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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, JANUARY 2, 1936

10 PAGES

PAGES 1 to 6

TRAGIC ACCIDENT (What Will year Of 1936 DEAN DAVENPORT . |,
LEAVE HASTINGS HAWAIIAN RACE
|FINE ^’baskets
A.
A.
Roth
WiD
Fill
HU
FoilPacked and Boy
BRINGS SOM Mean To Barry County? MIKES FINE GIFT,I tion With Barry County
IS DIG OUT Committee
Bcoata Distributed Same
I

BROOKWAY

AND

LOUIS BROOKWAY AND
WILLIAM 00U0H FA­
TALLY INJURED

hristmas. as the
tented him with
a present before
homes.
(

Elolst

Miss

uy Knntncr ant
heir Christ nas
nd Mrs. Ru sell
igs Sunday. Mr
liner and daLghrs. Levi Kanlner

vson Smith o«
college. Garnet
m State Tenche
Javid Christian!
Chalmer Hersh 1
State college ai |
rlstmas vacatloi I

rkson are spent]
h their ixtrcnt
son Blocher
'
srence Chai j
e schnlbley J
Irnith spent ‘1
inslng with ’ J
n honor of . «•“
rge Schalbtej ।

ISTRICT.
:iool gave
Friday evei ■
er the pi
(■pared. popCM«l
red. Santa Clat I
Ip with the di..
rom the tree
home for holl-,
Naperville. 1111-

eorgc Ball and
for a visit of
lot Ives in Olen-

fde Cheeseman
Mowing guests
!. Stanton and
nd Mrs. Sidney
n, Mr. and Mrs.
daughters of
•. and Mrs. Her­
tford.

IY.
ley.

who

has

her home Sat-1
had a fine time
. who is a ste 1
ty of Michigan i
istmas vacatlc 1
mts and otheJ
ry thankful for
the community
!. Proceeds were

itler, who is a
ame home SatChristmas
arenta.
will entertain

ulng.

AH an

PARK.
.he pedro party
f Mr. and Mrs. 4
lay night.
d family spen' I
is in Rockford |

IfTord and son
Mother's club
afternoon and !

i Saturday aft-

family

spent

■/-’*

OTVT.R MRMORTAT. OROW.

Health Unit
GIVES MEMORIAL GROVE I| People
BUT A FEW .....
GENERATIONS
i-ropic wno
who nave
have .hail
.tinu acquaintacqualntOF VIRGIN TREES TO
!1 ance with
With Harry
Harrv Gldlcy.
Cllrllrv sanitary
aanitarv MORE AND THE OURTAIN
I
engineer
of
the
Barry
County'
WILL
BE
DRAWN
WOODLAND
Health Unit, will hear with regret
b

to 100 Families
The committee, Adeibert Cortright. chairman, iiavlng in charge
tiw packing and distribution of the
1 Christmas baskets were pleased with

°r hU resignation here to accept a
position with the West Virginia THEIR HISTORY
.The
number oi
of basket*
i uni WILL
VVIL.Lme numoer
basnets required this jA GOOD UK
nAI/CLDflDT 8tat€ Health department at CharlesDC PRPQPRVPn year
,bout 10°- considerably
Dt rnt&amp;tnvtu lea, than
year, instead
of jooa
food
ton. W. Va.. and will leave for his
IS Fll
iiiau last year,
iiiaieao or
new field of labor Jan. 17.
| a number of people contributed cash
A Lover of Trees Preserves Mr. and Mrs. Gldley have made Through The Splendid Col­ which enabled the committee to;1The Banner Offen a
many friends in Hastings, and we
purchase what was no: donaiefi. ;
lection Made By Ex­
Some of Original For­
tion to Ftomotf I
are sorry to lose them. Mr. Gldley
Distribution of the bask--*
on
I is returning to his home state and
Gov. Carter
est Growth
In tradition and historic back­ Scouts and Scout leaders, a
Dean Eugene Davenport has made, his position Is a responsible one.
and on advancement.
ground. the Hawaiian Islands are
a fine gift to the township of Wood­
His place will be filled by A. A. rich; most delightful In their dlland. where he resides and where Roth. Ypsilanti, who has his M. A. verity; and ideal In their peaceful- ! In this undertaking—by gifts of beard
*“* “ ~&gt;oney. furnishing trucks,
he was bom. He has purchased six in public health from the Universlof nature a gtortre. Th^' are the an- j 1*^ or dUlributing baakete. etc ,
acres of the finest virgin timber in
ell received It and
four-letter man. Mr. Roth was at­ dent heiau.% or templee&gt;me of the “E™?!*** is grateful, as are,
that section Just west of tire town-tached to. the Pine lake camp for them crumbled to ruins. u..u some «o doubt, the recipients of the bas­
ship cemetery, on what is known as ’ a time last summer, and has &amp; tine
in a fairly good state of preserve- ke“’
the school board, if
the Fisher farm, originally the back ground for the position he as­
------------------------------------------------- —
,,T
K.r—
this day with pjcmorles of King I T .
.
’
Wheeler farm, and has deeded It to
the township. It is stipulated that
Kamehameha, the "Napoleon of]
: the Pacific," and other rulera that
the beautiful standing timber on
. followed him. Kona itself Is the land I
this tract is to be preserved, and ।
| of the early missionary efforts.!
■ There loo are .the royal palaces, the
whenever any of the original trees I
i early church where missionaries'
shall be removed.
.
i spread the teachings of the gospel Hastings merchants, made special and very unsightly. We
The tract, while adjoining the
to a pagan people longing to rethat the school board has tx
but can be approached through the'
TTMP nv nnvmAv celve
cc,ve it.
11 Not
NoV far
,ar distant
actant la
la the
the spot
spot ry county In 1938.
IN vrn
VOLUME OF HOLIDAY j where
Cook luuueu.
landed, ana
and also
also
wurre Capt. ugiii
driveway of the cemetery. The
This Thursday morning Dr. H. 8.
I the
spot where
the "redoubtable
BUSINESS DONE
--------------" ---------ex- Wedel
of Freeport reports a daugh­
■ plorer lost his life.
Before you
the six acres properly clean, with­
THIS YEAR
| reach Kona (really a little Garden ter bom to Mr. and Mrs. Henry play ground, and would oca
out Interfering with the forest
of Eden) you cross one of the wlld- Kidder, who lire north of Irving be so used. Tlie board ■
growth. There are to be driveways
village,
at 3:15 P. M_. New Yeart plan is to landscape and
lest
lava
deserts
that
the
world
through the tract, but their pur­ OVER 58,000 PIECES OF
pose Is solely to permit those who
; knows of. great stretches of ragged. day.
may visit the park to see the timber
FIRST CLASS MAIL - splintered, block slag greeting you
| on all sides. Then you come to the 'ln 1B3® before 3:15 P. I M.7 Have
as nature grew Jt. The place can­
not be used for picnics, but solely Were Cancelled in Six Days ; Incomparably 'beautiful Kona dis-|y?“{ d9*;tor "rtify the hour of that fill the hoUow, west of
Irin W1U, lu jonwu, Bower, ud birth and report to the--Banner,
--------- ----oth- High school building, which gt
as a forest tract, to show the beau •
—Local Force Handles
shrubs. Its magnificent ocean views,
ty
of
its
wonderful
trees.
Dean
I y
who have I0UE GOOD
I Davenport Is a lover of trees. He
really a great sea of turquoise in a lucky child.
Situation Well
setting
of
tropical
palms,
and
a
cli
­
realizes
that
there
is
little
left
of
the
■' .ere is a sllg* curve in the paved n_
If postal receipts during the
, original forest growth. He planned
!rts and Miss
d Christmas holidays are a true index mate that is perhaps as near per- ,JANUARY MEETING OF
f'oadway, Blake fell asleep. His car Ur
। this gift that the descendants of
)r' of business conditions. Hastings as a feetion as any on this planet. This
cohfinued at a good pace in a
Lillian Rol jrts Doing
THE BROTHERHOOD
Pennock hospital Is again the re- ; thb ploneera might ace something eomnwn|t&gt;-. t, keeping pace with the district only a little more than a
straight line. Just missing the first1
dplent of a *5.00 bill, which carnet of the amazing forest that covered general' business pickup which has century ago was really the heart ot
6nal Work
/ poat ui the highway fence, sped
’
a Christmas gift, the name of the Woodland when Ita flrat sett!era ar- been reported from all parte of the the then Sandwich Islands; the Uv- Honor
Guest to Be Dr. Fred­ in the vicinity of the
___________
__________
O'Connor returned as
' down Ui» embankment
and
crashed_ Mra. Plei
being unknown
unknown. Por
For several1 rived
rived.
donor helncr
. ..
' Ing center
for
hundreds
of
thou
­
country
In
rerent
months.
espreUlly
cfn
,
U
r
r
°
r
nunt3r
rdi
of
thoutree
mentioned.
The
।
from
Chlcaj
Into the
iJ Jtut before the holierick Spence of
years a similar gift has been sent, This gift, which the township has In December. The Hastings post of-!MnJto ot a haPPy-8°-&gt;Ucky Polydriver was th.-.-'jvn through
the day season, Irhere she had been vo­
the
the hospital but the giver Is modest, accepted, js to be known as the fice reports the best business it has ' neslan
,‘e*Un race,
racp which
whUh sometime In lh
*
Jackson
doorway of his dw. His arm was
before. , Iiad
evidently.
Such kindnesses are. Emma Jane Davenport Memorial enjoyed in the last five years, the, unknown
The January meeting of the
. „„„centuries
.. ,
hurt and body bruised, but he es­ Hing her d ters, Dr. Lydia Roberts
Grove, In memory of the late Mrs. cancellations of first-class mall in- i' crossed
the
and MImX Han Roberts. Dr. Rob- however, greatly appreciated.
rr0£scd 2000 miles .or more of th
5 Brotherhood will be held on Monday
caped with comparatively slight in­
Davenport.
satisfactorily to all i
eluding .11
Christmas
grrethrg !‘^buknl
ilng to leave soon with
evening. Jan. 18. wi'*- T'- “—
juries. He was badly Shocked. The
Dean Davenport graduated from cards, for the six days preceding
®ind P°Pulated these beautl- Spence of Jackson
t several weeks' visit In
the honor is usually a way L
i car was wrecked—wrapped around
PAUL A. REHMUS
our State College when It was Christmas exceeded by over 10.0001
Mr,
guest and speaker.
.
...
the tree.
•&gt;..
It
is
indeed
Indeed
a
matter of regret
eJe two Roberts girls who were
known as the Michigan Agricultural the number handled in the corre-L.
—
.
~
.
—
.
Once
before
Dr.
Spence
was
here
TO
BE
SPEAKER
Boylan was unconscious for a
College, and was for a time one of spending period■ a year ago.
। that the —
happy.
7“.
kindly,
good and addressed the Brotherhood,
time, after he was thrown from his ;“7 " .’in Barry county from good
car. When he awakened, he drag- (J?1 “i ecr slock, are well known in Coming to Central P. T. A. the faculty of that Institution. Lat­
The records kept by the local of­ natured. pleasure-loving Hawaiian those who heard him being loud In
er he went to Brazil where, under [ fice for a number of year show the race Is dying out. A few more gener­ their praise of his fine, helpful mesget) his two companions from thc|Uj igeville, and vicinity, and do
ations
will
doubtless
see
Its
finish
the
auspices
of
the
Brazilian
gov
­
Next Week Thursday
following cancellations were made
wrecked sedan,
KO.„. then
u.r„ went
wen, to
u&gt; the;S3
ernment, he established a College by It during the six days preceding
(Continued on page six)
Ihlnkln, to rammon help: ““J* •“*
“»
Evening, Jan. 9
of Agriculture. When he finished Christmas, as follows:
JrBrA\some passing automobile. They ■
Jr0*1 P,a&lt;5e
,
sanitation was the general opinion.
Tlie Hastings Central school Par­ his work there he retamed to]
’ sped by without stopping. He then
Lydi? XhoT?,&lt;S? hcZ Ph; SL1and
In the Michigan Conference. Dr.
CIVIC PLAYERS EN­
in 1931—57390.
walked to tire home of Walter
Ub,Ver^ly °Lt2VCB' ent Teachers' Association has been America, and was soon summoned i
Spence holds an unique ixisltion. as
in 1932—44.640.
in securing Paul A. to the Illinois University, to become I
park- The Central
Franck, sexton of Riverside cwne- ’l'La40
1f,^d ?/*n' fortunate
JOY
HOLIDAY
PARTY
In 1933—48,010;
tery. about 15 rods from the scene I? r ’ **
head of the Home Rehmus, principal of the Battle the head of the Illinois College of
pastorate
of the First Methodist
In 1934—48.450.
of the accident, who summoned,
department of the Unl- Creek High school, as the speaker Agriculture. Under his leadership
Walking Rehearsal Given— church In Jackson. Every Brother­
In 1035-58,760.
at
the
next
meeting
which
will
be
that
Institution
grew
from
a
mere
Bheriff Blakney and the coroner.
l* °r cblpaB° 8hc ta onc °r the
hood member Is urged to hear him
The peak was reached 'this year
Eva Le Gallionno’s Life
In LeRoy Foster's car the three leFdln« nutrition experts in the January 9. 1938. at the auditorium handful of students until It num­
Monday evening. Jin. 19.
bered Its student body by the thou­ on Monday, the 23rd. with1, the Sat­
i were taken to Pennock hospital. Mr.! co&gt;u?tr&gt;’ and hcr te«t books are rec­ of the Central school.
The names of the supper squad
Story Told
Mr. Rehmus has had a wide ex­ sands. Much original work was un­ urday previous pressing close, just
. Franck said he heard the crash at
authorlty by the American
A
pleasant
affair,
as
always,
was
perience in educational matters. He dertaken by that college under the a difference of two or three hundred
4 o'clock. He went outside but Medical association In which she
the civic Players Christmas party
pieces.
school children and no*
BAPTISTS
BRING CHEER
‘
could not see nor hear anything, serves on an important committee. is a graduate of the University of guidance of Dean Davenport. It
Extra help was not put on. the on Friday night In the parlors of
■Former-President
Hoover
ap­ Michigan, and Is a very effective drew young men from not only all
b-nd attributed the noise to irreTO COUNTY HOME. nuisance to the neighborht
speaker.
During
coUege
nvucika vu
------- - —
------ «• his —
‘.-o- days he quarters of this country, but also Increased volume being handled by the Methodist church, around 80 be­
pointed ul:
Dr. Roberts
to ocr»c
serve oil
on ins
his , -•
H onslble celebrating of the New Kvi.n.u
The Baptist church carried good
, the regular force working overtime. ing present.
from Europe. Asia and Africa.
National
Child's
Conference
comWM
an
outstanding
college
debater,
-r. and returned to his home.
A walking rehearsal was given of
After completing 30 years of out- ’ Sunday morning they worked till
I’ .»hen the three were taken to mittee. Reference Is made to Dr. Special entertainment will also be
standing educational work. Dean ,12:30 emptying the bins, sorting and one of the one-act plays submitted i Home during Christmas week. The
K ic hospital. Couch was already Roberts’ lectures In an Interesting furnished by the students under the
In the recent play-writing contest. | children of the Sunday school re­ It secma that
rtlcle in the December issue of supervision of the teachers. It is Davenport retired to his fine farm., distributing, getting ready for the
end. Brockway was unconscious.
pealed *In
part* their -Christmas
pro­
It
was excellently done by Miss —
------------------------------amount to be handled on Mon­
letter Homes and Gardens.
’ hoped that as many as possible will with ita beautiful home, in Woodr or a.brief time it seemed as if he
Aileen Iscnhath. Clay Bassett and gram given previously at the church. sential.
Miss Lillian likewise, has been take advantage of this opportunity land. There he has continued his day­
.lowed signs of reviving, but he was
.
....
. . no
hardly •-had
work os a writer for magazines and! Tlie
* rural• carriers
—*
-• Tom Myers. The play carried along The pastor. B. J. Adcock, gave a brief
Iving a good account of herself. to enjoy a fine program.
J badly injured that he had
ns the author of books. He liar, room to sit in their cars, and the a quiet running dialogue with a talk and Miss Mabie Lincoln gave CITY TO FURNISH
(Continued on page three)
startling several violin and piano numbers
English speaking woman employed'
given liberally of his Ume for pub­ city carriers loaded up many times. most unexpected and
BECOMES ASSISTANT
It's to be expected that in cancell­ denouement furnished In the closing which were greatly enjoyed.
lic work—os a speaker, and as an
n the Czecho-Slovakian embassy at FRANK ROGERS
ELECTRIC LU
advisor
on many topics. He has ing over 58.000 pieces of mail, one line as the curtains drew together.
A’u-shlngton and when Marsaryk reSERIOUSLY HURT always been
It
was
decidedly
clever
and
would trlbutlng a cash donation and each
very
gracious
about
ac
­
would
expect
to
find
quite
a
num
­
to Prague she was offered
Skating
Pond Alu&lt;
&gt;
STATB CLUB LEADER aumed
one
of
the
36
men
and
seven
women
bear
repeating
as
a
regular
play.
cepting requests to appear on pro­ ber of letters, postals and packages
position on his staff there but de­
Greek I, Oliund Md
dined. For some years she has been Im Injured When Two OarM grams—always glad to give his improperly addressed or lacking The author preferred to remain received a personal gift.
The Baptist people are old friends
Miifr. Alice
Fine Serv- business - manager of the Frederick
postage, etc. Postmaster Field tolls anonymous. It was directed by Mra.
services when be could do so.
Crashed at Intersection
B
mb
Flooded
at the County Home for they hold
Dean Davenport has never for­ us there were probably between four E. J. Pratt.
|T. Boles estate In Chicago, which
fhes I
sod in
Monday Morning
Louts Kennedy brought a laugh as services there once a month thru
gotten his home township, which and five hundred such pieces re­
runs into millions.
the property along Fall
f Frank Rogers, who lives near he has honored by his distinguished ceived. many of them with no re­ he darted out from behind the cur­
Dowling, but who is night watchman work as an educator and author. turn address, so the matter could tains and paged "Betty Barry’’—the
FREE TRIPS OFFERED
has cleared it of
If STOCKHOLDERS ANNUAL
at the Wlkox-Rlch plant In Battle The fine gift of the Jtfemorial Grove not be remedied. Many evidently mysterious one—several times.
a Hastings girl,
SIEETING.
Betty failed to acknowledge
•ra past has had
TO ISLE ROYALE Creek, driving there from his home Is Just another evidence of his love do not know that the one-and-a- present
Tlie annual meeting of tlie stock­
each day. was seriously injured in for Woodland and Its people.
half cent stamp does not carry the the call.
work In Calhoun
Miss Virginia Potts, accompanied holders of the Hastings City Bank
privilege of being forwarded or re­
• county.
\
iTo High School Students an automobile accident at about 6
by Mra. J. A. McNulty, sang in
o'clock Monday morning. The other SOMETHING TO BE VERY
turned to sender.
।
Miss Bates
just been notified
Who Submit Best Pos­
car was driven by John Thornton.
The habit of always putting a re­ charming voice a group of three day, January 14. Voting for director., nlngs.
of her appointment as assistant
The windshields of both cars were
I state dub leader, at Lansing headTHANKFUL FOR JAN. 1 turn address on mail is one that songs. “Love Is a Bubble." "None But will begin at 9:00 o'clock A. M, and furthei
ter and Slogan
so badly frosted that It was Impos­
can be cultivated to advantage, and the Weary" and ’’Sleigh." and re­
I quarters, which carries with it an-r
Tripe to Isle Royale, with all ex­
'• Increased salary, and much rdsible to see clearly. Rogers was driv­ State Treasury Starts New would do away with much of the sponded to an encore with "I have cashier.—Adv. 2 wks.
Ur.
l iponsiblllty as well. It is the posi­ penses paid, arc the prizes awaiting ing northward on Twentieth street
trouble postal employees run up You in My Pocket."
the four Michigan high school puYear
With
Fine
Balance
Mr, D. A. VanBusklrk introduced
against in giving the proper distri­
tion now filled by Miss Lois Corbett plls who win the “Halt-lhe-Poach- and Thornton was going west on
Miss Ethel LaMore, formerly of our
Lafayette Ave. Neither saw the
bution of mall.
who has been advanced to another
—First in Years
High school French department and
^executive position. Miss Bates wjll
oilier's car approaching the Inter­
Among the things for which the
This contest Is being conducted by section of the two streets. Thornton
Dean of Girls, now at Mt. Pleasant,
Rnakc her home tn lanslng.
&gt;
people of this state have reason to REPUBLICAN WOMEN
^We know of few young womfn. the Federated Garden clubs of says ho was driving 40 miles an
as the speaker of the evening.
•
be thankful, as they enter the new
Miss LaMore. who. Is a finished
■&gt; admirably fitted to fill this n.}-*- Michigan tn co-operation with the hour and Rogers stated that he was
MEET
TUESDAY
NIGHT
■xecutive position as Miss BatL Department of Conservation and Is traveling at about 10 or 15 miles year, is the greatly Improved fi­
and fluent speaker, gave a most in­
Mr. John T. LaDue, state highway eni
Ms a little girl she loved to md^s open to all high school pupils. There when the accident happened. Mr. nancial status of our state govern­
teresting resume of Eva LeGalment. At the close of the year 1934 Expect to Complete Organi­ llenne’s recently published book of
charge of the work on the government W1
I around the kitchen and canned 1 are no special entrance require| menu, information concerning the
the general fund, from which state
project west of this city, reports that there
memoirs. “At Thirty-three." with
zation and Adopt a
| hundreds of quarts of fruit and vekpltal, where he is in serious condi­
contest can be obtained through
expenses
are
paid,
was
36,892,000
in
added extracts and comments on
F etables when 4-H Club work was in
tion with a possible skull fracture
need for men's clothing, underclothing, soc
OonBtitution
local garden clubs or directly from
the red. That was less that In some
L’Alglon. the well known Rostand
.Its infancy. She majored In home
and other injuries. Mr. Thornton
and mittens for some of the county’s man
tlie Department of conservation at
previous years.
'
Another meeting of the Republi­ play, which she had the privilege of
was uninjured though his wife was
economics at Lansing, graduating
But on December 31, 1935, the can women of Barry county will be
■
working on that project Most of the man i
seeing during Miss LeGallienne's |
Kvlth honors at M. 8. C. and taught Duuing.
badly cut and bruised.
The two boys and two girls who
state's treasury held almost |2.- held in the community room of the Detroit engagement.
||rst at Ferndale, then went to Mtrerly clad for this out-of-dors winter job. 1
■hall to direct 4-H club activities in submit the most significant and Rogers and family resided In this 000,000 in cash belonging to its National bank on Tuesday evening,
Milo DeVries acted as master-of- ,
lack the needful things listed above. Old
novel poster-slogans in competition
general fund, and every bill paid Jan. 7, at 7:30 o'clock. At this Ume —and T -v
■ Ihoun county.
1
with all other high school pupils en­ clty,-Mr.-Rogers conducting a gro­ in full. That is something to be I| the organization will be completed. ceremonies and L.' E._ Barnett, direc­
or
footwear/including rubbers, which can b
■y Vhen the depression struck Mientor of the Civic Players, spoke of
cery on 6- Church 8U where the
of, and•—
It has not been true
i
.---------------------uriand
the constitution adopted. It is the next production to be given this
will be mighty helpful to some of these ■
K. &gt;h and most of the counties du- tered will win the free trips to Isle American Legion home is now locat­ proud
Royale.
These
tripe
will
be
con
­
In
many
a
year.
Governor
Fltzger,
expected
also,
that
study
groups
will
K .Tised with their 4-H club women
month. The popular demand for
ed. The many friends of the fam­
now,
Mr. LaDue says. If any one haa any i
ducted during the summer. Guides
directors. Calhoun county retained
ily wish for his prompt and com­ aid announced In his inaugural that1 be organized to meet at the homes more of the local one-act plays has
ments or footwear that they have diacarde
and chaperones will accompany the
he proposed • to have Michigan’s ' during tlie winter months when dis- Influenced the directors to replace
the services of Miss Bates, altho
plete recovery.
winners.
readily spare, if they will notify John T. I
Later—This Thursday morning, business conducted on "the pay as : elusions of political and economic •The Servant in the House,” for the
they had considered dUpenslng with
In some communities local garden Mr. Rogers’ condition is greatly im­ you go" plan. He has stuck to it. He ' questions will be held. A short In­ time being, with four more of these
his office in the Stebbins block, he will sen
the office as a matter oi econo­
clubs ore arranging special local
Insisted, when the legislature was in formal program is planned
for plays, which are to be given Jan. 39.
his trucks to collect the donated article*,
my. But a petition signed by wom­ contests among high school pupils, proved and It is expected that he
en all ov£r the county, protesting
A beautifully
appointed, lace
will be able to leave the hospital In session, that appropriations made by Tuesday evening and a large crowd
see that they are given to the men who n*
the winners of which will receive
that body must be kept within its । is anticipated. This meeting Is
a few days.
spread table, with lighted candles,
against such a decision, 'resulted
His phone is No. 2550, Hastings.
Income. The senate and house gave ■ held In the evening so that the was presided over by Mrs. Guy C.
in her remaining 'there where her prises sponsored by club members.
It will be remembered that the mra who a
. efficient services and fine cc'n- After being judged, the winning pos- DOWLING CEMETERY CIRCLE. him authority to trim appropriations, women who are unable to come Keller and Mrs. James W. Radford
10 per cent, if necessary, to keep during the day. may have an op- at the social hour following the pro­
atructive work have received suto ters.wlll be sent to Lansing to corning
on this job were employable* who w«r
Tire Dowling Cemetery Circle will Mlchlgan from going into the red. portunity to attend, though all are
gram. The committee in charge for
wide recognition, wjdch culminates
Welfare list. When employment waa OMbR
The winning slogans will be con­ meet for dinner and a business acs- He used this unusual power, and the welcome.
In Uils new office which she kssidered by the Department of Con­ slon Jam. 9, at the church dining result shows In a black ink balance I
relief was stopped. It wa* soma tima te|
Vries. Mr. and' Mrs. Radford. Mr.
the first of the year. C nservation In a campaign to encour- room. Ay members are urged to be of nearly *2,000,000 on January 11
NOTICE.
had their first pay day, and that WirtfV
this year Instead of the red Ink de-,' The anni1*1 meeting of the Farmto buy things to eat for their famiii**, a* ■
ed along- highways tn the northern tie will be discontinued or nqj. ficlt of 18.692.000 on January 1. 1935.: ers Mutual Fire Insurance ComF1NG BOOKS
Guests present from away were:
not buy the clothes and footwear IlMP IM
part
of
the
state.
The
purpose
of
OF BARRY COUN T.
ip&lt;ny of Barry and Eaton counUw
Mr. LaDue told the writer that
-S
ANNUAL kOOCTING.
M at the court house In
R. Mather and Victor P itt, the contest Is to focus state-wide at- the circle &lt;x&gt;nUnues.
' will be held
Blanche Powell, Secy.
r» from the Auditor Gene ds
The annual mealing of the River- Charlotte on Wed. Jan. 15th,“ 1936 El wain. Lansing; Miss Margaret
lacked warm clothe* and footww MBM
scrvanco of the Conservation taws
side Cemetery Association will be “•
Shaupner. Detroit; Mra. O- R- Dickfmaklng the regular audit of ih
held at the Council rooms in city reading the annua! reports, electing off. Iron Mountain; Ml» Anne VanGOOD TILL JANUARY IL
(books In tlie Barry county offlc&lt; i.
According to instructions Issued
from the cold.
Douglas, Detroit.
MIXED DANCES.
Jan. 4. 1938. afternoon, basement of and the transaction of any other and for the purpoae of transacting
Clear lake every Saturday n^ht,
church, for such business as may-------business that legally comes before ‘ such other buolness as may properly
NOTICE.
farUn’s orchestra.
“No
b*r." be good until and including Janu- legally come before such meeting, —
zuch
h a meeting.
I come before the meeting.
We haw moved to 221 8. Jeffer­
Yank Herrington, Prop.—Adv. If.
I Adv. 3 wks.
R. H. Burton. Sec—Adv. 1-3 Delton Telephone Co.
—Adi
son St. A. Tolies.—Adv.
• M i.auam

What will 1936 mean for Hastings
THREE YOUNG MEN
and Barry county! We hope it may
COMING FROM DANCE 'bring these good'thingi:
'

good of every child in
___ ,_____
we hope
____there
_______
may
, __
be the
fultoat cooperation of lu homes and
t
&gt; To all of ub. more consideration Schools with the W. K. Kellogg
iBlake Boylan. Driver, Fell for th* development of the ipintual /FoundaUon in Its wonderful health
... . __
- —.
I side a
of/ Ilf.
life. DaltV.
Faith .nr.
and &gt;(..
pie courage program.
| Asleep While West of City bom
of it are helpful at all times,
but eswclally needed In the limes, county, we hope for Increased prices
I
New Year’s Mortring
L An automobile accident, at about through which we have been pass-' for farm products; increased emIng We need the patience and poise;
f 4:00, New Year's morning on M-37, which such a faith begets.
/
We hope there will be an iml made in Barry county toward de­
I within the city limits and in front
velopment of its great but neglected
[ if whnt Is known as the McElwain
asset of splendid lakes. We hope
I cemetery. now a part of Riverside home, and families; less ^Irln
for the continued Improvement of
f cemetery, resulted in the death of of almhollc liquors; belter n
the trunk lines of Barry county,
William Couch; 25. and Louis objectives in our Ilves that will
with M-66 extended to Hastings and
Brockway. 21. twq well-known young to cl- aner. finer and more he:
a fine highway to Charlotte.
men of this city. Couch is the son living.
[ of Mr. and Mrs. Bam Couch, of
For Hastings' good In material
W&lt; hope for growing mental
things we hope far a big increase in
L Baltimore township. Louis Brock- in 1936—more reading of 1
[ way Is a brother of Harold Brock­ whol -some books and period!
business for Its factories, and the
’ way, proprietor of the Cut Rate Jess reading of trashy novels and extension of its rural trade In 1938.
We hope Hastings may secure a
E shoe store. Young Couch was al- verbal slush that moke for v
canning factory this year. Beginning
I most dead when picked up at the Insipid, trashy, moronje llvT
Id in In 1938 this city will receive a con­
f scene of the accident and had hope to see every rural &lt;
high siderable sum annually from the
| breathed his last before reaching Barry county have the san
i city: auto license tax which must lac used
the hospital. Louis Brockway died school privileges now given
for street Improvement. We hope it
[ at 'Pennock hospital Wednesday boy and girl. Fine progress li
may be used to curb, gutter and
, forenoon, several hours after the made tn recant years—part
____ black-top every unpaved street in
! car crashed into an elm tree at tlie last year. We hope tiw stu
may be so changed that I Hastings Hastings. In a few years our city
roadside.
&gt;
--------------------------------------------------------high (would have model streets.-----------We hope
r.
■
The two young men and Blake can open ita graded as well]'as
, Boylan, in the latter's father's Gra- school to all the children Off the sur- la beginning may be made this year
some' *---------toward* ~
wiping
out
the. ----unsightly
—------— —
* **"
' ham-Page sedan, and with Blake rounding territory. Wo *"J/pe
at the wheel, drove Tuesday night,.plan can be worked out that will places along Fall creek In the city
after the stores here had closed, to; place a consolidated achd &gt;1 In the particularly those near our princlcounty. I pal business street.
what Is known as the Dixie Inn., southeastern part of thl
on M-131, two miles south of Way-1 — 1
1 —
1 F’
I
‘XS/mp’
TWO orangevili/e girls

I

teep syvitchbacks
inonstrated their
once of 12 miles,
pper illustrations
mds, with its full
dais at the finish
Colorado Springs
hevrolet half-ton

*

The Hastings Banner?Extends It* Wishes *
For A Prosperous ancjl Happy New Year

IN HONOR OF THE
I ATE UDO

LATE MRS. DAVENPORT

BIG GUN N POST­
OFFICE RECEIPTS

Little GlTl DOTH
Jan. 1, at 3:15 p.m.

Unknown Donor
Remembers Hospital

£

Help Urgently Nee

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, JANUARY 3. 1&gt;M

Progress

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

AdminlstraUon

and picnic ground* are aoms of the

-------- y •
•----------------The eye*; COATS OBOVgTJ*g|ON OROyp

The eye* of a human being do not ]

reflect light In the dark.

coon or opossum, however, will shine! The Costs
Coats Grove Extension clazs
class
brtghtly in a beam at artificial light, met at the home of Hlldred Oluue.

Grocery
Lift A “Simon

More than 120 deer hunters in the । enl.
Upper peninsula availed themselves BQng
son* and the lesson on sleeve fitting
of the special messenger service were given by the Leaden.
provided by the Department
e(
| Conservation during the open deer hostess assisted by Alma Boulter.
{aekson.
The next lesson will be given Jan.
28 at the home of Dorothy Barnum.
1 Michigan trsjjpers are Under obli­
Ola Kimble. Secy.
gations at no time to sell fur. As
long as they have notified the De- STITCH AND CHATTER CLUB.
। partment of Conservation as to the
The
December
meeting of the
kind and quantity of pelts in their
' possession, they may hold such pells Stitch and Chatter Club met at the
, indefinitely In anticipation of better home of Mrs. Gladys Bush. A de­
licious
chicken
dinner
was enjoyed
market prices. "Many trappers seem
to think that they must sell pelts by all. Games were played, after
. in their poMeasibn within five days which each member received a love­
after the close of the respective ly gift from the Christmas tree.

Don’t Let It Get You Down!

■ trapping seasons," said H. R. Sayre,
58TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY.
chief of conservation law enforce­
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene M. Bush
ment. "That is not true." "The
law say* that within five days after celebrated their 58th wedding annithe close of the trapping season.1 versary Christmas day at the home
Individuals having furs must notify ‘ of Mr. and Mrs. Roy E Bush. All
the Department as to the kind and their children and their families,
quantity of those furs as of the: numbering 30. enjoyed a flne dinner
last day of lire season. If that re- »nd Christmas tree. While Mr. and
quirement has been complied with, | Mrs. Bush are not In the best of
the trapper is free to hold the furs health, they were delighted to have
as long as he wishes."
I
! all the family together for the day.

Shop at FOOD CENTER
and SAVE!

"Don’t Beat Me
Massa Legree”

type manufacturing concern, later i
with a printing press company. His
long experience with Uie panting I
business, with type and with printing !
presses,
him recognition
one
Whsn won
Thsodorg
Rocamlt aswas
of the best posted men in the field I
in everything pertaining to the ।
This, together ““
Dee. 8th. 18M, at the age ot two his printing business
propriationa
foe pleaiing
the gnatpersonality
Govern­ |
with his most
parents moved to Oregon. Illinois,
Jordon. wtuart
conspired
to make
a very val­
ment
Printing
Plant him
at Washington,
where as a young man he learned uable man. In addition to his du­
and was looking for the moat ex­
the printer's trade. In 187* when
w**- ties as a salesman, he devised a.
perienced
man
he
could
find
to
I Un^ wtiere
lUpport of the Printer* Inventory System which
come
and popular.
"straighten
matters
was very
Probably
noout."
man
George u
Mr. Brown's name was raoatniaendUblUh the Barry county Democrat.
French. Jim Hu
April 21st 187&gt; ho was united in
fourth row. BUI Caro. OUbert
clal
marriage to Miss Lottie Eaton. Theid
"wedding trip1' consisted of a walk
work struck terror to the •■political SBUIh. Mrael BMk and John Mb
down, the Thomapple river and on
employees” in thia great plant. Al- Are any of the soldiers alive today'
its bank they sat down and talkers
Thia group includes the mlMtarj
ware dropped from the pay roll* and
their places taken by practical
very active life with its *unshirie printers. He found 45 car-load* of CIVIL HE*VICE EXAMINA
The United States Clvfl
dead Government document* stored
and sorrows, they celebrated their
in a building for which the govern­
golden wedding anniversary. Mr®.
ment was paying 115.000 a year in competitive examinations as fol,
Brown died Oct. 17lh. 1990. heir rent. He also'found hundreds and Iowa: Junior graduate nurse. &gt;l.j
death being a hard blow to the bet
reaved husband. To them four chlU । hundreds of thousands of dollars (forestry), ti.aao a year; Assistant]
stock and
dren were born. Lemuel of Mil-, •• worth of
°! 'surplus
^ur£‘*“n
TTj?type
”*’far
™’ geophysicist, &gt;2.800 a &gt;v*r; Account-!
» of Chl««o .nJ •“*
many of the fonts of type never ant and auditor, assistant account­
Mr*. P. 8. Holcomb of Chicago, sur­
having even been opened. Bo many ant and auditor, senior accounting!
viving. and a daughter Nellie May.
Senatorial dignitaries had their toes and auditing assistant, &gt;2.000 to 93.-^
(.stepped on by this -muck raker" in 200 a year. Bureau of Motor Car-1
About 1880 Mr.- Brown moved to jthe government print shop, that riers. Interstate Commerce CommlsManistee. Pour years later he se­ ithey were successful in having his
cured a position as salesman with 'nay siopjjed. With the backing of
Certain specified education and
Uw Newspaper Union of Chicago,
President Roosevelt. Mr. Brown in­ experience are required in connec-1
remaining with this concern about vited Die indignant Senator* to call tion with these examinations. Full
10 yean and meeting with splendid
information may be obtained from
T.~™T wtSTS I *•
P*?.1
H. O. Wunderlich, Secretary of the
convinced; and the next day U s. Civil service Board of Examlglad to recommend that Mr.

approves FASHING OF CHAS- 8.
With the passing of Chas.
f^^'rndtnZ^vtnr' eSjrfJS^

HOLDS OPEN HOUSE.
The Department of Conservation
Miss Patty Stem, of st. Louis, who
issues 12.000 to 15.000 gun permits
each year, all of them must be se­ is visiting at the home of her grand­
cured thru the local conservation parents. Mr. and Mrs. Kellar Stem,
held open house Friday afternoon
off leer.
from three to six o'clock. Fifteen
Nearly, a million dollars will go friends called during the afternoon.
Miss Virginia
Potts won
into the improvement and develop- -------------------------- the
— door
ment of Michigan's state parks dur-1 prize. An out of town guest was Tom
Ing the ensuing year if the Works । French of Middleville.

Beginning the liYT/
NEW YEAR 1 Ah)
Free Day, Sat. Jan. 11

Lucky Day, Dec. 11

Save Your Cash Register Receipts For Lucky Day In January
■ LIBERTY

CRACKERS
lb. box

14C

Fresh Eggs

°~- 25c

Jewel Compound

2 -29c

15c
y Lb«.

Beans D"

Pirate Pancake Flour 5

19c
19c

Standard Corn, 9 No. z 9C/»
Peas, Tomatoes

Trilby SOAP

2

Bar.

13C

1 Bar FREE!

Silver Dust

5c n«d

C‘M
2

Large Pkgs.

P &amp; G. Soap

23c

10 “••35c

Roman Cleaner

15c

3Lb- 20c

Dry Onions

10- 19c

Oranges

■&gt;"* 29c
Doz. 33c

200 Size

CHOICE MEATS

T Bone Steaks

Lb.

17c

Corned Beef

19c

Rib Boiling Beef - 11c

Beef Pot Roast

14c

Beef Roast SSr*

Bacon Squares

Yard Goods

Suitable for bridge prizes—
Electric lamps, complete with
shades, cords and all
CQC
&gt;1 00 lamps al
Ow

Fast colored prints. 36
Ac
inches wide, XI only
©
36 Uich prints. 19c and 22c

Hosiery
We un- closing out
4 Qc
wonjch-V cotton hose at I ©
Men's nocK*. dark shades, in
plain, colon to
4 Ac
go al
IU

y “Carter” Underwear
Heavy union suits for women,
fleeced lined, long sleeves and

.J QQ

Women's and Misses'
Snuggies

25'
50'
69

Values to &gt;1.39 to

Cloth and four napkins, em­
broidered linen

1.00

Lace Table Cloths
60x80 lace cloths. &gt;4 QQ
new patterns, only
I «wO
Smaller or larger cloths In
proportion.

Turkish Towels
Pastel shades. 22x42. a
good towel st only ..

Pajamas

89'

Boys* Fajama\

70x80. fancy plaids, sin­
gle. first grade

a bargain at

Dreis Good*
Dark Marvel crcpc
dress goods at only

quality, this sale
at only

1?

Silk and Rayon

Bridge Sets

19

Bed Blankets

Outing Gowns
Women's heavy outing gowns,
valuta to &gt;1.00
——-

Men's Outing

Other Gift Hem* to close out
Al HALF PRICE.

Washable crepe in tea rote
and white. 40 inches Aftc
wide, at only

Crash Toweling
Half linen crash toweling
with colored
A Ic
borders .............. ©’

Glass Toweling, red, also blue,
inch check glass
4 Olc
towelUig ------- - -------- Ifi-

Russlan, heavy, all linen, un­
bleached crash tow4 Ac
ellng. 18 ins. wide .... I ©

SI

79'
25'

Outing Flannel

38-ins.

wide,

white,

striped

1 and dark colors—
4A
I bargains at -------------- I ©
1^
“Hope Muslin”

!1 Bleached, fine firm
OCC ■&gt; 36 inches wide—
t© Kat only
------

muslin,
4 |?c

. I©

29c

Bananas

Valencias

Gift Items

25' , Reduction.

Tuck-stitch pants
and vests
Carter's part wool
snuggies . --------

Sunbrite Cleanser

^HEAD
LETTUCE

Snow Suita and Girls'

2 -25c

Blue Ribbon Oleo

Apple Butter

K sack

Early Shopping is advisable!

- 17c

Sat. Only, 9 a. m. to 1 p.

Rolled

Although our stock is fairly new and complete, wc have at the be­
ginning of the New Year, Odd Lots and Broken Assortments of Season­
able and Holiday Merchandise, that wo want to dispose of IN A
HURRY! Every item in this ad is a Bona Fide REDUCTION. Many
items not advertised. Quantities are limited.

Lb.

19c

PASSING OF FORMER
PRAIRIEVILLE MAN.
Bartlett Nevins, 81. passed away
on Monday evening. Dec. 21. at his
a well known resident of Prairieville
township, later moving to Otsego.
He Is survived by his sister. Mr*.
John McLeod, of Hastings, and a
brother. Bolon Nevins, of OUegoFuneral services ware held on
Thursday with interment in the Ot­
sego cemetery. ‘

BARBER—TODD.
Mr. and Mrs. OUbert Todd an­
nounce the marrage of their daugh­
ter. Agues Bcmadenc. to Glen E,
Barber of Hastings, at 8 o'clock!
Monday evening. Dec. 23, at th*
German Lutheran church in Rlvel
Rouge by the Rev. A. Ebcndlcu
They will make their home In igvei
Rouge where the groom 1* emro^ ed
at the Great Lakes Steel OTporation. Hastings friends «x&gt;Md best
wishes.
J
BOWLING TOURNAMENT.
A very exciting' bowling tourna­
ment is in progress at the Jacok
Rehor alleys between the M-37 road
engineers and an independent team.
played with the following results:
Engineers, 783. 840. 840. total 2478:
independents, 834. 752. 752. total
2338
~

RECEIVE BOX OF
FRUIT FROM TEXAS.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Watkins wen
the recipients of a box of delicious
. Walldorf! Funeral Home, Rev. May'fresh fruit. Including tangerines,
Ian Jones, pastor of the MelhMist
church officiating. Burial waa %&gt;’ grape fruit and oranges grown In
, the Rio Grande rtver valley in TexRiverside by the aide of his wifeland
a*. This was a Ciiristma* gift from
daughter.
I
their son. Richard Watkins ot
' roURTH ARREST** FOR
I
Weslaco, Texas.
TRAPPING VIOLATIONS.
ENTERTAINS AT BRIDGE.
Conservation Officer George BumMr*. Raymond Branch entertained
,ner arrested Max Deeds. 34. &gt; of Tuesday afternoon at a one-thirty
Nashville last week on a charge of dessert bridge at her home on Wal­
trapping too close to and in muak- nut street. Contract was played aj
1 rat houses
Deeds was arraigned two tables, Mrs. Kim Sigler and MM
before Justice Andrew Matthews on Eileen Sullivan winning the prUM
Saturday and was fined &gt;25.00 and
16 85 costs which he paid. This SKIING PARTY AT
should prove a warning to any olhCOUNTRY CL
era who are violating the trappfrig
A group of young people are
laws in a similar manner, as Deed* joying the skiing at the Has
was the fourth offender arrested by Country club this evening and
the Conservation Officer In the lojit be entertained Jor lunch at
home of Mist Virginia Waters.

religious.

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦

ryRANDI THEATRf

•9 Hutinp, Michipn • T.kphou. UM-2SS7 ■_
Or JANUARY STM

FROGRA

SUNDAY and MONDAY, JAN. S and 6

■EVEN KEY? TO BALDPATE

SALE of

Wllh GENK HAYMOND.

SIZES
14 to 20
38 to 46
22^ to 28%
48 to 54

Cinderella
Coats &amp;
Dresses

■ "Oh! My Dear1. I just must gel time
to hurry down to Frandsen's Bi^ Coat Sale... and what
a lot of New Dressesf Oh! Boy! what Swell Dresses at

$2§8

BARGAIN MATINEE S

Callahan. Erie Btora. Erb,

liM and 3iM O'clock

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, JAN. 7

THE PERFECT GENTLEMAN
Starring Frank Morgan land Cicely Courtneidge
With Heather Angel. Herbert1 Mnnkln and Una (FCannoc

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, JAN S and 9

A FEATHER IN HER HAT
With Paulino Lord, Basil Rathbone, Loui* Hay
ward, Billie Burke *nd Wendy Barrie
ADULTS U Cento

CHILDREN 18 Cent*

FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JAN 10 and 11
DOUBLE FEATVRK PROGRAM
FEATURE Mtt I

$488

8/288

The Scree**'* Singing C«wtf7 &gt;■ » Musical Romance

GENE AUTRY In

TUMBLING TUMBLEWEEDS

22c

Food Center

there are very few. if any other,
on record, where the Senate
a man one day and hired him
I Mr. Brown continued on
for 10 months when he felt
work had been done and rty
The next year, however, the
lation for the Government
Plant was reduced by 23
prom all appearances we
। need allot of men to do that kind of
work bh Washington right now.
1 For &lt;Arer 23 years Mr. Brown repthe Duplex Press Company.
Creek, his ability to sell
ing recognized by menu­
big presses With the
Duplex
pany he made a great
at the head of Its
telling
and traveling from
Boston to 8*
Francisco, and from
lew Orleans. He put
St. Paul to
over, some ve
recognized a
authority on web
presses.
\
Charley Drown V111 1x1 remem­
bered by all who
him as a
most genial, kindly
He hid a
line sense of hutnor. kand was the
life of any gathering,
welcome visitor in any
t shop,
His overflowing humor,
sallies
of wit. and his love of
friends
made him welcome w
went. He got a lol of fun
of life
But he had a serious vein
appreciated good things, and

r«Atuu «&lt;?.»

FRANDSEN’S STORE

EDWARD

EXCLUSIVE, BUT NOT EXPENSIVE
H

EAST STATE STREET

TELEPHONE 2504

HORTON

■UUnee OoO—«tCK
ADULTS II CwU

»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦&lt;

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦

�TBK HAgTTNGg BANNER, TRURgDAT, JANUARY 8, 1830
Lou of radiator and carburetor

LOCAL NEWS

Now that Christmas is over, tak­
ing inventory Is the order of the

The thermometer registered

of thU
record

so far for this winter.

Hippy New Year I

CONSUMERS
( SPECIAL
Gas

WATER
HEATER
= "O. K."
FOR THE FINEST

LOW-COST
AUTOMATIC
WATER HEATING
YOU’D EVER WANT.'
A penny's worth of gas does
a whole lot of work in this
healer. A few cents a day
buys all the gas needed for
alwan-ready hot water.
Frore It—with this

SPECIAL OFFER

FREE TRIAL
"Try before
a liberal trial.
keep the new
buy it on the

yoa bay"—after
If yen decide to
heater, yoo can
new

tcanomu
PURCHASE PLAN

1CU
Eaty monthly terma

several days during the Christmas
Burroughs adding machine.
i the city's office In the city
hail, was voted by the Council Fri­ confined to her home for the past
day night.
ten days with pneumonia, in slowly
improving.
Mason is cl__
_ __
Two auditors from the state au­
dent's Dull to be held there on Jan- ditor general's department are au­
diting the books of the
various
nominate
for • x bright. county officers.
.Jy column
of interesting
Mrs. Lydia Bush, who has been
reading matter—"About Town" tn ill with pneumonia at the home of
the Jonesville Independent."
her daughter and husband. Mr. and
' Weather thU year has been Ideal Mrs. E. C. Edmonds, is recovering
1 for the holiday season, crisp, cold. nicely.
■ and enough snow falling each day
C. H. Osborn, administrator of
to keep coal soot properly subdued. the estate of Eva L. Paton, deceased,
1 Col. Frank Knox will be the fea- has sold the Paton property on 80.
Hanover. —
St.,.to
Chester Peck, who
। lure speaker at the annual banquet--------------------------1 of the Michigan Press Assn, at their Uvea aouth of Hastings.
i winter meeting In Lanxtng, the dates
"Mrs.
*
‘
'
Edward
Goodyear
is sticking
' of which are Jan. 10. it and 18.
close-in now-a-days having con­
"Mutiny On the Bounty" consld- tracted whooping cough from her
' rred one of the greatest pictures of children. Ed., too. has never had the
1 the post year, and bringing fine re­ disease but is hoping the germs will
turns at the box offce. is one of the steer clear of him.
early bookings for 1830 at the
Christopher Morley. In his column
1 Strand.
tn yw Saturday Review, says among
Charles E. Relgler, of Irving town­ his greatest pleasure of 1835 has
ship was arrested Friday morning, been watching the unusually comic
ciiarged with Illegal trapping. He shape of women's hats, and thinking
, was brought before Justice Mat­ of the enormous aggregate of pre­
thews that same day. and paid a cious female energy expended in
hesitating, demurring (or demur fine of (10 and (0.80 costs.
After seeing "Metropolitan." we | ring?) and eventually choosing one
quite agree with Time, or was it the of those tilled "frisks" of millinery.
We read of a nice thing the people
New Yorker? that Lawrence Tibbett
■ should "be heard." and "not seen," living around the Dailey neighbor­
I Too bad a face with a bit more hood over in Cass county did on
romantic appeal couldn't go with Christmas day. They had a Com­
munity pot luck dinner at their
that glorious voice.
church and made special effort to
, Editor Frank Brown of the Belle­
invito people who otherwise would
vue Oasetta is nominated by the
be alone, or a family that might not
Charlotte Republican - Tribune as
have a real Christmas dinner. After­
the best groomed man In the fraward there was a Jolly program for
i ternlty. Hope he will come this way
entertainment.
• some day and let the Banner
Mrs. Frederick H. Taylor and her
father. Prof. E 8. King, of Michigan
Family pot lucks for holiday din­ State college at East Lansing, are
ners grow in favor we notice. It's recovering from Injuries received in
easier all around on the hostess to an automobile accident. They were
Just roast the "lurk." and provide a returning to Hastings from Lansing
few other accessories, and have the when their car idt an Icy section of
extra dishes all brought in by tne the road near Potterville and turned
••sisters and the cousins and aunts." over completely. Mrs. Taylor re­
Why didn't some one think of a ceived severe bruises and Prof. King
pig raffle? Nothing more delectable a bad cut an the head.
than a young roasted pig with a
In a communication from Mary
baked apple In' Its mouth, and a J. Spencer. R. F. D. 3. Box 08. Ma­
chain of tiny sausages around rion. Mich., she informs us that she
the neck—plus- a knife whetted to has a black cat answering to the
razor blade sharpness to do the name of "Nig" that- is 23' years of
carving.
age, who. save for his teeth, is tn
The council
Friday
evening pretty fair condition. Four years
granted permission to Mrs. Maude ago. at the age of 19. he took a
Smith, county school commissioner, trip to Long Beach. California, and
to use a room in the city hall to back in an automobile, and seems
carry on work In book repairing for to enjoy an annual trip to Lowell
tlie benefit ot the county's schools. every summer. This information
What we hope some one will In­ was doubtless sent us because of
vent before next holiday Ume rolls the mention made In the Banner
. round. 13 a synthetic Christmas of Hastings' venerable pussy, "Lit­
tree for Indoor use that won't be­ tle Joe," owned by Sylvester Lane,
gin to "moult" as soon as you set It •who has Just recently passed to the
place where good cate go. at the ad­
up.
vanced age of 10 years. 0 months
Consumers power company are and over.
preparing to spend two million dol­
Prank Morgan of Charlotte will
lars next year on extension of lines. be in the city every Thursday from
This is partly,at least to Increase 0:00 A. M. to 3:30 P. M_, for the
farm electrification. It is believed registration of the unemployed. His
that ten thousand more farms will office is in the local relief office on
thus be served.
E. Court St. Further particulars
We shiver and talk about the ex­ will be given next week.
treme cold when the thermometer 15
A most beautifully done, and ar­
hovering around xero, but Mrs. A. D. tistically staged feature of the
Kni&amp;kcrn recalls the days when they Christmas season—the High school
were stationed at Ft. Assinibolne in Dramatic Club's
production
of
Montana, and it was nothing to ex­ “The Star," under direction of Miss
perience 60 degrees below, altho the Ruth Robson. It bore the stamp of
dry atmosphere often prevented one careful training, and as always, con­
from realizing It. But frost bitten veyed the reverent spirit that so
cars and faces received when Just often is lacking In Christmas pro­
running In to a neighbor's without ductions.
sufficient wraps, made one aware of
The Kalamazoo Civic Players are
It. The extreme cold seldom lasted putting on "Sweeney Todd—The
over a few days. It was sure to be Demon Barber ot Fleet Street." Jan.
followed by a "chlnook"—a warm 8. 10 and 11. According to their an­
breeze that tempered the climate lo nouncement it's the grand-daddy of
more comfortable living.
all the melodramatic horror plays,
Mt. Pleasant's Chamber of Com­ and was first produced tn England
merce votes a (25.000 budget far the In 1842. The Kalamazoo folks prom­
coming year with a full-time secre­ ise their audiences one of the
tary. and an acUve all-around pro­ grandest evenings of entertainment
gram scheduled. The oil companies they have ever experienced.
Mrs. Mary Waters has returned
■ have brought a million and a half
to her home from Pennock hospital
payroll to Mt. Pleasant.
Tlie Council Friday night were and is still under the nurse's care.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pender en­
asked to provide lights for the pro­
posed new skating pond between tertained with a family Christmas
Grand and Walnut streets. The dinner, coven being laid for nine.
The
alarm of fire Tuesday after­
matter was referred to the councils
lighting committee with power to noon was caused by a blazing oil
stove In Roy Douglass' home. The
act.
fire was extinguished without caus­
Plymouth Is evidently up against ing any loss.
the same conditions Hastings Is ex­
Bert DeVries, an employee Jn the
periencing in our Women's rest Banner's Job department, has Just
room In the court house. A com­ moved his family here from Kala­
munication to the Plymouth city mazoo. and they are located at 336
commission from their League of W. State street.
Women Voters set on foot an In­
vestigation of their public comfort
station, as a result a cash reward
Is offered for information that would
lead to the arrest and conviction of
any person destroying, defacing, and
committing any nuisance tn the
building. The room will now be
cleaned and an effort made to main­
tain It in a way that win be a credit
to Plymouth. A small reward might
prove a fruitful source of informa­
tion as to the parties responsible
for the nuisances that have been expericnced here. In the opinion ot
many, five o'clock Is too early an
hour for closing the women's rest
room, especially on Saturday nights
when the streets are filled with nonTh. BUS FARE
resident shoppers.
A snapshot of more than passing
NOW IS ONLY
Interest was brought to our office
Monday, by Maurice Waters. R F.
D. 1. Rutland Twp. it vu taken at
Matunuska. Alaska, and shows Will
Rogers In the foreground talking
with a Swedish woman from Minne­
sota. who came to that country as
a colonist with her husband. Rogers
Is In a characteristic pose and easily
recognised. The woman is clad In
overalls and mackinaw and both

CAN YOU DRIVE
YOUR CAR TO
GRAND RAPIDS
FOR $1.50?

TMCUH
BKnow

Woodland, where Dr. Cobb will
practice. They have moved into the

Waters by a friend who lived there.

Hayes. 303 So. Jefferson St., Thurs­
day. Jan. 8th. at 1:30. Guests In­
vited. •
PLEASANT HIU.
The three pupils put on the
__
Christmas program lasting an hour,
Monday evening. Santa Claus then
came and distributed presents and
passed popcorn and candy.
It la reported a wild cat was shot
recently by one of the saw mill
crew on the Spaeth place.
Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs.
R. J. Williams were Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Clarke and family of South
Haver...Mr. and Mrs. Byron Rowlader and children of Grand Rapids.
Mrs. George Konzen. , daughter
Ruth and sons Dale and Norman
and Mr. and Mrs Clare Williams
and family and Mrs. Addle Lewis,
local.
One of the men working in the
saw mill had the misfortune to have
ti whlffletree fly back and strike
him on the leg shattering the bone.
He was token to the hospital at
Zeeland and is getting along as
well as could be expected with such
a bad break.

SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Mr and Mrs Wm. Hale of north
Carlton spent Christmas with Mr.
and Mrs. Caryl Fuller.
Mr. and Mrs Walter Culbert en­
tertained eighteen guests on Christ­
mas day.
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Strodtbeck
spent Christmas with Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Weycrman and daughter Of
Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shriber and
daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Barry and son spent Christmas with
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Keeler of Has­
tings.
Mrs. Anna Buck and family spent
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Pew ot Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dlnehari
of Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Emerson
LeMasters of Carson City and Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Smith of Ionia
spent Bunday with Mr.arid Mrs. Jay
Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Tate Buck and fam­
ily of Battle Creek spent Bunday
with Mrs Anna Buck and family.
Hubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
jay Smith.

PHONE
22 72

McCREERY’S
Telephone 2140

We Call For and Deliver

WHAT OF 1

I

tel us Plan
Rather than Prophesy

A new year Is about to beqln^ which all oi us hope
will bring further Improvement tn business con*
ditlons.

None of us can know, ol course, whether there

are storms or lair winds ahead. But we can resolve
lo hold to a steady course, guided by sound prin­
ciples. whatever may come.

\*

This is the attitude taken by the directors and

officers ot this bank. We shall be conservative, but
always constructive In our efforts to benefit and

protect those we serve.

We appreciate the patronage you have given
us In the past year, and hope that our facilities

may be an aid to your progress in
the year fust starting. We extend

our best wishes lor your success

and happineu.

Sweeping Price

REDUCTIO
On Things You Need
4-BucMe.AU

MEN’S 3-Piece

Wool SUITS Arct
Boys’or
Men’s

Men’s and Boys’

Deliveries; 8 and 10 a. tn., 3 p. m. Daily

Wambat Collars

Men’s Wool

Overcoa

COATS

EGGS
STRICTLY
FRESH
Dox.

OP*
£jC

Misses’and Women s

SHEEP SKIN

Lh- 36c
- 19c

BUTTER
SWISS STEAK
BEEF

ROLLED

Pot Roast
- 15c

Beef Roast
- 19c

TRIO CAFE
PHONE 2137

$1.00

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

And Have Your Food
Sent To You!
DEL MONTE

fob

OF HASTINGS

HORSE HIDE

PRUNES
2 i^»-« 17c

2

uver

All New

Ski Coats
BOYS’ 4-BUCKLE

CORDUROY SHELL

Arctics

Fine Fur Trimmed

Ladies’
HASTINGS

-fated air trip.

H Pectel for Jan. 0, 7, g
Ladies* Plain Dresses

Organizations

thlngs In that country on their ar-

POWER COMPANY

entered a plea of guilty in Justice
Andrew Matthews court an Satur­
day, the charge being for violation
of the game tews by illegal trapping.

O. Finnic and family during their
11 o'clock Wednesday forenoon.
residence in Woodland.
Both had suffered skull fractures
this Thursday mom Ing, at Pennock Boylan was not seriously hurt, and
In Ute Ionia county circuit court
hospital, a boy.
though dazed, grieved and shocked on Saturday, a mortgage an the
Only six patlqnls had to celebrate by ths sccident. was able to give First Liberal
United
Brethren
New Year s at Pennock hospital, but some of the details of the tragic
wateh it fill up from now on.
affair.
closed to satisfy a lien far M.680 55
Miss Beatrice Blossom, superin­
Tlie three young men were good held by the Farmers
Merchants
tendent of Pennock hospital, left friends. Boylan works In the Cruc bank of that village. The suit was
Saturday In company with her shoe store, the other two in the Cut brought against the old board of
brother Armand, for her home In Rate store, Brockway sa a salesman trustees who signed the note given
Big Rapids where, she will complete and Couch as a shoe repairer.
with the mortgage.
her convalescence, reluming lo the
Couch is survived by his parents,
and by two brothers, Donald and
hospital next week Friday.
SPORT NEWS.
Everett. Brockway Is survived by
Elwood M. Brake. Jr., comments
hte mother, who is making
her In the Ionia County News concern­
home in Wayland; by hte brother. ing the Hastlngs-Ionla game as folHarold, the shoe merchant here,
and by three sisters. Winnie of Kal­
The Ionia quintet downed anoth­
amazoo, Bertha and Hazel of Grand er strong opponent. Hastings, to the
The Southeast Rutland W. C. T. Rapids.
tune of 22 to 10 Friday evening at
U. will meet with Mrs. Addle Perry
After a
of- the
» full
iuu Investigation
uxotunaiMi the
ww uime Armory.
armory. Trailing at half
nan Ume
ume
on Wednesday afternoon. Jan. 8. fleers decided that no Inquest ms by a score of lo to 7 Ionia came
Mrs. Muriel Perry will conduct the necessary.
back filled with fight and enthusi­
program on "Health and Hygiene."
All three young men are well asm to win a battle peppered
Members urged to attend.
known and highly esteemed in Has­ throuhout with fouls.
tings. This tragic accident caused
Members of the Emmanuel Guild a wave of sorrow to sweep this city
of the Emmanuel Eptecopal ciuirch which took away the Joy of New
will meet Wednesday afternoon. Jan. Year’s day In Hastings.
0. st the Parish House for a oneThe Couch funeral services will
thirty dessert bridge. The regular be held at the Baltimore church
business meeting will be held and on Friday at two P. M. Funeral
the preaident. Mrs. K. 8. McIntyre, services for Mr. Brockway will be
is desirous of a large attendance.
old Brockway, E Bute BL. on mHospital Guild No. 18 will meet
with Mrs. George Tolhurst. Jan. 8.
1836. Visitors welcome.
.
GOOD FOR GRAND RAPIDS.
Hastings rejoices in the good for­
Townsend Plan meeting. Eptecopal
pariah house Friday night. Jan. 10. tune of Grand Rapids in securing a
1830. 0 o'clock. This is the night for new factory to manufacture auto­
the election of officers. All mem­ mobile bodies for the General Mo­
tors co. it will require an Invest­
bers urged to be present.
ment of (7.000,000 In the plant and
Miss Jean Barnes will present the will give employment to 2.000 men.
program on "Significant Contempo­ There is no envy In Hastings but
rary Fiction” at the Women’s Club much gratification over the help
meeting to be held Friday after­ this new factory will give lo our
noon. Jan. 10. This week Friday neighbor. Grand Rapids has been
the furniture center of the country.
will preside when "The Value of That hurt when the depression hit
Radio
In
Music
Appreciation." the furniture trade an awful wal­
"Sketches of Radio Artiste," will be lop. The new plant will diversify
given with the assistance of some the Industries of Grand Rapids, and
club members and several students that win help.
who are home for the holidays.
8 TART WORK THIS WEEK.
Hastings Extension Group No. 3
It is expected that the contractors
met at the home of Mrs. Blanche
will begin work on the new consoli­
Lewis, on Dec. 13th, with Just an
dated school building at Delton, and
afternoon meeting the subject of the
on the new addition to the Thomdiscussion being sleeve fitting.—Mrs.
apple-Kellogg consolidated school
Blanche Lewis, Sec.
building at Middleville this week.
Hospital Guild No. 14 will have Both buildings will be completed os
a dessert party, bridge and other rapidly as possible.

listening. The woman in question
was the one who wrote to Pres.
Roosevelt calling his attention to

CONSUMERS

Court News

r

�The Hastings Banner

HOME

ditorials

iuntoou
t„.lto».
Ranttam
Observations

HUT.
। administration have given us a
,y-elght thousand ' "rubber dollar" without any definite
: tn automobile ac-: value which may be inflated or deyeer while a million and fiated at the whim of Washington,
injured. Qt these ' official*. '
d and fifty thousand 1 When he took his oath ot office,
for Ufa. Not an en- Mr. Roosevelt swore to uphold and
for » country which | protect the Constitution of the
that It ba* more tele- । United State*. The NRA and most
da. electrical wiring. I ot the New Deal legislation has

lea

poverty j been called unconstitutional. Yet the

class plumbing than 1 president in a message to congress
fan tn the world! In ' relative to new laws advised legis■* country even approxi- j latora not to let the question of conl record. We arc unique as stltutlonality hinder their actions.
who accept Oils annual1 The Democrats four years ago
ot Um highways as a mat- promised ''Strict and impartial enune. Many citizens who' forcement of the antl-truat laws to
with righteous Indignation prevent monopoly and unfair trade

practices and the revision thereof
for the better protection of labor
. and the small producer and dls' tributor." The New Deal gave us the
NRA which literally suspended the
anti-trust laws, encouraged mon­
opoly and helped the big at tlie ex­
I ACCUSE!
ise me present admlnlsUa- pense of the small industrialist and
being the greatest spending produced thousands of pages of ar­
Iralion In peace Ume in all bitrary rulings which for a lime
history, and which has piled had al) the binding force ot laws.
There is nothing in the Room veil
u on bureau, commission on
Hasten, .and has failed to an- administration whld) even approxile the dire needs of reduced mates the declarations of either
ng power of our people.
major party. 80 far the Roosevelt
• federal extravagance and Im- program has come nearer to meeting
fence bear a doable evil; our the campaign promises of Socialist
: people and our business can- Norman Thomas tlian it has to any
i carry its excessive burdens of other platform.
tUaUan; second, our credit »truc—'~~
lure is impaired by the unorthodox
MONUMENTAL ISSUES,
federal financing made necessary by , Sometime before he b through
the unprecedented magnitude of making new stamp*. Mr Farley
tbeee deficits.
' should put out an issue in honor of
I regard reduction In federal the real "forgotten" man. the averspandlng aa one of the most Impor- ! age clllaen who takes pride In look1 revolvers of gangland bepop. drive their own •'me­
I
projectiles" down the
roads without the least rehuman life.

tant issues. In my opinion It is &gt; Ing after himself and his own busithe moat direct and effective con tri-1 ness. in meeting his obligations
button that government can make j when they are due. who keeps faith

to business—Let us have the courage with the government and institu­
te atop borrowing to meet deficits. ’ tions of this country despite huge
Stop the deficits!
spending programs which help to
• - • .
1 keep his out pocketbook well
No! we are not embarking on a drained. Also he might put out an
tirade against the present adminls- ornamental set featuring the dlfitlon. Wb are simply quoUng ex- ferent types of animals and crop*
|pta from the speeches of Mr. wniCh have been destroyed, a policy
oaevelt when he was campaigning whtch resuitcd ln more expensive
• president
(CXKi to everyone and better markets
appropriate they are to the tn thU country for foreign pro)M situation. Nearly four years ; ducfrs who ^shed in to fill the
before he had even assumed 1 VOld. In fact after Mr Farley has

Bow

I, Mr. Roosevelt uttered the run
ganiut of our National parks
. eloquent condemnation of ills Ubfn. u no Cnd to the variety of
Inlstratlon that has yet been । subjects which he might feature.

---------------------------------- I
TRUE WORDS.
|
Wasn't It Abraham Lincoln who ।
said: “You can fool some of the'
people some of the lime; you can ।
foot part of the people all of t*
—,
the
time but you cannot fool all of I
the people all of the time."
J
/
1
OP NO PARTY
We believe that II is possible to

1

A WASTE OF TIME
Explanations are a waste of lime.
n |&gt;eOp)c want l0 believe badly
about you. they will and there is
noiblng you can do about it. But
don't worry, you are the one who
really knows whether or not you are
in the wrong.

WELt' IT GOT VOTES!
Candidate for congress Vernor
- criticize the Roosevelt Admlnbtrs-; MBln appears to be in a most unuon without criticizing directly the comjortable position. He chamDemocratic Party. For Mr. Roose - pjoncd the Townsend Plan to get
veil to not a Democrat. His ad- lUnu&lt;lf some votes and after hb
•mlniatralinn
_________
_ ...to&lt;_be_ _the
- logical
_ ■
mbUatratlon has rrnuriiared
repudiated almost i ........
vteterrhe
appeared
•very promise which the Democrat­ one to lead the cause in the House
ic pqrty made four year* ago.
I of Representatives. But Mr. Main
The Democratic Party since the docjn’l seem very enthusiastic about
time, of Jefferson has always cham- havmg this job thrust upon him.
ploned the righto of states against :n tBCt n
appears that he
encroachment by the Federal gov-1 wouj(j nke w d(xjse the Issue entire-

ernment. Under Mr. Roosevelt we jy. that he doesn't like to have the
have witnessed a centralization of Townsend Plan mentioned any more
.• power and authority which amounts than is absolutely necessary. ’
' ta dictatorship—or rather did until | It doesn't seem to us that the vic­
tory o! Mr Main is one to which
' Republicans can ]»lnt with verymuch pride In fact, many Repub• tcred numerous Joyful Jokes al the llcans hate to hear the name of Main
, expense'of the huge new office । mentioned Just as badly
building erected during the Hoover Main hates to h
--Townsend Plan.'
building but less than three years
Uter It w*s Insufficient to house the
multitudinous boards, bureaus, commi—irrrv etc-, added to the Federal I Business has picked up lo such an
| extent that numbers of firms are
payroll by Rooaevcll. Farley. Tug­
। again ordering two bottles of black
well A Company.
The deficit when Mr. Roosevelt ink at a lime.—Memphis Commcrentered office was about seven bil- cial Appeal.

Pungent Paragraphs^

UOU dollars

In spite of promises

b„4 UM »«■» whirl,I ™h
■Muuw
to •
I ‘‘S’"11”

“«&lt; T"

“c““' w“u' c“l

-WevtU
jre billion dollars to the
within the first two years
“ election. Fast work you
I listen lo this.
George Washington
lo
Wilson. 124 years. Federal
__tres amounted to *24.521,‘ Rooaevelt's
expenditures.

DAY, JANUARY 2, ISM

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

IIGAN

boola.

&gt; Spirit of a Cammtmitjr
t Count*—Not Ita Sisa

I3u.ow.ooo
«•«

',K ““ 1''°

figures.—Weston (Ore.t Leader.

John B Turrell thinks that music
helps people lo move more quickly
If a motor-horn can be called music,
it certainly does —Punch. /
Paper that cannot be/torn has

been Invented in Japan Tliat will
■■ rough 1834 and eallmated be fine for international treaties.—
and IWfl will amount to Flint (Mich ) Journal.

“Where," asks an editor, "is Amerthis record with such
lea's best farm land?'' Speaking off­
uttered during lite camhand. we'd say It is washing down
the Mississippi —Detroit Free Press.
to meet deficits.
Tlie first robin to truly American

Party promised
Uicn lias nothing lo do but stick
around.—Atlanta CcusUluUoo..

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

innc

fortunes,
but
meet
ihtni with fortitude
—Virgil

:nnc

1
‘
'

□nnc
।

RfAYOIt LA CUARUIA ot New
York bas placed a Lan on
artichokes, which should maks
arifehokei a popular Manhattan
dish.

“Woman awarded perfect driv­
ing prize In Kansas City. Mo."
We're from Missouri, too.
"Four barns could ba painted
iltb the lipstick University ot
That isn't so much, figuring 10
coals to each rumblescat date.

Tbs young ladles Insist that one
ot those on the corner has eyes

BEWARE OF PROMOTERS
Since the announcement of the
proposed extension of rural power
lines the highways and byways have
been full of salesmen, promoters
and organizers tn certain secllofb
of the county attempts haic been
made lo organize the farmers for
the benefit of promoters Member- i

1*1

Editor Banner —Congress will! interested in and tors both,
convene cariy
early in
In aiuiuaij.
January. One of
am *,v*,*/
greatly interested ui
In the
w
,
. .
icunveoe
ji »n&gt;
Well, 1930 should at least be In- [the first measures it will consider mysteries of the grand old Pacific
। leresttng. A presidential election [ wm be the immediate cash payment ocean, more so since reading your
year in this country is anything but of the world War Veterans' adjust- articles. I searched thru the library
UuU
I ea iervtee certificates, otherwise and found a book called "Tlie Lost
II
Aitn t u
h ..
it .i
nr iI1 known
known as
M Um bonus.
bonus Three
Three and
and one
one Continent
Continent of
of Mu."
Mu." written
written by
by Cm.
Col.
at&lt;
. .t .i
I AlUiough it to particularly needful
mnuon 'world War veterans.1 Jama Churchword. By hla re*e*rch
| to keep cool-headed during an elec-, holding these certificates wander ; and the research of other acienllsts
■ J10un
1,1 lnk clcarly and act, wllat congress U going to do about ‘ it has been discovered that the lust
IndependenUy. It la a time when them. The answer is—Congress is' continent was inhabited 50,000 years
1 most of US—at Ira-1 the Ml nrr r^nt ■
,
1 ago and ,u.&lt;
that it extended In the
Pacific ocean from north of Hawaii
7— . . ---------- i more, rut wic ia*s ten jwa
cltemenl. in
fact, we----------------------------elect our pre*!-' oonua nwAlure
presented to m
as iki
far south
--------------measure hM
nas been
occn jhvwuwm
*&gt;umi as
■* me Fiji
rij* and
»«iu Eastdents
in much the same
spirit
that
to. coiuiacren
comidered ana
and lurucu
turned uwu
deem vj
by rtr Island*: that it was the first habl—
~
"
---------—
io,
fnr
raa.-. at
at a
■ I rn' Mrti&lt; _rn 1935
__ Congrcs*
_
.
. . _a
__ -__a ■ . a. .
_.
*V*
‘e rrMU. ^°
r
hrnne team
passed
tat of man and of a high civiliza­
baseball or football game. Wc know lhc mentire only to have it vetoed tion; that it was a beautiful tropical
tajulvjnc who »» WM to win Oy
He„r y« hu country of valleys and low rolling
nhowth Mltlom why, «nd n unu« ■
axnwyrau. enouih to hills; that' «here were many largo
ourselves bv
by hurllna
hurling catch nhrases
phrases pass
.v. the bill &lt;&gt;
over that veto, altho it cities on this continent and a pop­
back and forth which usually have lacked only nine votes in last Con- ulation ot 64.000,000 and that the
about as much bearing pn the ques­
people of this mother land of man
tions at hand as the mass cheering
What I want to ask the World drifted eventually to other coun­
at a football game.
War veterans of this county is—Are tries.
we going to let congress or the ad­
The scientists were able to de­
Ona happy feature, however. Is ministration give us the same old cipher the symbols on tablets and
the fact that presidential year tem­
stope wall ruins and learned that
pers usually coal down just about Ing to do something about Itfi
as quickly as thfy heat up.
The Veterans of Foreign Wars has 12.000 years ago tlie earth's crust
led your fight for the cancellation of commenced to be broken up by
One major Issue during the com­ this debt for 10 yearn. It deserves eartnquakes and great mountains
ing campaign is likely to be the his­ your support. You can give that sup­ were forced up from the depths be­
toric one of states' rights vs. strong port by writing personal letters to low and formed volcanoes. During
centralization; only this time the each of your senators and represen­ that time most of the great conti­
roles of the two major parties will tatives in congress, demanding im­ nent sank and R is believed that the
p.ymr... ot
», me
u„ bonus Get
or.,
«»d
Ube reversed. The Republicans will I mediate payment
““
be defending the doctrines of your m.iX. Mlthbor. .nd luaUy £«■ "'•&gt;»« “
u“t a“1 n0‘ cnllcriV tUmppear.
Thomas Jefferson while the Demo­ to wrtU tetter, iUao
It
.very
.et.r.n
„
d
I*
InwmUitj
lo
™d
o/.
crats will be forced to defend the
will do thU. cowtroM -UI S“
“’■,urviews of Alexander Hamilton.
Otod .nd obey. Consreu will b.ve . “*• •“»,
«“'&lt;1 “W",
and wonderful work
Our guess, however. U that the unnd««k.bl. iwdetw. ol th. »U&gt;.«! immense ruins Mtd
’’ Che—e people ol long usex
planks of both parties will SOUND ot ll.e oeool.' Your rrure,enlutlve In I
pretty much alike. But party plank* Congress is there to aerve the peo-'
and party practices have very little pie. It is up to us to tell them what .• these Islands and the scientists have
out that these same sym-e
I in common. Party planks arc not we want. Don't be a hiicli hiker. I also
“"5 found
1
drawn up presenting alms and ob­ Don't expect the V. F- W and tne toU.
' which have been deciphered,
Jective*. but rather to supply a col­ American Legion to do all your' have been found in the United
States,
on
stones, cliffs And the
lection of statements, “promises.'' fighting. Gel in there and help
walls of Die cliff house dwellers In
etc., which the party thinks the them.
Oregon. Colorado. Arizona and also
public would like to hear. Bait to
Yours very truly.
‘ in Mexico, allowing that in all prob­
attract the voters, in other words.
Wesley B. Webb.
' ability our first dwellers came orig­
Publicity chairman.
The wisdom of the Colonial pa­ Post 3324. Veterans of Foreign Wars. inally from the continent of Mu.
I believe I he readers of the Ban­
triots in forming a united govern­
ner. who enjoy your articles, would
ment with the legislative, adminis­
Dear Mr. Cook:—I am sending to
be interested tn thia book end what
trative and Judicial branches en­
have
the
Banner
renewed
for
anoth
­
makes
the ix»k more interesting is
tirely separate has been demon­
strated during the past four years. er year. Il is like receiving an in­ that you have been on some of these
One branch may temporarily relin­ teresting letter from home every Islands, which were once port of the
quish its power but it is not prob­ week and I want to tell you how lost continent.
able that all three will ever do this much I have enjoyed the arUclcs , I can't realize that now fou are
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY. at the same Ume. The administra­ you have written in the Banner having winter for here It b bright
about your trips, especially of your and sunshiny every day—roses, calls
Ti»c new city hospital was qpened tive branch absorbed the legislative
trip on the ocean and vtalls to the. lilies and other lovely fiowt-r* In
on Tuesday. Mrs. Herbert Brown branch during the early stages of
bloom. &gt;I wuii
wish you nu
al) n
a mere
merry
has been employed as housekeeper the New Deal and os a result mea­ islands, about tlie mountains and u«wu&gt;.
volcanoes and other interesting Christmas and a happy New year,
and Mrs- Sophia Nelson, tlie visiting sures were passed which were not In
Mrs Effie M Ickes Foster.
nurse. ha» taken up her residence ■ harmony with'American concepUon things. I live in the bcauUful little
city of Santa Cruz, where the ocean
79 Logan Street.
there. Tne
mere.
The nrst
first operation was per- ,. of "government.
,,. V The Supreme Court
formed by Dr Lowry and Dr. Me-1 SniSl
functioned Indcpunucutiy °
off th
the
5 “
ad
d‘­ and mountains meet and am very
Santa Cruz. Calif.
ministrative
dictatorship and
and so i
Guffin. when they removed a Grand ( m,ntet
™u»e dictator-shin
RapitH man’s thumb. Al a meeting! over-ruled its actions.
pretty good. Ask him about itff1 -

at the parish house, a permanent | While
While tak!
taking u walk one evening
organization Was formed to main-1 j happened
*•---------- 1 to notice that several
tain the hospital, the board con-1 homes looks*.
u«- « rar a*
slsltag
Mrs L. outeldc paint was
,, _ ' of Mr* E._ A, Burton.
_ .
"ao concerned;
uuuitmia; but
out
H Evart*
Evarts. Mrs C. L
L. Bateys.
Baleys. Mrs. A. the
me porches were rather shabby
shabbv It
U nnrvxth
nnrl Mrs.
Mra T.
T Craig.
fTratit
--_____ _ to me
.....................
..
•
. .
H
Carveth and
occurred
that if the
work
former
hall
|
bt
done
reasonably
enough.
1
C.rorer
Rlrhbhl*
thr
fnrtMrr
-ball
could
hidnn.
r^ncnn-Kl..
Ggorgr Stebbins, the L
ce 4*.
player, and Mrs. Bernice
... Ben- people
- would be willing to have
nett, daughter of Mr and
nd Mrs W
W. I their porches painted.
painted, ”ji se&lt;^.
secured
IM
D Bennett, were united in marriage! several orders for this work, and
on New Year's day The ceremony . have made good money,
was [icrformed by the Rev. Carroll'
M. Bates, of the Emmanuel church, i Clara Huhman and the Messrs
A very pleasant social event dur-1 SUgh. Farrell and Huffman.
Ing holiday week for the younger
Lewis returned Wednesday
boclal ret was the party given by 1 Jr°m Ixiwcll to which place he was
the Misses Mildred and Margery ■ called by the serious illness of his
Reynolds Wednesday evening
.
-10
­
। mother. For the first ...
time .in
Mrs L. D. Waters and children | years all the family were together
left Wednesday for Syracuse. N Y.h for Christmas.
At
Detroit
Saturday.
Mr.
E
W.
where
wnvrc they
mrj will
win make
maac their
incir Home
name for
lor , ,
,,T . ".
------- '; • " “
1I
CHc present as Mr. Waters' new । Morrill, of this city, and Miss Gene-.
work'will be largely in the eastern v,e. ®’u*er- of Charlotte, were
I
united
in
marriage.
....
I united In nurriin

Aitia, Sampson came today far a
&gt;?•
’“h
»t I

FORTY YEARS AGO TODAY
Miss Flora Beadle, county
county scnooi
school

| Mr.,
Mr. A
A. B.
n Hedrick. m
Mr.
. Sampson is , compll„e„t
wy,R
k|„
bcU13
: enroute to Chicago, from Pigeon,
vented by Thomas Jefferson." | Mich., where he has been on a busl- elected secretary of the State Coun‘ ' School Commissioners assocua
Later generations ot office-hold­
ness trip.
on.
■
ers mu*i bar* originated the • A number of Hastings citizens are
A special train from Kalamazoo
feel-on desk Idea.
interested in the forming of a mut­
brought over fifty members of Uie
ual'automobile Insurance company. Royal Arcanum who helped the
I with main cfficcs in Hastings and E
home lodge prod the goat for 11
it Caldwell, of Grand Rapids, as su- new members who were Initiated.
been asked of persons seeking in­
। pcrinlendcnt of agencies. Among
Miss Gertrude Stebbins left for
formation regarding live con.'truci those Interested are W. W. Potter Ohio today, where she will visit her
lion of farm power lines.
H O Hayes, F R. Pancoast. Alfred
The slate public utilities commis­
M. Nevins. G F. Chidester. J. D
Mrs. A. V. N Slingerland. Mrs. T.
sion. the Consumers power com- 1
Rente. John F. Crue. C. Mannl. John J Brosseau and the Misses Gertrude
pany. the rural electrification a.--to- '
! P Goodyear and A H. Carveth. of
Sllngerland and
Mac
Brousseau
clatlons and farmers' organizations
। Hastings; w. Nobles, of Coral, and
were at home to their friends Tues­
Join in warning farmers lo go easy
&gt; Bruce L. Hayden, of Saginaw.
day afternoon. Mbs Lettie Gam as■iips and u!c-bcuren set on fitc
’. isted tn receiving and the Misses
the houses they enter."
THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY. Florence Scoby and Katie Lleiis
JANUARY
Wednesday afternoon by Rev. h. served ta the dining room.
I If. VanAukcn. Mr. Fred Fairchild
Mr. and Mrs, W. E- Merritt, of
and Miss May Richardson were
were'I Eau&gt;n Rapids, attended ...«
the m.,,
dance
, united in marriage. They arc very at the Hastings House last night
on paying membership fees in now
lushly esteemed young people of |
organizations until a full investi­
thb city and the congratulations
FIFTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
gation is made of the promised
and best wishes of a host of good! At the annual meeting of the En­
benefit-’. There appears to be no
friends go with them in their new dowment Rank K. of p. Thursday
necessity for paying dues to any
J—Bnthh Ism to Amtnci.n
estate.
evening the following officers were
organization lo secure power line
The Hastings Woman's club very elected: president. E. Y- Hoglc; vice
extensions.
fittingly observed Bible Day at ita president. Robert Dawson; secretary.
"Beware ot rackets Hung onto
Friday altaraoon meeting.
Mrs. U E Knappen; examining physld««i» ptrionoed by Dr.
your cash." arc warnings that should
Geneva Hiyes presided and Uie
be heeded.—Ingham County News.
.prograni was given by Mrs. Belle
Quincy Hynes is now clerking al
Burton. MIm Grace Radford. Mrs. Will H Goodyear s drug store.
THE CANADA AGREEMENT
Ellen E Robinson; Miss Editn Loin-­
On New -Year's eve at the resi­
While the arrangement between
otter. JMJ.
bard. Miss Charlotte VanAuken and dence of me bride's mother were
President Roosevelt and the Gov­
others.
united tn marriage the Rev. R. A.
ernor General King of Canada will
The Hastings Transfer company Carnahan and Miss Anna Holbrook.
suit some people, it will aggravate
pru.d&lt;nt. 41*1. 1919.
has a fine new hack. Frank Flfield daughter ot Mrs..L A- Holbrook. The
Just as many more. It is our own
acting as driver.
newly-wedded pair took the train
belief that the friendly relation­
Burnette More has come from for St Peter. Minn., where Rev.
ship. which requires no tx&gt;rdcr
Hancock. WU., to make his home Camahkn has accepted the pastoguards or the like, would be en­
wilh his untie. J. T. Lombard.
rate of the Presbyterian church.
hanced and prove advantageous to
The front page of this Issue car-1 On Tuesday evening, at the ret­
both countries If we had no tarifi
ries a letter written by Mrs. Mar- ’ dence of the bride's parents. Mr. and
barrier* at all.—Grand Lcds? In­
garet Bailey from Egypt describing I Mra. D. J. Heath, were married N. T.
dependent.
.
•
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
a visit to Cairo and the Pyramids.
Diamond and MIm May RtwUt.
A pleasant sactol affair was lite
DEER HUNTING
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Davenport.
should Old Man p :pr ssion take .“Pact* axe only possible between euchre party given Wednesday night Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Bales. Mr. and
peoples
when
those
subscribing
to
by
Mrs.
Charlotte
Russel!
and
Mr.
an air trip over wc
the up-siatc
up-state aeer
deer
country and see an army of #0.000
B
8°d*' “ 8. Kopf at the home of the former. thews and Mis* Dora Kennedy. Har­
hunters on the runway*, he would
p AAssisting in receiving the 125 guests1.,
ry Andrus ----------and Miss Blanche Hencrawl in some hole and pull It ta 1 Do what you can. where you are. were Mr. and Hrs. RT. French, of' derahott. A. M Woodmansee and
after himself. An average expense of ’ wRh
A.*. ^hut yQU have.—Theodore Middleville, and Dr. and Mr*. • Miss Carrie Travis and William
Charles Russell. Mrs. Ida Wood Louden were ta attendance at the
each hunter of g3o root counting Roose re It
poker games-, means a total of 62.'
catered and was assisted by the reunion of the Barry county slu7U0JXJ0, which is at least pruol poel- • Pride is as loud a beggar as want, Mtoaca Carrie Andrus. Evelyn Kopf.; dents and alumni ot Ute Michigan
live some people have spare cluuigc. and a great deal more saucy.—Eng- Glenna Pancoast, Wilhelmina Bates.' Agricultural Ooltogt held al the
Bessie Warner, Franc Lombard and | Hasting* House Nev Year's night
-M7htt Howell. Chesaning Argus.
; lish Proverb.

Crumbs of Wisdom

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

A Quotation
/X) not yield to mis­

THREE PERTINENT ISSUES
If we are to survive as a dem­
ocratic people, the next President
of the united States will have to
pledge a balanced budget
The next President of the Unit­
ed States wiU have to pledge a
sound currency.
The next president of the United
States will have to pledge a demo- 1
btlizatlon of the huge bugtaucracy i
that has grown up all over the
country.
These were the assertion* of
Colonel Frank Khox.
potential
candidate for the Republican nomlnation. In an address in Minnesota
recently. Colonel Knox made plain,
in a devastating arraignment of Mr
Roosevelt and the New Deal and
the contrast of Democratic pledges
with performance, that he does not
believe the present occupant of the ,
Wh(te House wiU do these things,
regardless ot his political promises
Whatever his personal fortunes
may prove to be. Mr. Knox cour­
ageously does the country a gen-1
uinc service by bringing tlie poli­
tical debate so directly to a focus, j
These are serious matters which1
the country cannot Ignore In re- .
lation to them. President Roosevelt
will have to stand on his record
•ecord alal-,
Roc , Ui j
rwdy made—Herman
F...
Northfield (Minn &gt; News.

[III Tte

'Round About Town
Hew lo me line, let the qulpe
fall where they may!

Al polfus nearly lost his new 00a 1
and that red hot Scotch plaid scarf I
His story is good. too!

Understand that Mr ami Mrs.
By .Observing Tommy.
Frank Foote tripped the light fanEngInter Lane of the city watrr tastlc in spite of his game ankle.
works say? that the thermometer 1
* * "
dropped ten beldw xero Monday
.... that Jim Mason needs to be
All
morning—Not exactly balmy
the cnampeen "caller-outer''
• • • ' mul UrlnK, .n.aon.,,*
»■*&gt;. magenia megaphone!
real bright
All of which reminds us of that
popular old song "California Here I
The "Ladles' choice" dance was a
Come."
,
| disappointment to me. Violet ShroyI er chose her own husband Woe U
’
Did your car freeze up? So did me. but better luck next lime.
mine.
BARBERS CORNERS.
Also the tip of my right car.
•| Mr and Mrs Harold Jones and
; daughter spent Christmas with
I like Archie McDonald's spate.
I Mary McIntyre.
Sunday
nd ay visitors al John Weaver's
Wc,------ '' were Mr. and Mrs Stanley Manker.
They are comfortable things.
I Mr. and Mrs. Lester Brumm and
„
' Mrs. Mohler of Woodland.
Doc Carrolhers wore a pair once. | Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hauer and
t0°; daughter. Mabeile were Christmas
guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn CIuir
Tommy would also like to carry a in Hastings.
cane.
Mr and Mn. L. J. Matthews en­
tertained thirty of the Matthews .
But in a little city like ours there family Christmas.
Guests were
.are some things you Just don't dare from Grand Rapids. Rockford. Mar­
do.
shall and Atlanta. Georgia.
Miss Margaret Snyder of Kala­
People would dub me a freak.
mazoo to spending her vaqitlon with
her parents here.
.
My editor a'jcady has.
Christmas guesta nt John Weav-*
er's were Mr and Mrs. Truman
Hubc Cook had Christmas dinner Muiuon and Mr and Mrs. Will
three hours late. I understand. Ask Flory. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Carpen­
him why|
ter of Woodland.
Mr. and Mra. D. Snyder and fam­
These new stoves with their au­ ily v.rre guests of Mr. and Mrs.
tomatic lime controls arc marvelous Royal Barnum at Stony Point on
contraptions. But even al that they Christmas day.
won t cook a turkey unless there's a
Miss Alice Foley of Cincinnati,
turkey already there.
Chlq, to spending her Christmas va­
cation with her mother, Mrs. Jerry
Science hasn't solved all of th« I Fotey.
household problems yet.
'
. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Preston enteritained guests-from Fremont and
Wonder if Frank Foote is as Maple Grove Sunday.
Scotch as his scintillating new red
... I---------------- » -------------------ter-­ ।
NORTH HOPE.
plaid scarf? Now that is an inter
esting case.
I The Christmas tree and program
। at the schoolhouse wax largely at,J- 1 tended and the teacher ....
j —pupil,
. Anyway, keep ou the alkaline side.
and
Frank.
aid their part finely.
Mr Maurice Murphy spent Sat­
Laurence Barnilt, i understand, is urday and Bunday with her fatter. I
still trying to produce a satisfactory Mr. Hampton, of Delton.
alibi for sending a wedding anni­
Mr. and.Mr*. Charles Wdch en­
I versary bouquet lo his wife one day tertained the following for Christ­
too soon.
mas dinner: Mr. and Mrs. Jay An­
ders. Mrs. John Pran&amp;hka. Mr. and
Dave Boyes does a lot of liUlc Mrs. James Murphy. Agnes Randle
charitable deeds on the q-l.
and son all of this place, and Floyd
and Harley Randle of Clare. Michi­
It's certainly terrible to be accused gan.
of being Obaervlng Tommy by so
Robert Praruhka had the mLformany people and have to relinquUh tune-to be bitten by n dog 8unthe honor for the good ot the cau&gt;cl । day aftertxxm. He u under the docCharlie Fischer and M* Orchestra I Floyd and Harley Randle of Clare,
from Kalamazoo look the Cheer-up Michigan, came Tuesday to spend
Glut) tor a retel "cheering up" the the holidays with relatives al this
night before New Year's Eve. a place.
good Ume was had by all. Including
Mra. Pearl Hull slipped and fell.
youn&gt; truly!
being badly cut on some glass mak• • •
ing It neqesaary tor her to be taken
Wh.it this country needs U bigger to the Hospital.
,
and better "Traffic" dances'
Ruix-rt McCallum attended the
Charlie Leonard s story about the shower st Jim Wilcox's Friday cvehat he nearly lost at the dance la ning.

�TK1 HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. JANUARY 3, 1&gt;M

Social Events and Personal Mention

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Birdsall and
MANY WATCH PARTIES
children visited relatives In Middle­ are visiting relatives In MarshaU
ENJOYED IN CITY.
ville over Christmas and the week

Mr. and Mrs Burt Farrell and Mr New Year’s eve with friends in1
and Mr*. Laurence Farrell and ton. Grand Raplcta
Lincoln, of Carlton Center, spent
Miss Margaret Merrick has been
Mra. Georg* Miller and daughter, Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Ernest home from south Haven for her
Eleanor, spent Sunday in Grand
holiday vacation.
Rapids.
Mrs. Irene Valentine ot Detroit
Mrs. L- Severance and daughter turned on Saturday from a week’s
Lois spent Christmas week in De­ visit with Mr. and Mra. Edw. John­ Edmonds Friday night.
troit and Lansing.
ston snd Mr. and Mra. Robert Flynn
Mis* Lettie Gam was the Christ­
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Barnum, of of Grand Rapid*.
mas guest of her brother, C. D.
Lansing, ware Christmas guest* at
K. R. Sanderson, ^superintendent Garn, of Grand Rapids.
of accounts for the Consumers
Konkle, of BalUe Power company and Mra. Sanderson Christmas v1*1 tors of Mr. and Mrs.
holiday guest of Mr. sperrt a part of Chrtatma* week with Amos Dalman of Zeeland.
relative* in Owosao.
Mrs. Grace Edmonds is visiting
Sil** Lena Andrus, who 1* taking
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Reinhardt
her sister and husband. Mr. and
visited with relatives in Benton a nurae’a training course at Nichol* Mrs. Edwin Pale, of Detroit.
hospital in Battle Creek, spent
Harbor during holiday week.
Mrs. William Frey ot Michigan
Ray Waters and Harry McDonald Christina* with her parent*, Mr. City. Ind„ was the guest of Mrs.
•nd Mrs. Jerry Andrus.
are enjoying a few days of fishing
George colcinan Monday night.
Miss Maxine Wunderlich, who bar. . Dr. and Mrs. M. R. Kinde, of
through the ice at Wall lake.
been home from Muskegon for the Marshall, were New Year s guests of
Mr. and Mrs. prank Andrus and
holiday vacation, spent New Year’* Dr. and Mr*. Kenlth S. McIntyre.
Mary Jane were guests during the
with Belding friends, and will re­
George Bauer returned to his
holidays of friends in Toledo.
turn to her school work Sunday.
work at East Lansing on Monday,
Mr. and Mrs. E- J. Clark and son
Of Jackson were guests of Mr. and! Mr. and Mr*, p. B. Holcomb and after spending Ciirlstmas week at
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Brown of Chi­ home.
Mrs.
Dell
Button
for
New
Year
’
s.
——
---—~
o.
cago and Lem Brown of Milwaukee
Miss Frances Cowles has been
Miss OUve Lathrop of Detroit was attended the funeral of their father,
visiting her cousin. Miss Connie
n c.
n P.
, Lath­
a guest ot Dr. and Mrs.
Charles 8- Brown, on Tuesday after­ Stanton. In Kalamazoo far several
rop from Saturday until Thursday. noon.
days.
Richard Hinkley spent the Christ­
Mrs. Carrie WUrd of Battle Creek
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Allen of
mas vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Flint were week end guest* of Dr. Is visiting her daughter. Mr*. Flor­
Nelson Willison at Hickory Comers. and Mrs. R. G. Finnic and with the ence M. Cook, during the holiday
Dr. and Mra. C. p. Lathrop were tatter couple spent Sunday in Bat­
Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs.
New Year day guests of Dr. and tle creek with Dr. and Mr*. Clif­
Mr*. R. F. Webb at Grand Rapid*. ford Brainard.
*• P. E. Adair were Mr*. Harry Parker
Mr. and Mrs. Rodman Baundera
Mr. and Mrs. Vcm Wellman. Mr. and Billy and Tommy Miller of
Jackson.
of Batesville. Ind., spent the week and Mrs. Edward Stringham and
Guy culbert returned on Tuesday
end krith Mr. Saunders' aunt. Mr*. Mrs. Minnie Bhriner, of Jackson,
James Silsbee.
were Christmas guest* of Mra. to Washington, D. C-. after spending
Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Glasgow and Maude Behomp and her father, his vacation here with ills parents.
I Mr. and Mrs. Sam Culbert.
Miss Sadie Glasgow were In Lan- James Ransom.
Mrs. Henry Phillip* of Battle
stng Wednesday and Thursday, the
Mr. and Mra. Walter Steinke came
guests of relatives.
from Detroit to attend a family Creek and Mra. Leia Ray of Mus­
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Baldwin gathering at the home of Mr. and kegon were New Year’s Day guesta
of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Young.
were here from Chicago to spend Mrs. Burdette Sutton on Christmas
MLss Gertrude Bentley of Kala­
New Year’s day with her parents. day. There were 25 members of the
mazoo was tlie over Christmas guest
family present.
Mr. and Mra. A- K. FrancUen,
of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Lane and
Father Dillon, accompanied by his
Mr. and Mrs. GeorgQ Newton
.
father, J. J. Dillon and his sister. spent Christmas week with their Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Osborn.
Mr. and Mrs. George Crakes and
Miss Adelaide visited friends hi daughter and husband. Mr. and
Detroit Wednesday and Thursday.
Mr*. Burr Cochrane at Coldwater. Misses Marjory Nevins and Prances
Mrs. Prank Foote spent Christmas Miss Marda Newton, of Kenosha. Sutton visited relatives in Grand
i Rapids Tuesday and Wednesday.
week with her mother in Kalama­ Wl" was also a guest
'
Mr. and Mrs
Mrs. Freeman
Freeman Furrow
Mr. and Mr*. Wayne Frey and
zoo. Mr. Foote Joining her there for
Chr stma* jueato of
the day and later for the week enfl. daughter Dorothy Jean of Michigan , ?‘"J
City
were
visitors
In
Hastings
over
lcr
*u,d husband. Mr. and
Miss Bernice Henry, who spent
the
week
end
and
also
attended
the
j
M
”
’
f
1
OHra{’d5*p“K’
the holidays With her sister. Miss
I
Eliza be tli Henry, returned today to wedding of Mis* Theda Jones, of n5^
&gt;^Ur,day
Akron. Ohio, where she-Is a teach­ Battle creek, on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. E B. Wixom. Mrs.
h im RaP“U
er.
.
/-p&gt;
thelrhohday
vacation
Miss Eleanor Miller will'return Bertha Taylor. Mr and Mrs a. W '

Clarence Workman went to De­
troit Friday on business.

Al

‘■fl

for the Watch night parties ushcr- Howard
Club* and neighborhood groups

VanBuricirk
A group of twelve held forth in
uansmg on xuesaxy on ouuncs*.
the spacious diningroom at the
Bookcase factory, the husband* ar­
Mr*, w. A. Hall and Mr*. Fred­
rayed In chef* cape and Jackets,
erick Parker are In Grand Rapid*
cooking the dinner, which counting
Ibday.
celery and like accompaniment*, the
Mrs. R. a. Plfinle (nd daughter. | Victor Munton visited his cousin,
men figured up as a ten-course af­
JoAnne, and BUhr Stebbins spent Charles Munton, of Grand Rapid*
fair. and are expecting s return
Friday In Grand/R.cplds.
endeavor by their wive* of like pro­
Mi. and Mit.4r.“y Clen.en* and
DcForest Walton, Jr., Is vtaltlng
portion*.
Claude spent Christmas u Ith Mra. Mr. and Mra. Jesse Crandall ot
A group of fourteen met with the
.Inna Boynton at Sunfield.
'
Jone
I
Earl Coleman’s for a buffet lunch­
Mr. and Mra Paul Baker of Nitas
Mrs. Eleanor Stridden and Ml**
eon. and had a unique program ot
Helen Knapp spent Christmas at L. spent New Year’s with Mr. and
P. Edmonds’ in Woodland.
Mr. and Mrs. Dell Shively were
The C. W. Clarke s was the scene
Mis* Alice Offley of Detroit visited .
„r Mr anti Mr* nuei
with the home folks. Mr and Mra.;*^! .. “ „
Duel
of a pleasant neighborhood gather­ old lime charivari and entertained
rha*
iof Carlton on Sunday.
ing numbering nine.
at a pot luck supper. Their depaxtCnaa. Offley, over Christmu.
Harold Hller ot
Mr. and Mrs. Findley Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent EgKleston of icxiu vthted Mr and Mr*. Tho*
gave a bridge party for eight at
Butlle Creek were Sunday guesta of I Baird over New Year’s.
their home, top scores being won by
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Densmore.
I MIm Dorothea Brouard of LanMr. Edmonds la employed at the
Dr. and Mra. Frederick H. Taylor ; ring was the guest ot Miss Margaret
Cordes.
Kellogg Sanitarium in Miami dur­
»pml Hn
day MU&gt; her r.u&gt;- mcitkk X
over me wees eno.
.
Dr. and Mr*. Ray Finnic’* home ing tlie winter month*.
er,
Prof.—E.—8.
Eastmiiwuu
Lansing.ruxiM,
Miss Mildred Punk, who kxwkx
teaches
----------- King,
—w. -of
--------A wide circle of friends ex^H*
w**
the
gathering
place
for
a
group
Rault Bte.
fUe ■ in Niles,
Uiu. was
—&gt;k.
—
c,.n.
Rev. Charles A. Hobs of Sault
the guest
of Miss
Stell*«
of twelve for a pot luck dinner, fol­
Marie 1* spending a few day. with Heath part of the past week.
lowed by a midnight lunch at the
hU parent*, the Rev. and Mr*. T. H. I Mr*. Nell Proo* and daughter
Dr. K. 3. McIntyre’*, the Earl Ware­
Ho°®,
I Jeon ot Grand Rapid* are vUIUng
ham's. Gay Jordan's and Dr. and CLUB ENTERTAINS
Miss Charlotte Beumer *as home Mr and Mr*. Guy Giddings,
Mrs. Kinde being guests present
YOUNG GIRL.
from the University hospital. Ann , comrade T. O. Webber is making
from away.
Member* of the U. A. D. Sub-Deb
Arbor, from Monday untU over New *n extended visited with his daughThe Cliff Dolan’s, the D. 8. Good­ club entertained a UUte seven year
Year’s.
.
. IUrl *1 Clawson, near Detroit.
year
’
s
and
Mr*.
John
Noble*
Joined
old
girl,
who
lacks
many of the
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Faul and
Mrs. Lillian Osborn and daughter
friends in Grand Rapids for a watch things that make a happy and care­
Marietta were Christmas guest* of I of Battle Creek visited Mr. and Mra.
night party.
free childhood. Friday evening at a
Mr. and Mrs. Richard O’Brien of ! Leo Taffec the first of the week.
Another
group
met
with
the
Ar
­
Lansing.
, Ml„ Ad* Michael and Miss Helen
chie McDonald’s for a pot luck din­
Mr. and Mr*. Raymond Faul and Wooten relumed to Detroit last
ner. with a midnight lunch at the Green street. In the afternoon the
little son ot Chicago were guesta of, night after a week’s vUlt with relaDr. Pratt’s.
members of the club bought a com­
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Faul over the 1 lives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Chet Hodges home plete outfit of clothing for the child,
week «nd| Mr. and Mr*. Roman Feldpauach
was the scene of another pleasant using money they had earned In
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Burges* and and family were Sunday guesta of
New Year’s dinner.
various ways, and this and other
Alden, and Mr. and Mrs. James I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Parker of
A group of friend* met with the small gifts were presented to bar
Benham, had dinner with Mr. and , Middleville.
Ralph Kerr’s on 8. Park and en­ after the dinner. Games were played
Mrs. Harold Hawk* of near Dowling, | Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mansfield of
joyed
a
musicale
as
their
New
Christmas Eve.
Battle Creek were guest* of her parYear’s celebration.
Mrs. Clara Wilke*. MUs Pauline , ents, Mr. and Mr*. jUvah Sceber. on
Two tables of bridge were in play Louis, and Miss Connie Cook were
Todd and L. J. Todd of Eaton Rap- Mew ’Year’s.
Id* were Sunday guests of Mr. and | Mr. and Mr*. WUlard Perry and
VanBuskirk at a New Year’s eve Zatae Eastman are the sponsors for
Mra. George Sheffield.
son of Midland were guesta of Dr.
party, winning scores were held by the group and assist tlie girls in cvMr. and Mrs. Frank Kelley of I and Mrs. B- A- Perry the tatter part
Dr. and Mrs. Guy C. Keller.
Kalamazoo and Mrs. Basil Frisbie Of the week.
These are Just a few of the many
and daughter of Detroit were SalMr. and Mrs. Earl Johncock and
more parties which took place, but. SIX MONTHS TRIP
urday guesta of Mri. Mary Burges*, three children of Prairieville were
for lack of Ume cannot be gathered.
AROUND THE WORLD.
Mr. and Mr*. A. B. Gldley spent | chrtatma* guest* of Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday in Owosso, bringing back e. A- Parker.
Dr. and Mra. E. J. Pratt will en­
CHEER-UP DANCE
with them a seven months .old baby I Mr. and Mrs. George Sumner and
tertain her sister and husband, Mr.
WELL ATTENDED.
boy. whom they have named Phillip Miss Susanne were guesta of Mr.
Seventy-five couples attended a
Allen.
and Mrs. Frank Denner of KatamaFrivery successful Cheer-Up dancing day. This is the. first stop tat Mr.
Mr. and Mra. F. J. Kussmaul and
Lois. Jess Baldwin and Miss Ed­
“£! “r.and Mrs. Carl W. Wesplnter party Monday evening at Puller and Mrs. Laughlin on a trip aground
Mrs. George Heath and Miss Sunday to Birmingham, where she 5“^ “r MX!!r
Hall. The guests thqroly enjoyed the Ute world. They will sail from New
wards of Ktriarha.-xx) spent Christ­ Stella Heath are visiting Dr. and is a teacher In tlie public schools,
8??rday
H£,r.
music furnished by Charles Fischer York City, through the Panama Ca­
mas night with Mr. and Mia. Ray Mr*. W. A. Lampman of Marlon for after spending the Christmas vaca­ Arthur Keiser, all of South Bend.
1
,Wi,yVca; and hl* round the world orchestra
tion with her parents, Mr. and Mr$. Ind.. Mias Florence smith and A. B. ^Ly’ ¥,r
Clemens.
nal to the South Sea Islands, and
the .balance of the week.
Stone, of Michigan City. Ind., and
Jr" and Mn' &lt;3ar ’ H1' oi of Kalamazoo. Former residents who on to the Orient. On their return
Kirk Foreman, who Is in a CCC
Mis* Florence WaUlns returned to George F. Miller.
returned for tlie party were: Mr.
l’
,,
.
Mrs. Cora Parker had a family Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dewey ot Lan-.
camp at Gaylord, visited his parents. Wyandotte Sunday after spending a
PaUT su?‘n
return on and Mrs. Ed. Kurt*. Detroit. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Foreman, during week’s vacation- with her parents. gathering at the Parker House over sing were holiday guesta of Mr. and : a
’ . ..
_ .
Saturd.iv
Saturday to her home In
in nt
St. Iziul*
Louis and Mra. Hubert Blakney of Grand York. They plan to be gone about
Christmas week-end. Mr. and Mrs.
Christmas week.
Mr. and Mra. Walter Watkins.
aftea^stpendlng the holidays with Rapid* and Dr. and Mr*. M. R. six months.
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius MannI
Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Slnklcr and Frederick Parker being here from house.
Miss Beatrice Giddings of Battle ; her gra^parenta. Mr. and Mrs. Kinde of Marshall. Judge and Mra.
were in Grand Rapids Sunday to Mr. and Mra. Edw. Shultz vlrited Bloomington. Ill., and Mr. and Mrs.
i Kellar Stem...
| Stuart Clement were chairmen of
Dan
McDougall
(Beatrice
Parker'
see the latter’s brother who had the former's slater, Mrs. Gertrude
Creek and Miss Katherine Giddings ’ Mr .
FAMILY PARTY ON
apd .’40. Ralph Boyer and the committee in charge and were
and twin daughters of Lansing. of Holt have been spending the holl-.
suffered a stroke.
CHRISTMAS EVE.
Grote, of Otsego on Saturday.
days with their parents. Mr. and ’a,/,}tef.
”’
of , Toledo.
*T------ - O..
'"'i■ a*ri»ted by Mr. and Mra. Robert
Bernard Caln of Schenectady. N,
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Garrison ot Mra. Parker Joined the Frederick
A delightful family reunion was
Joy °S
were O'Connor. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Haw­
Y.. and Miss Rachel Cain of Lan­ Cloverdale were guests of Mr*. Ella Parker’s at Albion for Christmas Mrs. ouy Giddings.
Clothing and Sh
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ingram. Mr
°f lhflr n,oUlCT’ Mrs thorne. Mr. and Mr*. Clyde Wilcox
sing were Christmas guests of their Hammond on Christmas, the latter day. the latter couple leaving for
Herbert
Bishop
on Christmas Eve.
for Men and Bi
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert McGlockhome, Friday, where Predeitek has md FknX
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Theron Cain, entertaining with a family party.
mm
. .
‘"S'SukcJS I ,'“"™“ °“
T
.„d. Mr. lln. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Eaton will when air of their children were
of Rutland.
HASTINGS
Mrs. E. C. Douglass and Miss a busy week refereeing basket bail
1 be chairmen of the next party.
Yuel McLeod. Miss Lucille Mc­ Edith Van Wicklan of Grand' Rap­ games on tlie Illi-Iowa circuit dur­
moving today to Lansing for the
little Mary Louise Smith.
Leod. Robert Gaskill and Philip ids were guests ot Mrs. D. N. Stuart ing the college vacation period.
TO BE MARRIED JANUARY IL were Mr. and Mra. Orley Btahop
winter
inontlis.
They
will
reside
at
Tumcsr were Bunday dinner guests and Miss Dona Stuart on Sunday.
John isenhath was in Battle
Mr. and Mrs w. L- Hinman and
Dr. and Mra. Robert Bruce Hark­ and children of Holland; Mr. and
Miss iPhyllis Hitjman returned Sun­ 129 E. St. Joseph 8t«.
of Misses Irene and Hazel Hosken
VICCK Thursday
niurauBy evening
cteuina attending niiao
Mr. and Mra. Kenneth Newton of Creek
ness announce the approaching Mrs. Louis Bishop and ton ot Ionia;
clay from
fr
Tawas City where they
of Kalamazoo.
Akron. Ohio, came Tuesday for a a dinner and theater party, as one ।, day
HAPPY HOLIDAY PARTY.
marriage of their daughter. Nancy, Mr. and Mra. Ralph Richardton and entertained with
------- guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gldley re­ vUit of several days with hl* par- ot the winners in a contest that hadwere
A lovely holiday party was given to Robert MacLuro Loff, Kings •on of Hartford and Mra. Sterling
turned Bunday
afternoon
from ent4 Mr. and Mrs. Georg? M. New­ been in progress for several weeks. MusolL during Christmas week.
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Point, Long Island, N. Y,. son of Zerbel and children of Kalamazoo.
Charleston. West Va.. where they ton.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert McGowan
Mrs. ।Walter, L. Wallace returned Waters of Rutland on Friday. Twen­
Mr. and Mrs. John Haviland Loff.
of —Lansing
spent Christmas week with relatives
The
—
Rev. and Mrs.
o. W.. ...
Maylan
nj iixn (Thelma Shively)
.
o were lo Battle crekk on Friday after ty-one old schoolmates and friends The wedding will take place Satur­
and friends.
Jones and family spent New Year’s Kuest* of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. spending the holidays with her fam­ were there in honor of Mrs. Bessie
In celebratioa of the birthday of
day. January 11, at the First Presby­
Shively, over Christmas. Mrs. ily. She 1$ % patient In a private
Mr. and Mrs. John T. LaDue spent Day in Lansing with her sister and I
•Storms of Los Angeles, cal. After terian church, at high noon, the Hon. John C. Ketcham on New
F.
ARoberta
of
this
city
was
also
a
sanitarium
gnd
returns
for
another
the holidays with relatives and husband. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hux- " ‘
“•**
............. .. ‘
partaking of a bounteous dinner, pastor, the Rev. John W. Kitchlng Year's Day, a happy gathering was
month’s treatment’.'
'
friends in Grand Haven. Mr. LaDue table.
guest.
.
the afternoon was spent in retailing reading the ceremony.
held
at the Ketcham home with all
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swrrdlegcr
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wareham and old schoolday events, and 'taking
is superintendent of the WPA proj­
Guesta at the home of Mr. and
Miss Rose DeFoe Is entertaining of the family present. Those who
ect on M-37.
Mrs. Wayne Merrick on New Year’s, of Buffalo were guests qf Mr. and daughters. Jan and Sandra, re­ pictures. Among those present were
came from out of town were Mr.
Rev. E. L. Crocker and family day were Mr. and Mr*. John Ell- Mrs. Roman Feldpauscirpart of last turned Sunday to their home In De­ two former teachers of the Otis In honor of Miss Harkness tomor­
and Mrs. Robert Houston and chil­
spent Christmas and the latter part wood of Comstock and Max Mead of week, visiting Mr. and . Mrs- Chas. troit after spending Christmas week school. Mrs. Allda Bogardus. Chi­ row, Friday evening, at a six-thirty
dren of Dearborn. Mr. and Mrs.
Packer of Kliddleville also over with Mrs. Wareham's parents, Mr. cago. and Mrs. Clara Robinson of dinner given at her home in Char­ John Ketcham. Jr„ and children at Saturday afternoon
of the week with relatives in Hud­ Detroit.
lotte.
and Mrs. Kellar Stem.
son. A sister. Misa Hazel Crocker,
W. c. Paulin and his parents, Mr. Christmas.
Hastings, others from away were
returned with them for a visit.
Gordon
Clement,
Jr.,
of
Belding
and Mrs. R. G. Paulin, of Chicago,
Mrs. Storms. Mrs. Ora Hinds
TWENTY-EIGHT AT
.
C. Sackrider and son ot Benton
lertalned
their
sons.
Hubert
and
Mr. and Mrs. John McLeod. Yuel spent from Tuesday till Bunday here came last week to spend his vaca­
Ceresco. Mrs. Zcra Robertson of
CHRISTMAS GATHERING. Harbor.
McLeod and Mias Lucille McLeod with the former’s wife and Mr. and tion with his grandparents. Mr. and Richard' Fairchild of Detroit, Mr. Middleville. Mrs. Blanche Otis
One of the happy events of
were in Otsego Thursday, to attend Mr*. Herbert Calkins.
Mrs. W. L. Shulters, and since he and Mrs. Wayne Mitchell, son and Lansing. Miss Neba Saunders —
of Christmas was the family gathering
the funeral of Mrs. McLeod’s broth­
came ha* been confined to the house daughter of Rattle
Mrs. near Jackson,
and mm
Miss Orpha
'---- , „Creek
— and
. --------mmvmvu. KIIU
urpns Wuwu- held at the home of Mr. and Mra.
er. Bartlett Nevins, of Detroit.
• Cora Gardner of Freenort
Freeport over Urs of Ann Arbor. Mr and Mrs Smith Will, when 'theft children,
Mr. and Mrs. c. J. Lalir spent Tues­ with the mumps.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner of day in Grand Rapids with the for­
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Buskirk enter­ C
George Harthy of Hastings. Mr. and grandchildren and great-grandchil­
nhutr. Jr.,
.Tr spent
xnrnt Christmas
Chrlxtmor
_
__
_____
-_
.
Lansing spent their Christmas va­ mer’s mother. Mrs. George Smalley. tained the following guests for
John Shute.
Mrs. Chas. Whittemore. Mr. and dren were guests. The bounteous
cation with his mother. Mrs. Erma
Christmas: Mr. and Mr*. Earl Bus­ week with his mother. Mrs. Jake Mrs. Bert Newland, Mrs. Eda Edger Christmas dinner was enjoyed by
Gardner. Mr. Gardner teaches in
Mr. and Mra. Wm. Smith visited kirk and daughters. Mr. and Mrs. Weycrman at Shultz. Other guests and Mrs. Libble Douglass of Rut­ twenty-eight. Those present from
the Everett school in Lansing.
their daughter. Bister M. Aqutn. of Bert Johnson and Arber Bachelder of Mr. and Mra. Weyerman were: land were also present. The day out of town were Mr. and Mra.
Mr. and Mrs. B. D. McMurray of Kalamazoo on Christmas. They of Hastings and Pete Powell of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kenyon of Hick­ passed all too quickly and they had Maurice will and three children and
ory ’ Comers. Mr. and Mrs. Geprge lo part, but hope to meet again Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cable and two
Toledo came Tuesday to attend Ute were also dinner guests of Mr. and Dowling.
New Year’s party at the Milton Mrs. John Smith of Kalamazoo.
' Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Crakes, of Hastings and Mr. and in the future.
children of Battle Creek; Mr. and
Murphy home near Freeport and
Mrs. William Fighter returned on Dalman on New Year’s Day were Mrs. Louis Meyers of the Doud dis­
Mrs Arthur Will and three children
visit friends here over New Year's.
Sunday to her home In Grand Ledge Mr. and Mrs. Amos Dalman and trict.
HONORED FLINT GUESTS.
of Ithaca; Mr. and Mrs. Zagonla Will
Solon Nevins is visiting his sister. after visiting her mother. Mrr&gt;. son Donald Paul. Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Hastings friends have received
Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Finnlo enter­ of Kalamazoo. Others present were
Mra. John McLeod, for a few days Michael Sullivan, and other rela­ Dalman, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence word from Mr. and Mrs. Claud tained with a contract bridge party Mr.' and Mra.. Beryl Will and eight
after Which he will go to Detroit lo tives.
Vanden Bosch and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Kelley, who with their daughter Saturday evening at their home on children of Hastings.
remain indefinitely with iris niece,
Mrs. Ed. Hall of Freeport and Mr. Huxtable and son Robert of Zee­ Opal and her friend June Judd and South Jefferson street in honor of
oum
Mra. Josephine Keel, whose father and Mrs. Arleigh Hall of San Fran­ land. Other guesta were Mr. and Mrs. Kelley’s mother. Mrs. Leavitt, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Allen of Flint. WILL ENTERTAIN AT DINNER.
cisco, Cal., were holiday guests of Mrs. Richard Schilleman and Mr. left recently for Florida, that Utey Twelve guests were present and tlie
Dr. and Mrs. Guy C. Keller have
Mrs. Edith Richardson, who had Mr. and Mrs. M. H. -Hathaway of and Mrs. Robert Schllleman of Has­ had safely arrived at their destina­ bridge scores were won by Mra. Da­ Issued invitations for a bridge din­
been visiting her daughter, Mr*. this ciy.
tion. Jeffrey Hills. Florida. They vid 8. Goodyear and Dr. Kenlth 5. ner lo be given Friday evening at
tings.
plan to remain there for six weeks. McIntyre.
Rollo Mosher, for the nest ten days,
the Parker house.
went to Hastings Wt-dne.-day after­
noon with her son. Arthur Richard­
son and family, for a visit.—Wayland Globe.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred 8. Jones and
Miss Ethel Jones went to Marshall
Tuesday lo attend the funeral of a
brother-in-law. Glenn Bristol. MIm
Jones remained till Wednesday
night. Mr. Bristol was a former
Lacey resident.
Mrs. Miranda 8l.'«)n and Mrs.
HASTINGS' NEWEST
Ida PaimaUer entertained Christ­
BEAUTY SHOP
mas day at a turkey and chicken
"WHIM QUALITY U UIUU
dinner the following. Mr. and Mr*.
Tom Hart and Frank Houtatatter
ot WhUon Comers, and Tom Becker
OPENING SPECIAL
of East Dearborn.
Christmas visitors at the home of
ErW REALISTIC
Mt. and Mrs. w. H. Franck of W.
OIL PUBH-UP WAVE
State Road were their children and
grandchildren. Mr. and Mra. Harry
Bldelman and son Laverne of Pon­
tiac. Mr. and Mr*. Geo Munsell and
&amp; Raymond and. daughter, Bar00
jeanne of Fowlerville.
Tru-Art OU Permanent for Dry Hair
« Complete
WHltarh webcr of Switchback, Va.,
•nd

Marshall with her stater.
Bristol.

rar,

JA

FOR

’1.50

52.50

93.45 JACK!

'2.65

FOR MEN

52.75 JACKET

53.75 JA(

’2.5

57.50 JACKE1

’5.50

Friday, Jan. 3

CHIPSO, Urge box
COFFEE, Maxwell H

COFFEE, Vacation Land .

POST TOASTIES, large box

POWDERED SUGAR...........
HERSHEY’S COCOA, xmall

NOW OPEN!
HOLLYWOOD
BEAUTY SHOP

GREETINGS OF THE
SEASON

mother and brother, Mrs Katharine
Weber and Gottlieb Weber during
the holidays.
MIm Lois Langston, who leaches
at Cedarville, has been spending

MRGAMONT OIL
I7J5 OIL
IA
PERMANENT
Comp.
Toil Know ThU Wave
by reputation

THE FAMOUS
GLO-TONE
PERMANENT

S'

Finest Castile Shampoo and Finger Wave........... 5Qc
Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value for 65c
(For Dry Hair and Dandruff.)
NOT A SCHOOL—AU Experienced Licensed Operator*

Langston, on Tuesday Miss Lang­
ston and Mr. HOMDck «rul to Katamazoo to visit Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Moore (Juanita Longsum).

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE

111 WEST STATE ST.
PHONE 2335
LUCILLE KKMLKU and MARG AM El DAHLKE

MEAT MARKET

PURE LARD.............
FRESH BOLOGNA
PORK STEAK
SWISS STEAK
MINCED HAM

NO Ammonia — NO Borax In.

and hU friend. Ml» Opal Matthews,
a teacher at O- 8. U~ Columbus. O ;
Mr and Mrs. Frank Weber and two
daughter*, and Fred Wber of River

RUB-NO-MORE WASHING
POWDER...............
KELLOGG’S SHREDDED
WHEAT

Success in 1936
and a world of happiness to go
with your success. May each month bring
better things for you and yours.

UNIV€RSAL GARAG€

HINMAI
JU KT HASTINGS

�TOT HASTINGS BAXXnt, ntmUDXT, JANTABT &lt; UM

Banner

1.1 There is also a first edition of tha! etc., that Mr. Carter has collected, i

GRANGE PROGRAMS

।■

WANTS

r । Testament, printed In the Hawaiian !
tea turned over U&gt; the Hawaiian | * nC
r
**
a,-1 Children's Society, to be preserved I-------—
*' J*n”‘8&lt;p' Al n tl
f
,
tor pooeriiy, ao that the history, the ■
1 Testament were printed separately, languorous music, and the language
inu it
n was not assembled
auemmeu into
uiu&gt; a of
ui the
utc dying
uyuig Hawaiian
iiawtiiin race may be
uv
a and
complete edition until 1838. The preserved. The world can feel Infirst part ot the earliest ' edition.! debted to him for his splendid, and

THE CHURCHES]

i ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER- .

Hall's orchard. Fooi
; WASTED

Service

TO

■Illi MCE

«IXT-Stmu

CARDS of THAN!
card

or

MaSUngS Banner

IIUHTIXTH TXaB

was printed in Rochester. New York , erations the happy natives of these
in 1838. m 1837 there was a complete islands of such mystic charm and ’
’
new edition.
; brightness will be no more, and the ; hrlohtnaaa witl l-w. rwi nwvrw end
Mr. Carter has endeavored to 1 moat reliable storj' of them will be
make a complete
complete collectia
collection of all the history that ex-Gov. Carter hu
!*»»**
hook3 printed If)
in the Wk - I L*tt
U\* school twslri
*01},
. I1 Of HARRY COUNTY. HIX MONTHR SOa.
__ _ ____
_ _________
(it paid la ndrano*)
! waUan
language,
beginningJ Wtttl UtS | In a previous letter I mentioned
the eruption
very first ones printed,
and hasof Mauna Loa. from [ IB Bahuy county. THREE MONTHS
successful, though as yet
* £?-V4,,c?
| been very
t------—• which four streams of lava, each a I ’**
of them are missing. The col- mile wide, were courting down the oltJ8Tdvaxcf’ coUSTY’ OX’' gfgo
n as a
very
strong
7t&lt;|0J( B
UBRCRiPTioKi onr YRA
b
• lection
awhole
------------I*—
,---------. in
... mountain side and destroying every- fo
foKMI0J(
BtynaaHyriosik
tram
in aDVaXCB
ss-oo.
i vocabularies and grammars. So far thing tn their paths. As Mrs. Cook
I as is known all the works In Gram- and I, on our trip to the bland of;-------------------------------------------------------—
AD VERT IS 1XG RATES.
Hawaii, passed over some of the
floars
will _
vocabularies he lias added those of territory
, that
,
,these
,, „. lava __
______
many of the South Sea Islands and cross, naturally we have kept track u&lt;juaiBaas loeala aa&lt;
other dialects of the Polynesian 1 of them as much aa we could from t
It on Ant »
people all of which goes to help 1 reports In the daily press A3 this
V^a'dr’ tot
make the collection one of Inesllm- is written it indicates that otte hfva ! ■,«. eonau aa a wi
able value In preserving tiw lan- , stream. 800 feet wide, is making lotarda &lt;4 Thank*
guages of these peoples.
I wards the city of Hilo, with iu pop-1
iru*’
Perhaps one of the most Interest- I illation of 18.000. This lava stream! »rint»d tno ss a
ing. and one of the most valued fat a speed of one mile a day is head- i -.‘"-'.'.‘t*?
hr‘i
items, la a complete collection of the ; Ing for the waler reservoir that sup- , ,1,4s. tbm win
printed minutes of the annual meet- ' plies the city of Hilo “** water. 1 • —
* —
*■ *~
with
w®»d.
each
«x«r» «&gt;a«iinc
ings of the Missions from the year Army planes, loaded with T. N.T. i “,*22X11
cimn&gt;««aurM skImi
of 1830’to 1853. in these little pam­ bombs, hope to change the direction ; i,'r
phlets also appeared minutes of the of the flow by blasting out a new 1 •viiar'a «*— ««d
dropping----------bomba
ahead ot
-----Hawaiian Association of Ordainedcourse
_______by
----------------------------------JOB PRINTING.
Ministers, which cover the years the flood of njelted rock and blowing
from 1823 to 1853. After these an- out a new channel If this should
nual meetings the members of the , prove unsuccessful. Hilo will be hard |
Mission scattered to their stations 1 hit to express it mildly,
on the various islands, and in order ,
that each one should have a record
/
Ervin attended a family gathering
of what had been decided at the an­
at-thq home of their daughter. Mr.
nual meeting, each one was sent a
and Mrs. Larry Walters in Hastings,
printed copy of the proceedings.
Christmas day.
These minutes were thus not print­
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Henney and
ed for general circulation, but were
ion attended a family gathering at
evidently ao highly regarded by the
"The Y. M. C. A. exerts a Ire men- the hpme of the letter's sister. Mr.
recipients that they were treasured, dous Influence upon lite lives of our and Mra. Gilbert Fisher, of Har­
—u .. —_
&gt;.---------------iu.. young men. encompassing their tings, Christmas day.
.
complete collection of spiritual welfare, their mental ex­
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henney spent
them.
_______
pansion._ ___
and ____
their _physical
______ __
de- Christmas at the home of their
After making an extensive and velopment."—Franklin D. Roosevelt, daughter. Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Green­
quite exclusive collection pertaining I Many loads of sand were pul on field and sons of Hastings.
to Hawaii and the preservation of the beach al Camp Barry last BatMr. and Mrs. Frank Aspinall ac­
the Hawaiian language, ex-Gov. urday and even more pancakes were companied Millard and Carl BrechCarter decided to enlarge the scope eaten
- •by
— Robert Kelley. «•••
a elsen and families to WooOiand
Bill —
and
of his activities and Include every­ David Jones. Coach Bennett, and Lutheran church to intend the
thin* thati he could find relating to Horace Angell and his Dad.
Christmas
exercises
Christmas
tlie missionaries, and still later ev­
The Welcome Corners Y Group night.
erything that he could get that re­ meets this Thursday evening at the
Mrs. Prank Hosmer's granddaugh­
lated to the Hawaiian Islands. He home of Max Leach, with Duane ter. Barbara, of Grand Rapids is
has been able to secure copies of a Pugh and Clarence Hackney lead­ spending her Christmas vacation
great many letters sent out from ing.
with Mr. and Mrs. Hosmer.
Boston to various members of the
A meeting at East Lansing of all
m
.. ...
u «...
. of
Mr.
and
Mra. Wm. ................
Zuschnitt
early missionaries and dating back County Y Secretaries has been West Hastings and Mis’ Verda
to more than a century ago; a com­ called by tlie State man. Ray Johns. Zuschnitt of Vassar visited at the
plete set of the reports of the Ha­ for Friday.
‘home of Carl "
Brecheisen
—*•*’— Sunday
waiian Mission Children’s Society,
The Young Married Group met afternoon.
running from 1853 down to the with Mr. and Mrs. Angell. Dec. 37.
Tlie annual meeting of the Has­
present. There is a complete set of for a group supper and had three tings and Carlton Telephone Com­
unmarried couples
as_guesfiu
Games pany will be held at Carlton Center.
In "Memoriam” ot the different mis-_____________
_ _____
---------------------sionaries. Including that of Mrs. and discussion of helpful activities Wednesday. Jan. 8.
Thurston (nee Lucy Goodell) num-, filled the evening, with tha gift of
A let of fellows who spout so pro­
bered among the first shipload of 1 some presents on the side. The next
missionaries to land on the Sand-1 meeting will be with Mr. and Melvin fusely about capital and labor nevir
had any capital and never did any
wich Islands in 1820. Mention uf {Smith.
her was made in a previous letter.
The Young Men's Y Group held labor.

VI RID
fillT "ake *
lUh Illi I
I llU UU I

S

tranki

&lt; Continued from page one)

Bronson haapilal
on these entrancing Islands covered
with palms; tropical trees, larger
than our mapk-a. whose tops are llv-

IS
EVAMOELISTIC MEETINGS.

hues; attractive tropical shrubbery,
and perfect seas of beautiful flowers
ballon
&gt; tkr OMXIrrar NuiMtM. 331 WmI
that send the color-senses reeling.
Vtnsrlitl B. It Widdle and wil
There to-day these happy people
BAPTIST CHURCH.
live &lt; quiet life and * full life in
B. J. ADCOCK. MlabUr.
the
great out-of-doors, fully real­
III I
WASTKIl
Hunday Hrt.»ol al IO'o*e|&lt;Mk:
ising that thry ore nearing the end
as a race. They seemingly give exHpiril—Ur
presaion to their heartbreak in the
JO SO
farewells of “Aloha" In plaintive
Hawk voice that needs no instrument to
sustain its sweetness.
IX MEMORY
Naturally with the define of the
race comes a decline of the Hawai­
im
ian language. Some day it will have
■ml Chlhh
KEG1STERED OPTOMETRIST
disappeared entirely, and works in
u-rbt rn |.iU COATS GROVE CHURCH OT CHRIST. the language will be a curiosity.
BANF1EI4).
'•■tort M-kMl
Faator
Hrhiaol.
The Banfleld Cemetery circle will
Credit—Terms.
solation to know that a former Gov­
, meet with Mrs. Fred Stiles Jan. 10.
:30
ernor of the Islands. Hon. George
Pot
luck
dinner.
v
Watch. Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
R. Carter, has taken It upon him­
Mr. and Mrs. Gene S^-eet spent for malk
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.
self to see that the Hawaiian lan­
Christmas with Mrs. Sweet's ,son.
guage is not to be numbered among
James Bristol, and family of Has­
the "lost" or forgotten ones. Capt
tings.
Cook and other early visitors to the
WESLEYAN
METHODIST
CHURCH.
Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Putnam were
ON COMMISSION
islands were struck by the advance­
with Mr. and Mra. Geo. Ransom of
ment of the Sandwich Islanders over
SHELDON &amp; SHELDON Rutland for Christmas dinner.
4 hilt
Bund*y. Jan. 5—10:00 A.
any others in the pacific. The people
H n S. In,.,I.
11:00 A. M-. itn
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Bellinger en­
ALL KINDS or INSURANCE
. - •■TKi.
Tklm I Ill" T
were honorable; they understood
tertained several relatives Christ­
the value of a contract; they kept
BONDS
mas.
'
word
and when they made -a
art li
-3:00 r. m. him
—
“ ■" —
HIM** their
The school children tn this and
। - 'i
inM-unc
»:3o
j
promise they would fulfill It. They
other nearby districts are enjoying a
■hi. On* Tkin«
showed a commendable spirit
two weeks’ vacation.
w
A
u
,
BiMr
*
Ior
community
effort through their
Geo. Wickwire and Henry spent
11:00 A
irrigation projects, small though
Christmas with his sister. Mrs. Clara
they were, whereas most pagan [jeo| Ransom, and family of Good Will.
ples could only get together for pur­
CHURCH or THE NAXABENE.
Rutland.
poses of defense in time of war—and
Mrs. Daisy Quick of Banfleld be­
many couldn't even do that much.
A VERY
came the bride of James Brass of
llrMdwar.
As stated In a previous letter, the
Battle
Creek
Christmas
evening.
1
HAPPY NEW YEAR
Missionaries from this country ex­
The wedding ceremony took place
8:30 p. M.
erted
a profound influence upon the
at the home of her daughter Claudia
paator. 7:30.
FUR SAM.
development
of Hawaii—then the
in Battle Creek The bride and
Sandwich Islands. As has been stat­
groom will -reside in Battle Creek
INSURANCE AGENCY
ed.
a
Sandwich island lad by the
■ndlllon. inquire al 303 X Iuntil the first of March. .
the name of Obooklah was respon­
National Bank Building
sible for the American Mission to
nASTINOS PARISH.
TOB PUBLICATION.
tlie islands. He was brought lo tills
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
B«v. C. M. Conklin, Putor.
country on an American whaling
Hasting*
MICHIGAN
[ Sunday. Jan. 5—
ship, and was found on the steps
Routt
of a church in New Haven. Con­
necticut. bewailing the fact that his
lirndrrahnl
i
—
Bible
s.
10:00
Fl&gt;K BALK—arimM Oold.n aud Baldwin
Bic
lieople were In utter ignorance of
| sydea. Oro. IHvro.. Pkonr 734- II. I'rrartinir 11:00 A.
■I Probata.
Marlin—Bi
Christianity. "Missionary work" at
11:00 A.
that time had reached such n stage
ill
:00 P. M.
that it could almost be designated as
roar* hw palltlr
IVrlrume—Bible firtool. 10:0(1 A. M.
a "fad." Obooklah's stories of the
godlessness of the Islands fell upon when as Lucy Goodell she became ' their regular meeting last Monday
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
The truth Is an example of how
CHURCH.
intensely Interested listeners. He the wife of Rev. Asa Thurston at ter । evening with some new faces and a
was taken In hand by some of the a very brief courtship, in order that' big program of action. Sub-zero useless streamlines are without a
13S
W.
Wain
nt.
..th
*
good people of New Haven, was edu­ they might embark on their mis- weather and deep snow changed good engine.
I FbE RENT—Hou.
cated In Yale, and spoke all through slonary work together. The' book the meeting place from Camp lo 427
New England soliciting aid to help concerning the missionary life of Young street.
NOTICE OT M0RT0A0B FOBEII 30 A. M
CLOSURE
SALE.
send a mission to the Sandwich is­ Mrs. Thurston was printeebdn Ann
This is the week of special train­
nt llrrknrr
lands. Only highly educated young Arbor. Mich., by the way. Then too. :ing for 8. 8. Teachers and Leaders,
-Ntrelntrr almnirl |&gt;up
people of sterling character, and there Ls a little pamphlet printed In :and the big Institute on Tuesday of
. White ahnnldrr. vrr
&gt;r’a Hhoa Rtrarr
and Ida M. Cat. bl. «ifa, aa mort*
Industrious habits were included in Boston in 1819. containing the ser­ next week. Jan. 7. for all 8. 8. work­
■ra. In Sarah A. Di Um hrrt aa mart'
the first shipload of Missionaries mon delivered when Rev.
Asa ers. officers, and pastors Miss Ione
HIST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
that landed In the Kona district Thurston was ordained as a minister Catton is directing. It wiU be In the
ISCIENTIST.
feature •'Select!v« Pressure
something over a century agd. a but a short Ume before he and Mrs. Hastings M. E. church.
•
Ocatrol”. Nothing else like
Fh..r&lt;
Sub- number of the descendants of those Thurston railed for the Sandwich
Bandar •&lt;
"The wealth of a city depends not
el. ■•Gnd.'
HTRAl Eli
missionaries standing high in the Islands. There are accounts of the | upon Its square miles but its square
folio.
A. Dlllralrark
financial circles of the Islands today. golden weddings—the Alexander, the youth."—F. D. R. .
■ htt&lt;
The Prescription Drug Store
aaalcnairnl 1*1
We doubt if any people ever rose Bishop, both names being very
nr 30fl9
more rapidly from the vices, cruelty prominent and well known in Hono­
QUIMBY.
MICHIGAN
HASTINGS
I will pay the highest market price
and Ignorance ot^iagonLim than did lulu today. There is also an interest­
PILGRIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE'
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Lowell and
FOH BALE
the Hawailans; But in the develop-, ing little pamphlet published at the daughter. Mr. and Mra. Loyal Low­
ment of the resources of the Islands. Ume of the InauguraUon of OaJfU
*Erai&gt;«rtirHr people of other nationalities by the College at Honolulu in 1854. which ell and son spent Christmas with
Mr. nnd‘ Mrs. Samuel Ostroth of
JAKE DePRIESTER. Phone 717—F3
score were brought in. and inter­ is sUll going strong. Strange as It Maple Grove.
marriage is sounding the doom of may seem this college had no small
Miss Gwendolyn Gaskill of Mcthe pure-blood Hawaiian, and the Influence on Uie western part of our Omber visited relatives here Sat­
end of that race. Every decade own country In those thrilling days urday.
marks a significant decline In the of the "Gold Rush." There being no
Robert Nash of Hopkins and Wal­
&lt;4.1
number that remain.
good schools there at the time, lace Bldelman of the University of
mm
LIQUID . TASLSYS HEADACHEEMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcopal).
While Governor of the Territory many of our people who went west Michigan have been spending their
R»v. J. A. MeNoltv. B D. Harter.
of
Hawaii
(1903-19071
Mr.
Carter
and
"struck
It
rich."
sent
their
sons
1929 Model A Ford
COUPE,
325 W. Canter 8L Tat 2321.
vacation with their grandparents,
was shown a report of the Depart­ and daughters to Oahu College In Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bldelman.
good body.
»:00 A. M . Hnlr Communion
ment of Education, telling of works Honolulu. They did this rather than
Miss Evelyn Lowell, wlio is at­
1918 G. M. C. TRUCK with
A M. Chord Euekarid: i»n
printed in the Hawaiian language, endanger their lives by sending tending nurse’s training school in
Pbon.
brautlfui Motart niualr will hr «u
and early editions of school books them across the Indian-infested Detroit. Is spending her vacation
-Middle
1928 rontlar — 1929 Essex
printed by the missionaries, which plains, or risk the perilous trip with her folks.
ISO■ hip A eordial
had entirely disappeared, and even around the' Hom so that they might
Ante Glass Installed
The
Young
Peoples
Sunday
the presence of a single copy was attend a higher Institution of learn­ School class was pleasantly enter­
not known. It preserved a challenge ing in the east.' This only em­
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS and afforded an Interesting "hobby," phasises how the cause of education tained at tlie home of Miss Freda
H. C. Pul
Scott Saturday evening.
A good
Installation and Repairs
Phone 2*37
HssUnga
especially so at this Ume when the advanced in Hawaii, which only a lime was reported by all.
FOIC SALE—Y&lt;un&lt; &lt;&gt; I
1V35.
7:30 Hawaiian race was on the decline, third of a century before was a
Skilled Workmen
The Christmas tree and program
and the Hawaiian language tending pagan country, and such a thing as at the church Christmas Eve were
to become extinct.
a .school was unknown It might be well attended and much enjoyed by
Ex-Oov. Carter has gathered a stated here too that the first news­ everyone.
regular treasure house of Hawaiian paper west of the Mississippi river
Mr. and
. Glenn Kellogg and
Iron NALEliterature, and has done a most was printed at Lahalnaluna. on the daughter
t Chrtatmas at the
BASTINGS
PHONE 2181
commendable work in preserving it Island of Maul, one of the Hawai- formers' parents, at vimondale.
for
posterity.
He
started
out
with
II K A H with MW aid. Four-hftiu ol all
T. 11. Jphnalqn.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Scott of Bat­
E Do«rn«. rraSli
the idea of securing only those Lama Hawaii." Bound volumes of tle Creek spent Christmas
with
I OS items printed In Uie Hawaiian these original publications are In­
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
language, and the outcome was that cluded In Mr. Carter's collection.
Scott.
he accumulated the largest collec­
In his researches Mr. Carter has
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dirk
Hoffman
en­
o Mcaal r»s4ias
tion in existence. Strange as II may uncovered many tilings concerning tertained their children for dinner
II Crsvtsrd r,*dtn*
seem he has secured books and King Kamchamehs. known in Ha­ Christmas day.
O M.enl „.4.n( to,
•
। Heryira Oil Ta., fart •
pamphlets from all parte of Uie waiian history at least as tlie "Na­
Wallace Bldelman. Ann . Arbor;
3 so world, from England. France. Ger­ poleon of the Pacific" which may Robert Nash. Hopkins; Miss FranGrand Rapid*. Mich.
n M many. Italy, Australia, the South lead to the printing of a history of cena Cutler from C. E. I. Chicago;
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
4 00 Seas. America and other lands. the life of thia most Interesting of
Miss Evelyn Lowell. Detroit; Misses
There is the Hymn book printed in all Hawaiian characters
Perhaps Velma and Maxine Kellogg. Paul
10.00 1833 that in some way he found In the next most interesting person­ Conklin from southern Michigan,
Yale university. It was In an out ality connected with the early his­ and Miss Frances Conklin, Has­
tory of Hawaii was John Ledyard, tings. were entertained for dinner
not even regarded as of sufficient an American of whom but Utile has at the home of Mr. and Mrs RLU
HASTINGS MARKETS
value by the University to index IL been heard. He was sent to school Kellogg in Hastings Sunday.
R EmbA
II* is a most unique volume, with at Dartmouth by his parents, but
Mr. and Mra. Pollard and fatnilv
tortoise shell covers, and otherwise disliking study he decided to run spefit Christmas with relatives in
elaborate enough to he associated away. In doing to he displayed the T .ranting
with royalty, inasmuch u Obooklah "dare-devil" tendencies of the youth
Carroll Cutler. 8r.. is quite poorly
of Colonial times. Cutting down a at' this writing. All hope he may
that this book came from the Ud
scon be-better.
responsible for mlsMonarles being hewed out
a canoe, which lie
sent to the Sandwich Islands.
launched one night with the aid of
CARLTON CENTER.
There are only 13 letters In the....
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
New electric lights have been in­
Hawaiian alphabet, and.previous to | termined to float down the river, stalled at Ute Carlton M. E. church
the arrival of the missionaries ; then unknown and unexplored, and and were very much enjoyed at the
there were no schools. Tlie work of ■ infested with Indians, to his home recent Christmas program put on
Miller.
by the Carlton Center school. An
their efforts was to translate the Ing nature took him to England excellent program was given and
Bible in the Hawaiian language, and where as a subordinate he joined that, tn connection with Santa
give
or
sell
printed
copies
to
the
Capt.
Cook's
third
and
last
voyage
you wish trucking service call Hastings
Claus and the electrically lighted
to the Pacific. When the expedition tree, furnished a very enjoyable
Phone 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.
manded not only a lot of work, but readied Kamchadka lie left it and evening for all.
crossed Siberia alone on foot, being
the first white man to do it. He is‘ with Mr. and Mra. Wm. Bavacool
editions of the Hawaiian Bikie, the
on Thursday, Jan. 9. for dinner. Al]
first one printed tn 1838. belh* a can to sec the Sandwich Islands,&gt; Are cordially,Invited.
•
huge, ponderous volume, nearly as now Hawaii. After his return home
Willard Nash of Lansing Is spendthick as it is tall. The second edi­ he wrote a journal of Capt Cook s1 ing his vacation with his parents,
lishta tion. printed in 1843. te said to con­ last voyage. Jared Sparks. President Mr. and Mrs. Guy Nash.
tain U»e purest and choicest Ha­ of Harvard college wrote a very in­
Mr. and Mrs. Garda Tlscher of
HASTINGS BRANCH
waiian. The edition, printed in teresting book on Ledyard s life Lanring spent Christmas with their
1843. is a very rare volume, as only which was printed in 1838.
son. Mr. and Mn. Gerald Tlacher
allowed to go. Brakes, lights and
and family.
pamphlets, letters, historical data.

EO. M. NEWTON

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

JERRY/ANDRUS

r

Guaranteed Truss
Fitting Service

WANTED/

666

1

----------1 ~
FabiuMS trere
••
Mi«h*«»*.
J. '
~

*

c
Bea
deai
peai

Moi
mut
flict
man
nap&lt;
frlei
All
thin,
fron
thin

dlsti
Inga

mu*
peoj

UpU
mar
real
wot
bln
igni

mor

Geo

his

din
mu
onl
to
BUI
drl

•|M
mli
llltl

cln
Ing
till

,F
the
Olli

COLDS

Ion

FEVER

Kir
nm
in

WRECKING

Plumbing and

Heating Equipment

Goodyear Bros.

Deafened

Dead Stock Removed!

SON OTO NE

sat
pa
To
pit
be

c
ini

Btt
on
nei
col

1BJ

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

Jo

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle

s

Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
''
Every Monday.

igan Livestock Exchange

asiiwr

ju

on

K&lt;

01

�I

PAR'i

THE HASTINGS BANNER

S. SCHOOL WORKERS
REPORTOFRED
BEAMIOtflGHTE EUCHARIST BENEFIT SHOW HI
^hat. &lt; at THE DIGEST POLL
Mias Oatton Speaks Twice—
SIMITEB Children's Music to Be
CROSS HOLL Mil
j/tiWtMnk. । ADDS TO 10" VOJE'^ss^a’^
i
Discussed
| .
-------.
'todwkrd
about:
----------op the a
NashVille

CoaU Grove
Good WiU Church
llaatinn Chy
Rualness District .

SPONSORED

NEW DEAL SEEMS

| many te the beautiful midnight
। service and choral euchartel at
Emmanuel
Protestant Episcopal

BY

ROTARY

CLUB FOR CRIPPLED
CHILDREN'S FUND

Tlie Barry county Training clav- WORKERS IN BARRY 00.
[for Sunday school workers now tn I---------- 1---------------------------------------DID EXCELLENT WORK
progress at the Hastings Methodist |
IN CAMPAIGNchurch has been well attended by
workers In the various church Sun-1
; day schools.
TOTAI AMOUNT
Miss lone catton will also speak IUI HL- miyiuuis I
■n*-9. A. M.. M. 1 &lt;» u» -DUU0. |
COLLECTED IS $656.80
of Officers and all school officers
.

3rd Ward
Sth Ward
E W. Bites Employees
Hastings Bookcase Co. em­
I ployee* ........................... ..
Hastings Table Co. employees

34 as
92 45

BOTH

41.00;

RIES WILL

——
EVIDENT
PLETE
____
.
Beautiful actress yiyift
I
”
PROSPECTS
BEST II
dead’
Crazed y^irler turn. N0T AGAINST ROOSEVELT»«.iFILM "ROBERTA” TO BE
peaceful street into a shamble,.
shambles. {
RUT H|S
UlC prl
Pni|-|n|cs
iricc uu.
U113 year
ytul
rervice, the
the r«uUr
regular choir
choir .
RUT
. Mrtee.
SHOWN JAN. 22 AND 23
Sil
PAST FIVE
toui
.8656
80
Mother of three hanged for.
DU^HId rULILItb being augmented by several solo I
&lt;ource
satisfaction
tn
- -w
Il
ta a oisource
of satisfaction
to
...
voices, and former members home
Boyes and Boy
murder. Nurse suspected of in* Republicans Can Win Only for the holiday season. Fine supportDavid
----------- -----------------------. Hub
a
u
l»'“&gt; Chapter Now Doing th. oltor. .nd dweun. u»t tn.. Steady Increa.e in De*
. are able to make this excellent re-!
dieting “mercy deaths'* on helpOn Constructive Plat
ul! «lven Bt lhe organ and piano by bard Are Captains of Teams noon and -.1 : -..took Mb. Canon
Definite Work Among
I^"^dVrXdV.'umMnTu'
8h,&gt;wn
On voustructive
Oon.trj.tlw rialPlat.
!—
j.
leu patients. Confeulon by Haupt- ,
.nd
f _. . .
| port and are indeed grateful to all t
.
Laborers Here
,(K
L.UF
.IjTmSiS
i» &gt;„» . T|
to Sell Tickets
who assisted in any way in making
*"
tnann predicted. Rich man's son kid- |
form in November
jA. McNulty.
*&gt;■«; candle lighted altar. ...w
Tlie two Hasting* furniture IN
and ...»
the , The work of the Hastings Rotary thr subject How Shall We Teach
Archie D McDonald, chairman of the campaign such a decided suenaped. Former President-Hoover [ Forty-one states have been in- ।I The
,'
I Christmas
in the Literary Digest's na-ICl..
—i..— greens made a lovely Club In helping crippled children in for Christian Living?"
irlea to make humorous speech. ... I{eluded
(the Barn- County Red Cross Chap- cc.m. Only through co-operation ufacturtng ptanta will be repreM
was this possible.
llnw
tlon-wlde
poll
the
New Dea)
this county te well known. While
uu.i..luc po
U on ln
e j&lt;ew
Deal. ..background for the service.
On Wednesday. Jan. 8. ther* will] ter. and Mra. Otto Isenhath. Roll
All these tragic
— —
•—
.
’I asosarvs
Mozart's Mass wav
sung with
। ■m
The
majority
and
percentage'
»»•■&gt; sung
wnn the
me ।■ most
&gt;■•«"* of
"• Hint
•*«•» work has been taken be a Children's Divluon conference | Call chairman, are pleased with the
things on t)&gt;e ume
at the January Furniture •
against II continues to mount up-1 traditional carols of the church for over by the W K. Kellogg Foundaf(.r children's workers on the .sub- fine response in the annual Roll WOODLAND BANK
front page. Earnest
■ ward as the returns come in. So far I the hymns and the processional and Hon. there have been and sllU are
Milch will commence In CM
thinkers who'll ac­
to help such children. jeet, -RcltaioUM Music for Children." Call campaign for memberships As
HAS BEEN CLOSED Rapids Monday. . In fact some
Is'tota) of 987.158 votes had been | recessional. Mbs Virginia Potu ren- opportunities »The public Ls invited to l-.car the&gt;e explained before, one-half of each
cuse the newspa­
I counted from 41 of the 48 states. | dered Neldilnger’s "The Birthday of At the last Rotary meeting a former talks and tho enrollment for •'*
•
-- the
•
... ihe Eastern buyers have already
St 00 membership remains
with
i
pers of sensation­
Receiver Barker Takes
i when the Digest's Issue of December ;» King" most beautifully for the of- crippled boy—his deformity due to
local'Chapter
for
use
here.
At
the
rived for a preliminary look at
infantile
paralysis
—
who
had
been
alism for featuring
I 28 was published. Votes continue to | fertory.
Records to Office at
present lime this chapter money is
■ new styles.
dlstreufuli happen­
The rector.
J.---A. McNulty, helped through the aid of the duo NEW YEAR'S SERVICE
I come in from the slates that
had ' Rev.
- ---------helping
a
lot
of
folks
who
arc
Ln
Saranac
I Both local factories haw b
AT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. need—helping to purchase warm
ings, forget that to
, previously reported. The votes from gave a helpful and timely address tn and is now able to walk without
James L. Barker, receiver of the ™uch encouraged by the impto
1 New York. Pennsylvania and New which the sacred meaning of the cane or crutches, sent word to the
The following ta the program of
live, newspapers
club expressing his appreciation of ji worship to be given at the First | clothing so the men may work on I Woodland State Bank, has
demand for their product since J
. Jersey have not yet been tabulated. Holy season was emphasized.
must print wbat
[the road project, purchasing fuel]
their assistance, which enabled him Presbyterian church on Sunday
(The
returns
so
far
received
show
nounced
that
after
Jan.
1.
the
office
*•
*
The
July sale of each was
people want to
1
to get schooling in the Battle Creek morning at 10:30 o’clock. The pen- to keep the homes more comfortable .at
Woodland will be closed. AU
th« &lt;*»&lt;»« «rf the psevl
i 409.527 "Yes" votes for the New M-37 PAVING HAS
land other tvbes of services. Should '
read
about,
not
Kellogg school for handicapped chll- *eral public is invited to attend this
records and assets of the bank will Ju y’ Thc mid-season sale ui
Irvin 8. Cobb Dea), and 577.631 "No” votes. Tlie
i the Roll Call be taken now, there 1
Xera^Tmut’ publtabere.
„^iTL^nd'.g.mTt
It^'.-J
dren.
taken to the Saranac bank of 'cm*r *•* *£&gt; • consktaraWe I
... .
“
percentage for the New Dea) U
BEEN APPROVED BY WPA I But there is other educational New Year's service.
I would be many who would no doubt be
1
Rev. John Kuching. D D. pastor I take a membership as they can now which he Ls the receiver. This ta
th*n
,8M- B«lw*n the
&lt;rdlt°,Mi h°Dl&lt;1 M»V ,hP?» 1 e I 80 r,r only one northern vtate
work where the club can be. and de­
Processional— "Onward OhrtMlan | see definite work that the Red Cross 'done to conserve the funds of the
lhe demand for furniture
read. To publish any other sort of 1 faV0ra the Roosevelt pollcles-Utah. Unless Some Hitch Occurs in sires to be of assistance to young Soldiers.''—No. 374.
bank and save the expense of up• steady increase over
|
Is
doing
here.
folks; but its dues are not sufficient
the Program, Paving
newspaper for popular consumption . Three southern states oppose ft—
enooun
Introlt—"Come to the church in | When the Roll Call was planned keep. The bank has already paid ^tous re*r ,A?
I with the other demands on the club the Wildwood "
®tbolh
W
would require an endowment fund Florida. Maryland and Oklahoma,
I in the fall, the county was divided, 65 per cent of its deposits and the
Will Be Rushed
lo permit of Its giving such aid Acbigger than the average reformer's । In
been
reduced »u
so »
it wu
was
in i. am
Tn the other uiotiw&gt;m
southern states the
Call lo Worship and Doxotoey
wnn Mra c j Barnum and Mrs work
"«•»■ has “
TO| iwumucu
--- to another
------- — increase
—'——
State
Highway
Commissioner
[
cordlngly
a
committee
was
chosen
to
Ignorance of human nature.
• L----------—
.
—
—
Invocation.
Lord
’
s
Prayer.
Threelxon
DunntnK
of
Delton
in
charge
not
considered
necessary
to
conlin„'Vi.
J
?2£
Bry
M
co,n
P®«d
with Jaupercentage for It does not average
j
devise
ways
and
means
for
getting
Murray
D.
Van
Wagoner
has
an
­
Extra: In the excitement, one jjas high !o
J
the
New
Deal
as
did
for
fold Amen
„ southern hatf
j v
_______
off th
the
half and
and Mrs. J.
V. ue the Woodland office. Those who ,
nounced that the paving of 13 miles. u
UI1U w
m-..
a apcvu&gt;l
special ,fund
to be used ...»
for &gt;such
Roosevelt
Hymn. 650 "The( Opening Year , HUben
'
-more saddening headline almost was | their vote for —
-■in 1832. nor on M-37, Hastings to the Barry ’j educational
Hilbert o(
of Woodland
Woodland ln
in charR&lt;
charge, of
of
pui poses. That commit­
Responsive Reading. Selection 44. tS1P norU1Mn
In thls
Mrs dress
-------------------------------------------- or been a big mortality In furniture
him at either Woodland
overlooked: Governor Talmadge of as high as did the New Deal poll county line north of Middleville, lias te( made ita rerort to the club on
Psalm 118
Harry Wood,
or ™ “PPOlntment
may be factories. Many have quit businees
Georgia still thinks he's running for made in the spring of 1934. Of the been approved by the federal works Monday. We know the citizens of P“,m ""
nwu. president
prraracm of
oi the
me Amernmrr,
L.
and more went inte receiverships.
.....Ix-gton
.
..
.
. mildr nV writing
vrfTlncr him
him at AaranazGloria Patri.
iuii Auxiliary,
a
41 states so far polled bj- the Digest.
। lean
was
assigned
President
administration.
Unless | notings and of Baity count*,■ will
Solo ! selected I-Mr Frank Foote । the
] PhV'bus7i^"^ton.'
"wd'^many
counly b*1’,c Both Hastings furniture plants mw
Roosevelt carried all but Connecti­ progress
business section, and
many
’80 *nn,V'’r
cut and New' Hampshire in 1932 In some hitch In the program shall: te ftad to coop* rat" in carrying
Scripture Lesson—St
John. Chap-, workers
workersassisted
assisted ininthe
thefour
fourwards.
wards Koea out ol existence and this one. survived the greatly dlmtntahad
this ought to mean steady em- cut pie piun. The club has not ter 1
sales following the stock market aa«
the Digest poll on the New Deal In come,
llnd(
,,
thp
aupervlslon
0(
the
wd
no
doubt,
could
have
been
a
paying
ployment for the next nine months I confined ita education! work to
Doctor Cam*) la a bit late with
1934. all of the 41 states then gave
Pastoral Prayer
chairmen, all doing excellent work Propoattion had it been allowed to
his theory that human ttringn might majorities for II. Now only 12 of the to over 50 men. according to Mr. Jia ting.-.; l ut has alaed youngst-p
book orders enough to keep th*
Choral Response- The Fruit of and nuking a fine record.
continue m
in operation.
Van Wagoner
i hi tevera) of the townships also.
be dried put and filed away for a
busy in 1938. Stocks of furniture
the Spirit "
I The
total . amount
collected
The snow and cold weather may | *j-l.c committee h ii arranged with
dealers’ hands are considerably t&gt;
matter of 200 years or so. and then
DIES AT HART.
Anthem—"Hail the Glad !New throughout tho county was 8656 80.
Michigan, which gave Roosevelt
cause
delays
this
winter,
but
Mr.
'
Ra
V
Branch,
mar.uu
of
the
Strand
The ’
state
papers deathof"
SaturdayWilber
car­ low the level In normal times;
brought back to life again. Only the a targe majority in 1832. and a still
Year.’—i Adams i
*fhM50Lb?M
bett” lth
HedThe
rtmy ^fTh?
v.m
w.
sn».w h/m..
tfor
nr &gt;
nni»h Theater fOr two evenings and. if
Van
Wagoner
hopes
enough
that with better business condiikx
other night I was speaking nt a larger for the New Deal in the Di­
Announcements and Offertory
„
of
8850,
but
is
much
better
than
last
—
•
—
-—
progress during the winter months necessary, two afternoon entertain­
F Taylor of Shelby. 75. the blind
Hymn. 117—"Our God our Help." year for which all are grateful:
dinner where there were many who gest poll iijXhe spring of 1834. seems
so that the paving can fee laid in ments. presenting that wonderful
Sermon Topic—"Our New Year . Collections for the county are as musician, well remembered in Has- stay, there may be a pleasing
must have undergone the process— to have become soured on It In this 1936
picture "Roberta."
Two
| tings, where he formerly held a viral in the furniture trade.
Resolutions
" members o!
only they hadn't been brought back latest poll, the "Yes-vote for the
follows:
the club ha.t seen !• and they said
singing school, and gave lessons in
Text
—
St.
Luke
16
4
—
"I
am
Ke
­
New
Deal
in
this
state
now
standing
to life yet.
MRS. ROSE COLGROVE
South Side of County
lt Ls a fine picture to present lo any . w|ved what to Do "
other points In Barry county.
EPWORTH LEAGUE.
It used to be that I had better re­ 15.069 and the "No" vote 32.236, or a
HAS NARROW EftflAFE. family group; that children would
Delton
.
!
— J Later Grange work, and lecturing
Thirty-six young people
Hymn 496 ’ A Charge to keep I
The Detroit and Grand Rapid.'. enjoy
,
sults. talking at banquets. But late­ vote against the New Dea) of more
Prairieville . .
... 22 551 took him into nearly every county Ln present at me Epworth ]
it
as
well
as
&lt;[rown-ups
Have '
.
than two to one. Massachusetts,
Hickory
Corners
and
Cressey
ly my audiences anti I seem to be which Roosevelt carried in 1932. and papers of Dec. 26 carried the story
The price of admission will be a
19.00 the state. He te survived by hte wife, meeting Sunday evening to
Benediction and Nunc Dimlttte.
Doster—N Pine Lake
drifting apart Or maybe It’s merely which gave a larger percentage for of a rather serious blaze in the straight 25 cents to each one. The
9 00 Maude Metcalf, ia XLtacr.
Mason ;
county
____ , ,u
the
- program the
-----college
"?r 7young
.Cloverdale
8 00 teacher, whom he married In 1896, pie put on. Games and refreaiu
poor old Mr, Cobb that's drifting the New Deal in 1934. now slams it home of Laurence E. Colgrove at {entertainments will be given on
Birmingham, where Mrs Rose E. Wednesday and Thursday evenings.
-.
At
the
Nashville Evangelical | Dowling
... ........
523 and three sons—William, superin- were indulged in afterwards, f
apart
by a vote of 4 to 1.
Colgrove. of this city and her
church the seventh annual Youth I Assyria
4 00 tendent of the Lake Odessa -chools. Newton will lead the dtecussM
Seriously. I think It would be a
As we have said before, the mis­ daughter. Mrs Mabie Ranney. were January 22 and 23 If needed—and
Conference convened on Tuesday, i Maple Grove
.
------6 00 Kenneth a hardware dealer at Hart, “What Scientists Tell US j
mistake to dehydrate a fellow the take must not be made of con­ visiting. The Are occurred in the it te believed It will be—matinees Rev. L. E Willoughby and Rev L F. Hcllevuc-&lt; Briggst
. .
4 O0 and Keith who resided al the farm God.'' next Bunday night, am
way Doctor Carrel suggests and set struing this Digest vote as against early morning while the rest of the ; will be given each afternoon of the Chamberlain were tn charge of the Ranfleld
2 00 home in Shelby. Mr. Taylor despite thur LaBallteter will be in el
him aside In soma quiet rntproof Roosevelt. It is not against Roose­ family were attending church scrv- ' two days also It te hoped that a program.
Churches
represented
I
’
•
Baltimore
—
&lt;
Durfee*
----200 his physical handicap lived an un- of lhe devotional* Let's sll
I very substantial sum may be raised
place far a couple of centuries and velt the man. but against the Roose­ Ices.
.
North Side of County
,
usually full and interesting life, and lhe new year right, young peop
' Manager Branch has kindly donated were Woodland. Maple Grove Clov- |
then return him to consciousness. velt policies covered by what we
A neighbor, it was stated, saved the use of his theater, so the only rrdale. Leighton. Jackson. Battle i Woodland
$ 68 10 is pleasantly remembered by many attending lhe Epworth Leagim
term
the
"New
Deal."
It
is
evident
He probably wouldn't notice much
Mrs Colgrove's life by rushing up­ expense will be for the picture Itself. Creek and Ionia.
I Middleville
33 30 friends in this section.
ice. Bunday. January 5. ar^o’
from the Digest's poll now being
change In radio gags—they'll still tabulated that the voters of this stairs and carrying her to safety
The Rotarians were divided into
be using the same ones—but. judg­ country do not now think the New from her second floor bedroom. Mrs. two teams of equal numbers, with |
ing by the present rate of progress, Deal policies are what this country Ranney had supposed her mother Roy Hubbard and David Boyes as ]
had followed her down stairs, when captains, to sell the tickets, the los- '
think what taxes will be then I
needs and should have In fact they
the maid who had discovered the Ing team lo pay for a good feed for |
seem to thoroughly disapprove of fire, had given the alarm.
the winners
them. If the Digest’s poll represents
Fight.
Damage to the home was esti­
The show Itazlf te well worth the 1
public sentiment now as it always
r'OR n while It acemrd that, when has In the past.
mated at more than 82.000
price oil admission
Tlie plan de- ■
. " the Republican! meet next year.
vised means that almost the entire j
The Digest poll cannot be con­
DEATH OF PIONEER.
It would be for memorial services strued as an endorsement of the Re­
proceeds
y.ill De used for benevolent I
Mrs. Laura J. Clark. 87. passed
nt Armageddon, and adjourning publican party. The people quite
purposes,
and
will
benefit
deserving i
away at the home of her son. Carl
thence to the cemetery. Now It's evidently disapprove the New Deal. pferdesteller. near Middleville on young folks in our own county and |
4 settled they'll meet at Cleveland, But if the republicans think they Sunday. She was one of the pioneer city.
So when you are asked lo buy a
and ihe official sliver-lining locator. can climb into power on a negative residents of Thomapple township.
ticket, do it if possible The Banner
Chairman Fletcher. predicts It platform — recording themselves as
nas tickets to sell. Come, or mail us. I
won't be any lodge of sorrow either. opposing the New Deal without of­ Pferdesteller who died in 1877. She
Also, the Democrat*. who not so fering something constructive to was married to Solomon Clark In the price of whatever number of 1
long ago were figuring their itt30 meet the present situation, they will 1895. his death occurring in 1907 tickets you want, and we will see
fail as they should
She is survived by a daughter, the that you are supplied. You'll be
to-do would merely be a gram! rat­
helping a worthy cause and gel the |
son. and one brotiter. Funeral serv­
ification rally, replete with Farley
“A FEATHER IN HER HAT" ices were held at the Middleville full value of your money in the en-'
nod flag!. ore now inclined to go
tertalnmenl.
HAS EXCEPTIONAL CAST Baptist church on Tuesday. Inter­
In for n regular conrention, with
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
An exceptional cast will be seen ment was in Mt. Hope cemetery.
resolutions deploring, among other
in Columbia’s picturlzatlon of I. A.
Tlie Wilcox Cemetery Circle will.
things, the Literary Digest
PASSING OF W. J. CI8LER.
Well, a fight Is better than n mas­ A. Wylie's famous love story-. “A
William J. Cisler. aged 68. former hold their January meeting. Wed- .
sacre. And upon the horizon of both Feather in Her Hat." when It shows owner of the Caledonia hotel, died nesday the eighth, at the Grange 1
at the Strand Theater. Jan. 8 and 0. on Sunday in St. Mary's hospital. hall. Maple Grove Center. Scalloped ]
parties looms the figure of old Doc
oysters will be served at dinner.
,
Pauline Lord. Basil Rathbone.
Townsend, coming with a little Louis Hayward. Billie Burke, Wendy Grand Rapids Surviving are the
Mr. and Mrs. Fred VnnDongan
plan, and If you don't think he's Barrie. Victor Varconi and many widow, three daughters and three (Edith
McIntyre i
of M.i.v.onn
Muskegon .;
beginning to cast a shadow, ask others of similar calibre -hold forth grandchildren. The funeral was spent Christmas with the home ■
held on Tuesday at the Caledonia
grandpa. Meanwhile, the Horn Fish in the film, which has for its locale
Methodist church under the aus­ folks.
boom for President spreads like cold modern London. Alfred Bantcll di­ pices of the Caledonia I. O. O. F.
Mr. and Mrs. George Ball and
rected from Lawrence Hazard's interment In the Middleville ceme­ family, who have spent the past
mol usses.
screen play.
week visiting relatives around Glen­
tery.
wood returned home Sunday after­
1powers’e’choes.
TO SHOW JAN. 5 AND 8.
noon.
WING to the Chrtotmas rush.
"Seven Keys to Baldpate" is a
Mr. and Mrs. John Spaulding of
George Bedford. Jr., is confined
our Post Office department let story of a mystery "story-writer,"
an entire week slip by without turn­ who retires to an old Inn to write to his house with a severe leg in­ Battle creek called at Orson Mc­
Intyre's Sunday afternoon.
ing loose any special stamp com- a new novel. After reaching the jury. suffered when he fell Into a
Mr. and Mra. Erble Zemke and
memorallng somebody &lt;r something. Inn he becomes involved Ln a series tree stump on Christmas morning. children and Carter Brumm of Ver­
Richard and Russell Palmer of
That means a double-header later.
of adventures more thrilling than he Detroit spent Christmas at
the montville were Christmas guests at
If you're going In for new United has ever written. The setting is an home of their parents, Mr and Mrs. w. H. Cheeseman'S.
States Issues, you'd letter figure old Inn in the Adirondack Moun­ Miner Palmer.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walton and
on an addition to the little home­ tains. Gene Raymond is featured Ln
Little Jackie Frost, who has been Seward and Mrs Mina Aldrich of
neat You won't be able to get your the picture, with Erin O'Brien- ill for the past three weeks, is much Delton were guests of Mrs. Walton's
Moore,
Eric
Blore.
Moroni
Olsen,
parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Bolman Ln |
collection In an album;you'll need a
better at this writing.
Grant Mitchell and Ray Mayer in
'
bowling alley. Because, when we
The children of Mr. and Mrs. Hastings Thursday.
other roles. Margaret Callahan has
Howard and Katheryn McIntyre
Henry Frost, Mrs. Daisy of St. Johns
run out of people or places or events the feminine lead.
and William of Detroit,
spent entertained the young folks of the [
to name stamp* for, Big Chief Farcommunity
at
their
home
Friday j
Christinas
at
their
home.
lay can draw on the Alphabet and FORTY CHILDREN
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Johnson evening.
WERE MADE HAPPY.
■till be In the fashion.
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Cheeseman j
At the Monday luncheon meeting spent Christmas day with his par­
My guess la the NBA memorial
and
daughter
were
Sunday
guests
at'
ents, Mr. and Mrs. WiU Johnson,
stamp will be printed In black and of the Hastings Rotary Club a re­ at MlddlevUle.
Claud Hoffman's.
feature a picture of Gen. Hugh port was read telling how the
Nile Hallock and Clifford Lee of
Charles Hauser of Detroit visited
mopey, which the members contrib­
Johnson standing on Ms head.
uted before Christmas, had been his brother. Fred, and hta aunts, Battle Creek attended the party at
spent. Ti&gt;e club donated about 880. the Misses Almira and Nell Reed. McIntyre's Friday evening and re-i
malned until Sunday.
Thirty-seven children were out­ Christmas.
CULVER CITY, a

PLAN NOW

As we stand on the threshhold of the
New Year, let us pause and reflect
Many have been the disappointments
of the passing year, but as we face
1936 let’s start anew, forgetting the
and face the future.
‘During 1936 manychanges will take
place, and the Hastings City Bank
will have a prominent part in the
progress of this community.
If you are planning to build a new
home, expand your business, or im­
provements of any kind, we invite
your application for a loan...to help
make these plans come true.

O

TICKING up their heads just fitted with shoes, hose, rubbers-or
long enough to announce there'd whatever footwear was needed. In
be no peace prise for 1035, the addition to this the club complete­
ly outfitted three boys, giving them
judges ducked right back Into the
shoes and other clothing.
sub-cellar.
So a total of forty children were
At the moment, all was quiet and given a happier Christmas than
harmony. With tM exceptions of they would have had otherwise. No
one large three-ring war and several doubt other organizations in the
smaller ones, and riots of one or city and county did similar Christ­
more of lhe standard varletlea—ra­ mas work, but this is the only one
cial. religious, political. Industrial
Industrial or economic—going on tentlon.
simultaneously In seven major
CHURCH SCHOOL HAVE PARTY.
cities on four continents, which
A happy Christmas celebration of
comes pretty close to being almost holiday week was the party at the
all the continents we have.
Episcopal parish house Friday from
7
to
8 for the church school children
But before withholding the award,
why didn't the JudgM take a quick of the 3rd grade and up.
Carol singing, gifts of candy from
glance In the direction of Greenthe Christmas tree by Banta Claus,
and games were much enjoyed.
word out of Greenland tfffyaar.
Everyone ta rejoicing over Grand
Indifferent state ol bealtb for a at
Rapids’ good luck in aecuring the
seven million dollar Fisher Body
of brass knocks.
plant.
.’
,
*VIN E. COBB

S

BRANCH DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mrs. John Darby enter­
tained their children far Christmas.
Richard Darby returned to the
Argu bright school al Battle Crrek
■after spending the holiday vacation
at home.
The Evangelical Sunday school
will elect officers Thursday evening
for tile coming year.
Rev and Mrs’ Rhoades and fam­
ily returned from their visit In
Ohio. Saturday.
The Nashville students returned
to their school work Monday.
Miss Margery Norton will enter­
tain the Intermediate class of the
North Evangelical Sunday school)
Wednesday evening Jan. 1.
Mr and Mrs. Vincent Norton en­
tertained their children Christmas
day.
Mrs. Sarah Ostroth has been 111

twined
day.

their

children

NORTHEAST STRIKER.
A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Randall Monday Dec. 23.
Mrs. Randall who has been quite
seriously ill ta getting along nicely
now.
Miss Josephine Romig is spending
Christmas vacation st Kalamazoo
with her sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Caliban and
sons of LAnslng and Mr. and Mra.
Wm. Cramer. Jr., spent Christmas
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Cramer. Sr.. Melvin Pierce of Hastings was also a guest.
Mrs. John Hoffman and two of
the children have been having the
flu.
Miss Elsie Poland returned to the
home of her sister. Mrs. Wm.
Cramer. Jr.. Saturday.
Miss Ruth Geer and friend of De­
troit were Sunday guests of Peter
Steel.
■
Burke Houghtalln and son of Bat-

Christmas
E. I* Houghtalin Bunday.

!
1

The Officers of this bank wish ypu all a very
Happy and Prosperous New Year, and assure
you of their co-operation. Stop in and talk over
your plans with us for the year 1936

I
|
।
1

Hastings City
Telephone 2103

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JANUARY t. IB4

: Dept of Public Instruction will I Michigan State College u the first' Mr. and Uri. Arce Hous Campbell Thomas' were John Thomas and '
Park and ChM. FawceU of Chi
WOODLAND.
bm and Ma many
1 conduct
a teachers' hour each speaker.
»P®oker. An early morning program , and family of Cedar
cedar Creek spent
spent . family of Lansing, Gqy Smith and i
Ambrose Cooper IB nassed spent Christmas day with Mr
&lt;■ to
tn be
Kw given Hall.,
at tt-nn
a M-|
Vf Christmas al
at the
tt,M home
fanmn of
nt . —
faala
fntnilv Dave
T"W1 VV» Eash,
Path —
Wr- Uli- away uiuwmaa
FOR RADIO STATION iiiursday. Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, Is
dally al
8.00 A.
Lewie
family.
Mr
and
Mrs.
Christmas morning
morning at
at snout
about
cwpte a long and
— —
— —
Special events, such as Farmers' 1 Maier's.
Merrill Kardiar
Karchar and Mra.
Mrs. Addle
Addie !«.».•&gt;
7;u
—
jjOlne
----------------- —
qjj,,
Mr. and Mrs Frank Kilpatrick
State Supt. will open this series. Week meetings, are being scheduled 1
—
Benton.
i,ajf miles south of Woodland Six
IA* Given Permission to The Michigan State Police win de­
family attended the wadding of the
Program bulletins containing the !
GLASS CREEK.
Mr*. Jennie Flynn and sons Clare I h&gt;d bead In falling health for the
i Oa Air More Hours and •cribe ,he worit of
p011" 1,01,11,1
Mr. an d Mra Fred Otte and Rob- and Floyd visited at John Nashua । pa*t year or two and was confined
X, ssoura ana crlmlnai detection and in civil pro- complete schedule are available to
to ert. Mr. and Mrs. Harry TJunn and Sunday
1 Uk—
&lt; •— .u----------------— request
•*0 Ohonfe Wave Length
tectlon. The State Dept, of Agricul- all radio listeners on r—1—WKAR. The Increased scl.ihedule
——— will .i family, mw
also Ray Otis. Louie
wwc Erway ■ 1*
—■ —
~ ”
■ ■ ■ ■ ■■
w— ro
"
' aervkc to'lhe people of tur« and the Stale Highway Dept, enable the station to serve the state .’and family and Mr. and Mrs. Frank are spending lhe holidays Willi her
las been made pcMsible **H continue their broadcasts.
with education, government and en- Shriner of Kalamazoo were Christ- father. Scott Lowe, in Florida,
Woodland with her parenta when with us and wv welcome them to our
.
station WKAR by the
Ftor those Interested in education, tcrtalnment.
mas gue-trft the home of Ray ErAlice Nash ta assisting with the she was nine years old and has re­ community.
mil Communications Coqlmis- ,the Michigan State Oollege ot the
————^e-e—————
vay
/ .
.
, household duties al Clare Porritt's. sided in Woodland township since
stood at 10 below at B o'clock, which
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert McLeod en­
granting an uicroased {lumber Air provides six courses by radio
DOUD COR NEK H
Mr. and Mrs Chaa. Whittemore ; Mrs. Addie Benton and Mrs. Watt ..that time. The funeral was held at
tertained the following for Chriit- ww plenty cold.
lay light ojierailng hours and of Three broadcasts each week direct
Car) and fam- and Russell and Annamac Pue of 1 Thomas attended the Christmas ex-: two o'clock at the home Friday aft­
Our merchants enjoyed a fine
perwitaslon ■*to change
the
*
*■
““ frequency
~
from Ute claaaroom win be made of
with
hte
parHastings
spent
Christmas
with
Cleo
eretaes
at
Merriman
sdhool
TuesChristmas trade and are nearly
—— — *— uMakuiu, oixiii uiuuuiim wm,
------— emoon, with FLev A F Wvnn ofml Z'.rl
„Brown
____ . nad
, .family
__ ,, ...
__ _ Cornt_
Antt afternoon
ntlnnnnnn given
nlVAn by
Itu Mrs.
Mr, Merrill
Mai— | nctaUng. Surviving are a daughter
BMlgnment
Tlie change In fre­ the course Survey of English Liter­
Mr. and Mrs. Will
Carl.
at Hickory
day
: and Mrs Clifford McMannta nere.
1
’
Kareher and pupils
Mr, v‘ra Hewitt a eon Owcar
quency will not be made until after ature. Spanish lessons will continue
Mr. and Mrs Raymond McLeod and
■ January 14. but
tlie program witli Prof. J. O- Swain conduclln
...
.nt
Christmas ai
at inc
the laiiersi
latter's । Forrest ........
spefit
------- u,re« STandchUdren and one grealin______
unruunaa
Havens and family „spent
Thursday, after a long life spent In
grandparents at
it u.iw„
being Christmas
with
*John
'j
EAST DELTON. '
changes win be made Immediately. the course. New courses
al Augusta,
.«
Augusta. i»
--- ----------------- Mr.
... 'and*
and Mra.
—
-----Mrs.EAST
John DELTON.
grandchild.
.
Mr. and Mrs. c. J. Barnum of Del- this vicinity. .
The new frequency will be 850 kilo- MUfal ^cl0,&lt;Xy'
----------------------------------------Mrs. Mrs.
JI.‘C.»■'Louden.
Mr. I Mr.Mr and Mrs John Dell snent
o ‘L, u. i Uie,r htiy-nrn wedding anniversary. Foreman
and family
In KalamazooMr. and
Mr. and
O. Louden.
S*1' J nJ 1C *2
8 । Mr ftnd Mrs
F®** ,pent
MUs
“ Foreman. Miss
Ml» Marl- and Mrs Harold Hazel and ehiMren
Mtas Donn
Donna
children II Christmas with Mr and Mrs Ezra
Mrs. F. E. Border Friday evening. day lo be on hand Monday A- M. on
Headlining the new programs,
business in connection with the
an and Norman Erway, Harold and of Richland spent Christmas day al i n,]] ot . .n,lno ‘ ’
’
Mr. and Mrs. David Kilpatrick at
Mr. and Mrs. Bam Gleb and fam- . Mtes
Governor Frank D. Fitzgerald will ment. information and enrollment
Miss Barbara Otte
Oita of
&lt;if Kalamazoo
Kalnmar-io the
th* home
hnn&gt;« of
nt Mr.
Mr and Mrs. Erdy
Frdv LouIzin- I
,
•'
school contracts for Uie addition to
I Robert Bush of Hastings spent Ann Arbor and Arthur Kilpatrick of our building.
131*nlu; a.rc now being, sent to those j|y
Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mrs. Site are spending their Christmas vaca- den in the .Polley district.
Jackson spent Christmas day with
| Larabee and family of Hastings all I tion with relatives here.
•
•
-'
tills “Governor's. Hour.' Gov. Flu-,, who wish to pursue these courses.
Word came here Sunday of the
I Mr. and Mrs. ike Lelnaar were partjif the Christmas holidays with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Many other new features are add- [spent Clu-istmas with relatives here.. Mrs. Forrest Havens visited her dinner guests on Christmas day of Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Hilbert.
gcnild will discuss affairs of state
death at Caledonia of William Cteed to the programs, both in edu-1 The Cedar Creek Cemetery circle sisters. Mrs. Nellie and Mrs. Floyd Mr. and Mra. Floyd Morford and
Miss Betty Kimble of Coats Grove Kilpatrick.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul wing and fam­
people of Michigan. The Dept, of cation and as entertainment. The' will meet at the home of Mrs C. N. Foreman, iff Kalamazoo last week, daughter.
te spending this week with hoe
ily
of
Kalamazoo
spent
Ctiristnuu
State will broadcast messages In high schools of the state are being [ Tobias. Wednesday. Jan. 15. for din-1 john Erway of M S. C. and Miss
mourn hie wife, two daughters and
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Waters and Mr. urandporenu, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. with Rev. and Mrs. Fay C. Wing.
j Ruth E Erway of W. s. T. C. arc and Mrs. Munson Newton of Rich­ Farthing.
connection with lhe state-wide safe­ invited to participate with bands., ner and election of officers.
The Rattler family arc victims of many other relatives and a host of
ty campaign with Orville Atwood. orchestras, and glee clubs. A series. Mr and Mrs. Harry Waters spent spending their vacation with their land were dinner guests on Christ­
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Rowlader of
friends.
whooping cough.
Secretary of State, as the first on vocational guidance will begin on Christmas with their daughter at parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Erwaj&gt;
mas day of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Grif­ Grand Rapids spent Christmas day
The stricklen family of Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hoover enter­
speaker on January 10. The State Jan. 13. with Pres. R. 8. Shaw of Hastings.
About twenty-five of the young fen of Fair lake.
with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Faul.
Rapids were Sunday guesta of O. D.
Elwyn Dell ot Wiedman te spend­ tained at a family dinner Sunday: and Mrs. Whitmore. Patricia and
.: people of the vicinity held u skating
Mr. and Mrs. Ike Lelnaar spent
I party at Hickory Corners last Mon­ StMiday with Mr. and Mrs. Von ing the Chrlaunaa holidays with his Mr. and Mrs. Roy Roberta and chil­ Joann remained to visit their granddren and Mr. and ' Mrs. Kenneth
day.
.
Dunn in Delton and Mr. and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. John DeU.
Christmas guests at Roy Erway's Floyd Morford and family spent
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Kimble and Gelsel of Lake Odessa. Irvin Hoover . The majority of auto owners seem
were Mr. and Mrs Al Wolfe and Sunday with Dr. Morford 'and wife1 children of Coats Grove spent Sun­ and friend of Battle Creek. Mr. and to be wailing the limit before pro­
daughter. Harold Sharp and Maur­ . in Delton.
day with lhe latte-r's parents. Mr. Mrs. Raymond Faul and infant son curing their 1938 plates; to many
ot Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ice Erway of Grand Rapids.
•1 John and Ed. Willison entertained । and Mrs. Chas. Farthing.
others calls for money right al
Rise
Hcv. and Mrs. Don Carrick and R1
^ and family
la®**J2of
“ Woodland.
Christmas guests at Clyde War­ Mr. and Mrs. Oordle Durkee and
Christmas and tax time, suggest It
Robert J3*!11® rt»v«
ren's were&gt; R. D. Gates and moth­ son. and Ray Durkee and family of daughter Barbara were guests of lhe
be put over until the middle of the
er of Eaton Rapids. Mr and Mrs Delton. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Beck Utter s parental Mr. and Mrs. WUr-, Xiinn “ B Xew daya w,lto Don season.
Merritt Gates, Mrs. Brlsbo. Phil of Galesburg. Doris Hartman. Mr. ren English of Grand Rapids for ,
rt
A rpeellng of tlie members of the
Warren and Miss Haul Warren of •nd Mr, CUM. llMlniun. !«,. Maw.
.
nrld &gt;na Mr. .nd Mr, Rmn w.-1 . Mr. Mid Mr, Hrr.ld CUWc Mid « "““i?
... Business Assn ta called for this
Lansing.
field and Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Wa- ; ——**
*»•»«*
.Mr. and Mrs. Claude Sabin and Monday evening to consider a pro­
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Havens were ters and Marie on Christmas.
I children spent Bunday with Mr. and
position, which If carried will be
family
of
Heslinga
spent
Christmas
■Christmas Eve guesta at the Robt.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Collison and , Mrs. Joseph Classic of Lake Odessa
Eve with Mr. and Mrs. Vemlce RafMcGIocklin home in Hutlngs*.
family went to the home of Mr. and ««d enjoyed a family Christmas
Middleville Sea Scout, of Ship No.
Mrs. josh Vanderllc for a Chrtet- I dinner with them. Fifteen were
Tlie following sUidente are home UL L. Russell Beeler, Skipper, came
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
mas dinner.
■ present.
1
aboard the good ship "Aquilla." ac­
¥rar!
Mason nrwion
Newton uprni
spent unnsimm
Christmas [^ Mr- ajid Mrs^ Raymond Foul »..w
and from college for lhe holidays: Grey- companied by their lady friends at,
Faul. Junior College. Grand
Bernard Hammond ta spending a da.. wnn hte sister, Mae Schauff- baby son of Chicago visited rcla- don
„.p,o.. , om non,, uuuneu
j » »'“■
“»
few days in Grand Rapids visiting hotincr near Delton
1! l*vca in Hastings, Woodland and Rapids. Torn Long, Business College,
Loren Erb.
-Mr.
- and• Mrs. George
'
-Lelnaar and , Lansing from Friday until Sunday.
!.
, MrS‘ ।
•;----- osuwncr m
Woodruff
daughter
of mexory
Hickory corners were [ Mr. and Mrs. Klda Guy and Mr.
,.r Sunday gUwta
--------at
- -----—
; jolin Guy of East Woodland and
tl*”
, ,iy
1 ’FR hnnu.
‘oni,‘’.of
Rex ....
Walers.
Harold TcnEyck in Grand Rapids
'
------i Keith Guy of Lansing were Christ। Mr. and Mrs Warren Hollon and
। mas guesta of Mr. and Mrs. Delmond
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
Pau’l Rtetr oT ni^oit1 ^nt
cook* The l»I*nce ot U1C «Y«HnF
family visited at the home of U-wte
,
Mr. and Mrs. James Burdick of ‘ Culler.
, Clum near Lake Odessa. Wednesday.
; Mr. and Mrs. John Bulling spent
Uh
I *“
ballroom where Mr.
Mrs. Rebecca Craig accompanied Portland were Christmas guests at i Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mra ?J
d "»*" wh“* 01 Caledonia ship «the Forrest Potters to the home of the Jim Dibble home.
MhJr«il “SJSSr .nd L.™&gt;C
JS
Bulling
of
Lake
Odessa.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Bcbon were
Ermont Newton in Hastings for a
England
of
home for the Christmas holidays. | Mtes Phyllis
’
"
7.1 Chicago
— oumrr. WO popuUr WPodUhd £*
: Christina^ day dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cronk and *»«-«&gt; her ™0,hSr’ Mr‘„,oleDn *?«- , young people, were married Christ- "*^’5'
*n"
' Floyd Craig and Phyllis Edger of Bernice Anne spent Christmas with t,and
?UI\day, mu night at seven o’clock at the , ' ““2“
' T™™
Hastings were Christmas day guesta tlie former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs i
“nd ^J1?'
®nB,and
home of the bride's parents. Mr. and
J thr o^nn8
at the home of Rex Foreman in H.ney'Lropard and family of Has- , Jl7hn^P“15 spcnt chrUUnM Eve
- Hastings.
Mra. John Gardner, by Rev. Harley
HOT DATED
COUNTRY CLUB
Townsend,
in
.
the
presence
of
the
i
U,ng
f
our
P
A splendid Christmas program
wj' Mr.. John Omer. Mr
“f
H“p"
families.
The bride's i
,,n»» r»NTte
was held by our school and teacher. ■M Molwedey Brnrdl.-, end Mr
™"«r.lul.uo.» on (he immediate
cousin. Miss Ava Shopbcll. and the !
,
"
v
Phyllis Edger. Monday evening. Mrs. Garver’s mother of Lansing were
oI a aon' Sund*&gt;- December groom's brother. Elite Garllnger. ac-1 30,11
Mr- and Mra. Russell Kay
Rex Foreman of Hastings assisted
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Bene-'22’1?' , . „ ,
COFFEE
VACUUM PACKED
companied them. The bride was of Kstamaeoo a fine baby girl on
by singing and playing. Candy, pop­ diet
for Christmas
\,l!,f.Arda‘l' Lponard °' Hasting. lovely In white satin and carried a Dee. 30. Mra. Kay was formerly
corn and apples were served after
Mr. and Mrs. Marley Burroughs of, and Mr' and MnJ' Flo&gt;d G"‘ner bouquet of white row buds lied with Mi» Mabie Leonard of thte place,
COUNTRY CLUB
EATMORE
Santa's disappearance. We are now Thrrr R|,rr. »■“ (ui.a'ol lhe Ul- "f™1 S
silver ribbon. Mtes Shopbcll wort a
Mrs Chrystal Shearer and daughenjoying a vacation.
- ....
. ----------—
- , ------...j
Mr3
Ell Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Leonard.
gown of light blue, and carried pink Iter Phyllte are visiting in KalamaChas. Woodruff made a business
Chruinu.
»». Bhel—UMU MUI —IRMK rov buds, a three course wedding “» d««n« ««^holidays.
IHp w orand n.pm. Fnd.y,
Mr. .nd Mr. Fred C»mD .pern
&gt;“
" •’Rf* supper followed. Mrs Garllnger te I Maurice Ashby Is vUIUng relatives
Robert Castelein ol Hastings ChrUOU. rwnhiK
Pure Honey
their! tf
Uu’ holidays
Dc-­ . ,ndu.u ol woodUnd h«h Khool Mid IrUnd. In KM.muoo IhU »col
With
th.-;r
lloUdnv‘ in
*“ Midland
MlilUnd and
.nd De
visited Lewis and Boyd Belton
•i trolt.
granddaughter. Miss Bernice Anne
I
the Barry County Normal. She D°n,‘d “J10 1PrD’ Wiseman of
Thursday.
COUNTIY CLUB
I Leon Nicholson and family. Mr. and
has been a successful teacher In the । ®*Ule
’ere Sunday guesta ot
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammond .Cronk. •
and Mrs. Robert Austin of Lansing county schools for the pari several i ***■, and J**?: ClyA®„L*o*^,rd'
P&gt;, 1 Oc
,
visited in Grand Rapids Thunday.
' and Mrs. Forrest Begcrow spent ■ years.
SUDAN
Mr. Garllnger graduated 1_¥r' and Mrs^ Milton Warner of
dayand
with
Mr.
and TusMrs. from the Nashville high school in 1
spent Sundaywllh their
BOWNE ( ENTER.
ROy McCaul and wife and mother. i Christmas
toMd cta^Tc
Mr^
RhJdi
S E A3 IDE
Mr- Jennie Fox entertain, d her Mra Sarah McCaul. spent ChristM
AU , 1928. He then enlisted In the Unit-1
Ma. 3
Mr- *nd Mra. Fred Ashby,
10c I ..on and family of
cd States Navy and was honorably
Albert Ande,s ol Brush Ridge Is
.,r icnuHraiiM. Innx day with the Colburn ' ......
hU »TUr; W’’
Aahby
Fred Lainbcraon spent Christmas discharged from lhe aviation cor£
Christinas.
ut IziBitrg.;.
COUNTRY CLUB
with hte father and sister. Miss Lola last March. Mr. and Mrs. Garllnger vlC1trTw
WESCO
Mrs’ ByT?n
[ Mr. and Mrs on ln Smelker six nt
Gene Haluht And family wt
Lambcr&amp;on of Kalamazoo.
will be at home to their friends after 1
ah,elby21LC *“*’ « ““
Christmas with their parent.. Mr. unrs nt' Guy
~ y McNcc's CM
,
a family gathering was held ul Jan. 1. Their many friends wish for Leonard home forChrtetmas dinner,
and Mrs. Antlcraon ol Sp.irta.
■ S’ the F. F. Hilbert home Christmas them a happy married life.
I
.Flr!y
confined
Mr. und Mrs. Gall Burkholder
COUNTBY CLUB
ored to (lay TPose present were Glenn
The nuptials of Miss Pauline to2,®rbS’
lh
' and .son of Grand Rapids spent
' 5Pfnl; Blake and family of Middleville,
SUNSWEET SANTA CLARA
J*«»«d «»•
Sunday a(tr^noo*.i nt Guy Smith s.
r Gibbs M„. s.Bta Hilbert and daughter and Hoover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.1
W Hoover of woodland and Ken-' ,Lrluln?dJ',r’i
Mrs. Grover Mar’ John tiaj-n
and family w, re and lamily.
Mr and
j v mibcrt of Woodnoth Getael son of Mr and Mrs shall
*h‘" of “
Maple
*"U -Grove
------- Bunday.
AVONDALE MEDIUM
Christmas guest- of Elmer Ellis and
Leon Potts and wife entertained ian(j.
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Ashby are vis-,
. family of Lowell.
S.llv5..Ch_“r®h,.l*.1,uld
?*ld‘ i Miss Virginia Faul visited her par- George Gcisel of Lake Odessa, were
Mr. M.n Boultefl u:,S’SSS? ?Xi spoken before lhe Immediate rela- Itlng their parents. Mr. and Mr*.
,tho second operation on ncr hand j|y at Christmas dinner on Sunday | »ron, Tuesday until Sunday
। lives and a few friends at four Wm. Trine, in Manhall during tho
leal IOC
for Infection Thur day nt Blodgett „nd on. Christmasd ay they enter- |* Mlss Mildred Williams arid Miss
o'clock oh.'Christmas day at the holidays.________
REFINED
. .
. the
-----following
; ,,----- ----J V.,
1 •a™ miiurcu wiuu*nu&gt; &gt;uu mis*
&lt; .lospital. Wc
all hope fora speedy telnet!
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wells al
:
J0“T5‘nf...guesta:
’uw?LClay&lt;la*? -------------------------------Dorothy Hynes of Mason .pent the home of -•
CEDAR CREEK.
।
recovery.
ttai
Johnson
and
wife.of
Bowne;
i
LARGE PKG.
GIANT
Christmas holidays with their par­ Woodbury. Rev. H. V. Townsend of­
Mr. and Mr*. Henry Wcrtmatt
We are sorry to hear Mrs. Clara Vance Sharp and family. Middle- ,
ficiating. They were attended by spent Sunday with their son Myron
;
ents.
bars
Watts expects to ro to n Grand viUe Mr. and Mrs Morris Lewis., The Nlclhamer families spent lhe Mr. and Mrs. Wells who were cele­ and family of Battle Creek.
SOAP
The Nlcthamer
families
lhe
Su
H,rOlM
e"1 1 Ch™mu
“SU
)“E spent
M
brating their first anniversary. The
The Community elub comes again
■cnu wcck.
family. Lansing. Marilyn and Jun- — ------------------, bride wore a gown of brown and this week. The program will be
Christmas dinner guests at Watt icr remained over for a longer visit. Mrs Frank Ntelhamer.
Roger Johnson who b in the V. S. ■ gold crepe with gold accessories and given by our good old home talent
WESCO SCIENTIFICALLY BALANCED
carried
an
arm
bouquet
of
pink
and a fine tpeaker also. The supper
Navy and Herman john.-on of Chi­
, cago spent the Christmas holidays snapdragons and baby mums, tied te In charge of Mrs. Wiseman so we
[ with their parenta. Mr. and Mrs. with gold ribbon. Mr. and Mrs. can all plan on having plenty to
Gelsci are well known young people, eat.
’
■ Gtu Johnson.
WESCO ICtENnnCALLY BALANCED
The people wlu&gt; have gone to
j Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Slang of Bal- both having graduated from Wood­
lie Creek. William Stang of Grand land high school with the class of Florida report a good time and
1004b. sack
Haven and Mrs. L- Faul were guesta 1934. They will reside in Lake Odes­ plenty of cool weather also.
WESCO 18
’
We are glad to report Aunt PhBDc
nt tlie home of Mr. and Mrs. Karl sa. where Mr. Gclsel has employ­
ment.
Thetr
many
Woodland Dunklcy much better.
Kaul Christmas day.
Miss Gladys Cairns o{ the Durfee
, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ruell and friends wish them a long and happy!
married life.
' district spent a few days with heY
family .-ipent the Christmas holidays
WZ3CO 20'
«i.ster, Mrs. Lloyd Owen last week.
with the latter’s parents. Mr. and
MIDDLEVILLE.
School commenced again thte
iMrs. &amp;l. covey of Gobles.
Dairy Faad10^? $1.29
D&gt;i&lt;y Fwd’S? $1.59
Christmas day Robert Hall, of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager'and Athens and Miss Jeanette Randt, of ]i Monday morning after a weeks va­
MEDIUM
। ;«n Morgan spent Christmas day Lltchffeld were marripd at the home cation. The Christmas program on
Oyster Shells10^ 69c
with relatives its Athens and the of the bride's parents, at Litchfield. Saturday night the atst was vtry
Cosr,. Salt
19c
rest of the Christmas vacation with Attending from here were Mr. Hall's fine.
Mr.,and Mrs. Harry Hough of Harl- two sisters, and their husbands, Mr.
"We no longer have tlie right t4
'
Miss Winifred Border of Oak and Mrs. Gillette, two daughters and think tn terms of our own genera­
Mr. and Mrs. William Hacker also tion."—Herbert Hoover.

KROGER STORES
" Complete Satisfaction or Your Money Back

HOT DATED

a JEWEL

15e

COFFEE

(3 lb. boo 45c)

French 2^. 39c

it, 10c

Raisin Bread

Nut Oleo 2
25c
CanvasGloves^l Oc

s:

25c

Coffee

5

£,59c

Bran Flakes

Black Pepper £ 19c

Lima Beans

Pork4Beans 3'lc^.T25c

7c

Soda Crackers 2

sa.Wi.'Xn8^. sx « SSKThn^WnS^^^
M^hx.°ssii^&lt;i ™

Kidney Beans 4can’ 25c

Prunes
Lard

70 80«

Red Salmon

S 19c

Cheese Bread

10

35c

Scratch Feed

$1.59

Laying Mash'

$1.89

Dairy Feed

$1.19

BULK ROLLED OATS

LEMONS

2Cc

OXYDOL

10

360 Size - Full of Juice

MICHIGAN U.

LARGE SIZE - SWEET JUICY

POTATOES ••«■ p-n 19c

GRAPEFRUIT

TANGERINES - 19c

19c

Soedhaa - Full of Juice

.S-SS5--

PORK ROAST 19c
PICNIC STYLE

(APPLE SAUCE

PORK STEAK

COUNTRY
CLUB

UAH

LEONA SAUSAGE

3

2$c)

lb

OYSTERS
FRES-SHORE
PINT

SWIFTS
SLICED
1 Be

25c

^7
High in Cream Content Q/

We carry only Drugs and Pharmaceuti­
cals from the highest grade manufactur­
ers — Parke-Davis, United Drug Co.,
John Wyeth &amp; Brother, Etc. You can
Save with Safely at the Rexall Store.

Bring us your doctor’s prescription.

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

Gooda Delivered

Phone 2131'^ Hastings, Mich.

Raw or Pasteurized

To the firat baby born
in Barry in 1936, we
will give FREE one
quart of Grade A
f milk every day for 30
daya; deli very to atart
when lhe parenta
want it.

O Quart

Thuro in no better milk than llitfhlsncto .Dairy Grade
A Milk. The Standard for Grade A milk Is set by the
alate, and few dairies meet this aUndard. Highlandd
Dairy enjoys the privilege of producing and selling
this highest grade of milk.
When yuu buy Highlands Grade A, you are assured
of the best money can buy, and you can feel assured
your baby is getting the food value it ihould Have
to build a strong, sturdy body.
•'

HIGHLANDS
DAIRY
ROBERT W. COOK, Prop Hutinai

PhnntJWI

�CLOVKBDALE.
left Saturday to do • log skidding
Battle Creek called at O. Haynes' । Mr. and Mrs. Herbte 1
Job dmt Dowling. . Mr*. Burd will
|Mr. and Mr*. Kenneth
stay with Mra Green and Gordon ing the Christmas holidays with Sunday evening. ~
Kalamssoo were Sunday guMto fi
her daughter and »on-ln-law, Mr.
MILO.
j Mr. and Mra. Verne Hawbllta of
and Mrs Maurice Loucks at MldCrowded Program Planned
Mr
and
Mrs.
Porter
Toozc
were
High Bank.
Unsing. 1
Gerald W. Potter. Wtoodtand . .. »4
for Homemakers During Kathryn B. Hynes. Woodland ...1$ Jack and
Henry Mosier, who has been Christmas guests of ths. fomter's । Mr. and Mra. Gant Oanka and
sister, Mra. Paddock and family. Mrs. Louise Lathrop ot Battle Creek
spending
a
few
day*
with
hi*
Farmer* Week Feb. 8-7
Robert B. Tunter. Flint$1
ot Mr. and Mr*. Marshall daughter al Grand Rapids, rcturn- Delicti.'where a dumer was served were Sunday gueste of Mr. and Mr*,
Mary RosMnn* Oliver, Hastings 11
to twenty-two. They expect to, Will Hyde.
ed home Thursday.
Era Tripp U gaining nlctly
ed .around the Home Economic*
spend New Year's with their daughMr and Mra Merritt Mead* and
PBOBATB OQIJBfr.
JW fter a
. three
uuw week*' sfcknsa*.
. -I Mr. and Mrs. Jess Haney spent ter. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mann.' Russell were Christmas guests of
building at Michigan State College,
Est. Hervey H. enuren. nnai acMr. and Mrs. Wm. Stanton and Christmas with their uncle. Jake E Hickory
jmd Mrs. Cameron McIntyre father.
count filed, order assigning residue little son have been visiting Mr. and Haney, ct Hastings.
Horner Fisher and mother were and children of Quimby.
limited and the program arranged entered
'Mra. Claud Wlllaon.
Mr and Mrs. -Arthur Johncock callers at Mrs. Penuels’ last Satur- |
———-carries an appeal (o ’ homemaker*
B.L naaslua I- Glasaow. Petition i Mr. and Mrs. O- Peterson have entertained the following children day. Homer went to Kalamazoo!
PINE LAKE.
for authority to surrender note filed, moved Into their own home on lhe and their families for Christmas Saturday afternoon and remained
fo
lhe
lUnd
women.
club „
£2.
■
Mitina- anLhnritv to aur- Storkan (arm
dinner: Mr. and Mr*. Russell John- U.U1 Munday vuliln, M&lt;n.U
ilk* which al) rural
I
I. UlU. Cnretu eock. OmnnMlla: Mr. ana Mra.
Mrs.
H.
J.
Flower
and
Bernice
nj^hois
an
Wednesday Jan 8.
housewiveywUl want to hear will be render note entered.
. Latta and son. Junior, spent ChrtaL-i Brower. Plainwell; Mr. and Mrs.
naU.™ Saturday
SaluMa. afternoon
.ru-uuu at
at I
enUr- WEST ORANGEVILLE
■were callers
given by-djpk* Margaret Hartnacke.
Un.
^5 ,
Y/’-,Vr?on'iP .
°&lt;nias with retattvM tn Battle Creek. ,Lyle Kingsbury and Mis* Emma the Moreau home. Augusta, where! ।
AND EAST GUN MARSH.
Christmas dinner their
Grand Rapids, who will discuss special administrator filed, letters of
Mr gnd Mr&gt;
Tripp and Johncock. Port Huron; Mrs. Edith Mr. Moreau la confined to ills bed; tatned for
„
#n(
and
Lillian Baria'Lighting In the Home.' Recent de­ special administration issued.
'baby. Mr. and Mra. Albert Green Powers. DunningvUle.
he was taken .suddenly
worse | cousins.
of Henry
plalnywtU
.
Utile daughter
velopments ot power lines in rural
Est. Asa L. Noye*. Ptb*l account
oordon ate Christmas dinner
Mr and Mrs. Virgil Monica and Christmas morning, but is some- -•
—
। Mr. and Mra. Floyd Mlnar had
district* has made the matter of filed, order assigning residue enter- wlth Mr and
Archle Burd
.father. Mr. Heller, are spending the
al U,“ -Tllliy
....
parents.
the members of the Willard Mlnar
the choice of electrical equipment ed. discharge ol executor Issued, es- (
warden, Mr. Sumner. ■ week with the latter’s daughter.
Word was received here ofLena
the 8famlly
guests OMrs^St'
n Thursday lS
On
oim of the most Interesting, house­
X.y MM?
II
,had Ww misfortune to have hls car Mrs George Smith. Mr. Helter Is jertous *£&lt;»“««* Mis.
hold subjects.
EsL Cordelia Bissell. Annual ac- break down tn tlie Green yard. Mr. feeling quite elated over
being
Dunn who -oibmiited to a major had U1Plr chUdren &lt;nd grondchll- iCafferty. Jr., and brother, Al Ca­
Dr. Maty Bwartx Rose, professor
«Cd’ - «•. ..
« -• — ' Orwn had to Itltch hls teain on grandpa.
operallon al Bronson hospital. Kai- dren and Mr and
Lyle NoU naan and wife, motored on Monday
of nutrition. Columbia University,
?&gt;-LenCe F"
Jn^LiS’iand tow him o quarter of a mile.
"
“ Kring spent‘ Christmas
•• with
•
Rev.
amaxoo. last Thursday. We hope to llngh*m and family, also Mrs Rog- last to McGuffey and Kenton, Ohio,
appears on the homo economic's count filed, waiver of notica filed, 8&lt;jme tlmM
hls parents at Blissfield, returning receive
reeelve word of the Improvement
Imnrovenwnt of j
of KaUmMOO who came to where they visited friends and rela­
Daughter
program and al the general meeting order assigning residue entered, dis»_________
। home Saturday.
Mr. Moreau and Miss Dunn very],
spend the day with Mr. and Mrs. tives, returning the last of ths weak.
on Tues Feb. 4. All general meetings charge of Admr. issued, estate en­
i Mr nnd Mrs. R. E. Pierce and soon.
FAIR LAKE.
Lee Nottingham and family.
*re held In the afternoon or evening. rolled.
v
Mr. Fritz uid Larirtn «twnt Sun- i daughter. Mary Joyce, and Mr. and
Mr and Mra. E. Quick visited Mr.
°f
Dr. Rose is a well known writer and
Eat. Hervey H, Church. Discharge da? wlE USn^kShey « Pu e ' Mr’ cUfford KMh,1° “&gt;d
bay with Mason Foraney at I ine OrangevUle motOred to Flint to and Mra Vert Robinson at Shultz
her talk will be enjoyed by those at­ of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
from Saturday till Sunday evening.
tending the home economics ban­
Est. Eva S. Johnson. Warrant
N»t.nn WHiiu...
(have ChristuiM dinner with Mra.
Mr and Mrs Harlan Scoby spent
Nelson Willison and family and „Km.hnr Trn slnwson and
quet Tuesday evening .
and Inventory filed.
Chas. Hammond and family spent
brolher- Ira 5la%son ana Sunday evening with the former’s
The skein of affairs in Ethiopia
Esc. Horace Bllvin. Annual ac­
, ,
I mother and family at Welcome.
Chrulmas In Hastings, the aueste i
111 be untangled in a talk by Dr. count filed.
of Mr. and Mra. Harry Ritchie.
L’*?- „
'
Miss
Leona Warner of Gaylord
H. H. Kimber. M. 8. C. Africa seems
Est. Henry Crapott. Order allow­
The Knul.y Aid Beeiel, .111 meel
1 nnd Miss Hallah Cheyne of Kala­
far away to most Americans but the ing claim* entered.
J.n. » with Mr. Le.l&gt; WUUunmt.!
“ Mec.llum du mazoo spent Sunday afternoon and
situation there may enmesh Michi­
Est. Mildred WUUtto, et al. Re­
-. —
otto
-----Loek&amp;Udt
—' ,vcnlnK w,lh M,s M Bradfield.
gan citizens unleas there Is a gen­ lease of Odn. filed, discharge of Mrs. Griffin and Mrs. Hannah Ford
----------Otto pteltsadl, Mr and Mfs Arthur Bradfield;
assisting her. Come prepared to
eral knowledge ot lhe import of lhe Gdn. issued, estate enrolled.
i™, »&gt;
are »~mlin, —aral
moves and counter moves of Euro­
ui. Bertha
oenn. Willard. Petition for
Est.
oSi “ jEkStri?■ SG
Mr
D,‘d' I
Mr. and Mra. Charles Lechleitner
pean nations.
]Admr. filed.
The commercial aspect ot lhe
Order and Edward and Mra. Meda Spew
'
| Mrs A. Roll and Miss Eva Roll.
’
and
»i*nt Christmas with Leod home.
week's program will appear in the confirming sale entered. '
and friend from Chicago spent from I
Est. Allee E. Steeby. et al. Release Mr- and Mra- Ncd Weteher m Battalk given by Miss Winifred GetMr. and Mrs. Archie McNutt spent
Fridayv till Sunday at their farm
temy on Homecrafts.' There are of Gdn. filed, discharge of Gdn. is-, Ue Creek.
Christmas with relatives in Otsego
here.
i Mr and Mrs
Knowles. Mra
several ways in which women who sued, estate enrolled.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pcnncls and
Merle Bradfield nnd son
Jack
Est. Edgar A. Hannemann. Dis- Earl
Larida and Gene. Earl daughter. Dona Marie, spent c-nrist
are talented with tlie needle or in
Christ- 1 8r*nt
Pennell
Sunday withlhelr uncte. Mr. I
lhe kitchen arts can supplement lhe charge of Admr. issued, estate cn- Knowles and Leo Lechleitner all
spent Christmas day in Jackson as
family income, and Miss Oeltemy rolled.
Est. George W. Miller. Warrent ‘he guests of Mra. Cyril Van Horn
will tell which of the ways are most
for and daughter. Mamie.
.
practical and of the experiences and inventory filed. peUUon
rhdd„n r™
children
for .
a few
r.w d...
days.
some women have had In market­ hearing claims filed, notice to cred-1 Mr and Mr» R** Pierce and son il" Me-d. o( KMamawo
After only a
week’s
vacation.
Hors issued.
'Allen. Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGIocking homemade products.
Mr. and Mra. A H Day of Pontiac
----------------»e
»
Un
and
grandson.
Earl
Weadbrock.
The most artistic ways of decorat­
spent Sunday with their sister. Mbs school is in session again al Milo]
this
Monday
morning.
EAST GUN LAKEMra. Lottie Colllsler. Iva and Mnry Cagney, and Henry Ryan.
ing the interior of the house will be
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Pietersma
aqd
Carl Sheerin is at home after spent Christmas with Mason For­
iht subject discussed by Miss EthcMr and Mrs. Elmo Snyder of daughter are our new neighbors on |
lyn Miller. Herron Art School, In­ spending several weeks al lhe Will' shey and family of North Pine lake. Kalamazoo spent Christmas with
FRESH. TASTY
the Pennels farm. They expect to
Clare Williamson and family en- Mr and Mrs. Arthur Waugh.
dianapolis. She appears on the pro­ Crans home near Caledonia.
Mr. and Mm. Ray Crawford and tertainea at Christmas dinner, Mrs
gram on both Wednesday and
Mr nnd Mrs. Wm. Pierce of Char­ raise poultry on an extensive scale,
Thursday. Artistic and efficient ways daughters and James Thaxton were Will Ford. Clinton Williamson and lotte and Orin Dayton of Hastings wc understand
the1I Mrs. Kellogg Flower ot Ross, and
of decorating lhe body’s Interior In Oteego Monday night, the latter , famUy of Augusta and Mra Inez had Christmas dinner with
i son Louis of Grand Rapids started
will be shown by M1*8 Lz&gt;u Brewer, spending hls vacation with relatives , Ford and family of near Fine lake. Grover Davenport family
Edward Martin and Mary GIL
Miu Iva Case spent Saturday
wlio demoiulrates Die preparation
Mr. and Mra. Russel! Monica spent last Monday for Lake Worth. Fla.
hran
of
Chicago
spent
Clirlstmas
at
night
with
Larcda
Fritz
near
Dclof food each morning. Miss Brewer
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Mrs. Flower will remain for the
9 Consistent "Everyday LOW
an.
Monica
I
'‘,,nl4?r' Louis will return lhe latter
the
Waiter
slater
home.
I
ton.
formerly was on the extension staff
About
ClifT Allen and son of Yankee
Ab
.. ..... - J2ad,_° I Mr. and Mra Lester Monica cn-1 porl ot th”
of Cornell University.
PRICES” on QUALITY
Springs called at the Will Crawford party for Miss »
Esther
Willison for, Kjjtajned the following relatives to
-.vBARRYVILLE
FOODS Count Most.
home Monday eve.
, her birthday Friday evening.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
a Christmas dinner, Sunday: Mr.
The Gun lake school entertained ' Charles McDermid is spending the and Mrs. Wellington Monica and ’. Christmas guests of Mr and Mrs.
Mr and Mrs. Bert Smith enter­
J J. Willette and Helen were: Ar­
• SATISFACTION GUARAN­
tained their children at supper lhe public with a Christmas tree । holidays with relatives in Freeport, daughter ot Bedford. Mr and Mrs.
chie
Newton
and
children
of
and
fine
program
Saturday
night.
Tlie
.Mott
family
met
Sunday
for
Wm Hayward and family of DclChristmas Eve. Those present were:
TEED or Your Money Back.
Prlchardvlllr: Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
ton and Mr. and Mrs Jess Haney
.Mr and Mrs. Casgo Smith of Len­ under the guidance of their teacher, dinner with Russci) Mott
Ike Lelnaar and family spent
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Pennels had Willette and Marilyn of Chicago:
sing; Mr and Mra. Ward Green Miss Sara Jane Gillespie, of Has• ACCURATE Cash Register
Christmas al Floyd Morford’s near Christmas dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Willetts of Detroit; Miss
and daughter and Mr and
Mrs. llnR*.
Mr. and Mrs. James Null and chil- Delton.
Elizabeth Griffin of Charlotte; Ray­
Ferguson,
Paul Smith and Marcia Ann.
Receipt with Each Purchase.
dren spent Christmas with relatives
Mr. and Mrs Grant Dickerson mond and Janette Willette of LanRev and Mrs Frank Moxon and
ROBINHUE PARK.
.-.pent Christ ma., with their daugh­ r.mc nnd Clara Day and daughters
Mrs Richard Mullis of Caledonia In Olsego.
&gt; PROMPT and COURTEOUS
Mr and Mrs. Otto Lightfoot. Mr ter. Mrs. Mills and family, at Sou Hi
Jack Andrews and Miss Lots
Mr. and Mrs. Chas Day and fam­
were Christmas guests of Guy KanlSherman of Lansing and Mr. and and Mrs Otto Kunde of Freeport Bend. Ind.
ily nnd Mr and Mra L. A. Day
SERVICE—SAVE TIME and
ner and family.
Bedford
is1 and to’uily
Christmas gueste
Mrs.
Kenneth
Andrews
sj&gt;mt|I and Schuyler Kollar were ChristMaxine Monica
. .
Mr and Mrs. Glenn Wotting en­
STEPS.
. mas day guests of Mr. and Mrs
of Mr. nnd Mrs Frank Day of South
spending a few days with --Miss Evetertained the Wotting families at Chrisimas at the Lawrence Barry । John Kollar nnd Harold.
home in Kalamazoo.
1
Hastings
llyn Monica. dinner Christ mas day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Crawford and i Howard Smith and family spent ' Mr.: Masi,a Hunt n&lt;M&lt;M &gt; l»rMr “J*
““J* ?'"“x •«’
Mr. and Mra. J. D. Wise and
daughters spent Christmas at the i Christmas with Mr and Mrs Lewis •onal rtdiosrHm Dec il Imr.i her
»' Uw H„tM»u» r.mUy near
daughters. Josephine and Cornelia,
i Skinner and family of Leighton
James Deaton home in Otsego.
son. Nelson Replogic, who is In Ma- I Bellevue. Christmas day
and Mr. and Mra. Bucl Wise spent
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mendenhall nijla, Philippine Islands, sending
**r and Mr*
”?‘dc *ccnmChristmas day with Mr and Mra.
KLINGENSMITIL
'and son. Edward, of Caledonia spent, best utshes for Christmas and the pan‘ed Mr and Mrs Chas McCoy
Floyd Mahler of East Woodland.
Clifford Converse and Miss Esther ; Christmas day with Wright Clifford New Year to the home folks
of Grand Rapids
'"
’ to
“ Battle
*“ ‘ Creek
Mr. and Mrs. John . Weyerman Allen^cre married recently. Con­ 1 and family
Christmas, where they spent the
and children of Delton and Mra. gratulations. They are living near 1 Lillian Jackson of Howell is visHICKORY CORNERS.
day with Mr and Mrs. G Oanka.
Inez Collar spent Christmas with Hastings.
11ting her aunt and uncle. Mr. and
Visitors
al
Glenn
Aspinalls
Sun
­
Mrs.
Chas.
Hultoh
of
Clarkston
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. H
Mr. and Mrs Burdette Willson Mrs. Evrid Jackson and Randall
day were her parents. Mr. and Mrs. came to lhe home of her parents.
Eddy.
entertained a number ot friends In 1 Mr. and Mra Julian Potts had as j Pete Hoffman of near Nashville, Mr. and Mra. Will Hyde. Christmas
Mr. and Mrs. I N Williams and honor of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Con­ i their guests Christmas day. Mr. and
and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Camel and evening
Mr Hutton comes for
Doris of Dowling were dinner guests verse.
। Mrs. Sam Zcrbe. Mr. and Mrs. family of Banfield
New Year's day and she will return
of Chas, Farlee and family Christ­
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Pickard । Ralph Flnkbelner and daughter, Mr
Mr and .Mra. Clifford Cottrell of home with him.
inas day.
.
have moved into part ot tlie DeVries I and Mrs Glenn Dean and children Detroll and Marcelcne of Hastings
Mr. and Mrs Ernest'Hoffman and
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Van Wle house.
of Middleville and Mr. and Mrs. rpent Christmas with their parents, children of Banfield and Mr. and
were Christmas guests of Mr. and
Albert Green and Archie Burd । Alex Potts of Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mra. B. Campbell.
Mrs. Howard Burwell of Kalamazoo
Mjs. Floyd Van Wle. We are sorry
Mrs. Wallace Barden of Kalama­ were Christinas guesta of their par­
to report that Mrs. Van Wic Is in
zoo. Her brother. Clayton Haynes, ents. Mr nnd Mra. Millon Oesler.
very poor health.
went home with her lo spend a few
Mr. and Mra. Ralph DeVine were
Wayne Offley and family spent
Thursday guests of Mr. and Mra.
Christmas day in Hastings with Mr.

EXPECT TRAFFIC JAM
AT WOMEN’S MEETINGS

- B. a Swift, and
1 the wedding of the
In Grand Rapids

Our

thermometer;

is enjoyed a fine
e and are nearly
Annual inventories.

a long life spent tn

rant to Detroit. Bunnd Monday A. M on
nnectlon with the
1 for the addition to
ere Sunday, of the
ml* of William ClsthU place, known to
, two daughters anil
tUves and a host of

I -family of Grand
nday guests of G. D.
more. Patricia and
lo visit their grandtek.
of auto owners seem
lie limit before pro38 plates; to many
r money right al
tax time, suggest It
I1 Ute middle of the

lhe
is
I to
If

members of lhe
called for this
consider a procarried will be

a Scouts of Ship No.
leeler. Skipper, came
I ship ■■Aquilla." achelr lady friends at.
:ond dog watch gatanchors al 8 Bells.
h 1st Mate took over
1 after setting the
its guests to thedln■ a splendid dinner
need by the Ship’s
ncc of the evening
ballroom where Mr.
Caledonia ship enjc command of full
rnlshing lhe dance
into port at 7 Bells
it Watch, when all
n shore leave ending
Ise since the organI Ship.
CENTER.
id Mrs. Russell Kay
fine baby girl on
Kay was formerly
nard of this place.
Shearer and daughrUlling In Kalamattolldays.
■ is visiting relatives
alamazoo this week,
erry Wiseman of
■e Sunday guests of
yde Ixonard.
Milton Warner of
. Sunday with their
I Mrs. Fred Ashby.
of Brush Ridge is
r. Mrs Fred Ashby.
:k and Mrs. Byron
byvllle were at the
r Christmas dlnnpr.
Jermott is confined
the flu.
Clyde Leonard en:1 Mrs. Grover Mar­
lrove Sunday.
Hare Ashby are vls-i
nts. Mr. and Mrs.*
farshall during the

Henry Wertmab
th their son Myron
ittle Creek,
y elub comes again

&gt;d old home talent
er also. The supper
fra. Wiseman so wc
having plenty to
mj have gone to
- good time and
father also.
report Aunt PheDc
etler.
’ •
Ums of the Durfee
few days with het
d Owen last weekneed again this

Mmas program on

have the right to
f our own generaloovcr.

iry Grode
act by the
Highlands
nd Belling

e assured
Bl assured
juld Have

URY
Hutmg,

COUNT HOUS* NWS

FOR your 1936 FOOD BUYING

;

f.

ItR1

OMASST

P’NUT BUTTER 2^ 27c
SPLIT GREEN PEAS-5c
EGG NOODLES &gt; 14c
SPINACH35225c
cocoa x
2^.18c
APPLE BUTTER- 15c
GRAPE NUT FLAKES
INSTANT POSTUM

and Mrs Charles Offley.
Mrs. Carl Scofield of Pontiac and
Mrs Carl Ntethamer of Woodland
called on Mbs Mary Nash Cu'si­
mas day.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thompson
and children ot Sunfield. Mr. and
Mra. Lee Hazel and daughter of
rence Lucas were dinner guests of
John Mead and Henry Cole and
family Chrulmas day.
Harry Sandbrook and
family
spenl Christmas with Mr. and Mra
Bert Rogers in Luke Odessa.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth SmlUi and
daughters, Ncvah and Viva, and
Mrs Sherman Smith of Hastings
spent Christmas evening with Chas.
Farke and family.We are sorry to report that Mr
and Mrs. Fred Jordan arc on the
sick list. Von Maklcy is assisting
with lhe chores.
“

SOUTH BOWNE.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Grinin, and
daughter. Marion, spent the week
end m Bellevue at the home of Mra.
Grlfitns grandmother
Mr. and Mrs. WiU Cosgriff
of
Lowell spent Sunday with Will Pardec and family.
Raymond Shatter and Miss Eve­
lyn Ellis visited Bunday afternoon
at Andy Blough’s.
W. H. Pardee and family. Elsie
Ferris and Jennie Pardee spent
Christmas at the home of Henry
Johnson al jjowne center.
Those entertained at the home
of Will Mishler on Christmas day
were: Mr. and Mrs. Carl Miller
and baby; Lena Mishler, Mr. and
Mr*. John Mishler and Marilyn
Martin of Grand Rapids.
Harold Yoder .was in Marshall
Tuesday on. business
. Will Mishler and family accom­
panied by Susie Forbcy and Deeds
Nagler wore at Pennock hospital
Sunday afternoon to see Mrs. Forbey s husband, who was hurt In the
• woods while cutting wood.
Snory Keim and family spent
Christmas with Harold Yoder and
family.
John Thaler and family ot
Campbell and Mr. and Mrs. Basil
Thompson of Pontiac visited Christ­
mas night al Win Mishler's.
Mr. and Mr*. BUncr Shatter and
family accoinpunled by Esther and
baby visited Thurefay in Fenton at
the home of Gord® Plllen.

MACARONI g^20‘
TOMATOES^ 25‘
PRUNES EE 4-19^
SOUPS
3^2SC
ROLLED OATS£22C
UVzVI

/■■K,

.

Ground-Grip

yirt&gt;tOH€ TIRES

looking for ... a tire with » tread
designed to eliminate all need ofchains. FIRESTONE G SOUN D
GRIP TIRES give you traction In

FOR TRUCKS

FOR CARS

DIED
• races
33x6 Truck Type
$27.85

SIZE
FBICEH
4.4O/4.5O/4.75-21 ....I 7.8.”&gt;
4.75/5.00-10 ................. 8.50
4.50/4.75/5.00-20 .... 845
5,35/5.50-17
10.65
5.25/5.50-18
11.05
6.00-18 ....

HEAVY DUTY
SUE
PRICES
4.40/4.M/4.75-21 ....» B40
4.75/5.00-19
10X0
4.60/4.75/5.00-20 .... 10.35
5.25/5JJ0-17
12.50
545/5X0-18
12.75
Otk«r ili«i propfirileaauly low

Drive in safety . . . install a Trico Vacuum Fan to
keep your windshield free of ste&lt;in - • • frost . . .
Sleet. On display at our Service Station.

GOOD COAL makea warm friend,,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleaded with the fine,
even heat. Low in aah, and longburning. Try a ton today and
save on your fuel bilk.
SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Price*:—

16'« Dairy—$1.55 per 100 lb,.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 Ibe.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lbs.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lb,. . ♦

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company
* _l|*’Uac TUw
• Batteries, Windshield Wipeas

EicdkaFhw

aJun&amp;sv

PANCAKE FLOUR St 19*

Built for passenger car. truck and
tractor.
■

C.00-20 ______ ............ 18.05
6.50-20 ______ ...............21.95
7.00-20 ______ ...............29.10
7.50-20 ______ ...............35.20
7.50-23 ............ ...............39.00
8.25-20 ............ ...............4940
8.25-24 ______ ...............54.75
9.00-20 ............ ...............60.75
9.00-24 ............ .............. 65.95
9.76-20 ............ ---------- 7945
9.75-24 .......
15.05
10.50-30 .......... ............... 92.10
Other iliei ptoptirUoaudr low

V

• titrates Gas and Gib.
* Valeggtiing Electric,

Greasing
Washing

Hastings Telephone 2257
Dealers Tu Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour. Sall, Limo,

BLUE

Sunoco M,
V' 1

Cement and Goal

ATTENTION!
MR. AND MRS. FARMER!
NEW POULTRY AND DAIRY
FEED DEPARTMENT!
In keeping with C. Thoma* Store*' Quality
Merchandise at "Everyday Low Prices,” we
have opened a NEW FEED DEPART­
MENT, selling ACME FEEDS.
ACME FEEDS GROW HEALTHY, VIG­
OROUS STOCK . . . GIVE HIGHEST
PRODUCTION AT LOWEST COST!

OPENING SALE!
SCRATCH FEED L*’1.79
ACME Em Math
DAIRY REED
’1.23

1 THOMA
128 W. STATE st.

ret*

til •3K

ifc
43c

�TKE HARTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. JANUARY 2. 1938
^acreage of rye was nearly three per Hart and bhby and Mr. and Mr». I Mr. and Mr*. Ray Clemens.spent
NASHVILLE.
'Pent her vacation with her parents. Srwtt of Rutland. Mrs. Gertrude.
jWdcux and Mr. and X™- George
cpnl larjt(,r whllc lts condition on' Robert Vrootnan and baby of Has- ’ Christmas with Mrs. &gt;. Boynton ot, T V ir-wm &lt;rw»nt rhrtxLmns with IMr »nd MrM Von w Fumlss
E’.V'
.15
Lewis Wiley, the 19 year old Cold- McCulla in Hastings Sunday.
I
PROSPECT IN MICHIGAN December 1 this year was about II lings.
•*'— Mr.
**- and
...... Mrs. Howard. John«-»•■&lt;- । Sunfield.
hls daughter. Mrs'. Raida Keyes and [
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Floyd^
Kussmaul
wjn. of Hickory Comers. Mrs Clara
per cent poorer than a year ago.
sons pi Farmington.
। water boy. has been charged with ■ Elmer Walters and daughter,
'attempted
extortion
by
sending
a
Donna, of Ionia speirt Wednesday
Robinson*
irtisungx.-*
Mrs.
Emma
spent
Weanesday
evening
with
Mr.
The spring and fall pig crop tn
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Flook spent
That Is the Crop Report for , 1935
letter lo Mra. Wesley Worst of Cold- afternoon with Mr and Mra. Edw.
WUylanrf
and Mr.--------and Mrs.
was 702,000 head in Michigan.Oils.
----- —-----------------------Christmas with Mr. and Mra. Fred
waler demanding 1200 Mra. Worst Walters and family.
'
Michigan Issued for
as compared with 714.000 in 1934. George Havens and children.
Hanea.
Other
guest*
were
Mr.
and
WEST HOPE.
1.076.00 in 1933 and 1.077.000 in
Mrs. Jennie Wilcox St N
Mr an&lt;1 Mr» Amold Malfol,n ,nd
December
The Christmas program at lhe Mrs. Howard Jones and family of
1 J5?dWtth .family of Lake Odessa were Sun­
1932. ‘
-------ti*w Sunday lo spend somZ lime
church was presented to a full house Battle Creek.
' j The Michigan crop report. Issued
.
_in&gt; her son Jim and family.'
day af^nioon gue,^ of the lai ter s
George Wotring. of Kalamazoo has. her mother, Mra. John Snore.
। December 27, shows five per cent
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mrs. Daii/JotigUs and Mrs. Bert Tuesday evening. Santa Claus was been spending hls vacation with his
DELTON
jm*rents. Mr. ana Mrs. joiui aaaismaller acreage sown to wheat last
Mrs. Hazel Otis and daughters of Newland ^rttendc-d a dinner last tn unusually good spirits and was
Rev. nnd Mrs. Bates are enter- ;co]1?'
J ,,
„
.
and
full than In 1634. and 35 per cent Hickory comers were Bunday gueMX* Friday jft the home of Mrs. Lula hailed wiih delight by the kiddies mother. Mrs, Fred Wotring.
and enjoyed by all. The program Mias Louise Wotring of Lansing lalning over the week end the for- ; , Mr- “to Mr&lt;- R°y Taffee of Hos­
less for rye. The condition of tlie
j.,
waters’ of Poditnk honoring Mrs.
...
bom® over Christmas
mer's father and mother from South | Vn»-i vtaited Mr. and Mra Clmklc
of last
two empa on December I was: Edna jester mwUtwo friends of Bessie Storms of Los AJWelc.-i. Cuilf.. was nicely given in spite
minute illness ot sr-vrral of lhe pur-1 M™. Hoy Bassett ot Lansing spent Haven.
•
| A. Hammond and family Saturday
Wheat nve per cent less favorableBclU’Vue were evening callers there. und Mn-.* Lydia B«fnrdus of Chi-! licipanU.
' . ® few day? with her sister. Mrs. Cor!.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adriansoh and '&gt;ftornoon.
and jye four per cent lev. favorable
Emma OtU of Wayland Is cago. The guests of the day Included
Dister Lord from the CCC camp ^“V4UC: who
,11- . ,,
.
Ilian on the same dale in 1934. For/
Harry spent Christmas Eve and ' Mr. Md Mrs. Floyd Wallers and
tin teacher. Mrs. Clara Robinson
county spent uir
the iiuu
hollBrumm
Nebr.. Christmas- Day with MY. and Mrs. famiiy of Grand Rapids spent Sunthe whole country the acreage oZ uniting her sister-in-law. Mrs. Wm. and eight of the pupils that
(hat atIII- j in Newaygo muiuy
- ■ Shirley
—..
_...... of Lincoln.
,
Aaven*i and family and other relaat
the
time
days
*&gt;th
hl
*
^fc
«P
d
her
family
“
P*"
1
J,
rom
Tu
'
‘
sd
ay
unt
5
®*
lu
rday
wheat is nearly seven per cent lap* &gt;Ilvi.e fMr
„
. •
Roy Adrlanson and family in Battle day evening with Mr. and Mra. Edw.
tended the OUn school o
for a
a few
days;
er than last year oral its condltk*&lt;*tives
in “ ,or
:cw o»p.
I here. On Friilay evening a group of ’ with bin parents, Mr. and Mra. Coy
Creek. .
Walton.
NOW. THRSKPORK.
December 1 this year was practi- I Mr. and Mrs. Frauds Gorham, the Honor guests did.
to the CCC neighbors and friends met at Jim °- Brumm.
Mrs. Ella Rogers is spending the
Wendall and Norris' Malcolm of
Lester Lord returned to the CCC
ran
dam’ Wilcox's
„A Youths Conference was held
cally the same as Ahe . preceding were Christmas guests of tneir camp .1
—rau «.*«
at rtc
Newaygo
after •
a •
9 UM,.
days’ Wilcox’S with lunch and gifts for a Tuesday* afternoon and evening at holiday vacation with her son in Lake Odessa are visiting their
yew. Ftor the entire country the daughter. Mrs. Willard Bagley and
vith hi*
wife
nt
the
home
of
miscellaneous shower for them. Mr.
Chicago.
.
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. John
visit
With
hi?
wife
=
.
’
lbb
“
.c
=f
___ _________ family of Kalamazoo.
the Evangelical church.
Seven
and
Mrs.
Lord
received
many
nice
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Leon
Leonard
and
Malcolm
this week. Norris was a
her parents. Mr. and Mr- Jim Wil­
notice to CBEDiTOBS.
znna nnd Lottie Douglass of the cox.
gifts nnd a delightful evening was churches. Woodland. Leighton. Bat­ •children. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kroos Sunday guest of David Robinson,
•
tle Creek, two Jackson churches.
BUI* Of
ProUta Coort for Edger district were guests a few
and children. Mr. and Mra. George
---------------- -----------------------Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clem and son । spent.
1
.k. rimo., ot^rrT.
; days ,Mt week Qf th|.ir grandpar.
Ionia. Maple Grove and Cloverdale
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Collison
are
Leonard and son. Dr. and Mrs. Loyal
---------------—*”
PRAIRIEVILLE.
an- visiting their daughter nnd hus- ■
ients. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Douglass.
the proud grandparent* of a baby were represented* Rev. L. E. Wll- Flowers and Will Leonard mH spent
iur a *happy. prosperous
band of Rockford.
K.r. uu&lt;u u..
w m,. loughby and Rev. L. E. Chamberlaih ChrisUnas with Mr. and Mrs Beyers NeA. wish
yearfor
to you
ai^V^S
1 Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilcox and son
Kenneth Brower of Hastings 11girl born on December 24 lo Mr.
! Robert and Mr. and Mrs. Lester spent the week end in the Harry 1and Mrs. Gordon Collison of Battle were the leaders. The following
1935.
.
tout
I
could
have
the
news phoned
Creek, in Nichols hospital: Dolores urogram was elven- 2:3U P. M._ de| Lord were Kalamazoo visitors last Dunn home.
Elizabeth Doster underwent a ton- ln or g|ven nw ttn). ume during the
votions; 2:45. group conferences:
Monday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Jim Wilcox nnd son. ■Ann is the name of lhe little Miss. Problems of Youth. 14 to 17. 18 to sil and adenoid operation in Bor- r--*gess hospital last Friday. She re­
Mr. and Mrs. wm. Havens enter­ Mr and Mrs. Lesu-r Lord and Benj. 1CongratubtioiLs.
A young njare belonging to Gerald 24. of Youths at 25 Years. 3:35. Re­ turned home lhe same day and is . Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hughes
tained the following relatives at a Jenkins were guests Christmas day
gave birth td twin colts one cess. 3:40. Address. "Youth Seeks getting along finely.
!and son. Fred. Jr. of Logansport.
holiday dinner on Sunday: Mr. and of the former’s sister. Mrs. Glenna Anders
the Meaning of Life, by Lend­
are visiting relatives here.
■
day
last
week.
They
were
premature
Mr. and Mrs. Browers and family Indiana,
‘
Mrs. Rankin Hart and daughter of Prtiidle and husband of Plainwell'
both died. We understand twin er No. 1 of the team in charge. 4:15. ‘ have moved into the Burpee ..vu=c
Mrs. Floyd Shelp entertained a
house
Mr. and Mrs. Hurry Dunn and and
'
Brusli Ridge. Mr. nnd Mrs. Wm.
Round
Table.
In
charge
of
Leader
&gt;
colls are very rare.
■
-­
children
spent
Christmas
With
Mr.
1 ' from the Boulter farm south and P»rt&gt;' of K^ls Sunday in honor of
"I.
0:00,
banquet.
All
Youth
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Morehouse
f- -----------«•••
east of Delton.
- her daughter, Ellen's, tenth blrtlinnd Mrs. Ray Erway of Podunk.
CHANCERY NOTICE.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Allen Terry of. day. A fine time Is the report.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Douglas-s of, [ate Christmas dinner with Mr. nnd Program. 7.45. public service, song
music, address. "If
. -11 Litchfield are spending the holidays
Mrs. **
Ernest
’’“*' Farr
E’“M' W
will
"1 give
olv* a
“ party
Hastings and Myron Bishop of Ce- 1Mrs. Homer McKlbbin and son “rv «•
MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE.
of Yankee Springs.
Toum Would Live and Senft.’ t~
Dy with the home folks.
lor her Sunday school class of
oar Creek were Sunday guesta of Richard
1
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Springer and , Lc“ffr J?0'
1 Wade Town and family spent young Indies Saturday. Jan. 4lh. in
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Douglas-..
children spent Christmas day in &lt;
ChlaT. r
Commerce met
■b&lt;l AtU*
Over CO guests gathered at the (
Christmas with Mrs. Minnie Telh- honor of Mlu Lets Billings' birth­
"J*}*1 •*1Jhe ’■
P- haUday anniversary.
i home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilcox 1Bowens Mills as guests of Mr. and
4U«llie. Miebixar
Mrs. Clarke Springer. Donald re- .lhe Rehekah ladles putting on the rick at Hickory Corners. m.
Gerald and Harvey Mills of De­
Friday evening for a miscellaneous 1
Miss Maxine Henton of Taylor
malned ihrre lor * l.w Sly.- vUll.. “Wr„ Th'
P™"™'shower in honor of Mr. and Mrs. &lt; Holiday visitors at the Jesse Os- [ lnJ Attorney Archie D. McDonald, University is spending her holiday troit came Tuesday to visit their '
vacation with her parents.
I
I -------parents.
-- *"
Mr. and-Mra. Maurice *»"•Mills.
Lester Lord. The evening was spent
good home art Misses Bernice HanMo"day
Jan; 61 *’lH oc­
in visiting and refreshments were '
Clair Richards of Kalamazoo and Wednesday they all spent the day
cur and Harriet Schaffer of Hunt-;CUr *thc,
01
Ruth Richards of Battle creek spent with Mr and Mrs. Bernard Mills
f.rved. They received a number 'Ington and Muncie. Ind.
I‘he Ivy Lodge No 37. K. of P with
Christinas with their mother and and family of West Lake.
of presents.
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Woodman and
Ka*to as Chancellor Corn.Id.
Mr. and Mrs. David Dt-1 enter­
brother Paul.
Mr. and Mrs. J. p. Collison had their •2’“”?"’.
IC2”F..
Mo?1
Mrs. Julia Weller is. entertaining tained Christmas day. Mr. and Mrs.
DURFEE.
family Christmas dinner with Mrs. |
-op°£ Nashville Temple
Neuman Deal. Mr. and Mrs. Town.
NOW. THEREFORE, hr virtu.
her daughter from Detroit.
i Barre.
Mobtoaob SALE.
Mr. and Mrs. F.d. Rice entertained
Mary Belle Johncock last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elirens and families,
|
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Leon
Pennock
and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Palmer and ,Tlie children and grandchildren
^*,b ,‘LCoJ?pttnl i111
I children. Mr. and Mrs-John Adams. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Deal of Grind
utk* !• h«rrt.» «!&lt;»• IL.
family of .Orangeville. Mr. und Mrs. were present.
I “n exhlbilor at the Grand Rapids
... V-I.n..r. 4
101.
Add Pennock and Mrj. Warner ale Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Palmer
Dean Po’.ler and Mrs. Mary Rice of; Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Keller and
J?*";
h*05*5 Christmas dinner wit
Christmas dinner with Mr. and Mrs. and Miss Barbara Fox of Hastings.
Ntin.Urd Tim*.
&gt;111
Hastings and Mrs. Ethel Parsons of famiiy enjoyed Christmas atthe X
ramny enjoyea unnsimns ai me
—------ —. Otenn Willbms at
-t' the Kellogg An enjoyable family gathering.
Plainwell, on Christmas day.
Sam Keller home, all of the family in,ter lhe 5Jrat °* the year for in­
Mrs. Fred X Hughes was taken »
Farm.
\
Rnlliilnr.
i ve,,tory and repairs.
Mrs. Orville Piirsell and daughter. being present’
Mr. and Mr?. C. P. Larabee and New Borges* hospital at Kalamazoo
Sir nnn
«nrt Mrs.
Mrs acre
Bert Mcrvioom
McKlbbin ana
«».l
n''.;^'1
callfd. 1 Mr and Mrs. Harry Garrison of Sunday afternoon. Ill with penuDora. Mrs. Tom Hoffman nnd
.Mr.
calnrfl
” “"™'“
daughter Doris and Mrs. Ed. Rice I family
&lt;rf llirr&gt;
ut­ °alur“*y
Hastings were Sunday ufternoon monla. We all hope for her a nice
family ate
ate Christmas
chrisimns dinner
dinner with
with °
-"n*l*l‘i&gt;t*d.
.............
ol Mr .nd Mr, H.rry recovery.
' and daughter. Veto, attended a —
M.
” C“UM “nd — —
&amp;rl■ - "°*" l”n" T”'
“■
j cd to about five dollars.
music party at Mrs. Chamberlain’s
■id mnrt&lt;*c*
No church services until Sunday.
Wertmnn.
nt Dowling Friday.
mortcu* will
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Anders nnd •
The Ladies' Aid will meet with
Mr. and Mra. C. J. Barnum spent
on
the
former's
sister
nnd
husband.
'
MIL
and
M
rs.
Grover
Brooks
and
1
j—children. Gerald Anders and the
"
« •« — ”
—
from Tuesday until Thursday in Mrs. Chester Johncock. January 8.
Lauer al Au[son spent Christmas with Mr. mid sSinger children enjoyed a Christ- . Mr.
,,., and
- - Mrs., Prank
Pot luck dinner and all day inerting.
i Cleveland. Ohio.
i an so [Mrs. gUle Edmonds of Hastings.
I nUA trtt&gt;-di&gt;d'dinner with Mr. nnd -“““i Saturday.
I R. G. Henton made a business trip
Mr. and Mrs. James McDowell of
, Mr. and Mrs. Harry William* nnd Mr5 -jju,/, Anders of Podunk Sun- I Pu
Funeral
’»'rnl "
services
’rvl
for William
Comstock were Friday guests of Mr.
to Detroit Monday.
MORTGAGE SALK
| Evans were held Monday afternoon i
th* mn ‘ children of Charlotte sjx-nt Sunday dn..
7
'
School will begin again Monday and Mrs. Manley Billings.
■t-i x.. j wftli Mr. and'Mrs. J. W. Moore and
'
v
-------- ---------I at the Hess funeral home at two1
of Ktnflrld'*
Robert Conway sppnl Thursday
January
6th.
it. &gt;&gt;&gt;
■ o'clock, conducted by Rev. Rhoades I
'r'll^rrr
DOWLING.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Walters and evening with Delton friends.
A Happy New Year to you all.
II of Maple Grove. Burial in Lake- I children of Potterville spent
i.ii.rr bb
Mr. and Mrs. James imes nnd
.
The young married peoples’ Sun­
•uir.i br . Mrs. Lena Brooks of Portland spent
An old fashioned belling was given view cemetery. Mr. Evans was 78 week with their mother. Mrs. Ada day school class will meet with Mr.
i Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Grover Howard Edmonds and bride at their years old. and had lived for a good Thorpe.
and Mrs. George Cowels of Delton
home Thursday evening and an an­ many years on a farm in Maple
i in Brook.-, and ton Bennie.
- New Year's Eve.
Dr. and Mrs. Ed. lowry
H. -i &gt;
Before that he
was a
T*
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Kellar and nouncement has been made of the Grove.
Tuesday several of the school
his
spending the holidays with —
.luV Donna Kellar of near Orangeville recent marriage* of Miss Hazel Ed­ plumber at the Glasgow store. Mrs. brother and family in Mississippi. children enjoyed the movies nt the
Evans passed away several years.
t ■'» spent Friday afternoon nnd evening munds. Congratulations.
at Hastings a
The Sunday School classes No., Strand Theater
,&gt;i.l wl,|, Mr all(1 Mrs Ed RlcP
;
Mrs. Anna Pierce, who has been ago. He leaves one son. Francis! 6-7 will meet with Mrs. Blanchei treat from the proprietor. They re­
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
imir
School began Monday at the Dur- at Hastings several months. Is stay­ Evans of Maple Grove, two daugh- । Richards on Monday night January port n wonderful time. Mra. William
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
Mra. F. Robinson of Hastings,
inr.i, fcc school after a week's vacation. । ing nl present with her son nnd tera.
and Mrs. A. W. Embury of Jackson. 1 Oil,.
6lh This L
is U,
to be a hard time party,, McKlbbin. Mrs. Ned Wilkins and
Uh
Rev. and Mrs. Edward Gamble family. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
both in dress and eatables. Mrs.. Earl Johncock furnished trunsporat which home Mr. Evans died, sev- ;
th* j were much surprised ns well ns. Pierce. ’
Bertha Adams has charge of the• ration.
f. ‘” | thankful for tlie donations unload-1
Mrs. Melissa Tinkler accompanied eral grandchildren and two great- I program and Mr*. Bertha Busii has&gt;
.Mr. and Mrs. Karl Krick and son
i ,t i ed at tlieir door by Santa Claus lust her broher. Leroy Emmons and fam*- grandchildren.
went to Grand Rapids Monday to
Mra. Bill King of Battle Creek charge of lhe eats.
ibrtl j Friday.
ily. to Bellevue Sunday where they
Tlte next regular community? visit her parents. Rev. and Mrs. L.
it flovbU
| Mr. nnd Mrs. Chas. Hammond, attended a family dinner nt' the
l D. Miles. They relumed Wednesday
meeting
will
be
on
Monday
night
n.th .Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Bateman. Miss home of their sister and husband, Clarence Shaw home. '
January 13th. Mra. Hattie Whitte­■ afternoon.
The Clover Leaf Club will meet
*&gt;"• ! Mary Baulch nnd Elroy Hotiuhtalin Mr. and Mrs. James Wcck&lt;
more is the program committee and
Mr. and Mrs. Orllc Fisher ’visited .Friday night nt the home nf Mra. Mr. nnd Mrs. Von Dunn and Mr. Lamar are spending the week with
r, spent Chrhtmns with Mr. nnd Mrs.
IgA ■
their sister. -Mrs. Millie Haynes, in | Grace Calkins. The annual election and Mrs. Charles Harrington will Mr. and Mrs. Verne Calthrop.
th* George Baulch at Hastliigs.
Nnuth
rrrr* ' Mr. and Mrs. Donald Couch nnd the Hendershott district- Sunday. of officers will be held.
act as the supper committee.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Krick will have
'"7 I family spent Christmas with Henry Mrs Haynes not bcing.yis wall as
MUs Mabie Roscoe of Lansing
MlssvShlrley Anders, assistant at for New Year's guests. Rev. and Mrs.
,ual.
[and Miss Alice Roscoe of Ypsilanti
-« i- Adonis of Delton.
■
usual.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Walter Cotton of I spent their vacations at their home the telephone office, is spending the L. D. Mlles. Mr. and Mrs. William
" 'h
Mr. and Mrs Ernie Bateman!
week al home.
Dobson and children. Mr. and Mrs.
"th" .‘pent Tuesday witii Mr. and Mrs. Climax were Sunday guests of Mr. here.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dunning spent | Robert Sponable, Mrs. Elsie Truax
Il ta farther
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Foster are both Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and of Grand Rapids and John Miles of
'• "t | MjTon Bateman of Eden.
। nnd Mrs. J. D. Wright and family.
,t thia ord.
Miss Diana Clemens of Battle quite poorly.
k"d i Mr- nnd Mrs. Lichty of Hickory.
Mrs. Bunktte Lyttle at Battle Taylor University. Upland. InCharles Lynn was taken to the Creek.^ ’'
'
j corners nnd Mr. and Mrs. Sol Boy- Creek spent a part of her holiday
diana.
,
____________
"■
: l.in nnd son. Blake, were Christmas' vacation at the home of Mr. and hospital al Ann Arbor Saturday i Mrs. Nellie Givens and grand1 Wednesday __________________
guests&gt;of Mr. and Mrs.
SUM«lnrhIrt«
= daughter 'Beverly ‘oivenTof "Battle j Honeywell were Rev. and Mra. Harguests of Mr. and. Mrs. Sam Couch. Mrs. Leo Geller.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Tom Hollman will
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Altman at­ stroZ ChrUtmCreek are spending the week with old Honeywell of Jones. Rev. and
day while at the M|. and Mrs WUUa|n 8mllb.
| Mrs. jack Shannon and Mrs. Mabie
UU entertain the East Baltimore United tended the funeral of an old friend. stroke Christmas dax
fg; Brethren Aid Society Wednesday. Charlie Harris which was held at Ansel Klnne home. She was re­
The L. A. S. will meet the second Bedford of Waldon.
January 15. Every member is urged Battle Creek Friday with burial at moved to her home on Thursday in - Wednesday in January with Mrs.. Mrs. Fannie Jackson is spending
the Hess ambulance.
I to come as officers will be elected.
।Olivet.
Beatrice Dunning.
the holidays with her sister. Mrs.
Carl Brown oM4. S. C. spent hls
'...... —Nofa Doyle of OUego.
vacation at his home here.
THREE CORNERS.
Mrs. Merrit Woods will have for
The Woman's Literary Club will
We are a bit late, but you know | guests New Year's day Mr. and Mrs.
meet next Wednesday. Jan. 8. at i■ wc hope you had a very Merry I George Woods and Elizabeth. Junior
the library for Opera Day.
i Christmas and wc trust the New and John Woods.
M1m Georgia Gribben, who is at­ Year will be bright and happy.
Miss Donaldene McKlbbin spent
tending Barnard College. New York,
Mra. Seth Cook met Gladys Wai- over the week end with Mr. and
is spending her vacation with her lerai spent a week with her parents, Mrs. Ray japhet.
mother. Mrs. o. Wf Gribben.
Mr. and Mra. Edw. Wolters, return- I Mrs. Vaughn Mott. Miss Frances
Hubert Wilson and Von Brady ing to her home in Lansing Sunday , Dosur nnd Mrs Ferris Quick were
have j-eturned home from their work evening.
, m Kalamazoo Friday.
when your diet Includes vitamins
in New Mexico.
Mr. and Mra. John Malcolm vis- 1 Mr. and Mrs. Milo Lehman have
A. B. C and D. During these
Mra. Maud Ackett was hostess to। lied their daughter and husband. । returned home from several days
the Ladles*'Ald Society of ’the Mr. and Mra. Al Steury In-Lansing ; vkMt with relatives in Kalamazoo.
cold months, the "health notes"
Evangelical church on Thursday.. from Sunday night until Tuesday , Mr. and Mra. Ray Castle and
of greatest importance are vita­
She was assisted by Mrs. Cora War­
night
.
.
1 daughter Charlene spent Christmas
mins A and D. found in abund­
ner. Mra. Flora Schulte and Mrs..
Roy Taffee of Hastings was a wlth mt. and Mra. Jay Wilkinson of
Mary Schulte.
ance in both Cod and Halibut
Tuesday afternoon guest of Claude Delton. Charlene itaj&lt;ng over for a
Mr.
Herbert,
manager
of
the
Star
■
A.
Hammond.
longer visit.
i
Liver Oil and their concentrates.
theater, ran a special matinee New’
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Wallers and' Miss Myrtle Smith has returned
Vitalise your system to withstand
Year's afternoon for the teachersi Marlon of Grand Rapids spent' to her school duties al Springfield
Winter ills by getting the vita­
and pupils of the schools to see■ Christmas evening with Mr. and • place. Battle Creek
•
’
Shirley Temple in "Curly Top."
Mrs. Edw. Walters and family.
1I -• -• -Woods
' - and George
min tonic you favor immediately,
Miss —
Elizabeth
Mra. Ida Wolfe has been ill for ai
Mr. and Mra. Forest Sisson and M. Woods. Jr., attended a party nt
from the Prescription
few weeks with neuritis.
Diana
of
Lansing
were
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
joltle
Horton's
last
Drug - Store.
Miss Pauline Bowman of Lansing[ Mr. and Mra. Clarence Sisson and Saturday night. They report a wonspent lhe week end with her moth­- family. Christmas day.
derful time.
■
er. Mrs. Della Boa-man.
..
Mrs. Claude A. Hammond and
Misa Margaret Furni&amp;s of DetroitL children called on Mr. and Mrs.
CRESSEY.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Barber en­
tertained at a party Christmas day.
Those present included their chil­
dren and grandchildren and Misses
Top of box only 36 Inches from ground. Some spreaders up to 45
Kalamazoo
and Miss
Virginia
inches. Box 2 Inches wider at rear than lu front make-, unloading
Eggleston of Richland. A well laAen
easier. A low spreader with 60 bushels capacity. Regulates for 6,
tree was one of the events of the
day. followed by a Christmas pro­
The safety of any savings institution lies in its loans.
gram.
'
This company's loans are confined to first mortgages on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cosgrove
Co-op Spreader weighs 1400 lbs- or 100 to 500 Ita. less than some
selected homes, for the moat part occupied by the indi­
spent Christmas in Augusta, the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rals­
vidual
home-owners
and
their
families.
This
company
contlnaoui tread lugs- tapered box. seif-aligning, closed bearing* with
ton.
oil chambers make for light draft Alemite-Zerk lubrication. SpreadMiss Vera Reynolds of Detroit
ings- hotels, stores or any other type ot commercial
spent the Christmas holidays with
Cold Breakers ... .25c
Parke-Davia ....$1,19
buildings, and the loans will not average more than
her mother. Mrs. Ernest Honeyselte.
Hill's CascAra
She returned Saturday.
Abbott’s . $1.09, S1.47
Steel angle construction far very strong, flexible frame. Heavy steel
• Quinine ....
24c
Mr.-and Mra. Irving Barber were
LET US TELL YOU MORE ABOUT THIS COMPANY
Santox $1.00
axles. Steel chains and^evers. Spokes hot forged Into wheels. Beatguests of his parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Grove's Bromo
SUCCESSFUL FOR MORE THAN 46 YEARS
Charles Barber, hi Kalninasoo sevPenslar .... 79c, $1.00
Quinine ...
27c
can replace it with Jununer and chisel. No welding.
Mr. and Mra. Orville Boniface
Vicks Nose
Wc have these oils plain or
were guest* of Mr. and-Mrs. John
Drops . . 24c and 44c
Jones. Prairieville, Christmas day.
with added natural vitamins.
Palatable-Comp. ..79c
Our school opened Monday morn­
of fertility. A real crop maker.
ing after a brief recess and will
SEE Tin CO-OP SPREADER and other Fann Bureau Machinery
close for the one day only, on New
1250 Griswold SC
Eaia
at our branch stores and farmers' co-op associations. Il will pay
DETROIT, MICH
Year's.
you to investigate.
D,troit&gt; QU— BUUi»g
Mr. and Mn. Charles Barber of
c/'iescMpfuHt
Kalamazoo entertained at a New
Year's dinner. Ur. and Mra. Irving
PHONE 2IIS
yy—- 7
Barber and children of Cressey, and
Mias Louise Sniffin, Gull lake.
HaSTING-T
MICH.
Clayton Barber spent several days
in Hastings tlie post week, on bujd-

NOTICES |

lufiDC UUklCAT I FQQ RYF
Wiunc. wriCH I, UCJJ n i l

EIG

BEA

AS 1
JU
ALL

Wrei

Invite

the i
Mrs.
lets a
would
beaut
anchc
ciAc.
Yank
with
kindl:

blue
med
decor

moon
see mi

as 1U
ning

bairn
and
lad

and

them

tropi
in tl

Eft

CO-OP SPREADER
Has Advantages That YOU Want

excit

cent
POP
nitre
miss

DR.

I

■
,।
-

97c
Upjohn Cod Liver, $1.50 size,
Penslar Cod Liver Oil........................ 97c

Parke-Davis Cod Liver Oil, $1.25 sz., 89c

ting
Mor
the

won

Spei
has
Metl
son.
hooc
his
ope
that

bQp
8pei
not

NOTES ON HEALTH

COD LIVER OILS

Easy to Load

Bro

I
I

this
yeai

r

■M

THE FARM
BUREAU LINE
Plows
Discs
Drags
Cultivators
Planters
Mowers
Rakes
Loader*
Wagon*
Tractor*

appli

ingi
met
The
abo

Uir

lani

Del
Goi
C.
Evs

and
•

op:

me
1181

Of-

Desirable Investment

Light Draft

HALIBUT
LIVER OILS

COLD
PREVENTIVES

Superior Construction

Jhc

Mich., Phone 2118

Woodland, Mich., Phone 27;

Uai

rol

ffiatiimal ffioan &amp;
Inuegfawnt OToinpatu;

Excellent Distributor

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc

gif

. . inj

J. L MAUS

fal

ch

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                  <text>Mrs. Gertrudo
nd Mra. George
■b Sunday.
and daughter,
pent Wednesday
and Mrs. Edw.

THE HASTINGS BANNER

old Malcolm and
less* were Bun­
ts of the latter's
Mrs. John Mal­

EIGHTIETH YEAR

BHUTIFUPAL

r T.iffee of Hasnd Mrs. Claude
family Saturday
1yd Wallers and
ipids s|&gt;eni Sunr and Mrs. Edw.

AS WE
JUST
DID WHEN
WE ARRIVED

rrts Malcolm of
visiting their
and Mrs. John
. Norris was a
»vld Robinson.

VILLE.
ppy. prosperous
ill; also a wjsh
he news phoned
time during the

iarshall Hughes
of Logansport,
g relatives here.
&gt; entertained n
lay in honor of
&gt;'s. tenth blrththe report
will give a party
chool class of
Billings' blrth-

iy. Mr undTffrs.
and Mrs. Town.
:is and families,
s Deal of Grind
s Oscar Palmer
•t&gt;x of Hastings,
v gathering.
ics was taken JO
Il at Kalamazoo
Ill with pc.nufor her a nice

all day meeting
les McDowell of
Bitings
spent Thursday
i friends
■d peoples' Sun'owels of Delton

school
Hustings

tie. Mrs William
i-d Wilkins and
fished transpor-

rl Krick and son
plds Monday to
tev. and Mrs L.
med Wednesday
F Erb and son

Calthrop
l Krick will have

nd Mrs William :
&gt;n. Mr and Mrs. 1
drs Elsie Truax d
id John Miles of . Upland. In-

&lt; of Mr and Mrs.
v and Mrs. HarJones. Rev. and
and Mrs. Mabie

kson is spending
her sister. Mrs.
ego
ds wll) have for
lay Mr. and Mrs.
Elizabeth. Junior

McKlbbin --spent
with Mr and
&gt;tt. Miss Frances
errls Quick were
Ho Lehman have
m several days
in Kalamazoo
ay Castle and
spent Christmas
Jay Wilkinson of
laying over for a

llh has returned
es al Springfield

■oods and George
snded a party at
tie ^Horton s last
iey report a won-

Representative at Welfare
Office Every Thursday
Morning

PAGES lto8

■ES OF ■
Birth Recorded
ms DROPPED-The•atEarliest
3:15 P. M., Jan­

N1

fflSIffl

uary First

BY
Itinerant service of the National NOTIFIED
OFFICERS THE COMPILATION OF Al.
the baby girl born to MrSand Mrs.
Reemployment Service is now being
ACCORDING TO STATE
STRICT BOOKS IT BAI! given in Barry county. A represen­
. Henry Kidder is thp first baby bom
RY CO. PROPOIKD
REGULATION
tative from the Charlotte District
। in Barry county in 1938. Unlew an
office is in Hastings at the Emer­
earlier birth is reported to this ofgency Relief office, every Thursday NECESSARY FOR
mik
nc*
Tuesday. Jan. i:2..
r_L. VENTURE WOULD
from nine A. M. until three P M.
Tiirt. TA nr nrAtArrn voungster will be awarded the prizes
BE UNPROFITABLE
Unemployed men or women who
THEM TO RE-REGISTER offered to the first "1938 Baby." The
wish to register for private
piitHur or
ur gov------------- ------------I Kidder
ruaaer baby
oaoy was bom
worn January 1. „
‘~1 ■
_ .
eromental employment may do so. Every Eligible Citizen Should 1938 at 3:15 p « and lhc parents Necetgary to Have Large la.
whether or not they are on relief
irvinc
«,**•&lt;-...«
", ” “
, reside in Irving.
vestment in Books and I
Those who have ever registered with
Be Interested in Voting on I Among the merchants offering
the service, either in Charlotte or in
gnu to uus oaoy JS?
are u
me
Franosen
Collecting Records
Public Questions
£.F
r*nd
*n
Hastings need not do m&gt; again. The
It wmiirt hi. ora.ll tor
'storeCut
shoe
Tlie Banner ehcihereprinte "a
purpose of
Ul the Itinerant
ramcnura service
semcc Ls» it »°uia oc wen lor every &gt;oter to 3tore&lt; carveth &amp; Stebbins. Feld-1 personal ward to Uw partpU nt Riwrv
to
give
those
who
have
never
before
»e°ne^f
Food
Cenler
HUhtandi
county"
from th*
AWnuS
w gnr
wuu nave iic.ci LWloir --------- ------ — — -...............................—
“
registered
• ----------*an
------------------opportunity
--------todo-so. Ukr
takc Part lnln Ben
Beneral
"“' r&gt;r
elections
"nn&gt; hheld
'-w Dairy and The HaaUnu Banner If office. While that office does furnish
-------- -----------------------■ In ‘bls state, in November of each you know of a birth prrv.ous to tl ‘
—------------------*
* fact
“ si
ntracts,
as a matter
of
:

Miss Maney Harkness, daughter visiting her family. Miss Harkness
of Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Harkness, was an unofficial co-pllot on the air :
has had some unusual experiences
ALL PASSENGERS ARE
DONATES
In her career as an aviatrix. She ana HOUgHton WnlCIl first Caliea Bl- RtY BRANCH
,
,nnnr-n"r a •
PROVIDED WITH LEIS first became interested in flying tention to lhe tourist possibilities of THEATER FOR ROBERTA
!
------------when some "barn slormers" visited Isle Royale.
In 1934 Miss Harkne&amp;s had her j(&gt;8
—
—
“ — “
Clean,
Worth-While
Wreaths Oast in the Harbor Houghton, her former home. Upon
reluming to her boarding school, the first position, acting as a saleswotn- ■
Play—Proceeds for a
Along With "Wish" to
Milton Academy al Milton. Moss an and deiponstratlon pilot for the I
.
she
look
some
lessons
in
flying
and
Inter-city
Air
lines
in
Boston.
Last
** Splendid Cause
Return
Again
at me
the age UI
of 1U
1C ri-vcivcu
received iicr
her private fall she did what she considered the I
.
,
I ui
your ticket
,„"J•»" ,rom
&gt;■”» •" pilot'. I«n«. bemi
t».t tun. most Interesting work of her career. I Have
- - - you
- -- purchased
.... it bi a very inter­
takltM io oral your leu upon Uw fhc younir.l womra to Itold .kueh . She was employed by tlie Bureau of ^°r 'Roberta.
wxr!3." which will be
water »■ you.- Pool .*11. out to m.
wwl, ,t «|loo| „ vurar. Air Commerce. Deportment of Com-1 «tlng tafitle-movia
merceT'Vt'
wLshtoitoiLD.'
c
’
.
’
as
an
»hown
at
the
Strand
on
Wedr.eul.y
merce.
at
Washington.
D.
C..
&amp;ho
.
w
IL
,t
8U
?
n
,
d
S“**
"1“Y F.**."* ",Wt. »'“t' 1“ k'«” °l ««'• •’»' obUtaM
the IMond., will, no little regret, hFr COI]imereUI pilot's license, ogoln air-way marking pilot. This consistTVuni^y eve"ln*’' danuarV 33
&gt;ln business was established
Mr.i. cook and I parted with ourlt^mg tlie youngest woman at that ed of mapping out the work of nn^ 23
The entire net proceeds
divisible by 2).
notify the Banner office.
lnv,t*d 10 d0 WeHlme to hold such a license a few marking towns, on roofs of build- ; *'111 h® given to educational work
The voter, before he enters the i
Definle announcement will
.ecn selling insurance, dealing In
would both love to return to these months later she received her trans- mgs. and by lhe railroad tracks. All f°r, 5r PI?!fd. ohHdren and others,
both, must at all elections sign a made next week.
&gt; real estate, making Joans on real
beautlful. friendly, happy islands,
of New England was her district *hUh will be carried on by the
slip, which shows he voted at that
I estate, making out papers, selling
anchored xnv
Al the prescnL tlme therc are 70 and the Bureau of Air Commerce; !JasU’1KS Bofary Club. Manager
way m.t
out .hare
there In
in mid Pa.
Pa- ‘
election. These slips are forwarded
I bonds and securities. The revenue
clflc- There the enterprise of the wonien
to the,township or city clerk, who
women commercial
commercial puuw«
pilots ua
as cumcom- furnished the plane for the work. B*y Branch has donat«y)jjie use of
Yankec seems so splendidly blended &gt; pared l0 7-000 men. Mlas Harkness' An interesting item in connection 111,1 theater and the services df his
records the fuel that the vr.u-r ,&lt;&gt;t! has always extended that from ab­
ui
th’ ®cnl*er philosophies of a । nccnse number is 54 showing her to with this is that Miss Harkness and attendants for the two evenings, so GEORGE W. LEONARD AT «»
‘hat election
stracting, and without these other
kindly Polynesian race The Ularids' b.. among lhe nnl
pl|ou two other girls were lhe first women 1 lha‘ th« cos‘ of
films will be
If ‘a voter falls to vole
any
THE HEAD OF COUNTY
'*
I activities the abstracting business
rise abruptly out of the beautiful Ovcr 500 women flyers hold private flyers employed by the Bureau of' practically the only item deducted
general election. Immediately after
blue of the sea. The shores are hem- ncen#es and are working to obtain Air Commerce. After MIm Hark- fro™ lhr
receipt* for lhe two
the following general election at
RELIEF SET UP
med with palms, and profoundly thelr comtnerclate. Miss Harkness ness returns to lhe east from her I
. Afternoon
performances
which he also falls to vote, his name
TAVt7m»
unr no coutuy
na «rxe uue» »n«re rew
' hajt 10 her credlt 375 M&gt;1° hours ln wedding trip, she hopes to continue t wl11 ** given if necessary to accomis automatically stricken from the JUDGE
1AYLUK
HOLDS
t, wcUre. n hax coat a huge
oua
a;r M well as many hours as a to do similar work.
BANNER INTERVIEWS
„1
I modale those who have tickets
ous colorings In
in flowers, shrubs
ahrabs and
list of voters, as required by state
THERE'S NO LEGAL
1
compile the abstract and
According to Mlsx Harkness, the
Jhf uniform price for the ticket*
frees There, with those gorgeous passenger
OUR FORMER SHERIFF law The voter will be notified that
RARTR FOR 7T
i k&lt;*P 11 UP
date wlth “ c«nP"'*(Continued
on
page
three)
;
*»&gt;
25
«««*
each-th*
regular
moonlight nights your very aoul
Whlle in Houghton one summer!
his name hns been dropped, and will
FOR XT
lively few abstracts needed in the
' price for such a play as "Roberta.
seems to respond to tlie rhythmic
Politics or Favoritism— wllh u,p no“ce. also receive a blank
------------county. The cost for such abstracts
I Those who have seen it in other No
cadence of the rvrr preaent guitar. I
He Wd. Treat Every
i BARRY_COUNTY INTER­
as Rs M*ft tones float over the eve-'
' cities say it is fine, and well worth
the 25 cents. Ticket-buyers, there­
ning air. I know of no place like It.
Case Fairly
tfon of 1,15 l’a«np on the list of volESTED IN THE SUIT books and keeping them up to tb*
To us the Hawaiian latands tn their
fore, will get full value received for
their money In good entertainment
balmy latitude were moat entrancing
0.. S^-EeFund
and will be helping a worthy cause had In mind concerning relief work
and our greatest regret was that wc
0- Licenses
Lleen... Paid in
; “jre. “
«
Car
Under the liberal terms given bv In Barry county was fully carried Ivlfl..niuon ca,o ,o ,n. X
had delayed our visit so long.
Mr. Branch, all but a very smell
We put In 10 nr 12 very busy days
Six vouQlies
Counties
i[i.,iv_. And yet the price of ab----- —..K ,5'"»
..a....
■&gt;“» „,.l
o&gt;*
ttoned.
Dr. George L- Lockwood, newly
on Hie Islands of Oahu and Hawaii
part of the price of a ticket will go 1
It will be remembered that a short | stracts
strsets in Barry county is
Is not above
YEAR OF 1935 to help Barry county young persons George W Leonard, as secretary of main off the voters' list tn h!.s pre-' it
elected president of the Hostings CLOSES
clnct. and can only be put on the . time ago the Banner mentioned the the average tn this state. And *
Commercial Club, announces the
1 who are In need of such educational that board He had been chosen a
WITH BALANCE OF
list by his applying In person to lhe fact that Kent county and the Kent Sheldon abstract has always bean
'aid as can be offered them through member of the poor board at the citv
them We saw about everything that following committees for the ensuing
-j Instl- 1 accepted■ as •furnishing a correct
:- ’-V
city or townshln
township clerk for re-reffi«.
re-regia- r&gt;r&gt;un»v
county -ra.a
road ranra.ra.i..irara
commission v.
had
$115,737.25
, this fund by the Rotary Club of adjourned October session, which tratlon.
was to be seen, and still you dislike
1 ...»«&lt;
tuted an i„i._.i*
injunction suit —
against status of the title to Barry county
industrial—O. E. Goodyear, chrm,
' Hastings. It will be helping our was held December 9. Previous to
After the election which was held Glngrch A- Co., Grand Rapids rep­ real estate.
I own county younk folks, for this Mr. Leonard's choice os secretary of
...nV.
there's .
a pa ..tora I v-tkut,
beauty M
In, UK
the oienn Brower. Fred Stebbins. M. L. ALL INDEBTEDNESS
tn November 1934. every city or resentatives of the International
tropical flowers, tree*, shrubs, and Cook. B- A- LyBarker. Kim Sigler,
type of work has not been limited the poor board, he had been made township clerk had to go through
of trucks, and against tlie coun­ trying to have the county compile
in the. great fields of sugar cane— A. D. McDonald,
„ .
HAS BEEN PAID to Hastings by the club Ln the past. administrator of the Barry County his list of registered voters, and take line
ties of Barry. Allegan. Ionia. Manis-_______ _________________ _ __
Membership
— Bernard
Reed.
1 nor will It be in the future, it •&lt;
Emergency Welfare Relief Com­
yrs. even in the craxy-quilt land-;।
u
off the names of all voters who te«. Newaygo and Oceana alleging streets to the people of the county.'
1
chrm..
Roy
Cordes.
Frank
Andrus.
,
_
_
,,
a
county-wide philanthropy.
The mission by the unanimous vote of
scapes of miles and miles of pine­
at the November elec- that the unlawful actions of the! Neither the Banner nor anyone
failed
to
vote
A
n.
McDonald.
Big
Problem
Now
Is
Welfare
t
aemana
,
’
,„
r
iu
?
h
„
rk
that
commission.
Thus
the
super
­
this
----------------- ------apples. planted- In even rows oil
tlon In 1932. Several hundred names Gingrich firm and the county road, connected with it has the alightoel
Merchandising—Walter Wallace. Belief—Requirements Can I county
. aree more than the club can vision of all relief work Ln Barry
paper. There are many things to
were dropped from the registration commissions of the six counties had Interest, directly or indirectly Tn riwLl
-- meet frnm
from * its -regular revenues. county Is made one man's respon­
sec and many places to go. It seems ehrm.. A- K. Frandscn. B A. Lylist of Barry county. Each one was1 deprived Kent county of
many' abstract business of Barry county,
Not Be Estimated
Hence the patting on of these bene­ sibility It will be up to Mr. Leon­
rto be a sort of an odd mixture of Barker. Dan Walldorff and T. S.
notified by mail that his name had thousands of dollars of automobile or who does the a borer ting But 18
fit-performances
provide funds ard to determine whether relief In
i The county of Barry closed the ...
r------------------- „ to________
excitement and rest. You can be Baird.
dropped,
to us that Itwwould
very r
■ - -------------- and
--- - received
-- ------- — —a card , license
..UU.UK money
u.uuej to
w which
wtttt.ll it
IL was
Wild seems
------------------------------ould bebea av«ry
Roads -Kim. Sigler, chrm., M- L. year 1935 with a balance on hand of .for this work.
any particular cose shall come from been
care free, comfortable, and 100 per ,
“ W Stebbins.
»115.737.25
,
in all the county
— funds.
YOU will want to aid this work. the county poor board or the coun­ io fill out for reregistration. If he claimed that county was entitled, poor venture for tills county to em­
cent lazy if you wish, then up will, Cook and F.
Public Affairs—Richard M. Cook. The greatest part of that large sum I You can do so by the purchase ty welfare commission In that way failed to fill out and mail or deliver; The legal proceedings instituted by bark in the abstracting buMpeaa far
pop something new in the way of
tirnt card, his name was dropped Kent Co. and Rs road commission the following reasons:
chrm..
R.
K.
Hurd.
Wm.
Parker,
is
In
the
fund
belonging
to
tile
Bar|
of
a
ticket
or
tickets
for
this
play.
,
.
there
can
be
no
"passing
the
buck"
attraction that you don't want to
from the list, and he cannot vote asked that a temporary injunction
ry County Road Commission—
—over
over You
*****can
---------get
* -them
------ of
*----any------------Rotarian , from one body to lhe other in conmiss. The people arc very •kind.’ Chas. Leonard and A. J. Larsen.
: be granted against the Gingrich Co.
lor at the Banner office. The price sidertng what should be done in । this year unless he reregisters.
.Continued on page six I
House—Homer Smith, chrm.. Wm. 867.000.
(Continued on page six)
It will be well for every voter, who and the six counties, forbidding furShulters. Jerry Johnson
. The
The lotal
total ol
of the
the money
money handled
handled is dhly 25 cents per ticket. But any given case. Barry county has failed to vote at the November elec­ 1 ther alleged unlawful diversions of
Tourist and Resort—Harold Fos- by the ^umy ln the yw 1935. as thlnjc what that little investment pioneered in this consolidation, the tion In 1932. to see to it that his
license money claimed to be right­
DR. FREDK.SPENCE
ter. chrm.. Winn Green. D Z.
shown on the duplicate records kept will do. It will give you full value benefits of which, with the right
name is placed on the registration
E- A. Parker and Roman Feld- by the county clerk and county in a clean, excellent entertainment, kind of a man to administer relief, list. If any voter has become of age fully belonging to Kent county. TA
temporary Injunction was granted
TO SPEAK JAN. 20 pausch.
I treasurer, was 8611.236 50. That's a and most of the 25 cents, thanks are quite apparent.
Summer Recreutton-W E Car-1 ;ot of money; but les, than a sev- to the generosity, of Mr. Branch,
The relief set-up at Lansing was I since the 1932 November election, or until the hearing of the case, which
if he shall become of age before the was set for Tuesday. January 7.
made
when
Mr
Comstock
was
gov;
Brotherhood Program to Be ter. chrm.. W. Maylan Jones. R W enth of it uns paid In taxes on the will go into a fund that will be used
1936
spring
or
fall
election,
that
votKent county and its county road
Cook and Jos. DeRulter
: properly of the county, which was In a maimer that will be very help­ ernor. and with the approval of lhe;
Especially Interesting
ter should apply to his city or town­ commission also demanded an ac­
! Health—Clyde Wilcox, chrm.. Dr &gt;90.000. The fees collected by county ful to young folks In Barry county relief authorities at Washington, j
ship cleric (or registration imme­ counting for the license money, outgrown our liking of
This Year
। Kenllh McIntyre. ..Dr.—
G. W Lock- officers and paid into Die county who need and should have such aid.; The same set-up was continued by
The January meeting of the Has - ' *ood- n
° ,P
E- r.,n*„tpr
Carpenter and
D. A treasury—such as dog taxes, court You will be glad that you had a1 Governor Fitzgerald for obvious; diately after he becomes of voting claimed to be due to Kent Co. from so interesting a personage as Chrto.nd n
age.
the six counties, and demanded pay­
reasons. The aim of' the Barry
topher Morley shares our dislike cf
tings Brotherhood will be held on I VanBusklrk.
"n
r
fees, register of deeds' fees. Interest part in It.
ment of the same by the six coun­
Legislative—-Archie D. McDonald. on delinquent taxes, etc.—amounted
Read the adv on another page of, county board ot supervisors was to'
throwing these “cheerful little xymMonday evening. January 20th In!
ties to Kent county.
/'V.rrri'hl
r B.
P to
. .. nearly
_ __ ,...
this
issue, buy
ticket early, - and
C.
gll.000. '
--------------—. your
------------------------------- take such action as would commend DELTON REJOICES
„
.
|'»™'
AOelMn
Corutita.
the usual place.
•
help
neip
boost
ixxm
a
wortn-wnue
worth-while
phlianItself
itself
to
the
authorities
at
Lansing.
I
1
TO.
ot « 1 &gt;'«'«" ”"a “rl W“ ,
OVER
NEW
SCHOOL
TT.i; member, kre ■«=ured
—*** -- —
The other big items are the de­ thropy. No matter if you live out- who have given their
that
representatives
of
the
Gingrich
tltelr approval of
• - - messagq that
-for1; Orchestra—Hubert Cook.
nality or carry a sentiment that you
wonderful
evening,
linquent taxes collected by thecoun- side ot Hastings, you are interested the plan. The supervisors
believed
. .
.n Co. came to the county road cornExecutive Committee—F. W Stebthe speaker is Rev. Dr. Frederick
ty treasurer, amounting to 392.067 Completed for a 12
apencr who
.or more
more man
» years.
year..
Da'dd Goodyear. Kim Sigler,
These cards often afford the only
Spence
who.. for
than 15
r- 52;also the balance on hand at the In having "Roberta" net a big sum that the first essential was to com- j“*ans
Grade
BuildingThat
for the Rotary Educational Fund, pletely divorce their action from
~
•—
••••
—
■'il,es'10 "U International tracks. The yearly contact with friends to wiiom
has been lhe pastor of the First T 8 Baird and Frank Andrus
uraae
ouuaing
mat
representative.
so
it
U
claimed.
beginnnlg of 1935 of about 192.000. If you will come to the Banner of-1 politics; so. while 15 of the 20 mem-1
Methodist Episcopal church of Jack- ijr-.ji Dni ipic'c
you are much attached but in the
also the amounts paid by the state flee we will sell you a ticket. If, bers of tlie board arc republicans, |
Unites 11 Districts
would and did tell each county road
son. The speaker was on a Brother-1 NtW rULILluo
busy
whirl of life, neglect.
'highway department to the county you send us 25 cents by mall, wc I they selected Mr. Leonard, a demoThe Bgreatest
news ui
of me
the year
year ior
for।
I con)m
‘M*----------on that
he—
would
&gt;&gt;«v
.r..«-«&gt;. uvws
“ttTI
------."V see
~ to It
hood program several years ago. and
....................
,. of Delton is
.
..
rnunlv would
— m,1r&lt; get
n.l through
,,-k
TOT AI X? 257 HQO road commission of about 8140.000; will mail you a ticket.
I crat, as lhe man to take charge of the
community
the
,Flint
?at ‘thnlr
heir county
IUIAL
lhe prlmary Khool fund and
happy to receive a unique
his address was then regarded us
all relief work in this county. While! completion of plans for the new 12 ,.lm ,or,,
comPany enough addl- from George McPharUn. a .
one of the best ever given before Windstorm Company Agents ’
“h“l ’““4 &gt;»“
Mr Leonard was for eight years; (trade Rural Agricultural school; ‘lono*
money from sources
that organization The more than
r
,the 8late to Qje county treasurer PROSECUTOR FILES
the
building
181
by 105
Irom
etui a siki11 a i ornnnT !' sheriff
^"‘0 ot
of ------------------‘hc county,
county, was
was nominal-1
nominal-1
bunding
181 feet
feet long
long
105 feet
feel “
““ whlch It was not then getting
200 members of this year's Brother­
Make Fine Showing • ।and by him distributed to the
----- *. he
I—| ..:
._ to
------_• by
otMI"AI»liUAL ntrUn I ed each time
by his own party,
wide,
be ------------erected* on
land pur-1I any
any to pay the entire cost of the of evergreen was attached with red
hood can look forward to Dr.
school
districts of the county, ag­
tracks. It; Is claimed
in some
------------I was elected
republican
votes— chased
Mrs.
p. A.
Blackman,
trucl
in December
'
was by
uiecieu
uy rcpuuucun
vuics— from
1 vnaacu
iiuni
bus
. r. A. xtiacxman,
----------~that
, -----woolen yam bears the German words,
Spence's address as one they can­
over 8100.000; and Emernl Ft 61
1 Cl
h
. A 49
A OonvicAt.--- -fr.. republicans
—
— • - had
L.
1 — —— major-1
...
IJust
ii.eknorth
ran—IV.of
nfthe village.
..lit —
T". „ out-1
A... man
m£innfr lhe
Considering the weather, a re- gregate
’
Total
Oasea;
. for
aM large
Eleven
Gingrich Co. or Its "Frohllche Welhnachtan," which
not afford to miss.
; gency Welfare Relief funds, received
♦ jrarao • i Aranulftal- in
I l‘
y eoch
Ime he
district schools
“e»»~
Ity
each ‘time
he ran.
ran. The
The supersuper- ,, lying
l?m» uiomww
senuuu have
nnvc consoll-1
consou-i~
~.~7" w
— own
— **T
1UU, UIC
lu imwanM1
The fact that the membership markable record in selling new in- \from
the state „
and
national auv
gov-.
HODS, 1 Acquittal, 10
visors
felt
that
after
Mr.
Leonard
J | dated
to
use
the
new
building
which
enoQ
*h
tracks,
which
were
the Jos. Pflug, of the Banner foroe, In­
visors
felt
that
after
Mr.
Leonard
dated
to
use
the
new
building
which
J
101
enoQ
*h
tracks,
which
were
the
terprets for us u being literally
this year Is nearly double that of a surnnee was made in December by ernmenta, probably about 860.000.
I was
was elected
elected sheriff
sheriff he
he performed
performed his
his | will
will be
be ready
ready September
Sepieiubef 1.
1. 1936.
1S36.’ ! ProP^y of Grend
citizens
Dismissed
Grand Rsplds
Rapidscitizens
"Happy Holiday Time."
year ago. and that there has been lhe agents of the Windstorm Insur- Detailed reporta will be Issued In
_
...
__ .
__ are
__ Delton.
__
____
. .. nr
' duties
and..
administered
his office on Ii —
They
Learn. _
Bunnell.
or mmnnraUnn*
coroporatlons. In
to register ih*
the
a
fine Interest
in the
meet- &gt;
u iuic
micBvok shown m
me uinzi-i
•••“ v..z. ...v,
| lne near
we cannot
Prosecuting Attorney Archie D. i non-polltlcal lines. Therefore the! Lent. Hope Center. Polley. Carpenne,r luture.
future- Wc
cannot give
' P®y “'..““’J? for them as. a former Hastings boy, no*
Inga .so (ar held, arc an entourage-1 new policies for a total of 82.257.090. exact figures now.
McDonald has filed his semi-annual supervisors favored Mr Leonard to ter, Dunn, Tolles. Kinsley, and the |i ln
in the other
h,”‘ counties. Thus license
ment to all Us friends and members. | When you remember that December
nnrrv »..«•« i.
officer in
Uncle Barn's arm;
bcr°31 f&lt;Tt ^xhowa'Y
I bead
The program for this year has been U the month for paying taxes and ' m^debT n*tS
hMd all
all lhe
Ihn welfare
welfare work
wnrlr of
nt Barn'
Rnrrv !1 Johncox
Jnhnrnx which
which was
wax the
th- last
lawt to
tn be
he 1 money, received from Kent county
rest* for all«£T tafrecttoM o Ure ' coUnl&gt;'
admitted. The .chool board is cm- truck owners, actually paid for the "King" Anderson sends hie masai
above the average in interest.
International trucks sold by the
taw
Of
thX
48
vere
rnnvirFrd
In
an
Interview
with
the
Banner
posed
of
the
following
officers;
The supper squad follows: Cap­
one was acquitted- 10 dismissed oA . representative. Mr. Leonard said:
j Henry Moorhus. Homer Aldrich, Gingrich Co. to such county road hand decorated card typical al
tain diaries Annublc; the other
payment of cost*- and one dis"l know 1 w“ choscn for lhJs tRoycc Hfnton- De»m*r Sager, and commissions. All the automobile li­ southwest country.
members .ire Fred Otis. Bert New­
charged on examination. Of theOl p,ace for non*Poll“c“&gt; reasons, and George - Eddy. Cecil J. Barnum Is cense money paid on cars or tracks
land. Harry Dunn. Richard Lau- state-wide good will toward . t
The Jim ironsides make us
registered In any county, less col­
(Continued on page five)
superintendent and Rex Sheathelm (
baugh, Russell Laubaugh, George company and that it has a corps“ °
of ’ The one big problem is that of cases. 25 were for violation ot state
conservau^ law* l?were taken on
----------------- --- -------------------is principal of the school. The Del- lection and other smalt coat-, is.re­ theirs to Inform us we sltould i
DeMolt.F.G. Havens. John Havens. agents who are on the Job.
turned to fee county where such ve“h“'
inc annual
annum meeting
mcriuig of
oi the
inc com- |
whlch h“ b&lt;?en auorderl, ehMtei; 3*?“ vM.to ! GLEE CLUBS ARE
The
Gordon Havens. Howard FVrris. F.
this
winter; that they have
&lt;Continued on page thre
&lt;
ter a two weeks holiday vacation. ।
C. Tabberer. Roy Nkgler. Ardis pony for the selection of directors.1 "oukht home to this county by the of motor whirl* Uara- a
TO GIVE OPERETTA |-»°m
our Deton err.
016
Bovemment
Evart, Kenneth Braendle.
Vere who will also name the officers for | “Uo"
wouldn't we like tot for wo had 1
the
year
1636,
will
be
held
on
Wedln
u
withdrawing
further
aid.
exApt
Carter. Rolfe Bulling. John Brass
delightful experience with their
false pretenses; 2 with assault andl
------ -—(MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY
nrsday, January 15. At that meeting *hBl u afforded by employment of
and Arthur Haven.
one). It also mentions that Dr. 1
the annual reports will be presented. t,1(W who were on relief by the Pub- batiery and 3 on other charges? Hear Musical Comedy,
lne
MOTION PICTURE SENSATION.
hemus, Mrs. Ironside’. father.
Fine, and costs Imposed. 8729.80. No
From all indications, these reports I Uc Works department. The state has prison sentences given. A total of!
Count and the Co-Ed,”
The mutiny that thuhdered over
OPERA AND POPULAR MUSIC
will show a considerable increase in appropriated 89,000.000 for welfare 362 days in Jal) was awarded to 17 i
««
17
,he declu of
"Bounty'' lives
IN PON8 SCREEN DEBUT.
the amountopf Insurance in force . work, which is far from adequate,
on
January
17
again on the screens of rhe world!
are still "holding tlw thought"
persons convicted of violating the
Grand opera and popular music and also reveal that the company bl du,t whal lhe demands wUl be on ...ivt
| Kenneth (Snooze) Andrews, co- The romantic adventures ot a mol-1
of tuiuttaut
Michigan.
Supt. D. A VanBusklrk announces
meet on the common plane of de­ in a very strong position financially I Barry county no one can conjecture, laws
To have come through six months mcdlan »lth the Marden College | ley crew who endured a thousand
that there will be no Freshman Col- much desired trip to Greece
lightfully human entertainment In as It enters the new year. Its busl- Tl’e bo5d of supervisors approwith only
ehow. th.t
““‘tta'p on the open ».,
he ends life's Journey.
only one
one .equllUl
acquittal shows
that °1"'. ol“b' • J*"1™ &gt;“!“ ,“h * I
"I Dream Too Much." debut picture new Ls in very capable hands, and Pr|at«d ♦20.000. the same as the pre- with
the prosecutor and sheriff have “d Undp;1:y for Betting Into scrapes for a fleeting moment of love on an
When the project was _proposed in
of Lily Pons, world famed diva, Its affairs are very well.managed by '। vious
year,
to be used **"
by *the
coun­ done excellent work
and thn«
“ v
‘" tn
’-----------thus ineurrinv
incurring tha
the wrath nt
of t■ nnchantad
enchanted lilnnd
island—
—ermw
come tn
to vnn
you with
with
lhe fall, a large number signified reallze when Halen By Chari
which comes to the Strand Theater
ty poor board, and 19.000 additional
President McSpadden. Ls featured in i all the tremendous sweep of this
the officers and directors.
popular and much loved High
man
Tirunn
nr
in.
thelr
111
ten
lion
of
enrolling,
but
due
Jan. 12 and 13.
for emergency welfare relief. The
I the musical comedy. "The Count strangcr-than-fictlon
gcr-ihan-nctlon saga
saga of
of the
the.
th
year mosl ol
AN INTERESTING SERVICE.
The dainty diva—she's Just five
। and
the Co-ed.'.'
which K to bei-pre-1
sea. Hllh
F'-*- —.cramra.
—* .
supervisors have consolidated the
joutal *tor.
An especially attractive service
------------------------------------------------— -----now living at Royal Oak,
feet tall and weighs only 104 pounds PUBLIC INSTALLATION
relief agencies in the manner wc has been arranged for the Bunday
by the boys' and girls' glee । courage and daring—these are the entered, have decided to do some­
—Is said to demonstrate talents as
OF K. OF P. OFFICERS explain elsewhere. But how much, if evening
service at the
Wesleyan
I clu^9&gt; nnrt'r
und?r the
direction nt
of ML
Miss
—
l _ ...
.
thn Hlrnrtlnn
k&lt; I thtne«
things iltnt
that virile drama (isk made nt
of.
evening
service al .the
Wesleyan
thing else and are not now Interest­ enter college. And France*
an actress which match her superb
XX—IVinrAI.,
Vittra.!.
* repre_ _____
any, more will be necessary to meet Methodist
church. —A
group
Jean Glerum and Roy Garner. Jan­ And Irving Thalberg. master-maker
gift of song. In the role of a little Next Tuesday Evening at the requirements for relief in this sen ting lhe City Rescue Mission of uary 17- ln lhe Cem™’ auditorium. of motion picture, has given all of, ed- In the College. Too, even if the
College were started now, the stu­ when teaching history
French girl who rebels against fame
county cannot be figured at this Grand Rapids will have entire ’ Tlie
of characters is as fol­ us a chance to re-live a story that ■ dents could get credit for but a part
Maccabee
Hall
—
Meeting
bccau.*e it interferes with her keep­
time. Only the future can show what charge of the service. Many who tows: Blrdle Bo“«s- a 5Weet and will never die.
'
of a year, so It was decided not to
- ing house for her husband, her very
that will be.
to Be Public
Charles Laughton Is cast as the ,
have wished ta visit the Mission In “*‘nP|e freshman girl, W. Royer;
open the College here this school bubbles.
decided flare for comedy is bril­
On January 14. 1936 there wifi be
Grand Rapids will appreciate the Amy Arnold, a bright and efficient dastardly Captain Bllgh—Clarke I year. Had it been opened In Septem­
liantly demonstrated.
Struble;. r-w.n«
Dolly Mc- Gable, as the leader of mutineers—
a pot luck supper followed by the SPECIAL SUNDAY
opportunity ot having this program junior. Evadene m...
ber or even October, no doubt there High teacher, who
Henry Fonda. Hollywood's latest Installation of the new officers of
"—daughter of the college Franchot Tone as Roger Byam. Oth­
brought to them.
, Spaddcn.
would have been a large attendance. such absorbing int
romantic lead "find" plays the male Knights ot Pythias,-Barry Lodge No.
EVENING SERVICES.
- ______________ I president.
ers in Ute cast are Herbert Mundin
J, Esther Monica; Mis.&lt;
rolezdpposlte Miss Pons.
‘I Agatha
hotme-mothcr at ns Smith. Eddie Qulllan as Ellison, SUPERVISORS TO*
A feature Service will be held STOCKHOLDERS ANNUAL
Acatha Lockstep,
L
113 and the Pythian Sisters and
1 Thornapple Temple No. 130. Instal- Sunday evening at 7:30 at the First
MEETING, i ‘he girls' dormitory. Edna Bchultx; Dudley Dlgges as Bacchus and thou­
MEET MONDAY.
The
meettai M the
1 »■
MeSPttaden. president 0&lt; sands of others. "Mutiny on the
' lation will be under the direction of Methodist church. There will be
The board of supervisors will con­
Judge clement and Mrs. Ella Myers community singing of old favorite holder, or th. Hutlw Cit, Burk ““den CTUeje. Merle Kelley: Mr., Bounty" comes to the Strand. Jan­ vene for their January session next
at the Maccabee hall. The meeting hymns. Lewis Hine will play two will be held at the bank on Tues- McSpaddcn, his wife. Ruth Mc- uary 15-18-17.
Monday. It will be largely routine Marshall and
clarinet solos 'The Loreley" by day. January 14 Voting for directors Laughlin; Martt Watson, the collage
will be public.
■
will begin at 9:00 o'clock A. M and *eU hsadef, Bernard Williams; Ham­
w NOTICE.
Brooks and "Romanic'' by Ritter.
CARL POTTER.
SUES FOR I5JkX&gt; DAMAGES.
A very Instructive and Interesting will d£e at noon. M. A. Lambte.
H'S'l^Llhe leader,1of
The annual, meeting ofnhe Farm­ various county officers, the poor
Violetta
As Carl Potter has other work so he
Through her attorney L. E. Bar­ talkie moving picture will be shown cashier.—Adv. 2
club, nn&gt;w
Robert
Burwell;
Willie
'r‘
""
r—w
11”" ers Mutual Fire insurance Com­ board and the Barry county road
cannot devote enough time to his nett. Mrs. Mae
Barnhart has on the subject of proper lighting,
■ (Rleepyi Carter, a freshman. Jack pany of Barry and Eaton counties commission. Unless some special
farm, he Is having an auction sale__
_
.
__
brought
a suit for »5,000 ___
damages
through the courtesy of the Con­
Blackwood, the will be held at the court house In
NOTICE—TAXPAYERS.
-Foote; , Marjorie
------ .—
at his place one mile north and one | against John Cappon, maintenance sumers Power Co. The title of the
If taxes are paid before Jan. 20, beUc ot Ulc camPUi- Phyllis Newton; Charlotte on Wed. Jan. 15th, 1938
---.east ......
— 0..^Just off
.. ..
foreman of Qjg Barry county Rood
mile
of Hastings.
M-43
picture is “Light." The service will there will be no extra percent »
Dan
Flannigan, a smart young
“n Flannigan.
session, It Is probable that thia will
with Dewey Recd as auctioneer. In­ Commission and the Barry County be held downstairs in the social charged. After that date 3 per cent ®°tor cop. Robert Henney; Ken- reading the annual reports, electing
be the final meeting of the present
cluded In the list offered for sale are Road Oommladon. The action grew room of the church. This U one of WiU be added
•
hath
neth (Rnnnaol
(Snooze) Innrawi
Andrews, tha
the enmncomeboard.
a span of horses. 2 cows. calf, har­ out of an automobile accident, which a series of feature services which
two
from
Eaton
co.
and
two
at
largo
। dlan of the glee club, Dick Cooper.
ness, hay and grain. 450 crates good occurred several months ago on the will be held every Bunday evening. Adv^ iwf. E. L- Benta, Cltys Tress. &gt; A- Buck. E. Sayles, E LyBarker. and for the purpose of transiting
corn, 800 bundles fodder and lot of Hastlngs-Gun Lake county road, Tlie young men of Coach Bennett's
! V.
Reorick.
DANCE.
1 —
—. —a. Royer. -P. ^Freeman, such Other business as may ptoperly
good farm tools. See the adv. for full I about six and one-half miles south­ Sunday school class will act u
come before the meeting.
Welcome Grange hall, Friday, B. Trego. M. Westerlind
particulars.
usher*.
west of this city.
8.—Adv.
night, Jan. 10--Adv.
|studies.

INJUNCTION DIS
' MISSED BY JUDGE

GOOD CONDITION
OF COUNTY'S CASH

' Freshman College
Project Dropped

SEY.
»yton Barber cny Christmas day.
luded their chllidren and Misses
Mijs
Virginia
tad. a well laden
he events of the
i Christmas prolobert Cosgrove
i Augusta, the
Mrs. Harry Rals-

, Gull lake
*nl several days

Life Of Aviatrix Full Of Thrills

ENTIRE NET PROCEEDS OO
FOR WORTHY PHI­
LANTHROPY

EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
NOW GIVEN COUNTY

Christmas
Brighter Yule

ic

wles Barber of
Ined at a New
and Mrs. Irving

jNancy Harkness Had Private SEE ROBERTA
Pilot’s License When Sixteen

Name Commercial
Clab Committees

; until Sunday
will meet with

h-ville Boniface
• and Mrs. John
Christmas day.
d Monday momecess and will
lay only, on New

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, JANUARY 9, 1936

CDNSOLIDAT ON
IS COMPLETED

ey Mills of De­
t to visit their
s. Maurice Mills.
I spent the day
Bernard Mills

aids of Detroit
os holidays with
rnest Honeysette.
day.
'Ing Barber were
Us. Mr. and Mrs.
Kalamaaoo sbv-

14 PAGES

.

One Auction Sale

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1&gt;M
Mm Dan WalMorff 1* giving a I Mrs. Jacob Weyerman hu been
The Bicknell store ot Clare is said itantly. Rolls can be heated up very
deaseri bridge tomorrow night al, 111 with bronchitis for *evw&gt;l day*. to be lhe largest small town adver­ *attofactori!y in them and left-over
h*r home on 8 Broadway.
I Richard Lopnenthlen is aulstlng tising space buyers in Mkhljin.
Mr. and Mr&lt; Robert Newton have
Judge Ruxscll R. McPeek h*ld, at the Baird clothing store at preacourt here Tuesday and Wednesday.. ent.
moved into Mr. and Mrs. Joim and as most cooks know, all dishes
made with milk can be safely enThe cases considered did not require , Ntnety-on- deaths in th* city of Ketcham s home for the winter.
a jury.
( Hastings in 1935 as compared wilh I
— -- --------------- Haven. Mr. Bywater is the Mil riant I
Orchids to our West Hope cor- : 103 In 1934.
ing to raise a community fund of
A letter written by a little seven
respondent. Mrs. James Springer, I And we have forgotten to mention ' 33.000 to ue* for relief purposes.
1
Twenty-seven different gambling year old girl from Florida to a boy
Congressman Hoffman returned to for her letter thia week which gives till now that the melancholy days
fiHand in'Hastings of similar age la
Washington test week, after having a bright and original resume of the ere here, leap yoar. when men must1 devices of all descriptions were
high
potato
tn
the
local
history
of
1
rilent
keep
and
live
in
constant
aelied
In
a
recent
raid
by
officers
of
a strenuous vacation at home with)
speaking^ engagements practically । her vicinity lhe post year. We know . tear.
. Gratiot county.
It entailed a good bit of work which • Beware, world's bowling records!
The 88th annual sale of the John
came down to Florida. On Monday
Oh. hum! prom summer's swelter­ wifi be appreciated by the people of Three bowling teams have been or- Hicks department store wm adver- It wm allright. But Tuesday it was
ing heat lo these blankety blank West Hope, and enjoyed by all our ganlzed in the Hastings Rotary Club [ Used In two pages in the Repub- horrid. Tuesday afternoon 1 felt dizblank slippery walks. Tills old life readera Mrs. Springer wants to look '; and perfect score* are in the offing i Bean-New* last week. It’* the olde*t sy. Not the kind that things go
stabllshment*
of aU bustnes*
- in
; Is just a constant change from one out or *he will be pushing aside: —perhaps &lt;?).
whirling around, but something ilka
from her place in Hie »un Ameri-1 It's hard to teach -old dogs new Clinton county.
। extreme to.lhi other.
Lots
.. --------------------------------I tricks."
st.tricks."
John* St.
ha* John#
a newhas
poetof
IUi of Hastings High graduates being sick to the stomach, only I
"beat- rural
correspondent.
Mrs.
a newLot*
post
­ Hm
Mrs. Albert Green sent in an nd ca'a
field of matrimony didn't overflow (that means vomit
rs ■ office, one of their veteran mail
wary Mahnkey. Follow her letters
mall car- entering the fie
and
we
believe
you'll
agree.
It's
In-1
riers
went
to
the
old
office
recently,
these
days.
Gerald
Potter,
32.
Ls
one
ed in two issues. She Informs u*
day night it was the same only
she had immediate responses and tcrestlng lo find out how much real i parked bis car, was non-pluosed to of the iMtest. He was married on
worse. On WVdneaday morning 1 had
bought one right away. "Your want news farm communities can furnish, t find lhe door locked; then caught New Year’s eve to Kathryn Hynes
aside from personals and visiting [ the removal sign—and felt It wm of Woodland.
ads surely bring results," she says.
Among the local artists In Grand right then.—
i too good a Joke on him to keep.
Tlie Knights of Pythias are mak- items alone.
The Buffalo Evening News of re­
1 ing plans lo occupy the hall over
Some pwple mum IMnk Uul Lh.
«“■?«&gt; MlU Woduel. Co. Rapids who exhibited their work at
cent date publishes me picture of
the A. /C. Gates Farm Implement ml
(”&gt;» • the Grand Rapids Art gallery's
Jerome . Davidson, a young Buffostore in the building owned by Earl •UOO hid .polled the deoth ol: ■“•W toeoan, boMneu. All opening exhibit for 1936. wm Miss
lonlan. son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Marian
Creaser
formerly
of
the
loe.
Hot
«&gt;.
.ceordlwl
lo
JheD
Jutuary
Mulput
U
belns
rant
Boyes on N Michigan avenue.lt has natural
nauirai ice. not sv. acvuruiiuc iu .
---- ,—.—-----------Griswold Davidson ot Uiat city,
.
.tells
.. us ..
been headquarters for the Sea .......
Leslie Hawthorne, who
they tn
* rtlnvralanrt
Cleveland nitrl
and TVrafmlt
Deteolt Vive,
Five raeor Hastlnes schools.
Construction blds for the 169.900 whose symphony is to be played by
are planning on cutting a greatly ?lx,,5uc,k *2*?' avpra8lnS \ 1-3
1-2 tons
Scouts.
have been sent out re­ new school house unit in Lowell, a the Buffalo philharmonic orchestra
The office of the Secretary of Increased supply this year over last to l^e
cently.PWA project, will be opened Wed­ at one of their concerts. Mr. David­
Slate is supplying every IBM appli­ season's harvest of 1800 ton. which cenUv
While loading castings Inst week. nesday, Jan. 15. Originally overbid son is a grandson of Ellen Hawley
cant for license plates with a copy didn't last out the summer. Thei
Prentiss, who lived in Hostings In
Hastings Ice and Fuel Company Earl Paine. 730 N. East street, had by many thousands, the project is childhood in pioneer days and was
! driving prepared by General Motors plans to cut at least 2500 ton for the misfortune to have one fall on now being readvertised.
herself a fine musician. Following
। Corporation. The department is also storage for lhe coming season. his foot breaking the bones in the
graduation from
; working on a course in safety edu­ Around 20 ton has been cut re­ two middle toes, and bruising the —not a cow—that kicked over a Mr. Davidson's
cation lo be Introduced into all cently for Immediate use. but the big ankle. He was taken to Pennock lantern and caused a fire which Williams college, he entered lhe
Eastman School of Music and ob­
hospital
where
the
injured
member
burned
to
the
ground
lhe
bam
of
school curricula.
harvest has not yet commenced, i
tained
his
master's
degree there. He
Henry
Sims
in
Mt.
Haley
township.
was
put
in
a
cast
aqd
he
is
now
at
The ninth and 10th grades of the Les Is Jioplng for some more zero'
Midland county. The loss was »2.000. appears to have a promising future
Dowling school have been discon- and below weather. They plan to wait liome recuperating.
Grand Ledge merchants donated in the line of his chosen work.
llnued and the eleven pupils in the till Ice is ten inches thick. Em-; “Oh boy; tomorrow morning f can
15 prizes in the recent holiday out­
i two grades have been provided ploymcnt is given to 30 or 35 men.
door lighting contest. Hastings could STUDENTS PRESENT
I transportation to the Hastings High lhe cutting being done by rotary
j school. The room they formerly oc- saws, and hauled up tramwayx to while eating his lunch Sunday to very good advantage try this or
MUSICAL PROGRAM
' cupied in the Dowling scnool has the Ice houses. One of the most night, satisfied that lhe holidays tome similar scheme the next time
| been turned into a gymn^Tum. A popular uses for natural ice. it were over. We don't recall many Santa Claus Is due to come to town.
A land mark of lhe village of Commercial Club Members
I new club organized during lhe year seems, is for cooling of beverages. boys who used lo feci that way in
the
olden
days.
Most
of
them
were
Northville
is
being
removed
as
the
I was the Plane Square 4-H Wilh It proving more satisfactory than
Held Enjoyable Meeting
anticipating lhe "licklns" In store, Old Exchange Hotel is wrecked.
Royal Bryant as leader.
the made product.
j Jesse Darling, a former Hastings
on Thursday
In the Grand Rapids Press of last and the tongue lashings if they There is no definite date on record
of Its construction but in 1872 it was
l boy. writes he Is coming back to the w?ek was a write-up of the pro­ moved crosswise of their seats.
The first meeting of the Hastings
। old home town this year. Jesse owns posed Centennial celebration of the ' MlM Della Allard has accepted a advertised by the. owners as being Commercial club in 1936 was held
—rMitton as
kd fitter with
— Vlnnt.
with Ihr
the TT
De
Vlnne' ' for sale.
•
। a resort (Darlings Resort) on the founding of Hastings, the cut con- position
Tuesday noon, with the new presi­
। Parittr
Pacific ,'nill
coast, Clrcrnn
Oregon. ICn
He rarrltraa
writes "'Tn
To | nfcUd wllh thb write-up being Shop, one of the exclusive ready-to-1 Byrcc E. Morrow chief engineer dent, Dr. George Lockwood, presid­
। see most—see Oregon coast." He in- loaned by lhe Banner. The cut tn wear stores for women in Grand I and manager of the production and ing. A fine report was given by Miss
I quires if the old wool bool Is still quc8
tion was
s drawing
question
was an
an artist
artist's
drawing of
of Rapids, and will leave for there the | transmission department of Con- Florence Campbell for the cljb and
latter
part
of\ncxl
week.
Hastings
I
sumers
Power
Co.,
died
Friday
night
i running night and day, and wants the log house of Slocum Bunker,
the Hastings credit Bureau which
| to know of the whereabouts of Art the first building erected In Has­ friends regret her leaving but wbh । at his home in Jackson of a heart showed that both arc functioning
[James. Grant Uwis. Bill Doelker. tings, the site being very appropri­ her all success in her new position.' attack. Manager Glenn Brower and
splendidly.
. -Sliver Jewel." Billie Pickcl and ately marked with a Urge boulder which b along the line of work she Frank Kelley, of the Hastings
The program was musical, and
(Billie Babcock.
with bronze plate, on East State followed for five or six years in one I branch, attended the funeral on entirely furnished by musical taientf*
| Kim Siglers most commendable street, al the corner ot Michigan of lhetlargest department stores in 1 Tuesday.
Seattle.
j We notice in the Charlotte Re­ from our High school—the school
I effort to build up a good stock-feed-.I „,
v
.
Ave. This artist's drawing was
Mr. and Mrs. Roman Fcldpausch publican -Tribune
that
Beverly band, under the leadership of Lew­
l Ing business in the city has been; made wholly from a description of
I quite^xcriously interfered with by the building given by lhe late John arc receiving congratulations on n Chamberlain, daughter of Mr. and is Hines; the boys'*glee club, under
the direction of Roy Gamer, with
Lth?.large number of wandering dogs Wickham, possibly the only man daughter born Jan. 4. at Pennock' Mrs. Lyman Chamberlain, former Miss Suzanne Sumner al the piano;
' in this community. One day last then alive who had seen the origi- hospital. This just completes a fine residents of Hastings, took part in and a solo by Mim Either Monica,
। wfeek they got into his large flock of nai structure. Mr. Wickham was quartet, the cider two boys, the two numbers in a recent dance re­
with Miss Sumner accompanying on
lardbs and destroyed 16 of them. intensely pleased wilh the drawing younger two girls, who doubtless cltal. "Joy Bells.’’ a ballet with aevI Monday some dogs made an appear- and declared that a photegraph wlll prove quite a torment to
lo their I •cral other girls and “Jazz Strut," a lhe piano. The members ot the club
expressed their hearty appreciation
-----------------------------at a certain
In age in life, but I tap dance solo.
। ance without doing any special could not have portrayed it more brothers
com­
Committees for the President's of all the numbers given. They are
damage as far as we could learn. correctly. In other words John Iron­ which is all Ironed out in real com-1
radeshin as
as . the years
vears pass.
nass. The
The'1 ball to be given all over the country proud of the work of Miss Jean
: but one of lhe dogs was shot.
side's well known ability as an ar­ radeship
Glerum. music director of lhe cits
young
lady
will
be
ciirUlcned
Janet
on
lhe
evening
of
January
30.
are
Have you had your first fall yet? tist has faithfully preserved for
; being organized in some ot the ad- schools, of that of Mr. Hines, lead-:
| We have! Hence the beauty spot, posterity Mas
iu»* landmark
- u.
the W
oldest
of uu.
our ■ Barbara.
Devltl Bronson, who for many joining cities. Northville. Charldtte cr ot lhe High school band and or-,
j under our left eye. and that tender city.
cheslra, and of Mr. Garner for his
place on our "crazy bone" that
Mrs. p. T. Colgrove received last .vears has represented the Misha- and Mason have completed arrange- work with the boys' glee club.
| makes us writhe if wc hit it. We I week a souvenir of the coming-out waka Rubber Company as a travel- rnents and other towns are malting ।
good
their ■plans.
: were carrying a
.. quart of tomato
kuinaku ’ pinky
party in
ill new
New York
IU1K Vi
City Ol
of Iler
her IUCCC.
niece. Ing
— salesman,
:------- ' reports'
•------- a very
'
°
"1 -------------- ---The proceeds
•----------- " .of
— , these
----­ SERIOUS ATTACK ON .
juice, too. to an aiUng friend. That's Miss Barbara Crim, which she prizes
Ulis year. Mr. Bronson is the balls are to be used to aid infantile
MRS. DOROTHY OUTNEY.
Why
took up ...
McCrecry's
offer I highly. ik
It was nil
an nvunuiikv
attractive iiuim
floral '------d«My
all -the
not in paralysis victims. ,
u
«... we ......
sv,j a ut.c,
' ’‘ “of —
— salesmen.
—
...........
Richard Gulney continues to fur­
Vtnie Brown of lhe Ingham Co.
this week to clean two garments for piece that centered one of the long i &gt;'cara perhaps, but In length of servihe price of one. allho wc hadn't I tables at the dinner which preceded 1
111 lhe company's employ—and News, who lias been enjoying a mo­ nish news for the papers. Yester­
day.
accompanied
by his sister, a
anticipated doing It just.tiffs way. kintlie uniiuiei,,.
dancing. Tiuvitis
Having been
coated ', l,l0BC
acquainted
utt it kiMLlll
’----------- with
--- - Devltl
----- -know
------ tor trip to Arlzonla and the south­
They 11 earn it. If they restore that with
—“ silver
-------- ..
it can
..be used■ -for many 1: •*
that
“» “
it was —
good,
1
faithful, «—
loyal
• west. observes that many of the Mrs. Helen Winn, of Detroit, he was
years. The party., for which one ‘ scrvlcc- too. because that's tlie kind slates passed thru are paying a lot in Hastings for hLs hearing on the
cloak and,drcss lo wearability.
of attention to beautifying roadsides charge of impersonating an officer.
hc ts.
Santa Claus. Incfzn town of lew hundred invitations had been Lssued °r a
In lhe afternoon Mn. Dorothy
wilh cither nursery stock or native
than 100. has become ’ famous all by Miss Crims mother. Mrs. J. W. If &gt;our Pcdal extremities cover
over the countryfat Christina.-, lime H. Crim and Mr. and Mrs. John more u&gt;an their share of mother altrub plantings. He thinks Michigan Gulney, his wife, who has estab­
mrw. old
v»u family
1-nuy friends.
nivnuo. p- arth
- — jhan
----- ,ordinary
----------- -----------------mortals——
In *ould do well to quit planting trees lished a residence here lo secure,
as the official addrc« of Santa Wycoff Mettler,
Claus. Hundreds^! letters are re­ was given at Pierre s and according &lt;’th,'r *»rds if you have big feel—. and make use of the many nttive her divorce from him. came face to
be intereried in
this. A
1 &gt;*ou Will &gt;w.
in tki.
. Rjirubs to provide bloom and color face with them on the cast side of
ceived to be re.stampcd and rcmailed. to”the’Ncw‘York aty’^ta’ww'
using only the Parker House about four o'clock.
The one-man force is Increased to one of the loveliest debutante func- wurch Ls on right now for the man the season through,
...—.. al ...w
Michigan wilh the biggest feet. enough of the evergreen type to give Wishing to avoid meeting them she
fifteen
the ..ant.ik
height w»
of one
the 0U.-M,.
rush., , lions of the holiday season. It's quite i
turned to go down the steps leading
Now Christmas. Florida comes into a coincidence thot in our Hastings । M an&gt;' man ln Barry county is gifted a spot of green during the winter.
Says Mrs. Gertrude p. Wilcox in Into the taproom. when. Il is alleged;
the spotlight, with a rapidly grow- Backward Glances' column this wJ^h a big - under-standing." get in
Ing business of similar nature, week is recorded a brief mention 1 Wch with your local shoe man and the Grand Rapids women's City Mrs. Winn rushed at her. struck,
Which might be a suggestion to from an extended write-up In a i havp *llin scad V°ur name and foot Club Bulletin,—"Some day I ‘ think her in the face, knocking her down!
Cloverdale, Hickory
Comers or Rochester,
‘
------ ot' the
'
N. "
Y.. daily
pre- *
at once 10 l»’c Detroit Publicity a whole article could be written on lhe stairs, the fall resulting in a.
Dowling, the three smallest cancell­ sentatlon of Miss Barbara's mother. Committee. 1805 Stroh Building. Dc- double boiler cookery. Wc do every­ bad break of the left leg, a bone;
protruding.
ing stations left In Barry county, to Miss Amelia Goodyear, al a very, trolt. If you're lhe lucky man you'll thing but wash and Iron with ours.
Mrs. Winn and her brother jump­
adopt the name of st. Nicholas or! lovely function given there by her! 8et a pair of custom made shoes as You need at least two sizes and you
i will soon discover you use them con- ed into their car. and left at fast
Kris Kringlc and put themselves on ; aunt and uncle. Prof, and Mrs. Wil- a prizespeed without waiting lo find out
lhe map in a big way.
&gt; ham Morey, during holiday week.
- ■
the extent of Mra. Gurney's injuries;
so it Is alleged.
State police immediately began w
search for them, but at lhe time of
our going to press they had not
been located. Mrs. Gulney is at
Pennock hospital, laid up for manr
Hastings, Michigan ■ Telephones 2244-2557 ■_
weeks, and the efid is not yet.

LOCAL NEWS

FREE DAY at
Food Center
JAN.

SATURDAY,

11

All Cash Register Receipts dated Dec
11th will be redeemed in Cash
on Saturday, Jan. 11th
Save Your January Receipts for Free Day in Feb.

Pillsbury Pancakes and Vacation
Land Coffee will be served FREE
All Day Saturday, January 11th
Cake Flour

Pillsbury, Sno Sheen

n* 27c

Harvest Time

17c

FLOUR

10c

5 lb.
»ck

Pillsbury Whole Bran

Farina

Large Size

19c

Sull Sac

pk«- 10c

Pillsbury Pancake Flour

Pancake
W

Z5«
a

Pillsbury Flour-129
Calumet Baking Powder c«' 21c

MortonsAU Are“ni15,11

100 Lb..

Royal M Coffee

CoSSee

White House
Lir&lt;e

Bowlene

Pkt. |9c

Lui* She

Palmolive Soap

L.rItStze

jgc

SUGAR c“b*"
Head Lettuce c™,

Grape Fruit

Pork Sausage H™*

Bacon

Steak, Sirloin

RINSO

’ 59c

10 - 5OC

Del Monte Red Salmon
New Carrots

,b ZZ
Large Size

]9c

4

Super Suds

D

Coffee

83c

19c

Climalene

nirger

Vacation
Land

5 Lbi 29c

Karo Syrup Bl«

23c
Bunch

0Q

Hend

gC

61« 19c

u17c

* 23c
“ 18c
2** 29c
Hmh Rendered

Sea Flyer

Pink

Salmon
Tali
Can IOC

Beef Pot

Roast

Yoh Can Save
Willi Safety At the It exall Store

SUNDAY and MONDAY, JAN. 12 end 13
LILY PONS The sweetest singing, loveliest girl
the world Is here ... In a moon-mad adventure.

Wilh HENRY FONDA Eric Wore and Osgood Perkins
Bargain Matinee Sonday, ItM and 3-W o’clock.

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, |AN. 14

$1.00 Halibut Oil Capsules79c
50c Milk of Magnesia 27c
39c Rubbing Alcohol, 1 pt.19c
50c Mineral Oil29c
50c Martel's Boy Rum29c
35c Parsten's Tooth Paste..19c
39c Blake Hand Lotion24c
50c Pure Aspirin, 100 5 gr. tabs. ..29c
39c Witch Hazel, 1 pt. ■...19c
1 lb. Black Psyllium Seed29c
$1.00 Halibut LivarOil Capsules ..79c
75c Norwegian Cod Liver Oil49c
2-qt. Hot Water Bottles.69c
500 Klenzo Tissues 29c
4oz. Glycerine and Rasa Water19c

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Goods Delivered

Phone 2131

Hastings, Mich.

PASSING OF MISS
CARRIE TODD.*
MUs Carrie Todd, who has made'
her home In Ho/tings with her sis-*
ter, Mrs. w. J. Holloway, the past;
16 years, died Tuesday evening ot
tltls week, Jan. 7.
While an Invalid since childhood.'
days the immediate illness that prereded her death dated only from
Sunday when she became unable

in all

“I DREAM TOO MUCH"

We List Only a Few of the Many Special
Money-Saving Prices for This Sale!

Try Peckham's Remsdy for Coughs due
to colds, formerly called Peckham's
Croup Remedy

2“ 29

fTRAND IliEATKf

KATHLEEN NORRIS Story of a woman who wanted marriage

NAVY WIFE
With CLARE TREVOR, RALPH BELLAMY. Jane Darwell.

WED., THURS. and FRI.. JAN. 15. 16 and 17

She was born hi Adrian. Mich.,
[Sept. 18. 1861. the daughter of Mr.
, and Mrs. Samuel Todd.
,
After her father's death Ml-.s.
Todd and her mother resided al
' Auburn. California, and shortly
after the death of the latter in 1918
. she came to HMtlngs.
,
While physical limitations held
, Miss Todd lo a particularly quiet
and uneventful life, she derived a
] J1 great deal of happiness from her
home, her friends, her flower.1,,
her books and her companionship
, with her sister which wm an ideal
one.
she had an alert mind being
X &gt;
well informed on all the events of
world interest and was an entertain tag conversationalist.
She filled a special niche in tho 1
hearts of her frleiiih, .and will be ft
missed by liirm.H she will be In
the home which her passing leaves

Mutiny On The Bounty :;
Starring CHARLES LAUGHTON, Clark Gabi*. Franchol Tone
ADULTS U

CSIMnn IS C.nU

NOTE—A Special Matinee may be given on Wednesday. Watch
newspaper and screen for further announcement

SATURDAY ONLY, JANUARY 18
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

Fbalaro No. 1

Gals fell tor him when he sang . . . tough guy&gt; fell when his
tlsto swung!
.
■

Carl Brinon in "SHIP CAFE1
&lt; ,

Arilne Judge. William Frawley, Mady Christian*, Eddie Daria

John Wayns in "WESTWARD HO'
ice Only—Bock Jana* ki EptooOe Na. 13 of "THE ROAR­
ING WEST”
Adah. 15 Cento. Children 19 Uente

Funeral services will be held at
Uie family residence on W. Green
street, Friday morning al 10 o'clock,
conducted by Rev. J. A- McNulty
with lhe burial on the family lot in
Adrian.

THESE LEGHORNS ARE
CHAMPION LAYERS.
We have In the Banner office
window this week anoUier dozen
super eggs, weighing 38 ounces, tho
They were produced from tho Pettit
strain white leghorns. North Broad­
way. TI&gt;e average production from
too hriu has been 62 per cent for
November and December 183?. And
wc know Pettit eggs are ruperflavored as wall, for we have tested
them cooked.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. JANUARY 9. 1938

INJUNCTION DIS­
MISSED BY JUDGE
• Continued from page one)

I hides are registered and where lhe
licenses are paid.
1 There seems lo be proof that. In all
-six counties, this method of selling
was carried on by representatives of
i Gingrich * CO., and that the coun­
I ties purchasing the trucks of the
I Gingrich Co. did receive license
| money from Grand Rapids truck
and car owners sufficient lo cover
| the cost of the trucks.

CONSUMERS
SPECIAL

Gas

WATER

FOR THE FINEST

LOW-COST
AUTOMATIC
WATER HEATING
YOU'D EVER WANT/

a whole lot of work In thia

Prove It—wilh this

SPECIAL OFFER

FREE TRIAL
a liberal trial. If you decide to

\ammw
PURCHASE PLAN

On Eaty monthly Itrrni
lb. OM.t llb.r.1 VU|

CONSUMERS
POWER COMPANY

Death Of Ernest J,
Edger Of Jackson
who died suddenly at his home
fackson, Jang 6 are being conPresbyterian church

In Rutland Twp., his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Jacob Edger, being pioneer
residents there.
He received his education In. the
Hastings schools, later going to Yp­
silanti Normal where he made a
brilliant
record in mathematics. On
i On Tuesday of this week, the
graduating he came to Hastings
| hearing of the proceedings brought
I by Kent county and lhe Kent coun- High os teacher in the above sub­
| ly road commission against the six ject. and was later made principal.
He resigned In June. 1907. when he
counties, was had before Judge
1 Taylor in Grand Rapids. Prosecuting was elected County commissioner ot
on the democratic ticket in
Attorney McDonald was present to Schools
'
a
strongly entrenched Republican
I represent Barry county. The other
five counties were likewise repre-1 county. It being said that every boy
or
girl
who
had ever attended
High
1 tented. On his return that evening.
„„
he artXt
was on the him
staff
a representative of the Banner in- :i school whilebJ^t
”
terviewed Mr. McDonald to learn w
oul 10 bo°st *nd TOte for hlrn’
what hxd been done in Judge Tay-1 He succeeded John C. Ketcham
lor'* court that day. We summarize *nd held the office tOT
yrars.
his report.
doing much constructive work durMr. McDonald stated that the le- !

.h.™

against the six counties and Glng- j

hiSi

«*&gt; b. dumu-d. Th., m.Utotod |a
tbdt
™ notoa.l buu tor „uSn&lt; toXdence to

Organizations

U“'

.to.pl. df rtta.

tax money claimed by Kent county.
All this money had been collected
by lhe state’s own agents in al) six
counties; that the money so col­
lected had been remitted to the
state; that lhe state in turn had
repaid the same to lhe counties;
that in accordance with the law
and with the state's instructions this
license money had been - paid di­
rectly to the county road commis­
sion ot each of the six counties, so
that none of the six have lhe money
and have no control of the money.
The road commissions have It.
2. That the six counties had no
part whatever in the purchase of
the trucks, the buying being done
in every case by the county road
commission of each county, entirely
independent of the other counties.
and with no understanding whatever between themselves.
3. Under these conditions and cir­
cumstances. the defense attorneys
asked that the proceedings against
lhe six counties Jointly be dismissed,
as there was no basis for any suit
against them jointly. The attorneys
argued that Kent county's remedy.
If It has any, lies not in action
against the six counties jointly,' but
in separate suite against the road
commission of each county, which
would be tried in those counties.
Judge Taylor took this matter ot
dismissing the suit against the six
counties under advisement and will
announce his decision In the near
future.
The Judge's dismissal of the in­
Junction proceedings Is taken as a
favorable indication that Joint ac­
tion against the six counties is not
lhe proper legal proceeding, and
that he may hold that; a spearate
suit against the road commission of
each county is the correct way of
securing any accounting for. and return of. license tax money which
Kent county claims has been wrong­
fully diverted to the other stx counties. His decision will be awaited
with much interest.
We understand that the secretary
of state, under whose direction the
auto-license tax money is collected
and the state highway department
ore much Interested in this suit,
which will probably go to the supreme court. The final dwtelon
may have a lot Jo do with the disposition of automobile license money
in the road building of the future.
Two legal questions involved in

live work on the side, as a teacher
of dancing and drama for children.
She has stddied with lhe foremost
teachers in New York and plans to
supplement It wilh work abroad.
Her ultimate alm Is to conduct a
school of her own—and we feel sure
she will.
Bertha Bentley, long recognized os
an authority Ln primary work, writes
from New York of her interest in
lhe new government project in Yan­
kee Springs which has come to her
attention out there In the big me­
tropolis and which she feels will be
a fine thing for her old home town.
From Florida, where they ore so­
journing until spring breezes tem­
per our northern clime. Dr. and Mrs.
C. 8. McIntyre send their message
■on a gold and white Hello I folder.
•The doctor notes that he has "the
Tigers, Boston Braves and Yankees
located and ready to go." After
crossing Tampa Bay over the 7-mile
Causeway, and from Tampa to Clear­
water. via the 9-mllc Davis Cause■
have a bridge across the Straits.
Florida spent around a quarter of a

।
sponsible wasn't reelected. It’s Mrs.
McIntyre's verdict that the pret­
tiest town they have visited so far in
Florida, is Winter Park, the college
town where the Keith Chidestera
have recently located.
Altho It's over thirty-years since
he left Hastings, the holidays never
pass without the card bearing lhe
iChicago postmark from Robert
Lewis, which lets the junior editor
know that a friendship which began
in post office days has never lan­
,
guished
—
"I'd like this greeting to be the kind
In which you almost feel
'The outstretched hand that would
clasp your own
With a friendliness very reaL"
1 ’d like the words to be worm and
"I
true.
So that you could almost hear
.
How
vary sincerely I’m saying to
‘Merry Christmas and Happy New

Nearer home we voted the Mc:Peek's card from Charlotte the most
ioriginal. It bears a stunning sketch
.of lheir farm home on the hill top,
।done by Mrs. McPeek's new nephew.
:Bill Solms, who Is a well known
।commercial artist,
Hope Daring selected a bit of
Has the owner of a truck, or a wholesome philosophy from Emerfleet of trucks, lhe right to register
those trucks and pay the license on In the world to live after the world's
them in another county than the opinions; it is easy In solitude to live
one where he actually Uvea?
When he pays the license tax on he who in lhe midst of the crowd
his trucks to the representative of keeps with perfect sweetness the in­
the secretary of state Ln -another dependence of solitude."
county, and that person receives his
registry of the trucks, collects the pert. In their statement that—"thia
license tax thereon and forwards the Christmas card business is a racket."
Not we. however! The signatures
and messages and little notes call
property of the county road commis­
sion of that county. If and when the
state highway department repays it spirit of Christmas Into our hearts
to that county, aven though the as few other things do. To us they
truck owner , did not reside Ln that
county!
.
truly glad to note
md friend Muri De­

partment are interested in the final

other six counties are vitally inter­

tho Charlotte Sunshine girls the
kl.
—__________ - —

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS
| February 6 at
tlie Hasttnga
1 Methodist church Is the time' and
| the place for the second annual
Mother and Son banquet to be spon­
sored by the Young Men’s Y group.
Cranston Wilcox Is president and
Duane Pugh Is oecrelary and treasi urer.
i This Thursday evening. January

elsctrio cook-stove. Jost the tblug
for eo-eds and tor people who lies

Another 50 wheel-barrow loads of
prove the swimming beach at Camp
i Barry. One boy has been heard from
। who is already saving money to at­
; tend Camp in 1934.
• Intensive plans are being com■ pie ted for the organization of a loIcal Y. M- C. A. at Mt. Pleasant. Mr.
! E. T. May. formerly of lhe Lansing
area. Is In charge of the Mt. Pleasaqt project.
.
A Hl-Y pongress ot the nation Is
being planned for June. 1938, to
I which Michigan may have 33 dele­
gates. Let’s plan on some from
i Barry county. This Congress may
j meet at Berea College in Kentucky.

Townsend Plan meeting at Epis­
copal parish house Friday evening,
Jan. 10. 1930. 8 o'clock. This Ls the
time for the election of officers.
Bring your pencils. All members
urged to be present.

Leaf Orange

Doll Stove? No,
Looks like *'dol&gt; stove, doesn't tt? I
Bat its designers claim this miststore rance la a complete, practical j

will be held a meeting of the Barry
.Y. M. C. A- committee. Ray Johns of
the State Y. M. C. A- staff will be

The Woman's Relief Corps will
have their monthly pot luck birth­
day dinner at their hall January 11.
At 2:30 the regular business meet­
ing will convene and after the busi­
ness has been taken care of lhe in­
stallation ot officers will be In order.
We expect to have Kalhren Sheldon
of Kalamazoo Corps to be our In­
stalling officer. Members are urged

Friday, Jan.

u u &lt;.u one invited.—Lecturer, Austin

.
.
may hMVC hastened lhe end.
■
That there had been no joint J Mr. Edger was a "natural-bom
action, no common knowledge by I teacher" if there ever was one. He
them, as to what had been done was genial, and had a fine sense of
in the purchase of trucks, or the humor. He could conduct classes In
manner of payment for them; that i the midst of a crowded assembly
there had been no understanding by room and maintain perfect discl­
and between the counties in the pUne.
Ke*’ will
w*.U live
U*e In
in the grateful hearts
purchase of. 'or payment for the
He
the trucks bought from the Glng- of hundreds of boys and girls whose
rich
company.
•------------ --------------- — •--------------WBy has been made smootherralong
The attorneys argued that there the rocky road of mathematics In
was
as not. and could not be. any
anv legal
lesal high
hteh school
vhnnl and
anil college
ml Into life,
Ufa because
haaania
basis for Injunction proceedings ,of the fine
preparation he gave
against the six counties jointly, them.
when there had been no Joint acSurviving are the wife. Belle Rock
tlofKjnd when the counties them­ Edger; five daughters: Mrs. J. E.
selves had had pdthlng to do with Chevrie. Leslie; Mrs. c. 8- Jones.
buying the trucks; the purchases Jackson; Mrs. Ralph Thayer. Deck­
having been made by lhe road com­ erville;
Marcelelne, Albion, and
missions, entirely Independent of Mary at home; also one son Ernest
each other, and with no agreement J. Jr., Leslie. He also leaves two sis­
or understanding among themselves. ters. Mrs. Maude Miller and Mrs.
Judge Taylor held that there was peter Vanderbrook. and one broth­
no basis for the injunction under er. Jacob Edger, all of Hastings.
the circumstances, and accordingly
A short prayer service was held
dismissed it. Tills was regarded as nt lhe family residence at ten
a substantial victory for lhe defend­ o'clock this morning. The burial will
ants.
be at Riverside.
The legal representatives next
asked that the entire proceeding, Christmas Cards Bring
including the demand for an ac-1
counting from the six counties, be,
Brighter Yule Season
dismissed for these reasons:
1. That the six counties did not'
(Continued from page one)
have any control over the license

Travels 33 Miles
Daily to School

The annual luncheon of the
Women's Club for members only will
j be Friday. Jan. 17. Al this time elec­
tion of officers for the year sterling
in May will take place. Annual re­
ports will be given and other yearly
business transacted. There will be
an interesting program arranged by
the music committee. Mesdames L.
F. Maus and Gordon Edmonds. The
other member of the committee,
Mrs. J. B-’Crue. is sojourning in
California. It is asked that each club
member reserve this date for this
outstanding social and business
meeting, place for holding which will
be announced later.

» A I ®lnB tor SeVeral yeOTS; tWO Week* Maple
h/th. Previous to his death he fell, break-

1 'Ths) tho .&lt;2
no’nZrt whitever

X J?SXX

"O. K."

mu season, return to lhe happy fold

Flook.

17

The Rutland Cemetery Circle wiU
meet Wednesday. Jan. 15 with Mrs.
Ollie Vanderbrook. A pot luck din­
ner.

of Peach. Wash., but she doesn't
mind.
For two years she has

The I. O. O. F. and Rebekah lodge
will hold a -Family Night” gather­
ing al lheir hall on Thursday. Jan.

bus and rides 28 miles to scbool.

o'clock. An exceptionally interesting
program will be rendered by some
boys from the Vocation School al
Lansing. Dancing will follow the
program.
Hospital Guild No. 7 will meet
with Mrs. E. A. Parker. E. Jefferson

missed classes only when snow­
drifts tnado roads impassable.

Nancy Harkness
(Continued from page one)

cross-country flights are the most
M._ Let us begin the new year with thrilling of all. Bhe has flown from
renewed zeal.
Boston to Palm Beach. Fla., beating
the air lino .time by 15 minutes. Lost
summer she flew from Boston to
Battle Creek, accompanied by her
flance, Robert MacOlure Dave, of
Long Island. New York, to vlait her
family, making the trip In less than
six hours. Having her mother as a
H. H. S. CAGERS
passenger they then flew to Houghton
visit relatives. The time- required
AT MIDDLEVILLE to
for this trip was three and one half
hours, which broke all records for
League of Four Towns Con­ the trip from Battle Creek to
Houghton. The plane used was a
sidered—Second Team
"Beachcraft” made by the Beach
to Play
Craft corporation of Wichita, Kan­
The Hastings High school eagers sas. It is equipped with retractable
will begin the New Year with their landing gear which increases the
regularly scheduled game at Mid­
dleville tomorrow night. The neigh­ hour. This gear folds up into the
boring quintet has won two games fusilage on ascending and is let
Slop-sided scores and will prob­ down again for the landing. The
ly give the Hastings five a good folding up ot the landing gear de­
battle. o
£
creases thq/*air resistance against
Tlie Bennettown will open their the plane and consequently In­
home games Saturday night when creases tha speed. The Beachcraft
the powerful and well coached has a cruising speed of 155 miles per
Greenville team invades the local hour with a top speed of 176 and
court. This will mark the beginning carries five passengers.
Miss Harkness has had some ex­
of tho hardest port of the schedule
at home. The following week will perience with sea planes and is en­
find Ionia playing a return game thusiastic about their immense prncand then play AUegan after Ionia. ticablllly. Bhe says she also, enjoys
Opening relations with Greenville its convenience for on a hot day it
will probably result in the formation Ls a pleasure to land on the water
ot a league comprised of Hastings. and slip over the side for a refresh­
Greenville. Ionia and
Belding. ing swlrn. When asked about the
These are all class B schools. The autogiro Miss Harkness said her ex­
population of each town is: Ionia. perience wilh it had been rather
6582; Hastings.’ 5.227; Greenville. limited but that three years ago she
4,730, and Belding. 4.140. This will flew from Houghton to Milwaukee
make four well matched teams and and then to Kalamazoo. At the time
a more Interesting game from the she was impressed with Its slow rate
spectator's standpoint.
of speed as 80 miles an hour was all
Four side baskets have been added that it could do. In recent months,
to the high school gymnasium Ln the however, the auto-giro's speed has
hope of bolstering the offensive of been Increased considerably, accord­
ing to Miss Harkness, but she has
played the Hastings' men have had not had the opportunity of riding In
to rely on a powerful defense to win
The only "crock-up" that Miss
their games. This is proven by the
fact that while Hastings has lost two Harkness has experienced was while
of their three games, they are still a student at Vassar when riding os
ahead on points. They won over a passenger. Her Injuries kept her
Charlotte by nine points and lost to out of college for six months. Bhe
Woodland and Ionia by three and has had six forced landings due
four points respectively which gives either to motor trouble or unfavor­
the local crew a lead of two points. able weather.
To visit with Miss Harkness con­
Cook and Kelley, who received In­
juries in the Ionia game, are back cerning her work is a pleasure. Bhe
In uniform and will be available. has a charming personality and an
The unbeaten second team will unassuming
and
matter-of-fact
swing Into action in a preliminary manner in telling her experiences.
As announced last week Miss
game with a New Year’s resolution
to keep the slate clean.
Harkness will be married on Satur­
day of this week at the Presbyterian
church to Robert MacCluze Love,
EPWORTH LEAGUE.
All Epworth League members are of Kings Point. Long Island. New
requested to bring a poem, or part York. It is interesting to know that
of a poem, which he thinks Is a good Mr. Love shares her Interest and
expression of an Idea about God. at enthusiasm in flying as he is presi­
lhe meeting Bunday night at 8 dent of the inter-city Air Lines at
o'clock. Stuart Edmonds and Cor­ Boston, successors to the Boston
nelia Beverwyk are in charge of the Branch of the Curtiss Wright Cor­
meeting which will have for its poration.
theme ot discussion. “What Poets
and Social workers Tell Us About
Blin Boaste Dacldng Stool
God." If you have colored envelope
The Village of Fordwlcb, enclent
linings from Christmas cards you
have received, the League would port of Canterbury on the banks of
greatly appreciate having them. Wc the Stour and the Thames Estuary,
wish to send a box of such linings still boasts a docking stool, though
Its only purpose 'Is to remind Fordmake articles to sell for the support wIchers of the gone glory of a day
of a dispensary.
when pirates came ashore to raid
the rich towns of Kent. Attached
ESTHER CHANDLER ALLEN
DIES IN LOS ANGELES.
Roy Chandler received a telegram hind the town ball is a huge oak
Sunday morning which brought the beam equipped wilh pulley and
Inews of the death of his sister, tackle from which the stool is sus­
Esther, wife of Howard Allen, at pended. Culprits were bound to the
Loa Angeles, following an operation B^ool and lowered Into the waters of
which had been performed the pre­ the 8tour. Legend calls this piece of
vious. Monday.
Mrs. Allen had not been in good
health for several years.
Her
death is a particularly sad one as
she leaves five children, and Mr.
The planet Pluto was discovered
Allen is In very poor health himself. by a W. Totebaugh of the Lowell
oboervatory on March 18. 1M0. Its
body is about 10,000 miles In diam­
eter, its mass about halt that of

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�I COUNTY—
AT HOME

The Hastings Banner
A PAGE OF EDITORIALl AND FJLATURM

MICHIGAN

—o Editorials
ANOTHER
Tbs supreme Ct

Public Porum |j
This and That Ill The
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

any increases direcUy onto congress.
ruBng against
■i a complete the "message." After staling that al)
rthl* tribunal

ret to tend me a notice that Um could control vote* wholesale at
A new plan is being brought for­
ward. we read, to help solve the ever
trolled the entire show. But put In
present problem of social security. care of out going Christmas card* secret ballot system at these part

fear" he followed up by trying to
act was an attempt to regiment appeal for personal support by Im­
farm* and farmers in this country planting fear In the hearts of his
under direct control of the Federal radio audience at what might hap­
govern men l. and regimentaUon of pen if his administration were not
any sort 1* contrary to the spirit of given support. Trying to overcome
our Union which was formed to in­ fear by Implanting fear of fear of
sure a maximum amount of Individ- .fear, as it were.
In brief, one might have listened
ual freedom.
Aside from legal consider* Uons. Ito lhe .president’s ’’message" care­
the policy of crop control by de- fully, er studied it in detail afterstrucllon is dangerous a* Mr. Wai-1 ward* without having the least Idea
taoe demonstrated during the first1 of how Mr. Roosevelt stand* on one

outguess the weather, an all-lmportent and uncertain factor. If the
drouth which ravaged this country had also struck in other important agricultural centers, most of I

Known as lhe childhood annunity taken the Banner and never missed
plan, it specifies that the govern­ a copy since 162S. My father took It
ment ahafi deposit 130.000 to the all hit life and the McCarty family.
credit of each new born infant and

Each month the Infant will re­ to South Florida, atop in and tee
ing so. But cut out this step and]
ceive gbO In interest Which is asmake lhe parties nominate their
Jessie O. McCarty.
education, clothing and other in­
Oakland Park. Florida.
qualified men to accept office.
cidental expenses Then when the
AnoUser thing Is that moat people
child becomes a young person ot
Dear Editors:—I Just want to say
twenty, the principal of 620.000 is that I agree with some of the things are not interested in primary cam­
you have said lately about people paigns even though they are mors
lin;x&gt;rtant
Ilian lhe actual cam­
right. Thus each young couple will not paying enough attonttan to the
be assured a small fortune of H0.- ones they steel to office. When a 60 paign. Itself. For If we don't get
000 as a starter as well as assurance per cant vote is all that turns out good me:, nominated in lhe primary,
the
that adequate provision will be even (luring
during a presidential
presiocniiai election. —
*■ actual election doesn't amount
there is no question but whst a tot I
much *nyw*y Because of the
made for all children.
of people are slackers It is also true.1 »Pln UP vot*' parties ganging up on
other to help get Inferior mtn
It is said that this plan will coat I think, that a tot of those who do
only about half as much as other vote do not give very much thought of the opposition nominated In
plans which are aiming at lhe same to the qualifications and records of hopes of increasing their own
chahces.
and general lack of inter­
objective. Money will be put in cir­ those they vole for.
culation. poverty will be abolished,
It seems to me that the party pri­ est. candidates representing small
'
young and old alike will be assured mary is responsible for a tot of un­ cliques are often successful.
a decent living, wealth will be redis­ sound things. Your good men hate
Do away with the party primary,
tributed. every one can enjoy life to run for office today because of I say. make the parties responsible
the primary which is nothing but a for their candidate* (and you will
lhe bothersome necessity of having free-for-all brawl. Candidates who help to Improve the quality of men
have absolutely no qualifications for you get to serve tn public office. But
office get the backing of a few cron­ perhaps you dop’t agree wilh thia.
What do we think of lhe plan? ies and run and more often than not
I like to read your paper even
Well, well have to think it over— succeed In making a dirty campaign though I don't always agree with
but in the meantime, give us a
everything you say.
bromo-seilaer—we've got a head­
I know that plenty of things were .
ache.

the world would have been faced1
‘ POSITIVE —
•
•
A
PROGRAM.
Frank Knox, editor of the Chiwith famine. Fortunately nations
abroad grew bumper crops so rushed cago Dally News, answers the chai­
In when our own crops failed.
[ lenge of President Franklin D.
The AAA did not work out the I Roosevelt to frame a positive pro­
way Its sponsors hoped. It has! gram not "concealed in a cowardly

placed American farmers In a very. cloak of generality." An alternative
unfavorable position tn regard lo in- program, in fact, for his New Deal,
tematlonal trade. Farmas abroad Here It 1*1
increased crops when the United
1—Immediate and drastic reducBlates began to plow under It* Hon of governmental expenses,
grilns. consequently foreign coun-1 2—A sound currency to be maintries have grabbed market* which tained at all hazards.
this country once helped to supply. I 3—Maintenance of the national
Michigan was not one of the ■ credit by a federal budget annually
state* which received much benefit balanced.
from the AAA. We paid out much
4—Unemployment and old-age in­
more in taxes than we received from surance unejrr state taws.
the processing levies.
| 5—Tlie removal of government
There will be substitutes cotvcocted I from all fields of private enterprise,
for the AAA. Just what form the ’ 6—Opposition to Uie unsound pol-

meat of the anti-trust laws to pre­
vent monopoly.
This program, os Editor Knox
points out is positive, not negative;
Is not "concealed In a cowardly
cloak ot generality;" is forthright
and specific.
Furthermore—and this is Impor­
-THE BIO RALLY.’’
tant—It- is the program which
tires fall to work. I myself wilL.be Roosevelt accepted 100 per cent
the first to tell you." Framed in this three years ago; It is the program
halo of noble sentiment, the New on which he campaigned his way tb
victory, and lhe program which he
What has happened to this candor has
--------repudiated
r------ ----------------in every
- -------------------detail since
in the meantime? One Is prompted assuming office.
to ask this question after listening !
-^-r.--------

plan; others hope to modify Uie
AAA to bring it within the limits of
the Constitution.
Whatever form the substitute
lakes, let us liope that the cure isn’t
worse than lhe sickness.

to the political-banquet

type of
A FALSE GRIN.
oratory with which Mr. Roosevelt
oulsed under the friendly name
greeted congress as It assembled for of "Social Security Act." a me*A*re
the opening session. For about a j u now in effect which will ultimatequarter of an hour during lhe course ' iy ux business and industry in this
of- his "message" he delivered a country six per cent and all work­
harangue against those who have I men three per cent of their weekly
criticized or opposed his policies. Helpay check* far the purpose of sup-

did not attempt to answer hls j porting a new army of Federal cmcritics; to defend the many dlicrep- j ptoyees some 30.000 strong. Of
encies between
hl*
campaign course that isn't the alm of the act.
promises and hi* subsequent actions.' But. according lo those who have
Without presenting arguments or [given the matter some study, ad-

reasons. without taking into consid-1
eratlon lhe fact that lhe right ol
free speech Is one ot the Constltu-1
Uonal righta of every citizen of lhe I
United States, he simply dubbed |

ministration costs will soon be
greater than revenue. Thus, if some
-social security" is desired new levfes will have to be made somewhere.
otherwise the new army, of em-

those who have opposed hl* rule as payees will have all the securities
unpatriotic, selfish, backward.
&lt; The same type of Insurance IntendAt . poUtal
tllU .&gt;pe or
Ael „u,a
ontory would h.v, boon erwotod
muc„
&lt;Oclmtl
* «» »&gt;“&gt;r
companies tn this country. No new
bu.e&gt;u,
bureaus would luve been required,
no new employee* added. The situ­
ation could have been handled
through agencies which already
existed for lhe benefit of ail par­
tics concerned. Tiie taw I* rather

POSED M be In a dJtter.nl catelory, tt U a time .tven over to Ute
chW exocuUre lor praenung hls
polujks and reenmmendeuon, before.
congress and hls countrymen. Few
presidents have ever abused this
privilege, at least to the extent that !
Mr. Roosevelt did.
I cleverly concocted, too. For exam­
What did the message contain relple lhe act doesn't begin to nibble
alive to the affairs of this country?
, away at Uie pay checks of workmen
Probably the only part of his speech
। until AFTER the next election it
which had any direct bearing on the •
। over. Those who framed the bill
affatn pf Ulis country came near lhe
* ।I probably decided that what the
conclusion when he said that be- '
•’ I workmen didn't know
probably
cause of Improved business condi­
' wouldn't affect lheir votes during
tions, and the consequent increased
the next four years. AU ot this in­
dicates the dictatorial, paternalistic
visable or necessary." such a state­
trend of Uw Federal government; a
ment might have been more signifi­
trend that will have to be resisted
cant becked by statistics— but ever,
U we wish to retain any measure di
so. it was the most definite sen­
Individual freedom.
tence he uttered.
How does Uie president stand on
such issues as the veterans' bonus.
The Townsend Old Age Pension
R. L- Atkinson of Sturgis. 6. D.
Plan, -a sound currency, further ex­ iia* been convinced of lhe value of
tension or contraction of Federal advertliing. He designed an an­
bureaus. apd counties* other Issues nouncement for a daily paper, mak­
that wlll come before congress. No ing known‘hl* desire to buy oat*.
one knpws. Tlie presidential silence Unfortunately, the word appeared In
was complete.
type a* "caU." Responses, however,

Pungent Paragraphs

proved the worth of the printed
word.—ft. Lout* Ototoe-Deniocrat.
In any family discussion, the
MU. message reveal* u&gt;at Iw doe* *h*re-lhe-work movement is en­
thusiastically Indorsed by mother.—
not be levied- That statement, Oil City Derrick.

party conventk
candidates just

We take the Miami Herald. Miami tias responsible for their govern-!
cent a year Thia principal can then News, Miami Beach Tribune and menu again and I believe we will
the Fort Lauderdale N«*a. all dailrates ranging from 4 1-2 to 5 1-2 per
apd to local governments, too.
cent thus netting the government a lhe Banner.
You can't blame anyone for steer­
tidy profit and helping to pay a
We an all well and enjoying nice ing clear of a party primary cam­
warm weather, eating greet: cucum- paign. It la a tang-drawn-out dirty

turned into the after-dlnnsr phase
of a political rally with the usual
accompaniment of kleig lights and
moving picture* camera*,
=====

new measure will take Is a question, icy of restricUng agricultural proSome legislators appear to be' ducUon.
grooming up the old equalization fee 1 7—Strict and impartial enforce-

THURSDAY, JANUARY », !l

'Round About Town
Hew to Um line, let the quips

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say
MOTHERHOOD.
Mother of Nine Dies on Gallows.
Mother of Eleven Given Life for a
Pint Mother of Seven Must Die—
headline writers like to fashion
those heads. Motherhood as such Is
trampled into the mire.
The motherhood that Is called on
to expiate for lhe poisoning ol a
husband, for the sate of liquor or for
asking a daughter to submit to the
attack of a beast is not true mother­
hood. it Is motherhood that Is noth­
ing more than a biological accident.
Motherhood Is sacred only when the
determination to shield, protect,
guard and guide Is present. The
motherhood of the Ontario woman
who died on lhe gibbet for the
poisoning of her husband was not
strangled last week; it was strangled ,
before the first child was born
Etta Milter's brand of motherhood '
did not suffer by her many incar­
cerations In jail and prison. She gave
more thought to gin than she did
lo her progeny.
Ingham county had another and
a horrible burlesque on the name
of motherhood several weeks ago
when Leah Bentley procured her 14year-old daughter for a 60- year -old
syphlletlc beast. Motherhood—God
save us from that kind of mother­
hood.
There Is no relationship finer titan
motherhood or fatherhood when
mothers and fathers live up to their
responsibilities and to their trusts.
A tomcat may devour its young, fish
and. Snakes eat their own gel but
the higher animate cherish and pro­
tect lheir offspring. The horse, the
bear, the deer, the elephant, the
dog—aU these animals protect their
own.
Motherhood—how thy name is
dragged in Use dust to make a head­
line!—Ingham County News.
HUNTING BUGS
Ernest Roe. well known Plymouth
resident and president of its Traffic
club, recently returned from a visit
of several weeks to the home of his
daughter, who resides within Ute
metropolitan district of New York
city. Her home Is In Westchester
county, that portion of New York
stole which in addition to the Hud­
son river and island sound helps
form the boundary line around our
biggest city.
Westchester county Is chiefly the
beautiful residential section of the

A Quotation
BETTER mend one
fault in yourself than
a hundred in your
neighbor.
—Elbert Hubbard

pNGLlBH surgeon says love
drama can causa a cold.
Borne of the Hollywood type.
agonizing pain in the neck.

i
Enforcement of betting laws '
has started an indoor gambling I
erase In Scotland, which should j
end for all time those Scotch I
Jokes.
that good meals rate first as a
factor lo marriage, so Hollywood
brides must not know their bta-

ealvsd soma Chinese "thousand­
year-old” eggs. in the old days
they were served to thespians
but a few weeks old. burled.

By Observing Tommy.
Wonder why those around town
are now calling our night watchman
under the norn de plume—"BUI."

TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
Seems if tt had something to do
in response to an Invitation, dele­
gates from the Middleville. Nash­ with a trip north. Ask him about It
ville, Delton and Coats Orove met if you dare!
with the Hastings Woman's club in
I wonder if anybody ever really
a county organization. The follow­ read the heading to this column?
ing officers were elected; President,
Walter
Winchell and Ben Bemle
Mrs. Belle Marble. Nashville; vice
president. Mrs. Nellie Cross. Delton; are still banging a way t at each other
secretary. Mrs. Daisy Townsend. over the air!
Nashville, and treasurer. Mrs. Phyl­
Have you heard the High School
lis Reynold*. Hastings.
George E- Coleman was re-elected Band yet? a great little bunch—and
enthusiastic, too.
treasurer of lhe Michigan Mutual
Tornado. Cyclone and Windstorm
They’ve got rhythm-m-m-m! Or
company at Its annual meeting
Tuesday.
The
annual reports whatever else that It takes.

showed the company to be In a pros­
perous condition.
At a dinner party given at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John Wtelssert
Monday evening, the engagements
their daughter. Ruth P. to Floyd O.
Lohmeyer. of Philadelphia, was an­
nounced.
A. P. King aged. 61. of Johnstown
township, died Friday at his home
south of Banfleld. Mr. King was well
known and one of lhe first settlers
of the county.
The well known firm of Goodrear
Bros., which was established In 1640
by Henry a. Goodyear, ha* been re­
organised and
the
firm
name
changed to Goodyear Bros. Hard­
ware company. Two additional part-

Edward Goodyear, son of John F.
Goodyear, and David Goodyear, son
of David 8. Goodyear.
Mrs. George Sheffield, first pioneer
fathers ot 70 ysars ago.'* Still,
1 teacher of Baltimore, died yesterday
our descendants may be pretty
at her home in Johnstown township.
short, judging from modern
debts.
THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs.
Lorenzo Maus entertained the supervteors and county officers at their
home. Cards furnished the diversion
and Mrs. John Doster and Miss
Bertha Mead assisted In saving the
refreshments.
One ot the mast delightful acces­
sions of the social season was the
,
j » i
» —
' reception given Tuesday afternoon
&gt;(ncr &lt;u^ a wwn a favor until
| by Dr. and Mrs. William O. Morey to
fai fad hit dinner.”
introduce their niece. Miss Amelia
JANUARY
Goodyear, in lhe receiving party
were Dr. and Mrs. Morey. Miss
Goodyear. General John O. Park­
burst. of Michigan, grandfather of
the debutante, her brother. Cadet:
William Parkhurst Goodyear and
Miss Elizabeth Dwight, of Chicago.

10-U&gt;5-« ot N.tloo. ho!J«
its first mrnms. 1M0.

great city. However it does have
numerous small cities and villages,
made up largely pf people occupying
a fairly important station in life.
They are not the usual type in
which one would expect to find
filthy conditions which give birth to
disease and epidemics.
But would you believe it—the New
Dealers are taking some 6300.000 of
Ute taxpayer* money and giving it
to politicians residing in Westches­
ter county to make a "study” in that
county of malaria fever—probably
Ute last place tn the warld where
such disease might originate or
spread. New Deal politicians must
be well provided for even if they
are hunting "bugs" where "bags"
cannot be found and are known not
to exist—Plymouth Mall.

Backward Glances,
Bits of Yesterday

Chester and Richard Messer went
to Sturgis last evening to attend the
funeral of lheir brother-in-law, a.
D. G- Thurston.

I like my drummers to have lusty
wallops.
My Ideal of good music is a fife
and drum corps—or a bugle and
drum corps—Just so long as there
are plenty of drum-m-m-m-s.

It must be lhe savage In us.
Maybe J. C. Penney’s Mr. Carroll
isn’t the best dressed gentleman In
town, but he ranks right up among
Wonder how Ben Gldley likes be-

Chet Hodges is alio a pipe smoker.
I see—I could tell it with’ my eyes
closed several feet away!

Eyes were made to took forward; There may be thot« who admire the
that’s why they're in lhe front of sunny south but Ed- U not one of
j Uiem.
Uie head.”—Bruce Barton.
_ .
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Russell, of
Maybe it isn't an electric dollar
"Absolute refusal lo lake up arms ' "Any book M a good book If you Wakefield. Neb. arc In lhe city ou a
that Is needed m much as an elastic u our only way to salvation."— gat
good out of it."—St. John Ad- j visit to friends there. Mr. Russell
George Lansburg, M- P.

you believe you were actually going
to get 11. that everyone who opposed
you was crooked and your persona!
enemy he now admits that 11 is im­
possible to pay the 1200, that many
of his critics were right. He has
abandoned his original plan, al­
Roman Feldpatuch. I see. lost the tnougn.
though. figuratively
ugurauvciy speaking, no
he
prize he put up for first baby of the cussed lhe rest of us for not swalyear. But not by much, though.
। lowing it.
• • •
I You have been giving me advice.
Have you noticed those eggs In । Permit me, in the kindliest spirit,
---------------------------------the*------------Banner office
window.
There was to offer some tn return. Quit believ­
ing the things which your common
a hen wilh a mighty ambition!
sense tell* you are wrong. Quit re­
This week's nomination for Has­ lying upon these lecturers, speakers,!
tings' Hall of Eligible Bachelors— holders of meetings, who are col-i
Don Taffee. A real haul. Tommy lectlng membership fees or dues or
says—and there's a tong leap year taking up collection*, and promi*-I
ing vou the Impossible—&lt;200 peri
ahead.
month.
•
Have you got any choice bit of
gossip? Don't be stingy. Let Tommy man. that Is all right, but pick out!
someone who Is honest, who will tell I
help you spread it around.
you.frankly and fairly where ha.
A Word to the Townsend Support- stands, someone who will not lie to
you. someone who will keep his
era of lhe Fourth Congression­
word when he gives It.
al District.
An adequate old-age pension to
Your leaders presented to me a those who deserve it—yea. A gift
written request, asking that I use of money to a few. an addition to
my utmost efforts to pass a law re­ your taxes, merely to spend on ths
quiring lhe Government of the theory that spending makes pros­
United States to pay to
perity—No.
"every citizen of said government
I shall be in Washington when
whose record Is free of habitual you __
_ this, and Just remember
___
read
criminality and who has attained that I am the representative of all
lhe age of sixty years, a monthly the people in this District, not ol
pension of 6200 until the end of his : any particlar class or group and
or her life upon the sole conditions that, while I am there, be the tims
that be or she retires from all fur- long or short—and that’s your buslther business or profession for gain. neas-I will do the honest thing, ths
■nH agree*, undy oath, to spend '.square thing.
and
the entire amourn of the pension
Clare E. Hoffman.
within the confine* of the United
Member of Congress. 4th District
States during Uie current month in
Michigan.
which It 1* received,"
and to pass a taw "creating a Natlon-wide Federal Transaction* Tax !
calculated at a rate sufficiently
high &lt;at least 2%) to produce the
revenue necessary" to pay such
pension.
That is what you asked me to do,
that 1*. pass a taw which would re­
watmr
quire every person every time he

Fl Trifles 0

They say that when Chet plays
tennis in fammer time he stokes ’er
up and lays down a smoke screen
which confuses his opponents no
UPPER OR LOWER
into a pension fund, which was to
end.
—
u&gt; new, MJ every
person sixty years of age who com- . TTHEY were getting ready to bold
1 see that Logan. Becker and Aten plied wit|i the above condition*. x • •totwe at one ot Ben Holla*
returned safely from Florida.
That was your wrttten request to dor's stsgs stations on tbs Over*
U 00 /ne&lt;tl to argue land tral). aod to make room for ths
Cold weather kept the bathing
| daneere. station employees had Si­
beauties in overcoats I hear. Belter about it It to on file.

11 By tuw won

luck next time. boys.
posing this burden upon all the
I&gt;eople for the benefit of a few and.
Does Andy Taylor know how to
agree to blindly follow the lead ot
catch ’em through the ice? Just ask
Dr. Townsend, many of you have
him. He can wield a mean spear, loo.
called me Ignorant, dishonest and
Snyder, says.
unfit to represent the District.
i
Your organization haz made its
I like to hear George Miller
boast that it would defeat me.!
me. |
chuckle.
should I stand for re-electton. That
is your privilege and. If you prefer!
Dan Walldorff is a pipe puffer. a glib, fluent gentleman, who has
no regard for hU word, and wish to
be misled by hl* rosy promises, that,
They say that Rolfe Buffing’s arms too. Is your privilege.
have stretched all out of shape from
Dishonest I am not, but some few
telling how big that fish wsj he among you do not appreciate a
caught—and tire biggest one got frank, unequivocal statement of
away al that!
your represcntaUve's poalUon. nor
can you see any merit in any posi­
The Commercial club. I see. has tion other Ilian your own. By the
gained a good president but lost a
way. your representative is the rep.,
good orchestra leader. 1 used to hear resentaUvr of aU the people not
Dr. Lockwood's outfit play while merely of lhe Townaendltes.
walking by at noon. The sound was
Evidently you- prefer to hear and j
Indescribable!
teUew xrnabl* praralK. .nd pr«.
diettan*.
Fact* are---stubborn MUUBB
things ,i
------------ ----------------What I'd like lo know Is—Why ■
nH niuat
miwt be met -..A
___ I I
and
and ..
It hu ,been
do shoe strings always gel untied my habit to meat them as they i
In cold weather and, go flopping SSL*?!?.---------------------------------------- 1
about to pick up snow which gets
onto your ankles. Some genius

FORTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
The Young People's ChrisUan En­
deavor will be led by Miss Mary
Powers next Sunday.
W. W. Potter has been made a
member of the American Academy
■Mka nii»
ill*.
of Political and Social Sciences.
Mrs. j. E. Hoglc and daughter,
Bessie, returned from Kalamazoo
where they spent the holidays with
F. N. Maus and family.
Mis* Agnes Rich, of Traverse City,
vl'ited friends in HasUngs. enroute Wakefield and talks now of locating
to Ann Arbor, where she attends In Sioux city. Iowa.
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS
The society connected with lhe
school.
’’Without Ute will lo succeed
Emmanuel church will be enter­
knowledge, cannot bring success.”—
FIFTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
tained Thursday afternoon at the
Harvey 8- Firestone.
Ed. Burton b home from Tcxa--..

Crumbs of Wisdom

should invent a shoe string that
would automatically tie itself. Boy!
He would have himself a fortune.
There! Tommy has given you lhe
idea. Now Just step right up and
make yourself immortal.

..
..suwusana
himself Is not now hoping to gel
you the g200 pension which he
promteed, that he now acknowledgra the unsoundness of. and tho
hardship that would be worked by.
In Uie spring. Henry Newton and his transaction tax plan. He now Is
WcUaert Bros, will raise thefr store
buildings one story. This will make
a fine Improvement and with the
Newton House and opera house will
halred
make East State street boom up in

11

ted Uielr tats with blngss, and
strapiwd them against tbs side walk
the dance was s young New Torksc
named George 11. Pullman. Chat
ting with Henry Carlisle, a freight­
er. be happened to mention what
an uneomfartable night ha bad
spent, titling up In a day-coaeh on
a train from Buffalo to Chicago
-Why don't the railroads build
sleeping cars with beds tn *eu&gt;r
asked Carlisle. "They’vs been try­
Ing to." answered Pullman. “Roms
of thra have bunks along one side,
but they're too bulky."
taday’s men bare d»ne and flx thati
bunk* In the railroad care like they
do ft here." Carltale said, point.
Ing to the cots strapped up against
the wall*.
When Pullman went back East he
rvmrmberad this conversation. Ila
*X|*rinwnt&gt; on ih« Chicago
end Alton railroad thnt results
•'“—''I I"
lb. ..Mp,

ww
wiir svoppuig so
that the passengers might drink
from the spring The overheated atitomobUe* needed attention, too. but
there seemed no way of getting the
water to them A small boy had
thought of this, and equipped with

a*k* no payment. but the Uj
receives from the grateful dr
makes lhe Job worth his while.

�TIMC HABTINGR BANNER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 18M

ji ur

rnioun

PMKIWTIEWrfe™

Biggest U. S. Land Ship Is New ‘Sky Pullman'
---------- ---------------- .----------------- ,—,-------------

!r

helps to maintain dtoripUn*

RALFH B1KS0N IP0K1 AT
BOTABT CLUB OB
HOBDAY

prism

Clear-Them
Great Reductions on Dresses, Coati, B
tics, Sweaters, Bedspreads, Snow Suit!,
and many items we close out

BOARD MUST CONSID
ER GOOD 0F
Think* Pr«*«nl
idad
Should B* A
„
Oonrtruolive Way
7

in
i»tai*- Tho recant disturbance at
Jackson ha attributed sotaly to tho
j feet that to mtnj prisoners z~
are idle.
'
Ralpli Bciuon. who superintend* .-4
and have lima
limo Ar,
on th.fr
lheir Hand.
hand* In
to
Ralph
lhe paroles of prisoner* from the j thtnk of and voice their supposed
state* penal tnsUtuiteni for th* srlennce*.
state s pardon and parole board.. He explained th* work of the lospokc at the Rotary club luncheon1 cal parole officer, in whose care a
Monday noon concerning the work j prisoner t* placed after he to paof that board. Hie paroling of pris-1 roled by the stele board. The local
oner* convicted of crime Is not a man hag a difficult, thanktea* task,
new idea, h* said. It to at toast 100' he said. And yet It is very important,
years old. The word "pardon" h* I Mr. Benson stated thst politics
■aid should not be connected with

can only be granted by the governor.
The only possible subject* for parole
are the prisoner* who receive the
shorter sentences—about *0 per cent
of lhe prison population.
A prison warden is naturally de-

mak* mistakes. Their work is sub­
jected to severe and often unmerit­
ed criticism*. But no satisfactory
substitute for parol** has been suggssted. Statistics shew that 74 per
cent of paroled men are not "re-

mate* reduced—that's one view. The
prison chaplain comes in contact
with many prisoners, hears lheir
Ilf* stories, and feels that cartain
one* would be permanently bene­
fited by a parole. That's another
angle. Parole officer*, including
Judges, hav* their view*. An attempt

strucliv* criticisms; but fault find­
ing baaed on prejudice and ignor­
ance is Dot helpful.
The workings of the parole laws
arc by »o means perfect, be said,
and tiiey do need amending. But
amendment* should be constructive,
with the good of society and helping
cc**fully, to arrive at what win Im the prisoner who wants to go
best for the welfare of society as
well as that of the prisoner.
A parole of a prisoner Is always
MARRIAGE LICENSEbased upon the minimum sentence Robert M. Ldve. Waltham. Maa*.. .3*
given him by the judge. The maxi­ Hannah L. Harkness. Hastings ...21
mum Is usually the limit specified
in the law. For instance, if a judge
sentences ■ man for from 3 to 7
Petroleum was need In early Ohio
year*, the minimum is always con­
sidered. les* what "good time” has
been earned by the prisoner, in chief recommendation a* a pioneer
.
granting tr parole. It almost never remedy.

GRAPHOLOGY COUPON
To obtain a character reading send a line of
your handwriting with your signature and com­
plete address written with ink, on unruled paper.
Enclose this coupon with ten cent* (coin or
stamp*) to help cover clerical and mailing costs,
and mail to Ruth Barton, care The Hastings Ban­
ner.
Your Name .

Address
City ..

State.

Final Clean-Up of

OVERCOATS!
Every One is this season’s

. . . not an old style
coat in our store.

Here is your opportunity
Re*. $16.50 COATS $4 Q I8
NOW ____ : 10

R«f. $18.50 COATS $4 £.88
NOW I W
«•». SU M COATS *«■».**
NOW I I
Ref. $27.50 COATS $04 .88
NOW G I

Our stock comprises coats
in sizes from 35 to 44 . . .

blues, browns, greys, plains
and checks.

AIm a few $21.50 purs wartied Suits

Here’s a Real Special for Boys
All Wool Cossacks, 32 ounce. Full
Zipper, plain and pleated backs—
navy blue and plaids; sizes 8 to 18.
Regular $3.45 value

taking oQ

4?
48*

tth a win* *Pan ot S» feet, and capable ot a cruising
this Bliramodsra Douglas slssptr transport bat seats for 14 passenger*, sleeping

w

warmth beneath ill* ttecklng*
from tranasootinmital flylpg scbodol**.

cowra

treasurer—Mr*. Claude Jones; cor.
see—Mr* 0*11 Lykins; pianist. Mrs
Clarence Shew; chorister. Mrs.
Oeorge Parrott. The game of "Bell" |
wa* played, wishes for ma and1
visiting was enjoyed. Twenty-seven
were present.
The woman'* Literary club met
(Continued from page one)
at the library Wednesday afternoon
I intend lo conduct my work with­ for "Opera Day." After the business
meeting
lhe following program wa*
out reference to politics—without
favoritism of any rort whatever. No given. How a Great Operatic Proone can tell what the requirement*
for welfare relief may be. I know
lhe board of supervisors expect that, Mrs John Greene. Music chairman
unless tire need for relief shall be —Mrs. Francis Fults. who will give
increased, lhe consolidation of re­ selections from the Opera. Review
lief work in thia county shall effect
a savin* to tho taxpayers. It ought William Vance. Wholesome Child­
lo. and that without penurlousneu, hood—Mr*. Stewart Lofdahl. Hostess
and yet afford real relief when re­ —Mrs. Gall Lykin*.
Mr. and Mr*. Elmer Northrup and
quired. i shall aim to be fair to all
concerned. I will endeavor to draw Mr. and Mm. Daniel Oarlinger left
the lirte fairly as to where aid last Thursday for Florida.
Mrs. Ralph Olin has returned
should be given and where it ought
from Pennock hospital where she
to be denied.
"I realize fully the responsibility underwent a major operation.
Miss Phyllis Brumm has returned
of the place to which I have been
chosen. 1 know the fcuod -people of home from Hastings where she

IS COMPLETED

niggardly and pinch-penny when
there is real need. I know too that
they do not wish me to act for them
tn a way that will increase unneces­
sarily lhe relief load they must bear,
nor in a manner that will cause
jiersons to lose their self respect,
and to feel that the county can and
' will do for them what they can and
I ought to do for themselves. Theiww
• set-up does away with all clashing
I between reUef organizations ip the
i county, and that ought to be a
great help."
“in undertaking this new work."
I continued Mr. Leonard. "I realize
that I have a real man-sixed job. I
me unsolicited, and I accepted it
with the feeling that in it I might
be able lo give helpful service to lhe
people Of Barry county, who have
been mare than kind to me.-I know
I shall make mistake*, for I am veryi1
human. But X also know that I will
give th* best that is In me to this
work. I ask lire people to be patient;
and. If they see anything to criti­
cise about my work, that they bring
their criticisms directly lo me. I
will be thankful If they will do that.
“I am not making any promises of
result*. I want the people to judge

thought-provoking address. He had
the facta, and plenty of them, to
allow that every promise made by
the “wets" when prohibition was
voted down had been broken, and
that the present statu* liquor traffic
is more demoralizing than the old
time saloon; also that, according to
the government reports, the boot­
legger. who was sui------- J

CLOTHES SHOP

ALL LEATHER HAND
BAGO at .

We FARTEL COLORED
TURKISH TOWELS ..

Ux44 FAMTKL COLORED
TURKISH TOWELS
S1.M ELECTRIC LAMPS

Tabk of Gifts or Bridge Prise*—
Hems at...HALF PRIOR

BLANKETS—Single, Fancy Plaid,

79'

MBN'* OUTING
PAJAMA8 ....
ROT*' PAJAMA*
ALL WOOL YARN*.

SHETLAND FLOM
4 «&gt;. KNITTING TARN

BlankrU

ALL SIZES OF KNITTING

Ing a thriving business.

Military Trend

January Clearance Sale
CINDERELLA

4

DRESSE

LAKEVIEW.
Mr. Minor Bateman of Opelika,
Alabama, is spending the week wilh
Wm. Cogswell and family.
Shirley and Sarah Gillespie were
very happily surprised Saturday
evening when about thirty young
people arrived to help them cele­
brate their birthdays. All had a very
enjoyable time.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Schantz of
Vermontville were Saturday after­
noon visitors at Wm. Cocswell's.
Lloyd Cogswell returned to East
Lansing on Monday after spending
the holiday vacation at home.

on

Select
Dre«s

Low

For women
and Misses
Values like
last

Head tax la a charge of *3 which
which the federal government col­
lects from all aliens entering lbe
United Statai, whether tor the first
lime or when returning from a tern-

long.

so

lection early

esgo Tribune. There are some ex­
emptions, such as ,visitors for lev*
than CO days, apd children accom­
panied by their parents; also repre­
sentatives of foreign governments.

The mourning band Is supposed
tlent with me. and to realize that I
of the old Enghave a difficult place to fill. I ask to be. the. nutgrowth
_______________
w
the cooperation of the people, and I llsh custom of requiring servants
I will try my best to deserve it."
I.to wear a complete mourning dress
* * * ~
following the demise of a member
OBITUARY.
ot the tjoujebojd.
Families who
Lewis Wesley Brockway. Jr., waa ; could not afford to provide a comtorn MU 11. IMS. .1 Orend lap-! p|«,
,Wr
id.
... the
Ih. younger son
™ ot:
|o
, bUrt
ids. H.
He was
Lewis Wesley fcrockway and Llnnie
I band around their hats or sleeves.—
■ Brockway. He came to Hastings
i from Grand Rapids with hls par­ Pathfinder Magazine.
ent* in 1929, attended Hastings)
1 High school and later was employed
Short-Lived Ropublk
es assistant tn his brother* shoo I
Th* Cwitrel American republic
store on State street. He enjoyed| was ahortlllved ami had its origin
hls work and wa* greatly respected In the pact of the union drawn up In
by all who knew him. He met hls
December. 1W0. with Guatemala.
death accidentally on M.-37 on the
morning of January 1. IBM. He is Salvador sad Honduras signing.
survived by the following relatives: Costa Rica favorable and Nicaragua
non-committal.
Revolutions
In sevHis mother. Mrs.
uiuuict,
Llnnie
mijBrockway;
. uuuiie urociwiy,
-—--------...
one brother. Harold; and three aU- I rral ot the constituent republics
iters,
। tent. Mrs.
Mrs Theodore Tubergan,
Tnhersan of
nf caused the coltapse
enllanae of
nt the
lh« plan
nlan of
nf
Grand Rapids; Mr*. Thurlow Price, I union within a year. ■
। of Kalamazoo, and Mrs.. Walter
I Jackson of Grand Rapids. After I
i the services at the Walldorff funeral,
James Buchanan was the only
home on Friday afternoon at 3,
o'clock, burial was made Ip
the President whose native state was
Ixre-ell cemetery. Rev. John Hitch­ Pennsylvania.
ing officiating.
NASHVILLE.
Mr. and Mr*. John Handel of
Cincinnati, Mrs. Clyde Stoner and
two sons, and Mrs. Stoner s father.
Mr. Hecker of Fayette. Ohio, spent
Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and;
Mrs. Frank Hecker.
Charles Roscoe. 57. who had al­
ways lived here until two years ago.
passed away suddenly at hls home
in Battle Creek Friday morning. He
was apparently In usual health
when he retired Thursday night, but
suffered a heart attack early In the
morning. Hls condltlln was not
discovered until Mrs. Roicoc went
to caU him. He was bom March 19.
1871. the eon of the late Mr. and
Mis- C. E. Roscoe. Ho wa* a school
teacher and in later years was in
the implement and poultry business
with hls father. He leaves hls widow
Carrie, of 2OT Main, Apartment B. I
Battle creek; one daughter. Mrs.
Jo*sf Mix; four sons. Leonard. Ken-

SPOKE HERE SUNDAY MORNING. I
W. J. Hoshal. of Battle Creek. 1
x&gt;ke at the Methodist church Sunday morning in the interests of the
anti-satoon league. Mr. Hoshal is a
volunteer worker, and what he does
is solely in the Interest of the pub-

Drastic Reductions on our entire large stock of
Coats and Dresses for Immediate Clearance!

Figured in tiny blocks ot light

Eleanor Whitney. Him player,
shows a marked military trend,
even to gold buttons and gold
trimming oa eollar and cuff*
Tba brown fait bat la adorned
with a small feather, the en­
semble completed
by brown

Now • $2.

$3.88 DRESSES
$4.88 DRESSES
$6.88 DRESSES

Afow - $3.i
Now • $5-&gt;

Now is your chance lo gel a New Dance Frock, Dinner or Street Drew,
at a very aubotaatial saving.

and suede. and monogrammed

Six million tons of dynamite, ex­
ploded every second on the earth's
surface through tlie year, would just
equal tho tremendous power used
up and set free annually In rainfall.
If all that rain were concentrated
on London the city would be re­
duced to a dust heap.—Pearson's
Weekly.

FRANDSEN’S STOR
EXCLUSIVE. BUT NQT EXPENSIV
HASTINGS

EAST STATE STREET

THE PURPOSE OF
OUR RRVERTISIEG

o
N

only a minute or two when dwy &lt;
ent advertiwmwrts, we "hgnsA

one, idea* that occur to w of

veMatioos wWi depoli tors

89

WATERS
“Selling Qualify Keeps U» Busy

—

***

By doing this, w*
grandchildren.
Funeral
service*
were held Sunday afternoon at two I
o'dock at tlie home of Miss Mab]0
Rorne. conducted by Rev. Mabie
Elder, pastor of the BapUU chursh.
Mr*, qail Lykins sang. Burial in
Lakeview cemetery.
gone td housekeeping in the Ookay
house.
The Clover Leaf Club met Fri­
day night at the home of Mrs.
Arehte calkins with Mrs. Gall Ly­
kins awistlng. During Ute business
meeting tbe following officers were
elected: — President — Mr». Coy
Brumm; Vice Pres—Mrs. Charley

friend*. We hops

"aodtoRc*" thta

these little

believe you will

£ OF H
IV.

wa«ti

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1934

th* side* of ths ship with' a boom 1 a mound on top of a large hill about' new bridge to Oakland Is nearing'
-No alien land in all the world
——. &gt;iv.
-- ---------,u of Jerusalem,
---------•— the completion, and riding the ferries I
almost
like &lt;&gt;..
the roar «r
of «
a cannon, i-----------wen miles
north,
hu any deep, strong charm .'or me -i
to reach any of Lbe cities around I
but that one; no other land could so
InT.vahS. Udro
s,t* bfln«
Tell en-Naabeh.
the Bay seems doomed&lt;to ob-l
beseechingly haunt me. sleeping and
COV"8 BbOUt el«ht *C™
Linnet11
Iof &lt;TOund. and only a very small
waking, through half a life time, as
ouH®riaP numb^ P*rt of it has m yet been explored,
trlls still Ilves the breath of flowers ways interesting. Quite a number -j-ue ercav_itors were very fortunate
were returning from China, some , ™e J^tong a place to sUrt
that perished twenty yean ago."
^bSSTni oRT. rouple of
Returning from Honolulu we
sailed on th® "Coolidge." a sister
had something
been removed
fepc English without any hitch In i
| ,eet
Wjlenof earth
struck
that
Islands and seem lo ship of lhe -Hoover." and one of pronunciation, common to most r*Xb£T. Xe pavement. It

Ml"
IDIIREARS

was something
about 90 foot
beam, and has a displacement of
33.000 tons, and a speed of 22 knots
an hour—equivalent to over 25 ‘land
miles." It Is a large combination
wallar. Band
freight and passenger ship, and has
accommodations for 1.000 passen­
to be a deeper tinge of sad- gers besides many thousands of tons
“Aloha-oe” as our ship moved of freight. The return of the Cool-

t
a

o
h
o

11
II
fl

o
w
n
II
li
o
r
•

ifomla was quite a rough one. Pas­
like sacrilege to cast them sengers who made the stormy trip
grd. but everyone did. And from China and the Philippines,
displayed their "woe-begone’’ feel­
ings through their disposition to
sincere wish lo sometime be • flock by themselves." There were
® to visit these magic islands exceptions of course, but passengers
Un. With Aloha still ringing in from the Orient generally, showed
’ aars. with music and waving the effects of being tossed around
ads wishing our ship God-speed,
’ good friends the Houvener's continued in a more or leu turbu­
lent state all the way from Honolulu
to San Francisco. One of the pleas­
ing diversions on board a large ship,
Ic surf-boards
go slapping la to watch the antics of the bathers
ough th® waves like crazy little in the large tiled swimming pool
Ing flab; on by mysterious old on the upper deck. But this diveriamond Head, the silent sentinel
th® harbor. Bluer and bluer the from Honolulu, was prevented by
ter became; gradually the cocoa- the roughness of the sea. which
t fringed island seemingly set- tossed the ship around so that it
d down Into the sea. and nolh- splashed most of the water out of
[ remained but the joyous mem­ the swimming poo). Sheets of water
es of most happy days, and the at times poured down into lhe sec­
tion of the ship occupied by holders
um to these Islands of tropic ot "tourist class" tickets, and in
numerous Instances didn’t even miss
the tourists themselves. As a result
da and tradition*, and of the the water was drawn from lhe ship’s
swimming pool practically all lhe

r kdlly
understand why Mark clflc was whipped into great high
*1 rain, in referring to hb life on waves. One could feel their great
t e island of Hawaii would write: power as their crashing blows hit

. PEOPLE SHOULD
■I CONSIDER MlHEfl

foreigners. There wu one of the .)rovety to be the foundalon at a
nabobs of India, many times a milt Wwrr citadel, which formed
Bonaire so it was claimed, who was a
of lhe
t
(Continued from page one)
m roe rcm«’^J^bB^relfbretlon1^1 *cUy Thc section excavated shows
in the Kings Jubilee celebration.
th&gt;t thp waU
ot
average of ment in fifty or sixty special ruled
books
that would cost over 82.000
Doubtless there are many smaller ।
feet in thickness and was built
Islands in the pacific of which we t0 a height of at least 40 feet, which as blank books. It would cost a
know little or nothing, though we wm give one an Idea of what a whole lot more, probably fully
S'
are apt to think that- the world,
remote from the polar regions has
been pretty well combed over. Short­
ly after we landed In San Francisco,
Chas. T. Crocker a Ban Francisco
suit In damage suits by any person
banker, arrived with u small party
of scientists, aflar a 14.000 mile trip and trinkets discovered. It Is figured or persons -who lost money because
visiting some of these out-of-the- that the building of the huge wall they relied on the correctiiess of
way places. The party stopped at goes way . back beyond the time of these abstracts in the purchase of
Pitcairn Island, about 1500 miles Moses, and* even the traditional age property. With lhe frequent changes
south of Tahiti. There are about 200 of Abraham. It ts estimated that It In registers of deeds and their clerks
people living on Pitcairn Island, and was built somewhere around 1500 to there would be liability of such
they are descendants of the 18 mu­ 2000 years Before Christ. There are I costly lawsuits as the result of errors
tineers of the ship -Bounty" that Indications that tire site waa in use by registers or clerks In compiling
landed at Pitcairn in 1798. Their even before the wall was built, and abstract books.
language is now an almost unin­ tombs holding the partial remains of -2. If the county went into the
telligible combination of English and many
,„„,7 skeletons, _..
_... by business It would mean competition,
are ____
thought
Polynesian. Another Island visited archaeologists to date back to 2500 and dividing a business between two
by the Crocker expedition was East- । to 3000 years before Christ, or abstract offices when there Is not
er Island about 1000 miles off the 1 around 5000 years back
o.cx from
-rom our |
as ™
the tombs ol ^Lw
a
coast of Chill. On this Island are present day. Just __
Jor
one.Oarnr
the Kings
Kings of
of Egypt
Egypt have
have been
been 1I buusiness
£™^
nr,°?f
some huge stone monuments that j tfje
Tlie people of Barry county should
are absolute mysteries. No one plundered, so did this tomb dis knows who built them, or when, or | doje evidence ot having been en- not be influenced by clamor or
what became of them, but the tered and robbed. A few scattering prejudice, but should look at the
builders must have had considerable , trinkets of gold were found, but proposition of having Barry county
intelligence. As hundreds of these doubtless lhe really valuable pieces enter jhc abstracting business pure­
islands are way off to one side, and . had been taken. While the collection ly as a business proposition, and
quite far removed from regular al the Pacific school of Religion Is weigh It on Its merits as such.
In our judgment it would be a
trade routes, they are rarely visited, not large, because lack of room prefoolish and unprofitable venture for
and doubtless some of them never eludes any large display, yet it Is
Barry county to put several thous­
have been. There are numerous is- ■ most Interesting^ and one of the
lands in lhe Hawaiian group, but1 best of its kind tn lhe country This ands of dollars into compiling a set
one rarely hears of more than a half; excavation work has been made pos- of abstract books and divide the
business between two. when there
a dozen of them.
xibie largely through contributions
isn't enough for one.
While In Los Angeles. Mrs Cook of California people, and. friends
attended a most interesting lecture, j elsewhere around lhe country. To
relating to some of the "finds" that' those who are interested In trying
archeologLsts are making in un- I to solve- the beginnings of mankind,
covering what Is believed to be the i such an activity as this excavation
ancient city of Mlxpah. about seven ! has many fascinating prospects
Home Economics Specialists
miles out from lhe city of Jerusalem.1 There was a time when traditions
Michigan Stat® College
This work Is under lhe supervision j were permitted to settle questions of
of the Pacific School of Religion of] historical origin, but they are not
Berkeley. California. Berkeley is a ; so highly regarded today unless
Mlchigan
young women will have
beautiful city Just across the bay confirmed by evidence. For this
from Ban Francisco. With the com- reason, archaeology is regarded as an opportunity to enroll in a short
pletion of the great steel bridge to,one of the most valuable aids in course In Home Economics, starting
Oakland, all of lhe cities around the correcting lhe errors of tradition, Jan. 6. and continuing until March
bay will be closely connected with Wk were most fortunate in having
This short cut to homemaking will
Ban Francisco, and perhaps become 0 charming and Interesting young
a part of it—if they wish lo. Should woman as our escort through the include classes in foods and nutri­
that happen. San Francisco will be- 1 museum whose intelligent know I- tion. child care, clothing, home
management,
home furnishings, art
come one of the large cities of lhe edge of the. exhibits added greatly
appreciation, music, dramatics, and
country.
to our pleasure.
physical education.
If you are interested in archaeolYou’ll enjoy a visit to the Pacific
Girls who contemplate taking this
ogy, and looking at old things, you School ot Religion, and you'll enjoy course should make application for
will enjoy a visit lo the Pacific j a drive around Berkeley and Oak •
School of Religion and seeing some ' land with their attractive homes, living accommodations through the
office of Dr
Elizabeth Conrad,
of the many relics taken from what sightly streets, lovely parks, and dean of women. Applications for the
Is thought to be the ancient city of । espcciaUy the
beautiful
college
short course should be sent to the
Mizpah of Benjamin. Through the: campus, with its famous Greek
Short
Course
office.
effort of Dean Wm. F. Bade per-’ Theater, lhe Cragmont Rock from
A few rooms on the campus have
mission of the Palestine Department । which in jvloneer days the Indians
been made available lo applicants,
of Antiquities was secured to explore signalled across Uie Bay. But the
and a few places are available in
East Lansing where the girls may
work for their room and board.
Other short courses at the college
which will start Jan. 6 and termi­
nate March 6 include: General ag­
riculture. dairy production, dairy
manufacturing, poultry, agricultural
engineering, practical floriculture,
and golf course management. The
course in commercial fruit produc­
tion will be offered from Jan. 6 to
Jan. 31.

Homemakers’ Corner

Mystery?
obtains! in our Dry Cleaning.
beM malerial and keeping lhai material
in cleaning.

MeCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS
RSone 21W

W, C.1I For »nd tWIh.r

Opportunity Days!
YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE ON ALL LEATHER SHOES!

We Must Clean Our Stock of Winter Shoes to Make Room for Our Spring
Stock. All shoes are drastically reduced. All of solid leather construction!
STYLE SHOES

SPORT SHOES

CROUP 3

CROUP 4

SALE!
^2-

SALE!
$388

SALE!

SALE!

$J99

10% Off

Form.rly $3.95

Formerly $4.95
VALUES!

Formerly $2.95
’ VALUES!

On All Children's

VALUES!

FREE HOSE!

SHOES!

FREE HOSE!

A Beautiful Pair of Pure Silk, Full Fashioned Ringless Hose with Every
Pair of Arch Support Shoes. Our Regular 79c Stock Hose!

Let Us Correct Those Foot
Troubles!

In Berlin it's against the law lo
blow automobile horns unneces­
sarily. The average American* city
could run comfortably on lhe reve­
nues from a similar law. assessing
a small fine of. say, pflfty pfennigs
per ptoot.

KIDNAP VICTIM POST CRASHES

Comfort Plus Economy
SHOES that actually keep

STRUCTION.

ROGERS PASSES

LONG SLAIN

AWAITS DEATH

Recalling principal news events ot 1083, pictures above show: left to right, above. Infantryman
on Ogaden front and ftaneral pyre on which were cremated bodies of 40 of th® 800 war veterans
who died In the Florida hurricane: below, left lo right, George Weyerhaeuser,
*•
Jr., Wiley
-Post,
WIU Rogers, Huey Long, and Bruno Hauptmann.

^AR captured a lion*® share ot
1935'a headlines.
Bowing
himself off th® stag® In th® set­
tlement ot th® long-drawn-out
grizzled old Mars pranced right
back on with Italy's Ethiopian
campaign.
. ,
But domestic events ran him a
close second.
The Hauptmann
trial, culminating In the sentenc­
ing to death of the German car­
punter to. the kldnap-murder ot
Baby Lindbergh, was one. The
tragic death of Comedian Will
Rogers and Aviator Wiley Post

tlon of Louisiana's "dictator,"
Senator Huey Long, likewise
stunned the country.
As usual, there was no dearth

Perhaps the most trsglc. In the
United States, was the death of,
300 war veterans in a hurricane
which swept the Florida Keys
snd burled lhe liner Dixie on a
And. throughout tho year, a
toll of some 200 Ilves was
claimed by a Pennsylvania min®
explosion, a Texas tornado, a
Utah ol) well dynamite blast,
.and numerous eastern snd west­
ern
floods.
Mor® than 1000
quakes rocked western Montana,
and dust storms choked and
paralyzed tho midwest.
Shocking disasters occurred
Overseas. An earthquake killed
30.000 at Quetta. India, while
Formosan and Rerslan tremblers
claimed 5000 Ilves. Two thou­
sand died in a Halt) hurricane;
and an Italian
bunt,
drowning &lt;00.

LOW HEELS

HIGH HEELS

GROUP 2

GROUP 1

War, Hauptmann, Post-Rogers Crash,
Highlights of 1935*s News

TN a happier vein, wo find many
A evidences ot progress on land,

Th® world's greatest ship,
Normandie, made her maiden
voyage to New York io record
time.
In outstanding a I r achieve­
ments. th® China Clipper
launched commercial trans­
Pacific air service; Captx. Stevens
and Anderson, after one failure,
reached a record’ altitude of
74.187 feet on a stratosphere
night: Jimmy Doollltlo and
Pilot Leland Andrews spanned
the continent In record time; and
fueling endurance mark.
Three avlatrlces demonstrated
that woman's place can also be
In th® air: Amelia Earhart mad®
two remarkable bops, Hawaii to
California and Mexico to New­
ark. N.
J.:
Laura
Ingalls
spanned th® U. 8. In record time,
and Jean Batton flow th® South
Atlantic solo. Early this year,
Admiral Richard E. Byrd re­
turned from bls Antarctic expe­
dition.
But aviation progress again
took Its toll: Sir Charles Klngsford-Smltb, British air ace, van­
ished In hls England-Australia
hop; U. 8, Senator Bronson Cut­
ting died In a plane crash, and
the dirigible Macon was wrecked
oYer the Pacific.
Political and economic events
manufactured potent news. Sam­
uel Insull was acquitted.. In
Washington.' Roosevelt vetoed
th® bonus and signed th® social
security bill, a proclamation
freeing th® Philippines, a U. 8.Canada trade treaty, and a neu­
trality law, besides launching

hls 14.880,000.000 work relief
measure.
Abroad, Manuel Quezon be­
came first president of the Phil­
ippine commonwealtb. Plebiscites
awarded the Saar back to Ger­
many, hls former tbron® to King
George II ot Greece. Tb® Stavlaky stat® pawnshop scandal
rocked France, as did Germany's
rearming.
Loyalists put down a Greek
revolt; and trouble threatened In
China, where a new pro-Japanene state mad® up ot Norm
China territory was proclaimed.
In Canada. John Buchan became
governor general.
American kidnaping.
For the
1200.000 abduction of Georg®
Weyerhaeuser. Jr., lumber heir,
Harmon Waley waa given 48
years in jail: hls wit® 30,
Many notables passed away.
Among them were Evangelist
"Billy” Sunday: Frank J. Navin,
head ot the Detroit ball club:
ex-8upreme Court Justlcea Oli­
ver Wendell Holmes and San­
ford Church; Scientist Michael
1. Pupln: Richard B. (D® Lewd)
Harrison: Thomas A. Edison,

Date: D® Wolf Hopper, actor,
and Jan® Adams, famed social

Outstanding abroad were
deaths of Queen Astrid ot Bel­
gium; former Archduke Leopold
of Austria. Marshal Pilsudski,
dictator of Poland: Andre. Cit­
roen, French Industrialist: Lord
Byng of Vlmy. World War hero:
Lawrence of Arabia: and Col.
Alfred Dreyfus, famed French
plot victim.

Stratoflyers Attain New Heights

BAG

SALMON

CREAM
NUT
PEANUT BUTTER

Del Mont®

2

Tall Can —

23c

25c

BUTTER pX: lb- 37c
ROASTS
BEEF KETTLE
POUND ....

. r
I DC

SAUSAGE
HOME MADE
Par. Perk LB.

. —
I7C

Hamburg 2- 29

■25! „ ’3
AND A PAIR OF HOSE FREE !

—AND A PAIR OF HOSE FREE !

TAYLOR’S SHOE STORE
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

BRAND

SOLID
=TT«T I

LEATHER

SHOES

ROASTS

PICNICS

PORK LOIN
RIB END LB.

SMOKED
SHANKLESS LB. 22C

22C

Soaring In lb® rarefied atmosphere to heights never before attained
by man. Captalu Orvll A. Anderson, left, and A. W. Slavens set
Explorer n Is pictured at l®ft floating upward after th® taksott
In th® South Dakota Bteek Hills. Tb® chart at right reveals ,
previous nlr records.

An old Arabian chroplcl® recounts

�Ttt HASTING g BANNER, THURSDAY, JANUARY &gt;, ItM

Social Events and Personal Mention

I She Carries Her
Own'
Own'- Phnno
Phone

I
r&lt;uuuM raxiu.
| Another Mt &lt;n» u Hi Mor, tor
। thea ter-goers starting Bunday. Jan­
uary 12. whwi "Tlie Parisian Follies !
of IBM" opens a four-day engage­
ment at the Bijou Theater, Battle;
Creek. Critics everywhere have ac-1
claimed thia fast-moving production
one of lhe outstanding hits ot the
current season.
Sol lie Childs, well-known producer
and actor, brings to the footlights of
the Bijou Theater a cast of thirty
talented entertainers including a
chorus of twelve dancing darlings

Lloyd Payne was home from , Mr. and Un. Roy Boyes and fam- CHARMING blNNER HONORS
Grand Rapids on Bunday.
I Uy werg Bunday guests of Mr. and
MISS NANCY HARKNESS.
Ray Branch was In Detroit on
Gerald Nash of Hopkins.
, A delightful poat-hoUday
idsy event
Tuesday on busihess
I Mr *nd &gt;&lt;”• baac Mote and Mra. Vaa the dlnntr given by Miss Rose
Mr,
«»£,»•&gt;. t, vUitino in
Drew of
tX^ssa wer^ DePbe at her home. 312 East Harris
. fr.
‘
KU“U ot
-»ohn McLravy ovtr, Ave. Charlotte, al 8:30 o'clock Frl*2®* dBy* ....
the week end.
Iday, Jan. 3rd complimenting Miss
Mrs. John Engle is cntertalnlns ^yjoroJd Phillips and WllUam Har- Nancy Harkness, a bride of the
her sister from Canada.
rington. mldwestcm district man- present week.
Mrs. Ophelia O'Halr has “
“ —
- —
-----—- twenty-eight
------ •in num­ scenes.
fd '-----ager*“
for“the
Hastings—
Mfg.
Co., —
are
The
guests,
Featured in lhe revue are Tlie
from a visit In Chicago./
i on a business trip west.
ber. were largely members of the
Mr. and Mra. D. L. Ch. 1.*
ww«----- —— ------- —• —..... official staff of the various Kellogg Three Revelers, the Graves Bisters.
In Kalamazoo on Bundiff/
Iwh0 Urc routhwest ot Hastings, Foundation centers in Barry and Bevy Snyder. Eddie Edwards. Dorie
AI
bion. Helen Baird. Florence Drake.
Eaton
counties.
Rn,, EPXr «...
from
were gucsU
of Mr. Corners
and Mrs.
itattte
R^da»,«,«.
hv
*
I Kenyon
of Hickory
onJesse
New
The small tables, Mating four. Gloria Smiling and the Follies Or­
Battle creek over Bunday.
j Year’s day.
। were spread with squares of barred chestra. and starring Yvonne, fam­
Harold Perkins lias returned from । Mr. and
Walker of Irv- ' muslin in shades of rose over a ous feather dancer.
a week's slay in Battle Cfcck.
MrB Anna Wlllltta of South foundation of turquoise and pink,
In addition to lhe stage al&gt;ow the
Mrs. Ed. Story has gone to Kala-: Hastings were in Buchanan Satur- accented by attractive favors carry­ Bijou presents Barton MacLane,
Mary A"tor and John Eldredge in
mazoo for a visit with her son. Lyle day to attend the funeral of Mrs. ing out the same colors.
the First
National ----------motion picture.
Story.
AUen Matthews.
'
WK WH.U Ul ----------------------Aben Johnson relumed yesterday
Quests of Miss Katherine Hum- the dining room by Miss Harkness . Man ot Iron "
----------------- • • •
from a several days’ business trip to phrey on Sunday were Mrs. Effle and her sister-in-law, Mrs R. B.
-----------------------WOODLAND.
Chicago.
I -------------Emsberger
and Mr. and---------Mrs. IterlntM. Jr, a heart shaped bride's
I Charles I-awrence and daughter, cake attractively decorated being1 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Yerty are
The Rev. J. A. McNulty attended
ofii^aeid
’Suo'
'
Mansfield.
Ohio.
cut by the former.
' receiving congratulations on lhe
a church meeting in Grand Rapids I Lucille, of “
ansneia. onio.
Mrs. G. P- Chidester and son,
Coronation bridge, an offshoot of । birth of an eight pound, eleven
on Saturday.
Gardner Chidester of Madison. Wls, the game proper, but allowing much ' ounce daughter. Jeanne Ann. bom
Mrs. Cora Biggs of Rutland is the visited Mrs. Sam Nadu of Charlotte more sociability was enjoyed fol- 1 at lhe Lake Odessa hospital Sunday,
guest of Mr. anti Mrs. J. F. Edmonds. last week and found her recovering lowing the dinner, prizes being December 29.
tor several weeks.
nicely from her recent illness.
drawn by Miss Marie Neuschaefer. i Harry Hough and Paul Hough of
Raymond Pt'rklns ot Monroe has
Albert Becker. George Aten and Delton; Miss Eliza Joyce Smith, Hartford spent last Monday night
been visiting his parents. Mr. and Harold Logan returned last week Olivet; Miss Mildred Tultte. Hills- wilh Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager,
While shopping downtown, this
Italian tlgnoriau can get in
MGroraeHvd^rJf'Prairieville visited from
a
lyl
P
l0
They
report
Regular
from a trip to Florida. They report dale,
dsle, with
with a
a special
special gift
gift presented
presented to]
to
”—
'— Bunday evening
-------*—'services
-----touch with her home on a sec­
hiPXnrtmrXr
Nettle Hvde 0,6
r there
' are being held at the CoeU Grove
lhe weBthf
weather
there as
as being
being very
very cold
cold ,, Mias
Miss Harkness.
Harkness.
’ N “ Hyd I -..A
&amp;nd dbasreeable. making ____
oceah
NEW
BRIDGE
PARTY.
I church of Christ. Beginning January ond's notice. The reason* She
I IUvtv
wYEAR
. n nnvn/^i?
nat.
’WX’
cArrlcn the phone with her. This
Mr. P?ari nrittol nf Marshall is ’ bathing prohibitive.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Carter en- 12. evangelistic services will be held
remarkable ■ adaptation ot the
nth^r stator Mlu Fthel
Mrs p D' Ashford of Milwaukee, tertained . the members of her each evening for two weeks with
““wh0 ,a vWUng in Battle Creek, spent! bridge club and their husbands at.
Rev. Chcmet T. Jordan, the regular
radio-telephone operates on the
n w
wXhitor waa in Tuesd“y w»U&gt; Mrs. A. D. McDonald, a evening of bridge on New Year’s pastor as the speaker.
micro-wave principle.*.
Grand Ranids Xte?dav to see Dr* Urs Ashford is an accomplished night. Prizes were awarded by add-1
Bobby Brady of Grand Rapids vlsHvnes occurred the marriage of;
U ran Cl Hapias JCSieraa) io see UT. . musician .nrt
Mr.
Urflnn.ia
InIna
the
H-nrr.
nf
the
hn.KooH.
lte-&lt;
»rrx—
1A
rxl
__
I...
and Mrs. McDonald in- ing the scares of Ute husbands and ited Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager last
their eldest daughter. Kathryn, to
and Mrs. Dennis Murray.
i vlted Mrs. D. D. Walton and Mrs. wives, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Cook. Mr. week. Hls parents, Mr. and Mrs.
H. H- Peirce visited hls brothers in Robert W. Cook for luncheon to and Mrs. Harold Phillips and Mr. j Jacob Brady, who have been spend­ Gerald Potter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Woodstock and Brantford. Canada, meet her and to enjoy her music.
! and Mrs. A. D. McDonald winning Ing lhe week in Detroit stopped for Clifford Potter of Nashville. Rev. A.
E. Wynn read the single ring cere­
last week, returning Friday.
--------------------------------the prizes. The luncheon table was . him Friday night and they all reMiss Grace
Wcrtemburger of
KELLEY—NEAL.---------------- | moat attractive, two white cello- turned to their home Saturday gfter mony In the presence of twenty one
Immediate relatives. The bride was
Grand Rapids was the over Bunday
Tlie marriage of Bernard W. Kai- phane Christmas trees and white spending the night with Mr. and becomingly gowned in navy blue silk
guest of Mbs Frances Sutton.
-------------------i M«r
U, ,A nt .
A “
nd wns
and
was attended
attended by
by her
her cousin.
cousin,
Mr. and Mrs. Hartley Finstrom ley. son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Lit- topera being used.
-----------------------------Mr. and Mrs. Ward Plante and Mias Evelyn Hynes who also wore
returned to East Lansing Sunday tie. and Miss Marietta Neal, all of •
Lansing, was solemnized Friday eve- HONORED MR. AND
. daughters were guests of the latter's: navy blue silk. The groom was at­
after two weeks' vacation here.
MRS. CLARKE, --------i parent
its. _______
Mr. and Mrs. Milon Trum- tended by his brother, Forrest PotMrs. Lloyd Baker and Mrs. D. L. nlng. al eight-thirty o’clock at the j
jnnit' nnd
.__ ,__ ................ ....
.
On Monday evening Mrs. Marian bo Sunday
and UAnHav
Monday.
Williams were guests of friends in home of the groom's parents, 803 B. Goodyear entertained very picas- I Dale Hauer and Helen McMillen ter. Following tlie wedding a two
course luncheon was served. Tire
Kalamazoo on Friday. January 3rd. Chicago Ave. The Rev. William Car­
read lhe
service
pres- nntly at a bridge dinner at her home , returned to their studies al Western wedding cake was made by lhe
i.onnie Cook
look returned
rciurneu Batn«t- penter
•--------------------- . in .Vlhe•------Miss Connie
urday to Ryder college at Trenton. &lt;
IJuesta. the vows on South Jefferson street in honor । State Teachers’ College after spend- bride's grandmother. Mrs. J. 8.
of MT. and Mrs. c. W. Clarke, who 1 ing Hie Christmas hoUdays with, Reainger. Mrs. a. Allardbig and Mrs.
N J. after a three weeks' vacation bclnR •P?kJin
at home
I decorated in pink and blue and leave Monday for Florida. Tlie cen-, their parents.
H. Hynes assisted with the supper.
Mrs Marv Angus has relume 1 to' bankcd with baskets of chrysanthe- terplece tor the dinner table was a I Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Bheldon and The Misses June Crockford and
A. M .pend!,.,
i
mirror centered with flowers and Mrs. Paul Eagelkroud and son of Dorothy Rairlgh served. The bride is ;
sniall artificial trees in pott cn- Detroit spent New Year’s day with a graduate of Woodland high school i
holidays with her mother, Mrs. from lhe arch also. Preceding the
wedding. Mrs. Harry chaptaan sang, circling them. Eight guests ----------with the class of 1933. The groom is .
Martha striker.
preeent.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Giddings and a graduate of Hastings high school. ; |
• Bb-hop Kuhn relumed to hls "I Love You Truly.” the bridal party
taking their places to lhe strains of .
t daughter Ruth and Mrs. John Velle class of 1932 and is associated with ;
studies at Ann Arbor on Sunday. He lhe
-Bridal Chorus ” from Lohengrin. ।
G,®°^L?FFT8'
returned
to
their
home
in
Tawos
has recovered from his recent op­ played
by Mrs. Max Holloway
°£ th,c P**y reading groups City Bunday after spending the the bride's father in business. Con- , i
grntuiatlons and best wishes for a
eration for appendicitis.
(Thelma Ellison).
।0
Hastings Civic Players as­ Christmas holidays in Woodland.
happy life are extended.
Mr. an&lt;L.Mrs. Robert Jessen and
A floor length gown of pink
"“J Zuc‘&lt;^y
“
Mrs. Walter Hershberger and son
baby have returned to their homo taffeta trimmed with blue rosebuds
B' Q.oodyear' Chalmer and Mrs. Wm. Warner
Eventually
some
automobile
&gt;n Chicago qfLx visiting Air. and
was worn by the bride, silver .Up­
spent Monday in Lansing.
manufacturer Is going to get rich
Mrs. Clarence Crawford.
pers completing her costume. Bhe
[J.?
Don Shorno and Lorena Hilbert beyond
—_______________
the dreams —
of _____
Midas___by |
Mrs. Frank Morris, son. Frank, wore a hair band with rhinestones
, “.X
AJjlns' A“ P1?,
and daughter, Dorothy, of Detroit! and carried American beauty ro*» happened to be Mrs. Oroos’ birth-, returned to the University of Michl- building a moderately priced car,
Ann Arhnr
tnsnH- equipped
'-nulnn^rl with
n xntmrlnrrvif
crrrnn
cameo American ocauty roses i
”,--------- —”— ----- ( uan
Bfcn, Ann
Arbor Rundav
Sunday after spendwilh a
soundproof screen;
were Sunday and Monday guests of ana
and baby ferns tied
wilh
heavy'
ahe rre
«lved
a “number
of Uun
­ ! ,ng thr Christmas vacation with between front and back seals.
lied
with
«*
,ved
a
iTtsST
Of
D"
white raun ^w andUSLa^Z
birthday cake
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Perkins.
home folks.
---------Mrs. Abbie Montgomery of Mid­ bridesmaid. Miss Delia Neal, sister and coffec were “rved b?
hostRevivals wiU be held in the UnitCellophane has grown into such
land has been the guest of Mrs. of the bride, wore blue crepe and *“•
ed Brethren church for three weeks. | familiar use as to overcome one’s
Cora Sheldon and on Tuesday the
The Hefflebower Bisters of Lindsey I nrsl impression that it was somesilver slippers and a corsage of forladies visited Mrs. J. F. Edmonds.
DESSERT BRIDGE SATURDAY Ohio, will have charge of the musi- lhta
thing
they
played
in lhe band,
band.
« thc
&gt;’ P
1*^ ln
Kenneth Blddie returned Bunday gel-me-nota. Robert Neal was best
Mrs. M. J. Cross entertained
man.
■
twelve guests at a dessert bridge cal programs. The meetings will be ----------------------------------------------- i
Following the ceremony refresh- ]’ Saturday afternoon at her home on held every evening 8*4:30.
g———
been home for a two weeks’ vacation
menu
were
served.
Ki:*
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lester
Brumm
were
;
2S?.M*h!
’
We5t
Green
street.
Bridge
honors
wilh hls mother, Mrs. Effie Biddle.
Kelley,
sister
of
lhe
groom,
and
Miss
wcic
TOn
in
Lansing
Monday
on
business.
M! were won by Mrs. Robert W. Cook
ML*^ Barbara Johnson and her,
Lucile DeWitt of Nashville, a cousin. and Mrs
------------Mrs. Kittle Holmes retume'd to
guest. Miss Kathryn Ann Keller of assisting.
Mr. and Mrs. Kelley left
McDonald.
Woodland Christmas after spending
El Pasq, Texas, returned to their!
immediately on a short wedding |
STUDY CLUB MEETS.
several months with her daughter.
tludles at Ann Arbor on Saturday.
Miss Theresa Pt erson returned to trip, later making their home at 803 | Members of the Monday Study Mra. Homer Harrison. and family of
7
\- w
Detroit1/
Ann Arbor Sunday after spending Chicago Ave. Hastings friends ex- club met this week nt the home of Detroit.
tend best wishes.
Mrs. F. W. Stebbins for a one o’clock I
ttnd Mrs. Lawrence Paul and
Iter Christmas vacation at the home
Mrs. Little, mother of the groom, luncheon and
J. 1i Oreydon
Foul spent
Sunday
BUM program. Mr?. E. V.
*
• - —
j with
......
of her mother. Mrs. Mary Peterson.
.....
.Mrs.
ui.i. Chas. ivuwiauri
ui
will
be
remembered
here
as
Mrs.
------■
r
'
------s«r
Pratt
reviewed
’
Queen
Christine
of
.
Mr.
tt,ld
Rowlader
of
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Clark and son
Ku
|. Grand
flranr! Rapids.
Rnnlrix Greydon
Orevrton remained
relumed to their home In Jackson Mabel Kelley, a former Hastings Sweden’’ by Margaret Ooldamlth.
to continue his studies at Junior
on Tuesday after visiting Mr. and resident.
I
College.
ENTERTAINS BRIDGE CLUB....
Mrs. Dell Sutton over the webk end.
SURPRISED ON BIRTHDAY.
Mrs. Robert O’Connor entertained ’' Mrs. L. Faul and Mrs. Lou
Miss Julia Moore is a guest of
W. A. Murphy was pleasantly sur­ the members of her bridge club I Schantz called on Mrs. Etta Faul
Miss cartherine Carrick of Hastings prised on hls birthday last Thurs­
Tuesday afternoon at a one-thirty' and Mr. and Mrs. Richard O’Brien
this week.—Charlotte Republican­ day evening when 15 of hls men
dessert. Mra. Ed. VanPopering and ot Lansing Sunday afternoon.
Tribune.
friends spent the evening at hls
Lawrence Herrick won the
On New Year’s eve at 8 o'clock at
Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Downs and home. Euchre was played. Fr. John Mrs.
honors in the bridge game.
I the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Craig and Dillon. Leo Taffee and Clayton
daughter. Doris, visited Mr. and Brandstetter winning the prizes, i
Mrs. Frank Erb of Grand Rapids on A buffet supper was served late in
Bunday.
the evening. Those present Includ- ;
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. ed Fr. John Dillon, Leo Taffee, Clay­
Clarke on Bunday were Mr. and ton Brandstetter, J. J. Dillon, Bur­
Mrs. J. C. Fumlss of Nashville and dette LyBarker, Murray Goggins,
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kronewittar of Roman Feldpausch. G. F. FeldMiddleville.
pausch, Clarence Workman. William
Mias Jcdn Barnes spent a part of Corkins. Peter Fedewa. Robert Taf­
the holiday vacation with relatives fee, William Taffee. Herman FcldIn Detroit she reports Mrs. Celia pausch, William Thomas and Dr.
Ensign Hamilton as being In much
belter health.
Mrs. John McElwain relumed on BRIDGE DINNER AT
Tuesday to her home in Lansing
PARKER HOUSE.
after a visit of two weeks wilh Mr.
A pleasant social event of last
FRIDAY, JAN. 10
SATURDAY, JAN. 11
and Mrs. J. E. McElwain and Miss
Mary McElwain.
Friday evening at the Parker house
Miss Beatrice carrothers returned by Dr. and Mrs. Quy C. Keller. The'
on Friday to her school work In De­ forty guests were seated at small
FRENCH'S WHITE LILY
troit after spending her vacation tables tn the north parlors, bouquets
with her parents. Dr. and Mrs. of white stevia and red begonias
FINE GRANULATED
Frank carrothers.
forming the decorations. High hon­
With
J1.00
Purchase of Other Groceries
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Boyes and Mar­ ors In bridge were wbn by Mrs.
jorie and Mr. and Mrs. David Boyes Frank Andrus. Mrs. Charles W.
and Loren Boyes were dinner guests Clarke, Charles 8. Potts and Ray
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kelley of Branch.
Kalamazoo on, Sunday.
Miss Virginia Potts returned Sun­
BRIDGE CLUB MET.
Mr. and Mrs. Rozel Stanton cn- 1
day to her studies at the Julllard
School ot Music. New York City, af­ tertained ten guests at bridge on
ter spending the holidays wilh her Wednesday evening. January first
parents, Mr. and Mrx Charles 8. Mrs. Mary Baker and Wilburn RogVACATION LAND—Finished Flavor
era were winners of top score, while
Try a Pound and Be Convinced!
Mr. and Mra. II. J. Foster and Mra. Allen Prentice and Lloyd Bak- ,

FLOUR
SUGAR

24 !/z lbs. 89c
10 Ibl. 49c

Cream Nut Peanut Butter, 2 lb. jar 25c
Calumet Baking Powder
lb. can 21c
IVORY SOAP, Medium Bar 2 for 11c
P &amp; G SOAP, large bar
4 for 19c
COFFEE
lb. 17c

children of Hastings were guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrx J. W.
MaeLachlan the latter part of last
week.—Tuscola Co. (Caro) Adver­
tiser.
Mr. and Mrs. Al Hovey spent New
Year's with Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Snyder of Soulh Hastings. Mrs.
Snyder tins been very 111 with a
heart attack and Is under the doc-

Mr! and Mra. C- W. Clarke expect
to leave Sunday lor a few months’
stay in Florida ..Their daughter. Mrs.
Mallory Caaslify, of Grand Rapids,
will accompany her parents and get
as chauffeur, returning by train.
Mr. and Mra. C. T. Hampton. Mrs.
O. R. Dlckoff and daughter. Bar­
bara. returned last week end to
their home In Iran Mountain after
a ten day visit with lhe L. E. Bar­
nett and W. M. Btebbini families.
DePorcst Walton. Jr., returned
Sunday evening from South Bend.
Ind., where he spent several days
with hta.'aunt, Mrs. Jeaae Crandall.
Mrs. Crandall relumed with' him
and they were accompanied from
Kalanuuioo by Mr. and Mrs. John
Walton, Dr. Walton's parents.

er received low scores. After re-'
freahments were served it was de-1
elded that the next meeting of the
club would be held next month at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vcme
Prentice at Middleville.
TOBOGGAN PARTY AT CLUB. '|

Monarch Coffee, I lb. Vac Pack Jar 29c

Member* of Warren Carter's Bun- |
day school class at tlie Methodist
church enjoyed a toboggan party
Friday evening at the Hastings
Country Club. After a strenuous 1
session the group ot people, num- ।
bering 23. was glad io go to the i
church at 10:30 o'clock, where they 1
enjoyed hamburgs, fried cakes and
COffM.
FAMILY PARTY*ON
I

NEW YEAR'S DAY.
Mimics Adah and Zella Odell en­
tertained with a family party on
New Year’* Day. twenty-one enjoy­
ing the pot luck dinner. Dr. Acclla
Leach of Lansing was an out of
town guest.

3. r. r. CLUB.
Mrs. Dari Lewis was hostess to the
J. F. F. Club on Wednesday. Cards
vet enjoyed by eight ladies.

Save at Baird99
An Economy Event holds Hie Spotlight WhHe WholeMle
ALL RETAIL PRICES ARE REDUCED! In oddiHon te om «
JANUARY CLEARANCE wo offer A STORE-WIDE PRICE

SUIT SAVINGS
11 SUITS—VMM U U«J«

I

*9.95

1« SUITS-Valor, to *21.00

13.95

U SUITS—VklM, U OI-M
&gt; &lt; c OC
SUM M te «—Naw

11 SUITS—Value, to *29.00

I 0,90
*22.95

SWEATERS
$4 4Q
1 • 1

(1.98 SWEATERS
Reduced to______

*230 SWEATERS
(4 OQ
Reduced to.............
1 sOv
*3.50 SWEATERS 14 4 A
Reduced, to............
1W
*3.00 SWEATERS
Reduced to.............

QQ
C.UO

.... *2.45
*5.00 SHOES
Reduced to .... ... *3.45
M-50 SHOES
*446
Reduced to ....
37J9 SHOES
Reduced to ........ *5.45

OVERCOATS
118.50 OVERCOATS
Redocetf to ................

*19-50 OVERCOATS

»2L50 OVERCOATS
Reduced to
*27.50 OVERCOATS
Reduced to

One Lol of OVERCOATS

DRESS SHIRTS
to (L5O—Now ...

DRESS SHIRTS

Style Park HAT8
3S.M value* new ..

WOOL JACK!

SHOES
*3.95 SHOES
Reduced to ...

*12.45
*14.45
*16.45
*19.45
*9.00

BOYS’ JACKETS 14
SLM vataM ■•*... Il

BOYS* JACMT8

MEN’S JACKETS
MEN’S JACKETS *■*
*7.50 values m .. V&lt;

TROUSERS-KNICKERS
SEPARATE TKOUSEkB—
Values lo *2.43—Now ..........
SEPARATE TROUSERS—
Valnes to *X45—Nww...................

HASTINGS

WE DELIVER

|

BOYS’ KNICKERS—

14S
BRAIDED BELTS
Reduced to

25c DRESS SOCKS *4

flfl

89' no* Fire pain .. I .UU
*1.19 r‘“™“*1.00
IO 4E
*1.00

Style Park HATS SO 4 E
P.50 value* no* ..

75c NECKWEAR
no* Two Tics for

*4 flfl
I &gt;UU

LUCGACK MARKID AT
REDUCED PRICK!

EVERYTHING IS SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCED! Comid.ring Hm cwt W re­
placements, these saving ore important—even if you have plenty of ciotbeo

BAIRD9

WHY NOT TRY A
ANT to sell your home? Want to get
rid of a few odds and ends in household furnishings? ... An inexpensive Want­
Adv. in the Banner Want Columns will find
the answer to these and many other per­
plexing problems.

W

And placing your adv. before 4,000 in­
terested readers is so easy. All you need do
is telephone 2415 and a courteous adv-taker
will help you "compose" a Want-Adv. that
will quickly produce satisfactory results.

JUST PHONE

AA
I AV

gf QQ

BANNER WAN'

�THE HASTINGS BANNKB, TBCMDAT, JANTJABY », ISM

GRANGE PROGRAMS

A PERSONAL WORD TO THE PEOPLE

WANTS

OF BARRY COUNTY -

or d»u»hiiut«.
,
Lecturer. - |

'|f»W

It pays to buy- to quantity.
If j
they charged for parking your car j
1 as tlicjtjlo for parking your hat. it
wMld coaryou $2600.

Some Fact! You Should Understand About

|

Our Service
I Te JMtOTECT You ComUoHy

1 *»lM*r« HoBca. Hotu-kaM Owa ,
I Private 04-44.. 44 LOW BATHS '

I CITIZENS MUTUAL
I Fire Insurance Co .
I MS Ksluuioa W4U Buk BUs
I A Mom Ooapaay Omturi is?*.
|

J. L. MAUS
lew! BoceeaauUfo.
UaiUact.

The Hasting* Banner

the Abstracting Business in

CARDS of THANKS

BahMripUaaa hr Mall. Poolpald:
(X BARRY1 COUNTY. ONE YEAR. SIOO.
(if paid In adraacr.)
IN BARRY COUNTY. HIX MONTHB. SOc.
(It paid la od.aaa*)
.

Barry County

Farmers, Attention! !

During lhe past few years, by reason of lhe discovery of oil

I will pay US. mOIIEST MARKET ’
PRICE for VEAL. LAMBS HOOS ud
CATTLE fcr ca&gt;b 44 th* HaiUnca Slock '
Yard*. Win eoaio and art them. Ship
Isvory Tnooday *nd buy retry day.
j
; JAKE DtPRIESTER. PHONE 717—F3

and gas in Michigan, because of. lhe activities of lhe Federal
Land Bank and lhe Home; Owner’s I-oan Corporation and oth­

0UT8IDK BARRY COUNTY, OKI YKAIi
IN ADVANCE--------------1UO.
"t n'Id v fgaat,rriow«- °” gA*

er governmental agencies, a new and greater appreciation of
real eMate lilies is being pronounced.

More lawyers have been

enaged in lhe examination of abstracts of title thin ever be­
fore. Tlie abstract profession is very closely related to lhe law

profession and it is due lo the law profession that the greater

DON'T GET UP NIGHTS

interest in real estate titles is being pronounced.

GEO. M. NEWTON

Tlie abstract profession is a real profession and is not to lie
confused -with lesser occupations.

Abstracters can not obtain

their education from books or from schools, bul must by dili­

gent study year in and year out obtain all lheir education from
experience alone.

An abstracter never completes his education,

but like a lawyer or doctor, he keeps in close contact with new
developments and new laws relating to his profession and work.

It is one of lhe mast confining of professions as the records
have lo be kept up day in and day out, and year in and year
out. Sunday and night work is often required.
George Elmer Jersey wxs bom In
l Romeo. Macomb county February
29. 1864.
On April 4th, 1886 he was united
in marriage to Luella Laidler. of

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

children wet-e born. Iva May; John
Elmer (who died in infancy) and
I He was a resident of Hastings for
lover 26 years and was employed in
| the Bliss factory for many years. He
was a good and hard working man
with honest 'principles.

JERRY ANDRUS
INSURANCE AGENCY

_—

THE CHURCHES

WRECKING

widow and two daughters. Miss
Pearl Jersey and Mrs. Iva Weaver
and three granddaughters. Chryslal.
Myrtle and Irene Weaver.
runerat was at iw monaay anemoon nt the First United Brethren
church Rev. E. o. McSherry officlating. Burial In Riverside cemetery.

It has always been and still is an axiom, that one gets just

what he pays for, and so it is true in obtaining abstracts. Tlie
"Model T’ abstracts, which are passed to title examiners, were

merely one line items taken from the indexes in tlie office of

the register of deeds. The present day abstract in form accept­
able to lhe title examiner, shows all information from the of­

fice of the register of deeds, lhe probate court records, lhe coun­
ty clerk records, records of death and marriage, lhe circuit
court records, and the Federal court records.

The Michigan

Title Association is composed of private abstracters in our stale,

and is responsible for the new form of abstract, through pres­
sure brought by the examining attorneys of the Federal agencies

and lhe intelligent examining attorney. An abstract of title is
a history of a description of real estate, beginning with the own­
ership in the United States Government or French and Indian
claim, traced down to the present date, giving such information

Michigan

Colombia is as large ns Spain
and Portugal combined. It can boast,
like California, of every climate un­
der the min; from tropical lowlands
Ils three Andean ranges rise to
heights of more than 17,1X10 feet,
and the fruits and grains of torrid,
temperate and Apllne regions sue-

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2637

HuUnp

relative to the chain of title, liens, encumbrances and taxes, that
an examining attorney may pass an intelligent opinion on the

condition of the title without further reference to lhe records

except uijdcr unusual title conditions.

It is to be noted that

an abstract may show a very good title or a very poor one;

determination is for lhe lawyer to make.

Barry county is a small county, containing only sixteen
rise. Its mineral wealth Is equally
varied. Gold is produced in quan­
tity. Colombia has been the world's
principal

NEW AID HELPS

DEAFENED
HEAR

AGAIN!

geologists have classified
as one of the largest po­

Every tnua we lit ts guar­
anteed to hold the rupture
and we keep it in proper ad­
justment for you. Let us show
you tho Now Akron Truss

townships: it has no large cities. Tlie revenue from a county-

owned abstract plant would not pay for the salaries and main­
tenance of the office and equipment necessary to operate suc­
cessfully.

Our office in normal times does not have revenue

enough from the abstract plant to pay a man capable of oper­

ating an abstract plant, to say nothing of the maintenance and
clerk hire necessary for operating.

In view of the fact, two

abstract plants in a county the size of Barry county could not
liced a wheat plant In one of hls
fields with n branching stalk. It
yielded sixty-three ears, and by sav­
ing the seed he originated a valuable

pay out to cither one, and lhe county-owned plant wotHd be­
come a burden upon the taxpayers of this county. In the case

of Kent county it is true, and Kent county is much larger than
Barry, and has large cities to obtain revenue from.

PUBLIC

ENEMIES

Plumbing and

Heating Equipment
HEADACHE'
Installation and Repairs

.Dead Stock Removed!

Skilled Workmen

Goodyear Bros.

NOTICE TO POLICY-HOLDERS
The Annuol Meeting of the Woodland Mutual Fire
Insurance Company will be held at Woodland on

Our office has been in business for nearly seventy years, and
has continued to operate, not from revenue- and income from
the abstract plant, but from other sources. We have written in­
surance for over thirty-four years, and have always handled
lhe sale of real estate. We have handled in the county and out­
side of the county, and still do handle, a large amount of money
for various people, and this is the principal income of our
office. If we had lo depend upon abstracting alone we could
not survive. We have tried to please each and every person
with whom we have had contact, but you cannot please every­
one no matter how hard you try. Our prices are lower than
nearly all abstract plants in the country, considering the type
of work we produce. Our price is sixty-five cents for each entry,
entries using more than one sheet arc charged for at a reason­
able rale, and we charge two dollars for certifying. Responsi­
bility is a large factor in abstracting and the utmost care must
be exerted for your protection and ours. Our motto is "Never
take anything for granted—look it up" and through that motto
Vre have had as few errors as any abstract plant in lhe world.
We are proud of our record and we will continue to keep our
plant in tlie best condition possible.
y.

We know that misinformed people are circulating petitions
for a county-owned abstract plant. It will pay to look the matter
up before placing your name upon such a petition. It would
be a stupendous task to form an abstract plant from the county
indexes and the cost would be prohibitive before a single prod­
uct could be made, to say nothing of the upkeep and mainte­

Tuesday, January 21, 1936, at 10:00 A. M.

for the purpose of electing two Directors for a term
of three years and one Director to fill vacancy for
o term of one year.
FRANK C. KILPATRICK, Secretary.

nance.

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central^ Stock Yards at Hastings,
/ Every Monday.

Michigan Livestock Exchange
HASTINGS BRANCH

FOR SAI V-

'Dtey say talk is cheap Maybe
it is—anywhere except behind
the steering wheel of an automo­
bile.
The Conversationalist who
elects to demonstrate Ins talents
while driving is literally talking
himself into trouble—and usual*
ly serious trouble.
Driving is a serious business.
It can not be combined with ’de­
bating, sightseeing or kindred
diversions.
Good drivers concentrate their
attention on the road and let
others do the talking.

“Sound Judgment counts tor a
whole lot In poultry raising," Bays
C. 8, Johnson. Manager of the Poul­
try Department of the Purina Milla.
“Any way you look at It." he says,
"the business of raising chickens
calls for a lot of good. cotnrpon
sense. Some make a go of It with
Leghorns, others with Plymouth
Bocks, and others with Rhode Island
Reqs. There are st'ccesses la Naw
England as well aa In the South
and West. There are fall urea. too.
No matter what the breed or the
section of the country, the differ­
ence is usually n the common scuse
of tlie man behind tho hens.”

Outlines 8-Polnt Plan.

In getting the most from hena
through tlie winter, Johnson calls
attention to whnt be terms the 8polnt common sense plan of making
hens [lay. Every flock owner wilt
do well to question himself on each
of Johnson's eight points to see If
tils Hock Is getting a chance to lay
&lt; winter eggs. Poultry rnleera need
i not go to any great expense In mak­
I Ing the necesimry changes that will
I tiring about the desired conditions
for health In the (lock and extra
eggd In the nest all through tlie win­
ter. Sometimes Just a Huie remod­
eling or Just n change cf ration la
all that's required:
(1) Give hens a warm. dry. com­
fortable. well-ventilated place
to live.
(2) Don't overcrowd—allow 3’4
to 4 square feet of floor space
per bird.
(3) See that blrda have plenty of
hopper and water fountain
space.
(4) Provide 12 to 15 nests for
each 100 hens—gather eggs
3 limes dally.
(5) Keep tilings clean.

(0) Cull out diseased, weak., or
poorly developed birds; also
birds that persist In laying
eggs of Inferior quality.
(7) Use artificial lights to length­
en the feeding period in win-

(8) Be sure that the laying mash
contains puratene (Pro-vita­
min A) so that lhe layera In
winter will get enough Vita­
min A for springtime health
nnd springtime production.

Boros Carbide
Boron carbide, the hardest mate­
rial ever produced by man, known
as "synthetic blaqjf diamonds" be­
cause lheir hardness approaches
that of real diamonds, Is employed
where only natural genu were used'
before.

Wh.n Moots Are Not Shy
Moose naturally are- ahy until mat­
ing time arrives. At that time, the
trumpeting of the bull moose means
a challenge to all Intruders. In fight­
ing, the bull uses bls strong fore­
feet at well as hls heavy antlera.

City of Tokyo

We render the county a real service in comparing the instru­
ments before they become a permanent record and have caught
many errors before it was too late, and there is no charge for
doing it. We furnish the supervisors wilh any information
which they want and do not charge for it; our service to them
is invaluable to the tax rolls.

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

TELLS OF THINGS
TO DO FOR HENS

We would like lo have anyone who h interested come into
our office and inspect our abstract plant, and we will be glad
to answer any and all questions possible pertaining to lhe op­
eration of our abstract plant. We would like to have you com­
pare otir modern abstract with the "Model T’ abstract still
produced by some county plants. It is a real education in form
and information showing. We use the beat materials we can buy
lo produce our abstracts, in order that they may stand the wear
and tear necessary in examining and handling them. Upkeep
is a Targe item in any business and it is true of lhe abstract
business.
There are three things to consider when buying a' parcel of
real estate, namely: 1. Obtain advice from your banker as to
values. 2. Demand a modern abstract. 3. Have a competent
title examiner examine and pass upon lhe title before paying

over any money.

SHELDONS' ABSTRACT OFFICE
105 South Church Street, Hastinfa, Michigan

REAL ESTATE

n

INSURANCE

::

BONDS

The city of Tokyo. Japan. Is lo­
cated at the bead of the bay of
the same name, on the aoutheaat
coaat of Honshlu. the principal Is­
land of the Japanese group.

HASTINGS MARKETS

�Thursday, January 9, 1936 |

THE HASTINGS BANNER
MISS BOYLE GETS
SPLENDID POSITION

01817454
______ aVimif*
about:

-------

“TULAREMIA'’ CASE B
BEEN FOUND NEAR
ESTWOOD HILLS,
DELTON
CAL.—In peace; I knew
streets in New York where cit­
izens went at their own risk, COMMUNICATED TO
HUMANS BY ANIMALS
and policemen walked in pairs.
But some were s» safe as though
they’d been in church—a doc­ Dr. Harkness Describes the
Disease—Tells How to
tor with hls kit; a nurse lo uni­
form; a priest or a nun; a preach­
Avoid Infection

m Been Named aa Head of

Newly Created Depart-

W

cultural Agent, that,Mias Beatrice
C. Boyle. forjnsr/Cti club agent In
Barry ocunty.
engaged by
Michigan 8ta

er or a rabbi, and always a Salva­
tion Army worker.

will be In charge of a newly created
deportment dealing with the young
men and women on our Michigan
farms.
Miss Boyle receives this singular
honor due to her outstanding work
with boys and girls in Barry Co.
and later In Gogebic and Chippewa
counties where she has been acting
as 4-H club agent since leaving
Barry county. She will work over
lhe entire state with groups of
young folks too old for, our present
4-H club project, yet too young to be
well established Ln their life work.

ganliatloo, no mat­

sonne), or bow fat
Ita purse, outdid
the Salvation Army

•oldlcra, ' wbatso-

color.
At Chrtstmss:
Who sent Banta
down cold chim­
neys to gladden the Irvin 8. Cobb
hearts of children
at
hearthstones
(bat
elsewise
would be desolate? Whr brought
a measure of holiday cheer 'o the
misery-laden, putting clothes on
the backs and dinners tn the stom­
achs of the naked and the hungry?
80. for their eleventh-hour drive
for their Christmas fundi thank
God for the Salvation Army. Every
cent went where it should have

covered near Delton. Thia is a dis*
ease found In certain wild animals,
but Is, communicated to human be­
ings. usually when cleaning an in­
fected animal for food. In animals
the disease can usually be dlstlngushed by enlarged glands; In hu-

ulcers, which usually appear about county wish her every success with
three days after cleaning an infect­
ed animal. The case near Delton
was diagnosed by blood tests made young folks.
at the University hospital at Ann
Arbor.
This Delton case is unusual in this

club lhdersto

head of the Barry County Health
Unit, to give our readers an idea of
what Tularemia is. He kindly re­
sponded with the following:
Tularemia Is one of the diseases
which has been identified and ASSISTANTS FROM M. 8. 0.
named within comparatively recent
TO TALK ON CLOTHING
times.
A disease occurring over a wide
AND HANDICRAFT
range of animals and inp widely
scattered portions of the country;
rabbits In California and nearly all DIST. CLUB AGENT
other states; ground squirrels in
EARL HAAS COMING
Utah; grey foxes In Minnesota. In
addition to rabbits and the other
for verily I tell yon, as one who above named animals beaver, Plans for Annual 4-H Club
•knows, these are the shock troops weasel, porcupines and other ani­
of the Lord.
mals are affected over such a wide Achievement Day Are Also
area that ttie disease has been found
.
to Be Discussed
in some animals within every state
Barry Co. 4-H Clothing
and
HATEVER became of the ben in the union excepting only Ver­ Handicraft Leaders will meet at the
which from time to |lme hauled mont and Connecticut. Domestic court house In Hastings on Tuesday
animals
such
as
horses,
cattle,
dogs.
afternoon,
Jan.
14.
This
will
be
the
off and laid an egg with mysterious
final leaders' training meeting cov­
Inlllals on It? In my days on a
Pint described in 1911 as a disease
country newspaper this gifted fowl of rabbits Ln Tulare county, Califor­ ering the winter projects of Cloth­
was a regular Journalistic feature. nia, the disease was found later to ing and Handicraft.
Miss Lola Corbett, assistant state
Her output might bo soft-shelled affect human beings and the causa­
club leader from Mich. Stale Col­
‘ sad shy a yolk, but always tho tive germ wis isolated: tlie name lege, will be In attendance to dis­
■'Tularemia" 11* adapted from the cuss the closing of the 4-H Clothing
cryptic writing was there.
Once she produced an egg bear­ county In which it was first found project wilh the local leaders. Miss
ing letters which many translated and described by Dr. McCoy, of the Corbett will discuss the setting of
United State* public Health Service. sleeves In dresses, the adding of
as prophesying “war." But some­
The disease In animals is carried
body pointed out that If you read from one to another by means of finishing trimmings to garments and
the message tho other way It spoil lice, licks and similar blood-sucking the making of club exhibits at
••raw," which also seemed to cover parasites; in man it is nearly al­ Achievement Days.
P. G. Lundin, assistant state club
ways contracted
by
Infection leader fyom Michigan State College,
the case.
This barnyard phenomenon died through cuts or roughened skin, will meet with the 4-H Handicraft
too soon. How tho Naw Deal boys chapped hands, hong-nails, etc.,
cotlid use a hen capable of turning when handling infected animals. In varnish and other handicraft fin­
most of the cases occurring in ishing material. Thia is a phase of
out weird alphabetical combina­
Michigan .It has occurred to men
tions and then going off and forget­ whan dressing Infected wild rabbits. the Handicraft work that generally
gives the local club leaders the moat
ting thorn!
A number of cases ot the disease trouble.
Afterthought—Among all tho of­ have occurred by means of Infected
Earl Haas, Dist. 4-H Club agent,
fice seekers or office holders who fluids from animals getting into the will also be present to assist with
have been or may be mentioned for eyes of men dressing them for eat­ the leaders' meeting. Mr. Haas has
a Presidential nomination next ing. In some cases in man the dis­ been recently appointed by the
year—dr even for Vice President— ease has undoubtedly been carried State Club department to assist
by the bliss of insects.
County Agent Foster with hls 4-H
you will search In vain for the
The disease Ls usually fatal to club program In the county. This
name of Governor Hoffman of New
animals and is severe Ln humans, meeting will give the local 4-H club
Jersey.
causing a high temperature for sev­
eral weeks followed by a slow conCounty Agent Foster wishes to

MEETTflESDlY

W

Destroying a Skunk

'VE Just been reading—until I
stopped to gag—the latest novel
ot one of tho new. school of au­
thors; you know, those so-called
realists who mistake filth for fic­
tion and lewdoesa for literature.
I wouldn't say this person was
much of a writer, but he certainly
is a practical dirt-fanner.
I’ve never believed in censorship

I

this group, I've always gone on the
theory, paraphrasing in old line of
sn old ballad, that they were more
to be pitied than censored.
But for the individual offend­
er against common decency—well,
when I was a youngster down South,
they told me tho surest wsy to de­
stroy a skunk was to pen him un­
der a barrel nnd just let him smell
himself to death on hls own per­
sonal perfumes.

N THE paper I see where, for
their Sunday sermons, three min­
isters preached on modern youth—
with particular references to the
shortcomings of same.
I haven't a doubt that the first
caveman, surveying the antics of hls
coltish brood, remarked In tonea
of gloomy resignation to hls hairy

I

set the date of the County Achieve­
every one hundred death results ment Day during the meeting with
from the infection. The diagnosis
is made by means of a blood exami­ taken of bow far along the different
nation made by a physician.
In Barry county at this time there Foster is Interested in getting an

OFFICERS’FEES
05732357

HELPS TO PAY
RUNNING EXPENSES

with Mr. Curtis at the wheel, at
about 11 o'clock Saturday night.
Just' beyond Riverside cemetery I

GOOD CHANCE FOR MORE
INCOME NEXT YEAR

Books of Treasurer Maus and 2S*.? J.'ZS.X'K
County Clerk Hyde Must
curve in lhe roadway at that point. I
The sharp freeze, following the rain |
Be Kept in Duplicate
and thaw during the afternoon, had

Co. ud Wind,
atom Co. Are the Larg-

Publicity chrm. Post

were

driving

116,000 ABOVE AMOUNT
NEEDED FOR FIRST
CLASS OFFICE

Barry County CaniMi
Our subject U Dogs—Jurt DOOS.

rural
nine, Barry county dogs. particular-

eB» Patrons
eBl rairons
P-Unaster Field balanced

PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE
I ATE B. A. NEVINS.

We print the following extract
from the obituary of B. A. Nevins,
published In the Otsego Union. Mr.
Orangeville township and the fam­
ily Is well known In Barry county.
Mra. John McLeod of this city was
a sister of Mr. Nevins, and M. E.
Nevins was a cousin:
Bartlett Augustus Nevins was born
on Juno 1, 1854. at Richland. Michi­
gan, Lhe second son of Jacob and
Augusta Brown Nevins. In hls boy­
hood he went to live on the Pine
lake farm, which is still in the Nev­
ins family. Hls education, begun in
the North Pine Lake school, was
completed at the Michigan Agricul­
tural College in 1876. The following

ADVERTISING THAT PAY8.

Hie small town merchant who
Mlnlsterial Association and succeeds is the one who has what
iday school superintendents, people want and lets them know
about
it People are busy today.
wring being held In lhe HasThey will not take time to shop
where merchants Insist on keeping
ed at this bi-monthly meeting. A
IRVjN •. COBB.
pot luck dinner waa enjoyed aa well
tended die bonus rally at the Harold as the splendid program.
to their customers' living rooms the
DAVENPORTS GROVK IS
home newspaper containing1 the
WOODLAND'S MONUMENT. Battle Creek on January 2. A good
baa been conducting a teachers' stores* advertisements of products
and prices. Advertising has become
gave the address on "How Shall Wc
old pioneers named this township of
Teach on Christian Living.” Her
bardfcjbA “Woodland."
warning waa given to over-conflwlfe. Bhe knowa from the advertb­
“Woodman spare that tree

-Contributed.

Delbert Curtis. Reuben Sprague

"While The
The Doggi

think that Lhe
been Informed that the Barry coun­
ty dog warden is off duty right now, vbc the county'n doga.
buay^toy II h. Z
and therefore all dogs in Barry
made the pavroLt veryslippery. In I
his county, from the diminutive Spits
to the lordly Police dog, is free to
county will raise in county tax this endeavoring to negotiate this curve books at the local postofflce last
warden h cn ids
the car skidded, smashing into the!week. The government requireyear about 890.000. that is only a
places and at all times as they may
"
small part of the total that will be sx. el
received by the county trsasurer- a ted scalp and Miss Slrimback an i10 "main an office of the first class
dogs. little dogs, medium-sized dogs.
with all accounts kept in duplicate injured eye. but the two young men 1 is that Ito total Income shall be
by both the county clerk and treas­ were bruised but otherwise unhurt. 340.000 or more. The total Income I playing their cute little antic# on
i of the Hastings postoffice for the the public streets and in the yards
urer. which must agree. Tlie books 'The cor was wrecked.
Shortly after this another car,! year 1935 was 35646485—or 316.- of our citizens. They are having tlie
of both officers arc checked care­
driven by Donald Leyendecker, the 166445 above the government mini- time of their sweet*young lives. It! to the
fully by state accountants sent here other
other occupants
occupants being
being hls
hls brother
brother ' mum for a postoffice of lhe first appears that
each year by the auditor general.
While the taxpayers will contrib­ Roger also Willard and Charles Kid­
"While the warden’s away
The receipts for each quarter of
ute 390.000 far the county's ex­ der. came toward lhe place, the four
The doggies must play.”
young
men
returning
to
their
homes
penses, the county has other sources
First quarter ..
•15.231.28
of revenue which help to pay the in Irving township after attending
and they're doing It. Some go a wear? Hasn't
. 12.514.29
Second quarter
cost of operating the county's busi­ the picture show here. As the Leyen­
courting. Some go a snooping.
Third quarter .
. 14445.65
ness. This county U not on the fee decker car neared tho-scehe of the
They're busy littlp buggers—and SO wilhoul creating a
Fourth quarter
. 14,763.43
system, but pays Its officers salaries, accident, the driver saw ths Curtis
playful and care free! The other Why should a dog's
and the fees, which used to go to car in the roadway. In trying to get
Total .......................... 356,654.65
the clerk, register and county treas­ around It. his car skidded and hit
Kim Sigler's farm, where he has
The total for 1935 was about
urer. now arc paid directly into the the Curtis car, still further damag­
ing the latter. Tlie Leyendecker car 36400 less than for tlie preceding
county treasury.
year, due to .declines In the amount
Take the case of Earl Boyes, reg­
ister of deeds. He turned over to reach home under its own power, of postage purchased by the Has­
with
no one in the second car seri­ tings Manufacturing Co. and the perished in a futile effort to be
the county treasurer recording and
ously
hurt.
Michigan Mutual Windstorm Insur­ playful with dogs. That's more than wardens vacation.
other fees he had received amount­
ance Co , which are by far Uie larg­ all the dogs In Barry county orc
ing to *3.205.80. That paid his sal­
est patrons of the local portoffice.
the job .right now.
ary and clerk hire, paid for the new JUST MISSES SERI­
worth, some folks say.
OUS ACCIDENT.
The business given the local of­
record books he had to buy. and left
Another
near-serious accident fice by other than the two Institu­
a surplus, over all expenses of his
tions mentioned has shown some in­
office, of about 3500. County Clerk
STORK BUSY BIRD
crease during the preceding 12
Allan Hyde turned over the county
where the liighway wirgjs down the months. The Christmas mail re­
fees that used to go to the county
IN HASTINGS
••Van Arman Hill” a mile or more ceipts, as given last week evidenced
clerk himself of 31,604.91.
County Treasurer Maus does not beyond Riverside cemetery. Evident­ the fact that business generally is Eight Births Since the First Zennlc Wallace. 316
receive many, fees that would be ly some driver failed to note the better in Hastings than during 1934.
of the Year Indicate No
paid directly to him if the county winding road at the top of the hill There to a general anticipation that
1036 will show a marked improve­
were on the fee system. But he col­
Race Suicide Here
lects between 35.000 and 36.000 of going at such speed that the lum ment over 1935. In any event Post­
fees provided for by state laws, could not be made. In any event master Field believes tjiat postal re­
which he is authorised to receive for instead of making the little turn at ceipts in Hastings, last year over of 22 less births In Hastings than .
the
top
of
the
hill
the
car
plunged
■40
per
cent
above
the
government
the county. The dog taxes are paid
1934. the old stork starts off the
Sunfield
to him, all of which go to Uie coun­ straight ahead and lip the'steep em­ minimum, will remain well above New Year working overtime.
ty. He pays tho county half of the bankment on the right as you ap- the 340.000 requirement.
On Jan. 3. a girl. Marian Louise,
mortgage tax money he collects, or
WHICH ARE YOU?
3526.75 last year. He collected In­ car was kept right aide up. but com­
terest and fees on delinquent taxes ing down from the embankment It "Age Is a quality of mind—
Platt. 113 E. Court St., their tenth
dashed straight across the road and If you have left your drcams behind. child.
If hope is cold,
Also on the 3rd came a daughter,
collected *92.067.52 of delinquent and broke off ope of the posts of
the guard-rail. We did not learn If you no longer look ahead.
Betty Mae. at Uie home-of Mr. and
who the occupants of the car were, If your ambition's fires are dead—
Mrs. Harold Schild. 218 E. State St.,
Then
you
are
old:
lhe sixth Ln their family circle.
All these fees for the various of­ nor whether anyone was injured.
"But if from life you take the best.
fices were paid Into what is known
And at Pennock hospital since
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
And If Ln- life you keep the Jest.
as the county's General Fund, from
If love you hold.
busy the following having arrived
which moat county expenses are Albert J. Chaffee, Hastings.......... 31
there:
paid. These Items would total al­ Juanita M. Wiley. Battle Creek . J7 No matter how the years go by.
A son to Mr. and Mrs. Wol Shrib­
most tUjOOOJX), and help to meet Harold M. Conk, cloves dale.......... 36
You are not old.
er. 630 E. South St., on Jan. 3.
the coat of operating the county's Martan O. Beattie, Shelbyville .. .19

Has Prayer Book
Printed in 1734

in youth it sheltered me

13063160

Dorothy Strimbeck

Don't Feel Sorry
For Yourself

Tuesday

lippery Roads Cause UaY to
Skid Into Stone Wall
Near Cemetery

VOID OTTO OSMUAL fund
or BABBY OOUXTV
TBXABUBY

early start on the summer club proj­
state there are none others report­ ects of crops, livestock, poultry and
ed at present.
canning
Protection against this Infection
is to wear Intact rubber gloves and
use care in handling animals while
dressing them; antiseptic care of
of the schools. In August, 1880, ha
cute la a desirable protection. The
was married to Helen Long, daugh­
ter of pioneer residents of Otsego.
in our district, but the danger of
From that time until the death of
Infection is always present tn dreasMra. Nevins In 1910 hls home was in
By Ruth Barton
this town, and hls interests were
those of this community. He was a
Vanity is a strange thing. If it
staunch Republican Ln politics, and
cannot obtain satisfaction Ln
If rabbits are thoroughly cooked
served os postmaster under the Har­
there Is no danger of tularemia in
rison administration, and later for
most any way possible.
using them for food.
two terms, from 1898 to 1902, as
For instance some people get
state representaUve. He was an of­
sufficient satisfaction from pro­
ficial member for many years of the
voking the pity of others to com­
Methodist
Episcopal church and was
pensate for their lack of achleveon the building committee which
erected the present structure.
tent of playing sick. They blame
their troubles on anyone but
with the late Charles Prentiss Ln
themselves but they will be very
William Zuschnltt of Rutland U
tlie manufacturing business; later
happy secretly if they have suf­
he was commercial representative
ficient sympathy.
prayer book which his father. Gott­
of
the Otsego Chair Company and
So beware of self pity—It is a
lieb Zuschnltt, brought with him
various eastern firms. After moving
from Germany. The book is print­
to Detroit he became interested in
mally directed vanity.
ed in German and was published In
the' real estate development of that
And this will show in your
1734. Besides the regular Lutheran
city.
handwriting If you are like that.
prayers, tlie Psalms ore included In
During the last decade he has
Have-your handwriting anathis little volume, which has always
traveled widely, both in this coun­
been higiily prised by generations at
try and in Europe, and wherever he
Pill
out
coupon
on
page
five
the Zuschnltt family.
has gone he has been keenly inter­
ested in the life of the people and
WILL 0PFO8K*GRANDwe will forward It to Him Ear­
their opportunities for a fuller en­
▼HJJt DEBATERS.
joyment of human privileges. Hls
The third debate of the Hastings
mind saw the future as the de­
high school debating team will take
velopment of the best of the past:
place Friday afternoon January 10, PASTORS ANO S. S.
he was always ready to embrace the
at 3:16 o'clock with a team from
WORKERS’ MEETING new. If It was built upon principles
the Grandville high school. The
which had been proven enduring.
question for debate is: Should the
several nations make government About Fifty Present to Hear In exploring unfatalllar paths, hls
mind was Independent and unhesi­
monopolies of lhe manufacture and
MIm Ione Catton on
tating. He was the genuine pioneer.
sale of-aU combat Instruments of

“Well, mommer, the world’s done
pretty well while we ran It Look
at the bole in the roof to let the
smoke out that I thought up right
out of my own head, be-geel And
now when Ir get the trick of the
new throwing-stick worked out, civ­
ilisation wilt just about have
reached her peak. But heaven help
the poor old earth when that bunch
of crazy kids yondgr takes hold I"
Before we start blaming the on­
war?" Prof. Hance, of Albion Col­
coming generation for everything, lege will act as judge. Coach Beck­
including its own sins, which are er has selected tho following to rep­
sufficiently manifest already, let's resent Hastings high: DeForrest
go back to where this buck-passing Walton. Jr, Floyd Wtaodward and
habit started. Let's go back to
Adam, the deraed old experimental­
ATTEND BONUS RALLY.
ist!

YOUNG PEOPLE
.
HAVE ACCIDENT

She does her shopping cn a third of
ing and sharing, not from getting.'' her original shopping time.—Jour­
nal-Transcript, Franklin, N. H.

Your Banker Is a Merchant
A Bank is more than a safety deposit box where you can store your

money. The Banker is a Merchant, his stock is money; and to do
business he lends to individuals and business concerns in the com*

munity in which the Bank is located.

The Hastings City Bank has for the past fifty years operated in this

community and is a Friend and Counsellor to many of the private
citizens, farmers and business men located here. This Bank has grown

with the community and in so doing, has kept abreast with the chang-

ing times and improved its service to conform to these changes.

So, today, this Bank is worthy of your confidence and is ready to

serve you.
To those who are in need of money for improvements, new equip*

ment, business expansion or any of the many things you may be plan*
ning to do, we say “let’s get together.”

WE ARE IN POSIJION TO MAKE MORTGAGE
LOANS ON ALL IMPROVED REAL ESTATE

HASTINGS CITY
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANNEB, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, IMG

HOUSE NEWS

CARLTON CENTER.

NORTHEAST CARLTON

waiver of notice filed.
_ _ Hing Admr. entered,
bond of Admr. filed, letter! of ad-

»

Hope Headline

■glvan to the Barry County Sunday
School Teaching Instruction
The

xi?

f°r ^35
hearmg claims filsd. inventory filed.
Bbal kood*t Clad, Waiver of notice low; I». and Mra. Lloy? Endaley
filsd. order allowing account filed, and family ot Fowlerville. Mr and
ad mln Istra- discharge of Admr. lamed, estate en- Mra. Geo Ffitncls and family of
News-Wise
--------------- -- Correspondent
--------- ----------------Saginaw. Mr. and Mra. Lewis DanGives a Spicey bunvnary
Bpringer attended the W. K. Kel­ rington, McClary. Snlffln and Nor
EsL Lucy Franck. Final account lets. Mr. and Mi’s. Fred Decker of
Cupid waa quite busy during lhe logg camp at Pine lake In August.
wood aang; two solos glwn by Mr
Hdhnes District and Mrs. Mae year, those afflicted by the fatal
filed.
This. too. is a wonderful thing for McClary and Mr. Snlffln were much
_
ER. Eva May Manby. Annual ac­
Townsend of Hastings al the home darts being aa follows: Ira Osgood
children.
: count filed.
enjoyed. A reading. "Don't You
of Mr. and’Mrs. Alonso Decker; Mr. and Miss Maybelle Hart of Shults;
creditors issued.
’’ • •
'
Our school with Mrs. Lena Lauand Mrs. ESwyn and baby of Delton , James Anders and Mrs. Emma .Wal­
Ekt. William s. Schader. Release
baugn
as
teacher
now
hu
. William Evans. Petition for
of guardtan
filed, discharge
lace of Podunk; Homer McCallum eleven pupils. At the Hope township
_ ______ filed, waiver ot notice filed.
Western State Norma] was intro­
guardian issued, estate
the
Trout
Itake
COC
with
hls
parand
Evelyn
Sparks
of
Muske1 order appointing Admr.. bond of
spelling contest on April 15, Jim­
ents; Dorence Barry of the CCC __n. Edward Willson and Miss mie Springer won first place and duced and gave • splendid talk on
®* Admr. filed, letters ot administra—.5^1 Gladys Mohler of Waytand; Ctar- Donald Springer, second They com- •'Adventures in Rural Education"
freeholders filed.
M- tton issued, order limiting .Xrlnx
settle- Tom !??•
befari
Barry and Mr and Mr, Mina
Mr. Bumham told many amusing
______
u’ Btott wlth hcr *lsUr and hu*band . encr Johncock and Miss Ethyl Read Cted with the county children in anecdotes of hls early experience
ay In Hastings and Jimmie won
. ctatou'filed. n&lt;MM to’ creditors to-1
*A^llI^s‘U“r “’a nu*oana of Orangeville; Lester Lord of the
in rural school teaching, and very
Annual ac- jued, inventory filed.
IIn arantl K"P,as
; c. C. C. camp in Newaygo and Miss honorable mention.
Our eighth timely helps for the present. The
count filed.
.
&lt;t(----------------Mr and Mrs.
Mrs.^BcOtt
Bcott Lydy and son.
son, Edith wilcox;
Wilcox; Earl M&lt;
McKibben and grade pupils. EUtah and Donna Kel­
closed by singing “God Be
Ert. Duane Powers, et al Annual f When a feminine guest says she I■ Vaughn,
. —«o..... spent Sunday7 with Mr.
..... and
—.-- mils
mi&amp;o Wllda Mugridge of Battle ler and Jimmie Springer, all passed. program
account filed.
must go. It means she will stand!*'. I Mr* ~
George
----------Lydy
----------and
-—
son.nGary,
‘~"
of Creek
* and4 Glenn
—
—
Wise and Miss Ed- Students going to other schools arc: With You." A fine dinner was
Est. Abram Martin. Petition for and talk only to minutes more.
Irving.
: na Shattuck of Lansing, formerly of Jimmie Springer at Delton; Vir­ served by the hostesses assisted by
their daughters and Mrs. Wllllam' West Hope
ginia Hayward. Barry Agricultural: son.
.
The next meeting will be held
The stork made three-point land­ Russell Laubaugh. Barry County | at the home of Mra. Harrington
ings in the following places; Mr. and Normal; William McCaJJum. W. 8. Jan. 23 for a Health Day program.
Mrs Gordon Foote welcoming a IT. C. ut Kalamazoo and Mtas Mil­
Mrs. H. J. Flower and Miu Ber­
daughter. June Marie; Mr. and Mrs I drfd Osgood, Columbia University.
nice were called to Leila hospital.
Stanley Klminlc. a daughter. Sheila j New York.
Bea; Mr and Mrs Ray Wells, a I The L A. 8. held an Ice cream so- Battl? Creek, lut Friday afternoon
daughter. Doris May. and Mr. and,
July *n&lt;1 » chicken pie sup- where the former's brother, C. F.
F*1"" ““ d-TJ»l«.
Mrs. Ralph Jenkins a son. Romer | pc.
P" .n
m November, u.r
the prae.™.
proceeds w
to «
be
LU«1
In putting
pulun. a
. new
new roof
root on
on the
Ihnl'PL*
°EV*'£' l-rtonnod
Ralph
I us
*d ln
I
--------- rr._ Tt--. -------------------- .. Friday at 12 o'clock. We are glad to
The Grim Reaper spared our comreport Mr. Moreau went through
। munity throughout the entire year &lt;
aMiv*
the
operation
remarkably
well and
1 although several families were be- AfVcr&gt;1 old uiylghtb buildings tom
Is doing as well as could be expect­
reaved outside the neighborhood. down, several ot us have better ed. Hls physicians feel very en­
cars, several ladles have new power
, Mr. and Mrs. Everett McCallum
' washers and if you think it is fun lo couraged. as hls age and hls being
; lost her brother-in-law, Lester Ter­
confined to his bed for ten days
penning of near Hastings; Mr. and ‘ write this, you try it.
previous to this .trouble made
it
Mrs. Geoffrey Keller lost her grand-!
more difficult. Mr. Flower and Ber­
1
OBITUARY.
mother. Mrs. Rose Hollister of Nash-1
nice went down to see him again
On Friday. Jan. 3. 1930. funeral Sunday and were happy to find him
viile and cousin. Mrs. Lloyd Stgbcrry
of carlton Center and the Anders services for William H. Couch, son still Improving.
family lost Edward Eckstrom. hus­ of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Couch of Bal­
Mr. and Mrs. Em Quick spent the
band of Elizabeth Anders Eckstrom timore township, were conducted at week end and Sunday with the for­
lhe Baltimore U. B. church. The
of Battle Cieek.
mer’s sister. Mrs. Jennie Lyons.
Changes In residence during tlie j
Mr. and Mra. Ferris Quick enter­
conducted by the Rev. Edward
year are as follows: Mr. and Mrs.
tained Bunday Mr. and Mra. Ted
J. P. Collison returned to their farm I
.
bom in Hutings. Jan. 24. 1911. He Tack.
from Kalamazoo; Mr. and Mrs, Geo
wu a member of the Evangelical । Mr. and Mra. Huhn Scobey spent
Willson and eight children moved
church of Nashville and a graduate New Year's day with hls mother
Into Mrs. Hattie Anders' home lilM
spring and to Middleville this fall; of the Nashville High school. For and family al Welcome.
Edward Willson moved to Bowens some time previous to moving to J B. N. Fenner and Mtas Nina and
Mills; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Osgood Hastings he attended lhe Baltimore Mrs. Chase entertained ‘ for New
U B. church and sang in the choir. Year's dinner. Mr. and Mrs. Karl
moved into, lheir Lower Guernsey
He is survived by hls parents. Mr. Palmatlcr and sons. Kalamazoo.
home; Mrs. Maybelle Hart Osgood
and husband. Ira Osgood, moved and Mrs. Sam Couch., two broth- | Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Quick were
efs. Donald and Everett, a *lster-ln- guests for sapper New Year's day of
Into the old Osgood home; James
taw. Gladys couch, and two cousins. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Schultz.
Anders moved to podunk and Ray
Joon and John. He will be sadly
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Skidmore,
Wells moved to near Delton.
mtased.by a host of friends and rel- Nuhville. visited lheir son. Arthur
Three reunions were held last stives.
and family, Monday.
summer; the McCallum school re­ He shines in the light of God.
The January meeting of the Milo
10c
union which is a real event of July; Hls likeness stamps hta brow.
yal keiffers
*•-. will be held al
. ..
Ladles'. Aid
the
^thf -McCallum family reunion which Through the valley of death hls feet
NO 2
home of Mra. Minnie Quick for
FINE FOR SALADS
have
trod
dinner. Wednesday. Jan. 15. All are
CAN
I and John McCallum in August and But he walks In glory now.
OR SAUCE
' urged to come.
I lhe Lord family reunion which was
fbeld al Stewart Lake In August.
A reader asks the proper way to, Tlie latest type of umbrella Is
is
CHERRIES
10c
' The Y- M- C- A- Camp Barry at greet guests. The usual way is to made of transparent material. This
NO 2
1 Stewart Lake was enjoyed by a say: "The house is In a mess. I enables a person to see where he U
targe number of young people dur- haven't had time, etc."
going and if the owner is coming.
V II •■11 11 I Lw FOR PIES
CAN
COURT

GREATER FOOD VALUES FOR

FHE
ENTIRE
YEAR

v&gt;

QUALITY FOODS AT LOWERED COST
FOR THE ENTIRE YEAR . . . BUYING
"THE C. THOMAS WAY" MEANS
CONSISTENT SAVINGS EVERY DAY !

I

■■ M Ft
■■ fl fiw

Im

'RO

n In W

n ■■ M

BLANS
I I

■

W&gt;
■B
WW
WW1
■

15c

2

RADIO BRAND

NO 2
CANS

oS

F* I
1 I
CODFISH

■■

VELVET
BRAND
bon
l
pc

CONSOMME
PEPPER POT

TOMATO
VEGETABLE

22c

BEEF
MOCK TURTLE
ALICE BRAND

ONE CENT
SALE
■CENT BRINGS HOME THE EXTRA

Here is the sale you have been waiting for.

NO. 1 CAN

PACKAGE

You pay the regular price lor any item on

uie and by adding only one penny, you may have another one of the »amt Hem.

Now

is the time to stock up and save money.

4

OYSTER CRACKERS -10c
SPAGHETTI
3 C"* 25c
SALMON
K 12c
TUNA FISH
2 c"" 25c
APRICOTS ST 3X415c
QUAKER OATS
.-19c
PETTIJOHNS
n&lt; 21c
TEA
mission inn
I Lrt PNEST GREEN JAPAN
.
1 lb. 23c
DI p r
RlbC

BEEF STEW
“OLD FASHIONED"
1 ’/a Lb. Con

Theatrical Cold Cream, 1 lb. .

4 E
Iw

fi
rabbit

Aipirin Tablets, 100'

MALT-O-MILK

40c

CHOCOLATE FLAVORED

COD

04
I

HEALTH DRINK
16 ox. Can

...U.o'

POST'S
BRAN
FLAKES

Glycerine Supperiterias,

BAKER'S
BREAKFAST

MU* «ia

4 4
I I

Log Cabin Syrup

4Oc

Fine Needle Balm

a Pin,* su

COCOA
Vj LB.
CAN

.

Infants . .

pensla*

«I E
O

LARGE
BOX

ROSE
Msay Deltahtful Weyii

DRY GREEN PEAS
lk5c
RED KIDNEY BEANS 2 . 15c
NAVY BEANS GRADE 3- 10c
SUGAR XI? 52c
54c

Big Days - Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday

THESE ARE ONLY A FEW OF THE MANY Ic SALE BARGAINS.

HORMEL'S

fancy blue

comau”**

&gt;1.1* HM

W.I., M,

A .oolH-B ond

Tin 23c

Boric Acid Powder (Sifter

chopp«i ‘l

Syrup

High Grade ACME FEEP^

SCRATCH FEED ."ta* $1.79
EGG MASH »«u. &gt;xc 1.99
DAIRY FEED iUfrZt 1.28

SUNRAE
'ctfcAMS'
WHITENS
I
BLEACHES Balti, g
KILLS ODORS
*

Coater Oil, 3 Obi.

.

u _

C

NUSp°0wo«

■

and
Colonial Club Shorina

4®*bowie

FELS NAPTHA SOAP FLAKES
Small Box 3 for 25c

CLIMALENE 3e.. 25c
SOFTENS W.w. -SAVES Sep ■

IVORY FLAKES

Camay soap

SOUTH SHULTZ.

Mr. and Mra. Frank Ham. Thad

.Lorga Box 24c
---------- ..Bar 5c

BOWLENE *18c
STOPS BATHROOM ODORS I

ASPIRIN TABLETS

nSSPTO-SAN

went

Aniltopiic Powder

Finest Quality 5 Grain

50c Boni. ol 100-

VANlUa 1XTXACT
MMI

Feminine Hygiene

Clinton Hom spent Tuesday night
Wm.
three o'clock
Mr. and Mra. Clarence Boeohler
luncheon in honor of Mrs. Evan and their mother had dinner with
frtendg tn Hagtlngx Bunday.
Mrs. Sarah Kenydn entertained
klso of nine new members who have
recently Joined the society. The her children and grandchildren on
afternoon was pleasantly spent in Sunday. Thlrty-slx were present.
Jeaae Kenyon of Hickory Corners
visiting and playing games.
spent Christmas Eve with hls unMr. and Mrs. Cleon Landon en­
tertained 30 relatives Sunday of last
week tn honor ot their twenty-fifth Icy hU car Bild into a ditch only a
wedding anniversary.
short distance from hls uncle's. The
Mrs. Elmer Marlow has been ill boraes soon pulled him out and no
during the post week with influenza.
MIm Mabel Hom of Battle Creek
of last week in Lansing.
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Henney entertained the Fred Hom. from Tuesday until Sat­
urday, and Mr. and Mrs Cenard
lings High school, including thatr Smith at Hastings spent Christmas
teacher, A. B. Becker, at a sleigh­ afternoon with them.
ride party. Friday night After a
Mra. Ida Ruth spent Christmas
10 mile ride, they returned to the with her daughter. Mra. Effie Hull
Henney home and enjoyed games and family in Hutings.
and refreshments
Mr. and Mrs. Will Gates had a
Several enjoyed the aluminum family dinner Christmas for their
demonstration at the Grange hall children and grandchildren.
Thursday evening.
Lora* Bonneville visited relatives
Mrs Jay Smith is convalescing
now from her second operation. Her
friends hope she may soon be well.
The young people's eholr met at
Byron Moody and family of South
Henney Monday night for practice. Maple Grovt spent Sunday with
Miss Wheeler, her niece. Mtas Ruth hls sister, Mrs. Martha Horn and
Wheeler, of Freeport and a friend. family.
Miu Summers, of Charlotte were
John Mlnzey spent Saturday with
present.
hls niece, Mra. Mina Pranshka. at
Mr. and Mra. Canno Nichols and Brush Ridge. little son of Bogota. Northern Mich­
SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
igan. visited at the home of the talter'a sister. Mrs. Ralph Henney. and Last peek's Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Harve Cheeseman
other relatives and friends during
and family spent Christmas with
Mlsa Maude Umholds and Jack thbir parents. Mr. and Mrs. Bam
Sigwold of Niles were over Sunday Buxton, at Banfield.
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. John Rob­
inson.
tertolnMt their children. Mr. and
Mra. Clayton Jarrard and frvflta
HIGHBANK.
and Marcda of Dowling. Mr. and
Last Week's Leiter.
Mrs. Keith Jarrard and Jimmy. Joe
The Moore school teacher and pu­ and Rom of the Mayo dUtrlcl, Mr.
pils are enjoying a week's vacation. and Mra. Robert Gray and Mr. and
Mra. Vem Elliston and Richard of
Christmu tree Thursday cvennlg.
West Vermontville for Christmas
Mtas Helen Skidmore, teacher of dinner.
the Cedar Creek school, spent a
Mrs. Lulu Gray entertained Bun­
week's vacation with her parents, day. Mr. and Mra. Leon Gray and
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Skidmore.
family of West Vermontville, Mr.
Mr. and Mra. WIU Hawblita of and Mra. Harold Gray and Donna
the Branch district spent Christmas of East Assyria and Mr. and Mra.
day with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Haw- Robert Gray.
blltz.
Mr. and Mra. Grover Marshall
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Reid enter­ attended a family gathering at the
tained their children and their fam­ home of Mr. and Mra. Chas Cobb
ilies for dinner on Christmu day.
of Battle Creek. Christmas day.
Seward Walton, who is attending
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Jarrard re­
school at Naperville. XU., is home for ceived word that their daughter.
the holiday vacation.
Mra.
Clarence
Cunningham, of
Rev. and Mra. E. Rhoades and Bellevue underwent an emergency
family went to Ohio Monday to operation for appendicitis at the
spend
Christmas
wilh relatives Hayes-Green hospital al Charlotte.
there. Miss Bernice, who has been Saturday night.
spending tlie post month in'Ohio,
The neighbors gave Mr. and Mrs.
will return with them.
Peter Hoffman and V|ctor a fare­
Miss Velma Hoffman of Jackson well party Friday evening. Mr. and
spent the holidays with her parents, Mra. Hoffman are moving to the
Mr. and Mra. George Hoffman.
Rich farm near Kalamo soon.
Mr. and Mrs Clare Marshall of
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lapham
Bellevue and Earl of Marshall and a daughter. December 27.
Mr. and Mra. Worth Green and son
Loyn Welker of the Brighton CCC
were Christmu day guests of Mr camp spent a few days with hls
and Mra. Curt Marshall.
aunt. Mrs. L. W. Jarrard and fam­
Mr. and Mra. .Ernie Skidmore and ily.
family spent Christmu day with
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Houghtalin In
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Hoffman vis­
Uie Striker district.
Mra. Esther Marshall of Nashville ited the former's cousin, Mra. Fran­
was a guest at Mr. and Mrs. Dewey ces Hendershott, last Friday at her
home near Hendershott Comers.
Jones' over Christmas.
Mra. Mina Aldrich of Delton, who
hu spent the put two weeks at the
YANKEE SPRINGS.
Church services—Sunday school home of Mr. and Mra. Clyde Walton,
al two. preaching at 3. Rev. Hough­ relumed home Monday.
ton. pastor. Wc expect some out­
The Sunday school officers for
side music, come every Sunday, so this year of the South Maple Grove
you will not miss the music.
Sunday school are! Supt., Jay Nor­
Born to Mr. and Mra. Richard ton; Asst. Supt., Ward Chceseman;
Gardner. Dec. 24lh. a ten and half Secy., Clyde Walton; Treu., LUlle
pound son. Hls name is Richard. Cheeseman; librarian, Dorothy Nor­
Jr.
ton: pianist, Enid Cheeseman; chor­
Our teacher. Mrs. Howard Cress ister. Sadie Ostroth. The following
«Maye Smelken hu resigned as teachers were also appointed: Be­
teacher in Yankee Springs school ginners. Mary Walton; Intermedi­
Mrs. Cress and her husband have ates. Mina Norton; Young People.
purchased a grocery store in Free­ Lillie Cheeseman; Bible Class, Ward
port. where they will conduct the Cheeseman.
business. We wish them success in
Seward Walton, who lias been
their new venture. The Yankee spending the holiday vacation al
Springs school board wu lucky in home, returned Monday to lhe
securing a teacher to fill the va­ Evangelical seminary al Naperville,
cancy. Mrs. Roy Houghton, who Illinois.
has spent twenty-two years of her
Mr. nnd Mji. Albert Harding left
life in a schoolroom u teacher. Mra. Bunday morning to spend the re­
Houghton comes to us well recom­ mainder of the winter in Florida.
mended. Her father wu a teach­
H1OUBANK.
er for twenty years and her broth­
Mr. and Mra. Harry Green and
ers were teachers. Mrs. Houghton
hu a state certificate/and Ls woli family of BarryviHe and Mr. and
Mra. Worth Green and son. Mar­
qualified.
'
Mrs. Goodin has returned from shall, were New. Year guests at Mr.
Chicago after spending Christmas and Mrs. George Green's.
Mr. and Mra. Frank Hawblitz at­
with hcr children in the city.
Sister Sager, who has been sick! tended the funeral of Glen Bristol
in Marshall Tuesday. They were in
for some time, is better.
BalUe Creek at Mr. and Mra. Frank
THE CROSSROADS.
Jones' New Year's Eve as supper
Mr. and Mra. Lawtle
McBain. guests.
Donald and Jean of Delton. T
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Reid spent
Ketcham of Martin and MIm Jen­ Bunday evening at Mr. and Mrs.
nie McBain and Mtas UUle Christie Will Hawblitz's of the Branch dis­
of Hastings were New Year's guest* trict.
of Mr. and Mrs. John Oook.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Jones and fam­
Mrs. Mildred Rpush of Battle ily of North Nashville were Bunday
Creek came to the home of Mr. and guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Haw.
Mra. Ernest Williams to attend the bllta.
funeral ot WUllam Couch at the
Baltimore church Friday afternoon were Bunday guests of Mr. and MiSj
Dcmaray al Hastings.
8t^*e
Oak Saturday for a visit with Mr.
Mr. and Mra. Raymond Pearce of
and Mra. Albert Wagner.
Three Rivera spent Saturday at Mr.
J1*
Or,fly 8mlth Bnd and Mn. George Green's and also
Mtas Mary Green spent Bunday visited a; Worth Green's.
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Karcher
WEEKS CORNERS.
near Freeport.
School began last Thursday aft­
^Mr». Jennie Page Is on the sick
er a week's vacation.
Mr. and Mra- C. N. Tobias w|U
tfchofl began IhU Moaday own’mg tn thia district after a
two entertain the C. C. 'Cemetery Cir­
cle Jan. 16 for an election of ofweeks' vacation.
Miss Vada Johnson of Saranac ficera with pot luck dinner fur­
hu been visiting Ernest Williams nished by the Circle members.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Dickerson and
and family the pul two weeks.
Ml. and Mrs. James Matthews Jean entertained for New Year's
of Grand Rapids visited Mr. and dinner the following guests: Mr.
and Mrs. H JO. Armour of Fair lake.
Mrs Clyde Btedge Friday,

srtLA’"*hu

Another now uac for cotton la family of Litchfield.' Mr. and Mra.

I € THOMAS STORES
TTffT

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE
Telephone 2115

HmUho, Mich.

t Ot Hastings.
feet wide, and nsttre than 15.000
Johnson spent
square yards of cotton fabric will be lhe week end at Vestaburg.
used a.s a reenforcing underlayer. A
Mr. and Mra. Fay Whitworth and
stretch of highway similarly ren- son of the Culver district were Sunenforoed was recently built In
ttay dinner guests ot Mr. and Mrs.
Prank Matteson.

Start.

�Tint
Ben Norman and son Howard and
wife of thia place.
Mr. and Mrs. Jkmcs Hermlnette
entertained at a Christmas dinner,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Her­
In This Meeting at Delton hls
mlnette of near Prairieville and her
Methodiit Church Next
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zim­
merman of Springport, also her
Wednesday
brother and hls wife, Mr. and Mrs.
The .»econd winter district meet­ David Zimmerman and four chil­
ing of the Barry county Farm Bur­ dren of Fort Wayne.
eau will be held at the Methodist
church Delton,
next Wednesday
January 15. starting with a business
meeting at 11:00 A. M. Then will
Safety Campaign.
come community singing, followed' '
by dinner at noon, served by tlfej r* School organizations will sponsor
Ladles' Aid.
f / the State of Michigan Safety Cam­
A "Farm Youth Day” progrswj.ts
planned for the afternoon. Barry may obtain a sticker for the wlndCounty 4-H Clubs will be represent­ । shield upon which it says. “I DRIVE
ed by delegations and speakers. The SAFELY,” in white on a circle of
Smith-Hughes department of the red. This is surrounded by a larger
county’s agricultural schoolswill be white circle upon which we find the
represented by the "Future Farmers words. ’STATE -OP MICHIGAN
of America" organization. Charles SAFETY CAMPAIGN.” A pledge
Whitney, of Leslie, Michigan, a card is obtained with the sticker.
member of that organization, will This card contains the fallowing
tell of its benefits and /explain its statements:
in co-operation with the State of
work.
Benj. J. Hennink. director of the Michigan Safety Campaign and In
Junior League of the Michigan State the Interest of safe driving, I pledge
myself
to: .
Farm Bureau, will discuss Its work
1. Drive carefully at moderate
with Michigan rural youth. The
Farm BUreau has a very worth­ speed.
2. Observe traffic signals and stop
while program for the farmer young
folks of Michigan. You will be in­ signs.
3. Not to pass an hills and to take
terested to learn about it.
The Barry County Farm Bureau curves carefully.
4. To signal my intentions before
Invites not only its membership, but
all who are Interested in rural life turning or stopping.
5. To be aonstantly watchful for
In this county, and particularly in
unexpected
moves of pedestrians
the young folks on the farm, to at­
and can. *
tend this nteetlng at Delton.
6. Not to take chances.
Barry county has added a man for
7. To be courteous of other driv­
one week per month and a lady for
two weeks per month, to assist en.
A HUMAN LIFE IS MORE IM­
County Agent Foster with hls youth
program, with the help of the or­ PORTANT THAN A FEW SEC­
ganization In tlie field some very ONDS OF TIME.
good work should be done with our
New Chemistry Cabinet.
future farmers. Tomorrow's agricul­
A new metal fire proof cabinet for
ture depends on today’s youth—
chemicals Is lo be installed in the
make it cooperative and happy.
science department of the school this
week. Thia will replace the one that
RUTH BARTON GIVES
was damaged by fire recently. The
KEY T0 CHARACTER new chemicals are expected to ar­
rive in time for lhe opening of
school
January 6.
Local People Have Found

FARM FOLKS SHOULD
ALL BE INTERESTED

Her Analyses Often Hit
the Mark
Wb hear frequently discussions of
Ruth Barton's work by Banner
readers, who have availed them­
selves of her services thru our week­
ly coupons. With few exceptions
they have found the results interestlrfg.
During the crowded holiday per­
iod this service was discontinued for
two weeks but is now resumed so
that any who haw not yet sent to
her for an analysis of their hand­
writing may do so.
A man quite well along In years
told us. recently that he submitted
hls handwriting to her "Just for
fun,” and felt the result almost un­
canny. as she told him in her
analysis of certain things he was
evidently fitted to do. He said that
while hls age prohibited realizing
them, he had always felt In hls
heart that he could have done just
those things had opportunity and
faith In himself at Uie right time
In life been hls.
Perhaps a younger person can
benefit by this man’s experience
and be guided in early life to some
work or a profession that will lead
to success and satisfaction In the
years to come. It costs but little to
moke the experiment.

PRAIRIEVILLE.
Miss Beverly Brown of Hastings
spent several days with Mr. and.Mrs. Silas Doster.
George Hyde spent the week end
with Mrs. Nettle Hyde and Paul at
Hostings.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pierce of
Hastings called on Mr. and Mrs.
Rankin Hyde Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Silos Doster spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joshua
DeCrocker of Richland, the occasion
being Mr. DeCrocker's 86lh birtbpay.
"Lyle Billings attended a New
Year's party at the home of Mr.
and Mn. O. E. Harrington of Gull
lake. ’
Robert Conway and friend at­
tended the revival meeting at Hick­
ory Comers Friday night.
Vaughn Mott went to Hart Mon­
day on business. He will stay In­
definitely.
Mrs. Bcm Hughes, Mrs. Henry
Rogen and Charles Hughes have
gone to Northville to visit Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Freydl.
Glenn Leeper. Clark and Alvin
Nottingham returned to their school
duties at Plainwell Monday; Marian
Palmer and Cleone Woodman to
Hastings school: Elizabeth. Junior
and John Woods. Jean and Joan
Rogers. Lyle and Lets Billings, Ar­
liss and Marva Cal throp and Ger­
ald and Charles Barber to the Kel­
logg Agricultural school at Gull
lake.
The members of the Good Fellow­
ship class of the Sunday School at­
tended a New Year's party at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. George Cowels of Delton.
Mn. Fred J. Hughes* condition is
reported as somewhat improved this
monday morning.
Mr. and Mn. Paul Nagel of Gull
lake w«m Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mn. Verne Calthrop and
callers were Dan Erb and Thomas
Ostrander of Delton.
Mrs. Jennie Baumgras will enter­
tain the Triple Link Club at the
Will Mullen home Friday. AU day
meeting, co-operative dinner and
prognim.
/

OBANa!nrtu&amp;

Christmas Baskets Distributed.
Twenty-sewn Christinas baskets
were packed and distributed tlie day
before Christmas by a committee of
lhe Women's Club with the assist­
ance of Miss Rose GeFoe of the
County Health Department and Mr.
Bell, superintendent of the school.
The committee representing the club
was composed of Mrs. Swift. Mrs.
French. Mra. Dleterick and Mrs.
Bennett. Tlie provisions came from
donations of the- High school boys
and girls and their parents and was
directed by Mrs. Wolverton, Prin­
cipal of the High school.
T. K. Trumpet.
Notice Is hereby given that the
subscription to the T. K. Trumpet
will be 3c per copy at school and 5c
per copy If mailed.

Seal Sale.
The Health Committee of The
Student Council sponsored Uie sale
of Christmas Seals this year. The
sale closed Thursday before the
close of school so that the reports
could be made and the money
turned in by the time that the
Christmas holiday began. We can
think of no better way to give the
public our report than to quote from
a part of the letter which we re­
ceived from the Michigan Tuber­
culosis AssoclaUon which follows:
"Dear Mr. Bell:
We are in receipt of $6337 In re­
turn for Tuberculosis Christmas
Seals sold in Middleville. May we
take this opportunity to express our
sincere appreciation for your kind
efforts? For any progress that is
made in the fight against tuber­
culosis during 1036, you and your
co-workers con be justly proud.
Without your aid just so much less
could be accomplished.
•
Sincerely,
M. L. Arrowsmith.”
NORTHWE8T THORNAPPLE.
Last Week's Letter.
Mrs. Arlolta Fisher and sons of
Grand Rapids spent Tuesday night
and Christmas day wilh her broth­
er, Robert Tolan. and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Thomas of
Galesburg were Wednesday and
Thursday guests of their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kermeen
and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kermeen
were Christmas guckts of the latter's
daughter. Fern, and aU were six
o'clock dinner guests of Mn. Bmead
and son of Battle Creek.
Mrs. John Allen of MiddlevlUe
spent Christmas with her son Glenn
Allen and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lor­
en Tungate and family were guests.
Mr. and Mrs. Ely McNaughton
and family of Middleville were
Christmas day guests of the tetter's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Otto.
Tlie Nosh Bellied el and Earl
Cranes families are enjoying a tele­
phone again from the Caledonia
Exchange.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Ifermeen and
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kermeen were
Bunday guests of the latter's mother
and husband^ Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Snyder of-Bo.’Hastings.
Mr. ana Mrs. David Perrault of
Middleville and Mr. and Mra. Ed.
Perrault and family were Bunday
guests of the latter’s daughter. Mrs.
Floyd Noffke and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Baker re­
turned last week from Three Oaks
where they attended the funeral of
Mrs. Baker's father.
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Stimson and
father, Laplerre Stimson, and Mr.'
and Mrs. Alton Flnkbelner attended
the funeral of their aunt, Mra.
Henry Delta, of Cleveland. Ohio.
Mr. and Mra. Otto Schantz and
family spent Christmas evening
with the latter's parents, Mr. and
Mra. George Pickett of Caledonia.
Vere Carter of Pleasant Hill and

Last Week's Letter.
Mn. Charles Crawford Is not so
well at this writing.
Mr. and Mn. John Foote and
Jimmie Elliott of Pontiac were Bun­
day guests of relatives at this place.
Marvins Bagley returned to’ hls
home Bunday from Crispe hospital,
and is making a fine recovery from
hls operation which hls many
friends are glad to hear.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Norman entertained at a Christmas dinner. Mr.
Transportation facilities range an
and Mra. Charles Hensen and the way from Ocean liners which
daughters Phyllis and Pauline of will seat thousands of persons to
Grand Rapids and Mr. and Mra. roller skates which will seat one.

warttngm banner, tbumday,

HENDERSHOTT.
The postppned Christmas meeting
of the M Inion ary Society will be
held January 10 al the Henderaholt
schoolhouse. plajta will be liven by
the Quimby and Hendershott group*
and music furnished by the Good­
will orchestra. The collection will be
used to help Miss Etha Nagter. who
15 home on a furlough, to return to
her missionary duties in- China.
The.immunity club met at the

home'of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bro­
gan for lheir New Year party. A
large crowd enjoyed the fine dinner
and general good time.
Mr. and Mrs. Orlle Fisher visited
their sister. Mrs. Mllly Haynes Sun­
day. We are glad to report that Mrs.
Haynes is better and we all hope for
her steady improvement.
Miss Storer started school again
Thursday after a week’s vacation.
On Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs.
Ernie Matteson called at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Whitworth
in the Week's district lo see Mrs.
Wallace Preston (Elsie Whitworth)
who is ill and being cared for by
her mother,
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Van Vranken
called on the latter's niece, Mrs. Al­
berta Lancaster, in the Gregory dis­
trict Sunday afternoon.
Fifteen members of Rennie Mott's
family surprised him on New Year’s
night. They enjoyed the evening
and the oyster supper. The party
was not only a surprise to Mr. Mott
but a celebration of hls father's and
mother's birthdays.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kruger of Ho­
mer spent the first part of last week
with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ren­
nie Mott.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Storer and
Eloise of Hastings were New Year's
guests of the Brill family and at­
tended the New Year party al War­
ren Brogan's.
The Ladles’ Aid will meet January
16 at the home of Mrs. A. C. Clark.
The Indies will have their Jello to
sell at tjiat time.

DOWLING.
The Dowling extension group will
meet al lhe home of Mrs. Lora Wil­
cox on Wednesday Jan. 15 for an all
day meeting and pot luck dinner at
noon. All who can are urged lo be
present as the final fitting of pat­
terns and sleeves will be taken up
at that time. Each member is also
requested to bring notebooks and
pencils.
Murray Otis, who spent the holi­
day vacation at the home of hls
aunt, Mrs. Florence Layle at Clarks­
ville. returned home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bacheller
and Mrs. Blanche Padelford ot Has­
tings were week end visitors at
Lloyd Gaskill's. They left Sunday
morning with their house trailer for
Florida and other southern states
where they will remain through the
cold weather.
Mrs. Cora Asplnall and Mr. and
Mrs. Orin Cole were called to Ann
Arbor Friday morning by the critical
illness of Mrs. Asptnall's son. Curwin. Mr. Asplnall died Saturday
morning and the funeral was held
Tuesday at the Hebble Chapel in
Battle Creek. Enroute to Ann Arbor
on Friday Mrs. Asplnall and Mr. and
Mrs. Cole met with an accident
caused by a truck, loaded with buzz
poles, which had broken down and
was parked in the road without rear
lights. They suffered slight injuries
and the car was badly damaged
causing a delay of several hours.
Mrs. josh Vanderllc formerly of
this place is reported as having been
quite sick the past week with diph­
theria at her home in Irving town­
ship.
Miss Nyla Jean Pierce spent a
part of last week at the home of her
aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mra. Albert
Klbllnger at Battle Creek.
Dwight Ren iff, nephew of Milton
D. Trafford and Isaac Jansen of

Kalamazoo were Sunday guests at
the Trafford horns.
’ .
Mrs. Anna Pierce accompanied
Mrs. Etta Blough of Hastings to Ann
Arbor Monday where lhe latter at­
tended the eye clinic. They returned
home Friday.
The Ladles' Aid Society will serve
dinner at the church on Thursday.
Jan. 16. with Mra. Ella Smith and
Mrs. Etta Stanton in charge. The
community is Invited.

January t, iim
DELTON.
Orville Kahler of Grand Rapids
to visiting relatives In Delton.,
Mr and Mrs Glenn Williams and
children of Kellogg farm spent New
Yeor's with Mr. and Mre. John
Ad«ms
r»
Ur. n t™,

becoming -guardian of a small boy,
is Jolted to find he has taken a girl
to raise, seventeen and pretty.
Charlotte Is called Charite, hence
the error. Why the jolt? Wall, I*r7 I* engaged to the imperious Vlvl,n Smythe-Kersey and Is further
h™-"dd'n W .*
.unt, T«

New

LOWPRI

turned from a two weeks' visit with delights him not. Neither does it
relatives tn the south.
delight Vivian nor the aunt. Charlie
Mr. and Mrs.
Ellis
E. , Faulkner
.
X— .—
—7busl. arrivrs
arrives
from
irom
Arxonsas
Arkansas
accompanied.
were in Lansing
Turaday
on
b
Uncle
Aleck
7^^,accompanied
llkf h^self. I,

product of the Ozarks. Bhe I
STATE ROAD.
ZndrtamiiivWMh*°n Robert 1 EtarU by calling Larry. "Papa” and
The Fisher P. T- A. will meet this
nndVra
-n by
but wartn afFriday evening. Mrs. Archie Cun­ tertliJSSJl izJi
fecUon&gt;‘krd the attitude.
ningham and Mn. James O'Connor
lbut “ fBUs 10 “mooth Charlie's way
will furnish refreshments and Mrs.
Ti, i w d J
X f I ’rith the women. The tetter asPearl Mathews &gt;nd Mrs. Elsie
,nn
c^y" i5urnc active enmity and plan to oust
Gothard the program.
2,2^
Rl!faeU»..,nd
I ‘h* •hULblllles." Farclal situations
devriop
OcU' b,undCT
« °
f
Miss Barbara Kennedy of Grand u? .nd Ur. £h£te.
develop frOm
from the *social
blunders
of
1। 1tlie
.'“.
&gt;»• .
Rapids is spending her vacation Sr.
new arrivals, especially ’
when
with her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Aunt Fanny Famham. determined ,
William Smith.
to moke Uncle Aleck eam hls board
Mn. Janet Pettenglll and Mn. El­
/nd&gt; ,.W
w11111 society butler. Conspiracies against
sie Sothard spent Friday afternoon
2 Cblca«°’ . the Ozarktens recoil; but Larry’s
with Mn. Dora Coleman and Mn.
po“*Uon h*
Fo uncomfortable
Ines Haynes of Hendershott.
“ T"evfn I that, to save him punishment, the
Our teacher. Miss Helen Butolph
and a half pound son. Bruce Irwin., pB|r depart only to return after
spent her vacation with friends In
™
monins on. so amercnu unarWest Virginia.
nnY'i3r‘
raoth' 1,e 13 barely recognizable In her sucMrs. Blanche Merrick has re­
JT.L rx-i CMSorglorious Charlotte, who
turned home from Pennock hospital
.
of the P**- flutters all masculine hearts. Uncle
and Is gaining slowly.
ten
Telephone
Company
was
held Aleck. U*.
undergone an amaxMn. Kenneth Clark is sick at the
iin the church basement Saturday lng change. A play of plot In which
home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
r^L^ &lt;Urrctors Wete farce-comedy Is tempered by heart
Will Newton. A baby .girl was bom
। re-elected for another year.
interest and touches of pathos. Ml­
living only a few houn.
.....
*^
r’ BMW
a*’d .......
Mre. Llewellyn Erb and nor roles Include Larry's cynical colMr. and Mrs. Lyle Fisher are re­ ! Lamar
have been
been spending
snenrtlnff several
several t.
«. _ ■___ ______ . ...
.
Lamar have
covering from their accident. Mrs. !days with Mr. and Mrs. Verne Cal­ lege pal; a haughty society matron;
her snappy son; a comical Irish
Fisher will go back to her school
throp at Prairieville.
maid; and her Irish policeman fi­
Monday.
Mr. and Jdrs. Art Collison of Kal­ ance. The cast of characters are:
The little son of Mr. and Mn.
amazoo spent Saturday night and Norn Malone. Mrs. Prances Nor­
Archie Cunningham, who broke hls
Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. Marshall wood; Officer Tim McGrill. Leon
arm a few weeks ago. is in a Gnnd Norwood.
Doster: Mrs Fannie Farnham. Mrs.
Rapids hospital for treatment. Mrs.
Mr. and Mra. J. C. Horton enter­ Blanche Eddy: Lurry Elliott, Joe
Cunningham Is with him.
tained the latter’s mother and; Tort; Ted Hartley. Max Reynolds;
Coy Stowell of Hastings spent
brother from Marcellus last week. ।I Vivian Bymthe-Kersey. Miss Marie
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Clifton
H. T. Chandler received the sad. Hughes; uncie
Uncle Aleck Twiggs. Mar­
Becker.
news Sunday evening that hls ste-ishall
shall NorwoodNorwood: Char
Charlie Hopps, Mrs.'
New Year’s guests at the Clifton
Becker home were, Mr. and Mrs.
?^L7n
CT
C
.
r
',2
d
£
0
’
Smythe-Kersey.
Mra.
... .
I— 1-------- -------- '
Mrs. Leda
izoa HarrlngnarringVictor Henney and children. Mr. lOWlne
Ah*
___ ~____
—________ —
lowlng a serious oneratlnn
operation
She ton Mortimer
Smythe-Kersey.
Dan
and Mrs. Dudley Kennedy of Town
43 years Of
ftnd cavea flvc Dannlels. Don't forget the dates
Line. Coy Stowell and Lena Becker. children.
,
•
Jan. 31 and Feb. I.
Homer and Majesty.
Mrs. Bertha Bush attended a W.
Mr. and Mrs. James Sothard spent
F. M. 8. district officers' meeting In
TOWN LINE.
Thursday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Grand Rapids. Tuesday. ’
Hale Carpenter at Carlton Center.
Rev. Ralph Bates made a business Last Week's Letter.
Two cars have gone into the ditch
Mr. and Mrs. Hale Lepard spent
trip to Grand Rapids Tuesday.
at the foot of cotton’s hill during
The Inland Lakes Garden Club Christmas evening with the former’s
this Icy spell. No one was hurt and will meet with Mrs. Blanche Stev­ mother. Mra. Alice Lepard of Lake
slight damage done to the cars.
Odessa.
ens Thursday. Jan. 9. Subject:
One belonged to Mrs. Donna Slo­
The Principles of Design as Related
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tasker spent
cum and the other to a Kalamazoo to Home Grounds. Roll call: Your
Christmas day with the latter’s par­
man.
favorite roee. Program committee: ents. Mr. and Mrs. John Robinson,
Belle Barnum and Maude Hughes. of Carlton.
PODUNK.
The Milo. Prairieville and Delton
Mr. and Mrs. Frances ColemAn
Last Week's Letter.
quarterly conference and church
Mr. and Mrs. Monta Replogle en­ night will be held Monday, Jan. 13, and daughter Betty of South of Has­
tertained at Christinas dinner Mr. at Delton. Pot luck supper at 6:30. tings and Mr. and Mrs. John Mc­
and Mrs. Dale Sponselier and fana­ This meeting is opened to all peo­ Leod ot 8. W. Woodland were guests
lly nnd Harvey Furlong and wife of ple of the community. You arc in­ of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rcahm,
Christmas,
Nashville and Cecil Oler And family vited to come and get acquainted
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Winkler
and Melvin Poff of Freeport.
with T)r. L. L. Dewey, our new dis­
and Richard spent Christmas with
Amil Bauchman Is slowly recover­ trict superintendent.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert McLeod of
ing.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Norwood Woodland.
The Geo. Ransoms entertained for spent Friday night and Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. E- J. Bates and fam­
Christmas dinner Mr. and Mrs. Don wilh Mr.'ind Mrs. Mason Norwood
ily had Christmas dinner for the
Putnam and Geo. Wlckwlre and son in Kalamazoo and also visited the
following: Mr. nnd Mrs. George
of. Bonfield and Kittle Hinchman of new boy. Bruce Irwin Baughart, at
Bates. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bates of
Hastings.
Borgess hospital.
East Woodland. Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Minnie Shrlner and Mrs. Adele
On account of the Church Night Van Zandt and daughter. Betty of
Wellman of Jackson and Maude and supper coming on the same
Detroit and Ben Schneider of near
Schomp of Hastings visited Geo. night as the Community meeting,
Woodbury. .
Ransom who Is Hl. Christmas.
the Community meeting and supper
Tom Robinson of carlton Is visit­
Pearl Hull had the misfortune to will be held on Tuesday night of
ing hls sister. Mrs. Harold Tasker
cut her arm badly one day last next week Instead of Monday night.
week.
Everyone please bear In mind the
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Winkler
Mr. and Mrs. Cody Laubaugh and change from Monday night to Tues­
and Richard visited Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Anns Laubaugh 4nd daughter day night. Jan. 14. instead of Jan.
Harry Sandbrook ul
of South WoodGladys spent Christmas at Nashville 13. A good program is being pre-! land Sunday p. M.
at Mr. Kinney's.
\
pared for each meeting.
।
are sorry to report that Miss
Mr. and Mrs. Theron Caln enter­
The comedy In three acts. “Here Phyllis Tasker who has been ill for
tained their son of New York and Comes Charlie.” will be staged In. three weeks Is still under the docdaughter of Lansing. Christmas.
the Delton Community hall on Frl- ( tor’s care and Is still confined lo
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Smith spent day and Saturday nights. Jan. 31 her bed.
the week end at Dowagiac with her and Feb. 1, by the Delton Com­
father who is ill.
munity players. Mr. and Mra. Mar­
Ofi^of our colleagues comes to the
shall Norwood have It in charge. conclusion that If that Townsend
A New York cinema holds 6000 Outline of the play is that Larry El - old-age pension plan Is adopted, life
people and Includes a creche, rest Uolt, young broker, thinking he is will begin at 60.
rooms, dance halls and restaurants.
In order to please everybody, one
department specializes in showing
films.

Food Storaa in 1936!

WHITE CORN

li es,

PEAS

Wa. 1 &lt;aa

HOMINY

Na. 2 cm

GREEN BEANS

Na. 1 ua

ic

WAX BEANS

Na. 1 «m

Ic

CAI T

I

cm

Di—end Crystal
Fl.te «r Iodized

Ic

Boksr Caffe* c"*~
• k “• 21c
Bect Sugar
2C 1
$1.00
Pure Lard
»•»
2 “ 29c
Navy Beam Hiai,u 10
lie
Bulk Rice
»•“
2 “ 11c
Whitehouse Milk
3
19c
Splendid Flour
mha u« ygc
Wheaties
|0c
Excel Soda
I*
17c
Rajah Salad Dressing
*•29c

MATCHES
WALDORF

6
T0ILtT tissus

21c

6 “»■ lie

SPARKLE CCLAT1N DESSERT

6

LIMA BEANS

3 “ 21c

CAMPBELL'S
RAISINS

SOUPS
Except Chicken

DEL MONTE
Seeded or Seedleu

21c

3

35c

3

Me

P &amp; G or Kirk's Soap

6

here

Keyko Oleo
Nutley Oleo

2
2

lhe.

19c

21c
lbs.
29c
2 lb. eaa 17c
A &amp; P Stringless Beans| No. 2 can lie
Corn
2 can* 21c
Mello Whealt Finest Faria. g pkgs. 25c
La Choy cousif&lt;AnbN dinner
J5C

La Choy Sprouts

— 10c

La Choy Vegetables
La Choy Noodles

“•27c

La Choy Brown Sauce
Seminole Tissue
4
Red Cross
T0WEIJ

Miracle Whip

17c

19c
rolls

Me
37c

Kraft's

LITTLE KERNEL CORN -‘-10c

POST TOASTIES
CORN FLAKES

ML

Ground-Grip

.

yiretfone tires

KELLOGG'S

BRAN FLAKES

KUU,,'.

PUFFED RICE

10c

KELLOGG'S PEP

RICE KRISPIES

** 10c

10c

KELLOGG'S

designed to eliminate all need ot
chains. FIRESTONE GROUND

GOOD COAL makes warm friends,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleased with the fine,
even heat. Low in ash, and longburning. Try a ton today and
save on-your fuel bills.
SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Prices:—
16% Dairy—$1.55 per 100 lbs.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 lbs.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lbs.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lbs.

mud Without help of chains.

NLLSBUSVS. VSs, 1.0*
SUNNYFIILD. I/Ss, Me

COLD MEDAL. 1/Sc, 1.09

LILY WHITE............. -»fe
-------------

FOR TRUCKS
SIZE
PBICES
32x6 Truck Type
$27.65
32x6 H. D........................ 3645
6.00-20 ........................... 1635
6.50- 20 ........................... 2L95
7.00-20 .
35.20
740-20 .
740-24 .
845-20 .
4930
835-24 .
54.75
9.00-20 .
60.75
9.00-24 .
65.95
9.75- 20 .
7945
9.75- 24 .
85.05
10.50- 20
92.10

FOR CARS
SIZE
4.40/440/4.75-21
4.75/5.00-10 ....
4.50/4.75/5.00-20
545/540-17 ....
S45/540-1B —6.00-16 .................

FBICES

8.50
845
10.65
1135

HEAVY DUTY
(HEE
PRICES
4.40/440/4.75-21 ....$ 930
4.75/5.00-10 ............. - 1040
440/4.75/5.00-20 .... 1035
. 645/530-17
12.56
5.25/5.50-18 ................... 12.75

Drive in safety . . . install Trico Vacuum Fan to
keep your windshield free of steam . . . frost
Sleet On display at our Service Station.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company *
Hastings Telephone 2257

Vuleaatatag.

Deetric,

Washing

Dealers in Wool, Grain, Teed, Flow, Balt, Lime,
Cement and Goal

IONA Flour, l/Ss ...75c
Splendid Floor. I/Sof 45c

REGULAR

CAS PRICE

BLUE

mUNULU

MOTOR
FUEL

Florida Oranges juicy 8
39c
3 LU. 17e
Bananas hI
Calif. Oranges
2 ■&gt;- 45c
Head Lettuce
5c
Wagner Apples10
MEATS

Lard Homo Rendered
Bacon Squares
Pork Steak
Oysters
Slab Bacon AaySteePteM
Fillets
Roast Beef

2 LU.

�M. OtaM. M. Tatatat Mr. aMMM.
Ftoyd tabtaa of WImmmo woro
FEEDING BIRDS.
John. Gorden and Virginia Hav­
Of all the things we can do for
' berlin.
■
\
ens
attended
a
party
last
Saturday
birds in winter the most Important
Garland Chilson who has teen on Tuesday.
at tlie home In Martin of Mr. and
Miss Bartha Miller
Mrs Wm. Gillespie given in honor ! spending (he holidays with hls par­
of the birthday of Mtas Sara and ents. Mr. and Mrs. Forest Chltaoo.
glase on the snow and weeds, are Miss
Delton spent Bunday aflShirley GlUcspie.
. .
x____
, Ind-, returned Bunof South Bend,
they tn danger of starvation. It can­
ih her stater . Mr and MAThe community meeting al tho day. Mr. and Mrs. CM
Miller. and other home
not be mpeated too often that it U
Good wm
Will church last
—Saturday
—« brought him back jp&lt;nt
put into effect a hunger that kills the birds, not the Hood
KLINGENSMITH.
Mr and Mrs SpeUman Oaeey gnd
“ attended
‘ ‘
night waa well
and the• with Mra- Martha Chyw
Michigan #».«!&gt;■»
sons attended an ontar supper and
talk given b/ Dr. R. B. Harkness of
the Kellogg Foundation was very Hope zpent Sunday with her grand■■
instructive. Miss Mary Waters bad parenta, Mr. and Mra. Um Ferguann. baby girl. She will answer to the
Mott-a surprise cm Rennie.
Mtaa Emma johncock reiurnad to
and Mra. Darrell
charge of the program.
Port Huron Bunday after (pending laspham formerly lived near Oates’ ChHatxnaa.
EAST DELTON.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weyerman and
11 months of 1935. lhe total*.
comers.
on spent
family of Hastings spent Sunday
the holidays with hcr parenta.
Mazon NeWton
I JJI#. Bounties were paid on |
permanent feeding, berry- Uon with her father in Kalamazoo.
Albert
Green
and
Archie
Burd
Bunday
with
Mr.
i
with Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Haynes.
Mrs.
Lucy
Davenport
viatted
Mon
­
EdN«wMiss Genevieve Erway was a Kal­
g shrubs can be planted, and
spent
Bunday
with
home
folks
re
­
day and Tuesday at the Ernest
Don't forget the Cedar Creek
amasoo visitor last week.
M wolf pelts and one wolf
Cemetery Circle Wed., Jan. U,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert McGlocklln Chalker home al Kalamasoo and re­ turning to their work near Dowling
and either left where it grew
porta that the new.baby boy la do­ Sunday evening.
daughter Freda of Cartton visited
Stewart Waters and family enter­ at Mrs. O. N. Tobtas.* It's the an­
&lt;or tied with other grain about a and family and Louis Havens of ing fine.
We understand the tools have ar- hls sister. Mr. and Mrs. Will Moors, tained for New Year's dinner Clate nual all day meeting and election
Hastings spent New Year's day at
______,j Now this is news and ta a true
and daughter Sunday.
Dolores and Anita
Louden and family. Rhlcraon Lou­ of officers. Pot luck dinner. Hope
fact 11 months. Included in the! Seeds arc the food of a large pro- Forrest Havens. ____________
pccted to begin soon.
Mason Newton of Delton called den and family and John and Ed. to see the men members turn out.
tateh for that period were 1.020 coy-.! portion of the birds. Wheat, oats, spent the remainder of the week fish atory. Mr. and Mra. Russell
The Roberta children have been on Mr. and Mrs. QrvlUe Hammond Willison.
there._____________________________ I Monica of Kalamazoo and Mr. By.
Everyone welcome._________
•to pelts and 51 wolf pells. The sunflower, com. or any prepared
Miss Evelyn Newland visited a ron Cole and two sons of Lansing on the sick list but arc better now. Sunday evening.
Maurice Johncox had the misfor­
. number ot wolf pelta so far certi-1 bird seed will draw them. Suet rubGeorge Grice of Grand Rapids
Mias Susie Phillips Is helping Mn tune to have hls arm broken while
| caught 10 big pickerel on Guernsey
CEDAR CREEK.
fied for bounty payments lisa not'bed* into the bark of trees will be friend in Ionia last week.
spent Sunday at hls home here.
Roy
Erway
and
family
attended
j
Lake
Sunday.
waters in Hastings with bar house- cranking elate Louden's tractor on
The Community Club at the
•quailed Um wolf catch of any ot the i dug out by the brown creeper and
Several young folks of vicinity
the funeral of Louis Brockway In | Mrs. Grant Dickerson and Mra.
Saturday.
schoolhouse Friday night wu wall
-*- —— —---------- u popular with many other birds.
have
been
enjoying
coasting
partlegl
Mr
tnd
ir,-,
Ronald
Haynes
and
Lon Ferguson helped celebrate Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Collison en­ attended. All enjoyed the address
| Other foods which can be put out Hastings last Friday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Warren. Phil- Martha Chamberlin's 75lh birthday, on the Hubbard Hills the past two' ions spent Christmas with Mr and tertained at a six o'clock luncheon by Ellis Faulkner. Mn. Joaephinc
i are: meal-worms, cut-up apples (celn Hastings The last Monday in honor of their fath­
Up and Patty Ann were in Lansing Dec. 28 at lhe home of Mrs. Cham- weeks. Frances Carpinakl had the
McGoldricb Is our next program
The paddiefUh Is the queerest and 1 dar waxwings Uke rotten apples, Sunday.
to hurt ta,
her face and boy, suyed till the week end.
•
i berlain. Mr«. Ferguson has her misfortune to_hurt_
er
Henry Collison's seventy-sixth committee and Mrs. Amy Pease hu
buckwheat,
crackers,
crumbs,
coco.. rarest of all Michigan fish. It has a
hand quite seriously while coasting.
■
■■■ »&gt;►
- ■birthday on the same date.
Glenna DcMolt came home Wed- birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Ool- charge of the supper.
tong, dar-lika snout and is known I nut meat, broken dog biscuits, hemp
judge and Mrs. Stuart Clement nesdav after soendlnx some time
CLOVERDALE.
1 seed, nulmeata of nil kinds, cspeMr. and Mn. Melvin Campbell
called on Mr. and Mrs. Marshall with her daughter Mildred in Has­
Miss Rosemary and Mias Margaret
ASSYRIA.
j daily native nuts or peanuts, rolled
Michigan waters.
Glenn Campbell who nas been 111 'Tripp Saturday afternoon.
tings convalescing -from a broken Art Collison all of Kalamazoo and and daughter of Quimby spent FrlI oats, popcorn, pumpkin or squash Kellogg of Kalamazoo spent the
night and Saturday with hls bister.
The school bus was back on the ankle.
week end wilh Miss Dona Marie with penumonla the past week, at
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Collison of West Mr and Mn. John Gurd. and Sat­
The froxen sltancc of (Lake Su-. seeds, raw or boiled rice.
Job
Monday
morning
after
a
3
Pennels and Miss Oma Jean Garri- lhe home ot hls father. Scott Camp- ■
F.ope the latter being the grand­ urday night and Sunday with Clar­
perior has completely 'enveloped!I Water Is very scarce in the winPINE I AKE.
bell, shows some Improvement.
'weeks’ vacation.
parents of a tittle son which came ence Campbell and family.
iorest-covered Isle Royale and Us [ ter and although it will always draw
Little Shirley Ann Peterson has
Mr. and Mrs. Ban Bellingham and the night before Christmas to
On Christmas day Clifford Conk- been on the sick list but is belter at
Mn. Dorothy Monroe and Mrs.
113 winter residents since the- de­ । birds, in the winter it is even more at the home of Mrs. Archie McNutt's
brighten the home of Mr. and Mrs. Emma Owen called on Mn. Olive
the
twins
were
Sunday
dinner
appreciated.
lln
was
host
to
21
members
of
the
parture of lhe Coast Guard Cutter,
Thursday. Jan. #th. A pot luck din­ Conklin family at his home In lhe this writing.
Gordon Collison of Battle Crack.
I
The
extra
thrill
in
feeding
winter
Campbell and Mn. Mary Owen of
Crawford of Two Harbors, Mlnnc-1
Mr. and Mrs M Tripp and Lois,
ner as usual. Everyone welcome.
Ellis district. Hls staters, tlie Misses Mrs. Esther Burd, Mrs. Green and and Mr. and Mrs. Byrde Doster.
Hastings Wednesday Afternoon.
aota. The visit of the Crawford wm ■ birds comes when a stranger makes
Mias
Dorothy
Meade
of
Kalama
­
School work was resumed on Mon- Lucille entertained Mr. and Mrs.
TcZ1 a call at the feeding station. In
Grace and Elsie Conklin, assisting Gordon spent Tuesday aftcmoori
Mr. and Mra. Henry Wertman
day morning at South Pine Lake. Lavcm Shedd and family with. a spent New Year's day with Mr. and
-i- Michigan we sometimes nee the Ar­ zoo spent last week with Miss Dona Mr. and Mrs. David Conklin. Mr.
... ------- ---------- -------,----- *—whlte- Marie Pennels. returning home Fri­ Ben Conklin and son Dale. Mrs. with Mr. and Mrs Lee Lapham by Miss Mary Willson who had | New Year's dinner.
Mn. Add Simpson of Gull lake.
and family In Maple Grove.
day.
.spent the holiday recess with her I Mr. and Mra. Henry Houvener and
Sylvia Bivens and daughter AraMn. Leo Monroe and Maynard
Mrs. Edith Powers and children belle. Mr. and Mrs. George Conklin.
^a •Stammttt of anU-toxina &lt;Hig- Any Wch unusual visitors
parents at Middleville; at Doster by | family Robert and Esther Wllltaon
HINDS CORNERS.
Arleae Brouard and at North Pine I and Laurida Frits spent New Year's v&lt; me »ee» with her parents. Mr.
for tetanus, meningitis, scarlet fever.! should
re?0,YdA TjH1 ,a c°tnpl®*&lt; spent Saturday afternoon visiting Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stamm and son 1' ;Last Week's Letter.
lake
by
Arthur
Lathrop.
;
evfc
with
Mr.
and
Mra.
Ike
Lelnaar.
imJZhTrt. .rZs
rits^aws .t description, to Audobon headquart- her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Archie. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Case . Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore ___
Lake
oy
I
ere
wnn
mt
.
ana
mis
.
sac
uesnaar.
,
and
Mri
Mr Monroe
and
Johncock.
The following returned to their
Ed. Willison is laid up with a lame caning fOr them Sunday
were among
I daughter apent Christmas wilh Mr.
_ those .present.
coming for them Sunday.
The Camp Fire girls and guardian
the
“ Icy
Grand Rapids.
Lester Campbell has been verv
Frank Falk, our veteran black- and Mrs. Edd. Tudor in Hastings, school work on Monday morning ‘back caused from falling on “
__________ _ _ __________
held this meeting ant lhe Clancy cot­
smith and berty grower who has I Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Phillipa, son. after enjoying a two weeks’ vaca­
sick but is a little better at this
supplied by the Michigan DcpartGLASS CREEK._____ Lage Friday night,
night. A pot luck supMr. and Mrs. Willis Norris and 'writingbeen very ill for the past fourteen ■ and daughter. Miss Susie Phillips tion at their hornet here. Dorothy
nor was rn
loved.
Mlss Ruth E. Erway relumed per
enjoyed.
Brouard to Lansing, Muriel Lind­ daughter of Battle Creek and Rex
Bernice Austin of the Doud dis­
Monday to W. 8. T. C- and John Er-1 A number from here enjoyed New weeks, is much Improved and re- | and M. W. Skidmore spent Christ- say to Battle Creek. Marian Hall Waters and wife were dinner guests
trict spent Friday night with Joae-‘
turned
to
hls
home
al
Lacey
from
mas
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jay
Snyder
way to M. 8. C. after spending their i Year’s Eve at lhe home of Mr. and
Sunday of Robert Louden and fam­ phlne and Helen Lelnaar.
sister's home at Gun lake.
and family in Hastings.
MW Sattar point. Slskiwlt Bay. and vacations wilh lheir parents, Mr. Mrs. George Kahler. Oysters and hlsMr.
Clark and Airtn Nottingham. Lyle ilyand
Mrs.
Clayton
Case.
Mr.
I
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mark
Garrison
and
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Ray Erway.
j hamburg sandwiches were served.
Robert Louden. Jr., spent lhe past Will Shriber of Hastings on the
Champion. Glenn Leeper. Marian
Ray Otis of Kalamazoo and Harry ' Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Monica and and Mrs. O. C. Hewitt and families daughter of Cloverdale called on hls
’ Uoaed tn the woods, are engaging
and Frederick Boulter, Recta Mlnar, week in Battle Creek with hls uncle. birth of a baby boy last week. Mn.
the attentions of the Department's Dunn and family of Southwest Rut- - father. Frank Heller, returned Fri- spent Christmas eve al the parental sister. Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Phillips
Willis
Norris.
Shriber was formerly Susie Curd ot
land were Sunday visitors al lhe | day after spending a couple of weeks home of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Case.' Christmas night.
The high school students of the 1 Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bishop and ter to Plainwell High School.
this place.
Fred Oils home.
I with Mr. and Mrs. Smith of MilTAMARAC.
Mr. and Mrs. John Rogers spent
Miss Gladys Cairns of the Dur­
Hastings and Battle Creek schools । son spent Christmas wilh her parAlthough the work to dale has sufMiss Virginia Havens returned to waukre. Wis.
Mr. and Mn. Myric Curtis were fee M
.
hcr school at Shulls and Gordon I Friends and relatives of Mrs. Earl | are enjoying a two weeks vacation. I ents. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Pran- New Year’s In Trowbridge with Mr.
district
visited her sister. Mrs.
fertd some setbacks. It is hoped
and Mrs. Leon Wood.
.,
ww Year
_____’s____
_____at
______________
New
visitors
the home ot I Lloyd Owen. Friday night.
Hsrens
to
Good
Will
after
a
two
Oaten
gave
her
a
surprise
party
|
Mrs.
Gladys
Corlright.
who
has
'
shka.
--Myers of--when lhe winter's isolation comes to
Alvin Fox is ill al hls home wilh her stater. Mrs.. Clarence
, The many friends of Edward
weeks'
vacation.
/
|
Saturday
night
in
honor
of
her
50th
HI
the
past
.
week,
Is
some
bet.
W.
...
J.
O.
Tobias
spent
Christmas
end. 100 moose will be ready for
a
lame
back.
Donald
Brouard
is
opWoodbury.
Lechlellner
wish
for him a speedy
। __
tar..i*
|—
with
hls daughter. Mr. and Mrs.
The community was grieved to • birthday anniversary.
&lt;»h hi.
shipment to the mainland.
eratlng the Doster elevator during I Bernard Smith and wife visited recovery as he underwent a major'
Ml ' Norjnw, Case returned to । Edd. Traver and family.
Miss
|
utter’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. operation at Pennock hospital Mon­
Lansing. Wedne-iday night after a
Mr. and Mra. C. H. Brown of A&gt;- hls absence.
Despite the terrible condition of torn Holton at Sunfield Friday.
day morning.
•
pre-holiday vacation of several days I pena spent from Tuesday until
the roads about thirty-five people, Mrs. Bernice Sensiba and little
I.
I
came out for the Farmer's Club at daughter of Kalamazoo were week
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Robert Ford's on Saturday evening. end visitors of her parents. Mr. and
Chas. Farlee and family were New
Mtas Neuachafer. County Health Mrs. Bertie Smith. They also visited
Counsellor for southwestern Barry lheir cousin. Mrs. Vanda McClelland Year's guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sher­
man Smith at Hastings.
county was present and gave a lec­ and the new baby Sunday.
Ouv Kantner and family spent
ture illustrated with slides which
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Eastman and
showed the various phases of her son of Grand Ledge and Mr. and New Year's Eve with Mr. and Mrs.
work. No definite place or date were Mrs. Lorn Holton of Sunfield were, Roscoe Cassel in coats Grove.
Charles Townsend, who hu been
decided for the next meeting.
Sunday visitors at Bertie Smith's.
In California for lhe pul two
Little Greta and Norma McClel­
months. relumed home Friday eve­
MARTIN CORNERSland are 111.. Some better at this ning.
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Cogswell and writing.
Mrs. Ohu. Farlee received word
family of Hastings. William Cogs-1
the past week that Mr. and Mrs.
well and family of Lakeview. Mr. ।
HINDS CORNERS.
Kennfeth Williams of Battle Creek
and Mrs. william Shanta of Ver­
MLu Bull. FHlUp, Uli lUhlan I „
M
are the proud parents of a baby boy
montville. Mr. and Mrs. Owen Var­
H. -Ill
ney and sons of Castleton Center
i answer to the name of Charles
and Miner Bateman of Alabama, lings.
Kenneth.
»
were family dinner guests of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore and
Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Dell of Lan­
and Mrs. Orr Fisher Sunday.
daughter. Margaret, and hU mother. sing; Mr. and Mrs. Glenn WOlrlng;
Mrs. Ida Moore, spent New Year's Mr. and Mra. Forrest Christian; Mr.
by Club No. 5 at the home of Mrs. day with Mrs. Anna Willits In the
Ths Golden Girl with ths Sdusr Song
and Mrs. Walter Hershberger and
Lowell Demond Wednesday. Jan. 15. Gregory district.
.
their famines and Mr. and Mrs.
for dinner. A cardial Invitation is
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Tudor of Has­ | Vane Wolrlng of Woodland spent
extended to all.
tings spent Sunday with Mr. and New Year’s Eve with Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday school next Sunday fol­ Mrs. Will Moore and family.
i
Owen
Smith.
lowed by preaching service. You are
Mrs. Ida Moore spent from Wed­, I Mr. and Mrs. chat. Farlee and
nesday to the Week end with her'
cordially invited lo attend.
I w America’s Dancing Stars
gr*
i family spent Saturday with Mr. and
Mr. and -Mrs. James Tyler of sister. Mrs. Trego, in Hastings.
I
MrsIN. Williams n«ar Dowling.
I tn JEROME KERN’gy
Woodlarid"and Claude Traulwein of
Mrs. Vida Phillips, of Hastings;
Glenn Wotring spent Monday in .
the Center road were Christmas bpent Saturday night and Sunday
Grand Rapids on business.
dinner guests of their mother. Mrs. with hcr son. Mr. and Mrs. Burrell
Lawrence Cox of Hastings spent
Eva Trautwein.
Phillips, and family.
from Wednesday till Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. H- F- Munn and Miss
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bell of Maple: Keith Farlee.
Lena Heldeman of Lakeview and Grove
_ _____ visited
_____ ....
__ _ Mr. and
her _.
uncle,
John Whetstone and family wereJ Ur.
hjrs. C.
r. N.
N Tobias.
Tnhla. Friday.
Frlrfav.
.r
SOUTH SHULTZ.
------------------------------------------------------New Year's dinner_guests
of M^. and11I TMr. and Mrs. Mell Hendershott
Mr. and Mn. O. E. Kenyon en­
Mr* Orr
Orr Fisher.
Wither
Mrs.
of Kalamazoo spent
Wednesday
tertained with a New Year's dinner
Our school began this (Monday) evening with her parents, Mr. and
tn honor of the eighteenth wedding
anniversary of their daughter and
husband. Mr. and Mrs., Lester Bon­
neville.
The anuual oyster supper ot the
Shults Community Club wu held
at the home of Mrs. George Olouse
The amazing musical stage

.....................

I

and
loor Notes

s*

Showing January 22 and 23 at

STRAND THEATRE
3 Thrilling Stars in
What a Show!
oh!
IRENE DUNNE

FRED ASTAIRE
\GINGER ROGERS

[&gt;l

BUILD!

tan talking on the screen*
Allptu'UM^mUTOMU
to its dreawt-disturbing
tunas f

The Enduring Ingredient
Even the stoule.st cedar pole must
at length succumb lo weather and
wear. New methods surpass —
and replace — lhe old. Equip­
ment disappears as progress
renders it obsolete.
There is, however, one factor in
your telephone service that never
alters; one important ingredient
that survives all the effects of the
passing years —and this is the
factor of policy.
The policy of this Company is
to supply Michigan with the best
and mo#l economical telephone
service that human effort and
sincerity can provide. To accom­
plish this purpose, there has been
• long series of-change»—un­
ending thanges— that grew out
of American inventive geniu# as applied to lhe art of
telephonic communication.

JT
Q J

A noteworthy example of this
is seen in the evolution of tho
cable. Year by year a greater
number of wires—each an ave­
nue of speech — has been suc­
cessfully packed into a smaller
circumference. This, with many
other improvements, has steadily
wideped tho use of cable. Util­
ized at first only to link subscrib­
ers’ telephones with central
offices, storm-resistant cable is
now used in toll circuits connect­
ing cities, and in a large percent­
age of all present-day circuits.
This progressive change was
not haphazard. It grew out of a
policy which itself does not
change. That is why telephone
service in the State of Michigan is
better today than it was ye»terday. And that is why it
H will improve for tomorrow.

4
f

i

Thot new home . . . 'new room . . . fireploce
. . . roof ... or any remodeling you may be
planning .to do. Let us help you. Now is the
time to moke plans and arrangements fpr
those improvements. The Hastings Lumber
and Coal Company carry a complete line
of BUILDING MATERIALS.

HASTINGS LUMBER A COAL CO.
FHON12515

FRANK SACK

r
The Sunken Grave
Y

with

RANDOLPH'tCOTT
HILIN WISTLIY
VICTOR VARCONI
CLAIRS DODD...an4
a haart-foad ot ravia^
lag boouUou in fnoplnt
gawiial

OTHING can be taddsr than a grave that ta ua tougtr a
nmM- Ths taaritabta has chm ta pw- Uw weight of

N

w4«g rati nd inaaseioem that
■MIrXMtoTiva'Bk
«M A

From th* f&gt;by "Robsria.’ Bwk anii
lyrics by Otto Hsrboch. A PANDEO
S BIRMAN ProdudtaK. Directed
by WfLUAM.A SEI I#?

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

■Haitfay Burial Vault
WUFHOhT MM

Benefit Hastings Rotary Club
Educational Fund, Jan. 23-33

Roy Thoma#,

. . HASTINGS. MICH.

Proprtetor

Mr. and Mrs. Will Anders visited
Mr. and Mrs. John Anders of Kal­
amasoo from Sunday until Wedncoday.
Tom Johnson and daughter. Miss
Mabel Hom and Mr. Nesbit of Bat­
tle Creek, were dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Hom Saturday.
Clinton Hom is spending two
weeks with hls mother, Mrs. Ada
Murray of Nashville.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Bonneville,
Lorraine and Loma, attended a
birthday surprise party in honor of
Mrs. Earl Gates of Cloverdale. Sat­
urday night.
Frank Horn and Thad Cook made
a business trip to Allegan Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mila Ashby called
on Mr. and Mrs. Claud Mosher of
Hope Center Sunday afternoon and
found Mr. Mofltar feeling batter.
STRIKER SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mra. Tom Hoffman will
entertain the Aid Society Wednes­
day. &lt;an. 15. Everyone come.
Mr. and Mra Jack Moore of Dur­
fee dUlricl and Mr. and Mra.
Charles Jckeg and children of Bat­
tle -creek were Bunday "YUltora at
Willard Ickes.
Mra. Bert Fancher spent Monday
in Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mra. R. L- Houghtalln and
Peter Steel spent New Year's day
with Mr. and Mrs. Levi Mead of
Hastings.
MT. and Mrs. Ralph Striker and
daughter spent Friday evening with
Mrs. 'Mattle Striker and Mrs. Mary
Angu» of HagUnfa. Mra. Angttrreturned to her home in Rockford. 111.,
on Saturday.
.
.
Striker District was saddened by
lhe tragic death of WlUlam Couch.
The community extend# deepest
sympsthy to the family,
।
Now approaches "tpe time whan

Mr. Average A m erlean. who knows
how to run a hotel, edit a news­
paper, mapaga « bus line, Amom—
the Govennncut; and end all crime
wavga. I* willing to take time out
from otiicr engagements and man­
age Hie local- ball loseeri.

FAI

a

Ji

�w ■nwwnt BARxn.
FAMOUS CELLIST COMES
TO GRAND RAPIDS
0. Van VUet, Bolobt, for
Jan. 17 CoRoert—Tunefnl Opera* Featured
Quite a departure U promised in
the next concert of the Grand Rap­
ids Symphony orchestra on Jan. 17
nl the Otvtc Auditorium with Cortnellus Van VUet, famous Dutch
'cellist, as guest artist.
Van VUet will play Hadyn's "Con­
certo tn D Major" with the archoCy
tra. The remainder of lhe proexa.h
In contrast to the concerto wOLbe
of a light and tuneful natur4*rour
compositions having been taken
from famous operas. Tlie overture
to "The Bartered Bride” by Sme­
tana, opening lhe program was In­
spired by Bohemian national airs.
Wagner's "Lohengrin” la ^epre-.
sen ted by "Vorspiel to Lohengrin"
and also the prelude, beloved by
concert-goers and familiar every­
where as the famous Lohengrin
wedding march.
The third opera represented In
' "Hansel and Gretel” by Humper­
dinck. from which the Dream Pan­
tomime will be played by the or­
chestra. Originally written for the
entertainment of Humperdinck's
own children, thia gingerbread fairy
tale has become a masterpiece in
Uie operatic world with its counter­
point, melody and counter-melody,
rich with humor and exquisitely
beautiful.
In direct contrast to the fairy tale
music in the program are Five Min­
iatures by Paul White. American
composer living In Boston. These
are a series of very brief modern
American numbers, a minute to a
minutc-and-a-half in length. They
are essentially humorous as indicated
by the titles: "By tlie Uke," "Cara­
van Song." "The Waltz for Tennle's
Doll," "Hippo Dance," "Mosquito
Dance.”
Completing the program is hu­
morous music by Richard Strauss,
'Till Eulcnsplgel." that mischievous
fellow given to practical Jokes whose
merry career has been set to music
of a diabolically Ingenious nature.
The concert will start promptly at
8:30 In the Civic Auditorium.

THREE CORNERS.
Mrs Agnes Kelley, who spent the
past week with her son and wife,
Mr. and Mrs. George Kelley, re­
turned to Hastings Saturday.
Mrs. Clair Yeiter is gaining nice­
ly from her recent severe Illness.
During the past week Mrs. Claude
A. Hammond and children were In
Hastings to call on Mrs. James
Hammond and Natalie and Mrs.
Leo Hammond and Richard, who
expect lo leave soon for their home
In Mr
Flint.
nLrt „r. xiK-r. a.-,.-,,
JL'in;“ er.
.7
i
ktkr'i parmla. Mr. and Un John
mS T, „r and Mn. enrudd

cahed’ al
called nt lhe Edw. Waller s home,
Friday afternoon.
The young people of the neigh­
borhood enjoyed a coasting party
New Year's Eve.
Claude A. Hammond attended the
annual meeting of lhe Wolverine
Beagle Club, which was held In
Lansing Saturday evening. This was
a very Important meeting as offi­
cers were elected and Judges select­
ed for Derby, Western Association
and Fall Trials.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Yeiter of
Kalamazoo spent Sunday with their
parents. Mr. and Mra. Clair Yeiter.
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Walters and
daughter. Martan, of Grand Rapfds
visited tho latter's father. M. E.
Moore, and aunt. Miss Clara Sisson
Sunday.
Wendall and Norris Malcolm returjied to their home In Lake Odes­
sa after having spent the week with
lheir grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Malcolm.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Taffee of Has­
tings. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Dooley
of Grand Rapids and Bernard Ryan
of Jackson spent the afternoon at
The home of Mr. and Mre. Claude A.
Hammond. New Year's day.
Mi** Marguerite .Yeiter of Grand
Rapid* was the guest of her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Clulr Yeiter, last week.
Floyd Wallers of Grand Rapids
called at lhe home of his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Walters. Sunday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Malcolm of
L*kc Odessa visited the former's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Malcolm
Sunday.
MORGAN.
Mr. and Mrs. Bordy Rowladcr
spent New Year's day in Kalamazoo
with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hammacker.
Jim Howard and Arthur Webb
were in Lansing Friday.
'
June and Ernest Grass visited
Mr. and Mrs Ben wall of the Pratt
district Wednesday.
.
'
Charles Wall ot the Pratt district
visited al the home of Mr. and Mn.
&gt; B. Rowladcr a couple of days last

Ruby Webb spent part of last
week at Lansing aa a guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Van Sickle.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Anderson
of near Newaygo visited Mr. and
Mrs. Elgin Mead last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Olatr Van Bicklo of
Lansing spent the fore part of last
week with Mr. and Mra Wm. Van
Sickle.
Sunday their daughter,
Catherine McAdams, Lansing, was
a guest.
BARBERS CORNERS.
Mrs. Mary McIntyre accompanied
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jones and Mrs.
Wlbert of Hasting io Middleville
Sunday- where they were dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vem Prenlice.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd. Clum and
family of Goal* Grove spent New
Year's day at the Herman Hauer's

Miss Alice Foley relumed to Cin­
cinnati. Ohio. New Year’s day.
Mr. and Mrs. John Weaver spent
New Year's day at Dau Weaver's at
Elmdale.
■
.
Mabelle Hauer'virtted Maurine
Chrm at Ooata Grove a part of last
week.
'
’•
Mbs Myrtle Wilson began teach­
ing al BarryviUe on Monday.

Boy Scout Ntws

|i

Slxtjr-Twe

tbubapay. januaby

•,

ibm

FREEPORT.
■
I last Thursday
Sunday. Jan. U, and contlnu*
Due to ye scribe's absence from I anel Clarkr/llte
two weeks, conducted by the pastor.
called. Tlie fire onglnated In the
Clement Jordon.
aeveral Christmas
Items
The L. A. 8. will meet with Mn. missed.
backfire from the engine which
Rev. Fem
Wheeler
officiated quickly fired several cans of high
Christmas week at the funeral of
Interested come prepared to help Rev. Charles Jacobs al Cfctirlotte, an quickly and soon after several wpnievangelist known to many Freeport en. who were employed in the bean
imM

Claude Karmoan
Mlddlavflla. Mr. i

and

Marie Ryno at Caledonia spent
Mr. and Mrs Victor Sisson and the building was in flames. Erin
Tuesday night and New Year's day daughter Roberta returned Frida? Johnson, owner of the building,
at H. Woodman's.
,
evening from Fairmount and Mar­ which with Its contents of grain, ning.
lon. Ind., where they spent the holi­ seed., and machinery, was a total
syria spent Thursday at Willard De­ days wilh Mra. Sisson's parent#, Mr. loss, would have turned It over to
mand's.
.
Dutton, new
and Mra. R. B. Carter, and other Raymond Vean of
Batty Kimble visited relatives in relatives.
.
Beatrice Morris (Beatrice Partons)
Woodland last week.
The January meeting of lhe P. T. I
HO.OOO and was covered by thsur- of Detroit called in the afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. E. 8. Thompson ■*■
and
“ A. Will be held at the schoolhouse *nce- AU iccords and afflee fumlyf.nB attended on Thursday evening of this week. ture were saved,
Mead, Sterling Rogers. Prank 6ege.
Mra Guy Cline entertained the JJfdaughters, Mabe! and Doris, of
. ----------' .
...
.
..
.
..
Nineteen ScouU are enrolled In this pupils of her Sunday school class the twcnty-flflh •'•dainw
A meeting for lhe purpose of or­ Charlotte wen
Sunday
dinner tfOarftcn.
sary of Mr. and
Troop.
1 to welcome In the New Year.
dames Wm. Mishler and Harold ganizing a local Townsend Club will
Troop 74 of Hastings—URoy Foa- I Harold Kermeen at Middleville Is
Yoder, and includes a song by a be held in the M. E. church base­ niece. Miss Ruth.
Middleville called on
ter, Scoutmaster; William D. Barnes, visiting at the home of hls uncle There was a large gathering present male quartette and a message by ment oh Friday night of this week.
We understand that Miss Vada Bunday.
Scoutmaster: Committee, Bernard and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ker- of about 140 people.
Rev. Wheeler. Refreshments also A speaker will be present and every- Kchwsiler. who teaches in Detroit.
will be served, a good attendance is one tnu-resicd h cordlaUy Invited to ZL™ of ^company who mode a
PLEASANT VALLEY.
VanHouten, Rev. J. A. McNulty. . Mr. and Mn. Otis Morgan and I
desired.
alteIldtrip to Bermuda during the holiday
Eighteen Scouts are enrolled In thia Lola and George Doty and Duane Last Week's Letter.
The w. M. A- of the U. B ghurch
Gary Newton left Sunday for Lan- vacation, spending a few days in Will Watts and family
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Osborn of Pin­ are holding an all day meeting at
Troop.
Bacon of Caledonia spent New
hook spent ChrhUna* with their the home of Mrs. Mary Dodge today sing where he will take a nine i New York City on their return,
Farm Patrol 60 of Bonfield—Peter
; Miss Mamie Tyler, who has bear
A. Lamer, Scoutmaster.
Scouts. Brown of Wayland. Mr. Browns daughter, Mrs. Floyd Neeb and fam­ (Thursday) wilh a dinner at noon. weeks' course at M. 8. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Karcher and cwrtng for Mra. Retta Rogers since
Kenneth DuBols, Leland DuBols.
parents and brothers and sisters ily.
Dr. and Mrs. Fred Shepherd of
the
— *illness,
”—‘ returned
--------* *lo
““
“ *home
------- “at
*
Madeline Neeb spent part of hcr Remus were New Year guests at the daughter of Newberry have returned 'her
Troop 51 of DowUng—Harold J. with their families of Grand Rapvacation with her grandparent, Mr.
home after spending Christmas here
DePriester. Scoutmaster; Commit­
। home of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wolcott.
■.
wlUi his parents, Mr. and Mrs Leap Sunday. Mrs viola Rogers and son
tee. Harold Stanton. Lloyd Gaskill,
A enn
le.
Frank Gartoow and son Paul ac­ and Mrs. Lee Osborn.
Milton Murphy. Jr, and
Kercher.
■
’
H. W. Geiger and family enter- '
Howard Stanton. Eight Scouts en­ companied his mother from Howard
rolled In thia Troop.
Mr. and Mra. Lyle Hayes of of Mrs. Maude Rogers and helping
City to Chicago where she will visit
Farm Patrol M of McOmber her daughter.
Strong of East Campbell Rev. and QrotIp mc-tj tj^s Thursday after- Campbell were callers at the P. A. with the duties there. Mn. Retla
School. Jesse Kelley, Scoutmaster.
noon wUh Mrs A,lce O^dner, to Thomas home a week ago Thursday, Rogers shows signs of a slight im­
Mrs. Hiram Garrett
relumed afid Mra
Scouts, Clinton Brill. Robert Traver.
of Tor^' Em°ry Bencdicl •nd l*by । complete some work already started.
Frank Falaetta and family have provement.
Cub Pack 9 of Hastings—Henry
Mtas Lillian Leyrer. who teaches I .A*S^^^ln^Mr^ moved to looia where we under­
Mulder, Cubmaster;
Committee, daughter and family In Chicago.
stand Mr. Falselta has opened a
in the Clarksville school*, spent a 1 wj-l^ub J^Mondlv
Milo G. DeVries. A. J. Laraen, Rev.
•
Mrs. Rose Fowler of Caledonia few day. at lhe H. W. Geiger home. pJuuK M°nda&gt;'
C°°- store.
Supt.
J. W. Kltehlng. Twelve Cuba en­ entertain ad the Social dub of this
School opened Monday morning
Mr. and Mra. clarence Kime ana 8 -------- - ' ■
....
.
.
rolled In this Pack.
neighborhood recently, a lovely
Leals Overholt, who Ls employed
dinner and a jolly good time.
by lhe Good implement Co. of Cale- we haven't heard much rejoicing on and was well attended.
d'
’ ** wl
eM «u&gt; Ms the part of the pupils.
• -------- Glenn
uic.ui mien
Allen received
cctcivoa wore
word irotn
from ol Uli
The three Scout Troops in Barry Hastings Saturday of the death of
Ivan Roush had lhe misfortune to
Mr.
Mr..
BUur uul
“ *n&lt;1
cou?‘£
ln -January uro their former neighbor. Andy Vosfall down the back staira Monday
aq follows: Troop 78 of Freeport, -----family entertained the following tor,
mer. -•
Christmas; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer I
.lh5
—
^-------------------al P™® ,n ™?
--------re lhan
--------- morning when he stepped on some
Troop 79 of Woodland, and Troop
The Ladles' Aid will be held in
years. Freeport's weekly paper. I Ice covered with the snow, a badly daughter, Louise, became the bride i
89 of the Good Will community. lhe church basement next Thurs­ Scott and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan ■' —
The -----------Freeport* News,
was—not
pub­ wrenched back and a strained ankle
----- --------‘
FLEASAMT VALLEY.
'Hiesc three Troops have a total day, Jan. 16
Everyone welcome. Slater and son ot Ionia. Mr. and lished Christmas week. Hits was due were lhe result. Dr. Wedel was of Paul F. Miller of Kalamazoo. Rev. |
membership of 58 Scouts.
Fern Wheeler.
pastor ot
tlie
Mrs. Vere Howlltte and three girls
Dinner served by the committee.
to the illness of the editor, Ken called and pronounced no bones M. E. church officiated, using the
of Clarksville, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bracndle.
broken
but
Mr.
Roush
will
be
laid
PLEASANT RIDGE.
I
single ring service, and only tha!
Lester Stuart and family of South
ASSYRIA.
■ Billy Vandcrmale spent part of up for several days.
immediate family were present. The 1
WO n, n 64JMt
Boston.
School commenced this Monday
I hls holiday vacation with relatives
Rev. Wheeler and niece Ruth, en­
morning after the holiday vacation. , The burial of Gerald Morgan. 12
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Taylor enterMde-. toU»r, V. L Wokou .nd ,
,
tertained twenty four young people
Kenneth Kelsey was at Cedar iyear old aon of Mr. and Mrs. Wil­ talncd their children Mr. and Mrs. in Grand Rapids.
liam Morgan of Marengo, and for­
Miss Betty Stuart visited her from lhe M. E- church at a watch
Springs on Bunday.
Harold RIJtcngcr of near Lowell,
mer residents here, was made at the
grandparents.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lewis
night
party
at
their
home
last
week
Donald and Evelyn Townsend
and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Taylor and
Union cemetery on Friday after­
1 Yeiter of Lowell during her vaca- Tuesday night, a very pleasant eve­
spent part of last week in Grand .noon.
family of South Boston.
Ition. '
ning was enjoyed and a nice lunch .Miller is an employee of the GenRapids.
Mre. John Reamer and Lloyd and
A party of workmen from the Mr. and Mrs. Mack Morrow ot Lake
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cress are
Mrs. Edith Richardson Is spending ■West
Penn field
church, among
moved.
.
Mrs. Ch is Hooper leaves the lat­
some time with her son Arthur ana .
Odessa spent Christmas with Clay­ । the new owners of the Smelker Cash
whom were O. C. Hewitt, Harold
Mr. and Mrs. John K. Brake
Store, having purchased it from ter part of this week for the tame of
family.
ton Mole-and family.
'Gerald Smelker last week. Mre. her sister. Mrs. J. D. Zagelmeler at
Case, and Paul Bivens, spent Satur­
children spent Bunday with h&gt; ’
Mr. and Mrs. John Kellar and
friends go with the newlyweds.
Mrs. Leveme Kipne has been .
day at the farm of Bernard Shep­
Cress, prior to her marriage in No- Hastings where she will spend the
spending a few days with her moth­
daughters of Grand Rapids called
ard of the Austin. assUting with the
Mrs. Myrtle Mote U
er in Jackson.
•
on Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Preston Tucs- । vember. was Miss Mayo Smelker and remainder of the winter.
MIDDLEVILLE.
work. The ladles went along wlth- Jday'Brenlng.
I had assisted her brother in the store
Miss Patricia Boughner is fully
Mrs. Anna Boice spent the week ,,
Two men with a milk truck, who
•a
co-operative
dinner.
wir
ana
Mrs
c
m
wenarr
01
of Christmas with her son. Ward '
Mr. and Mra. C. M. Wenger of durln« U1P summer vacation. We are recovered from a recent tonsil oper­ bad delivered their load of milk to
Earl Campbell and brother. Glenn, Ahn Arbor were Thursday dinner |
ation
at
Pennock
hospital.
Visitors at the J. F. Brake
CT
^
S
£
“
S
^2
and family, at Lansing.
of ScoU Campbell, are both guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Brake. signed
,lcned hcr position as a teacher and 1
Geo. Forbey who waa injured by the Wayland enndensary stayed in
Mr. and Mra. Philip Watterson of sons
'
is devoting her entire time to the 1 a falling tree last month and taken town evidently too long. They start- Allsburg of Grand Rapids
seriously III with pneumonia. Earl
Marne spent the week end with her is al Leila hospital. Battle Creek, Mr. Wenger and Mrs. Brake are
“
“
—
—■ Don siowina and .
store.
’
; and. Mra.
to Pennock hospital is reported as [
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Myrle Rich­ and Glenn was taken to Pennock sister and brother. He is a teacher
Mrs. Pearl Smith visited friends making a fine* recovery, altho not| near the Chas. A- Roberston farm.! ot south Boston
in the Ann Arbor schools.
ardson.
&lt;3-^ Jackson and 1
hospital al Hastings on Thursday
in Hastings on New yet able to return home. The many missing some electric poles and then t
Mr. and Mre. J. F. Brake accom-1 and
- -- relatives
;,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Endsley. Jack night due to a relapse. Latest word
•friends of the Fcrbey family are crashed Into a large one. breaking I ot ptnhook called on her i
ttnd JeMn of Onlnd Rapids 'spent
panied
8
pamea Mr. and
ma Mrs. Don
won Slowins
oiowuis Yca
off. near the bottom. TYielr truck , Mr md
is that both are improving.
and
Claude Walton spent several glad that the accident was no more It
and Grayden
Grayden of
of South
South Boston
Boston to
to
hart
tn ho
«hnr.- I evening.
had to
be talron
taken tn
to ■
a ronalr
repair shop;
”
Mrs. Sylvia Bivens and daughter. Grand Rapids for Christmas dinner.
,n Lowell, the guest of
Mrs. Edd. Hall has moved her evidently the men escaped any sell-, i&gt;y, Qeiger spent fro
Richard ol HaMlnuI and Mr end Arabella, and Mr. and Mrs. Clayton with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Van Alls- h" “^^re^MjTOb^Zylstra^
until Sunday night with
Case spent New Years day at the
’ ‘I An "epidemic of yellow Jaundice household goods to the home of her oua injury.
»%&gt;dK£”
burg.
Our school started Monday after Lansing.
home of hcr sister and husband.
| has been sweeping through lhe daughter, Mrs. Vlverne Cook near
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Miller en­
a two wneks' vantlnn onrt wn nn&gt;
__ « —
_ _____
t__
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Van Auken of
Floyd
Neeb
and■ family
EU*
tertained their children. Mr. and
Maple Grove.
—
Mrs. Chalmcr Miller of Hostings have subsided. Some have been quite ing her home there,
malnlng
for lhe week.
। Funeral services of Curwln Asplnof Pinhook.
111.
The W. F. M. S. of lhe M. E. pila back on our streets.
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ovid
Miller,
| all. who died Friday night at the
Mrs. Herman Rensch received church held their January meeting
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
Christmas d“y----1■
' r'»i
Floyd Craig was In Allegan on University hospital, Ann Arbor, will
Mr, and Mrs. Earl Curtiss and word last Saturday from the post- nt the home of Mrs. Adam Endres 1 No very large catches have been re­
Mr and Mn. Gerald
be held on Tuesday afternoon at
business one day last week.
baby of Hastings spent Christmas office department at Washington la»rt Friday afternoon. Tlie meeting ported.
‘
the
Hobble
chapel
al
Battle
Creek,
that
Mre. Pearl Lightfoot was ap-, was well attended and a missionary
Mr. and Mrs Clifford Hammond
with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hamblin
Jan. 22nd will occur the annual
with
interment
al
lhe
Union
ceme
­
pointed
as
acting
postmaster,
to
sue'
play
was
given.
Among
the
buslwere dinner guests of the Geo. Sny­
and family.
with their parents, Mr.
tery.
cecd the late H. H- Rensch. W w. I new transacted was the election of
der's near Caledonia Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Miller of the
Boughncr was given the appoint- Miss Fem Wheeler as president,
_ re­ appreciate the fact that this Ls a Walter Bidetman. also
FAIR LAKE.
Wanelta Strauabaugh Is visiting
Edward Lcchlel^ier underwent an ment at first but declined and Mrs. placing Mra o. Van Patten, who re­ splendid concern for Middleville it Mrs. Nash's birthday.
het; aunt and family. Mrs. Carl Briggs, who moved during the past
is now planned to make it a real
week, art now located at Olivet, operation for appahoicllb at the Lightfoot was then selected. The' signed.
Rcikert, in Detroit.
Kalamazoo new postmistress assumed her duties 'Mr. and Mrs. Arlclgh Hall, who
Our school bell U ringing again where Mr. Miller operates a crate Borgcss hospital at
His many friends wish on Monday monUng. This appoint­ have been visiting their mother, holders and their wives; speaking.
this Monday morning after a two mill. The farewell social event Monday.
was
postponed
indefinitely
due
to
ment
was
quite
a
surprise
here
as
Mrs.
Edd.
Hall
and
other
relatives
him a speedy recovery.
week's vacation.
men. The theater will pul on a fine
। Miss Thelma Ford and Merton everyone was expecting that an ex­ and friends for the past three weeks,
Floyd Craig attended the Civic | Curwln Asplnall's condition.
picture to assist In entertaining the
Greer of Augusta were married Sat­ amination would first be held. Mrs. expected to return to their home in
Players play. "Mrs. Wiggs of the,
ladles while the men are holding
Cabbage Patch,” In Kalamazoo last
c®ATb GROVE.
urday by Rev. Swaddling at Greg­ Rensch assisted by Mrs. Albert Wells Berkeley. California, this week.
Saturday night.
TTie Birthday meeting will be held ory. Best of wishes are extended has efficiently carried on the work AWare of hls father's serious illness, their business meeting. We hope to
at tho office since the death of Mr. \ Mr. and Mrs. Hall started for Michi­ give the program tn fall later.
to them.
Warren Bolton and family were
Charles H. and Mrs. Whitmore
Battle creek visitors Friday.
,uck dinner
Lareda Fritz of near Delton spent Rensch more than two months ago gan hoping to be with him in hls
Dr. and Mrs. c. D. Mohler of Has- 1
ofllfcra, Friday night with Iva Case.
and will be missed.
I last ______________________________
Illness but Arrived after hls
Ungs visited at the Clifford Ham- ’"dh
The Freeport Fire Department' death and burial.
Bert Litts and family and Earl
mond’s Sunday.
I *Uh Arthur Richardson last Friday Pennock and family spent Sunday was called to help fight the fire at 1 All Uie babies in Freeport were
—,with their mother. Mrs. Win Utts, the Elmdale Elevator a week ago given Christmas treats this year
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Potter of. evening.
'
evening.
There are four members of the ।of Bunnell.
Hastings called on Mrs. Rebecca
Sunday school who have not missed
Mrs. Susie Smith and daughter
Craig New Year's day.
Mr. and Mrs. lAwrence Oooley of attending each Sunday during the ।spent New Year's with Mrs. Lottie
Hastings called on the Chas. Wood­ past year: WUma Haight. Doris . CoUlster.
Coats. Clement Jordon and Bessie I
ruff's Saturday evening.
I if the atmosphere Of the theater
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Todd luve Woodman.
Mr. and Mre. Willard Demond is moist and sobby. then be sure the
moved to Hasting*.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Woodruff were spent New Year's day with Robert feminine r.pectalors arc having a
Demand.
; perfectly lovely time.
tn Lansing on business Friday. Sat­

.ck registering In Decamber ore and daughter of Cutlervflfe, Mr. and
follows:
IMn. Loren Gardner and eon. Mr.
Tioop ’&lt;J of Hastings—Jmm Kel-1 and Mre. Win Gardner. Henry
f. Scoutmaster; John B. Hewitt, Schroeder and Mrs. Ro»e Fowler
eisUnt Scoutmaster;
Norval and daughter at' Caledonia were
Stamm.
Assistant

r

urday they attended a funeral of a
relative hi Jackson.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Miss Ethelyn Ann Shriber of Has­
tings spent port of the week wilh
her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Shriber. They arc happy over
the arrival of a new grandson bom
to Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shriber of
Hastings on Friday morning. The
little one will answer to lhe name of
Duane William. Mother and son
are doing nicely.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Culbert and
son spent New Year’s day with Mrs.
A. M- Gates ol Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Densmore and
family of Hastings spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Fuller and
Miss Farr of Hastings called in the
evening.
jay Smith's parents of Ionia are
caring for Mrs. Jay Smith at pres­
ent.
New Year’s day guests at Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Barry's were Mbs Mary
Barry of Ann Arbor. Wm. Buitaiph
of Lansing, Mn. Nina Barry and
son. Vincent, and Mrs. Albert Barry
and children of Southeast Carlton.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Hall of HasUngs spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs, Leo Barry.
,
BRANCH DISTRICT.
Mrs. Sterling Ostroth Is quite 111
with quinsy.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Norton and
Joyce of Marshall were Sunday aft­
ernoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Vin­
cent Norton.
■Bit Dorcas Society of North
Maple- Grove wlU ba enlerlalned at
lhe home of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Rob­
erts Thursday. Jan. 15. for an all
day meeting
Prayer meeting at North Maple
Grove will be held al the homes un­
til the weather U warmer. Thursday
evening ot tills week II will, be hgld
with Mr- and Mrs. Don Roberta.
A woman waaMkcn off eOraln al

Battle creek while throwing money
out of the window. It is not decided
whether to hold her for Impersonat­
ing a government official.

Report of the Condition of The Hastings City Bank

SPECIAL

RESOURCES

.^. . $2.20
$2.30
Pailfiller Laying Mash $1.95
Mermash

V. B. (^rm^i obiiiiiioM’ pk;

Start the New Year
with . ........................................................ .

Better t

16%

$1.25
$2.10

Eatbsosei lot Clt«ri»s”’ii«ruic~—

BY
C. L O.

TRADING YOUR CAR
FOR A BETTER ONE!

We Dairy
hove some
extra tine
Pailfiller
16%
used cars with small mile­
Milkmaker
34% Call
. .
age
that are bargains.

$1.65 Cottonseed
fetal ------------LIABILITIES

Dollsrt Ct».

UkJNi4»d Frafll., net ....
llncr&lt;M for Tsxe*. IMrri

\

• ISO.OBO.OO
us.ooo on
io.ass.os
SU,000.00

Best Quality COAL
• Low Ash

Ttww CeBua«rci*l CvrtlScaUi of pct.

and look at these cors-drive
them and satisfy yourselfor give us a ring and we will

• High in Heat

Wc Deliver up lo HYE miles at regular price

•Tout

DEPOSITS:
couaU—-Habjert lo gt,i
l»a ot
Habjeci
....
,v.. .. t

T»i.l

Tsui

OP BjlRKY.

acri

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES • Inc.
Hastings, Mich.
WOODLAND

Phone 2118
PHONE 17

PHONE 2121

HASTI

�THE BASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. JANUARY », 1»M

COATS GROVE.
- ... ----------------- —-WWW** LtoHd
Miss Thelma Peereoh and friend,
pau) Woodman and Loren Over­
Bob Moon. Mr. andMr.. CUrenoe imllh vUllM ,rlanda m Lo-ell on
Decatur Paper Discovers g K^nd- for ^red. my bottom dime. Neubaum of Battle Creek spent the Sunday evening
week end at lhe home of Waller
E. ,8. Thompson s entertained on
w
n.M.fv eza
When summer's sun is blazin' hot
New Barry County Poet,
j CUM each onion that I sot.
Durk«.
| Christmas.’ the following relatives:
Mr. and Mn. Royal Wickham and Paul Thompson and family, Battle
fra Z Tubbs
Acrawlta' co my hands and knees
Tito tx-.ur ltopubltoM, M. du-.""1
“■&gt; "»» *"d Gerald spent Ghrtstmas with the . creek. Edw Thomnson and family,
Bert Plratera south of Coats Grove, sunfteld; Martha Wilcox and friend
eovrrrd &lt; new Bans county ixtot U i
■
Mr. and Mn. Robert Owens and Phyllis Fairchild Kalamazoo; Vlr&gt;lto»n by Uto lollowm, utld. blip- I Ood mute
plant. the Hotel thy
daughten of Grand Haven spent kima Thompson. Ann Arbor; Floyd
ped troth UM teeek'i paper:
ObUlned appeal ot Hie eye
Ire z Tubta. )uMly lemon. „ »a
And »«aE-H™. haar MY Christmas with her parents, Mr. Dunnigan and family snd Frank
and Mrs. Joseph Crockford.
I Haight and family.
the poet laureate of Hastings. Mich..; _ "“•l.
.
Mr. and Mn. John McLeod spent
Rev. and Mra. clement Jordon and
as weU as for raising 15 kids of p^^^Ood. He powi my onions
Christmas at lhe home of Albert । family spent a few days last week
various sizes tn hls family, was'
hthongi
Reams west of Lake Odessa.
| with relatives in Michigan City.
suucs ■&gt;&gt; ui M Heap uj MW iuwom
----- •-------- -——
Edgar Boulter spent Christmas Indiana.
last week
1 but he's expecting to write us a
A very pretty wedding was sol•Here is a little thing I call prose piece pretty soon about the with his mother. who lives near
Plne lake
emnteed in lhe presence of about
■Onions in
he
which
... the
.... Muck'."
—
... writes.
-----. ■ । Barry
„ county
' onion situation,
t,
onu Mrs. Glen
uwi&gt; Perkins
rrrxuui bus
relative! at the home
Mr. and
and 25 immediate relatives
Says It's a nature poem, but he Is getting pretty critical. It seem* a p^nk Cronk of Hastings suent nf Mr «n«i sir* Anrir*— T..i»ui_iut
aoro'l run:, »now ot wh.t n.lure. tot or Ite
1 Chmtlttu it IM hoot, or tto«nt
tcu, o'etoa on ChrUunu otur------- onions for a high market^ and just G-TtXat four 0 ClOC* 00 Chrt3UnM

ONIONS GIVE
■
•
^TOMUSEl^P^n^nwJto-^

MOTICB TO OBEDIYOB8.

XOW. THtRIFOR*

l,,Um w?Sch^T tootJTu "dSSiuT^i- rhyUU nnd vlvtan 10011 Chrtelmu Schaibly. formerly of Woodland.
...is. hJim
th? others ™ bln tell
?ome 01
Sar&gt;- now of ^mazoo They were at7?* hJL hiiu
wert Of fastings
tended by Mra. Paul Smith, sister
" 4’
y’ H
’ UiaU
Mr. and Mra. Walter Durkee spent ’ of th? bride, and Allen Dean of

CHANCERY NOTICE.

BANNED WANT ADVS. TAT '

Christmas with her parents. Mr Kalamazoo The vows were spoken
I and Mra. Elmer Rising in Hutinga. before a lighted Christmu tree and
; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brovont and under a wreath of mistletoe. The
B eitr af HmiIui. in (kid eevatv
i Loh May of West Lake Odessa ceremony wu performed by Rev.'
(fori* tb»- a».d Ha» nt Mav. a.’D
n,1&lt;i Mrs. Foster Waddell en- I spent Christmu with Henry Bro- Kennard Schaibly, brother of the
and Ib.i .aid eiaima &gt;iu h. b»ard । tertained for Christmu. her par-:vont and family.
groom
The dining room where
irtu’ente-,Mn and Mrs. Elmer James.
Mra. Edith Butolph and Freda |light.refreahmenta were served, wu
nij.
and daughters. Pearl and Ruby 1 spent Bunday with her sister. Mra.; decorated
-*■-------- -------------__
with— chrysanthemums
i«d. JannarT a. A. n.
'James, from near Lowell, and two Royal Wickham, and family.
■
I and• candles.
The bridal couple left
Main Cla-rat, JBd&lt;» at Probate.
other sUUn| 'and thelr husband*. |
--------------------1 for a short trip in the south. Mrs.
0*DEB roB PUBLX3ATI0M.
Mr. and Mrs. Ival Baird of Grand
MORGAN.
Schaibly graduated from Woodland
..
_
..... . . •— Rspjds and yr and
john Na- ta.t Week's Letter.
_________
__ __________
|—
high
school,_ ____
class of "39.
and is a
Felof the Powers neighborhood: Mr. and Mra. Dave McClelland graduate nurse of Christ's hospital
There will be a goepel meeting spent Christmu day wilh their son in Cincinnati where she will re­
al the home of James Nagel Tues-1 Loyd antj family.
| turn to her work for a lime. Mr.
day evening. January 7. Everybody | Harvey Troxel is spending some ; Schaibly Is a teacher in Junior high
“U!*”'.
...
. .
thne wilh hls son Marvin and wifeschool. Kalamazoo. After dlsconThe Ladles Aid will meet) at the nt Lansing.
&gt; Uniting hcr work in Cincinnati,
hall Friday. Jan. 3. There Is work,
'Betty McClelland of near Mrs. schaibly will Join her husband
to be done, for until April 1st. the Nashville is spending her vacation In Kalamazoo, where they will re­
church services are to be held in , here with her grandparents. Mr. and side. Congratulations
and best
the hall each Sunday and 1C hu to, jgrs.
fiso wlth
-rip. d
u.. a
n.. McClelland,
nuviciixHu, puhi
wiui her l wishes are extended.
.,Tad£ re”y'
.
.
The
pastor will
! aunt.
aunt. Mrs.
Mrs. Clair
Clair Norris,
Norris, at
at Assyria.
Assyria.
----- -----------— conduct
------------ revival
----------Mr. and Mrs. L. Munson of Lan- .services beginning Jan. 12 and la-'tIds spent the week end wilh Mra. slng spent a few days last week at ing two weeks.
Lillie Sowerby and daughter. Lil­ their home in Thomapple.
| Mn. Mattle Kimble fell and
lian. who is home from Chicago for
-------------------. . . en­ sprained her foot last Friday morn­
Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. —
Van
Sickle
the holidays. They all spent Chrisl- tertained Mr. and Mrs. John Van ing.
’
mu with Mrs. Isa Graham at Low­ Sickle and family and Catherine
Mrs. Irene Brooks has been sick
ell.
McAdams of Lansing Christmas with a severe cold.
Mr. and Mrs. Adelbert Wilcox ac­ day.
Harry Woodman and wife
...
of
_.
companied by Mr. and Mrs. ^xnk
muac wno
Those
who spent
spent unruunu
Christmas aay
day Grand Rapids spent Christmas
,p^?1ti,C^LHUna*.Wlt^ Ma wHh Mr ,nd Mr!' Cha* Harrington wilh the former’s parents, Mr. and
and Mrs. Kirk Wilcox in Grand and family were; Opal Webb and Mrs. John Woodman.
Mra. Mary Townsend entertained
_______ .
.
Ralph Cramer of Battle Creek; Mr.
TT.
1 W»7C *nd Mrs- Cl*lr Van Sickle and son a small company of young people
O“° *nd Miss Maurine nnd Mabel last Tuesday in honor of her niece.
and Mrs. Wm. McNutt of Rutland. Van 81ckle of Lanning, an&lt;j Arthur Miss Grace Ingram of Cincinnati.
Utile Foster Waddell Ls visiting Wcbb ot MorKan.
Those present were Colon Schaibly.
.hU grandparents at Lowell.
| Mr and Mr5
Van Slckle en. Grace Ingram. Allen Dean of Kala­
mazoo. Mary Butolph. OarHou. and
Tiuioir tertained Mr. and Mrs. John Van
ra ot &gt;al&lt;l
,
•.. AMAKAl। sickle and family and Mrs. Calher- Frederick Cole. They went later
lAst Week's Leiter.
jne McAdams of Lansing Christmas In the evening to Ada for supper
Boni Christmu Eve. Dec. 24th. day.
and a party.
lo Mr. and Mra Normand McClel• ot- Jackson
- '
The D. G. T. O. will meet next
Mr. and• -Mrs. -Max Eck
land, a nine pound girl, who will spent a few days the past week at Wednesday afternoon with Mrs.
answer to the name of Lorna Jean. their cottage at Thornapple lake.
Mattle Kimble; The program Is
Visitors at Bertie Smith's were:
on lhe Bible.
Mr. and Mrs. Juper Jordan and
The school gave a very fine pro­
DURFEE.
daughter Arieta; Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Rev. and Mrs. E. Gamble Invited gram last Monday evening wilh a
Jordan. Theodore and Frank Jor­ lheir friends and neighbors to the beautifully lighted Christmas trpe.
dan. Geraldine Richards_ and
Au­ East
_______
___ , AA..L....V.C
Baltimore United Brethren A radio broadcast was represented
„4tius jopplc
gustus
joppic of
oi Sunfield.
Bunneid.__________ , church New Year's Eve for a watch wilt* Robert Sease as announcer.
Robert Forshey of Alpine CCC meeting at 10:30 o'clock, but werelTllc new stage is a great help to
camp visited hls parents. Mr. and much surprised when-many people | pronouns of this kind. There were
Mrs. Spellman Forshey and hls came at eight, it being Rev. and i‘ftne
plays, rtxiianoijs
recltetloqs ana
and a
UMr music, piays.
brother Maurice al Sunfield.
■*
■ sliver
••
•** «*
—
Mb. —
Gamble's
wedding
anni- Jne ’lot
of presents on the »tree,
Mrs. George Enz visited her sister versary and John John . Gamble's ; M”- Flossie Allcrdlng. the teacher.
and brother at Lowell a few days birthday. A musical program wu deserves much praise for this fine
the past week. /
given and a wedding luncheon i program.
Mr and Mra. Bernard Smith spent served. After which Rev. and Mrs.
Ruth and Marian Woodman spent
Christmas day with the former's sis­ Gamble were presented with a silver the Christmu holidays at home,
ter. Mrs. Maurice Forshey al Sun­ offering of nearly ten dollars.
I About 35 attended lhe reception
field.
|
Mrs. Elmer Lusk is visiting friends a»»d church meeting al Uie home
Little Elizabeth Sensiba of Kala- at Marsiiall. while Mr Lusk is visit- ot Rev. Clem Jordon. They received
in th- i --------mazoo.- granddaughter of Mr. and Ing relatives in Indiana.
.
a fine donation. A pollluck dlnMr. and Mra. William Hodman |
«“ enjoyed by all. p:e followMn Bertie'Smith, hu been quite ill
entertained ........
their children and fam- I
offlcerB wcre elected: Trustee.
at her home in Kalamazoo.
'
■
Year's,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell McLelnthan njcs
New
Year's twenty-six being Floyd Clrnn; church' clerk. Bessie
of Middleville called on her sister, present, Hah
liah and
ana Mary Stanton
autnton 1; Woodman; treuurer. Ludie -Fisher;
—....
Mrs. Normand McClelland, lo see remained for ICIUBIUCU
a longer visit.U imUKui
Dah ; deaconess,
Agnes
TWU. xiail
, - ---- Haight;
' ------- assistant,
—----------------------lhe new little niece. Sunday.
|i developed the mumps but is getHfig
getUfig I p
PS.arl
cnrl Demond; chorister. Jesse
-----------------------------------Miss
Florence McClelland is as-1 tt]Ong nicely. Mra- Stanton came [Chase assistant. Floyd dum; ptanslstlng with the house work at her Saturday to help care for her.
I Ist' ol“ Kimble; assistant, Bessie
brother's. Normand McClelland's.
|
----------------- »---------------------------------- 1 Woodman.
Bertie Smith is improving slowly.
You can now get low-priced waffle | A board meeting of Sunday school
Little Chester Dean Holten is irons that will make beautifulcrisp; officers and teachers is called lo
visiting hls sister. Mrs. Bentard waffles except when you havecom-' meet at lhe home of Arthur Rich­
ardson on Friday .evening, Jan. 3.

I
(Hmm. Mieh.
MOBYGAOE BALE,
hrfaail hasing bwn made in

Back of the Investment

MOBYOAQE rOBBCLOSUBB.

in the shares of this sayings and loan association, a
purely mutual -company, stand first mortgages on

homes mostly occupied by the individual owners.
The home is recognized as lhe most desirable se­
curity known.

Lei us tell you more about this company that has
been successful for more than 46 years.

Rational ffiottn &amp;
^nueshnent (flnntpatm
I brine lh» buildjnc
1250 Griswold Si.

DETROIT, MICH

£.ra6/i&gt;Aed 1889

Dttnit'l Oldtzt Building A Loan

J. L MAUS

_____

:dcbalhomlu
-tuusvsn.w

AUCTION SALE
Having other work and not time enough to devote to my
farm work, I will dispose of my personal property'at public
auction at the farm located 1 mile north and 1 mile east of
Hastings, just off of M-43, on

SATURDAY, JANUARY 11,1936
Commencing at One o'clock, I will offer the following property:-

HORSES.
Span of black horses, age 12
and 13 yrs.; this is a good
work team.

450 crates of good corn.
6 bu. seed corn.
20 bu. potatoes.
800 bundles of good corn fod­
der.

COWS.
Red cow, 6 yrs. old, due May
2nd.
Jersey heifer, due May 1st.
Heifer calf, year old in May.

FARM TOOLS, ETC.
Big 4 McCormick mower.
Hay rake. New hay rack.
Good lumber wagon.
Oliver chilled walking plow,
nearly new.
Spring tooth drag.
Five tooth cultivator.
Whiffletrees.
Push cart and many other ar­
ticles too numerous to men­
tion.
v
k

HARNESS.
Set of good work harness.
HAY AND GRAIN.
12 tons mixed timothy and
alsike hay.

Bjjou Battle Creek

WEST HOPE.
Congratulations to Milliard Cook
on hls marriage Saturday to Miss
Marlon Beattie of Orangeville. Our
best wishes to this young couple in
their matrimonial voyage thru life.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Holmes of
Pontiac spent the holidays with her
parents. Mr. and Mrs Wm McCal­
lum. Wm. Jr., who is attending col­
lege In Kalamazoo, was also home

4 Big Days, Starting Sunday, Jan. 12-13-14-15
Weak Day Matlnss 25c — Nights • Sunday 35c

A swift, saucy, smart pag­
eant of lovely girls, tuneful
tunes and gay, rollicking
comedy.
,

Rev. Isaac Osgood of Wakuhmee
visited the home folks during the
holidays.
Mr.’ and Mrs. Geoffrey Keller and
family spent New Year's day In
Lansing u guests of his sister's fam­
ily. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bales.
Happy New Year to the Banner
force and all their readers.

SINGERS, COMEDIANS, DANCERS—
GORGEOUS COSTUMES— BEAUTIFUL
STAGE SETTINGS

Sparkling with
That Certain
French
Something!

Parisian
Follies

Open a bottle of Highlands ifairy Grade

Down Go
BUS
i
FARES '

A Milk—drink a glassful. You never tasted

30 — PEOPLE — 30

anything so good, so different, so tempting!

FEATURING

Healthful, too, because it is produced under

3 'REVELERS

the must sanitary conditions.

BERT SNYDER

High in vita-

• mins—lbw in bacteria.

•

DORIS O BRIEN
Contortionist

Any way you use it “Highlands Grade A"
adds a touch of newness to familiar dishes.

It will awaken a new pleasure in the cereal
course at breakfast and makes desserts both

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. No property
removed until settled'for.

dainty and substantial.
Try a quart and you will realize a rich­

New LOW Fares
To Many Important
Cities Now in Effect
on Greyhound Lines

ness found only in “Grade A” Milk.

CARL POTTER

[

DEWEY REED, Auctioneer.

CLIFFORD HAMMOND, Clerk.

Travel Now!

High in Cream Content

Pocket tho Saving!

Raw or Pasteurized

Complete Information

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hustings

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS

FHONE &gt;1»

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, JANUARY 16, 1936

14 PAGES

M j C CONDUCTS Nation’s Favorite Movie to Be TUESDAY ANNUAL
Presented at Rotary Benefit
08924810
MEET NG DAY
'

THREE BARRY CO. RURAL
GROUPS TO ENTER
PRELIMINARIES

M

*■— 1 ex M I

o ft

I?

ft o

r

/111

la

TWO ATTEMPTS AT BUR­
GLARY SATURDAY NIGHT

■AL MEET NG |
OF WINDSTORM CO.

PAGES Ito 8
HASTINGS’ FIRE LOSS
niir 1PT Hi 1WQ
$1,510 IN YEAR 193S1UI1L nul lUllU

INDI

Walldorff Store Entered—
Ninety-Three Per Cent of
Try to Get Into M. C.
Firemen Responded When
Alarms Were Given
Freight
Depot
The Proceeds From "Roberta" to
COMPANY’S AGENTS HAVE
BOTH BANKS AND TWO
WILL IN0LUD1 nOULLfl,
Chief Guy Giddings of the HasSometime Saturday night or early
ADDED
6,261
MEM
­
Help Establish Scholarship Fund
FACTORIES NAME
1 tings Fire department presented his
LAUGHS, DRAMA AMD
Sunday morning, burglars ■pried
open a rear door of the Walldorff
annual report to the city council for
BERS
IN
1935
DIRECTORS
HUMAN INTBRMT
Three of the nation's favorites in । but they remain to cheer and the
furniture store and attempted to

■, irui miulral Ml u wl&gt;»l erttlex
“ • “iumpfi. They let be»u- j
meeting Friday evening.
get into the safe. They pulled out
A total of 34 fire calls were made. TICKETS WILL GO ON
the locking device.-evidently having TOTAL INSURANCE IN
ii LITTLE CHANGE MADE
,|u, O. ■Robert..- UM muxiexiMoo,. _____ ,
tool with which to do that, but
FORCE IS $389,000,000 Nine of these proved to be Just
-------r_
--------------- Strand
- ------ 1.jewelry.
.
,
,N USTS 0F OFFICERS tome
91 cdy
P,ct
Pre coming
to tbe
SALE JANUARY 18
they
did
not
succeed
in
getting
Into
\
4,1 I theater on Wednesday and Thurs-j Interwoven In the play is the
Policy
Holders
Appreciate
partment arrived, in thrra of the 1
------------InrltfiAff Will
day evenings. Jan. 22 and 23. This! usual romance, which ends happily
•do„v. Mnrln Nr,
' remaining twenty-five the depart- Public Will Be Alked to Vote
Judges Will Select One for L, B
lhow spotuore&lt;1 by th(. ,or ,n concerned.
Th« Two Bank* Made No someone on the street. The only
Splendid
Way
in
Which
I rnent /extinguished tbe fire without I
.
thing missing was a revolver that
Presentation on Fanners’ (Hastings Rotary Club, the net pro-I Included in the supporting cast
***
-------------- *-in Either
----- nl,t
Changes
Offi­
damage. Seven of the fires were car ।
un tne rlays as
Business Is Conducted
-w.—-lionai 'are
are such
sucn favorites
ravoriies as
as Helen
neren WestwesiWeek Program
’reeds to be* used for educational
Given
The nightwatch discovered the back
cers or Directors
The Michigan Mutual Windstorm ! fires. In fifteen of them, chemicals !
work with crippled children. Man- , Icy. Victor Varconi. Claire Dodd..
(n (our. wxux wu
„„
door w« unlocked in making his Insurance Company of this city iiad
For the past several years. Michl* after Ray Branch Is donating his । Luts Albemi and Ferdinand Mu-1 The annua) meeting of the stqckrounds, and investigated the prem­ in 1935 one of the most successful
an State College has conducted a theater
expenses will
will be
nier. - A
bevy of --------------America s---------most holders of the National Bank of ises but found no one.
TIM rtmxrXxbM
.( U.1,
JfiP
gan
theater and
and the
theexpenses
be nier.
----------------years in 115
yrum
its nisiory.
history. H
It aoaco
added 6361 -------- 1
— -• •, — V -—
— ! the Hastings Civic Players Associa­
rural drama contest during Farm- ^nail-paying for the film andsome j beautiful girls add eye appeal as Hastings was held oil Tuesday eve­
The same night possibly the same new members, and made a net gain [cP°rt
lhal the total loss by fire ■
tion at the Central school auditori­
.
other Incidentals comprisingthe 1 the fashion
mannequins, and
a
Hastings for_the enning at that bank. Tlie director; person or persons tried to enter the of*$16,722,007 in the amount of in- ln lhe clt?
&lt;r sWeck inFebruary of each year.. nrccssnry outlay.
dance band,composed of radio and
tire year 1935 was only 81510. An- um on
~ the evening
’Jrx of January 29.
chosen were as follows: Kim Sigler. freight depot. Evidences that they surance in force.
Until this year Barry county groups
starring in "Roberta" are Glnp*
” «&gt;
’■•»« headliners, supplies some
linger’ ■•■&lt;»&gt;
i night
club
i other Item In the report, which ;
J™!
This company Is now one of the .i shows the faithfulness of the fire- ■
Irene ,| sparkling melody under the expert Chas. Potts. John C. Ketcham. had attempted to Jimmy the doors
have never entered this contest, but’Rogers. Fred Astaire and I....
hospital benefit an December
I Charles Hendershott and Dr. Burton were found; evidently they did not mrxest
largest corpora
corporations
uons m
in me
the state. ■ “"J5|t
: 9 was so pronounced that the execthree Barry county groups have en- Dunn, who arc outstanding movie guidance of Astaire.
; Perry. The directors made their get in. as nothing was molested. So The total volume of its Insurance is
uUve board decided to postpone
As announced in the Banner, the
tired the preliminaries this year.
.-tars. Among the song hits are
----------------- -------------------------------------Of
n"™" 7?^ **
flf” 1 their scheduled play. “Ths Servant
■ selection of officers for the ensuing far there arc no clues.
1389380.416.
all of which, under the
Professor Nickle of the Speech i "Smoke Gels in Your Eyes." 'Touch membership of the Rotary Club was,I year as follows: President. J. C.
mutual
capital
and
._. plan Is
-----really
. — —its
r—
.-mran
, in the House," and use four more
department. Michigan State College, of Your Hand." "Yesterday" and a divided with Roy Hubbard
I Ketcham:
vice-oresident. C. 8.
stock,
for
II
is
subject
io
assessment
|
stock, for il fe subject 16 assessment | T [1 ( IC
•!&lt;&gt;» the plays submitted In the conmet with Ui£ groups on the evening new melody. "Lovely to Look At." David Boyes as captains of the tick­
Potts; cashier. Warren E. Carter;
to pay lo&amp;te.s. FortuniKely. the as- I fir 11T
| test.
,
of January 7 to give them assistance I Clever dancing by Fred Astaire and et-selling teams. The admission assistant cashier. Orville Sayles
scssmenta hnv* always been small. I I IILilUi
The plays to be presented include
In casting their plays and help in Ginger Rogers, a band number, price is 25 cents to each one, and if । The annual meeting of the stock­
Usually the yearly assesiment is ten
IRIMIIIll DTHnnT ,hrtUa- laughs, drama and intense
method of presentation of the plays. "Let's Begin," attractive costumes necessary, matinees will also be giv­ , holders of the Hastings City Bank
cents on the hundred dollars.
fl U U 111
UL U|
I ’1Uman interest, according to DireeThe thret Barry county groups and a gay and tuneful story are all en to care for the crowds. Gel your • was held Tuesday forenoon and re­
The annual meeting of the WindHIIIIUhL 11 Li
’
or Barnett. It was the very unusuand one from Allegan will meet at ni be found in the picture, "Ro­ ticket early from a Rotary Club' i, suited in the choice of the following
storm company was Iwld
in this •city
—
— -•
— tiiat
..........
---- ' '
.........—---- uokuic v* 3’
mic—•
inui
the Welcome Grange hall on Tues- berta." The i.tory revolves about member or at the Banner office. &gt;! direclors: F W. Stebbins. M A.
il pi*y*
natureLiiaw
of the ♦four
plays
yesterday. There was very little of nvT,p
nnn WAC. pnNl, prevented them from winning any
day afternoon. January 21 at 2:00 .the comedy-rich situation of an The show is u good one and the'
j
Lambic.
Robert
Walton.
Kellar
the
oid-tlme
stir
at
this
meeting;
as
OVER
5600,000
HAS
GONE
o{
offered inasmuch as
ONCE
OWNED
500
SQUARE
o'clock for the preliminary contest. all-American football player falling purpose for which it is iieid is in-1
Siem,
R
C.
Fuller.
Dr.
C.
S.
Mcof fact, the business of the
‘a matter
...................................
THROUGH HIS
■-*•--■
-- —
। these plays cover a much
wider
Tlie four plays will lx- given before heir to a fashionable Paris gown deed commendable and worthy of | Intyre. A. R. Carveth and M. L.
MILES OF CALIFORNIA'S
company is conducted so success-.
। range than thbse given on Decem­
an audience and three Judges from 1 shop, the property of on aunt who your support. For many years the I
Cook. Tlw directors elected the folOFFICE
CHOICE LAND
fully and so acceptably to Its policy
ber 9. the executive board Is parttcMichigan State College, who will, dies suddenly. Tlie grid hero and
I lowing officers for the ensuing vear;
holders, tiiat comparntl ■ ' ■ .. of
jularly anxious to .-e what reaction
choose one presentation to be given his bond leader pal set the world
“„.L
. W,.2±
them attend thF annual ,. tings. (rnilMTY HAD BALANCE
the public will expvrfence. There­
from this district in the semi-final of fashion agog and Paris is won­ «lwrx .nd Uwy wl.h u&gt; cenUnu. bins,
vice-president: M. A. loimble. GOLD WAS DISCOVERED
That does not Indicate that they are 1 buur' ' • nHU DALMnUE
' fore. a ballot will be attached to
t ,can In an educa-.
contest'. Four groups chosen from 'dering Just what a football hero doing what they
Roy
OF $115,737.25 JAN. 1 every program and each patron will
NEAR HIS ESTATE not-interested, for they are. for nj
different districts in the state will. h“-' to say about feminine fashions, tlonal way, although a large share vice-president and cashier;
' Chandler and Loyal Lowell, asslstgood
percentage
of
them
are
repreI
at Farmer's his
menu helps
neips him
mm out making
maxing ,01
of me
the wont
work nas
has oeen
been taken
taxen ovi
oven-by
present their plays al
His. friend
j ant cashiers.
Wkek for state honors The presen- ‘ « lot of weird statements about the W. K. Kellogg Foundation,
Led to His Financial sented by proxy. They are desirous County Owes No Debts—Has liked best. The identity of the writ1 The annual meeting of the Inter- This
—
, ,,
,
, —
«* «ua»uiB me Kcticrui uuau&gt;c.-» jm&gt;u- i
tation of the plays Tuesday after- ; fashion Innovations his friend is go- I So—Gel your ticket early and en-'i
Balance in Every Connclea of the connnny. which have;
.. to
... Introduce.
.....
noon nt the Welcome Grunge hall is W
So ail1 rnrw
Paris style }oy n vuupic
couple ui
of iiu
hours of clever sing­ 1 national Seal and Izrk Company Downi^L* and He Died Com •
officials of the Civic Players and
fashion
stockholders was held oljhe combeen so successful
past,—
carty Fund ~~
paralivcly Poor
!-------------------- in the
---------1
and
open to the public. County Agent ' arbiters come *to
“ see "Roberta’s" Ing. dancing. -..
j
■ »— u.
as on the night of the hospital ben­
। pany's offices Tuesday afternoon
rU?herom‘X'now Las 107353 pol- '
f« ’Se'y^ efit. the sealed envelopes will be
Harold J. Foster, manager of the fashion displays, prepared to laugh I show.
| and resulted in the selection of the
Something over 50 years ago. i
project in Barry county, feels the,
opened and the names disclosed at
following directors: E. Tyden. Rlch- there died in the city of Washington ides in force, with over $389,000,000 ’“J‘‘
the end of the performance.
plays will provide n very enjoyable
tdcaq
MAIIQ
RUES FOR $20,000.
/lard
Oroos. Clarence Crawford.
Crau
' ord Groos.
W. a man who probably has the dhjlnc- of actual instance. The gain this ;
u S the
"Night Lamp" will be the first
afternoon to those who can attefid.
I ntHO. iVIMUO
...Cook,
----- L. and LZ.
_ Cook.
J_ j. Tlie di­ tlon of Mng the onlv one who was year of over sixteen million dollars y„r Ofo“r X.oSTaSd a balance play of the evening. There are but
] Mrs. Dorothy Ouyney. through fwr RM. L.
Thc Barry .county groups enrolled
rectors
named
as
officers
for
the
MAKES
SUGGESTION
ever
granted
an
ejnm»c
right
in
our
attorney Kim Sigler, has brought a
of Insurance In force means more
nf an*;
arc Home* Economics Extension
ensuing
year.
E.
Tyden.
president;
oii'ii country.-It TVa^nonc other than ,
damage suit against Mrs. Helen
who are husband and wife. The
Clubs num
liuus
from* me
the Welcome
wiieuiuc iiiugnuur-।
neighbor- .
hoqd. the Parmelee neighborhood | Believes
Helpful
Changes Winn for $20,000. The suit grows Clarence Crawford, vice-president: Johann Augustus Sutter. Born in;
parte arc taken by Mr and Mrs.
™
out u
of. the alleged assault by Mrs. RttaKl Oxya. vice-president end 1803 in the Grand Duchy of Baden, j
Harold Smith, uho are playing in
and Delton.
-r
I Winn, who U tinned with .Irlklng
Code xeereUry.
Could Be Made .in
for a time as a young man he served
the same tradition as Lunt and
None of the Barry county groups
Mrs. ouyney
Mr,
Guyney In eueh
such a manner as
ax to;1 T1?f Vlklfifi
v,klnR Corporation's
Corporation s annual ns an officer in the Swiss army, com -' to 1929. Under these conditions there t,most $4,300 Tlie balances in the Fontaine.
has been given too much lime to |
Tax Sale Laws
^'‘talne. Southern and Marlow,
.. ..... her
.
.
....
..
Iliff wnc
throw
down
the stairway of. the
meeting
was nlczx
also ImlH
held 'T.infirlnv
Tuesday off.
aft- Ing to this country he was Amcrl- i. have been mafiy reductions in the I various funds at the close of the J
-AUgn
oU?r
work on the play, but the hist two, County
_____________
Treasurer L. F. Maus be- Porker House in such a manner as ernoon. Th
The
named- ennized as John Augustus Sutter. ]■ amount of Insurance carried. There
* stockholders --------J
*
istage
'year were as follows:
«■&gt;»&lt;• and screen- husband
•• —* and
-* wife
w«k» luve
llw women ba.y .1,
lhal , ch
MlooW
for
directors
the
following:
E
Ty'
would
be
no
use
in
continuing
poll
­
He
was
attracted
to
the
west,
as
1
to
break
her
thigh
bone.
The
sumI&gt;.«■xi Il
It is
lu hnnxwl
tHi. plays
vxlxtve can
x-nti be
Im,
•wr ■« I l&lt;‘ams • Mrs 8m,lh b
director
them.
hoped the
‘ den. Richard Groos. James Radford. were many other pioneers of hisj
W...W.
»UU.U
MV
VUUCtkCU
MVF
?
nd
.....................
1
tnona
in
this
case
is
returnable
Febj
regarding
tax
sales.
There
will
bia
, cies which could not be collected beR6 on and says rchearsal3 are going on
given in several communities over
Hubert
Cook
and
M.
L
Cook.
Tlie
....................
day. He first went to Missouri; then I cause of decreased value of build-1 , ™)r
I'-n-u at 811 tlmeR during the day and
the county during the remainder of; tax sale, carried on under the aus­ ruary 13.
direclors selected ar. officers: E.'Ty- took on tlie life of a trader to San­ Ings. For a tlma many loyal policy ^lt,rar&gt;' £un°
night
horn/
night at
at their
their home.
.... contest I* plcca
tbe auditor general. In ev- '
the winter after ..
the state
den. president. Richard Oroos. vice­ to Fe. and nt last In 1839 lie landed holders had to cancel their insur- County Road Fund
completed. At least one piny will be ery county seal in Michigan next LOCAL DEBATE TRIO
president and treasurer;
James in California with n little money ance. because of inability to pay the ; Covert Road Redemption
given nt the annual Barry County May and annually thereafter, There j
17311.66
secretary.
and a lot of cfedit. Arriving there he comparatively small premiums. soi_^ur’d
DEFEATS GRANDVILLE Radford,
Home Economics Achievement Day will be llw usual number of persons
County Draln
Drain Punrt
Fund ....
The Viking Equipment Company, set out to found his empire. At that that for this company to come Countv
4.402.41 lity of Jewelry is needed for thia
. I I U . au n
--------- ------” •WUIIU IIH» CmpiTC. Al UlBl
in the spring. Everyone Is invited to present al the sale, ready.to buy up|
which '■
“ “
--------- ---------------County Health Fund
2,687.18
la ■**
the
finance
company (or time caliromla 'wax ju.t a cock-pit through willi well toward $400,000.(Continued on page three) .
attend tlie Tuesday afternoon enter­ the tax-title sold in ordcr'tq get the Ac|d Four Points to Record— handlL._
handllnir eonlracU lor the
!Mortgage. Tax Fund ....
. Vlklnj | fiUed with ateel-xpurred too,terr o(
1950
।Continued
on
page
six)
tainment at the Welcome Grange high interest and the costs assessed
Delinquent Tax Fund ...
6.75755
fSnE?."!:
a,n»r«Uon.
beld
held
iv
IU
annual
Annual
mootm«t,„,„y
different
___________________
nallonalltlea
and
of
, against the property sold for taxes.
Meet Battle Creek Central
hull..
OPERETTA FRIDAY
6318
00
n, Ti»M«y *K«n»on. .nd u.M, ’
T
i„„
M
„,„
,„d
i
ra.
J
s. Then Mexico had BIG REPUBLICAN
To be sure the owner of the prop-1
There January 24
1,673.60
’°*1°Y 8 directors: E. Tyden. control ot whnt Is now the state or,
EVENING^ JAN. 17
I erty will have « ehxnc. lo rctem | By (1„„un, orxndrtlle HUh RMhaM
8636
Richard n™.
Groos. Clarence rt
Crawford.
—r™, calKomta, but ter attempt to «ov- WEEK OF VALUES
RALLY FER RTH Teachere*
Institute* Fund
o,n Escheats Fund
AT THE A. &amp; P. STORE !K
(te I,iT'iXS
«“■“&gt;»&lt;»&gt; &lt;&gt;» «... James
vuu.vo Radford,
awxuiuiw. and
utiu M.
r»l. L.1J. Cook.
uoui. ern
rniwas
Brasweak
weakand
andfeeble.
fertileThere
Thuwwere
wnA
__ —
.....—
Cemetery Trust Fund . .
1500.00 Clever Production by Hifk
n
u
.
j
.
—
—
wniwi
uno
lorcigners
wno
,naa
,
j
»«SSSSX£S
------------: rates to Ul. owner o( the Inx title:
High school Oeb.tr squad
Revolving Drain Fund
1.007.06
School Mmic Clnbi
Second Annual "Manager's and a &gt;'ear 15 a-short time In which [ added four more points to Ils record CInrenct1 Crawford, secretary. Jamis their ships, adventurers and wan-k Feature Brilliant Group
Soldiers' Relief Fund ...
262.86
— 1 in the Michigan High School Foren: he can redeem his jwonertv.
wqpcrty.
and Orcheetra
State Covert Road Fund
266
“nd lrea!1' 1 dcrcrs' coming from all pointaVof I
of ^Speakers ’
Week"—Large Liat
. Mr. Maus believes that the city or :
urer,
Richard
Groos.
,
the
compass.
Thev
were
all
aenerallv
!
Colonel
Theodore
Roosevelt,
Dr.
Tax
*
Collection
'Fund
77
...
k
3342.71
The
unusual operetta. "The Count
•slc Association.
i the compass. They were all generally
township in which property b sold ।
of Specials
and the Co-ed," which la to be pres­
Glenn Frank. Governor Frank D.
°L-lhe
The local team, composed u
of
De,, I for delinquent taxes al these annual
» a^SHALL
COUNTY
GO
INTO
the
kind
of
government
that
the
i
ented Friday evening. January 17,
Fitzgerald, and Senator- Arthur H. । J ,.nce u wilMw*nnuS^at
The wonderful response to
tax sales ought to be represented al Forrest Walton. Jr,. Floyd Woodard.
in the Central auditorium, by the
will speak at a Repub- K-S
"Manager's Week". last
year Mas
n,.'.
, i1 throe
these sales,
and nu.rhi
ought m
to bn
be nrivi.
privl- Ii and
ant^ Donald Weaver, debating on the
'ales nnrt
ABSTRACT BUSINESS? MM,?J?„Ed^rAiPfire)me °f Vandenberg
'vert
Road
Redemption Fund
lican banquet program, to be held
batanre
Jf818oS
d has a High school music organizations unprompted the a. A ?• Co. to make । leged
|eKcd to buy up such delinquent I object
subject of "Government
• Government Monopoly
——- cf
Barry
the
Chic
audltorliftn.
Grand
Rapids.
I
•_
l
_
8
i
00
?*.
this an annual event. A full week of, In»i-«
tljais x
would
lie
warranted
in
each
of
Munitions"
earned
the
decision
of
unllbt
»v&gt;
wnrri&gt;n)»d
In
ranrl.
Of
Munitions"
earned
tlie
decision
Of
ii?,
wuuiu •«. wurruiiicu 111 cacn । Professor
—-...... —Kenneth
—
• values." foods pmchuM-d especially |
“
a....»
Hance of
of AlAl- Petitions Have Been Present-. ■■■
um. Roy Garner, and Lewis Hina,
(Continued on page six)
"
...
ca.se.s and
be content with the reg-1 Professor Kenneth
G.
Hance
on Saturday. February 8th. Tlw I
__________ , , r
revolves around Kenneth (Bnooaa)
for the people of tills community. uUr
lnjU.ad. flf. m0^p b
bion
college at
at the
the Central
Central audltorauditor­
■ ' JegB1
•
• lnlwst...
|On college
dinner will be served at 6:30. There REVIVED IWTEDCQT 1A1
ed to Board of Supervia. |
Andrews, comedian with the Warden
util b&lt; featured. Mr. W. A.i Murphy. । thaJ) d b) UuU lnUrest. whlch the ium before an audience of about
are accommodations for 1200. Ban-? r,c*lvtu initncoi in
College Glee Club and Dolly Mclocal manager, tells Ms they have ', tax title purchaser can exact. This two hundred students and adults. In
ors Asking For It
■■
quet
tickets
$1.50.
The
balcony
of
tlw
BARRY
LODRF
K
OF
P
been preparing for this event for । would. In most cases, save the prop- explaining his decision. Professor
auditorium will be available on a
1 uvuuc rx. ur r. Spaddcn, daughter of an austere
, wuuiu. ill iiiiiii
cur piup......
— ---- —. ..........
The board of Supervisors has re­
college president. Mr. McSpadden la
ALFRED HAYWOOD.
' ertv for the property-owner. The H*nce awarded the decision on the ceived petitions asking for the sub-'
twenty-five
cent
admission
charge
a
.
As
“Specials" to plaoM every one in I city or township would be saved basis of more effective work in dellv- mission to the voters of the county.
„ he
’' has
" ,ndecided
a”'h^ to quit farming I to thaw who wish to hear the pro-1 Blart8 Year in Good Shape— extremely worried over the necessity
of raising the final $50,000.00 for Um
Barry county. Every item on sale ...
&lt; .. .....................
.l- eru and refill ntlraia K,, fl.a lla.lln.. at the coming Hiring election, the £,yXd wUl hive Jn Sinn -u i -----------------------------------gram without attending
-dinner,
w._ ,
, Rents New Hall—Herb
from loss, because it would own the ery and refutation by the Hastings raS‘^d°™'.U'I.!T.Xb.C^t.’’ “
college endowment fund.
o SolpT'rarm S
has been selected by the fnanager tax deed to each description of land team.
.
where accommodations will be propersonally so there will be Just the
Galkins, 0. 0.
An audience vote on the question
vlded for several thousand.
on whlqh it bought the tax title
K
p
£ra
n
,S,3'™do
S
luSSS;
“
i"
S.?
1
1£TF
Snooze has one more encounter with
merchandise you want.
This is the only qppearance in । Barry
oarry Lodge.
exxige. No.
no. 13. Knights
Knignu of
or
given by the state. The property before the debate and after the de­
Considerable effort is required to owner would^ benefit by having a bate showed a shift of opinion of 29 hllllnACR Ihrt Ymir
Ko nald Ira IKn .
OS U1C HUCtiOnCI F. The list ln- Michigan at this time for the out of Pythias, was one of the earliest a traffic officer, merely because ba
pul on-a sale of this type and every . belter chance to redeem his prop­ In favor of the Hastings team, up­ county. These petitions have been sultry1 hay^f^ler indton St’ state speakers, which will insure a. lodges of that order established in has made a hurried teip to the city
referred to the Judiciary committee; ESj’Sl*
Ml l” state-wide response. The meeting is this state. It has had a fine history
attendant in the store is there to erty. We think Mr. Maus has made holding the negative side.
Festival program which is to taka
the ndv' foT [Utu Particulars,
plc&lt;Ue you. They arc looking forward ।
In its next debate, Hastings faces of the board. If that committee shall 1
sponsored by the Republican party during the revenly yean of its exlstn fine suggestion.
place that evening. In his efforts to
to seeing many of their old friends
the trio representing Battle Creek find that the number of signatures Or-Dlco nc TUDrrorganizations of Kent county. All; cnee. A turning point was reached at
hide away from the officer, and yet
and hoping to welcome many new
Central High school. The debate is is sufficient and that the necessary ounlto Ur I HKht
Republicans in the state are Invited; the beginning of this year, but the
continue his'part in the program.
.
ones. Buyers the county over will JUNIORS SELECT
scheduled for Friday afternoon. number of signers are qualified
11 1 IIQTDATCn TAI I/O to participate. Dinner reservations way now seems open for a fine career
remember this erent a long time.*'
IL.L.UO I OR I CU I ftLKo may be secured by addressing Ivan for this organization. Tlw lodge be­
January 24. at Battle Creek. Has­ voters living In this county, they.can !
“
ONE
MAD
NIGHT'
rented, and successfully disgubea
Tlie date Is ret for January 20 to
tings will again uphold the negative have no option but to recommend
------ Kr
t
T
HulL 130 Crescent Street. N. W ., san the year practically
p.avk.v-ii.y out
UMV of
VI debt.
urut.
himself as the proprietor of a dal25 inclusive.
Dayton Manker Is Grand Rapids.
’• *•----------I It
- has
-------------------------side of the same question, but the that the board submit the matter as Rev.
.
curtailed its expenses by arThere are few events in the year Rehearsals Started Tuesday team in this instance will be the requested in the petitions.
----------------- -----------------------ranging for a new hall which will
Speaking
at
Wesleyan
;
.It happens that Dr. McSpadden is
to equal this one. and every effort is
following: Robert Henney. Dwight
for This Three-Act
The proposition will then come
BROTHERHOOD ON
not on*y “^factory bOt it can expecting some distinguished guests
being put forth to make this one
Methodist Church
,
Ferris and Donald Weaver. ThW before the people of the county for
MONDAY NIGHT --------------r'*4ilv
Mystery-Farce
outstanding.
will make a total of nine debaters Action. It is an important matter
A three-doy prophetic convcn-1
them
is a count Gustave von WeinMr. Murphy has been with tlw A.
Tlw junior class of the Hastings, who will have represented Hastings to them and requires their careful tlon has been planned by the Westvp-.ji.
Herbert Calkins has been chosen
A: p. Company* for the past eighteen High school has chosen as their an­ in State League competition this
' ' thought.
They should not be | leyan Methodist church for the । pettKer to Be Dr. Freak, as the new Chancellor Commander.
years, the past six he has spent in nual play. "One Mad Night." a three year.
swayed by prejudice nor clamor, coming
.
week-end.
..
The Rev. Dayton
Spence—Chas. Annable
Heu hu
entered
* purptuTol
J upon*-•-•
hu
dullee
— lum
with
- I 5*
the
fixed
finrux
Hastings. Previous to coming to this act mystery farce to be presented
but should look at the matter on I A. Manker. of Marion. Ind., former- j
its merits and act accordingly. If «y oi mis place, win give three il-!
Heads Squad
( Lodge
be
city he was stationed at Omaha. February 7.
LO&lt;Ue'.tUta*«uS.VwS
iES
Tzwlffp attain
attain objectives which
whlnh will
will
he. it
Its merits and act accordingly. If ly of this place, will give three ilIMPORTANT ACTION
Neb.. Houston. Tex.. Chicago; Ill..
they shall decide that it will be for ___________
lustrated lectures
upon subjects
In' Next Monday night will occur the■»In■»»
line •with
Its»■«
fine history. »■
He has
_ _______________
_ ________________________________________
iu’
About 65 Juniors tried odt for the
.Muskegon. Mich., and Des Moines. play*before Christmas vacation. The
AT MEETING HERE the best Interests of the people of which' most people are today very j January ^meeting of theHastings, the h^tybacking
ofthe members,
much interestedf Sunday. January ; Brotherhood in the usual place, with! The lodge has rented The »«®nd ,
1a. During this time Mr. Murphy final cast, chosen Friday Includes;
specialized In food merchandising. Floyd Woodard. Loretta Springer.
7:30 P. M ---------------------he will lecture
on ; supper
.u. LirfTtepare a set of abstract books, at a 19.
1 - at----------------------------------- al the regular hour of reven. story of wiiat is known as the Jesse I Rn™.
Assisting in the Grocery Depart­ Emerson Cairns. Lauris Anders. Boy Scout Dist. Executive cost of a good many thousand dol- •h.
Townrehd building. Jen? occup!.,-!
explain the mutaito and
the .uhi^e
subject. ■-«..
*The Signs of Christ'sIrt'ci^v
, o'clock.'
ment are Jerry Bywater, who came Doris Gillespie. Donald Feldpausch.
Oomm. Wants Full Time
L. he is therefore obliged to continue
lars, and divide the abstracting bust- Coming." Monday evening. Jan. 20.; There ought to be a large attend-1 os a hardware. This upper i
the deception. This Is not altogether
to Hastings from Grand Haven. Stuart Edmonds. Darrell Aldrich.
UIU. on
Mil "tWeb
VW CM of
Ul the
me Rcd
1UU j. ance
““kt al
Mb Jmia
bumcwuK. because of
ul 40 by 90 feel. It can lx*
'
ness with the Sheldon company who up
talk
hls ^•tbering.
Scout
Leader
dLtasteful to him because both Dr.
Midi. Fred Shipp of Bellevue. Peter Margaret Fingleton. Lola Ashalter,
Spider." This service will deal with j the prominence of_____________
the speaker. IRev.
adapted, to the uses of tile
.
and Mrs. McSpadden have urged
A meeting of the district executive
Fedewa of Hostings. Don Woodard Margaret Hummel. Marian Hewitt.
—•- 1 rDoctor
uv“"'- Frederick Spence, who for* the changes toeing made by donIts «-■-»
history
then the people should vote for it. communism. tracing JI:
and Don Fisher of this city.
2000 years,
years, showing
showing!' more
more than
than fifteen
fifteen years
years has
has been
been ed work of Its members. The owner i Dolly to offer the Count every pos­
1st 2000
Robert
Culbert
and
Uiwrence Boy Scout committee was held But If. in their Judgment, it would through the past
sible encouragement. In the Ixhm
Others serving in the local store Moore. Rehearsals started Tuesday Thursday afternoon In the Com­ not be a wise proposition for the Its effects upon Russia and tlie i the, pastor of the First Methodist of
oi the
inc building.
ouiimng. Earl
tan Boyes,
uoyes, has
nas giv- that she may win a title for honatf,
are: Claud Sabin, manager of the night under the capable direction
munity room of the National Bank county to make such an investment world today. The speaker has sc- i Episcopal church in Jackson, and en them the rent for the first year as well as a fortune for the college.
meat dejiartnwnt. *ho came here
cured a large number of stereoptlcon who has a state-wide .reputation as if they shall complete these changes,
of Albert Becker.—Marian Hewitt.
of Hastings. Representatives of all and enter Into such competition,
from Bellevue, he also spent some
brother-. So the way seems smooth for anoth- highly Involved—with the confession
then they should oppose It. The slides with which to illustrate this ‘ a speaker. He was on
sections
of
this
county
were
present.
time hi Battle Creek and Lansing,
ago* er fine future for Barry Lodge,
Banner has no Interest whatever in address. Tuesday evening. Jun. 21. hood program several &gt; .
Mich., previous to coming here. He is A COMPLETE DEMONSTRATION. The treasurer's report showed a bal­ the abstracting business, either dl- Rev. Manker will lecture on the sub- and those who recall ids address at whose members and friends are of Identities, a rcicu.ered letter from
Count Weinerlieutcr, and a thrilling
Roy pdller says he has had a com­ ance of $550.83 on hand.
assisted by Allen Davidson also
Ject, "i
’ The
Last iwuna-up,
Round-Up,"' tnu
this teclec-;mui
! that nine
time spt-na
speak in me
tlie highzst
terms pleased with that situation.
rectly or indirectly. We will discuss Jew.
nc um
n&gt;,
The
having
the counfrom Bellevue.
&lt;
plete
UlCkC demonstration
UCIUUI.IUIUIUU of
Ul the
“It value
1MIUC of
XJl
----- question
'--------- -- of------n ------------c_,—
------------ .. .by stere.
• of
-» whim-ji— -~~2.
‘ Barry Lodge furnished the Grand ending.
this matter in later issues of this --------lure also
being illustrated
and Ills -----message,
the Banner s Want Column. A short il&gt;* committee employ its-own Scout
optlcon views. All services start at
The supper squad
“*'-J fpllows: Capr Lodge of Michigan a Grand Com­ High school office.
time ago lie offered for sale fifteen I ExecuUve was taken up and dls- paper.
7:30 P. M. and the public is cordial­ ; tain Charles Annable; the other mander In the person of the late
GOES TO FAR FLUNG
.
.
.
..
.....
raltauH Iba. fKra Mlera.iewlrara « raara .
brood sows. As a matter of fact, he cussed. After the discussion, a mo­ ANNUAL INSPECTION
members are Fred Otis. Bert New- Phillip T. Colgrove. who later be­
ly invited.
was made that the organization
POINTS OF THE EARTH had twenty such sows, but wanted tion
land. Harry Dunn, Richard Lau- came Supreme Chancellor, Knights
OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR NO. 56.
: to keep some of them for himself; in this county continue its connec­
Sunday evening Mr. Davies of
NEW SERMON SERIES.
, baugh. Russell Lauiwugh. George | of Pythias of the World. From
Hastings
Conunandery
No.
56
K.
he sold sixteen Instead of fifteen, tion with the Battle Creek area
Beginning
with
Sunday.
Jan.
DeMolt.
F. G. Havens. John Havens, among Its ranks there was recrult19.
Hastings Advertised All. Over so
and mso
una
also ms
his ncru
herd uuor.
boar. He
nc aaia
said t}' council. In order that this county T. will hold their annual Inspection the Rev. J. A. McNulty, rector of Gordon Havens. Howard Ferris, F. ■ ed the membership of Hastings Di­
may retain its connection with the on Monday evening. Jan. 20. The
the Methodist church.
the World by Internation- ! he had had double the number
Emmanuel
____________
Episcopal
r
______________
church,
---------starts
C.
Tabberer.
Roy
Nagler.
Ardis
vision.
No.
19.
Uniformed
Rank
of
sell, he could easily have disposed national Boy Scout office; and that inspecting officer will be Sir Elliott
a serrpon series
scries -on the “Life of
* , Evart. Kenneth Braendle. Vere the Knights of Pythias. Hastings
al Seal and Lock Co.
|
d““”
! of. them, for thara^vors many/calla the county hire Its own full-time C. Davidson. State Grand Captain vnrioi.
Christ." me
the very luuiiuuuou
foundotlon of. Carter. nuuc
Rolfe duiui
Bulling. John Brass. Division became' world-famous, for
t One of the institutions of this'। after all of them had been sold.
executive and carry on its own General, of St. Joseph. Guests are
.. t
—j Arthur -Haven,
-------- (
three successive years winning the
Christian cvivillzation. ________
Everyone Is
1 and
city that Is making the name of
Scouting program.
It was voted expected from Charlotte. Battle welcome to attend this series, which ! " —------------ *-*-*
। - e»
——
’ ; world championship in competitive
Hastings known all over the. world. I CHANGE OF DATE FOR
that any service coming from the, Creek. Kalamazoo, Marshall. Ionia,
EXTENDS LIBRARY
I drill, the first time at Cincinnati, the
*”
is the International Seal tt Lock!
area for the benefit of this county ’ Grand Rapids and Lansing. Dinner will develop th a way that will be !
of interest and value to all. It will I
SERVICE FOR WARDS, second at Milwaukee, and the third
'
BOY
SCOUTS
MEETING.
Company..Last
year
Hastings
car
|
would be paid for by the county,'will be Mrved at 6:30 P. M. Lyman
uunipuny.,uasi
car.
Library
board
their—-■
lastigt w“Abington
------------—' ,—
-- at ------Mais were shipped to Canada. Mex- । The date of the annual meeting of and that only a nominal fee be B. Chamberlain is the Commander, relate the life of the Master to the ' ---The
thought and complicated needs of meeting
give library terf—f Lodge --------------------------------imiim voted to otv.
has been a useful
------------------*
Ico, Honduras. Salvador. Guatemala, the’ Battle Creek Area and the paid to the Battle Creek area or-'
today. . Experience proves 'that lc?
u,° nrst
second ward factor in the social Ife of this city.
Cuba. Costa Rica. Peru, Argentine. I Special Court of Honor has been gahizatlon. It was decided that if WANTED—A KITCHEN CABINET,
"Christ was God's answer to man's schoolhouse branches three days There would seem to be no reason
Brazil.
Chili.
Ecuador.
Bolivia, | changed from January 13 to Feb- the area council refuse to accept I The Women's board of Pennock
greatest need."
j. cacb
each weekweek, 011
on Monday. Wednesday ^hy
^by it should
should not continue lie
Its iptenaplenChina, Dutch East Indies. India, ruary 10.
The District Court of this proposition. Barry county will hospital is renovating the kitchen
__ _
ini! Prtrlav
----- and
Friday. •
aid wdrk.
France. Belgium, Holland. Africa., Honor is to be held January 28th, withdraw from It. This motion had and can um to good advantage a
■ The first ward hours are from 2 to
PANCAKE SUPPER.
Egypt. Palestine, and Porto Rico, i 7:30 P. M. at the court houM. the unanimous approval of the kite hen cabinet. Has any Banner
At Emmanuel Parish .,vu«
house *«.Tues- 5—7 to 8:30. Mrs. Leona Cleveland,
RETAILERS MEET FKIDAY.
There, car seals were used In lock- Roy Henry of Battle Creek will show twenty-one repreMntatlves of the reader one they can donate? If so day. Jan. 21 from 5:30 on. Everyone librarian; the second ward, 1:30 to
Ing up cars of bananas, rubber, su-1 motion pictures of a trip with Eagle executive committee who attended call Mrs. Q. E. Goodyear, phone' (cordially
Mrs. Sutton In 6:00. Mrs. Amy Still Bower. U- lion la meeting tomorrow,. Friday,
cwumiij invited.
uivn
the meeting.
2484.
”
iI charge.-Adv.
*
gar and various other products.
| scouts through Canada.
charge.—Adv.
brarUn.
•■

PLAYS TO BE FIRST
&lt;
RIVFN ON IAN

12432215

GREAT EMPIRE
AUGUSTUS SURER

srsrs

-®!-

One Auction Sale

ix isr •

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, JANUARY U. 1M4

BARRY COUNTY’S
FIRST 1936 BABY'

FREE!
100 lbs. SUGAR
AND

*19 Occasional Chair
9 p. m., SATURDAY, JANUARY 25 AT

Food Center
With Every 25c Purchase in our Meat
Dept. Starting Jan. 17th we give you a
FREE TICKET On the 100 lbs. Sugar

SPECIAL

BABY BEEF SALE!
YOUNG and TENDER

Front Quarters

I

Hind Quarters
75 to IU
u lb.
100
lb.-------Average
lb. 1 jC

75 to 1UU
100 lb.
lb.-------Average
lb.

Beef Kettle Roasts

ib.

14c

Pork Shoulder Roasts

ib.

19c

Bacon Squares

ib.

19c

2 ib.. 19c

Pork Loin RoastsRib End

lb.

19c

1 Qt. Kraut FREE

Sirloin or Swiss Steak

ib.

15c

SPARE
RIBS
Neck Bone Cut

LARD Pure 225c
Fn. and SaL Ody

Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Kidder Awarded
the Prizes

• '

'

-------- 7~7f
,,utal1

New Officers Tues.

Spy or
Baldwins

Head Lettuce

25c

2... 15c

Yes Ma’am

P..try ’i’.k

'69c

Hard Crisp Head

New Carrots

Dry Onions

Bunch

10 Lb. 19c

French’s w”lye

•*&gt;

83c

Mother’s Best »in-.s.a 99c

SO RED THE ROSE

PETER IBBETSON

New dance sensations
by the dancing stars

Cases Entered, 209;
Estate Taxes Levied Totai $1935.18

'New

oi "Gay Divorcee". . .
Hit melodies by ths

You Can Save
With Safety At

r Silver Song...A price£?' less adventure in Paris
at lovo time I Laughs I
&amp; Level Rhythm!

Mortons

59c

Salt k? 83c

Rumford

3
round

Flour

$1.09
18c

Liberty Bell Soda Crackers 2^. l$c

Seminole Tissue

4

roH.

25c

4 FREE TICKETS On Occasional Chair

Fels Naptha Soap

SCfeRTA;

JEROME KERN'S muncal'ttagt hit
glonfied on the screen . . . starring

IRENE DUNNE
'A ST A i R F

■ Gl'N.QER

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. JAN. 24 and 25
t earless ituler of the World's Most Famous Underworld—

FRISCO KID
Willi Margaret Lindsay and Ricardo Curies
I EATURE NO. J

10 Ban 29c

OXYDOL

ROGERS

RANDOLPH SCOn, HELEN WESTLEY. VICTOR VARCONI, CLAIRE DODO
Benefit Performance for Ho»tingi Rotary Club
Admission 25 cents to all
Matinee Starts at 3:00 o'clock

CAGNEY, in the biggcit of his 5 hits of 1935

10 Bar. 43c

Lft. Size Pkg.

19C

Probate Judge Stuart Clement
I presented his annual rejiort to the
I Board o(_ SupervLw.s this week. Our
readers wUi be interested in the
Items.
New cases entered—209.
Administrators tipjxnntcd—74.

We List Only a Few of the Many Special
Money-Saving Prices for This Sale!

FRED

Crisco

Pillsbury

’

Recently Or. R B Harkness, chief
of the Barry County Health - Unit. •
vvwy WYWT'RTTTnN rtf
Trleadsv night meeting of Odd .FclStanley Malcolm, of Carlton, had presented us with an interesting; HlB FUlE EXHIBITION OF
To the baby girl bom to Mr. and inTkX
low
booklet
bearing the above title
i "■MARKSMANSHIP WAS
his right hand drawn Into the me­
tm. Henry
Henrv Kidder of
al Irving
Irvine Two.
—
Mm.
Twp.
Prom lime to lime we will publish
Noble Grand—Fred Linington.
&gt; chanlsm of a corn busker late Tues-,
goes the honor of being Barry coun­
some of the questions and answers
ENJOYED
Vice Grand—Richard Nixon.
| day afternoon. The injured man
ty's first '1936 Baby " The parents
Recording Secy.—Dewey Reed
which arc of general interest.
was brought to Pennock hospital Ureside on a farm near Irving. The
Financial Secy—L. D 8Umm,
The first deals with spinach.
TOLD OF TRAINING
was
found
necessary
to
amputate
attending physician was Dr. Wedel
Treasurer—Hugh Myers
Hpinaeh
In
Ordinary
Diet
three
finger*
and
part
of
the
thumb
of Freeport.
Mr Llnlngton read his commit­ of his right hand, leaving only the j
GIVEN STATE POLICE
Question—Some time ago I read
The prizes to.be given arc: A Baby tee appointments as follow.:
little finger and part of the thumb., an artlcla which stated that some .
------------Bunting by FTandsen's Store. Baby's
Right Support—Henry SoUiard.
Mr Malcolm had been throwing physician had come to the
con-j The Radio, Finger Prints and
first pair of shoes by Hastings Cut­
Left Support—Wilfred Cole.
the bundles from the wagon to the elusion that spinach was no longer
Trainnrf nffi-lola
Rate Shoe Store. 2 cans of Gerber s
Warden—Oscar Manning
feeding table, where Ed. Edwards 1' considered a food of such high value
value ' *ramca UIIlCiaiB Help to
Baby Food. 12 large cans Armour's
Conductor—Lawrence Larkin.
j was feeding the machine
The in the diet as it had been rated for-1
Fight Criminals
Milk and a 5 Ib. pall of Karo Syrup
Chaplain—Bert Archart.
trundles became
bundles
Became piled
idled up about the 1(tnerly Because
Becau.se it was more apl
ap. to
by Feldpausch's Food Center, a Baby
The HasUngs Rotary Club was
Right Senior Support—Zenas Col­
machine, so that Mr Malcolm got clog the digestive tract than it wb&gt; ■ highly entertained by Sergeant 6ulBook, comb and Brush by Car- vin.
down
from
his
wagon
to
push
14
to
be
of
value
in
the
diet,
il
had
lost
velh and Stebbins, $3.00 check by
11van of the State Police force at
Left Senior Support—Gay Norton.
away. In attempting to do that, the Ils place of importance, and other their Monday meeting. He gave an
the Highland:. Dairy and a »500
Outside Guardian—Harry Shute.
glove on his right hand was caught vegetables, such a* peas, were sug- exhibition of marksmanship with
check by the Hustings Banner.
Inside Guardian—•Claude Gay
in a pinion and drawn into the me- ' gested in its place. J* there an» the revolver that would be h^rd to
We are happy to congratulate Mr.
Financial com —Walter Rockhill
„
statement?
chanLvni with the result stated foundation
for such
and Mr Kidder, and they can receive Ira Shultz. Bird Shellcnbarger.
duplicate. At a distance of twenty
Much sympathy is expressed tar Mr --------------Because I —
am *teaching
—
nutrition. I feet from the target, he ehot ten
these gifts by presenting the doctor's
Press—Harley Ro wig
Malcolm.
a&lt;n particularly interested.
certificate to the various donors.
holes in quick succession through a
Answer—Spinch. like many good small spot on' a card. Two small
COMMUNITY FAMILY
ICY ROADS CAURB
foods, was greatly overstressed by pieces of elialk. set about an inch
ANOTHER ACCIDENT. dietary enthusiasts
Spinach, of apart, were successively knocked
NIGHT AT WELCOME
As Mrs. Clara Hannaman was course, contains minerals and vita­ from their places in the holder
Rev clement T Jordan, pastor of ‘
mins and is a valuable food but il without lipping over Uie holder. A
the Church of Christ at Coals: Special Features Are Supper, driving to Has tings from Nashville
on Friday noon she 'lost control of •is not the only green vegetable. small hollow glass ball was placed
Grove is conductins
service;.
.
conducting revival services
Gibe Club and Talk by
her car due to the* icy condition of Many enthusiastic mothers and. on a regular golf tec. He shot it to
there until Sunday. Jan 28. this be­
sonic
professional pieces without tipping over the tec.
the roads. The accident happened unfortunately,
ing the second week Subjects for
Rev. Karl Keefer
near the turn-off to Thomapple persons who did not think straight, Hta most remarkable performance
the corning week arc:
•
A big time is being planned al
... lake The car was overturned and tried to get children to eat spinach was made when he shot dlrecUy at a
Friday—"What is a Christian?" Welcome on Friday evening. Jan. 17,
every
day.
with
the
result
that the card, taken from an ordinary pack,
landed
in
the
dalch.
Mrs.
John
Wolfe,
Saturday—"A
Terrible
Reality." when there will he a Community
youngsters quite properly revolted.
with Just the edge of the card ax the
Sunday A M — "Sacrifices of Right­ Family Night A pot luck supper Lt who was a passenger, and Mrs.
The truth about spinach and target. The ball ripped straight
eousness." Sunday
P. M-—"The to be served at seven o'clock, fol­ Hannainann were badly bruised.
other
green
vegetables
is
that
il is across it, cutting It in two.
They were brought to town hy pass­
Dleiy of Jesus Christ." Monday— lowed by a program
Among the
This exhibition was 1{iven to show
Where the U»vc and Righteous­ special features will be songs by the ers-by and treated by Dr. K 8 Mc­ not necessary to concentrate on any
ness of God meet." Tuesday—"The Glee club which rendered such fine Intyre. They were returned to Nash­ one of them, but that each day's diet Rotarians the kind of Uulning which
Awful Wages of Sin." Wednesday— service in the Welcome neighbor­ ville through the courtesy of Gott­ should include at least one serving memberj of tlie state police must
of one of the green vegetables with undergo in the handling of a re­
•Tomorrow ' Thursday—Tlie New hood several years ago and the Rev- lieb Weber
spinach taking Its normal place in volver. It Ls not probable, however,
Birth “
Karl H. Keefer of Watervliet is to BREAKS ARM IN
a varied menu.
tiiat many of them became as pro­
Mvnir-wf wiriFTV
i speak It Lt hoped there may be a
It Is not true that spinach clogs ficient as Sergeant Sullivan.
FALL FROM BARN.
MEDK AL MH.IETY
good 3lu.udiuice at lhU Family
In his talk to the Rotarians he
Charles. young son of Mr And the digestive tract.
r.l.r.l 1 &gt; Or r It LKS. |
The use of green vegetables should ■aid that three outstanding things
Mrs Charles Hinman had the mis­
At a meeting of the Barry Coun- ,
---------------- -o-w &gt;----------------. be encouraged, but one need not fall are much used now In fighting the
ty Medical society held Thursday at STUDY PARLIAMENTARY LAW. fortune to fall about 12 feet from I down to worship any one of them.
criminal—the radio. Identification
an
upstairs
barn
door
on
Monday.
J
the home of Dr H A Adreunie. th?
Beta 8Unia Phi met last night at
finger marks, and training ,of offi­
following
officers were
elected thc home of Mrs E J Pratt, their As told to the Banner, he and an­
cers. it was interesting to leurn Itinf
President. Dr Herbert S Wedell of educaUonal director, taking up Hie other boy were playing tn tin- bam GUYNEY FURNISHED
einnnn PAOLI Dfikin the state police of Michigan had
Freeport; secretary.
Dr
Gordon &lt; study of parliamentary la* lor the and Charles leanedfagaiiut the door
which gave way He sustained u
JIUU.UU UAotl DU ND pioneered in the establishment of
Fisher of Hastings Dr Robert B topic Of the evening.
• police radio stations Thi« state iin
----- ---------Harkness was elected delegate U । ----------------------- on
— —
- ­ broken left arm. both bones in the
Miss -Mary Royer
re|x&gt;rU'tl
Em
the state Medical society meeting. . ma Fox's book, end Miss Ethel Rag- forearm being fractured He ta doing Brought Before Justice Mat-|the nMMt powerful police rxdiu,
as well as uosdblc
,
„
, «
.
broadcasting station in this country
la. and Mrs. Hazel Hinkley on Rob­
pwuur,,
thews—Bound Over to
I nn
a probably m
and
In the world
HASTINGS GROUP NO 1
erts' Rules of Order, Mrs. Pratt
I Hr mentioned the fact that ours is
INJURED AT SCHOOL.
Circuit Court
Hastings Extension Group No. 1 leading tlie discussion following
| a hard state for police to cover. To
Ro-^cr s;.Mix. six yearsViold .»
son «"
of
The sorority will meet with Mrs.
met with Mrs Hattie Prentice on
n,ch,nl
w
a
'
uro
"
“
ton
"
“
'
1
1
5
«•“»"&gt; »" Wrt; ■ Mkhlw, u&gt; IM Mlrenu, ...un.
Tuesday afternoon for the lesson on Pratt again next week for a waffle i ;',.d .. ib.su, Mrhil ™,
। and coffee supper.
siqcve fitting
off I। tip oC
oi,lhe
tne «PP
upper
peninsula, on- must
day. .suffering a fractured ankle. He
to •nsw‘'r ,o tl*‘ char« c °
er l*n'i['ula.
lived
I
travel
as
long
a
distance
as
from
and another boy were tussling and Impersonating an officer He wal'—4 [
■■ lnn‘r “ ««*t*nre
. 1 Detroit to Atlanta, a large part is
Roger's foot was shut in the door, examination and was bound over to
the accident happening when he was the clrclnt court, furnishing cash played in these days by the radio In
capture of criminals. Th- state
given a push, it is alleged He was ball of $100 The offense with which II' the
police stations of this and ull states
brought to Pennock hospital and the he is charged is a misdemeanor un­
fracture reduced, later going to the i dcr 0Ur laws, so that this bail was J In this country are now equipped with
Jinme of
at his parents
narrnLs where he
hr is deemed sufficient at
at the lime
llnu-. । radios The nature of the crime and.
home
time Howwhere possible, a description of th?
recovering.
! ever, ‘had the prosecutor known I criminal
is brondenst rapidly from
».»»*•
c,
**»»l would happen and did happen I one end of the nation to the other.
We urge you to watch our Screen for changes without notice
BARRY HILL GET $-j-~52.93.
4 little later, he probably would
I Some ---------remarkable
results-------------have come
It now seems probable that what have demanded higher ball. It will;7-----------------—b known as the Soldiers' Bonus Bill he remembered that Ouyney's sis- '
. ... „ ,
SUNDAY end MONDAY. |AN. 19 ond 20
will p.iss both houses of Congress, ter made a brutal attack upon her*
whither
the
President
vetoes
it
or
I
stater-ln-law.
causing
a
very
serious
!
therp
“
^
hng
r
print.,
of
a
mlllMn
MARGARET SULLAVAN in
not
Barry county
r1
nU‘Unui rsarrj
county people
people will
win be
ue in-1
in-' fracture
iracture of
or her
ner leg
leg bone
Done The
1 ne two.
two. t
, "
teresled .to ------------------know ...
that
u IorlIle
former
.r sol- loge[
together
|wr wllh
with lhelr
their Detroit attorney, j■.
,7. ' ;a
,,nd
J? over Jfive
W juilljon
the attack
Xshi.mtan
rte.’ltan "dnr?
diers Uvlng tn Barry •ounty will re- . left .immediately
.................... after
'•
-------------- 1 on
.......................................
‘
■ this
••
‘
Guvncv and have not .ilnce I *s»«&gt;wi;lon. Civilian.- are bcli.3
ccivr rJ331!».M when
bonus .Mrs.
uuyncy ana_ nav
nm -mice n.^r-printed in increase : num­
With Wolter Connolly and Randolph Scott
■hall be paid. .&gt;&gt; it ptubably will be been apprehended. Warrants arc out
in H|c*near future .
' ro, Mrs. Helen WUin. Guyncy's xls- bers. not because they are cx;M-rt«d
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY. 1:00 and 3:00 O'CLOCK
to fall into criminal ways, but to
■'---------------- ------- ----------------I lrr
Identify them in case of accident or
AITKECUTIOS D1NNCT[ 'XXS.m....
BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT—JAN. 21
Officer;, elected on Friday evening
i by the Hastings Townsend Club arc
Ob W. dnrvu,- J.n 21. &lt;b. MB| President. Walter Rockhill; vieeCARY COOPEk ond ANN HARDING in
ernnery Mwa»Uun »M|
ponce Ttey mu.1 not
IHTsident. Simon Ellerbeck; secreth&gt;
moo . club win wwr m„, ,, ,00„
but tlyy
Schantk; advisory board. Gilbert u dinner to be held tn the rytbl.n „)Usl k„„,. ,
parlors.
The
bus
in
session
is
to
tartorr.
me
buslnew.
wuiot.
b
lo
u
,
)(1
uboB1
dcU111, 0( Jfu.cu„,
Scott. Mrs. Bessie Annable. Mrs.
Thr most beautiful love slory In all modern literature
Sarah Woodruff Mrs. Belle Brock convene in the theater building and criminals.
....
an intcic.-.llng audrcM. and
at eleven AM a t.ite
talk mu
will be mv.n
given
With Iti.i i.upino. John llallday. Douglass .Dumbrille.
Peter Kunz and Sumner Sponable. ..
in the T- K. school auditorium, with the exhibition ol marksmanship ua&gt;
Dickie Moore and Virginia We idler
a man from Lansing ar. guest 1 astonishingly good.
CIRCLE NO. 4.
also be bridge for iI
7
, t,
Mrs. George Sheffield. Mrs Phebc .peaker. There willI abo
WEDNESDAY ond THURSDAY. JAN. 22 and 23
—’ —
Mote and Mrs Edith Bonnell en­ the ladles. These .c
“—
'“—
'“‘X
";|THE PROBATE JUDGE'S
tertained Circle No 4 of the Meth­ joyed a prosperous --------------- —.
RFPf)RT CfiR YFAR
odist „
L now..
A S. on Wednesday aftcr- merchants and stockholders are tak1935
noon al Qie formers home on W mg this means ol expressing their
"urvni run i
Green st.
I appreciation.

*5U

10 lbs.

"]SGT. SULLIVAN
’GUEST OF ROTARY

Answers To Popular
Health Questions

Stanley Malcolm Lost Three
| i^e following officers were inFingers, Part of Thumb
i stalled for the ooming year al the I
PrQm Occident

Golden Girl with ths

APPLES FLOUR
65c SALE

RIGHT HAND INJURED
IN A CORN HUSKER

.

GEORGE O'BRIEN in

Whispering Smith Speaks
Friday Night and Saturday Mallnre Only—Back Jotic* in
“THE ROARING WEST."- No. 14
Adult* IS Cents
4 hildreu !• Ceuta

$1.00 Halibut Oil Capsules---------- 79c
50c Milk of Magnesia------------------ 27c
39c Rubbing Alcohol, 1 pt. ----------- 19c
50c Mineral Oil ------------29c
50c Martel's Bay Rum 29c
35c Porsten's Tooth Paste19c
39c Blake Hand Lotion24c
50c Pure Aspirin, 100 5 gr. tabs. ..29c
39c Witch Hazel, 1 pt.19c
29c
1 Ib. Black Psyllium Seed
$1.00 Halibut Liver Oil Capsules ..79c
_49c
75c Norwegian Cod Liver Oil
.69c
2-qt. Hot Water Bottles
_29c
500 Klenzo Tissues ..-.-i—
4 oz. Glycerine and Rose Water — 19c

Try Peckham's Remedy for Coughs due
to colds, formerly called Peckham's
Croup Remedy

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Goods Delivered

Phone 2131

Hastings, Mich.

A

Surciul adminLstmtors appointed
-IB.
Special guardians anointed—I.
! Guardian., named for minors—25.
I Guardians named for incompe­
tents—14
. Administrators.
executors', and
guardians discharged during the
year—182.
| There were 109 afflicted adult
I cases handled by the court, and 94
, cases of afflicted or crippled chil[ dren.
; Tlie total amount of inheritance
taxes assessed agaiivl estates during
the year was 81935 18 Tills was paid
to the state and goes Into the pri­
mary school fund.
In the juvenile division of the
probate court, tlwre were 25 new
cases, with 39 dependent chtftftciv
involved. Five delinquent children
were brought into the court, and
there was one case when! neglect
wax charged.

V. OF F. W. MAKING
MEMBERHIill* DRIVE.
The Veterans of Foreign Wfcrs arc
making a drive for memberships.
They hope to have as many new
members as ixt&amp;siblc by January 33.
Al that time, live Harold Payette
Pal of Battle Creek is coming to
Visit the local Post, bringing tiwir
degree team with them. Every mem­
! ber of Leo A Miller Post Is a.--ked to
। make a date with himself and conic
to the Post rooms on Thursday.
January 23. There will be a supper
land entertainment for the ladles
after the degree work is put on.
jeome up and bring a new member
I with you.
GROUP'NO. 2
i Hastings Extension group No. 2
1 met In the .court house. Suirrtisors'
room. Tuesday; Jan. 7 The final
] fitting at commercial pattern wascompleted also a review of notebook
and lessons Adjourned io meet Jan.
! 28. Twelve members present.—Nellie
|MatUiew*. secy.

�■HIE HARTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. JANUARY 1$. 1938

High School News
Some interesting statistics were
obtained In the regular monthly club
meetings held in the High school
on Monday
In the- Social Usages
Club a vote was taken on certain
socrnl questions. The questions and
answers follow. "Should the girl ever
pay her own way to a public perlortnance when accompanied by a
boy?" Vote, yes—31 and no—2. Some
of ‘the qualifications are: "She
should never hand the money over
to the boy in public but could do it
when the two are alone Tile girl
might offer to puy for both tickets
one time and the boy for both next
time. The boy should not be embar­
rassed by her so doing. If the boy
can afford both tickets, however, it
is better for him to be allowed to
pay for them." A suggestion was
made to the effect that girls and
boys may enjoy the company of each
other'without going some place
where It is necessary to spend
money. "Try to cultivate within
yourself a personality that will be
rich enough so tiiat you won't need
to always go places' to be enter­
tained and to entertain."
Fifteen members of the High
school orchestra are to accompany
the glee clubs and chorus wltti Uie
annual High school operetta.'“The
Count and the Co-ed" to lie given
Friday evening. January 17. in the
CcnlVal auditorium. Admission 15c
or 20c at.the door.
Eleven members of the High
school basket ball squad attended
the Western State—North Central
Slate of Indiana basket ball game
at Kalamazoo a week ago.
At the regular meeting of the high
school chess and Checker Club on
Monday a checker ladder was sug­
gested and approved by the mem-

niUC APT D I VC
UllL fib I iLftlu

FILM RECAPTURES
ROMANTIC SPIRIT

HAS TAKEN THE BANNER
FOR OVER^ FIFTY YEARS

atection of officers—providing we Dinner will be followed by a proimportant
OF meeting
POMONA GRANGE.' declde to contlnue^-and such other gram featuring two good speakers,

°F roMOKA
An all day meeting ol Barry couti- business as may need to be disposed The first a prominent member of
ly grangers, sponsored by Pomona. of. Remember that some time ago It the State grange executive commll•So Red the Rose." Paramount s
Milton Nobles May Be The wlU be held with Welcome grange as i was voted that any person having tee. Holly Hubbell, the second, an
screen venion of Stark Young's ro- ,
IRI [ riirinnll
been a fifth degree member, and authority on the TownsendtJld Age
host on Saturday. Jan. 25.
mantle novel of the South during
I U I f nfnn~in
Banner’s Longest-Time
This meeting is mast Important as • who is. at present, in good standing Pension Plan. Joseph Warnock.
the eighteen-sixties, comes on Jan.
Ill I LIILnilUfiL
.. will
.... determine
wv.........
it
whether or in
nothis or her local grange is emitted community singing and other music,
Subscriber
19 and 20 IO the Strand Theater. Ai-------------------------------------------------- -------the Pomona organization will eon-;to take pau in this business meet- Wlttch. for further announcement
cast of well-known names is fea-,
(Continued from page one)
MOtcn
Nobles of Grandville. tlnue Irr this county. Business merrt Ting.
next’ week and plan to attend —Mrs.
----lured. Including Margaret Sullavan.---------------------- ------ -----———
Michigan, paid hts subscription for
Pot
P' luck dinner al noon, sharp. Lena Norris. Pomona Lecturer.
Randolph Scott. Waller Connolly, play, as a bug or it Is emptied on 1936 on Tuesday. He has taken the Ing u called for 10:00 A. M. with
Elizabeth Patterson, Janet ^leecher | the table. ThrXhvlc Players admit Banner for over fifty years Until a
and Harry Ellerbe.
| that It did no/come from the shops
township of Barry, but is now en­
gaged in the real estate and lasurharffshlpaXfid struggles in UwMjUncs. but was in fact purchased anca business at Grandville.
days wn-rf a peaceful country was right next .to
the
candy
.
.
. counter
We mentioned last summer a
u.c name ol war. R aboj...
c|„,. h,„ The action takes place celebration at Crooked lake, given
tell tilei story of a young girls love 1
nt
4n honor of the one hundredth
/. tried
and
tested
when
the
If
’
apu.uaer.s
u.,d
mud -ten
bmll&lt;l.yorM."u«Olbl-.-r.luUvr
ffidn to whom she is pledged refuses | Morgan and his 8an&gt;- P
Walter of Mr Nobles. Mr. Gibbs then lived
Campin.-T'lm
Hr’?0aa.
...............
roweu. Marceline
campurn. Tom ln,?'hU
1 W j.*.I
w“ ST*
X"’ William
W""“m Kennedy
K"""ay •"*
"d «old‘he“?c1,Lc“"‘’
a^h.^.
Myers.
and B
Bud
Mr'
Ifnrrv Wnlldnm and aiioti
Margaret Sullavan plays the girl
.
„w
tive He agreed to carry it until hl-.
Vallette a product of the proud
The third play te What Do Ya
w|&gt;(ch
occum-d
uom
way.' ano
--------- , .......
. -------;
. . ’ , “
South Randolph Scott plays her Mean,
coinbyine
me nura
Hard way?
and TK.n
I- dlrMM
Ite nroor'
proprlHor.hlp
M thr ea.vsweetheart who refuses to bear arms *■
hv Mr B.rn«L Thw TtM!
" ,he
propr
RwSISl »"
""" l» thr ™-l and no I,. was to be passed "
n “
™‘ old­
on
to the n
next
when tlie call to War
dies. Right now Mr Barnett is wor- est in the four families. Mr Nobles
throughout the country.
!-s tills cane.
ried a$ to how to Imitate correctly now carries
reachedthe
thei age of 86.
taici CADC fieri ICC IC
,he »ound of a distant machine gun tcaciied
WtLrAnt ntLItr Io
’but will have something figured out
.
~

We put finer-than-

ordinary fabrics

into these smart

A LARGE PROBLEM in llmr

t*11*

p'“y Ls onr

GROUP LEADERS TO

strangest
types oftypes
drama
prestrangest
of ever
drama
ever preMCCT MIQQ CRAMFR
An Impressive Total Is Paid '«*«»“*«» here. Deadly
Mttl ffllW bnftivicn
Deadly enemies
enemies meet
meet
„
after death and their reactions tn
to
By Barry County For
' the new existence work out smoothly Five Hundred Barry County
। to a rather unsual conclusion The
—
Such Relief
Women —
Enroll in the
। scene Ls in the upper room of a
From the annual report of County ,'deserted farm house at sundown on
"Clothing” Project
Clerk Allan Hyde it fs shown that
a July day. The five men taking
Leaders of the local .......
Home „„
Ecothr U of M. hospital was paid |9.part are Jim Fennell. Harold Logan, nomics groups will meet with Miss
556 78 for treatment of afflicted;
Tom Myers, William Kennedy and Eleanor Cramer.
specialist in.
udulLs by Barry county last year.
Russell Cleveland.
clothing from Michigan State ColThe Kalamazoo state hospital was
•Station Static." also directed by lege on Tuesday. Wednesday and
l»id 11 *05.78. The stale sanatorium M
Mr. Barnett, completes the program. ।—
■
•
*• —
- —
for tuberculosis patients was paid As Mr. Barnett says. "Il is the worst i Thursday. January 21. 22 and 23.
These three days of training lessons
11.264 84. The slate farm colony for । play
ever written. It is the mast' will be held at the court house in
epileptics was paid $235 89
utterly Insane thing I ever read or Hastings.
.
These figures show that the relief । tried to direct. I had difficulty in 1
County Agent Foster re|x&gt;rt.s there
work done in Barry county is by no finding people who would act in It.
means repre-sented by the $29,000 It Is the nuttiest comedy that ever arc 29 groups organized and study­
paid by the county into the Poor made me laugh" Il is a rip-roaring ing the project in the county This
year's lesson is on "Clothing " The
The Faculty-Student Council ap­ t.md or into thr atrWtcy
I
MUrteJ i.TO with i rM ol three preceding lessons have covered
pointed a Student Property cotnmlt- fund In addition to the $12*63.09
n-Q..]. n
nio. hll,
,»M to th. obo„ odUMr tnautue,."U“ StaS the foundation pattern, the making
of the pattern form and the fitting
lion of the group will lx1 to check tto,. thr M»&gt;m
Barry coonty ।
Up on missing articles bei-j.igmg to also paid BUM* -tor . Mothers I b blro,n
,or BfKX] meaRUre. The of the sleeve Tills, the fourth les­
students.
pattakm.. R will be
that aeltore L,w 0, „,e c K 4
u son. will corer fitting your dress and
will embody a'dlversion of new fab­
John Leary and Edna Schultz rebel I. quite a problem.
I the scene ol the play and the time
rics and materials that can be used
gave talks on the "Technique of ActTlie county clerk, report show. „ Jtil
T,„
in the dress.
'tng“ in Dramatic Club. Monday. Urn receipt, o! the General land, ,ncll„,„
olen
Mun)hyi
Miss Cramer is giving a very com­
ol the county, Irom •hleh Ml coun-101rvel„d j,ck wu^.'pam Aq.
The Juljlor play. "One * Mad ly own... are paid. «ere 10.1 year.roA
Wnt,
Anna Hdred plete and detailed course In "Cloth­
Night." is well under way with Mr MH.O8UJ . Th. expenditures Irom Bdd Wo,fc; Marsam oeumare, ing." Many group members report
the lessons to be very interesting
Becker as director and Dorothy nut land were
, Waller Rowell. Joe Cowles. Bure and worth while All agree they will
Roush assistant
luntIliad a..bobmee at the l-SWnlna I Dfmibd„ o
A„
be nbte^to do a much belter job at
Tlie annual girl's physical educa­ ol ISIS ol MJHMO. end al th* close (,lt„ „M Lucltp K„m„
----------------------------sewing and dress making after the
tion demonstration will be held Feb­ ol the ytutr IMS. the balance was . ----Tek
,„ wl
„ go
„„
le Salutdk
i Tickets
will
on „
sale
Saturday, year's lessons IjarV been given Tlie
ruary 20 under the supervision of $768-56.
Cordes'’ Newsstand
New&amp;st.
I। January 18, al Cordes
“
urr*
“.re
course
seems :=
to be sO
someMiss Helen Merson.
,
______________
I „.
Following
the
custom, all what ...w..
more iwork for many of the ■
If the Hastings High .school de- SUDDEN PASSING OF
al. .....
rrwrusual
.-f.d
! women enrolled than have the les­
.....
------FRANK beam j seats will be reserved.
bate -----------team wins
from Baltic Creek
sons on "Nutrition" and "House
Central. Friday. January 24. they
The sudden death of Mrs Frank FOURTEEN YEAR NON­
' Furnishing." as given by the Colwill become eligible tor the slate Ream on Monday of this week. Jan.'
..
ABSENT RECORD BROKEN. |rgr Extension Department in re­
। llininatioiui.
13. came as a shock to her family i
Rotary
Governor—
Ray
Dresser'scent ‘ &gt;'earj‘ Nearly' 500 women
-------- are
Iripnn»
. In _____
-________
»_________
Tlie high school Journalistic "Ren-1 and friends.
luses" have been writing one-act' our was
was un
about ni-i
her usual
usual1 monthly
bulletin
enrolled In the Clothing" course
up and
uiiu .nxiui
. .
.
...to Rotary
... clubs
.. in in
.
. "r
"
.
the county this year
morning
duties
when
the 1summons I his district
district, which
vhich includes
includes Has.
Hasplays for class work.
came, evidently a heart attack of
‘
local
such severity she lived only a lewl1*1-*-"’d
NEW EXTENSION
minutes. dying In her husband's
BUI Shulter. ol the Hostings Club
Tlie front of the Capitol faces east
,
| mbued attending Rotary the latter or opposite to tbe While House.
PROJECT STARTED
Mrs. Ream was bom. HenrleiU P“&lt; «' »c because ol Illness. This When the Capitol was built general
Organizing Local Groups to Llctkn. April 13. KISS. In Germany 1
&gt;'l» 100 per cent attendance
on tlw Mlle coast, and came to I "“rd tor a period ol over fourteen opinion wai that the city of Wash­
Discuss Civic, State and
this country with her parent, when I &gt;™‘ ’“•» HealU.«. lellows cor­ ington would
..
..
. . ™
... . ... .. tnlnlv do
National Problems
do urt
get the
the snirlt
spirit of
of nttrndinv
attending
15-months old. They settled in Al- tainly
.
largely toward the northwest
County Agricultural Agent Har- bion, later moving to Irving town- 1Rotary meetings
c.1d Foster reports the starting of a ship, where she was married In
new extension project in the coun­ March 1883 to John Franklin Ream.
ty known ns "Problem Discussion
From that time on Mrs. Ream has
Groups." Tills project will consist of been a resident of Hastings. Two
tlie organization of local groups of sons were born to this union, Ed­
15 to 30 members who arc interested mund. who died when fourteen, and |
Sheldon &amp; Sheldon
In community, state and national John Norman who lived till the age
problems of tlie day Tlie project of twenty-six.
gives a chance for informal group
Mrs. Ream was a woman whose
discussion and the crystallizing of chief interests were in her home, her ‘
Ideas on these problems similar to friends, her Howers, and the simple |
the old forum.
everyday tilings that count for most i
The extension office's part In the in life She was a devoted wife, a
Reliable Abstracts of Title . . . Real Estate Loans
program la the organization of good neighbor, and will be especial­
Real Estate Bought and Sold on Commission
groups, securing a group leader, ly remembered by little children
training the leader In the group whom she greatly loved.
leadership and presenting the group
The funeral services will be held
105 So. Church St
Hasting*. Mich.
with factual information on the from tlie family home on E. Bond
uroblcm to be discussed.
street, this morning, conducted by
With this help. Mr Foster feels Rev E- O McSherry of the United
many small, wide awake rural Brethren church, with burial In
groups can spend some very Inter­ Riverside.
esting evenings together and at the
Surviving are the husband and
same time materially increase their two brothers. Charles of Jackson,
store oLJpiowledgc.
■
and John, of Freeport.
Mr Foster feels Ahis project would
TAXES ARE *B£ING PAID.
I
fit into the program of many exist­
ing rural organizations such as the
City treasurer. E L Bentz reports i
Grange. Farm Bureau and P. T. that taxes are being paid this year
A's Tlie factual material offered for much better than a year ago. He lias
discussion would make interesting already handed over to the coun­
■•xini meetings for groups witliln the ty treasurer more than one-half of
organization interested in topics of the dbunty tax assessed to this city.
,he day.
Discussion material
for some
twelve live problems has already
THE PRIVATE LIFE OF
been prepared Groups or people in­
terested in such a project should
contact Mr Faster for enrollment.
Only a limited number of groups arc
tb be organized tills year in the
county.

Mrnecdoeha

la

Starting at 8 o’clock
Saturday Morning
While 600 Yards Last

Frocks

PASTELS, Vivid Shades

priced at only

AND

Printed Silk

CREPES
Right No*! A January
Price!

38c
Sparkling Firefly crepes

. Dustcnia crepes

Stitch.' Matelasses!

Styling? Up-to-the-minute!

Flared skirts, high necks,
Dolman sleeves, pleats,
nail heads, soutache—but­
ton, fur or velvet trims!
But we're specially proud
cf these handsome, fashion­

I U WUI 06 ”^7^

right fabrics, which make
the dresses, in themselves!
They’ll "gj places"! -12-14 !

We’re proud a* can be
because we’re able to pre­
sent thia colorful hrie-up of
brand new Spring print*
at such a low price! A per
feet crepe to sew
drapes beautifully Small
and medium florala. mono­
tones. stripes, plaids, dots
on
medium and
dark
grounds. 39 inch width
•uctpkUd

You Can Bank on
PENNEY’S for Real
Money Savers I

SHELDONS ABSTRACT OFFICE

INSURANCE•BONDS

COAL

ONE OF RILEY'S STORIES.
When I was a youngster I traveled
with a circus and have been around
a bit since. And In my days I have
heard some "tall" stories. But the
one that amused me most was the
one "Cowboy" Myers related in the
engine room at the old Wool boot
factory. He said. "Fellows, along In
the 'seventies.' when I was young,
and full'of pep. I got the western
fever and look Greeley's advice and
went west. I took a claim In Nebraaka When I got there I swapped
around and got a pair of mules. I IfUCN
started plowing and when 1 got done
il was pretty late to plant corn. So
I Just "broadcasted" the whole field
to pop-corn and that virgin soil
produced a forest of corn. In south­
ern Nebtaska when It^lHs hot In
August, it gets hot. Il got sdjiot one
day that corn began to pop in the
field. One morning when an. old
rancher-let out his aheep. tlyey saw
thAi field of pop coni. ttyJught il
. was snow and froze to death."

In a Used Automobile, bought at the
right price is more economical than
the purchase of a new one.

■ Olli

COAL Go
Out Nights?

p

AGREES TO RETURN
VOLUNTARILY.
Though a reputable pctrolt altomey. Prosecuting Attorney Archie
McDonald wu informed on Frtday that Mrs. Helen Winn would re­
turn to this city voluntarily on
Tuesday of this week to answer to
the charge of alleged assault, commilted by her against Mrs. Dorothy
Guyney. The examination will be
in justice court, but the trial If held
will probably take place in the clrcult court.

j
I

SRed
Jacket

STARLITE and
POCOHONTAS

I

'
।

Unused
Transportation

HASTINGS ICE
&amp; FUEL CO.
221 E. Green

Phone 2193

We have some 1934 and 1935 Tu­
dor and.Fordor Sedans in fine condi­
tion, with Small mileage, that are bar­
' gains.
Call and look at these cars and sat­
isfy yourself, or give us a ring and we
will be pleased to drive same to your
place of residence.

PM'I
dotting
•oil

ouicklr obiuntd by oilns

WHY NOT TRY A
WANT-AD?”
ANT to sell your home? Want to get
a few odds and ends in house­
hold furnishings? . . . An inexpensive Want­
Adv. in the Banner Want Columns will find
the answer to these and many other per­
plexing problems.

And placing your adv. before 4,000 in­
terested readers is so easy. All ypu need do
is telephone 241 5 and a courteous adv-taker
will help you "compose" a Want-Adv. that
will quickly produce satisfactory results.

COM PANY

FORD

PHONE 2121

DEALERS

HASTINGS, MICH.

BANNER WANT-AD

�BOOST THI COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

The Hastings Banner

Editorials

MORE RED INK

tempt to establish here a scholar- in town and tried to sell
ship fund to assist a limited num- [ advertising on the program,
ber of promising students to con-. ceedlng in most Instances
Unuc with their educaUons. Pro- the merchants didn't want
ceeds from the photoplay. "Rober- lodge member* or lose their bustta." lo be presented at the Strand ness. The local
Theater here Jan. 22 and 23 will be j the programs,
contributed lo an educational fund, price because
The film, itself. Is rated as one of ingly told, of
the most entertaining of the cur- get elsewhere, and because the wornrent crop and 1* being shown here en of the lodge jxtlntcd out it was
al the usual price. Consequently | to aid their cause. Program adver­
. I tlaingthose who attend will have the sat-I
" '
*brought
■ - ■in something like*880 '

Itf

and-----------------the cost of -----------printing----------------had been
’----down to 820. When a final settlcment had been made tlie lodge hod
cleared only a little more than gll^

'957,-* pufcH

\ «s.et»x

SUPREME
COURT
WClSIOi'l

Against

&lt;0^

AAA.

very useful purpose to young people: and most of Ils members had donatI ed more than a dollar apiece in
of this community.
1 time, worry or money. And the town

j was nearly 8200 poorer because of
What will the automobile of thet the money taken away.
future be like? Here are some of the1. In another community a church
features outlined by the Society of "rocket" was worked on the mer­
Automotive Engineering al a recent chants. They were sold space on an
meeting:
‘ auditorium curtain by an outside
1. Engine in rear.
'
| -----company,
,—, working through the worn. 2. Air-condition both for occu- en of the church. Later the same
pants and motor.
•
i merchant* were solicited for adver3. Air springs of bellow construe- i
tlon to replace iron Utaf springs.
~ 4. Individual movable Beats.
5. Self-inflating tires that do not

pActlca! lesson in Nc*wtoni laws of product. This cost be liece**artly
gravity.
would be forced to add lo the coat
• • •
of the goods on hl* shelves. Who
Hastings retailers are planning to would buy of him when they could
cnjdy one of Hosteler Green’s good purchase at ao much less of the
luncheon* at the Parker House Fri-1 chain store, of Uie large corpora-day noon, so I hear, and perhaps I Hon. which
manufactured
and
: transact a little business, too. ‘..handled It* own product* and.
Just finished reading "Discovery." : H-m-m-m-m! Wonder what aort ।hence, did not have this burden?
the story of the second Byrd Ant­: of'flag we're going to sec ' flying | Is it not true that the 2 percent
along Main street now?
transaction tax would ruin practlarctic Expedition. Much more Inter­
esting than the first bawk.' wei
• • •
| cnlly every small businea* man. Hiab.
thought. Nothing so xcnsatlonal a*i. I nevfr"suspected Fred Meyers l,lc independent merchant would
the flight to the jtolc but much more i of being a Jokester
But nsk him 1 rtnrt It Impossible to compete with
accomplished
hi the name of i about that original gonfalon which tl,c ,na11 order and the chain stores
■ added a somewhat spicy touch to *!01
added advantage, for the
) the front of Floyd Brown * tin shop reason that the independent meri Critics can poke fun nt these so- 1 during the riioliday season.
: chant buy* through a system that
i called deluxe exploring parties but
. . .
। requires many tnuuactiom, with
; the fact remains that the two Byrd
Lucy /Rchor, Hwy tell me. cooks ‘
I*’*’*
?u,1*
। expeditions have done more toward the best welncra and kraut of’any® .‘ronwcUoh*. while the chain
throwing light on the mystery of one in town. Boy! When weinera
?
,!^u,ac.,ur" . ret*,ler..this little-known region than all and kraut are cooked right, there
«Frtem of produc­
: other expeditions to date. Further­ in'! anything much "righler." Ex-:llon' nianulacture. distribution and
more Byrd has accomplished his
iu.,u» r=„., w™*, !
mer T11U to JU11
or
I work without the loss of n single

This and That

A-WORTHY BENEFIT.
I bill*, printed elsewhere. The
Halting* Rotarian* are giving full tor*, accompanied by local
value for the money in their at-jvtrited nearly every business

action of ’seeing an amusing comedy; also of knowing that
':
profit* will go toward the establishment of a fund which will serve n

THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1036

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

IGS, MICHIGAN

It’* the Spirit of a Community
That Count*—Not It* Sixe

I life—a truly remarkable record.

j
■
:
।
.
!
1
|

Well, well' Well' IW,. . IllU,' m’XSSJ’E?n

Just why the leader of a polar
expedition should be criticized for
taking elaborate precautions; f_.
milking th" winter sojourn on an
“■&gt; I; fellow is
Is so worried over the recent
Clare E- Hoffman.
unprotected shelf of Ice a* com fort- slump into Which Coach Bennett's
able as passible is difficult to erttn- cage men have gravitated that he j
Member of Congress.
prehend. People evidently like their
plans to pawn his best land only) :
polar parlies to exist with a mini­ • shirt and hop a freight back here;
mum amount of protection and to
just as soon as railroad schedules
finish a hard winter of seinl-star- will permit. He urges Coach Beruveit
vaUon by eating the skin of their not to uorry because everything will 1
'*
' । . —u—ad
fur panu or gnawing, hungrily on be qlright when lie get* back and a PRESIDENT HOPES
boiled shoe tops. There is romance demonatralc* the ertss cross, round!
wto trunks
in the thought of a heroic struggle robin. backwaM. lateral roll which
In thr .tl&lt;.moon JJL VuJ hJ
against overwhelming odds. But the he says u rood tor a basket against parture
S^rn to hta
careful planning and methodical any op|xw.!lion. The letter follows: . Iaw (imct&gt; u, PXamJne
pap^
execution of the two Byrd expedl______
Reno, Nevada. (Then he threw himself on the *ofn,
lions have almost put polar explor-1 Dcar Tommy*
d there was silence for a lime.
«Uon «, » produawn i»m—nr » 1&gt;; Tl,.nk.s lor U» New Yt.r . wr«.'
wl"‘
I in»
Uw low-&lt;lo«n on '.lwbi».!
•Billy, how long have wc been totion* ol the pa*L *
. k,.r bal| lcam As you |Jolc A. lhc jgether?"

r TOItl (JUT SCYCTt) Book

Using to be run in the local paper
al a price many times higher than
regular rates, though this advance
in cost did not go to the paper. 'Die I

It 1. tr... !«ddrcss. l am among the LedplYcar 1
?’,UahtOf \,U g
cro&gt;’ ft,“' ,,nve picked m2 tiul^for
We've never had a cron* word
1 nlmaUMK? ha- tain
thr JU,l'°r ”‘,,tOr' b,U l,on 1 trl1
durinB ““ lllnt l.1,ne- h“Vc «e?"
plmaUons Iw ta-cn removed. Bqth. However, tiiat is not mt point in.
•
"No.
indeed, we have not."
|x»lea have tarn reached at least arlUn&lt; thi* epUUe. I feel u«t acmere streamline styling.
■ a merchant in the town would have.
1
hw*.}*w‘
cording to yotp- report. Coacii Ben­ . Lincoln Him recalled some tnci: well establWwd that nothing o. any, nctl nct.tt. nu. ,o , ulnll .hl ] w„U|tj dents of hb early practice, gathered
6. Six wheels, four in rear to pre- refused to make an outright dona- j
11,, up a bundle of books and jmpcr.s.
linmediatr ecoiiomu value U likely
aIld havr &gt;&lt;ou brrak lhc
vent tire wear al traction point.
' tion to the church if he thought the I
to be found utKlcr Hu- mantles of ice -rnll-, ln mUchy Uu. Mmt."J
and started to leave, but paused at
S. Ute of two fuels in winter, cause was worthy. But not one of
.um miow.
—
|vou wouW j.our
mother-in-law's the Mgulipiicd which swung on Its
volatile type for quick starting with them could be expected to feel
।
.
,
.
'neck. I expect to be back in a week rusty hinges nt the foot of the stair.
Consequently
|»tar
exp
oration
of
or
t
,.
n
on
Uie
nrx
.
|(I
b
,
switch to ordinary type when motor pleased about being high-pressured
] the present and future will be large- :ju ,, blowlng in is my fsivon’e pas- I "Billy, let It Iiahg there tindlsinto giving money, knowing that
[ ly scientific. Possibly Hie. c regions. .jair anyway
*
turbnl. Give our clients to undpr10. No running boards.
half of It would immediate?}- leave ’
l.'P^l.lb thr Anurctlr. will yi.-ki; a,
|erl
.m-natr ■ Aland that the election of a pre:&gt;i1L More headroom.
; town and no opportunity of rclurn! .mpwunl rhw. ronwrnjn,
llot Uta»t vou will know 1 dent makes no change ifi the firm
12. Gearshift on instrument board ing to his cash register.
' ■ h.iik,.; will rnkkr Ion, nw
w.ll-wra.-J of Lincoln and Herndon. If I live.
■
. '’"T1?1:. ."’■’T
hr »ny Iwim havlmt Un »u- I'm coming back .some time, and
with improyed legcoom.
..
We cant blame merchant* for ;
nrhwo.v i&lt; iik
, ‘
,.than ,n L‘ at
(ilm-lly lo rvrn try to tlrlcwt my ton- then wt'H go right on practising
13- Lessened accidents because of feeling rather disgruntled at times.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ।. r»d&lt; information alone would b-.-1....titrated
.......i ^....
----------plays.
\—7
LOCAL TAX INCREASES.
law e. ’ if nothing had ever liapand inwtetue
best armor in the
Improved vision with engine out of Every kind of scheme from school.
Arthur
c
Brown,
prominent
Hasworth
all
the
time,
energy
and
Do you know that 1.400 new State
Your.-t for tv week or jo,
i money that Is ever likely to lie spent
world, but the worse
w»&gt;’
.
to church, lodge, telephone directory and Fedepil tax laws were enacted:
Iffy'.t country Couain.
As the two men went home lo­
I on polar exploration.
cloak.
14. Superchargers.
is foisted upon them. • • • And they in the .past year in your country—
tional Federation of Fixtures and
•
— John \'eu,'ton
THE TOWNSEND PLAN
• Just about everything solved ex- are expected to -come in" or lose orcryone of them seeking to take
holding already, and I shudder
; Furniture Manufacturing uv-ociaBut any discussion of what may •
and the
when
| think of the tasks that arc
cept the motorist All of the me- the good-will of this group or that money away
owav from you? While most
' tion. He will be"located in Grand or may not b*- found of scienlilk !
INDEPENDENT MERCHANT.
(People work to secure their futures,
'till ahead.” That evening at tlie
Rapid.;.
chanica) marvels In the world can’t one.
value In the polar regions is pure
, Reiterating the :&gt;tatrmrnt that hotel other. Lincoln himself wrote
,
(and are concerned too much with
Bishop
McCormick,
of
Grand
speculation.
Even
srO-nu
-•.:,
compensate for careless driving.
don't
।
practically
.cycryone
is
in
favor
of
Probably every "Main Street" In their own little worlds, movements,
the labels for hb trunks; "A. Lin­
Rapid . was the guest of honor of know
what
j;
''
" «21a_ths*re
—That's one• Un-' adequate reli-f not only for th? coln. White Houm'.. Washington. D.
Michigan has been touched al one!are alwa&gt;® tnk,nS P,nce o’*H»We b&gt;'
,u_ Young Men's club ol ....
the
th? ..
Em­ [Kirtanl r&lt;-..,:in why they want to Jiu-ed but ....
for 'the unfortunate and C." Then he roped the trunk.', with
um. n,
.. such games•• as
, those
movcORDER SOME HALOS!
|1 time
or another k
by
mrRU who
thatspend
cw your
and etaxes
;,fr —
J(Cck
l(J
manuel church Tuewlay evening
and an important rciiioii helpless, that the real fri.-nd* of his own hands.
...
, ..
.. ■ ,
’
”
menus mat ever anu errr sera iu
• Mr. Mary Brook.- returned Fri­ wnyNriiey should.
It remains to be seen whether the, these. The total amount of money pi,ce heavier burdens, upon the al! such aid insist upon a practical
And wiiy not? Why should he
day liom ft visit-with Mr' and Mrs '
.
NBC and Columbia broadcasting ' extracted from communities each ready over burdened taxpayer;
I plan, let me rail alt-ninn to one of'
Edward Brooks of Scottville. She ul- /ralriv convincing evidence wav’he inevitable results of the Town- s’-riAe a new attitude because he is
Do
Mr.
and
networks were acting "impartially" year by this process would probably I ”
* you know. **
“ *
“J Mrs. Tax­
about to take over the leadership.of
ro v; .'&lt; &lt;1 Mr and Mr.-. Mode Ricy uncovered by the 1. . . .
ipayer. that if you showed more inter­
to further the cause of a more tn- | amount to a rather impressive sum.
ol Traverse City.
■
11 ,Hint
ice cap is j --------- ,
.. the great Antarctic
--------------------bu«|nt*M men and the Stale? His own native dignity,
est in your own local community's
teUlgent and enlightened politics
. . .
, 1
... , w
Mis. Anna Johnson, of this city, —
— --------mowing
rather
than----------reeedmx. —
Doe.. । merchant,-, have signed thr petitions which is so perfect a counterpoise
city and school meetings, that you
who l&gt; known to thousands ol read­ ijtht- mean that another ir;- age L 1 |irr t nted to them to vote for a-bill to his general sense of the dignity of
when they rejected a program jpon, T-,
.
iI could
could save yourselves taxes every
sored by the Republican Central
*
Pof’Q^T’dphS 'year?
er, ol. her charming stories ar
its getting under way? A thought-pro-! authorizing a trtftuacuon tax of 2 mankind, will unquestionably sus­
“Hope Daring.” will give oral'ff'ir--- yoking question even though it won t I (Kin-nl to raise a jx-nslon of 820000 tain him al the White House; but
Committee.
Committee, or
or whether
whether pressure
pressure 'i A
A correspondent
correspondent writing
writing to
to a
a daily
daily II Our
Our city government b an cxtitlons of her stone, ut th" ' Happy., be ar.ylhir.g q_&lt;-w to worry about for per month. &lt;The Townsend Weekly
ts her left'
were brought to bear from the paper w»nta to know the «*»t.nicth." ,^"7.
Hour in the Methodist cht|rch
Sun­ 'cvcritl thoioand years lo enme. ] of December ju rays. ' There lias give up the practice of doing id.
.-h Sun•
.
j
terested public can be made to pay
day afternoon.
’
powers in Washington.
: od of kecp.ng apples and peara ifor it* lack of interest, for our city
r&gt;
Anyway, people, then may know ; never been, nor wQj^b*. ihiy com­
morc abotrt the process of liquifying promise on the &gt;200 per month'pro- Pre. Ulcnt oi the United States, and
Both of these chains, according Would he consider a muzzling order I government's budget is a constantTHH’.TY YEARS AGO TODAY
"frozen a acts" than, y.c do now.
j vi ion m the Townsend demands. because a hotel porter and one' or
to David Lawvence. well-known ^or small boys rather too drastic?—i ly increasing one Except only in
Mr. Bicknell Young gave a lecture
: AH statements to the contrary arc two other quidnuncs are scrutinmuw:
I Humoral.
r«™ !?“.“?■ “*
,l'r'd"‘
„ «
izinu hb actions? Is there any rea­
on
Christian
Science
at
Recti'.*
16
—
FunU
vends
he:
«»-le*der.
Another Important nliasr. of polar' false •
. ,,
, .,
‘
‘
;
.will, like lusty, growing youngsters
«r«Uky.
io
exile.
192SO;&gt;eni
Hotvc
last
evening.
tail, ta Umid ol the Rota.ell u——-- .
dem.nd mta .nd more money lo
exploration h that If w« can get! Permit me to call.the attention of son for taking down the old signministration and consequently will
* German railroad, offers a $2,spend on lh(,lr qulle naluraj rav. |
very pretty and quiet home eno'iah of our profeuora Interested ' the small merchant and business
one
may think il Improper that the
illrii: occurred lust evening al m going there to carrv on their man to the effect of this traiu.do everything possible to favor It. prUc 10 every mlll*Pnt11 passenger |rnous appetites. That's why- our’
R.
nt Mr anrt Mr- iii- experiment*, perhaps we can keep I action tax upon him in lit*, compr- Presi’cnt'; name should hang at the
Under the present set up the ad-1,,Ow llke thc olden &lt;Uys 1115 to hC3r clty UxM have kePl mounting for
xdfca
n-tri Rogers, when their daughter. •rm away from Washington—and . tition with in.ili order houv s. chain street corner to attract clients? Who
minUtrauon at Washington 1* abfclof “ r,lkM&lt;1 *uh a 1111111011111 P^;
“d lhe.y .wl11 ,con“".ue J?!
. .
feels this wav cannot offend him
Mi - Lina Beil" Rpger.- was united' judging from th" past few year*, store*, and like enterprises.
•
mount Just as long as you who pay |
to exercise a censorship of the radio. 15cn»cr ~Detroff News.
in marriage to Mr, Bernie K-nyon thU will save us enough in taxes to
•^ze
mean* -2c and those whose opinions he re­
'rl— transaction
—— •tax
..........—
ol Lansing: Rev. Rogers officiating pay for n considerable numtar of-• every lime a dollar is turned over or spects will understand his motives.—
mrourn me pernor « Itatue. m.l n ’ A
^7^ „„ ,
terest In local affairs—Geo Averill
hones:-to-goodness deluxe expedi­ spent. This means that the tnde- From •■Lincoln." by Emil Ludwig.
doe. rot bold over the pro.. There- cMt
„^|m
s. In the Birmingham Eccentric.
Translated from the German by
estimable people. well-known
tions.
.
■P'-ndent merchant must pay as a
Eden and Ceiluy Paul. (Boston: Lit­
great favorites hr...
me. 11 me ptar tn power choowo
plnll.no„rM p.^.-u,,
jiarl ol the can of hh nwrchandl
Every dos has hi* day. and so ;
tle Brown i.
Tao charming social events oi the
to -rrok down' on mdto .uttonv
a 2c addition to every dollar ol coU.
doe* every fake reformer or crusad­
•n
1 A 1
. rn
,ro
from
*F the time his product leave.
leaves
managers must .listen if they prefer
« er. Destiny cut down the sUr'of
CLOUD TOPOGRAPHY.
the-arth
until
it
reache*
hl,
hand.
Huey
Long
while
It
was
on
the
.
to remain in business. But possibly
Only a few wccts
Cr.ly
weeks arck.
are left
’l befoic
before ------- ------■
To the blase mr pilot, a cloud I*
dinner given by Mr. anc| Mrs. Tyden
?' Take clothing »■. an illustration.
Hew to the line, let the quips
--------- Stellar heavens hav'e
Mr. Lawrence is wrong; possibly we must select another Alles Amer-1'{J^rowTdbfi
Jibt that and little mon*. It fat cither
If
it
be
cofton,
when
the
fanner
■
- -------------- for Father Coughlin Just
fall where they may!
a clinging arav bank of murk that
John Be: utter left Monday for an
Lenox R. Lohr of Hie NBC and Wil- canik Teamovich.—Des Moines Reg- —
[■.payf th" tax on hb land it's a finow —
Dr. Townsend is commanding 1
extended visit with frirttds in New
Ifnancla! transaction. It means 2c on tmppicx on him the rigors of blind
Ham Paley of CBS arc moUvated by istcr.
much attention, though sooner or
flying, or *.l Is an inoffensive cum­
Mexico and California.
later hl» bubble will burst. The sad '
lofty ideals to purge radio of all
.
, . ,
.
»,'
Otarvm,
Ttamp.
|
ulus ym k over which he can soar.
Marton Cobb a sergeant of the*
th*t tr .tupld .nd tn.no mow nice.
“ * » thing about the ballyhoo these,
When he considers how climbing
|7th U. s. infantry, which Im., been
Hop*- that Windy Merrick doesn't |ur may not fcdd thin to the price of
ume, h.donliM.rtenm.ont.lue. s”d,"*d‘,ll,r' “I “
"&gt; "crqsaders" shout is that it attract­
stationed for Mtme time on the is­ bclieVe in ghosts.
the cotton, in any event; when the over cloud rldgcj drains hl* gasollniN
ed
many
persons
who
anenticed
Uttar.!,. However, time wlU m,.!-hurelt more olun-Oneld. IN. V .
land ol Jolo of the Philippine group,
[ cotton is sold to the ginner there is hr is not Inclined to become jKietical
to "Join" some kind of a league for
on the subject of clouds. As lilts
is expected home next week tn vL&gt;|J
u me old mylng ,oev Republlc.ru' r*‘noa*: Union.
12c.
Jobber
tn
mill-manufacturer.
Wonder who Bits "Poet Laureate'
the betterment of society little real­
book is a [Xrmancnt record of what
h!» jsir-nts. Mr. and Mrs Lee CobU.J of Hastings can be?
. 2c. .Manufacturer lo wholesaler ol
izing that they arc the victims of
piNEAPPLES are about 89 per
have been refused Uie privilege of
W H. Stebbins ts planning to
A-woman is a person who think*
■
j cloth. Jc. Wholsaler to retailer. 2c. wc saw and did and tele il Is per­
•
juo. another,
lUiVktlva .racket —n.
Just
R. a.
S. Corliss.
1 cent water. but try to con­
missible for u&lt; to become a llitlc*dcbuild three ncw.bNrit s’orcs on State
broadcasting a little skit dramatiz- you should have had sense enough pjrma News
Siom*' people sny it's Eiurne i Retailer to Jobber of clothing—.
vince a Chicagoan of the truth
street next summer. Tlicsc with the Skeeb -but then, on the oilier hand We'll cut him out and aosume rc- s-Tiptivc when we touch on I he
ing certain criUclsms of the New to know she was going to turn left
-------of. that atatement.
*
live new atpres o! It. 1. Hend"rchott who is Eugene SkreU?
Deal. But if the time ever comes I —-WIU
Gold leaflet.
1• ,Wc ,,avc
llttlc
u-sr Jor 1111,1
taller .'^113 direct to merchant. 2c. amazing cloud-masses-that met u*
LUUVb,
---------- - .....
* I
■£-.*o:ne 1650 miles out in the Pacific.
Will make a decid'd impi-ovemcni
•
'
' Merchant to customer. 2c. Or 14c on ’
______
; of political aspirant th»t watches for Xe'w'Tork court declare* that
when the party in power should In""
In the IlglR-of the moon? we. of
ut our principal business' street.'
You can tell those who have bceh.l«»me popular movement to, catch
No.puzxle Is too complicated tor J every dollar s worth of clothing.
course, had our -ghost" plane. This,
dicale an urge to present a similar
*—■
“"*■
a wife cannot bo prosecuted for
B rni*- Reed.',I hear At lea l h&lt;-Perhaps the tax is more tlmn.thi*.
live favor of the people and then
playlet telling why the Roosevelt broadened by travel. They know how
ic wwl Boot company *i&gt;vni u whole day repnifthg his rash 11 applies lo the thread, the bul- too I-, a ptuiM! of flying which the
looting
tier
husband's
pocket*,
.■«i*k* to have a prominent part in it
average
airman looks on as being
which
make*
zipper*
with
lock
administration ha* been a too peri10 Pronounce "visa."—Detroit News, tn order that he tnay be carried in­
regutcr and cr’3"d up . without a I '■0,,s- everything that goo., into the ।
quite a commonplace
But lo the
;k&gt; IL'j:i and is now gr.ins'hi* entire Mitglc spare part’.
and key an appropriate tnaicu’
completed product. Tills tax of ,
to some desired office on a wave of
cent success do you suppose that j
lavman. the ghost plane is intrigu­
.itn;e to the busin's- ol M Matthew.,
A political career should attract; public sentiment. Wc have seen
Hue style hint.
•
1?,w.l ft'.- on every dollar the ing.
..
the request of Democratic Commit­ everybody. Tliink of getting paid for
and co . in-which concern Mr. Rog­ ' Ger.lu*. Thoma* Al a Eduon said, mail merchant otl’Jt pay. The
many examples of this.In years gone
ers :■ a partner.
teeman No. 1. James A- Farley (who.
If a ludge.iurns that notorious
• i - 93 per cent hard work " Well nn merchant with canned good-., sugar, tween fotir and five o'clock in the
managing your neighbor's affairs.— by. and shall probable wc manv
incidentally.,is also postmaster gen­ Detroit News.
g.in/leader over.ro the peultrn
that cash register Job. all Bvroir 1,11 manufactured products, ha* the
more if we live w few years longer.
FORTY YEARS AGO TODAY
morning that our “ghost" plane did
tlary warden. he might be heard
lax and
J mail
*" pass "
it along
’
to the an immense amount of this (noun-j,,
eral of the United Stales), would be
Nir;. Walter Lampman has-been lacked was that one little cent.
consumer.
Io »ay. "Touhy from me to you ” .hired ft . a teaelu r tn thr high
turned down?
I The latest trend i* toward colortalneering over the cloud ranges.
Marlon E Whitman breez-j into I But what about Sears Roebuck? Here was the most amusing cloud
Wcll if he is. Messrs. Paley and । ful furniture. But that's nothing
town i.«st week I ‘ hear A&gt;k him What abb&gt;rt the chain stores?* How picture that we met on the flight.
Now that Congress Is back in
Lohr can order themselves some new to mothers whose children have
.about that mouse story. It's a dandy lung would It be before all these We. gazed down into grim gray
session, farmers should prepare
' JcotK&lt;TiH wtnijd grow or produce cloud valleys where the massive
gold plated halos and sit enthroned been playing with crayons and wator high wjnd*.
■ al .the G. A It hall Tuoxtay on­ but Tommy couldn't u-ll it Ijere
much^of their ow.n raw material.? ! cloud cliff., uhitrrcd ecrilv under
abovc Uvc’ rabble as America's No. 1 i ter colors.—Muskegon Ghronidlc.
i um1:. titc proceeds to be UM'd for
'Three year? or more ago there wax :i
Happy landings. Nanty Harkn*-ss- Have their own transportation *y*-,■ tlie moon. White cloiTd banks.Mood.
strong wave of public sentiment
Africa leads the world In pro­
ciuiuty.'
'
•
Idealists.
items? &lt;Mnny of them now do— out boldly as the rain ports of a
| Autumn is the time o' year wlten against high ti..,rs; a man named
Mr and Mrs. p. a. Sheldon gave a
duction of gold, which Inforrua. d'-liuhffiil pedro jatrlj . at their a “ban voyage" as our meiiacr aero­ Note A A: P trucks on the high- giant Arctic berg They broke into
tlou Is no now* to llussnliui.
the youngsters sUrl back to college Foulke* -aw hi-- golden opjxirtfhnty.
ITS DONE EVERYWHERE.
I waysj. Manufacture their own pro­ deep canyons; they hunched Iplo
got into the picture as a champion
' home Friday evening, entertaining nautical vocabulary will .permit.
’ Ray Corlls. editor ol the Parma and the trees and dining room of low taxes, and went t&gt; congress.
ducts’ Cut out all transactions in । mighty p~akr. and fell away Into bc-’
■rvi!or . county olhctr., and
; tables begin shedding their leaves Topay the Townsend plan is popu­
Tommy b no aviator. The near­ I between the grower and the ulti- | wlldering while foothills and plains.
Mews, discussed in a recent issue ol
,
est he ever came to flying wxi when 1 mate consumer?
lar and some fellow kho has failed
’
Hie
line
of
tables
manufactured
-bl* paper a milder form of "ihc —Arkansas Gazette.
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
"Fine." you sayj, wiuit becomes of (log man about clouds, but Ujls pic­
X'j be selected tor congress in this
by thi- Hxstlng* Table company b nn overgrown box kite nearly idled
racket game which hn* undoubtedly
- nil the merchants along your street*. ture was so arresting that we were
Il Is called a dime store, but how/! district by tl1 Republicans, th" ' "Practice doe* not make perfect, ireceiving many compliment* at the him off ids feet.
I
oi
ah
the
smaller
factories?
Do
vou
. hit ju»l j|boul every community la। a woman turned loose In there can Democr-'- - r
Farmcr-Ir-car unless
-......... .....
it is-the right land of prac- furniture exhibition in Grand Rap­
prompted to make a special entry In
the »ule. Mr. Corlls says! .
Except once when we tried to l-itt the advantage It would give to the Log Book, which read: "Moon
ids.’ «■
‘
.
spoil a five-dollar bill.—Daily Okla­ party will be found out In the front tice. -—John Erskine,
larcat
equal the soarings of peter Pan
by corporations, to the chain bn clouds beautiful effect. Break* in
rank making ■‘neech-s W the F200|n a neighboring town a lodge: honun.
FIFTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
affxlng one end of a rope to our belt. i -tores? They, having but few turn­ clouds look like river* and canyons."
i per-month program vfilh a view to
staged a minstrel show with ouuldc
Mr. and Mrs. c G. •Bentley and shnginu ihf- other thfbugh a pulley over* from the time the raw mater­
gBUwrhUmcii
getting himself sent to congress and : ‘Tnc great danger of bad times
And they did look like that. Down
------- J
-x. .-. &gt; 3,ir mm Mr. -j-. j, jjyjp gavc a very fastened to a Jxam from the ccdUik ials left the ground or'mine until
Another nice thing about having we
|amblc a
a ycar
-6 &lt;-nhfcub. ■ i* bad
people coming In to direct ju. The,
Albert
WC still wU1
Will aamtiln
vrur'i.
in those tortuous ravines, moonlight
Ritchie
plwant progrtssAt- euchre parly'and then taking off, iron: the top placed on their shelve* lor sale, s-'.TO"d to trickle. But the cliff*
»how netted 1334. Of thU -.Amount, neighbqni l* th»t you always know, scription against a lead nkkle ifdth 1
.
— •
Hast week
of an old table I ..till think lhe idea would have a lax of but 4c or 6c on
’ where to find your tool*.—Helena » Koi? l» B that wc can name that
crumpled: abysses closed; canyons
th* director*,• or their company re­
। ,n,in
man rl
rigni
now Thu*
*nu* do
ao the
*ne dema
arms"The sale of 'indian home land*. [ Fred Spar-gcm.-xhiT made a bu*l- might have worked—but the belt the dollar, while the Independent
(Mont.) IndeDendent
&lt;ht now
­
were crushed; the rivers were lost,
vived half, or 1167. The lodge hadI
ROgues take advantage of tickle
)gogue*
Hckle under the allotment law. ha* beenin?** Uin to Buffalo last week.
broke and Tonupy had lu, first merchant, purchasing- in the usual and a-new cloud tojiography arose
*•’— —
“T.rr.z ~
one of the principal causes of the I The xrist mill and elevator at
•
■
■
furnish tlie hall and M percentI
If* Ute way you *l»ow up al th.‘Publ,c
-•‘■ntlment
to ride
nde fnt'-V.ffk.Into'officr.’
u-ay. would have a tax of 10c and with every mile—C E *-Kingsford*----------------ruin ol tribes in all part- of Hwj Mlddh villo ol T D. French and sou Iniwluay before discovered that it up. depending upon the number ol
son^n,
the adverUUng, which wasn'tj showdown Uvat counU.-Louu Alhsi Let u* do —
Smith ami c T. p. Ulin, in "The
something to show that country "—John Colliwr. CoaunU- wai dcslrovrd by fire Tuesday was’thought the village would bc-de- times tlie raw material was luuid- flight of th*Southern Cross." New
|o because the company, had1 Mmenger.
we have Uved.-Cicero.
j-stoner of Indian Affairs.
•J
imorning. The fire liad gained auch ilrojed.
ikd before it became the finished York: McBride.
collapse at a blowout.
| church received some money, to be
6. Self-filling batteries.
sure, but the outside “racketeer. "
7. True streamlining instead of received much more probably not j

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

A Quotation

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

Kouna About 1 own

Crumbs of Wisdom

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. JANUARY U, 1936

ity

1936
esaarily
s. Who
y could
of the
orporal
and
a and.
den?
percent
prac tlin. tiiat.
would
te with
i stores
for Uie
t merm that
. with
&gt;c mulchain
etallcr.
»roduc&gt;n and

one of
organt prob­
plan
red.
irrax.

took
UNK8.

tapera.
r sofa,
me.

word

InclLhcrcd
wd al

.stair-

mdc:

■ firm
thing
hap-

oilier
udder
wrote

with

ter. In theory Fremont was out '
front of Crue’s Brownbilt Shoe stor? I morning concerning Mrs
Jacob
1 there, as an offleer of the United ।
vu mysteriously broken last week Wolfe, who has been to seriously ill
Blates Topographical •Engineers, ex- •
GRAPHOLOGY COUPON
When John came down one morning at Pennock hospital, is that her
plortng the west. Actually, he seems
'
he
found
tt
broken
and
he
doesn
’
t
condition
seems
slightly
improved.
.
to have been out th-re under the . ----------- --------------&gt;To obtain a character reading wnd a line of
----------------------------------------- U. , --------one le.raO on ft
t,,, Northville Bo.rd ol BtlueeUon
protection of...
his---father-in-law.
Judge----MePeek began his third fl-: &gt;no» .liHH.r
your handwriting with your signature and com­
R Senator
Arnslnr Tlwmas
-rtinmav Benton,
Rrnlmi looking
UvUtlna year,
v—r lerni
t&gt;mv Jan.
.1*11 1st. his second one
on&lt; ■ or the severe cold might have hM uwarded contracts totaling g25.8.
plete address written with ink, on unruled paper.
l!« territory over with a view to Its; without opposition
t
cracked It.
MI for a four ro^ grade school
acquisition by the United Stales., prunds of Mrs. Don Marcher, who i Allegan, st Johns and Charlotte^ building, it Ij another PWA projEnclose this coupon with ten cents (coin or
prior to
the declaration
of —
the warn
vet near
near rFreeport,
will uc
be ji«u
glad w
to n*»c
have cotflphted pum&gt;
plans iui
for President’s I ect
— —
----------- -— lives
rcepori, win
stamps) to help cover clerical and mailing costs,
_..w
. recovering
._•
,from an at. , Balls on Jan JO.
.a Paul 8.
a Bond is
&lt;«
A charlotte man thinks he has the
with Mexico
,
jyjow *he k
and mail to Ruth Barton, care T^e- Hastings Ban­
1 The war with Mexico was ended [
of congestion of the lungs. AU chairman at Charlotte with Oov. oldest Chevrolet in that section,
ner.
and Butler repained in possession hope for
complete recovery
Frank D. Fitzgerald u honorary having bought It in 1B20 Has any
of his great estate, which Included 1
.rannwiedee we are uulta' chairman It Is expected that the one an older one here? It can be
some of the richest soil tn the coun•**
witness the Clvtc Players’ Governor and Mrs FUsgernld will
Your Nume ..
traded in for a brand new one,
Out They Go! And they go fast at the price* we put
perhaps.
1“ 29.
™
Address ..
*",rM an , ,
«_•: en Jan.
The first production set
Members of the committee in
on them . . . It's Coats. Dresses, Underwear,
The Gratiot County Herald rte­
right on the point of realizing on
prett.. gtlff pace for these that charge of the annual Ladles’ Night
—.. r------— -------------- -------votes the first page of its second sri;the dreams of g life lime. Apd then i...follow
,r _ 'Anyway
______
__
h« nartu
*h,k -ar»
Blankets, Outing, Prints, Etc.
City ..
we wonder if
if ,the
party of the Commercial cClub
are llon t4&gt; &lt;.jevcn Articles on the oil
a funny thing did happen and It announcement of the prize-winners making their plans for the party industry, reflecting tjie influence of
led lo hia downfall, in 1847 he made
will be as much of a surprise
a contract with James W. Marshal! were the last time—perhaps they but will be announced as soon as ordl on
welfare of the people of
DOUBLE COTTON BLANKETS, 66x76.
i country, still he showed rare tact for the erection of a saw mill on will be more so. Who knows?
decided upon. . The committee tn that e0Unty
In his ability to get along peaceably ^rTwVtah^ nerrhbektalc. but
first grade, colored borderWednesday falls on Feb 26 ch?rje_ U^compo«d ^Carvethjk
Quite a number of new civil cases
| with whatever government was in
Stebbins. Consumers Power Com­
! fx/ymi notice the days arc really pany and Hubert Cook, representa- have been started in the circuit
' ix&gt;wer. The Mexican Alvarado had not a part of 11.
DOUBLE, PART WOOL FANCY BLANKET,
just come into the governorship In
; the of the international Seal and court since the opening of the new
It was in January 1848 that James EPtung longer?
70x80. 4'/2 pound, value $3.98---------------year. Most of them are concerned
1839 after a bloodless revolution, W Marshall made the now famous i Save Wednesday night. Feb 12, Lock Company.
and very diplomatically Sutter al discovery of shining specks of gold' for the Valentine Bridge at the par- ' We didn’t know, till she spoke her with suits in which money lx In­
volved. and there are divorce cases
' once secured a promise from him
Women's b Girlt' Wath
nuptial vows that Nancy Harkness In the list.
■ Continued from page one*
.
,
for a grant of land He not only l„ th. mill race Th. Mn «t the
h». recently comSain
was really * Hannah Lincoln Hark-i Luren D Dickinson of Eaton Rap;
Dresses, $1.00
„ ...
1 secured the "promise." but he was • nnd wax slow in being circulated.
Wed B rourae ,t thp UMar
ness." According to the young lady’s 1 ids. who" figures quite prominently
U.e ...« comm; married c.lllomU right on h,„d lo fee that M io&gt; Ite I bul wh'n J1 •'“, .^nflrroed"'!2!’ ty College tn Battle Creek
values, to go at
own
testimony,
she
uses
the
latter
as a citizen of Michigan, has for 25
■AMiorltas. and were accepted as land And this was not all the land the Gold Rusli of 49 wa^ on. The । MrR Ionc stl|| q nph ta making
only for christening, marriage and । years consistently refused to nil In
Boys' and Girls' Outing Woman’s Snuggiaa
members of the native community, that h* secured. The next year he man who suffered the greatest loss , h„ home wUh Mnt w j Holloway burial purposes, at all other limes.1
the blank which would enter his
Others
of* the type of rough old ,1 r
purchased
the—
Russian
Pajamas, sizes 6
25c—Extra SIm
- - --------------------------------holdings
- ------ wastiiat
flutter In quest of quick riches.
lh r-mgmder of the winter
"Nancy." A charming girl Is Nancy
Isaac Graham despised Mexicans had been secured for fur-trading, ht# men left his employ, and no one . -rh„ n„ttn» nsh hatchery is one the type one finds easy to call by name Into the list of- America's
to 16. $1 values otvv
$1.00 Admiratiw Silk
and wanted to make California a Then two or three years later he'could be secured to harvest crops.1 . pl.Tpn ln ]ower Michigan There- first name on short acquaintance -Who’s Who" celebrities.
No
local
deaths
or
births
thus
far
"white man’s country." They banded | added
what
wax
known
as
the
which
mit-n
in
.hn,ld.
th
ftr^t
i
ol
,o
.
..
_i_._
added what wax known as the which rolled in the fields. Tire first
the upper pinln- Something of the freshness and
Women's Sweaters and Hoc*—to close
,nfee mOr*
PP"
in January, at le ist no certificates
together and were just waiting for Bobrnnlr rant After making thia; -deluge ” of humanity to the gold
sparkle of the upper air currents
Blouses, values
the time to come when they could last purchase, he was the owner of fleids came
from California itself. „’ hl membcra of the U and I where she travels so much, about have as yet been nied with City
i Clerk C. E. FLvher —&lt;?hariotte Reup to $1.98. at
run off with Mexican herds and over 500 aquare miles of land, and , and included practically every xoul brld?e chjb were dellghlfuUy enter­ her.
36-in. Frinta, 15c
19c
publlcan-Trlbune And here in Has­
squat on soil included In the Mexi­ al! of It very nicely rouped, up in within easy reach of the field. Then ' latncd by Mra Dan Lewis on Wedthe Sacramento Valley He was per- . deluge aftir deluge of people came “'X. afternoon^
Grape-vine
telrwraph
along tings the stork made eight "threeWomen's ond Men’s All values, to close
can grants.
Mns gprinrr mother of Jos. Maln-st is to the effect that none point landings' in the first seven
Suiter’s parents in Baden were of haps the greatest land-holder of his frOm the outside world, each sueWool Coat Sweaters -*■ out at only
wliat was known as the middle-clav time, and naturally regarded as ex- ceedfng wave being larger, tougher. SurlnBtr w miu st is recovering other than K|rs. Franklin D. Roose­ days of 1936 It looks bad for Char­
in navy and
$0.75
and by occupation were paper mak­ tremely wealthy. Perhapa the only Mnd more reckless than the pre- nlHcel from a rracture’d ankle which velt. wife of the president, has asked lotto's next census, doesn't It?
16-in. Crash, part A] Ac
tlie Democratic national committee­
Passeng-rr service on the alr-llne
oxford
»w
ers. Bul the young man didn’t take person tn the country whose fortune ceding one HLs crops unharvested. • g.„la|ned ten weeks ago
linen toweling __O/2
to the occupation of hia parents. He would compare with Suiter's was m, catUe*tolen and made way with.
Mlas Helen MlChBe| who has been man for Michigan to give earnest division of the Michigan Central
consideration
lo
the
application
of
railroad
has
been
discontinued.
The
"Carter's
’
’
Woman's
Un­
was apparently more captivated by John Jacob Astor's.
; his land squatted" on. his great conftncd to her bed' for the past
a
certain
aspirant
for
the
job
of
be
­
division,
similar
to
the
c
K
At
8..
ion Suits in silk and wool 36-in. Outing, colored.
things of a military nature, and
But having land in those days. । empire was doomed, in those early . ,nonih w|th intestinal trouble, is
lovecj lo hear Uie crash of cannon, and being able to keep It. seemed California days there was scarcely now abJc to be up a part of each ing Lowell’s postmaster The na­ which served this district, will con­
must go
$4 .39
ilon's First tidy Ls said to be a tinue_____________
for a while _to w.._
give w freight
and was happiest when guns were
, a semblance of law and order until ^.v
at
friend of a friend of the aspirant, service. The towns served by this
-v,c|emen[
booming, cither in salute, or when l» te &gt;«o enURl, dUtennl pn.po.lthey were fired in deadly earnest tlons But Sutler evidently knew rjiargr. »nd left disturbers dangling; nlce]y from B mlnor operation per- hence her action in the matter of division are Jackson. Homer. Three
As a young man he attended a mili­ how He al once bulh a fart, known at the end of a roiw Helpless Sul- (ornlctj on Tuesday at Pennock hos- Lowell's next postmaster We pass Rivers. Cassopolis and Niles. The di*
tary academy. As a great admirer as "Sutter's Port." His land. 500, ter sow his empire crumble all be- plta| and expect3 io leave the hos- the story ilon'g for what it may be vision was built in 1871
worth. "Believe it or not!"—Lowell Says an exchange: Mrs.------- takes
of the first Napoleon, he served for kquarc miles all told, was. In the I cause
discovery of gold.. -Hb pita!
- • today.
■
-—~ of
— the
-------------------Ledger.
Well
women
do
mix
in
polla
great
Interest
in
the
doings
of
her
a time as an officer under Napoleon Sacramento Valley, and would be ’last' years were spent in a little । How hJ1jy peopif Brr nowadays lo
If!
But the call of the wild west priceless today. With this little in­ Moravian village in Pennsylvania.
money in out of the way places tics now and then nowaday?.! we neighbors. So she watchtfd with in.....
of a furniture van
in America was too strong, so he land empire that he owned, he not in what you would call dire . ,n thelr homrs Must'be they have, wouldn't want to aay it wasn’t true tcre.’t the arrival
jnociiy. but
mu. in
&gt;&lt;■ very
»v.z greatly reduced failed
cYowif the ocean, settling in call-, could give employment to several poverty,
gaj|rci to
to grasp
grasp that
that deposits
deposits up
up to
to ! 11 &gt;,ou w0!*,d, J?0?* wh^j. ^mer1’ next door. •"What did you) find out
With a Sale Tog
fornin In 1839. when tilings were
hundred servants, who were really circumstances. Perhaps because he «5 noo are fullv insured against loss. cans ftrr rc*Ny thinking about. Mys about the CHMtiirighbora?" asked
had;been so closely associated with K,ow’ nr^ ,u»L““urva
i
,„Ipp iw.ouneIndustrial Pres.' r
Service
■Washing­ her husband ■They’re not much," ■
anAlwnyv
U|&gt;roarfriendly
pqlitlcally.
soldiers,
and
If
necessary
could
that saves you
to Americans, and march lo battle al the head of a . the discovery of gold In California ixind^H wt Irani^that ^three^foxes
ton. D. C highbrow ►. get of! the was the reply. "They have no auto­
mobile
or
radio
or
piano
I
can
’
t
■
highways
and
amble
leisurely
along
looking
Kikine forward to the
thr day
dav when good-sized —
army
rmv tnr
for ih.i
that d.v
day. tn.
His and H-d
—,'tiraiiv nil
had trMt
lost nr
practically
all nt
of his ■ were captured In that locality last
money'—As Low as
Americans would lake over the early military training was of great land because of it. a bill was Intro­ ; week Thu is the flrat time we’ve the byways. Seek, out the towns Imagine what they have got.’’ "Per- ,
haps."
rejoined
her
husband,
"they
and villages: forget the citiesheard
and oftuch a happening tri a long
1 help In thLs situation. His forvand duced in comress to appropriate ,
thalr suburbs. If your lime is limit- 1 have a bank account."
hia army made him practically the 150,0Q0 as imrt payment for his So/'P*
ed. buy a copy of the paper pub-, At least we know of one hen wise
~
master ot California, because Mexi­ brantc grant. In June 1880. then a time.
The many friends of Mrs. L. L.
can rule was very distinctly on tlie man T7 years old. Sutter was in Dewey of Grand Rapids are sorry llshcd in each of the towns through to her responsibilities under- the
decline. There was another great Washington to urge action on that ^o
. hear of her.Illness. She has been which you travel. Carry them home new egg weighing code. Will Craig ,
source of danger too. and that was bill When the news came to him confined to hdr bed .since before with you and read them. It is a owns the biddy, and as proof of her
from the attacks by Indian.s. They that Congress had failed lo pass Christmas with pleurisy. All hope simple way to remove the veneer of prowess brings in a sample almost
sophistication with which the city as large as n roc egg. It measures 8
did attack him several limes, but in that 850.000 appropriation, he died for her complete recovery
has coated you. and to bring you I Inches In circumference and 9 inch,„r Hastings Commercial v
.uw „
rr)x;lling their onslaughts he was Hr w one of this country-?, noted , The
FUR TOP. RUBBER
Club
is
It was
slightly
ruthless, and would stop al nothing. characters, and his name will always sponsoring the organization of the back to earth again There is no I es lengthwise
Tlie Indians soon came to the ccn- be associated with the ’Gold Rush Hastings Pistol and Rifle Club It better sounding board of public broken when found, revealing inside
of Cali­ , Is expected that an indoor range opinion than the editorial page of another cgj of the usual size. The
clusion that he was a much better of ’49" and the settlement "*
the county weekly
hen. laying this freak. Is of White
friend than he a as an enemy, and fornia.
Till be made in the basement of the
GET YOURS NOW!
We notice that it is up ’to th.straln *nd *as ■ ■Prin« Pu»Reports of tlie discovery of gold । Home Lumber Co. N Michigan Ave
after a few attacks they gave up all
.
tlioughts of defeating him as a bad in oollfornla were greatly exag­ I A letter received from Mr and state prison comnMssion to decide lc’EXTRA Special
»
h«»ir
IN,
blnh
ol
a
OUr
u
an
.cl
i
, T!''" ' «'» W&gt; ,*0&gt;»«ll'U&gt;« happen-.
job and made peace with lilin Sut­ gerated. ns such retxirLs invariably Mrs. E A: Burton of Kissimmee.
...
ol
ood"
or
.
-prodner
ol
pn»n
la-1
“
“k*
&gt;°&gt;L“,' •' !l,r,»?‘■
ter proved to lx- a good friend to arc. But they caused thousands of Fla . states they are enjoying their
wjhor.- Jame. F. TMnam. «a« aart-1
N°« ramea Frol- HMft. ol U.e
’welNbehavcd Indians, and the bad honest, rugged souls to risk their winter there* and have been
U’
, —Hural
-.
rommlv.loner.
cnnlenrts
It" **
*h&gt;° . procl‘tm* U1‘*
one.-, knew whal they would get if lives anti everything they possessed,
Lakeland. Fla . lo call on Mr and • cultural
Mlchlgan may have an earthquake1
»wu»mm -»
u thatjntlvcs in the herds at the Jack­
they ’started anything." so they tn a mad rush to an Imaginary El Mrs. M
D M
B. Green M
of Woodland
and
1
remained quiet
Along with the Dorado, where gold could be had in expected to go to Clearwater soon in
’prison farm arrive as an "act of that will raL«e particular hob with'
/God" and do not gome
come under
the this stale. Thousands of years ago
| -good behavior” of Indians he also i.lmost inexhaustible quantities for, to we Dr ar.d*vMr-s. C 8 Mcln-/U&lt;xl"
unn-r me
■'
; law which says products of prison when the state was covered with an
। seemed lo include- a willingness to these who would just go out nnd i)rc
Black or
—
■
--------- 1be --•-•
—— ••
— Ice-sheet two miles thick, a lot of
work them for long hours with very pick it up. Arriving there, their
Titcre’s an attractive showing of •labor
cannot
sold. ••He ~wants
the
SILK CREPES!
minds were
quickly
disabused. woolen yarn* in onrtof the^sindovf.--1 calves sold to farmers to improve the land was depressed, and tlie rise
Brown ./*•*
muderate pay.
Thr Indians didn’t cause him all There was no adequate transporta­ of the . Frandsen. store thi week their herds. But James F. Shepherd, of depressed areas is what causes
METALLICS!
quakes. LeTs hope that the land
„aimil», Uin&gt;wo
Iourf jnai
----------------the trouble either. He had obtained tion system at the time and no with, Afghans,
throws.. rob-»
and [ —
assistant
attorney
general, says; -•--■-h;;-.’’’,’.. -----r
1 -Our reverence
for Our
the reverence
Almighty won
t taae a rise right away.
Wfa cluhtans
illustrating
uha&lt; call
.
hLs land grant from Alvarado, and provision could be.mnde for the rap- |1
SHEER WOOLS!
- - -to
ThLs weekvmarks the beginning of
to subscribe
1 true to Mexican form Alvarado soon id influx of people at the hundreds jbe tuacje from the many colored compels us to decline
letters
in ..’.he
VELVETEENS!
. x(r „travel
.
m
devrlofied a strong rival in Vallejo. of out-of-the-way place.-, where the|lkclna dtaplaycd. It tempted us to your .statement Without the care a new sertes-of
Almost aiiiomatically Vallejo be­ gold-jcekcra stopped. Tire result was Bo ln and make a piirchasc and and attention of prison labor the -Ba ne. b.Mr -Cook. From the Ha­
herds could not exist "
m ranforml’Jhh ita wealth o^in 1
came a bltt"r enemy of Butler’s. th" tthf cost of provisions jumped ,ilart something of the kind ourself,
to
almost
unheard
of
prices.
Many
Excellent
reporting
of
Women.s
JI
s
quite
graffying
to
find
our
®
C
»
hfo™
1
"
»
‘
h
its
»«hh
of
in
­
That’s about the way things .vem
stranded -----thous-1
doneu&gt;u
this year one exclusive
newsstand
came.-,
‘in?
to worje In Mexico today, so they .found
— — thcmsel-.rs
-— -------- ------------. cJub prOgran&gt;s beinguu.,&lt;
-------- ----------------------- —the
- ‘
nnds of
oT miles
miles from
and prac-1
one-i h
Mrs. G.
O.[Atlantic.
ii
haven’t greatly changed down there ends
from home,
home, and
b*.
v tjlctr .....
prfss committee
committee—Mrs.
.Atlantic. Harpers.
Harpers. American
American MerMer- .
■ any word w- —-•"
.7 Sheffield, publicity
Current History,
a Food
We quM^lon if any state |
in almon too years at least. The tlcally no way of sending
-----—chmn.;
1------- Mrs.lcury.
—------- • - "—and
-■
Col back, with ■loncsomcness
general
Mexican
government sent
C-l.
*- and
; Uk,. home- | Jov urozak. w
- meetings; Mrs supply of Readers Digests We men-1 "
FOR BUSINESS'
.. sickness eating .H-.r
.*
...literature pro
Manuel Mlcheltorena to replace Altheir ...................
neorla out ! George . Lockwood,
pro- non
, tton this
this because
because a neighboring "Cresting topics to write on as Caihome
county
editor,
complains
that
their
I
,fornlB
The
response
to। Mr. Cooks
vu.arln
Thniwh
Riitlor
rerolvml
Hl&lt;
VerloUX
WCFC
to'or.m.
sir,
r-r.-Hn,.
rnitntv
rrtltnr
rnm
varado
Though
Sutter
received
his
Various
methods
were
devised
to
Bra
ms;
Mrs.
Gordon
Fisher,
FOR AFTERNOON'
Heecc Lined
... . } . 'evidently
....j.—,.. hasn
____’t ,the
k. I nrevlaus series, bath verballv and bv
by
land grant
Alvarado.he
communication
&lt;uP
pt
brought 111
in Uli
on llllic.
lime. too.
*4'"*** from
a,..,., nt
■ &gt;•• •••••», in. at i|Frmlt^
................. -overland^
------ ---- ---- '• copy U1VUIIII
mu cRixemhlp
hh*umiii|»
v......
- .... previous series. both verbally
For
SPORTSWEAR!
taste
for
these
higher
grade
mag-has
been
a
source
of
pleasure
once cultivated the new official and with the thousands who had left ( We move to make the appointments taste for these higher grade tnagazines as
as he
he can
can’tti buy
buy them
them at
at his
his i, “. h,m
Wc believe the one now be "lined
•lined up"
no'' against
against .Alvarado,
Alvarado, wiicn
when . 1 their
their homes
homes and
and families
families back
back East,
East, permanent,
nermanent
•
zines
ermanent.
zines
as
nc
uuj
iiivui
av
hr
. - will
FOR DANCING!
.
. stand
. tau
-. . .have
nrnvn Juat
tiiat. “
as mierutlng
Internxtlnr
Fishing
thru
the Ice b a popular local
However, we
to •’ plnnlm- *
111 provc
SOW ONI.
the latter rebelled against
for gold tn
out- of
aao* Michel-1
^•tk.iv,- । to
w— hunt ...
—-----—- the
---- way
--- .
F ’ ’
"
lorcna.
*
was I gujaiws
’**—
In California.
One
of the
wrl jubi
just liuw
now. none
now.
Rolfe uuillllg
Bulling b thr
acknowledge,
Stories.
, g ,
.&lt;■&lt;.1,0. A
n ’ fierce
in-nr ■?• kbattfr
...........
—...... ----- —
---- • sport
uip hv
-hwww-vb*-. that- True
..... W
—--—. Dr- U1 lu wa&gt;; fought in which Mlcheltorena was mo .t unique agencies for rapid Wans-j chainplon l0 datc wlth a 38-incn I tectlve magazines and screen maga- ■
PUTS UP A CASH BOND.
defeated, sustaining the loss ot one | it of letters and small parcels was ............
miiskcllunge ...
It i was
brought
i zines
arc by
all­ odds In much great­
zines
arc by in
allJust
odds
in much
great
Mrs. Helen Winn, of Detroit, with
- mule, but Sutter’s transfer of al- the pony Express. nt
of ■'•••'
which
’’ more thirty minutes
..................
- wood
after •he cut........
the hole I«.v_
er demand—piled up like —
cord
her husband and a lawyer appeared
at
h'Kiance from Alvarado seemed lo will be said in our next letter.
and set the lines at Thornapplc I when the new ones arrive. There are in Justice Cortrlghl's court Tues­
W. R. Cook.
lake, for years the home of the big as many as two dozen different day to answer the charge of assault
save him his land gran Lt. anti lie
ones. Perch and blue gills are the screen periodicals on the market upon Mrs. Ouyney. as described tn
hung onto his 500 square miles of
"Err/uaire Bui
territory.
favorite catch. Parties out on My- now parading
under different last week’s paper. She stood mute
HASTINGS
PHONE 2504
. Bet Sutler's trouble.-, didn’t end
Kumqwat is a CtilncM* citrus fruit [ens lake the other day each got names, and ranging in price from a , when asked to plead, so a plea of
there. No sooner had lie made peace extensively culthatvil In Japan. their quota.
dime to 25 cents.
not guilty was entered. She gave i
with tlie new .Mexican government Florida, California and also In Eng1200 cash bail for her appearance In
, than the policy of the United States lli-li glass honsev. Il l« of small
. court Friday. January 24.
began to create jjroblem*. in Cali­ size.‘round or oblong In shape and
fornia. John Fremont; the "map
lias a sweet rind and arid pulp. It
maker.’* came out and slopped nt
Is.chiefly
used
for
making
preserves
Sutter’s Fort. His lordly airs and

LOCAL NEWS

Hot Barff ail

Cold January

» * 5’- ''•a"" 'm‘nd m“rch

I? «

GREAT EMPIRE OF
AUGUSTUS SURER

CClc
vv

89'

£Qc

OQc
. MW

78*

Qfic
5/0

Cr

4 Ac

IU

12'/2‘

I

All Coats

Foot PROTECTION!

Fashion's Newest!

GAITERS!

Dresses

29

Must Go!

(^1

tiilly.
poise

SUS­
; but
lould
come
and
itmsign-

him

twig.
by

82.88, 83.88
and 85,88

Men’s Rubber Arctics

Frandsen’s Store
Not Expensive”

ther
that
ilir.tl
uin■oar.
bing

this

Hastings Cut Rate
Shoe Store

114 W. Stale HL

HaaUngs. Mich.

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

, overbearing manner stirred up reI scnlment in the good-natured Sul-

’de-

This Work

thr
Mng

did
un-'u.

ouci
•ht.
ray
five
BOd

nto
nto
iy&gt;lc-

MATCHES

Buses Daily
to Battle Creek

QA&lt;’

&lt;•""

hr

SIX
Boxes—

pqc
CO

0 K SOAP

5J::r 23

f

8-LB. Box \

Clean Quick

Soap Chips

Spring Trousers

Toilet Paper
SIX
Rolls—

Crape Fruit, dox.

CO

CRISCO

We have a new stock of ,
Boys’ Pure Wool Knickers I
. .’. Corduroy Knickers and

19c

juicy Oranges
Sunkbit—324 size

ROUND
TRIP—

IO 30
■ =

Cheaper than driving

10 lbs. SUGAR50c

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 21ST

for ua ★ It b gtA'-l
busineas and good

FOR MITRAL BEREFIT
center our efforts upon rendering

N

good service to yon. We must
tldnk of our interests only as they

SALT BLOCK39c

2 cans Pink Salmon, 25c

'5 lbs. Rolled Oats _.23c

4 lbs. Prunes19c

2 cans White Cross
Dog Food---------------- 15c

24 Vz lbs. Leader
Flour

$1.50 Knickcr to be found
anywhere.

Lost Tims Around on Jonathon
whilo they last— bushel—
DEPOT AT

e'criee

All Wool Shorts.
We carry the finest quality '

5-lb. Sack Com Meal 17c

dealings with thia bank, there

can be no - permanent benefit

Sizes 26 waist to 50 waist.

k 29c y 3c'n 59
45c

N

Snappy patterns for young .
•ncn. small boys ond con­
servative men.

ONE
WAY

ion
in
am
[ht
ns
ins
ist.

★ UnleM you benefit from your

A New Shipment of

the
:10c.
. of

gu-

A

Here They Are Men!

fhnt

Apples,

69c

£JQ&lt;
Ov

Highest Market Price for Cream, Poultry and Eggs

WALLACE 4 and GROCERY E

OVERCOATS . .. We hove a few to close

are linked with yours ★ This
idea is firmly fixed in the minds

B

of every officer and employe^ of
this bank. We are try ing earnestly

out, get our prices before y6u buy!

Waters Clothes Shop
Selling

Quality Keeps l&gt;s Busy.

to make lids bank useful to you.

N
K

OF HASTINGS
HAS1 INGfi, R8CMKiAK

�Atnek Tonic lhe highest po*"*
things we
%hey confirm, in stronges
j^warch Farm
Dtd ^ei^?-Snipes a steer eondi-

°nd mineral supplement,

very truly.
THE HASTINGR BANNER, THTTRRDAY, JANUARY 14, IBM

The company is ikk desirous and i directors. They are looking care* of money that has been paid to the if
) lias never tried to pile up a great , fully to every detail of the business county by the state of Michigan I
and to the interest of the policy and
-&gt;'• the
'h* national —
government,
- ----------- *—
but.
lot ot m«p»y-for possible losses; but ' holders. Tlie promptness with which principally by tlie W. K. Kclloga II
■ ~, endeavored to have enough on the company investigates lasses aft­ Foundation to carry an their health I1
! ----------- ---------- -----------------at the beginning of any year ( er they are reported, and the work in this county. As a matter*
up not only average losses! promptness with *hich it pays losses of fact, there has been distributed
12L’. • but a little more than average, all&lt;
.r they
UJcy BIV
after
are BUJuarcM
adjusted,. .....
have won from the Health Fund during the/
should they occur during the year.;(,v
for tHb old reliable-company
a won*
,--------: year. $2X531 JI I. The only expense
(Continued from page one)&gt;
—— outside ot one year, the company's Iderful
-*—*■•» standing
-•—&gt;•— and
-•*•• reputation
—■•&gt;&gt;"■* with
—nw to Barry county, in/carrylng on the f
000 worth of insurance Indicates losses-have never exceeded 8531.000; the people of Michigan.
. health work. L* Inpayment of lhe I
that it ha* made wrv substantial ['but fur two or three years they have
TJien- was no chann made by the rent for Ihe ofpCes occupied by the
nearly
reached that amount. ”
There
progreu in spite of the depression.
—
•••—- stockholder* In 0»c Board of Dirrc- Barn' County Health Unit,
_______
The ‘policy holders will be especial­ are expenses of the company to be ton. This
u five dlrecWe think it is vqp- creditable for , nPpPATTT&lt;-------Hrpfnvtt t V
GREENVILLE
g. so the'Barry county to have come through ; DEFEATED
GKEENVILLE
ly interested in the fact that the met. To pay the losses promptly torj at enc
company has cash on hand and and pay these expenses. tlie Mini of Boqrd
of fifteen members, the depression years so well, dur- ‘ FIVE SATURDAY NIGHT
available to meet lossev that might 8531.000 tea reasonable amount to
ru selected the following ing (hat time having paid off all its
have
on
hand
at
the
beginning
of
•
_________________________
_
BY
SCORE
OF 23-13
or
this
year:
President.
L.
Covert
road
bond
debt
and
still
has
'
accrue during 1936 of $531.04237.
a hand
------------.
The company has followed a wise the year.
day; vice-pre-sldertt. G. E. «n
hand over
over $115,000.
$115,000.______________ i
Tlie
holders —
of ----this-------coin-"।
policy, which was so well'indicated
— ,policy
------ - ----------secretary-treasurer. E. A.
p—-financial
-------- ...
Duplicate
records are MEETING IONIA HERE
in 1933 and 1934. of carrying a sum , pany know that their Windstorm
Saturday evening
In reserve to m*rt losses If they; insurance business Ls In very gcxxl
ihould be heavjer than- the average.. hands with thr present officers and
inurrram°!h" utTSoriSS;
Quintet Developing So.

. I------ —;-------- A—

ANNUAL MEETING
OF WINDSTORM CO.

Both r&lt;ami will attempt to keeplni

“w T-

AAEON BARNES HAS
ANOTHER promotion

the Ionia five on Uie HaMlnga floor
I Saturday night. Ionia defeated Has------------.
i tings 22-is in a well-played tilt be- Is Made Lieutenant Colonel
[ fore the holidays, but will find n
—
Headquarters
at
Washmuch different situation if the lo| cal lads play the brand of ball they#' ■
ington, D. 0.
I displayed on Saturday.
The many friend* of Major OladThe line ups for the varsity game eon Barnes will be - Interested to
know that he was recently promoted
Greenville (13) nnd i* now a Lieutenant-Colonel in
Beardsley ।I the ordnance
_ ____ department
____ ,—. of _
the
__ ,
Cook
Baumgarten United States army Colonel Barnes
, pothers
Anderson I has been attending the War college
Kelly
Kingsbury j In Washington. -*D. C-. for several
Haunenberg | montlis. For tlie next three years, he
Walldorff
j Substitutes: Hastings; Gladstone. | will
1”
office of the Secretary
I Hinckley. Brady. Newton. Struble., “I War at Washington. It suits
Gladeon and -Mrs. Barnes
| Angell, and Ironside. Greenville; ।
— *very
much
to
have
a home In lhe noHolmdeen. Durdle Referee: Parle-1
Uon's capital.
) man. M. S. C.___
Colonel Barnes'
friends
have
watched hin steady progress in the
ofTl.rr./u&lt;11I ,hf b00ks Pach &gt;ear' perior Defensive Playing— BASKET AND VOLLEY
army with much interest and sails-'
and they find the county's book.;
. w o .
j
BALL LEAGUE FORMED faction. After he graduated from
. are well kept.
i
Hope to Win Saturday
tlie engineering deportment of the
-- • *---------------■ Tlie Hastings High school eagers
A basket bail and 'volley ball I University of Michigan, he entered
HOLLYWOOD
BEAUTY
I •tepped off on the wrong foot in league, was formed last week by a
QUOD DDhWCQ DADIli ad lthe,r flrst B“mc of the New Year at number of business and profeadoiial I the Ordnance department of. the
(Continued from page one)
army, beginning as a Lieutenant.!
bHUr PROVES POPULAR Middleville on Friday and ended on men of Hastings The league will be I His progress has been steady. He has .
. ,
_ ~. the short end ot an 18-17 score. sponsored by different business con­ ! been able to be of great assistance
county does not owe any Covert ,,
road bonds, or any other bonds. This Variety Of Service and the.crotbers led his teammates tn cerns and the officers are; Warren I to his department, because of invenLeslie Hawthorne. । tlons he has mode, which have oddmoney Ls really the property of tlie
Skilled Operators
I p®1”14 w,,h three
for a 101,11 Carter,
carter, president;
prt
_r.
of six points. Gladstone running a j secretary;
___
and wirmon Merrick. [ed to lhe efficiency
county road commission. It will be
h^avy arms.
Make Friends
dose second with two goals-and one treasurer.
remembered that, for many years,
Hollywood
Beauty
Shop
Is
g/eat!
fouI
shot
was
high
point
|
volley
ball
will
be
played on Wed­ He greatly improved and made more
the county ’ only received one-half
effective some of the smaller heavy
of the automobile license money, or . ly pleased al the response the ladies 1 man Jor **,e. neighbors with two ' nesday evenings at the high school guns used In fighting aircraft. He
i gymnasium from 7 to 8:45 o’clock also improved the mobility of these
weight tax. Now the county receives ol Hastings and vicinity are giving •neId k®818 and onc ,oul xh°lThe
M‘cond
came after which basket ball will be , and other heavy guns, by devising
all of It. The half that used to be to their work. Satisfied patrons arc
. through in their
whole of .siumuiv
Monday ere
eve­ [and perfecting new and original
-paid to the state for the benefit of the best kind of advertisers, and
■•m so ■-------------- usual
------- winning
--------- style played. The
inc *uw&gt;c
' *'*
'~'v made five field : ning
—will
... be jdevoted
—
» II methods of mounting of them on
to win 23-21. rCook
to basket .ball
the state highways fund was divert* il is proving In Hastings.
i ed to the countie.s after the depres­
0"14 and four foul ahols 10 ,cad I Sixty men have signed up for basket I trucks, especially built for that pur­
Their
very ----------reasonable price
pJIVc K
------(h» underdogs
.mriordno.
with 14
14 points.
nnint.
; baU „nd u |s hoix&gt;^ l(J slaK&lt;. &lt;n
it possible for. the
- with
sion started, because so manjwroun- schedules moke ..
pose. With these rapidly moving
•
’
rh
"
n~-&lt;»~
of
the
varsity
game
elimination
contest
with
games
ev[
women
to
avail
Uienuelves
of
aev:
.
Tpe
line-ups
tles owed Covert roads bonds. In
trucks carrying heavy guns, the cf.some of them the total ran into ।eral services at one appointment.
were;
cry Monday and Wednesday eve­ fectivcnexs of the artillery has been
Middleville (18) ning.
several millions of dollars. Most all, A facial under Miss Dahlke’s skill- Hartings &lt; 17)
Increased.
Houser
the counties owed some oP these ful fingers makes tired lines dlsap- Brady
Those who have signed up for) Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Barnes are
Fisher volley ball are: Leslie Hawthorne. H.1 well known in Hastings. He is a
bonds. The legislature voted. In or- pear
;
and dry skin relax—some often CroUier*
Hail Carroll. A. VanTil. Dan Walldorff.
the process.
. »-•*Ransom
C.
der to help counties that owed such go
i
to sleep during lhe
brother of Mrs. Charles S. Potts,
bonds, that the entire weight tax
R.G.
Fenton Joseph DeRulter. Herman Arold.
Thr soft oil shampoos do wonders Ironside
and Mrs Barnes will be remembered
Clive Clare DeCou. Richard Cook. Ches-!
be paid to the county for an in­ for dry brittle hair. Each customer's Angell
Substitutes:
______
____________
Hastings;
Struble. ter Hodges. Milo DeVries. Earl I in Hastings as MLss Evelyn Kopf.
definite period. So the fund Ls kept ;jvartfcular personality is studied for
*
as a Covert Road Redemption Fund, ithe style of hair dress most suitable. Kelly. Newton. Hinckley. Gladstone. Smith. Al Becker. Coach Bennett.'
although there are no Covert road­ Tlie new electric manicure outfit Middleville; Schondelmeyer. peeling. Dr. F. H Taylor. Harold Logan. Joei
bonds
to redeem.
This money .Just Installed Ls going to make Referee; Rittenger. w. S T. C.
Brozak. George Aten. Al Brown and.1
Tlie local quintet then welcomed a .number of the men who tire in ,
-should be used for highway pur- ।many friends.
poses, as we understand the law.
. Tlie close connection maintained the Greenville team Saturday night charge of lhe work on M-37.
There are balances aggregating, with Ia' Mar Beauty College al­ by trouncing them 23-13. The de­
as shown by the report, nearly &lt;ways assures patrons of the latest fense looked as good In -this game as
COURT NEWS.
it did al the first of the season when
$8,000 in the Primary Supplement ,and most up lo date methods.
When arraigned before justice
Zane Grey—The Trail Driver.
Hastings defeated Charlotte. Tlie Adalbert Corlright on Wednesday.
'Fund and the Primary School Fund
Rafael Sabatini—Chivalry.
These funds do not belong to the ’MUST, stay; another month. offense was far superior to what it | Almond Shears. 55. of Barry townEdison Marshall—Sam Campbell.
been at any lime this year.
codnty. but to the school districts, i
Robert Chadwick, who was placed
।, ship pleaded not |UUlJ
guilty w
to B
a VUM4Br
charge Gentleman.
Howei-er. for some reason, the1 in
i Jall bccause of his refusal to pay
ironside led lhe Bennettmen in Of cruelty to animals. He will have
Fanny Heaslip Lea—Anchor Man.
school districts have not drawn the ia Judgment of $400 against him and ----points with
three
field -goals
for----a . his hearing on Friday. Jan. 17.
- ---------------------------------John Masefield—Victorious Troy.
money, which Has been held 4or In
i favor bf Archie Kermeen. will be t&lt;J
tM.t
tal of
nf -.(»
six nnino
poinU Gladstone
nteridm. and
.nd , conservation George Sumner ar­
Graeme and Sarah Lorimer—
them for a considerable time.
;
kept
It] jail for another month at CrolhersTrere one point
1
... shy of
-- this
--'rested
Orrie Landacre of ThornHeart Specialist.
The Escheats Fund consists of least.
|
Under the law. Mr. Kermeen wlth tw0 held,k^Is’ 1and
--------------------one foul; apple township on a charge of trapWill James—Home Ranch.
money which belonged to person.* can
&lt;
keep Chadwick in Jail for nine 1 ,hot for a t&lt;J»y« five
1* points
llOintS each, ping
ninv mhhlt,
t,nnrlnrr.. wn.:
nr-­
rabbits. Landacre
was ar
Margaret Wlddemer—Eve's Orch­
I who hnff resided in this .county, but months;
i
but Kermeen must pay the. Beardsliy was ^high point man for raigned'before Justice Andrew Mat­
ard.
| who have died leaving no hears, price
j
fixed by the Board of Super-: llw visitors with-three field goals.
thews on Tuesday ami assessed a
P. L- Travers—Mary Poppins
। This money is first paid to the ivisors for his board. Tlie first month
The starling line-up whs again fine of &gt;10.00 and costs of &gt;6.85
Comes
Back.
county by the probate court.’then expired
t
January 15. Kermeen has ’ shaken up and cook, who has been which he paid.
Barbara B. Stevens—Walk Hum­
paid by the county treasurer, when • paid
j
another month's board, so 'inking them consistently for the
called on. to the state
| &lt; Chadwick will be held until Feb- second stringers, was given his
The family of Mark Rothschild in bly.
Josephine Lawrence— If I Have
I The County Health Fund consists i ruary
i
15. What may happen after chance with the varsity. He did not Montclair. N J., were not permitted
that will depend on payment of fils make a basket or foul shot, but to get lonesome after discharging Four Apples
Non-Fiction.
board by Kermeen.
looks good for the latter part of the their butler. Their doorbell was kept
Donnelly and McKim—Prepara­
' season.
ringing
almost
constantly • by
Tlie second string men remain un­ delivery men and boys bringing un­ tion for Civil Service.
Stewart
and
Gerald—Home Deco­
beaten as the result of a 2.1-6 vic­ ordered merchandise, including a
"A In carle” is pronounced "ah*
tory over the Greenville scrubs. This turkey, a case of beer, a chauffeur's ration.
!ah*kart" nnd Is French for meals
Richard Halliburton
gives them vlcjories over Charlotte. uniform and a bicycle. Dozens of
served from a bill of fare on which Woodland. Ionia. Middleville and
applicants applied for a Job adver- League Bools.
each dish lx priced separately.
i O. Henry Memorial Award Prize
’ Greenville.
Stories of 1935.
1 Richard E. Byrd—Discovery.
rpetratlng the "practical Jokes.’
Stuart
Chase—Government
The. London Daily Telegraph re-, Business.
Kenneth A Hathaway—Modern
ports that fried eggs are "new" In
Radio
Essentials.
London's smart set. For a pleasant I
N. Hudson-Moore —The Old China
novelty, when this newness wears
(&gt;ff. may we suggest a slice of bacon Book.
ASHLAND. OHIO
Mary H. Northend — American
or a bit of ham on the side?
Glass.
'
jinutn
1W6
G. O. P. leaders in Chicago are
Edna Hcldbredcr—Seven Psychol­
sending out 500.000 cards asking ogies.
. Hastings. Mich.
people
to
promise
not
to
support
Henry
E.
Garrett
—Great Experi­
B. A- LyBarker
Roosevelt or Gamer. We shall never ments in Psychology.
Mr. LyBarker:get anywhere, they -say. until we
Bertrand Rufiell—Freedom Vefsus
cure,Republicans of this habit of Organization.
T,o or.nd
voting the wrong ticket.
Jean Barnes. Librarian.
tcripiional
DrHess Stock Tonic.
conditioned on Dr. n
champion

HAST NGS LOSES
0 MIDDLEVILLE

Choose

Chiffons

from these two attractive price groups

The Season's
Smartest
Shades!

.60
3 Pairs $2.00

« Positive Run Stop
Hems

e Full Fashioned

• Double Heels and
Toes

« Reinforced Heels
ond Toes

• Dainty Picot Tops

« Beautiful Lace
Tops

« All Silk

• Exquisitely Sheer

« First Quality

• All Silk Chiffons

A Iso Service
II eights

• Full. Foshioned
• Ringless

COME IN-GET SEVERAL PAIRS

Crue’s BrownShoe Store
HASTINGS. MICH.

NEXT TO CITY BANK

American I

ife

TBS. MAUS MADE
ANNUAL REPORT

DECEMBER 31. 1*&gt;:

First Mortgage* on Real E.Male ..
Policy Loan* nnd Rriieuctl I’rcmiu

dr. HESS &amp; CLARK, Inc

steer of the Show•o( Wellman, to* J*
bv 19 year old Cleo
.
. Qrotland for this

ci2e«w^b’??5si’^tS
'WncommeniedrSon Jhe^ipeness of the flesh a

Deferred and rntolhi lrd I reiinuni
Furniture. I nderwtitiiig l.'piipmciil. Fixtures. Vaults and
Stinplir

lhe condition o

.

the
p
This steer M&gt;ld ®lVoder $3,195.
bringing young .
r n(i champion had rc. This toirrnatlotial Gra^d
JanUBnr
reived Dr Hess Stock
Qiher QraBd

■ »"«■£?'

w™i5

Champion
Shorthorn *as
Keeme for all I ..li« i&lt;
n’ iiu hiding Dixibililv Reserve...$13,932.95,'l. 10
"
’
'9IL205.JI3
Reserve for Installment Trust “
Benefit*
not.
Reserve for Prewni \aluc of Di-abiliiv Be
333.591.(Ml

Championship also
shorthorn
Many Judges tailed him ‘TnumaUonal. He

Hintip fur I'ri-mium- ami Inh'ic-l. paid in advance and
KM1.IIUI.O2
dead Pwlicit

brought $1 a

2Jf.25Jf.il I
26.JUi5.25
6.79(1.33
49.901.99
J12.000.( X)

for other

Reserve for other 1
RediHounUs unpaid

n&gt;
i-

•11129.61

. SOfr.OOO.OO
816.732.831.60

-------

Vincent B.k«

i vnow your products

‘

mV dt wd

JACOB’S
MUSHROOM
BROTH

DEL MONTE
PINEAPPLE
JUICE

3cans 19

2 Si 25

PORK SHOULDER ROAST u.o

23c

BEEF KETTLE ROASTS

15c

Tlie C&lt;&gt;ni|iariv e IncnincPfroin Premiums and Investment Rwcipls for lhe
1935 was _______
______________
................r--Z............ I--’----------- 5 2.531,238.06
* Paid Poliryholdei- in 1935'____________
- ......... - -------- S 1.811.|ik..39
Paid Policy holder* for Death Losses. Ma
.iidciw iiK id*. Annuities. Cosh Sur*
renders and Policy Loans for the den
years &lt;.F193O, 193J. 1932, 1933
and 1931,. over — ________________

..........-............ - — -.............

ttoncr
DR- HESS At CLARK. Inc
per J. L. Clark.

RIB BOILING BEEF

19c
24H Lb. SACK

Samuel Vrlle

William C. Hull
Clarence L Ayres

Aaron L Sibley
Frank W. Blair
’ George E. Leonard
Fred H. -Aldrich

83c

BABY BEEF

FRONT QUARTER

HIND QUARTER

POUND-

sg
1 ^4*

75 to 100 Ib.
POUND-

DR. HESS STOCK TONIC will help build up your herd!

DIRECTORS

Wilber M. Brucker
L. M. Albin •'
'

12c

Lean, Meaty

BABY BEEF
75 ta 100 Ib.
Average

SI 3.000,000.00

Immediate nnd Prompt Payment is Synonymous with the name AFRICAN [_ife

Lighting ’er Up

19c

Fresh Ground

FRENCH’S FLOUR

56.32
.S887,JNl.5|

Total Investment Receipts. for year

No. you nuven't seen a (Milling
suit like this one before. Neither
had the Judges. So they named
Bunny Grove, above, of New
York City,, "Sponge Queen" ot
tho Bahama Islands, al the an­
nual aquatic carnival.

BUTTER 36^

PORK LOIN ROASTS

Jnvertthcnl Income for calendar year 1935:
Interest on nil Cmnp.inv invr-imehls other limn Real F.«lal&lt;

■

She ‘Sponged’ Her
Title of Queen

SHULTZ OR FREEPORT

GROUND BEEF

** __________ - 1.OOO.OI Mi.l KJ

Claude P. Sykes
Archie: At Anderson

BY RUTH BARTON
There are many very 'deceptive
people In (his old world. Some
for Instance arc bold and blus­
tering outwardly but secretly
timid and even cowardly.
Others are the opposite-^-meek
and gentle in appearance and
manner while in reality they Are
intensely selfish and ruthleas.
Deceptive people usually overdo
their pose. so when you meet
someone-who Lx decidedly this or
that—make sure that they ere
not trying to deceive you.
We cannot deceive an expert
graphologist.
A
handwriting
analysis gives us away. Let MJmi
Barton analyze yours. Fill our
coupon on page 5.

BP-v ••• X.Tu.'b. V»&gt; ““T

-.SMM HMM 1.00

.

Outward Appearances
Quite Often Deceiving

New Books In
Public Library

Twenty-Eighth Annual Financial” Statement

J. Walter Drake
Clark Adams

Are Not
What We Seem

If e

[insurance Company

DETROIT, MICHIGAN

Ib

I

Sporting Items

*WV

Thl» street
square Id
seems Ideal
—that la. if
this

tamp id a public
Brussels, Belgium,
as a clgaret lighter
you've got stilts, as
fellow ba*.

The Evangeline couny? of fj&gt;u|.
■Inna, where tne Frenflj Acadlana
settled. Is what Is known as lhe
Techo country, which refers to the
entire region adjacent to the Bayou
Teche. It Is estimated that French
Acadlana numbering more than
8.0(0 were deported by the English
government In 1755 from Nova
Scotia.
Waler Flows Uphill
Water flows uphill In planta
through the many tiny tubes that

PHONE 2115

Phone 2272 UJe Deliver

It does notwgo In solid
; streams but forms films that slick
। to the walls of the tubes and flow
along them;

�TWK MAlTTNQg HAMNER. THURSDAY. JANUARY !«. ItM

Social Events and Personal Mention

Love—Harknens

Organizations

announced lhe marriage ot their
daughter Margaret E. and Forest E
James on Nov. Ifl. at LaGrange. Ind.
Miss Hannah Lincoln (Nancy)
On Bunday the bride and groom,
There will be a meeting of the
Harkness. daughter of Dr. and Mrs. and their parent* were entertained Methodist Episcopal Bunday school
Robert Bruce Harknca*. became the at a family dinner al the home of board with pot luck supper at the
church tomorrow. Friday night.
brido of Robert MacClure Love, non Carlton.
of Mr. and Mrs. John Haviland
Mr*. James will Join her husband.
Love, of Kings Point, Long Island, who Is in the employ of Consumers to Lansing Tuesday night. Jan. 211
New York, al a ceremony performed Powar. as soon as his definite place ! to confer lhe second degree for
of work 1* determined. Their many I Prosperity lodge.
at high noon Saturday at the Pres-|, friends offer congratulations.
------------bytcrian church by Dr. John J.’
। •----------------- | The annual meeting of the Has-1
Kltehlng. The single ring ceremony MEETING OF BANNER
1 Ung« Civic Players association wdl |
was used.
SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASS. I ** held Monday evening. February
The ceremony took place in front I Mrs. John Hoevcnalr entertained i ?;
c0®®®'ity room of lhe '
of the alcove In the northeast cor-! the Banner class of the Methodist 1 NxUonal Bank building. Officers will;
ner of the church, curtains screen- Sunday School on Tuesday evening | “ C7C| „ *nd olher buslnes* tramIng the pipe organ, with mi effective for their January meeting, with a j ®c
; AU members are urged lo atgroup of balsam trees of varying good attendance. After the pot luck “,u* 016 m®eUn«*
height In front. Hie choir rail was I supper and business meeting the . Baptist LadteVAid"wiii hnta (hA.tr i
mvoraH
*____for 1 regular m«Un«
males alAIOhrWIU
hold
covered with hr.nrh«
branches nt
of th»
lhe LBni*.
umt : »v«n(n«
evening wa«
waa spent -ou
with ___
aewing
hi™
of their
Mr.
and four wrought Iron floor can- Bronson hospital in Kalamazoo.
'
delabra with white taper, were their usual January project.
* p m Jana £erv

Mrs. John C. Ketcham of Lansing,
John O- Ketcham was home from HONORED MR. AND
•
was In lhe city on Tuesday.
. : Lansing Tuesday.
MRS. HARRY GIDLEY*
Mr and Mra. Wallace Osborn were ’ Cliff Dolan left Tuesday night | Mr. and Mra Harry K. Gldley.
on a business trip to Toronto.
Who will .leave Jan. 17 for Chariesin Kalamazoo on Saturday.
Dr. and Mra. DePorre*t Walton ton. West Va.,where Mr Gldley will
John Ketcham. Jr. of Grand Rap-,
ids was tn lhe rtly on Tuesday.
(were guests of Lansing relatives • be employed Sy the State Health de­
Sunday.
I partment. were honor guest* at a
8upt. and Mra. D. A. VanBusklrk
Mr. and
Carrick spent dinner given Thursday evening by
were in Kalamazoo Monday on Sunday
।
llieir
their
ugnuw in *Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Johnson. Dinbusiness.
।
Mr. and Mrs James Bristol visit­
Baird. Jr., -spent the
ed Stephen Bristol in Albion on '
nd with her husband and Johnson home on South Church
Saturday.
ter U&gt; Marshall.
street. Moving pictures were shown
,—
_. ——„ and and games played. Mrs. Frederick H.
Mra. Clara Kent Willison of Del­
ton visited Mra. Nettie Hyde on John spent Sunday with their Taylor winning the prize. The guests
' daughters and family In Lansing.
Wedncv^gy.
of honor were presented with a gift
Miss Olivd Clark of Grand Rapids *' Forest E. James and Louis Myers —a spun aluminum lamp Dr. and
is the guest of Mrs. Forrest E. Lane, of Jackson were guests at the How­ Mrs. M. R. Kindr of MarshaU and
ard Erway home over lhe week end. Mr. and -Mrs. Leonard Board of
coming today.
Mrs..., Fred
mln
rrnu Young
xuung went
wens to Eaton
utton Hillsdale were out-of-town guests.
Charles Sherwood of Grand Rap- Rapids Saturday to see her friend,
MORE
COMING MORECOU,NO
' urged to attend Visitors always welids was tn the city c
” *Tuesday
’■*—•'-■• —
— ------------ who
• ■Is seriously
•
• . FAREWELL FOR MRS. G1DLEY.
on
yr*.
RUsh —
Britton,
| crime.—Mrs. Myrtle Eaton. Secy.
greeting friends.
.
)UL
gram of organ music before the,
PARTY FOR TROOP 74.
,
.. —
. f Covers were laid for twelve a» a
Mr- and Mrs. Harry K. Gldley left
— zt
Miss Ha»l -err:!:
Crocker
of Hudson b deMert brldge
,fUf. ceremray and for the proceMional
ouriral,I Townsend
---------- Robert Reed tllvcllMUlTO
entertained ,fourteen
plan meeting. Eplson Wednisday for Charleston, W. the
le guest
euest of her brother and wife. noon g|ven bJ--Mrs p E
lwn. used Ixihcngrins Wedding March
goula of Troop 74 at the home I copal parish house Friday evening.
Va. driving through
• ! the Rev. and Mrs. E. L. Crocker, for oring Mr*. Harry K. Gldley. who .ORt
8he ,;"
concluded
0, ms
^is parent*.
parents. Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. B.
B. R.
R. ‘ *1*0* 24. It is a pancake and sausage
‘“'‘“u‘u with
w,“* MendelMohn^i
-1, or
Rev E O. McSherry was called to | a ,cw weeks.
i
_
------a
.
supper,
hours.
5
to 7. You are in­
leaves soon for Charleston. W. Va reSS?s
.
I R‘*d* on Monday evening. Games
St. Johns one day last week for lhe
and Mrs- C. P. Lathrop at- The dining table was centered with:
i.
., w“ charming In a were played, prises given and re­ vited. Come dine with us After sup- I
funcral of a friend.
tended a dinner at the home of Dr. a bowl ot Talisman rows flanked *
“l~ “°*n' .
fw»hments served
LeRoy Poster per. Rev. m. E Hoyt of Nashville,
George Hyde of Prairieville visited “nd Mrs R F Webb at Orand Rap­ with blue tapers in brass holders. In
,ln” M,lh * J1*1*1 cowl i and W. E Barnes. Scout Masters ot will be the evening speaker.
ids grandmother. Mrs. NcttlctHyde ld?i* Fflday night.
1 lhe living room bouquets of spring
'Tr&lt;&gt;op 74' were aEo P"*nt. The
tulle veil,
which was f*$tened
fattenedi, ^y, shMd
Brand time and---------appreThe Jan. 24th meeting of the
on Saturday and Sunday.
K
Mr* and Mrs. Hugh Riley were In flowers made attractive decorations JI Her
H
IL whlch
..^ ’.a —
Women's Club promises lo be of
Mrs. Otwell Fleming of Chicago O™”*! Rapldv Sunday lo assist in At contract the scores were won by ।' to a small off-the-face cap and at ciBU.d Robert's hoapitallty
tlie
of their grandson.
i the back ot the neck with orange I
----------------- , w ,
'
unusual interest The topic "Changes
was the gue,t of Mr. and Mrs. W. ,h
" celebration nt
Mrs. Earl Coleman and Mrs. B. A. blossoms, fell In graceful folds be- j
DESSERT-BRIDGE.
Leon's, first birthday.
in our Educational World" will be In
L. Hinman on Wednesday.
LyBarker. wlUi a guest prize fOr
"
charge of the Applied Education
Dr. and Mrs. p. H. Taylor had ns Mrs. Gldley.
.s: I on«s • «&gt;»»•
Mr and Mr*. 8 F. Nichols of De­
Committee. Mrs. A ben Johnson and
troit were week-end guests at the week end guests the tatter's sister
orchids and lilies of the valley Mid
,A.wlU‘ * d“,* Mrs. j. p. Mohler. Talks will be
home of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Barnett. and husband. Mr. and Mrs. M. G.
NIGHT HAWK CLUB.
given by D. A- VanBusklrk. superin­
Mr. and Mrs. Harold McDonald Fnrleman. of Lansing.
MIm Florence V. Wood enter­
The Misses Marian Echllnaw and
tendent of schools, and Mrs Ger­
of Battle creek spent the week end
*n&lt;? Mrs, D. °.WBllon M«* aldine Wolverton of lhe Thomaptained Uie Night Hawk Card Chib ' Mrs. Robert B. Harkness. Jr., of'
with his mother. Mra. Wilbur Me- 1 Phyllis Edger spent Saturday after­ at the home of Mrs. Anna Newton Lincoln. Mu. was lhe matron of
lnern‘^U,n,n« *«Bln on ple-Kellogg High school faculty.
noon and evening with Mr. and Mrs. i
Donald.
,on
Jan. 3. A lovely dinner was honor and wore a stunning gown of Frld*y evening,
I
Mr.’. R M. Bates returned on A. A- Kirchner of Grand Rapids.
Mr and Mrs Jerry Andrus were
7 oc,ock- *nd lh« remain­ gray crepe, ankle length with an!
Brush Ridge cemetery circle will
Monday from Detroit where she had ■
HAPPY SURPRISE.
meet with Mrs.
Ida Carpenter.
w »oent pt,,. aquamarine sash, and a gray velvet1
been visiting Dr. unci Mrs. C. M. ! In Bailie Creek. B-lunUy tn
I tlielr doushler. L*n». who Is In her *"■
Newton hat. She carried an arm bouquet of
A group of friends surprised Miss Thursday. Jan. 23 for all day meet­
Overstreet.
uwlnlnif
ot Nichols
sh“l“ ««*
Jane Herrington on Friday evening, ing.
spring flowers.
Mr. and Mra. Kenneth Leins and'1 second
- .yesr
— ol- ---------- ------------------ “J
.
|
and
Seba
Hillman
and
Chas.
Freer
lhe
guests
being
members
of
the
Richard Manning of New York
family of Battle Creek were Sunday | hospital.
The Goodwill Ladies' Aid will
Keith Fox. Mr. -•
and , Jf’c 12w',At
hour 011 thanked City was lhe best man and the usher Young People's Fellowship of Em­
guests of her |*arents, Mr. and Mrs.:1 Mr.
^*r and
“nJ Mrs.
“
j Mrs.
Lyle Rockhill —
and
and
*°r ■ very enjoyable wds J. Cobham Noyes of New York manuel church. They enjoyed a pot meet al the home of Mrs. Ray Er­
Will Bennett.
I
------------------------------- Mr.
. —
— I *hc
way. January 24 for dinner. Every­
lime.
and Portland. Maine.
. luck supper and social evening.
Mr and Mrs Gerald Nash and.Mrs- Edgar Hoevcnalr spent the
one is invited.
The bride's mother wore a black
Robert of Hopkins were dinner week cnd ncar Cadillac hunting
BRIDGE CLUB MEETS.
TWO BRIDGE PARTI KH.
velvet gown and hat and wore a
guests o! Mr and Mrs. Roy Boyes! jackrabbit.-,.
Tuesday evening. January 21. Has­
Mrs. Dan Walldorff entertained corsage of purple ' orchids, The , Mrs. Ward Erway was hostess to tings chapter No. 7 Order of the
Joint Wolfe has
ha.*, returned
returnee!
Monday night.
|j Mrs. Jojin
dessert bridges thLs week -&gt;
at groom’s mother also wore black vel­ ’her bridge club on Thursday eve­ Eastern Star will hold its regular
' Mrs. Marj Evarts. MIm Agnes !ro
&gt;" a Aew
« months’ slay
- ---------from
seven
stay on the at- two
Sim. Mrs. M J. Cross and Mrs Pacific coast, and is at present slay-1 JJcr home on South Broadway. The vet trimmed with ecru lacc and her ning. two tables being in play. Hon­ meeting and Mrs. Dorothy Sumner
ors were won by Mrs. Earl Brown
.*&gt; Ki
’cn on iaav
inursaay corsage was of purple orchids.
Harry Sponublc were Grand Rapids &gt;"» wn,‘ hcr friend. Mrs. Hannc-, nrsJ mu
*“
given
last Thursday
will be in charge of the program and
। man. at M»h»ui&lt;&gt;
NashviliiL
visi'or. on lust Friday
,.«»»»
(evening। eveningevening when sixteen guests were
Following the ceremony a wedding nnd Mrs. Hazel Hinkley.
Mrs. William Roh and D. A. Wiley
1 MIS* Florence Trieb. MLss Beatrice
1 nrescnl
&gt; Pjwnl.
Bououeta
Bouquets
of nlnk
of and
pinkwhim
and white
break!ast was served lo the out-of­
Mr* FrciT siiiith of Grand Rapthe refreshments. A good attendance
and
ld.s was the guest of her daughter1 Herney. Ml** Marcella Goggins ’ chrysanthemums
“
J acacia cen­ town rotative* and friends at the
Hospital Guild No. 5 was enter­ Is desired.
and xon-tn-taw. .Mr. and Mrs. A. R ' and Miss Eva Slrumbergcr wvre in tered the small tablet. Mr*. Winona home of the bride on West Green tained on Tuesday by Mrs. Kim Sut­
Methodist L. A- S Circle No. 8 will
VnnTil. the post week.
j Kalamazoo last week lo attend the Downing and Mrs Wallace Osborn street.
ler for an evening meeting. Hon­
MK. Murnret Barnett spent the 'ceremony of first vows taken by won‘the honors in the bridge game.
Mr. and Mrs Love left in the late ors al cards
WU|Iwere„„
won by Mrs. James be entertained on Friday. Jan. 24.
On Tuesday evening three tables afternoon for Chicago, from where MaAOn and MrA.
by Mrs. Smith Wills.
smith,
week-end in Baltic Creek us nie I-sisters al Nazareth Academy.
were
in
play
at
the
dessert-bridge
they
left
for
a
three
weeks'
plane
guest of Miss Edith Benton. She was ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bender of
honor guest at two parties while * Middleville were in Uie city to spend given by Mrs. Walldorff. with Mrs. trip to the weal coast returning to
Lhcrc.
y
her parents. Mr.
there.
I Sunda
o******“—
vr. andlp* D* Walton and Mrs. Floyd Gas- Boston by way of Pahn Beach. Fla
Despite their great alia and fe­
The porcelain made at Melasen.
Mrs. Nettie Hyde and Paul Hyde Mrs. E G- Hackney, leaving on «&gt;' winning the scores. Chrysan- The bride's going away costume was
rocious appearance, provided, as they
...............
■ of. Mrs
..
—Birdie
.. ..
.
II Monday by auto, a
&gt;«■( Shouse
ia.iba tAnllAA
tnemtims In
nlln VUV,
hlldp attrac
nllrar.­ a black wool suit with mink collar commonly called Dresden, out of
in bud
vases made
were
guests
Merluu
and
trailer, themunu
were, with two sets of tusks apiece
tive decoralions.
and she wore a spray of orchids. courtesy to the city where sat (he
stay In Florida.
ot Prairieville on Tuesday. They al- ['for n 'two months'
“**’ “
and huge molar teetb that were re­
They will be at home after February
so called on Mr. and Mrs. Rankin1 Dr. and Mrs. c. P- Lathrop have
newed If the animal lost them, pre­
15 at Trapelo Farm. Wallham. Mass lain and should not l&gt;e confused
had as guests over Uic week end WOXfAN'S BOARD
Hyde.
historic elephants were vegetarians,
ANNUAL MEETING.
The bride Is a graduate of Milton with the early translucent ware
Mr. andjdrs W J. Field and Mr nnd until Wednesday. Mr. and Mr*.
dining chiefly on trees, shrubbery,
M.
EWhitman
of
Elyria.
Ohio.
On
_________________
_
_
____
__
The annual meeting of Uie Wom- Academy. Milton Mass.. In the class made In Egypt and Persia and In
and Mr." a L. Brown attended the
grass and other forms of regel.ible
Jackson club dinner in Battle Tuesday they motored to Detroit an's board of Pennock hospital was of 1931 and was graduated from Vas­ Italy, Englund and France, which
matter. During glacial ages they
—J~ afternoon
-----------Monday
at....
the home sar in the class of 1635. Since the
Creek on Wednesday evening of last nnd spent the day with Miss Olive held ••
were triply protected from lhe cold
Lathrop. .
of Mrs. Harry G. Hayes on South age of sixteen she has been flying, Such ware was. at best, a substi­
RelaUves from
iu attendance Jefferson street following a one holding private, commercial and tute for the rent thing.
by one long coat of hair and two
Mr. and Mr* Albert Rresor and
-----------------------away
------ -------daughter. Marjorie, of woodland f al Uie funeral of Mrs. Frank Ream o'clock luncheon. The annual re­ transport licenses. She has been in
wooly coats.
wen* uiiri.u' ol Mrs Miranda Sisson were: Mrs. Hugh Ellsworth, and ports were given and all officers re- the employ of the Bureau ot Air
and Mrs. Ida Pahualler Monday Waller Ream. Toledo; Mrs. Adah ck't icd. Mr*. Hayes will continue as Commerce and will probably con­ ,xiirakiitnr» is a volcanic Island In
Johnson. Mrs. Richard Johnson, and chairman. Mrs. G- E. Goodyear as tinue this work on her return to, ; the Nunda strait, Netherlnnd In­
Mrs. Alin/.o Trim returned Tues­ Miss Frances Burling. Grand Rap­ vice-chairman. Mrs. m A- Lambic the cast. The groom attended the dies. This Inland blew np In August. l Tlie only kitchen In the world
day. after a visit wit it her sister. Mrs. Ids. and Mrs. Mattie Lickta. Middle­ as secretary and Mrs. Frank Andrus Lawrenceville school in New York 1883, with n report that wan heard through which free food constantly
' flows Is located In lhe basement ot
as treasurer. The board was in­ and was graduated from Prlncctcn
E E. Vender, and family al Detroit. ville. .
formed that installation of the new in the class of 1832. He abofatlend- 3.HOO miles away. Thousands and : tbe great. Cistercian monastery In
elevator at the hospital would begin ed the Massachusetts Institute of thousands of persons were killed | Alcobaca. Portugal. says Collier’s
FORMER FREEPORT
Nashville.
Technology in Boston. He W/prenl- by tidal waves In places that were | Weekly. Whenever flsh Is wanted
RESIDENT MARRIES. tome lime during January.
W T W:il1iicr’of Jonesville was
dent of the inter-city Air Line*. Inc . hundreds of miles from the Island.
Many of cur Freeport readers of
at Boston, which are successors lo The Sumin strait lies between
EMMANUEL GUILD.
Ing from here to Elkhart. Ind., the Banner will be interested in the
get a supply is to lower bla net Into
following Item which appeared in
A dessert luncheon was enjoyed the Boston branch of the CurtUs- Sumatra and Java.
I the branch of the Alcoa river, which
last.week's Issue of the Lowell Ledg­ by thirty-two members of Em­ Wnght Corporation. The company
। conveniently runs right through tbe
Mrs. charlrs vandcGrifl and son. er. concerning a former resident of manuel Guild al the Episcopal par­ gives sales service, charter and in­
middle ot t)ila-«lgantic room.
Robert, of Hxstinn*. were guests ot Freeport: ’
ish house on Wednesday of last strument instruction and operates
Willow and rock ptarmigan are |
Mr. nnd Mrs. Emil Dommert and
• Miss Jennie Finch of Grand week Mrs. K. 8. McIntyre, newly the only government approved
native (o all parts of tbe mainland ;
■ ftfinlly ’on Friday and Saturday of Rapids, formerly of Freeport, and elected president, conducted the school in New England.
Out of town guests at the wedding of Canada, and to many of lhe l» |
i last week.—Tlie Wayland Globe.
Vane Thompson were married tn business session. Mrs. George L.
Fishing In Mexican waters Is pro­
1
Mr. and Mis. Wayne Merrick were Kentucky on Dec 26. Fallowing the Lockwood was chosen secretary and included Mr. and Mra. John H Love,
lands along tbe Arctic coast ot tbe hibited except by government per­
the groom's parents, of Kings Point, territories
in Detroit Sunday as guests of Mr. ceremony, the bridal pair came by Mrs. Charles S. PotLs, treasurer.
mit according lo law.
Long Island, New York; Miss Mar­
and Mrs. Flayd Merrick. Mrs. Lc- plane to Detroit for a wedding sup­
garet
Love
of
Tuscon.
Artz.;
Miss
vanclie Merrick returned with them per with Mr. and Mrs. Earl F.
BIRTHDAY PARTY.
Emma Louisa Love. Mr. and Mrs.
f and Is al thr Wayne Merrick home Houghton, sister and brother-in-law
Mrs. John W. Thomas entertained
'
Mrs. W’nync Merrick and Mrs* of Mr. Thompson, where they hud a group ot six children Tuesday aft­ Lauren J. Drake and Miss Julia
' Levanche Merrick visited Mr. and been holiday guests. Mr. and Mrs. ernoon. Jan. 7. in honor of little Miss Drake of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs,
Mrs Ben Merrick of E State Road Thompson will be at home in Cas­ Donnabcllc's third birthday. The Louis H- Hardin of Lake Forest. HI.';
on 'Biesday and found Uie latter rc- cade-Twp.. after Feb.
I." Mrs. children had a delightful time play­ Mr. and Mrs. John Denton of Jack­
coverjngMaJccly from her recent op- Thompson was a Freeport high ing Ranies and hunting toy balloons son. Mich.; Miss Alice Hirschman
and John Itammoiid of Detroit;
er&lt;t,u4n.
school girl."
which were hidden about the room. Richard Manning of New Ybrk; J,
;■ Mt. and Mrs. Frank Andrus, Mrs.
Mrs. Thompson, after leaving Refreshments were served al a tabic
■;Wallace Gsborn. Mrs. Mac Trieb. Freeport, worked in Grand Rapids, centered with a lovely pink and Cobham Noyes of New York and
, Mr. nnd Mrs. G. E. Goodyear and living with her mother, who died a white birthday cake. Donnabcllc re­ Portland. Maine, and Mrs. Robert
B. Harkness of Lincoln. Moss.
Rev J a. McNulty, accompanied few years ago. Her' friends Join In ceived many gifts.
. Mrs. W J Holloway to Adrian Fri­ extending best wishes.
day morning for the burial services
CHEER UP TARTY.
■ of her sister. MIm Carrie Todd.
Tlie next Cheer Up party will be
ARENTY—KINSELLA.
held at the Community hall on
Dr and Mrs. A W. Woodburne
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nelson Monday evening, Jan. 27. There will
left Monday for Detroit, where* they
. visited Dr. and Mrs. Harris Wood- Arclitz of Prairieville announce lhe be a good orchestra.^ it Is planned.
burne before leaving for Jackson­ marriage of their daughter Helen Members of the committee are: Mr.
ville. Fla . for the balance of the Jeannette, to Milton R. Kinsella, son and Mrs. Waller Eatbn. Chrm.. Mr.
winter They shipped their car to of Mrs. John Thompson of Wall and Mrs. W. M- Stebbins. Dr. and
Florida so they will have the use of lake and Kalamazoo which took Mrs. Frederick Taylor. Mr--and Mrs.
place Saturday. Jan. 4lh al 8 o'clock Glenn Densmore. Mr. and Mrs. Ce­
it when they arrive in the south.
'
David French of Los Angeles who at the parsonage of the First Con­ cil Munton and Mr. and Mrs. An­
rune lo Middleville on a week's gregational church of Battle Creek, drew Roush.
business tr»f&gt;. was In the city Satur- the Rev. Carlton Brooks Miller read­
HONORED MRS. BRONSON.
da*, on his way home. He was ac­ ing the single ring service. Miss Jean
Mrs. Guy Bauer entertained her
companied by Ray Aldrich of Cale­ Eckstrom of Battle Creek was maiddonia who is taking Uie trip with of-honor and Frederick Anders of club for dessert bridge on Thursday
his own coupe as a trailer, to afford Cloverdale attended the groom. Aft- for Mrs. Devltl Bron.-on. who left
him a means of driving back on the ter the ceremony a wedding supper Saturday lo spend the winter In
was served at The Brlmont followed Grand Rapids. Mrs. Mabie Vickery
homcaard Journey,
by dancing at the American Legion of charlotte was a guest from out of
Mr. and Mrs. clarence W Craw­
VACATION LAND—TlohheB FUrer
ford leave today (Thursday) for Club. Mr. and Mrs. Kinsella will be town. Prizes were won by Mrs. Isa­
Chicago - Mr. Crawford will stay a al home at 605 W Walnut St.. Kal­ belle Carrolhcrs and Mrs. Ray
. Branch.
We claim that there
■
few days on business and Mrs. amazoo.
a difference in clean-’
Crawford will visit for two weeks
DESSERT BRIDGE SATURDAY.
CHARITY GUILD MEETS.
with her daughter. Mrs. Robert Jes­
ing .^a . compare our
Mrs. Floyd Gaskell entertained
Hospital Guild No. 0. known a*
sen. while Mr. Jessen is away on a
workrwith that sold on
twelve guests Saturday afternoon at
the
charily
guild,
tncl
at
the
home
business trip.
a
dessert
bridge-given
at
her
home
price and you will be
Jason E McElwain. Wrn Camp- of Mrs. Albert J. Vedder at Iter on South Broadway. The tablas
convinced that First
lyl! and LeRoy Foster were in Bat­ home on West court street on Wed­
were
attractively
decorated
with
tle crock Monday evening lo attend nesday evening. Mrs. W. G. Bauer small bouquets of mixed flowers.
Class .Work.is not just
a dinner for underwriters of this and Mrs. James Lopg assisted the Bridge honors were won by Mrs.
talk. Good Cleaning is
dlitricl nt Kellogg hotel and heard hoate&amp;s. Thirty members and gucuta
Hnroiy Phillipa and Mrs. David
not expensive.
DeLos Walker, associate editor of were present. After the business
Boyes.
Liberty' magazine, speak on Uie meeting conducted by this* chair­
man,
Mr*.
ADMcDonald,
contract
’return of prosperity.
PARTY FOR MRS. GIDLEY.
' Mr. and Mr* Albert H. CarycUi WM, playert. Mrs. H. J. Foster and
LADIES'
*
Sixteen friends of Mrs. A- B. Gidleft on Wednesday lor Florida to Mrs. Frank Foote tvlnnln*&lt; the ley met al her home on Tuesday
be away about twp inonlhy They prizes. Mra. H. I. Davies Jollied the evening of last week, with Mrs. C.
. have no definite destinatlon.ln mind guild a* a new member.
L. Texlcr. Mrs. vemor Blough, and
JAH. 10,11,1:
bul will wander around Uriull their
Mrs. LeRoy Foeter as hostesses.
tastes. Enroute they arc spending a BLhlhthS WOMEN'S
Mrs. Gldley was presented with a
few days In Charleston. W. Va.. with
HOSPITAL GUILD MET. fine gift for her newly adopted son.
Mr. and Mr*. Marion Hodgson and
Oh Monday evening lhe January Philip Allen.
son.
Art Collets end Cliffs E»lr»
meeting at the Business Women's
Dr. Hugh Kennedy and Dr. W. F. Hoapltai Guild was held, dinner be- NORTH MICHIGAN
■Kendrick of Grand Rapids were in ?n« served at the Parker House at
.
BIRTHDAY CLUB.
-Uic city on Wednesday bi Uw inter­ six-thirty. Covers were laid for
Mrs. C. D. Bauer and Mrs. Homer
ests of Clark Memorial Home of twenty-four members
and
two Smith entertained lhe North Michi­
which Uic tatter has charge. Sev­ guests. The chairman. Miss Jennie gan Birthday Club on Tuesday eve-1
DRY CLEANERS
eral people-from Barry county are McBain, acted as hostess. Mrs. D. A. ning at the former's homq. It was a j
happy resident* at the Home and VanBusklrk Is hostess for.February. 'backward'* party and caused a lol
are pleased with Uic excellent care Plaits lor future activities were dis­ of fun. Sixtxxn eiijoytd games, con­
[
they are receiving there.
cussed during the business session. tests and a spelling match.

... ,lm,

», „„

^WT”OL

The Sale Goes On and

OVERCOATS
$16.50
$19.50
$22.50
$27.50

SUITS

Coati$12.95
Coati $14.45
Coats $16.45
Coats $19.45

$16.50
$21.00
$24.00
$29.50

Suits $9.95
Suits $13.95
Suits $16.95
Suits $22.50

$2.45 TROUSERS NOW
$3.45 TROUSERS NOW

75c

$1.49
$1.99
$1.00

Winner

Brand

TIES

Overalls

50c

M’2

TIES

75c »

ONE LOT OF DRESS SHIRTS -..89c
ONE LOT OF DRESS SHIRTS ..$1.29

Style Park Hats
$3.50 Hats
$2.45
$5.00 Hats . $3.45

Fleeced Underwaar
$1.39 Value _.98c
$5.00 Valua .$3.45

Everything in the Stare is Reduced!

Clothing and Shoes for Men and Boys
HASTINGS

speed is an optical Illusion. A
can walk faster than tbe fleetest
suake. Its maximum speed Is less
than four miles per hour.
The
snnke's reputation for speed la
tenet! on lhe receptive grace of Its
smooth. Uncut. uodulatory gliding.

Disgrace to Bear Twins
In Nigeria it Is a disgrace for a
woman to bear twins. Quietly am!
without any publicity one of tbe
pair Is killed.

man that understands the advan­
tages of mass attack and defense
as well as the baboon, according to
Dr. A. E. llootun. anthropologist of
Harvard university.

Tbe fl rat casaba melons grows ta
th.' United Slates were produced
from seeds Imported from Kassa*
han. In Asia Minor, to California, la
1878.

SPECIALS for

Friday, Jan. 17

Saturday, Jan. 18

JUST TALK?

LARD, Best, Pure

3 lbs. 39c

Invest In Good Appearance
-ond-meet the coming year with the confidence that is
brought about by having one of our scientifically correct
PERMANENTS.

MATCHES, Ohio Blue Tip 6 boxes 25c
COFFEE

Ib. 15c

INSTANT POSTUM, large

43c

KAFFEE HAG or Sanka Coffee ib. 39c

Northern Toilet Tissue
BUTTER, Best Brands

6 rolls 33c
Ib. 35c

European
.
Realistic
Permanent *1—
The label on Ibis wave says
88. but Hollywood wants
you to have a January Spe­
cial—a true push-up wave
nt this efficient beauty
shop. Phone now and ask
about U.

MINCED HAM, sliced to suit Ib. 15c

PORK CHOPS, end cuts

COAT SPECIAL!

9432

McCREERY'S

JUST PHONE
HASTINGS

WE DELIVER

Bergamont Oil
$7.50 OU J 4
Perm'nt *t Crop.
By Re^utulion

Hair Style
Forecast 1936
Curls — hemi-Ssriria—

T.ltenR S-kEUnn.
The 1036 Coiffure will have
tailor-fitted necklines, curt*
plied on top or In tlw bock
—all with upward sweep.
As long as you have curia
—they may bo sculptured,
fluffy, rolled or cluatered.

ELECTRO MANI­
CURE MACHINE
The only one in Has­
tings. Electric Mani­
cures arc gentle and
pleasing.
Cftc
OnlyDU

THI FAMOUS
GLO-TONI
Perm’nt |Q
Wave— WCm*.

Finest Castile Shampoo ond Finger Wove —

Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value for
&lt;For Dry Hslr and Dandruff)
NOT A SCHOOL—All Experienced Licensed* Operator*

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SIRVI
114 WEST STATE 8T.
I
Lucille Kctdter. Marguerite few and'Edith I

50&lt;

�THE HASTTNOB BAHMEB. mCBBDAT. lAMCABY IS. IBB

TW.KSMI COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

-■

INSURANCE

GRANGE PROGRAMS

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

otn enrr a word, no adver­

THE CHURCHES]'Frida,
....____
rtrnina Jan

_____ .____________ 1____

10

l-rlOX al T *

tisement FOR LESS THAN Me.

Our Service
To PROTECT You Con.Untly
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly

Victorious Over Pacific, Sky Liners
Aim at Conquest of Atlantic .
ATLANTIC

Mmncst place In all Canada Ir*
this silvery peak of Mount Wad- '
dinetiin, more popularly known us
Mount Mystery. Jutting 13,300 fret i

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

OCEAN
Farmers, Attention

'Nqyfolk

■naUINMA.X WANTKIt-tnea.rr nr w»&lt;'»
, P«H»n Mnniammi Cn. l&gt;ran*i
1 IJI't I’lainllrM A»r.
t in '

GEO. M. NEWTON
STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
on farmers in N. Barry county. Nt
experience or capital needed. Writs
today. MeNKSS CO, Dept. B. Free­
port, III inch.
1-1C

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

I am In the mhritet for your hides
and pells. I have handled nearly
one thousand hides a year from the
farmer* in Barry Co.. ’ Prices are
stronger than last year, also buying
dealer lots. The leading fur and
hide buyer drTttrry County.
i

tbe Clippers* regularly scheduled
bap to Hawaii ,
Laier in lhe fall. In esperlmeu
tai rights, planes will span the
aoutheru route, flying from New
York tn England via Charleston.
S_’C.. Bermuda, the Azores. and
Portugal. .
While 1500 miles longer than

.llo.iratrtl
;• an’&lt;l -,1a

nine;*' M
r&gt;. &lt;-r thr
«. Jan. 3
h .errirr

A. TOBIAS
One block north of National Bank.
The place lo meet your hunter and
trapper friends.
1-23

h

Trnne-atcraulr rommrrtlnl pin nr a ot the future mar tak«
bring catapulted from the hath of a larger "mother
principle nf the Mnjn I I) lag Ikiat. ■ model of which t&lt;

STOCK SALE
JERRY ANDRUS
INSURANCE AGENCY

Johnson Farm, half mile
north of luske Odessa. on
Tuesday P. M.. Jan 21. Of­
fering—
'

Michigan

•• HORSES
75 FEEDER PIGS
FEW COWS

Alvo 2 Sets Good Harness.

ROYAL JOHNSON
.

CARDS of THANKS

Big Bertha’s Long Range
. The Hastings Banner
Outclassed Other Guns !-------------------------------------

In *n open'M|tmre«4a the Dottie of
the Rock (Mosque of Omar), aacred

Control”. Nothing alas ilka
tl. We are exclusive repraemstiUvee _

'lost In the maze of turnlrigs and
alley-ways Is tbe storied ancient
Wailing Wall of the Jews where the
prayers of the Children of Israel
float up on the four winds tn heav­
en. The city Itself Is tilled with
Arab*. Greeks, Jews nnd Turks.
Queer little shops line the streets.
To the west Is Mount Zion. Jehov­
ah’s dwelling place. On the cast

The Prescription Drag Store

WRECKING

the north stood the Temple of Solomnn. where Is now the Mosque of
Omar. Nearby are thr Garden of
Gethsemane, the allo at Calvary and

HEADACHE-

ferred the title of prince of Wales
upon his son Edward, who hap­
pened to be born nt Carnarvon, In
Wales, during thr period of occu|iation. It has since Uvn customary,
to use tills title for the king’s eld-

GLENJl F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2537

Hastings

"Where the Woodbine Twinetb"
“Gone where the woodbine twlncih,” la from a speech made In 1SGD
at a congressional Investigation of
“Black Friday." The words were
spoken by the Wall Street specu­
lator, James Fisk, and referred ,to
lhe money he bad lost in bis at­
tempt to corner gold.

NOTICE TO POLICY-HOLDERS
The Annual Meeting of the Woodland Mutual Fire
Insurance Company will be hetd at Woodland on

Tuesday, January 21, 1936, at 10:00 A. M.
for

Jerusalem Most Revered
Spot of Re'liious World
spots revered all over the world.
Through the Crooked Way is the
Cliurdipf lhe Holy Sepulchre where
pilgrims from every corner of the
earth come to worship, observes a

Every trazs we fit ts guar­
anteed to hold the rupture
and we keep It In proper adJnstment for yea. Let us show
you the New Akron Truss

of

smaller and hedvlJy load rd
plane.
All eight engines aid in

BAKE ODESSA. MICH.
1-M

WANT TO HIRE MAN

Dead Stock Removed!

Ice. Bermuda Is developing its
airport facilities. Pan American
Airlines has the necessary base
planes end. In the new venture,
will have the cooperation ot
Brllaln'a Imperial Alrwaya.

the purpose of electing two Directors for a term
three years ond one Director to fill vacancy for
a term of one year.
FRANK C. KILPATRICK, Secretary.

Malamate, • Work Dog
Tlie matamute, frequently called
the “husky" of the North. Is essen­
tially a work dog. This Is the typo
of sled animal used extensively to

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

HASTINGS MARKETS

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
Every Monday.
lot of gold. Considerable Inca gold
was thrown 'into the lake during
the squeezing ot Peru by Pizarro.

Michigan Livestock Exchange
HASTINGS BRANCH

When metals are heated they I Lagkon
soften. When they are cooled they ■ »•**•- ।
harden. When lead la cooled to
liquid air temperatures It becomes wm," wh
hard enough to vibrate when struck I ,l” ‘*r

A pallmpa^|t |g a parchment manu­
Boon. Hound.d by Debt
script, which, after (he writing upon
Dr. Archibald Henderson, biog­
Il has been partially erased, had rapher’ Of Daniel Il-vone. describes
been used again. Both the Greeks lhe explorer as usually bounded by
and Romans erased manuscript In :
order to use the parchment again..'

Typical artillery of the World
war. writes John A. Menangb. In '
the Chicago Tribune, were the fol­
lowing British guns: The 14-lneh
gun. with a range of 20 miles; the
12-lnch gun, with a range of 10
miles; the 9.2-lnch gun, firing a
ahell 15 miles; lhe Cinch gun. with

Publishes every Wadeeeday.

howitzer.- hurling a shell 8 miles;
the OU pounder rille, with n ranee

howitzer, shunting 7 miles; the 1Hpounder field piece, with n range
of about 0,100 yards; the 4.3-liuh
yards; nnd the 3.7-lnch howitzer,
shooting ,’&gt;.W&gt;£yt»rd«.
The maximum range of the huge

threw a ahell 1,250 yards. Tbe Ger- ' i
man Mlnenwrrfer was capable of
throwing a 50-pound trench bomb*]*
430. yards.
It was the German long-range ' i
gun, the Big Bertha, however, that '
was the most talked-of weapon of ' &lt;
the World war. . A number of guns 1
of thia type were employed In shell- Ing Purls.
Others of the guns had different i
maximum ranges, the greatest only |
slightly leas than bO miles.
-

Clarinet la Moat Useful
of Instruments in Band

Britaia’s Tallest Chimney
The tallest chimney In Great Brit­
ain Is the famous Townsend stack.
In Glasgow, which la 4H0 fret high.
It Is octagonal In shape, atfil meas­
ures 127H feet round lite base,
tattering lo 34 fret at lite top. Nearly

Tlie clarinet, like other members
of the wood-wind family, goes bock
derlylng, unifying principles and to those Instruments used by Pan,
laws of nature are those rare, pen­ when nymphs and fauna danced to
etrating geniuses whtfnpen the way the gay music of pipes In the woods.
for a thousand lesser men to put Since those early woodland days,
them to practical use. The prin­ says air authority In the Washing­
ciple ot antitoxins was discovered -ton Post, the pipe has undergone
Tlie mouthpiece
by that mighty mind. Louis Pnsteur. many changes.
leading a fat ox In a afreet parade.
but many men, using this principle, was given a double reed for the
Mnrdl meaning Tuesday and Graa,
have Invented vaccines.
Faraday oboe, the English horn and the bas­
discovered the principle of electrical soons, but In the clarinet only a
action out of which have grown single reed la used. Much as the
clarinet resembles tbe oboe, It does
not tnjwr, and la of equal thickness
science—the discovery of new meth­ until the end, where It flares Into a
ode of research and new principles bell. Of all the wood-wind Instru­
Formers, we buy all
In nature—and “applied" science— ments. the clarinet Is the most use­
putting It lo practical use. Some ful because ot its wide range. Its
kinds of Live Stock ot
ease, of playing and the great va­
Highest Market Price.
riety of tone.
Clarinets are made In different
M. C. Stockyard. Every
keys and pitches. Tbe ones In It
Tuesday — Veal ond
flat and A are most commonly In
use. although some of the scores
Lambs—Hogs and
Reach are not made on a track, but call for clarinets In C. F. fiat and D.
Occasionally
an
alto
clarinet
Is
em
­
Cot tie Every Day.
on a straightaway course along the
beach Itself. It averages about JUKI ployed, and. more frequently, a bass
feet In width, and is of smooth. clarinet,' which Is the largest and
deepest pitched Instrument of this
family. It hns a crook for the,
mouthpiece, and a large bell. It

GRAND RAPIDS
PACKING CO.
F. J. GRAHAM, Mgi
2330

Classed as Immigrants
According to a iaw In Brazil for­
eigners who remain there over 30
days I* pursue their trade or pro­
fession are clevsnl ns Immigrants.

fra. Mozart was the first composer
to bring out Ita chief poeslbllltle*.

Baby Kangaroo Small
At birth a yonng kangaroo Is lit­
tle more than an Inch long.

The true function of art la to
stimulate Imagination and evoke
new vision lo tbe beholder.

Good Work
'Sole Cheap.

freshen

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

Thursday, January 16, 1936

■‘Minnesota verse"

of principles may be announced. A i
mere negative program will not get
the Republican party anywhere,
There must be a positive program,
advocated by that party that will' 1Maude
Col&lt;rove
Bchllpln
appeal to the Amerlcap people as '
Edits Noteworthy
sound.-sensible, and promising good .
results; and there rpust be a Repub- 1
Anthology
ONLY TWBLVB OF FOBTY- lican canaldate about whose sin­ ’ We have greatly enjoyed looking
cerity. ability and character there
io Pledge .
CANTA MONICA, CALIF.!
CALIF.I EIGHT BT
can be no question. President Roose- over the “Anthology of Minnaaoto
veil Is still popular with the Verse" edited by Maude Colgrove
DEAL
—I never heard of a law!
American people. It Is evident that Bchllplln, Just recently published.
compelling a private individual .......
they have lost faith in his New Deal : Mn. Bchllplln ia known in Has­
VOTES 68
in times of peace to take an&gt;WlLnl
policies, but they have not tort faith i! Unas, being a sister of the late P.
ER CENT AGAINST in him. They will prefer him to a ’
oath to defend our flag and re­
reactionary Republican or to one
varloui times.
spect our institutions. Neither : ,Many 8taUi Evidence Benti- 2Xt°2?ne*S for ‘SJlch Mr
the wife of the editor of the
do I know of laws compelling!
ment niff.r.m
sh.
weU-taown Bt. Cloud Dally TUnesment Different Than the
M nilAiUrtn I Journal, and one of Minnesota's
us to give public jobs to men andj
Pou
1934
a
rD1&lt;eJt
u
women who refuse to take such an]
rou Taken
xaxen in
ID IWl
j about
u.g rcve.lX
reveallng t^ prominent
prominent women.
womenl She
one has
nw: been
»»en
______________
b0.ut
..UlUnited
*
?? II president of the Minnesota Branch
oath or requiring us
The supreme
court?of
the
fact that the American, people “do
to leave 4hem In
States by a vote of 6 to 3 sounded' not have confidence In the New Deal j
U
their jobs should
the death knell of lhe AAA. The policies.
।
____ - a
justices of
lhe highest
s ♦►
-------1
u
ftr,t anthology made
they violate that
Justices
of the
highest court
court did
did
I of Minnesota
Minnesota poems
poems and
and discloses
discloses
nnt
divfd.
nn
11
—
.
------1
---------■
—
'.
’
j-Lj
_■■■
■■
—
iof
oath. From the
not divide on party lines. Two,
ia fascinating group, many of them
President of. this
Democrats and one Republican up­
held the New Deal, while five Re­
country on down,
r
* if zi/r
11 contains a wealth of beautiful
publicans and- one Democrat held I
the run of office­
poetry, and a finely edited blothat the AAA was unconstitutional.!
holders must swear
I I graphical section. In fact it ranks
Thntr decision
dM-tcinn went farther than
Their
to uphold the Con­
as high as any state anthology wc
anticipated
and
is
generally
Inter
­
stitution and sup­
have ever seen.
...
preted as meaning tiiat other re­
port the govern­
James Oppenheim. Martha Otten covery measures will not be sus­
ment. Should any
50. Richard Burton. Arthur Upson,
tained by. that court when brought
siuira
By
Mumci
ixpui/
rnnuuc.v,
and
many
lesser
known
names.
one of them will- Irvin 8. Cobb,
there for decision. Briefly, the
make a list of which any state can
fully fall to do so.
ground for the Supreme Court's Lula Cole:
be proud. Many moods are to be
P. N. O.—Bessie smith.
tho offender Is Hable to removal— action was that the government of
found In the list of poems chosen.
N. G — Ethel Shultz.
amid loud cheers I Then why not In­ the United States did not have the
There is something to suit all tastes.
clude teachers and college profee- right to take money from one class
Rec. secy.—Florence Norton.
It has been received with much ac­
sora, those whose high task Is to of citizens—the consumers—and pay
Fin. Secy—Orpha Linington.
claim.
the
same.
In
the
way
of
processing
I
mould youth Into stuff fit fordllsenWc are glad to And included an
taxes, to make the busineu of the;
ship and civic responsibility?
Chaplaln
—
Minnie
Myers.
old
favorite of ours—"If We Had
producers of those products profit­
Why should they be suffered to able.
Pianist—Stella Foreman.
the Time," by Richard Burton who
Warden
—
Hazel
Buskirk.
has written some of the loveliest
peddle sedition nnd yet go on draw­
The New Deal seems to be unpop­
Conductor—Mildred Buskirk.
poetry In America.
Ing juilnrles fR&gt;iu lhe public fund— ular not only with lhe highest court
these people who claim they have I of tlie land, but also with tlie peo-Ira Shults.
If I had Uie tlm$ to find a place
conscientious scruples when what Kof this country, Judging from
And ait me down full face to face
summary
of
the
Literary
Di
­
most of us think they really suffer
-Beatrice Carpenter.
With my better self. that can not
from Is Cummunlstlc biliousness? gest's poll, as reported In the last Is­
-Lula
Cole.
And for the students, us I under­ sue of that magazine.
In my daily life that rushes so:
In the Digest poll a total of 1,­
stand It, the right of free speech
After
lodge
the
incoming
elective
It might be then I would see my soul
688.462 votes have so far been polled.
and the gift of free education do
Of these 643314 voted in favor of officers entertained. Pedro was Was stumbling still toward the shin­
not mean license to spout treason the New Deal, while 1.044.948 voted played, high scores being won by
ing goal.
on n campus or scorn America In against It. or a majority of 401,434 Bessie Smith and Frank Newton and
I might be nerved by the
a classroom.
thought sublime.—
against the Roosevelt New Deal low by Stella Foreman and Fred
Refreshments
were
If I had the timet
A red flag fils an auction sale, but policies. The percentage of approval Linington:
I don't believe I'd ever get used to was only 3811 per cent, while the
I
had
lhe time to let my heart
seeing it afloat over a district
per cent.
- SALES TAX PROVING
sclioulhouM.
Of those voting In this poll. 818.082
hand
‘
A REVENUE GETTER
in their votes indicated that they
Politlcal Plagiarism
To a comrade quartered in no­
had voted for Mr. Roosevelt In 1832.
OLITICS
certainly
produces Of that number 519,704 record May Finance State Hospital
luck land; (
copycats. First, the young Re­ themselves In favor of the New Deal,
Ah. God I If I might but just sit still
Buildings That Are
publicans meet, being greeted by aor 83 1-2 per cent, while 298,378 per­
And hear the note of the whippoor­
typical sounding Juvenile, who's sons who voted for Roosevelt ndw go
will.
Much Needed
I think that my wish with God's
th'1 last surviving drummer boy of on record as against the New Deal,
Reports from Lansing show that
would rhyme—
Shiloh. Then the young Democrats that Is, 38 1-2 per cent. Of the 1.­ the total sales lax receipts for 1836
If I had the time!
c&lt;&gt;me rallying us fust as wheel­ 688.462 voting In the Digest poll. were 842.429.068. or about 16.000.000
chairs will bring them, with their 773397 record themselves as having more than last year.
If I had the time to learn from you
voted
for
Mr.
Hoover
In
1932.
These
The
fine
thing
about
Increases
In
breakfast shawls and their earHow much for comfort my word
'trumpets.
Tlie self - proclaimed now go on record in the Digest poll sales tax Is that It will provide
would do;
as follows: For the New Dea). 84.­
“young" leader ot any party is usu­ 877. or nearly 11 per cent; against greatly needed funds for additions
And I told you then of my sud­
ally somebody who hopes to net a the New Deal. 688.520. or over 88 to the state hospitals, without re­
den will
sorting to selling bonds or levying
patriotic example to his grandchil­ per cent. It can be seen from this
To Uss your .feet when I did
taxes on property. Indeed, the gov­
dren and at tho same time get the tabulation that Mr. Roosevelt has ernor has already indicated that a
you 111;
old job back.
lost 36 1-2 per cent of his voting part of this six million dollar in- If the tears aback of the coldness
feigned
The Republicans hold a Grass­ strength in the vote on the New
Roots convention. So this month Deal of his own 1932 votes, while he ly needed addition to the Ypsilanti Could flow, and the wrong be quite
explained.—
nt Atlanta there'll lie what you has gained less than 11 per cent of State Hospital for the Insane. That
Brothers,
the souls of-vus all
the
votes
cast
for
Mr.
Hoover.
This
Is probably as much os can be done
might call a grass-widow conven­
would chime,
tion for the revolting southern shows a heavy loss for Mr. Roose­ this year; but the state hospitals at
velt. in the spring of 1934 soon after Kalamazoo, Traverse City. New­
If we had the time!
Democrats — absolutely too revolt­
the New Deal policies had been berry. and Pontiac are all over­
ing for words, to hear Jim Varley
formed, the Digest took a poll of
talk,
You see, they've been di­ the votes on that topic and found crowded and need additional build­ Ing the beauty of a lake ot which
ings. It should be possible, from in-- we have often heard Is by Esther
vorced, but tho decree Is not yet that, at that time, 573 per cent then
Friedlander—
final.
favored the New Deal, while now to make all these Improvements
Southern Democrats are great 59 1-2 per cent are opposed to It. without selling bonds, and at the
(Twilight at Lake Minnetonka)
The
first
action
was
taken
before
hands for seceding nnd remaining
same time continue reducing the Not Capri with its sapphire hues
so every day In tlie year except the policies had been applied; the bonded debt of Michigan, which Is Not far off Zante rising like
just one day.
On election, they latter, after 'the people had had a what Governor Fitzgerald has set An opal from the sparkling sea
become reconciled long enough to year and a half of experience with his heart upon.
Can offer scene more fair to charm
them.
. There may be clamor for the re­ Than this which lavish Nature
vote the straight Democratic ticket
An interesting fact in the Digest duction of the sales tex. but Gov­
Twenty minutes inter, they're off
spreads
poll Is the vote of the stole of Iowa. ernor Fitzgerald believes it should
Before my eyes right here at home.
the reservation again. I hear a That state is represented in Mr.
number of bankers' will attend. This Roosevelt's cabinet by Mr. Wallace. be left as It is. until the state build­
ing program be financed and paid How still the evening air I The sun
would seem to Indicate n changing Secretary ot Agriculture. In the
for without increasing the state's Himself Li loath to leave the spot.
trend. For quite a while after 1929, election of 1932. Iowa gave a con­ bonded debt.
There's not a ripple on the lake
very few bankers went to Atlanta siderable majority for Roosevelt. In
■ft&gt; mar its silver blue Inlaid
lhe Literary Digest poll, taken in
voluntarily.
.
With gorgeous reds. The lacy fringe
the spring of 1934, Iowa gave a large
The Woman's Relief Corps met In
Of trees whose tope stand out
percentage of the votes polled In the O. A. R. hall, January 11. ThsDistinct against the softened light
F, WHILE touring 1x&gt;s Angeles, favor of the New Deal Now, as tab­ birthday dinner was well attended, Looks like a bit of old Japan.
ulated
by
the
Digest.
17.062
Iowa
ten
friends
from
Kalamazoo
being
you see a bushy • headed, wild­
What need to travel distant lands?
voters, or a little leu than 42 per dinner guests..
eyed, elderly gentleman aimlessly
I have a whole world at my door.
cent, record themselves as In favor
At 2:30 Uie meeting was called to
wandering about, don't Jump too of Die New Deal; while 23,845, or a order. A motion was made, that the
soon nt the conclusion that he's n little over 58 per cent, go on record first business tn order would be the FINDS WORK AT HEI­
DELBERG INTERESTING.
typical specimen of our famous co­ as opposing the New Dea).
Installation ot officers, so the fol­
terie of hermits.
The state of Michigan polled a lowing were installed.
Friends of George McPharlln will
You see, they laid out Los An­ alight majority for the New Deal
President—Mrs. Tillie Hoevenalr. be Interested In the following ex­
in
the
spring
of
1934.
In
the
present
geles and environs on lhe ground­
Br. Vice—Mrs. Marie Smith.
tracts taken from a letter received
Jr. Vice—Mrs. Clara Wills.
plan ot a drunken angleworm, and Dlgest*poll. only 19,131 votes, or a
from him by a Hastings acquaint­
Secretary—Mrs. Nellie Gower.
tbe system of numbering houses Is little leu than 32 per cent of the
ance. George Is wt present In Ger­
Treasurer—Mrs. Stella Poreman.
further designed to encourage rav­ votes tabulated by the Digest for
many, where he has a scholarship
Chaplain—Mrs. Clara Clark.
ing Insanity. So what you behold Michigan, favor the New Deal;
In the medical school at Heidelberg
while 40.965, or a little over 68 per
Conductor—Mrs. Lucy Turner.
may merely be an ex-resident of
........................
University.
cent
of
Michigan
voters
polled
arc
Asst.
Conductor
—
Mrs.
Lois
Lar
­
the Middle West, who came out opposed ^to^lt*
Concerning school—Everything go­
kin.
here years
vrmra am
ago ti»
lo r^tlrn
retire nm!
and hnnirlitr
bought*
«_
ing along great, and I'm happy to say
Of the forty-eight states only
Guard—Mra. Jessie Young.
him a cozy bungalow and Incau- twelve in the Digest poll gave a ma­
Patriotic Inst.—Mrs. Clara Hale. that after speaking with the Rector
tlously* went for a stroll and has jority In favor of lhe New Deal. Of
of the Anatomy department of the
Musician—Mrs. Stella Foreman.
been trying ever since to find bls these twelve states, eleven are In the
Press Corr.—Mrs. Tillie Mclxavy. University, Professor Goettler, I
south, and Utah alone of the north­
Color Bearers—Mrs. Sadie Sutton, have been offered a place in hla pri­
way back home again.
The work will
Not all the nuts were nutty when ern states favored the Rooaekelt Mra. Mary Adams. Mrs. Clara Tink­ vate laboratory.
again be In histology. I am really
they first arrived. Many of them policies. The states going on record ler. Mrs. Ida Palmater.
Mrs. Kathryn Sheldon of Kala- extremely pleased over the whole
got that way trying to trace street against the New Deal number thir­
ty-six.
All
the
northern
states,
ex
­
matter.
There
are
few students
addresses.
,
cept Utah, and Including all the sisted by Sadie Culverhaua. chap­ given such privileges in first or sec­
Pacific Coast -states gave decisive lain. Mrs. McCrumb. conductor/and ond year in medical school.
rotes against the New Deal. One four color bearers. The work was
The Germans, as a group, most
O HUNTER LIGGETT h dead southern state. Florida, showed a beautifully done. Meeting closed by likely know more about the tech­
at seventy-eight—the only con­ slight majority against the New repeating the flag salute and sing­ nique of staining tissues than any
temporary lieutenant general of the Deal, while three border states. ing •■America." Our next meeting other body of scientists in the world.
It's due In part to their knowledge
United States army. For 60-odd Maryland. Oklahoma, and Missouri, will be January 25.—Press Corr.
good-sized
majorities
years, he wore with gallantry and showed
CIVIL WAR VETERAN PASSES.
Anatomy is coming along as well
with honor tbe uniform of his coun­ against it.
A former well-known citizen of as the other things. It may sound as
As the Banner hsus stated pre­
try.
Assyria township and a veteran of If I have the swell head, but the
He fought Indiana1;,- fought bor­ viously, the Literary Digest polls the Civil war died last week Tues­
Americans have thus far led the
taken
several
times,
beginning
in
der-bandits; fought Spaniards In
1920. have very accurately revealed day In Bedford—Ellas Callahan. entire group with their anatomical
Cuba; fought Germans In Franco: Kbile sentiment. Actual results of
dissections. There are three of us
..and, at tbe end, fought off death
I elections of 1830, 1024, 1928, and had been ar. Invalid for the last two working in this part of the Unrea­
for many dragging montha.
lity.
1932 prove the accuracy of the Di­
Chris
tmas
&lt;jay.
I saw him overseas, command­ gest polls. The poll on New Deal
Tomorrow I'm golnc up to DllsHe had spent most of his life on a berg, a little hamlet, near here to
ing our splendid Tint corps, which' policies takerf by the Digest In the
ot —
1834. was
confirmed by the
he made more splendid still. Im spring
—. _
------------------------— farm in Assyria township, moving take some pictures. I’m spending my
was as plain as an old shoe, and* •verwhelming Democratic victories from there to Bedford seven yean spare time trying to do some work
as easy to get along with. Hla of- r,in
“ nc
-- ----------------------that
-------------for the National Geographic So­
year.-----------Ils poll
Greene county. Ohio. He enlisted in ciety. I have a good connection with
fleers respected him, his Midlers _____ i question was abso­
Company I of the Merrill Horse them tlirough a very good friend of
loved him. They went where he lutely accurate. There Is no reason regiment
and
served
thirteen
to question that the Digest poll now
mine.
w
.
sent 'em, and If they failed In their
being taken accurately reflects lhe months In the Union army. At the
objective, they didn't coma back. public sentiment of this country on
Don't be haughty and turn up your
the New Deal at the present time.
nose.
•lite of the judgment teat tbe re*Republicans have no reason to ayrla township. He te survived by his
To poorer people In plainer clothes;
jump to the conclusion that this widow and a daughter.
Tbe funeral services were held For wealth Is a bubble.
They’il like him over thero—Is­ poll disposes ot President Roosevelt's
rael Putnam, and Stonewall Jack­ chances for reelection next Novem­
son, and Forrest, and Grant, and ber. It will depend on what candi­ ford Congregational church. The in­ And proud-flesh, wherever It grows,
date the Republicans may name for terment waa in the Bedford ccme- la subject to Irritation.
lhe presidency and what platform
IRVIN J. CfiU.

is

—

IN DICES! PULL

________ about:
about:

------

Rebekah Lodge
,
liutalu Officer*

I

P

I

S

nwr nrpnnn nr
nLuUnU Ui

interesting JlliL

rsMimns

BABBY 00. COW TESTING
ASSOCIATION GLOBES
ITS YEAS'S WORK

SIXTEEN BREEDERS
SIGN FOR YEAR 1936

over there to allow the
“*taking
““"* of
•*
three new Barry county breeders,
narptty.
Glen Ingram. George
Clou-v and Roy Preston all of Has­
tings. These breeders come into the
Association with purebred Jersey
and Guernsey herds. This makes the
Association fi)H again until further
transfers can be made In Allegan
county. County Agent poster is In
favor of building a 100 per cent
Barry County Association as fast as
possible and will do all in his power
to get Barry county breeders In if
they will notify him of their desire.

High Production Herd for WOMEN REPAIR
December Owned by Jesse
OVER 400 BOOKS
Osgood A Bon
The Barry County Cow Testing Many School! in the County
Association closed its year wrth some
SentJ -in Books and Pay
very good monthly production aver­
10 Oenti Each
ages according to a report issued by

short
way lines
EXPAND IN MICHIGAN
mated in Michigan In several yean
Is the transfer of the certificated

The seven ladles working on the
Harold J. Foster, county agricultural
agent.
book mending project have repaired
Jesse Osgood and son ot Clover­ more than four hundred books from
dale are owners of the high pro­
the Hastings City. Hastings Center.
ducing herd for December with an
Star. .
Blake.
Shultz.--------Bcigh.
imv ii
«. of
ui milk
num uuu
----- - ------------average mi
of 1040
lbs.
and Pratt. ------37.4 lbs. fat for their 15 registered D*1100 “nd Nashville schools and
Holsleins. The grade Holstein herd
«»» working on some from Mldof Mrs. Lottie Cridler of Middleville 1 d^vlhe. The Fisher. Wood. Cedar
falls second with 900 lbs. milk and Cretk, Norton and Pleasant Hill
313 lbs. fat for the 19 cows in the
b*ve sent books In to be
herd. Marshall Pierce and Lloyd mended.
GasklU of Dowling coma third and! The&gt;' remove the contents from
fourth with herd averages of 295 Ithe covers and buff tbe edges, mend ।
and 29.4 lbs. fat respectively for lh* lorn pages, resew the contents
their Holstein herds.
.
Iand Ptace them back into the-covers
' In the individual cow standing, we :'rith double stitched binder. The |
flnd that Jesse Osgood and son of covers are washed and lacquered,
StomUk L..II th. iiklun- co.
1 TO. khooU p.; 1« . boon for (OU

Lines, operated by Arthur

Inc., of Toledo. Ohio, effectiva
December 31. 1838. The transfer tolocated entirely In Michigan, which
will give Short Way a total route
mileage of more than 800 miles, both
interstate and Intrastate. It was ex­
pected that the Michigan Commis­
sion would issue an order today au­
thorizing the transfer of the Bchubel
certificates."
“The routes of Lanslng-Icnfa
Coach Lines transferred to Short
Way are as follows: Grand Rapids
to Lansing via Ionia and Grand
Ledge; Lansing to Ann Arbor, via
Mason. Stockbridge and Dexter;
Lansing to Hillsdale via Eaton Rap­
ids. Albion and Jonesville."
The acquisition of the Lanslnglonla Coach Lines, along with sev­
eral oti^r lines acquired during the

perintendenu
Michigan will be
Department of

sons in Michigan

the length of the routes and coordi-

throughout Uic stole. Mink I
it possible for the first time in the Is. permitted only during :
bus history of Michigan lo furnish trapping seasons In lhe area
through service under one company
between Port Wayne. Battle Creek
and Grand Rapids, Toledo. Lansing
and Grand Rapids. Toledo, Adrian
and Jackson. Monroe. Adrian. Hlllsdale and Lansing, and Jackson,
HlUfk um w "w.n», ■
Maton county. To evade
with a cow producing 1680 lbs. milk I w°rk which takes care of the coal i
----------------- -----------------------and 655 lbs. fat. Mrs. Lottie Cridler! of the materials used.
NEW SUPERINTENDENT
of Middleville and Marshall Pierce
ver
ON M-37 PROJECT, in their fish shanties. On finding
of Dowling stood second and third ■ NEW COLLEGE FOR
| John T. LaDue state highway en­
In this class. These figures are in- ,
GRAND RAPIDS. | glneer In charge of the M-37 WPA
tercstlng In that the Association1 .Educational facilities of Grand, project received notice late In the
average for December was 687 lbs. Rapids and western Michigan wiU; week of his transfer to a different
Detroit- «u&gt;d left Monday for
milk and 235 lbs. fat per cow and be broadened" next"fail ~ with the I J°b
.
likely the county average not more opening of a new» college. It will of- I kia new position.
frt- a four year college course and j Mr. LaDue came to the Banner
than half this figure.
before
leaving
to ask us to ex­ cupants brought out to ba
leai
Lloyd Gaskill of Dowling led the will be equipped to grant A. B.\ de- ofllce
------- Night classes will also be; of­ nress
press his
his unnrec
appreciation lo the people In justice court.
4-year class with a cow producing grees.
1742 lbs. milk and 82.7 Tbs. fat. Jesse fered. The college will be strongly of Hastings and vicinity for the
Osgood and son and Highlands staffed as members'of the faculty response given to his request for
Dairy of Hastings coming second will
________
,____ __
be required
to________________
have doctor's de- more adequate clothing for the men
and third with very good produc-i grees. Dr. Paul F. Voelker, former at work on tne project. Hr said the Bin contest which carries
tlons. Highlands Dairy of Hastings | superintendent of public instruction amount of clothing, and the kind of free trip to Isle Royale I
led the 3 year old class with 1392 lbs., will head the new school. The new clothing sent, went way beyond any-, ________
milk and 59.9 lbs. fat followed by I college Is of private origin, appllca- thing he had been led lo expect add It Is not
nold membership
Cridlcr
and Osgood.
Marshall, tion having been made to the sec­ provided amply for the net '
to enter. In locall
Pierce, Lloyd Gaskill and Jesse Os-' rotary ot state for a charter. The the men at present.
no Garden club, any women's
good and son had high two year olds proposed name for the school is Uie
intendent of the work, by Paul izatlon may handle the
in Uie order mentioned.
I| "Grand "
Rapids
—•-*- City College."”
Neale, of Galesburg, who Arrived
John Foster, who has acted as FORMER PRAIRIEVILLE
Tuesday to assume charge, y
Ing held.* high school pupils
tester throughout the past year, has
Mrs. LaDue. who made many enter the contest by writing to
done a very satisfactory job with
RESIDENT DIES.
the county breeders as to evidenced | Mrs. Nettle Hyde received ward friends during her short slay In the Department of Cwii ervaUoo for
structions.
•
I
city,
is
visiting
In
Grand
Haven
at
by the support he has had In the
work. Last January only two breed­ Oscar B- Diamond who lived for present and will Join her husband
Additional facilities for
c&gt;a wanted
wvwcu to
~ sign up ■for
— a
- year's- many years In the section north of later In Detroit.
ers
work. He finished the year with 16 Prairieville, a good share of his life
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
wall-eyed pike are
herds on test all but one of which being spent near Delton. Mr. DLa­
hos signed for the 1936 year's work, mond was a resident of Holton. William C. Burdick. Nashville ...
This has been as much work as Mr. I Mich. He was well advanced in age Margaret M. Kemerllng. Johns*
Poster could take due to the fact be and had been an Invalid far several
Is running an Allegan Association years. Burial was Saturday after- Bert Stenger. &lt;Doster ..
Fem Solomin. Richland
also. This month these, members are noon in Holtorj.

Your Banker Is a Merchant
A Bank is more than a safety deposit box where you can store your

money. Tlie Banker is a Merchant, his stock is money; and to do
business he lends to individuals and business concerns in the com
munity in which the Bank is located.

The Hastings City Bank has for the past fifty years operated in this
community and is a Friend and Counsellor to many of the private
citizens, farmers and business men located here. This Bank Jias grown

with the community and in so doing, has kept abreast with the chang-

ing times and improved its service to conform to these changes.

So, today, this Bank is worthy of your confidence and is ready to
serve you.

To those who are in need of money for improvements, new equip*
ment, business expansion or any of the many things you may be plan*
ning to dd, we say “let’s get together

WE ARE IN POSITION TO MAKE MORTGAGE
LOANS ON ALL IMPROVED REAL ESTATE

HASTINGS CITY
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS

�SI

THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. JANUARY IA 1S3S

NASHVILLE.
FAIR LAKE.
isrs’ financial probl*ma; and Russell
| Rvarts. who will discuss manage-1 About 5o friends and neighbors
Mr and Mra. Fred Elder v
COURSE ment problems in connection with;•ntortataed vary pleasantly called to Harbor Beach Bacurdaj
I harvesting end packing apptei.
Saturday night al a progressive pe- the scriou*
serious lllpest
lllpass of thsir
Uwir daugh
daug

—Iil» nnrtwcae tl/il I
FRUlf WfUWRM* WIIX

HAVE SHORT

M*r »««w U'.„&gt; D...1OP-

“XL

The woman's Literary Club
Wednesday at tho Library fw I

K &amp;&lt;£'”' " “*1K'”

manU is M. 1. 0. ItMion
Hutson, entomology;! Donald Ca-| gdward Lrehl either is gaining annual meeting. AP Indoor pi&lt;
r&gt;*n«7 BO to 94 ---------- ... fcjuny; v. r. Qartaer. H- D jnHgly from his operation and is was enjoyed al one o'stock. * c
Hootmtn. T. A. Merrill. J. O. expected homo Friday.
«ct play
Planning a banquet
Fruit growers of Michigan will Kremer. R. E- Loree. R. H- Kelly.
Ko&lt;jilc5 Of Hickory Cor- ‘heir husbands" was given by J
study the latest developments tn H. A- Cardlr.cll,
oarameu, F.
r. O-.Bradford.
O- .nraoiosw. W.
w. .icrl Hin.Uu.
Blanche r
Goldsworthy
■■
Arthur Stewart tnfH.hl
Lxifdahl, **r.
Mrs. n.»«K
Ralph u
Hess,
O. Dutton, horticulture; G. F. Gray. , .,nHbrake Mr and Mn George Mrs. Arlte Reed, Mrs Mho Young.
horticulture, janusiy 20 to 24. when_______
Walter Toengas
and g^nd^jn. George Henry.1 Mrs. coy Brumm and Mrs. Gall
they come to Michigan State qoUen
soils
conservaof
B#ule
Cwk
and
Ray
Plerc&lt;
and
Lykins.
■
tv the annual Fruit Growers' short ‘ *“d
, family of Banfteld were Bunday vis- I About U enjoyed Monday evening
court*.
■ I 7’7 Itora at Lottie Oolilster's.
| at lhe home ot Mr. and Mrs. John
Although the course ta open to all / /
, ,
FINE LAKE.
A
boy. Earl Leroy, was born D,u11- whw lhey surprised John on
interested, the course Is intended;
Alice Champion of Paw Paw to Mr. and Mra. Roy Wilkins. Wed- hta birthday.
The evening was
primarily for commercial fruity ■/Mrs.
Is Spending
spending iwo
two weeu
weeks wun
wilh ner
her eu«».
son. neeaay.
nesday. ears,
Mrs. nessic
Bessie Tungate
is carcar- , spent ,P&gt;W&gt;n«
rrawen
!U
xungaic u
•rr'—• cards' and visiting.
*?!!tous phases of the business &gt;aud
mg
'I The
h^h^ETSrv^jSS^lceiled'l
—.TTTand. family.
•
jpg for
for them
children went diAlne a
that will be discussed will be soils
Nearly all of the Plainwell High
Iva and Mary Case spent Satur- “”.**L*'1™1'
*
management,
Mra.. Will
management. fertlltaers.
leruikzers. and
ana motsmois- school
school students
stuaenu from
rrom this
ims communicommuiu- day
aay afternoon
aiiernoon with
wun mis
wui Litts
unis ■; ■;,fu Tt&gt;oM°DreMrit
' “I wmw
" ’ Mr and
lure relation in orchard soils; man-jty attended the basket ball game of Bunnell.
“
‘
“relement tn connection with harv»st- »t the High school gymnashun on
Allon Armoux nnd fBmily of Bat- “d
Archte c.lki^m Mr ‘ mid
tag and packtag; federal and state Friday evening, when Plainwell won Ue
&gt;pcnt
evenlnf al
Arcnte caiktax Mr. and
---------------------/«&gt;«&gt; Wayland with a score .of 42 Hammte A^ourl
’
’
y
wi YoX^d^nX tZ
grading
of apples;
_
soil erosion to 7.
Sallier of Urbandale is
13 visit- iI -,7-i‘“rJwU
.
J~'
ease control; cover• crape
crops, soli
j Mrs. Spiller
“T
d ^
‘Re^T.nd^n
«nu Mrs.
mis. JrtT. hiiitu
aiiu
son, mt.
Ch,rii® OMe ta again st the John ing Ray Pierro and family.
| and
XU
iJ?aX
I and Mrs. Jake Hollister and family
keting cherries at low prices; peach Rogers home after spending two
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
A.
E- Dull.
ORANGEVILLE.
and pear varieties, spraying mater-1 weeMa wllh hls chudren in Richland
Mra. J. W. Sheffield was a KalaRegular meeting of Laurel Chap­
lais for scab control and spray veil- and Kalamazoo.
due studies; grape and raspberry , r&gt; ...„
—. —ik— . .u
—
_. ii —m &lt;&gt;..&lt; ntazoo visitor Saturday.
ter No. 31 O. E- 8. was.held Tuesday
'.liinrtS
Hasiddmub‘ Mr and Mra FYcd Schulmayer night at lhe Masonic Temple.

DELTON.
Mr. and Mrs Ronald Haynes anti
family Sunday.
Russell Mott and ion, Alvsrt, and
FlusseU Smith of Delton spent Sun­
day with the fognws stator, Mr. and Bunday on lhe subject, "Thi
Mrs spellman Ca»y, and family. Began*." The male quartet

it tail week wilh her daughter.
, Ronald Haynes, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Camp of
Hastings spent Sunday with Mrs.
Camp's grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
C. H. Tobias.
Jay Webster with hU son and
daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Webster, at Battle Creek spent test
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. C. N.
Tobias.
Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Phillips and
daughter called on Aunt Della Hol­
comb at Francis Hendershot’s Sun­
day afternoon.
Gertrude Phillipa wai out of
tchool last week nursing a sprained
ankle.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore and
daughter called on Mrs. Moore's
mother. Mrs. Bump, of Hastings
Bunday afternoon.
The community Club will hold a
box social at the schoolhouse Friday
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Keet Tobias and
children spent Sunday with her sta­
ter. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kennedy,
on the State road.
W. O- Tobias is visiting for a cou­
ple of weeks wilh relatives in Bat­
tle Creek.
LITTLE ^ED BRICK.

MILOThursday night as
era returned home , , . y;,,
L
,___
&gt;&gt;•—— .
,, , ,
meeting she was much surprised t£&gt; j spent last Monday with tbe former's
find the members of her Bunday mother, Mra. Wilcox. Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Roll camo from Blue
Island last Thursday lo spend a
Than il

K

a memento of the
composed the original male quartet,
and now they would like to have
others loin them in a men's chorus
the sick Itat
or double quartet. So any one wish­ are
ing to Join in tills chorus Is wel­
The Fireside Hobby Club
come to meet with them every

eau. at Leila hospital. Battle Crook.
Bunday afternoon. Mr. Moreau Is
still gaining we are pleaved to re­

oc|

Mr* 8Uanu on lhe H Bollinger

STMT*, ~

W

and Mrs. Harry Wertman.
ing at the Orangeville schoolhouse'moTe weeks before the cast can be
A boys' meeting with Rex Bheat- ® ThJto.)^SFor thtaZST^ i removed.
helm as leader, will be held in the
Mra; Leda Harrington spent SatMr. and Mrs. Toore have attendchurch basement on Friday night
urday and Sunday with her sons, ed tho special meetings at Hickory
Marte and Duana, and thalr wlvto in Cornets the part weak and report
Kalamaaoo.
I them mort helpful.
Miss Marie Neuschaefer
and! Billie ^chulta of Chicago spent
home Thursday.
. Mra. Rflta Day of Augusta Is mother were Sunday gueata of Mra. I the week end and Sunday wilh his
staying and caring for Mra. Amy Eloise Leonard and mother, Mrs.. parents al Lake HUls Farm.
Rogers.
I**
Whittemore.
Mr. and Mra. Leon Doster enter­ | the Quick home Saturday and left
Mr. and Mra. Vernon Morford
have recently gone to farming on tained Sheriff Btakney and wife । lhe little girls with Grandma Quick
the Butler farm south of Hickory of Hastings. Bunday.
Mr. and Mra. Roger Williams were |! white they spent the day in KataComers. One day last week while
■ maxoo. Mrs. Mildred Scobey accomVernon was working around
the Sunday guesta of Mr. and Mra. Paul । panted them.
. *’»&lt;1 daughter. Marcella of North
Friends of Mrs. Alics HadseU have
I Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Quick and
bam he was attacked by an ugly
Gun Plains spent Sunday with i received word from her that she is
bull, and quite seriously hurt, but
fr^nd4
w
J feeling good and enjoying herself at
with the help of the hired man l»e slck with the flu.
with their brother. Mr. and Mrs.
Our January thaw has turned I the home of her niece, Mra. Findlay j
freed himself from the angry ani­
Vem Quick. Banfieid.
cold and left us with some very icy i Traxler. In Colorado
PLEASANT VALLEY.
mal. He was taken to Borg ess hos­
Mrs. Scobey ot Welcome visited
Uonal staff of Michigan State colm?T^^v?s o^’fS- roads to contend with. We will all
Co|da
Uie oril„ nf lhr
pital for a few days, but Is making
Mr. and Mrs. Chalmer Miller end her son Harlan and family Thurs­
Colds seem lo be the order of the
lege, there will be one out-of-state
M
K y
be glad when the gravel truck ar- . day in nearly all homes.
a good recovery at home now.
baby of Hastings spent Sunday with day.
speaker. Dr R D
Anthony, of ruar&gt; nnh
J
J ' rive* to gravel the hills and comers.
Mrs.
Kathryn
Posse
11
us
was
tailed
her
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Herman
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Ford of N.
Miss Maxine Dull was honored.
Mr. and Mra. Earle Meade and । Mr. and Mra. Janies Hermlnettc
Pennsylvania State college, who will
to Detroit last week to be with her Miller and family.
pine Lake spent Saturday evening
Tuesday afterhoon at lhe home ot I
discuss soil management, fertilizers children and Mr. and Mra. Keith are entertaining company from ner
sranamotner Mrs a e Dull
A big surprise at lhe sciioolhouse husband, who was seriously 111 at
Eldlne Preston of Pewamo spent i with Mr. and Mra. Rowen.
her ’
grandmother,
Mrs. A.
E. Dull. Reeled our teacher and pupils when {hc?l0m5®f ,U.M t™*h«’' with whom
and moisture relation tn orchard of Charlotte were Sunday guesta of, Bpringport this week
wllh
a surprise party
celebralinjj
the week end with her parents, Mr. i it Is reported tiiat Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ford.
| Mr. and Mr8. R*)ph Jenney are her twelfth birUdky
ce*eoraunk they found a new bookcase, new he has been staying for the past
| Gilbert and son Marcell'u, who have
and Mrs. Cecil Preston.
Two Michigan fruit growers arc
The Panners' Club will meet at' lhe parents of a fine baby boy who
Mr. .rm Mr,. cJl TiUtk luv. cl“k- »&gt;»1" «™1
Mr and Mra. carl Tuttle have clock, chairs ana the noon oiled
n.m.u
m
Mra. Alice Jackson of Pinhook purchased the Harry Leonard form
the home of Mr. and Mra. Eli Lind-, will answer to the name of Donald gone
. to Orlando. Florida
। tt-hi-n
thru when
entered
Mnnrlsv
mnrnInc
Messrs. । Dan
Daniels.
Ed.nleta
LOWW Ed. Lowry
to spend
they
entered
MondayI morning.
*&lt;rasra
.DanDa
and Eldlne Preston called on Pran­ , will soon move onto it and be oiy
Claire, who will discuss fruit grow- aey Saturday evening. Jan. IS.
| R.
new neighbors.
I
some time with his mother, Mra. C.Thanks to you all.
ces Scott. Sunday afternoon.
W Smith, who hasn't been well forMr. and Mis. Lewis Clum of Lake Communiu
Ci^b Lro
2
Mr. and Mra. N. H. Barber have
Mr. and Mra. Earl Herron of
wme time.
I Odessa visited Saturday at lhe home
C'“b:‘r“
rented their farm Mid rumor says
Lakeview brobght Mrs. Myrtle Mote,
A good lime was enjoyed ~by all of Warren Bolton.
,‘nleht Jan**!?1
.may move ta-thls direction. We will
who has been visiting her brother I be glad to extend a welcome lo all
PfeMn\B»hU‘w
Thu”day ! Mr- and Mrs Gco- Van
Walker chestra will furnish the ’music.
for a couple ot weeks, to her home.
new-comers.
n
“A
K’ Al £• h* ; ~
'01 Kalamazoo spent Sunday at C1U- .The
boys are hoping for. a
The
a big
big atal- Sunday.
The Garden Club met Tuesday ford Hammond's.
— boys are hoping Jfor
or..“
«
। tendance this lime. So if you like
Duane Gray of Lake Odessa was
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
afternoon at the home of Mrs. L. E.
Floyd Craig attended a wrestling • to dance, hop to IL
a Sunday night supper guest ot Mr. , The ft. A. 8. win serve dlpncr
Pratt.
match al Battle Creek Monday i The Farm Bureau held an all day and Mra. J. F. Brake.
I Thursday. Jan. 23. ab the liome of
On Friday plghL Lansing Re- night.
'meeting at Uie M. E. church Wed।
Mr.
and
Mra. Ward Cheeseman. Ev­
Gordon
RiUcr
of
South
Boston
,
wkahs came over and put on the । Bernard Hammond spent the|nesday. The L..JU S. served lhe
initiatory work.
I weekend with 'Howard Martin near dinner. Benjamin J. Hennnlk of spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs ' crybody welcome.
Will Hulllberger. John Ganseveld i Several families from this nclghTnc Cheerful class was enter­ Dowling.
; Lansing was the speaker.
borhood
attended the Cemetery
and wife were also Sunday after­
tained last Thursday al the home of
Mr. and Mra. Cha-r Woodruff at- i Harry F. Wertman Is slowly iin- noon callers.____________
Circle last Wednesday at
Mrs. Susie Kraft.
•
tended a birthday party Saturday ■ proving from hta Injury four weeks
Visitors al lhe H. W. Geiger home j Grove Center.
The choir of lhe Evangelical night al the home of Mr. and Mra.' *«o; but still Is not able to step on Sunday were: Miss Lillian Layer of
Attorney aArchie
—- •
McDonald
—”—•-* of
church Is going to pantomime fa­ Homer Ingram in honor of Mrs. In- hta foot or
W get VU,
out JCl.
yet.
Hastings gave an Interesting talk
Clarksville.
Johnny
Sullivan.
Mr.
'
vorite -"tongs at the church Sunday gram's birthday.
'I ’rK
“ midweek -----------------The
prayer-------service
will and Mra. Emery Benedict and babv
night. SorncoCtiie songs used will
I be held on Thursday evening at ohe of Ionia and Mra. Sarah Strong of
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Hollman had
NORTHEAST
STRIKER?
__________
.
be. '‘Rook- m- Ages.” "Hiding in
parsonage.
.
.dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Chaa.
East Campbell.
THREE
Thee.” -SHYer Threads Among the
Mr. and Mrs. Levi Mead of Has-1 Everyone is glad to hear that
Dale Geiger left Monday for the Jones in Battle Creek. Monday.
Gold." ”Thit' Silver Haired Daddy iUngs were Sunday evening- guests George Bagley is able to be back
The young people of the comCoyne school at Chicago to take a
of Mine." The last one on the pro- of
। Mr. and Mra- E. L. Houghtalin. ' in lhe Ford -----— *to
--------*---------garage
work
again
munlly—enjoyed
a coasting
on
course in radio work.
------------ ------------------------- party —
gram "Day U Dying in Uie West,"
The annual meeting ot lines 735 “Here Comes Charlie” is the farceOur neighborhood. was saddened the large hill across from
Royal
wlU have a very unique setting. .
iand 744 was held at lhe home of comedy in three acta at the Com- by the death of Mra. JJary Gray of Donovan's, Thursday evening. AflThe Philathea class sponsored an Mr.
:
and Mra. Jack Moore Wcdnes- munlly hall Jan. 31 and Feb. 1. by Shultz. She lived in this vicinity er coasting on the bobs, sleds, slfia.
entertainment at the Methodist day.
।
| the Delton Community Players and for saveral years. Our sympathy schooners, and even a scoop shovel,
church on Wednesday night with
The Striker school P. T. A. will*you don't want to mtas ill
goes to the entire family.
they went to Wayne Ostroth's home
Lamardo Acker, a very unusual Ibe held Friday. January 17, at 8
The 4-H sewing club organized
Mra. Mary Miller, who has been so ' for lunch.
Everybody come.
'
। last Friday, with 24 members. Von­ very 111 at the Lake Odesui hasyoung Negro artist as the atlracUon. o'clock.
।
Saturday evening 21 young people
. Mrs. Addle Montgomery, who has da Louden is president; Thelma pital. was brought to the home of from Battle Creek, among whom
HINDS CORNERS.
been vislUng her brother. Delbert Mott. vice-_preaidenl; Mary Marte tier stater, Mrs. Alvin Stahl. Sunday. was Richard Edmonds, a cousin of
Mrs. Iva Gamble and children. Reynolds, for lhe past month, has Henton, secretary and treasurer.
Harold Yoder and family were i Mrs. Dorothy Hoffman, came to'
Dickie nnd Marian, accompanied by rented rooms of her brother. E. A. Mrs. Leon Pennock. Mra. Leon DoYSunday guests of Emery JCime and Claud Hoffman's, who hitched his
la
Rapids
- friend ffom Grand «
.j. and Reynolds and k moving in
this;ter and Mra. Fred Otto are lhe ad-: fnmliv
family.'' ninn
Glen Kime accompanied I; t/Mim
team tn
lo ■ hl*
his *l»l»h*
sleighs nnH
and Izmir
took the
j vtscry board.
Martha Gamble of Hastings visited week.
them home for a couple pl weeks.
crowd for a ten mile.alelgh ride, tt
being the first lime many of them
CEDAR CREEK.
had ever ridden on sleighs.
1H1S weEK
Edward Lechleimer is at Borgcas।
Mr. and Mra. Clyde Cheeseman
hospital at Kalamazoo Instead of and children visited Sunday at Her­
Pennock hospital as slated last. man Babcock's in Bedford.
week. Al last reports he was doing
Clifford Ball of Glenwood, who
fine.
drove through to George Ball's Sat­
Mr. and Mrsx Lloyd Owen and urday, returned to his iinme Sun­
children called on Mr. and Mrs. : day evening. Eugene Ball accom­
Will Shriber of Hastings Sunday P. panying him. Miner Myers. Tlar—J
.
|vcy and Ernest Ball of Glenwood
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wert man ■ are now guests of Geo. Ball.
visited
at Will Knecstrict's al C1I-I
H|
max Qunoay.
„iax
Sunday.
t
MORGAN.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Campbell and
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bo&amp;toter who
last
several’ years *in
son returned home Sunday after liavs spent- the **
“--------spendlng the past week with Mr. Lansing have moved back to their
and Mrs. Leo Monrod of Kalamaxoo. cottage in Morgan.
Lawrence Bostwick and family of
Mr. and Mra. Bardy Rowtadcr and
Ross were Sunday callers of Mr. and family visited Mr. and Mra. Munro
Mrs. Leslie Pease and Grandma Rowtadrr in Woodland Sunday.
Dunktey.
Mr. and Mra. Wayne Christopher
of Lansing spent the week end at
Edward Campbell from our neigh­ their cottage here.
borhood as they are moving to their
Don Rcneck and son of Lansing
cottage at Midland Park. Gull lake, spent the week end wilh Mra. Ren­
this week. Mrs. Campbell's health is eck at Thomapplc.
Mr. and Mra. Clair Van Sickle of
- LOWEST PRICES EVER! Save money on laundry. Enjoy now ease, new time­
Mrs. Leavitt returned from Flor­ Lansing had dinner Sunday at the
ids Saturday. She brought home a home of Chas. Harrington and fam­
saving, better results, less work. Brand new models, highest quality, smart
fine collection of different articles ily.
such as shells, petrified moss and a :। Mrs.
—
appearance—give you “automatic" washing and ironing at its best.
G. Proctor of Kalamazoo
lot
of different things
taken out of i -u
was a Sunday guest of her cousin,
- --------------------------------------------------------the ocean
ocean which
which are
are Interesting
interesting to
to'Glcnard
Earl.
.
S:
the
Glen
see. She also brought some very nice ■
--------- ■
-------- £—
BRANCH DISTRICT.
fruit—talk about targe grapefruit. I
Ciiaa. Willison, who bought the
never saw one before. She reports a
Neal place about seven years ago,
was taken seriously 111 about two
ROBINHUE PARK.
—‘•s ago. A son from Lansing
The famous Universal. favorite of housewives, presents, this popular,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Vasset! framet last week to be with his fa­
r.,11.1—J —aU.I u-l.L- * ■ — 1-^ . .. a.. —
_ ,
_____a .
■■
■
nee Julia Poland) of Grand Rap- ther. who
’
passed away Friday. Fu­
to blankets in lhe same cartful, thorough way that makes $y| yf .95
Ids were Sunday guests of Uie tat­ neral services were held in Lansing.
The new 1936 Fori P-fl Stake Trac* m the 157-huA wAmIUm
Fred Nelson lost a horse last week.
ter's aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
fabrics last longer, look better. Specially priced now—only
John Kollar.
Remember the Aid at the home
Harold Kollar relumed home of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Roberta Thurs­
Tuesday after a week's visit wlUi day ot this week.
hta mother. Mrs. Spicklar of Lowell.
Mr. and Mrs. Hartwell have
He had as his guest on
Sunday moved onto. the Mary Hoisington
Ralph Klein of Caledonia.
farm. .

tl

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thrill ”

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THE GREATEST LINE OF FARM
TRUCKS FORD HAS EVER BUILT

IN THE old four-cylinder days, furmera re­
lied upon their Ford trucks as their moat
dependable farm implements. With the
coming of the V-8, farmers soon found
out that here was u powerful, rugged
modern truck as easy on the pocketbook
as lhe old four-cylinder Ford.
The 1936 Ford V-8 Trucks are the great­
est farm trucks that ever bore the’ Ford
name. There are no experiments, no uotried features in them. They hove been
PROVED BY THE PAST in millions of miles
of farm hauling, over all kinds of roads,
- in all kinds of weather. And farmers now

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and reliability, as well as in performance.
This year, they have been IMPROVED
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tion for an “on-the-job'’ teat on your own
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out what V-8 Performance and V-8 Econ­
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135-aiuoalh time pay-

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FORD DEALERS OF MICHIGAN

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Maple

u

�Tnt HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, liM

SMALLER BODIED
I
TURKEYS NEEDED | oifiTor Lansing spent Sunday

well attended. Among the numbers
on lhe program which were so much

with
quartette, which
their parents. Mr. and Mra. Nell
thia Ume. A thor
Modern Ovens Call for Birds i Newton.
About twenty-five people attend­
With More Meat,
ed the meeting at lhe M. E. church celred.
Less Bona
basement last Friday evening In
Pete Bmelker and famlly-are now
Housewives will be interested tn the interest of tiwffownsend plan. living In the Hulllbergtr house, re­
the news that the Department of
Agriculture to seeking to develop a|ent and severaF^Mnlfted their de- cently vacated by Wm. Hutchins
.
straln of turkeys which will furnish 'sire to join a Townsend club. Fifty and family.
P. E. Brunner has not been well of
housewives with teas frame and members are required before such a
/
.
more meat, the present day oven , club an bo organised. Prank Cool late.
Several changes are due to take
presenting a problem to the pres- waseetoetedtohead the local group
ent day housewife that our grand-. until an,n;&lt;ann*Unn shall be com- place in lhe surrounding farming
community
soon.
Mr.
and Mrs. Clar­
mothers didn't have to meet. It to ; Pletedz-ence Van Patten have purchased the
seidom that a self-boater ot the cur- - *Mtteral services for Mra. Gray, Jacob Geiger farm west of town and
ent period can comfortably look aft- J mo'-ncr of Bert Gray, were conduct­
or anything over an 18-lb. turkey, id/by Rev Batdart from the local will move about March 1. Mr. and
and about the only Ume the need to"®/ a. church Monday afternoon, Mrs. David Lalone will move from
the Geiger farm to a farm near
felt of a larger oven to when a tur-; Burial was In Pleasant Hill oeme- Carlton Center. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
key to to be roasted—so why buy 1 tery. Mra. Gray died Friday evening. Richardson will move onto the J. B.
. huge
---------stove
-— for a twice
----------------preeport Odd Fellow and Re­
a
a year rite?
Wolfe farm when Mr. and Mrs. Van
to the way the question stands.
bekah Lodge* held their joint in­ Patten vacate It.
This Item from the Menominee stallation at their hall on Tuesday
Harold Green of Mt. Clemens Is
Herald will Interest our feminine evening.
spending some time here with hto
father, Norman Green, and brother.
When medals for meritorious en­ around the elevator about e o'clock
Ralph.
deavor are distributed most house­ Monday evening nnd turned in the
Announcement has been made of
wives will applaud an award to the alarm. The fire engine made lhe
the recent marriage of Miss Flor­
Federal Department of Agriculture run, oul
but loriunaiciy
fortunately was
was nui
not nreuca.
needed. ence Skeoch. daughter of Mrs. Roy
for efforts devoted to producing a | 7^ urgrat congregation In many
smaller turkey to suit the need of, w^tu w« present at the M E
and Mrs. R. P. Kunde. Mr. and Mrs.
the average family.
| church last Sunday morning and
Kunde are at present at the home of
-Our
h„ra , ,
ulu the bride's grandparents. Mr. and
weighing as much as 24 to 26. wheeler
Mra. J. E. Skeoch. of near Mulliken.
pounds dressed, but cooking ovens 1i Miss
-Iris
- —
Wieland Is the new as- Both young ;&gt;cople are popular In
• and pans in most homes \wiil not | distant at ths poatoffice, helping
Freeport and have the best wishes
accommodate a dressed turkey if It , Mrs, Gail Lightfoot, newly-appoint­
of a host of friends. They were both
weighs more than 18 to 30 pounds." ed postmaster.
graduated from F. H. 8- in the class
says Robert R. Slocum, marketing
The January meeting of the Free­
specialist of the department.
port Woman's club was held at the
The M. &amp; L. A. 8. is meeting with
Common sense will recognise the home of Mrs. Fred Tabberer last
Mrs. O. N- Van Patten on Wednes­
need for reform In the size and Thursday afternoon and wps well
day afternoon of this week.
Ahape of turkeys. So they are try­ attended.
ing to develop strains with relative­
A combined church Family night miration for the pungent paragraph
ly smaller bodies, turkeys In which and a reception for the new pastor.
our local editor had to his Issue last
the proportion of meat to bone is Miss Fern Wheeler, was held in the
week, in which he so clearly defined
more in some such ratio as 3 to 1 M. E. church basement on Tuesdayinstead of the reverse, evep though evening. The first quarterly con­ FreeporUtl*. wte say, “Fine-keep it
\
It may necessitate reducing the size ference of the church in charge of up."
The Freeport Coop. Creamery Is
of the space devoted to dressing.
Dlst. 8upt. L. L- Dewey, followed. having a moderh Ice making system
Whatever one may have to say A full report will be given next installed. This Is a fine Improve­
about the department's Interest Ip
ment and one that will no doubt
the love life of a frog, he surely
Mrs. Geo. Thompson visited her prove a very wise investment to the
must respond favorably to the idea son Harry and family at Hastings
of a turkey having some meat on it. last week end.
,
yet sufficiently small to come within
Dad Angell of Hastings attended
irVing.
the range ot tho ordinary family’s lhe Sunday morning service and
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Mayville have
cooking facilities.
Sunday school at the m. E. church. gone to Grand Rapids to spend some
As a starter Itwnlght be suggested
The many friends of Mra. J. B. Ume with their children.
that the effort be.directed toward
Wolfe (Mama Vanderllp) of HasMr. and Mrs. William Bchenkcl
eliminating at Jeart two -jolnta of
th. win..
;' Un
8* enac
wcro"Brievea
hear
of un
her' and children spent Saturday at Ver­
bJ^e
thrt now reSL ...,
to .
very
llln*U-- to
Mrr
Wolfe
.“l"0* *en? 10 have bccn derwent an operation for appendici­ montville with Mrs. Schenkers
mother.
resigned primarily de«
for 1JX
use as
a
“
“ P*
100®*hospital
tis at
pennock
hoepl'-1 ■ISSj.
— ThUTS—-—
Little Dickie Belson. who has been
landing skid, and X
devel
wif’htn day nlght- Peritonitis developed and
of legs that can come
—........ «“&gt;
TXT?,
~mpll«.Uon. her con
«-•­ very sick to much belter, as Is also
complications
Dickie Waddell, who will soon be
lhe classification known as "pony
dition
this
Monday
evening
to
such
ballet."
able to go to school.
that very little hope to held for her
Prayer meeting this week will be
recovery. Her sisters, Mesdames
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wad­
MIDDLEVILLE.
The contractors, government men Nagler and Richardson are with her. dell.
and the school board met on Tues­ Other relatives were called to her
Miss Helen Wilcox to working In
day at 11 o'clock to settle matters: bedside Sunday evening.
Hastings at the home of our mall
nertainlnv to additions tn mir u&gt;hnnl
carrier. Mr. Bush.
buildings.
, very
service at the M. E.
It surely did seem good to see the
Mrs. Amy Headley who for years J™* f.?Ileaii2j,i11e.VLniinUte,lln^- sun after two weeks of sunless days.
has made her home wilh her daugh-1
?,C
.Id
William McCann is to attendance
ter, Mrs. Blanch Begerstrom. had a
m rhin. ^hn at the session of the Board of Su­
stroke on Wednesday. Although she
‘V.0 d.n,h hv pervisors.
to a little better, her condition to;
J**".1*?
?.vtno
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Tompkins of
still serious. Mrs Headley Is nearly Ch^wWer.»nd of the saving Kalamazoo were week end gueste of
n.
of the Slant baby by the heroic sac- her parents.
The M E Aid socletv dinner at.rtflce ol a naUve Chinese. This Is
Alton Warner of Grand Rapids
.k,&gt;r nyu.™i..;’an unusually touching and Interest­
was a caller on Ute Perry family, the
the home of Mrs. W. R. I
ing story and everyone will want to
Friday was well attended
past week.
be present. The male quartet will

DODGE ANNOUNCES
1936 TRUCKS j

--------

H. N. Potter is confined to his
home. His many friends are wishing
him tlie best of luck and hope he

A very enjoyable dance was held
at the school auditorium Saturday
evening by the high school pupils. A
colored orchestra furnished the
music.
The Pythlans hold a dance for the
benefit of the president's children
home on the 30th.
The streets are-very slippery and
many are the falls therefrom.
This Monday evening will occur
the meeting of the Business associa­
tion for the election of oncers and
other business that may come up.
Russell Bender and wife are leav­
ing for a trip to Florida and his
brother Ward will deliver tlie milk
for him for a time.

sing at this service.'
'John Fish to confined to his bed
with a severe cold.
The old Pere Marquette depot
which has served so many purposes
in Freeport has gone the way of all
such land marks. Recently Mr. Ren
Postma of McCords, father of Dan
Postma, purchased the building and
has completed razing it and hauMng

other building. Some of the heavier
timbers are being used to repair lhe
ice house at the local creamery, it
to with no small degree of sadness
that the older residents have wit­
nessed the passing of this building.
It to interesting to speculate a little
on what has been witnessed by the
walls of this Important building. tlie
many events, sad and happy, triv­
ial and Important that have oc­
curred within and without this
structure, and the many thousands
EAST DELTON.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Gainder and of dollars worth of freight and ex­
Lucille visited on Saturday at the press that have passed through Its
home of Mr. and Mrs. George Len­ doors. Passengers have waited in Its
warm reception room, while "Jerry"
non in .Hastings.
switched, preparatory to its outward
and son Billy spent Sunday with trip, others have spent weary hours
her parents near Kalamazoo and tiiere awaiting its return in the
evening. Bridal parties have been
awaited there, and loved ones have
home of her sister Marguerite.
been there when the body of a dear
tertalned with nine tables of cards one has been removed from the
on Saturday evening. Prises were train. Today all that remains of the
won by Mra. Myrtle Lclnaar and old depot la a rather messy pile of
Henry Hoevenair, while Mtos Larida debris. We wonder what the future
Frits ana Ike Lelnaar won
low,, of this tract of land to to be.
score. After a pot luck supper was
v*. I The students of the High school
served the remainder of. the eve­ 1 had a very interesting and enjoyable
ning was spent in visiting and sing­ Ume last Friday night when they
were treated to a sleigh ride party.
ing.
Charlie Lechleltncr and Clate Bo far as we have been able »to
Louden were In Hastings on busi­ learn, the only casually of the
evening was Miss Anna Stowe, who
ness Thursday of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hartman and
two daughters of South Hickory picked on thgt night. Three times
Corners spent Friday evening with during the evening she received bad
bumps on the head, once she was
her father and brother.
Company at Mr. and Mrs. Scott struck on the nose by a piece of
Lydy's Sunday were: Mr. and Mra. crusty snow thrown by one of tho
Kwyn Hayward and baby of Del- boys In fun and which accidentally
hit her. necessitating a trip to the
doctor's, in spite of this, everyone
low and Gerald Price.
Millie Butolph to visiting her sis­ had a good time.
The P. T. A. meeting at the school
ter and husband. Mr. and Mra. Ora
house last Thursday evening wm
Colwell of Battle Creek.

BUILD!
fireplace
That new home . . . new room
. . . roof . , . or ony remodeling you may be
planning Jo do. Let us help you. Now 1$ the
time to make plans ond arrangements for
those improvements. The ^Hastings Lumber
and Coal Company carry a complete line
of BUILDING MATERIALS.

HASTINGS LUMBER
FH0NIMI5

A

COAL CO.
FtANKSACI

While exploring pita near Carrara,
Italy, men found an underground
river 1400 feet below the surface
and a mile from the cave entrance,
while remains of prehistoric animals
were discovered not far away. ,

Gas masks for horses and dogs
have been developed and are ex­
hibited In Prague. Orachoelovakla.
They are patterned along the lines
of those designed for human use
and are Just about as handsome
and becoming.

Women s Cltib„

selling

Featuring "fore nolnflood distri-;
taRton
hydraulic brakwT T&gt;re-1 1T,&gt;* wtecUon of. Th. Value of
proved” economy, beauty In appear- 1 ,l‘c
ance amt Amoia steel springs. Dodge
home department of the
d^tolon of &lt;Clyster CorporaUanTn- ' HaaUn«« Women a club. Mrs. F W
rater curparuuini
corporation an
an-' c,Hastings
Women s club.
F. w3
utvision oi unrgMtr
bhlr.« chairman
fnr it*Mrs.
Jnnuarv
noun«» &gt; new series oftnicks and Slebbtns chairman, for its January 3
£Slr'Z.*rS«g. ™
WKS
commercial cars lor ivjo. mis new
th* nl»*titro
un. .in couut« u. Mi&lt;&gt;.in«!'l“y^,™"
chassis models- One-half
threeprofit of lhe radio. Miss Sara
SSrtS
one aUd X-halfUn
^ader as chairman of the

rent trend in literature to go back to
early settlement days for story ma-

1concerning people in Uie tame town.
1Site read parts of lhe book to show
।
the
clever portrayal of Ute details of
,
manners and living condlUons to a
« Um» .»d lour um S’'typioal small town in early days.
models. Specially built custom Air????
Mlis Bames brieflly told of "It
flow models also will be offered
on
^l^0- Mrs. Bauer recom- (
now mooeu auo wui on
. • mended the monthly bulletins of the .Can't Happen Here" by Sinclair
Lewis, a picture of what will happen
A,P,on*
lmP°r^ant innovations । ^410 institute of Audible Arts. The
SL?^^ iva,uabk work or **■ w*n?r d™- ;
the fore point load distribution
aiwj pj-of. joa«pii Maddy was "Edna, His Wife." by Margaret Ayer
through which the toad to shifted
BlUnUon uwel!u Barnes, lhe life of a Chicago lawyer
wlw scarlflces everything for fi­
lornrd In nUUon to U» •«»..1 th,
wllh
Thi. Uuurei «rr.ur uaMUty. ■
promo,. t.lt„ „CWlon. nancial success;- -Roll River." by
minimum of over-all length, more
t» James Boyd, a brilliantly written
nqvel of people ot our time and their
nearly equalized wear on brake, and
sratinn
tires and In general, a more efficient
^{25 ithn n
heritage.
As a fitting supplement 'to the
haulink unit
'&lt;
SLOW wr lound John B Kennedy
•
u.____
, (Ua, Bauer, afluy eommenulor ot book reviews, Mrs. Roy Cordes gave
One ot Lhe melor changer In ^e y,BC Be announcer He preeented a the correct pronunciation of a list
rorutrunlon or the new model. lalJJJ« ^3,7,
.S TSer
lhe edopUon or a etrteU, truek-,ype tk,Uhy„
£ckeJ ton of authors' names.
or trama on the one-hair um com-., 1Lucllta Karmee. ImU Arhalter and
merelal car. Thi. double drop rrame Lue„k Wam„ „c„mp«,|,d by
U daerhr In .Ide rah cron aecuon B,tb.„ WUe„, m ,w0
„um.
and haa Bro truck-type cn»a memutnUo„ Lore u&gt; Ma­
ben. Includlhk Uta rear en«lne up- „d
„ gmm, lu,„ on a HlBuip.port. The commercial .adan la an
KM .rorye.t Welle, pUyeaeepUcn. In that Dodge me. lu mg on hl. n.oplibne hu own companenger car chaula u&gt; afford par. I lxu,uon and lhema umg
-The
.anger ax riding eomTort tor the 5J~1U You,„r
.Virginia
commercial traveler and other large po,u al
^0 &gt; Variable voiced
yrourjol man. whoae penonal j^,,„ HolaniDorothy Long! gave
tramportauon need, eho call lor ,„ IrUh a,^o,. Tn. Hew Cook;" in
Mad capacity tor lhe carrying ol
smiting BlnrnSJ5bsndlsc.
, and the delightfully appropriate.
The front doors of aU 1936 models ,.x WUh Youtanny Ross of Show­
open from the rear. Particular at-1
fame (EUiWOrth NMrtOn with
tention has been given to smooth- 8uxanne 8umner as pianist) sang
ness of lines and beauty of appeargnd -Lady Moon."' And
modeI beln« ou‘- last our prims donna. Lily pons!
standing in these respects.
(Virginia Potts, accompanied by
TOe. round out thecomplete
, A. McNulty) Midemotoelte
Dodge truck line, which Includes Pona Mnz ,^e L, ft Bubble." "Nur
all tn». or ehJMl. and bod, equip- !
*KXt- ,-N^ne

WEST ORANGEVILLE AND
EAST GUN MARSH.
Mrs. Mary Crane of Orangeville
Mrs. Charles Grosenberg of Martin.
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. R. Reed.
the name of Willis SVillard. We are
sorry not to have had this bit of
news before.
Mrs. 8. A. McCafferty entertained
at Sunday dinner. Miss Margaret'
McCafferty, and several of her
friends. The occasion was Miss Margaret'a twentieth birthday. '
Mr. and Mrs. E- O Denniston have
been staying with Mr. and Mrs. C.
nlston Is helping to get out some

Mrs. C. VanEtt called on Mra.
Chas. Crawford last Thursday and
found her a little bit Improved. Mrs.
ment to enable Dodge dealers to (Lonely Heart") and -The Crawford has been very sick and
meet the requirements of every kind SLutT
had two setbacks, but she seems to
of hauling Job.
| o,ei.,n

On Friday afternoon. Jan. 10, the present lime. We hope for her
speedy recovery. Mrs. Crawford to
Mary Ann. eldest child of George literature department of lhe Wom- In her early eighties and it doesn't
and jemima Near, was bom near en's club presented an interesting take much to get a setback.
Dundas. Canada. Nov. 1. 1847 and ' program on "Significant Contempordeparted from this life, Jan. 11. 1936. ary Fiction." The book reviews were
"Davil-Daa &lt;:■*’*
aged 88 yra., 3 mos.. 10 days. She ! Riven by Miss Jean Barnes assisted
It is on alarming reflection that
was united in marriage to Evison by
v" Mrs. Haiold Phillipa and Mra.
much of our modern life is com­
Gray, who preceded her June 9. Kenlth McIntyre.
Mra. Phillips, the first speaker, posed of survivals of a witchcraft1907. To this union were bom nine
children. Those who survive are Mrs. cboae three books: "Paths of Glory." ridden past Dr. Margaret Murray,
Elsynia Beck of BhulU. Bert and by Humphrey Cobb, a frank, brutal, wbo Is one of the greatest living
Harold Gray of Campbell Twp. and and dramatic story of tbe French In authorities on that period, declares
....,
the World war; ’Time out of Mind.” that even our seemingly quite in­
Mrs. Glenns .Gaskill of Hastings.
FunerjH
__1_ were held at Free- 1 by Rachel Lyman Field, a refreshing nocent waits, for Instance, had its
port U. B^ church. Jan. 13. Rev. J. novel dealing with a family of ship­ origin in "Devil-dances.” These
J. Bstdorf officiating. Burial in owners In Maine In 1870; "veto of dances were performed by wor­
Iron." by Ellen Glasgow, a presenta­
Freeport cemetery.
.
tion of human courage as depleted shipers of the evil one during their
in the lives of a family in Virginia ceremonies of propitiation.
SOUTH BOWNE.
Mrs. Pete Griffin to at the home of from 1900 to 1933. Mrs. Phillips gave
her son. Mari, at Clio to help care a resume of each book and read out­
standing passages.
Termites lire in the ground. They
for his wife who to sick.
Mrs. Kenlth McIntyre read the are seldom seen. During warm
Mrs. Will Mishler called on Mrs.
Ret la Rogers of Freeport Wednes­ first chapter of "The Voice of Bugle
Ann." by McKinley Kantor, a fas­
day.
at anything containing cellulose—
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Blough called cinating story-of a fox hound and their principal food—wooden floor­
on Mrs. Hiram Kauffman near her owner. She gave a short sketch ing. books or cotton fabric, being at
of "Once a Wilderness” and "Sec­
Clarksville Friday afternoon.
. gll times careful to avoid their com­
Will Mishler has a very sick horse. ond Growth," by Arthur Pound. The mon foe. sunlight.
Adrian Cramer is at home for a first book is an agricultural history .
of . family and community life tn; j
definite time.
.Michigan.
The
second
book
is
a
con
­
Miss Virginia Moore of North ItYKeartargs a Woodaa Ship
ing was a supper guest of Gwen­ tinuation of the same family story
The Kearsarge was a wooden cor­
and Ute building up of Calhoun
dolyn Mtehlcr Thursday evening.
vette. launched at Portsmouth, N. H,
Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Palmer and county in particular.
Mrs. McIntyre gave a list of books In September, 1861, During tbe
Ralph Andrews of Lansing rislted
Civil war. June 19. 1864. it sank
Mr. and Mrs. L- Andrews and Mrs. she had found most interesting,
among which are "Silas Crockett." the Confederate cruiser Alabama off
Mtonle Bouck on 6undayJ.___
Cherbourg. The vessel was Itself
-The
Stars Look Down." "The Gold­
Jack Andrews returned td Lan­
en
Apples,"
"Valiant
is
the
Word
for
wrecked on February 2, 18M, in the
sing Saturday after spending a few
days with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Carrie." “Blood Relations," and Caribbean sea.
•North to the Orient."
Miss Barnes’ first book reviewed
Hastings and to cjjand Rapids on
Tbe redheaded woodpecker Is
Bess Streeter Aldrich, a story of
business last week.
abundant''In Indiana only when
Mrs. Minnie Bouck attended the pioneer life of a German colony in beechnuts are nlentifnl.
poultry meeting in Alto Friday.
Mtos Eleanor Miller was a dinner
guest (J! Ella Catt of Freeport Sun­
day.
OBITUARY.

I

'

NOW
YOU NEED

firestone
looking for . . ,
designed to eliminate all Deed of
chains. FIRESTONE GROUND
GRIP TIRES give you IracUon tn

GOOD COAL make* warm friend*,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be plea*ed with the fine,
even heat. Low in a*h, and longburning. Try a ton today and
tave on your fuel bill*

SEE US AfiOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Price*
16% Dairy—$1.55 per 100 lb*.
Homestead Math—$2.35 per 100 Um
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lb*
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 Um

845-24 .
9.00-30. .
9.00-24 .
9.75- 20 .
9.75- 24 .
1040-20

54.75
7945

4.40/440/4.75-21
475/5.00-10----4.50/4.75/5.00-20
545/540-17 ....
545/540-18 ....
640-16--------- 1-

R. S. P. CHERRIES
BAKER'S COCOA
ENCORE OLIVES Stuffed
ENCORE OLIVES o~»
Maraschino
CHERRIES
Little Kamal
CORN
POST TOASTIES
CORN FLAKES Kellogg’*
PUFFED RICE
Quakar

Heinz Soup*
Pacific Toilet Paper
Jello
•
Iona Peache*
Sultana Olive*
Condented Milk wiuuu^
Matcher
Waldorf Tirrue
SPINACH
CLIMALENE
LIMA BEANS
SOUPS, Campbell'*
RAISINS
“IE
PINEAPPLE JUICE

3

g

Rajah Salyd Drewing
Dal Monte Peach**
Pancake Flour

.HEAVY DUTY
BIZB
PBICE8
4.40/440/4.75-21 ....$ 9.M
4.75/540-19 —1848
440/4.75/5.00-20 .... 1845
545/540-17 -------------- 1*48
545/540-18 li.75

'bread re
1 POUND L
IMPOUND
2 POUND
F«BH
CARROTS

Dealers in Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Balt, Lime,
Opfaent and Goal

g ..~

Sunbrite Cleanier
Gold Dust
Kraft's Ch«cs«
Sweet Pickles
Lipton's Tee

HIGH TEST GAS AT REGULAR GAS PRICE!

Hatting* Telephone 2257

3‘i-es.

Mackenzie Flourr~* B*k*Ua‘
18.75
10.65
.. 1LM

“GIVE IT THE TET TEST"—Fill year tank wilh BLUE SUN-

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company

■*

.

FOR CARS

IMS
31.95 •

R9.1D

h

SHREDDED WHEAT
t
MUSTARD
o-"1

FOR TRUCKS
$27.65

Swantdown Cake Flour
Chocolate Crocker Jack
Crifco
»■ — **•
Ann Page Baking Powder
Rajah Extract 1
Sparkle Gelatin

KEYKO OLEO
MELLO WHEAT New Contest
CORN Little Chief No. 2 c.o

Balli f
traetor.

32x6 Truck Type
32x8 H. D
8.00-20
840-20
7.00-20
740-20
740-24

NORTHERN
SARDINES
TOMATO SAUCE
"
RAJAH VINEGAR
PEAS or CORN
GREEN or WAX BEANS HOMINY or Sauerkraut
•
SALT

HEAD L
CALIF
Sta,

Hastings,

Michigan

Batteries. Windshield Wipera

BLUE

Ecu :t Sunoco M

0

�niereu. uucubjiled. artate enrolled. .
| Est. Clinton 8. Boice. Annual
Eat. Fred M. Cuslilng. Testimony c°«»l fileiL____ ____ .
TkESJ:A"-'-.
Ert. Henry O- Warner. Annual

issued.
Est. Nicholas Brouard. Order al­
lit Howard W Ilham. Annual
lowing claims entered.
•
Cortrighl. Xpven- account filed.
ER. Sarah E. Glynn. Waiver of
Roe. Annual account notice filed. testimony of freeholder*,
Est. Mary B Mason. Annual ac­
licenre to sell issued, oath before
Wm. O'Conner. Petition for ■aft filed.
counts filed, order reducing bond en.

WHIZ

EATMORE

NUTOLEO
2 - 25c

Oxycfol

Ib.

&lt; 5

Pancake

19c

Ifa. pkg.

Graaalated tot Qwlak Sad*

20C

Northern "»«« ~u 5c
THE LINENIZED TISSUE

BLUE LABEL

KaroSyrup
5 &amp; 29c

Wyandotte Cleanser

Rolled Oats 5 L 19c
Yellow Corn Meal

FILS NAPTHA

SOAP
10
43c
r pi----- r ~i»

PET or
CARNATION
MILK

I

4 /; . 29c

2 «■ 25c

Heinz

Except Clam Chowder or Consomme
(Heinz Baby Foods 3 can* 25c)

SINCHITY

Flour brand MK-lb. 69c
79c
King's Flake
FLOUR

/

14H-» MSCk

Country Club Flour

CAMPBELL'S
SOUPS

89c

u» » «b *1.1 S

Cold Medal Flour

*1.1 5

Pillsbury't Best Flour »«»»■

99c

Lily White Flour

3 °°°» 25c

VACUUM PACKED

25c

Country Club Coffee

Henkel's

5 n&gt;

HOT DATED JEWEL COFFEE lb. bag 17c

31c

Froth Broad

VELVET CAKE FLOUB

FANCY QUALITY

pkg 27c

Sno-Sheen

cotnmv cw»
'

».i—&gt;

Seaside Lima Beans

CASE FLOUB

10c

WUCO SCIENTIFICALLY. BALANCED

WESCO

SCRATCH FEED ^&gt;1.59

DAIRY
FEED

10% PBOTEIX

DAIRY FEED

100-lb bag

$1.29

W PROTEIN

DAIRY FEED

$1.59

Medium Coarse

SALT

LAYING

ioo-o&gt;. bag

mash

89c

‘”,“’$1.89

Farmers* Week Visitors Will

.1
___ _
.
.
Est Martha DicMneon. Annual
See Interesting Test
account filed.
Eat. Libbie F. Reynolds, Annual
account filed. Whlch can pull more, weight for
Ent. Lula Helrigei Miller. PetiUoo ’
for determination of heirs filed, or­
One of the InlareaUng features
der tor publication entered.
iduring Farmers' Week al Michigan
Stale College February 3 to 7, will

Y.M.C. A. ITEMS

KROGER STORES

...V.. -,.U
WHICH
ire stronger
ATHLETES OR HORSES?

TMUiwm
-------------------- --- —.... _ . -a. —

obovb.

wllh E0od aucnd&gt;

,’SJra

Edw. Walters relumed home Tues- r Agner Haight.
lay from Grand Rapids where ha
Evangelistic meetings began last
&gt;ad been visiting hSaeo. Floyd, guBdayJan. u and wUl W held

lhe

h otanant
Wednesday at

Bachman's near-champion

sar- auu mra- game* ।
.
Hammond and Mr*. Leo Hammond |JeMe Chase home.
Lhe college demonstration hall, on of Flint were Saturday evening ■ The L. A 8. meats
this week in the hospital but did not undergo
Thursday night of Farmers' Week. caller* Bl the Claude A. Hammond ■ Thursday with Mr*. Agne* Haight.
o» This contest 1* only one of lhe many
A- stall- met with the members of
.
iiniitnul
z.f thr. I^armtrna*
MIm Rctha Robinson of Hastings' Mbs Arabeile Blveus of Dowling
the Barry county committee Thurs­ unusual features of the Farmers'
Week program.
day evening.
spent the week end wilh her par-' SP®11 the
en11 wilh M144
Several departments on the camp­
before returning home.
The Hastings Hl-Y Club furnished us are co-operating to make the ents. Mr. and Mra. H. J. Robinson. | Smith.
Funeral servlets were held TtiuraTin- P. T a n-ettiar
anu 1 Arthur Richardson. ^element Jorthe OMembly speaker Friday mom- PWam
------------------------------------1-tenwUnf mwe(1
wenMa.to_
day at Bowne for Edith Porriit who
Ing in lhe person ot Ray Johns, who j grructlve
preparing unsual
“ excellent talk on Dlrec-. hlbMlons J AitertaiXent as
well
Ai David Robinson. Robert and!
uonsas educational character.,
. Bunday callers at watt Thomas'
The Engineering show Is always Paul Hammond were unable to go
The meeting on TUBsday of Uie
Ministerial Asson. and 8. 6. workers popular, and the students this year to their schools tn Hastings Mon­
Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mr*. Ray
was the largest that has been held have still something new to offer. day on account of lhe Icy roads,
Thomas and daughter of Detroit
In 10 years. A county-wide survey Hie chemistry department Is pre­ they visited school here ta the aft-

paring to show some of the wonders
There will be a special county of simple compounds and members
meeting of all 6- 8. Bupta. held Jan. of the history department will pre­
3fl. 3 to 5. in Hastings called by Mrs. sent today's world problems.
The Rural Drama contest, for
A. Griffin, council president.
The meeting of the Young Mar­ which groups of actors have been
, wau piv’t all
ried group was postponed from Fri­ ----day evening at Mr. and Mrs. Melvin attraction to many. The players
have been providing entertainment
Smith's.
for themselves and their home auRace Relations Sunday will be ob- ,dienjes. and the winnej in sectional
served February 8. Suggested pro-: [O(urs
gram can be secured from National I prlM.
Th. eomplrtw prewrem tor

th.

Mrs. Edw. Walters' mother. Mrs.
Stoughton, who has been serlouily
11! with flu. is recovering. •
reading "City Down." Mr*. Nellie

STONY POINT.
Mr. and Mn. Hinkley from near

formerly occupied by Ed. Mead.
Bert VanderJagt and family spent,
Hastings spent Bunday with the
a portion of last week with relatives
latter's sister and husband, Mr. and
SOUTH THORNAPPLE.
at Cadillac.
Mra. George Kelley.
Mrs. Ray Farnham, who has been
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Malltaon of
The W. H. and F. Missionary 8o- spending some time with her moth­
Lansing and Lyle Blfielman of Pon­
cieuee bt North Irving met at the. er at Marion. Mich., accompanied
tiac were caller* at B- J. Wellman's
Tlie latter to Ann Arbor where she
Tuesday. Three
new members."
Mrs. Bert VanderJagt has been
Mesdames Burke, Proctor and Fet- Famham returning to her home
appointed as delegate from this dis­
here.
trict lo meet wilh tho health unit
noon was spent quilting.
Mrs. Ed. Slagle and little son of for Castleton Twp. at Nashville
Middleville spent PYlday with her once each month.
foster parents. Mr. and Mrs. Robt.
Garrett. James Loux of Grand man school was held last1 Thursday
had lhe misfortune lo bum her foot Rapids was also a caller at the Gar­
night. A fine program was put on
Saturday afternoon. We wish her a rett home Friday evening.
■_T
~
„
.1 with R short play and several Belec„A‘,}he
k
arV?d .llon« of vocil music by our own
Gene and James Harper of Plain­ Rapids and Oita scoit met on the------------- --------------•- - —-community people. A fine two-act
well called at the Frank Harper M-37 detour near the farm of the
play by the Altoft p. T. A. was well
home Friday.
late Martha Hoyt the milk truck rendered and enjoyed by. alt The
Mrs. James Null entertained *ev- skidded Into the ficott car, dameral at a birthday supper Monday aging the fender and wheel, but for- 1Calahan and Edmonds orchestra
night in honor
of Nita Null's j tunately no one wa* hurt. The road from Quimby was present and made
B great hit with the people in this
eleventh birthday.
i h narrow and like all roads now is ‘
community. Refreshments consisting
LaVeme Wiley of Otsego called] very Icy.

410 Fourth Ave.. New York.
|
mailed out within a few days.
C. F. AngeU met with Arllc Reid | Those who do not receive a copy
and tlie Scout Troop in Nashville [ within a reasonable time may do
Wednesday evening. This Monday : so by writing lo the college,
evening, wilh Freeport H. 8. boys!
----------------- *•»
,
and Mr. Ardis.
NORTH HOPR
/ The Young Man’s Y Group held 1 The Brush Ridgb Community
their regular meeting at the home of meeting was held at the home of
Mr. and Mra. Angell this Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Brownell,
evening.
-v-nintr
’
About thirty-five were present. Mrs.
Wisdom is knowing what to do. Theodore Pransiika was in charge
very
Skill is knowing how to do it, and of the program which was
'much enjoyed by all. Much credit
virtue is doing it."
is due to those who took part. Aft­
POnVNK.
er the program refreshments were on friends here Thursday.
| John Carter and son Robert of '
Mrs. Mary Laubaugh is visiting —
served.
•— The next meeting WU(
will w
be
Mrs. Kathryn Warner and chll- • Orangeville Twp.. were down to
her son, LaVem and wife, in Do-! held at the home of Mr. and Mra.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Roy Hull on February 14."*"** *"*^ dren spent Wednesday night at the their farm here Saturday.
waglac.
Roy Hull on February 14.
t.™.. Null
„..n home. Harold
M Warner
-------Charlie English has returned to 1 Mr. and Mra. Lafayette Osborne
Ami! Bauchman will go to Anri ' Miss Violet Wurm and friend of James
of Prairieville was also a guest Chicago where he has employment I jarrived home on • Thursday from
Arbor again this week
Ella Wurm
— for
— medical &gt; Augusta and Miss cuu,
nurm and
ana
In the paint *bopa. after passing a. their western trip. They spent
I friend of
spent the week
treatment. "
z’. Hastings ^.r.l
celebrating their
da*
Mr. and Mrs. Will Crawford. Mrs. couple of weeks here wilh his fam•
• 'm
vrl Matti.
I,- and Mrs. Oscar
.--- Wurm
Oliver Hayward of -Kalamatoo
visend
with Mr.
wedding anniversary
James Null and son Dale, and La- Uy. While here ibe stork presented ‘I thirty-fifth ”
. Sunday?
and
.............
Hcd George R*—
and family.
famllv
Vcme Wiley of Otsego spent Thurs­ them with an Infant daughter the with Rev. and Mrs. J. G. Wilson and
man is at Niles' Joan Hart, who has been spend­
Mra. Homer
.family of Crossville, Tenn. Mra.
day at the Will Crans home near first of the New Year 1836
mother, who is lug a few days with her grandpar­
helping care f&lt;
| Wilson was Fanny Carpenter, un
Caledonia.
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hart.
Ul.
old schoolmate at Carlton Center.
is - ESS?SSS"1 b *
HICKORY CORNERS.
' Mr. and Mrs. Evan Fuller and
Last Week's Letter.
... been in Dowagiac
ore moving this week near
hdpu&gt;;" ere tor Mrs SmlUr's I,Mr. Amm Rural. ,na
rt
«‘Su?w5?SSi
Mrs. Kate Burdick was caned tot family
Liwc'l. We regret that they arc
ther. Mr Benton, who passed away SUiker district spent the week end ®n
at Lto Kenneth An- AugusU Saturday because of the
leaving this community, but wish
last Thursday. Our sympathy is *‘th Mr and Mrs Morse Murphy ’
An
lUncss of her Uttle grandson.
extended.
Mr*. Minnie Wurm and son of,
hom*'
. . .__________
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Whtdby and/them success In their new home.
enuaren reiurnea
to Royal
kovbi oax1
Mr and M"- EuT*ne Nichols
children
returned
Oak
Mr. and Mrs. Monts Rcplogle Shultz visited Mrs. John Prnnshka I
aft"? sw^lng
lheirto va^Zon
8“nda&gt;' *lth Mr and Mra
TAMARAC.
after spending lhetr vacation with
were in Battle Creek Saturday.
;on Sunday.
Enz is assisting his sister. their oirenu here
Dwight Barnum of CoaU Grove.
blVlEdna Wlrilson returned to
Mr* L,le QuUnb* of B,u,c c"ek
Mr. and Mrs. John Stamm visited
TIKVFP
I™3' Anna Mourcr- al
OdCMB,
X ; Sr^Ltaverta U*^eher
his people at Dorr last Friday.
.
TANNER DISTRICT.
who 1* tn poor health.
------. । Chas. McLaury spent a week in ' Miss Wahneta Holton, stater of two weeks' vacation.
|UM?fand^rayTi^rS?,rt2K,«f
QUIMBY.
| Saginaw and Mrs. McLaury stayed
Mra. Bernard Smith, was united hi
Carrie Saadi Ing returned to Gregf
Sympathy is extended to Mrs. I with the children.
th M
ld
Floyd Gaskill on Lhe death of her!’ Mr. and-Mrs. joe Williams enter­ marriage to Clarence Van Warmer ory Saturday after a week's visit m "k
by Rev. William Boulctle on Dec. 6. with Miss Hilda Williams.
I mImAum*
m
mother, Mrs. Gray, at Shultx.
lalncd company from Hastings and al Sunfield. Both arc from Sunfield
Miss Thelma Eileen Ford, daugh- _2£,1“wJSJXtadtaw
Those who attended the Barry- Grand Rapids Sunday.
nnd will reside on a farm south ot ter of Mr*. Ines Ford, and Merton Xk Wed9*d”r W»l with Aachah
ville L. A- S. at lhe home of Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hathaway there. Congratulations.
Freer of Battle Creek were married
y, , ,
Clayton McKoeln Friday report a' entertained her clilldren/rom HasMr. and Mrs. Bernard L. Smith Saturday at noon. Jan. 4th. at the I
erwvt time.
time
iUor
northeast r ahi ton
good
Hags‘’ Onn^.v
Sunday.
, ••
were week-end visitors of the lat­
I
m Mi ™
Mrs. Rial Kellogg of Hastings krtsThe children of Tanner school ter'* parents. Mr. and Mrs. Loren
itfd Mrs. Cameron McIntyre on are planning a sleigh ride party
of thU
Whnre &amp;he haa WOrk ln lhe
Wednesday.
' / Prjday night, having lunch after­ Holton of Sunfield.
pastor of this place. Frank Burdick
tar
rhiiArr-n
Mrs. Bernard -L. Smith Is caring and MIm Eleanor Green, stater of,
_ch“"n
.
.
aim
MIM
ticanor
ureen.
sister
oi
n
..irnric
Roger Mix had the misfortune to wards.
for her mother a few days who ta Ik.
**"
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sala from quite seriously ill kt her home in and hw°twin 7isterlwnnus mduat1 Bcn Cole one nlght ,a5t wcek'
day.
and her twin sister Wilms gradual- ina nib hirthdav
m.B.,
Goshen, Ind., spent Sunday and Sunfield.__________
tr.tinx, biot,
,n® nu wrtnoey- He was presented
The Young peoples class party Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Joeed from Kellogg high school with with n nnlr of hnuro xlinner&lt;
lhe class of 1833 Mr. and Mrs , Kn a
01 n°Te Ulpptr'
Pol- williams.
will meet with Miss Frances Pol* .
A lighthouse Is for sale. A highly
lard Saturday night. Jan. 18. Re-1 Pauline Kelly has recovered nlce- desirable residertae for a tall thin Greer
will live tor the- -------------present ,—
wilh
--- --------------------, | a great statesman la anybody who
freshments will be served.
ly from her operation.
Mr. Green's parents near . Battle happens to be on the job when you
man who is fond of sea-air.
Creek.--------------------------------------------------jare prospering.

^MOTHER DEMANDS A SAFE CAR FOR SHIRLEY TEMPLE^

KJO-lb.
baa

coua

I

Report of Condition of the National Bank of Hastings

34H.OOO.OO

ORANGES 6 - 25c
FLORIDA S- FOB JUICE

POTATOES

21c

15-lb. peck

MICHIGAN U. 8. No.l

SWEET POTATOES nancy halls 3 ib*. 10c

APPLES

SEEDLESS - Full ef juice

Excellent lor cooking

4

19c

UMONS

29c

NEW CABBAGE

TANGERINES

3%c

2

3 3c

' SWEET. JUICY - Easy to pe«l

Wagners

4'n* 10c

Eating or cooking

4

Kings

Eating or cooking
BOX - Eating

Delicious

1714c

PORK LOIN boast
■IB EHD - 3 to 4 Ib. avens* - LOIN IND ik 19ftc

LEONA

DEEP SEA FILLETS

Sausage

DRY SALT PORK

SWIFTS

10 u&gt;«. 19c

Baldwins

NEW POTATOES 3 lb* 25c

GRAPEFRUIT

CIMTSM u 15c

CHILI CON CARNE

a- 18C

» 23c
11-o^pin IOC

MUSH and BACON is10c

PICNICS

So SMrfey hat a big, new, Money-Saving Dodga Beauty-Winner
N 8KLKCTING a car to uk* Shiilty to and ham lb*
studio w* wvro primarily inwrtstad In aeftty,"
lay* Mr*. Gvorg* Ttnipls, toolbar W lha famous

I

SMOKID

broadcast

lb 22c

ofMUTTON
CHOPS a 19c

■jar

FANCY MICHIGAN

MUTTON SHOULDER a-14c

gknuhx hydr
•hifung — line

»M0

�•not WAfTINPa BANNRB. TTCB4PAT. JANUARY !&lt;, IgM

{WOMEN INTERESTED

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNSPPLE-KELLOGQ

PRAIRIEVILLE.

i
IN FARM PROGRAMS
tb/of hla or ter Ume to boost this i Although the program tor Farm­
T. K. Win* From llasUup U-tl.
tournament. ths first In Middleville's । *r*’ Week at Michigan State DolThe T. K. boys really proved what
I— February 3
a tn
I. set un
j legs,
to a1, la
up un­
they wore worth Friday night Whan
der a number of divisions, with oqe
they defeated Hastings 18-17, in a
expected to be especially Interestgame that wm » hard one to low
and a glorious one to win. With the
odds against them. T- K. played those outside school 50c. The Athlet­
heads-up ball every minute, show­ ic Association will profit by a
cultural sections m In those spon­
ing it* followers that T. K. b*s ■ plus money. Wilh your cnl
sored by home makers.
team to be proud of.
Among tho discussions expected
During lhe flrtt half * steady
to be especially interesting to farm

ra

Uwugh no spectacular playing was
made by either side during this half
which ended 1-4 in Hastings' favor.
In the second half, which vu far
more exciting, T. K. lied the game
wilh successive OfId goals. Tlw store
was then 8-8. But Hastings came
back with another field goal, putting
them again in the lead. So it went
until the quarter ended. In the
■ fourth quarter, whldh was a basket
ball gome in iteelf, the playing kept
getting
tighter.
Schondelmayer
played his usual steady game drib­
bling by Hastings defense to get the

production, poultry and it* care,
meat cutting, curing and canning,
various phases of dairy production,
fruit and vegetable canning, flow­
Rev. Field* spoke before lhe m- er
wnk„,Zt.v rr»,r.
cr culture and horticulture.
aenibly Wednesday. This assembly I jn addition jjy. program of music,
w^oolDZear Vh^Va^r11 kIJcilh05C of thc Country Life AssoclaMr^IflthwhHr
ta”.hJrh tion and the Master Farm Home
very worthwhile address to which Makers' Association will, no doubt,
the students paid fine attenllop.
attract many of the farm women.
The Home Economics division ta
Faculty Meets.
expecting a full attendance al the
The faculty of T. K. met Wed- meetings devoted to lighting, nu­
trition. home crafts, table decora­
Ings have been changed from morn­ tions and table service.
ing to evening so that more Ume
The discussion ot the present sit­
ahead 16-14 when Hastings scored may
I
be given to different problem* uation and conditions in Ethiopia
a foul allot which made lhe score that arise. The meeting Wednasday are expected to hold the attention
16-15. Hastings then scored , two evening
i
wa* devoted to ourrlcular of Uic feminine visitors. Mias Bess
. points to move out in front 17-16. and
i
educational problem*. Tlw work M. Rowe'of the Fanners' wife will
But the T. K- boys wouldn't admits,for thli meeting wu presented by be a- welcome speaker, as well, also, |
as Dr. Mary 8. Rose, Columbia Uni-1
defeat. There were 40 seconds left Mr.
:
Bell.
The subject to be discussed at the venity.
bounds, cline took the ball and next meeting win be "Guidance." a
dribbled up the court and passed topic pertinent to this school and
PLEASANT HILL NEWS.
to Fischer, who was near the cor­ community, and will be presented
The pedro party at Mr and M's
ner sidelines. With game Ume draw­ by Mr*. Wolverton.
Herbert Cook'* on Friday evening
ing to a close. Fischer made an over­
was largely attended.
New Safety Program.
head shot tiiat went through the
M. G. Bedford went to Grand
A new safety program, a* part of Rapids Thursday on business.
basket without touching the rim.
The game ended Immediately after curriculum has been made for the
Mrs. Howard Lewis returned from
school.
This
program
consists
of
14
this basket and T. K. promptly went
Detroit pn Friday, after spending
wild! Xn spite of the heavy odds part* which are a* follows: Intro­ the holidays with her parents. Mr.
duction; safety in home; safety en and Mrs. William Thomas, and her
aguinit them T. K. had won 16-171
street; safety at school; safely in sister and husband. Mr. and Mrs.
recreation; prevention of fires; civic Paul Patterson.
protection; *chool-boy patrol; safe­
Three foxes were captured In lids
The teams were evenly matched, ty education up to 4th grade; safevicinity last week.
although hard luck was suffered by
;
The saw mill located on the Spath
both sides In missing many shot*, ty education in grades 4-6; safely
। demonstration*; exhibits;excur-------farm have their work nearly com­
At Ums half, the score was 11-10 in j sions; etc.
pleted and will then move to the
favor of Hastings, in Uw second
other side of Middleville.
half, lhe playing was much Uio
Safety Comer.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lewis and
u.
Each week Uiere will be a''Bafcly
In both games, tlie teams dis-! Comer" In which we shall inform Mr*. Herbert Cook visited friends
P’“&gt;ed • n«e brand of sportsman- parent regarding inslrucUon to be In Plainwell Saturday afternoon.
ship. Two fine games were played ■ given studente.
PLEASANT HILL.
before a capacity crowd by two'' Safety involves
--------■ only
• a state
• ■ of
not
Mr. and Mr*. Herbert Cook enter­
mind, but also knowledge, skills, and tained with a pedro party Friday
habit*.
cvcnlngf
. T. K. Defeats Hudsonville 34-11.
Part of the introduction ta m fol.
The Moeke sawmill sawed the last
The T. K. boys I tad another Vic­ lows:ln school students are educat­ log Saturday noon and expect to
tory under their bells Tuesday ed. but what good does this educa­ move this week.
night when they defeated Hudson- tion do if they lose their life tomor­
Aden Campbell and Harry Wil­
row.
liams Invited about 30 friends to a
all of tlie time, playing a good &gt; Children will not' avoid hazards sliding party Wednesday evening.
brand of defensive and offensive j unless they are taught to do so. We When every one was tired and some
basket ball. Mike Schondelmsyer want lo put our school on the Safe­ of them wet thru, they gathered at
played a steady game at guard, ty Honor Roll. Make your grade 100 Harry's home where hot cocoa,
passing and dribbling remarkably I per cent for safety by organizing a
sandwiches and take were served.
well. The boys are improving with' campaign so alive Uie whole town
MIm Margaret Palmer spent the
every game and we expect great: will want to help. Make a safely week end in Hastings with her
things of them before the season । pledge “I will try at all limes to obey friend, Mta* Cleone Woodman.
ends.
M all safety rules, and I will remind
Mrs. Addle Lewis Li nursing an
others about doing same."
injurM fool.
We hope the parents will cooper­
The T. K. reserves absorbed a ate in every possible way in this
BANNER WANT ADV8. PAY
.
trouncing, losing to Hudsonville SO- safety drive.
15. The boys were off form, com­
High
School
Dance.
,
'
mitting many errors and missing a
A high school dance was enjoyed
lol of shoLi.
by a number of students Saturday
T. K. Glrb Ixsse 8-7.
evening. A colored band furnished
T. K. girls la*.! a tough game to Uic music. Every one reported a
Hudsonville 8-7. Regoining their good time. A 25c admission was
old form in tho last half. T. K. charged to defray expenses. The M
played real bull, being ahead for the 1 Chib sold BcoUics. which proved
greater part ol Uiat half. A fumble I very popular. During the week, tho
In the last minute of play with the | Club sold orange basket balls with a
score 7-6. in favor of T. K.. gave;
Hudsonville the opportunity to score.1
Ice cream was rold by the Sopho­
which they did. Belter luck next mores during the dance.
Ume girls!
,
CARLTON CENTER.
Caledonia Game!
'
Jack Glider and Miss Evarts of
Caledonia plays T. K. at gymnas- | Grand Rapids and Hubert Marlow
Mrs.
lum Friday night. There will be of Kalamazoo
—-were
------- .guests
—„of„„
three games, the first of which will Frank Hosmer.
start at 7:00. Lets have everybody
Mr. nnd Mrs. Lewis Harvel or
out to boost the team. phicR at Kalamazoo spent Sunday with Mr.
present Is playing fine basket ball. , and Mn. Oils Landon.

invalid for some Ume.

Tbe Rebekahs Installed Uie fal­
lowing officers. Tuesday aflerpocn:
Noble Grand, Ethel Honeywell; vice
grand. Clara Scott; rec. *ecy, Amy
Blleock; financial secy.. Mina Mills;

Ehls gathered al the Clifton Conk­
lin home for a social time, honoring
hi* birthday and that of hla cousin
Archie Stamm.
Bva Man by. Caro) Miller, Lucille
Barber; waroen. uora jomsson, Calc and Marlea Swift composed
conductress. Ruth Hughes; chap-. a coasting group Sunday afternoon
Mary Dealer; right and left supports at the Utter's horns at the EUis.
of the noble grand. Edna Castle and MUs Mark* is a freshman at Has­
Ethel fltobben; right and left sup­ tings high school and rcturfied on
ports to vice grand. Maggie Lehman Monday.
There were about flfly present al
and Mary Flower; inside guardian,
Allie Woods;
outside guarman,
guardian. lhe rural electrification meeting Fri­
Adie
wooes;
ouuioe
Charles Armstrong. Installing officer day despite the storm. Much interest
U
being shown in that issue.
Edna Castle D. D; P. and Dora
Mr*. Gladys Cartright Is still Hi.
Johnson.
Her mother. Mra. Nellie French, of
Oddfellows Installed lhe following Ea*t Assyria is caring for her.
officer* Tuesday night: Past Noble
Mr. and Mrs. jay Cole and daugh­
Grand, Lewis Johnson; noble grand.
ter Lucille returned on Friday from
WUUam McKlbbln; vice grand. Gor- spending New Year's vacation al
tai Martur wutai IUj
Marian. Indiana, with an aunt, Mra.
Clui'MraHron,; flint nnftefi'
in. JW Col.

porur. u nobl. Bond. WUllan Ota
tnu'd
jT E22i- Sm. ’
j
wrnn’J1 W.1M1
w
inctAlhnt officer’'
aeor«
and"n^’

WMT HOF».

mature blasting of his life's hopes
and still smile.
Our Community club will meet
this Friday evening with Ira. Belta,
and John McCallum. Everyone concerned ta cordially Invited lo attend.
Something will have lo be done
about this epidemic of marriages.
This wwk It 1* Wn Helen Arent*
of Prairieville, formerly of here and
Milton Klnoelll ot Gull lake on Jan­
uary 4. The Arcntz family lived on
lhe Collison farm several yean. Best
wishes tn lhe young people.
Mrs. Nellie ward moved her
household goods to Plainwell Wed­
nesday where the win make a home
for her daughters, Mildred and Mar­
jorie, who are employed In the pap­
er milk. Harold Ward will stop at

Earl C.mpb.11. oho hM hwn IU
U0.P1U1. u
U
w,u' Ptaunta.
pneumonia .1
a; WU
Lens nospiuu.
^proving. His brother Glenn after
* rcl“P*&lt;! (rOm penumonla was taken
W
h«P‘tal at Hastings on
Thursday and ta Improving.

n M
vid Honeywell, O. M.
Millard cook of thi# vicinity and
BARRYVILLK.
Miss Marian Beattie of Shelbyville Last Week's Letter.
were married at Hastings, January
Mr.
and
Mrs.
c. Potter, Miss Doro4th. Congratulations.
Bert O'Donnell of Hastings. FranHigdon and Mr. and Mr*. Donald
rice Hughes went fishing on Barber, Potter attended lhe wedding of
Lake. Kent county. Bunday. A fair. Katlicrine Hynes of Woodland and
Gerald Potter ot Berryville at Uie
catch is the report.
Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Quick and honle*of the bride's parents In,
sons spent the latter part of the Woodland'New Year's eve. This!
,
week with Mr. and Mrs. Verne community Joins with many friends
4n wishing them the best in life and
Quick of Banfleid.
Mrs. George Woods returned from much happiness.
'' Heber Foster attended the funeral
Battle creek Sunday.
Mrs. Millie Fisher of Harvey and, of William Couch In Baltimore PrlMrs. Bert Brown of pine Lake calledI day.
on Mrs. Merritt wood Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Welby Crockford of
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Krick and son Woodland spent Sunday with hsr
spent Friday with Rev. L. D. Mllesi parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Higdon.
of Grand Rapids.
Ar^nr Allerdlng was an afternoon
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Parker. Mis*
Elizabeth Parker and Mrs. Marjory’
New Year’s guesta of Mr. and Mrs.
Ostroth of Hastings were calling on Cliff Poller were Mr. and Mrs. Leon
relatives here Sunday.
Hynej, daughter Gladys. Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Zara Boulter of Has­ Mrs. Gerald Potter and Miss Evelyn
tings and Mr. and Mn. Bliss Boul­ Hynes of Woodland. A sleigh ride
ter of Dealer were Sunday guests1 also coasting and skiing were en­
of Mr. and Mrs. James Boulter.
joyed.
Wilson Willetts had his tonsils out
ASSYRIA.
at the home of hls parents New
Last Week* Letter. Miss Nyla Miller, a freshman at, Year's day. Clayton Willette of De­
Hastings high school, will stay at, troll called on him Thursday.
the Emerson Cortrighl home until
Miss Dorothy Lathrop entertained
the close of the semester, when she wilh a party at her home New
will Join her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Irvin Miller, nt Olivet.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Pierce of
Mlsa Bertha Miller, a teacher at Sturgis were Bunday guests of Mr.
Lansing, returned to her work Sun­ and Mrs. Harry Green and family.
day after the holiday vacation spent
with her mother. Mn. Belle Miller.
in Germany they're getUng sugar
Mrs. Sarah Conklin, who has been out of wood, and In Russia they
assisting at the Charlie Purcell'a. is have succeeded in extracting gaso­
1)1 nt the home of Mn. Rose Miller, line from peat.
United States
Mrs. Mildred Poff being nt the Pur­ scientists are still working on the
cell home. Mrs Purcell-is in feeble problem of getUng the country out
health and Mr. Purcell has been an of hot water.

gift* to start housekeeping
bounteous lunch wm served

TAKE ITS PICK!

to put this in any more Lester. It
happens too often lo be considered

FAMILY
11 FOOD DOHA

■s'

GO FARTHl
1936

YOUR FOOD DOLLAR WILL CO FARTHtR BUYING
THI "C. THOMAS WAY" :,. CAMFULLY SSLICTtD FOODS OF FINEST QUALITY ARC MAKING
MANY NEW C. THOMAS STORE CUSTOMERS
EACH WEEK ... COME IN ... YOU RE THE JUDCE.
OVEN
FRESH
TASTY
VARIETIES

COOKIES
PRUNES
CRACKERS E
PEAS e&amp;t°er
I"

EARLY IUNE

*

BRAND

■■

Youn POCKETBOOK

Lester Lord from the CCC camp' family visited
in Newaygo spent the week end ciartavfll* 8c

M■
■ ■ ■■
|k|
■ _ ■ ■ ■&gt; |T|
WitaiW

FANCY COLOEN BANTAM
CREAM STYLE
ODESSA BRAND
Oft DEL MAIZ

TOMATOES

3
NO.

Ho. 2

Can)

2 CAN

Cream of
Carden
Solid Pock

FLOUR
NOW AT LOW PRICES

BEST YET

24 H LB. BAG

78c

ULY WHITE

GOLD MEDAL and PILLSBURY'S FLOUR,

SPECIAL
Mermash

16%

$2.30

100 POUND BAG
SCRATCH FEED
$1.79
ACME EGG MASH 20% 100 POUND BAG $1.99
DAIRY FEEDS Iff PROTON 100 LB. BAG $1.28*

THEYRE ALL/576-. X&amp;BFAUT/FUL...MA.M//CAT/

Pailfiller Laying Mash $1.95
Pailfiller Dairy

Milkmaker

16% $1.25

34%

$2.10
$1.65

Cottonseed

Best Quality COAL
• Low Ash

• High in Heat

Wc Deliver up |u FIVK ntil^a al regular price

fourcan

HERE wa* a time when the price tag
book berg and kt it choose from
told the main story about • car’s quah
that range in price from $765 factory list
hT’h^uajfriC*’ *°W ^UaIityh‘gh Priceto
’ $1945*. Then look upon jhe best buy
money can produce. Whatever Buick you
pick you'll get longer life, more tasteful
But Buick has changed thaL For example,
styk« deeper comfort, a more satisfying
the sleek Buick Special |t |765« factory
car to own.
list ha* the same basic Buick quality a* tho
The new GMAC 6% Time Payment Plan
lordly Limited at mere than twice the price!
brings tfywn the cost of buying on time.
It has the same more efficient type of valve­
You’ll be surprised at how little per in on th
in-head stnighp eight engine. The same , kts you own a Buick. Come in and kt us
smooth, iash-frea torque-tube drive. The
show you how you can use this saving to
same tiptoe hydraulics, solid steel "Turret
get a better car than you've been driving.
Top” roof, "Knee-Action” gliding ride.

T

♦YOU BAN AFF9R9 TNI NCW BUICK

The difference is iu siu and capacity and
$7ZC to
orv fAs M pricta at Flint,
i
UD__Mich.,
tubject to change without
notice.
finish. AU Buicks ate Ug in power and
____
___ _ ____________
— —
.„
ability, beau
Inside and OUt, Buicks to ■ Standard and opccial arcetorict group, an all
che innermott fibre.
«* M,ro cotl- AU H“&lt;f* ’’r,ieta iadud4
oafrtp plass throughout ae rlandard equipment.

Bring your pocket- - Convonimt new QMAC S% TIME PAYMENT PLAN '

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES. Inc
Hosting., Mich.
WOODLAND

PhbM 3118
PRONE 17

mn itnn tsioMiim ut nun, suns win

iuild thw

R.K.HURD
301 E. State

Hutinse, Mich.

24Va Ib. bag !

FOR HIGH PRODUCTION USE ACME FEEDS

r7 \

$2.20

C.LO.

84M LB. BAG

A FINE ALL PURPOSE FLOUR

HARD KANSAS WHEAT FLOUR

Phone 26*0

FINEST COFFEE
THOMAS SPiCIAL
MISSION INN
GOLDIN SUN^

pS&amp;u

»■

17c

»

20c

25c

RAISINS iffiT 4^ 25c
UNPITTED DATES «. 12c
APRICOTS
20c
SALAD DRESSING
27c
VEG.AU. ISfleX.- 2 c-23c
otuar

KREMEL.$®K^5!?- 5c
VANILLA FLAVW°N

SNOWD
SHORTENING 3 felt
FREE MUFFIN TIN

PINEAP
DOLE HAWAIIAN
C-uiMd

DRANO
Wl

�WOODLAND. ..

MORTGAGB BA LB.

Mr.and *nd Mn Ruth Nlethamer, president.
Of the UdiM* Aid. With bMUUfUl
corsage bouquets to show the appre­
ciation of their work.
Little Jackie Cobb has been spend­
ing a few days with Gordan Ftnnia
of Hastings.
&lt;
Miaa Dorothy Dell of Detroit spent
About eighteen guests Bunday night with her parents, Mr.
nted recipes and advice to the and Mra. John Dell.
who also received many lovely
Mr. and Mra. Geo. Roberta and
and useful gifts. Delicious refrtah-

Bunday afternoon
Mn. hnn.

K

Genevieve Hoover and Louise Rise.

NOTICE TO CUDITOU,
S»I4 at t
lUftlr.**.

Public Auction or
t bidder al the

'•&gt; aaiu com

Ri«urt Cla
NOTICE TO CBEDITOBB.

lU.iinr. HaklMa

Back of the Investment
in lhe shares of this savings and loan association, a
purely mutual company, stand first mortgages on
homes mostly occupied by the individual owners.

MORTGAGE FOUKCLOSUBE.
nndltlan

Hynes) was pleasantly surprised on ond vlce Pro* —Mrs. Kate Johncock;
UU Mona«y ,™iM .lun .bout,
“CMr^
. ,—
twelve ladles met at lhe home farj
Mrs- naau;
Mary wawavu.
Qiuso0.
those—
who did
a shower in her honor. Gomes and11 Por the benefit of .-------; '' not
not see
see the
the list
list of
of the
officers
contests and advice to the bride tbok
the new
new officers
up the evening. Many lovely and ’ri*^
the Young People a class
practlcol gifts were presented to • ^e» w“*“ MO,, we will insert It
Mildred Hmlth. RrcUlar at Probata.
Mrs. Potter. Refreshments were I n°w' Pres.—Mrs. R. E. Pierce; vice
BANKRUPTCY NOTICE.
pres.,
—Harry
Owens; secy.—Mrs.
served by the hostesses, Mra Welby--------------------Crockford and Mrs. Arthur Aller- Dale Monica; tress.—Meric Kahler;
board of directors—DeLos Flowers
. । dhig.
। Mrs. Sarah Ruell, aged 84 years, and .W. D. Brooks.
Miss Mildred Hoakens of Hastings
No. rt|30 In Ilsnb
A D daughter, Mrs. Helen Struble, at spent the week end with the E. L.
» »id ; Battle creek.
Creek. Monday morning. De- MacLeod family.
I ceased is survived by the daughter. |
Lucy Davenport went to HasMrs. Struble of Battle Creek, one I tlngs Saturday to see Orin Dayton,
&gt;. bH«ro *°n- C’Jrte Ruell of Woodland, two | who has not been feeling well the
in tali । slaters, Mrs. Mary Snover of Ben-' nast few weeks. She found him 1m■cioeit In the roronoon.
ton Harbor.
Mrs. Rose Mrwrnon
Newman nt
of \ proving
'nroaoon. I fnn
M-rhnr Mrs
__
Gaylord, eight grandchildren, four
Arthur
Shattuck and daughters
great-grandchildren. The funeral -.Qi
’
Miss Elsie and MUs Helen of How­
will be held Wednesday at 1:30 P. ।
ard City spent the week end with
M. at the Methodist church of Go­
the Davenport family.
bles. Burial will be In the Robin­
AND IT IN FURTHER ORDERED BY son cemetery, Gobles, Mich.
Miss Zaete Eastman. Harold Lo­ and Mrs. Priest and Children of Bat­
tle
creek were Sunday guests of Mr.
gan, of Hastings and Mlsa Virginia
Faul ui
raui
ot unum
Grand tvapias
Rapids were dinner
dinner
---------guests Saturday evening at the home ' Mr. and Mrs. Walter Snyder of
of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Paul
Hastings were Sunday callers of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. David Kilpatrick of I and Mrs. Jess Haney.
Ann Arbor visited Mr. and Mra. |
Davenport visited the Boysen
ORRIE J. MATTER.
Prank Kilpatrick from Friday until j family at Gun lake Thursday.
^Mb^Fvelvn Hvnea
hr«te« fnr । Ed' Hun‘ sure has a SWfI1 U"'
ml&amp;s Evelyn Hynes was hostess for I
hut »&lt;• haven't
a miscellaneous shower Saturday £?rd
ofm-,iory
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
afternoon at her home in honor of ।hgftfd Maggies aide of the story,

her cousin. Mrs. Gerald Potter.
CRESSEY.
Many pretty and useful gifts were
Mr and Mre Stanley Barber are
presented to the brlue. Dainty re-1 lhe proud parents of a son bom al
freshments were served by the host-; Borgess hospital Jan. 7. Gary Wil-

The home is recognized as lhe most desirable se­
curity known.
Let us tell you more about this company that ha
been successful for more than 46 years.

gtfje ^aitonal fljnan &amp;
^mirBtnwnt (jlfontpanu
1250 CH.wold Su

EtiablUhtd 1889

DETROIT. MICH

Dttroil't Oldatt Building
Attaciaiiaa

I. L MAUS

lUilinc* B

brclnninc. ecnlalninc on

Rrriatrr ot Probata.

AUCTION SALE!

I,-----LAKEVIEW.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Babcock of
Battle Creek visited Sunday with
the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Graveg.
.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hill and son.
Vallav Wayne, were Sunday guests at Mr.
Its.i
and Mra. Warren Coolbaugh's, and
■r. Htala Bank of MidJlvvilla. Ehner Leslie of Olivet wax a week­
end visitor there.
Dated. HMtlnsa. Miehican. Ne’embrr
Lakeview P. T. A. meets Friday
evening. Jan. 17. Everyone come.

Having decided to quit farming and engage in other busi­
ness, I will dispose of my personal property at public auction
at the D. Dolph farm, 3 miles north of Hastings or the fourth
place north of Welcome Grange hall, on

BANNER WANT ADVS. FAY

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21,1936
Commencing at 1:00 o'clock. I will offer the following prop­
erty
HORSES.

Private funeral services were held
Mrs. N. H. Barber entertained
at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Thom-. Sunday at a birthday party In bon­
us H. Cobb Monday afternoon for or of N. H. Those present were his
their two months old son. Richard brothers and nephews. Chas. Barber.
Burial was in Woodland cemetery. • Harold Myers. Francis Leach of
Dr. and Mrs Cobb recently came to ■ Kalamazoo Fred Barber of Galea­
Woodland from White Cloud.
burg. John Hogg of Richland. Clay.
Rev. and Mrs. Fay C. Wing were' c. L. and Trv. Barber.
dinner guests at the Iwme of Mr. I Mr and Mra. Murle Reynolds and
and Mra. Lee Lehman of Woodbury wn have moved to Weit Lake where
Sunday.
I Maurice Johncox ahd Murle are opMra. Leon Tyler has been 111 for'emtlng a garage.
the last few days.
, The school children with their
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rise
and teacher and some of the young pea­
family spent Sunday with Mr. and I pie of the community enjoyed a
Mra. Morris Qulgg of Mason.
toasting party Friday. Afterwards
The
next. _regular
meetingofofthe
the they
1 theywent
wenttotothe
thehome
homeofofMr.
Mr.and
and
—------w------- meeting
P. T. A. will be held Wednesday. Mrs Wm. White where they were
January 22, instead ' of Tuesday, treated to oyster soup, cake and
January 21. The Miller Ice Cream candy.
Company of Eaton Rapids are putMrs. June Honeysette made a bus­
ting on the program and ice cream mess trip to Delton
ueiion Tuesday,
xuesoay.
will
MrvnA
I1 Donald
__ , • "
____ - ...of
______
•
Reynolds
Wayland
was
The Ladies' Aid and Missionary home over Sunday.
Societies of the Methodist church
CARLTON CENTER.
enjoyed a very pleasant evening
The Aid Society entertained by
Tuesday. January 7. A- being the
second anniversary of the presenta­ Mr. and Mrs. Win. Savocool was
tion of the calendars. This was car­ very well attended. The next meet­
ried out in the form of a birthday ing will be held at the home ot Mr.
party, with the tables bountifully and Mrs. Wm. Hale and entertained
laden with the excellent food always by Club No. 1.
Miss Wheeler has planned a spe­
prepared by the ladies of the so­
cieties. The tables were decorntd cial message for next Sunday's ser­
with the three colors of the Mis­ mon. one on the lives of the two
sionary Society which are purple, missionaries who were murdered in
reef and green. The birthday cake China during the past year. It Is
was baked i^nd furnished by Mrs. sure to be very Interesting and it is
J. V. Hilbert. ’ It- was very beauti­ hoped many will be out to hear it.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henney spent
fully decorated with the colors used
on tlie tables. The president of lhe Bunday with Mr. and Mra. Jonathan
Aid. Mra. Ruth Nlethamer. intro­ Kick of near Freeport.
Miss Marian Hayncr of near Coats
duced Mrs. Fred Border, who re­
sponded in a very pleasing manner. Grove was an over night guest of
Mrs. stata Hilbert lighted the can- Mary and Ione Clem last week.

Block more. 13 yrs. old, wt. 1206 lbs.

COWS.
Spotted eow. 7 yn. old. duo |on. 29.
Cuamuy cow. 6 yn. old. due Fob. 14.
|orwy cow. 4 yn. old. tmh about 12
weeks.
Block cow, 7 yr». old, calf by side.
•
•
_IA
20
're bred

HOGS

HAY AND FODDER
2 torn second cuffing alfalfa hay.
1-2 stack rye straw.
Stack of com and fodder.
40 bushels of potatoes.

rat tritala Mertgagn:
MortgagM la Offie* .
Bondi and 8rourlti.l.
U. 8. Goveraaunt

FARM MACHINERY
Wagon and hay rack.

Two-horte walking cultivator.
Two-section spring tooth drag.
McCormick mowing machine.
Double work harness.

Open a bottle of Highlands Dairy Grade
A Milk—drink a glassful. You never tasted
anything ao good, so different, to tempting!
Healthful, too, because It is produced under
the most sanitary conditions. High in vitamin*—low in bacteria.

Moore walking plow.

POULTRY

Primrote cream separator.
1926 Ford coupe.
Many other articles too numerous to
mention.

Apy way you use it “Highlands Grade A”
adds a touch bf newness to familiar dishes.
It will awaken a new pleasure in the cereal
course at breakfast and makes desserts both
dainty and substantial.

TERMS OF SALE.-CASH. No property
removed until settled for.

Try a quart and you will realize a rich­
ness found only in “Grade A” Milk,

bered.

'

Mrs. Albert Brill spent Bunday
with her mother, Mrs. Ella Lahr, in
the Gregory district at the home of
her slater. Mrs. Otis DeMott. Mra.
Lahr has not been very well the put .
few weeks.
Mr and Mrs. Leo Hepderahott had
a toboggan party last Tuesday night.
Some of tbe older folks found-out
they could still slide down hill and
enjoy it as well as ever.
Mra. Mllly Haynes was some bet­
ter at the time of this writing.
Last Monday our school teacher
had a birthday wlilch left her
'"teens*' a thing of the past and to
commemorate the event she.had-a
special spread with her pupils at
the lunch liour which was much en­
joyed.
ovciyunc cuju/cu
Everyone
enjoyed the
me r.
P. T.
*. A.
A.
meeting last Thursday night with
aneclal music by Earl Shupp,
Walter Sinclair and Robert Newton
from Hastings.
We are all grieved by the serious
condition of our friand, Mrs. Con
Sinclair, In the McOmber district.
Mr. and Mra. Archie Sinclair of
Battle Creek spent the week end
wilh her while their children stayed •
wilh their grandmother. Mrs. Jen­
nie Slocum in this district.
Floyd Garrison and family were
Bunday guests at the home at hla
daughter, Mrs. Harvey Parmolee in
Johnstown.
Enroute home they
called on their niece. Mra. Wal­
lace Preston, and are glad to report
her condition as slightly Improved.
Clinton Brill was in Middleville
Friday night wilh the High school
basket ball team. Hutlngs beat Mid­
dleville also beat Greenville Satur­
day night In the Hastings school
gymnasium.
Tbe Missionary play will be put on
next Sunday night at the school­
house. This 1s the play which was to
hove been giveh the Sunday night
before Ciiristrnas but was postponed.
Mra. Lawrence Christensen enter­
tained a party of friends Saturday
night.
•
•
Mr. and Mra. Henry Bergman
from Uie Doud district were Sun­
day callers at Uie home of Mrs.
Mllly Haynes.
Please remember to phone your
news to your correspondent.—Esther
Brill.__________ _ _ __________ .
SOUTHWEST 'RUTLAND.
-

I

Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Vrooman and
Mias Joan Hart of Hastings were
Sunday evening callers In the home
of their grandparehts, Mr. and Mrs.
Wm..Havena.
Mr. abb Mrj. Ernest Gorham and
chlldreniof Kalamazoo were Sun­
day guests ot the former's parents,
Mr. and Mra. Francis Gorham.
Mra. Sarah BOrghduff^lg not as
well as her many friends Wish. She
is staying with her daughter. Mra.
Roy Oaks.
Mr. and Mra. Ray Mugridge and
son from near Marshall were guests
Friday night of her sister. Mrs.
Richard Laubaugh. and family.
Mr. and Mra. Geo. Harthy of Has­
tings were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mra. Bert Newland.
Mra. Alida Bogardus of Chicago,
Mrs. Ora Hinds of Ceresco and
Mra. Bessie Storms of Loa Angeles,
sisters, who have been visiting rela­
tives the put few weeks visited last
week here with former friends.
Wednesday they were guests of Mr.
and Mra. Fred Otis of Glara Creek;
Thursday. Mr. and Mra. Wm. Hav­
en-,; Friday. Mr. and Mra. W. H.
Otis and Saturday, Mr. and Mra.
Dan Douglass and Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Gorham.
,
Mr. and Mra. Richard Laubaugh
and Mr. and Mra. Earl McKlbbln
were guests Saturday night and
Sunday of the latters* parents. Mr.
and Mra. Ray Mugridge near Mar­
shall.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Barlow and
son, Eugene, of Hastings were Sun­
day guests of her parents, Mr. and

Friday evening around M.relatives
and friends gathered at the home
of Mr. and Mn. Richard Laubaugh
for a shower, honoring her niece.
8arings
Dollars Ota. Mra. Earl McKlbbln and husband.
The evening passed pleasantly with
games and 'visiting and refresh­
ments. They received a lot of pretty
• W.97F.44. • 37.0S7.44 and useful presents.
Lester Lord of the Newaygo CCO
•lX.37a.89
camp spent the week end with his

LIABILITIES

MMKBCIAL DEPOSITS.
(Khar Publie
RavnritiM pl
Public

Dollars Ota.

Mr. and Mrs. Owen Smith and
Eloise and Raymond were Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Kantner and
children spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Levi Kantner and Mr.
and
Mrs. Wlllta^Kantner in Hastings.
DQUD CORNERS.

Raw or Pasteurized

parents.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND. '
Mra. Harry Bandbrook and Mrs.
Guy Kantner spent Wednesday In
Grand Rapids.
Mias Nevah Farlee, who la work­
ing for Mra. Elmer Matthews In
Woodland, spent the week end with
her parents. Mr. and Mn. Chas.
SlS8.in.S9
Farlee.
Dean Eugene Davenport, who has

lhe program, which was fine.

PROPRIETOR
Phone 2651

I IL -2S 00

time, returned
Friday eve­
ning.
Ralph Van Wie started working
on a farm near Middleville Monday

High in Cr««m Content

ALFRED HAYWOOD
DEWEY REED, Auctioneer.

whlch came on Sunday. Miss Jose­
phine Romig from the Striker dietrict was her guest on Sunday also
in honor of her birthday. In all it

Report of the Condition of The Delton State Bank
RE8OURCER

Horse. 10 yrs. old, wt. 1400 lbs; good

Flory, Bunday.

CLOVERDALE.
The Young People** Class will put
on a penny social at the town hall
Thursday evening, Jan. 18lh al 6
o'clock, a program afterward. Come
and enjoy the evening.
The Cloverdale L. A. 8. elected
the following officers, at the home
m’TST'uiSrJiib^'Svtoiu S Si u"..A,chlS
th.
P' 1 Pres—Mrs. Ella McCallum; vlcelhM« n nJjhT1 Patter GCsthrvn Pres-~Mrs. Gertrude Monica; sec­

NOTICE TO CBEDITOHS.

BANNER WANT ADVS. FAY

■was an out-of-town guest.
soring an open meeting to the pub­
lic Tuesday evening, Jan. 14. at 8:00
at the high school auditorium. Au­
drey DeWitt of the State Conserva­
tion Department, will give a nature
talk using the pictures and slides
taken by Walter Hastings. A short

DHAVCEaV NOTICE

surprises Saturday night when her
friends and neighbors walked In
with boskets on their arms to cole-

with

Millie Haynea of tho Hendershott
S'uK
t^d **qulte poor,y

Halting
rota.ls.iaa“iffikl,’S0?19sZ *’

Circle

.

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, JANUARY 23, 1936

12 PAGES

EXPRESS CO. AND !sha11 County’8 Taxpayers Vote JQ ||[][[| ^()|][J
PONY" EXPRESSTo Tax Themselves $20,000?. FEBRUARY 19TH
WERE WONDERFUL HELP
IN BUILDING UP OUR
WESTERN COUNTRY

FOR THOSE WHO TOOK
PART IN THE GOLD RUSH

Some Things To Be Considered Before

LADIES’ NIGHT FOR THE
I
COMMERCIAL CLUB
Is Fixed for Tuesday Eve,
February 4—Good Pro­
gram Prepared

TIIF PI OrnillPfinP
I HL □UlLnVljUnU

CALL FOR HELP

PAGES lto8
CHET HODGES CHOSEN
TO HEAD RETAILERS

COUNTY HI

Committee Is Appointed to
Make Plans for the
New Year

REPUBLICANS OF COUNTY
Arrangements have been made for ^RE DISTURBED OVER THE
OLERK'B REPORT
At a meeting of the Retailers held
i "Ladies' Night" for the Hastings
~ -- ---------- -------------------------Launching County Into Competitive Business
TO MEET HERE ON
Friday. January 17th, at the Parker
TOTAL OF $64,977.78
RAPIDLY MOUNTING
Commercial Club. Il will be Tues­
House. Chet Hodges was elected
THAT EVENING “
MEDIOAL BILLS
SPENT IN 1886
As lhe petitions filed with the Barry county board of- supervisors j
day evening, February 4. It fo plan­
president. John Crue remains u
met nil the requirements of the slate laws, the board last week voted,: sarp-r \a/|&gt; ■ nr l|E| n
ns they should, to submit to the county’s voters, at lhe April elec- ’’•tel WILL DC rlCLU

tion, the proposition that lhe county compile a set of abstract book*'
IN THE FULLER HALL
and
--- --------- _Ml
,
HIIU engage
tunnel in
III the
IHC- abstract
UUXIIUI.I buainess.
UUlMIrtOO. No
."J one
Ml IL connected
, UIIIIM |FU with
mm the
Illi; '
They
Provided Only
Sure
----------------------- *
-----! । Banner has any inTereal, direct or indirect, in the abstract business ^Hon. Glenn Dunn, Muskegon,
Will Give the Principal
Way of Hearing From
of this or any other county. As it i« now a public question, we feci
Folks Back Home
that we can express our views on the subject, in the public interest I
Address
and will
endeavor to
fairly.
-------------------------------.. do
_ _ so----------I a Renublican county-wide ban­
We of this, age, with air-cooled 1 as we sec it.
Will it benefit the people of this county to have the county engage I quet will be held tn the Community
trains speeding across the country
in the abstract business? If it will, they ought to favor lhe propo-1 |iaU’r kn°wri possibly as FulIn a few days, and airplanes mak­
Ki i
,
.
....
i,
i
ler hall, in this cltv on Wednesday
it would not, they ought to vote against it on Monday, j evening. February 19. of which furing the trip in Just a few hours,
can have scant appreciation of con­ April 6. It is n business proposition, which should be considered i their announcement will be made,
ditions even ns late as 80 or DO nnd discussed solely on its merits as a business matter, without including a statement as to the
iireiudicr
' Price °f banquet tickets.
years, agq*. Nor do we know much •J
,
ii’
it.ii
•
United States Senator Vandenboine of our readers, who have never bought or sold any rcai; berg. Congressman Hoffman, the
of, or appreciate the wonderful as­
sistance of the Express Companies, estate, may have vague ideas about an abstract of title or of its ini- j state officers and heads of departand the Pony Express in building portance. A true abstract is a condensed and correct statement (lf ments, and members of the state
up. and cementing together, our
all matters which pertain to lhe tide to any piece of land, from the
great country.
....
।
i! t
.■
.
.
-n . i
aJ* exjiecteo to be guests of honor,
' Along in the
up
1 hat
former Rep. ButTiaria
—— early part. of
-- the
—— tune- it was bought
— from lhe
— government
n
"i- to now.
............
— abstract
■■
uuuiuiu, State
owiu. Scnocii18th century there were no raU-1 Hhould show every transaction that has at any time affected lhe title ator Mosier, and the chairmen of

phones, no mail system to speak of.,
.. .
’ . .
.
• .
1 • • 1 . &lt;
&gt;
, . i committees are also expected to be
no rural routes, no express service.; KnFe,
!«•«*&lt;•, lox-title, sheriffs sale, administrator s sale, probate I
The speaker wl'l be Mr.
and no improved roads. If n per-1 or oilier court proceedings, which may affect 'the title Io the prop-; Glenn Dunn, of Muskegon. He was
son living In one settlement want- ,.r|yi
abstract must give a complete, and correct summary of all tl10 keynote speaker nt the lost Rerffie„TorB^XOTtMC^i'hr
of &lt;he
the rmmly
county
|I”- public nrord.
rn-onl, .&gt;(
«. llley
lhe Illi' Io a gi.rn I
a friend or relative living in an- , r . .
. .
-.
1
., &lt; . ,
. .
.
r ; nt that time wtuj greatly appreciated
other settlement only a few mile* i piece oLland. No prudent man would think
of buying realestate | and heartily applauded. He
is lhe
distant, the question of delivery was unless an abstract was furnished him. whichwould show that the j legal adviser of the governor.
next to impossible. Where there: man from wboin he purchased had a clear title to it. Absolute cor-1
15 already evident that there
rS
I
■&gt;' “
' &gt;• ‘be Sis
Wilhoul that il » worth-1 S!Q5l.* Io* mm? ST^woVd hid

ned to start the dinner promptly at

secretary. The club known as the
ASK °oc™?'
Retell Division of the Hastings SUM MAY BE GREATLY
Commercial Club definitely decided
the members, their wives, and other
TO CUT THAT COST to meet once a month for luncheon
INCREASED IN 1936
guests, following the dinner. That
’
------------and business. Meetings will be held
program will conclude tn
ample Total Medical and Surgical at the Parker House. Twenty-three The Federal Goverament Rm
time for those who wish to get home
.......
°
members
Joined.
Aid, Paid by County,
at a comparatively early hour to
Withdrawn Aid and State *
It was decided at this meeting to
do so. Those, however, who would
Exceeded $26,000
' Outs Appropriation
have tha presidant appoint a com­
like to dance or play cards can iiave
of* »»•
five to be mmiwd
known a»
as the
The
that extra
extra entertainment
entertainment after
after the
the
Tne Board of
01 Supervisors Is
is mitlee u
ii»c
v^.
]l be »
to
WW thlnh
think |itt wl
will
a sururiw
rarprise la
that
regular program is concluded Fine much dlslurbed over the rapidly , Promolton Committee. .Mr. Hodges the pe©^
Barry county to know
mlrtc “mte p.«“a.d .S ihm. n»«m»w MIU which Che counl, Is1
a„,E
! how much u alrwwdj Ma, spnu Hr
for ca"c&lt;l on 10 P®V for medical and P,UK^ W. A. Hall. Wm. Field and
surgical service. for both adults and
E Carpenter to act on this com(llv
-nh«- Th.
mlttee. It
It isIs the
the duty
dutvof
of this
thia com
com­
Juveniles.
The ^..,1
board by resolution mlttee.
asked that the. county clerk request mittee to formulate plans for pro­
motional
events to be held In this
physicians and dentists to avoid
community.
running up bills against the county
The club is organized in an en­
in such cases, unless there is ur­
gent need. The county superintend­ deavor to promote good-will and co­
ents of the poor were also asked to operation among the business men
hold down this expense wherever of lids city.
possible.
AN AUDIT OF WINDSTORM
The reason why the board was
disturbedjjver this matter was the I
CO.’S BOOKS SHOWS
fact that bT 1935 the county paid I
$631,000 CASH
over 426.000, for medical and surRical aid for Barry county adults i
and children. That was much more
INSURANCE NEARING
than the entire county tax fifty |
400 MILLION GOAL ycnM «8O That docs not take Into nR
apwarew «AVR
------------- account at all what was spent by lhe ■ KprENUE BAYS
Five Directors and Officers Barry,^,u„ntZ.- £2^.r&lt;I*ncy JReUefi
NO NATION CAN LIVE
Commission for medical and sur-'
Re-elected at the Recent
UNTO ITSELF
glcal aid. which would add several i
thousand U
dollars
the &gt;muu»b
amount wc
we'
Annual Meeting
«.««««.«
uIUUa to me
The Michigan Mutual Windstorm
lhU yT ,the AMERICA FACES
Insurance company directors com8°',’rnincnU fur-'
~ «
who wish to dance and tables
those
care to
nlav cards
those who
who
mo.&gt;&lt;
wno care
care to
to play
piay cards.
cards.

relief work tn tills county. From
bounty clerk Allan Hyde’s annual
L-___ ‘
report to the superrtaora, we have the

LOSSES WILLED
S2B1.000IN1S35

SINCERE PLEA FUR

fairly passable, the stage drivers less.
J gotten out that the banquet will be
SERIOUS SITUATION
exacted a very heavy toll for tire acHie first question to interest lhe taxpaver is: What will it cost held. Even at this early stage resrelief; but
from the
first of
i- in.;.
tn&lt;11 lb- &lt;■“""&gt;&gt; I" compile a wl ot book, or record, from which
. u-,
“Y ’"“I”1 b*™
week after the annual meeting by welfare
*',‘fare rp,lef
bul frOm
th'* flral
of m, _aa .m,. ~
small
parcels.Burtnem.
Right then
was T.ter
when i. '■&gt;' eblrocU
■
. ot, Idle eon ,be mode?
। o A.rur.ry
*
-» nmwmry Joe
t
,
asked
by people whoare anxious
January on the national government Three Things Needed in This
lhe Krproo
whlrtr
damto
JjyJT
reelecting the officers—L. W. Sun­
will not pay anv of this expense: I Emergency Are Intelligence,
developed into mammoth .proper- age suits would result if the abstract were not correct, lhe next ture the people of lhe county Quit day. president; G. E. Crook, vice the state and. lhe counties must I
•--president; E. A. Parker, secretary- j
Integrity and Initiative
tions, first started. Seeing what a . question is: Will it be a profitable investment for the taxpayer* lhere will be no over-sale of tickets,
meet It al). The state appropriation I
snao
SffinME
stage drivers were having In &gt; i
.
.t
.&gt;&gt;i
Tbr
. ■i&gt;: il. ■..
il nercury .to do
■ -o 1at. '.
'hi.
. N°
■
P&gt;“ «
»» treasurer.
1936 was cut from $12,000,000, • Rev. Dr. Frederick Spence, for
The directors chosen at lhe an­ ,; for
which it paid for this kind of re-1I eighteen years ,pastor
-------- —of—
the. First
getting big fees for delivering let-,..
m
h
• i
• .t. •
i
committee plans can be seated at
tert and small parcels only a short
These questions
will consider in lheir order.
'the ublM
thojM_ ||ekeU
nual meeting were all reelections.;
% fit I
I
aV.I.A-I. *, Ai-Lmn —. — —
The five selected for tiirce years lief in 1935, to $9,000,000 for 1936. Methodist church at Jackson, was
distance, &gt;
a m.n
man by the name of
riirtom-.
(Continued on page six)
'■*-------------------- —
। sold,
no more can---be obtained.
The
. The county ha* already agreed to j the guest speaker at the Hastings
1 each were: W. H. Burd. Aim Arbor; j
Wm. F. Hamden.living
,
______________________________
In Boston, i -------------------------------------------------------------------------------■ sale will stop then and there. Watch
pav $9,000 for emergency relief, and Brotherhood Monday night He.
M.
E.
Cota.
Big
Rapids;
Harold
Sun
­
ta given credit for establishing the UACTiwrc Tn UAUC
. the Banner for further announce­
will probably be asked to pay more, made one of the beat addresses ever
day. Clare; Jerome Harmon. Lud-1
firat extended express line. He HASTINGS TO HAVE
ments.
Possibly our readers will be in- j given at the Brotherhood. It was
1 ington; G. E. crook, city. The other |1 tercsted
opened an office, established reg-,
DDCCtnClLlTlQ PAI I
to know the items of medl- : a sincere, forceful plea for people to
, The banquet will be called the
ular routes and for quite a reason- |
rntOlUCN I o DALL
the
«T’aid sur^ic’ai ^vlre’Sdd' f« by I think, to
SriTr^
County
nna
I '"Barry
uarry ooun
»y Washington ano
. w p
; cal and surgical service pel
able fee. everything
considered, ।
——
•*“‘—1935.
----- 1 from prejudice,
about the serious
Lincoln Banquet." as the time fixed
rJvminY
r
' Barry county during
.------- ---------------------------—-------------for it is between the Lincoln and Z, -4.”;
K
C I
Under recent laws a considerable problems that confront us all In
would contract to deliver letters,: Proceeds From Partida Go to
parcels, money. Jewelry or small I
------------------------------------------ . Washington birthdays.
i
' rpc.'
rl of llw
ring for these days. He told his hearers that
mIE-i a. ! Parl
t,lc expcnM
expense, of CO
caring
Fight Scourge of In­
MMCMtb .pon-l
Dr., £»•'“dl“
'
------------..........................................
j»ckages to people living in towns:
adults, ant
and’ children
children dedewe must‘
be"internationally
minded,
Feldpausch Food Center is spon-,
—
— —• r' Dodds, went Branch- Robert Bess- “rtHctcd
te0 atlu,u
and along designated roads a long
ctSm’wm
fantile Paralysis
because no nation can live unto It­
soring a free Cooking School to be |
Can-others, chairman of thee!mer. Flint; Charles' H. Hughes. । nnd^haMn
ways out of Boston.
The Idea ।
Hastings is to have Its first Warm held in the community hail in the Republican county committee.
Prairieville; Fred R. Likins. Mem-1
£uh self. Whatever effects other na­
™.i&gt;
— Building, on Tuesday. Jan.
r... ao
Program
Program and
and invllntlnnc
invitations enrr
commit-f phis; U W. Sunday, city; and E. AJ b
by
officer ln
in lhU
this rounlv
county wlth
with tions adversely will hurt us. He re­
' *that
hal offlcer
Fuller
28
...nT ST. ’™ m
W J“ » 1" communu, h&gt;U.
tee: Clyde Wilcox. A. D. McDonald..I Parker, city.
no way to avoid or reduce it.
ferred to the fact that tliere are
The county paid last year to the very powerful trouble makers In
given away at this time. All women Richard Cook. C. H. Osborn and
The annual, audit of the books1
. state for medical and surgical aid Europe and Asia right now. We are
who are interested are cordially in­ Roy Cordes.
showed that the losses paid for ।1 for Barry county afflicted adults bound to be affected by what they
The
committee
to
plan
the
meal
(Continu'd
i K«•”
Xfr£ vited.
windstorms during the year amount-'
Consists of: Judge Stuart Clement.
i and children 81048932. These items do. We ought to so conduct our af­
(Continued on page three)
whlch u constantly assuming a
Mrs. Nellie Cross. Mrs. P. L. Bauer, ed to $261,000. The cash on hand al । were billed to the county by the
fairs that these foreign troubles
”
i the beginning of 1936 was over $531,-.
ENJOYABLE PROGRAM
and A. W. Haven.
will not involve us In a war. The
(Continued on page six)
,' * *----------------- I greater national character. Proceeds
1000. The emergency fund carried by j
The committee to prepare and set
speaker did not say that an Ameri­
HATS OFF TO CITY AND
' from these parties throughout the
GIVEN TUESDAY NOON :the
this
company
to
meet
extra
losses
tables and provide the dishes
can youth should never Join an
X
nniiMTV nrriPiAi o 'country go Into the fight against
SECOND
MOTHER
land chairs will be: Sterling Rogens. proved its wisdom in 1934 when the
American army or fight for Ameri­
' COUNTY OFFICIALS , tire disease. 30per centto lhe Warm
,
AND SON BANQUET ca; but he did say that he believed
Representatives
of Hastings Nell Mannl. Mrs. George Burgess. losses exceeded the average.
I Springs Foundation nnd
70
per
i It was gratifying to the policy-1
------------that every American boy would be
Cam
pbeUand
Andrew
Matthews
D
'i
nolaer5
alia
directors
to
Know
tnatl
Manufacturing Co. Fur­
Who Manage Our Emines,,
u&gt; u&gt;» teal
■; holders ond directors to know that Y, M. 0. A. Sponsoring An- justified in refusing to fight for
'
I communities.
The committee to MlwS^tteketa ±
*dly ‘El
1
I communities.
Hin fAFnl IntlirnnrA !■rap
rnnIHIu
on.
.
nished the Program
America on any other tlian Ameri­
Affairs With So Mach
nual Event—Rev. Karl
I It Is fitting then, that Barry
“' nroachiiu.
proaching’ the coveted four hundred
will
consist
of
County
.Clerk
Allan
can soli.
,
The Hastings Commercial Club
| county through this party, should
million mark, being $388,360,000 at
Credit
Keefer to Be Speaker
He called attention to the fact
had a very Interesting program at Hyde. H. S. Sheldon and the Re­ ; the beginning of this year. The
:
do
Its
best
to
add
to
the
fund
of
de
­
AU honor to the supervisors of
The second annual Mother and that wars are caused often by eco­
their Tuesday noon luncheon given publican members of lhe board of [.amount of insurance was increased
Barry county agdjto lhe city offi­ I fense against the disease that Is get­ by representatives of the Hastings supervisors.
jSon banquet Is to be held at the nomic conditions, and that the efting
such
a
foothold
In
the
country.
cials of Mailings..' 'Barry county 13
Ushers' committee win be Glenn ‘ by about 16 3-4 millions of dollars. Methodist church panors on Thurs­
Manufacturing Company. Mr. Frank
without a cent of bonded indebt­ Wc are looking forward to the time Foote, the advertising manager of Brower. Harry Miller. Dr. C. P. La­ which was a splendid gain. The day. February 6. under the auspices standard of living throughout the
of policies in force was inedness. and so is the city of Has­ when every father and mother will that company, and Mr. Harold Phil­ throp. Dr. George Lock wood. Earl ।. number hu
of the Y. M. C. A- Rev. Karl Keefer world. Right now. he said, the com­
WJy fl,2ei
O.4V1,'
.
tings. The school district of Has­ know where to look for the best lips, the automotive engineer of the Coleman. Don Seigel. Dr. F. H. Tay-' cr~ied °
■ of Watervliet, who is well known | merce of European nations and of
. The.comnanv
The .company enters 1936 In flni’
tings has some schoolhouse bonds scientific aid al the first sign of in­ company, first gave the members lor, and Max Dietrick.
1 condition with an established repu­ .’ tOjthe people of Barry county, has the United States is being seriously
out far our most excellent city fantile paralysis.
The
committee
on
decorations
will
beerTuelectcd for the speaker of the interfered with by low-priced prod­
Tills ball Is being promoted by a of the club interesting talks. Mr. consist of Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert D. tation throughout Michigan for evening.
school buildings, which would re­
ucts made in Japan by cheap labor.
Phillips explained the functioning
quire several hundred thousand dol­ group of people who are not from of tiie piston ring in the cylinder of Cook. Mr. and Mrs. A. Reickord. Dr. prompt and fair adjustment of all
SpecMl prizes are to be given to Concern for American labor ought
lar* to duplicate, but these bonds any organization but who are urging the gasoline engine, how Important and Mrs. R. q. Finnle. and Mrs. Its losses, and with a good will to­ the oldest son accompanied by his not to be one of hours, but to speed
ward it that 13 a fine asset. From all mother and for the mother accom- up production _________
Mary Everts.
are being quite rapidly reduced ev­ your co-operation in fl worth while
to the highest
______ level
___
------,
,
u
ral
.
I
Wdtc.Uoru
UMi
ought
to
be
.
hotery year, and wiU all be retired in project. Tickets art 4135 .for ’ the and tear on the cylinder wall, re­
■ T^e &gt;re^Ptlon committee will con­
panled by the most sons. These sons | and Increase the purchasing power
a few years more. The city owns evening's dance Including a floor ducing the coat of oil and gasoline, tut o( Honorable BUa Pbulkner. ur year tJun 1BM,'
do not necessarily have to be her. of the average American. In that
its own water works system that 13 show and refreshments. Come and and increasing mileage per gallon.
own sons.
; way only can we meet the terrific
w. A. Schader.
-*
FIRST SEMESTER
the pride of the dty, and the ad­ have a good time. Every cent above
Admission price Is thirty-five ; competition, at home and abroad,
Mr. Foote gave details about the
miration of all who visit It: also ex pen vi goes to the Foundation.
Richard Cook will have .WM
' CLOSES FRIDAY cents. Tickets may be secured at the | to which we will be subjected by the
Mrs. E. J. Pratt is general chair­ thorough coverage the company the publicity for this banquet.
i
owns its own sewage disposal plant
Banner office or from any member much lower standard of living and
man and Dr. Birge C. Swift of Mid­ plans to make in Its advertising
Watch the Banner for further an- 1
, . „
"’
,
,
of the Y. M. C. A.
1 much cheaper wages and cheaper
campaign
this
year.
It
not
only
has
pleted. Our streets are well paved dleville will be the master of cereLast year's banquet was especial- living costs of the Japanese,
Improved the fine line of rings it nouncements and get your ticket. Thirty Pupils Transfer to the
and we have a fire detriment that
|
High School From
ly fine and this one promises to be
He declared that America Is fachas presented in previous years, but carIy' t
for efficiency will rank right up the ticket*; Dr. D. D- Walton is
as good or better.
|
(Continued on page eight)
has
brought
out
a
new
steel
ring,
with the best of them. Fire loss In chairman of the program and Mau­
I
Junlor H‘*h
also a tool for determining how bad­ BARRY DIST. M.E A
the city last year was only 81,500. rice Foreman of the decorations.
ly worn are the walls of the cylin­
AND CO. INSTITUTE
«rmX’“tou”lh'.“"H2uS
and fully half of that was caused Mayor and Mrs. Charles Leonard
der. This tool will show what type
by a defective hydrant. So why and Dr. and Mrs. K. 8. McIntyre
~i
.
j schools, the new semester beginning
ahouldn't the people of Barry coun­ are to lead the grand march.
plained that their campaign was rrogram to Follow Dinner at Monday. The High school receives
ty and Hastings be proud—as well
0-1___ i
t hlrt v.lhr— perhaps more,
mom
aHdl.­
thirty-three,
addi
aimed to reach the jobber of piston
Woodland
School
on
as happy. But this most unusual
tional pupils, thirty being promoted
MEN JUMPED FROM
rings, the garage dealers, and the
condition didn't Just "happen." It
January 28
from Junior High, and three coming
individual car owners.
required a lot of thought and plan­
CAR SAVING LIVES Both talks were interesting and The second meeting of the M. E. A. In from the rural districts.
ning. so we say "hate off to the
Thoae corning from Central are:
Instructive. After they had been combined with our county Institute
present and past boards of super­
will
’’Mystery’’ Authors To Be Presented
wm be
ue held
nem in the
me Woodland
woodland school
school; Zabclle Adrounie, Jacquelyn Bachvisors and city officials." Mighty,■ William Reid and Howard given, three reels of "talkies," well- Wednesday evening, Jan. 29. with a ' man' Lawrence Beckwith, Marie
illustrated. demonstrated the preci­
good work we'll uy. and there are'
at Production Wednesday, Jan. 29th
Ware Had Bad Fright
sion methods of making Hastings dinner at 6:30 followed by six short1 Britten, Hubeit Bronson. - Clara
very few counties and cities that
piston rings, the adaptability of the discussion groups led by the follow- | Bush, Barney carpenter. Imogene
on Wednesday
can equal it.
Next Wednesday, the 29th. is the Hard Wayt" and "Station Static.”
rings for their Intended use. and the Ing chairmen; Program Planning,! Cooley. Doris Craig, Roy Dennison.
A near accident on Wednesday methods by which they will be sold Miss Mary Roush. Delton; Legisla-1 Pauline Everson. Jack Francisco, date for the civic Players four oneThe former is a hardboiled gang­
struck terror to the hearts of two to the public.
tion. Edwin L. Taylor. Hastings; i Gerald Garrison. Martin Hawthorn. act plays, to be given at Central au­ ster play chuck full of thrills. The:
men. who are today thankful to be
The members of the club found Public Relations. Herbert Rein- Joim Isenluitli. Agnes Johnson, ditorium at 8; 15 o'clock. Tickets are cast include* Jim Fennell, Harold;
. here to tell the story.
Logan.
Tom Myers. Wm. Kennedy
hardt,
Hastings;
Professional
PfobDonald
Kelly.
Evelyn
Leslie.
Elton
already
on
sale,
and
the
demand
this program, explaining one of our
William Reid and Howard Ware local industries, very interesting. tans. Mrs. Geraldine Wolverton. McGhan. Lois Myers. Rosanna shows the production will be greet­ and Russell Cleveland. It take*
Looking toward the future, mem­■ were out calling on the residents of
----------------------. ­ Nash. Velma Rayner. Audra Robin­ ed with a full house.
place in the upper room of a desert­
Middleville;. Finance
and
Member
They were pleased to hear that the uimjujiu
bers of the United Brethren churchi the Quimby community about three
This time a ballot will be attached ed farm house.
prospects for increased business for ship, Miss Leona Moon. Dowling son. Paul Rose. Robert Roush, Mag­
In the second ward, in a position toi o'clock Wednesday P. M- As they
-Station Static." the last play.
1836 are fine, and that the twenty- and Publications. Artie Reed, Nash­ dalene Schelb. Carroll Stamm. Ruth to each program, and the awards
give their services, are working Sat­ were leaving the Eugene Freeman
!
Kathryn Townsend and will be made by popular choice, ev­
five salesmen of the company are ville. After these are summarized a Stauffer.
urday afternoons excavating for oni residence, the men backed their car
eryone In this way giving expression, characters, Glenn Murphy. Russell
out In dead earnest to make this a very Interesting lecture will be given Karl Wellfare.
enlarged basement to extend under- and did not realize, because of the
by Judge E. J. Millington, who Is the
record-breaking year.
to the play they liked best of the Cleveland. Jack Wilson, Paul Ad­
the entire area of the church,, hard snow storm, that they had
cock. Irma Waters. Anna Eldred.
Judge of the recorder's court at SCHOOL OFFICERS’
four presented.
which Is a project the mem- backed onto the railroad track
Bud Wolfe, Margaret Densmore,
Cadillac and has been a speaker on ,
We are assured tiiat the plays Walter Powell, Joe Cowles. Burr
shlp
hopes
to finance
soon.. nearby. Their first Intimation of MANUFACTURING CO.
BIENNIAL MEETING will
the Michigan Education Association
be fully, as enjoyable as those Dennison. George Aten, Lola AshalThe growing congregation and largei danger was the wild shriek of the
district programs for five consecu­
HELD
ANNUAL
MEETING
given
for
the
hospital
benefit
last
Bunday school enrollment could usei whistle on tram No. 103 coming to
ter and Lucile Karmcs. The scene
tive years.
Convenes Here in Central month.
to good advantage additional roomi Hastings. The men Jumped to safely
Is laid in the old C. K. &amp; 8. depot,
Auditorium on Friday,
The authorship of the plays, as Just before train time, and the pas­
for work and social purposes.
Just as the train hit the car which Re-elects Old Officers and TWO ARE HURT
before, will not be disclosed un­ sengers. a non-deecript lot. include
was thrown about 40 feet- The train
February 7
Chooses Seven DiWHILE COASTING The biennial school officers' meet­ til the seals on the envelopes are a bride and groom, a demon child,
was stopped and the crew, expecting
DR. R. B. HARKNESS
rectors
broken at the close of Hie perfor­ an Irish lady from the auld sod. a
to see a bad accident, were happy to
ing will be held at Central auditor­
Gardner Suffers ium
mance.
' find Ujg^men safe and aound. But
nationally known singer, hair tonic
The annual meeting of the Has­ Suzanne
here Friday. Feb. 7. beginning
Next Bunday evening at 7:301 the 1829 Chevrolet was a wreck. tings Manufacturing Co. was held
Most of the actors participating salesman, a schoolmarm, and many
Three Fractures of Left
o'clock. Dr. Robert -B. Harkness, They surely were lucky.
others, all "types."
consultation, advice and instruction are thespians of experience.
head of the Barry County Health
Leg Saturday
"Night Lamp.” an episode at 3 A.
Director Barnett classes It "as the
pany’s offices. The following di­
upon matters pertaining to the
M.. takes place In the bedroom of a nuttiest, most utterly Insane play**
rectors were seMM:
E. Tyden.
A serious accident occurred at
BIG FUR COAT SALE.
Ute Methodist church. He wlll'alsJohnson.
Dolan. Rich- Middleville on Saturday when Sux- public schools of the county. All husband and wife, with Mr. and he hat ever directed. It's slapstick
Values in furs such as are being of­ Aben
■ ease'a subject of interest to every­
J n
-------anna, eieven veMrs old daughter of
ard
Orooa,
H.
DTCook,
Clarence
Mrs.
Harold
E.
Smith,
old
stagers
in
school'officers
attending
such
meet
­
one and present moving pictures al­ fered al Fairchild's tomorrow. Fri­ Crawford and Harold Phillipa. The Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Gardner, was
Civic Players performances. Inter­
so. m addition there will be special day and Saturday have seldom, if directors named the following ofTi- I hurt while coasting. Her toboggan ing shall be allowed and paid their preting the clever little story.
actual traveling expenses going to
ever, been shown in Hastings. See
music.
Mi4. E. J. Pratt directs "Three
cere:------------------President, E. Tyden: vice­ ' hit a tree on the golf club grounds
lf you want an evening of amure------Dr. Harkness Is a pleasing speaker their adv for particulars. Every­ president, A. E. Johnson; secretary,' and she sustained three fractures and returning from said meeting, Blind Mice." and has a splendid
said sum to be paid from the gen­
and will bring on interesting mes­ thing In the line of fun shown with O. W. Dolan: treasurer, Richard j of her left leg.
eral fund in the treasury of the group to aid her In putting this
experienced furrier present.
sage. come and hear him.
Orooa. The officers are the same
Rodney Schad. 11, was severely school district. Watch for more de­ thrilling story across— Warren Car­
ter, Tom Myers. .Bud Wolfe. Walter
cut on the head while coasting on tails of the program next week.
DINNER AT N&lt;X)N.
MIXED DANCES.
Saturday and Jack Gillett, aged D.
Powell. Wm. Kennedy and one girl.
DANCE.
Quimby L- A- B. will serve dinner
Clear lake every Saturday night.
Marceline Campbell.
DANCE.
at Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Freeman's Martin's orchestra.
"No
beer."
crossed the road near the school. He . Welcome Grange hall Friday
Thursday, Jan. 30 at noon.—Adv.
Rank Herrington, Proj?.—Adv. U.
Adv.
suffered cute about the (ace.
[night, Jan. 24.—Adv.
■What Do You Mean Goin’ the

Sponsoring Free
rci
Cooking School

office. Following are Um items:

87

Mentally diseased
3MU1
Adult afflicted casea.... 544517
TB. patients ..................
73830
Conveying patients to

Transportallon of crip­
pled children ..........
Transportation of gfflicted
children ....
127*3

rawai

Total

who renders bills directly to the
county. Following are the Items
paid by Barry county to the auditor
pllal ............................ $
Mich. Farm colony for
epileptics
236-88
State T. B- Sanatorium
State school for blind.
7.15
State school for deaf..
2134
State public schools ...
U. of M. hospital for
medical treatment of
adults ..............
9,554.78
Conveying children to
hospital
35110
Medical treatment

J

Michigan hone
training school
Total........ .................. Il&gt;«7*l
Another considerable Item ■
Mothers' pensions, for whir* tha
county of^Ban-y paid test yefc MK-

ALBERT DYER
FRACTURES BACK
While Riding a Toboggan at
Haitinga Country Club
Sunday
Tobogganing with Albert Bocksr,
Winn Green and

S' ¥

appendicitis

Local Audience to Vote On
Ranking of Four One-Act Plays ■
* * * *

Remodelling Church to
Supply Future Needs

operation

Lorraine Boeskool, suffered a frac­
tured vertebrae and from which aba

ANNUAL MEETING
OF RED CROSS
Reports of Year’s Wort aM
to Follow Dinner
Archie D. McDonald, chi

Friday evening. Jan. &gt;1, st
American Legion hall. Dinner

workers at 6:30 by
Legion Auxiliary. Th*

�THK HA8TINGB BANNER, THUMDAY, JANUARY M, 1W6

FAOK TWO

FREE!
100 lbs. SUGAR
AND

$19 Occasional Chair
SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 9 p. m. AT

Food Center
With every 25c meat purchase you will

get a Free Ticket on the 100 lbs. sugar.

YOU Are invited to attend our Free
Cooking School, Tuesday, Jan. 28 at
2 p. m. at Community Hall.

PORK
SHOULDERS
Whole, Untrimmed

PURE LARD

2«...

PORK SAUSAGE, Home Made

lb. 17c

HAMBURG

2 lbs. 29c

PJG LIVER

2 lbs. 25c

FRESH HAMS whole untrimmed

FLORIDA

ORANGES
176 Siu

291

25c

lb. 16c

lb.10c

CHUNK PORK, fat

lb.15c

BACON SQUARES

lb.18c

BACON by the piece

lb.23c

t

QUARTERS of BEEF
ORANGES 2i6 sue

doz.

27c

CLOTH

LEAF LETTUCE

lb. 11c

NEW BEETS

2 for 15c

bunch 6c

ONIONS

50

BAGAS

lb. 2jc

Cigarettes
Old Cottis. Camels',

Chesterfields.

Lucky Strikes

sm,

24 Vi th. Sock

99®

SUNDAY and MONDAY. JAN. 26 and 27
musical 1

CORONADO”
MATINEE SVNDAVrkOa

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. JANUARY 28

2 lbs. 23c

STARS OVER BROADWAY”

PEANUT BUTTER

2 lbs. 23c

DONUTS, Saturday Only

dozen 10c

And What Stars!
Pot O'Brien, Jane Froman, Jama* Melton, Joan Muir
Frank McHugh and Phil Ragan

MUELLER'S BREAD, Lb, Loaf

6c

MUELLER'S BREAD, Twin Loaf

9c

SEMINOLE

FLOUR

Colds

OLEO, Blue Ribbon

ARMOUR'S MILK, tall cans

LILY WHITE

25c

3 for 18c

4 rolls 25c

" 4 Free Ticket* on Chair

ROWENA Pancake Flour

SHIRLEY TEMPLE in

THE LITTLEST REBEL
MATINEE WEDNESDAY AT 3:08 O’CLOCK
John Bole*. Jack Holt, Karen Marley and BUI Robinson
Adults &gt;5 cents
Children 10 cents

SATURDAY ONLY. FEBRUARY 1
DOLBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

5 lb. sack 23c

ROWENA Buckwheat Comp. 5 lb. sk. 25c
GINGER SNAPS
3 lbs. 25c

Zane Grey’s "NEVADA
Raymond Hatton and (Henn Erikson
FEATURE NO. X

PERSONAL MAID’S SECRET”
Margaret Lladsay, Warren Hull, Anita Louise A Ruth Donnelly

COOKIES Chocolate

lb.

17c

Friday ni*ht and Saturday Matinee only—Final Episode
(No. 15) of Buck Jones in "THE ROARING WEST!"
Adults 13'ceute
Children 18 cent.

VOTED TO GIVE 80
ACRES TO 0. S. GOV’T.

When your engine knocks it is
a warning that something is
wrong with your car.
When you begin to sneeze and
cough it is equally as good a
warning that something is
wrong with your body.

Neglect of either warning
leads to grief and expense.

WED.. THURS. and FRI.. JAN. 29, 30 and 31

Things sure started smokin' when Nevada hit lawn!

PIRATE PANCAKE FLOUR 5 lb. sk. 19c

Special Barvioea Obtarving
Delightful Gathering Held
Aanivenary of Ohriitlan
Mellon was mada tn last W*ek‘*
Friday Night at Welcome
BanSie about Milton NoblM of,
Zndeavor
Grange Hall

Iffy's CountryCousin
Rises to Remark —

JOHNNY DOWNS. BETTY BURGESS. JACK HALEY
Eddie Ehuhbi. and His

Brown SUGAR

CELEBRATING FIFTY*
FIFTH BIRTHDAY

HASTINGS QUINTET
LOSES TO IONIA

lb. 4c

NEW CABBAGE

First Subscribed
For Banner In 1883

Nut week we Shall oetebrate an­
quart of this winning
other birthday at ChfaUm Eh...
tha difference lislwMn community meet was bald Friday
victory and defeat. &lt;IF anyone out- evening last in the Welcome Orange forms us that he subscribed for th*
lan
Endeavor ha* served the young
hall. It waa sponsored by lhe Wel­
people of the church and young
Victors Nose Out Bennett­ dote known except by the manu­ come ladlee' Aid. Mr*. L. J. Mat­
people, the world around, are happy
thews. who had been greatly inter­ ing nearly 53 yean. He recall* lhe to unite In the observance of this
'
men by Sfngli Point—
facturer!.
ested in this subject, took a leading date perfectly because he went to
A good supply of this hair restorer part In making the arrangements Isabella Oo. to teach school In the anniversary of the founding of the
।
- Second Team Wins
win be needed Friday night when tor the gathering. Mn. Alma Fin- fall of 1883. ordering the Banner first ChrliUan Endeavor society.
The local quintet bowed their lhe boys meet Altegan. And then
Through all these year* Christ­
gleton. president of the Ladles' Aid, before ho teft. During that winter
: heads In defeat last Saturday night another charge will have to be
ian Endeavor has stood steadfastly
but kept their chins up while they utilised at Ouko on Saturday aided In the planning and had the Banner office burned and he re-. for Christ and the church; it has
charge al the meeting. The crowd
were doing It. The final score.was11 night. Allegan ha* as good a basket
-------- -*•
. helped thousand* of young people to
present filled the hall. It was in
‘’ 15-14 In favor
of .Ionia.
--------I ball crew as they did in football.
.------------------------------------------------------- remain true to the ideals of Jesus
every way a delightful affair.
Christ; It has trained countless
The Ionia crew started off with , They
th, locai ta(It |n football.
Rev. Karl Keefer of Watervliet been Banner subscribers longer numbers
nllmk-r, •----------- —
— of
-­
to assume
positions
«vo field Roals. Then lhe Bennett-1 despite a stubborn attempt to win and his two daughters were present
than
Mr. Robinson? U so, we would leadership
|fad.r,hlt in their local churches.
men evened the count by sinking a ta the nnai minutes. However, tfie
hnd took part in tfie program. Rev. like to hear from them.
.In addition,
- - , pair. However, the visitors were able
quajrter let lhe boys know their Keefer was a former pastor of Wel­
many of our national
leaders are former Christian Ento garner another field goal before own ilrenith and that i* Old Iffy'S
come church and It was a pleasure
deavorar*. who are glad to pay trlbthe first quarter ended 6-4 in favor | country cousin's point in this para­ to meet him again. There was first WOODLAND FATHER
ute to lhe
the or
organisation
ANn enN RANnnrTl। uU
8‘nl“Uon which gave
’ of-lonla'
.
.
..
I graph. Allegan has been beaten this community singing, then followed
ANU
oUN DANUUCI
hiiu uun
unnuuui j them valued training in their early
The second quarter found live two year despite a good record and they special numbers.
teams playing on an equal basis; j can
btaU!n again. IF it become*
X and to the Ideals to which
A feature of lhe program was the. B. A. Walpole of M. 8. 0. Will SX*h
each one made six pointe with the t nw-nory a radio-directed ball will
have remained true through all
score at lhe end of the halt 12-10 L* lnvented for the sake of Rutgers- singing by members of the old glee
—.- publie
life.
Be Quest Speaker TueeI
in favor of Ionia. On* of the inter- I an Ethloplan word meaning Has­ club, which was organized by Rev.
The three Christian Endeavor so­
day
Jan. 28
. eating feature* of the second quarter Un&lt;a But that wiu n0{ be necessary. i^eefgr. Muri and Ray Neeb. mem­
. Night,
.
,alette*
cleUes of Um local First United
bers of lhe former glee club, drove,
The
annual
Woodland
Father
and
1
Brethren
church
are planning to
i was that Coach AlbaQgh did not
tron-clad defense whieh the
one of them 170 and the other 190
- --------- —
*.-»-»■-- —
-•-------- --------•­
j his alternate team.
I boys put up in the last half of the miles, to take part tn the program. Son banquet will be held at the observe
Christian
Endeavor
week
l The last half was a fast
' jonla game will be sufficient.
There were members from Grand I Woodland school building on the from Jan. 28th to Feb 2nd.
&gt; lous battle In which the visitors
otsego is a different proposition
The following service* have been
evening of Tuesday, January 28. at
1 only scores were three foul shots. I a€3jn and lt can safely be said that Rapids and other communities as,'6:30 o'clock. Flans are rapidly being planned by the Young People*
well a* from the Immediate locality. 1
They made two in the third quar-: Hastings will beat them on their Enjoyable readings were given by | completed to make it one of the Council of the Board of Christian
ter and one in the last. The Ben- lQwn territory. IF they accept the Harvey Burgess of this city, and by | best ever held.
Education:
neltmen were blanked in the third ■ f,ct
OUe80 W(U take advantage
Bunday. Jan. 2d—The Young
L. J. Matthews and Orville Tuttle. |, B. A. Walpole of the Michigan
I quarter, but came through with four or ever gitueUon to*score. They will
plan and ...
conduct
who live In
m the Welcome neighbor- State College vocational agricultural People will
,rr&lt;
a, ’ the’
who
points in the last quarter to stage an be in there trying to win their own hwwi
Mrurt
Patil nnd Rena' department nil been obtained as * worship service at the Bunday
speaker of the evenIns. The school school hour. Ruth McLaughlin W
; incomplete Prank hte»riu-ell_finish,
gtme ln
of any defense nanauiiiet «va nw.L.1
SImSS mShtSSSSby a!Tpres“ I c,ub has had quite a little difficulty lhe chairman. At 6:00 there wUl ba
I Gladstone
was
high
point
man
for
~ ‘
- —
tactics whlch the local boys can use.
J the local* with three field goals and
Now for the second team. Watch ent Bm the m£t ntere.Un,2nd ln *curln« Mr Walpote for lhe be- a Joint meeting of lhe Junior. In­
two foul shots: a total of eight them closely and you will see what pleasing; featurTol' the galher^g clllon « ne te in great demand all termedlate and Senior Christian
| points. Campbell and Jepson of the It means to go native. The varsity Is pleasing feature of the gathering over the slate. Dr. Davenport will , Endeavor societies. Committee In
visitor* shared high point honors, being led by the youngsters at pres­ was the visiting and the getting to­
I charge. Leon West. Mrs. Lenabclls
each making one field goal and two ent by way of their victorious gether of the present and former The rest of the program is not com­ Tift and Mr*. Daisy Stine.
neighbors it is hoped to make this
I foul shots.
Thursday. Jan. 30—The young
pleted yet.
campaign over all and sundry
• The
second ' stringers
came From now on the varsity will community meeting an annual af­
people will conduct a consecration
The
charge
for
the
banquet
will
be
j through to win a one-sided battle make it a double win if the under fair.
25c per person. Every man Is urged meeting in connection with the reg­
■ 33-5 over the loriia second team. {
to secure a son and every boy la ular prayer meeting. Committee
dogs can hold their pace.
PAID DESERVED TRIBUTE.
1 Walton wrested high point honor* .
___________ At the Commercial Club meeting urged to secure a dad for this event. Evadene Struble and Pauline EVerj from Cook in this game with six '•w.C|4Ut| I r nCDATC
The Woodland Chapter of Future
Tuesday noon. Rev. W. Maylan
I field goals. Cook made five field NAbHVILLt UtUAIt
Friday. Jan. 31—The eighth an.
Jones paid a beautiful and deserved, Farmers of America is sponsoring
SS’Vtet o“mJ‘hot ,,Ulng,hort
TEAM SETS RECORD tribute to the late King George of the banquet. The Woodland Home nual Christian Endeavor banquet
England. Mr. Jones lived in Wale* Economics girls under Mias Schuler, will be held at 8:30. Supper comThe varsity will try to bring tlveir
i
assisted by mothers of the F. F. A. I —
mittee, &gt;=□.
Mrs. Sadie Hurless. Mrs
and
In
England
before
he
came
to
average of is per cent shots made Gains 12 Points Qualifying
Alene Struble and Mrs. Edith Sny­
America, and was a subject of King boys, will serve the dinner.
up to a higher standing when they,
for State Elimination
der; Decora Won*. Lois Myers. Mar­
George. He spoke In the highest
meet-live Allegan crew Saturday
8UDDEN
PASSING
jorie Raldt and Mre. Stine; Pro­
i terms of him a* a man and as a
night. They have made on an aver-''
UoniCBlB
OF HENRY MEAD. gram. Mary Stamm.
ruler. He said that he was very
age of 37 shots each game.
\ By winning its last debate al Pc- democratic tn hi* ways, loved the
The line-ups for the teams were. ’ wamo. the Nashville High school de- people, and thought of their good Tuesday
•
v.
of ..
a heart attack, his -.-.-..i
death ' mon for young people by lhe pastor,
Hnstlngs &lt;14»
’Ionia
—“
** ', bating■ *team
—- •has
— —
““ —• •for
— the
&lt;151
qualified
in every way.
He waa a home following a bad fall on the Ice on. 7:00 P. M The young people's choir
Zander stale eliminations which start Feb. man who did not court lhe lime­ the Henry Osborn farm where he i win render a musical concert undei
Gladstone
Campbell 121. This trio, composed of Gladys' light, and he was also a strenuous had worked for 35 years. Surviving ■ the direction of Mr*. Arlene 8Inj­
Brady
Martin Eddy. Richard Mason and Grace .
ure lhe wife, two sons. Leon and ble. There will be both vocal and
Ransom
Arndt । Wood, has not been scored against,
Ralph of Hastings, and three instrumental numbers and two short
Ironside
R.G.
Jepson I this season. One more debate 1* to FORMER ASSYRIA MAN PASSES. daughters, Mrs. Elsie Cogswell and talks an Christian Endeavor work.
Walldorff
Minrklpv
1
**
held
before
the
state
contests.
Mrs. Hasel Dryer of this city, and
Ernest
Norman
Olmstead,
a
Bat
­
All who are interested are invllHastings; ”
Substitutes:--------------------------------- that with Comstock this Friday
Mrs. Jennie Endsley of Coldwater.
tle
Creek
grocer
and
a
former
rest*
ed to thia service, and a special in.
Crothers. Struble. Ionia; Webster.
~
w.«hvTn»
dent of Assyria township, died very
vitation J* extended to forme:
Th,Uh«. Sh«d
W.1I.C.
' This Is a splendid record and the suddenly of heart disease at his First United Brethren church. At Christian Endeavors of the church
Indiana.
j Nashville young folks should be con- grocery in Battle Greek Tuesday
—Mre. Amy I. Bower, general di­
gra tula ted on their success.
morning. He was 41 year* of age. Barry County Rond Commission.
rector of Christian Education of Un
a World war veteran, serving for
Funeral services will be held at First U. B- church.
DEATH TAKES JNO. NELSON. some time In France, the son of Mr. the home on Thursday afternoon at
| in a recent issue of the Kalama­ an0 Mrs. Dan Olmstead of Assyria;! two o'clock, the Bev. E. O. Me- INTERESTING POMONA
.
zoo Gazette appeared a notice of township. He is survived by his Sherry officiating with Interment
GRANGE PROGRAM
the death of John C. Nelson, who widow and three daughters, and by In the Striker cemetery. Sympathy is
Barry Co. Pomona grange Is spon­
hi* parents, two sisters, and six extended to the bereaved one*.
soring a meeting of granges to be
Here I am back again. Ladles Mrs. Sylvia Royal, near Mattawan. | brothers. The funeral takes place
held with Welcome on Saturday
UNDERGOES OPERATION.
Mr. Nebon wasr-known for his1 today.
: and Genmen. with the opening
Jerry Andrus received word on Jan. 25. the importance of which
---------- e • »----------------I sentence in the first person. All of , kindness to and love for animals
Monday of the Illness of his broth­ was stressed tn the Banner of lastl
which means that 1 will soon drop and fowls. For several year* hl* j TWENTY-FIVE FAST CO.MMANweek. The business meeting if
DERS HERE MONDAY NIGHT, er. Miles Andrus, of Lincoln, Nebr,
my cloak of modesty and Ln deep mode of transportation was an oldcalled for 10 A. M. Pot luck dinnei
stentorian tones proclaim that the fashioned buggy hitched to an ox.. Commandery Inspection at Ma- formerly of this city. Mlles under­ promptly al noon. Two good speak,
Hastings High school basket ball He also used the ox for farm work. J0™0 h111 Monday night brought a went an emergency operation for era and several entertainment fea­
team looks- like a winner. That Frequently he drove to Blooming-1larR(; number of guests here. Battle appendicitis on Sunday evening. At tures appear on the afternoon pro­
1 ------------------------------------------------------------,9r*nd Rapid*.
last
1 Rapids.
report heEscanaba,
was doing as well as
statement Is made in the face of a dale with hl* dog riding on the back ,
; M.rxb.l!
Marshal), .nH
and —
Washington,
D. C-. i; possible. Mlles Is superintendent of gram which is open to all. Pro,
Of the. OX}
"
——
record of four games lost and two
agent* for the Hardware Mutual In­ gram as follows;
Deceased was
was bom
oorn in
in this
mu city
eny on
on bcb’?. rcPresent*dwon. Al lhe same time the ray of
10:00 A. M. Business. Election o|
“
Iwv-U...
Si*...01011
Dkvidson
of
St
Joseph,
in
­
.
surance
Co.
in
Nebraska. All hope
sunshine penetrating the dark past ' July 30. 1863. locating near Bloom­
officers.
. 35
vears ago.
35 years
ago. Burial
Burial 1 »P®cUng officer, was accompanied by । for hl* speedy recovery.
15 the fact that the boys have piled ingdale over
.12:00 Dinner.
ert
‘
i his staff of twenty-five pas', com­
up a point margin in their games
1:00 P. M community Singing
HAD FINE TRIP.
e w»
! mander*.
r
won. and have not lost a game by
The Banner on Tuesday received Leader. R. B. Walker.
w&lt;B9^&gt;e
Whqn
—the president presides st
at i „lThe »°rk proved of great interwl.
more than four points.
Piano Solo-Ray Matthews.
.
®ervcd by 0,6 Eastern a card, sent from Eau Callie, Flori­
Consequently I have mixed a po^. Xa&amp;Inet meetings we wonder if he °,nncr
Address—The Grange And Its Re,
da. from C. W- Clarke, announcing
~
tent concoction ot dynamite, por­ ask* the secretary to present the | Stars al 6:30.
his arrival al that delightful place : la tion to Farm Life—Holly Hubbell
***----------------cupine quills, and Bermuda onions -unfinished bu*iness"^-or does he | Moat speculators
arc engaged In in lhe following word*: "In Eau
Vocal Solo—Mrs. Henry Frost.
,
have
a
sense
of
humor
tn
such
matwhich can be injected intravenously ।.
wymg
trying io
to recoup mei
their losses from Gallie. By Golly. All well. Fine roads I Reading—Miss Chrystai Thomas.
and wh4n that extra point, or points. Ilcr5'
j previous speculations.
I Address—The Townsend plan. Jo­
I and weather from Kalamazoo."
] *eph Warnock.
Closing Song.
। Mr. Hubbell 1* an active member
I nf the State Grange Executive
Comm., and comes to us weU
recommended as a speaker and Mr.
Warnock Is one of lhe best to be
obtained as an authority on lhe
Townsend plan, plan to attend. Re­
member that Welcome welcome* you.
) — Mrs-Lena Norris. Lecturer.

HOG'S HEADS

HEAD LETTUCE, Hard, Crisp
each 5c
NEW CARROTS
'
bunch 5c

SUGAR

Sporting Items

WELCOME CORNERS
COMMUNITY MEET

We can't fix your car but we
can fix your cold.
We have all the old-time medi­
cines and all the new ones.
Just tell us which one you pre­
fer. And.if all others fail, try
Peckham's Remedy, equally
good for young and old. Has
been sold and praised for the
post forty-five years

Superviiors Do a Oraciout
Act lo Aid the Yankee
Springs Project
The Barry county board of super­
visor*. at their final session on
. Thursday of last week, voted to
transfer lhe ownership of an 80
i acre farm which will add that much (io the area of the govemmenti sponsored Yankee Springs park, to
j the federal government.
1 This farm came Into the posscsi slon of the county by deed from Its
lowner. when he became an inmate
of the county home. More Utah
| half of It Is covered with Umber,
i Because the 80 acres h not a part
of the original government plan for
i lhe park, the permission of lhe
1 government authorities will be neci esaary before this gift can be uc1

ft was a gracious thing for the
board to do. In view of the wonder, ful work the government Is doing In
। that area, which will greatly bene­
fit Barry county.
I

! MEETING OF SUNDAY
|
SCHOOL SUPEBrNTENDENTS.
Mr*. A. A. Griffin, county presl-/'
, dent of the Barry County Council'
, of Religious Education, ha* called a
meeting of all Sunday School super­
intendents to be held on Sunday
i from 3 to 5 P. M.. al the Hastings
Methodist church. Several import­
ant county-wide quesUotu are to be
dlKusaoa,

.

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
THE REXALL DRUGGISTS

DOWLING GROUP
The Dowling Clothing class met
an all day meeting. Eleven members
wan preaent. a sleeve fitting lesson
wAa presented. Mrs. Fancher was a
guest and assisted the leaders. Ths
nexi tesaon will be Jan. 30 with Mrs.
Gertrude Gaskill for an all day
meottag-Myra Wright, eocy.

�TWt BMfWOS BANNER. TUCTSDAT. JANUARY M, 1936
. The annual meeting of the Co-op. I oft Friday night last week instead They were stumps and all. which
I office In California was not started I they were not overly aatlsfs
made them hard to handle.
I until a year later. November 1MB. being rury alow, and Indians
James and Gerald William* spent
and was at the flourishing town of practically every mile of it a L.~ —
. P. hall Wednesday afternoon. The nlng.
_.7_
last week in Chicago. Ill, visiting
1 Coloma, which waa really Sutter's' murder and plunder. Various stage
1 annual report will be given and oth­
friends.
MUI. where gold was discovered The lines to carry mall and express from
This Wednesday will occur the
AflDDLEYILLF.
er
business
transacted.
! postoffice at Ban Francisco served a 81. Louis to Ban Francisco were
creamery annua) meeting and we
J. H.hoTtea
Miller's"and
young
boy drank
Mrs Harriet Fox of °™ndQi^' 1 some*
"was quite
ba'diy ) are looking-for a crowd "to-attend
territory for 200 miles around, a started but generally didn't last
i—onr. without roart.
Ids. mother of Mrs. W. E. Sisson. । burnKj frotn wme. A physician was the meeting and dinner. A full jro------- —J1;.'
------------------ 1 territory
roads, and
and ex- j tong, until the Butterfield line ne(Continued from page one;
(Comlnucd from page one)
' tending way back into mountain gottated the distance In about 24 to
passed wwxy
away a&gt;
at tier
&gt; called
I days.
, - -- pwiwu
irci home
iiuiik tn
ui Grand ....... .. and the child 1* improving . gram is nn for business and enter­
-,” '
!----------------------------------------------------mtnnantei nnaratm. n..r n» n«.t«n «ulchea and ravine*, where men 27_p,.n
------- .— «_«—i— - II i"oft.
.i~.im
tainment for both lhe member* and
This Monday
cun._U»
Kn, Express
Bprcu In
IntiMM
For the county Poor Bsard's'----- ... - ..
a^^^d
I tere feverishly hunting for gold.
Then came
the Pony
188*5 For
" |. th. R - n
found .s- their wives.
Brothrrhocxt ma
leezi that tTt™
aaamaH wn
tn elvacrXg
mnra “
aat.
demands.18.^4
Uixill 4?
them tiierr was ex- i^n
long Illness.
has iceOne
01 me R.toe
F. other
L&gt;. DO&gt;3
lOUrul
ffi’A SSraiBraS
a way had been found to take mail XlSn
^ipeX
at her Mrs
son',Emma
homeBlSSOn
the past
w silppery
day
thatI.IC
he
Mr. Fischer, eon of Arthur Fischer,
•*»'
after the basket ball game Friday our speaker. ■
isiacuon ww wesi_s craving ior
'month assisting with the care of could not stop and slewed into a
which saved the tong, dangerous M. .rurdwt ninnln. horu. UU for ««*» «en •■ Mm:
While sliding down hlU
evening, ran. off a culvert and dis“!• p“.......................................
.
“J* J"fiS5f
would carry many thousanoi of dol­
Last week we said that Mr. and I damage much to his.relief.
trip around the Horn. As a result a est. sturdiest running horsM that' for welfare were as follows:
| abled hla auto. Fortunately no one golf course Saturday P M.
lars from a bank In one city to a ship carrying mall would bring let­ could be bought were procured, and
Rent ERA warehouse 8
66 00
as injured.
Gardner, deilghter ot Mr. i-----Mrs. Clarence Van Patten had pur- j We are glad to report that H. M.
bank In ‘another city. That was be­
Repairs to county home 1378.78
ters and papers to Ban Francisco scores of young dare-devil riders
Jack Gillette had a close call Fri- Clinord Gardner, struck a trw.
chased the Jacob Geiger farm. Wr 1 Potter is much Improved.
fore somebody conceived toe idea of
were hired to ride them. Relay ata-1 Soldiers' relief
200 00
had no idea of questioning the! Sylvester Van Horn's track took
robbing stages, which later became about once a month.
64.34
Hundreds and hundreds of strong tlons were placed anywhere from 50 I Old age assistance board
source of our information, but It a large load of walnut logs
quite a popular sport The money
Salaries superintendent*
able-bodied men from the east, who to 123 miles apart. With Ulis system
seems we were mlslnformed. Mr. j dianapolls. Ind, one day las
would be carried in a little sack, or had successfully met the dangers of a letter would leave Sacramento and ।
• of poor 2.237.73
a small, frail trunk. It speaks vol­
The total of all these items is i: Van Patten Informs us he has not;
the Overland Trail In quest of gold, in 13 days would arrive In New York
bought this farm We are glad to
umes-for the honesty prevailing at
were marooned in these gold-fields, City, which was going some in those 854.677.75.
the time, when it is said that never up to 200 miles or more distant from days, or at St. Joseph. Mo, in 0
For the year 1936 the board ap- Ij make thia correction.
a dollar waa stolen. In toe Sxpres- Ban Francisco As a rule they were days. It cost g5 in addition to lhe propriated 19.000 for emergency re- | Several Freeport people attended |
. lhe U. B. prayer meeting at the
man's Monthly an old lime messen­
10c
postage
to
send
a
letter
across
lief
in
addition
to
the
ampunt
given
very successful In panning gold, but
home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fox
ger tells of a trip that he made
many of them would have given ail by this method. Today it costs six above. It the other items should be
from Kalamazoo to Grand Raplda lhe gold they had for "news from cents to send a letter to California i no more than last year—and they |llast Thun day evening.
in December. 1857. There were six home" and from the outside world.
»v.~. by airplane and it will reach Its, are likely to be fully as much—the : Mrs. Jennie Wlbert of Hasting*
coaches in toe caravan. Five of
was a | destination tn leu than one day. total for relief expenditures by was the guest of Mrs. Prank Wilton
Among these gold f* iters
'
them were loaded with passengers,
-! Alex•
I""
—- »n event it was when the‘Barry county in 1936 will be the
What
young fellow by the
Nearly 150 people gathered in the
and the sixth with express. Includ­
nrM -1-Pony Express" arrived in Sac-, sum of 804377.15. No one can tell
ander T. Todd, who "-----,head.------M. E. church basement on Tuesday
ed in the express were two kegs of
He conceived the Idea of storting an. ramento, was described in' toe how much more may be required for evening. Jan. 4. to welcome lhe
silver coin, each keg containing
individual "expreas line" from Ban newspaper of that town. Business emergency welfare relief in view of new pastor. Mbw Fem Wheeler A
MJXX) and weighing about 3U0 Francisco to the mining cahipd. Juki was suspended; courts adjourned; the situation as it exists now. The
ra.ru government
,o..rnm«n, n., practically
pnuur..., bounMul DOI luck .Upper. «rrrt
pounds. Tlse party left Kalamazoo
as had been done around Boston bands played; bonfires lit; the Sac- federal
UlhUr.L from Ihr has
.nuiuS,. .nd '"“F.'J*’1'. “JE2!l’',SnSS
at 7:30 in toe morning and was due W.M
.a ...
"Hussars" were out in full withdrawn from the situation, and ’7-7."and other eastern townsWdlWduil
few ramento
dra. uniform, .nd U&gt;e -le«dln« lire Mau h«r cut 1U .pproprUuon
“Id- J? nlSETmSL
to reach Grand Rapids at 4*P. M, l.w ,..r. belor.. nr
but due to snow drifts, didn't reach miner to go on horseback lhe 2001 citlaens" mounted on the most for the emergency relief from 812.- jHca
a wayside house several miles out of mliea’or more to San Francisco. and 'spirited horses, drove out to meet 000.000 last year to 19.000,000 this
Grand Rapids, until after 8 o'clock
the oncoming Pony Express rider. | year. This may throw a considerably half o! the school Rev J. I patreturn, to get his mall, would take The newspaper further states that; larger burden on Barry county.
। dorfjrepresenting the U. B. church.
idorf-/representing
at night. Leaving 600 pounds of sil­
several weeks' time and several hun­
‘Ralph Moore, for the M. E. church
ver &lt;810X1001 in hU coach all night
dred dollars of expense, as living ex­ 75 different running horses were i The board of supervisors fixed the and Mrs. Wm. Mishler for the L A.
long, and unguarded, didn't appeal
penses were terrifically high. So used to make the trip from St. Jo- county budget to be raised by the S. Readings were given by Mrs.
to toe messenger, responsible for ita
Oar Entire Stock Of
young Todd started this Individual seph. Mo. to California In 10 1-2 I taxpayers at 890.000 in addition to J. L Ickes and Mrs. Geo. Thomp­
safe delivery. He succeeded in in­
flxpress line, liming his trips so days. The -Pony Express" was a ro- that the county will receive about son. Special songs were sung by
ducing one driver to press on
mantle enterprise, the most spec-1 811.000 from fees, making the total
young
people's
by
the
through the storm with toe precious that he would get back to San tacular and typically American of receipts that will go in to toe gen- the
lh* &gt;
°“’1« *£
opR’ choir
h? . and b
&gt; toe
Francisco about once a month to
cargo. Though the coach didn't tip
all of our agencies of communica-1 eral fund of toe county 8101X100. It
«**• *
®‘;
over but once, it took over four rAect the Incoming ship, with mail llon. Though these lone riders went can ba seen that 863.677 15 of that
and newspapers. And did he soak for long stretches through territory ‘ wliijie paid out for relief work in P,ft&gt;ed •
m
Supt
hours to make lhe four miles into
'em!
Each
miner
was
charged
1100
infested
with h„
hostile Indians, yet] 1936. in al) probability, and there is
12
Grand K-apia.
Rapids -roe
The Express
urana
express Agent
'nUr hu Mme on ^d.M
infested with
' ‘ onc or lwo
in Grand Rapids was aroused and
d
about 2 000 of them. Ibut
° - thc rldefl as X . a possibility that it will exceed Ibat. “‘bort talk. Rev_ ®^ey
heaved
7ust a start™ £&gt;r™U.-j
—--u
Paul ano Mrreuitn Lewis sang two
For Women and Misses
u .LndTuI
__________
number,. p.ul nl.,ed . sunTr ,c
heaved a sigh of relief when he
delivered he charged 84 00 Ml
°i IUBII
mail MCI,
fell UlW
into/ lUr
Ml UIC
»lu»d.°iu»|
—
MU. Wheeler woke
Reduced up U&gt;
turned that goo pounds of silver _.uer . . .
r„„l of bravery, and
Indians. Th.
Tha feats
FREEPORT.
1 feelingly of toe welcome accorded
the scores of hair-breadth escapes)
*. ot lhcM hundred, of In- .jd,
could ,et He carried u.ck of these daring riders really place ;■ We understand that recently a her and of her hopes and desires
Sr^'L^nS^e^;^
man was here iqoking for a modern for the church and community.
them among the unsung heroes, and
house to rent, as he desired to move Rev. C. L. Wilkins pronounced the
seemed to indicate that they bore
2, 1•. At present, there benediction. Of sjieclal interest was |
to lhe American. Adams. Wells- llevc lhe
hu proflu „„ a charmed life. Abraham Lincoln h?
al least five vacant houses here the fact that there were seven |
Fargo, or other great Express Com­
was elected President in i860; the are
*
over
glXXn
a
day
for
a
considerable
but none of them are modern only preachers present at thia gathering.,
panies, which developed into giant '
Civil war soon followed; a telegraph
tone.
At
that
he
waa
rendering
a
The
one has a furnace and none of
.... Sunday evening service at I
concerns, and rendered great serv­
service for a much lower cost than line was completed through to CalJ- ' them has city water. Can anything the **
M. "
E. churchras
was
both
unique
both
unique
ice. though not entirely overlooking
individual miners could go to San fomla; the promoters of the Pony I be done about it?
land inspirational. Miss Wheeler
the question of "charges."
Express
were
ruined
financially
and
j
Francisco and get their own mall
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Gless of' gave a very interesting account of
But westward continued
the
lhe unique enterprise went out of
course of empire In 1803 cainc lhe and papers. But that was too big a existence. It was temporarily suc­ Bowne were Sunday dinner guests . the lives and stirring deaths ot John 1
Many coats priced as low as
snap for one man to have, and
of their daughter. Mrs. Vivian An- ' and Betty Stem, missionaries to
vast Louisiana Purchase, very much
ceeded by the slower stage coach. deraon. and Dr. and Mrs II. B. We- ) China, wiio were so cruelly put to
others soon got Into toe game.
against lhe advice of the conserveAt Ulis point toe great Adams Ex­ But it served lu purpose admirably, del and family at the latter's home, death by communists, and the mllive element. That purchase includ­
press Co, wllii strong eastern con­ bringing news "from home* to those
Anolher
Townsend
meeting
is
to
raculous
way
in
which
their
three
ed territory that extended way up
nections came Into toe picture and strong-hearted miners, who were be held on Saturday night of this months old baby. Helen Priscilla,
somewhere into the Rocky Moun­
absorbed most of the smaller con­ shut of! from lhe world, and who week in lhe basement of the M. E. was saved through the heroic death
tains. Our fur-traders pushed right
cerns The American Express • Co did so much for the development church. At this meeting, Mr. Er- of a native Chinese in her stead,
on. unmindful of boundaries. John
couldn't see ita great rival, the of lhe Pacific coast states.
nest J. Moore of Kalamazoo, mana- The male quartet sang at the aervJacob Astor had built htl fur-trad­
W. R. Cook.
Adams Expreas Co, walking away
ger of the Fourth Otmgressional ice. which was also attended by toe
ing post at the mouth of the Co­
with all this rich western business,
district, will be the speaker. We congregation of the U. B. church
lumbia. but for years our occupation
so the American started the WelUunderstand lhe local group is grow- and Rev. J. I. Batdorf. their pastor,
FAIR LAKE.
of Oregon was in theory only. In the |
Fargo in competition which became
ing fast and at the last report 64 j John Fish, who was confined to
A
baby
boy
was
bowi
Jp
Mr.
and
40's some restless American souls
very keen. Water freight rates from
' had lined up. Frank Cool heads the hu bed by illness nearly all of last
began to brave lhe west and toll
toe east to the Pacific coast, were Mrs. clay Rorabeck. January 13 at local group.
week, is slowly recovering and is
wearily over the mountains in
dropped from 60 cents a pound down Nichols hospital. He has been named
Much sympathy is expressed to now able to be up part of the time.
search of new Eldorado. It was dis­
to 40 cents. But the idea of having Clarence Malcolm. Mrs. Iris Norris Stanley Malcolm, who iuid the mis- ■ Mrs. Maude Rogers is confined to
covered in 184D when gold was found
ot
Carlton
Is
caring
for
the
home
in
to travel half way' round toe world
fortune to lose three fingers and her bed at present and is under the
in Sutter's mill race, which led to a
to get from 8t. Louis. Mo, to San Iter absence.
veritable stampede.
Mr. and Mrs Ed. Acker of Au­
Francisco was too much for those
The Postmaster General tried to
husky Californians, and they began gusta were Sunday guests of the Al­
get mall to peopte who had emi­
to make aggressive demands for a len Griffins.
grated to the west coast, but the
Mrs Lottie Colllster and children
railroad across the plains, or a good
expense was so much greater than
wagon road, otherwise they threat­ spent Thursday night with Mrs.
lhe revenue, that lhe service was
ened to secede from toe union. Earl Frits and family near Delton.
abandoned. Tliere those hardy old
When gold was discovered some
pioneers were left thousands of
overland stage lines started, but Ing
miles from dear ones back east, and
no possible way to communicate
with them. In the late '40's the
government did contract to make
one delivery of letters from Oregon
City, then the metropolis, to Wes­
ton. Missouri, from whence they
Sheldon &amp; Sheldon
would be forwarded to any postof­
fice In the east. The postage on
single-sheet letters was 50 cents, of
which one-fourth would go to the
rider who carried the letters. Thia
gave people on lhe west coast an
Reliable Abstracts of Title . . . Real Estate Loans
opportunity to write tha folks back
home Just once a year. Imagine
Choice Heads
Sweat and
Real Estate Bought and Sold on Commission
those lonely settlers in the west shut
Each
Juicy, Doi.
off from the world, surrounded with
the most primitive conditions, and
FHONK SIU
1U So. Church St
nuUon.
Mich.
you can Imagine something of what i
It meant to be among the early set­
tlers of lhe west.
The greatest
spiritual need tn tills great emigra­
tion to the Pacific coast was news
from home and kindred, or com­
munication with any human being,
who might be able to bring aid in
case of sickness or trouble. These
conditions, along with the discovery
of gold in California helped to bring
about the letter express service to
lhe west. Though perhaps the Klondyke. Alaska, "gold rush." may have
resembled it, there probably will not
be another one like the California
gold rush of "4fi" with all of its
crude, pioneer conditions. Here was

EXPflESS CO. JNO |:
“POW" EXPRESS

■SiBNUMF }
"j
IS BCE ITEM

*n°' SpSn:

«•***

ur

ireatest

S*AL€
Luxuriously Fur Trimmed

COATS

SPORT COATS
S5.8S

CINDERELLA DRESSES

FRESH FRUITS

SHELDONS ABSTRACT OFFICE

INSURANCE•BONDS

New Arrivals of New Dresses $2-

and VEGETABLES
Oranges

Lettuce

O
Jm^/ G

VEGETABLE OYSTERS bunch 5c
RHUBARB

lb. 15c

each 18c

CAULIFLOWER
NEW CARROTS

bunch 6c

lb. 15c

TOMATOES

SWEET ONIONS

each 6c

NEW CABBAGE

leas successfully In rivers, streams
and creeks. Gold •'came easy, and
went easy.- California had Just
been added to the Union as a terri-

the territory until the government
established one In San Francisco In
November 1848. The second post­

ODORLESS
DRY
CLEANING!
garments - returned

System.

year

to

Choice Creamery

JEWEL
COMPOUND

2

LBS.

BUTTER

29d I

Hamburger

lb. 5c

POUND

Fresh Ground

2 «&gt;• 29c

Pork Sausage

Beef ROAST

Homo Made | "W
Pound ...

Kettle Roast
Pound ....

1/C

I £
I
G

cleaning

You are invited to attend our FREE COOKINC
Try Our One-Day

SCHOOL, Tuesday, Jan. 28, ot 2 P.M., ot the Com­
munity Holl. FREE Groceries Will Be Given Away!

FRANDSEN'S STO.

Ths Bond Box
(Cleaning- System)
II. E. CARRICK. Prop.
ulated in Phone Direc­
tory as CARRICK, 2461

EXCLUSIVE, BUT NOT EXPEN
Phone 2772 UJe Deliver

HASTINGS

EAST STATE STREET

$6-

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THZ COUNTY—
TRADE AT HOME

TU»l Cowto—tM IU Sia&gt;

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Editorials

THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1B3S

YIAt OF THI BIC RAINBOW

This and That

ANOTHER FALSE ALARM.
I caught them, and by borrowing a
Nothing very startling was un-jaet of whlffletrees. we proceeded

Some unknown writer got a load
of exasperation off his chest with
i the' following "will." inspired, no
i doubt, by the tendency of the Roosej veil administration to help every1 one except those who try to help
i themselves
I. Willoughby Wemp, being of
| sound mind 'considering what It
. has been through) do hereby, large­
ly as a gesture, deciare this my last
j will and testament:
Paragraph I. To my wife. An­
., astasia, my uxree
three sons. Charles.
Charles,
Ople and Ignata, and my daughter.
MinBrva. i leave my entire estate,
real and personal, share and share
alike.
Paragraph II. I ask their for­
giveness for having accumulated a
sum of money so large that they
wlU get very little of it after the
government takes its cut. and I
beseech them particularly for their
pardon for building up and retain­
ing a targe and legiUmate business
and imposing upon my heirs the
burdens and trials incidental to its
distribution as shark bolt.
Paragrapli in. I -leave to the
above named heirs my certified list
of capable and combative lawyers
with the advice that they select no
more than one lawyer each, aa the
fees will be plenty; and I urge that
n time limit^ba^xit on lhe battle.
You know, my dears, how lawyers
j

covered by the munitions inveMlga- ] onward. But every onoe in a while
tion during which certain members there would be an ominous-sounding
of the senate attempted to ptace lhe ' -crack.” "crack." We piled out to j
blame for our entry into the tate j investigate several times but in lhe;
World war onto the House of Mor- darkness could see nothing. Dlscregan.
Hon. however, warned us that it
Senator Nye damned "the Interests" would be wise to "go slow." so rarely
for the benefit of voters back in did we proceed faster than the
■ good old North Dakota; Senator horses could walk. Along about 2:30
Clark attempted to smear Morgan. in the morning we had almost
and Lamont with all manner of reached the late Charlie Cock's farm
sinister motives for concealing In-1tn.Hope township, when “crash”

. formation regarding foreign loans went a wheel. There we were 7 or B
until the partners produced num- j miles from home "and no bell on "
erous newspaper clippings to show Groping through lhe darkness it
that all details ot the transactions was my purpose to rap loudly on
had been made public. The press the door of the Cock home. Blit belort all interest when no scandals ■ tort getting anywhere near lhe
were forthcoming—so the affair house, out came a dog with a voice
1 which promised so much petered - like a fierce Numldlan Hon. coming
out Several of the senators man- ] straight for -Ine—at least that was
aged to tuck in a few pieces of good my assumption Is It was too dark
oratory for the benefit of the people ' to see anything. Perhaps it isn't
back home but aside from this prac- necessary to mention my hasty retically nothing was accomplished, treat. Reaching the highway "Oh.
aside from establishing the fact that &gt;charUc!'’ was sounded at the top
a^ neutral country which attempts j of my voice. Whether It was be­

XJl tgthH
JotMOCAATlC
JPOTOFCOLOj

ta deal with warring nations is in I cause of my yelling, or lhe dog's
danger of becoming involved Itself j ferocious barking I do not know.

cepted fact before senators got busy ' opened with the inquiry “What's

III

‘The Public Porum

|frj

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Dear Editor:—In a number of the
papers which it Is my privilege to
read. Items have appeared telling
of the county-wide spelling con­
tests now being held in Ionia and
other counties. Might it noL.be a
worth-while activity to try tn
Barry county?
The writer recalls that for several
years spelling contests have been
featured In Ionia county and'have
been of untold value to the stu­
dents participating.
Spelling is one of the fundaman-

what oount. This is not meant as a
criticism of our present day schools
but Is a challenge to them to teach
their pupils to spell—teach diacriti­
cal marking—syllabication and rules
for spelling so it Is not necessary to
consult the dictionary for the speU-

revival of spelling in
Hastings Banner]—Just saw the
swell write-up that appeared in lhe

spelling is a necessary requisite in a bit homesick because of IL Be­
many fields of endeavor. Of course, cause my new title still sparkles
the present trend in education is with a pristine elegance, and tak­
ing a page from Mussolini's book I
feel moved to defend IL In fact. I
enough to think that students of now have almost u many titles as
today could benefit greatly from lhe New Deal hu departments. I
only hope there Is no tegal edition
years ago, not only in rural, but of the Supreme court to lift them.
in village and city achobls.
In other words. I started as studio
It has been the experience of announcer (comparable to a buck
numberless employers, (many of private or printer's devil) and have
them right here In Hastings), that now reached the highly exalted state
a young person applying for a posi­ of studio manager and program di­
tion as secretary or stenographer rector. a position that requires near­
was unable to correctly spell many ly double lhe amount of aspirin
simple words of common usage, to tablets.
say nothing of those more tech­
Would certainly like the opportun­
nical and unusual.
ity of acting u guide to friends in
Recently tlw writer watched a Hastings ..
..tJ make B
if they would w
only
a
teacher (Imagine III) who was writ-1 visit to lhe Rio Grande Valley. You
ing a letter, and for simple words see, we have nearly 300.000 people
like "which" was consulting a die- j down here In a section that extends
tionary. This may be an extreme ] from Brownsville about 50 miles up
case, but it shows that somewhere * the Rio Grande River. They call It
through the years, that person did ■ the garden spot of the world, and
not receive proper training in spell- I I'm inclined to agree, although I'd
ing.
'like to see a few Yankee Springs
—Uany
-------------------—
------- •in
“ *for
-------variety. Citrus
Ask
employer,
an English hills thrown
tn xug-1
sug-! and vegetables are moving now. apteacher, or we might even
gest asking Harold Logan, teacher proximately 1100.000 a day in value,
of Journalism in our city schools. The second crop of vegetables ta bewhat their experience has been with ing planted now. The thermometer
some ot the stenographers and xlu-1 went to 38 one Ume so far this win­
dents who have applied for work. ■ter.
— ~
*-— hasn't been a frost
' yet.
There
You might be surprised.
and the days are about like May
The old time spelling schools, the weather In Michigan.
Friday afternoon spell down, "leav­
My best regards to Ute whole Ban­
ing off hitad," and written and oral ner staff. Have you been able to
drills certainly were enjoyed and
produced many excellent spellers. the door?
The methods may have been less
Beat of luck to all of you.
scienUfic in certain cases than they
Dick Watkins.

Paragraph IV- I request that
my wife have the large oil portrait
of myself made of me in the days
when It was not thought I was do­
ing anything of an ignominious
native tn striving dilgently to
provide tor the future of my wife
and children. Bitter as sire may
feel about me in the light of pres­
ent-day legislation. I trust the por­
trait may bring
compensating
Um material to develop could have the morning and as dark as the pro­
memories pf happier days.
Paragraph v. I request my
told more about lhe reason for i verblal “stack of black -xata," he
heirs to destroy at once by fire the
American entry into the World war hitched up his team and brought us
copy of that article I once wrote
than partners Morgan and Lamont. [0 Hastings, and absolutely refused
on "Success" for the American
Moot of them probably knew that t0 accept a penny of remuneraUon.
Magazine together with any and
all books in my library on thrift,
inflammatory articles in the news- That was the kind of a man he was.
ambition, diligence, budget balancpapers were largely responsible for Mr. Cock capably served the people
it out and forget about It'Hke moat
' Ing and bookkeeping.
arousing public sentiment to a as County Treasurer before he
Paragraph VI. I direct that my
presidents do.
fighting pitch. If the newspapers passed on and Perry Powers later
heirs distribute equitably among
j TWENTY YEA'Ra AGO TODAY. them my collection of rubbers,
had not -cashed in" to the fullest very efficiently served Uie people of
To Al Dyer, genial host of lhe
WOULD HAVE P^ID.
Hew to the line, let lhe quipa
HE'S armed without
extent possible on the scare-head-!
______________
I
galoshes,
snowshoes,
wodlen
un
­
Supervisors
of
Allegan
county
I
I
Tuesday.
H.
G.
Hayes
received
Kist. Dairy Store—Sympathies and
Michigan as Auditor General. Here
fall where they may!
that's innocent with­
wishes for a speedy recovery.
। word of the death of Fred Allen In, derwear. umbrellas and fur mltline value of events which preceded j am where I started nearly 50 have ignored the deqjahd of state i
tens,
it
looks
to
me
as
if
they
1
St.
Paul
after
an
illness
of
only
four
in.
—
Pope
American entry into the conflict. ycars &gt;ga M onc of the“ editors of ERA officials that Ulis county ap- ■
I days. He was the son of Mr. andI would need them and they are the
j Greetings—to Miss Norma Evans.
prqpriate a minimum sum of 824.000
possibly the history of this period the Banner. But I never paas-Uie for ERA expenditure among unem­
By Observing Tommy, ’
I Mrs. Frank Allen and well knowni only fixings the Government won't
' new secretary-reporter-stenographer
would have been different.
1 old Charlie Cock ; farm without ployables and have gone home.
hpre, having lived here as a boy andI try to grab. Or am I wrong again?
I hear that a certain event of im-. *t the Banner office.
Paragraph VII. To my daugh­ portance in the life ot Harold Lo­
] young man. He was a successful ac­
In fact, those with a flare for thinking of that splendid man and Their action may mean, if tiic In­
.
tor on a prominent vaudeville cir- ter. Jcane. not mentioned hereto- gan will transpire somewhere in' .I hear that these .four
direct
threats
ot
the
ERA
admlnto(
w-, “*,
v..,v
Home
"dirt-digging" would have no &lt;Uf-| the kindly help he gaveIn LhaL early
._1 cult, giving plays which he wrotei fore. I leave no part of my estate.
(ration are carried out. that lhe op- ]
flculty at all in concocUng an ex-. mOrnlng hour nearly 40 years ago. tire load of care of unemployabtes
She was always my favorite child Indiana soon. Trmmy evidently got grown" one-act plays to bo presenthimself.
him for hta Hastings Hall of ed next Wednesday arc knockouts.
cellent case against the targe metro­
L- I • Announcements ------------ ..
have been
re- and I wish to spare her every care Eligible Bachelors Just In time.
will be turned over to the counfy.i
’ wall. Tommy'U be right there to
i cclved here from Chicago, of the, and annoyance.
politan newspapers for causing
but somehow, the thought of that
• • •
(MX.
KEEP IT SUPREME!
Paragraph VIII. Mr son. Dud­
birth of a son. William Robert, to(
America to enter the war (think ot!i
fact doesn't cause any fearful ex­
Or maybe-my free sales promo-'
—
Mr. and Mrs. W J. Field.
- ley. not heretofore mentioned, I
Only nine elderly men, the nine citement.
tion helped. What lio! Perhaps
IRVING.
the scare headlines, the feature
Sid Crowell, of St. Louis. Mo.i cut off completely from any share
The ERA probably believes that it;
Justices of the Supreme Court, stand
Tommy
is
just
a
little
Cupid
afterDell
Bchlffman and son Arthwr
left
stories, the human interest material, |
KUNKS are a favorite food VMIIIC
came Friday
i liuaj .MIIU
and is visiting rcla-. whatsoever
- ----- -- -- or
— eversowhat.
------------------ He —
-­ all.
has a far more efficient system than .
,
visited
Mr.
Schiff
man's
daughter.
to
block
the
road
toward
complete
the extra ediUons. the swollen clrcu- '
among many Canadian in- lives and friends in the city. Mr. home “J "n «»rty Mte. spent many
this county and perhaps it has but]
• • •
] Mrs. Rose Schaffer of Kalamaaoo.
Crowell was long a resident of Hos-Iw
““” of
"* hU life as
** a
‘ loafer, blew
u’—
years
lalions, made possible by armed con­ regimentation and dictatorial fed­ there is one all important fact and | dtan tribes, .which practically .
Quick boy! My bow and arrow and and his aged mother, who Ilves at
proves that there is a little 1 tings and when he lived here he in every penny he ever earned,
eral rule. The trend of the present that Is the tremendous cost of ad­
.Wayland,
flict). \
”
' recently.
and has never been anything but a fresh pink ribbon.
'
had
n
wide
reputation
as
a
marks
­
ministration
of
the
ERA
when
that
good
In
the
administration Is toward a socialMr. and Mrs. Thomas Gillette and
man with a shot gun and gat tiered a spendthrift and a waster. I real­
cost La compared to the cost of the
lu“ “» °1“ ln
In spite of all that Horace Gres- I family of Middleville were Bunday
Tha root of tbe Ethiopian i in many rich prizes al shooting ize now that he was right, and I
county system.
visitors. at Wm. Schenkel's.
ley
said.
Harold
decided
that
it
was
i
not
only
congratulate
him
on
his
n'gabrobwe bush, mixed with tournaments,
Relief officials in this county re­
,| Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Perry were in
but It mH tome •= n«r w
... ...._______
ability to look ahead. I now spare better to “go EAST young MAN. go
Those who heard the Jackson-Day cently estimated that It would re- ] tobacco, will kill the smoker
-----------actual facta, aa tha charaaa which
( Grand Rapids Tuesday.
him the annoyance and tribula- east.
THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
the aeuau mveMlgatln, commltUe 5»”ch &lt;" •&gt;» P"»MeM realize that quire around seventy or eighty
I E. D. Johnson, who has been quite
b“(\ ?”.n
C,n ‘ COmp,r' “ j
*' 10 »*** * thorough- ]
ftamuyP°Choth^
thousand dollars to care for unem­
,
Hastings
Is
to
have
a
thorough-]
attempted th han, around the neelu I ‘h'" “ 111111 an»l»thy loal between ployables during the coming year ! pollUcal bandouta.
Horace didn't know anything, I sick for a month past, is slightly
I ly up-to-date creamery, owned and . ceptfd my slandir(u Of IHe
of Morgan and Lamont.
ithe administration and the supreme According to costs figures of the
about present-day conditions any-.- better. Their ton and family from
•
i operated by Elmer F- Day. of ownsIN --------------------------------- way, did he Harold?
j «..
Grand HapKk and u daughter and
WHEREOF.
I
court. In fact Mr. Roosevelt hinted ERA. which have been released from
. , ,
| familyfrom Middleville
--------------------,---- ,Sun—
Each policoman tn Chungking. I so.
have WITNESS
spent
hereunto set my hand and
that efforts would be made to curb time to lime, lhe administration ot
China, must sign a bond by • Mrs. Mattle Spauldinj left MonOm»r BJtker u . duncull m to i'’Tta‘Xtaslta,, on. Vent wm
ERA costs around 130.000 each
which he forfeits his life If 1 day for Chicago, lo make her home
OUT OF THE PAST.
the power of the court; lo
'
to make it
n the
WILLOUGHBY
WEMP.
pul on his back, they say. But the sull(jay callers at the home of her
year and the administration costs of
eaugbt accepting a bribe. Clever. I wlh her daughter. Mtas Mabel.
ltnnn&gt;.(ihlr for the
th«&gt; court to over-rule ,
Thornapple
River
"turned
lhe
nrarCoata Grav?
The letter printed in the Banner 1 impossible
the county system are around 83.000
bolcun...
H. FOOT hj» Men .oenarn,
,x,uMle« there ere million, ot
trirV
rM-^ntlv with
with thn
— I. «t nt
-_
*
___ _
from Jessie C. McCarty, of Oakland , unconstitutional measures passed by per year. Offhand, it ^ould anpear
trick" recently
the nr
greatest
of
Mr. and Mrs. John Perry and Ed.
„
.
,
.
»«1'1»l
wlU. hU Wotlier wlto l. W||tou,nby w,„p,
lbu
Park, Florida, daughter of former congress. Yet. on assuming office, ev- that there should be no question as
Great Area sometimes create . very 111 at his home in Yankee wh0
a blt daxed by lhc rtch mlx'_ ease, Ask Omar for lull particulars. Look were in Wayland Bunday..
clouds and enough rain to extln- | Springs
| lures conceived and executed by lhe
Oounty Treasurer, and for. many ery president Is required to take to the proper agency for relief work
Tommy
has
decided
to
quit
smok
­
years Supervisor of Hope township, j solemn oath that he will .do all. its supervision.
'
NORTHEAST
STRIKER.
ruIsd the blaze.
With senators
Wc understand that Mrs. Jennie lnner ring of "intellectuals" at
True lhe county would not. under
ing. It's getting to be too demned
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Randall
It's high winds which sometimes Stebbins has given up the Barry ho- Washington,
the late Chas. F Cock, brought to his power ip uphold the Constltu- Hie suggested program, have been
effeminate.
gel them lo a whirl.
] tel and learn that H. F. Ford will I
'
----and Mr. and Mrs. White and chil­
paying ERA administration costs,
mind an amusing incident of 40 . lion of the United States!
•
•
•
I conduct it in the near future.
dren of Ionia were Sunday guests
Tommy's nomination for the All- —
Mrs.court
J. Tseems
Lombard
entertained
of Mr.- and Mrs. James Surlne.
years ago II didn't seem so very
Loss of power by the supreme they wouljl have come from the
The supreme
to
-----..I -------------- ------- ------state, but ft administration costs
Hastings volley ball team—W. E.. The Striker school P. T. A. which
delight In trumping area, with | a company of 14 ladies at tea Wed“funny" at the time, but it did court would be one of Uie greatest had coot
NEWS GLEANINGS.
iued as they 'have ■in "
the j the result that the New Deal | nesday afternoon.'In honor of her]
Carter.
‘-----•-* *“-■
— -------was*—held
Friday
evening wu very
present a side of Uie character of calamities that could descend on
____, uld have required most of . seems to have become a grand daughter. Edith, whose marriage to1I The paper money turned out by
well attended. Several
musical
the tale Charlie cock—hta loyalty this country, it is the only dignified, the state's appropriation to this i glam.
Tommy's nomination for the AU- numbers were given, also a very In­
' Donald D. Smith, of Washington. D | Uncle Sam may be folded 5.000 times
before cracking.
Mlchlgan volley ball team.—Warren teresting Townsend Plan speech by
to friends— that won him many thoughtful, non-political body we county for that purpose, and the
-------------C.. youngest son of Judge and Mrs. ।
county would have been paying for
Carter.
Bert
Scott.
5T? Sw?---------------------------------------- Clement Smith, will take place on
have left, the only body where the
staunch supporters and admirers.
More than 600 freight cars of tis­
relief—Allegan News.
Miss Ariel! Cramer was lhe guest
Did I know Chas. P. Cock. kind, rough liand of the spoilsman Is not
sue paper are required to wrap the
Tommy's nominaUon for the All­ of her aunt. Mrs. Clarence Ham­
1 A new firm. Russ and Crook, has;
annual apple crop of the stele of American volley-ball team.—Warren mond of Hastings, from Sunday un­
considerate, helpful—one of God's felt; Ute only body which dares to
WALLACrS BIG IDEA.
succeeded to the old firm of Homs Washington.
The farmers of America used to J
noblemen? Will I ever forget a kind­ act with complete independence:
I and Russ.
E Carter.
til Tuesday night.
Verne Reynolds of Kalamazoo
Having secured the requisite sub_ ___ __ ... of lhe meals in t
ness. that he once did me. and I am the only body with sufficient back­ help feed the world, but at the rate
One-fourth
a __
large
farm products are being Imported. Il
Wonder if Harold carroll cut off j visited hta parents. Mr. and Mrs.
scripttons, the Masonic Temple com-; city are eaten in restaurants.
sure II will be equally shared by ground, brains and time to take into
is apparent that the world is now
lhe legs of his old red flannel undies E. A. Reynolds. Saturday.
mitlee has an architect pre|wring
Hon. Perry F. Powers of Cadillac. consideration past, present and fu- helping feed Hie people of the good
.Mr. and Mrs. Verne Bumford and
' plans tor the temple it will be a
More industrial diamonds (2.300,- to make the most Important half of
It was :n «-political campaign way- lure in rendering its decisions: tjxe old United States. In lhe list of im­
bulldlng ot which members of the 000&gt; are produced each year than that original costume he sprung on children visited Mrs. Reva Denson
of Hastings. Sunday.
lhe volley ball boys last, week?
order and citizens generally will be* gem diamonds (1.500.000).
back before the days of automobiles, only body which can study its prob- ports we note beef and sausage from
‘If itfar eaner teprevou UTCKw
Argentine, park ami beef from Bra­
' proud.
I
■
■
and the thankless job of Chairman 11 lenu with complete detachment.
dun to brca\ them."
The regular meeting of the Worn-1
u- 0 ,* l.lh * ? ,c'
BAST BALTIMORE GROUP.
zil. bacon, sausage, smoked pork and
Wouldn't they look cute with
of lhe Barry County Republican ] Not in many years has the su- fresh tenderloins from Canada, ba­
en's Club-rtiday afternoon will be wor,d» f»P«tatton and less than a Chet Hodges old blue sweater!
The East Baltimore Extension
: .-JANUARY
committee had been wished on me.:: preme court been held In greater con. ham and sausage from Eng­
an open She to be held at St Rose's P- eterritory h**— 40 p. c.
class met at the home of Mrs. Ed­
'
toru of England din. 1901. ' hall, when the Rev. Caroline Bart-! world's‘ gold. 49 p. c. world's copper,
ward Rice Friday. Jan. 17, All of
Mr. Powers had been assigned to esteem than It is at present. It is land, smoked ham and zmokM mu- i
To Mary and Gay Jordan—anoth­ the fourteen members and two lead­
1 letl Crane, of Kalamazoo, will speak 7 p. c. world's oil.
make a speech at Delton, and wc the one solid anchorage in a storm sage from Germany, smoked pork ' •
er girl- The stork that serves the
ers were present, also two visitors
1 on "Modern Methods of Philan­
hired a rig frdtn a local livery1 of experimentation; the one chain from Ireland, smoked sausage from I
Forly per cent of the nation's Family of Stem must have a single
Italy, cured hams and cured pork
thropy." MUs.Vinnie Ream will re­ wealth Is owned by women.
track mind since Mary Caroline
along with a driver Jo take us to I which prevents our ship of state bfllits from Lithuania, bacon, sau­
. cite and Mrs. Hendershott and Mrs.
represents lhe sixth daughter th noon A special meeting on sleeve
sage,
ham
/nd
salt
pork
from
PoI
fitting and review of previous les­
i Hams will sing.
Delton and return. Mr. Powers was from sailing out onto the seas ot
An athlete who can jump T feet succession added to the lists.
land, and beef from Uruguay. The j
sons- was given. The class has done
| Dr. C- P Lathrop has opened an on lhe earth could leap 40 feet on
anxious to catch the midnight train ।, socialism.
very good work and nearly all at
office m connection with ills father. lhe fnoon. but only 3 Inches on the
out of-Hastings to reach another'1 No! Cut the power of any other
This week's candidate for the Hall the muslin models are completed
Dr. E. H Lathrop, and will promptly sun.
at Oblivion—lhe demon incarnate
appointment lhe next day. Alter branch pf government, reduce bur­
!nMt *‘th Mr» Wiliam
, answer all calls.
“Music ROw-w-W-W- Richards Jan. 29 for our next meethis speech, we jumped into our rig. ] eaus and departments, reorganize.
Moths uu
stunt,
do uui
not eat iiuuiiiik
clothing They
nicy who
, , composed
,
» Am Wilcox has become associated
l-s." we detest the demned ing.-Eslher Striker. Pub. Secy.
1 with C. B. Benham in the real es­ lay eggs, and lhe larvae which are I L L-l-J
the driver waved his whip, and we]. experiment—but leave the Supreme
thing
but
catch
ourself
humming
It
hatched
do
the
important
eating.
'
u
”
n
“
”
tate buxines*, the new firm being
। Court alone.
TANNER ECHOOL NEWB.
constantly.
j Benham and Wilcox.
unprecedented drouth of 1034. plus'
Mrs. Dora Coleman is gaining
180.000.000 gallons of ice cream
tiie government's attempt at crop j
is this Utile
dark
felwere consumed in the U. S. last,Who*
--------------------------------- 3beaded
--------------. nicely.
hour. It was a dark night and ev-'
reduction, hu been a boon to the I
i FORTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
Elmer
Hathaway was a Lansing
ervthlng went fine until we were,
farmers of other countries. Il might
1 Mrs. E J. Goodwin who has been 1 year—a qt*. per person. Vanilla was low we see running around the visitor last week.
KA0
streets
an ------------overseas—
uniform?
—'* *in
“ —
*'-------- rounding Ute shore of Waif lake.) In an eastern city is a bureau seem that in view ot the tremendous 1
visiting her aunts, lhe MLmcs Wolf, [ lhe favorite flavor, chocolate a close -*
I Mr. and Mrs joe Williams and
effects of lhe drouth, crop reduc-1
letl for Comstock Saturday, where second.
There our rig evidently left the J
through which competent players tion might not be advisable another This weft's nomination for Has­ ‘(amllv spent Sunday to Grand
she will visit before returning to
Ninety per cent of all clothing ta tings' Hall of Eligible Bachelors—| Rapids with Mr. Williams' mother
beaten rut and went slap bang into
yekr. but the government has de­
California.
made of cotton.
Don Fisher. on guard Don! 11'8 an and in tha afternoon called on hta
a hidden stump at the roadside. We honorarium, to make up a fourth at creed otherwise.--W. H- Berkey.
.
Mrs. John Mealley entertained her
father who is 111 in St. Mary's hoaopen
season this year.
brother. Mr. Tighe, of Detroit, over
■'
•
came to a sudden stop, but the bridge. Another kind of hired man. Cassopolis Mgitant.
pltal.
Sunday.
I.Tuesday evening; president. Mrsj
driver hung onto the lines and
Tye been doing a lot of nominal-1
LLL-. nf th,~y
A fire in lhe cornice of Frank] JJ,
P~‘dcnt “rt!
“Everything necessary to the sup­
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
.
'ng
this
week-but
this
being
presi-1
p_
*”
"soared through the air with the
Brooks' elevator on Broadway called ■ W. D. Haj-H; second vice president,• dentlal year, nominations arc in orport. comfort and happiness of the
only to ask for the
He
is
a
gehtleman
farmer
—
the
greatest of ease." He might have
"I state without hesitation that l out lhe fire department Thursday ■Mr&gt;- D*- Burton; third vice presiAmerican people could be accom­
7
uwuuMwows
ui u« ।iaUifwction of our spiritual and
been seriously hirt. but he landed only thing he raises Is his hat.— plished in about five hours a day consider a private banker a national afternoon.------------------------------------------- 1 dent. Daniel Striker; recording sec­ a
...
| mMcrisl needs; 4t ta to remind us
------------- retary. Mr* E- M. Bentley; coire'
and four days a week.”—Bruce Bar­ asset and not a national danger.*'—
right in. the middle of a big mud Cockle Bur.
Walt until Tommy comes out with 'nrinkwUre6
“~J’ohn
FIFTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
| spending secretary. Mrs. R. A. BallJ P. Morgan.
ton.
• .
puddle and escaped unharmed. The
a'j
J. B. Roberts will occupy about ey; financial secretary. Mrs. T. Phil-■ his platform! Boy. shell be a honey!
We now have a telephone connec­
. • •
| Several copies of the Magna Char"The man
with
lhe M..
beat tools has
..... W
.M. ...v
,»s'
"This U no time to save money; March 1 a portion of O. G- Spauld- lips, and treasurer. Mrs. E. H.•
tion with Japan. Central repons
chanc£.of
success,
and
there
I
it
is
a
time
to
get
things.*'
—
Brig.
the
best
c'.,
'
Ing's
store
on
Jefferam
street.
।
Lathrop.
And I promise you. my friends, ta were.made at the time it was
Into a field. Alter two or three hours ithat Ttokyo keeps calling for five.
is no tool
&gt;ol lo
compared with]Gen. Hugh 8- Johnson. NRA dlrecHastings W. C T- U. elected lhe 1 Morse NevUu spent his vacationi that I will carry out every last rigned and. fdut of these so-caUed
coaxing and maneuvering « five, five.-New Yorker
knowledge."' following officers at their meeting 1 al Maple Grove.
——Harvey a. Firestone,
tor.
। sliver of It, if elected—In fact carry -'originate" are still in existence
with their InvesUgatlon at a cost of । wanted?" Telling him who we were
many thousand dollars. But in and what a dilemmA we were in.
Washington these days, several
Cock hastily dressed and came
thousand dollars isn't even small; out with a lighted lantern. He
change.
laughed until I thought hta sides
As a matter of fact, many of the would spilt when he viewed lhe un­
Washington correspondents al the * UJUM] slluaUon. The upshot ot It
pre» tables walling for juicy head- (ajj wu that though It was 2:30 |n

Views and Opinions;

A Quotation

What Others Say

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

'Round About Town

S

Way of Our World

Pungent Paragraphs

Crumbs of Wisdom

�TVS VAltWOl BAJOrSS. THUMBAY. JANUARY 93. IBM
rights and privitefM in the days to

LOCAL NEWS
..

.j...

er 8. ill, running I

Ling their band to » UUW carpentry
work. ta the rear of the store, re.
modeling to make a more convert-

XWgLft.'

,.SS5 ESS

pgngae of band concerts thia wmd NaakvUto
'HgtaMllllffH 1WI
----------------lhe United Statee
w»tan4hM am
srsuL1*" “““ i
*
February 4 tor training.
Wm. Halneworth ar me uongregw-1 imagine, are rejoicing
Al Myers suffered an acute attack 1 ucnal church, who has had much । am m Florida.
of awmulMUs Saturday Mon. He experience In this line of work1
ctartn
was taken to Pennock
L. 1hoepftal,!.
-u.!
Juatioe W. w. Potter spoke' Grand street
t the MiddtavOte InfttyertMcd Mon- h^rt trouble
nlng. He seems to be making a good day
ay night. Ha ta alm ttxted ae the
..
Mrs. Clam Hale Is recovering
recovery
from an attack or erysipelas at her
(Greta Ann­
Mrs. Albert
______ _ _____ —_ nicely from an wagiac tn February.
Remember the card party and
operation for appendicitis performed
The Lanslng-lonta Coach
Line
at Pannock hospital and has re- operating between Grand Raplds- fashion show Wednesday evening.
Feb. 19 at Episcopal pariah house.
lowell-lAnalng has been purchased
f. Armbruster.
by the Short Way Lines, Inc., of To­
Friends of Jake Haney will be
ledo. This makes the company the
sorry lo learn of his continued illschool project at Charlotte loteled third largest in lhe state.

learned tv attending Umm annual

voted te have the county represent­
ed at this gathering and aelected
lhe chairman of the board. W. A.
Schader. who was authorised'to se­
lect another representative of the
board to go with him.

old age pension checks to deliver In
pleased wltir each new check re-

PRODUCTION CREDIT
1“®”™°
A8S'N. MEET JAN. 30 The Rural Resettlement Adminis­

Will 1« Held In Ch*rlott&lt;
Several Barry County
Membere

_____

United Brethren
tration tar Barry county, located in
Uie basement of the Hastings poet l«*UM *
office building, will be glad lo rt- Bsturday
1 cetve offen for sale of farms in this
spent Sunday wtth
, county up to and Including January
The Seat Baltimore
' 31. 1934 Those Interested in offering

Charlotte Production
DURFEE DISTRICT.
elation, which Is to be held in the]
grange hall at Charlotte January 30.1 About forty attended the Aid So­
beginning at 1 F. M.. It was an- • &lt;ciety at Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoff­
nounced this week from the office Man's
।
Wednesday
After a short
of oten a. Speers, secretery-trees- |business meeting election ot officers
urer.
iwas held. Results wete: President.
The Association Is one ot 15 local' jMrs. Floyd Gaskill; secretary, Miss
cooperative associations hi Michigan Esther
।
Striker; treasurer. Mrs. Ray
under authority of the Farm ।Clemens; flower committee. Mrs
Administration.
through ]Ernie Bateman
farmers may obtain short! Mrs. Prod Wheelock cf Saranac
term credit for production purposes.
Ineluding the purchase of livestock,
feed, equipment, and other legitlmate production purposes The as- .
soclstlon has served 550 .farmers in I
tte district since It was organ teed in**
the early part of 1834, total loans I
aggregating 1188,000 00 having beeru,
made. The present interest rate on 1
loans through the association is 5'
per cent.
E- P. Reynolds, vice-president of
the association will report for the
board of directors on tlie growth
which lhe association has mg(Ja dur­
ing 1935 and the general progress In
rendering credit service lo lhe farm­
ers of the territory. Mr Bpeers will
make a complete business report for
the association for the past year.
During the session the members

fair of her own, and says tha thrill
Atty. Kim Bigler of Hastings will
never lessens of bringing joy to each
there al such an election.
be lhe guest speaker at the next
"When the days begin lo length­ meeting of lhe local Lians Club
Mrs. W1U page of Irving Is nan- worthy old person she visits. These
checks from the state, bring with
en-the cold begins to strengthen"— Tuesday evening. Mr. Sitter gave
them the expectation that the fed­
an old saying borne out by the pres­ a talk on tho recreational benefits
eral government will match the
ent continued low temperature as to be gotten out of the golf game
amount sent, as soon as legislation
we aooroach February.
Have you bought your ticket far
before tha old commercial Club one
to that effect Is put thru this ses­
Plymouth's beautiful Presbyterian
evening three or four years ago and the Civic Players (our one-act playa sion of Congress. This Is Just the
church was recently burned. The on­
next Wednesday night? Better get
proved
to
bo
a
very
entertaining
kind of raw bleak weather, when a
ly thing Ui It not destroyed or dam­
speaker. Lions Club members will your reserved seat while selection U pension check, even tho small
aged by the fire was lhe old church
undoubtedly be ptaud to leant he
brings with It a ray of sunshine.
Bible. The cover alone was dam­
&lt; ta to appear here again.—Lake OdasMiss Ethel Ragla of the Barry"
B A LyBarker's store begins to,
aged, but the pages are still as good ’
|M Wave-Times,
County Health Unit, has taken the look very modem with Ila bright new.
1 Give a boy a Job, if he's the kind apartment at Mrs. Thos. Sullivan's display slacks, open and convenient
From all we hear about "Station
•tetlo." which la to be given In the of
1 boy who will do anything and do on B Broadway just vacated by Miss for customers and clerks alike.
Delta Allard.
Judge McPeek had planed to hold
group of four one-act plays next
Jonah Wickham, lhe fisherman, court here on Tuesday, but was
Wednesday night al Central audi­ can pay. A million jobs for boys
suing year, and It is urged that all
torium. we think it's a mistake not and girls, out of school and out of speared a dog fish weighing 12 Ibe. obliged to postpone the session until
be present tor this Importent event.
lo get In touch with Hal Roach and work, could be created overnight. on Thomapple lake this week. Jonah Friday when he will come.
This sub-sero weather is just the This Is the best opportunity the
have him send a scout here tcMrlt- If the people of lhe United States maintains they art good if you
kind to make Hastings and Barry
neu It. Maybe he'd want to get the would take this problem to heart. know how to cook 'em.
conduct of their association, and
And If they don't, theyll pay for ft
first rights for one of his movies.
A baby girl, weighing 10 pounds, county women gravitate toward tho
The Ernest Schelling concert* some day. in depreciation of the na­ was bom to Mr. snd Mrs. Lloyd Fairchild Store tomorrow and next they should not miss It, Mr. Speers
given every Saturday morning from tion's greatest aaeeb—lhe young Hughes of . 1131 South Broadway day to lake advantage of thoee be­
Special Invitations
Carnegie HkU, New York, over a strength and independent spirit of Tuesday mfiming at 2:30. The baby low cost values in fur coats. Nothing
like a fur coat to keep out this bit­
wide range of steUons, features the up-and-eomfng generation — has been named Katharine Mary.
. National Farm Loan Associations,
music appreciation programs for “The Houghton Line,” House Organ
Mtas Norma Evans, who comes ing cold.
county
agricultural agents and home
children. Kneeland McNulty of Has­ of the K. F. Houghton Co.. Phila­ from Grand Rapids to Join lhe Ban­
demonstration agents, teachers of
tings. has been one of six boys delphia.
ner staff as stenographer, typist and K. OF P. LODGE
vocational agriculture, and officers
In this day of automobile traffic reporter, ta residing at the home of
chosen from Bl
Thomas Choir
other cooperative farm organisa­
INSTALLS OFFICERS of
School for Boys lo taka part in a it’s suicidal co permit coasting on Dr. snd Mrs G C
Keller, cor.
tions. The meeting ta open to all
program and receives the privilege anything but supervised hills and Broadway and Green.
persons interested In agriculture and
streets.
•M
CCA. n
A 4MIC
fine Ilk.KT
Illite Ionia tA/J
boy.■ —
son
__
...
.
■
of attending all six broadcasts.
Adopts Resolution to Meet in lhe development of a permanent
Don French, a young man work­ of well-known parents, lost his life . The board of supervisors had 1U
-mu
i..« ——v, our hair usual reminder of tha deslrucUvecooperative credit system for agri­
Every Monday
inp his way thru Central State 1while sliding last week. Our hair
culture Mr. George Susens. Presi­
stood on end recently while
Teachers" college, has been asked to nearly
।
Evening
dent of lhe Production Credit Cor­
were in a car and several small Clalms of 9447 S3 were presented to
report at the Tigers training camp we
'
On
Tuesday
evening,
Jan.
21.
Bar
­
Uie
board
for
sheep
destroyed
by
poration of BL Paul, will be the guest
started down hill on their
at Lakeland. Florida, March 1. Don children
1
ry
Lodge
No.
13
Knights
of
Pythias
speaker.
well after we had started up
pitched the game that registered the sleds,
1
When children get together.
----- ------------ ---- --------- —______ installed the following officers for
onl/ defeat Michigan State ever grade.
i
lhe new year with Past O. C. Stuart
suffered from the hands of Mt. in the excitement of th«r enjoyment, was made in lhe Item about lhe
Clement officiating: Herbert Cal­
Pleasant
Last summer he pitched they forget tho precautions laid Women's Board of Pennock hospital.
kins. C. C.. Henry Mulder, V. C_ Earl
sensational ball tor Shreveport, aid­
Smith. Prelate. Blake Boylan. M. of
Ing In winning the Three-Eye league Already six children have been killed chairman, but It is Mrs. Kellar
A-. Craig Sheffield. I. G.. Elmer LauIn Michigan this winter.from riding
pennant
baugh. O. O.. R- D- McOlocklln. K.
Mrs.
Gordon
Clement
of
Belding,
on
sleds
hitched
to
automobiles.
The popularity of house-trailers,
The Los Angeles Times, which formerly of thia city, is seriously 111
.or trailer-coaches, as they are com­
DeVault, —
M. of
B,
Harry
Youngs.
in urwiipm
In
Btodgelt hospital
nisuiiai in
ui Grand Rap- —
— —
7 —
---- - --—
ing to be called, ta shown by the in­
Ida.
following
an
operation.
On
|
M. of W. A resolution was adopted
creasing number on the highways— per* in tills country, received a body
to hold all future meetings on Mon­
more than 150.000 at preeent. One of blow In the recant death of Harry Monday she submitted to a blood day night each and every Monday.
the concerns at Detroit manufac­ Carr, the best known columnist on transfusion. Judge Stuart Clement
The first meeting will be held Feb­
turing pullman-trallara has just lhe Pacific coast. His morning col- giving hta blood for the transfusion. ruary 3rd In our new location on
Mrs Mae Trclb Is confined to her
built an additional plant at Mount
North Michigan avenue. The Lodge
Pleasant covering fifteen acres. At liable with Uie Los Angeleslsuu and bed from a severe fall received on
with Ils new officers Is out to make
Saturday
on
the
allppery
walk
near
lhe
winter
population
people
si
lhe winter automobile allows, the
trailers were always surrounded by their cup of coffee, lie was widely Uie Goggins filling station on Jeffer­
Lodge._________ _ ________
quoted
in
current
conversation
—
In
I
son
street,
which
like
many
such
crowde. Indicating the popular In­
terest In these modern "covered fact was "an Institution" in Loa An- . falls seems tn have grown more
There is only one thing needed to
gelea life. Widely travelled, bright, acute and painful with each suc­ tnske the new silver program a huge
wagons."
The Sunday Detroit Free Press witty and sane, his going comas as ceeding day.
success. A tax of a dollar apiece on
Mr. and Mrs. Gay Jordan (Mary those of us who do not understand
Pictorial showed lhe crowd of sev­ a personal loss to thousands. Friends !
eral hundred people as they landed living there write that his* passing j Stem* are receiving congratulations It, and the Government will be altat Grayling from the first snow caused almost as much sorrow as on the birth of a second daughter. ting pretty.
Mary Caroline, at Pennock hospital
train running up from Detroit for that of Lhe Ute Will Rogers.
Here's a story from lhe Jonesville Saturday. Jan. 18. With this latest
In an effort to appear casual,
lhe opening of the winter sports
program Oscar Schumann, editor of Independent good enough to pass addition, the Stem family on the tome people unintentionally put a I
Rabbi Folkman told a good I "distaff side" now numbers eleven. terrible strain on their host by re­
lhe Grayling paper—the Crawford on:
AVbJanclir—Issued a special winter one at lhe Women's Chib Tuesday. 1 so Grandfather Kellar, the two fusing to reveal the purpose of their
(.porta edition of his paper lo cele­ Il seems Ural a short time ago the [ tons, and one lone grandson begin visit until the lest second of the ।
brate the event, with a new name Rabbi spoke over the radio on the to wonder If the ratio isn't becoming meeting.
plate showing for lhe first time. Os­ book, "Forty Days of Musa Dagh." too lopsided—sort of an uncomfort­
The greitest satisfaction we can
car ta a brother of Mrs. D. O. Bron­ the book which ha reviewed al the able feeling that they may have a
You Can Still Buy
son. was born and brought up in Club here. The next morning after pretty hard time lo maintain manly gel out of life comes from building. ■
Hastings, and got hta first exper­ his broadcast a woman want into
YOUR NEW SPRING
the
bookstore
In
Jackson
and
said
ience In newspaper work on lhe
she wanted that dog book that Rab­
Hastings Banner.
The tan best pictures ot the year bi Folkman had talked about the
have been announced as David night before on the radio. The
GRAPHOLOGY COUPON
Copperfield. The Lives of a Bengal bookseller looked al her tn aston­
To obtain a character reading send a line of
Lancer
The informer. Naughty ishment. ‘'Why I heard the talk and
your handwriting with your signature and com­
Marietta. Les Miserable*. Ruggles of nothing waa said about a dog." he
Red Gap. Top Hat. Broadway Mel­ said. "Oh. yes. he did." declared lhe
plete address written with ink, on unruled paper.
ody of 1934. Roberta and Anna woman, "and I want the book for a ,
Enclose thia coupon with ten cents (coin or
Karenina. All of these have been friend of mine who has a dog. The.
With TWO
title was something about 'Forty
stamps) to help cover clerical and mailing costa,
&lt;
;
TROUSERS
former and Les Miserable*. The for­ Wars to Amuse a Dog.’ *
and
mail to Ruth Barton, care The Hastings Ban­
"Johnnie" Armbruster. 8r’ had to
mer was just released in Michigan
ner.
last month and Is billed for an ■respond to the 8OS call from his
Manager
early showing
hart.
U
—-i— 1 Kut Dairy store Monday, where he i
Your Name
Branch didn't bring Les Miserable* is now serving patrons with the
to lhe Strand because, in all reports same pleasant smile and genial
Address
he received it Wasn't going acrcxu manner as In old Palm Garden days.
With
hta
mtnager-son-ln-law
in
well, but he niay bring It here Isler
Only 8 More Doys Left
Pennock. In a cast for a broken
State
City
tor a Tuesday night showing.
We notice the Blate Highway back; hta daughter. Greta, a maln-

an extended visit with tha ter­
mer’s parent-’. Mr. and Mrs. Will
Hoffman.
Arthur Palmer of near
assisted Edd. Rice In ci
this week.
Rev. Fred Wheelock of Saranac Is
mutating Rev. Edward Gamble In'Ids.
revival meetings this weak.
I Dr. Kenneth McBmurray of
Mr. and Mrs. Royal Gardner and sing called on Mr. and Mrs. I
j family of Hastings spent Sunday elte Osborne Bunday.

SUPER VALUES
Choice Heed Picked

NAVY BEANS 4-10®
MACARONIs 3-20®
CHEESES*
21®
EGG NOODLES:.14®
DATES &amp;r “9®
OLEOi^2^25c
TEA “.£.““.25®

Hurry, Men!

“WHOLESOME” SELF RISING

PANCAKE Flour k 1
GRAHAM Flour 41
ROLLED OATS 6^2
SUIT SPINACH ST 3s.’25c
SUGAR "
10 - 50c
23!?

TAILOR MAD£

department's proposed program for
federal aid and state allotment for
1934 Includes a project for sidewalks
to be built on trunk lines in lhe vi­
cinity of Flint, Kalamaaoo. Pontiac
and Grand Rapids "for greater pro­
tection for pedestrians." A move .»
the right direction. Another item
of interest is. 977.000.00 for roadside
landscaping, for which 938.500.00 ta
desired from federal funds, which
a tourist state like Michigan feels
will be money well expended, and is
in keeping with state programs ail
over the United States.
Over In Jugoslavia they have an
excellent law to improve traffic
conditions. Whenever a motorist
U caught violating rules, the police­
man lets the air out of lhe tiros, and
the offender has to pump them up
again, while the multitude looks on
and Jem. It's proving effective,

NEW ARRIVALS
for Winter Wear

We are Looking
for Safe Loans

*2 ’* *350 *4 50
If you are a person of known responsibility, you

do pot have to come here, hat in hand, asking
ub

to ’’favor” you with a loan. It to a natural

part of our business to make loans.

Mrs. Jahn Nobles. Miss Rom De
Foe and Miss Marie Neuschaefer of
the local Health Unit were in at­
tendance last week at the dinner
ew at the Piddle ‘n Bow in BalCreek for Miss Lulu B. St. Clair of
the W K Kellogg Foundation staff,
who was leaving tor New York City
where she will be lhe executive sec­
retary of the joint committee of
nurses and laymen, with offices tn
tho RCA building. Repmentatlvas
of ths American Nurses association,
lhe National League ot Nursing Ed­
ucation and the National Organtea-

communities through which the
public, hospitals and nurses may
work together to obtain
nursing
service.

Kalt TOQUES, as- IQ
jprt'd combina’t'ns "Tv
Plain Blue. Pure Wool
MELTON COSSACKS —
full zipper.
$0-98
extra heavy—
O

Others at S2.98

For example, any reliable farmer or

business man, who may need niMsy for

purpose, can come here witboul Iteeita
tion and apply to us for g loan.

lliis cljaxacfrr.

gather with a group &lt;4 laymen, have
formed a .new committee in New
York tor Ur purposes of co-ordi­
nating the work at nurtae in oommuniUas throughout the country.

YOUNG MEN'S DRESS
SLACKS. Beautiful New
Spring Patterns—

H OF HASTINGS
IV

HASTING!. MICHIGAN

Heavy Work Cgpe, Mel­
ton and Corduroy. TIQc
sizes 63/4 to
I v

A Big New Stock of Win­
ter Mittens for Boys
and Men
A few O'coats left of very
low Close-Out Prices

WATERS

Clothes Shop

BROADCAST

CORNED BEEF HASH 2 - 29®
MARSHMALLOWS
14®
Peanut Butter t-u.*
Muffets VKol Bncwta
Grape Nuts Flakes
Post’s Whole Bran

2u^25c
10c
-10c
■ 22c

Hoad Lettuce Fmlt. Crisp Heads
ea. 5c
Grapefruit Texas Seedless
6 for 25c
Oranges California, Site 288
doz. 23c
Onions Just riglit for cooking
lOlbs. 15c

CATSU
Od««M
ExoSoM
1Flsror

2 &gt;iu.»f.3Xc
10-31c
4 m, 17c
* 10e

GELATINE
ALL FRUIT
FLAVORS

REX M

C. THOMAS STO
US WI*T STATE STREET

'•
Bettie

SURE

CLEAN QUICK. CONVENIENT SIZE

Soap Flakes
P &amp; G Soap
Sotto Tissue
Ammonia

CRISCO

�THE HASTINGS BANXEK. TRUB8BAY. TANUAKY 23. 1936

Mt SIX

INTERVIEW WITH REV
I the church. What they demand.' gan. and took his seminary
m IEHVIEW HI I n HEY.
B
ffcl rUht w demand. New York."
W. KEITH CHIDESTER ,'i. a religion practical for dally life. From pictures showing

same man would be if he were preparing those an hi* own responsibility
Instead of the county's standing responsible for his errors. That's some­
isha11
thing to consider.
certain ।
They are asking for reality a* well residential sec lions in Winter Park
The next question to consider is: Will it be a paying venture for
Wfntor Park Reporter Finds “ tradition in their church and that Topics, and its forecast of thing* to
Barry county to go into the abstracting business? The taxpayers them­
. 3
.
is encouraging. Along with a modem come, wc can understand how one
selves now own the *30,000 it will coat the county to get into the business
Him Interested in Prob- • outlook one must have a grasp of night ____
be "thrilled"
_____ 1" over residence I। * ____
,
of selling abstracts. Tha taxpayers will foci the bill. If they cajj keep
rrrr
-j
—
s
-------—
from
nasi"
nnr»
(Continued
page
one)
in thLi pretty ----------------college town. Dr. Rich(Contlnued frora poge me]~~ I
ithe fundamentals." ’
lems of Youth
“
, thia *20,000 in their own possession It ought to be worth at least 5 per
Rolan
urd Burton, eminent lecturer, is ' u^ttaudTlor VeneraTTnd "had tn
i
cent to them. If Barry cpunly lakes It from them in taxes to atari in
In Winter Park Topics a weekly ' "Speaking of himself - and Mrs. about to begin hlS winter course on
jd Jf
county doC3 .0,_________ The lowest estimate we have heard of Uie probable cost Is *13.000: the
die taxpayers
&amp; per cent
interest,
review of social and cultural uc- Chidester, he said. In regard to Win­ Contemporary iherslure. indud-■
th,
state “can highest, *&lt;0.000 Wayne county has spent over (lAOOhOO f6r a county- the abstracting business, .tmracior
win will
c«i lose
as that siouu
a year
or ne
Georgi
ter
park.
“
We
’
re
thrilled
to
be
living
or
*1.000
per
year.
The
abstractor
will
cost
al
least
*1.500
a
year
or
he
tlvlties. pttbllshed at Winter Pork.
£le T WlteiUwu^.8^
!orce
ma“®r by ’“folding owned tt^trarL.pl‘"‘ “"d
Mn t good rcmigh for that work. Current expenses In lhe abstr^t depart- East-Lai
Florida, during lhe winter season, a in a small college town! Life takes
of ‘htehwa*? | “&gt; the^TO 77 Ba ray county register of deeds tried it. spent some thouf^^'^urchL^TTn^bl^k
reporter writes of an Interview with 'on a fullness and a richness. We’ve ^^r^^hn^min’b^tThb
always
wanted
to
live
In
one
and
home in
Rev. Keith Chidester, n former Has­
end.
tings boy. which will Interest his now consider ourselves fortunate to
Th"' lu~
“ • '■»
many friends here.
1
Palhei
.nic coun[..
pam f0r such large record boots, it wouia oe no sman joo t
"The young Rev. W. Keith Chid- J -Young, with a knowledge and
service al the oountv home abstract books, and have them correct and accurate. We uunx sxu.iaai
"—IT .T
- ------------ T ",-------- —7
ester looked into the fire In his | sympathetic understanding of the the Ballet Russc. and a fine musl- I
aunt
study in Ute All Saints' Parish needs of his contemporaries. Rev.
™ «ty £?°T board I m
'
lh
‘ ‘
i 25 or 30 years. The Sheldon Abstract Co. would still be here If the coun­
House and spoke earnestly. "The at- Chidester comes to All Saints', his '“^v^'^aehri'ler. the novelist, has
Ulude of our young people today Is fourth parish, with twelve years ex- ,“ rthere ^nd L, B
. cou?ty
Who will pay lhe cost? Only one answer: the taxpayers of Barry ty wenl into the business. They have 70 years of abstracting back' of
Detroit.
very encouraging. Tho challenge parlance in the ministry He te a
atnur
*nu « »
?ll,‘rilne county Will it be Justifiable to tax Barry county *20.000 for that pur- thcm. They would naturally fight for their share of the business. The
member of Rev. Chidester’s congrcMisses
they present putt new vitality in graduate of the University of Michi- gation. as is Mrs. Rittenhouse.
nr .£WU1 u
Bood' sound buslneM
now t0 “It the county's county would do well to gel half the business. That would mean an InFinch w&lt;
perintendents
of thet0poor
*3.000.
All I “”d
»_
&lt;n - come of -*2.000
k.,—
_• .■... .
Arc i
dl« llp
»20-000
it ...
m a set of abstract books■» and
a year al present abstract
prices, and much lew than that
At SororLi Club. Miss Amy Rutz FhL1
urday.
Inri Xa .h.i
records in order to compete with a privately owned abstract business. at the reduced prices which would result from such competition. There
who portrayed the Virgin Mary in
Melvin
Without first seeing if that levy on the taxpayers can be avoided and ycm have it: Yearly cost to Uie taxpayers. *2.600; yearly income probably
' the 1930 and ‘St Oberammergau
tor such terrice' tat the lnlere4U of the peop** of Barry county protected?
less than *2.000. Does it look like good business for the taxpayers to
Passion Play, a student at Rollins mLulon^pai?
mission paid for such services last]'
. .
.
- ,
an hom&lt;
i college on a fellowship, will. give year, the total would probably be I Elsewhere In this Issue we show that It cost Barry county taxpayers give *2,600 in order to get less than *2.000?
Mrs. 1
■ her story of the play.
well above *35,000.
j last year over *54.600 for welfare work alone In Barry county, and that
with Mr
Il should be kept continually in mind that abstracting-is a business—
• We hope "Rev and Mrs. W. K. C.“
Under present conditions it would this year the coal of that same item will reach and may exceed *63,000. a very PARTICULAR business, too. with responsibility for the correct­
of Rut!*
when you read this, you'll be willing seem probable that tiie amount to With lhe government out of the relief picture, who can tell what it may ness of abstracts sold. Bairy county ought, we think, to sidestep getting
Miss E
' to pause in the full days that come be paid by this county for medical cost In 1937 for relief, work in Barry county? With that situation facher new
into it. unless forced into II. because lhe business would get into poli­
। your wayrand pass on some of these and surgical service In 1936 will ex- । ing the county, can there be any Justification for adding *20,000 to lhe
tics sooner or later, unless human nature In Barry county is different
DeVInne
1 fine things and new experiences to ceed *30.000.
। county's lax burden except on the ground of absolute necessity, when from human nature everywhere else, and we do not-thtnk it is.
your many friends up In snow bound
----------------- *•
no effort has been made to see if that added tax can be avoided? Later • The only thing that should persuade Barry county to gel into the ab­
vllie Tut
Hastings and Barry county.
ITS ANNUAC'MEETING
1 on we suggest a way that may avoid a *20.000 addition to the tax burden stract business would be that it waa compelled to do so. In order to
fore the
lino Iir-I n vrorrnniv before we plunge Into the proposition so deeply that we cannot avoid that protect the public interest.
.
Mr. a
TOWN LINE.
WAS HELD YESTERDAY tax. We would say that it would be wise to avoid that tax if possible.
were sui
That brings us to the third question: Is it necessary, in order to
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Winkler
------------- Read this tlirough and see if you think the Banner's suggestions ore
Will Siu
accompanied
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ray
­
safeguard
the
interests
of
Barry
county,
that
the
county,
without
any
That is what our customers are telling their friends
Middleville
Creamery
Assofeasible.
mond McLeod of Woodland
•~
l
to
attempt to avoid an Investment of *20.000 of the taxpayers' money, de­
Penney
about our service. Coll us today and let us show
Tlik
ciation closed Very SueTld» next matter to be considered is:
Is: Who is to have charge of comcom­ cide right NOW to go into the abstract business? Has the county ns’
Grand Rapids, Saturday.
night fr
| piling Jx»ks
the abstract
jjooks
for Barry
mustwho
be a man who yet taken the stepa It should before embarking in thia new venture, with
. . v | piling tiie abstract
for Barry
county?
He county?
must be He
a man
Mrs. Corn Knapp entertained the
you what we can do When your garments are re­
cesslul Year
l•not
nol on
|j, understand*
only
understand* the
the factors
factors that
that enter
enter Into
into an
an accurate
accurate abstract
abstract (20,000 drawn from the taxpayers?
Friendship Club nt her home Wed- j
I
...,_
L...
Un
Aft
.U_.
..-..U
fc.a
Ray C
turned you, too. will soy. "I like that."
mewaj.
' Thc annual meeting of the share- I of title, but also capable of compiling lhe 50 or 60 books, that would be
nesday.
Lorraine
We wont to suggest some tilings we think the board of supervisors,
Norman Barker of Lake Odessa holders of the Middleville Creamery abstracted from the 400 record books in the register's office, so that an
| is spending the week at Hole Le- Association was held yesterday and I accurate abstract could be made of the title to any piece of real estate acting for the people of the county, should do before they decide to
Smith 01
make
an investment for which the taxpayers must iuuun
furnish mo
the
. pard's.
“ very interesting meeting. The in lhe county. He would need to be a gfiod man. The register of deeds:—
— such
... —
: Mr. and Mrs. "E J. Bates spent-Middleville chamber of Commerce ' could not do it himself. He must see to the recording of paper* as hta &lt; cash. Webelieve thesupervisor*
arenot only expected, but that thelaw
PHONE 2140
WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER
several days last week at their new cooperated in making it a real event, i duty demands. The man to have charge olXho. compiling of abstract place* upon them the duty ofprotecting the interests of thepeople of
Grand I
home in N. E?, Woodland.
A fine dinner was served to the ; books would, no doubt, be hired to do that work. The probable thing I Barry county, whom they represent. But we believe they should do
Rather ir
--------- :------------- ■)----------------------------------- patrons In the basement of the K. would be that the board of supervisors would appoint him, or authorize that in this .matter. If pcyplble, without calling on the taxpayers to dig fl
Lieut®
1 of p Itali. In the afternoon the lad- the register of deeds to name him. While tlirough the years we have ' up *20,000 In additional taxes, and invest that large sum In a businessfl
the Dtat
I- were entertained at the theater, had good registers and good suprvtaors. it Is only fair to say that some . that Li certain to get into politics—and politics and business do not mix fl

work In ‘

THE SUPERV SDRS
County’8 Taxpayers Vote
WIL FOR HELPTo Tax Themselves $20,000?

duw *■ or“M°-1

sS S

““ lh“ “

““ m°"

Si

w

You’ll
Like
It”

McCREERY'S DRY CLEANERS

^B

dramas

JUMPI

fl

this week

1

MUTINY
the

while the men attended a meeting . nre more capable than others. AU of them are chosen to represent po- well.
We have suggested that the supervisors might be forced to have the
held In the school auditorium, which litical parties. A man competent enough to compile abstract books
I was addressed by the production land records and make abstracts from diem should have much more.Uian county go into the abstracting business. Under what circumstances
I manager of the Kalamazoo Vege- I ordinary ability. We doubt If such a man could be hired for less than might that occur? In our view there ought not to be two sets of abtable Parchment Company. The *1.500. If he Lin't worth that much he isn’t a big enough mon. for
.Jr the Job. stracts and two abstract offices in this county competing with each
K V. P Company
quartet gave Would politics enter into the selection of
man for C:
a *1.500 public Job? other. That is wasteful and we believe it ought to be resorted to by
1 several fine numbers which were There would be political pressure brought upon the board, or on the reg- Barry county only when other measures fail.
heartily
applauded. The address , ister if he named the man. to consider politics in making the appolntWe believe the people of Barry county'have ceriain rights In the ab1 was aLso interesting.
ment, and to consider the position of counly abstractor as a political
Last year was one of the most job. Thus his place would become a political office. Iq that event cap­ stracting business tn this county whether publicly or privately owned.
successful in the history of the ability would sometimes be sacrificed for political expediency or per- The people of Barry county own the priceless records in the register of
deeds'
office, on which a private or county abstractor must depend for
Mlddlevlllc creamery.
Its output sonal popularity. Isn't that a factor the people should consider tn votwas increased over the preceding ing on the abstract question next April? We think it 13. The appoint- the information which he sells to a citizen who buys an abstract from
,
.
year. Special pains were taken to ing power would be political, and you couldn't keep politics out of a him.
Because of public ownership of the source of the abstractor's Inforproduce a high quality product.1 county abstractor's Job. Is it wise to establish another Job in Barry counA representative of the Slate col- ‘ ty which would become. In spile of everything, a purely political football? mation. that abstractor should be required to accommodate the reglslege who was present compll-1 Should the board of supervisors have a Republican majority, naturally ter of deeds or the county by promptly giving him Information which
merited the creamery
and its ••
-----------,J -favor
---------------------------------- their
■--------1 faith for the Job. con be quickly gained from n set of abstract books, which would take a
they
would
appointing
one of
own—
political
manager
on the fact that Its and the Democrats would do the same. Why? Just human nature is the j register days to look up on his own books. There should be co-operation
the i»u.
two. We
that mere
there is
is no
no complaint
complaint on
on mat
that
, product during tiie year had made answer.
answer, The
me question of
oi •■political
political patronage"
patronage would enter in
ui and
ana that
mat between me
ne understand
u»acra&lt;ai&gt;a uiat
the high score of 92. which 13 might mean Incompetency in such an office with the resultant damage | score against the owners of lhe Sheldon abstract office. They have been
suits, dissatisfaction, etc. Why let Barry county in for any more political accommodating to the register and the county.
No change was made in lhe board Jobs of this character?
Tn the next place, prices charged by the abstractor should be reasonable.
of directors, officers or manager.
Tiie voters of Barry county should not overlook this factor cither: Will A fair price for an abstract cannot be determined by snap Judgment
About 150 attended the meeting,
based on misinformation, but should be determined fairly from invest!among them Walter Wallace of this a man doing lhe difficult work of compiling a set of abstract books and
gation of the fact* bearing on that matter—especially upon knowledge
city, from whom we gel the facts writing abstracts to sell for Barry county, witli the county financially of
what is charged in other counties, of substantially similar size and
j responsible for any costly errors, be as painstaking and accurate os the
stated above.
population, for that service. No private or public owner of an only
abstract office tn a counly Is entitled to charge unfair prices for abstracts. Prices should be reasonable, and give a reasonable return on
the investment, The reasonableness or fairness of prices charged for
abstracts can only be determined by comparison with wiial is charged
in other counties, similarly situated. The investigation should be fair,
with the sole alm of arriving at fair prices—say so much for each separate Item in an abstract.
chargA for
We have never asked, nor do we know, what prices are c.—
abstracts in Barry county. The fairness or unfairness of such prices
here can be determined only by a fair Investigation and comparison.
The board would be fully Justified in taking drastic steps, if necessary,
to prevent monopolistic and unfair prices for abstracts In Barry county.
We have stated that we have no Information on that subject. The board
can easily ascertain the falrnew or unfairness of abstract prices in
this county in the way we have suggested and should do so.

Furs Make
the Coat!
OUT WITH 'EM! End the work and waste of the hard way .to wash and iron!
Enjoy the case and savings of “automatic ways" . . . here's a special offer that
brings you every advantage, and the finest equipment, at a bargain that makes
it cheaper to own than do without.

Washer &amp; Ironer
“
as

sale

OA months f
Oil
TO PAY '

While 12 of These

Fine Coots Lost!

COATS
Lavithly furred-

ON COMBINATION PURCHASE!
As little as 17c a day in easy monthly amounts buys both these mod­
em home necessities on our Economy Purchase Plan.
,-6r you can purchase them singly.

I I M IVCD

AI

U H lye K O A L
\A/ A
14 F D

Thks P*'Pul*r leader with all it* latest Improvementa means years ot better wwhlng,

longer-lasting clothes, free**
C
&lt;lom from old tasks. As long
•is 15 months terms—priced lower than ever .

ART I D f) M f D
A D
I K kJ IN t K

NOW

»5450

A DEMONSTRATION
WILL BE INTERESTING
Everything can be different when yon see what
these latest improved model* can do . . . and how

COME IN—OR PHONE 2305

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY

FOB WOMEN

35c
And they’re new! They
have just been unpacked!
Jaunty felts that’ll step
along with you 'most
every place. Light shades
. . . dark shades. See
them now! They're buys!

SPORT
COATS

Fox, Cross Fox, Skunk
and Others

c“h

"automatic ironing- give you a
nrw ldea of whal conrrnfcnce CBn be The

ironer does the work; you admire the results.

month-,,

e__QC

$10-

Bargain Priced!

Be Here Early
For Your Choice
of a FINE COAT
at a Bargain Price!
Fine^juality pelts and
lhe new, rough-surface
fabrics !
Beautifully
styled, warmly inter­
lined—lined with silk
flat crepe and crepe
satin — and sized, for
women and misses ! .

lour choice of a B
Variety of Styles . .
Excellent: Quality!

One Lot of Fur
Trimmed

COATS
$goo
You will, agree that
these are Huge
Bargains! ,

fl
fl
fl
fl
■
fl
fl
fl
fl
■

H
fl
fl
fl
fl
B
ifr l
fl]

B
■
■

I■

M

M

fl■

BI
■|

porta

a

daughter
his pare
Blakney,

(Margin
guests o
Heath o

(Doris

Mr. and

Finley J
ston we
night, fo

Sunday
rence W&lt;
Mrs
city u
and son
old Foal
here.
Mr. an
Wtdnead
trolt. Mr
gan Fai
the Hot

Bl

as gues
bro tiicr
Frank a
have bee
Mr. an
HB
H
Frederic
111
George
K
Bunday
K
W. May
1H
The R
the Rev
Grand R
After the board of supervisors has decided, from what is charged In K
the Dia
Burton
other counties, what would be fair prices for abstracts in Barry county, K|
Mrs. S
what should be the next step? We believe neither the board nor lhe '
Beatrice
county would be Justified In ul once committing the county to invest .. ' «. -----*20.000 of taxpayers' money in the abstract business. It should first, ■
‘tapIls 1
Grand 1
wc believe, see if it cannot gel right prices for abstracts from lhe Bhcl- flII
nr,nrt
featuring
dan company if they find from a fair investigation that prices here are Ifl
bus Dut
now unfair—before calling for a *20,000 investment of taxpayers' money, n
Mrs
When the board ha*, after a full and fair investigation, found whal are flU
Durkee)
reasonable prices for abstracts in Barry county, it should try to arrange ■ j
Hastings
with the Sheldon company to charge those prices. If the Sheldon com- ■|
Hing
her
pany refused to meet the board in a fair spirit and refused to fix fair ■
ter Durk
prices for abstracting then, we believe, the next step should be to offer fl
Grove.
to buy the Sheldon abstract business, offering no more than what It fl
Mr. an
would cost to start that business for the county. Should the Sheldons ■
and d
refuse to meet the matter of price* or sate in a fair spirit, then the fl
Smith a
board would be Justified in going ahead ant) compiling a new set of ab- fl
the wee
stract books. And they would be backed in doing so. by a practically fl
Clinton
unanimous public opinion.

In other words, Barry county’s going into the abstract business should
be the last resort, after reasonable efforts fail to get a fair agreement
with the present owners of lhe abstract business. The county should not
go into tiie abstract business if it can secure what It ascertains to be
Just prices for abstracts by agreement with the present owners. If they
refuse, then the board need not hesitate to do so. If the board forces
a competitive fight, without first seeking a reasonable agreement, it
can look for division of public sentiment and an unpleasant contest.
No one would blame the Sheldons for fighting to protect their business;
and they would be upheld in so doing, if the board declines to negotiate
with them. In that event many folks would believe the board had been
unfair and that it was attempting lo wreck a business that has existed
here for nearly 70 years. We do not need two abstract offices if It can
be avoided. But if the Sheldons would refuse to meet the board in a
fair manner, then the board would be upheld tn taking stej» to protcct the people from what a thorough investigation had shown them were
fair prices for abstracting.

"

fl

S
!

W
B
11
S
:' &lt;

B
■
|B
K
■
H
■

the Judg
Mrs.
for Bag
stay wl
husband
Francis,
daughte
Alonxo

Mrs.
Bunday
her dau
Lansing
Dimonda
Swegles,
mother

Under the circumstances, os lhe case now stand*, we believe the vot- ■
ers of Barry county should, next April, vole against lhe proposition sub- ■
milted and have lhe board sec if they can not first reach an agreement |£'|
with the Sheldons and avoid a *20,000 investment of the taxpayers* ■
money. But If the Sheldons shall be arbitrary, and shall refuse to meet B
the board in a right spirit, then lhe matter could be and should be'H
submitted In November. But first, we believe, the efforts to reach a fair B
agreement should be attempted.
■
Th Banner has explained that we do not presume to Judge the fair- K
ness of the present prices for abstracts in Barry county. We confess "]h
frankly that we do not know what prices are, or should be, charged. ~y
But the facts can be ascertained by a thorough Investigation. When that
Li done, then the board will be Ln position lo act. and act fairly, and
will have tha people with them.
We believe an attempt at a peaceful settlement of this matter will be
best for the county and all concerned before voting to Invest *20,000 in
abstract books. Il will be better than forcing the county into a costly
competition with the.present abstractors with the 111 feeling that will cer­
tainly result. No one loses in the long run by trying reasonable and fair
means to meet a situation before engaging in a competitive fight.

before g
second
Mrs, L
the hom
Mr. and
day eve

We have written the above with no .Interest in view except the public
interest. We desire and we believe our readers ahd lhe people of Barry
county all desire what Is fair. We want the people ot this county to be
given fair prices for abstracts. We have written this article without con­
sulting and without the knowledge of any member of tha board of super­
visors or of the Sheldon Abstract Co. We have expressed our views, we
believe, fairly. We think Barry county ought never to raise *20,000 by tax
to go into a competitive business unless It is compelled to do so. We be­
lieve It cannot be compelled to do so until ft has first tried to reach an
equitable agreement—one that will protect the people and be Just to all
concerned—with the present owners of the abstract business in thia coun­
ty. If they refuse lo meet Uie board in a fair and reasonable spirit then
Uie matter can be submitted again; in November.
‘

Atkins

Let us avoid getting the county Into a cosUy compeUUva fight if we
can. That's our position And we are saying this without any sugges­
tion from any one outside the Banner office.
'
”

the dea
way. In
son. Ha
Brock ws
Bunday
Baugh's
Globe.
Miss
of the H
called t
death o
Mangus
substitu

Sunday
Mr. and
Grand
home f

visited M

White e
ded on
lhe road

tx-cupan

they dro
lou* to

�THB BAITINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JANUARY U, IBM

Social Events and Personal Mention

Msihodht Sunday
School Officers
The annual .lection of officer, of

Roland Furrow was In Kalamazoo
Lawrence Wolfe wm home
Battle creek part of last week.

।‘THE COUNT AND THE

'Students Do Excellent Work
in oparRling
SparkUng Comedy of
of
1p,i p.rUh
H !«•

th* Methodist Sunday School wm
Campus Doings
“’.TWO GROUPS ENTER
held on Friday evening at Bunday
a well •tjri.tag
Really, you know it's quite «urwhat . groGp of Jmmgtten
from
DRAMA CONTEST
|

_______

■no.

,

,

Organtgations

coed” pleases all

-

-

TSE? evwibw.
JST

Thu to supper night

?*nc.a,k.M and
® to
kwSISltSSh wTfoSwftt^w*
School board. Following U lhe ro*l-1 can do when they ptff a little lime Town"««l »P«*:h. We fouml it Me­
o' ot officer*: General Bupt., T. S. | and effort into It. and have a bit
Baird; Adult Bupt. Adelbert Cort- of good direction. Now. that operrlghl with Andrew Taylor as assist- etta put on by the glee clubs the Paw Is the speaker. He is a dynamic
■-).
rl.ranAI ..11
~..........
. . speaker.
■nurd A»l. Roll. BullU,,; BKrrlw,' ot .rood h.rd worn. .M . Jmuln. I
,o. sv.k
MU uia lUant with Duuu data io .reomplUh «,m«htat I .JStaSTui b!7Sd
- as assistant;
---------------------r. IH
Ptalta talon .3 ■ SL“7“ S'J?
STttLSI:
Pugh
Treasurer.
Mr*. .orttatita
^ulteT'rate mi1U-bSr°2f ““i£ nln*' J‘n “ n win * a
Roy Hubbard and Clinton Lahr, as­

Monal service. Roll call wu respondRichard
and wisuu
Dalian zLxdioe
Mtos Esther Halnon visited at her I*...,.
—■« Jacob* wm .home
........ from WalooiM »u**
*&amp;qic
Interesting article* wen read. Mr*.
home in Kalamasoo over lhe week Big Rapids over Um week and.
|
.
end.
I Mu* Ajjstn lamhath waa home1
ProeQt«&lt;J
Tuesday
given by Dr. Dewey at the church
Father Dillon wa* in Chicago this from Kalamazoo for
m waek
‘ “
for U
lhe
nek and.
and.’ I
, .Afternoon
Conference a couple of nights pre­
—. . ■
week to attend th.
the funeral nt
of an
an
Winaton Boye* visited hU brother.' On Tuesday the drama contest.
vious on hb program of work for
aunt.
Donald, tn Saginaw, over the week conducted in Barry county by Uie
the churches in lhe district. Guess­
|Mehlgan Slate OoDege, wm held al
Mrs. Btewart Kelley to spending end.
ing games followed completing the
Miss Maxine Wunderlich wm w&gt;elcon't. with representatives of sistant;
program of the afternoon. ’"
Supply secretary,
Mr*.
Detroit.
____
home from Muskegon over th* week J*0 atenston group* participating, Clinton Lahr; General enrollment Burwell a* her ardent swain seemed i
W. A. Spaulding of Hastings spent
wul ™ appreciatea.
-nd.
Four had planned to preaent plays. secretary. Mr*. Chas. Paul; Librari­
Misses Helen Wade and Eltoabcth end.
,r^e ,hyThere will be a meeting of Sun­ Thursday at his farm here.
MU*
Elen
Phllbrook
has
been
bul
"lekneaa
interfered
with
two
Finch were in Grand Rapids on SalMiss cien pnunroox nas Peen
—
- an. Dale Bump; Pianist. Miss Doro­
Mr. and Mn. Merle Bradfield and
Dolly McSpadden's father—Merle day school workers, pastor*, teachurday.
spending several days in Grand
,
Jack spent Saturday with Mr. and
thy Ballance and Miss Prances
Melvin Oelow of Kalamazoo was Rapids.
1.J?°tn£ri“,n’
^’Jne *^up Cowie*, asstotant; Organist, Mrs Kelley—may have been president of er*, and any others interested, at Mr*. Mftcure in Kalamazoo. They
the college and a smart man. -but the home of Rev. and Mr*. McNulty,
a week end guest al lhe Walter RyMrs. Frtuik Trethrick of Sonoma
“atth,ews' ”rB Cranston Wilcox; chorister. R. H. he won t clever enough to get the
w.
Center
St..
Monday
evening,
an home.
I called on her cousin. Mn. Nettle 9?rrol, Hotuh, Mr*, cresrie Sledge, Loppenthlen,
Orchestra
leader. gist of hto daughter's Jibes at him. January 27. at 7:30 for the purpose on business.
"
*’"
,. Mrs.
Mr*. Elmer Cotant spent Bunday , *iyde~
Hyde, on
on Sunday.
Bunday.
"P* Anna Andrus. Mr*. Eva Leach.' Lewb Hine; Department superin­
And hto wif*—Ruth McLaughlin— of organizing the Hastings City . .The friends of C. P. Moreau In
z Mr*. Einar Frandsen
of Ionia has ,Mni LudHe
^jUdile Y»r««r
Yarger, Mrs.
with Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Cotant
”—“*--------vr. rIna
n. Pot­ tendents—Missionary. Mrs. Wayne
thb vicinity will be glad lo learn he
heen visiting her mother. Mr*. H. I t/‘r.and Mr*. Earea Crook, with Mrs. Merrick and Mrs. a. D. Kniskem; wasn't she a scream with her | district.—Signed by the committee, was taken to hta home from Leila
of -Rutland.
,
------------I RuU1 Moore and Mr*. Ruth Haven Temperance. Mrs. Herman Zerbel; squeaky voice and *ollcltou* man-.
Mbs Della Allard left Monday for O. Haye*, this week.
ner! “Come. Cicero, you haven't | The annual meeting of the Has­ hospital last Thursday and altbo
Mr*.
Elmer
Cotant
was
a
guest
“
bdl
f
s
presented
Peace.
Mrs.
James
Fennell;
Cradle
her new position as fitter at the
...
had your ---------na-a-p!"
।; tings Civic Players association will still confined to his bed I* gaining
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Burdette , ”72i£ T^c. ot “ Shirt "
Roll, Mr*. Clarence Grohe; Junior.
DeVlnne Shop, Grand Rapids.
Esther Monica as Dolly, their be held Monday evening. February slowly in strength.
Fo'Jr D*1100 women gave "That Miss Ethel Jones; Primary. Mrs.
Mrs. M. J. OroM was In Middle­ Cotant tn Rutland.
daughter, gave a grand perform­ 3. in the community room of the
George
Reynolds
has
relumed
to
[
Aw
[
ul
Letter."
bul
we
were
unable
ueorge tteynoias
Jot Brozak; Beginneni&gt;Mrs. Harvey ance. You could tell that she wa* National Bank building. Officers will and little son spent Sunday with
ville Tuesday where »he spoke be­
•
. n«s . returnea
. . to f
IK.•• n«mc3 of the —
...l.l
partlcifore the Women's Reading Club.
II Ann Arbor where he to receiving t0 1**rn
Burgess; Asst. Junior Supt, Ltrs. quite accustomed to being in the be elected and other business trans­ his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Freeman: treatment for hto eyes.
.. «, „
.
Robert W. Cook; Asst. Primary "spot" by her poise , r. and hasn't acted All members are urged to at­ Skidmore of Hastings
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Ml** J«i«t Teale of Kalamazoo I
«• 8. C~ who had Supt., Mbs Jennie McBain.
Monday Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
she a lovely voice? It was too bod tend the meeting.
Will Shellhorn of Lake Odessa.
«pem the week end with Dr. and
h"e pwwu*ly
On Sunday morning during the though, that her leading man I
----------------- - ---------------------1Skidmore visited their son. Arthur,
G.
- E. Carpenter,
manager of. the
. I1 Mr*. K. 8. McIntyre.
—
iI ’ladle*,
“J*”'
wa* pi
present
T.^i21.an
and
^?
brought
r0U8Vt two regular
““ of
=f ­
and family on the Flower farm.
regular church
church service
service the
the at
above
wasn't taller.
PINE LAKE
Penney store, relumed Tuesday 1 Mr. and Mrs. rarrest Lane. Mrs
winning nc
ers will
—
Mr.
and Mrs. • Harry Leonard
ficers
will be
be Installed
Installed by
by the
the rpastor.
But what Richard Cooper n.* | Effie Earle to spending some time
night from a several days business L. H- Evarts and Miss Agnes 81mm *y°“p ***!..notified by the M. s. (ReV. w Mayi*n Jones,
moved most of their household ef­
Snooze Andrew* lacked In size he I with Mrs. Clara Nlchob.
trip lo Pittsburgh.
spent Sunday In Saranac.
ana will then *ntcr lhe elimlna-1 The
several objectives certainly made up in
Mr*. Millie Plsher of Harvey. HL fects last week. Mr. and Mrs. Gil­
In ability and
otto. Harold. Barbara and!
and] Mrs. vwnne
Corinne ouuia
Oould or
of i*^«ng
Lansing ‘~n*' ™ln ----0113 in view for the coming year and spontaneity. Really, he almost stole 1* * guc*t of her nephew. Bert bert will move onto their farm vaRay Otto.
hope* -tor full co-operation of the । 4K.
the whole .u_.
show! Arid
Lorraine Oils of Kalamazoo were '
the guest of Mr*. Winona ;
._ . what7*count
. .
. Brown. She b also visiting her sis­
$1.00 ond $1.50 Shirts
guests of Mr. and Mr*. Harold E. I D*»n|ng over lhe Week end.
I
Urtng Parmera We«k ,n Feb- teachers, officers and members of
ter. Mr*. Mattie Spaulding, tn Kala­
------ ma
Mr.- and Zirr.
Mrs. ----Frank Trethrick of I ruir&gt;^
Smith over the week end.
Ii . —
the. church and Sunday School tn clothes, atrocious . . . hb grammar mazoo before her return.
Mrs. Charles Monica invited the
tuesta of Mr. and
nnd Mr*.
Mrs.
Mr and Mrs. Ltoyd Llnsea and Sonoma were guest*
bringing their plans to a success­ was terrible, bul hb sense of hu­
On
Thursday
afternoon,
Jan.
18,
CIRCLE NO. • TO
Mr. and Mr*. Ernest Hooten of I George Sheffield on Sunday.
ful conclusion. The school b well mor. superb. And you felt it was a special meeting was conducted by Camp Fire airb. their guardian and
HAVE BENEFIT TEA. organised and doing a splendidly Just like him to dash off and dis­
mothers last Wednesday eveGrand Rapids were guests of Miu* Mr*. L. E. Barnett returned on
Emma Nevins at the home of Mrs i.their
I
Circle No. 6 of the Methodist helpful work.
Katherine Loftus Sunday.
I Saturday from Detroit where she
close lhe whole farce to the prexy. Lottie Lindsay, for those members I nlng for a pot luck supper In honor
$1.65 and $1.95 Shirt*
Lieutenant T. 8- K. Reid spoke at1 bad been visiting friends Tor a week, church wm delightfully entertained
even though he expected to get ex­ of the Extension class who
had of their Sunday School teacher. Mrs.
Monday
evening
by
Mr*.
Guy
Kel
­
the District American Legion held ; Elliott Davidson at St. Joseph was
NASHVILLE.
pelled for it. But he certainly wa* been unable to attend the regular Owens. Mrs. Owens received a loveler
al her home v.,
on W. vnccu
Green o&gt;.
St.
at Adrian Sunday afternoon. He re- ■ guest of Dr. and Mrs. Frank Car- —
• -•
Mbs Mary Feighner has gone to flabbergasted when the real count .classes.
ports a large attendance.
1 rothers while in ths city thb week.(Dinner was served at 8:30. the com- Detroit where she has a. position.
—whom he had pulled out of the | The leader*' meeting was held in Pierce s birthday the girb presented
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Blakney and j Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Moore mlttee in charge being Mr*. Allan
Mr*. Max Miller to at Sparrow ditch that morning—sent a check Hasting* Tuesday for the southern her with a gift and a birthday cake
daughter of Detroit were guests of
'Beatrice Sutton) of Detroitwere Hyde. Mrs. Jas. Fennell and Mr*, hospital. Lansing, where she under­ for $50,000 to make up the rest of half of the county, and Myrtle Rog­ which everybody enjoyed.
hto parent*. Sheriff and''Mrs. Jay
Sunday guests of Mrs. MamieMa-i M. O. HUI.
Mr. and Mr*. Jack Shorts and
the endowment fund, and com­ er* accompanied Mr*. Nevins and
went a mastoid operation.
Blakney. over the week end.
neeA short business session was conDollar Nackwaar
Fred Potter and Tom Kay have mended him a* a fine outstanding Mrs. Shepard for a Anal check-up daughter, Miss La Verne of Otsego
Mr. and Mr*. Raymond Gilbert
Mr. and Mr*. E. P. Bottomhave 1 dueled by the circle chairman. Mr*. gone to Indianapolis—the former to example of American college youth on the muslin models. These les­ attended the penny social Thursday
'Margaret Heath) of Muskegon were i Kone to Grand Rapids and are I H. A. Adrounie. plan* were made vbit hb daughter and family. Mr. But he didn't lose any time telling sons are very instructive and help­ night.
guests of Mr. and Mr*. George B.! «pending the winter at the Cody for
,nr “
a benefit musical •lea
— •»
to be »held
’J Kay will spend the rest of the win-;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harry
Penneto
en
­
Proxy what he wanted in return ful and all of tha member* are very
hotel.
on Thursday, Feb. fl. al the home of ter there with relative*.
tertained Mr. and Mrs. vanderWeil
Heath over the week end.
Jor that great favor. He wanted to much interested in lhe work.
Mr. and Mr*. Lorraine Isenhath Mrs. Adrounie. The committee in
Mr and Mr*. Roland Taliaferro
The Women'* Literary Club met ma*ry hb daughter, and he
waa
About fifty friends and members of Kalamazoo Saturday.
Mr. and Mr*. Jess Haney spept
(Doris William*&gt; of Battle Creek of Saginaw were guests of hl* par­ charge of the tea to Mrs. Harold J. at lhe Library Wednesday for Its
co,,*d support her right rby- of the Farmers' club met at the
were Sunday guests of her parents. ent*. Mr. and Mr*. Otto Isenhath. poster. Mrs. Forrest Johnson. Mrs. annual meeting. A planned indoor1
because of all the things he J home of Mr. and Mr* Ell Lindsey Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Lewis Hine and Mbs Esther Doty.
over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Enifrt Williams.
picnic dinner was served at one ,,lad "*n my delicatessen store." As on Saturday evening. Harold Fos­ Snyder of Hastings.
Winter Merchandite ot
After the business meeting. Mr*. o'clock by the committee. Mrs Wil-1 “ “P dancer he's a good comedian ter. our genial county agent, spoke
Little Bruce Monica accidentally
Mr. and Mr* OUy Giddings and
Dr. F. C*rrother». Frank Adair.
a saving!
Finley Johnston and James Lang­ Mis* Katherine Giddings were Sun­ Andrew Tayior had charge of lhe ham Dean. Sr.. Mr*. Clarence Ma- bul 0,41 number was one of lhe high on several topics of Interest to the burned hl* arm and hand quite se­
verely
on
the
stove
Bunday.
ston were in Charlotte Tuesday day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry entertainment. Music and games son. Mrs. Francb Pull* and Miss 8P°U
farmer*.
Rev.
Bate*
of
Delton
gave
U»e show.
Poth of Kalamazoo.
. were enjoyed.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Penneto and
Correctly $tyled and un­
night, for commandery inspection.
Mildred Caley. During the business! And ol course, lhe house-mother, a talk which was enjoyed by all.
Clifton
Wellman.
In
company
with
There
were
29
present.
Mrs.
Dor
­
sons
of
Kalamazoo
and
Mr.
and
Mrs
Mr and Mrs. Walter Eaton and
session the following officers were ^’r!^loU8 mc- but wasn't she Uie re­ Miss Neuschaefer accompanied Mr.
surpassed in quality
Mr. and Mr*. Homer Smith were a friend from Lake Odessa, were r“nce Trethric was initiated into lhe elected for the coming year: Presi- i™-. ®enteel lady. "Elegance and Barnum for two solos. Mrs. Kobe Harry Penneb and daughter spent
and wear!
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. Law­ Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. [ Circle. Mrs. Clara MacLachlan of ucuk.
dent. ™»
Mr*. Floyd s.ictu&gt;.
Everts; vacc-picMvice-presi- ■ « roprlety ' could have been Hcr
her niot- Leonard in her usual gracious man­ Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Pen। B*y City was an out of town guest. dent. Mr*. George
_____ &gt;&lt;___।,0
to: Even ‘ho way
wo.., she wrapped her- ner- K*ve several readings, and Max
__________
rence Wendt of Michigan City. Ind. Theodore Bush of Detroit.
Taft:. recording
On Thursday Mr*. Nettle Hyde |
----------------- - ---------- c—‘—
Mr*. Clara MacLachlan of Bay­
secretary. Mrs. Oall Lykins; corre-1”" “round the pseudo-counts neck Newkirk and Mis* Neuschaefer each
"
SOUTH SHULTZ.
City b the guest of her daughter and Paul Hyde vtoited Mr. and.FINE HONOR COMES
spending secretary. Mrs
Btewart I *“ done ln « strictly refined man- rendered several piano solos, which
.anm
D&lt;vld
’E’KLI' 1 •
.treasuren'MraH.
_______
D.“wot- i। ner.
«cr- Tnilv
Truly, she ......
_____
exemplary
_
nrfrlnrl
ndded much w aa ..a
very
— pleasant eve"
__
In a recent copy ot the Banner
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Har­
I
1’?8'L frl*IJd*
Miss Lillian |rln». delegates to County Federa-1 house-mother. whom all the stu- nln
old Foster, she will spend a month Honeywell of Prairieville Twp.
—8«
_* entertainment,
entertainment, The
The next
negt
Mr. and Mr*. Andrew J. Herbert ’ Tolhurat. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 11&lt;X1 Mr8 Franz Maurer; alternate dcn'» feared, but no
one obeyed
meeting
will be
here.
..w u&lt;&gt;c
oucyea
meeting will
be in
in the
the form
form of
of a
a Carty. They were formerly of this
I Mr*.
J~|* Bell; bo.rt of dlnclm
Y" _&lt;■" “» -hole U
nne
ta* dinner A U» home oi Mr. place and have many friends here.
Lcon
o.
Toinurst
ot
Marshall,
are
.,,,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Foster spent
— whole it was a fine P°l luc* dinner at the home of Mr.
pleased to know that slie hu been j
Sh M
CLOTHING AND SHOKS
WVdnesday and Thursday in De­ visit wnn nis son and wife. Mr.
performance,
carefully
planned and Mri- J*!”** Nevins on Feb. 8. While we miss them we are glad
troit. Mr. Post-r attended the Michl-) and Mr*. Lowell Herbert, of Otsego.
FOR MEN AND BOYS
well-rehearsed, and well put on’.
Sympathy 1* extended to the fam- tiiey are 50 nicely situated in Flori­
‘5,7
Leon Tolhurst of Marshall and mraiir. M Ite
The costumed dancers probably fait I
MrB Marla Osgnod. who pau- da. We hope they think of u* while
gan Fair Association convention al
Lyman B- Chamberlain of charlotte
slily and they acted seif-conscious, -- BW*y lBlt Friday .uwiuuij.
morning. UUC
She we are wading through snow. We
HASTING*
the Hotel FV&gt;rt Shelby.
«ne d°S&gt;r th™ lltUe dat‘«hler. ot Mrt Ho»* and the chorus wasn't quite a* much liax spent
Mr. and Mr*. J. R- Mason have were here on Monday evening for S773
------ ---------— here
-----------some---time
with“ her are glad they get the Banner. It is
a* guests thb week the latter'* tho Knights Templar Inspection.
at its ease a* it should have been, daughter. Mr*. Reuben Boulter, and like a letter from home.
Mr. Ranney attended a Farmers'
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cacil has the congratulations of her many program of music, singing, violin, but aside from these two little is well known and very much re­
brother and wife. Mr. and Mrs.
gone to Florida with her sister, Mrs.l
meeting at Lansing Friday.
Frank Gage of St. Paul. Minn., who Munton on Saturday were Mr. and friends here. Miss Tblhurrt is a drum nnd comet, accompanied by things -The Count and the Co-ed" spected by all tn thb community.
•
Mrs. Harry Munton and Mr. and graduate of Hastings High school their mother al the piano.
Bad road* and stormy weather Eva Whittemore.
have been visiting In Chicago.
was one of the finest things put on
a good many from attend­
1
Mr. and Mr*. John Butz and son*. Mr*. Keith Friend of Grand Rapids. and was on lhe debating team here.
A luncheon was served Wednes­ In thb year, we're hoping to see EAST WALL LAKE AND VICINITY. hindered
from Kalamazoo spent Sunday with
She
Is
a
sophomore
at
Ann
Arbor,
Miss Helen Merson and Miss
Mr. and Mr*. Will WlUttemore left 1ing P. T. A. Friday night.
Frederick and Robert, and Mrs. E.
day at the Community House by more of the same type of good
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Prank
Hom.
Mrs . Ida Carpenter will entertain
George Gray of Ludington were E»lher Doty spent lhe week end in and her present success is. no doubt, lhe Main Street division of the work. You'va shown you can do it, Thursday for sunny Florida where
Sunday guest* of the Rev. and Mrs. South Haven. Miss Lois Carter was 1 partially due to the training she re­ Methodist Aid. The program which kids, so ki-ep it up.
they will spend the rest of the win- 1the Cemetery Circle Thursday in­
at her home in Kalamazoo for the ceived In Hastings High.
1stead of Mrs. Mae Anders, who has
W. Maylan Jones and family.
And no small amount of thank* ter visiting friends and relatives.
included a play was given by lhe
O. E. Kenyon Sunday afternoon.
The Rev. W. Mayian Jones and same period.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kahler visit­
and appreciation is due to Miss
Northeast
division.
MUSIC STUDY CLUB.
Miss Pauline Pogue of Greeley,
the Rev. c M. Conklin were in
rar.
w. j.
Mr. ana
and ears.
Mrs. W.
j. uiconauscr
Licbhauscr i J(?ln £'*Pr,Jm and Mr. Roy Garner ed Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stenger of i
Robert Bush entertained the
Milo Sunday. Mrs. Stenger returned
Grand Rapid* on Monday attending Colo., and Mrs. George Merritt and
Music Study club very pleasantly on |I are planning to leave this week for1 wh0 directed the production, and home with them for a few day*.
MU*
Mary
Schermerhorn
of
Grand
the District Ministerial meeting at
Florida.
| Mr. Lewb Hine who was responsible
Rapids were guests ot Mrs. Mary Wednesday evening, with a good at­
Carl Scotsman made a burinew
Burton Heights Methodist church.
The Methodist Sunday school to for
excellent orchestra) accomTHE MOST REMARKABLE JANUARY CLEARANCE
tendance of members. Norma Bry­
trip to Kalamazoo Wednesday.
Mrs. Sadie Mae palmer and Mis* Evarta and Miss Agnes 81m on
plaiuilng a carnival for the evening I Pediment,
ant won the honor for having prac­
v Beatrice Goggins were In Grand Tuesday and Wednesday.
Mr. and Mr*. Clifford Kahler and
of February 7lh. beginning at 5:30
Leslie Kent. ,
ticed
the
most
hours
and
Harry
' Rapid* Friday night to attend the
Warren E. Carter, cashier of the
family spent Sunday with Mr. and
o'clock.
There
are
tn
be
food
'
Wood. Jr., had memorized the most
A successful man is one who Mrs. Peter Von Hout of Galesburg.
Grand Rapids gynxphony concert National Bank of Hastings and M.
booths, hamburger stands, hot waf­
selection*.
think* up way* to make money falt­
Mr. and Mr*. Chas. Kahler. Mrs.
featuring Cornelius Van Vliet. fam­ A. Larnble. cashier of the Hastings
The study for lhe evening was fles. coffee, pie. and candy booths. er than the Oovvcmment takes it, Clifford Kahler and Mrs. Mina Aid­
City Bank, were in Lansing Wed­
ous Dutch soloist.
At tha regular meeting of Laurel away from him.
Tschalkowaky. Later games were
rich were Hastings shoppers Friday.
Mrs. Clarence Ncubaum 'Julia nesday attending the Michigan
played and a delightful apclal hour Chapter No. 31, O. E. S.. plans were
Durkee) of Battle Creek called on Bankers Association meeting.
made for presenting local films in
closed the meeting.
‘
Hastings friend* last week while vis­
March by contract with Amateur
NEW IDEA CLUB.
iting her jyarcnl*. Mr. and Mrs. Wal­
Service.
BIRTHDAY DINNER.
A very enjoyable meeting of the
ler Durkee, who live near Coals
.On
Sunday
Mt*.
Geo.
Harthy
and
Mrs. Ward Smith lias been at
New Idea club was held Wednes­
Drove.
.
Mrs.
Deyo
Larkin
entertained
twen
­
Pennock hospital where she under­
Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Smith day evening, with Jtor*. Emma E. ty-three guests at a pot luck dinner went an operation.
and daughter*. Mis*
Margaret' Evans acting as hostess. asalsted by at the home of Mrs. Larkin. W.
Mrs. Clara Brooks and two chil­
Smith and Susanne of Detroit spent Mr*. Ida F. McCoy, at lhe latter's Walnut St. In honor of the birth­ dren of Flint are visiting her par­
the week end wllh Mr. and Mr*. home on West State SC,
Upon arrival the members were days of Mr. Harthy and Mrs. Ena ents, Mr. and Mrs. Amos Wenger.
beautiful furs and Uie wonderful bargains
Clinton Lahr, returning Sunday by
Doxcy.
Work at the schoolhouse is pro­
tiie way of charlotte for a visit at Introduced to our guest. Madame
gressing in spite of' the weather.
Butterfly of Hong Kong, who ap­
the Judge McPoek home.
GUESTS OF MRS. OHA1R.
They have been pouring cement for
peared
in
Oriental
costume.
Known
day and Saturday. January 34 and 38.
Mr*. May Townsend .left Friday
Mrs. Ophelia O'Hair entertained several days.
You still have a chance to buy some of
for Saginaw lo make an indefinite to Hastings residents as Mrs, Van- Mrs. Sarah Powers. Mrs. W. N.
The many friends of Charles
these furs at the greatest sacrifice ever
stay with her granddaughter and Dugtcren and to more intimate Chidester. Mrs. Emily Sullivan and Lynn will be glad to hear he b In
offered in this city.
husband. Mr. and Mr*. George friends as Aunt Molly. She proved Mbs Sara Schader on Tuesday aft­ the convalescent ward at Ann Ar­
Francis.
Site
accompanied
her mast Interesting.
ernoon for tea at the home of her bor. and it has only been necessary
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
daughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs.
daughter. Mr*. Clarence Crawford. to amputate two toes.
Alonzo Decker, ot Carlton, to Sagi- sounded and we were usnrrea into
JANUARY 24 AND 25
Flavor
On Bunday evening. Jan. 26. Mrs.
the dining room, prettily decorated
YANKEE SPRINGS.
French Pultz. Miss Marjorie Hoyt
One
in
Chinese
fashion
where
a
de
­
of lhe largest Fur Manufacturers of
Church
services
every
Sunday
Mr*. Wm. Swegles returned on
and Arthur Lower will present a
New York City and Montreal, Canada,
Sunday from a month's visit with licious chop syey dinner was served, Sunday school at two. preaching at musical al the Methodist church for
Choice Blend
must
dispose
of their entire stock of aamher daughters. Mrs. Don Swlkert of to which all did ample Justice. The three, every body welcome. Rev. the benefit of the choir.
Lansing and Mrs. Myrtle Wilhite of house was decorated throughout R. A. Houghton, pastor.
E. L. Schantz has been confined
priced the coats so low that every garment
Mbs Jerry Judd returned from to hto home for some time with
Dimondale.
Her
son.
Everett with pieces of Chinese art. loaned
Is marked at less than actual cost of man­
Swegles, went to Lansing for hb by Mrs. Van Dugteren from her Florida Jan 14. where she had been rheumatism.
ufacture. It will positively pay you to buy
mother on Sunday. She is spending wonderful collection and was fra­ spending her vacation with her
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Green have
friend from Haaltngs. Miss Peggy
Rolls
a few days with her son and wife grant wiUi the burning of Incense.
relumed here from Lansing and are
A
short
business
meeting
followed
Kelly.
They
toured
to
Miami.
Tfcmbefore going lo her own home in the
staying with the latter's parents.
and
plans
for
the
new
club
year
pa.
Palm
Beach
and
many
other
second ward.
Mr .and Mrs Otto Schulze.
Rolls
Soft, Absorbent
Mrs. Linnle Brockway returned to were made. Our new president, Mrs. places of interest. They also called
8. I. BIGLOW
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Voelker and
the home of her niece and nephew.1 Maude W. Smith. gave a short talk on Dr. and Mrs. McIntyre ot Has­ son of Lansing spent Sunday with ,
An Expert Furrier
Mr. and- Mrs. Clayton Baugh. Sun­ and Mrs. Van Dugteren favored us tings, who are spending the winter the latter's mother, Mrs. Dause.
in Charge ot
day evening, from Hastings, where with delightful readings. The re­ In Clearwater.
Charles
Kohler
is
suffering
from
'
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Johnson have an infection in both hands.
This Sale
she was called New Year's Day by mainder of the evening was pleas­
And a HALF POUND FREE!
’
,
been spending a few days with their
the death of her son. Lewis Brock­ antly spent with games.
friends.
Paul
Hamilton
and
family
way. in an automobile accident. Her
BOWNE CENTER.
CIRCLE
NOL
of
Niles,
and
James
Hamilton
ot
■on. Harold Brockway, and Mr*.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Benton and
FUR JACKETS, CAFES AND SCARFS
Mrs. M L. Oook delightfully en­ South Bend. Ind. They returned
Brockway, brought her to Wayland
Mr. and Mn. John Nash were In
1 ACTUAL VALUE AS HIGH AS
TO SIN, CAN
tertained Methodist L- A. 8. Circle home on Monday.
Bunday and were guests of the
Lowell Saturday.
: BE BOUGHT NOW AT THIS SAL* AT
No. 3 on Monday evening, the busi­
Our school is coming fine. Mrs.
Baugh's
that evening.—Wayland ness session being preceded by the
Russell Benton and family of.
Orpha Houghton, teacher.
Globe.
Grand
Rapids
spent
Sunday
at
!
Your savings will be phenomenal. Thb is the most daring and
usual supper. The dining table was
Miss Audra Hummel from Has­
Miss Margaret Dahlke, manager
Wayne Benton's. Helen, who spent
sensational price-cutting sale ever held. The opportunity U her*
centered with a bouquet of lovely
of the Hollywood Beauty Shop, wa* spring flowers. Mr*. Glen Dens­ ting* High school was at home Sun­ Friday night and Saturday with her I
.. Grasp III Too much cannot be said in regard to the low price*
day. .
e •
Z*
called to Homer last week by the
brother and family, returned home
more was in charge of the enter­
Albert
Mick
from
Chicago
i*
visit
­
A
A
death of her mother. Mtoa Edith
ment to guaranteedtainment which all enjoyed, One ing his grandmother in Yankee with them.
Mangu,* ot Battle Creek has been
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Houghton'
JtAC
Spring*.
substituting during her abwnoe.
The Biglow Fur Trading Co. bring* every important high fashion
D. Z. Boye* Will be the hostess.
More coming lo Sunday school and Mr. and Mr*. Guy Smith were f
Mr*. Geneva Payne, Mis* Kitty
in Fur* ta Hasting*. You'll And Swagger Coats, Box StUiouetts*
I
each Bunday. All come and help, Grand Rapids visitors Tuesday.
Atkins and Dennis McIntyre spent
and straight line Cools with slightly fitted walrts. Despite th«
TAU CHAPTER MEET&amp;
w**atd*ptt. d J
________ _ Mr. and Mr*. George Bustance
Sunday with Mrs. Payne’s parents.
high quality of these furs llw prices are remarkably low.
Tau Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
and daughter of Campbell were
Mr. »nd Mr*. Will Fighter, at msf with Mrs. K- J. Pratt on Wed­
callers
on
Will
Fox.
Sunday.
NORTHEAST CARLTON.
. A LIBERAL ALLOWANCE GIVEN ON YOUB OLD FUB*
Grand Ledge. Bob Fighter was also nesday evening ahd,enjoy*d an ed­
Mr*. Merrill Karcher and Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. Aionzo Decker arc
OK FUB COAT
home from Big Rapids over the ucational program on speech and visiting their daughter. Mrs Qeo. Watt Thomas were Grand Rapldi
week end.
An expert furrier, direct from the Blglow factory, to with no
vole* cilltur*. conducted, by Mr*. Francis aad family of Saginaw. »hopper* Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Wesplnter Pratt, educational director. Mrs. A. Mrs. Mae Townsend ot Hastings ac­
Floyd Flynn and family. Clan
visited Mr. and Mrs. carl Wesplntgr, P. McDonald is assistant director.
Flynn and mother, Harold Nash ant
companied them.
SMALL DOWN PAYMENT-EASY TERMM
Jr., and son in Detroit on Friday.
Mr. and Mm Lyle Lydy ot Maple wife spent Sunday al John Nash’s
While enroute home, their car skid­
ENTERTAINS CLUB.
Grove spent Bunday evening with in honor of Alice Nuh'i birthday.
ded on the icy highway and went off
Miss Emily McElwain entertained hb: parents, Mr. and Mn. Sootl
Quite a number attended the
the road, the machine turning over the member* of her bridge club, all Lydy.__________
meeting held al Karcher'* oil sta­
__________
- on the side. Luckily neither of the of whom are teachers, on Tuesday
tion recently to organize a gun and
occupant* were hurt and Ute car evening for dessert. The evenlrtg was
New York excess cabbage b to be rod jrtubr'-^
'
LADIt*' FURNI
was not damaged ao much but what, pleasantly spflnl playing lhe new converted into sauerkraut. Now to ■ Utt. and M?3. Glen Godfrey ami
they drove ItTwmc. Neither is anx­ game. -Monopoly." MU* Rose De Foe beat the inevitable election baloney in'B idS'" 8alurday wllh &lt;lflcn‘u
144 lur Stata StraM
being the winner.
ious to repeat the experience.
surplus into frankfurter*.

SUITS

$16.50
$21.00
$24.00
$29.50

Suit*
Suit*
Suits
Suit*

$9.95
$15.95

$16.95
$22.50

OVERCOATS

$16.50 Coot* $12.95
$19.50 Coot* $14.45
$22.50 Coot. $16.45
$27.50 Coot. $19.45

SHIRT Spociah

75c ««ch

To Sa It Al IB IP

FUB COAT

Specials

SALE

for Friday, Jan. 24 and Saturday, Jan. 25

Bliss Coffee

u. 21c

Vacation Land Coffee
Grand Coffee

u- 17c

A

25c

Pork &amp; Beans c«.Puu-.

4

25c

Northerrt Tissue

6

33c

Gauze Tissue

6

25c

Lipton’s Tea

cr...

Hit. 35c

$35 to *65

Vegetable Shortening

BEEF

Swiss or
Sirloin

STEAR

LB.

64843^

JUST PHONE
HASTINGS

WE DELIVER

FAIRCH

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY JANUARY 13,

INSURANCE

r«£ crmomianEHBM.

H“"°“ B“”'
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 HONEST THINKING

I Denniston's brother.
'
has returned home leaving the
1 ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Dennbton and Mr., daughter somewhat Improved.
and Mn. C. E. Van Ett made a ' The dbtrict teachers health maetbuslness
trip
ta
Allegan
on
Weding composed
teachers from
Kip Ml nUCB.U
--- —of
- ----------------- lhe
---- . &gt;■
,. WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
C&lt;»dK BROS.. Editor*.
___ ____________
Inhn.tnwn
nesday.
last week.
; townships of Baltimore. Johnstown | UJ
JASON K. MeKLWAIN
Farmers, we buy all
I Mra Ida Dennbton b very ill With and Assyria was held at the
|
(Continued
from
page
one)
a hard cold and touch of the flu on Thursday evening- Mrs. Maude :
kinds of Live Stock 0.1
at her cousin's home. Mrs. Van Ett. Smith school commissioner and
al
or„, Bl Hsailnc*.
Highest Market Price.
ing a serious economic and financial She has been conflned to her bed Mrs. John Nobles, health nurse of
el*., m.n.r.
'•*-! situation. Two thousand young men for the last three days. We ho[&gt;e Hastings gave addresses. Albert I--------------------------------------------------------M. C. Stockyard. Every
"•dtr I vi11 graduate from hlgh'achoou and for her speedy recovery.
Hub»rrlMl&lt;»&gt;
Becker English teaclier of Hastings
him-jcolleges thb year, with no job* for.■
Tuesday — Veal and
Snow and ice seem to be in line high school directed a ptay presentJ*,**,1?*t’** TKA*' ** °Of
• them. ' We cannot meet thb situ­ for all motorists or the gravel roads ed by hb dctyUng class.
|S |lAKMr
HIX jgnjnfcg.
Lambs—Hogs and
T« PROTECT You Con.tantly
ation with ballyhoo. We must meet at present, although the pavements . Mr. and Mrs. Julius Paul and j ()r k411l ,n
&gt;
•
COATS OROVB CHURCH OFf/tHRIST.
.
Il with reason nnd common sense. 1
Cattle Every Day,
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly
arc in fine condition.
; family of Battle Creek and mother. |X harry &lt; &lt;iUNTy. THREE months.
H. a. M .lOur people are lhe victims of
11 ,'
----------------- -------------------- Mrs. Agnes Purcell of Hastings !• is advance--------------------------------- ----- ----- ss«
American genius in Inventing mn- :
Ol
’
TMIDE
BAIiRY
COUNTY.
ONE
YEAR
DELTON.
j called Sunday al the home of Mr.
chines for more rapid and lew cost- ; Ed Willison
wluuon u
uc kick
b qU
quite
sick witn
with1 und Mrs Fred Miller.
Good Work Team for
ly production. We have perfected pneumonia
------------r. it thc
-----------------home of-- hb sbThe nj.5t Jcc ymjmg reported in. FOREIGN SUBNCRIPTIONH, ONE YEAR
CITIZENS MUTUAL
the machUtes. but we have not lcr
Sale Cheap. 2 Cows to
....Mra Qordlc Durkee,
thb locality was at Martin lake on
F. MMA N U E aIUR C
),
Fire Insurance Co
found n way of expanding the pur-&gt; »&lt;
— wm
--------- 1 Saturday. A party of workmen were
Mr. —
and
Mrs.
Will Whittemore
ADVEHTIHINO RATES:
freshen soon.
chasing power of our people, awed- Je
„ Thursday lo
.. ; filling the Scrven Cooperative Ice
left
to &gt;pcliu
spend MMr
the remainen has discovered the way to do drr of the wlntcr m Florida. Mrs.
,&gt;ninnm««n.
lO'.IU A. J
that.”
Whittemore's
sister.
Mrs.
Mac
Anof
excellent
quality
and
about
ten
MAUS
"Thr tViae^
He warned against attcmpUnK. In Hers of Kalamazoo, accompanied ; jnchSi thick,
lUr*.
Butlon
' arrr, Fu»!.l UM »M eient Jroom P»«iv1»u Frilo»«iiii'.
a democracy, to stifle free thought them.
Glenn Campbell, who has been al
r a 1.4 Inlll.i.cX*
rn-u '
and free speech. ■Prevent these." । Mbs Virginia Ed&lt;fy of Long Island ' Pennock hospital because of a reUNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
he said, "and you pave the way for 1 b visiting relatives here and nt Kai-; lapse from pneumonia b now nt' luriTiution
IN CHRIST.
Fnscbm and dictatorship."
amazoo.
home "but confined to his bed.
I "-,—
F. J. GRAHAM. Mgr.
He spoke of the religious problems
Bsltlnot* Church.
Brick for thc new Delton Rural
-----11 Obiiuar
that face us in these days nnd noted Agricultural school has been select- '
Phone 2330
THREE CORNERS.
,
will t
Frwi w hwi-1 that the "fires on lhe altars of re- ,cd and purchased of the Wyandotte
Mrs.
Leo
Hammond
and
Richard
i
•
I hgion are becoming dimmer.” That Clay Products Co. of Upper San- „
luriM.a to
w uwir
I1OIUC U1
returned
their home
in Flint in 1 ,ah obh'u*
'
u because so many people who be- dusky. Ohio. Inspector for the Fed-1 comimny W|th Mrs. Claude A. Ham-1
Medium "■Church.
long to churches do not place God oral government b an architect. | mond and children, who spent Uie '
Knau a M I'nv.r first In their lives. "Religion u an­ Keith Smith of • Detroit. He will. wcck t,nd wlth her sons. James and
ini -US Mi
other name for making life normal handle both Delton and Middles'llle u.o and theli. Emilies there,
ON COMMISSION
REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
and adjusting oneself Co nil of life. projects and is making Delton hb
Anwld Ualcolln of Lake Odessa
We need a religion inside us; not headquarters
gpectsclrs Fitted and Guaranteed. SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
It b expected that: taled hay at hb farm here Monday
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHVBCH.
external
forms,
but
internal
power."
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
work will begin here thb week.
i
Mrs Malcolm visited Mr. and
Credit—Term*.
• Tlirec things, he said, are urgently
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE
The Delton flre truck waa called!
jgfcn Makolm.
needed in thc present emergency:
BONDS
i£me
Mr‘ and “«• pJaxc
Mr. and Mr*. John Oiner of Rut- vere case ot tonsilllb last week,
"First is intelligence." He said hc Ashby Thursday, when their house ,and w,.re Wednesday guests of Mr. which necessitated quite a stay in­
I Noury Public*—-O»n«r*l Conv«y»ncln«
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.
1 105 South Church
had met many people who could caught lire from a defective chim- aMd
doors.
aeo„c Kelley.
write PhD. and D D. after their nry. But the fire was extinguished
Mr Bnd Mrl Edw WalU;ra and
Mr. and Mrs Caryl Bowman and
names who are not really intelligent, by the time the truck arrived. «o fwnUy Bre entertaining their son- «»n. George, of Hastings were guests
and he had met other persons who no serious damage was done.
in-law. Rev. Dayton Manker of Sunday of their parents, Mr. and
had had very limited school ad­
LIFE. HEALTH, ACCIDENT.
Item. Iaclu41:i( "Old BclliU. r«.r nit
The Shnn-ta-ull-me-wo Camp Fire M3rj0n. Indiana, formerly of Has- Mrs. William Stanford. Mr. and
vantages. who evidenced ability to group entertained thclr mothers u
for a fcw
whUe he u Mm. George Stanford attended a
ALTO. FIRE. WIND.
think straight and to gel down to ,and dbtrict committee with an old U1 Bttcndance at a threc-day dinner recently at the home of Mr.
COMPENSATION
fundamentals.
fiuhloned
and Mrs. David Conklin near Ban
Ban-­
IU! Ilionet! tafiy.jjull
tony puu at_the^
ai me Home
nome ( prophetlc
phct(c convention being held at ftnd
"The second great need b Inleg- Economics building on Tuesday [ thc vyesluyan Methodist church in |ne,d- honoring Mbs Kathryn Conkrily.” We hear a lol of talk that the h
। 'S!?1' „ ,
.
,
,,
... Ii Hastings
at
b;, ,,n’R birthday.
...
ui which
wmen Rev.
mcv. Manker
wancer is
urgent need now b "conflder.ee" , TV,,
1.« will
I Mailings
. .
Nc|, uhflm who ha,
Th. n.1un
tk-non Pvl.n.lnn
Exl.nMon rflu.
, „rt.................................................
„ 0,
INSURANCE AGENCY
• Confidence in what? " asked the meet nt thc home of Mrs. Harrv , ieclurM
I a, vacation because of whooping
speaker. "Certainly not in lhe lack Wertman Tuesday oftemoon Jan- । ptaiide A.
HEST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Claude A. Hammond, who
who spS&gt;&lt;
spent cough, "Ireturns
—: thb week
™k to hb
National Bank Building
| of intelligence and statesmanship ,IaJ? j8'
SCIENTIST.
' t*le P
“st wcc
k in Jackson on busipast
week
bus)- cv.iool
school at the Pine lake camp.
ca
Cor. Cbnrcb *nd Confer Sts.
Hint
has
brought
America
to
her
Phone 2519
Mesaames Dunn. Lowry, Erb. , ncss returned home Friday night.
Mrs. Norton Slocum and daugh­
present condition. Certainly not Moorhus and Miss Kathryn Horton whUe therc hc vUlted hu nlK.e8 #nd
confidence in our present economic repmented the Delton Extension ; thclr huabnIlds. Mr ftlld Mrs. Chan­ ter. Ann. visited her sbter. Mrt. Al­
. . Michigan
Hastings .
bert Lewis and family at Baltic
life with its billionaires and paup­ class in thcprexentatlon of a one-, nlng Mlntcr nnd Mr
M„ a.
Creek. Saturday.
ers. What we need to have is "con­ net play. •That Awful Letter, in mcr Loehr
I will pay the HIGHEST MARKET
fidence" in science, which Is an­ the preliminary contest at the Wrl-: Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Belum of
Mrs A, 8teury of Un.
PRICE for VEAL. LAMBS. HOGS and
JETFERDON BT. UNITED BRETHREN other name for God's laws, and to come Orange hall Tuesday after- slnK wen.
Bedford spent Sunday afternoon al
pnd
BU
„
u
or
lhelr
CHURCH
। have personal integrity and char- noon. January 21.
SIUP
Cor. Jefferson and Center 8t*. .
। parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Mai- S. A. Wertrnan’s.
jacter that can he depended on. । „„„„„
Millon Nobles and Bernie Ran- 1 c0]m
A special
Illustrated sermon.
Honor and truth and an iioncst master of Grandville were visitors.
JAKE DePRlESTER. PHONE 717
search for truth are the needs. We nt narry Wertman's on Wednesday
tor at the regular church hour next
MORGAN.
nuht have suffered a breakdown in in- Mra. Josephine Johnson of YorkI Sunday morning far the benefit of
Glenard Earl and Bob Knight thc young people and the children.
i legrlty and honesty."
ville on Thursday, nnd Mr. and Mrs.
The next great nerd in America c. P Urabce und family nnd Mr. .I made it business
r trip to Battle Creek
STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
he said U initiative. Wc need right and Mrs. Harry Garrison and fam- ,s“y
HENDERSHOTT.
Guaranteed Truss RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call
'
Alton ana
and Wayne
Norris of Lacy
now statesmanship that can get us yy on Sunday.
Alton
wa
Not much news since the roads
on farmers In N. Barry county. No
out of our trouble, not by mortgagWilliam Seibel has been laid up 1 were week end guests of their
are so Icy. Our folks are staying at
Fitting Service
experience or capital needed. Write
ing our future with debts, but by for the past two week with infec- grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Dave home.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
| McClelland while their parents were
| today. McNESS CO.. Dept. B. FreeR«t. John Kltcbtng. D. D.. Putor.
polntlng the way to united • effort non in hb toe.
Mrs •LaVera
Quick
Banfleld
There wasn't ax large a crowd as
225 W. Cvalar St.
Phon* 8385. and Interest ir. the common good.' ••
••
--------- of- -----------** ! ta Lansing 'visiting Janet Kay. the
Iport, Illinois.
was desired to hear the Missionary
vUHwl her
Mra i। ,,ltle
aatood lo bold tbs rupture
•'We need big men” he said.
‘' visttcu
ner• narenta
parents, Mr
Mr. and
ana Mrs.
. . tnlss »1’° came
... to lake
.' .ul» hcr program Sunday night but it cer­
| SjS*®
He made an appeal to thc young .John Doster, on Wednesday
tainly
was worth coming out to hear
Mr
and
Mrs
Allen
Terry
of
Vicks*
nan
'
“
.
‘
SttoE^
folks in hb audience for each to
even though lhe mercury stood at
"seek to make for himself, nnd to |burg were week-end guests of lhe I 9 *'9
zero.
A WORD TO THE FARMERS:
’Selective Prepare
Mn. W o.
ij,b
lay the foundation tn a good char- |wun POO.U. Mr.
The
Aid was fairly well attended
Nothing else like
actcr. in Intelligence and cultivation '
I am in lhe market for your hide*
last Thursday at A. C. Clark's.
J?.rin‘i3a Mr” .T
1 "S 1«”&gt; •&gt;»«»«
of the ability to think, and a real
and pelH. I have handled nearly
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Matteson went
EVANGELISTIC MEETINGS
courage The kind of courage we i
one thousand hides a year from the
to Baltic creek Sunday afternoon
need, now he said is thc kind that :
farmers in Barry Co.. Price* are
The Prescription Drug Store
'°r d'"""Mr. ™ # HoX .„d with Mr. and Mra. Laurence Mat­
will enable a man to -take it on the ;
stronger than last year, also buying
teson to call on Ed. Cassidy.
chin.” set un smiling and deter-1
------.
dealer lot*. The leading fur and
MICHIGAN
HASTINGS
। Annur
Arthur weoo
Webb were guraw
guests o:
of tncir
thclr , Mrs. Millie Haynes who has been
mined
that
the
uorld
has
a
place
COATS
GROVE.
hide buyer of Barry County.
' “
___
”
' galnh
’ lnJ in
for him and that he will find hb
The next meeting of thc P T. A.
•u&gt;‘1 many friends at Bat- » ‘ for
me Ume
b
।&gt; strength which will be good
to
place, even if a humble one. In the will be held on Friday evening. Jan. He Creek last Friday..
cood news
nc
.31.
Pot luck
luck supper
supper al
al 77”o
o’’clock
clock [ Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. Wayne
Wvne Christopher
friends.
work of the world."
31
Pot
One block north of National Bank, j WAXTKDI
tollnn-nH bv
kv a
« good
i-nnA program.
nrnnrom Bring
Tlrino ' who are
HTO spending
.STM'tldlnV the
tile winter
Wi
I: followed
in Lan-1 Last Thursday was Jackie McDonFIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH.
The place lo meet your hunter and
! your own table service and plan to ’ing were at their home at the Lake aid'.-, birthday and hb mother sent
W Muyhn Jonci. Mlnlitur.
WOODLAND.
trapper friend*.
attend.
| over the week end.
। “ birthday dinner to the school chll13S w. w»lnnt.
Phon* 2141.
There was a good attendance at
Evnngclbtlc meetings continue I We are glad to report that Mrs. dren for thc noon lunch. Thc big
■ fnch
• evening
■
------ ebri
' ■ ­ 1 Anna DeVine b able to sit up part birthday cake was certainly enjoyed
the open meeting of the Women s thls week
nt-- 7:30.
1 by the youngsters.
Study Club on Tuesday
evening “al
n&gt;’"'
* ducted by the pastor, Clement Jor­ of the time.
The young people of lhe Nazarcne ' The ladies are asked to remem­
thc Woodland township school. This don, with special music each eve­
WANT TO HIRE MAN
was a very enjoyable meeting ns ning.
church held their prayer meeting at bcr our sick friends wllh calix or
LIQUID • TABLETS HEADACHE'
IMMEDIATELY with farm
the
home
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Chas,
cards. Mrs. Cora Sinclair's address
Mrs. Audrey DeWitt of the State
In 30 Minute*
Modcsta Klnne was operated on
1 b St. Mary's hospital. Grand Rap­
Conservation Department gave n for appcndlcitb on Tuesday. Jan. Harrington Tuesday evening.
experience for steady local
Folks around here are getting ids. Thc last report from her
nature talk, using pictures taken by 7. at Pennock hospital. She came
Walter Hastings. The High School home last week nnd Is getting along their ice houses in readiness for pul- ' slates she showed a slight ImproveCar necessary. Write- or sign
ment.
Girls' Glee Club under the direction nicely.
ting up ice thb week.
*
your name below and mail to
। Hie need for your news Items was
of Miss Naomi Van Loo presented । There was n fine attendance at
Box 161. Dept. 36!M». Quincy. III.
HINDS CORNERS.
again brought to our notice the past
three numbers.
1
the L. A. S. last Thursday, which
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Haynes and week so please phone your items of
Woodland friends of MKs Lucille met with Mrs. Frank Haight and a
Garllnger of Sunfield will be inter­ ven1 good dinner was served
by sons spent Bunday with lib mother, interest.
Age ....
Mrs Millie
xelllia Haynes,
VTnvnac in
In Baltimore.
Raltlmnru
a • * 11
Mrs.
I
ested to know that she was married Ciub. No. 4.
WEST HOPE.
Mr. and Mrs. Ekank Golden visited
years lived on farm
to Robert Cardis of Lansing on New
Marian Woodman came from Kal­
Year's Day at Grand Rapids. She amazoo Friday evening to spend the hb father. Natfianlel Golden, and
A goodly crowd attended the Com­
No one! But until recently this
family in Baltimore Sunday.
graduated from Woodland High week end al home.
munity meeting at the McCallum
Mr. and Mrs. 'Arthur Moore of home Friday evening in spite of tha
Address ..
.I The men of ___________________
school tn 1933.
the Sunday school
Mr. and Mrs. Welby Crockford will give a pancake supper in the Freeport spent Friday with Mr. and storm. An original poem by Izola
Klmmcy wa* put to music and sung
and family spent Sunday with Mr. church basement on Thursday eve- Mrs. Will Moore.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias and by Stanley Kiminey. And were some
and Mrs. Chas. Higdon of Nash- nlng. Feb. 6.
both A and D content. Thia means
ville.
| Air. and Mra. E. O. Smith spent daughter ot Kalamazoo spent Sun­ newlyweds’ faces red.
day
with
hb
parents.
Mr.
and
Mrs
Mbs Jean Eckstrom of Battle
Mrs. Glen England received word a few days at Niagara Falls last
C- N- Tobias.
Saturday that her daughter. Miss week.
Creek spent the week end with Miss
liver oil). Restock the pioneer prod­
Mrs. Burrell Phillipa v bl ted Mrs. ____
Belle MCallum and attended tha
Phyllis England of Chicago was to
Rev. and Mrs. F. C. Wing and Mr.
uct. Abbott** Hallver Oil, plain and
be operated on for appendicitis Sat- and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher spent Sunday I Houghtalin of Hastings one after-1 community club,
with Viooterol; liquid or nmall. easyMr. and Mrs. Ronald Anders and
\irday afternoon at Si. Luke's hos- with Mr. and Mra. Jolin Woodman. noon last week.
Miss Susie Phillips attended the gon* and Gerald Anders celebrated
I pital. Later news was received Sun- i
———&lt; e »
about this splendid new product.
Rutland cemetery Circle at Peter Gerald's twenty-fifth birthday with
' dav that she b coming along nicely |
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
and
would
be
home
in
a
week
or
Mr.
nnd
Mrs.
Ellsworth
Smith
Vanderbrook's
in
Rutland
last
Wedn
dinner at Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
BODY GLASS INSTALLED
more to convalesce before returning and daughters. Mr. and Mrs. Shcr- nesday.
I Foote's Sunday.
The Prescription Drug Store
llaybe«to* Brake Lining
There were thirty-six present at | n being the middle of the school
to her work.
man Smith and grandson and Ruth
। Mr. and Mrs. John Hauer and Mr. “nd Thelma Cbk of Hastings were the Cemetery circle at Mrs. C. N. year, the Delton school bus re­
MICHIGAN
I and Mrs f. e. Border were dinner dinner guests of Chas. Farlee and Tobias' Wednesday, despite the slip- versed 1U route so that our scholar*
Pennsylvania Tires
pery roads. A fine pot luck dinner here who had so far to ride are
guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. 'family Sunday.
J
The Misses Dortlia and Lucille was served and all enjoyed a good now on the last part of the morning
Will Mohler of Hastings Monday
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Hassel ba rt of Lindsay. Ohio, spent visit. The election of officers fol- lrip and are home early al night,
evening.
.
lowed. Mrs. Floyd Armour of Has- j
------- —-----------------Paul Hough of Hartford and Mbs Thursday with Mrs. Ward Green.
Phone 2637
Hastings
«... Irene
------------------Dicker-1 A seaside deck chair has been
pgficiiFriois1
John Smith of Battle Creek spent ting's, president; Mrs.
Frances Moyer of Three Rivers were
united in marriage by Rev. A E­ Saturday night with hb parents, son. secretary: Mrs. Velma Dick-; Invented which folds and unfolds
erson.
treasurer.
when
a
button
Is pressed. FortUWynn nt the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Owen Smith.
The box social al the schoolhouse nately for those who like a bit of
Mr. and Mrs.------Guy------------------Kantner spent
Donald Gager Saturday evening at
--------------------,
8:00 o'clock in the presence of Mr. Thursday with Rev. and Mrs. Frank was not so well attended on ac-. amusement, there are still the stout
count of the bad roads but all who' gentlemen who attempt
swallow
and Mrs. Harry Hough Of Hartford Noxon at Caledonia.
Thanks | dives from the pier head.
were there
there had
had a
a good
good time.
I
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager
Laird Wotrlng of M. B. C. spent were
Mr. Hough b the youngest brother Monday night with Mr. and Mrs. are due to Dewey Reed
CARLTON ORANGE. NO 2C4.
Ices as auctioneer.
I of Mrs. Gager nnd was a sophomore, Olcnn Wotrlng.
HASTINGS MARKETS
1 at western State Normal. Mrs&lt;
Mra. Caroline Bahlnger and fam­
DOWLING.
Hough has been taking a nursing lly from“near**"Woodbury were Sun­
Rev. Jolin Hull of Kalamazoo will
course al Branson hospital. Kala- day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
be
the
speaker
the
next
meeting
of
. rnazoo He has secured a position in Fisher.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Early from Uie Townsend Club, which will be
I the Auditor General's offlee and beon
WI11U held at the Dowling church
ii; gan work there Monday. The young Nashville, Mr. and Mrs.
, t^antner and daughter of Hastings. Tuesday evening. Jan. 38. Mr. Hull
i couple will reside in Lansing,
| Mesdames Glen England. Law- Mtr”and Mrs. Torrence Ttfwnsend comes highly recommended. The
ciub has a large membership and
___ . . -----------------I| rence
rente Faul
raui and
ana Karl
tcari Faul
i-wui were and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Townsend
the number b gradually increasing.
Grand Rxnldt
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
Rapids visitor*
visitors Thunuliv
Thursday and son were dinner guests of Mr.
Mrs. Etta Spiller of Urbandale
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Woodruff Mrs. Lawrence Paul remained over , and Mrs. Harrison Blocher.
were in Grand- Rapids Sunday vis- to visit her sbter, Mrs. Chas. Rowof her niece and husband. Mr. and
ASSYRIA.
***"-“ -- ---.u- ____ -• n—
,-------------jjjfter- and daughter. Virginia
Paul.
......
aw««- . —
RUUB ra»u&lt;.
Mrs
John Chamberlain.
The
Briggs
church
community
i3. Eyck.
| The January meeting of the P. T.
w,
airs. u.
Hammond 1 A.
Mr. and Mra. Jerry Steele of Bat­
w | rnr.
Mr. ano
and Mrs
C. at.
M. Hammond
A. was
was neid
held Wednesday
Wednesday eveeve- "JJ’j,
tle Creek accomjianled Mra. Ella
If you wish trucking service call Hastings
!J spent Saturday night at the home nlng January 22 at 8 o'clock. The
mm
Case chairman assbted by Mrs. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Leo Geller
X of Mr and Mrs. Frank
ir. Zz~Boys' Ckc
Glee C'.^L
Club and the Millar Lzz
Ice C
Phone 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.
arid family to Nashville Bunday,
Ds*nrl
P"?*PW’- helping them cele- Cream Co. of Eaton Rapids fur- Mildred Stevens. Mr*. Eulah Van
they attended a family din- RM ok
Meaa otOCK
brate
thclr wedding anniversary, nbhed a delightful evening's enter- Byckle and Mrs. Evangie Miller. Ev­ where
Feeder Calves and Milch Cows at all'time*.
eryone b welcome. Pot luck supper ner at the home of Mr. and Mr*.:wjd*»,'
kV
They
vL“,ed 1,1 ,he home °r Gfo tainment including refreshments.
I at seven o'clock followed by a local Franz Maurer. *“
rara
JLi7amm wtu 8nydrr nr,r Caledonia. Sunday.
----------------- -----------------------talent
program.
Bring
table
service.
LIAMS &lt;!S Cliaton 8t_ Hutiaxi. Tete . Mr and MTs. warren.Miller. Jean W’F.8T ORANGEVILLE *
jtaicn* proanun. «*“*»
among lhe guests.
•*»n. «**•
—
u Charles of Clarksville were,
AND
EAST GUN -----------MARSH,
and
— ---------------------— sandwiches, and one other food.
Mr. and Mrs. JU*.
.
I KALAMAZOO RENDERING
PLANT
- •
■
The
Stevens Parent---------Teacher
or- —------- ----------dinner guest* of Warren Bolton and
Mrs. Charles
Crawford
I* slowly
- -----------------WtMTtx.ui.phcn. (kU(n csDCdbcL family Sundaj
improving after being seriously ill ganizatlon will hold a regular aea- derahott visited their aunt. Mrs.
i________________________ _______ Jf- i
--------- .-----------------------for some time. She h now able to sion on Friday night the 24. under
HASTINGS BRANCH
. ^ly lhe man who can lmP°5e du- walk some alone.
the management of Mr. and Mra.
Mrs.
BANNER WANT »nvs .* v
ci ~P*
lne on
Mr.
x~~~
—himself
-———h—fit to discipline
uhmkumc
«u.and
muMr*.
aora.E.&amp;.O&lt;j Denniston
uennuumand
onu Ward Cole and Mr. and Mrs. Clay- ham has been confined
.
BANNER WANT ADV8. FAY
[Others
~ Van ~
„ ton Case.
for several days.
others or
or can
can impose
impose dlsciplne
dlsciplne on
on —
"Mrs. C.
Ett were in Grand
Mrs. Lob Altman had
'
^Rapids
otheis.
[Rapids on Tuesday oTtast
of last week and
Mrs. Nellie French of East Assyria

UFE . AUTO . FIRE

NOTICE!

WANTS

ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER­
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c.

Our Service

J

GRAND RAPIDS
PACKING CO.

GEO. M. NEWTON

rrarai

JERRY ANDRUS

Farmers, Attention!

NOTICE!

A. TQBf AS

666

COLDS

FEVER

The Fish That
Freed a Nation

CARDS of THANKS

NEW AND USED
AUTO PARTS

GRANGE PROGRAMS

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,
Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
Every Monday.

Kemovea.

Michigan Livestock Exchange

"Clocks

�। Thursday, January 23, 1936

what

. cGMcisioms.
about:

estwood, calif.-

CONCERNED QUESTION OF
|
BARRING FISHERMEN

W

FROM STREAMS
For our lawlessness we’re
forever blaming hot-headed- j uc on cunwc
.in
ness, the innate high temper! Nt-DU-onUNt LLUD
, „

I lows: Defective chimney*, wiring,
oilstoves, lightning, matches, brood• er stoves, cars, stovepipe, gas en­
gines, sparks on roof, lamps, and
some were of unknown origin. De­
Program Embraces- Many
, fecUve chimneys was the cause of
। Subjects of Vital Interest j
. losses amounting to over *13.000. De। -r&gt;,» triomniinnai Harvester Co I
■
I fective wiring and oil stoves cauted
to Agriculture
IT«?.|»Sr book!. { un“r FARMERS MUTUAL FIRE . &gt;««« Ml
ol over SS.0M.
I Michigan Sheep Breeden
|, n
Readers
of ,h
the
Banner
inter
rhe
"I1 Drive Solely"
I|
INBURANCE 00. HAS
™f,m nf
* —
nn— are ,nt
"-141C UUe
UI
ested In.the success of thia company.
| planning on holding a purebred ewe gtruciions in non-tcchnlcal lan-,
annual meeting
Which has been In existence for
sale on Friday morning, February 7. i guage to drivers of trucks and buses.,
] nearly three-quarters of a‘ century
at Michigan Btate College. This is*MAjOR WARNINGS:
It was reorganized In 1032. The
I one of Uie features of Fwmers ( Approach slippery curves as you OFFICERS GIVE
! members
,
and friends of the com; Week which Is in sew on at the .
w trank. llghu
RnOD ‘SATISFACTION Pany are pleased with the progress

SPECIAL FEATURES
”
OF FARMERS’ WEEK

circuit COURT

of the races behind us. But did j
you ever notice this?
Mem-*

THE HASTINGS BANNER
MAKES PRDBRESS '
driven Of Trucks
And Biues Warned
iwra
„__

,

. ...... ....

DEFENDANT IN SUIT
w ------------- -

.

,

In

PART

FOUNDATION ADDS
MUCH TO SERVICE

lacto

rccomir
mastitis. to prevent

STREPTOCOCCUS MASTI­
TIS" TO BE STAMPED
It should be dlspossd .
OUT IN COUNTY

CAUSES STREP SORE
THROAT IN HUMANS

of streptococcus tore throat
humans.

Debts Were Re- 1
"••
25 Per Cent of Cows in State
duced to 114,000-Ha.
ROTARIANS HEAR TOWNHave the Disease—Work
Nearly 6,000 Members
j
SEND PLAN DEBATED
Is to Start Soon
1935

many reasons to be thankful
ber. ot U&gt;™ identical breed, i
P'J&lt; L°&lt;« onii Other Ob.
somehow manage to control their
■taele* in Pine River to
Foundation; and this latest i.
homicidal Impulses better in coun­
adds much to the benefits It
Keep Folks Away
I The annual meeting of the Farm-[ .
**r‘
. .
.
.
Th^. W. K. Kellogg Foundation la conferred upon this county.
tries where cold-blooded murder
An important
„„ ____ question
_______ to every
____ _
__ _
______
er, , Mutual Fire Insurance Company Arguments For and Against again demonstrating its interest in
means the rope wjthln four weeks,
of Barry and F.aton counties wa*.
Presented to
to the
the Club
Club
1 the people of thia state. It has to
Hampshire breeds, but ewes of •
Presented
us In Canada; manage to be more trout fisherman In Michigan was . and
____ .---Ji— —
—Ill
1and a good non-glare rear vision held in lhe city .of Charlott? last |
„
- confine its efforts now to lhe seven YOUNG PEOPLE TO
honest in countrlsa *
mirror.
, week. Thc meeting was well-attendMonday Noon
Monaay
counties in which It Is operating at
CONDUCT SERVI
ated felony means
court in Cincinnati one day last
ed. with policyholder* present from | The members of the Hastings Ro-, the present time, but there will be
a full term at hard
week. The legal question was: Has
Yonker«V Funily Will Aju
Wfrt luhe State Colyour
of the P*vcmenl ln 1 both counties. There was no change tary Club were privileged to hear : resultant benefits from it to every
an individual or a fishing and hunt­
labor, as In Great
in the
directors of
the company, a very interesting debate on tiie county in Michigan.
We^Irown
from
a
small
begin.
al
night
and,you
-U^ot
oia
,
at Wtaleyan Methodist
ing club lhe right to prevent the
Britain; or where
The old officers were reelected as - Townsend Old Age Pension Plan. " I It has been demonstrated at the
public from fishing in rivers not
the run of crimes
'th/edee"of The lfollow*: Pro^ttent. R. B Walker. (There were two member* on each ! state college, as well as in other agChurch Sunday P. M.
navigable for boats by building a
ru*
!Barry county; vice-president. John ' side. They took their duties a* con-' rlcultural colleges, that a disease
means stern con­
Tlw Young MlMloqary Work—
fence enclosing a considerable mile­ state livestock and crop association I roaa.
nr*ui&gt;r»i
| i Strange. Eaton counly: secretary, i testants seriously. There was- no
~~ al“t- called strentococcus mastitis in cat- Band will have citarge of the rvtfinement In real
age of that stream, and later put­ meetings, talks by authorities on1 Check lire innauon pre
«
। R£)M BUrton. Eaton counly; treas- tempi
tempt to
to belittle
belittle the
the proposition
proposition,: tie can and does cause streptococcic nlng service at the Wbsieyan Meth*
prisons, as In va­
ting logs and other obstructions in subjects relating to agriculture, exbut each debater
considered’ it on
its! infection in humans. The only way odist church next Sunday evening al
urer. Byrd Rogers. Eaton counjy.
------------------—----------------------------------rious Scandinavian
it. so that fishing boats could not hlblls of crops poultry and live- moved and Inspects d every 5.000
prevent these deadly strepto­
Many of our Barry county renders . merits.- Roy ui.hh.rA
Hubbard anH
and r-horii.
Charlie
aS 1
und Teutonic coun­
enter into the club grounds and stock that would do cAlft to any
will remember that Ro w Burton. I Hinman spoke In favor of the Town­ coccus germs in infected cows from
tries. And did It
on the road
road arp
arc
wading the stream would also be state fair. Exhibits and demonstra- lhe motor vvehicles
-h’rU« nn
secretary. was born and grew to send plan, and W. J. Field and Les­ infecting humans Is lo pasteurize kefs family of Caledonia will give
.ever occur to you
stopped.
lions of an educational nature and running with defet tve or inade-! . young manhood In Ulis counly. He He Hawthorne upheld the negative, the milk, a temperature of 146 de­
that the proverbial
This question was first put up to an entire week of Home Economics quale Ures.
was the son of the late Morris BUr- Each one was given eight minutes grees. maintained for a definite music. This family
If an axle is designed to carry a ton. He now resides on a farm in our 1 and said a lot about the proposition
and program lor
musli-headed semi- Irvin 8. Cobb a
-- circuit
--------- court
, , of
. this stale,
„
-----for inc
the ouiu
farm iiwik
home- uimti
maker..
time a* required in pasteurization,
.Thousand, of Michigan rural peo- maximum of 3.000 pound*, don't pul sister county.
| tn that lime. We have not space to will kill these germs.
children ranging In age from
6.000
pounds
on
II
nnd
expect
it
to
Court,
court*
deciding
■
■qeurt,
both
eaurta
deeldlng
that
a
ple
ntU;n(1
each
year
with
the
American juries—and overly sym 1
Tiie year 1935 was a very good one . summarize their arguments, but
But only a few lierd owners have to twelve. All are Invited.
ja and
pathetic Judge* and. delnyi-d trials, club or individual had no right to | crowt
crowds
and Interest
interest increasing
increasing in
in travel forcefully over railroad .racks for lhe old Barry and Eaton, as it is they were right to the point and the necessary equipment for pasprevent
the
public
from
wading
or
J
this
event
each,
year.
The
ewe
sale
rough
roads
without
causing
better known. During the year the given wllh the purpose of stating teurizlng milk, so much of which Is
and prolonged appeals and revers­
&gt; just another item to Interest solnc trouble.
indebtedness to bunks was reduced fairly lhe .mtt.ts and demerits of consumed on farms and by people
als on trivial technicalities and post­ using a boat In such a stream on Is
«. __
.__
*___ &gt;
m passing
nn-tslnv another truck,
truck. make
makr
In
their land when fishing for trout. farmers
.. ‘
In for Lhe ......
week
and
extend
approximately (18.000. leaving the 1 this particular plan,
i who buy raw milk. Investigation by
ponement of punishment through The club concerned was the Ne-Bo- .
sure there ire no oncoming cars amount the company owed to banks1--------------------- —--------------the state college has shown that;.
legal devices; and publicity-seek- Shone Association of Columbus. the Influence odour State college.
Counly Agent Foster has programs
at the close of the year al *14X00, IMPORTANT DEBATE
i there is more Infection from this,
If. you are going 40 miles an hour which Is making good progress in
Ohio. They bought several thousand giving the complete week's programs
streptococcus mastitis than is gen-'
In cahoots with known crimi­ acres of land In northern Michigan. !
OCCURS TOMORROW . erally supposed—about 25 per cent
for those who would care to attend and attempt to pass another truck the right direction. Fortunately, thc
nals ; and perjury-mills, ami war­ which included several miles of tsome particular session of Farmers' doing 30 miles an hour, you must
‘ of the cattle being Infected. Those i
dens
who
think
penitentiaries shore line on lhe Pine river, a noted fWeek. Monday. Feb. 3. for the most travel 600 feet while lhe other rar Is which enabled tiie directors to cut Hastings
1
Must Win Over who produce or buy milk will be
should be playhouses fur coddling trout stream in lhe northern part of tpart is given over to dairy question* going 450—the equivalent to pass­ down the Indebtedness. If it can be
' glad to know that Dean Ward 8.
Battle Creek to Remain
naughty boys and girls; nnd most lhe lower peninsula. That club was ’wllh all Dairy Breed Associations. ing a stationary line of IB trucks as fortunate in 1036 in Its fire lapses,
Giltner, of the department of Vet­
.
of all, the prospect of quick release the defendant in the first suit and Meetings
in the Series
during the afternoon and each 25 feet long, standing bumper it will wipe out the remaining In­
; erinary science at the Michigan
।
In lhe evening. Tuesday. to bumper.
for chronic offenders, regardless of appealed to the state supreme court. banquets
debtedness and start 1937 with a
State College, announced tills week
Robert
Henney.
Dwight
Ferris
Taking
a 15.000-pound truck clean,slate. The company hopes by (
.
4. features horse, crops and beef
what
outraged
prosecutors
or which also decided against It. The Feb.
that his staff has developed the first
and
Donald
Weaver
will
represent
Association then appealed to the cattle meetings Wednesday, features around a curve with a 500-foot rad­ the efidof ihL, year to be in such ;
dependable scientific method of
thwarte-l pullcs authorities may
United Stales District
Court at. the
.
ius at 20 miles an hour. Uie truck a posHldtrthat it will carry no debts ।Hastings in the fourth preliminary
sheep
industry.
Meetings
fea
­
think about It—might have some Grand Rapids, where the case was
state league debate of the Michi­ diagnosing streptococcus inastilLs in
has
to
overcome
a
centrifugal
force
This
disease
annually
bearing also? Before we diagnose tried. Tiie district court likewise de- turing muck soils, upland soils, of only about 800 pounds bul al 30 and pay no Interest. Instead it will. ।gan High School Forensic Associa­ cattle.
poultry, horticulture, land­
when its cash on hand Is reduced lo ।tion with Battle Creek Centra! at causes damage amounting to thou­
the fruitage, let's analyze the seeds. elded against the club, holding that crops,
,
scape.
home economics, dairy and miles an hour this force has grown a certain sum. make an advance ns- ;Battle Creek Friday, at 3:20 P. M.
sands of dollars lo herds in Michi­
the Michigan courts were right. The J
animal husbandry are In progress to 1.815 pounds and al 50 miles an scssment, which will keep it always i. Hastings will have the negative gan.
case was next appealed to the Unit- throughout
.
the middle of thc week.
supplied with funds, making the :
Tiie w. K. Kellogg Foundation has ou» targe volu
on the subject of government
OMETItlNG I wild here the oth
ed States circuit court, which tils Latge general meetings are fea­ 20—more than 5.037 pounds trying rate of assessment as small as E side
&gt;monopoly of munitions. Prof. C. P. arranged to have every cow in the urit-er day brings nn Impassioned tel­ in Cincinnati. That court last week tured
,
afternoons and evenings on their best to push the truck ofT the consistent.
Lahman. men's debate coach at W. counties of Allegan. Barry. Branch.
egram from n gentleman who de­ handed down Its decision.• com- the
.
program Truly. Farmers' Week road.
The insurance carried by the S T. C.&lt; will act as judge. Coach Eaton. Calhoun. Hillsdale, and Van
,
pletely upholding the federal district at Michigan State College is an
Bear in mind that at a braking Barry and Eaton is &gt;16 004X00. It
Becker is taking his strongest trio Buren inspected and tested by this Th6 PrCSCriptlOO DrUQ
summary releasing of prison In­ court in denying tha right of thLs ‘event. Sec County Agent Foster
has almost 6.000 members The next over to Battle Creek as Hastings; new method for traces of mastitis.
hide
going
20
miles
un
hour
can
be
.
mates. and my position on the In­ club to fence in Uie shore line of for
assessment rate was fixed at 35c on must win this debate in order to। The Foundation has invited every
a program.
/
,
Pine river, and also denying the
stopped in 195 feet, but If wc double the hundred dollars, which will be
fliction of the death penalty.
veterinarian-'in the seven counties
enter state eliminations.
right of the club to put obstructions .
the speed to 40 miles. 78.2 feet Lt re­ levied a little later.
Each veterinarian
Other debaters who have been। to participate.
Well, nobody except the party In In the river to stop fishermen from IEMMANUEL CHURCH
quired to slop.
The total fire losses of the com-State League debaters this year are• will be assigned a portion of his
quest Inti may be deeply Interested wading the stream. The club had al­
A vehicle traveling 40 miles an pany during 1935 were 832.493.71. It j, Suzanne Sumner. Dorothy Shelling­• county and will be given a per diem
HOLDS
ANNUAL
MTG.
In my opinions, still Gils seems ns so stationed guards to atop the wad­
hour Ln capable of inflicting four will be interesting to know the I ton. Ruth Hathaway. ~
—
Marian
Hewgood a place ns any to answer him. ing of the stream. They made it Im- Elect
■
Vestry—Hear Reports times the damage of one of Uie same
At the Michigan State College. In
lit. DeForrest Walton. Jr.,
and
Since nny convicted criminal has possible for a fisherman to get up ‘
weight traveling 20 miles an hour, could be traced, and they are as fol-1 Floyd Woodard.
। addition lo developing a scientific
—Junior Branches Show
tho right to n|ipcnl from the ver­ the stream.
and at 60 miles an hour its damage
This act of the Association was
capacity
Is
nine
tmes
that
al
20
dict ngalnat him, I*d like In see n
Healthy Growth
first attacked by Isaak Walton clubs
Do not overload tires Remember
The annual Parish meeting of
sens In Hie community where ho in this state, on the ground that Emmanuel church was held al the that an increase of speed from 30
Pino river had been used in floating
to 60 miles an hour gives only 60
parish house, Wednesday night,
thc net of nny parole board Ip turn­ logs in the lumbering days and was.! with a pot luck supper.
therefore, to that extent a havlgabic
crease in temperature from 70 to 100
ing the said criminal loose again.
Elected for vestrymen for the
stream; although It was not navi­
degrees Fahrenheit reduces tire life
And I'm sure more of us would gable for large boats and never had three-year term were Messrs. Chas. to only 60 per cent of normal. After
be against capital punishment If been and there Lv very little boat-;' s. Potts. Clarence W. Crawford, and each speed trial Malcolm Campbell
Dr. George L. Lockwood. Bernard
only we had reasonable assurance Ing of any kind on lhe stream.
replaces old tires with new.
The Michigan Department of I R. Reed was elected to fill the va­
of some punishment for murderer*,
cancy caused by the death of the
klilnapehi and degenerate beasts Conservation, after the state courts late senior warden. John F. Good­ REQUESTS PEOPLE
had decided against lhe Ne-Bowho attack women and children.
4
Shone club, proceeded to start clear­ year.
Delegates chosen for the diocesan
TO FEED BIRDS
ing Uie stream of obstructions placed
convention at Grand Rapids this
In It by that club. The club re­
EFORE she seemed to despair taliated by bringing the case Into week were Wm. A. Schadcr. Dr. and Farmers Should Realize the
Mrs. G- L. Lockwood: alternates M.
of ever getting n start on hus­ United States courts.
Value to Crops of Quail
A. Lambic, Mrs. Bernard Reed, and
bands again nnd sort of slowed up.
Il is not known yet whether the
and Pheasants
I used to think Peggy Hopkins Et Ne-Bo-Shone ciub will appeal to Miss Bara Schader. The rector. Rev.
Cetera Joyce had the host claim the United States supreme Court or' J. A. McNulty, has been asked to
We have been asked by Conser­
serve as the Bishop's chaplain, at
to the title. -The Bride of Her not. It would be its last hope. What
vation Officer George Sumner lo re­
the
night
sessions.
We are tn position
Country." But a new champion has with the stale courts and lhe federal
Interesting reports were given. quest the people of Barry counly to
district and the federal circuit
feed the birds, quail and pheasants
Emmanuel Guild coming in for
to moke mortgage
thb winter There has been so much
So rally around us. you earnest courts deciding against Its right to commendation, as . always,
with
prevent fishing In the Pine river,
snow and Ice that these and other
loans on improved
Hollywood contenders for the All­
it would not seem probable that lhe; nearly *500. raised' the post year game birds, as well as other kinds of
American Matrimonial sweepstakes, club will appeal, it has already cost thru various activities. For the com­
birds, have been unable to gel their
REAL ESTATE.
and salute your queen. She's Mrs. th* club a great manythousand dol­ Ing year, the Guild will have usual out-of-door food supply. Con­
Virginia Overshiner Patterson Stark lars to fight this matter In lhe’ charge of all branches of women's sequently they have to be helped.
Seeger Gilbert Kalin Cogeswell courts, it may be that they will' work In the church. The Altar guild Farmers who realize the benefits to
is
retained
however,
as
an
indcGould • Porter, who has just been think they might as well fight it to
their crops of the quail should be
Gndent working unit, Mrs. J. A.
coaxed lo lhe altar fnr the eighth the last ditch; but It would look as
very glad to feed these feathered
cNulty chairman; Mrs. Wallace
friends, who destroy so many Insect
limo In that many years. And she if they had no chance of getting a’ Osborn, secretary and treasurer.
favorable decision.
enemies of the farmers' crops.
■till la but a mere chit of a girl.
The church school, dally vacation
If this case had been decided in
I wonder how It happened she
Bible school, and YoUng People s
favor of the Ne-Bo-Shone club, its
never met any of the Mdlvanl boys? example in fencing in the bonks of; Fellowship Club reports denoted a
MAN CAN MASTER
, healthy grpwlh. and Increasing in­
larger trout streams would have
been followed and trout fishermen, terest in the Junior side of the
DESTINY
'M HOPING those American arch­ would have been practically de­ church work. The Fellowship Club
;
meets
at
5:30
every
Sunday
after
­
eologists who are digging Into barred from fishing In lhe larger
By Ruth Barton
The roots of this Bank are planted in the ground. Fifty years ago the
noon. and enjoys a sort of open
ancient Troy And Ulysses* famous trout streams.
Graphology
Is not fortune tell­
forum for the discussion of religious
wootlen horse. It would help me to
topics, followed with music and
founders of this Bank settled in a community where fanning was the
ing—this has been mentioned in
confirm a theory that ■ wooden BARRY CO. GETS Flthis column before bul 1 have
B Special Interest Is attached ‘to the
horse must have been the original
principal industry. . Through half a century we have had the privilege of
NAL WEIGHT TAX
received so many letters asking
model for some of thc entries I've
diocesan convention this week as a
that only a fortune
been betting on nt Sants Anita
serving fanners in and around Barry county, helping them to get started,
Amount for Last Quarter of1 bUhop-oo-adjustor is to be seletced questions
teller Is supposed to be able to
to relieve Bishop McCormack, whose
track.
answer I have decided to discuss
1935 Waa Smallresignation a* acting bishop was re­
I recall one reluctant nag whose
helping them over tight spots and protecting their interests in pros*
it again. Analyst* of character
ceived sometime ago.
name escapes me, but It certainly
Only 1875.44
and counsel ba»d on It is not
There arc several candidates.
should have been Blde-A-Wee, ont
County Treasurer L. F. Maus has5 prominent among them being Rev.
perity. This Bank has in the past and will continue in the future to have
the same as fortune telling.
of Virginia Creeper by Stationary received from the state Barry coun­‘ Lewis B. Whittemore of Grace
The fortune teller professes to
ty's portion of the final quarter's’ Episcopal church. Grand Rapids.
Engine.
foretell future events. The char­
the interest of the fanner at heart.
acter analyst does not.
Everybody 1iere goes out there. receipts from the weight tax. They
If we assume that all that has
Some of the actors own race horses were very small during lhe closing LOOK OUT FOR
quarter of 1935, being only *875.44.
■
COOK
BOOK
SALESMAN.
happened
or
shall
happen
is
pre
­
or some of the race horses own
As a Fanner must plant the seed to make it increase, so, too, the Banker
The check also Included the second
A notice has come lo the atten­
determined by fate how could we
actors. I'm not sure which. And you half of Barry county’s, share of an
tion of the Banner, with a warning
recognize the power of the in­
.&lt;ee all the studio, playwrights equalization fund for road work,
must re-invest the money placed in his care. It is his duty to so invest
about E. Relferuteln. alias Carl
dividual to influence “fate."
pranking about. I'm pranking about. which is taken from tho gasoline Lawrence. He poses as a cook book
To the fatalist vision and In­
Well, It's a great place lo write tax. This amounted to 87.058.58, salesman, collecting *2.00 whenever
that the money intrusted to him will produce an increase and at the same
itiative are useless-duck Is every­
plays—a race track Is. I quit go­ making the total check *7X34.01, all possible. He is about 5 ft. 8 in. tall,
thing.
'
ing after lhe first few days. It of which will go into the county has brown hair, blue eyes and fair
To the psychologist luck and
time be available to the depositor whenever he may need it. The Farm*
made me so late for dinner at night highway fund.
complexion. He has only the left
fate are Just the working out of
—waiting for my horse to come In.
hand. A reward of *25.00 has been
divers forces. Forces which can
er’s interest is our interest.... We invite you to come in and talk over
INSISTS THAT EX• offered far Information leading to be Influenced by the Individual.
man's arrest. He is wanted on
In fact Individuality -or char­
PENSES BE REDUCED this
your problems with us
charges of various kinds. If this
acter is potentially the most
OU remetuber what hoppened
powerful fbree of all which Is to
lhe time before this when J. P. Board of Supervisors Gets man should call on any of our Ban­
ner readers, please phono Mrs
say that man can master destiny.
Morgan appeared at Washington to
Letter From State Relief
Charles Leary. 3548.
To those who have faith In
tell n senatorial Inrcotlgtlitlf com­
themselves and humanity char­
Commission
mittee how patriotism might be
HOPE CENTER.
acter development Is of the ut­
The Barry county board of su­
Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Lyttle of
combined with profit! In such a
most Importance. .
way as not seriously to damage pervisors received a letter from the Battle Creek spent Saturday with
If you are an Individualist It
either? A sideshow dwsrf came nnd State Emergency Relief Commission tlicir parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
will show In your handwriting. If
Insisting that the expenses of the McDermott.
nestled In his lap.
not—dc*lop it—let an analysis
County
Emergency
Relief
Commis
­
We
heard
that
Mr,
and
Mrs.
If. on the present visit, Mr. Mor­
of your handwriting guide you.
Fill out coupon on Page 6 and
gan craves a repetition of that sion be curtailed wherever possible. Charles Cable and family ore going
It was suggested that possibly lhe lo move to Battle Creek in lhe near
send it in to Miss Barton in care
gladsome Incident, I can think of fif­
Emergency Relief Commission could future.
of the Banner.
ty members of the bouse, not to men­
be given the rooms in the court
Fred Ashby and family spent
tion many ofilce-bolders, any one of house now used by the county road Sunday with their daughter, Mrs.
whoa could play that Liliputlan's commission, with the idea' that the Milton Warner and family, of KalaBe careful not to mix In a neigh­
role and nobody would notice the latter would use offices in the new maaoo.
borhood quarrel. A duarrel can be
-. ■
«
county garage building. No definite
Albert Anders of North Hope is patched up, but's hard to keep the
difference.
action was taken on this matter.
patch from showing.
IRVIN 8. COBB.
working for Claud Mosher.

XyffS* l ■»

I’™

*h'"

W me

“"rtf*-

।

Si

elra.n

Ku “i£*irS^*i^ *31*

the|^L^L

Your Health

S

B

YOUR BANKER IS A FARMER

I

Y

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 93. IMS

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

MANAGER’S
WEEK
A * P’s Greatest Annual

Selling Event!
Jan. 90 to 95

10

Sugar
Cane Sugar

\

,-lk

iu

10

50c

Rad Circle Coffee

19c

Bokar Coffee

Ib. tin

2fc

Chase * Sanborn Coffee
Maxwell House Coffee1^ tin

b. bag

23c

Ib. tin

25c

k.. 75c

•, o

Iona Flour

14H-lb. b*J

Splendid Flour

65c

k-« 79c

"unnyfield Flour

19c

Ib.

49c

Whitehouse Coffee

b. ctn.

21c

Crescent or Lily White

14 M -lb.

|9c

Dal Monte Coffee

Ib. tin

24c

Gold Medal or Pillsbury
Henkel's Family Flour

-r $1.09
UK-IL u. 99c

Batch-Nut Coffee

Ib. tin

26c

Hills Bros. Coffee
Kaffee Hag •&gt; 8“k*

lb. tin

27c

lb. tin

43c

10

bars

37c

10

bar,

41c

6

bars

20c

Hankel'c Velvet c*k- K.V"’ 5 k k-99c
Henkel's

5 lk

Pancake Flour »1

s.i..u

Sunny field r..ck. n...

Miai,..

Navy Beans

“&gt;&lt;•»■

Rolled Oats

’»

Corn Meal

5 iv i.. 19c
iv&gt;

17c

4 ik.4 &gt;k‘

19c

Easy Task Soap Chips

17c

^)xydol R'n,° °r

,k&gt;.

10c

3

s...,«.u

91c

Post Toasties

rU- 10c

Corn Flakes

ii&gt;. rte- 10c

x.u.ir'.

9 , &amp;. 99c
rkr- 10c

Sunnyfield Oats

Puffy Pops

wk«&gt; •' "«•

Pink Salmon

3 Jfi. 99c
do*.

10c

4 iv,25c

Seedless Raisins

9 k&gt;- 93c
Peanut Butter
lk- &lt;•' u. 2 'V &lt;•&gt; 95c
9 lk rV" 17c
Crackers
s"d" •• cr.k-»&gt;
- $1.19
Cigarettes
Popular Brands
Keyko Oieo

P,ul J9"°- Wings
car '■
Mgarettes
2o Grand
Iona Pork and Beans lk — 6 •■"•

Erccms

-k

cu.. s.~.

’ c,n

Tomatoes

White Corn or Peas

4
* c„ 4

Cut Green Beans

Sauerkraut

■

N"-IH c“

Macaroni or Spaghetti

SCRATCH FEED
EGG MASH
GROWING MASH

Cut Wax Beans

Tall Boy Soups

Matches

i

Brown Sugar

10c

2

jars

25c

4

cans

19c

qt. jar

Bdk

Cheese

BeerFul1

s,r«n«,i&gt;

von

lbs.

25c

6

boxes

25c

lbs.

49c

lb.

21c
5C

10
$1,19

use

“”'k '

Fig Bers

10c

Sperkle Gelatin

T,n

29c

6

Crean. or Brick

bottle

3

lbs.

25c

6

pkgs.

25c

4

cans

25c
25c

19c

Whitehouse Milk

95c

Mello Wheat

2

pkgs.

91c

Corned Beef Hash

2

cans

25c

2

cans

27c

N- 2 c“

Peas

"• 2,4 c“

99c

Iona Peaches

Iona Cocoa

4
4

99c

Calumet Baking Powder

99c

Northern Tissue

$1.55
$1.89
$1.98
11/8
&gt;2.25

2
2

OYSTER SHELLS
POULTRY GRITS
18% DAIRY FEED
20% DAIRY FEED
24% DAIRY FEED

2 c*&gt;

Seminole Tissue

-

95c

Bulk Green Tea

3 —•

95c

Iona Tomato Juice

2 •—

91c

Canvas Gloves

2

95c

Medium Red fs'inon

2

25c

Red Salmon

29c

15c
19c
25c

rolls

3

“■ ”•

1 ge can

55c

rolls

25c

4

cins

49c

Ib.

25c

2‘— c. 3

cans

25c

1935 Standard V-8 Tudor

3

-airs

25c

1935 DeLuxe Fordor V-8

T,lk 2

cone

35c

1935 DeLuxe Tudor V-8

2

cans

45c

1932 Plymouth Coupe

Corned Beef

3

I,u c“

BALDWIN APPLES

IO Ik.. 19c

SPY APPLES

IO ik.. 25c

FLORIDA ORANGES

NEW CABBAGE

8iLk,39c

See Our Used
Cars before
you buy!

25c

cans

SWEET POTATOES «.~rH.u 3 lbs. lOc

3 IU. 17c

STOP GETTING UP NIGHTS

75c
100-lb bag
69c
100-lb bag
100-lb. bag $1.15
100-lb. bag $1.45
100-lb. bag $1.49

i

Ovaltine

cans
Ib. ca
Ib. can

5

95c
95c

FRESH TEXAS SPINACH

qt. jar

I i-lb. tic

bi.,..,.

95c

Del Maix Niblets

15c

Bulk Prunes

3 ■■■•
Cki,k” 3

*™&lt;&gt;«:

25c

1-lb.
pkgs.

5-lb. tin 29r

99c

3

cakes

2

R,d or Kidaay

Blua Label

3 •-

T~- •’ v-

4

Dill Pickles

4

"■

19c
49c

«•

Beans

29c

cakes

&lt;••»*•&gt;•&lt;

Kiefer Pears

R. 5. P. Cherries
"• 1 c*
Grapefruit
No 2 c*-

Heinz Soups

Mustard

29c

12

or Lifebuoy Soap

95c

"• *c-

Golden Bantam Corn
Campbell's Soups

LlJX

Jack Frost Sugar

bar

b. ctn.
pkg.

&gt;1

chips®

6

Daily Dog Food

5

Palmolive or CaB”r So«p

■“ 95c Reliable

100-lb. «g
100-lb. b ag
100-lb. ag
100-lb. bag
100-lb. bag

FINE CHICK FEED
CHICK STARTER

IQsm.

Soap

Rejah Salad Dressing

tall cin

'•••
"•ct.’.'XT*

'

PAG Soap
P&amp;G °F Kirk’a Flako

BreaMaal Food

Corn Flakes

ci*"&lt;

Ajax Soap

Fels Naptha Soap

5 iv u. 17c

Wkeaties

Ketchup
Donuts

91c

5 is. k. 17c

6

«'&gt;•

Bulk Rice

HOPE FOR ASTHMATICS AMD
SPECTATOR wins award
YOUTH REIGNS
HAYFEVER SUFTKMMS?
A 8 BEST PRISON PAPER.
IN "CORONADO”
We have made frequent .refer­
ences lo 'The Spectator." official
Youth is aervod In Paramount's discovery out for the treatment of
jublicaUon of Slate Prison of new musical romance "Coronado." allergic traobiae thigh brow nan*
The State Y. M C. A convention
southern Michigan, our commends- which will be seen at the Strand
rill be in
Detroit at Central Y
■Ion of its news material and edit­
Theater January 28 and 27. ing is borne out by the verdict of
Belfer Burgess, who has' lhe femi­ as inralin far diabetics, seems the i area* concerning ■uommuniaw in
the acknowledged leader of all pris­ nine lead, is only 18 and was taken
medical director of on. of the big Our Mldat." Also Dr. GraflUn of
on publications. Die San Quentin
from her classes in a Los Angeles hospitals in Philadelphia. Dr. Harry &gt; New York Is an the program.
'Cal l Bulletin, who in making the
high school to be starred in her first Wilmer, announces “allergies” are
The boye ot the Older Y Group
yearly awards for the beat prison screen appearance.
direct oppodtea of “diabetics." The । who are sponsoring the Mother and
papers, says:
Johnny Downs, who will be re­ latter can't have sugar, and are gon banquet, Feb. 6 in Hastings M.
"Highest ranking we think is The
membered as the "All-American easily
—overloaded
-------------------------------------with zugar. — E churc|, huve inured aa their
Spectator from Jackson, Michigan.
Boy" of Hal Roach's flrsl "Our
speaker. Rev. Karl Keefer of WaterEditorially anti in make-up it reGang" comedy series, and who has Allergies can tolerate a lot of sugar,
•cmblcs n condensed metropolitan
had parts tn several recent Para­ but because of certain sluggishness program will have other specials, al­
dally—rich in news stories, features,
mount
pictures
including
“
So
Red
on the part of the suprarenal gland, so chicken is on,lhe menu.
cartoons, and illustrations— In a
the Rose," Anris himself in a star causing "metabolic insufficiency."
word. “Hearaty.”
The-Young Married Folks group
From the last two Issues wc pass
—---------- -------- .---- '
. - imev
wii.
iuiu
in
met wim
with Mr.
and mu.
Mrs. men
Melvin
And Eddy Duchln. one of Amer­ U&gt; —
W
«&lt; &lt;fe. Any- lBmUI, „,t
Tlwrelw erenlns.
on thc following Items:
ica'* most popular dance band lead­
Dr WUMn
lhal. »e- ,lu, ,
„„ -iuubo,, —Additional vocalists are wanted ers. makes his film debut In “Cor­
--------- -- ------------- — ._. _.H_ ..
M|dd|ey(1, H,.Y
piannlni on
for the
orison choir—however.
y Bv
BO
OB1
,7 Satur“Crooners, blues singers, moon sing­ onado" with his orchestra, at the to Inject a bit of cortical hormone, II a big party
at ^
Camp
Barry.
age of 20. Duchln tiis been a band­
in the gland and it will function nor- day dav
Jan.Jan
M 2S —„
e inviting
ers. cabaret products or any similar
-—
■——boys
— ■-----leader since he was 22. having cap­ mally. and the patient be relieved | ol Uje Iocal M and F F A clubs
monstrosity" are not acceptable.
tured
the
fancy
of
New
York*
so
­
A small improvised plant -for mak­
of furthur treatment. After all the
joln them. Dinner at noon. Hasciety
crowd
while
playing
at
the
varlous cures that have flooded thc ,i„„«
_v tw.r.
nr .„nn.r
ing soap over at Ionia gives em­
tings Ul
Hl-Y
there rfor
supper.
market for years, this sounds too
I ployment to 15 inmates. The prison Central Park’Casino.
A large group of boys attended the
good to be true. Anyway we believe Y group meeting .Jn Freeport on
' commission at Its last meeting
DEER-YARDING
AREAS
turned down the proposal for erect- , NEW AroiiiRFn
hv tup ktatp
Monday evening, last week.
ing a plant to manufacture soap for 1
THE "TATE- mones" around thc middle of next
I all stale Institutions
| Constantly on lhe alert to keep August, as probably a lot of others
LENT CORNERS.
' The men hailed as good news the , deer hunting in Michigan the fine will. If It proves up to expectations.
MUs Arlene Rector of Kalamazoo
addition of a night shift of 1J0 more j
it L’. thc Department of Con- But what will become of hay fever spent the week end with Miss Jean
men at the binder twine factory.
I scrvallon lias recently secured con­ and asthma resorts, and all the Hammond. a( the latter's home.
j Tire prison quartet recently sang, trol of the Butterfield swamp in manufacturers of salves and lotions
Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Doster are
In Grand Rapids, at the Peninsular Missaukee and Roscommon coun­ for the cure of ecaema?
lhe proud parents of a baby girl,
; Club, and also broadcast a program ties, one of Die finest deer-yardlng
bom Wednesday. She will answer
over WOOD.
| areas in the lower peninsula. The
GLASS CREEK.
lo the name of Alberta.
• Educational facilities at the prfc- purchase covers 10.000 acres of land
The Lent Sunshine club met at
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Erway of Kal­
Ion include, high school courses, ex- &gt;*» the heart of the swamp near the amazoo and Chas. Erway of Battle thc home of Mrs. Esther Merlau
‘ tension unit, commercial und agri- north and west side of Houghton Creek were Sunday guests at Fred Thursday. Annual election of offi­
i{ cultural courses and
ana a vocational
vocations I *akc; 11 ,lsn Blvea me
the stare
state control
control;; Qtls
cers was held. Mrs. Flossie Bur­
Otis. ’.
i.-.chool. &lt;Wc noticed in The Char- of six miles of Dead stream, which
'
T . _
mw&gt;ltn_ chett was re-elected president, Mrs.
lottc Republican-Tribune thLs week. flows thru the tract, and 13 coniidb. U meeung Lura Francisco, vice-president. Mrs.
that the young boy who entered thc
8«xl trout waler They plan
Friday for dinner at RAy Leland Hammond, secretary. Mrs.
i Ironside and Brown homes in thc to plant 50 deer in the swamp this rj'ka&gt; 5
Lenna Nottingham, treasurer, and
■lull
Sunday visitors at Roy Erway s
full had been transferred to Ionia I winter.
Inter. CCC men aiding in the Job.
on to
; from Jackson and complained that j Di addition
lo tnc
thc above. 2.000 were Ward Erway and wife, Esther । Nottingham, flower committee. The
will be I Erway of Hastings. Maurice
Erway
lhe had no opportunity for educa- more acres &amp;f
1. deer-yard
—
—r--------------- 'February meeting will be held with
i tlonal advancement now »
.obtained by purchase and exchange and Harold Sharp of Grand Rap- | Mrs Ocorila Hammond.
tdsMr. and Mrs. George Comfort of
! Two surgeotts from the U. of M. hi the upper peninsula.
I hospital stnff spent several days re , These purchases are nil made from
Mrs. Sara Erway spent the latter ' Kalamazoo spent Sunday with her
_» Die week
----- ». with
—.... her sister,
Mr nnd Mrs Marc Ham­
ccntiy al the prison hospitul and fund* set aside from lhe sale of -----part of
performed eight major operations.; deer-huntlng licenses.
Mrs. Clara Robinson, In Hastings.
mond.
I Later a clinic was held in which a
------------------------Mr. and Mrs. Harold Doster and
Sunday visitors at Chas. Whitte­
ONE
OF
RILEY'S
STORIES.
,
large number of men wire intermore's were Mrs. Cleo Brown and MT. and Mrs. Jay Hall ottended the
1 viewed.
general
healih condi- | We were sorting rags at the Wool ।children. Miss Katie Whittemore Farmer's club at Eli Lindsay's Sat­
-------- The
— „
--------- -------------------. tlons were found to be very satis- Boot factory one day and an old ;and friend of Hickory Comers and urday evening.
.
•
Miss Margaret Burchell of Kala­
factory.---------------------------------------------- | gentleman whom the men called Anriamae Pue of Hastings.
•••
। "Dad" was helping. Dad had a hob- 1'
Hie Glass Creek Extension class mazoo spent Thursday with her
PLEASANT HILIby for gathering antiques so when will meet with Mrs. Florence Nor­ parents. Mr. nnd Mrs- Robert Bur­
’ Clyde Daniels of High Point. N.
found a pretty or odd button ton tn Hastings next week Thurs­ chett.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Krick and non
! Carolina, vlnited iiLi sister and *e would hand It to Dad and he 'day. Jan. 30.
brollier-in-law, Mr nnd Mrs, Matt 1 would loss it into his dinner pall.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Whittemore of Prairieville s)ient Sunday with
B-ftford. over the week end.
(Before wc had finished that Jot of and Russell called on tiie former's Mr. and Mrs. jay Hall.
j The next meeting of the P. T A. | r»gs. Dad had his pall full of rare mother. Mrs. Amy Whittemore, at
Mr. nnd Mrs. Leland Hammond
and children called nt lhe Mahlon
will be Jan. 31. Mr. and Mrs. Ed : buttons. Before the whistle blew Delton Monday.
Burkett home in Kalamazoo. Wed­
Sehatll arc thc program commltie*. I that night, Joe Webber, the "Joke­
BARBERS CORNERS.
nesday evening.
Word was received recently by,smith.” sneaked into the shoddy
Mrs.
Matthews
attended
the
Gordon John Francisco of Dos­
Mrs. Chas Bennett from her old house and emptied
1VM Die
MIC pall,
pilll. filling
IIIIUIm
.--- —L. J. —
----------------------- — ---Dad
home in England that llry are ex- H with water. C
J carried*- home Welcome Comers Ladles' Aid at ter spent thc past week with Ills
I Mrs. J. M. Leach's on Thursday.
grandparents. Mr and Mrs. Jay
pcrienclng bad floods there. The &gt; the pail of water.
Mrs. Nay Bump and daughters of Hall.
' Aral since the time &lt;40 years agoi
The next morning Dad read the
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Hammond
'• that she left for this counuy.
(foreman the “riot act." Hc said. Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
spent Monday in Hastings.
Thc men. who bought the top "John. I have « good well. John. I ,
Olive and Elmer Ritter of Ada
' wood on the Spath place, are now' have a good cistern. And I live on Mrs. Jerry Foley's Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Matthews and spent Sunday with thclr father.
I busy gelDitg it out to the road •.••here the bank of thc Thornapple river.
Minnie
Matthews —
of Grand
—
----------------------------—-— ' Hugh Ritter, at the home of Leland
; they can buzz It up
And I don't need any of your Riley Mbs
Rapids came Friday and attended Hammond.
' Mrs. Macke has been spending a ' Water."
the community meeting al Welcome i Mrs. Jean Doster and baby ro­
few days with her sister al Holland [
----------------STONY POINT.
aund
_________________
______
remained with
Mr._____
and Mrs turned lo their home from Crisp®
' and enjoying thc fishm • through |
1 Matthews until Sunday.
.
.. . n. .
.............
.
Mr. and Mrs. carl Phillips of Kai- IL. J.
hospital, Plainwell, Saturday eve­
I rtu.wwv
amazoo visited
at c.&gt;&gt;.
Ed. LnrdMU.l
Deaklns ouuSun-j Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Jones of Has­ ning.
____
1 ff I
‘r.KU HW
tings have purchased thc Chas
Little Herbert Doster, who has
Hastings farm and have moved been so seriously ill with pneumonia
there.
I ■ .«» h. tniub &gt;OU
Uo ■ood Mr .
U'P &gt;° P&lt;-«
is Improving nicely.
L. J. Matthews and C. W. Smith
1 Inin H you want to marry him. keep
?,‘“5‘
nf fnrk«,n
"
H1GHBANK.
• on franllnir him
Mrv R’
Kcys 01 JtCkSOn Vis- . of Detroit spent Thursday at Lowell
।
• lied her pannu. Mr. .nd Mr&gt;. B. J. I and Ionia.
Mr and Mrs. Frank Jones of Bat­
------------------------------------------------------------Wellman, a few days last week.
tle Creek spent Tuesday w«&gt; Mr.
NORTHWEST THORNAPPLE.
——— yrs Lowen Dcmond entertained
and. Mrs. Frank Hawblitz.
Mr and Mrs. John Schantz. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Beryl Nash and sons
'U
v^, and Mrs. Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. spent Sunday evening in Hastings.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Fred Reid nnd
MAKE THIS 25c TEST
i farm Juat south of Mud creek have Schroeder. Henry Schroeder and
and daughter
been sold to a Mr. Decamp of Wood­ Mrs Rose Fowler
—
,-z- .----- family were recent guests of Mr,
bury and the timber Is being cut Ruth all of Caledonia were Sunday and Mrs Milo Keck of Bedford,
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Kcaglc
----off at the present time.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Jones
andOrton Endsley has Just finished and daughter Marian.
family of Nashville spent Sunday
Neal Vrooman was near Lowell with Mr. and Mra. Frank Hawa large job of sawing on lhe Hager
farm and has moved hb saw mill shearing sheep for Mr. Freeman blltz.
back to irts own mill yard where hc
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Thomas of
What makes uh wonder about his­
will soon start sawing another large
Galesburg spent Sunday night with tory tn general Is listening in court
job.
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Veme to the testimony of two eyewitnesses
Thomas and Birge.
to the same collision.

Crisp. Hard Heads

1934 DeLuxe Fordor V-8
1932 DaLuxo Fordor V-8
1930 Model A Sport Coupe

Ib 4c

1931 Model A Std. Coupe

FILLETS
No Bom-No Wast—
SALT MACKEREL
SALMON STEAK
FRESH OYSTERS
HALIBUT STEAK
BEEF ROAST

2 ly*- 19c
3 iv. 19c
u 27c
rv&lt;

23c

u 25c
u. 17c

PURE LARD

Home Rendered

PURE PORK SAUSAGE

2 ib., 25c
Lb.

19c

LARGE FRANKFURTERS

2. lbs.

29c

RING BOLOGNA

2 lbs.

29c

BACON SQUARES

Lb.

SMOKED PICNICS
BOILING BEEF

•-

2

iu.

21c
2fc

Unu.«d Tronsport,tl«n in • Ui.d Cor
bought at the right price is More Eco-

Moisture .... 3%
Ash.............. ... 5.4%

B.F.L. . 11150 Units

UNIVERSAL

25c

XV"P FOOD STOKES

FARM BUREAU
'fWl SERVICES &gt; Inc.
Halting*, Mich.

Wt CAM W?A PAT ^IgCKS

PRICES SUBJECT TO 35 SALES TAX

• nomlcal than the purchase of a new one.

WOODLAND

Phone 2118

OABAOE COMPANY
FORD-DEALERS

PHONE 2121

HASTINGS, MICH.

PHONE 11

J

�"FARM ALMANAC."

Pythian Suters
Install Officers

Women'* Clui
Ford Motor
held IU annual meeting and nmch-

Thomappte Tample No. 130 Pyth­
ian Sisters, held a pot luck supper
on last Tuesday evening at tha Ttmple. Afterwards, in lhe presence of
several guest*, the officers tar lhe
year of 1836 were Installed by Grand
Chief. Ella Myer*. Grand Manager.
Sadie Mae Palmer and Grand Sen­
ior, Charlotte Hubbard.
Officer* installed were; Past Chief.
Louise Erway; Moat Excellent Chief.
Core Lee Boye*; Senior. Anna New­
ton; Junior. Mildred Downs; Man­
ager. Alice Smith; M R. C. Ooida
Storer; Mistress of Finance. Minnie
Young; Protector. Blanche Lewis;
Ouard. Mary Cook.
Our newly Installed Most .Excel­
lent chief, core L. Boye*. was given
acme lovely flower* presented by
□rand senior, charlotte Hubbard.
With the beginning of lhe new
year we have new hopes, new
strength, and a desire to increase
our membership and bring to our
tisters a luting sense ot peace and
contentment.—• • •
CELEBRATES NINETYFIRST BIRTHDAY.
Saturday. January 18. at the home
ofr Edwin Coates of Freeport. Wal­
ter Coates celebrated his Bist birth­
day. His children. Edwin Coates,
with whom he resides, Mrs Mon­
roe Johnson of Grand Rapids, and
Mrs A Johnson of Muskegon ana
the in-laws were with him for the
day. Despite the very cold weather,
s good lime was enjoyed with a bl&gt;
chicken dinner and birthday cake,
fem inlicences of the past and a few
flood old lime tunes on his violin.
"Dad" Contes la well and sill) en­
joys life and wc Wil hope he crosses
the century mark. His eldest
daughter. Mrs jeraie Johnson, com­
posed the following jwem In honor
of her father's ninety-first birthday.
“DAD.”
He sits with folded hands, a resting
In thc sun,
A dreaming of thc days that used

He’s growing old. his race Is nearly
run,
And when lie's gone, we ll miss him.
you nnd me.
His step Ls growing slower,
His eyes arc gelling dim.
And tho- he's growing older.
Life still is sweet to him.
So he dreams of the day* when
a soldier.
When he answered Lincoln's call.
For men who were brave and loyal.
To fight for right and freedom for
aU.
He hears again lhe call of thc bugle.
Thc command to ••charge," lo •‘re­
treat."
Thc roar of Ute cannon, tiie bul­
let's whine.
And ll»c tramp of marching feet.

Now he knows all about the Baltic
of Bull Run,
He saw Sherman on his march to
lhe sea.
Tiie Battle of Gettysburg, was a
victory nobly won.
And that has all gone down In his­
tory.
They are all gone, the old days and
faces he held most dear.
Gone are also the old ways.
And sometimes life to him seems
drrtf.
And from his old lime Addle
Come lunes of long ago—
“Way Down on tho Swonee River."
"Nancy Lee." and "Old Black Joe."
Now he s no “Ole Bull."
But wc love to hear him play.
The old Jigs, thc old tunes.
Old songs of a bygone day.
And we know when he get* to
Heaven
And St. Peter lets him’ in.
They'll be there safe together.
Dad. and his old violin.
Ninety-one years young, he tells
with a smile.
For tho' he's old. his heart Is young
and gay.
Wc wish wc could go with him. as
he treads the last long mile.
For many he has helped along thc

Company.

Friday. January 17th

has received nearly a half million
cellophane centerpieces The of-1 naaa man. Other moUons are de­
fleers' table was attractively mi with signed to aid tha farm wife.
a bowl of white chrysanthemum*.
rord A)manac 1* pubSix new fire tower* will be erected
Mrs Guy Keller offered grace after [ llllwd for 1BJfl
u now being dls- to northern Michigan Hite spring
whlch a delicious luncheon was tributed it carries a readily avall- through the Emergency Conserva| able calendar on the back covtr and non Work program
“rogrem. The steel will
_____ __________
____ ________
Following
tho luncheon.
Mn. F.1 contain* table* showing the time Of I be furnished with federal fund* and
Maus led thc group to singing, rl»e and *et of sun and moon in al) the towers erected by CCC men.
"America lhe Beautiful." A brief! parts of the country every day of ।
• . .
builnes* *e**lon was held. Mr*. A. L. the year Other helpful and Inter- ‘ □rand Haven stole park leads all
Brown, chairman of the nominating esting astrological and astronomical1 state parts in Michigan during 1833
committee submitted lhe names of Information is included.
I in
lolB4
BUJrnaancc
* i»e
in total attendance ol
of vuuors.
visitors. The
the nominee* for office, wlxo were, Among the other prominent *ec- I Grand Haven unit reported 1,433.405
unanimously elected a* fruiows; llonl of lhe book are; A
ot mem- ‘ visitor* during lhe park seasons.
Presldent. Mrs.
President.
Mn. K. s.
8- Mclnl'
Mclnl'.e;
.e: vice
vice-­ orable
—&gt;ki&gt; historic
m.iah. events tnr
_ _ .
for each d.v
day .
...
president. Miss Sadie Glasgow; re­ of the year, facte about th. unlveree,1 A,
M JM8 rtporU o( Jn.
cording secretary.
Mrs Roman explanations of physical phenomena. ,n,n ron-ir mines L" •»“ »
dlan copper mines in lhe Lake »••Su­
Feldpsusch; corresponding secre­ , tut ot lmporunl touv.le
! pert&lt;«
perior rSton
region .ere
were sent out by'vwby voytary. Miss Sara Berle Bchader; anniversaries for the year, rule* for ageuri lnd Jesuit mlsiionaries.
treasurer, Mrs Cheater Hodges. Di­ foretelling weather condition*, pop­
rectors arc: Mrs. PejB. Adair, re­ ulation statistics, facts and records
Crow-shooting campaigns con­
tiring president of the ciub and Mn. on farming a* an industry, "do’s and
Milo DeVries.
don'ts" for use in emergencies, ducted as elub project*, produce the
Mrs. Adair spoke a few words in poisons and their antidote*, in­ beat results say* the Department of
Conservation.
Find out where the
appreciation of the co-operation the structions for flower and vegetable
had received and urged the club gardening, crop seed sowing instruc­ crows roost or gather in large flocks,
members to read their club by-laws tions, a list of place* of Interest to and discourage drives scattered over
an area of many acres These drives
and year book and thus become lhe tourist, parcel post rules and
cause injury, as a rule, to game birds
more club minded. Mrs. K. 8. Mc­ regulations, temperature and rain­
Intyre and Mrs. M J. Cross, the fall chart, dates of killing frost* in and animals, which are frightened
from their feeding grounds.
all
part*
of
the
country
and
a
table
president of the southwestern dis­
trict. spoke in regard to the club's of distances between Ute principal
If you want to talk and laugh
progress and future achievements. dlle* of the country.
■ while fishing do so. The belief
Mr*. McIntyre and Mias Sadie Glas­
Stories on the founding *nd de*•­ ' among many fishermen that fteh can
gow will represent the ciub at thc velopment of
lhe Ford
orme
Fora Motor
Motor Comcom- - hear thern if they .peak above a
state convention.
pjmy and about the Ford Rtoure. whisper is nonsense, according lo
Mr*. L. F. Maus then announced plant, word
famous Edituologbite' aiUUlVJl
studies of
flah. •Fish have
~ — - pictures
r.-r------- ---of -----—.) MWiUKUILB
—. ,^....
Tnatitn*..
i waMMins
mi.in*
: . .
. ....
.
.nd he,
hear few
the musical program which was en­ «&gt;„ BuUtow
jMueum
«n4 .nzi
count
„„ r.i.m.l
u&gt;a
joyed very much at this time. Miss OreenheM VUU«e. MUblUhed
1 „u„a, ouUiae of the weler.
...
Lucille McLeod rendered a clarinet in a few mlleg of the Rouge Plant.
solo, “The Lost chord." accompan­ are other features of thc Ford Farm
What have the CCC camp* acied by Mbs Sumner. Il was con­ Almanac.
i compllshed tn Michigan? The State
cluded by Miu Esther Monica, who
Forestry Department tells us. that
HICKORY CORNERS.
sang two solo*, accompanied by MIm
since their establishment to MlchiGlerum. She sang. “Love is a Won­
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Simpson and | gan o
to, May 1833 w
to Jan. t1 O1
ot uu&gt;
this
derful Word" from the operetta baby of Battle Creek were Sunday year
to 4a
havc
op.
•The Count and tiie Co-cd." and “I guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Simpson.
Love "Life."
Mrs. Lib Whitmore who has been
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
(
quite
ill for the past two weeks is
Miu Mabie Horn of Battle Creek-.able to be about again.
Is spending a few days with her
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan O. Brady of
graridmother. Mrs. Mabie Moody. South
।
Bend. Ind., spent Thursday
and helping with thc care of Mrs. and Friday with her parent*. Mr.
Robinson, whose health is very poor. .and Mrs. Ben Campbel).
Mr and Mrs. Claud Hoffman and
Mr. and Mrs. Olen Asplnall gnd
family spent Sunday with Mr. and family were Bunday visitors of hi*
Mrs. Fred Haines In north Maple mother. Mrs Cora Asplnall of East
Grove.
,
Dowling.
Mr. and Mrs Elmer Sponscller
Clayton Haynes and Howard Asand family of Hanover were Sunday pinall were at Battle Creek last Sat­
guests at the home of the former’s urday.
brother. Dale, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Moody and
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Moody and
daughter of Battle Creek called
"ARSON" MODISH
Sunday evening at Hie home of Mr.
and Mr*. Byron Moody.
MICHANO-FOIM TRUSS
Ansel Eno has been buzzing wood
FOII WOHK.OH FLAY
the past week for Orson McIntyre.
tvi.
'
Cyrus Buxton. Dale Sponscller. Roy­
al Donovan.
Clyde and Ward
Cheese man.

MILES of
Comfort/

r$) Children abould
physical condition.
streams; flsh planting, eradication
(6) Children should be satisfied
of poisonous weeds, timber esttmatwith
their day's activity and at
tog and fore»t clearing, fence build­
ing. overnight cabin* contracted, peace with himself.
bridge* bulk, beach Improvements.
PRAlRnVlLUL

miles ol

Mrs. D. N Honeywell 1* vUiting
her mother. Mrs. Bertha Arndt, and

truck-trail maintenance.

Mr. and Mn. E A. Parker. Mn.
Hammond and M1m Elisabeth Park­

numerous to mention.

CHILDREN NEED SLEEP
AT REGULAR INTERVALS
Sleep at frequent intervals Is nec­
essary for children before the school

Now You Need Thia

structor to Home Management at
Michigan State College.
Miss Lewis recently outlined es­
sential condition* for good sleeping
habits and placed a strenuaus day
at the head of the list.
-I would venture to suggest." she
stated, "that the child's ordinary
daily experiences are as strenuous,
as stimulating, and as demanding
in frequent adjustment* as that of
an adult, while on hU first tour
through foreign lands.
■'In order that children may re­
act toward the interests of what
appears to us to be a very ordinary
day with lire abandon characteristic
of healthy intelligent youngstere
they must have enough sleep at fre­
quent enough Intervals to permit
their bodies to recover from
the
constant stimulations of their wak­
ing hours."
Miss Lewis insisted, however, that
the sleep periods should not be
dragged out since It might inter­
fere with night sleeping habits.
Other conditions necessary for
the development of good sleeping
habits were given as follows:
&lt; 1) Regular hour* for sleep should
be established by parents.

Protection!
Highlands Dairy Grode A Milk is
toctors of heolt+i. Tho Antiro
family naed* the vitamins thb
milk contains to Drotect thorn
from colds and othor sicknou
prevalent during cold weathor.
Safeguard thoir health by mak­
ing this "energy building" food
a part of overy meal.

High m Gmtn GeMb nt

Raw or PastourixW

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651 ROBERT W. COOK, Prop. Hutton

vent depletion of energy to avoid
restlessness and. in extreme cases,
tantrums.
&lt;3» Sleeping rooms should have

JEWEL

FLOUR

COFFEE

KAFFEE HAG
’.gff

OLD INCUSH

3 =£? 10.

cotnrriT

15c

HOT DATED

club bich

COUMT1Y CLUB
tool 6c
FRESH BREAD
CAMPBELL'S rou uro, ™ 5.

39c
Country Club Coffww fc. can 25c

SCRATCH
FEED -

FANCY MICHIGAN

WEKO
LAYING MASH

AMU 3

25‘ BARTLETT PEARS

COM C

IATMORK BRAND

NUT

»°ir 10c
CANVAS GLOVES
CIGARETTES
—
CAMELS. OLD GOLD. CHESTERFIELD. LUCKY STRIKES.
KENTUCKY WINNERS. AND RALEIGH

CORNMEAL —
BIG BAR SOAP iu»»o 6 *&gt;“ 25c

51.89

10 »

33&lt;

CONTWOLUO QUALITY

Short Way

See agent for complete
Information, al

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS

PHONE 3137

16% Dairy—$1.55 per 100 lb*.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 lbs
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 Iba
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 Iba.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp;. Company
Huting* Telephone 2257
Dealer* ia Wool, Grata, real, Hear, Sait, Line,

Oexeat aad Coal

STEAK SSSL a 23c
CONTBOLLBO QUALRY

Chuck BOAST

th

CONTROLLED QUALITY

17c

!Stew

“■ 12c

POT ROAST
DRIED SALT STRIPS

WHITING
A REAL PAN FtlH

25c

2 to 8 Ib. Hmh

x!

OJANgK

6 - 25&lt;

GRAPEFRUIT
FULL OF JUICE

4 - 19«

HEAD LETTUCE
CAULIH.OWBI
MUSHROOMS
NAVEL ORANGES — —

CONTROLLED QUALITY

BACON

1Oc

WELL MADE

*1.49

ROLLED OATS

PANCAKE FLOUR 5 Ib. sack 17c
SYRUP BLUE BOW 5 lb. pail 25c
SUGAR GRANULATED BIST ib imik 5c

COUMT1T CLOT

CHIU

Wesco Balanced

100-lb.

5 X 29c
SOAP FLAKES
25tf
MAXWELL HOUSE
CHAM m* SANBORN COMM
I
£ 27c
BEECH-NUT
COFFEE

FRENCH
COFFEE

25c

APPLE BUTTER

CORN MEAL
5 u
LOG CABIN SYRUP

GOOD COAL makes warm friends
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleated with the fine,
even heat. Low in a*h, and long
burning. Try a ton today and
save on your fuel bills

18c

TUM3O

BIC BAR’ SOAP

$1.07

O* NLLS1U1YS FLOUR

HAFTS FACEAGI CKBS3E

O* SAMKA COFFEE

R and G

FLOUR

GOLD MEDAL

65c

SOUTH BOWNE.
Elmer Shaffer and wife were al
Lake Odessa on businesa Friday.
Mrs. Pete Griffin returned home
Saturday from Clio, where she has
been caring for her daughter-in­
law. who has been aick.
Ed. Lacy ha* been on the sick
Ibt the past week.
ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Mr. and Mrs. Will Mishler and
Mrs. John Thayler attended lhe tuneral of Mrs Frank Ream of Has­
tings. Thursday afternoon.
Mbs Eleanor Miller was a Sun­
The Prescription Drug Store
day guest of Paultoe Moore.
Mr. and Mrs.. Emory Keim and
family visited the Harold Yoder's HASTING B - - - MJCmOAM
Sunday.
GeerealeeW fr««» F/ttfag
Olen Keim has been assltlng
Harold Yoder wilt* hb wood culling, i

FLOUR KING’S FLAKE W 73c
85c
COUNTRY CLUB

SINCEIITY **AHD

Ib.
bag

SALE !

Act How

Your Chance to Save

HOT DATED

SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Price*
A mile of comfort
is yours for every
mile you ride q

Hickory comers spent tho
with Mr. And Mrs. Msuric

KROGER Opportunity

When '‘Death the Bugler'' sounds
taps, we ll do lhe best we can.
For him a glad"day. for us a rad
day.
When God has taken to Himself.
“Our Grand Old Man "

Boston police have broadcast lhe
serial number of a now prevailing
counterfeit $20 bill, but fail lo de­
scribe a 120 bill

Conservation and
Outdoor Hotel

SWfirrNOTATOM

» 21c

* 29c

MICH ROTATORS

FANCY APPL

KROGER STORE!.
ROMS MAUTH*

— S«

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, TgT»$DAY._ JANUABT 23, 1936

roRE

MOlrOAOB BALE.

OHAXCEBY J.OTICE

1

HOTICE TO CBEDITOBl

COURT HOUSE NEWS

TINIEST REBEL DEFEATS
YANKS WITH A SMILE। the

nt reo«

batis.

reduced rates which have been j

ADD 396 MEMBERS
DURING PAST YEAR

As the tiny confederate who .ur°P,
“t1*0";
rounds lhe Yanks with unites, as- |
*U1_
u8n “*ePh"ie
*5"? Woodland Mutual Fire In­
PROBATE COURT.
A"*1 .the “ub*
Est. Sarah E. Miller. Annual ic- tounds them with songs and defeats °c’ock f*0*1
surance Oo. Elects Offithem with dances, fjhlrley Templo
cars for 1936
returns
to
the
screen
In
-The
Utilnl
’
,u
and
°"
E^
011;10'
Est. Josef Raha. deed. Testimony
ext Rebel." which cornea to th. P"*”
Jan'
At lhe annual meeting of the
Strand Theater January 29. 30 and u,p’ l5' Thcl* changes wU| mean Woodland Mutual Fire iniflrance
31
a large annual saving to Michigan
port of sale filed, order confirming
Company the following directors
Abl, wppcrtrt b, . ...1 .hlch “JSStT
J",”"."',™
sale hied, final account hied.
includes John Boles
Jack Holt Johnson, manager here for
the were elected: Geo. w. Schneider,
Karen McXy a^d her okl tapTelephone Company
Lake Odessa, to succeed himself
dancing
friend.
Bill
Roblmon.
Shi?&gt;
w
Amuial account and petition filed.
and Harley V. Townsend. Woodland,
I dancing friend. Bill Robinson. shirorder for publication entered.
I I— pur. te, M dr.rn.Ue rok .In I SS-S'wv?fiL‘±J? .S for lhe term of three years, c. N.
Eat. Josef Raha. dec'd. Order al- ' thuPscreen offering produced tinder
which the present ata- Van Houten. Roxand Twp.. Eaton
XOTItra TO CBEDITOBB.
ormi.ni enterra.
mterwi oiicuarBs
discharge of Darryl
L—I". ,1' Proaucca
day rate is
lowing accouni
F. tZanuck
, tion-to-statlon
wm.j-vu-.wwu., u«»
w more
uumc county, was elected director to fill
.. lhan
than 35 cents.
ma tor
,1m ' Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
' ^e story of “The Llttlext Rebel"
^mts. Is the sixth major
. Est. Hattie Haggarty. dec'd. Final adapted from that ever popular play.
‘5hL“rR,n‘te
retary's report showed the total
'i'(‘ account filed, order assigning real- deals with happenings in Virginia
Bel1 8y«tem amount at risk $27.074502 and a
.
j
.
___
ji-.j..™zx»
.
u«,..n_
__
■
since
October.
1920.
membership of 7.925. a gain of 390
rJuo«, to due entered, discharge of Admr. Is- during the Civil war.
! This also Is the first time-that members and $1,003,309 in the
% *UPd- est,te «nrolled.
After Shirley's father. Jqhn Boles.
»» 'h Aid; Est. Charles Williams, dec'd. Pe- &lt;
called to fight for lhe Stars and discounted rates have been offered amount at risk.
The report of lhe
treasurer
• »nt Ibrir tition for Admr filed, waiver of no-I Bars, things go from bad to worse on station-to-station day long dis­
on Sunttay
Sunday and th,
lhe mxt
first showed the Income os $78,98558 with
i.tr onicr, ' Xl«
. • fited.
... order .Minting Admr.
Aztm. '.with
'.wito-his
hi, fatnilv
family. Tzival
Loya! (znanti
servants help tance calls «
losses of $49,250.57 and other ex­
or M.t, a. i&gt; I entered, bond of Admr. filed, let-, to keep th- family together, but
"'if*
r.
“tera of administration issued, order , when their home comes into t^c line “J*
penses of $8,111.08. current assets of
limiting retllement enteral. -peU- | ot fire. Shirley and her Mother.
A
In
$57,873.01 on hand and other re­
tion for hearing clslrns filed, notice , Karen Morley, are forced to flee.
the’orator u renue?tl?l
hSltZ sources
and impounded funda
amounted to $16.23851:
II. A. D. 19.15.
I to creditors issued.
, The delicate MIm Morley sue
The following officers were elected
,KSJ0' a*'T1“ni
M
I •-'Sbon.. vhKTSuiion-u. .UUon
by lhe directors fof lhe ensuing
,«nl med
| V,
“.th "
-11 U one
to . ulntaM W
MORTGAGE FOBECLOBUBE.
year: President—C. J. Moore, Free­
Ot Mleh.,1 M&lt;C1H.
OrmS1 paulb" Scion
•&gt;»■&gt; «&gt;
port; Vice-Pres—Earl V. Colby. Al­
uices trial ana possiotc execution ,
der allowing claims entered.
| when
&lt;..».
....
to; Secretary—P. C. Kilpatrick,
captured
J?™
»tokon-to-stawnen he
ne is
is
capcureu by
oy Jack
jack Holt,
Hott. a
a son
, in nartlcular. AAstatlnn-to-ita------ 7------- 7
— But
«... Holt s galtan- । tion call requires leas time for
Order Northern ..Al**
officer
fOr mak
mik­* Woodland; Treasurer — Geo. W.
Est. Morris O. Hill. deed. C.2..
rhurn. try
ir.. proves equal to that of
", the ing
Ing the connection than does
does a nerper­ Schneider. Lake Odessa.
allowing account entered, discharge
of Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
Ecuih. and hc
South,
lie let:.
tries to
U help Ch.;..
them son-to-person call and therefore the
4az,*&lt;4 T?1
_
rate is considerably less.
Est. tLouisa r.
C. tlllk.^
Hilbert, zdec'd.
Fl-- II escape.
As an instance of the saving made
nnl account filed, order allowing ac-1 When .they are recaptured, both
count entered, discharge of Admr. Boles
Holt must nice
face inc
lhe con
con-­ possible under the new schedule
uvm and
»uu jjuii
of uwir
their act.
act. The
issued. estate enrolled.
IJ sequences ui
she ppicture Manager Johnson says that the day
person-to-peraon
rate from Has­
Est. Orville C. Barnum, dec'd. Or- 1I reaches its emotional climax when
Erbin Newman, of Orangeville,
der allowing claims entered, final'Shirley
------ •-----•lo —
- •
Journeys
Washington
with tings to Detroit heretofore has been
account Hied, waiver of not'ce filed, faithful old Bill Robinson lo plead $1.00 al all times. Now the same was picked up by the sheriffs offi­
SOW. Tl F.KF.FORE. hr
order assigning residue cr'-ered.
with thc Great Emancipator for the coll can be made nights and Sun­ cers Friday night on a charge of
larceny from a Delton garage. He
Est. Raymood Knoll, dec'd. Pinal lives of her father and Jack Holl, days for 70c, a saving of 30c.
The week-end discount period on was brought before Justice Mat­
account filed, order allowing ac­ who were guilty only of helping a
both types of long distance calls will thews Saturday and admitted his
count entered, discharge of Admr. little girl.
Issued, estate enrolled.
Shirley's songs in lhe picture in­ extend from 7 o'clock Saturday guilt. The Justice Imposed a fine of
nights
until 4:30 o'clock Monday 850 and $685 costs or. In case of
Est. Ernest W. Rykert. Petition clude -Polly Wolly Doodle." by Sid­
mornings.
failure to pay. a sentence of sixty
filed, citation Issued.
ney Clare and B. G. DeSylva, and
days in the county Jail. He Is serv­
Est. Philip C. Merlau. dec'd. Or­ •'If all Thy
Endearing Young
IS
YOUR
DRIVER'S
ing out his sentence. Newman at­
der allowing claims entered.
Charms."
•
LICENSE OKEY? tributed his Infraction of the law to
Est. Gerald B. and Neva J. Stan­
- OdMlit Mleh. n'JTfc
his appetite for beer, and admitted
ton. Annual account filed.
MAD BOAR KILLS STALLION.
Be sure and have your driver's
Datrd. pKftnbrr 35. 1935.
that he took money, as well os ar­
license
with
you
when
you
make
ap
­
A thoroughbred Poland China
ticles which he sold, from his etrf«
Annual account filed.
MORTGAGE BALE
boar on the farm of Oscar Perkins, plication to obtain license plates for ployer, to get cash to buy beer. He
Esl. Milton Hebei, dec'd. Order
a half mile west ot the Crane school your car. The wise motorist will seemed to regret his wrong doing.
allowing account entered, discharge
house, in Lyons township, suddenly greatly help the situation for him­ His employer had taken mm from
of Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
ll : r
turned killer a few days ago. and self and the over-burdenetL aecre-1 welfare work and was'paying him
Est. Will W. Sheffield, dee d. War­
. as a result a valuable stallion is tary of state's office if he has his good wages and donating him the
rant and Inventory filed.
| dead, while two other good horses driver s license in good standing at use of an automobile with which to
John J. Blfrti r
Sin
Est. Elizabeth Ehret, dec'd. Peti­
the time he applies for the purchase
tion and order authorizing Admr. to and one mule are recovering from of his new plates. Records show go back and forth lo his home. It Is
। painful wounds inflicted by the
to be hoped he has learned his les-'
employ attorney filed and entered.
tusks of the animal, after there are a great many unlicensed
EsU Bernard O. TerpennIng. dec'd. j sharp
drivers
on highways of the state.
having been near death.
Verl Deeds. 22. of this city. Is serv­
Final account filed.
' All of these farm animals were in Many of these are not Intentional ing 30 days in the county jail on a
Est. George C. Bradish. dec'd. Dis­
. thc barnyard together, as they had violators of the law. bul have neg­ charge of contempt of court. Tha
charge of executor issued, estate enbeen many limes before, when the lected to note the expiration date. arrest grew out of Deeds' failure to
। rolled.
You cannot, get a 1936 plate with an
1 Est. George Dull. Annual account 1 attack started. Il had not proceeded outlawed driver's license, and it may pay |3 a week alimony far the cars
far before an employe on the farm
of a minor child, now In lhe moth*
। filed.
I discovered it. hurried lo the scene, cause you a lot of inconvenience er's custody. He has also filed sull
and delay when you wish to get one.
NOTICE TO CREDITOB8
and
managed
to
get
the
horses
In
­
MARTIN COkNERS.
for annulment of lhe marriage.
side the bam. The stallion lived bul
----------- L. A. S. last week at Mrs.
SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
CONSERVATION COURSES
- —...
.... .tiate ot William Martha Demond's was well attendTO BE GIVEN NEXT YEAR.
Mr. and Mrs. John Norton and
sVtire'te
does that four .mb. «» a,ld ‘'J enjoyed the splendid most dangerous of animals in an at­
Men and women Interested In
.... .... . ,-------. .. dinner and the "Puzzle" program tack of this kind, because the bite is family of the Moore District spent
very much. Proceeds from the dln- very poisonous —From Lake Odeata Sunday with their mother. Mrs. forestry and wild life conservation
til their claim.
will have an opportunity to receive
Wave-Times.
Anna Cheeseman.
; ner were $455,
Remember there will be Sunday I
Mr. and Mra. a. E. Eddy and fam­ special instruction in that field al
(school next Sunday at 10:30. folBRANCH DISTRICT.
ily of Nashville spent Sunday with Michigan State College. The first
short course of eight weeks will be
Prayer meeting from the North Mr. and Mrs Robert Gray.
rs.l 50 link
arc cordially invited to both these Maple church will be held al the
Mr. and MTs. Clayton Jarrard) offered during January and Feb­
home of Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Os- and family and Geo. Hecker of ruary. 1937. Instructors will be
Mr. und Mrs. Owen Varney and troth Thursday evening of this Dowling spent Sunday with L. W. ] members of the regular teaching
staffs of the forestry, zoology and
.sons,
uyte. or
son.-;. nooen
Robert unn
und Lyle,
of uastteuin
Castleton weex.
week.
jarrard and family.
1 entomology departments of the col.
' Center were Sunday afternoon callMr. and Mrs.
rs. ILee Mlsenar of BalEno Jarrard is helping her slsterera at Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher's.
tie creek *$vere
-^c.e Sunday afternoon In-law. Mrs. Clayton Jarrard, Oils lege.
■ During the last year the collegi
I The Martin P. T. A. will be held callers at the Vincent Norton home.
has received——
many
, „.,uiries
inquiries. -con
con­
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY
Friday evening. Feb. 7. Remember
We have been having gcnulnq
Mr. aijd Mrs. Glen Asplnall and , ___________
thc date nnd plan to attend.
winter weather for several days. family of Hickory Corners spent cerning short courses and Corre­
I Most of our neighbors have men Here's hoping we have it now. before Wdnesday with Mr. and Mrs. Pete spondence work in conservation. P
A- Herbert, head of the forestry de­
busy wiring their homes for elec­ spring time.
Hoffman.
tricity and they will soon be enjoy­
Kenneth Sage, formerly ot this
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gray spent partment. reports. To meet this de­
mand. thc college is offering a short
ing the conveniences of lights. place now of Nashville, passed the Friday at a. Eddy's in Nashville.
examination for the U. S. Navy, and
Wayne Robinson of Nashville course of instruction designed espe­
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Landis of Fait expects to leave about Feb. 5.
spent Bunday with his grandparents, cially for woodsmen, caretakers ol'
hunting, fishing, and recreational
Woodland were callers nt Mr. and
Keith Norton had the misfortune Mr. and Mrs. Lester Preston.
Mra. Orr Fisher's Wednesday of to smash his thumb while cutting
Mrs. Grace Brohc of Hastings properties, and others Interested In
.wood last Friday.
spent Thursday afternoon with her the administration of forested and
other game producing areas. Tpe
mother, Mrs. Lester Preston.
Mr. and Mrs. O- C. Marshall and work will be of a practical type, in­
Mrs Edna Kidder spent Thursday cluding mapping. Indentlflcation Of
with Mrs. Chas. Jones In Battle plants and animals, cruising, forest
and game protection, reforestation
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Evans and and allied subjects.
"We do not pretend lo make tech­
son of lhe Qualllrap'Dislrict spent
nical
foresters or zoologists out of
Sunday evening at G- C Marshall's.
the men taking this eight weeks'
course." Herbert explains, "but be­
lieve it will prove useful to those
employed in the management of for­
est and game producing properties,
No need to struggle wllh the gear shift when
information gained from this course
of study, together with practical
It remains fluid in extreme cold, permits
field training, should make It pos­
sible for these men to improve lhe
value
of thc property they are man­
lubrication. Recommended for transmissions
aging for trees, flsh. game and re­
creational use."
(Extreme Pressure) or regular gear lubricant.
ROBINHUE PARK.
Mrs. Grace Jackson and niece,
Lillian Jackson, of Howell spent
KftP THEM SOH,
Tuesday evening at the Kollar
WHITE AND BEAUTIhome.
ance during the Winter months. The following sugMr. and Mra. Ralph Flnkbelner o!
FUUY SMOOTH
Middleville have returned to their
home after spending a few days
COOLINC SYSTEM—Have it drained, flushed and refilled
with their parents. Mr. and Mra.
with fresh water ond install the proper amount of anti­
Julian Potts.
Mr. and Mrs. Art Lowring and
freeze solution: check for leaks; tighten hose connections.
daughter of Grand Rapids were re­
cent guests of Mr. and Mrs. George
BATTERY—It should be inspected, water added if neces­
Poland.
sary and all connections tightened.
to-station rate is more than 35 cents. Thc dis­
Wright Clifford and family spent
Sunday with-Mr. and Mrs. Harry
CHASSIS—To ovoid excessive wear, all parts should be
count on most persori-lo-person calls is thc same
BENZOIN AND AIMOND
Mendenhall of Caledonia.
thoroughly
lubricated
with
the
proper
type
of
Winter
Lu
­
Betty
Potts and Ruth Smith spent
CREAM
in money as on station-to-station calls between
Wednesday night with their class­
bricants.
’ •
thc same places.
mate. Marian Keagle. of Parma-

Court News

BANNER WANT AD VS. PAY

Every Careful Investor
Gives first consideration lo the security

back of lhe investment.

The experience of the building and loan ntUM-isiinnn of
Michigan during the past few year* of unsettled economic
conditions, from tire standpoint of safety, makes the siiarrs
Informal ion concerning “National
fully furnished.

Successful for More Titan 16 Years

(Jtje Rational ffioan &amp;
Imteatoent (jfrmtpmut
£»taWuA.&lt;f 1889

DETROIT, MICH

I. L. MAUS H™

MEMBER
HOME

For EASY Gear Shifting

SPECIAL SUNDAY RATES

SUNOCO
TRANSEP

SUNOCO

Beautiful Hands

for Long Distance telephone calls
and

REDUCED PERSON-TO-PERSON RATES
after 7 every evening
EFFECTIVE January 15, thc Michigan Bell
Telephone Company extends to all day Sunday
the same reduced rates which have been in
effect on long distance ttation-lo-stalion calls
after 7 p. m. each evening. The reductidns apply
to most calls on which the day rate for three
minutes is more than 35 cents, and range from
about 10 per cent on some of the shorter calls
to 40 per cent or more on distant calls.

ALSO...

Garden
Court

TIRES—See that they ore properly inflated; and if neces­
sary repair or replace. Smooth tires ore unsafe for Winter
driving.
.

TYPICAL THREE-MINUTE RATES-

fetter* total

From
HASTINGS
n»i

to
Benton Harbor

EFFECTIVE January 15, the Michigan Bell Saginaw
Telephone Company offers reduced rates on Chicago, III.

person-to-person calls every night after 7 p. m.
and all day Sunday. They apply, in general,
on long distance calls on which the day station-

Other Suggeations for Winter Driving

Detroit

Do

S

.75 r.60 $ .15

.65

.35 .

.30

.85

.60

.25

.75

.45

.30

1.05

.75

.30

.80

.W

.40

1.00

.70

The Busy Bee club meet with Mrs.
Macle Potts Thursday. 15 members
MICUIQAM and two visitors being present.

HABTTK08

WINDSHIELD WIPER—Adjust; replace the blade if nec­
essary.

t“*‘'

ata Nqlil Rtetattai
Rto

« .55 S .35 s .20

The Prescription Drug Store

In accordance with the recommendations made by the
manufacturer of your car, carburetor, fuel line. etc.,
should be checked ond adjusted; also the distributor and
generator.

.30

Petoskey

1.15

.60

.53

1.45

.95

.50

New Y'ork, N.Y’.

ZSS

1.40

f.15

3.25

2.10

1.15

MICHIGAN BELL (&lt;) TELEPHONE CO

ANDRUS SERVICE %

« Rwne2240

Car. JtSmea and Cowrt
8t£ Hasllngi, *

build!
That new home . . .'new room . . . fireplace
. . . roof ... or any remodeling you may be
planning to do. Let us help you. Now is the
time to make plans and arrangements for
those improvements. The Hastings Lumber
and Coal Company carry a complete line
of BUILDING MATERIALS.

Batteries, Windshield Wipers

REGULAR
GASPRICE

Ft ■ ■ BLUE
M M
SUN CU

HASTINGS LUMBER &amp; COAL CO.
MOTOR

PHONE 2515

FRANK SAGE

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, JANUARY 30, 1936

12 PAGES

EIGHTIETH YEAR

A SPLENDID "PONY |Couneil Considers Matter Of [][][]RT CALENDAR
EXPRESS MUSEUM” |Providing city. pJay Ground8i FEBRUARY TERM
NEAR PASADENA IS MOST
INTERESTING AND FULL
OF RARE 0URI0S

Supervised Recreation Expected
to Reduce Juvenile Delinquency

iFINE PROGRAM
BEING PREPARED
Second Mother and Son Ban­
quet Thursday Eve,
February 6

PAGES lto8

REPUBLICAN BAN
DUET WED,. FEB. 19

MORE RESPONSIBILITY
ON COUNTY DIRECTOR
Foundation Staff Is Relieved
of Much Detail in New.
Set-Up

3253

HELPFUL!

CIRCUIT COURT WILL CON­ • Final arrangements are going NAMES OF THOSE HAVING
DR. KILPATRICK «P1
VENE ON MONDAY,
• forward for the program of the
BANQUET TICKETS
ON SUBJECT, "WHITH­
W. K. Kellogg Foundation staff to
' Mother and Son banquet to be held
. such that-it has had to decentralize
FEBRUARY 10
'
TO
.SELL
ER BOUND?"
। February 6. at the Methodist church

We ore glad to note that the were provided, and far below what
.,
&gt;
i some of It in order to relieve the
parlors. The toastmaster is Mrs. J.
staff of too much burden In caring
nw. v C|WC nDiMlUAI
members of the city council are giv­ It is in other cities without them.
There is something about prop- UNLT rlvt LnirvlINAL
A- McNulty with Gordon Crothers WOMEN AS WELL AS
for details.
ASKED “WHERE IS
ing attention to the matter of segiving the toast to the Mothers.
In the future the county health
erly supervised play, with its InCASES
ARE
L
ISTED
LROCD HfiC LIO I CD There will also be a whistling solo by
MEN ARE INVITED officer will be known as The Field
curing needed recreation grounds sistence on playing the games fairly.i
OUR COUNTRY GOING?"
that
helps
a
boy
or
girl
to
see
much
n
t
—
n
Mrs.
Francis
Angell
of
Lansing,
Director
for
the
Foundation
in
hto
------------and facilities for the boys and girls
Tickets 75 Cents Ea£h— area, and will have direct charge of Three Element! Needed to
Rev. Karl Keefer of Watervlicy.
The Display Is Almost Price- and young people of this city. A more clearly their duty to them- Only One Jury Oivi, Case
merly
of
Hastings,
will
give
the
~~
’ Number xjf Di­
•*»
—m
all expend!turss of the Foundation's
Usual
less In
Value And
Bood 'ltart *“ ™dc ,n Provldtn’ a selves and their obligation to others I
Make Life of Person Or
If You Want to Go You
less tn vaiue Ana।skating pond. The Interest shown when they enter the great game of
main address to the mothers and
funds In hto county. The county
vorcas
sons. The program promises to be
Nation Successful
wu, vmv
-..j
health officers Will be accountable
Worth While
[in that project ^haa reVealM to lhe life. Wholesome play, especially In [
Better Buy
One —
Early
AM', out-of-doors,
nnt .nf.Hnnr« tends
IpnHt to
tn build
Ktillri '1 The February term of circuit court especially interesting this year and
Last week I wrote something membert of the council the need God's
Pta,
rn.de
lor
ore
or
the l.rte.l .nd best &gt;epuMl«n IMn- “bowl 11 be given lhe UUe ol comp.
about lhe -Pony Express." developed B'ld benefits of further steps in that body, mind and spirit. It teaches will convene on Monday. February a large attendance is expected
Tickets are on sale for 35 cents
co-operation, and getting along with 10. There arc only five criminal
in early pioneer days of the west. It direction.
.
Grand Rapids, wu the speaker at
was tlie most unique nnd typically
Al lhe council meeting Friday others agreeably. It teaches self- cases, two of which are appeals from and may be obtained from any
the noon luncheon of the HMtlngx
American method ever developed for evening this matter was discussed, reliance, putting up a fair fight and' justice court. There is only one Jury
Rotary club on Monday. He gave a
sending mall and small parcels to A* » result Mayor Leonard named obeying the rules of the game. No ; civil cause, with a long list of non­ Banner office.
most timely and helpful talk an
wonder
other
communities
have
|
jury
civil
cases.
There
Is
also
a
long
those thousands of strong-hearted a committee of five to be known
-Whither Bound?" Close attention
U ta “liedtt? Llneoln-WMhlng- '° thr r°-d.u»'. he^u^ier,.
men. who flocked to California. ai &lt;’»” Recreation committee The found play grounds, swimming pools | list of chancery causes, including
when gold was dUcovcrcd in '40.' members are Aldermen Schader. and skatine rinks a helpful factor. | the usual grist of divorces. Followaddress.
ton banquet because of lhe nearness j
After arriving there, those fearless Miller. Haven. Pierson and Wooton. And a half dozen boys getting off. Ing Is the calendar.
He began by declaring "We all
to Hie birthday dates of these two
Criminal Causes.
old souls found (hemselves almost |11 “ hoped that this committee on the wrong foot, because lack of
men.
play «ruunua
grounds iauss
causes mem
them u&gt;
to "gangPeople v».
vs. wiuu
William Wisner, breakas completely* out of touch with thelwl,‘ “ BbIc lo work out plans for piny
k&gt;»k- ij rcopic
The address of the evening will ।
outside world, nnd lhe loved ones I P,B&gt;' grounds, also to provide
a up"
uo" with others to
tn get
set the “excite- ! Ing
Inn and entering,
entering.
lion
-Where Is our country going?’'
be given by Glenn Dunn, of Mus­
back home as if they had been set' swimming pool for thto city. ."11101; ment” or thrill they crave, can coat
People vs. Ralph Woodmansee,
He mentioned a visit which he m»d&lt;
kegon. Mr. Dunn to an attorney
down in the middle of the Soliara wl11 Evolve, of course, someone to a community more than the dollars bastardy.
and lhe legal advisor of Governor [
Desert We will never know thef*uPcrvtoe the ploy, because auoh fa- it may spend for supervised play.. People vs. -------- B. Barkruff, stat-, SENDS REPLY TO ARTICLE
prank
Washington. He happened to
Fitzgerald. He is a fine speaker, as
dangers liiey braved in the tedious I cllllies are of little value unless and those who get a wrong start utory-rape.
those who attended the last repub­
PUBLISHED IN LAST
weeks on the Overland Trail nor IPr°Perly supervised.
[become so often permanent ilablllPeople vs. Emery Houghtalln. apIF UNINSPECTED WIRING
lican convention will tell you.
thelr sufferings from home-sickness ' Thc experience of other cities has ties to society inklead of helpful fac-1 peal from Justice court.
WEEK’S PAPER
: The price of the tickets will be CAUSES LOBS. NO INSUR­
and other causes after they arrived 1 Proven that supervised play and tors in doing the world's work.
i People vs ARichud W. Guyney.
75c each. Arrangements have been
Every one of them can be listed i P1®* grounds ore not an expense but ■ We hope our city will adopt a pro- appeal from Justice court,
ANCE AFTER JULY 1
ITEM MUST HAVE
made for four hundred al the tables
among our "unsung heroes" and I nn Investment. It h«s been prov-‘gram that will Aecure play grounds I
Jury civil Causes.
with whom thb country must reckWomen as well as men are invited.
they played a strong part In tlie en lhnt Juvenile delinquency In clt- I and supervised1 play for Hastings., Dolly J. Lee vs. Robert L. ChadBEEN MISINTERPRETED No tickets will be sold on the night DONALD ADAMS, CHAR­
development of our tar west We of 1M whert* u,crc arc P|a&gt;’ grounds' It will be very helpful Saturdays I wick', trespass on the case.
of the banquet. The tickets have;
today hear little, and know com- and supers l»^ play is far below and during school vacations—espe"
“
----------LOTTE, IS INSPECTOR netlc power that won approval of
Supervisors Evidently Felt
paralivdy nothing of the "Pony what it was before such facilities; dally the long summer vacation.
’ National Merchandising System
his policies. Under ordinary circum­
That Families Should Bear who will have charge of their sale
। vs. c. T. Hess &amp; Son. assumpsit.
Express." but in Ils day It was a
in the various townships, as well as Important That Owners of
Wayland State Bank, a Michigan
little attention would have been
wonderful undertaking. Il brought ARE YOU REGISTERED?
More of Expense
in this city. A considerable num-;
—
Banking Corporation vs. Wm. Wlsgiven to Huey Long; but tn these
Wired Rural Buildings
tidings from the outside world In
ber have been spoken for already.
tier and Etta Wisner, assumpsit.
days he would have become a strik­
the form of newspaiters. More im- j
IF NOT, “DO IT NOW!" I
. :ll would be well, therefore, for thoseGet
,
H.rry O. Uohm.nn. K^rHkAh. “S
rT*.
Inspection Boon
ing figure in our public life.
portant still, it brought letters;
Call For Help" has been misInter-, who wish to attend this banquet to
Donald Adams, of charlotte, vtoitfrom
home
to those
men
who
were *r_
an.ui
nrwtfkH OAm. Hrkuw. I.V-n l»
SlllV their tickets at OS Cllflv A date
literally
burled
in the
gold
gulches
No One Can Vote AP*
11 a
6 ;
Tliomas B^k Admr. vs. Stephen ’U2f2’U°” w"c t*kln&lt; “ d*« *l the ^T’nC^-HCKBTS wSaFSOlS Ju*‘
'PP01^ dl^‘ hispect- the church going?" In many ways
of California. How enger they were
----- -*
Who »la Not Registered
Karmes. trespass on the case
d£ T
b?ve "ewr heard any Jhal NO TICKETS WILL BE SOLD „ fop runU eleelrlaU lluUUaUona,
on the street corner with a Un cup
| Tuesday
evening. Feb. 4. Ln
to receive news is proven by their j
Fred Mackev vs Wm E Seltler crlUcbn&gt; of theHIV
charges
ftnd _ __ MunUea b
VAMU of Barry °N THE
- -----NIOHT
------------ OF
,,---THE
------BAN-------- . f(jr .Ba(Ty
_
by March R8
willingness to pay |12 in gold for a
1 "Ladies’ Night" for the Hastings
.u- —’
r', county
doctors In to
responding
to reQU tri.
There
will
be'5 no
the Atatjk’’administrative begging forI help, instead of trying
। county_
doctors
In responding
re- .QUCT.
There
will be
no °
ver“
I theoversale
state electrical
single copy of a newspaper that was[ Our city election will
be held
to lead the country out of its trouMJI.
hcld on
°n : commercial
Commercial
club, with
dinner
-------- trespass on the case.
lief calls. Everybody knows they do- of tickets. When the four hundred i board at r^mUng
Roy Blough vs. c. A. Curtiss &amp; nate many thousands of dollars of ttr£_so,.d' thc xale,.,s211 **
weeks old by the time It reached | Monday. April 6.
5. It will be important | promptly at seven o’clock. An in­
The legislature at Its last session
them, and the further fact that they | f°r those voters
----- —
•There are said to be thirty mil­
's who
are not —
now ~
u-restlng program will follow the Bon. assumpsit.
service freely to persons whom they
The
J ** ‘w’r?’cd
tbe ’ enacted a law requiring inspection
tenit to
In getting
unttlncr their
llw r jI dinner.
&gt;&lt;
... dancing
, . ,
. cards
...
gladly paid «5.00 In gold for each [ registered to attend
wllh
and
later
Rosa Hollister vs. Dr. F. O. Pultz, । know to be unable to pay. That fact Ladies Aid of Welcome church, who j of aU rurnl
lnJtalla^n ln lion people in the United Blates who
trespass on the case.
belong to secret societies. Where
letter brought to them. My. but names on the list before March 28.1 for those who wish to stay,
would preclude the idea that they ।served the last banquet so accept-; thU gUt&lt; Aecordlng
tbe Uw
Tli«
MctawMIn v«. William are deserving criticism in the mat-1 ably The menu will consist of, afUr u became effective insurance are they going? if. for Instance, such
what kirks we would register today After that date one cannot be reg-1 Tj
wse occuUu
occasions iie
are Tlww.
always en-1 „ clyd'
- vcry we....
. .
(Conrad, et al., appeal from justice
if we had to submit to such charges. I Islcred and vote April 6. In the joyabie alld
jj attended
ter u
of‘ 'charges
for &lt;cuei
relief work.
fried chicken, potatoes,. ,*,home-made
companjeg would
wouid not
r.ot have
have been rere­
—*’ —• ——-—। court
i **■*
■“
1'"r«lF
lu|
wuia. .K-. mil.
‘**™7 com. 1j। companies
But,
Itthan
we keep
on spending
billions
meantime,
any day. any can
voter
' ----- ------------__________
Tint
It ••s
I.
tellteri Atmles.
srallnned
wou
.,a rS‘soton
navc been
more
we earn,
maybe wine
day
not slrrndv
already'reghtered
getwho
his!-------------------------** *
i Fred Mackey vs. Mrs. Ed. Seltler. th?
“l JLt
’hav'/
b^n’within?'to
Sffee^tel
and^cWre'a^hOTw' ?uUed J® J*
y loss
,buUd- leaching of chivalry and chasUtv.
mnrn ’fKnn
.. iI&lt;’ tint
rOtfi *lt t-rrti CAtl Wt*t
hie
really lived their principles. Axnertwe'll have that "opportunity." Who name on the list by calling al the (REHEARSING FOR
knows?
city clerks office at any lime from
.,nNp
sm/m.™
Francllle Miller vs. E A. Rogers.
umuta ^vei h.re
to the^JwnXj which h^Tre- W?’
'J*® Uw
When you visit California DON'T 8 A. M. until 5 P. M From March j
ONE MAD NIGHT , assumpsit.
rttentfteJTn ^th
fwtoeh oubiici^ “uixrvhors those super,but
&lt;»PI»rt’“*hy
UlgllllKU
-IU1
UIC
irMlllUhUl
WIllCIl
W
—
—
........
I
------—
■
MISS visiting the "Pony Express 20 to
the ,
. ,, ------ ------ . .
. James L. Barker. Rec'r
wt?. rilor^in h£e eh^ie Mthe tteket
~ and including March 28 ...al
Rec'r. Woodland
appears later in this article. What visors will have charge of the ticket spection of such wiring in the rural
clerk's office will •be open until 8 ' Laughable
Three-Act Play State Bank vs. Cora Bhopbcll. Goldie
Museum." just a little ways out of -•-*'•
| the supervisors undoubtedly had in ’ «ale. Tn townships which do not areas of Michigan at the lima When shaping of American life.
।“
M. Rolfe, ---------assumpsit.
"
The speaker said it has been co
pu]l of Amusinc and ExPasadena. You will find it one of o'clock evenings except. Sunday, for j
I mind to that the coal of medical have republican supervisors, the
u OI AmusinK ana x-x' (Continued on page 12, part two) 1 care, to a larger degree than would. Ucket sale will be In charge of the the lah- went into effect. So It would pyted that the energy put forth
the most Interesting displays of the purpose of registering names of
have been unfair to the insured if
|
citing Episodes
pioneer relics that con -be found voters.
' seem warranted, has been put onto , member.-, of lhe republican county the insurance companies could have
physical activities was equivalent
anywhere. There are literally thou­ r-»iisina-rinsi m um
of "One “
Mad
COUNTY-WIDE
SPELLING the county. Doctors are not respon- 'committee for those townships.
I Rehearsals «*
nu Night." luuuivi
i-vviuc orCLLINU
been released from paying a loss
sands of articles used in the old FOUNDATION PLANS
the laughable, mysterious three-act |
pnUTCCT lllincD WAV s‘ble
Dial fact. They would not1 In order that our readers may traceable-to defective wiring. Ac­ the amount necessary to operate
electric refrigerator.
In Th—
“Pony Express" days, gold-washing
,
CCl I nu/CUlD CVCTCU
play selected by the Junior class for |
LUN I CO I UNUtri WAY attend . such cases unless _____
called on ____
know_________________
just where they ___________
can obtain
pans, gold-dust and nugget scales.
HtLLUWSHIH SYSTEM j their annual
------------to do sola's a matter'of factTsarry
tickets for this
banquet,
we give
FELLOWSHIP
production Friday I
------.
.
-------------------•— •
--------- ----------— yie
— - cordingly state insurance commis­
old clocks. hand-cuffs and Irg-lrons.
------------Schools Preparing for county doctors furnished only a following list of those who have sioner. John c. Ketcham of this
'I night. Feb. 7. predict It to be the [Rural
I
county, after consulting with the
pictures of some of the old-time plans to Give Practice Train- most thrilling yet amusing play that'
—
-----------------------------••
-----•
-»•
—
----•
n-v-*•
­
comparatively small part of the . charge of the sale of tickets in their attorney general's department, is­
Township Tests Before
chlnes they then had. would
desperadoes and what happened to
•—«------------------ ■- ——•------- ■—1
medical service and treatment given 1 respective districts.
ing in Public Health
to
sued a notice to the people of the
them (often shot or hung),"some of ।
Final in May
,such patients. The state university I Assyria—William Struln.
state that this proposed release of
the guns they used; old newspapers; (
Administration
| The committees have been hard
hospital received
received ------a big-------------share of—
the ! Baltimore — Bert
Stanton
and Insurance companies would not be
Rural school pupils all over Barry hospital
old letters; old lamps and lanterns; । r&gt;, K.« n
i Bt work arranging clever publicity, county, by now. are poring over the money.
I Lloyd Gaskill.
b
enforced until July 1. 1936. After And that is Just a speck
money
muiiry
uaaca,
obxes;
Ponythe
n»»j
Express
Mpivw,
stamps !i[ nected
owuipo
ur
n- the
oecKctt.
lormrnv con- | nnd
building
sets, gathering
costumes'
Barry—Morse Backus.
and
covers;
letters
Pony Express
with
state health
properties
and designing
an ' list of words sent to every school In I We have been asked and gladly
that date that provision of the law with the total energy deve
and rnverie letters the Pnnv Exnrrsw
! Carlton—Lawrence Farrell.
riders Aarrina-»nriv
rtriora
carried; early r&gt;niirnmia
California EtntA
state t! ment. has been aDDolnted to the ! unusual program. The publicity the county from the school com-1 9ive PUc? to &lt;h« following com- I Castleton—Wilbert Smith.
documents; a piano profusely “ear- sl*ff of the W. K. Kellogg Founda- committee, composed of L. Hopkins. mlssioner's office, as a sample of munleatton from the Barry County i Hastings Township—John Lipkey. every owner of rm al buildings,
the words to be used in the county- Medical Society and their Publlc I
which have been wired for electric
marked" with bullets, in use in tiid , ti«n. and for the ensuing six months B. Sigler. R. Culbert. K. Gillespie,
1
Hope
—
Bernard
DeGolla.
lighting or power, should be inspect­
dance-hall of one of the early gold- will devote his time to working on L. Moore, m. Westerlind. B. Glad­ wide rural school spelling contest to Relations committee. What we were i Irving—William McCann.
take place In May. following the
(Continued on page five)
I
ed by an accredited representative
mining camps; roulette wheels and [details of a fellowshin system.
| Johnstown—Perd Stevens.
stone. D, Walton. L. Marshall, and
----------* • •----------------of the
electrical
administrative
(Continued on pnge three)
At present two full-time, qne-year M. Hewitt, under the leadership of township elimination tests In April,
Maple Grove—John Martens.
--------- -----------------------fellowships are planned for students
for which each school may furnish TAX SALES ON MAY 5
board at Lansing. The wiring must But where are we going with all thia
Robert Henney are planning a &gt;-006 contestant.
Orangeville—Bert Brown.
be approved by such Inspector before
SCHOOl
OFFICERS TO
nubl|an
c bcB,th
administration.
To
(Continued on page eight)
oumi^l urriLErii
iu-------------iqual|ry
Bppllca
nt muat
a pleasant surprise to take place In
। Prairieville—Otis Boulter.
There will be two groups In the
THROUGHOUT
STATE
July 1 next, or thereafter any loss
I Rutland—Moses Stutz.
busines district Saturday after­ contest—one composed of third, j
of building or buildings due to de­
MEET rEBnUAKY
In [graduate of a recognized school. the
noon. Other committees are as fol­
1 Thomapple—Glenn Whitmore and
fective wiring need not be paid by FARM BUREAU “FAMILY
_
—---------- ,
' with special training In the publlc lows: Scenery; Douglas Barnes, JS'rXJh^X^vS-^ 0wB6r* of LaBd
'Glenn Blake.
the Insurance company. .
Many Questions of Interest health field Receipt of a teiiow- chairman. R. Furrow, a. Miller. D.
NIGHT' JANUARY 31
eighth grades, it will be a written I for
WIL’ Bo Notified I Woodland—Glenn Wotring.
Arn tn Pn Din
I ship will not mean that the student
There arc large numbers of farm
are io ue mai |U
tralned for a
ln the Solhard. L. Sccber, and K. Gilles­ test.
« i i m
u
I Yankee Springs—Albert Graves,
buildings In this county, equipped
pie. costumes: Isabelle Sage, chair­
Scanning the many rows of words
Early in March
city of Hastings—William Schacussed
I Foundation's work. The staff is now
for electric lighting or power, where Fine Time Planned for Gath­
man. D. Doxey, F. Humphrey. D. these young peoplo must become
County Treasurer. L. F. Maus has der. Clyde Wilcox. Allan C. Hyde,
Friday. Feb. 7, to the date for the complete. The purpoae of the fel- Leary, and B. Gladstone. Furniture: familiar with, several hundred in’re&lt;elve&lt;1 word from _the auditor [Henry Sheldon,^Judge_StuartJJle- the Installation has never been ap­
ering Here Next Fri­
proved by a representative of the
Barry county school officers' meet- lowshlp to to further the training. Marshall Cook, chairman, W. Allernumber and far from easy, we feel general’ that “
the
** advertising of **
the
“ ~
ment* and
"* **
the
“ ”
Hastings
**“
”
Banner.
day Night
Ing. a morning and afternoon ses- through practice in field experience,
electrical administrative board at
dlng. M. Kelley. R. Bogart. L. Wil­ the rural schools are doing a con­ i tax sales In this county, to be held I Just one thing to bear in mind.
Lansing. Owners of such property
sion. to be held at Central auditorlPersons who will eventually carry liams, and Orvjlle Ballance. Prop­
I
on
May
5
next,
will
be
far
different
I
IF
YOU
WANT
TO
ATTEND
THIS
structive piece of work In conduct­
should very coon get tn touch with Family Night will ba held at Fuller
um. with the following interesting &lt; on health work elsewhere.
erties: Margaret Hummel, chairman. ing these yearly contests. We think from that made In previous years. BANQUET GET YOUR TICKET
Donald Adams. Inspector for Barry hall. Hastings, on Friday evening.
program scheduled:
I The announcement also made It R. Hathaway. R. Ransom. T. Shute,
। Heretofore, there were always tn-[EARLY!
I and Eaton counties, and secure an January 31 at 8:45 P. M Thare wfi
9'30 A M— Music Boys' Glee i dear that the fellowship will not be M. Ftngleton, and M. Marble. Pro­ the person who wrote the com­ eluded in the advertising descrip-1
Club. Roy Garner, director.
UM'd 10 create a field station for grams: Lucille Shultz, chairman. C. munication concerning lhe poor
onoTontir tucid
। Inspection of their electrical in­
'
spelling prevalent among the young­ [ lions of the properties that were de- POSTPONE
THEIR
Stallationa
before July 1 next. His
9: 40-"Activities of Barry County “nv one University or college.
Smith. M. Polmer, R. Hathaway. M. er generation, will be pleased to read I llnquent for taxes offered at the sale
County Health Department." Dr.1 Dr. Beckett, who has been secured
PLAY INDEFINITELY ‘&lt;la"“ “
Green, o. J. Garrison, and G. Fish- of this effort to improve lhe stand- This year only the general court orRobt B Harkness, director.
;10 establish the fellowship program.
i
der
will
be
printed.
The
owners
of
arcUof
spelling
in
Barry
county.
10: 00—"Discussion of Thatcher-1ls 11 graduate of the University of
site of the family, coffee, cream
The action of the entire play
the properties listed for the sale will School! Also Closed at Del­
and sugar will be furnished.
Baur Uw." Harry E. Nesman. • Toronto and of the Johns-Hopkins takes place in "One Mud .Night" CREAMERIES’HAVE
I not be notified by the advertisement
School Board Counsellor, Dept.- of! University. After working for n and what a crazy night It is! Don
| that their properly Is to be offered
ton Because of the Scar­
Public Instruction
I time with the Cleveland health de- Cutter, a playwright, with Wing, his
SPLENDID YEAR
let Fever
10: 45—Music. Elementary Saxette Pnrtmcnt he camc 10 Michigan. proverb-quoting Chinese valet, goes
However, the owners will have
Orchestra. Lewis Hine, director.
serving first as assistant health to the cutter mansion, a lonely'
Because of the scarlet fever epi-;
11: 00—"Education's Responsibility commissioner of the citv of Bagl- house in the hills, to complete his Annual Reports Given at the due legal notice, because the county demic in Delton, the play. “Here;
treasurer is directed by law to noti­ Comes Charley." which was to have
’Lrtar^ into the singing.
to Rural Boys and Girls," Dr. Luthutcr ns health officer of Isa- latest play In peace and quiet. The
Meetings
Held
Last
।
fy each lax-delinquent land owner
er 6. West. Dean of Battle Creek ,bcl!“ county Recently he has been; house has been deserted for years;
W letter,
»&gt;«r. telling
Wimit each
«en of
o. these
.n«« owno.„b,n.a beautiful pageant will be given enby
College.
•
made director of county health adWeek
ers that hto property to to be listed £!^n ^r^’d iJSJfSite ! UUed ’ The Heart of the Dream.”
।
a
series
of
mysterious
murders
In
It
11:30—Discussion Group
[ministration for Michigan, hto post:[have given It the reputation of being ' Last week the annual meetings of j
Mlchlgan state collage. Ha will
at lhe sale, so as to give him ample
.h^ntP?"nn /mm™1!7’ i The cast of charerters to as fol­
1:15 P. M.—Music, Hastings High be,n‘t connected with the state)
“if11
lows: The Dream—BeUy Leary; The cuss the agricultural aituation
haunted. Don. then, is quite aston­ the creameries at Middleville and I opportunity to redeem it if possible. There BJ®
department. if
It u
Is hr&gt;n~&lt;
hoped that
School Orchestra. Lewis Hine, dl- health Henartm^nt
..............
” these
^Business Man-Vem DeMott; The the future of agriculture. Thia
ished to find the house tenanted by Freeport were held, splendid reports ..
The
notices will be sent* to •
all
[Dr. Beckett, after completing his
timely subject and Prof. Gunn
rector.
me
cases
being
serious,
however.
Dr.
|
...
being
given
at
both
places.
such people as John Alden. Priscilla.
owners early in March.
make it interesting for every
1:30—"The School Officers' Op­ I work in connection with the fellow­ Mr. Hyde. Lady Macbeth and a host
itoot.
At Freeport imxooo pounds of
nob,. u.
D iiarancM.
iwtorn director
dUM« or
Oi the
Barry Co. Health Unit, thought best1
“’.J™
portunities for Vitalizing the School ship, will be retained by the Foun- of others. They are lunatics under cream were received, from which (CARD PARTY AND
tworker
—Lucy
Lucy Bassett,
Bassett; pw
The numbers on the program.
1
to
close
the
schools
and
take
evenworker
—
datlon
in
some
other
capacity.
Program.'' Dr. .Mabel E. Rugen. As­
347JOO pounds of butter were made..
FASHION SHOW. (
S Wldow-FruK»« oooklln; The olrl
While it is not the purpose of the care of Dr. Bunn, whose nearby
sistant Professor of Education. Uni­
home has burned down. Though Don
A woty. UMMns -H~t.ua Une,; TO OWkg- titled -That.
the
Foundation,
in establishing
versity of Michigan.
doesn't know it. they are all quite
ladies of E^amfel [ ^arge of the play are planning to
1: 50—Talk. Member of Health De­ these fellowships, to give those to harmless, and his discomfiture In ^Uon to the stockholders to have ned by
• Zuschnllt will'direct the pageant
------- T-------------------------------------- neu oy tne laaics oi zjnmanuci
---------- ,
, . ■
•
whom such favor is granted a place
tension group of Delton. Thia
partment Staff.
their presence is most amusing. One the Freeport Creamery butter re- Oulld at the Parish house Wednes- pc^nt it later,
; and the church choir will provide
2: 10—New School Legislation," in the employ of the Foundation, of the inmates is Lucille, a beautiful celve first place last fall in a state- day nl&lt;hlj ^b. 12. It's a comblna- I
----------------- ----------------------special music.
it is evident that the Foundation
Harry E. Neaman.
wide
contest.
This
speaks
well
for
tlon
canj
party
an
d
fashion
show.
I
CREDITS
GIVEN
TEACHERS
girl with an amazing story of per­
2:45—Movies.
W. K. Kellogg has in mind the availability of the secution and intrigue’. Don is just the butter-maker. Dan Postma, who puyera
participating
will ..W.
not pro- ,i
IN---------------------------EXTENSION COURSE,
.
.... pO .UW...
---------------- LOCAL STUDENTS
men with public health experience.
Foundation.
about to ride towho
hercan
assistance
like bywas
gross, so individual tables __u
and i Some
of- -the teachers
oi Barry
be selected
there-hired
Founda­for the coming year.
ENTER CONTEST.
No figures are available for the groups may be formed and any I county, numbering 50, are taking
true Lochinvar when his fiance
tion or by other health authorities a
A number of the art students at
».U
»icr
muuicr
mm
meir
cmoreu
Mlridlevlllo Creamery, but we un­ game desired may be played. A prize an extension course of study every
and
her
mother
with
their
colored
A^nh'n..
(tor public health work in the fu- maid. Depression._one of the fun-! derstand that they had a very sucthe Hastings High school, working
:
will
be
given
at
each
table.
[
Saturday
morning
at
the
Hastings
ture. And public health work cerniest colored characters you've seen I cessful year also.
' A fashion show follows, features I High school. The course to &lt;spon—
■
— I tainly has a future.
Campbell, are planning to enter dance. Thia to an extra
In a long lime—arrive on the scene.
or new spring styles, modeled
of
mooeiea by
oy 1ioq- sored by
Dy the
We W. K. Kellogg founda- posters In the state-wide "Halt-theD. O. RICHEY.
|
ATTENTION, RETAILERS!
RUMMAGE
•From this point ori things begin to
- - ------- —SALE.
:—
[cal girls, and put on by Hastings I tlon and no tuition Is charge^
Poachgr" context being sponsored by
The American Legion Auxiliary'merchants.
I though the teachers buy their own
D. o. Richey will have an auction; The regular monthly meeting of happen fast and furiously, and not
the Federated Garden Clubs of,
There will be door prizes and re- text books. The course will continue Michigan in co-operation with the
sale at the old Martin Smith farm, the retail division of Che Commer- the least of the exciting episodes is will have a rummage sale at the
Bec. 3. Rutland, with Dewey Reed ctal Club will be held Wednesday the appearance of an escaped mur­ Legion rooms on Friday and Salur-. fraahmenls. It's sure to be an en- through Moy and credit for two seas auctioneer. The sale begins at'noon. February 5. at the Parker derer fleeing for his life. But after day, February 7 and S. If you have tertalnlng evening. A general invi- I mester hours will be given toward
The two boys and two girls who
one P. M. and Mr. Richey offers 2 House. All retailers are cordially many thrilling escapades, things articles to contribute please phone tation to everyone to participate. I degrees.
submit the most original and novel Night.
horses. 8 head cattle, 9 hogs, hay, Invited to attend this meeting and finally straighten themselves out Mrs. Dan Lewis. Chrm., 2420. and The price of admission will be 35 &gt; At the session last Saturday a lec- poster-slogans will win free trips to
happily for all concerned.
*the
u* things will be called for.—Adv.
-■
cents.
ture on “Methods and Materials in
etc., farm tools and household goods.' to join this association.—Adv.
With the cast learning their lines
----------------- • • * ——~I Health Education" was given by Dr. ducted during the summer and
See the adv. for full particulars '
----------------- -----------------------so quickly and the committees show- DELTON CREAMERY CO.’S ANabout time and how to find the!
PRESIDENTS B^LL.
; NOTICE TO WORLD
। Mabel E- Rugen, assistant professor guides and chaperones will accom­
WAR VETERANS.1 of education, at the University of
NUAL MEETING POSTPONED.
farm। Plans for the president's ball are Ing such Interest and cooperation,
pany the winners.
owing to scarlet
annual
Michigan.
-r-1 fever,
Wordthe
has
been received that the
*••
going forward nicely. The committee "One Mad Night" promises to afford
LIBRARY HOURS.
an evening of rapid-fire hilarity.
meetlns
meeting and
and dinner
dinner nt
of the n»it»n
Delton bonus blanks were to be shipped on
Emphasis was given on the way •
Beginning Thursday. February 6.,
Tickets will be on sale Saturday, Cooperative Creamery Company will Wednesday, doubtless arriving to­ the teachers may improve the health .
operation they are receiving.
the Hastings Public library will be;
February 1. at the Penney store be postponed until further notice, day. Several Legionnaires will be at
Camp Fire Girls will have a
open an additional evening. Thun-1
This coming Saturday morning bera of tha Hastings High art Class
Adv.
Vemor Webster, Sec.
the Legion home all day Saturday
checking concession at the Ball.
day. during February and March. If
« • »---------------to make out papers for veterans who , the teachers will decide whether to
the attendance warrants. Open as |
PANCAKE SUPPER.
' wish to file their applications for have the course on Friday after­
MIXED DANCES.
BAMS.
usual on Tuesday and Saturday । Clear lake every Saturday night,
DANCE.
noons from 4:15 to 8 o'clock instead
At coata' Grove church from 8 the bonus,
evenings, 7 to 0 o'clock.
Martin's orchestra.
"No
beer."
Saturday night, Feb. 1. Freeport. o'clock on. Feb. g. Everyone invited.1
Cornelius Mannl.
of Saturday morning from 10 to 12
Jean Barnes, Librarian.
Frank Herrington, Prop.—Adv. if.
Legion commander.

I

CONNECTED WITH THE
GOLD RUSH DAYS

MEDICAL SOCIETY
STATES POS TIBN

04634934

fflBB TO THIS

Night" On
Tuesday Evening

I

Presenting Pageant
Sunday Evening

Une Auction Sale

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. TKURtDAT, JANUARF M, IW

P4ORTWO

ICOOKING SCHOOL WAS

PRICES

Sporting Items
iH. Fl. S. CAGERS BOW

60

TO ALLEGAN 34 TO 1&amp;

DOWN
AT

Food Center
Ohio
Matches
loxes

WHEATIES
10 a,
Peanut Brittle
10k

COCOANUT

10

OVAL

Sardines
Mustard or Tomato
Sauce

1 a. 19‘

25

BRILLO
10c Package

5*

NONE SUCH

MINCE

MEAT

PORK &amp;
BEANS
Giant Sixo

Three
Cans

QEc
CO

4 Qc
IO

Three
Bors

Trilby Soap

Bean
Sprouts

2^13

10n,
ARMOUR'S

HONG KONG

Palmolive Soap

15

1 Bar FREE

Big Ben Soap
Six 1 lb O£c
Bars
CO
Rolled Oats
19.

£LS

BANANAS

3 lb. 19

■-

HONG KONG

,
,

Local Quintet Unable to Stem
Barrage of Accurate
Basket Shooting
The ifih school

eagers

again

j went down In defeat last Friday
night on the local court, Allegan
I
; winning by a 34-15 margin.
i The game opened with each team
' playing a defensive brand of ball
Iwith the result neither team scored
a field goal in the first quarter.
' However. Allegan made six foul
1 shots while lhe Bennettmen made
l two. The second quarter the visitors
I played the same defensive game,
: but proceeded a bit farther with
their offense and scored four field
goals before the half ended 16-5.
The Allegan crew came on the
floor for the third quarter and pul
four field goals and three foul shots
together for eleven more points
while the local boys scored two
field goals and one foul shot. Score
at the end of the-third quarter 27-10.
The final quarter was a hard
fought battle with plenty of fouls
. and loose playing on both sides. The
I visitors garnered seven more points
while the Hastings crew scraped five
together.
Zavita of the Allegan five led his
team-mates in points with six field
goals and three foul shot* for a to­
tal of 15 pointe. Despite lhe referee's
close decisions this man played a
full game without having a foul
called on him. Crothers and Wallthe locals with four points apiece,
each making one field goal and two
foul shots.
The line-ups were as follows:
Hastings &lt;1S&gt;
Allegan tJ4&gt;
Gladstone
~ “
R.P
Nyeberg
Hinckley
B. Miller
Angell
Vtenkant
Walldorf!
R.G.
C. Brinlnger
Ransom
Zavitz
Substitutes
__________________
Hastings;
Brady.
Crothers. Kelley. Struble. Ironside.
Allegan;
Shelbe. L.
Brinlnger,
Haynes. W. Miller. Goodwin. Baker,
and D. Miller. Referee: Vydaremy.

The second team took their first
trimming of the year from lhe Al­
legan scrubs 28-13. Cook was the
only man on the team who showed
up well, but the game was practi­
cally lost when he did gel started
He led his fellow basketeers in
pointe with nine points. Clason of
the Alleganltes. was top scorer with
10 pointe. This was a decisive bat­
tle In that up until game lime,
neither team had been beaten, but
as is usually the case, one team has

■

,

in

Iffy's CountryCousin
Rists to Remarl

Nolhing

’

like

’

a

cooking

' "’

Peaches

Ifaa. 1 9

’

2 do.
No. 2Vi Slxe

Two

pgc

39'

With Each 25c meat
purchase

10k
Bacon Squares
DEL MONTE

Pineapple

16 k
Spare Ribs
Neck Bone Cut

Juice
Two No. 2
Cons

Ot?c
CO

7‘.b
BEEF KETTLE

ANNOUNCES ’25-A-MONTH
TIME PAYMENTS

33c»ch

AND A

PEAS
3 ... 25*

18k
Chunk Pork
Fat 1 5k

BACON
21k

GOLDEN BANTAM

CORN
Na. 2$&gt;m

Sr

25

Pork Roasts
19k
HUSH HAM

Pork Roasts |
22%

Beef Roasts
RoUod

riLAMj TFiEATRp

rilhoBt notice

SUNDAY and MONDAY, FEB. 2 and 3

OLEO

PADDY O’DAY

10k

With JANE WITHERS. Pinky Tomlin, Rita Cantina,
|ane Darwell ond George Givot
SPECIAL BARGAIN MATINEE Handay, liH and 3iM e’»loek
Ail Other Performance*—Adults 2'c
Children 10c

Four Hour Special Sot-

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. FfB. 4

Any New Ford V'8 Car
MORTON 5

Smoked
Salt
10 ,b.

75‘

SHOULOIK

FIRST CALL

an executive board committee meet-

Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph i
DEATH OF WM. J. REED.
J. Emery, the latter once a well...
. „ .
. *
Wm. J. Reed, who &gt;rmerly
Armerly conknown resident of Hastings, were
pained to learn of Mr.
&amp; ducted
ductwl a grocery store In
in this city,
death, which occurred in Jackson-! w*s found dead In bed on Monday,
ville. Florida. Friday night. January He had been residing with hU son
| 24. Mrs Emery was the daughter of nnd wife. Mr and Mrs. Jack Reed,
the late O D Spaulding. Mr. Emery and was in very poor health. He had
I was at one time city editor of the planned to enter the Butterworth
Grand Rapids Herald, and later hospital on Tuesday for an ’opera­
■ represented lhe Associated Press in tion for gal) bladder trouble. The
pnilippine SMB.MS.
Islands, still
later Ul
in «n'lw,;° su[vlyf- »”« the sympathy
Il the
LHC rnuiivuM,
lui iBLcr
| Cuba, and still later haring many : °* n** *rlendt&gt; here.
i ~&gt;uignmenta for them in this coun-!
.'"'*** .
try and Europe
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
I Mr. Emery had been HI for several
A daughter was born to Mr. and
years. He was born in Milwaukee. He Mrs. Clare Zerbe of Middleville on
is survived by his widow, two sis- Jan. 21.
I ters. Mrs. Abbie Perry of Spring
On Jan. 21. a ion was born to Mr.
Lake, Michigan and Mrs. Hiram and Mrs. Vernon Patton. 121 W.
i Polls of Sebering. Florida. The ■ Center st.
। services were conducted Monday at | A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs.
Jacksonville by Rev. Ambler M. Marshall Pierce. City. Route 4 on
Blackford.
i Jan. 23-

NEW UCC 6% FINANCE PLAN

ROASTS

Sirloin Steak

.ntTt.in

Featuring Warner Baxter. Alica
Friday evening, February 7 at
Faye. Jack Oakie and Arllne Judge.
. »t the head of an all-star cast, the 7:30 Mrs. carl Wesplnler is enter­
; picture tells an absorbing love story taining the sliver tea at her home.
u/ the people who make tlie nation's The affslr Is open to lhe publlc.
mtertaln^mt
’

Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 HL—

BLUE RIBBON

14k
LITTLE FOLKS

Organizations

be put in lhe same place the anti­
dred Sinclair of this c ly. also four | ruar&gt;. 3 Bl 7;30 u hw lhc report of
freeze solution which was concocted DEATH OF— FORMER . __________
"ami Ul OMLULKD. niuuv.
Arctic. 1)1C nominating committee and to
by Iffy's country cousin, was stowed.
BARRY CO. RESIDENT., Battle
Battle Creek,
Creek, and
and Verne
Verne and
and Rus-1
Rus-1 cQnxtd**r plans relating to the work
Oh. well. It broke the cold snap we
Mrs. George Coleman received 1 sell of Baltimore township.
For II ln Ult. di5lrlcl —Committee
have been having anyway.
word last
['
st week of the death on more than 20 years
vears Mrs. Sinclair
S
, Thursday of her oldest brother's | was chaplain
iln of
of lhe
lhe Star
Star Orange.
Orange. ! „
,
...
,
CIRCLE NO. 1.
--- at
--------- s
1 wife, Mrs. Andrew • Frey,
Long -------and was
a member
rnemh^r of
nf the Menderit-nrf»r. I -Dur to the extremely cold wcalhReach California
Califm-nln Mrs
Mr&lt; Frey
w..v visited
i-lcitwl I1 shott tLadles'
&gt;rli» Aid Society.
1“ Bnd lhe
condition of many
Circle Nb. 1 of the Mcthodht ' Bcach.
Funeral services were held at the &lt;*oads. the attendance at the PoLadies* Aid will meet Thursday aft­ here last summer and also .spent
as
ernoon February 6. at 3:30. wllh some time at Gull lake She was very Dowling church Wednesday at 2:00 irnona
rnm” Orange meeting was not —
Mrs. Hillman. 315 East Colfax.
well known in the southern part of &gt; P M. the Rev. Karl H. Keefer of large as had been anticipated. How­
the county where she formerly lived. Watervliet officiating. Interment ever. all present enjoyed n good din­
ner. an interesting program of mu­
If resourcefulness were a real as­
The remains were brought to Kal- was in the Dowling cemetery,
sic and readings and an explanation
set. the fellows who cash rubber ainkzoo where the funeral was held---------------- --------------- - - checks would be leading citizens.
on Tuesday afternoon.
DEATH OF JOSEPH J. EMERY. of the Townsend Old Age Plan.

2 c...25£

Peanut Butter

in

Request To Feed
Feathered Friends

Noodles

Brooms

thrills

right back in his old status of publlc has to be pretty sure of herself to , n follows Baxter's rise from the
Toausend plan meeting. Episcopal
numbskull numbering from one to ,t,n&lt;1 UP before a big crowd of shows of 14th Street to the glittering parish house. Friday evening. Feb.
ten inclusive He was writing his
of Broadway, it trace, hte 7. 1836. g o’clock. Rev. M. E. Hoyt of
icn
nu (f&lt;u down
down on a, demonstration.
demonstration, or
or.. decline
decline under
under the
lhe spiteful
spiteful control
control of
of Nashville Is to be the next speaker.
L inciusic.
T .r . . lie &gt;was wrnuig
—• "-Jan
copy against time, as usual, and for- make a statement that some keen his society wife, played by Mona
got
We'd
*
gut to
to finish
finish hte
his last
last sentence..
sentence . He
He ii housewife
housewife wont
won't challenge. w
.m 1 Barrie^
’
Because of an engagement which
should have added that lhe first and'get awfully flustered, we know, but, m the climax, lhe picture shows
I?,ke 11 *
u,e** ,ftdlcs of the Affiliated 1 how this master of entertainment will detain the guest speaker. Dr.
double win or a double loss.
Grocers staff.
■ returns to his most spectacular suc- Otto Carl Bach, in his home city.
After last Friday’s dual defeat. I Lots of new ideas gained at this cess and the realization that he had Grand Rapids on Feb 7. the meet­
ing of the Women's Club which was
Tffv',
T
Iffy's miintrv
country M»uin
cousin rUlvMl
delved Into Tuesday affair. Clever idea that. I iOved Allee
Faye all lhe time,
planned for that date with Dr.
the archives of his vast sport sanc­ of dipping the edges of head lettuce I *--------------------------------------Bach giving the address will be put
tuary to find out what numbers had In paprika for decorating a salad,
to do with contests of various sorts also slicing carrots as thtn as pa­
chine
Age” will be presented by Dr.
and found they were lhe means of per. and curling their edges by let­
Bach, director of live Grand Rapids
determining a win or loss Wllh this ting them stand tn Ice water, for ,
art galleries, al lhe club meeting to­
an attractive petal garnish for a
morrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in
minder sat down and made lhe un- pineapple
____ ..... ..........................
........ cream
..........
and Philadelphia
lhe Masonic dining room.
heard-of decision that Hastings will cheese salad.
probably take another drubbing this | We will pass on all lhe rec (pas for'
Bhulta community dub will meet
Friday night when lhe Lakeview 1 our readers next week We were io paper urging people to feed the
squad paddles onto the local court. Intrigued with the Jlggs dinner we 1 birds during this cold, snowy at me nonic of Mrs. Vert Robinson
Lakeview played woodland last stopped al Feldpausch's and bought, weather.
Tills same appeal is on Thursday. February 6 Everyone
cordially
invited. Members especial­
Friday and beat them 27-20. Now a can of comed beef to try out on broadcast every day over the radio
once upon a time, 'way back In lhe our family, although we may shy also. The quail, especially, are a ly arc urged io be present as there
year 1D35 this same Woodland ag- &lt;at the tomato soup-cheese-baklng, fine asset to any farm as they prac­
gregation assembled in the gym- powder biscuit supposed to be baked tically live on insects that would
Mrs. Otto teenhath will entertain
nartum at tlie high school and en- on Sop. That looks a bit tricky.
I cause damage to lhe farmer’s crop*
gaged in basket-shooting ability I '---------------- - - -- ----------------- ’
Many folks here In town have reg­ the Surgery Guild No. ID at her
against a like number of Hastings EW.T.INFnn .. M
ular feeding places for the birds home al &gt;04 South Hanover on
hoop-heavers with lhe chronic re- ENTUlTAINLD O. e. s. OFFICERS, and are enjoying the dally visits of Thursday afternoon. Feb 8 Bring
suit bf 17-14. The last number be-1
Maude w Smith was hostess lhe cardinals, tlie blue jays, chicka­ thimbles for we have towels to make.
longed to lhe aforesaid Hastings
dinner Tuesday evening at her dees. the nuthatches, and other birds Assisting committee will be Mrs Ida
h. h. and meant they were losers in
South Park street to the' that winter In,this climate. Pieces McCoy and Mrs Emma Evans.
In
officers
of the Eastern Star Order. of suet lied to a tree or port will also
the tilt. Now Sherlock Iffy Holmes’
Tlie monthly meeting of the Bar­
country cousin—the |&gt;oor fellow has The dinner was served buffet style call many of these feathered friends
no middle name—had deducted to the 20 guests, the serving table You will enjoy watching them as ry County Ministerial Association
from this numeral juggling that lhe being decorated with a bouquet of । they really display quite a lot of will be held Tuesday. Feb. 4. at 2
P. M.. al the" United Brethren
Hastings boys are in a strategic mixed flowers and candles. The human tralta.
church on JcITerson St. Tlie pro­
position to lose IF they play lhe color scheme tor the smaller tables
gram for the afternoon will be in
same kind of game they displayed was carried out In blue and white. DEATH OF MRS.
when tl;&lt; Woodland shooters opened “Help thy neighbor." new card j
CORA E. SINCLAIR, charge of Mcsdamca Riggleman. Exgame, was played during lhe eve-1
her and Jordan. Rev. J. A. McNulty,
Mrs Cora E. Sinclair,
, aged 65. a Secretary'.
However, it is not probable that ning. Mrs. a. B. Gld'.ey. Mrs. Fred----- -------------- .. .
~ti Baltimore
.°*
will happen again. Coach Bennett Jones. Mrs. Delbert Whitmore and I township. died al r
St. Mary's hoaTlie next meeting of the Sunday
and Iffy's country cousin arc llke- Mrs. Edgar Hoevenair winnjng the pita! in Grand Rapids on Bunday
thls and decided some changes prizes. GUIs were also presented to , night, after an illness of three school workers of the Hastings City
should be made. These changes will Mm. Oidley and mist Eva A. Hecox months, the last two weeks being district. Including pastors, superin­
not be made publlc but will be no­ for their newly adopted children spent In tiw hospital. Her husband. tendents. teachers, and any others
JL-.L 1 interested, will be held at the home
ticeable in lhe future, and If they and the prize winners presented John M..—
—— ncr •-in death. o{ Of,
. preceded
Mr, McNulty. 325 W
do not answer the question, they will their gifts to them.

CHOW MEIN

MERKLE SPORT

ORANGES

r.t

school,

the Ftldpauach-Affiliated Grocers’
cooking school, with Consumers
.'Power co-operating. Tuesday afterv-n
and n»nm»n nid noon' ^though the thermometer
Yep, Ladles and Genmen. old gtl[j Covered around zero. Mrs. WilIffy'a country cousin was right— Uams knew her business, too One

Dry Yellow
10

unrivalled

Large Number— BeiBurlesque.” ths Fox pictura coming manual Guild at 1:30 Wednesday,
cure New Ideas
P*b- 8 and 6. to tha Strand Theater. February 6. at the parish house.
which Lums
turns uw
the ajwuiinL
spotlight uh
on ba ibb
fashu. .
—swv.1 , |wrucn
- Mrs. James Parmer Is in charge. The

ONIONS
DEL MONTE

NEW MUSICAL DRAMA

New and

—
1 iAns.
danea.
Isuahtar
andand
drama
era are
—■—
'
1 sons,
danca
laughter
drama
Bou..wiv«&gt;
XW..s EiS
W U»
W -Kin, .!

■■

,

I

INTERESTING ONE*

MORTON'S

Blocked
Salt
39

"Hands Across The Table”

Can Now Be Purchased for $25 a Month

CAROLE LOMBARD. FRED MocMURRAY.
Astrid Allwyn and Ralph Bellamy

with Usual Low Down-Payment

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. FEB. 5 ond 6
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
This S25-a-month time-payment plan
enables you to buy a New Ford V-8
car through your Ford dealer on new
low monthly terms.

car and insurance, you pay $24 for
the year of credit; if the balance is
$200 you pay $12. Your credit cost
for one year is the original unpaid

After the usual low down-payment is made, $25 a month is all you have

balance multiplied by 6%.
UCC plans provide you with in­

to pay for any type of new car, includ­
ing insurance and financing.
Your cost (or this extension of credit

surance protection at regular confer­
ence rates. You have not only fire and

is only

"KING OF BURLESQUE"
Fax Picture with WARNE* BAXTER. Allee Faye. Jack Okie
With Arllne Judge. Mona Barrie. Gregory Ratoff, Dixie Dunbar,
Fate Waller and Nick Lang. Jr.
Adults Uc
Children 10c

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. FEB. 7 and 8
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. I

Clarence I. MaHard's HOPALONG CASSIDY in

theft insurance, but $60 deductible col­

of 1% a month on your orig­

lision, and protection against other ac­

inal unpaid balance and insurance.

cidental physical damage to your car.

This plan reduces financing chargee tor

The Universal Credit Company has

twelve months to 6%. For example, if

made these plans available through all

you owe a balance oh $400 for your

Ford dealers in the United States.

19k

Sa^ ljc meat ,urthno F«EE Ticket on 100 Ik,. SUGAR

Just a Couple of Heels Head Over Heels in Love!

FORD MOTOR COMPANY

"BAR 20 RIDES AGAIN"
*

With William Boyd, Jimmy Elltoon. Jean Rouverol.
and George Hayes
FEATURE NO. t

"SHOW THEM NO MERCY!"
With KOCHtLLl HUDSON. C.U, Komara. Iruca
Cabot and Edward Norrie
ADDED—Serial Chapter Play, "GREAT AIR MYSTERY"
Serial Shown Friday Night and Sa tarda y—.Matinee. 3:00 o’clock
Only—Adults lie
Children 10c
*

�TOE HARTINGS BANNER, TOURSDAT. JANUARY •», UM
t ever saw mountain lions, wolves I way that Mark Twain records the I sister. Mrs. Coy Brumm and family. I cations should curtail crime news"— of Jackson.

Miss Kemerllng grad• Mrs
Broam spent 8atUr-|M« Chester Smith. Mr*. Maude u.ted In 1 M2 from Bedford. Mr of Hastings. who It waa alleged was
and many other targe animate spoke mT£Jn’ue Ume
rtUled
a|
Brown
0,1
Wotring
Word Sludy-Mr*. Ar lie Burdick in Williamston in 1W. He coming so rapidly »he wa* unable to
louder than woraa for the accuracy t,»e.BUUon
lnd
dosm to
„
w.her .nd Heed. Hostess-Mr*. William Wai- has been here about five years, be­
l" of hla alm. A* hte collection grew, ™f‘“^rtlh a itelf-LvaVe halfUce.
. Ing tn business with hte father un­ damaged. MU« Milter sued for *10.I
and knowleLtee of it. existence .
children spent Sunday with Lansing
Oeorge 1&gt;eonard and til hla death, now with hla brother,
bearded mountaineers, ranchmen i‘\
n.wkin.
Dr- Bn&lt;1 Mr*
Flo*'cr of
,T^y Bre
i and near to see It. and to send him and
station
employee*.
The
most!.
Mr
;
“
n
d
Mrs.
Hester
Hawklnji
of
wcr#
M
nn
,i
av
evening
guests
through Indiana and the aoulhem
station employee*. Tne most'
Treatlng frost bitten cMaka and
1 rare specimens for mounting. At the and
—.
--------- ....
-------- —. Irmins- called Balurdav at the Fred । . j^r ant«
Qay Lykins.
1 states. ■ Upon their'retum they will
(Continued from page one&gt;
■
vn i
Thie. ,,ve on th' comer of Lentz and favorite Indoor pastime lately. Rus­
. Extension group No. 1 met Tues-1 Oregl(s 8U
Burdick i* well
gambling devices galore from old ”, '------ «« &gt;«««
sell
LaubaUgh froze one ear and It daughter. Mrs Ruby
4 day with Mrs. Sam Smith. A pot known l»e;c as. she ha* been playing
mining towns;
there'ss the
bullet- , “
bird
life of Colorado.
1
mining
io*™ mere
me outlet—&gt;.and
----- animal
, .
~
. ,company'* service wu the person1 Mrs. Hayden Nye fell
tings Bunday to get i
...
[luck dinner was enjoyed at noon.
with the Johnsiovfn orchestra.
-----------..old bar. -------------— ah. Rnmc
Mr. Carter «. who
hegd q(
^ie. al night
broke her lef jUsl
rcarred
brass rail- and
*”n® ve«r.
&gt;®*r» later. unon ^Carters
of Alley Oop s chum. Fooaey” only her little great-gran
from
early goia-guicn
gold-gukh —
dc,t,,&lt;
StateNever
of Colorado
took, and the ankle.
irom one
one of
oi the
tnc eany
------ mythe
elbow.
youth«*tared
i Plans are being made for lhe I Kenneth Roscoe Is spending some । Russell Isn't so poetic.
..... ....
....I.
rnnxt complete Bn
and
un-' shivered as I did when 1 heard them
towns,
over whose polished
top.such nvnr
over, this
H*1* ,nosl
“ *un
Funeral services for Mrs. Pearl dramatized court scene. "Death time with his mother. Mrs. Carrie
celebrities as Mark Twain. Bret u*uaJ
birl
| call him BLADE. Here wa* romance. Navue were held Friday afternoon : Takes the Steering Wheel." spoil- Roscoe. In Battle Creek.
'
.‘tte'nfted*the'ftlnwHarte and other notables drank- P™*
i B,ld I *“ s,lUn« facc 10 f,c* with at the Hess ftmeralhOTie a. twp wed by the Anti-Sa loon League, on. Mrs stewart Lofhahl la enter- j
StoMMteligood hl* mother, Mr* Sarah Ke
water of course; on the wall near by
^2*^? “J.
’ * * Here right by mv .ide waa o'clock, conducted by- Rev A. L Ffb. 10.
ulning her stater. Mtaa Margaret |a piXweU M^dl, Marteowooo. Sunday cvenfhg wllh hta
are the supposedly "nude” pictures ;
a^^F^jtomta^with thta lhe “clual °erc wh0' ln T'«hu had Bln«B,n*" 0f
pRAt®,r•• Miss Margaret Kemerllng. daugh- Olson of Aurora. III.
■'
'
that hung in that old bar-room, but bSd‘m* by !‘akCT&gt; the Uwt of M n,e" ‘ * * He 2 ,?? 5*,n4elC&gt;1
ter of Mr. and Mrs Freeman Kern----------------Delton schools are closed for the i our high school puplte Cite MM
WEST HOPE.
lUnf becaus® of lh® Lmposaabllity of Lorraine and Lorn* Sonnrrtl
visit Palm Springs and you'll agree
bufStoi' a ter? mites '
80 frlendl7 “nd BcnUe ‘P0^
‘
K’*rlln« °f Dowhn«. a,ld Clare Bur------------------with me that those pictures are
, that I warmed to him in spite of hl* । Wilcox remetery. Mr*. Navue had dlck of Naahvflle. were married' l.„
TW L... " S -or-------------Churrh------------Unton
ill meet with
with Mr. and Mr*.
Mrs. Ray
Ray 1 understand at this writing the Kel- | aUend Kh00i Bt Delton are having
"tame" In comparison to the "real
J™™ ‘,ie’cjV ot
lawful htalory. • • • The coffee ran, been sick to'**®"1’
J*" [Saturday flight at eight o'clock by will
life” you'll see; there's a picture of * w
rnhfnmV?hou?d ow?2 ouL At leait 11 w“ reduced to one । cause of her death was a kidney thp Rpv j A McNully ot Hastings Barnes for dinner on Wednesday. logg bus te burled in a snow bank vacation. Due to tlie bad road* fl
jyet.- The county plovts will un­ school bus cannot get through.
lhe "Dalton Gang" and "Billy the,lhe sule of California should &lt;«m-. tlnHnip gun. 8tade was about to take ailment. She leave* her htuband.
------------------— --------- — . ----- ----------------- .------doubtedly clear lhe roads soon.
KM" and nearby are the actual guns ; It speaks volumes for tlie char-! lt when he aaw that my CUp WM, two daughters. Alberta and Berna- gowned In blue crepe wllh black acIt will be remembered that on
they used; pictures of
hanging* acter and honesty of our ancestors fmpty. He politely offered to fill'll, .dine, one sister. Mrs. Roy Baasett cessorles and wore a corsage of ' June 1st %hen Erl Jlogers. who re- .
Clinton and Mtas Lucy Sullivan
made by "Vigilance Committee*'' I of around 100 year* ago. before even but although I wanted it. I politely of Lansing, and several niece* and sweet peas and roses. They were
sided on the Wise place last sum- Every orator hashl- moment says Lewis Babo spent Bunday with 1
when *uch a thing ai law wo* not; the small. Individual Express Com- declined. I was afraid he had not ncP*ie*J'.,
.
Hom's sliter and family In Or
attended by Miss Isabelle Collins mer. was turning off the main high-; a writer. Buttoo many ofthem exrecognized and not even thought of; j ponies were organized, to think that killed anybody that morning and 1 Th® Lents Table Company began of Battle Creek and Merlin Gage way at tlie Harry Dunn comers, he tend their moment into hours.
Rapids.
old leather-bound chests in which there were no robberies or theft*. In [ might be needing diversion. But still operations again Monday after a
many thousands of dollars were those days there were practically no wlth nrm politeness he ln*tated on *hut-down for repair* and Invenoften carried; there lx one of the road* worthy of the name, and numg my cup. and said I iiad ^ry.
finest collection of Indian relic* I mean* of transportation very crude, traveled all night and better de-! Th® cold mother lias slowed up
ever saw; old kettles, tongs, locks. Frequently when a banker In one;wn.ed u lhan he—and while he work on
schoolhouse and the
bibles and testaments of the gold- town
------- ---wanted
------------to----------------send some--------money
,---to ^|,
talked
CU he
,|C- placidly JATU..U
poured A*»Athe *,M,U
fluid , wat®r «yst«n'
rush days that showed a lot of use ' *
a hanker
banker in another town naarhv
nearby. ■■&gt;■
। to thc ]asl drop I thanked him and
The
771 e Chamber of Commerce met
he
might
hear
of
someone
who
was
;
drank
It.
but
It
gave
me
no
comfort.
Monday
night
at, the
Fellow
too; on a line Just outside the
(iranK 11. out il gave me iw vuiiniui, ---- ”
”Odd
------ , -----­
aalr him
him tr.
.
_I could not feel sure
__ _ ..
&gt; . hull
rxfTIrnrx for
tnv the
r he
that. he
»&gt;•»• CTertlnn
Election nf
of officer*
would ask
to for
Museum an old lime washing Is going there, and wn.ilH
hanging on lhe line, including u suit deliver lhe money Just as an “ac­ would not be sorry, presently, that coming year was held: President,
of that old-fashioned red-flannel commodation.' Quite often the he had given It sway, and kill me|Vern Bera: vice-president, Frank
»®nr&gt; Remington;
underwear that fairly makes you; money would be entrusted to ab­ lo distract his thought from lhe loss. B®‘®»:
“Itch" Just to look at It. In n sep­ solute strangers, and frequently But nothing of the kind occurred, treasurer. Ed Kraft.
arate building near the Museum are the amount so entrusted would run We left him with only 28 people to | On Friday evening there will be
into ...
the ...
thousands of dollars. account for. and I felt a tranquil a mother and daughter pot luck
a half a dozen of the stage-touches , up -----. _ .------- ■- .----------- ...----------- cent of
that were actually hi use on the old As far us Is known, never-------------- satisfaction in the thought that In supper and program at the ComOverland route. Two or threp of il went astray, was delivered Just so Judiciously taking care of. Not 1 munlty house. The program will
them are decorated with evidence* as requested, and wllh never a at that breakfast table I had pleas- be given by outside talent.
of those strenuous days—bullet holes.»thought of pay. or reward. How antly escaped being No. 27."
. The Womans Literary Club met
doubtless resulting from some holo- many complete strangers would you • In a j following
following cnapter
cnapter Mark
Mark ; Wednesday
Wednesday aflemoc
afternoon at the Library
up or Indian attack that may have j want to tnut *5.000 cr *10,000 with -1Wai.n {jlta
was•-*
later
for "Debate Day." Aftcr
_______ bu*ii .. how
. .. Blade
. ----— *—
been resisted. One or two of these I —even out of your slght7
hung by a Vigilance Committee In । nes* session the following program
coaches were driven by “Hank
Fur a decade or more after these MOntana With an enemy in hl* I was given: Roll call. How long a
Monk" a noted driver of that day. mile individual Express Companies poWer glade was cruel and revenge-. club member? If My Daughter
and whom Mark Twain made fam- were organized, money was carted fU] Once seriously wounded by an Should Study Grand Opera—Mrs.
ous as the driver of the stage when around in the crudest and most open I opponent, who took an unfair ad- Nelson Brumm. Madam Butterfly—
Horace Greeley crossed the plains, kind of way. Messengers would | vantage. Stade kept a standing re- Mrs. Franz Maurer. Music From
LARGE SIZE, 5-POUND
ONLY 72 PAIR
These and hundreds of oilier very; rometlmes even boast of how many ward tar hta return. The fellow, a the Opera—Mrs. Francis Pultz. De­
Interesting things of in.
the days n
ofr th.,
the thousand, Of dollars they were cax-| man named Jules, was finally cap- bate. "Resolved that dally pubU"Pony Express” mode this a most rylng on their person, lo be delivered tured, and securely tied wllh ropes.'
attractive place lo visit, nnd visitors lo some neighboring town, but there was delivered to Stade. The fellow
to California should not fall lo in­ was never a hold-up and never a was left out in a cattle yard all
clude it In their trip. Sometime the theft. Even lhe great Wells-Fargo night, and allowed to nearly freeze.
real
value-------and—
Importance of the Company used to carry money and Tlie next morning Blade went out
----- ------A FAST CLEAN-UP FOR
Pony Express Is going to be nppre- valuables tn a little leather-covered and practiced on him for a while
elated more than It Is today, and, box In the earlier years of Its before pulling him out of hta misery.
when that day comes this exhibit business and no one ever touched it. But like many another “bad man"
will be almost priceless in value. Today when our own government he displayed a big yellow streak1
..
------- ...— that .x..
------of• u-nnts to deliver money, even for a when It came lo the show down. |
It ..
Is something
the «...
State
36 Inches Wide, 2 1-6
California should own. and house short distance. It seeks to protect While never showing any mercy to
yard* long
For CloHin. hr Oi.kn,
in a nre-probf building. Ax It is now. itself with a heavily armored car— an enemy, he piteously begged for
the state should feel under tasting and too often that Isn't enough. his own life when he saw that the
General Cleaning
obligation lo W. Parker Lyon, for­ Yes; times have changed.
Vigilantes meant business. But at
75 ROLLS
mer Mayor of Fresno, who must
The first robbery of an Express that time punishing (?i criminate
have spent a lot of money and de­ Coach on record, where anything of
----------- the farce it te today. There 1
voted a lol of lime In securing IL consequence was taken, was the was no onfr
-of the stripe of ...
the,
_..
Fifty years ngo I spent one summer hold-up of the Nevada City coach । present Governor of New Jersey to
working In the stamping mill of a out on lhe coast, when 17500 was I dally with public sentiment and
mine In Breckenridge, Colorado, al­ taken. It seems rather strange loo. Stade's piteous appeals went for,
most on top of the Great Divide. Tn that robberies hadn't become more naught. Would that that same sentlthe early days of tlie town, before general, because the new west was ment prevailed today. Murderers ,
the railroad came so it was said, an lhe Mecca for every desperate char- would get what should be coming to I
educated young man by the name of acter whom lhe taw was seeking to them, and there would be fewer I
ROUND TRIP
“Carter" os I recall, settled there lay
lav Ils
murders taking
taking place.
place. In
In other
other J
Its hands on. Sometimes these murders
650 Sheet*, 4 Vi x 5 Qis.
and commenced to gather specimens rough characters filled quite respon­ words Stade was hung In short or4 BUSES DAILY
of the bird and animal life of Col-1 sible positions too. Mark Twain In
orado. It was claimed that he was n his book “Roughing It" refers in his
W. R. Cook.
MEN'S AND BOYS*
professor In some large eastern col­ humorous way to meeting one of
CORDUROY SHEEPSKIN
Plaid*. Pkia
lege. was disappointed In n love af­ them on his “Overland trip.” It was
NASHVILLE.
fair. and retired from lhe world by none other than Joseph D. Blade the
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fisher and
building a little log cabin- high up in original “Bad Man From Bitter family were at Hastings Thursday
Only 200 yard* «t
the mountains, where Breckenridge Creek" and a noted character of his helping Mr. and Mrs. Waters cele­
"bow stands. There, all bv himself, day. wllh a record of having killed brate their wedding anniversary.
the-years were to cure the Jagged 20 men nt the time of Mark's visit.
Mrs. Roy Bassett has returned to
12 ONLY—WOMEN'S
wounds left by Cupid's darts. An ex­ Blade was al that time the Division her home In Lansing after spending
CLEARANCE—15 ONLY
pert taxidermist, he commenced to Superintendent of lhe Pony Express several weeks here helping care for
gather and mount specimens of lhe
her sister, Mrs. Pearl Navue.
Suede, Calf, Sheepskin,
bird and animal life of Colorado. It Slade’s division in Nebraska and
Talon Front
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Elder relumed
INFANTS' SLEEVELESS
wasn't long before his little cabin Wyoming was lhe toughest one on Saturday
i
night from Harbor Beach
CLEARANCE
was filled. Then he built on an ad­ the whole run. but the way he where they were called by lhe 1Udition. then another, and a lot of cleaned out the desperadoes with hla new
i
of their daughter, Mrs. High­
PHONE
2137
HASTINGS
others. When I was there ids Muse­ gun and a rope would be apt to land.
um was Just a long, rambling struc­ bring strong remonstrances from
Miss Margaret Crites and friend
ture of “additions." and all of sewing circles today. Here Is the of
&lt; BL Louis spent Sunday wllh her I
them filled with most Interesting
things. The bird specimens were
mounted in such a delicate, natural
STRIPED FLANNEL
life-like way. Mr. Carter happened
to be there at lhe time and showed
BLANKET ROBES
us his guns. One of them, used in
50% Wool
25% Silk
Only 25 at This Price
Sixe 2 to 16
getting small birds, shot Just one
small shot, no larger than the head
of a pin, so that the body would not
be torn or mutilated. Before tak­
ing any of these specimens, he
would watch them, sometimes for
days al a lime, to observe their ha­
bits and postures, and then would
mount them in the most life-like
MINERAL OIL
«-Jc
way. Then he had other guns that
Only at Penney’s, and only
Pint ................................ fc ■
Our regular Caney vatwould speak out like "Big Berthas."
m January, can you buy
PENTRO RUB
Parke-Davis Haliver Oil
Tire largest mounted grizzly bear
printed, collar attached
ORILIS ANTISEPTIC JQc
such sheets and cases for
Capsules—Plain

I SPLENDID-PONY
EXPRESS MU8E0M'7^«^=

A?^.S5at!5“oio,«.,XS •'»"« u“

'“I""11“"’'“ •JSi'

j-

I"■‘**&lt;1

SAFE SAVINGS IN Penney's

AU WINTER GOODS MUST GO
FRINGED Starting Saturday
PANELS Fine Quality, Lavishly Fur - Trimmed

COATS

Go

the Low-Cost
Way to
Battle Creek!

Clean Quick
Soap Chips

EVERYCOAT IN OUR

STORE HAS BEEN

WALLDORF
Scott Tissue

A CLEAN
SWEEP at

54 inch W

GROUPED 1NTOTH IS

ONE LOT

8OC.*I30

25-

BIG

SUITIN

VARIETY OF STYLES

EXCELLENT

QUALITY

49L

FURS !

CREPE SATIN LINED, Fully Interlined

Sizes 14 to 46! Block, Brown and Green

for

$&lt;98

Children’s

Bath Robes

TRIO CAFE

All Leather

Children’s Wool

49*

Hockey Caps

Drug Specials
for Thursday, Friday and Saturday

Small Size

OUTSTANDING!

$1.09
Box of 100 $1.79

Box of 50

SQUIBB S ADEX
Tablets or
7QC
Capsules-------------■ v

COD LIVER OIL
——
Squibb'*
7QC
12 ox.

Large Size

TABLETS, bottle of 200 WM

Monogram Cod Liver Oil
Plain or mint
j|Qc
pint___________ l*W

CADWELL’S SYRUP -QQc
OF PEPSIN, targe ...
SMALL.............
»
PERFECTION
CLEANSING
TISSUE
OQc
BOX of 500
&lt;-□
NV VF.L SANITARY
NAPKINS ....................

Several factors moke our
work outstanding ... alt
cleaning material IS FIL­
TERED. each piece goes into
clean fluid . . .
careful pressing
by experienced
workmen and
your dry clean­
ing is returned
on schedule . . .
ready to wear,
and looking like
hew. Our slogan
is "Customer
Satisfaction."

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS
Fbo««2140—Wo Call for and Deliver

gg

OUABT .....-----------Wo

Squibb s Halibut
Liver Tablets

Rubbing Alcohol
Pint ■ w

MIOSFO COMP
TONIC, 1125 .ire —

"9Q
lv

4 Qc

89

ALKA SELTZER

49'

ARMAND FACE
4Qc
POWDER. 50c the ....
MONOGRAM HONEY A AL­
MOND LOTION
* ~
Pint --------------------------- •

PEP8ODENT TOOTH
PASTE

69
39

59

so little! Firm, strong mus­
lin, made to wear well and
launder well. Stock up now.

$4*00

4 ONLY—LADIES’

Plush Coats 2—

Ephedrine Nasal

19C

CHILDREN'S SHORT SLEEVE

Campho Lyptu*
Rub
13

4 Qc

MEN'S CORDUROY

PINE
4 Qc
BALM_________ 13

Mineral Oil and Agar
Squibb'*
QQc
Pint........ ..............OU

ORILI8 TOOTH
PASTE

—

Union Suits 1O‘&gt;

JACKETS

JOHNSON GLO-COAT |-Qc
WAX. pint
OU

BROMO SELTZER

&lt;* u ete? qp C
® **
A ®

42 x 36 CASES—14c

4 (?c

MILK OF MAGNESIA OQc
PintCO

SUPER D PERLES
Bottle of 30

19c
39c

ASPIRIN TABLETS O(?C
Bottle of 100 ................ Cv

All Remnants
Odds &amp; Ends!
100"” GENUINE
CAMEL HAIR

6^00

1—

Bargain
Priced!

While 5 Last at

19

REED’S DREG STORE
COR. STATE AND JEFFERSON

HASTINGS, MICH.

PENNEY

VESTS

lot

Compare This Striking Value!

Thrilling Value! 81x99

WIZARD
junior

JACKETS

oo

MEN’S SHIRTS

49

styles . . . cash-priced for
quick selling! Dozens and
dozens of fancy patterns to
choose from I Get a supply
at tills bargain price!
LADIES'

TUCK STITCH BRIEF

PANTIES Comfo:

lot

ALL NEW COTTON

Small, Medium. Large

January Feature Value!

Reclaimed

SUGAR SACKS
The/U make such soft, abaorbent dish-cloths and
dust-rags I
Bleached and
clean . . . about 43 by 87
inches, unopened .
t*\e
big 98-pound else sack!
Buy a lot at this price!

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

Editorials

HAPPINESS FOR Ala.

bur* became tlie

New

Deal

We have just finished reading a
most inlft-esting little book—Science
praulon that our old favorite of
' favorites. Sherlock Holmes, waa act­
ually living today In numerous lab­
oratories where thc microscope.
camera, and test-tube are being ap­

was

A DESERTED PLATFORM.
swept into power with lhe greatest
popular vote every given to any
Mtnough Mr Roosevelt has been
president. So. to quote lhe words of almost 100 per cent faithful in erfrAl Smith. "Let's look al lhe record rylng out the campaign promises of
—let'* review some of tW promises Socialist Norman Thomas, what
made to 1932 and compare them about his own and those of the
with actual achievement. Here they Democratic party? "Let's look at
■re:
the record." Herewith are some
"1—A federal appropriation of of lhe main plank* on which Mr.
85,000.000.000 for immediate relief Roosevelt polled almost twenty­
fur those to need, to supplement three million votes;
state and local appropriations."
■1«—An immediate and drastic re­
(Uli* promise appears to have been
duction of governmental expendi­
adequately fulfilled by the PERA). tures by abolishing useless commLs"2—A federal appropriation of.rslons and offices, consolidating de­
85.000.000,000 for public works and partments and bureaus and elimi­
roads, reforestation, slum clearance, nating extravagance, to accomplish
and decent homes for workers*, by
a saving of not less than 25 per cent
federal government, states and
in lhe cost of federal government;
cities." (Here, too. tlie promise has
and we call upon the Democratic
been fulfilled by the PWA and CCC
party in the States to make a zeal­
and other agencies).
ous effort to achieve a proportionate
“3—Legislation providing for the
'fe result." (Against such a promise wc
acquisition , of land, buildings and
’ have lhe added federal boards, com­
equipment necessary to put the un­
missions and offices which have
employed to work producing food,' taxed the New Dea) alphabet to thc
fuel and clothing and for the erec­] limit. More than onc-hundrcd thou­
tion ot housing for their own use." i] sand new federal employees have
(This promise has been filled, at
, been added, not counting those on
least in part, by various experimen­
। relief or employed by lhe Public
tal communities in one of which
i Works Administration or the Civilian
Mr*. Roosevelt, herself, has taken
Conservation Corjw. instead of regreat interest: also. Rexford Tug-1[ ducing the cast of the federal govwell, under secretary of agriculture,
r' eniment 25 per cent, there has been
is working along these lines).
j an increase never before equalled
.
.
c in the history of our country. This
n.,-d.y
.Thou. . TMuau.,-,, how
kw, hb
In
■ .Th. Bl.fi UU ta Un-.
„mnbct
.

plied with all the Ingenuity of sci­
ence to the task of taking Uie guess­
work out of crime detection—substi­
tuting unassailable facta for lhe
brow-beating of the third degree.

Of coursfi these modern aclcntific
detectives cannot equal the achieve­
ments of our Sherlock—but given
the time, the proper equipment and
lhe slenderest of clues, they can ar­
rive al lhe correct answer with un­
canny, accuracy Take about a doz­
en of these leading experts, cadi a
specialist in a different field and ail
working together, and they could
point the accusing finger almost us
handily ai~lhc great HblniS. filffiaeU.
It is common knowledge that a
finger print is a signature, that an
ordinary typewriter Identifies Itself
by certain unmistakable eccentrici­
ties of action each time II is used,
that experts can Identify handwrit­
ing specimens with almost quantita­
tive accuracy, that every ri.le or re­
volver leaves a characteristic mark
on the bullet It fires—but few people
realize to what n degree these
branches of scientific detection have
been developed. .

'

,
’

III

The Public Forum
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

|t|

in yourItems of '“Twenty Years had borrowed the money, and what
W In last week's Banner. I noted
he had to say wm something like
you made mention of lhe death of
this:
I have taken a tumble to
Fred Allen, a magnificent specimen
of physical manhood, ha wm alia lhe fact that for years I have been
ixissexsed of one of the brightest making a blankety blank fool of my­
minds of any lad v;ho ever attend­ self. I'm sorry that I didn't roach
ed the old HMtinfts High School tills conclusion year* ago and
He had a natural gift of oratory my relatives and friends the humil­
and
charming voice. After grad iation and disgrace I have caused
uatlng from Olivet college he turned them. When you dance you always
to the study of law and would have to "pay thc fiddler.
doubtless have gone far toward* the around now paying lhe fiddler. I've
------------------------------up every
highest
rounds in
thatpaid
profession
butdollar I owe and purfor one thing—his love of strong । lastly saved ypor's until the last,
drink. This caused him to abandon | The last time 1 wm Jn Hastings I
his pursuit of law—and nearly cv- j borrowed 815 from you. went on a
crything else, including hte own self; spree an0 got into trouble. Here 1*
respect. He virtually became a i the 8154 owe you and 810 more for
tramp. One day. when he was per-1 Interest. I appreciate your friendhaps around 30 years old and had! sitip. your kindness and your confisunk to hte lowest depths, he drifted ; dence In me. and assure you that
into Hastings, his clothing a mass of you need never
— »•have
—* any fear of —
my
rags, shoes out at lhe toes and about taking part in drunken orgies again.
a two-weeks* growth of beard. Ap­ J have Joined the church; I've quit
proaching an old friend and school­ drinking; paid all my debts and
mate he borrowed 815 on lhe plea have some money left. That's quite a
that he had a Job in a nearby city change from lhe last lime I was In
and needed the money. That night Hastings." Tlie friend tried lo per­
there wm a "free-for-all" fight In a suade Fred lo omit any thought of
Hastings saloon. Fred had knocked "interest." but he wouldn't listen to
out one or more opponents; was ar­ it. Inquiry developed the ’fact that
Fred had signed a contract and was
rested; taken over to Jail, and---------------------------------------------------------through someone's Intercession was | regularly appearing upon a well
released. Nothing wm heard from j known Vaudeville circuit and wm
him for years, during which time he । making from 8300 to 8500 weekly.
1 had -gotten hold ot himself.” Eight | One of the remarkable things about
or ten years later, when he next it all wm that he wrote hte own litcame to HMtings he wm inunacu- ] tie skits, and many others that he
lately dressed, cleanly shaven, and . sold, and lhe scenes of ail of them
presented a most attractive appear- were laid in and around "HMtings—
once. The first thing that he did I lhe city that he so dearly loved,
was to go to the one from whom he |
a Reader.
I

Guess I jiut

can't, stand

this

Your scientific detective can now
strenuous night life anymore!
tell with absolute certainty whether
or not a certain susplclous-lookUig
1 Gladys Eaton had 'em all guessslain was caused by blood—and fur­
Hew to the line, let lhe qulpe
[ ing on that polygon puzzle of hers.
thermore he can tell with equal ac­
fall where they may!
curacy whether this blood came
I Even L. E. Barnett, i hear. Is still
from a human being, a cow. a hog
„
,
1 wondering what kind of a triangle il
or any other animal you wish to
By
Observing Tommy.
&gt; ;s ulBl
only lwo sldcs.
name. There is no guess work
about It. A few sclenthta can even
Notteed John Crue without his I
.
, ’ * ’
Abc VanTil made a hasty trip to
tell whether or not the specimen pipe—he says it strayed away while
of
from «;*•«a he was
in Ull
thc tUUUU)
country. Wonder
if .’Oran
Rapids
... blood
....... tn
... question. came
....... uuul
WM III
wuiiucr II
--- ... d ---'---- Tuesday
•------ * afternoon.
.
establishment of a thirty-hour week
(.„,(
i.t
He'll
be
nossinc
certain
individual.
One
advanced
I
Marie
had
anything
to
do
with
it?
i
He
'
n
•*
P
“
?ln» thr
U&gt;e rlnrs
cigars strain
again
irzzDnnc
. .
.
-2—Maintenance of the national
technician recently traced back
• , ,
‘soon!
| credit by a federal budget annually
1
Ch^r.up
’
eommliw
mm.
r
x/
.
i
!
nearly
n
hundred
blood
specimens
A
“5—A comprehensive and efficient
Its
Of
I
ester
day
|
without
a
single
error.
But
thia
act
­
system of free public employment i balanced on the basis of accurate
.
.
. v
.
enlist is ahead of thc field. Only a
I executive estimates within revenues.
A iirt ■RQiApkJk-’*,. • '• -.*-4 |
agencies.' (A comprehensive system :
•
few co-workers completely undcr- twenty-seven holes of golf with i ufralr#' “,lrr “u;
««•
1 raised by a system ot taxation levied
TWENTY YEARS AGO..
| Mand his methods — which will
TREASURY SHAKE-UPS
has been established although Its
| They go al their work wllh real
Ml V arc only great
I on the principle of ability Co pay."
Add the names of T. Jefferson |
Bishop McCormick was lhe guest Joubt,“s bwon11' standard within a
efficiency is a matter of opinion).
| spirit.
as
they
arc
kind
Coolidge, who restgncfl last week as {
।
Against
such
a
promise
we
have
'
of
honor
at
thc
monthly
supper
of
1
*
cw
y
cars
.
Lady
—
use
your
driver!
“6—A compulsory system of un­
Under Secretary of the Treasury,
Emmanuel Men* Club which was]
.
• • •
—Elben Hubbard
employment compensation with ade­ the greatest series of budget deficits and L W. Robert. Jr., who resigned
„ ...
.
I Feminine hearts of the com. lirid tn the Pari*h House last „Tntn ••*"«« SUfh new invenDon I know what thia world la com- munlty. f hear, are all adulter after
quate benefits, based on contribu­ in the history of our country, as Assistant Secretary of the Treas­
• Thursday evening. Mru. Ida Wood “°*Vi M
lie-detector and "truth"
amounting
to
nearly
eight
billion
ury.
to
the
long
list
ot
resignations
•
(ten
d.
The
Rector.
Rev.
BaU
.
I
M
’
n,
n»The
he detector, at pres­ ing to. Wlillc we were freezing al 5 that Clark "Gablesque" performance
tions by the government and by em­
below.
Alas**
was
basking
along
at
brought about in the Treasury Deturned in by George Aten Wednes­
;
dollars
in
two
years
lime.
Mr.
It ’V R. H. Bready of thc Methodist ।cnl- u “
indicator-at least
iczzsnnc
ployers." «The Social Security Act
45 above.
pnrtmeiit by fiscal cxpcrimeniation
day evening. Don't forget .George,
|churc!:. Kellar Stem. Smit Lederle 'a‘no,nk tllosc whose senslbiliues have
provides for such a system, with।. Roosevelt's actual expenditure* for under the New Deal.
this is leap year.
. । .md .Bishop McCormick were the ' r&lt;,t hardened-but n requires expert
■
1934
and
estimated
for
1935
and
additional contributions by em' Coolidge was a vice president of
If this keeps up. well mush up
lipeokers.
.operation. .Truth rerum Ls really
Ho, hum. . . and so to bed!
. Thr line up tor the Hiah School ] ^'®^crr'ul
tricky and there ourselves
, ploycea—even though it appears ( 1936. amount lo more than twenty­ the First National Bank of Boston, j
] four billion dollars. -According to when Invited into thc Treasury, and ]
bx.k.1 Uilf i,.m lor &gt;W
, .
■‘Hlewr «K»|»una
doubtful that thc total income will
It is to be assumed that he was ac- 1
THE RUBBER STAMP IS FATH­
.with Vermontville will In- Center. I*.c"
ea-? J ,CBCt “s u fatal
Don't forget to feed the birds.
be much more than required to meet the estimate of chairman Buchan­ cuslomed to-dealing m hard money f
■
Josephine
Anderson;
second
center.
therefore
only
a
few
super
ERING DUST.
of the House Appropriations
administrative costs. Still, il ap- an
1
and keeping his books balanced.
nmr.
Ell .-i Mary Gould; right forward.
can handle it properly it
When a dog biles a man—that's
Notwithstanding the fact that the '
why
had no .....
faith JT “** b“£JLCJ|llmal&lt;-d ‘“a‘ “,ora Glare Benham; left forward Mary _901 Ul co,n“’°nu-’5 because police
lhe session ot Congre** This explains W11
, he..............
pcaH. that thc administration has Committee,
1
Just ordinary; when
a man---bites
---------------------------—------------------aSupreme Court ha* dirlarcd the
Ij—
--------..... v-A-ore—TTOUU.UVi* oiund* among
which adjourned on August 26. 1935. ] in lhe Administration's
silver
jmllcy
Gould; left guard. Dorothy Cook; ', lcer!&gt; “r5 8{ral&lt;1 o&lt; H—and right- dog—that's NEWS. When a freight: AAA unconsUtulional and held that
made an honest effort to carry out
some ten and one-1 and why he was opposed to the conriKht zuard. Eleanor Reynolds.
I y
Dul *hcn properly adminis- train hits a car. that's Just another । thc Federal Government has no
this promise).
11। appropriated
- but that can’t oe rigbl. lor tbe . Landlord Ames tots had two work- '
tlnuance of large outlay.* of Govern­
11 7?&lt;’tLrU&gt;n,L"’Ca.P“bl'‘ ct yawn but when a car hit* a C K A: .authority to regulate production In"■
-7_nirt
nMiML tor
fnr mm
7—Via acr
age pensions
men nmi
anti Quarter billion dollars. From Wash- ] men*
ment money, uiin
after unthe cmvnivnvy
emergency
' men from thr Brunswick-Balke Co. t 11 Idt*hood. Pita hiu been 8- freight train .'.landing still that &gt; lhe States, money 1» still being uskwomen sixty yeats of age and over.", lugton to Woodrow Wilson, a period । lia(t IWS4etj These outlays postponed
at work for a week putting in th- provrn “me an.d
BKa,n
IS N-E-W-S (although some might cd by lhe Administration to enforce
&lt;The Social Security Act provides covering ”
124
* years, our federal gov- 1i “
the day when
'*■“ thc budget cun *"
be bal- ,
two alleys tor an up-to-date bowling ■
say it was taking unfair advantage the Potato Aotr'whlch h clearly an
ernment spent about twenty-four ' anced by orthodox fiscal methods. 1
alley al the lower hotel.
n,,,re than probable that ol the under dog).---------------------------- j oct to limit production and fix pricpensions for those over sixty-five
bor leader woo uuugut mue I Emcr on Cortrtghl ot Assyria 1* lbr tl,x’“"n?,n and police detective
and one-hall billion doll.re-lu.il The ruun.llou. ot coolid.r and
• • •
j es. hence unconstitutional.
years of age—a compromise, per­
.
1 Robert are interpreted by some as a
auto* al U)» tir»l auction bad al one of the junior state champion
‘J'S
't* ,.bc “ h*8h,&gt;'
By lhe way. have you seen the
Recently, the Internal Revenue
w.,h,, lean uidv rtasuni tor uut gOiug | corn growers this year. He produced ‘
haps. but still an attempt to keep about lhe uune .mount Ih.l Rooee. vU1„y
■hld*' ldUn* who won t be radiator on Leslie's coupe?
j Bureau requested the House Appro­
veil has spent in four years. This Is ington. who may now be expected to
bumo to dinner tnat nigbu
। tlie laigc. t yield of .-.helled corn of',ooIl'd by lhe clcvcr criminal.
the campaign promise).
. . , I priuiions Committee for an approhow Roosevelt has kept promise i press even more vigorously for thc
। any of lhe 400 boys who participated i
1
‘,a'‘
-“‘en t given enough
"8—Health and maternity InsufLe*
Hawthorne
never
eats
between
I
10 c?t“5cl “?’
, adoption of their monetary ideas
i
I in this project .work in Michigan |“t*ention in thus country lo our pomeals—at least that's his story—and 11?31?10 tftX for .0,,c ySnr,‘
**ld
■nee." (Also provided by the Social number two).
11cc
11 Ls «
Job »"d the
। Thc first Important defection in
completed, that slate will tie utilo this year.
he slick , to it
J
‘hal &amp;0,nc niembcr‘1 °f
Commit Concerning relief, public works the Treasury Department occurred
Security Act).
| Born Sunday morning to Supcrin-'
5.»‘*bll!,hi,icm of numerous
to Ouast both locks and keys.
tec. using their pencils, came lo lhe
' tendent
and
Mrs.
Lederle,
a
daugh,
P
?
,,
5
C
'
c,
“
*
o
l
s
throughout
the
Unil
­
“9—Improved systems of work­ and social security, the Democratic on Nov. 16. 1933. when Under Secre­
unucui uiiu nus. ueaeric. a oiiusn* , ■ u. .
.
—.......
Ask Chet Hodges what he did with I conclusion* Uial the tax would not
-----------------led
lo obe**a “recognition
tary Dean Acheson resigned. Tlie
ter who will
answer lo-the name of
"JStales*?,seems
£e,2?J
rccognition
men's compensation and accident platform of 1932 read;
The ancient Urcexa ocllcvca -------------adoption ot thc Warren gold pur-’
jean Louise Mother and daughter10
of' *tills
hU ,ar
fact.
* There "
Ls *"
more to thc that gio Christinas present wllh ■ amount to more than 8300,000 for
the yearly period.
• Extension of federal' crcd^ TO chase policy in October. 1933. was' Mount Olympue to tie lUa Dome
insurance." (See Senate bill 2793.
work of policing than most ix-ople which he was supjiosed to purchase | Thc estimatej of the budget for
Of the Ureclt goda, nut then, wo arc both doing nicely.
introduced May 9. 1935. by Senator; THE STATES to provide unemploy­ held responsible fur Mr Acheson's
realize.
a
new sweater—Or for a more pic-]! the enforcement ot the Potato Act
on Thursday evening Mrs. Jas ____________
turesque version of the story, ask1
&gt;
ment relief wherever the dimin­ action.
Townsend and Mrs. Margaret Troxel nesday morning a: 8 o’clock when Mrs. Hodges.
, amount to thc sum of 84.250.000 for
Then came the resignation of
"Id—The abolition of child labor.' ishing resources of the slates make
a period of five months. Tlie Com­
Statistics on tbe trillions ot were hostesses at a fl o clock dinner i Miss PhyllU Diamond and Dan W
Oliver M. W. Sprague, who had
. t.
.
.
.
mlltce slashed the amount lo 81.(See NRA and proposed constitu­ 1*. impossible for them to provide for joined thc Treasury ns an adviser,
tons ot coal remaining in coal r,nen to the young hdies who room Reynolds were united In marriage
A,
Frandscn made sure he 250.000 for two months, probably
‘U*fMrSc-tfr0X£,S’|
r ,-t •
11,1 the home of the bride’s mother.
tional amendment*.
tlie needy; expansion of the federal when there was talk of the United
WMIda
I
u,e theory that, by u»&lt; time
? T' “ i
M
ci®riWt°n. Rev. Tiios cox performed thc cerelUinii ot Cl&gt;
AND j States trying to bring about thc in“11—Government aid to farmer* program of NECESSARY
Wash
, ' mony
th(&lt;
7
. ! “c;. *
Act »ul &gt;« Ma unoon.tllu.
Wash. U
is viUtina
visiting at
al lh.
thc home n
ol
•*uh ' tcrnntional stabilization ol currency.
fesslonal finally got it o|x,n for him. ttonal
and small home-owners to protect ’USEFUL construction affected with
Mrs. m D. Falconer.
। the morning train for Chicago
I Assistant Secretary Thoma* H^wes
Mrs Emma S Jewell, wife of An-!
I(lc
7
U” ‘"wl° *" I
«. when thb requewl lor
them agalilst mortgage foreclosure. * jmblic interest, such as flood con- ! resigned
,ta^,ivu on Dee. 2. irjJ
Tlie Epsicopal and Presbyterian
1933. after aufound in there.
additional funds to enforce a law
drew j. Jewell, of this city, jussed societies
-xictlcs 'of
of the Young Peoples'
a moratorium on sales lor nonpay- , trol and waterways. Including the|thorUy over lhe Internal Revenue
away on Saturday after a long ill-' Christian
—
• a_ •
I clearly unconstitutional came beEndeavor will unite to obmem of taxes by destitute farmers St. Lawrence Great Lakes deep'Bureau .had. .been .transferred
.
■ .from
nc*k.
. ’
Anothcr Checr-Up dance liw_s fore the House, tlie bitter fight made
-erve
Clirhliati
Endeavor
day
next
and unemployed worker*"
(This Saierways; the spread of fnip|,&gt;y.' hts office to that of Mr Mnrxrr.thau.
A baby boy was born to Mr. and Sunday evening In lhe Presbyterian come and gone—and-with the usual by Republicans bore fruit. Sensible
, .
, , ’
,
,
then Under Secretary nnd Acting
promlie was fulfilled by a morator-1
Mr- Herbert Bishop ut the Good church. Herman Frost will preside. success!
I Democrat* who arc against some
ment by a substantial reduction in s^relary during Mr. Woodm. illSamaritan hospital on Friday of
—
...
I of the New Deal s’ most extreme ium which extended not only for the hours of labor, the ENCOUR■ nes*.
Pref. Mills gave another of his
What wc liked about this one was policies Joined with the Republicans
enjoyable Concerts al tlie Presby­
nonpaymem of taxes but also for
terian church last evening. The the culo waiter Jackal* that the I and the appropriation was stricken
nonpayment of interest and prin-• applying that principle in govern*
1 from thc bill.
THIRTY YEARS AGO
program mentions Mrs olive sulee- orchestta wore.
cipil of mortgage debts).
ment service, advance planning of,,
, Roo*'**1’?
•
.
In ,llcc manner, on January 24.
W.jl. Schantz received two Urge ba.
—. f red Spaulding.
....
Miss Effa Slrnp.
......
. , failure to make a serious effort to
And the girl accordlanUl lent a | an item calling for an appropriation
At J«f» u hile Uugjjirdi
J’lJ
k« .. ..s voca|
jfarEnglish Berkshire sows for breeding son who ...gave
minimum
. "12.—Adequate
_
"“*■ *«“&gt;»' i»-" ‘ [ taUure
talwi .■«! w
relief
from
the
usual.
of 81,000.000 in cash to Secretary
puriwMes
one
oj
these,
though
only
rie
’
.
tc
~
mil
Lire
com
U
k
B
and
\ccp.'
riclte Beadle, reader, and piano and
laws. (These were established by along the same line reads: "Wc ad- ,
Douglas' opposition to thc AdHenry
A. Wallace, to be spent by
nine month* old. weighs over 300 cornet numbers by Prof. Mills,
januaKy
.
NRA).
vocate unemployment and old-age ]i ministration's
uiuu'u
.* .spending policies.
uvular*.
'•pound*.
Jim Mason was especially kitten­ him as he saw fit. ••Ur“collecllng
And
now Coolidge and Rnhrrt
Robert
Even though the NRA and thc insurance
under
state
law* ' ! '*
ttd nou
Eugene Bu.'h
au.-h of
ol Hastings
Hiuting* township
lownthlp , '
neNlity ia Unitte Sutra
disseminating
information
ish with his "Everybody grab 'pad­ and
Eugene
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
' Join thc "outs."
about potato production and mar­
lias purchased of MC.sscr Bro* a
It Is now a settled fact that the dles.* '*
Frazier Dimke Mortgage Morator-, ,&lt; Against such promises lhe New ।
keting" was also stricken from the
thoroughbred shorthorn bull. Wc | women of Hastings have not the
ium Act were subsequently declared Dea] put nr.o“M?ret the frankly 'I Alji time when there u crying
- ! need for .confidence in thc future ol
lire glad to sec the interest being right to vote for member* of the
Not a single possibility was passed bill.
ell.
forceful
preiidenl.
unconstitutional by the Supreme socialistic program
.
- -Norman ■ uic dollar, all thc.-e changesjn thc
of
Tills action i. a direct answer to
taken in Barry county in the Im- board of education. The case of up—including. “The Music Goes
bcm IMF
- were
i.ti* reduced . personnel
ti-rjjimiel nt
I lie Treasury
’rrenviiYv mvral
Court, this docs not alter thc fact । Thomas. Thc statea
of the
reveal .i.1
thc President's challenge in his
provement of stock
Mrs. Fl. K Mudge vs Allen Jone*. Round and Round!"
. . .
I message lo Congress to repeal any
that Mr. Roosevelt tried to fulfill , to mere minions in the relief pro-! 1*‘ck 01 P,an 111 thttl drpartment.an
Prof. w. T Wallace wa* in Lake eleation Ui*i&gt;ector ol lhe third ward.
Never say so many blue dancing 1’Ar,t
1116 . Nc* 1?cal. le*lslall°n.
Odessa Saturday where he delivered was carried to the supreme court,
jstsr’l"4 “■
.llh m, Hnl
* • and It saved not only lhe 84.250.000
an addre.«» lx*loro thc Teacher's As- j and on Thursday last that court tic- dressc* in my life
pieces of legislation.
a* absolute dictator'
y « \ »
asked by the Agricultural DepartFEBRUARY
.ociation.
cutad tn favor of Mr. Jonr*.
Thus it appears from an exami­
I
—
Ccr.i&lt;dtr&gt;:e
doiUr
Qjcted
Mr, Coolidge ,uu hu her uulu- ™nl “Jl"u '“«■ ““ “»
It Is no exaggeration to state that
Miss calls Mills left this morn-1 Mr. F G. Goodyear will build a
000 wnlch
which would
would have been evnenrf.
expend­
nation of "tlie record" that Mr no other president in lhe history of
mg for Masslion. Ohio, where she residence in the spring across lhe enC9 It Meins
ed during lhe yaar. and another
hi* secured a place in thc state street south of C- O' Bentley'*, a
Roosevelt has achieved a pretty thc Unue(1 8ul„
„ completely
hoapitaL
*
Grand
Rapid*
architect
Is
drawing
Mr. and Mrs. Al Prentkc were million which would have been uaed
complete
program
fulfillment
repudiated hl&gt;
hi. campaign
campaign promises
promises
—
—— r--.— of—---------------— repudiated
Mrs. Fred camp entertained a lew' lhe plans.
«».un, in­
missed, F*—- “ II
——■­
an excellent otic, in fact.
1 alltj own p^y puilorm a* Mr. not only tn inc. currency but also
ladies Monday in u
i-aihonor
------- Hastings
of her Divft(on U. R. K. of P.
called.
, . .
I Compared lo the total Congresin the sincerity and ability ol the
ThU would be true except for i Rooseveit
mother. Mrs. Whitney's birthday.
will probably go to Charlotte when
Now Dealers in fiscal matters —De­
Mrs. J. B Scott sang several the new division is Instituted in that
The only ml.hnp «u . tup ol colu
one thing—The twelve promise*,
.
troit Free Press.
accidentally spilled by Rayand I *®aP*
il is a beginning. The
very beautiful kola* at the Baptist city, as It will be soon with proper fee
nuumru
were not niaac o,
_
—
.
”t aftertelhni t&gt;rw«|d
««*
continue and. to the
church Sunday, it will be remem­ flourish of trumpets.
Mr. Koosevtll and lhe Democratic
i^(
I..
-i• L
end thc rubber xt.mn will he l.iri
' Soviet law recognize* no parental
bered that Mr* Scott U Rev. Stew­
Harry Hayes Is now an employee good waller he would make if op­ end. the rubber stamp will be laid
party but by lhe Socialist candidate. 1 The radio can't replace new.spa- right* having precedence over those
on the shelf for a permanent rest.
art s. Crandells sister.
of thc bank of thU city.
portunity presented Itself.
OUre E. Hoffman.
' peri. If 11 says something nice about of the state. Tlie state, taking uie
The pupils of Miss Rase Bostwick
r
F'**' “ “ a*,B
u‘tc ■«’*“ । child ajrcadv tn the ;-n-whiwd i.ce
Member of Congress.
FORTY YEARS AGO; gave her a surprise party Monday
What I want lo know is—who
The twelve potau are word for you. you cant clip it and paste it In determines thc nature ol u.
. . .\Tlie fri"nd* of Shirley w. Smith, cvenhig.
made the cake?
word quotations of the first twelve । an album.—Dally Oklahoman.
’ion l..j . IHU ■&gt; LU TVICIVC. -I'rot. ;
"W«
are
only
at lhe beginning ot
son of Judge clement Smith of thli
"Hike" Kenfleld has returned
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
planks ot lhe Socialistic party on ।
—■—
Allred £. i’pjMn. Dijk- University. I
things.
1
think
that the truth we
city, will be interested to Irani Uial from a tour as manager of a skating
—7.-----have to grasp is that lhe natiom
Practice may not make a dawyer ;
■.
- -j- "Ju*l an we use money for bu»l-. he has been awarded lhe first prise combination.
-.ymblnaUon,
.
&lt;
fee!
। nerfect hut 11 rcrLalnlv u-dl ,„,v, ' r.
"OWWdUUJlVC
iU
Cllare dependent one upon another.''—
dCiolv&lt;! lu cn‘ !»«-'•»» needs.
wc need manner* for offered by McMillan and Co. of New
~~
' Hanlon
—
Dr. A.
of Middleville was
In 1133 and polled leu than nine
n
"uluko
*ll,Ury -?ublul-.„„u and
„„ de-, our dally needs."'—Michael Arlen.
Yorlr for Ute bc»t original ^Ujart married to a Mrs. Smith
smith of Grand
Grand;; After Al Smith’s- famous speech Viscount each.
him rich.—Sullivan county &lt;N. Y.) stroy what Uttfc armament' are left;
hundred thousand vole*.
"In ten yaars"o( n»W*papcr work
itory written for lhe “Inlander” a Rapids Wednesday of last week. R., thc "Sidewalks of New York" would
if neighboring rouhtric* did like“Gcrmatiy want* nothing it Ls not. magazine edited by li.c student* of B Messer acting as groom's best: have been in order, but lhe violinist
In other words. Mr. Roosevelt has Record.
I have never once encountered lhe
Mbc' ~A(l01t
__________| ready to giw-UHHIwr*."—Adolf Hltthe
untveruly
at
Ann
Arbor.
man.
{didn't have a brown derby.
been 100 per cent faithful lo
soused genius that the stage and
And we might gel some interest*
L.
E.
Stauffer
is
engaged
in
put
­
This
Issue
record*
a
fatal
accident
.
•
.
/.
films have established as the only
piank* and promises, but ing stories if thc While House cook
•The only reason tor an army and
—
.
ting in a new plate glass front In at the Rower farm, now the Hastings] A great group of people were'
to thoac of SopialUt Norman
a navy
because of the mbtakca; ' Tlie skyscraper, commonplace of his store and making many im­ Country Club, in which John Mat- elected for lhe "Comntlttee'' of the reporter type."—Meyer Levin
?L»ui
dll,Io‘nuU' -Jo«PI»um A. today, may become the curiosity __________________
of.
thews
aged 40 lost Ills life while! next dance. Real talent there— I Blang is like a wild flower; it
, provemenls in the
interior.
—Lo* Angeles Times.
Daniel*.
i
tomorrow..WiUtem Orr Ludlow. 1 A quiet wedding occurred Wed- tleillug
.
a ....
tree.
IghOMld MMCt MMUUM.finniBlL
wilU rapidly r-UwU QuuwU.

’Round About Town :

VibwS-dnd Opinions;
What Others Say

I

Hooa
dltlo

THURSDAY. JANUARY

Thisand That

LET'S LOOK AT THE RECORD. I The facte, as stated above, were
No one has a right to criticize thc ’ taken direct from the booklet. "Hell
present administration for carrying Bent for Election written by James
out Ha campaign promises. If any; P. Warburg, a former economic ad-

L

That Count*—Not Its Size

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTIHOS, MICHIGAN

—e

H a tha Spirit of • Community

Quotation

|

PUflgCnt Paragraphs

Crumbs of Wisdom

Lyma
farin
La
dru*
cond
suffa
follow

Pa

track
paris

Re
Bund
churc

cond
paris
Mls

the
lhe U
Did
llbra

Balu
conii
trona
Wo
the d
Mrs.
reme
staff.
Rev.

form
Alph

lege.
Hom

group
ered
to h

groce
spen
ing g

ous
dent

doing

Backward Glances;

B

c

O

A

�TCT WASTING! BANNIB, TUMPAY, JANUARY »■ 193A
his bed for about throe week* mare ' Mr*. Dan Ashalter entertained tl&gt;* •Avoid French seaming (or cotton
U hope for his
hl* rapid recovery.
Friendly club last Thursday
Thur*d*y Prise*
Prlza* dre**e«." the Mid. "They make IronAU
Dr.
Mr*. George
Sumner ing more complicated and are apt
LM. H
R. A.
a. Adrounl*
AlUVUXAAB to
W enierulniiu were won• by
-I —
_
-. .
tn Hraav In th&gt; ■■■Iru ” Ma* M«*na
an attack of jaundice, but. mengges
»nd lira U«rr..
Harry Dltnlila
Ritchie.
.. look
.... after
—™
-----offiaa
a------M
. , pom* to
card parly and
to
hi*
calls
aa usual.
— th*
— —
Wonder If Barry county with it* ion show al th*
j 12 and weT* young. French
Hoot are glad to know that h«r con­ larg* number of inland lak*s. and house Wednesday i
Up on
an th*
th* s]
spring style*.
M—Adv j1• leased, and we never did Ilk* to
dition la steadily improving.
high hills, couldn't stage ■ winter gel a Up
In th* • heyday of It* prosperity! iron th* thing*.
(QonUnited from page one&gt;
-------- nt Lota ot potent!*!
Miss Dori* Johnson of Balli*
creek, to home al her mother*. Mr*.
nans at
*t hand.
immiu. The
*«w Yankee when their mineral water and bath*
...«
aiming to do in th* article manLyman Johnson's tn Rutland, suf­
jrojeet ought to be a good brought cash and fame. Eaton Rap- RADIO, THE MARHoned
was to point out th* fact,
fering from an attack of qulnsey.
try-out the venture when id* had 13 hostelrtes. »ome of them
mei nr riir srsr
Stic eondiUon* ar* as fa-1 f0Ur-»torl*d affair*.
VEL Ur I nt AUt whteh lhe board of supervisors evl-'
Latest word received of Mlle* An­
dsntly felt when they passed their
-n,e member* of the Pythian Ste..
drus from Lincoln. Nab . to that hto vorable as now.
resolution, that the county 1* called
Mr*, nedarick Parker, who _to ter*, at thalr Tuesday evening meet- Brln&lt;« ‘he Btory ot King
condition was slightly improved. He
upon to pay more than it should for ,
....
u
.. Mr. and
—u Mrs . mg. gave a shower
...
Oeorfe'a Funeral to
suffered an attack of pneumonia, visiting
her
parents,
for their, new
medical relief. In other word*, the
W. A. Hall, ha* received word from 1 kitchen. *ome fine and useful piece*
following an operation.
family or relatives should, in many ।,
Hastings
Homes
her
hiuband,
Captain
Parker,
that
tx-lng
presented,
and
the
ladles
know
I
Pancake socials seem to make a hit
case*, pay what 1* now paid "by the
HasUnf who roae county. Below I* thc communication
these cold days. Hope no one kept ha ha* been ordered lo report to ju»i wiiat use to make of them. too. I The people of Hasting*
Albert Dyer, who *uffer*d a frac- early Tuesday morning for lhe &lt; 30 and following that lhe resolution
track ot the number we ate al the Fort Oglethorpe. Ga. where he will
LEAP YEAR PROPOSALS—We propose Now Coats. Dresses. Foundation Garments.
parish house the other night. How­ receive a reassignment Capt. Parker lured vertebra while coasting a week A. M broadcast of King George’s adopted by the board of supervisor*
Silk Underwear. Hose, and many other new articles for thc woman who wonts to
ever we had to turn down the tried- ha* been tn charge of a OCC camp ago Sunday, ha* been removed from funeral obsequies felt well repaid.
Hasting*. Mlcliigan.
in Mississippi since tn the spring of Pennock hospital to lhe home of । The air wa* clear, and the sound
look her best. Many special values at LOW PRICES. Wa propose a
January 2g. 1938.
1935
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Armbruster and recording perfect. Hoofbeat* of lhe
Rev. Lemuel Severance preached
Mr* L E Lane and children iia.e te doing as well as possible, which te
were plainly distinguished on The Editor
VISIT TO FRANDSIN’S STORE.
Sunday at the First United Brethren
moved back to Hastings and are liv­ good new* to his friend*.
। London pavement*, officers' mb»- Hasting* Banner
church for lhe pastor. Rev. McSherHastings,
Michigan
ing
In
the
John
Blakeley
house
on
E.
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Wilkerson
have
renttnand
f
10
troop
*
lln
*
;
Ule
----------------------—
ry, who was called to Cassopolis to
ed the Mrs H O- Hayes home on ।
®en from the lower of Dear Sir:
conduct the funeral of a former Blate street. Rev. Lane Is making a Bo.
J.IXmon Bl, for L&gt; ImMnlu
™ “
, "'‘.T"*'1" ■
good recovery from hto nervous
parishioner.
breakdown and Is at present with period. Mr. Wllkerwn u U» SUU -&gt;■'
chimes;
”— ""
the walling -■
of the bagpipes
-----------i Hasting*
-------------------Banner—
under“the
-----------cap­
Miss Charlotte Hubbard, a Junior hto parents at Columbia City. In­
pteyed by the Scottish piper* of the j Uon. "Supervisor* Call for Help."
inspector
on
lhe
M-37
road
project.
99
at the University of Michigan. Is diana. Hte many Hastings friends
Black Watch troop forming the 1* printed an article which we feel
playing basket ball this year In the are hoping for hte complete restora- Mrs. Kayes te planning a teip to Queen's own body guard; even ’leaves
--------------.----------------------a mistaken
Impression of thc
Ban
Francisco
to
visit
Dr.
and
Mrs.
contests sponsored for wonven by atlon to health tn the near future.
lhe
weeping
of
a
woman,
worn
and
Barry
County
Medical
Society
and
Sidney
Shipman.
the sororities and independent* of
“ ,7 ompmn.
wrought
--------... from
.---------Blanding
all night In
their part in the caring for the In­
Hie Albert csrvelhs it seems, flid
Did you know that the Hailing* lhe
alon&lt;^ht Un,
lhe University.
was created for the Ameri­
wUn* of march,
digent sick of the county.
Did you know that lhe Hastings I from a Michigan winter lo face a library
brarv wtll
will be opened
otic tied Uiree
three night*
nleht* was
__caught
____ .. by
..__________
lhe megaphone*.
A resolution In regard to medical
can woman — to complete
week
on
Tuesdays.
Thursday*
and
library will be opened three night* a still mor* trying climate al Charles­ a
।
These
were
followed
by
detailed
Z .17
7. . :
m
were tallowed
care was presented to the Board of
the color symphony of wom­
week on Tuesdays. Thursdays, and | ton. W. Va. where they stopped In­ Saturdays, beginning Feb. a and descrlnuon* In a clear English voice Supervisors by the committee of
ALL WOOL
an beautiful, reveal her sub­
Saturdays, beginning Feb. 8 and tending to remain over the week end continuing thru March if P*t™^ of the cortege as it pa^dTffeVent which L- R Glasgow wa* chairman,
continuing through March if pa­ with their grandson and hl* par­ warrants? You will find a bright., I&gt;01nU
ol those participating; and was passed We feel that this
tle charm and enhance bar
ents,
but
were
held
up
for
nine
days
tronage warrants?
resolution was a fair and Just state­
alluring
loveliness.
or
more.
Thethermometer
went
Word ha* come lo friend* here of
readmit tables and Iola ol good su,Uon for windmr where lhe ckw- ment of facts, and as Individuals
2 01. Skeins at _.29c
PHICESi
,
„rd ,from St and a* a society, we heartily indorse
the death last week tn Chicago of fifteen below there; the streets were magaalne. to look over IX you wish ing
riles were h
heard
1 OS. bolls, Shet­
Mr* Byron Overhlser. who will be covered with Ice. and several feet of lo .Uy alter drawing a Hook, or you
en,™]. W1U1 ttle voke « this resolution and assure the Board
land Floes at19c
remembered here a* May Bllcken- snow fpll. making mountain driving
of
Supervisors
of
our
cooperation
In
to spend th* two hours from 7 to 9 J ^,1,^ lhe telef commllta| service; an attempt to keep medical costs at
staff. the eldest daughter of the late lo FloAda dangerous.
All Silk Heml-Faahlened at Ue
Needles, Hooks, Etc.
The pupils of the elementary
Rev. J. A. BllckcnslafT.
On Satuiday afternoon while lhe; hte prayer for God's guidance for a minimum. A copy of this resolu­
Frances Sage of Hastings, wa* grades of the city, schools were family of Harry Cole &gt; were away I l)w new monarch, and the singing tion Is attached, and we shall appre­
formally Initiated Sunday. Into lhe I guest* of Ray Branch al lhe Strand from home, someone. 11
it is believed Of lhe familiar "Abide Wllh Me" by ciate its publication as a part of this
Aipna
Alpha Alpha
Alpna Chapter
Cnapter of Kappa Del- I ineaier
theater when
wntn the
me safety
saieiy film.
rum. "Once
unit a tramp, entered the hobse
olise and stole
stole.; Ihe vested cffolr of men * voice*.
communication.
la Sorority at Michigan State Col- ।| Upon a Time." wa* shown free of .-'a- valued
;-------------------a watch
at 850 it
ft iste claimed
claimed
One caught the iptrlt of tho
Early In 1925 a committee from
lege. France* is a freshman In Die | charge to the youngsters.
youngsters For good mat Richard Spring* heard lhe wlsole impressive occasion, and ex­
the Board of Supervisors and the
measure. Mr. Branch added an in­ man in the house and later saw him ' pcrlenced a thrill of amazement at
Home Economic* Division.
Barry County Medical Society, to­
_z
a 1 erest Ing newsreel which
en- Springer wa* In the
Last Wednesday
afternoon
Whileallyoung
the eaae with which radio, the mod­ gether with the County Poor Board
group of Second Ward ladtea gath- . Joyed. The film wa* secured by Mlu kitchen, lhe tramp disappeared. He
em witard. project* these event* ot and the Probate Judge, met and
end at lhe United Brethren church Helen Wade, grade supervisor. The was described as an elderly man. world-wide
importance
across ngreed upon il* schedule of fees for
to help Mrs L E Lane celebrate teacher* and pupils greatly appre- Thc robbery was reported and the oceans and continent*, to our
care of Indigent sick and injured.
me kindness
Ku.ai.CM and
biiu courtesy of
oi sheriff made every effort lo And the
her birthday, she wa* given a nice ■vuve
ctete the
homes.
This schedule of fee* Is from 25 to
grocery shower. The afternoon was 1 Mr.
v*' Branch.
tramp, but wa* unsuccessful.
50 per cent of the fees usually
To Co Regardless of Cost
spent singing familiar songs, play-1' Saturday, the local auto license | We were in carveth and Stebbins j
FAIR LAKE.
charged In like cases and has been
ing games and visiting.
bureau. Issued 157 licenses which in-1 V.U.
» W..V.
,TT','re
‘A. lh' h“nC closely followed by all of lhe par­
drug awv
store N
the
other u.,
day «.u
and noFrank Rogers, who suffered seri­ eluded paoaenger. veteran and com-1 tlced that Harry Miller and Maurice
J&lt;lh* Morford
Monday ties to the agreement.
Prices as Low
ous injuries in an automobile acci­ merclabi. Begins to look pretty busy | Crookston really need an escalator i
*o help her celebrate her 15lh
Of the $28,000 stated in lhe ar­
dent in December In Battle Creek, around Mrs. Tyler's desk, with Chet | at this lime of year. Two hundred . birthday Gamea were pteyed and ticle as medical costs for services,
has been taken from the hospital lo Lung called In to help out In the , and four bundles of wallpaper each ' “ lovely “
time
wr»s cn
enjoyed.
th;,physicians
T1'.
nv
the, physician* of Barry
Barry county rcrehte farm home near Dowling. He Is rush. We got a good story down: containing 50 rolls—figure it out for i Kt,
Edward
Lcchlellner 1* spending . reived $2.10330 according lo the ng**rd Lechleltnei
a.Uh
&gt;J.. I _ ____________
_ ... ...
doing nicely but will be confined to there. Seems a woman came In for a youiM.i-.iau io uc «.iwu .rum wc „ f,faw
e*, ^au&lt; »
‘th„ hla a.l.ra.
&gt;iUr Mr*,
ures ot the County Treasurer. Twen­
yourself—had to be carried from the
Wool Crepe, Silk Crepe. Camel Suede*
1930 plate, and according to .the tending dock in the rear of the Nc» w',ch,"'
. ty doctors participated in these serv­
required formula. Mrs Tyler asked store to the store room upstair*. SeeMrs E*rl
ices. giving about 8100 to each
to sec her driver's license. Thc ■ing al) that paper made us wish for
DatUc Creek with Mrs physician.
woman asked what that was—seems spring to come so we could clean up Nellie
Davis.
NeHI* u«vi»
Knowing your desire to be fair lo
$588
she had been driving a car for years
a bit after a dirty winter u many I Iva Case spent Tuesday night all parties concerned in the care of
without a card, and was interested
o do
‘ wlth Thelma Mott and a group of the indigent, we believe you will
a Hastings house-wlfc hopes to
to know how much she must pay lo!
-husRlrla
motorwl
to
Delton
and
enjoyed
welcome
this
statement
of
our
post; and is already telling frlend-h
gel one.
&lt; a Camp Fire taffy pull.
1 band.
\
tlon in the matter.
Those six horse and buggy rigs j
;
,
Lyle Dickerson and family of near
Barry County M*dicai Society
Supervisor* Glen Wearing “
o'• Hastings visited at Hammle Ar-1
seen on the streets of Hastings of
Public Relations Oommlltee
late which arouse considerable cur-1 Woodland and William Struin of mour's Bunday.
Barry 1 Mary Case Is sick with ear trou­
Barry County court House
I losily In this automobile age. espe- Assyria are representing
county at the meeting of the state ble.
Heatings. Mich.
I dally when they start out together,
'’Exclusive But Not Expensive**
January IS. 193S.
are driven by travelling salesmen suuCtvisors association at Uinsing. ' In spite of the weather 22 attend­
At a regular session of the Board
1 covering Barry county f*r a r.a- I You knew lhe Banners are NOT ed the Kinsley Aid at Le*h WilHealings
Phone 250 1
I llonally known kitchen stove. They printed until Thursday afternoon. llamson's The February meetbig of Supervisor* ot Barry county held
I stay about si* weeks in each coun­ We begin to think it's going to take । will be held with Mr*. Stuart Wa­ on thia date. Supervisor Glasgow. r
Morford and Delia Chairman of the Resolutions com-1
i ly. Thc week end* of the group a year to gel that fact firmly Im- ters. Mrs. rFloyd mull
helnina her
her.
c
mltlee submitted lhe following:
1
working Barry county are spent at planted in lhe minds of numerous Willison helping
-------*
| lhe Parker hotel Horses are dorn- good patrons of ours.
To the Honorable Board of Super­
Wc dropped in test week al the'
PLEASANT RIDGE.
a point where from a money stand­ ber of the Poor Commission, also an official act of the Barry County
Idled al A. L. Houvencr's on W. court house, on one of thc after- i
visors.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Albert
Kinne
were
.
' State street. At least the drivers
every physician and every dentist Board of Supervisor*
PURE WOOL
Gentlemen:
point it is an alarming situation.
Allan C. Hyde.
have been free from motor trouble noons on jthich Miv. Eleanor Crain- in Grand Rapids on Sunday,
Your committee on Resolutions to 1 Therefore be It resolved that this resident of Barry county, a copy of
cr. clothing specialist from M. 8. C..
Margaret Kelsey, who is helping
County Clerk.
during all this zero weather.
thU resolution.
whom was referred lhe situation rel­
was Riving detailed instructions on 'Care for Mrs. Alice Coolbaugh in
anvc to
io furnishing
luiiuaiims medical
meutcai ano
ana sursur- board
. communicate hereby
} to ti.e
ThU is the time of year to gel at I making a garment to lhe group lead- i Hasting*, was home Sunday after* ative
Signed:
DOL'D CORNERS.
Reg. $5.5O.ond $6 Suits
glcal aid lo supposedly dependent personnel of the Superintendents of
dresser drawers, and boxes, top ess who represent around 500 Barry j noon.
L. R Glasgow,
There wtll be a Townsend Old
। Poor and the Physicians of Barry
shelves of closets and all those lit­ county women enrolled in the I There wrtll be a pancake supper in persons in Barry county.
Morse Backus.
Age Pension meeting al thc Cedar
It being well known by the mem- county an urgent appeal to exercise
tle
squirrel-like out-of-the-way course. Wc found several well- the church basement Feb. 6. Your
Bert Broata.
Creek church Feb. 4. at 8 o'clock.
'' means available to check and re­
places, where so many things arc known Hastings matrons and those attendance will be appreciated as bers of this board and also to the all
Motion made by Glasgow and sup­ Brother Joseph Warnock te lhe
public in general that the number duce. if possible, the tendency of the
Rog. SA.98 Sulf,
stored lo be "looked over later." It from outlying districts engrossed IniH is to help repair the furnace,
speeds up house cleaning too, to taking notes, and asking questions. I Mr. and Mrs. Clark Oversmlth of appeals lo lhe Superintendents general public to place the rcsponsi- ported by Backus, that the resolu- s;*akcr.
have these cluttering Jobs over, and "Teacher" had Just finished going i are in Canada, called there by the of the poor for medical and surgical bilty for the care of lhe afflicted on tlon be accepted and adopted. Moone futile occupation la trying to
tlon carried.
not mixing in with lhe Ete spring over a large pile of remnant*, rep-1 serious illness of the tetter'* father, assistance for both adult and Ju- j Barry county.
3 to 6 only
.save--money
I hereby certify that the foregoing ------------- by auditing the checks
event later on. Most housesTriis time
venlle persons has been and is
Also that the Clerk of this Board
resenting many kinds of fabrics and j Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Ronk of Bat­
of year begin to look as tho lhe a wide variety of patterns. She | tie Creek spent the week end with rgpidly increasing and haa reached 1 be instructed to mall to each mem- is a true transcript of the record of at night clubs.
Novy Blue Zipper Suits
.■prtiig campaign ought to start right pointed out the ones to be favored Mr. and Mrs. Lester Kinne.
away, especially when the sun shines by iicr slender sister*, patterns that | The P. T. A. I* this week Friday
of heavy fleece material
thru lhe film coated windows, and would add height to those lacking evening. Jan. 31. Pot luck suppar
—water repellent—
strikes the sooty wall paper, and the inches, and many other good Up*. | with a pn^rani following.
upholstered furniture which looks
as tho a good old fashioned beating
out on the front porch would do it a
5 to 8 only
world of good.
■
Things that make reporters aud4
proof
readers greyheaded—"co-1
Men'* Red and Black
I adjuster- slipping by for ’coadjutor.’' i

MEDICU SOCIETY I
STITES POS TION

LOCAL NEWS

g

tn

ve
rd

in
ve

"Admiration

n.

Knitting Yarn

69c, 75c, 85c, *1

iy.
ut

tic

COATS - DRESSES
ALL WINTER COATS

$6-8

DRESSES IN ALL SIZES

to

$2?! $3?£ $4?S

Waters Clothes Shop

CLOSE-OUT

Frundsen9s

Odds and Ends
of JFinter
Merchandise !

SNO SUITS

sc
10

tn

le
Id

ar

ar

iy

Now $3.98

Now $3.48

For EASY Gear Shifting

Only $1.98

BREECHES
Now $3.98

ar

32 ounca—32 to 36
waiat only

w
le ■

MISSES' ALL WOOL

&gt;n
ry
&gt;y
&gt;n

ic
lo
1*

»

SKI PANTS
Regular $3.75

Now $2.89
14, 16. 18 only
MEN'S ALL WOOL

iy

ing the new successor to Bishop
l McCormick In thc West Michi-1
I gan diocese Perhaps tho. "adjuster."
Isn't such a bad title after ail for
| Rt. Rev. Lewis B- Whittemore, whose ,
। choice for thc office seems to be
| such a popular one. He has a dell- 1
j cate and trying position to face. I
• calling for both tact and wisdom In
| adjusting the choir trouble which 1
i has become such on issue in old St. i
Mark's parish in Grand Rapids. It
recalls to mind how young Rev.
Russell H. Bready brought the "dove
ot peace" lo a long standing choir
row In local church circle* years1
; ago in such a masterful way. wiUi
all factions pleased and happy at
the outcome, congregational slnging without accompaniment, and a
pitchpipe leader, has It* advan-

WATERS

Tlie Grand Rapids papers last
week recorded the death of Mrs.
Louise Ballard Knox. 83. on Wed­
' nesday the 22nd. al her home 30
1 Packard-av.. 8. E. after an illness
VI ■ ICW
Mis. IVIIUA
B icai| dent of Hastings some 25 years ago
• residing In the Myers home corner
I Green and 8. Church 81*. Her
daughter. Miss Ethel Knox, was a •
student al Kalamazoo college at Uie
I time, and ha* bean for a long time a •
i member of Central High faculty in ’
I Grand Rapids, having much to do
1 with staging of pageants and dra- ,
matte production*, and her poem* |
: have been published in well known ,
i national magazines.
1
Graylings winter sport program
' made possible by It* new $30,000
i winter park, ha* gone off with a
bang. Since it started, four &gt;now1
train* running In two sections have 1
come up from Detroit on various
day*. This to the week and of th* I
big festival when their queen will be 1
crowned, and th* competitive sporta
■ pulled off.
"Suicide Sal." their .
fastest toboggan ha* been clocked at i
, IM mile* an hour. The ige trough
I courses are marked with archways

Clothes Shop

along with lhe hunting season, lilto

COSSACKS
Pure wmI, full lipper—
brawn, plaid and checks.
Regular $4.50

Now $2.98
Boy*’ Siics. Reg. $3.45
to $3.75

Now $2.89
ia
id

F

Plaid All Wool

Wa have plenty of heavy
wool »ock», leather mitts,
heavy winter caps, for

erate prices.

PREPAREDNESS

eldpausch

SUNOCO
TRANSEP

•MARKET­

Phone Til2 UJe Deliver

Member of N. R. O. G.
lubrication. Recommended for IranianiaaieeH

irving 4,000,000 Families

Other Suggestions for Winter Driving

3

ir need* special attention in order lo give maximum |
ante during the Winter month*. The following tug—.&lt;.1.1 Ma:

foi

usually means such military strength that
no other nation dore attack and is pretty

i

good insurance for peace.

CATSUP

Remember, there arc thousands of ene­

•

my germs awaiting the chance to attack

Lsig* Site Bottles

your body if you allow your resistance to

2 f°' 19c

get low.

Prepare to resist these attacks

BATTERY—It should be inspected, water added If neces­
sary ond oil connections tightened.
CHASSIS—To avoid excessive wear, all parts should b&lt;
thoroughly lubricated with the proper type of Winter Lu­
bricants.
-

now by using either:

1. PEPTONA-an Iron and Nux
Vomica Tonic that restores vig­
or and strength to adults.

2. MELO-MALT-with cod liver
oil, rich in vitamins A, B and D
which promotes sturdy growth

in children; also good for adults.

In pint bottles-$1.00 each
, ■

...

k.amlv
*"i*“h*k«. Fl"“'
remix vP*«*

Pitted Dates
Butter

■

w

THE REXALL DRUGGISTS

2 pie*- 25c

TIRES—See that they are properly inflated, and if neces­
sary repair or replace. Smooth tires ore unsafe for.Wintcr
driving.

•2»- 25c

WINDSHIELD WIPIR—Adjust; replace the blode if necessory.

"&gt;• 37c

Shulti

Round, Sirloin or Swiss

Fresh Hem

STEAK &lt;» 20c

ROAST s-22*

’
f

In accordance with the recommendations mode by the
manufacturer 6T your cor. carburetor, fuel line, etc.,
should be checked ond adjusted; also the distributor and
generator.

ANDRUS SERVICE
HION2240 K:

Smoked Picnicssh*nl,'*“

■

CARVETH **
&amp; STEBBINS
■ W* W W I I w W

COOLINC SYSTEM—Hove it drained, flushed ond refilled
with fresh water ond install the proper amount of anti­
freeze solution; check for leaks; tighten hose connections.

Pork Steak

22c

it. 19k

eJi

�THK HAMTTNOR BANMFR. THURSDAY. JANUARY M. ffll

ansi
GREAT VALUE-GIVING EVENT OF THE YEAR!

C.THOM AT/TORE/

| 'Holes. William—Thomapple.
JURORS FOR THE
FEBRUARY TERM.
Hoover. Robert—Yankee Spring?..
Following Is the list of jurors
Klump. Jake F.—Thomapple.
drawn for the February term of
Lechiellner. John—Hope
court:
Martin. Ramon—Orangeville.
Bates. Laurence—Hastings Town­
McCarty. Harvey—Johnstown.
ship.
McDonald. Harley—Hastings. 2d
Bllven. Bert—Baltimore.
and 3d Wards.
Blough, Hervey-Carlton.
Meriau. C- A—Prairieville.
Miller. Fred—Assyria.
Bogart. Paul—Hastings 1 and 4
Nay. C. B—Assyria.
Wards.
Paus tic. William—Rutland.
Bourdo. Fred—Orangeville.
Rydtnan. Frank—Maple Orove.
Brooks. William—Castleton.
Sager.
Delmar—Barry.
Bump. Max—Carlton.
Sheldon. Clare—Maple Orove.
Butcher. Fred—Rutland.
Stafford. George—Yankee Springs'.
Coats. George—Woodland.
Van Luke, Fred—Prairieville.
Emmons. LeRoy—Baltimore.
Welchrr. Vem—Johnstown.
Fish. Allen—Irving.
Werlmun. Harry—Barry.
Forman. George—Woodland.

Our Loudspeakers of the Sea '

Cash In On the Hastings Cut-Rate
Shoe Store’s CASH VALUES!

ONE BIG WEEK

Food Bargains
C. Thomas Stores

THURSDAY !

JANUARY 30TH to FEBRUARY 6TH
HUNDREDS OF HIGH GRADE NATIONALLY KNOWN AND POPULAR
BRAND FOOD ITEMS . . . ALL AT LOW PRICES.

SAVE ON YOUR MID-WINTER FOOD BUYING . . . EVERY ITEM EX­
ACTLY AS REPRESENTED . . . SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR
MONEY BACK . . . DON'T MISS THIS GREAT VALUE-GIVING EVENT!

CANNED VEGETABLES
WITH NATURE'S HEALTH. FRESHNESS AND GOODNESS

SEALED IN—NATIONALLY KNOWN * POPULAR BRANDS

PEAS SWEET. ^TENDER
3 CANS-'
25c
PEAS BUST
2 •*« 15c
Wax or Green BEANS 8TBINOLE88 2 CANS 15c
3
r*ADM EVEBOBEEN
”
25c
3 NO.
CANS■'
LuKlN
FIBIT CALL
NO. 2
r'ADKl
WHOLE GRAIN
CAN
12c
VUKlX
FANCY OOLDEN BANTAM
2
CDIklAAU FRESH CANNED
3 NO.
CANS
25c
□ rllxACn HEALTHFUL GREENS
NO. 2.
3 CANS 25c
TOMATOES J&amp;Vp’LT0
1BINO
NO. 2K
SUGGESTION
SAUER KRAUTtlWlSSL
..... X 3AN2 15c
2
DE ETC FANCY CUT
3 NO.
25c
CANS
DEE I 3 ODESSA BRAND
NO. 2H
UrtlllkJV OOOD OBADE
3 CANS
MUM IIX I TENDER KERNEL
25c
NO. 2
CAN
20c
ASPARAGUS GREEtFlUFR
3 LARGE
CANS
25c
SOUPS VEGETABLE. FEA
NO- 2
LIMA BEANS RIPE&gt;AREAN^B0M 3 CANS 25c
PORK &amp; BEANS NATKMTSLCHOICE 2} CANS 25c
SPAGHETTI
SAUER KRAUT
RED KIDNEY BEANS
MIXED VEGETABLES
LIMA BEANS
SOUP—7 VARIETIES

NO. I CAN
FINE QUALITY
GOOD FLAVOR
ALICE and

C
w

,

i

j

Columbus Brands

Cookies Served All Day Saturday, Feb. 1

NO t
CAN

APRICOTS aAiADS0UDE8SERTBEI1
CHERRIES
JI?'
r
APPLESAUCE 3?&amp;.,E“CTBi&gt;
GRAPE FRUIT JUICE

NO. 3
CA!f
NO 2

PlhJFADDIE
riHCArrLt

no a

3 CANS

NO. 2
CAN

dOc

18c
15c
10c
25c
10c

DOLE HAWAIIAN No. 1 con 10c
SLICED
No. 2 can 18c
CRUSHED
No. 1 can 9c
No. 2 can 16c
No. 2’/j can 21c

FLOUR
LOW PRICES ON NATIONALLY KNOWN AND POPULAR
BRANDS—FINEST WESTERN AND MICHIGAN FLOUR

BEST YET

HA&gt;D ^KANSAS

LILY WHITE BBAND**
CRESCENT BXAXD1TE
GOLD MEDAL moi?oKX
PILLSBURY'S
GRAHAM FLOUR BOWENA
CAKE FLOUR FABEE FLUFF
PANCAKE Flour "WHOLESOME"
Grapefruit, Texas OC
“
6 for CO
Seed“Is**,

FLORIDA
ORANGES

dox.

HEAD LETTUCE
Fmh, tri.p

4 Q
I U

£
O

ONIONS,excellent 4 f?c
fer cooking, 10 Ibi. IQ

* 78c
ll'a “L 98c
Jlk“1 93c
$1.09
$1.09
5 Ha 17c
LB.
5 BAG 28c
5 LB.
BAO
19c

Ready to boom defiance to tha flrat Intruder, these 14-lueh guns on i
forward turret ot the flagship ot tbs United States fleet form part o
America's Aral Uno ot defanso.
This picture waa taken on •’
U. 8. 8. Pennsylvania during recent Pacific fleet manauvora.

Haile Hires Al Smith’s Friday

Fashion’s Newest
Fur Trimmed GAITERS
SNAP OR LACE STYLES . . . NOW
ALL ONE LOW PRICE

ioLbs 50c

SUGAR
FRESH. CRISP SODA

CRACKERS15
flour
,69c
COCOA “ia 2tl7c
P’NUT BUTTER

s-.m..q

SALAD DRESSING

** 25c
Qt. 27c

Wann
Fleece

Black

Lined
Brown

All
Heels

YOU'LL LOOK YOUR BEST IN THESE GALOSHES !

MEN'S KNEE BOOTS

Heavy Red Soles

Work RUBBERS

$2.29

2

WHEAT KRISPIES
/* nrrr c thomas special

VUr F CE.

Fail Sailing

Akar* Fmh

BALL BAND QUALITY

19c
17C
7c

Lb.
’ST

BULK FOODS
1‘L'RE. SvilOLESOME, HIGHEST QUALITY BULK

DRY GREEN PEAS WHOLE OR aBSBK lb. 5c
RICE Foncy Blue Rose
lb. 6c
BARLEY Pearl Bulk
2 lbs. 9c
MACARONI Elbo Bulk
3 lbs. 20c
TAPIOCA Pearl Bulk
2 lbs. 15c
lb. 9c
POPCORN Good Grode
DRY LIMA BEANS
lb. 9c
DRY RED KIDNEY BEANS 2 lbs. 15t
ROLLED OATS Fresh, Bulk 6 lbs. 22c
COCOANUT FINEST LONG THREAD
|b. 20c
RAISINS Seedless, Bulk
4 lbs. 23c
PRUNES Fancy 70-80 Size 4 lbs. 19c

SEA FOODS
BICH IN HEALTHY VITAMINS

FINEST ALASKA

Pink Salmon, tall can 12c
FANCY LIOIIT MEAT

CHEESE
HEALTHFUL—N0UB1BHINQ

GRAPHOLOGY COUPON

2 cam 25c

COLBY

MACKEREL

3 cam 25c

SHEFFORD'S Toity
Varieties Vi lb. pkg. ISc

Can 14c

SHRIMP
MU8TABD OB OIL

SARDINES

3 cam 13c

MEN S HEAVY
RED TOP

WOOL SOCKS

35c

MEN'S 4-Bkl
DRESS or
WORK

To obtain a character reading send a line of
your handwriting with your signature and com­
plete address written with ink, on unruled paper. '
Enclose this coupon with ten cents (coin or
stamps) to help cover clerical and mailing costs,
and mail to Ruth Rarton, care The Hastings Bun­
ner..
Your Name
Address
City

Arctics
Estra

Try one blade at our expense.
If not completely satisfied return
packet for full cash refund.

WARM KNIT

FELT SHOES
fed

You'll Appreciate the com­
fort of theie Full Cut 11inch Knit Shoes in the cold-

OUTT
GO!—

Sheepskin
Moccasins
SPECIAL
PRICE-

you

f ZJV

Keep Those Feet Mann

lose

MILD MICHIGAN

TUNA FISH

FANCY WET PACK

From Al Smith nyflnlle Selannlc may tie a long jump for most per­
sons. out for Joscfclsriiels. American publicity expert. It's ail in tho
day's work. Israels, left, is shown with Emperor Sciasslu just after
lhe emperor nnd appointed him chief public relations counsel for
tho Ethiopian government. Israels directed publicity in Al Smith'*
unsurrrssfiil 1932 flimpnlgn for tho presidential nomination.

Extra Heavy Soles

KELLOGG'S

FOODS AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS

BOTAL KEirrEBg
Fin* tot S&gt;Ib4b or Buu*
PfACUrC FANCY CALIFORNIA
r
SUcad
Halve*

Buying Here ‘is Constantly a MONEY­
Visit Us Soon!
SAVING Proposition

FINE GRANULATED

CANNED FRUITS
DEA DC
lUMIxJ

WARM RUBBER FOOTWEAR
For All the Family

FREE! FREE!
Thomas Special Coffee and Veltman's

PET MILK ™^T»E0

DELICIOUS FLAVOR — STOCK UP NOW!
DOLE, MIRACLE. LIBBY'S AND ROYAL BRANDS

SMUGS

lb. 21c

SWIFT S SPREAD
2 i/4 lb. pkgs. 15c

RUBBER

WORK
ARCTICS
MADE
FOB HEAVY
DUTY

Women's and Children's

Rubber Galoshes
WARM FLEECE LINED
Special
Price

AMERICAN. BUCK. PIMENTO

84c

DAIRY FEED IS* Vtouu $1.18 Prats in $1.38 jfiU. $1.69
SCRATCH FEED
100 lb. bag
$1.69
ACME EGG MASH
100 lb. bag
$1.89

UNCONDITIONALLY

GUARANTEED
•base )&lt;ni'«e been looking f«

of the fined Swediili turgKal steel !
snderfullr

Highly

keen

l.lede. — NOW I

ACME FEEDS GIVE HIGHEST PRODUCTION

HASTINGS

C. THOMAS STORES

CUT-RATE SHOE STORE

1U WEST STATE STREET

114 W. STATE STREET

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

"Barry County’s Buiieit Shoa Store”
HASTINGS, MICH.

&lt;/hesc^iptujn- Q'tugfirti

�THE BA8T7NG8 BANNER, THURSDAY, JANUARY M, 1M8

Social Events and Personal Mention

IDGE SERIES PLEASANT
SOCIAL AFFAIRS OF WEEK.
Mrs. Aben Johnson has been host-

CHEESE DREAMS.

1 1-2 tip. Worcester sauce.

I Peel and slice onion* and potato*
I in 1-8 inch thick altos. Arrange In
alternate layer* In well-grea*ed casiserole. Sprinkle flour, salt, popper. Mr. and Mrs. Richard O’Brien and
family ol Lansing. Mr. and Mrs.

Pre-Iaveatary

Few grains cayenne pepper.
3-4 lb. bacon.
Tuesday four tables were enter-| 3-4 lb. cheese.
grees p. oven 1 1-4 to 1 1-3 hours tines. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Faul
-1-2 Up. paprika.
tained
at
a
one
o'clock
buffet
i
I or until the onions and potatoes are
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Andrus spent CELEBRATED FOUR
Chas. Jones of Battle Creek
chlldre i of woodland.
luncheon, wllh Mrs Arthur Crothers ' 8 slices bread.
tender, serves fl to 8.
lit week end in Traverse City.
.
BIRTHDAYS SUNDAY. and Mrs. Maurice Pierson serving at |
in the city Monday on business.
...
, Beal eggs until light. Add cliee*e,
----------------- -----------------------Clifford Dolan t* In Detroit and
A surprise dinner was neld at the a lace spread table centered with grated or put through a food chop-!
scheduled for last Wednesday night
WOODLAND.
Chicago thia week on business.
home of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. flowers. Honor* at the four tables j per. Add seasonings and mix well. | Mr. and Mr* Forrert Roe of Lake
Kim Bigler waa the guest speaker Crookston on Sunday, honoring thc were won by Mr*. Orville Bayles,1 Spread on bread. Cut bacon in very View. Battle Creek, spent Friday storm. It will be held today, JanEllen Leonard was home
at the Linn* club In Lake Odessa birthday* of Mrs. Harlan Scobey and Mrs. Kenlth McIntyre. Mrs, David' thin illce*. the length of a slice of night and Saturday with Mr. and
Mn. Perris Quick of MHo. *&gt;
Mn.
on Tuesday
— Goodyear and Mr*. Ray Flnnle.
&gt; bread. Cover cheese mixture with Mr*. Donald Gager. Saturday aftend.
Jenple Lyons of Banfleld. also Mrs
Yesterday
twenty guest*
were the
and bake o8 to au
10 iuu
minute*
emoon aoia.
Mn. Gager cniciiauiea
entertained *u
»lx
xcsicruay mciil)
gucsia wcjc
—- bacon ...w
.uwb muuuu
HINDS CORNERS.
80I Shapiro of Lansing was tho
Mr. and Mm. Joe. DeRuiter and
Crookston. These four birthdays oc­ present for the luncheon. Mr* W under flame of very hot oven. Senes ladle* with a bunco party In honor | H°r”
Mr and Mr* Allen Bishop
family are going to Kentucky for a
cur within three days.
M. Stebbins, Mrs Harold Pelham.
i of Mr* Roe.
i Wednesday th.
the 22nd a san. who will i
on Thursday.
Guests from out of town were Al­ Mr*. CTUy Keller. Mrs Arthur Rea*Mr
and
Mrs
p.
C
Kilpatrick
were
answer
to
the name of Robert Dorr.
Mrs. Harold Foster and Mrs. For­ bert Lyons, Banfleld. Miss Moore,
Mrs. John Dawson visited rela­
LEMON
PUDDING.
i
Grand
Rapids
visitors
Saturday.
)
Mtes
Thelma
Tobias te nursing tn
oner
and
Mr*.
Frank
Andnu
hold
­
tives in Grand Rapids over the rest Johnson were In Grand Rapids Battle Creek, Mr. and Mn. Ernest
1
cup
sugar.
'
They
also
called
on
Mr.
arid
Mrs
Hastings
at
present.
'
Ing
high
scores.
on Wednesday.
Quick. Milo, and Harlan Scobey and II Tonight Mrs. Johnson will enter- (
Tvan rvntii,
nnH the (•
ft,—*■ mnih.
Mildred
1*
5 tbsps, flour.
Mildred and
arid Rain
Ralph
DeMott of
Ii Ivan
Dennis and
latter's
moth­
Mr. and Mrs. chas. Deal ot Prai­ Perrte Quick and children of Milo
Mis* Madeline LyBarker was
Hastings
spent
last Saturday
with
1-8 tsp. salt.
er. Mr*. Elizabeth Mohler
---------- ------------- ,-------------------- -----home from Grand Rapids over thc rieville were the guests of Mr. and
Juice of 1 lemon.
I The local Masons ere planning a their parents. Mr. and Mrs. George
Mrs. Oscar palmer Wednesday.
syrta.
2 eggs yolks.
. . I family night. Tuesday, February ».
4. DeMoU, and helped with the wood
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Lane and I Mrs. J. M. Townsend is spending
1-2 cup evaporated milk, diluted with a pot luck dinner al 8:30 The buzzlng.
children visited relatives in Saranac a few days In Grand Rapids with DEPARTING FLORIDA TRAVMtss Thelma Tobias spent last
’•th
committee has arranged an interEIXRS ARE HONORED.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ganunage.
on Saturday.
&gt;&gt;
»»
,
i
1-2 cup water.
jesting program, for lhe member*. week with her father and brother.
A dinner honoring Mr. and Mrs
iieen / ostponea \ 2 egg whites.
I their wive* and other guest* follow­
W O. and Keet Tobias.
Mrs. John Wolfe of Nashville te
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Fox of De­ James Radford who are leaving next
Everett Muir of Centerville spent i
~
__________________________
Mix sugar, flour and salt togeth- ing the dinner.
lhe guest of Mrs. George Shute^for- troit spent lhe week end with Mr. week for a trip to Florida. 1* on the,
.. . . ... ■ ..u
thoroughly. Add lemon Juice. I At the annual meeting of the Saturday night and Sunday with
and Mrs. Oscar Palmer and Baraeveral days.
** nci f.lh..
1. i
calendar for ton-orrow night, at the । Methodist Ladies' Aid circle No. 6 beaten egg yolks and diluted evap- Woodland Mutual Fire Insurance 1,1a. TS.I.". -rnhl..
1UUIM Ik
(BMicrs.
__ _ __
Miss Llcva Perry of Lansing and.
Bookcase factory, with Mr. and Mr*, ^aa
found n
It necessary
necessary lo
lo postpone
jiostpone orated
orated milk
milk* Fold
Fold in
in sliflly
sllrtly beaten
beaten Company held here Tuesday Jan- W. O Tobias.
..
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Pender of
Lynn “Perry of East Lansing were
The many friends here of Mrs *
J
*
■*
Bristol. Mr. and Mrs. Burr u
l&lt;; mU
sical tea planned for Thurs- egg whites and turn into buttered invnn'ur.XT'.nrt'Lr
UlC
musical
in- uary 21. lhe following directors were
Grand Rapids spent last week wllh James
Vin
llniltpn mil *1 r BnH X.&lt;rc Ul,l.
____ , ■ot Mrs H dlv
.........
...
. . in
. a pan
home over tlie week end.
y
nr
I
P*
1
’
6
at
016
homc
‘
du
*
1
baking
dishes.
Bet
elected:
George
W.
Schneider
of
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Sinclair of the McOmber district.
Hubert Cook returned on Friday ( Pender.
lace Osborn,
Osborn entertaining about 25
25,। A
. . Adrounle. ------bveausa
... of ....
lhe illness of x.m
boiling
-------------------water and
.---------------------bake tn mod.
Odessa to succeed himself and were saddened to hear of her pass­
•
from Chicago where he had been for
Guests ot Mrs. M- M. Crookston gue«t*. Mr. Radford expects to re- of [jf. Adrouhre. it 1* expected that erate oven. Unmold nnd serve hot Harley Townsend of Woodland for ing Bunday evening at Blodgett hoaseveral days on business.
on Friday were Mrs. Ernest*Qulck, turn a* *oon a* Mr*. Radford and me lea will be given later in the : or cold. This should be baked 40 a term of three years, c. N. Van pita! in Grand Rapid*. The family
Abcn Johnson is away on a two
their daughter Doris are permanent-1 spring. Announcement will be made minutes at 375 degrees F.
Houten of Roxand township. Eaton has our sympathy.
Mrs. Harlan Scobey and Mrs. Shultz
weeks' business trip in the east and of Milo.
■&gt;' located.
■
later about the date and place.
Mr. and Mrs. Mell Hendershott
county was elected director lo All a
south as far as Miami. Florida.
and sons of Kalamazoo spent Bun­
CREAM ONION SOUP.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard White visit­
Mr. nnd Mrs. Forrest Woodln of
STITCH AND CHATTER
BELLAMY
—
FISHER.
5
medium-sized
onions.
’
’
। tary's report showed a total amount day with their parents, Mr. and
ed his parents In Ovid Sunday. Miss
CLUB
MEETING.
Grand Rapids and Miss Doris Biddle Florence Bowen returned with them
------ --------- HELD
----- — —
.-r-: Mr. and Mra. Gilbert Fisher. 909
2 tbsp®, shortening.
I at risk ot g27.074.W2 and a mem- Mrs. C- N. Tobias.
of Battle creek spent thc week end for a visit.
The Stlteh and Chatter club had n. Michigan Ave., announce the
Seasoning.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Pranshka
1 bership of 7,926. The year showed
Jerry Andrus attended thc Fed- ।
a very enjoyable meeting on Wed-; marriage of their daughter. Carolyn '
'a.gain of 396 members and 11.003.­ and son of North Hope and Mr. and I
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox and two nesday evening of last week at lhe , Mary l0 AIbert H Bellamy. Jr., of I 2 cups soup Mock
$1.00 and $1.50 Shim
SSk-cldilS'lwS’ mnt£uof ni- ^
“^'of^Jorn^'s
1 cup thin cream or lop milk.
sons-of
Battle Creek ^Ser?^
were Friday
309 at risk. Tlie treasurer's report Mrs. Lowell Whitmore from near I
lYyjf
°A—
J
.'8
”
tty&gt;
'
,
flftcgl
!
Drtfoit.
Thc
ceremony
wa*
per-1
------ -- ------ - - - -------- ---------M.ICUIUI9 """ K-* |
1 egg.
showed the income of lhe company Delton called on lhe former's
being present. The ladies exchanged formcd by.the Rev. Maurlce Grigsby I 6 slices white bread.
day.
! as 478.98548 with losses of 4482S047 daughter. Mrs. Alien Bishop, Bun- !
8. B. Wilcox.
household hints, sewed and had a * at noon.7 Saturday. Jan 25. Mrs.
Miss Dorothy Jean Evans of
Grated cheese.
and other expenses of 4fl.ll IM with day afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Freeland
Grand Rapids was' the week end
happy social time, followed by re- Bellamy graduated from the
Has-;Peel and slice onions; fry
In shortTuesday afternoon of last week a
had os guests on Sunday Mr. and
guest of her sister, Mtes Norma
(
| anfl schools and the University of I ening until a golden brown. Season Other resources^ and Impounded few of the neighborhood ladle*
Mrs. William Glasgow and daugh­ । freshments.
Evans.
1
k
c
"
arlM
Norri^
will
be
the
;
Michigan,
and
for
lhe
last
tour
years
j
well
and
add
lo
soup
stock
made
by
$1.65 and $1.95 Shim
ter. Mildred, of Grand Rapids.
funds were glflJ38.91.--At a meeting planned a surprise party for Mrs
Johnnie Armbruster returned last
I nexl hostes.
.
I
has had a secretarial position with ; covering soup meat or soup bones of lhe Board of Directors, the fol­
Mrs. Clarence W. Crawford re­
week from a stay of several weeks turns today (Thursday) from Chli lhe Detroit Trust Co. Mr. Bellamy | with cold, salted water and slrnmer- lowing officers were elected for the C. N. Tobias. Only seven ventured
BRIDGE CLUB MEETS.
in Clearwater and other points in j cago. where she spent two weeks
year: President—C. j. out on account of the blizzard. A
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Prentice of is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. ing gently 3 to 4 hours. Bimmer ensuing
Florida.
four o'clock lunch was served and I
with her daughter. Mrs. Robert Middleville entertained their bridge Bellamy of Manchester. Connecll-1 gently for 30 minutes. Add cream .Moore, Freeport; Vice-President­
Mr. and Mrs. C- W- Wesplnter Jessen.
cut. He. too. is a U. of M. graduate I or lop milk mixed with eggs, slight- Earl V. Colby. Alto; Secretary—F. C. vveral nice gifts were left for Mrs.
rS'u»inire&lt;™™l»,Mn K^-10' UW mriKreUn «h&lt;»l ““Ji"-' ■!* SSwn coo, one 'numle
were called to Bay City on Tuesday;
Large Assortment of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Emery
Fox
of
Deb, UK *«. ol . oouan. Tbeodoro J*
,
mrez. v». -----—--------------------------------1 tn-: There will be a Townsend speech
ere end &gt;»w t, M„. Oren Huh to | £“u™ wl“,.“'vc*r.!b1”11
------------Dollar Neckwear
Mrs. Roy Ballmtine. 48. passed,at Oedtr Creek church Tuesday
Si .JJ’
lelendl
rrr&lt;i rtnmhte mwu in- week !
»ere dinner guests al the lhe men w.. won by Ron-Il sunion ।
FRENCH ONION SOUP.
way
at
6:00
o
’
clock
Wednesday
Feb.
4
tn
beginning
at
eight
and
low
by
Robert
Mcaloeklln.
All,
.
,
HulhU
1
mends
hon” “ Pr,Me,"k on
er a ver? enjoyable erenlnt ot r"1"111 tol “ bn” __________
I 6 onion*.
----------o’clock. Bro. Joseph Warnock of,1
j January -------22. Mn.
Ballentine was the
3 tbsps. shortening.
Mr. nnd Mta. Carlton Critx. of
Mrs gtott.an Ke|)ey has jemn^d
Galesburg
will
be
Lhe
speaker.
daughter of Mr. and Mn. A. V. Palbridge, refreshment* were served..
nstuuFWT nnmers
1 qt. soup stock,
Vicksburg.
.
B’V
। merton. She was born and had al­
her visit to Detroit. Her Thc next meeting will be held with
slices bread.
PLEASANT VAU.EY.
MIm Grace McPherson has had to from
Mr and Mr* Allen Prentice
Mrs. Floyd Gaskell was hostess al
) ways lived at the home, one and
daughter. Mrs. J. M. Jellls of Flint, Mr.
and Mr*. Alien prentice.
i w
brldlJ(.s on Wednesday ।
Grated Swiss cheese.
Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Livingston
leave high school because of III |
one-halt miles west of Woodland.
accompanied her here to spend a
IS LICENSED MORTICIAN.
health nnd has returned to her I few days,
'■ and Friday afternoons of last week.
week. ' Cut onions into thin slices and ।, where she died. A »on preceded her' and son carl of Pinhook spent Bun Winter Merchandise at
Friends of Mrs. Carlton Crllz | Bouquet* of spring flowers were used c^°l? ,?lo’f*y *” fal up‘n lendcr and_____________ day with Mr. nnd Mr*. John F
home In Kalnmo.
|
Mrs park Thomas, who has been
in death 13 yean ago. She leaves to
I lore wilii relatives.
.
. :
,' Brake
i in Big Rapids with relatives, te (Minnie Gamble) of Vicksburg will, on the small table* and a larger! a««W »owncd A&lt;« soup stock, mourn. Unrtf
Mrs. John F. Brake spent Saturby rovwtog aoup meat or »Up ( half brothcr
pulton and
Dr Winifred McLravy. df’ Grand making an extended visit with her be pleased and interred to know j bouquet in the; aittlng roonv eonRapids was the Sunday guest of Mr.
that she has passed the Mate board 1 tract was played at four tables on
Yn^eenriv
*
other retatlvea. The funeral was held
.irernoonMU.
her
d.usbrer
Correctly
styled ond un­
brother and wife. Mr, and Mrs. A- and-Mrs John McLravy and called J. Larsen.
licensed
Wednesday.
Mr*.
Arthur-------chase
and
’ ®r 4 h°urs Br,n? at thc home Saturday morning at Mr*. Don Blowins and family of 1
* * examinations and is now-a—
—— ,, -----------------—
------------------surpassed in quality
on other friends also.
a bod arid boll 2• or
service wa* con­ South Boston.
Mr and Mrs. Glen Densmore and mortician
mortician and
and funeral
funeral director.
director. She
She Ii Mrs.
Mrs. Dan
Dan Walldorf!
Walldorff winning
winning the
the ~
“•. 3
- minutes 11:00 ocPxic
Tlie Rev. and Mrs. E O. McSherry Misses Margaret and Audra Dens-' »'1H work with her husband, who has prizes. On Friday twelve guespt were Toast bread, place a slice in each
Charles Hamblin visited hi* broth­
and wear!
ducted by Rev. Don Carrick with F.
were in Kensington. Mich . on Bun­ more and Rote Ortley were Sunday * funeral home in Vicksburg. Her ! present and Mrs Harold Fester and
pc®'l‘r
tW° S*”1*.' I C. Wing in charge of arrangement*. er and family of Cedar Spring*.
Wednesday and
Thursday. His
day where he was called lo ofUctate guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ort- friends wish her every suece^ in her Mrs. Forrest Johnson had high
PourJJ?(’.hot,so^&gt; over
and
M^"it’*r 1 Interment in Woodland
; ana
“.red Mre/nrtdiitaid
n
WmdtoAdcemetery.
r.U«7.nd mother who has been there for
at thc funeral of a friend.
ley of Vermontvtlfe,
work.
'
I --------scores.
&lt;»”*«• &gt;»
Mr. and Mrs. Doer Mead. Kenneth
.ureo. serves 0.
hannua? will ha held &gt;1 Ih. some time accompanied him home. '
Robert c. O’Neil sptyit Monday j
BURDICK—KEMERUNG.
j
NIGHT HAWK CLUB.
and Dorothy of Kalamazoo spent
Miss Frances Scott entertained 18 —,
M
evening here with hte mother. Mrs.
Woodland school on the evening of
BAKED BERMUDAS.
Bunday with the former's parents. mt
young people of the Church ot the
u ’Neil.
ncii. Mr.
«r. u
nen is a salessaies- ! Emmanuel Episcopal church was
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Preston very
lone O
O'Neil
6 large onions.
Brethren of Burton Heights. Tues*
Mr. nnd Mn. Joseph Mead.
man for a tobacco company Barry the sccnc of a prctly wpddlnK Sal- pleasantly entertained the Night
3 tbsps. shortening.
... Mr. B- A. Walpole of thr Michigan day evening
Mrs George Coleman was in Kal­ —,c°Tp\n2'..Barry urday Jan 2$ when Mln Margaret Hawk Card club at their, country
|
CLOTHING
AND SHOES
county being part of his territory. I
State college Vocational Agricul­
4 tbsps. catsup.
amazoo on Tuesday attending thc
Not so many at church Bunday on
FOR MEN AND BOYS
Mr. and Mrs. Kim Sigler and Marie Kemerllng of Johnstown be- home hear Barbers Corners on
tural department has been obtained
1 can baked beans
funeral of her sUter-ln-lnw. Mrs.
account of the bad weather. Rev. J.
•
Claude Gay. overseer on thc farm. came the bride of Willard Clare; Thursday. Jan. 23. A lovely dinner 1
as lhe speaker of the evening. Dr.
1-2 cup bread crumb*.
were In Cadillac this week end on Burd,ck of Nashville. The single ring 1 was served nt seven o'clock and lhe :
Andrew- Frey, of Long Beach, Cal.
I. Baldorft Is bringing us some fine
HASTINGS
Carefully peel onions from stem Davenport will also be a speaker. messages. Come out and enjoy the
’
Mr. and Mrs Clare Fuller and son btMlncM. Mr nnd Mrs Sigler spent scrvlc&lt;? *'as rend by lhc Rcv' J A I remainder of the evening was spent'
The Woodland Chapter of Future Sunday service wllh us.
I ssssssssssasxxaKnsaMMMi
ot Owosso visited Mr. and Mrs. Kel­ Thursday and Friday of last week McNulty and the couple were at-. in playing progressive pedro. Htgh I end. Boll 15 minutes in water lo
Farmers of America is sponsoring
(ennea by
Oy Miss
mi« Isabelle
uaueue Collins
uphuo of
ui .: honors
nonors went
to Minnie
Myers and
ano ;'
‘J11?.* 8,,CCT ,rWn lltem
lar Stem nnd Mr. and Mrs. A. L. in
in Detroit.
Detroit.
went to
Minnie Myers
i1 tended
the
banquet.
The
Woodland
Home
Battle Creek and Merlin Gage of Chas. Freer, the low going to Ora [
h ^pS^teavtoTThin “waR
Houvener and Patty over the week
Floyd Gaskell wa* Ui Chicago
Economics girls under thc direction
end.
Monday attending the International
of Miss Schuler, assisted by mothers
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Trim enter­
Heating, Ventilating and Air-con-1 DESSERT BRIDGE TUESDAY'.
MISCELLANEOUS
SHOWER.
| C,UP mlnccd onion, cut from center*.
tained Marvin Caukin of Grand
MISCBUJUCCOCS
SUOWLIl
dltioning exposition. Forty-five men
Mixed bouquet* of spring flowers. On Tuesday evening. Mis* Evelyn 'homered 10 minutes in shortening dinner. The march, dinner music
Rapids al a birthday dinner Friday from neighboring cities went in a 1
। were used on the small tables al a Wagner entertained with a misccl- &gt;nlxcd with catsup, salt and pepper and special features will be fur­
in honor of the former's father. special car.
1 dessert bridge given Tuesday after- laneou* shower honoring a recent
’-^'te. and beans. Sprinkle tops nished by the Bamby orchestra and
. Henry Trim X
MLf’
K&lt;i?ert. a.n‘J noon by
°y Mrs. Dan Walldorf!
wanoorn at her
ncr j1 onoe.
.; place «unn*
bride. Mrs. Forrest James (Margaret wlth bread kmuu
crumb*;
onion* m
tn singers of La ns tn g with the compli­
Mr. and Mrs. C W. Wcspinter and
c-?
1
eland
visited
home
Two
Erway).
enjoyable
entertainment
baking ui»u
dish with mihv
waah South
Qzyutk Broadway.
ttmaiiwav
a,-, -nin..aRi.
*i„, covered baklmr
little wa
,—the
,h week
C i.nmK
“omc on
on
ooum
uroauway. *r*a'A
*wo Vr^w*-..-.
trwayi. An
An
enjoyaoic rere,
entertainment
w.i-— ments of the Lawrence Baking Co.
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Nevins spent1 Hren. oiHi./t-,—™-.
hcre A
and
In JFreeport
over
•,u_ i,..,
.. । the not.
.&gt; t-rtat 375 degrees F. about ,1
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Kltson attend­
„„
1
™
,p
*2
’
”
porl
,®
VC
5
t
*L
e
.,*
cclc
larger
bouquets
made
thc
living
feature
wo*
the
scrap
book
,cr
Bakc
Sunday in Grand Rapids with Dr.
Mrs. Eckert went on tn
to nhiea*m
Chicago room* giu^cm-e.-Twelve guests were guests made for lhe bride. Mr*.1 hour ot untl* onions are tender. ed the 50th wedding anniversary of
end.
Mr*.
nnd Mrs. Dennis Murray and Mr.- and her husband and son returned
his parents. Mr. and Mrs Levi Klt­
entertained Bridge honors were won j jame* was thc recipient of some ' Serves 6.
and Mrs. A. A. Anderson.
to Cleveland.
son of Syracuse. Ind.. Sunday.
by Mr*. David Boyes and Mrs., lovely gifts
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Mc­
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Stebbins were Richard Hurd.
The Barry County Round Table
ESCALLOPED ONIONS.
|
---------Leod. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Brown
In Detroit and Ann Arbor Tuesday. I
5 medium sized onions.
for teachers was held In Woodland
-------------- —----------------।
HONORS BAY CITY GUEST.
|
and daughter, Jean, left on Thurs­
Mr. and Mr*. Lyle Scudder had as
2-3 cups bread crumbe.
last evening. January 29. The Meth­
MOZART CLUB.
! Mrs.Albert Vedder entertained!
day for their home in East Jordan,
a guest last week thc tetter's mother.
1 1-2 tsps. salt.
; odist Ladies' Aid served the dinner.
Thc
members
of
the
Mozart
Club'
eight
guests
at
dessert
bridge
Tuesafter spending a few days here.
Mrs. Lee WaUon. of Holland.
Imet on Thursday evening with Mrs. I day nflemoon nt her home «,
Pepper.
Sunday. January 26,
Mrs. L.
on West!
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Conklin and
Paul celebrated her 82nd birthday.
Mrs. J. F. Goodyear t* expected 1. j. Smith and had a delightful' Court street. Bunco wa* played dur-| 2 tbsps. butter.
son Leon and daughter Marguerite
here Saturday from Detroit where time. Awards were given lo two of | ing the afternoon. Mr*. Clinton Lahr
2 1-2 cups milk.
Her children and grandchildren »urand Mrs. M. Cook of Lansing spent
she will spend a fortnight with Mr. the
member*
—
to
Bcrnlta
Flory
for
land
.Mr*.
A.
K.
Frandsen
having!
... ------------- -to Bcrnlta Flory for; and Mrt. A. K. Frandsen having!
Sunday al thc home oi the Rev. and
and Mrs. O. E. Goodyear.
having practiced lhe most hours and j high score. The party complimented
Mrs. c. M. Conklin. Marguerite is
to Lewis Bolton for memorizing thc Mrs. Harold Foster's mother. Mrs.'
remaining with thc Conklins for a
, 1 most pieces,
pieces. jean
Jean srnitn
Smith is prcsiaent
president ; Clara MacLachlan, of Bay City.
a short lime
'
°f
the Mozart Club and Stanley:
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Newton Mr. and Mrs. Levi Mead, and Amon jLne. ls secretary
‘I SHOWER AND BRIDGE PARTY'.
went to Detroit on Monday lo at­ H Laxton, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. I ,nea 1, wereury ,
--------------J Mrs. Herman Arold entertained
tend the funeral of her brother. Laxton of Detroit, spoke their marMRS. FRANDSEN HONORED.
। twelve guests Monday at a one thirRalph Smith, who passed away on । riage vow* at 5:30 o'clock on Wed-1 Mrs. E. A. Frandser
E.* A
A.* rT
Frandsen
of loma.
Ionia, wno
who: iy
ty ocssert
dessert Bridge,
bridge, wnicn
which was also a
(!)-•.&lt; nr .H—
J.
w
"Mrs.
ws- fc
“nasen oi
h^Lr«d Whip? thr?p
nMd«y afternoon at the Mead home has been visiting her mother. Mrs. shower for thc eight months' old son
a
J
Purk 81 R&lt;?V' W Mayl“n Jonci Harry o. Hayes, was honor guest at of Mr. and Mrs. a B Gldlcy. Bridge :
^r'..
.
I of the First Methodist Episcopal an informal tea given Wednesday honors were won by Mrs. Harry
a.Lin' T*m
church, read thc nuptial service be- afternoon
afternoon of
)
of last
last week
week by
by Mrs.
Mrs. A
A. 1I Young
Young and
and Mrs.
Mrs. Milo
Milo DeVries.
DeVries.
Austin. Texas, where he was called fore a white alter with a bank­ L. Brown at her home on South I--------------- by the death of his mother, Mrs. C. ground of palm* and fem*, with Jerterson street. Twelve guests were I ENTERTAINED J. F. T. CLUB. ■
Hoo Cre«rel«l*&lt;l
L Reid, who has been in poor health large bouquets of calla* and Califor­ present and lhe afternoon was spent i Mrs. Albert Beumer entertained
for sonic time. T- K. expected to ar­ nia acacia. Only the famine* and a visiting.
[
twelve members of live J. F. T.
s-.i
u&gt;.
rive Wednesday noon, the funeral few close friends witnessed the
’ —--------- ----------------I club Tuesday afternoon at a desbeing on Wednesday afternoon.
MISUEtX.ANEOUS SHOWER.
i sort bridge.
ceremony.
Mrs. Ju.,,,
John Lmwawi
Dawson »nu
and ncr
her aiaicr.
sister.
wm
Miss Mead choBC for her wedding
A miscellaneous shower, compll- j
---------------- • a »
Ml*. Edna FiUgibbdn of Grand I a beautiful gown of aquamarine menury to Mrs. Ellis Kelley, was U.L------ Tina*®
11
'"a
Rapid*, are Icaylng Wednesday for I crepe with bodice top of matching
........... Riven at the home of Mrs. Eben
. j p
.
afternoon.
Jana motor trip to West Palm Beach. | lace and carried a lovely bouquet of I1 Kelley. Thursday
muuuay ■
iwiiuxmi. jua
,-1&lt; rielpJUl dUfigeStlOHS
fa* Bo,
where they will Join their sister and | gardenias. Her only
was
Uttr&gt;' 23.
23. Seventeen
Seventeen stiests
guests were orespres- ’
iv attendant ...
- uarv
her husband. Ml', and Mrs. L. T. Miss Marge MacLaren. who wore a I ent- The afternoon was spent in
ond meet the coming year with the confidence that is
Rattenburv
-------------am, after which n&gt;rre&lt;H.
:
in1 ni-vino
cards
Rattenbury who have leased a stunning gown of gray crepe ...
,playing
—
------------refresh------ — '
CREAM SOUP,
house there for the winter.
Jacket style. Her arm bouquet was-------------------menls -were
served. Many lovely gifts 1: 4. tbsps. butter or margarine.
- brought about by having one of our scientifically
Mr and Mrs. Charles Faul and of Unted daisies. Howard Houghton ,j were received by Mrs. Kelley.
3 tbsps. flour.
CORRECT PERMANENTS.
Marietta were at Woodland on Sun­ of Detroit assisted the groom as best I
* ♦ e-------------—"
I 11-2 tsps salt
day attending the dinner in honor man. The single ring service was
MP“"'
of tlie former s grandmother. Mrs. used.
on
-Monday
when
seven
of
her
i
n
,
Kate Faul. il being her birthday.
Following |he nuptial riles there friends came to spend the evening ! feups tnSc”
'
Covers were laid 'for seventeen. was a small reception and tea. after)
her. the occasion being her o
&gt;_
-.i.i-i,
Other out of town guests were Mr which tlie young couple left for their with
bU-UKUy. G.mc. .nd relre.hm.nu
“* wl*h ''»«•“'»!
and Mrs. Richard O’Brien and fam­ future home In Detroit Her going
ily of Lansing.
Ual“
O» •
M.U IM. Add away gown was of navy crepe with
Tailored NrekUwn.
Mrs. W. L- Shulters spent Wed­ black silk hat and black shoes.
ha“ a haPP&gt; ttxp*'r
I flour and seasonings and blend. Add
The label on thia wave says
nesday in Grand Rapids with her
Y M L. CLUBn,llk' vt$cU‘bl'! water and pulp- Cook'
Mr. and Mrs. Laxton will be at
48. but Hollywood wants
tailor-fitted necklines, curls
daughter, Mrs. Gordon Clement, home to their friends after Feb. 1
Mr* Harry Baldwin entertainedminutes, rtining constantly until
you to have a January
who Is a patient at Blodgett hospital. at 4087 Duane st.. Detroit.
the Y. M- L. club very pleasantly on | tWckened. Canned or fresh vegeSpecial — a true push-up
Mrs element’s friends will be glad
Thursday afternoon. A cooperative tab*cs may Pc used for this soup.
j
wave at this efficient beau­
lo hear she is much Improved after CELEBRATED FIFTY­
ty shop. Phone naw and
dinner wo* enjoyed followed by a
—-----her long Illness.
FIFTH ANNIVERSARY.) social time. Mrs. Glen Bera was a I
MELBA TOAST.*
ask abbut it.
fluffy, rolled or cluaUrwd.
The out of town guests for lhe
The Rev. and Mrs. E. L. Crocker
Remove crusts from day old bread
'
guest.
Mr*.
HP.
Tuttle
will
be
lhe
1
b-ic«.
u. 18|c
Mead-Laxton wedding were A- H. entertained Saturday evening. Jan.
i and slice very thin, cut slices In j
hostes., - r
Laxton, Mrs. Walter Dierkes and 25. in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph.’ February
__________
‘: halves, or narrow strips If desired. ‘
Announcing lhe
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Houghton of Mead's fifty-fifth wedding anni-11
PABT NOBI.E GRANDS. . --P&lt;n11or cook*e ihccJt,
ELECTRO MANIla.
Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Bewail Lax« vtr*ary. a ill o'clock chicken dinner r
Bergqmont Oil
f nj
Tliee p**i
past noble
Noble Grand*
Brands of lhe
the Re- i‘ *“
“ nwder“l5 vmt.ov&lt;?“; mraw
AU®* 10 ary
dry ana
and 1
THI FAMOUS
CURB MACHINE
ton of Mason and Miss Marge" Mac- wm served. Rev. u Bird. wife, and txkali Lodge met wllh Mrs. Charles become delicately brown. Turn oc17.40 on $4
The only one in Has­
CLO-TONI
Laren of Lansing.
Utlle daughter were also Invited pj-ecr on Wednesday- evening for a ] cioionally so they will brown rvflnlj. I
Perm'nt
Cmp.
tings. Electric Mani­
Mr. and Mrs. John Bladeckl of guests. The evening was spent in! pot juck hUpper. Pedro furnished the j Serve unbuttered. Till* may also be '
YoW^Snsw
ihh
wits
cures
are
gentle
and
Three Rivers were the guests of Mr. vuiuia .nd preyreThU u on, ol I tnt„uliim&lt;-:il wllh Mn. Bdno Wood I
“ •» oreomponlnrenl lo and Mrs. Joseph DeRuiter at the llwmonx Uihwi Ur. ond Mre. ,„a Url 8U11,
fcu,g u,,' ul»dj\
.
Cheer-Up party Monday evening. Crocker can think of to cheer one
1
------------—
‘
winners.
Mr. DeRuiter and family left Tues­ along life's pathway. All pro­
,
PEAR-MACAROON SALAD.
day for Louisville. Ky.. to attend a nounced Rev. and Mrs. Crocker
HONORED BIRTHDAY'.
&lt;’carsFinest Castile Shampoo ond Finger Wave —...
HIrsch convention. .
Mr. and Mr* joacptrSnulu enterMacaroon crumbs.
royal entertainer*.
-------------------....wt— . 1 pkg. ®T*
cream
Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Bauer were in
Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value, for .
——
tained at dinner
on Monday
everting
n' cheese.
Lansing on Thursday attending a
OBSERVED BIRTHDAY.
DAV.
complimentary to Mrs. H. L. wood.
hUraschlno cherries.
&lt;Fbr Dry Hair and Dartdrufii
Mrs. MatUe striker,
bail given by Amity Chapter of tlie
who C._
has n ^^5 her blrthday. A delightful I. . Mash
cheese
and spread
------ -- —
.—. —
r. — .1 a thin
NOT A SCHOOL - All Ex|wrlM»c«4 Lfa
many friends In Hastings,
s. was tho । time Is reported.
1 ,ayer
layer ol
oq' ■a halt of pear. Cov
Cover with
I. A R
- -1I nnnthar
cl rwrerlhe Wayne County O. E- S. Associa­
another halt
half of
pear and .dip the
tion. Mr*. Bauer also attended the on Thursday. It being her eightieth
U AND I CLUB.
,
whole pear lit ground macaroon
formal luncheon of the newly or­ birthday A --------lovely
birthday
cake
..
------z .
— ( Mrs. Ray Waters entertained the .crumbe. Serve in crisp lettuce nests.
Ui WEST STATE »?.
ganized Bauer—Tupper past Ma­ wm ateo enjoyed and Mrs. Striker eight members of lhe U and I club Decorate top with half of marasWE DELIVER
lino cherry and
aii4j&gt;tocc
• wqonful
spoonful of
tron*’ Club, there being fifty mem­ rtcelved the congratulations and on Wednesday afternoon very pleas- chino
place a
ber*.
ayonnaise at the side of each.
antly.
-

this

Specials!
SUITS

Mis*

$16.50
$21.00
$24.00
$29.50

Musical Tea Has

Suitv
Suit*
Salts
Suit*

$9-95
$13.95
$16.95
$22.50

OVERCOATS

$ 1O.50 Coats SiZ.95
$19.50 Coots $14.45
$22.50 Coat* $16.45
&lt;£7 rn Cnnfrw
45
UOOTS

SHIRT Specials

89c

75c

••ch

I . S. HA I HD
w

Want to Buy or Sell?

Try Our Want Column

Iridafi - Saturday
&gt;lnn. 31

I

Feb. 1

SUGAR
10 (*•• 49c
BUTTER
36|c
Shredded WHEAT
GOLD DUST
1 Sc
Invest In Good Appearance
SALAD DRESSING
27c
DRY NAVY BEANS 7u. 25c
Hair Style
Grape Nut FLAKES 3».... 29c
European at
Realistic $150
Permanent

Forecait 1936

Meat Market Specials

OLEOMARGARINE
BEEF ROAST
BEEF STEAK Roue,

6462

JUST PHONE
HASTINGS

u 12c
22|c

50'

HOLLYWOOD BKAUTY

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. JANUARY 30. 1936

page eight

INSURANCE

WA N TS

LIFE
FE . AUTO . FIRE

ONB CENT A WORD. NO ADVER-

THE CH UR CHES I
-—

1

1 I

—-?-™s ROTARIANS HEAR
HELPFUL TO

This Is a Whale The Hastings Banner
of a Big Job

&lt; Continued from page one)
rapid transit, added power and en-

There b In every human being
what may be termed the “purpos. ..! ing element.” Young men and woin- i &lt;n have it today. They luvvv ideals,
lie said. but there Ls no place for
&gt; i, them to go. IP tie chance for them
i ’ »• to use their ability or cncrgyTSoinc
’J,’-' one has declared that 'Tlie young
ri tn people who have grown up in thr
i.-«2 last five years are an unwanted'
n ’t generation'—not that they lack the
• :.&lt;&gt; love nnd care of parents, but bc‘
cause they find no chance, with all
I,, /-; their high purposes and Ideals, to
- ■ »i get thc work they would like to do.
-.i-Tiic second element that Is need-

Our Service
To PROTECT You Con.Untly
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .
Haitlnx*.

where Is lhe "perspective clement.''
Wc must see clearly.
Hie third Is the "precipitous element." -Why should anyone want
to ride on a roller coaster" he asked
-when he knows that he U jeopard izing his life?" There u no purftou*
In tiding in the contraption. Why
should an old man like to drive a
car seventy miles an hour? It is lhe
i '•» precipitous element—the element
, \.r that wants to take a chance, to dare
something. to do something even If
' there Pi danger in ft.
"America Is surely going places,
these days." he said. When* are we
going and how are wc going? Hr
,i? would refer everyone who wished to
»'■ know what fie shouliPdy and how

/ ii'
i* ?!
'■
*!„!
i &lt;&gt;«
I &gt;.,
'
am
'"A

GEO. M. NEWTON

WANTED
REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
Spectacles Fitted and Guaranteed.
Credit—Terms.
Watch. Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

MOXTHH. nr*.

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

at FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET. Phone 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609

H. Feldpausch • 3921

young man who lived 1900 years ago
He had clear, precise and pure pur-

DURFEE.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Ray Clemens. Mr.
Amos tiemens and Muri spent
Sunday with relatives near Lake
Odessa.
The p. T- A- at lhe Durfee school­
house next Fridnv night ts posi­
tioned. but win be held Friday. Feb­
ruary 7. Pancake supprr at seven.
A good program U being prepared,
come nnd bring your friends.
Mrs. Tom Hoffman b visiting her
parent* at Plainwell
Rev. and Mrs
Fred Wheelock
spent the week end ut their home
near Sarnia.
f '
Rev. Wheelock will continuo to
assist Rev. E. Gamble in revival
meetings tills week.
•
.
Il has snowed and bluHered the
byroads so full they have been tinpassable part of the lime, in spite
of the efforts of the road scraper.
Hint luis been constantly going.
Mbs Grace Baulcii of Hastings
spent Friday night with lhe home
TOfttlT—-- ------- -:------------------- •*------Bennie Brooks of Hastings High
school war. home Monday ill witli a
cold.
.
v------------

Hons of the real values of life. In
fair reopen* In Snn Piece feb 12.
. Him the precipitous element was'so
; strong that He never hesitated to
NORTHEAST TIIORNAPI’I.E.
(follow
Hl* life's purpose,
no—
matterFREEPOHT.
|
---------------what
strength
of u,r
thr opposition.' Thi* linked goods sale held at Mid­
Plenty ol enmmenl and &gt; goal I'
‘*‘ the “
T'ff,1’ 01
BRING IN YOUR HARNESS
dleville Saturday netted the Aid
dent ol .unerUw have r.-.ulied iron, They
Th" hanged Him on ‘a cross: but
NOW
about
$12.
.
'
our recent severe weather. We His purpose tn life and His example
Mrs.
jofeph
Scbnurr spent Sun­
j i.suv wtxr
of noble dating have lived on. The
know fanning. Stale age and
lill.i-rn FIRST UNITED RRETItREN CHURCH. aren't asking for more but ns a mat­ more thoughtful today arc seeing. day at her home; she Is curing for
E, 0 MeSherry. Pa»tor.
A-I.lr.
ter
for
which
lo
be
thankful
we
puss
(arm experience. Box 161,
Eerldxn », sn F. Oran! Bt Phone 3950. on this—"it might be worse." a' with greater clearness, that the only her daughter. Mrs. George Schroed­
er. and new grandson al Caledonia.
Dept. 4101. Qtxinry. 111.
\i-rh,l..&lt; ■■( r'.ri.rUu tX.-I. J.'../ report from relatives nt Bedford. way to get places in individual life The boy has been named Lurrle
Ind.. 400 miles south, says 26 degrees or national lite ij to follow lib ex­ : Clark.
, An.lru1*1
below there. Another report from ample and HU teachings.
Messrs.' Earl and Wayne Kenneen
!w
f. ?" I. - * .. ....
Fairmount. Ind.. 200 miles -south,
entertained thc Socinl club Thurs­
MILO.
1 w «-—■ *1 ,. :*ri wii.... It-ni. I Ha
says. 25 degrees below, mow drifts
1
la-,,.. Ir-iu W.l,
yean lived on farm...
i .
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Flower and day and thc ladtcs helped to quill
REPAIRINC AND OILING OUR
Uu'l.n-I (»a
1 ''
k- " ■
........ . ».MT 6 feet deep, no school, no (rains, no Bernice were notified of tin* death on a lovely quilt of Miss Fern Kerliuwt. roaih blocked, an mnnr-sis 20 ol t.n- !ori..&gt;-i '. to, .
4PECTALTV
. ria Ihiut. •nw'iis.
cared for in one home until storm
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Zcrbc have
which occurred nf Bronson hospital.
abates, many frozen feet, hands,
coats opove church or cueist etc., and. of course, thc half of thc Ktilnmazoo the evening of Jan. 20. named the fine little girl that came
Clfm Jordon. Pattot
। The funeral was held at tlie home to live With them Crystal Mr Z- rsuffering b never known.
jin Galesburg last Thursday.p. M. bc nnd daughter are in Pennock
Thr annual meeting of thc Free- ....
Mriv were
uimuunable
„ M, to hospital.
Mr. «...
mid Mrs. Flower
THREE CORNERS.
port coop, creamery co was held go. Bernice and Mr. and Mrs. W
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kcrmeen
Winter still holds us In Its Icy
Ihn IP r.r r&gt;
1...
Air...I
..
. .
। mien*. Sunday at Battle Creek visit­ grip, snow and Ice have made driv­
H. Flower attended.
nesday. Thc report a-, given showed
Mr. and
nnd Mrs. Otb
Olis Toorc
t&lt;kw and
nnd son ing the formerX Sister, Miss Fern ing difficult for everyone. The roads
"AKOOM"
MOBFDM
WE EUY ON
ANDCOMMISSION
KCI-L KEAL estate
"AKRCN"
that 942.000 lb; of cream wen- re- I of Ypsilanti motored to his brother, Kcrmeen.
MIVKSvlN rfiUULKN
1 between here and the city wore Im­
Mrs. Glen Allen will entertain thc j passable for a time during the past
celled during the past year ut nn porter's home Sunday In spile of the
MICHANO-Fi
avwrau. price „r
-r, l-3c.
,
™ u..
ICHANO-tORM T3USS SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
average
of 33
317.300
lbs. , ,tri.n.e „,|d aud
Home Economics class at her home i
of butter were churned nnd the re- । turned
ou„uiSunday
„
u Thursday.
FOR WORK
WORK OR PLAY
.
all kinds or insurance
afternoon mr
Mr.. »&gt;
nnd
Miss Ruth Robinson was a Wed­
cclpta (or the year were $118.147.72., Mrs. Raymond Mann nnd baby were
Mr. and Mrs. David Benawa were nesday night guest of her sister,
In Smooth Rubber
Beck Pod,
abstracts of title
Thin
Ru
Thus Ls n tine report for a creamery ,Ui,o guests of Mr. and Mrs. Toon* pWsLs of the former's sbter. Mrs. MLxs Rellia in Hastings.
No Poill To Wecr Clothing
Noury PnbllcA—Genera! Conveyance*
of this size and met with universal on Sunday. Both of th Mr cars had Aaron Leatherman and husband ul
David Robinson wax the over
approval. Both Frank Hyne- and to finish the lost part of thr trip Dutton.
night gurot of Hoyden Yargrr of
Dan Postma have been retained for under horse power on account of
Mrs. Wayne Kenneen entertained Welcome comers Wednesday.
I another year.
deep mow.
.
Mr and Mrs. Harold Scgvstroin of
Claude Hammond was In Battle
I Mrs. Jennie Casadny ot Hastings. Herman Fisher spent zthe week Leighton. Mr. and Mrs. Wuyne Creek on business last week.
NEW V- OLD
Schroeder of Calcdonln nt dinner
B with her daughter. Mrs. Maud end and Monday in plrflnwell.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Rogers nnd family for a time
' Mr. and Mr, Arthur Skidmore Thursday In honor of her husband's 1
Rev. and Mrs. Frank Moxon of
A meeting of the official board of had for Sunday guest', tlie Utter'- birthday.
Social meeting will commence in Caledonia were dinner’guests of NV.
the Methodist church was held at sister and husband. Mr - and Mrs.
E. church
the parsonage on Monday evening. | Cvcll
Conkilt). of Batlle Creek. i tlie
”‘e M.
m. Eenuren next Sunday eveeve- ■nnd Mrs. Guy Kantner WcdnesdAEveryone seems to be enjoying the
Mrs
-.&lt;»«•■ »•&gt;•«
Mrs. tI., n
b. r
Lester
has been num- j | Mratld Mrs. Roll returned to1 nln«. Rev. Griswold nf St Johns ami
zero will
weather
by staying by their
1 their home Blue Island. Chicano. ■ Mba Wenger of Cedar Springs
;
ADJUSTABLE CENTER
bered among__________
the sick.
Geo Forbey h slowing recovering1last Friday. They rented their farm lurisl our pastor. Rev. Bacon.
1own fireside. Hence very few Items.
Spon;e Rubber Padt
Mr. nnd Mrs. Harry Sandbrook
at his home from injuries received while here to a party from Rich------------------ -----------------------No Leg Strap*
spent
Friday
In
Grand Rapids and
• when struck by a falling tree. He, land, -v
ASSYRIA.
Mae spent the day with Mrs.
was at P?nnocl£ hospital for nbouli On account of thc severe cold and
The-Briggs Ladles' Aid Society Janice
■
first pp.esp.yteeian church.
Kantner.
n-v. Jahn Kltehln*. D. D Pastor.
The Prescription Drug Store
three weeks and his many friends 1 drifted roads Ml-.- b Flower spent scheduled for last Thursday and thc Guy
1
!5 W. Centsr St.
Phone 3285.
are glad he Is able to be home again, four nighLs U.st week at the home Stevens Parent-Teachers' inerting
B. A. LY BARKER. Ftopr.
Farrell Anderson of Hastings was ot her brother in Kalamazoo.
' for Friday evening Were both post- .
HASTINGS • . - AUGHIOAK
thc Sunday guest ot Ills mother, i It h expected the Milo P. T. A-will poned due to the fiiled-in roads.
Girarantwd Trntt Fitting
Mrs. Vivian Anderson at the Dr. be at lhe schoolhous. next Friday | Representatives ot the Consumers wnrlil were: Pyrninlils of Egypt,
PRICE tor
Wedel home. In thc afternoon they evening.
' , Power Company of Baltic creek IPhanm uf Alexandria, Hanging Gar­
visited at thc Jacob Gless home in | Mr. and Mrs. N. H- Barber hove' have been In Jhh locality the past ,dens of Babylon, Temple of I Hana
Bowne.
rented the Nina Boyle house nt Milo 1 week in the interest of tree trim- ,m Ephesus, statue of Zeus by
Rev. Wheeler. Miss Ruth Wheeler, ‘ and will move there in the -near fu- 1 mlng.
Phhllns, Tomb of Mausolus nt Haltnnd Mrs Wm. MUhhr were Char-, ture. . i Patrons, on the by-roads of rural
and CoIomun of IthiHles
There Is No Substitute
toile visitors last week Tuesday
I Not many braved the cold
and I route three were not reached by lhe carnaaus,
'
i The local fire truck was called to! snow last Thursday to enjoy the I |»sUnan Thursday nnd Friday as !(statue of Apollo). Wonders of tho
for Life Insurance as:
Middle ages were: Coliseum at
thc A J. Novlskey home Wednesday , h. L. club at thc home ot Mrs. Os- the roads were not open.
noon when a chimney burned out. car Harrington when she nnd Mrs. I The Harold Martin bus
of the 1Home. Catacomb* at Alexandria.
Fortunately, no damage was done. | Lynn Lawrence werehostesses, but ‘ Barney Milb dbtrict which
trans- Gfeat
1
Wnll of Chinn. Stonehenge In
| "Rev. nnd Mrs D. Alex Holman a dcUlihtful time was rcjiortcd by 1 ports about
*'
* forty rural students
• •- •to 'England. Leaning Tower of Pisa,
will celebrate their golden wedding those who went for thc health &lt;loy Hastings high school daily fend re­ l'"ri'liiln Timer of Nankin, and
anniversary. Feb. 3. Hersey Con-1 program. Roll was .answered by turn were able to make all schedule the M&lt;&lt;«iue of St. Sophia at ConBODY CLASS INSTALLED
grcgational church, of which Mr. health hints. Mrs. Percy Jones sang trips Last week, as was Harold Hol­ atnntlnople. The telephone, radio,
llasbrMos Brake Lining
Holman is pastor, will honor them; two solos. The hostess introduced mes .and the students going lo Hat­ airplane, radium, antitoxins, specwith a dinner and program at 2.30 Mbs Ncuschaefer and Mbs Eagan tie Creek high school.
Sunday and the couple's Son. R -v.; Of the Kellogg Foundation who gave
Bert Holden, an aged resident,
■I Rex Hohnan. of First Congregation- | interesting talks on their work. A who lives by the Star schoolhouse generally considered the most won­
, al church of Owosso, will officiate at; delicious dinner was served. Tlie awoke Thursday morning at lour derful things of today.—Pathfinder
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
„ the celebration." This b from Mon- next meeting will be held Feb. 13 o'clock lo nnd his home on Ore. The Magazine.
* day night's press. The Holmans for- at thc home of Mrs. Hubert pel­ blaze started on the roof. The alarm
Phone 2637
Hastings
" merly resided in Freeport, where1 tenglll nnd the annual election of was given, but by the time help nrTunneis bored tn thc Boulder
। Rev. Holman served as pastor of the officers will take place
Congregational church.
i Mrs. W. C Schultz. Mrs E Quirk house.. Two small grandchildren Dam project are so large an a ver­
| Several car loads (ram Freeport ■ nnd Mrs. Harlan Scobey were guests were with Mr. Holden. He b now tigo tlvo story Ihium* could Im* moved
•, attended the annual meeting of thc 1 at a birthday dinner given by Mrs. staying with hb daughter. Mrs.
through them without touching ths
। tv
Woodland Mutual Fire--------------Insurance
1 Maurice Crookston in Hastings on
George Brunt.
roof or scraping the aides.
' Co. held at Woodland last week Friday in compliment to Mrs. Sco­
Born on Saturday night al Mr.
I Tuesday. In the election of a dl- bey. on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. O. C- Hewitt's home a nine
1
rector
to
fill
the
vacancy
caused
by
LIQUID - TABLETS HEADACHECrookston were hosts to a group of pound son. Mrs. Bertha Case, moth­
the death of Wm. H. Lind. Frank about twenty In honor of Mrs. Jen­ er of Mrs. Hewitt, h caring for them
SALVE . Now D..„
I.TIIHi..!..
। Hynes lacked only four votes of be­ nie Lyons birthday.
The name of Barbara Jean had been
, ing elected. C. N- Van Houten being
------selected.
chosen.
I
NORTHEAST RUTLAND.
1 ■ The Senior class of F- H- S. have' Greetings friends. Your old corSTATE ROAD.
(. selected as their class play. "Spookey respondent Is back on the Job and
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kennedy
i Tavern." a mystery play, and part-- will appreciate all news items you entertained their friends at a party j
Friday evening. Dancing was en­
' nave been assigned. Present plan* may be able to give.
arc to give the play the Utter part I Thr school bus from Middleville Joyed and a dainty lunch was served.
ol February.
was unable to return all pupib to All hnd a very pleasant evening.;
•’
——------------ *♦-*-------- --------| their homes one night last week, so About fifty attended.
HASTINGS MARKETS
,
Tlie Murray Ledger's idea of no the children were over-night guests
Mrs. Mabie Bennett spent Sunday
news Ls a postmasters' convention at the hotel In Middleville, so we with Mr. and Mrs. James Sothard
• Indorsing a National Administration, w ere Informed.
nnd Mrs. Janet Pettenglll.
■---------------------------------------------------------- Mr and Mrs. John Benedict enMr. and Mrs. Alfred Haywood
BAJacRtHTcr HOTicE.
tertnlned company from Lansing on have moved In to Mr». Mary O'CanSt\" ’(* o'*1!!'' tna,y
. Sunday.
nor'a new home.
" can’.'saatbrrn iHv’i'un—ta'.'lHnkrarter. Mrs Joe Matthews Ls entertaining
The girls who have to be In town
„; Fr»d strinsham. Rtnkrat-t x..
a company of ladies Wednesday each day are staying with friends
&lt; llllt &lt;1|/V1IANKS -'I lur'r, T,7d:X.,;j. complimentary to Mr*. Haael BeUon during this cold weather. Mbs La-1
vancne cotton wllh Her slslir. Mrs.
" *n°7iZ' 61k d.'.'ut J.Xra. IM*.
j
SOUTH BOW.NE.
• •LI Tr*-I Slnncham «•• »l»lv
•,!■ 1 Edwin Na&amp;h and mother of Clarks­ Harry Scobey; Mbs Re thal Newton'
with Mr. and Mrs Robert Newton;
ville were supper guests of Mr. and Mbs Majesty Becker, ‘with Mrs
Mrs. Will Pardee and daughter. Ruby Henney. tier sbter.
If you with trucking service call Hasting*
Marian. Thursday evening.
Not much news as every one Is I
Phone 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.
Mr. and Mrs. Forest Slater of •laying home by the fire these cold'
i«t »r tn Muir called on her parents. Elmer days.
rt'PrMtwr.
Shaf
f«L
and
on
Roy
Setae
and
fam,
Bn,
Feeder Calves and Milch Cows at all times.
!.
“y on Sunday.
EAST WALL LAKE
...
• wMu
•n.i ir&gt;n.Mrs. Mattle Mishler accompanied
AND VICINITY. X’.'- Lt*-, e ,
*&gt; er i-rli Mlsg wheeler of Freeport to CharMr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler and '
'
n. m.tr.
lone last Tuesday.
t two children accompanied by Mr -«»»»..' »t.»o e«i
Uakrapur.l Mrs. Mary Hatton, who has been and Mra. Leon Benedict and son
In bed for several months, keeps •pent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
r.nd»HASTINGS BRANCH
about the same.
: Burdette Lyttle ot Battle Creek.
Can™.
•••!.
._
. ,
•
,
lt»«hnr- F«tn«r. ■ nt«&lt;nap«r prlnla
•etiraS (ar
.. --------- — ■• • *
-------Mrs. Fargo went to Delton lut 0,1 •**•- ••-•O.
Does a fish expect to get something an&lt;i &lt;ircai*t»&lt;i in Uu em&gt;nty.
tfdShra hel^C,re tor
E^-Am^’biw.
to eat when It bites at a spoonhook.
mawt cimmt.
•&lt;
. ur b it unlyto gratify its curiosity! j' MrtJrSTf^iik. Krrtit«r rfmtau.'
WOULD YOU LIKE A. GOOD
Paying Steady Job? 1 want tn
hire a man immediately. Paid

NEATSLENE
HARNESS
OIL

Hamess &amp; Shoe Repair Shop

Farmers, Attention!

NEW AND USED
AUTO PARTS

JERRY ANDRUS

666

COLDS

FEVER

Dead Stock Removed!

THERESA HOST

IN TODAY'S ADS.

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,
Sheep, Lambs and Cattle

CARDS of THANKS

Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock-Yards at Hastings,
Every Monday.

GRANGE PROGRAMS

Michigan Livestock Exchange

I

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

Thursday, January 30, 1936

ANNUAL MEETING
OF RED

17263481

FARMERS SHOULD

!*«■ t’”»*

PART TW
'

PRIZES LETTER

rocu, InecliDle Kggw.
Run i. An egg whose Interior I
VERY H
------------- I quality Is below the minimum re- ‘
Act 91, Public Acts of 1935, fquirement* for Grade C thall be
Enjoyable Program to Fol-1
Written by the . Lati
_
tlwnMl to
tn be
I— Inedible
Inedibleand
end unfit
nn’Rl for
fnr
। ,deemed
,
Governs Sale of Un •
George for Ameri
low Dinner and Buai.
&gt; human food, and illegal for sale or
On Thursday night. Jan. 23. the
(possession-for sate a* provided In
bonded Eggs
Soldiers
nesa Senion PAUL
Leo A. Miner Pool held a slag party
BROWN, REGIONAL
I Act No. 193. P. A. 1KK». &lt;Mlchlgan's
TWO HUNDRED ENJOY THE
1
Idolatry of Self-Doilrvctioo.
in their hall. Beside* about forty
Mr*.
Leo Herrington 1*
The annual meeting of the Barry
! Our Urrnrr r«&lt;kn will be
Qcnenu
,
County Red Cross Chapter will be , DIRECTOR, NATL. PARK
of their own members, there were proud possessor of a letter of
ANT/\ MONICA, CALIF.
MEETING OF LEOION
prcinHy munaud In l»r rule, and
A1, e|re
a ,,„„n clol
held on Friday evening of this week .
SERVICE EXPLAINS
; regulations governing the grades or ' blood on Hie surface of the yolk or | the ritual team and other members come written by tha lata
—Once upon a time there
AND AUXILIARY
from the Harold Payette Post of
at lhe American Legion rooms, the
'
quality for unbonded eggs sold in | floating in the white, if not mixed Battle Creek present. Shortly after George V Of England. The tetter
was a strange race that, while
Auxiliary serving the dinner al 6:30..-.' 71..
in some ways quite civilized, MUSIC BY SCOUT
iUw auir ol Mlrhuun. Til.,, ruta
I the- visitors arrived, we heard the
The officers, directors and Red Cra** । THREE DEVELOPMENTS
I
.
.
....
,
account be deemed to be Inedible,
were made and e«tablLih«l under
An
^uming small particle*
yet worshiped a. murderous
lean troop* during lhe World war.
Reports of lhe year's work will be
WILL HAVE BUILDINGS
HARMONICA BAND
Of Act&lt;*.V Pub
AcU ot foreign material, such as pieces lined up old army fashion and enand a monstrous god.
given, officers elected and a short ‘
------------of 1935, and are as follows:
oI lSs3ue known a* "meat spots." ' Joyed a very good feed.
Now this god demanded hu­ State Senator Miller Dunckel program te planned.
The visiting team held the chair*
.Other Grounds to Be Pre­ All eggs unbroken and in the shell, gl,all not on that account be deemed
nan sacrifice. He bad high prtMts
I during the regular business meeting per having the official insignia ol
when sold or offered for sale for to bc inedible
the House of Windsor. A copy of lhe
pared lor Touriat. Who
Gave Splendid Talk at
who ministered to tils Images; he
human consumption, shall be sold
An cgK staining a small clot of I and also Initiated a class of eight letter follows:
calls for assistance and ha* renMake
had countless devo­
-- Short Stay
■&gt;
rJ' °A”ed for sale on the basis of blood as above described, or small member* in a solemn way that wa*
Allegan Sunday
April, 191*.
financial help ■ According
tees who traveled i Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Sayles. Mr. dcred considerable
According to
to an
an interview
pubfollow ing grows,
grades, ine
the minimum
minimum panicles
ponicles of
of foreign
foreign material,
material, such
such “a real pleasure to witness. Oscar
----------interview pubnnMirr, ne the
also.
।
„
.
,
.
..
.
.
requirements
.
----of
...
which
are:
rcoutrementx
of
niece*
which
of
are:
ti«*ue
mown
..
n-i~
“
meat
....
Brad&gt;.
the
visiting
chaplain.gave
u*
ooicuers or me unitea State*.&lt;n*
about, gathering In . and Mrs. Don Foreman and T. S K.
---------- -----------------------llshed in the Batt.e Creek Moon-, Fancy
gheU clfan an(J » pw of tl. u kno m as nwat. an eBrnejt u|k on lhe obligation, people of tlie Brttteh Isles welcome
the victims to feed j Rcld represented lhe Laurence J.
Journal
with
Paul
Brown,
regional
,
0U
nd;
air-cell
1-8
inch
tn
depth
or
.
uVof
essold
under
tttedMiMwi
whBl
“
really
meanl
10
urgln&lt;
u
*
'
2°
“
.^°
way
to
take
your stand
his craving*. The 1 Bauer Post No. 45. American Legion
' I director of the National Park Serv- less, localized and regular, yolk not
"^ncy Grade "Grade A" a11 not t0 for«*1 11 but Ute
11 b*aW!l
"'!“**
n.&lt;,Uofu
lhe care­ i apd Auxiliary at the Fourth District
less, the aged dod­ meeting held al Allegan on Sunday.
’-Tn, z;
.h-TriJ’IZ" 8110 talks from other members on great battle for human freedom.
w
and clear; candling shall show no in
About
two
hundred
enjoyed
thc
(there
will
be
a
considerable
develop
­
derer and the un­
visible development of Hie germ.
,
ment this year In lhe Yankee
wary child—these splendid dinner and the general pro­
Grade A. Siicll clean and sound
I Springs park. When the work Is air-cell 1-4 Inch in depth or lew. Jowere lhe favorite . gram which followed. Selections by
“.u i
x »
------------- completed. Mr.
I completed.
Brown statea
Mr. Brown
mat stated nnri
that1t
„ ... nhr
.7. . ‘
material
offspring*. Yet the , six members of the Boy Scout Har- PRESIDENT
L. W. SUNDAY there &gt;111 b. compIHr Keommoda- "'S. tS,,
ihd it." can- 7
™
“•»&gt;'
' monies band from Sturgis were en­
. i repaid for our inconvenience by lhe I your mission.
collectors spared
Joyed, some of the music being dedi­
SPOKE
AT
ANNUAL
IN.
|j
“
"
&gt;"
J
1
"
™
pleasure
and
instructions
ytc.
re-1
George,
R. I.
none nt all, neither ' rated to Ted Reid, who always leads
I ceived through our friends and com- r
“T------SURANCE MEETING
There will
will be
be two
two organized
organized camps
£e
Qnd „und. LARGE MAJORITY SHOW
IrvinS. Cobb
»•'« strong nor the thc singing at these district con­
There
camps
. , rades from Battle Creek.
1 Justice Andrew Matthew* has Um
Grade B. Shell clean and sound;
halt nor the help­ ' ventions.
NORMAL PROGRESS. I
located in thc area centering around air-cell 3-8 inch in depth or leas.
To All World War Veterans—Leo J necessary blanks for application tor
In county Schpol Commissioner
less. Often, In their madness, they I Among lhe guests introduced were
। Gun lake, which will have accom- ' localized, may be slightly tremuA Miller Post Veterrfu of Foreign soldier*' bonus which hu been votMaude Smith'.* January letter to
destroyed one soother. Each year Mrs Bernice Clark ot South Haven, BELIEVES IN “LIVE
modatlons for 150 person* each, inWar* will furnish and help you fill ed for tho*e who served tn Um
the cruel tolly mounted—so many dfklricl commit ire woman; Mrs. Eu­
out your bonus blanks u soon u the World war. He will be glad to make
thousands dead, so many hundreds nice Henlz of South Haven, district
blanks arrive. If and when the pro-1 out lhe necessary papers *o that
Do. Initmcts
In.tn.ct. Iti
It. sewage disposal.
in
* V
«»”1'1"1
of thousands crippled and broken. secretary; Mrs. H Calkins of Stur­ Windstorm Go.
posed bill becomes a law. Watch the those enUlled to the bonus may
receive
thc
been
paper* for further detalL*.-Pub- ----“
“ bonds which **have
— *------to Deal
Deal Fairly
Fairly
,
I **&lt;
These curious people lived In a gis; Mrs. Rose Arnold of Plainwell
Agents to
voted to them.
Competitor.
! _ a .bird c.mp. » b.
.. inc
I
place called America, and lhe god district ch^jlain; Mrs. Huff, presi­
lidty Chrm. V. of F. W.
dent of the Allegan Auxiliary; Mrs.
With
Competitors
I
A
third
camp,
to
be
known
a.
the
t
’
te
r^m^enta'fo?
Fan^
|
they worshiped was calMhl S(*eed.
Florence Holland. Three Rivers;
The fortieth annual convention of ,Fan’lly, c*l’ln development, will also Gratje Grade A. or Grade B
■ 41 two years retarded. 11 three
I years retarded and 3 are four years JANE WITHERS DANCES,
Mrs. Ethel Foreman, Hastings, al­ the National Association of 'Mutual1 ** included in the •ee*j
retarded. or
Of me
the 750
7M gu-1^541
glrH^Ml show
show
Candling.
:! retaroea.
Ths World-Problem-Solvsrs.
ternate district commitleewoman; Insurance Companies was held In &gt;'»*
“8 J*t
definitely lo- |
M year SINGS IN “PADDY O’DAY"
'M CONSTANTLY running Into Mrs. Thelma Webster. Niles, past Des Moines. Iowa, last October 7 to «i*d. The Family camp will also ' Classification of Individual Egg*. 1 normal progress. 45 afe~one
In
the
grading
of
any
lot
of
egg*,
advanced and 134 are one year re­
district
committecwoman;
State
10 inclusive. The Michigan Afutual accommodate
IM
’?Jh'&lt;
somebody who knows exactly
It's a bundle ot fun. express from
classification
shall
be
effected
terded.
23
are
two
years
retarded
Insurance
ctompany. sleeping and dining facilltlM. Mr.
Ireland, that brings Jane Withers
what's wrong wllh the world and Senator Frank R. Moder. Fennville; Windstorm
through visual examination of the and 7 are three years retarded,
By Ruth Barton
back to the screen again as the
what ought to be done about It. Representative Arthur U. Odell of with almost *400.000,000 Insurance. Brown stated,
that enough land has been shell to determine IL* cleanliness I Two schools In the county had leading player of the new Fox Joy
but can't make up Ida mind wheth­ Allegan; Tom Bochan. district com­ was one of the largest companies
mander; Verne Adams, national represented at the gathering. L. W.1 opUoned to insure the success o and by thc process known os "can- j perfect attendance records for Dc- picture. “Paddy O'Day" which is
er to have bls eggs fried uu one
-nd overcome the hidden fears
committeeman; Arthur Clark. South Sunday, president of the Windstorm ।
project, construction work and dllng” to determine size and condl- cember—the Brown school in Cari­ coming to the Strand Theater. Feb.
side or turned over.
~ with IB enrolled. Mrs.
which afflict all of us more or
Haven, department vice-commander, Company was called on for a talk , development of the grounds will be llon of the air-cell, condition of the 'ton ' township
2 and 4.
At lunch today, 1 encountered one and several others, who are active on salesmanship. His remarks on •' pushed “
so M
that
as
many
of "
tlw
fa‘­ yolk, white and germ, and condi­ Evelyn Short teacher, and the Pratt
’"‘ “
* "
”nv nt
w ,a
Singing, dancing, playing and en­
tion and soundness of the shell.
school. 8 enrolled. In Hastings town­
An analyst* of our handwrit­
gentleman who could diagnose all | In Legion nnd Auxiliary activities.
cilities
os
possible
will
be
available
countering
the
most
thrilling
adventhat topic are given In full in the 1
Tolerances.
ship. Miss Ethel Fisher, teacher.
ing by graphology reveals the
our political and economic Illa—Just । Department Vice-Commander Ar- convention proceedings which have for the coming summer season
I tures in her film career, little Jane
On account of the unavoidable
presence of inner fear* and
In addition to the organized
like that!—anil name tbe remedies, th nr Clark told of conditions at the Just been published in book form
enacts the role of a cunning colleen,
changes
in
eggs
after
candling
and
fresh from Erin who seeks a home
too. In fact he did name quite a Soldiers' Home in Grand Rapids and . We believe our readers will be glad 'camp nnd the family cabin develop­ before reaching the consumer, the MERCHANTS GIVE
consequent failure in our enfew while I wn* looking after the the needs of the Home. He stated to see what Mr. Sunday had to say ment. ample provision will be made following tolerances ere hereby csAWARDS ADVERTISED in Manliattan.
for inosc
lor
those who
wno conic
come to
io "spend
njiciia me
the , , . ■ ,
“
,
The supporting cast of the new
check. And yet 1 know for a posi­ that there nre but five Civil war on that subject. It will give them day"
«t ihu park. Ademale lacltl-1
O'"1'- ar:‘d'
fallh.
picture is strong In celebrities. In­
tive fuel that Ills wife won't tei veteran* nnd a few Spanish-Ameri- an insight Into his views in pro- ties for parking areas for c-ars will •A
Hazel
Vivian
Kidder
is
the
9radc B.
I can war veteran* housed at thc j
cluding pinky Tomlin, composer of
him pick out hl* own neck Iles an&lt;l i Home, lhe remainder, about 200. be-1 mot Ing the sale of windstorm In­ be available when the development I Wot ,,,uri' Unui 10 per cent of a
Nuinu of First Baby------'the song hits. "'Hie Object of My
he can't Im* trusted to cross the Ing World war veterans. Reading surance in thL* state, in which his te completed, in addition there will B‘ve" ,ot of
•"«}' »* below the,
Faith — considered psychologi­
Affection"
and
"What's
the
Reas
­
Bom in 1936
street by himself, owing to nnt be­ material, book* and magazine*, company In recent years has been so be a picnic area equipped with ta- . requirements for the designated
cally is an altitude or feeling at
on;" Rita canslno. talented dancer
successful. Wt quote from the of­ ble*. benches, waler cupply. outdoor ‘
On Saturday Henry Kidder of
providing such eggs meet the
the Individual toward life. Faith
ing able to decide off hand which would be gratefully received as but
who made her film debut in "Dante's
ficial proceeding*. Mr. Sunday said:
automobile lie prefer* lo be hit by. six magazines are taken for lhe . "Salesmanship has everything lo fireplaces and other features. A requirements for thc next lower Irving wa* in the city to claim the Inferno;" Jane Durwell and George
awards given to hL* tiny daughter.
of security giving poise and
Home, which Is a pitifully small ' do with the success or failure of any camping ground will also be made krade.
Givot. radio's Greek ambassador.
Shell Treated Eggs.
Hazel Vivian—the first 1936 baby in
surance in action.
number for so many people. Mr.; business. Including the insurance available for those who plan to
The Pining of Kipling.
Another thing the Legislature for­
spend a week end and bring their 1 Eggs preserved er protected by Barry county.
wenty-three year* ago. i Clark suggested getting up a petition j business. Advertising has a rightful
treating the shell with oil or any,
Mr. Kidder wa* d-lighted with the got was w
should strive for faith.
I asking lhe State Administrative [
to make It unlawful &gt;Ha
for banown camp equipment.
visited Rudyard Kipling at hl* Board to appropriate more money ‘ place in the selling of goods or
Mr. Brown stated that one of the other substance may be sold under articles given him for U»e baby by lam aUtos to have horns like buses,
services.
The
service
which
we
as-ins
borne In Sussex. Gracious In his for the running expenses of lhe'
**»
■
unique features of the Yankee any of the various grades applicable several of the merchants of Hashospitality, he nevertheless wo* al­ Home so that another capable doc- ■ surance men are selling Is compen­ Springs development work will be Uwreto. but they must be designated tings, and was aUo pleased with the ' Who's Who doesn't cirtint now.
ready allowing signs of t^e mania tor could be employed and paid an sation for looses our customer may that all the work will be done by as "Shell-Treated'' in addition to bank account which was started for Tlie real distinction Ls to gel your
n Lie.
suffer In case a windstorm damages
the baby.
| picture in lhe magazine ads."
for seclusion, which, following the adequate salary to Insure his con- j or destroys his property. If he local relief labor, whereas In many the grade designation.
death of til* only non In lhe World tinued service The Posts and Units escapes such a loss, his cornpensa- 1of lhe other similar park develop­
war. mads ut him an eulreoche-l adopted resolutions to this .effect In; tlon u lhe security he feels tn case ment project* In other part* nf the
their business sessions
recluse.
he did suffer such.loss.
1state and country, much of the work
Thc Allegan Post was compll-| Common law and common sense has been done by the CCC A plan
He shunned people; he ahunned mented for having 152 per cent of i both tell u* that what we sell should _now under consideration by the
service calls for the establish­
tilings; iiiunned Hie |&gt;agi‘niitry of their membership quota. The Fourth not be misrepresented nor overstat- park
'
life He developed an active dis­ District Is one point ahead ot the ed. People are fed up on high pres­ ment of work camps In thc areas
like for .American*—Hie people Second Dial- In lhe membership sure talk and dishonorable methods to be manned by relief workers and
Speaking for lhe Company 1 repre­ under the technical supervision of
whom he once loved aril Who con­ drive.
State Senator Miller Dunckel.
lhe park supervisor, he said.
stituted perhaps Iris moat loyal fol­ Three Rivers. In the Sixth district. ■ sent, we instruct every agent to sell
Upon the completion of the de­
lowing. He became that most la­ was the guest speaker By request he I what we have to offer on Rs honest velopment the project will be turned
mentable of flgures'^mong literary gave thc same talk that he gave at merits, and to promise no benefits over to the state of Michigan, and
that
will
not
actually
be
realized.
We
folk—the spot marked "II," denot­ Niles on Armistice Day. He used the
especially Impress that we want the will be administered by the park
ing where a quenched genius ws* preamble to the Legion constitution [ selling done fairly and honorably. division of the State Department
last seen.
as the basis for his splendid address, Fairness to our competitors Ls espe- of Conservation, with federal agen­
Moat of us who write are but as- explaining and analyzing it In a clally stressed In our Instructions cies serving only In an advisory ca­
almllators and assemblers.
Here fine and comprehensive manner. He , lo our agents. We want to treat ev­ pacity. The facilities of the park
was a real creator, nnd real crea­ said that the American people are ery competitor in a wgy that will will be made available to those who
opposed lo war but more opposed to never give us any regret or discom­ formerly had no recreational oppor­
tors don't happen often. Hla Jungle
F. H. A. LOANS
tunities. An appeal will be made
lhe agencies within and without our j
books nnd hla barrack-room bal­ country that are constantly trying fort when we meet him face to face to social and charitable organiza­
lads; hla Mulvaney and hl* Kim— to destroy our nationalism and at gatherings like this. Wc should do tions to co-operate not only in prep­
Wc ore in position
our selling so we can look our com- '
these will live while men read Eng­ Americanism.
pc 11 tors squarely in the eye. with 1aration of recreation programs but
lish and speak IL
May that be
to make mortgage
Past Commander award.* were' no mean feelings Inside of us. We in organizing groups for residence
balm to bla passing soul!
presented to eleven of the fourteen , want to feel comfortable ourselves. 1
loans on improved
Other points1' tn the development
men who had served as command- ’ and want our competitor to feel so
er* of the Fourth District. One of when we meet him around the table plan of the park service. Mr. Brown
Acting far th* Movies.
REAL ESTATE.
said, called for the construction of
UT here on this lol. we’re fin­ the men has passed on and two were or anywhere else. There Ls nothing ;foot trails for hikers, as well as pro­
unable to be present.
'
equal, in real satisfaction, to play­
ishing up the Ont moving pic­
At the Legion business meeting.) Ing thelgame of life "on the level vision for water recreation facilities
ture In which Ye Scribe ha* had a several special Hems of business I
along the shores of Gun lake.
real chance to give hl* all to art. The were discussed. Including member- &gt; and on the square," and there Is no
valid reason why that cannot be.
picture'* to be called "Everybody'* ship, organization of the Sons of th* Why should it not be done in selling STATE MEETING OF
COUNTY' TREASURERS.
Old Man"—that I*. unless tbe pro­ Legion, adoption of resolutions, etc. Insurance?
There will be held at the Hotel
ducers change their minds at the At Benton Harbor a strong Post of
In our advertising campaigns we
last minute, n* la customary, and Sons of lhe Legion has been or­ try. lo carry out the same ideas as in Olds In Lansing, on January 31. a
meeting ot thc county treasurers of,
re-title It "Tho Hollo Boys In an ganized. Seventeen of the 33 Posts selling insurance. Nothing Is to be this'state. Many county treasurers,
of the district were represented at gained by misleading claims or
Igloo" or something.
like Mr. Maus, the county treasurer
statement*. Our business te largely of this county, have never had the
None of ua seemed to fee) It while thr business meeting
Mrs Thelma Webster, past com­ with the farmers of our state. We
experience of a state tax sale with­
wo were shooting scenes, but If ev­
mitteewoman. presented a gavel bell
The roots of this Bank are planted in the ground. Fifty years ago the
erybody Is a* tired as lhe old man to lhe St. Joseph Unit tor the larg­ try to give them helpful Information in their counties, such as will be
in our advertising, of course, the put on in every county in Michigan
Is. they won't have to rock anybody est percentage of Increase over their
idea back of it te to sell windstorm on the 5th of May next. There have
founders of this Bank settled in a community where farming was the
to Bleep. The head cameraman goes membersliip quota. The Niles Unit Insurance. But we alm to state facta
been
changes
in
the
laws
governing
on a rest cure soon, and the direc­ received an initiation lamp for hav­ in all our advertising. In our Judg­
tax sales. This state gathering will
principal industry. Through half a century we have had the privilege of
tor's wife Just telephoned that she's ing thr largest number of points for ment the best medium to reach the
afford county treasurers the op;x)ra little bit worried about him—he community service and Unit ac­ farmer Is through his local news­ tunlty to get direct information
serving farmers in and around Barry county, helping them to get started,
keeps hearing brass bands playing, tivities. The date of the Birthday paper. which he reads as he does no from the state auditor general, os
party
for
the
Otter
Lake
Billet
ts
other paper the mailman brings well as from thc attorney general
and a while ago he ran out and
helping them overvUght spots and protecting their interests in pros­
tried to stop a runaway horse that February 16 and for the Legion hos­ him. Every advertiser should choose ,of Michigan. In reference to these
pital is March 11. Announcemei.. the best medium he can find for
wasn't there.
sales. Other matters will also be
waa made of lhe recent gift of *25,- reaching the fellow he wants to in­
perity. This Bank has in the past and will continue in the future to have
brought up that will be important
000.000 by Senator James couzens fluence, and not advertise something for county treasurers to know. Mr.
Tsltooed Lsdist.
for Children's Aid WO»k, Ln Mich­ lie cannot do.
Maus Is planning to attend this
the interest of the farmer at heart.
N A theatrical paper I read that igan. He has been of greit assist­
Now somebody might say "Do you meeting.
one of the tnoit copiously Illus­ ance at the Billet. In providing den­ practice what you preach?" Will say
trated tattooed ladles In the business tal clinics, hospitalization for the
WINTER NIGHT.
As a Farmer must plant lhe seed to make it increase, so, too, the Banker
children
and
other
activities
that'
Is fixing to be divorced from a hus­
reading of lhe policy, and to live Hie north wind beau
band who'* also of the sideshowing mean much to the health and hap­ up to our advertisements that we On our stout oak door.
must re-invest the money placed in his care. It is his duty to so invest
profession. I remember the Isdy , pines* of those entrusted to the care put out. so the policyholder has no And drives at the window-pane;
comeback on what we advertise. The sky Is dark with a stinging sleet.
well, sitting on a platform sod, In of lhe Billet.
that the money intrusted to him will produce an increase and at the same
response to requests, slowly turn­ I Mrs. Foreman was named on the Sure, the company turns its agents That at noon was Ice-cold rain.
I
courtesies
committee
and
Mrs.
E.
F.
loose
out
In
the
field,
and
what
they
Those
will
be
coming,
tired
and
cold.
ing around so the audience could
I Sayles was a member of the special say In order to get this insurance, Pressing home through thc storm
time be available lo the depositor whenever he may nqed it. Tlie Farm­
see what she had to aay on tbe
resolutions committee.
nobody knows unUl later. But after To grateful shelter, and food, and
other aide.
Cass county will entertain the* investigating thesq things we always
rest.
er’s interest is our interest.., ■.. We invite you to come in and talk over
Well, every man to hie taste, but next convention.
find that II Is tlie agent hlnuelf who I must have thc house all warm,
I've always figured life would be
has said more than he should in or­ And light the candles.
ELECTED OFFICERS.
kind of fascinating wllh a tattooed
your problems with us.
der to get the business and walk And brush the hearth.
The Hickory Comers Telephone
lady for a helpmate. Any time you
And put on a bright red dress!
got tired of talking, you could ask Company reeeiny held iu annual never been Instructed by~the officers —Helen Hixon, in Unity Weekly.
ber to let you look at tbe pictures. meeting. They selected as their of­ or the office U&gt; say and do things
ficers the following: President, El- that they did. and it Is hard to get TWO LOCAL BOYS
wyn Butler; vice-president. Banford the goods on these fellows, as they
ON HONOR ROLL.
Namesake* of Heroes.
Willison; secretary, Victor Jones;
Two Hastings boys are on the fall
T’S getting ao you can tell when treasurer. Alfred Gainder. In addi­ have made a little profit by it at
the time, and the other fellow feels honor roll at Michigan State college.
twenty-one years have passed tion to the officer* the following
as if he has profited by IL too. and East Lansing, according to a recent
since some great national figur*— director* were named: Morse Back­
they always try to put the blame announcement. They are John N.
■ president, or maybe a military us. Otis Lawrence, Charles Lech- on someone else. But we always
Gardner, junior In Applied Science,
hero—was at the peak of bla popu-, Jeilner and William DePriester
and John Erway, sophomore In the
Urtty. It's when a lot of Ma name­
Clever girls are said to know too and let live, and be fair with pur same division. They arc among the
sakes get too old for the reform
competitor*
336 students &gt;of high scholastic
much U&gt; gat married. The number of
school ond sre Just the right sge
I
have
tried
In
this
plain
and
di
­
standing.
V
bachelors around indicates that
for the penitentiary. Once in a there are some clever men. too.
rect way to give you. as I was asked
Prof. P. C. Haye* has discovered a
to do, ray ideas about salesmanship
while one of the crop goes Into the
ministry, but apparently pot enough
The next problem to worry tbe and advertising In lhe Insurance deserted city In Mexico. *Hic people
of them to make much difference. country Is what the sweet girl grad­ business, and thank you for your probably paid the taxes a* long as
they could, and then moved.
time.
uate will wear.

V.OfF. W. Sutg
Party On Jan. 23

KNOW REGULATIONS

DEVELOPMENT

S

07961090

pi rPMHiPiiin^-c"*-m

%21’aas

SALESMANSHIP

FAITH

I

A Modern Definition

T

O

YOUR BANKER IS A FARMER

I

I

|g|

HASTINGS CITY BANK

TELEPHONE Jios

,

IRVIN a. COB*.

♦

HASTINGS • MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS HANNER. THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1930

FAOETEN

11 HAS SOUVENIR OF ENG­
that wm put on by the Kalamazoo
I but they’ll be busy this week play-' and Stanley Lyons were dangerous all children have passed
LAND’S EDWARD VII. I U. S. CIVIL SERVICE
Stove Works far its employees, sales­
ing Galesburg and Woodland The 'place* threats at all times, and kept, 6. Stay out of the road and do not
EXAMINATIONS men, and branch and division man­
—I Mrs- C. A- Jacobaon of South I
,
IM
Wtwhina hard for
far these U
lhe
leader a on the • Jump.'
lumn.' Jack Dek- direct traffic,
traffic.
.
“
** working
m leaders
fBmw and wo wish them the teal of ker.
6- Keep
agers About 600 were In attendance.
«... Grand Rapid*
— r—champwn.
-------- ------- was
—
—chi
children at cross walks, — ,, r„,.
] Hanover street, ha* brought to our
Rax Sheathalr
pent the week
a guest star of the day After tlie until they can cross safely.
,
] office an interesting souvenir con­ Vacanoiea in Poiitioni of
.
T. K. Wins Eight Straight.
. race* were over, lie and Dave Smyth
7. Wear my belt nt all times when I The Hastings Women’s Club held netted with lhe death of King Ed­
end with his people in Lansing.
;The
inc Tt- K.
K- quintet continued
conunuea its
ns &gt;
Substitute Carrier and
_____
showed the younger group different on duty
iu meeting of January 34th in the|u-ard vil. the father of the late
The inland Lukes Garden Club
Skating
Tournament.
winnlnr wavs Prlrtav nluht hv rl*- :‘ M&gt;ny
will .hold their regular meeting
Dravea severe method*
meuious of
oi starting
xtarnug a
n race and
unu also
nuu
o Return
nctut.i
Many spectators braved
8
my Safety
Patrol • Masonic room. The program was {King George, and grandfather of i
P. 0. Clerk
laaung Lake Odessa 32-12. Tlie boys, wlnlr
------„ •------------------to watch
•-•- lhe
--------------contest- a- few
•— tricks -•
ot thc game.
—Sunday
.«—«. equipment to tIlc teacher uI lhe end jm charge of the Applied Education I the new reigning monarch of Eng­
Tuesday evening. February 11 In lhe
The United Statu Civil Service church basement, beginning With a
really 'Went to Town
In the first ants Jn mimiiviu
Middleville
first ----------------------Winter -spectators--------exposed
to of school year.
committee. Mrs. J. P. Mohler pre- j ianlj. King Edward VIII.
’STL,?,.
.-,’s —
- -themselves
—......- —:
Commission announces an open
, 10 pJ&gt;lnU . ,Qr* sports Day. In the Junior class many more spills, thrills and chills.
------------siding. The theme for the after-1 it
fl 1-3 bv
’*— competitive examination for the po­ co-operative supper al 6:30 o’clock
It u
U a *mail
small 6
by 8 in. —
replica,
, ,
h,d ?.CLlMnC&lt;! 10
' event*, the boys who competed in
Caledonia
and
Hastings
Indeprompt. A speaker. Mr. Krone, from
..,
New Addition.
noon was ''Changes in Our Educa- of the special edition issued by the
sitions of substitute clerk and sub­
startod. Hauser was high scorer
----- were;
— ouuny i^e. pendent
—...... hockey
u_.. team*
--------- provided
------T-h” with 1 ।
°"‘uru“----&gt; ‘ races
a
The contract for the addition to[tlo»al World."
Hamilton. Ont., spectator. May 30. stitute city carrier for the Hastings Lansing will talk on arranging bou­
15 points to his credit. Jnrt
Thc
quet*, perennials and annuals. The
' Clement*
Marchlnlak.
Carlton hotly contested game In whichthe T K school has been let to E | Mrs. J. P. Mohler Introduced D.
won the game handily and were' Smith. Pat Reynold*. Bob-OlHette. Donla emerged *the victor 4 to A Rekkcrlng. Who was the contractor a VnnBusklrk. superintendent of 1910. the day of King Edward's fu­ post office.' Applicants will be eli­ program will be In charge of Mrs.
neral
obsequies
In
London,
which
gible
for
appointment
only
in
the
never in serious trouble. Their next jack r-haax
alrltuv French.
Prinrh Arlle
Aril* ' Wrtlin«r
Halt* etarrifa
,l.H original
r-i..i..«i school.
—
Hasting* School* lllld recently
Chase. Sidney
Wenger. Hair
Hale *r,H
and th*
the Cl
Goalie
aarrtfa for tlie
was observed as a day of mourning office for which the examination is Blanche Richards and Mrs. Edith
game is with Galesburg there and ' Bixler and Conrad Beeler.
Barnes, with Mrs. Bertha Bush as
*-•»—. follow­
for Caledonia -------Immediately
„
honored by the Michigan Education tteuout Ite Bruun .rapUe
'held.
From the eligible* resulting
Friday night they take on Wood-; At the end of the first day’s rac­ ing thc hockey game the second
Hot lunch.
Association as it* president. Mr.
Tire piper record. IMl -over two Itrom U.U ntenlniUon. It U eipeet- hostess. Members please notice the
change In the meeting as outlined
ing. Carlton Smith led the younger day's radea-began.
Feb.
3
—
Salmon
Soup
,d w maM
, certification
«,un„u«, p,
VanBuskirk announced that he million people wltneued Ite tuner.l ed
make
to Bu
fill ex­
need some support at this game, so 1 lads with a total of 60 point* by virThe intermediates skated a bril­
.
------—
—
—
-----—
moa
*
istlng
and
future
vacancies
in
thc
Lervone^nvlted
**
Feb. 4—Creamed peas and pota- j would give reasons for the changes, procession, which was thc ir~let’s give it to them.
lue of wins in the 440 yd. dash and liant 440 yard dash with While
rather than the specific changes mwnUlttM inn ImpmUn fumnl
ol mtellUte eterk and
Do.Ur nV. I
Mrs. ixon
Leon Doster
Doster gave
gave aa
. the one mile race. The Inlerme- leading Cline and Lepper acres ■ the
the world has ever aeen.
Istitute carrier and occasionally no- .. Mr and Mrs.
I that had been made. He said:
It
alw
contains
an
account
of
the
o
“
regLb^cl^k^S
XuUr
!
tUn
™
r
TOe T. xiSli won itelr ..«»’ dn.li elu. lor bo&gt;. ««. jhoUy eon- finish line in thc mile event White
j
"Our progress up to date has been
FVb 6—Noodle soup.
blrthdBy The
wllh Uir Odem b, Ite KOT, ot J““d
Jte 220 &gt;* again bested the field followed by
Feb. 7—Macnronl an&lt;L4hecse.
.
largely made
because we believed memorial services carried out in. j carrier Almost Invariably appoint- mcr ? fa\hcIA
Ivr nf
.... Hot lunch will be prepared by in a democratic individualism in all Hamilton
»-U. A niter Brody some «„ dooh woo 0 nly ond tuck otto.r wUli Cline and Kelley. The final race for
Hamilton, Irrr.n^-I
irrespective
of rlrnnmlna.
denomina­ menu are r______________________ 9UO1U included the honored One. Mr.
The
p»,cu
- --------- , ”“»« ““ ■*»- ‘hc tnjfr'ncdiates was a 2 mile B Swill. K White,” s Granger '| phases of living. Now there arc defiplayed uy
by uovn
both team*,
uim.. ancr
Aller .u*...,
loBnk --«“ Un"
tion.
tions and promotions are made to
1....jgames?
...om.o one
White
for first nosltlnn
In thefor1-2
two
to Hudsonville
and White
first position. In lhe 1-2 Jaunt. Kelley Jumped out into a big
t;..- FH .hman- Dome Economics nlte trends toward socialization in
Mrs.
Emma Evans _________
has a copy
of regular positions according to sen­ Vern Quick and family of Banfleld,
_________________
„ —
one lo Hastings, the team has re-! mlle White was the cream of the lend at the start of the race mid rla.-j, went on n trip to Grand Rap- U
&gt;c »win
me me
■
the
field v»
of «xvnvp,iva.
eeonofnlcs. v&lt;ptvr
Under the
the ium»
Ionia or».u»&gt;
sentinel with
an account iority of appointment. Substitutes Mr. and Mrs, M B. Norwood, and
gained Its stride and is once more' fic'd- Totals for intermediate points held It until the flhal stages of Hie id.. Inst week to visit some furniture -------pressure
of demands
more
--------------------J- 'for
---------”» snt«"•- 1 of Queen Victoria's
Victoria's death, which are required to be available for duty Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams and
i.
' faiiiM*found
Un,lt«While
t.nHihn
with with
An nnlnta
rsiri. race
n-hnnwhen
mil fBill Lepper
I'll! An
I—_. .....
---- ------------,_
----- --- 1 we
, ■
.
leading
50 points,
put &lt;ion :i factories .The
nrsl ■«one. they .visited xstactory
economic
conditions,
I calls to mind that .the date of her on short notice and their employ­ Dean, local.
A carload of lumber wa* unloaded
------------- ------------------•
Bill Lepper, second position. 40 great last lap spirit, only to lose by was titr imperial Furniture Com- must nold fast to democracy In edu- passing Jan. 22.1901. was in the same ment may consist of only a few
here Saturday and trucked to thc
T- K. Girl*.
point*, and Garnet Peeling with 30 a scant yard. Points total- tor Inter- p.iny The guide explained how wood , cation. This should be America's week and same month as that of hours
„„UIB „
a my
day or wtXK
week..
The T. K. girls were idle last week points. Charles Kelley. Ken Cline mediate were as follow, white 130. wa. prepared for furniture. They!unique contribution to make to the her grandson. King George, which
be I.I.U
itcld rc«Feb- new schoolhouse site. So now the
----- . The examination will Ml
job is started. Hurrah!
Lepper 80. I£clky 40. Cline 40. Pzcl- also saw tin- ine'.hocl* of staining modem world.
'
occurred Monday. Jan. 20. Just
------ -, -----------ruary 29. •Application forms may be
ing 30.
.
. . . decoration
,
.
—
.
...
January appears a bit timid about
wood. anti
hand,
"Democracy
’does
not. worship
ef- thirty-five year* later.
. obtained from Hugo C. Wunderlich, producing any thaws, but any way
The Juniors found a new man
Ncx: they visited the show rooms ficlency and system, but rather it
local secretary of the United States
touting to the front during thc sec­ of Jo»ui--ot'. H ini- y. Jolinxm. Here honors those who contribute by conPRAIRIEVILLE.
_ .'Civil
w..„ uv
Service
&gt;«h.c uuntu
board ot
of examiners. I there’s enough snow on hand now
ond day's races, in Clrm March- tbo' taw dltlerently arranged rooms' celling new ways nntTfliethodi, inThe district officers of the Re- Applications for lids examination to last throughout the entire month
inlak Smith seemed to be having with :&gt;r&lt; es-airir. Tlie girls then te- vestlgatlng new solution*, validating bekah Association visited our lodge must be filed with Mr. Wunderlich of February, no matter what hap­
pens.
trouble keeping upright on l;i. turned to'school.
conclusions, criticising other solu- ,
। Tuesday. The meeting was much not later than Saturday. February 1.
Because of an epidemic of scarlet
skates and lost mmiy of his races
lions, and freely expressing what- enjoyed.
j fever in Delton, tlie health officers
became of hi* fulls. Marchlnlak won
EPWORTH LEAGUE.
Neu*.
ever may be on their consciences I Mrs Marshall Hughes returned lo ;
the 220 yard dgah. the 3-4 mite race
xwu wry
Two
very interesting lanes
talks were I hBVe cl0M‘d the «clw»ls “nd have
Enufish
‘ Democracy
exists
lo nurture
per-- her home at Logansport. Indiana.
“ Swiften.
L..
hteaeh-r
—
-■
।
--------------------—
----------and placed second to Smith in the .. .. for thc past ««.*&gt;■
Riven by Ml.vs Rose DeFoe and Fred Mked that there **’ no Public gfclhi.„w *15c
r.cnnlitv.
**
I Thursday
year «&lt;•&gt;&lt;
mid «
a half
nallty. not
not tn
to cnnMim*
consume it
it."
880.
1 Jones ax
at me
the tpworm
Epworth laeague
League meet-1
meet-' '•
er,n
«B for lbe Present. Therefore
the
ni»&gt;.
••
a
-June*
••••"
•••••«•»»•« mi.
has leff T K. She will be monied
This talk proved very interesting ।i •»
Mrs. WUliam McKibbin and son lnR
Point totals for lhe Juniors। iimlth p,.b B iltn| jhp v lll ,nak&lt;. ht,r ),orn,, and enlightening to those who were
ing Sunday evening. Sopha Wallace I, P***P,B&gt;'. “'Here
Here Come*
comes Charley." which
were at Battle Creek Saturday
wU1
BS 10
and Marchlnlak 110. Lee. 7i) and hi Detroit Thc faculty and students [privileged to hear it.
will be lh(
thc. discussion
discussion leader
leader next
next »'
WBS
10 hBVC
hB»e bcen
bc,'n pre«nUd
presented this
this
Joe Ehrman and friend of Kala- Sunday nlgiuchnse 10
oi
1 rs. wion
10 c --end ih"lr con-1 Mrs
night; the
lhe topic being
being. *1210
“The week Friday and Saturday night-*,
nights.
.....
. ------------Mohler then Introduced
inazoo were guests of Mr and Mrs. Bible and Huinan Needs." Gretchen I J«"
B”d &gt;*b &gt; bB" »*"« lnd&lt;‘flGold, silver, and bronze medal. krn*.i latio.xs to Mh
svend-ven and Mrs. Geraldine Wolverton, prlnciBrCAcl
Grandmother's
Plain or Slicad
lb. loaf
Vaughn Molt. John Do*tcr and | Beverwyk will be in charge of thc , nlt*&gt;&gt;' postponed. Three children
were awarded thc point
winners in uivh
•
-I. ■,I •her many ’y.-an, in
of llilUI&gt;|IK-r&gt;
happiness 11«*&gt;
I— —
o«
the Thornapple-Kellogg
...... _.|.r.. .„ ..VIB
the two clasps. _p--devotions. Every one L* urged to at- l,B’c l|ie scarlet fevc.*. all the cares
«&gt;.w. n.u
i. . dune_a_*pjet:dld
। ...................................
KaaI ,.r
-iv.,1 on daughter. FYnncrs. Sunday.
Due —
to the --------St-Vi re gj
piece n.f; ia
school
ut Middleville, who italked
Mrs.
NrtT
Wilkins
ts
in
Pennock
tend
the
meeting
which
should
bcln
&lt;
,n
B
,®rrn- 1x11 11
**sl
winter weathiir many
wul
,
nany skaters were w„r;: ,ind we deeph regret tc sej licr' "Guidance" and how n guidance
unable to conipeie.
e Richard
Hirhnrri Smyth.
Rmvii. .|enVe
।program could be used in our prts- hospital, where she expects to sub- I prove to be very interesting. Please 11° h* careful.
^«tO.Mn'aJOT&gt;°lXtrat
forv‘ brlnK your B&gt;bte with you, League 1------------1032 Olymp|C indoor champion.
Miss Greta lutzi of Ahnn has been l*nt educational world. Mrs. Wol»
DOWLING.
l»o aUA w «u&gt; Hl., .secured
„„ to
ul, fill the vacancy
M1„ ................
...............
Miss verton
Is ....................................
following such n plan for noon 'Monday). Her friends are I member.*
-- 'e
j The marriage of Miss Margaret
brother Dave. Rich won the 3 lap llltz
u
Degree from the;8«»iding students in thc selection of hoping she will soon be well again. !
Mrs. F. J. Hughes Is reported as I
DELTON.
‘ Kemerllng. daughter of Mr nnd
e?'cn5*11 l,c. Dave defeated him iti university of Michigan anti 1. well; subjects that will be of n&amp;slstancc
lhe 320 yards, in which he is Miclu- qunim.d to teach nut only English'111
vocations they wish in fnl- a little stronger. Mrs. Burden, a' Mr. and Mrs. Roy Adrianson and Mrs. Freeman Kemerllng of Dow­
gan state Champion for lC3u
but i^mn siH-nLsh nnd French.I,ow- She has a group of six tcach- nurse from Plainwell, is caring for ' family of Battle creek spent Mon­ ling, Route 1. and Wllllm C. Burday evening with Mr
and Mrs. hick of Nashville, took place Satur­
Gcorgc Hogg accompanied by hl* Biology, ir.-.il Zoology, she can rend
|rts *'ho 3Cl In
capacity of
Too cold for much news this week. • Peter Adrianson and Harry.
day. Jan. 35. The young couple will
three cuitighlrr.*. Grace. Hazel, and other languages. We welcome Miss counsellors" to the students, rather
Florence exhibited many figures for i,4tZj to our
SIlt1 hoiJ„
slu. |than as "advisors." Tlie plan for a Hope for a/lrifie warmer weather; How about this, for an old faah- reside at Nashville. Congratulu,
soon.
.
’
;
toned
Michigan
winter?
'lions.
lover* of fancy skating. Mr. Hogg
win enjov her work here She had a freshman group during the first i
at
’
7&lt;illow*"
Maurice
and
Charles
Hughes
were
Thc
Delton
fire
department
was
Rev. Exncr and wife of Banfield
and his daughters
have been
Iin(( wa.,
u&gt; begin her 'cmester at school was
at 1
bl KBlainaz
°o Thursday.
called
week.
, hn
r—
h’Z.’—'■
--------- out
—• ot
“• town twice last
dinner guests Sunday al the
chatnpions
of Michigan
many
times, ^taTta/hwork Mundav.
Alfred
Lvons‘UW
subGettingtal^SvT^nga)ou«
acquainted with th*
the si-hnnischool;
The committee
wisheT
to thank
/*"
”*
* ’maVmg
“es .. M*ui J°
» when were
h nK
F Brt
Br|«ham
Rha™ oI Decatur , Wednesday, ~
to Cedar Creek
home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gas­
Tlie eoilin’.ll trs- wishes to thanl: . ........... ... » _
'
I
....
1
all who were instrumental tn helping
Mr Cu:.:;ii!ghmn has teen ill nnd interest and abilities’ getting ac-ip j “USeT"”*8’ Mt'
Mrs'i ,Mr a?d ,“,rs' Ja^k ^pl?ci's homc ““/•
make this carnival possible.••*•»» off dutv Fr'dav
quninted with the world of work ! wl' I*y:hcs
"
| burned with nearly n|l of It* conW
... Clcmence of Battle Creek
Will
- -Mm MeFull «■&lt;&gt;«'ill-th*
IM.ri 'Various monograph* an vncatlon*.
n‘,ore PriJy*!f, jn*eUngs at the । tents. Much sympathy is felt for । has purchased the contents of thc
.B Ite »,. k *1 M. ■ ll.ir.JvUk- ted v vvillkMe In ilic iludmu and '
eimJn', n*"''
*'Ud' h“kb'w
Safely Corner.
Thc sixth grade boys have or­
charge of tlie 2nd «mde.
।t111’ educational requirements for '
gr ■
ganized a Safety Patrol to promote
Mim- Thomas spent the u.c!: end 'umci Mrs. Wolverton's talk proved
CEDAR CREEK.
1 safety in the-school and communitv
on
fire,
but
was
extinguished
by
the
possession.
Tlie real estate
was
al home
1 to be n very.fine resume of the work i The home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
The Captain Ls Roy Moore with
truckschool
arrived.
South American
La-t Wednesday this community thu&lt; !11»e had covered during the j Lupine caught on fire last Wcdncs- ’ time
methe
sundav
claw. No ai , purchased recently by Charles Moon
Connie Beeler 1st. Lieut, and Paul
Thc Sunday School classes No 0-7 of this place.
eMJ-riinccd the worst storm in U’nst summer al Northwestern Uni- day during the terrible bitaard and will
^t
wRh
Mr
a^rtMra
L
n
'
.. । Mr and
ormsbee of
Garbow 2nd Lieut The Patrol boy
u oni. time M-hool buss*com^.course sponsored by the burned to the ground in 30 minute*. B.»
u*h mi. _.
Moi dot ntahl Ftbruarv
iare: Eldon Bell. Han&lt;- Balsch. CHr- pl-ted thur rout... Thei.M went as Kellogg Foundation
lastings were Sundav afternoon
'it wcnt so quickly that only a few
Monday mgnt. February
ence ScrJan. Rodney 'Schait. Geort
'Eggleston. Vincent _jjeck
Wayne lar m po-siblr and then returned to
•clioo) One bu- found It Imjxtssibk-'
Tagg. Charles
Finkbeincr. and
to even start on if. regular route.1
BflCOn
Sliced
Sunnyfield
Leonard Stimion.
( Before these boys were chosen as gcttln£, only one quarter-of u mile
Forty-four school *bc guest speaker,
the afternoon and tie quilu. and the
officers, they were required to mem- from schoo'
warm biscuits are promised ns a
children were forced lo remain In
‘ *
' bd
big
shower
and pot luck supper will'■
, --------- ' MondB&gt; nl«hl- February 24. proof
Flavor*
| arise the Safely Pledge n: follow
”in
Ih/^ninn
On
of their culinary skill and many
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
town. These children were put up
I
eY5’’,nB- E'pobodj come prOf Gregg of the Michigan Slate other delicacies will be served The
In thc homes of townspeople who ; Our school wils closed Thursday chwthe iu’aHsoVtMs unf'orunm e College nt Lansing will give hLs il- ladles will furnish the program and
hiR.
bottle
I on account of thc drifted roads,
,
offered
their
homes
for
this
purpose.
',uslrulcd lccture 011 landscaping. a style show will be one of lhe fen­
I 2. Caution others |o do same.
Mrs. Minnie Hammond visited famdv ht i ie rnJ aim
family. Llhu&lt; Cox. atao livid wlthiThb&lt; meeting is sponsored by the lures,
I 3 Do all I can to make my school
her daughter and family. Mrs. Geo. them had nil of his things burned., Deiton Garden Club and will be n I M~
i and community a safe place to live needed and mom:- for. 50 more chil­ McCulla. in Hastings, Wednesday.
«... wx . U|I Mrs. Marshall Pierce and
including hh army papers and au- free
..x-.mwto«..«
I 4. Be nt thc place assigned me 13 dren were available. Tlie telephone.'
open meeting
every .body.
, Emmet
tniM,s' Wm’ '’oto,,i 13 awiMing with
minutes before achoo! In the morn-—. ~
b.. the housework at a family home in
pm ana noon and a.a&gt; then MU
„jm„, I Hastings.
I
\ fine '[Urn of coopt-rmiim ».••. 1 Mr. and Mrs Victor Cluni and

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG

Women's Club

invnnxrrn; ntLLUUU

“LK2 *nu

A &amp;P Continues to

Reduce
Prices
J-'

•*

17c

3 -• 25c
3 N„"J 25c

D-1

"i.* 10c

Del Mais Nibleti

2 —• 25c
— 10c
... |7C

i/ci fviaix vorn
Green Giant Pea*
Pop Corn

Bitquick

’£ isc

31c

*,7*," De
25c

Snc-Sheen Cake Flour

Jello

it Me
17c
f9c

3

Log Cabin Syrup

Pott Toasties
Minute Tapioca
Baker's Cocoa

tor ioc

2

Marwell House House
Preserves
•*•••
Pancake Flour
h.««, n™.
CraX
A N,w Cracker

25c
to- 10c
25c
ut 15c

to 25c
»k.. 19c

Bread and Butter Pickles
Kraft's Cheese
v.i™u

Iona Flour
Scratch Feed
Sugar

2
to

29c
17c

75c
$1.55
10 ibs 50c

Super Values Sc each
10-os.
bottle

5c

can

5c

pkg.

5c

pkg.

5c

Clothes Pins

pkg.
of 30

5c

White Corn or Peas

No. 1’

5c

Rajah Vinegar
Gold DuSt SCOURING
Sal Soda
Salt
Diamond Crystal

POWDER

Plain, or Iodised

Super Values 10c each
Borax

20 M“1- T—■

Bon Ami

•s«

10c

-.s.

10c

Mixed Vegetables &lt;*&gt;•••'•

10c

Tomatoes

ioc

A &amp; P Ammonia

10c

Chocolate Drops
SWEETPOTATOES «»««
HEAD LETTUCE
ORANGES flf.t'iL,
SPINACH KjaHK'
GRAPEFRUIT SHKilF"

lk

10c

3 lbs. 10c
2 doz. 45c
6c
8 lb. bag 39c
3 lbs. 17c
4 for 15c

* I’ I OO1) STORES
LISTEN TO KATE SMITH “COFFEE TIME"
W.'IAQ—7i-8 I’. M.—Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday

—

"HU

The
evid

retei
phik
enje
mo*
havi

ute
Lot)
who
lhe

gavt
by 1
Cllll
goin
live,
won
getl
late
lant
unit

coni
tier,
aclr
sire
ture
still
&amp;
oug

25c

2

Bean Hole Bean*
Pineapple
Dc*^’

Spinach

Fri&lt;

So 10c

Kellogg's Wheat Kris..ie&gt;
Apple Butter
8 O'clock Coffee

“Rl

iltown by everyone and ’.he school
wishes to thank those who in any
The
of me
thc xjciDel- :] unOCF
under way. With
with U1C
thc FlSllcr
Fisher and Os
Os-­
* "V animal meeting ox
former's sister. Mrs. Warren Bolton . * Mr and Mr Ivan r.mnh*lt
way hcljied.
.
a fiw dnv/Yn in’rk^n taton Co-operative Creamery Co. will , wald power machine in operation.
and family.
MAKE THIS 25c TEST
Fve^thmJ
,M? l,cld Sulurd“y ln t!lc Delton .The ice is ot fine quality and about
Mr and Mr* Wm Claggett. Mr.
ircutiiinz to a .scientific
Every thing gtm» to be balled up community hall. Dinner will be &gt; 13 Inches or more thick, which
and
Mrs
Morris
Calkins.
Mr.
and
by the continued cold weather, but ^ned al ’non.
;due
lhe cwHnucd coid wave
Hike 20.000 scratches on a
' .'.quarr invli1: of mi tai Never park Mn. CUflord Hammond mid Mr. there Is some relief now that the
Mrs Qlady* Gaskill visited her
-----'
nnd Mrs. Warren Bolton attended little pins have been declared con- broUlcr. Morrll Uwb. ttlld wife in |
alongmcte e.«
I lhe CQ-opcmtlve Creamery day proHENDERSHOTT.
Sl
r
‘
’
^,°r.
a
■
I
r
&gt;■
&lt;
w
&lt;
Kalamazoo
Sunday.
|i,rani held in Middleville Wednes­
There wasn't any school hut
/ , . Amateur rntert.dner
.
Leo
Monroe
and
family
of
KalaMrs
j
Barnum
will
enlcrday.
Thursday and Friday on account of
I’)0200 Tnt aunda&gt; wllh Mr B,ld tain the Women's Foreign Mission- drifted roads and the severe ?old.
-s-JrTm'iV^.i. . . fincktng to 1
Mrs. Chas. Woodruff ha* bcen on
'■ ’ recently ths
i ary society Friday afternoon of this
Mrs. Leon Slocum of Battle Creek
the sick hst. but Ls belter now.
, Mrs. Ardy
■ , tOwen
,
pleasure to ;
spent last Thursday with her moth­
Wanila Strausbaugh is working
There Ls no permanent success in week.
It is reported that George Cowles er. Mrs. Frances Hendershott.
In Detroit.
■ tricky methods.
| has purchased the meat market
Mrs. Leo Hendershott has been
1 business of Clem Munger.
sick thc past week but was able to
The Delton Community Club will lit up part of lhe lime Sunday.
' sponMir another mixed dance on
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Parmalcc of
' Friday night. February 7. in lhe Johnstown were dinner guests at
j Community hull with the Cowboy's Floyd Garrison's Wednesday.
j orchestra furnishing the music.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Sinclair and
! Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams nt­ children spent lhe week end with
' tended a convention in Lansing Sat­ the letter's mother. Mrs. Jennie
' urday.
Slocum and went to Grand Rapids
[ Ernest Smith made a business trip
- '| to sec hLs mother. Mrs. Cora Sinto Grand Rapids Friday.
clalr at St. Mary’s hospital. They
Marshall Norwood attended thc ' found her very much worse, and she
banquet Ih Kalamaioo Friday night. | passed away abut eight o'clock Sun­
day night. Thc friends here extend
their deepest sympathy lo the ShiI clalr family. Mrs Sinclair has been
I a member of lhe Hendershott Aid
for year* and was loved by all who
| knew her.
i Beatrice Mattison attended a
; birthday party Saturday given in
| honor of Jaqueline Thomas at her
I home on lhe Battle Creek road.
1 Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Matteson
I have given up the Herrington col­
’ tage at Clear lake and arc staying
Wllh their parents in this district
, until thcr plans for the coming year
। are completed.
i Mrs. Dora Coleman, who has been
I convalescing at thc home of her
I daughter. Mr.s. Geo. Haynes, left
Saturday lo stay with her son.
Francis In the Tanner district. She
is steadily gaining tn strength which
will be good news to her friends.
Margaret Garrison stayed Willi
her cousin. Clare Hendershott, in
Hastings Wednesday and Thursday
nights oh account of the severe
Unused Transportation in a Used Car
weather.

STOP BETTING UP NIGHTS

f GujuwiM

See Our Used
Cars before
you buy!
1935 Standard V-8 Tudor
1935 DeLuxe Fordor V-8

1935 DeLuxe Tudor V-8
1932 Plymouth Coupe

COAL\

1934 DeLuxe Fordor V-8
1932 DeLuxe Fordor V-8

FARM BUREAU
SPLINT FORCED

TON

1930 Model A Sport Coupe
1931 Model A Std. Coupe

bough! ot thc right price is More Eco­

Moislu 1*(

A si,
b.f.i.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES • INC
WOODLAND

w

Phone 2118
PHONE 21

® Red
Jacket
FORD- DEAL E R S
PHONE 2121

HASTINGS, MICH.

STARUTE and
POCAHONTAS
__________

_

_

I HASTINGS ICE
&amp; Fl'EL CO.
I 221 E. Crteu

I'hoBe 21M

—Tsxsss

I(OHER ( ROOKED
Mrs. Joe Stenger reU
! Monday after snendlmi
spending
lUng relatives at Delton, Baltic
Creek and Kalamazoo.
It is rumoted that wedding bells
rang again on our street last week.
A family gathering in honor of
Mr. Zimmerman's 80th birthday was
held at his home thc evening of
Jan. 23.
MWr. Frank Roush, who has been
confined to her bed for some time,
is not much improved.
Bcrtlia Stenger relumed home

I

nomical than the purchase of a now one.

5-1%
I 1150 Lnits

Hastings, Mich.

Does Your
COAL Go
Out Nlglitw?

hu been under a doctor s care.
Blocked roads and cold weather
have kept
..pi some
mimic children
luiiuii home from
i school the past week.

I

How -would you like to hive your

“W""

“

ch II

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. JANUARY 30. 1936

'RILEY STORIES”
ARE CONTRIBUTED
Friends of Biley Waters Re
call His Wit and
Philosophy

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

TOOK PART IN GOLD
RUSH TO CALIFORNIA
Jehial Mead, Barry Go. Pla­
nter, Had Exciting Life

-—-—-'HIGH HEELS CAUSE
p00R B0DY pqstuRES

COURT HOUSE NEWS
probate COURT.

•»;

P“°”' d"11

O

Now You Need This

Protection!
Highlands Dairy Grade A Milk i
one of tho best cold weather pro­
tectors of health. The entire
family needs the vitamins this
milk contains to protect them
from colds and other sickness
prevalent during cold weather.
Safeguard their health by mak­
ing this "energy building" food
a part of every meal.

High in Cream Content

Raw or Pasteurized

Qt

GOOD COAL makes warm friends,
and when you havp a bin of our coal
you will be pleased with the fine,
even heat. Low in ash, and longburning. Try a ton today and
save on your fuel bills.

Phone 2651 ROBERT W. COOK.

&gt;. Hastings

All loons do not hove to be big to be considered by
this bonk—but all DO have to be SAFt!
We make many small loons and are glad to co-op­
erate with borrowers of modest means.

The benefits of our service have never been re­
stricted to a single class. If you need a small loan,
do not hesitate to come to us merely because it is
small.

If you have sound use for the money and can give
the requisite assurance of your ability to repay,
we shall be glad to show you every possible con­
sideration.

N
K OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

LITTLE

thf

16'-' Dairy—$1.55 per 100 lb«.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 lbs
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lbs
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lbs

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company
Dealers in Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Salt, Lime,

Cement and Coal

MUSK

ROUND,
AND ROUND ;

TU
E rvi
MUCIC
washer
inc
v u i v 0FAN
meo„ahomelectric
.wStrewo,hday
trouts
are ended. No more tiring toil of old way*—no more wear and tear of fabrics.
You, too—here is the easy way to enjoy this convenience in your home: an elec­
tric washer, ond its new companion, the ironer, to give you
"automatic laundering” at its best.

WASHER &amp; IRONER SALE
^30 MONTHS &amp;
ON THIS IDEAL ELECTRIC COMBINATION
Our ECONOMICAL PURCHASE PLAN offers you combination term omier fbm
ever . . . less than 17c a day in monthly payments now ~buys BOTH washer and
ironer. Or you may buy them singly on attractive terms

UNIVERSAL WASHER
Thc famous Universal, favorite of housewives, present* this pop­
ular. full-sized model with latest features. Washes everything
from lingerie to blankets in the same careful, thor- &lt; — — qc
YUgh way that makes fabrics last longer, look better.
/I

SPECIALLY PRICED NOW—ONLY

ABC IRONER

SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed-Prices:—

Hastings Telephone 2257

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

We Make Small
Loans Too!

Good Footwear Necessary to
0°°d Health—Toe. Should

account filed.
"Although possibly large enough
Est Clark a Barber, deed. ReHave Room, Too
—Then Made Brick
We wonder how many follow the and strong enough lo bring down an
High-heeled shoes make for inIf the life experiences of lhe ports of sale filed.
"Riley Stories" which appear more unarmed man In combat, the timber
Est. Sarah Malcolm, deed. An- frrtor
IX»tUre» u worn for any
or less frequently tn the Banner? wolves of Michigan's upper penln- early Mttlcrs of this county could nual account filed
length of time, a study conducted
They are contributed by one whb!«ula are not man-kUler»." said be written, doubtless many of them
Eat. Hannah Yerington, deed. Pi- by the Home Economics Department
evidently was well-acquainted with | Mammalogtel Paul Hickle of the would be found most thrilling They nal account filed, waiver of notice Bt Michigan Slate College
lhe late Riley Waters to whom they ; Department of Conservation. "In were not given to "self advertising" filed, order assigning residue en­
Mud&gt;, conducted by . Mls»
refer. Riley was a good deal of a 1 fact, we know of no authentic case as a rule, but when it came to ad­
Julia Tear, revealed there Is a deflphilosopher and wit. and If he had to which a timber wolf attacked and venture and daring there was noth­
Est Carrie D Todd. dee d. Will nUe relation between Increased heel ,
enjoyed . thc privileges afforded killed a human being in the wild ing too perilous for them to attempt. Died, petition for probate Died.
height and poor body pasture. tIl. !'
most present day youths, would) anywhere to the country."
For Instance there was Jehlal
Eat. William E. Aidrich, dec'd, Indicated, too. that an Inferior
have made a name for himself I
• • •
Mead, of Meadville. &lt;now Morgan). Petjtion to apply heir’s share on
probably along different lines than’ More than 100 tons of baby fish How many are there who knew that land contract filed, order authoris­ standard of posture was more evi­
dent when thc heel height exceed­
fate destined him to follow.
were produced al lhe 14 Mate he was one who took part in the ing settlement entered.
ed 1 1 -2 inches than when low and
Fame. In a measure, came to him hatehories and planted In the to- "Gold Rush" to California, going
Est. Etta J. Aldrich, dec'd Final medium heels were used.
late to life as lhe father of Mn land lakes and streams of the state overland In a prairie schooner, in account filed, order allowing ac­
Fashions in other types of cloth­
Luther Burbank &lt; Elizabeth Waters) during the post year to improve days when going to California count entered, discharge of Admr.
ing may be followed with no fear ।
who is now carrying on so capably fishing.
meant something. Everyone who issued, estate enrolled
of Injurious effects so far as health ,
the work of the late California plant I
• • •
made that trip really took hte life In
Est. Sarah Marie Sixbcrry. dec’d. is concerned, but unfortunately,
wizard, /mother daughter. Margaret
Nearly 2.000 quarts of seed from hte or her hands. There were the Order allowing account entered, dis­ poorly shaped and jxxirJy fitted
gave a good account of herself also, native trees and shrubs have been murderous bands of Indians always charge' of Admr. issued, estate en­ shoes often bring pboift results 'Quit
by working through night school to collected by CCC men from various seeking lo exterminate those who rolled.
seriously affect one’s health and
Chicago, and after marrying and camps in northern Michigan for sought to trespass on their hunting
Est. Carrie D- Todd, dec’d. Proof comfort.
.
going to Berkeley. Califoriila. - to planting in lhe new hardwood nur- preserves; and there were desperate of will filed, order admitting will cnMiu Tear recently questioned 100
llve. followed up her education by sery near Wolverine. The seeds gangs of criminate ready lo kill, rob tered.
#
.wmiuvii
women buu
and iraEiteu
learned null
that u&lt;
67 per
per will
cent
work in lhe University of California, were taken from mountain ash. and plunder. Still even worse was
EM. Robert Dawson, deed. Annual admitted difficulty with their feet
getting a B. A. degree there and basswood, black cherry, black plum, the iM-ulbillty of getting lost In thc account filed.
and that 65 per cent gave their
later teaching some of lhe Romance hawthome, june-berry. sumac, dog­ desert and dying of thirst. This fate
Est. Caleb Risbridxcr. dec’d. An- -shoes away in one year, she added. |
languages as an assistant to the, wood, chokrberry and winterberry, nearly befell Mr. Mead in Death nual account ____
____
______
(lied,. order
for,pubilcacomfortable shoes should have: I
university.
trees and shrubs. Young trees and Valley, following an encounter with [ uon entered
..................
adequate length from ball of foot
These "Riley Stories" and others shrubs to be gown from this seed Inal.™. HU
I Bit. ororce w Uwrenee. d«&lt;l . „
rall „
lo toe. ample width at the ball of
contributed by friends of the Ban- will be used for wildlife cover and the Ule ol Men on lhe oust ol Ehi-. proot ot will tiled order udmltunit ..... (ool wm (0- (ounh end ittth
tier, recall many hitcresting char-, food on slate-owned lands.
lend, wild eWdemlr trwiumltted to wll| entered.
. |„ ,o „lc„d forward norin&gt;lly. a
acters who used to be seen on our ।
• • •
him that real e.« venlurerome .pith
----------------------------------------- „,c M,bou, „
’„,d
streets, whose sayings and advenAlthough there has been to date
—u'StT7
”
“
HAS BEEN PROMINENT IN an inner line sufficiently straight
of •food
sources above rettlemenl.
ture* were much quoted and arc ian abundance
— -»
—• —
the snowline, ground feeding birds
SOCIAL SERVICE WORK
,he
still passed on.
Following his return from Cali­
Some of our local dramatists throughout thc southern half of thc fornia. he and hte sons, went lo
■ Some health and fashion hints •
ought to find a wealth of material lower penUisula may face a food North Dakota, then way out on the
in choosing shoes arc: Shoes should
Rev.
L.
B.
Whittemore',
New
for folk plays in tlie lives of many it barrage this winter If existing frontier, and took up a claim, but
be comfortable as well as fashion­
of these pioneer people of Hastings. wFather
-------------------------conditions —
continue
------- — or returned to Hastings thc year of live
Bishop Coadjutor, Has
able and good looking: shoes are a
Tlie brothers "Lute and Lon" Ben- grow worse. Thc grouhd to many ■ big fire” &lt;to 1886&gt;.
part of a costume and thc color, de­
Fine
Mr. Mead was a brick maker by
r,ne Record
Bccora
nett, for Instance, who could put places has been covered by ice and
sign nnd general type of the shoe 1
forcing
ground
feed
Baron Munchausen io blush at limes crusted
•“**snow,
------- *—
----------------* ‘
‘ ­ trade, and from Ida yards came the I At the Diocesan convention which
'-hould harmonize with the ensemIrand Rapids last week, thc
.1..
with their exaggerated tales—Great ing birds to seek seeds on plants brick for.UlC "Sot, Goodyear house" met .................
_ vis B. Whittemore, rector of blc: simplicity of design hi shoes te
arguers were "Lute and Lon." Wc standing above the snowline. For­ on Jefferson Streyt. now owned by ___
Rev Lewi
desirable because It is in better taste
recall when verbal disagreements tunately. the rainy season of 1935 Mrs Allee Bates,&lt;aUo supplying lhe Grace Episcopal church of that city,
such brick tor some of lhe older stores was elected bishop-coadjutor of and also more economical in the
used to go too far in our home as a produced an abundance of
long run; shoes receive hard wear
child, our mother would chime in weeds. When these are exhausted hi Hastings He may not have left western Michigan. Tiw election was
and the kind and quality of the:
7 w.w
—'Now Lute and Lon. quit, your pheasants and quail may be hard- «
a great fortune, but he certainly
did a quiet, orderly affair with little materials used in tbe shoe influence i
pre.saed for food
By establishing his |»rt In helping to build up this | dLscusson or argument. Mr. Whllte- thc general satisfaction from them.'
arguing and go to work."
feeding stations now sportsmen and communlly.
received 33 out "»
of lhe ««
62 lay
’ more
—
.MIDDLE VILLE.
bird students may be able to help
He too was one of lhe Instigators delegates' ballots, and 15 of tlie 25
Mr. and Mrs. “Roundle" Poulson many game birds to survive “
the in building tlie Adventist church in votes cast by the clergy. He will ONE OF RILEY’S STORIES
arc very happy over lhe arrival of a winter.
tlie second ward, now thc United serve as biahop-coadjulor until lhe
One Saturday afternoon after
.son. who will uiL.wcr lo thc name ol
Brethren church. 'Die land for thLs gathering of the genera) church work at thc Hastings Engine and
Ronald; all doing fine, especially SPELLING DEMONS OF
church was donated by Mrs. Emily convention In July 1936. at which Iron Work.’. I stepped into Joe,
Grandpa and Gmndma Poulson.
lime
BLshop
McCormick
will
retire.
Pflug's meat market to purchase ’
THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE Cooper, who Is reported to have been
Creamery annual meeting on
Mr. Whittemore came to Grand my Sunday meat, and Robert Daw- 1
Under thc above head Dr. H. F. the first woman school teacher in
Wednesday drew a tine crowd, many
Rnpids from Detroit and soon iden­ son was also there with a package I
Jones of the University of South Woodland township.
of whom would have .stayed al home
For these facte which wc appre- tified himself wHh numerous cony- of meal. As we went out the door
Dakota
has
compiled
a
list
of
tlie
could they have forscen what the
fiatc, we are indebted to our good inunily activities. He waa e-speclally .......
Anson Maynard, thc
drayman.
weatiM'inan nun in More fur tu ail. one hundred wards hi Die English rlend Ernie Wurst, 6! IMS City. Who active torthe social irntcr field One nmjpd lr; aim am. „t,p on&lt;
language which arc most frequently
Manv attended the business 'meet­
— —
•- up in the ----------So
as a youngster lived as neighbor to of his most noteworthy projects whs ”
I'm
going
first ward."
ing in thc theater in the morning, mlupclied. This list appeared in lhe Mr. Mead.
tlie
omunzation
ol
n
comthe
orgunzation
of
a
volunteer
com
­
we
tossed
our
packages
into
a box
about three hundred ate dinner nt course of study syllabus for clcpicnmittee for the training of men and un lhe dray and chmbcd on. When
the Pythian hall. The afternoon lary grades sent out from the office
women
for
social
welfare
work
in
wc
got
to
Thorn
street
Bob
grabbed
SOUTH MAF1X GROVE.
of thr supcrjntrndcnl of public in­
thc
community.
He
has
also
served
a package nnd Jumped off and I
struct ion al Lansing.
Funeral services for Harry Mason
where good speeches, songs and I
These are the words: always, of Baltic Creek were held al the as chairman ot thc social service stayed on till we got to Grant’s
music were passed out. The ladles
Wilcox church Wednesday. with committee of thc Episcopal dioceses hill, took the remaining package
attended the theater nnd all were among, any. again, ache, answer— burial in lhe Wllcoxvccjicirry Mr. of western Michigan.
......
and went home. The next morning
business,
been,
built,
busy,
believe.
________
....
_______
__
.
happy until time to go home when beginning, blue, break, buy—can't. Mason was born in 1865 at Maple
Mr. Whittemore te n son of Hurt- when 1 came downstairs, wife was
many had their troubles, as car country, could, color, choose, coining, I Grove and lived here until about ford. Connecticut, and took hLs B. A. cooking
,
■
■
dinner
and she exclaimed, i
after car failed lo work; then many
degree al Yale. Five years later he "Riley, did you get a raise?" and I
cough
—
don't,
does.
done.
dear,
doc•
nine
years
ago.
He
married
Lillian
acre tied up by snow drifts and
entered thc Episcopal Theological raid.
;
“No. why?” "Because you
failed to gel home by chore time, lor—every, easy, early, enough— Lapham and to them were bom five school nt Cambridge from which he bought some porterhouse steak." I
but all ends well at last Butter friend. February, forty—grammar, 1 children. Iva dying in infancy. Left received hh degree of bachelor of ,she replkxl. I said. "I didn’t buy 1
made last year was 762560 lbs. al guess—horse, half, having, hour. I to mourn are thc wife and two sons, divinity. He was ordained a deacon ।any steak. 1 bought beef ribs " And j
an average cost ul 0165 per pound heard, here, hear—instead—just— George of Battle creek and Loyal of in 1915 and the following yeas lx— i.«We said. "I don't know what you
nnd this was the largest year for knew, know— laid. lose, loose— I Kalamazoo; two daughters. Mrs. came a priest of the Episcopal bought, but you brought home por­
many years and lhe patrons were so many, meant, making, minute, much I Alice Maurer of ’Battle Creek and church.
terhouse steak."
—none— often, once—piece—ready. Mrs. Irene Mayo of Bedford town­
well pleased that they re-elected all raise.
Until he shall assume hLs full i Monday afternoon the moulders ;
road straight, sugar, allocs.' ship; a sister. Mrs. Lixzic Mayo of
powers as bishop of western Michl-1(were at the cupola getting ready ।
of the officers; 'speaks pretty well —.j--------------- -i----- ---------- ------------‘Assyria; four brothers. Edward and
said. says. sure, since, some, seems,
separate—their, there. Tuesday, two. John of Maple Grove. Charles of gin. Rev. Whittemore will have to take off a heat. Greusel and
Hooper G Frrshney one of the
charge of such diocesan matters as II Dawson stepped in thc door with !
school bus drivers has been causing too. trouble, tear, tired, through, Nashville, and Will In Kansas.
Mrs. Lulu Gray received word of Bishop McCormick shall assign to.j a grin on their faces and Bob said. |
some comment on his looks since a though, they, tonight, truly—usedhim, including thc direction of lhe । "Riley, the Joke's on me. You know '
large chmik of snow thrown by a very—which. were, women, write, the birth of a son to Mr. and Mrs. foreign mission work, formerly in,I we sat down to our Sunday dinner
writing, would. Wednesday, wear, Harold Gray of East Assyria on
snow plow? broke his windshield and
charge of Archdeacon Lincoln R. yesterday nnd I said to my wife. I
whether,
whole,
won
’
t,
wrote,
week.
January
23.
The
young
man
will
an
­
he received several cuts on his face,
'Roxanne, bring on the meat,' and I
swer to thc name of Wiyne Robert. Vercoe.
fortunately no injury to his eyes.
I
she said; "What meat?’ and I said. '
Mrs. Gray was formerly Bernice
CARLTON C ENTER.
Our streets and nearby roads have
Some folks don’t get lhe praise ’Why that nice cut of porterhouse
Fifty-three
relatives,
neighbors
Buxton.
bcen dangerous to drive for some
and friends gathered at the home of
Mr and Mrs. Herve Cheeseman due them lor the reason that It gives steak 1 bought ot Joe Pfiug.’ She 1
days, the ice underneath the snow i
them
lhe
bighcad.
and
they
begin
to
exclaimed.
-Rob
Dawson.
you |
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Landon. Sunday
makes il very slippery and many I iJan 26) in honor of the golden and family and Mrs. Lulu Gray help out with thc praising.
brought home some bones for the
cars have turned around so quickly 1 wedding anniversary of Mr. and were at Harold Gray's In East As­
dogs, but no steak!’"
that thc drivers thought that they1.,,.
. syria Sunday lo sec the new son.
Scientists
claim
to
have
discovered
Mrs. Landon.
The gathering was a
Joyce and Duane Gray of West
",ore
*•1 “
“■usII you arc disturoed by strange
! surpine lu iiiein. n
picaaaui Vermontville are entertaining the a substance resembling rubber, but
uicir acsimauoii.
,I |lm&lt;
lime, was hBrt
had )rl
in visiting and reran.
recall- whooping cough while visiting at much more durable. They do not l|tllc noises you hear in the night,
Sheriff Jay Blakncy was seen on
you arc old or growing old.
say what it Is called on the menu.
I Ing former days We wish Mr. and their grandmother Gray’s.
our streets last Thursday. Jay has | Mrs. Landon many more happy anMri and Mrs. clayton Jarrard and
but few calls down this way.
। nlversaries.
family of Dowling called on L- W.
Thc ladies of thc Parmelee M. E.
Mr and Mrs. Fay Underwood vis- Jarrard^ Twllla spent Sunday with
church held a bake goods sale Sat-'
1 lied the latter's brother. Ford As- her grandparents
___ ,............... ..
...........................
.
while
her parurday to Guckes market and thus
on tlie Broadway road, during ente visited at Duff Eddy’s in Nashhelped many a housewife as they .j plnail.
lhe past a'tek. Mr. Aspinall recently v|Ue.
had a fine lot of goods on sale.
I returned home from Pennock ho&gt;- j Mr. and Mrs: Roy Preston and son
We arc pleased to have a nice pltal. where he was for three weeks! of near Hastings and Wayne Robnewsy letter from our senool this
week Lost week being exam week suffering from infection caused inson of Nashville spent Sunday
' from an injury to hLs hand.
. with Mr. and Mrs. Lester Preston.
none was forthcoming and all were
Mrs. Mary Bustance of Freeport . Mrs. Grace Brake of Hastings and
disappointed.
Ls at the home of her daughter. Mrs. I her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Carl Brechclsen. and is ill al this Preston spent last Monday in Bat­
Go lo friends for advice:
writing with heart trouble
hc creek,
To women for pny:
Mr. and Mrs. Garcia TUcher of
&lt; ♦ »---------------To strangers for charity.
Lansing spent the week end with ! Patriots used to shout: "Give me
Tu relatives lor nothing.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Tlscher.
I liberty!" Now they leave off thc last
Old Spanish Proverb.
__
_ _ _
The cariton L- A B. will meet at word.
Fathers who married without a the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hale,
- a»
-—
dime think their daughters ought to , Thursday. Feb. 6. for dinner. Club
Keep on plugging Remember the
marry millionaires. If Uwy marry at No. 1 will serve. AU are cordially in- first Olive you succeed in fishing out
■ of a bottle loosens up thc others.

Ironer. Here's the new ABU. complete with the
want—and best of all. priced" xt- a lower figure
that makes it ea»y to have right now—(attractive

terms)—UASII

ONLY

*54?

Coma In for • C
or Phono

PROFIT FROM

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. JANUARY 30. 1MI

PAOCTWBLVT

I

Harry O.
Mohrmann.
Rec'r. WHAT DO CHILDREN
vs. Isaac N. will-, and wife, mortgage
THINK OF TEACHER?
foreclosure.
Dorothy Guyney vs. Richard Guy­
.; ney. bill for Injunction.
Interesting Replica to Ques­
of Country Is
. \ The Hastings Hi-Y Club with Ed- Sentiment
11 Ciiarles F. Monica and wife vs.
tion Received by One
• Frances S- Lee el al, bill for injuncAgainst New Deal by De­
t ih* ju&lt;&lt;wln Taylor, leader, enjoyed skiinft
- ' lion.
and pancake! at camp Barry SatWho Aiked
, «h* &gt;ub nr'Three I
cisive Majorities
nwaiN br WltlUm
(Continued from page one)
। Jessie Dlllenbeck vs. LeRoy DllMt •»* 100th ‘Ulla
flbadJ lid VmI* Sh»ad
hul._
tlfta
' A teacher, according to Mn.
The final result of the Literary
lenbeck. bill
to quiet
title. Rnwdv bill Mau?e Smith, county school cofftRaJrfv
’vl Fdns
Middleville Hi-Y meet at camp
Mrs. J. A. Richards vs. John Toi
Y
“
8awd&gt; bin mlMtoner recently gave out a quesnext Saturday lor dinner; |X)stpon- Digest's poll on lhe New Deal Is in&gt;r divorce.
.
......
Ing from last Saturday because of terestlng.
---------- -_. Over 1.900.000 votes were
j The
thc skating tournament in Middle- j tabulated,
rne sentiment
semunenv against
ag»in»
"■
1 vine
- ' ' the New Deal increased as thc votei Wise, trespass on the cawThe Mother apd Son banquet pro- , ll'£Tfaied Abou‘ 36
&lt;TJ'1 0,’£f pciur^™^* cSfri
’
’
to whom they had gone.
gram includes Mrs a. McNulty for Jf»«» votes favor the New Deo .
$ “^o“
t '-^1.'
" Artbus Ko­ McConnell, bill for divorce.
Here arc some of the responses re­
Robert
Cook Vs. Arthuv
Mohrmann,
Rec'r. I
, tuastmlstres. and Gordon Crothers •
»«■,
« P*r "”t f&lt;W0« ‘ll
et W.tres^L^nUw
c^ Ko- i Harry O.
ceived—
—_.
I VS. EHIc M. Foster, el a), mortgage
lerlbed In Mid morior
for tbe toast to mothers Wm. T 1 Only twelve stoles of toe forty-eight | * -L,. ::
"I would not make any pupil feel
Lottie Stauffer vs. Arthur Ko- foreclosure.
Wallace is to lead the singing and;“*.*5
JtoJto Ftorid?
nnd
j .»omrr Kotesky.
i._ trespaas
Harry O.
Mohrmann.
Rec'r. ■shown up' In class. If a pupil does not know or understand. It is cruel
there are to be two special musical lllea
»f««e close in Fiorurn
’
»
vs. Merritt Mead', et al. mortgage lo have him laughed at and It
numbers besides toe short address «»&lt;l Oklahoma but to near y all the on ,h'ca^'
Mohrmann
MOW. THEREFORE. hr vlrtoe of ih
foreclosure.
makes toe pupil feel hurt. I would
.
oi B,-. H.T1 K-W All IM., wllb . “XI S., »
Iwianclnr.
...
...
Harry O.
Mohrmann.
Rec'r.
i Cook, assumpsit.
’ vs. Carrie B- Heft, et al, mortgage work with the pupil alone." "I
would try to be absolutely fair and
In the matter of the estate of Hl-1 foreclosure.
,i'»hr‘nn
i attribute my excellent physical ’ nr^h^Vnddk^'tate^New^'York ram Kenfield. appeal from probate
. 11 would not let a pupil know I liked
Harry' O.
Mohrmann.
Kec.r*jhlm better than others even if I
court.
vs. Gordon Edmonds and
' did." "I would look at every pupil as
James
L. *&gt;
Barker.
to my y^ars of trainihg in the Y (
Mntiment was better, —
•••«■* •—»«. Rec'r. Woodland mortgage foreclosure.
I an individual." "I would toy to
HATiCEKY notice
Gym."—Admiral Richard Byrd.
U|Bn two t0 onp agalnst lt3. All Stale Bank vs- David S.’ Goodyear.
Harry O.
Mohrmann.
Rec'r.
vs. Joseph E. Evans and wife, mort- | learn how to explain tilings more
C. F Angell was in Grana Rapstates of the Middle West rolled , J*- trustee, assumpsit.
| clearly." "I would speak more slow­
Ids. Battle Creek. Free|»rt. Middle-; up decisive majorities against It. । Hwry £)■
Mohrmann.
RecY. gage foreclosure.
ly. and learn how to speak quietly
Ville Hird Delton on Y business last i averaging nearly two to one.| Nashville State Bank vs. Merritt
James F. Nesbet vs. Mary Nesbet, I and pleasantly." "I would act In­
week.
| n mere were an outstanding । Mead and Maude Mead, assumpait.
bill for divorce.
I terested to my work.—f would be
The Welcome Corners Y group ■ leader in the opposition party,
a I Harry Cheeseman vs.. Clear Lake
Harry O. Mohrmann vs. Walter I happy all the time." "I would never
meet thLs week. Thursday evening ' man- whois not a reactionary but
Guernsey Farm, a partnership. R. Ruse, et al. mortgage foreclosure. scold because il has a bad effect In­
witi&gt; the Fingletun boys. Duane | ln favor of liberalizing tlie govern- [ •iPPenl from justice court.
Betty J. Greiner vs. Alfred Grein­ stead of helping."
its I Central National Bank A: Trust er. bill for divorce.
Pugh leading.
ment within constitutional limitsj
One question was; "if you could
LiJ.Cr.r
.....j jJ,
mu.Adls&gt;f Co.dls-f
of Battle
Banking
Corp
The Young Men's Y. group hold 1 an(
n faaV0
r ofniuu.u:,
a more equitable
Co. ofCreek
Battlea Creek,
a Banking
Corp
Andrew T. Dirr and Ella Dirr vs. change the average teacher in what
r «.f Ha
j uibutlon
of- ------the wealth
their bi-weekly ineetotg~tffK
■'
------------Of
- this ' *’• Joh» P- •»««»*• Lydia Jana*,
" and Lena Velte, bill for relief under i ways would you change nim or her."
inLtir
I country, so that we would not have H- A.
moratorium.
nesday at 427 Young Street.
| Some answers were: “I would not
the extremes of billionaires and |
Katheryn Hart vs. Delton Stole let a teacher get cross Just because
a ,- Wire. trespass on the case.
Bank.
1 paupers, that man would have a
)(GEVII.I.E.
I a pupil cannot understand. When ti
Edward_Groat el al., vs. Irving j jHipll is honestly trying, a teacher ,
Mrs. Lloyd Earl of Plain- j walk-awny if nominated against Mr ,1 Hoekstra Ice Cream Co., a Michi­
gan- corporation, vs. Fred Elders, et Charlton."et al.
i'i well spent Sunday with his ixircnu Roosevelt. Judging from the Liter-1 ought to be able to realize it.” "The
Horry Leonard and Clara Leonard 1 average teacher puls too much 1m* । at this place.
] ary Digest's poll. But that man ha-.,
replevin.
George
vs. Theodore
1 Mr. and Mrs. Homer Norman nnd not yet been found nnd it remain.'.1 u™r
Be cCampbell
a
portance on home work. The school
Langridge,
replevin.
tracls.
Mr. and Mrs, John Vcncifia were to bo seen whether he can be.
I is the place to do school work. If a
I Tlie Osgood Co, an Ohio CorporLillian Llchty vs. Hazel S. Well- teacher cannot get her work across
Hastings shoppers Saturday.
I atlon vs. Julius Maurer. George
IRVING.„
Mrs. Charles Crawford Ls now able '
j „
J In .*chool. she cannot expect a pupil
Mrs
Minnie
Cox
of
Grand
RapMaurer.
John
TMaurer,
aasiunpalt.
Hustings City Bank vs. Forest nnd ' to learn It alone." “I would compel
to be up ahd around the house.
Mrs Minnie Cox of Grand Rap- spent :last week
■ —
2* her
----------*1.
Ethel Ellie vs. Fred Livingston. Eva Havens, mortgage foreclosure. ! all teachers to learn to smile easily."
whlch all of her friends are glad to lds
with
parents.
,
»
•iMr. and 11
Mrs.
— Wnuvlll.
Mayville.
’
Emma Llvlnjydon. assumpsit.
Mary Baker vs. Lloyd Baker, di­ ' “I would have a teacher stick to Hie
hear. ‘
Schiffmnn- of Kalamazoo, C. L. Barber vs. Hugh Chapman. vorce.
The remains of Mrs, Marie Os- : Cldye
—
' subject until It was learned. Moat
Z-~.-2y here,
hrr?.
Howard Stuck, appeal from justice
carl Navue vs. Pearl Navue. bill teachers go on lo something new be­
good of Plainwell were brought to‘5l*”1 Sunday
for divorce.
.« burial
....... last week
Mr. “nd Mr», B«rl
&amp;»•&lt;;
and court. _
_
.
this place for
„
fore al) lhe pupils know it." "I would
Casey
vs. ------Board
of County
MondAV
A
A -----erent
great
mans* years
many
vearx"*of
oi ' daughter
nnd
nnd Mrs. Maurice
.......
-Ford
— -----j —
-- -—........ - , Blanche Eddy vs.
.... Wm. .DeGolia. not let teachers put so much emAtlnraey for Plaintiff!,
Monday,
f
*------------------"
j Mr.
- -BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY
her life had been snenl hero where Crookston of Hastings were dinner . Road Commissioners and County of, et a)., specific performance,
phaals on marks." "I would ’have
she
leaves
many
friends
j
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
I
Barry,
trespass
on
the.case.
I
cheater
Peck
vs.
Henry
Chester
Henry
Barnannt i nn an
them know what is going on in thc
Not much news this week as ev- iSchcnkel Friday night.
| Ur. R. G. Finnic. Henry Brovanl by. mortgage foreclosure,
world." T would have teachers act
noi mucii
news
uiu to
»irs
as c»
......... Fox has
.... gone .to Chi-: vs. Andrew
Andrew nirr
ran
„l
...
eryone
U btuy
trying
keep
mH Mrs. George
Dirr. rw.f
Def. nnrl
and Cl
Glenn
George Norris el al., vs. W. H.
MOETGAGl SAI,I'.
.‘2
J?’•STi.'SW.
' 'esco to
to visit her
her daughters.
Wotrlng. o.n.lUW
Gamlto'ec D.-rrndutt.
Defendant, ap- Whitmore, et al., mortgage morator­ as a companion instead of a boss."
■SSST.S.'K^'X^
ii Wotrlng.
"I would not let a teacher act as if
.nd hoping lor Lrmer
.ralhrr
Mr and Mr, J. M P-rry jpont pr-.l tron. lujUro courL
ium.
she had to have us and -would be
vxjn
i Sunday in Clinton county.
■ In the matter of the estate of
Bertha Weaver vs. LaVem Wea­ glad when wc left."
I Fellowship Fridav evening. Jan. 1 Caleb Risbridgcr. (deceased), up- ver. bill for divorce.
It was cheering to know Dial 95
William R. Bayne vs. Nine Bayne, per cent of thc pupils said they en­
kotice to '..rmor.----------- ’&gt;• •&gt; &gt;&gt;» h»&gt;': P"&gt; to* “JJ-r: , pejl.goor:
_
Tlie Tiffin Savings Bank, a bank- bill for divorce.
robai. Court for | election of officers: good program.
joyed going to school.
ln&lt;{ corporation of Tiffin. Ohio. vs.
Pearl L. Johnson vs. James G.
‘Everyone invited.
1 Ladles' Aid Society at thc halt , Dr. F G. Pullz. assumpsit.
Johnson, bill for divorce.
Gives first consideration to the security
DELOUSE CATTLE
if. 'Friday Feb 7. A gooa attendance is
Mac Barnhart vs. Jphn-Cappon
bark of thc investment.
l&gt; (desired.
'and Board of County Road ComBY USING POWDER
d,” | Mr. and Mrs. Faster Waddell nnd I niUsKnwis uf the county uf Burry.
M4M Than on? rar.
Tlie crjwrirnre nf the building and loan a&lt;«&gt;cialinn* nf
n »n-i sons were Sunday guests of her par- | trespass on the case,
Farmers May Make Remedy
'cnLs ncnr Lowell.
1 Lyman W. Baxter vs. joe C. Hurd. i Tlie Industrial Co. vs. Leon D. j
at Low Cost—Poison Mix­
ntti'* I The Irving j&gt;eople were grieved by ax'umpslt.
.
rendition!, from ilir «iand|x&gt;int of *afrly. inaLr&lt; the eliarr
।
. .. of
.. Mrs. Allen
...
------- ------Bertha - Matthews
vs. -----Ear) ------Fink- Cool. Andrew Dooley. &lt;ix.-&gt;unipui.
••uuir. the death
Matthews.
tures Should Be Avoided
Madison Furniture co. v?. Mike
h«r.i whlch occurred early in January, nt bclncr. Inez Finkbelner. replevin.
IniormalioQ renrrrning
, When cattle rub against posts and
fully furnIdicd.
j., .,f her home in Buchanan. She had
Standard Oil Co. of Indiana vs. GJukich. assumpsit.
MacieJ and Mary Wielgosz vs. buildings in winter, it is a pretty
n u'ciork in th- been a resident in nnd nround Irv- t Maurer construction Co, George Michael and Helena Zawacki. as- | ^ood IndicaUon^ t_hey are suffering
Successful for More Than 46 Years
ing while her husband was carrier Maurer and Julius Maurer, as- sumpsit.
from an.............
infestation of lice, says C..
■ on lhe R F. D- when Irving had a • sumpsit.
Alfred Moerdyk vs. Orma Glynn. B. Dibble, of lhe Michigan Slate
1 post office. Her four children were , Dorothy Guyney vs. Helen Winn,
college entomology department.
nOBTOAOi: FOF.Ed &lt;&gt; Nl'l'
I bom in this vicinity, attended : trespass on the case.
Many inquiries have come to the
Arnett Auto Co. vs. B. M. Han­
animal husbandry department ot
son. et al, assumpsit.
White Brothers vs. L- H. Cook, as­ the college, asking for ways of aeiouslng. a bulletin on cattle lice may
sumpsit.
Harry o. Mohrmann vs. E. L. Ap­ be obtained by writing to the col­
1250 Gri.wold St.
EitablUhtd 1S39
DETROIT. MICH
lege.
('nowadays. Mrs. Matthews was in
Woodland Exchange Bank vs. pleman. assumpsit.
Dftroit'i Oldft Building d: Loan
When fall control has bcen neg­
Ernest
Vermeulen
et
al.,
vs
Phe»tr ..t a serious automobile accident a cou-; James E- and Daisy B. Guy. inorlAuociation
lected and emergency measures are
pic of years ago from which she i cage foreclosure.
necessary in winter, louse powders
Gilbert
Vcrbcrg
vs.
Oren
Davis,
Henry Hitt et al., vs. ”
Henry
never fully recovered, and which, no
”
are the only safe desirable control,
trespass
on
the
case.
I Schaiblcy.
to conserve
dqubt. hastened her dcuth.
.. injunction
. — -----------------------The village of Nashville vs. Nora thc entomologist advises.
.
Matthew Bedford Ls confined to I estate. •
Commercial louse powders Ani his bed at his home north of here.1 Jacob Hatton, et nl. vs. Elam Dawson, sole and only heir of John tainlng pyrethrum and derris, but
NOW. THEREFORE, br virti&gt;» »f the'Mrs. Mary Mills is spending the I Springer, bill for mandatory injunc- Dawson, assumpsit.
Ada McKay vs. Clayton C. Pcttln- without such poisonous materials as
f.on.,tlnfl
""Fi-1 winter with Mr. and Mrs. Bedford.! tlon.
.
arsenic, flourine, nicotine, or helle­
।
----------------------------------------। Wm. Wisner and Etta WLsner vs. glll, assumpsit.
bore may be used.
QUIMBY.
I George Wilson, bill to set aside deed.
A home made recipe, recommend­
Will Tobias vs. Mabie Tobias, bill
I The L. A. S. will serve dinner at
John Vander Kolk cl nl.. vs.
ed
by Mr. Dibble, would include one
for
divorce.
the home of Eugene Freeman Farmers State Bank of Middleville.
Clyde C. Slcmons. State Comm'r. ixiund of pyrethrum, three jxjunds
Thursday, Jun. 30,
'
I chas. and Adda Sylvester, moraflour,
nnd
pounds
louse powder
of Health, vs. the village
of four
Nash---------------------.-------------Mlss Margaret Reid Ls convales- ■ toriuin.
clng from an appendicitis operation
Lewis J. Matthews et al„ vs. Jns- vllle. bill for mandatory injunction, i for a total cost of $.60 or $.15 per
C- Carl McGuffy cl al, vs. William pound.
at the home of her grandparents, per G. DeKoning et al, bill for temP. Streeter, bill of complaint to va- i One-fourth ot a pound should be
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Reid
| pornry injunction.
| used per animal with tlie treatment
! Miss Esther Hoffman of Battle
Kalamazoo Implement company cate decree.
Chester peck vs. Lee Brail and repeated in 14^ays^Beddins shl?^
ri « Creek expects to spend the month vs. Margaret Chalkir. ct al. bill to
lx* cleaned‘ each lime. ”
If u
blue
lice,
’
”
of Febnjar&gt;' al
home of her quiet title.
* Lois Brail, mortgage foreclosure.
which do not respond lo this treat­
Harry
O.
Mohrmann.
Rec'r.
Hoving decided to quit farming,' I will have on auction sale on what is
। ih» Town- parents here,
while her employers
—
-------'
' ~
“
—
Agnes
Randle vs. —
Floyd
Randle,
vs. Richard o. Tuke. et al, mort­ ment. ore present. six ounces of
trip to th? South Sea Is- bill for diforce.
known as the Martin Smith farm. Sec. 3, Rutland township. Go five miles west
powdered
naphthalene
or
moth
balls
gage foreclosure.
I *r A V I 'a*!5^3
‘ Kate
.
i Autg.
Kate VA
King vs. Wm. Harold King.
on M-37 to Al-Con-Quin school, turn left ond go 1 1-2 miles. The sale will be
' s.r!i.'.n 1'
Byron E- Farwell vs. Prosper G. should be added.
»rT*. «t
Dan Kelle&gt;’ has accepted a posl- bill for divorce,
.j, held on
herefrom [ Hon In Buttle Creek, and went to | George
—
~
Dye. -Receiver, vs. Richard Bernard, injunction to have specific
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
l w?r.k
Thursday morning.
Loppenthien and
and wife,
wife, mortgage
mortgage ixsrformance stayed.
Loppenthien
Fifty-two friends nnd relative*
Charles Kermeen. et al, vs. Grover
t ViiUr I ^*r- nnd MraKellogg of Has- foreclosure,
met at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
oorraiFd tings and Velma and Maxine Kel- , Ver) L. Deeds vs. Marvel M. Deeds H. Cline, et al, bill to foreclose sec­ O. N. Landon Sunday to help them
ond mortgage.
n.nk „t Mill ii.« u
v?‘!&lt;‘d lhclr srandparrnts at bill to annul marriage.
f liidJItvillt Dimondale Sunday afternoon.
I Hastings Building and l»an vs.
Togan Stiles, Inc. vs. John B. celebrate their golden wedding an-

| LEGAL’ NOTICES |

MORTOAOr SAT.E

NOTIOB OF MOBTOAOB FOBECLOSURE BALE.

I

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

NEARLY TWO MILLION
VOTES IN DIGEST POLL

COURT CIIBIDIB -I
“BRIMIff TERM

Every Careful Investor

JJfje Rational ffioatt &amp;
jlnurshtteitt ffimitpaiu;

J. 1. MAUS

UCTION SALE!

TUES., FEB. 4,1936
COMMENCING AT 1:00 P. M.

I OFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:

HORSES.
Bay gelding, 11 years old.
Roon gelding, 10 years old. wt. 1300,
sound.

CATTLE.
Hoistpin cow, 8 year* old, giving milk,
due in August.
Guernsey cow, 3 years old, due in Feb.
Guernsey cow, 3 years old, giving milk,
3 yearling Guernsey heifers
Heifer, 6 months old.

FARM TOOLS.
McCormick-Dcpring mowing machine.
Dump rake.
Low wheeled wagon.
Banner plow. Syracuse plow.
John Deere riding cultivator.
Spring tooth drag. Wagon with rack.
Walker’s trailer with new tires.
Pair bob sleighs. Pump jack.
Half H. P. gas engine.
Double harness.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
Sideboard.
Davenport, folding bed.
Half sixe iron bed. Kitchen cabinet.
Cupboard with glass doors.
Small sheet iron heater.
Quantity fruit cans.
Ten gal. milk can.
Five gal. cream can.
Other articles too numerous to mei
tion.

HOGS.

8 shoots.
Brood sow, Chester White.

HAY AND FODDER.
Quantity alfalfa hay.
4 or 5 ton* timothy hay.
50 shock* com in field.
Quantity com stalks.
25 bushel* oats

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

Nothing- removed

settled for.

D. 0. RICHEY
PROPRIETOR
DEWEY REED, Auctioneer

The people east and north nf Arthur Crothers, mortgage fore­ Bresson, moratorium relief.
Kate Hale vs. Fred Hale, bill for
. Quimby are anticipating electricity, closure.
Wc hope to see thc line put through
Ed~=.-d
Edward C
E Purdy or.d
and Cora Turd,
Purdy | divorce.
(Mt s is j* j in the near future.
I vs.
i. otto
Otto a.
G. Llnslcy
Llnslcv and Elzora LlnsLins'
**
COATS GROVE.
•
■ ■| ley. land contract moratorium.
The evangelistic meetings closed
—— ‘ Elsie C. Furniss vs. Delbert Deller
on
Bunday.
Rev.
Jordan spoke on
et al, mortgage foreclosure.
gn
। George J. Irland vs. Helen Irland, the subject of "Tlie Last Invita­
O CJ
1 bill for divorce.
tion." and Mr. and Mrs. Jordan
'■
Barry County, a municipal corpor- sang a duel. Al thc Sunday hour.
i alien vs. Michigan Surety Company Dorothy Kcasc and Betty Kimble
sang "Was That Somebody You?”
RnilND TRI* vl nl' acUon on hr,nrt
HOUND TRIP | Hnrry o
Mohrmann.
Rec'r. and at the church service the men
। Nashville State Bank vs. Edward sang "Faith of Our Fathers."
j Babcock, et al, mortgage foreclose
The men of lhe Sunday school are
ure.
sponsoring a pancake supper on
Jake DePriester, et al, vs. Hugh Thursday evening. Feb. 8. in the
PULLMAN AND COACH
I K. Johnson et al, mortgage fore­ basement. Everybody invited. The
FRIDAY OR SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 7 AND 8
closure.
money ts to used for repairs on the
I Floyd A. Brown et aL. vs. Mettle Church furnace.
BARGAIN ROUND TRIP — BERTH FARES EXTRA
Rickel. moratorium.
Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Wing spent
Edward D. Barber vs. Martin
Sunday in Kalamazoo.
M, Eastern Time.
Goodenough, et al., clear title.
Tlie P. T. A. will be held on Fri­
Lewis M. Rlshel vs. Horry Epstein,
ui train Iron Bnflalo.
day evening. Jan. 31. Pot luck sup­
moratorium.
CMWlfR.•LK«P«r
bslf tars—no basus* cbackad.
Anna M. Q. Wolf. Executrix of the per at 7 o'clock, followed by a good
FOR INFORMATION CONSULT LOCAL fTCXET AGENT
estate of John Wolf vs. Arnott program. Plan to attend and bring
your own table service.
Douglas, et al.
Bertha Tuttle vs. Orval l. Tuttle,
The Ladles' Aid will give a sup­
bill for divorce.
per at Woodland in February, which
Willis Streeter and Calvin Street* will lake the place of their, reular
ft vs. Township of Yankee Springs, meeting here.
bill to clear title.
Mrs. Jesse Chase, who has been
Dorothea o. Nelmyier vs Sakie
Ncimyicr. bill tor divorce.
ter and is now visiting at the Dav­
Hastings Building Ac Loon vs. enport home In South Woodland.
Frederick E. Hill and wife, mortgage Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Chase have
foreclosure.
Hastings Building St Loan vs. Har­ Jesse Chase
riet Neal, mortgage foreclosure.
Thatrjew hormr; . Yrow room . . . fireplace
George Dye. Rec'r. va. Earl A. En­
BRANCH DISTRICT.
. . . roof ... or any remodeling you may be
gle and wife, mortgage foreclosure.
planning to do. Let us help you. Now is the
Frlday evening. Jan. 31, at the
schoolhouse. Everyone come.
time to make, plans and arrangements for
Miss Edna Flory, teacher of the

Joij NIAGARA $5
J FALLS
WINTER EXCURSION

MICHIGAN CENTRAL

BUILD!

those improvements. The Hastings Lumber
and Coal Company carry a .complete line
of BUILDING MATERIALS.

HASTINGS LUMBER &amp; COAL CO.
PHONE 2515

FRANK SAGE

A FARMER BOY

Mr. nnd Mrs. Rural Root and
daughter ot Coopersville; Mr. and
Mrs. John Schrlber of Eaton Rap­
Ids Guy Hough and Mrs. Force of
Lansing; Mr. and'Mrs. Jud Car­
penter. Miss Adah and Miss Zclla
Odell. Mn. Arista Easton and
daughter Beatrix and Russell Parks
and Mrs. Faye Donley and children
and Wm. Shriber and daughter, all
of Hastings, and Mrs. Clyde Roush
und son and family uf Fieeport; Mr.
nnd Mrs. Cleon Landon and family
and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Yargvr
of North Carlton; Lewis Herzle of
near Coats Orove. and Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Jackson of near Lake Odessa,
and Mrs. Anna Buck and family
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shriber
and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Barry and son of this community.
A bountiful pot luck dinner was
served at noon. They received many
beautiful and useful presents. Ev­
eryone enjoyed lhe day very much
. and wished them many more years
of married life.

THE CROSSROADS.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Taliferro of
Battle Creek are spending a few
days with the latter's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest williams.
Lawrence Ryan and family of
Hastings spent Sunday afternoon
with Mrs. jane Tuttle.
Lynn Stodge started to Has­
tings High school this Monday
morning,--------- -------------------------- :------Miss Gladys Van De Velde of the
Center Road spent Saturday night
and Sunday with Miss Mary Green.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Sledge of Has­
tings spent Saturday night and Sun­
day with lhe former's parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Stodge.
Mrs. Burwell and sons of Has­
and Mrs. Lester Hawks, Wednesday tings spent Sunday with Kenneth
evening, aa the road was Impassable. Hurless and family.
Nearly everyone is staying at
Clayton Houser of Grand Rapids
home as thc weather is sp.-v.ery
cold and the roads not very good' in Williams home.
Miss Maxine Sledge of Grand
The prayer meeting at North Ma- Rapids and Ray Johnston of Rock­
ford. spent Sunday afternoon and
of Mr. and Mrs. Otb Whitmore evening with Mr. and Mix Clyde

- ---

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, FEBRUARY 6, 1936

12 PAGES

EIGHTIETH YEAR

LARGER ATTENDANCE
IS GREATLY DESIRED

OVERLJND EXPRESS
B°y win.
in MEMI BLASTS
VERY 110F TABLE ^aJor Bowes’AmateurTroupe
VENERABLE
INDEBTEDNESS ON CHURCH ALSO
PAID BY RADIO FANS' SUBSCRIPTIONS

AND IN A FEW YEARS IT
LED TO APPEARANCE
OP HIGHWAYMEN

) 2 PER GENT OF PEOPLE DO

Bill Boadway. aged 18. the Lake
Odessa young man with the soprano Sl^.oT^h%m'Mite?fXe.
r»Ai irnDsiiA'c cidct volec’ was
wlnner 00 lhf Major
CALIFORNIA’S FIRST, Bowes amateur program on Sunday STtSTteAit».joUr

BLACK BART” ONE OF

- evening. Jan. 26. so he was InformHe Was Followed Later On . e&lt;j on Thursday of last week. The
by the James Brothers
I ‘eler»m also contained the infer7. “
„ " vmar.
matton that Boadway was to start
and the.Daltons
with one ot the Major Bowes amaThe many service* rendered by ■ teur unit*. No. 13. on Feb. 12. his
western Express Companies and salary to be 440 per week and his
‘their usefulness to society, seem to; expenses.
have been accompanied by u com-. Through the kindly interest of
paratively small investment, small । two Grand Rapids business men.
wages paid employees, and very I whose names were not disclosed, the
high carrying charges, as a result; Lake Odessa youth was privileged
miHionaires were made by tW litin- to go to New York City to appear
dredi. and Express Companies be- ( on this weekly program for amacame the target for gangsters and, teurs.
hold up men. The favorite out-door j During Ute broadcast, mention
sport of highwaymen some time I
after the discovery of gold in Call-1 CHES ON AIR FOR
fomla. was te hold up stage coaches I
Min run

“

.

N. B. C. AT CHICAGO

Bdtty Osborn Caine Now a
_

.

, —

72 PER CENT OWNED BY
INDIVIDUAL OWNERS £»

------------.
assurance was given Rev. Boadway
that the Indebtedness would be W. J. Cameron of Ford Mocared for as donations were coming I
tor Go. Furnishes Data
from all over the United States for •
Concerning Proof
that purpose. Who said there was i
How often we
hear the statement.
no Santa Claus?
*------------------------------------------------------According to rumors afloat, the. made by those who wish to create
Major Bowes Unit No. 13 Is ached- prejudice, that "2 per cent of the
uled to appear in Grand Rapids., people of this country actually own
and Grand Rapids Is to be honored 90 per cent of- its wealth." That
in the broadcast some Sunday eve- i would be an impressive statement
nlng In the not distant future, so • if it were true; but it simply Isn't

'

carrying expresa. When 'the railroads took over the carrying of ex-1
press, lhe outlaw activity changed to I
train jobbery. As late as the decade
from 1890 to 190Q there were over
300 traln-hold-ups in this country. |
But supplanting the old wooden
cars wltli i.t4Hil one*, and arming &lt;
express messengers, tended to make ।
the hold-up business constantly
more dlfflcuk and les* remunerative
nnd accompanied with an increasing loss of life on the part of those

NOT OWN 80 PER OENT
OF NATION'S WEALTH

was made of the debt on the First ]

Games
There Is considerable dlsappoint: ment among the basket ball fans
j that larger crowds do not come te
lhe high school gym te witness the
contests, which take place Friday
evenings when they are held here.
Hastings High school ha* an over-

. the story gocAx.
;

so.

•

THE BROTHERHOOD
MEETS ON FEB. V
0.

February 29 Announced as

H. BRAMBLE, MASTER j
OF STATE GRANGE,
IS SPEAKER

HAS DECIDED VIEWS
ON FARM PROBLEMS

Positively the Very
Last Day
Because of the rash throughout

ized at Lansing that there would be
, a large number who could not get

n
Wl
MB. 010101 MAUBIB Ul
CHARGE—OmOB Ot
posTornoi

AIDS FARMERS OVER­
BURDENED WITH DEBTS

should say a better than average.
, .
----------- —of state has sent out notices extendits second team has lost only one He Is in Great Demand as a ing to February 2$ the time when Loads on Personal Property
game this season. It would be en­
Sneaker
P*aUs raU3t
** *«««»• °P
opeaaer Throughout
znrougnoui
, such
lh&gt;l Um&lt;
pUUt
—Five Per Cent Ghatcouraging to the players If there
could be a larger attendance at the
the State
I recognized. The statement Is made
tel Mort&lt;&amp;fa
local games. We hope those who can
The February meeting of the ‘fron’ Lansing that there will be no
Government activate* in th***
will plan to take in these contests. Hastings Brotherhood will be Mon- further extensions.
days Include » type of work which
day evening. February 17. in the
usual place. This will be the fifth of 1A11 Olj I Rlfi | f||M
teaUon." Under that beading is a
Wflotl I Nb I Ulr
division called -Rural RahabiUta-

GRAYLING SHOWS
THEM ULI HOW

Surely this Is a fin? opportunity
In a recent rAUlo talk W. J. Camfor young Boadway and his many j eron, of the Ford Motor Co., dlsfriends wish him every success.
| posed of thte^M^tament so thor­ THEIR
WINTER SPORTS
oughly thauwe give below the ahore
talk lie made over a nation-wide
PROGRAM
DRAWS
hook-up on January 12. 1938. He
HUGE CROWDS
said:
’Recently we described as-mis­
chievous
that own
the fj^CAR
rich 2 perthe
centassertion
of the people
UI&gt;bAH oLHUMANN

Junior Play To Be
Postponed One JPeek

PACES 1 to 8
iTIME FOR LICENSE
PLATES EXTENDED

WASHINGTM■I LINCOLN BUNQUET

The farmers especially will be In(crested In thl* meeting, because the I
-speller Is to be none other than Mr.
, C. H. Bramble of Lansing. Master,

~

~~

~

■»

Br.’^

poailble, to aid farmer* who an of
knowledge of farming,

who

fso*

ONLY 400 TIOKETB WILL trouble because of pressing or *Xceaslve Indebtedness. By making
speaker and will give an interesting i
BE BOLD FOR GATHER­
talk which every member of the I
__ , 0
Brotherhood will be glad to hear.
INO ON
19
Both political parties are striving to
———
‘
| work out a legislative program that | HFAN DAVENPORT
will benefit the farmers of this
uRVCfirun I

such loans to that type of debtors.

RECEIVES PRAISE | country. The need of such a pro-1
TO BE TOASTMASTER
. ------------■ 8™n&gt;
apparent, but ’just how te
------------Chesaning Editor Gives Vivid br,n“ 11 about&gt;^“ prccUc steps Hon Oienn Dunn Governor’s the Rural Rehabilitation can loan
r
,
necessary, are riot sb apparent.
, .. ,
’
.
_.
him the necessary funds, under
rlcture of Colorful
1 Mr. Bramble has decided views on j Legal Advisor, Is the Princonditions which we explain later.
~
.......
.
that subject, so the members
will.
Scenes
cipal Speaker
Should such a farmer have given a
hear an interesting discussion. We
Chester B Howell In the last l»ue are not able to give the names of
It is already evident that the mortgage on his farm to Ute Federal
of the Chesaning Argus tells how the Brotherhood Squad this week, problem for the next republican
Grayling ’ has gone to town" on this but we are promised them for our banquet, which will be held here
who attempted it. The introduction ■
winter sports business and gives next issue.
Wednesday evening. February 19. insurance or to buy animate or toots
their &amp;lud,M
studios on the National PRESIDENT’S BALL
of the jiarcels post system too. put thelr
credit to a former Hastings boy. I
Is not whether the tickets can be needed to carry on hte work and
a big crimp in the profit* of express|. Broadcasting Circuit’
WAS FINE SUCCESS
sold, but how to avoid an oversale. meet hte payment* on th* principal
Mrs.
Caine
has
had
marked
drapeople, me same amount of land. Av-Ittnch.
....
UOC
JUUri rrtUNE
USE YOUR
PHONE Un
OR
companies and this doubtless tended '
The sponsors ot this banquet are
malic
talent
from
childhood
and
te lessen the numlx’r ot hold ups. i
0'
WRITE A POSTAL CARD determined that there shall be no
Big Crowd Dance — Nice
;
was
cast
for
the
lead
in
many
Has
­
Following 1900. the development of'
oversale; that the sale of tickets hablUtation division with a loan. In
or 320 billions, the estimate for 1933.
J,’..
|
------------Sum Turned Over for
the automobile, the Introduction of tings High school plays. After her
Who gets the Income of the United
^d ,
You Know Where There Is will absolutely stop when four hun­ the manner we explain hereafter.
marriage she
with suc­
the
machine
and civil!other IjI ^,
~ appeared‘yrarFwllh
Charitable Work
States? Who controls the productive *“« ^Pd rtn P’Th/ho?."
81
dred ore sold, and NO TICKETS
blessings
&lt;?» gun.
of anheroin,
advancing
lna [jf fh^luFtw?
a Flock of Game Birds
lhe, ,hllge chute- ,
BOLD ON THE NIGHT OP THE unable to pay without selling .hi*
Hastings, along with other small and dbtributlve process? Tonlgfit we
ration, ushered In a new form of. Ja,’“. „nnT?&lt;1
J
*Uh
hundreds skallng-girte and boys
BANQUET. Before even the ticket* tools or livestock—which would ser­
crime. Then came the day-light
9™n&lt;1 5 ’5\v'c PlaXers,' towns, big towns, and communities deal with ownerahio
Needing Feed
were printed, when It became known iously cripple him in carrying oa
"In 1929 the largest single block
J
” I
uaFn Ils °Ind*the' ouHc^get'awny d,cl,0Hvivid perwimUtyF uml all over Ute land got into the swim
^buma^te^SEr-^
1
. .............. ...
v.
, Th14 h« b*'n, • V«T
wln- that there was to be a banquet, lib­ hte farm—he can make application
last Friday night at Community hall
• | Schumann, clever publisher of The tor on Kame blrUE- psrucutarly quail eral Crfdrti for tickets came in from at the local office ot the Rural Re­
and danced, as "th? music went
c Grayling Avalanche, here and there !Bnd pheasants. Unless they can be all parts of the county. This evi­ habilitation. The local represent*.
.
—
..
------------.
—
........
......
round
and
round."
at
the
first
PreslAll ol
Irnwunl »J th- time
WavUre jrtunu.
I ^To^ww ^rteb .- dences the Interest that will be
wnen traffic
mime In
in Illicit
mien liquor
nouor was
was at
ai j
Hastings friends will be anxious | dent's ball to be held in Barry
when
Ils height So lucrative was this for:,0 lunc 1,1 on the Iiro*rams ln which county. A capacity crowd was pres­ Uon^SLra'o’r U*
o!
w,th
«*-1 Wc..havco^n
Con‘ shown in this banquet. Those who
IS nilgni. 80 IllcratlU *’‘s
&gt;&lt;jr । ^e
lent nnrt
she IS
is to
to anoear
appear which
which will
will be
be in
in Uw
the'ent
and It
It was
was a
a finfine mihwm
success *n
in whole WIw Lwns th£e f.n^ IcaUse hc u the m,ln 8PrlnK ‘n thf MT’atl°" offlccr Oconte Sumner. want to attend should see to getting local debt-adjustment committee to
the very few who survived wholesale 1
their tickets early, for If they put
future.
■ every
i every way.
way.
Nex
cSlra £renl ^roSrt^ I ««»“nery that has pul over the [ *h“f,Ph°ne n’i™bcr
*nd, lLy
gang murders, that we sec an arch' near __________
, B t ____
it of! until the night of the banquet,
A representative group of people
hou^hmd
furaShm^ »bo»-15 °00 people Jammed into a .Hastings Rod and Gun club.
criminal like Capone, now languish-1 AklklllAI Cl/EAilAir
to make favorable aettkmenU of ttw
I was present from evcry^walk In life.1 clothing
Ing in Alcatraz prison, really in ANNUAL tVtNINU
, _ l.J. IL.I. •
JewelS auSbfteltamo^tm? te 1 u&gt;w,‘ lhal measured 2033 souls last I whose prudent is Dr. Burton Perry. they will be out of luck, for no tick­
ets can be had on that night. In­
with every section of the coflnty rep­
Sr
«nt
year
,offlclal
“
“
nl.-the
smart
Mr.
&gt;
P
h0!
’
f
’
207
te
ask
that
anyone
who
control of a grt at city like Chicago.
REGISTERS HIT resented. Tiiere was a Jolly Informal
deed. it is already apparent that
of ul ffuSSl^Mth AlFoFE
of Ki'hy
“,d on
where a flock of quaU or four hundred will be disposed of
and other criminals, scarcely less;
atmospiiere
that
helped
to
put
it'
noted, in control of other large ccn- Commercial
“
' " Club's
’’
— Ladies'
,ral^ ““ meking real
^hw wiU^ before the banquet is held.
across In fine shape A floor show l recognize that ownerahlp of these 1 ‘dea
ters.
‘wo from
* Dr-**"7 They will ««
in order that our readers may
with numbers furnished by high U almost entirely with Individuals
Night Features Dinner
In the early days of the California
kuuui
uu&gt;. »&gt;u
* and 006 ^rom Saginaw. Bay■.
i,nows or 4Uch a flock has no know Just where they can obtain
school B
girls,
and mum
local iui*»
folks wiyi
wi(b j’ "Of the 25 million houses and ;
stage express, perhaps the best
•oUly on personal property, taking
and Program
talent, helped te enliven the evening.1 lot* in this country. 17 million are flb-iiew hounds and picture men
™
known express robber was "Black
The
committee
planned
te
keep
ex.owned
by
their
occupant*,
most
of
'
rOm
as
far
awa
&gt;
’
M
Cincinnati
and
^
n
pl
’
“
le
.
l
?J
a
“
list of those in the various town­ chattel mortgage security at B par
• The Commercial Club "Ladles'
(Continued on ^ge six.
| south POin^-Pethe
taking shot*- ^ Mr Msx^^r^h H^te«
(Continued on page eight)
pol
ships and in this city who Win have
; Night" Tuesday, wasn't favored with pense. down as much as passible
----------------- -----------------------Grayling
tickets to sell. Ln the township*
Grayling. Mich.,
—J on the Job and | J® Mr. Max Dtetrich Hastings sec
। the desired kind of weather, and and many of the items were genthat nrc represented on the board of
I after 11 long years of pat,
' while storm conditions prevented a
SUDDEN DEATH OF
„ PICTURES
FROM CONThe pheasants seem more hardy supervisors with a republican super­
ernifiTinai r»r-n-r 110 the ouU,de world snowing how It
Ilin rARPCMTCP ful1 houw- 11 didn't Interfere at all
Mayor and Mrs. Charles Leonard i
SERVATION DEPT, is possible to put over a winter than the quail. If the latter arc well visor. he will be given the tickets to
JUU uanrcm I cn with the function proper, which was and Dr. and Mrs. K. 8. McIntyre led
fed. they can get through the win­ sell. There are Uiree townships rep­
------------- , sports program. And the show still
.
an unusually gay and pleasant one. i the grand march. Bud Wolfe’s
ter nicely; but If their stomachs are resented by democrats cn the board,
Was Stricken With Heart
Anything couldn't be formal, how- Prowlers augmented to eight pieces. Public Is Invited to Central going on.
Failure in Frank Beck.
lcver- wlth Dr- George Lockwood, the!with a girls' trio assisting vocally.
Auditorium on Tueidav
I Mr Howell advtees everyone to go empty, they are particularly suscep­ and in those three the tickets will
’
up and see for themselves the an- tible to severe cold.
be placed in the hands of the re­ clal help from other source*, can ob­
\
Club's president. In charge.
j furnished snappy music.
These birds are so useful, espe­ publican county committeemen for tain a Rehabilitation loan from tbs
Evening
swer to careful planning and a
er 3 Card Room
I He was introduced by Glenn I Receipts total around 9127.90. perNext Tuesday. Feb. 11. the schools1 vU,on U1*1 will not be licked, and cially the quail, that every effort those townships. Following is a list government.
Ycsterday afternoon, shortly after' Brower, head of the committee in haps more, and something like 460
(Oontlnued oo pajs three)
one o'clock Judson carpenter cn-' charge of the event, and made a 1 will be realized, seventy per cent will and the people of Hastings and vi-' d«oribes his own personal exper- should be made to get them through
the winter. It may take a little time talned:
.
tcred Frank Becker's card room.!c,ever Introductory speech, which | be used locally and 30 per cent goes clnlty are to have the privilege of «nce-there—
Assyria—William Strain.
Sunday, we took the Missus and to phone or write, but anyone who
comer of Slate and Jefferson streets 1 rather sounded the keynote
kevnote for the ’1 to
tn the Warm
warm Springs
Rnrinex Foundation,
Pnnndatinn seeing pictures of the wild life of
knows where a flock of these birds
Baltimore
—
Bert
Stanton
and
Michigan.
Mr.
Tinker,
representing
'
and
Tom.
the
members
of
the
rest
of
the
evening.
Everything
got
j
which
augmented
by
'larger
and
and sealed himself in a chair ap­
who are home and filled up can be fed ought to be glad to take Lloyd Gaskill.
sums from all over the the State Department of Conservaparently in hte usual health. He started off on the right fool it greater
the time to notify the persons we
Barry—Morse Backus.
frequently visited this place as he seemed, and the general Idea pre- | country means a grand total for this Uon. will present these films and the bu3 Bnd rode over summer­ have named.
and Mr. Becker were boyhood vailed that It was one of the most ’ work in which President Roosevelt give talks concerning them. He ex- cleaned and perfect highways to
Castleton—Wilbert Smith.
pects to be in Barry county all the I Grayling,
friends a few minutes after he seat­ successful of these annual nights is so vitally interested,
Hastings Township—■John Lipkey.
week.
, Wow. what a Jam of folks.
;
»*»
—
HASTINGS MEN
ed himself it was noticed that his yet held.
Hope—Bernard DeGolla.
The pictures are to be shown to
Wow. what a riot of colors.
Tiie program was carried out in CINC MIIQIPAI EVENT
head dropi&gt;ed back. Friends rushed
Stebbins, local druggists, will cele­
the present popular form of a Major r"’C
’
IN AUTO CRASH
Irving—William McCann.
the High school and Junior High at1 Wow- how folks entered Into the
to his assistance, medical aid sum­
brate their 30th anniversary. ThlrJohnstown—Ferd Stevens.
10:15
AM..
and
to
the
younger
I
s
P
‘
r,t
of
the
thing
and
went
to
town
Bowes
amateur
broadcast.
Harold:
ON
FEBRUARY
12
moned. but when Dr. McIntyre ar­
children at 3 P. M- At eight P. M. in-their good time. All happy, faces Earl Bumford's Oar Hits Ma­
Maple Grove—John Martens.
------------rived he was pronounced‘dead, hte Logan filled in very smoothly as that
the
pictures
are
for
the
public,
there
»nUles,
In
spite
of
the
nippy
(Continued
on
page
five)
Symphony of
death evidently being due to heart popular entertainer. Introducing the Minneapolis
chine
Standing
Across
being no admission charge. However, wind that rode right thru you. AU
,0loteSgMurptvand‘ R. shiithroat.l
100
Comes
failure.
Broth. Druggist" and etartad
if any adults wish to attend during MrU “&gt;d imaginations of sults­
Pavement
RONALD COLMAN TRI­
________
F—
1 the day instead of the evening they I
garbed in elegant snow suite.
Girls' Trio
to
Grand
Rapids
Reared ...
in Carlton
...... township,
.VV.lk-.JUp, ju.l
his songs
- t with
---- -guitars;
------ ------------------- —|
Thursday evening Earl Palmatier
The
Symphony comcom-i! •may
UMPHS IN DICKENS ROLE
earlier years were spent In farming H*“ea «»ngs--Lucllle Karmes. Lola
1UC Minneapolis
MilHloopoiia oympnuny
—. do so. The Central auditorium »l°res In Detroit and other Michigan and Earl Bum ford went to Uinslng
H__u.
tn see these
... auCltlCScities
SOld sold
OUt Ot
outSHOW
of snow
SUitS suits
and and
_ __ e Rapids
._
...A number
.
Civic Auditor- ought to’be filled to
In that ------township.
of. Ashalter. Sally Warner, accompanist.! ing te Grand
lum.
an ...
afternoon
views nnH
and hear about Mlch- heavy socks-rout of skis, out of to­ to attend a meeting called for the Heads Brilliant Cast of 118
Wllllnm Kennedv
n. February ,12.
n for __
______ | thentic vlxtva
Kennedy; nrrvirdlnn
accordion num.
num­ i..
years ago he came to Hastings and William
purpose of learning 'about the new
became a special carrier from the bers. Victor Belslto; -The Pewamo and evening concert is a mid-west-1 iRon's wild animals, birds, etc. The boggans.
egg law now In operation.
in “A Tale of Two
—* ——
vir­
Our
Tom.
the
10
year
old
hopeful
Fire-Fighting
Binging
Fools
—
Yanem organization numbering more t»lks are always Interesting and the
local postoffice. whiotr-work he fol­
On their return as they were
tually prospered until today It I*
lowed until three ay four years ago. kem Lockwood. Wimpy Cordes, Rube than one hundred splendid musl-' scenes beautiful. They are to be wants to know all about "Suicide about three miles west of Lansing
Cities"
completing thirty yean of service to
Surviving him__arc his wife, one Coleman. Cyrus. Osborn, Esq.; Clari­ clans, and their appearance prom-1 «hown at the Rotary club meeting Sal" the big World's champcen to­ they met with what proved a lucky
With
Ronald
Colman
al
the
head
this
community.
Adversity,
It
brother. J&gt;y Carpenter, of Carlton net solo. Lewis Hine; Vocal solo., tees to be the musical high light of on Monday also. Everyone should boggan as the publicity out of Gray­
seemed, only mad* them mon 6know’ “
more
concerning
Michigan ling said. Asked'Oscar Schumann reporter, two cars were directly
Center.-find a large circle of friends. Roy Garner; Reading, Chrystal the current season.
*
**
*
lured players, one of the great termlned to succeed in their underThe funeral will be held in Carl­ Thomas; Marimba numbers. Rich­
Eugene Ormondy, conductor, has and this is one fine opportunity of and he said "Suicide Sal" was across the pavement, the rear one photoplays of all Ume coming to
ton Center Saturday forenoon al 11 ard Waite,
Just been appointed one of the con­ learning about it. Remember admis­ chained at the top of the big hill. pushing the other one into a drive­
Dancing filled in the rest of the ductors of the Philadelphia Sym­ sion is free and the entertainment It has steel runners and It runs like way. Because of the poor visibility the Strand Theater. February 13. 13 wou^f be worthy of this community.
o'clock from the Methodist church.
and 14.
It is "A Tale of Two
Mr. Stebbins says. "W* started out
Billy H—when let go on the iced
evening. Bud Wolfe's Prowlers fur­ phony, Leopold Stokowski having begins promptly at 8:00 P. MEarl Bumford did not see these* Cities," from Charles Dickens' novel. with the firm resolve to make our
nishing the music.
Barry county people are fortunate runways. Tom. ot course, wanted to cars across the rodd. until he was
decided not to renew his contract.
The picture lakes Its place with
FARM BUREAU FAMILY
The committee carrying out this This la one of the highest honors in having this privilege as there are
(Continued on page eight)
too near to come to a stop. It was a the few great immortal photoplays
NIGHT WAS PLEASING most successful Evening was Mr. and that any conductor can achieve in more demands for the films than
choice of his hitting the rear ma­ of history, from which Ume is dated
Mrs. Qienn Bower. Mr. and Mrs. A. this country,
Stokowski having can be supplied by the Conservation TO DEDICATE 150
chine or a tree nearby, so he hit In screen annals. It is magnificent
O. Gldley. of Consumer's Power;
Pot Luck Supper, Interesting Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Stebbins, of made the Philadelphia world-fam­ Department.
NEW HYMNALS the car. His automobile was badly entertainment.
ous. Ormandy Is only 38 years old
damaged, the windshield was broken,
Yet with a deftness that is almost
Carveth St Stebbins, and Mr, and and is the youngest symphony or­ STATE BANKS IN BEST
Program and Dancing
Special Worship Service at and the front end was smashed in. inspired, the producers have not decided to
Mrs. Hubert Cook. rep. international chestra director.
Earl Bumford suffered an injured permitted the spectacular aspects to chandiae and
Enjoyed
SHAPE IN TEN YEARS
Seal and Lock Co.
Methodist Church on
Just before he left on hte present
kneecap,
facial cuts m&gt;u
and umiaca
bruises anu
and oversnauow
Kiiccvap. numi
human elements ty yean we have continued
overshadow me
the human
The Barry County Farm Bureau
----------------- -----------------------tour. Mr. Ormandy was awarded the
Earl Palmatler sustained a sprained! that make the picture truly great
Sunday. A. M.
State Banking Commissioner
PwUly ntaht tn Fuller hall was an BETTY IN MOVIELAND
Kllyenl Bruckner medal. This1 medal
wrist and cute on the face. The 1stjn the midst of pomp and of tel­ sold thru our store is fully
enjoyable affair to the 140 who atSunday morning*at ten o'clock the
is one of the greatest musical hon­
Reichert's Annual Re­
ler
is
able
to
be
at
work
again
and
routtt
the
camera
follows faithfully
tended on Friday evening. There was
AT MIDDLEVILLE ors of this country, having been giv­
First Methodist thurch will dedi­
Bumford expects to be on the Job the group of men and women whose
a pot luck lupper and program.
I
------------port Shows
cate 150 new Mctijodlst Hymnals for
en before only to such men as Tos­
bi a few days. Both were fortunate. ntes are vitally affected by the
Professor Gunn, of the Michigan'Eastern Stars Featuring an canini. Bruno Walter, and is de­
State
banking
commissioner. use in the regular worship services tq receive such slight injuries. The evenU of wor|d importance taking
development of thia
signed by the creator of medals Reichert in hte annual report de­ of the church. The new order of fellows, who had their autos across
arOund them, and through the
awarded to Colonel Lindbergh and dared that the banks of Michigan: worship will be urtjd and a beautiful the pavetnerit were surely taking a pattern of vastness are woven the
• for many yean u
that the acreage of wheat sown last |
Feb. 12 and 13
Admiral Byrd. It Is given in recog­ are In the beat condition they have service of dedication will be spe­ big risk as that is a very busy high­ threads of tender romance, high
In addition to the
’“jy" than f0,T
one
lh« | All Middleville te going Hollywood nition of musical trail blazing and been at any time during the ten I cially used for the. occasion. The
way and they were violating state adventure and glorious sacrifice.
: Stebbins
nOrmal i lhcsc
with the production contribution to orchestrated music. years he has served as commissioner. ‘ Hymnals are being ^presented by traffic laws as well.
Probably
there
arc
few
unfamiliar
Meld. Mr. Gunn thought there was । -Betty In Movieland." which will be
There will be a special student's During 1935 the deposits of the slate members and friends of lfte congre­
with
the
general
plot
of
Dickens'
no prewpect for an improvement In; presented In the Thornappte Kel- matinee at 3:15
„..v।
at the.popular pries । banks increased more than $105.- gation. In many cases they are NO WORD RECEIVED
story. It has stood for almost a hun­
the price of wheat; neither was j logg school auditorium, on Wedof 15c and 25c for children and 50c 000.000. All the banks are well sup- memorials to friends and relatives.
dred years as a masterpiece of fic­
therc hope for belter prices for oth- , nesday and Thursday evenings Feb. for adults.
In the new hymnal the words are
| pN®d wlLh cash and. with federal
FROM BETTY BARRY tional entertainment. Yet it is like­
er grain crops, nor beans. He said it ru*ry 12 and 13.
.
Tickets for the evening perfor-; deposit Insurance, confidence In , placed within the staves of music.
ly that Dickens himself could not
d,u».n01 a,3*fr lhat, the situation. This production, being sponsored -nanca
The
music
is
singable
and
while
ran™
from
«or
tn
«□
nn
and
|
their
stability
seems
entirely
remance range
50c to 42.00
come to depend on Betty Barry for more faithfully have brought the
with regard to potatoes would be by the astern Star is the story of a are now on sale at the Grand Rap­ stored.
there
ore
206
new
tunes
there
is
a
,9M
«^-ho Ss teHonyw^
larger number of old favorites. The a criticism of the Civic Player pro­ characters to vivid life.
ids Civic Auditorium.
ductions,
the
editors
took
It
for
and 1935. Ti&gt;* bright spot In farm-j &gt;nd makes good in nictures al the
choir will’ sing the lovely London­
Ing. he said. Is livestock. Hogs, cat- I piedmont Studios. A fascinating fea­
---NOTICE!
derry Air to the words "Above the granted that an article would be
SELECT OFFICERS FOR
You will hear your doorbell ring
time. Deadline
Morris Crookston »J*o
*** .bCnf^g hlgh!tu" ot lhl» production te the fact
Hills of Time the cross te Gleam­ forthcoming this
THE COMING YEAR.
some time during the next few
prospecl for decrease that moving pictures of the people
big." Sermon by Rev. Jones on camo but no criticism appeared and
Hastings Civic Players at their
weeks,
and
open
the door to discover
the writer, himself, feels unqualified
during 1938.
and places of Interest In Mlddle- annual meeting for the election of
"Finding God in Worship."
Benjamln HenrUrt of the State! vlUe PwlU
tXn ^d shown on
to deal adequately with the subject. an inquisitive individual who will
D. O. RICHEY.
officers met Tuesday night in Com­ 1 Because of the storm and the DEPUTY COLLECTOR COMING. Next time. Betty, when your facile ask you three or four questions conarm Bureau, ted the community both nlght performances immemunity room. National bank, and 1 blocked roads on Tuesday. D. O.
A Deputy Collector of Internal pen falls to tune In on the elusive
ainglng and made It a very pleasant diately following the show
selected the following officers: Di­
feature When the regular program
Everywhere this production has rector. L. E. Barnett; Gen. Cnmn, . Richey postponed his auction sale. Revenue will be in Hastings in the "muse of drama" please let the edlcome indignant and slam the door,
Dewey Reed is to cry the sale. The civil service room at the postofflee
was completed. Leflic ruber and his I pjayi^ it has b«m called unique,
Mrs. Burr Van Houten: vice-chair­ । list of live stock, hogs, hay and fod- on Tuesday. Feb. 18. to assist all
information la being sought for •
orchestra .furnished old time and i different, and a living moving pic- man. Mrs. Ktnlth McIntyre; sec­
RUMMAGE SALE.
■ der. farm tools and household goods who wish help in the preparation of
P^pUJ„^,.,?„dS!?7 which ture history of the community.
retary.
Miss
Florence
Campbell;
,
ty, which will be produced by R. L.
On
Friday
and
Saturday.
Feb.
1
I
appears
In
the
adv.
on
another
page
was enjoyed b&gt; a number of couples. | pictures will be taken of Betty’s
their income tax returns for the
treasurer, Mrs. Richard aroos; as­ i of this Issue, 8m the adv for date
and
8.
the
American
Legion
Auxil
­
Polk
i Co, the regular publUben
year 1935. There is no charge for
• MIXED nANCKA I an'Jlr*1 from Hollywood. The store
sistant
director,
Mrs.
Cheater |and other information.
ary will hold a rummage sale at the
this service.
MIXED DANCES.
and shopping center, the school and Hodge*:
membership
chairman,
Legion rooms. Mrs. Dan Lewis,
Clear Wte every Saturday night, everything and everybody in town. Mrs. Gordon Ironside;
finance
----------PUBLIC SUFFER.
Chrm. If you have articles to con­
DANCE.
Marlin s orchestra.
“No
beer." | Buy your ticket* In advance and chairman, Roy Cordes; business
Middleville K- P. hall. Frl.. Feb. 7. i Pythtan Sisters. Saturday, Feb 8, tribute. phone 2430 and they will be
Frank Herrington, Prop.—Adr. tf,
manager, Orville Sayles.
—Adv.
—
15 to 7. Maccabee hall, 25 cent*—Adv. called for.—Adv.
Member of WMAQ Dramatlc Staff

..
r.ih. i...
“”•
C!^?e ,1 “
n “nrd, n.L
nnd Am
Prm £Ulte^ d'.?ee’lfZ nnd AI?’
Ora"d
^4r^fn,tly
bad
lloi'h
&lt;!ta’
; Uon. Chicago* and wasaccepted im-

---------- -----

Because of weather conditions
and the blocked roads, the Junior
play. "One Mad Night," has been
postponed for one week—Uli Friday
evening. February '14. It is hoped
that the weather will be more fav­
orable by that time.

Forced upon popular credulity by ।
I systematic repetition, it is time it
were challenged. Who owns lhe
United States? Who owns lhe
| homes and farms and personal
property; the stores and factories.1
I lhe money stock and lhe debt* of
! the United States? Use 1929 or 1933
statistics. It doesn't matter. There1
1 are Ute same number of homes and

Druggists Celebrate
30th Anniversary

One Auction Sale

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY g, 1»M

MMTWO

Thirty-Seven
On Honor Roll

OVERTONES GIVEN
FIFTY FARMERS
COUNTY TEACHERS
FOR TEACHERS' CLUB.
METJNWOODLAND Tbs monthly meeting of ths Has­
ATTEND MEETING
tings Teachers* chib was held tn

They Heard Fine Addreaa by the Mslbodlst social parlor*. Thurs­
day night. Mr*. C. E- Barnes' circle Men From Three Counties
Judge E. J. Millington
catering.
Hear About Production
of Cadillac
For entertainment a group of
I The W. K. Kellogg Agricultural
Credit AMOoiatlo»
'school, south of Hickory Comers.
Covers were laid for 130 at the girls belonging to the Dramatic

aigains
SUGAR
49c
LU., Clolh Bag

|

K of C

PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs.
, Carroll Hamilton of Nashville on
Jan. 31, and on Feb 4. a daughter
was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Hamilton of Nashville. The fathers
are brothers.

»•- 19c

Coffee White House

lb.

tn Rom township. Kalamazoo coun­
I ty. which include* fo’tr district* in ■
Barry township, has recently Issued
I Its honor roll containing lhe names
of 37 students as follows:
1 Seniors: George Bottoms. Mar­
garet Armour. Elliott Jodon. Ken­
neth Litts. Harold Marshall. Lester
Moore. Marian Reed. Elisabeth
i Woods. Mary Ulcry and Leola Uidrleks.
| Juniors: Kathryn Horton. Mac
| Belle
Howard.
Ruth Hoffman.
j Eloise Cable. Illa Boniface. Eileen
I Piper.
Betty
Lewis.
Genevieve
{Knapper. Evelyn Sult. Rosemary
'Williamson. Rom Norwood and Nel­
! son Cushman.
.
1 Sophomores: Charlotte 'Alles. Elsie
I Clark. Mildred Cheney. Margaret
Hooper. Lewis Jansen. Martha Jean
.Llchty. Maxine McCrary. Edith Mc| Intyre and John Veraeput.
Freshmen: Arils Cnlthrop. Coral
DePriester. Natalie Jansen. Helen
Smith, Vivian Frick and Vida WliI llamson.

19c

Woodland consolidated school on Club, coached by Mbs Ruth Robson,
Wednesday evening of last week, gave a charming Interpretation of
when the Methodist L. A. 8. of that Susan Olaspel's -Overtone* "
Jean Arndt and Phyllis Hinman
village served the dinner at lhe dis­
trict teachers' meeting. After din­ with Ruth Hathaway and Ruth Mc­
ner group discussions were held, with Laughlin as their undertones, did
the six committee chairmen present. a most finished piece of acting for
this nth.,
rather difficult
interesting
Utter th. group, met rogrlhrr .nd thU
dimtult but
hui muratuu
considered several phases of the reg- ’ P1*?.

Fifty-one fanners from Eaton.
Ingham and Barry counties attend­
ed the second annual meeting of the
Charlotte Production Credit Associ­
ation held at Charlotte. January &gt;0.
Included among those who at­
tended were thirty-one members of
the association, county agent*, re­
presentatives of the Federal Utnd
Bank and a number of other fann­
«Jf
i
or ca
ers. Invitations had been sent to ten
persons in addition to the members,
't^e dStrlctnoreaankltionh0aen I,n Wall«r Re«d hospital in Wash- the officers of the association put­
ting emphasis on the fact that this
.^Xdi-SSS।«■ •“
meeting was open to all who were
S""1'*1* “
Sd interested In agriculture or in agri­
cultural credit.
““Th?™, m-un. win h. h.!d
K’'wX,”1hS""d.dSSS* hll
One of the chief activities ot the

IZZSflZ

£i rx^nTp^',2-h»

XT

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15th, 9 ©’Clock P. M
Buy Any Paramount Item and Get FREE TICKET
On 10 Baskets of Groceries.
Salad Dressing

Paramount

Paramount Catsup
Paramount jt8“to

J*r’*

29c

2 •»ufs» 25c

Paramount

2 c... 15c

Mince Meat

15c

2

Paramount CONECARNE
Apple Butter

L*ry» Jm
2 u. j.,

c- »•*

15c

19c

There Is No Exercise Like

Bowling!
It brings a lot of muscles into action that
aro not given much exercise, especially
during such weather as we have been hav­
ing.
It takes your mind off of other things, and
with congenial friends enables you tp spend
a most delightful hour or more.

Many of the fellows orc making up thelf
own groups for bowling and arc having
most enjoyable times. WHY NOT YOU?
Why not phone for an appointment?

FREE DAY, THURSDAY, FEB. 13

Rehor’s Alleys
WEST END CIGAR STORE
J. REHOR, Proprietor

All Cash Register Receipts Dated Jan. 13 \Vill
Be Redeemed. SAVE Your Cash Register
Receipts for Lucky Day In February.

Potatoes
Bushel

U.S.No.1

Peck

Oranges

Bananas
Onions

2do2 25c
4 m» 19c
10 ib,. 25d

Head Lettuce

PHONE 2214

HASTINGS. MICH

Raisins 4 Seedless 25c

J.OV

70c

head 5c

Oleo“

3 it, 38c

Jewel Comp. 2

Pineapple
Del Monte

milllr
IYIIIIr

L»s

29c

3 Cans 25c

GOING TO EAST LANSING.
HAYES SPONABLE
County Agricultural Agent Harold
KILLS REDTAILED HAWK.
Poster expects to accompany a group
Hayes Sponable
brpught to the
of Barry county people to East Lan-I .,"•}**
Sp09*
........„
„,..™ lhe dra- c,lY
.«».•' &lt;*• „n“c"
sing
on Friday to witness
m.Uc pl.r
conu.1 In &lt;hu
O-fUn-n. ot
h.rt Until, we
malic
nlay contest.
this .rr.
area th.
the -•peeimens
of U&gt;.
I
, counue, ot Borry.
and Kent1
w« ’““J:1”*competed with lhe group trom Sand ,tna Ullow. ot lhe red tailed ape.
I Lake. Kent Co. winning fir.r place..V.
* w,ng "P™? ° ' (.1:
1 This group has been organized for
If wo
j several years and has had consld- out for yourself and see
crable experience in presenting shouldn't be excused for mistaking
it for a young eagle.
‘ plays.__________ ___________
And think of the little chicks pre­
served for chicken dinners for tho
ATTEND ROUND
TABLE ON MONDAY. human family, thru the means ot
On Monday, county School Com-I Mr. Bponablc's trusty gun! The lat­
rntesloner Maude W. Smith atlend- ter had gone out to cut wood when
1 cd the Round Table for Superin- he discovered the big bird sitting
j tcndcnls and Commissioners held in on the limb of a tree.
Kalamazoo. Dean Edmondson of the I I George Sumner took It over to the
University of Michigan was the Department of Conservation where
main speaker, discussing educational It will be mounted for educational
problems in general In the group' 1 purposes.
meetings the new slate course of
study was considered, among the .
DEATH OF JOHN NEAL.
other vital question* up for* discus­ "John A- Neal. uged.SJ. died sud­
sion.
denly on Friday forenoon at' his
home. 204 No. Church St., following
ENTERTAINED ROTARY CLUB. a stroke He had signed up with the
The Hastings Rotary club was en­ WPA for work but a few hours be­
tertained at their Monday noon fore. but as the weather was so bad,
luncheon with several selections
, the men were sent home. Mrs. Neal
played by the High school orchestra, was working tn Grand Rapids at •
under lhe leadership of Lewis Hine,
the home of n relative, al i&gt;e lime
also by members ot the cast for the
o! her husbands passing. Besides
Junior play. ' One Mad Night" who
the wife, he ‘s survived by a daugh­
gave naris of the play under the di­
ter, Doris, at home, two sisters and
rection of Mr. Albert Bcckcr. The
। two brothers, all residents of Ohio.
Rotarians enjoyed both the music
। Funeral services were held at the
and the play.
I Baptist church on Tuesday at two_PAoFbETTT BARRY!
------• the -----------­ '
' o'clock,
Rev. B. J. ----Aucock ofWhere, oh where, is Betty Barry? tic luting. Interment was made In lhe
Did the terrible roads prevent her, Rutland cemetery,
from attending the one-acl plays j
••r
GROUP NO- 1.
the oilier night? Maybe her radla- |
Hastings Extension Group No. I
tor froze! The dead-line is past for
this week's copy. Betty! but we will met on Tuesday with Mrs. Otto
sneak your's in sometiow. if it ar­ Isenhath. Bo. Hanover St. All en
rives before the forms arc locked joyed the lesson on fabrics and col
ors.
up and down on the big press.

fTLANC THEATK|=
Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244*2557

Flats, Crushed or Sliced
Armour's
Verybest

directors, in which only members of
the association participated. Those
elected were Willard Rogers of Web­
berville. Ingham county and A. F.
Pink of Charlotte. Eaton county.
Mr Rogers and Mr. Fink were re­
elected for a term of three years.
Those attending
the meeting
showed keen interest in the fact that
tills association has .been organised
along permanent business lines to
furnish credit to farmers on a sound
basis for carrying on their seasonal
farming operations. Loans for mak­
ing repairs or improvements to
buildings, for paying up debts due
Pennock hospital on Monday, hav­ to farm production and for buying
ing been taken there on Sunday, horses, harness, tractors, cattle or
following a stroke. He lived alone at lambs are among the purposes for
704 W Bond st. Dayton formerly which members may borrow funds,
resided tn Delton. He was a mem- os shown by the speakers
Following the stockholders meet­
village. Surviving is one son. Lyle. ing. the new board of directors went
into session and cIumc--------------lhe following
of Lebanon, Did., who has been no- ,----------------------------------' tiffed of hi* father's death but hid officers far lhe ensuing year. Preslnot yet arrived as this te written, dent. F A. Smith; Vice-President.
Therefore, no funeral arrangements E P. Reynolds; and SecretaryTreasurer.
have yet been made.
"*------”G.* A.oSpeers.
—--■

nwftigkwi.
| I'.V.'X.“su:
js:
PASSING OF MRS.
.
nunU
Minnie Evans Keyes.
DELOS HOPKINS., Washington. D. C . and Mrs. Kale
Mrs. Delo* Hopkins, aged 78. । Evans Walker of Urbandale, also an
passed away at her home on N.' unde. Glenn Evans, of Lansing The
Michigan Ave., on Tuesday after- members of lhe Evan* family are
noon after a long Ulnea*. She is sur- ■ known In Hastings and other pointe
vived by four children. Mrs. Leon In Barry county. They are cousins of
Manning of Battle Creek. Leon of ' J»»n and Miss Mary McElwain
' Shepard. D#.!d of Kalamazoo and ' Colonel Gladeon Barnes was one of
William of this city, several grand- । the pallbearers at the funeral,
children and other relatives. The . nr.TH nP *nViN n»VT&lt;w
funeral will be held at the home on
,J&gt;A'tON.
Thursday at TOO P M . the Rev. W.
®rin Diiytorn aged 78. who। had
f‘m “ria"**
IS X TXS !JT’. ~lrt

These Items Above On Sale Fri Sat. Only

10 BASKETS GROCERIES FREE!

".

BL—

We urge you to watch our Screen for chance* without notice

4^1.27c

SUNDAY and MONDAY. FEB. 9 and 10

AH WILDERNESS
Storring WALLACE BEERY.

Free 100 lbs. Sugar
Saturday, Feb. 8, at 9 ©’Clock p. m
Ticket Given With Each 25c Meat Purchase
PIG HEARTS
Sliced Bacon ™«u.
Chunk Pork

10c
t*. 19c
u. 15c

Spare Ribs«»&gt;&gt;u..... 2 ul 15c
Mutton Roasts si—u.,’ u. 12c
Leg of Veal Roast
lb 20c

PORK SAUSAGE

2 - 29c

MuttonChops
u&gt;. 19c
Armour’s Star Bacon | u. 19c

Mutton Stew
Pig Liver
Beef Kettle Roast

u- 5c
2 u» 25c
u.; 14c

Invest In Good Appearance
ond meet the coming yeor with the confidence that is
brought about by having one of our scientifically
.
CORRECT PERMANENTS

European
at
Realistic $150
Permanent 1 —
The label an this wave says
M. but Hollywood wants
you to have a January
Special — a true push-up
wave at this efficient beau­
ty shop. Phone now and
ask about it.

Bergamont Oil
Cwtp

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. FEB. 11

DANGEROUS
BETTE DAVIS. os “the woman men always come
back to!"

Hair Style
Forecast 1936

With Franchol Tone. Margaret Lindsay. Alison Skipworth

Curb — Hemi-Swirls

Tailored Necklines.
The 1930 Coiffure wtB hnve~
tailor-fltted necklines, curls
plied on top or m the back
—all with upward sweep
As long as you have curls
—they may be sculptured,
fluffy, rolled or clustered.

Announcing lhe
ELECTRO MANI­
CURE MACHINE
The only one in Has­
tings; Electric Mani­
cures arc gentle and
pleasing.
£Ac
Only-

LIONEL BARRYMORE

And ALINE MacMAHON—Eric Linden. CeeelU Parker,
and Spring Byington
BARGAIN MATINEE Bunday, 1:00 and 3:00 o'clock

THE FAMOUS
CLO-TONE
Pcrm'nl IQ
Wave— O

SPECIAL ATTRACTION—THREE DAYS

'

WED., THURS. and FRI.. FEB. 12. 13 and 14

RONALD COLMAN In

A TALE OF TWO CITIES
With Elisabeth Allan. Edna May Oliver. Reginald Owen. Basil
Rathbone. Blanche Yurka and Henry B. Walthall
SPECIAL MATINEE, Wednesday, 3:90 o'clock
Adults 33c
Children 10c

SATURDAY ONLY. FIB. 15
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

FRESHMAN love

OU

With Patricia Ellis, Warren-Hull, Nick Foran, Frank McHugh

Finest Cattile Shampoo and Finger Wave

Food Center

50c

FEATURE NO. 2

Medicated Oil Shampoo. regular $1 value, for ____ 65c

JOHN WAYNE in

IFor Dry Hair and Dandruff)

THE NEW FRONTIER

NOT A SCHOOL — All Experienced Licensed Operators.

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE
114 WEST STATE ST.
PHONE 2323
Lucille KruUri. Marguerite Tew. and Margaret Dahlke

Matinee 3.00 o'clock Only—Added. Chapter Play. -THE GREAT
AIR MY»TEBY"-f Adolte 18c. Children 10c.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1»M
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Christie have I Her car was put out of commission
। sonable. Only sixty-five farms will
SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
I staying with their grandmother.
.1 be purchased in; this district, of ( Mm. iSestcr Preston, accompanied ( Mrs. Lulu Gray went Thursday to
{moved to 821 E. Madison St.
[ for a time. .
situation
isn’t any too,»
I Solon Doud is confined to his. The
— coal
-------------- —---------------[which Barry county may supply j by Mrs. Grace Brake and Mrs. Roy assist in the Harold Gray home in
home with an attack of asthma.
I good in Hastings. Every dealer is
* “'uMherS,frt?m
lo
Preston of Hastings and Miss Hel- . East Assyria.
I The wm. Kidder family living '■xpertenclng a shortage. Order.
Mn Faye Donley Is confined to Ljt of Waitings are
in
quarantine ,i Disced bv
by some
*ome earlv
*"ly In
in Janitary-are- _
.r. u&gt;
i„ quxxmuic
—--* —
j east of Hastings m&gt;c
। *■----—
—-— ------♦ — Januarvare—z —
a better farm, lhe government will Thursday aflenyxm at Mrs
“r*
rr home
hnmr by
bv Illness.
Ulricas
&lt;... fever
&gt;1111 unfilled.
unfilled Because
DM-aiice of
nf these nn.
her
[ {tir
still
unStuart Hammond.
The annual Shrine ball b schedMr, ,arnh Wn!f. whn ha, tw..n ' preccdented storms, which seem
——----- “ ------------------------। insist that the
the purchaser must be
be 1 Robinson’s. They took supper with 1
(Continued
from page one)
uel tbr Ptb. 21 at Ciiic Auditorium w\IriOuvlv
'Wneral all over the east, and mid­ ---------------------------------------------------------- ? ■“»»'
»•&gt;•
Grand Rapids
”
PcIulOck »»o«pitaL.dle weaU Ualna arr hHd up. com.
Rehabilitation loans art made for b,'c
knowledge and ex- ber-j comerr. and atienddd the P. enu. Mr. and Mrs L. W Jarrard
.
Mr. .nd Ml,. W.dlkm Dwnl,B;b,?T?.d,!S’l.ror,«.^lw»,
colds.
________________
not to exceed five years, with a fixed
« B‘ lh* n~rbT
Fun'r*1 services for Mrs. Ruth
(Dorothy Smith) have moved into protects wheat, then Dial crop sure-1
f •
•
?nd.. *ub zero |
"hu rrtirtTull ’Sil MU |
o&lt; th, prlnclml. u mil
M „n
p„
S"’Mnn“d
I
olu&gt; of tire Broadway ApU.
iy U well protected.
Mrs
PcrnwUa
ill kii uiicApcvtcu e-uy. n mjm v, iuji . inv interest, pfcyuoic catii year. 11 irum tne • government on a lanu- w&lt;-,
,, ,
I1LL_L„ „ ,
Ed. Story is confined lo ills home
The general meeting of the Meth- vanishes these days like magic. । y,,. maker of the chBUH mor,Btt8P [purchase contract, at low interest
Sunday guests
guests of
of Mrs. Anna ; Mrs. Laphan\’s sister, Mrs. - Albert family, Mr. and Mrs Harvey Li
Sunday
by illness. Mm Story la .lowly re-1 odist L. A S."was.held at Lire church
Tuesday the C. K. A B had to make ,.
.'
. .
.
I and with reasonable payments
on w'hesseman
chewman were
were Mr.
Mr
and
-----and
Mrs.
Green
of
Middleville,
has
taken
the
of
Haalings.
•
covering from her recent operation. I«'» Wednesday afternoon.
an appeal for help to coal their en- ,
to
m U °
’ h lhc Principal. If the buyer is unable O„n,
I, “ i, wK °r*’“
°‘
weeta old taby UfU 10 her hoaiv '
H»omM vk.lted hsr son
Over one hundred copies ot the; ^&gt;eJocaJ. «’nJ*rVttl*on dejwrt- glne stalled the other aide of Delton.
“P*™
.
Should a tenant former, of good
1835 Michigan Manual have been .
h“ 24 fading .tat on? ^alAlbert
Myers,
who
recently
undercharacter
and
practical
knowledge
distributed to the rural schools of i tr1rrd, tbru ®“r’y. ^°u,ny
firm
Mr “”d MnL PelCr
'
LENT
II
RICH
°iK‘,*lion at Pennock hos- Of farming, desire lo make a loan in I
LENT CORNERS.
CORNERS.
HIGH STXEtt
STREET. . I
the countv bv ruinmlssioner Maude »heat or corn is being - furnished,I
ure coumy uy cummisMoner miiuul i Ku|()e blrd-sT
1 pital. **
Is recovering
recovering niceiy
nicely ana
and was]
was 1 order to get a new start, he can ae- ; bation and located on the farm on a ion
----- victor,
-----------gpcnc
■---------Tuesday
---------- with
—... Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon MoorhUs of | Elmir JUthaway
attended a
— G)rn Asplnall al ...
..
marhnreM on
nn Thursday.
Thuradav
, cure , RehabUjutKjo Ioan. Should rental basis. If he needs it the Re- anj
I'rh»L
not
n.n,&lt;.
Father Hubbard, the famous Alas-1 discharged
and« »•
Mrs,
Hickory
: Delton spent Bunday with her sister i creamery flKtlng at South Bend,
habilitallon division will lend him comers
' , nnd family. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle ‘ Ind.. Thursday
riJrn ™ v
b prtwt’ trawlIc
r and
held
Corners.
■ucr
ana adventurer.
aaveniurer. i The Hastings Retailer, ,,v«
u their a young married mon, having no
down
wjl&lt; aeuver a lecture at Central I monthly meeting
------------------U
on Gray
c.:r.y of
ot West
wai v.nr.or.l.ui,
।I Mlu Pauline Kelly, who is wotk.Tuu' on T-K. faculty at Middle- Iw,u
al the Parker Ho-Ii capital but having a good character CMh on chuul moruw lo buy
Leon
Vermontville rwrw.
Francisco.
ville
Miss Svendsen
sooner rechildren.
There was no school part of luting
■’
’
hut I ing in Delton
Delton, soetu
spent’Hatui
Saturday *Md
vine—
—miss
Bvenasen no
no sooner
rt-■, Kh00| nuaiim-jum, |n Kalamazoo. I tel Wednesday noon, and definitely and’knowledge of funning, desire to stock and tools. lie can try it for came Sunday after his
Hgns. than
a mix
Miss
sums,
man n
* luUl.
Tutu, takes
rnxrx her
iwr gun(|ay afternoon. Feb. 23. at j P. named U»e first Wednesday in each get a start In lhe forming business.
place.
; M. Local people may like to keep the I month as tiielr meeting day.
| he can secure a Rehabilitation loan
for the three year period ha will I ——————
'
Allegan county has the oldest ’ date
'ate tn
in mind.
I Yesterday’s state papers gave the
5 I*r cent, to give him a chance
then be allowed to buy the land on ।
applicant In the state receiving old । Rev.
R". a- E McDonald
McDcr.alJ of
z‘. Wyoming ! news that Fred Ingram, a former . U&gt; engage In that kind of business.
contract.
age assistance. Sarah Isaac.. 109' park.
Rapids, was in the city r„|dent of Barry county, whose
«,v Grand
/-i
Mr. Georgc^Maurcr. whose office Is
It con be seen that these services
year., living at Bradley. She was to i Wednesday, Jan. OTth. to conduct । forebears lived In Irving, has re- located In the basement of the Has­
of
rehabilitation and resettlement
have her first check during Feb- the Quarterly conference at tire ! membered his alma mater, the Uni- ’4ngs postofflee. Is in charge of govare a wide departure from what our
ruary.
United Brethren church. Plans were 1 versify of Michigan, with a legacy ernmcnl
"l rehabilitation work
•- •in government has done in past years.
A. E Heath, Barry county sur-; made to complete lhe work on tire, of 120.000
Barry
county. He has two commit­
------------Whatever may be said for or against
veyor, has returned to ivU home in t basement of the church.
with -----him.•_ —
one ~~~
known~
i At the rale reservations arc being tees working .-v,-this method, it surely offers some
Hastings after assisting Harvey A
Orchids or gardenias, which ever , made for Emmanuel Guild card
farmers a chance to gel along which
Williams in lire county surveyor’s, they prefer, to sheriff Blakney and party and fashion show Wednesday who
*'"®'seek
---- to get concessions tn favor they could not have without such
office here for two months.—Olivet. yere Herrington, the caretaker al' night. Feb 12. some one will be out r °f
wl,crc Poa-’lblc; the
Optic.
| the court house, for lhe cleanest I or luck U (he, dou r moke their other cDlhmlttee '■
Is shown as •&gt;
the
”
Miss Anne Perry, who recently un- sidewalks court house square and reservation with Mrs. G. E Good­ ' Advisory committee, consisting of
POWERS ECHOES.
AT
derwent an operation at Pennock grounds have ever known. And do! year very soon for everything points local men who understand the probMiss Almira Reed and nephew.
hospital, is recovering nicely and ixdeslrlans appreciate ill
lema of agriculture, who try to find Fred Hauser, spent the past week
to a capacity house.
lias been removed to the home of
Not a bad Idea if those b!k high•
'
iI out now
how they can be helpful to the end with the latter’s father and sis­
Deity Barry hasn’t shown up in dnbtOr
'
her parents. Dr. and Mrs. B. A., any snowplow-scrapers had a side;
ters
in
Detroit.
M, Mau„ . w,n u, alM to
Perry.
■ attachment to bore tunnels thru our mall lo dale. «&gt; we are kolng
William Frost ot Detroit was
lollu who may need a
Donald Fiiher and Raymond Ro- these high banks they throw up “W "!a "I-1" "^opinion.
over the week end.
- --- - pos- . home
blcski on Wednesday were issued li-' along cross walks and parking open- Iwtler work has wldom been done., p-nabUhaUon loan wherever
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
o, cou,
ceiuwa as electricians by Donald ingj .is they sail by. Or perhaps the in any Civic Flayer,' production. ,1Mr. bul u
*
he must keep i^rihur Bedford were Mr. nnd Mrs.
... lhe
■
Adam, of Charlotte, stale electrlcalwcity might have a sidewalk scraper Ilian Tom Myer, and Jim Fennell' within
government regulations. I c j Schasberatr and Mr. and Mrs
did.
tn
their
resjrectlve
parts,
as
an
liupector for Barry nnd Eaton of its own. for follow-up work. AnyInr„
addition to his work
_.„.u in Rural
schnsberger of Grand Rapids.
countleit.
[ way pedestrian, aren't getting the 1 escaped lunatic and No. i Bad Man. Rehabilitation. Mr. Maurer also
Wortiiy Balmbrldgc of Dutton,
If you Mioot ^a wolf be sure nnd
The March of Tijnc. which comes , breaks tills winter.
furnishes information to Mr. A. E. who has been visiting at the home
every month al theStrand is a good I Hastings residents, now busking in go to the conservation officer in the I Gilmore. Room 524 Murray building. of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frost for
county where y\»u killed It nnd gel
thing to remember and plan to see. California and Florida sunshine, will
HASTINGS AND WESTERN MICHIGAN HOUSE­
the pelt stamped Mike Beckwith Grand Rapids, who Ls the district n few weeks, returned to his home
It always carries news stories of vi- learn with intcriwl that because of
project supervisor of the eleven Saturday.
WIVES FIND FOOD BUYING AT C. THOMAS STORES
lai interest, and luilnnu, are sorry lo , the extreme cold, the ice harvest on 1 who killed one during the deer counties which make up hLs district.
Mrs. Floyd Benner’s father, who
have them flash out.
Long lake had to be called off after hunting season, finds he has to send Barry county being one of them. So has been very seriously ill at her
THE MOST ECONOMICAL, AS DEMONSTRATED BY
Hastings friends of Mrs. Gordon 1500 tons of 14-lnch lee hud been I the skin back to the county in tlic , far Mr. Gilmore has ILstcd forty-six home, is somewhat Improved at Ulis
MANY NEW CUSTOMERS EACH WEEK.
Clement will be glad to know that put up. But that doesn’t trouble 1 । upper peninsula where he shot It. i farms for possible prospective pur­ writing.
.he Is recovering from her recent I
Hawthorne as he knows mod- j before he can collect the ten rlol- chase by lhe government. So for Mr.
NEW, FRESH, FINE QUALITY FOODS—PROMPT AND
operation nnd has left Blodgett hos-1 crate weather is bound to come, but'| lar bounty due him.
EAST DELTON.
' Maurer has listed six Barry county
pltai She Is now at the home of Mr. coal shortage docs worry him.
Clate louden and wife entertained
MARRIAGE*LICENSES.
' farms for thal l'urIXMr. Mr. Maurer
COURTEOUS SERVICE AWAIT YOU.
and Mrs Jack Reed of Grand Rapas Mrs. Alma Fingleton. who Is | Guile c. Conklin. Cloverdale . . .32 bas naming to do with resettlement their children
and grandchildren
Ids.
tire mail carrier from Hastings to Alice M. Byrd. Hickory Corners , .io| *ork
receiving appllca- and Mr. and Mrs. Kahll of Kala­
landscape—
the II Freeport, was driving homeward ini
A perfect winter landscape
—the
mazoo for Sunday dinner.
-------- -----------------------I ttons for listing Barry county farms
Rrniirlwnv or
nr ’* her Chevrolet car with her son and | EAST WALL LAKE AND VICINITY, for possible sale to the government.
view now from the&gt; Broadway
Mr. nnd Mrs. Von Dunn of Delton'
Michigan Ave. river bridges—banks 1 a passenger, a little north of the '
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ricker and son ' These farms, on which lhe govem- spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. •
I
BR
Sunshine Brand
covered with snow, river frozen over, i Rogers schoolhouse her car collided I Kent of Hastings visited al Mina ment will take option and will buy Ike Leinaar
■ VI ■ ■■ ■ * Rich, Creamy Milk
black water looking cold nnd men- #itli that of Cecil Oler. who was Aldrich's Saturday.
1 if it can use them to advantage, will
Mason Newton and Stewart Wat­
achiR where the cunent breaks thru ' headed for his home north of that!
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler ac-I be used to aid farmers who are un- ers were In charlotte Monday after- .
An Ideal scene for n painter’s brush place The nir was full ot flying I corilpqnlcd by Mr. and Mrs. E. D. fortunately located to Ret farms noon.
They ray thfgfOHnd nog enme out
Hiltner driver fouiu sec । Reynold.'; vlsiti'd friends and rela-; where Urey will hare some oppor- • Ike Lrlnnnr called at Hendershott
Sunday, fre and easy, because AAA the other’s car; fortunately both I lives Hi Nashville Friday.
tunlty to be successful. The farms Comers on Thursday, on Hub Cas­
Is no lunger in. nnd he wnsn't nfraid 1 were driving slowly. The occupants |I Mrs. Carl SooLsman entertained which the government will buy un- ey. who is slowly falling.
of being slaughtered. Anyway lie of Mrs. Fingleton'. ear were bruised her sister. Mrs. Bristol of Hastings I tier this resettlement plan must be
Seems good to see our school buses
must have seen a perfect shadow ■ considerably but not seriously hurt, i l the past week.
, fertile, and the price must be rca- again after two weeks’ vacation.
with the bright, infrequent sun
ihinlng. nnd re-entered his hole for I
tlx weeks more of winter.
Lowell’s adult education school
starts on with an enrollment of 40 '
men and women, who have signed |
up for handicraft, dramatics and ।
tap dancing, with music pomibly lo i
be added. Arrangements have been
made for nn Instructor to conduct
classes In golf for men nnd women ।
an another evening.
We learned from Dr. Otto Car!'
h'«
Bnch. director of the Grand Rapid* I
WiUlw Cre,ms
Fine Quality
Art gallery, who spoke before the
' women’s club Friday, that Vincent
McPhnriin is now n member of their
ttnfl. on n WPA project. He Is leach- |
Ing the children’s classes which Is a
24'/; lb. bag
ff
part of the extension work program
the art'gallery Innuguraterl Hie past
year.
Grand Rapids Railway Co. will
Fine Flavored
put eight new buses, costing $50,000.
Tomato, Vegetable, Pea
In service about Feb 15. two more
60 dajs later. They have 112 buses
(Campbell’s Tomato
now in use. Grand Rapids Is one of
2 cans 15c)
five U. 3. cities of more than 100.-'
000 imputation to go "nil bus" up to
Jan. 1. Other cities are Lowell. I
MIDI FTC Frc11’ Com
CAN
CAN
Mass.; Erie. Pa.; Camden. N. J- and i
111 DLL I O Off the Cob
Wichita. Kan.
Few things more arresting than '
SK
LBS
lhe flash of flame a cardinal offers 1

I

MERS
’END MEETING
Three Counties
at Production
Association
mers from Eaton,
rry counties altendanual meeting of the
ictlon Credit Aasoclbarlotle. January 30.
mg those who atIrty-one members of
county agents, reI the Federal Land
nber of other farmhad been sent to ten
ion to the members,
lhe association putn the fact that this

ricuilure or in agrilief activities of the
the election of two
ch only members of
participated. Those
lard Rogers of Web-

Hte, Eaton county.
Mr. Fink were re-

ling Che meeting
nest In the fact that
has . been organised
it business lines to
farmers on a sound
ig on their seasonal
ma. Loans for makimprovements to
tying up debts due
ion and for buying
tractors, cattle or
ig the purposes for
may borrow funds,
speakers.
stockholders meetrd of directors went
chose lhe following
■nsulng year. PreslIth; Vice-President,
; and SccrelarySpeers.
BLE
EDTAILED HAWK,
le brought to the
ne of the finest
e hawk family we
a big wlcked-tookc "red tailed" spering spread of 4 ft.
over all. Measure it
and see
If we
used for mistaking
iglc.
he little chicks pre­
en dinners for lhe
.hru the means of
•usty gun! The lat­
te cut wood when
ic big bird sitting
tree.
' took it over to the
Conservation where
ed for educational

JOHN NEAL.
aged. 53. died sud' forenoon at' his
lurch St., following
signed up with the
rather was so bad.
it home. Mrs Neal
Grand Rapids at
latlve. al the time
i passing. Brsldev
-vived by a daugale. two sisters and
residents of Ohio.
I were held at the
I1 Tuesday at two
B. J. Adcock ofil was made in lhe

’ NO. 1.
don Group No. 1
with Mrs. Otto
nover St. All en­
n fabrics and col-

llhout notice

d io

ESS
RRYMORE

s
ys come
Skipworlh

and 14

TIES
Dwen, Basil
slthall
lock

K NO. 1

ik McHugh

ER
&lt;E GREAT

BMHIBILI
1TOBWL

LOCAL NEWS

/IS £TXPPfSo£D «Y

FOODS

20,000

EXTRA
LOW
PRICES

FOOD buyer;
CTHOMASSTORE^

IK III/

EVAPORATED

Tall
Cans

3

1 QC
XW

PRUNES EF 4-W

THOMPSON’S SEEDLESS RAISINSI^23c

7f in PenneijsWORK CLOTHING
Built for Service

BEAN Sprouts 3~ 25c
R| golden bantam
I. UK IM
3 c-- 25c
FLOUR ss7R°
SOUPS
3™25c
14C

I Oxhide

against the white of the winter [
landscape these days. We have a
pair favoring our back yard, and de­
spite the hogRishnesx of lhe blue-1
jays and the pesky starlinKS. (who
don’t deserve such an attractive |
name) and the ubiquitous sparrows, i
these lovely birds seem lo ent their
fill of our sunflower seeds, suet and
cracked feed. They are quite apt lo
be nround early in the mornlriR. and
recm to favor the seeds spilled on
the groynd.
Among the recent arrivals from
Barry county who are enjoying their
visit In St. Petersburg. Florida, the
Sunshine City, according to the
Lodwick News Service, are Mr. and
Mrs. O- H- McCowan. Cloverdale;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Phillips. Has- I
lings; Mi. and Mrs. Alvin Bmelker. I
Middleville; Mrs.
Julia
Brown, i
Nashville. Something doing all the
time in that bright city to furnish I
entertainment. Rear Admiral Byrd, j
brands Perkins. Upton Sinclair.1
Amelia Earhart Putnam. 8. Parkes t
Cadman arc listed for lectures and I
the New York Yankees nnd Boston I
Braves are In training at their base- !
ball park
s
ThU is just'the kind of weather to ■
get the copy of Whittier’s poems;
down from your bookshelves, and'
turn to "Show Bbufid" for a re-read­
ing. Always given n coxy, comfortable I
feeling to be ensconced in n big easy '
chair, while Hie wind whistles and j
howls outside, and the snow drives |
against Hie windowpane, dupltcat-1
ing in part the scenes the old Quak­
er poet describes in this winter maslerpiecc. Not a bad Idea either to set'
some ot the Junior members of the'
family away from -The Crime Club,’’ |
•Lum and Abner." "Amos and An­
dy." et al. long enough to listen to it. |
Seems like old times to team that
the C. K. * 8. "morning limited”!
got stuck in the drifts on the big :
curve between Milo and Delton [
Tuesday. They had a deuce of a
time getting out. Tire engine and |
snow plow finally cut loose of the ।
train and came to Hastings to refill.!
the engine boiler, and get some coal. ‘
then got in bad going back. By j
strenuous work on Ure part of tire |
crew, the train limped into port
here after eight o'clock that night, I
and wheezed out for Woodbury yes­
terday morning with all hands won­
dering what the day would bring
forth.
1

LUNCH KIT

Packed Full of Value!

49® .

Overalls

SHIRTS

79c

Vacuum Bottle
Full pint sice

Extra Quality, Extra Wear

69c

19c
base . . . alumi­
num
shoulder .
and

Tough as they sound! Men!

they’re really constructed!

Best quality of 220 blue
denim, full cut to insure

comfortable

fit!

Parva

buckles—don’t dig in at the

Boys’ nnd Girls’ J. C. PJ

shoulder, bend or break in

PLAT SUITS

laundering! Triple stitched,

Neat, practical!

bar

tacked!

seams I

49®

CHEESE

Turned

in

Extra sites at no

extra cost!

Real values!

Men! See These Heavy

Fine yarn chambrays and eoverts. Dress shirt styling! Inter­
lined collar and cuffs! Extra
sites at no extra cost! Values!

Men’s Real Moleskin

WORK PANTS
They're hard wearing!

$1.79
Extra strong moleskin! Black
and white print Strong pockets!

Sanforiied Shrunk

OVERALLS
waistband 'style

LB.

21C

Instant Postum

Car?'

43c

HEALTHY FOOD DRINK

Baker’s Cocoa }

lie

CAN

|-||. NEW IMPROVED
FLAVORS

JellO

FKO

fi-

OC

SALADA TEA
1 Z. Lb. OTf
Z2 p|,, &lt; / (J
'
W■ V

Blue Label
Black, Green
Mixed

NEW LOW PRICES

PEACHES
Fancy California Yellow, 4^ No. 2*i M
.
Cling. Sliced or Halves
£ Cans QJ,C

2 No. 2 Cons 25c

RALSTON S‘'^',J"x23c

PILLSBURY’S
FLOUR

. $1.09

£T19c

QUAKER OATS

24*i LB. BAG

FARINA ST

PKG.

10c
16c

WHEAT BRAN

5c CANDY Bars 3^ 10c
MARSHMALLOWS

COCO MALT
denim:
aistband. Buc-

Black reUn Blucher style! White
storm weltf
Riveted seams!
Composition nailed soles and
heels! Ideal for heavy duty!

15c

2

lb

MALTED MILK

Flexible Toe for Comfort!

keta, drop seat!

CANVAS jfcc
CLOVES V

WISCONSIN

BRANDSIA

17c

Com MealSr 10u»33c

Economy

CEREAL

14c

3 LBS.

OLEO =

2

MUSTARD

or. jar 10c

14c

DOG Food

42c

LUX SOAP

Kibbled

3

25c

cm.

25c

THOMPSON'S

Work Shoes
Greys, bloea and

COCOA

Green Giant Peas

17C

OR SPAGHETTI

Men’r BIG MAC Work

Penimaid! Thoroughly ventilat­
ed I Black lacquer finish. Pint
vacuum bottle comoartroent!

Keep it steam­
ing or Icy, as
you
please!

3

MACARONI

baek. 5 pockets,
copper riveted!
Boys* sizes. .69e

&gt;

23c

Sunbrite

15c

CAMAY SOAP

Cans

25c

0. K. SOAP

cans

25c

Matches

cb cm

Mushroom Broth2
Lawrence

*

Tomato Juice
MACKERAL

3
3

3 HA HA 20c

CLKANSSR

6 BARB'
6

C. THOMAS STUB
12S WEST STATE STREET

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS A&gt;D FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Editorials
WHO PAYS?
IIow UP ,ctt*ra favoring legislation In
w. Wd no
(« UH r^lnnd I •*“ ■&gt;»» »»«•&gt;•"
Interested. Kearlns
Hearing nothing to the
the ]
.
, , . Interested
corporation* of this country. They
i contrary, and wishing to hold their [
have done things that were wrong. II legislative positions, the first thing
but they have paid, and are still1
you know Congress has passed some
paying for it through effects of the
of the laws they want, and (icrhnjH ,
most drastic, and often most un­ - millions of dollars added In the way I
fair, political regulations that any
of
indirect taxes, of which thb,
country ever knew. So drastic and 1
so unfair that around half of them 1great "Middle Class’* will have to.
were forced into the hands of re- 1pay Die greatest share even without
it. When the government
celver* because they could not meet realizing
[
appropriates millions, or billions, for
'their obligations.
। welfare, for parks, recreational
But white railroads, jwrhaps not spots, roads, or "what-have-you,"!
all of Jhem. were in lhe years past
you can rest assured that YOU will ■
somewhit unmindful of the public pay for it in increased taxes or in­
welfare, yet all must admit that ]
creased living expenses, because it
they have performed a most useful is
( Just as impossible to get "some­
function in the development and thing
(
for nothing" today as it ever
maintenance of our great country. (
In fact it is doubtful if we could
If you don't want to see freight
long exist without them.
rates increased, taxes increased, or
Despite the very unfavorable ftnanclal situation of the most of our
railroads today, and their importance to our well being, there is a
demand for LOWER FREIGHT
RATES, which of course everyone
would like to see.
But lef* look on the oilier side of
the picture and see what is going
on in Washington. It will surprise
you.
Before the United Stales Senate is
Senate Bill No. 1518. This Bill pro­
poses that the standard day for rail­
way employees shall be
SIX
HOURS. That was doubtless dceigned lor pay. and “over-time" and
to compel railroads to employ more
men. That one Bill if it becomes a
law will make the railroads an add­"
ed expense
These
’’
figures
are ot
NOT859"f.000.000.
OURS. but.were

It’a tho Spirit of a Community
That Count*—Not Ita Siso
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1936

^hisandrhat

TAPS

III

he Public Forum |||

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

HAPPINESS FOR ALL.

ST

Al

fl

I The Banner.
the INSTTTUTIONB of Hastings.
HMtlngs. Mich.
,
: j knew D R Cook Anrt phUo
j Gentlemen;
Sheldon as long ago as I can reTlu'se last few days have given I you have rendered a distinct pub- member and there were no better
just a slight Indication of what lhe jlc service j Bm iurc jn yOiir discus-1 citizens in Hastings or the county of
polar explorer;, have to face—except Mon oj (jie proposition lo establish Barry.
colul“ui&lt; al Publlc “I*'1- • new Abstract
The business they founded hu
bglmy summer weather.
Office
” ; served the public well and at mod­
I do not know what has raised the crate cost, so far aa I have had ocWlicn it gets so cold that mercury rquestion but I hope the plan will e^ion to employ Us services and
becomes hard nnd solid ax lead.; not materialize
, what h of first consequence I am
when rabber breaks like peanut
The pn.-M.nt office, conducted as a hUnJ Ls m reliability. I can conceive
brittle, when a beefsteak can be private enterprise, has served the oI no good reBMm fOr change,
splintered like wood, when candles, public for a long period of time.— j
ai,,rPr*!v vnur*
freeze so solidly tliat they cannot almost three-quarters of a century'
omcereiy yours,
be mode to burp without a prcliml- I sliould Judge. Anyhow It U one of1
E- Davenport,
nary thawing, when tempered steel ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------tools become so brittle from the cold j
ANOTHER NEW DEAL EX­
that they break under ordinary i
,
PE1UMENT GONE WRONG. 1
blows, when your breath freezes
| THE SILVER PURCHASE ACT.
i
with a crackling round—then it
Hew to lhe line, let the quips
must be getting really cold.
i The Silver Purchase Act7 ol 193$ I
fall where they may I
te another of the New Deal's ex- i
Once we saw some of the inter"1 peri men te which has been extreme- P
csling properties ot extreme cold i
• ly costly and without benefit. Predemonstrated by dissolving frozen ]
By Observing Tommy.
'sumably it was passed to stabilize
carbon dioxide (dry snowi hi ether.! See that Willard Smith ha* a
co5u,,ry* "«•*&gt;' . Actually, it
This, as we recall, gave of! a temper- brand new |»air ol gray ' dog muffs" j!“.on ? rMl*ltcd in a waste of pubaturo of about forty degrees below 1 spats fo you 1—well, anyway, he 1llc 6ind* and a benefit, at the exzero. Liquids froze solid as metal. wait-d for the weather to furnish an P?nM&gt; ot lhc
conforred
plastic materials became so brittle, -iiiU1
.-/
1 upon a very zmall class—owners of
that they could be crumbled like '
...
silver mines and those speculators
stale bread Yet such temperatures;। Speukln, ol n,uir.- ta«r you no-' ““““ u,k' •»«««« °&lt;
arc common on lhe Antarctic con-1
need Iho our pud., bcluren which \
tinent. Think of living in such un 11,0
be ।
‘"‘1 '“"‘X;
,8"’"
' Hie vouth
youth oi
of our
our bit
fair olio
city muv
may be
atmosphere*
! seen on these chilly, wintry dpya? Purchase Act of 1934 directs the
. Secretary of lhe Treasury to con­
! Ah there. Harold Teen I
Untie buying silver abroad until
An iptcreating condition dexribcd
...
by Admiral Byrd in hi* latest book j Anyway ru
mon. coin. |I cither lhe price of silver raises to i
$1.29 an ounce, or the total of the
on Antarctlcawas the milky nt- forlabkf than my old fell hat.
"Treasury's stiver stock reaches an
mosjihcre enoonnten-d mi overcast
"amount equal to one-third of Its
days when n light snow was falling, j
Hie twrri» can sure think up new gold reserve and. on lhe 18th of
Horizons and all otiicr marks on the :
j this month, the Treasury was still
landscape disappeared so that h was tilings to do.
1300.000.000 ounces short of rqualeven kuvs
guea.il
■ absolutely
.luwiuiii) impovdbic to
IU even
&gt;
.. .
tli.Understand they ribbed iny ba-s ing ite gold reserves, and. on lhe
th.* contour of lhe
the surface ahead !1
1 lie same condition U frequently
leniy at Uial Cammeftlal club 23rd ot this month. It was still !.000.000.000 ounces short at ite goal.
encountered in the mountains. You ] banquet.
Under this Act. Die Government j
' can't tell whether lite surface three •
U V.
„ w.r,
feel ahead
of &gt;vu
you is
level «
or rises 1 8orl «&lt; l«* U,r nr^ Leap Year luu created an artificial market and 1
the run. ao U. speak.
an artificial price for «!lv»r._lhls for
sharply. A
A black object
ctjcz; un a II.Ii P^l*^&gt;
the benefit of those owning silver
field of snow appears to be susiv-nd- •
Never suspected that he was a mines.
The Act te an illustration of how
—....
— .... -—.. • ••
......
.
It te
ing toward youunfair
from and
t)i&lt;* futile
distance
I for the Gov­
, llllstn eminent to establish an artificial
appears to be walking on mr—in
H'-li! It .
...“,1in
fact nothing seems ns It i*. one conw
- ,„
i "■vv
*"*
“ the old fashioned melter dzainmer price. Ninrietni months otter the
I.* usually would r-ay I guess we pul that one passage ot the Act. the market price
tiuuous track &gt;11
in the *now
*1
___ .-uffirtent to "1 !&lt;■;&lt;; up" me . itua-' over
— —eh
— Harold, you old snake in of silver is actually lower than when
..........
t.nx
'„Fbt!:r
fhirenin«*nt ----------------------------wt nut tn ruiu, tlm—*
.........
itV- cfoy.LwJwi althmigh 0:1
certam
‘|KirtieuIarIy
JM
'Brass.
IIS Of 1 CSlCrClay | -intuy - days even pliths lore a!)
‘ ‘ *
1 price to $1.29 an ounce, or. allcr•*
pirsjKTtive. I*, give., one B p.-euliar,
T'e warned im many a time not natrly. to purchase silver until
: •nsattim to move about on „uch | '-0 kc&lt;T» b*uc penciling those swell stocks reached one-third the value
.'EARS AGO.
day*. For all pMcl.cal purpose* you "bleated event " stone., of mine.
of the wold holdings
It this Wedur .day have a blindfold on your eyes—and
• • •
i On the 18th of tills month, the
Detroit to bring to tnis city yet vou can re. 1 Making your way1 Guess wc spoka a lew day* too
Y,,rk i,rlcc tor »Hver- was &lt;51,
tor burial the body of 1:1* brother. across hilly territory on ski or .mow soon, didn't we zAbc?
cents per fine ounce, the lowest
Frank Tinkler, a former resident ot shoes I* u tricky problem becaus? I
...
Ju*&gt;' 30- l®34.
.re hub II, mid &gt;»«r.h
Tbmm).
.m
j'°i'
X
ment i- on loot to organize ing down an unsuspected slape or thin -hat
1
*107000(XJ° upon the
riitin,, hx-ku'-c-a
.... ........
. j ‘'',1 u,av'
■ H3o.004.000 ounces of allver pur­
tailing
backward from an
unsucchased since Uie Government began
lodge. cc.sful attempt lo wall: straight up
I hear that lhe Commercial Club its program of suteudics -for silver
producers on December I, 1933.
to for the President's bail.
: And. with the world market for
Such n condition probably never i
Happy
ret.
.
&gt; ..
un ounce.
Hour at the Methodist c.-.unh will exists aroiind hen* because-there are । t»,u
nnminatlrm for the
nu"ul
enjoy a specially line program, John too many object* which stand out Hastings Hull nf Oblivion— Red
°J’vcri’'nenl Is
“ paying 77';
o'i
:r»m uw n.1., 01 M.O. .....
'Ll.in ui. w-.-Xta- u,“
'VJL'"""1•■"“*1*
_
attained a hue reputation a-, a vio-

"Round About Town

;
living
expenses Increased, it would
।be a good idea to write your Congi^man and the United Slates
senators at Washington and -let

them know that you are opposed to
those four or more JRailroad bills
rtamed above, that fire now before
the United States Senate.
THE CIVIC PLAYERS
The Hastings Civic Players Asso­
ciation is starting on Its fourth sea­
son with cxcelient prosprcls for a
continuation ot the fine work it has
produced in the past.
It Is probable that not many little
theater groups can point to a record
containing sb small a percentage cf ‘
■ duds" during the first three-year 1I
period as the one here. Most ol the”]
productions have been superior, as

amateur entertainment goes; a few
compiled by the Interstate Com­
really exceptional. In view of the
merce Commission. This law hn.s great amount of work and talent in- VlCTL’S UH(l O pilliOHS',
nothing- whatever to do with addedvolvcil in producing plays iil'fit IK
safety. but to squeeze more money
a mediocre manner &gt; It is really re­
out of railroads, faced with a demarkable that such an association
mar.d for lower freight rates. The
can exist In a community of Uns
Wu were not in court laat Thurs-1
•"dear people" of course would have
size.
day wlyin a man whom we had
to foot the bill, or lhe railroads go
Contrary to the imprr .vion held I known nearly all our life, jind « horn
biutedA
we
had always regarded as a irk-nd
by some, the association has taken |
was sent to prison fa? j|n oflem—
Then there is Senate BUI 59.
particular care to work in as much, committed while he was in a state □:
known as the “Full Crew Bill." This
new talent as possible; to give all, mjnd due to excessive and prolonged
Bill, if enacted into law, would
who are interested In ]i!ny produc-; drinking. Any prr'on who in- pa-wd
make certain trains put on "more
the half-century mark ean look back
mtn" whether they ar? needed or tian a chance to participate. In through the year* and recall n list
many instances, last minute with­ ti friend.1, who went wrong through
not. The estimated cost of - this
drawals have forced the director to, liquor, friends whose homes winwould be $83,000,000 a year. Its press some of the more cxjicrienccd j
broken up. friends who committed ’
purpose is not "safety" but a sublet-1
members into service.
j crime.-:, or look their Ilves or some- 1
fuge to create marc employment
one cLm- .. life—all Decaux" of li­
One of the outstanding achieve;
Here again the taxpayer* would ments nf the association to date. 1»! quor. You know tin.-, is true, and behave to pay II “indirectly" through
tlic annual piny for children pre­ at the changed attitude of lhe pub­
higher freight rales instead of lower.
rented each fall. Last year, tor ex­ lic toward this national curse InThere is Senate Bill No. 27 known
ample, more than two thousand
a* lhe "Train Length Bill." which youngster* from ah sections oi ],buslnew even to the extent it was
curbed in the old days of the saloon,
proposes Vb limit trains :o no*, more
Barry county saw "Jack nnd the we have attempted to niake the
than 70 cars. This would increase
Bean Stalk." and even in spite of business respectable by placing it in
railroad operating expends $200.­
an extra performance, all who I restaurants which all ages may jutronlz- and. while legally it nutyyfaot
000.000 a year and of course the j&gt;cowished to come could not be ac- !
ple would have to pay it through in­
commodatrd. "The Silver Thread"
f
direct taxes The purpose isn't' more
and "Cinderella" al*o played to miliar knowledge of drinlyiig and
safety." but -more Jobs"—uneres- nocked house.
! cam 11* idea that it i* tfo- profa-r
*
.
...
thins because the older folk.-, do it.
sary Jobj&gt;.
AnoUHrwonhwhUrxiMo oilh.
...... ,
|.r..rll
Then there Is Senate Bill 1562 that
association ha* been an attempt to a nation ot drunknfd'*. th,* hquor
proposes io reduce the jtoasible,
promote critical interest In plays'law of Miclugan Ls/riTialnlv tliat
hours of service from 16 to 12 nnd through the formation of reading
,b'‘ fejiealcrs a.*ked fo.r bclimit the lime of train dispatchers
, .. . ,. , 1 fore ctectian was/ the pnvilig" of
wtfoul |urk,.,.,
from nine hours to six hours. This «o
] ul&gt;. nnd the • IntomnL- beta ni bu)W
regular interval* throughout the they were given the world with a
would add many more millions in
taxes for people to pay. In fact
■
. ,, it.-drama
are given.
,
J l-'f-h&gt;
l.'ztslaiure ot 19X1 Wt
is estimated that the pas ige of thcX........................
.
J.Mill tiiiuk tliat the i.r-t *tep ,owkThe otu-ait plat cvnicsl ,'°&gt;«- 1IM| towsrd&gt;im3rmwn&lt; ni u! the ur. .*.
above bills would add over ONE
sored by the local a*.*ociu
ent situation Is to, place all int.ixiBILLION DOLLARS In casts to the
r.inti m tin- .uu-s stores 'much n&lt;
recognized
several oil
railroads, which the people would
HaVk7TO PAY or the transporta­
worthwhile
cxpcrimrii
tion systems of lhe country woulq
plays w.-re submitted at
go •■busted." with dire consequences
four used on u iirbcram which ncl-j
to those who work tor them; lo
। ted J150 lor the Peniioek HfepiUZ
shippers who use them; to pcnpU
a program which has also received
who have their money invested in
a generous amount oi prai:athem, and lo our business life. In
A * thing-turned out. it fka/prob.*1 every Careful &lt;
the face of all this the railroad., an ably a mistake to attempt a second I b*'1’ contacted
being asked to "lower their fate.*." program oi one-act play* so mxu: 1 C-as^iaili* N&lt; w
With this possibility confronting
RAISING A FAMII
railroad.*,, along with growing bus
be recorded simply Xs wl **rror 1,1' Tzo&gt; day* tin. wrt
and truck competition which LMi't
judgment ar.d in no*manner detracts “ Kr0l:up listening to
• regulated" "as are the railroad.1
„1S
anyone who gives "the matter any ln». th. Ilrn ;.w.m or tf.m
fact that the contest. RscQ.‘was (0U1ts mL:,. ,|O
consideration, can figure it out for
very much worthwhile.
himself that under present condi­
orx and inv
tion* railroads cannot reduce rales,
and the chief reason for .its accom­
and I hut
but may be compelled to sharjffy
plishments lo date is Laurence E
Increase them.___________
The irSf^Eack-bonc"* of this ’
1 hours of his linfc lo its interests. juvenile or adult, i.» a lot of tatiicn
country is what is known as the
He not only has directed the players and mother.* who work at the job o!
being pan nu and it doere. t make a
"Middle class” such as we have
but has designed all of the retting*. lol ol difference whether the. family
right here in Barry county This «&gt;c done a considerable ainoun*. ol the live.* on ‘.lie river banks or on lhe
called “Middle Class" comprises the
whetiirr the
father
work, himself, and also found unz1 ‘- boulevard
---------------- te a
great majority of our peopl*. They, to write Jack and the Bear. Stalk
or "
U*
pay the great bulk of the taxes and•
.
.
. ,
..
borer. What docs make a difference
and .-everal one-act play* as wci.
!s whether.the tpother delights in
do mo*t ol the voting. Every two
May lhe xvociation k"ep up ll;.' &gt; being a mother and the father doc.*
yean they elect a mar, to Congress
good work and continue at tlie pace dte «.art a* heart ot the family.—
and every six year* a man to lhe 1 which wu u-t hi X5utw.nl Bound.“ »«huu&gt; Coins
United Blates Senate. When they '

What Others Say

&gt;nn,—,n

A Quotation

|

|

Crumbs of Wisdom
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.

Bae|eU.ar(l dances;

B

. me winu.
a , e
: lhe results of tile Government s
CARLTON CENTER.
.
•
„ ,
'
.
' buying, advanced and so cave to t&gt;A We,“.?,nOWn &gt;0“"* “d7 ru-'“‘« oroducera of silver in thu cmintrA
Mbs Marsretc Valentine, who ha,
been ill during the p«.*t two weeks.,
was n»x- lo return to her
•• • wotk
- losing
at losing
quite quite
■ few of histMh-, particular product. there has been
Dr Unnie* in Hu.miuks Tliur&gt;...y
f
l
f " ,w perceptible effect, upon the quoor u: organized io piumole th-.Mary Clem accmnpankd B-tty I
,bul Prob“b,&gt;'
■*d'* *« . lalkms of wheat, cotton or other
jean curjvnicr lo Hustings High । •J*1 needed, anyway.
. g(XXjs
school Friday to spend the day.
I
.
Last -Monday. I introduced m
Elton Marlow ol Grund Rapid . I Wonder If the boys who wrn. tn congress If R 10383. n bill to rccounty amounted t» WuO.
!
TU&gt;
*W
l"u Ac‘
authority to the
1 ;,.W«rre^Lrtt?-Cl
UU Ir Sl°r’ 8ccrrt*rJf
ll1'' Treasury and the
ent. Mr and Mr1 Elmer Marlow.
Stowell was chairman of tin dm
If* aflcnva.ds.,
| President lo make these purchases
Minor Shupp I* ill in HastingTile Junior Auxiliary of t
maiiuei churcii under the clrniKV of suffering from a very severe stom­ I It's so CMV to net thina.'mixed
un
,,u“ .thh
..u""uxcdu” M'1
wtllbi
Mt
Bat-, and Mi- RcplPgl*’ gave ach ailment.
-Tommy knows!
i brought to an end '
RtV. Fern Wheeler of Fn eport
ii.- ir . ,i oj;d annual "Children's
' wu- in this vicinity Friiiay visiting. ]
Clare E. Hoffman.
When i! comes to giving a presl, Miss Wheeler preached a wonder­
the parish house.
'
Member of Congress.
" Ini sermon Sunday at the m e dcnttel
*-*••*—• address
«■•«•«-*- of welcome
w«uvuh,c tliat
uuu u
■.*,[
owcctiiiurt Bread.’
church. You are cordially invited r,;a,l&gt;' different, they tell me that Jan. 33. 1936.
II.iMlnir product Introduc'd
to conic next Sunday to hear her ' George Lockwood can .show "cm al)
Church service* at 11 45.
a
active or two.
Star Bakery and
C OATS GROVE.
Mrs Calvin Strffev and little son *
become a wi il-cs
■ of Kalamazoo spent part of last! They call him. Major Logan now.■
evening with good attendance. Mrs.
week with tier parent*. Mr. and Mr*
John Usborne
111 h01 ,,ial Al Brown has been'a 1 Nina Townsend had charge of the
THIRTY YEARS AGO
program Phil Water.*on of Marne
busy fellow there day.*.
showed fine moving picture* and
. tin probate register had a Mr i Carrie Goouyiar and Joint MeBud Wolfe te beginning lo gel some girls from Grand Rapids a.smovable gathering uf the El-ain carried of! the honors.
।
aisled
in the program
bald headed, Ask him eboul it.
officials a.id their wives
1
Freda Smith. Crystal Brogdon.
Mis* Alice Rlckrl entertained many .
lioiuv 4H W- Mill St.
.• of her friends Friday evening al her . Cold imlrigiit fur till1 rrfrigcflL- Mrs. Flossie Allerdlng and Ethel
I£;.*ii:ig
Poultry Asocla- home with a leap year party. Prizes j tor. Tommy *nz. bill when it comes Fisher attended the teachers ban­
. trowuw in nun.l« r It nnw
quet and program in Woodland last
VAtlnesday evening
. "''
1 ", l”“'
l!’l"’r* by Lottie Barnum nnd Hartev An&lt;• v
' town u; i; rh? hen 1-An all day meeting of the D. G.
Joe McKnigiit. Henry Sheldon
•otmns &lt;’f more nnd more imporOwing to the demand for a sum* and party. I understand. ore plan­ T. O club will be held on Wcdnesning
to
compo-c
u
new
poem
en
­
m-i school in Barry county Prln.
Arthur C. Brown will give a Mcally and Supt. Holden will con­ titled "Snow Bound al Dutton."
Coals* with dinner and program to
un Wednesday allenioon ut duct one here, beginning- Monday.
which the families of the club
members are invited. Mrs. Pearl
July C. and continuing fur - five
Mn. Frank Ham. who -will
Mrs. 5 B Nlbbx has been quite Demond Is in charge ot the program.
soon with her husband tor
rick with the flu but l.» improving
A flue 9-lb. baby girl was born to
now.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Clum last Wed­
FIFTY YEARS AGO- x
Au announcement party wl«i&lt;Ji
Mr and Mrs Arthur Clarke and nesday. Jun. 23. Her name te Kath­
tills city occurred children of Routh Woven urre &lt;t„n
January 28 in this
uid hardly b»- cxiellrd lor uniqueX"u“'£sx ryn Marie Mrs. Herman Hauer, sis­
md briglnnlR
. . .
ter of Mrs. clum. assisted in the
.Micl.i-an miaul. &gt; winch wu* br-i«».k ,, . «vnii.in«
home last week.
“bout
home on Jelfcrtpii St. m honor •XT*wm wrfrel&lt;Sttilthnth”'&lt;o!'1* Malt Br&lt;Uor&lt;1 u ’b,r ,o
Freda and Cleon Smith and Ruth
nmX ■ ri^* I- «h'iwn '"sa,n
hu ;"cverc illncAi 0( Uw Woodman spent the week end in
.ipproaciuus marriage of their
lowing officer-.: Pres —E. m. IHn-- last two weeks.
Chicago and Kalamazoo.
to Dr. McKltinte uf Seattle. man; Rec. sec.—J. ?j. Cblltstcr; Cor. i Sunday eiietls of Mr and Mn
Mrs. H. A- Woodman attended the
AVa-ltlHgtOiV-^-f-------------- - • ...--------' tS
,n.p
wm,„ ..!
‘fcrTTtSefaba-Wr county Red Cross meeting and supprr tn Hasilnga la*l- Friday eve .
election tn securing the Majestic
ning.
Reynolds will fiive a solo. Mi»s Mar­
guerite hail win read Van Dyke*

WflTH scientist*
’’ that trouble
atom, one wonders
wants with half an

going to s!)
to split an
what anyone
atom.

The veterans are considered
lucky dogs, now that Concrete

chew on.

latcd io spiders than to flrb.
which may account for the very
strange dream we had the otb-r
night.

People arc dying from the
heat in South America and fr. m
in

program.
Mixing sugar with tnoria
•aid to make
aironger. nnd
why a roune
ni u m n

?/a?
&gt; Ktuccn iuj }rier.M

i

husines*. Fridav.
Thcv have
Friday nnd Saturday, Wednesday. John Bc.-smcr »• ngls-.
h- ^dt™tatowCU’r “l hU *l°rC Hwrc snow thcrr ('14n herc a«d 11
STONY POINT.
r greatest sucrevres
Mr. and Mrs. Karl PiillUps of Kal­
' and "uoltte.i Giant
tn ...7
cl““ ““ lhe
“ "w amazoo were Bunday guests of Mr.
At last w- hate discovered James
„ u.n„ „1,r;
Mrs Bert VanderJigt spent tlic
• r-ixel"* favorite music—’h«- vole- of
the baby boy-who arrived Sunday.
latter part of the week with friends
in Pewamo.
■■
i-.u.-.i-i i, doing nicely.
served.
i Mrs. Claud Demond is spending
Forty years ago.
•*&lt; ■K.7*nL«..
that city. ..iv..., i
*.«
Ed Scharff and four Hastings Ute week in HasUaga helping care
Etlna
---------------------------*by ■■
~
'. racn pUt on R fine .musical program rfor
have done that much they seem to
. ..Th" ~
I lie parb given
Mis G&lt;or^&lt;
°r hcr
“* *»
» ,Lpk
her mot,wr
mother wl
who
is VBr
very
sick.
Goodyear Thursday evening was one i at th* p T .
eVenimb
feel that their duties are ended
PUHgt?Ht
,nen,^
t
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Qallinger
of lhe mo*.t pleasant social events i
4 .
cn‘n8
Very, v*ry seldom do they ever write
u mlghl astonish the wolf at the *«"hom are decent n^n. should so *sstart this week for California. They
in the history of lhe city
|
SOUTHWEIIT CARLTON.
M.t; T. Goodyear.
are going after their ran who is just
Mr MV*MU&gt; or V. S. Senator, ..
w
bouM, „„ m"I IMrrl .- roolher 10
... run
— m
». il
..
The Table factory I . compelled lo
Charley Baldwin lias been Mgncu • Friday evening the
neighbors out of the navy.
whut tl,«,v nrn in favnr nf nr wliatz*.. .
.
OOUragC WllCtl Califtl iq.'O.a in a crisis.
.
. i . developments
.
------- ...
••markable
run evctnmu to get out order
in tli" lately reorgunizcd Detroit gathered and surprised Henry WilLittle joicc Demand is spending
Ht-nry Ford
Mr and Mr* Will Hama and Mr. Ball Club, and has liU muscle hard- liftim on his fiftieth birthday.
the week with her aunt. Mrs. Brown
. &lt;♦.
.r-------I mid Mrs. N. T. Diamond are giving, cited .up
.. rlor
— .. |10, campaign wlUl llu,
Hubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo in Lansing.
.
-r------! spent tlir week end with Mr and
... .H m«*wo. ueiore ovgmnuw. a
------------- •- *••* -ii-.- '•1&gt; - "' ■■■ Tues- sphere,
Not much travel lliese days but
diligent preparation should be made resentatne government and national. day uHrrnoon me lad:- , entertained
Miss Ella Marshall. Orlon Lich'.y.' Mrs. LaFayclle Usborne.
what we do enjoy the most is to
Uie political game, and with a strong
Honorary degree; An honor con- 21c*oer
J
'
vi——
endeavor
endeavor. "-Prime- Minuter Mac- at five oclock tea. Selections by lhe Belle Kicks, Bell? HoUhkv.s. Clara
Mrs. Anna Buck. Mr and Mr*. look out and w-... MJV
watch
the snow u.uw
plow
lobbying committee, gel busy'. They I ferred on a man when hr te big :
—----- 7—
-----------------Donald.
mandolin orchestra and rtcitaUona Robert*. Dorr Mu'dge. Charley Pal-. Frank Shriber. Mr. and Mr*. Leo go by.
by mm Florence Diamondmatter
enlivened
and Will shean viaited Miss Barry and son railed on Mr. and
A new mail box has been put un
interview and even Uneaten tegk-;enough to honor the college.—Sait
haW
"The day's work must be done in the occasion. Last t-vnung their MurMiall's home in Prairieville Fri- Mr*. Abid Donley and Mr. and Mr*, al the schoolhouse in accordance’
MMH Urm, MU. &lt;01- rraoruco cbrouue.
jX""&gt;
day. "—Benno Mussolini.
guests were tntcruincd at pedro. day returning home Bunday evening. (George Robltuon of Lansing Bunday, with the new stale law.
ni.-ht- only

Paragraphs

““**e

.*'_;ft"J'1:“l“1' “ “'r.wr I."":

...

.

i

•

■

v

.

�THE MASTING* BAN NEK, THLREDAY, FEBRUARY &lt;, 1*34
PINE LAKE EXTENSION GROUP.
The Pine Lake Extension group
met al lhe home of Mn. Eli Lind­
sey, Wednesday, Jan. 20. Twelve
member* and four visitor* were
present. The leaden. Mn. Shep-

Mtlng lesson on foundation gar­
ment* and selection of dress mate­
rials. Tlic next meeting will be on
Feb. 37 at the home of Mn
Kllllck — Mrs Arthur Lathrop.

WASHIN6T0N
0465

j Organizations

llhM ilxly-throebaUe* enxolted. U'
--------------------------------------,----------- ' .'
It...- a
- larger
*------- Cradle D
aII
there
Roll
in this

city, wc wonder?

OBITUARY.

Clarence Stamm was bom
Johnstown Twp. Barry co. Maj

1*1 and died in Culver City.

MILL END SA

tain the Women'* Missionary so-1 * mo*., a day*. He *m united in
claly of th* United Brethren church ' marrtag* to Roae RiUy of Rutland,
on Thursday. Feb. 13th. Th!* 1*! To that union ware bom two chil­
(Continued from page one)
lheir annual Thank Offering meet- dren. Roy and Myrtle. He moved
Ing and the program win be In to the wast at th* aga of 21 wan.'
Orangeville—Bert Brown
charge ol Mrs DaUy 8Une. Please Hte wif* died whan they w«re living
A most fortunato purchota from different manufacturer*—Mill
Prairieville—Olla Boulter.
note the change in the day.
tn Colorado. Later, ba was united in
'■
- ■ i marriage to
Bummer. The
Rutland—Mom
_____________________
Slut*.
Mr*, c. W. Wespintcr is entertainHospital Guild No. 10. the Surgery ‘ deoeaaad was an eamert Chrtetten
Ttwm.ppl^Olo&gt;n WMOTOre ,nd
Uher UJ at h.r
Glenn Blak*.
i home Friday afternoon, Feb 7. 3:80 Guild, will meet with Mr. Otto; and a member of lhe Methodist
o’clock. There will be a sale of I»enhaih on Thursday. Feb. 13. In- I church. He te survived by hte wife. I
Woodland-Qi™ wouina
Mkta goo0l m
।■ suid
stead zt
of Udsy.
today. Feb. 5.
8.
a *on Roy of Denver. Colorado, a
Yankee Springs—Albert Grave*.
1|
80 X 80 PRINTS
■■
&gt;$*
—
daughter. Myrtle, of Culver City.
ateo three granddaughter*, a twin
Light Colored
Hie s E. Rutland W C T- U.
City of Hastings—William 8ch*-_ ____________
36-in. Broadcloth
dor. Clyde Wilcox. Alian C Hyde. I have a family social evening at the &gt;-&gt;/-»» roT* unucr JLrg*ti/e ateter. Mn. Cllra Wilder of Battle
OUTING
Henry Sheldon. Judge Stuart Cie- Goodwill church Feb. 13 A. pot luck
nUUoe. Zv£ vrO Creek, three half ateten, Sarah
36-in. BATISTE
men! and the Hasting* Banner
------------‘ 7;30. There
-------------------- ­ * ------------------------------------------- “---------- Shllllng.'ld* Bcteon and Emma
•upper at
will be
enter
A 8 Headid Valae at
Vd
Clement*; two half brothers, John
Wc want to repeal, because this tainment following. A play given by
Plain Colored Prints
PROBATE COURT.
and Fred Stamm.
ought lo be stressed, that those who Mary waters. Marie smith. Kathryn
"Clarence,
you
have
left
our
home
Hathaway
and
Mary
Bauchman.
--------------- --------------------------------------at. Mary Haff
Petition for 11earliest possible moment from the Numeroiu
f---------------------------------------------------other events arc ached-(cense to sell filed.
And the vacancy te great.
men will) whom they iiave been . uled.
Mary | Q[ Carrie D T.xki Bond of ex..i.^ Everyone welcome. —M«,v
nlaraw^,
' BaUChmU).
placed.
। ecutrix filed, lettei? testamentary But we know beyond the portals
You are waiting at the gate.
The banquet will be held In Ful­
——
‘usueo,
issued, order limiting settlement en- ‘
ler hall and lhe limit of lhe sealing
The Women's Missionary Society tered.
,
circle’s broken^
capacity for a banquet is four hun­ of lhe Methodist church will hold | Est Lewis U. Morewood. Annual Ycs- u,e
Double Cotton
25% WmI Fancy
I An&lt;* X°ur
to us so dear.
INDIAN ROBE
dred. The committee have planned its regular meeting al lhe home of 'account filed.
SHEET BLANKETS
for four hundred, and there will be Mrs. Harry Peirce, 902 W. Green 1 Eat. William A. Kerr. Bond of'ls truly drcar ®nd «mply
BLANKETS
Grey
no way by which that number can St., on Wednesday. Feb. 12 at 2:15 Admr. filed, letter* of admlntslra-' 8lnce &gt;ou teft “* tonely hcrc’
„„
, . , . ,
„
be Increased; for tables for that Mrs. Nellie Cross will conduct a quiz tion Issued, order limiting settle-1 „ , ,
many will take every foot of avail­ on the Mystery Box from the ment entered, petition for hearing Waiting there till that bright morn.
Women’s MlMlyary Friend, and J claims filed, notice lo creditor* la-1
able room.
I Where wc loo shall cross lhe
The menu will be furnished by Mrs Glcnna Doud Van Horn is to'sued.
E*t John F Goodyear. Petition1
strand.
lhe Ladies' Aid of Welcome church. talk on Interesting field* of Home
Single Pl«ld Blan(for cnntlnuance of widow’s allow- | What a Joyous meeting yonder
The menu was published In the Missionary work.
ance filed, order for continuance of j When well all Join hand in hand
Banner last week nnd It is a very
appelixlng one—...vw
fried V...VWV...
chicken, poTownsend Plan meeting. Episcopal widow's allowance entered.
tn toes, chicken gravy, home-made parish house Friday evening. Feo.
Est. Fred M. Cushing. Bond on 30 heaven seems a Utile nearer
rolls, coffee, |&gt;lcklc*. vegetables, and 17. 8 o’clock. Rev M E- Hoyt of ’M|e med. oath before sale filed, re- I wlth a ,ovcd onc 8°ne be^orc
homemade pies,
: Nashville Is to be the speaker.
port of sale filed.
I And we’ll ever ask God's blessing
To meet again on Jordan s shore.""
Women as well as men are Invll- .
-------- ;—
Est. Dossie Ballentine. Will filed, |
RAYON BEDSPREADS
Sister Clara.
ed to till* banquet and no doubt will' Mrs. p. L. Bauer, who I* arrang- petition for probate filed, order for .
be about as numerously represented Ing the Feb. 14 meeting of the Worn-. publication entered.
MIDDLEVILLE.
as the men.
en’s Club, announce* a worth while
Est
Est. George W.
W. Lawrence
Lawrence.-• Bond
LACE PANELS
-The toastmaster will be Dean----------------—. Pf Atj—
program on,u_n,
the subject Some Great
mr. ....
filed, iletters testamentary
Wm. Hulett was celebrating his
Davenport of Woodland No better U&gt;ves; Some Beautiful Friendships ’’ lSsued, order limiting settlement en- ul
.
birthday
Monday last, worked all
selection could have been made.
j Mrs G. C Keller will consider the tered. petition for hearing claims day and enjoyed a fine dinner in
GIRLS' HEAVY COATS
The speaker Is to be the Honor- ' love between Hel^n Keller and her .filed, notice to creditors issued.
his honor.
able Glenn Dunn of Muskegon. He Is
the legal advisor of the governor, a
WOMEN’S PART WOOL UNION
lawyer of wide reputation, and is
considered onc of the best speakers j
WOMEN’S ALL SILK HOSE
in lhe state. Doctor F. Carrolhcrs.
1 nual luncheon, at which about 75
chairman of lire republican county : tain connections with some of tlic , Est Clark A. Barber Order con- ladies were present. Mrs Hard*
3/4 length and full length at—
committee, will preside at the ban­ themes will be music by Mrs. L. F firming sale entered
.always took an active interest In
MEN'S COTTON SOCKS
quet and introduce the speaker of Maus. Mrs
Bauer is especially' Est Albert J Bell Nomination' this work when Rev. Harris was
Grey and Brown—
the evening. Members of the Judlci- • pleiused lo be able to present a half i of Gdn filed, order appointing Gdn. pastor In Middleville
Both have
ary. including the Supreme Court, hour film illustrating the friend- entered, bond of Gdn filed, letters many friends here who enjoyed sec­
MEN'S ALL SILK SOCKS
stale officers, as well os legislative ships of some noted people She I of guardianship issued.
I ing them back
‘
officers in this congressional dis­ considers it very fortunate that thia, Est Mary E Morganthaler Final
Harry N. Potter, who lias been In
trict. have been invited, so lhe fel­ showing could be obtained al this account filed
fafimg health for some time passed
MEN’S BROADCLOTH
lowship of the evening will be de- time. This program will also be givEst Philip Gcrlinger Petition for ' aw ay early Friday A. M. Funeral
PAJAMAS al—
Ughtful. Arrangement;, have been cn before lhe Middleville club Feb Admr. filed, waiver of notice filed, at the home on Monday al 10 A
made whereby wraps will be taken 18
lhe rvrhanue
exchange number
number. The order
&lt;
.» as Ih«
appointing Admr. entered., M.. burial in Grand Rapids, their
MEN'S OUTING
care of, Everything is planned tor a only ,other date for the club during bond
I
of Admr. filed, letters of ad- former home. The family came lo
fine, enjoyable afiatr. The liupixrr the month of February Is the 32nd ministration
।
issued, order limiting | Middleville about 6 years ago from
will he served nt 0:30.
when ii card party will b- given in settlement entered, petition for. Mulliken. The widow, two sons,
Folks can come to this banquet mid the Masonic dining room part oi the :hearing of claims filed, notice to both of Grand Rapids, two brother*
will be’given their seau at the ta­ proceeds from which will be given to creditors Issued.
4
and two sisters survive. Mr. PolCinderella
All COATS
bles any time after fl o’clock. They a Will Rogers memorial fund.
»t Flossie B. Roddy. Petition । ter luid many friends here. He had
will not need to wait outside lor the
DRESSES
for Admr filed.
TO CO
owned and managed a hardware
The
Business
Women
’
s
Hospital
doors to open, but can go directly
Est. Mary Haff. Walycr of notice 1 clore ever since he came here and
REGARDLKS
Oplld
will
be
entertained
on
Monday
to, end get their seats al the tables.
filed
will be great I v missed in- business
Their wraps will be cared for In the evening by Mrs. D. A VnnBusklrk
OF COST
Est James A Eddy. Petition for circles as well as in the Masonic
vacant store down stairs in lhe Ful­ Dinner is scheduled for 6 30 o’clock ।' license to sell filed, order for pub­ and Pythian orders of which he was
at the Presbyterian churth parlors. lication entered.
ler building.
an honored member.
As we have said before we repent
Our weather man is sending us
Hospital Guild No. IB will meet , Eat. Henry J Toozc. Bond filed,
HASTINGS, MICH.
PHONE 23OA
nnw that the Important thing for
with Mrs. Inez Welfare, fir il ward letters of administration Issued, or­ a real old fashioned winter and If
anyone who wishes to attend this on Thursday. Feb. 13. Visitors wel- der
limiting
settlement
entered.
you believe In signs. It is to con­
1
banquet is this GET YOUR TICK­
Est.
Phebe
Newberry.
Petition
to
' ttnuc for some time.
come.
ET EARLY, for it Li certain that
compromise notes filed, order to
Mr. Newman and family expect
the four hundred tickets will be sold
Methodist L. A- 8. Circle No 3 1compromise entered.
I to move west of Caledonia in the
before lhe day of the banquet.
Est. Perry Campbell. Petition for ■ spring. They have made many and BUI Ball of Glena-ood. who has'
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
MORGAN.
meets with Mrs Ella Hammond. 8
Jefferson St., on Friday. Feb. 14. license to sell filed, order for publi­ ; friends In the four years’ residence been at the home of his brother.
Mr. and Mn,. Clair Van Sickle • rtngton Sunday.
cation entered
| in this community and all will re­ George has returned to his home. and son Otto oi Lansing visited Mr.
YOUNG AND OLD WILL
. Member* urged to attend.
gret their leaving.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walton wiU and Mrs. Wm. Van Sickle Sunday.
The Dowling Cemetery Circle will
LOVE “AH WILDERNESS"
HIGHBANK.
Glenard Earl ana Bob
Marguerite Milla. Mr. and Mn.
serve dinner in lhe church dining
entertain the L. A- 8. for dinner
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Clair Van Sickle and Otto of Lan­ were in Battle Creek Satui
Mr*. Leslie Adams and Mrs. Frank
American life as every American room. Thursday. Feb. 13 After din­
| Thursday February
Last Week's Letter.
. 6. All are wel- sing and Clayton Webb were dinner nlng.
knows It—and human emotions as ner the usual business meeting will HawbUte attended the Extension
Because ot drifted roads the L. A. come.
' every human being knows them. lake place. The following ladle* are Class last Tuesday at Mrs. Bud Ol­
S. dinner for last Thursday al lhe | Several school children froze their
, make gripping, enthralling enter- on the committee for work. Mattle son’s in Nashville.
Erhret Skidmore of Augusta called home of Mr and Mrs. Ward Cheese- j chocks or cars on their way home
j talnmcnt out of "Ah Wilderness" the VanSyckle. Mary Warner. Florence
dramatic masterpiece of Eugene -WBrnrr. Effie Wood. Ella Warner. on Mr. and Mrs. Byron Guy Sunday: man was held Friday as the snow, from school last Wednesday.
plow had cleared the roads by that
A son was born Wednesday night
afternoon.
: O'Neill, coming to the Strand Thea- ■nd Sybil- Warner.
Mary Rose Maurer is asslvllng her time. There was a good crowd pres-! to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gray who
ter. February 9 and 10.
I live near Bellevue. Mrs. Qray was
The Cradle Roll Department of aunt. Mrs. Olmstead with the store ent.
I Dynamic in its dramatic Intensity
EUgcne Ball, who has been visiting Berneca Buxton, a former resident
---------------------the death of Mr. Olmstead in
by virtue of Us sheer simplicity, the •he United Brethren church undersince
relatives al Glenwood has returned of this neighborhood.
great hit of the New York Theater the leadership of Mrs. Pearl West 1 Battle Creek.
'Guild is brought to the screen by I
j Metro-Goldwyn-Muyer with all Us
। vital elements preserved nnd am-|
' piffled by lhe wider scope of the,
screen, with Us charming outdoor
sequences filmed in the quaint town I
of Graitoq, Mass.. and Us dramatic |
sequences and Its human episodes
embellished by skillful camera effeet*.
When yoa are offered Far. More than
Have Recently Installed an Internal
' The play Is a triumph for Wallace 1
Berry, who enacts the lovable, inef-1
Your Used Car is Worth . . . Take a
tectual Uncle aid. usually a come*
dlan. but !y several places a polg”
Good Look at lhe TOTAL DELIV­
nnnt figure in his - futile romance
Lionel Barrymore revels In the role
ERED PRICE of the New Car you are
the only machine that thoroughly
of Nat Miller, played on the stage by i
George M. Cohan and/he late Will!
considering and find out the Difference
cleans motors INSIDE.
Rogers He brings to the screen a ,
Between It and the F. 0. B. Price.
totally different characterisation as forcible as his famous role in “*
This remarkable new machine—
. Free Soul."
SHANKLESS

1

The Eastern Star* are holding a
Valentine-Day dance at Community
Hall Friday evening. Fab. 14. and
will have a card parly next Tueaiday afternoon the llth at Masonic
| hall.

MUSLIN

81c

lOc

BLANKETS

•1.19

It Is a known fact that clean
clothes wear longer than dirty
ones. Outer garments do not
show dirt oa quickly as those
wont closer lo the body . . .
but . . . they pick up dirt ev­
erywhere. In.cars, building*,
sitting or standing and even
walking. Keep those clothes
clean—and they will last
longer. Have youi clothes dry
cleaned regularly. It is our
aim to give you the best
cleaning possible. We give
social attention lo every de­
tail.

McCREERYS
DRY CLEANERS
FIIONE 2140

♦3.08

'1.39

45'

*3.98

89'

39

10'

25

1.00
89

Waters Clothei Shop

COLD
HEATHER
is Still Here!
Wc are maintaining 'full stocks of

Winter Underwear

Heavy Caps
Scotch. Corduroy and
Railroader Styles

79‘.o98‘
Warm, Lined

MITTENS

‘Exclusive, but not expensive

The ’Trade-In’

20‘,o98‘
Complete Stock for Boys
and Girls

Our Fine*! and Heavi­
est $5.50

COSSACKS
*, ’3.98
OTHESS or $2.98
Ye», we have car muffs
at 25c a.pair

You con o|wayi get it at
Water*’

Will Get You If You
Don't Watch Out!

Clean Lhe Sludge Out of your
Motor Before It's Too Late!

Values

We

MOTOK CLEANEH

Ticks, jersey, Outside

Nap. Leather

FRANDSEN’S

’2.88 ..*6,88

THREE CORNERS.

I

Misses Marguerite Ycitcr and
Helen Lunstra of Grand Rapids
| spent Friday afternoon with’ lhe
former’s parents. Mr. and Mrs Clair
Yciter.
r*
J. Shirley Wing of Grand Rapids
called on his sister. Mrs. Claude A.
Hammond. Tuesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Yetter of
Kalamazoo were Sunday guest* of |
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clair
. Yciter.
, Rev. and Mrs. Conklin and dilli dren of Hastings were Sunday'
’ guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Wallen. |
and family. *
I Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wallers and
Marian of Grand Rapids spent 8un—
I day with hl* parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Edw. Walters and family.

|

« WASHES THE INSIDE
CLEAN AS NEW.

OF

YOUR

MOTOR

• REMOVES ALL ROAD CRIT, CARBON AND
SLUDGE FROM THE CRANKCASE.

CIRCLE S PICNICS

SAUSAGE

• GIVES YOUR MOTOR NEW LIFE AND PEP.

e SAVES COSTLY REPAIR BILLS.

lb.

22c

2 lbs.

29c

lb.

2Oc

HOME MADE

BONELESS

VEAL ROAST

The job is done while you wbit . . . YOU
CAN WATCH THE DIRT COME OUT,
and you’ll be amazed ot the amount of |
.dirt it gets out of your motor.
Electrically driven—cleans behind pis­
ton rings ... oil lines ... oil filter.. . valve
stems . . . rocker arms ... oil pump
. .. crankcase . . . etc.

DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Thursday evening the families of
Mr and Mrs. Geo. Ball. Mr. and
Mr*. Dale Sponseller. Mr. and Mr*..
! Claud Hoflman. Mr. and Mrs. Ward
Checsman and Maynard Tucker
spent the evening with Mr and Mrs
COME IN AND SEE IT OPERATE!
i Royal Donovan and family. It was .1
a surprise celebration of Mr*. Dono- ।
| van's birthday.
। Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Dunham
and son of Colorado who are visit- I /
'ing in Battle Creek,
attended
U
church services here Sunday morn-1 V
ing and spent the remainder of lhe ' jP
—. Heating*, Michigan
day as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Ostrolh. The Dunham* formerly a Flre»lone Tire* and Tube*
• Kunaoo Gaa and Oil*. Greasing
lived in thia neighborhood.
. ..A.
Mr. and Mr*. Claud Hoffman and • Ballerle,&gt; Windshield Wiper*
• Vulcanising. Electric, Washing
son* and Mr. and Mr*. Gao Ball
attended th* Farm Bureau ’ family |
BLUE.
night at Hasting* Friday evening.
. TIw young folk* liad llicir Janu- ■
ary-p»rty at the home of Gordon
and Thelma Lee Friday evening.
||

i) ANDRUS SERVICE •

RIB END

PORK LOIN ROAST

lb.

19c

lb.

15c

KETTLE

BEEF ROAST

Butter ft*,’

*. 37c

Dixie Oleo

»■ 19c

2

31c

The “spread” between the F. O. B. and Total
Delivered Price is becoming lhe secret hiding
place for a large number of “cxlras" such
Safely Class radiator ornatnenla, bumper
guards special mechanical equipment designed
To trhptdvc ridmg, cb’., all of which edme-a»
regular equipment on the V-fl, Ixvth Standard
and De Luxe inodols AT NO EXTRA COST.
Itemize this spread and you will be amaard lo
find how many charges are lacked on.
Find out how much a new Ford V-0 u actually
going lo cost you. You will discover that vtmr
actual net initial and operating coab win be
inuc-h lower for ■ Ford even though ycM)
be offered more fur your tar clsawlicrr.

Sugar Xxxx *..&lt; .?•Iu 15c

Peas DeiMMi*

After all. uhat )ou gri fur sour trade-in ian'l
as important a* how much difference &gt;ou will
have ta pay for your new car.. Thai'* whal
count*. Rcnienibeg THAT when you buy your
next car. When you are offered more than your
used car is worth, ask the TOTAL DELIVERED
PRICE of the new car. Subtract your allowance
from this total and you may discover that it
will cost you far 1cm to buy a Ford V-0.

Gwhed &lt;» Sliced

2 Ne. 3 Cm* 35C

&amp; Phone 2240 £ '2ES.TL5S

WATERS
Clothes Shop
"SclUus Quality Keep* Di »*•»’’

Sunoco motom

F

eldpausch

•market­

Phone 2272 UJ&amp; Df liver

FORD. DEALS I

PHONE 2121

HASTI

�THE HARTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 8, ItSl
the private individual share Jn all I
ASSYRIA GROUPCOATS GROVE OROUPthere thing*, we have thl*-about 72 Yhr Auyrla Home Fronomles Ex- J Th*
iriuuni kiuuu met
u&gt;cv at the
wic home
iiomc of
ui (n»H with
w-— ??
—rot
---- --j
-­
cent
of
the
nation
1
*
wealth
1*
held
te,vton
PT —---------- ---- --.*21
cent oi ine nanon a wcann u ncm Mr&lt;
^ Nrwherrv
Mr*. ploreIu
Florence
Newberry. Wadnssdav
Wednesday !( Jan. 28. The fourth lesson of the
by ordinary Individual owners.
P. M, Jan. ». for the fourth lesson I Clothing project was presented by
That dispores of the falsehood in sewing, with eleven member* J
^J^ fA flr^^eck up^of^an
that while our people were working
lhe muslin foundation patterns was
nnd rearing their- families
and
Final fittings of the muslin pat­ given and demonstrations showing
minding their own business, this terns was first on the program of how to use the pattern, also a dis­
(Continued from page one)
Gladstone
Is
leading
his
team
country was stolen
I grounds they can win with ease. The
cuuiiujf
»wien from
.run them.
non. It
•* (the
the lesson. "Choosing Material and cussion of fabrics. This was a very
in point* al present with 28.
the other* are ths small Investment* ho been worth while to clear up Deiign (or a d„u TheI* are now interesting and helpful lesson. The
last quarter of their victory showed j
Crothers runs a close second
what to expect of fighting men with i
L I NI .
IU L L
of the same Individuals. In citiest that point. If you live In long set­ ready to take apart, press and use next meeting will be at the home of
with 27. Other members of the
, tied parts you can confirm this by as a foundation pattern for what­ Margaret Coat*.—Ola Kimble. Sec.
70
per
cent
of
this
property
l*
free
thelr bocks to the wall. Likewlsc.th? j
.team and their Season points
personal obsenation in your own ever style is chosen by the indivld- ■
game which
_______
WI1K.I1 will
wm be
uc played
putjvu at
» home
iiuiuc J:
of mortgage, and banks hold only' street, or town'or countryside. But
are: Hinckley 21. Ransom 19.
GLAH8 CREEK.
uai. Auer
After a lew
few poinia
point* on scams.
seams.
one-flfth of such mortgage* as exist.' It doesn't really change anything. hems and dress lengths. Hie leaders I Mr and Mrs. Fred Otis ar* In
Walldorff 11. Angell 8. Ironside
bennettmen
over
Of the “six million farms. 3'4 mil­ The wealth ot the country Is not demonstrated how to make three I Lansing attending Farmers' Week
Old Iffy'* country cousin made will be anything but a lark. Lake8. Struble 3. and Kelly 3.
WHELM LAKEVIEW
lion are owned by the men who op­ owned by a handful of people, but different kind* pt skirts, box pleats, I at the college.
the statement both team* would &lt; view ha* beaten Otsego w it UreaI The third quarter ’wo* a more erate them, anj 600.000 of these , that does not solve oUr difficulty. flared, puffed, straight and bishop I John Erway of M. s C. and Miss
.Uh— .In —
-Hteh h. -.m.' «&gt;nable to expect Hastings will be ■
FIVE 23 TO 16
either win or lose whan he came , OR Uje w[nnjng ^dc of llw ledger ['
evenly matched tilt on each team owners rented additional land. Al­ It only brings us point blank sleeves. Which colors and designs I Ruth E. Erway of W. 8. T. C. were
again. But as was proven last week,
battled hard for the two points they most two-thirds of our crop land Is1 against lhe fact, divided rlghUy or are best for stout and slender flg-1 week-end gueat* of their parents,
far he lias been on the right side of statistic* ihean nothing, it Is the LOCAL PLAYERS SHOW
| were able to garner.
owned The
by the
final
farmers
quar- who harvest divided wrongly, there i* not enough ures. brought the lesson to a close. 1 Mr. and Mr*. Ray Erway.
lhe prediction. Last Friday's dual way lhe team handles the ball that
------------------------------------FINF PASSING GAME ur ,ound the’ vUUora rallying to it. But what about the farm mort­ wealth anyway—not enough, under
Because of the Illness of Mrs.
The W. C. T. U. will have a pot
Victory verified his utterance
rirec rrtooiNU UAfflc the cause
clght
count*.
■
gage? In
in 1930 the
me mortgaged farms
larms lu)y d|vtalon. to permit every Arneri- Alice Thomas. Mrs. Addie Leonard I luck supper Wednesday. Feb. 12. A
The local lads- made 85 chest
-Dis
»hlle the Hastings bays were adding were worth 21 billion dollars and i can Iamlly lhe lUndard of life we assisted Mrs. Gladys Broirn as lend-1 program of music and a play will
of the varsity win than statistic* posses in the first half last Friday. Reserves Win 17 to 8- ’
’ two to their score. However, most of me mortgages less tlian 7 billion ; cherish. Rich as our country I*, and er.—Mrs. Glenna Jones. See.
follow
lhe supper. Please remcmwill tvtt show. The five men who That 1* more than they have macle
| the point* were made after Coach -dollars. About 30 per cent of the. no notion Is richer, ll is yet too
Play Flashing Drive and
..
| ber the date and come.
---------— *■
want out on the court for Hastings in any single game this season, and I
' Bennett had replaced the varsity farm mortgage claim was held by poor—even In ILs prosperity It Is too TO PROMOTE EFFICIENCY
The L. A. 8. at Ray Erway'* last
Tight Offense
won the game for a teammate who the effect was a telling one. Besides
with
"
iui kuc
the jj
pick
.iw v»
of nw
the jo
second
-uuu aviuiKcrs
stringers farmers themselves, active and re- pocr—to realize our common ideal
AND HELPFULNESS. Friday was well attended.
sat silently on the bench in street It gave the spectators something to
The high school eagers staged on and one veteran. The final score, tired; 32 per cent by farmer*' local 0( an opportunity and cultural marThe Hastings city District of lhe j Allie
Allie Brown
Brown of
of Grand
Grand Rapids
Rapids lala
clothes. He had battled with his own do; that Is. if they were watching upset on the local court last Friday । nevertheless, showed Hastings on financial Institutions and Insurance | gin for all. Reduce all the wealth
some Ume at Fred Olis'.
Barry County Council of Religiousi Spending
"
self and won. so the varsity was In lhe ball closely.
by defeating the Lakeview five 23-16., the long end of the 23-16 score.
companies, and 19 per cent by gov- (&lt;l nn „Bct equality, and even then
Mr. and Mrs. Cha*. Whittemore
Education met Monday evening at
no position to lose their battle. He
The ordinary fan such as old
The Bennettmen showed
a
better
I
Hinckley
led
his
teammates
In
emment
agencies.
The
1932
turn-^ur
economic
supply
does
not
any-- - ,
... f-------------- - --------------- WU, VVVUMUUV ouppij ULK^I IlWk W.IJhad shown the stuff winning team* Iffy's country cousin craves action, passlng game than at any other time • points with three field goals and one , over In form ownership was 8 per । where near e^ual our economic re- the Episcopal rectory and completed and Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Havens
attended the Farm Bureau in Hos­
and docs not like to see a basketeer thLs
nun ycur
year «•&gt;«
and pu»&gt;ru
played u
n ewi
cool ueuucrdeUber- ■ fou;
foul snot,
shot, wmie
while Angell ran a close I cem.
cent, oniy
only nun
half ui
of inni
that being
ucu&gt;k aur
due w
to; quiroment. Tliat Is a bitter pill to organization plans.
tings last Friday night.
The officers elected were:
team
retaliated--------------with a victory
which
—
...... standing In lhe middle of the floor ute
ate gome
game all the way through. In second with three field goals
goals. Hunt
Hunt. | bankruptcy. As a source of disaster ,OIIr national pride, but It is a tonic
-----------------The community meeting last Sat­
Pre* —Mrs Amy Bower
figures and statistics showed Im-. wondering where the scoreboard was fact,
fact, both
both teams
teams showed
showed accuracy
accuracy j »a substitute
substitute in
in the
the Lakeview
Lakeview line-dp.
line-dp’|farm
' ‘he farm mortgage
inort^r seem* compare~~~~* medicine „
wv will
w„. receive It.
». wu.
if we
Our
urday night was well attended, A
Vice-Pres.
—
Rev.
Lemur!
Sever
­
P°s*ltjleI before his team changed baskets, and aggressiveness,
and aggressiveness,
but the Bennettbut the
led hls
BennettUain wllh
i-d hi&lt;
thrw. baskets
u-io, and I Hvely small. i tivelv
The formers'
small. The
debt farmers'
In ; immediate
debt in
pressing
'
job is to create t. ,n
play given by Richard HAIffaway
However, that U all past history However, ll is Just as disconcerting, men outplayed their opponent* In , tw0 foul shot* for a total
of .eight
1333 »'«
in -------better ----shape
tlian
more a,in
and IVIIUCf
render ll
it ance.
----- . —
-D... •--------- --•
------- -the
• । u.iu produce IUU1V
and
daughters. Pearl and Ruth, also
Secy -Trens —Miss Helen Angell.
now and tomorrow the boys go to to see the same fellow in a frenzy the first half and were able to &gt; point*.
—
1[government or corporation debt. I caalIy
.... accessible;
--------- .^.
creole so much
Dept. Supts—Children. Mrs Har­ Miss Virginia and Gordon Havens
Lakeview where they have another of excitement throw the ball Into coast into the victory,
(Again: personal property of near- niore. Umt thp very prvssure and
■ The line-ups were:
vey Burgess; Young People. Wm. T and Robt. Hart was well received
duty to perform. They cannot take an opponent's hands and pray he; The local lads started In by leadLakeview
(16)
,ly
50
,
blll
,
Ion
110
llar
®
'value
Is
almost
(overflow
of
production
will
force
.'lew
.---- :
----- . .
.----------.virtiivw Ul uiuuuiuuii will lurce Wallace; Adult. Mrs J A- McNulty; and afforded much amusement.
miuikv
nur completely
rnmnlplrlv owned
nunnd by
bv ite
its users.
users Take
Take adequate distribution
.....Li—..__..."
the Lakeview boys too lightly on the misses it.
Ing the Roemen 8-2 In the first Hastings (23)
Watkins
Gladstone
R. F.
Jack Count gave a vocal solo nnd
Education, Rev. W. M. Jones.
Sidman the W-000-000 automobiles for ex- ;
----------------- -----------------------Crothers
’ ~
ine aim of
or the organization is to, Mis* EloLse Storer played a couple
Giilcndrr an’p,c■ About, 38 P*r
jrf them .
OBITUARY.
/ '' The
Hinckley
of selections on Ute piano.
Cornell ^n.^iSuhment^nurehiSs1 result
Hcn,y D M,ad' the “n of Rlch'• develop fellowship and efficiency In
Angell
Mrs. Sara Erway spent the latter
the
different
Sunday
schools
of
the
£ .m
1ard “d Elizabeth Mead, was bom
Walldorff
part of the week In the Lennie Robcity and for mutual helpfulness.
I inson home |n Grand Rapids.
Cook.
U
!" B”?' .™WSubstitutions: Hastings:
Struble. Newton. Kelley and Bea.- ^lo‘l j^Tg R over a debtor "' }“? «e l&gt;i*red away January
Sunday
visitors at Roy Erway's
DEATH OF CLYDE F.
rrx-r
Hunt
„
j jj. 1KJ0 at lhe ng(i of geyenty.flve
mer. IjikeviewLakeview:
Hunt. HitrdlnV
Burdick, Ii I.
Burdick.
class
* '* u.cj u
” ucutut
"
BOLLINGER SUNDAY. were Maurice Erway and Harold
Clyde F. Bollinger. 41. died early Sharp of Grand Rapids and MLss
Bctlt.lck, Klein «na Whitmore. Re. Add t0 lhe«. &lt;kc , p„ «„t ot years, one month, and ten days. He
tercel Vrel.rew. w. S T. c.
lhc ...uon,! ,.caW) reprewntod by came to Michigan when a small boy. Sunday morning at his home. 232: Esther Envoy of Hastings.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Louie Erway and
in « prellmmory seme. Ctech ,
,„d , hll, „uu ,10m_ He was united in marriage lo Lenh south Ave.. Battle Creek, after an
“came ?Ou kXXl’X-tenths of t“^
April 24 188L Six children | extended lllneu He wax' born In son. Charles, nnd daughter, Marian,
"‘T”! .
= you
Itet .».«.»■&gt;». ot ite
were born
bom to
to this
this union.
ipiiou. The
The Oldest
oldestI) Kfnrrenn nn rvrnh’r -&gt;-&gt; tooJ
n win
.....
... . ...
. ........ Uert*
«M_­ of Kalamazoo were Sunday visitors
throuyh to . decisive victory to
.In ’ .
mu, .tore,,
the. .property
Morgan on October 22. 1894, resid
away.
Feb- ing there until 18 years ago when he at Ray Envoy's.
oree
°
“r the
inc Ukcvi™
uxcunr «tte
sun, 17-d.
U.H. They
iney „
or butlnete
bualncM or
or both
both ot
of lndlvldu.1..
Individual. daughter. Lulu, passed
", “
7,,
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Warren and
showed more
speed and accuracy *dd another 5 ocr cent for local
. y i,xU*nth- 1003. He leftves his moved to Battle Creek. He Is sur­
lh.r&gt; (hey did Ite wrek tetore when J“ ““SJ,?
«*&gt;«•
three d.Mh(er., Jennie vived by his wife, two brothers. Fred Patty were In Battle Creek one day
lhe Allesiu,
underdoes drubbed nauiea repair step, elute—end you En?11fty°! ^oidweier EUle Cogswell
and James of Morgan, and a sister.
Mrs. Wm. Mater of Nashville. The
i.V’w80 unmcry‘ull&gt;'
| have accounted for over 50 per cent
ROBINHUE PARK.
&gt;
top'sforer in this Of the national wealth. Add to thLs sons. Leon A. Mead nnd Ralph Mead funeral was held on Tuesday nt 2
About 32 attended lhe pedro par­
tn^s*"
cXre
‘anlhe
‘“ SkSKn.'S, ‘X-Xtet.” P. M. In Battle creek, with Inter­
b*1 'c with l»*ree Held t^Rd-b;
goals and one S'S
thc wcalth
we own
collectively,
। foul shot, while Cook trailed by one [
ment In Oak Hill cemetery. Mr. Bol­ ty nt th* home of Mr. and Mrs.
। point
...............
with
...............
three
- field goals.
■— Wirt.. museums, parks, government prop'S3 linger had many friends In lhe cast- ! Julian Potts Saturday night.
« nWH on (te- Ultevlew quint. »■». I „ty. „„„ „
to s, per ent.
em part of Barry county where he i Harold Kollar returned home 8atI urday afternoon after spending n
। high point man with two field goals. ।
— whit U
lived so long.
| few days with his mother at Lowell.
SOlTt'.'.'oWNK
’tX«!lW’“i“tb“.;
| Julian Potts and family were 8unWELCOME EXTENSION GROUP.
EXTENSION GROUP.
«...
day guests of their daughter and
— they account .w.
. the
Welcome Extension group met
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starboard. of
for 14 per v»...
cent v
of
Gloss Creek Extension Oroup husband. Mr. nnd Mrs. Glen Dean,
normally
63 *-•"*
billion
dollars.
Campbell. George Cheelhnm. Mr. wealth, r.2.
—.2V7 T*
— -*-••
— , with Mrs. Ina Potter for all day spent n very pleasant and profitable; of Middleville.
..,. ownership
—u._
distributed meeting
meeting with
with 14
14 members
members and
and two
two day at the home of one of our lead- . Fj-ed Ingram of Hastings called
1 and Mrs. Clare Eash and baby —
nnd m
Their
buimU present. The lesson took up ers, Mrs. Florence Norton of Hm- on Mr unfl HH
Uc6r8t po|aiui
I Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Abe cent of them women—so widely dls- the making of box. double and tirurt
tings. Juniinrv
January -tn
30. wllh
with n
13 tnnnihrrc
members Friday
Eash.
I trlbuted that Government has based triple pleats and how to make seam­ nnd 4 visitors present.
MLss Lillian Jackson has employ­
less
puff
sleeves.
We
learned
what
Mr. and Mrs. Will Cosgrlff of ' a policy on that fact. ManufaclurThe lesson taught its how to use ment near Delton.
Lowell nnd Gladys Pardee of Lo- Ing constitutes 9 per cent of the na- - the popular material was for sum­ our foundation pattern, selecting of
gon visited Sunday afternoon with, lion's wealth, or 42’4 billion dol- mer wear. The next meeting will be foundation garments and the design
BARBERS CORNERS.
| Jennie Pardee.
iars. It consist* normally of 200.- with Mrs. Edna Trego on March and fabric suitable for one's dress
Mr and Mrs. Stanley Manker
I Mr. and Mrs. Will Mishler nc- j 000 factories with their equipment '
and was well presented by our lead­ and daughter. Roberta Ann of East
[ companled by Mrs. Una Mishler I Most of the factories are small
ers. Mrs. Floy Bechtel nnd Mrs, Woodland spent Wednesday at John
GROUP NO. 3.
visited at the home of Muryl Hos- places owned by one or several perFlorence Norton. All felt repaid In Weaver's.
tettler of Campbell. Mr. Hostcttler sons; 145.000 factories, or 72 1-2 per
week
Hastings Extension group No. 3 braving the cold weather and Icy
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huver of Lan­
is laid up with sciatic rheumatism. I cent, produce each leas than 8100.000 met al the home of Mrs. Mae Mul­ roads. Tlic February meeting will be sing and tyajne Bump of Hastings
। The Busy Bee Sewing Club of Lo- worth of goods a year. The rest arc ।der Jon. 29. An all day meeting was,with
___ _____
Mrs.___
Frances Erway—Minnie were visitors at Mrs. Jerry Foley's
gan met with Miss Eleanor Miller the big industries. The Ford Motor held with Jiot luck dinner. Tlie topic ’ Gorham. Sec.
Sunday.
Saturday afternoon.
Company alone deals with 5JOO oth- for discussion was choosing material j
William Porrilt and Clare Gies* er concerns, more than half ofand
„
design. The next meeting will ---------------------were In Hastings on business Salur- , which are capitalized for less than * be held on Feb. 24 with Mrs. Ida
day afternoon.
1 875.000. Conservatively computing Waters—Blanche Izwls. secy,

Sporting Items

That sums up the Joys and the
sorrows of the game pretty well, nnd
win. lose, or draw Iffy* country
cousin will be on hand like a sore
thumb when Saturday night's game
1 starts. "See you in the bleachers.”

H.H.S.CAGERS
ATI AT I HO FT

Iffy't CountryCousin
Rises to Remark —

I quarter, and then unleaaed a smash­

ing offensive game for 11- points
more In the second quarter. At the
same time they played an almost
air-tight defensive game allowing
I the opponents four points. The score
at the end of the half was 19-15.

18726941

mo

U | HuL Ul UL I

.

little

AFTER READING

advertise/^

;jETTH£GONJ

I

„ TH,S

MAJOR

HOUSEWIFE'S

GRAPHOLOGY COUPON
To obtain a character reading send a line of
your handwriting with your signature and com­
plete address written with ink, on unruled paper.
Enclose this coupon with ten -cents (coin or
stamps) to help cover clerical and mailing costs,
and mail to Ruth Barton, care The Hastings Ban­
ner.

eurs
ALL RIGHT!
AND IN HASTINGS
THE PHONE NUMBER IS 2305

Your Name

Address
City

.State

TO VOTE YOURSELF PERFECT LAUNDRY CONVENIENCE
The only way to put a little entertainment in washing and ironing is to get rid of the
old ways—and let the automatic ways of electricity “put on their act." It will save
YOU—save your clothing, linens, etc.—and save money, too. And here's on offer
you'll like—it has never been easier to own these conveniences !

V

SALE

UNIVERSAL ELECTRIC WASHER

BETTER- THAN- EVER

popular, full-sized model with latest.features. Washes every*
tliint from lingerie to blanket* In the same care_
ful. thorouzh way that make* fabrics last long­
er. look belter. Specially priced now—ONLY
■ ■

ABC IRONER
in 1/3 the time! And now
you can enjoy all the advantages of an automatic Ironer.
Here's lhe new ABC. complete with the features you want—
and best of all. priced at a lower figure that
terma) CASH ONLY

$5450

% 30 MONTHS
You can now buy both washer and ironer on our
new Economy Purchase Plan in a combination
offer—monthly payments as low. as 17c a day—
and 30 months terms. It will pay you
to look into this!

DETROIT JEWEL
GAS RANGES
. At lost we bring you a range that
not only make* culinary brilliance
practically automatic . . . that not
1 Q Q
only is the mojt beautiful range *
VU U
.i
------- Y-r------ - —P ‘.i.» that OOi-------------------------- •
.
only i$ jo designed ond opplianted os to make its use the mtfjt
$572°
sonitoiy, effotlless cooking expefience you have ever known . . .
lo
but it ij now so low priced for a
»16522
quality built tonge that you no
longer need to face future kitchen
’ bouts with dread. You not only
can afford a new Detroit Jewel on
our easy terms, but you cannot
afford not to own one.

May we demonstrate?
Come In—Or Phone 2305

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT

There is a model to fit your exact
home ond kitchen requirements
You will be very much attracted
by the'choice of finishes ond color
trims from which to choose . . .
ranging from full porcelain in plain
colors, porcelain and chrome com­
binations in plain colors to several
brilliant, three-color trims.

Among lhe features introduced on
these new *Delroil Jewels ore un­
rivalled quality Oven Insulation;
Drawer type Smokeless Broiler,Roller Bearing Cover Top; accu­
rate Oven Hoot Control; Sanitary
Burner Box; improved hcat-spreoding Top Burners; Sanitary Oven
Tray; lifetime Frame Construction
ond many other superiorities.

LONG -EASY TERMS

CONSUMERS
POWER

COMPANY.

Squibb’s Chocolate

VITAVOSE
Malted Wheat Germ Extract, makes a delicious milk
beverage. Compare this product with any other—
it has the Highest Vitamin Content—30% Cocoa
Carbohydrate 83; Protein 10 (NxS.25&gt;; Fat 1.8;
Calories, 3.9 per gram.

1 Can

12 ouncet

Sells for 49c

It is the best quality and the best buy as regard to
price.

GIVE IT A TRY

�THE RAETOfOS BANNER. TUUR8DAY, FEBRUARY &lt;, 1RM
?=Tl|

Social Events and Personal Mention

Nearly mnoat who drtvw a car I Haven, and also a sister at Lansing '

has had »tlloast one expectance of 'after which she will be married to I
fig"
J°h”
times right here in town Likewise
many driven have had to call for
someone to
a push to get
*« give them ■
'their cold ears
started.'*
"Atrtrad
friend*"
in1
,7^3
-------------------need-."" ----------------------- ~‘I

Ilhe* wlH m»ke Uielr home. Delton
; frient^ .wish Edna a long, happy!
and p^wperoua future.
j Mr. Write Bu*h .111 rnurteln
Buan *«&gt; 'nuruin

OVERCOATS

MUs Ruth Rotwon spent lhe week i Keith Lechlellncr was In Lowell W. M. JONES, JR., ON
end at her home In Jackson
I।on
«n •■•nHav
Sunday.
SOUTHERN TOUR
I
ta LS* WM“^’
•Miss Beth Haven was home from ' Lloyd Payne was home from
Grand Rapids over the weak end.
Lansing over the week end.
One of Fourteen Member, of j B
tJ^r-Jhity'Uie^ |
The M. E Sunday school board
1 Richard Jacobs ot Big Rapids
are holding a business meeting at1.
East Lansing over the week and.
i’penLU
the M. E. parsonage thia week1
Mtea Lois Carter spent lhe week Jkf?“
flix Waaka Trio
Thursday evening.
ton and u, and uk
&gt;r»m
Mr and Mrs. Otan Bera visited
mi*
sup
।
Bustance continues in I ton and Mr and Mrs. Geo Kern
end al her home In Lak. Odma.
|
Mr&gt;
0J JUU.
vi
mw miuintei
very poo,
ooor health
neaitn
she U
is ,U1I
sun .t
at BCt!n£
committee; Mr.
&gt;n • student
ncmi ura
rt Ite
MMtenn
Ste
Dally,
publication
at Ann th7h&lt;OTe^of
her datighter.
Mrx. Carl
Mr" C (J Uai?“m*re .lhe pr0‘
Mias Esther Doty v lai tad at her lnxioo on Bunday
Daily, student publication at Ann (ha home of her daughter, Mrs. Carl __
,7. —1
arhn.
------------------------..
—
I
—
Qf
N
cirlton.
and'it
•
home in Athens over lhe week end. , Prtd Weeber was home from Rlv- Arbor,
there appeared an item BrechtIsen of N. Carlton, and’ at **51" C0Tn2ll“cc Sf?? lhe&gt; ?“ve
Wendell Wolfe of Battle Creek er Rouge over lhe week end visiting telling of the tour to be taken by
t MdM
.hi. ----te .it
curpd -----■ State Conservation man
-- .... —- 1, fT0,n
- 1
i’"fiki,report
'Xf:Lws~
Lan*ln&lt; who will show movvtelted Mr and Mrs. J W. Wolfe on his mother. Mrs. Gottlieb Weeber.
lhe University Uttla Symphony.'
1 ln«
•»«! «lve
I
Sunday.
' Robert Fighter, who ta attending composed of fourteen asaislanta in th! orSer^f toe div
jlhe order of the day here.
„.mlng lhem
He W1U &gt;llo Bhow ;
Andrew Buss of Grand Rapids is Ferris InsUtute in Big Rapids, vtalt- instrumental
instruction in the
■ pictures, different from the ones he 1
a guest al the Kellar Stem home ed Hastings relaUves over the week Scjj00* °f
।
PRAIRIEVILLE
thte week.
j“~*
Hasting, te honored by haring W
The student, who received 95 or rn.es in toe hall, at toe schoolhouse j
Mr. and Mrs Robert Beumer and Maylan Jone. Jr., as the trumpet abwe m the m^-scmester testa are I in toe afternoon A good crowd is '
Mr. and Mrs. Jos DeRuller have
Mrs. Carrie Schenkel of Owosso player In the Little Symphony. The ioth grade geometry and English — । anticipated.
business trip “
to
relumed from
I spent several days last week wllh orchestra left Thursday on a .ta iBoyd&lt; ••—’—J
rememoer
remember me
the meeting
meeUng
‘ nl Everyone
Louisville, Ky.
wadM Mbmk^vdlRoBvd ---*
uLh^
thr lnUnd LakM Garden Club
relatives here.
weeks' tour through the south and 1
George Bauer and John Erway
AJ?m ghrin
’ ‘n lhe churc&gt;» basement. Tuesday
were home from East Lansing over ' The Rev. J. A- McNulty left Tuea- southwest, giving concerto in Mis­
’
SS?
&gt;1.
Supper
.1 , »
i day afternoon for a ten day stay In souri. Oklahoma. Texas. Louisiana,
“
Cl.rene. Keub.um “
» eitv of Waahlnitton where he i
toe
w.
......... ..v Miuiuippi.
4, norm
North caronna
Carolina ano
and
• Julia Durkeel of Battle Creek spent will attend
*"'nrt toe
““ College
noll“' of Preaciiers -Q----------uier educational
....
centers. They ex­
Six members of the Hastings High peel to play sixty concerts while on
'’'Dr^nd'Mrs^FTederick H Taylor ’ •cho
°1 **•**}• hall taam UAlllam I—., One*of
concerto wiii
-liAAt
.. their
,L_________
... be at
visited relatives in East Lansing
JJSS^oSdS Col“"wla- ,Mo- where Amelia Ear- Shelp and Mary Loutee Arents; 8th meeting everyone Invited.
grade. English. Civlca and general
over toe week end
Kell). Bradford Hinckley. Gordon hart is an instructor al Stevens ColMim Kathryn Town te assisting ( e
. nr
Mrs Clara B Wilder of Battle Crothers and William Gladstone. ]ege for Women This is a splendid i science.. each—Helen Nunemaker. Mrs John Harrington with her $ 1 Q.SO COOtS $1 2.95
Mt.i ctara d
&lt;t si.r
ftut rIJlns
jnB nn^RaturdBv
on futurdav i.--—
.t.i-“ ol',c.‘.K“u Those neither abaent nor tardy durMrs
B . wuuci
wilder ui
or o«i.ii
Hattie
.n.ina
"7IT"
Crcek
the city
week
‘
°n
honor to come to this Hastings ln&lt; the mon(h of j.nuary were: housework.
Creek was
was in
in the
city over
over toe
the week
Lyle Leinaar's children are the $22.50 Coati $16.45
,nrt visiting relatives
rrtauve.
“1.“ S' c-?“"'r,»«««
M»
&lt;»n«r.(- M.„ Umfte-teteU. Ok,,,, Hyd.
end
Mrs F L Bauer was In Grand 8
„ A Gamble was called to U 1
- - .
Allen Shelp. Ronald
McKlbbln.
let fever.
$27.50 Coat, $19.45
n&gt;nP.raSl nF iUTS
"ll*nd lhe i YjtellanU Saturday by a message MIDDLEVILLE M. E.
Boyd Morehead and Helen NuneThe dance at the Community hall
n.i-v
1 baling that her mother. Mrs. R. B I
CHURCH LUNCHEON.
u as advertised last week has been
Q
nf
ha&lt;1 brok*’* “er shoulder hr a I Members and friends of lhe Mid- .JI1?’ Myrtle Smith. Battle Creek. postponed until a later date.
M
U
i f«U received while coming down dleville M. E. Missionary Society {?nL!hc,*cek end *“h hcr n,oU&gt;'
tmd-XriiJ'Bttrrll . ।stairs, it has proven a severe injury, held their annual January lunch- rr
er *
and
M aUter
sister.
IRVING.
Charles
Deal
Planlwel)
Itartto
of Mnd Mr* RflU&gt;e h,s twn uken
1 eon In the church dining room al one
_nK7,'.twas
n-----In
w27*
”7“."and
Mr. and Mrs Robert Besamcr and
ETr
8
Ann Arbor for an X-ray.
.o'clock Thursday. Covers were laid
ALL WOOL MELTONS
Af P^rrtRvtiiA
***"
---------------•evenly- Much credit
Garrett lias add hte
]■
.■ -----------------■»*♦
----------------; for more than seventy.
hu,fill
n*’lng Mrs Caroline Schenkel of Owosso
Full Zipper—Two Pockets
Ibeaueat o?hls mndmother Mra ‘ EMtLY
«AlY DEWEY
jjis
»« due Mrs H E Benaway. chair- (JIL
SXn has ^mnWmlnV^n spent a couple of days last week
at Wm. Schenkel's.
me guest OI nis granamotner. Mrs. .
r» MET.
uv-r man of
nt the
Iha menu
m.nn committee, for
tnr the
lh.
SERVICE mitt
GUILD
h^5,Trpl°Z1T.e’‘t
$2.75 lacketa, Now $2.25
Jack Perry was home from Kala­
Nettie Hyde, over Sunday.
The Emily Dewey Service Guild ' splendid feed.
Smith and Doster garage at
mazoo over toe week end and his $3.75
_____ ,________
Jackets., ____
Now $2.95
j Veddcr
veddcr were In
in
““
.
Mr and Mrs. A J&gt;I was
Tapers, hand painted place cards.
,
•“ delightfully
dmuMlully entertained
enljrUln.d at
.1 the
Ite
mother returned to Kalamazoo with I &lt;7 nn
Grand Rapids on Saturday
21, rtdtlna
/
home o!
of Mrs.
Mrs. A.
A. D.
D. Kntekem,
Kntekern, MonM°n-1 and other decorations were used for
J™
Ta Ll'
home
Mm
for . fe« dw- MMt.
| J, el
“
Mr. and Mrs. George Smalley.
Mur .
OuUnew , lh«
.nd whUk color «1»™.
“*?“.V?, ,. ,u„ ".. ., .r y
$5.50
Bom
to
Mr
and
Mrs
Martin
$'.50
jackets,
Now
Mrs. Harold Wright of Lansing ta
Temple In 'The taltlest Rebel/- '
A playlet, music, ^mi addresses by
spending the week with hcr parents. meeting presided over by lhe presiMrs Hazel Billings and daughter. Smith of Jackson. R F. D. on Jan.
dent, Mtes Maude Wallace, a play, Mrs. John Strong, president of lhe
14, a third daughter. Jane Frances.
Mr. and Mra. Unite Karmes.
Leta.
are....
on the sick list.
■
Marusha."
product
of
South
Amer-1
Grand
Rapids
District
of
W.
F.
M.
r.i-.u
Mr. and Mrs. Smith were formerly
Charles W. Sherwood of Grand
lean Missions, was given. Those tak- 6 and Mrs. H. H. Harris of Way“r&lt;* residents of Irving, when Mrs
Rapids
several
the
mumps.
l,r Ule spent
mrro.n
oi uwdays
»«.in the
Mu"*
M“'1-1 l*“a- DL'trlcl E.un.don stcrcurr. I.entertaining
»““*■ “
» mumc.
city lhe forepart of the week.
। Tile Kellogg honor roll students Smith, then Miss Mabel Raymond,
•from here are Elizabeth Woods, aen- taught our village school. Congratu­
Tuesdav after spendmg the week Angell. Marian Hailwood and Maude
“HELP THY NEIGHBOR.’
lor:
-• ................
Lila Boniface,
...... — ---------junior:
Arliss lations.
LEATHER and CLOTH
• Wallace. The hostess then gave a
end with hte wife and daughter.
Mr and Mrs. Win. McCann of
Mrs. I. F. McCoy and Mrs. E. 8. Calthrop. freshman and Leta Bil­
Mrs. Howard Birdsall nnd Nor- J
East Lansing were Sunday guests of
Evans entertained on Saturday eve- lln8s- 8111 Rracl‘'
HORSEHIDE
{Christian.
Kagawa.
prefacing
her
Ine were In Grand Rapids on Tues­
--------------------------two tables
of "Help
Thy ~,ML? VWIBU tewta n’lunied William's parents here.
] talk by telling the girls some amus- ning with........
65c, 75c. $1.00, $1.50
day. lhe latter attending a clinic.
Mrs. Rose Cushing Hubbard of
uw contrary lol Neighbor." Thte te a new game that »»din..
morninu
a visit with
s,,dT
h-from
oj -b^^
Burr Van Houten returned on12k
1
Owosso, a former resident of Irving
...»___ ।Mrs. McCav and Mir Evnn* hroueht Mtes Janet Smith
of Crooked
lake
“d dnt JnUnduecd
WUU.m Olb.nn
N..hv,n. township, had lhe misfortune to1
Bunday from a business trip lo New 'a limber, .nd ....u, inoroujhl, I &lt;&gt;""
COWHIDE &amp; PIGSKIN
Mrs. William
Gibson „&gt;
of Nashville
?njS«KX
« a.
Mr. &amp;te.. H.T^ N„,’.h „te ™
-he &gt;« r~m&gt;y and SraaY
Briton. Conn, and New York City. enjoyed
lhe rest of the evening list-' “l
"c
50c. 75c. $1.25
Mr and Mrs. Arthur Haven and
,
X
Hu,tea 1
„„
Mrs. Erma Gardner were guesU of S In otter land., which .telr 11-un.Un,
CLOTH MITTENS
relatives at Onondaga on Sunday.
a1-. !
GETS PUSSYWILLOWS.
Mrs. Ned Wilkins who submitted •'‘found here has gone to Mu&amp;kegon i
20c, 25c, 50c
Gordon Biddle of Chicago and iranmenUteeri' Srvid !»■ Mr..i M„Gw^I'»nJ"m‘T?2teJr.- । Mrs. Ned Wilkins who submitted around here, has gone to Muskegon j
Mias Doris Biddle of Battle Creek
to an operation at Pennock hos­ to reside.
spent lite week end here with relpital Monday Is getting along nice­
Cook
and
Gladys
Jones.
from
a
friend
in
Seattle.
Wash
.
a
TAMARAC.
atlves.
ly.
The Ladies' Aid will meet with j
Mrs. Normand McClelMr and Mrs Andrew Kemp and
sure harbinger of spring. Tills shows
ST. ROSE PARTY.
‘ what the Japan stream floes for Mrs Ernest Farr. This is the reg- (land visited hte mother near Ver- '
Roy Finstrom of Rattle Creek were
Mrs. Stanley Robleskt was hostess,■’•.Seattle and vicinity. Some different
Sunday guests o£ Mr. and Mrs. Carl
ular meeting and they will meet ' montvilk Sunday
on Wednesday afternoon of last;
"-[than in thte section of.Mithigan.
Finstrom.
their Sunshine friends The date te 1 Mr. »nd Mrs. Bernard L. Smith
at a cardpteteb
party sponsored
by
Mr and Mrs Forrest Baldwin of week,
Ite. m.
women. Tenj
February 12. Pot luck dinner. end I are nicely located in lhe Dorr Ev- ! CLOTHING AND SHOES
Chicago spent lhe week end with
j erell tenant house near Vermont-; FOR .MEN AND BOYS
Bo&amp;queta of lovely spring flowers wllh ht, grandmother Mrs Nettiet vllle Mr. Smith has hired out to
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. A- K. tables were In play, lhe ladles cnjoying
euchre
and
bridge.
Mtes
Mar
­
were
attractively
arranged
through’
Hyde of Hastings
Frandsen.
HASTINGS
the latter by the month.
cella
Goggins
won
the
euchre
hon
­
out
the
rooms
on
Saturday
for
the
UImb1iu
who
h
a»
been
111,
is
Mr. and Mrs. C. W Wesplnler
Doti Higgins who has been 111, is
Mrs. Martha Neuman has been
were guests of Mr. and Mrs Carl ors and Mrs. A. D. McDonald held dessert-bridge given by Mrs Frank again able to attend school.
visiting friends and relatives in
..,.
Carruthers, four tables being ...
in rplay.
Wcspmter. Jr . and son of Detroit high bridge score.
Mr. and Mn. Gerald Doster and Kalamazoo the past wc-k. She re­
The
next
party
will
be
at
the
winners
at
contract
were
Mrs.
Nelni'.r
SOLTIIWEST WOODLAND.
over (h.
the wi'.k
week rnrt
end.
Mr and Mrs Robert Brown ot Has­ turned to her home Sunday.
hnmr nf Ur, Flnrem-r Pnm.rnv on lie Cross and KXw.
Mrs. nitvT.
Clyde uzil-^w
Wilcox.
The Rev. C M. Conklin and the home of Mrs. Florence Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs Floyd Clum are the
tings were last Sunday guests of Mr.
Normand McClelland. Dorr Ever­
Rev w Maylan Jones were in Wednesday afternoon. Feb. 12
and Mrs. Silas Doster
ett and son helped Bernard Smith proud parents of a 9 pound girl that
BRIDGE-DINNER.
Grand Rapids on Monday attending
arrived last Wednesday. The little
Mrs.
George
Woods
of
Battle
move
his
househoIHgoods
to
their
Covers were laid for eight at the
SURPRISE MISS
a ministerial meeting.
miss will answer to the name of
FLORENCE V. WOOD. charming bridge-dinner given by Creek spent over the week end with new home Friday and Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs Carroll McGuffln
the home folks.
Mrs. Myric Curtis is suffering Kathryn Marie.
The degree staff of the Rebekah Mr. and Mrs. Frank Andrus on
and daughter of Lansing visited his
Mr and Mrs. Bert Smith and Mr
Mr. and Mn William Horton of with an ulcerated throat.
Monday evening. High scores were
Lodge
surprised
Miss
Florence
V.
mother. Mrs. Anna McGuffln. and
and Mrs. Paul Smith and daughter
Wood on Friday evening at the won by Mr. and Mrs. Robert W Augusta were Sunday dinner guests
other relatives over the week end.
spent Sunday afternoon with Mr.
of her father. Charles Hughes.
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Richard Esmonds of Battle Creek home ot Mrs. Grace Shute. Miss Cook.
Miss Opal Honeywell of Nichols
Mr nnd Mrs Merle Calihan of and Mrs Casgoe Smith InJ-anslng.
Wood
has
been
captain
of
the
staff
visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ed­
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Wbffing and
hospital. Battle Creek, spent Thurs­ Lansing were Sunday guests of their
monds and Mr. and Mrs K. C. Ed­ for a number of years, recently re­
The members of the. J.’ F P.j-----club day afternoon with her parents. .Mr. parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cramer, I Betty spent Sunday afternoon in
signing. This party was in appremonds from Wednesday till Friday. elation
Nashville.
of her splendid work during I
delightfully entertained on and Mn D. N. Honeywell.
Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. James Radford and the years. Cards and refreshments I Wednesday afternoon by Mrs. Frank
Miss Glenna Blocher and friend
Hie Triple tank Club will meet
The February P T. A of Striker
daughter. Doris, left on Tuesday for
with Mn Honeywell Feb 14. All school will be held Feb. 14, at 8 of Holland spent Sunday with Mr.
I
.
Florida where Mrs., Radford and were enjoyed.
and Mrs Harrison Blocher.
day meeting. Pot luck dinner and o’clock.
Doris will remain for several weeks.
Miss Lottie Rogers qnd Marley
program.
Miss Leona Coleman spent lhe
Mr. and Mrs. Mason Norwood of ENTERTAIN TWENTY DISNE- I The thrlllmg extremely interestweek end in Battle Creek with her Hough of Lake Odessa were Sunday
Kalamazoo and Mrs. Chester Bang­
DELTON.
guests at Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sand­
°„
ur. .n?
x
The
health
officer
permitted mother. Mrs. Glenn Coleman.
hart and son of Delton were guests
brook's.
■
” -- - ■ ' ■
—
of Mrs. Sarah Brandstcller on Mon­ Mrs. Richard Groos entertained al r . -school to begin again Monday
dinner honoring Mr
and Mrs. i'
'cast of characters te made up large­ morning after being closed live past
day.
.
Mrs. Walter WUllace was home James Radford, covers being laid ly of local people with some outside week on account of the scarlet fever
.
from Battle creek over Sunday re­ for twenty. Contract was played aft- talent.
Wherever thte play has eptdenjtc. with the exception of the
j
turning for further treatment. Her er dinner with Mrs. Roy Cordes. Mr. been
given It has created a great children under 7 years of age in
condition
seems somewhat Im­ and Mrs Earl Coleman and James deal of interest end a full house Mrs. Kahler's classes, who are not
Radford
being
the
winners.
Guest
proved.
greeted lhe players. There is no yet permitted to return. The epi­
Mrs. Jack Siem and daughter. prizes were also given Mr. and Mrs. admission charge and a cordial in- demic seems to be In a light form
Lkvilalion is extended to everyone to
Judith went lo Detroit Sunday for a ! Radford.
so far. Little Betty Leonard has
few weeks' stay with her parents
| attend.
been the only one to have it real
who are convalescing from recent ENTERTAINED AT CONTRACT.
Mrs. Emma Steson returned Fri- hard, but her condition is much im­
Mrs B. A. LyBarker delightfully ’day from Grand Rapids where she
operations.
proved now.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Phillips, Dr. entertained al contract on Tuesday had been for the past two months
There have been a few cases of
and Mrs. D. D Walton and Richard afternoon, with three tables in play. .at the home of her eon. Winfield.
flu._____
Mrs.- _____
Irene ______
Harrington.
Mrs.
__
____ ______
| Mrs John Fish is ill and is cun- ’ Lucy Dings and Mrs. Hattie WhitteCook were In Kalamazoo Saturday Bouquets of spring flowers decoral-1'
cd Ute living room and the refresh-1,rined to her bed.
‘
more
being the oitas most severely
evening attending the Civic Play­
inenl
table
was
centered
with
a
vase
I The W. P. M. S. meets al the affected
—**“ with that. Little I^tvlna
ers' production. ' Oliver Oliver."
MIm Doris Ryan and Melvin Ge- of daffodils. Winners al bridge were home of Mrs. H. M. Boughner on Dings te very 111 with bronchial
low of Kalamazoo spent (he week Mrs. W. a. Davis and Mrs. David Friday afternoon of this week. Mrs. pneumonia. But wc hope by the
end with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Boyes.
C. Bunn te In charge of devotionals. time these lines get in print that
Wright and were attendants at the
and Mrs. Wm. Mtehicr of the pro­ Everyone will be much better, and
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAYi.
। granj. A
wedding of MLss Geraldine Ferris
Au
n the ladles
indies are
are invited.
invited. out around.
Seven friends were invited to the- hrlhrr
nr not
COFFEE
GRAND DATED
and William Spence
Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Bush were In i
Lb. 25c
home ol Mr. and Mrs Gordon IronRoy Naglcr was ill with the
Mrs. H. G. Hayes left via the side.
Saturdav night
night lo
to help
help Miss'
Miss lfl“”st w^ekX teTbl? to K oil Hastings Wednesday and called on t
side,
Saturday
Michigan central Tuesday morning
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Gaskill and
WHEATIES
2 Boxes 23c
Jocelyn
Ironside
celebrate
her
for Chicago, where she look lhe
again.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaskill.
birthday.
I.
_____
w
Northwestern for San Francisco and
Victor Sisson, accompanied by C.
Delton was well represented in
A dessert coursc'Wfi served after B. Baxter, made a business trip to
PEANUT BUTTER
will spend lhe remainder of the
2 Lb. Jgr-25c
Hastings on Wednesday, last week
winter with- her daughter and son­ which the evening was spent play­ Middleville and Hastings last Fri­ Everyone thought it a good day to
in-law. Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Ship­ ing monopoly. Miss Betty Swift ot day.
go
and get their auto license
.- &lt;Lbs. lie
DRY BEANS
Middleville and Miss Jean Brower
man.
The Februry meeting of the P. T.
Chester Banghart te moving into
Miss Alice Bales of East Lansing proving Hie most adept at the game. A. will be held at the schoolhouse hte new house, which has Just been
BUTTER
BEST
BRANDS
.
Lb. 37}c
spent lhe week end with her mother.
thte week Thursday evening* The llntehed.
MONDAY STUDY CLUB.
Mrs. R. M Bales. The latter is
arogram te in charge of Dr. H. 8.
Mr and Mrs. C. J. Bamum. Mrs J
Mrs. A. D. McDonald entertained fedei and will consist of a moving
spending a few days in East LanNettie Kern and Mrs. Bertha Bush 1
the Study Club on Monday, the us­ picture and a talk. Refreshments i.were
Kalamazoo shoppers Thurs-!
troit for a visit before leaving for ual luncheon being served preceding will be served by the committee.
(day.
-Meat special!
East Lansing lo spend the remainder the program. Mrs. F. W. Stebbins
Mrs Harold Rosenberger was conMr. and Mrs. Roy Adrianson and
concluded the review of lhe book. lined to her bed with a very severe three children of Battle Creek were
of the winter with Mis. Alice.
rnlrf last
last. week
waalr but
hut te
k better
hnttn- at
■&gt; this
thia guests
^,..1. of Mr. and Mrs.
«... Peter
_ a-,-.
Mrs. Robert B- Harkness. 8r.. left ■Catherine the Great." One guest cold
Adri­
.beef ribs LEAN AND MEATY 2 Lbi. 25c
Tuesday for Ft. Myer. Florida, where
writing.
anson and Harry Saturday a/tcrshe will join her sister and husband.
Allen Pteh has been drawn for noon.
.
CANT FIRE PARTY.
Beef Roasts ■»*«*«* CWe««w*-Beef U?. 19c
Mr. and Mrs. F- W. Denton, in*a
Jury service for the February term
Mr. and Mrs. Clardttcc •Williams,
Miss
Patricia
LyBarker
was
host,
month's cruise on their yacht “Inof circuit court.
and daughter. Rose Mary,
csj to her Camp Fire group and'I Miss Isabel Rice motored to Chi­
Vegetable SHORTENING Lb. itjc
moved to Delton from FultOR.’fnd :
coin. Mass., and her two small sons guardian, Mrs. Allan Hyde, on Wed­ cago and spent lhe week end with Mr. Williams will work ^er W. W
. friend there.
are remaining in Hastings for three nesday evening. It was a birthday a
Lung.
pf BACON ofcKORY brand
' Lb. 18c
additional weeks to help Dr. Hark­ surprise on Mlu Betty Lane. The
Mr.- and
Leo
and —
chil
------ —-Mrs.
----- ---- Rose ......
..u ­
•Arthur Pooselips,
• VlWVCiypf UJ
WUUIH mcnof whom
glrte came at seven o'clock lor des- ,dren. who recently moved from the | tlon has recently been made as beness keep home fires burning.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Hinman were ert and had u happy Ume until nine Wolcott farm to Ute house Just cast ing so very, rick at the home of his
tn Grand Rapids on Sunday and o'clock.
of there, formerly occupied by Mr. mother. tn Detroit, passed away
and Mrs. Jay Blakney, have had to Thursday morning. He leaves lite
DELIGHTFUL EVENT.
Dewey. They found lhe latter alow?
move again and are now living in ^rife. Kathryn, one brother, and his
Twenty guests were delightfully the Henry Ragla house, across front
ly convalescing from a severe at­
mother, besides a host of friends
tack of pleurisy and able to be up entertained on Thursday evening at the K. ot P. hall. Mr. and Mfs. to mourn hte passing. Funeral serv­
part of the time, which Is good news a dessert bridge with Mrs. Wm. Gor­ Fausey, formerly of Hastinp/pur- ices were held in Detroit Saturday
to Hastings friends. Mrs. J. W. Wcs- kin as hostess. Winners ut contract chased the Blakney house and arc forenoon.
brook of Middleville has been assist­ were Mrs. Charles Leonard and MUs residing there.
.
Mr». Elmer Reynolds suffered a
Sadie Glasgow.
ing with the care of Mrs. Dewey.
W. p. A. workers; employed on alight stroke last week, but is bet- ,
Mn Denote Murray, who with Dr.
lhe M-37 relocation project, have ter at thte writing.
■JT CLUB.
Murray, is spending the winter In
been having pknly of Ume off. due
Mrs. Edna Greenburg, who has.
Mrs. Arthur Wheating pleasantly to the severe weather.
Grand Rapids, is coming to Hastings
been assisting Mn. Leon Leonard
tomorrow to spend,the day with her entertained her “500“ club on Tues­
Mr. and Mn Harry Fish and son, with her household duties for the
sister. Mrs C- W. Wespinter. and be day afternoon, eight being present. Harry. Jr., of Middleville visited hte past two and one-half years, has
present tor the silver tea being held Mrs. Lucy cregtow and Mrs. Hay motlicr. Mrs. Mary Dodge, last week I loll that home now to spend a few.
‘cook were lhe winners.
at the wesplnler home.
Wednesday evening.
। weeks vtextuig her mother al South ,

JACKETS

MITTENS

SKSSKiS mouupu» p^.

|T. S. BAIRD

Friday - Saturday
Feb. 7

I

Feb. 11

Sugar

Thirty-three years ago this month, lhe
United Drug Co. started the manufacturing of
Pharmaceuticals and Toilet Goods which they

marketed under the trade name of REXALL,

Thirty years age—this month, Carveth &amp;

Stebbins bought out “Fred L. Heath, the
Druggist,*' and started on their own.

Policy

The Guaranteed-Money-Back

the customer, that we took the agency, and

have held it continuously for thirty years.

We have watched it grow from a small be­

ginning until now the word “REXALL”
means HIGH QUALITY and FAIR PRICES

lhe world over.
We thank our many customers for die loy*
ally and good will they have shown us during

all these years.

In appreciation, we are going lo celebrate
this Double Birthday by putting on an Im­
mense Sale during the month of February and
give you lhe profits. ; '*

We list a very few bargains below, but see

large hand bill for hundreds of o/hers.

59c—100 Puretest Aspirin , BOTH FOR
49c pt. Milk of Magnesia

159c

49c M I 31 Solution

, BOTH FOR

49c Puretest Rub, Alcohol j
25c Nail Polish

59c

THREE FOR

25e Polish Remover

5Oc

50c Jonteel Cream

THREE FOR

25c Cuticle Remover

50c Vanishing Cream
50c Skin Cream
Be Sure to Get a Large Hand Bill!

In addition lo many Bargains, the United

Drug Company also gives away TEN CHEV­

ROLETS and THREE THOUSAND DOLL/\RS in cash in a very simple nation-wide
contest. Secure your Entry Blank at our store.

Anyone can enter. No strings attached. Noth­
ing to buy. No labels or cartons to send in.

Remember, Birthdays cotue but once a year

and we shall certainly be glad to sw you.

6462

JUST PHONE
HASTINGS

WE DELIVER

of

the Rexall Line was so fair and generous to

CARVETH &amp; STEBI
THE REXALL DRUGGU
Hastings

Phone 2131

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY fl, IMfl

INSURANCE

wants

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

THE CHURCHES

OVERLAND EXPRESS
VERY PROFITABLE

became.quite domineering and very ; Mrs. Fred Deland, who has . been ;
strong politically.
'ill for a few days, is improving.
;
There was a real demand on the
Harvesting Ice is the order ot the j
part of the people for a porcels-post. day around the lake.
in connection with the postal-serv—minor roiNEU------Ice. but it didn't seem to be forth- '
kT-T
rlntniv
coming The reason whv was well
Well, the ground hog certainly
oStli^ by JoTJ^oSi,’th!
S&amp;

Our Service

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

GEO. M. NEWTON

great Philadelphia
NOTICE TO CBRDITOB8.
: 3t«t» ot Michigan. the PrabeTr Court for
I Ik. County ot Berry.
In ll.r tr.Jtlrr i.f th. r.fatr of Gfotto
|W.
drc.e.rd,
_
.
Xoticr &gt;&gt; hrrrby elven th»t -frnsr nfunthc
from ihr -.'’tli du uf J&gt;tiuar&lt; A. I&gt;
l»M, I.*tr been -&gt;M»«r&lt; lor rrMItor. t.
pretent thrir rleimd eke'n.t Mid dereacev
to raid court for .lamination and adiii.t
■ ment and that alt irrdltnra of Mid dr
rra.rd ere required to i-rAmt their
claim, tn .aid court. nt tho probate office.
In tho cite of llaninca. in &gt;&gt;nl county,
■ n nr hef*th. 3«ih dav of Mai. A. I&gt;.
and that «ajd rtai'n. wilt

announced that he was going to
visit his mined. there was a stage
robbery. 8ometlmes he would pull
off two or tlirec of them in ns many
w4»ks, then again he would Uy ofl
his robberies there would be found a
little four-line rhyme signed by
"Black Bart." He always worked

tcirrnoon.
'"
IHtrd. ’JaijMMr Sit A l» tV3C.
Htuart tTrrnrnt. Judex of l*rol&gt;atr.

shot-gun. but never harmed anyone
in any of his hold-ups. after which
his disappearance would be almost
phantom-like. His special grudge

NOTICB
‘Th-- I acre Mutual jT.1oid.jihr

'trist

I. . . li.r li.i.-rd .-I la.r.-ci.rr. t..rrir.
Il. r rlcht to roj. . i a.n or atl »...!« Jl.J.
-'ll

purses at his feet as a possible In­
ducement to escape injury or fur­
ther search, but he would always
politely hand the purses back with
the remark: -Lady I don't want your
W rdnra- mons”. All I want Is Welh-FargoV
KradlhC For eight years he successfully kept
this up. but at is always the case, he

'' "ll. &gt;•??.’"' Mu'tucaf.

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

lieve that the quirt, good-looking,
intelligent man wtjoin they knew as

FOOD CENTER 2609

'

OLD DRIED HARNESS
ROTSAND BREAKS

lone highwayman who for years
carried on his depredations.
When the overland stage express'
was succeeded by the railway ex-,
press, there were several gangs wiio ,
proceeded to hold up trains and rob
express cars and pa-wngers. Per­
haps the best known were the Jesse

H. Feldpausch ■ 39?l
l-.W

SAVE IT With,
NEATSLENE
Oiling in Neatslrne gives Insur­
ance against the ravages of rata
and miro for one year. Have your

WOULD YOU LIKE A GOOD
Paying Steady Job? I want to
1 hire a man Immediately. Paid
every week. Must have car and
knew farming. State age and
farm experience. Box 164,
Dept. 4404. Quincy. III. .

Bring in Your Harness No
Repairing and Oiling

Hamess &amp; Shoe Repair Shop
Middleville, Mich.

I

years lived on farm.__ _ *
Name .........
| ।

MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Smoolh Rubber Back Padi
No Poth To Wear Clolhlng

*-30

——
OUR WANT-ADS

ride on It. so did Jock, but Oscar
thought It was too dangerous Value
they succesfully "got away with It." of publicity shown in this "Suicide
but eventually the law caught up Sal" yam—It appeals to the imaglwith them, as it Invariably does.
Restaurants Jammed with folks.
Shoppnegan's Inn packed to the
Emmett, was dangerously wounded doors—reaping a harvest.
and served a long prison sentence.
Evidently sensing the futility of such Grayling put the thing over and Os­
a life, after leaving prison lie moved car Schumann was back of it all and
tc California, where I understand he ■
is living today as a quiet, respected I —n small town publisher who kept
citizen, a life completely at variance the faith, encouraged the town folks
with his younger years.
to go along with him and now the
Another gang was composed of the town Is CASHING IN and HOW and
we think the Cheboygans-. the Al—who operated sometimes with Die penns' and the Petoskey*.' etc., will
James gang. Possibly as an attempt have to fight real hard if they grab
al variety, they made lhe mistake off any of thlif winter sports for
of trying to hold up the bank in Grayling Iprs hit and how.

results!
NOW

OLD

WE BUY AMD SELL REAL ESTATE
OK COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Peds

ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE
BONDS
Nolarr Ptibllct- Oencral Conrryanclni
105 South Church
Phono 2185

No Leg Strop’

The Prescription Drug Store

*’

The Cedar Creek Cemetery Circle
will meet with Mr. nnd Mn. Elmer
Hathaway Feb. 12 for dinner; mem­
bers to furnish dinner. . Everyone

Floyd Casey was taken to Pen­
nock hospital and operated on for
appendicitis Sunday afternoon.

Farmers. Attention!

FARM BUREAU FERTILIZER AND
SEED ARE GOOD PARTNERS!
Team up with these two
partners. Put them to work
for you. Farm Bureau Ferti­
lizer will condition your
land for a real crop.

Farm Bureau Brand seeds
are guaranteed as to purity
and germination.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES • INC.
Hastings, Mich.
WOODLAND

pioneer# of that day knew how to
point a gun pretty straight. Citizens
of the little town of Northfield were
around when the attempt was made
to rob their bank and they turned

CARDS of THANKS
There

Is

No Substitute

for Life Insurance as:

word Saturday of the death on
Thursday of her uncle. Mr. Clarence
Stamm, at his home in Culver City.

NEW AND USED
AUTO PARTS

mcr. Sympathy is extended to the
family.
Friends here are sorry to learn

JERRY ANDRUS
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2637

Hostings

1

'I

Dead Stock Removed!

'r

n

HEADACHE-

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,
Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price
cash on delivery, at the Michiga
Central Stock Yards at Hasting;
Every Monday.

GRANGE PROGRAMS

HASTINGS BRANCH

han turned outlaws so they claimed,
former had it severely but the latter just to resent the injustices of so­ poned owing lo the bad weather.
was not so sick. Ail hope for a ciety. Like all the others, this gang
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Norton were
speedy recovery for them.
too came to grief, were killed off or hr Marshal) last Thursday and Bar­
imprisoned. After serving his sent­
.Douglas. Berl Newland. Harry Clem ences. one of them. Al Jennings, be­
and Harry Dunn attended the ex- came a lecturer and an evangelist,
tension club meeting last Thursday
at which he made a much greater
I at the home of Mrs. Florence Nor­ success than he ever did in attemptServices in the church Sunday
ton of Hastings and all report a fine । ing to perpetrate some crime.
school al two. preaching at three.
.
Rev. R. A- Houghton, pastor.
Mrs. W. H. Otis does not gain as seemed to logically become a part
Albert Mick has returned to his
fast u her many friends would like of the story of the growth of the work In Chicago after spending two
express business with Its background weeks with his grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson of of greed and oppression, and for
Lj'le Sager was home from Kal­
Hickory
Corners were Sunday decades was the target of the preda­ amazoo Sunday.
guests of the latter's parents. Mr. tory portion of society. The great
People of Yankee Springs are
I majority of the brigands were killed glad that work has commenced on
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Foster of or captured. Some of them were the Yankee Springs project.
Bellevue and Mrs Hazel Otis and
Lester Sager, who has been havchildren of Hickory corners spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
HASTINGS MARKETS
Otis.
formerly respectable, citizens or sons
of respectable parents, who after
falling In their quest for gold, donRena Whipple of Augusta spent
Saturday night and Sunday with unlque methods were devised by
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest gangsters to get inside lhe express
car. A case is on record of a high­
A man demonstrating stoves spent wayman being shipped in a coffin as
three nights last week with Mr. and a corpse.
But falling asleep he
Mrs. Vert Robinson.
commenced to $nore and was dis­
Our High school students started covered. His weeping widow and two
to school again this morning after sons, in the passenger coach were

oUr »f
Jess Kenyon of Hickory Comers
mX’
spent Tuesday afternoon with his
। uncle. G. E Kenyon.
I Henry Ragla of Hastings spent
r,rtB*r one day last week with Mr. and Mrs.

Phone 2118

The North Maple Grove prayer
meeting will be held at the home of
Rev. and Mrs. Rhoades Thursday
evening of this week.
Younger brothers were all picked up
We extend sympathy to Lee Lap­
seriously wounded, and later con­ ham and the children at the death
signed to long terms tn prison, where
Lapharn who left seven children, the
life. The remaining brother. Coie. oldest fifteen, the young a month
after leaving prison, later made old baby.
something ot a success by lecturing
on his career and the futility of
ton and Joyce of Marshall were
Sunday guests of their parents. Mr.

far west, and especially with lhe
We were all glad to see the sun pioneer settlers who had gone over
shine Sunday, even if the Old Bear the Overland Trail, follajring the
did see his shadow Now I suppose discovery of gold in California. A*

Michigan Livestock Exchange

f

and his original pioneer express
around Boston. What the future
holds In store In the way of rapid
express transit none of us know. But
90 years ago. Tennyson in "Locksley
Hall" had the present situation pret­
ty accurately sized up when he

GB« SHOWS
THEM ALL HOW

I_______________ '___________ 1
•

’ ° U W”U“

Tiie modern newspaper, large or • •"•J
small, is “contact man” for Its com—^M^’1’,1
munlty outside Ils field of publics- '.i.r
tion.D Every
worthwhile citizen ■« ni.r'
should be as anxious as the pub- 1
profit, they would have been able to Usher .himself to make each newspa- 1 n.»
continue business right along Just per truly Representative.—Western |
1“'
ns they were.. But under the con­
ditions prevailing, lhe parcels past
was Inevitable and has saved lhe
people of this country millions and
millions of dollars.
Thur. Rrd we saw express carried
by the slow-moving coach; then
came the more rapid Pony Expres;
then the still faster railway express.
Today great airplanes. carrying ex­
press. flash through the air at 125
to 200 miles an hour It's a great

For I dipped into tlic future
Far as human eye could see,
Saw the vision of the world.
And all the wonder that should be.
Saw the heavens nil with commerce.
Argosies of magic anils. •
cernlng their whereabouts, or noth­ Pilots of the purple twilight.
ing against them. But like all other Dropping down wllh costly bales.
criminal, in a few years they came
to grief. Jesse James was killed and
his brother Frank captured and
served a long prison sentence. The’
latter. Frank James, once appeared
in Hastings, nnd gave n lecture on
"Crime Does Not Pay"—and prob­
ably very few men have more rea-

Henry Amborski, Prop.

"AKRON" MODERN

yearP

There were several callers at Al­
len Bishop's last week. Opal and
baby are doing fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Snyder and
.sons and Mrs. Vida Phillips of Has­
tings visited the latter's son. Bur­
rell Phillips and family. Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias and
daughter of Kalamazoo spent Sun­
day with their parents. Mr. and

gang. So great was the antipathy
towards Express Companies al the
time, that the most skilled detectives
In lhe country, when searching
their home territory for the criml-

1----------------------------------------------- 1
. Age .............. Number of .

j

General. Mr. Wanamaker explained
that there were four principal rea­
sons why ixircels post was not in1 stalled in this country, and lhe four
reasons were—the Adams Express
Co.; the American Express; WellsFargo, and the United State* Ex( press Co. Tom Platt, the great re­
publican boss of New York, also
represented the Empire Staie in the
U. S. Senate, and for several years
lhe demand for parcels post went
unheeded. When Parcels post was
finally created in l»i3 it put a big
crimp in the receipts of the Express
Companies, which up until that time
had had a practical monopoly in the
carrying of small packages, and that
was the most profitable Reid for the
Express Companies. Probably, had It
not been for the greediness of the
Express Companies, and hod they

caught, convicted, served n long
prison sentence nnd was never heard

at FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET - Phone 2616

merchant._ who

helpful purpose. It wm succeeded
by the railway express, which rather
rapidly settled down Into Just a few
companies—principally the Adams.
Wells-Fargo. American and United
States. These Companies, though
having comparatively small invest-

For Valentine's Day, Feb. 14
Roses
Daffodils
Slock
Garde
lovely mixed bouquets.

Cyclamen
Azalea

Primrose and

0

Attractive pottery for small
plants and
Candles
and Valentine Novelties.

Member Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association

CLYDE WILCOX
HASTINGS, MICH.

�Wednesday, February 6,1936

iner

-■

KA ide.

Astiir.

j

. X Q’1’ HUSTINGS BOM rUE
:
DEBT $ SMALL
SSJE “
.about:

..aDOUt.

I
Middte A., .nd P.inl... Dentistry.
|r^ULVER CITY.—Especial-

_________ ———..__________

AND IT BPPRMyNTR T FRR !
iLlT
™
,
THANr..i™,

Teachers Duciui
Important Matters [
I

(NASHVILLE MAKES
FINE PROGRESS
RED CROSS HAS&gt;
illllilllll iirrniln
ANNUAL MttllNb
...J

County
School
Commissioner
onstrfltion
Maude W. Smith and Joseph Broxak.
We have been asked by several representing lhe Hastings Teachers’ ARCHIE D. McDQNALD RE­
ELECTED AS COUNTY
w petal (M•»» [
‘un

onitration

"

avviu*-

:s!
WO
ark
rti&gt;ur

eds
ity

u
c.
118

4

or

Commerce

Accm,^ Much for
That Village

HASTINGS HIGH TEACHERS
GIVE PROGRAM AT BRIGGS.
The teachers of the townships ot
Maple Grove, Asayrte. Johnstown

ta and Baltimore met for their Jan­ circuit

When Wool Boot
and Bumble Bee
Plains Crossed Bats

mc

your
Your

W

I

The

uary meeting at the Briggs school.
Thursday evening. Jan. 17. About
twentjMour were present and en­
joyed a very fine pot luck supper.
A very tatmattag program was
given by Albert Becker and hla
• Speech Class ' and Harold Logan of
Hastings High school. Not only was
tiie program very entertaining but game?

In recent montha Nashville has
been making fine progress. A beau­
tiful cement bridge has been built
I
across
the river al that place, the
ly to those nearing middle '
CAPITA
recipes given by Mr*. William* at, #nd y-hool commte*loners'
I paving of M-14 has been extended
|a„_.1,when ’ vrui I.vain
------------llw
Associated
Grocers — FeldAmong the topic* considered were
northward to the village limit*; a
age the age when you begin -...g
q
ONLY
PaUKh Cooking school demonstea-. teacher*’ salaries, teacher tenure, EXCELLENT WORK
______________
new up-to-date
water system te beto exchange your emotions for '
* J*’non at community hall last week. । chans„ m the retirement law. credit
DONE DURING YEAR ln&lt; taatalied that will supply the regretted tliat every teacher wu not
symptoms—it's gratifying to j $127,000 SCHOOL BONDS mention ofuwhich wu made ta the unions and- larger administrative
[Village with pure water; a 993.000
lhear a New York scientist has
———
I Banner.
'units,
full of original ideas to make poetry
lorK scientist nas
Report
of
Treo.urer,
OrvUle
hit on a formula
There Is
"The Jlgg’s special
” was tried out
it might be Interesting to know
.
mare interesting to children. Sevformula for reailv
really :«■«•
’■ Over $800,000
»800,000 of
ot
,
a .1
M . . . .
7
Hitv nwu.A Pmaart. fn
in *** Atonal family, and we can ; that in Barry county lhe lowest salBayleg, Showed Balance
I
seen that Nashville is going places,
‘
Property
to
recommend
it as a fine,
(ary paid
to anald
rural
935 a :te 135 a
IpalDlesa dentlsty.
If be* right, City
the ■ Owned
Lily uwneo
Property
to
I
I, hearty,
a Cn. one
haartv
. arv
tn'teacher
a rural te
tvarhrr
. Speaking chorus.
choru*. Thte
Thte Is
te aa type
type of
of
nfldfifiHO
ii A
fine
thing
for
aa community
like
Speaking
A
fine
thing
for
community
like
(operation will only
. begin to hurt I
Show for Debt
dish meal, which can be enlarged , month, and the highest Is 985 per
♦ ’‘'"•“s'
I I Nashville
Nashville to
to have
have Is
li aa Chamber
Chamber of
of t training which all children would
when yon get the I .
.
.. । by the addition of more cream month, or an overage of 951. In
Despite the stormy weather and commerce, with members really ta- enjoy greatly
bill.
Time
was , In Jt f P®P«« claims are made
vefetabi„.
। Allegan
Allegan Co.
co. the
the lowest
lowest wage
wage is
is 935
»35 the poor roads, about fifty were i terested ta the public good and men 1 We wish to thank Mr. Becker and
। for
or that,city
that—
It------------has thei |
Yowr A. G. Thrift Menu.
-------------------and---------------------the highest Is
1100. or an-------gver- present at the annual meeting of who. pull together. Nashville has I lite class and Mr. Logan for the fine
when you could;
—this
----------------------------hang
onto your I lowest bonded debt per capita. Lan- , Del Monte pineapple Juice Cocktail sge of 15285.
the Barrv Countv Red Cross Chao- thi* klnd of “ Chamber of Com- proram. and we appelate thetr
J^ng from what Isas been coming very much.
stately ruin* until , sing te a new aspirant tor this hon- ‘ "Jigg’s Special” Meat Pte. Family
ter on Friday evening at the Legion I accomplished In recent months The |
&gt;■, . ‘■ - ■ ■■­
Style
there wnt English or. and claims that its bonded debt I
home. A delicious Swiss steak din-1 new president te Vem J. Bera; vicePillsbury’s Best Savory Biscuits
Iry
growing
on te only 924 per capita; but In order
ner was served by the Legion Auxll-1 president. Frank C. Boices; aecStokely’s “Refuge’* Whole Green
them.
Nowadays, to get that figure. 91.600.000 wort!)
Beans
lary ladles which ail enjoyed.
Iretary. Henry F Remington; trewsno matter wlmt I of bonds are not taken Into consldMaster Uwte Kennedy, accom- urer. E. C. Kraft; directors for three
। eratlon because, lhe statement says. Del Monte Kraft Winter Delight
panied by hte brother. William Ken-1 years. Doctor E T. Morris and DocSalad—A. O- Salad Dressing
,lh these are to be retired from the
ray
your
Pie—Bno-Sheen Pastry
nedy. sang several delightful num­ tor Stewart Lofdahl.
which Is a mistake earnings of the city-owned waler Borden’s Magic Lemon Meringue
The new president has outlined
bers. after dinner, receiving hearty
works nnd electric light plant. But
SEND
REMITTANCE
7 he most exciting amateur ball I
ON applause.
to begin with, besome objectives for lhe Chamber
Vacation Land Coffee
the fact remains that Lansing owes
I Irvin 8. Cobb.
Jack Frost Sugar
County Chairman Archie D. Mc­ of Commerce to work for during the game I ever witnessed in Hastings. |
these bonds just the same, so that
QUOTA FOR FIELD
’ saw an X-ray pho­ the 924 per capita is hardly fair.
Borden's Eva ported Milk
Donald presided at tiie business coming year, among them being a said Riley, was when the Wool Boot;
SERVICE
nograph that was flattering.
And Instead, calling Ite population 80.­
meeting which followed. A splendid canning plant and lhe paving of team played a nine from Bumble*
"Jigg's Special" Meat Pie—Family
report of lhe year's activities was M-14 from M-78 through Nashville Bee plains on the Wool Boot dia- j
■the next thing you know, you’re a 000, tlic debt of Lansing te really Style—(Serves 6. Time, 30 mln.
Itnaie In your ttinuih like a drug 944 |&gt;er capita. Even at that lhe Temperature 375—400F.)
given by tiie secretary. Mrs. Otto to a connection with M-14 south of , mond one Decoration Day The Wool
LOCAL GROUPS 00
Boot
had
'- -1
- big bunch of long-wind­
Isenhath. The report of the treas­ Ionia. It Is paved from M-16 Into, Z
Iglat’a-illahript: and your fare looks showing is very good for that city
1 12-oa. can Ubby'a Corned Beef;
ed
namely “Noisy" Bower.
'
* rooters,
‘
SPLENDID WORK urer. Orville Sayles, showed a bal­ Ionia.
lllko an old-fashioned buckskin and proves that Its financing Is be­ 1 onion, minced; 1 pt. medium white
■ Big Bill" Reams. -Windy" Webber.
ance on hand at the present time of
Ipurse. with the draw-string com- ing carefully looked after.
sauce; 1 pt. cooked left-over pota­
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
•
Happy
George" Roush. “Dandy" I
There I* in lhe treasury of the toes or other vegetables.
Guardians Plan Obaervance 946559. after all dues have been sent Plyn Tuttle. Hastings
ling undone; nnd, nn the Inside,
.31 Pierce. "Bunta” Kramer and "Sham- |
lo national headquarters and other Clara Allerdlng. Hastings ....
Hustings school board the money
Cut the comed beef Into small
of 1936 Birthday Project
feels as empty as a haunted house.
rock" Kelley. Al the last half of the
expense* paid. Part of this sum.
I SUU. getting ths tipper plate from that will pay the Interest on the out­ chunks, saute the onion ^and add
ninth inning the score was even and
of ’’Hospitality"
95553. te Impounded In the old Na­ Steven L. Karmes. Hastings ...
standing bonds up to May 1 next, to the white sauce. Combine the beef
Priscilla W Brooks. Cloverdale
and also retire about 99500 of the and diced cooked potatoes \( or other
Mrs. Aben Johnson. Hastings tional bank. Mr. McDonald asked
Ipensntlon*.
Hot soup no longer principal, which will reduce our left-over vegetables, carrots and
.21 out and Bin Brock the captain sent I
Gail
F
Sedore.
Lake
Odessa
.
the
various
officers
lo
give
a
sum
­
Imakes bllatm In lhe palate, dual bonded Indebtedness lo 9127.000. all turnips are excellent) &lt;wilh the Camp Fire executive, is in receipt of mary of lhe work of their depart­ Alberta D. Navue. Nashville ... -.21 in “Old Hoss" Bishop as pinch hit­
the following letter from Miss Dor­
la alight smell of burning rubber— of which are school bonds The city white sauce. Bake as directed at 375 othy Laros. executive of the Battle ments. Mrs. E. F. Bayles reported
furnishing garments, shoes, etc., to
that’s all.
owes no other indebtedness. Figur­ degrees for the first 15 min. When Creek Council. The letter reads:
ing our imputation at 5.400 this half done, the savory biscuits are
“In behalf of the Battle Creek the amount of 950.00 under the
would make the average per capita placed on top and finish baking at Council of Camp Fire Girls. I wish Home Service department. Vice­
debt ot Hastings a little less than 400 degrees F. Send to table in dish to thank you for the contribution of Chairman Adelbert Cortright told of
r I 'HEY gave n dinner here in the
In which It is baked. Serve extra 150 00 which Hastings Camp Fire the assistance given the WPA proj­
I ■* son of desperately poor ImtnlThe question then arises, what biscuits If you wish. For meat pie has made toward its quota for field ect workers, who needed food, cloth­
(grant*. a modest, kindly little man
has Hastings to show for this In­ use no salt as corned beef Is suf­ service.
Will you express our ing and fuel uptil they received their
Iwbo started life ns a singing waiter debtedness? to begin with the city
ficient seasoning.
thanks to those people who helped checks. Some ot the money has been
lln a Bowery bar-room. The dinner has one of the finest high school
repaid. Mr. Cortright said, a good
Savory Biscuits (Serves 6. Time 12 to earn this money?
(celebrated his allver jubilee na u buildings and one of the most com­
“It 1s through such efforts as this share of this coming from the rural
to 15 mln. Temperature 400 P.)
(maker of melodies.
It hns been plete grade buildings and one of the
WPA workers.
Mrs. Maude W
2 c. flour; 4 t- baking powder: 1-2 that we are able to continue field
best school auditoriums to be found t. salt; 2 t. granulated sugar; 3 T. service to districts outside of Battle Smith. Junior Red cross chairman,
said a number of the rural schools
it the nation to tingling with "Al- In thLs or any other state In a city oleotnargertae; 1 c. tomato soup; Creek."
of thte alas. These bulldingn actu­
Hastings friends ot camp Fire are had continued their Junior Red
'Xahdcr a Itngllhie IWftiT."
Cross memberships. Mrs. Victor Hil­
Sift flour, measure and sift again proud of this splendid showing by
I can think of att ocenalnniil pop­ ally coat, with their furnishings,
In addition together with the salt, sugar and the local groups and congratulate bert of Woodland and Mrs. C. J.
liar composer, who might bo do more tlian 9500.000.
Barnum and Mrs. Leon Dunning ot
the city owns Ite water works plant,
Ines! oi i person who hns a good which represents an investment of baking powder. Cut or rub the oleo them upon their enthusiastic Inter- j Delton were commended for their
nemory nnd hopes nn one else hns; nt least 1100.000 more. The city Into the dry ingredients, add grated
The camp Fire Guardians Of ”“Uent *OTk durln« thc annual
cheese, and stir the tomato soup in­
Hastings were the guests of Mrs. I
Call, the number of memberowns its sewage disposal plant and to the mixture.
Give dough 20
trade secret—you strike n writ- the city hall building—although we quick stirs and toss on floured board Johnson at a one o’clock luncheon ; ‘bJP® received being larger than ever
The before tn some localities being more
are not boasting much about tliat. | or cloth. Give 20 quick tosses with on Wednesday afternoon.
meeting which
which iuuuwcu
followed ihc
tiie iuucu
lunch-- ; ,than d°ubled
also -------holds ----true
Is such n good writer, hut because The city, likewise, owns property fingertips. Roll ta a thin oblopg inevui
- ----- , This
.........
....... . somewhat
......... .. as a 1i *in
a
was conducted
“ the
l?e eitu
cl^ nf
of. Uitllnn
H“Hng4 wh.w
w?ere.18
the
in the business district that Is easily strip, sprinkle with additional cheese eon
he hns been such n close reader.
worth 15.000. probably a consider­ if desired: roll up like a jelly roll model Camp Fire group meeting ’•’orkers did splendidly. In behalf of
with
singing
of
Camp
Fire
songs
and
1
pie
orgaiilzation.
Mr.
McDonald
ex­
laid that Ida lyrics are Ids own and able more. The city also lias sev­ and slice ta 1-2 tach slices. Bake on
craft
games.
Honors
were
.
also
!
ftocere
thanks
and
appreeral miles of paving all paid for. the meat pie or separately—(or you
elation to all the chairmen and
which coat better tlian 4200,000 All may roll these biscuits out like ordi­ worked out.
ire bls o«n,, Maybe that’s why bls
■ Hoapitality." which is lhe Birth-1 wooers who rendered such faithful
of this city-owned property, with a
tuneful output Is so good—It re­ debt of only 9L27.000 against it. nary tea biscuits and cut ta desired day project for 1936. was explained I *rvlccuttu,r1^ 016 roU
Bnd
flects the spirit of an nuthcntlc proves that the business affairs of shapes). Bake as directed. Your _ • j.-f____ j
_____ throuehniit
throughout the
the venr
year.
and discussed. Most of the rgroups
family will ask for more of these.
creator, a genuine minstrel bard.
Officers elected for the ensuing
Hastings have been, and are being,
have already worked out some parts
Lemon Meringue Pie.
year are: Chairman, Archie D. Mc­
well administered.
of
this
project
and
find
it
very
en
­
1 can Borden's Eagle Brand con­
Donald; Vice-Chairman. Adelbert
densed milk; 3 egg yolks; grated rind joyable. All lhe crafts put them­ portright; Secretary.
Mrs. Otto
It NEVER thought the stocks that CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR
or 1 t. lemon extract; 1-3 c. lemon selves at the command of a hostess, Isenhath; Treasurer. Orville Sayles;
U licked the desert and ths Apaand we know that Camp Fire girls
Juice
(2
lemons).
Combine
until
Iches would be slackers, but neither
SOCIETY HAD BIRTHDAY well-blended. Meringue: 3 egg will And dozens of delightful and First Aid. Dr. c. P- Lathrop; Life
original ways of demonstrating this Saving. Russell Cleveland; Volun­
Id Arizona nor la New Mexico can
b find trace of an^aneathetle Preal- With Promotion Excrcisei, 1 T. lemon juice or vinegar; 1 t. Birthday project. The activities teer Service. Charles Faul; Home
Rs i e, Mrs. E. P. Sayles; Junior
Identlal boom for ruy home-grown
baking powder; 1 t. lemon or vanilla have been so arranged thaL-Ahe" Red Cross. Mrs. Maude W. Smith;
Banquet and Program
younger girls can chooi ‘
“
things
’
■talesman. On the other band, ths
extract.
Public InformaUon. Miss Mabel Bis­
at U. B. Church
Add cold water to egg whites and that are within their I,
■heep crop la reported good.
son; Nutrition. Miss Rose DeFoe;
while
for
the
older
girls
there
Is
I Maybe It’s just as wcIL Already
Hie eighth annual banquet of the beat until stiff but not dry', adding
plenty of challenge to their skill. Nursing. Mrs. John Nobles; Roll call.
where has been more than one fa- three Christian Endeavor societies sugar gradually at the last; the Imagination and originality.
Mrs. Forrest Johnson; Disaster. Mrs.
Ivorito son boom that reminded on., of lhe United Brethren church was flavoring and baking powder as you
T. 8. K. Reid. An addition was made
lof a new trunk store on a aldo held Friday evening. January 31 at finish. Bake 8 to 12 minutes at 300 FEBRUARY 18 LONG
to the department officers, the nam&lt;'
the
church.
It
was
lhe
fifty-fifth
an
­
degrees
to
325
degrees
F.
(street—you know, the kind that
ON PARTY DAYS. of Dr. Robert Harkness, as chair­
Bno-Sheen Pastry—“Bride’s Fa­
February, though the shortest man of General Health, being added.
lalwnya o|H*ns with a grand cloa- niversary of the founding of lhe
society by Francis E. Clark, and os vorite." Time—15 mln. Temp. 400 month ta the year, offers more This links up the Red Cross with
Ing-out sale.
has always been customary, lhe
chances for parties than does any the Barry County Health Unit. In­
Itepubllcnna here apeak highly of banquet was on lhe last Friday in
1 pie shell; 3 T- cold water; 1-2 t. other. Within Ite four short weeks, suring better cooperation in case of
Governor luindon of Kansas. Still, January.
baking powdtr; 3 T. oleo or other fat there are three Important excuses disaster or general need.
you never can fell. If you can be­
Each society was responsible for (5 T. for rich crust); 1 c. Bno-Sheen for parties. &gt;■
Barry county has been very for­
lieve what the Sunday papers print the decorations of Its own table and flour.
First. February the twelfth when tunate during the past years ta be­
when the editors can’t think of any­ carried them out ta Its own colors.
In a mixing bowl, break up with family friends make the birthday ing free from calamities such as
Cludrmen
of
decorations
were:
Jun
­
thing else, tragedy always followed
a silver fork the oleo tn the cold wa­ anniversary of a great President fires, floods, cyclones or anything
owning the Hope diamond or dig­ iors. Mrs. Stine, blue and white; In­ ter. Blend in the sifted flour and a time for dining together around that Would call for assistance from
ging Into King Tut’s tomb. But termediate. Lois Myers, green and baking powder until a compact but the fireside. For this, let’s plan a the Red Cross. But one can never
tell what may happen so It is best
I being Indorsed for office by W. II. white; and seniors. Margaret Cooley, rough ball of dough results. Roll out supper suggestive of pioneer life.
red and white. The program for the
Lincoln Birthday Dinner.
Hearst Is pretty fatal, loo, acetns evening entiUed “The King’s Hlgh- and shape os desired—in one shell
commendable things about the Red
or In 8 Individual shells. Bake on in­
Country Style Sausage with
tv me.
way” was In charge of Mary Stamm verted tins.
Cross—they are prepared for emer­
Old-Fashioned Pan Gravy
who Introduced the toastmistress,
Fried Apples gencies.
Several nice ideas were given by Mashed Potatoes
|
A New Kind of Inflation.
Mrs. Amy Bower. A reading "The
Log Cabin Salad
Mrs. Williams for salads. One was to
Lord
’
s
Why
”
was
given
by
Helen
HEN one of the New Deal
Preserves OVER 200 APPLY HERE
mold fruit or vegetables in the same Cornmeal Sticks
groupa — the President’! co»- Adams, followed by short talks. “A can which had been opened to ob­
Pickles
Celery
liumcrM* council — announced Good
the Start," by Imogene Cooley, and
Gingerbread
Coffee
FOR THEIR BONUS
tain the sliced pineapple. In this
other day that Americana have "Keeping on the Right "Road.” by way the exact size is duplicated. She
A buffet supper Is an attractive Claims Will Aggregate Con­
larger iilps than formerly, 1 just Doris Everson. The promotion of had molded beets tn this particular
the juniors into the Intermediate,
form
of
service
for
the
Valentine
Mid: “Well, I'm glad tilings are
instance, cutting the slices the same
and the intermediates Into lhe sen­
siderably More Than
thickness as the plneappie. then put party. Ils Informality seems to
expanding.
There were several ior department followed.
create an atmosphere of frlendllI years when nothing I owned showed
$100,000
Eva dene Struble gave a short dis­ them together with a layer of neu and cheer, and its method of
a tendency to go up except my cussion entitled the -Road of Life." Philadelphia cream cheese, slightly
At
this writing something over 2Q0
service Is so easy that even the in­
blood pressure, and If hips are and then the main speaker ot the thinned with mayonnaise. This was experienced home-maker need not applications have been made by men
cut
ta
half,
the
pieces
placed
on
end
spreading. It merely means wider evening. Mr. W. T. Wallace, former
who served In the World war for
on head lettuce, the edges of which hesitate to invite guests.
detours for a fellow when danc­ principal of Hastings whools, was
BL Valentine Buffet Supper Menu. their soldiers’ bonus. The amount
represented by these 200 claims will
Introduced. He gave a most Interest­ had been lightly dipped ta paprika.
ing on a crowded floor.
Creamed Veal In Heart Shaped
Another altracUve salad was made
considerably exceed 9100.000. This
But now another White House ing and helpful talk In which he with a slice of pineapple, centered
Timbale Cases
large sum will be a very welcome
pet. the Works Progress admlnl*; stressed the Importance of enlarg­ wllh a spread of Philadelphia cream
Asparagus In pimlento Rings
addition to Barry county.
tratlon. gives a real thrill by protu^ ing our sphere of life, living all over cheese. Into this were Inserted eight
Hollandaise Sauce
and not just within a small circle of
Cloverleaf Rolls
slug to expose spinach, proving
our own making. The three things. or ten slices of carrots which had
OBITUARY.
Stuffed Olives
Celery
there are plenty of vegetables Just Mr. Wallace said, which tend to been cut as thin as paper and
Ruth Wall*, youngest daughter of
Cherry Bavarian Cream
as good for the diet, that taste make a person's life richer and hap­ curled by standing for a Ume In ice
Nancy and Boyd WalLt, was born In
Frosted
Sponge
Cakes
water.
Egg
yolk
grated
ta
the
center
like eoneiblng and not like spinach. pier are (ll making the past live
Bradford. Pennsylvania. April 25.
.
Coffee
■
Maybe they’ll yet And a use for again ta our own lives. 12) exploring made the "DiaLil" for the fiower-like
1894 and departed this life January
spinach—by applying It externally. the present; finding each day ta our sated created.
Washington’s Birthday is a good
own common-place lives and sur­
excuse for a Colonial dinner, and and 3 days.
roundings something'new which we 248 FARM BOYS
IN SHORT COURSES. whether or not George Washington Kalamazoo with her father, her
N TIIK matter of their ruling hadn't noticed before, and (3) see­
had the intimate association with
Increasing Interest in better farm­ the cherry tree that history credits mother having passed away the
F.H.A. LOANS
monarchs, the English are luck­ ing the future and its possibilities
as though they were an actuality.
ing methods has brought the largest him. cherries and hatchets will al­ year before.
ier than soma. The crown Is nev­
winter short course enrollment In 14 ways be used at any celebration Ln
In May 1913. she wu united in
er tarnished nor the people ever FIRE WARDEN—TOWERMEN
We ore in position
years to Michigan State College, de­ his honor. And It is said that George marriage to Leander Lapham of
shamed, for all their kings are gen­
EXAMINATIONS IN .MARCH. clares R. w. Tenny. Director of the Washington
was never prouder Maple Grove. To this union were
to moke mortgage
tlemen and all Ibelr queens are
Annual competitive examinations college short course. The short win­ than when a whole baked ham. born 7 children, lhe oldest Dale age
queens. That’s why, I think. Brit­
by which 2C0 fire wardens and tow- ter program permits the stele's farm baked to perfection and on a large IS. Leota 14. Virginia 10, Donna 8.
loom on improved
ain will keep her royal line, while
youths. to obtain Information and silver platter, was placed on the Betty 5 years old and Joyce Ruth 5
we keep our flag, which ought to Ing spring, summer and fall months training In general agriculture, table in front of him for carving.
REAL ESTATE.
will be conducted by the Department dairying, poultry, dairy manufac­
Wllh the exception of two years
Washington’s Birthday Colonial
engineering.
eommuatetic person should aakyoa. of Conservation during the first turing. agricultural
on a farm south of Middleville she
Dinner
spent ail ot her married life In
So, to the witty and enraging week in March. The examinations floriculture and commercial fruit
Grapefruit and
will be held in the lower peninsula production.
Maple Grove.
youngish gentleman, who picks up
Red Cherry Fruit cup
at Boyne City. Atlanta. Mio. Ros­
First year students In the winter
Besides her husband and children
Baked Ham with IlaLain Sauce
the mantle that slipped from the common. Traverse City. Baldwin
short course number M of the total
she leaves to mourn, her father. E.
Glazed Bweet potatoes
tired shoulders of a kindly and gra­ and Gladwin.
enrollment of 348. Not since 1822,
B Walls, two slaters. Mrs. Wm.
Com Pudding
cious elderly gentleman, we over
Men who desire to compete for when the farm boys numbered 354
Green of Detroit, Mrs. Albert preen
Combination Vegetable Bated
either position of fire warden or
of Middleville, one brother. Roy
Virginia Bpoonbread
know Tour Majesty Invariably will
towerman may file applications at rollmen t been aa large. The present
Walls of Santa Marie, Calif., also
Washington Pic
show zood taste, and whilst you may
these respective district headquar­
one step-sister, Mrs Douglas Rouse
Coffee
ters of tiie Department of Conser­ when graduation exercises will be
not always do the right thing—that
of Battle Creek and two step-broth­
would be asking loo much ot any vation from which places notifica­ held for thoae who have completed
Never put off until tomorrow what ers. Lewis Lasco of Loveland, Colo..
tions will be issued u to when they the second year 18 weeks course and
and John Lasco of Cheyenne, Wyo ,
should appear for examination.
today.
and a host of friends.
-. ‘RVLN «. COBB. ,

CHAIRMAN

CAMPFIREfiRLS
IRE COMMENDED

ND

L

Chamber

WES

le««. SO#

| PART TWO-4

THE HASTINGS BANNER

1FZSE... Orjiut
Pretending To Bo
•r RUTH BAKTOH

bition however that seems lo be
universal. That te the deslrs to
seem wise or mentally superior.
Mon energy te wasted by the
average person tn trying to seem
unart than It takes to acquire a
thorough education.
Some people succeed In putting
long ny thru life without ever
really knowing much, but with
most of us it la a waste of energy.
An analysis of your hand writ-

If you

an

Interested

and

Ulu Barton by filling out cou-

Your
Banker

FRIEND

banker is □ personal frjend,

he has YOUR interest at heart and he is
ready to help you complete the plans for your
family's security. The Hastings City Bank'
has for a half century proven its friendliness
for those who have intrusted their interests
to them. As a guardian watches over the in­
terests of those left in his charge, so too, this
bank watches over and protects the interests

of its depositors.
The services of this bank are varied and
many. You can come to your banker for ad­
vice ... for loans to promote your business ...
for loans to improve your home ... for help in
making plans foryour family's future security
and happiness. As a friend he will always
keep your affairs in strictest confidence. The
facilities of this bank are at your command. •
A friend must prove himself a friend ... let
us prove our friendliness . . . take advantage
of these services. Here you will receive friend­
ly, courteous service.

CONSULT YOUR BANKER AS A FRIEND

HASTINGS CITY BAN

TELEPHONE 2103

♦

MICHI

HASTINGS

T

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1936
PODUNK.

SCHOOL NOTES FROM

Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Matthews “‘

Portland came together, turning the

latter's car tmr twice, but fortu-, the Welcome dteteict visited at Geo

all mothers will be able to attend.

INAPPLE-KELLOGG ' K.Cgtete h?d no troSbte Jd’ali InwliFI nunfiiRrrLC-MlLL
— ---------1
—
------------;------ - ning over woodland
ning over
Friday night,
Jured.
•
---------------------------- '
Mr and Mrs Monte Rsptagte
* K- Tata. Ntnth BM^hi.
The gtete seemed to find themselves
Mary Laubauth Is not as will as ‘I Th. book "WK, W. Behave Ukef
Gordon Havens came very near
—— Jhel
their poor showing sgalnst
Humah Brings" had a big sale In
Th* T- K vanity defeated Geles-1 MUr
liavthg a serious accident at Po- her many friends wteh.
Galesburg,
! 2^^
’ woodland was unable to
Russell Biaek/ord visited his j spite of thefact that most of us 1_of
score in the second quarter. Tlic
mother in Irving last Friday.
way. although T. K had the edge score al lhe snd of the half was 14ui
T K- substituted freely In the fl­
In wic
the kwmu
second-------------quarter. wiwi
With so
30 sensec­
nlav. and the score
srnrp 27-26 in
In na‘ quarter. The team has some fine
! ends to play,
I favor of Galesburg. Hauser made 3 r*$erv« material.
baskets putting T. K. in the lead and
------------' winning the game. Hauser was
General New*.
high point man for T. K. with 13
U»ere te one case of scarlet
I points.
‘
•
1 fev*r *n ,he community. Dr. Hark‘
_______
ness of the Kellogg Foundation ex­
Secend* Lose.
amlned children exposed, to the dis­
ease. No further signs were found.
T- K. seconds took a defeat Tues­
We are asking the parent* of chllday night 18-17. It was a nice ball
dren who have colds to help guard
game. T K. was ahead with a
HATUSINC CANNED GOODS ANO COUNTRY CLUB PRODUCTS
minute to go but Galesburg made a against this disasc by keeping lhe
children home until they are fully
basket to win.
COUNTRY CLUB
recovered.
nately neither

February
Food Festival

seriously

was

KROGER STORES

TOMATO
JUICE
t
6
49c
12

3 ■£? 25c
oas. 98 c

cans

BARTLETT PEARS
6

mm 3L12

12

COUNTRY CLUB

19c

PEAS

6

•*■*

fill

It

~~ 3223

No 2

OR CRBEN BEANS
(4 29c)

COUMTBY CLUB

85c

coumtby club rliced

SIFTED PEAS

2

85c

earn

LAIGE

APRICOTS

mm 32 23

CORN-TOMATOES

c^0 quality

6

;

In-, Ransomte Bunday.

12

29c

PINEAPPLE
8 mm 31.00

mm 3188

COUNTRY CLUB

12

cam

1195

■ Rich halves or alicee

PEACHES

(1 ,&lt;».

OOr«
Q yC

M°.2V4
cans

in rich hoary syrup

33c)
EATMORE BRAND

FLOUR

65c

SlncrHr

NUT OLEO

S3C

COUNTRY CLUB FLOUR
KING'S FLAKE FLOUR

uihs •••• 75c
LIGHT. FLUFFY 13 IGG

COUMTBY CLUB

5 » —» 1 Pc

Angel Food

5 D&gt;. saek 23c

APPLE

PASTRY FLOUR

•«

CAKE

COUMTBY CLUB

PANCAKE FLOUR

COUMTBY CLUB

PINEAPPLE
6

No. 1 (U

can*

89c

12

can*

12

oan«

15c

.

•177

COU1TTBY CLUB

FANCY PEAS
6

79c

can*

2

85c

27c

coumtby club bbeakfast

QUAKER

73c

school building the

cam

12

utmost

Dramatizing progress since the
turn ot the century tn automotive
design and performance in home
decoration, furnishing* and equip­
ment. progress in science, and in the
arts of public entertainment, the g
upper peninsula.. Fires by causes General Motors Parade ot Progress
Very concise directions have been are: Smokers. 741; brush-burnIng.
tv enroute from Detroit to the
given out for fire drill.
255; incendiary. 131. miscellaneous. Southland. This caravan, comprising
Drills were held Wednesday and 116; campfires, 83; railroad. 47; un28 motor-driven vehicles with a
crew of 40 men. la carrying a travel- .
Wednesday the building was cleared
ing exposlUon to lhe people of the
in 3 minutes. Friday It look only
country in a manner and on a scale ]
on* and 3-4 minutes to clbar It.
The spring open season for taking never attempted before.
----------------- *“*“*----------------After months of study, planning
beaver this--year
will run from---April
HICKORY CORNERS.
-------------------------------------------Mr and Mrs. Don Johnston, who j 1 to April 15. inclusive, in the upper and construction, attended with the
arc staying In Kalamazoo thte win- j*nlnsula and from March 17 to utmost secrecy, thia "world's fair on
spent Saturday and Bunday with | March 31, inclusive. In the lower wheels" was completed recently In
The new chemistry cabinet, re­ ter.
Tiie T K- girls took a beating 22-4
the home folks at the farm
' peninsula. Open areas In the lower Detroit. On invitation of Gov. Dave
from Galesburg. Galesburg is un- placing the old one which was de­
Mr. and Mrs p. Hoffman of near peninsula include all counties north Sholtz of Florida, it will begin Its
। defeated this year and it looks as stroyed by fire, has been Installed. Nashville were Tuesday guesta of of Townline 16 and in addition lhe showing* in that state, later-cover- ,
The new cabinet, made of steel anp their daughter. Mrs. Glenn Aspinall. I counties of Mecosta and Midland. A ing other territory in a 20.000 mile I
though they'll go through the season
fireproof, has a new set of chemicals.
that way.
Mtes Marceline Campbell of Has- j list of designated closed areas wlth- tour this year.
The walls of the room have been re­
Eight huge, streamlined, expos!- I
tlngs spent the week end with her 1 in the open area.* ot both peninsulas
painted.
Winning Streak Snapped.
parents. Mrs. I. G Brady of South { te being prepared and will be issued tion transport trucks, said lo be I
Mrs.
McFall,
second
grade
teach
­
the largest cab-over-engine unite •
, The T. K ’s winning streak was
Bend, was also a recent visitor at' later.
er. was 111 four days of last week.
mapped at nine game* when they
the Campbell home.
I
...
—— ever conceived, carry lhe exhibited
lest to a fast Woodland outfit, 14-9. Mrs. Bonneville substituted for her
Mr. and Mrs. W J. Borden of Kai-&lt; All indication* point to the fact and form part of the exposition on
Mrs. Seekel. Kdg. teacher, was ill
location. These highway leviathans. ■
A very rough game was played be­
Thursday and Friday. No school was amazoo visited their parents. Mr. that the smelt te extending ita range built on special General Motors I
, fore a big crowd. T. K. played the
nnd
Mrs.
O.
Haynes.
Saturaay
eve,
farther
and
farther
north.
A
few
held tn her grade Friday.
| worst game irha.i played this year.
' have been found In fishermen's nets Truck Corporation 233 Inch wheel- !
Work on the addition to the T. K. ning.
j Every man on the team committed
The young people of thte neigh- on the shores of Lake Superior, so base chassis, measure 33 feet from '
school was begun Monday of last
many errors. Wc hope lhe boys got ■
borhood enjoyed a sleigh ride party upper peninsula creeks emptying In­ bumper to bumper. 11 1-2 feet from I
It all out of their systems and take ,
Wednesday evening.
[-to lhe lake may become just as road to roof, and 8 feet In breadth.
The educational exhibits carried In
Woodland when we play them over.
Recreation.
Glenn Aspinall assisted with fill- productive of smelt run* as many
| there thte week
1 Mr Urn has aslced U|P SERA for Ing the ice houses for Vere Williams other streams tn the state. The eggs the big trucks contrast the new wllh j
the old In transportation and the ’
~~
I assistance In establishing n recrea-, hut week nnd thte week he te help-1 Of n female smelt are so small as to
comforts of living. These exhibits I
Reserves Win 27-16.
; tion program for pupils and adults Ing to fill J. Johnson's.
................................................................
be barely distinguishable to the
The reserves won their game with ; of the community. The Admintenaked eye. They are adhesive In were designed by the General Mo­
EAST BALTIMORE GROUP.
tors Art and Colour section In De- .
Woodbind 27-16. The boys were tration has responded by appointing
character and cling to water vege­
The Home Economics group of tation. debris and gravel on lhe bot­ troll. The Interior walls arc finished i
never in trouble and won the game;
Wm. McConnell as the director,
In bright contrasting color*.
easily. "The score at the half was!
present program of recreation East Baltimore met at the home of tom of streams.
Mrs.
Will
Richards
Friday.
Feb.
29.
Among the display* are various a
113-7 In favor of T. K- The boys were ‘ wm be skating, and Ice games such
exciting and mystifying scientific j
• never behind during the game.
I B5 hockey, cross tag. etc. Parents for an all day meeting. The fore­
Scientists
have
estimated
that
one
...................
may feel free to send children lo the noon was laken^GfF-wlth lhe final female smelt of approximately seven devices used in automotive research •
,
...................... .. .
, pond any evening after school and check-up of the muslin models. A Inches in length will produce and and advancement, all products ot .
the General Motor* research labora- I
on Saturday. Mr. McConnell will
lories, improvements over many ot 1
In the afternoon the business meet­
&gt;e there to supervise. Il Is hoped
the mechanisms shown nt the QcnUivr TUIR
TFCT
lhllt °Ur y0Ung PeOP1C W“‘ tMkC “d‘ ing was conducted by the chairman.
Michigan led lhe nation In plant­ era I Motors.building at the Chicago ■
members,
two leaders rand
masl ihis zsc itsi
. vantage of thte opportunity for good ,Twelve
---------- ----------- —
—
reerrauon. All are •»!The l«- ing forest trees last year. From World's Fair. Some of these exhibits
.
. son followed which Wne
nn
tian
u_­ third place In 1934. the state Jumped the visitors themselves may operate.
was
on
Uie
se
come!
I lection of fabrics and the discus­ to the top in 1935 wllh a planting of Forced ventilation lias been In­
sion of textiles,
textiles, with the demondrmon- ' 112.000.fXX) pine seedling trees. Wls- stalled for the sightseers' comfort.
i
Mothers' club.
'slon
On location, tn towns and titles |
The Mothers' club will meet next stralion of samples of materials j cousin is second. New York is third.
Tuesday afternoon. Mr. cunning-, which arc at present in demand. । Indiana fourth. Minnesota fifth. The which the Parade of Progress will j
ham will have charge of the singing We adjourned to meet with Mrs. । total planting for the nation was visit on Invitation of Die community, j
at 1:30. The program will be very i Claud Hunt for our next meeting.—; 501.789,763 trees, which seta an all- tlicse transports will be parked and I
opened, witiioul charge, to public
much worth while. Wc hope that Esther Striker. Pub. Sec.
lime record.
Inspection. On these selected loca- (
Hons, a huge tent, carried In th* I
caravan, will be raised and a variety
show of motion plctui-es nnd wonder-uiorking scientific dcmonslra- !
lion* and lectures given for the en- ■
I tertaininent of the people. It will b« j
| a veritable -circus of science."
j Herbert R. Schaeffer, former U. 8 !
Naval officer, now active in the Na- i
| val Reserve. Is commander of thi i
I Genera) Motors Parade of Progrest '
। on tour.

DON'T GET UP NIGHTS

NEW CHEVROLET FOR 1956
tinn it s thr only

COUNTRY CLUB FANCY

10c

complete car that

.

Country Club

2* roJ 25c
$1.45

sells at such

CATSUP
9
I

RICH. RED
large bottle

low prices!

couwtby club
WESCO

BREAD
COUNTBY CLUB

SCRATCH FEED

PRESERVES 2 ’£ 33c
. .

LAYING MASH
20% DAIRY FEED

Country Club

&gt;*- — *1.55
$1.89

100-lb. sack

$1.25

100-lb. sack

MEDIUM COABSE

SALAD
DRESSING

T 29c

BLOCK SALf^39c
OY4TEB

SALT

‘S

85c

WESCO CHICK

69c

SHELLS

HID

STARTING

‘“A"

100-lb. sack

*1.85

*2 05

AMD GROWING MASK

CALIFORNIA NAVELS

ORANGES

Sweet juicy - 252-288 size

New Cabbage » 3%c

BANANAS
LEMONS

Onions

POTATOES

4

10c
Think nf all the good things you get in

Golden yellow fruit

CAULIFLOWER
SWEET POTATOES

doz.

the new Clicvrolel, ami don't get any­
where else at Chevrolet price*, anti you uill readily

NEW PERFECTED

FULL OF JUICE

G. M. PARADE
OF PROGRESS

OATS —SMALL PKGS, t forT7c

$189

cam

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

children, high school students and Michigan last year were caused by
all employees. The back door must
the men with tobacco and matches.
persons are to slay away from all Of lhe 1.437 forest fires, 046 occurred
construction work.

2 "Jj 29c
12

BANTAM CORN
can*

25c

pt"
SWEETMEATS OP THE WHEAT

COUMTBY CLUB FANCY GOLDEN

6

2

WAX BEANS

GREEN BEANS
cani

29c
l»"

FOOD

&gt;1.97

I

COUMTBY CLUB YANCY

6

GIANT

2

1UTTER

COU3TTBY CLUB GBATED

Students, teachers, custodians and

operate wllh our

&lt;*•«

23c

HYDRAULIC BRAKES

understand why people call this the only complete lowpriced car.

GENUINE FIBHER
NO DRAFT VENTILATION

• DOWLING.
The Dowling cemetery Circle wlB
1 serve dinner at the church on
Thursday. Feb. 13. The officer!
elected at lhe last session for ths
coming year were: Mrs. Vcre Segur,
president; Mrs. Jane Smith- vice­
president; Mrs. Blanche Powell, I
.■ecretary and Mrs. Ella Smith |
treasurer.
The next meeting of the Town-J
fend Club will be on Tuesday after- j
. noon. Feb. 11. which takes the placi J
of tiie evening meeting and will be- '
। Mr. and Mrs. Tom Howard ami
i family of Leslie were Sunday vlzltors at Emil Schwucho's. Mrs. Ella
| Sullivan, who has been the guest ol
l her parents the past week returned
home with them.
Miss Hazel Henry, who has been
convalescing of late at the home of
Royal and lyna Bryant hns gone to
Detroit for a visit with friends.
Mrs. Raymond Robteski of Has­
tings visited Mrs. Norton Slocum
Thursday afternoon.
Mrs. Marshall Pierce, who has
been 111 at her home U reported
some better at present.
Mr. arid Mrs. Emil Schwucho were
the recipients of a collection of fowls
last week which were donated by
the community to take the place of
lhe flock which was stolen from
their hen house recently. Mr. and
Mrs. Schwucho are very grateful
and appreciate Oils kind act.
The Parent Teachers meeting at
the Bristol schoolhouse Thursday
evening was wejl attended and
proved to be very enjoyable. The
Oswald's with their stringed In­
struments furnished lhe music
Mrs. Irene Klbllnger and Mrs.
; Margaret Schuricho of Battle Creek
were Sunday visitors at Marshall
Pierce's.

IN NEW TURRET TOP BODIE!

It’s the only low-priced car with New Perfected

h415c

Large mow whits heads

10c

NANCY HAU.

Michigan U. S No 1
Quality - Bushel 75c

Hydraulic Brakes, which arc essential to maximum

driving safety—

SOLID STEEL on»-pUca
TURRET TOP

15-lb
pack

The only low-priced car with the (Hiding Knee-Action
Ride*, which brings you comfort and safety beyond

*

compare—

The only low-priced car with Solid Steel one-piece

SHOCKPROOF STEERING"

Going South?

Turret Top. Genuine Tidier A'o Draft Jenlilalian, llifihSHORT WAY Lines Offer

Compression l'altv-in-Hcad Engine and Shockproof Steer-

CONTSOLLID QUALITY BEEF

CHUCK ROAST —

18c

HIGH-COMPRESSION
VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE

satisfaction.

FORT WAYNE

Good judgment says. Buy a ncu- 1936 Chevrolet—the

ALL THUS FEATURE!
AT CHEVROLET'! LOW PRICE!

only complete low-priced car.

CONTROLLED QUALITY SHF

SHORT RIBS

3 BUSES DAILY

ing"—all of which are essential to complete motoring

CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY,DETROIT, MICHIGAN

IMPROVED GLIDING
KNEE-ACTION RIDE"

LEAN

Fillet of Haddock

17c

Fillets D»«p $•• u 15c

Sliced Bacon *-»•

19c

Smoked Picnics » 19c

n/
U/

6

m
'*

NEW MONIY-BAVING
O. M. A. C. TIMI FAYMINT

FLAN

*49S

Compare Chevrolet's low dditcred prices
and low monthly payments.

Making eXceCent connec­
tions for all southern
cities such as

INDIANAPOLIS
MEMPHIS
NEW ORLEANS
TAMPA
And Many Other Cities

SMALL SKAMElESS

EXTRA $PKIAL

PORK SAUSAGE

TkkeU and Schedule*

11OADCAST

lb 21c

R. K. HURD
‘ ’

HASTINGS. MICH.

PHONE 2580

R. D. CADWALLADER, Hickory Corn«r», Mich
THE SERVICE GARAGE, Delton, Mich.

TRIO CAFE
JlASTINGb

PHONE 2137

j

’
।
'
I

•

1

�Tire HASTINGS BANNER, TWURBDAY. FEBRUARY «. 19M

FARM DEBT ADJUST­
MENT CONFERENCE

How many noticed lhe political; Ouem*e&gt;cattle club. This animal te ' with their parent*. W. and Mt*,

Women'! Club

PROVIDED ENTERTAIN­
srtann In t&gt;w&gt; last tune nf tiie Ran- the etaht and a half vear nld ruid- Pravi AaMaw
MENT FOR THOUSANDS attl It was preUy clever We gave f en Blossom of the Prairie 2d 212662 , Mrs. C. Cabte
But Wa* Known by Com-

Government Aide Fanner*
With Bxcenive Debt*
Mr. Charles Robertson of Middle­
ville. Michigan, and Mr. Glenn Wotring of Woodland. Michigan recently
attended u conference of Rural Re­
habilitation and Farm Debt Adjust­
ment Committees at Grand Rapids.
Michigan. Representative, from lhe
Regional Office of lhe Resettlement
Administration discussed conditions।
under which a farmer burdened with1
excessive debt and unable to borrow,
,
money elsewhere may obtain a loan
from the Rural Rehabilitation Di­
vision. Tiie manner in which Farm
Debt Adjustment should benefit the
creditor as well as lhe distressed farm
debtor was emphasised. The Pcd' era I Land Rank sent Mr. C. L. Rose
to discuss Its policies and position as,
an independent loaning agency. The
men named above together with Mr.
Archie D. McDonald of Hastings.
Michigan, constitute the Farm Debt
Adjustment Committee for Barry
county. They give their lime to aid
worthy farmers whose debt load is
excessive. The cost to lhe farmers
Is nothing. Those wishing further
Information should see any of the
above committee members or the
County Rural Rehabilitation Super­
visor. Mr. C. P. Maurer at Hastings.
Michigan.
MILO.
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Jones and
daughters moved from Lockshore
Farm last Thursday (o their new
home near Saginaw, where he will
be- manager of a Guernsey farm.
Mrs. Jones will be missed frqm the
H L Club and Milo L A. S. We ex­
tend our best wishes for their sueecus and recommend them to lhe
people of Saginaw and vicinity.
On account of the bad roads and
severe cold and storm, the P. T. A.
of Milo was postponed one week. Ex­
pect to hold the meeting the evening

Mr., and Mrs. Flower entertained
nt a 1 o'clock dinner hut Saturday
the men's birthday party, which
has been held annually, with one
exception since 1D30. This occasion
honors the birthdays of Messrs. H.
J. Flower. N. H. Barber. J. J. Doster
and Ro.s Evers, whose natal days
came the 8th. 10th. 20th and 37th
of January. Dinner was served Sat­
urday to these gentlemen and wives
by Miss Bernice Flower at the
Flower home. The afternoon was
spent In visiting. Il was purposed
to have the parly the 25lh of Jan­
uary. On account of the cold and
bad roads ll was postponed till Feb
1. Messrs. Merritt wood nnd Orson
Garrett, whose natal days were 27
and 28 of Jan. and. who forrnerly
wcre included In these gatherings,
have passed to their reward.
Austin FV-rris of Dowling spent
over night Inst Tuesday with his
sister. Mr. and Mrs. E. Quick.
Sunday Mrs. J. Scobey and daugh­
ter June and Mr. Green visited their
son. Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Scobey,
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. H- M- Kennedy and
son Lee ot Dowagiac visited the
home folks Sunday.
The Home Literary club will be
entertained al the home of Mrs,
Hubert Pcttcngill. Feb. 13. for din­
ner. Election of officers will take
place at tills meeting.

PLEASANT VALLEY.
Mr. and Mrs. clayton Mole and
family spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Ed. Cool of Grand Rapids. Mrs.
Dell Scott who had been visiting
there accompanied them home.
Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Slater and
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Scott spent Sat­
urday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Stuart of Clarksville.
Eldlene Preston of Pewamo spent
the week end with her parents. Mr.
nnd Mrs. Cecil Preston.
Visitors at Bert Slater's Sunday
were. Mrs. Russell Geiger and chll-1
dren of Ionia, and Mr. and Mrs.
Tony McCall and family of Lake
Odessa.
Mrs. Emery Kime and Glen were
in Ionia Thursday.
A fair crowd enjoyed the day
with the W. M. A- held at Mrs. Ruby
Wait's Thursday. The next regular
meeting will be held with Mrs. Bar­
bara Brake. Fobmary 13. 1936 Ev­
eryone welcome and a good crowd is
desired.
The Third Quarterly meeting will
be held at the Freeport church Sat­
urday evening and Sunday morning.
There will be no services at Pleasant
Valley so ail who wish may attend
the services at Freeport. Rev. Grif­
fin of Hastings is the presiding cider.
MARTIN CORNERS.
Frank Cogswell and son Maurice
of Hastings. Lloyd Cogswell ot E.
Lansing and Dorothy Cogswell of
Lakeview were callers at Mr. and
.Mrs. Orr Fisher's Sunday ot last

Mrs. Willard Hilton received the
sad new.-, last* Thursday that her
son Meredith Wright of Marshall
was very seriously ill with pleural
pneumonia. Mr. Wright passed away
early Friday morning. Mr. and Mrs.
Hilton and sons left for Marshall
Saturday to attend
the funeral
which will take place Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gillespie and
daughter. Marcela ot Lakeview. Mr.
and Mrs. Thos. Gammage of Grand
Rapids were Sunday callers at Mr.
and Mrs. Orr FUher's.
Friday evening. Feb. 7 and plan to
attend. A cordial Invitation is ex­
tended to all.
S. 8. next Sunday at 10:30 fol­
lowed by preaching. You are cor­
dially invited to both these services.
MTs. Nina Barry is visiting her
daughter. Miss Beatrice Barry in
Grand Haven for a few days.
GROUP NO. 2.
Hastings Extension Group No. 2

crvlsor*' room. The class completed
muslin pattern fittings. Will meet
again Tuesday. Feb. 4. lo complete
lesson on selecting materials and
color tor individual. Meeting to be
at aanie place.—Nellie Matthew*.
Secy.

en'a Club presented as Its speaker
Per* on*
on 'Mod4m Art" th* director of lhe
Then died tn Lowell recently a
Grind Rapid* Art Gallery. Otto
Karl Bach. Mr. Bach, a descendant man who along in the gay nineties
of Johann Sebastian Bach, lhe and the year* following, ___
added much
cMraJM Mrmin "".Ueljn. U .'u „„ ,nwm.nl M M
a

our copy to a neighbor and forgot
to notice the name of the artist.
.
*----------- * u___
.u-1
county road from Bugbec comers
east Is scraped every day while the ,
nonn
north ana
and soutn
south county roaa
road running from one end of the neighborhood to the other isn't even plowed.
And two mail carriers, the Delton
bus and our children and teacher
travel the north and south one. or

«“min* ss.'.tSrJs,
j none other than LeRoy Van Dusen,
to Grand Rapids.
'a natural lover o( fieet-fooled BARRY CO. COW MAKES
—r— —— v-•—• —
j horses. He was a man who had a
say!«ng.
V*'xpec**! talent of knowing how to de­
product of 1930. 1x11 01 JWO. The ve|op lhelr
allci bring out
present tread U eimpiy geUta* back
»wiu
wln - ^.g , ,^3.
lO Lhe t°UrC.C1
U‘“
**«“ qn-lity U&gt;°. regardl..* of whether
—the EgypUan frescoes, the high
tn B mtn „ a horse
O0.lh.U:
P'rUan
m on. of the races in Hasim*..
J,”ane* *nd Chl', Mr. Van Dusen entered hie superb
nose paintings.
; Hul8 trotter "Nellie Niles." Ex-Gov.
There te a contemporary American chaae Oaborn. also a lover of fine .
school maturing in the midwest to- horses, happened to be here at the J
day. the speaker continued. Onc of time and was so impressed with lhe
the best known exponents of this 1 performance of "Nellie Niles" that!
school te Grant Wood, of Iowa, who 1 he offered Mr. Van Dusen $1500
takes liberty with nature and paints , in cash for har. That waa a splendid !
rhythm Instead of how people look, offer, very templing, and In a way!
John Stewart Curry, a fanner also the owner quite reluctantly declined,
from Iowa, has a style of hte own But she went on lo added glories, 1
and paint* to tell a story. Peter especially on the half mile circuits,
Blum, lhe Carnegie prise winner -in and triumphed on many fields with '•
1934. has the same Idea as Curry but her mark
ztof
2:iC.
iir.
Vxx
~In
2:10.
Mr.
Van Dusen.
paint* the New York scene rather his day. was the owner of a long
than lhe mid-west, jolin Carrol is string
------------------------“ that -*developed
—•—-•1
of "fast ones,"
our forenxMt Michigan painter. An­ into good "winners." While he may
other American. John Marin, is said have remained more or less in the
to be lhe world's greatest water color 1 background, yet he has provided a
artist.
lot of entertainment and pleasure
Mr. Bach illustrated hte lecture for hundreds at thousands of Michi­
wllh slides showing paintings of the gan people in the days when horse­
jUflerent schools of art, The impres- racing was inure general than it is
slontels believe lhe only thing real j today.
in nature te the impression at the i
Hte love of fast horses, and the
time. Claud Monet painted many! ability to develop their speed and
canvasses of the same scene to ren-1 “will lo win.” stents to have been
der a fleeting impression. The ex- j transmilted to hb son Clyde. After
pressionlsls have a vision of nature 1serving several years as a jockey.
In terms of geometric form and I Clyde Van Dusen won recognition
------------ -U an -------------C0UntfyS m0Sl willful
color. tA...,
Paul -Cezanne
expres­ gs Qnc of
sionist and te called the father of trainers and capped the honor by
cubism. In contrast to expressionism having hte gelding, named after
and impressionism are realism and himself, win the great Kentucky
surrealism, or super-realism. Georgia Derby. The horse that wins that
O'Keefe's paintings mark the be­ event must not only be bred right,
ginning of realism.
but trained correctly. A rule that
Mr. Bach thinks that modern art would
„r_._ apply .to humans too. as far as
Is pronouncedly here to stay, al- success goes,
though it k best understood by
WEST HOPE.
scholars, geniuses, and children. A 1
Fred
the birds. No r
prettier
sight
great percentage of what goes into
_ -----------------------------—
a painting can't be explained. If it than a flock of quail busily making
could, lhe artist would be a novelist their way to the grain they trust
and not a painter.
‘ will be wailing for them.^They can
------------ -e
-----------------. i&gt;e made quite tame with a little

NEW OFFICIAL RECORD.
A Guernsey cow owned by R F.
Locke v.
of Cressey has just finished .
a
new official record for production
which entitles her to entry in the
Advanced Register of the American

and MA, Wt» tMV*
producing 137185 pounds of milk been under th* doctors «•!«, ar*
and 635 pounds of fat In class A. I reported better.
, Qbtud Moeher ta much improvwd
in health.
HOPE CENTER.
.
School opened this morning after ' STRIKER SCHOOL DI8TB3CY.
two weeks' vacation on account of,
(nov drifted roada and a case ot children called on
»rM
r„.r W-UU. ioeaUB.
‘
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Amsler and who waa Injured In an nutomobuB
Mr*. Lucy Leonard of Homer visited —■-•—- •—’ —
at Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Leonard's
Mr and Mrs. Willard
ac- Schear's lhe week
and MrsIckn
chrystal
comptnlnd
Mr
and Mrs Walter .
end.
____________
I Rockhill of Hasting* to Battle I
Lyle and William Ashby. Clyde ' S^k^Bunday^w^
’rocnrlhe*day
«---- •- ------— --------- -------.. ,h 4 „ 'I
Leonard. Chas. Cable are helping wtth Mr
Mra charie* Ickes i
u&gt; lianest lhe ice crop at Acker's and family.
Point
Mn. Rebecca Bryans of Charlotte J
Mr. and Mrs. 3111100 Warner ‘ and Mn. Lon Campbell visited Mr*. I
from Kalamazoo spent Saturday Sarah Ickes one day last week.

Another

OUTSTANDING

AEAT SAL
At All A
A&amp;P MARKETS
This Week!

Ll NCOLN SAVED *2500 A YEAR

Meats and the finest ot Sea Poods
have been purchased to stock every
A A P Market to insure entire satis­
faction in year meat baying at the
lowest possible prices.

for 12 Years
Steaks
Boiling Beef
Smoked Picnics

Abraham Lioooln, up

Praident, were small. A* a lawyer,

Slab Bacan

charged. Yet he aaved $2500

Pure Lard

year for 12 year*. White he waa

Mild Sapr

!7&lt;

I*re«ident he saved one-half of lua

Pork Sausage

salary of $25,000.

Liver

The Great Emancipator knew the
emancipating power of thrift. He
preached thrift and practiced it.

His life might well he a model
today for both public and private

expenditure.

N
K OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Mt
Ik

Pork Chops

he was noted for' the low fee* he

a

Loan-Meaty

Bacon

Roast Beef
Chuck Cate
Pork Loin Roest^/lr^n'r

Sauerkraut

SH
'4? Me

Spare Ribs
Dried Beef

Frankfurt*
mincbolocna
Fillet of Pollock
Ground Beef

Choppod

•» 99«
lie
19«
Fillet*, 2 11m. 29c

Bread

Grandmother'*

Log Cabin Syrup
Cracker Jack

3

Campfire

j

Wyandotte Cleanser

1

Mop Handles

Iona Peaches

Peaches Del Monte
Stuffed Olives
Sparkle

Encore

Al! Flavor.

Lipton's Tea
Bokar Coffee
Rajah Syrup

Pancake Flour
Keyko

Sue.,field

«

Easy Task Soap Chips
c~* - s™11

Cheese

Wheaties
Salado Tea "» L-Ul

SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Price*:—
16% Dairy-41.55 per 100 lb*.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 lb*.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lb*.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lb*.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp;. Company
Hatting* Telephone 2257

There Is No Other Way

‘
CST “

Pet or Carnation Milk

19c
11c
19c
tic
tic
19c
tic
l- 19c
*■
19c
10c
lie
19c

Whitehouse Milk
In-supplying telephone service to
Michigan, this Company's first
concern is with the present. Above
all else, die service must be good
today. But lo serve lhe present,
wc must be constantly preparing
for lhe future.
To illustrate: In Detroit stands
Michigan's largest long distance
switchboard. It represents in­
vested money, skilled labor and
thorough engineering study. Tlic
need for this switchboard did not
exist at lhe time plans were made
for it. But a careful survey of lhe
future had plainly indicated that
such a need was coming. And
when it came, this Company was
perfectly equipped to handle the
heavy traffic of long distance
calls that flowed in and
out of Michigan's great
Jr
industrial ureas.
H J

Tlic intricate medianum behind
your telephone cannot be assem­
bled overnight, nor thrown to­
gether to meet a sudden need.
It must be “built ahead.’’ To
do this intelligently — and eco­
nomically—requires an inten­
sive engineering survey of such'
factors as bhiftsJn population,
industrial^owlopmenta and
’ in
‘ reHjCstatc.
•
trends
r’jiie ne«Iect
of these preparations
is could be
as wasteful as building a bridge
accommodating a single lane of
traffic, only to find later that
additional lanes are imperative.
It is not a mere academic
theory tliat this policy of budding
for the future is the only way to
provide high-grade telephone
service. Experience has ropeatedly demonstrated that
W

PAG Soap
Fels Naptha Soap
Scot Tissue

Mt

Waldorf Tissue
Rolled Oats

fit
SneayCeH

Maxwell House Coffee

Excal Soda Cracker*
Rite Crackers

Fresh Fruits and
Grapefruit

Applet

there is no other way.

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

Dealers in Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Salt, Ume,
Cement and Coal

n«
19e
fQc

Salt Mackerel
2 for 15c Herring
Smoked Herring
lb. 19c Oyster*,Solid Pack,pt. 23c
Smoked Boneless
Salmon Steak, Ft
Herring
lb. 19c
Red
27c

The Home Economics group met
Rankin Hart started shearing I
with Mrs. Lottie Lindsay on’Wed- sheep for Mrs Zilpha Morehouse
nesday wlUi thirteen members and Monday morning with lhe machine
four visitors present. Helen Shep­ mounted on sleighs so he could get
ard presented the new lesson on through. &lt;As a town greenhorn we'd
"Foundation Garments, and Suit­ like lo ask If they blanket the poor
able Material for the Dress." She also little sheep after depriving them of
gave a demonstration on how to their nice warm coats Ulis cold, cold
test fabrics. The afternoon was weather. Sounds sort of cruel.—Ed. &gt;
given over to a check-up on the
No church or Sunday school the
muslin models. On Feb. 27 the next past two weeks because of' the Imclass will be held with Hattie KU-' passablllly of the roads and the ex­
lick.
treme cold.
Among thoae who are having the 1
Several families from here at­
mump* are Bobby Klllick. Hugh tended the four onc-act plays at
James Nevins, Glenn Leeper. Lyle ' Central auditorium in Hastings
Champion and Clark and Alvin Wednesday evening put on by the
Nottingham.
! Civic Players and written by . local
Charlie Gage attended a birthday people. Tiie Junior play. "One Mad
party for Silas Doetcr on Salur- 1 Night." is thte Friday evening at
day evening.
11 ••
-------------------------■ •Miss
— •Lauris •An­
lhe
some place
and
On Saturday afternoon. John and ders. formerly of here, te in the cast.
Lee Klllick and Georgia Bellingham
Il being an undisputed fact that
visited Mrs. Hattie Beattie in Com­ . the elder generation had a hand in
stock. She te now able to sit up getting us into one economic mess,
after having been confined to iicr those of us not wishing to support
bed with arthritis.
them al lhe tune of $200 per month
The Helping Hand Club meeting for the rest of our lives had better
which was to have been held al the wake up or we may find ourselves
home of Nettle Keyes on Wednes­ doing just that. The Towtu-cnd plan
day. was indefinitely postponed.
te more widespread and has more
Elizabeth Burgett of Marshall. followers than, the average person
Robert Warner of W. S. T. C. and realizes. It wouldn't be a bad idea
Grace Earle of Plainwell were week­ , to attend a few meeting* and ask a
end guests in the Walter Warner । few questions which they would al­
home.
,
liakft ’ most have to answer.

GOOD COAL make* warn-, friend*,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleated with the fine,
even heat. Low in ath, and longburning. Try a ton today and
•ave on your fuel bill*.
■

»•
»•
&gt;u.

3* SALES TAX

Faacy Delieiow

�the
I

Hastings

DAD PUTS STAMP

banner.
I

Thursday. February b,

im

*»"*&lt;•«« U* likes and dislikes of |l

------------------------------------------------------ ,
WOODLAND,
Cal., besides other relatives and
M r* A ITUMQ । Mtai Louise Hilbert ot Ann Arbor | Diends,
XKr.a IY1. u.
1 taws
the week
week end
end wllh
with her
her moth-1
moth- I Mtas
Mtas Pauline
Bowman
V. A.
A. 1
11
IL1Y13 ।; gspent
pent the
‘
—
—— and Mtas
1
&gt;•
_
oi-.ui
—
irn.
a, aim «.
aec?rdln« to Professor Moore-"We
er&gt; Mr3. state HObert. Mtas Hil- Diitv,
Ruth n.
Bailey of East Laming spent
?• ??!! ; Children Imitate Food Likes .must not make the child 'food con- ,
jbert has secured employment in jthe week end with lhe former's
,
and DiBlikes of Persons
petousV'
The state Y. m. C. a. convention Ann Arbor and expects to make her mother. Mr*. Delta Bowman,
mv.
.j »
When serving food which. the at Detroit, January 30. was well ■ home there.
I The communltv nrntherhnrvi
They Admire
! child may dislike, it is best to serve attended and challenging informa- । —h ,
. Ualnn,
,nt.rtaln- Mondav nlsht a? thr
If dad criticizes the food, don’t' bismail helping* and with other tian wasgiven on present meds of mlh ( families Tuesday night; house.
M. E- church. Supper was
blame the youngsters, sluing at the food.' the child likes. The new food youth. The talk on • communism in r*.
J "with a pot luck supper. A good served at 7 o’clock. The speaker was
Our Midst"
Midst" wo*
was startling.
startling, Aa ear
car load
load time ta promised by the entertaln- Glenn Dunn of Muskegon. He was
table if they refuse to cal something should
should be
be served
served aa number
number of
of times
times Our
new. That bit of psychology U of- al intervals until tiie child becomes i from Barry county attended,
sent by Governor Fitzgerald, who
7'..------- —
,.
ment committee.
ferod ta parents by Dorothy L. familiar
with—
theI flavor,
insists.Girl
•i TRe*rrves.
1’*
------- - --------The she
Michigan
lhe; ni,i d,..,,.,- •»— ■
.
,
,
Miss Moore ------------has made
of tiie Y. W C-A . held tiu-ir i The Woman a Foreign .Missionary was unable to come.
Moore, assistant professor of nu- “a -special
—*&gt;-• Juniors
’ Friday night Is the carnival put
study
children
of pre- -----------annual ----convention
lhe Detroit I Boctety of ine Methodist church
1 trition at Michigan State CoBegr. -----* of
—diets
------- -- for
-------------—• —
- ---------- —at—
—
-----------_
----------------..
...
„
.
-j
held
their
February
meeting
at
the
on by tiie Methodist Bunday school
M Taste in food te a nlatter of habit I school i&gt;ge. Fried foods are taboo for Y. W C- A. last week end.
I borne
of Mr*. Ernest Shorno Mun- at the Community itouse. ft will bcr'* and must be developed like other .‘the pre-school chtlif and raw fruits! Our
Our Mother
Mother and
and Son
Son banquet
iwiiqucn
------------------v : iiabite alic *ay».’•Children are quickt uno
“nd vcgcmoKs
vegetables snouni
should oe
be Kepi
kept nut
out commiHce
committee icci
feel gratciui
grateful io
to on
all me
the,day **«“*'«■
J of the diet until the age of three. | folks who have kindly consented to I
1.. Mesdamea
VT- •’Harve
ST”" Towns, n
jzon
“7”' get their supper. The evening will
' Ij One
Onc quart of milk per day is e*-1
ea- help on Ute program and with work Hyne*. Lester Brumm. A. w. Bates, be full of all kinds of entertainment
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
-----------Harve Woodman and J. V. HUbert
Mrs. Eva Deane has returned to
r«r I s..-.i-*nti#l to tbe health -of*
young.....
ciul- involved in serving a big banquet.
mue of apprectation
Susi* Fisher attended the lier home in Lansing after spending
! dren. according to Mtas Moore
; • A deep sense
appreciation I*
is “nd
for^Red Croas work- several weeks in the Olin home.
ih. ’ A day’s diet suggested for tiie pre- expressed
expressed to
lo all
all financial
financial contribucontribu- annual dinner •*'L
,ln IIsciiool
school child.
child, B3
as prepared by Miss . tors who have made our Y. M. C. A.
A. . «?
cr? Bt , ,7
dBy e.ve.
Miss Marqulta Shupp, daughter of
’ * I Moore,
V/Aziro follows:
TnllAU-.rU'nrk possible during
work
rilirliw 1935.
105'.
'’ NtTS. J. V
V.’Hijb*
Hilbert
rl *
entertained
ntertalned her
I
Mr. and Mrs. Will Shupp underwent
»
Breakfast: prunes (seeded and
"No man was ever injured by the 1 “ridge Club Thursday afternoon. an operation far appendicitis lost
cut up&gt;, wheat cereal with sugar truth, but he is injured who abides Mrs_ Karl Faul. Mrs Raymond Mcand thin cream. 1-2 slice of buttered Un hte error and ignorance."—Mar- “*°d
v. Kilpatrick were j
,nc
On Friday night a pot luck supper
t toast, and one glass of milk. 9 30 A.-Stus Aurelias in Character Maga- ;in
* pr.«
pr M. wumm.
„nneJ?’
Mr. and Mn. Karl Faul and chll- I •*“ »*
Evangelical
* M.: cod liver oil followed by 1-2 zine. Read the magazine “Characdren were guests of Mr. and Mrs. i cliurch tQr the members of the Sun*
1 glass of orange Juice. Dinner: one , ter" in lhe Hastings Library.
wlll H. J Stang of Battle Creek Sunday. &lt;
“h001 »ho "*
honor
' small liver paltie. two to three
Welcome Comers Y group «...; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lehman of ro»- A P™«ram will follow, rnu-.ic.
cluck i„ I mashed potatoes with butter. 1-3 । meet with Sanford Crook for their; Woodbury were guests of Mr. and lalka and presenutlon of diplomas.
‘ Lr to 1-2 cup buttered carrols mashed. [ next meeting February 13.
Mrs. Fay C. Wing Sunday.
—Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brumm and
i4l-2 slice bread and butter, 1 small &lt;
ASSYRIA
Mr- and Mrs- Mlllln Trumbo re- son Bruce and Miss Dorothy Green
piece of sponge cake witfo fruit
, turned Sunday from Hartford after . attended the Farm Bureau’s an» sauce.
1 Rtasa
milk..
nt 3 P. i
l-2*g
“ita~6f
ninic Lunch
SuDDcr"
M°?n
BrlS , a week’s may with their daughter, nual Family night at Fuller hall in

NOTICE TO CBETHT0H3.

Ytn.

ON SONNY'S EATS I

by aid &lt;o»H on Tu»mIi
!M*t. A ll 1'136. al I

MORTGAGE rOMCMIUIl
NoW THEREFORE

now.

THF.Hr.roin:

flull.llnr

»t Feellen 52 In T

nn«* half ul the Koulh

BANNF.R WANT AIIVS. FAY

MORTGAGE SALE

There’s No Speculation
About your investment in Building
and Loan Shares.

iTetit huinc Uno imtitntfJ.

Since the beginning of civilisation the home has been
the standard of worth and value. Building and loan
shares are secured by first mortgages un homes. This is
the kind of security this old building and loan association

ronti

Chr«l bhliltr *t
till* court hourHarry eminty. M
of March IVta

Successful for More Than 46 Yearn
WRITE FOR INFORMATION

Commeneinr at th

JJ'tje Rational ffioan &amp;
flnupBtment ffinntpatui
1250 Griswold Sl
Etlabliihtd 1889
Dt trait‘t Oldtit Building A Loan

J. L. MAUS ham7cT’

MfiiBur
E»«t I t
Knuth nn

nil ’.&lt;&gt; link■

DETROIT, MICH
MEMBER
LDlRaL HOMt LOAN
•■BANKSYSHM
Adflbert CcrtritM

.
j ■ coddled 3-4 cun crealn of tomato ' !£h02,1 “nd ^?US Ara.*T S
1 Mrs Wa,d plant-5 Wld daughters. Hostings Friday night.
........... SJJ I buttlr^l graham^crackri V-3
Bu,"ou«h. recently fhitahed the whUe Mr PUnU. wbo u
of,
-------------- ------------ The ladies of the Baptist church
” I-” cuu H* tian? cut fine 1-3
wwk g‘Jen..a.1 ”
,he Hartford Farm Bureau elevator.,
Friday ancnioon
afternoon lor
for
.
--.,1 Ml.,
gave a party maay
,
■-* tup awing ix nn.. cm
one.
i-j
।
Bivens
and
y'
1
-, “™n,p'"‘.lc‘l. rmiii
. dui™
..i nniiwi.
—
und i itolSSL.'STL niroJ
“""lorn
olhrr
rurm i Mr,. Jo.ph MU a&lt; lhe home ot
cup ppricota cut fine,
SlUiired Smilb. Retlalrr of Frobste.
Cairns of the Durfee school are I, Bureau elevator managers on a tour 1 -■
J-Mrs. -•
Fred —
Elder.
— i of milk.
registered in the Extension class in 1 through
Ohio. Kentucky. Indiana
NOTICE TO CREDITORa.
.
inland Weeks spent Saturday
I hygiene now functioning there unhome through Chicago. They
y night
and Sunday helping in the
BARRYVILLE.
dpr th*/iwtion of Prof .h.
Rugen
of were
gonem-LouS
a week. , Ward
reported
wr.-ter
rolter
The L. A. S. will be held at the th* University of Michigan.
th£ weather colder
;r. LouU.UL
, home of Mr. and Mrs. Merritt , Betty Ketcham. Bobby VanAukcn, thnn in Michigan.
1 Mtas Dorothy Green of Battle
! Meade Thursday, Feb. 6. Everyone Harold Holmes and Mtas Scrven,
Mrs.
Mrs. Floyd
Floyd Collar
Collar of
of South
South WoodWood- Creek spent a few days last week al
ta cordially invited.
students of Battle Creek High tand sp&lt;.nt Sunday with Mr. and
her home here.
of omd d. i There is not much news this week, school, returned to their work Mon- j Mrs Ralph Rise.
The cold bad weather of the past
PT'.aont th»ir ] It has been so cold most everyone day after the semester exams.
( Mr. and Mrs. Delmond Culler are
Bc* has been busy keeping the home
Russell Eugene Kthe name given moving into the Wlll Mohler house two weeks has slowed up the work
• i, l fires burning.
the nine pound son bom recently
----- Mr.
---- and-- --------—
• Parmalee on the water works project and
Mr* Forrest
schoolhouse.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brumm and to Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hewitt.
and children of Battle Creek visited
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pennock and
Annella spent Sunday with her par-j The Community Night at t™
the |. their parents. Mr. ________
and Mrs. Grant
daughter visited relatives In New
ente. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph DeVine. | Briggs church, scheduled for Fri- i Osgood. Sunday.
and helped Ralph celebrate hu
his day night, was postponedFrank Nlelhainer ta under the York stale and then went to Flori­
postponed. until
. birthday.
F*b21.
due ,o
to ‘the
drifted roads
roads ;| ----doctor
care
and e.pccu.
expects lp
to ue
be cuncon­ da on a short visit.
------------------------------.
Frb
- al
'duc
h5, drl,tcd
— »s vm
.v a.Kj
Rodney Warner of Hastings ta the
that; _Thn
Rrie«« T
jiHIm’ am
-- -----OBDEB FOB publication .
।I Word came here this
thte week that
The Briggs
Ladles
Aid Society flned to u,_
hte -------home---------for at
least_ three
local agent for the Standard Oil
'" Mr. and Mrs. John Higdon have met 0" Thursday for a pot luck: weeks
| reachedi Kissimmee.
and mnd»
made plans
for future
future
.
vi—i—i Florida,
r-i...1.1. safely
..r.i..|, dinner
dinner nnd
plans for
Mr* Clyde Wise who now lives In Company.
Petitions have ^been filed with
in and are having a fine time.
u
nujnclnjot Ite wort
Woodland, loot ter wrddln, Hna
The leaders of the Lacey Exten- over twenty years ago when she Henry Remington, village clerk, re­
questing
that
the
question
of the
• or i' Last Week's Letter.
-----1 S1OJ}
MtA- L.ucy GUIasple lived on a farm near Easby. North
| Mtas Margery Gillette lias gone to and Miss Leona Ketcham, met tiie Dakota. Two weeks ago Monday. village coining under tiie 15 mill tax
Ia’k Muskegon where she has employ- . C1BSB 0,1 Wednesday and presented I on January 13. she received it In the limitation be submitted lo the voters
at the annual village election March
r;n&lt; ment.
the lesson on sewing, continuing the , mall. The ring was a wide gold
rine I ,\frs. Herbie Wilcox spent several wa, , undF5 way1 band with her husband's and her
Mrs. William Mater received word
(dayslost week
inKalamazoo
and ! .Ny ,,er; B freshman of Has- own Initiate engraved on it. Fred
of
tiie death of her brother. Clyde
if • . helped hcr son celebrate hisbirth-, l*_nRB High school, who lias finished Roder. who was a neighbor boy at
tin-' day on Saturday.
Ifl* first semester’s work, has joined - the time they lived tn North Duku- Bollinger. 41. .of Battle Creek who
passed
away Sunday momlng. He
.,X
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hulsebus and
P’rents. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin -----------------------------------ui. -----------is married
and now Ilves on lhe
was
bom al Morgan Oct. 22. 1B94
daughters of Bellevue were dinner Mill*r- who ar* now located at Oli- farm where they did. Mr. Rodcr
,."f guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbie Wil- VBt- T11'* wl11 continue to operate remembered Mrs. Wise very well nnd had lived- in Battle Creek the
past four years. He leaves hte widow,
ld j',. cox Sunday.
th* cr°t* mill.
and when he found the ring he
phi
Miss Wilson, who teaches al Barre ^na Case. Chrystal and recognized the initials on it and one brother. Fred of Battle Creek, a
ryvflle, was a Sunday guest of Mr. c*a&gt;-‘on. Jr., were in Hastings Sat- so sent it to her. M17. Wise is wry half brother. James Howard of Mor­
’„p’ I and Mrs. Burr Fassctt
j urduy on business and were dinner happy over the return of her ring gan. and tiie stater. Mrs. Muter.
Funeral services were held Tuesday
«[&gt;• | Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McCoy. Mr.! 8U«ta of their uncle, A. C. Hyde. long thought lost.
J^land Mrs. Billie Corie and baby of n“d
,
I ---------------- —
-­ and Lucile afternoon al the Farley Funeral)
Ellen Jean
Leffler
Grand Rapids nnd Mr. and Mrs. I. Tn° 1CP banest ta on. That cut Nicholson spent the week end with Home. Burial In oak Hill cemetery.
•- ;Gent Ganka and children of Battle by pow.er,fr°m c&gt;w lake at Har- Miss Doreen Clary and Frederick
HENDERSHOTT.
: Creek were dinnerguests ofMr.and r*n8ton * landing ta about 14 inches Clary of Hastings.
Mildred Hmith. Refill*
Basil Hayward and family of Allo
- Mrs. Will
Hyde Sunday,callers; ,lca al,d vpr&gt;’ good quality. Clay-;The Woman's Club are planning
were dinner guesta at the home of
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION,
'were Dr. and Mrs. Morgan Skinner I ,on jV*' Rnnp™J ,merchnndisc deal- their annual banquet at which they
of Mlcblcnn
Chas. Van Vronken on Sunday.
। of Grand Rapids.
!£,01 “ccy n,led bls ice house on I entertain their husbands to be held
Tiie Ladles’ Aid will meet this
-----Thursday. It required 59o cakes‘.Tuesday evening, Feb. 11. The Civic
averaging one hundred jxninds each. | Players of Hastings are bringing month at the home of Mrs. Warren
ORANGEVILLE.
Brogan.
1036
J. W Sheffield and Adam Lcinhart |
CiovYrL.. f--------I on* of their one-act plays. The muMrs. Leo Hendershott ta about
were in Hastings Saturday on busiagain, callers and guests at the
Hendershott home the past week
Mr. .nd Mrs. Cllionl Kahllo
J*'" •
------------------------ „ „„
were
Rev. and Mrs. Conklin. Mr.
1
runo,”'K.Mo“TSYr.teX,''e i S“terOr“" ChUW’ •" “'r''n•
and Mrs. Clyde Hendershott of
Tlic Canin Firn cilrl-s Knnm.n, -i .
’
Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Izon
Slocum ot Battle Creek.
NASHVILLE.
Grace Brill was home from Kala­
Mr. and Mrs Toni McWhirter of at‘*n&lt;lc&lt;1- They receded about nine
Gall Lykins and John Dull were
o™„,. «rrr si.r.u Ir™. mda&gt;- un!
Mow.)' on UuMno,.
„„......... , ,
------- I ...
muiiuay un OUSinCM. mazoo from Friday night until Sun­
day night.
their
ceremonial
gowns.
The
clover
Leaf
club
met
Thurstil Monday afternoon of relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Nosnor of
Tiie P.,T. A. will meet al the Town , day night at lhe home of Mrs. Clare
here.
----------------- - a a
I*1®1’.
I Cole. The assisting hostess was Mrs. Battle Creek visited at tiie home of
Wc recently found a man who . Mr: and Mrs Harr&gt; Panels and Milo Young. Some of the members Floyd Garrison onFriday enroute to
Chicago.
admitted he’s not trylifg to leave ’ “au8hlcr spent Sunday wllh Hie 1 met last Friday and made mittens
t,u,uicu.
Linden Bryans from lhe Marlin
footprints on the sands of time, be- Vandcrweile family of Kalamazoo. I for the needy children.
Lee unpLap- district
Aunt Diehl Hol­
ing more interested in covering up , Mr’ and Mrs- Ed Hunt spent Bun- I Funeral services for Mrs. uee
—--- called
---------. on
— ------a lot of those already made.
1 ,y **th Mrs. Marybelie Johncox |; ham
nam were held Friday afternoon at
at ,I c0,n
c0!"b
“ on Sunday.
?u"d“y’ ,
,
clock at the Wilcox church I Mr
Mr- and
and Mrs E
Eln,pr
i who is ill.
two o’’clock
*n,er Hanna of
AAn.t.by
.... Rev.
n_ ___
*
—t Mel
W.l
| Thrtssa and Patricia Ann Hay-1 conducted
m__E __
Hoyt____
Mrs'
Kalamazoo i.lcltx.l
visited tl.xlr
their 'ill'
father.
j ward of Delton were Sunday visitors Gail Lykins sung. Burial was in the Hanna- on Sunday at the home of
nt the Jcm Haney home and Donald I Wilcox cemetery. Mrs Lapham wan 1 Mrs’
Haynes. Other callers
I Haney of Hastings spent the week 1 41 years old and passed away at I wero Mr Bnd Mrs Orlle FUher with
end there.
| Penhock hospital of itreptococcus
Etw B‘“nton from Dowling and
Mrs. oils Replogle of Kalamazoo | pneumonia. Most of hcr married life Ronald Haynes and family from Ute
I spent Sunday at her home here.
had been spent in Maple Grove Hines district.
Frank Barnard, who has been She leaves her husband, seven chll-! Mr* Fences Hendershott went
। quite illat the MacLeod home is im-: dren. her father, E- B- Walls of Kel- I w,lh Mrs- Wallace Eldred to lhe
proving 111 atprese,
present writing.
. amazoo. two staters. Mrs. Albert I
Put on by Uw C,v,c Ptayw* ln
Mr.
and Mrs.
Mr .nd
Mr,. Davenport
Davenport have
haveI ’G&gt;vc»
Green of.near miuuicvmc.
Middleville, uuo
and Mrs
Mrs । HasUngs last Wednesday. Mrs. El­
‘
Detroit, who came
came 1 drpd (A,u,a Mulr&gt; u wiu‘ the Clv,c
beer going to Hastings to sec’ Orin
Mildren Green of Detroit,
Dayton, who had a stroke and is , from Florida for the funeral—one players vow-, she certainly has been
Seriously ill at Pennock hospital.
brother. Roy Walls of Banta Marie good In lhe plays put on here at
Hendershott.
Our Bunday school superintend­
ent requests that each of us Invite
someone to come-to Sunday school

“u"S uSilSJiX

UCTION SALE!
Having decided to quit farming, I will have an auction sole on what is
known as the Martin Smith farm, Sec. 3, Rutland township. Go five miles west
on M-37 to Al-Gon-Quin school, turn left and go 1 1-2 miles. The sale will be
held on
v

THURS., FEB. 13
COMMENCING AT 1:00 P. M.

I OFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:

HORSES.
Bay gelding. II years old. wt. 1300.
Roan gelding, 10 years old, wt. 1300,
sound.

CATTLE.
Holstein cow, 8 years old. giving milk,
due in August.
Guernsey cow, 3 yean old, due in Feb.
Guernsey cow. 3 years old, giving milk,
due in April.
3 yearling Guernsey heifert.
Heifer, 6 months old.

HOGS.
8 shoals.
j— —
Brood sow, Chester White.
HAY AND FODDER.
Quantity alfalfa hay.
4 or 5 tons timothy hay.
50 shocks com in field.
Quantity com stalks.
25 bushels oats.

*“ ‘“"°n

NIAGARA
FALLS

FARM TOOLS.
McCormick-Deering mowing machine.
Dump rake.
Bonner plow. Syracuse plow.
John Deere riding cultivator.
Spring tooth drag. Wagon with rack.
Walker's trailer with new tires.
Pair bob sleighs. Pump jack.
Half H. P. gas engine.
Double harness.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
Sideboard.
Davenport, folding bed.
Half sixe iron bed. Kitchen cabinet.
Cupboard with gloss doors.
Small sheet iron heater.
Quantity fruit cans.
Ten gal. milk can.
Five gal. cream can.
Other articles too numerous to men­
tion.
Nothing

removed

PULLMAN AND COACH

BABGA1N BOUND TRIP — BERTH FARES EXTRA
Leave HASTINGS 5:11 P. M.. Centra! Time.
Arrive NIAGARA FALLS. N. Y, 9:35 A. TH., Eastern Time.

AS NEW FALLEN

SNOW
This con truthfully be said of Highlands
Produced and de­

livered to your home fresh and pure, full

High in Cream
Content Raw or
Pasteurized

build!
That new home . . . new room . . . fireplace
. . . roof... or any remodeling you may be

values, free from impurities. This is milk

planning to do. Let us help you. Now is the

at its best ... a complete food. To re­

time to make plans and arrangements for
those improvements. The Hastings Lumber

, ing qualities of milk, be sure you get the

BEST.

Order Highlands Grode A Milk.

PROPRIETOR
DEWEY REED, AucttoiSMr

MICHIGAN CENTRAL

of health-giving vitamins, rich in food

ceive the full benefit of the body-build­

Qt

FOR INFORMATION CONSULT LOCAL TICKET AGENT-

and Cool Company carry a complete line
of BUILDING MATERIALS.

HASTINGS LUMBER &amp; COAL CO.

HIGHLANDS
Phone 2651

DAIRY

ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.

Hastings

PHONI2515

FRANK SAGE

M

BUI

LEI

book
thia
Bout
nta

my»

• canu

Min
mau

Ulya
hte
from

thln

But
trac
tala
clos
tion
The
men

ston
art
tc'rl
wit
atom
bee

the

Ung
the
nnt

thi
con
ml
a h
thi

LE

Ha

em
Ha
hlg

dit
tio
si c

wi

brought good results before and will
again if we all try.
Last Thursday the school pupils
enjoyed another birthday treat dur­
ing tiie noon hour. This lime it waa
Hortense Mead's birthday.
The men are getting ready for the
big event of the winter months—
that of filling the community ice­
house. Beside the hard work, it
means a good' time together and a
big dinner served by the ladles.

ROUND TRIP

FRIDAY OR SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7 AND 8

till

D. 0. RICHEY

$550

WINTER EXCURSION

Dairy Grade A Milk.
TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.
settled for.

cxr‘,cXhx£Ts,.'l 1 ^"or”v' c,'“"h"
2,th * “ *
*’d |
XMHVIUX.

EIC

BOWNE CENTER.
The patrons of tiie Alto Creamery
from this way enjoyed a fine dinner
and program at tiie Alto Grange

“

O

I hallThursday.---------------I
I

Will Fox lost a horse last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Skinner. Mrs.
Levi Miller, and Mrs. Harold Begcrstrom all of Leighton and Mrs. Mer­
rill Karcher spent Friday at Watt
Thomas’ the ladles assisting in tying
off comforters.
Bom to Mrs. Doris Loss Wednes­
day a nine and half pound girl.
Miss Mamie Tyler is caring for
them.
Mrs. Addle Benton. Mrs. Merrill
Karcher and Mrs. WRtt Thomas at­
tended the matinee at Hastings last
Wednesday seeing Shirley Temple in
•The Littlest Rebel.”

STRENGTH ALL
GONE
RS
M. Clark at
R217 No Honan SI.
lartaon. Mkh.. said:

M

ti

s

K

o
th
h
Ir

o

w
P

w

D
X

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, FEBRUARY 13,1936

12 PAGES

WAS I CONTINENT [Hasting!f Merchants To Hold BROTHERHOOD TO
INTHEPiCIFICS',ri,,« Fair Here In March
SUBMERGED AGES AGO BY
A GREAT UPHEAVAL OF
THE EARTH

DISPLAYS, DEMONSTRATIONS, BOOTHS,

10. H. BBAMBLZ, MABTEB
OF STATE GRANGE, IB
I
GUEST SPEAKER

|

PAGES 1 to 8

OHEFEBRUARY 25 CO.TREASURER
PAYS 55,006.87

Young People Name the
Committees for Fifth
Public Event

REPRESENTS COLLECTION

'AL BROWN MD
I
DO A SPL
Night and Day Work Has
Kept County’s Trenk
Lines Open

On Tuesday evening, Feb. 25. me
OF DELINQUENT TAXES Brown, state highway maintenance
BANQUET
St. Rose Erin Supper Club will have
the fifth in their series of dances
superintendent. for hla good tract
FOR THREE MONTHS
NIGHT, F
and floor shows at the community
Something new in Hostings is the will be shown, with entertaining |
lines In Barry county op^ti. It has
hall
In
me
Puller
Bldg.
Don
TafTee
forthcoming Merchants' Spring Fnlr
TOWNSHIPS
RECEIVE
DEAN
DAVENPORT
is
general
chairman
and
Wm.
Ken
­
meant
a
night
and
day
fight
for
the
LEAVING THE SOUTH
The
Banner
will
give
further
deI
IN
GREAT
DEMAND
being sponsored by me Hastings
nedy will be master of ceremonies.
anniinr. *&gt;&gt;r*
Club for the week of tails as they are completed, thej
$2,305.24; CITY $320 mighty good job of IL and la enTO BE T0ASTM1
SEA ISLANDS Commercial
AROUND THE
Members of other committees areorgnlzatlon having Just been com■■■ — STATE
March 24.
Decorations.
Clark O’Donnell; jtelvilla,,..
,o ine commenaauan or me
'
—
It will be held In me Home Lum­ pitted late yestrday.
Ab Gruesome Reminders Of &gt; ber Co.'s building which will be The following committees have Farmers WUl Be Interested *vertlslng.
e”lsln«- Peter Fedewa; Tickrta, Balance Goes to Villages, people of this county as well as of Advance Bale of Ticket*
Robert Corkins; Check room. Ed­
County and to the State
• the state highway department The
| filled wim display booths where been appointed;—
Indicates That 400 Unit
I in His Views Concerning
“
World's Greatest Ca­
ward Fisher; Orchestra. Kenneth
■trunk llne5 of lhls county could be
1 plenty of space Is available to put
Entertainment and Prisea—G. E. ।
.
-°
or Michigan
travelled when they could not be tn
Will Be Bold Barty
Goggins: Dining room. Miss Bcatastrophe
Agriculture
Carpenter. David Boyes. Wm. Steb- |
it on in a big way.
While the months pf August and any of the surrounding counties. He
These
merchant
fairs have----be- bln*. Chas. Hinman, Herman Arold. • The next meeting of fhe Hastings 1 trice Goggins: Kitchen. Miss Flor­
Having just road an Interesting 1 ..
—„ —
,—...----------------• book I am going to "sandwich" in I come very popular In cities and A. K Prandsen.
I Brotherhood will be Monday night, ence O'Donnell; Clean-up. Wayne November were the peak months tn has also responded to calls for help banquet win be held next Wn
the payment of delinquent taxes | from Kalamazoo and Kent counties day night, February 19, at •:
Bump
and
William
TafTee.
this letter about those interesting ; towns, drawing large Crowds and
; February 17, at Hie usual place and
In the past these Erin Supper to county treasurer. Lorenzo P. i in assisting In opening of trunk lines
South Sea Islands, and return next. proving a fine advertising medium Barker. G. E. Goodyear. Walter at the usual hour of 7 o'clock.
'
Wallace. Roman Feldpausch. D. w.
week to further letter* about Call for- wherever they have been put on.
The members and their friend* s Clubs have been enjoyed by large Maus, yet there have been substan- in those counties which connected nated
nln and the southwest. No matter I Displays and demonstrations of Walldorff, Carl Wespinter, Frank will have a treat In store for mem. numbers and this, no doubt, will tlal payments of such delinquent wim Barry county trunk llnpa. No
taxes right along
Last week Mr. doubt he will be me first to praise banquet will
*
where they are located, and regard- I foodstuffs, household goods, and sp­ Andrus
for they will have me opportunity be equally as good, or even better.
Maus was able to make distribution his crew of men for their* loyalty
ies* of their size, there Is a strong I pllances representing all the variAdvertising—Tom Baird, Chester to hear Mr. c. H. Bramble, of Lan­
of $5,006 87 of such delinquent taxes, and faithful work.
appeal to Islands way out In the ' oua lines of retail trade in tlie oily Hodgea, Dr. G. W. Lockwood.
sing, Master qf the State Grange. He
which he had collected during me
sea. You can fairly lecl the air of
Is a fluent speaker, much in demand
months of November and December.
mystery that surrounds them. You I
throughout the state for addresses
1935, and January. 1936.
can’t help but wemder ' how' they 1
at such gatherings.
To me city of Hastings and three
■ came.” and whan. You would like to I
These are strenuous times for i
of the Incorporated villages a total
Dun.”..
know their history, but that to all ।
farmers. Everybody recognizes that
something ought to be done to give
1
City
of Hastings--- $320.66
I
come and gone. For some reason too. 1
। better price* for farm products, but
F
INGRAM ESTATE
Village of Nashville
12839
I
they -seem to arouse your poetic Im- I
j so for me right way to do it ha* not
The American Legton Auxiliary
■ Village of Freeport- 4432
I
agination* and appeal to your robeen luunu.
found. The
Supreme uouri
Court nas
has
____ ;_
I vsvii
,nr supreme
PAYS 120,000 TO
| Village ot Middleville ... 37129
I
mantle instincts. That seemed to be will meet on Monday evening, Feb. MEETING
iHlij.
SCHOOL OFFICERS HEARD
HONORING G. ditched
itched the
the AAA
aaa
os nnrnn
unconstltuTHE U. OF M.
I Tlie townships received from Mr.
I
Just as true in the centuries that ' 17, wim Mrs. Ethel Foreman to sew
tickets to sail for this banquet are
I tlonal. How to give
Hive me
tlu&gt; farmers
farnw« bet
hot.­
for the Otter Lake Billet, n call
MANY VITAL QUESTIONS as follows:
FELDPAUBOH
HELD
ON
I
have passed as it Is today. Ever.
Maus, on mis payment of dcilnter
prices
and
not
violate
me
fun
­
I
Ulysses returned to his island after • having come for twelve dresses for
। quent taxes, the following amounts:
EXPLAINED
TUESDAY NIGHT
’ damental tow of the land 1* a prob- HE HAD PLANNED GIV­
girls at tlve Billet. A pot luck sup­
I
his successes, and Stevehson retired I
Stanton
j 1cm. Mr. Bramble ha* his own Ideas
Assyria $ 16236
Lloyd Gaskill.
I
from the world, passing hl* tost days per will be served and It is hoped
: on that subject and will no doubt
ING MUCH LARGER SUM Baltimore
..
197.04
**
there may be a good attendance.
FUNDS SHOULD BE
I
on his beloved Samoa. When you ।
BEGAN BUSINESS
t give Uiem at me Brotherhood next
Barry
245.13
I
think of lands "where every pros-1
UCRF OR VC ARC AQH Monday night, so there ought to be Heirs Contest Will and Get j Carlton -------------- --------KEPT SEPARATELY
183.70
On Thursday evening. Feb. 20.
I
pect pleases." your mind almost auntnt 43 I CHriO MUU a flne attendance at this meeting—
Castleton ......................
16738
Hastings Township—John Llpkry.
I
tomallcally turns to those Incom- I me regular Unit meeting will be
Bulk of His $200,000
not only of farmers who are directly I
Hastings township ....
Many
Treasurers
Do Not Hope—Bernard DeOolla.
I
parably beautiful palm-fringed is- held&gt; at me Legion rooms.
Firm Develops to Keep Pace Interested, but others as well. We ore
Hope-...............................
89.04
Estate
I
lands of the pacific South Sea*.1
Irving—William McCann. .
all Interested in the prosperity ofi
138 83
Follow This Plan and
With Changing Methods
Some of our readers, especially In 1 Irving...............................
I
But for far more than their most at-‘ WPA TO SUPERVISE
farmers.
Johnstown ...................
118.81
Confusion Results
I
tractive settings, those South Sea
The supper squad for next Mon-jI this city and in Irving township. I Maple Grove
and Growing Demands
WINTER SPORTS HERE
’
will
remember
Frederick
F.
Ingram.
!
I
Island* present a great field ftr i
Despite me Impassable roads in
On Tuesday evening a delightful day night will be as follows:
7831
! who was bom In Irving township in I Orangevjllp
I
closer study and deeper investlgnPrairieville—Otis Boulter,
Captain. Walter Watkins
The
Prairieville ....................
5539
a Country Club Coaating and dinner and social lime were enjoyed
1855. He lived In mis city for some
I
lion than they hove ever received. ■
ftuttond—More* Btutx.
hundred twenty-five school officers
I at tije Parker House by the employ- other members are: William Parker.
Rutland...........................
309.61
i of ills earlier years and attended
Grand Street Rink Part
I
Their huge carved stone monu- i|
did get to the meeting on Friday and
jees of Uie Feldpausch Market and Charles Offley. Ralph Moore. W. 3. school while here. He afterwards be- 1 Thomapple ....
28733
I
mcnis; their great ruined temples .
Glenn Blake.
Woodland
of
Program
’ Food Center, honoring Q. Feld- Wills. Henry Chamberlain. B. H. came a successful manufacturer of ■
13605
|. of stone: their stone road*, ond their I
Woodland—Glenn Wotring.
planned.
Wills. Blake Boylan. Gordon EdYankee
Springs
8130
8now&lt;mexed itrwu and slippery i
। drugs and toilet articles In the city i
Yankee Springs—Albert Orav
stone-lined canals, all speak of an sidewalk*
Dr. R. B. Harkness, field director
are always a temptation to
bccn 80 •uc«eM* n.onds. Winston Blieffleld. William of Detroit.
I
artistic, cultured people that mys- ■
City of Hastings—William B
Liningion. Max Dietrjck. j E. John­
of our county Realm Department,
Total returned to town­
youngsters to bring out their sleds {u ^,ur
years
,
Our
readers
may
have
noticed
an
'
I
terlously disappeared.
Up until - , - —„
—
T
"7
—
I
der.
Clyde Wilcox, Allan C. I
told
of
the
various
activities
of
the
n..t U.ou.1. Urey
.i— | Alfred Deljaan of Grand Rapid*, son, Sterling Rogers. Everett Swc- nrtjcle. which appeared In the state i
ships $230534
I' wllhU. « ft. year, w lh&lt;»i r.rvrd ' “”d
Henry
Sheldon, Judge Stuart
post year in the county and Harry E.
gl&lt;*. Floyd Thomas. Lp Maus. J. D.
fund- —
of -----Barry
county
I
atone tnonumenU nnd mln* have «»y hove » Rood Ume they ore not representing me Del Monte Corpo- Zagelemeler. Elmer '-falsing. Royal■ papers Wednesday of tost week.1 Tile
— -general
------------------ ---------, Nesman and Mrs. Caroline Thxun.
been one ot the p„t n&gt;lin&gt;U ot I “ &gt; “xhulgenns their own lira, | ration, gave a splendid and helpful1 Myers. The supper will be served at which mentioned me fact that Mr. | received, bi mis distribution. $1.­ from the Department of School
talk on the subject of "Merchandto,
Ingram's
will
gave
the
larger
part
I
270
19
The
sum
of
M67.18
was
rethe world, twd Ut.lr grown aymbota “
o"a dUposlUona |
Board counseling, were present, Mr.
ing and Co-operation." He stressed the usual hour of seven o’clock.
I of his $200,000 estate to me Unlver- mltted to the state, being a part of
o complete myaterv. though Spllaa ui pcuc&amp;irians
l»dairlona ann
and motorist*.
motoruu. HowHOW- I U”
------- j
. .--------being purchased and It la
need- for Jh«*u‘n« ldc* lnd «W»t«d way*
I
ore to be round £&gt; other port, ot ever, there
,hm Is
“ no
"" longer any
- ----------ally of Michigan. Hie article also I
were delinquent before Nesman discussing me Thatcher- that the 400 will be sold ba
this, for the children of HastingsI1 lo
to improve
lmDrav* sales.
“1M
stated mat
that his heirs had contested IIthc 3Ute ceaseo
ceased u&gt;
to couect
collect taxes on Saur law. He emphasised me 1m- banquet takes place. No tic
.
.
r
■ e
statca
the globe The research of the pasl
portanCc of kerning all funds sep­
Plans
for
the
coming
year
were
/I
this will, and that a compromise had ' property. The final item Is $99.60.
few years has disclosed some start- can now coast in a safe place under | discussed and all felt the gathering
arate and not transferring any of
been
.
been arranged
arranged whereby
whereby $20,000
$20,000 was
was j , which
wnicn represented
represented delinquent
delinquent taxes
taxes th_m
Ung facts, which go to show that watchful supervision.
paymcni
given to u&gt;e
the uiuvcrBiiy
university oi
of Miciugun
Michigan j J" •
payment or
of woven
Covert lioao
Road £nd
A man has been appoint^ Bi the helpful and worth while.
gi»cu
these South Pacific Islands stand ns
Recreation department of tlhijB'PA I Twenty-five years ago this month I
and the balance to be divided be-1 ^°”d
attend this banquet should
mute evidence of perhaps me great­
| G. Feldpausch. with Gard Bennett
tween his heirs, consisting of hl* *“
to
supervise
coasting
(and
ONLY
est catastrophe that ever visited
| as a partner, purchased the meat
usrt r«
Mrt.., pur- I
S S uSJK tickets NOW. The Banner,o
On February 13 of 1906. Mr. and
mis world—the sinking of a great coasting) at the Country club every business of Woodmansee and Sny­ Mrs. p. L. Fairchild purchased the widow and one son. Frederick F. In­
gram. Junior.
continent, and the destruction of i day of the week. On Saturdays he der. The partnership continued
store
men
known
as
the
H.
&amp;
M.
IhU
mon.,
.Ill
b.
p.!d
■»«.
7^
Mr. Ingram was the undo of E. P.
AH of this money will be paid Into
.“ u “T p**??"'
millions ot people who had reached will be there from 9 In the morning about six months as Bennett and
Wlthey
from______
Mrs.Bottum of mb city, a cousin of the lhc treasuries of me different tax- General Store ____
I
a high degree of civilization. All of until 6 In me evening; Sundays,
tuition money
tpo and one
from ^
P*tU^,,'l,W»henKMtr BCn?fU,Ke' Henry w,the’'
Aft
remodelling tote Chester and Richard B. Messer. ing ................
- —
------------------------ i tultlOn
* and the two
• " ------units, and
will' *be
a substantial
from Feldpausch. when Mr. Bennett de- Henry Wlthey.
I.
this was due lo a great upheaval from 2 to 6; and week days to
i half milli raised by the district in
qfnU
J1.0 »!Len ?1C&gt; opened their store for women's also a cousin of Mrs. Mattle Spauld- i help to mem.
be’
lo of the earth and lend* to prove that 3:00 until 6. Two men arc also to
order
to
obtain
me primary supple­
rink
o. f£om, furnUhln8s and continued in this ing. for many years a resident of
Early in May will occur the first
H
the greatest calamities of this old put In charge of the skating rink
ment and equalization money must
Till! P’owlcr. Michigan, and thus the Arm .----line until
1935. when me store was Hastings, who
now lives
Ilves UI.A.UUU11AIn Kalama­
------- .......
wIIU „UW
(Continued on page five)
(Continued on page 10. part 2)
; on Grand street every day. T..L
..
beeamr r elniiautii-ri anri Frvinu'a an.in
__ ____
....
..
. _
project is sponsored by, and has the became Feldjiausch and Fedewa ngaln remodeled and business con- zoo. He was me son of Orin F. In, Lion supplies, fuel and other operat­
warm approval of Supcrlntftident D. Through 1911 and until about me tlnued under the management of । gram, one of the pioneer settlers of A FINE HONOR FOR
Ing expenses. It is feared that many PICK-UP AND DELIVI
LEWIS HINE IS
&gt;•*&gt;■ “» —
. m«,. Mrs. Fairchild (better known as Irving township. His father, for sevSUPT. D. A. VANBUSKIRK boards do not understand that their
erhnz.1,
I business only, doing their own May). Mrs. Fairchild worked for' eral years In me old stage coach
FREIGHT SERVICE
CHOSEN DIRECTOR schools.
I
slaughtering,
curing
of
meats,
and
i The WPA has tentative plans for
the Wlthey's for nine years previous days, conducted what was known as
Member 1-2 mills b restricted InHte use and It Win Ba Inaugurated ¥
making their own sausages. Very to purchasing me store.
| "Ingram's Tavern.'1 it was located Has Been Named
Hustings City Band to Give rather extensive programs Ln the re- little
।
they
are
not
free
to
use
It
for
addlchange
took
place
during
those
j creational field. Mr Greenman of
Many changes have taken placethe site of me present home of
of Michigan Advisory
! tlons, new equipment, etc. Ln many
Benefit Concert in the
I1 Kalamazoo, who is In charge of me nine years as far as methods of since the store first started. It was' Alvin Bmelker on M-37.
Railroada in Grand Bapcounties school boards are Increasing
Commission
i work for Barry county and who will business were concerned Every­ me custom In years post lo retain ' When Mr. Ingram was a tod In his
ids April 1
Near Future
thing was done by these people, from a milliner to make todies' hats. All, teens, his parents moved to mis
A fine honor has come to Supcrinmake
his
headquarters
In
Hastings,
The Hustings City Band has ciecU
says they have hopes for a success­ slaughtering to getting the meat tn hats were meh produced in the store1 city. While living here, he learned tendent D. A VanBuskirk. He has
ed Lewis Hine os director for me
final form, ready for consumption. In which they were sold and were I telegraphy.
This was soon after been named by the Superintendent contracts watch is a much better the railroads that reach
ful
spring
and
summer
program.
He
coming year Mr Hine L* regularly
way than giving bonuses at the end Rapids will In that city in.
During these years thb business
employed as music Instructor In the hopes to encourage Interest In horse grew and became a progressive and fitted to each Individual. Nowadays, the railroad was built to Hastings, of Public Instruction. Eugene B. El­
al! ladles' hats are purchased from He worked in a local drug store liott, as a member of the Michigan
Hastings High school and has a fine shoes, perhaps organize a soft ball representative meat retailing esleague and develop playgrounds and
manufacturers who specialize In this and later In one In Charlotte. His Advisory Commission on Education. a surplus should not be carried over
high school band and orchestra.
tablbhment.
line.
--------------- on page six)
This commission will meet from
(Continued
Mr Hine’s selection as director playground activities for the young­
(Continued on page eight)
Mra Fairchild Is happy In me I
-----time to time to discuss educational funds, primary Interest, primary
children. Not only me athletic:
of the city band presages much ad- ’I er
supplement, equalization, tuition ar liver freight to
side of recreation will be stressed. |.lov
—
questions that are related to the
store where she has spent so many! THIRD SURVEY BEING
dltlonal activity for me organteayears.
She has kqpt abreast of 1 ninu OUriVEI DUINU
Mr. Greenman said, but also Its JURY WILL COME HERE
schools of this (Ute. Included In the tax tmoney Included In the
tlon. It is planned to stage a muchanging times and adjusted thej
(Continued on page two)
this
group
will
be
representatives
&gt;
I
more
cultural
aspects
tn
me
fields
MADE AT NASHVILLE
slcal entertainment In a few week* 1
NEXT MONDAY, FEB. 17 store to meet these changes. They
from business, labor, agriculture,
In which the city and high school j of music, etc., if all goes well.
this math
that ah
have endeavored to give to their । Purpose Is to Learn Depres- public utilities, women's clubs, pro­
bands will be combined, and which
Session Circuit Court Will customers me best In merchandise
fessions
other
than
education,
phllteutons
will also present orchestral and vo­
sion Effects in That
anthropic foundations, and educaand service. Many of their cus-|
Convene Today, Thurs­
cal (Specialties. Since me, Athletic
tomers have patronized the store
tlon. The splendid record of Bupt.
Vicinity
Association of the lilgh school and
quested that the railroads
day
during Its entire thirty years. We
The United States Bureau of Ag­ VanBuaXlrk as a school man. Is no
the Journalism clasa year book are
It would enable them to m
doubt responsible for his selection.
The February term of circuit court congratulate the Fairchilds on their
tn need of funds, me proceeds will
&gt; .
,,
opened Monday afternoon. Judge outstanding achievement and wish ricultural Economics to making Ha He Is now the president of me Mich-,
u“h"""'i
-«.&lt;■«&gt;p— »-”■ —«™TibteS'x;:usz:
' third survey of Nashville and vi­ Igan Education Association. He has _,On, »C3?,
SuT’
them success for many years to
cinity, for the purpose of deter­ served os superintendent of me 21, at 2 qcIock at me Mascmlc dlnRegular rehearsal of the Cttv Rand
the JurUor pUy' "One Mttd il,n8a and lhe traln wna » 11 w
come.
•
held lnttttteMM«lhhSl&gt;a?
i
haa t*Pn Postponed indefl- the session could not open until aftmining the effects of me depression schuols of tills city for fourteen ln* room will occur the ca^ party at having
wSriiLvXntaa
n’&gt;,y
°f
« dinner. The call of the calendar
on me social and economic life of years and to regarded os on out­
ABANDONED CARS ARE
and UarUng ’nSly Sb .
N°
C*n
J,eUr’ w“ m,de 10
me village and surrounding coin- standing educator.
munity.
.
----------------- 1 t i
1 bridge will be played. There will BI­
—U. Vjrr*''
mined until roods ore opened up. j were ready for trial. When that was
CA
USING
TROUBLE
The Rockefeller Research Agency
ANNUAL MEETING.
so be tables for 500. This Is the club's
00 nc,d 011 1ocs‘ Many rural people were planning to completed, court adjourned until
evcnSlgs tn the music room at
Of the Farmers Co-operative effort to raise an amount for the by trucks. If the railroads oan
come tn for the play, and would be I today (Thursday), when It will con- Should Not Be Left in the made the first study there about
High School. The use of this
twelve years ago. Six years ago a Creamery Association of Nashville WUl Rogers Memorial fund and it
unable to do so.
। alder
------------a
non-Jury
case.
room is through courtcny of Bupt.
second survey was made by Prcsl- will be held In the Star theater. Is hoped to have a large rtsponse to
Roadway, But Driven
When given. It will doubtless be ( The
&lt;M1 jury*will be summoned for
D. A. VanBueklrk and the members letter perfect, with all the extra limo | next
dent Hoover's commlttee'on social Nashville, Friday ' P. M.. February me call as the 25c charges will aid freight.
Monday when criminal causes
to Side of Road
ot me board of education.
trends. This year the survey to 14. at one o'clock.—Adv.
a national project.
afforded for rehearsal*.
will be token up.
The Barry County Road Commls- sponsored by Columbia University of
Central employees hare i
tor of the City Band for the post
slon, In their attempts to keep me New York City. Edward Brunner Is
three years and he will continue
main county roads open, have ex- in active charge.
to give studio Instruction.
•
perienced unnecessary trouble beThe present survey Is planned to
cause some motorists abandoned ‘ determine Die effects of the depres“SHOVEL THE SNOW
their cars, leaving mem in me road- | sion years from 1931 to 1936 upon
way instead of at the side of the the village of Nashrtlta.,and me
FROM YOUR DRIVEWAY”
road. In one case, where an emer- ; fanners in Its trading area. The first
gency call was answered on account j Item to be considered will be the
Coal Dealer Asks That Co­
of sickness, me snow plow ran Into local school system, and will deal
Buck Huge Drifts — Suffer Bitter Cold,
Some Folks Are Very Unreasonable In
an abandoned car south of Banfleld.1 wim such items as the enrollment.
operation in Behalf of
It was left squarely In me middle of • the percentage of non-resident pu­
Kind Farmer Plays Host for Twd Day*
Their Criticisms of the Commission
All Dealers
ttie roadway. There was no way for, plls. me variety of courses offered,
The advertisement of me Has­
NO FREEZING IN WIL­
me snow plow to get around it. The | me number of teachers employed
How puny are me efforts of man, shovelling can cut through many of
J. H. Tredinnick, Joe McKnlght i depressions wherever . .
tings Lumber and Coal Company
driver had carried hl* keys away and melt salaries, and the perccnt,
.in this Issue Is unique. It ought to wim all me progress and the devices these drifts. Even men It Is futile, with him and left all the brakes on.1 age of school expenses paid by the and Henry Sheldon are loyal mem- ] found on the landscape. Tlutt storm
COX GREENHOUtl
bers
of
the
consbtory.
To
be
sure.
'
was
on
Its
worst
behavior
late
that
he
has
made,
when
he
Is
compelled
’/ be read by every person who wants
for more lilgh winds will follow and so that me snow plow driver could local district, included also will be
The
they pro- ------------- '-K— farther
“■*- “
to have coal delivered at mis time to cope wim me elemental forces of soon fill me cuts and seal mem up not pull or djive the car out of me 1 me success of high school graduates, they have to go to Grand Rapids to afternoon.
Temperature Is
of the year. This advertisement nature—such as the terrible storms so tightly mat anomer •'operation" road. Of course this was thought-; what building programs have been attend me meetings, but they think
It well worth while. They planned serious phases were found on norm
Enough to In*
says: "Please have a heart for us. and cold of me past two weeks.
lessness on me part of the driver carried out, etc.
or for some other coal dealer— Man's machines ore marvels; but sable for car*.
of that car. It would help me work-' The second part of me survey will to attend me session which was and south roads.
of AH F
Our Hastings trio had no dlfficulThere are north and south town­ men who are doing their best to | cover social and economic changes, held Tuesday night of last week.
shovel the snow from your drlve- he has not made one yet which con
| ty in negotiating M-37 through MldDespite the severe
way." Not far from where the wrii- right now successfully buck the huge ship roads In Barry county right keep the roads open If a driver, if any, in the village and com&lt;-•
&gt;&lt;&lt;.,, uc
wmvuvu a
■ delivery
ucincxy from
irum Ii *now drifts on some of me narrow, now that never can be and never nndlng he must abandon hi* car. munity. Pupil* of the senior m- pl Hous on mat particular afternoon, dleville to me county line. Supertner lives,
he watched
one One
of the
rtf coal
thn rnal
dealer*. TV.A
The mat,
man on * hlu^ north-and-south
township will be open to travel unless the old­ would get it off on me side of the ciological class and members of the they resolved mat that would not undent Al Brown and hla crew had
me truck was delayed more than an 1011(15 of Barry county. Deep cuts time snow shovel brigade does me road as far as he can before leading Smith-Hughes class In agriculture of keep them away from mis meeting. kept me trunk line roads open In
hour because he had to shovel snow arc flUed 10 016 brlm wlth «now. In’ trick, or until me sun shall climb it. me Nashville schools will assist In Accordingly, about two o'clock, they
left Hastings in Mr. Tredinnick's the border and entered Kent county.
from the driveway tn order to get,othep c*5” u 11 PUed UP
drifts high enough and get warm enough
----------------- «*»
me sure-ey.
to twelve feet high,
packed solid
onto me premises where the coal ten
l,n
''l”h —
—&gt;*•*-­ to melt me snow.
YOUTH DISPLAYS TALENT.
The third part will relate to car for Grand Rapids. The storm
Some wonderful road machinery
County
School
Commissioner standard tests used in working with was then, doing things in Hastings;
was wanted. This Is a matter in ly and frozen. It will be remembered
It
In ordinary Maude Smith pointe with pride to high school seniors. Nashvillu and *■but
“* '*
“— compared with blea too. Fortunately, Mr. Tred­
which there should be cooperation. that first mere was me rain and has been Invented.
innick had added to ma usual
It is equal'to keeping
People who want coal ought to think sleet of me week before last which weather
radio
-----. — —the
- — a sample
—------------announcement
——------------- ——ad-me
/ w Is one what t—,-------------------- ,--------- --mesurrouximxiM
surroundingwuuiiuiaia
community
It will be remembered that rain equipment of hla car a sturdy snow
of the coal dealer’as well as them*- froze solid. Then followed lighter snow removed from our highways; vertlslng Hastings turned In by a of 140 aimliar communities that arc
snow which, driven by lilgh winds but It cannot, on narrow township 16-year old boy In his workbook—
and
sleet
the
night before had made
investlzated bv workers In this
and wim subzero
temperature, roads, wim huge drifts of packed The .city Among Lakes' mat Is
a smooth coating on me snow.
WILL ASSIST WITH
Ito unsurpassed
y‘
-- -----------------------formed Impassable barriers when and frozen snow, do mat job. U it Hastings with
Tuesday mere began falling a light,
INCOME TAW REPORTS. blown Into great drifts, when (mall could, another blow with more loose school system. Its nearly a dozen “BETTY IN MOV1Efluffy variety of “the beautiful.''
car* run into mem, IL Is Just too snow would dulckly fill the road- churches,
several factories from
LAND- POSTPONED, mat wouldn't have been so bad If it
Deputy Collector of Internal Reveways; then It would have to be done { which goods are sent around me
Owing to weather conditions the hadn't been driven by a high wind. co obstinate that
...
.
0fflc8
Uila
tempts to crash through them. It is all over again. When one considers world, fine streets well shaded and Eastern Star production of "Betty The gentle zephyrs made It slide
city to assist
the old case of “an Irresistible force that me county Road Commission 1 six , thousand neighborly people. '■ in Movieland.'' to have been given over the frozen snow and pile up In­
striking an Immovable body.” Only has 225 miles of main-traveled coun-1 What more could be asked for In a at Middleville this week) has been to huge drifts tn unexixseted place*
toes are free (o the public.
(Continued on page six)
1 place to choose for a hosne?"
I postponed until March 11 and 12.
especially In highways. Also it filled

AMUSEMENTS TO FEATURE EVENT

Auxiliary Members To
Sew Monday Evening

FORMER BARRY MUN
AIOS UNIVERSITY

LOOKING BACKPLANNING AHEAD

t0"1'*''0'

18765445

AWOSCUSSED

prc5'

notner Local Store to■
i I , .
Celebrate Anmvenary\

a

Junior Class Play Is
Postponed Indefinitely ',

Raising Fund For

Rogen Memorial

a

Barry County Road Commission
Doing All It Can To Open Roads

Hastings Trio Will Remember
Last Week’s Raging Blizzard

�TN. MMT1H0* B.NNKB,

REE |

LOCAL NEWS

10 Bushel
baskets of

SATURDAY, FEB. 15 at 9 P. M

Buy any PARAMOUNT Product and get
ticket on 10 $3 bu. baskets of groceries!
Paramount SALAD DRESSING
Paramount Sauer Kraut

APPLE
BUTTER

3

qt. 29c

Ne.lj C.ns

25c

Ig. jar 12c

Every Ready MUSTARD

No. 2 size 14c

CHILI CON CARNE

Paramount Apple Butter No. 10 tin 49c

LARGE SIZE JAR

Paramount Sandwich Spread

15c

pt. 17c

3 lbs. 19c

PRUNES

VAN CAMP'S MACKEREL 3 cans 25c

MINCEMEAT —&gt; 2 It 19c
SEA FLYER
PINK

SALMON

BLUE RIBBON

MORTON'S

OLEO

SMOKED
SALT

2 POUNDS

CAN

CVDIID
O I 11 U I

10 POUND CAN

69c

23c

lOc

5p^27c

STALEYS
BLUE LABEL

No. 2 size 10c

DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE JUICE
MONTEREY PIE CHERRIES

No. 2 size, 2 for 19c

Standard Peas, Corn or Tomatoes,

No. 2 size, 3 for 25c

OUR MOTHER'S COCOA

starting on am of lhe shelves and
Landlord Groan of lhe Parker
•M eaMly pM out. Nad It been Mtor J
vbleh had tow thrown out to
the tala might have bren different. JStTSSy JjTLEd’^XlSrta^ birds, and ate voraciously i ■

Marlon Recker and Vomon Karrar niato&gt;

GROCERIES

PARAMOUNT

TSIMSWW. FZaaOWT u, m*

N

Hastings Burial Vault
TELEPHONE 2822 . . . HASTINGS. MICH.

Roy Thomas,

24’4 Ib.

Proprietor

Sask

SNOSHEEN CAKE FLOUR

25c
'

PILLSBURY'S PANCAKE FLOUR

pkg. 10c

PILLSBURY'S Pancake Flour with Buckwheat

13c

25 Ib. sack $1.15

PURE BUCKWHEAT FLOUR

PERFECT FLOUR 'Stf- 65c

LAW DISCUSSED

The Sunken Grave

2 Ib. pkg. 16c

PILLSBURY’S rJouJ

.it &lt;.,»

I two more wceas in wmoil IO put
lhe occasional presence of auDg In
’ off getting your auto license.
the public kw rtnk on «. Grand because of the storm. On * previous their towns this post week, the ftrgt
! Judge Me Peek held court in Ionia
Uma in years. .
strret. and Fred Gamble it
(ConUaubd from pw
i last week for Judge Hawley.
We have oftert been a visitor In
at lhe country club tor supervising
food. Mipp5«r*he5^Petc^he
j Think of the postponed things
sp?rU' finds he put Into circulation tn Has- met county, where MTV Lamkin
, that have got to coma to for their Tlie men at the
2 1-2 mills and
rink have been • tln&lt;9 during the month of Janu- ducts an Irin famous In that rei
share of attention later, along with kept busy shoveling and sweeptog
fJ lM whlch
, n„
of th , w'SeTrubUcl^
। lhe things not postponed.
snow. It s no more than cleared be- holel j, t
Mfcfe from be­ EXoind
£2?SS!i™
u “®‘ rwtrteted in Ito use.
i Nashville has a new drug firm, the fore more snow flakes drop down- 1Bn gCCOmm£xUUon p, the uavelwn(j transient population, Lake Michigan tragedy which oc- Olhw inf0rmaUon pertaining to
I Elder drug store having been bought sort of v continuous performance I jlng
I by Boyd Stockford of Lake Odessa. this winter.
j Mrs. Eria Jarman Is quite 111 at
; and Don VanderVeen of Mason.
Win. T. Wallace is keeping awfully her home In the second ward.
Mrtdr dTha sh.MF i.
wkta ,und* transportation, etc., waa given
| The annual meeting of the Has­ busy during his visit
• • here
*•-— tn
- Has-Wm chrlatto Is confined to his spared.
The shore is lined with b
' tings Co-op Shipping Assoc, will be I tings, which he plana to be of sev­
high bluffs and te a wild windswept
DTiJtherEI West Dean of Balheld Tuesday, Feb. 18 at one o'clock eral weeks duration; great demand home with Inflammatory rheuma­ plaoe in winter. Th. March of Time tte cr^k College ^d dTr^u.r of
tism.
| P. M . In supervisors' room in court for his services at banquets, and;
radio program
Tuesday
night,!
n-n 8Chooi in Assyria izwnhouse.—Adv.
iha
Ar
Assyria townvarious programs as a speaker, and
— ---- *—------- -------------—
tJemonstrotad
the rrsZhni..
freshness
of u.
Ka l lne
rJL ucu •“&lt;*&gt;'
new.
b, Jrtbfl
dr.S 2.&lt;S
Sg;
singing leader. Mr. Wallace Is one of |
home on Dibble street, being
for several weeks. Is Improving the few people who dote on cold । gUl| wiouicu
uvu
,u- .-ii—
dress. He told how in years past so
confined w
to im
her bed.
I nicely and gaining her strength coo- weather, w
.b.. .«
hi. many hMd ,e,t the tum* *nd Bon*
with
Its fresh pure air. even | Mrs
**“ - Clarence Haight is slowly
.uperv^r 5 S- niS 10 lh
* clu*t; h
°* lmporUnl
। tinually. which is good news to her tho it bite, and stings H. advises Improving from her long Illness with
the
how
‘mportant “
it wU
wak
us. as a splendid book to
Th*
to sit up a . SSi “ oVl^N.XS
“
XeX-'
•&gt;» “ “»
. many friends.
I Ail those signs last fall—geese
BU‘
£wl
F^hor'z Adv
menl AdnUniatraUon in thia ooun-1 have to raise enough to feed us all,
j should have the very best advan­
। flying
south
early;
caterpillar . thor of "The Great Plains.
' Bowl at Rehor s.—Adv.
, ly
markings; the thickness of squirrels' | Over al Ionia a street light saving
,rj;*”‘d’
.S’s It
I FH*nds are glad to hear the news tages for being trained in all actlvi' fur: the larger supply than usual of campaign has been inaugurated, all ।
“nmJ? ,h- ! Vjjl H*1 come* from Ann Arbor
ties pertaining to farming and to
‘. boulevard lights In the business sec- 1 “ 1
Ulneaa she Is able I Dr H A Adrounle’a condition is loam to cooperate, to know men
Be.innin, Bund., F.bru^v l.U., [uon
I Uon being turned
DlHWd off
oO al
.1 midnight.
mldnl&lt;hl. ,o ** un
UP “*ln
He -hM been wl- and be able to work with them more
1 PwUy
' Improve.
’
- .bS?.m*be . ejlnL
.^eTr^. Spee’Xn'^S
DIEV efficiently and be trained for ap’■ । beginning last Saturday. c
This “
ac-I ; »
" , predation and culture to be able to
enjoy the better things of Ufe.
cenuy as mie way oi e naming mem ;
...
.
.
‘ Church of Christ. Scientist. Sunday ‘ to
A plan that Is being worked out.
keep their expenses within the ' h“p*w’ on Sunday.
I School will be at 9:30 Instead of 9:00 15 mill limit. In contrast to this, 18y,T“*r,£*nf, Wfcs,ab*n‘ ,rom I rural colls. He went to Ann Arbor similar to lhe one Bellevue recently
recently for special treatment.
land church service at 11:00 instead action at Ionia, lhe Hastings city **■ I?*1
voted on favorably was presented by
city
water
works
ata
­
action at lonia. uie iiosimgs city
------Another great man was bom on
I of 10:30.
.fathers
..
...
■
..
..
.....
.
.
tlon
Inr
six
Hnvi
th
—
nm
ur
—
v
,1,,
—
Supt.
D- A. VknBuakirk. This plan
voted in the fall to have 'lon ?or •u,d,&lt;’
JP“‘ wwk due Feb. 12. Lincoln's birthday, accord­
Mrs. Arthur Vickery will succeed all-night service, throughout the i t0 “ hn,rd
। Is to extend the Invitation to lhe
ot lhe flu­
| Mrs. Ruby 8trlngham at the ticket city. unUl April, for which aU are D Mrs Hubert Bronson was token to ing to Bert LyBarker. and why not? ' rural districts surrounding Hastings
'
Anyway
It
’
s
a
boy.
the
first
one
in
I office at lhe Eaton Theater. Mrs. grateful.
grateful.
Pennock hospital Friday suffering his Immediate family of five daugh­ ! whereby these districts may vote to
Stringham has taken a position In.
with an attack ot bronchial pneu­ ters and crowns him as granddad dose their school and have all their
There's a reason for that smile
। the ladles' ready-to-wear deparlmonia. Her condition yesterday was for the first time. Mr. and Mrs. elementary and High school puplb
this week on Charlie Annable's us­ reported ns improving.
1 transported to Hastings at no great ually serious cast of countenance—
Kenneth Buehler (Louise LyBarker) , er cost than to run their own school,
। lolte Republican-Tribune.
Enjoy Bowling at Rehor's.—Adv.
are the parent* ot the boy. a lusty i Their organization Would not be
So March 1st Is the lime limit for on Ptb 8. twin daughters. Bar­
February 1930 will be known as lhe
now, It seems, for using the old auto bara and Beverly were born to him month of |XMtponemcpta. We have' youngster weighing 9 lbs. and 4 ot.. 1 changed bi any way.
and Mrs. Annable at Pennock' hos­
' who arrived at Pennock hospital.
. license plate
We arc Inclined to
. Much more state aid Is available
been kept busy this week writing
’drop in line behind Muri DeFoe's pital. one weighing 7 lbs. 5 ox— the notices for events postponed because • yesterday morning.
accordingly tn larger unita than in
| MACUU.| . r-’y/ .,nTC Hkl
banner and declare we. too. are nev­ other 7 lbs. 1 oz. congratulations. off weather
the small primary districts. In any
weather and
and road
road conditions
conditions
Twins
are
fine.
we
have
them
In
our
er again going to -hound'' our read­ i.mn. tart ih.» &lt;ta kMo enn nn.
graded system the seventh and
We
wc notice
”OUCC E.
E. W
W. Bliss
BUSS stock
StOCk has!
has NASHVILLE TO VOTE ON
ers about buying their plates, or
eighth graders are figured as high
15
MILL
TAX
LIMIT
year
|20
me pres_
take any stock tn the original dead connected rather busy tne nrst, Uon of
1 school pupils and state aid Is avail­
, line.
r
ent time. Too bad we didn’t all take Matter Will Bn Danirind at able at g65 per pupil Including pri­
I Fred Ingrain ought to get a pa­
Judge Me Peck drove in from a fly„ Bnd tavwt , hlt
Bul We manor WUl DC Ueciacd at mary money and tax raised, and the
I tent on that clever new feeding Charlotte Monday fortified as to in general is made up of “Ua.”
I
Tho Village Election
1' grades, kindergarten through the
I tray he has hooked to our dining headgear from the aero weather, by । official registration at lhe water I
sixth grade on the basis ot 848 per
Next Month
| room window And how we are en- a beaver cap that an Antarctic ex- works fo».ow temperature the past
pupil. In a rural school it is figured
We
notice
that
Nashville
voters;
plorer
might
envy
It
seemed
it
was
(
week
haa
4
on
Uw
5Ur
i
। Joying lhe chickadees, and red
i ks 8750 for the first 12 pupils plus
MiV the 8th;
a
lIlc the 7th;
. wlU b«
to decide whether the
i breasted nut hatches that gobble ------------one long--------worn---by —
his -------------------grandfather. -&lt;------above,
5 below
89 for each additional pupil in averthr 8th; 10 below the 9th &lt;Sun- * vllla«e sh,n lljnlt taxation on vil- oA membership in the eight grades.
down sunflower seeds, and peck Dr Abram DeOraff. one of the
away at suet not caring a whit how ploneer doctors of Grand Lzdgc. ^y,. 2 above lhe lUlh' 8 above the l“8e ProPerty 10 15 nillls. It Ui1 Now this sum included, as In lhe
who came to Eaton county in the, Ilth. 9 Bbove yesterdav uretdnsr I c,altncd lhRt thc r*w Wtts ttbout
I| above case, the primary money plus
near we are to the window.
i mills last year. If NUhvlile should lhe 3 1-2 mills of tax money raised.
Just before closing lime Satur- M s and In those days, with horse I warm. you see ►
forr------------------motor power tik doc-.1| Ml*3 ' Haze)
Hazr) Henry has received take thta sUp- lt mB&gt;' nnd ,tAC,f un’
I day night fire was discovered in lhe and buggies
—------------Dr. Mabel Rugen. Aral. Professor
In■ Jhe
matter oi
Wallace grocery store, caused by tor had to be clad in
In extra heavy I permission fronl
from her physician to re- I c“nifortably limited “
“•» •••-•«•
of cuucauon
Education in
In tne
the ui
University, sug—apparel.
.HF-F.I The
Thfr beaver
hrover is
u an ।i auJln
ronw. „
hrr
teaching ,in
the Detroit
burning soot sifting down from lhe wearing
ct vcavnuig
n lnc
uctroit of v1IUbc ,• ,— J-'. Tlie
"IT tax ap- gested many ways In whlch school
i&gt;.-. . ..
1 nortlonment
Is Is
Oxrrt
hv by
thethe
Rnrrv
. floor above from the chimney run­ extra fine piece of fur, and splend- schools
beginning March
I. It...will
P°rt|onment
fixed
Barry boards could vitalize the school pcoIdjy
preserved
'
*
•»
—
.
-----Countv
I
bi
r^ommLuinn
'i-hev
will
—
—
—
•««
—
—
h
b
.#.
—. .*,
k—
i—»— —of
#
.„. „„„
luw
rc —„„„
ning thru the store a flame was
grant
and showed ,how
lhe
alma
be remembered that Ml«.s Henry' was County Tax Commission They will B&gt;
first provide for the county expenses, education arc changing. Miss Rose
taken with typhus fever while in -hl-ta
- ----- - a -in. ....-----t(j]d Qf lhp many n.luUon,
■ Mexico in the summer attending ’ which were about 6 mills last year.
| school with a party of friends. Ac- Nashville will also have to pay Its to lhe school health program that
i cording to lhe doctor, she has made share of the township tax; then were involved in the work of the
there will come Its schools, and then family health counselor. Mr. Linden,
[ a remarkable recovery.
I An Interesting Lincoln relic dls- the expenses of the village Itself. from the Michigan Tuberculosis Asthrough the courtesy of
| played in the Banner w£dow this This Is Nashville's own.. affair and sociallon.
vhe Hea|U1
Bhowed a
week Is a cane owned tw John J. they are able to settle It. Nashville
OTHING can be sadder than a grave that Is no longer a
j Sinclair of this city made from wal­ has been coming along so splendidly very good picture of some of the
this
last
year
or
so
in
getting
public
activities of the association In com­
mound. The Inevitable has come to pass—the weight of
nut logs-taken from the court house
! in Decatur. Ill., where Lincoln first Improvements, that It would be too bating tuberculosis.
the sodden earth has crushed In the last protection. It helps
I practiced, also a picture of the .Mime. bad if it were tied down too closely,
nothing to close the imagination to what happened then! Yet
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
i Mr. Sinclair swears as to Its authen­ and that might happen, because the
there Is not the slightest necessity for this barbarous, unsanlBad weather and blocked roads
ticity as he says he worked In a fac­ village can have no control over
ary. old fashioned method ot burlaL The Hastings Burial
tory at the time where they were be-1 the county tax or lhe township cut no figure with the landing of the
„_
. .
Vault — at little cost —
taxes.
The
county
and
township
stork
at Pennock hospital the past
Ing made.
I .
'
’
- ■ .”
- ■ 3
b)1| prolffl absolutely
, taxes In this county will ordinarily
Bowl
at perhaps
Rehor's Alleys
—Adv.
A gull,
the first
of that take from 7 to 8 mllLs. or half of1 week, five births being registered
among them twins.
The coal
Hastingswas
Is
species
to besituation
seen in In
Hastings,
the
suggested
15
mills,
leaving
about
j
and steel, waterproof
On Feb. 8 twin daughters were
about theby same
as reported
last
observed
Mrs. Frank
Cun-others
half to pay the village's proportion bom to Mr. and Mrs. Chas. R_
I| week.
« shortage,
but by last
the of
in herThere's
back yard
one morning
the s^iool tax and to defray vil- : Annable. 221 8. Michigan Ave., city.
( combined
week It had
evidently
efforts
of allbeen
thedriven
coal
lage expenses.
Feb. 9, a daughter was born to
everyone its
hasnatural
been portioned
। dealers,
by hunger'from
habitat.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Robinson. 228
ground mausoleum that
out enough to keep them golna.
CASEY ON TUESDAY.
literally "Lasts Through
Coal comes in by a single carolad.
Hulbert Casey. 72. died at his • N- Church street, city.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
and is qdlckly disposed of This con­ home In Hope township on Tuesday
dition won't change much till the after a long Illness Surviving are: Floyd Urich. Bellevue. R. 3. Feb. II.
dertaken insist on Its
A daughter was born to Mr. and
cold spell is broken, and roads and the widow, four sons. Slellman. I
railroads cleared.
Wlniford. Fordic. and Clyde of Hope; I Mrs. Leland Jones. Dowling on Feb.

TKAND
H EATLF
Hastings, Michigan ■ Telephones 224-1-2557 H__

r

8PECIAL ATTRACTION

SUNDATond MONDAY. Fit. 16 end 17

"COLLEGIATE"

four daughters. Mrs. Claude Ham­
On Feb. 12. a son was born to Mr.
mond. Cedar cre-k. Mrs. Maggie1
and Mrs. Kenneth Buehler, Grand
Pfeiffer. Kalamazoo.
Mrs. Henry
Rapids.
Ftngicton. Hastings and Mrs. Dora
„
,
...
Hoffman. Cadillac Funeral services'
। by hunger'from its natural habitat. I wUi be held on pridav at 2:00 P. M-.
a lake, now probably frozen solidly al lh.
BurU1 ,n Cedlir
“I Ond that my neighbor HI Tint
j over, to seek food elsewhere. The cemetery.
has a proper rennon for being dis­
tant and formal,“ said 111 Ho, the
sage of Chinatown. “He known bls
asm past and fears that If I knew
him better I might Ilka him leas.”

Ten
Below Zero

. . . is very severe weaiher. but not nearly as dangerous
to your health as letting your physical condition get

With JOE PENNER. JACK OKIE. NED SPARKS, FRANCES
LANGFORD. BETTY GRABLE and LYNNE OVERMAN

Large Pkg.

Today the

Dionne Quins had Quaker Oats

FINEST

QUALITY

COFFEE

18c

THE MAN WHO BROKE THE
BANK AT MONTE CARLO”

MEATS

BEEFSTEAK

ib. 15c

BOLOGNA

Ib. 15c

SLICED BACON TID BITS

Ib. 19c

CHUNK BACON

Ib. 23c

MINCED HAM

Ib. 19c

BEEF KETTLE ROASTS

Ib. 14c

CHUNK PORK

Ib. 16c

RIB BOILING BEEF

Ib. 11c

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. FEB. 18
RONALD COLMAN with JOAN BENNETT, Colin
Clive ond Nigel Bruce in

SPECIAL ATTRACTION—3 DAYS

WED., THURS. end FBI.. FEB. 19. 20 end 21

DEL MONTE
COFFEE OCc
FOUND TIN

—W

VACATION LAND
COFFEE 1 EC
FOUND BAG-

CECILLE I. DeMILLE S

"THE CRUSADES”
With LORETTA YOUNG, HENRY WILCOXON. Ian Krllh
Katharine DeMUle, C. Aubrey Smith, Joseph Schildkraut
CAST OF 10,00A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
. Adults 23c: Children l»e

BIRTHDAY SALE
You con remain healthy and comfortable throughout
the winter
Check the items you may need ond then
get them the first time you are in the store.
.

MI-31

Ysost Tablets

Aspirin

Shampoo

Cough Syrup

Orderlies

Cold Cr«om

Water Bottles

Glycarine

Milk of Magnesia

Rubbing Alcohol

Hand Lotion

SATURDAY ONLY. FEBRUARY 22

"HER MASTER S VOICE”

Food Center

BELOW NORMAL
arid it is so unnecessary, as with o very little core
ond expense; combined with the wonderful prices we
ore offering of our

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

WKh Edward Everett Harlan, Peggy Conklin. Laura Hope
Crewe and Elteabclh Fattereon
FEATURE NO. 2

CINE AUTRY in

"THF SINGING VAGABOND”

With Ann Rutherford. SmUey Burnette, Barbara Pepper
Added - Serial Chapter Story. “GREAT AIR MYSTERY” —
Mallncr. 3;0D o'otorh Only — AdulU lie; Children IQt

One of the large railroads
Northwest makes It a custom
elude on Its dining car menu

Seif Large Bill for Hundreds of Other Bargains and
Details of the CfMtest.

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
THE REXALL DRUGGISTS

Hading*

Phone 1131

Michigan

Whot do you think?
How do you look to oth­
ers?
. .
See yourself os others see
you. , take a look . . . can
you pass inspection?
Cleon clothes neatly
pressed will moke you
feel and look your true
self.
HAVE US KEEP YOUR
CLOTHES CLEAN Send
them to us regularly.

McCREERY’S
DRY
CLEANERS
1
PHONE 1148
We

»w and Deliver

�TBB MAITWOI BAV&lt;r». TTOMDAT. m»C*»T !». 1»M
see that they were Erectly tn front times, so the Leatherman supply
fndera and fired eight baskets lor •
total of 15 points. Thl* U tlie highest
of a good-sized farm house. They was not large; but they hkd several
I number of poinu- any one man has
made a last desperate effort and. cows, which Mr Leatherman milked
guests. Thursday
i made in a single game thia year on
with hard’ shovelling, succeeded in and with the help of his guests, the latter
I the local court. Fowler led his tram
started 1
getting their car into the front yard.
in points with two field goals and
milking and Immediately churned
(Continued
from
page
one)
one foul shot.
into butter. The amount was none
The line-ups were:
plentiful,
but It had
to do
danla, they saw the Hastings bus and folks inalde invited them in and too
It aur
W-4.S3.,
iZni,
” and
Hastings Ml
Otsego (15)
two other cars ditched at the side for lb* nlfhl. They —re happy
irkphoned lhe ppcery .1 Dutlpn Co they ought lo have done, and could
LOCAL BOXERS SHOW - LAKEVIEW WINS
Gibson
I
ora„
n* irocer Md h. not think of receiving compensation
Thompson of the road. Even that warning wax ihh «ek«me
FROM HASTINGS
WELL AT TOURNEY
Hospital Guild
Fowler (C)' not heeded. They were plenty cold '
j0*1*" 01 Ullt home
Ur-I wouldn't dare —nd hla delivery ear for such service. But we know the
Zednosday. 1Mb.
b„ lblt b, wbbU Hastings contingent will see that
------------- t Angell
Schuyler when they arrived in Caledonia, John IwaUd-rman: and U&gt;. three ln
Hastings was well represented in
Bennettmen
Oauf ht
Off j Walldorn &lt;c&gt;
Stetler soaked up a lot ot heat In a store, Hum,, fellow, will never tprsel lbad up one ot hie clerk, with all the Leathermans get some substan­
' the Golden Gloves boxing classic,
tial
tokens
of
their
appreciation
‘
of
eould any. some lime feu,
t SubaUtutions: Hastings; Hinckley. had some chains put, on the car the Undnj. ot Mr end Mr. LeeihGuard by Their Strong
the great kindness shown them durnot winning so many honors but
1 Kelley. Struble. Ironside. Otsego; wheels, and decided to keep on. erman. They proved to be Tree' thia man appeared with aoveral Uig tljelr enforced stay at tl&gt;e Leath­
“f Ttev ■&lt;’•'•» « KMd. • b» of erackere
making a good showing In the tour­
Opponent!
Q«llU*au. Referee; White. W. S. T. They realized later that Uiat was ,ol“' 7?'.“ .^"*:
made their Haatlnaa ■urate
tni ch— and two pounda 01 cot- erman home.
The Hastings High school basket! C
nament and a big hit with tiw spec­
toUble
mid
ted
them.
With
th.
I
wh
lch
helped
out
«ry
mwh
the ideal Ume and place where
The three men from Hastings ar­
Tlie Women's Relief
ball team took a trouncing from ' In n preliminary game the second they should have turned about and
tators.
coming of night. Ums storm grew in
Mr. Leatherman's home has a fur­ rived here about noon on Thurs­ have their monthly birtt
lhe Lakeview five Friday night al 1 stringers played an exciting battle
Joe Cowles, one of the best light Lakeview, Battle Creek, after hold- which finally ended with Hastings started for home.
fury. Later other cars got as far oa nace Bod o he had a good supply of day. having been absent from home at one o’clock Thursday,
, nearly
forty-eight
hours.
For­
Resuming their journey, they the Leatherman Imr. from both coal. thc tM)use w M‘pl al
weight boxers of these porta was in ing lhe lead for the first half. The I on lhe long end of a 13-11 score. The
made the first mile on Uie east and north and south, but could go no foruble temperature night and day. I tunately they were stalled at a home
the Ha-sUngs comer a few years
Bennettmen blanked their oppo- ' Otsego youngsters were never in the
back Joe made a big showing In ncriU In the first quarter and scored ] lead, but wM» never for enough be- west road O. K.; but Wiicp they farther. The Izathcrmans had a.The boy* from HasUngs said Uwy I with a telephone, so they could notlGrand Rapids and Muskegon He three field goals to lead fl-0. They I hind to put thc peanut in lhe bag. rounded lhe comer northward for dozen snow-bound guests that night,
known to
wunder fy their families and TrWHdl NUT
could teach the boys of Hastings came back in the second quarter to ! Cbok did a clever job of keeping the lhe second mile they had to fight Next day more came, until Uiere than they did on the two nights keep them from worrying. All three Temperance Union will )y&gt;id Ua
meeting —
at —
the home of
1 after their practice, know how toular
----- --------quite a bit about boxing if Uiere score four more points while the | Brozakmen in the lead by scoring drifted snow constantly by shovel­
they spent at the Leatherman home ! wield a snow shovel like veterans. Ruby Merrick. B2&gt;3 H. Church
were only a place for them to train. Roemen garnered ff. Score at the . 11 of their 13 points. A. Robgler kept ling and bucking. Afterr a time they ( Wednesday the beleaguered folks ( Tne B1M.str ’lav
zy on the. floor, sat tn
where they | telephoned
................................................
the Kent County Rood Chairs and trot
Donald Feldpausch punched too end of the half 10-ff In favor of Has- the game from going stele by seor- reached the* comer i.!::?:
and
got
Into
the
mast
com-'
't'Haf
I
*■!
1**
m
*._
-A
.
.
—
[
lard
Memorial
Day
will ba
turned westward again. That west- , Commission for help, and learned । ft^bte‘^^s'tbey couSTfoTtht mind his lost hat.
straight and clean for E. Kozloueskl tlngs.
Ing six pointe for the Otsego team.
, , ,
i aiso a survey 01 our maw xi»
ward stretch was .not ao difficult nor: that their county trucks were all two
•— nights And they did .have
------ a
of Grand Rapids and won by a
Thc Lakeview ouint took the floor
--------------We agree with* lhe judge Wtoo[Law- .-vn
yet 10 easjj; but when they arrived out. most of them stuck in snow good time in spite of all their dif­
knock-out in tlie second round. Rob­
lh U&gt;e third quarter and displayed un| . pY RAl I AND OK
at the comer, from which they were drifts.
The HasUngs contingent ficulties. None of them would want ruled that a wooden leg doet not bar ■ &lt;r]W 53 narTV county cxienslon
ert Powers made a good showing but a-snappy
offensive that apparently , VULLtT BALL ANU BAoI W proceed Erectly north into Dut- phoned Al Brown to see if he
wllj,
Baaxme
was no match for Jolinny Stanxan.
to go through this experience again, a man from operating an automo- ' i.otirrl wln
caught the Hastings men off guard
wct QAI I
ADC DflDIII AD
Bud Williams showed plenty ot heart, Lakeview made 13 4»inU in this. ’'Cl BALL AnC “UrULAn ton. they were up against lhe real couldn’t help dig them out. He tried but they can look back cm the hap­ bite. It's wooden heads Uiat cause . Cramer uf M. 8. C for thetr iart
thing. A swirling, high wind at this his best, but couldn’t reach the penings In the Leatherman home most of the trouble—MaPherson,
and promises to be a good fighter quarter to snatch the game from |
point
took
Mr.
Tredinnick
s
hat.
He
Leatherman
home
on
Wednesday.
with another year’s experience.
V.W fire
u.e and
w,.u pul
puv It
,k on
«. Ice. as
„ lhe
uw ; , Th* Volley and Basket Ball
and laugh about' them now. The Kansas. Republican.
the
Junior Fox lost his fight, but kt local crew were only able to gamer J^Muea started some weeks ago, was able to forget about it, because However, the Barry county workers
house In this city.
there was notitTng else to do II came within a mite of it, but had lo ^i^tempted teip1 to Gfan^Ra^
was so close that tlie judges dis­ .
have proved very popular. Organized there was nothing else lo do. It came within a mile of it, but had lo
Today is the tomorrow you wor­
3 --------points. -------Score at tlie
“llemplca ,np 10 UTBnu
agreed on the decision The crowd third
unrtl QUBrier
------------------meet every
- Wednesday
--------------- - --------------night. Uie simply floated away In toe atmos- quit They had no end of trouble
ried about yesterday—and all is
quarter 13-19 m
in lavor O1to
flne.t thlns wa, lh, .ractow, well.
went wild over the fight Uiat Harold 1^^^, Jn lhe ]ot quarter Has- attendance has been gratifying. The phere and is now located somewhere | getting that far. On that same day,.
than any other kind of food.
workers from toe Kent County Road
gracious
Bolo put on. Bolo showed the beu Ungs
.&lt;•vnlb.v
h.«ball
nntgroup
■■ v»thas
nr.not as yet or- in Gaines township.
i hall
while
voltey
made *•three more points,
whileirrruin
The previous storm had left a big i Commission came to toe Leather­
left hand of any fighter in the tour­ their opponents counted into victory I atolxed Into a team, but lhe basket
nament
After three hard rounds and scored one point.
ball »*cuon
section lias
has one
one and
and tney
they are
are drift Wt that comer, through which 1 man home. Two of them had frozen
1j «*»
of fighting. Robert MacLzud was on
GUlender was high point man tor1 pr*c‘lAlng and plan to pUy w veral; a roadway had been cut; but the | hands, one had frozen feet, and toe,
lilgh wind hod filled tills cut with | others frosted fingers. They had
the short end of the decision, but Lakeview with four field goals and
other teams.
Il was so deep that when ti)c 1 shovelled snow al) thc previous night!
the fight was close. Robert Murphy one foul shot for a total of 9 points
meeting each week la ipstru- snow.
.—.
—. ftn(1 wcre exhausted. The other
car.—
bucked
Into ..it. .uthe j.-.displaced
and John Leary might go placet Gladatgjie brought his season’s to- mcnt*1 *&gt;&gt; making every one who ---with another year’s experience.
tai up 0 points with 3 field goals participates feel a real thrill and l»s snow almost reached the lop of the guests aided them by rubbing lhe
lo lead the Bennettmen. Angell removed all feeling of Inequality car and held lhe doors light shut. frosted hands and feet with snow,
In ,K
lhe
trailed by one point with one field ’that
H“* may have existed.
“ Il was a case of bucking, backing. and then vigorously rubbing Lhej
goal and three foul shots for a total games, toe main idea L» to get a lol twisUng until they could climb out frozen members with dry cloths. All
of wholesome fun out of being to- of *the car and get busy with lhe of them apparently recovered except
of five points.
gether,
and
lhe
competition
is
keen.
I sn0jw
’ shovel.
—
The line-ups were:
Some of thc players ar» real profes- I At last they got through that drift taken to a doctor next day. suffering
Hastings (Iff)
sianals and some are dubs- but in ' an&lt;i rounded tlie corner, but were by much pain
Gladstone
the whole game, lhe real player geLs i no means at the end of their trouThe question arises: How were lhe
Old Ifiy's country cousin broke Hinckley
a big kick out of •eebig Just how , ble»-r»ther they increased as they Leathermans able to feed such a
even on last week’s predidtlon. Has­ Ransom
dumb a man can be trying to knock 'lowly proceeded northward. It was hunch of unexpected guests? The
Angell
tings lost to Lakeview on Friday
a ball across a net. and the dubs ' drift after drift. In apparently end- answer lx. they weren’t. But they got
enjoy themselves in spite of their1 lcAS Accession, and getting worse by because the guests washed and
night, and Ifiy's country cousin Walldorf! tC)
called on the Greek god Zeus Satur­
Substitutions: Hastings. Crothers. lack of training and try each time I “» tb* “"»* The hard part was not wiped the dishes, helped cook the
day morning. Zeus in turn threw a Kelley. Ironside and Struble. Lake­ to succeed Ln their efforts to play a 1 altogether the work involved. It food, wait on table and did every­
dark and foreboding cloud In lhe view. GUlender and Sidman. Ref­ good game. One can well Imagine 1 »»• difficult lo breathe. The wind thing they knew how to assist Mrs.
area of thc nLratosphere and thc erees. Wallace Ind.. Knode. U. of M. the pain he real players suffer when j
blowing 30 or 40 miles an hour, Leatherman. Fortunately the Leath­
heavens rained down while pellets of
In a preliminary gome, lhe second a so-called dub" makes a terrible ' full of fine snow, and one choked up ermans had a supply of coal, plenty
fury Saturday night The result ot stringers swamped lhe Lakeview blunder, but it’s all In fun and each , incessantly. Thu seemed to sap of potatoes, canned fruits and vege­
the aforesaid storm created a psy­ youngsters 32-11'. in which Cook participant gets plenty of exercise, I their strength more than thc work, tables. But they were shy on meat
chological efiect on lhe varsity team, walked of! with high points. He shot and so the game goes merrily on.
Often as they shoveled the snow on for such a crowd. It so happened
and lhe Otsego five was snowed un­ six field goals and one foul shot
that among
Tlie basket ball seems lo fare bet- one side of thc car to gel the wheels-----------------w the
—uninvited
-------------- ----guests
------der.
for u total of 13 points w. Adams ter. Those playing ore mostly
free, then performed .the same open- Tuesday night was an employee of
IF they keep on playing the was top scorer for Lakeview with young men who have played in •tlon on the other side, they would the Kent County Welfare Co mm Isbrand ot ball they displayed in that one field goal and three foul shots high school or college and have u look over where their first labors sion. He had in his car a lol ot
game, they will not lose any more for a total of five points.
'good knowledge of lhe game, so that had been bestowed and could find no canned meat and some cabbage
games. However. IF they let Old ■
«...
Die Basket Ball League 1» a bit sign of their previous e(Torts. The which he wanted to take to a fam­
Man Winter get his frosty grip on HASTINGS QUINT better organized and is progressing roadway on that side wax drifted Uy who needed them. ThLrstock was
full again. No wonder that !t took 1 confiscated,
- — '
’and
—'paid
'
• • helped
•
for, •and
them and they start coasting as they
DEFEATS OTSEGO mi u&gt; .it
th. id.,
a u. „t th.„ them more than an hour to go n 1 amazingly. Another of the unexdid in the Lakeview game, tljey are
um. Mic
iucu »
going to come out on the losing side
young men together that they, may | rnile northward
They were up . pected guests wax a farmer, who wax
pf the score more times than In the Locals Play Smashing Ef­ know each other belter, and to t against it. for It was gelling dark, 1 going to Grand Rapids to sell fif­
winning cotun n
#
promote good will. Even if no games being past five o'clock The three teen dozen egga. He wax stalled at
eek
fective Game—Second
Old ifiy's country causin' was on
orc played in competition with otner 1 were exhausted with the druggie 1 the Leatherman home The guests
Team Also Wins
the verge of divulging one of his
teams, everyone wlU agree that this ' and wondering what they could do bought htv stock of eggs and used
most intricate of complicated plays
Tlie Bennettmen relumed to the .•ffort is proving a real help to each next, if anything It was quite evi­ them to feed toe multitude Anothafter Friday night's game but held local court Saturday night and play in building strong bodies and dent that they could not go north­ 1 cr problem was butter. No farmer in
himself In solemn restraint until played a smashing offensive game to good feeling
ward any farther.
A momentary these days puts up three or four big
loll in the storm enabled them to I crocks of butler as they did in olden
(he present. So now he will pre­ trounce the Otsego five 30-15. The
" * ‘
sent the theory and then go into se- —
attendance was not ns large M
as usDOWLING GROUP
WAS**'
°f
b.U‘
fan;l *h° b’«^
.nc uowrmg
The
Dowling uiouunx
Clothing vmas
Class mec
met
blows over. It consisu mainly of the wintry blasts were well rewarded Jan ». with Mrs Gertrude Gaskill,
subsidizing lhe referee He Ls to play In their desire to see the Hostings for
day meeting The lesson
beneath the Hastings bosket at al) team - goln' to town. " The Bennett- X prescnSd KR wXol
,olne to tOl
*hh?.n‘h'
0P*ned lhe game cautiously and j Mr8 ^Us pmal sleeve fittings were
recover the ball, they arc to make a scored six polnU in the first frame completed four type* of sleeves befioor length throw to the referee and llmitedthe visitors to two. The L,* PpreM.nlcd, The^ Muslin Models
who Is to shooLas many shots as he second quarter was an evenly
£ow ready to be taken apart,
has time for T*he main object Is to matched battle with each team pressed and used ax a foundation
O'TLclal w,1° *' Uloroil«»'lv struggling valiantly for lhe three
of dreaslbe Inskllled in thc art of shooting bask- |I points they were able to garner. The । dividual wishes’to make. Color, de■ ■ ■■■ W'^ tba* wa|h day villain—old “Work-n-waat«.” Sava H»« day
| nennottm.n
Bennettmen iled
at the end of the | sjgn jpaqj finishes, materials for
—i «»
Cw ■ ■ B
—save yourself, your clothing, linens, etc., aava your
Another big advantage In this sys- first half 9-5.
i various garments were discussed by
The third quarter found tlie local ‘ 1. Next meeting will be with
■
with thc automatic helpfulness of the newest improved washer t
players a chance to referee and he five
blast ,I
— Vo turning
tiirnlnfl ^on
or. toe heatI full
r.atl KI...
’ Janc’'sm'l'toMyra Wright*
and ironer.
can gel smart, mean, foolbh or off- and scoring 12 points, while the visl- [
amiin.
w&gt;-ra wngnt.
balance jp he chooses. There will 1 tors were held to half that many.
Hara's tha aasiast plan wa avar offered to bring thasa ideal laundry aids to
no doubt be many who will disagree , Score at the end of lhe third quarwllh this theory and hold It as a 1 ter 21-11. In the final quarter lhe
m, ..____ ..____ .___ _ ..
.
.
right now . . . profit from it.
.
dreamy Illusion of a methodical
Bennettmen kept lhe power on and
Crackpot; in which case. Old Iffy’s rang up nine pointe more lo bring
country cousin musingly agrees and their total up to 30. The Oteegomen
goes to lhe bleachers once more to scored four points as the curtain
root for lhe five men who step onto closed 30-15. Gladstone acted as
the floor tomorrow night at Otsego. spark plug tor the other four cyl-

Hastings Trio
Will Remember

MT TLE

Iffy's CountryCousin
Rises lo Remark —

QU!-and never

da*«e"/J;"^Sm'ng5
AGAIN*
o &lt;

I

THIS W

IVAy
per

Ji

SALE ENDS
UNIVERSAL

CUTTING A LANE
THRU THE DARK

The United Blsta* Ncwe
crevvnu the n«wi of na­
tional ad air• tn dvpartnwnu.
THE CONGRESS WEEK—
what the Bouev and Ben•to detale.
THE rnKSIDENTS WEEK
did
STATE OF THE UNION—
• S-tnlnute vwtns around
the country wlio lhe no­
tional ne*&gt;.
THE POLITICAL WEEK—

THE NATION THINKS—
cOrn • quick. latrntUni
■urray Of public opinion.
Including percentage ot
pm« fir and agilQit on
iradlnr Inuer. THK TREND
OF AMERICAN BUSINESS
—• remarkably complete
statement ot buitnou In
on« par*
VOICE OF THK NEW
DEAL—atgr.ed arUelei by
admtntetraUon ipolnm’n
DATTO LAWRENCE crtU-

So much is happening every day in the
'world of government that a fleets your liv­
ing. income and buying power.
What is Congress doing? For what is
money to be spent? How will they raise it?
Who is to administer the spending? What
does this business improvement mean? Will
it continue? Why is there another aide
to so many questions?
All UiU mnk«» you ask youraslf—"How eon I
MbUHUrartM nm*s. unamtand what aranta
maan. dlaeuas national affaira intaUlcvnUyT**

Stje (Snitei) States
Every week you find in The United
States News a complete, accurate rejwt
pf nalionsl affairs from Washington. News
is grouped together in departments for your
convenience
Simplified for quick reading.
Connected for dearness and perspective.
Authoritative, concise, useable.

- - -

WASHER

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�The Hastings Banner

ATHQMK

;an

A PAGE OF EDlTOlftXtS AND HATCHES

THL'KSDAY, FEBRUARY U, l«

-e Editorials
-

dl-Id-O
«»»»&gt;«*

nomerou. wa.Knd.nc

elala U&gt;. monummul wrrte. pwrrnn.dWAt.r.t.xm Unrein Inlwding the successful fight to preserve
lhe Union.
Kxcept for his efforts, lhe United

■

This and That
OLD ABE.

LINCOLN
InrcMnt moment If the tradfno. -l&gt;o Mw iwd' &gt; nnl-hxnd 11“"‘

Bml

What sort of an individual was
Abraham Lincoln? Many accounts
have been written and quite fre­
quently the descriptions do not
agree. The popular notion is that

be..wn:
)»&lt;“■'

r'ij

"green pasture'' .Ulis would have
The New Deal will have succeeded
been for your spell-binding poU-; ln •pending about $35,000,000,000
tirien;
' during Its four years residence at
Lincoln saved us from Utfa. It Washington. Not quite so much as
took courage, faith and vision al-. wc threw lntb toe war hopper, to
most beyond comprehension to meet
surf- hut still, not an inconscthe issue, io lead a fight against qu*nUal sum—especially during a
one's own countrymen; to strain Period ol pw«*«r tone
ths resources of the country In the upending produce^ a wave of prosIntereat of future genrraUons.
Parity Just as has the gush of
Lincoln was concerned with the spending under lhe New Deal—but
problem of slavery but above all he ‘here Is no logical reason why Imwas Interested In preserving the provement under the one should be
Unfan at a lime when the democ- j *ny more permanent than under
racy as outlined in the Constitution! ‘he other. New Deal debts will have
of the United Slates was In danger.
Such soUdsrlty as we enjoy today-1

our country.

FROM WASHINGTON.-

Ill

The Public Forum |||

Fin
Clo

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Dear M?. Editor:
’surely be there next-time even It
Really, f am ao sorry that I failed . I have to gat on sp.-nc snowshoes
to submit my remarks concerning and carry a pack—that would be
the second group ot one-act plays, rather original, don't you think?
But than, you see. I wasn't even , Well, bye. bye. for now. Beet of
there. Bo naturally, I couldn't I luck to my dear civic players,
write about them. Honestly the
*.
road* about lhe old homestead
-A. _
have been" in perfectly terrible .
Barry-

To J

____

.
'
IN A OLASS “OU6E.

In lb&lt; Peb- 8 lwue °r Today, un°nran of thc Roosevelt ad­
State* might have broken into many ministration. Raymond Moley. edlparts, each Jealous of its own power tor. states:
and suspicious ot its neighbors. The i, "When the bonus is paid, the
World war will have cost the Unit-'
aanted the first and deciding test, ed States. In money .actually ex­
case regarding the solidarity of the pended. M5fX».000,000. And that,
Union. If the confederacy had suc­ you may be sure.«ta merely a be­
ceeded, nothing could have prevent­ ginning. We arc still paying for Ute
ed further divisions. Each little Civtl war, and no one Is silly enough
territory which had a grievance to believe that the Legion is going
against Its government could have to let us off as cheaply as did the

and tn spite of our political squabbias, we still enjoy more personal
Uberty than the citizens -of almost
any other nation in the worlcP-is
due lo his influence on the history of

If. tba l»Ht af • CooniiBlty

hi

r ro win"I

'svec/jjE
1 •

OUTSIDE

&gt;

4

■■

i
"■

IF

’

MUD1 Whitewash,

** P41d )us‘ M
debts had to
Spending and paying are two

different things.
Mr. Moley la correct. Bonus pay,nent*
extravagant and wUl cost
Lhb country a fat of money. He
niight have added, however, that
. bonus payments are no more of‘ an
extravagance than many of the New
1 Deal measures—much less extrava-

Views

‘ gant, for example, than paying out
Another great American was born1 money 'for destroying foodstuff*.
In February —George Washington.’ A Those representatives and senator*
superb leader and a sound thinker,
who voted against bonus payments,
many of hl* remarks reflect such a during an election year, deserve
glow of common sense that they ap­
praise tor an especially courageous'
ply to the present belter, if any­ action.
thing, than to the colonial times in
But as far as Mr. Moley and -hU
.hkh he Urrt. Tte for eumhle. ^',u
m f^te
U» --lollowlnc
exeerpu
from —
hl-■ oia
01d aaaiCj
odMr.-Thm
.to live
U« in
m g
,Uu
------- -- -------r- ------- jnose wno
fareweU mesrage:-------------------------------- hou-pl Bhouldn-t lhrow &gt;tonea_.
"As a very importent source ot very mUch
lhe (JOlnl
strength and security, cherish pub­
lie credit. One methodxjf preserv-1
VERY SIMPLEI
Ing It fa to use it as sparingly as
. The secret of making money Is
possible, avoiding occasions of ex­
pense by culUvattng peace, but re-* really quite simple, in farming, for
example, it's all a matter of having
numbering also that timely dis-1
lots of hogs to sell when hogs arc
bursement to prepare for danger i
high and almost no hogs al all when
frequently prevents much greater,
, hogs are low; in business It -fa all
disbursements lo repel It; avoiding'
a matter of selling at a higher price
likewise the accumulation of debt.
than you buy. Yes the problem is
Aot only by shunning occasions ol j| simple; elemental, in fact. But
expense, but by vigorous exertions.!
" working out lhe problem—well.
In Ume of peace to discharge the
that's a different matter!
debts which unavoidable wars have
occasioned, not ungenerously throw­
A LA FARLEY.
ing upon posterity thp burden which ’
. Howard Lawrence, newly appointwe ourselves should besr.”
’ ed State Banking Comml&amp;aipner, ac­
"Not throwing upon posterity the
cording lb press reports, plans to re­
burden which we ourselves should
tain his Job as chairman of the.
bear"—A sturdy philosophy which
Republican Bute central Commi$reflects lhe spirit of those patriot*’

around in the public rooms of coun­
try taverns swapping stories with
other fellow travelers and who was
saved from mediocrity by a great
heart and a mind of unusual power.

,'^gS

and Opinions; j n'
Others Say' ~

What

4 Quotation
ERRORS, like straws.

Bits of Yesterday

to get about. I hitehed up toe cut- IJved in---------a UUle community, where
ter on the afternoon of toe play amateur plays
—i are produced and
but really I had' hardly turned when
toe play
--------------. .. yers are one's own
out of the driveway before old Mary, ' friends, neighbors or acquaintances,
that’s the horse, you know, almost you will know lhe dilemma with
became hoiieieaaiy stuck In a big: which an editor fa faced in writing
drift. So. there was nothing to do . criticism*. To damn by faint praiM
but turn back. I would have writ- | fa damnable; to apeak only honeyed
him under a variety ot circum­ ten you befote-'jiul really I never word* fa to produce a saccharine
stances and conditions do not agree expected that you placed so much 1 nausea among one's readers; to &lt;
with this picture.
confidence in my critical meander-1 maintain complete silence fa an fil­
ings. I’m ever ao flattered, truly.! suit to be avenged by barbed looks
Many of these intimates, unfor­ I thought surely that some other and cutting words; to sp^ak toe tunately. were not authors or Jour­ critic would cover (fan’l that a de- ‘ plain, unvarnished truth is—well,
nalists. Consequently their impres­ llclously Journalistic word?) the' use your imagination. Betty—and
sions have survived only In occa­ event for you. But goodness I Now 1 for goodness sake never fall us
sional letters or In volumes which that everything fa up lo me, i'll : again.—Ed.)
have never enjoyed wide circula­
tion.
| leading the people to believe that It
From such people as these, how_
I waa the bonus, and that alone,
which required the levying of new
taxes, ThU may be the AdmlnistraHew
to
the
line,
let
the
qulpe
I tton's obiectlve.
Ull. Umdw ond .omxnot Hooped
fall where they mayl
■ Nevertheless, the mounting pub­
ward. Although no Beau Brummel.I
lic debt Qiat is going up at the rate
he dressed neatly tri the plain and
ot H20.00Q every hour, twenty-four
By Observing Tommy.
somewhat severe style then com­ •
hours a day. six days a week, means
mon hi the midwest
Is Mrs. Nellie cross? Or Is she? either heavier taxes or repudiation.
Il Is extremely regrettable that
Well, maybe you would be too If
Although he had a genius for the water pipes in your house froze lhe President did not get this tax
telling stores, they were invarisbiy solid—and then busted.
idea when he asked for lhe M,W0,told to illustrate some theme or to
000.000. He was told often enough
that continued spending meant In­
dramatize some point he wished to
TO Mr. and Mrs. Harold Phillipa
gut across to his listeners. Moat —sympathies. It's tough luck lo have creased taxation. He professed not
to believe it. "The chickens are com­
accounts we tave read agree that
a heating plant -go boom” during
people never took Abe Lincoln light­
ing home to roost.” If you dance,
such frozen limes os these.
you must pay the fiddler, and somely although he mixed easily with
them. He knew how to preserve his
Ever seen anything more ecstatic the other fallow’s dancing.
own respect and lo command the
Clare e. Hoffman,
respect of others In whatever cir­ than the look of sublime satisfaction
cles he happened to move. This on Al Bicker's face as he eats raisin
Member of Congress.
Dated: Feb. 4. IBM.
was a real lest in the near-frontier pie with ice cream squashed all over
it?
Neither
have
we.
society of his day.

Many of the commentators also
feel that historians have dealt most
unkindly with Mrs. Lincoln. The
general conception seems to be that
she was a sharp tongued, hot tem­
pered shrew. As a matter of fact,
however, she was a member of an
old southern family, cultured and
finely educated. She was quick wil­
ted and when the occasion demand­
ed sharp tongued. Robert Todd
Lincoln, especially, according to re­
ports. was very bitter al the manner
In which historians had represented
his mother.

GOVERNMENT BY RADIO.
1
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
upon the surface blow.
The late Huey tong and hb’ *
Thc Consolidated Press Company
He that would eearch
friends and enemies' ogreed Uiat
। is gradually moving its machinery
for pearls must dive
the slate radio station at Louisiana &gt;
Into its beautiful new factory bulldI ing on E. State Street. Thc people
Slate university had much to do I
below.
—Dryden.
wllh lhe Long dictatorship. The1
1 of Hastings are indebted to Mr. H.
university broadcasting v*tem was I
i B. Sherman of Battie Creek, the
a sounding board for Long and his I
majority stockholder in the com­
followers.
pany. for this fine building; Great It Is said that after Blr Walter
T*“er
■ interest Is shown in this new plant |
/he Tower
Well. Michigan fa on Its way. '
[by Hastings people as minced by
^,de^ 10 writ® ■
WKAR at Michigan State is being
I the fact that last Sunday, in spite ".“Jfry °f„EnAL nd,to hel1?
P10
geared up to a higher frequency and ।
■ or
.lormy wroLher. .1 Im:1 SKA’SL
more hours have been added. The |
r people visited it
' *,r‘ena s‘ood looking out of the winonly thing lacking for a Long set­
s&gt;rr&gt; elite, in B»rr, ruun.y U1
up appears lo be a shortage of
|N IStb century England, longHuey Longs. Beginning within a
urjrf w cooperite In boonint the ,
1 baired doga were used In­ membership
M the Barry county
bt?.h
few weeks will be a schedule upon
“r
Hospital Association which will hold I Sa^aiS^Emhh?
5U‘
which the governor, thc secretary of stead of napkins by diners for
whilewhile
eating.
paling.
A ;u* r&gt;rit
mecllnf and dinner'
H£?p?!*ran“
I the state, the state highway com- w...-. wiping bands
missioner. the superintendent of j true case ot "putting
•*
*
on tba ln 8t Rosc haU on Thursday. Feb. ’
17. Memberships in the Association
ST
Eublic instruction, lhe alate police dog.”
• •
are being soai. Mrs A E Carveth *nnr’H'd upon lhe futility of atend. the conynlssioner of agricul* Approzlmately 93 per cent ot , Mrs. w. r. Coflk Mrs H L stoweil’i
^UILt5,l’r wchTOniS,e
ture and other state officials will
.
.
...
....
or
.
..
...
.
...
.
.
..
I
evenU
Ol
the
naat "
centurim
w»u*n
all
fatal
auto
accidents
occur
at
an
J
Mrs'5
Frank
Edmonds
are
’
tho
n,lurtPS whcn
broadcast.
■peeda
■neeila ot
of teas
!«•* tb»n
than 60 miles
mites an I membership committee and they
thev arc
are ji y*0 0"®*11*01 could not even agree
Of course, the taxpayers will foot
an
event
which had Just hap------. hour.
whyofnot
make that
the bills
in the*o
name
education
or the ready to sell shares lo all comers.
entertainment or politic*. The radio , mlnithnm speed lljnit?
’ A- E. Sleeper of Bad Axe was in'
-------------in*furnish
—j.uonly
—
•
•• •
! Hastings Thursday in tnc interest i
statesmen
will
thc tai- •i .
ent. while WKAR will try to dig up a
Using .
u.m.
• »&gt;«»■
Di|D-prcuur»
prnmj- tui- , or
O1 ms jnmandme,
own cauainacy (or
tor ite
uie reI buretor. an Italian engineer uses 1 publican nomination for'the goverfew listeners.
’ । ent day authors who attempt to
It Js rather too much to expect । fuel oil to run a gasoline engine. I nonhip.
TbatU’ia.*V when’ MwaSliu" wn't j' Saturday night. 25 Rebekahs Wfth ' *’r,tC ot Un“ln, ,
that MessrsL Fitzgerald. Atwood.

IP*l^,1. P°n

A comely young woman of Has­
tings. 1 understand, walked Into one
of the town's mercantile establish­
ments and asked lo see some light
weight woolens, and was mildly non­
plused when the obliging clerk
UEked. "Long legs and sleeves, two
Ijlece or combination?” Tiial wasn't

Is my bora ever sore! It seem? that
his Crystal took a sudden crush to
"Hlzzoner” Charles Leonard, nusyur
ol all Hastings. My! My! These
women! They always fall for a uni­
form or a title!
Understand that Harold Carroll
is one fine bdwling Instructor! Ask
Mrs. Carroll about It.

Abe says—"Still no news."

Our Idea of • creaUye Imagina­
tion." Andy Taylor telling a fl&amp;h
story. Ask 'Im lo tell you one.
Tills week's nomination for Has­
tings Hall of Fame—Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Annablc — Reason: The
twins!
Really, this weather is terrible.
Tlie government should do some­
thing about it I
THEY
ARE
BEGINNING
TO
STUMBLE—TO HESITATE.
Real Democrats, those who know,
and who for years have followed.
Uta principles of thc Democratic
parly, for some time have been
hesitating in yielding blind obed­
ience to the Administration's orders.
They showed symptoms of revolt
last session. They have been think­
ing it over during the recess.
The Literary Digest poll has help­
ed. No longer will they, for the sake
of party expediency, blindly follow
the. President's lead.
Even New
Dealers are not quite as cocksure as

1

Fla

Ha

I

O

Only

ADDS NEARLY $1,600,000
NEW INSURANCE IN JAN.
The Windatorm Co.’s Agents
Make Unusual Record for
That Month
One would not believe that the
month of January would be a good
one for the agents of the Wind­
storm Insurance company of this
city to mH new insurance. Writing
of new policies In the winter months
is ordinarily very small, but this
winter seems to be an exception. We
mentioned last week that thc De­
cember showing of new insurance
was much above the average for that
month. The January addition to the
volume of the insurance carried by
this company wu 81.599.250. which
h a wonderful showing considering
the time of year and lhe many
storms encountered during that
month, if lhe month of Febrnary
shall continue to furnish tlie same
article of weather as that of its first
ten days. It may be doubted If the
January figures will be equaled.
The unusual showing of new Insur­
ance tor tlie first month of this year
Indicates that this Is lo be an
outstanding year for the Windstorm
Company.
When warm weather comes and
the twisters begin to cavort across
lhe state, then Is the time when
people think ot getting windstorm
insurance. And that's funny, loo.
They ail know that not a year has
gone by In Michigan without some
serious windstorm. The fact that
the Windstorm Company of thisjlly
has. since it was organized, paittoul
nearly five ipllllon ol dollars I for
such losses prove* Hie worth ot that
kind of Insurance.
We expect to see a considerable
Increase In Hie volume of
In force tn this old reliable
by the end of this year.
more than probable that lhe four
hundred million mark will not pnly
be reached but passed by a consid­
erable margin on December 31, B3B.

VanWagoner and the other ■ radio
stars will not be prejudiced as lo
Tb.i On&gt;«r,llr "■ Ohlmo | with mnuc uid • «tel Um«.
Hu tedl'
the worth ot their services to the' ■
stat*.
student about to end a four-year ,
j“,ld
p’ ‘J’
f°r him a place among toe ImmorWc hope we are wrong. We hope
course lo one year must be one rained the seslry of Emmanbel t|ljs
hfatory which can never bp
that lhe galaxy of slate radio talent &lt; of that uew rpedea which might. ®hurch *t dinner on Tuesday eve-1 (ie,troyK1 by muckrakcrs or' en­
who went through personal danger
,, ... . ,
will educate and entertain the pop­
w. Krtww lw u» „ke
b,U11.1
u»» »
f
SLrtrr M.nrU te
nml, I b"^ b&gt;
,
ulace and that the public will re­
m, . tree n.u. .hkh wiur. ,.n- "
» •"»
enough applications to insure ren»tw**n
.
ceive full value for Its money. But ■ ■aai-BKcr*. . • •
Tact-A doctor aak. bl. pa«^r
.nt th*
. action, should cease al once from
llent, a aupretne court justice, to ®»rr&gt;
County Spanish American
than 10rjo per cent. Beverly
"■j,“&gt;»*» ■&gt; ■&gt;•»" *
! open hfa month aad ray O-O-O.
UiP
HUU. CaUf, M«5 per rent; Dear born,
which seems lo be. throw off onto
.
,
,
.
.
I tnaread of A-A-A.
jtra^tS JJ^n^tur^ “S'
*££r
iK fttiSe. •
ot - your Bunfcn. 1
“ &gt;■“*’
u|.IMpU,.
Ordlnarily. private bills, intro­
...
, ’
!
master nenerat
general while servinv
serving a«
as
,U- teT contented rre.» Co. ’
. »Jr
S1‘”'r duced by memberi for lhe establish­
which you do not wish to shoulder
building over to toe company last ।
45
’
10 . P*r cenl
chairman of the national Demo­ | we believe that danger lurks in lhe ■
ment of a park, the erection of a
today!
, cratlc commiliee. The two cases plan for a state broadcasting station.
Wednesday, and left that day for.. "Little Things pay." The metal monument to please the "home FIRE DESTROYS
"It fa importent. likewise, that'
Chicago.
are identical. H one is wrong, so It smacks too much of Huey Long,
&gt; cap for bottles, the peg golf lee. and folks." get through, if there is a
HOME AND CONTEMTS
We habits of thinking' in a free
is the other. Mr. Farley has Just os of Hitler, of Mussolini, of -the con- i
the collar button wlUi a Uim-down sliadow of an excuse for the ex­
THIRTY YEARS AGO
country should inspire caution in
trol now being clsmped on by tho |
.. ' cyP&gt; iMW® GUHCd approximately |j.- penditure. But recently there has Evan Fuller Rieke Life in
much rich! to net in an important federal agencies. There Is one-guudi
been an indication that the spend­
Uitwwiuusted with its adrnirrutra— -- -----T. ■ 000,000 each for lhe inventor*.
- -------cabinet position while directing thc thing about it. there is yet no law;
ers are losing some of thetr recruits.'
Lombard of this city their daughter. ।
Early Morning Blate
tion to 'confine themselves within
Yesterday. February 3. a resolu­
affairs of the Democratic parly ar. which prohibits, the public from their
Ann Arbor Friday •»
lo attend the
constitutional
u» tion was Introduced, authorizing the
on Tuesday
.
, Wednesday afleinoon. F\b it. al * jyniof hop.
Mr. Lawrence has to direct Michi­ tuning their sets onto some /Other .
sphere*._______ ...
,
President
to
invite
foreign
coun
­
Hastings
friends were sorry to
program.—V. J. Brown in Ingham
oclock to Donald D. Smith of, Miss Mabel Nixon of Charlotte
gan Republicans from lhe office ot
: "He who castes every mans broth
County News.
the powers ot one department to!
M^SeSmiSmith* A^eiemioiUn ' *** lhc CUMt 01 Mkss Clara Hcndcr- tries to partlci|&gt;aie in an ex­ hear of the misfortune which Mfell
I
sometimes burn* hi* mouth.'
banking
commissioner.
—
. stale
irate
oanaing
comnuxuonrr.
position lo be held in Los Angeles Mr. and Mrs. Evan Fuller and fam­
. Mr*, clement Smith. A reception in
, ia.t u.rr.y
FEBRUARY
in 1938. In celebration of the bring­ ily,' who moved In January from
their honor will be given this eveing to that city of water and power Hie Fuller farm in Carlton to a farm
nlng at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
FORTY YEARS AGO■- 'iu”
0, me state.
„,u, .
tn nn«
nx «»
.
Du:n togrtr.'T. t-copic ot
' BRrEF OBSERVATIONS.
। Lombard.
.
| Tin Women’s Club wU! give a from Boulder Dam. This resolution near Lowell. He had built lhe fire
mentA in th.
one »nr
«nrt thnu
wh.ij.vM»*“ In
. CTea
. **»° P*y-thrlr banking commission- Ii ’ "Al! real beauty ts heaven-born,
&gt; Ray cook was pleasantly sur- musical and have a social evening did not require the expenditure ot in the morning and waa working at
a real (fapottan.’™ ° •0Vl"UnC-1- « will
belUr s^lW wUh Ute| EvcnHhmg^ruly^oo^u ot Ood."prised by about thirty of his friend*; at the home of Mrs. R. I. Hcnder- any money, but the one lo follow lhe barn when he noticed smoke
would and. after It .was suggested pouring out of the house. Knowing
iand schoolmates Friday evening. k shot I this evening.
The evening was spent playing*
George Walter has
sold hb
w^aXXTo^h^ lud
h* XTSfra
,
has'edld
hh trot- that lhe Invitation' be extended his family bad not arisen when he
i games.
iter
—'* ........
- only to those foreign nations which left the houie, he rushed into the
i ter "M
"Maggie
May” to a Saginaw
"Only In taking action does the
This issue records the death of party.
—.
The
consideration
was had paid their war debts, thc reso­ house looking for them. MH MrsEnglishman discover what he wants
lution was vupcu
voted uwwn.
down, A
a uinc
Utile ; Fuller had awaacuau
! A. H- Salsbury, a well-known horse 11,000.
luuuti
awakened auu
and laarn
taken sue
Hie
to do."—Andre Mauroia.
thing, you say? Yes, but it s a straw three children to safety. He had to
। trainer, who was found dead in Dr.
live functions from a subservient
----------.
.
showing which way Uw wind is JumP Hom gn upstairs window when
IS-j»hnB*rrytMtt.tu(t«ad I chas. RusAll's barn. He came to
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
"Will 'Pact*' prove the new way of1
ooogresi looks with acquisitive eye j
qoqd work ’
' ■
the staircase tell and later, while
kru™ »ur. bom i**f. , jiasung3 originally to lake care of
Henry Barnum of Carlton drew at blowing.
Pax?"—Dr.
Cloudesley
at Ute consutuuonal authority of
Wonder if people appreciate what spelling
Sa too. was the President’^ mes- ’ trying to gel some things from lhe
. P- T.. Colgrove's team. Alio is re- one load from hb farm to the ele­
Brerion.
IB-Gwwrd u. S. Cr»m wp. | corded the lUdden death of W. H. vators of Rogers At Fausey of this rage of the same day. recommend- house, lhe kitchen celling fell on
Uta Supreme Court, iuclf?
| a nnc job A, Browu an[j Ms work"TO try to gain security through'
city, a dbtance of nine miles, a load . ing "the prompt repeal of lhe act dr him. but he escaped unharmed. The
. Myers, harness maker, aged 59.
"The execution of these maxims t men foave dOne jn keeping uie main
April
21. 133*. as amended, known house was a fatal tea. together with
*
Rev. H. H- Van Autan was Wjimwimui
containing in
176 i&gt;*ouNir»«
1-3 bushels of gaw.
oats.
belongs to your representatives; but ■ roads of this county open? Il has armaments fa simply to make war I
their belongings.
I years old Friday. Members of hb
Phin Smith I* training Jay Eye as the 'Bankhead cotton Act;' of
it fa necmary that public opinion, been a real Job, with Iteavy dzUU inevitable."—Lady Astor.
Because of the deep snow and
church and congregation'and friends! See No. J. About 1890 he will down the act of June n. IBM. as amendI oufalde Uie church surprised him. the whole Uaveling fraternity—lhe ed. known as the "Kerr-SmlUt blocked roads. It waa Impossible foe
should co-operate.”
I blowing in almost as fast iu&gt; the
A man who does nothing fa not I
Tobacco Act;-' and of Title 11 of tho ‘he towel! Are department to render
enjoying
an
evening-of
great
social
horre.
we
mean,
Much abun has been heaped up-1 plows
Uiove lhe UIOW
bom.-though he lives too years.— .
pleasure. An elegadt library table' ’ Mrs. Florence Bowne and Mrs. B. act of August 24. 1933. known as assistance, 'rhe family has the
&lt;m the shoulders ot congress, much , Today wc are so accustomed to roads Chinese Adage.
of a wide circle of
and, a tine electric student's l»mp Busby will give a tea parly to Ute "PoUlo Act of IMS?' thus aban- sympathy
of it undoubtedly Just. But lhe fact ( maintained in excellent condition,
were left as reminders of lhe event.. friends this Wednesday afternoon doning, after an enormous expense, friends. ,
Did you ever observe that immod­
mere Uuio useless experiments, it
„ ------------ —
remain! that public demand, or at lhal „ arc nkely
looM upoil any erate huthtcr always cntL in a
MIm Alice Munrop, furmerly em- , and evening.
makes one think of a child building
counting (hose completed yesployed here by A. Black St Son was
Mis* Jennie Fracc of Nashville
Way
Mast the demand* of vociferous or-. delay whatsoever as poor service. sigh?—Leigh Hunt.
I
VM00
married Friday to "Doc” A. W. was in our city Saturday and Sun- block or card houses and Uwn tip- ^f.day'
NEWS GLEANINGS
ganlsod minorities. In contrast to But we do not believe It an exagping them over.
, fllUn» Mattons in Ute United Bfates. .
Il fa by grim energy and resolute
Oranges
were originally pear Smllh. former Adrian 'postmaster at day. U»e guest of hw friends. Mfaa
ritenga of that great slice of the ICraUfin_Uj state Uiat with the men
her mother's home tn Portland. ’ Edie Kfaflcld
and Miss Belle
The President made one very, -rim
.,n ir.
~~
।
courage
that
we
move
on
to
belter
shaped,
and
About
the
sue
of
a
Ifaeral public which fa too Absorbed ,
They will reside in San Diego.
|Hotebkl«.
macWnes available, the Job of things.—Theodore Roosevelt.
-----I cherryAn anniversary party will be giv-! Eugene Davenport and . wife of
In tte own affairs to use intelligent-'
&gt;lng Ute highways clear could
as a ' Abproximateiy^teTnlllion
nerons
*0 04x1evening
Mondayatevening
Cailfa Woodland
enjoyed
Ute hospitality
of not like Uw passage of Um bonus
----next Monday
Cattle al
Woodland
enjoyed th*
hospitality
ot
k ''®Pcecb stamps us exactly as a i lbApproximately
one million persons eq
ly U» privileges of.citizenship, hast
h^ve been done any belter than
■_ the ________
- Ontlar
—Emily in the u s stteXt fa
I ..-11
HaU ___
under
auspice,-jof Barry Supervisor
Potter anH
and fanillu
family nwr
over, blU ow his veto
suggnUon
W»!»i|
hall mars stamps silver.' —v».iiy ■'h? u. 2.
-- —-ITTs—
llvmg 1^
by door-to-door
door-to-dM- seUing.
rciuns ’
p
will be a musi- Sunday. Mr Davenport fa lhe editor was mat C«mgrm begin, by impoe- goes foe
Poet
______
! living
‘ • Lod«» «
daring top maM texatom fad public debt. I
. --------- --mg Dy qoorJo-door telling.
. ca]
7 to 3. Urerary of Um farm department of Ute Ban-। ing naw twres. to rates Ufa morMy ^-wmu
vegtrabfae, etc.
No entertainment fa so cheap as
Canada Is larger than the con- program from «. to 9. and card* and. ner. (Wtah we had the Dean work- to pay Uia bonus.
I Tho Q
ffototo *nd common sense of j A IumIcrs u unc who never reigns
•ns reading, nor any plea Pleajure so Eul- tinentai u. S-. cxcludutg Alaska, by I dancing bom than on.
! ing in Uiat same capacin thia
Boms veteran* claim to aae in this, aircraft i
ing—fitly Montague.

CH

SN

N

LEE

&gt;11 a

Tha

W
Clo
"CsUU

BANN

Crumbs of Wisdom

‘“JF - -

—

of Our World

R

A

�USE YOUR PHONE OR
WRITE POSTAL CARD

W«ter» Cloth— Shop

Noilly Offlo.rs About Birds
Tluii An Mol Bslaf Mud
la th. Country

Final
Close-Outs
of Several
Winter Items
To Wear Now!

daily the quail and pheasants,
which are auch good friends to the
farmers. Many have already per­
ished from the cold and no doubt
many more will unless they are
given plenty of feed.
Tho Barry County Rod and Gun
Club, in cooperation with Conserva­
tion Officer George Sumner, wifi be

WmI
COSSACKS

Mn'i il—., All

Ferry. 3307. or Mr. Bumner. 254A
IP they know where there Is a flock
of quail or pheasants which la not
being fed.
They have arranged
about 35 or 30 feeding station*
around the county where feed will
be taken for distribution. If you
haven’t a phone, drop a card to
either of the men mentioned above
or to Max Dietrich. Hastings. who
la secretary of the Rod and Gun
Club. and\they will see that the
birds are fed.
If you have a feeding board at
your home in Lown, you can enjoy
watching your feathered viators. The
birds most common here in the city
are the cardinal, chickadee, tit­
mouse, bluejay, nuthatch, junco,
sparrow, and. of course, the starling.
Several people are also feeding the
squirrels, who seem to like sun­
flower seeds as well as do the birds.

ZIPPER FRONT

Rag $4.50. Now $2.98
Reg. $5.50, Now $3.98
leva Reg. $3.45,
Now__$2.89

Flannel SHIRTS
Pure Wool—Checks and
Plain Blue—-New

at Almost
SILK AND WOOL UNION S
34 to 48, $2.50 valuot. to cl

ROYS’ $1.00 UNION $UtT$
Sixts up to 34. al

WOULD OPEN SCHOOLS
TO NEAR-BY DISTRICTS

$2.98

Plans Now Being Developed
Would Maintain Rural Dis- (
trict Officers

Heavy, All Wool

BREECHES

Plans are now under way whereby
every school district In the territory
Immediately surrounding Hastings,
can arrange to have its pupils at- :
tend both lhe grades and the high
school of this city, and be conveyed
In school buses from their homes to
our city schools and return WITH­
OUT ANY INCREASE IN THE
DISTRICT SCHOOL TAXES That
is. the school tax assessed locally!
against the district would be 3 1-2
mills; lhe balance of the money paid I
for the schooling of the children 1
would come from lhe state of Michl- .
gan. This plan would permit the ,
districts to maintain their own or- ,
ganlxattoni,
with their
regular,
school district officers, who can con­
tract year by year with lhe Haa- •
Ungs school board-for such educa­
tional advantages for the children |
of their districts. This would give
to the children of thc nearby rural 1
districts all the privileges and ad­
vantages of the schools of this city,
which have a state reputation for
their excellence. This same plan has
been worked out for the territory
surrounding Bellevue, we will com­
ment further on this proposition
next week.

Large Red and Black Plaid—

*4.12

Sirea 33 and 34 Only.

O’COATS
Only 8 left In stock at
CloM-Out Prices

’13.88:-/
CHILD'S NAVY BLUE

SNOW SUITS
Zipper—Sire 4 to 3 Only

Now Shipment of

LEE Overalls and
Jackets
All iImi, from- 32 $4 .59
to 54 waist—

Blankets, Snow Sults,
Hose, Gowns, Pajamas,
Drews, Gloves, ete. at FINAL

I

CO. MB
PIUS S5.006.67

The only atoro in West­
ern Michigan where you
con buy this overall
ot $1.59
--------- *-------------

(ConUnued from page one)

WATERS

Clothes Shop

The New Spring ■

COATS and SUI
$Q.88 and $IO.8
SPORT SKIRTS at

sale of taxes on delinquent tax
lands for the years 1033 and previ­
ous years. Up to this year it haa
been the custom of the auditor gen­
eral to advertise descripUons of the
lands offered at the Mav tax sales
for delinquent taxes. There lands
were described In the lax sale legal
notice: but this practice has been
discontinued.
Hereafter only the
court order authorising the sale of
such delinquent tax lands will be
published. However, the owners of
such lands will be notified by the
county treasurer, not later than
March 11 of the fact that their
lands will be sold for taxes at the
May tax sale. They will then have
the opportunity to pay they county
treasurer the amount of thc delin­
quent taxes plus interest and legal
charges. If they do so before the
HASTINGS
May tax sale, the land will not be
offered at that sale. If, however,
the delinquent taxes shall not have
been prepaid and the property sha11
be sold by the state for the delin­
quent taxes, the owner will have
Assisting a criminal to escape the
one year In which to redeem by
paying to the person who bought law is a crime, unless you happen to
be a lawyer.
the property al the tax sale the
amount he paid at the sale, plus
No one U rich enough to do with­
interact and other charges. He will out a neighbor.
save money by .paying the. delin­
quent taxes before the May sale.
The county treasurer has nothing
whatever to do with the ordering
of the May tax sale, as the order
comes from the auditor general of
the state and that officer, under the
law. Is responsible for IL

*1.

NEW DRESS

"CtUlng Qasllty Keeps Vs Xaiy”

FRANDSEN
"Exclusive^ but not expensive*

BRANDED CORN

FED BEEF at

Feldpausch Market
Beef Kettle Roasts

u 18c

Ribs of BeefJUKV A"D

13c

Armour’s StarBaci

^19c

Swiss Steak
Salmon

19c
25c

Plneappleduice 10c
» 27c

ou. Mown. uo.vJw.iu.so.

25c

OBITUARY. John Neal, second son of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Neal, was born No­
vember f. 1182. in Genoa. Ohio,
where he spent the early part of his
life. He camo to Hastings In IMS
and for eight years was employedKy
the E. W. Bites co. On Aug 5. inc
ho married Mrs. Harriet Allen ol
Hastings. to this union was bcm
one daughter. Doris Marie. Mf.'Neal
had been in poor health since 1930.
but continued working whenever
possible. He departed this life sud­
denly on Jan. 81, aged 53 yean. 2
monUta and 34 days. Besides the
•Ife and daughter he la survived by
three step-children. Dorothy Alien,
Hastings, Frank Allen. Grand Rap­
ids and John Allen, Chicago, also
two Usters. Mrs. Vado Keel. Wood­
ville. Ohio and Mrs. Daisy Groring,
Genoa, Qhlb, and two brothers.
William Neal. Toledo, and Charlie
Neal. Genoa. Ohio. He also leaves
two nieces, two nephews and a host
of friends and neighbors. He was a
good husband and father and will
be greatly missed.

ter dispositions than other men.
Perhaps it menu Uiat , way because
a man wHh a pipe in his mouth
finds It difficult to argue himself
into a fighting frame of mind.

Now You
Sugar Traetha far j
. . . witfc PiratM
there it i»a chaaaa
because the saW-41
pull you through mm
of chains. ,

PNOM

�THE HAATTNGg BANNER, THtTRADAY. FEBRUARY IX 1»M

3.000.00

5.000.00

PROCEEDINGS

#.000.00

Alias C. Hyda' Ctork.
*
(To be continued.)

The above statement ought to im­
press any reader with the difficulty,
and under tlie present condition* the
Impossibility, of keeping all the
narrow roadways of township high­
way* open in such times as this.

Road Commission When you think that there are MO
miles of meh highways in Barry
Doing All It Can constant,
county, and that it took ten hour* of
hard work to clear nine

Detroit Flr» i Marino Im.
’iisfi
Old Colea, Im. Co- No. 2*5. 09f ...._____ ............

full that travel over them would be' no allowance whatever for expense*.
Wa rlfllihl If manu of /w*a vaaHavw
would want to endure lhe abu*e
they have taken for that princely
cent post when people who lived sum.
■
A woman called up one day last
on township roods paid large town­
ship highway taxes, also county week. She complained that the
township road past her home was
road taxes, and yet had to shove] so badly drifted that slie and tier
their road* in times like the pieseni.
husband could not drive their car.
No one- then ever thought it was She allowed that that was very
lhe duty of lhe county road comshabby treatment, afur they had
rnlMlon to keep township roads open paid their share of the taxes for
during heavy storm* and severe road building and snow removal.
winter weather. The neighbors She was reminded that neither lhe
banded together and did that Job township nor ti»e county raised a
then. Now there are no township
road taxes and no county road taxes
she Laid, "and we paid our* thia
to pay. Yet some who live on these year. Wc demand that you open our
township roads are unreasonable rood." She evidently did not know
enough to think that it is the duty Uiat the money to build and main­
keen'everv^iiiwTi^iri ™,TTlMJ.nn ,O la
Jn roads
roatl!i In
111 Barr
Y county
tain
Barry
county an
an com
cornea

mile* of main traveled county road,
(Continued from page one)
5.000.00
with a big machine and crew of
men. one can realize what it would
* .l5.30O.oo of township road*, it can be seen mean and how many men it would
(Juuni IS. 1ML)
HetlrfttfuHr
'
what a tremendous task it is to keep require to keep not only the 225
graaklls. No- 200 ......
them open in ordinary winter i miles open, but also the 840 miles
:"**
weather. With such terrific storms of township roads.
In attempting to remove the snow
iod snpoort- and winds and low temperature as
1.000.00
t b« accent- we have had in the last two week*. from township highway*, the plow
&lt;1 .uotnrlad 11 U
out ot the
fOT must travel In the middle of the
1.000.00
„ on imur- the rood commission to keep town- graveled surface of that road. The
xiitai* ihe »hlp roads open. The best it can do driver .does not dare to reach over mailer wnat me weather, especially
&gt;&gt; h*.in.------ *—----------------- -of It being paid
by any
one in
Vh.. ,o« W cent
SE/iS*
--------------------------in clear inow from the maln- the edge of the roadway, for fear of “» p^kuUr
z___ ____ — . _____ .
hitting a stump or stone or frozen the critic'* own house.
The Barry county rand comnilsground
that
would
ditch
hl*
ma
­
There
are
at
least
fifty
north
and
7..r
8.000.00
—,“*z .‘.T — *“u sion. will continue to do all they
, The County Road commission chine or smash it. -The gravel road­
p
I can not only to build highway* and
6.000.00
l added four new snow plows to its way of township roads average* only
f
road 1 maintain them, but will also do ev.XjS'#U*3t..
equipment litis year, and let us Ull nine or Un feet wide, so that It Is S^to.lWtr
n tlie «now6.000.00 .
you that they have been busy for impossible to make a wide track
h nery' 22*' blockaded road*; but it *hould be
the past two weeks. But with all through a township road. Tlie nar­
pU&gt;W* *1U?2 i apparent to anyone that when we
(Jtasirr IS. 1»37.)
their machinery they cannot buck rower the track, the easier and have to hire
IhettEa. No 100*4---------aSiv 'ofOImX?Uld 1 havc *uch “or™ “ Ul0Se of lhe
1.000.00 ot #300.00.
such drifts as are now to be found quicker it will be filled again with
u-nrk
1two week*, the Barry county
on such north-and-south roads as drifting snow. With the high winds th* mnnlL °w *h°'cls- “nd •Pc,n‘11 road commluion cannot perform the
4.000 00 (Jon »rrl»).
we have described. Four of these and such a volume of loose snow, will be needed next sumrn^'tn’hniM I llnP°5slble- Tl*? MUST keep the
(NMHbir 13. IHT.i
3.000.00
OU Colony. Ho. 40*52*
plows in one day lost their rear the snow plow's woak on township rnadTJira
° bu°S' m»ln traveled road* open. Thc
wheels or had broken gears in try­ roads is soon obllteraUd.
4,000.00
I »t*U cretrs will keep trunk line*
ing lo fight snow drifts. Fortunate­
It is almost impossible for the av­ roid
J°b °f * open' but thc connw:tlng township
12.000.00
ly, the new county garage has made erage person to realize the power
7^0
»...
..
* roads cannot be snow plowed in such
it possible to make repairs on trucks it takes to push a snow plow #5 000 in
#an lem
storm* and in «uch- weather a* wo
*146.050.00
quickly, which could hardly be done through deep, closely-packed, frozen moral Trom tnuXn
.h"*0*,,"." ■ ha”‘ »“d fOr «*“"
lwo
Detention Bom*
..
..# 3.600.00 at all in the old building, because ot snow, as it Is now piled up on al­
Oiram —........ —....
nearly all raent£ The road comnili51on vrtU open all
□ HO'25 lack of room and because It was not I most all of the township roads of
Content* ot iulldlny*
in
obouWbc! highway, aa *oon a* it pooilbly can.
heated. But in the last two weeks j this county. The Impact of the plow bome in mind that the commloslon f u
cannot do it. there la only
M.rhlrx.
there lias been delay in getting ex­ into these heavy drifts puU a ter­ cannot
?UTl onc way: The interested neighbors
tra parts, because there have been____________
rible strain on
,_________
the rear__wheels
________
and
_
n°[ d?1 lhc impossible. They lack I mu5t band togcuwr. M lhey u*5ed to
breakdowns of snow plows all over driving gear. On one recent day four to keen an'rount^
T01 Bet
d0' ®houltler their *now shovels and
23.800.00
°i*n, ln dig snow. The county road commUthe stole. and stocks of repairs for, trucks with snow plows were put LVthJi
trucks and plows are al a very low tout of commission in this county,
ebb.
I The county not only does not own.
The state crew has. by fighting but it cannot buy, snow-removing
It should be recognized in Barry!
Motion mad
hard, been able to keep the 127 machinery that could right now county right now that, in such
County It
mile* of trunk lines in Barry county clear the township roads of their weather aa thia, and with *uch&gt;
open. They have succeeded better i huge packed snow drifts. No ma­ storm* aa we have had for lhe past I
than they have in Kent county or ' chlnery capable of doing this is on two weeka, the Barry county road I
in other neighboring counties; but I the market. It would take an army commission cannot undertake to|
Co- No. 55*2 2.500.00
the trunk lines are wider, the road; of men to shovel the snow from all keep all tlie township roads open.1
beds are wider and the grades easier these roads. With such high winds Under existing condition* it 1* do-■
than on the best of county roads, I and such low temperatures as we ing all It can tn keeping the
(Continued from page one)
krt&lt;U. By constantly bucking the snow and had on Sunday and on the preced- main-traveled roods open. It can-1--------------------------------------------------------5.800.00
pushlng it to lhe road side for the ; ing Tuesday and Wednesday any not afford to hire shovellers enough next move was to Detroit, where he
1.000.00
full width of the trunk line roadway, narrow road would soon be made to do that work, if it did, it would] entered the employ of a druggist,
it is possible to keep the main trunk Impassable. Such storms are “Just spoil its program ot road building He saved his money and. wltly thc
ri4»iiu
lines open.
| one of those things" that happen next summer—and road building la, help of a loan from hl* cousins,
- 1.500.00
Chester and Richard Messer, en­
Next in importance and in width i In nature, which mock the efforts its real Job.
5.500.00
of roadway are the main county' of man to overcome. They cannot
in cases of extreme necessity. In I gaged in the business of mnnufocroads, 225 miles of them. These be prevented. They simply have to 8 m J* ■Wne 83 lhla- ibe commission | turing drugs and toilet articles. He
the county road commission must | be endured.
will do all it possibly can to open was very successful and sold hU
keep open. They. too. are snow- 1 If the Barry county road commis- a road wliere a human life or hu-1 business ten years ago when he
plowed to the full width of the road-' sion had to take upon itself the task man live* are at stake. It is doing i reached his seventieth year. He died
GRAPHOLOGY COUPON
way. In order to keep the traveled ' of keeping all township roads open that now; but it can do no more three years ago.
port"of the highway open for traffic in such weather as we are now hav- than it is doing, in ordinary winter' Mr. Ingram was always greatly
To obtain a character reading send a line of
। The wider the track, the easier it
i» M
** .; ing. they would use up so much of weather, it can -and did do a good Interested in economic questions.
your handwriting with your signature and com­
; to keep open, but it is not an t. ./I their money that they would have Job of snow removal on township j After he retired, he devoted his time
plete address written with ink, on unruled paper.
। Job at that. Mr. John Cappon. wlx
rho i' little left with -*-*-*which *to
-----------------carry on roads; but in extreme weather, such to a study of such matters. He went
' has charge of lhe maintenance work
‘ ­ , township road building next sum­ os we now have, THAT 13 IMPOB-1 to California after he sold out in
Enclose this coupon with ten cents (coin or
: for the county road commission.'^ I mcr. They have called on their BIBLE. That fact might a* well be Detroit, still Intent on his studies,
. stamps) to help cover clerical and mailing costs,
opened the county highway lo Free­ I loyal snow plow crews for their recognized right now. The old-time particularly of taxation.
and mail to Ruth Barton, care The Hastings Ban­
port on Saturday. He attempted to best effort* to keep the roads open. method of neighbor-cooperation in I He is said to have made several
ner.
go over it again Sunday, but was The crews have responded by work­ shovelling out roads will have to be 1 wills preceding his decease. TTie
able to get only seven miles from big from twelve to eighteen hours undertaken in such severe storms as | lost one found gave the larger share
Your Name
town and had to return. When he a day. including Sundays. The peo- those of the past two weeks on thc of his estate to the University of
went out Monday, he found all that pie must realize that the first Job less traveled roads.
Michigan, to establish a fund to be
roadway piled with drifted snow. It of these crews is to keep the 225 I Some people who ijave "called up used to promote the study of taxAddress
took Un hours on Monday to open । miles of main travelled county roads and called down” the Barry county atlon. He was always quite erratic
[open.
There
would
be
no
use
in
the
nine
miles
of
county
road
to
road
commission
have
shown
not
|
in hl* views and. it Is said, this be­
City
Freeport, which has the most travel [ cleaning snow from township roads en ly a lack of good sense and good came more pronounced after he sold
| if these main roads were drlfUd so breeding but also Inexcusable ignor- , Ills business and devoted himself en­
of any county highway.
ance tn the abusive criticism which tirely to economic studies. It was
they have heaped upon the luckless because of that fact that his heirs
members of the commission.
contested his will, on the grounds
For Instance: when all of the ! that he was not men tolly in concounty snow plows were out bucking i ditlon to dispose of his property
the drifts last Sunday, doing their at tlie time his last will was made,
best to open the main roads, when The compromise indicates that
four of the trucks were at that very • there must have been some merit at
time broken under the strain of least in that claim.
*
over-work, one man in a nearby ■ Wc understand that the $20,000
township demanded of the commls- | given the University of Michigan
sion that a snow plow be sent I will be known as the "Frederick P.
to open the road past his house at, Ingram Memorial Fund" and will be
once, or he would see to it that the used to promote a study of taxation
commission was put out of business. | so that, at least in part, his plans
That's some Job for one man. But will be carried out.
the commission would not lose much
---------------- » • »
-------. . Jf ^.happened. They get the mag-1 Don't complain about keeping up
nlflcent salary of $300 per year, with ; poor kin. Think of Uncle Sam.
6.050.0^

6.000 00

aS&amp;dk'iHJ

3^’

xi^Xr” -

FOHBWW
JIOS UNIVERSITY

Meet "Mrs. Public”
I

HE PUllSE STRINGS of Barry County are in her

FAIRCHILD’S 30*

hands . . . When it conies to a matter of spending,
buying what the family wants or needs, whether the-purchase be one of commodities or amusements, of business
or professional service—whether they be considered ne­
cessities or luxuries; it is, in the vast majority of cas^lhe’
women who influence the final decision. For women are
lhe logical purchasing agents of the home, the guardians
of the. household budgets and the custodians of the
“Purse Strings” in the average family. ’
Your most important prospective customers are wom­
en. Prospects waiting to be told about the values and the
services you have to offer. Prospecls ready to become

buyers'll! YOUR store. And clever buyers they are, too,
abreast of-the times. They know what, when and where
to buy most advantageously, because they rely on the in­
formation gained from consistently reading the adver­
tising in this newspaper, to guide them in their buying.

£

&lt;&gt;.

if

$1.98 Ladies* Sweaters '___

$1.49

$1.39 Twin Sweaters______

..89c

$1.00 Children's Sweaters .

..89c

$7.95 Silk Dresses___ -____ -L.$5.00
$1.98 Cotton Crepe Dresses ..$1.49

--79c

$1.00 House Dresses

WILL SERVE EIGHT
MILLION METHODISTS
Over Half of Songs Are New
—Beit of the Old Are
Retained

Part of the morning service of
the Methodist church Sunday was
devoted to a dedication of the new
Methodist Hymnal, used officially for
the first lime.
It is some seven
years and more ago that the Board
of Bishops of that denomination ap­
pointed a commission to revise it*
Hymnal, the last edition' of which
dated back to 1905. This commis­
sion was enlarged to 38 members as
the Methodist Chdfch South and
the Methodist Protestant church
asked
to collaborate. The new
Hymnal, issued late in October, thus
becomes the song book for eight
million Methodists. It contain* 416
hymns. 206 of which are new.
It was a difficult task, but the
genera) opinion seems to be that the
committee ha* done a fine piece of
work, considering lhe large number
of people with varying tostes to con­
sider and to please. Robt. T. Mc­
Cutchen, head of the music depart­
ment at DePauw university, was
editor-ln-chief.
Many of the distasteful outmoded
tunes, lacking in true religious
meaning have been deleted, but the
best of thc old ofies retained, a bit
(Continued from page one)
over half as the above figure* show.
The hymns by Charles and John
Wesley have been reduced from 242 , to know what the Issues pre and will
to 71. Some lovely modern hymn* be glad to hear both sides.
Women as well a* men are invited
have been Inserted. Harry Emer­
son Fosdlck, famous pulpit orator. to this banquet, and it is probable
John Hay. statesman. Arthur Gult- that at least half of the ticket* sold
will
be taken by women who want
erman. John Haynes Holmes. John
Addington Symons, and Henry Van I to hear the discussion by Mr. Dunn.
Dean Davenport of Woodland will
Dyke, modem poets, are represented.!
Sidney Lanier's beautiful "Into the act as toastmaster and will intro­
Woods My Master Went" is among duce tlie speaker. Dr. F. Carrothers,
those retained. Many denominations chairman of the Barry county roand faith* are represented. Hardly Sublican committee, will preside,
(embers of the legislature from this
an European country which ha* not
been drawn on for a melody or senatorial district, consisting of Al­
words for a hymn, going to prove legan, Barry and Van Buren coun­
ties.
have been Invited, as have also
that all nation* have a common
several of the state officers.
heritage in music.
Arrangements have been made so
Because of sectional demands, we
find Included the favorite hymn of that tlie wraps of those who attend
the Methodist Protestants, "Take this banquet will be cared for In the
Time To Be Holy;" thaj. of the downstairs room. Those who come
Methodist Church South with its will be seated at once at the tables
old-time fervor. "Spirit of Faith In the banquet room, so that there
Come Down;" and the favorite Ne­ will be no tiresome standing and
gro Methodist hymn beginning, "Joy waiting before the banquet is served.
Is a fruit that will not grow In na­ And remember, no tickets will be
sold that night.
ture's barren soil."
“Auld Lang Syne" and "London­
derry Air," serve as the tunes for two DEATH OF DR. CLARENCE
hymns, despite lhe strenou* objec­
YOUNG OF ALLEGAN.
tions of certain member* of the
Dr. Cla/ence Young of Allegan. 66.
commission, we are told, counter­ son of the Ute Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
balanced however, by the loftier Young of this city, died in a KaUmelodies
of
Mendelssolin, Bee­ mazoo hospital early Sunday morn­
thoven and Schumann.
: ing. He had been a dentist tn Al­
A striking example ot the use of legan for 45 years, going there 1mmodem music is to be found in medUtely after his graduation from
"Hymn 73." where the principal the Chicago College of Dentistry,
theme In Jean Sibelius' great sym­ which he attended after graduating
phony "Finlandia" has been re­ from the Hustings High school.
harmonized to go with a lyric writ­ [He served a* mayor of Allegan for
ten In the 16th century by Kath­ three terms, was president of the
arina von Schlegel, it's a lovely, Allegan Co. Deatol Association,
haunting melody that typifies the president of the Allegan Foundry, a
soul of the Finnish people. Sibelius life member of tlie Masonic and Odd
is a great favorite with present day Fellow lodges and of the Episcopal
symphony orchestras, and you'll be ; church. He was bom In Hastings.
apt to recognize this air coming over Surviving are lhe widow, two daugh­
the radio. If church choirs will do ters. two sons, and a brother. Will
their part.
1 Young of Bellevue. The funeral was
. Isaac WUtt. lhe famous old hymn hpld at the home tn Allegan . on
writer, is second only to lhe Wesleys Wednesday with Interment to Riv­
In receiving recognition, 18 of his erside cemetery to thU city.

M1UESS

5^?

Used Cars
When you buy a used cor
the amount you pay for the
same is based on the unused
transportation it will give
you.
A used car that has good
tires, a reconditioned or new
motor is as good as new ex­
cept for the difference in
style . . . and you save from
1 -3 to 1 -2 of the cost of g
new car of the same model.
Good used cars will furnish
cheaper transportation than
new cars.
We have a fine assortment
of used cars, so don't fail to
see us before you buy.

$1.00 Outing Pajamas__________ 89c

Winter Hats

Vi Price,

Saturday Only

SEDUCED PRICES •« S-ow Sulu an4 Ski luh

THE HASTINGS BANNER

WERE DEDICATED SUN­
DAY—CONTAIN MANY
FINE FEATURES

Immortal hymns being published;
Whittier follows with, nine; Fannie
Crosby, the blind hymn writer. Paber. Montgomery and Wlnkworth
arc oUiers honored with six or
more. Phoebe Cary's. -One aweeUy
Solemn Thought” is on* of the old
one* retained.
'
Many will be glad to find Kath­
erine Lee Bate*' “America the Beau­
tiful" in this naw edition, whose
up-to-datenes* is further empha­
sized by lire modern note of a hymn
for airmen, placed alongside of thote
for mariners, and other* traveling.
It is
appropriately
key-noted
••Byrd." Words and music were only
recently copyrighted.
Interesting, too. Is thc Order of
Worship section to which ho* been
added lhe "Bunday Service of John
Wesley." founder of Methodism, who
•ent II here in 1784 for the American
Methodist church. It 1* practically
liie same as that now used in the
Episcopal churches for their morn­
ing and evening prayer.
Th* book lias a superb index
which add* greatly to it* usefulness.
The classification is also an out­
standing piece of work, and ought to
bring Joy to all preachers, choir
leaders and laymen who can quickly
select, thru Ule topical index, songs
appropriate to season, sermons and
for many other need*. Over 200
classified topic* are to be found.
The hymnal is described as
"marking a stage in the evolution of
lhe Meth’odUt church in the United
Slatfs.” That It will go far in has­
tening the union of yw various
Methodist denominations In our
country, goes pithout saying.

at Bargain Prices

$5.95 Silk Dresses________ ...$3.98

You can most economically reach these buyers
with the story of your store through this same
medium. For YOUR advertising messages in the
Hastings Banner are placed in the same hands
that control the operation of Barry County's
Purse Strings."

NEW METHODIST ‘
WIN USE

LADIES' FURNISHINGS

UNIVERSAL
GARAGE COMPANY
FORD.DEALERS

144 E. STATE ST.

PHONE 2522

PHONE 2121

HASTINGS, MICH.

�TH WAITING 8 BANNER, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY II, IM

Social Events and Personal Mention

FAMOUS PIANIST PLAYS
WITH 0. R. SYMPHONY

Significant New Book
Added To Library

Percy Grainger to Give a
Varied Program at Fehruary 21 Concert
phlne

In Battle creek on Saturday.
business trip lo Ottawa. and ToVALENTIN 1 PARTY.
v. w Barnett was in Grand Rap- ran to.
| A delightful vaunting party to bo­
known
Ids on
on buiUMM
I Mtss,Mary Gowdy of Orand Rao-1 ing ptonMd by lhe two sub-deb
- - - 'Ids visited Miss Ruth Fap dver the chibs of Hastings to be held at the
week Mid.
“
'
| Masonic Temple on Saturday evetroll on Monday on business.
I' Maurice J. Pender is in DKrolt ning. Feb. If. The chaperons are
Ray Branch was in Detroit on this week attending lhe stele hard- lhe club sponsors, Mtos Rosa DeFoe,

Lawrence's much-dlscusaed
igtr, internationally book—“If i Had pour Apple*,~ re­
and composer from cently added lo thc Hastings library.
It is not exactly bracing or Inspira­
31 concert of tlw Oradd tional reading, but is very much
ympboay OrcbMtra bou- worthwhile and is deadly In Its
truthfulness.
The economic dUBculttes of the
Hoe fapiliy. who** story we follow
through’ the book, are a counterpart
of thousands of similar American
families. Well enough meaning folks
they are. kindly and good hearted,
trying in a bewildered way to keep
their “heads above water" on the in­
come brought in by Dad. Mother
and oldest daughter, the latter
whose earning capacity has now
reacned the point where she can
contribute 15 a week for her board,
although she often lets it slip by.
The Hoes are people lacking In
financial sense, Puzzled, driven, the
parents are harassed to death with
lhe problem of how to keep up the
Installments on the house, pay the

Annual Exhibition at Gym
Next Thursday Evening
at 7:40 O'clock

ThM Girli Phy
UtuketbaU—Ami Ho*

JiR

irre
SSS

The annual Physical Education
Demonstration to be given by tba
boys and girls of the city schools win
be held tn the, gym On Thursday

rtry bury

charged, the proceeds going to the Ihere.bouu. a taaXH hall And bov
Athletic Association. MIm Helen Uw, Pia, Tbm aaam to to only
Manon is director for the girls and
Joseph Brosak for the boys. The Get that ball and every girl for her­
C.hver the week end, ft turning Bun­ MOTHERS AND B0Y8
*pSSr‘uu^°ZXt
program follows:
day.
self. And some of those gtrto are as
Figure Drill—Girls' 1st hour class. slippery as greased eels. One ol
BANQUET
TOGETHER
to
invite
a
guest
and
another
couple.
Orlo Brown went to Cincinnati.
Games and Relays—Boys* 5th
Bud
Wolfe
s
Prowlers
are
to
fur
­
Ohio,-on Wednesday for the I. W.
nish
the
music.
Th*
valentine
motif
BHss CO.
Fino Affair Given Thursday
Clogglng—Girls' 2nd hour class.
Into her and we thought she'd be
Mrs. Warren Carter and Miss Sa­
Calisthenics Drill—Boys' 1st hour out for the count, but no *lr-e-e[
Might Under Auspices
Members from out of town are
die Glasgow ware in Battle Creek on
Misses Betty Swift and Pauline
She wrapped herself around that
Saturday.
Basket.ball Technique—{Jiris' Sth ball, rolled over a couple of times
I Beneway of Middleville.
Bill McConnell of Middleville'was
Mothers and sons this time, not, Committee members are Misses
and before you could say "Jack RobTumbling and Stunts—Selected
the guest of Miss Opal Kelley over fathers and sons, held forth at the I Jocelyn Ironside, Jean Brower, Mar­
group.
• banquet sponsored by the Y. M. 0. . gret Barnett. Isabel Sage, Dorothy
Sports Parade^-Selected group.
the court.
Jack Wilson of Battle Creek spent A. Thursday night In lhe social par­ Roush and Betty Sigler.
Marching and Pyramids—Boys'
Sunday with his parents, Mr. and lors of lhe Methodist church. Nice
But this is only thc beginning of
2nd hour class.
Mrs. Robert Wilson.
SURPRISE PARTY
.
Girls'
Basket
Ball
game
—
Juniors
that
nature
to
occur
here.
Prizes
Elmer Polfus went lo Chicago on
a little more practice, they’ll show
GETS SNOWED IN.
vs
Seniors.
were
offered
for
the
mother
with
Sunday to attend a convention of
About thirty friends of Mrs. Bul­
you what basket ball really to and
the oldest son present, L. A. Abbey, ler Smith, who Ilves southwest of
Gambia stere manager*.
meet the monthly payments on lhe
insurance policy and various house­
Miss Alleen Isenhath and John who came with his mother, Mrs the city; gave ber a birthday sur­
alifylng in that prise on Saturday evening. Tills was
hold equipment; aside from giving
Chandler were home from Kalama­
present with the a case of everyone being surprised
the plain awkward younger daugh­
zoo over lhe week end.
'
They've organized Into teams that
ter dancing lessons and the son a
MIm Beatrice Giddings of'Battle
(•------ ----------- ---- ----­
haven't any captains but do have
Creek spent the week end with her
9- Hastlnp. who carried off
college education, although he has
names. And the name* are honeys—
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy piddings. l^e honors with three fine boys tlie can could not get through. The
to be tutored lo make high school
(We think they were one of Helen
Mr and Mrs. Frond* Angell of *Umgalde of her at lhe banquet la- thirty folks were forced to stey at
grade.
,
Mrs. Maude Smith gives us the Merson's brainstorms). Here they
Lamlng were guests of Mr. and Mrs. D,cMrs. Hoe had a penchant for buy­ following poem written for a lan­ are. anyway. The Alums, that's
the Smith home till Sunday when
C.
F.
Angell
the
toller
part
of
lhe
I
Wide
bonds
of
red,
white
and
blue
ing household equipment. “Any guage lesson by Paul Williams, aged self-explanatory; the Hastings De­
w. ..
__________________
some of the men shoveled out the
PERCY GRAINGER.
i: With
with white
white candles
canAea in
In glass
glass holders
holders road and came through with a
salesman, if he struck the moment 10. a fifth grade pupil tn the Parker pendent*, none other than the mar­
week.
when she had cash for a down pay­ school, Johnstown township. The ried women; the Faculty plashes,
Mr.
andMn. Harold Brockway ■ gave a bright touch to_the tables. | sleigh.
Seventeen, however, reducted by Karl Wecker. Grainger
apd children left- Bunday on a Following the dinner. Cranston WU- mained until tote Sunday afternoon, has Just recently returned to Amer­ ment. could easily persuade her to lesson tn question asked for a de­ (where do they get that “flash”
week's visit inVirginia and Ten- ■ cox. chairman of the Y oommlttee,: But with plenty to eat and a good ica following two years spent In his sign on the dotted line," says lhe scription ot the clock. In Longfel­ idea?), and the Ladles of Finance
nesaee. .
,
i acting as master nf ceremonial, tn- ! warm Are. lhe time passed happily
author.
low's. The old clock on the Stairs.” (at least, they call business girls
home country.
The bright gas range, the huge Wc think Paul did a pretty good Job todies).
Edward Caukln waa home from trodaced W. T. Wallace, who led a . ami, quickly.
The dramaUc concerto In A Minor
white electric refrigerator, daven- for so small a boy. allho Madame
Grand Rapids over Ute week end vigorous round of singing. .
' Pedro‘furnished the entertajnfor piano by Grieg, close friend of
vtolting hi* parents. Mr. and Mr*. I Mrs. J. A. McNulty was then pre- ment
* Saturday
—*— ------evening
-— with
'“ Mr lhe pianist, will be played here by
School
commissioner
probably THE “OLD FASHIONED
E- A- Caukln.
sented as toastmaster, Alling that and Mrs. Claude Kelley. Mrs. George Grainger with the orchestra on thc go,” when she contracted for a looked doubtfully at that, last line.
cemetery lot that was to be sold
Miss Yvonne Trego Is expected position In a charming way. She Tolhurst and Eli Bronson the wii- first half of the program.
WINTER” IS NOW HERE
ultimately "for much more than the body blow for the sake of rhythm.
home from Detroit to visit her par- ; also proved an adept at telling a
As'a composer, Grainger Is per­
original Investment" and she was
ent*. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trego, over good story with a point, which isn’t
haps best known for his "Country
Supervisor S. W. Smith of
the week end.
I always true of toastmaster stories.
already planning on Venetian blinds
PENNY SOCIAL SUCCESSFUL.
Gardens
”
and
“
To
a
Nordic
PrlnEmil Tyden. Mrs. Richard Groot I Mrs., Leon Bauer, representing tlie
Castleton Fully. Convinced
In spite of the storm which came ceas*' the latter of which will be and an electric mangle. Duns wait­ The old clock is antique with age.
IU massive frame against the wall.
and son Richard left yesterday for mothers, gave a splendid talk, lhe up Saturday afternoon, lhe Penny
ed while she "patiently distributed
played on the forthcoming program
That It Is
a three weeks’ trip to Los Angeles, keynote .of which wu “Character." Social given kj the Episcopal par­
The Incidental music for piano will
night
.
During the mild wlnten that pre-.
and the coast.
, She took each of its nine letters to ish nouoc
house ui»i
that evening
evening wm
wu not
not ■a be played by tfte composer, and would go." There is lots of humor
Il seems extremely tall.
Mtsaes Marie Rowe and Rote De-, stand for a word that would aid complete failure. And Judging from
and tragedy In the story. You, feel
where two pianos are specified. Mn.
Foe visited relatives In Charlotte on materially tn character building. I the screams and shrieks that folan overwhelming sympathy for the Its huge stained face la discolored marked that we probably would
Dorothy McGraw will assist st thc patient, kindly father and the fool­
nirer again see "an old-fashioned
“ — ■*--------■* —
——■ •— it
&gt;.—------s. u------------------lowed in the wake of those brave
Sunday
and
were —
compelled
to -•
stay
These
weren—
cleanliness,
honesty,
second piano
Its hinges are squeaky with rust.
ish. big-hearted mother.
until Monday noon.
! athletic*, respectfulness, ambition.
A suite of Danish folk songs will
“The author.” says her publishers. But it still booms out with a ter­
Mr-and Mrs. Mast and son Bob cheerfulness, tactfulness, enterprise
conclude Grainger's rather large but' - has worked on a New Jersey dally
rible voice
and Ward Baldwin of Battle Creek and religion, all excellent safewelcome contribution lo the con- I in charge of a question and answer
Even though it Is covered with
were guesU of Mr. and Mr*. Gary guard* tn rounding qut a life that plenty of music and music-makers
dust.
loned winters.’
Crook on Bunday.
I would be of value to society.
'vhto
ik. dtP*rtnwnt. and to familiar with
available, and a good share of the
fl
1
ithe problems she writes about, many Its narrow hulk is faded
For inste'ice. Supervisor S. W.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moore j Gordon Orothers responded for evening waa spent in singing and
And the ptature on the front
Smith, of
Castleton
township,
of
»ro.concerned with budget­
(Juanita Langston) of Kalamasoo 1 the boys, giving a delightfully hu- dancing.*
wished to attend the township
You
can
but
faintly
see
It
were Sunday guest* of Mr. and , morous sketch of lhe "ideal mother"
The
wood
Is
worn
so
blunt.
board
meeting tn Naahville on Mon­
;
.
brt&gt;
Mr*. James Langston.
I —*n indulgent one. who never go, BLISS CO. EMPLOYEES
It
still
ticks
faintly
Stephen Bristol and Robert Field a son out of an euy chair to shovel
WILL HAVE BIG PARTY.
And I guess it always &lt;Jill.
Nashville lie had to walk from hb
were iiome from Albion over the , walk*, or called him out of bed at
The employees of the E. W. Bliss
Bach—Grainger.
.Blithe Ralls
Grainaer. 1 g
accurate study of one In the old town hall by the little
week end. lhe totter being accam- , r*rty hour* to look after.the Are, plant, including all departments,
Bong.” "Spoon River," aspect of life in the U. S. A. which
old home.
G. Smith. Coats Grove, another
panled by a friend. Fred Livingston.1 ric. Then to show he was Just arc looking forward to the flrat
Tlie home of me and Phil.
board member.
They carpe to
Mr. and Mrs. William Plant were j "spoofing." Gordon doecd on an­ general party ever given by the "To A Nordic Princess"—Grainger. ought to be required reading for ev­
"Legende for Orchestra" — ten ery thoughtful American."
Nashville via Hastings over 43. 80
ta lied to Lake City a week ago Bun- other vein, ending by repealing Klp- company, which will be held at
Have.
WILL GIVE RADIO TALK
itoy on account of tha depth of their llng'a beautiful and oft-quoted community hall, thc night of Feb.
Danish Folk Music Suite—"Lard
Smith what he thinks about the
brother-in-law, returning Thursday. I tribute. "Mother of Mine."
THURSDAY NIGHT BRIDGE.
EVERY WEDNESDAY present variety of winter, be can tell
Peter’s Stable Boy!" "The Nightin­
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Densmore and
Very much enjoyed were the
Cards, dancing and a floor show
Mrs. Archie McDonald was host­
CLOTHING AND SHO
gale and the Two Sisters;*' "Jutish
you that it is emphatically of the
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Buskirk w*re in ~MJI"
*
*
— ess Thursday night for a very de­ Rev. Earl Scott,
FOR MEN AND DO’
Son of old-fashioned type, if by that to
Medley^,—Arranged by Grainger.
attendance al lhe funeral of Ernest
stand around 300 have already sig­
lightful dessert-bridge at her home
HASTING* 5
meant blockaded roads and a bard
George Scott, Will Talk
D. Densmore held at the LeVallej- terpretatlons of 'To a Wild Rose” nified their intention of attending
on W. Court street, twenty guests
lime to get anywhere.
EMMANUEL GUILD
church near Ionia on Saturday.
। and "Glowworm" came as near re­ which indicates a full house.
being present. Honors at bridge went
Over WENR
Ben Oldley, Robert Gorham. Rob- producing bird notes as anyone we
to Mrs. Gordon Fisher .and Mrs. I
Under the Wagner bill the em­
PARTY FINE SUCCESS David Boyes.
. We have been given a copy of lhe
rrt O’Connor and Winston Merrick ever heard. What a prise for a
HONORED AT W. 8. T. C.
I Putnam county Courier, published ployer stJlLyould be permitted to
were in Detroit on Friday attending Major Bowes program that young
Mias Irene Jonca^and Miss Alleen ■
Rtoip* w—. t । v
* at Carmel.
carmei. New York.
York, In
in its issue
Issue of wstebthe whc^U go round.
a Frlsldalro demonstration. Mrs. matron would be I
Isenhalh have again been honored Lxrge Crowd Witness Dis­
R-n-.nL.
^‘3" *p.k "• .
February 7 It speaks of the Rev.
Rev. Karl Keefer, always a fav­ at W. 8. T. C.. by being named on
O'Connor accompanied her husband
play of New Spring
Ben a first telephone. Invented tn . Earl Scott nastor of the Drew
audience. the staff of lhe dramatic club in
tO Detroit.
,
I orite with any Hastings auuiciiKC,
1878, consisted of a box with mouth- J Methodist church of Cannel, who is
Styles
Miss Beth Haven and MIm LaVera 1
the addre.vs which had the us- connection with the college. One Is
piece. Into which one alternately to give a. series ot radio addresses on
Otis. Who work in Lansing, came ual Keefer happy mixture of humor, a member of thc costume committee
St. Valentine's colors and emblems talked end listened.
,,
station WENR. beginning at 3:15
home for lhe week end and could wisdom and good common sense, and the other is on thc decorations were everywhere in evidence at the
February II. The talks will be given
not return until Monday. It took the 1 Karl, above everything else, ha* the committee.
Both of these young card party and style show sponsored
Wednesday of each week at that
bus three Lour* to get to Lansing faculty of understanding boys' prob- ladies arc making good there and by Emmanuel Guild at the Parish
on Monday.
I lama. We fancy he was sort of a are a credit tq the* Hastings High house tost night.
The drug stabrlne haa been found hour, and are particularly designed
Douglas
Barnes attended lhe ’’card’' himself when he was a school and this''city as well.
to be many times more effective for shut-ins. This series is sponsored
Forty-three tobies were filled, the
Brotherhood of St. Andrew's older youth, hence his ability to get
In the treatment of malaria than by lhe radio committee of the
capacity limit for their floor space.
Church Federation of Metropolitan
boys’ conference held at Grand , neM* to them and understand their .MONTHLY GUILD MEETING.
It was a fine success, being car­ quinine.
New York, of which Mr. Scott to
Rapids Friday and Saturday of tost
and sorrows. His tribute to
The regular monthly business ried out with the same attention
a member. Rev. Scott to a son of
week. While there, he was Lhe guest "Pad" Angell, lover of boy*, who meeting of Emmanuel Guild was to details as would have been given
of thc A. IzGrande Albees.
| ha* worked for tliem and with them held In thc parish house Wednesday In a private.home.
Zoologlsts say a large elephant George Scott, for many years rural
Mrs, John Klldee. who ha* been ; these many years in.Barry county, afternoon. Fab. 5. preceded by an
Dresses and coats were shown eats about half a tun of bay each carrier, first out of Quimby and la­
ter from this city,, but now on the
making an extended visit with her; was especially fitting and clo**d the executive board meeting, at both
day and often drinks 50 gallons of retired list. His son has made a fine
daughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs. I program on just the right note.
of which the president, Mrs. Kenlth P. L. Pairchild. The .Rose Shop, and water without lapping.
record in the ministry.
Clarence Workman, left Saturday! A feature that was much apprcel­ McIntyre presided. A light dessert A. J. Larsen, being modeled by
lar ber home tn Traverse City. Mrs.' atfd was music furnished by Lewis was served by the committee in. Cyntheal Reed. Marjory Nevins.
Workman, who has been ill. Is re- . Hine, clarinet, Mrs. Gerald Smith. charge for the month composed of Hazel ReXlne Downing. Margret
Covering.
I violin and MU* Joan Olefum at the .Mrs. James Parmer. Mrs. W. L. Barnett. Frances Sutton, Eugenia
• Mrs. Hugh FumiM of Woodtond J&gt;lan°: Uw totter also accompanied Bhulters ancfyMrs. Harry Baldwin.
LyBarker. Dorothy Dunlap, verlan
♦ra* In the city on Monday. Her son,. M”- Angell In her numbers.
Liqington. Mrs Sadie Mae Palmer.
Charles Furnls*. who had been
,—
BANNER CLASS MEETS.
Mrs. Keqlth McIntyre, and Mrs. Ray
•pending a tew days at home accorn- BUSINESS WOMEN'S
Twenty-four were present at the Plnnie.
panled his mother here, enroute to ।
HOSPITAL GUILD. meeting of the Banner class of thc
Music was furnished by Mrs. J. A.
Ann Arbor where be to a student at
Mrs D- A. VanBuskirk was host- Methodist Sunday School at the McNulty at the piano, and Stephen
FRIDAY. FEB. 14
SATURDAY. FIB. 15
the University of Michigan.
| esa to the Business Women's Hoe- home of Mrs. Glen Densmore on Karmes, violin.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Dolan left । Pll*l Guild on Monday evening, a Tuesday evening. The hostess was
by automobile Monday for a trip to । ch°P
dinner being Served by assisted by Miss Ruth Farr. After Osborn. Mrs. Mary Spangemachfr.
thc west eoast, where Mr*. Doton |
Presbyterton todlas. in keeping
Mrs. Fred JOhes, Earl Coleman, Mn.
will visit the Jim Ironsides in San I with the valentine season, the ta- games and contests were enjoyed, W.
FLOUR, Golden Sheaf 24 &gt;/2 Ibi. 79e
Uf. D.
n Barnes,
Rarnx Mrs.
Krv. Harold
MarnlH Srfillh.
o4.UI,
Dlego ahd Los Angeles friends, white I ole decorations were of red and also music by Mrs. Densmore, Mrs.
Eieh table was furnished a prise,
Cliff is looking after the interests of, *hl^' *h® Ur«e red lace paper B. Maylan Jones and the Misses an attractive pack of cards.
Pillsbury'• Best Flour 24Vi lbs. $1.09
lhe Hasting* Manufacturing Co.
I ‘‘carts, the white tapers adorned
argaret and Audra Densmore.
The committee headed by Mrs. G
Miss Rachel Caln of Lansing and wlu’ red and silver scab, the place
E. Goodyear and Mrs. Lawrence:
HONORED GUEST.
j Herrick is entitled to much credit:
M/sa’Doris Fritz of Detroit came to'0*™1and candy dishes all carrying
POST BRAN FLAKES
spend Sunday with tlie farmer's par- 0UI thl# motif.
Friday aftrmoon Mrs. Lou War­ for the affair, which cleared a fine
ent*. Mr. and Mrf. Tiieroii Caln, ol
““ bwdjl,« aeeatan. the ner entertained eight todies In hon­ sum for Ute Guild fund. *
•
Rutland. Because of the bad road members made valentines for enter- or of her ateter-ln-tow, Mrs. Earl
HERSHEY COCOA
2 Ib. jar 25c
condiUons, the young todies were' talnment, the honors going to Miss Warner, pf South Haven, who has “COLLEGIATE"—
and Miss «
Grace
Unable to return to Tanking until' Elizabeth Finch --•&lt;
—■— been her guest for two weeks. Bridge
and meet the coming year with the confidence that h
GRAPENUT FLAKES
pkg. 9c
MUSICAL COMEDY
Edmonds.
on Tue.-day.
.
furnished the entertainment, fol­
brought about by having one of our scientifically
Hostesses for March arc &amp;n. lowed by delicious refreshmsnla.
In the musical comedy film com­
Student* who came home from
the University of Michigan on Mon­ Ruth Baine and Mrs. Florence Prises were won by Mrs. Frank Mc- ing to the Strand. Jerry Craig
CORRECT PERMANENTS.
SALAD DRESSING, A-G
qti. 27c
day. for lhe vacation between semes­ Wood. Mllton and Mrs. Clarence Cappon. (played by Jack Oakle) inherit* a
school for girls, from his aunt, with
ters are Miss Charlotte Hubbard. DINNER FOR N?GHT
Y«!
If*
Trap
—
that lovely
tlie
stipulation
that
he
must
run
it
BUDGE
LUNCHION.
FELS SOAP
Miss Marjory Stebbins. Mis* Bar­
bar4'/jc
.
HAWK CLUB.
Mrs. R. w. cook entertained three for one year and show a profit or
bara Johnson. Max Bauer. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Wllford Cole very tables at a bridge-luncheon Mon­ be cut of! without a cent. Jerry,
European
Cascaddcn. Ian Ironside and Thom­
pleasantly entertained thc Night day noon. Spring flowers added at­ broke, decides to take a chance at
FLAKE
WHITE
SOAP
2 bars 7c
as Stebbins. Miss Stebbln* returned
Realiitic $150
Hawk card club at their home on S. tractiveness to thc rooms, and small running lU.wlth the help ot Joe
Wednesday to attend the J-Hop. She
Permanent * “
bouquets of acacia and statlcc cen­ (Joe Penner). Scoop (Ned Sparks)
will also be a guest at a fcousc party Broadway Friday night.
A 7 o'clock dinner was enjoyed, tered the small tables.
Miss Hay (Frances Langford) and
The label on thia wuve says
given by thc Phi Kappa Sigma frathe remainder ot lhe evening being
Winning scores were turned In by many others, rtiejr turn the school
■temlty. Mis* Johnson also returned
18. but Hollywood wants
early ao she could go in to Detroit spent with progressive pedro. Win­ Mrs. George Lockwood and Mrs. into a modern one and teach danc­
you to have a January
ing. the art ot beauty, romance and
to see Katherine Cornell In "Romeo ners ot first prises were Hugh Hubert d. Cook.
Special — a true push-up
Myers
and
Seba
Hillman,
low
scores
every thing that will make a young
OLEOMARGARINE
and Juliet”
wave at this efficient beau­
going to Ora Newton and George
N.
C.
CLUB.
•
tody attractive/The picture takes
ty shop. Phone now and
Wm. McCallum, a student at W. Hltlman.
Mrs. Prank McMillan entertained the audience through a series ot hi­
ask about it
8. T. C. spent the w»*k end with his
BEEF
STEAK,
Round,
Swiii,
Ib.
22
’
/2C
the N- C. club toat Saturday eve­ larious adventures to the final cli­
aunts the Misoes Elisabeth. Cather­
CL4S8 CHOOSES OFFICERS.
ning, Fbur tables ot SOO were max when the pupils put on a mar­
ine and Rose Clark.
Twelve members of Mn. “Fred played. High scores were, made by
BACON
velous display, starting with a pa­
Mr. and Mrs. Archie McDonald Johnson's Sunday School class had
Ib. sliced 18c
and Dr. and Mrs. George Lockwood a happy time at her home last Tues­ Mix Gamer Hampton and Clar­ rade featuring a girls’ band in Ml
Bsrgamorit Oil
ence Cappon, low scores by Mr. and regalia, b diving exhibition and a
CUM
are in Battle Creek tonight to hear H
. CTCI1UIH
CERTO
day
evening ae5piM
despite. the cold and Mrs. Boyd Clark.
bottle 19c
I7J« OU Iff
style
show.
Thc
end
shows
the
■rtuouh
the lecture by Stewart Roddie In the ' norm,
- ------- ’«» girl* had
d a fine pot luck
Ferm’nt “t Cmp.
school a huge success and lhe boys
"World at our Door'' aerie* being
—j lhe business izi- ENTERTAINS WITH
decide to continue operaling. -Oolcho&amp;en for lhe ensuing
BRIDGE LUNCHEON. leglate" comes to Hu Strand, Feb­
•A pleasant social affair of the ruary if and |7.
week was the bridge luncheon Mrs.
* wbthdayVumfribi
Hanford, was in a very serious con- &gt; c*U?rine Davis
Treasurer, Keqlth McIntyre gave for eight
friends at her home on 8. Wash­
Mrs. pfnley jotuutdn wu the vic­
dltton tn a hospital faDotelng an apr
f P ___________
ington street, Tuesday. Top scores tim of a surprise on Thursday eve­
eratten for appcnUlclU*. very little BIRTHDAY DINNER
wm. made by Mrs. Burr Van ning. six friends coming to remind
hop* being held out for hl* recovery.
and THEATER PARTY. Houten and Mn. Cha*. 8. Potto.
her
ot her birthday, contract wu
Mr and Mrs. Edw. van POpering | z Mr*. Gomer Hampton entertained
enjoyed as waa the lovely birthday
who were visiting relative* in Orand MUse* Katherine Townsend. Bonnie
*
&gt;
GUILD NO. 5Rapids last week starting home ear- Carpenter. Frances Button- Mary
Mrs. David Boyes entertained
ly Saturday afternoon, and were DcVrte* and Thelma Wheating al a Hospital Guild NO. 5 on Monday eve­
Sevanty-ona per cent of a selected
among lhe many who got marooned six o'clock dinner and theater par­ ning. sixteen being present. a &lt;te»- group o( lhe largest general auto­
having to spend that night and ty on Tuesda---------- —
- ------- --- •rrt bridge was enjoyed with honors motive newspaper adwtUers will
Sunday night at a farm house, tiiu fifteenth
of tier daugii- going lo Mrs. Roy Hubbard and Mrs.
averted118 aPJ*®prlaUons

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DRAMA OF“CRUSADES”

One of the world's moat romantic
love stories, told against the back­
ground of one ot the most spectac­
ular periods in the world history—
TEETH—DECAYED.
Queallon—One of our small sons that is “the crusades" Cecil B. De­
‘ has bad leeUr; the doubles have de­ MUte's motion picture epic of the
I cayod and broken to pieces. What
conquest.of the Holy Land, which
should we do to prevent his second
teeth from being poor? Does lime comes to the strand February 19,
'
water help Uw teeth? He is 7 ytan 20 and 21.
The story concerns Richard Coeur
old. What foods are good to help
de Uon. King of England, who goes
the teeth?
&gt; •
.'
to
lhe
Crusades
to
release himself
Answer—Efforts to prevent |&gt;oor
teeth should be exercised long be­ from his obligation to marry Prin­
fore the seventh year, as Uie second cess Alice of France. En route he
teeth are forming in tlie Jaws at marries Berengaria, Princess of Na­
birth. However, there are certain varre. When the Crusaders arrive
foods Uuil help to build strong in tlie Jloiy Land, they find the
teeth; among them arc all of the Saracen forces, under their Emperor
fresh vegetables, such as lettuce, I Saladin, are stronger and offer
spinach, beets, corn and cabbage; •| grester resistance than had been ex­
the fresh fruits. »uch as oranges and peeled and. for many weeks, thc
I Ude of the fnvasloo is checked at
applca; the coarse breads, such as
rye. witlre wheat and bran; and. of 1 Acre.
I It te only when Saladin cafkures
course, plenty of milk.
Lime water Included in the diet I Berengaria That Rlcliard. casting
does not do good. Cod liver oil given discretion to the winds, storms the
during the winter months has been 1 walls of Acre, and begins tlie battles
found to be of some value. The boy I that determine lhe Cate of western
should be put in the hands of a good civilization.
Miss Loretta Young plays the role
demist —From Hygria.
"Get along, little turtle, get
I of Betengarla. with
Henry Wllalong ...” You'd Imagine even
I coxon as Richard. Ian Keith is
ERNEST DENSMORE
a terrapin would want to obllgo
! Saladin, Katherine DeMllle Is lite
thia fair Miami mermaid, but the
' princess Alice. Also In the cast are
ACCIDENTALLY KILLED such favorites as C Aubrey Smith.
little old codger apparently has a
heart aa hard aa his shell, snd
Schildkraut. Alan -Hale. C.
Meets Death in Highway Joseph
won't put on a apurt aven It loaa
Henry Gordon, George Barbier and
of ths race means his name will
February 5—Was For­
many others.
be soup.

The Hastings Banner

Health Questions

S&lt;iUrri|Ml««s hr Mall. Fo*U»l&lt;i
IN ^AIUIY [OOD»gy. put TEAR. Sl.M.

IN HARRY COUNTY. SIX MONTHS. #M.
«lf pate la
IS^Ajg^COIfNTY. THREE MONTHS.
OUTSIDE BARRY COUNTY, OMR YEAR
IN ADVANCR ---------------- ----- . 4BO
FOBEIUN BUBNCHIPTIOMR ONE YEAR
IN ADVANCE------------------------- M.00

ADVERTISING RATER:
Di*»l*r sAtmuisa
o« sselifs-

JOB PRINTING.

mer Woodland Man

A‘. Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

L00KNGB1CK-

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCH'S
MARKET - Phone 2616
FOOD CENTER 2609

NEATSLENE

&lt; Continued from page one)

H. Feldpauich ■ 3921
AIM naw milch e»w &gt;w ■*!».
U.

Waterprc«fs
INSURES
o
Fann Hamess, Work Shoes, Boots
and other leather for one year
against gnawing of rats and mice.

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY
National tank BMg.—Pbau* JS1S

Harness Repairing and Oiling Our
Specialty

It, c Full.
nut SALE-

Hamess &amp; Shoe Repair Shop
OK COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE
.
BONDS

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thia Saioolh Rubber Bock Pads
Wear Clothing

NEW

Farmers, Attention!
I will pay lb* III0HE8T MARKET

5- OLD

CARDS of THANKS
NEW AND USED
AUTO PARTS

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

'

BODY GLASS INSTALLED
Raybestos Brake Lining
Victor Gasket*
Pennsylvania Tires

The Prescription Drug Store
HASTINGS............................MICHIGAN
Gueraateerf TrwM Fitting

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 1637

Hastings

Mr. and Mr*

Kaakln Bart.

I

y. A. MrWaHy

GRANGE PROGRAMS 1

WANTED AT ONCE

Growth." Churth arhtx

Man with farming experience.

NOTICE!
TO THE FARMERS OF
BARRY COUNTY
I handle about 1000 beef
hidei and sheep pelts ev­
ery year. I do not dock
on untrimmed hides.

Box 164. Dept SiU,
Quincy, III.

Prices Higher than last year

।

Address

The mines In the vicinity of To­
Hop* of the "Faithful"
* ledo. Spa In. produced ore which con­
If the Moslem can but take a tained Just the right amount of'
Journey to Mecca, lhe chief shrine manganese, chromium and other
of the Mohammedan world, he feels substances tn produce lhe famous
sure of panullse, even though, he Toledo swords.

ARCHIE TOBIAS
One block north of NatL Bank
2-13

666

Dead Stock Removed!
KALAMAZOO RENDERING PLAMT

I

UQUI0 - TABLftS
SALVS - NOSE
DROPS

SALVE

COLDS
5c lOc 23c

Prolactin la the name of a bor
"Devil'* Tongas” Needs No Soil
mone (pituitary
gland _secretion).
A curious plant la lhe “Devll'a .------_____ . _____
tongue'* which blooms without
which causes animals th produce
tar nr anil
and yield milk It was discovered
by
Dr.
Oscar
Riddle
of the Carnegie
TOHECLOSUBE
DKPAVLT harlnr br«n n&gt;
Institution of Washington.

The Japanese natal base closest
to the Philippines is the one In For­
et. moaa. The American naval base
closest to Japan Is at Cavite. Phil
&gt;*t Ipplne Islands, and tlie closest Brit­
Ish base Is st Hongkong.
o«-.

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,
Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
Every Monday.
If you wish trucking service call Hastings
Phone 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.

■

NOTICE TO CXBDIT0R*.

ri.m.n.Uon nn4 UH&gt;1
ill rrr4ll«r* •! ante 4»-

HASTINGS BRANCH*

. &gt;11
ISM.

Conditions that were really bom
In the war period began to show
evidence about 1920 and necessitat­
ed certain changes. Trying to keep
up with the times, the Arm of Feld­
pausch Ac Pcdewa. noticing thc
place that fresh fruits and vegeta­
bles were taking In-the daily life,
stocked* a very complete -line of
these commodities.
Tlie depart­ ward Sterner. 21. ot Imlay City, a
ments grew and gradually other
grocery jtenu were added to the badly injured that he died «oon after
He was very highly esteemed by* all
line.
People were demanding that their
food supplies be purchased all un­ type of man and citizen.
Surviving te the widow, formerly
der one roof. The P. &amp; P. Market
realised this fact and by the /ear Lily Siiultz. Funeral services were
1923 had a complete food store. In held on Saturday at the LeValiey
1928. Roman Feldpausch purchased church of which he had been a
..k, Interest v.
w«w&lt;* ..
&gt;u member many year*. The Rev. J.
the
of Michael *
Pedewa
and
the store became known as Feld- M. Jensen officiated. Interment being
pausch Market The business was i in the Balcom cemetery.
continued with about
the same
"1 * * T-------methods as the F. &amp; f. Market, ex­
CHORAL UNION PRESENTS
cept for a heavier advertising pro­
MYRA HESS. PIANIST.
gram.
Myra Hess, distinguished English
Things were O. K. until 1929 came plantet. will give a recital in the
along and
changed everything. Choral Union Concert Series. Hill
Methods of merchandising changed Auditorium. Ann Arbor. Monday
and Feldpausch Market, trying to
evening. March 18. This marks lhe
keep up with the times, completely third appearance of this celebrated
remodeled their store and thstalled woman virtuoso in Ann Arbor. Miss
lhe more modem and economical Hess haa won the nlaudita of critics
equipment tn the meat, vegetable and music lovers throughout the
and grocry departments.
concert-giving world; and has dis­
Then in 1933 something else hap­ tinguish cd henelf as an artist of
pened. We were tn the blackest de­ tint rank.
pression this country has ever wit­
Attention te also called at this
nessed. Everything was turned up­
side-down;
business methods time to the fact that the John
Charles Thomas concert In tlie
changed overnight. Again Feld­ Choral Union Series, has been post­
pausch Market launched a new poned from February 17' to March
program trying to keep pace with
these changes:
Thus in 1933, the last week of HASTINGS—BA-m^October, there was opened Feld­
CREEK WHIST MEET.
pausch Warehouse gl 20« E. State
This Thursday evening It te ex­
street. This was and 1s a Self­ pected that a group of Postum co.
Serve store with no fancy fixtures, executives from Battle Creek wfll
no delivery service, no credit, or come to Hastings to meet tlie whist
other unnecessary overheads. The team here in their second toumastore occupies a huge building, us­ 'rnent games. Hastings defeated them '
ing the main floor as n salesroom easily at Battle Creek a few weeks
and the basement as a store’ioom ago. so Battle Creek now hopes -to
and warehouse. Food Center, as it even the score. The men play lhe old
is now called, has a total of 9.000 time straight game of whist, which
square feet of floor space. The store is interesting and fascinating.
is making every effort to supply the
Comprising the local team are R.
people of Barry county with meats, O. Hubbard. F. W. Stebbins. Chas.
groceries and vegetables of a high Doyle. Guy Bauer, c. H. Osborn. W.
quality and tn the best condition A. Schader, Dr. J. A- Wooton. George
at the lowest possible price.
Myers. Clyde Wilcox . and G. E­
When Gory and Roman Feld­ Goodyear.
pausch began business together in
1928. they had one employee and
hired their delivering done. Today
Hepplewhlte furniture waa so
they have their own delivery service
and operate their own produce Banirtl for George Hepplewhlte. ao
truck. Between the two stores, Enxliab cabinet maker, who died lo
J7»L
The furniture Is character ­
they now employ sixteen clerks.
Earl Palmaticr Is produce buyer ized by llgbtnesa. delleacy. grate,
and manager of Feldpausch Market. the effect dej»endlng more on Inlay
He to assisted by Melvin Jacobs as than canring. Hepplewhlte was a
sign painter and desk; BlUTCenne- constant and succeaaful user of a
dy and Willard Lawrence, clerks; shield back for chai*. He prob­
Ping Beckwith, deliveryman: and ably originated the winged eaay
Mel Newtcg.. backroom man.
chair, lu which the sides are coo.
At Food Center. Earl Bumford te
tloued to the same height as lhe
grocery manager with Bill Thomas
in charge of stock; Dan Bhay car­ back. The Hepplewhlte chairs are
ing for the produce department; often adorned with galleries and
Harold Parker and Hazel Roush as festotms of wheat ears or pointed
checkers, and two other clerks. Jul- fern leaves; eometimea alao with
ten Townsend and Francis Ulrich.
Prince c* Wai** feathers.
In the Food Center meat depart­
ment. Kenneth Goggins Is manager.
Eilbtk of World Are Hindu*
He te aided by Jay Wilkes and Her­
Hinduism baa 250.000.000 followman Feldpausch. The tetter aad
era. or one-eighth of tbe^world** en­
Gregory Feldpausch are the buyers
of cattle; bogs, veal calves and tire population.

chickens for the two ztores. Roman
HASTINGS MARKETS
Feldpausch 1» general manager of
the two stores.
Corr«t»d Tkanday. Y«b. 13. 1B1C
The people of Hastings have
Price*
*r» down •• r»d »*4 wkll*
watched with pride
live steady
rr*ek*d *«n.
growth and development of this eWet
company and feel the city and
county are indeed fortunate in hav­
|. ..Id swww-- ing these two fine stores here and
the families connected with them
b« h*«4 as well. That the coming years may
bring them every success te the wish
of their friends.
.

Feeder Calves and Milch Cows at all times.

Michigan Livestock Exchange

Many of our readers in the north­
eastern part of Barry county were
acquainted with Ernest Densmore.
He was a son of the late Fayette
Densmore of Woodland township,
but for thc last twenty-flye years
liad been living on a farm three
miles south of Ionia. Wedneaday
of last
week
he
had
taken
rome of the neighborhood children
lo school as their car was stalled
in his yard. On arriving home he
started to call their parents and
found his phone out of order so
decided to walk to his neighbor's a
mile distant. Il vu storming at
the lime so visibility was poor. He
had gone hurt short distance when

■niTTH RHULTZ.
Mr. and Mrs. Mila Ashby attend­
ed the funeral of Orin Dayton in
Hastings Friday afternoon. Mr. Day­
ton had manv friend* in thte place
who extend their sympathies to
the bereaved ones.

Epona la' the goddeet of stables
and of horse*, ease* and mule*.
She waa flrat worshiped la ancleot
Haul and later In Home. Inscrip­
tions ID l«r honor have bora found
tn Gaul. Garmany. the Danube coun­
try and In Nome
.
.

FARM B UREAU FERTILIZER AND
SEED ARE GOOD PARTNERS!
Team up with these two
partner*. Put them to work
for you. Farm Bureau Ferti­
liser will condition your
land for a real drop.
Farm Bureau Brand seeds
are guaranteed as to purity
and germination.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES - INC.
Hastings, Mich.
WOODLAND

Phone 211ft
PHONE 27

Send Flowers...
... For Valentine's Day, Feb. 14
Roses . . Daffodils . . Tulips
Stock .. Iris .. Gardenias and
lovely mixed bouquets.

Cyclamen . . . Primrose and
Azalea plants.
Attractive pottery for small
plants and vines . . . Candles
and Valentine Novelties.

Member Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association

CLYDE WILCOX
The Florist
HASTINGS, MICH,
Tsfephoiw 2530

�-

MOOSE FOOD SHORT
ON SEE ROYALE

leans., please discourage your
campaigfulrategists, whoever
those jfoor antiquarians may be,
who believe you can prove the
Spartan simplicity of your
rugged souls by inviting distinIguished visitors to drop in for
pot-luck with you and the fam­
ily in the kitchen.
Because, dear cans., that's old
stuff. It dates back to tbs Meintyre and Heath era ot political
vaudeville. The great common peo
pit may be common—anyhow the
orators keep on
telling them they
nre — but
they
aren't exactly atupid.
Merely be­
cause a man haa
to live lu the deep
wo o d a
doesn't
mean he has to
think like a wood­
pecker. I contend
K’s generally the
other way around.
With the exception
of -Mr. Dooley,"
lhe outstanding sn­
ot our national fol­
lies sprang from the soli and not
from the sidewalk. If there nre
any true yokels left, their princi­
pal center is New York city. And
If ever there was a day when Amer­
icans In moss believed a man could
best qualify for the Presidency by
behaving like a peasant, that day
hu passed.
Odorless Cabbage.
OME experimental genius at Cor­
university has bred a noncnbbnge—a thing absolute­
ly guaranteed to remain unsmcllable while being cooked. I presume
be crowed It with the tuberose.
Now. I never protested when they
produced a spring onion with no
aftermath to It. no lingering remi­
niscence. "Fair enough." 1 said,
“after nil. why not let bygones be
bygones 1"
j And I shall welcome with glad
outcries the evolution of the anti­
squirt grapefruit, and the self open­
ing coconut, and. greatest buou of
nil. thc hiccoughless radish.
Hut to tnke nway from the suc­
culent fried cabbage Its only means
of self defense seems a cruel thing.
Besides. b«w In future would a
stranger be aide after dark to Iden­
tify an old-fashioned, twodoliar-a-

S nell
odorous

‘day, American plan hotel? Once
he got Inside and saw the Gideon
Bibles and met the resident cock­
roaches. he'd know. of^conrse, where
he wns. but how about approaching
In the night-time with no perfume
to guide him?
. . .
The Courage of Texam.
HERM'S Something about Texatis—sonfelldng different.
• The men who tramped the Ore­
gon trail were homesteaders. They
took their wives with them, and
plows and seed corn, the forty-nin­
ers who went to California had
shovels on their shoulders and—If
you can believe the Susannah song
—banjos on their knees. But If
It came to a pinch they threw away
the banjos first. Because they were
looking for gold. -But in the begin­
ning those who came to Texas car­
ried rides nnd kept their eyas
j&gt;ecled. They were looking for trou­
ble. And. how tire found It.
For nobody dreamed then nf the
Incredibly rich and fertile empire
this would be. The only prospect
was for a fight against thc wilder­
ness.

T

The Happy Warrior*. Grammar.
N THE Sabbath calm following
lhe explosion of - Al Smllhlams
the palpitant ether/you could
almost hear the purists murmur­
ing: “Be sure, thy snytax will find
thee out"; but the purist vote Isn't
big enough to count. For culture,
a collegiate accent may have it all
over the Brooklyn brogue, but there
are more people crossing Brooklyn
bridge every day than go through
Yale or Harvard In M years. Governor Smith may not pro­
nounce radio the correct way—as
some critics already have already
pointed out — but he certainly
knows a hat to do with It when be
faces a microphone. All grammar
aside—and why not all grammar
aside. If leaving It aside keeps sim­
ple speech?—when he gets through
talking there are no missing word
contests.

I
over

The War ia tho Paper*.
ODERN wars are won by tho
side with the best sdvance
agent—at least so far as the press
notices go. In ths Inspired reports
sent out from Rome. one reads that
the white Invaders have again routed the dismayed Ethiopians after
destroying tremendous numbers of
ths black warriors, while casualties on lhe Italian side amounted to
two Infantrymen suffering from fall­
en arctu*s nnd one bystander painfolly kicked by an ambulance mule.
Or statlxiles to that gratifying ef­
fect.
And next day a postscript
trickles nut from Africa that lhe
victory was so complete the win-'
ners only fell back about 20 miles,
la
~: S-1RV1W «. COBB, i

M

| PART TWO-

THE HASTINGS BANNER

Thursday, February 13,

C. C. CAMP OFFERS
WORK AND PLAY

ABIGPROBLEM
FOB MICHIGAN

A Barry County Boy Writes
From Camp Wilderness,
Oarp Lake
ROTARY' SPEAKER BAYS [ Delbert Lancaster, one of the Bar­ EACH YEAR FROM $.000
THAT CAUSED DEATH I ry county boy* at Camp Wilderness. TO 6,000 CHILDREN FACE
I Carp lake, send* us thl* interesting
JUVENILE COURTS
OF 2,600 MOOSE
letter for publication:

I
|
GROWING POPULATION
•
' OUTGREW FOOD SUPPLY
' Animala Are Vegetariana,

HOWARD LAWRENCE IS
NEW BANKING COMM’R.

OommiMioner Reichert Re- ।
signs—Will Head Big Bank 1
in Ann Arbor

Carter’s Snake — Lute
Bennett — Jim Shay
Figure In Riley Story

One Sunday forenoon wife and I
Governor Fitzgerald w*« eompelted to appoint a successor to •
sitting under our apple tree
State Banking Commissioner Reich-, in our froiB* yard, and Luther Benert. who faithfully and efficiently | nett came Down the middle of the
served Michigan in that office for . road with hl* fish pole, a minnow
the past ten year* Mi Reichert ha* ; pall and hl* hound dog. Hr shouted,
been selected as Uie president ot the j “Come on. Riley, they *ay they are
combined banks of the city of Ann biting pretty good out to Carter'*
Arbor, all having united to form one | Lake." Bo I got my fish pole and
large bank. As that city wa* hB for-1 went along. We fished and fished
mer home, so he was well known ' but failed to catch one. I guess the
there, and a* hr ranks high as a wind was in the wrong direction,
banker, he was considered an Ideal । At last'Lute said. "I hate to go home
man for the place.
with an empty pall. Let's go over
in choosing his successor, the gov- and pick some huckleberries " I
ernor has named Mr. Howard Law- jaid. -isn't that lhe swamp where
rence who began hB business tn a । they say that big snake Is?" And
Lake Odessa bank. Mr. Lawrence , Lute said. "Riley, that big snake Is
served this state as slate treasurer all
“ a ‘fake, old----------------------* that
Carter started
and made a fine record. He Is a fine story so people would be afraid to
man. as well as a good banker Since go Into his marsh." A little while
serving a* state treasurer, lie ha* thereafter I was leaning against a
been the head of one Grand Rapids
bank and liter was chosen receiver someone said. “Lute Bennett, empty
of another bank in that city. Al Uie those berries into my pail and get
time of hB appointment, he was re­ out of my marsh."
ceiver of a large national bank at
And Lute said. “Mr. Harlow Car­
Saginaw. It can be seen that he has ter, Esquire, you are barking up the
had the experience that qualifies wrong tree. I haln't afraid of you
him for hla new position. He is a nor your notorious snake."
very likeable man and haa success­
fully filled every position lo which
Along
1g in inc
the seventies when
wncn incic
there
lot of timber in Barry county,
ful as well as efficient We believe he
will make a good record as state James Wilkins had a big sawmill on
“Btandey Creek" east of where lhe
banking commissioner
Table factory is located 1i6». His
logs were hauled across lhe Thorn­
CHILDREN ENJOY
apple river on a bridge which he
built (Wilkins Bridge), and some
DRESSING SELVES winters logs would come from every
direction to this mill. One winter I
Process May Be Pleasant If was doing some millwright work at

। We have been having quite a win­
' ter up here. We were snowbound “MICHIGAN PLAN POR
for two days There was no mall
BETTER CITIZENSHIP’
service for three day* because of
------------I the delay in getting through the Every Community Should Co­
storms. It U a winter that I will
I probably remember. It ha* been
operate in Stamping Out
But Eat Little Graaa,
j
real cold all the time. We all hope j
.
« —Crime
-■
Juvenile
Except Alfalfa
It will soon be warmer.
I
“Every year from 5000 to 6.000
Perhaps many would like to
The members of Ute Hastings Ro­
children face Juvenile court* in
tary Club were highly favored at know Just what life I* iikejt these 'i Michigan. It costs th« state ap,
their Monday noon luncheon with camps, which ha* given work to ao I proximately Z600.000 to handle them
I an address given by Mr. Tinker, . many boys.
and a “startling" percentage go on
There is plenty of work and plen­
| representing tlie State Conscrvatioa
to become adult offenders, contrib­
department. His talk was Illustrated ty of play at a C. C. C. camp. Re­ uting to the state'* annual crime bill
with two rolls of pictures, showing creational activities are almost un­ of *30.000.000 or more.
| thc features of. and the wild life limited in their variety. The usual
“Thl* situation is Michigan * child
of Isle Royale. Mr. Tinker said gomes of baseball and basket ball. crime problem. Tlie nndUigs are
| that this island was one of the few Educational picture* are shown in reported In a statewide survey of
unspoiled places of our country nearly every camp. Each boy has conditions, prepared for the Michi­
where nature can still be seen “In his chance to Indulge in hi* favor­ gan Juvenile Delinquency Service by
Die raw." The pictures and his Ulk ite sport. The Army furnishes equip­ Professor Lowell J. Carr, of the
evidenced lhe thorough study he ment for various sport*. There are University of Michigan. Service di­
has made of the geology of the is­ snow ahoes and lot* of snow. Some rector.
land. of its features and Its wild boys have their ice skates and up i "A "Michigan Plan" for uniting
here we have plenty of ice to skate | court*, churches, sciiool*. police, and
life.
For several recent years Isle Roy­ on. Others prefer to box; other* civic leaders and the state govern­
ale was noted for ita big herd of Just like to read and there B lots ment in a sustained, cooperative
moose. They were not native to the of reading material; others are drive to prevent children from going
Island. Tlie first of these animals to spending the winter making furni­ wrong and to reform as many as
reach Isle Royale came across the ture. Now an archery club is being possible. Is proposed In the Delin­
I formed and some are making 'bows
Ice on Lake Superior when it was
quency Service bulletin as thc only
frozen over in tlie year 1912. It and arrows. In the summer three i* way in which to attack and even­
i no end of exercise and activities,
is thought that they were chased swimming and hiking being' the tually reduce adult crime and Ils
cost in money and public danger
from the Canadian mainland bv
chief sport*.
“Under lhe suggested “Michigan
wolves. Hie location seemed lo be
One of our latest achievements
Ideal for them. There was lust the I was to produce a three-act play. Plan for Better Citizenship." every
kind of food that moose like and I It waa given in surrounding towns community in the state would call a
Proper Guidance Is Of­
Joint, voluntary meeting of Its Juplenty of it. Under these ideal con­
Gram“ I
00^.“^. iwhool
ditions. the herd increased from
fered to Little Ones
!
**°fJ*1 authority*, church leaders Y. M C
nrobably around twenty or thlrtv । „ • It wns of a comedy type and authorilles. church leaders. Y. M. C
Dressing,
for a clilld under school
to over three thousand by 1926. In 1' pu.
?
A. and Y. W C- A- directors and
to make things funnier, boys had leaders of civic clubs and group* age. may be either a pleasant ex­
1930 these animals began to die off
lo impersonate feminine parts.
The 'rat step would be lhe setting perience or a disagreeable task, de­
very rapidly. At lhe present time.
The Educational department i* an
up of a permanent council repre­ pending on the attitude of the par­
Mr. Tinker estimated the number
Important factor in our live* here
ent. say some economics experts at
of moose on thc Island al about at camp. Here many classes are or­ senting all groups.
"This council would then study Michigan State College.
three hundred. Llterailv. the ani­
ganized. also planning much enter­
Children even three years old will
mals have been starved to death. tainment for our benefit.
The the fact* of the delinquency record
Thev had over-ponulated the island course* given are largely of a prac­ of the community lo determine enjoy washing If they have their
where cases have occurred and own small wash racks, their own
until thev had eaten un all the va­
tical nature and designed to give
cloth
and towel, and a box or stool
rieties of food uoon which thev sub­ men economic advantages when would endeavor to get at the fun­
sist. such as the leaves and bark they leave the C. C. C. Most of lhe damental causes behind each case. on which to stand while washing
of certain trees and. for a very lim­ classes are held after working hours. Next lhe council would decide ex­ Likewise, they wUl enjoy undressing
ited time grasses that grew on the There are about twelve classes and actly what ways and means the and dressing if they have their own
Bland, and the roots of water plants several enrollees are taking up cor- community as a whole could adopt hanger for their clothes, and are
taught to lay their clothing out in
of u,e
lhe Qf
delinwhich were nlentlfu) in the manv respondence courses The camp 11- to reduce the Ccauses
*U8M 01
“n'
proper order.
lakes on the island. The moose had brary is also connected with this deWftrk. n» th.r
A three-year old must not. howconsumed nearly all of the once partment. Here we have all of th*
ira
uvuuvu ,
wvu.u w lu
B.cvp’ .£&gt;
— 'fi ' ever, be expected to curry through
abundant food suddIv of th- Bland. popuUr teak, .nd « or rhe m«. “
wS
survey
up-to-date,
to
see
that
the
•
the entire process of dressing. It
The only dry hnv they will tat Is widely read magazines.
agencies
represented
in
this
couni
1*
enough that, encouraged by lhe
ajfalfa. The sneaker said he did
Another form of recreation Is lhe
not believe that even the three movies which occur once every two dl cooperated harmoniously and to’ parent, he attempts to remove slmgarments, and to discover lhe
hundred now there could find weeks. These pictures are of lhe the fullest extent, to recommend I
enough food to keep them alive. best and are very popular. Such necessary legal or financial steps I proper order of putting on clothing,
The onlv hope for the future in films as "Broadway Bill" and "It upon the community government. Bven H the youngster docs appear
and lo cooperate with delinquency »k&gt;w and awkward, he must be al­
maintaining moose on the Bland Happened One Night" are shown.
.....
....
1 -1. — 4 lowed sufficient time lo do these
Is to remove them until the shrubn
We are required to work a 40-hour councils in other communities to­
and trees shall grow again and wa­ week. All work done Is in this pork. ward eventually setting up in the things for himself.
A shoe that does not go on easily,
ter plants also increase until thev Camp Wilderness Ls located In state government a bureau lo give
can airaln be eaten. There never Wilderness Blate Park., and all of scientific and financial aid in dis­ although a mere tug to the parent,
ought to have been more than three the work Is for the Improvement of covering and treating delinquent is a problem to a struggling threehundred, or at lhe outside 500. on this park. Several projects are be­ children before such cases have be­ year old. and no child should be
faced with the problem of a hard
the Island, he said. Then the natu­ ing carried out to make the park come set in criminal waya
“Nine cities have already estab­ knot or tying a bow knot until he
ral growth of their food would have more accessible to thc public. It has
kent pace with their requirements. many attractions as to wild life and lished coordinating councils and is five or six. Furthermore, if
Thc speaker incidentally remark­ scenic beauty. Many people visit it mapping the facts about local de­ clothing Is in good repair and fits,
ed that
mm the
uie food
looa supply Is
is directly
airectty In the summer and always feel re­ linquency situations. Professor Carr the child will find undressing and
proportioned to the abundance or paid. There have been many trails reports. They are Ann Arbor. Cadil­ dressing a much pleasanter experi­
ence titan If he has to struggle with
built through tlie park. They lead lac. Detroit. Highland Park, Kala­
glon. as ranldlv as the Isle Royale through the woods to beaver ponds, mazoo. Midland. Port Huron. Sagi­ buttons that are too large for the
moose can be tranped. they are be­ rustic cabins and many other places naw. and Ypsilanti, while action Is button holes, or with safety pins
where buttons should be.
under way In other cities.
ing moved to state-owned forest of Interest
It Is not asking too much of a
“As the widest and most vulner­
reserves in northern Michigan: and
Tlie living conditions In Camp are
It h hoped that thev will increase nearly the same as in the boys' able gateway to crime, juvenile de­ child to look to him to take ids
ranldlv enough, no that there can homes. Each boy has a wall locker linquency Is the logical point of at­ clothing from lhe lower drawers tn
again be moose hunting tn the In which he keeps his books, ciga­ tack." his report states. "No child chests, although the selection of thc
day’s garments is too much to ex­
northern nart of the state,
rettes. letters and snapshots. Bar­ Is bom delinquent, but if we adults
Mr. Tinker’s address was Inter­ racks must be kept clean and neat have not willed to create delin­ pect.
Finally, as the child gains profi­
esting- so wore thc pictures. He looking and every boy does his share quency breeding situations, al least
held the closest attention of the to keep it so. Each boy upon entering we have not willed to prevent them, ciency In undressing and dressing, a
Rotarians for threc-quartera of an a camp te furnished with complete and until we do will to prevent race with daddy or mother will help
hour, and they would willingly have clothing ouflt. The uniform Is non­ them, and carry our intentions into to speed up the process, but win­
remained longer. Mr. Tinker gave mill tary. neat and distinctive. The practice, we shall go on paying the ning the race should not oversha­
in
washing,
talks also tn the schools here and work clothes are well adapted to cost in crime and poverty and dow thoroughness
brushing the teeth, or brushing the
■ in Nashville.
the work which the enrollee Is called wretchedness."
We are pleased that this Impor­ hair. Neatness, as well as speed,
upon to do. Any articles of clothing
should
be
the
goal.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
that have become worn are replaced tant subject is being seriously studFirst showing of the new 1938 Plenty of food te furnished and of a led in Mchigan. Hastings and Barry nijAlirE ISl'lLoA
Frigdalre will occur Feb. 18. at the good quality. Medical care te fur­ county ought to unite In efforts to UnflNut IN WrA
reduce Juvenile delinquency, by the
Consumers Power Co dealers here nished by an army doctor.
WORK SCHEDULE
for Frlgldalre household products.
OITUIHI Conservation
Civilian
UWUKT1 VBMUll Corps
t-Ul po has
UM plan suggested tn the above article
.
1938 Frlgldalre is the result i helped many boys. They leave camp from Ann Arbor. The suggested plan F. S. Benjamin Announces
veer* of
nf engineering
encrinssrlnir and ...
_
__
—
__________
i
JI.I
—
of
a
Joint,
voluntary
meeting
of
ofI the years
In much finer physical condition
Three Shift System Is
manufacturing experience of the than when they entered. It's a good Juvenile court officials, the officers,
world's largest manufacturer of re­ chance on the whole to regain self­ church leaders. Y M. C- A. and
Now In Effect
frigeration and unit air conditioning respect and self-confidence, and get Scout directors, leaders of the Wom­
With
the WPA work month cut
equipment." the Frlgldalre Division a Job when you are back in regular en's club, the commercial club, the
Rotary club and the P. T. A. is a to 128 hours throughout Michigan.
of General Motors corporation," life again.
good plan to follow. While Juvenile F. 8. Benjamin. Eighth District Di­
“Sensational
developments
have
delinquency in thia city and coun­ rector. has announced a new threeb-en Incorporated In the new models
ty is not as serious as In many other shift system of operating labor
and we anllcltate a public accept­ PASSING OF MRS.
JERKY HAYNES. counties. It Is serious enough to crews for lhe ten counties under his
ance of the line that will far sur­
supervision.
Mrs. Jerry Haynes, aged 63. passed warrant cooperative effort.
pass tlie enthusiasm with which the
With the state-wide plan calling
American people greeted our 1935 away at her home in Baltimore
for 32 hours work each week. Instead
Twp, on Friday after an Illness of SPEAR, DECOY AND
offerings.
Of the 35 hours prevailing prior to
! "Hitherto unheard of operating more than a year, death being due
February
first, the plan reduces in­
TIP-UPS
CODE
economy, faster freezing and tem­ to heart trouble. She was a life long
dividual hours by 12 each month,
peratures that Insure protection of resident of Barry county. Mrs.
Oonservatipn Dept. Gives and at the same time has the effect
perishables are only a few of the Haynes was a member of the Hen­
of increasing the hourly rate. The
striking features of the new Frigid- dershott Methodist church and of
Rules—Season Closes
system now In effect in the Sth
kin-. We invite everyone to attend
District permits continuous daylight
on February 29
esteemed. Mr. Haynes passed away
our showing.
in 1033. Surviving are two step­
Worried fishermen in many ports operations on all projects. One crew
will
work eight hour days the
children. Mrs. Nora Striker of of the state have been asking If It
MICHIGAN SCHOOLS AID
first four days each week, one will
I
IN SAFETY EDUCATION. Athens and Ronald Haynes of Has­ would be legal to use two tlp-upa duplicate this for the last four days,
Questionnaire returns to the State tings; two brothers. Otis Fisher of outside a fish shanty and be within
while lhe third crew will work Fri­
Department of Public Instruction Kalamazoo and Orlle. Fisher of the shanty at the same time with a
days. Saturday. Mondays, and Tues­
spear and a decoy.
from two hundred superintendents Dowling.
It was planned to hold the fu­
This will be entirely legal, state days on the projects within the
of schools and forty seven county
larger cities, and in the rural dis­
conservation
authorities
announce,
neral
on
Sunday
afternoon
but
beschool commissioners Indicate that
so long as the "Immediate control" tricts a single four day, eight hour
most of the schools in Michigan are
postponed until Tuesday afternoon, provision governing the use of ice­ shift will operate.
' giving time and attention to the InFurther advantages claimed for
when it was held at the Dowling lines and tlp-upa Is not violated
structon of safety education.
the 8th district plan are, that it not
Of the graded schools reporting, church, the Rev. c. M. Conklin of­ Tlp-upa are considered under im­
only affords the worker more time
seventy-six per cent are teaching ficiating. Interment was in the mediate control as long as the fish­
ermen can see them readily and at to supplement his earnings by pri­
safety education In the elementary Dowling cemetery.
frequent intervals by looking out vate employment, but It gives him
grades and seventy-one per cent In
more time to look for a Job in pri­
REACHES CENTURY MARK.
a window or the shanty door.
( their high schools. Slxty-two per
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Engel
are
In
The decoys and line used for vate Industry. Over-crowding on the
cent
of
lhe
county
school
commis
­
I
receipt
of
some
clippings
telling
of
spearing
do not constitute an addi­ projects will also be eliminated, an
sioners report all rural schools In
end which has long been sought by
lhe
celebration
of
the
one
hun
­
j their counties to be offering safety dredth birthday of Mrs. Engel's tional line under the two ice-llne the Works Progress Administration
' education; twenty-three j#r cent aunt. Mrs. Robert Hays, of Luck­ regulation.
Tlie two-month spearing season executives.
report some schools; and only fif­
Workmen will in the future be re­
teen per cent report no such Instruc­ now, Ontario. Canada. Mrs. Hays, onjhe Inland lakes of Michigan
who Ilves with her daughter in has little more than a fortnight to quired to make up time lost on each
j tion or no data.
semi-monthly pay period because of
Lucknow, has lhe distinction of hav­
The other evening we heard a ing lived under five of Great Brit­ After that date sportsmen will temporary delays like those caused
woman ask what In lhe world would ain's sovereigns. William IV. Queen have to confine their winter fiah- by the Inclement weather. In the
post the men have been paid for
I become of the younger generation. Victoria, Edward VII. King George
such time without having to make It
That's ap easy one. They'll fall in and Edward VIII.
tlp-upa.
On her birthday. Mrs. Hays met
love, get married, have children and
A disease which" thickens the hu­
paid tor voluntary absence or sicktrouble and all that sort of thing, hundreds of her friends and had an
and aa they get older they will worry enjoyable time. Mr. and Mrs. Engel man skull may eventually be Identi­
The monthly pay schedules are
fied as nature's effort to evolve a
about what's to become of the
more durable taxpayer.
not changed by the new plans.
festlvitlM.
younger generation.
~—

IS

great big husky youngster those days

Wilkins who always looked out for
Jlm had on a pair of boots badly
worn.
He said. “Jimmie, tonight you go

BUBONIC

yard and Jim drove up to the skld-

boots, and Jim Wilkins said. "Jim­
mie. I thought I told you to go up
M, at a dinner.
to the shoe (tore and get a good pair
of boots,"
Jim replied, "I did. Mr. Wilkins,
but my brother got up first “
thia
' Hies with a dinner dance and card
this morning."

“TRAVELLING GAVEL”
WILL BE PRESENTED

Courtesy sud Oracle**-

Middleville Chapter 0. E. 8.
Will Furnish Program
and Receive Gavel
Hastings chapter of lhe Eastern
Star will meet next Tuesday night.
February IB Tlie program for the
evening will be furnished by the
Middleville chapter, after which a
gram will follow the regular meet­
ing. The Middleville chapter will
put on lhe program, after which It
will be presented with lhe 'Travel­
ing
mg Gavel " This
I ins will
wiu be
w given the
me
visiting chapter by Mrs. Cora Gebhart, president of the Barry County
Eastern Star Association. The Mid­
dleville chapter in turn will latar
present it lo some other Barry
county chapter which exemplifies
lhe degree or puls on a program.
After it has reached all five chapters
in the county. Il will be returned to

your

By RUTH BARTON
I have Just finished a hand­
writing analysis fat a writer
highest integrity — conscientious.
herself to different surroundings
with um. Her manner is gracious

affable. She is an entertaining
talker about herself—her own

made with ease—flowing and
gracious. Her capital* are large—

Do you write in this manner?

FRIEND

Your banker

is a personal friend,

he has YOUR interest at heart and he '
ready to help you complete the plans for
family's security. The Hastings City Bank

We are in petition

to make mortgage
loons on

improved

REAL ESTATE.

has for a half century proven its friendlint
for those who have intrusted their interests
to them. As a guardian watches over the in­
terests of those left in his charge, so too, this
bank watches over and protects the interests
of its depositors.
■
The services of this bank are varied and
many. You can come to your banker for ad­
vice ... for loans to promote your business ...
for help in
for loans to improve your home
making plans foryourfamily'sfuturesecurity
and happiness. As a friend he will always
keep your affairs in strictest confidence. The
facilities of this bank are at your command.
A friend must prove himself a friend ... let
us prove our friendliness . . . take advantage
of these services. Here you w'ill receive friend­
ly, courteous service.

qo;nsult;your:banker as a

HASTINGS CITY
MICH

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11. 1936

| lined canals, stone roads, stone walls, I our present civilization as lhe great- ' of old civilizations. What he found1 had to pay adollaror more for

a came .upon a layer of gravel. Way
land hqge carved atone monuments : est the world has ever known, but ■ was.most —
surprising
.K. -....A..---.....
and would-v.
seemilicense
mccn*e to
io hunt,
num, and
ana
ages
age*
before
ociorc down below the gravel they cams
Christopher Columbus saw “
the
, as silent reminders of s once might) , who really knows whether that is 1 to prove beyond doubt the existence
*lu“ j
“ light to a alone pavement, nicely laid,
tx. i««t
ln Artson, Nevada.
the upper surfaces being cut and
, clvlliMtton that passed on. leaving true or not? Scientist* state that at He found that lhe early civilizations UUlh
Utah, and Colorado are the htxoee
I no evidence of who th* people were. [ least four great continent* haw ot the Greeks. Chaldeans. Babylon- ■of the cliff Dweller*, high upon the
; or what becaow of them. At one been submerged in lhe ocean. Even fan*. Persians and Egyptian* had all mountain titles. No one know* any­
________________________
,pot * great stone monument 70 in our own country it te claimed been preceded by Mu. He found the
-Lthing definite about them, only that Of gravel undar the mastodon's
(Ooilinued from page one)
&lt;e«t tall was found lying flat in the that Pike's Peak was once a part of a Hindu epic written by the historian their pottery betokens quite a de­
skeleton was
caused
by some
------------ -------- ---------------- ---------- quarry, which would seem to Indi- great level plain. Scientists say that Valmlkl. which states tiiat the pro­
gree of skill, art. and intelligence.
planet-have never been recorded.---- {cate that something most unusual. m a few thousand years New York pie of Burma came Uiere "from lhe Perhaps they have left the moat cataclysm ages before that. Tho
Thouwhodwell upon these South n‘ust hBve nappened. On all of the | city will be a mile under water and land of their birth in the east." The definite evidence Of whd they were, sltjne highway *1111 further down
c
i.i.nx.
tar nutairie ,h i nionuments rsmalning—and there1 japan submerged. Tradition tend* Troano Manuscript now in the because on lhe walla ot tome of speaks of a civilization (till much
“
TJX.Zm
Jh!iare m“y hundred* of thet»-4be; to verify lhe symbols as handed British Museum was written in Yuolder, and ovidently an intelligent
n»rn«
world
that they seemi elUier the n(jaUy carvcd iynibote have only down through those great carved catan. and speaks ot the land of their cliff home* they left painted
symbol!
and character*
it is
nii! tonded to mystify Lhoac who have monument* and ruined temples of "Mu" to lhe west and using for strange
indeed that a number of
S?JJXJrn Wlte'
tunate of mankind depending on vUUed thfMf o.Jt ol
way spou I EMWr J||Und and other
pg. ..Mu- identically the same symbols
these symbols are to be found on the , f
nn_
uie way you
a. n.
ucuuuiu.
d-,1 cUmate Thfy epe“k °f “n *rtuUc cultured dflc Islands. Scientists and students found in India. Burma, and Egypt,
-«„u .r BMU,
lurroundlng*
.urmundln*. and an idea) Canute
climate rM„ and o( , clvllUaUon ilfud and cU|m thoM iymboU
p, | Un(Ung
that all
p^.
and other South Pacific Island*. ,T~r
I perhaps would at leaxt help com­
----- ----r ---talented
uucriKu In
U&gt; many
UIKUJ ways, indeed
inaeea far
rar I1 age* past
post a great continent existed
existed ' pies originally came from the
Ute same There lythe circle with lines extend- 'buff^o a'illow* - ta NebJalk^ ai^
I
for lhe
fi-clina of-rra
Solitude
Jtlt.rhm«?t
‘ blue beyond lhc u,ual conception of peo- in the Pacific; that during a great land. In Tiahuanaco. Peru, is a great ing outward indicating lhe rising ' ^"^dZ b? bufUl^^dl
*rd
nf the trnme pk?
the car,y
°f mMnklndupheaval of the earth it sank into, monolith that has stood os one of
..
th .?r l^Lat
Wh0 *ere lhr8c ‘*ople; whMt h,p- the °"‘n That continent It la the englmas of lhe world A beauti- sun-one of the symbols of the lost 1

“SSJ

PLEASE HAVE A HEART
FOR US OR SOME OTHER

COAL DEALER!
SHOVEL SNOW from
YOUR DRIVEWAY!
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

!*
I'd .. h A., ntt^r pcned t0 Uiem: whftt became of claimed was at least 5000 miles long, fully carved record. IU execution
I who lived here thousands of years
. i0”,) Ea’rtVh&lt;.1
Pnriflr utand &gt;lhcm? Untl1 W*&lt;Mn the last few extending cast and west, and at demanded not only a high class of
islands of Jthe
the fioutn p®
racilic.
i., carved monu..... ...........
..... z mile's
.. in’width?
....... . being
.
.. t*ieiri.
....... ”but
... artistic'skill
. .... ... ....'and*
__ , ability,
......
| Islands
cllJc' *stano
‘“"d ; .years, those curiously
: least.
’3000
dl^J
: ago. and vanished, leaving no evlthree black bars or lines. "Three"
great ruined stone temples, stone- menU have stood as if lo defy any, vidcd into three parts, each iecUoh&gt;-Wlth thc aid-of his knowledge as to
dcnce of wild they were or what be­
is the numeral applied to Mu on
■ answer. For thc past few years being separated from the other by I thc translation of symbols. Col. monuments in India. Egypt. China, came of lliem. But they did leave
scientific expeditions have been comparatively narrow bodies ot wa- j Churchward was able U&gt;-decipher Yucatan and all thc old civilizations a lol of relics and works of art in­
made to Easter Island and others of ter. It is claimed that the Hawaiian Its hidden meanings, and found tiiat around the world Thl* black circle dicating quite a degree of civiliza­
the South Pacific group in an effort Islands---------------------------------..---------- It---------were
about the northern
referred
to tlie..----times when the is supposed to indicate that the sun tion. There were heads, with quite
to solve tlie riddle. Only last year limit of this continent, and Uiat I first settlements were made in Egypt of mu
„„ set and that MIWV
Mu has
that muu
land „
is an oriental cast, made of pink soap­
lhe Crock«r Expedition, including Easter Lsland was about lhe south-j on ■ the Nile delta under Thoth. fOrever in darkneu. There 15'the stone; masks and heads made of
noted scientists and geologists, rc- eastern corner. On the Kona coast | which was at the very beginning of serpent symbolic of tlie ocean, and burned clay, ornaments, etc. Last
1 turned to San Francisco after an of the island qj Hawaii are ruin* of Egyptian history, supposed to be al above it a semi-circle supposed to but not least it proved that the men
• absence of months investigating stone temples that no one knows least 16.000 years ago. The Mono-' represent the western horizon and tand perhaps thc women too&gt; of
these strange monuments and ruins. anything about. Il is said that lhe 111th refers to Queen moo then reign- oix,Ve the semi-circle arc thc three that far-off lime would be consld*ln the great Bishop Museum inTroano Manuscript.
ancient ing In Mayax -and Mayax was one bars, again referring to Mu. There ered quite modern today, because
[Honolulu are to be seen some of lhe . Maya book, written In Yucatan, tells of the colonial empires of lhe con-; 1S n c|rclc inM|dc of which is a cross, । they smoked, and there were the
I carved stone relics from Easter Is- of Ute great continent of Mu lo the tinent of Mu. which wtis then prob- Thla waa supposed to be the royal I tell-tale evidences of glazed clay
land and others of the South Sea 1 west of what we know as America. ably
glory. According
.htv in
In its
n. full
r.,11 ..Inrv
s.Anrrit.w to
.« I cacuicheoi» of Mu. There Is lhe lotus, jilpcs. Bo we're not so young aa wc
Islands. They show a quality of while Asiatic records refer to it as the Troano Manuscript in the thc sacred flower of Mu. It Ls said perhaps may think we are. Maybe
I workmanship that indicates culture being east of Africa. Thus if such a British Museum. Queen Moo visited that tiie sacred symbols on Pueblo we've been a little loo slow In adver­
, ""•*
and refinement.
----------continent ever existed it must have
thc Maya colony on the Nile delta . Indian ceremonial blankets of to­ tising. that's all.
One of the men who has devoted been in tiie Pacific ocean and later during the first century of its exist­ day are symbols evidently handed
Aside from Uie similarity of
many years lo a solution of this lost submerged. The Troano Manuscript ence. and there met. Tiiolh Its down from the lost continent of Mu. carved stone symbols In what wc
' civilization U col. James Curchward. is estimated-to be anywhere from founder.
Two Gods that lhe Hop! and Zuni call the old World and the New
author of the book "The Lost Con- 1500 to 5000 years old. and states
Wc in America are apt lo consider Indians worship are called Ahaiinta World. a|l referring lo the Lost
। tinent of mu.” and other books dcal- that "3060 years before the writing
nnd Mauailcma both of them band­ Continent of Mu in the Pacific
i ing with lhe people of thc South of this book," the continent of Mu tiiat our country ^jga^_discovered by
ed down from Mu and their sacred ocean, perhaps lhe next best evlPOPULAR BRAND—FAST SELLING
1 Pacific islands. After years of study disappeared during the night after Clirl-stopiicr columbu;. in 1492. when symbols arc from Mu. Pueblo leg-,i dcnce of U»e existence of such a
Always Fresh—Ground lo Order
‘
j and research that look him to all having been constantly shaken by he happened to bump into it on his ends arc that their forefathers came .' vvmmuch
continent* »
is mic
lhe ou
South
is-­
&lt;u» xPacific
-«u«»u in
parts of the world, the author pre- the fires underneath. This record trip to find u short cut to the In­ to America in their ships from 1themselves. Take Easter Isi sents many proofs of the former states that at that time thc conti­ dies. Our historians would almost across the sea in thc direction of | land »
example. It la a barrt-n
existence of the great continent of nent of Mu was inhabited by 64.000.­ tend to have us believe that.for un­ the setting son. Some of their words ' Utile Island only 13 miles long and
I-Mu" out In thc Pacific ocean; that 000 people made up of 10 tribes or told ages this great country was are identical with the Indians of i7 miles wide. Despite Ils smallness.
RICH. MELLOW-FINEST BLEND
M VV
It was really the motlierland ot peoples, but all under one govern­ standing out here "all by Its lone­ South America, all of them dating | there are hundreds and hundreds of
: man; and that it was submerged ment. Some of these peoples were some." just waiting to be discovered. , back to the motherland "Mu ” Pueb- carved stone statues up to 70 feel
i during some great upheaval ot thc white, and some were colored, which It should not be overlooked that aft- , lo Indians have not been influenced, j high, the majority being around 15
j earth. This happened thousands may account for white jieoplc being cr Christopher s .ship was docked.' scarcely one iota, by thc white peo- or 20 feel tall; there are thc ruins
and thousands of years ago. even found on thc Soutli Pacific Islands. he was met by Indians. There Is pie of today. They live just as their ! of atone temples; great stone walk;
AN OLD FAVORITE BLEND
I before mountains were raised up by One wonders wheUu-r the present plenty of evidence tending to show ancestors did; they |&gt;re*crvc with [ stone-lined canals, and stone paved,
IN -VACUUM PACKED TIN
• forces of nature. The South Sea Hawaiian race may not have sprung tiuit our country was inhabited ages great care the purity of their own 1 roads. There are piles of chipped
islands that remain os wc know up from those who survived lhe sub­ and ages before Columbus landed. language which they teach their atone hundreds of feet long and 30
. them, were left because they hap­ merging of this lost continent It The very Indians who met him were children to siwnk correctly; they or 40 feel high as If they had been
24H Lb. Bag 69C
pened to be over solid earth forma­ really seems more reasonable than perhaps reninanta of a civilization hand down their traditions, rites ' left for shipment to some other part
, tions and therefore did not sink tn- do&lt;S lhe tradition that they crossed that was all but destroyed when our and ceremonies from generation to of the country, when "something''
24 « Lb. Bag 78c
1—
to the
sea.
•
— —
thousands of mites of ocean in their mountains were raised up from thc generation. Wc nre apt to think of happened. Possibly that - something"
Thc author of thc Lost Continent little, frail, dug-out canoes
sea. Out in Oregon, for Instance, our own country a* young. As a re- j was when a continent sank into the
ot Mu. went to India as a young1 —
' on "
- of- is a place called Fa..11 Lake way out public wc arc voung. but as an in- *&lt;». H would recm that tlie carving
24J{ Lb. Bag $1.09
The people
tlie continent
man in 1868. to assist in famine rc- Mu were a sea-faring people and on the dry desert
•
~t these hundreds
Once, in apa&lt;.haj»it&lt;
d part of h'.;
Uie globe we prob- 1 mid erection of
i lief. Greatly interested in archae­ their ships went over the world from pa-‘ .1 wa&gt; a fertile plain, but nh/y
..Jy extend as far back as any of of great slonc
stone monuments; Use
ological research work, he made thc thc eastern to the western oceans when the mountains were raised up which we hear so much. Tiie ClifX i building of great stone temples
| acquaintance of a high priest in In­ and from northern lo southern seas. all the water was drained off. Thc Dwellers or their ancestors were here and***
stone walls; thc construction
* “
of‘
I dia. was given access lo ancient They were colonizers too. and their fossils of ancient animals haw been before the mountains were raised, stone-lined canals and thc building
I tablets that were regarded as sacred peoples settled in India. Yucatan discovered all around Hie dried-up and there arc many other evidences of atone roads would require con­
I and had beeh hidden for thousands ( and other lands both east and west, bed of thc lake. Bones of dinosaurs of people being here long before any tinental resources and thousands of
GOLDEN BROWN
। of years in temple vaults More than ' perhaps in lhe western part of our were found in the lower .strata. In recorded history. A few years ago skilled workmen and would not be
| this the priest showed him lhe aim-1 own country.
tlie upper strata were the skeletons al Blue Lick Springs in Kentucky considered
or even deemed
possible of
------------------------------------—---------------plest interpretation of the symbols. I Having mastered the language ot ol mastodons, and mixed up with un excavation waa being made. &gt; accomplishment by the people of
and he really became a master of the symbols. Co). Churchward started thc bones were arrow heath and When 12 feel below the surface a HlUe Island only 13 miles long
No. 2 J$
| the language the symbols disclosed. out for a very thorough study of lhe spear heads of volcanic gia« They worluncn came upon the skeleton of and 7 miles wide. Besides this there
j Perhaps wc are inclined to exalt writings, monuments and temples were made by men long before they a mastodon. Farther down they is the evidence ol stone roads on
। some of lhe other South Pacific te1 lands, just os though when lhe
ROYAL KE1FFERS
continent sank, lhe little stretches
Finn for Salad* or Sn
of stone highways remained on the
spots that did not sink. Those
"spots” arc now thc South Pacific
. islands. In addition to all of this ot
course arc manuscripts and syinbol| covered tablets and monuments In
| various parts of thc world, referring
No 2
lo tlie upheaval that submerged the
continent of Mu. this evidence belli;;
found in North America, Central
America. South America,
India,
EARLY JUNE
No. 2
China, and many olher lands.
SWEET. TENDER
If
. «,,, Ir...
&lt;&gt; Kml. A..
archaeology, you will be Interested
FRESH CANNED. PURE. .TASTY

Ttulity's Dnenl
Coffee Values!

THOMAS SPECIAL Ib. 1
MISSION INN

lb-Onr

GOLDEN SUN

lb-25c

FLOUR
SUGAR

SNOW QUEEN
BEST YET

GOLD MEDAL

10 as. 50c
10 ib.. 49c

PEACHES

31c

DC* A DC
I E.MVID

NATURES
HEALTH
FLAVOR
AND
FRESHNESS
SEALED IN

YOU GET MORE
FOR YOUR MONEY IN

PINEAPPLE f^hawt:

TOMATOES

25c

PI? A Q
■ LFIQ

25c

SAUER KRAUT

No. 2!4

OLDSMOBILE

15c

Mu.” by Co! James Churchward,
which really form;; the basis of this,
letter. The book is quite generously
illustrated with symbols from an-

ASPARAGUS

EGG NOODLES

"keys" to explain them. To me the
book was keenly enjoyable. the
greatest difficulty being lo condense

14c

FINE. MEDIUM. BROAD

CAKE FLOUR -™.F

25c

SALMON 2ffi

For Valentine Day
CHOCOLATE COVERED

CHERRIES

5 bb-

19c

RESEARCH FINDS WAY '
TO KEEP PARASITES
OUT OF FARM PROFITS

12c

TUNA FISH i'&amp;Y

OLEO

length.

COMAR BRAND

2 c*»» 25 c
2 LB3 25c

CARNATION MILK

KF

• Feeding woririi and other para«llea la almost aa big an Industry
today aa feeding livestock nnd pool*
try,” aaya E. B. Powell, manager &lt;4
lhe Purina Iteaearcb Farm at Cray
Summit. Mo. “Hut It's a mighty
unprofitable business for the man
who does the feeding I Every year a
forturn&gt; la literally eaten up by In­
tent lunl worms, lice, mites. file*,
nnd similar parasite*. These nrs

7c

Irradiated—t'red by Dionne "Quints"

SWEETENED CONDENSED

CRISCO

GOLD MEDAL

MILK 2c,n* 25c

EASILY DIGESTED SHORTENING

3 t 59c

FOR CANDIES, PUDDINGS. DESSERTS

Hershey's Cocoa
2 c.‘.‘. 25c
Baking Chocolate i u. b« 10c
Minute Tapioca fug
13c
Baker's Cocoanut W-cax J 3c
VEG-ALL Vt(tubl&lt;i
te»;*
2**
23c

TRIPOINT

SALAD DRESSING
QT.
MUSTARD BTYbE
CATSUP
Dry Red Kidney Beans* **•
PEANUT BUTTER Hff'h,

CIICKC
nVJIXJ

N&lt;an&gt;klrK
Dillciclti

3 FKGS
Soda CRACKERS
2 BOX
Graham CRACKERS2 ilx
ROLLED OATS
6 LBS.
MACARONI
2 th

TRILBY SOAP
FOR THE BATH

27c
10c
10c
15c
25c

P Cr G SOAP
OXYDOL
UPEBUOY
RIN SO

25c
15c
18c
22c
12c

2 ■»«. 15c

5

GIANT
SAKS ZlC

MEDIUM

10c

3 “»• 20c
3

long life . . . Then consider thia
— Oldsmobile The Car That
it's your money you are
paying out and you are entitled Has Everything"—is priced
but a little above the lowest I
to the most that every dollar
will buy you . , . That's why
• THE EIGHT •
we say—go see the Oldsmobile!
Look at its size. Try out its
roominess. Count up its mod­
ern fine-car features! Note for
yourself Oldsmobile's every
convenience, every provision
for extra safety, extra comfort,
increased economy and extrae as critical as you like—-

B

*665

*810

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

KNU-ACTION WHIlLi
for * r**tful .^gliding ride.

1101 STABHIXIB for
level, eweylee* riding.

'±k-

«—•

protection and baauty.

NO ORA9T VIMTILATKJNfor plenty of freak
*lr without draft*.

"TU««n.Tor’

STOMACH
UPSETS?
H Curie. O'fiml

STIIIING for •ffortleaa.

‘ 25c

C. THOMAS STOKES

’
OLDiMOIILI has every
flne-car feature .. . none left out

According to Powell, much of th*
money that now goes to parasites
can easily be turned Into clear
lirutits for the farmers of this couD'
try. It Is for this reason tiiat years
of research have been devote! by
lhe Purina laboratories to work
oitt a fnnn sanitation program that
will put a halt to the annual raid of
parasites. The &lt; utcoma has been
the develupment of n line of sanita­
tion products nvalluble nt any store
where Ubeekerbourd feeds ore sold.
Through them every American
farmer Ims thc mennsof preventing
costly llrestock mid poultry dis
enses. This research nnd Its result­
mil drvrlofiment of disease preven­
tive products site mltje«l stipfmrt to
the nlii nilnttr. "nn ounce of preven­
tion |a worth n pound &lt;'f cure."

M_____

R. K. HURD

301 E. State

Hastings

Telephone 2680

of®-’ North Howin

Mtdksl Diwo^ry. It U
area to itlicvt iadi(nind u&gt; on th«

UtM. Mt, liquid |1 kll.jj.

�TILE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13. 1PJ4

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG COUKTHOUSE NEWS
Athletics.
PROBATE COURT.
Middleville eagers won
from
Eat. Clark A. Barber. Annual ac­
Woodland, more than evening the count filed, order for publication
score between the two schools. After
entered.
taking their first defeat of the sea­
Ext. Hannah Yerington. Dtason from the Woodland boys the
previous week, the T K eagers went enrolled.
after revenge and got It tn one of
Est. Mary Haff
Testimony of
the best games of the year. The freeholders filed; license to sell is­
game was so full of thrills and loud sued.
cheering that most every one was
exhausted before It was ended.
nual account filed.
T. K. started first and from thc
i Est. Mary Haff. Bond on rale
first tip off they Impressed the crowd | filed; oath before rale filed; report
that they meant business. Put of sale filed.
breaking plays cracked the Wood­
Est. Clarence Willison, Inventory
land defense for Ave baskets lo give filed.
us a 10 lo 0 lead. At the half time
Est. Fred M. Cushing, Order constill lead by 10 points. In tiie firming rale entered.
last quarter the Woodland team
Ext. Vera L. Rogers
Final acstaged a rally, but our light defense count of Gdn. filed.
held them well hi check. The well
an PitylUs Edger.
Rclcase of
earned vetory gave the Kellogg boys guardian filed; discharge of guardi­
a record of 10 wins to one defeat.
an Issued; estate enrolled.
The T. K. reserves and Giris’ team
Est. Clara and Wilburn Rogers.
also
through
_ ,, came
,
-------- "" with
------ victories
;---------- L Release of Gdn. filed; discharge of
c‘°“ ,nd।|O0
n issued; estate trolled,
Gdn.
enrolled.
interesting.
।
Thup*
to wwbujd u, L ——------ —.

play and we hope that our boosters entered
will attend
lo boost
our«,young
»«• X
Lui. „
who h.ve
tom,
„11 alhUto niS!

1
Mtiter

Tmim/mv

tercd.
Est. Harland V. Sweitzer. Order
MILO.
allowing account entered.
On account of Uie storm nnd bad
Est John I. Baker. Discharge ot
roads school was dbmbscd Tues­ executor issued; estate enrolled.
day afternoon and Wednesday, also
Est. Frank Price. Report of rale
loday (Monday). Those who live at filed. order confirming rale entered
Milo and drive to Kalamazoo to
Est. Alfred C. Buxton. Annual
work were delayed Monday until Uie account filed.
roads were opened but all made it
before noon.
PRAIRIEVILLE.
Billie Schultz ot Chicago spent
Clarence Garrett has leased Uie
the week end with hb parents. Mr.
oil station here. Clarence h well
and Mrs. W- C- Schultz.
liked and will make a success of thc
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert came to their
business. Hb many friends wbh
new farm, lhe Harry Leonard place, him well.
last Friday. Mrs. Gilbert remained.
Who said wc were going to liave
Saturday they brought one load of
an
open winter? Well, that’s as near
household goods and their son
Richard stayed with hb mother. j' as some weather prophets get lo
what
we actually have, but Just let’s
Mr. Gilbert hoped to finish moving
smile and like it. It might be worse,
from their former home tn Marcel­ you
know.
lus. early thb week, but will be held
Schools are closed until Wednes­
up by lhe bad condition of thc
roads wiUch nre worse near that day on account of thc condition of
the roads,
place.
Mrs. Ned Wlikliu expects lo be
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Bradfield and
dismissed from Pennock hospital lhe
Jack visited their mother. Mrs. Wil­
forepart of this week. She will go lo
cox. and W. A- Spaulding In Has­
the home of Her father, Dwight Van
tings this week In honor of Jack's
Horn, for a few weeks. She is get­
birthday.
There was no mail two days tlie ting along nicely which Is good news
to her friends.
past week and with the impassable
Orin Dayton, well-known here,
roads, we were quite cut off from thc
who died at Hastings February 3.
world.
was brought here for burial'Fri­
Mrs. Rowrn spent several days day.
the past week In Kalamazoo.
Monday—shovelling snow Is lhe
On account of the cold and un­
order of thc day.
certain! ty of tlie weather It is
John R. Jones, aged 52 years,
thought i&gt;est not to hold an Aid
passed
away at a Kalamazoo hos­
meeting this month.
After spending several days at her pital Saturday afternoon at 3

son'ol Mr.^nd^a John Carpenter.

You seldom think of your
medicbie cabinet except in
times of sicknewt and emer­
gency. But don't wait until
that your medicine cabinet is
equipped completely now.
In addition to gauze, cotton,
bandages and other flnl-ald
supplies we suggevl and recom­
mend these Squibb Home NeceraiUes: Cod-Uver OU. Sodi­
um Bicarbonate. Aspirin Tab­
le U, Liquid Pclrolatum. Milk
of Magnesia. Tasteless Castor
OU. Epsom HaiL Boric Acid
and, of course, Squibb Dental

Arnold Malcolm of Lake Odessa
waa thc guest ot hLs parenU. Mr. and
Mrs John Malcolm. Thursday.
Robert and Paul Hammond spent
Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday
with their uncle and aunt. Mr. and
Mrs. George McCulla, in Hastings.
Misses Margery and Odella Fifield were among the students from
here who remained in thc city dur­
ing lhe time Uie roods were block­
aded. They were guests of Mrs.
Marble, returning
home Friday
night.
David Robinson was in Lansing
Thursday in attendance at thc
Farmers’ Week program and spent
tiie night with Glenn and Dennis
Frederickson of lhe Rogers Dist.
School here was in session only
Monday last week, due to the drifted
roads. Mrs. Newton was obliged to
remain at home.
~
Ralph Roy of Carlton spent the
past week with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Fifield and family.
MIm Ruth Robinson was the guest
of her sister. Miss Ret ha. ot the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Boyes Ln
Hustings from Tuesday until Thurs­
o
„ . David was also iy KU
„t lneic
day.
guest
there
Tuesday and Wednesday
|I Mrg Geow Kelley
was called to
I,Grand Rapids Saturday taking the
] .noon train.
•'
| Claude a. Hammond returned
home from Jackson Saturday
I None of the students here have
been able to get to Hastings so far
this week, and aeroplanes If avail­
able. would be lhe favorite mode of
travel Just now.
David Robinson. Robert and Paul
Hammond spent Monday afternoon
with Paul Sisson of thc Jones dis­
trict. coasting and skiing.

GOOD COAL makex warm friends,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleased with the fine,
even heat. Low in ash, and longburning. Try a ton today and
save on your fuel bills.

16% Dairy—$1.55 par 100 lbs.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 lbs.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lbs.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lbs.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp;. Company

B. A.' LyBarker. Propr.
IlasUngs
Michigan

A Landslide

ui ba Jloyal to out

Home Community
If a restaurant owner regularly
took dinner at another restau­
rant, he would be considered
rather queer, and the trade of
• I
his restaurant would surely
fall off ... If a farmer planted seed in
another farmer's field and then spent
hours of hard work ploughing his own
acres, he would probably be
locked up for insanity... There
I Bl*is a thought here for all citizens
of this community. Wc are
working to develop home en­
terprises. Therefore, let's plant
our seed in our own furrows. Let's buy
whenever we can from home merchants.
It helps them, helps each one of us, and
the community io general.

N
K OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

MONTH

BUYS A NEW
1936 FORD V-8
WITH THE USUAL DOWN PAYMENT

SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Prices:—

Hasting* Telephone 2257
Prescription Drug Store

/.V '-'FT

Conservation and
„
.
- ,
Outdoor Notes

THREE CORNERS.
Snowbound for lhe greater part
of lhe past week and now since thc
last storm, lhe roads arc impassable
again. Rigorous winters bring out
thc pioneer spirit in all of us. but
the kindliness and consideration for
others shown leave a warm glow in
our licajt.
)

home in Kalamazoo. Mrs. Jennie
pita! Friday afternoon and submit­
Chase returned to lhe Fenner home
ted to a very serious operation. He
last Thursday.
moved here with his family from
Monterey five years ago and was
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
highly respected. Surviving are tlie
Last Week's Letter
wife five sons,
«n&lt; eight daughters and
Floyd Craig was in Kalamazoo wife,
seven grandchildren. Thc family
Monday on business.
Mr and Mrs. Frrd Stevens and have the sincere sympathy of the
community.
Marlon of near Lacey were Sunday
dinner guests of Warren Bolton.
QUIMBY GROUP.
Our school was visited thb week
by thc county nurse. Miss Payne.
Thc Quimby Extension group met
Floyd Craig, accompanied by Mbs at the Quimby church basement
Phyllis Edger of Hustings. attended Tuesday. Jan. 38. Eighteen members,
Uie ■ President’s Ball” held in Has­ one visitor and two leaders were
tings Thursday night.
Bernard present. The lesson was given on
Hammond played in the dance or- , "How to use thc foundation pattern
chcstra that night.
| and selection of designs and fubBtatc Auditor. Mr. Neilson, is at rics." There was a final fitting of
Chas. Woodruff s tills week auditing the foundation patterns, a delicious
the Shipping Association's books.
dinner was served by group No. 3
Is there anything more disgusting
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammond H&gt;e next meeting will be Feb. 27 to hear than the fellow without any
visited at the home of P. S. Sparks I and lhe lesson • filling the dress" : real complaint eternally howling?
| wll|
BjVcn _CIara omeapie. re. 1 But how refreshing, when you hear
in Hastings Sunday.
Mrs. Chas. Woodniff attchded the porter.
I the person you think has every reasExtension class at Mrs. Forrest Pot­
| on to be downhearted always pre­
ter’s near Welcome Corners Wed­
Advertising Is what draws away' renting the brightest side of life,
nesday.
the trade from lhe small village. Ad- Which do you think gels the most
vertlslng will also keep it at home, i out of life?
Did it over occur to you that thc
best method of climbing higher on
life’s ladder of success is lo remain
ON THE LEVEL?

Your Medicine
Cabinet

w,

Ill
IO MIC U«UIUl, , LUU UU IIAIIU MMX U&gt; LHUU U&gt; B4quarters, Camp Pioneer will house I most ten million* of dollars on the
a Conservation museum. One of Lhe I first day of Lids year.
bulldin*, will be KI ulde lo conUln
n,. HorldwMUrn h*i InunonM
nay jrtfe originally
r_.
slate and were among the pioneer
* "S'?«“““■ “* “ •»“&gt;- i™i»«u. .hkh «. .porovwi t,
cd birds.
of different species I government authorities and makes
families of Carlton township. He wu
——————— and other attractions of interest to ]argr Jq^ w
patrons with their
born June 30. 1883 In Caritoo_where'
___
„ . . I sportsmen and cunrervisUonlsU.
policies as security. The company
he spent the greater part of hb life.
•'Ey#*, myriads of them are be- I
...
He wu married to MIm Josephine pnoln, u&gt; to.Kop In Ih. touW B«d wto, M lhe .lun-toKl
Alierdlng. May 22. 1901. After the trays of eggs on which depends ,
lh
j t
t bloonli m lhe secure basis This comprises a sub­
marriage they resided on hb farm Michigan's IBM planting of young fall, are rapab? McxpcuSg th™
improvement in farm conditions la i
near Carlton. They moved to Hu- trout. As long as there eyes appear.
M far
15 fert
reflected by the decrease in mort­
tings In 1917. locating at 818 South lhe hatchery program has made a
__________
__________
gage foreclosures shown Ln the re­
Jeffereon street. Mr. Carpenter be­ successful beginning.
Already Uie
port.
came a member of the staff of our -eyes” are appearing by the mil- COMPANY SHOWS
local post office and worked gs a
The Northwestern not only writes
substitute carrier for several years.
SPLENDID GAINS life Insurance, but also writes polic­
Five species of lhe whilctailed !
.
■
He had been In declining health for
ies that become ’’social security on
the put seven years following an deer are recognized. One of lhe moat Writes Policies That Are a voluntary basis." It is possible, un­
operation- He had been 111 about a
their liberal plans, for a person
- - Security
•
“Social
on Volj der
week when he wu stricken on the widespread of these Is the Virginia &gt;
during hb earning years to make an
To this species belongs the
street here and expired very sud­ I deer.
, annual investment in a Northwestuntary Baais’’
northern whitetailed deer, the form
denly on Wednesday. February 5. at
1 cm policy which, at the expiration I
.„ found In Michigan and neighboring
One of the strongest life insurance
Ute ig' of 73 years. 7 months and 10 .
.. 1i area*. The division between lhe typi- companies in this cotuitry is thc ■| of the paying limit, will be repaid
days. He leaves to mourn hb de' leal Virginia whitclall deer and the Northwestern Mutual Life of AI11- In annual Installments during the
parture hb wife, also hb brother. Jay
life lime of the person. These invest­
carpenter of
ot Carlton,
canton, four
tour nephews
nepnews ' no-^ni form occurs in eastern waukce. It Lt reprerented here by
Carpenter
menu have been very popular, be- I
and a host of friends He was al- I ^en^y*'a?? aP?.n
W. D. Campbell, district agent, whose cause of the security, and because I
ways a good husband and a kind &lt; Yor* Besld5a , *??larK ^' ,
offices are up stairs in the building
friend and neighbor and will be northern whitetail has a heavier of thc National Bank of Hasting*, i■the company has been able to take j
' the premiums paid and so Invest |
greatly
«“ *nd u nt^h grayer
in winter. Thc assets of thc company reached j
greatly mUred
nusrea. He
«e was
was a
a member
mcmocr of
oic----------------------- •
an all-time high last year—31.071,- i them that they return substantial I
lite Baptist church of this city for 1
dividends to the person making lhe
the past sixteen years and was held I A
ycar-around
Coiucrvatlon 9914)55.41. an Increase of more than Investment.
in high esteem by the members and I museum and permanent home for 5 per cent above the previous year, j
New insurance written in 19351
lhe pastor.
Ute Officers’ training school will be ■luuuKtcu
. &lt;•«
«... —.
Consistent advertising is the mer- |
amounted to 3374.238.850. an increase •
Thc funeral services were held at established by the Department of of
‘“nearly “15 ' per-cent' “above Tire chant’s pledge of quality; it is visible
thc
Carlton
Center
Methodist' conservation this spring if lhe
church Saturday. February 8 al 11 ’abandoned CCC camp Pioneer in previous year. Tiie Northwestern’s i proof tiiat he has faith enough in |
Roscommon county
turned over ,n
to total insurance in force amounts to; his goods lo back them with his '
o’clock. HU pastor. Rev. Adcock of---------------------------- *is
...........
flclalcd. The interment was in Ful­ the Department by federal author- 33.705.020.135 Thc company had name.—Stolen.
ler cemetery.
OB4TUARY-

THROUGH
UNIVERSAL

CREDIT

PRODUCTS SALE
Offering A. &amp; P.'s Own Fine
Foods at Low Prices

Whitehouse Milk

93c

Rajah Salad Dressing
Preserves
'•••
Pork and Beans
Pink Salmon
c-u •&gt;-.
Peanut Butter
Suites
Macaroni or Spaghetti c«-"4
Mello Wheat
2
Sparkle
6
Red Beans
6
Preserves
1Imitation Sultana
Ketchup
8 o’clock Coffee
Bread Grandmothers
“ loaf
Red Circle Coffee
Rajah Extracts
A &amp; P Ammonia
Iona Cocoa
Ann Page Baking Powder
Rajah Vinigar
bottle
Potato Chips
r~* D*u»

99c

Wc

JUICY nOBIDAS

GRAPEFRUIT
APPLES

wuuu

lie

Wc

Me
10c
13c ‘

Ac
19c
Me

10c
17c
19c
3c

Wc

2

'&amp;C* 37c
*** 19c
3 «*“ l$«

•** Me
1

Ma

bog 39c
4 for 17c

"ayRMW

10 lbs. 19c

aasaar

2 doc. 39c

CARROTS

OAUTOEMIA

SPINACH

TAMOT OBElR

FORD DEALERS OF MICHIGAN

Dealers in Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Balt, Limo,
Cement and Coal

19c

93c,

ORANGES

CABBAGE
&gt;our nearest Ford dealer today—select

»«

OTHER VALUES
Red Cross Towels
Drano
Woodbury's Soap
Ralston Cereal
Shredded Wheat
Holland Rusk
Lard
Chipso or Rinse
Oxydol or Climalene
Del Monte Coffee
Beechnut Coffee
Sunsweet Prunes
ORANGES

Ford car. Financing at H of 1% a
month, or 6% far 12 months. You
racolvo insurance at conference rates.
Complete fire and theft Insurance—
and $50 deductible collision, and pro­
tection against accidental physical

33c

33c

»* SAVES TAX

1 wM

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13. 19M

NOTICES I

."n'I . "".”

MORTOAOE FORECLOSURE.
DEFAULT

Slate St.

BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY

There’s No Speculation
About your investment in Building
and Loan Shares.
Since the beginning of clvillratlon the home has been

shares are secured by first mortgages on homes. Thh Is
the kind of sccarlty thb old building and loan association
offers to those who invest in its shares.

Successful for More Than -16 Years
WRITE FOR INFORMATION

Rational j£oan &amp;
flmtesfnwnt (fimnpanii
1250 Griswold SL
Establiihsd 1889
Dstroit's OldFit Building A Loan

J. L. MAUS

DETROIT. MICH

F.KIMl HOME

---------------------------------------------- -------- 1---------------------- - ------

;--------------A6UTH JHLLT2.------------

1

. afternoon of games and vislUng.
I
FREEPORT.
WOODLAND.
wh&lt;j
h(j
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Whitney of
auess our weather has been about
The play “Betty In Movieland" to work ln Kalamazoo was obliged U&gt;
Crystal Lake are visiting Mr and llke that of ftH lhe surrounding 1 be given. February 18 and 19 in the j stMy thore laal week M1 account of
Mrs. Fred Camp. Mr and Mrs Kin- country. The storm of last week . Woodland township school has been
nle
and.. Bernice Anne w.
of weunesuay
Wednesday isolated ius for a short' postponed until March on account of
ReUB
— —
—t
in, Cronk mhu
Rena whlppk
Whipple cJ
of Augusta
spent
lhe
spent Sunday
in tlie
Urae
. condition
Mb11 retched
“
“ city
.............
.. ....................
herecamp
Bbout
the
of the roads. This pro- un week with Mr. and Mrs. E.
home. ’
|i •«
— coming
—— ■— •10:30.
In close behind the 1 duetion is being sponsored by the
.
'snowplow,
snowplow, and
and the
the same-procedure
same-orocedure Parent-Teachers'
Parent-Teachers' Association.
Association. The
The
Ur. Sarah
-—k. Kenyon
—-------------u Ida ^...^
Mrs.
and
Ruth
NASHVILLE.
’ was
wu necessary for the evening mall., antes
dates win
will oe
be announcca
announced iaier.
later.
visited frit
friends in Hostings Friday
Thc Clover Leaf club was de- There WB3 Ilo
Wednesday: The Womans Study club banquet afternoon,
'[ Ughtfully
"fitfully
entertained
1----------- -- and
Thursday
about a dozen there on which was scheduled for Tuesday
*-*• at
-• the home
- -*
— rlftrn
.
- „ . . ..
I ——
«•
Kun
- night
of »•
Mrs.
Clare Cole Thursday. The storm
of Saturday , evening. February 11. has been post-1 of ljer so,,. RUMey in. Kalamazoo,
■ ’ with Mrs Milo Young as assisting night and Sunday was the most se- poned until Tuesday. February 25.1 81ll. )1B1 serious trouble with oiu- of
1 hostess, in spite of the bad weath- vere with a temperature reported Ti»c condition of the roads made it i |1Pr eyes and infection in her fare,
" er there were 16 present. After the from 18 to 12 below, and a strone impoasible to hold tlie banquet on ,jer many friends litre hope for a
short business meeting, games in wind blowing. It wasn't long until, the dale planned.
I speedy recovery.
keeping with Valentines Day Were the snow piled up. Driving a car ‘ Miss Stella Parrott was suddenly | Mr nnd Mrs tauter Bonneville
: played with Mrs John Dull. Mrs. was out of thc question, and walk- taken ill Saturday evening. M»s. made a business uip lo Middleville
ing was very difficult. Tiie cold and Vera Hewitt was called in lo iiclp'one day last week.
I winning tiie prizes. Lowly rcfreah- wind made it next to impoasible to care for her until her sister. Miss &gt; Tiiad cook visited relatives In
' menu were served.
heat a building and many reported Florence Parrott, who has been In Kalamazoo over the week end.
I Miss Sarah Kocher. 87. a former sitting around their homes Sunday: Grand Rapids for thc past few
Our
students all
MUJrtd Hi'nlth. R*&lt;ln** ct Probm
I resident of Nashville passed away with coats on. and an unusually ] months arrived- She U reported to started to school last Monday only
i at Edgewood. 111. and was buried large amount of fuel consumed. No be resting easier the first of lhe' l0 flnd ttwl K]IOO] u closed for an
: there in lhe family lot of her sister. [ church was held and streets were ' week.
। indefinite Hine on account of scarlet
I sometime after lhe death of her, deserted. The
Mid Mrs.-----------Victor.-------------Reuther —
of fevcr
Th« fuel situation hasMf.
has
-------------------I brother. John Kocher, she went 1.been
worrisome,
wiui
canton
"^een rslntr
"
‘
’ ' a
- Woodland
■&gt; n.«r
•»
— parents
— -»ciinton Hom
Hom went
went to
to Nasnvnie
Nashville
rather
worrisome,
with
a ccai
coal■ | &amp;*■»*•
East
ore ««
Uie
of »a
। home with o niece and husband, shortage and blocked roads mak- little
who arrived al their home FridBy Io spend a week or so with
Mrs. Sprouse, who had been ln({
delivery of wood Impossible, on Wednesday. January 29. Mrs. his mother. Mrs. Ada Murray,
j The Young Men's Y group r*t**v*.
ex pres J,r■ thank; to all who helped with the
thc . h,,r,? ^*"8
&lt;£«&gt;n.
Rural moll delivery was very un- Fred Cox is caring for Mrs. Reuther
-----'
Boyd
Odessa
certaln
WMk. u
although,
' । work and on ..._
the ------------program of ther
-— Stockford
----------- - of■ Lake
-.
.] w,
&lt;.«■&lt;, lx6l .n*.
&gt;i»uu((ii. local and baby.
WEST CARLTON.
j recent banquet for Mothers nnd and Don VanderVccn of Mason hove carrleri Jfd stowei dld exception­
Orville Colby of Northville spent
rw fanner
Friends of the Fox family,
! : bought
.' Sons. 194
ini participated””
bouoht the
the Elder
Elder drug
druitstock
.slock and
and will
will • -n..
„„
ally ..'..n
well.
Some
folks
report
no
mail
।
the
week
end
with
his
siilcr.
Mrs.
residents
ol
Freeiwrt.
now
living
nb...
IK.
•.
~~
-—— ------ --- ------ acaMiVHM v* rVvvpuit, IM/W liViuk In
1*1
.■-II....... since
.1..— a
_____
-V___
U Cohh
rnmllvand family.
Ij stockton.
o...in
... interested
_____ ______ in
_
I Tlie Freeport Y group had as Utelr ' °&gt;’«n as sbon
slorc ha;i bt&lt;in delivery
week
ago. 'T'
Monday.
I T.nnrl
H. Cobb
Calif., will be
Uur it:B,bI&lt;; Study lost Monday, lessons restocked and made ready.
It was late In the forenoon of Mon- : The regular meeting of lhe P. T.' having news received from them in
from the story of the Prodigal Son I Mr- ancl Mrs- ^oy Brumm and day before tyiy form of transporta- A. will be, held st the usual time ' a recent letter passed on thru the
n« t»&gt;. Their meeting thb Monday included । f“&gt;nlly and Mr. and Mrs, Gull Ly- tlon was seen.' then several sleighs | next Tuesday evening. February 18' Banner. Il seems Mrs.' Jennie Fox
k. " | refrethmenu along with a checker । klns and lwln sons entertained Mr. pulled Into town. No milk was de- at the school.
, injured her right hand quite badly
hirhr.t and tuble tennis tournament.
| and Mrs. Voylc Varney Sunday at livered Sunday and If was noon.
Woodland suffered defeat at the I when she got It caught In an electric
‘“r| Middleville and Hastings Hl-Y th[’ Brumm home in honor of Mrs. Monday, befpre any was available, hands of Middleville Friday evening i wringer. The doctor placed clamps
„* 1 clubs are registered with State and , Varney's birthday.
Canned milk was much in demand, when the Thornapple-Kellogg two on jt for jq dnys W|ien infection
Wom­ Cracker sales took a ispurt,
National Hi-Y inovcmcnU and are |' Wednesday afternoon the Wom—**
due
— to | boys’ teams and girls' teams played
. ..the .bone
------ had lo ...
----- : started, and
be
an's-' Literary club observed "Lincoln the scarcity of bread.
eligible for representation in the Hi- an
1. The snow- in —
the local gymnasium. The girls' I scraped. When lhe accident hop­
&gt;al.i! Y Congress at Berea College. Ky IDay” wlth t!w l°B°w*n8 program plow, accompanied by a crew of game was thc peppiest, the score be-; pened. Mrs. Fox screamed, and In
••1■ June«*-»•
‘ after the business meeting. Flag Sa­
20-24. 1936.
ing
tied
until
the
end.
|
hurrying
to
the
basement.
Mrs.
Ray
men with shovels labored from 7
Music Land A. M.. Monday, till 3 P. M.. to clear
1 In 1935 every day 1.900 young men lute in Unison;
- Touring
Miss Naomi VanLoo spent the, poX tripped and fell down a few
t:: February—Mrs. C~y
were given lodging or food or both ln
Coy Brumm: thc road from Hastings to Freeport week end with her parents In Zee- Atcp., receiving a severely sprained
Music chairman—Mrs. Frank Coley;
and our first mall of the day got land.
ankle. At present they are all bet­
1 "The Y M C. A. adequateb*’ sup- Composers-Mendelssohn.
Edward here about 5 o'clock. The plow
School was closed Tuesday after- ter. the stitches having been re­
ported and intelligently adminh- , Gerawn; Resume of Greatest Lln- suited tn a large drift Just south noon. Wednesday and Thursday of moved from Mrs. Fox s hand. Tiie
। tercd. makes for sound bodies, clean coln Story of Ail." by Ida M. Tar- of the creamery aKlTd- large crowd last week and Monday and Tuesday rest of the family are well, and all
I minds and rugged spirits "—Pres ‘ bell—Mrs. Edwin Nash; Two min- gathered to watch It finally win Ils of this week. As soon as thc buses Wnd regards to their inquiring
[ Glen Frank.
Ute talks; Symposium. Commun- way through. The local school can get through the side roads, friends.
At the recent Stair y. m. C. a. ism—Mrs. William Dean; Fascism- made no attempt to open on Mon­ school will open.
j
... &lt;»» —
.
supplied;
I convention in Detroit. Mr. Warren'-------- Nazism—Mrs. W. St. C. day. nnd the report as this is writ­
----------------- *♦*— --------STATE ROAD.
Cl—ter; New Deal—Mrs. Lester ten is that It will be closed until
; E. Carter was re-elected to member- | Gloster;
WEST HOPE.
well lie re II is Monday nnd we
Brumm.
1935
Biography
of
Lincoln
I ship on thc State Committee.
"
Thursday at least. Tlie report also
nils being "Lincoln Week" here's■ have lived through another blizzard,
[ The Welcome Corners Y group —to be supplied. Hostess—Mrs. comes to us that one local business —
IO. 1035.
the ----------loveliest------------------------------------poem about Ann Rut- „„
We are wondering &gt;ww
how ......
many more
1 meets this week. Feb. 13. with Sait- Philip Dalhauser.
man got marooned in Grand Rap- ledge. Abraham Lincoln's sweetheart Wl. wil) have before spring,
MORTOAOE 8AI.E.
Nashville was without bread Mon­ ids Saturday and isn’t back yet thb who died.
| ford crook. Duane Pugh Is leader.
; Archie Cunningham is having an
... Hastings are
day until lute in thcMonday
afternoon
when
. The local Y groups In
P. M.
Another Is snowed in You were the loveliest thing In Lin- {electric pumping outfit installed ‘in
«h« I delighted to have Mr. Richard Lop- ia Battle Creek bread truck got in at Lowell. A carload of young men | coin's life.
his home,
»rrr penthien as tiie song leader for ।town by coming by way of Hastings. have been detained near Hastings Glory he knew, and fame, and ven- &lt; Mrs. Dora Coleman of Rutland
I their opening worship service each
The many friends of Mr. and Mrs. since Saturday night. And we prob- | eration
spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrsin.
All boys of
Millington
Mn- ’ Tuesday evening. mi
ui high
lugn । Ward
...... .. Hynes
...... of
. ..........
............. sympa•-•••■*—
ahiv
ably amn**
didn't hear it .it
al). An i~,iIonia Long hardships and lhe bitterness of t James sothard and Mrs Janet Pet­
mortcacora to Snrib Ann P.ocert | school age arc urgently invited to I thlze with them in the death of their county snowplow was Uld up Mon­
strife
| ungill.
f*l7
A" come anJ benefit from the program 1 baby daughter. Mrs. Hynes was tlie day near the John Doyle home and And loneliness and grief and much
our school p. T. A. will be Ulis
nii.n,.,
rxinc re- .....I,
, -----—....--------------■ ■ in,
-04- iiticnnmi
n —1/4* f
1.....
Torrtier Pl,
Charlotte
Cross, r\f
of 1here,
rordrd in ■I.ibfr
of. '*
on |&gt;ac* iUld .......
gymnasium Work.
had to go back without opening Hie
privation.
Friday evening. Mrs. Archie Cun111. uuon
----'
daughter of Mr. nnd Mrs. Elmer road south of there.
But you were beauty for an hour
I nlngham nnd Mrs. James O'Connor
nJ Elelili
MIDDLEVILLE.
Russell Gray was the object of a Against Uie raggedness of hb whole will furnish thc program and Mrs.
| A
A fire
About 60 attended lhe get-to- search lost week Wednesday evc- Exbtence. you were an exquisite I Earl Travis and Mrs. Will Sprague
fire alarm
alarm about
about noon
noon called'
called
i,» virtue' the boys to Mrs. Mattle Lynd's home i Kether supper at the Evangelical ning when he failed to reach liftflqwer
refreshnumts. All come.
ri"7tn b’r 1 0,1 Arlington Si. Wednesday. The j church Friday night. A fine pot home In Campbell in the storm. Unto the need and hunger of his I
■»"*t imb ! weather was so cold Hint the boy.-. ,luck wipper was served, after which He was later found at the Lloyd
soul.
Wc believe It will be a long time
&gt;r st th. had to fight under great difficulty.
|&gt;roglMm wtis given. Music by lhe Near home where he had gone be­ So short a time. Ann Rutledge, did I before the people of this country
ithv?Mieh"'but t,,p household goo&lt;U of Mrs. i orchestra.
Thc toastmaster was cause ot the storm.
you spend
/'
will follow thc leadership of the
&gt;” iVj'.'W Lynd in the down stair.* rooms were Harold Bahs, talk by Maurice PurWaltons garage made good use Here In your gentle springtime, sud-1 theorists and college economists into
mostly sayed James Polhcmus and chLs. violin solo by Billie Hecker. of a tractor for towing in disabled
denly leaving
.
' government ownership for America.
Mrs.
Richard
Green; cars. A car was of no use in thb
family living in the routh part of thc reading.
More strangeness than one youth ---------1-----------------------------------------------I-jilrtb’1 house, lost their belongings but is piano solo. Mrs. Margery Dull; chalk work.
I could comprehend
talk. —
Rev.
Prichard; song
'most of the fire was above, their,-------.-------------------by men's
A couple of lads made the best And loneliness and heartbreak and
F
things were more damaged by water : chorus; presentation ol diplomas of the strong west wind.
Each \ deep grieving.
r
nnd smoke than by fire. They were i nnd seals lo thc |xx&gt;plc attending seated on a sled with a carpet on
Surely he found upon lhe farther j
fortunate in getting their family all Sunday school. 52 . 50. 49. 48. Sun- two posts, each holding one past,
| shore
out without Injury. They had in- days last year,
they were rapidly propelled down The flower he had cherished long .
good*-------crowd* —
enjoyed
the
carni
tended moving a day or two earlier &gt; A
---------*—J “
----------' ­ the main street.
before.
1 to their new home, but on account of val Frldaj- night ad^the Methodist,
And we are all wondering if we've
Incidentally, how many know that j
church.
Booths
&lt;rcnll
kinds,
music
*
*. the weather had put it oil until
: reached the end of this kind of
Lincoln's mother. Nancy Hanks Lin-1
r । Thursday nnd then they had tut and plays formed the evening's weather.
ill.- Mun.
Thc ladies who attended the Feb­ coin, died at the age of thirty-five
| job Ute Wednesday and will comNashville has beeh chosen for the ruary meeting of thc F. M. S. at the of undulant or milk fever. An epl-'
। plrtr hh work ns won as the things thiid time by lhe United States home of Mrs. H. M. Boughner last deralc wiped out part of thc LUiFOR MY FAMILY," says
5. 1933.
can be thawed out. The house Is Bureau of Agricultural economics to Friday afternoon report a very in­ coin family at that time.
Adalbert Corlrifflit.
T. L.WoolhouM. Cranford. N. J.
| nearly a complete wreck Many of make n survey for the purpose of teresting meeting, taking up a map
BANFIELD.
Ont s s the boys got soaked in the flic fi’ght- determining lhe effects of the de­ study of South America. Miss Fern
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Beach have
------------Ing but so far no bad results except pression on thc social and economic Wheeler Is the new president of
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
moved into the tenant house on the ;
colds. A heck of a time for n Arc.
। life In the community.
the society.
Stiles farm.
•&gt;&lt; unrrr.
। sunasy
s onzzara
sirsir-, Jesse
jesse Garllngcr
uurnugcr ana
Sunday's
blizzard caugnt
caught some i
Mr. aim
and Mrs.
and
We'll be glad when the_jveather
Mr. and' Mrs. Lloyd Carmel nre |
infiht riirTf’iiMHnr’.of our tcac,'crs away from here and daughter left over a week ago for permits people to go places and do
&gt; th"cub d»r of Jautiiirv-. । they had a real time trying to get Los Angeles, where they will meet things so news won't be so scarce. working at the United Steel nnd
A. D 1030,
' home.
home Some tried it by way of Way- their son Loren, who has been In the We'd appreciate the help of readers Wire Co. In Baltic Creek.
Mrs. Eva Sweet nnd Mrs. Grny I
i. stairt Ciraient. Jud»» ot
frotn Qrand Rapids, only to get navy. He will return home with in turning In their, items.
»r «r th* e«tatr of c»l»b' ‘luck and return lo Grand Rapids them.
Since the quarterly meeting at will entertain the next Methodist
-briJr-r. . ''"J."1', r
.
.
Iand lhcn tr&gt;in« to get home by, Mr. and Mrs. Porter kinne ex­ thc U. B. church last week end was Aid society In lhe church basement.
Th* Wirt.l
Ted Darling and family nre mov­
” .I'm
’"iitfnn 1 trnln 'tcre carried through lo Has- I peeled to leave Wednesday on a trip called of! due to tiie storm, the bus­
day b* »rt for h«irinc «n tings and then home. The old say- | to California for lhe balance of lhe iness meeting will be held nt a ing to the Bench farm near Lacey.
Several schools In this vicinity
ing the longest way home Is the winter.
later date.
safest might be true in some cases.1
Mr. and Mrs. William Bitgood and
The senior class recently had their were closed the past week on ac­
j Sunday s/atorm coming right after son are spending sometfme with pictures taken and are looking for­ count of snow and extreme cold
weather.
wc had thc roads cleared about here , Mr. and Mrs. Perry Van Tuyl in ward to getting their proofs.
Our mail man failed to cover his The popular phrase “Just what
have left us worse of! than we were Yankee Springs. .
The weather and roads being so
before. School still closed and not
Tiie Garden club met Tuesday uncertain, those who are in charge route last Tuesdny and Wednesday. the doctor ordered” fits my big,
much hope of school for several jtftemoon at the home of Mrs. of the arrangements for the pre­ If the patrons would keep their mall new Dodge to a “T”—so far as
days.
11 —
—*Jones
--------------------------- ---------'*•- sentation of the stirring drama, boxes shovelled out It wduld help my family is concerned, w
Claud
on the south
side,
with
Supt. Leroy Bell attended a tcach- Mrs Philip Dahlhauser as leader.
"Death Takes Uie Wheel," adver­ some.
AU social funcUons have been
j ers' meeting in Grand Rapids SatMr. and Mrs. Fred Elder nnd Mrs. tised for Wednesday night of this
j urday. A fine meeting is reported Lyman were In Lansing Friday.
week at the Methodist church, arc at postponed for the |&gt;ast two weeks u
the roads in many places tn this vl- ।
antV-he succeeded in getting home
The Woman s Missionary Society a loss to know what to tjw
do. but tu
It H
is
before the blockade.
w„,, hoped
.
of the Methodist church will observe
conditions will permit its clnity have been impassable. We cer­
I Our
tainly appreciate our telephones and
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
„ R. P. D boys
, havf done
„ ( their Gentlemen's evening at their March ' presentation os planned.
We have been unable to have ' best to get the mall out. but with ' meeting at the home of’ Mr. and
Much sympathy is extended to radios.
school since Monday on account of wily i&gt;anial sueem
•
-Mrs Ed. Hafner
Mr. and Mrs Ward Hynes of MU
POWERS ECHOES.
lington. whose new-born baby pass­
Mrs. Frank Haywood is confined
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
COATS GROVE.
ed away a week ago Sunday. Burial
Floyd Craig has been staying tn
~
Not much going on because of Uie took place al Nashville on Wednes­ lo her bed with arthritis.
town this week due to thc impass­ Last Week's Letter.
Miss
Irene
Frost is visiting friends
*--- iand day. Mrs. Hynes has been crltlcaliy
Mrs. Allda Bogardus of Chicago, cold and stormy weather
able roads.
in and around Dutton.
Mrs. Bessie Storms of Los Angeles blocked roads, so news Is scarce,
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Woodruff at­ and Mrs. Ora Hinds of Ceresco lire ! The Birthday meeting will be held I 111 but is slowly recovering.
Ml&amp;s Ethel Palmer accompanied by
Miss
Vernier
Benson,
who
teach
­
E.
Van
Syckle
visited the lattrr'a
tended the Farmers Week held In spending some lime visiting their with Mrs. Gladys Thompson on
es at Bowne Center, had quite a parents In Hart over lhe week end.
Lansing last week.
'
1 sister. Mrs. Emerson Edger, and oth- 1 Thursday. Feb. 20
My wife demanded safety, and I
Bcttiunl Mammund visited How- I cr frlehds.
*
Mils Marian woodman who ot- time getting home from school last
don't know where 1 could find u
week Wednesday. After much ef­
ard Martin in Hastings Thurs-1 Friends of Mrs. Will Fifleld are tends thc Mayer Business College fort she succeeded in getting as far
car with more safety provisions.
day.
। sorry to learn her condition does not in Kalamazoo was home from Fri- as the Merrill Karcher gas station,
My son was impressed by the
’
day
until
Tuesday.
We hear thb morning. Monday, improve.
still nearly two and a half miles
quick responsiveness of the new
that
About 20 ladies enjoyed the
de-- | ouj
Mrs.. Yarger
of viuuwi
Carlton unn
has urtu
been Trom
viink the
me stork
oiviK visited the
uie Hopkins I ouuuk
.... ...
iv.
irom nomc.
home, wnere
where sae
she left her car
Dodge; and my daughter insisted
1' family
fntniiv last nlnht
Uriahs luncheon elven
Joe caring for Mrs. Floyd Clum and and Ualked lhe remaining dbtance
night nrui
nnd left a hoiitir.
bounc-1 llcioui
given bv
by Mrs. Joe
that we have a good looking
ing boy. Congratulations.
i Matthews last Wednesday, and the baby daughter. Mrs. chim's sbter,. through Uie storm to the Chas.
I
'
, Xfiss
Miss Nnttpn
Notten. nf
of .Tnrksnn
Jackson is
Is n1*.A
also as- . nnVaa
Baker K,n.a
home.
slsting in the home. Mother and j Those having Ice houses have
I daughter are doing fine.
them filled with a very One grade
Last Sunday Is reported to have 1 of Ice from Uie local pond, put up
been one of the worst days on record , last week.
-------- I*
It --------seems—os though •«
it i
j here. yet there were enough present would pay someone to put up ice |
1 at church to have services in the to supply the local demand next I
! morning.
summer, Instead of permitting outThe LAS. could not put on the of-town concerns to reap this busi­
supper at Woman's Club meeting ness.
In Woodland last Tuesday evening
on account of the condition of tlie
HINDS CORNERS.
—
Mot many items as everyone Is
roads. It was postponed until Feb.
XOTICB or MOBTOAOB FO11B.

ORDEB FOR PUBLICATIOH.

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

“‘Just What
the Doctor
Ordered’-

Go
By Bus to

AS NEW FALLEN

SNOW
This can truthfully be said of Highlands
Dairy Grade A Milk. Produced and de­

Hi,h in Cream
Content Raw or
Parteu rued

Qt

livered to your home fresh and pure, full
of health-giving vitamins, rich in food

values, free from impurities. This is milk
ot its best ... a complete food. To re­
ceive the full benefit of the body-building qualities of milk, be sure you get the
BEST. Order Highlands Grode A Milk.

GHLANDS DAIRY
1

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hmtingi

INSIST ON

MICHIGAN MADE

BEET SUGAR
Best for Cooking—Baking— Canning
Jams and Jellies—Candy Making
Frostings—Table Use
Always ask for one of these quality brands —

PIONEER
GREAT LAKES
RED ARROW
BIG CHIEF
FOR SALE RY GROCERS EVERYWHERE

CLAY HILLS.
Last Week's Letter.
Eugene Haight and famUy and
Guy McNee and wife attended the
funeral of Mrs. Haight's brother.
Walter McNee. in Battle Creek, last
Monday.
Charles Skinner Is visiting relalives in Grand Rapids at the preaI ent lime.
I Roy McCaul and wife attended
tthc shrine circus in Grand Rapids
Saturday evening.
Harold Digland and family of
Lansing and Norris Lewis and wife
of Kalamazoo spent Bunday with
tiieir parents. Leon Potts and wife.
Men in the United Stales have
bought on the average four-tenths
of a suit of clothes a year since 1929.
Let u* hope It was thc panU fractlon.—Boston Evening Transcript.

Mr. Moore and M W. Skidmore
attended the school officers meeting
In Hastings Friday.
W. O- Tobias went to Battle Creek
this week to spend the rest of the
month with his brother and sister
and other relatives.
There will be no Cemetery Circle
this month. Next month it will meet!
with Mrs. Kelly in Hastings. Further :
announcement later.
The friends of Mrs. Millie Haynes I
were pained to hear of her sudden ;
passing last Friday morning. We ex- ,
tend our sympathy to Ronald '
Haynes and family in the loos of a i
kind and loving mother.
wars some folks keep on
golf, and that's a happy fa
were not for folks who keep
. ing while other folks flgi
would be a hard jrorld.

ONE WAY

BUSES DAILY
LEAVE
HASTINGS ON

have to
the bills, and while
all these things sold me on Dodge,
I know that Dodge owners have
reported getting 18 to 24 miles

ot«t

19 miles to tho gallon.

DODGE
NEW LOW FIRST COST

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS

PHONE 2137

^6^0^-

Aa4 aad«r ibcnrw OflUurchrrsltr Motor*
DODQE--------------

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
THE GREAT CITY OF iHastingsCommercialCIubFair [Q[]R NURSES
MIKE BELIEVE" To Be ,,eld Here March 2S-2S
||^
1
HOLLYWOOD, WHERE THE
MONEY CAME EASILY,
)
WENT RAPIDLY

PAGES I to 8

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, FEBRUARY 20, 1936

12PAGES

EIGHTIETH YEAR

ALL EVENTS FREE—ENTERTAINMENT,

PRIZES, EXHIBITS TO BE FEATURES

I RURAL CARRIERS
■
DOING THEIR BEST

FINE CHANCE FOR
RURAL PUPILS

STORMS FORCE
SCHOOLS TO CLOSE

j Rural Districts and
Township Pupils Have
---------Country
Had Vacations
DOCTOR AMD STORK
CITY SCHOOL AVAILABLE
BARRY COUNTY WOMEN
The severe winter has been hard
The rural carriers working out of
TRYING OOWDHTI
HAD ENVIABLE RECORD Hastings post office have done the FOR NEARBY DISTRICTS on rural schools. Mrs. Maude W
Smith, county school commissioner,
best they could in these trying days
—
NO
CONSOLIDATION
this wians
DURING WAR
(has no record of the exact number
to deliver mail to the patrons on

Fret' In every sense of the word . structlve
their routes. At the present time NO INCREASE OVER PRESJSS
.in be
&gt;... lhe ...
-.I....- Commercial
I .1 I'ntTt- r: will
Hastings
there are still several crossroads
BUT IT’S NOT GOING
’ Club Fair to be staged in the Com­
tuc A r r nurmcrAC Umt have hot been opened and
ENT RURAL SCHOOL COST
ESSThJi
I
nt
A.
t.
r.
UVtnotAo
probably will not be until the snow
SO RAPIDLY NOW , inunlty rooms of the Home Lumber nickel at this event. Nothing will!
------------melts. «.
Of coune. the vcarriers
State Aia
Aid Makes
It rossioie,
Possible vhooI whlch
«&gt; cto*.
thc dllUlcU
KeUow
.......
—..... can- oiate
Company here .every afternoon and be sold, no admissions will be
manes n
ukei but
ln flve
Putting on a "Front" Is a evening from March 25 to 28 Inclus- charged, there will be no concessions One Was at Camp Ouster not do anything with such lilghAlso Transportation To ' from this county, the school being
ways,
over
—
• but they are travelling —
I ive. None of the usual free udmte- or gambling gamej to tempt the
and the Other
at -Post
Real Art and They Sure
all the opened roads and doing their '
' and From Citv School T
located In Ross township, also the
stpn gags which eliminate a modest contents of purses.
ana rrom vity sciiooi
homapple-K*llogg school at Mldbest to accommodate their patrons
Field, Fort Sill, Okla.
On the other hand there will be 1
I entry fee In the hopes of opening
Know How
" was -----**nt ------- MJ
wre forced to shutUU.U
down be—---- . w/ek lhe
------on their routes. In many Instances
of prizes, free refreshments.
refreshmenu.;
,n nQrrv -ountv ,hw or•««■» perintendent D. A. VanBusklrk to cause of the inablUtv of buses to tet
Hollywood Is probably the greatest ' yoqr purse later with a hundred and plenty
tm .muKintnu. Inumlln, ,nd In-1 w0,„,£^n .uL who LMr
t*" “» m,u “
city of "make believe" in the world. one money snatching scheme's will
the school board, of rural district. throBgh wme of the rtmtte T»
displays and a general
receive the bonus bonds recently one of the main trunk lines or close to Halting, a letter which Delton school was not forced to close
Behind tlu* high fences surrounding be incorporated in thte event. In
county
highways
and
the
blockaded
authorized by congress
reais as follows:
for M Ion&lt; B Ume. We doubt u ln
lhe studios you can see streets and fact, tiie committee in charge of this good time for all.
neighbors call for it there.
The Barry county fair provides a
_.
...
....
....
.•cents rroin all over creation, but &gt; fair, we understand, is planning to
"At the meeting of the Barry fOrty years the schools have been so
dunn« u.e
r.ll oi
of rh.
""
Kc.-cugrcnei uunng
uir isti
me .
j
It’s only ■ make believe;" you can see , offer a substantial cash prize to KMof.tbrr
county school officers in Hastings inuch interfered with by winter
year and this Hastings Commercial • v”,ce *“i t° bf accePud
re*
gnat .allips. but they are ull "make । anyone who can detect any method
February
7.
I
presented
very
storms as they have been during the
on
Club Fair will serve lhe same pur- *71 ... A?
«
briefly a plan for taking care of the ' present winter.
believe." Near one of the studios whatsoever of spending even so pose during the late., win ter days be- Corps, was Miss Louella M. Rose.
hra^Xde woFk ^ejins
!
“w,rd
°f *°°7;
elementary rural pupils In the dte————
stands the franwwork of that pre­ 1 much as a thin dime or a battered
!
pre-war
penny
in
any
of
the
rooms
historic monster that appeared so,
• in
In mm
this issue
Usue there
is a
preliminary I lnnd flhc
wo
&gt;«
,■I1W on Fcb 18•
mire
u
ar.lr
preliminary
. .to
..
no time to discuss this plan with
nalurn) and so life-like in "The Ixist ) or booths to be occupied by this fair. ■•0v.rlU.menr
Jr,
.Th 2'1818
sent
the
Base Ho.pll.1
Hospital
ot 3&gt;.
.nd
on'
•and
“&gt;, “
»*»»
|
Hales
of
any
kind
will
be
Just
as
World." as I recall it. a few years 1
you in the morning, and since everythe lower section of thte page an1
CamP Custer, where she re­
ago. but it was only "make believe:" i। taboo as matches in a gasoline re- announcement of a jumbled word 1
“^11 Sept. 24. 1918. then
the afternoon program, there was
However it wouldn’t seem that a real | finery.
SECOND or THREE AP. little time then. Consequently. I did 1
dinosaur of ages find agog ago. could 'i TIUs fair will be for the mernot gel a very good idea of the re- ,
have acted anwJMKuktural. Ev­ । chants what the live slock displays
PORTIONMENTS OF
A E F on Nov. 15. 1918. She entered '
action
of the district officers to thte'
erything te
believe."; and produce exhibits are for farm­
service al Hospital Center Kerhnon.
SCHOOL YEAR
STATE FIRE PREVENTION
plan.
There te but om^|Hbp&lt;i. Il is ) ers nt the*Barry county fair. Because The rules are simple the puzzles1 Base Hospital No. 105. and was later
"In order to refresh your mind. I j
doubtful It there
another, ' of the limited amount of space only easy and the prizes worthwhile. transferred to Base Hospital No. 85:
ASSN. REPRESENTA­
Don't
mtes
thte
opportunity.
|
thirty-five
firms
will
be
able
to
ex
­
will give the main points of thc'
because It’s an ideal location for
she left for the United States June AMOUNT ALLOTTED
80
keep
these
facts
In
rtind:
;
hiblt.
Already
tiie
space
has
been
TIVES TO BE HERE
plan:
the center of "make believe." TheTHIS COUNTY $27,443 “1. The Hastings Board of EducaTIME—March 25 to- 28\ inclusive 27. 1919 and was discharged on Aug.
----------- ocean te only io miles distant In a sold completely and only the limits
10.
1919.
, from
1:00 o'clock
the Afternoon
------- ------------------- ...In—
straight line; the city nestles nt lhe of lhe hall prevent the fair from be-1
tlon are proposing to enter into con- NOON LUNCHEON IN
Miss
Amber
Z.
Cruso,
now
Mrs.
T.
the evening.
--------- - ------------ —-------- -------- — -­ List of Schools and Amounts tracts with sueh districts u desire,
foot of tiie Hollywood Hills, which i ing even more comprehensive than 1 until 10:00 o'clock in lhe
VLic c,|| 1 cd! MAI I
■ PLACE—Community rooms of the j 8- K. Reid, was the second Barry
transportation and educational fa-!
mt rULLun MALL
Very properly could be called moun­ planned.
for
Districts
—
City
Schools
M
OTh.n. MU.IMU
. r«.
Home uuiuuci
UjmMr WW
’.'iti “
JJA™* ‘.'.■f
Merchant
pvlilh tn MU
will be a
tea- iiuuic
nuuuga. ,
— “
— ."
...........
...........
clUtles to be provided for their chll- _. .
1
---- .
tains. Within three hours lime It Is turc
—much after the fashion of the | EVENT-The First Hastings Com-1 oath on June 19 J1918. and being
dren in the Hustings schools.
Richard E. Vernor of ChicaReceive $9,730
claimed that you can get a dupli­
famous Leipzig fairs In Oer- mercial club Fair.
sent to Fort Sil). Okla., as a reserve
"2. No consolidation of districts is
­
cate of any terrain In the world. We I world
go ---Will Give
Address
County Treasurer Lorenzo F necessary or desired. Each district |
many—but there will be free ' FEATURES—Amusements, enter-' nurse. Here she served nt Past Avinsaw the movie "Desert of Sahara",
free entertainment I teinmenl. free refreshmenu. Inter- Hon Field from July 15, 1918 until Maun, on Thursday, received a draft would retain Its own organization j
A
. Good Speaker
and the -Coast of Nome." Alaska- amuscmcnls
rm lunch., .nd num-'; “™« dUpU,. .nd »hlMU. |&gt;n«..
“ "S’.?- “"“k from the state treasurer for the sec­ and school officers.
| with the purpose of discovering
all in California of course, Up near tm
ond of three state apportionments
l "3. Bee 'use of the amount of slate . any defects or conditions in the
Bakersfield we saw the southern ] erous valuable prizes In addition.
Nothing comparable to the Com-I ADMISSION—Free! No admission *CQgh,
“Y.l“lor’ for this school j-ear to aid the ‘ old now available for rural districts. I construction, equipment or upkeep
cotton fields, a few years ago a
T. S. K. Reid, of Austin. Texas, schools of this county. The amount
it Is believed that in most cases dis-. of a business house, a workshop, or
movie outfit went to the island of mercial Club Fair has ever been at-1 charge, no money-grabbing conceswhom she later married.
They from the state was $27,443. This was , tricts would not find it necessary to । a public institution that might cause
Hawaii to film "The Bird of Para­ tempted in the county before. It sions. no gambUng booths. no sales—
have since made their home in this apportioned in accordance with the
raise more than 2 1-2 mills to fi- । a fire, if not remedied, the Michigan
dise." but it finally -relumed to I will be enjoyable, entertaining, in- everything free!
provisions of Act 236 of the Public• city.
j nance the plan.
Catalina Island to complete the pic­
Acte
Act
After being accepted as a reserve A
rcU, of
bf 1933. as amended by A
5‘ 192 :■I "4. To lake advantage of thte
ture. Old fashioned ixials on the j
nurse on June 24. 1918. MLm Stella of
,ra5-which
.7^c\
. distribution
of
thte|
monev
■nnoitlanMl
hv
the
'
Mnlcc
- lt *ould be necessary for the
PREPARING
TO
Sacramento river and you have I
M. Parrott of Woodland was also mnn'v wh,rh *
Mississippi river scenes; the Salton]
Buport^ndeol or roUle rn.t™cPAY ON CONTRACTS
sent to Fort Sill. Okla., and regte—..vvi—
i
Bea becomes Die Dead Sea; Agua
tered for overseas service. On Sept. tlon** made as follows In this [ board to enter Into contract with lhe
Caliente becomes Monte carlo with­
9. 1918. Miss Parrott went to New county:
roun,v'
Hastings board.
out altering a thing; the high Sier- ; Congress Makes Available
Assyria Township.
York City, where she was assigned
"If you wish to talk the matter
ras very faithfully serve ax Alaska
Balance Due Farmers
No. 3 frl. Eagle Dtet$ 102
to U. 8. Army Base Hospital No.
1 over with me. or with the Board of
and Siberia; lhe coast lines of San 1
No. 4 frl. Austin Dtet
64 in France, reporting there Oct. 16.
of Country .
I Education here. I shall be glad to
Diego and Los Angeles suUstllute
NEARLY 400 ATTENDED 1918. She was later transferred to
No. 6 Ellis District
make
arrangements for such a
for Mediterranean scenes. Just a«
Harold J- Foster, county agrlculNo. 7 frl. Briggs Dist
, Base Hospital No. 238. B. H. 79 and
—ALL ENJOYED THE
meeting.”
Catalina does for Hawaii; latke Ta­ lural agent, received notice from I
' Camp Hospital No. 91. her discharge
No 8 frl.-Checkered Dtet. .
139 ; The Thatcher-Saur bill, passed by
hoe becomes the Swiss Alps and the Washington. Monday of this week
PROGRAM
’
from
service
being
dated
Nov.
14.
'
frl.
Lincoln
Dtet
93
, lhe last legislature, provided a plan
Florida Everglade; are right al San that he should prepare all Com-!
.181®
Baltimore Township.
1 whereby elementary and high school
Pedro.
Hog and Wheat adjustment con-1 p. .... nNyM u*nCTUC
: Miss Nonna Michael of this city 1 No. 1 Dowling Dtet............. $ 198 j education for the rural school chilin short,
snort, right near Hoilwood you tracts for payment. A bill has pass-: ULCniS MU Is PI MHUC I nt
In
2
Striker Dist
: dren of Michigan could be provided
can find a duplicate for any topo- ed congress appropriating money
PRINCIPAL ADDRESS was accepted Nov. 6. 1918 and as- No.
' without consolidation of school dteNo. 3
j signed to the Base Hospital at Camp
McOmber Dtet
107
graphical scene in any pan of the and instructing Secretary Wallace .
No. 4 Hendershott Dtet. ...
tricts. The bill required that. In or130
until
ring -picture
to meet the government
obligations n
p n0rrnfl,0-. Prn&gt;idj.A Custer, where she remained un
world. The great movL.„
---------- --------------------------------------------------lerc
because
on
the
contracts
now
In
force.
Mr.)
ur
'
r
UarrotherB
Presided
h
er
discharge
from
active
service
Weeks
Dtet
.................
No.
S
(Continued on page eight)
*
_
2L2
---‘
----------2
---------Lt
on
industry didn't center there because ,• on the contracts now in force.
No.
6
Durfee
Dlst
Faster *immediately —
took
up his
(Continued on page three)
“
»• —
—Dean Davenport Was I Au« ’■ 19,6 During her time at
No.
7
frl.
Barney
Mills
♦h T
♦»
Camp Custer the terrible epidemic
work on the contracts at the point
“
ERIN
SUPPER CLUB”
Dist
where
wnc.v 11
jt wu»
was uruppeu
dropped un
on j«iu»r&gt;
January’ u.
8. ;J
Toastmaster
| of influenza occurred, hundreds of
COUNCIL COMPLIES
^FEBRUARY 25
when the AAA was declared uncon-1 The Republican banquet last eve- the boys there dying from the dteBarry' Township.
WITH GOVT. REQUEST stKutlonal. Mr. Foster now has all nlng in the Community hail was In; rase
Township Union Dtet$1,032
forms ready for review by the state ) every way a success. The ticket sale j .Hastings and Barry county are'
Eddie Marek's Orchestra to
Carlton Township.
officiate.
As
soon
as
the
state
ofhad
reached
the
limit
of
400
but
1
proud
of
the
record
these
four
i
No.
2
Carlton
Center
Dtet.
$
Asks to Be Released From flclals review the *forms
Furnish the Music
they _...
will —
some purchasers were unable to i women made in serving Uncle I
--------- .*
No. 3 frl. Barnum Dtet. ..
39
Contract fox^Seventeen
for Dancing
be sent to Washington and placed come. The attendance was between Sam's soldiers at home and abroad.'
No. 4
frl. Fish Dtet
............. I
.. .
in line for payment.
j 375 nnA
and JI*1A
400. 111.
We .11
all L."..
know Ik.
the .--.II
condi- The official record
of each one says
No. 6 frl. Welcome Dist. ..
The Erin Supper* Club known as
Acres of Land
farmers
depended
on
Hastings'* "Smartest Rendezvous"
Cheney Dtet...............
No. 7.
The city of Hastings owns a par- 1 ,»Many
----- j —
-•—have
-----------■’'iT'-.r
’ |‘lo" of tht,foads'.A *°l ®r cnthl“- "A bronze victory button was te.... Mr. I lastlc republicans had taken part in sued."
will again present an evening of en­
No. 9 Friend Dist.................
94
cel of seventeen acres in Yankee | this money -----------------------to pay taxes with
74
tertainment on Tuesday. Feb. 25 at
Springs which was given them for I Fo5lcr »t,ates
« wl1' * entirely' shovelling the highways through the
Each one of these four women1 No. 12 Ragla Dist
Community hall. Eddie Marek with
purpa'ics of reforestation and on , impossible to get this money before day Wednesday so they could attend could doubtless relate many Inter- 1
Castleton Township.
his 10 piece orchestra will furnish the !
eating experiences, and lhe two I No. 1 frl. Nashville Dist. . .$2,976
which some seedlings have been laXM are relumed. There Ls a great this gathering.
RICHARD E. VERNOB.
music for four hours of dancing.
.
A fine menu, prepared by the who were in France could tell of
planted. The trees have made a ! &lt;‘cal °r uncertainty as to when payNo. 2 Castleton Ctr. Dist...
"'
49
This te the fifth presentation of the j State Fire Prevention Association
ipiendid growth in the short lime ’ ment will be made, but Mr. Foster women of the Welcome Ladies' Aid. many sad and harrowing events, as
No. 2 frl. Lake View Dist...
season sponsored
by the Club. ' will make an inspection of Hastings,
since the work first started When docs not «P«i payment for at was splendidly served by a group of well, as their work was in the wari No. 3 Hosmer Dist
which
have
proved
popular
with
the
I
Wh.
The
Inspection
te
the government started Its Yankee lpast two months. Even though the high school young ladies.
sectors all the time. No doubt they
No. 4 Wellman Dist
people of Barry county. The high- being sponsored by the Hastings
Springs
poject0 this
acre' payment
venture
No. 5 Morgan Dist...........
After the repast Dr.. r.
F. vouuuk
Carrothers.
123
o
|j«ouk.* jjujvr.
run seventeen
r-ocuuTh utrr
. . will . ba late,
.— we
.
—,---- I
-id, will know Just what to do with their
..
...
Ilin innnlnlnn
"It that
le hotter
light of the evening's program will i u&gt;«u.neicial club, and te being cotract belonging
to
the city was
) [bc that
opinion
"It isl.u
belter late chairman of the Barry county re- bonus bonds when they are Issued i No. 6 Feighner Dtet
42
be the floor show, which te entirely 1 operated in by the municipal aucluded. and a contract was made 1 tbnn nCTcr."
| publican committee, made pleasing this summer.
No. 7 Martin Dist
new. none of these acts having thoritles, the Rotary club, and
with lhe government to purchase thc | So that contract signers may un- and pointed remarks about the Po­
No. 8 Barryvllie Dist
shown here before.
Don Taffee. members of the city Fire Depart­
land. it seems, however, that the derstand what is still due them,' UUcal situation in thte state and GEORGE MAURER GETS
No. 10 Shores Dist
chairman of the entertainment com- , ment.
government appropriation te not j Mr. Foster states that the wheat. country, concluding hte talk by in­
Hastings Township.
mlttee
informs us they have a show i The activities Of the fire prerenA NEW^SSIGNMENT No. 3 Fisher Dist|
sufficient to take up all the option.' contract* are all paid except for the traducing as toastmaster Dean. Eu67
thnt will please everyone.
tiontets will in no way interfere with
so accordingly thc government has &gt;“*t and small payments still due on . gene Davenport of Woodland. No .
No. 4 frl. Gregory
in sponsoring these entertain- the regular order of thlnga in a store
requested the city to release them ; the 1®35
crop.
Tills payment better relectlon could have been, Will Be Senior Foreman on I No. 7 Star Dist:...
ments the Club is endeavoring to or a workshop. To Inspect a build­
from thc purcliasc of this small t amounts to approximately 10 cents 1 made. He filled that difficult place ,
No. 8 Hastings ctr. Dist...
Yankee Springs Park
give this community a-, place where ing and Its contents, the men who
acreage. As It te some distance from P«r f“rin
allotment bushel. This j to the satisfaction of everybody. Aft- 1
No. 9 Pratt Dtet
97
one may spend an enjoyable evening will be accompanied by the city fireProject
tt{v lake they felt the government statement te true except for a few i er a few introductory remarks he
No. 10 frl. Quimby
dining and dancing amidst friendly
could get along without it and the Isolated cases where the first pay-' said the first number on the proWe mentioned last week that
Hastings.
people in pleasant surroundings.
ful manner, disturbing none of the
govrrnment wtehes to exercise Itsment on the 1935 contract te still t gram would be a selection by a re- George Maurer had resigned hLs
City
.19.730
Everyone is welcome. Prices are
(Continued on page eight)
ontlon
at Farl
option an
on nil
all land within iho
lhe tmrt
tract due
d»p because of aome
some inLuinrtrrmteunder- nubllcan
publican ouartet.
quartet, eaiutetlntr
consisting of
Earl position as local representative of
Hope
Township.
low enough to allow all to attend
thal borders on lakes. -The council) standing. Com-Hog contract sign- Coleman. Dr. George Lockwood. Roy Rural Rehabilitation in this county.
No. 1 Doud Dirt."I
and high enough to assure high class AMERICAN LEGION
.9 133
voted Friday evening to comply with crs have about half their contract Cordes and Wallace Osborn. They Hte successor te Mr. R. G. PotLs of
AUXILIARY’ BROADCAST.
No. 2 frl. McCallum Dtet...
entertainment. The food is of the
149
the request of the government.
I payments still due. Thte also is true were heartily encored and respond­ Middleville. Mr. Maurer has token
A nation-wide broadcast over
best and the prices are most reason­
(Continued on page six)
, ----------------- -----------------------| except for a few isolated cases
ed with three more numbers which a position with the parks division of
WJR will be made on Saturday, Feb.
able.
■■
.3 where the first payment te still due.
(Continued on page four)
the same bureau, and will be senior
WARNING TO MOTORISTS.
foreman on the new Yankee Springs
DISTRICT M. E. A.
Melville Mucklestone, national presi­
I world day of *
With icy roads and snow multi­
DEVELOPING YANKEE
Park project. Mr. Maurer has had
Thursday. March 12. is the date dent of the American Legion Auxil­
■-------■
PRAYER FEBRUARY 28.
SPRINGS PARK. a Int nf experience with work of plying traffic hazards bv throwing selected lor the next Barry County iary She will discuss topics of In­
can
into skids and sideslips, Orville
r j SHF! nnsr
' Thc annua'. World Day of Prayer.
Work is progressing on the de­ that character and ought to pake
District M. E- A., the Hastings terest to Auxiliary members all of
A. pubh^iX^* held M'E^hu^esVHX^wrtVl velopment of Yankee Springs park a good man for the position.
schools to entertain. More complete whom are urged to listen in to this
sued the following warning to
now at a lively rate. It is expected
information will be given later.
special program.
TWO VILLAGE TICKETS.
I Michigan motortete:
‘‘7 Methodist church that there will be ample preparation
east of woodland. The sale will in-1 parlors, sterling at two oclock. A
There will be two tickets In the1 "Protect yourself and the other
for the resort season when the sum­
elude hay. grain and livestock. Also program.
l)rDKrnm In
,n which
wnicn all
... of
0I the
....
aw this slippery
•llpprry weather by fol
fol-­
mer arrives. On Tuesday there were field at the village election in Nosh- fcllow
lowing
so clearly set
&gt;—
■— the advice
-------sixty-four employed at various types vllle on Monday. March 9.
,,C placed wi
of work on the project The number
The Republicans 1U
have
on down in "We Drivers." that excellent
this reason. See the ad for full i extended.
pomination the following: For presl- U‘M« bo«k on “,e driving. I quote
will be increased.
particulars. Harry Pennington te the
dent. L- O. Cole; clerk. H. F. Rem- •
pertinent pointe:
auctioneer.
Ington; treasurer. Mrs. Mildred Kfa- I ***• 8,ow down br • ■«rlc’ of brief,
ter; assessor. Elwln Nash; trustees, modrr*tc brake actions instead of
A THREE-LEGGED LAMB..
Jesse Campbell. A. E. Dull, and one continuous pressure, quite a dis-Mr. E. M- Davis, who lives on\
Frank Caley. .
lance from where you want to stop.
farm northeast of this city, has a
The Democratic nominee, are: : "«• Do not disengage the dutch as
freak lamb which was bom on Wed­
For president. Gall Lykins- clerk •oon “ ,be b™ke« are applied but
nesday of last week. The lamb has
John Appleman; treasurer. A. L. I waU unUI lhe “r b**
»lopperfectly formed hind legs, but onlyBcnnett; assessor. Elmer Northrup; ' Pcd3—AU answers must be in the mail
1— Tlkhen cemyrlnt.
j’ j' “3. T
Treat
one front leg. the one on the right
trustees. William Martin. M
'“*‘ every slippery curve or
2— Shoe Denolar.
by midnight, on the Monday fol­
side, which is fully developed for Its
‘ turn as though it were going to be a
lowing their publication in the
HASTINGS SCHOOLS WILL SHOW
Hinckley and Solomon Varney.
3— Mik Orisel.
age. On the left side there is no
newspaper.
' •t4P.
4— Erogge Odwoklco.
leg al all. Where one should appear
CENTURY'S PROGRESS IN EXHIBITS
' "4. With
power
turning
the
Answers will be judged from the
5— Raid Uoced.
SPECIAL MEETING.
the skin Is perfectly smooth, as If
of -------CORRECTNESSNo. dear readers, our linotype op-. standpoint
—- —
——------A special meeting of the stockhold­ wheels, you are less likely to skid.
there never had been any Idea of a
Promising the greatest assortment education. Miss Merson; manual ers of the Hastings Building and
era tor and proof reader have not LEGIBILITY—NEATNE88. In orleg being formed there.
। pf&lt; interesting exhibits ever to be arts. Mr. Conklin; agriculture. Mr. Loan Association will be held at the as you would teat a slippery step If gone -hay-wire." The above are the 1 J‘~ “
**"
I witnessed in lhe history of Hostings Knopf; home economics. Miss Car­ office in the Stebbins building, in you are walking. Gently apply the first five names, in the Scrambled ty an equal chance, the principle of
CHOOSE TENTATIVE DATE, i the city schools are preparing to ter; language and literature. Miss the City of Hastings, on Monday.
Names contest sponsored by the ■•flrst-come-flnt-aerved" WILL NOT
Tiie tentative date for the Junior fire the opening guns of celebration McElwain.
•
March 2. 1936, al 7:30 o'clock P. M . some speed and apply brakes again Hastings Commercial Club Fair.
class play, "One Mad Night." which under the caption "Barry CountyFor the second ward Miss Burton for the purpose of amending Section a little more firmly. You can thus Five. $5.00-value prizes have been an answer on Monday afternoon will
uj. had
*..u to ----------------- m twice beu_ I Hastings
centennial
Exhibits,"
has
be postponed
is chairman of a general exhibit and 2 of Article VI of the by-laws of the determine the surface and estimate donated by professional and busi­ stand just, as much chance for one
cause of the severe weather, liasApril
----- - “
27-28. Committees have been Mrs. Kuhn will have charge of the Association to give the Board of Di- the de&lt;
ness men of Hastings for the best of the five $5 00-value prizes as a
been set for Friday night, March 13. appointed, and each school and de­
person who submits an answer on
rectors power and authority to de- •»^‘rfive solutions received.
first
in ward.
the Central Trade «rhnni there termine
u,rTnlne the
016 rate
rate of
of Interest
Interest and
and con“A Yo“ ®*y *’OW slipping In j Each line of letters represent the Thursday afternoon. The decision
It has always been the aim of partment is planning Individual dis­
those In authority not to present plays.
of the Judges will be final; there will
plays during the forty day Lenten
engine In second or high."
Chairmen of committees are as will be a colonial exhibit supervised 1M.ns
slonal or business man of'this com­
period, but this time It has {pen un­ follows; general chairman. Miss by Mrs. Myers and a collection of old _Adv
munlly.
Names of winners will be pubmunity. You tavow
know each one of
Chas. 8. Potts. President.
J.
avoidable, to the Banner has been Helen Wade; publicity. Harold Lo- dolte and toys under the direction of
ROD AND GUN CLUB.
them. Try your luck at solving the llshed the Thursday following the
informed. However, this dale te pan; history. Miss Grace Edmo’nds; Mtes Doty.
--------------------------------The Barry county Rod and Gun puzzle with one of the flve. |5.00- Monday deadline together with the
ANNUAL MEETING.
only tenteUve.
j health. Miss Rose DeFoe.
The paper has been asked to anThe jjuoipuncu
01 uiuu
postponed annual meeting of
Club wui
will meet cm
on monoay
Monday evening,
receive their prises.
, High school committee chairmen nounce that any articles of Interest the Fanners Go-operative Creamery Feb. 24. In the office of the Barry are simple:
.
‘ arc: commercial.
ST. PATRICK
Miss’S Leiter;
SUPPER.
so- which members of the community Association of Nashville will be held County Road commission tn the
1—Answers must be addressed to
Reserve Tuesday, March 17. for St. clal science. Mr. Taylor; musical in­ would care to have put on exhibition at the Star theater. Nashville. Frl- court house. Meeting begins at sev- Scrambled Names Contest. Hastings telling more about the Fair.
Patrick's supper at St Rose hall.— atrumenta. Mr. Hine; science and would be appreciated by comnTKtee day afternoon, Feb. 21 at on* o'clock., en o'clock. Members requested to be Commercial club Fair, box 387. Has­
Adv.
[mathematic., Miss Rowe; physical chairmen.
1 -Adv.
| present.
tings or just Box 287, Hastings.

। w s_erveo_wjth

COUNTY SCHOOLS
GET BIG BOOST

INSPECTIONTDBE
NEXTTHURSDAY

iTHEBMIMS

AFINESUCCESS

LATTER OFTEN BEATS
THE FORMER IN RACE
Blocked Roads, Zero Tm.
peratnre Oalls for He­
roic Effort!
*
Time and time again U has beaten
them in their attempts to reach
their calls before the bird arrived,
only to be bald back
‘
and Impassable roads

shovellers and neighbors.
hardships occurred here In Barry
county recently. Mrs. Bryan Cro­
foot of Rutland In company with
her husband started for Pennock
hospital Saturday night, February

buggy were unable to make the grade.
So arrangements wen made for

an automobile would then meat
them. Mr. Crofoot stumbling on

through drifts piled high and in a
temperature rapidly falling to saro.

r ration. The Grand Rapids ph
slclsn retained, started for Hastln
the next morning only to find Mand all roads landing here blpcki

Mrs. crofoot suffering with a cold
and thought best to delay the opgirl was brought into the world, the
first tn a family of four boys. The

We hope the little girl will lire to
a joy and comfort
to come and warrant

Rbruary 4. In company

with

LOCATION OF FIRE
ALARM BOXES
Gat Oat the List and Have M
for Handy Reference is
Your Home

printing them again herewith. Ott
the list out and paste it in you»
telephone book or other conveniant
place for handy reference. Pollov-

Church 8L

21-Comer Hanover

ud

Clinton

One Auction Sale

I".m

S'ZS! *•*"»•"*

u

Fires Opening Gun in BarryHastings Centennial Year

33—Comer Thom and Church BU.

(Business section.)

HASTINGS COMMERCIAL CLUB FAIR

SCRAMBLED NAME CONTEST

&lt;3—Comer South and Part Sts.

Win One of the $5.OO-Value Prizes!

45—Oornar dinton and

LICENSES OFFSET
LIVESTOCK Cl
Do&lt;i 0&gt;u&lt; Dubu&lt;«
Gouty to
Il.ill.tl
might want

�TIIE HASTINGS BANNER, TUyiUpAY. FEBRUARY to.

l«ea&gt; &gt;l«w ihawd Uwlr bwvu.x1 Th. B«v Luurake BUd.
I nVIAHMIA
AR.
nywiH jhiu
---------- -------­
window coating of frost Tuesday &lt;4 Lite
the nev
Free Mtmuuat
Methodist eiikueu.
cnurch, buu
and UHLHnUHlR
CHiw «nrh
mOmlAg
r.l 111111wILh
I
F
"1 ***!!•
lltUenlarta
Gloriati*v»
have teen—very
with
RIVES
IN
MICHIGAN
j
,
A. K. Frandsen underwent an op. ■ pneumonia, but are now slightly Un­
fedfor which all are glad.
By JANG CAMERON
1 Mr*. Dell Newton I* confined to ; crallon al Pannock hospital on WedWe think we have had some mow­ Carried by the Wind—Palate !
1 nesday morning, yesterday, and Is
White Landscape With
j1
fall here, but not mucn a* compared j
her home by lUneas.
: with reports from Isle Royale where I
1 a pound and a half of egg* of i __
Yellow
j
I “Id to Jerry—that * my husband
there’* 28 inches of mow on Uw
average size make a dozen.
, me ambulance today. Thursday, to level
Folks in this part of the state. I —"1“ *° 81*d egg* sell by tte
and drift* quite mountain hlgn. j
Does anything look much colder Grand Rapids to the home of her
on Friday P°una uo’*- Those Oversized marIt aome one ha* a baby carriage when daylight came that
it had bles.*aU1 ** W*’ neighbor’* puUala
Uian a derby hat these day*?
daughter. Mr*. Ray Weal, who will they would be willing to oonate. the |1 morning, knowing
Sno* has helped out a lot In lhe)CBrB lor h?r durln«
U1,w“’
WM.
~
.! mowed during lhe night, were *ur- I w°u,d m**e P”«Jr expensive vita­
Banner will be glad to place it in a
"
almost
Rtartled,
to
see a yel-1 F*n‘ A “nd D.u
had to buy them
employment situation this winter.
Tte National Geographic1* Jan-1 family where one U greatly need-lP1^2*11coating on the vmwimuc
otterwire'
010 dozen.
Reed
Furrow are rcre- uary
and muiwaiy
February numbers
The baby
is.
ntru and
nuu Marshall ruiniw
u*i)F »nu
nuiuvsi * are pd Tne
oaoy requiring one u
! covering from an stuck of appen- specially interesting one*, featuring motherless and the people who arc white snow. The air too had a yel-1
t dlcllls
Australia and
care are not ...
in TI ------------lowUh cast
struck one as.------pecu-1 We attended a community..meet­
iciii*.
; Ausiraiiw
ana New
new Zealand,
xa:nu»»u. with
»iui giving it excellent Caro
— that
—- -----------------------V4r and Mrs.
Hr, Harold Phillips have I many Kam
Hitutna I Inn ■ elrcum»tances
........
1 linr
■ rain
Mr.
beautiful1 colored IIllustrations.
to buy one
1Ur- ILun.Ihlno
Bomclhlng nt
of a
rain rtnrrn
storm l.nrl
had ing of farmers recently. Of course,
returned to their home on North, We think it’s up to lhe Keefer! The scarlet fever situation In the j corae “7 ^Ing Ute night alter the farm produce was the topic under
Broadway.
.; boyswtoiww
1? *«*«•»
comeuw.
overSUU
andrepay
their•«re-■ uinuiiy
county uucza
offers miiku
much iuutc
more ptuuuoc
promise 1 *7°* storm, and had daubed the discussion. One would-be orator
was waving hU arms and talking
-to lhe
-------------... girl* -----------------------------------------------_ There
—
.K whole landscape with yellow.
Friend* of Mbs Stella Parrott --------of spccts
Annablo
as soon tharn-a few weeks ago.
has
Where did this yellowish fine sand about the trouble* that beact farm­
Woodland wlIL be glad to iiear that | nj conditions permit. These two been only one new case in the coun­
ter condition is improved.
।
0{ twins were born less than a ty reported during lhe last ten days. come from? It la believed from Okla­ er*. and he said. ■’Agriculture Is
the backbone of the nallonl” and
The storm
.. J
»““u bo” 01 Mr
week apart.
while
,.......
— • nnd Mrs. | wccx
wnuc in
in the
uic previous
previous three
inrcc weeks
wccos homa.
”7----- . -----; — which
----- we had
— I had iiard work not to pipe up and
Karl
- - factory
i -•
- —28
-■ cases reported.
- - —
■
Ear! Colomati
Coleman. IUk r.rnvvrlno
recovering tmm
from «a
BUJ of lhe
there were
This
™“r»dV *nd. Putr^*y
U
suggest consulting a chiropractor.
“it^tauotehtet^hi^nhi showed thc boys up the other eve- otters hope that lhe current outbreak
Its laughable to hear the groans nlnj. ln a bowling game when he is under control; with lhe exception'ot '*! country. It traveled in a
Believe It or not, Jane has a mot­
i1 forecasts. "Snow and colder.’
dipped Off B SCOIT of 2^- Five 01
cases of moderate severity, all । •
,n ... r-nnru*
straight strikes, a spare and then of the cases have been mild ones.
Michigan in its course
The big to and here it is: "Count that day
Next Wednesday. Feb 28. U Ash
^nore strikes
Anomer check against the star“‘“J"_’"Urn Oklahoma aho
AnoQier check against
the star- , IZnn.na *JrKrn,lrn anM aa«:am Onln. lost whose low descending sun views
sdine more
strikes.
WrrlnrB.Hov the
lh» beginning
h..,. I n In- of Lent.
r -... &gt;•-&gt;***.
IUM&gt;1 OU.*.*.
Kansas.
Nebraska
and
eastern
Colo
­
from
my hand no worthy action
Wednesday,
It’s hard to realize it’s nearing lings. ' A friend gave Mrs M. J. j rado were scooped out during the done.”
Eister falLs on Sunday. April 12.
Cross some grand homemade mince­
Miss Frances Sutton is recovering maple sugar time. Nothing could run meat for pie. She saved it for a I hot weather and high wind* of last
Oh boy! Soybeans! | They’re get- /.
from an attack of bronchitis, having this weather, but the hardware store
summer. Those in Oklahoma arc
winoows are uismay.ua . a« u. «»’’l*ny oveaaton. and put ner ocm
been confined to the house for two windows are displaying a lol of
believed to have furnished tte sand ling more publicity than Lily Pons. I
bright tin cans along with sap buck-. «ttoru into crust that would do it
weeks.
Il —
being *
a “
bit&gt; &gt;hot
to serve for this phenomenon witnessed in Over two hundred uses for them.
,U»s maple .u&lt;« mulpm.nl, W• credit. 11
“* “
George W. Sheffield sets a new
I said to Jack—that’s my husband
site pul It on thc back porch to Michigan on Friday morning. High
record—he has worn hl, straw hat
cool a bit, then went to answer her winds In Oklahoma lifted the fine home some. Well cook them and
nil winter and he is out of doors lime.
then report on their palatabillly. A
Popular and hard worked men doorbell. When she returned her In this slate In the rain early Fri­ farm paper gives recipes, and they
most of the time.
oc
luxe
dessert
was
black
with
those
Flru was discovered Ui the roof of now-a-days. thc plumbers, gorage pesky starlings.
day morning.
are also good for cows, hens and
tiie W. 8 Bamum residence, W. mechanics and doctors. One of our
pigs. And then Henry Ford h makpeople who have seen them, say It
Green st., on Saturday, but was ex­ rural correspondent* relates how a will pay one to take a train trip PASSING OF ALBERT
tinguished with little damage, no Hastings doctor, finding lhe roads down to Grand Rapids now, and see
M. WALLACE. worse comes to worst.
, blocked after reaching coats Grove.
water being used.
W. T- Walhice was called to his
| the drifts along the Michigan CcnThree gulls were flying around the I used the C. K. and 8. railroad tral right-of-way. notably tnosc flve 1 home in Jonesville test
hut week by the
city on Tuesday evidently looking track to reach tte home of a sick foo(
Thcre comes a knock at Hie door.
..... three miles beyond Calc- sudden death of his brother, Albert Wonder if it’s another of those book
for food. They doubtless were driv­ patient.
' rtAnia
"&gt;»■*'t there
’s a —
300-yard
i M. Wallace,
।
Hals
off
to
the
Hastings
Women
’
s
“
onlB
where
---------.
—
en from their usual haunts by the
agents selling church literature. 1
■
■
-■
•
1
We
clip
from
the
Club who arc giving a bridge parly 1 “rill. ITUs is where the early morn-1 .
- ---- --—
-Jonesville
-------- - — In—
snow and cold weather.
I tomorrow afternoon. Friday, at two ,nK train got stalled tor over seven dependent the following obituary, wish our legislature would call an
Mrs Eugene Bush, wlio has been o’clock, al Masonic dining hall, for hours
open season on them, i wouldn’t
morning.
!anl1 editorial
editorial comment:
comment:
hn"r« on
n" a
n recent
««•-&gt;“ Sunday .....mino
land
attllcu-d with paralysis for three
Trainmen aver it was the wont! Albert M. Wallace passed away even care whether there was a bounyears, became worse on Monday and tte Will Rogers Memorial Fund, blizzard in years.
ly. Or maybe it’s that guy selling
I Tuesday.
her condition U serious. Her daugh­ thus taking lhe stigma ott Hastings
-----Thc end came at thc Hillsdale cook books that Mrs. Charlie Leary
ter. Mrs. Peter Tilkens. of near os being one of the few county scat
; hospital after a brief two day 111­ is after. I bet he sold her one.
DEATH
OF
MARY
KILMER.
towns
in
the
country
not
contribut
­
Campau lake has come to care for
The remains of Mrs. Mary M. KU- j' ness. Surviving him arc hLs brother.
ing to this most worthy cause.
One of tte pleasantest smells—a
Somathing about the name of mer, aged 80. were brought here! William T. Wallace, and two sisters.
Word from Mrs.’ James Radford,
Mrs. Lyman Tracy and Miss Flora granary, a feed store, or even a
i who is at Clearwater. Fla . for sev- • Erin Supper Club" carries a feeling from Grand Rapids for burial on E Wallace.
stack of much-used grain bags.
(
wrr»3 w.n.
| era! weeks
with nrr
her u«u*niCT
daughter uoru.
Doris. *&gt;l Kood cheer along with it. Sixty
Always a quiet, retiring man. he
says: "We are so happy here Nice hustling, enthusiastic young people
You farm ladles who have good
and warm and beautiful flowers." of St. Ro*» church comprise Us ago. WK
Mrs. Wtae.
Kilmer .uu,
had been making
...W,.
stout feed sacks to bleach will find
’ Mrs. Radford and daughter are at ’ membership, and they haven’t had a her home with her daughter. Mrs
, pendent as hLs obituary:
them a lovely cream color with all
607
Prospect A»rAve.. uirarwaier
Clearwater
date
in —
anything
they
have Leona
Rink, ns
al 2835 mu
Colt Ave..
N. c...
E . 1 "Albert
u riuopvvt
,. failure to —
— ...
........ —
—,-----iruoa m-&gt;a.
.. n.
"Albert, vm
son nf
of Tht
Thompson and Hie rainbow hues removed If you
The storms of the past two weeks engineered. So we advise anyone her death occurring there Friday 1 Harriet miik Wniiorr
- ii.tinvi
wan uvrn io will boil them in two boilers of soft
nvr played havoc with lhe high who
can still
” or peo- evening.
Another daughter.
have
STrti
Sf "shake a loot.
«»n.
’Ai-SnSEroi
MiSSiSik Mrs.
X lhp southwestern nart
water with Rex end FcLs Naptha
school attendance The lowest mark
township. May 18. 1802. and died roap. The second boiling Likes the
I was reached Monday. February 10. looking on’’ to get a ticket for the survives.
Feb
11.
1930,
this
being
his 74th last of the color.
I when 195 pupils, or 35 per cent of Club’s dance and floor show next
the enrollment were absent in the Tuesday night, which promises to be
bl ROKE C AlbEb DEATH.
..Iu compliance with hLs request.
My alm in life—to be able to pick
morning. By Friday, however, roads as enjoyable as any yet.
Jack Snyder received word of tte | verv brief services were held nt the
Orchids to Mrs. Bryan Crofoot of
up a daily paper without a "queen"
had been cleared to such an extent
death of his only sister. Mrs. Mary Beebe Funeral Home in Jonesville ,
| that only 66 were absent. Many Rutland township and Mrs. Walter Surrey. 69. of Decatur, on Saturday । Feb. 13 and burial was made in lhe ol some variety on tiie front page.
Anything from pumpkins to snow­
students spent the early, part of the Harrison of Barlow lake. Barry morning following a stroke. Mr. arid । village cemetery. ’’
storms inspires the populace to se­
! week shovelling out aide roads and county women who prove there arc Mrs. jack Snyder and Mr. and | ’ ■^-■7——------lect a presiding queen. We wager
; were present at the close of the still women reflecting lhe stuff of Mrs Jay Snyacr and son Wayne atdeaTh OF MRS. ARNETT,
week. Mr. Taylor says. "The stu- which our pioneer mothers were tended tte funeral which was held , Mrs. Orla Arnett. 69. mother of that Johnny Armbruster's son-in­
law wouldn’t care for any toboggan
I dents at our nigh school show a made Blocked roacis. lack of doctors.
in
Kalamazoo
on
Tuesday
afternoon
Mr.
Russell
Kanlner
of
this
city,
yery fine spirit in their unwilling­ right nt hand, frightful wealh-r. til two o’clock. Burial was made in dud &lt;ui Friday of pneumonia-after queen;, right now. Our sympathy ip
ness to te abicnt from school. I didn’t floor them or cause them to 11 Kalamazoo cemetery. ’Sympathy; an illness of ten days. Mr. and the young man.
\hmic there is more of this spirit grow hysterical when they faced is extended to the bereaved ones.
'Mr*
— Arnett have o.xrated
....
I
the
Advertisement seen in a daily;
“here than in any other high school unpleasant and dlsliearlening con­
1 resort at Mill lake for several years.
ditions in bringing their babies into
Cow for talc—Slightly used 1931
I have known."
GOOD PRICES IN 1936.
Surviving arc the husbatyi. two Jersey hay burner, hornless, and in
Rex Foreman and Percy Diamond the world, one coming In to Pennock
The hlgij price ol pork and thc ! daughters. Mrs Kanlner of Hastings
can also be listed among those who via horseback, the other facing herI relatively lower prices of lamb te- and Mrs Myrtle Organ of Battle wonderful running condition, hits on
have been stuck in the drifts this ordeal alone, white husband andf suited last year in a switch in the I creek, also four son*. Edward and all four, sclf-fllling radiator and
| Winter. Wc understand that they !J doctor battled storm and snow. retail trade for lamb and pork—1 Frank of Battle Creek and Chester witli four good faucets.
Were sent over to Allegan by the drifts in vain attempt to reach thc’;। thc demand for choice cuts of pork I and Ward of Mill lake
State Highway Department with a home.
We regret the death of good King
. declining, while that for lamb inFuneral services were held al tte
Karl H Keefer thinks now lie will
big truck to help clean out the driftcreased largely. Thc present decline | Delton Methodist church on Mon- George V of Great Britain. Too bad
i cd roads of that county Everything have a belter message than ever for। in pork prices, a* compared with the day at two o’clock, the Rev. H. V. it couldn’t iiavc been a self-.ipi&gt;olntwent along finely until they reacted future father and son banquets, ailj top-notch price, and the increased Townsend of South Woodland of­ ed ruler in southern Europe whi
a point between Hamilton and Hol­ bccau«e twin boy.-, weighing 5 1-2! price of lamb, may bring pork back Relating: Interment
in u:c
the ucnuii
Delton carries on wholesale murder in
unerniviii ■■■
land. There, with a mountain o'. and 6 lbs. respectively, arrived at thc, into greater popularity.
South Africa for ills own personal
I cemetery.
glorification.
snow in front of them and big drifts Watervliet parsonage Feb 13. The;
Washington authorities are agreed
stork
card
bringing
us
thc
glad
tid
­
forming rapidly behind them, they
that ail indication* point to conFIRST
ONE
AT
COATS
GROVE.
1 were stuck good and proper. The' ings pictured the old bird in flight,1 tlnucd high prices for jiork during ! Tte Haslingn Commercial club is
My brothers and I in the days of
; boys arris cd home by train Satur­ with a babe in a blanket ,-uspended 1936. also that thc price of iambs 1 planning, during 1936, having some our happy childhood poNwiued a
day all hale and hearty, but al this from his bill, to which Karl, with his’ will not decline. This would indl- of ita meetings in thc evening and patient, long-suffering pony who
writing the truck is still where they j usual display of humor, had added u, cat* that those farmers who feed in various places In thc territory would cat our peanut shucks and
left It—and it will remain there un­ pen and mk sketch showing Uw, lambs for market, if they can make . surrounding our city.
The com- banana peelings. When Mother wa,
til thc highway Ls cleared. A huge other little twin brother sailings the right purchases in the big live mitlce having that matter in charge out at night, we would lead him into
.snow plow was expected Monday to1 alons behind in a trailer The boy.-,. stock centers, should do well this ha* recommended that the first oul- the kitchen and Illi him up on brown
, clear the road and literate the are to be named David J and Lin­
I side meeting be held at thc coat* sugar. and of course, he soon learned
truck Allegan has been having Ils don M- and ought to keep Methodist
contained
the
Grove church on Tuesday evening. which cupboard
i full share of blockaded highways—! parsonages enlivened for many years
If you know what you want the March 31. Weather conditions may delicacy One day wc had some
to
come,
congratulations
from
Bar
­
! and what county In Michigan
salesman will be less likely to sell interfere and make a postponement high-toned company and someone
• hasn’t?
ry county friends.
left the door open. In came Alexan­
you something you don't wan*..
necessary.
der. He went to thc brown sugar
door and whinnied and neighed and
tried to qpen tiie door. We young­
sters didn't sit down comfortably
for several days.
I

LOCAL NEWS

Can't Stop Now! We’ll See You at

FOOD CENTER
Saturday, Feb, 22 -9 p.m
They’re Giving Away 175 lbs. Sugar
and 6 Bushel Baskets of Groceries!!

10 lbs. 19c

PRY ONIONS

2 lbs. 23i

PITTED DATES

FAIRY FLOUR 5 lb. sock 19c

LETTUCE

each 6c

4 lbs. 19c

ORANGES

2 dozen 25c

BANANAS

JELLO
3 packages 17c
GINGER SNAPS 3 lbs. 25c
* a II
Carotene
4 for 25c
AAIL.I\
Toll Cans
RICE
3 lbs. 17c
Soaked PEAS 4 cans 25c
Bean Sprouts 2 cans 15c
Sardines Monterey 3 cans 25c
FELS NAPTHA SOAP

IO

41 c

bars

FINE GRANULATED

SUGAR
10 as 45c
4 Hour SPECIAL!
SATURDAY.

FLAKE WHITE SOAP

IO

TRILBY

2

29c

BARS

bars

BAGS

CLOTH

10 lb. Limit to a
Customer

SOAP

13c

And t BAR FREE!

FINEST

Bur *"r PARAMOUNT

9

Product and get FREE Tick­
et on 6 Baskets of Groceries.

QUALITY

MEATS

With Each 25c Meat Purchase Get 1 Ticket on 175 lbs. Sugar

LARD pure 2 "»■ 22c

f ll AMj TtiEATPF

Hastings, Michigan - Telephone* 224-1-2557

WITH EVERY 50c MEAT PURCHASE

SUNDAY and MONDAY. FEB. 23 and 24
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

BEEF KETTLE ROASTS

LB.

LEAN SIDE PORK

lb.

FRESH PORK LIVER

2

lbs

14c
23c
25c

HAROLD LLOYD in

•The MILKY WAY”
With ADOLPHE MENJOU

The*hilarious Laic of a timid milkman who accidrntally knocks
cut a ihainpion fightri and becomes the “terror" of the ring.

l oitr

HAMBURGER 2...29
Chunk BACON

P I G

23c

HEARTS

lot

Cat and Dog Need

VITAMINS

LOOK’
RIB
BOILING
BEEF

2 Lbs. of
FRANKFURTS

29c

Food Center

BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY. 1:00 and 3:00 o'clock
Otter Performances—Adults 25c. Children 10c

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. FEB. 25

"MILLIONS IN THE AIR”
John Howard. Wendy Barrie. Willie Howard. Elcanore Whitney,
Benny Baker. George Barbier

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. FEB. 26 and 27

We have a product now which
supplies Vitamins A, B, D, G and
E. If you want to keep your dog
or cat healthy and escape distem­
per, feed them Abbott's Vita
King. It will produce thc finest
results for you that you can imag­
ine. Call and get literature on
this product.

Vic^f\esc/iiption ‘frit/i/flute.
PR OKI ZII5

THEO!

Barry Bypaths

-T-i m 1

WILLIAM POWELL in

"RENDEZVOUS”
Adali. Ur. ( l.lWrrn IK

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. FEB. 28 and 29
.

CHARLIE CHAN’S SECRET’’
With WARNER OI.AND. BOSLNA LAWRENCE
FEATURE NO,' I

IOAN ilONDELL and GLENDA FARRELL in

"MISS PACIFIC FLEET’
Witte Hugh Herbert. Allen Jenkins
Serial Chapter Macy. “GREAT AIR Ml'STKBY." at
Night and Saturday Matinee. 3:00 o’clock only

DEATH OF MRS. HARRY JONES.
1 Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, wife of Har■ ry Jones, died Sunday forenoon at
her tarm home, two miles west of
Hickory Corners. She had been ill
for about five weeks with &gt;ome heart
ailment. With her parents she came
to this county when five years of
age. the family locating near Deiton. She was married to Harry
• Jones. September 23. 1889 al Delton.
They left Immediately for South
Dakota, where they resided on a
farm for a year. They returned to
Michigan moving to the present
farm home west of Hickory Comers
thirty-one years ago. She u sur­
vived by her husband, two daughten. Mrs Alice Jensen. Kalamazoo
and Mrs: Avery Pcltlnglllof Hickory
Comers and a son. Donald of Dcl, ton. The funeral was held from Her
, late home Tuesday afternoon. In­
. terment in thc Prairieville cemetery.

DIES AT FORT SMITH.
Mrs. A. J. Veddcr and Mrs.
Floyd Gaskell received word last
week of lhe death on Wednesday of
a sister-in-law. Mrs. LeRoy Mort,
of port Smith. Ark . the wife of their
youngest brother. She I* survived by
her husband, two daughters and a
son three months old. Her death
came as a shock to relatives here.
Sympathy is extended to them.

With Rosalind Rassell. Binnie Barnes, Lionel Atwell,

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

We have an uncle who winters In
California who drives twenty-five
miles south along the banks of the
Mississippi to avoid a loll bridge,
and then drives the same distance
back on thc other side.

ACQUITTED BARKRI FF.
The time ol lhe circuit court on
Monday was taken up with th» trial
of Frank Barkruff. charged with a
statutory offense. The matter was
given to lhe jury who brought in
their verdict on Tuesday forenoon,
acquitting Barkruff.
.

ADMITTED TO CITIZENSHIP.
At the session of circuit court
held yesterday, Wednesday morning.
I Charles Smith, of this city, wax ad­
i mltted to citizenship tn this country.
. Mr. Smith came to the Upitcd
Stales from Scotland. He live* on
i South Market St.

(Coutii
of lhe dim
helped, bui

which any
cured Al
wood a.i u
formed th.
distinction
governmui
just g .pat
geles-and
too. With
are probat
How rfl’pii
shown by

which tli«r
but farm
building oi
street inis
scraper st
tiie early

hard-work

early ever

■grind.’’ I
later won
Swecthear
of anothc
Fairbanks
ditlon the
common t
ever, that
hers. Hoi
regard to
shown at
Hollywood
tures of t
tresses of
thrown on
picture w
with very
Doug's w:
fleeting Is
day. and
and de ria
who seem
literal ap
motherly
death ren
of the nai
Just bn
HoUywooc
quite proi
Scores of
••hits’’ on
pered froi
gone bad
to the vei
homes w
There nrt
gardens,
reached t
All lhe ’
for desisn
villas of |
Ing lines
turesqu".
land. Sci

the high
Mission
the plain
American

crowning
on terra
side. Bn
Callfoml
roses, flo'
hedges t&lt;
picture.
JvayB-pre
•atlractlvi

screen, i
goes casj
of It goir
upkeenbeautiful
tractive
Puttini
you’d es
Holl vwoo
pointed,
the film
as Wash
lltlcal dr

and Klei
self pror
on nntor
centers
drawn tc

aLso a hi
and lovi
subordin
alsts of
fldenl tl
&amp;£*

chance,
role, to
take tl
••stars,”
That’s i

the mal
wood. P
over the
in fact,
perhaps
would e
you wal
that ybi
are pl
blondes
heads,
and wh
cheeks

quite dt
But pe
not a

nouncet
what w

ingly o
procnen
street c
and to
to arre
movie
•’peeled
unusua
•‘freaky
sands v
in the
and thi
duranc
young
tempts,
in one
restaur
hair ar

and pn
The

�“

Tiir nnriT niTV nr
Hl IlHrll U!IIII IY
I ‘
IIIL U!!Ln
I U

.THE HASTINGS BANNER, ♦HttftHftAY- FEBIt TAUT M, IBM

tater »aw it on the screen we could land In lhe Introduction of a trill to car could buck th* huge drift* j—".....
thru the w,nd,n« ' Q T dfl Hl
110 HQ
Rom hall. Monday. February M. at
1 recognize only the dashing hero and stick on. an extra tax of a lulf a They drove
°* »*« courtn. and al- ‘ lhe demure Iwroine. each one j cent a foot for all lhe films taken. storm. th* hones plowing thelt | V &gt;
HU /SO
'though only a comparatively few
' mounted on a hone, and dashing I This threw consternation into the
rars oId' h“
*nuj ihe w-i-----------------------•"
madly to one another at a much i camp* of lhe Movie Picture com­ deep most of lhe way. a terrific I nnoh Kid,. Cmortr, CW1. Mil,
llfl A K
* n r I 11*
&gt;lon d0»*r clu”
11 hfU’S’ hugemadly to one
an
strain on both man and beast. Six I
-------------~ pace
e Ilian wax shown ponies, who claimed that any such
lllHR
ULLIL L |*ui|ia
to California, and quite largelymore
rapid
____________
________________ mrtl with Mn. M»ud. Zwbri.
&gt;___________
■■****!!■
_____________________________________
wwaih. Be
^Ojlywood f0rilaries,
M)arjCS
expenses.
, expenses.
{
I; when the
mm; picture
picture was taken.. While! tax burden would mean ruination.
Memben «1 for the Parish hous* make th. poal- 8LDDKN DEATH OF
and uw doctor rruirort. citUlrd 10 '
ors are *lw.n P®^« of
mretlngadvtasblTA
being an niKirawu
Interested witness to the
upon the —
Moving
tne I «Florid* has looked **»~**
------ » .. . ..__
7-~ .
(Continued from page qne)
etc J^t the one item of extra help MCHig
. _______
a._CT„ to oe present ana visitors are always vMwt .■'..V.. la n*awal-*at frta ttu
taking of thte screen picture, some- Picture business with longing eyes, . the bone, to find that the baby, welcome.
good speaker is promised for the
;__________________
i means lhe expenditure of many
Thl* Thursday
how.
In
some
way
that
it
ha*
still
and
promised
fair
treatment
to
all
,
a
husky
7
1-2
pou
nd
bo
y,
had
arnext meeting.
....
•
of the climate, though that doubtless hundred* of thousand* of dollar*
been
impossible
for
rnq
to
figure
out.
I
companies
who
would
locate
there.
I
rived
five
hours
previously.
Mr­
Mrs. Prank Andrus Is entertain­
helped, but because of lhe great va- I, rach ,__r
y^—
—around
around aa couple
couple of
of mil
milI came in contact with "poison oak." (The result was that °PUon* were Harrison had frozen his face hwids ing the rnemDe
„ oof
, Mogpluu
The Dowling Townsend club will
members
Hoepltal auua
Guild
rlety of scenery so close at hand and lions ’I Was
"* informed.
meet
at
the
Dowling
church
on
lhlJ
nenlng al a
Taking pictures for the screen, When you go to California, after a taken on tract* of ground in Pl^da ^d feet. The horse*, which he *a&gt;s, No
the ease, and lncxpen*lve way In
daughter and sonin-law. Mr
bitter experience my advice is that; by moving picture companies, with ( he will put up against any team in-----------------------------seven-thirty dessert- bridge.
which any desired picture can be se­ grouping them, and rearranging
Mrs. James Bristol, whert il
v—
.. •
' then.assertion
n.u.rtinti
that
that
they
thev
would
would
have
havethe
i the
county
eountv
forfor
sheer
sheer
gameness
aameness
and
and
cured. Above I referred to HoUy­ them.- has develojwd into a fine art. you keep Just as far away from to leave California if the proposed I wiUlngneM. to do his bidding, were
Odd **«&lt;&gt;»
Fellow “
and
Rebekah
Family
A special communication o! Hasnd R
*b*!?ih1 Par
?‘1&gt;
wood as a city, though I was in­ Those who saw Grace Moore In poison oak as you possibly can. tux was levied, and it looked as entirely covered with a coating of ice i tings Lodge No 52. F A- A M will: Night »»’ »* held on Wednesday. the past eight yean.
poison ...
ivy ------and ,poison
__________
formed that it does not enjoy that "One Night of Love" will remember Many limes
though tiiey might do so. Not rel- an inch thick.
dL-dinction, having no organized 'city ■ the stirring scene where she enters sumac have -got me." But poison ishlng the idea of losing their greatTo get lhe doctor back was anoth-' ?■ .1 1 30 oclort. lor wort in !1» furnished, “
so J**'*
pleaae bring
not feeling especially well the r‘~“* ~
”* buttered
*«"
govurnmunt of Its own. and being a balcony and begins to sing as only oak. as near as I can figure out. Is a r»i
est uiuuau;.
industry, ,and
one
er rproposition.
appeal
made g
u&gt;m «..
v that brings ' —
—,------------ ---An r,— was
----------degree A lunch and program
nnt&gt; Oflc other dish of food for before. When Mrs. Bristol lho|
Just * part of lhe city of Los An- she can. Her beautiful song attracts combination of nellies, hives, poison miUloiu
of dollars ri'.-'i
and - —
employs
to the B
Barry
county eroad
commis- - wU( foJU)W
work
H
me pot luck supper. A program fol- she heard her mother Mil
niuuudia vf
*— tn
ottv county
fwiH cotnmlsgeles-suid a good-sized port it is violinisbi. harpists and other skilled ivy. and the seven-year itch. Just •*
thousands
’upon
" tiwusands
of
*peo- sion
at Hastings
for
help. Tiie
tat----------•—
“
•»
—
r.t
«mn
at
uaatinn
fnrtwin
Th»
tatlows
me
supper
I
seme time after nine thia mof
too. Within the limits of HoUywood 1 musician* to the patio just below I when you think you are getting bet- pie the Californians got busy and ter started out with a snow plow j The course in Health Education I
she carried her breakfast to ia*r
are probably 100.000 people or more her. and they rapidly develop into ter is when you want to look out. be­ tnc
the prvpwacu
proposed tax was •••«»»•*•*
snowed under,
and
a car
but
to reach for teachers in Barry county given
—™...—
— —
— —
— were unable
--------- —
Attention Pythian Sisters—Our room, and we understand Ml A,
How rapid has been Ite growth Is a magnificent orchestra to accom- cause it will be Just taking a fresh So
, sUU
^..&lt;1 ii.,..
.. the great ' th.
llarrfcAn
l-iww
XSr
Mnrrllnrt
_ __________
HoUywood
lives
as
the
Harrison
home.
So
Mr
HarrLwn
b
Dr
Mflblc
R
from
lhe
Unl
.
;
next
regular
meeting
on
Feb.
25
Siawson was unconscloui. puatag
shown by lhe fact that around 25 Kny her charming voice. The scene start.
ik* *o true and so natural that I Moving to "location" for a big "make believe" community and it: again got out his team and sleigh VCISjt.. of Michigan has been divld- *&gt;» &gt;* held in our new Temple on away whUe her daughter wa» in the
doesn't seem possible that any other and drove the doctor to tiie Road I
lwo g^ps’ Thc cla5S W1H No. Michigan Ave. AU
AU member*
members room. Indications wunttn.
pointing to .
a a»_
cerewhich tlu-.city stand-, was nothing the spectator feels that it all must screen picture is not unlike moving can ever take its place So when , commission car which had stalled ! mW!l al 7;3O
evening In
in CenCen-!
to &gt;* present -XXX.
Ibral hemorrhage.
take.- &gt;its
-------meet at ..7:30 Friday evening
u&gt; place.
but farm land, with .scarcely n have been taken from real life. But an army. Hundreds, and sometimes. can ever -m
- -_ ,a---------c.i.rf.r
rtf-Jr
a mHa rbl,
nf ih,.................
_______
,
•
Mrs. Siawson had been a redden
one whose occupation brings him in ■ thousands of people are transported. I you go to California don! miss vlsll- ■ QUarrtr ol • mil, tliu Udo « U» U&gt;1 oumu,, ,„a „ ,0 odock a.t. I
building of any kind in sight. At one
String
where the doctor 1 urday
v.u...morning
------- -— &lt;„
—»—» I The Woman s Missionary Society I of Bangor many years, where aha
--------------- place
----------------------------------in the «.-w
High school
1 close touch with lhe taking of pic- But before this is done, carpenters I Ing Hollywood. It would be like Rouig -John
street intersection today a tall nky
was transferred and finally reached bujUjim,
8
of the Jefferson St. U. B. church will was an antique collector of more
scraper stands on each corner. In lures for the screen, informed me ■ and electricians must build a regular I to Canada and not seeing the Middleville via Hastings.
~
’------------meet at the home of Rev. and Mrs. | than local note.
entertainment
and । Dionhe quintuplets.
the early days of Hollywood a cor­ that at the time Grace Moore's pic- camp, and
Mrs. Harrison remarks that while
Townsend plan meeting Episcopal E. B. Griffin Wednesday. March 4., The funeral will be held tn BanW. R. Cook.
ner was pointed out where a poor Hire was taken she might have been amusement features must not be
they
didn't
gel
lhe
first
103C
baby,
parish
house
Friday
evening.
Feb.
Business session 2:00 P. M. Officers .gor Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Slawhard-working Utile lass with lunch­ singing " Yankee-Doodle" in her own overlooked, because temperamental
they
certainly
could
call
their
s
s
21.
8
o'clock.
George
Vase
of
Kataplease have annual report ready to son was a member of the Christtao
box in hand used to alight quite home. That only gives one an idea (stars have not been sold on the Ide*
“storm baby."
mazoo is to be the speaker.
I turn. In to secretary. New officers Science church and of the O. X. 4.
—J—'— any
---- hardships for the
early every morning and wend her of how the matter of taking pic- of' enduring
!
1
1
----------------I
will be elected and three delegate* to , and had many friends In Hastings.
way to the Studio for thc dally tun**, grouping them, and re-or-1
Ql'I.MBY.
|i Methodist
...------------ L. „.
.... Michigan
.......Branch Missionary Mr*. Bristol A. B. -------Circle ....
No. .8. the
te ...»
the only member of
"grind." Il was Mary Pickford who, ranging them has advanced. Those lines and an abundance of waler:
nt flllnr,
tnrnllr surviving.
c,,rx-&lt;vit.n Ur
Ala—w.
The Quimby young people will orlll
will mrof
meet with
with Mr,
Mrs. clnvrl
Floyd Rmwri
Brown nn
on rnnvpntlnn
convention at
Gaines t!
U n
B. rhilrrb
church , th-*
the family
Mr. Blawaon
later won the title of ' America's who take the pictures naturally pictures must be developed on the
have their Sunday school class parly Friday. Feb. 28. AU members urged . in Kent county tiie third week in and two sons having preceded Mrs,
Sweetheart." and became lhe bride are very expert nt tly*lr work ana spot to see that everything is being
Saturday night at the home of . to attend.
{April. Pot luck dinner at BtOO o'clock.. siawson in death.
done
right,
so
that
all
lhe
work
are
said
to
command
very
attractive
of another screen favorite. Douglas
Maxine and Velma Kellogg All are------------------------------------------------------------- !---------------------------------------------1
not have
io be done over- again.
— —
-------------------------------------i
Fairbanks. Quite true to movie tra­ salaries. It happened that we were will
cordially Invited.
(Continued from page one)
dition they were later divorced, lhe given an opportunity to note lhe ; and Die big expense duplicated Due ■
Miss Esther Hoffman, who has
skill of thc movie photographer, and to the foci that any terrain on the'
common understanding being, how­
spent
the
last
three
weeks
with
her
'
his ability to cut out thc part of a ! globe can be duplicated within a experienced In years. Mr. Harrison
ever. that it was through no fault of
distance.
Hollywood
will left his home at midnight with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Dirk Hoff­
hers. How public sentiment runs in picture he did not want, and use only short
man. will return to her work In Bat­
regard to thc two was perhaps the part he desired We happened to doubtless remain as lhe center of team and a sleigh, when lhe ther­ tle. Creek Wednesday morning.
mometer was eighteen below zero, to
shown at a movie wc attended in pars a spot where a small port of a the great moving picture industry,
Mrs Cronk, who has not been very !
drive lhe four miles to Davies cor­
Hollywood one evening, when pic­ screen picture whs being taken for ■ However, at the last session of the
ners. two miles west of Middleville well the past years has had an-;
whnl
camy
out
later
as
"McFadden's
|
California
legislature,
the
quite
tures of the famous actors and ac­
where he would meet lhe Middleville other stroke and Ls quite sick at ,
tresses of a few years back were Flats ' TWte picture was taken down prevalent idea to "Soak The Rich"
nt thc bottom of a ravine. When we i cropped out In lhe "epic" program. doctor summoned on lhe case as no present.
thrown on the screen. When Mary's
picture was shown it was greeted
with very liberal applause, while,
Doug s was roundly hissed. How!
fleeting is fame! A popular idol to- |
day. and an object almost of scorn i
and dcrLMon tomorrow. The one I
who seemed to be greeted with mast
liberal applause was generous, kind.j
motherly Marie Dressier, whose'
death removed from thc screen one
of the nation's favorites.
Just back of Hollywood, are the |
Hollywood foothilL'i, which could
quite properly be called mountains.
Scores of those who have made
"hits" on thc screen, or have pros­
pered from thc movie industry, have
gone back In thc foothill*, and even
to the very tops, am) built beautiful
Penney Days are
homes with commanding
views..
There amid trees and lawns anti
Saving Days!
gardens. American architecture ho*
CR OWD - G mE R !
reached the zenith of expression.
All the world has been called on
for design. There are the artistic
All Wool
BOYS’
villas of France and Italy, the curv­
ing lines of the Orient, and the pic­
Flannels, Crepes, Tweedies,
turesque. peaked roofs of nld Eng­
Checks, Plaids: Full Cut
land. Scattered In among them will
be the sturdy grace of Hie Colonial: ,
the high color of the Hpani'h: the '
MLulon with Its arche.'i. down to;
Fino quality Cotton in
the plain, simple, cozv home-like'
Bright or Subdued Colon
American bungalow. Some of these '
are rcnroduced In great palaces
crowning the hill-top*: others re*t
on terraces against the mountain
aide. Hnlhed In the brilliance of a
California sun. there arc the palms. I
roses, flowers, and a great variety of
hedges to complete the beautiful ’
picture, saying nothing of the al-|
ways-present oranfjc and other most j
attractive fruit frees. To those who j
have -reached the goal" on thc |
m
■ ■■■■ with that wash day villain—old "Work-n-wasta
screen, money coqies easy and It j
Women s Rayon
goes easy, usually not a small port i
MEN'S
III
—save yourself, your clothing, linens, etc., save your money—
of it going, for tHr* maintenance and ■
I
with the automatic helpfulness of the newest improved washer
upkeep of beautiful homes and
beautiful ground:, in tills most at-1
and ironer.
tractive setting.
Putting on a "good front"—well
Hare's the easiest plan we ever offered to bring these ideal laundry aids to you
you’d expect it in "make.believe”
Hollywood, and you'll nut be disap­
right now . . . profit from it.
pointed. Hollywood Is the center of |
the film drama of the nation, just;
Veits, Bioomen,
ns Washington Is the center of poAll Leather Where
lit leal drama. Both cities are simlPanties
Leather Should Be.
lar in some respects, combining art i
Composition Soles
□nd Chemises
and science to enable man to rise by
and Heel*.
self promotion, so that he mav live j
on notoriety and glamour. Both orc
centers of showmanship and have
drawn to themselves not only a more
or less da/zllng coterie of actors, but
also a horde attracted by pageantry
and love of the spectacular. ThLs
subordinate horde quite largely con­
sists of would-be apprentices. con­
fident that no eminence is too high
for people of their ability, but slip
willing. In fact Jumping nt any
chance, to accept tho moat inferior!
role, to demonstrate their ability to ।
take their
places among the
“stars." and win fame and renown. .
Rondo Prints are one important reason why most wo­
That's why It Is so interesting, al I
men think of Penney’s when they think of sewing.
least It was to me. to walk down
the main business street of Holly­
It’s the wide variety of prints, stripes, plaids and
wood. People flock there from nil
over the country, all over the world
checks, which make them suitable for so many uses
in fact, just to get in the movies—
ter. SPE( 1 Al l V PICK I I) MIW-OM \
perhaps to "get inzthe big money"
would express It more correctly. As
you walk along the street you fancy 1
that you can pick them out. There I
are platinum blondes, ordinary j
blondes ibleached of course), red- '
heads, curly-heads. frousled-heads.'
and what have you. Of course I
CASH ONLY
cheeks are painted. Ups -daubed, and
eye-brows smeared. Dress, too; Is I
quite distinctive—what there is of It.
But personality, or "It." is ■ gift
not a creation, and comparatively
few possess it to any marked degree,
at least the kind that leads to pro­
They're nice enough for
nounced success on the screen. But I
what would Ufe be without hope— j
'most any occasion . . . yet
so lhe horde Ungers on. and seem-;
ingly contents itself with the daily I
they’re
low priced! Why
promenade up and down the main |
not use them as a life-saver
street of Hollywood, all painted up
and togged out. apparently hoping ;
for your better hose? The
to arrest the attention -of some
movie magnate, who has his eye'
reinforcements at points of
"peeled" for the beautiful, or the
3tay spic ’n span the whole
wear make them wear ex­
unusual
not to mention the
day through!
Tailored,
"freaky." Naturally all of the thou:
tra long.
Mock seams,
sands who flock to Hollywood to "get
aemi - tailored and frilly
Coverta, bar tacked, rein­
in the movies" cannot be successful,
French heel and cradle sole.
•tyles! They’re Avenue vat
and there even comes a limit to en­
forced! Sturdy, full cut!
durance of trying. Some of the j
prints.- Sizes from 14 to 52.
Popular shades. 8 &gt;4-10 &gt;4.
young ladles, who abandon their at- 1
tempts, may be found as waitresses j
• In one of lhe scores of attractive!
restaurants in HoUywood. blonde
hair and alL while perhaps some of
the young men settle down In posi­
tions-more adapted to their ability
and preside over cigar stands.
1^10^ mtocne of me great m.

“RHi/r nn ir r

DEFACING PIO­
NEER HMBSWPS

LITTLE

™AMAS

Now! Semi-Annual

CO!

-and never
dARken her washiNgs

PENNEY
DAYS
Burnt iit q With Bargain*!
Golf Hose

SKIRTS

MSI. NORTH 1

south f

15c

Undies

DRESS
OXFORDS
$198

25c

SALE ENDS FEB. 22

Penney’s Fine Quality Rondo

UNIVERSAL

DRESS PRINTS

ABC

&amp; IRONER
Featuring
^..,6-30 MONTHS’" Purchase
WASHER

A positive bargain at this price!

19c p*,r

Women's Pure Silk Chiffon

*54"

Sheer and Clear! Ideal for Everyday Wear

New! Fast Color!

Wash Frocks

49*

so

Work

Pants

Sanforized Shrunk

98*

ACT NOW-AND ENJOY YEARS

OF EASIER, BETTER, CHEAPER
LAUNDERING

Come in for a demonitration-or Phone 2305

CONSUMERS POWER C

The moving picture business has

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY—
TRADE AT HOME

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Editorials oTHE COURT'S POWER
Justice Roberts incorporated in
lhe recent AAA decision a definition
of tbe function and powers of the
Supreme Court which very effectively answer* certain of the new dealera who claim that thte body te attempting to usurp legislative func-

I hours by observing the twitching* of
a frog leg when il came in contact
with zinc and copper plates. Yet from
this simple beginning developed an
important branch of modem electrical science which has given u«
such things as electric lights, motor.-.
and appliances without number— ।
I luxuries that have become nece&amp;slIles.
.
James Wall was considered ionicwhat of a ■’nut" for wasting valuable
time -playing"
with steam. Yel •here
—
was the germ which multiplied and
expanded into tho giant turbines
and steam engines of our day.
The Wright brothers were ridieuled for toying about with man
carrying kites—Of ~
what
~ practical
‘ “
value was that flimsy creation which
'.puttered down the track at Kilty
Hawk and rose haltingly from the
ground for a brief flight? Well thc
China Clipper and thc numerous
airlines which span thte country
constitute al least one answer.
Otto Mergenthalcr. a German •
Swiss watchmaker, spent years of
hte life working and dreaming over
a complex creation which looked
something like a grand piano stood
on end. Printers of hte day looked
at this awkward contrivance and
laughed—but lhe linotypes and oth­
er mechanical typesetting machines
have revolutionized the printing in­
dustry and have mode possible large
daily editions and cheap publlcatlons that have placed all literature
within thc means of everyone.
Steinmetz was a little hunch-1
backed fellow who loved to work ,
with figures—an impractical enthus- I

76 AND '36

IP. U&gt;* S»iril of . CemmuaHy
That Couata—Not lu Six*

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 19S6

This and That
Random Remarks.

It Kerned almost

HASTINGS RESIDENTS
REVEL IN SUNSHINE
Chose Just the Right Winter
to Leave Home and
Visit Florida

’Round About Town
Hew to the line, tot the quipo
fall where they may!

like wartime j
By Observing Tommy.
Tnis seems to have been n great
&lt;r,7tT. m7k*The *toter
winter for wanderlust to seize upon
upon , Harold Logan. I see, is carrying
1
k
Hastings people, as witness lhe trek * Peach of a shiner on hte left
supply last.
. to Florida. Some must have had a । orb- uh huhl Hext time you make a
hunch of lhe long hard winter at j P**8 b® prepared to duck.
Understand
that
weathermen
home with all this snow shovelling
. • • •
predict a break in thc protracted । and coal heaving to do. aside from | A** Van Til. I see, te passing the
cold spell soon. Then we’ll ■ have getting the avalanche oL .sno* off . cigars—a baby daughter, hte second.
flood waters and slushy, muddy II tiie roofs of houses. We hope they
tlons. He says:
...
roads to worry about
“It is sometimes said that the
' won’t find any leaks In their ceilings
Tills week’s nomination to the
I when they return. A lol of people Hastings Hall of Eligible Bachelors
Court assumes a power to overrule
Let's hope for a gradual return of Ure. and thawing weather hosn t —Albert Dykstra. Plenty popuor control the action of the people’s
balmy breezes rather than a sudden evcn
m.
I bir with ■■ 'em." too. I understand.
representatives. Thte 1s u mtecontf»w.
: Lots of sunshine and jitay down tn Beware of the "open season," boy!
cepllon.
* ’ ’
the Flamingo state. Mrs. C. 8. Me• • .
“The Constitution te the supreme
Anyway
mtyre
write*
from
Clearwater
— —* thc
— weatherman's
--------------------- - rejiort
---------!»wiu
vww«
&lt;•&lt;»«•
wue»c
। Ycsl where
00,1 Taffec's wavy marcel, te
te just about as uncertain as thc tjiey uc located that it seems inorc ' real—believe it or not. No permatew of the tend, ordained and cslabweather.
like a northern town than any place , nenls ever needed there!
lished by the people AH legislation
• • •
I they
— --------* |
...
uicy have
nave yet vlsitea.
visiuju. ’
n* *nu
tn unmust conform to the principles it
Years ago Voltaire said: "I wholly usually attractive post office build- i
Grandpa LyBarker now—also,
lays down. When an act of Con-.
disapprove of what you say but will
Living expenses average about ।ll’* • boy!
defend to thc death your right to say lhc
herc; (rull and vegc. |
...
grass te appropriately challenged in।
it." All of which exemplifies the ublez much cheaper, meal, a bit f This weather reminds us of that
the courts as not conforming to thc&gt;
spirit of a free press and a free peo- higher, with milk very higji. rang- I popular book. "If Winter Comes."
Constitutional mandate, the judicialI
pie—even
though the author, him- mg from 17c to l»c a quart. They can spring be far
behind? The anself. lived under lhe rule of an auto- were expecting thc Radfords soon 1 swer of course teYEB! A helluva
branch of the Government has only.
crat.
and felt the sunshine would be u **ys behind.
one duty, to lay the article of thc.
.
' ‘
, fine
unu thing
muig for
lor Doris.
uoris, Mrs.
Mr*. McIntyre
Mcimyrc
• • .*
Constitution which te Invoked beside
| Several representatives and sena-! mentioned lhe work occnpylng her 1 I understand that lhe Rotary boya
ths statute which is challenged and;
torn are looking about tor ways and particular attention al the time wm Had a rather chilly luncheon Monto decide whether thc tetter squares,
I means to curb the power of thc su- an a/yhan which she wns crocheting daY। premc court.
Wonder what will . for lhe new granddaughter in Ann !
PERSON OT’EVEIZY DESCRIPTION TO
with thc former.
happen to these bills if they arc Arbor. Bonnie May. who arrived aft-1 ---------------------Darrell Hall. I-------------------understand,---is -now
"AU the Court does or can do is
CONTRIBUTE TOHIS' COUNTRY'S
I passed. Thc constltulion of thc er they had loft and whom they arc : lhe powesaor of a son and heir.
to announce Ite considered judgment
! United States defines the respective , naturally quite anxious to sec. Coun- ’
• . .
WELFARE"
upon the question. The only power
powers of —
the ------------legislative,
fU|r8-, dog races, boxing matches! Bcmic Reed. I sec. te opening up
------------ exculive ly ------H judicial
(tiritndkl branches of onvoni.
...... of “ new bar with an old-fashioned
and
govern- and baseball games offer plenty
it has. if such it may be called. is
ment.
ConsequentJj-Jf congress j diversion for the Doctor who is loot rail in front but the only "hardthe power of judgment.
passes laws which attempt to lake , really learning how to rest and play »tufl" served will be Ice cream,
“Thte Court neither approves nor
away powers granted by thc constl’ ----------------------------------------const!-1I and feels In
in fine shape
I
-------------------------------condemns any legislative policy. Its
tution ll
it look;,
a.*Jthough
Tkr Carvctlw.
C^icUii. who have
i.a.c settled l„
to2k; J\'
‘2l0UKH the SuThp
in j, LLOYD PORTRAYS
preme Court would be compelled to' a cujy modern bungalow at 614 B. E.!
delicate and difficult office te to as­
declare these anti-Supremc Court ,Second
Court. Fort Lauderdale, arc '
-----------------------------------------TIMID MILKMAN
certain and declare whether thc leg­
bills unconstitutional.
'; enjoy
- --------- '
Ing —
the presence of- -•
their
-----------—
.
islation te in accord with or in con­
• - daughter. Mrs. Morion Hodgson and
Harold Lloyd timidly makes hl*
travention of thc provisions of the
If representatives and wnator$, llltte son. -Skip." of Charleston. W. wa&gt; Hom milkman obscurity to
would merely slay in their respective i-Va. They have seen most of thc lighting fame in hte new Paramount
Constitution and having done that |।
rooms and once again assume lhe , Hastings people bul the Woodburnea I comedy. "The Milky Way." which
its duty ends.
rcsjKinsibllities they surrendered to ; who are at Sarasota, and wore on a!°P®n5 at
Strand theater. Ho
"The question is not what power
tiie president, they will assume ‘ drive when they called They' re- i bridges the gap between self-doubt
lhe Federal Government ought tc
much more respect in thc eye.* of the i celved lhe report, however, that Doc- and “’e instincts of the killer,
have; but what powers m fact have last who was perfectly happy so long ,
public than they will by atteinpittd' tor Wotxiburn*- was feeling a lot bet- I Trouble came* to the spectacled
as he had difficult mathematical ’
- —
■■■
i to discredit tiie nine venerable gen- ter. was fishing a good deal and had comedian when two drunken fighters
been given by the people."
| tiemen of the Supreme Court.
developed a marvelous appetite. A.
“ dls|1ke to him. One swings
. .‘.F .
Il te natural far dlsappomted leg­ equations to solve. Yet thc abstract |
H repor
reports forty ttellors al the last al blm. bul Lloyd, both frightened
...
I, H.
labors of this little wizard took the
J ZY*. • •
islators to criticne the court for guesswork
------- S of thc local Rotary club a,,d rast °n his feet, manage* to
out of electrical calcu-J » ICTL’S dJlU (JplIllOHSJ
Think of the sad situations wldcii
scrapping pet projects. If represen,
---------he
attend.*
every
week.
Thc
&gt;
duck
The middleweight champion
; might develop If there were no re-1 »'dcn n
------lations and have made thte field off
Wh(lt OtllCTS SllV
—
ijoying tativc government means anything
1 straining body to keep tiie legislators .(.
,t”‘n
enjoyihg
a boom.
boom, ;iot
not a va- i KcL’’ lhc toll brunt of the blow inengineering an exact science. Thc L
'
'
&lt;citni
in eighteen
in lune with the constitution! ir
ranl room
"»"&gt;»•&gt;
e«ht~n or
n, twenty
i.,m ho- tended for thc milkman, and is
to the people of the United States,
YOU cannot receive
great hydro-electric power plants of I
'
j lives one n headache Ui even think itcbjhrwe some night* In a recent ‘ knocked out. Lloyd takes credit tor
however, they have lhe nine eMerly
with a closed hand—
TWENTY YEARS AGO
I of thc wild bills .and half-baked 1 traffic count, an average of 500 cars tl,e punch, and henceforward must
men of this court to thank for sav­ today and the many, complex dec-; IF MR. CONSUMER ONLY KNEW
। an hour pa-w&gt;d a certain 4ilghwav j m«ke good and repeal hte prowess In
■ The Hastings High school basket measures which might result.
। corner. On a Sunday 1.050 were thc rl“g as a title contender. Hilaring thte country from a rapid plunge
t ball team won from South Grand '
...
which
gives
ah Idea of the I lt&gt;' *’ ll»c keynote of this picture.
by
tiie
.quatlons
of
Stlenmctz.
the
throats
of
American
consumers
Rrrpid.s
High
here
Saturday
night
by
1 Congress with a supreme court i« I counted,
,
. ,,
--------;
into socialism
•an
ix
’
y
The supporting cast of player*
—
Clarence
Houanl.
u .*corc of 58 to 21. Hastings'line-up a valuable institution—or can lx*: i।
.ravel now ir.
in Flcrtda.
Florida. Th.
They'
And so It goes Today, much fun If the suggestion of Col Frankjflnox
braneiitomatoer,
and broccoli selling comteU of Adolphe Mcnjou, Vcrree
for
lhe
game
wo.*.
McKnbiht.
R
F-.
—
-----’
l
-'-icuoti'
.omatoer.
and broccoli sellina
Is being poked at the "cosmic raj "i of Chicago could be placed in cl­
ut
five
cents
a
pound
and itlrawber- Teasdale. Helen Mack. William Car­
THE TVA DECISION
Newton. Bostwick, l, F.. Floyd Eek- would. figuratively speaking, be a 1
' enthusiasts who go up in balloon*.
.. , „
,, , ’
rie* at thirty-five cents a quart
1 «“'&gt;• Dorothy Wilson and George
c’.u tb mountains and indulge in oth-1 rcS,PUaK iSw
wj
steam engine without a governor.
Another significant decision
Dog pclnK te one of the great di- Barbier Thc direction was handled
Bottum. L. G
handed down by the United Stalos |
versions
| er idiotic whims for thc sake gelling I a.« to inform the purchaser of the
The Crystal creamery of till.* city »••»«« v •«/*.-*» r. •»» ri„* .. ------— In that section. One com- by Ixo McCarey. who calls Lloyd the
:.... five
“.4- hundred greyhounds I,nnst genuine comedian of lhe ccnSupreme Court in regard to the more data. However, we would hate I amount of tax charges entering Into
had the best year oi it* history In' Plenty of room for dives and den*. । jmny has
In ««te.ino
training *About eight races are ■ lury.
1015; Cream received. 1 052.307 lbs ■
'Glitter and glare and sin’i
1 jln
Tennessee Valley Authority.
to commit ourselves definitely to thc । thf.
,
i
billed for- each c.cnt
Thc .aine 1 ......
----------total bijtte: made, 425.105 lbs. paid Plenty of room for prison pens,
It upheld the right of the govern­
...
.. ■
That would, for the first time in'
|,dogs
never run
in ------more----------------than one MO*
ARFMI1
tatement that nothing practical [ hutorj gU.e Q,e arerBgc cttUrn a
t Gather th».
the eelmtnal.
criminals mu
in!*
------ -------— ...
cash to patron.. $100.252 25; total'
•«.«»«•
ment to build dams for National
■—
— —
— the
-v...same
------- Lt&gt;lsl.r,K?iIX&gt;
TVI.AKt2.HIA.
Plenty
of
room
for
jails
and
court,
i
race
on
day.
will ever come from the work being check upon the amount of concealed
pay roll. $16.87550
An article published in the Bandefense and navigation control in carried on by lhe.se highbrow lheor-1 taxes levied against hte purse—and rpo conform with thc tcuor of
(Willing
enough
to
pay:।
.
The
C
W.
Clarkes
have
taken
’
Marco Barbeiri has sold out the'
-------- —---- --------- ।
ncr
some
time
ago
referring
to a
—
-------—
*
—
|
ucls
U)
।
quarters
at
Casa
Blanca
Hotel.
Holaccordance with the conditions un­ tats.
I Mr. Average Citizen would be due
* bls remarks on subjects per­ stock in his fruit and candy store Bl|t never E fllace for th*
lywood. Fla. in which city the E&lt;1d . case of Tularemia in the county
der which the Wilson dam was built
I for the shock of his life If the esli- taining to America and Ameri­ and will dlKonunue ills busmex.
I
Hunmuns have an apartment for gave information as to thc preven­
No. never a place to piny!
See Francis X, Bushman and Bov- j
I mate of Col. Knox te reliable, he can.*. thnt English playwright
and to sell whatever electricity may}
tion
of
the
disease
which
is
usually
the season. Twelve from Michlzan
CONGRATULATIONS OSCAR. ; would find that about &gt;5 out of every should spell ills name “Fallow.”
criy Bayne at lhe Crown Tuesday.
given to humans by cleaning cer­
be generated in the power, plants.
Michigan is making considerable [
lie spends goes for hidden taxes,
&gt;gs Bowling
Hasting..
.» team won from ■ Plenty of room for shop, and stores. arc at the same hotel with the tain killed animals, usually rabbits,
lhe ^Uh, m.he U elm! progress
~ a. a winter resort state Wei Taxes concealed in retail prices
Clarkes. Charlie write,* that he is
• Tuesday
—
■
tMammon mur.t have th&lt;* in’..i!&gt;
evening ■by n
The words that froze on the Charlotte
acquiring
a summer coat of tun and with lhe bare hands. There have
Plenty
of
room
for
the
running
sores
Ih.t Ik m hld .ro. ..Uee H,
I serve to minimize the demand for old man's lips—"Now. when 1 margin of 411 pins in three game*.
been no new gases reported since
feels
much
better.
They
have
u*n
—
I economy in government The averztamn
,
,
,
,
.
stamp of anornval
approval unnn
upon .uwinlntle
socialistic
was a lau. wc had real winters." The Hastings Banner team te com- i ------------- ----------- — ■
thc original one about which the
almost spectacular, strides made al j age smoker pays io or 15 cents for
posed of Goody-ear. Hubbard. Under- Plrnly of room for the lures that t ad most of the Hastings colony, also
legislative policies represented by Grayling within the past few years I a package of cigarette* without giv&gt;.&lt;«■ &gt;■ ...... _ i.
_____ &lt;_
_
hoa.!. nt n^ir .null, itstrAV
j Mr. Crawford, an Eaton Rapids
no hl’.L McNeela ' anil H Cook The, Thc hearts of our youth astray.
Indiana
There hit, been a misunderstand­
bowhnu alleys at Hotel Barry arc Hut never a cent on a playground friend. Postal, from Mr.,. James ing concerning certain phase:! of thte
Of particular interest to many restthought to the fact that six electric L-iautcurist.
Until
wc
government on a wholesale program J Uenu her. u .he &lt;.« Ih.l emuder. c™'* “ “*
the finest in thte section cf thc state.'
spent.
; Radford tell of her arrival and that
‘S',’"V
view It with tbe unaided eye. we
—-------No. never a place to play!
they are revelling tn thc sunshine. infection. There te a scrum which,
... ,
.
eminent tn tax. even though he te
of competition with private enter- ‘ ..
shall
retuse
to
bellevo
that
a
however,
has not received the entire
able credit for thte achievement goes constantly reminded of it by the.
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
Mr*' Joljn Dawson who te on the
prise The court made it clear that
machine can chew cutn.
approval of thc persons qualified to
to Oscar Schumann. Grayling editor. I revenue stamp which he must break j
Saturday witnessed thc Inaugura-, Give them a chance for innocent southeast coast with h-r sister*,
its decision referred only to the par-1 who formerly lived here and worked' to obtain thc cigarettes.
tlon ol Charity Day by the Dorca.,
sport.
write* from Miami that thc days arc judge and which te obtainable on­
. ly through private sources such as
That term, “Neutrality Bill." Daughters Over $m wa* collected
them a chance for fun—
i not long enough to enjoy everything
Ucular case at hand, that other, lor several years on thc Banner. I No, rcv.cnuc stamps “dorn other
pharmaceutical manufacturers, ctp.
can’t refer to fire-cat Ing Senator Thc funds will be used lor charily . Better a playground plot than a} on their program.
projects of this nature would have
.
.,
,
„
,
। merchandise to remind him of taxes i Borah.
Certain accepted scrums and vac­
. Those who know O*car are mighty hlddPn ln the relaU
He d0CMVl
court
and without regard to dqiomlr.acourt
.
to be judged separately.
cines. like diphtheria antitoxin,
HOPE C ENTER.
.
glad to learn that his efforu to realize that »5 out of every $25 &lt; one- |
And a jail when thc harm is dune!
smallpox vaccine, tetanus vatnne.
If there's anything to tho tional lines.
Boiled down, thc Supreme Court
Oise them a chance—If you stint
No school for three wi*ekv School etc., are accepted by the Slate De­
, popularize winter sports have met dfth of thc moncyi he spends for
Station agent G, W
charge that mldweatcrn toutballdecision apparently says, for pur-j
them now.
will begin Tuesday' morning, Feb. partment of Health a.* valuable and
Middleville last Monday laid
... lhe
' with so much success. Thc terrain I
Tomorrow you'll have io pay
poses of .national defense, or navi­ around Grayling offers some of the],
IB.
approved remedies, and are used by
game*, that huddle gives them a first brick for the fine new passenger
Chp* McDermott is quite poorly at the physician with a feeling of se­
Motion
which
will
be
erected
by
thc
gation control, the National govern­
chance to brush up on "Sweet
best opportunities in-the lower pe-'i
So give them u chance to play
tills writing.
M. C there. Happy Middleville!
curity; lhc.sc arc distributed for the
ment has the right to build damn
Adelins "
nlnsula for such Sinns ax skiing.!
—Dent-, A. McCarthy
Mrs. Clare Ashby and daughter use of the physicians of thc stale on
A M Stecklr- informs us that hr
and sell whatever current may be
I-ouiw have gone to visit, her par­ Hie request of lhe physician.
was one nt the number who made
sledding, tobogganing, etc. one of I
generated from thc jiower plants,
food, clothing, necessities or lux- (
maple syrup during
thc warm an entertainment given by lhe la- rnta in Marshal).
The Tularemia scrum te not avail­
dies of thc M E church Mte-vs’ Chas Coble and
•* ’family
■ “ are going
‘
but this does not imply that lhe govu
u
. i uries goes for government spending
weather in January
able under these conditions; private
-nuiwnl h«, &lt;„
*’
The proposal of col Knox would ,
move soon from Will Seibel house lihysiclans who desire to use thc
'
L M Atkin*. *o:r of Mr and Mr.* Jone.*-. McElwain and George assist- ■'to
and It is reported that Mr. and Mrs. wnun would secure it through drug
Cha- Atkin* urnv d Thursday from cd on the program
Annapolis wh»7r lie rm* just grad­
Al til* nmr.e of the - bride's par­ K.irLG«tcs of Cloverdale will move। stores of pharmaceutical companies
private business where the elements i
। taxes, hte income tax and all otlicr
«.
uated with honor from tiie U S. ent* Thursday afternoon of last into the Seibel house.
Th** Barry County Health Depart­
1 -it r!d,rcc4 laxcs and reach hte first apMr*. Christie Schearer, and daugh­ ment te thc distributor for such vac­
of defense and navigation control ’ But if a man builds
N»\al Academy
He left Saturday week. Miss Belle Handy and Edward
a ijetf r predation Of ttie total amount he is
' for Butte. Montana, where ho will A. Burton, two prominent Hasting* ter Phyllis have gone to Kalamazoo cines and serums as are supplied by
are attaent
absent
■
{rap now jJC u w busv ‘
husv , jjaying to support the various rami­
^3*—
visit for a short tinv* He expects to young people, were joined in wed­ where Mrs. Scheares has employ­ thc Department of Health. This
Ths. TVA decision still leaves such making speeches that he never ha.*
'
' fleauons of government.
jmn tn,. North Atlantic squadron lock The ceremony was performed ment in a paper mill.
distribution is made to thc phy­
questions as land purchase, home time to make any more — Richmond
.............
1
I Asa conscience awakener. thesugMr. and Mrs. Milton Warner of sicians for their use; lhe Barry co.
glujj tclJirn spin.'
soon with lhe rink of a Midship­ by Rev Tho* Cox licforc relatives
, gestion of col KnoX would he ofbuilding, resettlement projcr’* ‘
■
and a (e*v intimate friends. An elab­ Kalamazoo spent Sunday with her physicians make excellent use of all
! man. —. .
FEBRUARY
J fective
The concealed tax is the
Loren McIntyre arrived Saturday orate lunchron followed and a re- parents. Mr and Mrs. Fred Ashby.
unanswered.
, *uch measures as arc available.
Clyde Leonard's father-in-law of
from Mts issippi lu attend the fu­ cepllon was heid from five to eight
Lace will be a feature of |he new father of government extravagance
, It h a deceptive tax that iorces the
Kalamazoo spent Sunday with Clyde PARENTS OF KINDERGAR­
neral of hte sister. Mrs. In-z M-'inA NEW SAFETY GLASS.
season's dance frocks, wc read From , consumer to pay and pay again with­
FIFTY YEARS AGO
and his wife. :
TEN PUPILS MEET.
lyre colwell
Scientist*, we read, lire new exper­ our experience on crowded floor* , It:, out knowing that he b. doing so He
Our
street.,
were
jam
lull
ol
people
Parents of the children in this
Mr and Mrs. J. T- I-ombard left
Spuuih rule, IWiimenting with a - one way" glass .’imply bound to catch on.—Humor­ , is entitled to know how much and.
ORANGEVILLE.
year's kindergarten groups met to­
Monday evening lor Cuba At New Saturday.
Hastings
now
has
a
lull
fledged
, uhat he is [xiying for.
which has the property of control­ ist.
Orleans they will be joined by Mr
Charlie Bourdo was quite ill thc gether Friday afternoon at the Cen­
. Unfortunately the government
and Mrs. J. R. Thompson oClron* ,-lgnal service station with John M. past week bul is belter at this writ­ tral school building. The meeting
Dig and srnoolhmg cut thc hellerBe.ssm*r in charge.
wood.
'
ing.
was an informal discussion of tho
And now some of our more emi­ i ..ponders arc also the law makers.
ikrlter paths ol light wave*. Nor
The Shakerpcre Club is a flour­
That probably preclude., the plac*
In the wrc;.tling match at Reed's
Quite a number of the school chil­ dental and medical examination
nent
educators
are
saying
that
ll
L&lt;
inc
.
f
are these studies merely Interesting
mg of the Knox suggestion into
hall la. t night Ed Sliclp of Bancroft ishing literary organization of this dren arc having the chickenpox this (srogram for tills year.
practical
u»e It should lie done
radical ii*e
abstractions. For poiaroid. a.. Hie permissible to end a sentence with a ;
won. tao falls and thc match (tom City The Club meet:, at thc rcsl- w«wk and arc out of school.
Every
Every child
child in
In lhe
lhe kindergarten
kindergarten
preposition.
dence of Mr.. Nathan Barlow each i Mr. and Mrs. C. L- Rupe and lit- grade group has lhe opportunity to
What is thte world । Exact knowledge of how much gov­
Tice Emory of thte city
new ^product te called can remove
„
c son of Otsego BI
,„ mr
no Mrs
'
ernment is costing each individual
He
and
Mr. „
and
Mrs. have a medical and dental examlnacxamlnaAn order was received from Char­ Monday evening
glare from automobile headlights coming to?—Los Angeles Times.
would not only effect sharp curtail­
Fred
Hotclikis*
will
octmpy
half
nllM
Boulter
of
Doster.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
tlon by their family physician and
lotte for 18 tickets lor th*: local tal­
cpitr-i. Dublin. N- H . U-’J
without destroying the effectiveness
What our ....................................
Government needs ... ! ment of government expense, but
ent play "A Secret Enemy" which is of thc Hendershot i store now used QCra|d RUpe an(j Jacqueline of Gun dentist without cost to the parent.
spcnt Sunday with their par- Such a service is possible through
of tho light--. ihem»elve.,. Think more pruning and less grafting — । better government would result.—
being given al Reed's Opera House b» M E Nevins after April 1st next,
i The Hartford Day Spring.
Mr and yrs j,(ar|an Rupe,
next Monday night by the Maccu- Thte will give Fred a neat and coin-1
lhe Barry County Health Depart­
what a boon thte will lx- to night'Brunswick 'Gai Pilot,
modipus place.
Mr and Mra Howvd Normao ment cooperating with lhe W. K.
• bees.
.
driving: of what it will mean in
—Friday last Charles W Jone.* was, 41K.nl gunday with her pa rents near Kellogg Foundation. All necessary
. Several Episcopalian;, from this
terms of reduction tn accidents
A traveler cla]R» thu’. he In.*
city went to Grand Rapids Wednes­ 27 years old. That evening 60 or Nei,iey
dental care, which will be noted at
caused by lhe blinding glare ol ap- ,0’lnd ,he world's large ,I palm W&lt;*
Not much news Uda week aa the time of examination will be
NEWS GLEANINGS.
day jo willies* thc consecration of more of hte friends Invaded hte
preaching hcadlighU This glas»j,ancy we know ,hc hotrl l&gt;orlcr ,lfcs
the Bisho|&gt;teoadjutor to Bishop Gil­ home in hte absence and gave him | |l8ftr]y everyone is busy shoveling done. If parents are able to pay for
Statistics show’ that out of every
a genuine surprise. As tokens of Know Mmead of visiting or going dental care for their children they
iuu been thoroughly tested and ; rc^errlne l° —Humorist.
11.000
lespie—Rev. John McCormick.
,
1.000 arrivals
arrivals on
on this
this plane
plane 514
514 are
are
their cateem they prewnted him places
.
are expected to do so. Children
many traffic apcciaUsU predict that,
boys*
with two. -books
of poems and
a '
--------------11
FORTY YEARS AGO
—----------------------.------------------------.
------needing dental care whose families
this glass will soon be included as
u&gt;cs'n
w*r 15 ^’Indian t
.--------- —
• . "i
Sunday night was one bf the cold- beautiful
atoum and hte mother „
gate I George
---------Adc says newspapers - are unable to pay for lhe work, will
3^,3,,,) h,,,!..-,.,,,
..
again.” says a writer. Now if we; Of lhe 200W000 pairs of hoes
.
...
*
| nowadays
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
e;t of lhe season. ..
Hie ..
thermometers
him a .handsome
study
gown
| nowadays do everything but wind be taken care of through the Barry
"Maturity is by no means wholly registering all the way from nine to
There was quite a dispute over j
dock and tend thc beby. thereby County Health Department.
The
.
.
! a matter of year*."
—A below
Lawrence
vLhn;,-------------------('”?. '* ;"»
(opening
likely «•=•«
field v&lt;
of jvmohiiuuc
journalistic .latter pan
pert ai
of me
lhe i»rcm
parent garnering
gathering
eighteen
zero
TTSTI— iT*5 \°t j'T.'L
”•••&gt;•«,»a ■••=*/
—t:--—
......... ■,
,,
.
-----------I Lowell
The C. K A* 8 morning train the
ladies.. aid railroad
fund. It
—Omaha World-Herald,
spent watenina
watching inoruig
moving pwsMreS
pictures
---- -----.
.. was |kenterprise.
..lv.F,„,—
vruoM-rwaaiu. . wax open,
, ,
I Doughnuu came ■ ■ r • ■ the May-rolled Into Hastings over two hour.* £»** unrferxtandfcia that
inunderstand*^
ease the I
-------------- the
- - -------------—• denial
-•------ • care and• motion
------- -•
anlst in
promoting
safely
is , Government and~
our
that
in
cose
----------------about
plcbig buslne.K’co-; ..
fiU*£r
me .PUgiiais
1
-------»
.... —
Earned' to
"I•-never
have run myself -------out I
railroad
failed, —
the -------funds]
■n
lc
jp invc*l »
te when
the
lure* u*ed
In umming
teaching new
health ______
habits
woNhy of a trial.
late. It look two engines and a lol r,
—-—. projrc.
--- ---------,
a„„
w
wmeu m
&gt;e .«.«»
u.*ra M1
operate Now all they need I* the cb-1make
—■-- in Holland!
■
them
' always have something left when it's of
_ ________
„ enuld
ku^ ite
. ibearish
—...jj
___ _______
"-*es------------ ■• *"
work tow...............
get through the _big
could he
tee used tar
tor street lamps. Hut ....
public
and thinks -bst
that l;;
In the
lhe el=i
elementary
grade*.
operation oi
of i»c
the cam
cash customer.
customer.—
—
drills
near
Milo.
”
”
'
if
ths
ladies
prefer
to
purchase
win
nerer'
reTurn
”
'*
“
*
c‘
c
“
w,
“
w&gt;
‘
it
y
t
*™
UB
'
--------vAi.
utnr—, —,
|vp««wun
,
over."—Clarence DeMar
drifts near Milo.
If the ladies prefer to purchase jood business will never return.' ----------------- - t «- ■
■■ .. ’
flees devastated more than
YOU CAN NEVER TELL.
; j.. . . . -nme*
Forest fires
_____
Times.’
R. M Bates te spending a few days book:, for thc library. Hint 'will be | Reger w. Babson.
.
The solutions of our problems
You can never tell U* science Juul I Los Angelas
B
43,000.000 acres in Hie U. S. last! "War is a racket I know, because ।
------------ . »«&gt; -------------are to be found. I think, in a return
where the theoretical leaves ofl and
..
&lt;
■
I’ve been in it for thirty-five years." at thc Agricultural Collego. Lansing, entirely satisfactory to thc Banner.;
' Mis
Misses laji
Lois
The
running
"Only by disarmament .can
simple taiui.
faith, simple iwncaiy
honesty *na
and
—— g
— .- W
n Lowry.
Mzwry. mimci
*
&gt; *** croqiict factory is ........
... lhe to inupuwiwre wiMwnKu leases on ana
Wanted: A new name for a coin,
cold
-— —
—Gen. Smedley D BuUer
Marshall.
Bessie George. Sara with
.... but ..
few hands
..... .....
and
..........
short
... .. lime.
......... , .,-------prace--and
----- progress
- ---------of ---lhe world
--------------and simple credit. Surely utwt,
man. BIUtM
aided and
lhe practical begins.
wave.
wave"
Thc whole Bible has been pub_______
wave. Somehow
Somehow lhe
lhe word
word "wave"
A D.
~ Cook ha* ----------’----------Uu* national -----*•- A.
secured’ •*
the
*crv-]the
security
of each --------------coun- guided
by divine ------providence,
can
A teamed dreamer by the name ol suwesu a wraiancnt-Rociie^r ]*£he&lt;l ln 175
the New, • We women do talk too much, but Jones. Mary McElwain and Frank
ini.n Brock uo- assistant in try be truly promoted. —Norman H. devise rolutioiu to meet all our
Voila, for example whited away Ttenes Union
iwciicszcr. Testament in 374. and portions in , even tlien w. dont tell half
„ Dilbuhncr and Jason McElwain were ices nt
of John
vwm. tor example, wiuicu away Time»-Union.
954 languages in all.
know."—Lady Astor.
In Nashville Friday night to attend hte grocery.
Davu.
problems."—Lord Macmillan.
w7.“kL("7

It is incumbent upon every'’

~TcA^AL
IlfiBOfZ 1

A Quotation

r&gt;1„„

V*

‘-iHcf....................

W/ir

Way of Our World ■

Crumbs of Wisdom

xnJ

1 Backward Glances;
|
Bits of Yesterday

4

�TUF 1U1TIMO* RAMMER. TVUBUUY, FEMtUART M, IBM

SUPERVISORS'
PROCEEDINGS

I BATTLE CREEK PREXY

ctirutt ‘te msS^aut |

Stea
sa..’«Wte w.
Io lhe &lt;v»nly Irepw'tf' ®«l&lt;» &gt;» !*’•«

ADDRESSES STUDENTS

Dlikvrs*

* KI I! Compares Laggards to Beans

I HI

JANUA1T S11SIPX COXTTXPXD
n&gt;rn*z&lt;^«*lT r«rt II
lU.llr-

•
' Dr EmU Leffler, president of the
1
Battle Creek College, gave an Intar -------- 1’ estlng talk at high school assembly
, 0!f----' on Thursday. February 12. on avoid____ Ing self-pity. He stressed thc fact
• i.ooooo that too many people pity them­
selves and feel that luck Ls against
them and that they, never "get a

। Court Ihue uig •

®sF3&amp;

Dr. Leffler then developed lhe
theme that people succeed in school
and In life according to what they
deserve, not according to luck. He
ass hs UM.(j a forceful Illustration, cornpar­
Ing people to beans and walnuts tn

a . .”

Wii’Tirraviws

resenting those people who won't
worjt and use their talents In school
and In life, are put on top and the
71 walnuts, representing the workers
ti aruf industrious people, are put on
-ae 1.1' ‘he bottom of this glass jar. Then
*
those who pity themselves, the bean*.
say that things are not as they
should be. But as Um glass jar. rep­
resenting life. Is shaken by lhe var­
ious events of the world. Uie beans.
। Inevitably sink to the bottom where
। they belong and the walnuts come
। to the top. So In life every time.
Isays Dr. Leffler, despite "pair and
luck and the breaks, the workers
I come out on top. He advised stu­
dent* not to worry if they are called
*'nuU" for doing hard work.
The applause at the close of Dr.
Leffler's talk Indicated that thia was
i one of lhe most enjoyed asuemblies

Rs
Holl call:

until unrllilrlr n'rlnck.

—Success Due to Work
—Mot to Luck

lleleure uB bead 13 .11 3*.
p»i&lt;

FRANDSEN'S STO

offers Some Vnusi
Values in Dress*
Excellent quality Cotton Dresaes for

$ ■

house and street year. Many styles

|!

and sizes, 14 to 54. Perfect fitting
and fast color. Price—

H
To h&gt;U4

STREET AND PARTY DRESSES
Made from washable crash, blister
crepe, Shantung, sanforized broad­
cloth, floral prints and small conven­
tional patterns, all well tailored and
perfect Atting. '

I—
Tax Included

SEE OUR "FORMFIT" FOUNDATION CAB MINTS
NEW SPRING STYLES

Cinderella Dresses
Smart, New Silk Frocks

exciting excerpt from "One Mad
ncr r.o- Night." the Junior play, which has
since been postponed.

!

.
|
,
.
■.42 ’.&lt;&gt;
»■»«•««
II ■‘.Ou

Waters Clothes Shop

A COMPLETE

I SO Ofl

EFFECTS OF ZERO . WRATH ER.
The severe cold weather has been
felt in thc south as well as in this
part of the country. It is expected
to result In a considerable decrease
In thc early potato and onion production of the south. That will
work to thc advantage of Michigan
producers of these vegetables.
But another effect of sub-zero
temperatures will bcncill the south
and hurt Michigan. The bitter cold
weather of February, it is claimed
lias destroyed most of the peach
buds and will certainly cut the peach
crop short in this state. That will
be true also of Illinois and Missoutl.
It Js not believed that the weather
has been cold enough to harm the
peach buds in Georgia orchards, so
that slate will benefit.

OBITUARY.
flattie J Hopkins was bom tn
Erie Co. Ohio. August 2. 1857. and

tings February 4. 1936. aged 78
years. 6 months and 2 days. She wax
married to Delos Hopkins April 5.
1873.
Her husband passed away
Juna 12. 1030. To this union flve
1 children ware bom. one daughter
" '
। passing away in early infancy. She
leaves io mourn her four children.
William of Hastings. David J. of
Kalamazoo. Leon O of Shepard and
Daisy Manning of Battle Creek, one
eximi stster. Sarah Steen of Sandusky.
। Ohio, one brother. Charles Nodine
of Minnesota, seven grandchildren,
three great-grandchildren and a
host of friends and neighbors.
She was a most kind and loving
mother and always devoted her life
• tn h"r children. She has been an
earnest Christian since early life
and was a member of thc Methodist
Episcopal church In Hastings. She
nil that Hi
will be greatly missed by all who
i continued on page six)
. knew her.

Dress Shirt
Health Fund

SERVICE!
For men who appreciate

style and proper fit.

Sizes 12 to ol and Half Sizes, al

M3K.U • MGU.8

FRANDSEN'S
'‘Exclusive, but not expensive”

PHONE 2504

HASTINGS

FORD Leads
Ilitltate Fund.

IXS SO

THE NEW
FLEXTON COLLARED

i St; at

Mack Shirts

In both car and truck registrations for 1935

Look At
These Values I

as furnished by R. L. Polk &amp; Co., Detroit

Condition of E R A Fund

Ear Spring arc here!

Sizes from

13’/j

to

19

32

io

35

Sleeves from

Registrations In United States
Ford

Chevrolet

Plymouth

Cars

826,519

656,698

382,895

Trucks and
Commercials

185,848

167,129

61,488

For EASY Gear Shifting

Ask for
No. 880
A pure white broad­
cloth shirt. Flexion col­
lar attached.
Entire
shirt sanforised shrunk.

SUNOCO
TRANSEP

SUNOCO

It remain* fluid in extrema cold, permit*
gears to shift easily and auurn instant, tale
lubrication. Recommended for trammisaions

Ford
Car* .

Your car needs SPECIAL ATTENTION in order to give ■
maximum performance during the winter months- Drive ;
Into pur station and lot us keep your car “winter serviced."

ANDRUS SERVICE f

Main Cw
-nd Court
Owl
Dhnna 441(1
Cur. JtOarwn and
rtlvllv 4L^U 8U, Hastings, Michigan

Clothes Shop

BdlUrta. WlaShMd Wla»

RFGUi Ak

• Sunoco Ga» and Oils.
• Vulcaaixlng. Electric,

BLUE

Sunoco

___

Trucks and
Commercials___

(Extreme Pressure) or regular gear lubricant

fl net I ihirt value any-

WATERS

Woodbury s Facial Soap 3 bars 25c
CHERRIES Northwood, Sour 2 coni 19c

Registrations In Michigan

*****
--*^’

Chevrolet

72,074

36,164

8,961

6,293

Plymouth
18,484
DODGE Trke. A Coal.

2,663

Registrations In Barry County
Ford
Cara ......
Trucks and
Commercials

Chevrolet

171

146

30

30

Plymouth
48
DODGE— Tiki. A Co tel.

2 lbs. 25c

PORK LOIN ROAST ms «■■“&gt; lb. 21c
HAMBURGER Fresh Ground
2 Ibi. 29c

HAM ENDS
BEEF ROASTS

Boned. Boiled

BRANDED BEEF

ECK-RICH BACON

&gt;/2 lb.

10

Greasing
Washing

vjr

tall can 7c

PET MILK

KING NUT OLEO

Ford World Sales for 1935—1,311,927

ELDPAUSCH
Phon

lb. 19c
lb. 27c

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THVRWAY. FEBRUARY 3*. 1938

New

PROCEEDINGS

Books In
Public Library

COUNTY SCHOOLS

worse game, the net result will be
three days exile for Old Iffy's coun­
try cousin In those three days he
will cut out paper dolls and try to
amUse himself as best he can.
However, he la putting lhe boys on
a merry-go-round this week and IF
they don! get dizzy and fall off.
they will be in the pink of condi­
tion. The merry-go-round play
which U the basic reason for lhe
I aforementioned drilling U sure-fire,
and unless the men keep on think­
ing they are Yankee Doodle on a
wooden horse, tiie Charlotte men
: will lose lhe game
j And now old Iffy's country cousin
I will convene with the business end
; of a snow shovel and try to get lids
I pert little note to Uie-editor before
the Sunday edition is run off.

FSporting Items ll

GET BIG BOOST1- - - - - - - - - - - - -

Fiction.
(Continued from page one)
Johnston
McCulley — Riders
Against lhe Moon.
No. 3 Cedar Creek Dist. ..
133
Hoffman Birney—A Stranger in
No. 4 Hinds Dist
124
Black Butte
No. 8 Shultz Dht
111
Margaret Pedler — The Shining
No. 7 frl. Brush
Ridge
Cloud.
800RIN0 SPREE IN LAST
Dist..................................
11 isa
Max Brand—Happy Jack
No. 9 Cloverdale Dist ....
57
HALF ACCOUNTS FOR
Alice Marie Dodge — Sunshine
T OO
Irving Township.
Acres.
31 TO 12 WIN
No 2 frl. Cobb Dial*
Phil 8long—Career.
No. 3 Wbod DiLt
■
■
Ethel M Dell — Where Three
No. 4 frl. Jones Dist
RESERVES MAINTAIN
Roads Meet
No. 5 Ryan Dtst
131
Louise plait Hauck—The Little
WINNING STREAK
No. 6 Brew Dist
125
Doctor.
A
No. 7 Fillmore Dial.
P. O. Wodehouse—Luck of the
Charlotte Basketeer* to Moet
No. 9 frl. Freeport
406
12 .-.fl
Bodkins.
No.
10
Pleasant
Hill
Dist
.
Bcnnettmen
on Local
Frances Shelley Wees—It Began
No 12 frl. Little Brick
in Eden.
Court Friday
Dist
Anthony Abbot—About the Mur­
The High school baskeleers made
Johnstown Township.
der of n Startled Lady.
It two in a row last Friday nlvht
Fcw person., can change their
IIOOO
No. LKing Dist*
Alexander Woollcott—The WooliNo. f frl. Parker Dist
when they overtook the Outgo five plac„ of rwidence without, as a
cott Reader.
0,1 'he** ow7
31 lo ,3\.1
■ matter of routine, notifying certain
No. 4 Stevens Dist
I■
I.
A.
R
Wylie
—
Furious
Young
Srt-Maud* "
in no
1 The first half gave no indication commercial firms with which dealNo. 5 frl. Bristol Dist
.
Man.
of a.. one-sided
the Bennettln&lt;8
No. 8 Banfield Dist
- score
—• as
---------ingi or
or accounu
accounts arr
are maintained.
mainiainra. /
Mr. Harry Pugh Smith—Jewels
I men led the
• .few ..
------ of• tiie first frame with a
ai 8-4.
8-4 —
jutatlvely
licensed. drivers
No. 7 Cutler Dist
For His Crown.
I| score.
.enre Tiie
The OUego
Otsecn men came
eama back’ molor vehldea U1 lhe 1Ute have evtr
No. 8 frl Fick Dist
SO W«.l Pt
Clarence Day—Life With Father.
;
in
the
second
Quarter
and
scored
1
No. 9 Bullis Dist
JI M*'* .
| feallMd that the same law which
Harold Titus—Black Feather.
three
points
to
lead
the
local
lads.
No. 11 Burroughs Dist. ...
107
requires that they be licensed also
E P. Oppenheim—Floating Peril.
12 !Mii.« hrolh»r. E»
1 However, the Hastings crew came stipulates that they must nqfliy the
Faith Baldwin—The Moon's Our
Maple Grove Township.
! to life in the last few seconds of Department of State ••Immediately"
Home.
No. i frl Quailtrap Dist. . .*
. the second quarter .to lead 8-7
of any change In residence address.
R. A- J. Walling—Corpse in the
No. 2 Maple Drove Center
The local five took the floor in Notification is made through local
Crimson Slippers
Dist
the third quarter and scored six police and sheriff's headquarters;
Courtney R. Cooper—Poor Man's
No. 2 frl. Mayo Dist
' points. They played their air-tight these officials have proper notifica­
Gold.
No. 3 frl. Moore Dist. .. .♦.
defensive game and blanked their tion forms.
Nordhoff and Hall—The HurriNo. 4 frl. Dunham Dist. ..
1 opponents in lhe third quarter with
I Hatt Brews
The 1031 licensing statute pro­
cane.
No. 5 Norton Dist
57
a 14-7 score The last quarter was vides that failure . to have any
Lucille
Papin Borden—White
No. 8 McKelvey Dist
20
l a last and furious tussle with both change of address recorded in the
Hawthorn.
No. 7 frl. Branch Dist
teams
to keen. thc ball movF'reeman Wills Crofts—Loss of the
.
..trying
..
. .
UttaKHlAM II1KIIIIC*
prescribed
manner limy
may w
be uuuac
cause iui
for
No. 8 Belgh Dist
n.8;. IJ?s,lnK8 Mcorcd *$ven.
I revocation or suspension of an opJane Vosper. .
Orangeville Township.
wliilp Otsego
rTssj.frex was
u*ns able
nhlis to
tsi chalk
c-riniK up
lift erator
..... ■’s or. ciiauffeur's
&gt;.»&lt;&lt;■license.
while
Clarissa F. Cushman—The Bright
No 2 Faulk Dist$
109 . four.
The Department of Slate has been
Hili.
No. 3 Orangeville Dist. ... 241
I
Angell led the Bcnnettmen in unable, on many occasions, to fur­
Kathleen
Moore Knight—Clue
No. 4 Blake Dist
102
nolnts with four field goals for a nish the correct home address of li­
of the Poor Man’s Shilling.
No. 5 frl. Gun Lake DUl. .
13 ‘ total of eight points. Gibson and censed operators In this state when
Kenneth Roberta—Il
Must Be
Fowler
shared high honors for lhe the appeal for aid in locating people
Prairieville
Township.
Your Tonsils.
•RESSEY.
Otsego flve with two field
" '' goals
'
No. 2 Milo Dirt.»
53
sought was for the purpose of noti­
A Kipling pageant.
apiece.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Boniface are
No. 3 frl. Prairieville Vil­
fying friends or relative* of injuries
Irvin 8. Cobb—Speaking of Op­
I
The
line-uns
were:
it 75 ' the parents of a son born at Borgess erations.
lage Dist
342
or even death. “Missing'' persons
hosnitai Feb. 10
Hastings (21)
Otsego (121 have been sought In thc records of
No. 4 frl. South Pine Lake
Harrlette
R. Campbell—String
Dist
i Gladstone
Gibson thc Department of State by relatives
There has been no school In our Glove Mystery.
Crothers
district for lhe past week and a
No. 7 Calkins Dist
Thompson who knew that the person sought
59
Eugene Cunningham—Pistol Pass­
half on account of the severe cold port.
No. 10 frl. Cressey Dist. .
Fowler
13 . Ransom
I1”*"' l was a licensed automobile driver in
RO.
and blocked roads
1 Ansell
Schuyc.r h '! Mlchl8an
In unsuccessful cases.
Rutland Township.
Non-Fiction.
WnUHnrff (C)
Mrs D Enzian fell Saturday in­
Stetler । fadure to locate lhe inl&amp;slng person
No 1 Algonquin Lake DUt*
Frederick porter Wensley—Forty
juring her rleht arm ouite seriously.
1
Substitutions:
Hastings
—
Ironside.
-nn«
m ।i WM attributable only to negligence
No. 3 Chidester Dist
'
Kelly
Hineklc..
Bernier
«ml
SJru.
I
„„
„„
„„ operator „
Mr and Mrs. Clav Barber visited Years of Scotland Yard.
No 4 Tanner DLit
on the part of the
to „„
file
98
Alan C. Collins, ed.—Story of
relatives at Richland Sundav.
'
OWTO-avUllm. end Leleb- I h„ ch„„
eddreee-vtenevce
No. 5 frl. OHs Dist
Mr. and Mrs Murle Reynolds and America in Pictures,
tr*,
nivie.1.!
Black. tvuuiniuAw
Kalamazoo1 niacle
made—
—with thc
’
~
ton.
Official.
Liava.
No. 6 Edger DLst
Department ”of
Mark
Sullivan
—
Our
Times,
the
son of West Lake spent Saturday
state
No. 7 frl. Good Will Dbt .
40 I College.
Twenties.
.
night and Sunday with Mr. and
• In a preliminary game the HasT
hcl
There
are many Instances in
Thoniapple Township.
Leslie Crump—Directing For the
IM. wood •Mwr* came ihroueh | whlch
„oly m|un
.u persons
or
Mrs. Lee Reynolds.
which badly
Injured
persons can
can be
Township unit school ... 84.453
Mr. and Mrs ch'de Kine are the Amateur Stage.
S ’."‘'J!™"'
«’lf
Idenllfled only bv lhe name, on
Clifford Cook Furnas—The Next
Woodland Township.
narenL, of a daughter. Zelda Belle,
??• ’• ,«“» "ld
,h»ve lhe
a„„„.
tal
thc
Hundred Years.
Township unit school . . . *2.462
born Jan. 28.
a
tIUS &gt;,one td,fl
addresses are wrong delays in more
Maurice Leven—America's Ca­
e»dSL--u;n. b“l .bowed a hel ve
lw
|d,nun?auon are exYankee Spring* Township.
The C S C. to be held with Mrs.
No. 1 frl. Gates Dist. * 36
(Ojeiul ^ eook .mln led hU male, j p„towcd
0[
Chas. McNulty has been postponed pacity To Consume.
i perienced and In some cases. of
E G. Nourse—America's Capacity
No. 3 frl. Yankee Springs
until next month.
with elahl baxkela lor a loul ol coUrse. ll Is Impossible ever to Irsee
To
Produce.
Dist
128
, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hartman vislt16 point*, while Berry led the Ot- the residence.
Harold
Glenn
Moulton
—
Forma
­
No. 4 frl. Robbins Dist. ..
74
1 ied his father. Chris Hartman, at
sego underdogs with two/baskets j state Department officials advise
l tlon of Capital.
rpclton. Sunday.
that
licensed chauffeurs
,
A . ।“
“l all
*“--------------ebauKeurs and op­
I Harold Glenn Moulton—Income GAVE
------ DISTINGUISHED
---------------------------I The local fans will be pleased to iera
—tor,
--------—•- their .home
-----------addresses
uj—Lcheek
j and Economic progress.
SERVICE IS WORLD WAR. know that ChsHoH. lbV.de. lhe : ^■■ihvVtaJs.T'll'^m^
on their licenses. It requires o.'tS'.'
only a
Mme. Tatiana Tchernavin—We
I Mr. and Mrs. Rolle BnlUnn allend&gt;';«« This prom,„onw„u lo pr„^,ly „cord lhe
’ Soviet Women
rd Use Ilmend ol her uncle. Robert !“*“*,
ll?1’ comet address and any subsequent
Eleanor Farjeon—Portrait of a i
SiS: [ cbwK. .bleb m.,^ made.
Family.
[Benton Harbor last week. Mr Cook
Gilbert Townsend—Carpentry.
had many acquaintances in Barry
Margaret Deland—If This Be I.
county having been born in Cale­
Julian Dana—Sutter of Califor­
donia. where his parents. Mr. and
SPEAK AT DELTON
nia.
Mrs Robert Cook, reside.
Wm. Longyear—How
aiaxe
Mr Cock who
wllll Co A
Garden Pools.
Landscape Architecture Is
1131st infantry in the world war as
i Elizabeth O. MacOibbon—Man- । sergeant had a record few Michigan
Topic for Discussion at
ners in Business.
i soldiers equal, being one of three In
t O. H. Watt—Terriers. Working our state to be awarded the distlnCommunity Club
Old Iffy's country cousin made the
, . be sure io send your clothes to the cleaners.
Dogs. Sporting Dogs. Hounds, Non- । gulshed service cross.
Prof. O. I. Gregg, specialist in
.'ta’ement that the high school var­
I Sporting Dogs. Toy Dogs.
Cold germs lurk in the fabrics of your clothing and
I Two other orders conferred on sity looked like a winning team, and landscape architecture, from Mich­
Richard
Halliburton
—
New
Worlds
in many cases start a cold ail over again. Be safe
him for valor under fire were the
igan State College, will address the
' To Conquer.
n.. ICrolx dc ouerre. and thc American nated a game to Lakeview in a fu­ Community Club in Delton on
Wm.
’
11
inslnt ■■
lhe Qrd„ o,
tile effort to make a prevaricator out Tuesday evening. February 25. ac­
will “germ-proof” them.
Equator.
I He was given a full military fu­ of the old master-minder, but cording to a recent announcement
1 Lowell Thomas—Untold Story of
neral by the Twin City V. F W. utralghlened up in the next two by Harold J Foster. Barry County
Exploration.
post, with members from Chlcagb games and marched to victory.
« Agricultural Agent.
• Walter Duranty—I write As I and other cities attending.
Prof. Gregg has made land­
Friday night they scale lhe high­
I Please.
nrAhkL-TH. amdhhr. ' Sgl Cook *“ “ man highly rcscape planting plans for a consid­
' W. A
Brooks—The SlpdenL, ?arded ln lhe business world, pop- est peak of their inarch when they
PHONE 2146
WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER
meet charlotte here. They started erable number of Barry county
I Handbook.
r
ular. and much revered by ail who
the season out with a victory over homes during the past few years.
NASHVILLE PHARMACY.
J™,,,
„ ,pptndklU1 their worthy rivals on the charlotte Many of these plans have been car­
floor and are In no position to lose. ried out and add a great deal to
A CO-PARTNERSHIP, operation of especially severe nature. Old Iffy's country cousin is predict­ thc appearance of those farm
! On Monday a certificate of to- ’ His wife and a daughter survive, ing a victory for the local five, but homes. The plantings also increase
partnership was filed with the also his parents, who by his death has his fingers crossed when he does the enjoyment of the farm home
[ county clerk for lhe Nashville arc deprived of their last surviving It. because Charlotte has been dis­ and will aa materially increasa thc
Pharmacy. The members of the; child.
playing some flashy basket ball at value of tha farm.
| partnership are Boyd L. Stockford I
----------------- »
F6r the post few years people
times. Hastings showed a very slow
, of Lake Odessa. William B. Vander I "Our difficulties are from within, offense in last Friday night's game around Delton have shown an in­
Veen and Donald H Vander Veen, not from without, and in that very and that is the main reason for the terest In this work and have re­
both of Mason. All three partners fact lies lhe hopefulness of our finger-crossing act.
quested Prof. Gregg's services in
| will move to Nashville and conduct problems, because thc cure lies in
il o subnormal weath­
IF Charlotte plays their best game making planting plans for certain
the business there.
j our own hands."—Lord Macmillan.
Mr Foster has scheduled
and Hastings plays a medium or homes
er condition. You mutt
this meeting with the Community
Club to further explain tiie work
and crystallize lhe interest Into a
during these times.
definite landscape leason course for
Don't let your physical
tiie Community to run through next
condition get
winter.
.
The Tuesday evening meeting Is
open lo the public. Prof. Gregg
will demonstrate with a built-up
canvas or picture the genera) prin­
. It is so UNNECESSARY, os with a very little care
ciple* he use* in farm landscape
and expense, combined with the wonderful prices we
plans. The meeting Tuesday eve­
ning will also afford an opportunity
ore offering ot our
for people to ask Prof. Gregg in­
dividual questions regarding plans
he has made for them In lhe past

12357830

i Notify Dept, of

Change of Addrew

KROGER STORES
Stock Up Week Values
Cream Cheese «uu&gt; n&gt;u. rt»vo» a. 19c
Tuna Fish K«nruoin&gt;iai 2
23c
Pink Salmon
— 11c
Jell-o Ba DELICIOUS FLAVOB3 3
Pancake Flour WHIZ 5
19c
HIGHEST QUALITY

Macaroni or
Fancy Rice
Fresh Bread

3

Spaghetti

25c

BLUE BOSE
COUNTBY CLUB

Ih. tool

QC

4 Si 29c
4
29c

Pet Milk
Raisins summaid-seedless
(IBRADIATED)

BAABAAA AMM

Tomato Soup

5

23c

2

23c

3
4

25c
29c

FANCY QUALITY

Whole Shrimp
OVAL - TOMATO
OB MUSTARD

Sardines
Tomatoes

good quautt

AVONDALE - RED SOUB PITTED

rot pies
Cherries
3
Cherries CHOCOLATE COVEBED
SLACK
Salada Tea

Mo. S

P»&gt;0

29c
25c
33c

% lb. pkg. 17c

10-ot. pkg.

10c

3

bar*

14c

*“•
pkgs.

25c

large can

57c

Graham Flour

5

17c

Buckwheat Flour
BLUE BOW
Syrup

5
5

19c
29c

Corn Meal

5

19c

10 MULE TEAM
Borax
Palmolive Soap
BEEF THAT SCHOOLGIBL COMFLEX1ON

•&gt;

Super Suds
DOUBLE TOUB MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
(Small Can 31e)
Ovaltine
Jewel Coffee rotd*™
OLD FAS IP OPED

Doggie Dinner
Ken-L-Ration, Sandy*
or Pard Dog Food
MILLERS DOG FOOD

SPOT DOG OR CAT FOOD

GOLDEN YELLOW
ih.
5c
Bananas
SEEDLESS
4 &lt;•* 19c
Grapefruit
Fancy Apples
4
25c

BOX BONES - BOX WINESAFS - BOX DELICIOUS

Csillif lower labge snow white heads
Oranges
caufobnu seedless
19c
FLOBIDA JUICY 8 lb*. **c

Sweet Potatoes

10c

NANCY HALLS

McCREERY’S DRY CLEANERS

TEN BELOW
ZERO

BELOW NORMAL

Hastings Commercial Club

FAIR

BIRTHDAY SALE

You con remoin healthy and comfortable throughout
the winter. . . . Check the iterns you may need and then
get them the first time you ore in the store.

Yeast Tablets
Aspirin
Shampoo
Cough Syrup
Orderlies
Cold Cream
Water Bottles
Milk of Magnesia
Glycerine
Rubbing Alcohol Hand Lotion

ANNOUNCING

MI-31

Quality Meats
COMTBOLLED QUALITY BEEF
MEATY TEMDEB CUT!

Fancy Red Salmon

27c

Smoked Picnics

19c

»u&gt;au*&gt;

Boiled Rib Roast

Link Sausage

- 25c
ir

Smoked Liver Sausage

»■ 29c

ABMOUB1 STAB

23c

whole fnm i yOU Can f°ke
'xhibit merchM!rchon,s
Spring
a
chandise fnr

tolerraun
-"'rre'^ “

X*1'"9

See Large Bill for Hundred* of Other Bargain* and
Detail* of the Contest.

offered every
brues *dl be
Fa,r will h» L ®^n'n9- The

‘"-■’''•KO,

^'t,^

28c

*

^no*n os th. o C,ub' lobe
C/ub Fo°s"29s c“°nd^-",n3soH'r
* r«l fai, ^h'hln ond frolic

to sec. a
*11
'rK ond sevcC,, ,SS,on *11 be

CONTBOLLED QUALITY BEEF

ABMOUB'g (TAB

Iffy's CountryCousin
Rises to Remark —

Have You a Cold?

Coming, Mar. 25 to 28

Fresh Produce

Pot Roast

An ounce of prevention is
worth a pound of cure."

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
THE REXALL DRUGGISTS
Hastings
Phone 2131
Michigan

"’“"'I'Hod
Com' n°» * Hostin9s
* ..’.’'" '■’"■'.■A..

COW TESTER'S REPORT.
John Foster, tester for the Barry
County Dairy Herd Improvement
Association, has made his report
for the month of January. Jesse Os­
good and Sons of Cloverdale had the
highest tested herd, sixteen regis­
tered Holstein cows which produced
an average of 1345 pounds of milk
and 48.7 pounds of butter fat. Mar­
shall Pierce of Hastings was next
with his ten registered and grade
Holstelns with an average pt 1025
pounds of milk and 39.2 pounds of
butter fat. The high cow for the
month was a mature grade Guern­
sey. owned by Bernard Peck. Johns­
town. which produced 1298 pounds of
milk and 88.7 pounds of butter fat.

662 pounds of milk and 2G 7 pounds
of butter fat. in the mature cows.
Jesse Osgood and Sons registered
Holstein was second, producing 1934
pounds milk and 67.7 pounds butter
fat. Highlands Dairy was third with
• -a grade Holstein producing 1605
pounds of milk and 642 pounds but­
ter fat.
•Price* have shot up even where
wages and materials have not been
affected, and that is not right."—
Henry Ford.

I have won every argument I ever
had with myself

PRO

�TU HASTINGS HANNS*. TBUBRDAY. FtBMDAMT M, UM

Program featured

Social Events and Personal Mention

SNOWBOUND—A PRESENT
'
DAY SAGA.

COMING CENTENNIAL

On the ninth of February nineteen
thirty-six.
several families, from
were in quite a fix.
Teachers Presented Events Vermontville
TheV liarl iWen tzk th*
rtti Ratin Early History of
urday night, but stayed until Mon­
day
not
because
they were tight
This City
The wind and the snowman came
On Tuesday evening live HasUngs with plenty of mow. the thermome­
Teachers' Club had a very interest­ ter dropped to fourteen below; thc
ing meeting featuring early life tn roadmen did all tn their power to
Hastings, which served as a begin­ help, but we finally decided to go
ning for the observance of the Has­ and see Joe. We stayed night* with
tings-Barry Centennial by liw city Hine*. Davis. Lowe. OOOk. Jemke.
schools.
-iisr™, wjwbujwu™. |
S*“ui

SOME REMARKS ABOUT
CROWNING QUEENS
People Believe the
_
_
•
Country la Overrun
With Royalty

Some
_

iMimjsi

IF* SUCCESS

Mrs J.ohn Brass tfas in Grand
Mrs John Armbruster relumed CENTRAL P. T. A.
Rapids on Monday.
Saturday from Ann Arbor where she
■upt. D. A VanBusklrk is in Lan- htd been to see har new grandMET THURSDAY P. M.
Gov Fitzgerald not being at the
IJncoln Club banquet in Grand ceived.
sing today on bculpto.
nmwri
w*.
1 Ml“ Je*n 8i«d«e returned from
RapUls was that someone ohoved
wZuAnT 1
D k I D^rolt Thursday and leaves today Baaiceig Session Followed
ffext he introduced the guests
him his picture taken the day be­
Rapids over the week end.
uk- g courae
ycrTi* institute,
by Program of Music
fore. in hooded cost, peering out from Lansing as well as from neigh­
Mr. and Mrs. Burr Van Houtan 8lg Rapids,
through horn-rimmed
spectaclea. boring counties, concluding by in­
and Games
were in Kalamazoo on Monday.
■
---------troducing as lhe speaker Mr. Glenn '
Daspite the mixture of wtnd. snow
Mr and Mrs Fred Meyer visited GERMAN DISHES FEATURE
chairman for thte centennial pro- . (arms without water and feed of
relatives in Nilas over the week end.
DINNER AT MM- RKHOR'S. and rein lhe night ot Thursday. ram Bupt D. A. VanBusklrk gave I whlch we kwwTheJ v^e S in CUy. The theory being that he Dunn of Muskegon. Mr. Dunn began I
February 13. about seventy parents
hte address by paying a fine tribute |
An event that certain of her
a history of Uw schools of Has-1 ne^d By the aid of tiie neighbors look one took and. with head bowed
R. H Loppcnthien was in Chicago
and teachers met for the regular tings; Lewis Hine and Roy
' through the old tetepIX- aSid aU down, fled to the wilds.
from Wednesday , till Saturday on friends look forward to each year, Oantral p. T. A. meeting in the play
rendered some old time music; Miss ‘
■ ^S***^.' ana M.u
is the night Mrs Jacob Rehor blds
business
*
room of lhe Central building. A
th*t
i wHh Jutc caawron.
Barry He thought Barry county had every
reason to be proud of him and his
Miss Delia Allard has returned them over to her home. 735 E Bond short business meeting was followed McElwain told of the flrwt house could
mW loan,
loan some
w,™ of
a, the
---------------wwj..
men braved
record.
from Grand Rapids and resumed her street, for'a sauerkraut dinner.
by entertainment In the form of a in thte city, lhe home of Mr.
Now
there's
sauerkraut
and
sauer
­
says
ner
asm
m
me
is. of
He mentioned Abraham Lincoln
work here.
solo by Geraldine I senha th accom- and Mra. Slocum Bunker at the frooe their eare-&lt;Thls happened in pU.k
a „„ wllhoul a queen
kraut. but this te the genuine ar­
Vermontville, centennial
renunnlal yeor.i
veer &gt; We ^U^trom pumpkins up.) ax an example ol what our American
Bishop Kuhn was liotne from Ann ticle. It's homemade to begin with, panted by Donald Taffee. accordion corner of E Main St, and Michigan Vermontville'*
’ institutions and
and'scheme
schema of life can
*olo by Victor Belsito. violin veto by I Ave ; Lyle Bennett discussed early arrived home on Monday by doub­
Arbor the latter port of the week,
page.
cooked from early morning till night, Joe Wilcox accompanied by Mar- [
—---------------------'1 produce, taking a boy from what we
J",lhc ling the mites. Bul we ll agree we appearing on lhe front
between semesters.
at low temperature, and served with
We" thank
P®lnU te the fact that might call very unpromising stirGoggins. duel* by Lola Ashalhad no serious trials. \*.’r ih=r.J:
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hyde and the old Ume German dishes, frank- cella
d1
'11,8
,U «rowln« wcarJ of roundings, giving him opportunities
ter and Sally Warner accompanied eXblUna
tumen nf^thJi
everyone
who
helped
and
gave
aid'
George of Prairieville visited Mrs. furta. pork ribs, rye bread, and by William Kennedy. The kinder- £Jhlb,U^&lt; coalumes of other years
queens, is it because we are a dem- m
whlch he mat so successfully
by William Kennedy. The kinder­
and hope that some day they ll all ocratlc nation, or *cau*c we have | ,hal he was placed ta the presidanUa
Nettle Hyde on Sunday.
-knoepfie," which only one of Ger­
up W1U1 UIU
01
garten furnished coffee and cookies The entire program was delightful Be well-paid. And now that we re become Iea
fed up with thte surfeit of chair
Vernon Tester visited al the home man blood essays to pronounce cor­
which lopped a game of guggenheim and demonstrated that there are home and pretty well set. It will be th
U1 Michigan, and demand
of Mr. and Mrs Leo.i Dunning of rectly. It resembles our American
them
in
Michigan,
and
ctemand
the
speaker
said lhe family and
many
interesting
historical
facte
a lime In our lives we will never for­
which was Ued by Mrs. Hah Hill.
. something more novel or original? ।
homt. are lhe
of
nroanoodles, being cut broader and
Delton over the week end.
Mra. O E Goodyear and Frank and events that can be used to get.
veral u»l Aljx orjjtek.
apple Foote
make the Centennial celebration
Mrs. JO* Bruzaa spent the week cooked in small chunks;
tvhlke
anvemnr
hmiurht
anathema*
....
.......
. the present genwh
%
.
b
r0U
F
h
‘
_
Bn,lhemM
the
steps
by
which
end in Grand Rapids, called there kuchen. &lt;or te il apple struben?) te
The committee in charge was Mr. more worth while educatlpnally.
on his hsad by turning down every CTatlon had come into a wonderful
lhe dessert, an open shell custard pie. and Mrs Dorrance TFethric. Mr. and
Preceding the program, a dessert
by tiie illness of her mother.
I appeal made to him for doing the h„lla&lt;e. aU lhrough goo&lt;J
,n.
J w Wolfe te spending several baked with slices of apple, sprinkled Mrs. O. E Goodyear will act as lunch was served, with a lovely HASTINGS HIGH GIRLS
days in Grand Rapids witii his liberally witii cinnamon, covering chairmen of the March 13 meeting birthday cake, honoring Mr. Van­
SUBMIT POSTERS a wlnl«- le.tlv.1, we rue lo wluie
“I nuenoe. .nd our toe IMUtutlen.
He Ipdut
the over.eBTOlton of
the lop.
daughter. Mrs. Harold Shaw.
at which Ume the Camp Fire Girls’ Busklrk. centering the table.
------------him .1 IhU Ute dele lor .ood con- JjetotkSaUue
Tor ^SeSTtwi
Thc table, honoring St. Valentine, । will furnish the program.
Mr* Kenith McIntyre was In Kai! Three Entries Sent to Lan­
.eiwe.
which had led lo lhe depreulon.
nmazoo on Monday and attended where covers were laid for twelve, i The annual Michigan Congress of HASTINGS HIGH IS TRY­
PerhapB one ot the reuon. to
In ltM, when lhe
was bright with red. roses, dainty Parents and Teachers te to be held
sing in Isle Boy ale Poathe Ballet Russe that evening.
OrwrtoE.
OTUUndWs
«ieee*I»l
I
ple
„„
,
n
they heard a
ING
OUT
NEW
PLAN
napkins,
and
other
attractive
ac
­
Walter Wallace and Robert Cook
| In Benton Harbor at the Hotel Vin­
ter-Slogan Contestwinter .port aeaaon Is. that they nleaslna voice over Che radio, makattended tte State Diaryman's con­ cessories.
cent A Wil 39 to May 1. The genera!
Friday. February 31. te the day dldn'l tom lo over-ernphaalae the ■ £promu„ [or Tmri.
Games of bridge followed. Mrs. theme is to be "Character Building Home Room Idea Allows Dilvention al Grand Rapids Thursday.
I
when
the
four
best
pouter-slogans
-crowning or the qejen’ realuee.
u h, „„
President They
Mr. and Mr*. D. A VanBusklrk W. N Chidester winning al the con­ The Goal of Home. School and
cutsion of School and
pUlrad
| submitted by high school pupils of hut pul the hula or Chen advercu-1 loJk hto ,t hl,
were in Kalamazoo on Monday eve­ tract table. Mi£&gt; Mabel Sisson al Community." Il te expected that
nol only upon hl^ Pul up0„
Michigan will be
Life Problems
- --determined
—-----------by-- tte in, on Che .pore program proper, to
ning and attended the Ballet Russe auction.
delegates will be sent by thc local
One
ol the most
of
mow significant J1 Jbd«“ InUralng
ln^dn»- noMalM ator ah. that', wtal Intoe.u pee-1 u.^ pl.llOTm u£T which he dT
organization.
■i.. th
the
two best
best posters
rasters done
done by
bv girls
sirls pie murt u a erowner and a mleen cU„5"p„ hundred per
during lhe
® t®°
VALENTINE PARTY.
wn MUlluay
Hrs
T changes in high schools
and son anH Mr. and Mrs Milton
,„a w„
two by boys. TOese fortu- must be had and a «UU otoul h„ I „„L H,
Warfield and Joyce spent Sunday in
The members of Aowaklya Camp Sanders of Grand Rapids. State pest few years has been lhe devel- ! “nd
of home rooms, small groups J’"1® J,OU12S, P^P1' *’*}. be awarded to do 11. why nor rend to one ot authority such aa waa never granlDcarboni.
Fire groun honored their mothers , congress President, is to speak jon opment
of students in close contract with a 1 ,rlps 10 1!dc
‘bis summer, Ihoae good-Kxirtng young men In lhe , M „
oU1„ p^igan,.
lh,
Mr. and Mr*. Guy Willard and with a Valentine party at lhe home -Michigan Activities" over WLS.
acace
pohoe
toce
anil
dawk
him
out
Utt
hl
„ „ „ lht
teacher
at
definite
periods
when
disI
^e
contest
which
cl«ed
February
Duane pugh were Sunday guests of of their guardian. Mrs Milo DeVries. Chicago.
Chicago
..
.................. .... *.
...
outfit with Ina * gnlffv Dnulan ontnt orith a results
cusslon of school and life problem* is ‘_5 , c°?spiffy
ducK&gt;dRussian
by the Federated
at that platform and those
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Snyder of South on Thursday evening. Feb. 13.
Mra. O. E. Balyeat of Sparta, who
I n,rri
Garden
dubs
of Michigan in co- Cossack cap. and give the pictur- promises and from giving all this
pouible.
In
many
schools
this
type
1
*
n
r1,,h
*
nf
Hasting.'.
As a part of the evening's enter­ Is well known in Woodland and
with tiie Department of e*que note lacking tn most corona- power to one man? We still have
Miss Doris Biddle and a young tainment the girls presented a dra­ Freeport where she formerly resided, of organization has displaced lhe I operation
conservation and was open to all Uons?
;
eleven million people unemployed..
lady from Battle Creek were guests matization of "What a new girl was recently named as chairman of . old large assembly hall, a develop- ,
?1I,P25 otJhe. stam' u
waaa* **»
Instead of the expense of govern­
al tiie Newton Benner home over the would do on coming lo live in Has­ •Founders Day." Dr. Howard Mc­ ment of thte type of organization J hI®h
H**Un8B H1*h school will have
WOODLAND,
ment being reduced 25 per cent, as
tings" This playlet represented a Clusky. who has spoken in Hastings te* been made this semester al Hasweek end.
tings High school according to Prin- । ‘hree P°’1M5
Ju“ u entries
Mr. and Mrs Donald Gager and had been promised, it had been in­
Mrs Acncs Fisher and Don and requirement for the 1936 Birthday ____________
several times during lhe past year.
Dwight Fisher were Sunday guests honor. "Hospitality" upon which all has been selected as chairman of the dual E. L. Taylor. Five groups of Se'T™1 were submitted and it was son Morgan visited Mr and Mrs. creased by that amount. Tbe public
Paul Hough of Lansing Friday.
debt has now passed lhe thirty bil­
of Mr. and Mrs Karl Johnson and members of thte group arc working.' -Mental Hygiene" committee of lhe students from the ninth grade are hoped that aU of them might be
Mrs. J. V. Hilbert delightfully en­ lion mark, with every prospect that
I meeting daily with teacher* at lhe , *nt
^nsing. but al the eleventh
family of Battle Creek.
Tlic remainder of the evening was' Michigan p. T. A. Congress,
hour a
notice was received that only tertained her Sunday school class of ll will reach flve billions more by
thirty-minute period in class rooms I hn,,r
“ no,,rr
Judge Russell R
McPeek and spent in playing "home made" i
«&lt;*
1
three
would
be
accepted
So
a
com
­
18
boys
and
girls
Thursday
evening
1 instead of in the large assembly
the end of the President's term.
accrue Dean of charlotte and T. D. games which provided much mer- HUB DEBS AND FRIENDS
mittee of four selected tiie three best After a delicious dinner served by
The. remedy, the speaker thought,
Merrill of Kalamazoo attended Ro­ rlment for mothers as well as
ENJOY VALENTINE DANCE, | hall.
Mr. Garner has a group of thirty- ones last Friday evening and sent Mrs. Hilbert and assisted by Miss is lo cease further socialistic experttary in Hastings Monday
daughters.
| A St. Valentine's party delightfully
them in. Those submitted were the Anne Rosenthal, games were en­
five
nine-one
students.
Other
Sunt D A- VanBusklrk leavesFrl------- ------- -- ------------ ------ ---------o&gt;
rarrlcd ou»- w“ thc onc «&gt;*«•” by
work of Suzanne Sumner and Ruth joyed.
day for St. Loup.. Mo., to attend thc strated an original game, this also lhc lwo gub-Deb groups on lhe groups are from the nine-two McLaughlin.
They
were
14x32
j
Arthur
Kilpatrick of Jackson
Fleeces, with full
Superintendents' Division of the N. being a requirement for the birth-, njght of the 14th at Masonic dining | grade. Mr. Knopf. Mis* McElwain. inches and done in poster paints, spent the week end with hte parents. real problem of getting people at
work. -Ml at government jobs nor
E. A-. tn session there for a week. ; day honor.
hail. Thlrty COUpies were In attend- I Mr. Reinhardt, and Mtes Reynolds One of Suzanne s was a moose head Mr and Mrs. f. C. Kilpatrick
bells.
Buy now
&gt; have one hundred and nine students
payments doles but at legitimate
ML-u Lois Severance of Sturgis' Refreshments with a valentine1 ancc
done in silhouette, and lhe other a I Mr. and Mrs. Vemice Raffler at- employment which they desire
।
from
this
grade.
These
groups
will
was home over the week end for the motif were served, after which the ,
orchestra was stationed under
first time since New Year's, as lhe whiners in the 1936 membership Re- 1 P canopy of crepe paper with other I combine regular home room dtecus- sludy tn browns and tans of does tended a birthday dinner Friday There is right now a big demand
and
fawns.
The
letters
were
made
evening
at
thc
home
of
Mr
and
Mrs.
road* liavc been in such Lad slwi*. galla were announced. Jacquelyn colorful decorations skillfully placed sions with study period.-.. Usually to represent bits of sticks put to- ; Claud Sabin of Hastings. The dinner for goods that would keep our facMrs Orley Btehop
Bishop and Bachman
-------------------------------------------------------In the
Mr and Mrs.
received first prize
in
valentine hats „
and balloons were I ti^e thirty-minute period te for study gether. Ruth chose as her subject was in honor of the birthday of Mrs. I lories busy for years, but uncertain­
I purposes, bul on occasions tte
ty about what tiie government may
MOO used for
for ffavor
avor dances
Mi
family of Holland were guests of Hastings district, a check for M.OO
Matched*
I teacher* lead discussions of pertl- the practice of dynamiting streams. Raffler.
do makes people hesitate to make
Mr.
and; ---Mrs. ----Herbert.. Bishop
ami to
be applied
hearts tUUlMl
found UUIIMT
dinner nartne.s.
..... .....
7 ----—--------- on camp
-----r expenses
---------- ..at to***IMIlUCck.
and carried it out in the shape of | Fay C Whig conducted the fu- or buy the needed goods.
' nent problems.
Mr and
nnri Mrs.
Mrs A
A L.
t. Hubbard
Huhhurd over
over r*amn
All j Those
.
Mr.
Camp teitnnnlw*
Kitannlwa next
next summer
summer. All
present
Those present from
from ’away
away were
were
a fountain full of vari-colored fish ' neral services of Isaac Johnson, age
CLOTHING AND SHOES
While the balance of the high
the week end.
the other girls in this group also Betty Swift. Pauline Beneway JunShe had for her slogan. "Protect 73. at Portland. He was a resident of with very close attention.
FOR MEN AND BOYS
MIm Olive Clark of
Grand Rap- received prizes of lesser amounts to. jor Gillett Ed Lynn Donald Hall school remain* in session rooms Nature's Wonderland "
I Scbewa township. Ionia county and
regularly during the thirty-minute
Thc chairman then called upon I
ids was the
thc guest
tri*
uuest of Mrs
Mrs Forrest
vinrrest be applied towards camp.
’ Middleville George Benner GrayThose
who
were
disappointed
in
at
one
time
worked
for
Perry
Flory
Supreme Court Justice W. W Pot­
Lane over lhe week end. Mrs. Lane
Thc evening was concluded by! don Faul. Woodland; Janet Tcale. period, it te planned to make the
this
contest
will
have
other
chances
U)
the
barber
shop
here.
discussion features of these home
ter. No one need ever doubt what,
accompanying her home on Mon­ lhe exchange of valentines and each i Kalamazoo
-----------•—* *to
-----------— ­ justice Poller thinks about any pro- I
We
are glad
report* that ’Law
rooms available to all under a plan later in lhe spring. There is a soapday for the day.
girl presented her mother with a red j
now being worked out by Miss Rowe carving contest, for high school pu­ rence Bird and his little daughter position. He states what he thinks ‘
The Res. and Mrs. c. M. Conklin rose as a Valentine token.
CIRCLE NO. 3.
TAMARAC.
nnd the Rev. w. Maylan Jones were
Tte home room discussion group is pils and a poppy poster contest in Gloria who have been seriously ill clearly, frankly, fully; and he did I
with pneumonia arc slowly improv­ so in this case. He believed that
Circle No. 3 of lhe Methodist L. A. one of tte practical means of train­ May.
We are glad lo welcome Mr. and
in Grand Rapids Monday to attend EXCHANGE PROGRAM
ing
8. met with Mrs. David Boyes on ing for life in a democracy, an ob­
lhe administration had been given , Mrs. Buel Wise lo our community.
lhe District Ministerial meeting al
WITH MIDDLEVILLE CLUB­
Monday evening, with sixteen pres­
RADIO FILM.
Mrs. C- B. Benham of Hastings, every opportunity it could have
The Ena brothers have had aocna
joy Memorial church.
Seven members of tiie Hastings ent. Following the dinner and busi- ligation which te one of lhe chief
the
Radio City's largest auditorium, who -has
--- been spending
'----- .
---- r winter
.
asked--—IL
it I1OU
had WXU
been LIICU
tried ana
and iuuiki
found difficulties on their milk routes Ver­
Howard
Herrick
of New
City,’ • Women
women's
Club *
went
to MWd
Middleville
"
XsLieni
ol the
f w York
X*7to
’!i Club
enl to
'*’tiUe new meeting, several games were requirements of high school* today.
th/ wrrk Inrt
®nt
on Tuc-M,By 10 PrMent *n exchange enjoyed under lhe direction of Miss Miss Rowe made a special study of where the naUon's most popular months with Mr. and MrxRtohard wanttng-lacklng ability to meet dun Stowell was stalled near Bharlradio
amateur hours originate, Hughes of Chicago, came Friday to the nauonal emergency.
brother and *tetenln-l£ Mr and |*°«r‘ni *uh lhc Womens Club Ruth Farr. In March. lhe hostess this tyjtc of organization while at
visit her daughter. Mrs. Karl Paul.
nXbi about the
was
built
to
exact
scale
by
Para
­
Northwestern University last sum­
m«
HrrriJk
M
Ithcrr
3^c “me '5°«rBm “ w“ will be Mrs Olenn Densmore.
I value of such a gathering as waa panted him back and shovatod Um
mer and te especially well qualified mount technicians for production and
Mrs. Lawrence Herrick
presented al the
----------------- * a (
thc Friday meeting
..........
Mr and Mrs. w*lby Crockford and hel(1
evening, with its thought­ truck out.
Ur. H
tl A
* Adrounie I.
Av.n Ar
*r-­ .
. .
_
...
V
of "Millions in lhe Air." which opens
to develop the program here.
Mrs
te In
in Ann
here was repeated. Those partici­
THE NEW IDEA CLVB.
family spent Sunday with Mr. and provoklng discussion of the iswes
on Frb. 35 at the Strand theater
Our mall carrier Iwhb dlfficulbor this week with Dr Adrounie pating were Mrs. G- A. Burgess. Mrs.
°: S*r..U’na~
I
the
coming
campaign. All
O. G. CLUB.
Mr*. Earl R. Boyes delightfully
More than 1.000 extras were
who te under observation al the Uni- James Long. Mrs a L Brown, Mrs
Mrs. Kittle Holmes, who has been I connected with the planning for routes
Mrs Harry Waters entertained ____
_______
entertained the club Wednesday
used _in________________
lhe picture as "amateur"
sily hospital
F L Bauer and Mrs. L. F. Maus.
banquet
Bernard Smith of near VermonlMr. and Mrs. Ernest Erway drove In attendance also were Mrs. F. E. evening. February 13th. Thc dining the O. G. Club Thursday noon at ' performers before the microphone vteitlng her sister. Mra C M. Brown. and carrylng oul ot
of commendation A
to.CajIlon Sunday lo sgc thc latter's Adair and Mrs L. E. Barnett. Tea table was very pretty in its decora­ luncheon, places being laid for ' or as members of lhe studio au- of Grand Rapids, returned to Woodtend last week and te now visiting nn,
WM p^d u, Doctor Car­
mother. Mrs. Burt Farrell, who has was served following thc meeting tions of lhe usual St. Valentine em­ etehl. Bridge was played in the 1 dience.
ter
daughter.
Mrs.
Grace
England.
lO
thers
for*
the
splendid
manner
in
In
background
u*uiuict,
aor»v»r»cc
unuuu.
blems.
After
the
splendid
dinner
afternoon.
,
m
addition
many
"background"
been sick for four weeks, bul is now and a
Ume enjoyed,
Ann Arbor
Arhnr .....
...
...
.
shots of New York scenes were Lak-| Ulu
Miss Uiroirpl
Margaret C-nhh
Cobb nt
of Ann
and business meeting, thc remainder
which lie has met thc duties and Odessa hospital.
slowly improving.
1
--------BB1DGE CLVB MELTS.
lu„ into the story, which 'isited her brother. Dr. T. H. Cobb. rejsponslbllltes of his position as
en to „
be ,fitted
of lhe evening was spent playing
James Tyler of Woodland is plast­
Mr and Mrs Louis Btehop and
BROKE H18 LEG.
On Thursdw e.enUu Ur. .nd ,
abou, , ,„reaIul
and family from Tuesday until Fri- chairman of thc county committee. ering the Buel Wise house.
cards..
son were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Richard A Herd Ing. three years old,
Mrs. A. K. Frandsen entertained ■ hour. Wendy Barrie and John How­
Mrs. Herbert Btehop. The former whose parents live near Lake Odes­
their bridge club at dinner, eight '
Jean England of Hastings spent
are moving from Ionia to Detroit sa. broke one of his limbs while vis- CYNTUEAL REED ENTERTAINS. being present. D.’ A. VanBusklrk t ard play lhe leading roles.
Sunday with hte mother. Mrs. Grace
A party greatly enjoyed thc night held high score at contract.
where Lou has accepted a jxMttlon. | ulna |Rre at lhe botne of Mr*. Phoe! FOUR FLAYERS IN FILM
England.
Mrs. Bertha Kuhn. Mtes Helen be Mote on Saturday afternoon. of St. Valentine’s Day was the one
The Women's City club will have
ARE ALL BLONDES.
Wade and Btehop Kuhn were in 1 Mra MoU
hte grandmother. While given by Cyntheal Reed at her home
BIRTHDAY LUNCHEON.
Four
leading
feminine
players
in
their banquet Tuesday. February 35.
Grand Rapids on Saturday. Miss ptaylng. he fell from thc arm of a on 8. Broadway, fourteen girls be­
Today the Presbyterian L. A. S. ...
"Miss Pacific Fleet." the Warner at the schoolhouse. The Hastings
is holding Its Birthday luncheon al '
Wade attending a committee meet- rocking chair to lhe floor and suf- ing present.?
|
Bros,
comedy
with
music
which
Civic
Flayers will present one of the
The traditional valentine colors the church parlors. An interesting
ing in connection with thc M E A {WTfj thc injury. He was taken to
comes lo lhe Strand theater on Feb. one-act plays 'Three Blind Mice"
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ickc* and the hospital here for treatment and were attractively used in the rooms. program has been planned also.
128 and 39. are blondes.
recently given in Hastings. This
Heart* and other games were
family and Mr and Mrs. Wayne, K getting along as well as could be
B. . to,
, w. ..
. The four actresses are Joan Blon- banquet was postponed from the
Wheeler of Battle Creek spent lhe expected.
played. Mary Belle Reed and Kath­
t,
, dell, Glenda Farrell. Minna Gom- 11th because of lhe bad roads.
ryn Davies being winners In the
week end with their parents. Mr. and
binall birds wtien migrating
and Marfe Wilson,
- travel I। WII 4IIU
niuvu. all
».l being
Mrs! Willard Ickes of Baltimore
game of hearts
1N HOLLAND HOSPITAL.
ostly at night, says one caturallst.
mostly
caturallsL blonde rnotieh
enough to nira.se
please those muchmuch-1
Mrs.
Billie
Hitchcock,
who
with
Twp.
»
j heralded gentlemen who prefer'i
Cals, like men. cannot mll.Alt I
Mrs. Mary showerman visited Mr. her husband left Hastings Jan. 1 for
Honc-Dr.w.
Cars
la
1GO2
,
them.
and Mrs. R M. Uunbie the last of a southern trip for her health, was
I solute darkness, uya a psychologist.
Crude
horse
drawn
railway
cars
j
"Miss
Pacific
Fleet"
te
the
Mr
and
Mrs
Fred
Hcrzcl
and
Cnida
horsodrawn
■
Facuic
Fleet
w
me
latent ,
thc Wfek leaving Saturday for her taken very sick al Holland, where son Donald of KMamazoo spent were used In coal mining at New- comedy featuring Mtes hlondelllatest
and
home in Waldron
She has Just they were visiting her sister, and te
1n..Jki£ ^d
completed a series of meetings at now in the Holland hospital with Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Otis castle. England, as early as the “’^ZBrr?l,;u
year 1002.
Warren Hull.. Allen Jenkins and,
I'crinsylrunln has Ibv ere a test
slight chances for her recovery. Bil­ Landon.
—.. ... —
.
....
tltish
Hugh Herbert
Mr, and Mrs, a B Gidley and lie te staying al 398 Van Raalte Ave., ■ Robert Henncy accompanied hte
son spent the week end with her with relatives, word received Tues­ speech class and teacher. Mr. Beck-1
parcnlj. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Law­ day said that pneumonia had de­ ef. to Holland Saturday lo take part ।
cock of Hint. They came home by veloped and her condition was criti­ tn a debate tournament al Hope
way of Owooso. Mr. Gldlcy's mother. cal.
College.
Friends of Judson Carpenter of |
Mrs. wm. Gldlcy. returning with
MONDAY STUDY CLUB.
HasUngs were grieved to hear of his ;
them for a visit.
F*»cr Blue Ro**
Mrs. James Bristol was hostess to sudden death
Mr. and Mrs. tzslie Hawthorn
Much sympathy is,
were called to Holland Saturday her Study Club on Monday, lunch- expressed for his widow and also'
by thc serious illness ot tier mother. con being served at one o'cloc|t to for his only brother. Jay Carpenter. |
Mrs. Wm Hitchcock
Thc» former eight. Mrs. Aben Johnson gave of Hits vicinity.
returned on Sunday bul ift.v Haw­ an interesting review of "North Thte Week's Letter
There have been no church serv-1
thorn remained with her fattier at to the Orient" by Mrs. Charles A.
Lindbergh. Two guests were pres­ ices here for lhe past two Sundays!
tiie home of an aunt?
Warren E. Carter was in Lansing ent. Mrs. Harold Phillips is hostess on account of the weather condi-1
lions and snow filled roads.
last week Wednesday attending a for the next meeting.
dinner honoring lhe retiring Com­
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
Fins Qurlity
entertained In February at the home
missioner of Banking. Rudolph E.
mile, the coat of a bus tickMrs. Mary Hertney was honor
Reichert. Thc dinner was spon­ guest at a dinner given on Friday of Mr. and Mrs Wm. Hale has been
sored by a group of bankers. Mrs. evening by her daughter. Mrs. An­ postponed until in March. So if'
driving, which often runs
Carter accompanied her husband to drew Roush, in honor of the for­ lhe weather conditions permit. Club
No. I will entertain at the Hale
Lansing for the day.
mer’s birthday. Covers were laid
Mr* Rose Benham returned on for ten. a bouquet ot tulips centering home Thursday. March 5. for din- i
can enjoy all the comfort*
Sunday from Chicago, where she
ner.
lhe table Thc evening was spent
of the latest style buses.
lias ybeen for several monUu with
Mr. and Mrs. F. Greenfield and
with visiting and a pleasant social
Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Hughes
sons of Hastings spent Sunday with
Why not phone lhe agent
time.
iGoldie Benhami. On Monday Mu.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henncy.
today and investigate the
a Lovely'VAIXNT1NE.
Benham went to Woodland to
Much sympathy te expressed for
schedules and fares to the
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Evan
Fuller
and
fam-1
spend lhe rest of the winter w|U»
A- R. Van Til. advertising manager
towns tn which you are
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Paul.
lly
in
Uic
loss
of
their
house
and
I
tor lhe Hastings Banner, received a
Interested?
Mr and Mrs O. H Cleveland of fine valentine on Friday—a baby conlenta by fire last week. Mr. and
Columbus. Ohio, drove here Friday glrl who weighed nearly seven Mrs. Fuller JUsl recently moved lo
WITH HIS TEN PIECE ORCHESTRA
for a .short visit with her mother. I pounds, bom at St
8t. Mary's
Mary’, hospital Lowell from Carlton.
ri W Hyde.
Uvde They
Thu found
tmmrt the in Grand
to___ ■ Rafilds.
tocl
.- has
.... been
Friends and neighbors of Mrs ।
Mrs. O.
She
main highways in fairly good con­ named Elisabeth Harriet.
Mother Jerry Andrus were sorry to hear of;
dition. thc stretch from Battle Creek and daughter arc doing splendidly— her illness which made an operation
necessary, she Ls at Pennock hos- i
In the best of any they encountered. and so is fatter.
BIC FLOOR SHOW . . . DININC ... 4 HOURS OF .
pllal and at last report site was gel-1
On Saturday they went to Laming
DANCINC . . . Continuous Dancing . . . Smart
to attend lhe marriage of his son.
SEWING FOR BILLET.
ting along as well as could be ex­
Ten members of thc American Le­ pected. .
Allen Cleveland, and Miss Alice
.
Entertainment... Delicious Refreshments
Sloan, the ceremony being per­ gion Auxiliary met al the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Henney visit-'
formed at fouc-thlrty o’clock. That Mrs. Don Foreman on Monday eve­ cd al the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.
75c per couple. Moke reservations now. Phono 2225
ewnlw Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland. Hr.. ning. A chop suey supper preceded Kick of near Freeport. Saturday aftleft for their home in Columbus, ar­ Hie sewing for the children al Otter cniooii. Mrs. Kick te again very i
WE DELI'
DELI
HASTINGS
riving Bunday.
Lake Billet.
poorly.

**•!£? h&gt;omc *2™

w

* Work Gloves

T. S. BAIRD

Friday and Saturday, Feb. 21-22
CHERRIES
PET MILK
CHERRY JELLO
RICE

CHEAPER
Than Driving!

BROWN SUGAR

FLOUR
RUB-NO-MORE
PEAS

Everything /or a perfect evening!

ERIN SUPPER CLUB
Presents

EDDIE

Boef Roast g
Bolling Beef
Bacon

MAREK

Community Holl, Tuesday, February 25

HINMAN’S

BZZ3E3EE"

17c

4^ 22c
5u.23c

10c

c... 25c

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. TRftflSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1916

INSURANCE
LIFE . AUTO . FIRE
WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON t McELWAlN
Hum I W., Natl Bank Bldg.

WANTS

SAVE
MONEY

CAUCUS NOTICES

NOTED ALASKA
PRIEST TO LECTURE

Our Service
CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co.

In Kalamazoo Sunday, Feb­
ruary 23, at Centra!
Auditorium

Fly Spray. 1 gallon ....
Fly Spray. 5 gallons ..
Fly Spray. M gallons, .
Poultry Tonic, 100 lbs..
Stock Tonic, 100 lbs. ..

&amp; Rl
REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
Spectacles Fitted and Guaranteed.

KERMIT R. DAY

' WAXTKP - !&gt;• iwr.-laMr xlrl
lio.i,.worV, Three* in ini’
ilk* r hadron ft wr-k. 1
1 izan Are., U»ltle I rwl

c' i

served for 25 years by sulphuric acid
eruptions from Mt. Kntmal.
The ••glacier priest" is head of the
gqology department of Santa Clara
University. California, and had just
completed his eighth expadlllon to

Mu

Father Hubbard discovered a new
• moon crater" at tiie Up of the'penInsula on his lost expedition. The
crater, a blown-out portion of lhe
earth nearly as large as tho pre­
viously discovered Anlakchak crater

IS WORTH

GOOD TREATMENT

NEATSLENE HARNESS OIL

Galles crater by Father Hubbard.
Price of tickets are 35c and may be
arranged for by contacting with
Miss Valenta Doyle of Nazareth Col­
lege. Nazareth. Michigan, or nt
College.
Kalamazoo. Michigan.

SALE OF
HORSES
ot PORTLAND

Harness &amp; Shoe Repair Shop
MidJIevilic, Mich-

Henry Anborili, Prop

SATURDAY. FEB. 22
8 Months Time

JOHNSON &amp; JARVIS

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Smooth Rubbar Bock Pads

NEW

OLD

INSPFCTIUNTHRF
NEXTTHURSDAY

row frr*h, i
Ftllt KAl.E—Purr
&gt;■ milMeth Ur ,r I'rntrr 1
| An.lin Srh.hU S»,hr.Hr. Route 2.1

WANTED

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
FELDPAUSCH’S
MARKET • Phon. 2616
FOOD CENTER 2609

Sponge Rubber Pads

JERRY ANDRUS

The Prescription Drug Store
B. A. LYBAEKXB, Propr.

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
ly and Hastings. Reliable hustler
should start earning $25 weekly and
Increase
rapidly.
Write
today.
Rawieigh. Dept. MCB-18S-S, Frcc-

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY

MILO.
This community was raddened by
ue death of Mrs. Harry Jones

grandchildren,
one
sister,
two
brothers and a hoc of friends Her
loss falls very hard on Mr. Jones
as he has been an invalid and a
great sufferer for several years. The
day at 2 P. M. with burial In Prai­
rieville cemetery. Our loving sym­
pathy is extended fo the family.
Prank Gilbert came from Mar­
cellus Sunday to see his wife and

to care for them there until later.
Mr. and Mrs. Dauphin brought him
lo his home after he had walked

and Mrs. C. F Moreau. They found daughter's home in Assyria lost
Mr. Moreau able lo sit up some. Mrs. Friday evening to' help care for her
Moreau b. very poorly. Their niece
from Battle Creek is asaUtlng in little granddaughter. Joan Tack,
who has pneumonia* She was some­
what Improved Sunday.
Mrs. Hnrliui Scobey spent several
The Hume Literary Club
was days last week witii her mother­
HastUMK. school
111 — f*V In.-lArl r»t» postponed one week on account of in-law and family at Welcome Cor-

will pay a maximum of $40 for each
grade pupil. and not more than S40
for the transportation of each pupil
to and from the city schools, for each
school year. In other words, it will
be possible for these rural districts
surrounding this city to give their
children lhe advantages of the
splendid schools of Hastings at no
greater cost than would be neces­
sary to carry on the schools in their
own districts and in some districts

contracts shall be signed, lo provide
employes. Tliey note any dangerous
transportation of rural pupils from
accumulation ot Inflammable rub­
bish on the premises. Instances of
defective electric wiring, or other
conditions conducive to the out­
break of a Arc Following the Insnectlon. the fire prrventionists will vcnicnce as well as nddt-d safety to
ll’t thc defects tliey have found. Inrural district pupils; for they would
be conveyed in buses that would
protect them In rainy weather and
Inspection of Hastings dwellings winter storms. They would be de­
will be accomplished by means ot
livered nt thc school? here in time
what are known a» ‘ home lnsp«c«
for the opening of school and would
lion” blanks in Uic hands of the
be taken immediately to their home*
school children. Tills ulun has been

ADJUSTABLE CENTER

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call
on farmers in'N. Barry county. No
experience or capital needed. Write
today. McNESS CO.. Dept. ». Free-

The Hastings Banner

Bellinger from California tells of

daughter attended church in KalamtL~oo Sunday evening.
Mrs. Bradfield had a party for
Jack in honor of his birthday at

somebody

WASHER

Hastings will undertake, if thc plan

H. F.ldpausch • 3921

No Leg Strap*

position. It seems to tu as If it of­
fers a wonderful opportunity for

district at least 2 1-2 mills. If Hurt a heart attack Sunday morning.
Mrr Jones hud not been well for
were done, thc bill provided that the several months but »as apparently

the tax payers of the district will be
called on to pay 2 1-2 null.-; on thc
pools of water, comparable to similar assessable properly In the district.
liools in Yellowstone National Park,
The letter printed above from the
school board of Hastings to tin- dis-

PAKKEIK
HOUSE

GOOD HARNESS

ffer to get slatt aid. each district re­
ceiving such aid must raize by tax­
ation on ‘the prope rty of tiie rural

B. Hubbard, -the glacier priest'' who
will lecture on his experiences in (—„.
„„u
Alaska. His lecture "Valley of Ten had completed eight grades in the
Thousand -Smokes" will be nccom-{ district schools would he paid bv lhe
panled by a motion picture which Is state nt 665.00 per annum for each
the flrst complete film on record of, of such school students who were
। the famous Alaskan valley
Tbe
motion picture was made during a
five montlis expedition and at a
1 time when mist and fog. rarely ab­ that rural *chool districts will re­
sent from the valley, lifted to permit ceive liberal aid from lhe state, so
the recording of 15.000 feet of rare tlial the district school officers will
pictures.
have available $48 for each grade
Scenes which will appear In the pupil enrolled and 66500 for t-acii
motion pictures and be described by high school pupil enrolled from that

will save you money on Min­
eral*. Tonics and Fly Spray.
1 also have bargain offers on

GEO. M. NEWTON

FINE MCE FOR
RURAL PUPILS

NEW AND USED
AUTO PARTS

Foil HALF —A Ourrn.rr hull, nr will
trr.i* tnwuM • eon.l work linr&lt;r.
imMurli PdtMi..Bvatt.3.
2:20
FOR SSt.F — Modern «&lt;»hi room bou«e.
■ virndhl lormion for buildlnz ttor* er
oil &lt;ta&lt;l«n. &lt;»n romer lot: h»rr*in.
VrVed for ouirk rale. Inquire S«2 X.
floltw.H,^ St.
8 30

CARDS ot THANKS
r-

Farmers, Attention!

'

.

.

=g

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Fmwf»rd !

1 UMi"»«"’e

Dead Stock Removed!

SALVE

COLDS

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,
Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards
Hastings,
Every Monday.

Michigan Livestock Exchange
HASTINGS BRANCH

THE CHURCHES

। manv Instances, in Michigan and
other states. The children enter
into the spirit of the activity, nt the
Another advantage woulfl be that
same time acquiring a knowledge of this arrangement would not mean
what Ls meant by fire safety and
fire prevention.
jwnse would be placed upon the
Under the auspices of thc Com­
property of .tiie tax payers of the
mercial chib, a public meeting will
rural districts except thc 2 1-2 mills,
be held with a luncheon nt noon, at
and no more than they would have
the meeting place nf the Rotary
to pay if they maintained their own
Club In the Fuller building Rich­
ard E. Vernor. manager of thc fire saying that the schools of this city
prevention department of the West- offer superior advantages to any­
em Actuarial Bureau. Chicago, will thing tlial is possible in a district
be the speaker on this occasion
Mr. Vernor has made a six-clal
Another advantage would be that
study of community tire prevention
the districts would continue to funcand is one of the country’s outstand­
ing experts in this field. He I* in .di­
officers; so that if tin- urtangi-ment
rect charge of thc activities of stale did not prove satBlectcry. rxhool in
fire prevention associations in nine­
the district school btiildihgs could be
teen middle western states. He has
been extremely active in the work of
It has cost the people of this city
National Fire Waste Council, a volun­ over a half a million dollars for the
tary association organized to assist |
school buildings and equipment they
the insurance department uf the I
have provided. Thc Itonds which
Chamber of commerce of the Unit­ the city gave for the last building
ed States in conducting a nation - have been paid down to about 6127.I wide lire prevention program Hr Is
‘
paid enchairman of the Contest Commit­
this city,
tee of the Council, the group which
administers the In ter .Chamber Fire the advantages' of tiie wiff have
splendid
Waste Contest In which more than buildings, fine equipment
600 cities are participating
cellent teaching staff of the Has­
Mr Vernor is also a director of tings city schools, without costing
lhe National ‘Fire Protection Asso­
them any more than It would to
ciation. and is president of the Ro­
maintain schools In their own local­
tary Club of Chicago, which is Ro­
tary Club No.-1.
Whether this arrangement will go
An assembly of High s?hQ01 and ■through ur not win depend entirely
Normal school pupils will be ad­
Upon whether the people In the sur­
dressed by Mr. Vernor at 10:15 A M..
rounding
territory desire 4o have it
in Central school auditorium.
Short talks by members of ihe
not be added to the Hastings district
Fire Prevention Association will be
so they could not be holdcn for any
made to two or three groups of the debt that might accrue at any time.
fifth and sixth grade school chil­
They would not be holdcn for any
dren. starting nt 10 A. M.
| part of thc bonds which thc city now
owes or may hereafter owe. because
there Is no consolidation proposed.
It would seem as If there ought to
■be universal approval of this pro­

teacher, was snowbound at his home f
near Clarksville over last week end. I
reaching here Tuesday afternoon. !
Hastings High school students of
this community were unable to get
to school until Wednesday of last
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Dunham
and son of Colorado spent last week
at the Ray Ostrolh home and also
called on other former acquaint­
ances in the neighborhood.
Because of drifted roads lhe DunhsmP T A which was to have been
held Saturday evening was post­
, poned until a later date.

HASTINGS MARKETS

washing and aid* tbe quick,
gentle cleaning action of
the Gyrutatur. The Roller
dries garments, spares but­
tons. leaves no hard -to-iron
wrinkles. There are many

FARM BUREAU FERTILIZER AND
SEED ARE GOOD PARTNERS!
Team up with these two
partners. Put them to work
for you. Farm Bureau Ferti­
lizer will condition your
land for a real crop.

Farm Bureau Brand seeds
are guaranteed as to purity
and germination.
.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES . Inc.
Hastings, Mich.
WOODLAND

�Thursday, February 20, 1936

what
^.at

;H5(g^ UTL TIES COMM,

_____ —about:1
&lt;1.-— c**,..
r
Tt__. ।
Sb*,
Tb,**,h

|

H

THE HASTINGS BANNER

olston, texas.-i

way, said there
one living person

-

t
,vxrrv
WILL

ai1

nnrwn
ORDER

rates

&lt;,nl&gt; I
who could

mnannu
UNIFORM 1

unser

the

"BLOOR SYSTEM"
----------—

CONSUMERS POWER CO.
i
‘EXPANDS FARM PROGRAM
Frof. H. J. Gallagher, Farm
Electric Expert, Joins
Oonaumers Staff
!

GET RIO OF THE
08643930

SPEECH CORRECTION
11X,,"*S|«£
AUTHORITY COMES :th«
room will

be fastened
down and used for study only.

PART
MICHIGAN SCHOOLS TO
SEE WILD LIFE EXHIBIT

Dr. Simon of Northwestern - The Junior play. "One Mad Night" Conservation Dept, to Route
I has been postponed until "ole man
to Hold Conference
Trailer Oar Thru Michi­
| winter" has a change of lieart.
Reservations f
Here Saturday
.
gan Counties
TRUCK
AND
BUS
HAVE
A
m*. v,*,*,«, ,.
Th* pr-Umlilry AMlAOlAUon con1 Prof. H. J. Gallagher, one of the 1
, Dr. Clarence T. Simon, director '
RIGHTFUL PLACE BUT
country's leading authoriUes on
; Of
«
speech
rc-educaiian
re-MuCAUon
at North.
al
North■; room ~
,—nlaht
7T.——crhnnl
7—&gt; ~Rpn.
7
bring conservation
to Michigan ccived from Grand
__
*
__
...................
.
*
rfirli
1 rural *lectrtficaUai) development. Is
and one
one ur
of uie
the room . eaclt night
Rep­ schools, the Department of Conser­
: western
wcaircii University
university ana
. ..after. school.
,
—
NOT THE OHISELER
.well
__ &lt;■ ....
. authorities
... ...
. 1. reseiitntlve* of tho Preahman »
and
’ now associated with Consumers
known
on speech,
nd vation will begin early this spring to lotte, Ionia. Portland
Music Is to be furnished

i will spend Saturday. February
I “Phomore English cUzms are com­
; Power Company in charge of rural
route a large wild life exhibit
throughout NEED REGULATION OF
in conference at lhe Hastings High P*511***through every county ot lhe state.
The exhibit will be transported by
r4^"?to'
au
ALL TRANSPORTATION ?ch001 Wlth leache” of
coun’1 Tiie limited amount
of»,
desk room
HLL inMnorvniMiiun
ty
in the
the session
teuton room and
and the
lhe increase
Increase trailer car and will remain from
■V
via*
»• W
wu A[.‘h L
1
in
,
« ,
' Dr- aknon wl...
» ’Pend. the morning I, m
enrollmentroom
has necessitated
the
person would be George Her- , Chmn. of Utilities WU..U.
Comm,
Prof- Gallagher who has been In Fair Treatment Necessary— at a round table discussion with lhe ' —--------------- -• * -■— --------establishment of home rooms for munity visited, in each instance the
nard Shaw.
(Charge of this field of research and
------- ---------------------•
, group
of
teachers
who -----took a six
freshmen during the thirty minute assistance of local conservation or­
Connected I experiment at Michigan State Col- i Fair Wages and Oompe­
And. by num. he did It! For this! Explains Why
wreeks’ course In speech correction period.
ganizations will be solicited. It is
.
.
jat Northwestern University last
Load" Is Unfair ; lege since 1923 will bring to our cus-1
tent Drivers
Also
admirer he begnn the dlilllu.tenlmt |
expected Hist the exhibit will be
lomera the benefits of a wide exper-,
a,h.n,,inassistant
I
summer.
The
group
will
include
first routed liirough the western
job the last time he
The Saginaw Daily News. In a re­ lence
in the «***■*
adaptation
of c
electrlcliy
COUNCIL
VOTES
NOT
**.,,*.*.**■*,,,
&gt;**u*k&lt;j, , u,
1.1 IL My I, Mlllon G- Schancupp.
Mrs.
Ilaii
Hill
of
Hastings;
Mrs.
half of the upper peninsula and will
_____ ..___ .. stated | attorney genera),
f.f Lansing,
Iuunilng.
JI t
cent Issue, carried the story ot the to agricultural, operations"
general, of
vi
was Joile Watrous. Woodland; Mrs.
-TO RENEWJMNTRACT
Ing us so frankly
t:
-7:‘7:7 . Minnie
u McFall. Woodland; Mrs Besproposed revision of electric rater, Mr. Arthur. "Previous announce- ! the
speaker at Uie 7777.
noon ’luncheon
southern peninsula when schools
what ailed us, and
Club.
HJ*
'
ale
Rogers.
Delton;
Miss
Isabel
charged by the Consumers Power menu by lhe company have in- of “ HasUngs Rotary
-- ------ ■“
-- -------- —-•—;
Aldermen Not Satisfied With reopen next September
on the present trip
formed the public of lhe greatly ext t
f ld
j Rtee. Preeport. and Miss Ruth RanCo. in Michigan towns and cities panded
Included In the exhibit, one of
he already fins fin
program now under way in
wiiai
»• u
1 sorn from iV&lt;&gt;
Rates Being Charged
the Kellogg Agricultural।
■erved’by lhal company. This ar­
the moat diversified ever assembled,
this
department
of
lhe
company's
.
'
flkrn
&gt;n
order
to
get
a
fair
and
।
&gt;«hed up the con;.
school.
ticle will be of Interest to our read­
to the City
will be mounted specimens of all
: equitable system of transportation.
tract. When a man,
In Uie afternoon Dr. Simon will
ers In Nashville. Middleville. Free­
species
of fish found in Michigan
The city's contract with the Con­
! both rail and trick? He said he j consult and advise' teachers" who
no matter how great
port and Woodland os well os Has­
sumers Power company for street takes and streams; more than a
I was not liere as a propagandist for 1 have asked for special help In deal- lighting, also for power purposes at hundred mounted specimens of up­
tings. The story in
... -.IUie Daily News
j
the
railroads.
He
said
he
recogi
Ing
with
children
having
speech
was written by its own staff cor- I
thc pumping station and the sewage land game birds, waterfowl and
res;xmdent. who recently Inter- j
nized that the commercial bus and t problems,
disposal plant, will expire on June predatory birds; large colored murals
viewed Wm. M. Smith, chairman of I
the truck have their place in our | M te al the request of speech 1. The council on Friday evening depleting the various phases ot con­
transportation system. There Is no teachers who studied under hint'
the Michigan Public Utilities Coin- I
hosts for proof of
voted unanimously to notify the servation; specimens of all Michi­
Irvin 8. Cobb mission, which has hod lhe matter I
reason why both should not be re- last summer that Dr. Simon te com- 1
DanVtoat Vl gan furs; a collection of guns and
Ids own brilliancy.
quireu io Ruuinii io proixr rvuuiu- ••*«» — —truvuof electric rates under consideration ,
traps used for specific purposes;
Instead of Just badmanners—well.
tlon by state and national laws, on ers have been correcting speech de- I tract, the city will not renew It.
for some time, and has given con- 1
. models of forest fire headquarters
to me one of the most dlsireulni sfderable time In making tnvesllga- 1
the same basis os’ the railroads.
fect cases-- In their
----------------------own’ school
—
ays- ,
Talking with members of the I and fire detection towers; and a
sights on this earth Is that of nn tioru preparatory to final action.
He mentioned lhe fact, which is terns and some of them have helped I council, we learn that the basis for 1 wide variety of other exhibits of speextinct crater still trying tn be the The New.* had the following to say:
apparent to everyone, that If rail­ in- the rural schools on Die request I their action te that they feel that-------------l ciflc interest.
Depart- — 7Conservation
—---------- - —r—
flaming volcano It one* was.
roads are compelled, as they are. of the rural school teachers. The th. r.«« charjrt lhe Chy «ee wo .
"Uniform tales under the block '
picture! WIU he Won
system, instead of the connected j
to maintain their own tracks and work which they have done Is espe­ hub. *ml Uul they would wull lhe conUnuoualy Ourtn« We Ume We
road bed for their cars, then It te cially gratifying to all concerned, contreel modined before Wey will dupleyi ere helm exhibited It WAI
load method of computation, will be
equally essential that thc owners of and they have a right to be con­ renew it.
announced.
XXTIIAT, 1 ask you. I* (he mo nf ordered by the Michigan Public
Commission in February I
trucks and buses shall pay their gratulated and supported by the
v v being a consistent old line R&lt;&gt; Utilities
for the Consumers Power Company's I
proper share of the cost of highway public.
No wonder a hen gets discouraged‘ What father would like moat to
publican back East, with line hank
It is hoped by the school author- at times. She never can find things gel out of his new car is the rest
maintenance. Just what the propcustomers, It was forcasl on Friday.
Ing connections, when all you're per­
"William M. Smith, chairman of I
I er share of thc trucks and buses. Hies and by lhe Health Dcpart- Just where she laid them.
ot the family.
mitted to do, ns the other follows the commission, when asked Hie
should be he was not prepared to ment that the public will show their
start drawing their hands for this status of the Power co. case, said il
| state, bul It can
be ascertained, appreciation by acquainting themWhatever It may
be. In fairness | selves with this type of work being
years big game, I. to funs with the would be a few weeks before lhe !
the equitable share of the owners 1 carried on throughout the county.
dlacnnta?
commission would have Its order'
I of trucks and buses for maintaining The more thorough the knowledge
Why. Iota of ns can remember i ready. Rate engineers ot lhe com■
the highways of thte state ought to which the public has of the subject,
when
It wasn't regarded ns fatal lo, mission have been at work on lhe |
PROF. H. J. GALLAGHER.
the Presldonllal prospect ot 11 new system of rates for several |___________________________________ be paid. That burden ought not to the better the co-operation which
bright member of the &lt;1. O. P. months. Smith said, and he Indi- public service, with many hundreds be put onto the tax payers, but can be given the speech teachers,
«lfd Wat We job wm about com-1 or mile, or new lines already pro­ should be borne by the owners of' The course, which was provided
younger set If he hnfipi*n&lt;*l to re­
; Jected. The Important point to the the commercial trucks and buses, i the teachers last year, was financed
side on the Wall Street side of the P
He stated that the worst feature . by lhe W. K. Kellogg Foundation
Whether the change would mean farmer, both the present and future
Allegheny mountain*. In fact, quite n genera) cut Mr. Smith declined to . electric consumer, is that he sludl be of the trucking buslnes at the pres- I and Dr. Simon's visit to Barry
the contrary.
say. "Wv cannot discuss lhal ques- able to make fullest use of this new ent time Is what might be called I county on February 22 te also paid
Now It seems there's a rule that
“ ’from Foundation funds.
'
1 ,roT J “,d A. . ... •Imptement.' The many recent de­ the "chteelllng trucks." By that he *for
only westerner* may look longingly
.
then pointed out that lhe vclopmenta In the application of clec- meant the trucker who is not will­
toward the White House without stahdard rate now in effect te not UcUy lo operations and process- ing to ask fair prices for hte serv- XOUNO WOMEN REEVBL1CANS
7' ’??’.!!' l"!j "*l.lon
being accused of trying to peep In *n Bnc
8£J?eral Practice In thc cs about the farmstead are making icm or «&gt; poy ,..r w.,e, u&gt; „„
drtrer*. Ho 81VOI no eoiudderaUon n",tM. “ r“R°”d « “•«&gt; '»&gt; »l"&lt;
lltllltv
Tim mm
nt I a u I cam oai
.a___ _ _*._. ....
. .
. ...
utility flsitrl
field. The
commission
gave
the deck before lhe deni.
great changes not only in rural life
12 days to lhe Power company but In farm methods. It is. there­ U&gt; Wo hours Woy work And p«y, *»d *« »o dlKh«nc of We dour* of
hearing, which began March 12 fore. as an aid to the farmers mUerably poor wiees. He U out lo i eUKenihlp. WU U We year Young
'
So-Called "Sunnv South'*
get *11 he can it lhe lemt poulble ,
"»'«’• »'
««'
and terminated September 12.
throughout our extensive rural ter­
“ lh5
TF THE poetic plonecni wild first
"We are convinced that the pres­ ritory that Prof. Gallagher's services ikpetue to hitmen. He mehUmed \
Wwiung'dLS: the laet that he wai recently *ltor. ve-l'bole-or aduh Uie. ought to b,
a christened the lower croM see- ent method of charging for domes­ are being enlisted. V.'„:
'
"
Uto
aM
'°c • m«" •!&gt;» •” arreited omcmied about the ptublenu gontlon of our country thc Sunny South tic current, while not entirely un­ ly through our division
Ulon „..****».
odlce* add
g p.„nger «r
car fr°nl!"&lt;l them-solullons
Wem-wluUoni for
ior some
me
camo hither at this aeniton of the fair, has outlived its usefulness," the their local staffs. Prof. Gallagher's lur ru.uu.ui uuu .
With his truck. The accident result- of *hlch are ,ou«hl through the
year, 1 think I know whut actuated chairman said.
department will be engaged In mat­
uim
vpcruuuiu of
vi state
auiv and
aim
«l operations
. "The rate schedules adopted by ters concerned with extension of fa­ ed in the death of a woman. It puur.m an
them.
i
federal
government.
thia man had started
“**"
tnat this
".
*.
Thej. called Dixie thc Sunny Itho «»inmtealon years ago for Con- cilities. uses of electricity In the developed that
Sdiuth for the .am.* remum that nat-: ?“S*r’1PoW" Company, where the farm home as well as the farmstead from Chicago on Monday morning.1 I Tn.pJ® 7s one group of voters that
™u&lt; to register public oplnurHllKt* hnvo named ■. enrf.&gt;in utl,Uy u not opening under a and assistance to farmers In prob­ had been working almost contlnu- Pan d° much
tn ' ,r Afr inn
T'“ n Ilrondxteo, did not contemplate the
ously from that time until the fol­
pin. of Atrlinn hyena lhe laugh- many dlBn&lt;M nnd lmprOvemenu lems connected with these matters.
many changes and improvements The
Company's
organization lowing Saturday, never having a young women of Michigan, as well as
U. bw-Aor brnme lb. ere*
............ taken place m „„
lhe „„„
homes: through Prof. Gallagher s depart­ chance to change his clothes In other states.' In particular, we refer
ture laughs so often, but because &gt; °
off M
Michigan
residents
since
C 1 8an rei,,den
‘-' *J
ncc lthen,
hen. । ment, will also co-operate with that time, and catching only a few to Republican voung women. They
he ..laughs III seldom that
ao.I
K&gt;«i.
------ It
* nat— I "The
"The ennnnrfArt
connected Iload
basis .of county Agents In this rapidly de- minutes sleep now and then when can well afford to stimulate their
urnllv attracts attention.
“*••
urnlly
charging
for elecllc current is out vcloplng field."
he thought he could while driving. ranks to take an active Interest In
the coming campaign's Issues and
After contemplating lowering ot °I date, from the standpoint of
"—• Gallagher
—1*
. a native
..
. i Prof.
of. He was drowsing at the time of the personalities.
leaking skies for a straight ten &lt;tay», | both the utility and the user. It
nigan. ocing
It i| M1C
Michigan,
being oom
born on
on MacKmac
Mackinac accident. The speaker declared that
Women, for long years, struggled
I’m beginning to wonder whether | *‘or*cs 10 lhe disadvantage of the • island and having his early school- it was not this man. but his merci­
and sacrificed and flnaliv won the
the bun has retired from buslnesi ,ar?e "0!n^ owner and In many I |pg there. He Is a graduate of less employer who was to blame
'permanently. Probnbl^about next I
to lhe advantage of the | Michigan Agricultural College, the for that accident. Human endur­ right to vote in Uie United States.
'July I'll wish he had.
I
’.C,0™ owncr- e“ch, of whom I present Michigan Blate College, and ance would not permit any man They have done much to Improve
I
...
I
thp “'"'amount of current." । holds degrees of Bachelor of Science to work as this man had for flve or Uie structure of government—and
I
v , .. ., .
Different Rate*.
| and Master of Agriculture. He qual- six days without propel- rest. He can do a great , deal more. Young
V.lu.bl. Ad»&lt;«
Tiie chairman pointed out that. 1 iflez as a -dirt farmer" having oper- could not be alert enough to drive women are very dlrectlv concerned
ODAY •I ran •Into
my old
and I --nrier
under the
hisa.,own
100 acre dairy
farm .for a high-powered truck. He felt that in government—especially those who
...
the connected
connected load
Inarl system
nvxtemated
I
__ ___________
.__________
wise friend, Bassett Blakely. He of ttauring electrical bills,there | many yeqrs In addition
to hisprothe national and state governments, expect to have homes and children
as well as the public, ought to In­ of their own some day. if they
'ituck lo the cow business, whereas nre 21 different rates. The com- fessional work.
haven't already arrived at that sta­
Will Rogers was weaned
wen noil from EL .
want* n
basp
Since his
his association
associationwith
Since
with the sist on having all trucks manned tus of life. For young women will
that
will
be
thc
same
for
all
users.
by
competent men. who are paid
Slate college In 1923. he has con­
IL Otherwise these southwesterly
come to know that government de­
Then
everyone
will
pay
the
same
ducted numerous experimental and fair wages and required to serve termines, among many others, one of
ranges might have produced one
rale for the same amount of en­
only reasonable hours. -If that were
more corn r«-&lt;J phllosopher-humorlsl ergy. An adjustment either up or research projects, particularly In the
the policies that relates to mother­
field of farm electrification. Dur­ required of all truckers, accident#
with a national reputation.
down is a simple thing under the ing this time Prof. Gallagher's ac­ would be reduced^on our highways. hood's most precious possession;
I During the depression, Bassett Mock system, he claims.
Railroads might, as well know first children—the policy we refer to is
tivities also included work as a farm
- tried to borrow a sizable sum from
• Smith says lhe Consumers aver­ electrification specialist in the Ag­ as last, he said, that the truck and WAR!
a gentleman with a well-earned rep age rate is 43 cents a KWH. which ricultural Engineering Extension the bus are here to stay. All the To band Republican young women
utatlon tor frugality. It was a for Is about one cent under the nation­ Branch of the U. S. Department of railroads have a right to ask Is together In Michigan an active and
al
average, but that many of Its Agriculture} He is well known lo that the same treatment be accord­ able woman. Mrs. Muri H. DeFoe. of
j lorn hope.
Charlotte. Is devoting much of her
1 '‘No,** stated Bassett, emerging customers arc not getting a fair thousands
of Michigan farmers ed to their competitors as to them­ time these days. Local youth of the
from the Interview, "he didn't let
through his demonstration work selves. Railroad men are not re­
"For example, under the present carried on throughout the state ouired to work long hours, and they feminine sex who are interested in
me have any money, hut on purling
doing their part in saving the Unit­
ho gave me free of charge some connected load method of figuring the past eight years, as well as do get reasonable pay. For the ed States from socialistic, non-Dem­
a monthly bill, two users of 200 through numerous magazine ar­ shorter hauls the truck Is undoubt­
beautiful advice. Bassett, my son.
KWH per month will pay different ticles. radio broadcasts and Experi­ edly the better means of transpor­ ocratic drifts as manifested by Uie
lie said, never feel your stock drj amounts.
Roosevelt administration, or from a
tation,
he
said.
But
it
ought
not
to
ment Station publications. During
fodder In windy weather. 1 did that
"He listed one householder with
be permitted to pay miserably small repetition of the unfortunate recent
in March In 1884 and one shuck a small connected load paying a ed as editor of the "Question and wages and keep Its employees work­ Democratic administration of Mich­
.blew away on me."
monthly bill of $465 or 233 cents Answer Dept." of the magazine ing for unreasonable hours, then igan. will do well to band themselves
per KWH, while the other, using Electricity on the Farm.
cut Its rates to the detriment not together in a Young Woman's Re­
the same amount of current but
only of railroads but of big truck publican organization.
This community has many able
lines as well.
‘
AKE CHARLES, LA.—1 tnenn having a -higher connected load, GROUP LEADERS
paid &gt;9.72. or 4.88 cents per KWH.
At the present time. Mr. Schan- and loyal young Republican women
no disrespect for any ninn'B
cupp said, the big trucking compan­ who are lust the type Mrs. DeFoe
"Electric refrigeration,
washing
MEET NEXT WEEK ies of the country are conducting wants to contact. We suggest, in
memory, but for ninst any one of us machines, radios, electric Irons, etc.
,who ever tasted success the verse are not figured In the connected
their business fairly. They
are the name of clean Republicanism,
that was written about little dog load under the present method, Mias Eleanor Cramer to Give paying fair wages to their men; that they do so al once.
Lesson on “Fitting
Rover might serve ns an epitaph: which penalize* some to the advan­
they are asking fair pay for their
services. They are performing a HASTINGS HIGH
(“While he lived, he lived In clover, tage of others." he said."
Your Dress"
'but when he died, he died nil over."
real service to the public. The rail­
SCHOOL NOTES
Barry county Home Economics roads do not complain of
such
EXPENSIVE TAX SALES.
| I would^hnve said that Huey
Extension group leaders will as­ competition; but they do complain
One of the largest physical eduWhen thc old taw wa.* repealed,
Long’s machine, being essentially n
semble at the court house in Has­ and'have a right to complain, of
caUon demonstrations in the history
onc-mnn machine, would start fall­ which advertized tax sales giving tings on Wednesday. Thursday and
the chlseller.
of the school will be held In the
ing to pieces before ever they buried I descripUons of the lands, and a new Friday. February 26. 27 and 38 for
It was an Interesting and Inform­ high school gymnasium tonight, Feb.
one enacted, ll was claimed that the
him. But It yet endures and Is'pow
lhe fifth meeting with the clothing ing talk.
state would save a lot of money. The
20. under the supervision of Miss
erfttl and. right or wrong. It func­ new auditor general arbitrarily can­ specialist. Mtes Eleanor Cramer.
Helen Merson and Mr. Joseph BroMichigan state college.
NASHVILLE FIRE DEPARTMENT.
tions.
celed Uie sales although designation
The annual meeting of the Nash­ zak. This is the flrst time that the
County Agent Foster states this
I Admire such a man's record or of newspapers for the publication
boys and girls have collaborated In
despise It, nevertheless yon have had been made and some publlca- lesson will take up “Pitting Your ville Are department was held Fri­’ the production of an entertainment
to take off your hat to n personality tlons begun. The new taw requires Dress" and Is one of the important day evening. William Shoup was' of this type.
elected chief; William Miller, assist­
lessons
of
thc
course
of
six
lessons
that can project Itself back across notice to each owner to be sent by on "Clpthlng1' given to the 29 Bar­ ant chief; Delbert White, foreman;
The defeat of OUego bv the Has­
___
registered letter.
The result ta
the_ grave.
ry county groups this winter. Near­ George Graham, assistant foreman; tings eagers, there, on February 14.
F.H.A. LOANS
।_____________ ...
, greater cost than ever. For instance
ly 500 Barry county women are en­ Charles Betts. secretary and treas­ by a score of 20-13. not only upset
T,
,
...
.
in Ottawa county there are 10.000
.
* . A '
descripUons and Uie cost will be at rolled in this instructive and enter­ urer. The total loss sustained by the dope basket but brought the
We are in position
()UT In California every patch1 least &gt;2.000. for a force of clerks taining course from Michigan Stale fire in the village was a little over a Hastings average up to the point
Miss Cramer states In­ thousand dollars during 1935. The where the loqil courtmen are break­
of ground where things grow,' must be employed, and that is more College.
to make mortgage
department responded to nine caus. Ing even on games for the season
regardless of size. Is a ranch. S.&gt; than would, be the cost under the dividuality Is the outstanding ad­
vantage of making one's own clothes
with the opportunity of forging Into
far ns 1 know there are only two old taw; and the counties will have
loans on improved
A CXIRRECTION.
farms In southern California - one's 110 W instead of the state a* for­ and the dress which each leader
In our announcement last week the lead in the near future.
will exhibit at this meeting will
REAL ESTATE.
a lion form and the other la an 6tl mfrly.—Allegan Gazette.
prove the originality of these home concerning the radio broadcasta by
A model of Hastings as it was 100
Rev.
Earl
Scott
of
Carmel,
N.
Y„
trlcb farm.
I look for the day
sewers. Careful attention to perfect
years ago is the project which has
LARGER THAN EXPECTED. .
when n Hollywood scalp ajiecliillat I
fitting, to well designed necklines we made an error in the day of the been started by the history depart­
The meeting of the Hastings
will refer to hte ealabitahment' as
and collars, and other details will week and name of the station.
ment of Uie high school in prepara­
Brotherhood was held on Monday
The day is every Tuesday al 3:15; tlon for the school exhibits of the
be given. Adapting the fitted pat­
*
,
...
ni«ni.
night. un
On accouni
account 01
of inc
the itnpuimpasIn Toxas, which we just left be gable roads in many sections and the tern to a foundation slip is an added o’clock and lhe station is WHEW Barry county-Hsstings Centennial.
(1250 kilocycles), we beg your par­
use
for
the
pattern
upon
which
the
hind ua. nearly everybody it a intense cold, the attendance was not
don.
•
The Dramatic Club is working
rancher, too, or used to l»e. Today as large as usual.
However, the women have been working.
usual.
upon a one-act play called "The
we'r* In the land of the planters. I number present waa larger than ex"Inherited economic power Is as1 Bishop's Candlesticks” which will be
Men have a lot of characteristics
and If we keep going, bearing north. ■ pected. Mr. C. H. Bramble. Master that we may dislike, but we can inconsistent w|th the ideals of this' presented In one ot the assemblies.
tomorrow we'd beamong the farm-1
Ulc State Grange gave the ad- overlook moat of them in a man generation as Inherited political
ert.
। dress which was listened to with who shows gratitude.
power was Inconsistent with the
Lockers are being installed in the
Th, so-called genllemao-farmer. fj®* *WenUtm and had much In it
Ideals of the generation which es­ high school and are almost ready for
With all Ba drawbacks Ute U atill tablished our government."—Presi­ use. Henceforth, books, wraps, and
aa we know him baek Eaat, dpean'l
™ of ‘nU?al
the
dent Roosevelt.
a splendid adventure.
flourish anywhere down here.
who
present.
private property will be kept in lhe

convince me that George Bcrnard Shaw was not the smart­
est man ih the world—and that I

ABOLISH “CONNECTED
। electrification activities
LOAD” PLAN OF PRICES to announcement made

splendid floor slwrw

te

.

g

Don Taffaa is gmwral

CORRESPONDENCE
COURSE AVAILABLE
Studies Ootnplttod to Ayfij
on Freshman Coutm in
CoDege or University
apply on

collate

and

1 will ba carried on in co
our city high school.

Holwerda of Grand Rapids, and will
। be conducted under th* auspicM of
tho University of Michigan Exten­
sion Division and lhe Michigan
Works
Progress
Administration.
Credits obtained by students in this
course will apply when student* who

any Michigan college. This course
ought to be attractive to many who
have completed, or are about to fin*
Uh. their work in high school, and
Let changes
com*.
Without
changes there U no progress.

Your
Bant

IS A SPECIALIST

T

WEBSTER says a specialist is "One devoted

to some special branch of learning, art or
business."

Your Banker is a Specialist in the business of
finance and as such you can consult him on
all financial matters. Consult him with con­
fidence as you would your doctor. He may
not always tell you what you would like to
hear, but he will give you sound advice, un­
prejudiced and impersonal, based on the
facts of the case.

The Hastings City Bank for more than fifty
years has rendered a specialized service in
banking and is qualified to give you sound
advice in this line.

L

To individuals or business concerns, city
folks or farmers in need of financial aid or
advice, we say, come in and talk it over with
your Banker.

We are in a position to make loans on real
estate. We are also in a position to make col­
lateral loans, and loans based on sound flnancial statements. We invite your appliestion. All loans are considered on the basis of
the borrower's ability to repay.

Confide in your Banker and he will
in you.

HASTINGS CITY BA

TELEPHONE 2103

IRVIN 9, COBB. .

HASTINGS • MICH

.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY f. I»M
of executrix filed letter* tasla- l«r» of admlnhlratlon usued.

I

Light-colored wall*, proper loco-1

MIDDLEVILlZ

CLOVERDALE.

[called Uie boy* to the Oeuke* meal

BARRYV1LLE

Misses Dora and Agnes Potter di
Monday was stock day and some , m*rk^ ,wh,7e
7*
Augubright'* achool of Battle Creek
of the fanner, were able lo get their i c?v"cd ln H1? rSotl*jt
slock Ln on sleigh*, looked old fash- j of }be market. By
wk U wa*
r-^—
■
toned all right
More team* and P01 °ut with a nominal amount ot
Kenneth Wilcox of Kalamazoo |
PRQBATE COURT.
sloiglu in town the past few day* | &lt;h*&gt;naKr U&gt; building and content*.
called on hl* parents. Mr. and Mrs.!
«». MjroS wfuiwonl..
“w
iiu. ojn rHi-i Tonuhi 1. llu r«uUr Um, ror
Herbie witaxx. Thureday. .
M- anowtng tialm*«ntered.
cJz
’..™.?'!?.?"
C,71*_.rT",„
belner
’has been delivering
coal' on a II O
°nr
’ir Brotherhood
Brotherhood, hut
but on
on account
account of
of
KM Vera L. Roger*, minor
Melgh
the condition of the road aame ha*
tend school ln Hastings, stayed in
IrBM of Gdn. filed, order allowing
Est. Owen L Dodge, dee d. Order "ni’MMOnTwofeoU
wr'—• —
••• •An­
deed
* mur tram Urnt I. rinc. .(
Our M..n
erauln, .iund "'“ J?'1’””''
""U
&gt; Hastings the post week.
account entered, discharge of Gdn. allowing claims entered.
1 nual account
n«nsnm
uc
filed
1 kitchen has windows on at least po^p^no. Fla., state* the tempera- ant was ill and also snowed In the
g’
-----Christian Endeavor met with El­
ndnnr Re
^es. or one or two window, on turrTround B5 degree, and swim- fint of last week, ro had Alfred,
Urued. eatate enroUed.
1
HQ-a Hollister, dee d
M Order
w.u.i
•
,,.
,
n„ ......... ..
.
,.
mre BTQUIia CO aczicc* k»u awuu- lull wi i*»i
MJ iihu niucu
don
and Virginia Day Sunday eve-'
MARTIN CORNEHH.
Est. Albert fli»d
J. Chanee.
minor.
RC- r,n,. •ald»
and-an
outside d
door
nti
. the ocean
___ L__
_• m
——,-—.1 substitute
—...—
E»t Jacob Edger, dec'd. Order as- allowln
Uowln*
. claims entered,
entered.
dteharae
of ndn
“* •
nd an obUlde
“^ ®
“ nn. mlng pi
fine, . ll U hard
England
for ...
a few .days. .
signing residue entered, discharge j r
-. Rhoda A..—
.. uEst.
Wolf.
dat'd. Petition k“°' O®°‘ °
?‘h" Th* crow
°ul I for ua to imagine that when we look Bill
mu finally
n.-u, got
,vu dug
uu. out
out enough
e»uu.n lo
iu
Mrs.
home nlng.
The Sunday School contest sup­
of executor Issued, estate enrolled. । for
&gt;r _____
license to sell ftled. waiver of
f&gt;ut* enrolled.
hot air and odors, especially if thc #t our thermometer and lakes.
get
get back
back on
on the
Uie job
job Wednesday
Wednesday P.
P. recently from 1 wk* visit with
EM. Carrie D. Todd, dee d War- I nollce nl-d testimony
t*sU,n?? of freeholder* KITCHENS NERD '
’T tan*
Cloverdale friends of Mr and Mrs M
—
her daughter. Miss Beatrice Barry per and program was postponed un­
til a later dale because ot lhe
rant and Inventop filed petltlonfor nled Uc&lt;nM w mU kMUrd
on KITCHENS NEED
th* top.
Ira O«‘c»d‘wiil“be“iiad‘to hear that 1 Call went out Wednesday for the &gt;n Grand Haven.
blocked roads.
~
COLOR. AIR. LIGHT.'
hearing claims filed, notice to credlflled
flkd re.
The stove should be placed so that they are the proud parents of a ba- outside children to be ready for
Tiie "caterpillar ' has been very
The teacher and pupils and sev­
Good lighting and ventilating fa- ,drafts do not strike it directly. Such by boy bom Feb 11th.
tors Issued.
, J)ort Of M|e filed, order confirming
school Thursday, bul the wind that ■ busy cleaning out the cross roads eral mothers enjoyed a valentine
Ext. Btalxlce L Carpenter, minor. ..te entered.
।cllltles in kitchens are health neces- ,drafts are-fire hazard* and decrease
Mr nnH
Wan,-,- visited nl’ht again filled the • roads, so north and south of the schoolhouse. parly al the school bouse Friday.
Est. Philip T. Colgrove. dec'd. An- sltba for the housewife, according lo ,the efficiency of the stove.
Release of Gdn. filed, discharge of
(B. ft»vPiu..tina&lt;, school was declared on until the At 3 o'clock Sunday morning it was
L™ ““Uu8lk' 24lh. Wc all hope the roads will be | opening them. The Coata Grove
nual account filed, order for publl- extension workers of thc Home EcoGdn. ktued. estate enrolled.
A screened transom over the out­
— entered.
inomlcs Department
at Michigan
y
.
opened enough so that all can re- road and also thc one north of Stony* entine box with exchange of valen­
Eat. Harry N Potter, deed. Will cation
---------------------------—
-------- - ' side door and over the windows sunaay. Mr. Haney u
niui. r-n1Uir»
Fact tannins,
:
fllad, petition for probate filed.
Est. Mai’y Harr/, deed. Waiver of State
college. East
Lansing, who helps
Mias Rose Peake of Shultz spent port for duty
point are cleaned out at last, but tines and a gift of n heart shaped
In carrying out odors while an
box ot candy for lhe teacher from
waiver of hdtice filei proof of will notice filed, order appointing Adinrx. nay that much fatigue can be traced outside door with glass in thc upper Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Forest
j F Dietrich got to Bowens Mills! owing to the heavy snow and all
thc pupils. Candy and popcorn
filed, order admitting will entered, entered, bond of Admrx. filed, let-. lo eyestrain and poor air.
। with supplies for hl* customers by roads blocked, thesa roads were full were passed and the achool band
I half adds to the light. Bright cur- Smith.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jess
Kenyon
of
Del,
going
from
here
to
Irving,
by
way
j
for a week or more.
I tains can bring color to a kitchen
played tor thc guests.
Were all sorry to hear of lhe
but they may shut out loo much ton were Sunday callers of the Oro- ■ of^M-TI to Daniel* corners then west
A caterpillar snowplow dug out
ver Davenport family
I to* Irving village, thence south to dl.at j, of our ojd frjend and neighlight and air.
the drifted road south of Barryvlllc
Mrs Forest Smith was very sur- Hastings road, through the tunnel. I t&gt;or. Mrs. Hottie Hopkins, who died churth Wednesday only lo have It
Sinks play an important paxt in
prised when a few friends dropiwd then to Gales corners, south lo Hills | at hcr (jome in Hastings Feb. 4 For drift full again Thur. day. Saturday
kitchen
work
and
should
according,
lv be "nS when? there te mmt Iln Saturday evening to help cclc- comers,
----- thence
------------. west
.... I.
to Bowens 27 years Mr:.. Hopkins and her hus- with Uie help of the men alonyihe
ly uc placet! wnere mere L* most ...
. , .. .
..
!1Mills,
t .nd
some trtn
trip
and now that Is b411d wrr resl(lw,u here living on road shoveJlng. a snowplow again
MUir.1 light. Some.uU.ortUe.wg-i'brale
”1- her birthday.
“«ha.v.
Mill. wm.
I ;he"f;
gest that the sink should be directly 1. Helen Davenport spent last week dosed.
the farm now owned by Orr Fisher. cleared Uie track.
uno.r
.
.mom,
.....c
ln
m«
i
»•
•"&lt;&gt;
«
”
•
w
«
11
"
I
„
s
"
,ur
?*x
•
'
“
d
•&gt;,
&lt;"&gt;” 1 They were charter members of lhe
under a window while others think.'
Mr. and Mrs. John Higdon re­
। Bowen Mills with plenty nf shovels Martin
I.
be put* .&gt; n,hi wk,
. wlll
" '' church, and active in all turned .Wednesday from their trip
reached town by going clear td Has- thlngs for Rje goo(1 of thc nclthbor- to FidMda where they visited many
« tne ..mao. .O .V°u ....
tings and then back on M-3T They | j10od Blld community. Mrs. Hopkins places of interest. It is reported
*
■, t ,__________
I Feb. 27. pot luck dinner everyone took out plenty of mail and supplies
nko R falthful worker in the they would have enjoyed slaying
for their neighbors.
Aid society and thc Sunday school. longer.
The R. F. D-. boys sure have been g|1(. wnj u ROO(j neighbor, always
Mrs. Floyd Nesbit went to Nichols
having their troubles too. By driving ' WilUng to do what Mio could far hospital in Battle Creek for an Xr&gt;«.»
»r. » l.rs. &gt;n ..... । ,110nd 0[ K,Untatoo
many more miles than usual they! oUwrs_ ^4 wo wiu Rlwayi remomray returning Wednesday
»ge five story house could be moved
Mr and Mri
cu0 Card of' have succeeded In delivering the
her kindly disposition, sunny
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Geiger. Mr.
through them without, touching th* Prichardvllle spent Sunday with bulk of their mail each day
Mnll). and helpful ways. We know and Mrs. Heber Foster called Wed­
roof or scraping the shies.
^Mr. and Mr*. Chfiord McMannls.
Fire alarm early Saturday A M. that she will hear thc welcome "Well nesday evening on Mrs. J. B. Wolfe
------------------------------------------- :---------------- done thou good and faithful servant, of Hastings, who has just n1 turned
enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." to her home from Pennock hospital.
O D. Fossett went to Battle
poned for more favorable weather Creek Saturday to visit his son. Bay
as the roads were impassable.
Fnssett. and family.
WEEK "AFTER WEEK FOOD SATISFACTION AT
Miss Dora Day has been ab-'i nt
COATS GROVE.
, from her school in Hastings thc
C. THOMAS STORES . . . QUALITY FOODS AT LOW
Dr. Finnic was called for Mrs past week on account of the bad
; Floyd clum last Saturday and as roads.
i
PRICES . . . VITAL SAVINGS EVERY DAY . . . JOIN
' lhe roads were drifted full he went
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Haley of
THE CROWD OF HAPPY FOOD BUYERS
|V&gt;
VKE3
, down the railroad track with his car Lansing visited her mother. Mrs.
i from Coats Grove.
.
।Clara Day Sunday.
Raymond Green and Phyllis Day
AND SHARE IN THESE VALUES.
| The coaU Grove school kept going
AGAINST YOUR OWN NEIGHBORS
during thc very stormy and cold have not missed n day in our school
i weather ol thc past few weeks while 1all this stormy cold weather. Those
FRESH AND CRISP
a good many other schools have been !neither nbicnl or tardy during
When nations apply "sanctions”—that is, cut
closed.
; January' acre Joy Van Doreen. Phyl­
| Thc 4-H Club girls hnd a meeting .lis Day. Junior Rove. Raymond
off trade with another nation—there may be
Green.
. at the Floyd Kimble home Friday
economic hardship on all aides.
evening.
Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox of Kalama­
Mrs. Lillie Shultz Dcn.'morc of
The same may be true of communities and
’ zoo Is visiting her slater. Mrs. Har- Ionia has many friend.. In thLr. place
! low Barnum and family
who regret thc passing ot Mr. Dens­
individuals. How few of us stop to think when
। Thc D. G. T. O. Chib met last more and extend heartfelt sympathy
Wednesday with Mr. nnd Mr:.. Geo.
we trade unnecessarily away from home, that
eGaals.z They enjoyed a flue dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hum attend­
I with Jhe men In attendance. The ।ed a party In Nashville Saturday
we are in a small way applying "sanctions"
। following program was given "Amer- night.
against our own merchants and neighbors!
lea"; devotions, Rev. Jordan; BusiJohn Hine went to Ann Arbor Fri­
nr.«w. Program in charoc of Mrs. day expecting to have an operation
Mock Turtle
CAMPBELL S
It is a good thing to trade at home when­
Willard Dcmond. respemse to roll but his friends will be glad to hear
Oxtoil
call witii jokes; Juanita, sung by he may not have to have one
ever possible. It helps to keep local wealth
Vegetable Beef
the men; reading. Mrs. Freda Bump;
No. 1
Tin1 mow plows have been faith­
di bate—Resolved that electricity b ful. running day and night and have
c»»pb«n .
c«»
circulating for local good. Let us
can
more beneficial to the farm man kept the main road open although
than to .the farm woman—afflrmn- the enow banks are way above the
keep this in mind and do our proper
Tab
. live. Mrs. Kendall Coats. Miss Freda fences.
bm
Cana
.
Consomme
part as citizens of this community.
Bump— negative—■Geo. Coats chns.
The many friends of Jessie Hine
Townsend: time keeper. Kendall' will be r
...„ to know she has rcglad
We shall all benefit as a result.
[Coats; judges. Arthur Rlcnardson. [ mnied from Kalarnazzio and Ls gainEVAPORATED
Mrs. Warren coolbnugh. Mrs. Glen Jng. That she mav be fully rcCarnation, Borden's
Densmorc. The debate was very stored lo her health is thc wish of
Ivl I mb I &gt; Irradiated, Vitamin (D)
good and the Judges decided thc ! |1(.r many friends.
negative side as a winner by 1 point. I Ronald Kenyon of Nar hvllle spent
WAX OR GREEN
: The men wrote reeija s for baking I Friday night with his grandparents.
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN '
eakr and thc one written by Rev. Mr. nhrf Mrs. g E Kenyon
Jordan was declared best.
I Clinton Horn spent Sunday with
CUT STRINCLESS
Mr and Mrs. Willard Dcmond t;in!rr Anders of Brush Ridge.
1 viMtert Mr. and Mr: Arch Graves on j Mrs Alma Wlilpple. who has been
Sunday afternoon.
spending a week with her daughter.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Waller Thomp on; Mrs. Florence Pcnkc. and family re­
BEST YET
am! children have been staying with . turned to her home in Augusta FriFlovd Dunnigan
Dlinnican while
white their
tiirir road
rnnr! duy.
...... Rens Whipple accompanied her
■ Floyd
Hard Kansas Wheat
i has been impassable for travel.
home.
। Tlu! roads around here have been
Mr*. Ada Ashby received a card
i cleared out now and here's hoping Friday announcini: the birth of an
I they will net gel drilled shut again. eight and one-half pound girl Feb.
‘
Paul
Thompson
of
Battle
Creek
Ns 1
12 to Mr. and Mrs. MaUrttt Loark.
DARK RED
| Mailed his parents. Mr and Mrs. ot Midland
C*n«
ODESSA BRAND
Thc little Miss has
। E S. Thompson on Sunday aflcr- been named Emelle Ann. and
GOOD FLAVOR
3 c*31
। noon. .
Grandma Patton is there helping to
; Rev Wing wax in Portland Sun­ rare for her. congratulations from
HEALTHFUL OBEENS
; riay. to preach the funeral union of their many trieuda iiv this place.
• Isaac Johnson, who formerly lived
SUN XIPEMED
3
EVER GOOD BRAND
i in West Sebewu
GLASS CREEK.
in spite of the weather conditions
IAWRENCE BRAND
[ Mr. and Mrs. H A Woodman visCUT GREEN TIBS
i lied Mrs Ella WoRe in Hasting., Gordon Havens tnlved only one
j Sunday evening. James Wolfe was In day having school at Good Will.
CHINESE MAID
Miss Virginia Havens, who teaches
Grand Rapids, consulting spcclal! bts there on account of poor health at Shultz, was home three days the
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shelley forepart of last week as thc chil­
end Mr. and Mrs. Neil Smith ol dren were unable to gel to the
Midland spent the week end with Shultz school.
। relatives here. Neil went to Toronto
School was closed In the OIL* ditCorned Beef
Can 17c
t CMl.. bn Sunday afternoon, having trtet fur the-pxst two weeks on ac­
count of lhe bad roads.
I been sent there on business.
BROADCAST CORNED BEEF
Thc many friends of Rev. and
I Miss Ruth Woodman was home
HASH
2 cans 29c
Collowoy fur coat.
I from Tuesday until Sunaay evening Mrs. Karl Keefer wfil be interested
FOR PREPARING THOSE TASTY. HOME-MADE
Heavy Calloway fur robe, well lined,
1 because ot vacation due to bad to know that twin boys were born
Jcrscy
cow.
8
yrs.
old.
test
5.7.
DISHES AT TRULY LOW COST
AUNT JEMIMA
1 roads.
to them Feb 13th. They have been
a good one.
named David and Lindon. Al Inst
Pancake Flour pkg. 12c
Registered Jcrsoy cow, 12 yrs., test 6.
Wool horso blonkot.
SOCTHWEKT WOODLAND.
report.* mother anti sens were doing
DRY GREEN PEAS, whol* or iplit
lb. 5e
Registered Jersey cow. 12 yrs., test 6.7.
Mr and Mrs. Chas larlce. Ncvah fine and Dud i.M&gt; t likciy*to to.se his
LOO CABIN 30’, MAPLE
Carpenter
tool
chest
and
carpenter
BARLEY, Pearl—finest for soups
2 lbs. 9c
and Keith were dinner guests ot interest In boys for some time.
Syrup
Table Tin 23c
Jersey cow. 8 yrs. old. bred Jan. 13.
tools.
1
Mr.
and
Mrs.
1.
N.
Williams
near
Homer Erway had thc misfortune
RICE, fancy Blue Rose
lb. 6c
1 Dowling Friday.
Holstein cow, 9 yrs. old. bred Feb. 1.
to cut his fool quite badly last week
2 log chains, one 12-ft., one 17-ft.
WINOOLD ECONOMY
DRY KIDNEY BEANS
2 lbs. 15c
This neighborhood was very sorry while cultinc wood.
Jersey heifer. 15 mo*. old. bred |on. 13.
ladder.
Cos
engine.
1
to
hear
ot
thc
death
ot
Mrs.
Rosa
18-ft.
Cereal
5 lb. bog 25c
Kenneth Brower of Hastings was
MACARON 1—SPAGHETTI
3 lbs. 17c
Red brood sow, wt. 500. bred Jon. 6.
Arnett, who lived near Dowling, bul a week end guest of Junior £rway.
Hay slings, ropes, forks and pulleys.
Quaker Oats Ig. bx. 19c
CHEESE, mild Wisconsin Colby
1 was a former resident of Southwest
lb. 21c
Sunday visitors at Chas. Whitte­
White brood sow. wt. 175, bred Jan. 4.
Sop pan. Hog crate.
' Woodland Wc extend our sympathy more's were Mtes Katie Whittemore
PEANUT BUTTER, fresh
2 lb. ior 25c
Ralston's Cereal, pg. 23c
[ to the family.
Heifer calf. 10 weeks old.
of Hickory Corners. Lowell Whitte­
"Thc Practical Stock Doctor." a book
PRUNES, sweet, tender—70-80 sixe
2 lbs. 11c
Mr. and Mrs. Blake Makley and more and wife of Delton and Mtes
Cream of Wheat
23c
4 pigs, wt. about 90 lbs. coch.
daughter ot Charlotte were Sunday Atmamac Pew of Hastings.
treating diseases of all kinds of
RAISINS, seedless
4 lbs. 23c
50 White Leghorn hens.
j guests of Mr. and Mrs. Guy MakPost's Bran Flakes 15c
Phillip Warren was a Luusing
stock.
| ley and family.
FIGS, fancy layer figs
lb. pkg. 10c
visitor on* day last week.
KELLOGGB
50 White Leghorn pullets.
I We are sorry to report that Mrs.
Other articles not mentioned.
Mrs. Hazel Oils and children ot
TAPIOCA—Pc«rl
All Bran
large box 20c
2 lbs. 15c
j FJoyd clum is not showing Im- Hickory Corners were visitors at the
CORN MEAL, fresh, yellow
1 provement at this writing.
10 lbs. 25c
Wm. OUs home Sunday.
Wheat Krispies 2 for 19c
ary Usued.
’
| E»t. Christine Cole. dee d. With- tlon of window*, and separate lights
A tetter from Mr* Lou Ann PatMarv
Tta-M order eon- draw*! of claim* filed Order allow- over lhc llnkubl&lt; brU&gt;« ton of Midland, states Uial she 1*
Miier*d
I Ina tardy claim entered, order can- good illumination, the extonaion very proud over Uus arrival of a
a * ssHtTsa
intw-rirane*
entered final' workers advise. Drab colors such * granddaughter. Little Emelle Ann
Est- John Neal, dec'd. Petition for
*.
Qrfur suirnlna' resi- *■' gray, brown and dingy greens I arrived at the home of Mr and Mr*,
Or- Admr. UM. pillion r«r
l'‘,d' ort"
'
JI.
u„
,nd
«JaUUiSS,
; Admr filed, ofdir appolfitlhg special
entered
tend to absorb light rather than to !’ of’Srs. Loucks, ‘nee Helen" niton,
Re- Admr. eatered
I E*L Annte B. Wolcott, dee d. An- reflect It. For best lighting and । wnd congratulations.

HOUSE NEWS

S"!

FOOD BUYER

DON’T APPLY

^anctions

If TUAUAC

SODA Crackers

A A II H C
SOUPS

15c

HEALTHFUL,
QuickU^aNOURISHING
M.„,uo:These

lOc

Scotch Broth

Tomato Soup

2

15c

Pea Soup

3

25c

MU K

™ 7c

^.15c
£u78c

BEANS
FLOUR

SPAGH ETTI.,,,.
KIDNEY BEANS
LIMA BEANS ,
SPINACH
TOMATOES
ASPARAGUS
BEAN SPROUTS
CHOPSUEYSAUCE

25c
25c
25c
25c
29c
50c
25c
702 bottle 15c

3

N
K OF HASTINGS

UCTION SALE

Having sold my farm, 1 will sell at public auction at the
fam/, one mile east of Woodland, on

TUESDAY, FEB. 25
Commencing ot one o'clock, thc following property:—

BULK FOODS

LIVE STOCK

COCOANUT, finest long thread

lb. 20c

ELITE LA BL I,

SNOWDRIFT

3 CM S8c

ECUXOMICAL BUOBTEKIXG

WESSON OIL
"•« 24c

SMACKS RSS
SURESET D&lt;M«n*
KOSTO DESSERT
I E| | V
JCLLI

45c

laltsUto Blip
b.rrr Fl»Tor

IVORY SOAP
IVORY FLAKES

ir."

I8c
9c
3
14c
5 Ku 35c
2

2 »*” 11 c

THOMAS STORES
ITAft mhut

FARM TOOLS AND
MISCELLANEOUS.

2-bar platform scales.
Feed cooker. Grindstone.
McCormick cream separator, large
sixe, belt attachment, a good one.

HAY, FODDER, ETC.

150 butholt oats. 150 bushels corn.
Some seed corn. Cloverseed.
Barley. 7 tons alfalfa hay.
Corn fodder. Bean pods.
Straw stock and corn ensilage.

TERMS OF SALE:—Under $ 10, cash. Over $10, 8 months
time on good bankable notes.

E. J. SHELDON, Propr
Harry Pennington, Auctioneer

IMMMWMMWMA

PLEASE HAVE A HEART
FOR US OR SOME OTHER

COAL DEALER!
SHOVEL SNOW from
YOUR DRIVEWAY!
Hastings Lumbar &amp; Coal Co.

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

wvwew

�TUT BA1T1H01 BAVNEK THCTHDAT. rmil'Air

Women’s

Club

DAHLIA HISTORY
TRACED TO 1615
New Bulletin Weavoa

Ro­

t&gt;.

1,1.

Wheel." which was lo have been | most of the »lort* began to L
even st the M E. church last week i pretty bare
ducted by Rsv. Prichard of lhe
ednesday svsnlng. was called off ■ Harold Rosenberger and LauroEvangelical church. Mrs o»U Ly­
on account of the weather At Hie 1 Endres were in Grand Rsplds
kin* sang. Burial la the mausoisum
present ttms the date for Ita prawn- buslnwa. Saturday
at Lakeview cemetery. Mr. Deller
---------------- —__________
L. E. Bus11. for 26 yean State Y. tatlon to not known, but It will i
probably not be untU after Easter. ।
DOWLING.
। noon. He suffered a stroke and
Cheesebrough's factoiy to shut1 Mr* Leland Jones and baby' passed away Thursday morning
Detroit. Many In Barry county will
daughter have arrived home from; without gaining consciousness. He
recall hl* vtolt* here He discovered down this week.
Mr and Mra Fred Tabberer en-1 p*llnock hospital Congratulation*. . leave* hto wife. on. brother. Bert of
tertain^d RevandMriT JI Bat-1. Mr
Mr* G«a‘d
Mar
O^®: • step-mother. Mrs.
on Torch lake and Is a thorough stu­
H«»taU Deller. Mra uep-taer..
dent of lhe Bible and Is author of SiiidlUitaMirH w b«a&gt; '"'y a”lu»
XL.. ..Tt
’ P-renu ol &gt; »n. ton, Mae. who Mr, Hu,l&gt; areen ol CharloUa. Mra. track from Barnes’ four corners to
some study courses.
Cloverdale, across Guernsey take
The Older Y group will meet Feb-' ^enkig in horior of theh 21st W- w*.
11 Bcrtine pricker of Detroit, and sev- from noli twin’» to Loekstedt's and
ruary 34 on Monday eventag instead , ding anniversary.
I „“*?* MUdrcd Gaskill, who was al
nieces and nepbtws.
I a footpath north out of iha neigh-

Y.M.C. A. ITEMS

The Homa department of tin Hasmance With Information
lings Women's club had charge of;
th* February 14 meeting. Sines this
on Varieties and Culture
dale wa* Bl. Valentine's Day. the I
Whenever
you sec
a dahlia
general topic*. "Some Great Lures ' ।
Beautiful
and “•Some
fcxc r
—“* ■’ Friendshipa" flowering, whether il be in the ferwere followed
foUowed under
,
the guidance of tile soil of southern Michigan, the
Mrs. F
. L
. Bautr.
».
chairman for the rocky ledges of mountainous land*.
day.
1 or In lhe lava beds of old Mexico,
There are beautiful stories of love
ll is well to remember the many
and deromon from tune Immemorial.
dangers and obstacles encountered
Perhaps lhe greatest love story is
• Romeo and Juliet." From the I by the dahlia In ll* trip about lhe gave 41600 to Ywork this year
P “ *'
u
I necessitate
in«Vww. and
Mr
Mrs Vem
Vem ner.
.nant “VTT1? v*&gt;uju
uicre. ipc nre spent Saturday afternoon
'■
,
necessitate a
a lnn«
long stay indoor*
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Bera spent
world these last three * hundred
mythical talcs we come to more re-1
. Mis* Ruby Newton and Gary were an absence from school duties for several days last week In Detroit at­ children from the Band HUI*, over
The next meeting of the Minister- i*.
from'Danalng
over 8uiw!a"y.
‘ some lime.
cent love*. That of Robert and
r— ------------o
—
tending the state hardware conven- two miles distant, were unable lo
EHxaiieth Browning is outstanding.
For the dahlia "discovered' Amer- ■ ^ith^H rioXeA oFX
come for sometime before we closed.
Ch",e« Bunn
1,1
on
Mr and Mrs. Joseph StuUr have.llonTherc I* sadness in lhe story of Na-11«* before Columbus. Il was itself .। wUh
The L A- 8 1* postponed indefinitely
with lhe
the 8
8 8
8 Wor&lt;eri
workers of
of tne
the county.
county |■ hl„II1M. Uorrt,v
moved into the Chas Neww tenant
Mr. and Mr*. Clyde Briggs of Has- and the Community club which was
। It wiU be held in the Episcopal parto have been held this Friday eve­
| toh house. March 3. beginning with j
tlic coming year
former
neighbor. Charles
Deller.
billon for (xiwer. After touching B0'1'*' l"w lat&lt;,r rooU
taknl 10 a
pot
luck
dinner
al
noon.
Borne
ll
»
e
council
rooms
at
8
o'clock
MonUlr
rormer
newnoor
cnuit.
nener
ning at the schoolhouse will haw
B
U11UIAI Ml. IIVUU. W11IIC
’------- " ’ - ----- -- - ----- -- - Thc funeral of Mrs. o A- Arnett.1 Clark Titmarsh, who has been poor attendance unless the plow
briefly on these siorles
the post Rniln
BP“‘n and
»nd tn
to France
France, and from there ' specials ...
.mr,.. of &gt;i.___ div
on ■&gt;..
lhe _______
program&gt;_____
have ■been
da&gt; evrnlmr
evening, anrl
and thj&gt;
thc mtn&gt;nx'
Citizen* mic*uwho
with
her
hu»band
conducted
a
spending
the
winter
with
his
1
Mr. and Mra. Ruxoeil Taylor and
and those of our present day, Mrs. spread to all parts of tho world. Nor •rranged by the Asson. Pres . Mra. A. c" on Tuesday evening st the same
r.-wr'. al MUI lakr. was brtd at the 1 daughter. Mr*. Waller scbledt al I Th7e had’
family of Berlin spent ftalurttay
time Wc h°Pe 10 have a Hal of the j' DbkllPk
Bauer presented Mrs
A Lynn bas Its Journey been an easy one. A. orlffin.
ibuteh Metta, at 2 P. M All.nW.tt, n. went te chaUk-1
2 neM^nta
it,U&gt;“ with hi* parent*. Mr. and Mr* Hir.
&gt;“ ”*«„
Brown, who with Mrs Maus al the 1 ‘or ll has been afflicted al different "iS'lW. -fee pr^drnl of
Win, burlul In the Dowling cemetery. I "Wa. Tenn, where hu brother’. I “
ley
Taylor.
piano, gave a colorful description of- limes by 16 major insect enemies Si. LOUU N»Uon«l IUMb.ll club. I MU. aurar Mita who uucta
Harold Jackson of Pinhook Is
Rev. Tbwnamd or woodland omcUl-Tllmkr.li. h.d
Great Love* Expressed by Music." and at least 10 plant diseases. aU of -C.rtln.U." U ch.irm.n ot the N&gt;-1
rd Mr.
.»«, with
with , WT*
to,. £„7wL hb?iepSS. X h'
Lo«.n wshool .nd moke, ta cd.
Mrs Arnett
Arnett pawed
p.uwd away
P-'l'Xd •-&gt;away and theUolloMW
following day,
Romantic love Ls expressed in wed­ which can have serious results.
llon.l lll-v conreu u&gt; be held .1
,r»ndlMXenU. Mr. pneumonia after a four weeks'
weeks* mill- ■.his-brother
hto-brother John had a stroke.
‘
Floriculturists have developed over Berea. Ky. June 20 2, lor hl,h ’
ding music. Wagner's second wife,
Mr. C M Benedict. Iiu ta
I Tf' Phllalhea class was to hold
Frau Coalma. helped in the inter­ 1.000 known varieties of lhe dahlia school boys o! thc United Sutes. |' lost ‘a day of school in spite of ""
tho
Mr and Mr* otto Fisher of Kai- ita Annual Gentlemens evening
fiEndJ ttwo^thTdrifte ■on are visiting rakUvw in Lansing.
pretation of hts music al lhe time in the last f«w hundred years,
.
wurom- V
r M. C
, A
- urn,
,■&gt; wlmo*t imposaable roads and lhe ex- amazoo were gucste.of Mr. and Mrs , W«lne*day night at the Community ;"™
Mr and Mra. Don 8k&gt;wln* and
The
Welcome
group
uhen Wagner himaelf was looked with lhe greatest development takOrlie Fuher Saturday.
, house.
morTffO lEo"
*
Grayden of South BoMon ware Prtupon ns quite a revolutionist. Mrs. narJcaeVu* dlhHo and I ^ing to thl* week. Feb. 20. to'a‘« pu pl to showed up. coming from
Lloyd Gaskill has been suffering I The "«»K
U»e Republican can..
dihlia* Ire rome “f the &gt;‘&gt;"1 *»h Sanford Crook at hi*
w“ no.ll«,e7
Maus played the ■Lohengrin Wed­
from the effects of a badly wrenched F" PresWent-L G. Cole; Clerk««&gt;Jg
John P. Brake.
1
nhonca
ding March" as well as Mendels­ jcentea aa nuas are some oi me 11,..^
‘
phones so
so they
they could
could not
not be
be notified.
tallied. back for several day*
' Henry Remington; Treasurer-Mil-,
sohn*. Love is expressed on thc cisMiflca lions.
----------------- -----------------------,drcd Mster; Asseasor-Elwin Nash;
tg-t* wllh,h*^
201 men were given relief each MUs Miller walk, nearly three miles
Encyclopedic information about lhe
violin by Fritz Kretsier who Is con­
the.
day in the Y M- C. A 'a during 1W5 I
NASHVILLE.
, Councilmen—A. E
Dull;
Jesse
dahHa
ha*
been
collected
in
recent
^e.^iTtad.forLrlyrt^w^.^
sidered the greatest violinist be­
• I am in sympathy with the work
After school being closed on Monyears
by
floriculturists.
A
brief
cause his music reaches the heart
of Y. M C A- It .ha* a long career i—,
«. &gt;■»«
and
Mr*
Lyman
Elder
nt
Lansing.
I
democrat
summary
is
Included
with
pointer*
and satisfies the mind. Two of his
of honorable service ’ —Frank A ' fort wa* made to reopen on WedClerk
John ..
Appel
man;
.. „
The nre department held their Lykins;
-------- —-------rr--------, ——-------------------------------------------------- —--------------- ----- - ,
compositions "The Old Refrain" and on propagation and culture in an In­ Vanek Hip.
Inesday. Wc understand that only annual meeting Friday night. Tiie Treasurer—Al Bennett; Assessor—;
"O Sole Mio" were played, and also teresting bulletin now being printed
following
officers were elected: ------------------------FJmer Northrup;
---------- —----------32 pupils were present and not all-----------. ----------,, Councilmen—Sol• |
Cliarlcx Wakefield Cadman's "Land by the Agricultural Experiment Sta­
&gt;
REEPORT.
of
the
teachers
were
able
to
get
Chief.
William
Shuppassistant
Varney.
M.
J.
Hinckley.
WllUatn
of the Sky Blue Waler." Two of tion, Michigan Blate College. East
AH that wc said about the weath- I there, so school was called otf for chief. William Miller- foreman Del- v
*',rt'r’
Martin.
Victor Herbert’s songs were played Lansing Tiie bulletin, which can be er In our last week’s letter could be Um- rest of the week. On Sunday il bert White; ass t foreman George
in conclusion "Ah. Sweet Mystery of secured by writing for special bul­ repeated thl.
thl* weekSnow, cold.
c
Rnnw
&lt; was announced that there would be Graham; nxretary and treasurer.
WEST HOPE.
|
letin
No.
JM
on
Dahlia*,
hna
been
Life" and "Gypsy Love Song."
blocked road*, etc., are still
lhe no school tills week.
Charles Betts; first pipeman. Wil­
Blizzard*. snowdrift*, sand from
written by C. E. Wlldon. assistant
Mrs, Clara Brown gave a most
leading totHex of lhe day. Many of
Mrs Anna Geiger is not quite so liam Martin; second pipeman. Voyle Oklahoma and Texas. high wind*.
professor and research assistant In
interesting imper on Mark Twain's horticulture at Michigan State Col­ the side roads are aUll closed to
Varney;
third
pipeman. Frank mid zero weather are our headliners
love for hl* mother and wife.
traffic and farmers living bn these
Mrs. H W. Goreh lias been on Dawson; fourth pipeman. Clarice this week. We were snpwbound levlege.
road* are experiencing rc»l diffi­ the sick Hat the past week.
Twain’s humor was an inheritance
Greenfield; hydrantman. Fred Mil­ eral days before February' 8. bul on
from his mother. Hto father died
culty In getting out to the main
Lawrence Endres ha* been staying ler; ladder man. Fred Ackelt; prop­ that day lhe plow and a crew of'
when he was very young. AH j
T. K. H. S. NEWS
roads and to gel cream and other In town quite a bit during the most erty man. George Graham; lineman. shovelers came through and people,
products
to
market.
Everyone
Is
School,
will
be
closed
until
Feb.
,
_______
___________
________
_
,
through hl* life, wc find a respect,
severe weather, spending the night* James Hummel; first driver. William made ha*le to get to town for pro­
love nnd perfect understanding be­ 24. It to hoped and expected that i looking forward lo the good old at thc home of his father. Adam Miller: second driver. C- J Betts; visions. only lo find the roads blown
tween mother and son. He married the roads will then be opened so I summer Ume.
Endres.
third driver. William Martin, fourth full in places on their return sevOlivia Lungton In 1870. Tliey had that transportaUon of all rural' Jed Stowe ha* been numbered
Thc small daughter* of Jame* driver. Frank Dawson.
। eral hours later. We have been
thirty-four happy years together children tn thc district can be sue-, among the sick. H. W, Blough Is Shaffer and William Porrilt of
........
The
annual meeting of the tFarm- snowbound in earnest since. Herb
when Mrs. Clemen* tiled in Florence. cessfully accomplished
• carrying the mail on lhe R. F D.
Bownc have been 111 with pneu- er*- Cooperative Creamery
------------- , which
--------- Rose, milk hauler to Wayland, hasn't
-— I Dr. Wedel, accompanied by the montn. but are reported on thc gain 1 —
Italy. Six years later. Mark Twain
•* *'•
&lt;-• la*t u-u...
was
to have been held
Friday been In here since the 8lh and Har-1
welcomed death so he might again
The basket ball game at Wayland i‘ nurse. Mr*.
Mi
Vivian Anderson, made
Robert Murray of Charlotte was wa* postponed until this Friday be- old Springer, hauler to Delton, leaves
be with Olivia
BectiuM* February which wa* lo have been played last | the trip to the Richard Durkee In town on business Monday.
..... of
.» lhe severe
------ ~ weather
----- - — —
cause
nnd, hls uuck ln Cloverdale and hauls
In Carlton early last Tues14 had been set apart as "Edgar Friday evening was postponed on | home in
Traveling salesmen called on lo­ blocked road*. --------j there with sleighs, sometimes car-.
largo
Gue*l Day." Mr &gt; Hauer read two of account of thc road conditions, but day morning, going part of thc wny cal merchants Monday for lhe first
......
.... ......
Funeral
services for Charles Del- rying the milk by hand, .....
from homes
hto iioerns. "Friend hip" nnd "Moth­ wc expect lo play al Caledonia Frl-1, by
U, auto
,UU&gt; and
HIIU making
lllOKUIg lhe
lilt- last
IMl lap lime in two week*. Thc sliclves in ler. 65. were held Sunday afternoon off thc highway. Our cellars have
er." Mrs. J w Long told of the
In a sleigh. They officially welcomed
large
j a Hille
little boy in lhe
thc home that mom- ';
great friendship between our be­
------------■hg.
nnd WHcy
Wiley Post,
Post. Ii Mr. Bekkering. contractor for the ] Ing. Mrs Durkee before her marloved Will Rogers
Roger* and
io the
me school
scnooi building
ounauig I rtagc
rlage was Gertrude Price,
Price.
whose tragic death together the I new Rooiiion
addition to
largo
world mourns.
—
*■'-------“*1 ~a-------“crew
----------*
-- •
--•
-has -been i
wa* ----working
with
small
of
Mrs. John
Llctka.
who
men
early
this
week.
Several
loads
!
numbered
among
thc
sick,
is
betMr* Guy Keller. In bringing out
3 lb.
the great friendship tlial grew be­ of tools and supplies have been j ler"at this writing John wa* also
thc weather
for. - '
— days.
J-“
------- ....
--------- —
few
tween Annie Sullivan und Helen placed upon the premises and lhe under
*“— ------------------— on the Jury
Fish is serving
Keller said. "Sometimes great sor­ work will go forward a* soon as the ! Allen
thl* week.
row or hardship bring* people to­ weather permits.
Clayton Burns Is now employed
gether." Lark ot normal sight wa*
The cub Scouts met
lb. pkg
.5^** Ih&gt; Grand Rapid*
IMtptlW on
Uli thc
kike new
in
plant '
X1C
the tiling that brought these two school Friday afternoon.
*r tlw&gt;
—■ ' I
After
I
for
lhe Ptkhg*r
Fisher Body. T*z*w,*
Corp.
’v—
girl* lotietlier
Ml*» Sullivan re­
having worked upon
their activities,
!4 th.
.
u
&lt;
*
,
Have you 5&lt;’p” that smile on
gained liers through successful op- they were served "Ic- — —
•
ro
,Ch
I
Frank
Cool's
face?
Il
sure
1*
a
Whg.
i-ratlon* and became the teacher of. wa* furnished by Mr*. Faulkner.
:;rr
| broad one. and Is occasioned by the
lfel&lt; ii Keller who lost both sight |
Rkg.
and speech when 19 months old. Stic ] The Boy Seoul progntm I. going
“ '.I' h»™'
-------- to even’though'the school is
. of Mr and Mrs Leland Jones of
i- given the credit for that wonder- forward
Urge
fill girl s carer r Their great devo-( closed. The Immediate study i* safc- | Dowling on Feb. il. She weighed
»hgtom to one another l* a beautiful ex- iy W|ih fire arm* and merit badge I 8'.- pounds and her mother to thc
ample of great friendship* of the work Ui connection with marksman-1 fo™cr Norma Cool.
aj.jp
,
AH social functions In Freeport
present &lt;lny.
have been postponed on account of
Th- last group in this most en­
William McConnell has been in l*&gt;c storm
The February mretuig
tertaining a fir moon «a* given by
CMS*
Mrs. G A Burgee-, wliose talk cen­ the school gymnasium afternoons lo |_nI the Freeport Woman's Club is
this
tered around thc friendship between supervise rct-rraiioiuti activities for: br,nR held un Thursday of
tall
Henry Ford Thomas Edison. Luther' those boys and girls who come. All. wcck
'
•to this
' - wholesome
’ ’
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Nceb and son
Burbank
John
Burroughs, and I nre welcome
and' J
! Lewis ol Blissfield were week-end
Harvey Firestone T|iis interesting | worthwhile program,
lb.
tool
-----------------------,
gueata
ot
hto
parents.
Mr.
and
Mrs
Graad«olkor
’
a
jiaper was further carried out by
--------------- * * *
Cluirics L Faul of lhe Universal I PEA. CELERY AND ONION SALAD. Lewis Necb
Combine the content* of an IIMr. and Mrs. Ralph Walton were
Garage, who showed sound movies
lb.
ol Henry Ford's Greenfield Village ouncr can peas and one cup diced marooned in town a week ago Sat­
where hr has erected memorials to celery, and marinate In one-fourth urday evening and stayed at thc
these friends a* well as to other cup FYcnch dressing for about an home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs.
hour in the Ice-box. Add one-half Frank Walton, until the road was
great men of our country.
Thc Women's Club is sponsoring cup sliced onion, arrange on crisp opened to the farm.
lb.
Thc drama. "Death Takes the
a benefit bridge for thc Will Rogers lettuce and serve. Serve* six.
tin
Memorial fund. Friday. February 21.

in.

iw
‘y.

rd I
in I
id I

ip
IK

(Stores

id
af

FEATURING

ol

P &amp; G Soap

10

37c

Chipto

19c

Ivory Flakes

19c

Ivory Soap

.Crisco

’Jt

2

17c

21c

59c

__
_
_
Kitx crackers

1

Kraft’s Cheese

v.i.~u

Royal Gelatine

2

33c

3

17c

Bisquick
Borden's Chateau Cheese S
Wyandotte Cleanser
S

17«

Pet Milk
Bread

29c

33c

I5c

4

J

*c

8 o'clock Coffee

SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Snowbound for the greater part
of lhe pa*t two weeks and since lhe
|a*l .- now storm. the road* were Impayable until Sunday evening when
|
thc caterpillar tractor opened them
Il take*
u* back to pioneer
I
days when no one goe* by only on
i foot Thc mailman wat&gt; unable to
||- reach this part of his route all
week. During there times every one
appreciate* and enjoys their telcphone* and radio* for it l* their on—ly u«y or contact with tn* outer
world Not much going on because
ol lhe cold and stormy weather and
blocked road*. so Ute new* to scarce.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Strodlbeck
moved recently on a farm on North
Broadway. Wc wish them thc best
uf *utte.M in their new community.
Kmdall Buck I* working al the

I
।

I
i

Hubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo
spent Sunday with Nfr. and Mrs.
LaFuyclte Usborne.
THREE CORNERS.
Our (.solation will won be al on
end. Thc men of thl* neighborhood
and vicinity arc again opening tho
north mid south road to the west
which they had opened twice before
only to have it- till in .deeper than
ever ere they could use It. The ap­
pearance of the snowplows. however, will be welcomed a* will. Incldentally thc first sign of spring.
Mb* Ruth Robinson was a guest
from Friday until Monday of her
• Mater. Mis* Relha. in Hastings.
Mr. and Mr*. Allen Malcolm of
Hasting* spent Saturday evening
with lhe formers parents. Mr. and
Mrs. John Malcolm
Robert Hammond went into tiie
city Tuesday where he stayed with
relatives until Monday, while lhe
road* were impassable.

34

WHO

C$9D

MRStanL«*«u Rtidnaer
sij t.
Dr' raitt*.
rrt&lt;»ty»jian

Red Circle Coffee

21c

Bokar Coffee

23c

Heinx Soups M~1

।

:

17c

9

Heinz Beans

*“ r**

3

Heinz Pickles
Heinz Baby Food

2$c

cons

Heinz Ketchup

3

Urge
betUe

19c

«aoo

2Sc

24 os.

23c

caas

25c

a u.

S’

bos

GOOD COAL makes warm friends,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleased with the fine,
even heat? Low in ash, and longburning. Try a ton today and
save on your fuel bills.

SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Price*:—

16''' Dairy—$1.55 per 100 lb*.
Homestead Math—$2.35 per 100 lbs.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lb*.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lb*.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company
Halting! Telephone 2257
Dealers in Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Salt, Lime,
Cement and Coal

An Addition to lhe House
Very few purchasable tiling* add
Il often enable* them to escape
a* much to a home—solid value
hazardous exposure to disagree*
Iter dollar of cost—ae modern
able weather.
telephone service.
It adds enjoyment. Thc family
Il adds security. The presence • accessible by telephone has
of a telephone in thc house means
greater opportunities for social
that here no time will be lost when
pleasures.-Over it they can both
some sudden crisis demands the ‘ extend and receive invitations;
services of a doctor..-It means
they can send congratulations, or
dependable, 24-hour contact with
exchange greetings of the season.
thc police, it is a valuable form
They can take part in “voice
of insurance, for it* swiftness in
reunions” witii distant friends or
summoning the fire department
relatives—can indulge in thc
can easily mean thc difference
amenities of life to an extent de­
between trifling damage and a
nied those families without this
crippling loss.
modern, inexpensive convenience.
It adds comfort. Thc telephone
By delivering genuine value,
frees every member of thc family,
telephone service of the type this
and especially the housewife,
Company supplies to Michigan
from the drudgery of un­
has earned recognition as
Hr
a welcome, sensible addinecessary steps. *It saved
. them bothersome errands.
k m
tion to thc house.

io. a it
boa

Sun-Sweet Prunes
Del Monte Tomatoes

No. 2

X

Red Pitted Cherries
American Family Soap

10

25c

Na. 2
•M

10c

bare

4»c

Sun-Sweat Apricot*

l*c

Block Salt
Lua or Lifebuoy Soay

4

25c

(AT MORE FAISH FRUIT ANO VKITASLU

ORANGES, juicy Floridas - 8 lb. bag 3Sc

CABBAGE, new Texas
APPLES, Mich. Baldwins

lb. Is
10

'

CAULIFLOWER, snowy white

ORANGES, Calif, seedless
BANANAS, the healthy fruit

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
1* 1ALU TAX

lbs. I

2

I!

�THE HASTINGS BKNNFB THURSDAY. FFBEU4RY 28. 1928

lTww.ni

I*

’”

1

WOTICB or MORTOAOE FORB­
«.....'“J™

ORDBR FOR FUBUCATTON.

TO CREDITORS

*1

PRAIRIEVILLE.

I

Charles Armstrong was taken to I

DELTON.

22
Ce*r‘
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hyde and Borges* hotpltsl. Kalamoxoo Friday
Everybody has eithsr besn snowed
of ."I r.Or. t.ia .. ,k.,George were HasUngs vUUors Sat: afternoon as a medical paUent. HHJm or mi0^ed under for lhe past
rubait yflra i» u»
ot Htttino. la'urday.
*
lUiany friends wish him a speedy ,
M
hasn't been much do„.i
Kih .k. at Frbm
Nothing preventing, lhe Triple •’^"y.
| |jlM ln olton only lo 'kaep the
row.
:&lt;aror».
Prwrat. Hau. RtatH rhmrai. jadn' Link Club will meet With Mrs Hon- &lt; Sunday Mrs. Ethel Stebbens. Mrs. home fires burning.”
it raid
' I’.aUi.
" &gt;um.il
cywell P.ia«v
Friday r&gt;.thc *&gt;&lt;•«
21«t. Dr&gt;t
Pot hiAfc
hick Win.
din-1, TJlura
Laura flarrrtt
Garrett and Mrs
Mrs. T.uln
Lulu RH»n.
Shep-1'
A
little
six
pound baby boy was
Michigan had 40 delegates regis­
'' , ner. program.
' “rd enjoyed a cooperative dinner at
born to Mr. and Mrs. William O. tered al Use recent wild life confern
Mr. and Mrs. Llewellyn Erb and the latter'* home, the occasion being
Smith. February 4th at Leila hos­ ece held In Washington, with several
• Lamar, who have been, spending I Hie birthdays of the trio. May they
pital. Battle creek. He has been of the delegation delivering impor­
several weeks with Mr. and Mr / have many more such meetings.
A. nillrr-berk to
named Dale Dean.
tant paprs.
Mr. and
Maurice
■t Lavem Callhrop. have returned to
**"
"* Mrs. **
**" Hughes
Mr. O. C. Gregg of Lansing, who
spent
Sunday
with.........
her............
sister.. —
Mr..
■’ their home at Delton.
.
..........
.............
Records indicate weather condi­
h.
i*
Mr. and Mrs Danford Higgins and and Mrs Hugh Chaptnan mid fam- has been previously advertised to
airs.
Winslow
Manin
01
nautmuzun
—
.».vwv.
x
mmik
is
.
)
&lt;
lVf
hb
illustrated
lectures
on
landt&gt; l»:tC
tions on Isle Royale haw been gen­
Mrs. Winslow Martin of Kalamazoo Uy of Hickory Corners.
vu
‘ud
mother.
Mr. ___
Ethel. ’i The
Kellogg
student* weir
were uuir
able Ul
to raping,
on ---------Monday
Febroary
erally more severe this winter than
____
______ ___
___ ___
.
® awuuvaiut
•
—
. night
. ..----..—.
b* intruded M
.
V *
wet through
thrmii’ii to
tn school
aehr^i today after
,n.r a. -R
24 aat
Community hull,
lutll, will
will be
be during the winter of 1834-1935. The
&gt;r."tare&lt;• tit***w««kt
Stibbeiu. Saturday.
| I get
^ ‘the
he Community
INH
XOTICE TO CREDITORS
i-r &gt;etnnr. in th«
Funeral services for Mr John week of blocked roads
' here on Tuesday night February-25 lowest temperature reading made at
"mm*1’” ‘"iu“4 Jones’ who died February 8th were1 Our school opened again Wed- 1 instead.
'
----------r-------- —,
---------- ----Mlrhll
.—j— Funeral
------- . ..
------ , neaday.
Our g^Het fever quarantine ha* . greet below zero Tiie snow is 28
held at the Gordon
Home
at Allegan Saturday. February 15. j Sympathy it extended to Mr.' been removed and school began ’inches deep on the level, but il is
1 drifted to great depths
»— ■In
­
many
Much sympathy 1; t-xteuded to lhe Harry Jones and family in tbe loss Tuesday morning.
MickUraa Corporation. •aid
bereaved ont».
i “f the wife and mother. Mrs Jones
Mrs. Mary Moorhus. Mrs Esther places as a result of storms.
lived in this vicinity many years Dunn and Mrs. LoVera Erb went lo
FORECLOSURE.
amt. ,0°* “Clive part in social af- Lansing last Friday to attend lhe
Life trapping, tagging and releas­
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
fars.
rural drama contest at lhe Michigan ing deer are now under way in five
1 Mr. and Mrs Milton Kinsella of State College.
counties of the state.
'
| Kalamazoo visited her parents. Mr
William Lelnaar and family at­
• and Mrs. Richard Arentz Sunday.
Mild rad
Late reports Indicate that deer| William McKibbin. Lewis John- tended the funeral nf Hulbert Casey
debt, or
A. n UM,
huntcr licenses* in Michigan nearly
at Hind* Corners last Friday.
MOTICH TO CREDITORB.
&gt;qn and William Blookin called on
Mr and Mrs. Roy Walters of Pot­ reached 100.000 last fall. 571 being
Chari?* Armstrong ar Borgess hosterville came last week end to vi*lt non-resident licenses.
! pitttl. Kalamazoo Sunday.
MORTOAOE SALE.
„ 1 MLw Frances Dosur ap
c.ii iour
spent
four thelr "noiher. Mrs. Ada Thorpe, and
Enough nshlng licenses for 17,per4 days of Uu week with friends at hod to remaUi longer on account of
raid
Hastings.
the _________
stormjtnd________
drill Fled roads.
Mr. H T Chandler is silting or Uie present fee—could be bought by
'*n । Mn. F J Hughes is not gaining I
1 hlrh
ra
walking
"Jest
so"
now
days,
because
William
Wascher. 33. Flint. wlUi lhe
w as rapidly as her many friends wish '
lie has tiiree broken ribs, three money lie paid lit justice court for
bidder, al Public audlor. ur
it Ann Rostra l)t
badly fractured ones, and u splin­ his failure to buy a license. Wasclier
tered chest bone caused by his was taken Into custody on Squaw
IRVING.
h !• farther
Twelve men. three from Schiff- slipping on a board door over a well lake near Fenton for Ashing without
of ihit order, I
man's, two from John Belaon's. Ray pit. thc door going into tiie _pit a 1938 resident license. In justice
l»\V. TllEltEFiiRE lit virtue of tl
ot
hearinx.
In
edgewise ahead of him and he court be pleaded guilty and paid a
Lampson.
John
Perry,
Lew
Nagel.
corer raid
&gt;aU fonr Kolli
IT of -&gt;tr . .fnUin-.l II. -till Mior
nertpaprr oriulrd . Roger Wilcux. Wm. Schenkel. Wm. striking on lhe edge of it. Bert 1* fine of |S and costs of *360.
I foltowi
McCann and Mr. Christman from
We on- all very sorry to hear of
Two Detroit men claim lhe dis­
the Beverwyk place, shovelled all
Mildred Smith, RrcUt.r n| Probate.
ORDER FOR PU1UCATI0M.
day Friday to get a road out lo M-37 the death of Mrs Harry Jones. Sun- tinction of being the first stale­
Bute ef MiiMtan. Ik. Probate Coui
•te .1 Ml.l.
by'way of Daniels comers, so Dr I da&gt;’ mornln« °f heart trouble. Her park campers of 1930. Braving snow
blahr.l bidder
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
• SI.to Hlrr
ot lb. rfitirl b&lt;
ctia-ift could
rauirt get
&gt;&gt;»&lt; in to .i
— ..in
____ to
_ illness was of short duration.
and low temperatures. Elwood KrlfSwift
Uie
village
llnlldinr.
1
Ui»
Counlr
of
Btr
ot Haatinsa. in
Messrs. Fred Van Luke. Delmar er and Olis Walton of 2974 Mont­
At » •r««lnn of «
see Mrs. E- D Johnson, who with
deacribtd I r*
vrohjtr offiea in II
her Jnisbaijd. lied been ill for some Saeger. John Lechlcltner and Harry gomery Ave Detroit, set up a tent
time and needed the care of a phy­ Wert mon are serving on Jury ip In Waller J. Hayes stale park in
held. &lt;•( tl.
Hon. ^iiiiar
Jackson. Lenawee and Washtenaw
sician. These worthvpeople hvc In Hastings this week.
Mbs Ruth Richards, who has been counties, to spend a week enjoying
what was Mrs. Jane McCann's
working in a beauty parlor in Bat­ winter sports. They slept under can­
link. l»
tle
Creek
has
accepted
a
position
in
vas with the temperatures at times
Ail lhe rest of thc able bodied men '
Ef
Lake O4«
Hr'.-!
four degrees above zero.
were marooned in Hastings where.'| Saginaw and left for there Friday.
IMS.
ni.
•tai*
People of Delton were greatly
tliey are employed, or else nt work
Houlh
KLINGENSMITH.
on Uie M. C. R. R. section. Some win- | shocked Friday to hear the broad­
Little Lois Tripp has been ill and I
ler we are having Tire sand which cast over tbe radio of the tragic
covered our last big snowfall must death of Dr. Donald McGee, who under the doctor's care but is on the ■
haw blown some distance. No sand has been a surgeon in thc Federal gain now.
prison at Fort Leavenworth for lhe
round here.
Moat of our roads are blocked and ■
Muss Gladys Williams of Middle­ past six months. Dr. McGee spent the mail carrier only makes lhe ■
ville Is visilUtg her sister. Mrs. some time here previous to his ap­ route on the main road, but we are ■
pointment nt Leavenworth, ns an as­
Philip Nichols.
thankful to see him come that far ■
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle WUcox visited sistant of Dr. B. P. Farwell, and as we can all get our mail by going ■
Ont B i
llaitlnea. Mlchlttn.
Mildred 8m.Ih. Rttiali
Mrs Wilcox’s parents near Bellevue made many friends who are very out to Uie main road to meet him.
I
sorry to hear of Ills sail ending.
between blizzards recently.
Mrs. Albert Green has returned to '■
Mr. and Mrs H. F Wertman and her home bringing with her the 0- ■
। No church .services, no prayer
Kmart Cletnenl. Judji
meetings—everyone slays by their Mr. and Mrs. C P Larnbee and son weeks old baby girl of Lee Lapiiam s H
of Hastings were Sunday guests of of Maple Grove, her sister. Mrs. Ruth fl
| own fireside and glad to be there.
Mr. and Mrs Harry Garrison the Lapham having passed away Jan- fl
occasion being in honor of Mr. and uary 28 leaving six little girls and a ■
' -MrsyGarrIson's 20th wedding unnl- boy. Mrs Green will keep Uie baby, fl
Mrs. Freda Rykert has gone to the ■
Vernon Texter of Hastings spent Lapham home hi Maple Grove to fl
from Friday until Monday wllli hh help care for the family as Mrs. Will fl
cousin. Leatrice Dunning.
Green was called to her home in fl
Mrs. Bell Mullen and daughter Detroit and will leave Immediately.
I
Jane of Prairieville spent the most
Mr. and Mrs. E Latta. Everett fl
of last week witii her sister. Mrs LAtta and son have gone to Battle ■
Is the Watchword’’ of those who have money
Julia Doster.
Creek for an extended visit until fl
to invest, and «mong the SAFEST forms of in­
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Ixiwry spent ’
roads are opened up
Sunday with friends in Vermont- 'our
vestment known are BUILDING AND LOAN
Several men arc st work opening fl
villc.
SHARES
up tho road west ot Uie school.
The Home Economics extension
Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Willson fl
These shores ore secured by first mortgages on
class will meet with Mrs. Ed. Lowry expect to move into the schoolhouse, fl
on Tuesday. March 3 at 1 o'clock recently
'
homes and in addition the associations are regu­
purchased by Claud Will- fl
sharp.
son.
lated by wise State lows.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Banghart
entertained
Sunday.
Mr
and
Mrs
Moy we furnish you information about the
SOUTH BOWNE.
Burr VanHouten and Mrs. Sarah
shares of this old institution?
William porrltt Is wiring the C. M.
Brandsletter ot Hostings, and Mr.
and Mrs. Mason Norwood of Kala; , Benedict house for electricity.
uwwu
Mr
and
Mrs- RalPh Walton and
mazoo.
“ Mr. and Mrs. Russell Boulter of Delores have spent thc lost week
Bradley were Sunday callers of Mr. ,n Freeport with Mr. and Mrs. Frank
and Mr\ Roger Williams
Walton. They were unable lo get
Mr. and Mrs Marshall Norwood ho™ on Saturday night on account
1250 Gritwold St.
Etiabluhtd 1899
DETROIT. MICH
spent from
&amp;now
blockading
until Thursday
iiiuisuny until
uulu Saturday
oaiuiuay ot.......
---------- - the
---- road.
.---. ... Mason
... . Norwood
. ................ Raymond
navmnnrl
flhafTrr
whn
n.
'---with...Mr... and. Mrs.
Shafter
who
Is 1'1
working
Detroit '* Old.tl Building &lt;fi Loan
in Kalamazoo.
, ,n Orand Rapids spent Saturday
Dales of February 28 and 2« have ' n&gt;Rhl »1U? hls IoUu_
been set for Uie presentation of lhe
Mr and Mrs. Vern Blough of
three oct comedy. "Here Comes ' Grand Rapid* visited from Saturday
,,am.tcT
—
Charlie"
by Dtglon Community night until Monday afternoon with
Players in Delton’tonimunily hall. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Blough.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Martin and
Much time has been spent to per­
fect tiie presentation of this play daughter Marilyn of Grand Rapids
and the players especially solicit visited Sunday at Abe Eash's.
Mr. and Mrs. William Porritt's
your patronage and hearty co-operatlon. So give them a good house youngest child has been very sick
both nights and show your apprecia­ with penumonla the past week but
is
better now.
tion of their efforts.

;

IdllUOS «t • raHS'b

'•?

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

made 1

Issa.

THERESA HOST

IN TODAY'S ADS

SAFETY FIRST

Rational ^jaan &amp;
ffmieshttent Ufontpam;

J. L. MAUS

Alike?

NEW PERFECTED HYDRAULIC RRAKES
VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE •• FULL-FLOATING REAR AXLE
make Chevrolet the world's greatest truck value
The truck with the greatnt pullingpouvr in the entire low-price range
- . , the safest truck that money can buy . . . and
the most economical truck for all-round duty—that’s
the new 1936 Chevrolet!

NEW PERFECTED
HYDRAULIC BRAKES
always equaliied fur quick, unt*erring,
“ttroighl line" stops

PULL-TRIMMED
DE LUXE CABS

These new Chevrolets are the only trucks in their
price range with all thc following features: Aeu&lt;
Perfected Hydraulic Drakes, for unmatched atoppingpower; NcicHigh-Compression I'alvc-in-Head Engine,
giving pulling-ability and operating economy with­
out equal in the low-coat held; Full-Floating Rear
Axle of the most rugged and durable design; and
Full-Trimmed De Luxe Cab for driver comfort, with
clear-vision instrument panel for safe control.

They do look alike, bill . . . one in ilia

like it.

wilh inrtrnril liorM-powrr. increated
torque, grrtirr economy in gat anil oil

Two hollies of milk look alike

bul tiie difference is in the milk itself.
It’s the contents of the milk that you

with the naked rye that

See these new 1936 Chevrolet trucks at y our earliest
convenience. Subject them to any and every com­
petitive test of price, of features and of performance
on the road with your own load. To do this will be
to convince yourself that they’re the florid's thriftiest
high-poucrcd trucks and therefore the world's
greatest values!

determine the ipialily . . . Highlands
Dairy Grade A Milk is pure and whole­

High in Cream

Content Raw or
Pasteurized

CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY. DETROIT. MICH.
AflZ MIW ■0MtT4AYIHa B.M.A.L TIBI PATBOH PUN
fl I9 C—g— OaraW. l~r d^Urad .rar.
Im.

real tiling, lhe other i« made to look

NEW HIGH-GDMPREMION
VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE

FULL-FLOATING REAR AXLE
with barrel type wheel bearings
on 1 J^-ton model*

8'«

some, produced under lhe most sanitary

conditions and from cows that arc fed
only lhe best grade of milk producing

foods.

Buy Highlands Dairy Grade A

for its health-giving vitamins. You will

NEW 1936 CHEVROLET TRUCKS
R. K. HURD
HASTINGS, MJCH.

PHONE 3660

R. D. CADWALLADER, Hickory Comers, Mich.
THE SERVICE GARAGE, Delton, Mich.

agree that there is a big difference.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hastings

PINE LAKE.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Whitecotton are
the parents of a baby daughter bom
Wednesday morning. Mrs. white-'
cotton is the daughter of Mr. and I
Mrs. James Luke.
Clark and Alvin Nottingham. Lyle
Champion. Reela Mlnar and Glenn
Leeper were able to return to Plain­
well high school on Monday after
a two weeks' enforced vacation
caused by mumps and bad roads.
The leaders of the Home Econnomics class will attend the meeting
In Hastings on February 25th. The
local group will meet with Hattie
KHllck on February 27th.
Chris Merlau went to Hastings on
Monday wheite he was called to act
as a petit juror.
On Wednesday Bliss and Earl
Boulter took a truck load of fat
lambs from the Avery farm to lhe
stock yards In Detroit. They re­
turned on Thursday and reported
lhe roads were not In good condi­
tion due to deep snow and ice in
many places on lhe pavement.

MORGAN.
Miss Marguerite Knoll visited her
sister and father last week. She
was to return to Springfield Sunday.
Catherine McAdams of Lansing
visited her parents Sunday the 8lh.
She couldn't get nearer home than
the railroad crossing so had to walk
face of a strong wind and storm.
She suffered much with lhe cold
before she reached the house.
So much storm irtitT blockaded
roads nnd severe cold weather that
there has been bul little going on
and little news for the last three

Mrs Fleming returned home Fri­
day after visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Bachelor of Dowling for sev­
eral days.
Glenard Earl Is redecorating his
home.
.
'
The Insurance company's repre­
sentative has been at the Rowlader
home to see what damage was done
by the Art and the Home Lumber
Co. aent men out last week to make
the repairs.

BANFIELD.
.
Mrs Rose Phillips has been quite
ill but Is convalescing at present.
Mrs. O. A. Arnett, residing at Ute
Mill lake resort, was a victim of
heart attack last Friday P. M. The
funeral was held Monday at Uie
Dowling church and the burial was
in the Dowling cemetery.
The county road commission
cleaned out the Grange hall road
Sunday. It had been blocked by
snow for nearly two weeks. Several
east and. west roads are still impas­
sable.
George Wickwire and Mrs. Don
Putnam were in Battle Creek on
business last Monday.
Farmers In this vicinity have been
vuunxuwu
compelled w
to i»«c
have wb
coal&gt; uibwu
drawn ttviu
from
Battle Creek and Delton for the past
two —
weeks.
v- They»•have
“* not bean able
to get to their wood supply In the
woods.
The ladles of Banfleld met at the
home of Mrs Lydia Jones last week
one day to help her celebrate her
birthday. Mrs. Jones has been coiftpolled lo use a wheel chair for severnl months.

BU

8H
Di

RA

Ou
V

K
f.m
the

moi
tbe

&gt;ng
cau
nat

ihl:

win
din
tire
iier

ma
llhi
acr
thl
ler
Um

did
ma
too
ma
ICO
Bu

Ou
str
fol
Un

Bid

clu
ahi
All

P.

dll
ini

bo
th

Cs
lei
Hi

Br
Al

mi

nu

of

in

I
I

u&lt;

I
I
I
I
I

LENT CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. George Comfort of I
Kalamazoo spent Sunday with her
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marc Ham­
mond. MUs Jean Hammond re-1
turned to her school with them.
Mrs. Clare Thomas spent Satur­
day In Kalamazoo.
School started
Monday after;
several days vacation, on account ua I
drifted' road*.
Charles La Tourneau worked]
several days last week for Irving
Frye.
&gt;
Utile Norman Hammond returned
lo his home at Cressey .Monday aft-1
er a two weeks’ visit with his cous-1
ins. Stuart and Basil Hammond.
1
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bryant and
children Of Otsego were Wednesday
evening callers at the Leland Ham-1
mond home.
The Lent Sunshine Club which!
was to have met with Mrs. George]
on Account of bad roads.

EI&lt;

o
It

tl

hi

it
cl
h

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

14 PAGES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, FEBRUARY 27,1936

ANGLEWORM FARM’
Prize Event8 Be a Feaf-MIT ONS RIGH
A NOVEL VENTURElire ^oniiuerc*a’ ciub Fair FOR BIG FLOODS
BUT IT8 success ONLY i
SHOWS WHAT A MAN OAN j
DO WHO "KNOWS HOW" i

Thousands of Doughnuts—Gallons
_ e
-------- j r .
off •&lt;-.
Hot Coffee to l
be
Served
Free!

SUNDAY SCHOOL
WORKERS TO MEET
Goals, Problems and Possi-;
billties Topics for
Discussion
.

PAGES 1 to 8

CHADWICK GETS .
OUT OF JAIL HEBE

'NEW R. R. FREIGHT SERV­

ICE MAY START APRIL 1

GYM

Railroad Tmckg to Pick Up
and Deliver Freight at
Business Place

GIVEN A FEW D^YS OF
HE UNLOCKED HIS CELL
To Sunday School Workers—Sun­
We notice in the Portland ObWARM WEATHER AND
DOOR AFTER MID­
.’rrver that the Pere Marquette rail­
day afternoon. March 3. at 2:30
road company announces that, on
o'clock u meeting for superintend­
NIGHT FRIDAY
WARM RAIN
April 1. that railroad will inaugu­

CROWD
a AMI*

ents and Sunday school workers will
Every one of Ute 35 booths avail-' Ions for those who wish to bring |
rate a curb service for receipt and
be held at lhe Hastings Methodist
“ble for the Hastings Commercial their lunches with them and make a ,nr। delivery of freight. In other words, TUMBLERS PLEASE
church with Frank Angell os lead­ PICKED UP SATURDAY
1 club Pair to be staged In lhe Home . day of It.
lUt AND SNOW ARE
dv
rftaroacl
IUstore
wnd ofluthe
own
t™0*
Lumber Company building here | 6—Special rooms where mothers
er. Topics will be. "Our Goals. Our
BY ikiniAUA
INDIANA ncrirrue
OFFICERS to the
office »
or
shipper
HEAVY RIGHT NOW Problems. Our Possibilities."
AUDIENCE WITH
i March 25 to 28. Inclusive, has been i can care for their youngsters.
j
------------- : to collect outbound freight, and will
,
taken, according to Dr. George I In addition to these public events.
On March 3 at the Episcopal parOwner a
Secret
Process Lockwood. Commercial club presi- [ each merchant fa planning some More Snow and Ice Than Lsh house there will be a MlnLs- Sheriff and ProsecutorHope deliver at the office or store by Sporta Parade to Malic Fro.
♦
z,
Prinrt
truck
inbound
shipmenu.
This
will
terial
meeting
and
for
Sunday
School
WorkaHe Shins Worms I denti ftnd ,ocal merchants and firms I special gift or prize event of hfa own. ‘
When We Had the Big
vides Colorful Finale
to Bring Him Back
b« a convenience that win be greatworkers with a pot luck dinner at
an «
have a]ready begun to plan their! Every effort will be made to make;
Floods In March 1904
to Hastings
ly appreciated. We do not know
to the Event
noon; These two meetings will be
All Over World
I exhibits. Drawing for booths will, the booths interesting and instrucRobert 1. Chadwlek, who h.d brt-n 1
&gt;• *“...
, The writer can never recall a time very valuable to ail interested in
Thls old world fa full of strange, take place this afternoon. Thanks tlve.
....
peculiar and funny things. All you I to the courtesy of Dove Boyes, the
The Commercial Club committee ! when there was so much or as heav- Sunday school improvement.
night, but that didn't stop a fin*
—
„ to
~ do fa to hunt MK*M&lt;
------------ the
-- Banner
........ to
.........
“X P*CkCtl
«rOU?&lt;1 “
The county this year is organizing^ civil case for non-payment of a
have
them „MV.
out. ...U
and -KT.upper --------------floor, the -----------------------------south room on the..----------has requested
espeway with a view of giving that crowd from visiting the high sehr»l
perhaps close association with the, first floor, and part of the Home ■ dally stress the fact that EVERY- there Is al the present time. Ice in to bring practical help to every Sun- civil judgment, got out of the*•Jail der
'
newspaper business for nearly a Lumber company office space will THING will be free. Absolutely the lakes, streams and rivers Is day school in lhe county, therefore some time between midnight Friday | service here. While no official no­
half a century, was our inspiration 1 be available.
nothing will be sold or soloclted. j thicker than we have ever known half Ute money that is turned into and six o'clock Saturday morning. lice has been received here, local
iBunma employees
railroad
cmpiujeva believe
ucucvc that
uiai
___ ..... .
,
to look for some of them. One of I Details of the event are pretty There will be no side shows, enter- at this time."Lake Michigan is said Ute treasurer. Miss Ethel E. Jones. .He was captured that afternoon, by', Hastings
will have this pick up and exhibition. And thoa* who went
the strangest' was the "Angleworm ' well in hand. Here are a few of the(talnmenu. gambling booths, re- ' to be frozen from Grand Hayeh to will be used iin
Barry
county.
n Barr
y county.
the Indiana state police and sheriff s i
freighj service early in [
Farm" and It is a success too.
1 many attractions planned;
, freshment stands, etc., etc., which Milwaukee. That is why we have
—------------ • • • ------ -------officers of Angola. Indiana, near , delivery
April.
■
■vu * sight worth braving th* winitaleltr.
April
.
When you think of California, al- j 1—Drawing for free prizes everjr, charge admissions.
&gt; seen big gulls flying over Hastings as
most unconsciously you think of evening.
''• There will be entertainment and I we did last week, looking for water
। It will be remembered that Chad-----------j antics by a couple (or was it three!)
the far-flung groves of beautiful1 2—Loudspeakers
upstairs
and refreshment stands, certainly—but and food.
wick was sued in lhe circuit court I
rube clowns, the show proper opened
orange and lemon trees or the trail-i down so that crowds will not to | everything, including admission will The question naturally arises:
of this county last year by Archie
I with a figure drill by th* girls In th*
ing vines of extensive vineyards.-be- have to congregate in one room j be free. In fact, the possibility has What would happen in case of a
Kermeen. of this city, whose wife 1
! first hour das*. Th* whole
cause in some way they Just1 while the drawing is in progress.
been discussed of offering a special | sudden lum to wanner weather,
died as a result of an automobile ;
u* •♦««* u»ui whw, •«*
naturally seem to associate them-' 3—A refreshment booth on the 1 prize to anyone who can dope out ,especially If accompanied by a warm
accident south of Bedford, in which
selves with that warm, bright. stMT-j first ' floor
where thousands of I any method of spending even a : rain? No doubt the rivers and
It was claimed that Chadwick was ।
shiny climate.
! doughnuts and gallons of hot coffee plugged penny In connection with I streams would be higher than ever DR. SIMON, NORTHWEST, to ’blame
‘
?. Ute Jury- evidently
be- ' -----! fils weaving In and out in various
But In every stale. California as 1 will be served free.
;
the fair.
! before, because so much drainage
lleved
ERN AUTHORITY, WAS
"
" that he was. for they brought THP nnTTNTV ANTI RTATP triangular?and rectangular form**
well as Michigan, there arc those ! 4—Sjieclil entertainment for aft-,
More details concerning prizes. I work has been done that tends to
j in a verdict of »450 against
againt.l ChaduuunlY
HTATE ।j tions.
'
llom. We
We think
think this
this »vtnt
event was
was b**t
ts
who want to, cither do things in a cmoon and evening.
| entertainment and amusements will I empty water
quickly from the
1 wick. He declined to pay. claiming ' CREWS DID GOOD W,ORK 1 nporeclated by those who got
HERE SATURDAY
different way. or do something cn- j 5—Indoor "picnic"ground provlsi be made in the
Banner next week. cleared land into the streams. There
I that lhe coroner and the sheriff of
IN FEBRUARY bird's-eye view of it aa a whole .
tlrely at variance'with the common --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- | are cities In Michigan that ere look­
Calhoun county had absolved him I
In nther wnrdt thna* In tho hatrzz
1 Ing forward, with a good deal of ap- , QUALITY OF VOICE
herd. engage in sorfe sixrlalty as it! j.-... M-M0CD nw
from blame and had -Stated (hat the'
prehension, to what may follow a '
were. Old Mother Earth is used in j NtW MtMOtn UN
PEOPLE READ BANNER ADS.
FINE JOB DONE IN
REVEALS CHARACTER accident was unavoidable. .
quick thaw accompanied by rain. '
many different ways to gain a live- &lt;
PYTFNQinN QTAPP
। Taking advantage of lhe pro­
Attached to a check /received
though we weren't quit*
liiiood, but in California. I ran
PA I ENSIGN oIHrr,
In cose of a quick break-up. the
visions of a Michigan law that ap- |
PLOWING THE DRIFTS won which, neverthe less a
from a firm In Lansing, for whom
and County Schools plies to such cases. Kermeen caused ।
thick ice would go out in a hurry. City
across some of Uw strangest. In ’
.
...
the Banner had run advertising,
this, and perhaps a following let- Miss Mary Bullis Began Du- I was a request to keep them in
The tendency would be for it to
Deal With Corrective
the Issuance of a body warrant for Barry Roadi in Better Conpile up against the old type of,
ter or two. let me tell you about
tjeg jn Barry County
Chadwick.
That law compelled
.
.
,
mind for future advertising, as
Speech Problems
bridges—such as the C. K. &amp; 8 '
Kermeen to pay Chadwick’s board!
ditlOD in February Than
them.
—, ,
.
Jack-rabbit races.
they were cohvinced by the num­
bridge in this city. Thick ice driven ‘ The wide-spread interest in cor- | while kept tn Jail, and stipulated !
First, who ever heard of an;
This Week
in Other Counties
ber of inquiries received from
"Angleworm Farm?" I never did.! Miss Mary Bullis of Howell has
by
a
swift
current
might
easily
lake
reclivc
speech
work
and
its
growing
that he could be kept there for nine I
. ..
„
demonstrated clogging, but it lacked
people in this section, that people
months
If
Kermeen
were
disposed
to
The
work
of
the
Barry
county
out
such
a
bridge.
Importance
tn
modem
education
did you? To the ordinary person, been added to the Barry County Ex-. did read Banner ads.
life and zest until ”—”
i The nearest approach to present was brought to local attention Sat­ foot the bill for Chadwick's eats. The road c°mml“lon |n cleaning the die,” a dance they
making a business—and a good one j tension staff according to an an- •
conditions which the writer can re­ urday by the presence in Hastings. latter had been ...
in Jail since a little . *n°* frOm
of thfa
too—of growing angleworms for the i nounccmcnt by Harold J. Foster. |
......
. Si- : before Thanksgiving. hls board. •««“»? ~ ““’J** ave,T
, call was in early March 1904. There for th* day.
of Dr. Clarence T.
market, would:seem to be Just about Barry County Agricultural Agent. PVPRY R&amp;Q PHN^IIMPR
and they showed they
reaching the limit of "specialties." ML« Bullis comes to Barry county CVCJ]1
L~n aiin uecn was then a good deal of snow on the mon. head of the corrective Speech i twenty cents per meal, being paid by
‘b' ‘haw. which clog when they got sta
reduced the depth at the snow to
But having heard of the "Angle- two weeks out of every month to, SHUULU HEAD ANU HttU ground, not nearly so much as at department of Northwestern Uni- i Kermeen.
* J?whal I1.,
present. There was then thick Ice versity. a recognized authority on ; Chadwick was a World war veterworm Farm." we set out to visit it. work on Home Economics Extension
------------.
। an and. resulting from hls army
‘hf
Our route led us across the main' work and girls' 4-H chib work under Consumers Power Co. Sends in the river, but not so much as the subject.
Dr. Simon came, as so many help-! service, had a serious stomach trou-;
lhat ,
There
street of Hollywood, on a paved road f the direction of Mr. poster.
I
Tmnnrtnnt Notice to
I। now in streams or lakes
following a depression, or ravine. | The other two weeks of the
important nonce to
*n
came a stiff warm rain, which began ful agencies do. through the Kel- ble. He had spent a lol of Ume In j
|
in
the
afternoon
and
continued
all
logg
Foundation,
their
educational
:
government
hospitals
and
had
had
'
‘
J?*
JS
u
through the Hollywood foothills. We I month Miss Bullis will spend in AlPatrons
tie fellows in the Uno who w*
The ^nmtawere soon coasting down the other kgnn county on the same work. / tuewherc appears a notice from night. The Thomapple rose to the section, tn this particular Instance, several operations performed by , ch*"” lo
. ,C5nl.,’Orke™
side, and entered a beautiful wide with this help from-Michigan Slate;
consumers Power Company 1 highest stage ever known in Has­ He led a round table discussion with I surgeons in such hospitals. For ion “nd
springs, but they did . . .
small ------group
in lhe
morning,
talked
gomeiu..c
timevc.uzv
before.ichewoo
wasUIU
brought
,e, U'e bcsl J0® lhcy possibly have presented rather a f
--------------------...---------------------, sv«&gt;v
u«m wto
valley. There are a lot of most in- college. Mr. Foster is expecting a whlch evcryOne should read care- i tings. There was a good deal of •a
tcrestlng things In this valley, in- ftne 4-H Club program this coming I fully T1)(. noUcc calu attention lol ice on the streets and under the a half hour before Barry county'the Jail here he was on a diet pre­
As we mentioned In a recent is­
snow. which helped the water io j rural teachers In session at the High ! scribed by a' government physician.'
eluding the great airports, with summer. Girls will have the advan- tlie facl
lhal
lhe
unprecedented
fact tliat the unprecedented
sue of the Banner, the people of over they went regardless.
ships coming in from all directions. tage of Miss Bullis' experience with cold
cold wealhcr
weather prevailing
prevailing in
in this
this part
part find its way to the river. The Thom-1 school building, and gave another a legal controversy as to whether
The girls demonstrated
A rather short drive brought us to their canning and food preparation. of .... united States has causcdTin i apple was so high, following tlxal, informal talk there in the afternoon' Kermeen or Chadwick must pay for I Barry county must realize that it phases of basket ball technl
flood,
that
there
was
no
train
serv1
when
he
listened
to
individual
•
extras"
for
Chadwick's
diet
was
Alhambra, a beautiful city of which dub*.
umuu.,
of ground-free.extras tor unaowtexs atev was oounly
efMTimiMinn to kegp ail
|i determined
■ ....
- •
(Continued on page 12. part two.)
Miss BUllfa comes from a farm lng whlch may affect gas mains or। ice on the Michigan Central here problems.
jmvuwuu.
in the court
here, the
;
showed that they really
:
.'^i
d
“
hton
belng^thal
Chadwick
of
B
iwh^evere^v«»ther
and
^vy
z‘
~
....
n T &gt; oonuonoe-------1710”1!.- ' “F
’ I "m*&gt;1 “r«“ PH»». "nd “V l'*d , for three or four days.
P. T. A. SPONSORS
U«U or Albion coll«. In lhe Homo „ „rtouM
u n hu, Wille much has been done in the fact that stammering and stut-1 iff must pay”for such extras?which
Rapids
In
of flood
u-rlng.
Simon
makes no dlstlnc- lie did.(VM».
Mrs.
Chadwick Is
said
- .----- '
—.
---- the way
J
।--- —
.... . Dr,
-- ---------- --------------IzUUUWIUK
OUIU
w to
WOODLAND
PLAY
“'LS""."’' Hl
locUlta. Th. a.n.rr here 1 Grand
WUUULHnu run I ml
Mlu Bul,u b„ been doing
Hutlnn u UUht. Mnee rnU ol protection, if the present hqavy snow , tlon between the two. lisping, all I have been a trained nurse. and month of February. In talking with
"Betlv in Movinlnnd" to Be "
01 wor^ 1,111 *B&gt;e«l»lly file I me trouble .ppenr. in hlnh-premure 1i and ice should quickly melt fol- defects that block the customary; 5ecmed anxious about the health of a gentleman who sells mow remov­
ing machinery Tuesday he stated
Betty in Movioland to Be ,
,„r „
Demon.u.Uon »■ I main nren. X Heeling, u low • lowing warm weather and a warm rhythm of speech are recognized
(Continued on page eight)
that lie has been hearing through­
Given at Township School
tension work. Miss Bullis taught I pressure, hut it is best to lake no­ ' rain, we can easUy imagine that the now by up-to-date schools as probm
out this part of Ute state that Barry march sedately round and
west side of Grand Rapids will find lenu that must be Intelligently dealt
March 2 and 3 ! Horne E000001105 ‘n, lhe
| tlce of the fact.
I
county
roads, both trunk lines and and build sturdy pyramids. Al
STILL
ANOTHER
HONOR
__________
maren
ana □
Kh00, t two
tler
8uch happenings cannot be fore­ itself In a far worse flood condition ' with and remedied. It was gratifySponsored by Uie P T. A. of from college. She also was lecturer wn nor BUarded agwlmt by lhe than in 1904. There isnj't anything ing to learn that Hastings' and
FOR SUPT. VAN BUSKIRK
Woodland. "Betty in Movlcland and demonstrater of foods and|company. u,cy
controlled en- anyone can do about it except to' Barrv county's school systems are
(Continued on page six)
will be produced at their school au- equipment in the Modem Kitchen of llre|y by 'ihe elements. Because in- hope and fervently wish that the j very active along this line and are Gov. Fitzgerald Reappoints than those in the neighboring couni
ties. He stated that at one time
?, and Tuesday,
_______________________________
dltorlum Monday
a department store in Toledo. The atances have occurred where frost heavy snow may gradually disappear doing constructive work; the former
more than sixty of the ninety trucks MOVE FARM LOAM
Uan-h 2
O and
anri 3.
1
1..,
__ ......... . ..... . .
. .............. .
Him
on
Teachers'
Retirej
Instead
of
going
off
with
high
tern'
through
a
special
class
In
which
28
March
last position held b...
by &lt;&gt;!■&gt;
Miss (l.illla
Bullis be­ .has
caused leaks In gas lines, the
and machines of the Kent county
-------------------...--------------------------lt Is a lively. coloHul story. Local fore coming to Burry county as Ex­ company issues this notice as a pre­ peratures and warm rains.
children
are enrolled
with Mrs. Ilah
ment Fund Board
OFFICE TO ALLEI
road commission, used bi snow re­
interest is added by moving pictures tension Agent, was with Washbum­ caution:
j Hill, who took special work under
Superintendent D. A- VanBusklrk moval. were put out of commission
' Dr. Simon al Northwestern last
relating to Woodland and Wood- I Crosby Co., in their Home Service
HASTINGS SCHOOLS
(Continued on page six)
has
been
reappointed
by
Governor
Unite In Three Oom
summer. In charge, and in the
land people which will be shown department.
FORMULATING
PLANS
Fitzgerald
as
a
member
of
the
both nights at the conclusion of |j With this *-background
—•---------- J *'
| county through the Kellogg staff of
of -a 'farm
Combined to Leeun
home or
Teachers Retirement Fund board, CAUCUSES NAME
the play.
|I ...
____________
home
and commercial work. Miss
an
nurses and special teachers.
All Departments Working
Alongside of these deviations from on which he has served for the past
XxpenMa
Among people in the cast are Bullis should be of real value to
VILLAGE TICKETS
premises at once. Second, call
The new term for
“ Projects for
। normal speech go faulty diction. five years.
Catherine Spindler, who has lhe I Barry county home economics work,
on
Special
Consumers Power Company, gas
’"r small Attendee, on Account
leading role, with Richard Chris- | she began her work in Barry Co.
i slovenly and careless construction of 5X rniw.1"
service department, and an in­
Centennial
| sentences, harsh and unpleasant
Ilan; comedy parts are filled by (this week and is meeting with the
spection will be promptly made.
This fa a responsible position. To
of Weather—Elec­
The pupils and teachers of the j' voices
every hand
nrant
ieaders of the Home Economics
vnlrM which
which we
wc hear
hear on
nn pvptv
hand
Grant rwsrwui
Osgood. uirei.ni
Birdsill Uz.iiu
Holly. now
Rex
Agricultural Agent Foster for
The company phone* are 2305.
Bradley. Waller Hershberger Is the Clothing groups on February 26. 27
various schools of Hastings are mak-; —the so-called "American voice." the commission fa paid a percentage
tion March 9
which fa their city office, and
villain. Others taking part are Mrs. and 28.
ing extensive plans for their con-1 butt of many Jokes. Modem educa- of the salaries of the teachers of
2339,
which
Is
at
the
gas
plant
Alice Bailey. Lucy Lind, Els* Her­
tributlons to; the Hastings-Barry tlon. through experts like Dr: Simon. this state, oil of which goes Into a
&amp;Z1UWZ1 as
u the
me Teachers
icacriers Retirezveure- tended the village caucus last week,
fund, known
man. Mr. and Mrs. Born and Wal­
Centennial to be held this summer. I from whom teachers acquire the; zuuu,
FAIRCHILD’S FEATURE
THREE-DIMENSION
ter Hershberger.
Apt H 27 and 28 are the dates that, technique for training to remedy ment Fund. It has been carefully ' because of the stormy weather. A
V. R. Wotring will fill the role of
.v. the Hastings
nooHiiic '&lt; such defects, alms to improve these administered and fa proving an ad-1 Citizens ticket was nominated aa treasurer with Wayne Conklin
ANOTHER FUR SALE
FILM AT STRAND have been set tor
marter of ceremonies.
Schools Exhibit* which wan
will be
held conditions. Speech is one of the ditlonal Incentive for college grad-1 follows:: President. Dan Postma; assistant.
________
w UC1U
i Clerk. J. E. Babbitt; Treasurer. •Lula
•A chorus of 20 High school girls Same Firm Returns With "Autsoscopikg” Make Fig- throughout the school system. Each highest tests of educational attain­ uates to choose leaching as a profesalon. When they reach the re- Nagier; Trustees, two years. Prank
will be one of the attractive features
«
„
„ deportment fa.. working
on some
.Tnmn Out
llnl From
R
ov-aat,
.
. . . spe. . ment. Correct speech acquired dur­
Choice Coats and
urcs Jump
Screen
of the production.
clal project and many, historical ing the formative years is of in­ tlrement age. if they have not saved D. Cool, Percy Rosser. Prank Wal­ united with the Allegan Aaeoctetloa
ton:
Trustee,
one
year.
Otto
Kunde;
People attending will be assured
relics
and antiques have been estimable value all through life. up sufficient funds, or even if they
under one secretary last fall. Nov
Neck Pieces
in Realistic Manner
an enjoyable evening, and help­
promised, in connection with these, When one stops to think of It. have, they are entitled to their pro­ Assessor. J. D. Knowles.
So popular was the sale of furs
The Citizens caucus in Middleville
Manager Ray Branch of the however, the teachers issue the fol­ speech is the medium by which the portion of this fund as long as they
ing projects which the P. T. A.
stand behind for community better­ and fur coats conducted by the Ca­ Strand Theater here promisee plo- lowing requests to parent^; If they adult puts himself across to his fel­ maX-HySuJt has been very helpful nominated the following candi­
nadian flun of furriers for Fair­ tures in three dimensions on Sun­ are willing to allow their children
i the.tn- ,»J™1*,■ ’teacher.
m
,
dates: President. John Dietrich:
ment in Woodland township.
low-men; its Influence with the.
child's Store last month, that they day and Monday. According
to to bring exhibits to the schools, telligent as well as the Ignorant
I.-—--— ’ Tbcrc 15 no compensation for servhave returned for another similar him. the process is an improvement
.
Intr nn
ing
on the rzntlrt'mrtnt
Retirement PiinH
Fund hnar.1'
board;
please do not send them before the
(Continued on page three)
event.
over the early experiments tried week of April 20-24 as some of them
but as Mr. VanBusklrk has devoted E. Lynd; Trustees, Arthur Oeukes.
See the advertisement in this 1s- several years ago. Colored glasses
his life to the work of teaching, he George Juppstrom, Henry C. Poul­
may be very valuable; and though
OPENING SEPARATE
sue and take advantage of the un­ for the occasion arc being supplied
fa glad to give his time and efforts son.
special precautions against every
precedented values they offer.
Two tickets were nominated in
by Dr. DeForest Walton, local op­ type of loss will be taken, the teach­
tor this helpful service to the teach­
STORE
FOR
FEEDS
There will still be days when you tometrist. It Is said that with the
Woodland village as follows:
GEO. L. FATTEN.
ers of this state.
ers would not care to bo responsible
Republican—President, Carl Jor­
Having decided to quit farming. will need a fur coat this season, and "Audloscoplks" the pictures come for them over too great a period of
Walter Wallace Finds He
NEW LIBRARY HOURS.
•eo. L. Patten will dispose of his when another winter comes you will right out at you. The stunts pro­ time.
dan. Clerk. Herald K Classic;
be happy to have a choice coat all vide some unusual entertainment.
Library sendee at the main li­
Needs More Room for
The children and teachers of the
brary has been extended to include two yer.. Gilbert ueUod. Onnt
you van
can't,
IVIU1 « II1UC liurill OI UIC uasueton ready
Ivauy to put on,
vn, al
a, a price jvu
second ward school presented a play
RETAILERS TO MEET.
Expanding Business
a reading hour at noon every day Osgood and Vemice Raffler; Assescenter zchool. sale to begin at one • then duplicate. The styles are all
The monthly meeting of the Retail Monday evening for the entertainP. M-. with Henry Flannery as auc-! advanced patterns that will be right
Walter Wallace, one of Hastings' of the week. The schedule also in­ ■ sor. L. H. Brumm.
Division of the Hastings Commercial
cludes library hours from 5 to 7 ev­ I Democrat—President.
Uoneer. The list includes 4 horses, j In vogue another year.
Karl
C. rowers will be notified of this ar­
dealing with the early history of leading merchants operating a gro- ery Tuesday. Thursday and Satur­ | Paul; Clerk. Ralph W. Rise; Treas- rangement.
club
will
be
held
at
noon
Wednes
­
3 cows, brood sow. 3 turkeys, farm
o«„y Wu.uy.
nry and feed 5tore at w- Blate
K. OF P. DANCE.
day. March 4. in the Parker House. Hastings and Barry county.
day evenings, and from 5:00 to 6:00 urcr. Florence Nelthamer; Trustees.
tools and hay and com. Bee the I
The
art
department
of
the
High
w
‘
u
1
°P«?
“
*P*
r
*
le
records It Is impossible for
Middleville, Friday. Feb. 28 —Adv. AU are urged to be present.
,
adv. for full particulars.
; school is busily engaged on murals reeds- 11 u hU intention to serve P. M. on Monday. Wednesday and
ter to do anything In this
depleting early days In Hastings and hls customers better in this way. The Friday. Other hours remain the thur Allerding and Frank NelthamMRS. DORA COLEJlfAN.
same as usual.—Jean Barnes.
er; Assessor, William Oerllnger.
Barry county, while the Junior High
Bnd
a large part
ing problems that require tame
Because of the death of her hus­
is designing friezes. When these of the Present store, and he feels
attention should get tn tots*
band and a son. Mrs. Dora Coleman !
ore finished, they wUl be placed on Ithttl thls end of hU business should
the Allegan offio*.
will have an auction sale at the
the panels In the foyer of lhe Cen-' ** «**«», ™ore •“"‘H00- 7116 new
Coleman farm, located at the first
tral auditorium during the Ccnten- ■a,oro wU1 be at 221 W. State street,
four comers south of the Catholic
nlal celebration.
1 Mr- Wallace came to Hastings in
cemetery. Henry Flannery will be
-------------- » e »»
I 1920. at which time he with Earl
opening production of th
the aucUoneer and E.E. Cray, clerk.
! Bumford purchased the store of J. J.
FALL IS’--------------------------------------------FATAL
community players at i
This Is a big sale with a lot of live
munlty hall. Friday and
TO AGED RESIDENT. Mead known as the East End Grostock—horses, cattle, sheep and hogs
years.
Sunday Elihu Larkin was clean- eery.
------- Afterjdne successful
--------------------------nights, Feb. 28 and Nth. 1
—hay. grain, farm tools, household
j Ing the snow and Ice off the roof of •*Mr. ”
Wallarf^sdld
'allac/*sold ills interest back
goods, etc. See the adv. for complete
Hlrsch Brothers will this year In­ with the business will be carried on his porch and while descending the to Mr. Mead and Mr. Wallace startlist, date, etc.
crease the work of their Hastings in Hastings. This will be good news ladder one of the rungs broke, let­ ed in the feed and seed business at
221—
W.__State
—- St. During 1934 the
station. Heretofore their place here to the people of tills city and coun- ting him fall about twelve feet to...
JOHN BARKER.
Winners of the first five prizes in
the ground. He did not think he ‘ feed and seed business dropped off
There will be a public auction at has been a salting station, at which
This decision of Hlrsch Brothers was hurt seriously but in the night to such an extent that It became the Hastings Commercial Club Fair
the farm of John Barker, located the pickles were preserved until they
were
needed
for
making
into
various
was
taken
worse,
dying
Monday
necessary
to
add to the business. In Scrambled Name Contest are as fol­
to make Hastings the center of their
toiletrl** a
four miles northeast of Hastings on
lows:
.
The above five were selected with hoidan of
forenoon
about
10:15.
'
March
of
that
•
------year
•
-------he
moved
—
•to
•*-the
M-43, first farm east of Barber's kinds of pickles—such as sweet, sour, pickle industry, is no doubt largely
Frances Cowles, 127 8. Washing­ difficulty from the 265 entries re­
present location and added grocorners. Included in the sale are mixed and dill pickles—then they due to their superintendent. Mr. Joe
farm machinery, tools, horses, cows, would be shipped to the place where DeRuiter. Under his supervision and had lived in thia city for 56i cedes. Since that time the grocery ton,—Call at Kim Sigler's Office for ceived, according to MUa Eva A.
Hccox. secretary of the Hastings Friday i
end has grown to such a degree and prize.
hay and-household furniture. The such processing was carried on. the business of Hlrsch Brothers in years.
Florence Norton. 127 W. Green Commercial Club. Many correct so­ married
ZZM^.11 Brothers
DZUWIC.a have UVV.UCM
decided that.
MUI., this county has been • greatly in­
Surviving are the widow, a son., the feed and seed business returned
sale starts at 1 P. M- The auctioneer , Hlrsch
at
Dr. lutions were received and It was
'hereafter, they‘will make all their creased. He has given it such care­ Deyo Larkin, and a daughter, Mrs., to a more normal condition, so that Street. Hastings—Call
will be Henry Flannery.
necessary- to go through them with
pickles for the territory north iui
ful
of the
and micieni
efficient auenuon
attention that
uiai un- William
nuuun mbui
Main,, both
uom of
oi Hastings,
Hastings. He
tiei tlw two lines must again be separat- Kenllh McIntyre’s office for prize.
Mrs. Llbbie Craven, Hastings, R. a fine tooth comb to determine the
DEWEY JONES..
Ohio river and extending eastward doubtedly his employers felt that also leaves two brothers, Allen and; ed. The present store will remain
Dewey Jones, farmer near Nash- ' from the Missouri river to New he would be the proper man to have Albert Larkin, of Kalamazoo, nine■ as the grocery store and cream and p. D. 5—Call at Charles Leonard's winners. Margins between pries
rille, will hold a public auction at &gt; York and Pennsylvania at their charge of their pickle-making.
Establishment
for
| grandchildren and six great-grand- eggs will also be received here. The Undertaking
the proverbial gnat's eyebrow.
his farm. Mr. Jones’ sale will in- station here. This will require about
The salting station will be con-' children. The funeral was held at, Seed store will occupy the old build­
Theron Caln, Hastings. R. F. D. 1
elude household goods, farm tools, * dozen more employees. As the tlnued as it has in the past at Has-' the home this Thursday morning at, ing where Mr. Wallace formerly op­
hones, cows, hay and grain. Henry | buslnua develop*, that number will Ungs and other points in Barry 110:30, the Rev. B. O Mcfiherry offi- erated his feed and seed store at —Call at Dr. George Lockwood’s of­
Many war* presented In such origiFlannery will do the auctioneering । be increased, as R is' certain that county. Tills new processing is slm- j claUng. Burial in the Valley Home। 221 West State St. Watch for the fice for prize.
and Ernest Grey will act as clerk.
I other processing work in connection ply an addition to their work here. 1 cemetery.
Alice Flnglelon, Hastings, R. F. D.
(opening date.

nazit/o iimti iiintin
nANKo rllun AMUNu
Finn “CPFPIAI TIFQ”
UUU
OrEUIHLI IEO

ANTICS

08723321

AREDISCUS5ED

WOIIIlffOFfflSE. I

AiriT nn inipnn ।w“
lw Ln ILIoM

Four Auction Sales

Important Addition to Hirsch Bros.
Processing Work in Their Local Plant
They Will Make All Kinds of Pickles Here
Instead of Having Only a Salting Station

HASTINGS COMMERCIAL CLUB FAIR

SCRAMBLED NAME CONTEST
Win One of the $5.OO-V«lue Prizes!

’j?

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 87, UM

SALMON

HEKMAN’S

Can

Sea Flyer Pink

lie

OXYDOL

APPLE BUTTER

2

lb.

L I B E RTY SODA

15c

P&amp;G SOAP

CRACKERS

COCOA

2

Lb.
Can

15c

CAMAY

2

POUND
BOX

I C

C

PRUNES
LIBBY’S

GRAHAM
Lb. Box

Our Mother's Brand

JEWEL COMPOUND

Giant Six*

10 Bari 97C

"The Soap of Beautiful Women"

KELP CLEANER

Bar

19c

5c

2

for

29c

FOOD CENTER wai&gt;rso(t«n&lt;r 4

it»-

25c

2

lbs.

29c

FOOD CENTER

2

lbs.

25c

l.

Soap Powder

OHIO

MATCHES

5c

Lb.

70 - 60 Size

CORNED BEEF HASH

2 p^g*- 39c

Large Size Pkgs.

|Qc

MULLER’S

FRIED CAKES

IO-

REMEMBER—Values Like These Come Onee in Four Years!

IN

OUR

MEAT

DEPARTMENT

BEEF Kettle Roasts
SMOKED PICNICS

HAMBURGER

Fro.hGround

PEANUT BUTTER

COTTAGE CHEESE ™

lbs.

29c

u

IOc

2

RUTLAND EXTENSION GROUP
individual, wa* very mteresung
The Rutland Center Extension of ,
club met with Mrs. Myrtle Cotton ---------------------------and instructive. The
next —
meeting
----------------z—„
rar
for an
an an
all aay
day meeting
meeting January
January at.|
31. &lt; will
will be
be March
March 6
6 with
with Mrs
Mrs Beatrice
Beatrice
There were 7 members and 6 visitors Laubaugh for an all day meeting.—
present. The lesson on choosing Mrs. Beatrice Laubaugh. Secy.

/ m going to see the advance
showing of Spring Merchandise
al lhe Hastings Commercial
Club Fair, March 25 to 28 al
lhe. Community Hall.
PLAN TO SEE THIS FAIR
Every thing Is Free.. Admission,
Prizes and Refreshments

TluTFair Will Be Open from
1 to 10:30 p. in.

COFFEE

FRESH

FRUITS

AND

VEGETABLES

2Oc

Lb.

2

WHITE HOUSE

14c

Lb.

Shankless

JUhat .t Value!

PECAN MEATS

b.

15c

Food Center

FARMERS CREAMERY

' tlon at the creamery has steadily In- * present manager. Li assisted in the I NQIA/
makl(&gt;&lt; by
Barr.u nn j | NUW

BALDWINS 6scBushd IO ib. 19c
SPIES 79c Bushel
IO 25c
ib.

LETTUCE

Crisp Heads

6c

CARROTS

242 OLD AGE PEN

Freshl

Bunch

6c

d UUU Abt HtN'
WOODLAND POSTMASTER.; MICHIGAN’S SHARE
in the historv of the association and Hubcrt Lathrop.
Day and night I
SIGNERS
S
ONERS IN
N COUN
COUNTY An open competitive examination'
IS $750,000,00^
.
lt5c ”lstor&gt;
ine association and. i
arc |lcccMary d|lrl,,g
lh •
vivnwuxz --in vvui.
[will be held by the United States'i! hU butlcr,at P^chased had been summer -months and
'
'
™,i»j •*._
— conskiting
-------of• &lt;«_
churned, would have —
exceeded
the. ;,—
force
Mrs. Jennie Os- .
. of postmaster at Utootuutiu. ।
,
'
Annual Meeting—Elects
Pensions will Increase
I .dale
----- ' Statn
d itc toto be
be obtained
obtained Ipfln
ipetii pHuv.oi
State «s Prnnnrtlnn
Proportion nt
of thn
the
one million mark, an increase which borne. Harry Appclman and -------ErnestI
I Wunderlich, local secretary of the I
clearly shows the decided upward I Mead, are kept busy issuing checks,
John Martens, Pres.
National Debt
•
Monthly Allowance
I U.
w. S.
.J- Civil
v.i.ii Service
ouvivr Board.
uvaiu. This
a inn postinaoi. trend of the business. Cream and io more than 800 patrons, who re­
| Few people in Nashville and vlIn
an
interview
with
a
repre.cnj
Uon
carrles
B
Mlary
of
|1B0
0
00.
ApSenator
Vandenberg
has
comput
­
nuiK are
arc delivered
delivered by
oy fifteen trucks I। ceivcd 1279.344.63 for uu-ir
their iiuik
milk uno
and , ■
.... . ....
| clnlly are aware of the growth and milk
.... the
... Banmr.
....
Mrs
J | plications may be obtained from the ed that Michigan's share of lhe thir­
whose drivers cover a radius of cream during 1935. Total sales for 1 tatlyc of
1 co^ram’edeciramZr?CAsS’iMtoJi
niore^tarTwmiies/
It'
is
"interest'he
“
^m^riml
’
'
wctc
“
833
s
’
.
488
97.
* ...z.P.. . i.... -tn ,i... t. 4. the rjltne nrrlrxl urrn USS ARA
-I... stated
....... that so far U. S Civil Service Commission al ty-five billions of dollars of public
Cross ...
of .this city
^mce 1914. wi£n it was organized ,
n,a,'&gt;’ »’ounds ol ।
d0UbUns *”
lW0
242 persons in ihrry county are re’nu^
"ot debt of the United Slates Is 8750.­
i Fewer still realize that the produc- ,hr bu,tcr
(■'Ivina regularly each month their •
m L.20;, i!?3?,', ,?hc 000,000. The amount is jirojxirtioned
are consumed by j»irons who
sell
----------At the recent annual meeting two old age pensions. There .ire se veral. S*a'nblaUo1’*111 ** h,e,5? in
according to the population and the
milk ;»nd
cream.
In.
*~**
more
claims
to
be
acted
upon
from
.
A
P
•°
‘
°8
ra
P
11
lakcn
within
„ . -------1035 the new directors. Earl Gehman and
wealth of this state, as comjxtrcd'
amount has grown to G3.246 pounds.; Ralph Pennock were elected. The this county. Barry county has a fin- ■
&gt;car&amp;' ,M&gt;1 aJor I*00*- with lhe other slates of the union.
II has more ',nu 4
Prc:,c,Ucd 10 l&gt;'e examiner
As a large percentage of sweet other members are Will G. Hyde, record at Lansing
Ninety-two per cent of the wealth
complete
re^rdv
in
old
age
pension
”
,m
'
nal
‘
°
l
n
AU
cream is used In lhe manufacture Frank Arnold. L. D. Gardner. John
and |&gt;opulMlton of Michigan arc
,bUul ?a\^.rci «cd ,n th? south of a line drawn straight across
of our butter, the word “Wolverine ' t Martens. Will Martens. Wayne Of- cases In proportion to population J
in the,butler budne-s* has become ftey and Robert Mart.n. On Mon- than any other county In lhe dis-! J fr!U&gt;ry.. 5'cd by .t.hls °™c&lt;? {or “l the state from the northern part of
This shou . Hint Mr- Cro ■- । lcai»l a &gt;paF preceding March 20. Muskegon county to the northern
« sign of purity and quality. The day afternoon the new board met trie;
lh' ,«•” "■ « part of Bay county The stale lax
ether by-producls of the creamery i and reorganized, choosing John lm..ll«w lor IN roomy In Uww &lt;&gt;"‘&gt;■.(•‘■1’1'
rows. ho. ton Muy ona rffielmt ln
» *" "ft"’1' “'PP» V'lrnn commission of Michigan has figured
arc dried skim-milk, dried butter- Martens as president. Mr. and Mrs. -aw
»—r work preference will not be granted un- out that the amount of the public
milk and casein The former to- 1 Laurence Osborne were re-hlrcd for her
1" —
The state old age pension bureau'
&lt;Scu,n"'larZu
taled 860.709 lbs. in 1935. From’ a the coming year.
debt which each Inhabitant of the
i has received word from Washington I
Wund&lt;rllch •b0l“ P*f- lower forty-three counties of Michi­
tittle concern in a meager building.---------------with few employed, lhe business has PASSING OF MRS.
gan or his successors must pay Is
-------. . . i that two millions of dollars ol the i ICU,^_2. . .
grown Until it furnished employIVTLUAM
recent OCK.
oio age
pms.on
,.
4161.90 jxt jyerson. There arc BjSOO
WILLIAM HITCHI
| recent
oldapjxoprmuon
age pension apjwoprlnlion |&gt;EATn nF (
ment last summer to 24 people of
Mr. wfijum Hitchcock, aged-54.1 made by Congress will be available ।
OF
people in this city. Tlial would
whom 16 are working during lhe | pa,v?&lt;j awa&gt;. Saturday In the Hol-I for Michigan next month.
Just I
, ’A??VK
make this city's relative share 81­
winter months. Laurence Osborne. Und hospital, death being due to. how inuch this change will increase p5?. "I
003.780. The proportion to be jiald
pneumonia. Mr. and Mrs Hitch-] the monthly pension allowance jxt j
'Jos^‘5|a.T'‘*,'n.e ymXIL* by lhe 21.000 jjeople of Barry coun­
cock left Hastings the first of Jan-[person In Michigan is not definitely ,aIt£ “a^LJ?.®, 2?nSj ty would be 83.399.900. as anyone can
uary for a southern trip. They | known at present A state require-1 ?PaS®da!Thta ll^Suniivli^re a determine by, doing some figuring.
stopped at Holland to visit her sis- ! ment for an old age pension Is that I ft nSivH^rwrtto.
None of us will be asked to pay
ter. Mrs A. C. Hillebrandu. and the applicant must have resided in b
A,
this directly; but nearly every time
while there Mrs. Hitchcock was tak- .Michigan for at least ten years. The
n
P'niJhiSL' we make a purchase we pay some of
en sick and grew worse, pneumonia federal statute red tic.-* this to five | “"JUJJ?
theDWi
this lax to lheXgderal government;
de-.doping last week
years, and the state mu t conform ! * u‘7*
thus we are paying'^ little on lhe
Orace Danhon was born in Mus- to the f£deral law As a result there bfjJrSS principal or interest of this huge
kegon in 1843. the daughter of Mr will be' a considerable addition to (®“,‘b* D®™* debt. The manufacturers and busi­
-nd Mrs Simon ' DanhofT
Nearly . lhe number nf pensioner*. *ev.nty , Sm?’
ness houses can pass on their in­
come taxes and special taxation to
Ihlrty yeays ago she was married to years of age and over, The federal I ”
. 8't
•
their customers, so we all help pay.
William Hitchcock of HMtlngs and law reducing the age requirement to
n. p.
they have since made their home' sixty-five yean will not go Into j fhe Woman s Relief corps held Thus, in one way or another, it can
here. Two children were born to effect until 1040. Alter that time their business meeting in their hall, be seen what each one of us and
MU.. union.
...UUII, James
UHIU' u of
UI Middleville
ni.uuil uuv and
UIIU .i the
UIC number
ilUlllUVi ol
V* jxuuloncrs' will be .. fft, 22nd. We arc well pleased with each of our families will have to do
this
to discharge this government obli­
Angle Mae. now Mrs. Leslie Haw-1 considerably Increased. Mrs. Cross'
For the average family of
thonie. of Hastings. Surviving are raid, but it is expected that by 1940 1 meeting. WV had as our guest. Leah gation
lhe husband; the two children; four. a much larger sum will be available, M. Simpson, president of depart­ five, the proportion to be paid by
them of this public debt would'be
grandchildren; a nephew Raymond1
—------------- &lt; • *
ment of Michigan Woman's Relief
Van Dyke. Grosse Point Farms; DEATH OF EDWARD
Corps, who gave us a very interest­ 8800-50. These things bring home to
three sisters. Mr*. JlillcbrandU. Hol-1
D. SILCOCK FRIDAY, ing and helpful talk. Our next every one of us what the thirty-five
land Mrs. William Osslginac. BenEdward D Silcock. aged 65. a life­ meeting will be March 14. Meeting billion dollars of public debt really
ion Harbor,
and Mrs. William
naruor. ana
wuuam Miller,
mmcr. long resident of Barry' wcounty,
—....,. died closed by singing "America."—Pres* means.
- - on Friday
night
hls home
South
Haven; two brothers.
Herman
on at
Friday
night in
at hi* home in Corr.
DEATH OF SIMON VOLLINK.
Orangeville township. Billowing *a
DanhofT. Walla Walla. Wash. and '
Many Hastings and Barry county
Not oil of us con of ford
Ralph DanhofT. South Haven, anti11 short illness. Hu is survived by his SUFFERS FRACTURED PELVIS. people will remember Simon Vol­
widow,
one
son.
Frank
of -PralricMrs. Amanda Ward. 502 W.
her step-mother. Mrs. Simon Dannew clothes for spring
link. who was here for several years
I
vllle.
three
daughters.
Mrs."
Helen
South St., had lhe misfortune to fait
hofi of South Haven, also several
tn
connection with Hlrsch Bro?.
But wc con dress up
x&gt;n.—(us
- ­
nephews Mrs. Hitchcock jxj.isc.-3cdI Rrcd of Augusta. Mr*. Hazel McKib- on the lee Monday ft-------------- ---------------------- talnlng a fractured
.............. pel
'She was Pickle co. About three years ago he
and Mrs Eva
a happy, cheerful disposition which, ben of Prairieville
located In Stockton.
California,
Look over lost springs
made her many friends. She was Shultz ol Shultz; also four brothers.) taken to Pennock hnejatai where where he continued hU work with a
always ready to do for others, ever j. W.. of Delton. A. J. of Texas. I ^he Is resting as comfortably os planting machine he had invented.
wardrobe, send us what
exemplifying an unselfish nature. Benjamin of Montana and Robert of I possible.
Hls death occurred In Stockton on
needs to be cleaned so
Dakota,
also 13 grandchll----------------■
■■
r/&gt;pccuuiv
ovum
un»«...
—
—
-* -a-».
Especially wiu
will sne
she dc
be misseo
missed uy
by npr
hpr South
.
—
. had
x--j
Tnenitx.r oioj|
—
-Monday. Feb. 17. He Is survived by
husband. children and grandchil- dren.
He
been 2 a _ member
HAS
L¥• A3“pUT*TED.
you can look ‘ Dressed
dren. who were her first con.idera- lhe Prairieville IO. O. F tor over* .
Ransom ofRutlwd town­ hls wife and one child who have the
sympathy of friend* here.
lion. She was a beloved member of 35 years, and had served as a di- ship. »ho h“d b ’ r‘«hl
‘®p“'
up” when spring rolls
lhe
J.
F
F
club,
the
Women*
Herector
of
lhe
Prairieville
Telephone
I
tated
a
*&gt;ve
the
knee
a
&gt;
week
ago.
bethe J f F Club the Women's Ro- rector of the PrairieviUe Telephone l latcd above the knee a wetK ago. uc- DEATH OF MRS.
around.
lief corp* and was Lady Commander Co. Funeral services were held at cause of gangrene, is
«
Under Yonr Coat I
JOHN BEATTIE.
of t^Mareab^
Ihr Mineville MeUtodUt BJUcopai «a^.“ ^ble' H° U rt‘U al
Al her home In Orangeville town­
It won't be long now!
Funeral services *ere held on -church at one P M ■ on Tuesday. Ute Pennock hospital.
ship. Mr*. John Beattie. 46. died
Wedncsctay aften-.oon al one-thirty llrev. E. M. Bates ^ciattag. Burial
B c Forbes. financial writer, on Saturday.
Her husband and
o'clock at the Methodist church, was in t^c PrairleviUe cemetery.
points out that one Chicago business eight children survive. Earl. Harriett.
the Rev. w Maylan Jones officialvrrtn-K mWker DIES.
firm pays 810.000 In taxes every day, -------------------------------------Robert. Doris. —
Helen,
Walter.---Louis
u„ uurul ... in RlnnUe centM.'nto Z‘k akd on xnite .nolhw nu u&gt; al. up 2.000,.nd Mn Mirlon Ox*. .11 or Orunan (ar atroet wear! Pretty
■"&gt;■
pSrSbl »nd lun«*l
iron m«n •»
duly .ulncrtpUon. .norUlr sl&gt;« b olio lurvivw b, her
Spring prints in light, dark
Dl —7--------- , ..
hr id Tuesday at one o'clock. Seemingly those business houses pdy mother. Mrs. Helen chapman, of
PHONE 2140

I r. UHCAMtni
|
MAKES
FINE GAIN
------------|
Nashville Association Holds
—

Dress Up!

Colorful Printed
RAYON CREPES

*J.98

McCREERYS

DRY CLEANERS
Wc &lt; &gt;11 For and Deliver

he resumed hls regular ganta.

’’

will apgear next week.

&gt;end.

i

�THE HAlTfNGg BANNER, TWTTRfiftAY, EyMltJAIlY

7) TALK OF STARTING
SKEET FIELD HERE

07423525

I ANOTHER HONOR FOR

ri“

1131

»*DLV damaoto bomz I =====

LargMt Capital BalMlwga
Next to the Capitol 4a Washingvw»
i. VAN
iniiuwuniim.
oi woodland, wm ° badly '
SUPT.
BUSKIRK; rarift,
Farlee. "V'woodland^'wM
——
. da matted by
hv fire
Are Tuesday
Tuocitnu forenoon.,'
fnrvnnnn ________ ______________ _'
—
——
'damaged
'IILLLII Is OhoBon as Consultant by ।His place is two miles south and:
Rod and Oun Club Adopts
United States
- The monthly meeting of EmResolution of Appreciation
HASTINGS LOST TO
bllOOtU |
Educfctionzl PoHeie.
“•“*'
| manuel guild will be held next Wed­
:-----Commission
.defective chimney. Neighbors dis-11nesday/ March 4 in the pariah house
for Saving Birds
CHARLOTTE FIVE I
/Continued from page one)
;
, .'covered the fiMmes and notified the
A
' Several items of business were
*
■
■
‘ Another fine honor has come to -*i*a (me
k* r.r.. j., j r*,, j. •
wooaiana lire ae-----------A Hard Fought Game went! considered nt the meeting of the
°, , d a'
Th' department m
।.------------ -•
The
re--Ii Next Tuesday. March 3 the Joint
■ Barry County Rod and Oun Club
to Visitors by 21 to
penda largely npon what la dona to
of mir eltv zrhnnls
H. has
suonded n-------- --------- J
।
| on Monday evening, of interest to।
Dr. Simon himself Is admirably of our city schools. He has been | sponded promptly and did effective 1 meeting of tiie Ministerial Associa- them tn early Ufa eapaclally.
19 Score
members and for tile good
of theI fitted to be an apostle of better. appointed as consultant, ex officio. ‘ work, but the flre had gained such ! tlon and the Council of Christian
The high school cagera lost to the whole county as well.
speech Hls voice has all the qual- for the Educational Policies Com- headway before they arrived that j Education will be held in Emmanuel
j
mission
whose
headquarters
is
at
there
was
much
damage
done
both
Episcopal
parish
house.
Hie
meet■ Charlotte five last Friday night on
Plana are being discussed for thei Hies people strive to attain, coupled
1 Washington. The members of that by fire and water. The loss is part■will
ing open
will open
“ 'lunch
' ------with with
a pota luck
­
the locul court 21-19. It was a hard-' establishing of a skeet field her- with, perfect diction and clear-cut.
• commission are appointed by the ly covered by insurance in
the (COn at 12:30.and all
„l
pastors and
foughl battle from the start to lhe nnd a committee, consisting of' concise English.
National Education Association of Woodland Insurance company.
■I Sunday
■
- • workers
School
are cordially
finlah witli Charlotte taking the lead Homer Smith, chairman. Walter
Dr. Simon has some Interesting
invited. Mrs. A. A. Griffin Is in
In the last minute of play.
Eaton and George Sumner, was
. things to say along the psychological the United Slates and lhe depart-!
inenl of superintendence.
'' THIS CAT IS 23 YEARS OLD.
charge of the program.—J. A. McThe first quarter found each team ’ named to see about securing land side of speech, quite a hobby with'
Tjie appointment of a group of I
j Nulty. Sec.
running neck and neck for the most I for lhe field.
him. he acknowledges. He believes1 educational leaders as consultants is 1 -And now comes lhe patriarch of INulty.
part with Hastings leading 4-1 at ’ The committee on speakers for voices reveal truthfully the charac- '■
all Michigan cals perhaps.
.
U»t tall we meMtaned « IS 1-2- . Member, 01 lhe Amerlc.n Uslon
the end of the’frame. The Bennett- the annual fish supper Is C, H. Os- ter of the Individual, betraying hon-,
■ , ’..I*!!.
! (•
“•oM tallne
y.ui-uiu
ieiine belonging
beloo.i.., to
U, sylvesurged Co »Uend U»
mcn then turned on the power In ’ born, chairman. Hon. W. W. Potter csty, sincerity, shallowness. Irrethe M-cond quarter nnd scored. 10 1 nnd Max Dietrich. No definite date sponslblllty. etc., as well os the opter lone ol U.U elty. lhe article : ™“ f?'1"'” Thundoy evening,
points, while their opponents rang was decided upon but will be an- poslte qualities. Children and dogs;
evoking nolle wldeipre.d InlereM. &lt;i March 5. initiation of new members
I
will
be
preceded
by a pot luck supper
cembcr
1935.
tor
the
purpose
of
de
­
up seven. Score al the end of the j nounced later.
have an uncanny instinct along
and bringing In several other claim- '
first half 14-8 In favor of Hastings. I Another question that was dis-1I this line. The voice will betray i veloping long-range planning for ants for old age honors in the cat 1at 8:30 o'clock. Please bring your
of American family.
.
itlons, alarm, nervousness,
The rival crew came back in the | cussed but not definitely decided I' strong emotions,
nervousness, 1 lhe Improvement
&gt;
।1own table service.
third quarter and outscored the lo- was whether the Club r-hould co- | etc. when every other part of the schools.
This week we received a picture
cal five o-4 and added a hint of a | operate with the Commercial Club'body is under perfect control; a; The consultants will receive Im­ of a cat named ’'Nig'' belonging to i Townsend plan meeting. Episco­
threat by trailing the Bennettmen by furnishing an exhibit al the; -poker" voice is rare under trying । portant materia), prepared by the Mrs. Mary J. Spencer at Dowell.
pal parish house Friday evening.
8 o'clock.-----------------We are expecting
by two baskets. Score 18-14 at the Commercial Club Fair, March 25-28. conditions. Certain teachers owe Educational Policies Commission,
The writer informs us it came to Feb.
- - 28.
--------------------------will be----asked to assist the Com­ Mrs. Spencer's home twenty-three a speaker from Kalamazoo,
end of lhe third quarter.
There arc a number of exhibits , their popularity with children large- and
~
•v—■-----‘nlons
The fourth quarter turned out to that cotfld be secured from the I ly to the pleasant quiet quality of —
mU1*—
on *--------------MPr*4**11’*—their
opini
years ago. White "Nig" has only:
------------------------------------------------------—
&gt;
by
be a Frank Merrlweli finish with Stale
Conservation
Department their voices. A low. clear-cut voice1
‘(0°a
four teeth, hls health is good, and I a
A general
genera) meeting of the Metho
Metho*­
raising
additional
issues
to
be
con
­
the charlotte five scoring seven i that would be intensely interesting i will carry Infinitely farther than one raUlnB additionalissues to
c
eyesight unimpaired. An interesting ' dist L. A. 8 will be held at the
points, while the local quintet added to everyone. The matter Ln to be J of a high-pitched, shouting quality, sidered by the Commission, also to fact concerning lhe cat. Is. that hls church on Wednesday afternoon,
i.nr
.nttl.-rl at
nt lhe
the next.
n..uu. &gt;■ disseminate its recommendations coal black coat is becoming liberally , March 4. at 2:30 o'clock. Circle No.
one lone tnllv
tally tn
to thr-ir
their third nnnr.
qunr- settled
next meeincr
meeing nn
on Don't tell na pupil to "speak ilouder."
and to report the conclusions of
ter score. Tt&gt;e game ended 21-19 in March 9.
but "more distinctly." lie warns.
sprinkled with white hairs. The • 7 is'to furnish the program ahd Cirfavor of Charlotte.
The following resolution of ap- Women make pdor radio material as Important committees of which the , family always takes him on their cle No. 5 will serve refreshments,
The game was well attended by : predation wan adopted Monday well as being less effective on the consultants are members.
out-of-town trips. He has been as Members
"
---------• - to attend.
requested
It can be seen that Ulis Is a fine
fans on both sides and the clave ! evening:
platform because of the naturally
far away as California, and seems
score gave cheering sections for
Because of the heavy snow and higher pitch of their voices which is recognition for the superintendent 1I to adapt himself readily to these
Moose Family night will be held
of
schools
of
this
city.
He
Is
now
each team a splendid opportunity to severe cold weather of the past few harder to retord arid less easily re­
overland Journeys.
March 2 beginning promptly nt 7
exercise their vocal cords.
weeks, making it hard for tiie game ceived. Whining voices, baby talk, the president of the Michigan Edu­
o'clock. Bring sandwiches and one
cation Association and has received
Gladstone again lend the Ben- I and wild birds to get food, and
other dish.
etc., should not be tolerated. The
SIMPLE EXPERIMENT SHOWS
neltmen in points with five goals 1 Whereas, many farmers, the Farm former carries defeat and inferiority other honors which show thte high
EXPLOSIVE POWER OF DUST.
and two foul shots for a total of ' Barciiu, Mr. Schantz. Elmer Bush. all through llfev the latter demand­ e«teem in which he is held personal­
Surgery Guild. No. 19. will meet
12 points. Smith led the Goblemen Middleville Bea Scouts and many ing favors and recognition not due ly and the fine reputation he has os
Dust explosions which occur In with Mrs. Otto Isenhath on Thurs­
with 'four field goals and one foul I individuals have so kindly assisted in adult life, while much of Dr. an educator.
grain elevators and other industrial day afternoon. March 5.
shot for a lota) of nine points. Col- | with feeding of the birds and dis­ Simon's message was primarily for
plants can be easily demonstrated
OBITUARY.
The Adult fflbte classes of the
Uns trailing with one field goal nnd | tributlng nnd furnishing feed at the those dealing directly with problems
Chemical engineers of the United
Hulbert Ransford Casey, son of States Department of Agriculture United Brethren Sunday school will
five foul shots for n total of seven*
-—--------------— of speech, a listener-in heard much
I ------------varous stations
around* -------------the county.
Spelman and Olive Casey, was born often produce miniature dust ex­ meet at the home of Mr and Mrs.
points.
I Therefore, Be It Resolved, that of interest and prpfit.
| the Barry County Rod and Gun
in Hop^ Twp. Barry co.. April 20th. plosions at training schools for fire­ Haney Myers for their regular
The line-ups were:
1885. and died al hls home near men and at fire-prevention meet­ meeting on Friday evening at 7:30.
Hastings d9&gt;
Charlotte "**'
(21) j Club publicly express its apprecla- TRIM WAISTLINES
Gladstone
Smith &lt;Ci , tlon. and thanks for these acts of
take a small handful of ' Bring offering to pay for refresh­
__ They
,
CALL FOR SALADS. Hastings. Feb. 11. 1938. aged 70 ings.
Putman | kindness and for the Interest shown
Hinckley
Salads are becoming the most years. 9 months and 22 days. On corn starch and sift it through a fine ; menu. All interested are invited. A
Schroeder • in saving the birdlife during such popular food dish of the day. ac­ August 10. 1884. he was united In cheese cloth onto a lighted match, i good time Is assured.
Ransom
Angell
Dewey cold, stormy weather, when other- cording to Katherine M. Hart, as­ marriage to Nettie Lclnaar. To this A vivid, fast burning flame appears
R.O.
Walldorf! &lt;C&gt;
____________
Collins । wise our feathered friends
...
might sistant food manager. Union Build­ union were born 11 children, one as if by magic. It Is such a flame in WEEDS IN THE WATER
Substitutions: Hastings; crothers. ‘ have perished.
CUT DOWN DUCK FOOD.
ing. Michigan Bute College. East son and two daughters preceding an industrial plant—starting per­
Charlotte;
Tcutaiit, Burke nnd |----------------- &lt;
----------------haps from an electric spark or the
An undesirable water plant—the i
lAii.o-iug. First
riant course salads are icLansing.
re- hhn to the Great Beyond.
4. 1935
he was taken striking of a match—which ignites caltrop—has smothered many acres 1
Barnhill Referee. Clark. W. 8. T. C I U U C u&lt;{ Rgl niUQ__________________________
IN
...
placing soup On
andOctober
fruits while
main
in the preliminary game the Has- j
"• - - - “tLUINU
DISTRICT TmiRNrV ' course salads gain in popularity over sick and has been a cheerful suffer­ other infla inmat le dust and causes of valuable waterfowl food plants,
lings reserves trounced lhe char- |
Dioiniui
luunnci reRu|ar dishes, she claims. “The er ever since. All was done that a disastrous explosion.
and even hinders navigation, in the j
lottc second stringers 25-6. Walton । The drawings for the district bos-1 salad Is "stepping out today." says loving hands could do but to no
Once the dust starts burning the Potomac River, near Washington. 1
led tile Brnzakmen in points with ket ball tournament which will be I mKs Hart. "No longer can it be con- avail. He is survived by hls wife, flame travels rapidly, building up
Its sudden appearance and rapid ।
four
sons
and
four
daughters
and
a
four field goals for eight counts.
pressure
which
causes
the
actual
held at Belding March 8. have been । sldcred a mere side dish. For many
spread Is a lesson in the conserva-1
completed with Hastings drawing 1 a tempting salad is now a meal in sister, also 25 grandchildren and explosion. Inflammable dusts will tlon of waterfowl food plants, says
H. H. S. GAGERS BOW
n„t,&lt;i,... ns their first rival. This (tsclf Thanks to the advice of doc­ four great-grandchildren. He was a not explode unless they are fine, the Bureau of Biological Survey.
Belding
greatly eniianced by the fact that tors and dietitians, and the almost kind husband and father and will be dry. and suspended In air.
When any aquatic plant of no value
TO ALLEGAN 27 TO 22 Is
sadly missed by his family and a
investigations by the Bureau of as waterfowl food appears. It should
lhe local eagers meet . Belding
---------- To­ universal desire to avoid extreme
morrow
on the
**
"
„ night —
Hastings
1 waistlines, the popularity of lhe host of sympathizing relatives and Chemistry and Solis indicate that
Bennettmen Put Up Game --------two reports are usually heard in
court and much will be determined salad has increased tremendously of friends.
Recently a small stand of giant
Hush, speak softly for our hearts are connection with large dust ex­
Fight But Fail to Stop
ns to the results of the eliminations j late.”
cutgrass, or white marsh grass, was
sad today.
plosions. The first report Is sharp, discovered in the Potomac near
in lhe tournament. Ionia drew the ' Mlu JliTt
Hart recommends the
the fol
fol-­
Visitors’ Fast Play
bye. so the winner of the Hastings- lowing salad combinations as side We have lost earth's greatest bless­ and quick—the second, loud and Washington. The next day the Bu- ;
The high school quintet look an­ Belding game will meet them Bal- dishes:
ing.
rumbling. A small quantity of sus­ reau began its eradication. Giant:
—
other blow on th&lt;- button Tuesday urday night in the finals. Ionia
pended dust catching on fire ap­ cutgrass is a possible pest. It affords
with fish-cucumber salad, mixed Father has passed away.
Dearest Father, you have left us.
night when the Allegan live tripped has defeated both teams.
parently causes the first. Then other a minimum of food and fair-to-poor1
| vegetable salad.
them up with a 27-22 score.
The schedule will call for two
with cold meat—potato salad, Your sweet face well see no more. dust Is disturbed and another ex­ cover for waterfowl. Where it makes 1
Till! game provided thrills aplenty class C games and one class B, to stuffed tomato salad, macaroni, But from Heaven you're beckoning plosion. much larger than the first
a stand. It crowds out wild rice and ,
with each team playing hard for be played FYlday. March 6. with cheese, and olive salad.
and accompanied by more flame, Other valuable
waterfowl
food
the points they were able to score. Sheridan and Cedar Springs at 7i with chicken-pineapple salad, Calllng from that far off shore.
spreads through lhe dust zone.
Allegan took the lead In the first o'clock. Hastings and Belding al 8 asparagus salad
gingerale fruit
frame nnd never relinquished it. al­ o'clock nnd Rockford and Lowell at jeny ,alad. cranberry salad.
though it was threatened many 9 o'clock. Saturday night the win-' with duck-watercress and orange
times in the following quarters. The nrrs play off lhe finals which will salad, apple and celery salad, green
Initial quarter endetl 4-2 in favor determine the top teams In class gnKC p|utn salad.
of Allegan alter a fast and furious B and C schools for this district.
1I With pork—cabbage
— ---•
------and -■
plneapstruggle.
.
I pie salad, apple and raisin salad,
Hastings, Michigan ■ Telephones 2244-2557
Tlie Dnmothmen then unleashed
American pajier money will fold
a powerful offense and scored 12 five thousand times, by actual test. , grapefruit salad.
With lamb—chicory or lettuce salpoints while the Bennettmen gar-1 without cracking or breaking. There
’T.V’’’72?
We urge you to watch our Screen for changes without notice
~
1
ncred scvcnSwith the net result at Is no need for any such test in Can- ?.dn
“me ui.d
the end of the first half 16-9 in ada. where it Is impossible to hold J
gvr, tyv
fr.r
tl.nr, 1 AVlth WSl——SlUfftd pTUnC Salad.
SUNDAY and MONDAY, MARCH 1 and 2
favor of Allegan.
The last half found the local one loitung.
salad.
Bnd ollve
CLAUDETTE COLBERT ond FRED MocMURRAY in
lads making an earnest attempt nt
salad.
a comeback and almost a success­
With beef—heqd lettuce salad.
ful one too. In lhe third quarter
The whole of Japan Is ful) of
I apricot salad, asparagus salad, cole
they showed their opixmenLs what storied niiMintalns. tteautlful lakes,
j slaw salad.
to rxjiect by scoring five irnints, hntlilnc beachea nnd endless gar- ■
With Robert Young, Wm. Collier. Sr., and Donald Meek
White the Allcg.inites scored seven. dens. Every home In Japan, no I
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
With the score 23-17 in favor of Al­
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY, 1:00 and 3:00 o’clock
I Maurice W. Johncock. Barry Twp. 22
legan at the cluse of the third quar­
Other Performances—Adults 25e, Children 10c
den.
I
La
Vera
F.
Mott.
Barry
Twp.
ter lhe Bcnnettment came back In ■
the last frame in a noble effort to'
overcome the lead nnd outplayed
their adversaries by ringing up five
SPECIAL ADDED NOVELTY
tallies ns against four for Allegan.1
Gladstone was lop scorer for the
Bennettmen with four baskets, and
one foul shot, for a total of nine 1
points, with crothers a close Bee- ,
All in Color and Third Dimension—the characters virtually
ond with four baskets. Zavlty led !
step right out of the screen. IF YOU LIKE REAL FUN DON'T
the Damothmen in points with four
MISS IT! You’ll Gel Water in Your Eye! Mice in Your Hair!
baskets and two foul shots nnd was
closely followed by S. Miller who
Balloons Will Burst in Your Face! A Girl in Your Lap! in
had four baskets nnd one foul shot
this latest screen innovation. Note—Special glasses
to hls credit.
The line-ups were:
Dr. D. D. Walton. Eye Specialist, over the National Bank.
Hastings &lt;22&gt;
Allegan
*”------- (27)
B.
Miller
'
Gladstone
Wheat Kriipics
FREE! GET YOURS NOW!
10c
Crothers
Nyeberg !
Whole Wheat Biscuit*10c
Ransom
Veenkant
Angell
C. Brlnlnger
Whole Wheat Flokex10c
BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, MAR. 3
Zavily
Walldorff
_____
.
»
•
n ■
■ S QugU,y Guaranteed
Substitutions: Hastings, Hinckley
Ask obout Receipt Book, Free!
nnd Struble. Allegan, Baker. R. Mil­
ler. Shelb, L. Brlnlnger and B. MllRICHARD ARLEN, BERYL MERCER, Claude Allliter. Charles
The reserve team also bowed in
McNaughton. Cecilia Parker and Dudley Digges
defeat for the second time of the

। Sporting Items ।

______

Organizations

।

.

I.

infection, u typhoid tew

MONDAY SPOTLIGHT

Be Colorful In

Printed PIQUES

98*
Trim . . . tailored . . . trtsl
Choose the neckline that look*
best on you—round, square,
Peter Pan, wing, dub, lapel I
They’ll tub beautifully. 14-44.

TKAND TLEATKf

r

"The Bride Comes Home

SPECIALS

AT THE
WALLACE GROCERY
KELLOGG
SPECIAL!

AUDIOSCOPIKS

I
IUC

THREE LIVE GHOSTS

season. 23-15. Allegan defeated
them both times, all of which add­
ed to the bitter taste of the second
loiw for the Broznkmen.

foul shots for a lotnl of eight |&gt;olnts.
while Clason led the attack for the
opponents with four baskets and
four foul shots for a total of 12
points.
Nalsmlth Game.
Hastings High school has desig­
nated its game with Belding to­
morrow night as a "Nalsmlth" j
game. In other words, four per cent
of the gate receipts, or any volun­
tary contribution which may
be
made by season ticket holders, wlllj
be sent to Coach Buck Read of
Western State Teachers?. College. !
who L\ state chairman for' the com- .
ml ttee which plans to send Dr. and
Mrs. Nalsmlth to the olymplc,games
. in Germany during the coming
summer.
Dr. Nalsmlth who Is the origina­
tor of basket ball. Is the only Jiving
founder of a ma Joa sport. Basket
ball Is to be demonstrated at the
Olympic this summer and will prob­
ably be listed on the program of
sports thereafter. For this reason,
thu tribute to Dr. Nalsmlth is
thought especially fitting at this
time and&gt; fans of Hastings should
feel honored In assisting a worth­
while cause of Uris kind.
.

SUGAR

IO*. 48c

ROLLED OATS5 lb. sock 19c
Clean Quick Soap Chips, 5 lb. box 29c
CORN MEAL, Yellow, 5 lb. sack 17c
SODA CRACKERS ....2 lb. box 19c
19c
MACARONI, bulk3 lbs.
CLIMALENE, large size —pkg. 19c
O K LAUNDRY SOAP ..10 bars 45c
Sweet ORANGES, size 344, 2 doz. 29c
ORANGE SLICES1 lb. 10c
MOIST COCOANUT . .4 oz. can 10c
FELS NAPTHA SOAP'. .. 10 bars 45c
If you have not yet tried our RED BAG BULK
4 Qc
COFFEE, you should—at — ----------------------- -_lb. I v

YOU WILL LIKE IT!

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. MARCH 4 ond 5
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

THE SEAS RUN RED IN THE WAKE OF

CAPTAIN BLOOD

WE DELIVER

OPEN EVENINGS

We say "it may"-we don't know, because a happen*
ing of this sort is controlled entirely by the element* and
cannot be foreseen. But because instance* have arisen
where frost has caused leaks in gas lines-we issue this
notice as a precaution.

IF YOU SHOULD HAVE ANY SUSPICION OF
THE ODOR OF GAS IN YOUR HOME OR

PLACE OF BUSINESS, DO TWO THINGS

Cast of Thousands!—ERROL FLYNN. OLIVIA DellAVILLAND,
Lionel AtwUl, Basil Rathbone, Roas Alexander, Guy Kibee
Adults 25c, Children 10c

FRIDAY ond SATURDAY. MARCH 6 ond 7
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

SONG OF THE SADDLE
With DICK FORAN and ALMA LLOYD
Adventorc and Romance

Ventilate the premises at once.
Call Consumers Power Co.—Gas Service

Dept.—and an inspection will be made
promptly.

FEATURE NO. 2

Bon Hecht and Charles MacArthur Present

PHONE 2305 or 2339

Walter Connolly in

SOAK THE RICH”
With JOHN HOWARD and MARY TAYLOR

The WALLACE GROCERY

The unprecendented cold weather prevailing through*
out the northern part of the United States has created
on unnatural situation in connection with normal ground
freezing. This situation, entirely beyond the control of
the Company, may affect some gas lines because of the
record depth to which frost is penetrating the ground
in certain localities.

Chapter Serial Story, ’THE GREAT AIR MYSTERY," wrfll be
shown Friday night and Saturday Matinee, 3:00 o’clock, only
Adulta 15c, Children lOe

CONSUMERS POWE

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THl COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

Editorials

This
and That
xrssourii.* x

demands which seemed excessive; of a f;imiitar name—Yek, we puzwere not broadcast, unsolicited, to x|cd over RaU;1 uoced. too. even !
thc public. The general was invited though hc do&lt;.s. on occasion, do a •
to tell the truth as he saw It and swell joh at reV|ying the old suit
lor doing so was kicked out." It Takf. even such , slmple
appear* that some of hls remark* -rhlngass." for example, we know It
concerning the high. cost and in- B,
ng
know our own name,
efficiency of WPA labor were inter- |jUl
j)nd us gue^ing tor a time.
preted as unfriendly criticism by the
sensitive New Dealer*. For not
NOVEL ENTERTAINMENT
making
- of himself a "yes'* man. for
Some of the busiest little bodies
giving his frank opinions when lnjjje county are having lunch with
frank opinions were asked. General ^ach noon. We refer to the chlckHagood was fired despite more than adeM and titmice which seem to
forty years of honorable service to cnjOying the little feeding station
his country. In military circles, the
outside our dining room win­
general is given credit for doing dow gwlsh!—and down they come
more than anyone else to cut official (rom nowhere to a perfect two-point
red tape to a minimum and thus landing on
rjm of the basin full ]
promote efficient service. Yet for of sunnOwer seeds. Peck! Peck!
speaking lhe truth, he was treated Pecg!_and the first course is selike a criminal
cured. Zip!—and away they go to a '
Never before has an officer of the nearby tree or bush, there to crack
army or navy been called to lime open their seed* and enjoy a leburefor frank utterances before a com- jy lunch. But they soon come back
mlttee of congress. It marks a new Qncf y, a v)|]|e wlien thc radio Is ‘
trend toward censorship by inliml- blaring they look in-can it be disdatlon that is uncomfortably like approval? You never lire of watchthe methods used by Mussolini. Hit- ,ng them Onw lt, a whUe Mtne
ler and Stalin iu their climb to ntw specimen floats in and then it's
power.
'
B question of identlflcation. A birdA distinct testiness of spirit Is feeding station, even a small one. is
growing within the New Deal, a .self- worth many times it* co*t. in &lt;Ute
righteousness that will not permit1 ncvcrrendlng entertainment providcriticlsm Gone, apparently, is the cd by (Iie
ftathcrcd creatures
calm candor of the early New Deni u uor ram «.,d E».
j Kno KI^ COCK Rq^IN! , ,
yean so well expressed by thc
| “It was I" proclaims Governor
phrase. ”H these measures do not ___________________
ww
In regard to agriculture the Dem- ntzgenld—Il „
Is unu,,
under ui
nT? present
work, my friends. I myself, will be ocra(|c platform said For lhe ro-‘ administration that the red figure*
the flrst to tel) you "
situation of agriculture, lhe nation's ; of state deficits have disappeared
AS things aland now.
the New basic industry, we advocate better “taV reewsun
“ * *urp,U5 ,n ,1“’
Deal would make it a
treasonable nnanclng
of farm
mortgages ' Wlo can 5ny u? Thc ngurcs SUJ&gt;.

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

offense against one s aumtry to through reorganized farm bank 1 |&gt;ort every word the governor says.
even hint that any of thc numcr-! agencies at low rates of interest, on
“rt was I■" shout* former Ooverous experiments underway might an amortization plan, giving prefer-f
*?’u?der my ad;
k.
urn ence to credits
...
.
.
. ;M
ministration
that ed
the 3 per where
cent
not be
open to classification **
as sa,JOO
for thc redemption
of
|C$ tBX
—— saics
in* WJa
was pBM
passea. There's
meres wnere
per cent zucress.
•farms
------- ------------------—
•
—
l■
and homes sold under fore- the-money is coming ------from. -I am thc
Anything can happen in a coun­ closure; extension and development 'onp to get the credit."
of lhe farm cooperative movemen'.
W,’S&gt; can dfny 117 Do. n.ot ,th,J
try where this spirit exists.
.
...
records support every word lhe forand effective control of crop sur- m„
„&gt;,?
’ARALLEL.
plusv* so that our Ortners may have ( Who killed Cock Robin? as we
narallel between the thc full benefit of the domestic remember the old nursery rhyme,
aurttl.
BurlmmL
ol
ewry
pomlbte
|
»'"&gt; HU »»» »™‘
dismissal of Major-General Hagood
and disciplinary action taken tn re­
cent year* against General Smed­ will aid the farmer to receive for
well, we have heard very little
ley Butler and General William basic farm commodities price* in broadcasting by Mr. John Public
Mitchell.
1 excess of cost of production " Also an^ *?*s children. Mr. and Mrs Vol­
They
t been
ons lhe
The outspoken Butler made cer-._
lv exU»H.nee u
-•We condemn „
Che
M,. er.
cUlmlll
’ haven Lor
s«Un
lhe radio

[cossTrrunoKAL

tain charges, unsolicited, before
member* Of a private club which
caused somewhat of a strain between Italy' *nd the United States;

From Our Scrap Book \Taxpayer Wants

n------ :nnc

)□□(

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

A Quotation
\OIILE\ESS .,f
ailcr i* nothin;

Dr Hiram A
Barber, aged 73
year*, died on Saturday after a long
lline.j. which Iw.d been gradually
undenninim; hi* health lor many
month*. He was known throughout
the counly and was the hit phy-

tooil and atcaik M'ura
&gt;f evil.
~frmale.

=nnc

in the Cail WM
The K of p card and dancing
party Monday evening was a I tendcommittee ur-xiurae wer
who

ao invitation io attend bls wed­
ding must lead a harum-scarum
existence

«=, u» emm.«•*,

the ....
Fafm Board. Iu disastrous .Voc- of Michigan "out
w„. of lhe red." Yet.
....
....
tton which made the government a । a* we understand it. they are the
..peculator in farm products, and l*&lt;&gt;Ph? who Pa&gt;’ thc
tax and 011
taxes.
U» unwuna i-llei ol naulcun.I' other,
“JJitS'mofe.
f « remnnter

Way of Our World

conrirur'. a duplicate of tuc. Pyra-l

...... “

.Mnl'S

„.d U Ctaju
project. Those promoting thc idea ■ qrsfc. point out that it will make a nice
Germany has only forty-two golf
place from which to get a Rood view i clubs. Britain has 2.000. and lhe
of the surrounding country We've united States has S OW.
forgotten how many millions, the 1
The seating capacity of American
thmg will cojt—Anya ay. that's not;
theaters b estimated at 11.133 000.
important! Considering all'thing*',
■
Herd* of live stock graze over
however, perhaps such a pyramid
would be a Atting monument to the 275DOOOOO acres oi land in the U S.

ITS UP TO US.
Many traffic officer* have re­
marked that in spue of slippery
roads and pavements of lhe past
few week*, serious Accidents de­
creased. All drivers, even the reeklea ones, appeared lo be Impressed government bureaucracy of our day
with the risk* involved, and ob­ , —an impressive show
&gt;^o action.
served afety precaution*. The re-' nothing intelligent ac,'ompll*hed.
suit spewks for itself. If accidents
- .
’
~can Be reduced to a minimum with I A neighbor who borrowed the
roazte and highway* in terrible con- I *now shovel last March has been
dition. why shouldn't Uie same rate ‘ decent about it. With Jhe winter

The jjrst paMfngcrs ever taken '
aloft were a duck, a rooster and a
sheep— when Joseph Montgolfier.]
sent up a balloon at Versailles.

•Hie United Bute* Post Office
i' Dept- I* richer by about $250,000
'[each year because of unca*hed
money orders.

of safety prevail all of the time? half over, he hasn't billed us for
1 While r'..;:d
jr?!
It could. If drivers would adopt the storage.—Detroit News.
not offiii’ '
:vre-d m Scrir: Jiu.tame measure
of Individual
respon—-—
|.ka Z.r lh
.QVPr..ni7.,._
aaiuy.
AH«.U
Mlildu^
re. I

living;

V‘,le&gt; Forgv' 11 ''’.paun •
'■ nCCd 40,116
li,On' 35 11 rfOCMl I
________
vltni inalte clear lhal Norma Shearer won
* uo[d l* inc prevailing rate
signs. .
,
for sky-writing!
traffic!-.
. ou
Francisco
---------—
aU of Chrontole'
_______
UtSXi

things art necoMary merely lo; TeU a boy that he Is no good and j
"------------“I drivers with the necessity of' you will help him lo become to.— 1, ,The..!^1^Lpa!?1 brU^?

Traffic safety decan t de-.|Kl Paso world News

The
Public Forum |||LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Fourth—For how long a term
Btb. 22. IB3S.
would a manager or clerk be
Dear Editors:
_
...
.
Thanks for the Banner in which chosen? What would hls salary tw?
Down in -Florida
the ----baseball
clans .lUU'
appeared
reprint w,
of Chet Howell's
- ------ ---;------ --------tlcu aa irpou,
• Who would name such manager or
re gathering
iiatherins—
—all
all of
nt which
which mean*
mon, ; artiele aboUl
are
Grayling's winter! clerk? Where would such authority
that spring can t be so very far , iporU. n makes me feel like a thief, be vested?
Fifth—How long would it lake to
away. Hope the boys put on u good ln the n|gtu whtn I note the great
show tills year; It'll be needed with credit I am given for lhe success of look up and copy all lhe abstracts
a presidential election coming.
. our jnow activities Really. I only In Barry county? who would do Ute
I had a small part In it. in comparison । work? How much would it cost?
Sixth—If and when the abstracts
American, as a whole, have a
Mme oFthe other fellows. My
pretty good sense of humor and.. Job was UiuaHy a, chairman of pub- are copied and the office opened,
after the national npid-»llngUig |lclty. and that WM ,My fOr the should the issue pass, would the fees
epree Is over, can usually look back newxpa|&gt;era everywhere were gener- received from the abstracts sold
with a chuckle al all of the things Olu with their space. That was make the office self-sustaining? Or
they vi- done and said, still, some largely because our project has nev- would the county taxpayers still
light old pennant race* wife help.
—■*
have to "dig down” for maintenance
| er ---------------------been commercialized.
' We certainly have a great set-up
Evi n George Welsh and Frank ln our winter sport* park and.seem, another expense to the taxpayers.
Seventh—If the Board of Sui&gt;erMcKay; Franklin Roosevelt and Al to be giving the public wtxat it
Smith; Henry Fletcher nnd Jim wants. We have had from one to vlsors want the people of Barry
Farley; Carter Glass and Rexie Tug-j thrw. ipecial trains here from De­ county to vole on this question in­
well; Bob LaFollette; etc., and etc. | troit every Sunday, beginning with telligently. why are they not pre­
can probably get together on the Jan iaih And n u surprising how senting the facta to lhe electors, giv­
subject of basebail.
। many individuals have been here ing their reasons for submitting this
question to a vote, giving cost esti­
* * *, .I every Sunday.
.
Bunoay.
A great
rin hoplng to
n frw
areal many people in thU
this comlo
few Inorf
more edl- mates. etc ? In fact, why don't they
munlly have pul up bird-feeding lor5 hcre before the Mason closes, put all their "cards on the table face
stations. Fine work
Tiiey don't which it Is liable to do nt any lime, up" and be frank about lhe whole
cost mpch to keep going and are Thc 3U degrees below zero this affair? It's the taxpoyera who have
valuable contributions to lhe fca- mOrulng doesn't mean anything in to pay the bills and they are entitled
lhered songsters. At least one per- the afternoon when the sun is to all the information available
son. Herman Zerbel. has been feed- brlghI
lhe
lcc toboggan from their Board of Supervisors. No
ing a flock of pheasants drivenfrom ; troughs wU| ,tart to melt and flow doubt the various newspapers of the
their usual haunt* by theheavy , down the hlU and Uien n wlu
al| county would gladly give space in
snows and lack^of Jood.
. ovcr, Anyone from lhe Banner Ol- their columns to a statement or
* ’ *
I flee would be welcome visitors and statements from lhe Board about
Congratulation.', to the city school/., WP i,ope you may be among them, their plans and policies, ami It sure­
for the fine prqJeeUo b&lt; put on dur- My kindest pcnotial regards to your- ly Is due the people before the April
ing thc Barry county r.ntrnnlal
and t,le uook families and Joe election.
Eighth—If there is dissatisfaction
year It should be possible to gel , pf]Ug
by the Board members over the
together some very Interesting plo'
Sincerely yours.
present charges for abstracts in
ncer collections.
Oscar p. Schumann.
Barry county, would it not be a good
policy to try and affect a com pro intec with lhe present abstractors.

.00 worth of space

wasted by Congress' inability to
spell "asinine." They seem to
have dramatized the word.

The lliiuou supreme court
ruled that tbe
tcncc meted uui in a noidup
murder trial It legal, pul that
doeau'l make It possible

Mulholland. L W Heath
Schadcr and J J. Dawson
prizes were won by John Armbruster.
Mr* D C. Adams. I. L Bal! and
Mr». Albert Vedder.
Charles Barnaby lias rented to c
E Waring-of Kalamazoo the build­
ing occupied by Hulltnan * hard­
ware Mr Waring will establish a
cash grocery.
Ml* Ruth F Weissert lift on
| Tuesday for Plymouth where -he
• will produce one of her plays she
will npix*ar in the leading role
Miss Marguerite Matthew , of Kal­
amazoo Normal spent the week end
with hir parent*. Mr. and Mr B
A- Matthews. She h&amp; secured alv •
position tn the Battle Crrk schools
next year She was the third mem­.
t
ber of her clf.s to :«cure a position.
i which speaks well fur her ability.

General Mitchell went over the1 agricultural production to the de-I rightly, the people of lhe stale «.f
Reminiscences ui the Flor|di
head* of his superior officers in mands
of
domestic
markets." Michigan voted for a 15-mill llmlreal estateOuotn—
... new*’
matters 'pertaining to aviation. In &lt; Against such promises Mr ltoow-|“«“
»»» °n rcal psta,c and
'JaspeF, Florida, larmer's oaru
out of ngbt io bls back
neither instance was an opinion so­ veil continued the much-critleued *
■
licited. in neither instance were policies of his, predecessor only on a
the statements made before a con­ much larger scale and under a dif-1
THIRTY YEARS AGO
Iddiaua truck driver wt&gt;o
gressional committee, or‘ inquiry. fcrent name; he ]&gt;ald bounties to'
Monday night between half past
d bi* truck loaded with
General Mitchell adopted such a farmers not to grow crops, to kill'
He into tbe ditch to a void
is glad bis into the livery stable where F. c.
chip-on-the-shouider attitude that pigs, and to restrict production—so; that upset the old state real estate , three otb*r xrucki
park«-r • new hack was kept and cut
his dismissal was necessary fur the successful was he in this ttia; the tax applecart. The 15-mill amend- r »bow dluu'i coo yitb
the leather cushions all to pieces.
ment was really what forced the ।
____ 1t r
jaKe of discipline.Bu|1rr'* error
Bishop McCormick will make hl.
was one of |XX)r taste and Jack u! from abroad cummodities that wen tax Yet Mr John Public has r. &gt;:
i church Thursday evening. March 29
judgment. Hi* excuse was that he formerly procured tn this country been on thc air claiming any credit.
j Rov cutler, a ;x&gt;pul.ir young man
It was the voters of the state who |
thought 1ns remark* were betflg instead of taking Uncle Sam out of. Killed
who has tx.cn in the employ of tin*
, :zJ
Cock
Robin ’—Schuyler
made in strict privacy; that he ex­ the farm business, he
is *'
the‘ Marshall. Clinton County Repub'.iJ 8. Goodyear Co for sometime.
Mwrrd his connection with mat
pected hi* word* to so no further biggest—and most stupidkula-1 can-News.
flrm this week He will go
"Delton
than tlie walls o! the toon; in which tor in agricultural products in the!
for a time and then with lib broth­
he sI&gt;oke.
world’.
er to Sheridan. Mic h. yherc they
jGenera! Hggood. ' oh
other
hate purchased a Kvrtvral store.
NEWS GLEANINGS.
W’Ju.iu In, pk'iulj Jiu nwriA k&gt;'Ji.
Mr and Mrs Homer Warner were
, Taken throughout lhe world seven
may fore Im money
fui /rsenjr."
;i!ea -antly .•urprlscd by their friend*
gave hls replies before a congres­
O', er in lllino! .. we read, plans acres lire required to feed one person
last Tuesday evening, and a fine
FEBRUARY
sional committee of inquiry before are being’.M nou*ly cotuidcrcd to | each year.

which even the highest of official,
are supposed to speak with perfect
freedom—and was dismissed lor til­
ing the truth. &lt;

Illi

RANDOM REMARKS.

., pend on rules and regulations but
IT IS HAPPENING!
Dictatorship? Fascism? Hitlerism? ।i upon us. This is a pretty poor reI flection when we consider that
It can't happen here! Don't be too
Michigan has one of the worst traf­
sure! When an army officer is re­
fic records of any state in the
moved from hls command for ex­
Union.
pressing opinions, solicited before a
congressional committee of Inquiry,
SCRAMBLED NAMES.
autocracy is not beyond the border
Many people
throughout
thc
of possibility
county are getting quite a “luck"
Major General Hagood's remarks out of lhe scrambled Names contest
were made hi lhe privacy of a eom- being staged in connection with
ipltlee room where Investigators the commercial club Fair It is in-1
were attempting to find the reason teresting to note how tlie juggling
for certain military appropriation of a few letters masks the identify

i.

THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 27, 1936

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, jCnt.VlKJA.S

•potuibllity is the important
ren.h
im^rbbrl tnr
tiian traffic lichts caution
than traffic lights, caution
speed limits, road markers,
, or tews, in fact

It’s th* Spirit of a Community
That Counta—Not Its Size

whiskers!

„

1--------------——i i
To K )IO11] *houlder thousands of dollars of un­
4
zxvuzuv necessary expense?
.
-------A LABYRINTH OF LANES;
1 T1’1* writer hxs noticed in tc.cral, Ninth—Would the manager or
At the time of the Revelation the J**1”
fanner men- clerk of such a county office be paid
population of Parla numbered 600.- !!on f t,,r Ucl lhal l,lP I’cople of a regular salary and if so. how
(M0. and its limits were practically ! J*'rry S?u,!‘y ,arc
to v°lr “J ,n,lp»&gt;? Or would he receive fee*
M.nur.1 w'U&gt; 'hr lnn« boulevuLU
‘'J*11
«'; only,
U „ Iron, Unu lune th&gt;, lhe r«l |
lot »&gt;"&gt;
-------- — ------Tenth
Have -----------------------thc supervisors 'In­
- vrslignted other alislract office*.
tide of modern improvement* may
.
be said to dote. The area or&gt; the
*‘— i1 There are several jioliiLs in con- whether owned by counties or Inrigni
w '«*' ".’“‘.“I *l *.&lt;,Uld I ,n*,t,U3l» ascertained the oxpensr of
right uaiix
bank oi
of me
the ocine
Seine was
was then nJTLln!J
considerably smaller, whereas to-day I “T??ll‘1' B?“r'1 ,f,f
opening such an office or learned
it is much larger than that of thc ^&gt;‘2, H.2“2kr.iC,&lt;?.r.(rleclort | »&gt;’al ‘''p operating cr»l* might be?
Uf,
A, (K..»
—r,.-. the ..area
.... before
lx-fore thc
lhe April election, thia
this voter 1‘ What
Wl’.at hind*
hinds nt
of ainirurt..
abstracta arc iiitfl..
made
left bank. At
that .period
by the countic* having such offices?
uf Paris was scarcely more Until one- thhik*.
First—Why should Barry county Are thcr-c abstract* complete. Riving
slxth of what it is today and. with
invest
thousands
oL-ANMn,
in
this
a*
full
details
aa
the
abstract*
furthe exception of the boulevard-,, it
was a labyrinth of narrow winding undtrtaking? Is X'”'' "«iy great nlxhed by private abstractors?
lane*. These
*-•'
-ou.u
Eleventh—What
would
Barry
lanes.
Tlicsc were
were dark
dark and
and dirty
dirty. n. d f r U* 1 "n abstr»cl °mcc nl
the cleansing of the street* being 1
n
u thls. county charge for an abstract and
left lo the weather, m that a heavy .
I *»'al do other counties charge lor
downpour of rain wa. regarded a* a
Sreynd-How much
docs thc them?
godM-nd The streams of waler, find®’,‘*'rv,3or*.’‘R‘'rc ,hU
i These question* arc but natural
ing their way to pot-holes and hoi- S?1 1
taxpayer* ol Barry county? ones for the taxpayers to a*k and
■lows,
—- •became
-----------•
■ ■ - ; Oh. yes. the taxpayers would have the Board should supply thl* In far|&gt;ond.s
over which
.
to
loot
that
bill,
too
. tn*uon.
’-m but
•nation This
nils would
would sc
seem
but lair
fair
planks were laid and ladies carried !
■ Third—Wto
would have the to the fellows who have to foot the
across.
'
Few of the street* had any pave-. management of tlie office, which bills.
‘ naturally would be a political one? |
An Interested Taxpayer.
ment*. and of course at that time I
there was no established rule of the ,
Our little Thornapplc apixtars to
roa-* to drive either to tlie right or ।
the left, m that coachmen crossed '
be in quite an expansive mood.
and jostled one another wit hour i
Understand that some of tivceremony, a few large stones which |
Hew to the line, let the quips
town's younger liomtnri des affaires
projected from some of the houses,
fall where they may I
act caught in a draft a few days
coupled with the receding dtiorwav., of other . a Horded a limited
amount of protection. In wet weath­
By Observing Tommy.
Save shoe leather and lung power!
er the stream in thc center of the
read becoming a rapid torrent fre­
This week', nomination for the Let Tommy help peddle your choice
quently compelled the jx dr trlan to Hastings Hall of Most Ineligible bits of gossip about!
hire « fiacre cr cabriolet to escape a Bachelors—Harold Logan.
Dan t think there aren't some
drenching in thc mon- crouaea and
noirni little' ■ spreaders arounders"
Unpleasant Streets Tr.c*c vehicles
Many a feminine heart through­
.
could be hired by the month, fort­ out Use length and breadth o! the in our quiet 'll! village.
night. or day.—Hatold Clunti. in state wit) register a flutter of disTown crier* went out of existence
-The Face of parti." (London: apixiiiitincnt at this latest dtvcloplong ago—gueu they found they
Simpkin Marshall.*
' ment.
weren't needed. Anyway you look
' Friendship is nn expansive spirit
at it. you can't beat thlj "free ex­
There was a lad!
I hat overliirrtws vindictiveness and
change co-oix-rntion."
takes in enemies, overpa-v*.* jcalAnd U all happened during leap
ousy and embraces rivals— Dr
My friend Angelo. I understand,
Harry Emerson Fosdlck
now plans to serve 'em on Jefferson
street.
' We are all very apt to favor the
Undrretand they had a dickens of
panaceas which will cure nil our ! i time locating a minister. Twas a
Monopoly now seems to be the
troubles in thirty day*. We ar*' lazy." legal holiday and the divines were rage.
—President Roosevelt
%
i not divining.

'Round About Town

■1 ■
.
...
. .
bnd.1 ™,jte h.re b.™
down marked copies to Mr. Burton h&gt;n uncommon interest In wading
rrffijrnunn;’ ine» past few days.
man" was standing the Journey.

Il JMU
you want W
to KI1UW
know WHO
who MIC
lhe IWU
two
H
‘°w" *"■ “k

Tremendous
[1 Trifles H

Chris Spirts I see. wore a rather
Main street now.
look Monday—Nothing
Mr and Mrs. Al H Weber mine depressed,
serious, only Mrs. Spirts had to re­
to Hastings Friday where Mr. Wrb-r
ha* accepted the position a* ioreman mind him that it was their wedding
anniversary.
.
| | By ELMO SCOTT WHS0M | |
for tin* Banner.
Charle* Doyle was the guest of
Who was that anonymous writer
Dr ant! Mr*, c P. Lathrop at Ionia
MU.- coutchic aceotn-1
on Sunday. M!
SHOT OF DESTINY
.
Ticklish
Tommy
Nope! You
I&gt;anled him home
{guessed wrong, old tlnfer! You
J«MU &gt;L««
-,a
"“J [t WAS .b«&lt; M ci™, .nd .*
ware .oddlLLS MMVTOM, o: M&gt; , '““’"I ’™“»•. . .
,1
ant! Mrs.
Kent.'
xfr, rCompo
nniuz, at
nl Alaska.
AlaKra Itmii
.
r
occasion. They will scon move to aiir!
eft Virginia iwit. PH.
Al Brown. I see. sported a t»air ofi "'‘aglow—that arquebus which EuI their recently purchased farm in C-&gt;. this wick. Mrs. Compo will;
t»c remembered by tiic older rest- 1; "cadUnower" cars the other day. Not' f"ll«ao soldier* carried In ths SavRutland.
■Concms Matron conical
cirnts here as the daughter of lllc ropcd arena but thc sub-zero! enteenth century. But no modern
oi DiMrict oi Columba.
Yankee Lewis" who kept lhe lam-!
-n’l “n rarly, niQnL
। '""cliltie guo etcr affected Ameri1191
W;;.-rt Bro have made a great
ou* tavern at Yankee Sprlnc* tn by-1ul ®rtwa lo PUC. Froze can history inn re than so sndsnt
improvement m their More by an
...
* —
arquebus did In 16UO.
addition covering the old alley way. gone days Mrs. I A Holbrook is ctn
.
...
J B Goodyear baa sold the corner the only person now living among , , ..
In that year Samuel da Champlain.
ai Ripou. Wusoniia. ISM.
all the number from Hasting* who
J,,Jr bcc'}’ u*‘A^? a,n? I founder of Quebec, accotnpanled a
attended
the
wedding
flfly
yearago.
si*
Ji
th
'.
I
nnr
party nf Hurons and Algonquin*
Valkenburg uno we understand ex- Dan Donahu* aged 30. died al his
" h H°Pc thcy
j»ects to build thereon in the near'
] ngnlnst their euemlea, the Mohawks
home in thc 4th ward Sunday morn-1
; future
"f the Iroquois Confederacy. They
ing.
February
23.
at
seven
o'clock,
j
Franeej and Thelma Burch enter­
• Thl. week’., nomination for the | *ouBd them on the shores of the
it W»ll.r.&lt;tcn.
tained 13 of thelr-voung Irjends at
tuJ. 1010- „
HuMngs Hall of Poesy—George Mil- present Lake Champlain.
a Wn.iiington
Birthday party.
FlhTY YEARS AGO.
. ' jer.
stull is
vc !
ler. His
His stuif
L* original,
arteinal too
tno 'you
vn,. 'v.
I
ctuunplaln saw the Mohawks get­
Thursday afternoon from I to 6 A
n
u
4
connunorum
which
is
tne,
..
It
a connundrum
the ( never
heard anything like it before. I
ting ready to shout their arrowa.
pleasant time was enjoyed bv all In more pleased. Commander Hogle at |
. .... orders Capital
• • •
various came'. The one aflordlng hls new sword and tlie exhllNtlvn ol
Earl Coleman is wit lucky fellow He leveled bls aquebua. which be
’ thc most amuMmenl was seeking pood will on the part of hi* brother who never has to worry about re- had l&lt;4ded with four ball* and
the hatchets. 30 of which were hid- filr Knight*, or the member* of the । during or "bay windows."
aimed straight at one of the three
|den in various place* Mabel clary­ Division
sur-[‘
...
'
Mohawk chiefs In lhe forefront of
iisuiun at
ai, having
caving completely sur• .• *
won the. prize for finding lhe great­ prised
rised their first
fint officer.
| Wonder if D'Roy poster has been ■he enemy's line. As the gun roared,
est number.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
F.
ABlackman
o.
to
-"Sunday
School"
yet?1
two of i hem droiuxd dead and tbe
1 W. A Hair , has returned from
aerv were in
In thc
the cite
Fridav the .I
Lacey
city Friday,
'
,
.
third was seriously wounded.
! New Mexico- where lu* ha* been guests of Mr and Mrs Julius Rus-1
...
I'hamplale could not bare reelI looking ovcrJhe country
sell. Tiiey
- for the
attended
pa-t
thc K. of p 1
E
,cluhb'r-i' 1 u,n* !
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
"Communbm i*. and always has1 *9*r“* *,e,ks Mc uas »
dancc
i derotand. are going to continue with iz&lt;*d II then, but hls was truly a
been a fragtk growth' -Raymond plc*sctf¥l«l it lliat hr lu* decided
Th* many Barry county friend* of •
Pof**lTj,,al &gt;heain a "shot nf destiny.** For this was the,
Frank
B.
Ultlcficld
will
be
pained
lo
,ot
of
*
‘
ork
,or
Hw®WMolcy.
;to UKelup a farm of tM acres
Hrsi' enniact of the Iroquois with
| with his son and will move there
tbe Frenrh and ihclr hatred for these
learn of hl* death which occurred at.
• • ••
• Haling people is like, burning ‘ alt*1 i,is
hi the spring,
Greenville on the 17lh Mr LittleGreat boy*, tiwse Fosters. Foster while men dated from that day. ft
field wa* landlord of tlie Hastings bfothtn. who really aren't foster made item allies of the English end
down your own house to get nd ol a &gt;
FORTY YEARS AGO
House three years ago.
bro’.iwrs at alii
rat."—Harry Emerson Fosdick.
li&gt; i.lrn long struggle with France
In Ute list of marriage licenses
Mrs. Kep Silsbee of Freeport has
• • •
.
for dvuilmiitoa of North America,
' The one thing that a dreamer published in the Nashville New* last spent lhe greater portion of the
Up at Kellar Stem's. I’undcrstand. ihe aid „f moi) warriors played a
'
- "i .week.. E. A. Burtons age. nt week with relatives and friends In Uicy iiave granddaughters by the
'»ri»|te (&gt;art In fHor of Great Britdreaming. '—Dean Inge.
('given aa M years, and frigndt of the thl* city.
। quarter doaen.

W;

Crumbs of Wisdom

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY Zl, 1134
| Edward parpenter. age 28, of Calo-1

Hallowcen parsflMit sUll.lp evi­
donia. carpenter wax arrested on a dence on State street­
Ichgrgo of negligent homicide. Ills
Clarence Grohc is al Pennock hos­
' .lrl&gt;l va&gt; held ‘n °rand Rapids pital for imtment for heart trouble.
' Thursday and ha was found not
Mrs. Eliza Devereaux U ill with
From lhe Charlotte Republican-, guilty.'
pneumonia in Pennock hospital and
Tribune we learn that Mrs. Elva &gt; Oan you figure out how many 1 1-2
21*“’“ has
”*
U,“ UI In Fiori- '
Ite«»'“&gt;;
rTwXjo, niacin, putal
Granger
been ’
quite

/ fl/"1! f

1936

3?* to rtolM*

1*1
term

sx
stracU
do lhe
it?
Hracts
pened.
se fees
sold

•till
mance
5UJM.TBarry
in in-

a. givig this

I they
le face
whole
Hilled
diable
rs. No
of the
see in

aboul
surcApril
action
r the

i good
mproiclors.
of uner or
e paid
how

ifficcs,

made
fiices?
giving
s furBarry
I and

slural
t and
infurJl the

the
Taires
days
owur!
ihoicc

some
idcrs” •
ilencc
they
look

Hand,
erson
: Hie

AZF Tire
ITi?

idern
inert­

■*"" h™“

lulna
rhey
the

J be
and

ired,
tho

ly a
the
with

and
■nee
rd a

3rtt-

8 ur“‘1-

LEE No. 91

BALDWINS

79cbu
LARGE AND CRI3P

HEAD LETTUCE

2

PECAN MEATS

for

15C

ib.

39c

BEEF KETTLE ROAST
Cut from Branded Beef
Ib. 16c and 18c
BACON

Ib.

23c

lb«.

29c

CHICKENS

ib.

28c

SALMON STEAKS

ib.

25c

HALIBUT STEAKS

ib.

27c

Chunk Lean

HAMBURG

Fresh Ground

ELDPAUSCH
•MARKET*

Phene 2272 UJo Deliver

2

THREE STYLES

SIX or SEVEN

GENUINE

Cars

826,519

656,698

LEE No. 36
High Back. Blue Pin Stripe—
the Biggest Value 8 4 Art
In HastingsI .03

Plymouth
382,895

167,129

61,488

WORK PANTS
THAT REALLY WEAR
8^.43 8 J.69 84.79

Registrations In Michigan
Cars
Trucks and
Commercials _

Ford

Chevrolet

72,074

36,164

DRESSES
would !&gt;&lt;• smart . . . for youngsters

need plenty of them. They are gay
in patterns . . . excellent washing
nnd wearing fabrics. Sixes 2 to (&gt;.

GIRLS' 6 to 12 and
MISSES'10 to ]61/2

18,484
DODGE- Trk« H Comi.

New Spring Blouses
Washable Silk Waists, sixes
32 to 40, are $1.69

8,961

Ford
-j_____

Trucks and
Commercials

String Lacc Blousea, pastel
shades, tises .32 to 40,

Attractive Spring Styles . .

giving bright notes of color.

They're Prid'd at

6,293

Chevrolet

171

146

30

30

$2- $688

WORK CAPS
rtf“(

|

2,663

WORK SHIRTS
8 J QQ

Made by Racine

Plymouth
48
DODGE—Tik*. * Csail.

Of Covert and Blue Pin
Stripes—Shrunk—al

GREY COVERT ZIPPER

Registrations In Barry’ County
Cars

$ ■ OO
I
e

We carry them lo sire
50 waist

Plymouth

UNION SUITS
|
I

10 Per Cent Wool—Ju»l the
right weight for lhe
QAc
neat |wo months—
30

10

Ford World Sales for 1935—1,311,927

WATERS
Clothes Shop
"gsiiing Quuity K«&lt;pi ui a one*

.95

To buy SEVERAL of tjicw drouws

DODOE —Trk«. * Coml.

185,848

&gt;&lt;|.00

Girin’ and Minsen

DRESSES

Registrations In United States
Trucks and
Commercials _.

' Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth
Mr. and Mrt Ray Crawford,M
Forman, Walter fflatar. cled Bentf
bury. Laura Kennedy and Jami
Null were on a sleighing party Sal
tirday night.
John and Will Crawford were 1
Hastings Tuesday on business.

New Spring

III both cat* and truck registrations for 1935
as furnished by R. L. Polk &amp; Co., Detroit

Chevrolet

day in Orangeville

. . . jysl lhe thing lo freshen
up your wardrobe. Soft, Huffy
woolens and Bouck, knit in
lhe new spring shades. When
you see them, you'll probably
^wapt at least two, for they’re
a real bargain.

FORD Leads
Ford

fairly were

New Spring Sweaters!

,

65cbn
10 lbs. 19c

Mr and »

better et LhU writing.
Ur and Hr, Hlair Van O»VU
live four mile* northeast of Middle- i Lansing virttad Mr. and Mn Wm.
ville, were aqre that spring had ar- । Van Byckle Bunday afternoon.
rived Bunday when they heard a
Mrs. Sophia Mead Is gaining
tree toad calling.
I strength slowly after her recent lllBut there Is a sequel to thia story.' ne“Mr*. Harris u a lover of house
T1,c Morgan school put on a Llnplants, and every fall for several coln and Washington program Frtycars when she has taken
the daX 10 whlch tbe parents were in­
plants into thc house from their vlt&lt;d: cherry pie was served to all.
outdoor summer home, she has takBunday we had a real thaw, the
eu a tree toad or two in also. Thc nrsl 10 ®hout six weeks.
little anlmab arc quiet during the
long winter days, but when the sun
begins to shine out warm against
lhe windows, thc tree toads come
to life and begin to talk to lhe
Harris family. Mr Harris vouches
ior tnc statement that when warm
: days really arrive, the toad* go to
ch- door and ask to be freed from
their winter reiuge. wnethcr the
same toads return tach year is a
question, he says, as he lias no way
of knowing.
This winter, one tree toad was
on some plants in an upstairs room
and the other was downstairs, thc
latter showing thc first evidence of
life on Sunday but nothing has been
I neard from the one upstairs.

This
Store Maintains
a Complete
Work Clothes
Department

s

‘
i&gt;een“
fvery «fck°wHh"th?fl
’5?much

on the Way

Waters Clothes Shop

dent

Jain.

Think Spring Ii Boally

*4

APPLES

«■"“

Ma and M^auk H.rri.

™ nnt ua, oi uu w n: “Sur mm wSViS JTiu.51^1*

u&amp;XX’XtSX &amp;

10 lbs. 25c
I an:ould
Eu-

TREE TOAD COMES
TO LIFE SUNDAY
■—
II
T Bflalnu

inurnun, u&gt; nM. but h*rd on -TM Tiunt A,Un.l
j UMn“c«nl’*WMd?riT'“n“r'uteM
the eyes—-up and Down Main
Street" in Charlotte Republican­
Tribune.
Mrg. Mae ^,1, r..rorowl her work I
Mrs. Katherine Barrett has moved appearance, nor any social tunc,
wcelt Wjy1 tJu. vvelfare Comfrom Mrs. J. M. Decdrick's to Mrs Hons, stipulates Mrs. Roosevelt.
Michael Sullivan's residence on W.
From lhe standpoint of a woman. | mission and Is convalescing from
Grand st.
and woman are supposed to hold ’ her accident.
Consumers power issues a warning lhe purse strings of the nation, wc, Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Kill* Kelley
In their weakly advertisement this would say this idea of a Buslne** [ al 3:30 Sunday morning k nine
week which you had belter take Men's Fair, which the commercial pound two ounce boy. who lias been
club 1* sponsoring for lhe week of, named Jack Leslie
pains to read.
Mrs. Jerry Andrus returned-to her
February this year has five Satur­ March 25. is about the best thing
days. R will be 28 years before that that's been done in a long time, tn , home from pennock hospital on Satwill happen again, and by that time the way of publicity for Hastings. | urday. she Is recovering nicely
t
.
v..s,
We
i*
rc&lt;
H
ct
11
****
he
u
wliuier.
. from her recent operation
many who read this won't care.
'
Michigan"I* ^tevidoplng*as"*iui oil ( Al lhe Methodist Sunday Schoo)1 A K. Frandsen returned un Wcdficld. Some of our oil la being ' ncxt Sunday morning several se- neaday to his home from Pennock
pumped to Toledo. Ohio a distance!lectlona are to be played on the {hospital where he had an operation
of 140 mile*, through a new pipe I rn*rl'nba by Richard Waite. He is1 for appendicitis He Is gaining nitenn. Just completed.
“h artist
on -------this —
instrument
line
.—
-------- —
------------ and
-— lyThe Hastings
Women's
Club I
Traffic on the Michigan Central manX- no doubt, will want to hear
wa* held up for several hours Fri-1 hlm- Bunday school
meeu at bridge party Friday afternoon for
the benefit of the will Rogers "liv­
day when an oil lank car Jumped eleven-thirty o'clock.
the track at Caledonia and smashed [ Word has been received of the Ing memorial'' fund netted around
Into the co-operative elevator.
; birth of a son to Mr. and Mrs Larry SIS. We understand the memorial
Al Myers, who wn* operated on for Creson (Jean Hooper) of Memphis. takes the form of a great endow­
A ruptured appendix Jan. 19th. was j Tenn. Friends here extend con- ment fund for cri|&gt;pled children,
which lhe national committee felt
- SOUTH BOWN'E.
i.ble to sit up in a chair for thc first gralulatlon*
would be In necord with the late be­
; Frank Page and son of Grand
Jano“£inb“t|&lt;‘'dnn*
nlSjfrom°h«rWr^ni o^roUon^d loved humorist's wishes betler than
I Rapids and Thurman Noel of Lever­
anything else. We are glsd that
ing were dinner guest* at Will MlshHastings is lo be represented in this
iler's Friday, also Miss Fem Wheeler
fine philanthropy.
and niece of Freeport.
iarlaps. almost sold out. with sweat- Mrs RHV waicri
A Woodland farmer wan In Die of­
।rs. underwear, and woolens cleaned
wnfri/., k.
I Mrs. Noah
Shaffer of North
nut thc closest in years. But the ,
lt J* to° much lo a*k Ex­ fice this week to advertise for a
j Bowtie visited from 'juesday .until.
trade in marble* ha* been at low ebb
c,1“b «roupi 10 "f°rt lhcU horse. He reports five farmers in his 1
।
Saturday
forenoon with her son Ellor this lime of ye*r
mealing* the same week &lt;hcy occur. vicinity
„.u ,ualhad
,1U,lost horsey from a mys-1
[ mcr Shaffer and family.
Who remembers Cordy West,1 wh,Ie lhey aUI1 hftVC newa va,uc’ “ I t'Tious
Hie ppat.t month. The;
tfrtr.us disease
disrase- the
। Mr. and Mrs.'venwn Wolcott ol
lumber camp veteran, now of Mid- i10 tln,e *ul(1 Plftcc?
horses are afflicted
a ou,* «&gt; ,
Cmirlottc called on her parents. Mr.
land county, who figures in a BunMrs. J. F Goodyear, who returned [ paralysis that causes /choking and
and Mrs. Abe Eash Sunday.
day Detroit Free Press write-up. Ito Hastings recently from Detroit ‘ Inability lo swallow, death following ' One grim, phase of warfare in Ethiopia, revealed in these graphic
■ nd says he came to Gladwin from I where ahe spent a port of lhe win- I In short order Describing these con- scenes. has proved eoeily io Emperor Halle Selassie's black legions. | Mr. and Mrs. Josie Roush and son
।
of Charlotte spent Saturday night
Barry county when 17 years old?
I
has re-opened her home on 8. dltions to a local veterinary he says I In the scene above, taken from a plane, units of Italy's Disperaia
,
at the WUI Mishler home.'
.
Insurance Commissioner John C ' Washington street.
lhe disease may be caused by botul-1 Squadron me shown flying In unswerving formation toward a
Ketcham spoke at a meeting of lhe ■ Over In Mason our old friend, j I 'm bacteria. wMch forms in dark. strategic Ethiopian pdlnt on which to rain cH-adly bombs. Below, : Miss Norma Yoder spent the
Men's club of Trinity Episcopal J“ck
Rakowsky.
has had
hls ; dump places on hny. grain and other fluming village huts testify to ibe accurate alm of lhe Italian airmen. j -.veck end with her aunt. Lena
I zlelrn. of Campbell.
rhurch. Marshall. Tuesday cycning. I troubles, too. according lo lhe Ing-1 fodder, nnd produces conditions
----------------j Miss Eleanor Miller spent Sunday
Leon Tolhurst was chairman of the ham county News which says - j Imllnr to those related by thc
CREN8EY.
| family of East Delton spent Sunday wllh her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
lirogram committee.
i ''Jack Rakowsky said Wednesday Woodland farmer.
Mr. and Mrs. John DePau. who evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Lee . Glen Miller of Carlton and made
Auto owners unable lo purchase 1 afternoon that he has about lost j .....u
------------| the acquaintance of her brother,
worked the Ed. Woodham farm the | Reynolds.
lheir full year license plutcs before hope of keeping even with lhe snow. »AN b GKEENHOUst.
, Maynard Vaughn, who arrived. Feb.
lhe dead line, Feb. 29. may purchase ! On Sunday the roads were pretty |
GARDEN FIRM, I i&gt;ast year, have moved in with his
----------------I 14th..
BRANCH DISTRICT.
r slicker good until July 31 at half I wall cleared. Then with more snow
Mrs. J E. \nndcnberg. who has parent-. Mr. nnd Mrs. Lancaster. I
the full year rale, according to Sec-1 “nd frequent shifts in the wind thc i bl‘rn cnnfined lo -her chair with of Kalamazoo, have moved on tlie
We ure glad lo be abic to send '
infall once more; our road has been '
retury of State Orville E Atwood. I Ingham highways were plugged I ncuri’.ia In her buck and complice- Woodhani farm.
Hastings was not represented in again. On Monday. Tuesday and | Umis, since thc fin&gt;t of December. (
Mr and Mr*. Ray White and Mr Impassable for a week
The snow
the Golden Glove Boxing Tourna- Wednesday thc road forces working ' do™i't “How much Improvement,
and Mrs. Walter White and family ! Ptoar “nd several shovelers cainc
ment this year. Neither was Lowell. , day and night lost ground In their ।
Have
H1’1''1 **1 and snowed in' ot Kalanioxoo spent Sunday with through Wednesday afternoon, but
|«A.st year their contender was [ battle against snow. Many of th»|
or four wicks? If so you I their ,,parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. the road was drifted full by Thurs- |
knocked out in gpe round by Joe 1 main roads were plugged Wedncs- W11l know what a welcome sight it White.
.
•
day morning. The plow came ,
Louis who started hls spectacular day although If the wind dies down ua“ to C®J? *Hc big caterpillar plow
Mn.. SmUI&gt;. »h« hM teen Bl the
«“■" SMtettey rncnunj
rise to fame at that time as a Gold- &gt; the work of cleaning out will be I come wallowing through HP' anoW.'i pul l»0
went to the home and so
“ far the road Is open yet.
clearing
road
and canitecling
in Glove boxer.
I hastened. Highway workers are 1। ''■
‘“r'"" the —
«'• «"'•
All Hastings students from this
of her daughter. Mm. Marshall CalWhen Marie Peary, daughter of handicapped
because there Is no you with thc outside world again.
way were marooned all last week, i
throp.
on
Sunday
for
an
indefinite
"shove
snow. —
The
thc Admiral, was born up in thc place to
—
*------ •*the
------------• •bank"
• 1I Wen Nagel and family hxvejnovcd stay.
■—
• - but were able to get out again this
”nstJ‘W to be near hl* work, unArctic circle, the EAqulmoux named are now so high tluil they refuse to
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parks of j Monday morning.
weather warms up and roads
Iter Ah-nlg-hltn—"Snowbird." which । budge for lhe snow plows. Snow on | 1)1
There was no school at the
Kalamazoo spent Saturday night
good “vain
her father loved to use. Somehow ' top of thc crust overlying fields has |
Branch the past week, as the teach­
.Donald Vandenberg Is sawing with Mrs. O. Smith.
we feel Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. Cro- been blown Into the roads."
returned Monday | ’’"’’wr for hLs new Iioum- Donald.
School opened again today after er and pupils were unable to get
fool should have nn appropriate I Al McCall
through the drifts.
I
night
from
a
week
end
silent
with
i
Hls
father
and
mothiT.
arc
two
and
a
half
weeks
’
vacation.
nickname for their "snow babies."
George Marshall ha* been very |
up-stairs in the J E Van­
The city mailmen have given u lot I hls brother Robert in Detroit and ।
Mr. and Mrs. John Klinger and
STANDARD QUALITY
of thought recently to organizing . at Ann Arbor in a very happv frame J arulscssc home until the new house family visited Mr. and Mm. Allie sick during the bad weather.
; b, fiiiLr.l-.cd
Rogers near Prairieville. Sunday.
I
Miss Margery Norton, who was i
a walk cleaning squad to help out v., num,
i am vini' ui,u. 41 win ir-t
and MODERATE PRICES
11 there ever is a time when you
our jioor city. How thc boys rave remembered, he went thru one of •
Miss Clementina DePau went lo cut of Nashville school all last week
has gone to stay with heiyaunt un- 1
about thc walk.-.—and who blames the mast delicate and dangerous of 1 “PPrcclulc good friends and neigh- work Sunday for Mr
and Mrs.
them?—Livingston County-Repub­ surglcal oiierallon*. removal of a hors II Ls when yo-i arc ill and sliut- Frank Hallock near Hickory Cor­ Ul weather conditions change.
GENUINE
,
,n a wmu-r
like this. Hurnh!
”—
—
—•
lican Press. Which Item will strike tumor from tlie brain, ail operation --ners.
Hie. flfirst
5sl .rrobin.
?’
a responsive chord In thc breasts of that give* few per cent of cures. for spring and_t,lc
Visitors
at
the
home
of
D. EnMrs.
Will
Carter's
health
does
not
about
five
cases
In
one
hundred.
Al
.
1..
r.KL
««&lt;-.,
iw;
Uncle Sam's blue clad boys here.
,
Their
Best
Plain Blue Jell
has
been
going
down
ever
since
at
hnprovc
a.
fast
as
we
nil
would
like.
£_
U1
•
Sunday,
were
Mr.
and
Mrs
... ...... „„ a,
nMUUi i,»c. ~ , —■
. ; —■ -— "
Over 10.000 posters were entered In '
ter of world cullure and world 1
।
Mr Carter
min «,n
Carl Enzlan
and and
family
of KiilaDenim. No Starch. 8 4 EQ
Mr. Carter
and Wenden
son Wendell have
knzian
family
of Kaluthe Isle Royafe» paster-slogan con-' .«......
staled time.', for a check .....
up. ....
Monday
lluniice. There are names nssoclat- I No Shrinkage—
I &gt;33
lest. The four winners were Mary he was told he need not return as hclped our mail carrier all through rnazo0- nod Mr. and Mrs. Leslie En­
Lou Mills, Ann Arbor; Gwen Gor- ' everything showed a perfectly nor­ tile last three or four week* until iUn and family of Wayland,
„.™ Alice
nuve Laubaugh
ueuunugn of
oi Grand
orana for al*
Ro,no °f them are
MLs*
don. Detroit; ThomasClzmedjt. Kai- mal condition. Al lias some gray the roads were plowed out.
Rapid,
, - - ----- ----------■...... Is spending a few days with
-All .Mlehelengeln, the Medici, ! unite '
ninazoo. Robt. Gundcrscn. Pontiac.1 hairs tho. that shouldn't be there,
—■ .«_
■
.
Alighieri, llocrawlo. Mncliierelll.
Often an unfortunate experience ...
Mr and
Mts. Oils-------Boulter
and famSaginaw.
Detroit
Northwestern., and a memory of excruciating pain
,
. Della Robbia, laxmardo da Vinci, !
Wyandotte, and Battle creek school, j that he will carry with him to hl- on a by-path Is Just what Is needed Uy.
to keep u.s on thc main road.
" and—
-----Air.
Mr.v. Clifford
Kahlir nnd Benvenuto Cellini ami Raphael.
are represented In thc alternate i dying day. Life is sweet but not
class.
■
enough he says. to warrant ever
Clyde Coleman of Rutland, was, going liirti a like experience again.
killed near Grand Rapids last No- j John WelMcrl will go to the Uni­
veinber, when the car he was driving I versity hospital at Ann Arbor today
was smashed Into by one driven by for treatment.

SPIES
IS

Wings of Death Over' Ethiopia

LHIN1ISL
"SxchuitMi, but not expend
HASTINGS

�I
THE HASTINGS BANNER, THVRSDAT. FEBRPARY 57. 1938

। the money and machinery availI able—and have done better than
our neighboring counties.

WORTHY OF PRASE.
GYM EXHIBIT ON
BLOOD”
NOT CH TIM “CAPTAIN
REGSTERSHIT
COMES TO STRAND
(Continued from page one)
! The famous and colorful story of
bwjuw ol th. M-vrr.
upon
•nd
, ___ . , , .
,
Blood' comes to the Strand. March
them. A complete Job of snow re- 4 and 5
moval under such road conditions । This thrilling talc of seventeenth
as we have had In February. Is sim- century sea pirates la said to be one
ply out of the question. It is not ?.'
n,?8t elaborate and pretenStable U»l niny MKhUu. winl»“iuouor» In «r«n hUiory.

PLEASING VARIETIES FOR DAILY MENUS . . . LENT­
EN FOOD SUGGESTIONS . . . CHOICE SELECTIONS

OF FRESH

FRUIT AND VEGETABLES . . . FINEST

CANNED FOODS . . . BEST QUALITY BULK FOODS

C.THOMAS STORES

PROMPT, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUL SERVICE

19c

CHEESE ;s?nsih

SWIFTS CHEESE SPREADS

SHEFFORD'S CHEESE
American, Brick,
- . _
Pimento, Limburger, A
'
’ Olive-Pimento
2 Pkg-

PIMENTO,
AMERICAN and
BRICK

M P" n
|
JL

% lb.
PKGS.

1 EC
X^J

SALMON £. 12c
CODFISH =.. 22c
LB.

Pkg.

can 14c [ MACKEREL
3 cans 14c I ANCHOVIES

SHRIMP Wk*
SARDINES JfSff*

Canned

3• cans 25c
' can 14c

ru’ts*

l2c

MACARONI
■ ■ III#
Iwl I I M
IVI I las II

EVAPORATED
SUNSHINE BRAND

RICH, CREAMY

PINEAPPLE

3

1 Qc

tall
CANS

HALF SLICES
HAWAIIAN
No. 2% CAN

19c

ion will minil un. one In th, «*"c
verity of HA February storms. In the , b&gt;_.mAs^er bulw,,r*
depth ol the enow ond how drllU
.Wty opeus with the Mon­
on tlie hlKhwaye. This repmonu- htouUt reteUtat UMml KIW J.nlee
five ol « ieeton' which m.kSwow 11 »’ Ewl«nd Venn, Peu-r Blood
removing machinery, slated that a Phytlelan. who althouuh he had
Kent county had declined to at- ,
Ihl1
“ «■&gt;tempt to open township cross roads. 1fenced to slavery.
The picture has a tremendous east
unless assistance was furnished by
more than forty principals and
the immediate locality or the town- with
1
thousand extras. Among the
ship. He claimed that no machine several
:
Is made that can handle such drifts leading players are several starsJn
own right. Including Llonel'Atby plowing into them; that unless their
1
will.
Basil
Rathbone, Ross Alex­
shovellers go ahead and partially
open the way for the plows, it is 1ander. Guy Kibbee and Henry
useless to attempt to remove the Stepenson.
1
snow. Trying to do IV just means ,
wrecking the machine or putting it ‘“THE BRIDE COMES HOME"
NEW COLBERT PICTURE.
out of commission.
The picture. “The Bride Comes
We are sure the people of Barry
county owe a debt of gratitude to 1Home." has Its setting In modern
with Miss Colbert playing
the Barry county state crew which. Chicago
1
leading role, as the daughter of
under (he direction of Al Brown. the
I
has done such good work in keep- ‘a former millionaire. Hard times
Ing the 127 miles of trunk lines 1have overtaken the family and Miss
open. They have done a better job 1Colbert goes to work.
Several important scenes in the
than has Calhoun or Kent Co., each
of which has a much larger equip- Ipictures are taken In the old man­
ment of machines nnd more money ।sion where the family lived for
to work with than has Barry poun-, imany years. Hie home for tlie plcty. Not less arc thc people of Barry ■। ।ture was designed by H- H. Richard­
county indebted to the county road ‘son and the decorative scheme char­
commission and lo their crews of ।acterizes fashionable architecture
lhe nineties.
snow fighters, who have done such of
'
"The Bride Comes Home" will
valiant work in opening up the
main county roads, also In doing as ।show at lhe Strand. March 1 nnd 2much as they did In removing thc j
snow from township highways. As'
we have stated before, they cannot
do the impossible. It will be nec- la revealed by “balloon postage."
cssary in thc future, as Lt was in Letters crossed the English chanthe old-time winters, for every
farmer living along a township road
to have a snow shovel nnd be pre- '
pared to use it whenever we have
"To sleep soundly nt night 1s
such record-breaking storms and
snow drifts ns we had In thts coun­ sweet." said Hi lln, 'the sage of
ty in thc month of February.
Chinatown. "There may be dreams,
Another thing that will prevent a but none of them so false ns dreams
better Job of snow removal is the
expense of It. The county road ing the day.’
commission has spent a lot of
money doing what they have done
this winter to keep thc township
No proof or sworn statement is
and county highways open It must
be kept in mind, however, that their required when registering n birth,
principal job is building roads and marriage or death in England. Thus
maintaining them They cannot af­ It is easy to record Hie ••birth" of
ford to spend more money than a bogus baby when desiring nn In­
they have this winter in snow re­ creased unemployment allowance,
moval. They can do a good Job of to secure a marriage license when
keeping the roads open in ordinary already married, nr to obtain a
winter weather. Tiiey are entitled death certificate in a murder case
to much credit instead of criticism
from a credulous physician, ns he
for the work they have done in
keeping lhe highways open this la not obliged to examine the body
month to thc extent they have. and determine for himself the cause
Tiiey have done all they could with of the death.—Collier's Weekly.

TRIPOINT—FRESH. CREAMY

SALAD DRESSING
DCADC
I tnFIO

O7C
f

QUART
JAR

No. 2
CAN

royal keiffers
FOR SALADS OR SAUCE

c

GRAPEFRUIT
Texas Seedless
4 for
ORANGES
California, Size 288
dozen
Carrots and Parsnips, Fresh, Bulk, 3 lbs. for
HEAD LETTUCE
Fresh Crisp Heads

19c
17c
10c
6c

ACME BUTTERMILK EGG MASH ‘PKOTEIN* 100 Ib. bag $1.99
ACME SCRATCH FEED
100 lb. bog $1.79
*100 Ib. bog $1.28
ACME DAIRY FEED, 16* Protein
ACME DAIRY FEED, 20 ' Protein
1001b. bog $1.48
ACME DAIRY FEED, 24* Protein
1001b. bog $1.84

spaghetti

,Fxn::r"

PEAS Early June Sweet, Tender
CORN Whole Grain North Maid
DE
A NG
Wax or Green
DEA
H O Cut
Odeeea Brand

Cans

2

Can.

No. 2 C«n

TOMATOES
SOUPS Tomato or Vegetable

FOULD’S MACARONI or SPAGHETTI
CAKE FLOUR Farce Fluff
31 Of. JAB

3

25c
15C
12c

3 Nc"..2.25c
3 V.!29c
3 c™ 25c
2 pi,.. 15c
5
25c

APPLE BUTTER

15c

CANDY

OLIVE BUTTER

20c

Chocolate Chips
4 Qc
Covered P'nuts Ib. 1 v

• «. Jm—Tut Bstaii. Baadwlcbta
1 LB JAB

PEANUT BUTTER

14c

Lozenges

Ib. 15c

LAMPS

15-30-60 Woff
Each—

10

C. E. MAZDA Lumps
15-25-40-5015-25-40-504 f60 Watt, each
I v

WASHINGTON'S LIFE

j Scrambled Name Contest
—
(Continued

from page one)

F. L. Bauer Oivei Informing nal forms as posters, drawings arid'
poems. Btxty-five of the total num­
Talk to Young People’s ■
ber receive}! came In after the’deadFellowihip Group

(Continued from page one)
I line and so had to
discarded^
------------------ ------------ :------------- -—-------- 1 inc
The young
young people
people oi
of emtmanuci
Emmanuel ,
_
sit down on the Door anti play
a I YI
y P.
p F.
F. were
ut.rf fortunate In
in having
iiaving i■ **'"“• were rejected wcausc
because of inIn•&gt;' “
wv5ral xh
«d no
™
strarige sort of soccer with a-big w their
lnrir speaker5prakPr Bunday
Sunday evening.
evening. Icorrrct
---- •»»&gt;“**: several
had
in.h I1 r.
_
.
n
______
......v nr
mi anitrr-r.r
uuuii-MInto
iu iHnnttYv
lucniuy sender.
M-iiuer.
beach
could ---only
touch
p won
Bauer ,,,
of«...
this city, wmm
who
Rave« name
■ natnc
or
address
identify
-------- -ball.
---- They
----- - -------- -------uuuv,
Ml.,
h...&lt;
the ball with their feet, and lf.it a delightful talk on George Wash- I Entries were received from De­
went away from them they had to inaton. Mr. Bauer U well qualified troit. Lansing. South , Haven and
chase It crab-fashion. But it looked l0 slJeak on Uw ,ub|ect. as he has many neighboring towns. Impor­
lota of fun. and It certainly was mnde a nfe.ionil gtudy of that great tant! All entries must be mailed to
amusing to .w a dozen or more legs nun. A lev yra„ ago. h(1 madc a Hastings Commercial club Fair. Bhx
of various sizes and descriptions all lrlp through thc East and visited 287. Hastings or delivered to thc
waving wildly In the air after a those places most Intimately con- Commercial club Office in the Steb­
Several
people
ball that wouldn't wait lo be kicked, nected with Lhe life and history of bins Building.
When their legs got tired, the boys Washington, and It was this trip, brought their answers to the Bangot up and played bat bosket ball" tl)at he rtetehed for the young nir Office but tiiey cannot be ac­
with the same big beach ball, in lx^ple; valley Forge. Mount Ver- cepted here. Answers must be dewhlch anyone played anywhere he | non. lhP dty of Washington. New Uvered to Box 287. Hastings or to
chose .at least, that! the way it York city. un through York stat- the Commercial club office.
Several entries were received from
looked lo usi and the object was to through the Berkshire* nnd over to,
keep.......
the ball
down
at the other
end
Boston. iic
"
-..........
-...............
.............
- ooeioii.
&gt;'kc oi
as a - youngsters eleven years old. ConHe six
spoke
of- -mm
him
of the court from where he was Christian and a perfect gentleman.'
the Judges have decided to
ploying.
M
r. Bauer
Mr.
Bauer raid
said that
that Washington's
Washington's ; offer two extra prizes each week for
Then the accompanist started perfect command of the English boys and glrli attending any grade
playing "School Days. School Days." languoge and his exceptional pclite- up to but not Including the ninth.
and In came two charming young neM wcre evident in everything he Those competing In this bracket
ladies on bicycles. They were head-, did. even -’in hls commands and should give their age and grade in
Ing the sports parade In which , dealings with hls soldiers. Even hLs school.
groups of girls pirtrayed the sports | penmanship Is self-revealing. He
Doris Slrlmback. age 11 years. 210
of the various seasons. . . skating concluded with a fine tribute to N Church, has been awarded thc
and skiing and building snowmen the man Washington, Mr. Bauer's first special prize for echool pupih
in the winter .The human snowman address was very instructive and and can obtain same by calling at
who waddled In with the girl, on revealed various phaws of thc per­ the'Commercial club office.
Herewith are thc five names
skis almost fooled u». At first, we . jonallty of one of our nation's
thought , he was real.; baseball in greatest lenders which arc not us- scrambled for this week's issue—and
the spring. tcnnLs and golf in lhe unlly apparent to thc average per- i even a casual .observer can see what
a thorough Job Miss Hecox has done.
suminer. and a lively rhythmic tap son.
dance for any season Ln the year.
----------------■» a &gt;----------------No name divisions this week—just
Frances Pollard was so good that PASSING OF WALTER
one grand scramble— best of luck to
she had to repeat her dance before:
shirk
SHIRK on
ON MONDAY. you all I
thc show could go on. And then all1 Hastings friends were saddened
1. Bercwcndcrsovscle.
the "seasons" produced a grand fi­ to hear of the death on Monday of
&gt;2. Pefoshofce.
nale to the tune of "Joy Is Every­ Walter Shirk. 45. of Battle Creek, a
' 3. Acogtaregckoykgorarcndrln.
4. Taykhagsinblcnsl.
where" and I think nearly everyone World war veteran
He became
In the audk-ncexas willing to agree suddenly ill on Thursday and pneu­
5. Hadnomlacedrcld.
with them.right then.
monia develojied immediately. He; FLASH—Important!—Tlie Mon­
If those arc the kind of activities was placed in an oxygen tent at the day following publication is tho
they get in physical
education hospital but failed lo rally.
deadline and answers must bear a
classes, it seems to us It s a mighty
......
Mr. and Mrs. Shirk have made postmark not later than Monday to
fine subject to study nnd we re per- 1 many
--------- friends here among the be eligible. Letters with a Tuesday
fectly willing to see some more American
•
'
Legion nnd Auxiliary postmark will be ruled out auto­
demonstrations of it. One Incident members ns they have been here matically.
which we remember quite distinctly many times assisting with the moot*
Correctness, neatness and legi­
was at the opening of the program Ings and social evening*.
bility are the three main jxjlnta on
when the girls In concluding their
Surviving are lhe widow, Marlon which entries are Judged. Cprrectfigure drill fang lhe Hastings school Grayson-- Shirk, a brother, two ncxs Includes spelling the name Just
song, all the student-s .alumni as nephews, nnd an aunt.
as It Is spelled on tlie list; In tho
well as present ones, in the audi­
A military funeral wait held this
ence stood up in tribute. I:
It r-;..;;
seems Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock 1 reported as -Charles" in several ento ns that was a fine example of
cf in the First congregational church | tries—but "Chas." was the correcl
real school spirit.
in Battle Creek, the Rev. Carleton form.
-----! Brooks Miller officiating. Burial in ‘
OBITUARY.
lend
Memorial Park cemetery. Sincere
Rosa Ella Mennlch was born ir
Unearthing of 12 skeleton! of un­ sympathy Ls extended lo Mrs. Shirk. ], Miami Co_ Ohio. Jan. 28. 1859 ant
usually tall men at tlie »|M&gt;t of Ron.. ...............................
I departed this life on Feb 14. 1936
According to a preliminary report
07 y°ftrs antl 17
llohind ami hls fearless knights on “l&gt;.-prv.-i..tl..ii Siu.il.&lt;• of the 1M9- »’•’*“
‘° OI*a
| nett of Darke Co.. Ohio. To thb
j union seven children were born
predation rate nnuunlly on a onestory.
Historians declare the And family dwelling 6t masonry, brick four 'rons nnd three daughters. Mn
I। Iva
Ar
mi Knntner.
rwnumvj. Ha.nttngs; Ward
„.uu zn
proves that the traditional French and concrete it "
— . ------- - --- Per rent. 1 he ni.lt Bedford; Frank nnd Edwan
hero renlly made hls gallant flzhf. probable useful life nf the building Arnett, Myrtle Trayer nnd Elva Or
The discoveries were made during la M years. If the liouse Is frame. ' gan. Battle Cheek: Chester Arnct
preparation for the erection of n the depreciation rate Is .1 per cent at home. She Is survived by he
inoriuiiK-iit on the summit of Ibnneta ind the probable useful life Is 33 ■ husband, seven children, ten grand
In the Pyrenees.
I children.
one
great-grandchild
three sisters, a brother, and man
friends in Ohio and Mlchlgnr
About 1805 she united with th
Brethren church in Ohio and live
a faithful. Christian life until he
, death. She was always a devote,
wife nnd mother, willingly sacrific
I Ing herself to her home and1 th
I community in which she lived. Th.
funeral was held at lhe Dowllnu
1 church Monday. Feb. 17 at two
| o'clock, with thc Rev. H. V. Towni send ol South Woodland and lhe
i Rev. Exner of Bonfield officiating,
i Burial in the Dowling cemetery.
! Do not ask us If we miss her
‘ Oh, there's such a vacant place.
Oft we think wc hear her footsteps,
Or sec her smiling face.
Heaven re-talneth now our treasure,
Earth the lonely casket keeps.
And the sunbeams love to linger
Where our darling Mother sleeps.

Follow the Footsteps of
Your Advertising Dollar
go astray. Your advertising is an
investment and must bring you re­
turns. See to it that yqur adver­
tising dollars are spent on a medi­
um that has a live circulation.

King Edward VIII

Ytiur advertising in The Hastings
Banner will guide the footsteps of
your advertising dollar back to
yourstore. Each week the Banner
reaches your prospects when they
are in lhe buying mood and guides

the footsteps of these buyers to
your door.

The Hastings Banner delivers your store news to
more than 8(P of the HOMES in (his trading area

JELLO
New Improved
Flavors, pkg.

DRANO
WINDEX

Ac
O

can 21c

bottle 19c

For Winter Window Wuhlnx

Peppenalnt—Wlsurxteen

PUKE 8TBAIVED

HONEY

G. E.

LISTEN TO STORY OF

8 oi. jar 10c

PILLSBUBT’B

FARINA

pkg. 10c

SNO-SHEEN

pkg. 25c

WHEAT BRAN pkg. 16c

S U N RA E
WHITENS CLOTHES
Kilis Odors, Disin- 4 Ac
f^cts, 18 ox. bot.
IQ

KIRK’S CASTILE

SOAP
bor 5c
CHIPSO?,iL?20c

pielures. inc. Fortran by Hugh
This Is the most recent picture
of Britain'! new bachelor king.

C. THOMAS STORES
!U WIST STATE STREET

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

THE HASTINGS BANNER

form of eolonel-lo-chlef of ths
Welsh. Guards.
We read that a well-known acta
and hls wife have a caravan holl
day every year. In the event of thl
hbrse going on strike, the lady cat
always hitch her wagon lo lhe star

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 37, UM

est

and'
um-

BAX
tlie
u-bu.'le

Torn

rude
nth.

210

iplll
mes
and
one.
just

t

IHAROLD LOpAN AND
I
MISS BASTMAN W1D.

CBAWLKY—DUDRICK.

PE AN CT BUTTER COOKIE8.

in Style

Sports Clothes

916.50 to 932.00

“Cheer Up11 Party
1\L,~9 Monday flight
I\ext

Sport Sweaters

Helpful Suggestions

lonthe

■day

Military Trend

On Saturday Mr. and Mrs. James
1 c lard, butter or butter substlBatson. Thomas Crawley. Mrz. J. M. cute.
terian manse in Plymouth. Ind., the Deadrlck and thc Rev. B. J. Adcock
"
'
marriage of Harold Logan and Miss were dinner guests of Mm. Minnie
....
...„ v..„
Batson, her daughter, Mrs. Mabel
----- ------------- -------------------------------------------- -—........ ............... .......................... ............................ ..... Zatae, Butman
of this city,
only
peanut butter.
I daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen A. Hughes, and son. Wayne Batson, of
•3 c flour,
I Eastman. Worcester, Mau, was' Grand Rapids. After dinner, all
vanilla.
anM Mpw* c™&gt;‘*“
“*“• \ERIN SUPPER
rrcn CLUB
ULUD
solemnized by the Riv. Kline, who i Mwmbled tn the living room where
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bllvin were j Mrs. Nellie Conaway spent Satur- ’
!SCORES SUCCESS re,ld the ,,n*te rkl® «rvlce. Attend-1
R«v Adcock united In marriage
- - *
** Ing the bridal couple were Mr. end Mr- Crawley and Mrs. Dccdrick.
Cream shortening and sugar, add
in Battle Creek Saturday.
day in Grand Rapids.
ttondanoo
at the
tha Mrs.
Mr* bowU
Niles and Mr. .I They
were
attended
Mr.----------and Mrs. peanut butter, egg and vanilla. Add
Lewis Walton of Nites
• — ——- by
- -------was
Attendance
at
Clay Bassett was home from Big 1 Miss Belva Riley “
■ home from ’Large
'
and Mrs. Ray Logan ot Plymouth, J«mes Batson. The bride Is a sis- soda and flour gradually. When
Rapids over the week end.
. I
D«nc. &lt;U&gt;&lt;1 Floor
all relatives of the groom.
Mrs. Minnie Batson.
• well mixed roll in small balls in
MIm Jean stedge has gone lo Big
Richard Oroos left Thursday for
Mr. and Mrs. Logan relumed to .
?nd Mr» Crawley will reside floured hands
and place on a
Rapids to attend Ferris Institute.
a trip to San Antonio, Texas.
I
onow
this city on Sunday and for the
h°me f
Oreen
Best greased baking sheet. Press balls
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice pendtfjeere
Mtea Frances Sage was home from
Again thc Erin Supper Club met present are residing
rial with a fork. Bake tn a hot
apart-1I wtahM *re ei“«ndcd.
residing in
in the
the apartM. 8. C- over lhe week end.
, **th .splendid ruccess with their
In Lansing Saturday on business.
oven
five
to
io
minutes. Watch
i. John Nobles' home.
I
Mrs. Max Alien of charlotte was a d*nce ond n°or show held on TueaP. N. G. CLUB.
cloeeiy and when baked allow to
Miss Louise Kenyon visited her
The groom has been a teacher of j
R. Cook
haU&gt;
brothers in Uuulng Saturday and guest Thursday at lhe
Thursday evening. Feb. 20. al her cool before removing from cookie
English
and
journalism
In
lhe
Has
­
home
; °*er lhre* hundred attending.
Sunday.
tmgs High
tugn school
senoo! for
er several
severe! years.
years !
0,1
Center 81 Mrs Chas. sheet.
tings
Mr.’ M.m.
Mr
1 B’ceBent music was furnished by He
received hls A- B- at Alma Col-1 W**'by Mre l^ren Myers
Mrs.
Guldet anu
and miss
Miss liesBeami
. Wilson
wuson utiiaei
Mrs. Heine
Nellie cross
Cross visiiea
visited Mr. ana
and Eddie Marek'a
Marek's nrrhM.tr
orchestra
. and
.mt manv
HAM AND POTATOES.
"" "*
Cm'‘ trx Paul watiiknar
“W“ "" 0 oTcncctra ana many
“.o lege where he held the highest whoF?°ren5e...
3-3 pound sliced ham (smoked).
laatlc honors and was valedictorian
dB2Lad es
1lJc P.,N' °' c,lu.b
Hub.,,.nd Rlchud
rumhlld
u„. o. E. onod^.r .pent . " mT’to. *p"lS.dU'U?'’S" door of hls class. Uter he attended the'ocl*k dinner fol3 cups sliced potatoes.
taolespoons pour.
lowed
by
an
evening
of
cards.
Top
j
2
were home from Detroit over thc &lt;jaya last week in Detroit with her show which Included alright of University of Michigan where he
1-4-----------------------teaspoon salt.
score was won by Mrs M. Craig, low I *'
. week
week ena.
end.
mother and alster. hand
hand performances
performances by
by Chester
Chester took hls Master's degree, having an
Mr. and Mrs Herman Arold were .: Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Adair were Engelhardt, numbers by thc trio almost complete A record. After score by Mrs. Jennie Briggs. At a i e1** teaspoon pepper,
i -'J tablespoons cnopped
cnoppe green pep­
dinner guests of Battle Creek friends Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Har- composed of Misses Lola Ashalter. receiving her B. 8. degree at Howard business meeting officers for 1036 I ‘ a
elected were: pres.. Mrs. Frank New­ pers.
on Sunday.
old Steiger of.Lansing.
&gt; Lucille Karmes and Lucille Warner. Seminary in connection with Sim­ ton; Vlce-Pres . Mrs. Loren Myers;
4 tablespoons chopped onion.
Mr. and Ma Frederick Palmer
mons
College.
Mrs.
Logan
took
Agricultural Agent Haraia J. Fos- “”d * dc**«hUu’ Irtah. dance »“
1 cup milk.
Sec. and Trees.. Mrs Edward Smith.
and Mrs James Silsbee were tn Kal­
ter was in Grand Rapids on Monday
?&lt;yt?lary..A*nea MurPhy and nurse's training al the Massa­
Place ham in shallow baking pan.
amazoo Saturday.
attending a conference.
McKcougti. to the strains of chusetts General hospital, and L%
Mix potatoes with flour and season­
MOZART CLUB.
man. New backs of Inverted
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Boyes. Mrs. Ed­
now connected with the Barry Coun­
Mrs. William Warner Btehop of'-tX
ings
and arrange on top of iiam.
pleats, the full blouse backs
ward Downs and Mrs. Emms Evans
A meeting of the Mozart Club was
Ann Arbor visited her niece. Mina gre&lt;.n Stamu and werTSStK ty Health Department of the W. K.
AOd milk, cover and bake 50 min­
with half belts arc very cor­
were In Grand Rapids Saturday.
held at the home of Mrs. I. J. Smith
Kellogg Foundation.
utes
in
moderate
oven.
Uncover
and
g
y
rect this spring. Coma tn and
Donald Boyes and Miss Ida Osler Anne Burton. Saturday and Sunday, “njoyed
They have the best wishes of a on Friday evening, Feb. 21. with six­ bake 10 minutes to brown top.
of Saginaw were guests of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Woodin of!
-----wide circle of friends in this city teen present. An hour of music,
Sprint Suits. Prices range
Mrs. I. L- Boyes over the week end. Grand Rapids were guosta al the
games and laughter was enjoyed.
and county.
KARMES—BROOKS.
BAKED, APPLES.
Mrs. Charles A. Wiberl visited her Newton Benner home over the week
Marietta Paul had the most gold
A very pretty wedding was sotein4 apples.
daughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs. end.
stars for memorizing and Jean
।। nlzcd
.... ______________
at 3:30 Friday afternoon in
2-3 cup brown sugar.
Verne Prentice, of Middleville on I Mr. and Mrs. Richard Green of Emmanuel Episcopal church in Has'-1
Smith for the most hours ot prac­
1 teaspoon vanilla.
Sunday.
ticing. Don Reid was transferred
■ Nashville were Sunday dinner guests । Ungs, when Miss Priscilla Brooks,
1 cup water.
I■frorn
from lhe
thc Mozart
Mozart club
club to
to the
the othc
other
Mrs. jack Stem has returned from of Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Trim and H.1 daughter
Welton
------ of
- *'Mr.
-------and
■* **Mrs.
“ ----------1 |
club because of hls splendid work. I 1 tablespoon butter.
Detroit where she has been caring । D. Trim.
i
Brooks of Cloverdale, was married to i
, Wash and core apples. Fit into j
for her father and mother. Mr. and
।
small
baking pan. Sprinkle with rest j
Stephen
Karmes,
son
of
Mr.
and
.... Briggs.
I Miss Helen'Wooton relumed to
Mrs.
I[ The monthly winter dancing party |
i of ingredients and bake 50 minutes 1
Mr. and Mrs. LcRoy Foster and Detroit Sunday after visiting her Mrc. Louis Karmes of Hastings.
Before an altar banked with red of Hastings, known as the •'Cheer-1
: in moderate oven. Serve warm with
imily spent Sunday with hls par- parents. Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Wootorj,
family
roses, the single ring service was Up," will be held on Monday eve- '
cream.
cute. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Foster, of for several days.
, Mbs Mildred Tuttle of Hillsdale read by lhe Rev. J. a. McNulty lo nlflg, March 2. at Fuller ball. The I
Rives Junction.
;
•
PECAN GOLD'CAKE.
and Miss Flo Burgdorff of Allegan the accompaniment of Lohengrin, committee in charge postponed the
LAMB CUTLETS.
played by Mrs. McNulty nl the or­
(Frosted Cake Dessert).
were
guests
of
Miss
Rose
DeFoe
on
2
c
finely
chopped
cold
cooked
'
War In the news hat Influenced
Lnke Odessa Tuesday evening where
. gan. Only members of tfie imme­ Erin Supper club.
1-3 cup butter.
lamb.
he spoke at their Community Bro­ Friday and Saturday.
stylea as shown by tbe trim mili­
diate families were present. Mr. nnd
3-3
cup
sugar.
I
Mrs.
Marion
B.
Goodyear
was
In
2 l lemon juice.
therhood meeting.
tary frock worn by Helen Parris.,
In charge of this party is the fol­
Mrs.
Harold
E.
Wright
of
Lansing,
1-3
cup
milk.
nau».. U
r... 17C1-8 t pepper
MLwk Barbara Wilcox,
jean
De- Orangeville last week where she was
lowing committee: Mr. and Mrs.
film player.
Frogs of cordlog
1 teaspoon vanilla.
Vries and Aileen Isenhath. students cal,cd by the death of her brother s. sister and brother-in-law of the Harold J. Foster, chairmen. Dr. and
1 egg. slightly beaten.
hooked over twisted eord but. aonn
i
lhe‘r »W«danta.
1-4 teaspoon lemon extract.
nl W S. T. C. Kalamazoo, spent the wi.c,
|fc- aw
Mrs.
John uc.tuc.
Beattie.
1 c thick white sauce.
Mrs.
Maude
Smith
took advantage
advantage 1
*?vely in a gown of Mrs. Kcnith McIntyre. Mr. and Mrs.
. ... end at home.
. .
1 I 14
ll.iidp
Cm(»h
t took
1-4 teaspoon almond extract.
week
Mrs.
Maude
Smith
Harold
Smith.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Keith
polllan blue crept dress.
A
------of
. -favorable
--------। royal
blue silk crepe trimmed in
1-8 teaspoon sail.
Lloyd Lohmeycr of German- ot the B*5* d»y
weath1 t minced parsley.
gold with a bouquet of I Fox. Mr. and Mrs Ray Shroyer and
cherry red scarf Is knotted at
3 egg yolks.
lown. Pa., was in lhe city last week. er and °Pcn roads Monday and black and _______________
„,M Mrs i
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lewis. Bread crumbs.
roses, sweetpeas and carnations.
tho neck, the ends extending to
tlie guest of John Weisscrt and visited lhe Orangeville school.
Combine lamb, white sauce, lem-' 1 1-3 cups flour.
Wright wore aquamarine silk with i Music for the party will be fur­
2
teaspoons
baking
powder.
Lloyd Lohmeycr. Jr.
: Mr. nnd Mrs. Carroll McGuffln
brown accessories and a shoulder nished by Higbee's orchestra of on juice, parsley and seasonings. ( Cream butter and sugar. Add rest
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hyde nnd nn&lt;1 daughtr of Lansing were Sun- corsage
thoroughly.
Shape in' of ingredients and beat 2 minutes.
of roses and snapdragons j Belding. This orchestra Is tlie same | Mix
“Un&lt;i
twfflchea Cool.
indianSteTand
George of Prairieville visited Mrs. ,lay
of Ills mother. Mrs Anna The bride’, molder wore blue ,IU one which eu w well receh-ed by I ™
"lie? n!Em Ind
U&gt;W eh,110w pan greased well baby and Miss Edith Newton of
Hastings spent Sunday at the Her­
Nettle Hyde on Saturday. George McGuffln. and other relatives,
no more. Wa ve glorified it
crepe with a corsage of white sweet- the tost “Cheer-Up party With this
Dtp in ess and
£
man Miller home.
remaining till Sunday.
i Cornmr. and Mrs. John C. Ketch- peas and rosebuds, while Mrs I music assured the committee feels
’ „*** *"
with meringue.
Mrs. Robert Wilson went to Flint n,n ot Lansing were here on Satur- Knrmes
Bunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
pleasing to wear—new Weaves,
Karmes had a similar corsage
corsaae wilts
with I,there
a
good
lime
in
store
for
ev385
deRr
?
T
*
u
”
1
"
?rown.
Drain
________
Is
---------------good time In store for ev-1
on Tuesday to attend a Home Ecot&gt;» former going on to Alle- j
absorbenl
paper.
John
F.
Brake
were
Duane
Gray
new styles and new materlab.
I
eryone
attending
the
party
Monday
™
'
£
ed
a brown silk coal-dress.
—'* "
CHOCOLATE FROSTING.
nomln. Institute conducted by the Ban where he gave an address.
Plain and fancy backs, pleat­
and Grace Grimes of Lake Odessa
Serves eight.
Following the ceremony a dinner night.
• 1 square chocolate.
Mrs. Will
Will Fighter
Fighter and
and grandson.
grandson.
Consumers Power Co.
,। Mrs.
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Van
Allsed and .hlrred. They're ideal
j 3 tablespoons coffee (left over).
SAVORY BEET SALAD.
Mrs. Harry Bldciman nnd son. La- ' Bobby Payne, of Grand Ledge were was held In the Trio cafe, after
for early spring wear. Price
burg of Grand Rapids.
which
the
young
couple
left
for
a
COLONIAL
TEA.
।
1-8
teaspoon
salt.
1-2
T
gelatin.
vcrnc. of Pontiac were guests of her' KuctL. of Mrs. Geneva Payne and
Eldlene Preston of Pewamo spent!
| 1-2 teaspoon vanilla.
One of lhe pleasing social events
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter oU,er «toUvea over the week end. | week's wedding trip to Indianapolis.
the week end with her parents. Mr. ■
On their return they will of the past week was lhe Colonial
। 1 tablespoon cream.
3-4 c boiling waler.
Franck, over the week end.
v..u, ' ^r' and
I Mr
Mrs.and
Lynn
Mrs.
Clark
Lynn
of Clark
Grandof. Indiana.
Grand
and
Mrs.
Cecil
Preston.
reside
for
a
short
time
with
Mr.
bridge tea given Friday afternoon
' 11-3 cups confectioner's sugar.
Mr. and Mrs. SteWart Cleveland R«l’*ds were dinner guests of Mr:,,
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Osborn of Pin­
• Cook slowly chocolate and coffee,
1 T sugar.
and son of port Huron were guests N,el»p Cross on Friday cvennlg. Mr. Knrmes' parents. Both young peo­ by the Women's club ut lhe Ma- ‘
i When blended, add rest ot ingredl- hook spent Bunday with their
1-4 t prepared mustard.
ot tier parents. Mr. and Mrs. T. S. cl*rk was a former teacher at Del- ple are members of lhe class of 1M5 sonic dining room. About seventy- j
of Hastings High school, and Mr. five ladles were received by the coI ents. Mix and let stand 5 minutes. daughter. Mrs. Floyd Neeb. and
Baird. over the week end
,tonKarmes is now employed by the'E. loiiially costumed committee. Mrs.
I Deal until creamery and frost tops family.
2 T minced onion.
A. L. Brown and Kenneth Labro- 1 Mrs Lawrence Herrick went to
W. Bliss company.
Clayton Mote. Joe and Elmer
F. E. Adair and Mrs. c. D. Bauer, os
of cookies.
2 c cooked beets, diced.
dcaux were in Arm Arbor on Wed- Kansas City last week, returning
Scott accompanied Claude Scott to
George and Martha Washington I
1-2 c celery, cut fine.
ncMluy and Thursday attending a Saturday with a baby girl they have
We|dman Saturday to see Adam
were assisted by Mrs. James Mason.
CLOTHING AND SHO
Soften gelatin in cold water and
MARSHMALLOW ICING.
convention of highway officials.
t i°ken for adoption, who will be LOCAL CHAIRMAN
FOR
FIFTH
TERM.
Mills
Who is 111.
dissolve in boiling water. Add salt,
1 1-3 cups sugar.
FOR MEN AND BO
Mrs. Allen Pender spent last week christened Jannet.
For lhe fifth consecutive term of and Mrs. J. C. Wilcox In doing thc sugar, mustard, vinegar and onion.
Mrs. Emma Hamblin is seriously
1-2 cup water.
from Wednesday until Saturday in, Ur- KHarkness was in Detroit
three years each W. J. Watkins has honors of the afternoon.
ill at the home of her son Charles
When the mixture begins to stiffen,
3 stiffly beaten egg whiles.
HASTINGS
Grand Rapids ns the guest of her ovw u‘e
cl&gt;d for a conference
been re-elected local chairman of
Hamblin. We hope for her speedy
Flavoring extract.
son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd *,U1 Dr- Bruce Douglas lo com­
Prizes in contract were awarded stir in beets and celery. Turn into
recovery.
6 marshmallows.
pander
I P1**16 details concerning the tuber- ■ lhe Order Of Railroad Telegraphers to Mrs. R. G. Finnic, high, and Mrs. Individual molds. .Garnish with
covering lhe territory known as the
This neighborhood was grieved to
Cook sugar and waler together
Mrs. Carl Bauer and small daugh- cutools program in Barry county.
Jas. Fennell, low. At auction Mrs. strips of hard-cooked egg whites.
Michigan division of thc Michigan
ocivc on
un lettuce
i
with mayonnaise. until it spins a thread. Pour slowly hear of the death of Z. T. Norcutl
ter. Carlccn.
carlccn. of Saginaw arc
are spendMr''- Russell Kantner went lo De
Be­
J. M. Ricker and Mrs. Chas. Hin­ Serve
Central railroad and was also elect­
Japan has a “33 league I
over stiffly beaten egg whites and at Hastings. The family has the
man were high and low winners re­ Serves six.
ing the
Ing
thc week with Mr. nnd
and Mrs. W. trolt
Uolt Wednesday to visit Mr. and
ed as delegate to their convention spectively.
beat until cool. Add marshmallows sympathy of thc entire community. klo, which Includes In Ita
O. Bauer, carl Bauer was here for Mrs. Carl Wcsplnter. Jr., and son.
which will be held in New Orleans.
Vaughn Geiger spent Sunday aft­ ship any woman who agre_,
RELISH
BAKED
BEANS.
cut into six pieces each, beat hard
Sunday also.
i Mr. Kantner is going for lhe week
George and Martha Washington
La., next May. The Ladles' Auxiliary
1 pkg. quick cooking beans.
for a few minutes, then spread’ over ernoon with hls grandmother. Mrs
main thlrty-flve years old f
Mr. and Mrs. carl Wcsplnter were ®nd and both will return on sun­
hold their convention at thc same poured thc tea al a table spread
3,c hot water.
top and sides of cake. Sprinkle all Sarah Strong of East Campbell.
in Detroit Sunday visiting Mr. and *•*&gt;'■
regardless of her actual age.
lime and as Mrs. Watkins is a mem­ with a linen cloth, the period theme
2T brown sugar or molasses.
over with colored cocoanul.
Mrs carl Weapintfe. Jr. and their
MUe Ada Michael of Detroit spent
ber she will attend their convention being carried out with a pot of&lt;
1 I salt.
small son. carl III. who has been l&gt;art of ,hc
week
her home
while
spring
blooms
in
a
clever
red
and at the close of these conventions
1 c corn relish.
PLEASANT VALLEY.
ill. but is recovering.
. here, returning on Tuesday. She
they will visit their son Richard at straw Jardiniere centering, on either |
Slater ana
and aaxa.
Mrs. Edinger
cAiingo ur
of ,.
1 medium onion, chopped fine j Roy Dialer
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklin arc wa* called here by Die serious illWeslaco. Texas, aLso friends in side of which were grouped red,1 and browned.
I near Lake Odessa and Mrs. Russell |
moving to Allegan where lie Ls in neM of ber sister. Miss Helen Miwhite and blue candles tn crystal
Houston and Kerrville. Texas.
r- I Geiger of Ionia spent Friday with
Put beans in a casserole and covthe office of the Federal Farm Loan cbaflcolonial holders on red place mats.
n
I
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bert
Slater.
er
with
hoc
water
lo
which
has
been
I
Mr.
hll|PP Van
Van Zlle of Dclrolt
Detroit wa
was
Thc former went to Allegan last'* P"***
-'- aa
Antique silver further accentuated added lhe sugar or molasses and' ~
Roy Kauffman and family of near I
, guest over the week end at the home GUILD 20 MET WITH
MRS. FRANK ANDRUS. thc February 22nd spirit.
« ...
salt. Bake for 15 minutes
in .
a ..„»
hot Clarksville and Bruce Mesccar of
Hubbard
uncle.
G. —
E. -------Goodyear.
Hls
Mr. and Mrs. Roy G. .&gt;
uuu.&gt;u ot
--------- *------—
Hospital Guild No. 20 has a very
A check from lhe proceeds Is to
Then add ; Odessa
uacssa spent Sunday
ounuay with
»iui their
ureir par-- |
visited her sister and husband. Mr. Pnr^nts. Judge and Mrs. Donald enjoyable meeting al the home of be forwarded to the Will Rogers oven (450 degrees FJ.
browned onion and corn relish. Bake 1 ents. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Mesecar and
and Mrs. George DeVries, of Grand V,n Zllc- arc spending a month In
Mrs. Frank Andrus Thursday night, Memorial Fund headquarters. It h again for five minutes longer, having , family.
Rapids on Saturday and Sunday.. Hot Ida.
twenty-seven members being pres- a splendid spirit shown by thc many the dish uncovered. Serves six.
| Mr. and Mrs. Chalnter Miller and
Mr. DeVries Ls III following a stroke! Sunday guests of Mr. and. Mr.%
ladies who responded so well to thc
some time ago
। Russel) Kantner were Mr. and Mrs.
The evening was spent with dnly call madtflhus far to that proj­
Miss A in bra FCflewa. Miss Bea- Gu&gt;' K’ntner and family of Wood­ bridge, table prizes going to Mrs. ect by a Hastings organization.
trice Goggins and Mrs. Sadie Mae land- 8am Holsaple and Frank
C. B. Hodges. Mrs. Fred'k. Taylor.
Palmer went lo Grand Rapids lost 87'l,th °r Bellevue and Mr. and Mrs. ।
NIGHT HAWK CLUB.
I
Mrs Ray Finnic. Mrs. John Nobles.
Friday night to hear Percy Grain- Willis Kantner and family.
MjNu Faulkner, Mrs. A. L. Brown.
On Friday evening, Feb. 21. Mr.,
ger. guest artist with lhe Grand
GREATEST EVENT EVER HELD IN THE
Mrs. Robert B. Harkness. Jr., who ‘
Mcinfers present from away were and Mrs. Ira Shultz entertained the
HISTORY OF THE FUR INDUSTRY
O7.,.h.,u..z.
I *‘th Jier two sons. Robert B. 3rd..
Rapids Symphony.
Mrs. Paul Faulkner and Mrs. Sid­ Night Hawk Club at their home on
Mrs. Isabel Pancoast returned on an“ Charles, have been making an
ney French. Middleville.
East Slate Road, a lovely dinner
On account of the great demand for these beau­
Friday from Saginaw where she has ^tonded visit al the Dr. Harkness
The members in charge were Mrs. was served at 7 o'clock and the eve­
tiful
furs and the wonderful bargains in thesa
been spending tlie winter with Dr. ,lomp- «ft Thursday by automobile
Roy Cordes. Mrs. Burr Van Houten. ning was spent In playing cards,
salesmens samples, we are reluming by request
and Mrs. Bruce Hayden. Mrs.! ,ot thc*«' *»ome in Lincoln. Mass.
Mrs. DcForesl Walton and Mrs. Jos. first prizes going to Margaret Palm­
for three more days, Thursday. Friday and Sat­
and• **daugh
Pancoast is slaying with Mrs. R. M | Mrs.
M" Craig Sheffield —
-*- ­
Brozak.
er
and
Wilford
cole
and
second
to
urday. February 2T. 28 and 29. You still have a
Phyllis and ---Ann.
went---to-------Kal­
Bales for the present.
, ters. -----------------—---------Alice Meyers and Gay Norton. At a
ciiancc to buy some of these furs ut the great­
Sun**
— where
-•**— Mrs. Shef•
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Severance and amazoo
in!;zo° S
und»y.
late hour all thanked lhe host and
SUBMITS TO OPERATION.
est sacrifice ever offered in this city.
daughler of Battle creek were Sun- ncld was calle&lt;1 by the death of an
Hastings friends were surprised to hostess for a jolly time.
day
guests
of
hls
mother.
Mrs.
I
unc,c
Thc
y
wcrc
the
guests
of
her
'•-p nw.
।
--- hear that Dr. A. W. Woodburne had
THURSDAY. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Mary Severance, who broke her hip ' P“rcn5'Mr. and
Mrs.
ULTRA CLUB.
undergone an operation for appen­
FEBRUARY 27. 28. 29
four months ago and is now able to, Blanchard, until Tuesday,
On Monday evening Mr. and Mrs.
dicitis last week Wednesday in the
sit up some of thc time.
Mr and Mrs. Lyman Chamberlain
hospital in Sarasota. Fla-, where he Archie Reickord very pleasantly en­
One of the largest Fur Manufacturers of New
Mr. and Mrs. Warren E. Carter a',d daughter Beverly and Mrs.
tertained the Ultra Club with twen­
York City and Montreal, Canada, must dispose
visited their son and wife at Sagl- • Chamberlain's sister. Mrs. Fay Mar- and Mrs. Woodburne have been ty-one in attendance. Dinner was
spending tho winter. Word from
of their entire slock of samples in order to raise
naw and friends tn
in Bay
nay Lily
uiiy over
over." ”
Mrs. woodburne says that lhe doc- served followed with cards. Those
money. They have priced lhe coats so low that
They found the 1 wero caUcd t0 Muskegon last week iI tor assured them that conditions winning top scores were Mr. and
EXTRA LEAP YEAR SPECIAL
every garment Lt marked at less than actual
roads In good condition, as that part by
deatl&gt; of their uncle, Tom
were good for Dr. Woodburne'.-. Mrs. Edw. Lawrence. Mrs. Burdette
SATURDAY.
FEBRUARY
29
ONLY
coat of manufacture. U „wll! positively
of the state has had lots less snow , Cartjron. — Charlotte - Rcpublicancomplete recovery. Mrs Woodburne Sutton and Otto Iscnhath. The club
Tribune.
GHANI!
you
to buy your fur coal nowl
than In Die western section of *** """
voted lo spend $25 for clothing and
Mrs. Florence Cook and a friend has also been in thc hospital with shoes for needy children—a very
Michigan.
sciatica. Friends here hope for
Miss Margaret Merrick and Miss I visited her mother and .other rcla- their rapid convalescence.
commendable act.
bought nnw at this tale from
b. I. BIGLOW
Evelyn Johnson, who teach in South lives in Battle creek on Friday.
Fine Granulated
&gt;
CONTRACT PARTY.
Haven, were home over the week | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vandegrift
TO ENTERTAIN HUSBANDS.
Mrs. Edwin Smith was hostess to
end. Miss Louise Porter of Adrian, were in Wayland Tuesday where she
With $1.00 Order of Other Groceries
As an innovation, the Women's her bridge club of eight on Saturday
in Charge of
another South Haven leader, ac­ ' attended a Women's club' banquet,
Club is featuring Husbands' night,
This Hale
Emma
evening. Contract was played fol­
companied them here and was the I . Mrs.
-j-------;------ Weycrpian of Shultz
guest of Miss Grace Edmonds, her!had as hcr sues: last week. Mrs. which will be held next week Friday, lowing the six-thirty o'clock dinner.
ALL SIZES
March
.6.
There
will
be
a
dinner
claa&amp;mate at Ann Arbor, over the Harry “
— of “
“ Soldiers' •*
“
Moon,
the
Home,
Top scores were won by Mrs. Charles
served
by
the
ladies
of
lhe
Episcopal
;
week end.
j [Women's Annex. Grand Rapids.
FUR JACKETS. CAPES AND SCARFS
church in the parish house at 6:45 bconara ana Mrs. Frank Kelley,
M A. Lambic took advantage of. I | Mr. and Mrs. F. J. LaMaster and o'clock. It Is hoped each member I------------------------------------- !----------------ACTUAL VALUES AS HIGH AS $15 TO UN, CAN
the bank holiday Saturday to spend Donald Severance of Detroit and and her guest may plan to attend |
BE BOUGHT NOW AT THIS SALE AT ... .
the week end in Ypsilanti with Mrs. I Miss Beulah Severance of Pontiac as lhe after dUuicr time wilt- be
Lamble, wiio has been there the; came Friday to s-pend thc week end pleasantly sjxmt socially, for which
Your savings will be phenomenal. This js the moot daring and
past few weeks ualsting in the care I with Mr. and Mrs. L. Severance.
sensational price-cutting sale ever held. Thc opportunity la here
the committee tn charge. Mrs. War-1 -wof her .mother. Mrs. R. B. Rouse, who
. . Grasp it! Too much cannot be said in regard to the low prices
i ren Carter, chairman, is making
|
HAPPY BIRTHDAY PARTY.
broke hcr collar bone, her shoulder,
at which we are selling these fur coaks . . . Each and every gar»
man
y
plans.
Twelve
friends
of
sybil
Wood
­
mid two or three ribs in a fall on '
ment is guaranteed.
thc stairs. Mr. Lamble found Mrs. I mansee helped her celebrate her
q
S&gt;.
MUSIC
STUDY
CLUB.
eleventh birthday on Saturday.
Thc Blgiow Fur Trading Cp. brings every Important high
Rouse Improving rapidly being able |
The Music Study Club met with
DEEC CTEAI^ Swiss or Sirloin
In fun to Hastings. You'll find Swagger CoaU, Box
to be up and around lhe house port Washington's birthday. Games and Gladys and David Jones on Tuesday
DKEr DI EAR. All Chicago Beef
. refreshments, including a birthday
and straight line coate with slightly fitted waists Despite
ol each day.
•
|
evening. Feb. 18. eighteen members ,
high quality of these furs lhe prices are remarkably low.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Piilllipc and 'cake, were enjoyed and Sybil re- being th attendance. Harry Wood
ceivcd
some
nice
gtffrom
her
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Smelker re-:
received lhe honor for having prac- .
A LIBERAL ALLOWANCE GIVEN ON YOUR OLD FUM
’. young guests.
,
turned Saturday from a two months',
Heed the most hours. Colorful re­
OR fUR COAT
auto trip lo Florida. Just
in time to
freshments featuring the valentine
....
DESSERT BRIDGE.
An expert furrier, direct from lhe Biglow factory, la with ui
enjoy our more comfortable
omfortable change', Mrs. Mary Spangemacher enter- motif were enjoyed. All agreed that
ing this sale to assist you in the beet poeaible way.
In temperature. T;-;
UI„ -v
Tiiey report that talncd eight „
ladles
at ,a UC3Borv
dessert Gladys and David were splendid en­
rlrnrrd quite
null, a
a tot
ln( bridge
i
__ —
.
.
.
..Honors at.
Florida had experienced
Thursday
evening?
tertainers.
SMALL DOWN PAYMENT-LAKY TKMMM
of cold weather, and much rein. St. bridge went to Mrs. L. R. Glasgow
Petersburg the -'Sunshine ciry' had and Mrs. Q. E. Coleman,
ENTERTAINS TWELVE.
nine successive days of heavy down I
---------------- - t „
The national colors, red. wldtc
Sour. Miami benefllling by lhe Gulf
,
TAU CHAPTER .
and blue, furnished the color motif
tream. has had summer weather! Tau Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi for the destert bridge given by Miss
and a winter population that has held an' educational meeting on Sadie Glasgow on Washington’s
LADIIS* FUINISHIHG1
filled everjrthlng to overflowing. Friday evening at lhe home of Mrs. birthday, with twelve present. Mrs.
HASTINGS
WE DELIVER
They spent several days at Clear- Archie McDonald. Last evening, the Edgar Thomas and Mrs. A. D. Mc­
144 Cost State Street
water and enjoyed visiting with thc members enjoyed a waffle supper tt Donald were the winners at con­
McIntyre'*,
Mrs. E- J. Pratt's.
tract.

Social Events and Personal Mention

9L95 to S5.00

T. S. BAIRD

Ung

THE MOST REMARKABLE FEBRUARY

FUR COAT

Leap Year Low Prices!
Friday, Feb. 28

SALE!

Saturday, Feb. 29

DEL MONTE SALMON tall can 23’/zc
SEMINOLE TISSUE
4 rolls 25c
COFFEE, Chase &amp; Sanborn's Ib. 24'/zc
DEL MONTE CORN
2 cans 23c

sue*’’

46c

10 lbs. SUGAR

$35 to $65

MEAT

y
"9

we have it

SPECIALS

FRESH BOLOGNA
MINCED HAM, sliced
OLEO
Dixie Nut Margarine

2 lbs. 29c
'/z Ib. 10c
Ib. 12'/ic
Ib. 22c
22’/ic

"MONOPOLY
the game that is
taking America
by S-t-o-r-m !!

&lt;• II. HUBGEN

6462

JUSTPHONl

FAIRCHILD

�INSURANCE

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

CHADWICK GETS
OUT OEM HERE

Lion or Lamb?

Beige and Green
Ensemble

The Hasting* Banner

her husband. Site would prepare
and bring various articles of food to

Our Service
hud permitted her'to do thh.
dally ils thc physkluti had

emZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .
band Friday evening, later going to
hcr boarding place. -Chadwick was

--------------------------- ■
1
midnight Friday night It was dlj'J'tJ C r'lJI]DrsLJ'CQ covered about six o'clock Saturday
I ■* z x, UH U A Lxl xLD , morning tiiat tils cell door was open

GEO. M. NEWTON

El

iiad disappeared from her boarding
place and that the car which :.hc
kept there was also gone. Tlie lady
at the boarding place saw Mrs

promptly telephoned tlie Michigan
and Indiana state police, notifying
them of Chadwick's disappearance
and asked the stale police to notify
the officers along the Indiana bonier
was
and
and
The

picked up by lhe Indiana police
sheriff's officers near Angola,
taken to the jail in that city.
value of our slate police broad-

prompt

apprehension of Mi
world's entire popuhillon, is tl
only living religion which wor»hl[
goddesses ns well ns gods. In fnc

Sheriff Blakney himself locked
Chadwick's cell Friday evening. It is

STEADY WORK. GOOD PAY
NEAT8LENE
HAENESS OIL

crepe blouse Is dotted In beige,
nnd her Jaunty foil hat is ot
beige, also, with a pompom ot
yarn al the Up of the pointed

on farmers In N. Barry county. No
• xperience or capital needed. Write
today. McNESS CO.. DepL B, Free­
port, Illinois.
2-27

Weekly, they probably far outmimber tlfO g'xla. as more than .80 per
cent of tlie people In aoiitlicm In­
dia worship local village deltlea,
nearly all of which are feminine.

lock by reaching hls arm through
thc opening in thc cell door through
which food is passed to a prisoner in
tlu* cell and so could unlock hi', cell
■when he had n key The lock was

Hamess &amp; Shoe Repair Shop WANTED
'AKRON" MODERN

MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Smooth Rubber Bock Pads
No Poits To Wear Clothing

NEW

OLD

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET - Phone 2616
FOOD CENTER 2609

Recently, for example .drug in­
spectors picked up samples of what

Chadwick, tod. hud been busy, and
had secured a lawyer to help get
him out of thc Angola jail on a writ
of habeas corpus. The prosecutor
and sheriff planned to be in Angola ditiotv: Pneumonia, cancer, diph­
on Wednesday to opjxxw lhe release theria. typhoid fever, kidney and
bowl trouble, appendicitis, intestinal
worms and tape worms, locomotor
proceeding'

H. Feldpausch * 3921

estimated at 150.000,000. Fox fann­
ers in 1934-35 harvested 170.000 pells.

not in competition wtlh any other
type of farming. The industry is]
organized, with 3 national. 15 re-|
gional. and 16 state associations.

DEWEY REED
Having conducted many success­
ful sales and a large experience in
dealing with the buying public
make me feel belter qualified to
nd as YOUR Auctioneer.

JERRY ANDRUS

NOTICE!

chattel mortgaged propertv

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leo Strop*

Fur animals are an Important and
profitable farm crop, not only In
supplementing the natural supply,
but also in using land of little value
for field crops.
No branch of animal production,
says the Biological survey, has de­
veloped more rapidly during the de­
pression nor has resulted in greater
profits than silver-fox farming, and

FOX BROS. BARBER SHOP

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

The Prescription Drug Store

Will be open every evening beginning S ]
MONDAY, MAISCH 2nd
j
NEW AND USED
AUTO PARTS

got printed in one

should start earning $25 weekly and
increase
rapidly.
Write
today.
Rawleigh. Dept. MCB-I89-S. Free­
port, HI.
Out 2-27

Farmers, Attention!

CAUCUS NOTICES
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

the United States Department of
Agriculture suggesu that turkey
growers will do well to include a few
eggs of guinea fowls with each in­
cubator lot of turkey eggs. They
have the same period of Incubation.
-The guinea chick." he says, "is
brighter, more alert It teaches the
turkey poults how to llnd the feed
liqpper and the warm spots under

guinea sounds the fir-t alarm when
strange animals or predatory hawks
appear. To see a few guineas in a
large flock of turkeys reminds one
of a motorcycle policeman weaving
in nnd out in crowded traffic."

Dead Stock Removed!

COLDS

ic l0c M‘l CARDS ot

thb table, nnd many consider the
gumey meat a great delicacy.

THANKS

much has been said, will never be
completely successful until every­
body ha-, a house in which anybody
else would be glad to live.
WWi Einstein would lay off curved
space a while, and explain why a
telephone-receiver xord. persists .in
twisting up in 40 knots.
' ■

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
Every Monday.

Michigan Livestock Exchange
HASTINGS BRANCH

HASTINGS MARKETS

FARM BUREAU FERTILIZER AND
SEED ARE GOOD PARTNERS!
Team up with these two
partners. Put them to work
for you. Farm Bureau Ferti­
lizer will condition your
land for a. real crop.

Farm Bureau Brand seeds
are guaranteed as to purity
and germination.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES INC.
Phon. 2118
raw. n

tl
u
10
II

�I

Thursday, February 27, 1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER
SENIORS AGAIN LEAD
IN SCHOLARSHIPS

thinks
about:

jaL.

ONTIIH.

YKAH

Irn. 30a

ibrd nn

4TH
&gt;00.000.
nt and
nly In
supply,
e value
notion.
;he de­
ureater
ig. and
n coin-

now
fann0 pelts,
ilmatea

and Is
1 other
airy la

IMPDRTMTTO
MO SEISES %!:=—r

H

,

ed&gt;
rity

lU
IC
ins

■--- '

;LIVED ON SAME
1
FARM FOR 78 YEARS.

OF SCHOOL FUND | M»- Martha McNee. 79, passed

LIVESTOCK MS.

romance In her scope; raw drama the following official report, given the freshmen. Two Juniors, Horace
In her bnslneaa Superlatives grow out by lhe State Department of Ag­ Angell and Merieta Stiles, are the
on trees out here
riculture. concerning the campaign only students to do ail-A work for
and distance lives
lhe semester. Girls outnumbered
being carried on In Michigan to boys on the list in each grade.
up to Its name. We
eradicate livestock diseases. This
Horace Angell leads the school
campaign Is Important to every with 28 hours of “A" work. Three
fail In love with
farmer nrnuvunn
who- growsL livestock.
Il 'other Juniors take runner-up poslmMwu
'hi sloc,t'. “
the fgt lady In the
meanl
tlOn3 10 lhe *cho°1 W,U’ 22 hours of
sideshow, bnt her
markets1 fM
“A ‘ WOrk- E1&gt;lne V**- Ruth
slie commands re­
w*y' *nd
Btllea. other
ou? iueh^n2&gt;l£LthM
^hn^ membcrB ot the Juntor cllL* on the
spect And some­
tuh^tarie
Jkh
iM,ecl ,Ut tnd lhelr number of hours
times, as In this
ty along with bulk.
quarantine again,. _______ ____
. Taka t h e famous
this state,
state which wnillrl
nnlhlnr.
this
would be nothing
King ranch — tha Irvin 8. Cobb
short of calamity. We give below
mightiest
domnfii
the published report of James F.
iojhs hands of a single family In Thomson, commissioner of the De­
all the world, probably. There Is partment of Agriculture of this
"
a saying—and a true one—that H's state?
ninety miles from the front gets to
Spread of livestock diseases Ln
lhe front yard. Think of trying to Michigan must be curbed If the state
shoo the chickens out of thst front is going to maintain its high stand­
ard in thlsjnoat Important agricul­
yard I
tural Industry. Commissioner of Ag­
riculture, James F. Thomson, told
the members of the Michigan Live­
TAUHINU hls active life, there stock Exchange In annual conven­
was a general Journalistic ten­ tion here.
dency to deprecate Charles Curtis*
Thomson stressed the importance
larger achievements and laugh at of a continued program for control
hls little vanities. Now that be's and eradication of bovine tubercu­
gone, the newspapers, without re­ losis. hog cholera, sheep scab, gland­
gard to their politics, are printing ers. rabies nnd bangs disease. He
tributes to tbe distinguished career pointed out that the state depart­
and fine citizenship of this man ment of agriculture In cooperation
with the U. 8. Department of Agri­
who went from an Indian lodge to culture Is conducting an extensive
the second highest elective office In campaign against these diseases.
our gift.
In 1935. the„ Commissioner point­
Rlnce to criticize our leaders la an ed out. 10365 herds containing 135.­
almost universal Instinct, wouldn't 525 cattle were tested for bangs dis­
ease in Michigan. In these herds
about speaking no III of the dead and 11338 reactors were found. Initial
praised a deserving fellow-creature testa showed that more than 50 per
while he could hear what we said- cent of the herds tested were in­
hut saved up the scoldings until fected. and that 20 per cent of the
cattle in these herds were disposed
he’d passed on?
of. The sum of $365,586 was paid
I could elnhornle on this lest, but out for reactors. Twenty ;&gt;cr cent
must stop io try think up some of the herds In the state are now
small gibe at the expense of some under supervision, and new appli­
prominent man.
cations for testing are being re­
ceived in the department of agri­
culture at the rate of about 1.000

HEY’VE taken the Japanese war
"With more than 2.000 Individual
scare from the old cedar what­ Michigan farmers stopping milk in­
not and shaken tbe mothballs out to the Chicago area, and more than
1.000 head of cattle being shipped
breeze as a signal to the citizens of monthly out of Michigan for sale in
Los Angeles to remove the women other states, it Is highly Important
and children to a place of safety that tubercular testing of cattle be
and a warning to the folks In Se­ maintained on a large scale." Com­
attle to start building street bar­ missioner Thomson said.
He explained that It is necessary
ricades. Thus we have the annual
to test in twenty-seven to thirty
revival of a time-honored custom.
counties per year in order to keep
To be sure, there's a 'racial dif­
the state on a fuUy accredited list.
ference to be reckoned with. We're To date 4 1-2 million dollars has
a breed of opportunists, the Japa­ been spent on this work in Michi­
nese are a breed of fatalists. The gan with 2 1-2 million dollars ad­
American soldier wants to go home ditional being paid out for indem­
nities.
Sheep scab has never been as
can get hls job back from tbe tad
that amugicled Into It while he* was much of a problem In Michigan as
at the fronl; the Japanese craves It has in some other states. Com­
to rejcln hls ancestors instead of missioner Thomson said. Hog chol­
era Is probably the most Infection!
hls family. So naturally a fellow
of livestock diseases and produces
who'd prefer to go on living la at a the greatest losses, according to
handicap fighting a gentleman who Commissioner Thomson.
During
thinks you're doing him a personal 1035 lhe department traced seven­
favor by killing him.
teen out-breaks of hog cholera di­
But no matter how acute the per­ rectly to swine sold through auction
il, 1 decline to retrqpt to the Ozark sales, and 12 out-breaks were traced
mountains until they prove to me to hogs coming in from outside the
that Japanese explosives will ex­ state.
“I advocate strict registration of
plode when dealrod, or at all.
all auction markets and registration
of all persons trucking livestock
White /oiks’ Matadfes.
other than their own. and the
eaving California, i said: Tm establishment of at least two quar­
fed up on the kinds of sing­ antine stations on the southern
boundary of Michigan In order to
ing that you hear so much of out
here. No matter what a Mexican aid In the control of livestock dis­
song starts out with. It winds up eases," Commissioner Thomson said
"If the 1.700300 head of cattle,
with something about a dove. And
the 1350.000 head of sheep, the 12
the trouble with Hawaiian singers Is to 15 million poultry, the 400,000
that they're always telling you horses and the more than 500,000
good-by but they never go. Thank hogs that make up our livestock
goodness, 111 soon be listening to population, are to be properly pro­
the stuff I was raised on—spirituals tected. we must continue strict pro­
pouring gloriously forth from vel­ grams for the eradication of all
diseases. This is not only a benefit
vety Afrle throat*"
But 1 hear now the distressing to agricultural interests, but is e*
sentlal from a public health stand­
newe that, even here In tbe deep point."
South, some of tbe black people are
getting so self-conscious or some­ RABBITS AND MICE
thing they want to sing tbe white
DAMAGE TREES.
Damage to Michigan orchards by
folks' comparatively thin and pith­
less hymns instead ot their own rabbits and mice lias been reported
to
V.
R.
Gardner,
professor of hor­
rich, glowing melodies.
ticulture and director of the Agri­
cultural Experiment Station at
Glasses of Eternal Spring.
Michigan State College, East Lan­
RETTY much all over the coun­ sing.
try there seems to bo -general
Deep snow Is responsible for In­
complaint about tho weather. Peo­ creased destruction by rabbits since
ple are saying the trouble with this they nibbled away on branches of
young
trees. Mice were able to dig
winter Is that there's so much winunder thc snow and destroy Die
trunk bark.
Farmers who used
But tbere'a a philosophical, way repeltants recommended last fall by
of regarding climatic unpleasant­ thc college report no damage.
ness. My friend. Ed Boreln, tbs Orchards In which damage Is found
western painter,knew an aged chief should be surveyed to determine
how much bridge grafting will be
Northwest who, when tha' first necessary.

P

and bought a pair of green gog­
gles. There didn't seem to be any­
thing wrong with the,old Indian's
sight—be bad an eye like a captive
hawk—so' Boreln asked questions.
■Tin no longer young." answered
tbe ancient, "and I don't like tbs
snow and Ice. Now, wherever I
look, I see only green things and
It makes springtime In my heart"
IRVIN A COIR, 1

DID A GOOD JOB.
We believe the business men of
Hastings appreciate the thorough
Job of snow removal on our main
business streets, done under lhe di­
rection of our city engineer and the
city council. It has made It pos­
sible for automobiles to parlf close
to lhe stores and get from the road­
way to the sidewalk without wading
snow drifts or making long trips
down tbe roadway.

son. Robert Henney. Beatrice Mead.
Isabel Sage. 15 hours; Phyllis Beck.
Gladys Bennett. Margaret Flngleton.
French Humphrey. Marlon Palmer.
12 hours; Lapris Anders. Stuart Ed­
monds. william Gladstone. Dorothy
Roush. Freda Scott, Lucille Warner.
10 hours; Barbera Bliss. Franklin
Browne. Emerson Cilrnj, Donald
Doxey. Gertrude Finstrom, Reid
Furrow, Doris Gillespie, Stephen
Johnson. Modesta Kfnne. Alberta
McClelland. Margaret Moore. Jean
Newton. Frank Rogers. Ruth Sager.
Ray
Sigler.
Loretta
Springer.
Charles Struble, Evadene Struble,
and Donald Tredinnick. 5 hours.
Forty-four of lhe seniors have five
Their leaders are four girls Betty
Cooper. Ruth McLaughlin, Lillian
Proefrock, and Belly Vandergrift,
who have each 17 hours. Following
these are Dorothy Shellington. Don
Weaver. 15 hours; Hazel Caukin.
Audra Densmore. Norma Jacobson.
Doreen Rltzman. Mary Stamm,
Florence Westerlind. 12 hours; Anna
Beck. Robert
Burwell. Madeline
Cook. Dora Day. Marie Everson,
Charles Emrick, Velma Kellogg.
Hugh Kelly. Lucille MacLeod. 10
hours; Doreen Cappon. Ruth Horn.
Margaret Keeler. Agnes Rdyer. Su­
zanne Sumner. Cleone Wcxidman.
Mildred Woodmansee. 7 hours;
Jeanne Brower. Rosalie Caseidden,
Rexine Downing. Dwight Ferris.
Dorothy Johnson. Harold Knapp.
Herman Newland. Reathel Newton.
Carroll Newton. Robert Newton. Al­
bert Orsbom, Bemelta Rodebaugh,
Edna Shultz, Donald Wldrig. Ruth
Warner, and Virginia Waters. 5
hours each.
Boys carry off most of the high
sophomore honors. Sanford Rogers
heads the list of 40 sophomores who
have five or more hours of “A" work.
Phyllis Hinman Is second with 17
hours closely followed by Robert
Bronson. Russell Donovan. Lawrence
Snyder, and Thomas Stephens with
15 hours, others listed are: Bea­
trice Buxton. Margaret Hummel.
Marcene Kinne. Margaret Mead,
persus Newton. Ruby Webb. 12
hours; Arietta Arnold. Carl Edmoqds. Wayne Flnkbelner. Jack
Sage. Helen Steckle. 10 hours; Achsah Buck. Ante* elum. Ruth Munton. Phyllis Newton, Wilma Royer.
Ethel Bayles, Thelma Shute. 7
hours; Howard Althouse, Ruth An­
derson. Richard Bessmer. Eugene
Bush. Henc Cappon. Dorothy Ever­
son. Norman Hall. Ronald Ingram
Loon Mudge, Adrianna Raldt. Doro­
thy Perkins. 8am Schwartz. Mabie
Seeber. Laurence Strickland. Kenn®|h Stamm. Harry Thompson, 5

Six girls lead the freshman class
with 17 hours each of "A" work.
Alice Beck. Maxine Erway, Pearl
Hathaway. Haselmae Mannl, Patty
Osborn, and Helen Strlmback. There
are 26 on tha list, as follows: Bild
Cheeseman.
Keith
Clark. Zane
Nash, 10 hours; Hazel Bryant.
Kathren Conklin. Jean Harrington,
Thelnfc Lee. 7 hours; Gsylen Bristol.
Robert casteleln, Wyman Claggett,
Elaine Denney, opal Kelley. Rich­
ard Lester. Enid Mohler. Donald
Newton, jack Rearlrk, David Rob­
inson. Kenneth
Rose.
Kathryn
Saunders, and Milton wills. 5 hours.

COUNTY’S DOGS COST
TAXPAYERS OVER $800
Receiptg Frpm Dog Licenses
Lack That Much of Pay^
ing the Shot
In a recent issue of the Banner,
we mentioned the fact that livestock
claims allowed by the Barry county
board of supervisors in 1035 amount­
ed to over $2300. These claims were
nearly all paid because of Injuries to
or killing of sheep by dogs In this
county. In addition the county paid
the dog warden, (or salary and ex­
penses. a little over 8800. making
tho total cost to the county of over
83.000.
The owners of dogs did not foot all
of this bill. The receipts for dog
licenses shown by the county treas-

IM.70.

It would seem as If there

licenses; for there Is surely no rea­
son why Barry county taxpayers
should put up 1900 for Its canine
population.
celpfe of the count

।

service, carried on jointly by the
United States department of agri­
culture and that of this state, has
Issued a report on the value of
Michigan livestock on farms on
January 1. 1936. The total reported
was $136369.000.
This compared
with $92,459,000 on January 1. 1935.
and la the highest Inventory of
livestock in Michigan since 1930.
The cash return to Michigan
farmers for livestock during 1935 it
Is expected will reach $100,000,000.
or about 14 per cent greater than
for the calendar year 1934. The
number of cattle on farms In Michi­
gan cn January 1 was 1.548.000
head. 30.00Q more than a year ago.
The averagfe value per head this
year is $4330. as compared with
$2630 a year ago. Thc number of
cows two years old and over kept
for milk production Is estimated
at 887,000, which Is 2 per cent leas
than on the same date a year ago.
The number of heifers one to two
years old being saved for milk cows
Is placed at 163,000, or 8 per cent
less than on January 1 last year.
The total number of sheep and
lambs In Michigan on January 1.
1936, Is 1361,000, nearly 100,000 more
than on lhe same date in 1935.
This estimate Included 150,000 sheep
being fed on Michigan farms for
market. The number of hogs on
farms is estimated at 594,000 head.
Tills compares with 512,000 head on
January 1. 1935. The average value
per head is $1430 as against $6.60 a

The number of horses on Michi­
gan farms Is figured at 377,000 head,
which is almost the exact figures
for a year ago. The low point In the
number of horses in this state was
apparently reached about January
1. 1934. The number of colta raised
on Michigan farms lias Increased
steadily in the past three years, but
the Michigan colt crop is still not
sufficient for replacement purposes.
Relatively large imports of horses
are made from other states.

TW0JPPLC1NTS
FOR MEW
OLOF OSTMAN AND LEWIS
MASTIN FILE PAPERS
WEDNESDAY

ONE FROM SWEDEN
OTHER IS RUMANIAN
Must Wait at Least Two
Years After Declaration

of Intention Made
Two declarations ot intention to
become American citizens were filed
.with the county clerk on Wednesday.
One was by Olof Ostman. age 66.
of this dty. Mr. Ostman was bom at
Ystad. Sweden, and emigrated to
America from that country. He re­
ports that he has six children. aU
living in Michigan.
The other applicant was Louis
Martin. 52. of Middleville. Mr. Mar-

Mr*. Needham volunteered
first hand. Her publishers

Railroads Pay &gt;27,507 Pri­ ton. Guy McNee. near Middleville li the first complete testament

. - «-

L

fwo
ork
rtiour

i,,'i",E’*re

mary Money in County—
JIUED PROGRAM FOR
_
H18h .
, m REPORT SRGWR IT Tfl
6,070 Children Helped
OONTINUXD FBCMAM FOR
I THE REPORT SHOWS IT IS I Of -the 0.070 school children In
The seniors and post-graduate
ERADICATION
OF
HOO
ouston tex
b
classes led In high scholarship at HIGHER THAN ANY YEAR j Barry county the education of 2.cau$e the Texas rangers
OHOLESA, ETO
SINCE 1030
Hastings High school during the
merged with a prosaic highway
first semester according to marks re­
owA^s/ Aas
largely through railroad t|xes. acleased^ the office. Students are FARM STOCK SALES
patrol, thereby losing .their en­ TWO QUARANTINE
I cording to Floyd E. Drake, executive
placed on lhe honor list if they retity as perhaps the finest fight­
. OVER $100,000,000SEMEST1
l celved "A" In five or more hours per
STATIONS
ADVOCATED
ing force for law enforcement
! week nt work nf iik uinir», •
' Barry county is receiving $67,621
Fanners
Found M
share of tlie state primary
that America ever knew, Commr, Thomson Stresses post-graduates 38 per cent are thus Michigan
listed. Thirty-three per cent of the
they're saying romance has suffered Necessity for Regular Test­
Livestock a Profitable
Junior
class
on
the
list
give
that
13 per school child. Of the $15,492.­
a death blow.Item
in
1935
group
the
runner-up
position.
38559 in the 1935-38 fund, the rail­
ing of AU Herds
But 1 wouldn't go so far as to
Twenty-four per cent of the sopho­
The
co-operative
agricultural roads through taxes paid $6,301.­
uy thgt—not about Texaa There's
Our readers Will be interested In mores are listed and 18 per cent of

T

ND
IS!

BieimsEiK

907.10. or a sum equal to 41 per cent
of the lotah On this basis rall&gt;
road taxes made up $27307 of this
county's share ot the fund.
"The primary school fund Is one
of our state's most sacred funds,
and. basically, finances the educa­
tion currently of 1391.843 Michigan
children." Drake said.
"Without
this fund their schooling would be
impaired or minimized The biggest
contributors to the fund are the
railroads, whose taxes by law go di­
rectly into it. Thus railroad pros­
perity is making possible, at least
Indirectly, lhe education ot 570.656
of the state's children.
"The railroads* tax contribution
to lhe support of our stale schools
is another reason why the railroads,
which play so vital a part In our
economic life, should not be com­
pelled to continue excessively regu­
lated while they have to combat un­
regulated competition. The rails
need understanding assistance If
they are to function as Is expected
of them, and if their aid to our pri­
mary school fund is to continue. To
help the lines obtain that assistance
and. Incidentally at least, lo assure
future contributions by them to our
school fund is the alm of our rail­
road employes and citizens league."

In Irving Twp.. the farm on which war period from the point of view of
an American woman."
। born in England, the family coming
to the United States when site was
six months old. Two sons, Guy of which will be awaited with interest
Middleville and Ernest of Colorado, by many Hastings people,
two daughters. Mrs. Wolter Ogden
of Hastings and Mrs. Robert Baird
of Middleville, thirteen grandchil­ DEATHS, 36,400;
dren and eight great-grandchildren.
DISABLED 107X100
Methodist church on Tuesday at
Tht Wai thc Horrible Record building Ida
IWo o'clock, with burial in the Par­
that city with
of Motor Accidents in
melee cemetery.

U. B. in 1035

EPOCH-MAKING
BOOK PROMISED

Preliminary figures for 1935 pre­
pared by the National Safety Coun­
cil show ths following:
Motor accidents caused approxi­
mately 34.400 deaths. 107.000 per­
manently disabling Injuries and !.170000 temporary disabilities.
Two-thirds of all motor vehicle
deaths Last year occurred In small
towns under 10.000 population and
in rural areas.
City deaths declined about 9 per

Mary - Masters Needham in
Revealing Story of
World War
It is something unusual whop Ar­
nold Mulder goes on record, as he
did Ln a recent article, os being con­
siderably excited over Mary Masters
Needham's new war book. • Tomor­
row to Fresh Fields" abouj ready to
be Issued. Mr. Mulder Is. as a rule,
a conservative of conservatives, so
when he gets "het up” over a book

terestlng reading. Then, too, the
author is known to a number of
Hastings residents.
She is the
youngest daughter of Rev. Levi
Masters, who was one of the early
pastors of the Methodist church
here. Hcr eldest sister Lizzie, (Mrs.
Elvln Swarthout) Is a graduate of
Hastings High school.
Mrs. Needham's-husband. Henry
Beach Needham, was a Journalist
of note, and was killed during the
World war.

Amend*

only for reading
Mr. Mayville with
days

While there were more truffle
death! nationally—an Increase of 1
i

tor vehicle registration increased 4
per cent and gas consumption 7 per
cent.
I Only among children 5 to 14 yean
were there fewer motor vehicle
deaths In 1935 than In 1934. Down
3.400 to 3.000.
Milwaukee, with a death rate of
108 per 100,000, and Providence,
with a rate of 7 per 100300. again
led thc larger cities of the country
in safety.

townshlp, died Monday
hls home. Surviving are
two sons, Llewellyn
the United Brethren
Thursday afternoon at

Burial

township.

HASTINGS HIGH JOINS
STATE ASSOCIATION
WUl Compete in Oratory,
Declamation and Extem­

pore Speaking
Hastings High school has become
a member of the Michigan High
School Forensic Association and will
compete In state-wide contests In
।I oratory, declamation and extempore
'1 speaking, which will be conducted
I by the Association. This announce|
Halstead. Albert Becker, of our high
school faculty, will train the local
contestants. Three hundred fiftytwo Michigan high schools have
Joined the Association this year—the
largest number ever enrolled. There
were 289 last year. Tills indicates
the constantly Increasing interest
In public speaking, and the training
It affords for later business and
professional life. It also evidences
that there Is a large number of
students who ore taking public
speaking courses In high school, col­
lege or university.
The Forensic Association Is spon­
sored by lhe Extension Division of
the University of Michigan in cooper­
ation with an advisory council, rep­
, resenting
i vx-mniK the
u&gt;c Michigan uoiucrcucc
Conference
of City Superintendents, the Michi­
gan High School Principals Asso­
ciation and the Michigan Asso­
ciation of Teachers of Speech.
Each school participating in ora­
tory. declamation and extempore
speaking will conduct a local con­
test in order to select a winner In
each activity to represent it In the
sub-district contest. The winner in
each event In each of the fifty-five
subdlstrcts will be awarded a Web­
ster Collegiate dictionary, with the
name of the contestant in gold on
the cover. These winners will en­
ter the district contest. The dic­
tionary
awards
are
presented
through the courtesy of the Detroit
News. The schools having a win­
ning contestant In the district will
receive a banner award, suitably
lettered.
-----Over 137.000 high school students
participated in public speaking con­
tests conducted through the Asso­
ciation last year. The contests were
heard by audiences aggregating over
112,000 persons.

IS A SPECIAL!!
WEBSTER says a specialist is"Oned«vo
to some special branch of learning, a
business."

Your Banker is a Specialist in the business
finance and as such you can consult him ch
all financial matters. Consult him with
fidence as you would your doctor. He
not always tell you what you would like
hear, but he will give you sound adv
prejudiced and impersonal, based on
facts of the case.

J/oJtak In Hungary. He came to
America In 1904 and has three chil­
dren, all of whom are living with
him on a farm near Middleville.
After these declarations of inten­
tion to become American citizens
shall have been kept on file for two
years, each applicant can file a pe­
tition for American citizenship.
However, the application must be
made before the expiration of five
years after the declaration of Inten­
tion. Each can become an American
citizen ninety days after having
filed hls petition for citizenship In COMMISSION SETS
the United States within the period
A RATE SCHEDULE
named—that Is, not leas than two
years nor more Ilian five years after
Determines What Consumers
having filed hls declaration.
Power Co. Shall Charge
Making citizens of persons of
foreign birth is an Impressive mat­
for Natural Gas
ter. There 13 always present, when
Tlie
state Public Utilities Com­
such person Is received, a represen­
tative of tha united States govern- mission has set up a rate schedule
to be charged by the Consumers
circuit Judge and In open court, Power Company when they shall
examines the applicant. He then supply Lansing and twenty-six
makes his recommendation as to I neighboring communities including
whether citizenship shall be given or Hastings with natural gas. William
A. Smith, chairman of the com­
denied.
mission, said the new rates will be
at least thirty per cent less than
BROUGHT FROM

The Hastings City Bank for more than fit
years has rendered a specialized service
banking and is qualified to give you
advice in this line.
To individuals or business concerns,
folks or farmers in need of financial aii
advice, we say, come in and talk it over i
your Banker.

FLORIDA FOR BURIAL.

Tlie body of Mrs. Belle (Thomp­ artificial gas. The rates will be 75c
son) Bowdish. 69. wak brought to for the first 300 cubic feet of natural
Hastings from Tampa. Fla., the fu­ gas; 8130 a thousand for the next
neral services being held on Tues­ 1.700 cubic feet; $1.00 per thousand
day afternoon at two o'clock at tlie for the next 3.000 feet, and 85c a
Walldorf! funeral home. Mr. and thousand for all over 5.000 cubic feet
Mrs. Bowdtah. residents of Nash­ used for domestic purposes. This
ville, went to Florida for lhe winter, schedule Is slightly tower than the
where she was taken sick and died one proposed by tho company, Mr.
on Friday. Feb. 14. she was a mem­ Smith said.
ber oDthe Nashville Rebekah lodge.
For space heating, the rates win
Surviving are the husband and six be Ke per thousand cubic feet. Mr.
daughters. Mrs. Charles Leaver of Smith exptalned that the heating
this city being one of the daughters, value of natural gas Is twice as
also five grandchildren, one great­ much as that of artificial gas. For
grandchild and a brother. The Rev. Instance, he said, If a consumer
Edw.
_ ____ Boone
_ IL, _
of----Grand
...... paid
Raplda
$5 forof-5.000 cubic feet In any
flejated at the funeral and the re- given month while burning artificial
— i—____--------------------g&lt;s he K0U]d
on]y 2 0Q0 cublc
mains
were placed. In .w
the
mausoleum
at Riverside cemetery awaiting bur­ feet of natural gas to get the same
ial in the Yankee Springs cemetery results, which ought to mean a good
later in the spring.
saving.

den's expenses were practically paid
last year by Increased licenses. In
addition thc city contributed some­
thing to the Cost of hls work, so that
putting a dog warden on thc job
When a man feels that ha has
Many refuse to Join public move­
has more than paid; but dogs are
certainly not a profitable asset to outgrown hls beat friends he has not ments because they'd rather remain
grown at alL :
on the sidelines and criticise.
the county.

F.H.A. LOANS
We are In position

loans

on

improved

REAL ESTATE.

We are in a position to moke loans on
estate. We are also in a position to
lateral loans, and loans based on
nancial statements. We invite you
tion. All loans are considered on th
the borrower's.ability to repay.

Confide in your Banker and he
in you.

HASTINGS CITY
TELEPHONE 2103

«

�»;•
THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, ,'HIRl'AUV tl. 1«M

DOM CKNTtB,
I Nklu?ls. Mr- and Mn. Gilbert Fish-1' Mr. and Mr* Gerald TUcber ve­
Mr Ma been ill and er of Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Al- iled friend* near Lansing Bunday.
care dur teg the I hart Halit mr of DeUoU at a aix I It seemed good to have church

iee't

SOUTHWB8T WOODLAND.
- ■ — ----- x* „ w

|

Wedding balls rang In our nelgh.—u—&gt; ------- t MLu Ha,,

h**ui&gt;»* anxartalMd Sam Holaanle garet Thelma Bur
daughter of
' Q'clMk dinner Saturday night Sni*c&gt;vKn
w» —
* —
....
» Mr. and Mrs. Hol
services ■***&lt;■
again hwmmw
Sunday. We
are
in j oi Beiievue,
Bellevue, **r.
Mr ai_,
and Mrs.
Willis
----------th*
--------------------Kaotnarwonand
came the,nd
bride
». Harold Ulloa and honor Qf Utelr niece and husband. • hopes
weather
conditions
t । Kanlnfr
Guy Kantner and
ssrai the week end MT Mid Mr*. Bellamy (Carolyn {keep ua from having service, again fwnlly
family in bono,
honor ef -Guy 's birthday aUo of thl* vicinity
Ccngrelvb! Mr. &gt;U &gt;C L.WTOC. Ucu
“• «•«»&gt;» “ &gt;»• b-WT
and friends here in pislun who were recently married, i this winter
All remember the Aid will meet
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Yarger and acre BU
u oi
ana
Bunday guests
of mr.
Mr.
and
a Fred Henney and ■ glib Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Male Thur*-1 children recently moved into
lh* i
Edward Thompson and chll■Mn. atw.rd Thampun u&gt;d &lt;»j
1 Mr- and Mr*. E. F. day. March Mh for dinner.
’ Quy Na*h tenant house.
|dren to
U 8^^,
Sunfield
ta
I . . ....of....
-e. -Oreek
neighborhood.
n... 1,1.1 ....
■■ ■
■■■■ R.
.
! ii■
--------------------------------------- John
Battle
spent
BiSiVrb M-.nd srss
*£

el .

KROGER STORES
Stock Up Now /

Special Low Prices !
HOT DATED

JEWEL COFFEE

Lb. bag

HOT DATED - FULL BODIED - FLAVORFUL

VACUUM PACEED - FIHE. RICH

BlCH — BED
Catsup

HoImx

&gt;*&gt; ■&gt;». 19c

FRENCH COFFEE

19c

Saodvkh Spread

2

COUNTRY CLUB

10c

large beltle

Soups

Coh.. u&gt;

can

25c

MIXED-JAPAN OR GUN POWDER

25c

«re*

29c

MAY GARDEN TEA w

bulk

%-lb. pkg. 15c

Salted PaanuH

siNcenrrv

s

vlUe. on account of steknoaa
Harold Wbi(tcniore and son. Wil- evening visitors.
Us. of Cressey called on Irving Frye.
Mr. and Mr* Harry Olwn. who
moved onto the Jones farm last
Sunday.
—----- '
----------------fall, are leaving again the first of
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
March due to the Ulneaa of Mr.
congratulations to Mr and Mr* Olsep.
Bo^rofoot^d The UUlo d»X . Mr. and Mre. Neal Welcher of
ler.
. Battle Creek called on their parI EbT cnaxiFBu
I Mr lind Mr* We**«y Benedict of ent*. Mr. and Mrs. Ch*». LechlletLENT CORNLRb.
I Lansuig
fanner's par- ner. Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Chandler and ent* Friday and Saturday.
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
daughter Pauline, a friend, and Mr.' xyM Marian Edges has returned
and Mr*. Clarence Hammond, all of to her school work, having been
MUS Josephine
Romig spent
Hastings, spent Saturday with their home during the period when so Monday and Tuesday tn Hastings.
brother. Mr. and Mr*. Marc Ham- many schools were closed because School started again Wednesday
I mond.
/
1i -*
after being closed for a week. Mbs
of ----------------deep snow.
The children of Mr and Mrs.
Lyle Vanderbrook and family of Romig spent Sunday with Mr. and
Lyle Francisco have all been real Hickory Comers spent
spent lhe week end Mrs. A. C. Clark of McOmber dis­
sick, but are on the gain at this with the home folks.
trict
j writing.
L. to
—____
. Will
A daughter was bom to Mr. and
i We _are glad
report—
Mrs.
Hugh Ritter spent lhe week end Fifleld
is
at
home
Im- Mrs. Wm. Cramer. Jr., at Pennock
r-Aviu u&gt; ■ - immmc and
auiu much
iiiutl, uuat Ada.
1
-------*
•---••*I proved in hsalth.
hospital. Feb. ID. She has been
Mlu Jean Hammond and Miss
The Northwest Rutland Extension named Sandra Margaret. ■
Opal Brierly of Kalamazoo spent club will be entertained this week
Mrs. E. L. Houghtalln is confined
the week end al Hie home of the at lhe
' 'home of Mrs. ~
Burr ~Laubaugh.
‘
’
to her bed with intestinal flu.
former's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marc
Lyle Bldelman of Pontiac was
This correspondent greatly enjoys
Hammond.
lhe column by Jane Cameron, also visiting in this community Satur­
The Lent school children enjoyed Observing Tommy. Here's hoping day and Bunday.
Merlin Pierce of Hastings was a
a delayed valentine box Friday aft­ they contniue to grow—lhe columns,
ernoon.
.
we mean.
week end guest of Chester Cramer.

Mr and Mr*. Ellsworth Smith '
and daughters. Mr. and Mrs Joseph
Smith and daughter. Mr and Mr*.
Cliejler Cox and children and Mr*
Sherman anuin
Smith ano
and
grandson..
tinerman
greuoaori.
Ralph, of Hastings were Sunday
.rt-monn
Ur .nH
afternoon muwr.
guests M
of Mr.
and Mrs*.'
Chas Fur lee.

N

“ok

MIUtO

I
■

'

$1.05

COLD MEDAL

Quart bottle 12c

2 ...»

“X 85c

COUNTRY CLUB

17c

paying bills, for they give you a clear receipt.

N

5

CORN MEAL

*»«

They are cheaper to buy than other forms of

money-orders and are especially desirable for
those who do not carry checking accounts.

COUNTRY CLUB-RICH SMOOTH
GIANT jar

EMBASSY - RICH SMOOTH

COUMTIY CLUB

8

amount Readily cashable and acceptable any­

R

where. Best for mail remittances.

Lux Soap

No risk of loss and they do not

EMBASSY -RICH TASTY

LUX FLAXES

25c

lorff* pkff

19c

SALAD DRESSING

tissue

Quart jar

B

the bank.
You may buy bank money-orders here in any

2
“■
** jar 25c

PEANUT BUTTER

Fresh Broad

1-*

They link your name in a favorable way with

APPLE BUTTER
rolb

Baseball Stars Turn Professors

Bank money-orders are better than cash for

OR POUBUXY FLOUR

23c

YELLOW

4

Tangled wreckage strewn tor a hundred yard* and mangled bodies
prewnted a ghastly acene^ lop. aa aearrblng parties located the
wreck of a pulatlal air liner which cra*hed near Goodwin. Ark.,
taking 17 live*. Tree* anapped off a* the plane &lt; ra*be&lt;| allli a
roar. The motor, below, was a^ulk ot twisted xleel. buried deep
in lhe swamp mud. The disaster was the wuret In American cominrrclal aviation hlalorv.
,

ME BETTER

LABORATORY TESTED FLOUR

AVONDALE - FUSE CIDEl

Siminolo

'
.

BANK HONEY-ORDERS

75c

KING'S FLAKE FLOUR

19&lt;

FLOUl

Silver Duit

Clayton Haynes, who ha* employ­
ment tn Battle Creek, spent Satur­
day afternoon with his parent*. Mr.
and Mrs. O. Haynee. Their daugh-

ia-'aib.

iiund

MICHIGAN

OLD FASHIONED

ViM«ar

Miaa Atha Joluuton visited rela­
tives and friend* in Kalamazoo, a

SODA CRACKERS 2^17c

FLOUR
Buolxwlsaal
noua

Worst (J. S. Plane Crash Kills 17

WESCO-CRISP. FLAKY

1

iAs

Mucator Crax

tiatonnu ruis

HICKORY CORNERS.
School tx-g*u again this morning
iMonday) after an extended vaca- ।
lion caused by cold weather and

’W

have to be verified by the receiver.

25c

Buy bank money-orders here.

3l

KRAFT S - PHILADELPHIA

Climolenc
BOWLEiiZ

CREAM CHEESE

AVALON

■a a

Ammonia

CHEESE

PABST-ETT

15c

Quart botll*

■ ■ ■

Food

2

pkga.

2

pkga.

TWINKLE

Tobacco Values

■*&gt; 10c

6

pkgs

25c

GELATINE DESSERT

Our Advartikor 3 pkg*. 25c

EMBASSY

TOBACCO

Bull Durham

MUSTARD
MAXWELL HOUSE

6 pko« 25i

TOBACCO

Tuxedo

4

MOTOR OIL

25c

lb. can

2
can

100«~C PURE PENNSYLVANIA

TOBACCO

BANANAS
Oranges

97c

Celery

5c

bunch
LARGE FRESH TENDER BUNCHES

■•oik

5c

POTATOES

Michigan w-w. pock 27c
U S. No. 1
Haney Halls

25c

3

lbs

10c

SWEET POTATOES
Idaho Bakers
15-lb bag 39c

FANCY HOT HOUSE

web

dt
Younstltra o' Nlsml. ria., will now have all tbe reaeon In tha world
:o become great baseball players, tor a school baa been opened there
where bae&gt;ball Is tha only subject taught "Professor" Paul Waner,
Plttstftjrgh PI rale star, one ot the Instructors, la shown as he demon­
strates how io bit a low ball. Leslie Mann, formerly ot tbe Boston
Brava* and also a member of the faculty, looks on.

“Just a Cold”

Yellow Onions

10c

di

.

Commencing at 1:00 P. M.

Do not ba miserable for a week or ten days just
- "wearing it out."

I offer the following:

3

lb.

10c

Cray more, 7 yr*. old, wt. 1500.
Black more, 10 yrs. old, wt. 1250.
Biack mare. 12 yrs. old. wt. 1250.
Boy colt, coming 2 years old.
Black colt, coming 2 yean old.

If you assist Nature just a little

you will be so mueh more comfortable ond get out
so much quicker.

HORSES.

We sell ond recommend the

following for Colds and Sore Throat:—

Hay loader. Mowing machine.
Wagon and rack. Sot of bob sleighs.
2 walking plows.
Two-bottom John Deere tractor plow.

CATTLE, HOGS, POULTRY.

w

w

Two-horse walking cultivator.
Disk harrow.

1C

... is often the first step toward a serious illness.

MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1936

CRISP TENDER. WELL BLEACHED

Extra Fancy Box Apples

Cucumbers

y&lt;
hi

Hoving decided to quit farming, I will sell my personal
property at public auction on the Sam Blocher farm, located
2 miles north, 1 1-2 miles west and 1 mile north of Nashville,
or 1 mile north of the Castleton Center school, on

SEEDLESS - FULL OF JUICE

New Carrots

Wine.api
ib,
Rome Beauties

AUCTION SALE

Crapefruit 4 f°r 1 9c

FLORIDA JUICE

Delkiou.

12c
25c

GOLDEN RIPE

6 &gt;&gt;» 25c

A

bi

PENN-RAD

Bed Men

. Quart jar

COFFEE

25c

TOBACCO

k-

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

COCOANUT BARS - FIG BARS
IE* J GINGER SNAPS. VANILLA JUMBLES

OVEN FRESH

IC OF HASTINGS
31c

Rexall Cold Tablets

Al

MI-31 Spray and Gargle

Buick cor.

Vapure—to inhale

HAY AND CORN.

Holstein cow, 7 yr*., due In April.

PORK ROAST PORK STEAK

©SHORT RIBS

ib

«» 25c

LEAH

of beef

LEAN

“&gt; 12y2c

Fing for Baking

Holstein cow. 7 yrs., fresh 3 months.
Holstein cow. 5 yn., due in Moy.
0. I. C. brood sow. wt. 350, dua May 1.
2 hen turkeys. 1 gobbler.
•

Cherry Bark Cough Syrup

Crain drill.

dl

Peptona—a tonic
MISCELLANEOUS.

in

Also McCormick F12 tractor and cul. five tor. nearly naw.
And'many other small articles.

FARM TOOLS.
Two-section drag.

10 torn of alfalfa hay.
150 shocks of com.

Try a bottle of PECKHAM S REMEDY for that
cough that nothing eUa will touch.

Q STANDING RIB ROAST

22c
TERMS OF SALE:-CASH. Nothing removed until settled for.

WHITE HSH

w»t»

CAUGHT

ib.

Red Sobneo
FANCY SLICED

» 28c

Cottage a— 2

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

GEO. L. PATTEN, Owner

tol^ Ib. average - Excellent to bake

17c

Henry Flannery, Auctioneer.

&gt;

•

C. g. Motor, Clerk.

Rich and creamy
— -.......................... ■

—

।

.

THE REXALL DRUGGISTS

Hatting*

Phona 2131

.................................... ............

Michigan

. U

. K

�THY HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY.
I SOME MORE RILEY STORIES.
■ One Sunday monUng I had my
I jersey calf tn my front yard and
Jim Bauer the auctioneer drove past
and said. "Riley, you sold that calf
Over three hundred people at­ yet?" and I said "I tried to. Jim, but
tended the Boys’ and Girls’ Gym
Demonstration last Thursday night. him." Mr. Bauer was a good friend
High spot* of thc evening were of mine, and by th. way. I sold him
stynU by a group ot boys, seasonal a mule once, and we still were good
•ports by several girls, and a basket friends. He said "Riley, bring him
bull game between .the Junior and down to Die Barry county fair next
Senior girls. Tho Junior squad won I week." And on Tuesday morning I
! said to my son. "Homer, get a halter
by a score of 4-3.
...
and take that Jersey calf down to
Thc Boys' and Girls' Assembly was 'the fa,r- Bnd Mr- Baucr wh0 Jud’ca
held JohiUy in Suf A-Xly roo“"h"
"" —
{the livestock will tell you where to
Monday, February 24. The, pro­ lie him." Next Friday night when I
gram. given by lhe boys, included; came home from the foundry my
A reading by Donald Doxey, two wife said, "Rllay. Homer brought the
readings by Donald Weaver, some calf home and he won a blue ribbon
relectlons by the Boys' Glee club and there are three men out In the
and a short play with Bradford bam." Bo I started far the bam and
Hinckley and Floyd Woodard par­ one of the mtn said "What do you
ticipating. The hit of the morning want for that bull calf?” and I said,
was a Leap Year Melierdrammcr. "Gentlemen, a week ago I offered
Tlie handsome lover was Bill Ran­ him for five dollars, but seeing he
som. with feminine parts portrayed got first prize at the fair, I think he
by the great artists—John Barnett, Is worth a little more, don’t you?"
Wayne Bump. Steve Johnson, Don­ And he said. "I’d give’ five-fifty.”
The other man spoke up and said..
ald Doxey. and Marshall cook.
"Six dollars." I turned to the thlr"
farmer and said. "Give me six-flftj
‘X
Unless tlie unexpected happens, and I’ll throw in the halter." He U
re­
the junior play "On* .¥"4 Night” plied. "O. K-. you’ve sold something."
which hat bee., iwler postponed will
be presented on Friday evening,
March 13. Tlie scenery is all ready, I Speaking of Luther Bennett the
the publicity committee is hard at famous hunter, trapper, and fisherI man makes me recollect one Satur­
work, and the cast is busy with fur­
ther rehearsals, so everything is day night when I was in John
' Kurtz's butcher shop and Chester
propitious for this play to be a
great success. Action pictures have Musser was at Ute counter buying hls
been taken and will be displayed ' meat for Sunday, dinner and he
soon. Tickets will go on sale begln- handed Kurlz-Ti silver dollar. John
was counting out the change as Luing either March 7 to 10.
tiWr Bennett stepped in the door
with his lantern and dog. Mr. Mes­
The annual recognition assembly ser picked up his meat and said to
of the Hastingr. High school was John Kurtz "give the change to Lu­
iield Friday morning. February 21 ther." I'll never forget what Lute
nt 10:16. At that time tbe Gifts' said. "God bless you. Chet Messer. I
, League cup nnd the Hl-Y cup were '
have always respected you as a man
awarded to, the .senior girl and boy and honored you for your gener­
rhost deserving of them in thc osity.”
opinion of the Judges. Miss Mil­
dred Woodmansee, chairman of thc
One morning when I started to
Izague. presented the cup to Miss work, wife said. "Riley, go through
Ruth McLaughlin, and Homer Ycck- town thia morning and order some
l,&gt; . memto
the cto
IMS groceries."Aa friend oframine
,„, had Just
unde the .weed to ponehl Weaver ,..rUd . Froe„y „„„ „ , lh0UIht
Th.
M
,
Tile ..Uetten
selection «
of tho winners of j ,
these cups is based on character,!: got to the store there was nobody
’ scholarship and service to the there ond I said to the city marshal
Ecliool.
who stood outside. "Where is the

Barry Bypaths

School Netca

Is 17

Kled bodies

I&gt;c&lt;| with a
juried deco

sors

In the. world
opened there
Paul Waner.
t tho Boston

d”
illness.

ys just
a little

get out
nd the

From a field of thirty-six contest­
ants, seven were chocen In the elimi­
nations last Friday morning to par­
ticipate In the final declamation
contest to be held at the High school
Friday morning. February 38. There
were three sophomores nnd four
freshmen in the group: Borgia An­
derson. Vivian
Brooks. Aclisah
Buck. Wayne pinkbelner. Jean Har­
rington. Phyllis Hinman and Laura
Sabin. Honorable
mention
was
awarded the following participants:
Enid Mohler. Artica Cluin. Banford
Rogers. David Townsend. Arietta Ar­
nold. Fraijces Pollard. Jack Sage.
Huron Healy. Pearl Hathaway, and
Haze) Bryant.

.

boss?" and he replied. “I don't know,
but when you find him he will be
wrestling with the crank on that old
Ford relic of hls." So that noon I
went Into the office of the wool boot
factory and stepped to the phone. I
said, "Grant, this Is Riley Waters
talking; send me up a bushel of po­
tatoes, a sack of French’s While
Lily, peck of onions, etc." He said.
"Riley, where do you live?" and I
said. "Same old place, and Grant
said, "Gee whiz! Better order some­
where else. I don't think I can make
tlie grade."

DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Weather and roads permitting the
L. A. 6. will serve a dinner of
corned beef and cabbage al the home
OBITUARY.
of Mr. and Mrs. Claud Hoffman
Elirnbeth E. Jones was born June Thursday. March 5. Tlie local Hill
30. 1860. on a sailing vessel, return­ Billy Band will furnish music.
ing to England from Australia, near
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sponseller of
the SI. Helena Inlands, lhe daugh­ Moscow arc guesu at tlie home of
ter of John and Anne Lewis.
their son Dale and family.
Tlie first five years of her life
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Mark have
were spent In England. Then coming
aolher grandson, who arrived Sun­
to this country with hcr parents,
day morning to make hls home
they settled in Barry county. Sept.' | with Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Kelley In
25, 188IL she was united in marriage
Hastings. Mrs. Kelley was Mar­
lo Harty Jones.
guerite Mack.
They spent their first year of mar­
No plans are being made for the
ried life in South Dakota, then re­
regular meeting of the Wilcox
turned to Michigan and the last 31
Cemetery
Circle which would be
years have lived In their present
thc first Wednesday in March. An
home.
announcement will bt made later.
To this union were bom two
Mr. and Mrs. Orson McIntyre and
daughters; Alice Jensen of Kala­
family visited Sunday al the home
mazoo. and Doris Pcttengill of
of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Mclness In
Hickory Comers; and one foster
Battle Creek.
son. Donald of Delian.
Clif Gatewood, who conducts the
There are three living grandchil­
rodeo with which Royal Donovan
dren; Dale. Jensen and Dorothy and travels In the summer visited hls
Lawrence Jones; and Anita Peftcnlittle daughter. Joan-Peggy at the
glll. who passed away B years ngo.
Donovan home one day last week.
She leaves alsb; one sister. Mrs. H.
Hastings High school students
S Bullock of Akron. Ohio, and two
from this community have had con­
brothers. John R. Lewis of East
siderable difficulty in getting school
Liverpool. Ohio, and Emerson G.
tlw past week. Beatrice Buxton
Lewis. Parchment, and 10 nieces and stayed In Hastings. lAVera Gillasple
10 nephews.
stayed nearer lhe bus line, Ruuell
She was a devoted and faithful
Donovan at Dowling, Brandt Mc­
wife anti mother whose sole inter­ Intyre at Dowling and Hastings.
ests were in her home.
Huron and Doris Healy drove
She is now waiting in Glory for meeting with considerable difficulty
those she has left behind.
at times, and Enid Cheeseman
Faraip Die heights of Glory.
stayed at HMtfngs from Tuesday
Unfollowed by grief or sin.
the rest of the week. That morning
Swift through the pearl white por­ with her father she walked one and
tals
and one-half miles through drifted
Her feet have entered In.
roads against a fifteen below zero
wind, starting from home at 6:30 A.
Into a realm of beauty.
M to meet the school bus.
Where not a note will Jar;
'
Into n dime of sweetneM.
Where not a breath will mlr.
Where sighs are all out of hearing ।
And tears are all out of sight,
And the shadows op earth are for­
gotten.
’■
In ti&gt;e heaven that has no night.

Where love yields Ils long-stored in­
terest.
And bitter its long-hid sweet;
And thev sing unto Him who hath
loved us.
And lay down our crowns at Hls

GOING AS EARLY A8
Lv. Hastings
Returning

m

Late aa

Ar. Hastings

♦ I -50 hound trip

A STRENGTH BUILDER

INS
ichigan

.

.

.

the sleigh party, they all gathered! Mls» Lucy sulllvan of Kalamazoo
at lhe parsonage and enjoyed an;
ho°* folk1' Mr “ld “«■
oyster supper.
i MRMt Hom. over the week end.
Mrs. Esther Dunn and'Mrs. Bea-1 Mr. and Mr» Alva Kenyon of
trice Dunning, group leaders for the I Bellevue spent Friday with their
Delton Home Economics Extension Parents. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Kenyon,
group, will go to Hastings Wednes-1 Roger Wiswell of Kalamazoo called
day to meet with lhe clothing speu“m Thursday, and Mr. and
clalist. Miss Eleanor Cramer of the | Mrr,
Milner of Kalamazoo
Mich.
Bunday there.
Mien, .State
niaie College.
uonege. This
mis lesson
lesson I
Will
taka
nn
'TMltinw
Vntlr
Flr-Ma
One
Of'OUT high
of-our
hlgll school
r ~~ students“
will taxa up "Filling Your Dress,"
and Is one of the important lessons froze her ears so badly while going
of the course of six lessons on cloth­ to thc school bus last Tuesday
ing. Every group member should morning she was unable to go on to
have her wort completed up to this tchool and spent the day and night
lesson and make an extra effort'to( with her grandparents.
The many friends of Mr. and Mrs.
be present at the next meeting
which will be on Tuesday, March 3. Ira Osgood of this plage congratuat the home of Mrs Ed. Lowry, to j late them on their fine baby boy.
Thn&lt;i
imnl Iho
*- —
■*
Thad Pnnlr
cook spent
lhe ----week
end
get tlie lesson from the leaden.
Mrs. Elsie SlerUema of Kalama­ with hls father in Kalamazoo.
John Minzey spent the week end
zoo was a Sunday guest of Mr. and
with Alva Kenyon and family of
Mrs. Gladys Gaskill spmt Satur­ Bellevue.
day Ln Kalamazoo.
•'
HENDERSHOTT.
Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Wertman
Not much news thtse days owing
spent Sunday with the former’s sis­
ter and family. Mr. and Mrs. C. P. to the bad weather.
The
Ladles
’ Aid meeting was given
Larabee. in Hastings.
Mr.
rars ejus
this month. Also
Mr. ana
and Mrs.
Ellis k
E. cauizner
Faulkner UP enUre'y
■M Mr.
Mr« Uon nunnU&gt;&lt; .1- h*£“ «lv' “»
tended the Republican banquet in | *c“°01Hastings Wednesday night.
1. A few PUPIU, nfar the schoolMiss Mary Marie Henton enter- ' ho;isc kot out for school thc last of
tabled a girl friend from Battle1 th*week„
.
Creek over the week end.
; ¥r- and Mrs- Floyd Garrison
‘ Oh. yes! Now folks, don't you i caUf?
h?J?e J!1
WhU”
forget to come to Delton Friday
or Saturday night and see "Here '
Whitworth PresComas Charlie." Mr. and Mrs. Mar­
shall Norwood. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. serious condition. It was thought
Danniels, Mrs. Chas. Harrington. for a while that she was better, but
Miss Marie Hughes. Mrs. George recently seems to have become very
Eddy, Max Reynolds, Joe Tork and much worse.
Mrs. A- H. Brill spent Friday in
Leon Doster will represent the Del­
ton Community Club In presenting Hastings with Mrs. Albert Vedder.
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Matte­
I this three-act comedy tn a manner
son
arc- moving into lhe house on
i to meet your approval.
Mrs. William Smith and little son. the McOmbcr farm.
Margaret Garrison stayed with a
Dale Dean, returned home Sunday
school friend in Hastings last week
from Battle Creek.
George Stokes of Grand Ledge because thc roads were so bad.
We hope to have church and Sun­
was a Sunday guest of Mr. and
day school next Sunday.
Mrs. C. J. Barnum.
.

• • •
| part of tlie county. We are sorry
‘ —
Tbe gent..................................................
who sets type in the Barry county loses out on the elec­
Banner office made us a present tricity. County Agent Foster tolls
us it is impossible to find a tenof two husbands tn last week’s col­
umn. That’s very kind of him, but mlle strctqh but what has a power
line, whereas, lhe government wants
one is a-plenty, and wo hasten to
a 00 to B0 mile length before they
hush up the scandal by announc­
ing we have but one. and hls name begin operations. We didn't know
there was so much luxury here In
is Jerry.
our own oohB(ty. _
We see where a robin made the
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
front page of a daily paper by ar­
Miss Barbara Powers of Yankee
riving in Manistee. This ought to
be a lesson to the other robins that Springs spent several days last week
with
her mother, Mrs. Byron McKlbthe early bird gets the publicity.
bln.
We are glad to report Mrs. Sarah
■Inkdrain
pipe
la to
in u Burghduff is feeling better at this
“
*“*““* &gt;'
,rc “
lu throw
uuuw ui
Jiandful of aalt. When you thaw writing.
frozen potatoes the tcara run out
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hart and
their eyes. Jane knows.
daughter Mary of Brush Ridge were
Sunday callers at the home of her
Wc haVe been hard at work fig­ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Havens,
uring out the cause of these repeat­ They made lhe trip in the olded blizzards. With the aid of "Ten fashioned way. with horses and
sleigh.
tecUve," a magazine article on how
Lester Lord returned to the CCC
the Brain Trust does Its trusting, a camp at Newaygo Sunday after
compass and the kids' magnifying spending lhe week end with hls
glass, we worked out- two theories.
Theory No. 1: Official dispatch and Mrs. Jim Wilcox.
from Washington announces that
Wc are sorry to report Mrs. W. H.
the decision di the Supreme Court Otis Is not so well at this writing.
takes us back to lhe horse and bug­ Mrs. Leslie Weaver of Hastings has
gy days, so the weather man gives been assisting in caring for her.
us some corresponding weather;
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Theory No. 2: One of these dainty Jim Wilcox included, Mr. and Mrs.
little winds we’ve hod lately blew Albert Nash and children of Has­
us over into Minnesota, and this is tings and Hubert McCallum of
Just one of the ordinary winters.
'
Brush Ridge. Callers were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Gorham and children
Frozen potSloes arc sort of sweet of Kalamazoo who were guests of
tasting.
(
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Gorham.
A new and worthy PWA project
BenJ. Jenkins relumed home Sun­
is under way in which high school day after a two week's visit with
graduates may attend night school hls daughter, Mrs. Albert Nash, and
or
take
correspondence courses family of Hastings.
which will give them credits in the
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Erway and
University of Michigan. It is only son. Norman, of Kalamazoo were
for those who are financially unable Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
to continue their college work. In Harry Dunn.
the evening schools, instruction will
Mrs. Fred Barlow of Hastings
be given in radio, mathematics, came Saturday for a few days' visit
public speaking, gardening, sales­ with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. W.
manship, civil service subjects, pi­ H. OUs.
ano. English. English for foreigners
The pupils and teacher of the Otta
and commercial subjects. In the school enjoyed (?) 8 days' vacation
correspondence courses freshmen due to the storms and blocked roads.
English, European history, mathe­ On Friday they had a delayed val­
matics. sociology and mechanical entine party al which cake. Jello and
drawing will be taught? This plan candy were served.
speaks for itself.
Sunday visitors at lhe home of
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Otis were Mr.
We recently told za roomful of and Mrs. Harry Poster of Bellevue.
people that the ice pt Little Amer­ Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harmon and
ica is 500 to 600. fefct deep. After daughter of Hickory comers and
thinking It over, we seem to re­ Eugene Barlow of Hastings.
member we should have said 50 lo
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Newland had
60. and wc do fee) silly. Anyway, as Sunday guests their son, Clayton,
we bet their potatoes froze.
: and two friends from Hastings and
i Russell Laubaugh.
One of the worst smells—the la—
- Lena Laubaugh has been
Mrs.
dies' rest room under the court kept from her school work at the
house. That place is a disgrace McCallum school for over two weeks
to Barry county. The school toi-1 because of lhe storm nnd drifted
lets with their ten to fifteen seats roads.
arc sweet and clean, but the rest I At this writing thc weather has
room toilet with its two scats al- moderated and we are all in hopes
ways smells to high heaven of dlsln- that the worgt is over. According to
feclant and worse. We suggest that the reports of others we were served
some of the city dads and supervls- about the same as Xhey. Oil stoves,
ora vUit lhe place. If they can stand lanterns and other methods were
IL
! used tn an effort upkeep cellars from
• • •
I freezing. Everyone kept ns well ns
Jane has mnde more clothing and , usual and no one that we know of
houshold supplies out of thc nicer I suffered from lack of food or fuel. At!
quality
feed sacks. Pillow cases, one time the milk situation reached
.....
............................................
luncheon seta and napkins, aprons. an acute stage, but it was from lack
Jumper dresses and nighties for lit­ of cans and not milk, due to the
tle girls, pajamas, rompers, sunsuits “milkman's not being able to get
arc only a few of the uses. We gen­ here.
erally trim the edges with colored
Last Monday morning the neigh­
tape and work an embroidery de­ borhood men enlisted Hie aid of a
sign in the color of the tape or snow plow and with shovels turned
liarfnonlzlng shades or applique out about 10 strong to help open
animals the color of the tape for the three and one-half miles of road to
children. Four sacks make good give us an outlet to Hastings. They
stout sheets for lhe boys' ty&gt;d. and worked faithfully through subzero
the young apes can't pull them weather till Thursday afternoon to
apart no matter how fierce their finish the Job. We all felt as tho'
we were out of prison, as we had
been snow bound so long. Our mail­
Wc are working out some charm­ man. Ray Erway. couldn't do the
ing ways to serve frown potatoes. impossible but did remarkably well
Method No. 1: Serve with freshly In getting our mall to us. We think
ground horse-radish, ratio 10 to this is a winter young and old will
1; that is. ten parts horse-radish always remember.

Tho local Women's Foreign Mis­
sionary Society will sponsor the ob­
servance of the "World Day of
Prayer” with a service Friday aft­
ernoon at 2 o'clock in the church.
Everyone Is welcome.
Mrs. LaVera Quick and daugh­
ter. Norma, of Banfield spent Sat­
urday with her sister, Mrs. Frances
Norwood.

Than Your Telephone
The certainty of accuracy, the long experience
of professionally trained pharmacists, is yours to
command. And, in addition to filling your pre­
scriptions correctly in every sense of the word, we
make assurance doubly sure by using whenever pos­
sible Squibb quality chemicals and pharmaceuticals.

SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few feed Prices:—

16% Dairy—$1.55 per 100 lb«.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 lbs.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lbs.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lbs.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company
Hastings Telephone 2257

TRIO CAFE
PHONE 1117

FEBRUARY 24th to 29th

FLOUR
Henkel's Family
Henkel's Pancake
Henkel's Velvet
Iona
".,k$l.4S
Sunnyfield
$1.57
Splendid
Gold Medal or Pillsbury
Splendid Pancake
Famo Pancake
Cheese
Prunes
Keyko

' c~“ •' ,ri,k
’«•«“

8 o'Clock Coffee
Peanut Butter
Rajah Salaji Dressing

t? Wc

m*7»«
\?.k6»c
’^SLOB
L'«h- 17c
£ De
ik
19c
4
19c
2 “ 13c
4-Ib. __
15c
0
l/c
15c
al
lot
13c­

2
Brooms
c,~‘
Green Tea
Ajax Soap
Post Toasties ., cr±‘F’AWaldorf Tissue
Brtsd
Groadmotbor’a
Beechnut Coffee
Maxwell House Coffee
Salmon
r«k
Peaches
Corn Meal
Crackers
Kitchen Klenxer
Soap Chips
Mustard
Bulk Lard

* 17c
25«
each

f

ib.

10
37b
2 SE 19c
15c

4 —
lb. toaf

AJ

14f
lit
Mb.

2

11c
S-lk
box

2

HC

q— toe
25c

FEEDS

GOOD COAL makes warm friends
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleased with the fine,
even heat. Low in ash, and longburning. Try a ton today and
save ort your fuel bills.

No Farther Away

FOUNDERS'
FOOD VAL

CLOVERDALE.

The Cloverdale L. A. 8. will meet
with Mrs. Chas. Monica Thursday.
Feb. 27. Pot luck dinner, everyone
welcome.
Miss Winona Brooks of Kalama­
zoo spent the week end at her home
here.
Miss Priscilla Brooks and Stephen
Karmes of Hastings surprised their
1 many friends by getting married
confined to hls bed with bronchitis. Friday at the Episcopal church at
Wc hope he will -make a speedy re-|, Hastings. A wedding dinner was/
covery.
»served at the Trio Cafe. They weht
Roy Adrlanson and son. Tommy, to Indianapolis on a short trip.
of Battle Creek visited hls home When they return they will make
folks Saturday afternoon.
their home in Hastings. Congrat­
The Delton L. A. 8. will hold an ulations from all Cloverdale friends.
all day meeting on Wednesday.■
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens spent'
March 4. at the home of Mr. and; Friday al the home of Mr. and Mrs.'
Mrs. Marshall Norwood. Dinner Wagner of Kalamazoo.
will be served at noon. Mrs. C. J.■
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pennels of
Barnum and Mrs. Ed. Lowry have‘ Kalamazoo spent Sunday
with
the program in charge.
Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson.
Mrs. Ella Rogers and Miss Marte1
MT- and Mrs. Chas. Monica and
Neuschaefcr went to Hastings Sat­' Mr. and Mrs. Lester Monica spent
urday to attend the conference held1 [Friday at the Wellington Monica
with Dr. Simon of Northwestern1 home at Bedford.
University.
Mt a. Margaret Koplow and Mrs. •
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Margaret Farwell were In Kalama­
We are glad to welcome Mr. and
zoo Saturday.
Mrs. Arthur Yarger and family
Rev. Bates announces for hls ser­ of North Carlton to our community.
mon subject next Sunday morning
Mrs. Frank Shriber and daugh­
at 10 o'clock at Prairieville and 11 ter, Hazel, and Mr. and Mrs. Izo
o'clock at Delton. "At Home in the Barry called on Mrs. Faye Donley
Universe," and the children's ser­
mon subject. "The Boy Who Arose." tings on Wednesday afternoon. Mrs.
The Prairieville children wifi also Donley is a little better.
be given a sleigh ride party Satur­
Mr. and Mrs. carl Jackson of near
day afternoon, providing lhe weath­ Clarksville and Mr. and Mrs. Cleon
er and roads are favorable. They Landon of North Carlton called on
will meet at the Smith store at Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Yarger and
family Sunday afternoon.
Rev. Bates has been furnished
Hubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo
tickets to distribute to those who spent the week end with Mr. and
wish to go to Kalamazoo on Tues- Mrs. LaFayette Usborne.

Dealers In Woo], Grain, Feed, Hour, Salt, Lime,

HASTINGS

“LWfcjwimi IUL

27.

We see that Montcalm
their county
rural .Iwill
k- 1

You may depend upon ui for complete drug
ttore service—and our store is no farther away
than your telephone.

"Modicr «»'c rr.r Dr.
Pierers Golden Medics!

»cty Inin. Afire uking
? Jr.:

The
r^ ^ught^

VISIT YOUR FRIENDS
IN
*

PLEASANT RIDGE.

r that

Are we mad? Tlie radio announc- j lookln8we

GO BY BUS!

GRAND RAPIDS
Mrs. Lavem Kinne is in Jackson
visiting her mother.
No school Monday and Tuesday
as'the teacher. Mrs. Flossie Allerding's, father passed away.
Margaret Kelsey who (has been
In Hastings for some time is home
for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Ceci) Rank of Bat­
. tie Creek spent Saturday at Lester
. Kinne’s.

By JANE CAMERON

TEBRUaRY

Ito one potato. Method No. 2:
DELTON.
Iday. March 3. to hear the lecture
(A dalightful way, too.) Cover fttoThe senior young people of Del- (Toyohlko Kagan, the Japanese
I en washed potatoes with S*1m ton were entertained Friday night I Christian Socialist ond "Gandhi of
by
Rev.
Ralph
Bates,
who
gave
■ Japan-” "
_ j potatoes. Method No. 3: (The kids
them a long sleigh ride, with bobs
. *1111 —*—~
| worked thia one out.) Sneak the hitched
behind a truck. Following
SOUTH SHULTZ.
potatoes to the dog when Ma isn't

Gement and Goal

Scratch Feed
Egg Mash
Growing Mash
Chick Feed
Chick Starter
Oyster Shells
16% Dairy Feed
20% Dairy Feed
Block Salt

Steaks
Perch Fillets
Salt Pork
Beef Roast
Pork Roast
Hockless Picnics
Bacon Squares
Pollock Fillets
Frankfurts or Bologna
Pork Sausage
Ground Beef
Boiling Beef

1% SALES TAX

WMAQ.

■oo ^$1.89
■«^$I.B9
&gt;00
$1.70
.00 IU.

71,

'“•'“$1.11
,MIU-$f.3B
31c

t
' t **■

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY tl. IMS

GULLS ANO DUCKS
DEVOUR GRAYLING

] ANGLEWORM FARM
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A NOVEL VENTUBE
y. m. c. a. items

new*p* per people and had no other

Single Human Hair Is Important Clew
to This Laboratory Sleuth

paper srUcie about hls most unusual
undertaking, lie eventually conclud­
ed that we had no ulterior motive
and relented. Escorting us to the
angleworm gent in hls back yard, GPLITTINO hairs Is no mere
he turned over a few spades full of
bromide to Frahk Gompert of
(Continued from p«s« one)
rarth and brought great masses of
Michigan's plans for the propaga­
Herman Newland won the Hl-Y
will be said later. Here lh Al*ihhL
tion and planting of Montana gray­ prise for selling the most pencils more
living.
]
we looked up Mr. R. B.
• “A***.?*0*
ling from the Wolf Lake hatchery for the Club. Don Weaver won the hambra
±7i"~C_
Chief of the ahcrilFa crimino­
near Kalamazoo this year are all off. HI-Y scholarship, given to any boy j
n-hi “u
and whom,
whom it
it . _____ _ _hc &lt;»Uid
____
raltcI a million logical laboratory there, Gompert
A flock of morgansera ducks and . 7"
. ...
. _.
-------- z — Angleworm Farm, ana
it
... _____
IB.
gulls recently visited the pond con- I".?**1
hW&gt;
h°“ rec®r(U
I
--------. would seem, must be credited with worms. From thi« you can estimate
lhe
capacity
of
hls
5-acre
farm.
A
talntng the grayling and devoured i
'
,
.
,
starting up a new Industry In thia
woodtand.
HMM1*. C~U Grave __
oW__„'8
A ...
Mr BUlloay’ iivra in man down In Texas a short time
A Wtop of hair, found al lhe
every fish.
u "...
before
had
purchased
the
right
to
The Incident Is almost without1 *nd
aUrBCt
ive nicely
furnished
and Middleville,
Middlvvlllv. besides several
aarar.1 a
. vcn
„rv. ,
tlracu&gt;i
nlralv lurnlUml
precedent in
hatchery recoras.
records. a
A country rplaces, were vUlted last bungalow,
buntaloK. wun
wllh a
a i^ge
yard surwr.
portant clew to Gompert, with
■preceaent
m natenery
large yara
___ ,against
___ .__ .predators
___ _________________
KC C.
r- AA wnrlr
,
..
. ■
guard
at hatcher- u-M.te
*^kin inVY Mwork In
in Rarrv
Barry , roundln
g .............
it. Indicating
al least that
n\
hta powerful microscope. To'him.
Ites and rearing stations is always I
county.
the squirming worms had teen very
hairs are like Sngerprlnts. They
maintained and few losses occur. but;Kent countyIs planning
anOlder ' kind to him. al least In a financial, *°J™.**.n"'"*&lt;
the massed attack of merganser I Boy* conference at Lowell March, way
.
time* a story criminal* cannot
duck* and gulb at Wolf Jake wllh ! 26-27-25 ‘
| But do not get thc idea for a min- JXd
H^XT^XltauS
aontradlct.
such serious consequences, has never
The postponed meeting of Wei-1
lhal because Mr. Bilhosky lias
in owTwMX wm ronSclanllOc “hair aplittars” bava
^meYOr0U^wm‘^Ld.Ul‘kWeek made, splendid success a* an Angle- “
tn^kiL in uJarX ■olvad many sensational cases, ac­
bythe birds contained several hun- Thursday at E J. Crooks. Duane worni Farmcr.
can start in
business oTa targe seite
cording to Gompert. He dies one
dred grayling of from 10 to 14 Inches Pugh is leader.
■ and duplicate his efforts. There's
.
Jl“
*
„
Instance. A young woman was
As may
may be
be imagined.
imagined. Mr.
Mr. BilBil- found murdered recently in tbe
in length, every one of which was
Sunday school teachers and ofll-1 Mmethlng more to the business
killed by the birds. In addition 35 ! err. are urged to meet with lhe
,nuw..?“rc .J? .“ hosky is an enthusiastic fisherman.
’ than
putting the worms in the
, albino brook trout and a sizeable Barry County Minbterial Assocta- ground and depending upon their I asked him fiow ho happened- to
number of normal brook trout were ’ tlon Tuesday. March 3. Pot luck din- rapid Increase. Before Mr Bilhosky start in this most unusual enter­ plcion finally restad on an old
killed. The grayling arc irreplac-1 ner, bring own table service. Par­ thrust a new Industry, on Angle­ prise. As near as I can make out. woman who lived nearby, alone.
able.
The loss delays grayling bh house. Hasting*, a helpful pro­ worm Farm, in lhe great com­ a terrible anger can be given aa the Officera found a largo wooden­
planting for at least two years.
' gram has been arranged.
mercial arena, he spent a long time reason for it. Before going on one handled butcher knife in her
Thc Department of Conservation : -The Bible is printed in 175 dif- In developing a special way of feed­ of his numerous fishing-' tripe, he borne.
had devoted a lol ot lime to gather­
still has a quantity of fingerling ferent languages."
Ing them, so that he could guarantee
ing a large pall full of nice angle­
Montana grayling at tlie Wolf Lake
that they would live. As a result
caught between tho blade and tho
hatchery and will keep this supply
MARTIN CORNERS.
of hls secret way of feeding them, worms. But upon arriving at hla handle,” Gompert wont on. "The
for later use in propagation efforts.
favorite stream In the high Sierras,
The Marlin P. T. A. will meet he ships cans of angleworms all
when he'was ready to bait hls hook suepect said she had been killing
Friday evening. March 6. There over the world—even to Australia.
HINDS CORNERS.
he found that every worm was dead. rabbits. A laboratory tost, hawwill be a program and refreshments. He puls a certain number of worms
Frank Gompert. Iaj* Angeles scientific criminologlit, la pictured
Well, we didn't get any January Please bring cup and apobn and do in a can. about the size of an or­ Probably lots of fishermen have had
that soul-breaking experience, and neither human nor rabbit speci­
above at work In hie laboratory.
thaw, but we are very grateful for not forget the date.
dinary baking powder can. puts in
let It go al that. But not so with mens; Instead, they were fox
one in February. We think most
William Cogswell and children of some soil, and food enough to last
the third, or center section, Is the
Hair will not reveal a person*!
this
proprietor
of
the
Angleworm
everyone has seen enough winter Lakeview. ^
o,u vuipwrn
Lloyd
Cogswell ui
of r-ui
East them for three months. He guaran­
medulla.
“The victim. Incidentally, had
and snow for this year and will; Lansing, and Marjorie Cogswell of tees that the worms will live for al Farm. He was determined to know
Tho cuticle scales are meas­
proximate age.
The medullary
welcome spring.
. Hastings were Sunday callera at least 90 days, and "makes good" if WHY those worms all died In tlie been wearing a fox fur collar at
ured. aa in tha width ot the hair.
very prime of youth 'so to speak, and tho time ot hcr death. Con-,
canal, through which food is con­
.Mr. Hanna of Baltimore spent Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher's. .
' they do not. There are many mer­
The cortex tells tho strength ot
veyed to each hair. Is narrow'io
Bunday with Ronald Haynes and I Mr. and Mra. James Tyler of cantile establishments where you vowed that never would such a fronted with thia evidence, the
thing happen to him again. He woman confessed tho crime.” • •
hair pigments. Tho medulla Im­
a young person, aud grows wider
family.
.
Woodland and Miss Alice Whet- can go in and buy a can of his
parts tbo probable ngo of the per­
with age. Gompert points out.
Sunday guests at lhe home of! stone were Sunday visitors al Al- ' guaranteed angleworms Just os you proposed to learn why untimely
death should come to his pel bait
OMPARING hairs Is Gompert'*
son. and hls condition of health.
Animals easily ere Identltlcd by
Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Tobias were i fred Fisher’s.
'
। would a can of fruit, or baking
and
how
to
prevent
It
and
he
did.
All
thia
information
la
worked
chief
taslC~'Ho
explains
the
tho hair, Gomtfcrt says. Each has
their son. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd To- i Word• received- from --■
Mrs. Alonzo
• powder. He will give you quite an.
He
rounded
up
another
collection
into
a
formula
which.
It
It
com­
Individual characteristics.
delicate operation. Tho hair. It
Hilton of
Saugusj
Mass., informs assortment to make you* selections
bias and daughter of Kalamazoo --------—----------------------of
angleworms
and
began
to
experi
­
pares favorably with flguraa ob­
“In dbg hair, the medullary
seems. Is Imbedded In ■ paraffin
and their granddaughter. Mr. and
they had been Spared all thebig from too. There'll be the small,
”
ra. Harold
iura'.d Comp of Hastings.
tained similarly from tho strand
canal cells are round In a singly'
Mrs.
' ’terms until Feb.
rzb. 14.
it. thc
tfi; daDrofher
JiJTSTEc. ordinary looking worm, or a spe­ ment. Neighbors saw a lantern block, which la then fed Into a
ot hair to bo compared, reveals
row. In rabbit hair, there n/e
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Whitmore lettrt. They were having a blizzard cial "blood—red" angleworm that burning In the Bilhosky back yard cutting machine.
Tho hair
two tn eight rows of cells, ^ch
that the hairs are almost surely
from near Delton spent Sunday ; then. Their old friends will be glad he has developed, or the great big every night for week in and week emerges In 40 almost Invisible
from the same head.
resembling an ear of corn,- And
with her sister. Mr. nnd Mrs. Allen to hear tiiey are all well and active. "nighl-crkwicrs" such as we know out. and wondered what was going strands, each about 4/1000tba of
Bishop and sons.
| Mr. Hilton has been appointed a around here. And that Isn't alt If on. Hundreds and hundreds of an inch thick. Under a powerful
In cal hair, the cells are plate
Miss Thelma Tobias Js spending church steward and member of the the water Is muddy where you want types of soil were tried and discard­ microscope, ono or more ot these
ACCORDING to Gompcrt, there
shaped.”
ed.
as
well
as
hundreds
and
hun
­
some lime with her brother and I Boy Scout committee. Ordway Hll- to fish, as so many of those westTho revelations of Gompert. 4P
are 21.870 kind* of hunmn
dreds
of
different
kinds
of
foods.
famlly. Mr. and Mrs. Keel Tobias, j ton is Scoutmaster. Miss Hazel Hll- em streams are. he has developed a
linlr. And there are eountles,
"A hair is divided into three
Mlss Susie Phillips is caring for ton is a teacher In the Sunday "white angleworm" that fish can At last ofter a couple of years of 1 sections.” expl a! na Gompert,'
fort uno and onetime dcterilve,
different colors, from lightest yel­
the sick at Warren Laubaugh 'a In ; school, and holds office in the East­ sec much better in water that is not experiment he .succeeded, nnd since “each unlike its neighbor.” Ono.
will
startle those who ihbught n
low
to
darkest
brown.
Rut
no
Rutland.
cm Star, and Mrs. Hilton is presl- clear. You pay your money and then has doubtless been mentioned
hair told but ana alary; that of
person can claim having black
many times In (he thankful prayers
Mrs. Bftrrell Phillips is on the ‘ dent of thc Women's Home Mts- take your choice.
approaching baldnera
hair, he contends.
wives and children, who have had cuticle; another the cortex; and
sick list.
slonnry Society, so all are busy.
|I Sportsmen In many places have of
w r&gt;miMC M
to endure a disappointed fisherman
(ound that they can .-.end lo this for
on end probably no man
very rapidly, laying around SOO eggo price. Many grown-ups today can!
QUIMBY.
Angleworm Fann and get Juul what m the country B better [xwted on
| they want In lhe way of angleworm angleworm*, if as well, as he. and If each year, which hatch out In three recall those days of youth, when il
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Hcolt nnd
was confidently said, and as thor­ family of Battle Creek visited aL
bait, in case their own hometown WM interesting to listen to him tell to four weeks time. Wc were shown
oughly believed, that the one siure
। stores do not keep them on tnelr , about them. For instance they go; hundreds and hundreds of ......
these and only way lo become a contor­ Geor;c Scott'j Sunday.
Tho class parly which was post­
• shelves. The result b that his busi- down to a dcpth of
or eight | eggs in the shoveta-full of earth that
tionist was through liberal appli­ poned last Saturday night will bo
SS!? h
a rapid Rrowt-h- feet In their wanderings under-1 Mr nilhoskv turned o-cr
Their
cations of angleworm oil. Another held next Saturday, February 29.
.Today he ha* a 5-acre tract that is ground, though mo»l often found
’ ,
,
.
’ '
,
1 devoted to the culture of angle- n. ft depth of from 12 to 18 inches. I i"uscular development* are the only big use for angleworms is as a poul­ at Hw home of Velma Kelloggworms in addition to this a con- Tllc.y ^e unable lo see or hear, yet I defensive mcctuuiLun.- that anglc- try f:»od. Many Doultry growers, nt
Many will be sorry lo know that
least in the well supplement their Minnie Bldciman has been quite ill.
. sidcrabie port of his large back the? nre very sensitive to vibration. I worms have, stiff brBtlcs on the surfeeding systems with angleworms
Sunday school and preaching will
yard l&gt; abo devoted to the btulnew
and odors. PounJing on lhe facc Of the skin giving them a good
Thousands and thousand, of cans groUnd. or thc rumble of thunder!
«ne sxm giving mem a gooo and send to the Angleworm Fann 1 Im- held at thc regular lime Sunday.
for
big
supplies
of
worms
to
propa
­
are shipped out every year, every wll| ,tlr thctr curiosity and bring grip on tunnol walls, when enemies gate beds of their own. Helping oth­ Because of road conditions nnd
lone guaranteed for M days nnd os thrrn to {he
tn the day time, attempt to puli them out. Thal'o er. get started in the btidm-ss. fur ■ weather, there has been no meeting
staled above, many of them go to even though they shun light. While why birds hove to lug and .’.train which he reecfvua n generous sized for ionic time.
Mr. and Mrs. Dirk Hoffman en­
I foreign countries.
tunneling underground thc dirt is to get them cut of thc ground. They check for divulging hh secret
Naturally the proprietor wanta to swallowed and this is deposited on are fed only oner a week, excepting methods, also errau-s a demand for tertained the following guests on
guard his secret of feeding as well.; the surface at night in the form of during the winter when they hlberhibcr- a lot of hii product. Between aup- Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hoff­
man of Dowling. Mr. and Mrs. Har­
—. —
— —
— ucan.
■ r|ch vegetable mold. It_ is esti- nate in burrows al the end* of their
and
as •long,
as u*
he -----possibly
. plying bait for fishermen, the re­ din Hoffman. Hollta and Ruth. of
When we called al his home and mated that every year one-fiflle’h , tunnels.
fining of angleworm oil. supplying
expressed a desire to sec some of of an inch of this, rich vegetable | But growing angleworms lor fish­ poultry growers and helping start Baltic Creek. Dewitt Cutler nnd
his growing worm:., naturally he was mold is added to the surface of the rrmen» purnosc.s b onlv part of‘the up new I arms, at so much per. .Mr Peter Hoffman and friend of Kala­
somewhat averse to complying with earth by angleworms, so in the business. There Is quite a demand Billunky has evidently developed- mazoo.
our request. But when informed economy of nature they are impor- tor angleworm oil. ana it is refinea qulte a proHtab'.e business In this ।
COATS GROVE.
Z
that we were just meek and lowly tent factors’too. Tiiey propagate I and bottled and commands a good most unusual product. But It only
and
Mrs. E. G.sAith
spent
shows what can be done by one ,,Mr.
------ .
---------------------------»~
—
who gives study nnd thought to,
*vcl‘cfi'l at Nlnjara Falls.
No
and Twxl.j
Tuesday
wh»'. h.. Is BoUit Into, rouloly U
&gt;•“ r.cbool Monday "■&gt;'&gt;
Mr BUhoatrt
b.an'l «*•
&lt;?„“&gt;’ ’"*•!&gt; »■
all
on Him" olm br wu out, teacher. Mrs. Allerdlngfather. Mr.
—
for one of Ms frequent Selling trips. Nnrcutt.
Oeo. Cunts went lo the hospital
there neVt-r. would have been any '
last
Thursday
nnd
was
operated
on
"Angleworm Farm." But he hap­
pened to be just tht kind of a num lor appendicitis on Friday. He is
who w»s determined to know lhe getting along nicely.
A birthday party was given for
"reason why" and he capitalized on
Hoving decided to quit forming. I will sell at auction thc following list of cat­
thc results of his extended experi­ Doris Coats Tuesday -after school'
tle. machinery, etc. The sale will be held at the farm known as “The Dilbahncr
thc home of Kendall Coats.
ment and study.
Fajm,” 1 1-2 miles south of Nashville, and 3 miles west and 1-4 mile north; or
There were 12 present and il was
Photograph courtesy of Thc Detroit Neut
2 miles north of Maple Grove Center and I mile west and 1-4 mile north.
ner i well th birthday. Mrs. Floosie
Allerdlng
and lhe girls enjoyed -a
BRANCH DISTRICT.
Jeu
Mra. Wayne Conklin vUlted her good time and were served
parents. Mr. nnd Mrs. John Darby ercam and cake.
Thc
P.
T. A. will be held this
a part of last week. Mr. Conklin
came for her Sunday and tiiey re­ week Friday-evening with pot luck
lumed lo their home in Hastings. supper and program in charge of
SALE TO START AT 1 ;00 P. M. SHARP. I OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:
Mrs. Floyd Kimble.
They are moving to Allegan soon.
Mrs. Waite.- Thompsoq Is sick at
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Norton,
entertained their children Sunday thc home of her mother in Hastings.
HORSES.
HARNESSES.
tn honor of their thirty-fifth wedTOWN LINE.
Dr. Sherwood Eddy, who spoke in!
Several Hundred Killed—
Loss Delays Important
Kalamazoo Monday evening, wax for |
25
yean Y. M- C. A. secretary mso- ■
Project
elated with Dr. John R. Molt.
|

light trim
accents these smart

DARK-TONE

DRESSES

’6-90
• , . and the accent is
on ttvla when such dis­
tinctive black or navy
frocks highlight their
smartness with refresh­
ing white or pink I In
tires 12-44! See them!

C

AUCTION SALE

THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1936

BII I CAN TELEPHONE

You hear il all over Michigan . . . as

winter storms put a atop to many every­

Light bay marc, 5 yrs. old, wt. 1500.
Black more, 8 yrs. old. wt. 1500.
Gray mare. 13 yrs. old, wt. 1450.
Croy marc, 18 yrs. old, wt. 1550.

day activities or make them extremely
difficult.

COWS.

•

In numerous communities the physician
cannot reach tho bedside of his patient.

But he can prescribe and diagnose by tele­
phone.

Holstein cow, 3 yrs. old. due Sept. 1.
Brown Swiss cow, 5 yrs., due in Morch.
Holstein ond Guernsey cow, 7 yrs. old,
due In March.
Guernsey heifer, 2 yrs., due in March.

■»

SHEEP.

A salesman is cut off from his customer

by snow-dogged roads or uncertain rail

1£ Shropshire breeding ewes, due in
Morch. mostly young.

transportation. But ho can trauuct busi­
ness over llic.lclcplione.

Ddivtyy of thc weekly letter to the

~2

young Duroc Jersey brood sows, due
April 15.
-

folk* back home may be delayed by win-

CHICKENS AND DOG.

ler’s grip. But telephone wires c«rry the

18 While Rock and While Leghorn
hens.
Good Collie stock dog. 1 year old.

sound of loved voices instantaneously to
Thit cUppHtf from the St. Janph Herald-

HOGS.

anxious ears.
CRAIN AND HAY.

It tt toUphoot.

Thc telephone is so niudi a part of

our day lo day activity that we accept it
a* commonplace. But in lime of wide­

spread emergency, we sec liow fur its

275 bushels cots. 500 bushels corn.
3 bushels Early Rochester seed corn.
8 tons mixed hay. 3 loads bean pods.
600 bundles of corn fodder.

2 sets of double harness.

4 collars.

TOOLS.
McCormick binder? 7-ft., nearly new.

Dunham cultipackcr.
International hay loader.
Osborne side delivery rake.
Osborne mower. Hay tedder.
Clovcrseed buncher. 3 hoy slings.
Two-horse walking cultivator.
Two-horse Oliver riding cultivator.
One-horse cultivator.
Oliver riding plow.
Calc walking plow.

Thrcc-sec. International spring drag.
Two-sec. Syracuse spring drag.
Thomas grain drill, Hoosier corn planter.
BlrcUell wagon. Low iron wheel wagon.
New idea spreader. Fanning mill,
torn tbeOcr. Grindstone. Chum.
Lard press. 3 milk can*. 40 grain bag’.
And other article* too numerous to mention.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
Round Oak heating stove, No. 20.
Singer sewing machine and other furniture.

value lo all the people outweighs it* cost.

TERMS :-C ASH. No goods to be removed until settled for.

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE CO

DEWEY JONES, Propr.
HINRY FLANNERY, Aucrimor.

ERNEST CRAY, Chrl.

Mr. nnd -Mrs. Herman Winkler
h.d w &gt;.»,
s th? road ’from ^Barei-vSb '‘urprb"
f,'r lhelr C0UJ,u’- Do“-

um£’,

day.
.
Mln Flofy. teacher of the Branch ,
Mr. nnd Mrs. Waller Tasker vis­
school, has been slaying at thc ited 1U
tit Ralph /Jordan's In Lake
H.nry Adelman home the past
week owing to road conditions.
'
Mrs. Dell Rlchardwi
has been

very ill and under the doctor’s care
STATE ROAD.
thc past week. Her daughter. Doris,
This Monday morning we have of Oranq Ledge came home to earn
aa mtlch vrater.as wc have had snow. for her.
Our P. T. A. was postponed last
Wedding bells have rung for Gall
week until further nolle:.-, owing to feedorc a nd'Miss Alberta Na. ue of
weather and road conditions.
Nashville, .who were quietly married
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Cunningham at lhe Evangelical parsonage Feb­
were In Grand Rapids lost wc-’k. ruary 18. Congratulations.
The doctor look the cast off the arm
Mlaa Pliyllia Tasker was taken to
of their Utile son Who nil In the Lake Odessa hospital a week ogo
early fall and broke hls arm at thc where she is receiving treatment
elbow*.-He is recovering nicely. ,
for a nervous condition. Her par­
Mrs. Madonna Kennedy of Grand „.ia, mr
. nna Mra.
„„ IV)V Tasker
Rapids visited her parents and ents.
wc£ wMr.
7lh and
ahcr Frtdav Boy
oxxd fiam.
daughter, Mr. and Mra. William day afternoon
We* wish her a
Smith and Barbara Jean Sunday. | epJed" recovery.

■MMMMMMWWMMMai

NOW is the TIME
To Repair Your Roof
DO IT BEFORE THE
MARCH RAINS COME
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

�THE nASTJNOS BANNER, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, ing

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

FROM OKANGB BLOSSOMS
.
TO NORTHERN HNgS.

Several tron mines ta MkMgaAk
upper peninsula are more than a ■Cause I was living clear down south
mile in .depth vertically. They are
Where lhe sun shone all the while.
among the deepest mines in the

cl acto, emk wl home ta LAlnsrtWg.
YANKEE SPRINGS
.
1 ■SEMMMMMMMMI
MT. and Mrs Wm Schenks! Wire 1
SCHOOL NOTES1
Mr. .and Mra. William Horton at Bunday gueeto of Mr. and Mr* i Teacher-Mrs. Opal Houghton.
| The sun U shtatag a UuJe end we ■■■■■■■■■■&lt;■■■■■«*■
Augusto. Mr. and Mrs. Jamas Nev­ Maurtee Crookston at Hasttags

COURT

ins and daughter*. Ruthcva and
Shirley, and Ml** Jean Rogers of
Pina lake ware dinner guests Sun­
day of Charles Hughe*.
The Ladies’ Aid will meet with
Mrs. Earl Johncock Wedneaday
All day meeting. Come and meet
your Sunshine friends.
Edward BUaock, wed « year*, a
months and JO days, former road

Double

NFW^
KWU31L rt&amp;WS

Fred Manker, aged M. passed ’ are gradually emerging from the
MARRIAGE LICENSEaway recently after a short Ulnesa., *now bank*, so we think lhe Banner Thomae W. Crawley. Hastings .... K
Burial to Irving cemetery Tuesday,. reader* should hear from u* and Jesxlc Maud Deedrick, Hasttap . .#•
Ftb, 36.
•
know that we are alive.
jEmerson j. ruamIL otay
........ M
E. D. Johnson te recovering from
The school work ta taoving along । Elizabeth A. Willard, Ionia ....
his long illness and wishes to thank ’ smoothly In spile of the fact that i
,

ail who have helped to make this . snow blocked roads have kept some

PROKATE COURT,

confinement more pleasant with, of the children from attending reg- | Est. Millie Haynes, will filed, pecards and flowers.
। utarly. Those who could not at- Utlon for probate filed, order for
--------...
------- - a party
- -for tend Khool have been studying al publication entered.
The village
ladle* -had
seem w
to «»»vts
hare •a uiiu
firm ucde- ■ ~— «-•Cora E. Sinclair. PeUllon for
Mrs. BemlM Naeei Feb, 30. at tlie home end ovtin
home of Mra Wm. Bchenkel, the
to “keep up” with tbetr Adrnr nied^
cla**e*.
| Eet Franc
Than I would *lt me down outaldo directors of tho Prairieville Tele­ bccaakm being bar birthday.
The children have adopted a naw Admr. filed, petition for special
And breathe lhe balmy air,
phone Company, died at hls home
work ourselves Admr
While they were bundled up In wool Friday night at ten o’clock. Ho her nlaoe. Rlveraide Farm to Mr motto, via: "We
w« may wor*
outmivcs
Z.7:
«!. AN- I
'«
By their fires, clear up there.
had been ill oqly a few day*. Mr.
' entered.
And when It grew too cold for them, Silcock wae bom on thc farm where
I Est Alexander Cortrighl. Notice
&gt; . spirit is bound to win.
be died. He had been a member of
(At least the ones who could.)
: toxredllor* Issued.
Because the weather is considered1 Packed up their grips and came the I. O. O. F. lodge here for some district.
’ Tbe hot lunch project is proving 1
Mr. and Mra. Alex Mayville
an "Act of God ' oil drilling contrac­
. are
- !.
u , ,
...
• Esl Christine Cole. Waiver of
down here
forty years. Gurvivtog are the wife. spending the winter with .a nr^"
a great help in thLs
this cold weather,
weather. notice filed, discharge
nephew’ 1 •
----------------------of* executor
tors will not be penalized for failure1
Where thc sunshine feels so good. Amy. three daughters. Mra. Halen j
Wc m1ao enJoy the'mllk and crackers issued estate
_
and niece at Plainwell, Mr
i:.. May__ ,
lo continue work this winter.
enrolled.
Then letter* came. "We're having Retd. Augusta. Mrs. Hazel McKib- | ville recently celebrated hls IMth ot
j
of
;at in-ta
10.IS each a.v
day. w.
We are making
snow,
bln. Prairieville, Mra. Eva Shulte of i
birthday. He was not very
well a health suggestion notebook as a spacial Admr. filed, letters of spe­
Tlw Circuit court at Weil Branchr
Bhultx, one son, Frank, thirteen
The most for many a year.
part of our hygiene work. The cial Admr. issued.
they left here.
,
having declared that the atata hadI I wish that we were there with you, grandchildren and four brothers. A. when
luiph c— u rtum,
(Wb,, SS'S'TSjy
Est- Fanny R. Sheffield. Proof of
J. ot Tuleta. Texas, Ben ot Mon- , R*&gt;Ph Cave
no right to withhold mineral rightoi
Not snow-bound way up here.”
i| will filed, order admitting
•»»&gt;»“&gt;« will
«» en•when it sells Mate land, no further J chuckled, when they read me that, tana. Robert of South Dakota and ,n, Muskegon,
. ...
*x_i«
—- —
.
.
Mr
. tertd.
Mr. anA
and Mr
Mra. Fred Bchlffman of
sale of such property will be made,
J. W. of Delton. Funeral service*
To stay there in the storm.
U
?
e
.
■P
len&lt;u
‘
1
°i
refereji
jonn W.
vv. Wolfe.
woixe. Petition
reuuon to
to Chicago fire fighter* hed lo atop pnrnplag water to remove lee from
Est.. John
except plotted lots, until the state When they could Just so well be wero held al the Prairieville M. E. Battle Creek spent Sunday with
tbclr equipment while they battled c recant special alarm fira in
'
?°°£
purchased
for
our
hearing
on
contingent
claim
church Tuesday at one o’clock. Rev. the home folks here.
below scro temperature*. The blase destroyed the Second Evangeli­
hero
school. We make use of them every 1 nied. cltottoru Issued.
Lion.
Ralph Bates officiating. Burial will
1 Where it was always warm.'
cal church ta tho Windy City.
day and enjoy the Independence 1 £., »Ohn H. Mater. Release of
MTI.O.
’ they give u* in searching out helps' Gdn
bo in our cemetery. His loved ones
And then I had a big surprise,
discharge of odn. filed.
There promises to be considerable
have
the
sincere
sympathy
of
tho
Mr.
and
Mrs.
H.
J.
Flower
quietly
I went to bed one night, and
aMrs’ »H“U8hV)O v : E*1- toaurtcc E. Ford. Release of
activity In upper peninsula oil­ When J waked myself next morning, community.
observed lhelj Mth wedding anni­ glad too. we do not have to ask, Qdn. nied
drilling in tlie near future. The
Mr. and Mra. Robert Spanable versary U) their home Bunday. Feb.
The ground with froet was white.
m- ’St?,m3NoL W* i
Myrtlcc D Lewis. Order conTrenton rock formation yielding oil
of Battle Creek visited Mr. and Mra.
the xxew piano , nrn)lng »*&gt; of real estate entered.
in southeastern Michigan is com­ I wondered If I was awake.
Hubert
Pettcnglll
made two trips
---- -- -----w--- —
' luviuouu
Carl Krick Friday and Saturday.
। promisedIMus sowt we can have mtulc | annual account filed,
I shivered as I dressed;
paratively near the surface there.
to Marcellus Saturday to bring back *nd
learn
tomsing
Chester Johncock of Blwlbyvtllc was1 livestock
anrf
uam
John F. Goodyear. Petition
Wheni
was
my
warm
and
sunny
foe'F.
Gilbert.
"
Farmer* in lhe eastern half of the'
I Prteay « hed a .piendid sur­
a gUest also.
south.
upper peninsula drilling for water
J&gt;lcUr8n's V
—iFCMt.
afid
prtae. m&gt;o.
Mrs. nwner
Homer Mcrtiooen
McKibben gave to enter into lease filed, notice ot
Janet Smith ot Crooked lake (pent■
have brought up trace* qf oil, Indi-!
~ ’“2 YT’
»ere in
Kalamazoo
8un-1
u,
a
very
appropriate
dessert,
with
" rr—■;-----‘“ very »PPropri*te dessert, with
eating oil might be quite near the I
»ctJ,UCVe-7^a.n8cd
* h*0**1- Bunday here calling on some of
day for church and Bunday school, -our hot lunch, which brought to hearing issued, proof of service filed,
she'd
let me
me down,
down,
’ tier many friends.
surface.
Exploration started on , I felt
*c ‘ *
’,e d let
E Quick stayed
«taved over a
&gt; week our mlndl |n B prBcUcBj WBy lhc order allowing peUtion entered.
Mrs. E.
Drummond .island has been *u»- I
UP'*1^ f^ciuta all looked at me
Esto] Arenta spent Sunday with with her daughter and husband. Mr.
Est. William A- Kerr, inventory
story of "81. Valentine" and ' George filed.
pended till climatic conditions arc I Yrllh such a puzzled frown,
her friend. Ellen Bhelp,
and Mrs. T. Tack of Assyria to help
more favorable.
Bo now ’twafl I had*fire* to build,
Est. Theron A- Aldrich. Pinal
Mr. and Mra. George Warren and care for littlq Joan, who lias been Washingtons cherry Tree." Each
child present, as well as the teach­ account filed, order assigning rest. . .
'
Twas I that nearly froae,
son* of Hickory Comers were Bun- sick with pneumonia.
Saturday er. was presented with an individual
Suffocation of fish life In many of I
nor*hern P«Ple here
night and Bunday. Mr. and Mra. heart shaped salad with cherry fill­
lhe smaller Inland lake* in Michl- ■ _
^elr »totor dtohea.
Quick visited their son. Mr. and Mrs. ing and two tasty cookies. We sure­
publication entered.
gan. due to lhe severe winter and
cold kept on,
Vern Quick, and children. Banfield.
dinner guest* Bunday. Mr'and Mra. Mr. and Mr*. Harlan Scobey and ly think it was fine of Mrs. McKib­
Est. Rebecca E. Dipp. Final ac­
solid freezing of Ukc surface*, has j ./T ™
t
caused the conservation department Alld everywhere we heard these Ward Ltnd*ey and son of Doster. Mr. and Mra. Ferris Quick and chil­ ben to give us such a nice treat.
count hied.
We surely appreciate lhe fine spirit
words:
............
Oallera were Mr. and Mra. Jamesi dren spent Sunday evening also wllh
Esu Claude Beck. Petition and
to begin an intensive study concern-1
'*Drfls
of co-operation which the parents
"It
must
be
cold
at
home.**
Nevins
of
North
Pine
i^ke.
ing the best means for aerating the
their brother and family.
and other patrons of thc district
Est. Thomas Heney. Final account
water in small heavily frozen-over O. Dixies Land, what have you done?
W. A Spaulding and Mr. Andrew* have shown.
filed.
MOUTH
MAPLE
GROVE.
I was so proud of you.
lakes to supply lhe lack of oxygen
of Hastings were at the farm here
All parents and patrons are cor­
Mr. and Mrs. Will Martin and Mr. Monday.
Est. Caleb Rlsbrldfftr. Order al­
The echoes of your sunshine states
needed lo sustain fish life.
dially invited to visit school as often lowing account entered.
From south lo north rang through and Mra. clifford Rich of Nashville
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert and Mr. and as convenient for them.
EsU Mary E. Morgenthatar. Orders
NASHVILLE.
1No more I pat my back and smile. were Thursday callers at Pete Hoff­ Mra. A- Skidmore and son were Has­
man's.
.
to assign to devisees, entered.
The fire department was called' . Nor sit me In the sun.
tings visitors Monday. Mr. and
ASSYRIA.
Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Bump and
Est. Judson R. carpenter. Petition
Saturday noon to put out a small I For lhe heat and cold of south and family of Hastings spent Bunday Mr*. Skidmore visited their grand-1
Harold Case of North Avenue road for Admr. filed, order for publica­
north
parents in lhe city in honor of thc
roof fire at the Earle Rotlihaafli
with Mr*. Anna Oheescman.
tion
entered.
Were
united
—
Into
one.
birthday of hls grandfather.
home.
meat. One soldier has learned t” operate the tank and is bell
Lucian
Hyde
farm
home
has
been
Mr.
and
Mrs.'L.
WJarrard
and
Mra J. E. Vandenberg.
Bernice Flower did not make lhe unable to move due to the drifted I
MI*a Louise Wolfing of Lansing !
BARRYVILLE.
family and John Smith tp&lt;uit Sunlowed on the parade (round al JlJIga. The capture ot the tan)
__________ (Megtta Van.)
drive some
home me
the pa
past week on । roads from lhe Eagle schoolhouse to :1
wiih *•- -..,i
1• usual anve
spent the week end wllh her mother. •
Mr.
and Mra. Burr Fassett and
mn in
Hl
B El
I1“
ccount of 2::
lhe —
weather.
1-"""/.
22^7. She came
I
Lois.
Mrs.
Chas.
Day,
Eldon
and
Mrs. Fred Wotrlng.
Briggs church.
------ ---------- ---------- - —.. ——------n 'XT 1 Vermontville.
Friday
MIDDLEVILLE.
Friday nhiht
night for
for the
the w.
week end.
। The Briggs school has not re-I1 Miss Virginia
T*Vav
**!««
Virginia Day. Miss Elizabeth
Mrs. Eva Robinson and daughter I
Wednesday A. M- sl
the .big
cater- Ellen (Of Grand Rapids spent the ! Wc al! appreciate the effort the I r.umed Its
™ sessions due
d— to
U the severe
.... McClelland and Mr*.
Mrs. Herbie WUlllar mnwnlAB, ——-a...
—”VS;
—-y
। men with snow plows have made to' ,j cold
——
•*-—
shoppers
weather.
jI cox were Battle Creek shopper*
i up Arlington Bt.’to the week end wllh lhe former's parents, keep the roads open.
Mr. and Mra. Lester Preston.
wlth^’ p^eumSa^^TSir da^ghteJ Icha^
a^ig^.
Mr. and Mra. Ray Faswlt and
’Tto.Tr
I cnar»B °* MTF- Eana case ana Mrs. j Mr. “»d Mra. Ray Faseett and
Grover Marshall was a business
««• 01
•&gt;»■&gt;' “» w«k i Broadway, .ter. Lte .now
Their daughter Wangle Miller has been postponed lwo
f&gt;t Battle Creek spent Sat®
J
‘cU11y d&lt;«P "id hard packed. A visitor at Hastings Friday and At
Bun day to helo---------urday
wlth the
tolkl
\
The Monday Evening Bridge club break finally slopped all work until Battle Creek on Saturday.
a?
h 1
1 lhc weather permitting.
nd enJoyed-a
I“
and
enjoyed-a birthday
birthday dinner
dinner hon
hon-­
met Monday evening wllh Mrs, Un repairs were made.
..
! ■"&gt;' »''"•« •*«»
V.l- ortng Burr s natal day.
Wnnh"'l’r!nOr;
,
i Mr* Florence Gillette entertained Grover Marshall accompanied Mr*.
i
pw
.°
n
■»
| Miss Elaine Day wu ill last week
Grace Brake of Hastings to Zeeland
The chamber of Commerce met lhe Master* circle of the Methodtot and Grund Rapid* Saturday.
; the Inclement weather of last week. and unable to attend high school.
at the I, o. O. P. hall on Monday , Aid society on Thursday P. M. A
Feb. 28. A musical program will be ।
The Reds lost in Ibslr Sunday
Mrs. Etta Gould entertained tho
1 Three families, Henry Cotton.
night. The Rebekah ladles served | very pleasant time was enjoyed E
presented nnd all are urged to come.
Hugh Case and o. C. Hewitt, have uchool contest and will banquet the
thc supper.
j H.
Flnkbelner
entertained
the Birthday Club on Friday.
been marooned for 'the past two Blues at the church Thursday eve­
EAST
QUIMBY.
The Lentz Table co. began opcr- farmers with a picture show on Fri­
IRVING.
weeks, no outlet even with a team. ning.
ctions in nil departments, Monday, da*, showing them how certain imMr*. George Fox has returned
Tom Hoffman and Ray Clemens
Messrs. Fred Miller and Vem
after a few days' vacation due to a ’ Plementa are made and then had from a visit with her daughters al were in Charlotte Monday on busi­ Wclchar are in Hastings this weekshortage of coal.
j them to dinner over in his store. Des Plaines. Ill.
ness.
a* Jurors.
Harold Eddy of thc navy, who j Many more would have been presMr. and Mrs.- Ray Clemens and
Mr. and Mr*. Joiui Perry visited
spent thc past three years in China, i cnl had the roads been in shape to their children In Kalamazoo one the latter's parents spent 'Friday
Most women are too wise to ex­
is visiting hls mother and otixer rel- #cl K&gt; town.
with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Archer and pect a man to be honest in love, but
day recently.
at‘2’.cs' M
J Mr. and Mr*, o. O. Blrlcklen and
they expect him Co be enthusiastic.
Ed. Look spent Sunday at hls family In Lake Odessa.
Thc Nashville creamery has made I family spent Sunday wllh the lat­
a good showing the past year, a' tor’s parents, G. D. and Mrs. Whltsubstanlial gain inXpuslness. The more of Sherman st.
“5.
I Tb« ■»“* “&gt; &lt;*»
sunte,
O7/.1U4 pound.,—flea.708 pound* of
enloved bv all- the water I* en
dried skimmed milk; an increase of I San«ring rom- ’ baim^te
33.710 pounds of dried buttermilk
uX d“
and 17BJJ5D pound* of sweet cream
onc'
sold.. The following directors elect- .
.sl?.rU;a off thl5 Monday
cd to succeed themselves are. W. O.' ,A' ¥ ,N0.1. *1 lhe PuPlls could dr,*°
Hyde. L. D. Gardner. William Mar-1 n' bul those who wero on hand
Un and John Marten of Nashville. J®?,®*? PJ*a*ed 10 be again at work,
Robert Marlin of Hastings; JVayne ’®Howln» near*y two weeks' vaca;
Offley of Woodland. Two new di- Uo”'
„ „
rectors arc Ralph Pennock of Nash- , Mrs. ?-_9'
H. O. Benaws
Benaway
&gt;' went to De­
ville and Ernest Qehman of Ver- tf°U Saturday and Bunday left with
monlville. The manager Is Law- h" br°trier. Ernest VoUweller and
rence Osborne.
wl,
“ ,nr
H"r' stay in xFlorida.
”'''
wife
for “
a *short
Charles Gray, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Harlcn Bowdish. 70. a resi­
dent of Nashville the past eight W. H. Gray of our town has been in
years, died tn Tampa. Florida, Ann Arbor, Mich., for an operation
•where she was spending the winter on his knee; recently he was taken
wllii her daughter. Thc funeral was down with pneumonia and was very
held Tuesday afternoon In HasUng* rick. Hls Bister from Pendleton.
and the body was placed In lhe Ind., has been with him and she re­
mausoleum until June when the rel- ports that he U improving nicely
atlvcs from away will come for lhe past few days, which is good
burial. She leaves her husband, six news to hls many friends here.
daughters, MF* Jim Chancellor of
Tampa. Fla., Mrs. Letha Aguilar of some yeara he has been located at
Fort Worth. Texas, Mrs. Margaret Merritt. Mich., where he conducts a
GrowcU of Tampa. Fla.. Mrs. Rcta large farm and slock business.
Five-tooth cultivator.
This Monday evening occurs the
Barnett of Jackson. Mra. Nellie
Brotherhood meeting.
Two-hone com planter.
Leaver of Hastings. Mrs. Ulia Saw- adjourned
Rev. W. H. Helrigle of Parchihent
Brown horse, 5 yrs., wt. obout 1400;
Wagon,
3-in, tire. Hoy rack.
Thompson of Battle Creek. • five will be the speaker.
sound.
The many fiends ot Fred Manker
Spring seat. Wagon box.
grandchildren and one great-grandBlock horse, 11 yrs., wt. about 1400;
were saddened to hear of his sud­
ciMld.
•
Stewart
horse
clippen.
Russell Partridge Is attending den death at the county home on
serviceable, sound.
Platform scales. Dbl, work harness.
business college in Battle Creek. Friday. He had been there but a
Durham cow, 3 yrs. old, due soon.
Tom Prichard Is taking hls place at short time, he had lived In tills vi­
Dbl, driving harness. Single harness.
cinity for many, years and leaves
the Beedle store. .
3 young awes, to lamb middle of March.
Pair wool hone blankets.
The World Day of Prayer service many friends to mourn the passing
will be helcf Friday afternoon al lhe of an honorable man.
Quantity
grain sacks. Ice tongs.
It Is rumored that there will be a
Evangelical church. Musical num­
Iron kettle. 15*gal. 2 leg chains.
bers will be furnished by the differ­ business change ta Middleville soon.
ent churches...
Montana
robe; Fur coat, sixe 42, both
Quantity of hoy. Quantity of oom.
PRAIRIEVILLE.
THE WORLD’S FINEST
Mrs. Inez Wash is the nuftc in tho
good. Hog crate. Calf crate.
Mra. Robert sponable accompan*
Hayden Nyo home, where both arc,
VALUES IN QUALITY
' led Mrs. Carl Krick and son to
Grindstone. Galvanised stock tank.
seriously sick.
,
Grand
Rapids
this
week
to
visit
GAS RANGES
Sickle
grinder.
Other
small
tools.
Junior Dull was sick last week
1 their parents. Rev. and Mra. L. D.
wllh tonsllitls.
McCormick
mowing
machine,
6-ft.
cut.
*
Mra. Stewart Lofdahl is entertain­, MllwThe distinction of theta new 1936 Delroil Jewal r«MM
Mr.
and
MrsSLewls
Johnson.
Mrs.
ing her sisters from Wilmette. HL,
McCormick binder, 7-ft. cut.
goes for deeper than their first low cost and lasting valwr
’ Jake Johnwn rfhd Miss Dora John­
this week.
Side delivery rake. Dump rake, 8-ft.
Nor does lheir merit rest entirely upon lheir panokil
Washing machine. Barrel chum.
Charles Betts and daughter Doris. son called on Charles Armstrong at
beautiful designing qqd coloring! It’s the efficiency &lt;
Hay tender. Roller, 8-ft.
/
spent Bunday with relatives and। Borgea* hospital. Kalamazoo. Fri­
Lard press, (-at. Meat crack, 20-gal.
day. Ho la Improved and expects to
friends in Kalamaiwo.
their performance provided by Ineir 1936 improvemen
X
Spring
tooth
drag.
Drag
cort.
.
be
moved
soon
to
hl*
sister's
horpe
Good
Florence
heater,
sixe
Fred White' has gone to Benton
that moires them lhe most desirable gas ranges you hav
In
Chicago.
The
address
ta
*31
LawQuick
M&lt;al
oil
stove,
3
burner.
Harbor where he has employment.
Massey-Harris 11-disc fertilizer drill,
। ler Ave., Chicago. Hls state*. Mra.
Lan Miller al Ann Arbor was
Oil. itova aven. Set bedepringa.
brought here Tuesday for burial. Knauu, ta with him at present
Every Teoture of tho now Detroit Jewel ho«
Quantity
of
fruit
cans.
Mra. Lucy Norris Is on the sick
He passed away In Pittsburgh. He[
Litth Willie two-horse cultivator.
perUcted, on4 iflclttded only b•&lt;«use d
4 tan-gal. milk cans.
leaves his wife, one son and a’ list We are wishing she soon may
riority and outstanding convagisac*. T&lt;
Dayton hoy loader. Cale riding plow.
2 hanging lamps; several other lamps.
daughter, one brother, Frank Miller, be well.
George M. Woods. Jr..'attended
two sisters. Mrs. O. L- Glasgow andi
Mrs. Bert Brunner of Grand Rapids. tha basket ball tournament a; Kal’
amaioo
Thursday
night.
He
Is
a
Ceylon Garllnger and Ernest Mil­
ler went in the ditch early Tuesday, member of the W. K. Kellogg Agrlmorning near Assyria caused by ther cultural school team.
Miss Myrtle Smith spent tho week
W, ullu ihn,
uuh
icy roads. Tiiey were taken, to a
It * th, choice ol snurt
hospital. The seriousness af the, end with her mother. Mrs. Barah
SMALL DOWN FAYMIl
accident Is unknown at the time ofr Smith and daughters.
worn,* who know
Mra. Will Hayward of
Delton
sanding tills Item.
LONS, 6ASY TERMS
.spent Friday with her sister, Mra.
6am DcBack.
- ,
Mr*. Louise Higgins of Kalamaful shades in luxurious
Ethol3stebbi'i’i °f h&lt;&gt;r molh*r’ Mrs
Town Crep«—12 to 401
or something vary Ilka It, the mo­
* ment It la batched, and n cry from1
Mra. D. N. Honeywell is expected
within the egg Is sometimes beard. home today (Monday) from a visit

-Tlie names of some of Michigan'*
inland lakes are suggestive of a
picnic lunch. There are: Pea Soup
lake in Baraga county; Egg In1
Charlevoix county; Cucumber ta‘
Newaygo; Lamb ta Berrien; Pepper'
in.Pt. Joseph; and Coffee lake Ini
Van Buren.

there, With all their fires to make,
’
A frecsing fingers, ahovsltag snow.
Beamed like their backs would

Ethiopians Run Captured Tank

i

V

nd

be

ui.
id

ui

id

&lt;1

NEW

1936

here's the

FROCK
about

ur

&gt;n

lo

ot

at

TOWN1

4

UCTION SALE

JUST ARRIVED

Having rented my farm, I will have an auction sale on
the premises, obout 4 miles northeast Of Hastings, on M-43,
first farm east from Barbers Corners, on

Tuesday, mar.

3,1936

STARTING AT 1:00 P. M. I offer the following

LIVESTOCK.

a

HAY AND GRAIN

FARM TOOLS.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

75.

t

TERMS OF SALE :-CASH. Nothing removed until settled for.

Priced

W

JOHN BARKER, Propr.

Henry Flannery, Auctioneer.

Clifford Hammond, Clerk.

viath-'

to 4|i

�pH! HASYTNGg BAMm, TgUMDAT, FtBRCABT W, ttN

WOODLAMO.
Idrawln, hu no, b«n mad, ~
,
----------------------.—.—, ,-------- — —--------- -------THREE
CORNERS.
Mrs. H- A. KKltson entertained ; are unable to give you the names
The beauty and tranquillity of lhe , **ler tn hMC’nenu. etc. But, due to
... Ute King's Heralds of the Methodist. oflhe wheels playing here.
| landscape-* study in black and lhe fllct th*t ,he"
M rr&lt;*1
’‘o'fHMtiMto.'te, church at her home Saturday afterGordon
Gordon Ptnnl*
Plnnle of
of Hastings
Hastings spent
spent,, white
white and
and eoft
soft grey
grey melting
melting into
into to ^&gt;e. ground, most nf the water
dor w Fohr. noon, with nine members and one
azure haae.
haae. with
" be abeorbet
on*‘lhe
the week end
end wlU1
with Mrx&gt;nd
Mn&gt;nd Mrs.
Mra. J.
J. an
an.. azure
with the
the sunshine
sunshine
■ help io lhe
a«.«L J»dw'&lt;u«‘ pre*hL Dainty refreshments’v. Hilbert.
glorifying alb-a truly modernistic which will no doubt
.tel. of Froaei.
hL nn
*nd Mrt. Herald Classic and i setting. Is no small recompense for croPa this summer
—
th?77rt&lt;«“
! ehitoreh «Peu‘ Sunday evening wllh the discomfort* we have been en­ slushy, almost impa***ble roads,
d in said tourt. the Ladles Aid society of the y former's oorenU. Mr. and Mrs. during.
uuiui*. No
nu artiat
tuuat can approach
AWVivaiu the
me ,there **em to be no. hardships
- thus
tb. •4-1-1^-1 Methodist church during March.!
3
-----------------of
- —
——
- rtr because oi me maw.
perfection
lhe -----Creator's
art, but
r.nt-4 i- Nn,.,|next slipp.T will be served by Joe Classic, of L*xe ou&lt;^n
r 'n,.- ST'S; Club NO
wSnndH. April &gt;.
‘ Mln Mywr; Cojb
[rteul at it Is, indeed, an Inspiring goal toj Plans are being made for an Eastnirlwa tnr
er naeeant tz&gt; he nreaented bv tlie
। o'riork la t&gt;.» i class C- Basket Ball Tournament Ajni Arbor visited her brother. Dr. I Mrs George Kelley returned home Methodlat Bun^X School on taster
irte7‘ ^dd**Mtt* will-be played In lhe Woodland T. H. Cobb, and family Bunday.
■
r
Bunday
evening. - — neT lutel*
—-----I school lhe last of najrt week. The
P. P. Hilbert and Mr. and Mrs. J I o—J--------- 1,
with
MrsBunday
Mr evening.
and Mr*. Wesley
Stowe and
irin_w
o,,n?(Au rlimwr
weesut witn ner sister. asrs.. aar. ana mt*, wesiej:
auu
— yuJta^ Mr mJd Mrs Gl‘ti Blake J o,‘w HoyM and
of Carlton visited tils parent*.
.
d‘lr*
norlh
Orand Mr- *nd Mr*. Jed Stowe. Bunday.
f„ J oi Mtoaievwe.
|
went gfun. hBr
.
Mrs
Augustus
Wickham
la
at
Marvin CI
Clazalc
and" J
Jackie
Manin
omIc and
ftck*e Cobb
day morning,
morning, remaining
remaining for
for lhe
lhe day.
day. Home
nt n^t«r
wii.i 1, toy
lorne Acre*
Acres near arena
Grand hbpm
Rapids
were supper guest* of Rodger Paul — •
uh&gt; | Tue*day. February 34. in honor ot j
than she had anticipated due to the . Mr. and ------------—
a. —j —
Mr*. H»rry Ftth and »on
condition of the roads.
h
.
—
I Harry. Jr, of Middleville
called
on
Clifford Walters left for Ligonier, hl*
his mother. Mt*.
Mis. M*rv
Mary Dodae
Dodge MonFORECLOBUXE.
.. at ulduoblMnd lbah .ehool «&gt;.
n
UZ
wedn«d»y.
.* tn
io u«ura« • the
W n A,,.
du-' day
- .......
r.wiln,
*--DEFAULT bavin* b»«o n
ore.ent th.ir tcrtaincd lheir mother:, al a banquet . ties of _a JZZut
— u-j accepted 1 I y
*
position
he u
had
Clayton
Bunn
was
home
from
Monday evening. The dinner. dec­ there. He will' stay with hls sister.
Grand Rapid* over the week end.
. Pear).
H. J. Freeland of Hastings called
ild (latma wHl
pared almost entirely by the girls
H. J. Robinson managed to get' at
at lhe
the Mrs. M*ud Rogen home 8at\’io&lt;k0 te I *1U* Uie assistance of lheir teaeix^,
'
i Mias Helena Schuler. The color moat of the livestock he purchased urday.
Evart Ardl* spent last week at hls
M; scheme was In soring colors, orchid recently, home last week In spite
home in McBain, school being
r-saia
i an&lt;J yenQW After a delicious din- of the bad road conditions.
Mr. and Mrs. Ployd Walters and closed.
moxtoaoe BALE. »
ner served by lhe girls a program
Workmen shoveled snow at the
harinc broa nada la the eoa- | was held With Eloise Smith aS Marian of Grand Rapids spent Sun­
9*
JL%A“te
1 toaetln**ter Prances Warner wel- day evening with the former's par­ west end of Cherry street Friday
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Waiters, afternoon making it possible to
re^ch
the office of Dr. Wedel by au­
_ made by Mrs. Glen England. A and grandmother. Mra. Stoughton.
group of girls-sang and Pollyanna
Mr. and Mra. Lester Yelter of to for the first time in quite a while.
Sunday being Missionary Sunday
England sang and gave a tap Kalamazoo spent Sunday with the
dance. The audienqe abo enjoyed a former's parents. Mr. and Mra. Clair a play entitled. "Maruaha." will be
given by a group of ladles under
song by MLss Naomi Van Loo. The Yelter.
lhe direction of Mrs. Lester, at the
speaker of the evening was Mrs.
«nrv« or «nr port ihrrn
Miss Ruth and David Robinson
Muri H. De Foe, of
Charlotte are staying in Hastings 'until the Methodist Sunday School. Everyone
NOW. THEREFORE. I.,
is Invited to attend Sunday School
i Her subject was "Happiness" and
I her talk was enthusiastically re­ weather moderates and driving con­ at 11:30 and see this demonstration.
Sunday morning at 10:30 Mlaa
f ceivea by the girls and their moth- ditions are better. David spent the
week end at home. Misses Margery Fem Wheeler will bring the first
! and Odette Flfield are also remainmessage of a series that will occupy
OMhER FOX rVBLICATIOM.

NOTICES |;

L“Jr&gt;:

■E

A-ftTW
. ■! Mil

MldL Itli

Al a towtea of *
probate •*!«« la t
retry. A. D. iB3«.

oo-holf of (I
• ten ooml^r
&lt;7 H*nr» •»«
Slip. Iterrv I

ChM. F. Er»tb«re«r.

Dated. nwMabor 2«. 1»S5.
pmrnl ibalr eli
U mH roart f.

THERESA HOST
IN TODAY'S ADS.

TO DRILL FOR OIL SIX
MILES N. W. OF LOWELL

Electric App&amp;r&amp;toa Indicates
tn Oil Structure in That
Locality
Juel a UtUe north

at

Lpwell, In

oil. but not enough to make it prof­
itable to operate the well.
The
shewing was sufficient to prove that
there is an oil structure In that vi­
cinity which may yield profitable
returns.
A large oil producing company
has had Its representative* In that
locality, locating and tracing the
trical apparatus, with a view of put­
ting down another well. It
is
claimed that Ulis apparatus will de­
termine with reasonable accuracy the
depth and extent of the rock for­
mation tn which tbe oil Is believed
to be trapped. After considerable
investigation, lhe company believes
that, on a farm about six miles
*hlp of Vergennes, It has located
thia oil structure and Is moving ap­
paratus to tha point indicated with
a view Of putting down an oil well
In the spring.

LITTLE RED BRICK.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Woodruff at­
tended the Michigan Livestock Ex­
change banquet held at Lansing
Thursday night.
Our school Is again In suasion aft­
er a three weeks' vacation, due to
Impassable roads and extreme eold
weather. However our teacher had
a car. bring her as far as they could
get through last Monday and she
waded drifted roads to Ute school­
house. but went home sick and was
111 most of lhe week. Only four
scholars ware there. We are very
sorry that this happened and only
'Kives U&gt; us that we gain more by
ving school only when weather
does permit.
Mrs Rebecca Craig celebrated her1
80th birthday Sunday, but has been
on the sick list for the past week. J
We are certainly thankful for we]
can hear the "Caterpillar" coming |
down the road this morning to clean
our roads, after a three weeks’ ahull

Ilun
Jnr** .
' _ri_,
TCl*y sPrn{ me week endwilh their climaxing on Easter Sunday. The
'-vfnr.’eh isja •• ■ Tuesday Ynorning after a long 111- parent
atMj Mts gdgar Pifield.
te nr.miMi d-ocribod ness. He Is ’brvived by hls widow, a I p\Ir nnd Wr, pinv-rt
.nd general subject of these sermons Is.
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Waiters and The Alluring Christ." A cordial
son. Fay. of Carlton and three
tho North
I daughters. Mra. Ruth Geiger of West Marian of Grand Rapids were Sun­ tnyitatlon Is extended to everyone.
».ro fte7th is rh.m. : Woodland. Mrs. Gertrude Town­ day dinner guests of M. E. Moore
Altho* no special service 1* being
held here in observance of the
South
H do .send of Clarksville and Mra. Bessie; and Miss Clara'Bisson.
World Day of Prayr Friday of this
“nLAspinaU of Carlton. The funeral I
BARBERS CORNERS.
- . - -.. f” •“* .-in
t»ta
»•
!
week?
the ladies of the W* P. M. 8.
win mc nciu niiuaua) r. m. ui me
Miss Evelyn Matthews of Grand
I home. Burial In Woodland ceme- Rapids Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. L. are requesting all who will to lift
lheir hearts In prayer wherever they
1 tery. Rev. Harley Townsend will J. Matthews.
1 have charge of the funeral services.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Shroyer enter­ are at 3 o'clock. At this time pray­
I Mrs. John Stairs, who has been tained Mr. and Mrs. Bert Palmer ers will be rising from all over Umworld. -Prayer changes things.”
and children of Middleville. Bundav.
C. H Runclman, In keeping with
ot land, was taken to Lake Odessa hosCircle No. 1 of the Methodist L.
,BI* I pltal last Friday.
A. 8. will meet with Mrs. James Ma reputation as an A-1 elevator
The Woodland fire truck was Lons Thursday afternoon, March man. has Installed a fine new feed
mixer
In the local elevator. Con­
called out Tuesday morning to lhe
sumers Power men set a pole and
THE CROSSROADS.
home of Charles Fariee of South­ come.
connected it up last Saturday and
east Woodland. The extent of lhe
At last the roads In this vlclnltj
| manager Al chlckerlng L» now
pre- are - plowed
FREEPORT.
... ---------------------- out for which everyom
fire has not yet been reported.
------------ w-^-.----------------Everyone seem* well pleased with 1 pared to mix al! kind* of chick and Is thankful.
Oddly
enough, when
the n
way
amount
ofouuw
snow |3Is dairy feedf.
’ * Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Collace ol
— ------a ,politician
-------- ----- ...^
—7 —our
—. largeM.asvu,
,, U,
U shoved out of the picture, he disappearing. It hod been feared
After having only one day of Battle Creek and Mr. and
Mrs
usually claims that he was framed.
that a rain or a rapid thaw might
" ”•
Newman Tuttle of East Lanslni
the cold weather and blocked roads were Sunday guests of Mra. Jam
thc regular work ot Ute school began Tuttle.
Monday morning.
The teachers
Clayton Houser of Grand Rapid:
spent the enforced vacation at their
various homes.
Williams home.
The Creamery scales broke down
Mr. and Mn Harry Merritt of AL
hut week and caused a great deal of bion spent Sunday with Mr. and
inconvenience.
Scale men from Mrs. George Townsend.
Grand Rapids were here Friday and
Mr. and Mn. Karl Williams hav*
made the necessary repairs.
Just reached home, having had U
Is the "Watchword" of&lt; those who have money
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller (Louise stay with the latter's mother sin cd
to invest, ond among the SAFEST forms of in­
Wolootl) of Kalamazoo, visited her the storm In order to reach thell
vestment known are BUILDING AND LOAN
parents. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wal­
cott Monday.
SHARES.
Lynn Stedgc spent thc week en
The first F. F F (Friendly Fam­ at home.
These shares ore secured by first mortgages on
ily Fellowship) night will be held at
Mrs Orley Smith who has bee
the Methodist church basement next on the sick list Is some better i
homes and in addition the associations'are regu­
Tuesday evening. Everyone Is invit­ this writing.
lated by wise State laws.
ed and urged to be present at 7
Mr. and Mrs Rolland Tallfen
o’clock for a pot* luck supper, which of Battle Creek spent Sunday wit
May we furnish you information about the
will be followed by a very worth­ the home folks.
shores of this old institution?
while program. The male quar­
BOWNE CENTER.
tette will sing and Dr. W- F. Ken­
Sunday vialton at Wayne Benton'a'
drick of Grand Rapids Is the speak­
er for this gathering. The invitation were Mr. and Mra. Russell Benton
is "Bring the whole family, your own and two children. Mr and Mrs.
table service, sandwiches ur buns, Vernon Benton and daughter of
and another dish of food." This Is Grand Rapids. Glenn Godfry and
1250 Griswold Sl
Eitabluhod 1889
DETROIT, MICH
the first such gaUterlng. one of! family Mra. Addie Benton, Mrs.
Dt trait't Oldtit Building &amp; Loan
_ _______
which will be held each Tuesday Merrill Karcher and Mrs. Watt
evening until Easter, with out-of­ Thomas. .
We sure all appreciated the snow
town speakers for each one.
FEDERAL HOME
Not much Interest is being shown plows working Saturday night and
~ - BANKSY 5TTJ
hm,tc'hC5’
thus far in local politics. Although Sunday opening up lhe north and
two caucuses were advertised, we are couth roads.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nash of
only able to learn of one ticket be­
ing nominated. A few citizens met UnreU. Floyd Flynn and family,
at the council room and named the and Clare Flynn were Bunday visi­
Quantity of mixed hay. Bin of oat*. Crib of corn.
tors
at John Nash's.
following officers for the Citizens
Henry Pry Is on the sick list.
ticket: President—Dan
Postma:
Dick Brackney of Temperance
clerk—J. E. Babbitt; Treasurer—
Mrs. Lula Nagler; Trustee, one year came Saturday night to see hla
mother. Mra. Will Fox who la 111.
Deering binder, 7-ft. cut, good condition.
Frank Cool. Percy Rosser, Prank Mrs. Brackney has been caring tor
John Deere mower, 5-ft. cut, practically new.
Walton; Assessor—J. D. Knowles.
John Deere hay loader. Side rake.
Mrs. Amy Thomas has returned to
Caucus Committee—J. E. Babbitt,
the home of her daughter. Mrs. Guy
Dump rake. 2 farm wagons. Hay rack.
j. D- Knowles, Frank Walton.
Another ticket in the field would Smith after spending the past three
John Deere manure spreader, practically new.
months
with her son. Walt, and
make the election much more In2 Oliver plows. No. 99. Both in good condition.
family.
terertlng.

AUCTION SALE

"SAFETY FIRST”

BECAUSE OF A DEATH IN THE FAMILY, I WILL HAVE AN AUCTION SALE

AT MY FARM, FIRST FOUR CORNERS SOUTH OF CATHOLIC CEMETERY, ON

FRIDAY, MARCH 6
SALE TO BEGIN AT 12:30 O'CLOCK SHARP.

ffiatinnal ffioan &amp;
^nuestment (jfmttpattH

I WILL OFFER THE FOLLOWING

DESCRIBED PROPERTY:-

J. L. MAUS

HAY AND GRAIN

HORSES.

Sorrel more, 6 years old, weight 1600.
Boy more, 8 years old, weight 1500.
Pair black mare colts, 2 and 3 years old.
CATTLE.

Holstein-Guernsey cow, 3 years old, calf
by (ide.
Holstein-Guernsey cow, 4 years old, calf
by side.
Guernsey cow, 9 yrs., bred first of Dec.
Holstein cow, 2 yrs. old, bred first of Dec.
Jersey cow, 3 yrs. old, due soon.
Holstein cow, 9 yrs. old, fresh six weeks.
Guernsey heifer, 6 mos. old.
Grade Durham bull, 15 mos. old.

FARM TOOLS.

Alike?

Three-section Syracuse drag.
Syracuse riding plow. 'Oliver riding cultivator.
David Bradley walking cultivator, new last year.
Five-tooth cultivator. Shovel plow.
Cloverseed buncher. BUxzard silo filler.
Fordson tractor. Two-bottom plow.
Muck plow. Double disk. Dowagiac grain drill.
1 Yj H. P. United gas engine.
Bell city incubator, 140 egg size.
Oil brooder stove with canopy for 500 chicks.
DeLaval separator, No. 15. good condition.
Shovels, forks and other articles too numerous to men­
tion.

11 Different Cars Refrigerated
to Below Zero...
They do look alike, but . . . one is lhe
real thing, the other is made to look

SHEEP AND HOGS.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

like it. Two bottles of milk look alike

Vacuum sweeper. Silver Tone victrolo ond 20 records.
2 iron beds complete. Set extra bedsprings. Army cot.
Commode. 3 dining chairs. Porch rocker. Stand.
Large picture. Axminster rug, 9x12. Throw rug.
Poir heavy curtains. Large kerosene lamp.
Gasoline lamp. New dresser. 2 bird cages.
Vinegar barrel. Copper kettle, 28 gal. size.
Four-qt. ice cream freezer. Some dishes.

30 grade Sfirop ewes. (Young sheep J

Brood sow. due to farrow in spring.
4 feeding pigs, weight about 60 lbs.

POULTRY.
3 bronze turkey hens.

but lhe difference is in the milk itself.

BLUE

It’s the contents of tlie milk that you

cannot see with tlie naked eye that

determine the quality . . . Highlands
Idigh in Cream

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. NO PROPERTY TO BE REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR

started in
split-second
average and stayed started

Dairy Grade A MilC is pure and whole­

Content Raw or

some, produced under the most sanitary

Pasteurized

conditions and from cows that are fed

SUNOCO

ANDRUS SERVICE •

only the best grade of milk producing

MRS. DORA COLEMAN

Mumo99JA
Mhntn 1M Court •***
HlVHC ZZ4U BU, HaattM*. Mteklgaa

foods. Buy Highlands Dairy Grade A
for its health-giving vitamins. You will
agree that there is a big difference.

PROPRIETRESS
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

Sunoco
TRANSEP

.Sunoco
MOTOR OIL

...

E. E. GRAY, Clerk.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 1451

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

REGULAR
GAS PRICF

BLUE

f11 I KI PN H fl

mUNCICU

MOTt
FUL

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 5,1936

14 PAGES

EIGHTIETH YEAR

BUTTEflFLV FARM' |Merdumte to Give Away More J|f[ MEETINGS
UNIOUE BUSINESS Th“" ««’»
»*Fair!1 FOB FARM BUREAU
MANY INDIVIDUAL AWARDS TO BE
MADE; ENTERTAINMENT FOR ALL

AND PROBABLY NOT MANY
WOULD BE SATISFIED

TO ENGAGE IN IT

More than $600 worth- of prizes
will be distributed at the Hastings
Commercial Fair to be held in Com­
munity Hall at the Home Lumber
Company here from March 25 to 28
It's a Mecca for Artists and Inclusive, according to the commit­
tee in charge. This does not in­
' Others Seeking Un­
clude the many individual prizes
usual Colors
which w«.
will be distributed by many
I wrote last week about visiting ' of the merchants at their booths,
lhe, "Angleworm Fann" in Alham- More than thirty prizes will be disbra. It struck me as really being, trlbuted during lhe day and each
laughable thal a man could make a i evening the winner of the grand
business of growing and shipping ( prize for the day will be announced,
angleworms, make money at It, and . Each
afternoon and evening
from "appearances." pretty good1 there will be entertainment pro­
money too. An "Angleworm Farm" grams. Loud speakers throughout
really seemed just about the limit j y)C building will carry the prothat human ingenuity could reach _______________ __
Hl ^S^ut11^TWO TOWNSHIPS SETTLE-

BUT THE DISPLAY IS
A GORGEOUS ONE

other unusual Farm" lhat we vUlt- , Two township treasurers have so
ed
| far made their settlements with
Thl, »&gt;. . Butum, Fm--an the eounly trtuwer.
They aye
you beet It. • reel Butterfly Perm, Rullahd end venkee Bpnnn. th
iwned end opereted by Mr end . I»‘h •
t'"'".1**'
, “»
UK Albert Carter. It I. not (er: “«&lt;•• have b™n paM thle year Urer)
from
Anxelee. As ( recall. It Is;lnsl; J11
nJ.,™
' IflTTI- Bart rrmoM.. V-tUy. Oo on, UbttAfl paid end In Yankre sprlnk,
ihrouglr the town of Burbank lo the ■ 65
cenr
U ' ,
h
town 0( Roaoe. turn w the rlaht.; d«serlpUons Ml the supervUor s roll
crossing lhe railroad track, go down ln Yankee Springs Li resort propa pretty little valley (or about three i «ly and them taxee art not u*bally
m!l« until
come lo
Utile store,
Theretort
the ojmers
mill you
you come
io a
a nine
store. heavy. ----— --- ---------- ---­ o( he
Turn to the rlaht
right and
end (allow
follow “lt*«" or
“ ‘ol* h«™ bee" hl
.
.
. or more.'i bvnValf
111* ClMtri.
along
a ravine
for _20 rods
habit eaf
of navlrrar
paying dlrrtrtlv
directly tri
to tthe
counThe "BUltcrfiy Fann" will be on
treasurer after he has made m­
your left, and almost hidden from' tlement with lhe township treasview by trees and thick foliage. It | urer. ______________________
is at the base of a lowering hill, lhat1
--.’.W,
might be dignified by lhe name of SUNDAY SCHOOL
mountain. Mr. and Mrs. carter have ।
UUnRKFRQ Tfl MFFT
their home way up on top of this
WUHRErib IU MEE I

I TOPICS

POB OONBIDBRA.

[ TION ABE NATIONAL AND

STATE QUESTIONS
grams and prize announcements to
each floor.
Tlie refreshment committee an-'
GUEST
SPEAKERS
nounces that more than four thou­
sand doughnuts and gallons of cof-1
AT EACH SESSION
fee will be served free during lhe
------------fair. Allowing six dunks per dough- Programs and Oomplimen.
nut and an average net vertical, . •
travel of eighteen Inches per dunk.! tary Dinners at Middleville,
the Banner statistician has come:
Delton and OoaU Grove
to the remarkable conclusion thal &gt; _.
„
„
,
A
the total vertical travel of these i The Barry county Farm Bureau.
•u»l»r.- Sum, )», (our 0.)."“' "'‘J*

WANTS TO BECOME
AMERICAN CITIZEN
by the Court in Sep­
tember

"One

Mad

Three

Night,"

After

Postponements

Again in Rehearsal
FATHERS

AND

DAUGH­

Rehearsals for the Junior play.
TERS TO MEET NEXT
"One Mad Night" have begun again
and the cast will be hard at work
WEEK WEDNESDAY
I for the next two weeks getting the
I production into shape for its per­
JOHN C. KETCHAM
formatice next Friday
evening.
Tn niUF Annurcc March 13 ThrllU and halr-nUalng
lUJjIVt AU UK tod episodes abound In this rollicking
.
, ,
comedy of the unexpected things
Excellent Program Sched- wWcn happen u&gt; a
rounx
uled for Gathering at
' playwright
**
“*■* who goes to his old
“ *"
famj Uy residence, a lonely house in the
Methodist Church
hills, to complete his latest play
The Methodist L. A. S. of this in peace and quiet. He doesn't get
city is sponsoring the first Father it. but the audience will get a good
and Daughter banquet everjifld ln laugh out of his bewJlderment-and
Hastings, the dote for which
is discomfiture in the presence of the
Wednesday evening. March 11. Din- escaped lunatics under Dr. Bunn's

LOCIL CHAPTEB
[BUBOES'
RED GROSS TO EBTABUtM
FIRST AID UNIT IM
BARRY OOUNTT
SELECT DOWLING
FOR FIRST STATION
Charge Must Have
at Least Fourteen Hours
of Instruction

Those in

HASTINGS BOYS ARE
WINNERS AT IONIA

FIRE PREVENT ON
MEET NG THURSDAY

Useful and Unusual Career of
Dr. II. A. Adrounie Ends Here
Local Doctor Played Heroic Role
During Massacres in Armenia

I

JUNIOR COMEDY NOW
SET FOR MARCH 13

Red Cross Field Representative,
Mr. Hausknecht. was here part of
u» r«ir mu b. .tout mom
last week and met with the board
or more than 6.8 miles—all of which | J1 ng a 2Sr e* ot
county meetof the Barry County Chapter on
is higher than most of u. wiil ever X
Wednesday evening. Mr. Hauastate and national legislative pro­
the ladies, the price being 35 cents' 10 at the High school office,
Watch the Banner next week for grams and the services of the state
teresting the chapter in First Aid
per plate.
I
—■—'■-------- * *“• -----organization, the Farm Bureau
further announcements.
work and the establishment of First
T. 8. Baird Li to be toastmaster “
Services. Both subjects are of ex­
Aid stations tn the county.
and R H. Loppenthlen will lead the
treme concern to Barry county
Dr. c. P. Lathrop was authortted
singing. Stutc Insurance Commls- ,
farmers.
MONTGOMERY WARD TO
to make arrangements for the first
sinner John C. Ketcham of Lan-j
Ail three meetings start at 10:30
unit which will probably bo at
sing Is cdmlng to give lhe address |
LOCATE IN HASTINGS in the morning with a complimen­
Dowling. The plan is to train «evof
the
evening
and
it
is
always
a
tary dinner served at noon to Farm
pleasure for Hastings and Barry |
Have Leased Adrounie Block Bureau members and guests in at­
I place them in charge of the itacounty audiences to hear him. He
-----------tendance. The meetings will be
—Plan to Open Early
hos announced no definite topic, dptvh rahv TOPPP tt 1
held according to the following
but whatever he may have to say;
BACK THREE TI- in charge to have the usual instruc­
Part of April
schedule: Tuesday. March 10. at M.
I wil!
will be helnful
helpful and interesting.
j
Intm-Mthw
[ TLES IN AMATEUR BOX­
tion in first aid work, not leu than
For some time rumors have been E. church In Middleville; WednesI Miss Dorothy Roush will toast-[
14 hours of training, and must p&amp;u
heard on tfie business streets that
ING TOURNAMENT
certain testa cm their work m weB.
SP0N80RED BY COMMER­ ‘the Fathers artd Adelbcrt Cortrt'ght ’
a Montgomery Wur0 retail store, Delton; Thursday. March 12. at the
Anyone in the neighborhood need­
will
give
the
toast
to
the
Daughters
Coals
Grove
church.
was to be opened in Hastings. It
CIAL CLUB—OTHERS
ing first aid could get it at this
A
reading
by
MiarGhrystai
Thomw,
SHOW
THERE
’
S
EXCELBoth state and County Farm.
was confirmed on Monday by of­
clarinet solo by Lewis Hine, and a
, ’
.. '&lt;.^77, ,lrnr
station which would, be supplied
CO-OPERATED
ficials of the company who an­ Bureaus are sponsoring the meet-;
quartette by Misses Frances Conk- !
LENT MATERIAL HERE with bondages, cotran and other
Ings and offering the compllmennounce, the lease of lhe
“ ' double!' higs
lin, Margaret Densmore. Lucille
------storcs on 8. Jefferson street recent-1 “rY dinners lo those in attendance, INTERESTING TALK BY
Rov
an accident
am
aid U necBassett and Lucy Bassett, ore other Bob McLeod,
Koy WhitP
White, lowing
CSJary and
such
could
uk_
ly completed by lhe late Dr. H. A. Reservations for the dinner must
RICHARD E. VERNOR features of the program. .
Adrounie.
। made with County Agent Foster by
Frank Brown Won a
cn there for care. Statistics show
। Tickets for this banquet may be
The officials point out in making, Monday. March Bth.
Close Match
the announcement thal lhe opening ' The program of the all day meet- Ample Reasons Why Every secured from the Circle chairmen I
and at the Banner office. Get your 1
accidents happen in the homes of
1s an expression of confidence in
will feature several well known
Person and Community
While no boxing tournaments UU5
j tickets earl?; Fathers, and take
this country,
country, me
the mjureo
injured ones
ones r»recontinuing belter business con di- speakers. E. E. Ungren, editor of the
Should Aid in Work
your Daughter or Daughters to thLi, have been staged in Hastings this qmrlng first aid aaalatance - Very
tlons In Hastings and the surroundNews will discuss the Soil
season the sport. It seems, has not: often lives have been saved because
,
banquet.
The
two
Mother
and
There was held in the Community
ing region. They expect the store Conservation program which is pro­
been allowed to go by default.
SUch help hu been promptly given.
,
Son
banquets
have
been
delightful
opening Itself to act as a factor posed to replace the AAA. Mr, Un­ hall, in the puller building, the "Fire
A number of boys interested have so the need for such a service ia
and this one promises to equal past
In general business advance. A 8rcn 15 B YCr? capable speaker, Prevention" meeting Thursday noon
bren practicing in a room under very apparent.
successes.
long-term lease further emphasizes
Combs of Lockland. Ohio, which was announced Ln the Ban­
the City bank, and gave a good acRussell Beeler of Middleville and
the permanent nature of the firm's
discuss Farm Bureau fertilizer net of February 20. This meeting
( count of themselves over at Ionia Albert Dykstra ot this dty wen
EDDY
COMES
plans. The main floor and base-। contracts with one of the largest was sponsored by the Hastings Com­ NELSON Th
rnzuh o*t»ne ‘“..“T
w npnmt in. rm cmm
fertilizer
manufacturers
in
the
mercial
club,
with
the
city
council.
ment of the building are to be ar- —-IU UnANU nArlUS Which ran three nights.
Chapter at the training camp al
Don Kidman---of —
the -------Stale city firemen and the Hastings Ro­
ranged In accordance with the lat-. w°rld. --------------------„
Kcllh CraI«- Frallk Brown. Har- pine lake in June, under the spon—'--- of
-- -Lansing
.
Ury cjU|j cooperating There were H18 Appearance March 13
---------- —
1st Montgomery Ward plans for re-1 p*r,n. Bureau
Services
old Bolo. Roy white. Robt. McLeod, sorship
Kellogg Founsojjjup of
qi the w
w. K.
K ticnogg
FQUn*
•all stores. We understand addl-! »111 discuss Feeds and Seeds as of- present at the noon luncheon repre­
Occaaiom Record Sale
“-1i dation.
James Thomas, and Don *■
Feldtional floor space will be added by । fe«d
the State Farm Bureau sentatives of al) of these local or­
pausch entered the preliminaries. 1 Those present at the maeUAc oo
•xtending the rear of the store sev-1 Services
through
their
supply ganizations. as well as several rep­
at Auditorium
Auaitonum
In the final* Tuesday night Bob j Wednesday evening were greatly
vral feet west.
! stores. The afternoon program also resentatives of the Michigan Stale i A major event of the musical sea- McLeod. High, school sophomore.I interested In the work praented by
Montgomery Ward operates 500 features Rev. Elmer Pritchard of Fire Prevention Association. They | son for western Michigan will be uo? ,the. nddd‘^wel8ht ,CT0^?1 by i Mr. Hausknecht. who hopes to earetail stores throught the country,; Nashville with entertaining chalk came to hear an address by Richard I lhe personal appearance in Grand iechnlcal knockout
of
George । tabllsh three First Aid Units ia
twenty-two of them being located,
Special music and community E. Vemor of Chicago, president of Rapids of Nelson Eddy al the Civic Welgle.
rvvr.g.v. xxwoM.v.
Pewamo; iivr.v
Roy White,
niktuM. an-।; Barry county.
In Michigan.
I singing will also be on each day’s the Chicago Rotary club, who is in 1 . ..j,.__■___
__
.
.
nthrr
xrhnnl sfnHpnt
other Mlc»h
High school
student rvnn
won Ihp
the I
'
J
« a &gt;----------------। program.
direct charge of the activities of Auditorium on Friday evening. heavy weight title by first round’..
Pinr«
J
March 13.
rnMUrNnrn PARRY
1 The hoard of directors of the state Are prevention associations in
Wherever Nelson Eddy appears in : technical knockout
. - over
- - -Chas,
------ . Al- GAMP FIRE GIRLS
bUMMCNUtU DAnnl
I County Farm Bureau Issue a gen­ nineteen mlddlewestem stales. He is
concert there are sold out houses
•on,a' FTBnk Brown, a High
HAVE BIRTHDAY
CO. SNOW REMOVAL eral Invitation to all Barry county also a director of the National Fire । with people seated on the aisles school sophomore, won the welter
■ farmers to attend one of this ser­
Protection Association.
and on the stage, and he Is Invar- &gt;!»J!*** lltle uncontested.
Best Work of Any County, ,M
meetings. They feel every
During the day representatives of Inbly engaged to return the follow- „°y,er 1,200 fa?5 6aw lbe ^nt. Central P. T. A. Wffl 1
farmer will want to discuss these the Michigan rue
Fire nvumwvn
prevention Asso- Ing season. The popularity of this Hastings spectators present said it
Said Tom Pemberton,
Gueitg Thursday, Mareh
| Items of Interest. Be sure and notify elation inspected the stores and fac■ County Agent Foster of your tn,K- »*»«•
,K“
and He Knows
tention so he may provide for your
------ --------------unanimous praise from thelr
Camp Fire groups celebrate Ute
Many
Hastings
people
arc dinner.
be done to reduce the fire hazards in ' nas
1
: the most critical of the reviewers. Jiever
better material for box- ‘ birthday of their organization !Mt
acquainted with Thomas Pemberton ,
. those places.
of
whom
have compared his
”
U‘P *u,lh ? .7. T
preset® week all
over
the
United State*
Stated
of Jackson, who represents O. H. &gt; AnncDO DCnilCED
vuninr was ir.troducrd
intrrwinrAd by
hv !­I many
msny to
01 lhat
wtl0m
his ,'line
• ••" 4lars
.......
’’
au °
ycT programs
“
Mr. Vemor
Introduced
by
volce
Qf nave compared
nbtx'lt
lln
up
lu
°Ped thal
Here M
tin.- "and
its h
honed
that afUr
after with special
,er United
Hammond Ac company, the big meat* UnUtrio ntUULtU
hfts promlsc(j Orand this excellent showing at Ionia that Hastings, as a feature of their hoaMayor Leonard. He gave an address II Ncbon
packers.
Mr. Pemberton drives
__
____
____
......
..
.
tnmiInral
pnrniiratrTTinnt
will
to
1
_
_
...
.
_
. jJl
PASSENGER
RATES
which
was
listened
to
with
the
clos'
over a considerable territory in this
Rapids a particularly excellent pro­ some local encouragment will
est attention. He is an interesting
received.
section of Michigan, including Jack-1 T...
i 8gram
ran’ that will bring out tl
non. Eaton. Branch. Calhoun. Barry Interstate Commerce Comm.
.with »
-of
! qualities of his fine voice,the best
.* !.1_ J.— .__.•. Eddy
meeting, which is to be held Thurs­
and Kent counties, so he is in a
Makes 2 Cents Per Mile
prevention tn an , Joves
alng and
day. March 12. at 7:30 o’clock bl
loves lo
to sing
and fof
for thal
that reason is IMPROVED SERVICE
position lo know about lhe condition
n
.-1?
] particularly
particularly generous
generous In
In the
lhe matauditorium.
of u.r ro.d. u&gt; .u lh.i
He
Effective June 2
.
« or endues. And in the .
TO START APRIL 1 Central
of the roads in all that area. He
The district chairman wiU ex­
nrZZi,
I tor of encores. And in the encores
To!?
?
C
|«
y
»h
f
1
he
81vea
the
audience
those
popular
Every reader of the Banner is in­
stated to the writer Thursday that
plain the origin and objective Qf
Rome had a fire department in lhe
Michigan Central R. R. to
during the month of February the terested in an order Issued by the
the Camp Fire work which wffl
I
roads of Barry county were in fur interstate Commerce commission l^eq°IipC^th
Pick Up and Deliver
better condition than In any of the last week Friday. That order re­ and used water; so that the method !
him C
lndellbly ,denllfled
groups wlU give, and Ln music and
Freight
other counties through which he duced passenger rates throughout
dancing. Afterward everyone la
(Continued on page slx»
I On lhc’ progrttm Mftrch 13 will
While no detailed ins true UonM invited to go to the recreation room
travelled. He requested the Banner the United States from 3 06 cents
have
been
received
at
the
local
to express his appreciation and that per mile to 2 cents per mile and RIG RAPIRQ VnTFQ
for
refreshments and a social hour.
' bt‘ Uw 8roup "ode 10 °Mtan'
। Poems" set to music by Francis Michigan Central freight office, yet
of other travellers for the excellent Pullman rates from 4 cents per DIG HRrlUO VUICO
The Invitation to attend- thia
work done by the stale crew, under mile to 3 cents per milt. The order
DOWN 15 MILL LIMIT i Hopklnson; an appealing group of the order has come from headquar­ meeting Is a general one. extended
ters
that
store-and-factory
door
the direction of Al Brown, and the is to become effective on June 2.
I German songs, by Strauss. Brahms.
to all Hastings citizens Interested in
county snow removal workers em­
The experiment of 2 cents per County Taxes Have Been In­ and Wolff. The operatic number pick-up delivery freight service will
ployed by the county road commis­ mile passenger rates has been tried
will be from Verdi's "Othello." The begin here on the first of April.
creased Because of the
Under this plan the Michigan opportunity to learn the whole
sion. That Li a compliment which out quite extensively Ln the west.
last group includes Pilgrim's Song.
tie people ot Barry county appre- . The railroads that have tried the
Route Marchin'. Now Bleeps the; Central agent, after April 1. when
Welfare Work
l lower rates have been pleased to see ! The citizens of Big Rapids had Crimson Petal, and Love Went notified that a shipment is to be the major organizations in thia day
date.
I the great increase in passenger
made by freight will send a truck and age helping young girls and
.
the good Judgment to vote down the a-Rlding.
RECEIVE APPOINTMENTS.
receipts resulting from the lower
Mr. Eddy's accompanist will play for it. and that will be all the trou­ young women toward the attain­
Mrs. Gladys E. Gaskill of Delton rates, it used to be possible to go proposition of cutting all taxation a Bach number during the program. ble that will pc caused the shipper. ment of high Ideals and welland Clifford Gardner of Middleville from this city to Grand Rapids for in that city to the fifteen mill limit.
womanhood.
If your
In spite of the unprecedented When freight arrives for a store or rounded
have received their appointments as Instance for 63c. while now the fare While the state tax has been abol­ seat sale many good seats are still factory, it will be delivered at the daughter is not a member of a
postmasters at the places men­ is 81.18. If the railroads will ac­ ished—it never * was heavy—yet available at all prices, and good dear of the store, factory or office. group, or If you have one too young
tioned.
They were recommended cept it Ln good faith and make the county taxes have risen on account reservations may be obtained by an In other words the railroads will do to Join, come out Thursday night
for the place a long time ago but best effort to Increase their passen­ of welfare work until in Barry early letter or call at the Civic Au­ as trucks are now doing—give a and get first-hand information in
the appointments have Just been ger traffic, we believe they will be county the county lax at the pres­ ditorium box office.
, slore-and-office-door
delivery on a most Interesting way concerning
-------- , -----I freight. This will be a groat con-.
made.
well pleased with it. It has been the ent time is six mills. Add to that
SUB-DEB RUMMAGE SALE. ■ venlence and ought to result In a
eastern
roads, particularly
the the school tax and if the limit were
fifteen
mills,
there
would
be
very
HARD TIME DANCE.
Pennsylvania and New York Cen­
Under Nat'L Bank, Sat., Mar. 7. good increase of business for the |yQf£Q FOREIGN COR*
Prairieville Saturday night. Mar.
| railroads.
tral. which have bitterly opposed little left with which to carry on
7. Ecklers orchestra.—Adv.
, the activities of the city. The prop­
any reduction in passenger .gates.
RESPONDENT COMES
- nsltlnn wu mowed under in Bir
Raplds by a vote of 804 to 310.

mountain, which must command a
Superintendents and S. S.
beautiful view, though we didn't al- &gt;
tempt to scale the height. As slated'
Teachers to Discuss
above the Butterfly Farm is at thei
Vital Questions
base of this towering hill. The ex- I
„.u.v 13
u contained ...
• I Next Sunday. March 8. at 2:30
hlbit
in a .....
little —
bungalow. at the rear of which a half p. M. at the Hostings Methodist
acre or more of ground Is complete-1 church there will be an interesting
ly covered, both top and sides, with' meeting for all Superintendents
wire netting to keep the butterflies. and Sunday School workers of
in and their bird enemies out. Il is ] Barry county. Interdenominational,
here that the butterflies arc raised., The topics that will be of Interest.
Different kinds of butterflies feed on lead by Frank Angell, are. "Our
different kinds of plants. In grow- Goals, Our Problems, our Responing them, one has to know Just what' slbilltles."
kind of leaves and blossoms their
Plan
— *to
-------send
J a carload
**~* 'from your
fickle app'-tltes prefer. As a result, church for this first meeting of
that screened-ln half-acre or more county Superintendents and Sun­
of ground is quite thickly covered day School workers.—E. E. Jones.
with many different kinds of trees See. and Tteas.
and shrubs to provide Just the right.
RECOVERED BOTH CARS.
kind of menu to make them thrive.
w. didn
t.ni
lhe
We
’t know ».
it, but ...»
the »».Butlerrty Firm H suppowd lo be open on Frtday nlfht lhat two rars were
to the public only one day a week&lt;rom Naahvllle The report
.Continued on p°Xe three)
In •&lt;»«&gt; ID 0-eloeX One ot
-*
-----'the cars was a Chevrolet Master
I coupe, belonging to Max DeFoe of
, Lansing, the other, a Buick coach
, belonging to Lloyd Marshall of
1 Maple Grove. The sheriff phoned
j the news to lhe state police deFRANKK. GIDDINGS.
partment who relayed It to adjoinFrank K. Giddings has rented his lng uutes As a result of this, as
farm, and will have an auction sale mentioned elsewhere, the Buick car
at the farm. 4 miles west and I 1-2. wns foiind in Findlay. Ohio Stale
miles north of Lake Odessa, or 2 1-2 pou^ found the dcFoc car Salurmiles south and 1 1-2 miles east of day and returned It to the owner.
Clarksville. Henry Flannery is the ।----------------- -----------------------auctioneer. Wm. McCartney, clerk. FORTY TAKE CIVIL
He offers a fine list; span ot work,
SERVICE EXAMS,
horses. 4 cows. 20 sheep. 135 pullets. I On Saturday the civil Service exa long list ot farm tools, soma amination for substitute clerk-carhousehold goods and other articles, tier in this city was held, with HuRead lhe adv. in this issue for date go
“ -------------Wunderlich “
and
J ~
E. F- Sayles —
as
the examiners. There were forty
and full particulars of this sale.
present to take the examinations.
ELMER G. HULL.
Having decided to quit farming, postofUce. making it necessary to
Elmer G- Hull will dispose of his go to the high school for the tests.
personal property at public auction
NOTICE.
at his farm 8 miles east of Has­
Owing to the uncertain condition
tings. or 1-3 mile south of Morgan.
This farm Is known as the old of the roads and weather, we will
••Strong Farm" and is 1-2 mile off not have the Delton Creamery din­
of M-79. The sale will commence ner. but will have a business meet­
at I o'clock with Dewey Reed os ing of (Nitrons and stockholders at
aucUoneer and H. Lathrop os clerk. the creamery on Saturday. March
A good list of properly will be dis­ 7. 1030. at 1:30 P. M- At this lime
posed ot including a bay gelding the buttermilk will be offered for
1.250 lbs ; bay mare 1.350 lbs.; four
Vemor Webster. Secy.
cows and three calves, chickens, —Adv.
hay, grain, harness and farm tools.
PANCAKE SUPPER.
Read the oucUan sale advertise­
At
the
Martin
church Wednesday
ment in this Issue for further par­
evening. March 11 from 6 UH 8
ticulars and remember the date.
o’clock.—Adv.
C. U BARBER.
As C. !&gt;■ Barber has decided to
CITY COMMITTEES
. quit farming he will have an auc­
COMMENDED HASTINGS.
tion sale at his farm, a half mile
CALL CAUCUSES The
representatives of the Mlchl■ - ‘
Wnh
„
• ■ gan Fire Prevention Association
Henry Flannery as auct
tr and
Jieceaaary to Elect Mayor who inspected the business places
offers
John Hoag clerk. Mr. Bi
and
Treasurer
on
Monttnd
Stories
Thursday of
a large list ot stock—16 i
catUe,
| last week spoke of the fine cooperTB and blood tested—IS...
day April 6
allon'they, received from eviflybody
of farm tools, and miscellaneous.
here.
They
said
that
Hastings
is a
On page 8 of this week's issue of
This will be a fine ppportunlly far
the Banner will be found the caU better than average town in doing
anyone wishing to purchase cattle
for the Republican and Democrat away with conditions that start
or farm Implements. See the adv.
caucuses. Officers to fires. The Banner has been prom­
for full particulars.
tiuica on
uii horse
iiuik through
uuuuiu an tiunvuc
. - and
,ward
---- , -------------miles
hostile city
Tarsus. Turkey.
ised their complete report, which
■ country.
It was
a dangerous
under- ---------nominated are mayor, city'
May
7. 190®.
■-----------------------------------__
....
____
____ nrrr Kttnorvispr fnr tint
FRED BURPEE.
arid we know will be'of interest to all of
To My friends in America:
(taking, and the chances were: urer. supervisor for First
.
An aucUon sale will be held at the'
Fourth
wards
and Second
and our city readers.
The bearer
of
this
letter, against his getting thru alive. He
farm of Fred Burpee. Deciding to' Haratoune A. Adrounie. is a mem-1 was willing to run the risk, how- Third wards, one aiderman and one
V. OF F. W. HAVING X.
constable from each ward.
quit farming, he offers his personal ber of this year’s Senior class in 81. ever- to order to save Tarsus.
SLUM
SUPPER
MARCH 12.
property, which Includes horses, cat­ Paul’s inaUtute. He has been ad-1 I cannot too highly recommend
The Democratic city caucus will
The Leo A. Miller Post Veterans
tle, and tools, for sale. Also a quan- I vised by us all to go to America. him.
be held on Monday evening. March
tlty of hay. grain and com. The ।
16. at 7:30 at the city hall and the of Foreign Wars will have a slum
1 for the reason that there Is no
Faithfully yours,
supper at their their hall on Thurs­
farm is located six miles northwest
Republican city caucus is Tuesday
safety for him tn this country since
Herbert Adams Gibbons.
day night. March 12.
of Hastings and three and one
evening. March 17 al the same
massacres. We believe that he
This will be an open meeting and
With the above letter from Dr.
fourth miles north of M-37, near, !II the
has a future before him. and that Gibbons, a dUUngutehed American
every ex-service man and his famthe Irving Grange hall. Henry ;
‘ he will become a good and useful scholar, carefully treasured in his
i Uy are invited to come.—Signed—
Flannery will act as aucUoneer and,
I man. His ambition is ,_to study pocket. Dr, Haratoune A. Adrounie FAIR COMMITTEE APPOINTED. The committee.
R. B. Walker as clerk.
medicine. I do hope - that he can landed In America in the summer
At the meeting of the Retail di­
I attain to It.
.
ANNUAL MEETING.
FREDERICK FUHR.
of 1909, with Just three dollars of vision
---------------------------------------------------------of the commercial club held
Tne annual meeting of the Has­
As Frederick Fuhr lias other I Mr. Adrounie is one of the very money In his pocket, but possessed: at the Parker house Wednesday, a
Work, he will dispose of his per­ ' few Levantines whom I could hon- of a courage and a will that were committee of merchants was ap- tings Rural Fire Association will be
sonal property at auction at his j estly counsel to go to America. Ho capable of surmounting great dlf- pointed to work with the Barry held at the fire station. March 7 at
2 o’clock.—Everett Swegles—Adv.
farm, one mile south of the County 1 ha/ in him the elements of suc­ Acuities.
county Fair Board. The commltFartn comers, a mile east and cess. We have tested him thorHe had a few weeks before grad- tee consists of Dave Boyes. A. J.
1-4 mile south. Sec. J. Baltimore oughiy and not found him wanting. uating from 8t. Paul’s college at Larsen. Herman Arold. and William
NOTICE!
Twp. Henry Flannery will be the &lt; Above Mil things, he has displayed Tarsus with a B. 8. degree. He left Stebbins.
For the convenience ot pa­
auctioneer and E. E. Gray, clerk. ' two characteristics, willingness to his native environment in tiie Near i
-----trons the Banner has installed
Mr. Fuhr has a nice lot of property serve, and personal courage.
East where his race had met with ।
NOTICE TO SHIPPERS.
a second telephone—No. 2414.
including. 2 horses.. 6 head of cat­ i When Tarsus was Invested on the untold persecution for yean, where i The ' Michigan
, ____________
Livestock __
Those wishing to reach us can
tle, Jti ewes, chickens, hay and dark night of April 16th. Dr. Chris- he had seen his parents, near kin change has changed its shipping ■ now put in their calls through
grain, farm tools, etc.. 8ee the adv. tla and I being absent in Adana, and friends wiped out in the per- day here from Monday till Saturday
2415 or 3414. If one number-Is
on another page for list, date and he volunteered to carry a messaga iodic Turkish massacres, to come to i of each week. See adv. on another ' busy try the other.
complete Information.
to our consul In Mersina—seventeen
(Continued on page throe)
page.

Five Auction Sales

FIRST BANQUET
OF TS K ND HERE

Petition Will Be Acted Upon

Mrs. Jeanie Smith of this city
has applied for citizenship papers.
She is the wife of Charles Smith,
who recently became an American
citizen. Like her husband, she is
Scotch. Although now the wife of
an American citizen, site cannot,be­
come one except by court action.
Previous to 1922 it would not have
been necessary for Mrs Smith to
have applied for citizenship papers;
but since that time laws have been
passed so that her application fw
citizenship is now necessary before
she can become an American citi­
zen. She does not have to wait the
two years, as did her husband, after
her petition is filed, but only three
months. Her petition for citizen­
ship will be acted on at the Septem­
ber term of lhe circuit court, which
will be the earliest one at which
such action could be taken after the
three months following her applica­
tion.

PAGES 1 to 8

HASTINGS COMMERCIAL CLUB FAIR

SCRAMBLED NAME CONTEST
Win One of the $5.OO-Velue Prized

WiU Feature March 11th
Meeting of Barry Co. M.
E. A. and Inititute

Oounty District of tha M. K. Acombined with tha county institute
will be held In the Hastings Central
school. Thursday evening. March
12. with a dinner In the play room

The lucky ones this week in the A. Robinson, for original posters,
Hastings commercial
Club Fair and to Mrs. Anna WLUitts. Hastings. which hiutaada, wIvm and Mnfe
Scrambled Word contest are:
R. F. D. for her Mother Goose •
1— Mrs. Leon Young. 619 E. Jingle book, i
Bond Street. City (Cordes News
To those Wlio successfully Strug- |
Service).
gled through the hodge podge as-' to plan for.
2— Mrs. Homer Bauchman. R. F. sortment of vowels and consonants '
D. 1. City (Coffee Shop*.
last week, here are five more offer­
3— Mrs. Anna Kronewitter. Mid­ Ings which have passed through the business meeting i
dleville. (Kroger Grocery and Bak­ Commercial club scrambling mill. cd and short talks
ing-.Co).
Good luck!
4— Fhyllls Newton. 542 No. Bolt­
1. Oantlathsfonbsokalnlna.'
wood, City (Hastings City Bank).
2. Ablodlayenledm.
5—Victor
Sisson.
Freeport,
3. Taccnlephaclacegtadonltllrfca- dltorium to hear At
(Archie D. McDonald).
foreign correspondon
The names in parenthesis repre­
4- Ignlrfdenr.
ler-Kane expedition
sent the prize donora. Mrs. Young,
territory in Africa
5 Eshodysenhml.
for example, will receive 'her prize
Rules arc the same as published through Ethiopia to
from Cordes News Service; Mrs.
distance
of 15/"
Bauchman from the Coffee 8hop. in the Banner last- week. AU let­
ters must be postmarked no later will be -Down
etc.
• X.
In addition
children’s -prtzci man
than Monday,
Monday. ukcwlsc
Likewise au
aU letters
letters , ’**•
were awarded to Kenneth Gates.'^nust be sent tlirough the mall to U8U“
I care of Glenn Gates. Cloverdale. R. Boz 287. Hastings.
“
*
A correction: In last week’s ar-1®ul*y
F D. 1 and Miles M. Wafers. 436
■*»&lt;»*»
W- State Street. Hastings. Prizes tide, the Banner left the Impres- ~B*‘
can be received by calling at the sion that' prizes were awarded by i “
I commercial club office in the Steb- Miu Eva A. Htcox. Commercial,
dub secretary. TbU U Incorrect as
blns Building.
Honorable mention was given to
Don Wldrlg, Hastings, and Mrs. E. millet.

1

�iiaitixgr, HiancAx thvmdat. mabcb a iw
Easter is .Tve wfceks away.
Kenneth Lane, who ha* been LU.
Mrs. Kclherlne Moses and Miss
(Lucille Williits have been victims A BURGLAR WAS
Chicago goes on eastern stand­ Is convalescent.
BUSY IN NASHVILLE.
John Haven* is Che new clerk at: of flu thl* week.
ard tune far the tint Ume. March 1.
| New offices for the Barry county
Box social, parish house. Mar. II. the WUllacc Fred store.
Barber Shop
and
1
Townsend
club.c.__
Free.
coffee,
free ------The U. A. D. Sub-Deb dub are welfare are being prepared in the Enter*
1
■ Townsend
—...
Francis Goggins has recovered cards.—Adv.
holding a bridge party Saturday basement Of the court house.
Takes Oath—Officers
from his recent appendicitis oper-; In tha semi-final bouts at Ionia afternoon at the Masonic Temple. I Jerry Bywatcr. assistant manager
Get
Two
in
Ohio
atlon ----and is back at school UAW
this' last ....
week UU1UI
John Leary V*
of HastingsI
Kagha Camp *Fire
.. v
group .....
met ..
at the
.V n
A-. AW
St fP, ,has
IM Just been trans nan-aall Swanson of with Mrs. D. Z. Boyes, guardian, on ferred to Spring L______
j H'Clr
week.
'।&gt; WB.
was defeated by Darrell
Lake as______
manager
_
Friday night a burglar entered
Misa
Miaa Ethel Ragia
Ragl* entertained Lowell; John Tfiomas of Heelings1 Wednesday evening. Each girl in- of lhe store there.
Pearl Btaup's barber shop at Nash­
seven friends very pleasantly at won ,rotn Harry Eickhoff of Lowell i vited a prospective member a* her &gt; Two new cMl cases were started ville taking something over |1T in
her apartment last Thursday night bJ' default. All of these boys were guest, thus winning a birthday bi circuit court yeeterday. One was cash. He made his entrance by
with
1
in IH
the
novice nlasB
class.
honor.
J. Clark Rnhtnmn
RobinsonVersus
--------- ------------—
.(•h monopoly.
aaaI.
9
a nAvlAA
iI hnnnr
Dewey
breaking lhe window of a rear door.
The friend* of Mrs. Helen Lanta- wia
the .I -----------Carol Annjs
the ------name
Rouse. and —
the--------other.- —
J. —
Brgndstet— —. the
—— Person.
b~.-—. wh0
— wrote
.—-— —
— — —
— of
—the
-----------------------»Jidstet- j The same fellow also took a Buick
will be glad to know that the is Banner
r"
some *time
’
ago. asking for daughter bom to
“ Mr. nnrf
—-* Mrs.
*
Ar— ter
•
and
—• Nina J. Boyle versus Albert!car
belonging to Uovd Marshall of
information of relatives of Mar-. thur Westerlind on Sunday. March Blom.
| MBpte Qrove On Bituriiav Harold
slowly recovering from her recent
guarette chalker. at one Ume a l. al
Pennock hospital.
She I Harold Sunday of Clare, son of1 nillev age ia of nundec Mirhiuan
illness in Blodgett hospital.
resident of Orangeville Twp. please I weighed seven pounds and five Mr. £fld Mrs. L W. Bunday, is । *nd Elwood Jones 16. Of Nashville
Mrs. Frank Adair is entertaining communicate with the fanner? We ounces.
dangerously ill following an oper- were arrested at' Flndlav
Ohio’
lhe officers and board of the Has­ now have the desired Information.
It seems the attracUve looking aUon last week. He has about an' where they had driven in Mr Martings Women's club at luncheon
Ws quite agree wUh.Irving Cobb lady who owns the Morning Glory even cilance for recovery, the doc-, shall'* Buick automobile Thevwere
today at her home on W. Walnut.
that the trouble with this winter is | Shoppe takes time off now and tors say. His parents are with him. I held at the sheriff's office there
Friends of Miss Helen Michael that there's so much winter to it. then lo. try her hand at writing ; Theodore Fedewa and Kenneth awaiting lhe comine of the ntnrers
will be pleased to know that she | Word from Mrs. A. W.
,
Wood-; poetry. What's more sho gets them Daniels were picked up Saturday'! from thu county in addlUon to
has relumed to her home from bume says that Dr. Woodburne is printed.

I

FREE DAY
Food Center

were
Jail

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18th

Mr. and Mrs. John Engel. Her son many friends.
| include it in their sixth anthology. Daniels paid the 810 fine and costa ■ unde'raheriff Glen Bera drove to
and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wy-, John C- Ketcham recently ap- With Miss Stickney's permission we of |4.75 axscssed ogainst him and is Flndlav Sunday and returned with
kom. of Indianapolis. Ind., came peared in Allegan to address the are printing it in the Banner this. free. Fedewa did not pay and is uw two bo vs it was admitted hv
BA.
a R.
r. al
u their
S.S Washington
wuimwn BirthBirth', 1 week.
wnk.
bo-din, with
.Uh the
th, sheriff.
Uimn.
.toto
Tuesday to assist with her care.
1 D. boarding
i JS.i7i.iw
•..._
day luncheon. The Gazette says—I From Lakeland. Fla., the Banner
Nelson Eddy's concert at the and revolver from Staun's barber
Those who drive trucks will be
interested to know that temporary ■Mr. Ketcham's address was one of ha* received a small eight page pa- Grand Rapids Civic Auditorium | shop and that he alone drove
nroved
hr
ner
called
TukePrtdnv
13th
nrnhahlv
.
.
brilliance
and
wit
and
proved
he
per
colled
"This
Week
in
LakeFriday,
the
13th.
will
probably
see
Marshall's
car
awav .from ..
NaahvUle
restrictions have been placed on the
was wholeheartedly American and land." Abd wc notice lhat one of more Hastings people tn the aud-1 Jle drove throuah Dundee RaturJ
weight of loads that can be carried
musical j day forenoon
' “
'
"
over highways in this section of inc
the an adtnlrer 01 Washington; and all the first page columns is headed., lencc than nt any previous
. vni™
;--------j Ii — &gt;h—
and there found
this
*
cre
P
Icasct
i
'
‘
o
have
him
chosen
!
''This
—
That
—
And
T
’
other"
by
Aroccasion
in
years.
Eddy's
and
i\° 7s “I’d' Cilley. who thumbed for a ride. He
state. This is customary at Up­
irlne •P*a,‘er ol ‘i»e day."
• • ' i thur E Howell. Lake Odessa. Mich- personality
personality have
have been
been i sold to the wu taken in by young Jones and
time ol the year when lhe spring
Richard Vernor. high authority igan. The paper is filled with news 'American
’
public thru moving pic- . drove on to Flndlav where tlie
brenk up comes.
There'was a larcr number nr rti&lt; on fires,
""*• their
inclr cause
c,u“ and
‘nd prevention,
Prcven‘lon- of
01 interest to tourists—places of in- ; lures and the radio, and everyone oh|0 sheriff nicked them up having
Thcre was a large number
?u“*r of
Of disdU.; WBslnin°ur
ourc“
city
y 1Mt
lastweek
week
IIn his -------terest--------to visit,
-------sports events,
-------- -tour- is eager lo hear him in person. He become satisfied the 21J P»a,
StahT t«e nrn?.C,t pubUc “ddreM he Mld tho larB«‘ i*1 registrations, clubs and societies, is. without doubt, the greatest onc 8toi“lUfrom Nashville ^Ji|b£
amihist^wh£?J th&lt; vhl tr'rmed Vhe s‘ngte
,OT ftr“ ,n thls coun- tourist club programs, etc. Speak- drawing card today in lhe list of wlu released because he Id nolhagainst what thev
they termed the.-.
tthe try wereOuicigarettes.
; special ingot tourist
registrations, thow musical stars.
whatever
do with eiXe?
w _______________________________
smoke nuisance from the conden•"* peeve against them are the traces listed from Michigan and New York
Jcrkne. Jones is at the Detention
sary plant. The matter was re­ they leave in the majority of I outnumber those from any states.
Home awaiting further action by
NOTICE!
ferred to the city engineer for in- । homes in the shape of blistered fur- our own state leading with 27 regthe authorities.
•
vcbtlgatlon and report.
For the convenience of pa­
I nlture, and scorched holes in up- istratlons and. New York state with
trons the Banner has installed
Word from Mrs. Melvin Buchner ji holstery. et cetera.
• 25.
CONDUCTS SERVICES
a second telephone—No. 2414.
(Louise Showerman) of Sunfield
No, "Jane Cameron in Barry
The Education Division qf the
AT
CHICAGO
MISSIONS.
Those wishing to reach us can
Twp.. says that Mr. Buchner is re­ Bypaths." now a feature in the Dept, of Conservation say lhat the
Glenn H. Blossom of Grand Rap­
now put in their calls through
covering nicely from his recent ap- Banner, is not a syndicated eoi-1 recent poster-slogan contest was
ids. who has many friends here, is
2415 or 2414. If one number Is
pendicltls operation nt lhe Char­ umn. Il may be some day—who i “
■* most
‘ successful one they had.
the
combining study al the Moody Bi­
busy try the other.
lotto hospital, returning to his home knows? pretty good philosophy we ever conducted.-A total of 8.000 posble Institute, Chicago, with pracllon Saturday. Tills is good news to think running thru It. Jane Ls a tcr-slogans
were
entered. The
। cal training in city missionary work.
I Barry county product and well ac­ quality of the art work us well us 1
their Hastings friends.
PASSING OF AGED WOMAN.
He bi the leader of a group of fclThe reported need of repairs on quainted with the bypaths she the slogans worked out exceeded
Many of the older residents of low-student* who have charge of
the 8. Jefferson St. sewer, from1। saunters down every week. The all expectations. They have made , this city will remember Mrs. Caro- the services once a week at one of
South St. to the end of the sewer, Banner is happy to be a medium records of scores of slogans for lino Hall, widow of Mathew *¥f&lt;illJ the many city missions,
and lhe church street sewer from for putting her Ulent before the later consideration in planning former residents here. Mrs. Hall---------------- — ‘
Marshall street south to South public.
law-observance signs to be used on passed away on Thursday at the
LEAP YEAR BABY.
street, was referred to the council
Mr. and Mrs. Ross B. Thorbum Michigan highways. Subjects sc- age of 93. al her home in Grand
—
Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Bennett.
sewer committee Friday night with 1 and son. Dr D. R. Lethbridge. Mrs lected by lhe youthful artists in, Rapids. Surviving are four dough- Route 2. are the proud parents of
instructions to investigate and re- j. Lethbridge and son attended lhe preparing their entries ranged from tcr.&gt;. Mrs. Fred Emmer. Mrs. Ches- “
~ ,klb.
- —
■ —
i» little 6 ]-2
son. born Feb.
29.
port.
i builders show in Detroit Sunday pollution
and preserving
wild ter Lathrop. Rose and Carrie, also Leap Year baby, at the home of
On their return lo Mason their car flowers to .observance of the game I n sister. Mrs. Anna SchafThausr r their parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. E.
, was wrecked in Farmington. No and fish laws and many of the con-1 of this city. There are fifteen Bennett. Sr.. Montgomery St.. He
one In the party was injured, but trlbutions were humorous in na-1 I grandchildren and seventeen great­ has been named Vai Arthur.
the car had to be left in Farming­ ture.
grandchildren. The funeral was at
ton for repairs. The Mason people
Mrs. Terrence Doyle «Margaret St. Alphonsus church tn Grand
DEATH OF MRS. HILI..
were brought to their homes by lhe Barnum i severed her connection Ra[)lds on Saturday at nine o'clock,
Mrs. Fred 'Elsie Margaret) Hill,
men driving the car which figured with Pennock hospital Saturday with burial in Mount Calvary 34. of Maple Grove Twp, died ul
in the collision—Ingham Co. &lt;Ma­ and will now give her entire atten­ cemetery here al 11 30 A. M. her home on Wednesday morning
son) News.
tion to things domestic at lhe Doyle Father John V. Dillon officiating at following an illness of a year's du­
Our unusual amount of snow has farm in Campbell Twp. Ionia coun­ the burial. Mrs. Hall was born in ration. She was a resident of Maple
gone off in most approved style, dis­ ty, not far from the Barry county Germany, coming to the United Grove vicinity nearly a'.l her life.
appearing gradually each day. with line. Mrs. Doyle has been connect­ States when eight years old. She-------------------------- her husband«»
u
She is survived by
and
Be sure and visit this store
only a minimum amount of rain ed with the nursing staff at Pen­ had been n resident of Grand Rap- ! two sons, Milo LeRoy and Junior
' accompanying the thaw. Saturday nock for the past nine years, and ids for 53 years. She was a sister Fred, prayer service nl lhe home at
before buyiqg your Spring
the
ice
went
out
in
the
river,
a
has
been
one
of
Ils
most
popular
ot
the
late
Mrs.
Jos.
Pflug,
Sr..
2
P.
M
on
Friday
and
funeral
servWork Clothing.
rather fascinating right, huge sec­ members.
She will be greatly well known resident here for many ices at the Wilcox church at 2:30.
lions being borne along at a rapid missed by patients and her co­ years.
Burial in,Wilcox cemetery.
Our Work" Clothes Depart­
rate by the swift current. Men । workers alike. Mrs- Doyle is no I
ment is very complete, and
। were stationed at the base of the | stranger to rural surroundings hav­
?ia^T,lzpf)F A7-E’ GREG°RY- I
DEATH OF MRS. WYKOM.
j railroad bridge all day to deflect ing been born and raised on a
Albert Elmer Gregory, aged 70.: Mrs. Etta Wykotn. 77. died at the
will save you money.
(died early Wednesday morning at home of Mrs. John Engel Wednesthe larger cakes of ice from harm­ farm.
home of his brother. Henry. 810 day noon, following a three day 111ing the heavy limbers which sup­
This past week two unfounded
port it. The river Is not much over rumors were given widespread cir­ E. Marshall st., after an illness of ness from pneumonia. Mrs Wykorn
| normal spring depth al present.
culation in tlie city ot the death of hree years Before coming to Has- had been in failing health since
ngs he resided on a farm in Bal- she had fallen down some step, in
Our Stony Point correspondent two well known citizens who al
sends in a challenge for the cham­ present are away from home. The tlmorc township having lived in j August. 1934. and It had been nixpion woodcutting record, by calling Banner, the telegraph office and Buiry county all his life Surviv-' eMBry for hfr ,0 g0 abo^ 1,
attention to the fact that Charles friends of the parties were beselged Ing arc three brothers. Henry of crutches, she lived in Grand RapBarkhuff who is cutting wood for with calls as to the authenticity of Haattngs. Emory of Leroy and Jas. ids until she was-45 years old. Sur­
Barry Wellman has this winter up the news. Added to these, the re­ D- of Monroeville. Ohio, also a sis- vlving are two sons. Harry of In­
to the past Saturday night, cut port came thru thal Mickey Coch­ ter. Mrs. Alice Miller ol Hastings, dlanapolls, and Walter of Beattie
Funeral services
services will
will
without help. 103 1-2 cords of wood rane had been killed. Tills spread The funeral will be held at the PH- Washington. Funeral
He tells his own trees, cuts them all over the country, and to thoroly grlin Holinex, Tabernacle, of which be held at lhe WWlldorff funeral
home al
al 9:30
9:30 Friday
Friday morning
morning and
and
discredit the statement. Mickey Mr Gregory was a member, on home
...111 **
I— ln
1.. Oak
—..A. 11111
..... cemc‘«ry
.
nmlr?i P’ W
iT burlnl W,U
still going strong for he isn't himself was called to the “mike."
'
H. Hoos
Hues officiating. Burial will K'
be in Grand Rapids.
thru his Job yet. And still, our and personally denied the report H
correspondent remarks, some peo­ that he had been killed In an air-, in the Striker cemetery in Balti­
ple claim there is no work Can any plane crash. Said Mickey “It's to-1 more Twp.
PASSING OF EVELYN BROWN.
one equal the record made by Mr. tally unfounded. I've had my feel
Evelyn Jean Brown, rixhl years
| THORNAPPLE GARDEN CLUB.
Barkufl?
lhe ground all day."
The spring meeting of the Thorn- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl

Your cash register receipts dated Feb. 18 which is
Lucky Dav” will he redeemed in cash on March 18.
Save Your Cash Register Receipts for Lucky Day in March

FRIDAY, SATURDAY and MONDAY VALUES

CORN

PALMOLIVE
SOAP Bar4^C

National Recovery
No. 2p । /

Can

Moil 3 Wrappers and

072C

10c—

Get BEAUTIFUL BRUSH

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE

lb. 28c

24'/z lb. sack 95c

LILY WHITE FLOUR
YES, MA'AM" PASTRY FLOUR

24'/z lb. sack 69c

Waters Clothes Shop

ROWENA PANCAKE FLOUR, plain or buckwheat, 25c
PIRATE PANCAKE FLOUR

51b. sack 19c

KARO SYRUP, Blue Label

5 lb. pail 29c

Men

2 for 39c

RINSO, large size package

BIG BEN

CRYSTAL WHITE

SOAP

Soap Chips

OVERALLS

5 lb. Q r*
Box ZjC

10 £ 37c

SATURDAY ONLY

KELLOGG'S Whole Wheat Biscuits, pkg. «
KELLOGG'S WHEAT KRISPIES
KELLOGG'S Whole Wheal Flakes

t9’ I O-H
pkg. ■

51b. bag 19c

BUCKEYE ROLLED OATS
BUCKEYE CORN MEAL

51b. bag 15c

MOLASSES, Aunt Dinah

5 lb. pail 25c

ORANGES
POTATOES
HEAD LETTUCE

2

fILAM
ll fATLf
Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 224-1-2557 BL—
BIG FITTER
BRAND

do*-

SUNDAY ond MONDAY. MARCH 8 ond 9

89‘

WASHINGTON
$4.29
DEE CEE Brand.
I

peck

each

GENUINE LEE OVER­
ALLS

(jQ

Sj-39

$j.59

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

Fred ASTAIRE and Ginger ROGERS in

FOLLOW THE FLEET
With Randolph Scott, Harriet Hilliard, Astrid Allwyn

BARGAIN .MATINEE SUNDAY. 1:00 and 3:00 o'clock
Other Performances—Adults 25c, Children 10c

WORK SHIRTS

FRESH GROUND

HAMBURG

Genuine Pepperell Blue
Chambray,
KQC
35 inches long _ ww

Minced HAM

SANFORIZED

2 it- 25c

ii. 12*/^c

।

"KIND LADY”

SHRUNK

Chambray,
T7Ke
36 inches longIV

WAFER SLICED

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. MARCH 10

Genuine Pepperell Gray
Cover!,
CQc
36 inches longvv

ALINE

MacMAHON,

BASIL RATHBONE.

Mary

Carlisle, Frank Albertson and Dudley Diggcs

WEDNESDAY ond THURSDAY. MARCH 11 and 12

Myrna Loy

in

"WHIPSAW”

SPENCER TRACY

PLEASE NOTICE

lb. 23c
lb. 15c

Wednesday. March 25.

FRESH PICNICS

lb. 18c

Watch fur details later.

SIRLOIN STEAK, bonelcts
BEEF KETTLE ROASTS

v*ill fee held at uur Mure

lo Saturday March 28.

COD.FISH, pound pockoge, 23c

RIBS.

lb. 11c
HERRING, keg, 99c

TRY OUR HALIBUT AND SALMON STEAKS

FRIDAY .nd SATURDAY, MARCH 13 .nd Id

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

JOHN WAYNE in "OREGON TRAIL"
FEATURE NO. 2

lb. 19c

lb. 13c

Adults 25c. Children 10c

Formal Spring Opening

LEG OF VEAL ROASTS, boned and rolled
HOME MADE PORK SAUSAGE

HERBERT MARSHALL and JEAN ARTHUR in

WATERS
Clothes Sho

"IF YOU COULD ONLY COOK"
With Leo Carrillo

Episode No. 6 of “THE GREAT AIK MYSTERY' will bc-shown
only al Saturday Matinee at 3;00 o clock
Adults 15c, Children 10c

1 apple Garden club will be held
Thursday, March 12 at 2 p M. in hospital Wednesday about noon,
room 1! in the Central school after a week's illness of rheumatic
building. Tne q&gt;eakcr Ls to be Mrs. fever, she was a bright, happy win­
Arthur MHtner of Lansing, a mem­ some child and was unusually ad­
ber of the Women s National Farm vanced in some of her studies Sur­
and Garden Club and an authority viving are the parents and a sister.
on gardens and flower Judging Her Lorraine, and other relaUves The
subject will be - New Plants and funeral will be al the Walldorf! fu­
Shrubs" and she will have some of । neral home Saturday at two P. M.
mrm
.*51?“ J0”®*
them wun
with wmen
which to
to illustrate
illustrate her
her'‘
talk All members are urged to be'lng °urlat 1,1 RfvenJOe cemetery.

present as this is lhe first meeting
of the Club this year.

PASSING OF C OLEMAN C. VAUGHAN.
EMPLOY HASTINGS ATTORNEY.
Tlie Nashville council last week readies us ot the death of Coleman
selected Don Potter as village mar­ C. Vaughart. 78. at hl* home in St.
shal In place of Vem J Me Peck, Johns, this morning, following an
i a hose resignation had been pre­ attack of pneumonia.
Mr. Vaughan was one of the best
viously presented and accepted The
। council also voted to employ W. G. known men in Michigan, having
I Bauer of this city as attorney to served the Republican party and his
(push the suit which the village has county in many positions of trust.
I brought against lhe estate of lhe He was a former state senator, one
i late John J. Dawson, who was a of the best Secretaries of State
...... on a bund given by
My the
W1C old
OIO Michigan ever had-lhe best type of
signer
Hastings National Bank Jo the vil-, P°*ilicl*n and man of public affairs.
. lage of Nashville as security to the
l,mc
bls death he was
village for its deposits tn thal bank.
‘be position of director of the
------------- ----------------i building and loan division in the
। COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE.
of ‘he Secretary of State,
। The Nashville Chamber of Com-! The funeraTwill be held Saturday
I inerce has selected a committee to&gt;®‘ 2:30 P. M. al the Congregational
Investigate the effect of the fifteen church. 8t. Johns. A more extended
| mill tax on certain Michigan towns mention will be made next week
I wJ»are It has been In operation for ■
----------------- - * ■
--------some ume.
, OBITUARY,
time. Tney
They plan on having a
a |
public meeting a little later, where | R|cliar(* Kenneth Bromley, son
•they -in
will report .u-itheir findings The of Chester and Lillian Bromlev.
committee consists of Dr. W. A. I was bom in Hastings on July 6.
Vance. L. C. Lorbec. L. W. Feighner. ; 1935. and died Feb. 28. 1936. aged 7
F 8 Boyes, and J. C. Hurd. Nash- month* and 22 days. He leaves to
vlll&lt;- will vole on a proposed 15 mourn his father, mother, one
mill tax limitation at the village brother. Buddy, and three sisters,
Beatrice. Joyce and Ruby, and hta
election March 0
grandparents
Funeral
services
GRADUATE FROM M. 8. Cwere held at lhe Baptist church
Three students from Barry coun­ Sunday March 1 at 2 o'clock, the
ty are among the 175 graduating Rev. Adcock officiating. Burial in
from short courses at Michigan Striker cemetery.
State College al E&gt;*t Lansing. Fri­
TO WIND UP ITS AFFAIRS.
day. March 6. The graduates In­
Papers have been filed with the
clude Gary O. Newton. Freeport.
Winter Term General Agriculture; county clerk for the dissolution of
Paul R. Pennock. Nashville. Route the Delton Cooperative Shipping
3. Second Year Sixteen Weeks; Association, which was a corpora­
John D. Polla. Middleville. Dairy tion duly organized under the laws
of this state. Changes, brought
Production.
about by the fact thal stock is now
MARRIAGE LICEN8E8.
easily transported in trucks, have
Frederick W. Daniels. Kalamazoo 21 done ,away with ,the
or necessity for
IT. many
manv. livestock
Hv-.t—1, shipping awo
_ Doris M- Heffner. Orangeville ..30! so
i George Staiger. Battle Creek .. .71 • elation*. As the Delton Association
1 Florence M- Cook. Hastings . . .56 does not buy stock. Il will wind un
J. D. Sherman. Kalamazoo Co .
iu affair* and go out of business
Ruth B. Erskine. Assyria ITll^owpa no debt*.
. '

:

�PANTING8, MTCHIGAN. TUTlKBAr. MARCH 3. 19M

Organizations BUTTERFLY FARM’

UNIQUE BUSINESS

Tlie Quimby Ladle*' Birthday
club will meet with Mr*. Rial Kel­
logg. 127 E- Walnut st., on Thurs­
day afternoo/i March 12

on Sunday as 1 recall. We went on
Tuesday, and naturally found lhe
place locked up. But noticing a lit­
tle telephone near lhe front door,
we ventured to ring It. Mrs Carter
answered, and after explaining that
we were visitors from Michigan and
unfamiliar with tlie one-day-a-week
open house, she very obligingly come
down and admitted us. I want to say
right here for the people of Califor­
nia generally, lhat they are the most
friendly and obliging people on
earth. and always at least appear
lhe happiest when doing something
to add to the happiness of others—
especially strangers. Mrs. Carter had
to climb way down that big hill, and
later climb back up. Just to ptease
Tis. But she did so cheerfully and
seemed to get fully as much enjoy­
ment in showing us those rare
specimens as we found In looking

The Business Women'* Hospital
Ouild meet* Monday evening at the
American Legion hail, with dinner
served by the Auxiliary women at
0:00 o'clock sharp.

Townsend plan meeting at Epis­
copal parish houM Friday evening,
March 13 After supper George Voae
of Kalamazoo is to be the speaker

Hospital Guild No. 18 will meet
Thursday. March 12. with Mr*, lyo
Welfare. 409 E- Colfax. Visitors wel­
come—Nellie Matthew:, assistant.

The Dowling Cemetery circle
will meet for dinner at the church
dining room March 12. The usual
business meeting will follow the
dinner. The following ladies are
on the committee for work—Laura
Wilcox. Lois Altman. Linda Butler.
Mrs. a. E. Bracey, and Lllah Bab­
cock—IBanche Powell. Secy.

fine, and represent &gt; considerable
Ume and expense, but naturally, such
collections would be small compared
to the collection of Mr and Mrs
Carter. In short; those who collect
butterflies have a wa/of finding one
another out. Ju»t as have the grow­
ers of blooded stock, or lhe colleci tors of ran- coins and stamiw. Rut
the Carters somehow seem lo have
I expanded their territory to rover
। practically the wiiote world. For in­
stance one shipment of butterflies
that they received from India some

When we entered the large room
Pythian Sisters next regular a most beautiful sight met our eyes
meeting I* March 10 Pol luck sup­ —a perfect riot of color in fact. The
per. Bring your own table service.
Time—6:30.
covered with mounted butterflies ot
Mrs. K- S. McIntyre is arranging every hut and color, gathered from
the program for the meeting of all parts of lhe world There were
the Women's Club to be held Fri­ the great butterflies taken from
day afternoon. March 13. al 2:30 around water-holes in the Jungles
huge beautiful
o'clock. Her subject will be "The ot Africa. Great, —
_ .... |argf.
Stage Today." Tills week's meeting thing*

Barry
Pythias,
at eight
ters, 105

justice.
in any event, both tlie Angleworm
Farm ahd the Butterfly Farm go to
xfiow That way outside of the beaten I
pattii of human enterprise. to tlioxr
posse.•■eu of vision, and perhaps
a way gifted with unusual latent In I i
certain ways there are opportunities ।i
of developing buxine ». unique- m
their way. and at the same tliniwlpful. Often w»- .see tiw- meek and
lowly angleworms brawling ulonr

Ixxlge No. 13, Knights of
meets every Monday night
o'clock al their now quar­
N- Michigan.

All young people are Invited to
attend the Epworth LeugUe service
next Sunday evening to hear a
guest speaker. A social hour, al 5
o'clock, will precede the devotional
hour at 6 o'clock.

another example of protective simu­
lation by nature.
With Just one short visit to this
Butterfly Farm with Its thousands
and thousands of fnounlcd speci­
mens, you are’mi completely ab­
sorbed in admiring their matchless
beauty lhat the mind fails to
"click'' In describing Individual ones,
unless they strike you os outstand­
ing for some reason or other. I ain
far from being an expert In ••But­
terflies." but In viewing this rnagnl-'
fleent display II is easy to under- I
stand how anyone might become in­
tensely Interested In it. This would
lx- es;&gt;ecUlly true, perhaps, of any­
one of an artistic nature who enjoys
the unusual In the way of colors and

The annual missionary lunch­
eon will he held Thursday. March
12. in the Methodist church parlors
Mrs. Esther Strong, district presi­
dent, and Mrs. W- M Stevenson,
the district young people's secre­
tary. will be the speakers. Past
officers arc lo be honor guests.
The S. E. Rutland W. C. T. U.
will meet at lhe home of Mrs. Ollie
Vandenbrook. Wednesday. March
11. Mrs. Mary Bauchman will have
charge of the program. The subject
to be discussed will be. "8. T. T. and
Press.” Poems and readings In hon­
or of St. Patrick's day will be given.

Acrobatic Auto

Is Inexperienced in butterflies. It
would seem thal the mounted col-

Mr. and Mrs. Carter took up lhe
collection of butterflies a-, a hobby.
Mr. Carter especially as a relaxation

Dr. Adrounie Passes

live correspondents in all parts ofthe world
Sales and exchanges
were made that brought to him
specimens of lhe moth and butterfly

they could make, but lo make their
collection Just as complete as j»s-

It may be surprising lo learn that
manufacturers
of JcwiQfA and
novelty goods are big buyersBT but­
terflies Just to get the beautiful
and unusual colors that nature sup­
plies. One Los Angeles linn, n good
patron of the Butterfly Farm. xp.*-

his Job

logg. In whose home he Lit- r lived
and with whom lie enjoyed a i lose
friendship that terminate &lt;1 only

logg'

Supplying n

and insects, and have very creditable least helps to sustain the "Butterfly
collections. Man} of them are very Farm." which is a Mecca for artists

i

3 Deliveries Daily, 8 &amp; 10 A. M. &amp; 3 P. M.

LOOK

Aina

The Dionne babies have become
so wealthy they may have to pay
Canada an income lax. even after
exemptions for dependents.

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE lb. 28c
COD FISH
lb. 23c
MISSION TUNA FISH
2 cans 25c
BEEF KETTLE ROASTS
lb. 15c
2 lbs. 25c
KING NUT OLEO

Good Food
. . . that's one reason why so

GIVE THEM

many people “Dine Out” nt

lhe Trio. Other reasons arc

the

cheerful service*. . . pleas­

taste

ant surroundings and rea­

sonable prices.
Special Luncheon. 30c

Soup,

Meat,

Potatoes.

Rread and Rutter,
Side Dish,

Drink—

Notice the full cream laatc of High­

{Coffee, Tea or Milk]

lands Dairy Grade A Milk. It stands

out because it

SUNDAY DINNER

LEG OF VEAL Roast, boneless, lb. 23c
PORK LOIN ROAST, rib end lb. 19c
LEG OF LAMB, trimmed
lb. 28c
PICNICS, small, shankless
lb. 20c

of the highest

Complete Chicken

Dinner_________ 50c

cooking and the

Steaks cut from branded
beef . . . prepared

which milk
*

many

things for

is used and you

big difference.

“As you like itn

HIGH in CREAM
CONTENTI Raw
or Paitaurizad—

•ELDPAUSCH

TRIO CAFE
Karmea Bros.

-MARKET­

Phone 2137

Stale St. and Michigan Ave.

Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hastings

MARCH 25
PLAN TO ATTEND

HASTINGS COMMERCIAL CLUB FAIR!
on one of these days. Bring the family and come early. But
leave your pocketbook at home, because everything will be

FREE!—Admission, Refreshments, Prizes. Don't Miss this
SPRING FAIR!
THE PLACE—COMMUNITY HALL

capture the much desired specimens
lo make more complete his wonder-

engaged in other specialties Thenare* a good many |&gt;copte In this
country who have made a specialty.

There must be something lo that
Loch Ness monster up in Scotland,
as he has reappeared at lhe old lake
again with the opening of the tourist
season. Or did they hire the same
press agent for this year?

Those who gel things for
never fall lo coma back foe
His life is ended and his works | supply on the sama terms.

has beaten a path lo its door In
that canyon stands Ute world . first
and only Butterfly Farm. that's the
Returning to Battle Creek for hit
reason why It's unique; it's unusual; only one of it* kind in .the world year at internship they later went
the display h wonderful. That Is Ladles will be especially interested to Lacey where a resident physician
why lhe world has worn a path (o

would be complete, but there are
thousands of beautiful specimens in plaques, trays, mirror and picture
another room lhat haven't as yet frames. In colors duplicating as
nearly possible those found on but­
terflies of rare hues and markings.
cumulated this gigantic collection? So lhe flutterfly Farm way off in
Where do they come from? In an­ । this California canyon may be re­
swer lo lhe first question, it Is a sponsible for some new fad in color
for milady's jewelry, and is the only
"Butterfly Farm" in the world. It
not only provides a most gorgeous
'and Interesting display, but at the
1 same time Is supplying a demand to
some other states, who are engaged
in the same activity. The same is

rar Isn't trying to climb a
tree; It'a standing unsupported
on its rear wheels and the lid ot
Ila turtle-back. The auto ended
up In thia weird position after
crashing Into another car at
Wichita. Kan., and skidding 75
feet.

by l&gt;u devotion to humanity he has
helped multitudes.
.
Year. ai;&lt;i I had the privilege of
having him in my home for quite a

flies flitting through tin air around 1 oilus but who would think of making .&lt;
’
busmen ot selling them? Maybe Ami
galow of Mr. and Mrs. Carter, prac­
tically "forty-mites from nowhere.”
nerses
crawling
in
the
ground
un
­
located almost at the end ot a Ijme.
thal leads Up a ravine in the Cali- derneath U*. or flitting in the an

(Continued from page one)
very Intelligent lady, looked after
lhe Butterfly Farm Society didn't n land that meant opportunity to
forge ahead; where he ho;x«l lo
ture did Together they sallied fortii realize his long cherished desire to
to all parts of California, and with study medicine. Ho came through
the aid of their nets they brought
long.
back their specimens alive. When membtrs of st. Paid'.. faculty, who
suddenly
eggs were found on leaves, whole fell he had the stuff to see his (fay
from lhe steaming jungles of India. plants were uprooted, carried back
To thF captors, how was a night to their canyon building, and plant- through any hardship to .success,
lor they had ven him facing death tnented without doubt, by the overspent In the Jungles with its heal
calmly and undisturbed, saving the rxmion experienced In serving his
and dampness, to be compared with
Ilves of thousands who had sought widely scattered clientele during'
lhe handful of rupcai. that would
tlie unusually trying weather concome as a reward for lhe capture of
these huge gorgeously-colored but­
terflies? What beauties they were care. Special boxer, in'the hatchery
too. The tip of each wing graphi­ received lhe chrysalis formed hangcally discloses why tlie natives call
both live and dormant departments
iiau icd man. had Insisted, despite
stocked, there was nothing lo do
strenuous protest-, on going on to
plainly painted as only Nature can
Middle lake because he had prompaint It. head, mouth and eye. Just

will be a social one with lhe men as
guest*. Following the dinner called
for 6:45 o'clock there will Im1 a so­
cial evening arranged by Mrs. War­
ren E Carter.

faithful and conscientious. We trust­ follow him. 1
ed him to the limit and mlsaed him HU memory i
I send my l
hU dear wifa and

ly feebly &lt;1escribed this unusual cn- summer of 1912. with the optimism
terpeise in this tetter, because one ‘ of youth, he felt he could ask the
with perhaps u better appreciation

Phone 2272 We Deliver

�BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

The Hastings Banner

Editorials

THE NEW CATALOG WILL SOON BE OUT

This and That
Yellow fever probably wouldn't
appeal to the average person as sub­
ject matter for drama. Yet tn "Yel­
low Jack." as written by SidneyHoward In collaboration with Paul
De Krulf and presented by the
Kalamazoo Players under the di­
rection of Paul Stephenson, this
rather repulsive topic was molded
Into a story of Intense interest:

munlty lost not only a capable Republican
representatives
and
physician, a loyal citizen, a most । senators who thought more of pa'.devoted husband and father, but ronnge than they did ot the pledges
one of the world's "unsung heroes." they mad? to their electorates
When lhe final history of the
Armenian Massacre of 1909 is writ- reduced and still provide, sufficient
ten, the name of Dr. Adrounie' revenue for carrying on legitimate
should be emblazoned as one of the activities, the administration n
outstanding heroes of lhat horrible Lansing owes it to the buying pub?.
Easter week. Tarsus, where he was of Michigan to see that this reduc
attending school, was besieged. In tlon is made.
cold blood the Turks were murder­
THE CONSTITUTION.
ing men. women and little children | '

In most brutal ways. Help could
be secured at Messina 17 miles
away, but the one who reached that
city would have to pass through
hordes of Turks bent on murder
and plunder. Dr. Adrounie realized
the danger. He knew full well that
if caught he would forfeit his life,

THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1936

1^1

Public t1 OTUtn
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Delton, Michigan.

DR- H. A. ADROUNIE.
I cate reducing the sales tax by
In the passing of Dr. Adrounie * exempting certain classes of merat the University hoapital In Ann I chandise but his recommendations
Arbor Saturday morning, this com-1 were tossed overboard by a gang of

More than likely lhat histone
document. The constitution of
United Stales, will be brought into'

thc spotlight during the next few
months. There arc those in
present government who v would
•modernize' .it according to their
own "advanced" and "liberal" Ideas.
probably through the most cruel All of which brings up the question.
methods of Turkish brutality. De­ ■ What is the Constitution?"
spite this he volunteered to make
A rather difficult question to an­
the attempt—and succeeded, but swer. The constitution is not a
help did not arrive before thous­ bill of rights granted by the govern­
ands of his countrymen had been ment to thc people; is not an edict
massacred. No one ever beard him which people arc required to obey.
boast about it. nor would he men­ Rather it is
statement by lhe;
tion it only reluctantly when ques­ people* limiting the powers of their'
tioned. His bravery during that aw­ government; a document designed
ful massacre has been referred to in to uphold the democratic principles
"The Red Rugs of Tarsus." written for which the Colonial patriots
by Helen Davenport Gibbons, in fought.
which he was referred to as
Some critics assert that we of th*-*
"Harutun." One of Dr. Adrounle's, present day know more than the
prized possessions when he landedI makers of the Constitution did.
In America, was a letter of recom­ But do we? Probably wc know more
mendation
signed by
Herbert about such things as science, sani­
Adams Gibbons, husband of thc au­ tation, rapid travel, etc., but do wc
thor, in which letter his brave at­ know as much about government.
tempt to save the people of Tarsus Itself? The Colonial patriots knew
was most highly commended, as from fiht-liand experience the auwas his personal character.
' 1 tocratic tendencies of .a govern­
Whbn Paul Revere roused thc ment whose rights were not de­
slumbering patriots nround Boston fined; they appreciated better than
he rode tc undying fame, though at wc do the tyranny which results
COMSTOCK
the time surrounded with no par­ _____
____
There is a touch of pathos in
__ _
from____
rule________
without _proper
representicular danger, as his flying steedI tallon; they foresaw Hie danger to Governor W A Comstocks stalci
nr
n,cnl
ll
“
l
retired
look riim only by the homes of loyal1 democracy of dazzling 1*r °nal counect]on he
wuhhaslhe
IB36from
dXnal!
ofriends. Dr. Adrounie was in thc' leadership, of the inevitable tend- f cra,|c campaign
He glvcsxai^ his
midst of dangbr every rod of the 17I cncy toward unwise emotional ac-1 reason the federal patronage muss
mile ride to Messina—but he had po• tion under stress. In the const!-&gt;» which he claims lhat political
^nom^ior“ to
Longfellow to Immortalize his feat. tution they attempted to protect m

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

the

Um Spirit of « Community

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

He was one of
sung heroes."

lt*a

"un­ from our own weaknesses by mak- 193, democrats have been given
' ing hasty, fundamental changes in | greater consideration
than
the
government impossible.
j members ol the "old guard" with
EASY COME. EASY' GO.
consequently, the Constitution »hlc'* «ro“P »»e aligns himself
.
N
:
Frank
APicard,
capable
and
UseAccording to reports, the state
tWU
Uw supn i.., power It
s„„11w j.
•ales tax measure is bringing nearly guaranteed not specific righto but J iiar manifesto a few days earlier
twice as much revenue to Ute state rathfr a specific form and phdoso- Picards statement was charged ofi
as was ever realized from property phy of government
SubordinaK J° disappointment al hl* failure to
.land the newly created eastern
levies. Furthermore it appears to,
to the Constitution were lhe preal- . MlchlgaJ1 lcdera| Judgeshlp.
But.
be as popular with the tax paying dent, congress and the courts. I---------------------------------------------------------public as any tax can be. People i Furthermore the functions of gov-1
make their contributions in drib­ eminent were divided into cxecu-;
blets while going about tlie Usual tive. legislative and judicial to
routine of trading instead ol hand­ guard against concentration of
ing over much larger sums at in-. power in any one branch. Tlie one
frequent intervals to a county ol- purpose ol the constitution is not
Comstock it is dilTerent. Here
ficial.
■o b!»d.r
or .P.orre .„•&lt; £*
SSrlJlS I
This gives an illusion of freedom .exact ideas of the Colonial patriot.) to keen thc jwrly alive. He ran for,
from tax burdens which b entirelyi, onto future generations, but rather governor when he knew the demo­
false. The method may be less ] te prctcct us from autocratic rule—.c™ts dldnt have a. Chinaman's.

A Quotation [
III. WHO rc . ivra u
bcjuTil should never

The Hastings Banner.
Hastings. Michigan.

In your last issue of lhe Banner
you had an article about one should
praise the road commission and not
criticise them which Is O. K.
But you don't give any credit to
42 men who volunteered and helped
shovel and open lhe road from
to
Prairieville
I The play, an adaptation from De Bugbee Corners
Krulls book. "The Microbe Hunt­ which took a day.
There were five men or all the
. era," describes the monumental work
men
on
this
road
who
volunteered
tlf Dr. Walter Reed and three asso­
ciates in establishing the fact thal that day and we live on a side road
the dread yellow fever could be
spread only by one particular va­ other side roads and said they
riety of mosquito—if this mosquito would be darned if they would
could be exterminated, the terrible shove) and wanted lo know wiiat
epidemics of this deadly disease the commission was getting paid .
for.
could be held In check.
Their road is open and all others
near here except ours and we have
It still doesn't sound like an eve­ not seen a snow plow for over a
ning's entertainment. Well enter­ month so why not praise a bunch
tainment la an inadequate word. of hicks aa well as lhe road com­
You follow the successes and fail­ mission. Now what have you got to
ures of these four men with the say? Lei us see your answer In the
। same breathless interest one fol­ Banner next issue.
lows a mystery thriller just before
the denouement—only at the con­
clusion there Is something more to
carry away than a mere two hours
To "Reader" and hl* forty-one
of amusement or excitement.
companions — congratulations for n
Lacking the usual romantic set­ job well done. Snows too heavy
ting. this story succeeds in bring­ for available equipment to handle
ing home lhe unpresuming heroism cannot be blamed onto road com­
and self sacrifice Involved In such
missions;
therefore communities
unexciting feats aa the discovery of
that pitched Ln and helped them­
lhe yellow fever mosquito.
selves deserve praise — particularly
A particularly effective scene—« m&gt; since the spirit of self-help and
group of soldiers outside the medi­ self-reliance are less common now
cal laboratory ridiculing the idiotic
| antics of the doctors—and within. than formerly. The Road com­
। the doctors with nerves and tempers mission i* no tin god immune from
Compared
with
stretched to the breaking point, all criticism.
1 testing, testing, testing; doing ev­ counties about us. Barry county re­
erything passible Uf infect them­ ceived n better job of road clear­
selves with the yellow fever virus ance than most others. For this, we
from imprisoned mosquitoes which believe, the road commission and
had come in contact with yellow the men employed by them deserve
fever victims This contrast to lhe praise—just as do thoxe many pri­
.'.coffers and the workers—the work­ vate citizens who through their own
ers ignoring criticism to establish initiative contributed toward the
hypothesis which might prove of almost hopeless task of keeping
incalculable value to humanity, even roads clear.—Ed.
lhe scoffers outside, creates an im­
pression not easily forgotten; is a
TWENTY’ YEARS AGO.
dramatic "flash" of the whole his­
I The Ironside Shoe Co. has pur‘ chased the stores and lots on So. tory of progress.
' Jefferson St., long occupied by w. H.
Hew to tha line, let the quip*
The Kalamazoo Players are for­
j Spcnce’a harness stock and Philip
fall where they may I
tunate to have one of the moot
Lutz's shoe shop.
beautiful and complete little thea■ Mrs Sophia Nelson has resigned | tors in the United States available
her position as superintendent of I for their productions. The audltoBy Observing Tommy.
, the Good Samaritan hospital and num. Itself, is a masterpiece and
; will leave when her successor is ap­ the backstage completely equipped
People who live in the neighbor­
pointed. Mrs Nelson will slay in'
hood tell me that Howard Frost Is
| this city and continue her work in for handling the mechanical details getting lo be quite a saxophone
of scene building and shifting. All
the schools which has been of great sets are built in a well equipped looter.
1 value. '
work shop.
Al one side of the
Local billiard fans will welcome auditorium Is a very beautiful
This week's nomination for the
the announcement, lhat George E. lounge where coffee is served be­ Hastings Hall of Eligible Bachelors
Spears, world's champion straight tween acts. It can be said without —Don Fisher, one of the city's wellrail billiard player, ahd Chas. L Fer­ exaggeration lhat Kalamazoo Play­ known young electricians. Tail,
ris. western balk line champion are ers live up to this fine background. dark-eyed, athletic—what a prize
•
to meet here in a 300 point match Their productions are put on with for leap year!
at the Club Billiard parlors next a real professional finish. Most of
Monday evening.
We've Just discovered lhat the
the plays could be presented any­
Thomas waters has returned where without shame of compari­ favorite nickname of a certain
from a business trip to New York son.
young advertising man is "Tillie."
। and Boston. '
YANKEE SPRINGS HILLS.
When Dave Boyes Ulis 'em they're
Yankee Springs Hills lay
I
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
. dreaming
_ told!
Miiud Ballington Booth. "Angel
Clad in their ancient pine.
of the Prison." will speak on Tues- j Only lhe bird notes tremble
Plaids and checks seem to be tlie
day evening March 13 In St. Rose | In the grove where graze the kinc.
current fad in shirts.
hall on the subject "Lights and ।
Shadows of Prison Lite." in the I But not an echo whispers
Tommy has a hard lime concen­
Women's Club course. The price I Hen* where the willows bend
trating these days—must be an ad­
for this lecture has not been raised I Nor shall the fir tree quiver
vance touch of sprig fever.
: from the usual one ot SO cents
I Though wars and nations end.

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

'Round About Town

-Charron.

|

worlds

VV.'HEN a man has the last
" word In an argument with
his wife. It’s usually “Yes. dear."
'Tn spring a young man's
fancy lightly turns to thoughts
of love.” except during leap year,
when his mind is too filled with
thoughts of self defense.
Walter Jobnann may bare
proved that a dollar will.to Just
ns far today aa In Goorge Wash­
ington's day. but everybody
can't tx&gt; a star pitcher.

|i^|

FROM CALIFORNIA.
Santa Cruz. Cal.
February 24. 1930
Dear Mr Editor.
I am writing lo have the address
on my Banner changed to Santa
Crux California, Route 3. Box 197.
I am moving to a cozy little bunga­
low where I can pass part of my
time with a garden and flowers
which I dearly love. We have en­
joyed your articles of the west and
California very much.
California Is a very interesting
and wonderful stale. Anyone can
find the climate that suits him
best—from the burning suns in the
deaeru to lhe hot summers of the
valley; more equal climate of Uie
coast lo the most severe climate of
the mountains, equal to any Michi­
gan winter.
Only a couple of
hours' ride from any of the cities
brings one to Yosemite valley. Lake
Tahoe or some other winter play­
ground for people who love coast­
ing. skating or other winter sports.
But California Is not all innuhtne
either, for we had about three
weeks of cold, rainy, gloomy weath­
er about Lhe time of your big bliz­
zard there. Wc used to enjoy those
old-time winters with the horses
and sleighs and bells Jingling, but
those good old days arc past, never
to return only In memories to some
You surely have written a most
Interesting article about lhe Last
Continent of lhe Pacific ocean. 1
have placed It In my scrap book,
also the Item about the three men
of Hastings who started on n trip
that ended up in the big blizzard.
Il seems that the Atlantic ocean
has a lost continent, too. and the
Banner readers will tx&gt; pleased if
you will give a description of it
flhnellme. too—how the continent
of Atlantis was destroyed, lhe de­
struction of the great continent
which once Joined America
lo
Europe. I am told It 1* a very in­
teresting novel written by Gutciifie
Hyne. I hope you have all been dug
out of those big snow drifts by now
Our cold, rainy spell is over mid ev­
erything Is lovely again and fruit
trees In blossom.
'
sincerely.
Mrs. Effie M. Ickes Faster.

Tremendous
(1 Trifles |1
I I h ELMO scon WATSGN | [
A STRAY HORSE
KTER n'RII.ET and Patrick
Mcloiughlln went busy at a
spring near the head nf six Mlle
canyon In Net ado. trying to wash
out ennugh |&gt;ay dirt to keep then
In grub.
As they tolled at their
job a horseman rude up.

P

Thomas Paige Comstock.
He had
turned tils horse out to rustle fur
Itself and lhe anlrn.il had stray* I
Comitock glanced down nt the
contents uf tlie Irishmen's "nicker.”

claimed. "The only trouble Is. that
you're struck It on my Innd. You
know | bought this spring from
old man CuhlwelL And I took ICO

Well, there's soma hope for
Junior, now that the University
O'Riley am! Melonighlln protest*
..7, ,.,1^.-1
r.t | chance and it is easy to understand
ot Chicago his sal the precedent
even autocracies ot a benevolent [
bltierne.v.. it is dtfTcult to vis-1
1 at Comstock's “horning In’ thin
of conferring the honorary de- । The engagement of MUs Bess
order. For thc framers of the con-। uajtw tl,P democrat, getting anvJudging from the actions of some
Willison to Clarence m Davis of But when the last man ventures
son kept an account of The total slitutlon knew belter than we do i where minus the service* of such |
of the young blades and lassies we So bls n.itne went on the location
; Toledo was announced last eve— Forth
from ...................
this burning shrine see. spri'g is already here.
amount of sain taxes paid during that the division line between 11-kder*.. and voters regardless of ,
notice with theirs. I.nn-r ho mi
If only politicians' statements ninq at a pretty dinner given by What friends shall soothe him
the year, lltc result ought be some­
were tnoro candid and less can
Miss Willisons sister. Mrs. Waller
But tlie ageless firs and pine*.
'
....
■
-sportaman
in
politKa
—
WilUam
A
This week's nomination for the
what of a revelation.
died.,
Buckiiout. at her home on Ban­
is narrow and pliable os a strand Coni4oek That he lech comr-eiled ’
Hastings
Hall
of
Poesy
—
Frank
An
­
croft street in Toledo.
As the sales volume increases of thread—tiiat the one can merge i to desert his party that honored i
Iilin an Initnurtnliiy which he little
' The sooner business is back tn drus. His words move with the dreiimvil of nt the time.
Mayor Heath made a business
will lhe stale government reduce into the other almost over nigh'. -W:” ultl*
governorship, and at'
trip to Chicago, last week, rclurn- lhe hands of business men. the rhythmic cadence of gasoline flow­
For the two Irishmen. panning
tne saiei .ax ra.e or will it use the
NoI OIKi.
u,,. constitution op •a time when his judgment and in-•
sooner will business begin to func­ ing from an automatic pump.
mg Thursday.
for gold, had uncos ere,I ore which
( flueiu •• ire so sorely needed, is a de- ,
•adrt mmje M
p.,.,
w W|10rr p,01.,v,
Quincy Hynes closed one ot the tion."—Senator James J. Davis. Re_cLLH*tating blast againjt jicnipcra'.ic L
kpateonage-iist* through the -need* ■
One of Doc Lockwood's minor
-largrst sinRWs.ne»-of wan-paper pubUc&amp;nr docu- prospects in Michigan.-Muri De-‘
------------------J,wre'
"&gt;*"M
j lev. expansion ol department* and mcnl ls
ambitions. I understand, u
is lo
to oebe- ”
ever made in this cily last week.
general rather than de-jF«*'- Charlotte Republican-Trmune.
come an expert pistol shot_ he has l,ip
■nn"“|* Ojvlilr mine, an.)
Uhc bill being over 8100 worth, all
bureaus? It Is pretty safe to tate fl’nUlve Amendments have from I
"
««•»«
to one residenj+fp this city.
I• Mas Della Coutchle returned to a private range in h's own base- • Ihcr* ’•»* «eeoi&lt;*st mining i.»n tins’
j
Muskegon
Monday
morning.
that unless people make a terrific
At the Wc4*ti Methodist parment.
I continent ha* ever, known. Virginia
time to time beer, made but none of
j&gt;r.est T Conlon
abb Grand
I -----------------Mrs. Ann ------------Gumisli -----and
her
clamor, lhe state
government these have added or detracted from Rapids politician, and now an :&gt;•&gt;"He uho uil! not pardon others mu: ‘ sonag? wedne-w,1. February 28. by i daughter. Mrs. Jennie Burk who
' Rev c L Brroicy. Arthur Moore
whether it’be m Democratic or Re­ the fundamental philosophy' cuts- I 'istant Stale Attorney-General asI can't figure out what note it is, •"'"f* lhe name nf the owner nf
not hmsclf expect pjrJon” I were injured so seriously last Dccand
Miss
Zoe
May
McDowell,
both
lhat
Warren
Carter
strikes
when
he
'h«* aira.r hnrse. it was the fninouz
publican hand-, will mi tight and lamct! in the original document
। ',5"cd
adv|'*' t,lc Sale' Tax D1MARCH
, of Ha'tings, were united in mar- i] oration day. left their home Sat­ laughs.
I C^yia-.ick buln
vqiun, thinks that a sale.- tax u a
spend the added income ,i f,r;t as
urday for the first time since the
Th|i document docs not serve as
Charlotte will vote on bonding ' acc^ent*
There is a sun after ail—I saw '
ORANGEVILLE
received. This, of course, doos not a case book in determining the con- wonderful thing for the people It
hits an unnecessary burden of tax­
for 89.000 to get a new factory.
help to. promote n well-managed ntltutioniUty of legislation. Rather--------FIFTY YEARS AGO
one yesterday morning.
1
AND EAST GUN MARSH.
ation --------------from real --------estate." argue, Mr.
8—Prctident RomcVc'i osdrrv
govemrqcnt; on the contrary, it laws arc judged m the;light ol their I Conlon, ant! he point.- out that a
N. T. Parker contemplates hcat- .
«it ci cur banks closed.
I Mr' nnd Mrs A1 Canaan ot
I mg his new hotel with steam
i»jj.
Iormcr 1931 suic Ux l,! 17 «»*n»oxts
encourages lhe spendthrift spirit— 'i irmonv- with tin* mn* of
„
„1Ah2*R,A'Marshall were Sunday viritors of
.urmon, mtn tm
pun ot tn- 0„ rcal.&lt;klate lu:&gt; 1Jirn ff.,nuvrd
FORTY YEARS AGO
| Julius Russell and family will w2x5 A* . Frenc,t\. spS'U 1,11 Mrs 8 A. McCafferty and brother
Easy come, easy go!
A little fresh maple sugar found 1 soon occupy a portion of hte fatb­ weex at the home of her daughter., Morse Canaan.
Constitution. Spirit xs- a vague entirely and that last year the
So long as people paid properly term winch defle* clehnitiori. Con-1 'ale* tax brought 4.i millions lo
its way to market last week.
crer's rrildcr.cc
residence or.
on jaCcraar.
Jefferson ataart.
street. Mra. Emerson cortrighl. On Fri-1 Ben Madden and Albert McCattaxes, each incrca &gt;■ in levy aroused wqucntly this
Miss Belle Stebbins has accept- He will rent his residence on Park day she was called to lhe home of I ferly made a trip to McGufTy. Ohio.
responsibility
luu
. t
is responsibility
luu 'the stalc KO^rnincnl.
cd a position in the office of Bxr- street.
h^r V.St5r ~r5' 1Wll,,aH1 lUUman. a week ago Saturday reluming
a protcil which, although it did not
:n
tlie
hantij
ol
.nine
&gt;»„
m UK !».«,
rell A: potter.
| The factory ot Bentley Bros. Ac who had suffered a stroke al her । Monday evening. They brought
•
, tiiciuai v&lt;».\ prpivipies
Ul'.y
"Y'snkrc Doodle.
succeed tn elimlhatiu; cxlravieminent jttMsu who form
'The Bicyclers." a farce by John i \V ilk Ins was started Monday.
h?21e near •Sulmby.
Morris Canaan back with rtirm-whosu- apply to social security Mt Conlon
gance. at least served to check th-.*
Kendrick Bangs will be given by
David Eycieshymer is now over-: The Brigg*
community
night will slay with his sister. Mrs Mepreme court free from the obliga­ is about a&gt; well posted on the . ab­
volume ol spending. Tills checl: i- tion,-uf party politics and palron- ject us a first-grader would be to
members of the Women's club and seer of
5rt?Sne^.?
OmuiF^'dl,c
vi the county
wwiivj farm.
imui.
,
..vu.
uuc t0
io Cafferty.
uanerty. until after the spring
Cunent Topic
Club
at
the
Lecture
i
r
•
-----*
drifted
roads
will
be
held
nn
pm
.
ri{J
Chas.
Baldwin
leaves
for
Sevanon
Friremoved almost entirely now lhat
I solve high u'hool problem:.. Mr.
■
------------ —----- :
-------—----- -------- ---------- ------- „ ....... Vi, .1.- planting
piauiuiK ls
u donei
uonr. M
ns he
ne ownj
owns&gt; B
ana
ti^vfweek
«l-mVwith
withthe
iKaDetroit Ha
1.' rvenins
...
Course entertainment after Lent. I nah next
day
evening.Unrrh
Marchn13.tp,...
Every one ____
I operates
an onion farm in nun
Conlon., argument that placing a
the sales tax is in fore*The consti:
bar- direct sales tax op the products of1
R J Bell add John Eggleston I baseball club.
welcome. Pot luck supper and pro- Marsh district.
’
caught a twenty pound muscalongc | Married—On Thursday February gram.
labor is a good 'economic mine u
„
u.
1 We understand Clifford Kahllo
don't know, doesn't hurt us—a false. (
at Gun lake yesterday.
( 25 at the residence of Moses Fuller.
Clay
................
.........
,U 1B ! andnBVC
rojoyir
ln,
Clayton
Case...............
was able
to. U1
resume
family have
been- enjoying
the
.dictatorship which alway* lias been ilUy
is grocery
arocerv deliveries on
nn the open far sunny
.........south
__ ... ........
.
.«
Claude F- Hough of Nashville.1 the home of the bride. Mr. Smith: hl*
while .his1 .friend
We do not question Mr. Conlon's 1
dip-shod statement if there ever . and
a
we hope always will be abhor.•on of C- A Hough formerly of this A. Holmes and Miss Kittle Grames routes
—
- neighbors here
- •have, -been -huvro“l” last week.
*pek'
|«nd
sincerity about the matter—but we
city, was married yesterday to Mis* of Carlton. Tlie Rev. Win. Judd.
question
his fundamental
And did we rejoice on Thursday I ing a real Ume fighting snow drifts,
b
i
d B’*u&gt; j lieople of this nation a- a gioup.; do
knowledge
ot taxation
...................
h..r lhe
,h. snow
„„„ plow „„
------ -Mr and Mn IXnnls ^Fountain
■ Mildred Rowladcr of Woodland. , of 8arBnac. performed the cere- tn
to h«ar
go ,u
through
truth. For
|eatiy wnile our attention l, lo-^pawcr* that-Uicy could nut hojie-lo, that ouaGer.„most public official* .
Miss Mac Robert.; hay
I.sf been mony in the prwenc* of a number which opened a way out fromCaM'a ar* the proud parenta ‘
little
'exercise al^nthvldtuK
so^kuS do,n 1
tax“'‘c«^ truth ‘themcalled home from jack&gt;on
. .. u..
by lhe of fr|cn(jj| who had been invited to Comers to Eagle schoolhouse after son bom Sunday,
cuaed elsewhere, the net result is t-xMru, a individual*,
so loi-^ I dor‘1 know W’dRton truth -them| illness of her. mother.
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
witness lhe important event which being marooned lhe past five weeks.
the same.
h IM
H
.
wives What wc need
is the eltmi.&lt;. ri».
,..nnI
or.:.„ « ... urn*
’gUSlX!
Howard Dunlap of Vancouver,
-Tht ml WU|1
ihin, »- ...n !,
I
Taxes for purpose of legitimate
h 2
P.
h L
d bl
nation of land speculation-then
made the twain one.
.» .
The death ot Dr. Adrounie.' our Washington, is making his home
. p
_.and bj. thcSr ConiU,uUon- Gley j there would:'.', be so
r a i-utilc knowiedie but
Richard Youngs, a man 63 years former physician here, came as a
to. r
.1.. U.ur"
““Il”
E. VanEtt
government, for carrying
nccd not
rot fear
,Car the
llle uiroads
Klroadj of
0» a debt burden pMccd on prooucuve । Lawrence Lowell
------------------------- --------------- ... ...... of age, resident of Carlton, fell shock lo hb many friends and pa­ wiille tn Michigan.
- - on neces- need
i self for .the Jeweler s trade.
; dead of heart disease In front ot tients who did not realize his seri•ary activities, are contributions Musxol
MuwoUnl
a Hitkf
„Kk.f or
or a
a Stalin.
8UUn
I real e-uu--Cccrae Averill.
. .........
-'
«a,v,^v«av
3»rEveryone ,,,
In ,nu&gt;
this swtiou
section oegms
begins to
lo
’ni. a
• Worn* never d d a sood dav'a1 Frcd Parl“‘r and Fran3 Col5 »IU'thc
offlcc Saturday after- ous condition. He spent many ar- feel uneasy about tire onion xituathat all of u* should be glad to
Th03C ull0 ..
l(J mfddiP |
Ecrentre
~~
Those ulip. attempt
______ ,
uwk^-AVi i ll ita
iope" B b,CKle aU&gt;rc
Hastings noon.
duous days In his work over unim- tlon and are moving them as fast as
make. Taxes spent for needles. , wltlt thh. document arc playm/•
£
•
I the coming season
Sinclair Brock won the five-mil*! proved roads Ut iiorse and buggy: the market condition will allow
bureaus and commissions ximply to. wUh Samite
. "Unless wc abolish the slum*, lhe I F ° Sto»«U leit Monday for race at the Jeff, rink Friday night­ days caring for bls patients, often j them.
- ...---------- -------------Bed
McClellan has received
aimatihg the trip on fool to’ reach I Cecil Hanson ot Clarksville spent
provide Jobs tor deserving party;
_____________ _ . .
|
NEWS -GLEANINGS
slums may abolish us."—Major F. Hudson,
where---he expect*
to lo~
'“■*
I eate
Htm* hai*in*«*
cate in
in thr
the sshoe
business. Mrs.' back pension amounting lo 11.100 them.
a couple ot days with his parent,
" mm‘ ■to"'*™ «• U&gt; HOP
!«,..«« .006
m 1 Yeats-Brown
. Stowell will not leaveuntil
later, and 80 per month.
Miss Margery Keiser a student ofMr and Mrs. Ben Hanson the nasi
and should very properly arouse re- al the elbow, a* a fashion expert! commerce Is approximately 92 per',
"1 hold tiuit it h ultimately lhe( The whip factory
isgoing
Died in this city. Thursday, FebBellevue High school entertained* week.
1
•enlment in aU of u*
| adyocate*. what U to become of the jcenl
. moralist* and philosophers who must through some seriousfinancial
ruary 2S. Cellndla. wife of Samuel group of young people on fiatufday
We were very sorry indeed n
nr;
'
“PPly lhP foundations of stales- trouble.
r. wiUUon in lhe 39lh year of her evening at tfte
home of her uncle, know of Mr*. John Beatties nassIn juslioe U» Governor Fitzgerald, good old custom of writing it on the
f.
' •G0'*’0,0,1 America *4.000.000; manahip. even, though they never! Btehup GUkuple ot Grund Rap- age. She had been Hl of lungiMr. and Mn&gt; Bill Sarver, of lhe Ing untl wish U&gt; extent! our svmH must be said that he did advo- cuff.—Sacramento Bet.
parin* are electrified I
.
appear in the forum."—T. S. Eliot. Ids was in the city Saturday.
| trouble for several mouths.
| Justin district.
' patliy to Mr. Beattie and family

painful but the

funds

are

paid

Crumbs of Wisdom

of Our World

�HA1TINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MARCH S, 11

The Woollcott Reader

‘Now, Take That Last Drive

Cinderella Dr

Alexander WooUcott’s ability to
take a be»t seller by mentioning
casually in a radio broadcast that
he hu gone quietly mad about a
modeat book has been demonstrated
more than once in the last year
Now he ssema to have accomplished
the same result in his anthology.

The Man Tailored Suit
2 and 3 PitC'Slyl"

pleces of his day-books, shbrt stor­
ies. essays—which he thinks deserve
to be rescued from oblivion: some
because they are no longer to be
found except pn the counter* of the

Swagger Suits &amp; Coats

they were passed by in the rush of
the new books of their dav by many
who will find delight in th-m; and
some because, try as he will, he enn
never keep them on id* own book

Th. famaw* OteM Girt Myte te (

AM

Any anthology produces three
stole* of mind: satisfaction that fa­
vorite* have been included; disap­
pointment that some linve been left

copyright permissions, but his selec­
tion l.% a happy one. Of course lhe
••Doctor of the Old School" is there—

thnl out—and “Margaret Ogilvy.”
The “Dolly Dialogues." quite un­
known to the modem young, he in­
cludes. knowing full well thal none
of lhe crisp, sophisticated dialogue
to be written in 1036 will approach
them in airiness and gay noncha­
lance It is well that many who
missed "Mr. Fortune s Maggot.' will

"Joggs. you'll just simply have to atop pulling up your knickers while
I’m driving: It throws me off my game” That, probably. Is the
t^nor of Actress Baby Patsy's conference with her simian caddy at
the 19th hole. But Jogga. screen chimp, lakes the scolding philo­
sophically. The pair aro shown on the course during the Aiming of
a "kid" comedy.
,

dog story as one couid wish: a de­
lightful little one-act play by Thom-

made his home with htS grandpar­

the Aid Society at her home Wedni'Mlay March It. Pot luck dinner

Frre|x&gt;rt spent Thursday evening
dlnal Manning by Lytton Strachy;
with Mr and Mrs Otto Lightfoot
Aug 18. 1853. and departed this life Ransom is coming nicely after the "My |JtUe Boy.- LranslaU'd frorr
Edna ctsler of Laming spent the
F-b 21. 1936. u;cd 82 year*. 4, recent amputation ot one leg below
wrok. end with her sister, Mrs. Ar­
month**and 3 days. Mr Mankcr
thur Moore, and family.
.
spent his early life in the lumber the hip.
camps in northern Michigan. In
pleasure of hi* “bypaths in the
tended the funeral of his grand­
realms of gold.' and one is led tc
Oto. Newaygo county. Near here
mother el Middleville Friday
hope that as he half prtrinlse*. he
they bought 40 acres of virgin tim­
Mrs Rebecca Bryan* of Charthis
community
several
years.
will
tome day promote us to a secber snd cleared it for tunning. Here
lhe Cemetery Circle will meet
they resided sixteen years. They
moved to Irving Twp m 1012. Hur- at Roy 'smith's Thursday of till*
Virginia end Charles Hess. Miss
Mr, Srolt AUerding of Carlton Amy Hartwell and Hinman Sack­
Is helping to care for her brother. ett wen- in Kalamazoo Wednesday
Hastings
William Brown, who is in very poor
Clayton Bhurlow

Reynolds
Prolection From Wilchra
An old Eiigllsli sii|H-istitlnn
thnl If you hung llllc* over

iitertain lhe general aid for din­
ner [n thc church basement Thun-

RuviCll Hinkley al Freeport Sun-

llir Lirgc.-J u&lt;
Ii dlr founder express
»f lodiiy. We rmigiatulah- the Camp
ml extend hert'wishes for
•mall
—-

Elanore Hess of Kalamazoo spent
Sunday with thc former s parents.
Rev. and Mrs. Prichard.
Bom Feb 28 lo Mr. and Mn. Ly­
man Elder of East Lansing, a sixpound daughter, who has been
Sunday

'

H.r'n'.doV

n
t«n9

t$lo*

•

iCYC”
r
^ipo\'bc

*,r
'
&gt;° "*

On Saturday afternoon 15 neigh-;
bors and friends of Mrs Charles
Cool and Mrs Al Quindry met at
the home of Mrs. Boyd Olson for
a surprise farewell party. A pleas-

COLORS: Biltmore Blue. Snappy,
Moondust. Marimba. Toasty, Misty,
Burnt Copper.

Prices:

On Tuesday evening the Father
and Son banquet war. held at the
Evangeiicel church, thc supper be­
ing put on by thc Ladies' Aid. The
speaker was Mr. Henry o* Battle
Creek. He showed pictures taken
m Canada while on a trip with lhe
Eagle Scouts. A duel was given by

sic by Mr Lower and some of tlie
high school pupils.
Thc annual Gentlemen's evening
of the Womens Literary Club was
held Wednesday rffght al thc Com­
munity house, thc banquet being
served al 8:30 o'clock by the Ber­
ryville ladies
Mrs. Floyd Everts
introduced Mrs. E. E. Hickman as

husbands was given by lhe club
daughter. Mrs Hazel Goltz of Roy­ president. Mrs. Lottie Bell. Two
al Oak; two brothers. Dan and Al­ vocal solos were rendered by Mrs.
fred of Assyria: one sister. Mrs B Francis Pullx. The speaker for the
Garrett of Battle Creek; one half evening was Mr Marshall Rector of
brother. Orin Kimberley of Belle­ Grand Rapids; his subject was.
vue. several grandchildren, among ■'Modem Turkey." Two clarinet so­
them Billie Olmstead, who had los by Arthur Lower. A play. "A
Cup of China Tea." was given by

O^ct

■round the comer. Fov ibsrs'* a wcohfa of
•ntmnce in the*, bostilnl stocking* at ex­
it* quality klginwlM *ilk. dor-*bow—

ent* lhe past few years.
Die Junior play was given Thurs­
day and Friday nighla at the K.

Cool arc moving on Lite Jesse Brown
farm and thc Qulndrys will go to
Mr. and Mr. Dewey Jones arc Detroit. They have been operatmg
having ii sale and will move tn
town and live in the George Franck
Mr. and Mrs Ralph Welherbee
were at Battle Creek Sunday.
Mrs. Clyde Hamilton fell Thurs-'
in Portland Tuesday making the day on the walk in front of the
oequmntance of the new daughter
al the home of Mr. and Mrs. KenPennock hospital by Dr. Morris for
an X-ray.
Gid Gage end Gail Lykins were
three-quarters in Marshall Wednesday on busiweighing ten
pounds.
The Clover Leaf Club will meet
Friday night. March 6. al the home

I

When March Windi Blow

er. Joseph Bell. Ralph Olin and
George Taft. Two vocal solos by
Dr. Stewart Lofdahl.

NEW SPRING

WASH DRESSES
The newest end most popular materials are:

Blister

Crepe, Eyelet Batiste, Shantung. Crash, Piqua,

Brood

cloth and Fino Prints.

Our BEST WASH DRESSES

Good Fast Colored HOUSE and
STREET DRESSES at

Children's Spring Wash Dresses
at69c and

FRANDSEN’S
Exclusive, but not expensive
HASTINGS

celcorated their 50th wedding anni­
versary on Sunday al their home.

ot

lint year* waro spent on a farm in
Woodland township, but have lived
on thc farm where they now reside
for 45 years. Their daughter. Mrs.
Leia Roe. a teacher in the Kellogg
school, and her three children. VI-

o,c'
n,cd&gt;oo'c ^^^'eUbo'oneedo
_
^’O,OnV

And Now It’s Sea-Wheeling!

mazoo. their son. Floyd and family
of Vermontville and Trooper Carl
. Reidel of Alpena spent Sunday with

toil S«3'

Check Up
for Spring

ond th0' '

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Voelker and
son of Lansing spent Sunday with
family
Miss Margaret Fumlss of Detroit
spent the week end with her par-

^'r‘a

Send

need them.

HASTINGS BANNER

mH

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS

Hastings Saturday.
On Thursday evening Mr. and
Mrs. Coy O. Brumm and family.
Mr. and Mrs voyle Varney. Mr. and
Mrs. Gall Lykins and twin sons
went with welLOUed baskets and
surprised Mrs. Nclsdr, Brumm on
her birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hred Fisher spent
Sunday with Hastings relatives
Mis* Either Felghner who has
spent several wacks in
Detroit,
spent the week end at her home
training at the Sparrow hospital.
Lansing, is at the Keefer hospital.
Detroit, fur training in contagious
Khe rides white aha gw
Miami beauty. Her wait

around Biscay »■ Bay, ■

�7HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. MARCH 5. 1936

FAQS BIX

Into a victory over lanla..despite al
I baskets and one foul shot for a to-, The leqms and they standings in I L inn, four Table Factory teams, j
! uh or nve pou.u,
i,hc ”r’1 ™"11"™:
dual defeat from that team, both
one independent, the Road Com- 1
here and there. The team b In good
mission and Consumers. Besides ■
‘ Tomorrow night the Hastings five
1 condition and takes the task of
I again meets the Belding quint in I Home Lumber
those groups a number of en­
training seriously.
tlie first feries of the district tour- j Bliss ..............
thusiasts hold forth each Wednes- ‘
i An encouraging factor to old
.......a... .a.KiteK
K*. tvlavtee!
at Fisher ..
nainent
which will
will be
played at
,.
.
.
1i Iffy’s country cousin last week was
day
and
Saturday
night.
Those
I
। Belding. The winner of lhe Classi Feldpauscli
Tlie old master-minder went In the elimination of nervous strain
two nights are non-league nights. I'the waste basket last week, ladles: when the boys stepped-to the foul
,--------------------------------IB cliamplonshlp in the district will Consumers
(Continued from pope one)
Faculty .
«■ *hW'
•"»
«• *»].« ,-nmen. Ju,l tecute be tetea line to try to add one more point ------------------------------ - —'
—;---------H. H. 9. CAGERS BEAT
‘h'&lt;’°r,hJ"1‘br nKroger ..
te«™ Kn down .nd ..tempi .o »tl,o „ am,™,.
„„ to the score. IP the varsity can of fighting fire ha* not changed so
dci nuur rivris m in
'ran”''
y
iteuu&gt;«
pi». iom* in u&gt;. Happy Day ...
overcome this nervous tension, they j much, except Ujat fire fighting ap-.
, novel Idea of sending his weekly I
DtLUIlYu rlVCJD IU IU points to the score. Belding scored finals Saturday night
A definite schedule of 28 games a new high for lhe month.
Last week’s top scores in league । nie-viuge to the boss .via carrier pig?
------------I their first field goal ot the game j----------------- -- --------------------has been worked out whereby eacn
—^-1. b»Bennettmen
Run
Up
28 and acored five points.
THREE FIVES
TIE
IN
j team play* lhe other in the cllmi- bowling were won by Ai Brown with | eon. which was a novelty in itself! s“K?unBlsli"'..L'r&gt;.1::uA°:
• Gladstone led the attack for the lnncc
rIVCO
I IC Its
niTv
i riciir
ccdicc 'nallon-'’’ Thc *'lBhl Uams wl” pl“y a 210. Henry Sheldon came within | However, the editor, who is always
Points in Three Quarters, '
Bennettmen by scoring .five field I
CITY LEAGUE SERIES every
Monday
and Wednesday seven pins of that with a 209. On I steering clear ot observing Tom-1
twn
Ivnl.U. fZ.mnrwr... ..it.. । WTOng it WC ttlUlK tllBt liW OHly
aSd the Ml n?te
Wmorrow nllr j problem In fire prevention is lhat of
I goals
and four foul shots for a toFriday
night
the
pick
of
the
Rotary
I
my
’
»
stork
prediction*,
took
one
Let Reserves Carry On
.
----■-------—
-------| night lo
W determine
UC1VI mint the
LIIV winner
WIII1IC. in
... ' ....
,
“ ■-- -- --------------'
. ...... • .
nl thc blC(J BIU| made n sjmp, ttnt*.
ncxt nl7t .__________
I saving property. In 1D.W. 10.000 lives’
j tai of U (joints while Salisbury led I The Home Lumber, Bli» and me tetena round er tempteHten. ,
Ptoed
The High school quintet wel­ the Belrjlntt five with one field goal I
decision as to the good news the
GLASS CREEK.
' W|,ri' '“f1 ln lh,? United States alone
comed the BMdlng five List Friday and four foul shots for a total ot । Fisher Squads Each Lose
wrre
it was all in the spirit of fun and poor creature was bearing and blue ’ Mr. and Mrs. Lyle 6th and son as ■ rMUl1 °r
night by defeating them 35-10. This ■ six pints.
; ended up with everyone on speaking penciled lhe thing without any j of Kalamazoo were Sunday visitors terrible tragedies, such u lhe Kerns
Once in First Round
LOCAL BOWLERS HAVE
is lhe opening of new relation:-, ' Tlie line-up
further ado.
terms.
.
at Fred Otis’ last Sunday.
।31 Lansing, where there was
which will undoubtedly prove a
Belding
| The
----------------------------------------_--------------------first round of—
the---------------Hastings
•
ACTIVE
SEASON -------Duckr...
pin-------------bowling-------has----------enjoyed
Notwithstanding, old Iffy’s coun- *
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Otis and Mr. ‘th&lt;' l*nte»t loss of human life in any
Hastings • 33»
worthy rival In thc near future
.... U-.KU.
-------- •—
u— u-..
jes has I
1 Gladstone
S.IWwy city
Ite.k-t
tell-cr
tette.
-n,,
ipo„ 0,
mu.b poputerlty bre.u» K u not try cousin is back again tills week, and Mrs. Furrest Haven* attended i rwnt hotel fire
The first quarter was all Hastings
iiih winter
hi as
“ strenuous.
Uiwnuou*. However.
Howrrrj-. It uppar«ppar. nnd the tears he showered through Hie funeral of Vincent Stamm in
Paulten *—*&gt; ptey-d on with th— team. ln|COJne l0
torp thu
wlnler ln
There Is an old statement “If you
as the Bennettmen blanked thc^r ■ Crothers
BK„ ,c, « rleadlodr tor Orst Plate. TheiHa.n,
nnd
turnHhed many -““y «!»’ more skin than the last week’s column have turned to Hastings last Thursday P. M.
wanl 10 if1 hurt- S° ,iomc ” As “
opponents while rim ing up eight j। Hinckley
other type of bowling. If the scores a smile due to lhe victory lhe local
Johnson-If""- Lumper company. Blta a"d a
,0_morr or |r„, depend- ...............
John Havens began work at the matter of fact lhe number of acclpoints in behalf of themselves. The
are
in
any
way
indicative
of
genius.
lads
turned
in
last
Friday
night
In
Leonard i't-her trams have each
ll8 011
t)lc individual
individual—
vxeuse
Wallnce Feed Store in Hastings &lt;•««« resulting fatally In homes was
------ fnrtn
, won
— siri, .,mg
on thc
—an
an- . excu~
Visitors
three .foul
Walldorff &lt;Ci
.ee-e^ee- connected .for
—■ ......
—
,i o
. . &lt;|.ecrfn
_____se.
mid Jost jinn
one cntnte
game tn
to form trite
the i ,or
Kradunl
In sJme A duck pin bowler who is able to their final scheduled game.
Monday morning.
°n&gt;y ’J^OO *«" ‘han the number of
ahots In the next quarter, while thc I Substitutions: H.xMlng.‘: Res mer.
He is going on record right -now
- - John Erwny from M- S C. was a ' f"1**1 accidents on uur highways durthree-way tie.----------------------------------- 1 mMnncCa- muscles which have been break th« 200 mark usually ends up
locals scored six pointe, making ironside.
,J
Walton. cook.
&gt;- e. Moore.
’’ week end guest of his parents, Mr । l,»i: 1935. There were over 300 000
_ predicting
----------------- lhat
..._. Hastings
w&gt;n
Tlie organization of these teams | dormant since the teens have sud- by cutting his head Into a Mon? a.«
the score M-3 at the end of the I»i Ballister. Rarisom*. and Newton.
wall or talking to himself all the
the Class b championship in and jjrs. Ray Erwny.
Are* in American homes last year,
Belding: Dehn; Referee. White. W. has given the stars of other years . drnly come into play and revolted 'way home. And he has every right i win
half in favor of Hastings.
_ v... ...
Mf QniJ Mrs Rob[ McClockiln 1 He wondered how many men had
j n...
tile Hu.-ite.
district ------meet to kbe
held
ut Beld.is well as those who wanted a dlf- . wuh me old Charley horse, but few
The Bennettmen came back In
i ing tomorrow night. IF Belding and family of Hasting* were Sunthought of instructing lhe
Thc second team aha wound up &lt;, ferent form of exercise and recrea- regret thc aches after they are able to do either.
the third quarter and turned tin1
..--- , on opportunity to fulfil
P..WI1 their to straighten
.............................
There are eight women’s teams |j was playing ’paisum last Friday : day guests at Forrest Havens in , members of their families about fire
„.
p
.
m
..
u.w.K.
their
season
’
s
schedule
In
victory
1
t,on
out
and
get
back
to
heat on and scored it points more.
battling tn this game. In which thc night, there Is no question but whoi honor of Mrs. McGIocklin’s birth- ! prevention and what to do in case a
while lhe silk citv five were mak- ' by defeating thc Belding subs 30-14 wishes.
j normal.
Piston
Ring
and
Beauty
Box
were
the
Varsity
will
wake
up
In
lime
to
day.
i
fire
should
be discovered in tha
ing two more foul shots, with the cook made five baskets for the
Some of the games provide a
There are 11 teams which resort
Phil Warren nnd daughter. Mbs i home. He stated that he did not
score 28-5 ai thc end of the third subs to lead his mates with 1Q! maximum of thrills to the finish.. to the more strenuous art of bowl­ tied nt the end of last week’s play. pull the game from the fire They
quarter. Coach Bennett gave his points, while Dehn was high point while others are a great source of; ing four nights each week nt the Twelve men’s teams are entered In have played consistent ball the lat­ Hazel Warren, of Lansing were Itome 10 Hastings to talk against
-------- u
-------- ----...-------...
I Rchor alleys, four Rotary club n league with Alton’s Body Shop In ter part of thc season and have week end guests nt Clyde Wurrcns. cigarette smoking; but as a matter
to |nau fvr nie opponents with two amusement.
stringers
chance
the lead at the end of last week. made it more difficult for every
The Glass Creek Extension group Qf fact- ‘he cigarette is thc Hugest
They have won eight games and team that has run up against them are meeting with Mrs. Frances Er- i Hngle producer of fires. We are apt
lost one,
•
They have seen what holding the way for an all day meeting this to think that wc do not need to be
All in nil, cither game is good ball does for them (Charlotte 21— week Thursday.
concerned about the possibility of
clean sport and provides recreation Hastings ID) and will go Into the
Russell Whittemore and MIm being burned lo death. There were
and exercise with ns much or ns tournament with the grim deter- Annainae Pew of Hastings were 10.000 people who suffered lhat fate
little effort as the Individual de- imlnation not to ease up until after I married at the home of his sLster. last year .who probably never ex­
cides he needs.
Ihr lUtel whuik. They -.11 have Mrs.
...... Fred .........................
Bechtel’s in Hastings pected to pass out lhat way.
Insurance is not merely paying
rnoUKh drive left (o pro,.! them . test Sunday p. M. conaralulaUonv.
1 lasses caused by fires. Hu.urance is a
shock-absorber. But for the great
development of Insurance companies
of all kinds, this country could not
have weathered lhe depression as
well as II did.
To show the tremendous volume of
fire losses, he slated thal eighty fire
Insurance com|&gt;anles In Ihta country
in lhe Iasi fifty years have paid over
eight billions of dollars of tire losses.
But the Indirect losses by fire are

FIRE PREVENT ON
MEET NG THURSDAY

Iffy's CountryCousi &gt;i
Rises to Remark —

Sporting Items

sss* &gt;■-

A "MARCH" OF FOOD VALUES

c.thomai
FOODJomPA
ALL STAR VALUES
THAT MEAN EXTRA
FOOD SAVINGS FOR THE
MONTH 0F4AARCH

PURE, WHOLESOME FOODS WITH NATURE’S HEALTH.
FRESHNESS AND GOODNESS SEALED IN!

SWEET. TENDER

EARLY JUNE

No.Z

EVERGOOD

CANS

9EC

&gt;CORN
25c
W purircr
vn ttoc FULc°-iAM 19c
COOKIES
10c
COCOA *“E* 2 “■ 15c
GOLDEN BANTAM

16-Oz.

CREAM STYLE

CANS

• PICK OF CROP”

WHOLESOME
SELF-RISING

PANCAKE
FLOUR

5baS19c
$|9S

LB.

LB.

n A T F C FRESH. GOLDEN
UH I LO UNPITTED
riPQ NATURAL BLACK MISSION
F I U O FOR COOKING
.

LB.

RAISINS

4

lbs

MINCE MEAT
NAVY BEANS

3
3

POP CORN
TEA
I LA

PICKED

PKGS

SQUALlTY

MISSION INN
GREEN JAPAN

LBS

LB.

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COCONUT TIIREAD^BULK
JELLY ASSORTED FLAVORS

P'NUT BUTTER OVALITY

LB

3
2

8-OZ
JARS
LB.
JAR

9c
10c
23c
25c
10c
9c

23c
20c
25c
25c

Whqpt Kriipiet 2 pkgs. 19c

pkg. 10c

Rice Puffets
Gropenut Flakes

Rolled Oats

pkg. 10c

5 lb. bag 19c

ELBO

SPAGHETTI
MACARONI

2box12c

Buckles, pumps, straps and but­
toned patterns in the season’s new.
est colors ond combinations . .
shoes of distinctive appearance.

HERE YOU WILL FIND THE FASHIONABLE
BROADSTRAP MODELS IN PATENT... PER­
FECTLY DESIGNED FOR DRESS OCCASIONS

COFFEE
Thomos SPEC AL
Popular Blend
MISS ON

Rich. Mellow

$298

WIDTHS AA TO C

17

NN

HIGH OR LOW HEELS

20'

CUT-OUT VAMPS

direct losses. Forty-three per cent
ol lhe Industries destroyed by fire
arc never rebuilt; mast of them be­
cause of indirect losses
Thc Idea of fire prevention origi­
nated witli thc late Governor Ritch­
ie of Maryland, who called a con­
ference of governors to consider the
matter and succeeded In getting lhe
National chamber of commerce lo
cooperate. Fires are not merely a
' problem of fire insurance companl lea; they concern the property own­
ers and community, the business in­
terests of the community and the
comfort and welfare of Its homes.
Mr. Vcrnor paid a fine compliment
to thc Hastings fire department and
said that It was remarkable lhat
Die fire loss in Hastings had been
held down to *1 JOO in 1935. He also .
stated that he did not know another i
city of its size in the country lhat I
has better school buildings than I
Hastings, and mighty few of them j
can anywhere equal thc educational I
equipment of this city in Its grade
and high schools. He had given a
talk to thc pupils in the high school,
so had a chance lo see our splendid
school buildings.
He wished his hearers to realize
that there an* other hazards lo fire- /
men than thc work of fighting fires.
As a matter of fact, more ot them
were killed last year by automobiles
while going to or coming from their
work of fighting fires than lost their
Ilves In their actual work.
Mr. Vcrnor emphasized the fart
that fire prevention is a problem of
the community, as well as fire in­
surance companies. He mentioned a
Michigan town who* only industry
was destroyed by fire. Tlie factory
was never rebuilt. That town has
been a dead place ever since. That
fate may come to many another
community, which would keenly
feel the loss In the decreased num­
ber of inhabitants and decreased
I purchasing power ns well ns in other

Mr. Vemor said he appreciated
: the fine cooperation which had been
shown in Hastings and urged every
one of his hearers to realize that it
Is Important lo him lo cut down tha
fire loss in this community and the
surrounding territory, not only os a
■ mean* of saving properly but also
I of saving llvfci

A musical comedy actress always
insist* on exercising her pel dog
herself. She naturally objects to
anybody else taking the lead.

SNOWDRIFT
Fft
Shortening, 3 lb. can Vv

CALUMET
lb. can 22c
BAXIWn POWDER
BAKER’S
Chocolate
’•2-lb. bar 15c
ABOO
STARCH

tb. pkg. 9c

KREMEL
DESSERT POWDER

pkg. 5c
”

JUNKET
pkg. |2c
TOR MILK DESSERTS

FLOUR
BEST YET
24’/j-lb. bog—

Al Rejects Bid
to White House

fO

HARD KANSAS WHEAT
SNOW QUEEN

69

All Purpose Flour ।
MS Lb Rar

THOMPSON’S

CHOCOLATE c.T
MALTED MILK

SILVER DUST 2
GOLD DUST

27c
18c

SOAP POWDERS

Sunbrite Cleanser

RINSO

2 for 9c

lg box 21c

LIFE BUOY 3 — 20c

ORANGES
California Seedless
GRAPEFRUIT
Calif. Seedless
6 for 25c
HEAD LETTUCE Fresh Crisp Heads each 5c
ONIONS nice for cooking 10 lbs. for 17c
CARROTS - PARSNI PS
Fresh
3 lbs. for 10c
BEANS
WAX OR GREEN
CUT 8TRINOLEBS
3 No. 2 COhS 2$C
TOMATOES RED RIPE
EVEROOOD
3 No. 2l/z cans 29c
OXYDOL

3 pkgs. 25c

CAMAY SOAP

bar 5c

C. THOMAS STORES
129 WEST STATE STREET

I&gt;

HASTINGS CUT-RATE SHOE STORE

:

“BARRY COUNTYS BUSIEST SHOE STORE"

114 W. STATE ST

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

I
.

.

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

4

Al

Bmltb

drawing- farther&gt;—

dent UooaevoliT
Tha queatlon
arose when Al declined a Rootavelt Invitation to ha a White
Homo guest Jan. 25 when ha
apeak* in Washington before the
American Liberty League. AL
will stay with friends at a hotel
two blocks from (be JVJHte.

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. MARCH 5, IMS
PRACTICED PROPOSALS AT
LEAP-YEAR PARTY.
Tha girls of the Anchor class of
the Methodist Bunday school with
their teacher. Mrs. Guy Keller, en­
joyed a Leap year party at lhe
home of Miss Cornelia Beverwyk
Mrs. W L. Shulters was In Grand
W. J. Watkins U tn Detroit this BLISS EMPLOYEES
on East Thom street last Thursday
Rapids on Tuesday.
week on business.
ENJOY FINE PARTY. evening. The girls called for and
Nearly 300 people were present provided transportation for their
Kenneth Biddle was home from
Miss Rose Clark Is spending the
at community hall Saturday night ■ escorts The decorations were coI­
Kalamazoq on Bunday.
week In Chicago.
to enjoy thc first general party giv- i orfully carried out in red and white,
Mrs. L W Bunday Is visiting relGeorge Bauer was hope from M.
on by the E- W. Bliss Company's and matching hearts and darts
ntlves at Clare this week.
S. C. over Sunday.
।
&lt; -Tw,
employees. It was a success in cv- ■ provided partners for some of the
Mr. and Mrs. W. L- HlnRian were
Robert
bikolsklvuiteo in Three cry Wky&gt;
muCh so, they are al- ' games. One of the most amusing
In Battle Creek on Monday.
ivers over the week end
rcBdy taiklng of a .-repeat." A floor 1 game*, was lhe proposal, which the
Robert Lockton ot Detroit called
Henry Weaver was in Grand show under direction of Frank girls were obliged to • make to the
on Hastings friends last week.
Rapids Tuesday on business.
Adair went across splendidly. Lovle I boys.
----------------------------Mis* Mabel Kiel rislted her aunt Kennedy sang, Chryatal Thomas I
Miss Beatrice carrolhers was
gave a reading. Oallup and BalTWO MEMBERS INITIATED,
home from Detroit over the week In Kalamazoo over the week end.
Mrs. Edgar Thomas left today for lance furnished guitar and har-' Two new membirrs. Ruth Vanend.
monlca
numbers
and
Florence
1
Hom
and
Wilbur
Gibson, were
Mrs, Ella Hammond Li the guest Columbus, O.. to spend the week­
। Westerlind danced. Jos. McKnlght Initiated into the Rebekahs on Frlof Mr and Mrs. Mark Garrison of end at her home.
Leather sportswear will re­
Cloverdale.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Dell Button had. as had donated thc door prize, a beau- j day Evening A lunch was served
ceive a prominent part tn
Mr. and Mrs. Hartley Finstrom week-end guests. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. tlful bouquet of American Beauty following the regular session,
roses, which was drawn by Elmer
--------------- *
wore home from East Lansing over Clark of Kalamazoo.
early spring wear. Pig grain
I ENTERTAINED AT BRIDGE.
Lite week end.
J. B. Whitmore returned Monday Robinson.
leather jackets, full zipper;
—- ■
«•» --------------I Mrs. Hazel Hinkley delightfully
Ml** Lillian Christie spent the from a trip to Denver. Colo., and
half belts and pleated bocks.
HAVE JOINT MEETING.
entertained with two tables of
week end In Grand Rapids return­ points tn Nebraska.
There was a good attendance at 1 bridge on Tuesday evening. WinOther styles in suedes and
Mr. and Mr*. Forrest Lane and
ing on Monday.
Charles A. Weisscrt of Kalama­ Mrs. Cheater Long were in Bat­ the joint meeting of the Barry ners were Mr*. Edward Smith and
calfskins. Colors of Black,
County
Ministerial
Association
and
,
Mrs.
Robert
Moore,
zoo was in the city on Sunday call­ tle Creek on Saturday.
deeptone Browns; tailored lo
council
of
Religious
Education
।
Mr. and Mrs Walter Barnum are
ing on friends.
wear; correct tn style.
on
Tuesday
at
lhe
Episcopal
parI
BIRTHDAY
DINNER.
Sidney and Percy Allen of Bow­ visiting Mr. and Mrs Harry Barn­
Mrs. Peter DeLeys was the honor
Uh house. The program was pre­
ens Mills visited Mr. and Mrs Berl um In Lansing this week.
The guest at a dinner given Sunday at
____________________
luck dinner —
Mrs. John Sparks. Jr., of Detroit ceded by a pot
Tinkler Saturday.
• -—
of• ■her
C D. Garn of Grand Rapids was is visiting her parent*. Mr. and Rev L L. Dewey of Grand Rapids her home in celebration
was alio present for a part ot the seventieth
Lbirthday
anniversary.
a guest over the week end of Frank Mr*. C- F- Angell. thL* week.
1' *■-■*-* Mrs. ’DeLays
was presented with
and Miss Lettie Garn.
Mr. and Mrs. Loy Royer of Bat­ program.
Reports of the departments of : numerous gifts.
Mr. and Mr* R K Hurd arc en­ tle creek visited Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Religious Education work were giv­
tertaining hl* sister. Mrs. Virginia Crook on Sunday afternoon.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mrs. Carrie Schenkel of Owasso en and an especially interesting
WUltl. of New York City.
COLORADO RIVER
NTAKE
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harry
sandbrook
talk
on
the
history
of
Sunday
Mrs. Walter Wallace was home
school work was given by Mrs Amy entertained several guest* Monday
AQUEDUCT
from Buttle Creek the latter part cob Rchor over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Amii Bachman Bower. Mrs. A- A- Griffin presided. evening in honor of their tenth
of the week, returning Sunday.
FAMKtU
wedding anniversary. Those present
Mr. and Mrs. c. W. Thomas of' went to Ann Arbor Monday where
were. Mr. and Mrs, Paul Townsend.
HONORED NEWLYWEDS.
Kalamazoo visited Mr. and Mrs. thc former is taking treatment.
A delightful party was held al Mr. and Mrs. Ogle Flanigan. Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Giddings were
Clarence Grohc Thursday of last
10-Mile
l Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. Wayne Offley, Mr and
week.
I Mrs. Ward Green and Mr. and.Mrs.
Crawley
on
Wednesday
evening
of
Loren
Johnson
of
Middleville.
Mr nnd Mrs. Charles p. Parker
Coachella
Sfi* r.nd Mrs. Ray Branch Were last week in honor of their mar­ ' Guy Kantner and their families
of Middleville were Sunday guests.
Tube
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Joseph
Smith.
Mrs.
riage
the
Sunday
previous.
There
of Mr. anti Mrs. Roman FYld- • In IX-trolt On business lhe first of
were about sixty present, ail mem­ I Chester cox nnd son Lawrence and
i the week, returning Tuesday.
pniuch' .
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Baldwin of bers and friends of thc Baptist Mrs- Sherman Smith of Hustings
Mr. and Mr*. Frank- Dny and
A billion gnllons of waler e day can be carried, over (be mountains and deserts lo soullirrn Cali­
Viola were guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Chicago spent Sunday with her church and Sunday School. The called on Mr nnd Mr*. Chas Farfornia whi n engineers complete the gigantic Udlorado river aqueduct seen upper left, t'pper right,
Melvin Campbell of Quimby on parents, Mr. and Mrs A. K. Prand- evening was happily spent with lee and son Wednesday evening at
games, visiting and) refreshments. 1 the Grant house where they are
“holing Ihrough” solid granite lo complete the IB-mllc east Coachella tube, one link In lhe mighty
Sunday.
scn.
241-mile waler supply line. Two crews, working from opposite directions, met srilhln Inches as
Dr. Frank Carrolhers attended a The honor guests Mere presented living while their house is being re­
General John H Schoulcn of
this picture not taken. Below, (be route of the aqueduct from the Colorado lo California. Ar­
Grand Rapids was In the city Fri­ meeting Of the Republican Stale with a lovely lace table cloth and paired. •
Miss Josephine Wise. Mi" Eloise
row Indicates position of thc Coachella tunnel, just driven through thc Little San Bernardino mounday on business nnd calling on Central committee al Lansing Sat­ the good wishes of their many
Smith andg Mrs Arlle Spin&lt;ll&gt;*r
friends.
urday.
friends.
spent
the
week
end
in
North
ManMr. and Mrs. Raymond Gilbert
Mr. nnd Mrs. Carl Boyes and
। Chester, Ind
A MUSICAL PARTY.
■pilE turbulent waters of tbt
When they are laid, gigantic
plosives, and 2500 mill
Fred Lawrence of Hickory comers of Muskegon were guests of Mr.
Large or small. In tweeds,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Kantner and
Miss Rosalie cascadden and Miss
pumps at the Parker dam Intake
cable contemplated.
were guest* of Mr. and Mrs. D. Z. and Mr*. Oto. B- Heath over lhe
Colorado river surge steadily
homespuns or worsteds. You
Suzanne Sumner were hostesses at Mr. and Mrs. Harry' Sandbrook nnd
Boye* on Sunday.
week end.
Construction pipe. 600 miles
doser to Southern California.
will tad that they check with
Mr
nnd
Mrs. Wayne
Conklin
ter to tha tunnel lavel for IU
Mr. Moon- of Kalamazoo, district
----- ---------- ----------- a music party held at lhe former's family sjicnt Tuesday evening with
Battling desert beat and moun­
every style that La to be worn
inannger of thc Townsend Club, moved to Allegan Monday where home on w. state St. Saturday Mr and Mrs Bert Rogers al Lake
long trip.
Food supplies. 74.600 tool.
was thc dinner guest of Dr. F. G. he b employed with the Fann afternoon. February 29 Twenty Odessa pi honor of the latter's an-j tain belghla. 4000 workers, build­
this spring. New colors of
T' »•
•
'
were present, a well rendered pro­ niversary.
Shctncld on Friday
i Loan Association.
DUT before building ths aqua
ing the greatest aqueduct In lhe
Platinum Grey, Chalk Blue,
AS workers “holed through" on
Mr.
and
Mrs
Floyd
Williams
of
gram
of
piano
solas,
duels
and
Allen shelp and George Hyde of
Abcn Johnson left Sunday for a
blstory of man. recently “holed
** this latest link, costs of the
duct proper, engineers were
and Sun Tans, sport models
Prairieville
visited
thc inlier's business trip to Pt. Wayne and songs was greatly enjoyed. Light Battle Creek. Mr nnd Mrs- 1 N
.through"
another
link
ot
lhe
241
Williams
nnd
Doris
of
Dowling
great
project
reached
160.000.000.
faced
with
construction
ot
roada
and plain back styles.
grandmother. Mrs. Ni-ttlc Hyde, other poinU. in the interests of thc refreshments were served by Mrs.
mile
supply
system
that
will
car*
spent Wednesday with Mrs. Chas, i
or more than onofourlh of the
Cascadden and Mrs. Sumner.
over the week end
.
Hastings Mfg. Co.
ry water from lhe mighty Colo
Farlee.
total estimated cost of 1220.000.­
and communication aystsma
Miss
Maxine Wunderlich,
who
Pres. L- W Sunday and Secy. E
------ -----------------Mr. and Mrs. Erlle Flanigan -and
rado to lhe homes of Los Angeles
000.
Io SOO days. 44 6 miler of high
RETURNS TO BELDING.
!
A. Pinker ate attending agents',,.teaches
In Muskegon, spent thc
Mrs. Gordon Clement, who has baby daughter of Detroit spent i and 12 other coast municipalities.
But costs are only Incidental to
vol tags power transmission line
with *her parents. Mr. aryl
meetings this week, thc first one week end
“■* —
been 111 all winter, relumed to her Sunday with the home folks
F. E Weymouth, general mana­
1 Mrs. Hugo Wunderlich.
being held In Detroit.
Thc
United
Brethren
Missionary
home
In
Belding
on
Sunday.
She
ins
hnfd
rock
crews
bad
driven
I
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ba»U
Smith
ot
ger
and
chief
engineer
of
this
modern
surfaced blghwaye and
Mi** Llevu Perry of Lansing and
Society will meet with Mrs. Bernier
project Southern California must
feeder roads finished acmes desert
Lynn Perry of M. 8. C.. spent the Jackson vtrtted her parent*. Mr. has been slaying In Grand Rapids
J since leaving the hospital. Her Kantner Wednesday for an all day
■ alna lo a central point Then a
and
week end with their parents. Dr. 'and Mr*. Weldon Bronson. —
and over rugged mountains
meeting
Some
quilting
will
be
done
health is greatly Improved. Her lit­
. other relatives on Sunday.
600-pound dynamite blast 2000
ply
Ila reildeots decided that
feel underground ripped through
Francis Thorons and
grand- ] Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Oidlcy and tle daughter, who ha* befiiXstaying for thc Chas Farlee family who re­
Ilmlnarles. the actual tunnel
cently suffered a loss by fire”
CLOTHING AND SHOE
clauuhtA-r. Joan
Herman, of son visited in Owosso on Sunday. with Mr. nnd Mrs. w. LTShulters
ilio remaining Inches and two
Hence, these Oku res for the proj
building baa progressed at toe
Mrs James Smalley of North
FOR MEN AND BOY
Battle creek visited mt. and Mrs I taklnx Hie funner's mother. Mrs. for eight months, accompanied her
great tunnels—each nine miles
Woodland nnd son Hollis of Detroit
I Maggie Gidiey, lo her home after parents lo Belding.
Clarence Grohe Saturday.,
Ao average outlay &lt;?t 16.000.000
month. Completion of lhe Cast
called on Mis* Mary Nash Sunday . long—were joined to form tba.
HASTINGS
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fletcher and , a visit here.
East Coachella lube.
a month for construction.
Coachella link moved lhe Cnlr*
morning.
isEwaaivM
wa
11
a
*
FIFTH
OF
SERIES.
Paul Conklin returned to his
son Robert of Coldwater spent.Sun­
. An estimated 6.670.000 barrels
Altar------------Society of —
St —
Rose
--- ------—
day with Mrs. Fletcher’s parents. school near St. Joseph Monday I The
meat In engineering. The task
of cement for the entire project.
coast.
Almost
120
miles
of
inn
PODUNK.
morning after spending the week , church held a benefit card party on
Mr. and Mn, 8am Amer. •
won that of providing a lunnel
An estimated 1.600.000 gallon*
uellng has now neen enmpleied
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Mrs. Ella Smith will entertain
Mrs. Norn Dawson returned on end with his parents, thc Rev. and ] Wednesday afternoon at the home
I Miss Josephine Romig spent
pass through the San Bernardino
of gasoline consumption before
By IS39 or 1940. the builders
of Mrs. Leo TafTec. N. Broadway. the D. d D. birthday club at her
Thursday from her southern trip. Mrs. C. M Conklin.
uiouninlnH go that huge concrete
the Job la finished
of this aqueduct believe the Colo
I week end In Kalamazoo.
Miss Dori* Ryan and Miss Bar- Assistant hostesses were Mrs. Mary home in Hasting*. Thursday.
She visited Miami. Wert Pnlm
water conduits can be laid lo car­
Ninety million board feet of
redo will finally reach Loa Ange
George Ransom has returned
Mrs. E. L. Houghtaltag and
Beach nnd other points In Florida. bara Trego were in Kalamazoo 1 English. Mrs. Ross Bllvcn and Mrs.
ry 1.000.000.000 gallons a day.
lumber. 41.000.000 pounds of asmi a. pearl
rw Bristol, whv
Delbert Reynolds who hava
Mrs.
who nu*
ha* to™
been Wednesday where they spent lhe ' Charles Jacobs. Nine table* were home after hL* stay in Pennock
’"&gt;winner* m
the guest of her sister. Miss Ethel aay
day witn
with college friend* and saw ***
,n P|a
&gt;'- Winners
nt auction oriage
bridge ; hospital. His sister, Mrs. Minnie
quite 111 with flu are both n
Western
State
defeat
De
Pauw
at
werc
Mrs.
Forrest
Lane
and
Mr*.
Snnner.
Is
helping
in
his
care,
better
now.
Jones, tor the past two months, re- \V~icr::
d;:;;’. 3c r-u--------------ORANGEVILLE.
I
CARLTON CENTER.
' Lowell and sister al Allegan last
Born
to Mr
Mr. “
nnd
Mrs.
John
O- Feldpausch and al euchre. Mr*.
"
nrn ,n
,1'’ Mr
“
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Caliban
turned on Sunday to her home In basket
basket ball
ball that
that evening.
evening.
.... .....
r.„yo „„
cnu.' „»"» W‘lm" UMynw. d.ushUr ol j wwk. Ht .pent Sunday afternoon
Stamm, a boy. Feb. 22. He will
Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd
Earl ano
and chilI **"
Mr. and* *Mrs. Don Foreman. Mr. Henry Smith and Mr*. Nay Bump.
Marshall.
dn-u
ol
HalnaeU
and
Ray
Hermln1
1
.
“
‘
.T''
*
h
“
ln
tM
’
”
'
w,
'»
&lt;h
answer
to
the
njime
of
John,
Jr.
Mrs.---E. ..
F Sayles. Mrs. T.
-----------------------------------------Mrs. Fred Jones returned Tues- ' and
----- --------.. S
attends High school In
in Lake OdraOdes-1 Some of the roads In tills vicinity guests of their parents. Mr.
ette and family of Neeley were Sun- HtUnds
and Mrs.
Oliver—
Hayward
and
TO SPEAK AT MARSHALL.
L Mr.
■
----------------------------Mrs. Chas Callhan and Mr.
day from Cedar Creek where she K. Reid. Mrs. Sterling Rogers and
■sa. was taken * ill
last week In Lake I arc not passable with a car yet.
* J™
D rt
A.. VanBuskirk.
president1 daughter. Tr'ST',*"
Margaret, """
and son. Basil. day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Art
Mr*. Wm. Cramer. Sr.
has been assisting with the care of, Mrs. Pauline Bliss attended the fu-; Supl. u.
vuiiduuitk. president
Odessa
with th^
pneumonia.
mU(
.'h
h gl thls She is I A few neighbors from this way
her father. Harry Water*, who has i neral ui
of Walter
Shirk oi
of Battle
A - will -ntxtaw
speak ai
al Mar'ld *"
Kalamazoo.
wuih'i
anuK
tjaiiie 01 lbc M E. n- a-----c of ............
• Mr. and Earl of this place.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
mueh
better
though
at
this
writing.
Mr
. Mnd Mrs Ked jRnney and 1 ‘tt*nJ1rdJhe funcr” of
Man’
on Thursday.
on Wednesday
evening. March
Don Putnam and Geo. *»--Wlckbeen attUuly IIICreek,.___ — zEd Sayles be-1 -'ball ----------------------------------------------sir and
anti Mr*
wr*. Dorr
uorr Backus
Backus and,
and,| Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Henney and !
w one
ixie ot
of thc
the pallbearers.
IL «t a meeting of thc Calhoun'*1™
B«&gt;ne&gt;d were visitors al Mr and Mn. Jamr, Balun and lit- IIson entertained w
,.„ ,
Mrs. Henry Kllenbaas and dai
Dr. and Mr*. Fred Amer of Ann Ing
pallbearer*.
birtiiday
with
a f
—I• ker Tuesday.
.1.
.
.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Stephen
Carter
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Herman
Zerbel
and
j
County
Teachers'
Club,
composed
Ransoms
Sunday.
ter.
Edna, of Middleville and
Arbor spent Saturday with his . Mr. and Mrs. Herman Zerbel and • county Teachers' club, composed
Me son or Galrsbunr spent the day dinner Sunday In honor ot the tor- 1
--, -—. ------ , -•
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. Gerald
Gerald sSmith spent
tr. and Mrs.
Mr*. Charles Barnc*
name* are
nrr :' 01
of “
about
citv teachers.
teachers
Mr
- recently with Mr. and Mrs. Marcias
cousin. Sam Amer, and family.; Mr.
bout 300 rural and city
[alher
pb Heaney, who
»«» &gt;»'&gt;' daughter and Mrs. Merle Callhan and ।
thc week end tn Dowagiac.
Baclcv
___ seventy
_______ years
___'..u
__ pres.
and famllv
family at.
al Alleean
Allegan.
dfen of Lansing.
Ba61ey
: was
old._____
Guest*
Sam Arner is seriously ill at his visiting in Chicago for several day*.
' ‘ ‘
home on Center street.
i The former are guest* of Mr. and I
J. W. Sheffield made a business ent were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hen­
Mrs. Belle Brock was hostess to
Mr and Mrs Dan Lewis visited Mrs. Charles Van Worden and thc
trip to Kalamazoo Wednesday.
;ney. Mr and Mrs. F. Greenfield
Mr *nnd Mrs. Wm crans of Cale- other* are guests of Mr. and Mr*, her “500" club on Tuesday after­
Mr. and Mrs. Hcnkle and son. and 4006 01 Hastings and M. C.
donla on Sunday. Mr. crans Is able Frank Spcnsley and baby of Down- noon. two tables being in plaj; Hon­
..icnoia of
oi Grand
uranu Rapids,
jtapia ..
Romaine, and MU* Reva Emmons ‘ Nichols
lo be around on crutches and is re- ' ers Grove.
ors were won by Mrs. Ray Cook and
Mr. *""*
nnd *Mrs. *'
Marion
of Otsego were Sunday guests of
‘
‘clem vial- j ■
Mrs. Lucy Creglow. Two guests were
covering from hla recent accident.
ted the former s mother. Mrs. Pete
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Norman.
WHITTEMORE—PEW.
present.
Mr and Mrs. Charles Buslck of
Thomas of Freeport. Wednesday
i
On
Sunday
afternoon
at
four
I
Mr.
and
Mr*
R.
W.
Pettijohn
of
Chicago are visiting
Mrs
Mary
night. Mrs. Thomas has been very
•o'clock,
the
marriage
of
R
umcII’
BIRTHDAY
PARTY.
North
Gun
Plains
spent
Wednes
­
Van Dugtere'n and Mr. and Mrs.
seriously ill but was better thal
day with Mr. and Mrs.
”
‘
Marclus
John Mctravy. Mr. Buvlck is a Whittemore, son of Mr. and Mr* I nn Monday afternoon ML*-, pheGET YOUR TICKETS FOR DRAWING
evening.
Bagley of thLs vicinity.
brother of Mr*. Van Duglcrcn and Charles Whittemore of Rutland bJ plannelly wa* surprised by a
’ Mrs. Ralph Nobles came Bunday
Twp, to Mis* Annamac Pew,-------— •-*
—•- •-------- ofgroup----of -■
nine
friends
in •honor
Mrs. Bert Brown went
Mrs. McLravy.
1 Ticket Given for each 25c cash purchat*
to the home of her parents. Mr. and.
erre City FMd.y .here she will , „„
„„
Mrs. Sntlli! Mae Palmer. Mis* daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley her birthday. The ladles met at the
Mrs. Elmer Marlow, to assist in the
1 Ticket Given for each $1.00 paid on account
spend a few days with her daugh- rare of jlcr father who I* very ill
Ambrn Fedewa. Miss Beatrice Gog- Pew of Hasting*, was solemnized by home of Mrs Wayne Merrick for
gin* and Mis* Margaret O'Donnell lhe Rev. c M. Conklin. The single a social lime and refreshments.
CM*' 10 Bet ,c‘
•rthritte.
WATCH THIS PAPER FOR DATE OF DRAWING
quainter! with the new granddaugh« a »----------------were in Kalamazoo on Saturday
)»,r
.
1
‘
________
_
__
_____
of
the
{ftoorn'K
sister
and
husband.
CIRCLE NO- 7.
ovunlng atlondmg “Yellow Jack."
tcr!
PLEASANT HILL.
MANY VALUABLE PRIZES GIVEN EACH MONTH
Methodist L. A. S- Circle No. 71
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bechtel. In the
a Civic Player* production.
David Zimmerman oi rort Wayne
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bennett visG. Winston ShefDeld wa* a visi­ presence of the immediate families met with Mr* Wm. Parker on
spent one night thc past week with 1 ited her sister near Caledonia SunAttending
couple were
tor in Battle Creek over the week -- the bridal
----- —
------ Thursday evening for thc regular
hls sister. Mrs. James Herminelte 1 day.
end. as thc house guest of Mr. and Mr- and Mrs. Arthur Bennett. The meeting, thirty-one being present. ‘
FRIDAY. MARCH 6
SATURDAY', MARCH 1
and family of this place.
j Verc carter called on his ’aunt al
Mrs. Harold Adams Sunday he was bride wore an attractive gown of They enjoyed a dessert lunch pre­
ceding
lhe
business
session.
Mrs.
|
royal
blue
rough
crepe
and
Mr*.
entertained at dinner by Mis* Mar­
Harold
Carroll
will
be
Hie
next
I
Bennett's
J
*-----of
brown
jorie Dunn, who wa* hostess to six.
hostess.
MIm Virginia Boyes wa* home crepe
Following the wedding, a buffet
from Lansing over the week end.
6he ha* catered the uuuing Busi­ luncheon was served. The home
Leon Cool. Jr., of Kalkaska, a
ness University, taking the secre­ wa* decorated with bouquet* of former resident here, has enlisted
tarial course. Miss Grace Hart roses, sweet peas, fresias and other in the United States Cavalry and
accompanied her home and spent spring flowers.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiltetnore arc has been sent 'to a camp in Virthe week end with her mother. Mrs.
both graduates of lhe Hastings । ginia. He ha* many frtetids here
Katherine Hart, of Shultz.
who hope for hi* success In Uncle i
" The Rev. W. Maylan Jones, the High school, thc former graduating
Sam's service.
Rev. C. M. Conklin and Y Sucre- ( four years ago and Mrs. Whitte­
HASTINGS NEWEST
lory c F. Angell of this city and, more in 1935. They had their home
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
BEAUTY SHOP
the Rev. Rigeiman ^of Middleville ready for occupancy and went to
Mrs. J. W. Long 1* cntcrlauilng
attended an Institute at Central housekeeping immediately on the Methodist L. A. 6- Circle No. 1 this
"WHERE QUALITY IS HIGH
MothodUt church In Detroit part Whittemore farm. Congratulations Thursday afternoon. As it is her:
AND PRICE IS LOW"
of last week. The theme was "Re­ and best wishes are extended.
birthday, the Circle members are
ligion In Relation to Fascism and
surprising her by taking along a
MONOPOLY CLUB.
EUROPEAN REALISTIC f 4 F ft
Communism." The main speaker
Hastings is up-to-date enough lo pot luck supper and enjoying a so­
OIL PUSH-UP WAVE
Q (J
was Sherwood Eddy.
have a “Monopoly club.*' six young cial time with her
Dr R. B. Hnrkne** is in attend­ ladies of High school age compos­
ance ihlsjveek-Jn Detroit and Ahn
GROUP NO 3Our
Special — Complete
ing the membership. They nnd
Arbor at the American College of
Extenrton Group NP. 3 was enter­
this new game more fun than
tained by Mrs. Harry Walers on
Physicians of which he Is a Fellow. bridge, too.
With 61.00 Purchase of Other Groceries.
Wednesday afternoon. The mem­
He will be joined by Mrs. Harkness,
They hold a pot luck dinner at bers enjoyed the lesson on necklines
According to leading siyllsli.
who ha* been spending the past
.
Tru-Art OU Permaiifpt for Dry Hair
Complete
lhe homes of the different mcmnavy blua and whlia will be the
month with relatives in Detroit;
and collars^. They also filled the
moat popular color combination
±k“‘“
“■ ‘"' i ■I"‘
"&gt;'&gt;■ "&gt;« «&lt;“ Mkrsre, dresses they had made..
IIERGAMONT OIL
THE FAMOUS
for apring.
Joy Hodges, film
Chexter
Mnrfsox
fBamett,
Brower
proving
* Mr and Mrs
C*
Barnett.
Jean Jean
Brower
nrovirut
the thc DESSERT BRIDGE LUNCHEON.
67.50 OIL'
SA
player, models a charming silk
CLO-TONE
PERMANENT
Comp.
Twelve guests enjoyed the dessert
frock In om blue printed with
Mr. and Mrs. Roman Fcldpausch.
You Know TJ11S Wave
FEBMANENT &gt;4
bridge luncheon given by Mrs.
a spiral pattern In white,
a
R. M. cook. Dr. R. B. Harkness, Mr.
WAVE—
O Comp.
by Reputation
Lloyd Storer on Tuesday afternoon.
narrow, pleated ruchlng edgei
and Mrs- Roy cordes. Dr. and Mr*. MRS., BOYES ENTERTAINS
At contract, the winning scores
Geo. Ijockwood. Orville Sayles. Mr*.
the accordion-pleated collar.
WITH DESSERT BRIDGE. were held by Mrs. Harry Walers
finest Coitile Shompoo and Finger Wave
• 50c
Maude Smith. Mrs. Mabie Clarke,
Friday a company of 20 ladles and Mrs. J. L Brass.
Medicated
Oil
Shampoo,
tegular
$1
value,
for
,«Sc
Mrz. W R Cook. MIm Jennie Mc­ were entertained moat delightfully
NOTICE!
■ (For Dry Hair and Dandruff.)
Bain. Mis* Mabel Siuon. Mr. and with a dessert-bridge al thc home
ENTERTAIN EIGHT.
For the convenience of pa­
Mrs. Joe DcRuiter were among of Mr*. D. Z- Boyes on W. Green
Mr*. Glen Bera and Mrs. H. E.
NOT A SCHOOL-AJI Experienced. Licensed Operators
trons the Banner has installed
those from Hasting* srtio last week street.
Baldwin entertained informally at
a second telephone—No. 2414.
attended
lhe Kalamazoo Civic] a pretty arrangement of spring the former's home on Saturday
Playera Rne presentation of “Yel-’ nowera centered each table. WinThose wishing to read) us can
evening, eight being present. Var­
now put in their calls through
low jack." lhe play based on Paul nlng scores al contract were made ious card games furnished the -en114 WEST STATE ST.
PHONE 2ttS
2415 or 3414. If one.number is
De Kniil h story concerning yellow by Mrs. B. A. LyBarker. Mr*. Hobl tertalnmenl. all reporting'’ a de­
LUCILE KE.MLER and .MARGARET DAHLKE
busy try Uiu oUier.
fever, in
In "Microbe
“Microbe Hunter*.'
Hunters.
lever,
w.
warrou curler. lightful time.

Human Ants Burrow Through 18 Miles
of Granite to Tap Colorado River

Social Events and Personal Mention

*65°,.,1O00

Spring Clothing

CHECKS

W0..^50

T. S. BAIRD

Street Ensemble
for Spring

FREE DRAWING!

NOW!

HOLLYWOOD
BEAUTY SHOP

NO Ammonia — NO Borax

RINSO
21b. boxai 39c
SEMINOLE TISSUE
4 roll* 25c
ARGO CORN STARCH
2 boxes 15c
LOG CABIN SYRUP
can 21c
LIPTON'S JAPAN TEA
’/a lb. 23c
BULK PEPPER
lb. 19c
BEEF STEAK, Swiss or Sirloin1 lb. 20c
OLEO
2 lbs. 25c
FRESH BOLOGNA
2 lbs. 29c
MINCED HAM
’/a lb. 9c
PURE LARD
3 lbs. 33c

$0.00

BACON, sliced

HINMAN’S

JUST PHONE

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE

HASTINGS

Vt lb. I

�INSURANCE

WANTS

CARDS of THANKS \ THE CHURCHES

CAUCUS NOTICES

Morgan Quizzed
on War Loaning

The Hastings Banner

- IA

Z5 d

I

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

Our Service

£

I

To PROTECT You Con.Unlly
Adjrut Fairly
Pay Promptly

GEO. M. NEWTON,1

r. vrB oaS

’

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

tur detail, .foil

Prairieville id.nn.' A--- 3H II.
■&gt; '.
"■'STEI»— Hirer men between
■»&lt;!
4'1 tear. of acr mill antomololra. ( all
lint Itodce. Parker Hotel .Iter f.itir
Twenty-one head—.Colts from one
to five years old—Greys, sorrels,
Foil SAI.E--7 brad tlwrare; enrne matrlr
roans—nice animals—Single or
• d team*. mare in foal. All vuunr
matched pairs.
hurwe. Harry le-onar.l farm. Milo

HORSES FOR SALE

CLENN A. MILLER
die cut.

ii.ii

a ’.70

LAKE ODESSA

SATURDAY. MARCH 7
8 Months Time .
JOHNSON &amp; JARVIS

No Poiion Snake, in Labradr
It Is wild that there-are no ।
snakes Ir. Labrador. and t
qultoes there carry no malaria.

Full SALE — -Hl.letriu Jrr.e. hr.I.-r, a|.»
Marte Jrrsrr low. Heth tine lo frerh.
ea .'-It. t'ai.uAi iwlu..*1"1 “f

FHH SA1.E—lUUK Er-kine r.-arl.

SALE OF HORSES

East Lansing came Saturday to see
William McCann, sr.. who is con-

The Irving ladies nnd a few from
outside helped Mrs. Katie Peek
‘celebrate her birthday one aftcr-

oqoiih

. .....

W Sooth Si
:i 5
Ent! SAI.E -liar r.-r.i. nt mare., ■&gt;&lt;,.
tea....... &lt;ri» atrliliuc*. r.itntnic 4 an.i .
'• &gt;»ar* old
Fiord II..w man. 1 •• j
mile, it.l of end ot par. merit on Mill

Esperlmenta by scientists nf Inwn
university Indicate that ninngnnese and Mrs. Caroline Schenkel visited
la another of. the minerals required at Wm. Schenkers from Thursday
b&gt; the body ns fooiL
lo Sunday.

Hill SAI.E—Alfalfa Im
Jark &gt;l..i.rr
Ha*tma» Phone 73*— F5.
tt AXTI.lt A rrlial.tr *|u&lt;le mar. to work 1
on ti.llijir month Uurl I.. (i..mI .. &gt;ih
__rlAllir rsrhar.ee.
’
'
|‘*_■ i

May Bring New-Type Dirigible

HEREFORD STEERS
AND HEIFERS, also some gorx

AM BUYING WOOL
Again This Season
HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID

WILL TOBIAS
"AKRCN" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR FLAY
Thin Smooth Rubber Back Padi
No Portv To Wear Clothing

NEW

OLD

Hartings. Route 4

Phone 74

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET • Phone 2616
FOOD CENTER 2609

GRANGE PROGRAMS
■ t

H. Feldpautch * 3921
GOOD BUZZ BIO FOR BALE
Mounted on Trall.r
if

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Padt
No Leg Strap-

The Prescription Drug Store
B. A. LTBARKEB. Propr.

'

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

Farmers, Attention!
I Will pay th. HIGHEST MARKET

Thls strange craft, shown In front and side views, may revolutionise
dirlclblo Construction and powering, believes the Inventor. Thomas
M. Fidley of St. Louis. A standard truek chassis la helng used for
tejls, _A dirigible employing this principle would have a hollow nose
with n tunnel leading thruugh the bag to the rear. Ono or more
propellers at the front would draw In air ahead of the ship to create
a vacuum, instead of building up tremendous *ir pressure as do

NEW AND USED

Not a Single Egg Was Broken!

Dead Stock Removed!
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone !G31

Hastings

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,
HASTINGS MARKETS

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
EVERY SATURDAY

Michigan Livestock Exchangi
HASTINGS BRANCH

For the convenlwice of pa.
irons the Banner has* installed
a second telephone—No. 2414.
Those wishing to reach Us can
now put Ip their calls through
2415 or 2414. It one number is
busy try the other.

notmcvd by the mother In law strik­
ing a wooden pillow. Thia la a
signal for everyone In the bouse to'
begin beating anything available.

’

uncle. William Potts, at Marshall
Sunday. *
Mr and Mrs. John Perry spent
Sunday In Kalamazoo
—
children and celebrated
ding anniversary.
Mr. —
and —
Mrs.
Henry Nagel and
— e^,
daughter of Grand Rapids spent1*"
Saturday here.

JERRY ANDRUS

s S t! s » 8 » |!j« s s l

[trist.

�I

Thuraday, March 5,1936

abput:

THE HASTINGS BANNER

HOWBESTTOSOLVE
F(RM PROBLEM
HINkY FORD BELIEVES IN

BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF.
RAISING PLENTY OF
—Do you remember the fever­
FARM CROPS
ish, the almost hysterical eag­
erness to make kidnaping a REAL QUESTION IS
capital offense which swept
to ind new uses
legislature on legislature—Mis­
souri and California and pther Authoritlea Predict Radical

F

slates besides—after the Undbergb
baby was stolen? You must remem-

Ohangeg in Agricultural

Industry in the U. S.

And now will some bright little
boy or girl tell the rest of the class
Just how many kid­
napers, who were
tried, Contleted ana
condemned
under

Every thoughtful American has
given Mme consideration in recent
yean to what may be called the
"farm problem." and the question of
how best to solve it. We may all ad­
mit that the present secretary of
apiculture and the president of the
been legally put to
United states have been entirely
death since then?
sincere in thinking that the way out
And does anyone
of the problem was to Increase the
seriously believe
price of farm crops by reducing the
amount of those crops. Bui when
that anywhere lo
we find that such reduction In crop
the Union, Bruno
acreage results, as it has. in She im­
Hauptmann would
portation Into this country of com
today stand approand wheat from Argentina and but­
dour to lb.
t c&lt;*b ter and other fata from other coun­
electric chair, had
tries, and that It has greatly In­
not child murder been added lo the creased the coat of living in these
other hideous crime of child-steal­ United States, we may doubt the
Ing?
wisdom of the crop reduction plan.
We're a great people for laws— ► We are much more inclined to
not for enforcing laws; dearie me, believe with Henry Ford that the
no, we're much too tender-hearted better way Is to produce in the
for that rough stuff—but just for United States what food we need in
having nice ornamental laws on the this country, as well as some for ex­
port, but that the real problem to to
statute books
find uses and demand for farm crops
Let's see how many more wo en­
in manufacturing. Mr. Ford has
act before tha spring thaw comes. done this by producing a beautiful
finish for his can from My beans.
Really great progress has been made
Old “Uecla Wilbur"
in discovering other manufacturing
O THE ex-kalser Jd getting on
toward eighty. It seems only
In the "Magaalne of Wall Street"
yesterday when I waa one of threethere recently appeared an article,
American correspondenta with the written by L P. Livingston, presi­
Invading German forces In 1014. dent of the American Society of Ag­
An&gt;0&lt;£ ourselves we wanted to be ricultural Engineers. The title of tills
able to refer freely to our Imperial article was "Science Remaking the
z
host without giving offense to any­ Farm."
This author believes that we are
body In his army. So ws twisted
Emperor Wilhelm Hohensollern In­
to “Uncle Wilbur Pennebory of culture. not by producing a scarcity
of crops, but by producing plenty of
Chambersburg. Pa," and went about them. This new day wiU not wit­
. speaking of him as one to whom we ness attempts to curtail production,
were Indebted for diverse favors but to increase it to meet the grow­
* but whose policies and methods fre­ ing demand of manufacturing In­
quently were open to criticism.
dustries for organic farm crops. En­
To the world today hc'a the wood­ gineers and scientist* will pioneer,
chopper of Doorn; to the aup- and are already doing so. In this
pressed royallsta of the Vaterland new day for agriculture. Below are
he's still. I suppose, the all-hlgheat. some of the things that have actual­
But ao long as I can remember ly been done.
The cotton crop of this country
those mad days In Belgium and
lost year was Valued at 01.500.000400.
France, he'll be “Uncle Wilbur," a A by-product, which was formerly a
good fellow while he had It.
waste, is the cotton seed. Manufac­
Maybe If he hadn't figured his di­ turers last year produced from cot­
vine right was better than tbs de­ ton seed, oil, fertilizer, etc., which
vastating left book of world opin­ sold for $200,000,000. Colton Unters
ion be might still be the all-ages formerly a waste, are now used In
heavyweight champion of Europe­ the manufacture of rayon. Cotton
an royally. And there might be more Is now used for coated fabrics and
automobile upholstering. Billiard
European royalty than there la. x
balls and golf balls, hair brushes
and combs are now made from cot­
ton. aj are electric Insulators, and
WALKED Into a beer parlor to­ photographic films. A noted south­
day but. If that was (he parlor, ern engineer states that road build­
I Fd hate to visit the pantry—anding experts are quite convinced that
cotton can be and will be used In
[
road making lo an extent that will
old friend—a friend I hadn't seen
require from two to three million
for full thirty yeara. It was a
framed sign reading as follows:
At the present time over ten per
“Don't ask us to charge. The Light cent of lhe nation's corn crop is
Brigade charged and look at what taken by manufacturers. Othft- usesi
happened to them.”
for corn are being urged that would
utilize the entire com crop of this'
country.
Wheat straw used to be a waste;
VERY time 1 go to a so-called but It Is now used to make corrugat­
wrestling contest, I asy to my­ ed paper boxes. The wall board In­
self that, if only wo revived the an­ dustry Is baaed on the chemical use
cient Roman sport of matching of farm products that ten years ago
gladiators ,to murder one another were considered as waste and valug■ publicly, no building anywhere
An eminent scientist has predict­
could bold the multitudes that
ed that farms can be made to grow
would flock to the blood-lettings.
| It can't be the posing, posturing, vegetable products that will produce
fuel
that will take the place of coal
cheap IcUng, deliberate fouling, oband oiL
vlous hippod row! ng. the fixed vic?
Chemists are busy not only trying
tories and the faked defeats that to find manufacturing uses for sur­
bring the crowds smarming about plus crops, but t’ley are also work­
the mastodonlc masters of the man­ ing to curtail the tf.500,000,000 an­
ly art of-pelf-pretense, these blub­ nual .loss to the farmers of the Unit­
ber-laden practitioners of the pleas­ ed States from Insects, weeds and
plant diseases. The reduction of
ant science of mayhem.
t
AU the cruel agony can’t be make- such losses meanstaddltlonal money
believe, all the seeming suffering for the farmer.
"The chemistry of the utilization
Isn't rehearsed beforehand. That's
of farm products and farm wastes is
what makes the business pay- The yet in its infancy," says Doctor O. M.
creak of the dislocated ankle and A. Stowe, one of this country's fore­
tbe brink snap of the splintering most chemists.
knee-joint, tbe scream as a brutal
Another authority states that
thumb gouges at a tortured eyeball there is now in the making a radi­
—it's so much music to the popu- cally altered agricultural Industry,
★hose development points to a per­
manent solution of the farm prob­
lem, with lower prices to the con­
Stlfll.i tU Urge
sumer and a far better living for the
TS almost time for the master farmer.
tailors to announce that this year
Manufacturers are tremendously
men will wear bright color*. They interested in this problem, because
do that regularly and nothing ever they realize that a prosperous farmer
cornea of It except vain longings is the best patron at lhe manufac­
for ua. poor cowardly worms that turer. The more produced on the
farm and the better profile the
well go right on encasing ourselves farmer makes from farming, thc
tn garments suitable fir pallbear­ more he will need machinery lo op­
erate hla farm and the more cer­
ers at a Dankard funeral.
tain he will be to buy things for his
I'm typical of the whole thwarted
family, his home and for his farm
male species. My impulse is to. go buildings. That will keep the wheels
pick out something sultable tar a of industry turning.
fancy vest and then have a whole
SETTLED THE CASE.
suit made of IL Right now I*ve got
The damage case of Thomas
my eye on a nobby checked pattern
Beck, administrator of the estate
of Claud Beck, deceased, versus
Stephen Karmes, has been settled
like a marble-tiled ealry balk But.
out of court It will be remembered
will I Indulge ray atlflsd aatnral that Claud Beck and another percravings? Don't make me laugh I son persuaded Karmes to drive
It’s not one another's acorn wa them to Battle creek in Karmes'
fear.. It's onr womenfolk. Well, if car. Something happened to lhe

S

I

E

I

Uh rooster had surrendered to yen
all his gay feathers, along with
most of hla other.perquisites. would

IRVIM A COBS. .

DO SPIDERS
SEEK YOUR DOOR?
Mark

Twain's Opinion
Non-Advertisers Puts

TB PROGRAM MEETS
WITH FINE RESPONSE

Apropos To The
Winter Of 1935-36

The Teat

of

Many Barry county people will

Across Good Point
Whenever a merchant or a busi­
nessman queries the wisdom of
newspaper advertising, I am re­
minded of the quaint story which is
credited to Mark Twain, a sub­
scriber of the paper of which Mark
Twain was editor wrote to inquire
the significance of a spider, which
he had discovered In the fold of hls
paper. "It means neither good luck
nor bad." remarked tha humorist, in
reply to the subscriber's letter. "The
spider was merely in the paper to
see which mercliant in the town
doe* not advertise, so that he might
spin hla web unhindered serose hls
doorway."
.
While Mark Twain's remarks are
probably merely a delightful fabri­
cation, there are nevertheless at
least eight sound business reasons
why a progressive businessman can­
not afford to disregard newspaper
advertising:
1. Newspaper reading Is a univer­
sal habit. Newspaper advertising,
therefore, reaches each day virtu­
ally all who buy. giving them the
merchants' news.
2. Newspaper advertising Is the
life blood of local trade because It

ery community. It gives the na­
tional advertiser lhe same oppor­
tunity for complete consumer ap­
peal in any locality, carrying news
of what Is new and good to everyone
simultaneously. ,
3. Newspaper advertising cuts sell­
ing coats because It entails no waste
In locality of circulation. This cuts
costs to the consumer.
4. Newspaper advertising Insured
quick, thorough, and economical
dealer distribution and dealer good­
will, because retailers arc willing to
sell products advertised direct to
their own consumers. This insures
freshness, newness and the best
form to tlie consumer.
6. Newspaper advertising enables
manufacturers to tell where their
products may be bought. This elimi­
nates time, trouble and waste of
energy to the consumer.
6. Newspaper advertising can be
started or stopped over night, can
be prepared between davi to meet
certain developments and to obtain
immediate results. This gives con­
sumers lhe latest news of late de­
velopments that may help them
save money and are better served.
7. Newspaper advertising enables
manufacturers to check advertising
results and costs In every market
they enter. This Is ah important
element in keeping costa down and
distribution at peak for manufac­
turers.
8. Newspaper advertising coats less
money than other kind, and brings
results. Naturally, tower prices and
quick distribution results.
Tlie merchant or other business
man who is not taking advantage of
the opportunities offered by news­
paper advertising to boost hls busi­
ness now. will still be facing read­
justment problems when hls comjxiUtors ore back on a normal bustncss plane. And the consumers
cannot be well served by the nonadvertlser for the reasons set above.
-Times-Record. Spencer. W. Va.

DEFINITION OF
“BOONDOGGLING”
Allegan

Gazette

Tells

Just

What It Means in the
United States
Many of our waders, like the
writer, have run across the word
"Boondoggling."
and
wondered
what Its real meaning might be. In
thc Allegan Gazette last week we
noticed this explanation of It:
Originally the name of a game
used by the Boy Scouts, meaning to
do needlework in leather and to
string beads, I. The employment of
men and women to do utterly use­
less things, such as raking leaves
when there are no leave* and
counting the number of bricks In a
house where there Is no house with
the Idea of paying them money, as
a pretense, to bide the fact that
they are on the payrolls for politi­
cal purposes to round up the vote.

WARNING AGAINST
SEED BOOTLEGGERS.
A warning against seed bootleg­
gers who spread a vast amount of
poor seed throughout the middle­
west each year has been Issued by
commissioner of Agriculture. James

tested and accurately tagged to
comply with the seed law, as any
seeds sold must carry an analysis
lag on each bag. Usually. Thom­
son pointed out. untagged seeds sold
in this manner have been turned
down by regular dealers on account
of the foul stuff it carries. This
will be especially true this year,
the Commissioner said, as seed Is
not plentiful.

OUT ON (IM BAILOn Friday, Mrs. Clara Brunson,
teacher in the Checkered school in
Assyria, reproved one of her pupils
for the muddy condition of his
shoes and directed him to go out­
side and clean them. Instead of
।removing the mud. the boy went to
।
hla
home. Shortly thereafter his
:
mother.
MYs. Bessie Easey, came to
,the school and. It is claimed, slap­
■ped the teacher's face three times.
:Mrs. Easey claims that the teacher
■
first
struck her. The whole matter
will be thrashed out in Justice
।
Cortright's
court March 6. In the
meantime Mrs. Easey Is out on 0100
Ing into a tree near the Albert Wil­ ball.
liams farm on M-37 In Baltimore.
Beck was instantly killed. It was to
collect damages lhat the suit was
brought.
just another leap year..

who often contributed poems to lhe
Banner and will also be Interested
In the one given herewith which
was sent In by 'Mrs. Victor Anson
of Doster. Tills can be doubly ap­
preciated now as dozen* of families
were so recently snowed In for two
or. three weeks. When this poem

T. and M. railroads were giving
passenger, freight and mail serv­
ice In Barry county. The Pine Lake
Farmers club has had to postpone
some of Its meetings this winter be­
cause of weather conditions. The
poem follows:
For the benefit of Mr. A. T.
Shepherd when that gentleman
returns from the South.
Doster. Mich., 2-M-12.
Editor Banner.
in a recent Issue of the Banner
I saw a letter from A. T. Shepherd
of Assyria, who was visiting In the
south, expressing a desire to be
present al lhe Fanners' Club. He
also stated that if he were present
he would suggest that lhe first
number on lhe program would be
the singing of "Michigan. My
Michigan."
I enclose herewith a revised edi­
tion of that one lime popular song
and suggest that
the Assyria
Farmers’, club sing It at their next
meeting for lhe benefit -of Mr.
Shepherd.
’
Home of my youth, likewise old age,
Michigan. My Michigan.
Where storms and blizzards always

In Michigan. My Michigan.
From O-HI-O lo Saginaw.
From there to farthest Keewenaw.
Such drifts no mortal ever saw
Except in dear old Michigan.
The mercury goes on the bum,
in Michigan. My Michigan. ,
Twice ten below Is going some,
In Michigan, My Michigan.
The iceman smiles, while you took
blue,

If you survive and tough it through.
Till summer comes in Michigan.

The water pipes and cellars freeze.
In Michigan. My Michigan.
The people all begin 4o sneeze,
In Michigan. My Michigan.
There's influenza and lagrlppe.
The doctor gels you on the hip.
Twill cost a V for every trip.
He makes for you In Michigan.
The faithful postman tries to please
In Michigan. My Michigan.
Gets out his snowshoes, sled and

Service in Barry

County Going Across

INGUfflIES ABOUT
BRIDGE GRAFTING

SUGAR COMPANY

MAKE!

The Lake Shore Bu
made a second payment

Around 100%
.
MICE AND RABBITS HAVE ship contract being used by beet
Dr. Bruce H Douglas of Detroit
growers and lhe Sugar Company.
ABOUT RUINED MANY
came to Hastings last Thursday to
meet with thc members of the
FRUIT TREES
Barry County Medical Society at
tlie Barry County Health Depart­
IMPORTANT TO
sold.
ment to discuss with them the TB
of the Sugar Company declaration
program In this county. Skin tests
COVER INJURIES NOW areFieldmen
calling on farmers a* fast as ant Bull." Second
for tuberculosis orc beginning thLs
week at several of the schools. Oion Wood for Graft Should iweather and road conditions per­
mit. Many farmers are calling at selection
Woodland on Monday and Freeport
on Wednesday. The doctors will Be Taken From Last Year's jthe Sugar Company office in Hol­
land and at the homes of the field­ D. D. Walton,
give the tests on the specified day
Oood Strong Growth
imen to sign their contracts for this
and read the results two days later.
and Mr. Albert
County Agent Foster reports he !
parents to this work is noteworthy is having numerous inquiries about
and Indicative of the great progress bridge grafting for young fruit I ASTAIRE-ROGERS IN
of medical education In this coun­
“FOLLOW THE FLEET’
ty. in one school, the Health Edu­ trees. With ^iie heavy snow in orcation League member herself was chords and the scarcity of feed. It
In their current musical "Follow Battle cnek
responsible for the 100 per cent is found that mice and rabbits have the Fleet" Fred Astaire and Ginger
response on the part of the par­ about ruined many good young Rogers Introduce three new dances.
Inkbelner will go
ents In accepting this test for their
Eliminations In
The setting for lhe first dance 1s
children. So far nearly all the re­ trees. County Agent Foster sug­ a San Francisco dance hall, and
gests
that
everyone
having
young
turns from this tuberculosis test
Astaire and Mis* Rogers become March g. There
service given by Vie Barry county trees examine them very carefully engaged In a dance contest and
Medical Society and the Health at this time for bark Injury. If the wind up with a whirlwind ballroom
department have met with 100 per
tree is injured and treatment start­ routine to a new Irving Berlin tune.
cent acceptance.
ed right away, the treatment has a “Let Yourself Go.” Their second aa American liberty,
dance Is staged on lhe quarterdeck and Ethiopia, tlie T
HOMEWARD BOUND SOON. 1 much better chance of being suc­
----------» freighter, and is an eccentric
Thc Banner last week received a cessful. County Agent Foster states
card from Ted Reid who. as he says. sometimes mice apparently ring a Jig to the strains of another Berlin
Is "spending a few days in the mid­ tree, gnawing tht bark completely ! nation, "AH My Eggs Are In One
dle of the sunshine of Texas.” We around the trunk but actually fall1 B^et." Astaire fans, used to seeare all glad to krfow lhat Ted's to touch the cambium. If atten- lng thelr Norite bedecked In top MRS. ROOSEVELT IN
W1U * surprised to
health is improving. He writes tlon Is given before drying out has hat ttnd
GRAND RAPID
h,m
through hls paces in
that flowers and sunshine and sing­ occurred simple mounding with i
ing birds are making merry where earth or wrapping with waxed cloth naT? dungarees.
Tint Lady of (ha Laad 1
will be sufficient to permit regener- I
Interpretative dance to a
a
tlon
of
thebafk.
I
haunting
new
Berlin
melody.
“
Let's
planting gardens and corn, and all
If injury has occurred, whether i
lhe Muslc and D*nce" is a
they know about snow Is what t^ey
day, the Sth
hear over tlie radio about the snow bridge grafting Is to be done or not. flnalc for lhe P^^re. Tills 1* the
Hastings.' without doubi
it Is important to stop drying out I ?nIy danc&lt;*
wWch
JMlr.te
up in Mchlgan.
Ted writes "I see by the paper of the sap wood. Drying severe f°rmally attired.
Baptist church when Mrs.
that Michigan has been having enough to cause checking can oc- !• Included tn the brilliant supportsome unconstitutional Democratic cur In March and April so it is Im- ln“ cot arf Harriet HlHlard. Ran- night March 8.
and Astrid Allwyn. This
weather." He closes hls card by say­ nortant to cqver the injury now. d?lph
Mrs. Roosevelt cornea
This
covering
tn
some
cases
can
be
'
P
lcture
wU1
come
to
the
Strand
ing that he will be homeward
done with earth or resin and Un- s00n’ 8“ 010 advertisement fa this Ctlea! significance alt
bound soon.
appearance to talk
seed oil paint for apple trees. If a PaPcrBOTH BIRTHDAY *18
Threat Against America's
bridge graft Is to be made the Ideal
------------REMEMBERED BY FRIENDS. graft should be secured from la*t “WHIPSAW" FEATURES
LOY AND TRACY.
A very pleasant surprise on Mrs. year's growth and should be extra
Starring Myrna Loy and Spencer
W. J. Holloway was qarrlcd out Fri­ large strong stock. Wood from Mcday the 28th. by Mrs. Glen Brower
oreferred because
because of
of its
Its hardiness.
hard I nr*. „*'™p?a.w ,oon.t?. ihow *l th0
and Mrs. wallace Osborn who had oreferred
Invited Intimate friends and nelgh- If cion wood has not already been Strand Is cne of the more Impor- and fluent
bor$ to drop In for a cup of tea----------.. it.lluuiu
secured—
for thisww
work
shouldmcbe
tn at
at nnra
some time In the afternoon, and of- attended to
once while the dons presents Miss Loy as a member of
an international ring of Jewel dents, that a "first
fer thelr congratulations and beat are In the dormant stage.
ored Grand Rapids
wishes for her 80th birthday.
| County Agent Foster has bulleThe dining table was covered tins on all kinds Of grafts, selec- ice man who tries to trap her
with a lace cloth, centered with a tlon and care of don wood. etc. through romance. The supporting
low bowl of daffodils and fresias. These bulletins are free for dls- cast includes Harvey Stephens. Wil­
and was further embellished with tributlon. County Agent Foster la liam Harrigan. John Qualcn, Irene being received by the
two beautifully decorated cakes.
, planning a grafting demonstration Franklin and many others.
Rapids. Appikatkm
The rooms also bore evidence of the exact date to be announced laWhile Safety slogans will help In
friends' regards, many lovely bou- ' ter. Farmers wishing a special nomaking our streets and roads safer,
quets and pote of flowers being in, tlce of this meeting should send
we're going to have to go much far- are available tn a
right.
, thelr names in to Mr. Foster.
। ther than that.
75C. gl.00 and 1150.

In Michigan, My Michigan.
He tries to keep the postal laws.
He never falls without a cause.
He much resembles Santa Claus
While traveling in Michigan.

Your friends who long to hear from
you
In Michigan, My Michigan.
Await the malls that can't get
through
The blooming drifts In Michigan.
The snow keeps piling on Die track.
The train went down but can't
It's down tlie

track

stuck

in

a

Spring Time Is Home- Time !

Between two drifts In Michigan.
When spring time cornea, things
turn about
In Michigan, My Michigan.
The rivers rise and drowre you out
in Michigan. My Michigan.
To live. If you have any right.
For an existence you must fight.
And stand on guard both day and
night,
in Michigan. My Michigan.
O. B. Garrett,
Doster, Michigan.

ONCE AGAIN IT'S HOME TIME, when
thoughts of spring bring thoughts of improve­
ments and remodeling. Look over your house

ond get ready. Plan to make your dreams

DEATH OF ALBERT OLMSTEAD.
Albert D. Olmstead, age 78. a
prominent citizen of Nashville died
Friday night at . hls home after

come true. If it's a new home or fixing up the
old one, PLAN EARLY, PLAN NOW!

president of the former Nashville
State bank. He is survived by his
two sons. Earl, manager of the
Nashville Elevator company, and
Clarence
of Detroit, also one
daughter, Mrs. Hasel Gota of Royal

THERE ARE MANY THINGS all of us would
like to do to moke our homes more convene

Dan and Alfred of Assyria, a half­
brother, Orin Kimberley of Belle-

ent and comfortable.

rett of Battle Creek. The funeral
was held from the Hess funeral
home at Nashville Bunday aftcr-

Now this is possible through a Federal Hous­

RELATIVES HERE?
Harry W. Cross, a 61-year-old re­
cluse. ended hla life in Battle Creek
Monday morning. He left no will,
but papers showing bank and postal
savings deposits *of 85,400 were
found in an envelope on a small
stand in his apartment. At the
time of his death it was not known
that he had any relatives, but since
then a cousin from Decatur has
presented herfclf as Interested In
hls estate, a Battle Creek paper
stated that he had two other cous-

ing Administration Loan. You can repay

these loans in small convenient payments.
See your bonker and moke arrangements to

start soon. The Hastings City Bank can and

will help you make your dreams of the

Ungs. We do not know thair names,
but It would be well tor them to
get busy if they want to share in
the estate.

A SENATOR FOR VAN BUREN.
Highway construction and Im­
provement 'in Allegan county will
receive 81220,140.08 from July It
1033-to July 1, 1038; and still many
intelligent, voters in thia county
and even some of our readers have
continued to work and vote for Alstate senator. We still insist that a
Van Buren county senator, regard­
less of qualifications, la better for
Van Buren county than Ute best
qualified oni from Allegan county.
—Oobtes News.

beautiful" come true.

Hastings City Ban
TELEPHONE 2103

♦

♦

♦

HASTINGS . MICHI

*

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THUHSDAT. MABCT I, IMS

Y.M.C.A.ITEMS

i erlng illness. AU of her early Ufa
was spent in this community, where
she had resided until about algh-

The New Year

CURE MAN HAS A
PEEVE AGAINST DEER

falling health, the and Mr. Minor
Are Ruining Hla Orchard—
Many a young man has been left thc farm and want |o Ilya In
BERTHA LOVELACE STICKNEY
Grouse and Partridge
helped in Mfe by rooming In the the village of Plainwell.
Y. M- C- A. hotel In Chicago. Now
Th pint uke Helping Hand Club
|
Alio in Disfavor
Well bld her welcome-lhe New
that same help has been made has been postponed Indefinitely,
The opening of Clare county to
available for girl* and women at
rjOyd and Lee Nottingham and
deer hunting next fall will be all
828 South Wabash Ave^ with rate* C]autj champion are Improving With us shall corns to stay; .
She may not think us very grand, right with the owner of the DeGus
very reasonable.
t g)owly after having had mumps.
a------- Mr and Mrs EarIe jnmc8 gnd Nor find ua vary gay;
apple orchard near thte place. The
। 500 and more ministers .Art
and—tey| men spent two days at the Central Laura vtelted hls brother Chartea She will not find us without hope 140-ocre orchard ha* been supportl Methodist church tn Detroit test in Alamo on Sunday. A nephew, And courage for tbe fray.
I ing the deer long enough. DeOu* beweek in an Institute to discuss ro- Harold James, who te located in -7-_------ -7 -t;.-' —. Ueves. At least 30 deer have been
clal justice for world needs. Dr. ,
Of feathers soft and white;
I visiting the orchard this winter and
| Fred B- Fisher was the guiding
Byrde .Doster has a very lame UV av lM In lUr crlmaon |krt bro»uL on U» Ina. U&gt; addition
morning light;
'rhBt follows
rnllnwi mnmlnv
Hohl.
R
near)y jq ruffed gTOUSC OT
spteit.
Barry county furnished ankle caused by slipping on the ice That
She may prance in on noble steeds partridge ha* bean coming In to eat
four representatives.
anti is obliged to use a cane.
And North wind trumpets roar— |1 buds. One partridge examined by a
| Francis Moore, of the Miller
. HENDERSHOTT.
We'd
like
her
best
If
she'd
sail
in
Department of Conservation repre­
। Dairy Farm and Ice Cream Com­
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Parmalee And loudly stem the door.
sentative contained 103 apple buds.
Hmm MIS
Hatting.
pany of Eaton Rapids furnished
of Johnstown were dinner guests And bring with her abundance
DeOu* hsi appealed to lhe De­
the program for the P. T. A. at
at Floyd Garrison's Sunday. In the Like that we*ve known before.
partment of Conservation for relief
Freeport this Wednesday evening.
from the hungry deer and the
I at the request of thc Y. M. C. A. afternoon they all called at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Whit­ Bad to us. sweet to us.
bffds. Last year, it wu reported, he
I The Young Mens Y group met worth In the Weeks district to aee
spent &gt;100 In feeding the deer dur­
.•in Kalamazoo Monday evening and Mr*. Wallace Preston, whose con­ Thte day and every day.
The New Year will be gay
ing the winter and this winter he Is
। heard Dr. Sherwood Eddy. Thelr ,dition remains about lhe same.
Sad with us. glad with us.
trying again lo divert the deer from
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Matteson JU
ai in
in mo
same
01a
way
Just
ths
same
old
way.
his orchard by setting out hay. But
st. Hastings. March 11. pot luck .rent SAlunU, nl«h&lt; •«! Bund., A„a wb,„
It's no use. The deer apparently
I supper.
■t the home ol U»U loihee. reel* And mA„ „„
he
would rather browse In the orchard.
Thc young Married Folks group Matteson. In the Weeks
dtaulct.1 0An make hla earth a naradlM
Il may be lhat the deer will be scat­
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- will meet this Thursday evening. The latter has been quite 111 the By following "After Me' —
tered by hunters when the season
■■■March 5. with Mr. and Mrs. Cran­ past week, but waa Mme
better aM ,1U
,teshns aoltly In
In Clare county opens next fall and
ston Wilcox. 212 8- Park Street. All Sunday altemoon.
And kenUy eltwo the door
then the orchard may get a rest. De­
I young married folk* Invited. BudMr. and Mrs. «eo. Haynea and o„ ,u the want and torrow
Gus believes. But in the meantime
| getlng te the program topic and Ed. June .pent Sunday with Mra. In u„ world. lorerer more.
the deer insist on "yarding" Ln lhe
Uavnaa' mother
mnlhar at
at her
her home
hnma In
In the
the
.
xTj Taylor will be the guest speaker.
Haynes',
orchard and apparently nothing can
"11.000X100 In the United States 'Tanner district. Mrs. Coleman Is
be
done about It.
LENT CORNERS.
slowly gaining in health which Is
Mr. and Mrs. George comfort of
n.aiun&gt;nioo apcni
&gt;u..0U»rtW good news to her friends.
Kalamazoo
spent tsunuay
Sunday wirn
with ner
her , PRAYER OF THE
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hendershott parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marc HamMODERN MOTHER,
and son of Hutings were dinner mond.
' They are so small, dear Oodl
•
guests nt lhe home of Leo Hender­
Mrs. Leland Hammond and sons. Their school Is blocks away.
P1NE LAKE.
shott on Sunday. In thc afternoon Mrs. Permella Sage and Hugh Hit- Thelr steps so prone to lag
Sympathy Is extended lo • the they enjoyed a call from their ter spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. At bits of color In the street—
family of Mrs. Ella Acinar, who brother, Mel and sons, of Kalama­ Clarence Hammond of Hastings. Make keen the eyes of drivers.
zoo.
While there they called on Mrs. stay
“*—
—x_
daughter. Mrs. C. O. Gaindcr. on
Thc L. A. 8. will meet thte month Alice Bachelder and son Scott.
The grinding wheel* of trucks—
Wednesday afternoon after a ling- at Mrs. Warren Brogan's home.
Howard Carpenter came home Spare u* from tiny splintered bone*.
from hls work at elate PeltlngiU's From flesh, like blossoms,
of Hickory
Corners.
Saturday । Crushed upon lhe stones.
quite sick with throat trouble.
By Jeeale Wilmore Murton.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eifler and
son and Miss Betty Allen of Battle
WOODLAND.
IONA
TALL BOY
Creek spent Sunday evening with
Mrs. Rhoda Austin has been con­
1 Mr. and Mrs. Deland Hammond.
fined to her home with Illness this
Robert Butler and friend ot Bat­ past week. She is slowly improving.
tle creek spent the week end wlln
Mr. and Mm. Victor Brumm and
hls mother, Mr. and Mrs. Mel children and Maurice Purchtes of
or
Nashville were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Kirby Maron and Mr. and Mrs. Welby Crockford.
Richard Hall of Richland. Mr. and
Tomato or Vegetable
Misses Lenore Dowden and Na­
Mr*. Frank Hall of East Plainwell ---------------omi-----------VanLoo- spent
the...week end in
and Miss Lola Hall of Otsego spent: Lansing.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall., Mrs. Hubert Bronson and sons of
Mr. Kenneth Thomas of Kula- Hastings spent the week end with
mazoo spent the week end with his Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Leffler. Mr.
parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Clare Bronson joined them on Sunday.
' Thomas. Mrs. Thomas is under the I Miss Dorothy Dell and Miss Gaye
THIS REMARKABLE NEW MACHINE . . .
doc.tor/
al Kalamazoo and ex- ] Saline of Detroit and Bwin Dell of
uikcurf
-rue aaieme ae wa...
pects to undergo an operation soon. Weidman spent lhe week ertd with
• WASHES
THE INSIDE OF YOUR MOTOR w* all hope for her a speedy and Mr. and Mrs. John Dell.
Chatea Food
CLEAN AS NEW.
• complete recovery.
j
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager and
• REMOVES -ALL ROAD GRIT, CARBON AND
Jrt*nd'I “•* *“*«? .’J™1 8J“urd*2
Shinberg of Kalamazoo were Sun- j Ing relatives In Paw Paw. Thc forSLUDGE FROM THE CRANKCASE.
| day evening callers of Mr. and । mer’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. V.
I Mrs. Marc Hammond.
Morion of Paw Paw returned with
U-IE.
• GIVES YOUR MOTOR NEW LIFE AND PEP.
; Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Doster and them for a week’s visit
• SAVES COSTLY REPAIR BILLS.
1 baby girl spent Sunday with Mr. l Mrs. Sally Towns wu taken sudlb.
and Mrs. Harold Doster.
। denly ill Thursday afternoon. She
Miss Jean Hammond of Kalama- i is somewhat improved the first of
zoo spent the week end with her I this week.
Crandmotber’a
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marc Ham-1 The Nlethamer
rt.rtd.mrt family
r.mu, m«
met with
Mr. and
Mrtmond.
I ”
J •*
— Oco. Roberts of Dike
’
IE,
Odert. and lirtivd u..

IS THE

TIME

DO IT BEFORE THE
MARCH RAINS COME

HastingsJftmber &amp; Coal Co.

WANT to BUY? TRY the WANT COLUMN
■

f

W -C#

&gt; jQTC

\

LENTEN FOODS!
I Macaroni

Soups

Spaghetti

3

Clean the Sludge Out of your
Motor Before It's Too Late!
We Hove Recently Installed an Internal

MOTOR CLEANER

25c

3

10c

Macaroni or Spaghetti
Pabrt-ett
Hershey's Cocoa

2 ,!.... 33c

33c
17c
6c

8 o'Clock Coffee
BrCffd
Bokar Coffee
Flrtiar
FlOUr

Sunnyfield
Family or Pastry

Soap

Caahmero Bouqui

21c
19c

2

Gold Dust
Super Sudi
Morton's Salt

15c
29c
15c

2

Sanka
Woodbury's Soap

the ONLY machine that thoroughly
CLEANS motors INSIDE.

2

15c
39c

Argo Gloss Starch

15c
19c

Instant Postum
Hilf* Bro*. Coffee

27c

The job is done while you wait

COME IN AND SEE IT OPERATE!

Dhnnn 004fl

Phone 2240
• Batteries, Windshield Wipers

vw.
Cor. Jefferson and Court
Sis., Hastings, Michigan
• Sunoco Ou and Oil*.
• Vulcanising. Electric,

Greasing
Washing

BLUE

REGULAR
GA5 PRICE

CllRinr&gt;H
mMHUULJ

MOTOR
FUEL

39c

4X Sugar
Calumet Baking Powder
Kellogg'.
*“•'

eerr

2

19c

Ovaltine
Holland Rusk
Seminole Tissue
Staley'* Starch

2 *•- 25c

4

25c

2 *- 15c

rilh

CARROTS FANCY TEXAS

Jc

MICH. POTATOES u. s N*,i-reck 21c
ORANGES CALIF. SEEDLESS
2 dox. 39c
NEW CABBAGE
lb. 3c
NEW TURNIPS
bunch 5c
NEW BEETS
bunch 5c

No Farther Away

k

2

the long experience of pro-

fcsnioiwlly trained pharma­

cists, is yours io command.
And, in addition to filling

your prescriptions correctly

l‘ FOOD STORES
TAX

W? CAfiH WPA CHECKS

cals and- pharmaceuticals.
You may depend upon us

drug

Several local residents of the
Brigg* and the Eagle districts
availed themselves of the
open
highway on Friday and looked
around at the snowbanks, after be-

visited Battle Creek.
Tha Allan Woods transportation
bus for WPA workers to Middleville,
Is again on schedule trips.
The next regular session of the
pot luck dinner and business on
Wednesday. March 11. Mrs. Basel
Norris ia chairman of the axrango-

Mra. O. O. Hewitt and sons. Rus­
sel). Eugene. Floyd and Marvin,
spent Friday at the home of her

Her sister, Mrs. Vida Cary,
and
children were also there, making
quite a .family gathering with the
movers.
Mrs. Dorothy Bristol has been
taking her turn tha past week with
Influenza, the rest of the family be­
ing quite recovered.
Frank Falk, who has been ill and
confined to hls home, shows some
improvement and is out some.
The Briggs school resumed IU
CLOVERDALE.

Zi,l‘ &gt;O“' ““ M*"h “■

Government encourages you to repair,
modernize, and beautify your home, If
your property is free of tax or other as­
sessment liens upon it, you can borrow

sible Squibb quality chemi­

complete

Sunday gusata ot Mr. and Mrs.
John Malcolm were their children,
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Stoury of Lan­
sing and Mr. and Mra'. Stanley Maicolm and family of the Ryan dis­
Harold Cue. in getting settled. trict.
Charles Corey of Pennfield, a
Mr. and Mr*. Ctelr Yelter were In
brothcr-ln-law, la doing tha paper­
Kalamaaoo Saturday visiting their
ing.

money into your home
11 ; Under the Federal Housing Act, the

sure by using whenever pos­

for

any reasonable amount from 1100 up to
12000, through this bank. To do this,
you dust be able to show your ability to

store

service—and our store is no
further away than jour tele{drone.

repay thc loan in convenient monthly

paymenu.
.
We shall be glad to tell you more about
it upon request

j/icJ■iescHpfam Qiuqffole
PHoafziis
hASTIHCr

and

goods which

I

Yelter.

...........................................

Mr, and Mra. Clarence Sisson.
Mlsa Betty and Pau] spent test Sun­
day with Mr. and Mra. Forest
Buehler and family near Freeport.
Mr, and Mrs. Bruton DcOockcr
of Hie Ryan district visited at the
Kdw. Walter's home. Monday.
M. E. Moore and Mtes Clara Sis­
son were Bunday guesta-of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Thompson of Bowne.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Flfield and
family were dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Walters of Carl­
ton, Bunday.
School reopened here Monday aft­
er an enforced vacation due lo road
conditions.
Mra. Miranda Sisson of Hastings
spent tha week end with Maury E.
‘ Moore and Miss Clara Bisson at her
farm home here.
Mr. and Mrs. ctelr Yelter were
Sunday guest* of thelr daughter. &lt;
Mlsa Marguerite. In Grand Rapids.
ROBINHUE PARK.
Julian potts and family attended
the funeral of hls uncle, William
Potts, at Marshall, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs Sam Ashby of Hutlng* spent Saturday with thelr
brother Earl and family and mother. Mr*. Kate Robinson.
Miss Lillian Jackson has gone t*
Gary, Ind., where she has employ*
menu
Mr. and Mrs. John Kollar spent
Saturday evening with Mf. and
Mrs. Otto Llnsley of Grand Rapids.
xiRalph Kline of near Caledonia
spent Sunday with Harold Kollar.

“» '*■

THAN MONEY PUT
INTO YOUR HOME

Thc certainly of accuracy,

wc make assurance doubly

25c
23c
*•&gt;*■
27c
15c
2
27c
2 iu 31c

tn Um freshly fallen snow
■ ia quite so fairy light and
Italy perfect \* a tiny

No Better Investment

Than Your Telephone

in.every sense of the word,

Boiling Beef
Beef Steak
Fillets
Chunk Bacon
Pure Lard
Ground Beef Frwb

Glorious sunshine breaking thru

pleasantly entertained at the home
of Mrs. Chas. Monica. Four new
members were taken In and plans
laid out for the next three months.
The next meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Mary Gibson
March 12. Everyone welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. OUn Bown of PlainOBITUARY.
well spent Sunday with Mr. and
Stella Blanche Bawdy, oldest
Mrs Arthur Johncock. Mrs. Johncock returning home with them for daughter of Edward and Flora
Bawdy, was bom November 10, 1M9.
in Woodland, and departed this
life February 25. 1930. aged 4a
hall Friday evening; pot luck supyears, 3 months. 15 days. Her en­
iter and a good program.
tire life was spent in that com­
Mtes Donna Marie Pennel* enter­
well
tained her friend. Eleanor Schur- munity and she was wr
1‘* and faing. of Kalamazoo over the week v°f b,y .kno.wn’ ln early ur°
end
me »cc*. attended Uie
lhe ri.
U. n
B. rhu».h
church of
A father and son banquet .spon­ Woodland and gave her heart to
the Lord. On February 25. 1908
sored by the young people's class,
she wu united in marriage to John
will be held at the town hall Thurs­
Stairs. They began housekeeping
day evening. March 12.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fennels and tn their present home. To this
daughter were entertained at the union three children were born,
home of Mr. and Mrs. Anson Ira. Richard and Lucille. She was
a kind neighbor, ever ready to ex­
Whllpley of Kalamazoo. Sunday.
tend a helping hand in time of
. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens entertalned Mrs. Carmen and daughter.
Norma, and friend. Mr. Leonard, of ing wife and mother, always look­
ing after the welfare of her loved
Kalamazoo. Sunday.
I Orville Bonfoe of Luther, Mich. ones, seeking to make her homo one
lo be enjoyed by her family. She
not only tenderly and lovingly
I
ML. ' wecllL.
looked after her own family, but
don t fonrtl your data during the last three yearn has
HIGHBANK.
___ ^d Mrt K'
___ Hrtrt. and'
Mr
&gt;«*«•■ &lt;™
been a mother to her sister's
Mr. and Mrs Harve Marshalland
Mr and Mrs. Leon'Hynes and tickete d’
daughter. Alta Haskell. She had
Earl. Demary. Jr., of North Maple daughter. Gladys Mae. called on tUCMU nowbeen in falling health tor lomo
Orove and Mrs. Hazel Demary and Allen Fuller and his mother. Mrs
time, and was taken to lhe hos­
KLINGENSMITH.
daughter. Katherine, of Chicago. Ada Fuller, of Battle Creek. Bunday
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Rouse of pital where everything possible wax
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawblltx and afternoon.
Battle Creek spent Sunday with done for her. She leaves to mourn
Bernard Whitmore of North Maple ' A. W. Long of Lansing and Tom the latter's sister, Mr. and Mrs. her loss, her husband, three chil­
Grove were Sunday guests of Mr. .Long of Grand Rapids spent the Albert Green and family. Mr. and dren. her mother, two sisters and
and Mrs. WU1 Hawblitz.
week end with their parents Mr Mrs. Frank Green of Nashville. Or- three brothers and a host of rela­
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Recd and soils and Mrs. Wayne Long
’
vin and Fred Birman of near Dowl­ tives and friends.
called on Mr. and Mrs. Beryl Nash
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Carpenter ing were also callers there Sunday.
A dear one from us is taken,
of
district.
Mrs. iwvi.fuu
Richard Blough
— ~lhe Moore
»—■■--------. Sunday.
.------■ vtelted Mr. and Mas.
Mrs. J. storkan entertained rel­ A voice we loved is stilled.
Rev. E. Faust, district superIn-, of Grand Ledge. Sunday.
atives from Grand Rapids over lhe Our tender hearts are broken.
tendent of Kalamazoo. conducted, Miss Winifred Border of Oak
And ths vacancy In our home.
quarterly meetings Saturday and Park, Hl. and Charles Fawcett of
Mr. and Mrs. James Bowerman Never can be filled.
Sunday at the North Evangelical Chicago spent the week end with entertained thelr daughter and
church.
Mr. and Mra. F. E. Border.
family from Grand Rapid* and
OUTVABY.
Mr. and Mrs. Theron Mead of
Greydon Paul of Junior College. Mtes Alice Bowerman of Hutings.
Orville Vincent Stamm wu born
Battle Creek called tin Mr. and Mrs. Grand Rapids, spent lhe week end
It is good to see lhe school bus March 1. 1882. near Kendallville,
Leslie Adams Sunday afternoon.
with hte parents, Mr. and Mrs. Law­ and mail carrier travel all the Indiana, moved to charlotte with
------------------------------------------------ — rence Faui.
roads again after three weeks’ va­ hls parents when five years old.
and Mrs Ray Ostroth and Mtes; Mr. and Mra. Clyde Ruell and cation.
.
coming to Barry county In 1875.
Beatrice Buxton of South Maple : family were Sunday guest* of Mr
The many friends of lhe late) July 2. 1888 ne was united In mar­
Grove were Sunday dinner guests and
family Mr*. Ruth Lapham will bp glad to riage to Either O. Hart and to thte
uuu Mr*.
mfb. Harry
iiarry Rlror
tusor and
ana family
Af Mr.
XCr and
enH Mrs. Rarv.
k.
'
of
Sam Ostroth.
of Hastings.
hear that her little baby daughter union were bom two sons and three
Mr. and Mrs. worth Green and
Class c and D tournament will Is gaining nicely at the home of daughters. He wu always deeply
son were Sunday visitors of Mr. and be held ai Woodland Thursday. Fri­ her aunt, Mrs. Albert Green. Mr.
Interested In all religious, political
Mrs. Curt Marshall it) the Branch day and Saturday. March 5. 6 nd 7.
Lapham Is keeping the five little and fraternal organisations. At the
district.
Thtireday. Lake Odessa will, play girls with him at Maple Grove can- time of hls death he belonged lo
Will and Frank Hawblllz were in Woodland and Sunfield will play
the Security Benefit Aaron, and lhe
Bellevue on business Saturday.
Palo. Friday. Middleville will play
Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Willson L O. O. F- For part** thq'last year
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Guy and sons Caledonia. Clarksville will play SL
arc nwying Into the school house, he wu proud of having a longer'
spent Saturday at Mr. and Mrs. Paul's ot Ionia and thc winner of
connection than any other living
Will Guy’s In Nashville.
cla&amp;s D wiU play Saranac. On Salmember with the local I. O. O. F.
Mrs. Prank Hawblitz called on rday the winners of Thursday night
Some folks don’t tell what they
Mrs. Mary Scothom tn Nashville, win ptey to decide lhe winner of know. white other folks tell what joining in 188?. hut owing to cir­
cumstance* not becoming active
Tuesday.
lhe tournament.
they don't know.
until 1903. He wu closely connect­
ed with some church all hla life.
fie passed away peacefully after a
wo year*' Illness on Fshruary 24,
aged 73 years. 11 months and 24
day*. He wu a laving husband
and father and leaves to mourn
thelr teas, hls wife, two sons. L. D.
Stamm of Hastings and Hart E.
of Nashville, one daughter, Mrs.
Stephen Cooley of Hastings, thir­
teen grandchildren, two nephew*
and three nieces and a host ot
friends. Two ol his daughters.
The future of many in*
Mary and Henrietta, preceded him
tn death. Funeral wu Thursday
vestments is uncertain,
afternoon at 2 o'clock al the Fiyst
but you will not mike
United Brethren church, the Rev.
E. O- MoBherrv officiating, inter­
* mistake if you put
ment in Riverside cemetery.

SSiu^rt Kda?

ANDRUS SERVICE •

THREE CORNERS.

ASSYRIA.
Tha snow ahovsl, having opened
tha highway from North Annua
gravel road north from Kaglo W-ho&amp;l
liousc on Thursday afternoon, en­
abled Mr. and Mrs Harold Owe

.n
MICH

.

OBITUARY.
Zebulon T. Norcult passed away
at Pennock hospital,
Saturday
moaning. Feb. 33. at tha ago ot 81
years. For the last six years be and
Mrs. Norcutt spent the winter
months at the hoqje of thelr
daughter, Mrs. Blake AUerdlng, of
this city. They celebrated their
01st wedding anniversary last July:
and have lived In the vicinity ol
Clarksville for 65 years. He lost'
hls left band in 1901 but was very
independent, never needing help to.
dress or otherwise. He was a fann­
er all hls life. He was a member of
the U. B church for about 0 years
and will be missed In the- church
as well as the commonly. He
leaves the widow, Mrs. Catherine
Norcult, one daughter. Mrs. Flos­
sie AUerdlng of this city and three
sons, Milo and. James of Clarksville
and Henry, who resides on the old
Norqutt homeategd. Funeral serv­
ices-were held at the Thornapple
Bretlusn church Tueaday. conduct­
ed by Rev. e. B. Griffen. Burial in
tha Clarksville cemetery.

�HASTiyOX MICHIGAN. THVM5DAT, M.AF.17H rmg

thru

tiny

Udran,
Mai-

thelr

itason,
IBunteport.
locker

r. and
wne,
d and
Carl-

tstlngs

ighter, f
laplds.

tended
/llllam
f Hasthelr
molh-

mptoy*

spent
r. and
laplds.
edonla
allor.

oldest
Flora
9. 1689,
I thia

Corn­

ell

of

i. 100a
0 John
replug
0 this
born,

1 look• loved
no one
r. She
ovlngly
ly. but

slslev's
le had
joine
e hosmourn
e chil­
es and
f rcla-

an.
le,

13 born
aUville,
■e with
ra old.
1 1875.
n mar-

d three
deeply
XJllUcal
ijed to
ind the

longer
living

lo dr­
active
onnectils life.
ary 24.
and 24
tusband
mourn

r, Mrs.
3. thlrlephews
tort of
lighters,
led him
hursday
ie First
ic Rev.
Inter-

aturday
:e of 811
be andi
winter
J thelr
ling, of I
d thelr
txt July
Inily of
He lost
help to
1 farm-1
Ifl years
church
ty. He

d three
urkavUle
the old

mappie

urtal in

Conservation and
.
* Outdoor Notes
Vtotattonsof Michigan's game and
fish laws ttete winter are at the low­
est ebb tn years, due. conservation
afficeni feel, not particularly to a
rtiango of heart on lhe part of
would-be violators, but to the cold
weather, together with the soft,
deep snow in the north.

The smelt committee ut Boyne
City predicts that the smelt will
start running up Boyne River about
the last 10 days in March. According
to an announcement, the committee
is arranging for a large celebration.
At Escanaba, a smelt committee
has set April 2 and 3 as the dates
for the annual smelt Jamboree and
is making arrangements for the
event.

One at the heaviest penalties re­
ported In several years tar a viola­
tion of game laws in Michigan was
meted out to Vineent Peterson. 22.
of Kenton, who pleaded guilty on six
deer-vtotation counts. He was fined
$525 plus costs with alternative Jail
terms aggregating 330 days. He took
the Jail. He met a conservation of­
ficer when he had a load containing
four deer, a buck, does, and two
fawns.

"Roast breast of owl" may never
be considered choice wild meat In
Michigan, but it's edible. Harry D.
Muni, cniei
Ruhl,
chief or
of the
tne Department or
of
Conservation game staff, obtained a
great homed owl. which was old
and tough. The breast was roasted
and portions of it given to hte family and others. Those, who lasted

Atvah Pennock. Sr- and Mr. and
Mrs. Alva pennock. Jr., of Hick-

Barry Bypaths

Mrs, E. R. Willison Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Lelnaar
and daughter Josephine of Hickory
Corners. Mn. Llnnle Lechtettner
and
daughter.
Mn.
Margaret
Welcher, of Battle creek were Sun­
day visitors of Mr. nnd Mrs. George
Whittemore.
• Mrs. Minnie chandler, who has
spent lhe winter with lier eon and
wife, Mr. and Mn. H. T- Chandler,
returned to her home at Gull lake
Saturday.
.
Mr and Mrs. Howard Pennbck
and daughter Joyce ot Gull lake
were Bunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
John Harrington and Marvin.
The drtfled roads are about all
cleared out now so thal school
busses are running their regular
routes and on schedule time.
Because of the fact that meetings
of lhe Inland Lakes Garden Club
have been
Interfered with by
weather, epidemics, etc., a slight
change In lhe order ot program as
outlined In the year book has been
made. Tlie next regular meeting
will bo held on Thursd^ afternoon.
March 12. at the home ot Mrs.
Bertlia Bush. Mrs. Ella Reynolds
and Mrs. Carrie Wilkinson will
prepare the program on the sub­
ject of Fertilizers. Roll call an­
swered to by "Winter birds around
my home” and "What tea garden?”
Each member te requested to bring
a poster suitable for use at our
coming flower show In June. Make
it as targe as you like and any de­
sign you like, only omit the date
I “d
25
I
J?
^2^ *JLbL!t
£
I
I™
555?

I, JANS CAMERON

It said It "wasn't bad at all"; In
fact, perfectly edible. Young owls1
and hawks are regularly eaten in
some parts of the country, par­
ticularly along the eastern flyways
where many of these birds are shot.

Hunting bobcats with bow and ar­
row is becoming more popular as a
sport in tile vicinity of West Branch.
A large bobcat recently was killed
In this manner near the Ogemaw
Blate Gaine refuge, 80 miles north­
west of Bay CityOther archers are being attracted
to the game possibilities of the bob­
cat and a move is afoot to organize
a club.

__ •—‘
quiet
wedding,
was
solemnized
A ou,
't •*
rtdln,r “
** “
lr
Sunday at 1 o'clock at thc Metho­
dist parsonage. Hev. Ralph Bates
officiating. The contracting parties
were MIM LaVera Mott, daughter
of Russell Mott, and Maurice
Johncox. son ot William R. Johncox
all of Delton. The bride and groom
were both born and raised on farms
near Delton and are well known
and very much liked by both old
and young who wish for them a
very hoppy and prosperous mar­
ried life. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice
Ford attended the bridal couple.
Following the wedding ceremony
they returned to the bride's home
where a wedding dinner was served.
The groom has purchased the Dixie
Oil route in thte section and will
Immediately go on with lhat work.
They Intend to soon make thelr
home In Delton. Congratulations.
Prayer meeting will be held in
the church on Thursday evening at
7:30 o'clock with Mrs. Ella Rogers
as leader. Rev. Batea* sermon sub­
Ject for next Bunday morning will
be “A Withered Hand;" hls sub­
ject for the children's service will
be “The Music Store." It’s always
a real inspiration to the pastor to
step into the pulpit and look down
upon well filled pews. Yotl can help
to fill them and at lhe same time
get some good food for thought.
Come to church next Bunday and
every Sunday.

DELTON.
The funeral of Miss Helen Sack­
ett formerly of Prairieville, was
held at the Henton funeral home
Monday forenoon.
Mrs. Ella Rogers and Mtes Mary
Roush were In Kalamazoo Satur­
day.
The Boys' Club will meet tn the
church basement Friday night ot
thte week.
The tiiree Camp Fire Group*
met last Thursday night in lhe
Home Economics building and com­
pleted thelr plans fof a program
which they will present at lhe
Community club meeting In the
Community hall on Monday eve­
ning. March 0 Mr. and Mrs. Jay
Wilkinson and Mr. and Mrs. Solo­
mon Stanton are the committee for
NORTHEAST CARLTON.
serving the cooperative supper at
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Marlow and
8:30 o'clock. Everybody come.
&lt;
Miss Dorothy Laros of Battle children of Mt. Pleasant spent the
Creek an Instructor and counselor week end with hls parents. Mr. and
in Camp Flrexwork will be present Mrs. Chas. Marlow.
Mr. Tyrrel Is quite III. The doc­
at the next community club meet­
tor was called Sunday night.
ing nnd assist In thc program.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Elliott and
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis E. Faulkner
baby
of Flint visited hls parents,
spent one day last week with thelr
Mr. and Mrs. M. Elliott Sunday.
son Robert and family at Coloms.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Olmstead and
Miss Bessie Faulkner te back
again In the drug store after spend­ son Clair were al Grand Rapids
ing several weeks thru tire winter Sunday visiting at D. U. Leopards.
with her sister. Mrs. Charles Kopf Cletus Leopard te very ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo Keeler and
at Middleville.
•
Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Wertman family of Hastings visited Arthur
spent Friday with lhe lattar*s fath­ Stairs Sunday afternoon.
er. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Nobles at
Grandville the occasion being Mr.
Nobles' 86th birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Willison spent
Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
Cklthrop al Prairieville.
Mrs. Julia McElwain, who has
spent lhe greater part of the win­
ter with her sister, Mrs. Clara Wil­
lison, has returned to her home
here In Delton and her niece. Mrs.
Florence Forbes, has come to live
with -her and care for her in her
declining years.
Mrs. John Doster spent Friday
with hte sister, Mrs. Oscar Ehrman,
in Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Norwood
entertained Monday night for sup­
per, Mr. and Mrs. John Doster and
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams and
son Dean, the occasion being little
Dean's first birthday.
The play. "Here Comes Charlie"
was a complete success In every
way. It was well liked by everyone,
and each player filled thelr part
with ability. The sum of $87.75 was
taken in and a net profit of $75 will
be realized for the Community hall
fund.
’
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Van Luster

talned by Mrs. Emma Dickerson at
Cloverdale Thursday afternoon ot
this week.
Mrs. Elsie Horten will entertain
her bridge club Thursday after­
noon of thte week.
'

YOU MISERABLE?

MStSFJ-KS

MIDDLEVILLE.

L.

| given on 4-H Club work by

a spe-

n«w went u&gt; RUtte 'Al workei- Ur u&gt;d Un U*ua or

Crnk on Tbundw u uk, hu
““ ImuntaMlon la mmralnR al th. Boy.«■
•»* pUno. Un
Seoul b.atlouarWn, IU ha, taken I
«•« ■
DniaM
an aetlre part m Ihh orianlraUon! c“*“
nomtera nt th,
for yeart
guitar and harmonica, nnd Dean

The W« chief, etuh or the rythIan Bister, ™t with Un. Nettle !

and WiU PardM
guests of Jennie p«

shied Roy sc«c with thrtr
ering Tuesday and Harvey
on Thursday.

’Ef””
m
"
house windows and listening to lhe '
■ •
•
Sherk on Friday and enjoyed a fineI AeTwe^nTay
The ~D n *T °
oa££o£
chih will meet
fat, well-cared-for hens preparing
Do you knowr/men are funny ertt- dhtner and a ,ood ptnlln,.
_
BRANCH DISTRICT.
for bed. Of all the "talking" you tert. When purchasing necessities
Many families are carrying water Mrs. Matlie Townsend. Leader.
ever heard I Incidentally, the old during the depression, rather than
Little Barbara Norton has been
thelr neighbors'
Irene Brooks..
having the chicken pox.
Duuuca who "talk"
biddies
iai* most
niu»i arc
are lhe
me best
nest to admit
»aniu w*ai
that they
mcy were ur»u
dead broke.. । from
----- - in wells,
------ as
. wa- I —
birthday in tha
frnn-n
.*
layers. We Interpreted lhe fdltow-. we have seen one after another do ter
*** imiw
P***,5. nrr
"Lr fr
“‘‘n •*» manv
many nlarev
places;
-A &gt;1-1
«irl was &gt;born ...
to Mr. and- -Mrs.
Cltarlotte It a,
Inc: "Kawrk. kawrk. karwk" means this They would dap each pocket.
'“J*"*
* Ul®*'
Kenneth Wilcox (Martha Thomphouse--------------------------- - --------------- — "g.
WWE
"Oct on your own Nd. ol the then .Ul« IrlumphStUy. -Th«r! I
'
*• &gt;'oyt. wdIM yrorr. I wnl lut Wrdrwnl.y ,t til, taut
Quarterly meeting was held at Shln'ahau^a’v
perch." and if the kawrki are ac- left my pocketbook in my oUifr !?,U ,or rnft,,y ***" * resident n of Harlow Barnum. She has been
compacted bv
by a
a iharo
sharp peck,
that twin
pants."
Women, of course, didn't
named Donna Jean.
comnanled
Deck, that
is
----- --the North Evangelical church Gunto Yanke
Margaret Kelsey was home from
means, "or else.” “Kawk. kawk. use thte. if the depression had con- hte bed Friday A. M He had been
farm, which will come
kaduckut" means "You knock me tlnued-much longer. U wouldn't have downtown during the day and felt her work In Hastings a part of masoo. District Bupt. delivered a
wonderful sermon.
off the perch again, and I hope you &lt; been any good anyway. Once it well, although he had been failing last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbie Wilcox are
have Bee.” About thte time. Jenny happened when we knew the man for some months. Besides the widow , John Woodman had a horse die
Lind cuts lose with a few arias, j didn't have another pair of pants, he leaves four daughters and two I recently.
cash before Franklin gets
sons to mourn ids passing beside
~
Jenny Und te a tuneful sou^ but' but he saved hte pride anyway,
many friends. The funeral was held
SQUTH THORNAPPLE.
we’d rather have eggs‘than her i
• • •
At three yean, the
from the B*eler rooms Monday at: Mr. and Mrs. Wm. KroncwRter has been named Donna Jean.
hoarse, cro^ky tunes,
Fourscore. and seven years ago.
2
P.
M
.
burial
In
Irving.
.
Iof Mlfldlrvllle were callers SaturHoward Snow, of Nashville la cres of heavily tin*
• • •
Jane started a quilt. And just got ■ i. 7,* «----------- 7------- .
.
Benasmy &lt;J«we to Ann day afternoon on Mrs. Hattie Johnrhlch lie helped clear
A ilttli boy near here can wrinkle it finished. Now. she's in a pickle, Arbor Sunday to visit his son. wlid.^,,, On gunday she had as guests, working for Leslie Adams.
Seward Walton, who Is attending
hte nose like a rabbit. Our young , it's Joo pretty to use and too pret- te attending col ege there and W.. Mr. and Mrr Nei^n sumpsan and
school at Naperville. III. spent the ware store at Wayland,
hopefute are spending hours prac- ty to lay away out of sight. Oh. I H. Gray went with him to visit hte mOther. Mn
week end with hls parents. Mr. and
tlclng in front ot a mirror. It's a i know I Take it to tlie Barry County son. Charles, who has been very ill
. ..
.
Mrs. Clyde Walton.
, there. We are pleased to write lhat '“•W’d Buwr P««d
the week
failure so far. but it looks like the ..Fair
......................
this fall and* “
win
* a prize.
*“
fire well-drilling outfits. A*
there. We are pleased to write that |
Frank Buck. "Jungle camp" at lhe
Im? te Improving nicely and while
2lrs
QUIMBY.
very weak yet is making plans to Charlie Bunn at Freeport. RayWorld's Fair when they art all re­
NORTHWEST THORNArTLE.
g"yhometo MeSiu X“ P
Mrs. Wesley Franch of Assyria Manufacturing Company, first
mond «?
te passing the winter
hearsing at once.
A nitecelianeous shower was given
1 Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Garrett,
was called here Friday by the seri­ erating In Wayland, now k*
Gerald (Perry) Bedford for some ,
for Mrs. Norman Carpenter at thc
Nolhlng
h ----of
MrJ
Nothing so disappointing as an- “
Tony Blrumberger te assisting ous illness of her sister. Mrs. Wll- in Charlotte.
-• *•
—
Loren
Tungate lime employed at Traverse City, has
11am Rltxman.
•
IW*U°&lt; •
«•«'"“ top Ot Thursday
olemoon.
_______ _ _________
i. A fine time purchased the hardware stock of Nelson Btlmpson cutting wood.
Mtes Janette Rltzman of Battle
eoKee ihh time of the peer, end up- cnio
y«|
,
na
the
„&lt;
Our highway which was snowenjoyed and the recent brlda re­ Mrs. H N. Potter and will lake Imon tasting, finding It weak and flat. ceived many useful gifts.
mediate possession. Jerry has many bound near Middleville for so tong Creek te spending a few days at
home
here.
Barry county friends are
Our private name for' that kind is
The Home Economics class will •. friends around here, where he has was cleared out Feb. 24. The 29th
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Nash and pleased that he has.
"dishwater."
hold thelr March meeting Friday. spent lhe most of hte life and the they cleared the road over by Mr. son Robert of Hopkins visited Sun­
lhe Chrte
...
Chris Andler farm.
March 6. at the home of Mrs. Verne stock he has bought is well known Smalts'*}
MARTIN CORNERS.
day- at lhe home of their parents.
Those who find the price of lard Thomas, and Mrs. Garrett will en­ as a good clean one and has been
Leo GtifTeth was over again Sat­
Bunday school and pre
prohibitive can fry delicious fried- tertain Ute social club Thursday at kept up-to-date. Here's success lo urday to see hls mother. Mrs. Ar­ Mr and Mrs. Walter Bldelman.
The Birthday Aid will be enter­ service next Bunday comm
cakes or doughnuts In beef fat. It her home.
thur Griffeth. who is confined to
tained at the home of Mrs. Rtel
should be "tried out" the same as
Some one sfiol into the Severance her bed with heart trouble.*
Mr. and Mrs Wm. Schroeder of
Kellogg in Hastings March 12.
Invited.
pork fat. the doughnuts made and Caledonia, who tetumed from Flor­ home. West of town Saturday eve­
A Mr. Boyce, who was working
Mrs. Kenneth Reynolds and lit­
fried the same except thal when ida Saturday, were Sunday guests ning. The reason for the act is not here on the PWA project, suffered a
tle daughter, who have been ill are
you lake each one from the fat. of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. WlUls yet known.
heart attack Wednesday. He wu
some
belter
at
this
writing.
plunge it quickly into-a dteh ot boil­
brought lo the offic*. which is in the
Wood.
The Epworth League meet at the and does not improve any.
ing water. Thte removes the suet.
COATS GROVE.
Hattie Johnson tenant house and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rogers and
Mrs. Willard Hilton te visaing
home of Miss Freda Scott Bunday
Then shake all in a sick containing
Geo. Coats.,after having been in
son and family of Grand Rapids
son. Cecil Wright, and wife in
sufficient powdered sugar to coat were Sunday guests of the former's the Pennock hospital for a week day Mr. Boyce was taken to Has­ evening.
while war* and warm slightly be­ sister, Mrs Otto Wood and family. for an appendicitis operation, re­ tings.
Remember thd P. T. A. this
Orin Tubbs a former resident of
turned home last Thursday. He la
...
____
fore serving.
"
Mv Glenn Allen will serve a
this place has been quite ill with Friday evening. March 8. and
!
SOUTH BOWNE.
birUtuay dinner to friends Wednes­ getting along nicely now.
to attend- Bring cup and apoo
A few years ago Mussolini was day evening In honor of Richard's
Tire L. A. S. took in about $47
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Blough and heart trouble.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dirk
Hoffman
en
­
ordering the young people to marry
from thc banquet supper for thc '(son Laverne Blough and wlte were
ninth birthday.
Women's Club al Woodland last i in Indiana on business Tuesday, tertained Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed? at the church Wednesday er
and raise families and the already
Spring movine has started in our
Hoffman and twin sons of Dowl­ March 11. Pancakes, sausage
over-burdened mothers were to have neighborhood. Mr. Rau and fam­ Tuesday. The L. A. 8. appreciates I returning w*dnesday.
ing, Mr. and Mrs. Hardin Hoffman maple syrup. Supper will ba I
Mrs will Mishler visited •her sis­
still more children for lhe glory of ily are moving to the Tyngate home, tire splendid help of all and It has
•­
Old Italy. Now these good, obedient the Neumans to a farm west of [raid for tlie new church singing ter. Mts. John Thayler of Campbell of near Battle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. from 6 till I o'clock. You ar
Thursday, who Is under the doctor's Roy Gunnel and family and Misses dially invited to attend.
people must see their fine young Caledonia. Murray Harper has pur­ books.
Ruth. Esther and Margaret Hoff­
sons die or be maimed for life on a
Mr and Mrs. H. A. Woodman and
chased the Nathan Moffitt farm.
Mrs Elsie Ferris, who has spent man of Kalamazoo.
battlefield In an offensive war on
daughters. Ruth and Marian, went
Oscar Kachele has purchased the
still more Innocent people, the ex­ Harper farm. Mr. Wilson of Grand to Kalamazoo Sunday P. M.. Martan the past nine months with her
cousin. Jennie Pardee, was called
cuse being that Italy needs terri­
Rapids has purchased the Wm. remaining there for her school
tory to take care of Its over-popula­
to Hollon to assist In caring for her
Olaiughlln farm Mr. Clark te mov­ work.
brother's wife, who has been sick
tion. Seems like they would get
ing to hls recently purchased farm
wise to old "Muscle piny." Now the (the Sherk place) and Sam Sensl- nlng. After a pot luck supper and for some time.
grief-stricken Gold Star mothers
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Johnson and
business of the evening, a talk was
Harper
must go from door to door, collecting ba has rented the Wm.
scraps of material for more war and* farm.
Otto Wood and son Lyle are work­
destruction.
ing in Grand Rapids.

CLEARANCE O

We see the Kellogg Foundation te
MORGAN.
going to lest our Barry county cows
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Anderson of
for streptococcus germs which cause
near Newaygo spent the week end
mastitis In cows, and Ls transmitted
with Mr. and Mrs. Elgin Mead.
to people tn the form of strep sore
They took little Bonny Mead home
throat. Bossy made the front page
with them for an Indefinite stay.
that lime.
Arthur and Opal Webb of Battle
In the southern tip of Illinois the Creek spent Sunday with Mr. and
state purchased a lake and sur­ Mrs. Chas. Harrington.
Opal Webb of Battle Creek called
rounding swamps and woodland nnd on Miss Demarls Hagerman nnd
dedicated It to wild life. Naturalists
are welcome, but hunters are taboo. Mr. and Mrs. Elgin Mead. Sunday.
Forest Beach of Lansing called on
It te estimated that 75XXXJ Canadian
his aunt. Mrs. Chas. Harrington,
wild geese and ten times as many
wild ducks are wintering there thte lost Friday.
Wayne Christopher and Clayton
year. Thte te the only state In the
Webb were in Battle Creek Wednes­
Union to have given official welcome
to Canadian
migratory
birds. day.
Don Rennlck of Lansing spent
Louisiana te the usual destination of
the week end with hls family.
these birds.
Mr. and Mrs. Cack, who
are
spending the winter at Jackson,
During the war when our ladles spent one day last week at thelr
were knitting
sweaters,
socks, cottage here.
'
mufflers and mittens for the Red
Cross, one more enthusiastic than
experienced young woman sent a
pair of socks which somehow got
through Inspection nnd were re­
ceived by a soldier who found her

GOOD COAL make* warm friend*,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleaaed with the fine,
even heat. Low in aah, and longburning. Try a ton today and
•ave on your fuel bill*.

were Sunday visitors of Ray John­
son at Yorkville.
Mrs. Blanche Richards and son
Paul, accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
C. J. Barnum to Grand Ledge Bun­
day each spending the day with
relatives there.
Dr. and Mrs. Ed Loury enter­
tained lhe farmer's sister and hus­
band. Mr. and Mrs. Alien Brochman. of Flint over the week end.

and address intide. This Is
;the thank-you note she rteeived.
I "Received tlie rocks. a perfect fit.
I1 Wear one for a helmet, tlie oilier a
I
mitt.
'
I Hope lo meet you when I have done
’my bltl
Bui where on earth did you learn tn

SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Price*:—
16% Dairy—$1.55 per 100 Iba. "
Homeatead Maah—$2.35 per 100 Iba.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 Iba.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 Iba.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company
Hastings Telephone 2257
Dealers in Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Balt, Lime,

Cement and Coal

1935 RANG
A PAGEANT TELLING
THE STORY OF THIS
STATE’S PROGRESS!

,

lanny

/

ROSS

.
KC

fcV

it.i t«

THE
WORLD ’
A MILLION BVS RATU.
k YEARS AGOj

[DNVENTIDN HALL MARIH £

WATCH

to 15*

We have several 1935 model
on hand now, to be sold at

Reduced Price

this space for important

These stoves are equipped with'

announcement about the

• AUTOMATIC OVEN CONTROi

• FULL INSULATED OVENS
• FULL PORCELAIN FINISH

Commercia I Club Fair!

• AUTOMATIC LIGHTERS

AND ALL MODERN FEATURES

i

HOME LUMBER COMPANY

liberal Allowance
FOR YOUR OLD STOVRI
36 MONTHS TO PAY!

CONS
POWER
HASTINGS,

■5

�lurttwaa, sgqnoAN, tmoiday, mw i, im
NOTES FROM
NAPPLE-KELLOGQ

given in group* af six.
available to anyone Interested In
singing. including students and
adults. Two groups will be organ-

nlng a week.
community. The
We also desire to organise a Civic
orchestra. Thia orchestra will be
■ivan’to tho*e who wish to take composed of everyone who wishes
Swm A
A schedule
*ch*dule will
will be
be made
made out
out I 10
to J™
Join.
will be
one evening
than
1, There
ume wm
« uuc
for the convenience of the rural
woek devoted to this organisation.

on Saturday afternoon. Parents Remember.
these courses
are
will have to furnteh the material1 offered free of charge. Additional
for the lessons. Lessons will be information may be secured at lhe
'

Wa Wish to Announce the Opening
of Our New

FEED AND SEED STORE
Located at the former stand, the
McLravy Building
This store, under the monagement of LESLIE LOCK­
WOOD, a former employ of some four yeors with thc

Wallace Feed and Seed Store, will carry the most
complete line of Flower, Garden and Field Seeds of
any store in Barry county. . . . Also a full line of

Feeds, Poultry and Dairy Supplies.
We invite you to come in and sec what wc
have and get acquainted.

•

WE ARE OFFERING AS A SPECIAL THIS WEEK
THE FOLLOWING ITEMS:

100 lbs. OYSTER SHELLS .
100 lbs. ALL-IN-ONE SALT

79c
79c

ORDER YOUR BABY CHICKS E^RLY

WALLACE FEED &amp; SEED STORE
221 West Stote Street

Hastings, Michigan

school office from Mr. Bell and Mr. I trouble but seem to be regaining
Ray Mathews. This Is a worth I their stride after the enforced throe
while enterprise of the T. K. school, weeks' vacation. T. K. Reserves
and we hope everyone will cooper-. copped thelr game with Byron Oenate in every way. The only things ter by the score of 33-30. The game
jou have lo furnish arc the music was comparatively easy for tha
books.
I boys. T. K. never being in trouble.
,n
a Item vo sum uquau ucHOME ECONOMICS.
! feated Byron Center by the score
The 4-H Club girls are working of 21-11. Longstreet showed up well
lo finish thelr projects far lhe making
12 points. Haight also
Achievement Day to be held April played a nice game getting 0 points.
----------- ----------~_____
----- ----‘ “D

B„r ■

। vln Van Der Kolk played a few
80 P
fnr'nttt
eheeze °
sJlorln* PrQnU#e Ior next
March 13—Macaroni and Cheese.'year. Parks and Lyons, two other
| March 13—Cream of tomato soup, second team members also received
Thc Hot lunch for this week will thelr chance to play in this game,
be prepared by Mary Lois Fresh- , The next game is with Caledonia In
| ney. Sarah Mae Lewis, and Bertha the tournament at Woodland FriMugridge.
day night. The Middleville reserves
also took thelr gome with Wayland
I by the score ot 21-11. Like the first
• The T. K- quintet lost IU second team game, this game was easy far
game of thc season when Caledonia T. K. They took lhe game at will,
; defeated them 17-12. It was a very seemingly
scoring when
they
rough game. 21 fouls being calleu. pleased. Th Lt was the last game of
T. K. lost the game In the first the season for this team, a fine
i minuto of play when Caledonia bunch of players, who lost two
• scored 4 points. T. K. could not games out of the fourteen games
pull lUclf together after this. Mld- played—a fine record. The girls
dleviilc beat Caledonia in the first game with Wayland has been
game which was played in the T. K. changed to Wednesday. The re­
I gym. The boys get another chance port of that game will be In next
1 at thelr rivals tonight when they week's news.
I clash in the tournament at Wood-I
---------------- &lt; • » ————
land. C'mon. fans, let's boost the I
DOWLING.
1 t«*nil
, The Dowling Townsend Club will
-----------meet at the church basement'for
i RESERVES AND GIRLS
•
' dinner on Tuesday. Mirch 10. MemARE VICTORIOUS., ^.j-^ please bring doughnuts
or
I . The T. K. Seconds defeated Cale-1 sandWiches or fruit salad, also table
donla by the score \Of 14-7. Cale­ service.
Everyone Is Invited.
A
donia failed to score a field goal speaker is expected for the occa­
until the last quarter when Pres­ sion.
cott scored three o^ them. Parks
We welcome Mr. and Mrs. Will
was high point main for T. K. with
Garrett to our village, they having
6 points. The T- K- girls also de­
, feated Caledonia. Tlie score was moved here from the Barney Mills
16-8. After trailing for most of thc dtetrict last week. Their daughter
I game’ T. K scored 2 points in the and husband. Mr. and Mrs. Rennie
third -quarter, putting them ahead McOlocklto. will work thelr farm
the coming year.
D-8. They followed this with 7
Mrs. Millie Herrington has re­
points In thc last quarter. Cale­
donia did not score a point In the turned to her home here after
spending tlie winter with her
last half.
daughter and family at Grand Rap­
T. K. RESERVES AND GIRLS
ids.
DEFEATS BYRON CENTER.
Mrs W. A. Exner has been suffer­
T. K- took iLs come with Byron ing lhe effects of a badly sprained
Center 24-20. Tlie boys had some back for several days, she having

^arch H-ChUi

AUCTION SALE
HAVING DECIDED TO QUIT FARMING, I WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION AT
MY PREMISES, 1-2 MILE WEST OF CRESSEY STORE, OR 3 1-2 MILES NORTH AND
1 1-2 MILES WEST OF RICHLAND, ON

TUES., MARCH 10
SALE WILL BEGIN AT 12:30 SHARP.
16 CAI I LE—Good Ones—TB ond
Blood Tested.

Guernsey cow, 7 yrs. old, bred Nov. 14.
Guernsey cow, 5 yrs. old, bred Nov. 26.
Block Jersey cow, 5 yrs. old, due Apr. 19.
Block Jersey and Guernsey, 6 yrs., fresh
Jan. 29.
Shorthorn, milking strain, 5 yrs. old, fresh
Feb. 12.
Guernsey heifer, 2 yrs. old, fresh Feb. 6.
Guernsey-Jersey heifer, 2 yrs. old, pasture
bred, due soon.
Guernsey heifer, 2 yrs. old, bred Nov. 14.
Guernsey heifer, 2 yrs. old, due Moy 20.
Jersey heifer, 2 yrs. old, due May 11.
Guernsey heifer, 18 mos., bred Nov. 20.
Guernsey heifer, 13 mos. old.
Geurensey heifer, yearling.
3 heifer calves, 6 weeks old.
SHEEP.
15 head of sheep.
.

TOOLS—IN A-1 CONDITION.
Fordson tractor.
Farmall tractor plows.
P &amp; O Little Genius 2-bottom, 14-in. plow.
Double disk, new.
International disk, 16 inch, 7-ft.
Dunham cultipacker, 7-ft..
TERMS:—CASH. NO PROPERTY

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:—
Three-sec. tractor drag.
Two-sec. spring tooth drag.
Two-sec. spike drag.
'
Two-row walking cultivator.
^One-horse cultivator.
Black Hawk corn planter.
Superior fertiliser grain drill.
Alfalfa seeder. Oliver walking plow.
Massey-Harris grain binder. Bean puller.
McCormick-Deering side delivery rake.
Keystone hay loader. Truck wagon.
Hay rack and wagon.
New Idea manure spreader.
Self-feeder potato planter.
Champion potato digger.
Boggs potato grader.
Combination orchard and potato spray­
er, power driven, with 3 1-2 H. P. gas
engine. Corn shelter.
Buzz saw mandrel. Saw frame and man­
drel, 10-in. rip and 8-in. cut-off saws.
Oliver two-bottom tractor plows and oth­
er articles not mentioned.

MISCELLANEOUS.
Set light work harness. Quantity of oats.
Quantity potato crates.
6-ft. galvanized tank, new.
Set harpoon hay forks.

BE REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

C. L. BAR JER, Prop.
RY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

JOHN HOAG, Clerk.

slipped on tha ice at her home Fri­
day evening.
Mr. and Mra. George Stanford
and Mr. and Mn. William Stan­
ford visited Mr. and Mn. Leslie
Conklin near Lacey, Bunday.
Tha ladles of the community are
arranging plana for a supper at the
church on Friday evening. March
13. The men win put on the pro­
gram.
Mr. and Mra. Howard Blanton
and Mr and Mrs. Marshall Pierce
spent
Sunday
afternoon
with

Bunday dinner guests ai Mr. and
Mrs Mary Crookston and Uo
FRUPORT.
On Tuesday evening uf next week Mrs. Harold Rosenberger and Mar- Quick of HaMingi spent Saturday
at the Methodist church basement vta were Harold Yoder and family afternoon and evening wkh Mr.
of
South
Bowne.
.
and
Mn. M A- Mills.
*
will be held the second of the se­
ries of F. y. F. (Friendly Family
Carl Buztance and family
are' Mrs. George Adriacson. MU* Lu-

town. soon. We are informed that to visit Mr', and Mr*. Clarence
Mr. and Mn. Marvin Thaler will Adrianaon and family. Mn. Adrian- '
The speaker of tbe evening will be move on tbe Mrs. Oeo, Sagar farm, son will remain for a lunger slay.
Rev. Leon Manning, pastor of the when the Bustance family vacate. | yj, Rdward Silcock and Mr*.1
Methodist church at Lake Odessa.
Thera wm a fine attendance at William McKlbbto were to Hasting*
the M. E. church Sunday morning on business Saturday.
act as the supper committee. Ev­ u h«r Mlu WlmUr
U»
, un 01.4,. Wilkin, r.lunud lo
ery one te invited to these gather­ « . nria w1-4JW up hw Horn, Bur.d.j from . ....
ings. Brtog your own table service. “
T*. *!- VK11 lo htr uLr. Mr, HDv»rd
Mrs. Prank Cool returned to her These social times will be held each
home at Freeport Wednesday after Tuesday evening during lhe month lurlm Cprui. ■ Th. wooM on. will HuUon. Mid t.mll, ol O.laUiun. '
be next Bunday. Thc attendance at.
.
u
th* evening service wm also larger ,
M OfMDecatnr called &lt;in m?
of March.
•
baby at the Leland Jones home.
' 2J y^atnr calh-tl pn Mt.
Dr. H. C. Peckham celebrated hls than usual and we trust this will
Mrs. Mate Oswald is the nurse in
continue
.
lU,d
p- J- Hughes Friday. Mra.
90th
birthday
ai
hte
home
here,
charge at the present time.
,,
j „„ ..
,
,
J Hughes keeps about as )a*l reportFeb. 23. Although remarkably spry
. Mrs. Doris Pierce and daughter, and enjoying good health, he docs I Mrs. A. Wickham has returned cd.
near Grand Rapids where she .
n«Mifeiin«Ji(n ein..
Marlon, accompanied Mra. Irene riot get out much this winter. The from
cared for a rick daughter
Ooodfellowahlp class cA
lu« a
uausnver.
, youn&lt; married people had a party
Kibllnger to Battle Creek Sunday doctor's many friends hope he will
A daughter wm bom to Mr. and at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cheswhere they will remain for a few live to see many more birthdays and
Mn.
Fred
Kunde
(Florence
Bkeoch)
days’ visit.
ter johncock Friday evening. A
that he may continue In
good
at lhe Grand Ledge hospital Feb. truck load ot jolly folks and a good
health.
20. She has been natnXl Kolecn
MILO.
Mra. Maude Rogers and family are Kay. Both mother and daughter lime is the report..
The Ladles' Aid will meet with
Mesdames Barber. Flower and now enjoying electric lights.
are doing well.
Mra. Ralph Bates of Delton March
ZVrr, .ll.na.dlh. 0IU.U, «hldM I The
„„ regular monthly meeting of
The March meeting of the P. T.
reception of Mr. and Mrs. Geo.: Lhe W. P M 8 will be held on A. will be Held al the schoolhouse
“rlLi0”1'
*lwn&gt;oon' ol u&gt;u
U
Master Sherman te on the sick
on Wednesday evening of this week.
Jsnd Park last Friday. Other club' •»._ ».--------- n »—— &lt;n Moving pictures of activities in list again.
members nearer thelr home were the ladies arc invited to thte meet­ tlie large dairy barns and Ice cream
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Mills spent
also among the guests.
ing.
factory of lhe Milter Ice Cream Co. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs b. M.
Mr. nnd Mra. Barber will be­
Miss Ruby Newton of East Lan­ of Albion will be shown by a repre­ Mills and family of West Uike.
come residents of Milo this week sing was an over-night guest of sentative of that company, who will
Mrs. Bess Hughes. Rankin and
as they are completing their moving Miss Evelyn Overholt Saturday.
also furnish ice cream ban, which Charles Hughes, Mrs. Belle. Mul­
today. They will be at home to the
Mr. and Mra. Gearhart Kunde with home-made cake, will be the len and June called on Mr. and
Boyle bouse
Mra. Allie Wood te
refreshments for the evening.
Mra. Alfred Anson and family of
now
occupy
the
A.
J.
Novteky
house
assisting them.
Announcement was made last Cooper Bunday.
to the southwest part of town.
Mra. Ida Brandstetter was taken
week that the fire siren would be
Mrs. Mary Polley and Mrs. Flor­
Mra. L. B Lester wm numbered sounded at noon each day by thc
seriously ill last week
Monday.
ence Hughes called on Kirs. Clair
Tuesday forenoon she was taken to among the rick last week.
operator at the telephone
office. Aldrich of Gull Lake Friday.
It was necessary lo postpone the The purpose of thia Is to make sure
Borgess hospital. Kalamazoo. In a
Mrs. Jennie Baumgrns has gone
couple of days she showed consid­ Missionary play, "Marusha." which that it te in operating condition at
erable
improvement
and
was was to have been given at the M. all Ume*. So far it hasn't been to Grand Rapids tor an extended
brought home Friday afternoon. Al­ E. Sunday school last Sunday. It heard, although for several days, a stoy withher daughter. Mra. Epsey.
Mr. and Wra. Mark Ritehio of
though confined to her bed still, will be given npxt^punday and a good many have stood with gritted
she b improving and able to receive cordial Invitation is extended to all. teeth and fingers In thelr ears al Gun lake called on the Jennie Nor­
Miss Ruby Newton and brother. noon, dreading to hear the shrill ris and Sarah smith famiUcs Suncallers now.
Gary.
»pent
the
week
end
with
thelr
blast.
Perhaps
to
much
adverse
Sunday, while Mra. Skidmore was
A family party honoring Rankin
outside, little LaVem got a bottle parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nell Newton. criticism has caused the powers- Hughes was celebrated Thursday
of cascara pills, which Mr. Skid­ The former 1s employed at EMt thal-be to change thelr plans.
The W M. A. Of the U. B. church, evening al hls home. Ice cream and
more had been using for a cold and Lansing and lhe latter Is taking a
cake
were served. Hls many Irlerttte
IS hold
is
noiaing
tog lhe
me March
Maron meeting this
tnis
। ate about one-half of them. As'
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Nagler and Thundjy. D day. .t u» home »
j soon as the parents discovered what
Vaughn Mott had an experience
A public
the youngster had doue.. first aid ( Ivan Roush attended the funeral of Mra. Enuna Anderson.
Saturday he does not care to repeal.
| was administered and a doctor | H- A. Hoyt at Middleville. Monday. dinner will be served al noon and
Since writing our last week's let­ lhe annual election of officers will Aller watching some welding being
; from Augusta called. Thc child
done for three hours. lie became
was very sltk for several hours, and ter. arrangements have been made lake place to the afternoon.
blind. By applying compresses dur­
for
lhe
Freeport
school,
under
lhe
Mr.
and
Mrs
Geo.
Rosenberger
Is still ailing, but no serious con- 1
— of
-- Mrs.
,------------------- to
- have
------- I of Grand Rapids were Sunday aft- ing thc night hi*..wAS Bblc to see hi
direction
Walters,
sequences are expected.
charge of the special Eaater pro- ( emoon caller* at lhe Harold Romh- the morning. Some scare
Twenty-nine people attended P. oram at IKa M V
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Calthrop en­
Va.la.
fiome.
। T- A. last Friday evening. A good Sunday evening, Instead of the
Mr. and Mrs H. M. Boughnrr tertained Sunday honoring thelr
program
was
provided, several Sunday school program as an­
were to Saginaw last week, called grand'on, Lamar Erb. on hls third
games presented and prizes given nounced.
there by the death of the latter's birthday. Thc guests were Mr. and
aside from the music. Mrs. Tooze .
Mrs. Lowellyn Erb of Delton and
Mra. John Thaler has been under brolher-to-law. Charles Neal.
had the program to charge.
Mr. and Mra. Paul Nagel of Gull
lhe doctor's care the past two weeks
lake. Tiw attraction for Lamar
PRAIRIEVILLE.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Wooteton and and te reported better.
Raymond Bunn, who is employed ! -----— —
—— —
—... was the birthday cake.
Mrs.---------Frank
Hughes
and- family
daughter have moved on the Roll
Miss Lila Boniface submitted to
' farm and ore now residents of Milo. on a farm near Middleville, spent attended the funeral of Mr*. John
an appendicitis operation ut Pen­
The daughter started school this the week end with hte parents, Mr. i Beattie of Orangeville Monday,
and Mrs. C. Bunn.
I Miss Helen Backet, 68. a native of nock hospital Thursday. Her con­
Monday morning.
dition
is vary satisfactory. We are
Thc Grand Rapids Press of lost Prairieville died at the home of her
Thc P. T. A. are planning “A pen• ny a spoonful social," to be held at Friday contained a notice of the ■ niece- Mt. and Mrs. Karl Loveland, all whiling her a speedy recovery,
Charle.-. Armstrong was moved
after
death of Herbert A. Hoyt, aged 74, of * Kalamazoo, Thursday
J
- a
! the schoolhouse March 20.
33 short Illness, she leaves to mourn from BorgcM hospital, Kalamazoo,
I The natal dav of Mrs. Saunders, a realdent of Middleville for
her passing two sisters. Mrs. Jessie Wednesday to the home of his sis­
thc teacher, will be observed with years, who died to hte sleep early Temple and Miss Mary Backet, of ter. Mrs. Orville Knaucz, of Chi­
Friday morning. He is survived by
। a little party given in her honor
,
three nephews. cago.
I the widow, five daughters and two Topeka. Kansas;
by thc pupils. Tuesday.
Ben.
Harold and Don Temple;
and
sons. Charles Hoyt of Freeport be- -----------------------------------------------------BOWNE CENTER.
: Mr. nnd Mrs. Gilbert were Has­ ing one of the sons. Mr. and Mrs. | the n|ece. Mrs. Winnie Loveland.
Mr.
and
Mra.
Will
Watts enter­
tings visitors last Wednesday.
I Hoyt and daughter Patricia and -----------------'
-------------*"
,J
Funeinl services were held Monday
j Juanita, the German police dog Mrs. Carr attended the funeral forenoon at Henton's funeral home tained thelr sister. Marian, and
' nnd companion of H. J. Flower, j which was held at the Beeler fu- at Delton. Burial to Prairieville family of Grand Rapids. Stuiday.
Mr.
and
Mra.
Lewis
Skinner of
I died last week. She wa-s nearly 13 . neral home at 2 P. M.. Monday. cemetery. Sympathy te extended lo
Leighton spent Bunday with Mr.
] years of age. but only sick a short j Burial was to Irving cemetery.
the relatives.
•
time. She Is much missed by Mr. I Miss Pern Wheeler and niece,
There will be a special collection and Mra. Merrill Knrcher.
Mr. and Mrs Harold Nash of/
' Flower since hte confinement to thc Ruth, nnd Mrs. Ivan Roush were at Bunday School service Sunday
Lowell spent Bunday with thelr par­
I for county and state work.
home.
, Grand Rapids visitors Saturday.
ents. Mr. and Mrs. John Nash and
family.
Mrs. Keith Fuller of New York
ipent lhe week with her mother.
Mn. WiU Fox. Mrs. Fox. who lias
been seriously 111 the part two weeks
was taken to a hospital to Temper­
ance. near her son’s home. Sunday.
We all hope for a speedy recovery.
Mra. Dorothy Houghton gave u
shower at the home of her mother.
Mr*. Guy Smith, for her cousin,
Mrs. Beatrice Karchcr. Wednesday,
to fllty-clght of her friends. Mra.
Karchcr received many lovely gifts.
Mr. and Mra. Charles Posthumus
were Grand Rapids visitors Tues­
day.

AUCTION SALE

Having decided to quit farming and engage in other busi­
ness, I will dispose of my personal property at public auction at
my farm, located 8 miles east of Hastings, 1-2 mile off M-79,
or 1-2 mile south of Morgan, on old Strong farm, on

TUESDAY, MARCH 10, ’36
Commencing at 1:00 o'clock,

I will offer the following:—

HORSES.

HARNESS.

Boy gelding, weigh! 1250 lbs.
Boy marc, 8 years old, weight 1350 lbs.

Double harness and collars.

For FAST PACKAGE

cows.

TOOLS.

Jersey ond Guernsey cow, 10 yrs. old,
due in May.
Jersey cow, 9 yrs., due in Aug.
Jarscy cow, 8 yrs., duo in May.
Jersey cow. 7 yrs., duo in April.
3 yearling calves.

CHICKENS.
50 White Leghorn hens, how laying.

CORN AND HAY.

Wagon and hoy rack.
Dump boards.

New Gale walking plow.

Drill.

Two section drag.

6-ft. cut McCormick binder.
DeLaval cream separator, No. 15.

New Idea mowing machine.
Hay rake.

120 ft. hay rope, fork and pulleys.

150 bushels corn.

Two-horse walking cultivator.

4

Forks, shovels,.hoes and many other
articles too numerous to mention.

tons mixed hoy.
20 bushels of potatoes.

BUSES

EXPRESS SERVICEI
Many leading companies
arc using bus express daily
—became they have found,
low rates, frequent sched­
ules »nd careful handling,
the answer to thelr need for
quick, reliable express serv­
ice a I low coal.

Why not phone the local
agent to find out wha*l wc
can do. or If you wish, just
sand a postal to

SHORT WAY LINES
TOLEDO, OHIO

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. Nothing to bo
removed until zettled for.

Complete InforniaUon furI niahed without obligation.

ELMER G. HULL
PROP. «•'
Dewey Reed, Auctioneer.
H. Lethrop, Clerk.

DEPOT

AT

TRIO CAFE
HASTING* PHONE 1137

�BA1TIN0*. WCWOAM, mUBADAY, MARCH I, 1W

brillianY program
FOR MAY FESTIVAL
Pott., Althoa.., B.mptoii,
MarUn.m, IlmbilUt With
Thoi. Appearing

hazard. 1 Know what lo do about

-HOBS- RACING

“Rule G" SHU In
Active Operation

High School Now
ty

Fair

around*
far Wright Bro* grocery

IMW
Th. Ann Arbor M», FMlr.l ot InJuwrlar «rd«r
1936 promises to mark a new mile­ drinking, te still rigidly enforced de•ptta reports Id the contrary vu
stone in the Festival history of
recently announced by R J. Bow­
man. vice-pre*idem of th* Parc
dlUon to the engagement of th* Marquette Railway.
Philadelphia Orchestra under Leo­
Thc railroad executive branded
pold Blokowikl. with Ito full com­ auch reports as silly. "The Per*
pliment of more than one hundred Marquette, and every other rail­
men. a lilt of outstanding soloists road. would Just as soon dispense
ha* been engaged for the six con­ with Its signal system as operate
certo to be given May 13. 14. U and without Rule o.“ he said. "Our line,
all other*
16. including opera star*, oratorio and I am certain
singer*, and leading Instrumental­ throughout the country, not only
ist*.
demand total abstinence of em­
LUy Pon*, the world's outstand- ployes on duty, but they are shov­
ing unqualified preference to ab­
traditionally brilliant Friday eve­ stainers on or off duty, over even
ning performance.
the so-called moderate drinker.
Jeanette Vreeland dtetiniutehed Rule o vas in full force and effect
orsIorio and concert singer will have through lhe prohibition era and te
the Important
soprano rote in now. Bnployes using Intoxicating
Verdi's Requiem. Saturday night.
liquors while on duly are dis­
Rom Bampton, contralto of the charged tn proven cases, and what'*
Metropolitan will sing Saturday more they are not re-employed."
night. Miss Bampton is rapidly
Rule a became part , of the na­
assuming ths position held by such tional railroad etandard operating
artists as Bchunuum-Helnk and code in 1899 It ordered that "the
Louise Homer.
use of intoxicants by employes
Martinelli, the great Italian ten­ while on duty te prohibited. Their
or will sing in “Manion! Requiem.” habitual use or the frequenting of
He Is now.at the height of hls ca­ place* where they are sold te suf­
reer. Paul Allhouse, a great fa­ ficient cause for dismissal." Later
vorite tn Ann Arbor will sing lhe me word "habitual" was dropped
tenor role in "Caractacu*."
and "total abstinence either on or
Two outstanding baritones are lo off duty" came to be almost toe
be heard for lhe first time. Keith universal requirement
On most
Falkner British bass-baritone, who line* the rule also covers narcotics
made a great impression in this
country last year and Julius Huehn era ought to be in effect' in the
of lhe Metropolitan. Efrem Zlmbal- opinion of Vlcc-Presldtnl Bowman.
1st the well known violinist. Harold 'An^rrlca'* railroads have had aevBauer master
pianist.
Palmer.
Christian distinguished organist, from accidents arising out of em­
are other soloists.
ployee negligence." he said, “and
The Philadelphia orchestra ap­ the unbending rule of total ab­
pears for lhe first time at the fes­ stinence on duty Is credited with
tival. the University choral Union having been a major factor. Cer­
will offer Elgar's vibrant "Caracta- tainly a like rule on the roads
cus," and "Requiem."
would result In a sharp drop In
The Young People's Festival highway fatalities, which now av­
chorus will appear on Friday after­ erage 3.000 monthly."
noon and win give Pieme* “Chil­
dren at Bethlehem."
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
Mra. Edith Edger and daughter,
OBITUARY.
Phyllis, of Hastings were dinner
Mildred Chapman, daughter or guests of Clifford Hammond* FriMr. and Mrs. Geo. chapman, was
bom in Martin Twp . June 4. 1890.
Mr. and Mra. Warren Bolton and
and entered into rest al her home
in Orangeville Twp.. Feb. 33. 1936. family spent Bunday at the home
aged 45 years, 8 months, and 18 of Lewis Cl pm near Lake Odessa.
Mr and Mra Chas Woodruff were
days. On July 16
1913. she was
united in marriage to John J. in Lansing on business Friday;
Our school lias a wonderful'new
Beattie of Orangeville. To this
union were bom eight children. set of maps hanging on the wall
Earl. Harriet. Helen. Marion, Rob­ this week.
Mr. and Mra. Clifford Hammond
ert. Doris. Walter and Louis, whom
together with lhe husband survive. attended a card party at Bert
Site I* also survived by an aged Sparks' in HasUngs Saturday night.
mother. Mr*. Oeorge Chapman of
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Battle Creek, five listers, Mrs.
Mtes Achsah Buck was the win­
Blanch Currie of Shelbyville. Mra.
Bertha
Currie
of
Vancouver. ner in lhe seven declamations, giv­
Washington, Mrs. Bewde Kelsey of en by HasUngs High School students
Bellevue, Mrs
Elsie Brinkert of Friday monUng. Congratulation*.
Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Fuller spent
Grass Valley. Oregon, and Mrs.
Jessie Mason of Lansing, three sis­ Wednesday tn Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mra. Leo Barry and Hasel
ters preceding her in death, three
Shriber
spent Friday in Grand
brothers. Courtland and Charles of
Rapids.
Battle Creek and Odell of KalamaMtes Achsah Buck attended a
*oo. Funeral services were held
al lhe church in Orangeville, Feb Leap year party at Mr. and Mra.
Wesley Pew* of Hastings Saturday
Weston of Allegan officiating. In­ evening.
Hasel Shriber and friend spent
terment in Orangeville.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
wiST CARLTON.
Tasker of near Lake Odessa.
Mr.
and Mn. Sydney Gelb of Cal­
Forty neighbors very pleasantly
surprised lhe Arthur Richardson edonia, Mra. Freda Klump and Mr.
family Frl4ay evening. Games were and Mra. L. R. Beeler and san of
played, high score being won by Middleville were visiton Bunday at
Homer
Fredrickson
and
Mrs. Mr. and Mr*. Walter Culbert'i.
Paul Slrodlbeck of near Clarks­
Owen SU-cklr. Mrs
Fredrickson
nnd Art Eckert winning low score ville called on hl* parents. Mr. and
After refreshments, the guests left Mra. J. J. Strodtbeck. Sunday.
Mr. and Mra. Henry Williams and
at a late hour, wishing the Rich­
ardson's happiness and success in daughter, Geraldine, and Mr. and
; Mr*. Lafayette Uibome spent Suntheir new home.
Mrs. Cora Kick iuu been very 1 day with Mr. and Mr* Lyle Quim­
by of Battle Creek.
poorly thc past week.
Mr. and Mra. Harold Eliott and
Ralph Frisby, who was confined
to his bed by Illness, is again able daughter of Flint and Mr. and Mra.
Gerald Ttecher and children of
An a-lb. son was bom to Mr. and Carlton relied on Mr and Mr* Ar­
Mrs. Albert Crittenden Monday. thur Yarger and children Sundajv
afternoon.
Feb. 34. named Alton Cecil.
Mr. and Mra. Caryl Fuller and
The only safe Ume to make a pre­ daughter spent Sunday with Mr.
diction is after the thing has hap­ and Mr*. Wm. Hale of North CarlI ton.
pened.

P. BUI Pennock spied Baaty and
said. "Old timer, you used to ride
'em. Take that black mare and
start in that half mile running
race. She* fast.” And when the
sterling Judge called. "Bring on
your Barry county hortee for the
half mile running race," Banty rode
onto the• track without saddle.
»pur* or whip, and the crowd hoot­
ed and "Speedy" Parker yelled,
■Take
her to the bone-yard.
BantyI" and "Go ride on the mer­
ry-go-round!" But
when they
came down lhe home stretch, the
crowd in the grand stand began to
ill up and lake notice, for Banty
was in the lesd and Black Beu
went under the wire a full length
ahead. And Banty will *1111 go
many miles to watch a "ho*»" race

.

EAST WALL LAKE
AND VICINITY.
Mr. and Mra. Gruner and friends
of Lansing spent Sunday at thelr
cottage at Cedar lake.
.
Mis* Alice Laubaugh relumed to
Grand Rapid* Sunday after spend­
ing lhe past three weeks with home
folks.
Mrs. Carrie Klemp of Freeport
visited her mother. Mn. Fargo, sev-

Mr and Mr* Carl Ricker and
son of Hastings were visitor* at
Mrs. Mina Aldrich'* Saturday and
Bunday.
Seward Walton of Naperville. Ill.,
visited two days with hls grand­
mother. Mra. Aldrich, last week.
Mr. and Mrs.'' Clifford Kahler
Mr cable and family have moved
into Uie house on the Given farm
and Bert Stenger and wife of Milo
arc moving into lhe tenant house
on Chas. Kahler's. Welcome to our
midst.

The Senior girls are leading with
1000 per cent in the basket ball
toumanwnt which to being held in
the
gymnasium
Tuesday
and
Thursday noons. The Bophomon
n team to second with JOO. Other
tesms participating in order of thc
most games
von are Junior*.
Sophomore* I, and Freshmen.

Plans are progressing for the
High school exhibit in the Cen­
tennial. There 1* under construc­
tion a model of Hastings as It was
a hundred year* ago and aa it Is
_ .
today. There will also be
a VWI
col.­
wvwv..
u. old
wu fire
U.B arms. Tlie
lection of
T” development of the radio and teleDhone
“...
will"be"graphically
"shown
. .
____ l._ ।__________
under the supervision of the commerelal and science departments.
, , ,
* n.- m.rwin. .v.t.rr, win iv
uiblUhld in

The Dramatic club will present a
one-act play. March 30. entitled
■The Bishop's Candle 8Uc|u."
incident taken from Victor Hugo's
nov*l "Les Miserable*.'* Th* play is
under the direction of Mlu Robson,
and the cast includes Donald Weav­
er,
Benjamin
Burwell. Edna
Schulte, Barbara Trego and Hugh
Ksltey.
WEST HOPE.
Because of the alarming increase
of tuberculosis tn Barry county the
W. K Kellogg Foundation has made
it possible tar all the school chil­
dren in the county to be examined
by a physician in their school room
»ome tlInc during the next two
months. It will be entirely without
cost tn
to the
the nawtnta
parents, as tha
the' Fnurvta.
Foundaermt
i 1'on 1* paying the bill. If the phy•uspects tuberculosis but te
unable to determine definitely an
I X-ray picture will be teken .'In-

weye be checked by diet and care.

Nature can be improved a little,
but not radically changed.

Don’t Neglect Those

BABY CHICKS!
or your LAYING

• You can have it and pay for itwithout Worry ... all
you need is your present car, in average condition ... we
take that in os cosh, giving you highest allowance!

HENS with inforior Feeds!

Thc Beat U Cheapest

MERMASH
16%

■iaii
tin muu aiuiK

a. ik.

USE

MICHIGAN CENTRAL

NEW
WALL

Mr And Mr* Wilcox caUed there
Wednesday and Saturday and found
them doing fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Shuman of Grand
Rapid* were luncheon guests of Mr.
and Mr*. Will Hyde Wednesday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs Chas. Day spent
Sunday with her brother. Glen
Hyde, south of Battle Creek.
Russell Meade, who has employmant In Grand Rapids with the
Blue Valley Creamery and Mr. and
Mrs. Merrit Meade were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mra. Cameron
McIntyre and family of Quimby.
Kenneth Wilcox of Kalamasoo
spent Thursday afternoon with hls
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbie WU-

New Styles
New Patterns
New Prices
The Wall Papers of 1936 are out
standing in colors and designs. By
buying directl$hfrom the factories we
get the pick of the entire lines a, fac­
tory pries, and as usual we pass the
saving along to you.

PARLORS . DININGROOMS
BEDROOMS . KITCHENS
PRICES TO SUIT EVERYONE
Alto Complete Lino of Window Shod.*,
Enomelt, Point* ond Vornithet
■

CARVETH &amp; STEBBIN
THE REXALL DRUGGISTS

Phone 2131

Hatting*

HAVING RENTED MY FARM. I WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION AT MY
FARM, LOCATED 4 MILES WEST AND 1 1-2 MILES NORTH OF LAKE ODESSA.
OR 2 1-2 MILES SOUTH AND 1 1-2 MILES EAST OF CLARKSVILLE. ON

WEDNESDAY, MAR. 11th
HOMES.
Chwgtwut more, 13 years old, wt. 1760.*
Brawn gelding, 9 years old, wt. 1500.
COWS.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES • Inc

SHEIP.

Hutinia, Mich

Phon. 3118

Walter Wood bfodfr.
cut.
Walter Wood mower, 6-ft. cut.
DaaHng-MiCormkk whaal drag. \
Deering-McCormick lime sower.
Deering-McCormlck 2-hfne cultivator.
?-harH Buckeye culfjvafor.
Single spring tooth cultivator
I. Plat reek.

TIIMS OF SA LI:—CASH.
TLID FOR.

13-hoee Van Brunt fertiliser drill, new.

Lend roller.

Buggy. Cvttar. Grindstone.
Maytag angina. 2 satg wagon tarings.
Clovprseed buncher. B-H.
Oil-burning brooder.
Copl-burning brooder. 2 log chelae.
HOUSIHOLO GOOD).
Iron bad with matt rail and »&gt;rii»&gt;8.
Oak bedroom set.
.19x12 tapattry Brunels ruf.
Wood folding cat with mattraat.
Dining tabla. Oak iMabaard.
Kitchan tabla. 2*hwraar ail avaa.
Folding h«Rfh wringar.
MISCILUNMUS.
Pair I.Un.p ,l.i.h, wlH. U&gt;k&gt;.

NO PROPfRTY TO II RIMOVID

FRANK K. GIDDI
HINRY 8LANNI8Y, AuciImmi.

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING:

CulHpoeker.

Rogisterad Holstein, 6 years old.
Full-blooded Hohfoin. 4 ya«n N4Full-bfooded Hols tain, 4 yean old.
Grada Dusham and Guamtay, 3 yean
old, calf by g|do.

T9W

Let ut figure with you on your

Mjclii

AUCTION SALE!

CHICKINS.
135 Whit. Wy.nd.tt. pull.lt.

We hove a full line of BULK
GARDEN SEEDS

PHONE 2121

$^OO ROuMd
•••
Ki?M*"

MERMASH 18*

GARDEN SEED ORDER

FORD DEALERS

have been snowed In took advan­
tage of toe fine day Friday and vis­
ited some of thelr neighbors.
The many friend* of Vincent
Stamm in tote place extend sym­
pathy to the bereaved one*.
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Hom and
Evelyn and Loyd Laubaugh vtelted
Mr. and MTS- Byron Moody In
South Maple Grove Bunday after­
noon.
Mlu Lucy Sullivan, who has been
working tn Kalamasoo for several
weeks returned home Saturday.
Alva Kenyon and »on Donald of
Bellevue spent one day last week
with his parents and cut wood for
them.
Dr. Adrounie has many friends
in this place who regret hl* pass­
ing and extend heart felt sympathy
to the bereaved family.
Rena Whipple spent Thursday
with bar sisters ta Cloverdale.

DETROIT
CoachuOnly

19 full'bloodod Shrop awas.
I full-blooded Shrop buck.

you how we make our FLEXIBLE FINANCE PLAN fit
your individual needs.

HASTINGS

Hickory comers called on Mr
Mrs George Kenyon Bunday.

MERMASH 16*

You select one of our good used cars from a stock of
all the popular makes and models . . . then we will show

Universal Garage Co.

■

SALE WILL START AT 1:00 P. M. S HARP.

100 Lbi Nel

Do You Want a Better
AUTOMOBILE?

WEl'ic-V

ceivsd word Saturday of Um pass­
ing of thelr old neighbor. Mr. Dell
Olmstead, of Naahvpte. By—galliy
is extended to lhe tereared ones.

of hh dZe* sejirate mirks on *here necetesry. We sincerly urge
citltensWp rathe? than include1
l)?lr wt««nt
tnTZ irT fb. \nhni.r.X r.tin«
lhls e«unination and surely appXlI ^e S£^ii2“ffi I gxfdJS1 lhc Ke,10M Pound‘’
Parents have been consulted and
lhe returns have been overwhelm-1
««• Hattje Anders has purchsed
Ingly u.
in the affirmative. The ..w
few
negative vote* will be investigated the John H. Anders farm and te
and lhe objections willed if poa- moving In the first of thte week.
.....
Ur
Mr. .nJ
and Mr*
Mra- Bon.lJ
Ronald Anders and
slbte.
I son* are moving into the Lu tie.
Mr. and Mrs. Cha*. Hutton and
Although few take an interest In I Woodman tenant home and Gerald
mother of Walled Lake spent Fri- I
lhe activities of Room three, the Anders will “batch" it on the James day with Mr. and Mra. WiU Hyde.
sewing dau progresses quite well. Anders farm.
Mra. Hutton remained till Sunday
Girl* have been learning to make
Congratulation* to Maurice John- when Mr. Hutton came after her.
many attractive, as well as prac- —
•- on
•“ *-•*— “
—-•— to Other Sunday guests were Mr. and
cock
hls ------marriage
Sunday
Heal, garments: pajamas, blouse*, Mias Revah Mott of Delton
Best Mra. O. Ganka and children of Bat­
and dresses also knitted articles.
wishes for a long and happy life tle Creek. Mr*. Billie Corie and two 1
together.
children. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Mc­
Mr. Becker's fifth hour class will
snow plow and
end a crew of Coy and san. Russell, of Grand
The ano*
present a ptey for the Women's about twenty men came through Rapids.
Club at the Episcopal pariah house. Tuesday on the east and west road
Friday night, March 6. Mr. Becker and turned north and cleared the held al lhe schoolhouse Friday eve­
1* director of lhe play with Rosalie road through to toe Glass Creek ning.
The L. A. 8. will serve toe supper
Cascadden as assistant director.1 district, which was already open.
Member* of the cast are: Ruth This Monday morning we can hear for the Nashville Ladies' Literary
Hathaway. Thomas Shay. Helen them on toe south end of
the Club in Nashville, Wednesday eve­
Jane Kurtx. Jack Erway, Howard neighborhood. The Delton bus will ning.
Mr *nd Mrs. Herbie Wilcox and 1
Martin. Cleon Smith. Viva Mae Os-1 be able to make its old route tobom, Donald Sothard. and Donald morrow for the first time since the Mr. and Mrs. Verne HawbllU and
Weaver.
school closed for scarlet fever the children were Sunday dinner guest* 1
u« mkiiuu/.
xueauay,
uic
!
.'*r'
Mra. Hoteebus,
near ■
t
01
Tuesd*5'' t*w
A near case of pneumonia kept 25th. was the flrat time a car had j BeUevue.
*
one
tchool traveled~tol*\oad since' Febru*ar&gt;**8* | Mr. and Mra. Herbie WUcox re-1
__ of our .teachers
—».— .from
------ ।......................................
ceivsd
m glad
news of bS?&gt;
the to
arrival
for over a week; the student body te ■ The school children enjoyed a be- of
theteUfirat
^randcWld
Mr
glad to see Mtes Michael back tn I
TUe8&lt;Uy
Mr. Kenn.to wil£?rt tte
her usual place In toe Latin room,
J — ’
u and Mr* Kenneui wuoox at the
I the .tunduil candy, popcorn and horn.
Mr.
Mrs. Harlow Bar­
, appies.
num ncar Coata Grove, Wednesday.
Mrs. Barnum is Mr*. Wilcox'* sis­
lo a.lormln. £111, In reeosnlzlns: Jg" “J
ter. The UtUe miss, who weighed
rtxunx.ndlone._ _
.
; hb^toun Jerked Mm out o|. u&gt;. eight and one-half pounds, will an-

CEDAR CREEK.
Several from thte way attended
lhe play al-Delton Friday and Sat­
urday night* which was very good
Remember the Community Club
this week Friday night, as we were
not able to have one last month,
on account of weather conditions
It te hoped to have a large crowd
this time. Come and bring some­
one with you.
Ella Wertman spent part of last
week with her brother. Add Simp­
son, and wife of Midland Park. Gul)
lake.
E. E Cairn* of Barry township
About len girl, ot the U. A. O.. Rev- trnno Osgood vhlled hl. tom­
apent Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Sub Deb club accompanied by Ml**. l&gt;y herc a couple of days last week.
Lloyd Owen, ateo Mtes
Gladys Rose DeFoe. advlier. plan to alMr nn&lt;i Mra. Pat Ooodrode re­
Calms of Baltimore.
tend the concert, given by Nelson turned to their home here Saturday
Eddy at the Civic Auditorium in • Mter having wintered with hte
Grand Rapids. March 13. Previous brother.
Miss Lavere Mntt and Maurice
to the concert they will have dinner
lr“ Osgood went to Kalamasoo
Johncox were married Bunday at
*nd returned with hte wife and new
one o'clock at the Delton parsonage at the Pan Hind hotel.
• • •
son. Xra Stephen, who made hte apby Rev. Bates. A six o'clock din­
French student* have exciting; pearancc in Borges* hospital on
ner was served at ths bride's horns
for the Immediate families. Best moments when some one of the; February 16. Congratulations
of wishe* are extended this young class receive* a letter from lite 1 The Barnes family who have been
French
correspondent. HasUngs ।111 for several weeks with severe
couple by thelr many friends.
French students write letters to ■ colds and after-effects are improved
Thursday evening a party of sixpen-pote in France and lhe whole . in health, although Ray suffered a
ten helped Gene Frits and Earl
class enjoys translating lhe an- set-back last week.
Knowles celebrate their birthdays.
; Herb Rose, milk hauler to WayWay­
Ben Quick Is soon to take up his swers.
land, just went mere
there for the first
• • •
, iana,
work for the year with Morse Back­
All girls in thc various high Ume since February 8.
us of Hickory Comers.
school clubs Who play basket ball1 We had Just picked out "The PrteThe Kinsley Aid, which was post­
poned 'on account of bad weather are organising club teams and pre- oner’s Song" and "BlrTninghgm
paring to enter the Club Basket Jail" and started to practice when
and roads, will be held this week Ball Tournaments. The winning ' ,h"
&lt; •••
the plow liberated
us.
Wednesday, for dinner, with Mrs.
Mra. Jesce Osgood isn't as well as
Stusrt Waters. Mrs Flossie Mor­ team will be presented with "The
her many friends wish.
ford and Mrs. Delia Willison are Little Brown Jug." which goes to
Mra. Mary Belle Johncock.li quite
the winner each year.
helping her entertain.
improved in health. A f---------- *—
Ray Pierce and family visited
will be a
On Thursday, February 37. Rich- days we
... think
------------------------Mason Forahey arid family of North
ard Vemor. of Chicago gave a very | to our ones w-ho are not
w.
Pine lake, Bunday.
Nell Welchtr and wife of Battle Interesting talk on fire prevention.1 send our youngsters out doors to
Three
valuable
suggestion*
given
by
■
get
every
bit
of
sunshine when tliat
Creek and Chas. Lechleltnera ot
Mr.
Vemor
were:
1.
Find
lhe
fire
rare
event
occurs.
near Delton spent Bunday with
their sister. Meda 6pau ot MUo.
Ray Pierce and family of Ban­
field spent Bunday evening with
Mr*. Lottie CoUlster. Mary and Iva.
Word has been received that Mra.
Ian Iha Rtebrldger of Battle Creek,
well known in this vicinity, passed

funeral will be held Wednesday al
lhe Banfield church.

SOUTH SHULTZ.
Parchment spent Saturday with
thelr mother. Mrs. Sarah Kenyon.

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MARCH 5, IMS

. U.

ORDER TOR PtmUCATIOR.

NOTICES I

WHEREAS

■MMaaaaaaaMwaMS probate ofirt is tl
ra*4A.e»«aO.
on »
PUBLHXATION.
n 1M6.
the Probata Court tar
Preeoal; Hon. St

4
at t»« rerular Janturr I

---------------------------------------------------------------------- ■

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
n raopril n&lt;
r«S3 F»h

Feb. 2d. 1»SB.

»•
Friendship

rKUMjK
PROBATE cuunr.
COURT.
E*t. George a. Marshall. dec’d '
r petition
ttltion and order authorizing
. I release of mortgage and aceepiarte
’ [ of HOLC bonds therefore filed.

TTsvnn hevlrut filr.l

- MI|Wlti&lt;i

PLEASANT VAtLXY.

COURT HOUSE NEWS
—B

Club at the horns of

FIRST HONORS TO
CASTLETOIf SCHOOL

iiexuay
nesday aivcnuxHi.
afternoon.

Beoeivet Award for Selling
Only a few brand Um norm
Mott TB Scali Per Capita
Thursday to attend the W. M. A. at
—------------------------------------------------------■"
During Campaign
Mra. J. P. Brake’s. The
bat mat- j
tag wfll
Mra. Emery Kime
Kime' 3*3^
Mld more tubereuing
will be with Mr*.

"•
■ tltion and order filed.
_ delcgaua to lhe Branch meeting.
than
**•
“" any other rural school In "Bar
—­
1 Est. George J. Doster, d
Dale Geiger ia home from Chlca- ry county, children at Uw Castle­
- ? jw j herttance tax determined.
Cora E. Sinclair, dec’d. Walv- ।i go
goJfor
or a week’s vacation.
ton No. 5 school. were thia week
Mr.
and
Mra.
H.
W.
Geiger
eni
awarded
a
handsomely
framed
pic’.. h to
of notice filed, order appointing ’ Mr- i
,1 ' '
■“
&gt;“«
... a.4o Admr. entered.
iooto
Est. George W. upreenre. deed
scientist and benefactor. Presenta­
| Mrs. Emery Benedict and Joan of
*
Warrant and inventory filed
tion of the picture to Mra. Alberta .
’IEst. John Smith, deed. Discharge Ionia and Mrs. Sarah Strong of , Greenfield, teacher at lhe Castleton
" East Campbell.
nrevlone •• raid &lt;
No. 5 school, was made by the
■ ’122 ■ of Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
HMtlnca Banner.
Clayton Neeb of Kalamasoo and Michigan Tuberculosis Association.
£»t will W Sheffield, dee d Pe­
: ho I UUan for authority to barrow Win Neeb of West Campbell called
Accompanying the picture was a
on Floyd Neeb and family Bunday.
« 2® money filed, order granting author Claude and Frances Scott spent brief story of the life of Pasteur, re­
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
' - .. ’ Itv entered
Friday night and Saturday with calling the fact that in regard to
.. =*o
Est. Leonard R. Jacobs, dec’d.
the number and importance of hls
Bert and Flora Hooper of Cale­
’? J,’; Order allowing claims entered.
; discoveries, lie has hardly a rival in
donia.
" -a m j EsL Lorenzo E. Mudge, dec’d. An&gt;l&lt;! rmmlv. on the 3I&lt;
I
Mr. and Mra. Harley Taylor spent ■
Aioono.,in v .v,
5$2 9U“* account fl,edrr. A. It. 1930; '
• J-Ij i‘? Eat. Betsey Sensiba. dec’d. Pell- ; fX’of^r* “• R““" •“
xT. tlon for determination of heirs ' I.1UUZ im zranui.
nefj
second and third prises.
•• ;
filed, uiun
order iui
for publication
entered.' Garfield
Garfield Slater
Slater and
and wife
wife enterenter- resoectlveiv Thev will be allowed
puM&gt;u.a&gt;ivri wiicivu.
-tjo
j? ij EslEst. Eradtu*
Erastus Sensiba.
sensiba. dec
dee’d. PetiPell- i, tained Mr. and Mra.
Mrs. Norman Stuart to make a choice of any of the
. r. &lt;u&gt; |। tlon for determination of heirs j! of Clarksville. Joe Scott
fieatt and Mr.
which the Association offered
- .-J® filed, order for publication entered., and Mrs. Elmer Scott, Saturday
'Jf as school awards during the recent
Hasilno. in said eoonts
' J; 55 i Est. Dossie Ballentine, dec’d. । evening.
campaign. Miss Charlotte Buckley
’-rs Proof of will filed, order admitting
Those who attended the ExUni«.
cnCT
e«ey krooi
mm
&gt;* ' teaches at ur
Cressey
school.
Mra.
- ’ ” j will enured.
sion club at Mra. Eva Groff’s ciarabelle Apsey U lhe uacher at
.. ii v.
Est. David Hefflebower. dec’d. An- Thursday were. Mrs. Dell Scott, Algonquin Lake school, and at Pral•
!:21 nual Recount filed.
j Mrs. Harriet Mote, Mra. Garfield rleville school No. 2. Mra Doris
" ’ j® ■ Est. John W- Briggs, dec’d. Peti- Slater. Mra.
r.*
Mrs. Rimer
Elmer Smtt
Scott »nH
and Mn
Mrs. ( Saunders
U ._
tn -&lt;
charge.
"
"
”
: lion filed, order assigning residue
in naming the various county
.. 3.30 entered.
Clayton UM look
wJn^enl-.
Assoclatlon commend. io 3A : Est. James Blsard. dec’d. Annual hls mother. Mrs. Myrtle Mote, to ed
the
teachers
for
instigating
tn
­
■ paper printed j
" । account filed.
LonsinR Wednesday. She remained
. terest among children in the antl.. as.is j Est. Rebecca E- Dipp, dec’d. Or- with relatives for a visit. .
| tuberculosis program.
’V*
der a“Ufn*nR residue enured, disMr. and Mrs. J. p. Brake, John
E. Brake and family visited Elwood 1 “They who are children today
me Yr».: am. enrolled.
Brake and family of Ionia Saturday. can clinch lhe victory over tuber­
I * 4iM*’w-rfwrt’ I
E*1- D°naId A. Callahan, dec’d.
Mr. and Mrs. Tony McCall of culosis." Theodore J. werle. execu­
'
| Final account filed, waiver ot no- Lake Odessa and Mrs. Russell tive secretary of the Association,
&gt;i&gt;. •■niMrtMi iiv । lice nied. order allowing account Geiger of Ionia were Friday caffert declared. "If they learn to avoid
m'U a£1 ° llavem I entered, discharge ^FAdmrx. issued at Bert Slater's.
Mra. slater ac­ lhe disease while they are yet
itsirkor.1. Krh«: eslatt enrolled.
companied Mrs. Geiger home unUl young, then we can be reasonably
I. Alii. XVvl««er|. |
4a
'
sure —
that- they will —
be free -------from
Sunday. Sunday callers at Slater’sj --, . ,
DURFEE.
were Mr. and Mrs. Edwin McCall - tubcreuloaU ln tho now dangerous
rie&lt;hi.,K nf Mr’.. 1 Mr. and Mrs Lawrence and son and |BU1
family and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Jo j® age "P*?- , And J1* Bale
1 ..-verai -&gt;ihrr« | Duane
of Battle Creek spent' slater
at
Ionia
--------of Christmas seals is perhaps the
M-r"for*inr»iic.- 8unday
Mr. and Mrs. • Harry t
#
best way of awakening a child’s in­
nne. Carries/
ReaMJT.
’
--------- HOPE.
NORTH
।I terest .In the prevention of tuber&gt;r. .iimmrieJ ».r
Mr. and Mrs. Edd. Rice attended
* □. And for this reason the
This community
extends
lls.£ulo*l«Coumr lliiiidlnc.
-&lt;r'“,from"soiih
in M1C
the .Aasocla
—-elation Is much indebted, not
from South the funeral of O. V. Stamm at sympathy to Mrs. Stamm w
t ibe
-r n&gt;.i Hastings Thursday.
| lo::
las* cf
of her
her husband who passed only to the teachers whose schools
Mr- and Mrs. Homer Hammond away
-“7 on
“ Monday evening. F_t.
Feb. 24. won awards, but to every one of
is held, of the
r.imm'i’L‘'nia'- called on Mr. and Mra. Niles LilchTlie friends of Dr. H. A. Adrounie tae
the huUd
hundreds of teachers who co­
bidder nt the
imri «t ii- nrxt mrvi- field Sunday. The East Baltimore were sorry to hear ot hls passing on operated/
•ourt boa.e in
ewatv Nkh
•*7.dra"
hv
club meets with Mra. Claud Saturday mortdng al Ann Arbor.
------1-1 C",&gt;nrii ..tiourn st
Thursday. March 12.
*•
..,Hunt
__________________________
,j We
; extend our sympathy to the ’
STONY POINT.
-nt. [, Mrs. Sarah Ickes and'
I some
of the real ambitious sugar
M. Vra«: All; ab.vnt.
and’ Mrs.
Mra. Lon bereaved ones.
In raid mortaace to-wit
Campbell will entertain the Aid SoMiss Violet Wurm of Hastings makers of the neighborhood started
Commenelnr at lhe
'
clety of lhe East Baltimore United, and friend of. Augusta spent the to open thelr sugar bushes those
WEEKS CORNERS.
I Brethren church at the home of week end with her parents. Mr. and . warmer days last week
Tlie
cedar
Creek Cemetery
Circle
Ickeseven-body
Wednesday.
March 11th,: Mrs.
WUrm.
will
beC
cntertalSd
at^he home
of P°l ,uck
welcome.
Mr.Oscar
fed Mrs.
Nelson Hulbert andJ lnP?n
*

administration nf raid rd
n&gt; Ronald Havnea or to a.
•nt m....,.......

Xi

NOTICE or MORTOAOB FORBCLOSURE RALE.

M follow!

due nnd
tsoo.oo

h-a

Sir M Mrs ntn

kX

or mi

Mr- "n&lt;1 M”

^^’aES

ani'to Ur
tbire Wr

Br W. 0. MrCartaer. Llyuidstor.
I

MHdrrd'flmHh. Redder of Probate.

Having other work, I will have an auction sale at my farm, located 1 mile south
of County Farm corners, and 1 mile east and 1*4 mile south; or first house north of
Striker school, section 2, Baltimore Twp., on

FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1936
HORSES.
Black marc, 14 yean old, weight 1200.
Block mare, 15 yean old, weight 1200.

CATTLE.

Holstein cow, 8 years old, due May 28.
Holstein cow, 5 years old, due March 25.
Holstein cow, 6 years old, due June 27.
Brown Swiss and Jersey cow, 5 years old.
Holstein heifer, 1 year old.
Holstein heifer, 10 months old.
SHEEP AND POULTRY.

16 ewes. 15 Plymouth Rock pullets.
Plymouth Rock rooster. 3 ducks.
GRAIN.
65 bushels of oats.
2 bushels of seed corn.

-

10 tons of hay.

FARM TOOLS.

Late model Fordson tractor.
New John Deere tractor plow.
Fordson buzz rig attachment,

‘ 'OfFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY

Set of Fordson extension rims.
Complete set of 4 rubber tires and wheels
for Fordson.
New McCormick disk, grain and fertilizer
drill. New Oliver walking plow.
New Oliver spring tooth 3-sec. harrow.

TERMS OF SALE:-CASH. NO PROPERTY TO BE REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

AUCTION SALE

Having decided to quit farming, I will sell my perianal
property at public auction. The sate will be held on my farm,
known as the Will Kronewitter place, near the Irving Grange
hall, section 27, Irving township, or six miles northwest of
Hastings on M-37 to Alvin Smelker’s farm, then north 3-4
mile, then west about 1 -4 mile.

0925

, MARCH 9

BEGINNING AT 1:00 P. M.

1 OFFER THE FOLLOWING:

to be removed until settled for.

CASH

FUHR, Proprietor
HENRY

Auctioneer.

«...

**M WOOL

Kalamazoo came to the Ed. Deaklns
SiTO
home Saturday night and Sunday.
rhir
Mriinnzbi.
turnjsnea uy
0, me
U, members oi
or me ——.7 "
",
\
Atiomtr for Ann* K. Brown
c c
'
' vlslt 1,ls Ialhcr- Myron Bateman.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Chamberlain Both families visited friends in
.... .
whoisisill.
ill,and
andfound
foundhim
himnot
notmuch
much and
1
"family of-•Delton
—
-------guests
------ *- Grand Rapids.
Oot Mzr 7 •_
. .
, .. ,.. . .- who
were
------------------------------------------------------ ' ii T*ank MnlUso” 13 on thc Elek । improved in health. James Clark of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Chilson
Last Saturday. Feb. 29. was Gene
Ust'
and MLm Hunt accompanied him Bunday.
Deakins' birthday. She was 12 years
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Dickerson and home Sunday.
1
------old but it was only her third birth­
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY
I daughter called on Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Tom Hoffman. Mr. and Mra.
TAMARA.
day. on account of this rare oc- ।
Commercial Police Arthur Bruett currence her mother Invited in mv's'
|Fred Iauch of Urbandale and Mrs. william Hoffman spent Sunday
________________________________ ! fantha Risbridger of Battle Creek | wim Mr. and Mra. Leon Stanton
and wife of Grand Rapids visited eral of her young girl friends and j
I Sunday P. M. thc latter being in nn&lt;i family of Battle Creek. Miss lhe latter's parents, Mr. and
the school teacher. A fine dinner i
1 very poor health.
Mary Stanton came home with I Bertie Smith and called on her was served and o Jolly good time 1
We-are very sorry to hear of the them for a visit Hah is a little brother. Bernard Smith, and wife was enjoyed by all.
! illness of Mrs. Elsie Preston of better ot this writing.
I of Wurnerville over the week end.
Bonfield, who Is at thc home of, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Williams and I
..2!
L V—
her parents. Mr. nnd Mrs. Harry children of Charlotte spent Satur- j ter. Mrs. Russell Me
icLcmura.i, ui Uje g00d molheri of lhe dulrlct
l Whitworth.
’
day with Mr. nnd Mra. Jock Moore., Middleville for a few days.
trudging by carrying a well-filled
basket. Knowing she was going to
(the schoolhouse with food for a
hot lunch for lhe school children
at the noon hour. I could not help
but wonder If they would, as they
K older, appreciate what had
done for them in the years
gone by. by the good mothers of this
community, it brought up the time
when I was a mere lad and attend­
ed school in this Mme district. It
was in the little old red school
house that used to stand In the
some location as lhe present one,
and lhe room was much smaller,
the seats and desks were built-in
affairs and extended from the outaide wall lo tho one center aisle.
This room, small though It was, had
to house 40 scholars every winter.
The scholars ranged in age from
five to 21 yean. I remember one in­
stance where a young man married
very young, and later when he and
| his wife separated, he returned to
school again. In lhe middle of the
। room was a big square box atove.
i Those who sat near it were too
‘ warm, while those farther away
' suffered from the cold. Back on a
bench in the rear of the room was
a red wooden water pall and one
drinking cup. The schools in those
SHEEP.
HORSES.
days, of course, were not graded and
32
head
of
Shrop
sheep,
due
to
lamb
the main topics of study were read­
White horse, 14 yrs. old, wt. 1800 lbs.
ing. writing, spelling and arith­
April 2.
Double disk. Lumber wagon and rack,
Parcheron mare, 14 yrs. old, wt. 1300
metic. Believe it or not, I think
FARM
TOOLS.
Massey-Harris corn binder.
Deering mower, 5-ft. cut.
the scholars in those days were bel­
lbs.
ter spellers than they are at tho
John Deere side rake, nearly new.
Champion mower, 5-ft. iut.
Walking cultivator.
Percheron mare, 4 yrs. old, wt. 1500
present
time. One thing that
John Deere mower, 5-ft. cut.
Little Willie riding cultivator. One-horse cultivator.
lbs.
makes me think I am right Is be­
cause two years ago, we had a spell­
John
Deere
riding
plow,
nearly
new.
Bay horse, 14 yrs. Old, wt. 1250.
Large silo filler.
Bean puller.
ing match at our local P. T. A. and
Three-sec. drag.
Good International manure spreader.
New stoneboat.
at thal time a mother ot three chil­
CATTLE.
dren won lhe match against all
New Idea spreader, nearly new.
Stover 8-inch feed grinder. 2 stock tanks, galvanised.
j comers. Now we wish to change the
Holstein cow, 10 yrs. old, due Sept. 15.
Grain drill, 11 hole disk.
I scene and look in on tho present
Two-wheel trailer with stock rock.
j school room. Flrat we find it deco­
Holstein
cow,
9
yrs.
old,
due
Oct.
8
Gale
Hr
a-bo
Horn
plow,
12
inch.
Two-bottom Moline tractor plow.
Light bob sleighs.
rated from floor to celling with
Oliver riding cultivator.
Holstein cow, 7 yrs. old, due Oct. 19
Pump jack. Large tool chest. 2 oil drums.
crepe paper of all colon. On the
i walls are many pictures and other
Moline binder, 7-ft. cut. Trailer.
15 new crates. Work bench and vise.
Holstein cow, 8 yrs. old, due Oct. 21.
I works of art made by the ciilldren.
Wagon
ond
box.
Set
double
harness.
Over tn one comer is a modern
Small power rip sow. 4-cylinder power motor.
Brown Swiss cow, 7 yrs., due Oct. 24.
heating plant, which makes the
30 feet of 6-inch belting. Double work harness.
FEED.
room an even temperature. On one
Guernsey cow, 2 yrs. old, due Oct.,28.
Old double work harness. 3 new halters.
side of the room Is a book case con­
Hay, about 10 tons hay second cutting.
New brooder stove, 1000 chick size.
Holstein edw, 2 yrs. old, due Oct. 5.
taining a library of many valuable
Corn, about 400 baskets.
.and Instructive books. Over in a
2 large poultry feeders. 2 large poultry fountains.
Durham and jersey cow, 8 yrs. old, due
Quantity of oats.
comer is a metal drinking fountain
2 metal chicken coops.
Oct. 15.
with a row of Individual drinking
Several small chick feeders and fountains.
MISCELLANEOUS.
cupe hanging nearby. There’a «
Holstein cow. 5 yrs. old, due March 30.
Thor power washing machine.
piano and victrola ready for use
Cream separator, nearly new.
at any time. Aside frorfi all these
Holstein cow, 10 yrs. old, due Nov. 20.
Five-gallon milk can. Milk pails.
3 ten-gal. milk cons.
modem improvements lhe county
Sharpies cream separator.
Other articles not mentioned..
Holstein heifer, 1 year old.
Health unit comes with a doctor
Other articles too numerous to mention.
of the children. Throat, teeth, eye
'and ear troubles are looked after
land corrected in thelr early stages.
Back in school days ot old. Itch and
lice were accepted as a part of
school Ilfs. Asafetlda bags were
worn around most of the scholars*
nocks; now a louse hasn't much
chance of thriving, I am Dot find­
ing fault with my own school days
ot old. but 1 am writing this hop­
ing some of the present generation
will read and note the difference

AUCTION SALE
SALE TO START AT 12:30 P. M

“"‘l «» ML *'“1 «"■ Hurvoy Hill oE “f J"

ERNEST GRAY, Clerk

Auctioneer.

R. B. Walker, Clark.

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

■CHIIUFM

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1936

16 PAGES

Orcheslra, Hill-Billy. [ffK |$ |ff

SINTEIES NG ^ar,non*e8at^onim,^u^^a*r
NATIVE HOME OF THEBE
VALUABLE ANIMALS IB
HIGH UP IN ANDES
I

Merchants to Provide More

Band and orchestra music, songs.
' Hill-Billy harmonies. Swiss yodcllng,
stunts of magic,
a few
--------------.... with
-----possibly
----------c-VTCDisikiATrn nkita nnd °lh’’r miscellaneous stunts
tA I tnlYIIN A I tu thrown In will help to keep-things
moving al the Hastings Commercial
When California Man Saved Club Pair, according to the enter­
tainment committee. In addition.
Them—Now Sell for
j too. will be the numerous awards of
, free prizes—varying from the "grand
$3,600 a Pair
California boasts of another un- prize" to be given each evening to
uiual "specialty” form—the first the many hundreds of souvenirs to
presented to
to fair
fair visitors by inand only one of Its kind in exls- be presented
tence.
It is the worlds original dividual merchants
Merchants
exhibiting
at the fair
"Chinchilla Fnrm” at Inglewood.
" “
*
,
have
contributed
more than l£&gt;0
Just a little ways out of Los Angeles,
.' small prizes varying in value from
and really a suburb of that city.
’’ $100 lo $2 00. and these will be
This Chinchilla Farm, especially its
financial possibilities, may be of awarded at random during the day
Interest to some men. but its ex­ according to a system which will be
pected future output will probnbly novel and interesting. The announc­
appeal more strongly to the ladles, er who decides on the awards has
and especially those who have $40.­ the privilege of selecting any per­
000 or $50,000 that they want to in­ son he sees In the act of doing

2344 DESCRIPTIONS
OF LAND OFFERED

EXTRADITABLEAl

PAGES 1 lo 8

CITY ELECTION ON
MONDAY. APRIL 6

HASTINGS WORLD WAR
VETERANGETS 111,500

cinsp

Harold Keenan Won Case in
Federal Court for War
Insurance

Next May
INDIANA GOVERNOR DE­
ACCUSED or OBTADTOTG
CAUCUSES WILL BE HELD
i The auditor general of this state
Harold Keenan of this city.
CLINES TO RETURN
MOMMY FAL1BLY, LAB.
NEXT MONDAY AND
। has sent to our counly treasurer. L1 F. Maus, descriptions of 2.344 pieces
iday In federal court at Grand Rap­
CHADWICK
OENY, OTHER 0RIMR1
TUESDAY
NIGHTS
I of land in this county which will be

something unusual, such as scratch­
' ids awarded a judgment of $11500,
offered for tale al the May tax sale,
In his suit against the federal goving his right ear with his left hand,
lying a shoe lace. etc., etc., and dl-1 MICHIGAN LAW ON JAIL
for taxes of 1932 and prior years. MAYOR LEONARD OUT
GETS $37,500 FROM
reeling the one named lo a certain i
Elsewhere in this issue will be found
Tne suit was brought In order to
BREAKING DEFECTIVE ■ the
TWO HASTINGS WOMEN
FOR RENOMINATION obtain back Insurance payments
official announcement and court
booth where the prize will be preorder
directing
the
sale.
The
court
senled.
.
from
August
1919.
totaling
$57.50
a
; Our Legislature Failed to
Promised to Make Large
: hearing will be on April 13.
Dave Boyes of the Horne Lumber1
Supervisors and Aidermen month. The claim was made that
Make It Apply to Case
Company has been spending a lot I
Keenan was totally disabled from
Profit! From the •'Mary
Seek Nomination—Treasfered at this tax sale this year is
of time during the past week on
tonsllltls contracted while serving In
Like Chadwick's
Holding Company"
much larger than usual owing to
rcflnlshlng the targe display room
the army balloon corps. This dis­
. urer Not a Candidate
u.u getting1 We mentioned last week the fad the fact that It Includes not only
on the ground floor and
Carroll w. Spicer. M. of Belding
ease brought on a heart ailment, so
'The
annual
city
election
will
be
it is claimed, which resulted In his1 was arrested In Grand Rapids on
Community hall on the second ,lhal Robcrt L. Chadwick, who was the sale of delinquent taxes for
held
on
Monday.
April
6
The
dem
­
.
'
being
kept
in
jail
here
on
capias
1932 but also for several prior
floor In extra fine order.
------ » —•-- -- '7-7 7-7
total disability.
Mr. and Mrs., Monday night by Sergeant Zdward
Evernhlnr in connmlon with '
Ud pteted lh, lo« of years. Ordinarily the May tax sale ocratic city caucus will be in the Keenan have resided In Hastings.
CM, It, will b. Im No wdmlulon
““
J"' covers the delinquent taxes tor but city hail at 7:30 on lhe evening of for only a few months. Mrs. Keenan ' city detective, Frank Breen of
Monday. March 16, and the republi­
—no conceulont—nothin, to b. ( dhtno Me was nebbed by the In- a single year.
will be better known by her former Grand Rapids, on a warrant Issued
can city caucus at the same place
aold All oi the prut, will be tfven a‘*“
t in this city charging him with em­
name. Miss Delilah Webb.
on the following evening. Tuesday.
alwolutely tree Sllh not e.en a 'he day tollowlna hla Jail break,
I bezzlement. larceny, larceny by con­
March 17. The ward caucuses ot the
liluraed penny lo be apenl on rat- WowebUnk Attorney McDonald and
I version and obtaining money under
republicans will be held on the
fling All refreabmenla. loo. will be s'"'1" Blakney went u&gt; An»ola and
| false pretenses. He was brought to
evening of March 16 as follows:
tarred tree. In short, the Commer- | ascertabted Iron, Chadwick that he
' the jail here by Sheriff Btakney on
First
ward
in
the
voting
booth;
sec,
dal Club u tolne u&gt; do everythin “&gt;“« not relum eacepl under com' Tuesday. The
offenses
charged
ond ward, voting booth; third ward.:
poatlble to put on a tree fair that I
,Tbe two Barry county
! against Spicer were committed In
voting
booth;
fourth
ward,
the
office
;
officers then vlsltad
visited novernnr
Governor Fitzis really FREE!
nulrfu
1933 and is&gt;34. when he fraudulently
| gerald at Lansing to get the proper
of the probate Judge. The demo- .
obtained possession of about $37,500
vest In a fur cont for winter wear.
requisition papers to bring Chad- SCHEDULE OF PRICES IS cratic ward caucuses will be held on
of bonds belonging to Mn. Eta
That Is about what they would now
Tuesday evening in the three vot- A. L. MILLER, PUBLISHER । Holloway, of this city, and her sla­
WILL BECOME MEMBER I wick back to Michigan. The Barry
FIXED BY UTILITIES
have to pay for a Chinchilla fur
■tag booths of llie first, second and
nr criciUTirin ronnn counl&gt;' officers realized that he
ter. Miss Carrie Todd, since de­
OF BATTLE CREEK IN­
coat made from good selected pells.
third wards and. in the fourth ward.
OF SCIENTIFIC GROUP could not be extradited under.
COMMISSION
ceased.
Here Is Where the old. old taw of
1 in the office of the Hastings Prlnl------------- I Michigan taws on the ground that
QUIRER, SPEAKER
Spicer is a fine-looking person
"supply and demand” comes in. and
i Ing company.
Harry Adrounic Leaves Soon , he was being kept in jail here on a
and must have a very ingratiating
1 The city officers whose terms will
for Central America
e,’u- 10t * criminal case He had CHANGES BECOME
gel round.
.
expire
are
Mayor
Charles
H.
IjeonEARL BUMFORD IS THE
refused to pay a judgment Of $450
only ones of this character, accord- EFFECTIVE
APRIL
1
I had heard of chinchillas but
ard. democrat; City Treasurer. E L.
and Yucatan (against him and in favor of Archie
SUPPER SQUAD CAPTAIN duced a Belding lady to part with
had never seen one of the little TO MEET GRAND RAPIDS
Sentz. republican; Supervisor first
Harry Adrounie. who \ias been Kermeen. of this city, growing out
animals so we visited the Chinchilla
enrolled this year at the University of
automobile accident. The lat- Means a Saving to About and fourth wards. Clyde Wilcox, re­
CHRISTIAN HIGH ON
about $18,000 of her securities. *
Farm. Somehow the idea came to
publican; second and third wards. Names to Be Suggested for
had k-n
kept' '"hndwiri,
Chadwick m
in Jail
of Illinois, has recently Had the op- । ter hoH
t.n under
Eighty
Per
Cent
of
State's
Evidently Spicer learned of the
FRIDAY NIGHT
me that these animals would ap­
Lemuel Glasgow, democrat.
portunity lo become a member of capias proceedings by paying Chad­
death of Mr. Holloway, also the fact
Brotherhood Officers
Electricity
Users
proach a woodchuck, or perhaps a
We
understand
that
Mayor
Leon
­
wick's
board
while
here
In
Jail.
Ex
­
a scientific expedition composed of
ard
expects
to
be
a
candidate
for
fox. in size. Imagine my surprise nFFFATFn RFI RINQ
for
Next
Year
tradition
Is
granted
in
criminal
The Michigan Public Utilities
college mpn, who are planning an
owners of substantial amounts of
when I found the adult ones to be Lit PE A •tU_B_ELUIIW
commission issued an order Friday another term, which will be his
extensive trip in Yucatan and cases only, not in civil cases.
The Hastings Brotherhood will bonds and stocks. He Induced them
even smaller than a half grown rab-1
IN FIRST CONTEST points in Central America.
Before going to Lansing. Prosecu­ whlch will cut about $1500.000 fourth. We have not heard of any­ hold their March gieetlng in the la^part with some of their securi­
bit. Their ears were not ns long1
It offers many Interesting and tor McDonald Issued a criminal from the light bills of 80 per cent one being considered by the repub- । usual place on next Monday night. ties on the plea that he would make
as n rabbit's, their legs much short­ Local Gagers Displayed Fine unusual
experiences, and is a warrant against Chadwick as he of Michigan’s electric consumers ,llcans 10 run “sainst him. Treas- March 16. The speaker will be Al- a better deal for them, with higher
er than bunny’s, and they carry
L- Sontx will not be a can- b'tt Miller of Battle creek, pub­
ichance that doesn’t often come to had grounds for doing, charging The order will be effective on April i urcr
Form and Excellent
sort of a straggling tall five or six disposing of chattel 1. and the Consumers Power Com- dldflte for another term, but wiil Usher and editor of the daily En- gave receipts to the two Hastings
|one. Harry has accepted the In­ him with
inches long covered with short. I
Team Work
precedent of two terms quircr-News of that city. His theme women for the bands which they
; vitallon and will leave shortly for mortgage property. He hoped lo pany as well cs other electric light- 1 rcsP«t
bristly.
worthless hair.
These
offlce Both supervisors. Wll- : will be -The Freedom of the Press."turned
The high school eagers added an- New Orleans, where the supply base extradite him on that warrant. tag companies must conform to lhe for
__________
over______________
to him during
_________
the two
chinchillas sell for $3500 a pair. other basket ball trophy lo their Is located.
When the two officers went to Lan­ schedule of prices fixed by the com-,cox and Glasgow, will be candidates
Mr. Miller Is a convincing, force- i years. These receipts they kept un»
You could hold a pair of them, case this week os a result of their 1 The expedition which Is called sing to see Governor Fitzgerald and mission.
It0 succeed themselves. The alder­ ful speaker. His topic will be one of til December 1934. when he cama to
equivalent to a good 80-acre farm win over Belding Friday night in ■ the Pan-American Society of Trop- the attorney general’s department
in commenting upon the action 'men whose terms expire this spring
live Interest to his auditors. We are' them with the announcement that
In price, in one hand. The attend­ the semi-finals and their victory leal Research Is affiliated with the about the extradition, they were of the commission its chairman are “ lollows: First ward. Arthur not apt to think how vitally we all | he had become the owner of a largo
ant very obligingly brought one in’
William
Smith, of St.Johns, said, Haven,
republican; second.
Fred! are interested in the liberty of the building In Detroit—and he showtd
advised to have a criminal warrant
over Ionia Saturday night in the Pennsylvania Pan-American FU- i---------------------------------to show us. It was a cute little finuls of the district tournament i search Association.
third. !&gt;■••»«
Harry press In this country. Should Its them pictures of it. He asaartad
issued for Chadwick charging him-- that since January 1. 1935 it has Picrzon.
democrat; third..
thing, very tame, und would make which was held at Belding. This Is .Those going on the
with
accordance
cut —the income of theConsumers' Miller,
republican; ‘ fourth. John' right to criticize public men and that the only way he could relml.,rexpedition
------ Jail
— breaking.
-------------• In— —
---------—
a good pet if it wasn’t for the un­ the first trophy to be won by the ' are college men associated
■ - - largely
... ...ItH
IQTI by
Ka our
r&gt;,,a rxn
—nj.
Company
by
$2050707 WOOtOD.
dCmOCTat. We
nc understand
UIIUCl 3MIIIU measures be forbidden or seriously . burse them now was to form what
with rea Ina.law nurrad
passed Irk
In 1931
Power
godly price.
.through
reductions. They' have
»« of
wUl »» candidates' abridged, that very fact would open he called the "Mary Holding Com­
Hastings teams since 1931. After I with southern and southwestern'
(Continued on page six)
But the fur! how soft and beau­ that
promised a further cut of half a) tor renomtaatlon and re-election.
mat year
&gt;ear district
aisinct meets were disais- ' colleges. Harry will be
De a member
member,]
—
- - - the way for the destruction of lib- pany.” He said the Mary Holding
tiful! Maybe the PRICE had its in­ continued and only regional meets of the staff, which is headed by J. SHOW INTEREST IN
I million dollars during the coming
----------------- -----------------------erty for the citizen, and would mark Co. would Issue bonds to be secured
fluence on the degree of beauty too. were held which Involved a long. Mortimer Sheppard,
a
former.
, the beginning of autocracy. Mr. |
(Continued on page threa)
&gt;ear
More lhan 300.000 users of 0RQPRVP LENT IN
A lustrous shade of smoky gray series of eliminations, in the Held-1 Grand Rapids man.
FIRSTi him
AID urn
UNITS
electricity wm
will uc
be wnenuca
benefitted uy
by uu&gt;|
this I UDI&gt;tnvc
LCfil I I Piaaaaiair-n Miller, by reason of his fine ability
x
irana
napias
xj
i
rino
i
o
weewwasy
nniATieii
““................. ....
and as fine as a spider s web. N.o Ing nwel three class B schools were
their
——-—
order.
PRACTICAL MANNER as a speaker and thinker, os well os
Others of the personnel and their'
order. The
The schedule
schedule fixed
fixed by
by the.
the'
BAD BLAZE IN
wonder that milady raves over It. entered and four class C schools.
special ____
assignments are Paul R. Red Cross Chairman Names commission will reptace twenty-two.
'by reason of his occupation. H well
I _____
and that It was the royal ermine of
Eliminations were played on Frl-1'nron.
Grant, navigation;
M. Rowe,
rote elsMifieatinna
classifications which
naviM.i«n. J.
i m
...
.
.
different rata
d
f
Church
Debt
fiuaUtled to make this an interest-1
RUTLAND
TUESDAY
Committee to Plan for
the ancient mcas. or that the lad­ day night with Hastings winning secy.. University of Texas, hcrpclol-1
lhe consumers company has had in ;
Ing discussion, which every member
les of the Spanish Court greeted It the first round In lhe class B dlvls- 1 ogy; Louts Karn. Tulane University, j
f operation. The new plan Is to pro- j
-------------Station
Objective of Pres­
; of the Brotherhood will delight to]
Interior
of
Farm
Homa of I
with rapturous welcome, when it ion and Rockford
vide
a
graduated
rale,
which
will
)
and Cedar m., geodetic survery. icthyology;
since the announcement by the
I hear.
“
was first introduced ipto Europe. A Springs winners in lhe class C di- /rfh.ir u/
byterians
n- wmim
—
-------.. . be wholly dependent upon the |
Elmer Hathaway Waa
I
Notre Dame. !_
Barry
County rscu
Red vioas
Cross oi
of the
....
No doubt on next Monday night.
7,-;----- — 7’7."IT- “, —. Arthur W. Everett. Jr..
I tiarry
vuumy
single selected pelt is so small that
ballota wlll
for (he
University
university
of Miss.,
Miss . photographer; |I establishment of a First Aid station
st
amount of electricity used, rather । The Presbyterians of Hastings
vision. Saturday night the local l
—
Destroyed
L
Il would hardly make a decent sized team went
.n, up
„n against
—In.. the
.K. Ionia
. ........................
----------------------------thu counly much |merew hu than lhe present plan of changing ,' llflve J®*1611 68 t£ielr ^nt.cn n‘8O*u- | nominating of Brotherhood officers
waller „
H. Dustmann.
Jr.. --Tulane
patch on the seat of a pair of trou­ quintet to determine lhe winner of • university. La., taxidermy, conchThe rural fire department wm
the rate according to the bulbs and j lion this year the reduction of the tar lhe nrx[ Brotherhood year,
been
manifest
in
the
project
and
a
sers. still these pelts have sold for the class B championship and came 1 ology. Harry will be assigned to lhe
the church building. Next । 11IC „
nca
officers
not „
be owm
chosen. called to the Elmer Hathaway farm
appliances being used in the home. deet- on
----------------ow. uluuet
J&gt; will
W1U UU4
request
has
come
in
for
a
second
$400 apiece. Perhaps on account of•, out on top of a 22-12 store.
SUnd**"
Unr.h
will K..
...
.
..
. ... .
in Rutland township on Tuesday
। latter division.
unit. No definite action has been The new "block” schedule will not [ Sunday morning. March 15. will be at the March meeting, but wlll be
the "depression” they command . The
Rockford-Cedar
Springs) They go with complete moving taken as yet however.
go iInto
-.a operation
Opcmuuii
unnicuuiLciy. : the
Immediately,
me occasion
wv4*aav,i when
hiicii each mcuiuci
member ui
of • jelected at the April meeting. forenoon by a bad fire in the bouse.
only ar°und
Mlt. Ron,,;
« game to
w I| picture
; the -s..._h
church --u
and congregation will However, the Informal ballots taken
game WB8
was Bn
an u,lcraun
interesting
picture outnt
outfit and
and are
are well
well equipped
equipped
Dr. C- P- Lathrop Is chairman of Substantial reductions ihave ibeen ..I.takes from 120 to 150 of these pelts, watc|, and was woll jn thc
m|n. for the vttriOus branches of research
sene engine was being used to opcrmade
in
the
rates
for
municipal
bring
a
special
Lenten
gift
to
the
to
a*uu, of play by the Rockford team work they aim to do.
tn make even what Is known as *hde
Central the committee in charge appointed lighting and for the smaller users; church. Every dollar given’will re- nt the March meeting will suggest
lhe names to be placed on the bal­
by co. Chairman Archie D. Mc­
short coat, it woujdn l take the av-, 1V12
a:tlincri &lt;_
m llie
duce the amount of bank interest lots for the final meeting of the
..
■■
America Is n fascinating country, a Donald and his assistants arc Dr. । of electric power.
ernge fellow very long to figure that* c(ius c (HVlalon
As nearly as the Banner can as- paid each year by six cents.
veritable treasure house for scien­ R. B. Harkness and Albert Dykstra
Brotherhood year, which will be fired, setting
the shorter such a coat was the bet- ■ Tbe Haatlngs u,anl wlU enUr the
nearby. The
pertain this reduction will mean a I All moneys taken into the church
tific exploration along prehistoric
(Continued on page three) —&lt;—
•------ - meet Friday
.u. the 13th at lines, as well as present day flora of Hastings and Russell Beeler of saving of about $1,000 a month for | In collection and donations on this held on Monday evening. April 20. to the dwelling and when the de­
I regional
The present year has been one of
Middleville.
----------------------------- ---। the 'people
of -this
and will
we i be
day devoted
will be lodevoted
to this most the mMt successful in lhe recent
partment arrived considerable dsm-------------ancjcity;
we I day
this most
,
------------------------ , - - . J Union High school In Grand Rapids an(j fauna.
_. .
.
.
„ ,
I with Grand Rapids Christian as
It will be remembered that Col. OBSERVANCE OF---------------- ( would say about $1,000 a year for worthy objective.
history of the Brotherhood. The
Elftht Auction Odles lthelr opponents in the first round nnd Mra. undbergh made an aerial
I crinkl DIDTMOAV t&gt;ie clty
,
I
no^ ab'e t0 attend this membership has increased, com[ "f pl»y By virtue of a new ruling, survey of that country a short time
LEGION BIRTHDAY
The commission has also recently (service on Sunday may send or pared with lhe preceding year by
gift with For- ------’
11
' 1 the winners and runners-up in the ago, taking photographs
photographs of ruined j
------------agreed upon rates to be charged for j leave their Lenten gift
•- —
• The -------’----nearly
75 —
per —
cent.
programs
(Continued on page three)
'cities, «r,a
and other sections that
that had
h.4 Local Post Having a Slum natural gas in this city, as well as rest Lane, 717 W- Green or with throughout the year have been in­
C. E. ROBINSON.
C. E. Robinson has rented his I
'never been seen by men belong-1
flnnnar Next TtiAnrlnv
several other communities that will I Ray Waters, at lhe clothing store. teresting and the meetings very en­ 500 or S3.000. Mr. Hathaway had
Ing -------------to our race.
PP «,
. lue8aay
be served by the Consumers Power i 138 E. State.
some insurance but not enough to
farm, and will have a sale of per-' ADDED OVER MILLION
.I
joyable.
The
Evening
company when connections shall!
&lt; • *----------------tonal property at the farm. 3 1-21
nr KipW IhKIIRANCF
T*16 expedition has leased their I
------------- „
Earl Bumford Is the captain of
Douglas Hindes, one of the firemiles northeast of Hickory corners. 1
11iwwimiibE Qyn
----- ■ boat
—-* Bnd wl|1 --------g0 u.e|1
" —
equipped.
‘—J 1‘ On
Tuesday,
March 17. the be made with the natural gas fields] 1, o. O. F. LODGE PLANS
the supper squad for the March
In
Montcalm
and
Mecosta
counj
IMPROVEMENTS
ON
HALL.
Harry has promised to write some | American Legion celebrates Its sev£ .K
A«ent. of wSditonn Oom.
I
10 meeting. The other members are falling board.
Henry Flannery will be the auc: letters to the Banner, altho he as-, en’eenth birthday anniversary. In
Andy Taylor. C. Hammond. George
tfoneer. Mr. Robinson offers some i
pany Make Fine Show­
1 sures us he Is no journalist. But observance of this occasion, there mean a reduction I?om pn«'a ',“•'!*?&gt; rfL"” Scott. Floyd Gaskill. Austin Perris.
FOUR VILLAGES
live stock, farm tools, harness and
I we guarantee they will make In- । — be a radio •------ ------- over
------ the courses ol aubatanllall, 30 pic cent. v'»“&lt; &lt;•»&gt;'•
will
broadcast
ing for February A
Board ol Truttrea. Clair Ferris. Lloyd Gaskill. Harry
' u-reslfng reading.
miscellaneous articles. See the adv.'
Whitworth. Frank Angell. Charles
i NBC network beginning al 11:30 which we should ludk, wUl mean i “«V"“ •&gt; J“«; Dr ch*("s
When one thinks of the subzero
HOLD ELECTIONS
In the issue and remember the date
1 P. M.. the program to last an hour.
GasklU. Ray Rice. Claud Lester.
another thousand dollars per month1
NewU3t* "hd
weather, the blocked roads and the
.
The
history
of
the
Lecinn
will
be
Fred
A.
Smith.
Albert
Reesor.
Geo.
saved lo Che people ot this clly.
|
‘"c flower lo take he work In
uncomfortable conditions that ob- BEAGLE CLUB SPRING
NEWELL H. BARBER.
dramatized by professionals, who
Foreman. Albert Hauer. Glenn Kel­ Little Intereit Shown in Mid­
The Consumers power company's cBarke ol polnUng lheir hollaing.
As he has rented his farm. New­ talned in Michigan during the!
DERBY COMES HERE will present many interesting
logg. Clifford Allen. J. M. Leach,
dlevilla and Freeport
ell H. Barber will have an auction month of February, it seems quite 1
scenes. Musical*selections wlll also
and Max u*ach.
surprising that the agents of the 1
r™ IS. d«2e H' *
T“
Monday
\
be rendered.
starting at 12 30 sharp. Henry Flan­ Windstorm company were able to Field Trials Set for March
Mrs. Melville Mucklestone, na­
MEET
AT
GRAND
LEDGE.
Village
elections were held on
service. Michigan has lower light-1
h“ be&lt;n
°n’y
nery wlll cry the sale with John add IL124J95 of new Insurance for , nR
nnpftrkPr Hotel
tional Auxiliary president, and Na­
28 and 20
Parker Hotel
Monday In Nashville, Middleville,
Ing rates from the Consumers than I °ace (5lace. 11
acquired in 1912.
' Hoag ns clerk. Mr. Barber offers a that company during the twentytional Commander Murphy are to iM^^
’
gh^ing'sta^c^from
their
|
lnIfrlor
has
lhe
same
paper
Eaton
Dental
Society
wlll
meet
at
.
....
.
.
.
...
I
Thp
(ntar(r»r
the
lump
nnrwr
Woodland
and
Freeport
with
the
nice list of property for sale In­ nine days.
|
Headquarters
c’Xnta.
Had th? tatas &lt;« -Wewalta irnd ceiling that were the
give five minute addresses.
the Jefferson
Jefferson Inn
Inn, Grand
Grand Ledge „
on following results.
cluding 2 horses. 10 head of cattle,
There are now being held tn
It win
of lnUrest to dog lovers
In Hastings, the Laurence J.
NaAhrille.
p ‘" a
beJore Friday evening with Dr. Charles E.
hay and fodder, lot of good farm various
--------- ---------------------------------------------parts of the slate meetings w
। U) learn
mother field trial will Bauer Post. No. 45. Is planning a been as high In Michigan for elecbowhl &lt;he building from Baribeau. the local dentist, in
tools, household goods and mlscel-1 of the agents of the company, who | b&lt;? staged here by the Wolverine slum supper, followed by a program. trie service, as in some of our I
tancous articles, see the adv. for are getting ready fur their soliciting ] Beagle club Saturday and Sunday,
of arrangements. About 298; clerk. H. P. Remington, 2M;
nelghborhlng stales, the charges
®ptoCOpaI charge
An Invitation has heen extended to fixed by the Public utilities com-1 church- lu original owners,
twenty fivo ore expected to attend.
complete Information.
work for new Insurance this year. 1 March 28 and 29
return
of
good
roads and
- . —and will Arthur Clark of South Haven, De­ mission would hove meant a deeper I
Elwyn Nash. 267; Trustees. Jess
rxrr
k'fi r rv I With the
i w,th
.7lur
".°
This is the spring
derby
,. .a-v
A ureirvrr
vri
..‘he ..
..... f
..... B"d
partment Vice-Commander, to at­
Campbell. 263. Prank Caley. 236.
wm
hi.' sunlhl?e' lhe&gt;
«M&gt; Ooubt be able be lhe fl„t tune that event has
cut; but because of the lower than!
,X
make ftUplCIIUlU
,P|endl(1| lowing during been brought here, as at the former tend and give a talk. All service average basic rales of the Consum­
-- ‘ ’knnJn
------------2.
--------------------- ------ ---- w*2lUAAt
and A. E. DuU. IM.
men
are
Invited.
irm known as the James Kelley. the warmer months.
'
n,. k.nn.i.
Democrat — Pres.. Gall Lykins,
ers company, the reductions will,
farm, on M-37. first farm west of,
«»i-----------------I....
130; Clerk, John Appelman. 1M;
average on lighting charges about
HEAR YOUNG FOLKS
old Powers school, or seven miles NAMED DR. FISHER CORONER.
12 1-2 per cent. We are thankful
west of Hastings or four miles east 1 Dr. Gordon Fisher of this city was ™
for.^e
sor,
Elmer Northrop, 148; Trustees,
SUNDAY
EVENING
for that.
of Middleville. The sale will In- on Saturday named coroner to sue- .^3®.‘Lni
th. ii
Wm. Martin. 161, Merle J. Hinkley,
elude horses, cows. hogs, poultry, ceed the tate Dr. H. A. Adrounie.
219 and Solomon Varney. IM.
hay and fodder, farm tools and The appointment was made, as the
5? J?nB^?H?aturday’ High School Students to Give NASHVILLE VOTERS
Mme household goods. Dewey Reed la* requires, by Probata Judge
— ““ ,5’lnch onea
on“ on
°n 8und,y
8und‘V
Declamations and
- - —
•
Around 500 acres near the city are
VETO PROPOSITION
will be the auctioneer and Clifford Clement. County Clerk
Hyde
andOrations
available for the runs. A 6:30 ban­
been cast In Middleville. As there
Hammond clerk.
Prosecuting Attorney McDonald.
.
quet
on
Sunday
evening
at
the
ho
­
was but one ticket nominated, then
The
Sunday evening service at Fifteen Mill Limitation Is
------------Dr. Fisher has lived in Hastings
According to the Judges in charge Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co.
tel
will
close
the
meet.
was no guesswork about Uia vlUaga
LLOYD PENNINGTON.
I for two years. He came to this city
the Methodist church promises to
of
the
Commercial
Club
Fair
Mrs. Ernest Robinson. 620 E. election. Following an UM odhtSt
Snowed Under by 282
be unusually Interesting, as several
There will be an auction sale at । ofu.r completing two years of In। Cardbelms Moen (Hang It all! You Bond. Hastings—•Get prize from Dr. elected: pres, John Dietrich; Clark,
NAMES OFFICERS.
of the High school students will
tht! farm of Lloyd Pennington, four j Urne work m a Toledo hospital. He
No to 137 Ye,
■ get the habit! We mean Scrambled R. O. Flrinle.
ix&gt;ra White; Treas.. Blanch Btgtfmiles north of Nashville and one I
nr.t aMOCiated with Dr. A W.
At the meeting of the Hastings participate. Declamations are to be
The voters of Nashville decisively' Name) contest the replies received
Mbs Jean Hunt. Hastings R. 4—
mile east or two miles south of | Woodburne. When Dr. Woodburne Rural Fire department held last given by Laura Sabin, on "War.’’
Warnervlllc and one mile east. The | disposed of his business and home, Thursday the following officers were Wayne Flnkbelner. on -Courts.’’ and turned down the proposition of i arc becoming more original and Get prize from Henry 8- Sheldon.
Children—Betty Marie Friedrich. strom and Henry C. Poubon.
sale will include mules, a pony, sev-1
p^her enU.red the practice of elected: President. Theron Caln, Achsah Buck on "Intolerance." amending the village charter so as clever each week. Some very close
eral cows, farm tools and ma-' medlcine for himself,
re-elected; vice-president. Albert These students were entrants tn to come under the fifteen mill lax decisions are necessary and it is City and Vernelva Barnum. City
limitation. It drew out an unex­ necessary to go over all answers •Commercial Club office). Honor­
At Freeport only three votes
chinery and poultry equipment. Al- 1
,
.
Brill; secretary and treasurer. Ev­ the recent contest.
able mention for originality and cast at Monday’s election, ttw
-----------------,U- -------so many other
items.----Grover Pen­ FATHER AND DAUGH­
Orations written and given In the pectedly heavy rote. Those in favor with a fine tooth comb.
erett Swegles. John Usborne and
Some misunderstanding still ex­ cleverness to June Scobey, Hastings.
nington will be the auctioneer.
TER BANQUET. Clyde Stedge were re-elected for a final contest will be presented by of the proposition polled 137 votes,
The Father and Daughter ban­ term of three years as board mem­ Dorothy Bhelllngton. whose subject and those opposed 282—a 2 to 1 vic­ ists concerning the prizes. These R 2. Jack Wilson. Hastings. R. 4.
HARRY AND~HOWARD DRAKE.
awards are in the form of $5.00 val­ Lucille Karmes. city, persus New­ ticket tn the
quet, the first of its kind so far as bers. Elections for officers of the Is "American
Liberty
League." tory.
An auction of special interest to we know, was held In the social city fire department will be held Hugh Kelley. "Mussolini” and Su­
In view of the fact that the ues, not necessarily $5 00 in cash. ton. City. Mrs. Bucl Fuller, City.
cattle men will be held al the 1 rooms of the Methodist church last this week Friday.
zanne Sumner on "Communism In amount of the taxes that can be As a matter of fact a majority of Mrs. Oscar Flory. City. Richard Postma; Clerk. J.
Swanson farm. 10 miles northwest evening. There were about one
raised In any community Is fixed by the prizes have been in the form of Ken field, city. Mrs. Adah Murray. Lula P. Nagtar.
America.”
’
of Battle creek on M-37 or two and hundred In attendance. Thomas
Albert Becker Is to Introduce the the county tax commission, it can merchandise—although a few of the NashVttle. Mrs. Gordon Wolfe.
A FINE COLLECTION.
one-half miles north of Bedford or Baird acted as toastmaster. Rlch•
Rosser, Prank L.
speakers. A general Invitation Is be seen how this might greatly professional men have found it Cloverdale.
16 miles south of Hastings, Horses, ard Loppenthlen led the community
Many have stopped in front of extended, the service beginning at hamper the development of any more convenient to give cash.
Herewith
are the scrambled
hogs and 80 head of cattle will be singing, and there was a fine pro­ the Banner office window to study 7:30 o’clock. Special musical num­ community with the fifteen-mill tax ' Prize winners last week are as names -for this week—You ..know Kunde;
the largest part of this sale, some| gram of special music and talks. the fine display of Indian arrow bers will be rendered by Lewis limitation. Fully six mills ore re-| follows;
every one of them well; although I
qulred for county taxes. Add to j Miss Dorothy Slocum. Woodland one must admit they are a bit dlf- i Two
farm tools, machinery and feed will The address by John C. Ketcham heads left here by William Craig of Hines.
that the school tax. and one can see I R- 2—Get- prize from Rational Bank- ficult to recognize:
.also be sold. See the advertisement was what all expected—very tunely Hastings township, who Ilves east of
r
"
for complete
information. Sale and helpful.
town. Just beyond the city limits. POSTPONED ANNUAL MEETING. that there would be left compara­ of Hastings.
1. Umhocatsoricnlmusllclmunna- ' ।
will start at 9:30 A- M. Auctioneers.
AU of these arrowheads were picked
The postponed annual meeting of tively little for Nashville lo get
Don Wldrlg.-310 8. Dibble Street, gelwarnd.
Andy Adams and Harry Denham.
up by Mr. Craig on his own farm. the Hastings Cooperative Shipping along on. Evidently the .voters real­ Hastings—Get prize from Lamble
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
.2. Naytconslgapthlmpinnsnr.
Herald
Clerks. Howell Sanford and E. E.
They make an Interesting collec- Asson. will be held at the court ized this situation and determined and DOyle.
3. Tedjartrp.
City Treasurer on Republican ticket. I lion. Most of the arrowheads are as house Thursday. March 10, 1:30 P. that they would not hamper the
Gray.
Mrs. Paul ward. 355 W- MarUiall,
nearly perfect as they well could be.1
(Continued on page three)
—Adv.
| village.
Hastings—■Get
prize from The
5. Yrebasloer.

THEY WERE ALL BUT

REDUCED RATES
FDR ELECTRICITY

FREEDOM OF THE
PK--THEME

HAST NGS TEAM
TOENTERFNALS

HASTINGS COMMERCIAL CLUB FAIR

SCRAMBLED NAME CONTEST
Win One of the $5.OO-Value Prizes!

�HASTING 8, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH U, 1M6
DEATH OF HAROLD SUNDAY. ' BHULTZ COMMUNITY
DEATH OF HARBISON
Clarence Orohe returned to his
_____ ______________
____ Mr*. Nellie McMurray is under
the First Presbyterian
church had
SCHOOL NOTES FROM
WOODRUFF ON MONDAY.
Harold Bunday. *on of Mr. and;
CLUB RLECTS OFFICERS.
. _ - . — w.rr.
the pleasure of listening to a very the doctor'a.care at the home of her j home from Pennock hospital on
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG Harrison Stewart Woodruff, only]
fine talk on Bunday morning by [sister. Mrs. Thus. Beck. W. Mill St.'. Monday evening, his condition being Mr*. L. W. Bunday of thl* city, died' -rhe Bhulla Community club was
j Improved.
Friday of pneumonia at hl* horn* entertained on March 8 by Mr* .
I According to the Banner* fifty
ruff,
was
born in Hastings on July I
near
Clare.
Michigan.
The
funeral
•
Kenneth
Babcock.
A
short
bus!-:
Mental
Hygiene.
‘ McDonald.
year*
ago
items
inc
rirsoapusi
Charles
Annable
has
purchased
years
the First Baptist
nes* meeting followed the bountiful1 The grade teacher* of the Thom- 21. IMO. He received his education
■ OomaUu* Manni has been 111 with
John Stasi to the successor to । church will be that many year* old the old Luts home on W. Center wa* held Bunday afternoon.
street just cast of the Prssbyterian
Harold Bunday wa* a director of. dinner and lhe following officers for apple-Kellogg »chool are making a in our city schools where he was
• lhe Influenza.
j«ny Bywater a* aMlalant manager, In April.
manse, and will modernize It be­ the windstorm Ixuurance company the coming year were elected: Pieri- • careful study of mental hygiene, held in high esteem by his teach­
d Mix. Wayne Merrick I* recover- | &amp;
Atlantic At Pacific »tore here.;
jt u good newi to
many
.
of thl* city and a prominent and ‘ dent, Mis. Ora Babcock; vice-preal-1 The emotional needs of the grade ers and classmates. He had been in
Ing from bar recent illness.
Mr. Steal, who came here from friend* of Mrs. T. H. Hoc* to know fore moving ta.
- A good hart rain no* would give Wayland, was a former employe at (thal
u aW(, to
up. and lwpei
Mis* chrystal Thomas la suffering successful farmer, a man who had a i dent. Mr. Beck: secretary, Mr*. | children are given- careful consider- failing health for some lime but-was
Wim
treasurer.
reasurer. Mr*
Sira 1 ation and at the end of a period UUXII
taken eciiuuuy
seriously 111 buoui
about inree
three wefts
with uroncumi
bronchial pueumum*
pneumonia ana
and no*
has hl«h reputation for character and, Llbbte Craven;
our city a much needed bath.
i 0,8 oc“ itoIT
’10 walk soon.
- .Daisy Thompson. K
Mrs. Winifred• । of studying certain children's
attlbeen moved to the home of Mr. mtogrlty. Mufh sympathy to .felt
- —
• j ago. when il was suggested that ho
I pr. and Mrs. Row Lethbridge, of [ Every one seems to -be moving on
Brownell
was--------appointed program । ludes, we hope to be In a position be taken to Ann. Arbor for observafcmUy.
,| r
--------- "----Mason, are receiving congratula-1 another farm thl* spring. If you and Mr* Fred Phillipa. All hope for I here *«■ ■»
Thursday. There are no jury cases
three | --------chairman by the president. The j to apply successful remedial mens- Uon. He gradually grew worse and
her
rapid
recovery.
I
He
la
*urvlved
by
hl*
widow.
on dai
the birth of their second don-t believe it read the county
Is there anything more dlscour- Hon* “
netl meeting will
mill be
hn held Thursday,
YfcnrMav urea.
tires
dvnartert this
tht* life on
no Monday
kfnnrtav aft
aft-­
departed
The ------------A A- P store
1* tlv flrat
sons “nd “ dau«bl«- aUo' bhv
Y an nexl
-j daughter, at Henry Ford {correspondence.
; --------------------------------------- buri- ! brother.
' nZ. hL-v
Walter of this city, and by April 2. at the home of Mr. and Mrs I
ernoon. March 9, at the age of 15
aging looking than a back yard ho4pl[al.
---------- ---Saturday.
------------ ---------I. Detroit,
March ■ New maple sugar made Its ap- nrM block •«, ** rtruced up for;
AMcmbly.
years. 7 months and 17 days. He
his parent*. Mr. and Mr*. L. W : Gerald Hine.
7. The little girl, who weighed 6
pearance in the market the past 5Prln«- fron‘ a"d
having re­
’
"
'
,
e
___________
I
A
music
assembly
was
held
ThursBuhday.
leaves lo mourn hi* departure hl*
The many friend* ot George Hu- lb*. 13 1-2 ounce*, will be called week So far it hasn't been a fav- crlyd * coat
«nnlne and black
nraTU nr mrk
' d“y at one °‘c,oclt Th‘' band and nutnu.
wwu-­
parents. Mr.
Mr. onu
and Mr*,
Mr*. n.
H- o8- Wood
Ung will be sorry to hear that he judith Ann.
orable season for lhe product
-and B“Id Pab,t
W8ck'
'
WHITMAN BFNliAM i
|playcd very wel1 V’fL *2* I! ruff
ruer of
Af Hatting*,
ITattlncra hl*
&gt;,1a grandparents.
cranrtnar-nt ■
DEATH OF JOHN NAGLER.
is gradually
falling.
‘
1 One ha* only to drive to Grand
WHITMAN BENHAM. । B|rl»' ringing wa* well received by Mr #nd M„ wUUam woodruff also
Little Vivian Fennell, daughter of' . Members of the Women'*
'* Club, The many friends of John O.
i
j
--.-.
—
,
0
hnve
any
change
ln
&gt;
Word received from Mr. and Mrs. Rapids or Kalamazoo on lhe trunk Mr. and Mrs. James Fennell. U a , desiring to have any
Mrs. Edith Benham, aged 57. died | lhe student body.
| of thia’city, wverah aunt*, uncles
were shocked to team ot his 2n TU'sd«y n‘«f’t at penn°ck hosR. J. McCreery says they have been lines to realize what the snow banks scarlet fever victim. Donald Henry I name
new II Naglerwhich
sriZ^iu..'.«n.
I «nd cousins and a large circle of
nom‘’ or
nr address
orfrtr«c,: before the newidMth
fniinwod o h-.rr .ttxfir 0,1 i'JCSOI‘y mgnt el pcnnotx no*Mlacellaneou*.
spending the past two months in must have been in their original
He was
a dutiful
of lhe Hendershott district also has year books are printed can t ’
Mr. Bell noticed smoke coming | friend*.
”
—
—-------------- —-•son
- and
state. Despite the mild weather and
MB,.
«!■ hWU .'Jill". —Mr. I iron,
phone Mrs. Kenith McIntyre.
i Havcn '
Mr clmluxi'. hmue Mond.' Boodjludent. P-.U.I .11 hh .r.dr.
! the same disease.
Mr Nagler was bom in Barry j Sro^Leo^rton&lt;of Marar*nd two niornlng about 7:30. He turned Tn I
last week. They expect to return sunshine we have had the past ।
Two new clubs have been added
Hr ’
niomlni- about 7:30. He turned in ,n ortlerUJ.CTX week*,
wc—. mow
-__ __a —
- I Row™ Wtve been making llieir
three
still- -----------piled high
to Baltimore about March 25.
suntv
.nd
for
vear.
wa*
nn,
nf
n,
.
‘
JU
V
on
««
Mason,
ano
v*o
vubeck
The funeral was held at the Bap­
And no* Mickey Cochrane has along the roadside where the drifts ' appearance in increasing numbers school clubs. TTjc Outdoor Club best known and highly respected
m Attanra *0?
each took an extinguisher from the tist church this Thursday forenoon
lhe P*-’1 WPvk: Mr-' Alonzo Trim will study wild life and conserva- citizens, serving the RcpuWIcan
bought a farm on which to retire in were highest.
5?“
tells us the has had several in her
..chool and went immediately to the at ten o'clock, the Rev. B. J. Ad­
Uon. Tlie Bridge Club 1* for either party in many offices of trust IYjt
lh 1 ’’m
All our garden friends are poring
yard the pasl few day,
cock
officiating. Burial
scene
of
lhe
fire.
When
lhe
depart
­
farm in Commerce township. Oak­
j eleven vrars he was eountv clerk Whi’man Benham. The funeral will
A K prand&lt;en returned to his beginners or advanced players.
I eleven years he was county clerk.
ment arrived Mr. Van Der Veen Riverside cemetery.
land county, near Milford, and over their seed catalogs al present.
। Good Friday used to be the day for work nt ,he 8tore Mont)ayarter a
He
was
chairman
of the building
Friends of Gomar DeCocher re- I •
— — —
——• — ~~
and Mr. Vtsbeck were fighting the
comprises 229 9 acres, close to White
I, many to get ...
in W-..
certain
... «.
of ——
the rally
-■
three ww,k,. ab8cnce due lo an ap­ cclved word this week that he will I committee for the present court the residence in Irving, th- Rev. fire. It was soon brought under
W- Maylan Jones officiating. The
I, isn’t far
far off.
nfY
■
..
.
....
garden
and 11
It
Mrs. John Appelman of Nashville j; 6
ardcn seeds,
»ee‘is' ana
130 1 ,ar on
] pcndicitis operation from which he rail on Saturday, the 14th. from house. He moved to a fruit farm remains will be taken lo the Bent­ control.
New York for Panama and South 1 near South Haven in 1910; for the ley Comer* cemetery near Homer
wax injured in an automobile accl- ' On Monday and Tuesday, six men has made a fine recovery­
Tlie American history class saw
J ■ in— the
10 years ■he ■has- lived
30, of ShelbvShelby­ America, where he will be riaUoned past- •*
dent on Saturday when her car col- were in town buying old gold. They
Warren Kimmel. 30.
for burial.
pictures of the Battle
Waters Clothes Shop
medical
Mr.
game with Uncle
jeu with
wiui a truck.
true*, She
ojic »ustalned
»iui»uiru picked
picxea up a
■ choice
cnoivc assortment
auauiMucu* of ville.
....... charged with
...... possessing
—..„ .......
- ------ --Sam's
-------- —
——- unit.
—— —
— ■ . clty. serving as supervisor of his
lided
Monday and Tuesday.
fractured shoulder and other in- old watches rings, pin*, bridge- fish out of season, admitted the of- DeCocner lias for U»e past year ward, and was just re-elected this DEATH OF MRS.
Juri'e*.
____ _etc., so the Banner was in- tense in Justice Matthews court bi-en employed at the Hirach pickle month. The wife and^ three sons
■
a-ojic.
SARAH BURGDORFF.
The Animal hdsbandrv class vis­
I Tuesday. He was given a fine of *15 station. He was formerly enrolled survive. More extended
The Young People's Bible class of formed.
Mrs. Sarah L, Burguorff died on Ited the creamery last Thursday to
and costs of *6 85 which he paid. । us a student at St. Joseph's college i will be made next week.
Tuesday morning at lhe home of study testing cream for butterfat,
The arrest was made by Conservn- in Indiana, with •*the
— priesthood
■—-■—- •-in
------------------ ——
her daughter. Mrs Roy Oakes. in pasteurizing. and why 100 lbs. of
GIRL HIT BY CAR.
view, but lack of funds prevented. J
Uon Officer George Sumner
work-------here,- —
and
decid!
Archdeacon Vercoe of Grand 1 He obtained
------------- --------« —
—-,, Little
-------- ---------------Bonita---------------------Sutherland — Rutland Twp. Funeral services will cream wlll make more than 100 lbs.
of butter.
Rapids, well known here, and con- cd to enter Uncle Sam's medical Grand Rapids was injured Wednes- be held this Thursday afternoon at
sldercd one of the best speakers corps a* a means of obtaining the day evening on No. Broadway when । two o'clock, al the home of her
Tiic F F. A wlll meet March 17.
among the Episcopal clergymen in training to become a doctor. He I she ran into the street
’ -after
---------a ball. daughter. Mrs. Wm. McNutt, the Green Hand and Future Farmer
Rev.
c
M
Conklin
officiating,
bur■ccessarv
requirements.
1 She ran directly Into the path of
Western Michigan, will address the paved the ne
--------- ---------------Pins will be awarded Father's night
.... city about two week* i an automobile driven by Miss Plor- lai in Rutland cemetery. She ■ Is will be held March 27.
Hastings Commercial Club at their nnd left the
cnee----------------------Westerlind. The
child---was
cut survived by the two daughters, a
next regular meeting Tuesday. ago
™ Gumar will doubtless run on,---------------------------March 17 His topic will be "Tlie , to many interesting cxjHTlcnces. ;in&lt;l bruised but not seriously hurt, son. Orville of Hustings, and 24
] Great Pyramid.'\
' while In training, and his friends , although several stitches were nec- grandchildren also several grentWith the change which marks
With railroad and bus fares drop- I wish him full measure of success cssary to close a head wound. The grandchildrep
our age there has been brought
। ping, electric rates being shaved in realizing his ambitions.
1 driver of another car narrowly
about an assertiveness and restless­
DEATH
OF
MAPLE
down, the promijr of lowered rates ■ a literary’ friend tclLs us to be e4a‘Pcd hitting the girl as she ran
ness which characterize* Itself in a
GROVE RESIDENT. desire for *elf expression. Music of­
for gas as soon/as we can tap the sure and listen-ln for Prof. Boyn- i,nt0 lhe ®t"*tMrs. Helen Coleman Brown of fers an excelienl outlet for the
natural supply from Mt. Pleasant, ton. Of the University of Chicago.
----------------- * * *
-----------Maple Grove Center died suddenly emotions and when well directed,
MRS. COOLBAUGH PASSES.
the long hard winter practically in a quarter-hour book review over
I over, a 5.000-acre playground open- -------WON every Sunday
.
evening
.
at"?’ I KIrs Alice coolbaugh. aged 66. on Friday at the home of Mr and [■roves valuable as a means of satis- I
| ihg up almost at our door—aren't Another friend tells us of lhe en-1d,ed on Monday morning at her Mrs, Cecil Ronk of Urbandale, hav­ tying that desire.
things looking up?
Joyment they get from the weekly home- &lt;120 W. Grand SI., after an ing suffered a severe heart attack.
Time and thought must be 'ffyrcn
The Knights of Pythias report a Monday night broadcasts of the ‘■’'tended illness. Her former home The body was removed to the Heap to its development. Therefore if
• fine turnout at the Monday night WJR Radio Theater at 9 o'clock wa?’ near Martin Comers, moving funeral heme in Nashville, but defi­ you arc to develop your musical tal­
meeting in their new quarters. which offers well known dramas t0 lhL’ c,tY eighteen years ago. She nite funeral arrangements awaited ents. plan your work and practice 1
I Eighty new chairs have Just been and famous stars in the leading had bcen a member of the Martin word from Texas relatives. She had systematically.
j added, and some new equipment in- roles. This week Eva LeOalliene church and L. A- S. for many years, been In failing health for two years.
A working schedule has been made
-----------__ —
1 of
.-tailed, it Ls lhe plan to keep the was the Monday night offering In Surviving
arc _a -----son. ---------Warren
out and class piano lessons start
। coats Grove,
three daughters.
Mrs PASSING OF A. A. GAItDINIEK. this Monday.
' rooms open so members may drop "The air! of the Golden West."
— --------—
.
Arnold A Gardinicr. 8(1, died on
| Olin Brown of East Lansing. Mrs.
I in for social times, committee meetThursday from 8 until 10 o'clock
DeMond of Woodland and Friday • at the home of. ill., son. is set aside for the community or-'
| Ings and cards any evening in the
DEATH OF MRS, HENRY HILL I Claude
Miss Florence coolbaugh at home; Loren, in Bedford after an extended cheatra.
I Mrs Henry Hill, aged 70. died al
1 five grandchildren and four broth - illness. He had been a Barry coun­
We recommend the reading of a
ty resident since a child, his par­
Home Economies News.
I letter in our Public Forum thLv week. her home here on Sunday after a
The freshman Home Economies &gt;
| written by a young woman who re- week’s illness. She. was born In BalFuneral services were held at the ents coming from New York state
| ccntly spent two months in Gcr- Hmore township on Sept 5. 1865. home on Wednesday at 2 P M. the where he was bom Auk 7. 1*49 classes are finishing their blouses
and
plan
to have a style show in I
They
located
al
Cedar
Creek
He
| many It gives a graphic picture of living her entire life in Barry coun­ Rev. C M Conklin officiating Bur­
'
the real state of affairs in that Hlt- ty She was married to Henry Hili ial was in the Woodland cemetery. was married lo Mary Jane ELston class at the end of tills week.
The Advanced Home Economics
! ler-rldden country wher? fear grips in 1883 To this union were born Mrs Coolbaugh was a devoted in 1882. She died in 1932. a short
WIDE SPREAD
, every heart; where people never dls- two daughters. Mrs. Blanche Kirch­ mother mid a kind friend to every­ time after they celebrated their class visited sonic furniture facto- I
■ cuss adverse sentlme[it!&gt;\conccrnmR ner of Lansing and Miss Grace Hill one. always exemplifying a truly golden wedding Surviving are two rles in Grand Rapids last Friday. '
BUTTON DOWN
sons. Loren and Truman, eight,They
.
were shown differently ar- i
j the government, save—nncier their at home, and a son. the late Morris noble character.
i grandchildren and two sisters. The ranged rooms, the process of atambreath; where munition factories Hill Surviving are the husband, lhe
Ing wood and othcT different- profuneral was held in Bellevue on -----------------are running night and day; where daughters, several grandchildren, “FARTIIEST NORTH”
COLLEGE PAPER. Monday, with, burial In Lhc Wilcox ccsse-s in the making of furniture.
wages arc pitifully low Along every two brothers. Frank Rickie of Has­
NAVY
Dean Eugene
Davenport
of cemetery.
They also went through lhe Ou ,
line Germany is preparing for war tings and Wm. Rickie of Grand
Wonder
House.
... — I
CHOCOLATE
Woodland
brought
to
the
Banner
One rebels when they realize how Rapids, also two sisters. Mrs Sarah
OLDEST DRIVER DIES.
all this waste of money might be Tucker of Niles and Mrs. Della office on Monday a copy of "Fnrlh-'
MAROON
Hol
Lunch.
est North collegian." an eight page
Many Banner readers will recall
expended In making life easier and Shay of South Bend. Did.
Tlie
hot
lunch
for
the
week
of
New Check* in Blue,
happier for one of the finest home­
She was a member of the First paper published by lhe University having heard about Thomas Gor­ March 9 will be prepared by Virloving nations on earth
Methodist church and L. A. S. Cir­ of Alaska nt Fairbanks. Alaska, ft don. who at the age of 106 years,
Tan and
Kinin Hole*. Aletha Johnson and (
No. 4- a —
member
of the
Eastern is Just what Its name indicates, [he secured a license to drive an nuBearing the imprint of the Lowell cle
— —
— ....
------------------Dorothy Pender. The menu will be
Mr. Gordon died at
Manufacturing Company. 2.000 in- j Star, chairman of Pennock hospital ■'Farthest North" college paper, be­ tomoblle.
guild
No.
9 and'---------------was an active
work­ ing located at 64 ’ 51' 21" north latl- Grand Rapids a couple of week:. as follows:
scctlcide sprayers started a voyage ' ”
”11'4 “
“ “
“---------Monday—Spaghetti and tomatoes.:
Hide.
The
paper
is
a
six
column
ago
"
..._
..
friend
of
to faraway Morocco on Monday er in the Barry County Red Cross
Tuesday—Cream
of
vegetable
one and is published monthly. The Alexander
'
Mayville of Irving, who soup.
I Judging from the reports of world Chapter.
. travelers' on Moroccan hotels, where
The funeral was held at the scare head on the first page of the celebrated his 105th birthday rcSpring's Newest Designs.
Wednesday—Shepherd's pic.
I guerts are carried away each night MethodUt church on Wednesday at Feb. 1 issue says "Five-Year Engi­ ccntly. The two worked together in
Thursday
—
Baked
beans.
Maylan neering Courses Adopted." a pro­ u sawmill in 1874 when they became
। by armies of voracious bugs, any 2:00 P M. the Rev. w
Every One is a
Friday—Goulash.
Lowell bred sprayer starling a ca- Jones officiating, assisted by the O. gressive plan to broaden mining is fast friends Gordon used to help
university.
| reer in that verminous country will E- S. Interment was m Riverside the aim of the -—
- --------------------------'Mayville celebrate his birthday by.
PASSING OF CURTIS
Other Items of interest pertained taking
,।
; have il* work cut out Incidentally. cemetery.
iKing him
nun for
tor a motor ride.
nae.
MARSHALL.
address —
on
C—......
Gordon
came: from
a long lived
| the Manufacturing Company, bcMrs. Hill was a splendid type of to on Ice carnival, an----------------| ginning
.
last
—
week,
------- resumed
------- -----------opcra-------- woman, faithful to her home and "Voodoo." Home Makers' Short family, his /other dying accidental- , Curtis Marshall, of Maple Grove,
, tlons on a 50-hour week basis, in- family, loyal to her church and her Course, opening ot an Exterston of- |y at’ the age of 97. while hLs moth- died at liLs home in that township.
Tuesday
morning
after
a short ill­
His father's parent*
। stead of 30. Upwards of 65 per- friends
Sincere sympathy is ex­ flee in Matanuska. a military ball er was 101
etc It is a very fine and interesting were 104 and 93. and his mother'* ness. The funeral services will be
sons are employed —Lowell Ledger j tended the bereaved ones.
conducted from the North Evan­
college publication.
parents were 106 and 93.
gelical church of Mnplc Grove to­
day, Thursday, at 1:30 and the in­
terment will be in the Nashville
cemetery.
.

OCAL NEWS

। sx-tf

.s.’sxrs;-.

s । a?

The New SPRING

Shirts
ARE HERE!

FREE!

SPARTON
DE

LUXE

REFRIGERATOR
will be Given Away at

FOOD
CENTER
Saturday, April 25th

The New Duke of
Kent Collars

Deep Shades

A FREE TICKET WITH
EACH 5Oc PURCHASE

FREE DAY- APRIL 18

Friday 13 th

MACK SHIRT

and Saturday Specials!
LIBERTY BELL
SODA

LIBBY'S
CORNED BEEF

CRACKERS

HASH

2 POUND BOX

TALL CAN

13c

13c

TRAND TREATRF

Hastings. Michigan ■ Telephones 224-4-2557 BL—
We urge you lo watch our Screen for changes without notice

Special Notice!

Dr. HESS

SUNDAY and MONDAY. MARCH 15 and 16

CEILING ZERO
JAMES CAGNEY and PAT O'BRIEN

HOG SPECIAL
It makes a difference at farrowing time!

June Travit, Stuart Erwin. Barton MacLanc

SUGAR
POUND

ba°gsh

a m

24c

BARGAIN .AJATINEE. SUNDAY. 1:00 and .1:00 octo
Other Performances—Adults 25c, Children 10c

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, MARCH 17

SALMON
TALL CANS

FRESH ©ROUND

HAMBURG
POUND

roiitinui* lhe Hog Sixx ial ul-

seen troubles pup up at far­

liilmrnl while llicy'rc .suck­

rowing lime.

Poor

litter*,

anemia, hairless pigs, weak­
lings and stints, sows llial

abundance of

cal iheir. litters. Tiles? trou­
bles come from apparently

plentiful in iodine, copper,

iinexplainablc reasons.

and iron—minerals that arc

f

However, there is often a

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. MARCH IB and 19

ROSE

of the

RANCHO”

With JOHN BOLES and GLADYS SWARTHOUT

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. MARCH 20 and 21
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

Gene Autry in “MELODY TRAIL

age of minerals in lhe sow’*

ration.
bles

Iw caused by mineral de­

Clothes Shop

The Sunken Grave
MOTHING can be sadder than a grave that is no longer *
AN mound. The inevitable ha* come to pass—the weight of
the sodden earth has crushed in the last protection. It helpa
nothing lo clone the imagination lo what happened lhen! Yet
there i« not the slightest necessity for thia barbarou*. unsanlary. old faahloned method of buriaL The Hasting* Burial

conditioning

petite on edge ami lie
Feed Hog Sjiccial to help

lhe

mineral* — give

your

sow# |)r. Here Hug Special.

ularly at least a month be­

Adult* 13c, Children 10c

WATERS

proper-

tain*

tem in tunc.

li pats t&lt;&gt; make sure about

Give them Hog Special reg­

With Wallace Ford. Brian Dontery, Phylli* Brook*. Erik
Rhodes, Molly Lamont. Alan Hale. Addison Randall
and Paul Stanton.

Our spring Opening will be
held March 26 to 28. Special
prizes totaling orrr *50.00 will
be given absolutely FREE.
Store will be open Thursday,
Friday and Saturday Nights,
March 26, 27 and 21 Watch

ncces-afy to healthy lit-

mentioned above can

FEATURE NO. 2

Added—Episode No. 7 of “THE GREAT Alli MYSTERY" will

It is particularly

All of these trou­

With BUC K. lhe Wonder Dog—And Ann Rutherford

"ANOTHER FACE

minerals.

■imple explanation—a slidll-

ficiency.

FOOD CENTER

supplies an

WOMAN TRAP

Adult* 25c. Children 16c

WE BUY EGGS, CHICKENS AND CATTLE

ling their pig*. Hog Special

Gertrude Michael, George Murphy, RoscoeKarm,

Akim Tamiroff

DEL MONTE RED

Sometimes entirely unfore­

MATTIE SPAULDING.
Mrs. Mat Ur- Spaulding, aged 81. a
former well known Hastings resi­
dent. died on Monday'tn Bronson
hospital. Kalamazoo, death being
due. to penumonia. For some time
-he had made her home with her
niece. Mrs. Ethelyn Shulters, of
Kalamazoo and previously'had lived
with her sister. Mrs O D. Fisher,
of Harvey. Illinois. Her daughter.
Mrs. Mabel Grigsby, and son. Leon,
preceded her in death several years
ago. Surviving are the sister, three
nieces. Mrs. Shulters of Kalama­
. znn Harel Iroiulde and Florence
Snyder of Detroit, three nephews.
Bert Brown of Orangeville. Ralph
Brown of Hasting* and Carl Brown
, of Chicago. Funeral services were
held at the Henton funeral home in
Delton on Wednesday al 2:30 P. M
Burial was in lhe Rlchlar.d ceme­
tery beside her children.

fore

farrowing

lime

and

avoid (arrowing-timr disap­

pointments.

Feed Hog S|N*-

rial to give suckling pigs a
good N'ltd-ull toward an car-

Dr. I less dealer.

will protect absolutely
and forever.
Cement
and steel, waterproof
and airtight. It seals In
p.!aJa sight and becomes
one solid piece under,
ground mausoleum that
literally “Lasts Through

Hastings Burial Vault
TELEPHONE 2623 . . . HASTINGS, MICH.

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MARCH 11. 1938
'erana eligible to register: 7 milch I Mr. L..
growing of valuable fur-bearing ,
animals lias been Marled a* a buntcows, 3 heifers and 3 Guernsey
10
new. and seemingly at least is pros­
bulls; 3 sows and a stock hog; 60'
pering. The greater part of the
(Continued from page one).
tons of hay; 8 bushels cloverseed; ("•"
furs, now being worn, have never
rain rra(A« at mm- 200 hmhela at
*“
seen or even been near the wilds
HOWARD WARE.
00ta all cleaned for seed; iCTml j The aMMon
in many communities trapping is |
Having rented a farm fully double harnesses; and a good list of shall see aome at
useless and posse, but even there
.tacked lie will dispose of Ms pres-1 farm tools, it will be an afternoon dtlaans and mH,
you may find black fox farms, rac­
(Continued from page one)
(Continued from page one)
ent stock at public auction. The1 sale with Henry Flannery as auc- aatMmed, either
coon farms, or muskrat farms, that
will really provide more furs than by the Jarre brick building whieh , sale will Include a targe number of i tlonrer and Ernie Gray as clerk.; alarm" or 'point!
ter it would /mil him al least If he
ral horse-’.- farm tools;
those communities would have done lie claimed to owfl. As a matter ot
had to pay for it—as occasionally
and miscellaneous articles. The sale I
in their wild state.
fact he never owned that building.
happens.
will be held on the farm known as i
This • Chinchilla" business today His story was a bald fabrication, the Harry Sponablc farm, two milrs (
There's a very Interesting story led in u&gt;. breedm, ot other tor »e,u
seems to be Just about in the same made evidently tor the ptifposc of ‘outh of Hastings on M-37. opposite'
in connection with chinchillas. be,rlnB »nlmah. .nd today we tie,, *"
lr°m • ll,le relative position that the silver fox getting away with the Mocks and
Star schoolhouse.
Their native habitats are in Chili. mudcral-taona. mink t.rnu. rac- of fUhUnk- antealora They are
bonds'whlch had already been
South America, way up In lhe coon term,, and many other,. In «tulpt*d with lante. .harp tmh business was 15 or 20 years ago turned over to him. and the 83-SWr
Maybe after years have gone by.
snow-capped Andes. 16.000 or 20,000 operation. Without them the prke
“T". T”' apd chinchillas incnkire greatly in additional which lie induced the
An auction ‘.ale of the Harry Wa­
feet above sea level. About 10 ot tun would probably be aimoat
* J*t
numbers, the ladies can buy a chin­ ladles to give.In ordtr lo help him ters estate will be held on Saturday.
years ago Mathias f. Chapman, a prohibitive, because with lhe coun- lhem
. . **
chilla coat without investing a for­ carry the project through. He also March 21. Slock, seed, grain, tools,
young American copper mining en­ try becoming cleared up. wild anl- way‘ u,lng, brllllant «retegy. They
tune. Possibly styles will change induced them to mu render to him household goods and farm will be
gineer was stationed In the high mal life1could not begin % meet the I
too—thfy have been knowri to the receipts he had previously giv­ offered fur Mile. LUt ot articles will
Andes of chill In pursuit of hLs demand for fur
I malej
wllh not
'how glronger
of odor dlan
T,w the
,e" Maybe chinchillas will become so en- them. He read to them the or­
gre “ much
appear in the next week's Banner.
profession. There, and there only, uemana tor lur.
plentiful, and coats so cheap, that ganization paper.-; for the Mary
8° there was Mr. Chapman sla- majM. and Bre quite choosy and vuu ,,ltr
were to be found these odd little
you wouldn't want one. A low price Holding Company, which were
“ P'~,"
~meumn d&lt;Jl Jtlm thl popllar- signed by the two Hastings women
animals, whose pelts furnished Ed|nfchIlTaround UR n.n°.“.o
A community auction will be held
coals for the beautiful and expen­ tains tn Chiu around 18 years ago. t chllla come
mitady's boudoir .... oI a Droduct and PVen urobablv us well as by a Belding victim, and
°.L
-e on beautv ta^Bu
on the Hastings fair grounds. In­
sive ladies of royalty, and n few and not far from him were the few, bearing the aroma of another lady .
by himself
eluded In the sale are horses, cows,
queens of the movie screens, whose r7?\ln,2f ehlnch,Uaa'
chinchilla and that fellow is lucky
Ctat H
The Hastings ladles realized that a
,, bull,
„„„ sheep, farm machinery and
a 'TJ*. "al f,i c«^t lod^
incomes were so large that they 7hLC.57he «ov'rnmenl .o'Cb“* had II he escapes with his life So even
they had been victimized and .-aid tools. Sale starts at 1.00 P. M Dcwdude chinchilla must need dis- cla^- .cn‘ncn?,la ,ur coat
hardly knew what to do with their forbidden to be exported. He was,
you'll have to come across with nothlng about it for a time Later?,,.,. RM.d wm be the auctioneer and
money. Fifty years ago European familiar with the wonderful de-, creUon above everything else when
____ Mr* . ____
_
____ to
_ ___
Holloway
came
con-. C|lfiord Hammond, clerk.
out on amourous ventures, 840.000 of the good old cofti Of the when
royally established Chinchilla fur veiopment of the silver fox Indus- j)e
ns the very -diamond" of al) furs. try With real American foresight । M previously stated the female realm. Maybe that'.-, one of the.suit Attorney Sigler about her sis­
reasons why a visit to this Chln-|ter's estate, file mentioned the lo-.&lt;
There was only one place it could and enterprise, he figured that if, chinchilla te stronger than lhe mate
of the 'bonds
to ‘him, ~
Mr. ~
Sigler I c.lcnn HofJinan will iuv’e'an alie'
Glenn Hoffman will luve an atiebe secured, and that was In Chili. lie could capture a few of these live! and qulw ~choMy" when It comes chlUa Farm Is M&gt; Interesting. What ' '
— -a —
•-------——
”
- happens when a product goes "ont plactd the facts he had h arm o I tlon su|,. ut personal property at his
The result, naturally, was that the chinchillas and get them back to ■to selecting
male
partner
For
of
style" will be inanlioned in my with Prosecuting
McDon-. farm
•&gt;•’&gt; —
■«. „ Attorney
...
, ------miles east and ' —
mile
demand surpassed all expectations. California alive, hr could establish this reason It was probably just as
description
of
a
visit
to
an
"Ostrich
aid.
As
it
rz-_nr;a result the note!sary pa- ,|Orth of Dowling, on Sec. 26. BaltlChili reaped a rich reward, because a new and profitable industry—and well that lhe original shipment con­
Farm" next week.
per-s for bringing the .scoundrel
„ww«. as the old "Henry
■•r::um're! to
io•. lllulv
mure,, w
known
for a number of years from 300,000 he surely seems to be "on the way." sisted of seven males and three fe­
W. r. cook.
Justice were prepared. It appears ^bewk Farm' Among the prop­
lo 500.000 pelts were shipped abroad But capturing some ot those live males. Quite often, we are in­
lhat the slate p’jlfce have one man. crty lhal
will sell are fl horses.
every year, in short the demand chinchillas in Chill, and getting formed. the female will demand a
i.i. onp nf tlM.m
a registered
Sergeant cooper, who devotes hh
was way beyond the supply, with them back to California alive, were selection from a half dozen or more
time to hunting up this type of Pcrcheron. add two other Perchthe result that these little fellows two entirely different propositions. males before she will condescend to
sharpers.
Through
Mr.
Sigler
he
Their
native
home
was
way
up
in
were all but wiped of! the map. Just
accept a mate. Even after she has
was
set
on
the
trail
It
was
through
as buffaloes were on our western the snow-capped peaks of the An­ accepted him she may keep him on
his efforts that Spicer was appre­
plains, when unbridled slaughter des. three or four miles above sea quite a platonic basis for some little
hended.
was permitted to continue. To level and it was believed that these time. The number in a litter varies
It iH&gt;|&gt;ears that Spicer has a fine
make matters worse In Chili, as far priceless little animals could not from one to five—five being a huge
wife and family at Bidding, but has
(Continued from page one&gt;
os the Chinchilla fur indusfry was survive in any other clime. But Mr. one. One or two little ones are
apparently deserted them and. with
concerned, the sportsmen of the Chaprltan felt the urge of experi­ more usual. But once that mamma
country Imported foxes for hunting ment. feeling that before they be­ has contributes! to the clan, papa district meet both go to the regional the "easy money" which he has
purposes, and.they made their raids came extinct, there was only one Js expected to look after them. If meet, so Ionia will have a chance to been able to obtain, he has led a
on the comparatively few remain­ recourse; and that was to capture she conceives the idea that he is redeem itself in a game with
ing valuable little fur bearers. and breed them in captivity. Con­ falling down on the job, then she Grand Haven tomorrow night. Sat­
Spicer was arraigned before Jus- '
When IL was too late, and after sequently he hired some Indian goes right after him? and "cleans urday night the winners of lhe tier Adclbert Cort right Tuesday'
Chinchillas had all but been ex­ hunters to capture some live chin­ up on him." until / he Ls glad Grand Haven-Ionia and Hnstlngs- evening. He demanded an exmniG. R. ChrLsllan game piny to ascer­
terminated by trappers and foxes. chillas for him. and after several to resume
his
responsibilities. tain lhe winner in the class B di­ nation which was set for next week
I Tuesday. He was remanded to the
Chill clamped down an embargo on years they succeeded In taking 10 • How human." I can hear some
vision of the regional meet.
the export of chinchilla pells. But live ones—seven males and three people remark.
' Barry county Jail, his bail bring
Prospects of the Hastings fire
the damage had been done. The females. He devoted a lol of time
Five t' jjxed at $25,000. which iie was un- ■
For food, they thrive on com.
*■ look very bright if they -----can -play
as
&gt;ie to
barn was locked after the horses In study of their habits and tastes. fine grains and a wide variety of
I as , at
able
to obtain,
obtain. In his possession
- were the ■
is they displayed in I■ at
at the time of his arrest
were stolen. It Is doubtful If wild Gradually he took them down lo vegetables, and have even mani­ good a game as
Chinchillas
will ever reproduce lower levels each year, and about fested a liking for tobacco, without lhe district meet They were never {vcry receipts which he hod given
rapidly enough to supply pelts in 10 or 12 years ago started for Cali­ any of the ill-effects, so often visit­ . in any serious difficulty at any time j Mn&gt; Holloway fur the securities he '
fornia with them. He put them in
during their two game series at fraudulently obtained
IrOm her. I
commercial quantities.
Get ready for spring . . .
ed upon lhe initial attempts of lhe
] These will be Important in the i
As stated above, Mathias Chap­ refrigerated cages, and frequently human. Mr. Chapman's little ani­ Belding.
send us your hat for
this ■ trial of his case, when that shall oc- ‘
man. a young
American copper ice-packs were put on their heads mals practically double in number , An interesting feature of
mining engineer, was stationed In lo prevent their suffocation. On I every year. so. providing nothin* week's schedule Ls the similarity of cur.
cleaning ond reblocking,
the high Andes in Chill. South the way one of them died and two happens, it will be quite a few years the situation now and in 1931. In | gplcrr's lather was a well known
were
born,
so
he
landed
in
Las
An
­
and we will completely
America, around 16 or 18 years ago.
before he can ship out 300.000 to that year the high school team went, CJtlJx.n of Belding and a man of I
That was along about, the time geles with 11. and started lhe first 500.000 chinchilla pells every year, to Grand Rapids Union lor the reg- i in,.uns He followed lhe races and
recondition it. so ihat it
| ional meet and on Friday. March 13.1 )ia(1 a nnt. uring of horses. When
when valuable furs of*most every Chinchilla Farm ever known. How as chill used lo do.
will look like new,. . .
Pur has been rtaselv connected
pl“&gt;Cd C4“h?,lc Central and j hl. du.d hu
inherited valuable
description seemed to be growing well he has succeeded is shown by
“I
However, lhe
Fur has been. closely connected ‘losL
the present team pn)I&gt;rrty and a considerable . urn ot 1
scarce, and correspondingly expen­ the fact tliat today. 11 years after
with the history of our country. , d0PS nol plan t0 end up ln thM way. I money, and often brought a string ;
sive. The growing of animals for he landed In California with them.their pelts was right in iLs prime. he has a family of nearly 300 of lhe and when we think of it our Qne oj tj,e b|g differences in the । of horses to our county fair.
situationli KU
that
year was iuv
the iuli
fact
--------- naturally
—' go back
------ —to
. . theM.uauun
I. Jim
A few years before he was stationed fascinating little aristocrats ot the thoughts
• He was well known to tlie Parker
in Chili, an old hunter and trapper fur tribe. When you consider that old Hudson Bay Company. John thal the HafcMngs learn won the di&gt;- ' family, as he always made the hotel
by the name of Charles iDalton, who they sell for 83.500 a pair—well that jacob Astor, and the scopes of lrlcl meet on dH. iofa] door. wherc- hLs headquarters, and they, us well
Isn't
so
slow.
But
it
takes
a
lot
of
hardy
men
with
guns
and
straps.
(as
lh
e
present
team
w.ro
able
to.
was later lo become Sir Charles
as‘ othi&gt;r Hastings people, had been
pells
to
make
one
of
those
840.000
roaming
through
the
forcit-wilder5tt
,
p
j
nl0
dlP
memy's
territory
and
.a
Dalton, had mastered the problem
entertained nt his fine farm home
ness. When wild animals bearing wil,
(™
of feeding and breeding black foxes, coats for a luxurious dowager to
on the outskirts of Belding
--------- ------- ------ r-------------tnc Kames
„ last Friday and „„
Th*
Bat- Ul1
commercially known as "silver" ,flaunt for the envy of her sex.
are so few chinchillas In lhe . lured men lo the tops of the Andes. urday nights showed a fine repre­
foxes. These block foxes were There Hint
nt nmirun va-rv varu few intri the frrwen north rnnntrv mirl .
,__ &gt; .............. I
PHONE 2140
raised and sold for breeding pur­ world that of course very, very few into lhe frozen north country, and , 6t,iltau0n of local fans who disposes only, and they commanded of Mr. Chapman’s animals are the mountainous regions of our ( playd nwre cnthusia-sm-and right­ 1 Friday night. March 13. The proenormous prices. According lo one killed during a year for their pelts. west. With the rapid growth of our fully ^-thnn at any other time i gram committee is Dorothy O'ConOrders
for
chinchilla
furs,
we
were
population;
clearing
off
our
forth
ls
reason
'
of our own Government bulletins a
[ -nor
and
Margaret Cunningham, the
rests, and converting former choice1--------------- &lt; »
-------— —
—----------pair of high grade silver foxes sold Informed, are taken with the un­
hunting grounds into farms, all I An economist says Uncle Sam refreshment eAinmlttpe
committee Is Myrtle
for 834.000. It was a common event' derstanding that it will probably
I and Thelma
Sprague,
this has changed. Nature could not' must eventually take over the banks Coleman
'
lo pay 810.000 or 812.000 for a pair be several years before enough of
much..Bring
cup
and spoon. Everyone
*- **"
"'
oi them.
ui.u. Dalton
|»|» and
.no several
«,venu others
o.ner. ■ “»"• «" “
“ft * keep up with man's persLslenl hunt because they ou;e him so
of
■ welcome.
for furs. To supply the demand lhe European papers please copy.
wore made muiti-miiiionaires.
molU-mlUlon.ln-,. and
.nd ; *•"«•&gt;.
were
” W«
Prince Edward island, the original J1*1* of MCaUf°rnl? ..L* "J~ J.
home of the silver fox industry, be-;four or five chinchilla coata The
came one of lhe wealthiest com-1
u , obvious-price and lhe
munities per bqplta. In the world., scarcity of lhe furs.
The demand for breeders satLsfled.
As may be Imagined Qils chlnthe silver fox Industry seems to chllla treasure 1*
Is carefullv
carefully suarded.
guarded,
have entered Its second stage—the ' and with reason. Only a few years
production of foxes for pelts. Farms j bro 35 of the little aristocrats were
for the raising of sliver foxes arc' stolen and a regular Conan Doyle
located all over the country today. ’ detective story resulted. At large
even Barry Counly being Included.1 expense a detective was hired. The
The sale of black fox pelts Is said .to animals were traced to Germany,
amount lo 810.000.000 or 815,000.­ where 17 of the little animals were
000 annually. The business seems found and returned, the others hav-

CHINCHILLA FARM
S NTEREST N6

to be getting down on a itablllsed Ing died. The thieves were caught;
baste, but It would not have been 'and sent to prison, and a case
here at all had nol Charles Dalton, | against a German furrier still pends
or some other man. experimented Jin lhe German courts
wKh and mastered the problem of
ituro i As ilal*d at the twulnning of this
feeding
and breeding.
Nature
simply could not keep up with Brt,c*e' lhe Chinchilla Is a cute lillong ''tle
men'a eager desire for furs. As long
: *n!ntal. and like humans have
u women prize warmth, comfort;
.nPX,’ h tP d.Ur‘
and beauty In their most sumptuous [
dJ^‘d.
Jun'
forms, it seems as though there will ‘
1
‘ ^“°w

!£%■* ■

CWOLL SPICER
ARRESTED MONDAY

Auction Sales

'“i- ««

HASTINGS TEAM
TO ENTER FINALS

A New Hat
for Spring

See the advance showing of
Spring Merchandise at the
Hastings Commercial Club
Fair March 25, 26, 27, and 28.
Over 150 prizes to be given
away during the four days of
this Fair.

Everybody welcome. Every­
thing Free, admission, prizes,
and refreshments.
At Community Hall, Hastings '.
1:00 to 10:30 p. m.

McCREERY’S

DRY CLEANERS

MARCH 25, 26, 27, 2

sun

AUCTION SALE
Having decided to quit farming,

It's Thrifty to Buy

'

gtST?BSH0L
Men! Spring Calls for

I will hold an auction

sale to dispose of my personal property at my farm, 4 miles

Dress SHOES

north of Nashville and 1 mile east, or 2 miles south of War-

The Seaton'» Value!

nerville and 1 mile east, on

NEW

Beautiful
ROOMS

TUESDAY, MARCH 17, ’36
Sale will start at 1:00 P. M.

Smart looking Blucher style
oxfords. Black side leather up­
pers, nailed composition soles
and heels! Creased toe I

I offer the following property

98®

EXPENSE!
Bean puller.

LIVESTOCK

Interior Decorators agree that a well
papered and. painted room is onethird furnished.

Eight rolls of paper and a quart of
paint or enamel will finish an overage
sized room ond you will be surprised
at how little it costs.

We will be pleased to show you a Fac­
tory Line of Wall Paper at Factory
Prices, as well as a full line of Devoe's
Paints, Enamels and Varnishes.
Last, but not least, how about those
Window Shades? You know we moke
them fit your windows.
.

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
THE RIXALL DRUGGISTS

Halting!

Phone 2131

Michigan

WE WILL JEE YOU AT THE MERCHANTS’ FAIR

Pair of mules,

good ones,

Style! Comfort! Service!

2 riding cultivators.

Holstein cow, 4 years old, fresh, with
calf by side.
Holstein cow, 3 years,old, bred Sept. 3.
Jersey and Brown Swiss cow, due April
5.
2 Holstein heifers, 1 year old.

FARM TOOLS.
McCorqiick groin binder.
McCormick mowing macMrife.

Hay loader. Side delivery rake.
2 drags. Syracuse walking plow.

McCormick-Deering cultipacker.
Wagon and flat rack. Drag cart.

Look Good! Feel Good!

MISCELLANEOUS.
Pony wagon and harness.
Set of double work harness.
Page fence stretcher.
Iron kettle and jacket. Grindstone.
2 Bell City 140-egg incubators.

And how these Balmoral ox­
fords will wear! Black side
leather flexible uppera Center
scam toe! Welt construction!
Leather soles and heels* Rn»i

Brown Hen 50-egg incubator.
40-gal. meat crock.
Heavy western saddle.
Brooder house, 10x12, now.

Smart Feet Insist

FEED.
Quantity of corn fodder.
3 tons of alfalfa.
Other articles not mentioned.

Cynthia A
The Quality J

BOTS* SHOES
for Hard Play, and Work!

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. No property removed until set­

tled for.

Lloyd Pennington, Propr
Grover Pennington, Auctioneer.

Sturdy, good-looking axfonto
black calf. FloxiSta cbm

Men’s Shoes

John Deere corn planter.
9 and 10

years old.
Shetland stud pony, 3 years old.

Children'1 Plain Toe

M. J. Scott, Clerk.

/LTx $1.59
Shoos for boys who will be
boys!
Leather middle aole.
Composition outer soles, heels-

ion soles
Uate for
! Wing tips for extra
l Side leather uppera

�BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

The Hastings Banner

MICHIGAN

Editorials

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

eIhi&amp;andeThat
RANDOM OBSERVATIONS.

lt*&gt; th. S.M ol a Cam»mty
That Couala—Nat lU Sl&gt;a
THURSDAY. MARCH 12, 1936

Backward Glances;
'Round About Town
to the line, let Uw quips
Bits of Yesterday Hewfsll
where they any I

Itl 'The Public Forum |'|j
LETTERS
TO
---------------------------THE
EDITOR

be so interesting. Unfortunately,
DANGEROUS GROUND.
1 tionary in this respect, carrying
I received a letter yesterday from we did not discover much beauty In
Surpluses are to business firm, i the methods of the spoilsman into HARD TO GET 5 CENT PENCIL.
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
my former school teacher request­ Virginia, except in certain charm­
What savings accounts are to pri- ] all of the
so-called "alphabet
Gen. Hagood,
Hagood, who
who wa*
We have a block of metal on the
By Observing Tommy.
Gen.
was being
being
AU of the high schools tn Barry
ing ma to send her the "Riley ing old towns. Otherwise, the roads
-------appears
•z;—J to be county will be invited to participate
vatu individuals—reserves against soup” bureaus; It has concentrated quizzed by a congressional commit- | d®«k before us which
141 Lockwood. I see. Is sporting stories” for she wishes to preserve were as hideous aa one can Imagine,
MM
mdlkM
sn iiiviuumi Tr.«
.1
tee and who had been asked to talk
—--—------—--m sui
iracK ucei avia
new pair of alasaea
them Bhe had known "Riley" ever with the usual filling stations and
hard times—funds to help weather ' more power in lhe hands of one
and ,h
which
, ,all xhnulrf
Iramd.weiwh
In lU.ilng.
ahnut ....
qn |
. T?
freely, made the statement that It and which ahquld weigh about
My husband was
since she was a young gtrl. HU hot dog stands
difficult economic storms Ttiere- man than ha* ever before been pcr- wa* mote difficult for him to get three-quarter* of a pound. When ' Saturday. June 3 n was suggested
.
.
• you lift it. however. It feel* "light | by Superintendent Lederle; ^and I aUA1PHr?S±1r“y Unt B cow Bfter brother Charles, a Civil war veteran rather shocked, as he had somehow
fore if the administration goes mitted even in time of war—and five cent* for a lead pencil than It
lived neighbor to them in Bellevue. had the Idea that all the ugliness
a*
a
feather
and
actually
weighs
^ach
Vem
Roger*
ire
planning
j
"
’
Norma
?
through with its proposal to tax lhe administration U hungry for was for WPA to get (1.000. of fed­
This letter was from Mrs. Minnie
only three ounces. The reason -------&gt;I
...
• • ••
Evan Keyes who U Worthy Grand His acquaintance with America is
surpluses out of existence, it will. enough more to permit it to over­ eral money for the purpose of is that this block is made from | the events.
Miss Gertrude Polruff of Lowell
Archie McDonald and Ben Gidley. Secretary of the Eastern Star and very slight and he puzzled loo. with
teaching lhe CCC boys hobbies. It
remove one of lhe greatest stabiliz- rule the Supreme Court when the was for this remark that Gen. Ha­ Dow metal, a magnesium alloy In­ ha* been engaged as superintendent I
tel1. me- ,re
their has an office In the Masonic Tem­ lhe fact that, tn many instances
|ng factors in business. Lacking occasion demands.
good was demoted, incidentally, a vented by lhe Dow Chemical Com­ of the Good Samaritan hospital IP6®, ~ revive the ancient and ple. Washington. D. Cdown there, they are Just beginning
this stabilizing factor, business can- ■ There Is today within the New federal man blew Into Grand Ledge pany at Midland. It Ls twenty-five Miss Potruf! received training at I healthful pastime of hiking.
to do something about the develop­
per cent lighter than aluminum. lhe U. of M hospital.
• • •
ment and preservation of the old
not hope to have that confidence in Deal an influential group that the other day and wanted to know
if we did not have some Jobs we
Despite
the
very
unfavorable
Tommy
predicts
an
increaae
in
The following letter received by a historical spots Borne of them had
the future which 1* so essential to wishes to pack the supreme court could give to men. He said he had the same tensile strength. The glob­
night over seventy people attended the bunion plaster and arch support member of the editorial staff from been allowed to go down until they
healthy recovery. When business ' with justices who are pro every­ some federal money wlttch he want- j ular gondola of the V. S. strato­ the K of P. social evening Monday. business soon.
a personal friend, an American bcm were almost past saving before the
slows down, men are thrown out of thing Ute New Deal is for; anti ev­ ed to spend. He inquired about the । sphere ballons were made from this Messrs, and Mesdames Overstreet.
gtrl who. during a two years' resi­ people did any work toward preserv­
.
P^rk and was Informed that tha j substance.
Rlzor. Vedor. Underhill and Van
work and one of Hie best markets erything the Hew Deal is against.
Wish I could grow a mustache like dence in Germany married Into ing them. Have you seen Mt. Ver­
men who worked out at the Park
Tlfflin being the entertainers.
Jerry Johnson's.
a family prominent In the business non? We loved that.
for agricultural products is closed. Their decisions would not be gov­ would have lo go on relief If they I
Magnesium 1* also one of „„
the
world there. 1* of general enough
The infant son of Mr. and Mrs
Even a little county like Barry, thus erned by the Constitution or the didn't have this Job given at the I main ingredient* in the flashlight Menzo Turner fell from a couch
Ray Waters can sure fix a interest to pass on to our readers,
has a very definite interest in this equitable rules of human rights in Park, so he asked about the Ice I powder used by photographers. All one day last week and broke one of
f
"mean" display window—One look thru the Public Forum column.
question. The so-called industrial property but by a congress which skating rink* and when informed I those who have taken chemistry in hl, arms.
We can vouch for the responsi-1
PUBLIC ENEMIES
In and my old "zut" seems shabbier
of their condition said, "Well send high school are familiar with the
MLss Ruth F. Welssert relumed than it really is.
tycoons and business barons would is controlled from lhe White
billly of the writer who give* first
a man to supervise them anyway." brlsM colored rltboq. ot this mrt.l I। „„
on Monday from Plymouth where
hand Information concerning the : —■■■■■mwm————
not be hit by this proposed measure House. The Supreme court is the Bo. we have a man to supervise our wldch bum with « dqrtllnq white ,hr !t,,M ,„a produced , plMy
condition*
of
which
she
writes.
Stnoe
-r*
I j i~"
light
when
ignited
in
a
I
U4
„
Dave
Boyes
is
busier
titan
the
1.?!-.."
1
!!!
1
.
■
Butweo
with
the
awUUnce
ot
home
talent.
last
source
of
appeal
left
to
those
skating
rinks
Of
how
much
value
—rather the men employed by in­
her return to thl* country she and
I ~ L.
j,;,..
" " Tills is the stuff that forms
Lockhart of Nashville, quintuplets' nurse these days getting
dustry and others who have a part who feel that the traditional Amer­ that is. you know quite as well as burner.
S
7^ L_ Vt
LheulbB?*,s „,or ?°w me‘al- Frcim Will
off Battle
Bailie Creek.
Creek’ Community hall all sanded and pol­ her husband have lived In New York *“* Severance
“
-----In supplying them with the neces­ ican rights guaranteed by the Con­
It occurs to us that it would not flashlight flares to structural metal Miss Elizabeth Severance of Jack- ished and shined for the Commer­
sities of Mfe. A corporate surplus stitution of the United States have require any amount of brains on seems quite a gap; but not too great ,an .nd Leo Severance of Grand cial Club Fair.
To begin where I should. I must
U l-l 5 7~
start back to test summer's Euro- ^ON/Vr'
'L f0r chetnUu and Rapids were ciiled to this city by
Is a fund which helps to insure been violated—and a group within the part of those who are feeding B °"e-, ?
I lhe dMth of Andrew j
physicists to brldre
bridge.
Thought 1 had a good one on pean trip, which now seem* ages
continued activity and therefore the lAw Deal which has a consider­ at lhe public trough to realize, if nhvsielsta
Judge Clement Smith has set 9;0o Dorrance Trethric lhe oilier eve­ ago. I went all atone, after a rather.
continued employment. A surplus able voice in Federal affairs would they would stop to think, that the
public trough will dry up if the de­
o'clock Monday forenoon as the ning—saw him in the Jail, but I hasty decision that my husband
is not necessarily an idle fund or reduce this body to a cheering sec­ mands on those who fill the trough terial for this metal comes from the
time for beginning lo hear the guess he was Just trying to sell Jay made when he grew angry because,
hoarded money. Taking the props tion for New Deal philosophy
'
are excessive, ft also stems as if It brine wells at Midland where It is cases called on the old calendar some insurance
there was no way to get the money
nol------take—any
unusual
under- pumped to the surface In the form
which hi* mother left him. You
out of business through the surplus
After three years of trial, a wide would
------- —
„ —
--------- ---------«tandlno tn Irnnw
hllltncu rdA few more of these warm days see. the German government will |
tax to help pay government deficits spread conviction exists that the standing lo know thaf business re- I of a magnesium chloride solution— date back to 1852. The calling of
should bring the divot-diggers out not let any money out of the coun­
covery. which will put men lo work ' much after the fashion that ordiis one of the most unsound policies President, perhaps confused by the instcad of men on the dole, is pref- ! nary salt Is obtained. The chloride this calendar will be an important In force. Doctor Eddy will soon be try. and the most disgusting part of
event Ln lhe judicial history of this
magnitude of his responsibilities, erable.-------------------------------------------------[solution ts then treated lo isolate county.
yet proposed.
applying corrective measures to bad
slices and hooks sgatn.
Yet. the dole ts what Jim Farley i th® magnesium.
the artist, really needs it. but we
ha* listened to counsellor* who have
were not even allowed to give It to
• • •
The spring fair to be staged this flattered him Into thinking that he expects lo carry the next election '
THIRTY YEARS AGO
A group of local women were very' him as a present. After two yean
As yet Dow metal ts still in the
month by members of the Hastings 1* a new Moses so to speak, who with He figures that every man
f
much_ „„„„„„
Im pre»ed „„
with the personal-■ of writing back and forth, my hus­
well placed means forty votes and | experimental stage so far as comMr* Franklin D Roosevelt . band decided that he was not going
Commercial Club promises to be a might lead hl* troubled children he expects to have enough "well I merclal use is concerned It appar- Cross, has been put up in front of. ny
MulholLnd-. dru, .Wr. u u hand-, ,
■ to make Mr. Hitler a gift. .&lt;n one ot
most interesting affair. There is into a new social order; that all placed"
jently has great possibilities wherjomq when snn by dayll.hi. b« IU ,;,„d ho,. ,
couM
' us had lo use it In traveling in Ger­
Thu ts lhe nisi Ums In lbs l»&gt;- J”',’"!"1’1
1* •» Import­
great enthusiasm over lhe project who oppose "planned economy" are
X “ rtrtblnit .iwn al nlahl I d0 h„ ,uch . s„,
many.
IHClor
# ,
and individual merchants are put- self-seeking
reactionaries;
that lory of lhe United Slates that lhe
the interior of lhe sign 1* a blaze,
• • •
I spent every cent of II and even
never
before
March.
1933.
hod
there
"•5“ T1'1!” ”‘"1 °“‘ *
T&gt;'“ s ’I"" “T'ra
Ung forth much time and effort to
j Another unusual item
which
No1 managed to smuggle a little out1
blood-nd gldw.
earn.™ could do an mjualfc
make their displays worth while. । been any truly worth while social
passed across our desk this week wuiunl.
1
(through some diplomatic friends)
Friday evening lhe Roosevelt I Tommy
i Impulses in the heart* of lhe Amer­
i was a type specimen book of 1882,
but
when I traveled to Poland I
Club of Middleville will give a ban-1
'
• • •
। the property of John Olney of the
had to use my dollars. My visit lo I
ican people.
^al town I w,th Oermw a"d France menCOLEMAN C. VAUGHAN.
| American Tjpe Founders Company. £!!2J!LK £ .
Poland, with very dear friends, was
But
American
people
do
not
like
W
!
**
P
re,enl
»c*ng
each
other
along
lhe
Rhine,
। Those who talk about the crazy and
In the death of Hon. Coleman Cand discuss the taxation question . n*ly and Ethiopia threatening the only bright spot of lhe whole
distorted type designs which have
on Tnuria.v Hov
DON’T let u» work .ill
’ trip and even that was depressing
Vaughan. of St. Johns, that city coercion any belter than that hardy
.pur? wor,d P®ace ln the "in-baked high­ If I let myself think of ail the
S^dPUic°nthi*hCb&lt;2krkeTh^nold chnscfl Marlon Matthews' ’intemt
not only loses an outstanding citi­ group of patriots who staged tlie
. iime'designersldldbJm&gt;t aboul^en-™d
* lands of Abysinnia. Japan and1 frightful poverty there. Krakow
Boston
Tea
party
as
a
gesture
of
zen. but the stale a very competent
ing. but let us work to
Russia growling over the form of is a fascinating old town and I was
, contempt for governmental tyranny.
China to the East, one of the moat
। thing to a piece of type that could
The Thornapple Gas i Electric momentous questions of the mo­ there Just after lhe death of Pilsud­
They do not like to parade about
be done—they foreshadowed it and
ski. when all the Polish school chllspired by honesty and the public
—Jack Min^r.
| they lengthened It; they outlined CO. have rented R. I. Hendershott's ment to Michigan tat “What in dren were being sent to Krakow to!
good
Having very capably served in goore step at the dictates of a
hardware .store and will soon move 'ell" is Hank Greenberg going
,
it.
underscored
it
and
draped
it
with
1
1 view his body and I saw plenty of
their new quarters.
Michigan as Secretary of State, for supreme commander, they will not
do?"
all manner of cupld wings, leaves. into
pitiful human beings.
The Hastings Women's Club has
the past several year» he was at be easily regimented into arbitrary
; flowers and intricate spiral convoI shall never again be quite the
engaged the Ballsbury orchestra
। lulions. in fact, disregarding con­
GLASS CREEK.
the head of the Building At Loan and experimental plans, they will
same after the visit to Germany
Z with Abbey Rose Wood soprano solhev built
not take order* unless they are •
------------------------- - ventional line altogether they
i)_&lt;..
oL.. for
Sunday visitors at Fred Otis’ were Many people have wanted me to I
*_r next Sturday eyeing
Division of the Secretary of Slates,
i is
Chas. Erway of Battle Creek and write some of lhe thing* I isw'
'convinced that lhe leaders know taxpasers' money i* being dlstrib-, up letters from such forms as wire.
•
March
17
at
St.
Rose's
.hall.
They
office at the time of his death.
uated solely for political purposes , boards, logs and ribbons.
aiarcn u
. . hope not only to add another fine, Norman Erway and Harold OU* of there but I can't do it I am. how-1
. - Locating in St. Johns in 1889 as where they arc going and only then under the camouflage of legitimate I
, Kalamazoo and Elmer Laubeugh of ever, ready to shriek when I read
if they are convinced that the new positions —Grand Ledge Independ- :
Yet. along with all of these bi-1 entertainment, but to raise &gt; sum |’ Hastings.
editor of the Clinton Counly Re­
of those American tourists who
ent.
.•
path
docs
not
mean
an
Infringe'
«...
zarre
designs
were
a
few
faces
,
publican. he became keenly Inter­
cpme back and tell us how beautiful
------------j
which
arc
essentially
the
same
as
’
-------u&gt;
m.k
“
HUUnq.
“
tau.
”
"S
' Kalamazoo were Sunday guests at and quiet It b in Germany. They
ested in many movements for civic ment of their personal liberties.
General Motors company, the big । (he best types in use today. In fact |
Erway's
For many year* this country has (automobile makers, have a system , it would probably be more exact to more beautiful.
sit Ln the cafes and walk on the
j. Ray **
’
and community betterment. Pos­
Pity him as we do. the Crn«&lt;• Mrs Dr Weaver of Charlotte sec.
The community meeting at lhe boulevard.) and it I* quiet and very
needed
an
awakening,
an
apprecia(
of savings for employes under say that some of the beat designs'
sessed of splendid business ability.
very clean. They have plenty of \\ .ilk Somnambulist has no one
which
latter make detxtaita
deposits each jc.
v mere
.„v,v modification* of ‘. Women's Clubs was tn lhe city ???.
“
•■'th the latter-make
. of today «.
are
att
^
p
&lt;
^
d
lhe
young
Mr. Vaughan was president of two tion of and confidence tn its own ’month from
the poor devil* cleaning streets, so to blame Imt himself Sleep-walk­
wages.
After
these older types.
institutions and democratic phil-'1—-----------------------------------------*~ , five I apparently
as
ui
all
life.The
x&gt;und,
Ballln
8l
?
n
Tuesday
to
hear
Mrs
Ballingion
V*
flUp
»r
Bnd
why
wouldn't
it
be
clean.
I
lived
ing pedestrians gamble with
banks tn St Jbtins at lhe lime of
. ,
-------. ol¥ttloIl
j,u.i
— o
-•,
U' apparently, ns in a
w._ _____________ _____ year* a. &gt;w
division
of the
money
Ismoney »
Mr chet 'Eng'ehart save the pro- with a member of an embassy and
his death. With lhe late Congress-, 0M’Ph&gt;
There has been loo much | Inade interest of six per cent being e*t elements invariably manage to
ol
‘ rteSMv^Rmw^’ the
1 , gram which was much enjoyed.
my acquaintances are of many va- I death.
। S^est ox Mrs. Clement Smith.
nun fWdnry .M wvnrnl St, John, •‘■'"'“i
&lt;«
allowed
This Is for men getting survive.
While it is true that pcdcstri*
| Mr. Robl. Bchrickcr ot Hickory rleties—Catholics. Protestants. Jews.i:
men he wna quite heavily miere.l- lhc “eademle Mjcululs anil lhe les* than (4.000 per year These last •r
g^,
" ‘•r
. I
FORTY YEARS AGO.
Corners was a week end guest at some very rich people, some very | an* have the right-of-way
over
„...
....
1 cha*. whlttemor'*.
rt In western Umber.
, aileuante radleah. Perhaps the sleht are given bonuses This week the
poor ones and many musicians
1 autos making turns at mtersccother employes got back twice as
| and
Mr. "
and
Mrs Cha*. Whittemore
Whittemore
Mr. vanahan enjoyed a wide ae•l,’,
SO'emmenl aequlrers^
\^rm±.
^,l
'^U’en?7;|
V,;rr
”d M^Cha*.
l
|A
n M?Bw7k
rdHn
rA^,L
^'
,onw'’ 5X1,SE; ,'k*^
'!£ "»"•
"•«&gt;
•fflra'i‘1 «!■&gt;»
much as they had deposited There I jMLO
I
w",a rT*aa&gt; n«Snt;and Katie called on the former's when I returned I had acquired the
t
.
qualnlanee IhraiKhout lhe slate
dulalorial power ot reachlns were 14.389 of the men and they
i^n^n^^M^
re-eleclcd sex- mother. Mrs. Amy Whittemore, al habit of whispering until it took I
’ r rrr'o,&gt;’ U'"’R eng­
drew (0 733.139. Yells about "soul­
r “2°Vrr ,T.“r
^lu,n Sunday.
aiuaered u&gt; him by his many noble •'"&gt; ]“ ™"» ““ *“»'
P’i?11 “L
LouU Havena spent several days ine days lo speak of political events wa'*s&lt; iicilner of these truths
less corporations ’ are now in order
If you'ro downhearted, think Lnrt,rur«n
of —
state
qualities al heart and nilnd. and strongholds
"
- * — and -even
- local
I met people i can afford much cointort after
from ail good communists.—Edwy of the future generation. They
fvrrt’nn hHn7\rBu h
B.f.n
U,t wwk at ‘ Salesman's school ip in a normal voice
who had experienced ghastly things an accident ha* occurred
to them lhe notice of his death government* will provlcl? the de­ C Reid. Allegan Gazette.
Fred Bush of Kalamazoo attended , Grand Rapids
I sired stimulant. If so. the New
por ynur
airrl
to our radio Jokes.
w^~J&gt;.fvMrS’ C*rOl,ne ROb’' Mrs
BrUb0 ■nd Mr and and I listened to facta and not goscame as a distinct shock
sip. I was so nervous when I got1
. . .
*
, ’’ ';
,,r air' •
Deal will not have dealt in vain.
WISDOM FROM IOWA
K
.. iMr*- M**111 Ga*e» Of Lansing were out of there that I was thin and.
b" 1 way* bf!urt C'vitWith all those taxes. It seems 1 tJ^n\nE^!nq?!7n^Z
5unda
y
&lt;uesta
al
Clyde
warren'a
The other day an Iowa farmer
couldn't sleep for weeks. That was: "W Die street!
LETS RETURN TO AMERICA!
[been
an
employee
in
the
Whip
facHarold
Sharp
of
Grand
Rapids
Washington not only la, but baa.
came to Chicago to market 60 head
. -------------wnnrtf*J r^’Xunl fnTn
J*'1 and M*“ Es,her Erway of Hastings my lovely vacation that my husband
Never did this country rally bet- writing a spnffig editorial. Then wej of yearling steers in an interview I the national capital.
won-­ .
HENDERSHOTT.
such a won
Monday morning for Belding where, were week end guests at Roy Er- had thought would be sucn
appearing in a local business jour- I
derful---------------rest—for—
me. Nothing
N " ' af-'
Mrs. Cha*. Hendershott was en‘
happened to remember that we nal.
The new tss bill Is said to | she ha* secured employment in the way's.
expressed
grave
concern
over
than tor Frar.kUn D. Roosevelt u
ZnUI?
..
w.
1 Mrs Sara Erway to suffering with fected me personally, but all thov tertained Sunday by her daughter
tried lhe thing three time* last year lhe possibility of discontinuance of have robbed Huey Long of soma ।
he assumed office three years ago.
Died—On Sunday. March 8. al I a bad cold, ail hope for her speedy friends were worried and miserable Clare In Hastings to honor of her
ot his thunder. Not all of it.
and after each attempt wlnter-ltke the branch railroad that serves his
and I could not Ittten to such birthday
Others guests were Mr.
her home in lhe second ward. Mrs recovery
though—he still his those lav­
things day In and day* out and not Hendershott and
the
Wilbur
gust* descended on us. So we have community
1
Phoebe
Boorman
wife
of
Henry
I Tbe many frtenda or M„
ender
shirts.
If
It the
MIC road
IV«U L* discontinued, he
aav ;
surar.ee and charm. The pres... the
a,tfr * ton« illness at lhe Barlow are sorry to hear of her feel as if I were going to pieces. Shanti family.
come to the conclusion that there .mid land values in lhe locality will
pubhr the mlnorttyXpartle* and i
Their
cultural
life
Is
a
Joke
and
Mr,
*nd
Mr*.
Floyd Garrison and
Mr .n’rt
tr-h. z, —
k
,,lne“ Bt the hOme °f hCT father
rhow wife
ts evidently some hoodoo about giv-| be depreciated by as much as &gt;50 per
their
musical
world
Ls
so
bad
that
congress did ercrTthing possible to
Mrs. Ernie Matteson were Sunday
Mr and Mrs^Cha* O'born have where she came to care tor her
....
.j,.,, i4 9uipK
catterr at Narry Wlittworth's in thegive him a c&amp;aHce.
■priwume Theretoee. hwvlns had
bu&gt;l"r“ m™ and termer. him for divorce, lie'll probably : moved into a house tn lhe serond; mother?---------------------■ Week* district
Mr*. Matteson
’Vhi.
-.11
.A
I A very interesting meeting of the can consider themselves lucky.
.
would get together to support the have a hard time remarrying; no
Liberals saw him as a leader who
All this comes from one who ajayed over night and Monday to
sufficient ol thq misplaced arctie' |lnf
i n T-h’Li^i’,p.,lCV’n
111 he M&gt;,d «» Gla*.s Creek Clothing group was
bride
wants
to
wash
a
yard
full
might push through their reforms. climate to which- wc have been sub- [ That may seem to be a small and
•tarrh .. J
! neld at lhe home of Mr* Lancia loved Oermany.snd you will never afelsl Mrs. Whitworth with lhe
of dishes.
know what the disappointment was
aociahsU saw tn him a chance to
'
‘
satisfy
lhe
claims
meeting
will
be
held
with
Mr*
jetted of late, wc will take no unimportant incident But It t* emlo me lo realize that now I need nol to report that Mrs. Preston is ui a
implant some of their own political elienee. unlll the sn-:&gt; hud.
11 Pearl Newland
I blemallc ot a problem of the mmosl
tv sad again because I can't live critical condition.
I The offirer. nf Barry Counly Law
_________ -tar
H2.V00.000
phikwoph; into OU.’ government
, ,,
,
...
Importance—a problem that is dupKlk
there. It wa* my dream to go back. | Mrs.
and Order League wlll meet tomorYANKEE NFRINGS.
Mrs Chas Van Vranken and
actual.) siwwuig un tlie l,ew ' heated in a thousand different sec­
Don't forget the church .service*, but it is,over You say that you do Mr* Basil Hayward of Alto enterwarm breezes arc drifting up from i nons Of thl* country In lhe pioneer keep ou caring fnr tils hogs. He । row afternoon lo take active meason whom one could depend to curb lhe south and the usual seasonal! days, no agency contributed as much |
nol understand why they do not talned with a family dinner Sunday
evidently can't be bothered with ure* to secure local option in Barry Sunday School at 2. preaching at 3. rtop and realtoc what another war, at the Van vrankin home in honor
Federal spending, to stop the ex­ touch of wanderlust has developed It0 *hc development of this country small chans-.
. county
Rev R. A. Houghton, pastor.
I William Bitgood from Nashville will mean to them and I can only of Mr and Mrs. Maurice Johncock
a&lt; did
ellrl the
iha rallwtart
Ann we have
hira not
nnf
pansion of departments and bur­
as
railroad And
to an acute iniensity-*and even j ye: reached the time when we can
P U.11 . \RS AOOj
. I to living with-Perry VanTuyls and answer you that the people have (of Delton
They will make their
eaus and to inspire the confidence
n.E
11
C° opcn,fd tlKlr working on lhe Yankee Springs nothing to do with it. In Poland it home with lhe groom's father. Will
then proceed with .catitlpn.
I get along without the rails. They re­
'new clothing store on Jefferson1 project.
of business by balancing the budwa* lhe same The people are be- johncock. west of Delton.
main our preeminent form ot transStlrrtl
' Mr* perry VanTuyl is having a ing taxed to pay for arms and the . Remember the Ladies' Aid March
| port—cheapest, most efficient, widqj
Un Ulde experience with lumbago.
LET B KEEP CLEAR
navf JW
newspapers are Ailed With war 19th at the home of Mrs. Warren
Possibly this many sided aspect of
। &lt;u
est Jn
in scope They
They have
no nval
rival ln
in
J mXS nJ’.
1 M1M Junr Judd 13
‘n propaganda. Don't you see. that it! Brogan.
Armies are on the march again I moving heavy goods—machinery.
the president accounts for the fact
burned Merchant hotel on Creek Ki*t Dairy. Hasting*
is the only thing you can expect, Albert Brill wa* in Rockford
livestock,
grain
Yet.
during
the
last
in
Europe.
Both
sides
oi
the
Rhine
that at the present -moment, at
' Mr- and Mrs
w Johnson were from the system of government? Monday with lhe Rural Fire Truck
ten years, railroads have found it
t?^r -n 1 Barr&gt; i001^ c*,led t0 ®°ulh Bfnd- Ind - hy Ute The capitalists everywlierc are lhe board to see a fire truck demon­
least half of lhe people In the are bristling with soldiers. War Is necessary to discontinue thousands
ought to have a new jail. The | death of Mrs. Johnson's brother
same, and there you have Capital- tratlon.
United Stale- no longer have con­ by no mean* a certainty but the sit­ of miles of branch line, because
•'",
?
YBnk*
S du. Ism tn Ito extreme form-Fascism. I Josephine Romig from the Striker
,
,
,
.
fidence tn him or his poheie. tn uation is serious. If th? worst docs they could not be made self-sustain-. , ,
the county At the next election the ( No. 3 hejd a meettng tost Saturday Hitler has been supported by the' district was the guest of Mrs. Franmg
i find tt the putii to Jutrca.
spite of the fact that Uidustry and happen lat's hope that America
stee) interaata always. Wages are ces Hendershott Sunday. They went
These lines went out of business I
MARCH
lower and the coal of living ha* tn-1 to the meeting of Sunday School
sericulture are at least momen­ -keeps her head this time and under because unregulated carriers made
creased steadily. The figures they (workers In the afternoon at the
tarily on the uptrend and more no circumstances Joins in the it impossible for tlie railroads lo
give on unemployment are very to- downtown church. We enjoyed hava U1p uj i chase a piano for the school
people than ever before are re­ squabble. Last . time we entered un­
Bittie creek and Chicago In tlie
potoon suntec aroma to be the aceurate but the greatest source of ln« mim Romig in Sunday school
ceiving salaries or subsidies from der the mutakdp delusion that we
Kt ilT0*11 r‘ooad
bush ,he ***are BhCT on
employment has been because of, with us.
the government. He has tried to be were saving the world for Demo­
u ’ ^s“fr "nd I YBnkM Spring project. Borne of lhe munition factories, which have
we hope hl* effort* may be success- lhem got too ctaae to it and you worked day and night. They make i
a liberal with the liberals, a social- cracy. The net accompllsiimenl was
DO I'D CORNERS.
every boy and girl serve one year
Mr. and Mrs. John Houghtaiing.
an
appalling
loss
of
hujnan
life
and
Th.
J
J
I
should
see
how
they
took
About
100
tet with the socialist* and a conThe Baptist* expect to dedicate,
Bre .. worv
in Uielr Labor service before they Mrs. cora Weatman. Mrs. Mae Qari,
asrvatlve with the conservatives, in property, staggering debts and th"
thrIr new church the last Bunday. Mr and Mrs M
Maae Wfre
are
25.
When
some
one
to
sent
and
Mr.
Will lauch attended Mrs.
attempting to please all, he has replacement of the Kaiser by compete on an equitable basis They
“'Mr*1* Ma?th-rr
‘m*?*1’ Kalamazoo to vtoil their daughter.
Harold lauch'* funeral at Charlotte
went out of business because local
Mrs. Mary T Lathrop wlll lec- Mrs L T Gardner
Mell* Hiller and hu tanaucl
.................
serve his year, they give his position Monday. Mr. lauch formerly lived
merchants ano farmers rouzht
for
Hire
on
temperance
in
thl*
city
this
’
«7i
to a new fellow, and then count----------.... ________________
In lhe neighborhood.
All extend
tn spite of Its professions of lib­ Nazi. No! This lime let's keep our' temporary advantage at the c»-vnse
Thurtoay evening
I
NOB TH EAST CARLTON.
that as a reduction of untfnploy- sympathy.
erality. ths New Deal has exhibited heads. If Europe can't settle her of permanent stability, and,did not
Bad roads do not deter people 1
Mr. and Mrs Seymour Olmstead menu Oh. it to all so horrible that
Harry Waters of this place died
g definitely autocratic spirit.
It own troubles, certainly the United Sjve ,lhe ra|lroad* adequate support.
from coming to Hastings
, attended lhe funeral of a nephew. I dislike the reminder of it and yet, Saturday al ten o'clock. All extend
States can have little to add
Prxpe.-ous town* gradually
, turned to gho.„ 0( (htU Jormer
From the stone now on the Cletu* Lcparti. at Grand Rapid*, I nevei aHm able to run away from sympathy
has attempted to "crack-down" on states can nave uttie to add
ground wc should judge Mr Parker i Friday.
tha subtoci for I think we can have I Mr. and Mrs Norris Bergman of
atMcnling minorities and lo brand
-- I selves great sums tn taxes were lost
intend* having a .•ubstanlial founMr. and Mra. Sealer ot Haaltogs something similar happen right . Battle Creek visited at H. BergBut then what is a little money to c6unly *nd municipal governcrtUcs as unpatriotic; 41 Uk* at­
itation for hto new hotel .
visited Mr and Mr* A- M. DecMr here If wc art nol cafeful
' man's Sunday.
n°“tempted to array class against brt.rta «««&gt;. when our nauqnal I Km’ ",&lt;1 ,rop71’'
Eld L O Moore will deliver a ' Sunday evening.
We had a nice vacation in the1 Mrs. Silvia Lara be? .spent Bunlecture before the W. C T if. at
Mr. and Mr* Scott Lydy vulied fafl. motoring around through Vtr- {day In KaUmasoo at Harry Laraata**; it has done nothing to re- d&lt;U la quins up al IM raw ar
The loaa larger rpoXe lar milmuuiH. nil
rhe star schoalhouw Wednesday, Mr. and Mrs. Eiwyn Hayward ahd ginta and then spending a few days, befs tt being her nth birthday,
the grip of patronage from (430 OCX) every hour. 24 hours a day. liotu of cXUeiu when he pointed to
evening. March 17.
‘ baby al Delton. Sunday.
in Washington. Wa were enthus-1 Mr launch la visiting hto son ot
federal system—ou tlx con* for the six working day* of the Ithe need loT maintaining and aun' The American public ha* found a
Happy George intend* to hie him ’ Mr. and Mrs. Tyrell have been tastlc about Washington and 11 Charlotte for a few dav».
week.
| f«rlu,« our greatest single industry. clianne) to future prosperity.-—
t0.
*ith ,he northward quite HI. but are better al Uito writ­ natty felt proud that we bad mkIi ( Don t forget the P. T. A. al Ute
the railroad —Unidentified Clipping
flight of lhe bird*.
| Inga City, for l had not known it would1 schootBotue Friday night.

jane
A Quotation

:r«„&gt; S

\DT^\'n

J™

�BASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH U. IBM

BOLES FEATURED IN FILM

SOUTH SHULTZ.
QUIMBY.
Mr. and Mrs. Elam Crook of WeiKenneth and Bernard Oates spent
The rdle of "Jim Kearney" in Parcome Comers visited Mr. and Mrs
ktnotmt'* ne« musical romance. the week end with Mr. and Mrs. William Rltsman. Wednesday.
Forest
Smith
of
Cloverdale.
•Rose of the
Rancho," which
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Kellogg and I
Rev. Harry flalisbury of BelNearly every house in this neigh­
comes to tlie Strand Theater. U
family visited the former's parents i
: PRAIRIE EXTENSION GROUP.
dihf to Fretch on Thurs­
well suited to the handsome sing­ borhood have some of the family in Dimondale Sunday, bringing Mr.
The Prairie Baterulon group of
ing actor. John Boles, who is co­
Kellogg
home to spend a few weeks
day Night
Middleville met March 4th with
Mr. and Mr»- Harry Mlsener of
•
"
UPPER CLABBMXN WILL | The monthly nwe^tng of the Mrs. William Brog for our third and starred with Gladys swarthout. lhe Kalamazoo and Mr and Mrs Les- with them.
Mr» Myrtle Castalaln and Charles
| Barry county HolinaM Association, fourth Riaon in Mwlng. we could
TA.KK A FLlltG AT
Boles, tn lhe picture, essays the £ Bonneville and Lorraine and visited at Nile Castelein's Wednes­
ma eame Sunday to spend lhe
wlll convene at the Free Methodist not me&lt;H for ^ur third lesson as part of a government agent, sent to
POLITICS
day with their parents, and help day and helped celebrate BiUy's sec­
church on Thursday
Thurodav evening.
evening, Mar. moal of the members were mow-1'Southern S^yomia
California lo
to’break
break ui
up a
ond birthday.
luck "dmner' helm 'wrvedat1 band of tand-grabbing desperadoes | them celebrate their fifty-fourth
Mrs Fred Bldelman of Detroit U
luck dinner being served at who
preyln&lt;
BpanUI, wedding anniversary and Mrs. Ken­
district ,.—
----------------- ---- --------KALAMAZOO COLLEGE
visiting relatives here.
yon's birthday.
—Ionia district. will deliver the
..
w.rkl war Boles
INVITES DELEGATES message, Rev. Salisbury la a very Our leaders. Mrs. Lottie Cridler P®"'.
Irene Shellenbarger of Hope Cen­
and Mrs. Minnie johruon. capably Iah*
JTiitlwK
American
youngsters can be;
ter
spent
Sunday
with
Evelyn
Hom.
talented preacher with a message of
instructed us as to lhe tyi* of maM
H&amp;atlnga Students to Join the true Gospel.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hom at­ thankful. Think of the trials of 1
tended n birthday dinner in Has­ the French school kiddles in naming
Rev. Salisbury will conduct the terial suitable for dress to be made. I American army.___
Those From Indiana
।
all
the
premiers
tings Saturday nlghr.
v—• — t0
make a rol,pd ht,,n: 10
regular quarterly —
meeting
of •the
OBITUARY.
and Illinois
This community was naddened to 1
Free Methodist chureh on Friday make looped button holes; and first
If this auto-buying spree con­
William C. soft of Charles and hear of the passing of Harry Wa­
The younger generation will have and Saturday evenings and two! fitting of our dress.
tinues. there'll be a building boom
------ *— on
— Sunday.
___ -— -March
------ - —
IU fling al politics when lhe model | services
20. 21 ' we had been anxiously awaiting Elvina Brown, was born in Lee ters Saturday. He had many friends
lhe surprise, which had been prom­ township. Calhoun Co.. Feb. 18. here who extend heartfelt sympathy in garages, anyhow.
Republican nominating convention . and 23. AU are invited.
_____ . . .----------------' Ised for Ihia meeting by our lead-1 1881. •“!. On March 19. 1889. he came to the bereaved family.
Is held at Kaiamasoo college. Sat-j
with his parents and located on the
OBITUARY.-- ers. Mrs. Cridier and Mrs. Johnson. ~*,u
Thad Cook spent tlie past week
unlay. March 21. High school stu­
Elmer E. Gregory was born In , and were rewarded by having MLs* ( present farm south of Freeport, with his daughter at Bronson.
dents from Michigan. Indiana and
Hastings
Twp.
Barry
Co.
Sept.
6..'Bullis, our new Home Demonstr a- where he has since resided until his
Paul Cager of Mancelona was a
Illinois wlll be invited to take part
death
March
2.
1936.
at
the
age
of
dinner guest of O. E. Kenyon Fri­
as state delegates, and Hasting* 1865. and departed this life, March Uon agent, spend several hours In
fifty-five years and thirteen days. day.
High Intends to send het full share
We will meet March 13lh nt the On Dec. 5. 1914 he became a mem­
Lorraine Sonnevllle spent Satur­
to voice the sentiments of the months and 28 days. He passed
younger Republicans in thia part of away at the home ot his brother, home of Mrs. Minnie Johnson lo ber of Harmony Lodge No. 146. f. day night with Omagcne .Garrison
of Cloverdale.
Michigan. Forty-two Juniors and Henry in Hastings He was the son complete lhe fitting of our dresses
tlve member until illness prevented
John Mlnzey. who ha* been
renlor* from the various history 1of DeWitt C. and Mary A. Greg- —Sec.. Blanche Crldler.
his attending On April 8. 1911 he spending the winter with his sister,
----------------- -----------------------. . . that' * one reason why so
classes of Mr. Logan. Mr. Rein- 1ory, both of whom have preceded !
was united In marriage to Irma B. Minn Kenyon, went to Mancelona
RUTLAND CENTER GROUP
hardl and Mr Taylor have expre.ns- :him in death. He leaves lo mourn
mnnv people “Dine Out” al
nfU1 meftlng of the Rutland - Munson and to this union two chll-. Friday to spend some time with his
ed their desire to .participate.
■his low. three brother! RHery of
lhe Trio. Other reasons arc
dren were born, Merton J . who died' son Gary- and family.
Leroy;
Jamea
Dof
Monroeville.
1
C
|
Ub
W(U
he)(1
wlth
M
r*
From tlie time the delegates ar­
cheerful service . . . pleas­
in infancy and Margaret M . who
Henry
and one slater, rrnlnll MMthe„. Friday. March 6.
Mabel Hom and some friends
rive until the Inst speech is given Ohio;
1
at night, the day promises to be Alice Miller of Hastings, also a lor an n|| ^ay meeting. There were with the wife, one brother. George, from Battle Creek spent Saturday
ant surrounding* and rea­
full of exciting events. After regia- 1number of nephews and nieces. AI Aeven members and one visitor two sisters. Mrs Scott Allerdlng of evening with her parents. Mr. nnd
sonable prices.
relMng man. yet a large
wo a dUcuMlon Carlton and Mrs. Win. T. Pearce of Mrs Fred Horn.
tratlon, the convention will get un- Qu'et1
Fred and Rose Peake and Rena
der way In the college gym which 1number of friends mourn hB going. aboul what we would do for lhc Lansing, one nephew, one niece and
L-T5mber ?f
Achievement
Day Project
The a host of relatives and friends are Whipple spent Sunday with their
will be converted Into a Republl- •
Special Luncheon, 30c
can nominating booth. The rend- 1Holiness Tabernacle In Hastings, a leadera prf3enied the ie.wm on cut­ left to mourn the passing of a dear sisters nt Cloverdale,
Soup.
Meat.
Potatoes,
maklng the rolled one
Ing of the platform aa drawn up by ;consistent Christian in all his ways . Ung
funeral was held In the above hem. Several different kinds of col-1 "God's will not ours."
SOUTH BOWNE.
the platform committee will be an TTie
'
Bread ami Butter,
’ P &gt;»rs were cut and illustrated. Each
outstanding feature of the mom- ^
; UrC1 £tUrda,y' M?rch ’
Mr. ' and Mrs. Danny Zook and .
Side Dish, Drink—
WEST
HOPE.
jhCr?&lt;ls!£r'
member made a rolled hem and
ing. There will undoubtedly be '
the former's mother. Mrs Zook oi
{Coffee, Tea or Milk)
He was burled in Strlkhome with them. The
Hooray! Spring is on the way! We Clarksville, were Sunday guests of
proposals and counter-proposals un- officiated.
1
____
| dreaica w(rP men fitted and sug- saw a robin and Hubert McCallum Elmer Shaffer.
til finally a platform is devised up- er
1 cemetery.
shaved hl* beard Some foliage. Hu­
on which all lhe delegates agree.
|
gestlons
exchanged
as
to
how
each
Mr. and Mrs. John Mishler and
PODUNK.
SUNDAY DINNER
bert. The robin seemed to have ton- Marylln Martin of Grand Rapid,
Temporary officers will be named
one
eould
finish
her
dress.
,
.
Mr. and Mrs. Abe Hayward of
silltls but otherwise he was O. K.
Complete Chicken
and then permanent convention ofvisited Sunday at Will Mishler's.
fleers selected. Just as is done in the 'Orangeville were vis'.to.s at his slsMr. and Mrs. Stanley Kimrne and
Quite a few from this vicinity '
Dinner___ w_50c
real convention.
daughter Sheila arc back in their attended the Logan Community
Sunday visitors at Geo. Ransom's
Steaks
cut /rom branded
After the noon luncheons when ,
home after having stayed during club meeting Friday night
beef . . . prepared
ipeechfs by tlie various campaign of Kalamazoo. Maude Schornp, Mrs
the coldest weather with her par­
Mrs. Minnie Bouck visited Wed­
" °
managers for their particular canparents. Mr. and Mrs. Adrian John­ nesday with
her sister-in-law.
QUIMBY GROUP.
“zf* you like it"
D. E. Fuller and sister. Mr. and
dldates will be made, a short ses- :
Clara Watts, who Ls in very poor
Mrs L. J. Matthews ot Hasting*1 Tlie Extension class of the Qulm- son.
»ion of lhe convention will be held. 'and Chas. Smith ot Delton.
‘I by Group
met al the------------------------home of Mrs.
Harold Springer finished bean health.
------- --------------------nnd then more speeches and bally­
Mrs. Lydia Porritt ha* been carBom lo Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Hummel Wednesday. March 4. The threshing at Bert Nctkland's Tueshooing will be in order A dance to I Coleman. March 9. a daughter. | lewon wa* collars and necklines and day. This Job was started in Jan-1 *»»K lor her sister. Jennie Pardee,
which all college and high school Congratulations.
। sixteen members were present also uary and blocked roads prevented who ha* been sick with the flu for
delegates will be Invited will follow
Karmes Bros. Phone 2137
Mrs. Mary Caln visited her five visitors including Miss Bullis. Its finish. Mr. Newland is one of | l!,e past week. Her sister Gladys
Lhe meeting.
Rachel at Lansing Bat- Home Demonstration Agent for the few farmer* around here to try ;was a,so w*th her. Mr and Mrs
Slate St. and Michigan Ave.
The highlight of tlie evening wlll daughter,
'
urday.
| Barry and Allegan counties. Next soy beans and raised both black and Will Cosgrin of-Lowell spent Sun-1
be the banquets, when the enm&lt;tay afternoon al Miss Pardee's.
|
Mrs. Jennie Loehr who Is spend- meeting will be the afternoon of white.
nnlgn managers will further extol Ing
,
lhe winter in Jackson with her' March 18. at the home of Mrs. Allie
;f(iriricrs on the Bert McKibbin i--------- -- ------ —--------------------------------------lhe abilities of their respective can- son Elmer, was calling on home Munn.—Mrs. Clara Gillespie, rcnnd Francis Gorham road cleaned
__
____
lildnler. Following the banquets folks Saturday and Sunday.
porter.
it out Thursday and Friday Mr. Al- ‘
lhe delegates wlll reconvene in lhe
Mrs. Gerald Smith and Jack Co— -----lerdlng went through with the plow,
nominating hnll to make their final tant
are qn lhe rick list.
,
ASSYRIA GROUP.
so
now
they
are
out
of
their
con■
selections. The nominees will be
Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Colant en-' The Assyria Home Economics Exnotified of their election* by tele­ tertained with a birthday party tension Group met nt the home ot flnement.
A bouquet of spring violets lo the •
gram.
Sunday for Mrs. Cotant'* mother. Mr*. Evelyn Tasker. Wednesday aft- Stony Point correspondent who
Tlie whole affair from start to ;
Thone present were Fanny Smith, emoon. March 4. 1936. with nine paihled such excellent word pic-;
finish promises to be lively and dy­ Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Colant and member*
-------- ------and iwur
four vuiiors
visitors present.
present. ‘—rs of the old-fashioned and mod-1
namic with no opportunity for it !Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Cotant.
I The
The lesson
lesson on
on c""collars
and
necklines
‘
■
— *"«•
-1-"—I schools.
:o lapse into bofedom. The Hastings
was given by Mr* Addie Leonard
students are anxious to attend and
Mrs.
Anna
Collison and Mrs. —
Lil- ■
STATE
-.™.- ROAD.
and Mrs. Gladys Brown, followed
---------------------------------------------It Ls hoped that It will be possible
Mrs. Hugh pettengili and Mr. nnd by a demonstration on how to cut Ile Woodman attended a shower
d[ffere'nt"style'coilixs
”
'After
a^brlef
«
,wn
Mrs Wart*
Wade Tnwn*
Towne nf DrlDel- 1
to accommodate nil of them, but if Mrs
tra Cheeaeman nf
a I ven hv Urs
of (lattla
Battle Creek
the enrollment becomes too large, and Mrs. Dora Coleman of Rutland, recreation period led by Mrs. Mabel1 lon Bl her home in honor of Mrs. '
it
may
necessary
lo —
limit the
........
■* be
— -----------J —
---- spent cSunday with Mrs. Janet Pot- PufpnfT. members had their dresses 1 Maurice Johncox on Friday after­
number of delegates sent from each I &gt;^tiani
criticised by those present. By the ‘ noon,
school.
Andn
A
Andrew Kennedy and Eldon Mat­ next meeting all dreases must be
‘ housewife here put down dill
thews are making maple sugar.
finished. Achievement day Is to be pickles in an old-fashioned small- |
OBITUARY.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Travis have field May 1. 1936. Officer* for next mouthed stone Jar last fall Upon
Ella Trask was born in Barry
opening
them Saturday she found I
rounty. Nov. 11. 1859. nnd died in moved from the Fisher farm, to the year's work elected as follows: them completely dissolved into a
Sowcrby farm in Irving.
Leader*. Mr*. Mabel Hartom nnd
Hailing*. March 4. al the age of
The babies of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mrs. Marian Green; Alternate. Mrs. thin green slime except for a trans- I
77 year*. She .•■pent her early years I
Chairman. Mr*. parent bright green skin of one cu­
with her parents. Mr and Mrs. j O'Connor and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Evelyn Tasker;
Kennedy have been under the doc­ Alice Thomas; Vice-Chairman, Mrs. cumber and a few dill seeds. She
Howel) H. Trask, in this county. In
Glrnna Jones;
Secretary.
Mrs. accidentally spilled a little of the I
lhe year 1880 she was married to tor's care with whooping cough.
It seem* good to sec bare ground Florence
Newberry;
Recreation foul-smelling mess on her dress ।
Fred Wykom and they mjide their
once again, and one robin has been Leader. Mrs. Caroline Ta*kcr.—Secy. and holes appeared in the fabric'
home In Grand Rapid*. Mr. Wykom
exactly as if battery acid had
died In iflOfl TO this union-two chil­
CO Al 8 GROVE GROUP
| touched it. Can any of our chem-1
dren were. bom. Harry and Waller,
HIND5 CORNERS.
The fifth meeting of the Coat, j ists explain this?
fjhorlly after lhe death of Mr. Wy­ Last week's Letter
Grove Extension Group was held1 Ronald
Anders Ls
beginning
kom, Mrs. Wykom moved to Has­
Miss Susie Phillips accompanied Tuesday, March 3. at the home of sheep-shearing this Tuesday morn­
tings and made her home with her her nephew, Wayne Snyder, of Ha*, Margaret Coats. The lesson given ing.
. parents, living here until 1915. when ting* to Ohio, for a visit with by the leaders was lhe first fitting
Mr. and Mr*. Earl McKibbin re­
• she made her horn* with her son. friends over the week end.
of lhe dress, collars and neckline, cently spent a week near Marshall
Harry, in Chicago. Since that time
Mr. and Mrs. Alien Bishop and ft was very helpful and interesting. with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Bay
the has visited relatives from coast sons made a business trip to Kal­ A well balanced dinner was served Mugridge.
to coast. In 1934 she returned to amazoo Saturday.
al noon by the hostess, assisted by; Church
service* began again
visit her friends In Hastings after
Mrs. c. W Tobias is spending Orpha Richardson. The next les­ Sunday after an enforced postpone­
making a trip lo the Pacific coast the week in Kalamazoo with her son will be Judging the completed ment of about seven weeks because
Lo visit her son Walter During her daughter and son and families.
. dress.—■Ola Kimble, secretary.
of weather and road conditions.
slay here she fell and injured her
hip. The best of care wa* given her
al the horfie of Mrs. Carrie Stark
and later at the home of Mrs. John
----------------------------------------------------- ,---------------------------------------------------------------Engel She made a wonderful re­
covery from her hip injury but her
(rail body could not resist the ill­
ness which recently came upon her.
Two sons arc left to mourn her loss.
Harry of Indianapolis and Walter of
Seattle. Washington, and a iiost of
-friend* and relatives
Those who
knew her loved her and enjoyed her
personality a* site radiated a spirit
of cheer and optimism that was
contagious. This was evident in
tlie month'* of lier confinement. She
was a patient and a cheerful suf­
ferer and met lier misfortunes with
good sheer and good courage.

UNION SERVICE pF
HOLINESS ASSON.

Extention Groups

NGONV

the Lucky 13th
STARTS OUR FOUR DAYS* SALI!
Fridoy, Saturday, Monday and Tuatday
Our Four Days’ March Sale takes in many more Bar­

gains than this space permits to mention .. . come in
and look them over, we can save you some money.

5,000 yard# or more of Fine Prints, Broad. cloths. Batistes, Sateens and Muslins, values up to 25c a yard.

Choice—

OTHER ITEMS TO Bl CLOSED OUT
SLIPS, BLOUSES, SWEATERS, CUR­
TAINS—Some oi low oi HALF PRICE!

Admiration Hosiery
Fur Our Four Day*- Sale we after
"ADMIRATION" Full Fashiomd.
All Silk. Sheer. Substandard:HoBc.
"IRON CLAD"-The BeM ifift Ur

3 -7

1
\

• Two-Way Stretch
• ShadowltBB

21

COATS« SUITS
AND DRESSES
6

Dressy Swagger Coats
h Mannish Tailored Suits

• Print or Plain Colored
Dresses
SIZES 12 to 20
and 36 to 54

Free Ticket given with each 50c purchase

Fritluy iXth and
Saturday Specials

Big SPRING OPENING
and FURNITURE SALE

DEATH OF MRS.
SHERMAN VANHELLEN.
Edith Waterman was born on
June 14. 1883 In Wisconsin and
came lo Bellevue, Michigan, when
she war. a little girl. She lived there
until her marriage lo Abram Dubois
on Dec. 24. 1880 To this union
were born four children. Ernest.
Mabie. Mildred and Viola. Ernest
died in 1P24} The father and hus­
band passed'away in February. 1921.
She was married to Sherman Van­
- hcllen of Barfield in 1923. She de­
parted thia life very suddenly on
Thursday. March 5. at her home on

She leaves to mourn her passing her
husband. Sherman Vanhellen. and
her three daughters, Mrs. Mabie
Davis of Los Angeles. California.
Mrs. Mildred Payne of Hastings and
Mrs. Viola Graves of Kalamaxoo,
eight
grandchildren
and
one
Kat-grandchild, and a number of
mds and neighbors. Funeral
’ services were held at lhe Baptist
church on Monday morning. March
3 at 10 o'clock, interment was In
Olivet cemetery.
- MARRIAGE LICENSES.
Harold H. Eddy. Nashville ....
Edith A Hartley; Flint ........

When' lhe Crossville Bugle prints
gossip about the neighbora, that's
hick stun. It a journal print! simi­
lar items about New Yorkers, it Is
smart and sophisticated.
The best tipis of the times yet are

NEW AND MODERN FURNITURE WILL
BE SHOWN IN GREAT PROFUSION!

• During lhc week COMMENC­
ING witli MARCH the 23rd wc will
keep open hou&gt;e lo all our cuMomcr» anti friend*.
• On this occasion wc will show
our newly decorated and refur­
nished five-room cottage.
• It will |»c completely furnished
with just such furniture us we feel

EGGS

SOAP

3 !»» 13C

OXYDOL

that you would like in your own
home, and ill a price that you
would l&gt;c willing Ip pay.
&gt; For this week there will be EX­
TRA SPECIAL LOW PRICES on
many articles that you have been
needing in the home for so long,
details of which wc will publish
next week.

Several Pieces of Furniture Will Be Absolutely Given Away During This Salo.

Lar,, f*.

IVORY SOAP
BUTTER

I COATS, $9.88 to $16.88
SUITS,

Lb.

NEW CABBAGE

USE OUR CONVENIENT LAY­
AWAY FLAN

FRANDSEN&gt;S
"Exclusive, but riot expensive”
HASTINGS

21C

33c
u. 3c

6 - 13c

LEMONS

HEAD LETTUCE r2

&lt; 15c

Refreshments Will Be Served by the Hostess of Our Five Room Cottage.

REMEMBER THE DATE—MARCH th* 23rd to the 28th
FULL ANNOUNCIMINTS NEXT WEEK

Miller Furniture Co,
rrComplete Home Furnishers”
HASTINGS

-

Beef Kettle Roast

Lb.

15C

Swift’s Smoked Ham Bonaleee

u.

32c

Veal Shoulder Roast Chore.

l*

19c

Tander

FLDPAUSCH'/^\

F

■MARKET­
Phone 22Z2 Uie Deliver

$7.88 to $16.88

DRESSES, $2.88 to $6.88

22c

Shultx or Fracport

• Three Lengths
• S,t*‘ 8'^
’O’*
• Elasticity Through• Flekible

Saturday, April 25

CAMAY

m
_
C ^G
J
&lt;

* Oefie* Runs
• Ankle Slenderness

kA

Will Be Given Away

FRESH

Yd,

ARE BLANKETS, OUTiNG GOWNS,

SPARTON
REFRIGERATOR

w f

Dresses, odds and ends, but sixes II to
52. Oul lo go at— *

FREE!
LUXE

a

■

One Table Full of Womcn’a S1.95 Wash

dje Brin (Eufr

DE

g
I

Tb» gias I
।
mrlesa. Rritigh elrm*
H. M- S. Rodaty by siren
M rends at daaircyar, ttydy

.

FHONI 2504

�HASTINGS. MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MARCH It IMS

OFFENSE
EX'

FOR THE^wffeK^tWb
FOR YOUR KONOMY

Rhubarb
Green Onions
Leaf Lettuce
Apples

ORANGES
Florida Jumbos
126-150 Size

Hot Hou**

Seedleu

Cabbage

lb.

5

lb.

10

Freah Texas

New Texas

Turnips

•Fre»h Southern

bunch

5c

bunch

5c

bunch

5c

5-lb.
bag

Splendid

OSD

pkg.

27c
lb.

MARGARINE

KEYKO
2 Ib&gt; 23c
FLOUR
Splendid BAii lb
IONA
ik'd b
Gold Medaliko Ib
Sunnyfield bag :b

65c
73c
H 03
83c

feFds
Scratch____ $1.55
Egg Mash__ $1.89
Dairy 16'' _ _ $1.15
Oyster Shells __ 75c

SODA

Crackers
e- 17c

2

pk&lt;&gt;.

15c

A 10-oz.
pv,..

19c

2

Rajah Salad Dressing

27c

QUART JAR

Old Dutch Cleanser
-

27c

A lb'
Post or
Kellogg’s

Bran Flakes

PURE

22c

Palmolive or
Camay

Brown Sugar

LARD
2 ,b- 25c

19c

Maxwell House Coffee

ROLL

3c

lb-

Swansdown Cake Flour

BUTTER
33C

5c

25c

lbs.

New Taxa*
Michigan
. U. S. No. 1

Onions

19c

9c
J bunche* 10c

Fancy Hot Hou*e

Pancake Flour

FRESH CREAMERY

for

Fancy, Deliciou*

New Beets
Valencia!

"

lb.

Southern
Shallot*

Carrots

doz.

64-70
Size

Arzonia
Seedle**

can*

P&amp;G Soap

10

25c

large
bar*

35c

Green or Wax Beans

No. 2
cam

Lima Beans

No. 2
cans

25c

small
cans ■

25c

small
cans

25c

Seaside

Red or Kidney Beans
Pork and Beans

Iona

Heinz Baked Beans
Ann Page Catsup

25c
lOc
2

Shredded Wheat
8 o’Clock Coffee
Grandmother’s Bread

Plain or Sliced

Soap Chips

Lb. loaf

6c

29c
16-oz.
can*

Lima Beans
Campbell's Soups ch“t«

Macaroni and Spaghetti
Seedless Raisins

23c

P&gt;&lt;8*-

5

25C
3 c.». 25c

Iona

25c
4 X. 25c

Mackerel
Baker'* Cocoa

Gold Dust

Issues of Today
j of Saginaw spent the week end with '
An Interesting address was given ■ her parent*. Mr. and Mr*. Clark
the Rotary luncheon Monday Barber.
legislature. The plain intent af that i at
f
noon by carl cooper, of the WestCallers at the Enzlan home Sunlaw was to' make jail-breaking a ern
'
State Teachers'College of Kai- day were Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Crancrime, regardless of the reasons for amazoo. He discussed the question dall and family. Mr and Mrs. carl
which an escaped prisoner had been of -Attitudes of the Day." meaning Enzlan and daughter of Kalamazoo,
imprisoned.
the viewpoint* which people have Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Doster and
It was strongly urged by the at- ,or ought to hold with regard to the 1 daughter and Harold Doster of lhe
torney general that the warrant questions
।
nt issue in these trying: Lent neighborhood.
upon which lhe two officers should 1 times He urged a balanced judg- i Mr. and Mrs. Otis Boulter and
seek the extradition of Chadwick ment In reaching decisions.
| Doris vLdted Mr. nnd Mrs. Orville
be based Upon hLs breaking Jail,
The siwaker said. Take, for In- Boniface near Orangeville on Bunrather than upon the charge of dis- ,stance.-the simple question of thrift. | day.
posing of contract property. They ।On the good side, thrift can be car-1 Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Enzlan
argued tl\aj the latter charge might rted to an extreme that makes for . visited Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Enzlan
indicate that the proposed extradl- positive stinginess. On the other n( Bradley Sunday.
tion was an attempt to collect a i hand thrift-: which will help one to
filbert Cosgrove of Plainwell
debt which Chadwick owed. The' accumulate so lie can oe generous. ’ vbited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Coslawyers in tlie attorney general s of- may be carried to the selfish ex- | Jgrove
on
Sunday.
’rnv'' n
" «undav.
flee expressed tlie opinion that the treme of making one a spendthrift.
Visitors at the home of Mr. nnd
"governor of Indiana would not look Thus
.
both sides .of It may be over­ Mrs. Cat) Hartman Sunday were
with favor upon anything that ,emphasized. Somewhere between Mr. and Mrs. Harry Leinaar and
smacked of debt- collection as a these two extremes, the good and family of Delton.
basis for extradition.
Mr. and Mrs E- D- Reynolds and
, bad. is the real viewpoint' which
Accordingly the charge of dLs-'ia person ought to have on the sub­ Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler and
posing of chattel mortgage prop­ ject of thrift." He illustrated his family of Delton spent Sunday with
Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Reynolds.
erty was dropped. and the attempt point by taking other matters about
was made to secure the extradition which there can be divided and ex- 1 Mr and Mrs. Orville Boniface
of Chadwick on the ground that he treme views, some favorable and have moved from the Irving Barber
farm to Mr
Boniface’s father's
was a jail-breaker. But it appears some unfavorable.
that the Michigan legislature gum­
He spoke of two outstanding ad­ farm near Orangeville.
med up the bill they passed in 1931 I dresses which had been recently
BOWNE CENTER.
prosecutor McDonald called tlie at- ’, delivered in Kalamazoo. One was by
Mr. and Mrs. Asahel Thompson
tention of tlie Lansing authorities;,
; Sherwood Eddy. In which he deto the fact, and said he was doubt-1| scribed the poverty stricken con- were in Hostings Saturday.
Frank Tliompson spent Sunday
ful that a man who was placed in •। dltion of the "croppers." who till
with
his parents. Mr and Mrs. Hen­
Jail on a civil warrant could if he'। lhe land on shares in the south and
broke jail be classed as a criminal |I have an extremely hard time in gci- ry Thompson. Frank is the proud
possessor
of a Ford roadster.
under the wording of the 1931 stat-j। ting along. On the other side of the
Mrs. Addie Benton and Mrs. Watt
ute. However the Lansing author!- picture was tlie address of Kagawa.1
.n. noted
.,««■« Japanese
j.p.,.™- Christian,
enra,,™. who
.... ,, ™°"““
H“U™*
ties believed that Che chances of lhe
getting Chadwick back Into Michl- described the cooperative movement; *“T.saa&gt;.
among lhe labours of Japan and ' fWe
ve5 wor^
gan were better under a Jail break­
(Continued from page one)

FRESH FROM THE GARDEN SPOTS OF THE COUNTRY... SPEEDED
TO YOUR A * P STORE-ATTRACTIVELY DiSPLAYSftANP. PRICED

Grapefruit

I Mrs. Earl Robelyer of Monterey alea»«&gt; there the umf dMy
Mio* Elizabeth Hartman of Kal" . amaxoo
omaxoo spent the week
week end with
&gt;ani r » .
« ~I------- Z.
.
IQ L Botary Speaker Urged Need her parent*. ?dr. and un. cun
HOLL
or Oon.ld.rln, Carefully
,
Mrber and mend

BALANCED THINKING'
rDE!Ti~\/ lieenr'n'IiAiii
GREATLY NEEDED NOW

25c

1

GAMES WELL PLAYED
AND HARD FOUGHT
The Usual Allegan-Hastings
Kind, Bays Gazette
Reporter
The sport reporter of the Alle­
gan Gazette writes in detail of the
recent Hastings-Allegan bosket ball
game there which is interesting as
being tlie •other" viewpoint. We se­
lect bits of his personal comment
which the Hastings team may like
lo read.’
Of the reserve game, he says;
Hastings No. 12. who occupied his
time between fouling and gelling
fouled, ringed a free throw. Until
the' appearance of this No. 12 upon
the floor the gnma had been reason­
ably free from unnecessary rough­
ness but from then on It got rough­
er nnd rougher. There was a lot'of
“riding off." ns they say in polo, in
which Watson excelled for Allegan
and No. 12 for Hastings. Hastings
No. 10. a small but clever player
who starred In the game, here
ringed *a basket and another basket
by Hastings made, lhe score 13 lo 10
for Allegan.
Outside of his rough playing No.
12 on the Hastings squad played n
fine game, but he should learn to
control his temper. Speedy little
No. 10 has already been noticed.
Comments on the regular game:
Hastings, at once stormed lhe Al­
legan basket and all through the
game showed exceptional ability in
passing back and forth but the Al­
legan defense was too strong.

A field basket by Hastings made
what good it Is accomplishing in his
w&lt;^k w^
ing charge.
rnnntrv
/
11 Toledo hospital last wcex. was the score 16 to 0 in favor of Allegan
- When lhe two Barry county of- 1
The speaker declared that we
4,1 ”” 1™** for “ short at lhe half.
fleers appeared before Governor ■
..
McNutt nt Indianapolis last week lo should balance our thinking. We I
should nil realize that the American I wW“llJT KwB,c«Lk papered for Mrs I
Hastings was guarding strongly as
argue for the extradition of Chad­
Thom“ Tl»“«day and Frl- the second half opened but Zavitz
wick, they found In the person of home is lhe unit of our democracy
ringed a long angling shot. No. 8
Thc alm
alm of
our school
schools
as well
well as
as of
of । **“&gt;:
ana governor a very keen The
of our
’ as
lhe Indiana
....
.1 The John Nash family were on for Hastings ringed a free throw.
lawyer. He
K. had
hzi evidently studied, the home should be to promote In- । the sick list the past week.
Here lhe game became really rough
-------- .. -----------------the case enough
so that .he was
con- Hiatlvc on the part of young people.
~«s Hastings made a desperate effort
vinci-d that the Michigan law did In the home there should be taught I
TOWN LINE.
not make a crime for breaking jail; the virtues of dependability, integ- . Malcolm Tasker of Lake Odessa to turn the score.
il the man who committed that of- rtty. character and the virtue of as- ! spent Sunday with his parents. Mr.
Damoth Introduced several sub­
.tense was in jail as a result of civil sumlng a pro|x-r part in the “r 1■ anti Mrs. Roy Tasker.
proceedings Instead of criminal spohsibUitie* of life.
| Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert McLeod of stitutes but Hastings was a little too
strong for the “young ones" and
proceeding.’.
Governor
McNutt
Woodland visited the latter's niece, scored two baskets before lhe old
therefore declined to allow Chad­
y—.
.
.
, Mrs Herman Winkler, and family guard returned to the bottle. Zavitz
wick to be returned to Michigan. He
scored another long angling shot
held that the charge against Chad-1
which was the finest single play of
wick uould not warrant holding --- '■
- ■■■
a reception Saturday evening at lhe game. Hastings scored two more
him on the criminal charge of. Townsend plan meeting Eplsco- ■
home for their son. Gall nnd
breaking jail.
pal parLsh house Friday evening. »«£• *h°
recently married.
legan with Hastings pressing hard.
Thus our officers were unable to March ifr. 1936. 8 o'clock. George
T,w ■««&gt;&lt;»»
ot Ralph Jordan Another long angling shot by Zavitz
bring Chadwick back to Michigan. Vote, a young man from Kalama-,
wel1
Thursday.
and a foul shot by Hastings No. 4
While disappointed, the Barry, zoo. is to be the speaker
I Mr and Mr" Clarence Carter nnd finished the scoring. The gun
county officers felt that they had,
family spent Saturday In Ionia.
banged loudly nnd Allegan won. 27
made the best attempt they could
4W r
,.„.uc nuuu
, Vluu
----„o has uern
The
Fireside
Hobby
Club CMW
com-.
Miss- Phyllis Tasker, w
who
been to 22. a very fine game, hard fought
to get him into Barry counly. They posed Of teachers from the town-j at Lake Odessa hospital for the
loud tn
in their nratse
praL-c nf
of th..
the gh(|w of H(JJX, Barry nnd priUrlf.. past t|lrre weeks. returned to her and well played bv both sides—a
were tnud
courtesies shown them by the state ville will meet at lhe Goodwilli home Friday much improved in regular Hastings-Allegan contest.
Referee Lundquist was hardly
police, the sheriff at Angola as well church next Thursday evening., health.
quick enough lo catch lhe many
u b,■ Governor McNutt and U&gt;e March 19. nl
nt ,6 o'clock for dinner ‘I
body contacts but although the au­
eounu'l for Chadwick. All or them, u.n„ „
Mto,|,re
MORGAN.
charge I
| Mrs B. Rowladcr sjient last week dience expressed some disapproval
were very courteous. It «a» In,. ol M1„ M„rk. Heuwimler.
possible to hove Chadwick returned
with her mother. Mr*. Ernest Gold- the reporter believes that he in­
tended to be fair. It takes a very
to Michigan solely because of nl Pennock Hospital Guild No... 7. ,en of Barryvllle. who is ill.
technicality in the Michigan law.
meet.-, with Mrs. Ella Hammond.
- So.
- ,
Mrs.. B S' Wing ot Cadillac Is quick eye to follow a game of this
•• Jefferson St., on Wednesday. March vLsitlng at the home of Glenard kind. While the reserve game was
a
rather rough affair, most of the
OBITUARY'.
Eart.
Vernon Dean and Verlyn Oene. do so the members arc urged to be
Mr and Mrs. Clair Van Syckle of fools in the regular game were
the infant sons of Mr and Mr*. present.
Lansing spent Wednesday with the merely the result of over-enthus­
Lynden Norris, were bom on Feb.
termer's parenU, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. iasm. There were one or two In­
27 at the home on S. Washington
stances of intentional roughness
Tlie W. C- T U. will meet with Van Sickle.
St.. Vernon passing away within a Mrs. E A. Parker. 1014 5. Jefferson
Bob Knight made a business trip and the reporter does not consider'
the Allegan players were angels by
few hours and Verlyn living but St.,
... on Tuesday. March 17. Reall-’ to Baltic Creek Friday.
any
means.
two days, surviving are the por- zation of our Ideals through cduMrs.
Alberta
Greenfield, our
ents. a sister Eileen, nnd other rel- cation
----- and
-- • information
■ ■
— wlll
— •be con­ teacher, went to Orangeville one
COMMENDS HASTINGS BOXERS.
alive* and friends Burial in the sidered.
day last week.
CommcnUng
on the recent boxing
Cedar Creek cemetery
' Mr and Mrs. Wilson Mc’senger
The p. T. A. meeting scheduled of Battle Creek called on Glenard event In Ionia, the Ionia Co. News
says:
OBITUARY.
for .March 12 has been postponed to Earl Sunday.
Middleweight Final: Wagle again
Harry L. Water* was bom near :next Thursday. March 19. al 7:30
Mr. nnd Mrs Ben Boslater. who
independence. Iowa. Sept. 30. 1867. ।o'clock in the Central auditorium. recently moved from Lansing to went to work in the final bout
and passed away at hLs farm near A general invitation Ls extended to their cottage here, entertained their against Bob McLeod, but hl* ef­
Cedar Creek. March 7. 1930. at the nil Hastings citizens nnd the pro­ daughters. Martha and Irene, and forts were wasted. Wagle. a hard
slugger, floored McLeod., but the
age of 68 years. 5 months and 6 igram promises to be an enjoyable their husband*. Saturday
Hastings Hustler came right back
days. When he wa* seven, the fam- ।one. presented by lhe Camp Fire
Amber Van Syckle and Marguerite
ily moved from Iowa to Michigan in ,girls Illustrating lhe origin, history Mill* of Lansing spent Sunday with and floored the Pewamo Plunger.
covered wagons and experienced and some of the objectives of their their parent.’, Mr. and Mrs Chas. A few solid whacks were exchanged
and then Wagle wo* downed for
many exciting incidents .since that ।organization.
Harrington.
time he has resided in Barry coun­
a.
a..
.
u
! Mrs ° E- Padciford and Frank the count.
Heavyweight Title Bout: Roy
ty and in the present farm home
At the Womens club meeting Wilcox visited Mr* Wilcox and Mrs
-*•White,
Hastings,
against
for twenty-four years. He was Friday afternoon. Mrs. K S. Me- Mildred Fleming TuesdnvMr,
» o*
.&lt;
.Ionia,
&gt; pitted
lhe wikox .nd «r.Ma.»,hi,r C.r5
Mrs
m I Charlie
Allen.
gave the fans
united in marriage Feb 6 1895. to imw. preMfcm-el&lt;»L will
t some head
Jennie m Johnson. -To this union paper -The Stage Today
This Ls Ann. returned with them for an In-'—--•- ••
■ •• -■
drives
to the latter'* anatomy.
three children were born. Gertrude a subject in which Mrs McIntyre , definite visit.
gained the first round by a
Jones of Hastings. Glenara Hamil­ is greatly Interested and it will be iJJLinv
*■
• ’w — - -V“»SlC&lt;.k e °f [White
anrt
wlde ,nnrKln »nd had Allen so
ton of Battle Creek, and Paul Wat­ an afternoon worth Hie effort each irfThiSlw’i?" Harr*7«lon: groggy that he threw In lhe
ers of Kalamazoo
member may make to be present.
W ub.«Wer^, d,nner lowel ond dld n0‘ “PPear for the
As a neighbor he was kind ond Next Friday afternoon Dr. Gordon
Mrs Wm Van «cond cant0 A technical knockdependable always ready to help in Fisher will present the subject. sickh, - mursday. __________
.oul vicU)ry for white.
time of need
Although. nrtt a •These ^hanging Worlds."
tsmadac’
: The Bport wrllcr aUo °°oimend»
member of any church he was a
r-zvii ana wJrH , .
. ... ,the work
Donald Felspaugh In
good Christian and always prac-! The next regular meeting of the
Atm^v
Ul d,JLand M1M l&gt;he semi-final who stayed a stiff
Heed the Golden Rule "Do unto Eastern Star will be held Tuesday. Sumlav Bru?’L&lt; f
*er5 balUe wUh EdWard Brown of Sheriothers as you would have them do March 17, followed by a short pro­ Sunday guests of
the Bernard dan to get the right to fight Kress
unto you."
gram.
Smith's at wamervlllr Mr and of Ionia for the title. Tlie lanky
He was a loving and generous
Mrs. Bertie Smith and Leslie Smith Hastings boy it seems had the bet­
husband and father and one that,
CRESSEY.
of west Woodland were also cullers
ter of the tight until the middle
Mr, and Mrs. N. H Barber have . thara.
will -be sadly muted by hl* family.
Besides lhe family he leaves two moved to the Nina Boyle house at
Mrs Bernice Senslba and daugh- of The second round, and barely
sisters. Mrs. Charles La Forge of! Mllo and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wood ter of Kalamazoo and Harry Sensi- gained the decision. He wa* pro­
Algonac. Mrs
Ella Garrison ofi and family from near Hickory Cor- ba of Cloverdale visited Mrs Sensl- hibited by physician* from enter­
ing the ring for the tecond fight,
Hustings, one brother. Chester Wat- I ners have moved onto their farm.
ba's parents. Sunday
ers of Lake Odessa, and three! Mrs. Gus Brenner and Mrs | Little Janet Jordan ot West which automatically gave lhe title
grandchildren. Irene. Wlllo and Elmer Brenner and daughter of i Woodland visited her grandparents to Kress, by default.
Beverly ^ones. besides n host of : Shelbyville vt’lted Mr and Mrs Mr and Mrs jasper Jordan and
Reputations wear out quickly
other relatives and friends.
O. Robelyer on Friday. Mr. and Aunt Arteta Sunday.
when not taken care of.

Organizations ^nJ M„

Moic „„

Rinso or Oxydol

Drano or Sani-Flush

To Whom Thi. Advertisement Moy Concern

Pink Salmon
Brooms Clean Sweep

DECORATION DAY
ONLY 2ft MONTHS AWAY

MONUMENTS

M1CHIGAN.GROWN

BEANS

.

Sporting Items

MARKERS

III Our Meat Departments
T,22_I&gt;*?r' *fAV ”T|‘

Picnics
u 19c
Pollock Fillets 227c
Chunk Bacon &gt;*. 17c

Pig Hocks
Bologna

th. 15c

Beef Roast

u. 15c

H' hew a braetlfel «tvrU.n .1

BEST OF MATERIALS, the BEST WORKMANSHIP, at the
Ihwert eamaallvla ...I...
*__...
-

money * worth and satisfaction

ever after.

Oar Buaineu waa established in 19*7. Our Best Guaran­
tee-Still Going Strong.

Appointments Solicited—No Obligation to Bay

AU

Price* Plu*
1% Sal** Tax

. e Cash
WPA
Checks

A&amp;P FOOD STORES

Li«t*n to Kate Smith
I
“Coffoo Time," Tu*k, W*d.,
Thur*., WBBM, 7:30 P. M.

HASTINGS MONUMENT WORKS
Telephone 2497

IRONSIDE BROS., Propre.

Hastings, Michigan

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THUBSDAY. MARCH 11. 1»M

.
O

•

T

.

'
.

-------- ---------------- ■■■■............ -|l £«""

1

TV

1

,

Tl T

x*

Social Events and Personal Mention

Mn. Harold Logan, who u al
much entertainad bride, was honor |

—i DETROIT CHURCHES

WOODBURNE MAKES

SPLENDID RECOVERY
!wriie,sPP7Sw1v.iyorth.

Helpful Suggestions

SPONSORED CONTEST

■■■■■■■ Fourteen Yeun Old Robert

Now
afford to lot
your Best.

I Mr*,
sue Noble*,
at herWinning
home on W ,
'
ONION
I
Gerton
Gave
Letters, Garda, Flowers
Green »treet. Saturday night, al
AND TOMATOES.
n-«tamatl«w
1 which time Mrs. Logan received
From Hastings Friends
Peel twelve Large white onion*.
Declamation
Kenneth Ooggin* was In Grand
Mr*. E J- Pratt wa* In Lansing on
TOBIAS HAS
I some very beautiful gift*.
i The Banner received thl* wack a cut them in halve* croaswlae and
Robert, fourteen-year-okt aon of
Rapid* Sunday.
Friday on busln***
EIGHTIETH BIRTHDAY I
££
■» * w
lay them in a baking dl*h Melt the Rev. and Mr*. WUlfa Gekton
Rev Karl Keefer of Watervlell
Wm. Fox wa* home from Kalawas in Hastings Thursday.
mazoo over the week end
n_
YU- MIsa Marie Neuachafer turning in , now in Sarasota. Florida. It will be tour &lt;aU&gt;o»ou burur. add one ,„a , Ilud«d ol th. KKMahd Part
cup
strained
tomatoes,
one-fourth
.i,.
Mr. M A remembered that he was taken to op .tralnwl hooey, alt and p.p-1
™&gt; “»
Mrs. Mallory Cassidy ot Grand
Mrs. George R. Green is visiting Family Party Held in Hie thc inning
Honor at Home of Mr.
1 Kinde,
MU*--------Ruth. Tapping
of a
hospllal lhw
Bn awMcuuuniu
gnpendiclu* per lo taste and a few grains pap-1
Rapid* wa* in the city Friday.
— -----------"
offered In a peace declamation
.—
---..and
---- --------.
■ •luoiniai
mere ror
ior an
. __
—
,
.
le
—.Hall
nr-M
nt frnm
nwav
. .Uo„ ...
.....
Manhall,
ww,
pra.nl
from
a.ay
,
lprr
He
,
,
pk
„
aw
Mr. and Roy Thomas and Mrs
Clark --Welker
--------------of ----Grand
-— ----Hawn
rika. and heat to boiling Pour over contest sponsored by the Church
and Mrs. Frod Bush
Tuaiday nlghi Mf. Lotmn wa.
In hla letter he speak. onions and b*ke until tender—from Federation of Detroit Mr*. Gefaton
phoebe Mote were in Greenville on spent Sunday here with friends.
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Bush. 31 Mil­ attain h«»red with r jui, and ' wpTO
|,I1„|y oi u
,e sveauy
,„,a, &gt;utdiu
,tra,m one hour to an hour and a half—in
Bunday/
'
। Miss Ruth
- Robson
....
»*»p»vi.««nveiy
tne
...
visited
al her ler Avenue. Battle Creek, enter­ ntanwor
olvori hv
Men nelllah K
Kee. ..
. and. flower*
_
__ a slow or 350-degree oven. Serve*
ihower given
by Mr*.
”‘ of. letter*,
card*
*enl
remembered here a* Varna
Doni Id McQuarrlc of Delton home in Jackson over the week end. tained at a birthday party Saturday nan
n.n and Mis*
mim Ethel Ragla
Haida at the ' hJm by HMUngl frfand* whfle he dx
Blakney. a graduate of Hasting* ।
spent Monday with hi* mother. Mr*.
Mrs Leighton of Paw Paw is lhe evening complimenting her father. former's home on E. Grand street. was In lhe hupilal. He writes that'
------------High school and tne daughter of |
M*ry Burgess.
guest of Mr. and Mr*. John Engel. W O- Tobias of Shultz, who cele­ The table* were yery attractive with M1W at&lt; 1HP
uiaB than Ha*- PRUNE ..AND
............................................
,ier The UCU1WI
» now
"there are no finer ,folks
TOMATO SALAD. „„
B*n niM
Blakney.
Gelston*
now
Mrs. Richard Jacob* and Miss
....
—-----coaxed
—.-aprunes.
—.— 1. cup
—- cot—• n
- re tn Highland
..........
p-rk where
wh„, Mr.
Mr j
Miss Marte Rowe visited al her brated his eighteenth birthday, al­ cover* of pink. c''ntered with spring UngR
• In thu.......
hU flrrt
tel. I one cup
Park
Margaret Waters spent lhe week home lh Big Rapids over lhe week though he i* 72 years old
flower*, and lighted with pinx
afu.r Ieavlng lhe hospital, he tage cheese. 3 tablespoon* granu- oefaton is pastor of lhe First Pre*end in Big Rapid*.
A bountiful dinner was served at candle*. Tlie guest* were nur*e* and rxpreiM.shU appreciation of their, fated gelatine. 1^2 cup cold water. 5 byterlan church,
end.
A
Mr. and Mr*, clayton BrandstetIn writing Mfas Anna John*on of
John Chandler, who attend* the 7 o'clock, a special feature being u member* ot lhe office force a**o- lhoughtful empathy, their kindly cups tomato puree made from wild,
targe
and finely decorated
ter and Mrs. Earl Coleman were In
elated with
Logan
mPM0He5 ana
and . rnnrmvnuKci.
remembrances xi'
He pack tomatoes. 1 bay leaf, fourthis Mrs Gelston said. "Robert and
.
„ birthday
«...
-------------- Mrs
.
. . in the,■ KH- messages
messages
and
remembrances.
presented
Mrs
Cyrus 811k- logg
logg Foundation, and she again
again re- ,ay, lh
A
.
business *nd
and , whole
home.
.ccake,
*"- p
"*en£rt by «
r’-Silkcime
from
buMnesa
alhcr ^4
Grand Rapid* Saturday.
'hole cloves. 1-2 onion, chopped; 1 hu ffather
had lhe
the hooor
honor of being
being'I
worth.
durUlit
ralvari u *J
shower
at B
ctfu
Mononoiv prole
. . ,^lonal
... men. M W(
... .n
.. as farm
.
Mr and Mr* Henry Brog of Mid- J?.
”?' Music was furnished
£ ‘T’,*?
U“ ;. celved
‘ower of
‘fB Monopoly
. tea-spoon salt. 1-8 teaspoon pepper. On the same program at one of the'
Mr. and Mrs. Lowed Herbert of
.w“ sund.7 wnh Mr .n4 ‘X
M
pl*&gt;'ed'
- - __________
'1 ers. laborer*,
Mtoren. young
youw ixopU«&gt;d
,„ ccity
u, ehunta
people and the&gt; dash t.tawo
tabasco aura.
sauce, kUuce
lettuce old
and otl
other
churches U
at a
a FaUor.
Fathers’
’ ;,
OUcgo were Sunday guests of Mr. dievllie spent Sunday with Mr. and
I Rotary club, and from many of hl*’ mayonnaise.
land Sons' banquet Wlll wa* the'
and Mr*. A. J. Herbert.
Mr* Allen Pender.
NORRIH—ORMSBE.
I former patient*. He and Mrs WoodPit prunes, cut into small piece* principal speaker of lhe evening?
Mr. and Mr*. Frank Kelley of
and Mrs. Grorgc Sumner and nn(j children. Rosanna and Norman
Nelson Norris, son of Mr. and
bunie wire deeply touched by them and mix with cottage cheese Moi*- j aJMj Robert wa* asked to give his
Kalamazoo visited tier mother. Mrs
luzannc Sumner were Ui Kai- of Detroit; Everet Myer of Center- I Mr* Arthur Covey of Dowling, and
Doctor Woodburne alate* that no ten gelatine In cold water CombUie prinrue contest speech ”
Mary Burgess, on Friday.
““ *Saturday
w~ltUrdliV.
' .lit/-.
.... K- daughter nf
amazon on
vlllc; Mr* t,E. -TV.var
Traver ..irl
and ayan
ton IVarilion- III..
Mi*s .I--'-Maxine ZA.
Oimsbe.
of le«» than eleven Hastings tourfats tomato puree, bay leaf, dores, onion, 1 Hastings friends extend congratMr and Mr* Sperry Thomas ot aid. of
v, HMtings; Kect Tobias. . MI
lu m
„. Cha* uluUH
a., BU
w ut
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Paul and
Mr „,
and
Mra.
Ormsbe.
also
of .In Florida
.. called
.. . at their place ._
in Balt pepper and taba.*co sauce and'ufauons.
iations.
You don’t have to pay
Marietta visited relatives in Lan­ Assyria were Sunday gue&amp;ta of Mr. daughter Marjorie
at Angola.
~ ~ / .' and sister
stater ThelThe!- Dowling,
Dowling were married
rageat
Angola, one day. They were Mr. and Mrs. heal Remove from lire and strain ,
--------------- «*&gt;
j
aky high prices for the**ding and Ovid on Sundav
and Mra Clarence Orohe
. jxx.
’.tx; ~ht!r
“ ffrom
“—. tb.c
ma. :?
ol Chu
Shultz;
while L*-.
those
the !] Lr.i,
ind.. on Feb. 27. They are residing E A Burton and Mis-. Handy; Mr Add moistened gelatine and stir un- -FIGHTING BLOOD'' IN FLAX
MM Florence Trelb «... In onnd city
c’.ly were a.-.
—4 a
— L.
-S— \ in B.1U.
Mr and
Mr*.
L- 4
E Tobias
Battle C,„k
Creek ol.e.e
where SoU.
both a.
are em- and Mrs William Grigsby. Mr and til dissolved Pour into a shallow pan
topcoats. “Sandy McDufl,"
Mr. and Mrs George Gillespie of
OVERCOMES WILT DISEASE ’
Rapid*
Monday
and
spent
lhe
night
an(
j
M
n
Robert.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
L.
R.
ployed
by
the
United
Steel
:::
" '•
!. "
C„.l
and
Charleston. W Va . visited Hastings
ordinary flax varieties planted in
lhe topcoat that- is shower
with Nazareth college friends.
. thl* Mrs A. H Carveth and daughter • jelly should be 3-4-lnch thick! and
Abbott, ...
Mr and Mrs --------Cyrus.....
8llk-&gt; ....Wire Co. nThe many
friends of
relatives over tlie week end.
set. Cut
into desired shape*.
ot M- at ...
the
-------------------------------,-------Spread
.-------- - -pj
«..
t North Dakota Ex- .
proof and warm: correct in
Mr. and Mrs C**l*r Thomas of worth.
WWBM„ Mr. and Mr*. C. A. Orames. well known couple wish them much and Mr and Mrs. Charles Bachelor —
nnd his slater.
prune mixture sandwich
pcriment
cannot u...
live. v&gt;&gt;
Yet 1 ‘
..
\ J,.
Mto ms swear, air* rauciiuiu.
i ..c , Mrk Padelford. The nrune
, perimctu fashion
aiavionbecannot
uva. Station
x&lt;v
Mir* Helen flecker of Grand Kalsmazoo were guests of Mr. and and Mr and Mr, j —
E ™.
Tobias.
style and a leader among
success and happiness through life. Bachc)Ors arrived with their trailer tween
two
layers.
Serve on lettuce 1 ii
fl—
„ jroWS ...
ln thl* plot
and
pro­
p.w.
—
,&lt;v
Izdge spent last week with Miss Mrs. C E Grqhe Friday evening. | — - --------..
W C. Tobias •is a .brother
of- J. E
the well-dressed men. Col­
’ • ’
&gt;on the day when the Doctor was and ■garnish
’■entah
«-iih
»■«««.!« duces
a------ heavy
------- yields
..—a.
---------- ----with
mayonnaise
That
Rax
is
Majesty Becker of Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Doud of Tobias and Mr*. L R Abbott, and I COUNTY ASSOCIATION OF
! taken to the hospital. They moved Serves eight.
1 highly resistant to will disease.
ors of cloud grey and rusaet
George R. Green returned on Battle creek visited hl* imrents.
father of L E Tobias, of the ScI. O. O. F. AND REBEKAHS. their outfit onto hLs lot and looked
|
In
1000.
H
L.
Bolley
of
the
North
Baturday from South. Bend, where Mr. and Mrs. Solon Doud. Monday curlty Natl Bank and has been j
Ian; well tailored, of lhe
Tlie County Association ot the I after Mrs. Wbodtoumc while she RANGERS STUDY
___________
________________
lie had been for several days.
Dakota Experiment
station, deter-1
lies! quality wool yarns, and
night
visiting in Battle creek during the O. O. F- and Rebekahs was held at was alone
I
WILDLIFE OF THE ROCKIES.! mined flax wilt wa* cau*ed by a ■
Ml * Helen Clark and Harvey
Piililp Van Zile was here from
priced from—
In concluding hl* letter. Dr | Deep In the great national forest* i parasitic fungus. Most of the flax
Diehl of Ann Arbor were Sunday Ann 4xbor lo spend the week end month of February, attending his the Odd Fellow hull on Monday
brother's birthday lhe 11th. hi* sis­ evening, with about one hundred ; Woodburne says that he wishes all । of the northern Rockies several score planted at that time In lhe will-1
i.ucsls ot her mother. Mrs. Mabel with liU grandmother. Mrs. J. Fter's the 2l*t. and hl* own lhe 29th . present
Lodges represented were । hi* friends might be there lo enjoy 1 ranger* and wildlife specialist* from. infested soil of Plot 30 died early. I
Ulark. ,
Goodyear.
the first time they were ever able to Nashville. Freeport. Prairieville and
lhe
delightful
summer
weather
Forest
Service
regional
headquar-1
but
a
few
planta
survived.
Theai
Dr. and Mrs. Geprge . Lockwood
Mrs. D. A- VanBuskirk and Mrs be together in celebrating their Hastings. The business meeting
rrc spending the day in Detroit, it W R Cook attended the lecture by
which they are experiencing.
ters at Missoula. Mpnt . are studying survivors. Mr. Bolley knew, had
birthdays in rotation/ Their com­ and program were followed by a
«
----------------habit* and "homelife" of such game । something in their inheritance that
being his mother's birthday anni­ Mrs. Franklin D
Roosevelt at bined ages are 215 ykars. and the lunch.
Prairieville will entertain
versary.
MONOPOLY PARTY.
animal* as bear. elk. mountain enabled them to fight disease. He
Grand Rapids Monday.
only ones left ot thw old original the next meeting.
Miss Marcia Ironside entertained 1 sheep, goats, deer, and antelope dur- used them as parent stock in de­
Mr and Mr* W W Cushing of
Verrol Conklin and Frank Wey- Tobias family, born, 'and the most
Alma were ituests of Mr. and Mrs erman visited the former * parents.
, a group of friend* on Friday eve- I ing the months of ice and snow.
’ veloping wllt-re*l*tanl varieties, and
of the descendant* still live, near
EMPLOYEES* GATHERING.
...
------- - --and
a-----««*-Living
ning. for.dessert
monopoly.
Misi
, in bolated cabin* and seek- was probably the first man in the
Frank Hoonan un Tuesday and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Conklin, of
The
employees
of
the
Universal
Hastings W O. Tobias lives on a
| Audra Densmore----- ” winner
1
Wednesday.
al: ing out the winter haunt* of anl- history of agriculture to subject I
Honor over the week end.
farm with his son Kect and fam- Oarage Co held n service meeting I
this
popular
game
rr.aLi,
these
men
cimK
check
mi
on
&gt;ucn
such
ques. plants
pianus to
io a disease
aiscasc in order
oroer to
io gel
get
Mr. nnd Mrs Andrew Roush and (
Waller Perkins, principal of Jun- । Uy near Shultz where he went after on Wednesday
. w.
evening, dinner be- :
lion* a* these; ”
—-----------•*1—
*-*—--selections
- --—
■
—
• pl^a
•
lhe tatter's mother. Mrs. Mary Hen- lor High, and Miss Helen Wnde. ! Ills party, taking some very fine ing served al the Parker House
How
many of* —
each
resistant
Today
this
DESSERT AND BRIDGE
Ing on lhe forests? Is r
to ( basic for crop Improvement worEf
ney. spent Sunday with relatives grade supervisor, attended a meet­
species are living
birthday gifts with him in remem- i Till* was lhe third in a scriem of
On
Wednesday
evening.
Mrs
W.
in Grand Rapids
there
sufficient
food
for
animals
Mr.
Bolley
’
s
achievement
changed
—that ia smart. New shad­
ing in Grand Rapids on Tuesday.
brance of lhe occasion.
such gatherings where problcnrs in
Mr nnd Mrs C. M. Sisson and
Kenneth Beuhler of Grand Rap­
J. E Tobias always celebrates hts | connection with the txisir.c.ss arc I. Hinman entertained with two "wintering" in a given locality?' the outlook for flax production Ln
ow check*, window pane
I owes from disease, starstar-1 the United States Older
older vanetie*,
varieties.
tables of bridge and dessert. Hon- What are losses
Blllv and Barbara of Kalamazoo ids was in the city Tuesday. Mrs. birthday by standing on hi* head. discussed.
J‘
"*
t-quarc*. chalk Mtipea; all
were Sunday gur u of the former's Brulilt r and Kenneth Raymond re- He sent lhe Banner two snapshots. I
or* at bridge went to Mr* George vatlon. predatory animal*, and hunt- susceptible to wilt, could survive only
MISS STEIN STU I
! Coleman and Mrs. Emma Murdock, ers? what are feeding habit* of anl- J on new land. It wa* Impossible.,
beautifully tailored in apurt
lister. Mbs Mabel 81-sson.
,1 turning home with him that eveone taken in 1935 and the other on ' * '
HCI. PITA1
*'
a O W ■ —■—
1 mall
a annarllv
——— tn
a*rt-v
maU. o«rrvin
carrying
capacity nt
of tnn^lno
feeding ' tv,
therefore,
to grow
nax MmtlnaiMiatu
continuously I
Mr and Mrs. A. II Carveth re­ nliiR.
i»ack* and double breasted.
i hl* seventy-fifth birthday. Feb. 11.
OBSERVE BIRTHDAY.
________________________
_________
turned on Monday from a stay ot
grounds,
types
of
forage
preferred,
on
the
tame
land,
or
even
lo
grow
Mr and Mr* F. L Fairchild. Mr*. 1936. He was standing on his head
Friends of Miss Josephine Stein.
Moderately priced and a
■
nri fvr^K
and hu.nllHp.
available
3,r
I* ■*
ln
&gt;.r,’.l, w.t.t,
.......1 ....
^ U.
_ IJ
several weeks at ?Y&gt;rt laiudcrdale Richardson and grandson. Bobby
In
honor
of
hLs
birthday.
Mr.
and
and
types
and
quantities
available?
al
intervals
with
several
year*
bein the snow dressed in overalls and a former teacher here were sorry . Mrs. Harold Brockway entertained snecial
Special consideration will be given
given' tween.
choice sclectiou of model*
vnd oilier places in Florida.
Richard-ion. were Sunday guests of 1 overshoes al his home. 860 Capitol lo hear that she was still a |&gt;atlcnt
six guests on Tuesday evening ' to
t „
,
Mr and Mrs. Andrew Kemp and Mr and Mrs. Wayne Mitchell ol
a study
of any conflict between
Tne wilt-re*i*tant BUon variety
and color*-—
Ave . N E . Battle Creek. He says at lhe hospital in Petoskey where , Winners at bridge were Mrs. Ed- game and domestic stock.
Mr and Mrs. Lnwreno* Smith of Battle creek.
I developed on Plot 30 by Mr. Bolley
&gt;f.e underemi «n op.r»Uo„ lour ;
""“ff
U-X
1 he does this lo keep young.
. .
... . Smith, high.
Distribution of game, once satis­ and hu assistant Q. E. Heggeness is
•Jallle creek were Sunday guest*
week* ago “
She
Mr. and Mrs Frank Wceber and
Ld
St isupstill
H.rverv
X..weak
ad’ &gt; ward bmith and Huro.d
“S'
factory iuvuiiaj
methods, of
jf Mr and Mrs. Carl Finstrom.
ui regulating an- ; the principal cuiii
1 ncrcin 1 variety in
commercial
daughter* of River Rouge were the
dress Is 311 Division St.. Petoskey, j Grccn held &gt;o* “°rc-_______
Frank Abbey. Mr. and Mr*. Jos. guest* of his mother. Mrs. Gottlieb
nual kills have been established, wlll the United Slates. Last year flax
HUSBANDS AT DINNER. ।
•« j«« w&gt;«w&lt;u«i o«.. »-vw»»cj. i
not be difficult. Most species will! growers raised more than 10.000.000
tViilianv- John King Mid ML** Eddy Wcebcr.' and Mr and Mrs. Gilbert ! Reviving an old custom,
the I All hope for her speedy and cumi&gt;f Battle Creek Creek were Sun­ Todd over the week end.
—
GROVE.
............
rcpopulate
......
natural
w
game
„„
ranges
।
a
up
—
r
1
bushel*
v*aa«M,a
w,
of
thU
variety
—highly ■«.re­
| Hastings Women * club observed 1 pletc recovery.
rnrrvlno capacity
canacitv if they
thev are givsiv- I slstant
•iiiant to
tn wilt.
— lit Several
c*o*r*i other
nth-r sail*viu. •'
Mr* Andrew Townsend visited •' to carrying
day guest* of Mr. and Mrs, Guy
Mr*. Mcrl Clark. Mrs. Boyd Gentlemen's ......
Night by .....
giving a
----------------- -- -----------I her mother In Battle Creek on en a fair chance. At present, much I factory varieties have been de­
Giddings.
Clark and Mrs Cora Clark were in Myen o'clock dinner 1 hurray al,
MAKE SUMMER PLANS.
Mr nnd Mrs Ed Bartling and Delton Friday lo attend a luncheon !■»&gt;;
Sunday.
of
lhe
best
deer
country
1*
depopuveloped
in
thl*
country.
—-u house
u_.— _..u
the Parish
with .u-&lt;their u...
hus-■
------ ---------Covers
were
laid for eight at lhe •
D. Townsend is great-grandpa on fated because It I* easily accessible' oil is extracted from the seed of1
daughter of Glen Ellyn, ill., visit- and shower for Mrs Maurice John- i band* as honor guest*. It will pas* luncheon given oy Mrs. r W. Cook
account of a baby born to Mr. and to hunter*. In other places, with 1 most flax grown in this country and
rd tier father. J. E Tydcn. and n.ck al Mt* Wade Town's.
CLOTHING AND SHOES
1 a* being one of lhe mort pleasant , on Thursday, her guest* being the Mrs. Robert Townsend in Grand little or no hunting, deer abound'
- making
-------- - --------aunt. Mi* Tillie ryden. over tlie
fa used- in
paints,
linoleum?&gt;
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eycleshymcr ! events on the year's calendar.
FOR MEN AND BOYS
( members of the Country Club
Rapids.
These factors must be balanced.
patent leather, and other products.
and Mr, and Mrs. Paul Baker ot
Over one hundred were seated at Board. Plans for the summer ■
Mr and Mr*. Harold Griffin and
Fiank Foote left Tuesday for a Niles and Mrs. Jessie Davis of Al­ the
The residue from the pressed seed,
HASTINGS
‘
small tables which were cen- 'I months at the Club were discussed. II Mr. and Mrs Mahlon Fuller attend-1
business trip of several weeks lo' bion were Sunday guesta of Mr and
NORTHWEST THORNAPPLE.
linseed
cake,
is
ground
into
meal
and
tered with bouquets of pink sweet
1 cd lhe funeral of a niece. Miss Eve- I A number from this way attend­ fed tp livestock. Flax breeders of
New York City and other points' Mrs. Solon Doud and Mrs. Glenna ____
prim- I
peas; pots of rose colored —
lyn Brown, in Hastings last Satur­ ed the basket ball game at Wood­ lhe Slate experiment stations and
in the east in the interests ot tlie Van Horn.
' roses outlined the stage.
Hospital Guild No. 5 was pleasstage. Young
1
land Friday and Saturday evenings. the United Stales Department of
PENNOCK HOSPITAL
Hastings MfK- Co.
J. W- Wolfe and Mrs Otto Isen- ] fadies Bi white dresses and sham- I “idly entertained by Mrs. Andrew । day
- nt rhll„h
K R
Mr and Mrs. Wm Thomas were hatii were in Freeport on Monday । ro&lt;k aprons and wearing green Roush on Tuesday evening, clghSome of our boys play in the T. K. Agriculture are now trying to im­
in Luke Odessa Sunday to pay their &gt;to
n sec his
t.lu ci.t.r
prove the yield and drying quality of to Mr. and Mrs. Otto Church
sister. Mrs MarthA
Martha Be- I...4K.-4
headband, served xa..
Mrs. t LorenzoI , fnnn
teen b-lno
being nracant
present. *&lt;r,
Mrs. tlarlav
Harley Fov
Fox 1 WOlKer.. niCl ULSl wcuiivsuay
respects to 04-yeari&gt;-old Constantine vicr. who Ls very III al the home ofI Mans. piano, and Stephen Karines. I and Mrs. Kim Sigler wen winners | ning at the church for pot luck them lose.
the oil The oil content of different 1 White cloud.
Mesdamcs Earl and Wayne Ker­ lot* of seed may vary from 33 to 42 I The «me day a ion was born ta
FrldlMUM*h. father of G P. Feld- her daughter and husband. Mr. and ( violin, furnished music during the , at bridge, a lovely lunch in kevp- supper and business meeting.
Ruth woodman was home from incen. jack Dotzcrl. Hiram Garrett per cent. A difference ot 4 per cent Mr. and Mrs. Russell Booher or
pouaeh. of this city.
Mrs. L M Curtiss.
dinner hour.
ing with St. Patrick was also served, j
I Caledonia on Sunday and at Kal- and Claude Rosenberg walked In on between two lots of seed means a Woodland.
Bert Zagclmeirr was the guest of
MiKsrs Grace Edmonds. Helm : Following the dinner Mrs. Frank
' amazoo on Saturday night.
Mrs. Claude Kcnneen with a ;»t difference of 2 24 pound* of oil per 1 Twa girls were bom on March R—
his parents. Mr and Mrs. J. D. Wade and Elisabeth Finch were in A(jalr. president of the club, wclHTGHBANK.
Mr and Mrs. E 8 Thompson. luck dinner and a nice gift Wed- VUiMwa
Zagclmcier. Saturday night and
, 3.MO pound* of to Mr. and Mr*. Forrert Coleman,
bushel of seed, uor
Sunfield Sunday, and called on Mr romed the guests and jiresmted , Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Adams were ' Mrs Will Brooks and Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday, enroute from Ohio tn his
ncsdfty to remind her of another oll ln a cartoa&lt;l ol 1.500 buzhels.
]| city. Route 5 and
"
Buchner They
Mrs .......
warren Carter.
general
----------- ,, ---------Sunday
guests
at—
the —
former's
par- I
and■ Mrs.
.Melvin
—
--------------- - । .....
. ------------—— ■—
H- A Woodman visited Mrs Mar­ milestone.
hoin&lt; in Grand Rapids.
. ■
&lt;
- ♦»
- .
-----' uerald Tebo. city.
found Mr. Buchner recovering nice- chairman of the evening, who had ent*', Mr. and Mrs Adams in Free- tha BeVicr al the home of Mr. and
The
Social
Club
wlll
meet
with
j
The Rev E. O McShcrry went to
When the dancing teachers «
of J
|y from his operation.
j arranged a delightful program, port, and Howard Snow also visited j Mrs. Mort Curtis in Freeport last
Grand Rapid' Monday to attend
Mrs. Jack Dotzert next Wednesday «,-ew
v»u«* u«r»
uv »uwm
aw Vnrlr got
trrU together
tzwelhar recently
reerntlv to,
tn'
"What
does •
Mr. and Mrs. Roman Fcldpausch.1 Lewi* Hine, accompanies
accompanied oy
by Mrs. j his
uncle. nincy
Harley Wood,
there.
in* untie,
wow. uicrc.
। Sunday afternoon. Mrs. BeVicr ha* to
lhe meeting of the Board of Christ* Mr. and MB Earl Puimatler and
tn tie
tta a quill
nuilt for
far the hostess.
hosteas.
| tap wl thelr trouble*, they omitted,. wife
ha* prepared nothing for hl*
Mau*, gave a group ot Irish mclCurt Marshall had a heart attack been very sick but is *ome better
tan Education ol lhe Michigan Con­
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kermeen a» wy
mealF* a*ks a writer on do,:rj important Item.
it;—.. They failed
fallci evening
—
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bumford attend­ odles. Mr*. Mary Vandugteren in 1 Tuesday morning but is somcwliat 1: now. Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Wing vis­
ference of the Unlied Brethren ed a dinner in Grand Rapids Tues­
spent Sunday in Grand Rapid*
I tn
natahllah
■a limit
tn
th»
nnmh'r
mestte
Mlbleeta.
Me
to
establish
limit
to
lhe
number
meaUc
subjects.
He
usually
chooeM
appropriate costume gave several I on the gain. Visitor* there were
Mr. and —
Mr*. Maurice
Thomas of
ited Mrs BeVler last Wednesday.
church.
—----------------------------------- of steps your partner can take on'that evening to bring home a few
day. given by the Del Monte com­ Irish character sketches, and a good Mr. and Mrs. Clair Marshall. Belle- ;
Mr- Nettle Hyde nnd Paul Hyde
Plans are being made for the 8. Galesburg
________
,
spent Sunday
evening your loe,
friend* to dinner.
.
■
pany to wholesale grocers.
sized cast of high school student* vue; Mrs Llbbie Marshall and Chas. I S. to give a program on the eve- with hi,
narant*. Mr.
Mr
Mr. I
his parents,
and Mrs.
visited Mr». Birdie Mcrlau of Prai­
Sunday guests ot Mr. and Mrs. presented an lrL*h folk-lore play 5 Jone* ot Battle Creek; Mr. and Mrs (
I ning of Easter.
veme Thomas.
rieville Sunday George Hyde, who James M. Gilmer were Mr. and
under the direction of Al Becker. Worth Green. Moore district; Mr ’* Arthur Richardson and clem JorMr*.
Will
Schroder
of
Caledonia
'
had been visiting hi* grandmother, Mrs. Floyd Van Auker of Belding. The rest of the evening was spent 1 and Mrs Will Hawblilz. Frank and L.’n ‘attanded
went lo hi* home in Prairieville with Mr and Mrs. Burr Clark of Hol­ with bridge, monopoly and in visit- Laurenct Maurer. Mr
and Mrs. I .zz z‘.tz-±zd
)n Ma a Sunday School will entertain lhe Home Economic
। meeting in Hastings last week.
class for their spectil meeting.
them
land. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Glad­ ing.
I Harve Marshal) and daughter. Haz- '
i Geo. Coat* fa getting along nice- March 25th and Mrs. Harold Seg-!
Mr nnd Mr*. Nell Fish, who have stone of Grand Rapids and Mr.
Prizes were awarded only lo gen-1 el. North Maple Grove
Mr .nd u'r/ u««..r,i
...a '?&gt;' aft*r hls
operation.
i estrom will entertain lhe class in'
spent the winter in Florida, have and Mrs. Bernard McConnell of
tiemen; Harold Phillips and Robert I **'
Mr .04 •*Mrs. ”
How.M
2 2?^ ?2
Jone
““ ^21
and | ’T,„
, | Aprll
I
returned to their home in Bangor
Battle Creek.
Thursday'' •*— veme Thoma* called on;
meeting here ihfa"w^k
this week Thursday
and spent the week end here with
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Loehr and tables, and John Reazoner and 1A. Ingram and Hiram Lockwood of . ^^1^ al 10 o'clock with dinner Mr*. Mary Bidelman In Lake Odes- j
Mn. Fish's mother. Mrs. Rose Trc- Mrs. Jennie Loehr of Jackson were
R. Cook at monopoly. Earl Coleman near Hastings calltd on Mr and 1-------- - k.. .».«». a
Saturday
afternoon.
। served by the L. A- 8.
here over lhe week end. lhe two received the cul-prizc. Mrs. Carter । Mrs. Frank Hawblllz. Sunday,
| Mrs. Neil Smith was home from
Mrs. John Nobles. MLv. Mary former visiting Mr. and Mrs. !/•&lt;■
was assisted by Miss Sadie Gia:.- j Mr. and Mrs Berylc Nash and
illvsr Olar vacorauoa
Payne, Miss Rose DcFoc and MLv. Hubbard, and Mrs Loehr visited gow and lhe members of the socle 11 two sons were Sunday guest* al
Ethel Rag la of the Barry Co Health । in the Good Will community. Mr.
The Silver Star rank* next be
; M?Mr. and Mra.
Mrs. Claud Reida
Reids cf
of the
the I |nR lh(. wMf|t cnd wRh hcf ftUU,r
and
hastes*
committees.
i
Unit ore spending the week in Bat- I
Hw the Distinguished Service Cross &lt;
Loehr Is recovering nicely from hh
Moore district.
SURPRISE HOSTESS.
।I The
neighbors
gathered
for
a
‘
J*"'
“
"
’
weJt*
WoodHnd
Pa&gt;
lie. creek at Lht‘ Extension program
a*
a
decoralinn
RR
■
UWUI-UIIU for
t«t valor.
........The
--- The neighbors gathered for
. rt-ceni operation.
institute.
Circle No. 1 ot the. Methodist L. A. farewell party at lhe home of Mr. ‘ klna hotne ln West Woodland.
Purple Heart ranks nest below the
I Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs.
Mrs. Fred Atten and si*ter-ln-'' John Hocvenair were Mr and Mrs.
Distinguished service
Service »ieoai.
Medel, wu-cu
which |
S held a delightful meeting on and Mrs. Dewey Jones Saturday
I The Oov£
----------------- m«v yet
. _. have
.... lo Dfatlngulaked
raturoay
.
rnme
nt
law. Mrs Glasiur Hamilton of Bat­ ' Clare Emerson and Mr. and Mrs. Thursday of last week at the home ' evening with well filled ^
k',U 1l.-u-p in and revh. yaudaSte. W set '• "" bte'-c-t d.enn. Inn Mr mart
basket*.
lie Creek, were in Grand Rapids .Chris Strong of Sturgis. Mr. and of Mrs. Jas. W Long with thirty-' They are moving to Nashville for
vine for । the cIowns oul of th, morc serious toriou* service not Involving per
Monday Mrs. Hamilton returned Mrs. Alvin Helrigle and Donna and
the present.
-------- ------------------------five attending. As It was her birth- “
*
calling*.
tonal bravery.
Wednesday to her home after a Mrs. Gordon Usbome of Freeport.. day. the members came with well
short visit al the home of her ...
T •wrM.r-r- TTatrkill.
Mr. ™Hr,
and Mrs Lawrence
Hawkins filled baskets for a pot l,,.Lr
luck .suppei
brother. Fred Allen.
‘and baby of Grand Rapids, besides as a surpri.-c for Mrs. Long Mrs.
ua Tip
Bans
Visitor* at the home of Mr. and
local guests.
George Balch had charge of the
J4rv W. H Franck over lhe week 1
program which centered around the
end were Mr and Mr*. George I
MIDDLEVILLE
BUSINESS WOMEN'S .
topic. -Mothers of Famous Men."
Munsell and children. Raymond and
HOSPITAL GUILD MET. There were five mothers present
, Barbara Jeanne of Fowlerville and
Mrs Harry Wood and Mrs. Ward who had birthdays that day. so
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bidelman and
each was presented with a rose.
Bnlne ---------entertained
the
Business
—
in Laverne
Lavcme 01
ruiuiac.
---- - soil
of Pontiac.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Severance and Women » Hospital Guild on Monday ■ Mrs. I. J. Smith la the hostess for
daughters of Battle Creek. Mr and evening at the Legion home,.dj.pner AprilMr*. Gershum Severance and Adel-1 being served by the American LxATTEND THE RURAL
ber: Rclckord ot Tkomapple Twp. | Rion Auxiliary.
HASTINGS NEWEST
PROGRESS DAY PROGRAM.
.pent Sunday with Mrs. Mary Sev- | Green candles In crystal holders,
BEAUTY SHOP
The sixteen students of lhe Barry
erancc Mrs. Elizabeth Relckord was shamrocks, green and white nut
also there from Lanaitig a part of । basket* and green and white crepe Counly Normal, accompanied by
WHERE QUALITY 18 HIGH
the week
P&gt;P«r. ■« «'» keeping *‘th the St. Mrs. Mabel Clark. Mis* Jennie Mc­
AND PRICE IS LOW"
NOW YOU CAN GET
it
Mr* W*rrcn nou»h. Mr*. Keith 1 P^rick *ea*orf. made the long table* Bain and Mrs Maude W. Smith,
attended the Rural Progress Day
Daniels and Ml»* Dorothy Roush very attractive.
EUROPEAN REALISTIC
were tn Kalamazoo on Sunday to
In the absence of the chairman, program at W. 8. T. C.. Kalamazoo,
OIL PUSH-UP WAVE
sec the former's baby grandson. Mfa* Jennie McBain, lhe vice-chalr- on Thursday evening and Friday.
Fredcrick Lewi*, born to Mr. and man. Ml** Ruth Parr, presided al Speakers included Mis* Helen Heyl
The Regular 15.00 Wave!
Mrs Lloyd Roush on Friday al the business session Plans for fu- of New York City and Dr. Carl C
Our Special — Complete —
Bronron hospital. The Hille fellow lure meeting* were discussed. Mr*, Taylor of the U. 8. Dept, of Agri­
Stretch your Travel Dollar.
weighed eight and one-quarter Bernard Reed is hostess for April, culture.
pound*, congratulation*.
. | All
appreciated
Irl*h
other uses.
One Book
STAIGER—COQK.
Mr-. Fred Phillipa. Mrs. Earl songs delightfully rendered by MUs
Tru-Art Oil Permanent for Dry Hair
fc Complete
serves the family..
The marriage ot Mrs. Florence
Boyes. Beatrice Goggtn*. Elizabeth Jean Glerum. accompanied by MUs Cook and George Staiger both of
ASK for YOUR TICKETS on FREE DRAWING
Book Today—It's an
Henry. Mr*- Fred palmer. Mr* Cleo Florence Campbell. Several con- thl* city occurred Saturday night in
BERGAMONT OIL
THE FAMOUS
n-rrv Mrs.
Mr&gt; B
n F
p Rieke).
nickel Pearl
Pearl Jer
Jer-i
Berry.
­ teat* appropriate to 8t. Patrick* Battle Creek al the home of Mr.
CLO-TONE
sey
Mrs. Harold VandcGiessen. day were enjoyed.
and Mr*. Edward Hamilton. rela­
PERMANENT *t Comp.
Battle creek, and Ambra Fedewa
tive* of Mr. Staiger Rev. Brillhart
PERMANENT JO
You Know Tills Wave
TALKS OVER WKZO.
all from the Windstorm office at-,
of Emmanuel Holiness church per­
WAVE—
W Comp.
by Reputation
Miss Harriet Kelley.' daughter of formed the ceremony. Mrs. Carrie
tended the funeral of Harold Sun­
day near Clare on Bunday.
Mr. and Mr*. Harry Kelley of Kai­ Ward, mother,of lhe bride, was a
Pineal Costile Shampoo and Finger Wave-------------- -I,50c
.. Yesterday.
umazoo.
gave a talkMrs.
on Monday
over
Wednesday.
8terguest present.
,65c
Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value, for
ling Rogers. Mr*. Don Foreman, station WKZO about the Girl Re­
Mr. and Mrs. Staiger are al home
iFor Dry Hair and Dandruff.!'
Mrs. Pauline Bliw- Mrs. Harry Wa-,serves, of which »he is an active at the bride's residence. 714 W.
TICKETS AT
ter*. Mrs. Donald Smelker. Mrs.. member. MUa Kelley wrote her Bond, congratulations.
■
NOT A SCHOOL—All Experienced Licensed Operator*
Harry Wood. Mrs Albert Craig.; own article and Hasting* lUtenrr*
FAMILY DINNER.
Mr*. Edw. Downs. Mr*. T- H- Johns- said her voice was very pleasing
Mr. and Mr*. Edw. Tudor enter­
ton and Mr* John Wood represent- over lhe radio. She ta making a
HASTINGS PHONE 2137
lit WEST STATE ST.
PHONE 2325
ing the American Legion Auxiliary, splendid *cholMtic record in the tained with a family dinner on
LUCILE KEMLER and MARGARET DAHLKE
attended the Fourth District Birth- Kalamazoo High school. She Is a Sunday honoring the birthday of
day Party al the Legion iioaplUl niece nf Earl. David and L L. Boyea ■Mn. Tudor's mother, Mrs. Eddie
Bump. A delightful time I* reported.
al Camp Custer.
ol this cHy.
oriental

W. 0.

’1650,.’2250

Spring
Clothing

’1350

’29”

T.S. BAIRD

Hinman - Special

Friday - Saturday, March 13 • 14
SHREDDED WHEAT 2-.23c
A-G SALAD DRESSING
27c
PORK &amp; BEANS
4 c_ 25c
HERSHEY’S COCOA
MATCHES

NOW I

REGULAR
RIDERS

BUTTER

LIFEBUOY SOAP

HOLLYWOOD
BEAUTY SHOP

MEAT

10 RIDE Books
At 25* OFF

FRESH BOLOGNA 2

NO Ammonia — NO Borax

-

TRIO CAFE

.4

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE

,

HINMAN’S

HASTINGS

f u 9c
13C
Lk 35c
■*&gt; 5c

SPECIALS

BEEF STEAK J&amp;*
MINCED HAM
i

$J50

3

20c
10c
29c

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MARCH It, 1918

INSURANCE

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

Our Service

Miss Lorrene Collison, who is tak­
ing nurses training at Nleltobi hos­
pital. Battle Creek, spent Sunday
afternoon _ad evening with home
Enllrc • "
came Friday to spend ths* week end ,
with her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. I
Hugh Care.
Mrs. Mildred Stevens spent Wed­
nesday with her mother. Mrs Nellie '
Galesburg.
Miller, who has been in ill health I
for several weeks. Miss Eulah Care ■
will assist with the work there.
These mild spring days give farm­
ers the urge to begin getting Ute
sugar bush paraphernalia in read!- .

The Hastings Banner

Marion Keagle spent
Friday
night with Betty Potts and in com-

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

husband. Mr. nnd Mrs. Rnlph Fink-

nesday.

dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and
Ur.- Von Dunn in Delton.
The Kingsley Ladles' Aid will be
l.r.l.l n. •
t- .l.i «.

GEO. M. NEWTON

Fl

Mr. and Mr.« George Leinaar nnd
Josephine spent Wednesday evening
with hls brother. Ike and wife.

L.r rs.hi

Writs K.l
• 1

SALK- Meii.UK.lh
rlr.i.-d r.—l l.r.chl
t 1 ridl-r.
X* AXlt.lt Suhtlt. men
| Uli iV iir.rn Hr
&gt;'■11; HAl.t'r- It.rb-.li.d
1 -r "
r"1"1"!-*!
I Smith trjwwrltrr. rt
.
1
1

WOOL GROWERS
I am In the market for your wool.
In my first experience buying wool
I bought nearly two carload*. I sell
direct to lhe mills. That Is why I

srllinf.

ARCHIE TOBIAS

\V,

Richland. Mr and Mfs. Art Rob&lt;Tts and baby uf KiibiYluizou wert
visitors at elate Louden's Sunday.
Several families hum this neigh-

•» lh. n.i-r.lh Lr
’.illrr. Ile«un&lt;«.
Ilmnll.v irr,l.
Wrrk. old H.ll
ritrnt mndiii.m;

the Extension Club meeting at Mrs.
Ray Erway’s of Glass Creek last token io the Hospital nt Ann Arbor
Thursday had an enjoyable lime.
Morvan Hinckley of Chicago spent for treatment and observation. He
Sunday with hls grandparents. Mr. was bom and grew to manhood in
Lester Lord returned home Sat­
urday after having received an

SALE OF HORSES
AT IONIA
SATURDAY, MARCH 14
8 Months Time
JOHNSON &amp; JARVIS

BABY CHICKS
The Republicans ot the township
urday afternoon at Assyria Center.
The executive board ol the Lacey
Mutual Teliphone comixiny held a

AM BUYING WOOL
Again This Season
HIGHEST MARKET TRICES TAIO

HEREFORD STEERS

honorable discharge from the CCC
camp nt Newaygo.

family of Hickory Corners visited
him on Sunday.
Mr. and Mr. Andy Louden and

■ trend |te|.ld&gt;.
r'l»M ”w&gt;

Billie nt Lowell.
Glen Dean nnd family. Rnlph
Finkbeincr and family. John Kol­
lar and wife enjoyed supper with
Julian Potts and family' Wednes­
day night the occasion being Betty's
birthday.

MLis Mary Douglass is assisting
with the work In the Robl. Moore
home in Hastings Mrs. Moore Ls
Mrs. Effie Louden nnd grand­ suffering with an injured hand.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl McKibbin spent
daughter Beverly Silcox spent last
Wednesday and Thursday with Ellie several days last week with her par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Mugridge. near
Latham and Mater near Banfleld

CAUCUS NOTICES

JERRY ANDRUS

tournament nt Woodland.
Harold Kollar is spending a few

WILL TOBIAS
Hastings, Route 4

iur the coming year. They have
given very efilcleni service lhe past
three years.
Mrs. Doris Warner of Detroit is
. pending the week with her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller.

Phone *4

HORSES!

FREE
25 lb«. of PURINA STARTENA CHICK
FEED with every 100 chicks ordered by April 1 st for
immediate or future delivery. New low prices on "HiQuality” baby chicks from *100'/ blood-tested stock.

Brown, White Leghorns &lt; large type I, Anconas, $7.75.
Barred, Buff, White Rocks, Reds. Orpingtons, Wyondottes. Minorcas, $7.95. White or Black-Giants,
$9.95 par 100. Order from ad. $1.00 per 100 books

your order. Add 1c to above prices for superior grade
for chicks from old hens' eggs.

WILL ARRIVE WITH A
OTHER LOAD FRIDAY.
See These Before You Buy:

The Briggs Ladles’ Aid Society
will meet on Thursday for a pot

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Smooth Rubbar Bock Pods
No Posts Tq Wear Clothing

dinner on Wednesday and the com­
munity night will be on Friday.
Come and bring table service, sand। wtches nnd one other food.
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Dunklcbcrger

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

NEW

OLD

LEEUW’S SUPERIOR POULTRY FARM

FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET. Phone 2616

CARDS of THANKS

FOOD CENTER 2609

H. Foldpausch • 3921
ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

USED CARS

The Prescription Drug Store SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

Unievrsal Garage Co.
Farmers, Attention!
NEW AND USED
AUTO PARTS

1929 Model A Pick-up.

1930 Model A Sport Coupe.
1930 Model A Std. Coupe, Rumble
seat.

Dead Stock Removed!
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2637

1932 V-8 Fordor Sedan.

Bastlnga

1934 V-8 Coupe, Rumble seat.

1935 V-8 Standard Tudor.

1935 V-8 Standard Fordor.

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

1934 Plymouth Fordor.
HASTINGS MARKETS

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,

GRANGE PROGRAMS

1931 8-Cyl. Buick Fordor Sedan.
You con buy a used cor from us with full confidence.
We hope some day to sell you a New Ford V-8 ond

EVERY SATURDAY
If you wish trucking service call Hastings
Phone 710—-Fl 1 or 737—F4.

Michigan Livestock Exchangi
HASTINGS BRANCH

1929 AA Truck, stake body, dual
wheels.

we know when that time comes the Used Car you
Several from this community at­
tended Quarterly meeting at North
Maple Grove. Saturday afternoon
and Sunday morning.
Seward Walton of Naperville,
Illinois, was home from Friday un­
til Sunday afternoon.
ployed In
week end
gene Ball
Sunday

bought of us will be your measure of

respsibility.

Battle Creek spent the
at Orson McIntyre’s. Eu­
was'a Sunday guest.
callers at Herbert Mc-

Checseman and family of Battle
Creek and Matt Balch and daugh-

1 TA."*.

PHONE 2121

HASTINGS, MICH

�■^^t&amp;s
about
Maidlag Money In «SHr*

PART

THE HASTINGS BANNER

Thursday, March 12, 1936

TROUT SEASON OPENS
|Utint/Q
SATURDAY, APRIL 25 8 Barry Bypaths S IlIHllIuJ

—

New Date Glvei Office and
Shop Worker! Better
Break

• ----- &lt;1-^

By JANE CAMCRON

! work is very marked. But it will be
! remembered, in fairness, that lhe
; township highway commissioner.
and preceding him lhe district
overseer, did nol have machinery
I to do-such work, and road nuking
| wa* anything but an art In those
I days; Now it ha* become a real

X™I LAST 165 MILES WILL BZ.SSS™ '

Illi rnr DA nmi
uUr ’Hr III rr l!”
III LI IL DU I Lil

(dollar bill*. Pew people Uk* thrm.]
.While a small percentage may be ।
| governed by the superstition that

High School Norn

N E5 COME HUMP :SS»=£=S’._ _ _ _ _ _ _ „

II LU UU IIL I ItUllli blUa ot another denomination. Bs- •ponaond by U» H. B. MtSU
Ul«
* nearby c’ty sometime ago, I council is to ba *bown tn tha O*nWE VISIT THE CITY BANK he got quite a kick from offering a tral auditorium. March M. Adado-

With
wnn ‘the experience which the
AND OET INFORMATION
commission has gained during the
chases in a five-and-dlme itore. . children and Un oral* tor High
ON THE SUBJECT
post four years In Its work on
। The first clerk regarded it with school studenU. Proceeds will ba
I township highways, it will be able
suspicion; evidently wasn't quite given to the Athletic Association,
; to do much belter in lhe future.
sure it was legitimate tender and
• • •
The commission will have available LOCAL DEMAND FOR
called the floor manager for an
Hasting* drew
Grand Rspkta
pea-wee home,, u n uol ,o?;o,
„,a tl„
w„ , w,„ h„ w „„ op
nlstiUea
1
mil-CHUc
every
year,
beginning
with
1830.
for
THEM
GROWS
STEADILY
°kcy 'n,u ‘^PP^ed Ihree
Christian High Khool for Um umlI At San Quentin here in Cali- : acknowledged by un* of thousands because silk 'cause* hubby to have !
WILL BE 840 MILES • construction and maintenance on
_
I
in
reply
to
our
query
a*
to
the
fi
nal*
in
the
alate tournament. If
.
j
jn
reply
UUI
Muri
ju
Lrnia chosen wrouns turning
»PorUmen a* their special holl-. eczema; an old sea captain ha* Ur.------------ —
township
roads
&lt;55,179.
which
will
.AF.
tr.,amount
of
counterfeit
money
run
*
. . *
’
. day. But
But beginning
beginning this
this year
year the
the,' rific
rifle aalhma
asthma seizures
seizures when
when going
going County Road Commiasion is
|I
..
.day.
across in the thousand* of dollar*
be lhe county’s share of lhe McNilt Thousands Kept on Hand
lut counterfeit money and nev-, ttr«.»
rout wtuon DOM.llo
officially m-n.
opens m,
on .h.
the, .
ashore;
the i.Hu
lady fvten
friends
of another
another II
a good chance at the state cham­
aluM. ih.
• at
puttjng Them in Good
- .
.
Fifty Cent Pieces Also
handled yearly by the bank. Mr. pions! ilp.
k having i&lt;&gt; worry about getting In u*t Saturday in April, lhe 2Slh. The man have to wear shiny noses beWhile the legislature evidenced a
Pnnnlsr
| Lowell said they aeldom found any.
kll. since they are already In. And change was made by an act of the 1 came the dtrU .root In cosmetic* 1* j
Shape for Travel
fair spirit in the distribution of the
ropuiar
Doubtles* six or seven pieces would
nice Jolly strike on at Alcatraz, hast state Legislature, so trout what gel* him down; a doctor'* son
Basket ball game* have been
On the first of April next, Barry McNltl money, some counties can | We happened to mention the sub- be Uie total In the la*t fifteen years,
started among the various girls'
nd In my old home state, tlie In- {fishermen wlll get six extra days of gel* bronchitis from horse dual and county will
rm assume full
iuu control
coniroi of
oi make
mBke a
, larger showing
.bowing than other*.
other*. ' J«t
Jcci of
or pennies
penniea the
me other
omer day
aay to uite
iAt* this
thia fall the bank had been
l
rnnrea Just seeming j O*hing in addition to a week end. other* are sensitive to feather*, fur.'
maintenance
nee and of all construe- because they ....
lack the many .hill* Loyal Lowell, one of the assistant WBmed to look out tar counterfeit
.fin
’
t&lt;&gt; come nnd go at
Beginning of trout season on the dog and cat hair, adhesive tape, ai- tion work
k on the
lhe remaining 165
185 an
and
,‘u°
*•,*
d deep ravines which are *0 casters al the City Bank, and ^n dollar bills which were appearlast Saturday In April will allow pirin. gum. glue. mice. soap, honey­
plentiful in
in this
this county,
which
found out a lot of Interesting lng tn Orand Rapids and certain *'*“!’ - y-* . . ’
vers. mllM of township roads in Barry Pitiful
-------“
*
, ’ the many northern Michigan com- bee (tings, certain kind* of flowers. county
This
will
make
close
to
,
mB
ke
road
building
difthings
about
the
humble
and
o
t
he
r
town*
Michigan.
।
“
T,.
iiu*
wui
mane
nu»«f
au
(
m
axe
roaa
Building
much
more
dirinmg*
aoout
roc
niunme
copper
«uu
other
towns
in
western
wM
.
h
mm
llut In Illinois I* munilies''a betUr opportunity to and strawberrie*.
Pollen*
and
ne of
man it is for Instance,
instance, tn
in our it* popularity as a medium of
ot ex- O
One
Of these came the bonk's
bank's way. “t"
where the chaps stage' their annual trout festivals | foods are the most common al­ 840 mile*l of township road* taken flcUiltt than
this has I। neighbor Eaton county, or Clinton change in Hasting*. We had pre- Mr Lowell
mwell showed It to us. We are ,w n Dy
»*«*"*» Team.
over by the county. All thl*
y
B*roan*n
enjoy the benrflis and celebration*.
I ’lergen*;
consequently
you can brag .------ .— undfr
t)ie provisions ...
of i or--------------*Gratlo?“ where
the
country
told of the enormous qul» ,uw w, would to,e mxwptM
.
-----------------------—
...._ ....
.
..
. "is
. vlously been
------ -------------------------------------at congenial *uct
In a number of places the open­
On PrUiAy. March 13. four High
due!the UcNUt ***• wh‘ch •*CBme more level. Our commission has ^number of pennies certain rctall- it. It Is considered one of the most
ety
without
tha ing o! trout season ha* developed
—
-----------------------------------Some doctors conslcter allergy y" 1 effective in 1931
In our Judgment1 on(. ftne asset which many other | ers here who do a large volume ot perfect counterfeit bilb ever turned I
studenU will compete in an
bother of paying a holiday or carnival spirit. Men [ to a lack of calcium in the diet and the McNltt law was one of the most i COuntles lack—that is lb plentiful; business are obliged to keep on 4;out. One's attention really had u&gt; 'extempore
speaking mnut
coatoat. Thaw
They
”f'mnor* .ne-kta.
due*. It must be leave their place* of business and others have theories Including ex­ constructive pieces of legislation supply of good gravel.
| hand. This was confirmed by Mr. be called to the difference between wlll be allowed one hour tn which
grand, serving ns in some Instance* school session* cesalve alkalis and excessive and ever passed by our state law-mak- i
wm not be many years unUl | Lowell who said it was nothing un­ it and s legitimate bill; then you to prepare a five to seven minute
a member ot the are suspended if opening day oc-1 insufficient gland secretions. 8er- er*.
there will be a gravelled highway ' usual for some of these stores to । con discern that the paper does not speech on topic* drawn from the
urns ore often successful in thwurthouse committee of curs on a week day.
We
every farm
home —
In. —
Barry
- can all remember
- - _ tlie old I passing --------------... --------... come In on a Saturday for any-1' have quite the body and crackle to general subject* of Theodore RooeeThe new law. changing opening । Ing the attack*. You can go to township
’c^meb.'p highway
high”? system. &lt;(?)
’■ For- county,
county. ar.d
and it
tt -ill
will ccr.trtbuU
contribute much
much where from a thousand to twenty-1' it. and that it appears a little dul­
lhe Juliet Indoor
daU
Baturslid get. a serum ’ merly township road* were super- to the comfort of living and to the five hundred pennies, aside from
—from May 1 to tlie last -------- , your physician
r..,---------------------Country club, what
ler. which might easily be attrib­ ant* will be Donald Doxey. Dwight
day in April, gives the office workfrom anything from canary 1M_d b )ocal 0{jjcers Who seemed 1 eaJMS of travel. It will make market- varying amount* during the week,
Ferris. Ruth Hathaway and Robert
with crop games and [Hiker parties er and rtnn
shop laborer an
evenfeather,
j bird feathers
to dandruff.
First aid
— third
to dandruff
First aid
------------- ------------ra-,....
c“sc
maze marxei
dernand for pennies uted to soil. Il also passes a test Henney. one of whom as the winner
j------------kc- There
o( fBrm product* a far less dlfInd liquor made right there on the chance with the mon of more lei*- i treatment in critical seizures con-' to take the matter a* a J°
which only Uncle Sam's own bill*
were In cx.&gt;i
each ww.Lu.ip
township neighbor- ’ ncull matter than it has been.
■cic
, has been of gradual growth. While are supposed to pass—when you rub will compete in the iub-dlstrict
ure.
I slst* of adrenalin injected Into the hood districts, which were called ,
----------------- &lt; &lt;»
—
It naturally Jumped with the ad­ it between the fingers the color rub*
-------- muscle* and the wheezing or whatvent of the three per cent sales lax. off. Government currency 1* print­ April 3. Judge* for lhe event will
road district*. One person
, WAR ON WORMS
I The day Is at hand when "prison BLAZE lyfCHimUH PARSONAGE, have-you will stop immediately. In lecled to oversee the road building 1
be five member* of the faculty.
lhe vogue of marking commodities
AIDS LITTLE PIGS. with the odd-end price which ed with ink which never dries, and
Ireak” In thex headlines won't mean
On Thursday afternoon fire was 1 not quite such critical cases, ephe- in that particular area. People then1
so are these ten dollar counterfeit
dLwovered in the parsonage of lhe I drin I* given. Both drugs are falr- worked out their road taxes Instead i
Precaution sprang
against Into
roundworm
favor several decades
STIRS UP HIS
------ ncw ln the mental wotId. Also of paying tn
MethodLit Protestant. -&lt;
church
at
In cash. If
tt there
fl,— ever
AVAT was
WBR I' Infestation of swine should be ago was also Instrumental in In- । bills. __________ _ ___________
Hickory Corners. It is believed the X-ray and a method of producing a festive occasion it wa* when the planned right now. prof. Veme A. creasing their clrculati6n?'Tt s funny EDUCATIONAL EXHIBIT
BROTHER MEMBERS
Ire trying to get In; nnd who could fire originated from the chimney. artificial fever are proving Satisfac­ people of the district, under the di- j Freeman, animal husbandry de- how much cheaper an article with
hartingr
/
The Hickory Comers fire depart­ tory in some cases.
,
a
39c.
49c
or
99c
lag
seems
than
To
COME
To
iCong.
rectlon of their overseer, congrcgat- partment. Michigan o._._
State College,
Glare E. Hoffman
llntne them?
ment
responded promptly,
and
It 1* comforting to kriow that ed to "fix" lhe road. They -fixed" advises, clean pastures, clean far-the
,,
cent more price which makes
An exhibit from the Conservation
Provei to Be Forceful
found the entire roof ablaze, but doctors consider allergic people to it all right. Usually that work con­ rowing quarters, and clean sows will the even amount.
। department, which will later reach
!
The Yellow Peril's Peril
was able to pul out lhe flames by l,.v. ■ hlxhrr muulxenee quou sisted
m
of plowing a strip ,on each eliminate the danger of roundworm
The slot machines eat up pennies
Speaker
Ia T *1*1112$ moment lhe question the use of chemicals.
Hastings and every town In Michi­
than ordinary mortal. A drrm..
u,- ro,d ,„a “
wllh
-Z 2::
".h a slush [parasites and insure larger litters at like magic. Believe it or not. Mr.
. . . . says
----- ..that
—allergic
„.omen women
9rc ■____________
_ ___
Evidently the congressman from
Rev Oscar Smith, pastor of the I tologist
are ' scraper ______
or any
any other
otner
tool
tnai hapnap­ weaning time, fewer runts, and a Lowell tells us the bank takes in gan. Is starting on its rounds the
|A before the house Is whether
tool thl*
that
thka^dlstrict. Honorable Clare E.
*d . or suggest
Itself
loose
[ Is more perilous to tie a slate* church who. with hU family, oc- unusually magnetic and fascinating.
.
peneu iu &amp;ua*r» iwu. mu* wv*c more profitable product, he point* around $200 to &lt;275. worth of pen­ first week of April in the upper Hoffman. Allegan, has made an ex­
house discovered lhe fire । This will compensate ffor h going
&gt; h.*18 materialWB3
wasauuiiwu
dumpedu up into the out.
nles from the penny-ln-the-slot peninsula. The exhibit is said to !cellent reputation for himself as a.
pun in Japan and give offense to cuples the nouse
he was returning from the barn, without whipped cream and
ot &gt;he highway
&gt;n leaving
*&gt; n» ^Mti!™
—
Roundworms are about the most man who covers this territory in be Ute most educational and com­ forceful speaker in congress, as the
lie soldiers or a soldier lu Amari- as
He notified the fire department Im- off feather*, and fur trims.
for that road it look a ।
{long time for that road to become . commonand troublesome parasite hls monthly rounds, collecting from prehensive' ever designed.
following clipping from the dally
mediately, but II had gained con- | Here are some idea* for these *u-1 ^Able
after
this
operation.
But
natuhlo aft*r thU nneratlnn Hut affecting
after tint? pigs
nles raised
raised inIn Michigan,"
Mlrhiean " the
lhe wrtirhlne
weighing mnrhlnes
machines, mim
gum. randv
candy
Included are specimen* of prac- papers of Michigan shows:
slderable headway before lhe de-. per-lnlelligenu. They can supply I
the annual road-fixing the he says. ' Pigs become infested by and other mechanical devices. This
lically every fish found In Michl- j When Congressman Clare , E.
I llowsomever. at H.o risk »f Iwlng
partment arrived. The exact extent Ideas to fit their own particular ne[BhboM had B g0od visit and a
him
and saves gan waters; all game birds, water- Hoffman get* Up to make a spooch
lcnullz&gt;*d far punning, tills Inno­ of the damage is not known to us. case or write to Jane, tn care of real get.together It wa* the peo- swallowing the eggs of the parasite accommodates
picked up on Infested ground. The the bank from bringing in that
lent bystander ventures the pre- but we leant that it 1* covered by this paper, and she will help them
le wh0 attempted to negotiate the eggs are dropped in the manure much more by express and paying fowl and predatory birds; murals, on the floor of the House, yawn*
depicting various phases of conser- disappear and even those perpetuinsurance.
.out free of charge. If you don t like &gt; rOBds lhat ttTre ..|mproved ' in thl* from the infected pigs And develop carrying charges.
vatlon; specimen* of various fur-1 al whisperers in the back of lhe
fiAfiilCV Aii’n n'DDiru
't0 *,a-'h dishes, you can have a selz- mnnner Wh0 saw me tragedy of it.
In a few weeks. Now is lhe time
And here's a queer thing. While' bearing animals; types of guns and room cease their mutterings to II*CAGNEY AND 0 BRIEN
ure and watch hubby do the work.dld not Bppreciate the Joke.
to plan control to produce thrifty the bank has to order a lot ot pen- traps used In the state and nc
models ten. He set a new high in a tirade
t)
u
orc ------- --------- -------------------- ....---------- Of rorest'nrc detection and fighting
against
IN “LtlLINli
CFI1 ING ZtKlJ
7FRn” ' Ab0 you CMn t. eat c,bb
----- 7“Kr,. ------lurnll«. I LAUer
Later on tne
lhe townsnip
township overseer ,-------------- r.__.
u
government
spending.
orr '-cheap
must
nnr4 district
d|..rlrt system was abolished.
abolished. 1 "The eggs of the parasite are piece* to meet lhe local demand.' equipment.
"Celling Zero" a new nlcture star I ?
cheaP meats; &gt;you
ou ,simply
{™P|y m
¥st and
Ilecutim.* when somctlilng liappcns
.with
■-----brought on by the task given to
jamescagney and Pat O'Brien h&gt;V&lt;? n^XiCUrl^rtU;.^e^.drf»nK. BhICBnd hl«hw“y taxM were P“id «n I microscopic in size and may live for twenty-five cent pieces accumulate
the exhibit will
w.u be contlnvmmmm- umm™ M ktj nevy i-—» m
Iff or on a military p«t tu mnke ring
With
the
congress
levy
heavy
taxes.
He
will soon shot at the st^nd. It is 1 ^
Stive to hubby* rank
c“h' Alias ilicuiiu
mCant ouuai?n“‘ un|«u&gt;rlrn‘r°vc/ ' y«kra. ,n lbC “U
Ul *nd ab&lt;?Ut mu.cb faflU?r lb“n lhey,are
uous showings of Department con- wa*
at his to
best
when
he said
“Uta
j-- “
----------------------------------------, Sid caan.
pi tn Blanton the lil»&lt;&gt;&lt;|.sweating
a "picture "dealing
"with
sfIulUvc to
‘S hubby
hubby*
o d I| „„„.
menL but nol enough to speak of. ihe hog houses
•
... 'the*
. ’ com"।1
coma sensitive
s rank oia
The young pigs and they sometimes ship out &lt;3.500 servation motion pictures
1 Nero ot old. Tugwell Wallace and
ki'lieniotli of Texn* Ih-inocrncy. line meK m.S• atS'p^ngS'reX
'
mXrSw'* 1 Tt1* “I
hl«hw?y comneed protection until they are three worth. The fifty-cent piece is espem most Instances the/exhlblt will Hopkins have had a gloriou*’ Um*
bp wiili n lot of lte|iiildl(.-nnii—well.
of Uw air. and there U every thrill
,hortXcluw X can! (MI mhalon" *ervcd ? “ ShOrt
or four months old, after which daily popular; the silver dollar has be housed in school building* for, spending—now that the nAAUr
Imaginable raanev n'Rrien ami , U t!0” **cbusc y°u Cttn/ *7““ a year or two—then someone else time they become resistant and lhe practically passed out of clrcula- the convenience of school children 1 must be paid congress must have
Srt XinC^ yth*role« nfthr^. her 0,d woo,en
’n Ucl' j was chosen. The ordinary townworms do not cause them much tion everywhere, save in the west, during the day hour*. It will be i the disagreeable task of picking tha
fiylng war buddies who have turned the
b*llcr demand a doctor's Jhlp highway commissioner was trouble."
H's a funny thing too. about two- open to the public each evening.' pockets of th* taxpoym."
rarprised than he la.
?»»»'■
taoc.n. o? &gt;b, ,r. o? rood
the devil-may-care stunting lr-1
.
building.
HU
intention*
were
r,«non,lbl« member of the trio with .l”' dost jolte of Ute yec A W- jtrtctlj honorable but he did not
Abolishing Potlatches
.. the ,uperlnUmdent of ?
U», know tow to A« U» road «»1. II te
A T LAST ui'a'uuiiIb. the I’nhadlVh O'Beleh
lhe ilvera nnd srwlnu . mmewtot I«to
•&lt;*'“d I did. he tacked the tool, to do It
la parliament hnd n hill before It
steadier pilot than Cagney
I particularly a police dog. One day ; with.
o abolish [Mitlntclws When an InJimmy is also glventd making a frlend °r lhe rBmUy who w,s on
Aftcr the sUU adopted a system
Mnd lnuniform of rood
construction and malnte[arty, with free food nnd drink for love to every pretty girl hesees the P°,,ce force
which lands him In nlentv oftrou- came to the door The
8lr’ r“n nance the commonwealth built and
III, and whatever hr has left over wnwn lands nim m plenty of trou- , to Wm
excUlmed . oh Mr p,,.,
the trunk lines. It was
[e beslows upon the gu&lt;**la and
Pat O'Brien is excellent as the1 llcen^n'‘b'nexl.Umcy®“have made the responsibility of the
lo winds up beggared but happy, somewhat more sober air superin- PUPP1CS *,H y°u “ve me one?
county to construct lhe other and
rhat's a potlatch.
Although at Undent, but he lends no inconslder-1
less-travelled main highways, which
• • •
[resent confined t&lt;»X|io Indian*. It's able humor to the comedy situa- J It t*kes about four weeks to grow were called county road*. This left
[ot their own Idea. They borrowed tion*.
j whiskers on a cat. A wee Ultle girl in Barry county, after the county
Stuart Erwin doe* a good Job as [ “I our house borrowed our shears and trunk line systems had been
the third of the war buddles, a* unbeknownst to us. and gave the completed about M0 miles of town­
t's an old Scotch custom.
I Tracing the genesis of tradition- does Barton MacLane as the big air j old cat a shave about a month ago. ship highways, and most of them
[l things Is Interesting. I thought boss. Henry Wadsworth 1* seen a* i Pussy is Just getting back her self- reminded the traveller of a bad
respect
and z
a —
reasonably lengthened dream.
“:ct "d
lhc famous motto of the North­ the rival of Cagney for the love of rc
Under the McNltt law the sum of
set of whiskers.
west Mounted Police had original- the leading lady.
&lt;3.000.000 wa* taken from the gaso­
■d within the force until once
line tax in 1933 and apportioned to
BETTER PRICE FOR WOOL.
The Ripley pagt's in newspapers
when I tackled some native stnokFederal authorities seem to have have become so popular that nearly the counties on the basis of their
ng tobacco at a trading post In figured it out that the price of wool every paper and magazine you pick unimproved
township
highway
should go higher this year. The up has a similar feature. Barry By­ mileage. Tills soon brought tan­
bovered
consclousne**
1
knew principal reason 1* stated that there ways 1* almost queer enough to gible result*. For the period of four
years after thi law went into effect
Whence enme the slogan. “Always is practically no carry-over from qualify.
each year an additional &lt;500.000 of
□eta Its Man!" Thnt wa* year* last year. Foreign prices for this
gasoline tax money was add­
Bgo. but 1 still hare dizzy spell* staple are rising; mill* have good
led to this township road fund, so
order* booked for fabrics that re­ SEVEN GIVE ORATIONS
In humid weather.
’
that this year and every year here­
quire wool; and It is believed that
V
IN
FINAL
CONTEST
after there will be &lt;4.000.000 of gas­
the soldiers' bonus will make more
line tax money appropriated by the
’TI* Holdout Timo
money available with which to pur­
Live Topic* of the Day Pre­ state highway department from the
T IS the gladsome season when chase woolen goods.
gas tax and given lo the counties
sented by High School
GLASS
CREEK
GROUP.
for the purpose of building and
■■ever put un uniforms again unGlass creek Extension Group was
maintaining township highways.
Students
La* they get belter contract*;
entertained at the home of Mrs. R.
■
The Barry county road .commis­
The final* in lhe oratorical con­
rhlle the manager* Just as loudly W. Erwav for an all day meeting
sion took their duties under the
on March 8 with twelve members test to select a representative for McNltt law seriously, and began to
offered or stay oil! of the game for­ and four visitor* present. The the district contest were held in Improve the township road* as
evermore. Through anxious week* I.forenoon wa* taken up with the the High school assembly room Fri­ much as they could with the money
each group proclaim* that, from i lesson
!T“- on
“ collars,
“2XC3. necklines and day morning, with Mis* Doris available. The commission had the
Shute, winner in last year's con­
machinery for grading these high­
the position thus taken. It will nev­ hems. In lhe afternoon lhe lead­
ers. Mrs. Floy Bechtel and Mrs. test, presiding a* chairman.
ways, crowning them and putting
er. never nbnle or Jot or tittle.
Seven
participated.
Dcmakl
But when tlrn first robin (tart* Florence Norton, demonstrated the Weaver discussed Crime Preven- them in shape to gravel. On trunk
making
of
collars
and
sleeve*.
Sevlines, or even county road*, hills
north and the last training squad
Suzanne
Sumner.
Com­ can be cut down and hollows filled
eral dresses were fitted also. We had |
•tart* south, something always hap­ the pleasure of meting Ml** Bullis, munism; Horace Angell. Athletics;
up. That is impossible on township
pen*. One side decide* to abate our new member on the Extension Thelma Bhute. Racial Injustice; road* because of the expense In­
qnlie a few of the Jot*. And the uvan,
noon ana
Staff, m
In ine
the lore
forenoon
and *ne
she gave Hugh Kelley, the Ethiopian-Italian volved. The commission decided
other side say*, "(lh »huckln*. aft- | us a short but Interesting outline question; Dora Day. the Townsend that the thing for them to do was
er *IL wbat's a tittle more or les* of her work in thl* county in the Plan; Dorothy Shelllngton. the Lib­ not to make expensive cut* and fills,
between frlendsT'
I future. After lunch she left for an- erty League.
but to take the roadway substanThe orations which were original
8o thia spring^ hold out* become other appointment.
Would
be
tlally a* they found it and Improve
UI, rnll'R p-»n,ni «ln»en. or olio
t0
m-t »Uh 0, ones on live question* of the day.’ ‘it by cutting the brush, grading it
were
unusually
well
constructed
as
erwuo ... U.0 e,« o.,t be. ..,.1.
par next
Itart
। and crowning it. so as to permit the
to
thought
and
style,
and
developed
IreoovnllF II
And behind lh. before Achievement Day will “
be
1 water to get off the highway. The
with Mr*, pearl Newland—Minnie in a logical and interesting way.
, commission ha* gone further in its
scene*, everything .In either cham­
The Judges. Prosecuting Attorney work of improving township high­
Oorham. Secy.
pionship team will be Just as peace-.
Archie McDonald. Mr*. Wm. R.; ways
II has graveled them—not
ful as a cage full of panthers until |
Cook and Albert Becker, coach of. all the mileage taken over each
PAID FINE AND COSTS.
this time next year.
! Mrs. Bessie Easey wa* brought the speaking department, rated[ year—but a* much a* wa* possible
I before Justice Cortright last week Donald Weaver, Suzanne Sumner. with the limited cosh available. The
on the charge of assault upon the and Thelma Shute In the order township road* cannot be covered
Which Is ths Leisure Class?
teacher ua
kwvuci
in mic
the vaaw-aacacu
checkered ovaauua
school ui
of named for the honors.
with gravel to a* great a depth or
WHEN Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan Awyrt* township, whose face Mrs.
There is a possibility that the dis­ width as are county highways, but
said any American family gasey wa* charged with slapping. trict contest may be held in Has­
’ a nine-foot track has been graveled.
that kept a maid belonged to the She admitted her guilt and paid tings.
and it has been done on several
leisure clan, he touched a respon­ &lt;17.75 fine and costs.
hundred miles of township hlghSTORED VEGETABLES.
sive chord Id the bosom of thl* |
The taste of stored vegetables। ways in this county. They have
RELEASED ON PROBATION.
household, only he got the propoei-’
Elwood Jones. 18. of Nashville, eaten in- the late winter or early, been wonderfully Improved by this
tion mlzed ns It applied to our lit-,
was brought before Probate Judge spring can be improved if servedI Plan.
tie home-nest.
It will not be possible this year
Clement on the charge of driving with sauce*, according to lhe home.
- Twas a maid we bad for a short away with an automobile which he economic* extension staff at Michi­; for the commission lo finish work
■pell who really qualified. Possi­ did not own. and wa* released on gan State College.
on the townahip highways, but they
bly we didn't give sallsfactlon. Any­ probation. The young man seemed
Among the combinations recom­. will make a good deal of headway.
how, one evening she took um­ thoroughly penitent and realized mended are white sauce with car­. With so large a mileage and only a
brage and gome guest towels and the dilution in which he was rots. turnips, onions, salsify, or. fixed amouift available, they have
a bam and, one thing and another placed. On account of hl* age he. cabbage; Spanish or creole sauce, to limit their expense lo about &lt;300
and illcntly stole away. But look­ was allowed to go on probation. He I with onion, green pepper, celery; ■ mile for gravelling and about &lt;150
ing back. 1 can't recall ’anybody must report to two well-known peo­ canned tomatoes for use with meat,’ a mile for grading. But anyone who
r’ ha* travelled over the township
•Ise wh&lt;» could be »o let*urely and ple of Nashville, and promises to. fish or omelet; ar tomato sauce or
| obey the law in the future. He had catsup with baked bean*, meat loaff roads which the commission have
■o classy, both at once.
graded and gravelled cannot fall to
We are wondering now what never committed any offense before. or patties, or left-over meat dishes.' notice the wonderful Improvement
class we belong to on the present । It'* queer why a stock goes down
In hard time*, the buyer win* all1 that ha* been made. The contrast
maid * night out.
the minute come people buy IL
argument*.
with lhe old method of township
IRVIN S. COBB.
-

,
D EVERLY HILLS, CALI E.
P —Things certainly are loveL for the bovs in the hie stone
I .
roc mg yum

An anglers' tradition of many which mean*
----- a tKw
TAKEN OVER IN
lhe vlnlim
victim la
I* OMUdtlv*
senxlUve :
year*' standing will be shattered.! w
,„„, lwu&gt;
uu.„m.v«. ...
u
to crr
certain
food* ur
or »
»ubstance*
and
APRIL
j when trout fishing season open* in | will sneeze, stuff up and have hay
: Michigan thl* spring. Il used to be fever, hives, eczema, migraine. A ‘
:uut
rignaUzed the opening mile boy ha* hives when spanked; Tf)TA| TWP MILEAGE

’I

U’

Spring Time Is Home Time!
ONCE AGAIN IT'S HOME TIME, when

thoughts of spring bring thoughts of improve­
ments and remodeling. Look over your house

and get ready. Plan to make your dreams

r ..

.

come true. If it's a new home or fixing up the
old one, PLAN EARLY, PLAN NOW!

THERE ARE MANY THINGS all of us would
like to do to make our homes more convent

ent and comfortable.

Now this is possible through a Federal Hous­

ing Administration Loan. You con repay

these loans in small convenient payments.

See your banker and make arrangements to
start soon. The Hastings City Bank can and

will help you make your dreams of the "home

beautiful" come true.

Hastings €itg
TELEPHONE 2ro3

»

♦

MASTIN

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 12. IMS

Nashville and will be zhown at each
NASHVILLE.
helpful talk on "Budgeting" lo the i
Young Married Folks' group last! Miss Phyllla Brumm went to
Thursday
evening Mrs. Cranston
..
where she
.............
................ Grand Rapid* Thur»day
er
of Piedmont Picture#--L. o. cole.
Wilcox served dainty refreshments. nas employment.
Arthur Trent—The Great Director
Next Saturday. March 14. will be I jMr.
— and Mrs.
•— Fred
«
Ung* Y group* by Richard LoppenAckett. MB*
-Gall Lykins. Haxel Wing-Secre­
Ihlen ...
In' directing singing during a big day for 5th. Sth. 7th and 8th Garnet Lynn and Ben Shaffer were tary—Alice Greenfield. Fitzpatrick
the worship peribd each Tuesday grade boys and. girls In and about tn Ann Arbor to see Charles Lynn,
—Bert Arnold
Glnxberg—Clarice
I Freeport «t the school from 10 to 2 who Is In lhe hospital there.
Middleville High school at 11 A. M. evening. Is greatly appreciated.
Greenfield. Betty Rand—The New
Mr E
when George
Aten,
of HuHie clover Leaf dub wa* de­ Star—Mrs Marqulta Varney. Con­
March
and for the Nashville
Mr.
K- L
L- Tavlor
Taywr gave
gave a
a most
mw o'clock,
JchooK
WU1 Uach
lhem
how
lightfully entertained Friday night
* to make things with their hands at the home of Mrs. Fred Fisher rad—An actor—Voyle Varney. Har­
Reginald Thtotlewailc—Frank
I out of leather. Each one brings hU with Mrs. George Parrott amIsting.; old
DuW#On—KlldorfT — The Monster—!
lunch.
Each one was given an Irish name । Ai Bennett. Katrinka Swanson—I
I Coats Grove. Dowling. Delton.
which was pinned on and wa* used, i vance Swedish—Pauline Lykins I
Freeport.
Hendershott.
Quimby. during the evening; every time several dances will be given by 18
Nashville and Hastings were a'l one's own name was used a forfeit ' mgti school girls
well represented In the S S. mectCUr* Hanneman spent
ing held Sunday afternoon iii the
ntev^i
f£veiJ hrr‘ Thursday, w,u&gt;
with relatives In „„„„
Grand
| Hastings M- E. church, when probShe w„ .eromp.nl.d !»•
i lems and goals were discussed. Mrs.
— —•-*— -'
meeting
wlll
be
held
al
lhe
home
■
J
8
,
H 1, ?
A-A. Griffin assisting.
Mrs ' The womens Literary Club met |
। "Trying lo do an net of love is of
of Mrs.
Mrs. Melissa
Melissa Showalter
Showalter with
with Mrs.
stner junnson
j Wednesday afternoon at the 11- I
। better than trying to learn tlie Esther
Johnson assisting.
assisting.
Golden Rule."—Helen Heyl.
inRBattte ^r^k^stxM Sunda^'ld
Over^he ftahlsSmhST
. dio—Mrs. Ralph Olin Music chalrCLOVERDALE.
man-Mrs. Gail Lykins, our DailyThe father and son banquet which nts home ncre.
Mr and Mrs. Nelson Brumm end . Bread—Mrs. Elsie Furniss. By Their
was announced lo be held Thursday.
h
Coy
"oy a
G Brumm were -at —
East Lan- Fru
|Ls You Shall Know Them—Mrs
Fruits
Marell 12. was postponedu
Mr. and Mrs
Vkn Luke and «ln8 Thursday.
Clair Furniss. The Fish Are Run,?
CAMAY 3 b— 14c CRISCO 3 lb. eaa 59c
daughter of Delton and Mr and
All Nuhvuie is going Hollywood ning—Mrs. Georgt Taft. Tea—"A
Mrs. wm. Pierce of Charlotte were these days with tlie production cup ot good tea is acknowledged to ,
Sunday guests ot Mr. and Mrs. "Betty in Hollywood" which will be be a famous restorer of gladness'— ;
AVALON
AVALON
Grover Davenport
presented In the Masonic Temple Mrs. Frank Lentz. On Trail of the ■
AMMONIA Sm! ’ S&lt; BLUIHC
bo.u. 7c
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens nnd Wednesday. Thursday and Friday. Cereal—To be supplied. Word Study
daughter spent Saturday evening March 18. 19. 20. This production —Mr*. Maude Wtotrlng.
'
I
Coy O. Bruinm. Fred Ackett. |
with Mr. and Mrs. Wyganl of Bat- sponsored by the Nashville Fire de­
FINE QUALITY
! tie Creek.
partment. Is the story ot a local Mahlon Strickland were in Battle |
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fennels and girl who goes to Hollywood and Creek Tuesday night to attend a
daughter spent Sunday with Mrs. makes good tn pictures "at the Scout supper and school of instruc­
Pennel’s parent* at Armena.
Piedmont studios, a fascinating tion.
Donna Marie Pcnnela entertain- feature of this production is the
Frank Dllbahner
of
Chicago
cd Margaret Kellogg and
Elnore fact that moving pictures of the called on Mr. and Mrs. Gail Ly­
EXCEPT CLAM CHOWDER AND CONSOMME
Schuring of Kalamazoo. Sunday.
people and places of Interest In kins Friday.
assembly tn the P. M. Mr. Johns hu
contact with most of the larger
high school* In the »tate.

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

aa.

KROGER STORES

P*C%aanpt1O-35c

OXYDOL

39c

2

ALL
FOR

IwArv Crv-wrw 2 L«rg« B«rS «nd

Ivory ooap

23c
25c

!2
2

Avondale Peas
Heinz Soups

2 tegular Bars

22c

COUNTRY CLUE

Pancake Flour

23c

5

»

AVONDALE

Medium Red Salmon

19c

tall can

A PLUMBER
SAYS:

25c
27c

3 ”

VAN CAMP'S
Mackerel
KRAFTS
Loaf Cheese

N

Stopping leaks
is part of my
business”

AMERICAN OB PIMENTO

35c

Royal Baking Pow'd

o
N

MACARONI OR

Spaghetti 3 bulk 25

"I watch out, too, for the
little leaks in my spend­

ing. That makes it easy
for me to save a little

every week.

"Every plumber needs

a good helper. My bank

account is the best one 1

Uncle Sam Moves to Bring Electricity
to the ‘Forgotten Farmer’
pOH year*, most city iwslltr*

and * handful ot farmer*

"genl* of th* switch" to bring,
them
many
ot the
tb* con,,orl&gt;
comfort* ol
ot
m 'B*
07 of
llfo
To ,heni lhl" Ere*b powerful
brought light: tt
h
has
*B n»e««r»*d
preserved «nd
and cooked their
food, washed and Iroued their
&lt;•"!«&gt;
•»'1
'• IMuarnM,
other ways.
But. of the 54.000.000 people
dependent on agriculture for
their living, an estimated:
water from_J’eHs
sources of supply.

or

other

along with outdoor toilet*.
03 per cent have neither

tamp*.
4H per cent heat (heir
homes partially or entirely
with fireplace*: SI per cent.
02 per cent have to do their
laundry work outdoors.
rpHESB earlmate* are provided
1 by Morris L. Cooke, dletluKulshed Philadelphia engineer
and chief of the Rural Electrifi­
cation Administration, which ts
■winging Into action In It* pro­
gram of bringing electric sorvlc*
to American farm homes.
With an Initial J 100.000.000
work-relief allutpreat. Cooke az­
peels to make electricity avail­
able to 1.SOO.000 more farm
people, and lend Impetus to a
movement that eventually a III
bring complete electrification to
rural America.
The REA will lend money to
potver companies, public and
private, to finance new electric
lines to farm districts
Whtre
power companies are unwilling
to extend their lines, snd farm-

| them and build line* to convey
It. such co-operatives will tie
aided financially by REA.

ever had.

"The last few years when businem

COUNTBY CLUB FANCY

wan slow and I hit dull periods, the

Golden Bantam Corn 2^1
Twinkle «urwmmi 3
1

family got through all right with the
help of the bank account.

SALAD
DRESSING

2"^$1.n
Plus Sc F*d. Tax

100* PURE PENNSYLVANIA

Block Salt

35c

SO-lb. block

MEDIUM COABSE SALT 100-lb. bag 89c

OLEO

N
K OF HASTINGS

2 - 23c
Pkg

1

0c

KELLOGG'S WHOLE WHEAT BISCUITS pkg. 10c

COUNTBY CLUB

Fresh Bread
May Cardens Tea

6C

lb loaf

^■ib. pkg

29c

3

25c

%-lb. pkg. 15c (Except O'pekoe)

Our Advertiser

toucco

TUXEDO TOBACCO 3 cau 25c

PINEAPPLE

33c
29c

Oranges

Leaf Lettuce u&gt; !
Hod* grown - Hot house

19&lt;

4 n»»

Potatoes

GREEN TENDER

Fresh Asparagus
Spinach

2 u&gt;*. 13c

15c

Full Pound

Fresh Peas 2 it* 25&lt;

Crapvfruit 4 for 19c

Onions

Fall of jate*

4

u&gt;i

10c

Fresh Strawberries
WITH CBEAM OB SHORTCAKE

choice

yccirling Lamb

Leg O' Lamb * 16c
Shoulder Roast
Lamb Chops
Lamb Breast

White Fish

RIB 01 LOIN
FOB BRAISING

“■

Winter Caught lb.

POSKLIVIR
--POSK HEARTS
POSK HOCKS
HICK ■ONES
UONA FAUSACI
SMOKID HISSINC

Smoked Picnics
SUGAR CURED

1l’/2&lt;

U&gt;

REPRESENTS 10 PER CENT OF ALL FARMS)

see Valley Authority'* "Electric
Home and Farm Authority" la
being expanded Into a nation­
wide organization to finance lustallibcnt purchase of such
equipment by farmers.

French rural communities bar*
electric servlco available.
Tbe
applies to 40 per cent of
Sweden's farms: and nine out of
10 Japanese homes.
At last, the American govern­
ment has come to recognize the
IT has been pointed out that
U. S. farmer's right to the per­
1 many European nations sur­
sonal and economical advantages
which electricity brings, and is
pass America In supplying elec­
.... .. for
inking
seo that he gets
tric ,power
ruralsteps
areas.loThus.
more than SO per cent ot all
them.
mow

WANT TO BUY OR SELL ? TRY OUR WANT COLUM

HAVE MORE ROOM BECAUSE THE
FORD V-8 ENGINE TAKES LESS ROOM

Having rented my farm, I will dispose of the personal prop­
3 1-2 miles northerty at an afternoon sale on
or the promises,
.
■
-Section 14, Barry township, on
east of Hickory ■ Corners,

CATTLE.

California Seedless
do*.

stalk .
Well blaached. aup, ttadi

(EACH

Tlie IlKA, under tlie dlrcctloitxqf Morris L. Cooke, sbatr left.
Is launching Ils campaign to electrify rural America. The chart
below llluMralcs the surprising scarcity of electric service on

AUCTION SALE
Beginning of 1 :00 o'clock P. M.

Cauliflower s"°w vvhite heads
Colcry

&lt;■&gt;. • SRSSMR
SYMBOL

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18

COUNTRY CLUB - FANCY QUALITY

SLICED
OR GRATED

TELEPHONES

up. A bank account is a good 'plumb­

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

«u.oggs

RADIOS

er’s helper’.”

EATMORE BRAND

Wheat Krispies

ELECTRICITY

WATER PIPCO INTO HOUSE

.

and ready for anything that comes

(Pial jar 25c)

A-penn Motor Oil

FARMS WITHOUT

"We’re getting ahead again now,

KRAFTS

Miracle Whip

and buy appliances — refrigera­
tors. pump*, stoves, lights, farm
... .. etc.
equipment,
For tills purpose, the Tonnes-

FARM* WITH

714c

15c

n»

15c
UWc
ib. 16c

I offer the following:—

Pair Stanton sleighs, with log

3 grade Guernsey yearling
heifers.

bunks. Portland cutter.
Corn sheller.

MACHINERY AND TOOLS.

DeLaval cream separator, a
good one.

Deering binder, 7-ft. cut.
Bradley mower, 6-ft. ciit.
Keystone side delivery roke.

Keystone hay loader.
Kentucky grain drill, a good
one.
Two-horse walking cultiva­
tor. Single cultivator.
No. 99 Oliver plow.
Three-sec. drag.
Steel land roller.
No. 3 Birdsall wagon.
Iron wheel farm truck.

MISCELLANEOUS.

25 grain bags.
Cream cans. Pitchforks.
Other articles not mentioned.
Bag holder.

HARNESSES.

Double 1 1-2 inch pod har­
ness with breeching.
Single harness.
Some extra collars and halt­
ers.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH:—No property removed until set­
tled for.
•

C. E. ROBINSON, Prop
* 1

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

THE compact design of the Ford V-8
engine allows more of lhe car’s length
to be used for pa&amp;scngcr room. Thia is
just one way in which tliia engine from
the luxury-car class adds to your com­
fort as a driver and to the comfort of
your passengers in the new Ford.
For years the finest cars have been
distinguished by a V-typc engine. Ford
brought this type of engine within the
reach of the average motorist. The
next great forward step was to make
every feature of the Ford car measure
up to the quality of lhe V-8 engine.
You can see the interesting results in
the new Ford V-8 for 1936. Comfort,
beauty, driving ease and safety—all arc
in keeping with its V-8 engine quality.

FORD DEALERS OF MICHIGAN

Behind Every Feature of the 1936 Ford
Is the Standard of V'8 Engine Quality

COMFORT
Uniixusl body room ami wide seats • 112Inch wheelbase with long, flexible springs
on 123-inrh springltase • Center-Poise

the iprlugi.

Jr* "1 Q and

I I I I ,ln
UlU Up

R- Drlroil. Standard aerr"s&lt;”7 KrouP» ineluding bumjiers and »p*rr lire, extra. All

throughout st no eddltional root. Ask year Ford
dealer about the new 925-e-ttionth and UCC
IS '.i per month Finance Plans.

FORD V-8 for-1936

�HAHTTNC1S, MICHIGAN, THTTRHnAV, MARCH IS. IMO
Mn. Oscar Lucas of Chicago visit­
ed relatives i^g^/oodland. Lansing
and Hastings from Saturday until
Monday.
The run! and township school
teachers of Castleton.
Hastings
Twp.. carlton and Woodland met at
the Woodland school Monday night
where they enjoyed dinner together.
and taler listened ip an excellent
program
at which Mrs
Josie WMtrous
preaided,
■.'■■Ma.i and
.ml Mrs.
Ur. Flossie
• It. AL
Al-

Fenner and Jennie Chase last
Thursday. Dinner was* served at
one o'clock. Roll was answered by
current events. Tlie business of lhe
annual njeeURg was taken up. The
annua) report of the secretary. Mrs.
Dorothy Pcltenglll . was given by
Mrs. Frances Norwood. Mrs. Petlenuiu t*.;™ demined by sickness In
ftr^urer
ani,Ty- The
fejJoiT
of'
waxannual
'given
by. «*_
Mrs.
..
.
_ ___
—1.—— w.
—

lerdlng. Coats Grove, conducted the | rxMtt.r Election of officers followed,
business session. A question box । j»rs Bertha _Prouty
—..
___ , ----was -»•
cho.Mii
with Paul Smith In charge result-1 prealdent;
• • - ----Mrs. ------Dorothy Petteiurll).
cd In the discussion of general top­ vice-president; Mrs. Frances Nor­
ics of Interest concerning school wood, secy; Mrs. Florence Mc­
problems.
Crary. Irene.; Mrs. Mary Doster,
custodian. Mrs. Coaler w^. ap­
pointed pianist andi Mrs Schultz
MILO.
. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Skidmore Bower com. Mr:. Barber made tome
I and LaVern visited the former's doting remarks upon her retiring
’uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Hough tai In as president. Th* next meeting will
be entertained on Marci^ 20 by Mr
.near Hastings Sunday.
I ' John Brandstetter suffered a serl- Doster 'and Mrs. Norwood al the
home of the latter.
ou» sick spell Wednesday night but
On account of the weather and
is better at present. Mrs. Brandroads there was no aid held in Feb.
sleller Is atao slowly gaining.
so a meeting will be held lids
Word was received here of the month on Wed. March the 25th, ot
I passing of Mrs. Mattie Spaulding lhe home of Mr. and Mrs. Merle
. at Bronson hospital this Monday Bradfield. We hope for a -vt-rv good
morning of pneumonia. She leaves attendance on this date Nori'-'' it
a sister. Mrs. Millie Fisher, of Chi­ Ls one week later than the usual
cago and several nieces and neph­ time.
ews. Mrs. Spaulding lived at Milo
Word from John Bradfield from
many years and had many friends hls son's home in Routh Bend was
■ in this locality. She was a member to tlie r|irvv
1V W4Mt
effect u&gt;ai
that ,lie
was ..........
not very
of lhe Home Literary club and look weH llsl5 wlnU r We regret to hear
part In other activities of the com- | thLs
! munity. We sympathize with the ; Mf.rle DrndfW-ld Is In Galesburg
I bereft ones.
. on business this Monday.
Nineteen members and one visitor j Mr. and Mrs. F Gilbert were
enjoyed the meeting of the H. L. | business visitors in Hastings last
club at lhe home of Mesdames Nina । Friday P. M

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes
Eighteen hunters lost their Ilves
as a result of gun accidents In lhe
woods during lhe 1935-1936 small
game and deer hunting seasons in
Michigan. Three fatalities occur­
red during the deer season and 16
during the small game hunting sea­
sons.

Starvation In the over-browsed
deer yards and Ils train of dead
deer arc beginning to assume more
serious proportions than state game
authorities had expected for this
winter. Deer have been dying in
the Oxford and Stiles swamps of
Newaygo county, lhe Luther-Bald­
win swamp, and in the Fletcher
swamp near Alpena. Dr. Don R. Co­
burn. pathologist of thq Depart­
ment of Conservation, examined 10
deer found dead in the Oxford. Lu­
ther-Baldwin. and Stiles swamps
and reported that 14 of them had
died of starvation.
The 15-day beaver trapping vssen, which assumed the proportions
of a &lt;32.000 Industry in Michigan
last spring, will open Tuesday.
March 17. In the designated areas
of the lower peninsula and on Wed­
nesday. April 1. in all of the upper
peninsula. Indications are
that
beaver pelts will command a little
higher price this spring than last,
when the average good pelt brought
about |9. lhe lowest price In years.
Last spring 811 licensed trappers
reported taking 3,381 braver pelts
The average revenue per trapjser

Due lo lhe effects of lhe extra­
ordinarily severe winter, the spring
smelt runs In northern Michigan
may come a little later than usual
this year, state fisheries authorities
believe. Smell runs have occurred
as late as April, recalls Fred A.
Westerman, chief of fisheries oper­
ations. In 1923 a sub-zero cold
wave, on April 1 delayed the smell
run at Beulah until mld-month.

WOODLAND.
MIm Bernice Munion of Hastings
called on Mr. and Mrs. Truman
Munion Friday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Baas. Mrs.
Alice Bailey and Lawrence Finefrock were called to Bradford. Ohio.
Saturday by the death of their
aunt. Mrs. Rebecca McGee. They
returned to Woodland Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Heaald classic and
Mr. and Mrs. I .eon Nieholann railed
on Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bird of
Hartings Sunday evening. They
found Mr. Bird much improved and
able to sit up a little.
Jjfr. and Mrs. Clifford Potter and
family of BarryvIUe were Bunday
dinner guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Welby crockford,
Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Dell and
daughter Joyce of Lansing and Elxyn Dell of Weldman were Sunday
guests of Mr. and yrs. John Dell.
Mr. and Mrs. Oerald England of
Grand Rapids. Mtas Phyllis England
of Chicago. Jean England and
friend, Miss Leone Leonard of Has­
tings were Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Glen England and daughters.
Pollyanna and Margery.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L- Higdon of
BarryvIUe were supper guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Welby Crockford
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Blough of
Grand Ledge called on Mr. and Mrs.
Truman Munion Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Stang of Bat­
tle Creek were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Paul and family Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren English of
Grand Rapids and Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Filch and daughter Shirley of
Dutton were week end guests of
Rev. and Mrs. Don Carrick.
The annual meeting and election
of officers of the Women’s Study
Club was held at thl schoolhouse
Tuesday evening, March 10, with a
pot luck supper at 8:30.
Mrs Robert Born entertained
Group No. 2 of lhe East Woodland
Extension Class al her home Fri-

o*

day. Il
very interesting
meeting with a targe attendance.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Tucker of
Clarksville and Mr. and Mrs Frank
Nielhamer and children called on
Mrs. A- Laird of Battle Creek Sun­
day. She lias been confined to her
home for five months with a broken
hip. They found her much im­
proved.
Tlie Midyear Council of Adminis­
tration and Branch Missionary So­
ciety of lhe United Brethren church
wlll convene at charlotte. March 13
and 14. Bishop W. E. Musgrave, of
Huntington, Ind., will give the
opening address Friday morning at
10:30 and the evening address at
8:00. Rev. C. E. Carlson of Hudson,
Ind., who is a returned missionary
from Africa is also on the program
and will give a missionary address j
Saturday evening at 8 00. S. WSmith and Rev. Carrick are mem- &lt;
bers of the council nnd Geo. Schaib- ,
ly is a delegate from lhe United
Brethren church of Woodland.
|
Mr. nnd Mrs. J. V. Hilbert visited
Miss Winifred Heffernon and fath­
er James Heffernon of Kendall
Sunday. Mrs. Hilbert remained for
a visit and to assist Miss Heffernon
In caring for her father who has
been 111 and Is confined to hls bed.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hewitt of
Saranac have moved Into lhe Atchi­
son house. They previously lived
in Hastings. Mr. Hewitt is a broth­
er of Carl Hewitt of South Wood­
land and Mrs. Hewitt Is a sister of I
Ted Euper. We welcome these
young people to our community.
Tlie W- F. M. 8. of the Methodist
church met with Mrs. Donald Gager
Monday evening. March 9. Mrs.
John Dell had charge of the meet­
ing.
Dale Hauer of Western state Nor­
mal spent the week end with hls
parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Dell.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd' Fisher and
daughter Gladys of Hastings called
on Mr. and Mrs. pay C. Wing Mon­
day evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Paul and

GOOD COAL makes warm friends,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleased with the fine,
even heat. Low in ash, and longburning. Try a ton today and
save on your fuel bills.

SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Prices:—
16% Dairy—$1.55 per 400 lbs.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 lbs.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lbs.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lbs.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company
Hastings Telephone 2257

AUCTION SAL

Having rented a farm with stock furnished, I will have an auction sale at the

Horry Sponable farm, 2 miles south of Hastings on M-37, opposite Star schoolhouse.

on

FRIDAY, MARCH 20,1936
SALE WILL BEGIN AT 1:00 P. M
HORSES.

Boy gelding, 11 yrs. old, wt. 1650 lbs.
Brown gelding, wt. 1500 lbs.
Grey gelding, wt. 1550 lbs.
14 CATTLE.
Holstein cow, 2 yrs. old, calf by side.
Holstein cow, 3 yrs. old, due time of sale.
Holstein cow, 4 yrs. old, due June 3.
Guernsey gow, 4 yrs. old, fresh Jan. 1.
Guernsey cow, 5 yrs. old, fresh Jan. 2. *
Holstein cow, 7 yrs. old, bred Jan. 9.
Holstein cow, 4 yrs. old, fresh Dec. 25.
Guernsey and Holstein cow, 5 years old,
fresh Dec. 26.
Holstein cow, 7 yrs. old, bred Feb. 7.
Holstein cow, 10 yrs. old, pasture bred.
Holstein bull, 2 years old.
2 Holstein heifers, yearlings.
Guernsey heifer, 10 months old.
TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING

HOGS AND DUCKS.
Duroc brood sow, wt. 300, duo April 25.
Duroc brood sow, wt. 200, due Apr. 2.
7 Duroc shoots, wt. about 75 lbs.
2 ducks and 1 drake.
GRAIN AND HAY.
Quantity of silage. 30 bushels rye.
Load shredded fodder. Load bean pods.
7 tons alfalfa hay.
2 bushels early seed potatoes.
.
3 bushels late seed potatoes.
TOOLS.
Side
John
Pair
Iron

delivery rake. John Deere hay loader.
.
Deere walking cultivator. Lumber wagon.
of bob sleighs. Slush, scraper. Doane scraper.
kettle. Double work harness. 4 tan-gal. milk cans.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
Gas stove. Bookcase.
Other articles not mentioned.

*

NO PROP ERTY REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

HOWARD WARE, Proprietor
ERNEST GRAY, Clark.

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer

AUCTION SALE
NEEDING TO RAISE SOME MONEY, I WILL SELL THE FOLLOWING PERSONAL PROPERTY AT PUBLIC
AUCTION AT MY FARM. 1 1-2 MILES EAST and 1-2 MILE NORTH OF DOWLING, on SEC. 26, BALTIMORI
TOWNSHIP. KNOWN AS THE "HENRY BABCOCK FARM," ON

Dealers in Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Salt, Lime
Cement and Coal

MONDAY, MARCH 16
COMMENCING AT 1:00 O'CLOCK, AND WILL SELL THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:

3 bushels June cloverseed, recleaned.

HORSES.

Registered black Percheron mare. 9 years old, wt. 1550.
Black Percheron stallion, eligible to register, 3 years old,
weight 1600.
Black Percheron marc, eligible to register, 2 years old.
weight 1350.
Boy gelding, 1 year old, good one.
Brown mare, 3 years old.
Black horse, 2 years old.

. • and it a»ks no odds
of any car at any price

5 bushels Mammoth cloverseed, recleaned.
50 crates of good potatoes.

COLLIE RUFS.
4 Collie puppies from on extra good mother.
HARNESS.
Good 2-in. double work hornets.

COWS.

1 1-2 Inch double work hornets.

Guernsey cow, 4 yrs. old. due date of sale.
Jersey cow, 6 yrs. old, due April 9.
jersey and Holstein cow, 3 years old, due April 17.
Jersey and Holstein cow, 7 yrs. old, due in September.
Black Jersey, 12 years old, not bred.
Holstein cow, 5 years old, not bred.
Durham cow, 7 years old, due in May.
3 heifers, 1 year old.
2 Guernsey bulls, 9 months old.

Impressive victory in famous economy run
officially confirms Pontiac’s superior economy!
_L at economy claims—and here is what it revealed: Under Ameri­

can't do better. Buy a Pontiac to save. Buy it for dependability.

Deering mower, 5-ft. cut.

Oliver riding cultivator.

Dunham cultipacker, good one.
Little Willie riding cultivator.
Two-horse walking cultivator. One-horsa cultivator.
Walking cultivator. Thru-sac. spring tooth drag.

Pair sleighs. Buckeye brooder stove, coal.
Refrigerator. Library table. 100 ft. 7-1 inch rope.

50 tons of mixed hay. 6 doors of silage.
About 50 bushels of wheat. 600 crates of corn.
200 bushels of oats, cleaned for seed.
4 crates of pop corn.

That settles the matter of Pontiac's thrift. Pound for pound, you

Several horse collars.

FARM TOOLS.

Syracuse three-sac. spring drag.
Bradley riding plow, 14-In. bottom.
Oliver walking plow. Wida tiro lumber wagon.
Oliver plow. Oliver drag. In good condition.
DeLaval cream separator, sixe 12, good condition.

HOGS.

Spotted sow, around 250 lbs., bred Feb. 13.
Black sow. around 200 lbs., bred Feb. 3.
Black sow, around 200 lbs., bred Feb. 6.
Stock hog, 9 months old, around 200.

HAY. CRAIN. CLOVERSEED.

can Automobile Allocution supervision, the 1936 Pontiac traveled
352 mile* at an average ot 23.9 miles per gallon (no oil added),

Double work harness.

Seeder. Bean puller. 150 foot chicken netting.
Number of crates. Oil drum.

Honed.

’OFFICIAL PRIC1 CLASS
’ ECONOMY CHAMMOH

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

HASTINGS
D. H. SHARE.

MOTOR

PONTIAC SALES

COMPANY

SERVICE
TELEPHONE 24U
Hastings, Mich.

NO PROPERTY REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED

FOR.

GLENN HOFFMAN, Proprietor
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

MNil

�HASTINGS. MICHtGAN THt'KSBAT, MARCH It. ItM

pointing Admr. entered.

THOURENEWS
PEOSATE COURT.
tot. Geneva Callahan. Releasr
Odn. filed, diacbarge of Gdn.
Est. Clarence Johncock. Release
ot Gdn filed.
E*l. Myron Whitworth, dee d. Pc
UUon tor authority to give deed
■ pursuant to land contract filed, or­
der to give deed entered.
Est. Lucy Franck, dec’d. Dis­
charge of executor Issued, estate en. rolled.

J

S

Dual account filed.
E»t Sarah E. Glynn. dec’d. Order
allowing claims entered.
tot. Harry o. Haye*. dee d. Or­
der allowing claims entered.
tot. Margaret Eleanor Malchcle.
dec’d. Petition for Admr. filed.
waiver of notice filed, order ap-;

• special Admr. filed, oider appoint-1 of Admr. filed, letters of admlnl*-1

FREEPORT.

tot. James H. Child*, dmrd. f.- lin* ydal Admr. enterod. order for. tratlon toued. order limiting settlew g iplenmil lunl
M
.Mabel Bisson of Hastings called on
tlUon tor license lo aell fiUd. order, publication entered
mant
pet! on for hrulnf | {be
F F F gathering al Ito
I —
tot. Gerald
claims' filed, notice to creditors
creditors,
. Methodut church .last -week
"tum- friends In Freeport Bunday after­
for pubUcatioa entered.
------- - Steinke, dee d. Final M rlslm
-------------account filed, order allowing ac- i ls*u®o
( day evening. A pot luck supper waa noon.
Since writing our tetter test week:
tot Francis J. Barry, dec’d. In- greatly enjoyed, followed by a good
Will filed, petition for proto te filed, count entered,, discharge of Admr
Issued, estate enrolled.
i ventory filed.
program. The male quartette aang our fire atren has sounded al noon
order for publication, entered.
That and two mill I
tot. Ann Jessup, dec'd. Order al-1— Eat Ann Jeasup, dec’d. Petition ■ two numbers. Miss Rice read a each day.
■ Eat. Clark A. Barber, dec’d. Order lowing claims entered.
i for license to aell filed, order for j poem by Edgar Guest, and the ad­ whistles surely announce the noon1
allowing account entered
hour.
Es’ Marea*et F Malchelc dec’d publication entered.
dress of the evening, a witty, helptot. Perry Campbell, dec’d. Bond
—-----------------—,------------- w -----Mrs j. e. Babbitt, who has been
on Mie filed, oath before Mie filed.
was
given by—Dr.
w. F.----------------Kendrick 111. ts Improving and Is able lo ait
CLAY HILLS.
-------------------------------Est. Charles Hook. dee d. Petition
.j. _ .
------------- up &lt;t lhlj wriilng. Her daughter,
Eugene
and family
spent
Eat. Frank Hampton, dec’d. Order
—
-------Haight
-----------------------for Adrnr. filed.
t--------- -7
....
—
allowing account entered, discharge Sunday al .toplerre
Stimpsons
In Intendent of the Grand Rapids Dis­ Mrs. Charles Beatlie. is with her
Est. Henry J. Tocze, dec'd. peti­
trict and at present superintendent Uils week. Bunday guests were
of
Admr.
issued,
estate
enrolled.
1
West
Pannalee.
tion for liearlng claims filed, notice
of the Clark Memorial Home. His Chas. Beattie and family of Vicks­
tot. Harry N. Potter, dec’d. Final
Mrs. Ouy- McNee and I wo daugh- subject was. "The church as an burg, William Harrison and family
to creditors issued. Inventory filed.
Est. Roslna Webber, deed. An­ accounl filed, order allowing ac- ters were shopping in Hastings Sut- Opportunity. The third of this ser­ of Grand Rapids, and Mr. and Mrs.
: count entered, discharge of Admr. urday.
nual account filed.
✓S
ies of five such gatherings will be Lyle Arnold of Lansing.
1 Ro&gt;’ McCaql and wife were Sun- ".'P .""5
tot. Dossie Ballentine, deed. Issued, estate enrolled.
“ Ji Mr. and Mn. on. Towimnd ol
„ Uw
Bond ot executor filed, letters testa- 1I Est. Lucy S. Daniels, deed. Order day guests of her parents. William o.lork
o'clock. Rv..™,.
Everyone 1.
ts invited; ™t
pot Itv|w W[re suna,y
|UVB
, /uul
allowing claims entered.
MHullet
””"‘ and wife, in Middleville
mentary issued.
•
luck supper and also U1U1
bring
your
ch
v«a&gt;«,. ucvm
vw.-.i; o...
,— ....-. L
« Glasgow, dec’d.:;
kra&gt;&gt;k Harru Mid wife and Mrs. own labje service. The men of liw W. W. Boughner home.
Est. eCassius
E'.t-. ort„&gt;uci
Samuel Vanity,
dec’d.. .Poti—
In
I r ’ » — ”tLeonard
rtrt.ynr.l ..
Kill.
Mrs. viola Rogers and son Alton
heirs ------filed, ----------------petition
to pt
discharge
Mil- Ivnn Harris ana Mrs Nina Winger f church will act as the supper comtion for determination of helrt
-------------.-u.. for
.
....
rt. «...
order
publication entered
ler .j.;.
filed, --.j-..
order allowing =c:=;i
account
en- went to Kalamazoo Friday to see ,n|-.tcc and the program will be a were Sunday visitors al the home
Mid.
Mr Winger. TTwy found him some- at
program In charge of of Mrs’.? Ellen Hubbard at Green­
tot. William Coleman, deed Pc- tered.
Sinclair,
dec’d.—Bond i what
Improved.
.
,; --------------------•
---------J.
Mn L B --------Lester.-----The
speaker
of ville.
tltlon for Admr. filed, petition for I Est.
to-. Cora E. ---------------------Leon Potts and wl
wife spent bunevrnmg wlll be
„ Rev. Glenn
Nelson Thomas and granddaughday with the latter’s sister.
- - -rs
Mrs.sister. MA.
of First
r ~ Methodistr
MHs "Irene Fish of Clarksville
Clayton Johnson and husband, at1 church nt ____________
। called on Mr. and Mi’s John Fish
Lansing.
Bowne Center. Vance Sharp and , J. E. Babbitt, accompanied by Saturday afternoon.
wife and daughter and the for­ Win Harrison*of Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs Allen Fish and chllmer’s mother. Mr*. Sharp, of Grand motorrd to th. tormeru lartn af d"n
“&gt; *“» “&gt; ■’uBnaa. BatRapids, visited at Leon Potts’ Sun- !
Marion Saturday.
i
.
day evening.
u" 3-“%a.zMr*Su'ud.^x..‘^
j The radio can t replace newspa­
per*. if it says something nice about
i you. you can’t clip it out nnd paste
SJaS11*
Mr and Uri A B FUh fnUr‘
i it in an album.
Mabel Osborn.
i mined kjr. and Mrs. Ray Ware of

-frMARCH VALUE EVENT

PLACE YOUR
FOOD WANTS
IN HIS HANDS
THE MAN BEHIND THE COUNTER IS EVER
AT YOUR SERVICE TO GIVE
RELIABLE INFORMATION ON FOODS

C. THOMAS STORES SALESPEOPLE WILL COURTEOUSLY HELP WITH YOUR
FOOD SELECTIONS IF YOU PREFER ...

South Lowell. Mrs. Elmer Roush
and F. E. Deming al their home on
Tuesday evening. March 3. In hon­
or of their son Calvin’s seventh
birthday. Ice cream and cake were
served.
Gary Newton, oldest son of Mr.

MAYTAG
jtowoi costwai/wi^s
FOR

MORE

YEARS

MODERN MENUS FOR HEALTH RE­

QUIRE PURE. WHOLESOME, NOURISHING FOODS . . . MODERN TIMES REQUIRE
ECONOMICAL BUYING!

SODA CRACKERS 2

15c

2 Lb.
Box

L8.

DRY GREEN PEAS -

§C

Shift the expenae, lhe burden
and the rcpoaiibility of washday
to tlie Maytag, a* nearly three
million other women have done.
The rnomy. rme-niece. ca»t alum­
inum tub with hinged lid is extra
convenient. The Gyralalor wash­
ing acti.ui.i*iRinatetl and tterfected
v tt .
ii
d&lt;mp-drie« the clothe* quickly,
ami it i* practically automatic in

Ul ABOUT TH I EAST PAT MINT MAN

D D11 KI r O Sw"' T"’,,c,
l Riwlullw 70-80ClSixo
°""
Golden Crest
Snow Queen
Gold Medal
Pillsbury’s

FLOUR
PEARS

Delicious
Royal Kciffers
For Salads or
Sauce

TZtft'lbTTA Todayf

2 s llc
HARD WESTERN
WHEAT

69c
$1.09
$1.09

10c

Clapp's

VITALIZING BEVERAGE

THOMAS SPECIAL
’/* lb. 15c
MISSION INN ns.rt.voi '/, lb. 23c

■ •*■***■ ■

9C

Frutt Flavors

fftPkl

The Original Strained
Fooids lor Babied
16 VARIETIES

cint 25c
17c

9c
25c

\

GOLDEN BANTAM
CEEAM STYLE

KJiRI FT^ FAMOUS WHOLE
NIDLE I J KERNEL CORN
DC AC OREES'GIANT•
I C/\J LIKE rZESH FEAS

PEAS

COMMENCING AT 1:00 O'CLOCK

**

LAWRENCE

ASPARAGUS
BEETS rODEB5AClJT
CARROTS

CEEAM OF GARDEN

14c
17c

2 £

GREEN LIMA BEANS
Brown Powdered SUGAR
GRAHAM CRACKERS

25 c
14c

iu"' 9c
i.14' 18c

1c SALE IVORY SOAP
WHEN YOU BUY

2 REGULAR SIZE
CAKES
1 GIANT cake
10c
1 GIANT SS&amp;
”Kin4 t» EvirvtUss
Total 22c

BOWLENE

S'

18c

Keeps Closet Bowls Clc.ni,

CLIMALENE

3 »» 25c

Used for All Cleaning Purposes.

APRICOTS
nM"BULKUAL
CORN MEAL

th.

20c

IO i-u 25c

RED KIDNEY BEANS
BARLEY, Pearl

2 is. 15c

MALT-O-MEAL SJiff

22c

2

KELLOGG'S Whoot Biscuits
WOODBURY'S FACIAL SOAP

FLAKES
4 F“&lt;
l9- pkg.— I V

warr state btkut

SALE!

\
HORSES.
Grey gelding, weight 1350 lbs.
Block mare, weight 1350 lbs.
Block more, weight 1300 lbs.
Boy gelding, weight 1300 lbs.
(One team to be sold together with har­
ness.)
COWS.
Holstein cow, 6 yrs., old, coif by side.
Holstein and Guernsey cow, 4 years old,
calf by side.
Guernsey cow, 6 yrs. old, calf by side.
(This is an extra good bunch of cows, TB
and blood tested.)
HOGS.
Brood sow, due March 30th.
Brood sow, due April 20th.
Brood sow, due April 30th.
7 good shoots, weight 100 lbs each.
POULTRY.
30 Rhode Island Red hens.
10 Leghorn hens. 10 Barred Rock hens.

HAY AND FODDER.

15 ton, of good alfalfa hay.
170 shocks of corn in field.

FARM TOOLS.
Deering binder, 6-ft. cut. Osborne mower, 5’Zt-ft. cut.
Superior 11-hoe grain drill.
New Idea spreader. No. 9, brand new.
3 good farm wagons. 50-bjJihol grain box.
Combination hay and stock rack.
Set dump boards. Set Belknap sleighs.
Gale spring tooth walking cultivator.
Oliver riding cultivator. Single cultivator.
Oliver 99 walking plow. Land roller. Dump rake.
Three-sec. spring drag. Twa-sac. spring drag.

20-ft. ladder. 30-0. extension ladder.
15-gal. water separator. Quantity of potatoes.
Forks, shovels, hoes and other articles.

FEW HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
Buffet. Chairs. Tobits.
Round Ook kitchen range.
Oil heater.

Bads. Fruit cans.
2 heating stoves.

12c

3 bor&gt; 25c

Maxwell House
Coffee
Lb. Con— t I

Instant Postum Cm""

25c

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

TERMS OF SALE

CASH

Dishes.

Nothing removed until set

tied for.

Lawrence W. Kelley, Prop
Dewey Reed, Auctioneer

Harvey Blouch luu&gt; leased the
CurtLss saw mill'and is netting quite
a yard of logs on hand. This is en­
couraging for Freeport.
The missionary play "Marusha.”
given during Bunday School at the
Methodist church last Sunday waa
greatly enjoyed by a' lino attend­
ance.
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Good-ell of
Lake Odessa were Bunday guests of
the latter's sister. Miw Grace Ros­
enberger at the home of Mrs. Jacob
Geiger.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Fox of near
Lake Odessa were Sunday guests of
hu parents. Mr. and Mn. John Fox.

Tlie Project club member., from
this way attended the farewell
1 parly for Mrs. Senia Kelley held
at the home of Mrs. Jas. Mohler
Friday. While we all regret losing
Mrs Kelley from our club we wL.h
her happiness and success in her
new home.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Palmer and
। children spent Sunday with rela■ lives in Middleville.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Campbell
spent Sunday with their daughter
and husband near Allegan

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING

9c

C. THOMAS STORES
im

AUCTION

THURSDAY, MARCH 19

Black, Green, Mixed, V4 lb. pkg. 19c

SURESET -- «■— 2

wimufacturarx

Having decided to quit farming, I will sell my personal property at public auction
on the James Kelley farm, located on M-37, first farm west of the old Powers school, 7
miles west of Hastings, or 4 miles east of Middleville, on

BABY FOODS

HOLLYWOOD rA:i5'ut*uc" &gt;/2 lb. 25c
SALADA blue label i/2 lb. pkg. 37c

PET MILK^3 21L22C

I) E A I. E K

l‘, I.BS QOr
BAG

24’/j Lb. Bag
24Vi Lb. Bog
24' 2 Lb. Bog

No. 2
Can

Visit the

those graduating from the'Sshort
course in agriculture at Michigan
State college last Friday. He U
taking a special course this week j
and Is expected home lo stay this ।
i week Friday.
i. Mrs. L. B. Lester and Mrs. Victor spending the winter In Grand RapMiss Ruth Tabberer. who ts Slason report seeing thalr first robin Ids with her son Frank and wife.
| teaching in Detroit, spent Saturday Monday morning, spring Ls surely! spent Bunday at her home here,
I afternoon and Sunday at the home on the way.
•
nnd Mrg Edd grgar Of Grand
I of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Rev. Ml*s Wheeler and niece, ‘ Rapids wore Sunday iiur»i&lt; of hls
। Tabberer.
Miss Rulii Wheeler attended a brother, Philo and Mrs. ton Segar
| Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kunde and meeting at charlotte last Wednes- nt the latter's home.
I daughter Koleen Kay. returned
djy OMlM u«l .pent lh. nuhi
M„ oh„|„ N,.,t o! ^,(.1,,,^ u
Saturday from Mulliken where they
wltii friends there.
, making an extended visit with her
i have been for some time and are
staying at the home of her parents.1 Miss Agatha Kunde has returned sister. Mrs. H- M. Boughner.
co h.r wort at DettoU .IW. .p.nd.
u, .„a M„ c„, „
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Nagler.
u
, d„„hur. bom oo
Chester Savacool and family have in, xnver.1 month, with hrt porenu
March 2.
moved from the Chas. Moore house hcreFuneral services ' — William
into the Curtiss house on cherry
Mrs. IL F. Kunde is in very poor
Brown wore h.W .1 lh. UHhodu h„1[h „
w„u
*
rturch tut Thurttl.y alumoon .1 ,
"
““ “ 7
v
Friends here have received word rhiirrh last TtiiirKrlnv aftrrnnnn at
tL'"r
of tlie death on Feb. 24 of Mrs. 1 o-elocl. condueud by Re. K.rl
Kwt.r ot WolcrvUel Burial waa In
lo
Ohln. Uta
Sam Eckert, which occurred at lhe
fore part of last week where she
home of her daughter. Mrs. Arthur Pltuant HUI cam.Ury. Mr. Broa-n entered a hospital Mr*. Fox had
McDonald nt Toledo. Ohio. Mrn. sufiered a stroke ot paralysis about been 111 for some time and her
Eckert had been in very jioor rn.ni .unenr smee. wcu.
«,
condition wa* auch that it wa* felt
slant
sufferer
since.
Death
came
on
health for several years and since Monday. March 2. He Is survived by i necessary for her to have hospital
leaving here lo make her home with lhe widow and daughter. Margaret.
and Toledo wm chosen in cr­
her daughter, had been falling rap­ one brother. George, who lives on der »»».l she might be near Iwr
idly. Her other daughter. Mrs.
Maggio Wan less
preceded
her the farm where Will died, two sis- ',onMr. and Mrs. John "
Baar
nnd
ff.f
zr.:!
mother in death by only a few days ters. Mrs. Scott Allerding of carl- | “r.
« were
were ton- 8nd Mrs. Ruth Pierce of ton- ; children of Grand Rapids were
dying Feb. 7. Both ladles
members of the local Rebekah sing, besides other relatives and a । Sunday guests of a B. Fish and
host
of
friends.-Much
sympathy
Is
family.
Lodge and had many friends here
ed ones.
Mr. and “
Mrs. ’Earl
•*“* Jack
’**** of Dc­
who regret to learn of their |&gt;ass- expressed for the bereaved
’ who is troll -'Pent Saturday night here
Aunt Nancy Deming.
Ing.
1 with her parents.
rwrcntA Mr.
Mr and
tnrf Mrs.
Mrs H.
l&lt;
'with
W Gosch
L- M- Curtiss and sons. Max and
Floyd arc at present employed in

Clifford Hammond, Clerk

bra ted their 25th wedding anni­
versary1 Saturday March 7th.
The Project Club will hold its
next meeting with Mr*. Mall Bed­
ford. March 19. Il Is being turned
Into a garden club and each mem­
ber wlll answer roll call with "What
Interested me most In the wed cat­
alog."
Mr. and Mrs Curtis Pierce and
son of Allegan spent Bunday with
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Carter
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Rowteder
and children of Grand Rapids were
'Sunday guests of her parent*. Mr.
and Mr*. R. J. Williams.

PINE LAKE.
We are very sorry to report lhe
death ol Mn. Mattie Spaulding,
which occurred in Bronson hospital
in Kalamazoo. Monday morning.
She lias been Tn ptffir health for
many years, but was always very
optimistic, and a very good com­
panion. She will be remembered
by all of her friends and those who
knew her well tor her cheerfulness
and kindness.
Billy Ford and Hugh Nevins are
having the mumps.
The Pine Lake Farmers' Club
met with John and Mr and Mrs
Lee KUIlck on Saturday evening,
with an attendance of thirty mem­
bers. The next data and meeting
place wa.s not determined. becau.e
lhe committee was not present.
Marian Hall and Robert Warner
of W. B. T. C. were at home for

Muriel Lindsey of Battle Creek,
Elizabeth Oltoon of Nashville and
Max Newkirk of Kalamazoo were
al lhe Lindsey home over the week

Alvah Cole of Kalamazoo U at
Waller Waruer* to help with the
farm work for lhe summer.

�HABT1NGR. MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MARCH it, ItM
Mn. Miranda Sisson, who Ls While there they saw Robert Jepk- fitting of their garments will ba ii
spending lhe winter with her sis­ ins of LaRoy. who said his sister,. takr.n up at that lime. Mrs. Lewis 1
1 Otis entertained the class at her I
ter, Mrs. Wa Pslmalier, in Hastings. who is at hls home, is no better.
I
wm a guest in the home of M. E.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Schenkel and home Friday afternoon.
Moore and Clara J. Sisson for the children ware Sunday guests of Mr.
Mn. Leo Geller spent several I
and Mrs. Thomas Gillett of Middle- ' days last week with her sister, Mn.
past week.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. vllle.
Jerry Steele at Battle Creek.
Claude A. Hammond were, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Foater Waddell and:
News reached us last week of the
Mrs James
P. Hammond and sons spent Sunday at Coals Grove
recent marriage of Nelson Norris
daughter. Natalie, and Mr.jyid Mrs. with Mr. and Mrs. Castle.
and Maxine Ormsbe
They were
Leo C- Hammond and son, rUcbara.
Mr and Hr*. Leot) Steadman of formerly from this locality and are
fonts were week-end guoats of Mrs. now residing at Battle Creek. Con­
of Flint.
Mrs Edgar Flfleld spent over the Steadman's parents, Mr. and Mrs gratulations.
week end with Mr. and Mra, Leon­ E D. Johnson.
Mrs. Rose Bunnell and Mrs. Law­
ard Walters and family of Carlton
Mn. Edith Benham, just south of rence Fuhr of Delton were guests
Center.
here. Ls reported ill with acute ap­ Frlda^ afternoon of Mrs. Mary
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sisson en­ pendicitis.
Wrrtman.
tertained Mr. and Mrs. Carlton
Mrs. Stella Peeling Grab? was vis­
Russel Stanton accompanied his
Bump of Hastings al dinner Sat­ iting her sons and families in De­ grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Sam I
urday evening.
troit. last week.
Buxton of Banfield lo a birthday j
Misses Rum and Retha Roblnsoti
Mr. and-Mr* Frank McNutt and dinner given for Cyrus Buxton at ■
and David ot Hastings spopt over children spent Bunday afternoon
his home in Maple Grove. Sunday. I
the week end at. home.
with hls parents in Rutland.
A box social Is being sponsored 1
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rccsor and
I( seemed good to have services by the PT A on Friday evening, j
family of Woodland were Bunday nt the church again Sunday. The March 20. A "Major Bowes” pro- j
iiftemcon gucsto of M. C. Moore plan no» is to have church there gram b being arranged for the oe- '
and Clara J. Sisson.
every Sunday al 8:30. Everyone is caslon?
week end with relatives and friends welcome.
Mrs. Melissa Tinkler was a din- J
here, both departed ior Jackson
ner guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Monday morning. The dales of Ute ,
DOWLING.
George Stanford and accompanied
Spring Derby have been changed
The ladies in the community are them and Mr. and Mrs William
to March 28th and 28lh.
serving supper si .the church Fri­ Stanford to Hastings where they
Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Mayo and day evening March 13 beginning at attended the meeting of the County
Jean of Hastings spent Sunday with 7:30 with a program put on by the Supcrlntendi-nts
and
Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sisson and i men and with an, invitation to all. School workers at lhe Methodist
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Malcolm and I Mr, and Mrs. Bernard Quigley of church.
Norton Slocum and other Con­
Grand Rapids and Mr and Mrs.
family were Sunday gueau of the'
sumers Power workmen left Mon­
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John I Charlie Mapes of Nashville were
guests Sunday at the Lloyd Gaskill day for Plainwell where they are
Malcolm.
employed al present.
home.
Misses Marjorie and Odella FL-1
Tlie Ladies' Aid will serve dinner
Tlie Sewing Class will meet on
Rapidly, taction by section, skilled engineers are assembling lhe mammoth San FrancUco-Oakland
field of Hastings were al home over |
Wednesday afternoon, March 18. ■ at the church on Thursday. March |
Day bridge, longest In the world. This photo, taken from lhe air. ahows the newest phase ot con­
the week end.
with Mrs. Esther Stanton; * first
struction on the 4ta*mil« long apan—trusses which form the deck of the bridge—In place below the
Maury E. Moore was in Grand I
cables. These deck sections are bolsted by pulleys from barges anchored In the bay and bung by 214Rapids on - business, Thursday; I
Incb steel ropes suspended from tbe main cables ot the bridge.
The center concrete anchorage is
Prank Thompson accompanied him
shown above at the rlgbl and*lbe San Francisco skyline al the left.
■ there.
Mrs. Feme Robinson.
Dorothy
and Mrs. Miranda Sisson called at
THREE ClftlNERS.
results; Step 3—Cut lhe curd Into
POP CORN CHEESE
.
,
,
the Clarence Sisson home Friday
one-half inch cubes, using the back
The white winter is gone.\ only B(lernoon.
EASY TO PREPARE side of a long, heavy knife or thej lhe smirched ruins, moumfujl and ■ •
----------------prongs of a heavy fork; Step 4—
-------------.-u-.
------•
IRVING.
Heat lhe water slowly in lhe pan. Impoverished,
remiuii-bcwilderliig
Eight Steps Necessary to It should take about 25-30 minutes variations of clouded while and 1 -------Allen—Matthews
from ------------Buchanan
-------------- ------to raise temperature from 72 lo 115- BreY meet the c&gt;'c on every hand, and Mr and Mrs. Robert Mills. Mrs
Finish Product, flays
120 degrees; Step 5—Stir curd care- I and my "early birds." a robin and a Clark O'Donnell and son of HnsCollege Staff
fully during Lhe first part of cook- | cardinal, tell us that spring Is nigh, tings were Saturday visitors at Wm,
Michigan State College extension ing period. Do no more at this ' Claude A. Hammond attended the McCann's
workers in dairy and home eco­ time than pull the curd away from Wolverine Beagle Club meeting in : Mr. and Mrs. Jolui Perry and their
nomic.* arc cooperating In a project the side of lhe pan so that all of it1 North Lansing Saturday night; daughter. Mrs. Avis Tompkins of
to enlarge the variety ol foods for cooks evenly; Step a—As the curd Bernard Ryan of Jackson accom- Kalamazoo, who is vLMting them,
firms, more rapid agitation can be panied him home and spent the spent Saturday in Grund Rapids.
farm families.
Jewell
MJensen, extension used, although lhe curd should not'
dairyman, and Helen Straw, exten­ be beaten into fine bits. The tern- I
sion nutrition specialist, arc hold­ pernture of lhe whey tn the making &gt;
ing a series of demonstrations In ot lliis type of cheese should not be :
eight Michigan counties to em­ raised above 120 degrees; Step 7— I
phasize wavs of utilizing the pop When curd is of proper firmness,
corn type of cottage cheese. Women drain lhe whey, and wash curd
leaders In each counly will lake lhe twice with good cold water. Allow
results back to home communities to drain in pan or draining rack
until most of the free water has i
and neighbors.
The purpose of our rollagc cheese run ofi; Step 8—Salt lo taste. Add
demonstration* Is to provide better thin cream, folding the cream Into 1
• Every part of your car
living for farm families, utilize lhc curd.
more home produced food products
NORTHWEST ’.RUTLAND.
needs a certain type of lu­
and lo enlarge tlie vaitety of food
Best
wishes
lo
the
little
girl
who
bricant.
Wc use only the
for farm families. Mr Jensen says.
has come lo live in the home of;
In order lo meet n growing de­
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Belson. She wlll right greases and oil to
mand for utilization of by-products
answer to lhe name of Yvonne.
I keep things running smooth
on the farm, wc have planned these
Tlie Extension Club met last FrI- ;
cottage cheese demonstrations. Tlie day
trouble-free.
Expert
at lhe home of Mrs. Joe Mai- 1 and
chief values found in cottage cheese
thews.
lubricating service for ev­
arc a concentration of lhe milk pro­
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Burdick
of
|
tein* whirh are excellent muscle
ery part of your car and the
builders nnd the milk mineral.* Portland spent the week end wiUi
right lubricant for every
which are go indispensable lo good Mr. and Mrs. Jim Dibble.
George Whitney of the city spent j
health
job!
Ste|»s In the manufacture of the several days in the Fred Camp
pop coni type of cottage cheese home lost week.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Jim Mead visited
follow:
Step 1—For cottage cheese mak­ in the John Benedict home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pratt. Jerry I
ing. pic pare a starter al least 21 Johnson. Miss Doris Hall and Adam 1
hour* before the skim milk L* lo be
set. To make starter, set a mason Arney were dinner guests Sunday
j
jar full of sweet fresh milk, cooled in the Ritchie Mullen home.
Mr. and Mrs- Ed. Dodge of Lan­
M*Ann 994ft Cor. Jefferson and Court
to 72 degrees temperature, nnd hold
I llUlIb ZZHU Sta., Hastings, Michigan
at this temperature until sour. Skim sing visited Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Whit- ,
ofi the cream. The remaining sour right Saturday and went to Three • Firestone Tires and Tubes
• Sunoco Gas and Oita. Greasing
Rivers to spend Uie week end with
or curd"d skim milk is started:
1 • Batteries, Windshield Wipers
a Vulcanizing. Electric, Washing
Step 2—Temper skim milk in a Mr. and Mrs. Marley Burroughs.
We wish lo congratulate Donald I
double boiler to 72-74 degrees
Weaver
on
hta
scholarship
record
Fahrenheit
Stir in one pint of
*
BLUE
;
in
Hastings
High.
good clean starter for each two gal­

World’s Longest Bridge Speeds to Completion

I

SPRING BA
2 lb. can BLISS COCOA .
No. 2 can TOMATOU..
3 lbs. BULK MACARONI
2 dox. Sunkist ORANGES, cm. (x.,
3 lbs. SPINACH.......... .. .................... 25«
5 lb. pkg. Chan Quick Soap Chip*, 29c
10 ban P-G SOAP, 100 size............ 35c
10 lb*. Granulated SUGAR______ 47c
2 lb*. Powdered SUGAR
............19c
2 can* Beet Grad* PINK SALMON, 25c
CREAMERY BUTTER .................. lb. 32c
2 lbs. PRUNES, medium six*
13c
Z'/i lb. box SALSODA ...J
COMBINATION MOP HOLD- both ter
ER and TWISTED WARP MOP 23c

I

BE SURE AND VISIT OLR BOOTH During Commercial
Club FAIR held at the Community Hall the WMk
of March 25—FREE GIFTS Every Day!

WALLACE GROCERY
Highest Market Price PaM for Your Poultry. Cream and Eggs.

AUCTION

We will sell at public auction at the p remises, the Frank Parmelee farm, or bet­
ter known as the Swanson farm, 10 miles n orthwest of Battle Creek on M-37 pave­
ment, or 2 1-2 miles north of Bedford and 16 miles south of Hastings, on

THURSDAY, MARCH 19

LUBRICATION...

ANDRUS SERVICE

COMMENCING AT 9:30 A. M. SHARP.

4 HORSES

1 pair brown geldings, weight 3500.
1 pair black geldings, weight 2900.

Ion* of skim tnllk. As high as a
quart for each two gallons may be
used safely and will bring quick

4wzw&gt;v&gt;w&lt;'x.'/zzzz/yx
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY

REGULAR

GASPRICE

dUHULU

MOTOR

FUEL

teaten.

to attend
It’s a day you want to spend with us, enjoying the new talking
pictures of life on the farm . . . learning of new and better ways of
farming ... of new ways to save money . . . new machines to
cut your costs ... new methods to increase your yields ... new hints
on getting the most from your tractor.
, '
See and hear the two new John Deere talking pictures:

“Sheppard &amp; Son”
and

“Murphy Delivers the Goods”
Plenty of Entertainment and Education.

Everything is EREE.

AT OUR PLACE OF BUSINESS

ALL DAY TUESDAY, MARCH 17th
PROGRAM STARTS PROMPTLY AT 10.00 A. M.

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO.
FREE LUNCH !

50 DAIRY COWS
Thia ia a mixed dairy herd—Hol»tai««, Durham*,
a few good Cuemaeya ond Jeraeya. CIom up apriRfera, cowa with colvea by aide and milkers. Theea are
large cowa and a herd of high production and goad

YOU'RE INVITED
John Deere Day

80 HEAD OF CATTLE
Cattle Sale promptly at 1:00 F. M.

9 HOGS
4 young sows due first part of April.

5 shoots weighing about 160 pounds.

MACHINERY

13
3
9
5
1
1

heifers coming 2 year* old, all brad.
steers coming 2 yean old.
heifers coming 1 year old.
heifer calves from 4 to 6 month* old.
grade Guernsey bull.
Guernsey bull calf, 6 month* old.

2—99 Oliver walking plows.

1 John Deere corn binder.

1 David Bradley walking plow.

1 Deering binder, 7-ft., new canvases.

1 farm wagon with flat rack.

1 McCormick binder, 7-ft., new can,
vases.
1 McCormick-Deering spreader.
1 Deering mower, 5-ft. cut.

1 farm wagon with box,
2 sets heavy harness.

1 John Deere side rake.
1 International hay loader.
1
I
1
1

John Deere two-horse cultivator.
Oliver two-horse cultivator,
John Deere 3-sec. spring tooth drag.
Osborne 2-sec. spring tooth drag.

HAY — OATS.

About 300 bushel* very choice Markton
seed oat*.
SEED POTATOES,
About 40 bushels early Irish Cobbler*,
grown from certified seed.
About 60 bu. late Sir Walt*, Raleigh*.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. No property to be removed until icttlad for. Lunch
be served by Ladies of Eastern Star.

HARRY and HOWARD DRAKE, Propri
Auctioneers—
ANDY ADAMS.
HARRY DENHAM.

Clerks—

HOWEL
I. I. (HI

�HASTINGS. MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MARgf! It. 1938

FOOH1KEN

. enu. Mr. and Mrs. C-D. McDermott, new home on the Will Siebei form. Aftnstrang min Mrs. Melissa Ashby ! Maple Grove,
Clarence
Menck.1
Sunday.
Seward Walton of Illinois Ls vis- in Kalamazoo. Sunday.
[ Crystal Shears nnd daughter. Phyl- 1
Itlng his grandmother. Mrs. Mina Mr. nnd Mrs. Carl Ricker nnd , *ls- Mr mid Mrs Anthony Williams I
I Fred Scott entertained company
| Aldrich.
little son of HasUngs visited Mrs.' »r.d family visited Clyde Leonard
molt and wife Saturday. Mrs. Bea­ from Lansing. Sunday.
Fred Ashby and family were Sun- Mina Aldrich Saturday.
nnd wife Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Oates of Clov­
rtrice Dunning mid daughter. Lea-Mr. and Mrs.'Orover Marshall of
Mr- an&lt;* Mrs. Clarence Payne and I
trice, from Delton visited their par- erdale arc nicely settled in their day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
.
, two daughters. Clare nnd Lyle Ash- I
----------------------- , by
FrwJ Ashby
spent I
। Tuesday in Hastings.
HOPE CENTER.
d Mrs. K. A. Klein from

BARBERS CORNERS.
|
Mr. and Mrs. R C. Blough and j

1
family of Grand Ledge were Sun- ;
(day guests at John Weaver’s.
{ Mrt and Mta-Norral Nielsen and
' family of Rockford, who have!
moved on the. James R Mattiiews j
1 farm, -spent Tnursuay at L. J. Mati thews’.
I Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hauer were
guests at Floyd Clum’a at Coals
I Grove. Thursday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Clyde Kuempe) were
! Battle Creek visitors Thursday.
Mrs Mary McIntyre has moved
to Hastings nnd Mr. and Mrs. Dud1 Icy Kennedy have moved on her
। farm.
1 Mrs. Etta Bump nnd Miss Evelyn
I ?4ntthews of Grand Rapids are vlsUting’Mr mid Mrs I. J. Matthews.
I Mr and Mrs la-o Riker of north
of Portland have moved on the
j John Barker farm and Mr. and Mrs.
Barker have moved to Hustings
! James R Mnjtlirws of Plainfield
spent Thursday wibti Mr. and Mrs..
; L. J. Matthews.
F Mr. nnd Mr- Cleo Mourcr nnd
Joyce. William Jones of Detroit. Mr.
' and Mrs. Glrnilon Jones and fnmily
| ot Dowling and Lyle Bristol of HatI tie'Creek spent Sunday with Mr.
| and Mrs. Oscar Jones and family.
I Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huver ot Lan­
sing and Janies and Martin Foley
‘ of Hastings were Sunday visitors nt
I Mrs. Jerry Foley’s.

The Home Lumber Company
BUILDS HOMES
Also

Sells All Kinds of Building Material
Phone 2276

Watch Our Ads

NOW ON DISPLAY IN OUR STORE

Dutiful new

Valiant War on Tree Scourges Marks
Progress in 60 Years of Forestry
M1NETEEN THIRTY SIX marks
ilia 40 tH anniversary of the
United Sistea
In. 137*. after a careful study
of the nation’s timber. Franklin
8 Hnugb. Uncle Smn'a tint 'for

•urely

People thought him a crank.
Most Americans then thought our
forests Imperishable
I n &lt;j
farmers and homebuilders
eomed forest fires which saved
them the trouble of clearing tlm
Herland.
Nevertheless. Hough’s warning
had Its effect S^s of a future
sowed In the mind* or the while
Farsighted thnush ho w

Itnnglned lhe splendid prtigi

Sine* Congress appropriated
$2&lt;if&gt;0 to finance Hough's torest

iltlrorii milestones nn lhe rnad
to an iDtelllgent. eennnmlrai for
Mt policy
In 1RS«. the nirisiAn
lent Harrison esteMhhcd the
YellowHtnne Park llmherlnnd nre

ent National
nnssed
The Bureau nf Fnr
• established Ip 1901. became the
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
- Forest Serves In 1905
Mrs. F. a. Pierson of Hastings
called on Mrs. Walter Culbert Fri­
Weeks law
day afternoon.
Nary bill.
Mr. and Mrs. Win. Usbome of
Woodruff act. 192S; and lhe Me­
Grand Rapids called on Mr and
• Mrs. LaFayette Usbome Thursday
strengthened ths nalIon's forest
I afternoon.
•
policy
j Mrs. Anna Buck and Mrs. Leo
in 1933. the president sent hls
I Barry called on Mrs. Jerry Andrus
forest wnrk relief message to Con­
of West carlton Tuesday afternoon
gress; and In 1933. the first CCC
1 who is recovering from a recent
corps camp was established.
' operation.
I Hazel Shriber worked the past
week for Mrs. James Mead of West
IN hls most optimistic momcnls.
. I Hastings.
Hough could never have fnroI Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hale ot North
I Carlton spent Sunday with Mr. and
tiny to protect (J
s. timber
Mrs. Caryl Fuller.
atanda. Ho enulil never hnre vi­
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shriber and
sioned a foreat army known as
daughter Hazel and Mr. and Mrs.
the Civilian Conner vat Ion Corps
Do Barry and son called on Mr.
putting In 1.841 000 man day»
i and Mrs. Abid Donley of Lansing
quelling forest fires; nnr the 33.
' Sunday afternoon.
459 miles of telephone lines
threading forest areas to ennvev
A bill to make st. Patrick’s Day
Are warnings; to say nothing of
a legal holiday was Introduced Into
lookout lowers, nlrplano blaze
the New York State Legislature nt
Albany. U S A The name of the
“spotters." radioed alnrma. ete.
sponsor of the bill L&gt; Senator
lie could hardly have foretold
Wojtkowalk!
that nn unrelenting war would

NOW is the TIME
To Repair Your Roof
DO IT BEFORE THE
MARCH RAINS COME
NEW PRICES
AS LOW AS

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Phone 2515

Hastings

*34?°
Quiet . f.
T.

•r cur. cunnZ "

Don ’t Neglect Those

TOTHnSjXC««T

.pecmore coTdf'“n,t
current co,rk^£ much

BABY CHICKS!
or your LAYING
HENS with inferi*

Meets ALL FIVE Standards for
Refrigerator Buying

or Feeds!

The Best is Cheapest

LOWER OPERATING COST
2

SAFER FOOD PROTECTION

3

FASTER FREEZING-MORE ICE

4

MORE USABILITY

5

FIVE-YEAR PROTECTION PLAN

USE

W

1

1 “S

Food-Saftty Indicator Built
Right I nto tha Cabinet

Only Frigidaire dares to give you the Food-Safety Indi­
cator— visible pnof that foods are kept at Safety-Zone

THIS WAY SAVES YOU MONEY
the scsled-in mechanism is protected for Five Years against service expense
for only Five Dollars included in the purchase price.

ican Tree Association, has said,
"forestry bas come far since
IST«."
To commemorate the COth annlverpary of the first step In for­
e-try. Mr. Puck has announced
In short, tlio Primer brings re­
printing nt tho 43rd edition of his ’ ncw/il emphasis to the warning
Forest Primer,. which,. when
___ dis.
wl^U-li Franklin B. Hough utlorod
tribute*!. will make a total ot
nearly CO years ago.

The L A. S. will be entertained
b&gt;' club Nu 3
U* home of Mrs.
Blanche Bayne Wednesday. March
IS. *"*
fo? dinner. A cordial invitation
,B
is extended to all.
Our hearts were saddened to hear
that our old friend nnd neighbor.
Mrs. Alice Coolbaugh of Hastings,
hud died this morning. For many
years she lived among us and en­
deared herself id us all by her kind
disposition nnd her many acts ot
neighborly kindness. She was a
faithful worker in the Martin
church UI
UkkUkVH
to which
WkklVkk .11
she
IV belonged
UVkVIkkgCU Skill
and
A delightful shower was held for |n the L. A. S. She has been a
Mrs. Lavern Mott Johncox at ffie great sufferer fnr several months,
\ home of Mrs. Mabel Town of Del- nnd Wr know that with her. as St.
, ton a fine time was had and many pOui sold. ’’To die Is gain.’’ She has
| lovely gifts brought for the bride.
—-■ gone
----- —
•
• of
— —
only
on a little ahead
the
rest of us and her good influence
STONY POINT.
, will ever live in the hearts of her
The WcliinnnP. T. a. will be held ' children, neighbors and friends. The
this week Friday evening. March 13. funeral will be held from her late
home in Hastings Wednesday after­
Every body cordially Invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Vander Jagt enter­ noon at 2 o’clock. Interment will
in
tained company from Pewamo Sun­ lie in the Baptist cemetery
day.
j Woodland township, beside her hus­
Mrs. Allee coolbaugh. mother of band and children. The sorrowing
Mrs. Claud Demand and once a । family have our deepest sympathy.
resident of this community passed
away at her home in Hastings early
ORANGEVILLE.
Monday morning after a long 111Mr and Mrs. Ray Apsey were at
ness.
Hastings Tuesday nnd again Friday
Mr. nnd Mrs. Sam Blocher of on business.
Nashville. Mr and Mrs. Lynn MalMr. and Mrs Charles Hensen nnd
ILson of Lansing nnd Mrs Leroy
Combs and Forest and Myrtle Mead daughters of Grand Rapids spent
of Kalamazoo were week end visi­ Thursday with her parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Norman of this place.
tors nl B. J. Wellman s.
FAIR lake.
।
। The Kinsley Aid will meet with
'Mr-. Esther Dann. March 18. for
dinner. Mrs Vina Durkee anti Mr..
Leda Harrington entertaining with
. her.
I Chan. Pickaley nnd family of
Nashville have moved onto the Dltc
Willison farm and Mr. Reasoner
nnd family of Dowling arc moving
onto the Chas. Robinson form.
Mr. mid Mrs j|- &lt;J- Armour spent
Sunday in HnHings the guests of
I’ their son Floyd Armour.

-------- MARTIN CORNERS
at the home ot her daughter. Mrs.
Our schoolhouse was wired last, Arthur Crawford.
week mid wc sure nil enjoyed the
Mr. and Mrs. John Venemn spent
i-li'clrlc lights for the first tune at the week end with her parents nt
the P T a. Friday evening. We Pontiac.
i also enjoyed the music by .Messrs.
Mr. mid Mrs. R. W, Pcltijohn
. Edmunds. Callahan and Rowloder, were Saturday night and Sunday
accompanied by little Miss Clark guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marclus
on the piano, the song by Mr. and i Bagley of this vicinity.
Mrs. VanderJagt; the excellent tap
Mr. nnd Mrs. Abe Hermlnette of
dancing by William Hirst, also the near Prairieville spent Sunday with
fried cakes and coffee served by their son. James and family, of this
' Mesdames Nina and Agnes Barry. I place.

INSIST ON
MICHIGAN

MADE

Let us figure with you on your

GARDEN SEED ORDER
We hove o full line of BULK
GARDEN SEEDS.

GET A DEMONSTRATION TODAY

Consumers Power Company

TRULY, as Charles Lnlhrop
A Park, president of tha Amer­

4.300.000 copies provided
for
schools and other education use.
Some of the forestry facta
pointed out In (ho Primer are:
North America, with onetwelfth of the world's people, uses
about one-half of all timber con­
sumed In tlie world. Each year
about 400,000,000 trees aro felled
to provide telegraph and tele­
phone poles, fence posts, railroad
ties, newsprint, etc.
Forest Area during 1934 cost
the United States &gt;124.000 a day.
nearly 43.000,000 acres having
been swept by flames during that

or

MERMASH 18'*

BEET SUGAR
Best tor Cooking—Baking—Canning
Jams and Jellies-Candv Makins’.
Frostings—Table Use

See what marvelous convenience Frigidaire gives you. Up to 42 A more
usable space in front, easily reached. Full-Wiath Sliding Shelves, Portable
Utility Shelf, Super Freezer, Double-Range Cold Control and scores of
other advantages. See — compare — and you'll agree Frigidaire gives most
for your money I

fltktufa'faofrl

bo waged against lhe 2000 known
kinds of Insects , which annually
kill millions of trees.
And while they are fighting for­
est scourges. the corps and other
agencies are busy replanting
thousands of treea each year. In
an attempt to stem the Udo of
deforestation.

MERMASH 16^

The Mott Beautiful FRIGIDAIRE
Ever Built!
• Amazing io beauty, quality, low price! What's more, it brings you an
utterly new way of choosing the right refrigerator — on the five basic
standards. Buy no refrigerator unless it meets ALL FIVE. And don't buy
on claims, buy on /*xh/

Imvr been delighted to watch CCC lads fight forest flrca, deadly
menace to the nation's trees.

ftS&amp;M

FARM BUREAU

Always ask for one of these quality brands —

SERVICES • INC

PIONEER
GREAT LAKES
RED ARROW
BIG CHIEF

Hastings, Mich.

Phone 2118

FOR SALE BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. MARCH 12, IMS

-

ANOTHER CROP OF
RILEY'S STORIES.
One Saturday afternoon “Big"
Forest Jordan stood in Die doorway
ot hl* picture show on Michigan
Ave.. -Newton Block-' and when he
HjK
"R,to* r°u’r'‘ the
man t'Wn.looking tor, Come inside
a few minute*.'" Ho began lo laugh
and then said, -You know, about
three yegrs ago I *terted the Coffee
Ranch and I also bought eggs, and
one day I got an extra large egg and
Just for the tun of it. I put my
nui* and address and date on that
Wi- And yesterday I got a letter ;
from a woman tn Buffalo. N Y..'
staling that she had Just bought
that &lt;gg and want* to know if the
date U correct. Now you're a kind
of a humorist, so I want you lo annwer Hint letter.'' And this h what
I wrote:
•
Dear Madam:
In reply to your letter, wish to
state that date on egg is correct
nnd 1 still own lhe rooster that laid
that egg. My eggs are hard to beat
Like wine, they grow belter with
age. Bull selling eggs at tlie old
stand.
Yours for eggs,
■■Jumbo-' Jordan Chicken Ranch,
Hastings. Michigan.

ou. monUn, «.«» nnped nl ।

Huge Luxury Liners of the Air May
Circle World in Week by 1940
Then step for a lltll* while into
the laboratorlM add draft lug
room* ot the country's foremost
airplane builder*.
Yotill learn
that the "baby" nurtured by tbs
Wright brothers nearly 33 years
•go Is (till a rnddler
dlans are concerned.
its full life ahead
In the Interim, the plane being
laid and developed approach lhe
They wlll enable yon. for In
atanc*. If they succeed, to board
a hermeihally sealed cahlo plane

continent Ihrnugb the aub-airato
sphere el Ove miles a tnlnule
Plans fnr such a plane are al
ready In aliab* for construction
purposes
fork City.

w-"

Um door .nd iX ».w. "Com. in.
to." n
A I ?
"
..I.
...... ""“r...
man opened the
limn
lhe door, extended hls ’
^nur "
•Nip
fl,P likely would have coal
cost
hand und said, "Hello, old trou|&gt;er." i frnn* 11.0(10,000 to I2.O0O.O00—far
I said. "That * me, but who are I IniRer than any commercial plane
you?" And he said. "Slim Jim. the ! Y”1 ,n operation—because money
magician, nnd I came here to see if | la nnly Incidental to Hie progress
you wouldn't go to Freeport with
me and sing a few sr.ng* for u* at
the *how tonight" And I said. “I'm
a little rusty. Jim, but for old
lime-* sake I'll go." Tlie last act
Slim Jim did hls *lcighi-of-hand a sleeper service which would
stunt* and then said. •T.adies and tuck you away comfortably while
gentlemen, here I have a strong
your ship whirred through the
rope, and anyone that can He me
night at 3'4 trilies a minute Now
so that I can't get loose in ten min­
under const ruction, these huge
utes I will make him or her a pres­
ships are designed lo carry I«
ent of ten dollars." And a man
whom I recognized ai Dr. Peckham ,passenger* by night and 32 by
started in on that job like a sailor
Th* future seems unbounded.
and soon exclaimed. "If you get
loose Inside of ten minutes, i'll eat
my shirt!" In less than five min­
ute*. Silin Jim was free and clear
will t&gt;e entirely possible for th*
and the crowd shouted. "Flat your | buMneut go getter." predicts Col.
Miirt. Doctor!" and Dr Peckham ; Edgar Gorrell, newly appointed
laughed and. said "I'll lake that ui! i "exar” of the aviation Industry.
back, but If you fellows will step
And In the light of existing
Into Hie oflice inmorrow I'll give progress hls prediction seems reayou all a good cigar.”
souabla. Already aviation eno
Many year* after I met Dr. Peck- ' point tn the record-breaking 33S7ham In John Dennis' printing oflice '
mite flight of the navy's latest
••d he -aid "Riley, that was lhe
type patrol plane from the Pan­
t'v •'.Sb q stunt that I ever
ama Canal to Alameda. Calif.; to
puill'ii!
the epochal (Halits of lhe Sikorsky
Clipper, which has been hinting
a new mail and passenger route
Mr nnd Mrs Grover Marshall
across lhe hazardous Par life; and
spent Sunday with Mr nnd Mra.
to the general rapid growth of
Clyde Leonard at Delton.
commercial flying.
Mi and Mrs Laurel Marshall of
the Branch District spent Thursday
EQUALLY significant have been
evening al Grover Marshall's.
*-* developments of a nation wide
Funeral services for Mr*. Frrd
network ot airmail transportation.
Hd' who nsNsd nway Wednesday

were held st the Wilcox church
Friday. She leave* the husband nnd ;
BRANCH DISTRICT.
two sons, two half brothers and a I
Neighbors and friends of Mr and
hall sister
Mr nnd Mrs Clifford Rich have I Mrs. Dewey Jones gathered at their
moved on their recently acquired home Saturday evening for a fare­
farm, the farmer D. H- Evans farm. well party Mr. nnd Mrs. Jones, who
Mr* Ella Taylor of Nashville have lived on the Dilbahner farm
spent Saturday nite and Sunday nl for eleven years arc moving to
Nashville this week. Wc wish them
tlie Frank Norton home.
good luck in their new home. Wc
Mr. and - Mrs. nob EilUton and ,understand Mr. and Mrs. paul Bell
son of West Vermontville spent
Sundily at Frank Norton's an&amp;^ilso
(tilled on their pardills. Mr. and
MM I. W. Jarrunl.
Miss Helene iplasmu of Zeeland.
Mrs. Grace Brake of Hastings.
Wayne Robinson and Howard Jen­
son of Nashville spent Sunday with
Mr and Mrs. Lister Preston.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvc Ciierscman
and family spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mr*. C- Buxton of the Dunham
District helping Mr. Buxton cele­
brate hls birthday Mr nnd Mrs
lUrolu Gray, of East Assyria also
*pent the day with Mr. Buxton who
Is their uncle.
Mr. and Mrs Clarence Bump and
family of Hastings spent Friday
with their mother. Mr*. Anna
Cheeseman.
.
Mr. and. Mrs. Grover Marshall.
Mrs. Lulu Gray and Mrs. Robert
Gray attended the Jim dinner at
Claude Hoffman's in the Dunham
district.
Mrs. Lester Preston spends today
rMondayr Tn Grand Raptds- with
her daughter. Mr*. Eva Robinson.

PRAIRIEVILLE.
turned to their home her* after a Harry Freeman and family
Mrs Arthur Baker and daughter months' absence spent at Richland
Mr and Mrs Neuman Deal ot ,Mrs. Gerald
of Kalamazoo spent Bunday wlhl
,n&lt;1 Mr»- John DePriester of Grand Rapid*, Mr. *nd Mr*. Oaaar it! Um put
the formers parehls, Mr. and Mrs Do»Ung visited Mr. and Mr*. Jake
----------- ------------------- - — - pneumonia.
Grande DePriestcr.
, Johnson and Dora. Wednesday.
, Hasting* vultod Mr. and Mr*. David
Mln Lila Boniface is home from
Sunday Mr. and Mr* Jake John- Deal. Sunday,
Pennock hospital and
a’ong
*nd P°r‘
'
rau Mr. and
nicely from an appendicitis opera- i^rthday dinner honoring Mrs. Dori*
CARLTON CENTER.
Uon
Johnson. Other guests were Lewi*,
MU* Catherine Spindler of Wood- 1Sunday with
• ti....
.. . .. Johnson and Lorain. George Adri­
Kina of near
land
spent
Bunday
with
Mis*
Mar.
V? ■
(“UI. «nd BtotMX. AdruixX ‘m ™ m’ A Mili
I, “
»■ a
‘tow to re- grete Valentine. Burt Valentine of
son.
near Lawhead Lake also spent Him.ported.
। Hereafter there will be prayer
Miss Hartman
:
of Hickory Corners
. meeting at lhe church Wednesday
Mrs. Scott Allerdlng spent moat members of the Aid are plannii
- night; choir practice following the is assisting al the telephone ex- ' of last week at the WU1 Brown serve nn election dinner al
change oflice.
I service.
home In Irving. Her brother. Will Orange hall. April Bth.
Miss Ellen Shelp. who had an al- ' Brown was burled last Thursday
1 Mr* Florence Mott, who ha* been
at Kalamazoo *ince October, re­ tack of appendicitis, la much im­ alter a long illnen.
the church *ervice» Bunday
I
turned to the home of her da ugh- proved. we arc pleased to report.
Mr and Mrs Wm
Usbome of enjoyed lhe splendid aermen
Mis*
Elizabeth
Woods spent
ter. Mrs Maurice Hughe*. Sunday.
, Grand Rapids were visitors Thur*-; Rev. Mln Wheekr. You ar
Arma Glynn of Battle Creek vis­ Thursday night with her mother. ' day ot the former's brother, Mr.
Mrs. Allie Woods, at the home of
ited friend* here this week.
the sermon with us.
| and Mrs. John Usbome.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Osborne Mr. and Mrs. Barber.
John Cloutier is moving from the
and family of Nashville visited Wil­
liam Mullen and called on Mr. and Jay Wilkinson place to the Robert
Mrs .Milo Lehman. Sunday.
Mrs. Camp^Webb of Pontiac and
;
RuMell Lewis Is sick with flu.
I Mr and Mrs. Richard Arentz and MUs Ruth Nelson of Battle Creefc_
। family arc moving to a farm in Irv­ were caller* of Mrs. Surah Smith
ing township. Mr and Mrs. Harry snd Mrs Wilbur Polley. Wednesday.
Mr and Mrs. W. R Norris and
Wilkes will move from Mrs Sam
DeBack's farm to their farm in the Mrs Lucy Norn* were in Hastings
Falk district and Mr and Mrs Dick on buMne*M, Tuesday.
•
। Foote of Orangeville will locate on
Mus Nina Munger is assisting
Mr* DeBack's farm
with th- household duties at Mrs
j Mr nnd Mr* Robert McKibbin Jennie Norris'.
i and family of Rutland spent SaturMrs. Henry Benson, who spent tlie
I day here
winter with her brother, Mr and
Saturday. Allee Lewis entertained Mrs. Peter Castle, returned lo her
twelve ot her little friends, the oc­ home here. Saturday.
casion being the little hontess* Oth
Charles Hughe* lias b" n busy at­
birthday Games were played and tending the conventions of the
Windstorm Company at various
join her friends in wishing her .‘ities. Friday. Lloyd Shelp went
many happy returns.
to Kalamazoo to the convention and
Mrs Nellie Hyde and son Paul Saturday. Mr and Mrs. Vaughn
called on Mr. and Mrs, Rankin Mott attended at Grand Rapids.
Hyde and George. Sunday.
Mr. Hughes returning home with
Mr and Mrs. Philip O'Toole and the latter in the evening.
daughter of Battle Creek were Sun­
E A Rowley, county executive's^
day guests of Mr. and Mrs D. N. Hastings, reorganized a scout troop
Honeywell.
al this place Thursday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. William Duncan Russell Nunemaker will be leader;
and family of Kalamazoo were din­ eight boys were present. They Will
ner guests of Mr and Mrr.. Maurice meet at the town hall Friday night.
Hughes. Mr and Mrs. Hugh Chap­
Saturday. Mr and Mrs. Calthrop
HASTINGS
-iMICHIGAN
man and family of Hickory Corners were in Hastings' on business and
were callers in lhe afternoon.
Sunday In Plalnwen where they
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold McLcay re- were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.

$8-

EACH!

• SPECIAL PRICE ON

HOBLENKI ELECTRIC SHOP

TtiouiMiiU* ui feel utxiie Hu- rertll. Ibis glgnnllc nll-inel*! llnuglni

T

nautical device, speeds acrosa lhe continent, touching both const*
between dawn and dusk.
Below. Hie even larger Pan Aqicrknn
Airway*' China Clipper I* aliown returning to home water*. H«n
Franciaco Bay, after her first epochal flight to lhe mld-t'acinc.
'
Oakland nnd Berkeley, Calif., arc in the barkgrouud.
now branching out a* trans­
oceanic.
Moreover, the men behind th*
scenes In the shop* and airplane
laboratories have thought ot th*
llllie fellow Who wants to fly bls
own plana
Perhaps th* most
hopeful sign tor th* future of pri­
vate flying has been the effort ot
the Industry io build a *mall.
foolproof plane.
The goal Is a type which, above

e Com.

today. It will be priced to com­
pare with automobiles and juit as
comfortable, may travel 3v to 40
mile* an hour faster than the best
car. and oo the same amount ot
gasoline.
With It will come lhe problem
of *lr traffic!
But already the Bureau of Air
Commerce la laying lhe groundwork^oj a rigid traffic control nt
airways and airports. When that
day comes, the "baby" wlll be

craft being sold lo private owners

an* moving to the Dilbahnrr farm
Prayer Hireling will be held at the
homo of Mr and Mrs John Howel).
Mr. nnd Mrs Jew Fasselt entertnlncd Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Lathrop from Prairieville. Mr and
Mra. Floyd Fawtt. of Grand Lcdi;e
and Mr nnd Mrs. Hurry Green and
children.
Mr. ana Mrs. Ricflbrd Bird arc

moving on the Chns. Mapes farm
in East Maple Grove.
There was no P. T A- nt the
Branch school Saturday evening
A few have tapped their sugar
bushes in this locality.
Mrs. Lawrence Maurer, who has
been 111 for some time is a little
better al present.

COMMUNITY

AUCTION SALE!
On The Hastings Fairgrounds

in the only car in the lower price range with the

SATURDAY, MARCH 14

FAMOUS KNEEACTION RIDE-

SALE TO START AT 1:00 O'CLOCK

■„

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mrs. Bertha Mlllinex and children
of Battle Creek spent Sunday with
Mrs Walter Hershberger.
Rev. Harley Townsend attended
an insurance meeting in Grand
Rapids Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas Farlcc have
their house repaired so they moved
in Monday. Earl Benner I* moving |
on the Grant place.
Mr and Mrs. Harrison Blocher.
Mr* Otto Townsend and Mrs. HarIcy Townsend accompanied Charles
DeVault to North Manchester. Ind.. '
last Friday where they spent the [
week end. The former two visited
their daughter. Mrs D. L. Hersh­
berger and family. Mr*. Otto
Townsend and Mr*. Harley Town­
send attended a motiirr and son
banquet, and Mr. DeVaull attended
a father and daughter banquet.
Mrs. Gladys Sandbrook will en­
tertain the East Extension group
Friday. The lesson Ls a continuation
of the study of dress accessories.
Mr and Mra. Joseph Smith and
daughter. Mrs Sherman Smith, Mr.
and Mr*. Ellsworth Smith and
daughters 'Nevah and Viva, of Has­
tings and the latter's friend. Gerald
Stukcy of Indiana, spent Sunday
afternoon with Chas. Far Ice and
family.

TIRED-OUT, WEAK?
• ••.» laiiHU* Art.
Bittk Creek. Mich. Mid:
' I »»» m &gt;klt »n&lt;i weak
llu 4 moldrft do my
lunwwork For mmaht

HORSES.
I will sell a load of good
weight and good age horses;
ranging in weight from 1300
up; some matched pairs.
These horses will be guar­
anteed strictly as represent­
ed and sold that way.

Spika tooth drag.

Dump rake.

COW AND' BULL.

Pump jack. Oliver 98 walking plow.
DoLoval cream separator. No. 12.
. s

4 year old Durham and Jer­
sey, pasture bred.
Jersey bull calf, 6 mos. old.

Wagon and rack.
20 good chicken shipping cratci.
Double barreled shotgun. Bed.
Couch. Center table.
Sewing machine and many other arti­

SHEEP.

17 head of good coarse wool
ewes, due to lamb in April.
HARNESS.

Double work harness.

cles not mentioned.
Bring in anything you may wish
sell. Everything to be sold strictly
represented. There will be a man
the grounds all day Saturday to take
those goods.

DEWEY REED, Auctioneer

IMPROVED GLIDING
KNEE-ACTION RIDE*

NEW PERFECTED

HYDRAULIC BRAKES

SOI tUtoOKCM - ■
r ,
.
•
. „
tiurseoiiinai
go swiftly, safely and economically.
And Chevrolet for 1936 maintain* iu title of

(Double-Acting. Saif Articulating)

the only complete lou-priccd car by being the only

car in ils price range with the famous Knee-Action

SOLID STEEL one-piece
TURRET TOP

(Hiding Ride*—lhe moat comfortable known.

GENUINE FISHER
NO DBAFT VENTILATION

Your Chevrolet dealer believes that "one ride

is worth a thousand words."

He invites you to

ride in the new Chevrolet at your earliest con­

HIGH-COMPRESSION
7ALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE

venience.

Just so you'll know how much more

comfortable it is on any road and at any speed.

SHOCKPROOF STEEUMO*

The same ride will also prove that Chevrolet

for 1936 is infer, more spirited and more thrilling

to drive than any other thrifty car.
Because Chevrolet is the only car in its price

Now Money-Saving

'0

C.M.A.C. TIME
PAYMENT PLAN

to
as
at

range with New Perfected Hydraulic Brakes,
Solid Steel one-piece Turret Top, High-Compreasion Valvc-in-Head Engine, and many other im­
portant features. See and ride in ibis tar—today!

ALL THUE FEATURES
AT CHEVROLET71 LOW PEL

495

CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY. DETROIT. MiCU.

in

TERMS OF SALE:&lt;—CASH. Nothing removed until settled
for.
•

CLIFFORD HAMMOND, Clark.
lu st n.jtc Tab*. Kc. Liquid Si.OUkUU

FARM TOOLS, ETC.
Wagon &amp; combination rack.
Land roller.
Oliver 2-horsc riding cultiva­
tor.
Oliver 99 walking plow.
Spring tooth drag.

CHEVROLET
R K. HURD

* ’
HASTINGS, MICH.

PHONE2M0

R- D. CADWALL ADER, Hickory C
THE SERVICE GARAGE,

�nASTTSGS. MICHIGAN. TWCBSDAT, MARCH 11. UM

ANNUAL TAX SALE. .

NOTICES

» -f Mirblf.H r'.in-.'r nt Hare,.— &lt;•

-

*” u’.r.'

Qn tO the 01’
Swimmin’ Hole

spent Saturday night and Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs John Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Starring of
Frontier, Mich., were guests of Mr.
। and Mrs. Leon pvnnock Saturday.

Mrs. Bertha Adams and daugh­
ter. Mrs. Lila Williams, were Kalamaxoc visitors Friday.
Mrs. Leslie Williams and daugh­
ter jean spent Saturday night and
Bunday with Mr. and Mr*. Roger

of __

re'

2W1:

I

Famous G-Man
Corners Dodge
Economy

.R

a

i»

r

Northeast Barry spent Sunday with
their parents. Mr. nnd Mrs. Peter
Lelnaar.
Dr B- E- FarweU spent last week
in New York City, going there by
airplane from Kalamazoo
Members of the Bridge club and
tlrelr husbands held an evening
•party Friday evening In lhe Fnr-

InveiEUmion, U. S. Dipt, ofJustice

Harvey Dings.
Sunday School cloxtcs No 6 and
7 wju meet at the home of Mr and
Mrs. Lincoln Bush on Monday
I night. March 16. A cooperative Mip■ -&gt;
I per will be served At 6:30 o'clock in
charge of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Rey‘ noId‘ Following this a very Inter­
doll.Muffei, little
Mary Aiin e)rtmg program will be presented
Halrd
ofPittsburgh. Pa., picks ln cnarge of Rev. and Mrs. Ralph
tier way carefully across the jjates. It is hoped that all members
slate walk leading to the beach
of
rtoaae5 may be able to atat Miami. Her three-cornered
tend and bring their husbands or
aborts ure the latest In iufatij—^-ive.’ along with them.
sun styles.
. Mr. nnd Mrs. Floyd Wilkinson of

’•V

JTSBfl

James Polhemus nnd family nre
now nicely settled in their newhome. on Main street, following the

The Extension class met at the.
home of Mrs. Ed. Lowry last Thurs­
day with but one member absent.
A very interesting lesson on collars
was very ably presented by the

Rep. Ellis E. Faulkner of Delton,
was calling on friends here on Dunn. Mrs. Dunning also repealed
the demonstration of putting In
Thursday.
Mrs. B C. Swift formerly Mistress pleats and flares to those who were
nol able to be present at the pre­
vious meeting. Tlie fitting of the
DeQuint In Mu-kegon Thursday, a?,
a ni.'inlxr u! tlie Grand Lodge. Al
' ’ she was joined by
pleted for the next lesson, when
selections and arrangements will be
made for our part in lhe Achieve­
ment day plan. Tlie next meeting
wtli .be nn all day meeting with a
cooperative dinner held at the
Thursday, nt the Rowe hotel. Grand
Rapid’ A large attendance and n
fine Hine reported.
Fire alarm Monday A. M. called
the fire department
to Allen
Cleveland's home on West Main

It gives me 19 to 20 miles to the
gallon of gas consistently in city
driving and as high as 22 miles
out in the country.

Tuesday March 31st. Every xncmtxw
Is requested to be present at ibis'

spent the week end with
Mr.’. Chester Banghart.

No damage was

the department arrived.
Donald Hall has os;n quite ill of Neuschafcr were In Hastings Sat­
late. Saturday hiilit hls sister and urday on professional business.
The cast for the play. "Here
drove to OMiid Riplds and met
• ami Mr ;. Hmjh Hall of Chicago, hall;'.-, were entertained Saturday
io visited ’uni over Sunday at hls evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Norwood. A cooperabcr of this year's graduating
. 1. keeping up hi?, work, w-ith Joved after which cards afforded a
assistance of some of hls fearh- pleasant pastime for the evening's
who go up each night to assist entertainment. There were eigh­
. We are hoping to see Donald teen guests present.
Roy Adrianson and Tommy nnd
Marilyn of Battle Creek spent Sun-

AUCTION SALE

DODGE
640

NEW LOW FIRST COST

Adiian’on and Harry. We arc sorry
to hear that little Jerry, youngest
M)n of Roy's Is In the hospital in
Battle Creek having-had a mastoid
operation.

HAVING RENTED MY FARM, I WILL HAVE AN AUCTION SALE AT MY FARM
LOCATED AT CRESSEY STATION, ON

TUESDAY, MAR. 17
STARTING AT 12:30 SHARP.

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY

HORSES.
Bay gelding, 1.0 years old.
Black gelding, 12 years old.

COWS.
Holstein cow, 7 yrs. old, due in April.
Holstein cow, 8 yrs. old, due in October.
Red Polled cow, 6 yrs. old, due in August.
Brindle cow, 7 yrs. old.
2 yearling heifers, 1 year old.
Guernsey heifer, 4 months old.
2 Jersey heifer calves.
Guernsey bull, 9 months old.
(These cows are all TB and blood tested. I
HAY AND FODDER
12 tons alfalfa hay. Quantity corn {talks.
FARM TOOLS.
McCormick-Deering binder, 7-ft. cut.
Ton truck.
McCormick-Deering side rake.
McCormick-Deering hay loader.
Jahn Deere spreader.
TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

McCormick-Decring mower.
John Deere drill, 11 disk.
Cultipacker, 8-ft. Champion mower,
Three-sec. spike drag.
Osborne drag, 25-tooth.
Corn planter, Gale. Walking cultivafor.
Little Willie riding cultivator.
Two-sec. drag. Dump rake.
Wide tire wagon. Low wagon, iron wheels.
Sleigh. Hoy rock. Stock rack.
Oliver riding plou
Oliver walking plow.
Cale walking plow
Potato planter.
2 hand planters. Fanning mill.

2 hand corn planters. Sickle grinder.
Grindstone. Hay slings. Corn shellcr.
2 sets pulleys, 7-8 inch. 2 set pulleys. 5-8 inch.
Splinting cleaver. 20 wire chicken crates.
2 chicken batteries, nearly new. 100 hen capacity.
Log chain. 2 sots double work harness.
Single harness. Ross silo filler. 6-in. pipe.
75 potato crates.
MISCELLANEOUS.

NO GOODS REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR

NEWELL H. BARBER, Prop
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

JOHN HOAG, Clerk.

family nnd Mr. and Mr.’, Ed. D
Reynolds spent Sunday with Mr.

LOOK
ALIKE

Sunday with Dorr Kahler and
mother of Woodland.
Lloyd lAUbaugh--spent a couple
d-r , in Holland and Grand Rapkh
1x4 week.
. ’
‘

Mrs. Leda Harrington and Mrs.
Bertha Adams spent Saturday In.
Battle Creek.
. Two nurses from tzrila hospital.
' Battle Creek, called on Mrs. Mary
Smith Saturday afternoon.
Miss Maxine Henton of Taylor1
University spent the week end at

1

We exPre’s our sympathy to
Mrs. elate Pattengill, who had the
misfortune to fall on the ice nnd
break her nrm and dislocate her
shoulder Joint. She is being cared
for in Leila hospital.
Mr’. Mabie Town and daughter
Kathryn, very delightfully enter­
tained Friday afternoon, about
thirty guests nt a miscellaneous
shower in honor ot Mrs. Mauriee
Johncox Ice cream and cake were
served nnd the new bride recelvtd
many nice nnd useful present*.
Mrs. Ralph Bates nnd son have
been spending the week with her
mother in Bottle Creek. They re-'
turned lionic Sunday,
, Mr. nnd Mrs. Ernie Smith and:
family moved th* latter part of the
week Into the Harrington house on |

GIVE THEM

the

taste

Notice the full cream lasle of High­

lands Dairy Grade A Milk. It stands
out because it.

of the highest

graders of milk produced.

Use it for

conking and the
,. .
... .

many things lor. .
.
.
^ ...
HIGH in CREAM
which milk is used and you will
CONTENT! Raw
,gm lhal there &gt;» a big .lilTerencc.
o,

Mrs. Irene Harrington. Mrs. Bell
Barnum and Mrs. Lula WVrtman
attended n meeting of Sunday
School teachers and officers in the
Methodist church In Hastings Sun-

Phone2651

ROBERT Wa'COOK, Prop.

Hastings

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
------------------------------------------------------------ -

EIGHTIETH YEAR

16 PAGES

•

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1936

PAGES 1 to 8

FOUR GALA DAYS HERE
7^159633

MEET DBS K

! CONSUMERS CO. SOON
1
TO FINISH PIPE LINE
Expect to Make Tests of
Natural Gas Line Some
Time This Month

THEME. EGYPT’S
GREAT PYRAMID

CENTENNIAL INVOLVES
ALL DEPARTMENTS
Even Geometry Glasses Are
Planning an Exhibit
of Interest

7679

FREE FUN, AMUSENldln i,
FIRM
REFRESHMENTS
FOR ALL AT
RE0MIZE5

IN HARDWARE BUSINESS
A FRUIT TREE PRUN5HG
A MOST INTERESTING AD­
Work in laying the Consumers
One might wonder Just what con­
HERE FOR NEARLY ONE
DRESS BY ARCHDEA­
DEMONSTRATION BY
Power Company's natural gas pipe
nection geometry.
physics, and
shorthand and typing could pos­
lines, to the fields in Mecosta and
HUNDRED YEARS
CON VERCOE
PROF. MERRILL

OPPORTUNITY FOR
TESTING MUCK SOILS
Dr. Paul Harmer of M. 8. 0.

to Bpeak at Court House
and at Orangeville
County Agent Foater announce*
the coming of two Important meet­
ing* to Barry coupty farmer*. On
Thursday, March 26. at 10:00
o'clock, prof. Merrill of Michigan
State college will meet with Barry
county fruit growers to demon­
strate frlut tree pruning. In the
morning of the 26th. Prof. Merrill
tdll demonstrate pruning at the
Bert Arehart farm south of Has­
tings on M-37. Thl* meeting Is set
to take care of the small fruit
growers in and around Hastings.
At 1:30 the afternoon of the 26th..
Prof. MerrlU will meet with fruit
Prowers In the southwest part of
the county at the farm of C. W.
Avery located south of pine lake in
Prairieville township. On Tuesday
and Friday. March 24 and 27. Dr.
Paul
Hanner
muck
specialist.
Michigan State college, will meet
with Barry county muck farm­
ers. Dr. Harmer will be in the
court house In Hastings for a
meeting from 9:30 March 27. until
noon. Those wishing to have muck
colls tested should come in early.
The discussion will start at 10:30.
in the afternoon. Dr. Harmer will
be at the Orangeville school to meet
muck grower* in that locality. The
latter part of the afternoon will be
used in testing soil samples and
giving fertilizer recommendations.
Dr. Harmer will be In Delton all
day Tuesday. March 24. for a meet­
ing with onion grower* there. The
morning will be given over to soil
testing and fertilizer recommenda­
tion*. During the afternoon Dr.
Harmer will discuss muck crops
and show pictures on experimental
plots. All muck crop farmers in the
county should attend one of these
meetings.

Eight Auction Sales
WM. J. SHAW AND
BEN L. BRISTOL.
Wm. j. shaw and Ben L. Bristol
will have an auction sale at the
Clear Lake Guernsey Farm at Bris­
tol Comers. 11 miles south of1 Has­
tings. on M-37. They will dispose
of their enUre herd of high grade
Guernsey cows, from 2 to 10 years
of age. some of them fresh. In ad­
dition they will sell a good Holstein
cow. 3 heifer calves, a registered
Guernsey bull and a complete milk
equipment. Including a 2-horse
boiler, cooler, eleptric circulating
pump- separator/and cans. Henry
Flannery will cry the sale and Har­
old E Smith will serve as clerk.
Read the auction sale odverllsement In this issue for further par­
ticulars and remember the date.
ALBERT HUL8EBOS.
Albert Hulsebos Is having an auc­
tion sale at his farm located four
miles north and three miles west of
Bellevue, or six miles south and one
mile east of Nashville, with Henry
Flannery as auctioneer and E. E.
Gray, clerk. Thl* is an all day sale
and there will be a lunch wagon on
trie ground*. This Is a fine, large
sale and a wonderful opportunity
for anyone wishing to purchase
horses, cattle or hogs. Hi* list in­
cludes 12 head of horses. 80 head
of Durham cattle and 17 hogs, be­
sides farm tools and miscellaneous
Items. Cnmplrto information Is
given ln-.th« auction adv. on an­
other page.

Montcalm counties,
is evidently
tasking satisfactory progress, it Is
claimed that the company will be PYRAMID HAS SPECIAL
able to conduct tests on their ?0MESSAGE TO ENGLISH
mlle 10-inch gas mains about the
I last of this month. In thst event,
He Give Astounding Taots
it would appear that some time in
April we should be able to have
About the World's Great.
natural gas in Hastings.
eat Wonder
Natural gas is said to have about
50 per cent more heat value than
Archdeacon Lincoln Vercoe. re­
coal gas, and It will, no doubt, be tired Episcopalian clergyman of
necessary •for people who use this Grand Rapids, spoke at the Com­
^a*. after the pipe lines are com­ mercial Club meeting Tuesday
pleted and delivering the natural noon. His theme was the "Big
product, to learn how to use It In । Pyramid of Egypt"
order to
rates
-- make
......... a
— saving.
— ... .a, The
. ... .......
....
vu-ewc began
MCRiail by
uy ICICilUkf
MJ
Mr., Vercoe
referring to
Will be considerably reduced from I the confuted condition* of our day.
those charged at present, according He felt that it would be a relief to
to Information from the Blate Pub­ hear about one of the world's great­
lic Utilities CommLMon.
est wonders. He said that most of
the Egyptian pyramids are tombs,
but the one called the Big Pyramid
SAFETY CAMPAIGNS

RESULT IN GOOD
Publicity Makes the People
Safety Conscious Says
Universal Garage
As a result of widespread news­
paper campaigns urging greater
care In driving, safety features In
automobiles this year are receiving
increased consideration from a ma­
jority of new car buyers, according
to the Universal Garage, local Ford
dealer.
"Unquestionably, articles such as
'And Sudden Death* and newspaper
publicity have made people more
safety conscious" universal Garage
stale*. "Mechanical features and
principles of design contributing to
safety which for some time have
been obscured by the demand for
speed and style are now important
factors in the buyer's choice.
"In any car. "Universal Garage
continued, "safety features natural­
ly fall into two classes. Some are
protective in case an accident does
happen. Others
are safeguards
against accidents, some inherent tn
the design of the car and others
directly under the driver's control.
The new Ford v-8 is a good ex­
ample of how both types of safe­
guards are afforded.
“Important protective features in
the Ford v-8 include the welded
steel body and the safety glass used
throughout In all models. Another
protective feature Is the body de­
sign which permits the passengers
to-alt well down in the car.
"Of equal Importance are the
many factors which contribute to
averting accident*. The most ob­
vious of these Is dependable brak­
ing. but clear vision, ready acceler­
ation, and driving stability should
also be taken into consideration.
All these have been considered In
the designing of model* by the Ford
Motor company.
"Ford brakes have consistently
I been designed for maximum safety.
As traveling speeds have Increased.
I the braking area has been increased
and the required pedal pressures
have been lowered. The brakes are
of the mechanical type, dependable
at all times."

CAPTURED THE TWO.
Jack Fox and Robert McLeod,
charged with unlawfuUy driving
away an automobile, waived exami­
nation and were bound over to the
circuit court by Justice Matthews
on Tuesday.
When the car was missed, the
father of Fox. who lives In Ovid
was notified. He followed the boys,
catching up with them near the
Kentucky tine. The pair. It is said.
suaded the boys to return with him.
MEETING OF HOSPITAL
, GUI!.I&gt;8 ON APRIL 16.
Mrs. O. D. Bauer, president of the
Guilds of Pennock hospital, enter­
tained the board on Wednesday and
later the members fixed the date
for the annual meeting which will
be on Thursday. April 16. This
year the dinner will be served in
the evening gt
the Methodist
church parlors at 8:30 o'clock, the

CLARE W. THOMAS.
Having engaged in other work,
Clare w. Thoma* will have an auc­
tion sale at his farm, one mile south
and half a mile east of Doster,
known as the Charles cook farm.
Henry Flannery will cry the sale
and Byrd Doster, clerk. The list in­ ficers and Guilds will be given and
clude* taro horses. 8 head at cattle." a program presented.
hogs, sheep, hay. grain, seed. 100
chickens, lot of farm tools and some
STOLE HIS CAR.
household good*. See the adv. for
Richard Shively of Plainwell
full particulars.
drove to this cljy early Bunday
morning In a car belonging to the
EST. WILL W. SHEFFIELD.
Onion Supply Company, of Plain­
To settle the estate of the late well. He parked it near the hotel
WIU W. Sheffield. Mrs. Sheffield. here. Thieves took the car and
Admrx., will have an auction sale drove away with It. Through Infor­
at the farm Just west at the State mation sent out by the state police
Fish Hatchery, on M-43. Dewey radio station, the car was located
Reid is the auctioneer and Clifford some time during Sunday at Three
Hammond, clerk, included In the Rivers. Mr. Shively went after It
list are 3 horses, 10 head of cattle, Monday. There have been no ar-

quantity of hay and grain, farm
tools, household goods, etc. The adv.
DIDN'T MAKE A HIT.
appears on another page of this
Shortly after 12 o'clock Saturday
issue.
night burglars attempted to get into
the oil station of M. J. Hinckley,
,
HEIMAN nXOrAUSCIl.
on south Main street Nashville.
As he has decided to engage in
other business. Herman Feidpausch Mr. Hinckley, wlvo Ilves across the
will have an auction sale at his Street, heard the racket and took a
farm located northwest of the city. shot at the Intruders from his front
Take the first right hand turn we*t porch. His last sight of the burg­
of Lake Al-Gon-Quln and go to lar was when he was running up
the fourth house on the left* hand the railroad tracks.
aide of the road. Mr. Feidpausch
offers a horse. 5 head of cattle, 6
SPRING OPENING.
shoot*. 30 ton* hay. lot of seed,
Saturday night. March 26. mixed
harness, farm tools, etc. Dewey Reed dances, Long Beach, clear lake.—
(Continued on page six)
Adv.

INGS COMMERCIAL

GETS $500 MORE
THAN ANTICIPATED
STARTED BY HENRY A.
GOODYEAR IN 1840 mnk oidding* pleased wnh
the Results of His Auc­
to ito torry roew
Hit Hard by the Depression

sibly have with a centennial cele­
bration. But it you should take a
peek Into almost every room In the
High school, you would soon find
I the answer. Practically every de[ part men t is working on tome spe-

IS

S?"“ly1,1l

A 5 b*ld “

the school April 27 and 28.
The geometry classes are going
to show the use of geometric designs
in Barry county's history. Hastings'
nsplring young physicist* will show
the progress of the radio, and the
future business men and women
will present different types of writ­
ing materials used through the
ages. Old teachers' certificates and
other legal papers will form an In­
teresting part of this exhibit. And
these are only a very small part of
the entire display which promises
unto be not only interesting but —
'usual.

and Closing of Old
National Bank

We understand that arrange_
ment* have been made whereby
David s. Goodyear jr.. becomes the
owner-of the Goodyear Bros. Hard­
ware Company through purchase of
it* capital stock. Edward Goodyear
retiring from the firm.
This splendid mercantile estab­
lishment was founded hi 1840. when
Hastings was Just a little pioneer
settlement In the wood*, by Henry
A- Goodyear, grandfather of David
8. and Edward Goodyear, and for
nearly a century ha* always been a
family possession. A* a matter of
sentiment it will be pleasing to
many to know that the name of
• Goodyear" will be continued with
it.
Henry A. Goodyear was the pio­
neer merchant of Hastings and the
SETTLEMENT WITH CO. town’s first banker. When Hastings
grew to the dignity of becoming a
TREASURER SHOW BET­ city, he was chosen as its first
mayor, and throughout his long and
TER CONDITIONS
useful career he was a leading citi­
zen. For many years the business
DELINQUENCIES THIS
was continued In his name. When
YEAR WAS 17 PER CENT his sons. David S-. Sr., and John F,
grew to young manhood, they en­
Less Than Last Year—Less tered the firm under the name of

tion Sale

On Wednesday of last week,
Prank Giddings, who lives near
Lake Odessa, had an auction sale,
having a fine crowd ready to buy
He was delighted with the result*
which totalled 8500 more than he
anticipated. Three of his Holstein
cows brought 8455.00. which is fine.
Judging from the reports coming
to the Banner about the various
sale*, it would indicate that tills is

FAI

MOte 1 hall
Given Away-interesting Ex­
hibits in Colorful Booths!
VARIED ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAMS
EACH AFTERNOON AND EVENING
TWO PAY HEAVY FINES
IN COURTS HERE
Richard Guyney and His Sii-

Club Pair will make It* debut here
in community hall on Wednesday
afternoon. March 25 and will con­
tinue each afternoon and evening
through Saturday. Everything will

that folks go to the sales to really
buy. in the last four weeks the
ter Each Pay $100
Banner has published eighteen auc­
Fine
tap dancing and old time muale.
center of the arc of the Nile delta.
tion sales, some of them being large
Il 1* also situated at the exact cen­
Richard Guyney of Detroit was
one*. This shows what Barry coun­
ter of the land area of the old
‘____
arraigned
before Judge Russell R.
ty people think of this paper a* an
w___ ______________________
throat, the High School Orchestra
world. It was buUt four or five
med‘Um- “Pecla,,» for McPeek In circuit court on Thursand Glee Club. Dr. George Lockthousand years ago, when Egypt led
“UHie sutacrtptlon list of the Banchxrled wlth ‘nrpenonatlng an
the world in civilization.
Archdeacon vercoe stated -&lt;hat
ner is steadily increasing, many . officer. He admitted tils guilt. A Hastings Commercial Club Quar«
the Big Pyramid wo* buUt by a
people saytng when they subscribe, Fine of 8100 was Imposed, which he
Almost hourly prises will
master builder. It Is 62 times larg­
"I want to get the auction sales • P*W* K
remembered that
er than the Washington monument
and the Want Advs as well as the i Guyney. on the evening of Augat Washington.
It Is built on
county new*." If you are thinking &gt;ust 26. accosted Ronald Taliaferro, which will pick the winners al ranmathematical lines, which are ab­
of having a sale, be sure to use the °F Battle creek, on M-37 and possolutely correct to the fraction cf
columns of the Banner for adver- Ing as a deputy sheriff, forced the thus has a chance.
In the evening at 9:00 o'clock
an inch. The stones used in it* con­
Using it.
Battle Creek man, al the point of a
struction weigh from two to fifty
------ . &lt;*&gt;
gun. to accompany him to Hastings.
———————————11 it
remembered that Guyney
(Continued on page six)
1 Vpt^rnna Give
made ■ hrrak for D«ttolt tametrite
diately after that offense, but later
NOMINATIONS MADE
Thursday a cabinet; Friday, a ]
; ।lees set of dishes and Saturday,
FOR CITY OFFICERS
Than Half of What It
death at the founder the firm name ---------------------------------------------------------- ' At the time when Guyney was day bed.
was changed to Goodyear Bros., and
ton. woton
ehU-1«« »»«•&gt;'
Was in 1833
Dr. Lockwood and 0. H.
so continued for several years.
will be given away during the 1
the above
his sister,
Last week county treasurer L. P. When the brothers retired more or oarlv Aninv-n
eWCTTbvn the Veterans onH
o^'lice
Mra- on
Hclen
whin ciiiiTge
of
met days of the fair in addition to
Leonard Are Candidates
Maus completed his settlement* less from active business. their sons
Foreign Wars at their hall on i ^s'
J ,on,1 of lJ*e Parker
for Mayor
with the various township treas­
SXy. M^h 12. piey hL a.
The Democratic city caucus was urer* and the treasurer of this city. en Into the firm which became
stairway leading into the basement, present.
held on Monday evening. The Re­ The returns of delinquent taxes known as "The Goodyear Bros. their guest* of honor, the ladles of breaking Mrs. Guyney's limb. Mrs.
There will be free doughnut* i
the Women's Relief Corps. The eve­
publican caucus was held the fol­ this year are much less than a year Hardware Co."
Winn admitted her guilt when coffee for all and In addl
lowing nlghL The Republican ward ago. Of the county lax of 898,000
Following the advent of the new ning was started with card games, brought before Justice Cortright chocolate milk and orange juice
caucuses were held Monday eve­ only 816513.71 was returned a* de- i partners, the store was thoroughly pedro or cribbagc being the games Saturday. She was assessed a fine
ning and the Democratic ward cau­ Unquent—a little less Uuui 17 per I revamped and enlarged and two played by most of them. A peppy of 1100 and costs of 88. which she
cuses on Tuesday evening. Follow­ cent, woodland makes the best additional State street fronts add­ six-piece orchestra gave plenty of paid.
showing, with a return of only ed. With these changes and Im­ muilc throughout the evening.
ing are .the nominations:
We understand that civil proceed­ Wallace Grocery Store on '
about 11 1-2 per cent of delinquent provements -The Goodyear
Goodyear ------Brew.
After supper, comrade Andrew
Republican Nominations.
ings against Mrs. Winn, growing day, Hinman's on Friday and
Moyor—Dr. George L. Lockwood. laxcs Hastings township is next Hardware Co." $.!_
wis _
recognized.
_________ _ Matthew, acting as toastmaster, led
er’s on Saturday.
Treas —Mrs. Jessie Loppenthien. I wlth » little over 12 per cent. Tills throughout the state, a* the best the party tn community singing out of this matter will be tried lat­
The thirty-five colorful
Member Board of Review—Henry I cl‘y ,s ne3rt wlth n delinquency of and most complete liardware es­ with old war songs that were sung er; Mrs. Guyney sues Mrs. Winn for
। “a trifle less 11
than
per cent. w
Maple
WVllmon.
1
— 13 -------------“ - tablishment In Michigan to be over there "way back when." Com­ heavy damages for injuries which tlonal displays win be a ft
Supervlsor. First and Fourth' Grove returned almost exactly 13 found In any Michigan city of less rade Matthews* boys gave a vocal she claims she sustained when Mrs. Itself. Visitors will doubt)
wards—Clyde Wilcox
I P®r
T,le Figures for various than 10,000 population.
selection, accompanied at the piano Winn pushed her down the hotel many things of interest In
stairway.
Supervisor. Second and Third j townships and this city ore as folThen came the depression and by their mother, that was enjoyed
! lows: ’
the unfortunate closing of the Old
ROTARIANS ENJOYED HIM.
—Total arpount of
After the singing the toastmaster
Aidermen: First ward. Arthur
Arthur; Assyria
nnj™-up«im
«« county
county National Bank with which the
Ray C. Pellett. dean of men al
Havens; second ward. Fred Ogden; 1assessed. 83522. County tax re- Goodyears had long been connected introduced the Post's surgeon for a
Western State Teachers College, ment In the Banner next
third ward. Harry Miller; fourth turned a* uncollected. 865552.
and owners of a lot of Its stock, the a few remarks, and when we Inform Kalamazoo, spoke at the Rotary
Baltimore—County tax assessed, Receiver procuring a Judgment of you our surgeon is Dr. Birge Swift
ward, Earl Coleman.
83.871. Returned as uncollected. 820.000 representing the total and of Middleville, tlien you may know club Monday noon. It was one of FAMOUS RUSSIAN
Democratic Nominations.
the wittiest addresses ever given be­
8803.61.
Mayor—Charles H. Leonard.
indirect liabilities of the firm. The we did not go to sleep while Doc
VIOLINIST TO A|
Barry—County tax assessed. 85.­ firm was hard hit. os were thou­ had the floor. He especially stressed
Patricks Day talk, enlivened with
Member Board of Review—Wal­ 194. Relumed os uncollected. 8909.- sands upon thousands of others. A the point that we. as ex-service
ter Wallace.
variance in policy as to the neces­ men. must be men of integrity, an vulsed his hearers from start to WiU Be Quest Soloist
Carlton
Township—County
sary adjustments resulted In a re­ example to all others as first class finish. He paid a fine tribute to the
Supervisor.
First and Fourth
Symphony Concert on
Toastmaster
Matthews
wards—No one named at this writ­ assessed, 85.096. Returned as un- organization which ha* led to the citizens.
Irish race and to the Irish philos­
March 2 7th
change above mentioned David as­ next Introduced another speaker to ophy of life; to the sympathy and
ing; Second and Third wards— collected, 8913.46.
Castleton Township—County
suming payment of the Judgment talk on crime and Its problems. It tenderness of the Irish people and
Grand Rapids Symphony orchasAldermen: First
and
second assessed. 89506. Relumed as un- and also other substantial liabili­ was presented in a comprehensive to their loyalty to their religion.
collected,
81.542.90.
.
and
Interesting
manner
by
.none
tra
course,
brings Tnscha Baidal,
ward*, no nominations made at the
ties.
Hastings Township—bounty
caucus, but will be filled by ■ the
Friends will be pleased that the other than our prosecuting attor­
the great Russian violinist to their
NAMED THE PLACE.
assessed, 84512. Returned as un- name of Goodyear will still be con­ ney. Archie D. McDonald.
democrat city committee.
Heretofore
there
lias
never
been
This concluded the regular pro­
Third ward endorsed Harry Mil­ collected. 852635.
tinued with this nearly century-old
Hastings City—County tax _ . establishment and join in very best gram and the rest of the evening a designated place for the city
ler; fourth ward nominated Dr.
teased, 822.687. Returned as uncol­ wishes to Edward Goodyear, the re­ was .spent In playing cards again treasurer to carry on his work. Hie
John A. Wobton.^
On this program for the first
city council on Saturday evening
lected. 82.925.98.
tiring member, whose plans we un­ until time to go home.
time appears a regular member at
named the council room as the
Hope Township—County tax as­ derstand are undecided, but whatplace where the treasurer should the symphony orchestra as soloist.
CONSIDER FARM
sessed. 82.989. Returned as uncolACCEPTS POSITION.
keep hU books and records and
Gerald B. Stanton. 414 W. Mill
tlnue to reside in Hastings.
RECOMMENDATIONS toud.Mn.Ts
maintain his office.
------------Irving—County tax assessed. 83.St., ha* accepted a position a*
■.■.rings in the third number offered
confidential stenographer and as­
Barry County Planning Com- 528.
Relumed
as
uncollected. GUY GIDDINGS AGAIN
by the orchestra.
A CORRECTION.
8778.41.
sistant to Ezra Clark, vice-presi­
mittee Met Here on
Johnstown—County tax assessed.
SUES FOR DAMAGE.
CHIEF OF FIRE DEPT. dent of ths Clark Tructractor Co. Center the copy should have read
84.067. Returned as uncollected. 81.­
Monday
of Battle Creek. He graduated —February 18 Lucky Day and
The
Barry County Planning 00751.
Has Served as Chief for 17 from Hastings High school In 1933. March 18 Free Day.
Maurice
West against Gordon HavCommittee met with county Agri­
Years—Other Officers
PANCAKE SUPPER.
DANCE.
cultural Agent Harold J. Foster on aessed. 85.096. Returned as uncol(Conllnued on page six)
Coat* Grove church. Mar. 20. six
Welcome orange ha
Monday. March 16. and started
Are Also Named
to eight. 25 cents.—Adv.
Adv.
an automobile
accident
their work on making recommen­
On Thursday evening the annual
miles southwest of this city
dations to the federal government HAVE YOU ANY
election of officers or the Hastings
a* to what should be Included in
OLD FLOWER POTS? Fire department was held in the
occurred on Pel
an
agricultural adjustment for
fire haU. The following were
claims damages
Barry county.
Y. M. 0. A. Group Collecting chosen: Guy Giddings, chief; Er­
Fourteen farmers from different
nest Hayes, assistant chief; Rus­
Them on Friday and
sections cf the county, representing
sell Bmelker, captain; and Loren
making ills total claim 8880.
different line* of agricultural en­
Saturday
Meyers,
secretary-treasurer.
Mr.
deavor met for this first meeting of
This week Friday and Saturday Giddings ha* served the Hastings
the committee.
The agricultural
Fire department as chief for the
outlook and basic material were
will collect flower pot* around the past seventeen years, and has given
HOLD FAST
presented during the session by
city. If you have any that you are excellent service. The good work of
the firemen last year proved the
Hy13 committee is formed at the I not now using, or going to use. the
efficiency of the department. The
Y
would
be
glad
if
you
would
place
Invitation of the federal govern­
Winners of lost week's scrambled land. R. F. D. 2; Miss Dorothy Slo­
total property loss from fire In this
ment to work out an acceptable । same on your front porch so they city was only 81500 In 1935.
cum, woodland. R. P. D. 2; Vonda
. names contest were:
agricultural program for Barry may get them. Or you may phone
Mr*. Adah Murray. Nashville. C Paulin, 302 E. State. City; Merle
Preceding the annual meeting,
C. F. Angell. 2453. or DeWayne
county. They are charged with the
Mich (Michigan Mutual windstorm
members
of
the
department
and
responsibility of forming a pro­ Pugh. 3153. and they will collect their wive* enjoyed a pot luck sup- insurance Co.).
Following are the names to bo
gram that will build up the soil your contributions. The Y plans to Kat the hall, cards furnished
Mrs. Oscar Ftary, 419 W. Grand scrambled for this week's issue, be­ leachings, ths alm of
fertility and lessen soli erpslon os sell these flower pot* and use the
entertainment of the evening City (Hastings Printing Company). ing the final group:
proceeds for replenishing the furwell as yield a fair return to the
Mrs. Elbert Eaton. Hastings. R. F.
1. Azefmonourb and Dalhenacyl
Uhlngs at Camp Barry. There it later.
farmer.
D. 4 (Dr. E. J. Pratt).
(two names).
Post agricultural programs have a need for dishes, etc., and every
Jack Wilson, Hasting*. R 4 (Cole­
OUR FORTUNATE CITY.
2. Tcrsoghlrodneycr.
contribution will be appreciated.
not fitted Barry county any too
man Insurance Agency).
The council at their meeting Sat­
and that means
well, according to the Idea* of the
Mrs. Sam Anderson. 1945 8. Han­
CAMP FIRE GIRLS MEET.
4. Dllnetsilotnewfis.
urday evening instructed the city over (Earl R. Boyes).
committee members. Their thought
The Camp Fire girl* of Barry and
5. Nodfhorrldergs.
seemed to favor a plan for greater Calhoun counties will hold their treasurer to transfer 81500 from the
Children's prizes were awarded to
water fund savings account to the Gwendolyn Althouse. Hastings R. Now It's done, the tale is told.
com production In Barry county, twenty-fourth
birthday
council
also an Increase In pasture, hay fire In the gymnasium of South­ fire fund checking account. Also P. D. 1 and to Bertha June We thank you. friends, both young
aoivad ah Uta |
and livestock, they think, would western High school at Battle Creek 82.000 from the paving maintenance BechteL Hastings, R. F. D. 3. Their
These "crazy name*" had but goe individual —
help the county. The reduction at 3 o'clock Bunday afternoon. It is checking account and |500 from
the paving maintenance savings ac­
would likely occur in grain crops. .expected that 600 girls will partici­
at the commercial Club In the
count
to
the
checking
account
of
To bld you come to our Spring Fair.
The trend of farmers' practices In pate and that their parent* will
Stebbins building.
the past seem* to follow this Idea also attend. Mis* Dorothy Loros. the general sewer fund. Our city is
Honorable mention to the follow­
tulte.
during the post ten years, said ,Camp Fire executive, will be In fortunate Indeed to have funds ing entries:
available for purposes at this kind,
County Agent Foster.
Isadore
Echtlnaw,
Hastings.
R.
F.
charge of the gathering.
without borrowing.
right;
The report of the Barry County
D. 3; Persus Nearton. 542 N. Bolt­
That
you'll like our booths, and
Planning Committee Is combined
wood. City; Chlola Newton. 542 N.
EMMA S. EVANS.
food, and fun.
with other Michigan, county re­
Boltwood, city;
Madeline Cook.
Democratic nominee for city RUMMAGE AND
BAKED GOODS SALE. 305 S. Hanover, City; Neva June
ports to form a state adjustment treasurer.
program and recommendations to
I have had over 25 years of ac­
The. Anchor Class of the Metho­ Blanton. 414 W- MUI Street, City; And that you all will oom* and
share
the federal government. The local ।counting experience. I am a prop­ dist Bunday school will have a Richard Kenfleld. city; Mrs. Lina
county committee win meet at 1a- ।erty owner and resident of Has­ rummage and baked goods sale In Robinson. Nashville, R. F. D. 1;
lerval* during the next couple of tings. Be sure to vote April 8ttv- Community Room of National bank Mrs. Elmer Robinson. 431 W. Bond
St., city; Mr*. Lewis Hersel, WoodAdv. 4-2.
Saturday. March 21.—Adv.

JJIXD

ESS HISYE1R

Veterans
reierans Give
oiuiH
courthU
Slum aupper
Supper cuc
Sunner
c,mc WM uken
“ JustlceclrcuU
here Bnd

HASTINGS COMMERCIAL CLUB FAIR

SCRAMBLED NAME CONTEST
Win One of the $5.OO-Value Prizes!

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY; MARCH IB, UM

We Are Going To the

FOOD CENTER
Friday &amp; Saturday, March 20 &amp; 21
PILLSBUin

QUALITY

PEANUT
BUTTER

’1.03
24

-+T
7

Sack

SPY

Sack

*J APPLES

Delicious Peach Snowbank Pie Recipe in every sack.

Pillsbury's Harvest Time PANCAKE
FLOUR, plain or buckwheat, 5 lb. sack 23c

lOclb

65cbu

PILLSBURY'S FARINA, large size pkg. 18c
PILLSBURY'S FARINA, small size pkg. ._9c

LOCAL NEWS

Workmen started Tuosday in­
stalling lhe new elevator at Pen­
nock hospital. A fine improvement.

HOLDING “OPEN
HOUSE” SATURDAY

the “500“ club Tuesday afternoon The Bev. and Mri. Conklin
--- Ct green touches In wearing
with a luncheon at bar home. Mrs
Invite Friends to Call
spparel Tuesday.
Arthur Wheeling won high score
on Annivenaij
Who would you say has the wid­ and Mn. Vern wldrig low.
est acquaintance in the county?
Saturday. March &gt;1. is the thir­
Dr Frank Carrothers will go to
tieth wedding anniversary of tha
Free refrigerator See John Bull­
represent the dentists tn an all-day Rev and Mrs. c. M- Conklin of this
ing a* Sons for Information.
Henry Robinson of Charlotte is health meeting conducted by the city, in observance ot tha occasion,
ithe new night clerk at the Parker Hillsdale county branch of the W. they will hold "open house" all day
Saturday and their friends tn thia
K Kellogg Foundation.
I hotel.
Charles Bsc he Iler writes the Ban­ City and tn the rural parishes are
Mrs. Harold Phillips has been a
1 victim of the influenza for several ner that his party has gone to St. invited to call during lhe day. Rev.
and Mrs. Conklin live at 51B K.
1
Petersburg.
Fla.,
until
further
no
­
days
---------------- ---------------------------------- —
Green at.
hvi lh«v
A W
Mrs. Herbert Calkins entertained;. tie*
Gee. l«o
He says
they left nr
Dr. A.
W.
the J. F. F. club on Wednesday aft- Woodburn* Saturday and he was
CIRCLE NO. «.
ernoon.
much better. And lhe Bachellers are
Circle No. 8 of the Mothodist L.
Hugh Hall highest man In the fine also.
A. S. met with Mrs. Allan Hyde at
civil service ratings lost out tn the
What with Nelson Eddy appear- her home on 8- Hanover St. Mon­
|, Eston Rapids post
poslofbce
office race
&gt;ng here In person, and the King day • evening for their regular
'meeting,
Mr. and Mrs G. E. Carpenter of England announcing that he ninthly
----------------------Dtnner *at
mirht get
ert married, thia
nrnbv­
- - ■ - '. _
this has prob
have moved Into their newly pur­ might
ably been the most thrilling week tee composed of Mrs. Andrew Tay­
chased home on E. Bond St.
for
our
fairer
citizens
since
the
dis
­
Mrs a JJ Knlskern has been
lor. Mrs. Dorrance Tcthrlc, Mrs.
confined to her home by sic lutes*, covery of red nail polish—Grand Snyder and Mrs Ryan.
Rapids Chronicle.
but is now convalescing nicely.
A short business session was con­
Dr. H. C Peckham of Freeport, ducted by Mrs. Jos. Brozak and
The Bible study class of Char­
lotte High school will go to Ann well known in the county, recently plans were made for a rummage
Arbor March 27 U&gt; hear Kagawa celebrated his ninetieth birthday.
the great Christian leader of Japan. This week the Banner received a lhe business session Mrs. Ilah Hill
Mr. and Mrs. N. L- Neilson check from him for his subscription and Miss Other Doty had charge
(Katherine Matthews* of Rockford and the writing was very plainly of the entertainment. Several games
have moved onio lhe James Mat­ written In a firm hand, showing were enjoyed. There were 34 pres­
thews farm on Route 3; at Leach I hat the years have dealt kindly ent. including three guests.
lake.
with him.
Owing to the large amount of ad­
Miss Anne Burton has been suf­ RARRY CO. COUNCIL
vertising this week much of it com­ fering from a bad attack of asthma.
ELECTS OFFICERS
ing in late, a great deal of reading
Since we heard lhe First Lady at
The East Central District of Barry
matter has to be left out much to Grand Rapids last week we have County Council of Religious Educa.
our regret.
acquired a new-up-to-date slang lion met at the Berryville church
On Sunday at Pennock hospital, word for our vocabulary. It’s “spin­ Sunday P. M . March .U, to com­
a son. weighing B lbs. 5 oz. was bom ach." Use it in place of pshaw I plete lhe organisation end lay plan,
to Mr. and Mrs. Philo Sheldon. He shoot! or flddlesUcks! it carries the for future work. The Survey proj­
has been named Gordan Dean. same meaning The First Lady used ect was presented and leaders ap­
Mother and son are doing nicely.
it witn
with cnarmmg
charming enect,
effect.
pomteu
pointed to carry it lorwara
forward. ttev.
Rev. m
NL.
Will c. Moulton, brother of Arba
We make our bow this week to E Hoyt of Nashville called the
N. Moulton, editor of the Decatur j Mrs. Mary Butler, of near Lsccy. meeting and acted as chairman.
Republican. Ls running for council­ I who celebrated her Both birthday
The following officers were electman In SeaUle. Hope he wins. 1 Monday of this week. March 14th.; ed: President—Wm. Hyde; VicoThere’s good stuff hi those Moulton Our Assyria correspondent sends in 'President—Rev. M. E. Hoyt; Sec
boys.
1 -an
----------account
.... of the celebration ...
ac- ---------and Treas.
-------.---------—Mrs.~Clare
----------------------McDerby;
„
Frank Herrington of clear lake companyIng the event with chll- j Supt. of Children—JMrs. Fredg
was In the city on Tuesday for the dn;n. and great-grandchildren pres- Laurent; Supt. of Young People—
first time since December, having ent. Mrs. Butler still resides in the Miss Ruby Cogswell; Supt. of
been confined to the house with farm home to which she came as Adults—Rev. Van Doren; Vacation
sickness All are glad to see him ; a bride 70 years ago. 8he is mentally Bible School—Mrs. Mabie Elder;
out again.
keen, reads and *ews .without | Supt- ot Administration — Hebei
Miss Amelia Wallers and Miss glasses, and still does her bit around Foster; Leadership Training—Ret.
Leia Jordan entertained twelve the house.
I E Pritchard.
members of the Bell Telephone
Free refrigerator. Bee John Bull-1
...wo
force at a very delightful six o’clock mg &amp; Sons for information.
_ SNOWBOUND 67 DAYS.
dinner Wednesday night at their
a man. well known in Hastings.
n! one °‘ .lhe
J?1?”.,
home. 520 E Walnut, it being the recently lost a gold watch, that was *!*.k
item that will bo
March meeting of the group.
an especially prized possession be. Interest to many Hastings poocause a mother, long since passed P e- w,1° J®0*1*’ *!ld
«
away, made sacrifice* to buy 11 for. *v*nn Nobles ot Coral. The Item
him on the day he graduated from'5*’™}
, ..
,, ..
„ .
High school. Ordinary means of „ S0"1, ,}4arSh_ H,7*S!,r,s
advertising have failed to produce N°blcs. wife of Dr. H. Wynn No­
lt. Perhaps some one reading this1 J*1**’ c’*J*n* lhe distinction (fl
may realize the special sentimental havln« ?cen hou*cd,
value connected with Its iota, and “ny °®" {*rwn ,n
°«
it will be returned. It should be of; ac^?‘‘nt
easy Identification because the | K ?he *?. snowbound 67 day*, nffl
owner's nam* to engraved on lhe in- &gt;ln« *?.le,‘o.
“^lr f*4
side. It was an Elgin watch with J?0™* *U 0,11 Ume bec*usc «
gold hands and hunters case, and aru“had a gold chain with knife at-'
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
tached
It could be , dropped *in -a' On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Charh
mall box addressed to thf ”-------IJ.»Pr F,ul entertained with a family dlr
who will return tt to l.,.-v-».
UiHAjtftUr Or; llrr
ner nonoriug
honoring ner
her &gt;UMrr
sister.. Mr5
Mrs.. Edit
Uw owner Wil rewyd .nyone rlv-, ^oden. ol rrwlrleyllle. U beln, Lt
ins . clue u. lUj.Here.bouU
uiur',. blrUld.y, The pony «r
RRinr.salso * »u«’P«’i3e for Mrs. Loude
Two tables of bridge were In play
?},* ’I'
on Saturday evening al th* home,
of MUs Mary McElwain. W. Center 1
z^hri i
St. Dese rt was served and Mrs.!
??? “r,
“
George Coleman held high score at
! Mra' char,c* Aldrich ?
bridge.
Hastings.
*
-|j
!
DEATH OF*MRS. DELAND. '

SPRING

Mrs. Bertha Deland of Yann
Springs. 55. a sister of Mrs. Bel
Clement of this city, died on Wei
nesday of last week. The funnl
was held at the Yankee Sprin
church on Bunday, with burial '1
I lhe church yard, a surer. Ml
। Mamie Terpening. of Tulsa. Old
. came for the funcYal and is vlstf
I ing in Allegan this week.
J

I

QUALITY MEATS

Don't Miss the
DEL MONTE

u. 10c

Rib Boiling Beef
lu.

25c

VARIETY SHOW

Beef Kettle Roast

u&gt;.

13c

Beef Roast

Lb.

19C

Del Monte

Fresh Fillets

2

Minced Ham

Lb.

Gold®? Bantom

15c

Pork Shoulder Roast 18c

3

SUNDAY and MONDAY. MARCH 22 and 23

Bar 5C

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

SLICED or CRUSHED
Na, 2 SIZE

—
* ANYTHING GOES”
ARE YOU? I
----------BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY, 1:M and 3:00 o’clock
Other Performance*—AdalU Ue, Children 19c

&lt;* „

D C“‘ UOC

Del Monte Peaches

6- $1

t ANNE SHIRLEY-‘CHATTERBOX'

NO. 2K SIZE

25c

T

U. 25c
2 &lt;=... 25c
2 Lb. Pit,.

19C

With Phillips Holme*. Edward Ellis. Erik Btiodes and

Margaret Hamilton

Del Monte Salmon 6

SEEDED OR SEEDLESS

Del Monte Coffee
Del Monte Whole Kernel Corn

Jp Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, MARCH 24

25c

TOMATO SAUCE OR MUSTARD

Del Monte Raisins 3

Del Monte Prunes

a

4 Large Bara 15c

Del Monte Pineapple

BUFFET

Del Monte Sardines

♦ rrCAND TtEAILF j

21C

Large Sue

Ethel Merman, Charlie Ruggles in

lOc

or CRUSHED

4&lt;~ 19c
ll. 3c

G Soap
Camay Soap

No. 2 Size

Del Monte Pineapple
SLICED
25c
SIZE

10 u&gt;.. 19c

Dry Onions
Juicy Grape Fruit
New Cabbage
|vory Flakes

CORN

a

WATCH
McCALL’S

Roquefort Cheese u 49c
Silver Nut Oleo
2 25c

WED.. THURS. and FBI.. MARCH 25, 2$ and 27

88c

Del Monte Fruit for Cocktail

6 Can.

Del Monte Grape Fruit
Del Monte Pineapple Juice

6 c,». 82c

That suit, topcoat and dress . . .
send them to us and we will
clean and press them so you, too.
will be ready for spring.

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

The screen's "bad” woman In Alaska, in a powerful drama ot
crime and treachery and love. A pic lure full of
fire and typical Mae West action!

MAE WIST ond VICTOR McLAGLEN in

71c

"KLONDIKE ANNIE"
AdalU Me. Children 14c

JACK FROST 4 XXXX

SUGAR

FREE SPARTON Refrigerator
Got FREE Tickets with each 50c Purchase!

SATURDAY ONLY, MARCH 28

RINS0
LARGE PACKAGE

6‘ bt,

Correction: Our ad last week should have read Feb. 18th

Lucky Day - March 18th Free Day

17

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

GEORGE RAFT and JOAN BENNETT ia
Houseclnuing lune U clean-up
lime . . . send the drapes and
curtains lor complete cleaning.
Our process- removes all dirt and
restores new We and color to
your drapes and curtains

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS

VISIT OUR BOOTH AT THE HASTINGS COMMERCIAL FAIR NEXT WEEK, MARCH 25 to 28, Inclusive!

PHONE &gt;148

W. Call Tur uidlMUrcr

&lt;

"She Couldn’t Take It”

▲

FEATURE NO. 2

4-

CHAUllS StAKKETT In

*

"The Mysterious Avenger"

♦

Added—Episode No. I of “THE GREAT AIR MYSTERY" wfU

1

�■■•V”
THE HASTINGS BAXNEB. THVMDAY, MARCH 1#, ISM

^SPRING FAI
March 25, 26, 27 and 28 will long be rem embered in the hearts of the people of
Barry County. You are invited by the Merchants of Hastings to be their guest

during these days. Four days of entertainment and celebrating, entertain­

ment furnished for your benefit celebrating the coming of Spring. Through
l

A

the efforts of the Hastings Commerc ial Club, sponsors of this event, the
Merchants will exhibit Spring Merc handise of all kinds. In specially de­
signed booths arranged in the Community Hall, you will see what Mi­

lady will wear this spring ... what the well dressed man will wear ...

what the well dressed family will wear... you will see the latest in
modern appliances for both town and country home... there will
be shoe exhibits ... exhibits of special interest to farmers . . .

exhibits of special interest to city folks—in short, everything
that is new will be seen at this FAIR. This is one event that

will cost you nothing—everything is FREE . . . ADMISSION . . . REFRESHMENTS . . . PRIZES . . . Over 150

v
\

prizes will be given away during these four days, more

than 35 prizes every afternoon and evening.

Any­

one can win if they are present. That is the price

asked, "your presence," and you will be amply

,

repaid for this.
family along.

Plan to attend and take the

Over $6OO in Prizes!
ur Grand Prices; will be Given Away, one on

We are publishing below the

each of the four days of the Spring Fair . . .

names of All Commercial Club

DAY BED . . . GLIDER . . . 100-PI ECI

members who have contributed in

DINNER SET . . . CABINET.

any way to the success of the Commer­

these

cial Club Fair. These firms and individu­

prises will be a

Each of

$25 value.

ALSO 150 SMALLER PRIZES will

als are donoting'their time, money and mer­
chandise to give the citizens of Barry county a

days of this Fair.

really good time at no expense to them.
HERE THEY ARC:—

bers

HASTINGS CITY BANK.

ATLANTIC &amp; PACIFIC TEA CO.

HASTINGS PRINTING COMPANY.

JOHN ARMBRUSTER—Kist Ice

HIRSCH BROTHERS.

V

C. B. HODGES—Jeweler.

ASSOCIATED TRUCKS.

HOME LUMBER COMPANY.

EARL R. BOYES.
ALLAN C. HYDE.

ROLFE BULLING.
BARRY COUNTY HEALTH UNIT.

.
ROY CORDES—Cordas News Service.

T. S. BAIRD.

R. K. HURD.
...............

INTERNATIONAL

CLYDE WILC0X'
SEAL

&amp;

LOCK

COMPANY.

DR. F. E. WILLISON.
WALLDORFF &amp; SON.

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS.

COLEMAN INSURANCE AGENCY.
CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY.

KROGER GROCERY &amp; BAKING CO.

archie d.

McDonald.

COOK BROTHERS.

DR. KENITH MclNTYRE.

RICHARD COOK.

THE REV. J. A. McNULTY.

ROBERT W. COOK—Highlands Dairy.

CRUE’S BROWNBILT SHOE STORE.
CLAIR DeCOU—McCreerys.

L. F. MAUS.
k NORTH SIDE GROCERY—W. L. and

C. H. Hinman.

A. K. FRANDSEN,

NATIONAL BANK OF HASTINGS.

DR. GORDON FISHER.

MICH. MUTUAL WINDSTORM IN­

FELDPAUSCH

MARKET and FOOD

SURANCE CO.

CENTER.

FARM BUREAU SERVICE ELEVATOR.
DR. R. G. FINNIE.
GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO.

the

The mem­

Commercial

Club art sponsoring this

ANDRUS—One Stop Service Station.

Cream Co.

of

DR. E. |. PRATT.

J. C. PENNEY COMPANY.
PARKER HOUSE MANAGEMENT.

HASTINGS LUMBER &amp; COAL CO.

HENRY S. SHELDON.

HASTINGS BANNER.

KIM SIGLER.

H. E. SMITH HARDWARE.

WALLACE FEED &amp; SEED STORE
DILLON WOLVERTON—Agt. Mass.

Mutual Life Insurance Company.
BARRY COUNTY ROD AND GUN
CLUB.

,

JUDGE RUSSELL R. McPEEK, Charlotte.
w. 0 CAMPBELL .nd JASON McEL­

WAIN—Local representative* ol
the Northwettern Mutual Life In­

surance Company.

B. R. REED.
A. J. LARSEN.

HOMER SMITH—Coffee Shop.

LAMBIE &amp; DOYLE.

A. R. TAYLOR SHOE STORE.

CHAS. LEONARD.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE.

D. A. VANBUSKIRK—Hastings City
Schools.

DR. G. L. LOCKWOOD.
L0NC &amp; MOORE.

B. A. LY BARKER.

COMMUNITY HALL, HASTINGS • 118 No. Michigan

�The Hastings Banner

IS COUNTY▲T HOME

It’s Um Spirit of a Community
That Counta—Not Its Sixs
THURSDAY, MAUCH A, 1936 I

A PAGE OF EP1TOIUALS AND FEATURES

MICHIGAN

-o Editorials
wtU with any In the state. It has
oohobrnimo issues
Governor Frank D. FlUgerald been fortunate that no compact
■Bid that the Republican party must minorities with real or imagined
grudges to settle against everyone
Mttution if they expect to win the in general and no one in particular
have ever decided to lake these
coming election
This is probably true even though caucuses by storm
Considering all things, if voters
the question of preserving consti­
feel
they have the time and interest
tutional rights is the most imporfor only one election, they might
better
attend the party caucuses
lean people In years. Shall lhe pro -.
vision* of this document be altered; Bncl *•* lhal «ood
ot candito give supreme power to the gov-'d’1" ‘rc named-and neglect the

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
Ths city board of health met on
Thursday afternoon and completed
organisation Oscar Tyden was ap­
pointed to nil the vacancy on the
board caused by the resignation of
L- W. Heath. Supt. E. J. Lederle of
the city school* was elected presi­
dent ot the board.
Offi. John J. Pershing, who will
lead lhe U. B. expedHionsry farces
into Mexico in pursuit of Villa, was
a classmate of Col A. D. Knlskem.
formerly of thb city.
Mr. and Mr*. W*ync Merrick will

obrntni ua IU. II .».&gt;■ tram Ite
H u in u.e p.n&gt;- cupeople? Shall a new order be estab- ' CU!,e3 whpr&lt;‘ the n:O,t important katchewan. Mr. Merrick went to the
.hnrt, UM gov«rn&lt;Mnl ,U1'
bl UK l«*l
to done, Canadian Northwest ten years ago
and this is his first visit to his
define the rights of lhe individual
Michigan home.
WHY! OH WHY!
Instead of individual* defining the
Mrs. olive Crocker, who has been
During a talk with a group of housekeeper al the Good Samaritan
rights of their government? Wc
(
me
ui
roc
ircw
cicvhospital,
has
resigned
tier
position.
defy anyone to say that such an U-, “»•&gt; lh1, •'ubXc* of the new elecThe first meeting of the Barry
One
sue is not of supreme importance, j, trical inspection came up. ew..
CO. Hospital Association was held
ShaU the people rule lhe govern­ man said that he planned lo have Saturday afternoon at the City
ment or the government rule the several floor plugs put in his plant bank with eight of the nine mem­
people? The answer to tills question for the more convenient operation bers present The following officers
President. Kellar
a portable machine. Ordinarily were elected:
represent* lhe difference between of
'
Stem; vice-president. R. B Messer;
the United Blates as visualized by this would have meant an outlay of secretary. M. L.. Cook; treasurer.
the colontai patriot* and lhe dicta- 001 more O’*11 flve doltars for the John F Goodyear. Thomas Sulli­
tanhips of Europe—The Fascist* :enUrc Job
P&gt;u«» U&gt;at coat van was selected as lhe attorney for
ihe Nazi*, and lhe Soviets.
‘aboul flfly cenU
But lhe the Board of Trustees.
Yet it is true that this issue tacks ' electrical inspector cake on lhe job
THIRTY YEARS AGO
dramatic appeal. So few people have »nd
addition to some rather
Mrs- Chas. Young, living near
Mtn first hand what dictetorahip' tuscy wiring insisted on plugs that Coats Grove, died Monday night of
mean* that the word lacks slgnlfi- CQSt #bout
fach Th**- nat" pneumonia.
Mr. and Mrs. W- H. Goodyear
tance. It doean't Indicate, for ex- urally. was out of lhe question. Thl*
will entertain for Mr and Mrs Jo­
ample, the fear, suppression and tack' particular plant now has the plug* seph W. Emery tomorrow evening.
of personal liberty which exist in 'ln PUcf. “
understand, the wirTha Sunflower club gave their
thoee nations where dictator* rule.' lnK lx entirely safe but the ' gold- last number on the series of dance*
L*ck of personal liberty—we don't ptated" article recommended by tire last Thursday evening at the K_pf
P. armory. Ice cream and cake
know what it means here in the inspector was not used. Every one were served by Mrs. Rehor and Mrs.
United States. In any one of a j will agree that specification for Brock and a jolly good time reporthalf dozen countries in Europe the **fe wiring 1* necessary. But why.
Chas. Baldwin purchased the
people don't dare to extras ideas when electrictans. themselves, now
Frank Rorabeck sheds yesterday
concerning their government for have to pas* stale examinations be- afternoon and will take immediate
fear of punishment—punishment tore licenses to operate are granted, possession.
Murray Bromley and Martin
which frequently goes beyond mere &gt;* »’• necessary to have this latest
have rented the fair
imprisonment and approaches lhe ' parasitic group of inspector* wished Tinkler
grounds for the season, and will
torture of the Middle Age*. Per- ■ uP°n us? Incidentally, you. yourself, have a number of race meets next
haps this sounds exaggerated but it1 P°y the coat of maintaining these
is true nevertheless.
; inspector* and the cost is from 82 00
The fiftieth anniversary of the
wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Mcperhaps we think that such up. per inspection.
Olocklin was celebrated at their
things can't ever happen here but
residence Ln Delton. Monday, March
NOT MUCH DIFFERENCE
they always have and always will
Many
were
doubtless
Albert Christy, who works for the
happen in a nation where supreme
.
.people
.
authority passes from lhe people shocked at the idea of a Communist Barber Bros. Chair Co, got his
hand in a rtp saw at that factory
Into the hand* of a strongly cen- leader being given free time to
Saturday and all but Ute little fin­
tnlized government no matter how , *peak over one of the large broad- ger on his left hand were cut off.
benevolent and kindly a dictator-' casting networks of this country,

FORTY YEARS AGO
ship may be at the start, cruelty This shock mu*l have been coiuldHastings has no citizen more alive
and suppression are certain to fol- erably lessened, however, when list­
lo the interests of Hasting* than is
tow ju*t as surely as night foltow* jener* realized that the statements Sylvester Grouse), who is even now
day. If you don't believe this read I of Earl Browder, general secretary writing dosens and dozens of letters
history—follow the trend ot affairs! of the communist party of lhe to manufacturers in an effort to
in Soviet Russia, in Fascist Italy. United Blates, were les* radical get our idle furniture factory start­
ed up again.
or in Nasi Germany.
than many of those which have
If you make maple sugar this
But. as the governor points out.' come from Rexford Tugwell. 8ec- year and live up to the laws of the
thb issue does tack dramatic ap- i retary of Agriculture Wallace and •late, you must have labels on your
cans.
*
peal capable of arousing enthus- other influential members of the
Died al lhe home of her daugh­
tasm. It U difficult to see further! brain trust. The main difference b
ter. Mrs. Lewis Beadle on Friday
ahead than tomorrow, consequent- • that Mr. Browder speaks frankly a* last, Mr*. Keziah Davis in her 95th
ly political orators will probably a communist while the brain trust­
have to be given an issue capable ers are doing their work disguised
of inflaming lhe public mind; as liberals.
something which esn drag in sotes
A QUESTION
Regardless of anything that may
be said or done, however, the one
"How many men of your ac­
THERE is no duty
real issue before the American peo­ quaintance would today take the
that comes to our hand
ple during the coming presidential personal risk that the signers of
but brings to us the
election will be the question of con­ the Declaration of Independence
possibility of kingly
stitutional rights, shall the people look when they faced issues no leas
service.
—Anon.
continue to define the powers of the vital to their future than are some
government or shall lhe govern­ of lhe questions facing American
ment define lhe rights of the peo­ citizens today." asks David Law­
ple? On one side will be the New rence in lhe United Blates News.
Gary Spaulding Las out driving
Deal and the Brain Trust—opposed A difficult .question and. a T
good
„ one.
will be the Republicans and that I It might be extreme to say that •bout three miles in lhe country
Sunday, when .the rattler in which
section of lhe Democratic party i there aren't any such people in he was riding broke in two. letting
which has the courage to stand up I public Life today but at Icm*, they Gary down in the mud. and ha had
and declare that the soclalistic. dic- * are m scarce as to be in danger ot all the pleasure there is to be found
in walking to the city and leading
latortal views fostered by lhe New ' total extinction.
his horse which he fortunately pre­
Deal do not represent the party
vented from running away.
|
GOOD HEALTH!
of Jefferson and Jacksen.
Mr and Mrs. Chas. Wardell ar­
We were glad to see that Dick rived in this city Thursday to spend
THE CAUCUS
’ Baldwin, editor of the Northville their honeymoon with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs I. M Cunningham
It takes a rather healed local
Record, has sufficiently recovered have issued Invitation* for the
election to bring out even half of
from a protracted siege ot poor marriage of their daughter. Fran­
the qualified voter* and only a
health to write his own personal ces V_ to William T. Grigsby on
amall fraction of these take lime
column once again. He Is now down Tuesday afternoon. March 31. at
lo attend the party caucuses. Yet it
four o'clock at their home in Irv­
' tn Florida and seems lo be getting ing.
| thorough enjoyment out of living.
Miss Ida McDermont left for
Grand Rapids last week where she
will work with Miss Teal lhe dress­
most important part of an election.
maker.
The. caliber of city offictab de­
anywhere he happen* to be.
FirrY YEARS AGO.
pend* upon the selections made at {
There will be a mock trial aUlhe
lhe caucuses. H these selection3 are .
court room commencing tn the near
poor, then a 100 per cent turnout
future, so say lite boys, tn which
Frank pancoast will be tried for
of voter* on election, day couldn't
pick a good administration for the (| One of the more or lea* harmle** the murder of a fictitious real e*Ml,. The r»l work ls dw ln u»' ■**’'* “ w,Uch **"
”“&gt;« tate dealer. Esc. Kenaston will pre­
side. &amp;nest Bailey will act as prose­
C.U.U., the
u» ekciin.
u merely
mmb “* hlm“u 11
party caucus;
election, u
cuting attorney, assisted by Thom­
Ur'a bedroom.-—Monu—1 Bur.
as Campbell and A- Hafner. Fred
an anil-climax.
Alien will conduct lhe defense as­
Yet. year after year, a handful of I
। An author declare* that he once sisted by F. M Woodmansee and
voters, say eight or ten. could Have 1
Tad
Clark. Twelve business men of I
kept an idea for a novel in his head
walked into almost any ward cau-1
lhe city will act as Juror*, and ill
for fifteen year*. It Is not long
is calculated that there will be fun t
cuv in Hastings and have taken*
' enough —Humorbt
alive through the trial which -will r
mailer* into their own hands.!
last two or three evenings.
They could have selected as can-! The "Micks" 1* that region where
The Rev F w Henry, new rector
didate for aiderman. the poorest, people can't enjoy hot roils without ot Emmanuel church of thl* city
qualified voter in the ward and Uking
‘
some to the neighbors.— will enter upon his duties lhe sec­
ond
Bunday in Lent. March 31. *•
there U nothing that voters at the Daily Oklahoman.
Henry smith wa» in the city Sat­
election could hare done about it.
What kind of memorial s'-snsp urday and the band boys availed
themselves of lhe presence of the
have they designed Id case Mr. Far- tuba player to get a little practice.
Jordan hall Was well tilled last
group working together could filer- lay happen* lo make a ukc golf
night to witnaoa. The Kingdom of
score?-Dalias Journal.
Mother Goose" as presented' by
Bec»u*e of lhe lack of Interest
Someone defines a vacation as the scholars-of Union school under the
time when it is possible to sleep late direction of Miss Estella Wheeler.
The scholar; show ' a progress in
in Ute morning If tgic could.—(X- bulging that speak* well
that
troll News.
Wheeler as an instructor.

A Quotation

Pungent Paragraphs

This and That
RkHDQM OBSERVATIONS.

SPICER WANTED AT
use of the empty light—Uw diffused I future. radlo-tM*vl»ion will bring peckllnee and collar*, also several
| dreaags were fitted. Officer* elected
BATTLE CREEK. aqd the concentrated. The produc-1 drama into our boane*
tlon* of Dante's “Divine Coqjedy," I jn «ioMng. Mr*. Mctatyre said, | tor
FMrt work were: Leader*.
Mary of Scotland," and "Romeo ••without thought of the movtea. or i Mrs Fancher and Mn Pursell; *uband Juliet" are example* of this j considering lhe radio, we know that stltute leaders. Mrs. Fuhr and Mn.
Creek, according to the Enquirer­ new and growing technique la form, (here |r overwhelming evidence that I D*y: chairman. Mn Couch; Becy.| lhe old theater survives; that the I Traas.. Un Bateman: recreation
News. His offense there, so it is Ilghl and color
claimed, was inducing a ninety-one
The Little theater, lhe Repertory xtege of lhe Jiving actor bqteitaiaa I leader. Mr». Welch. We will meet

have affected drama in our Ume.. Q&gt;at tha ptayhouae attracts with Its «on- Kother Striker. Pub. Bcoy.
hundreds 01
ot civic
" • r
his own use. epicer's
“ • procedure
(HULUULUC and
buu the
u&gt;e many nunureiu
ovic ' anient
UKSBIII —
m ““ -4—-i- Au. &gt;.
was the same as dial alleged in lhe 1 theaters have been a means of the place
OROUP NO. 3­
case against him hero He look the bringing drama U&gt; a great number when craving amottanal and spirtt- ; The Hasting* Extension Group
bond, so it is claimed, promising to of people.
ual ad venture; this ta lhe blight- 1 M0 3 met Tueaday. March 10. with
replace it with another type of
■n&gt;. &gt;peU&lt;r
U.U no ualnu
«*’*“ &lt;* •“ ■“"»’»«
। Mn. E A. Caukln for the after__ ________ ____ ,*
___ i mi.ncl renter® 1
bond, but never did It A warrant —. ■
I noon, ©ur leader*. Mn. c. D.
It's funny about politics. Most has been Issued In Battle Creek, but
| Bauer and Mn Winifred Echlinaw
(date
without
considering
lhe
people couldn't tell you why they will not be served until after the
EAST BALTIMORE GROUP
I gave Instructions on the cutting of
tian
pictures
which
have
dev
el
belong to one party or the other— trial hero.
. collar* and making of rolled hems
—
—
The East Baltimore Extension
But you can get into bigger squab­
1903 lo lhe modern talking picture group met at the home of Mrs • Most of the dresses were fitted and
bles in lose time over nothing al all CITIZENSHIP MARKED
with its use of technicolor. Now Claud Hunt Thursday. March 13. ! suggestions given concerning Unee
in politics than most anything else
ON HIGH SCHOOL REPORTS. talking picture,?are creating a new | with twelve member* and three vis- , that were best for the individual.
short of armed warfare.
Students will no longer take interest Ln the opera with the ap- tiers present. A pot luck dinner Dresses will all pc completed by
home only marks for read tn', wrltln' pearance of metropolitan opera was served al noon. The lesson Achievement Day.—Nellie Mat­
However, political enthusiasm in and ’rithmetic A new item called stars on the screen in the near, then given by our leaders was on thews. Secy.
a nation which Is trying to be a Citizenship will make Ila appear­
democracy is important. So long as ance on report cards from now on.
A mark of 1 will Indicate that the
no matter how trivial or important, student is an excellent citizen, cour­
we need have little fear of follow­ teous. efficient, respectful of lhe
ing Ln the wake of Italy. Germany
or Russia to an absolute dictator­ othar end of the scale will be a
ship.
mark of 4, indicating a poor citizen
who frequently violates law* and
Still, one cant help but wish at creates disturbances. A notice in­
times that there might be more in­ forming parents of this forthcom­
telligence and less emotion in ing change in the marking system
politics.
of the High school was sent out
las: week and their reactions re­
Hastings Civic Players are plan­ quested. The response was over­
ning to present "Servant Ln the whelmingly in favor of the plan, but
House,” early Ln May. This fine old there were a few negative* In or­
play by Charles Rand Kennedy Is der to discuss the question further
an excellent dramatic medium; in­ and discover the reason for the un­
cidentally. too. it represents an am­ favorable votes, a meeting of the
bitious undertaking on the part of parents, both in favor of and op­
the players
posed to the plan, was called for
last Tuesday night at the High
BANNER MISINFORMED.
school The difficulties were ad­
justed and the new system will go
Banner for which we are sorry— into effect immediately.
another case of the Banner report­
er being misinformed Last week's
item said that a daughter had been
bom to Dr. and Mrs. Ross Leth­
bridge of Mason. The fact was
that a daughter was bom to Dr.
On Friday the literature depart­
and Mrs. Harris Woodbume of De­
troit on Saturday. March 7. at ment of ths Women's Club gave lhe
Henry Ford hospital. She has been afternoon's program.
Mrs. D. A. VanBuakirk chairman
named Judith Aiui.
presented Mrs. Kenllh McIntyre
who read a paper .on "The Stage
Today."
The modem trend in drama. Mrs
McIntyre said, began with Henrik
Ibsen who instituted changes in sub­
ject matter and in the construction of
the play itself. It was a change
from the romantic theater of lhe
eighteenth century to lhe realistic
and more human play of the nine­
teenth. Galsworthy. Shaw. Mase­
"Thu TI»U rn gjrjrnmg ncw /orgrt:
field and Eugene O'Neill are ex­
to sou* dry and *rt wet.
ponents of this school. They devel­
MARCH
oped the problem and social plays
and the form of comedy which por­
trays the more humorous aspects of
our everyday problems and insti­
tutions.
Since Ibsen's experiments, many
liberties have been taken with form
and color. Architecturally, the thea­
ter has gone back to the simplicity
of lhe early Greeks. But the real
change in the theater 1* within the
•rails. The invention of electricity
lat Prixo—1 Suede Leather Blaser ------- $7.00
lias done more to bring about this
2nd Prise—1 Dresi Trousers
3.75
change than any other one thing.
A group of modernists advocate us­
3rd Prise— 1 Portis Hat ------------------ ------ 3.50
ing one neutral scene for a whole
or lot dut'a.’ 1 re­
play with the lighting creating an
- 3.50
4th Prise—1 Moheir Sweater _.
Illusion, or portraying a change of
mood. Adolph Appia and Gordon
3.18
united States' tndependCraig, have been largely respon­
3.00
sible for thl* change of sentiment
tS-First Con«rri»-on»l Mtds!
in stage setting. They developed
2.00
7th Prise—1 Mack Shirt
the simple stage design, the use ot
three dimension scenery, also lhe
2.00
a maximum ot enthusiasm and a
minimum of mud. We haven't been
troubled here in this latter respect
for many years—■a record worth
continuing.

WATERS

CLOTHES

SHOP

SPRING OPENING

And Store Wide MERCHANDISE REVIEW

AT OUR STORE ONLY

Women's Club

MARCH 25 to 28

During This Event We Will Give Away

$C ft |n Merchandise CQE E
3U ABSOLUTELY ■ 11 EC.
HERE IS THE COMPLETE LIST

Visit This Event at Our
Store.

OF PRIZES

The New Spring

Stylet will be prominently

displayed throughout the
store, as well as by Special

window displays.

HOW TO WIN A
PRIZE

1.50

Come to our atore any day be­

I Oth Prise—2 69c Spring Tics
i Ilk Friw—2 69c Sp.l.g Tlu

1.38

12th Prise—2 69c Spring Ties

1.38

ginning Wednesday. March
25 to Saturday night, March
28, and make the following

14th Prise—2 Cooper* Shorts

1.00

15th Prise—2 Coopers Shorts

1.00

16th Prise—2 Coopers Shorts

1.00

1.38

.98

1934 Studebaker DE LUXE SEDAN
Only 16.000 miles; new license; look* like new.

1932 Studebaker Comm. 8 Regal Sedan

Wool Driving Cloves

1.00

Summer Polo Shirt

1.00

Summer Polo Shirt -1.00

20th Prise—1 Summer Polo Shirt

1.00

21et Prise—1 Summer Polo Shirt

1.00

Trunk 6 wheels! radio*and hot water haator.

1932 ROCKNE 4 DOOR SEDAN
Complete overhaul.

1931 Studebaker DICTATOR 8 Sedan
Excellent shape.

1928 Studebaker Dictator 4 Door Sedan
Only 37,000 miles; looks like new.

1935 Studebaker 2 Door Sedan
17,000 miles; new license; heater; looks and
runs like new.

1.00
23rd Prise—1 Summer Polo Shirt _.

1.00

24th Prise—I Icy-Het Bottlei

1.00

25th Prise—1 Boy's Wool Swfoter

1.00

26th Prixc—1 Wool Lined Glove* _

.65

27th Priao— 1 ^oir Pure Silk Sock* _

.50

28th Priie—2 pair* 25c Dross Sock*

.50

29th Pri»o—1 pair Dress Sock*

.35

30th Prixc—1 pair Dresi Socks

.25

"How many men's and
boys' dress and work
shirts are in our
store ?"
bnsineea. Saturday. March 2L

Rules of Contest
Only one guess Is allowed each

come a* well a* adults. Conteat is free—not necessary to
make a purchase. Store will
be open Wednesday, Thurs­
day. Friday and Saturday
nights. Slips for your name
and guess will be furnished at
the store.

The correct number of shirts will be published in the Banner April 3rd. and also com­
plete list of winners. Any winner of the above prises may exchange his or her prise
for other merchandise of equal value.

1926 BUICK

guass;—

Friday nights for inspection.

Store will be open Wednesday. Thursday and

NOTHING SOLD ON THESE THREE NIGHTS.

1936 license; good condition.

REMEMBER THE DATES—MARCH 25th to 28th

GOODYEAR BROS
HARDWARE CO
HARDWARE, AGRICULTURAL I MP UM ENTS
AUTOMOBILES. PLUMBING AND HEATING

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP
Selling Quality Keeps Us Bus

�wa KABTDIGS BANNER, TMURBDAY. MARCH U, IBM

Big Suring Opening

Ortani«atit&gt;ns

£

- Itli/f1,

ITL.TL.T’o.*

Do Justice To Year

March 21. a o'clock. We have lhe March 13 iaaua of the Clare Sgnpromise ihai Joseph Warnock will tmel, which show( the high esteem
be our next apcaker.
In which he was held:
“The community was stunned
Brush Ridge cemetery circle will early last Friday morning by tha
meet with Mrs. Mildred Hovey, 121 newa of lhe death of Harold D.
West Orand at, on Thursday. Mar. Bunday, one of Clare county's
M Memben are urged to be present most promising young men. and yet
and visitor* are welcome.
hourly.
"Harold D. Sunday, son of Lewis
W- and Josephine sun da). was bom
The Baptist Ladles’ Aid wlU hold in Arthur township. August Hth.
their regular meeting al the home 1804 and passed from this life
of Mrs Lucinda Hawkins on N. March 8th. 1936. ai lhe age of 41
Washington St.. Wed. P. M . March yean, a months and 21 days, follow­
28 Visitors always welcome.—Mrs. ing an illness of ten days.
"He was united in marriage lo
(Myrtle Eaton. Secy.
_______
Mlu Violet Ulrich January 1. 1916.
A alight change in the Women's ‘ To this union were born four chUClub program for tomorrow after- dren' Mrs. Eunle Marie Helrholxer.
noon has been made. ’These ot Midland, l^wis Harold. Bernwd
Changing Worlds" will be given by IL-. and LeonArd W.. at hqme.
Walter Perkins, principal of the I "Besides his faithful wife and
1 Junior High school. He will show children he leaves to mourn their
! slides and will give a very Instruc- ‘
hU parents, Mr. and Mrs Lewis
Hive talk.
W. Sunday, of Hastings, and one
------------, brother, Walter Sunday, alsq near
| Pythian Sisters regular meeting1 Hastings.
•
j Tuesday evening. March 24. at the
"Mr. Sunday had spent his entire
I Temple at 7:30.
—
t life to Arthur township with the

37. Supper al 7 JO followed by a
good program. AU Invited.

Next week, beginning March 23rd,
will be "Open Hoiue” at our store!
• Refreshments for all our customers and
friends will Iw served by the hostess of our
newly furnished five-room cottage.

&gt; Our bturc is jam full of bargains in living
room, dining room, bedroom and breakfast
suites.

• Several pieces of furniture will be given
away by us absolutely free lo some of our
friends and customers who attend our open­
ing week.
&gt; During the whole week there will be hun­
dreds of bargains on every floor of our entire
Furniture Store.
•

• You need die goods; we need lhe room
and money. Buy now for our mutual benefit.
• We have not the space here to fully enum­
erate the many wonderful bargains dial can
be secured from our store during opening sale
week.

, MUs
. Katherine Humphrey will give a
lecture and demonstration on the
forms of piano material.
and during the course of It will play
| twc‘vc Mlecttona.
_________
i

• It has been several years sinfib we were
able to offer such a wonderful opportunity lo
secure good furniture cheap.

• Goods may be purchased during sale week
and for a small payment, can be held by us
until customer is ready for them.

i
i
I

!

j

1

We are offering some handsome rugs during this sale
at wonderfully low prices! Come in and look them over

$24.00 value Tapestry Brussels Rug at only------ $14.85
$49.00 value American Oriental Rug, at only —$34.50
$64.00 Genuine Wilton Velvet Rug at only-------- $19.95
$29.00 value Axminster Rug, during sale week, at only ——$19.95
(THE ABOVE SIZES AKE ALL 9xll)

Genuine Armstrong Printed Linoleums in the 12 ft. width, some
patterns as low as------------------------- ------------------ per square yard 92c
A profusion of felt base in the 9x12 sizes to select from at $4.95 to $6.95
Some exceptionally good patterns o f "felt base" goods, sq. yd. only 39c

Dining-Room Suites
and Breakfast Suites

ROOM SUITES

o9

Several HANDSOME BREAKFAST
SUITES at prices ai low as—

$4 A.95
I U

We ore offering o good sixed topestry covered, two-piece living room
suite that was a good buy at $39.00,
NOW ONLY—

FRESH
FILLETS

'
&lt;

Other Suites in curled mohair, ribbed mohair and mohair
friexe, none in the line ot over $89.00.

Mattresses, Beds and Bedding

Carefully cut oa
straight five-gored
linen to imure per-

panel colon—

Royon Taffeta
Sj.00

CHEMISES
Beautifully
fitted
girmenli in crepe

DANCITTIS
Brawiere and panlie
to match favorile
9 4 J)
ganncnie—
I

Wo Carry Nev Uageria for
Larger Women!

The Peak of Values in

COATS and SUITS

RIB END

New Dresses

We ore also offering Mattresses, Beds and
Bedding ot a Big Reduction in Price.

ROQUEFORT

FKANDSEyS

CHEESE

"Exclusive, but not expensive"'

A SIMMONS Inner Spring Mat- $4 f* QE
tress for os low as----------------------I VeWW

Lamb Shoulder Roast &lt;*■ 18c

Box Springs and Inner Spring
$4 A OK
Mattresses for as low as-----------I UivV

HASTINGS

Branded Beef Roast Kd- ». 25c
Branded Sirloin Steak
We hove a BIG HANDSOME LINE of BEDROOM SUITES we ore offering at
REAL BARGAIN PRICES!
Good walnut finished three-piece Bedroom Suites for as low as ...$29.95
Worth ot least $49.00. Other Fine Soites up to $89.00
.
Living Room Tables, Cedar Chests, Odd Dressers, Occasional and Rocking
Chairs in great profusion, oil marked especially low for ourbig opening sale.
CMDIT TIMMS CAN BE ARZANUP.

-

2lbs- 27c

A FULL SIZED Cotton and Cotton Felted
Mattress^worthh at least $10:95. $£* QC
for this sole ot only----------------------- D»OP

r

SLIPS

5on- tAkmg advantage of the cducauonaj facilities while there
Re­
turning lo their former home HaroId cngage&lt;i ;n fanning and stock
raUlng wllh
falher whl£h he
continued until his death. He was
elected director ot the Michigan
SUPERVISES PROJECT,
A former Michigan Stale College Mutual Windstorm Insurance Co.,
1
extension worker is supervising of Hastings, which position he also
Michigan's sole federal soil erosion hold at time of demise. He was also
an ambitious young man with pro­
“? *&gt;“ •*».»«&gt;
countv nrolcet which involves M 1 maintain a comfortable homeland

ROASTS

of OUR LINE of WELL MADE

ALL ESPECIALLY MARKED DOWN FOR THIS SALE!

going at only

Wall Fitting

PORK LOIN
WE ARE

&amp;
V Q

the right kind I

ALL BILK LINED

If you have been wanting a new dining
room suite, and felt that you could not
afford it, come in and chouse one during
our opening sale week at a price that you
can afford to pay.

A handsome 8-piccc
walnut suite, original-

Start right for a hoppy Spring.
Be as careful in selecting your
foundation garment oc you are
yaqr frock. You’ll find our
lingerie saleswomen an^ous
to help you plan exactly

m HarrL

DEATH OF
DEATH OF MBS. WILL OTIS.
HASTINGS RESIDENT.
Albert E. femur. 00. a former
Mrs. Will Oils, who luu u»ui ill
well known Hastings resident, died for a long time, died this Thursday
Friday night al Manistique, the morning at her home In Rutland.
body being brought here for burial. The funeral will bo held at the
The Butler family lived In this city residence on Sunday at 2:30 P. M.,
before moving to Mt. Pleasant. He the Rev. C. M Conklin officiating.
is survived by his wife, one son. Al­
bert. of Ann Arbor, and three PVTIHAN OFFICERS ENJOY
SOCIAL EVENING.
daughters. Mrs Howard Taflt of
Mrs. Earl R Boyes. Moat Excel­
Howard City and Irene and Rachel
the--Pythian
SUtera.
at home Funeral services were held lent
—- Chief
----- —of—
——at the Free Methodist church here| entertained her corps of officers
on Wednesday at 1:30 P M . the; very delightfully al her home on
Rev L- E Bodine officiating. Inter- West Stale St. Monday evening
ment in Riverside cemetery.
|wlth a St. Patrick dinner.
__

It won't cost much lo cover your kitchen with some o/ these handsome patterns

.
r

;.and
xseu:„fftmUy
o'usrwldcd

Sackrider li better known here as ।
Miss Ruth Ketcham
i d,ay afternoon from the Congraga__________ , , _______
[ tional church conducted by Rev.'
PASSING OF L L MILLER.
u R- Honderich. assisted by Rev.
Lester L Miller, aged 32. died Frl-1 Albert Dawe with commitment
day night at the home of his par- j service at Cherry Grove.
enU. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Miller of
‘The evidence of his life time acjrving Twp- after a long lUneas. His quaintances and frienda was mani-!
wife, two daughters. Joyce and tested by llwi l*rge attendance at
Jarlee. hU parents, five brothers and
services, among whom were Mr.
a sister survive. He was affiliated and Mrs. Henry Sunday, and Mr.
with lhe Freeport I. O. O. F. The j and Mrs. Hasel! Wolf, of Pleasant ■
Rev. Karl Keefer of Watervliet offl- Lakr. Ind., Mrt- K. A- Comer, of ,
elated at the funeral services held Coldwater. Mr. and Mrs. Howard I
on Monday al ten o'clock at the I Edgctt. of Battle creek. Mr. and
Miller home.
Mrs. Don Walton. Battle Creek. Mr. |
----------------- -----------------------| and Mrs. pearl Hartman, of Grand
TWO CARS COLLIDE.
Rapids. Wm. Hartman., of Bay City. I
■ A serious accident was narrowly and among his business associates
averted on Thursday afternoon on! were Walter 8. Burd. Ann Arbor,
M-43 at tlic real city limita when clalr O Thorpe, of Kalamazoo,
two cars came together. Don Fore- \ Chas. E Hughes. Prairieville. E. A.
man. who was driving a car owned Parker. Guy E Crook, of Hastings,
by Russell Smelker. was making a Henry Rogers. Delton; M. D- Young,
left hand tum into the Smelker Muskegon, M E. Cota, of Big Rap­
driveway when the auto and one Ids. Jerome Harmon, of Ludington,
driven by Jerry Andruscollided. • clalr O Stanley. Indian River, HarBolh cars were damaged and the -------------rteon Dodds,
"----------------------------of West Branch.
*- Robt.
men sutlered cuts and bruises but Beumer. Owosso. Fred R. Likins,
were not seriously injured.
Memphis. W. A. Bartlett. Merrill

FLOOR COVERINGS

A beautiful walnut finished eight-piece dining room suite, for­
merly priced at $69.00

jvnio. mITc lugll
League will

The junior Music

THE RIGILINGERI

Smoked Ham Ends

BUTTER

Miller Furniture Co.

MICHIGAN

»• 15c

।

NIGHT HAWKS.
Mr. end Mrs. Frank Newton en­
tertained the NW Hawks at their
last party for the mason in their
lovely country home on Friday,

» 34c

’-bd/^RKF'TELDPAUSCH

OHM EVENINGS FOR YOUR ACCOMMODATION

23c

Phone 2?7*’ UJo DpIi . .

'T(
MlM Ruth Farr and
Riley. After lhe usual.

PHONI MO

�THE HASTfftpg BANNER, THURSDAY, MARCH 19. 1836
horse*. 24 head cattle. 2 'hogs. 15'
J ton* alfalfa arid farm machinery..
joints. There Is a passage at lhe that it also confirms the prophecies
base of this pyramid which leads of Daniel and l»alah.
"
(Continued from page one»
Di hU book describing Ute Great
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
within to a stone casket, which .haa
1 Pyramid, which Mr. Davidson wrote
। wiU cry the «ata and Clifford Ham- j Twin girl* were bom on March
no lid and is evidently symbolical. j, in 1923. he asserted their that, ac­
mond is clerk. Bee lhe adv. for 15 to Mr. and Mr*. George Maurer,
Archeologlits and mathematicians cording to lhe symbolism of the
dale,
etc.
■
They
have
been named Jannel I
have made a study’of lhe Great Great Pyramid, the World war,
&lt; Continued from page one)
Katherine and Jean Elizabeth. Thl*
pyramid. Many are convinced that which closed In 1918. would be fol­
MRS. HARRY WATERS.
Imakes a family of eleven children
lowed by ten years of seeming
■•oh. It would be difficult, if it was built by divine direction, be­ great prosperity’, ending In a de­ lected. 8661.74.
for
Mr.
and
Mrs. Maurer.
Because of the death of her hus- 1
cause It* mathematical lines are so
Orangeville—County tax a&amp;sessed.
A daughter was bom to Mr. and
superior to those of other buildings pression which would last eight 82X0 Returned as uncollected. band. Mrs. Harry Waters will have Mrs. Keet Tobias. Route 5. on Mar.!
-------- an auction sale at . the farm locat­
equipment to erect such on tlic earth. It is six times as large years. This depression began
1928 with the'curtailment of credits.
«*•
ed a mile north and a quarter mile -­
;
The strange thing as lhe Empire. State building in which
started that year and result- ‘ Prairieville—County tax assessed, west of Cedar Creek, with Henry ; On March 15 a daughter was bom
New York city.
ed in the stock market crash of ’ 85.684. Returned as uncollected $!.- Flannery as auctioneer mid Fred to Mr- «nd Mrs. Philip Nichols.
The speaker said that David ।
lhe metric sy»tem. but can
1929.
According
to
Davidson
’
s
pre-1
034.10
Jones as clerk. Hie sale begins at. Hasting*. Route 1.
Davidson, a noted Scotch matheaicuon. U&gt;. drerrolon «U .nd U,U
BMUnd-Counl,- U»
tone o’clock. Included in the Itet are
Aho on Mar 15 a girl was bom to j
to English measurement of matician, ha* spent years In the yj,,.
; 83.234. Returned as uncollected. two horses. 6 cows, hog and sheep. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Boniface of 1
S. feet and yard*. The outer study of the Great Pyramid. He is
There was much Interest in the j
poultry, large quantity of feed in-1 Doster.
of the pyramid was built of convinced that its construction and
eluding hay. cornstalks, straw, 70 1 A son was bom to Mr. and Mr*,
led stone,
so wonderfully । symbolism were designed to express Archdeacons address, which was:
uncollected. bu. oats. 150 bu. com. also lot of I Philo Sheldon on March 16.
led and fitted together that arthe course ot human history. and given the closest attention by the; 86.027. Relumed
farm took, household goods and
This makes a total of six babies
rimum
of lhe thinnest writing paper ' that it has a special message to the members of the club.
, Woodland—County tax assessed. miscellaneous. See the adv. on an-1 bom at lhe hospital In three day*,
18.134. Returned as uncollected. other page for complete informa­
I 8941.67.
tion.
i Yankee Springs Township—Couni ty tax assessed. 81.813. Returned as
E. M. CADWALLADER.
uncollected. 8717J9.
in order to settle the estate of
Dependable
। The figures given above apply -----------the late W
... L. ______
Perrin.___________
E M- Cad-,
j only to the county tax. but the j waltader. Admr. will have an aucI same percentages of collection I tlon sale at the farm three-quarters 1
j would also apply lo the township ! of a mile southeast of Hickory Cor­
! and school taxes. While the per- ners. Harold Newkirk is the auc-1
' rentage ot county , taxes unpaid ts I tloneer. Included in the list are four
i nearly 17 per cent, it is considerably
j smaller than a year ago anil a good
’ deal less than half the uncollected j
| taxes for the years &gt;932-33.
'
I In fairness to Yankee Springs
I OrangevJlje. Johnstown. Prairieville
1 and Barry townships it should be
i explained ’ that there is In each of ,
| these townships a considerable
; number of lake cottages, or vacant1
• lots on resort lakes, which ore,
owned outside of the townships.
named. The owners of these properCONSISTENT SAVINGS EVERY DAY IN THE
I ties have been In the habit of payi Ing the tax to lhe county treasurer
WEEK. ►
Instead of to the township treas| urer. This brings lhe percentage of
PREVAILING LOW PRICES ON QUALITY FOODS.
, uncollected taxes In all those town­
ships, but
particularly Yankee
FOOD DISPLAYS THAT ARE EASY TO SEE AND
th—
wv«n p«r
Springs, much higher than it should
•pan right now. Vl«Jj
EASY TO BUY.
be and would be except for this re­
port property,

could not be

placed between

die [ English speaking world, lie holds I

irnmo

TAX DELINQUENCY
LESSTHISYHR

Auction Sales

You are cordially invited to
visit our booth at
the Fair
Pre-showing of new patterns
in Glassware, Silverware
anti Chinaware

B. -HODGES

Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday-Thursday- Friday- Saturday |

WATCH
McCALL’S

FAMILY
FOOD BUYER/

Jeweler

Hustings

SELECT THESE VALUES

lERYft

IM

IC-THOMAS STORES!

TIME AND STEPS.

T0MAT0ES“3

29c

WAX OR GREEN

D r A Al C
iD t
W CUT STRINCLESS

3 «•••■ 25c

ODESSA BRAND

rADkl
CUKN

WHOLE OBAIN .
GOLDEN BANTAM
FRANCO AMERICAN

SUCCOTASH SSTfiffi &amp;1 10c

SPAGHETTI

3 tL9 25c

MILD
WISCONSIN
FULL CREAM

CHEESE
MACARONI
DATES
PINEAPPLE

?1U 10c
3 cans 25c

19c
IT

LB.
OR
SPAGHETTI

3 LBS.

FRESH, GOLDEN
UNPITTED

DELICIOUS FAKCT
DCATMCC
YELLOW CLINGS
rtAvlTEj
SUc«d or HUv..

31c

FANCY
HAWAIIAN
CRUSHED
No. 2 CAN

16c

SNOWDRIFT
SHORTENING

TBIP01MT. FBESlt. CREAMY

QUART
JAR

SALAD DRESSING

27c

TALL
CAMB
OVEB 2500 CANS USED BY DIOKNE QUINTUPLETS.

3

CARNATION MILK

22c

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR Jl'd “
CORNED BEEF

can 17c

BBOADCAIT

CORNED BEEF HASH

3£n

58e

FREE MUFFIN TIN

$1.09

SWIFT'S

2 cans 29c

SWANSDOWN
Cake Flour, pkg.

Flavors—pkg.

25
6

BAKER'S CHOCOLATE—’/j lb. pkg.

4 f?
I

YELLOW GLOBE

ONIONS
APPLES

LARGE

5
5

FANCY
BALDWINS

9c
. 9c

lbs.
lbs

Acme DAIRY Feed
1«% PROTEIN l"n $1.28

20% PROTEIN K " $1.21

EGG NOODLES

pha’ni?

BAOLLO‘

14c

APPLE BUTTER

PEANUT BUTTER

24% PROTEIN 1“ “• $1.53

15c
QUALITY

PRIME CATCH 3 {.“j
MACKEREL
25c
SALMON PANCT BED SOCKEYE
25c
2 CANS 25c
TUNA FISH

OVALTINE

HEALTH DRINK

SEMINOLE TISSUE

CAm°E

59c

Ivory Soap 2 •■■■ 11c
CHIPSO KF 20c
p &amp; G Soaps K::'2ic

LUX Soap 3 »*»• 20c
LUX Flakes m 10c

4 rolls 25c

SPECIAL OFFER ON CANNON TOWELS—Oct Full D«Uil».

BA-BO

PORCELAIN

13C

NORTH STAR KIBAF‘
BLED DOC FOOD—3 lbs. &lt;-0

C. THOMAS STORES
1U WEST STATE STREET

PENNEY
«

PROMPT, COURTEOUS. HELPFUL SERVICE SAVES

PRltf

BEAN SPROUTS

Ho^rou

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

OBITUARY.
Curtis Theodore Marshall, the
oldest son of Samuel and Sophia (
Marshall, was bom In Maple Grove
March 17. 1875. and departed this
life after a brief Illness. March 10. ।
1936, at his home at the age of 60
years. It months and 22 days. On ।
March 22. 1899. he was united In .
marriage lo Freda Morgenthaler. To 1
this union three children were bom.
one daughter and two sons.
His
entire life all but four years was
spent In Maple Grove. His mother
and father preceded him in death.
He leaves a faithful, loving wife.,
one daughter, Mrs. Beulah Green 1
of Maple Grove, two sons. Clare of
Bellevue and Earl of Marshall, and '
a stepmother of Nashville: five
grandchildren: two brothers. Laurel
and Glenn of Maple Grove: one sisr-■— Jones
•---------- of
- » Battle .
• ter. Mrs. Edna
i Cre&amp;&gt;4wo uncles, eight nieces and
। four nephews, other relatives and a
I host of friends.
j Dearest Father is gone but not for­
gotten.
Never shall his memory fade.
1 Sweetest thoughts shall always llng-

I

MEN S HARD FINISH

MARATHON

DRESS
PANTS

HATS

OBITUARY.
Horace Hubbell, son of Levi and I
Mary Hubbell, was born in Irving
township. August 1. 1861. and passed
away at the home of his sister. Mrs.
Sidney Fificld. March 14. 1936. He
was married to Sabra McDonald in
1886 who passed away a year later, j
To this union was bom one daugh-1
ter. who passed away seven years |
ago. He leaves to mourn his loss j
two grandchildren:
four great-|
grandchildren; one brother. Cassius
Hubbell, of Rutland, one sister.
Dora Flfield, of Irving: besides
many other friends. The funeral
was held at the Wesleyan church
on Monday. Rev E L- Crocker of-1
ficin ting. Burial was made In the I
Irving cemetery.
OBITUARY.
James c. Hayes, aged 74.
Johnstown township, passed away at
his home on Saturday after an 111-

The Working Mass’s Choice!

XOC

Boys’ Action-Back

Sweaters

BLUES, GREYS AND

ALL FUR FELT . . . NEW

BROWNS

SPRING SHADES

Men’s ]. C. P. Work

SHIRTS
TheyII Wear

Featuring tha full shirred back,
to give plenty of room for action!
Brushed and unbrusbed lur-

Our Famous ]. C. P.

WORK SHIRTS

49c
Men’s OXFORDS;

Medium weight

Dressy . . . Serviceable

erta! Dresaahirt
styling!
Inter-

Boys like .'tn!

wing

tip

Balmoral

Steal

battens!

YANKEE SPRINGS.
Come lo Yankee Springs church
every Sunday at 2 o’clock and en­
joy a good Sunday school also
preaching ot 3 o’clock and hear H
good talk by Rev. R A. Houghton.
Yankee Springs school has a fine !
new piano. Mrs. Opal Houghton, our
teacher t» well pleased with it. She !
jays she ha* some fine singers.
Watch for her announcements.
Claud Willson is recovering from
lagrlppe.
The horse traders arc
glad Mr. Willson Is better, as It is
lonesome without him.
Mrs. R. W Johnson is entertain­
ing the fiu at this time.
Lyle Sager was at home with his
family Bunday.
The Yankee Springs project is
coming fine, but, Oh my. that su­
mac!
The prayer meeting last Sunday
evening at Mrs
well attended.

Boys’ Hard Wearing

Golf Hose
Priced to Sell Fast!

covert, »trongly

lincd collar I Two
pockets. Values!

s[&gt;u
y re gooa loosing,
the
icaable! All ovar
fancy pattern* In a variety of
■hade* and color*! Sm the*I

Columbus. Ohio, on Feb. 22. 1861.
son of Sam’ and Elizabeth Hayes.;
He had resided in Johnstown Twp.
for five years. Surviving are two
sons. Glen of Cadillac end Clifford
of Johnstown, a daughter. Mrs. Lil­
lie Miller of Boone, a sister. 11
grandchildren and other relatives.
Tlie funeral was held at the grave
In Bristol HUI cemetery on Wed­
nesday at ten A- MOBITL’ARY.
Sarah L.. daughter of William
and Louisa McCown, was bom
June 20. 1852. at Waterloo. Seneca
Co.. N Y . and died at the home
of her daughter. Mrs. Roy Oaks on
March 10. aged 83 yr*.. 8 ino*.. and
10 day*. She was married to Jacob
Burgdorff in 1873. his death oc­
curring 37 years ago. Surviving are
two daughters. Mrs. Minnie Mc­
Nutt and Mrs. Alice Oaks, and a
son. Orville E-. all of Rutland Twp..
also 24 grandchildren and 13 great­
grandchildren.

I They'll stand a maxfamnn of sav
I view! Fino quality combed cotI ton in solid color*I Sec them!

Popular Slipover Styles

«•

Around a grave where he Is lain.
,
A lot ot grief, a shock severe.
To part with one we loved so dear; I
Although our loss is great.
Well try not to complain:
But trust In Jesus lo meet again.

WORK SOCKS

$&lt;98

Full Fashioned! Rmgless!

Gaymode HOSE
Like a Breath

of

VOILE

59c

Stunning Floral Patterns!

pair

Spring!

Hollywood Printed.

Bilk and Acetate

PRINTS
69cy™&gt;

Ringless silk chiffons, dear and sheer and lovely,

and ringless semi-service weight, too, for those who
prefer it

Flawless and snag-resisting . . . they will

take plenty of wear and stretching.

In all the new

shades, including navy blue in chiffon.

8&gt;4*10^.

Chiffon - shearI Soft, baautlful
colon that an vat dyed I Smooth
finish that add* to the draping
qualities 139/40 inches wida.

Come To Merchant's Free Fair March 25, 26, 27, 28

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, MARCH U, ISM
Miss Ruth Farr visited In Grand

Social Events and Personal Mention
Roy Finstrom wu

home

from

Un. Bart DeVries visited in Kai-

RELATED HISTORY
OF THE CLARINET

L«wi&gt; Hine Waa Principal
vhlted relative* In Marshall. over
Speaker at Magicians'

Mr* Bruce Ritter at Lak* Odem

Mro. J. B- McElwain and Mias
Emily McElwain were in Grand
sister, Mia* Amalia Walter*.
Rapid* on Saturday.
Miss Leia Jordan and Mias
Mn. PYederick Parker Is visiting
Amelia WUlter* left today to spend Mr. and Mr*. Leon De Lu no of
a few days with friend* in Flint.
Grand Rapids thia week.
Mr. and Mr* James Bristol were
Mn Charles Gardner ha* been
visiting her steter. Mr*. Nell Fish,
Conklin of Battle creek on Sunday
of Bangor for the past two weeks.
Mn Thoa. Sullivan. Mr* F- W
Mrs. George Baulch and Miss
Mary McElwain spent yesterday Stebbins and Ml** Eileen Sullivan
were Grand Rapids visitors Satur­
(Wednesday) In Grand Rapids.
day.
•
Mrs. Maurice Pierson spent part
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ramsdell of
of the week tn Battle Creek with Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
her daughter. Mr*. Louis Williams. Mrs. Jessie Rlsbridger and Miss
Mltt Margaret Merrick of South Ethel Copenhaver.
Haven spent the week end with her
Misses Emma Chandler. Allren^
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Mer- laenhath. Barbara Wilcox and Jean
rick.
DeVries were home from Kalamatr.
—
- -L. —
. and.
Mr. and- -Mr*.
Fred'
Bush

Mr. and MM. Kaye Butters of
Donald Goucher waa home from
Detroit ware guest* of Mr. and Mr*.
Battle Creek over the week end.
Dr. D. D. Walton was In KalatnaMr*. Robert Moore haa aa a guest
soo last Wednesday attending a
funeral.
Mr* Jessie DeVoes visited in Mrs Bert Keener of Dunkirk, Ind.
Grand Rapid* on Saturday night I Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs.
and Sunday.
| oienn Den*more were Mr. and
Mrs. W. R. Cook and Richard Mra. Vincent Eggleston of Battle
— ——
a.fi.Mau
.___ .
Cook were Iin
Lansing
on Saturday
. on business.
Mr.famSy
and Mn
Mka Ellen Leonard, who la stof Donald McQuarrie
and family of Delton
guest*
______ were
_
_
“• 8 c-,penl the
of hu
molh*r- Mr*. Mary Burgess,
___________
end at home.
on Friday.
Clare Beach of Detroit is •pend­
_
Frank
F.
Oosch
relumed
on
ing the week here with hl* mother.
ira. Mary
' I Bunday from Lansing where he visMr*.
Mary Beach
Beach.
Mn Sarah Powell and daughter I “«J relative* and friend* for *ev...
.
.
—
.
.
o&gt;r«1 o—.ki
Druzllla are leaving Bunday for
Mr*. Warren Roush 1* In Kala- family of Battle Creek visited hi*
a trip to Chicago.
Mr. and Mr* Nelson Gardner of zoo thia week with her son and mother. Mrs. Emma E Bush on
Etest Lansing spent lhe week end wife. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Sunday, who has been very tick,
but is better at thl* writing.
and little ton.
here with relatives.
Those present from away to at­
Mr. and Mrs C. A- Seibert. Bob.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lewis visited
relatives at Godwin Heights. Grand Betty Lou. David and William Pox tend the funeral of Harry Waters
of
Kalamazoo
spent
Sunday
after
­
Rapids on Sunday.
ter
Waters and Mr. and Mrs Er­
Attorney Thoma* Johnson of noon with Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Fox.
Dr. and Mr*. C. P. Itethrop were nest Waters of Lake Odessa; Mr.
Laki* Odessa waa In the city on
and
Bunday guest* of Mr, and Mr*. and Mrs Ed Johnston. Mr
Tuesday on business.
——. The Mrs Nathan Norton. Mrs Ralph
John w.
C. Ketcham of oLansing.
Mr. and Mr*. Roy Cordes are wwmu
spending the day in Ann Arbor with latter are planning to return to Norton and Lora Norton of Grand
Hastings in April.
'Rapids; John Waters of Tustin;
Mr*. Phyllis Reynold*
Judge and Mrs. Stuart Clement Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Shattuck of
Mn. J. A. Wooton Is visiting her
daughter. Mi** Helen Wooton. in were tn Ionia Tuesday night al-[Alpena; Mr*. Amy Parker and
tending the
Elks’ St. Patrick s Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Denslow of
Detroit for a few weeks.
party,
aa guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mount Pleasant; Ralph Parker of
Miss Eleanor Thomas anti MIm
, Lansing;
Charles
Parker
of
Margaret Buchanan of Detroit Gordon clement of Belding
Mr*. George Green had as guests Blanchard; Mrs. purl Chaffee and
were guest* Saturday at the G. E.
al lhe Parker Hotel* Friday, her Mrs. Howard Johnson of Alma;
Goodyear home.
Mr. and Mr*. Archie .Wilson and sister-in-law. Mrs. B- V Wixom of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis. Mr.
Vivian of Kalamazoo were Sunday J South Bend. Ind., and Mrs Carl. and Mrs Sam oelb and Mis* Ruth
1 Gelb of Kalamazoo; Kenneth Reed
guests ot Mr. and Mrs Jos. Shulls : Spaulding of Three Rivers.
Mr. and Mn. Lee Warfield of and Mr. and Mrs Manson Newand Clarence Radford
Miss Doris Biddle, who has been Jackson and her parents. Mr. and ton of Richland; Mrs. Fred ClcMrs.
Dwight
Gramc*.
of
Carlton
i mence and Mr and Mrs
Victor
working in Battle Creek, spent part
ot last week here and 1* now in . were guest* of Mr. and Mrs. John clemence of Climax and Mr. and
Hoevenalr on Sunday night.
&gt; Mrs. Lester Laird of Battle Creek.
Grand Rapids for a few days.

WHAT? A SALE?
Not By A Long Shot!
Just a few items ot prices you can afford to poy. Try them
and be convinced that they are the best that money can buy..
Then come to our Ic Sale and buy any TWO articles at the
price of ONE plus One Cent. Remember, the Biggest One
Cent Salo ever held in Barry County is only a few days off.
The REXALL 1c SALE—Watch for hand bills and Radio for
THE "MAGIC" DAILY SPECIALS !
1 pint Rubbing Alcohol--------------- 14c
100 Hobart’s Aspirins-------- - -------- 16c
1 pint Haskill’s Milk of Magnesia, 17c
1 pound Hall's Baby Talcum_____ 17c
$1.00 Cod Liver Oil Tablets_____ 59c
50c Sodium Phosphate_________ 27c
50c Analgesic Balm--------------------- 27c
25c Corn'Solvent_______________ 14c
50c Cough Syrup_______________ 27c
$1.00 Syrup of Hypophosphites y__59c
50c Kidney Pills________________ 27c
25c Tooth Paste________________ 14c
27c
1 pint Almond Hand Cream
25c Shaving Cream
14c
25c Shaving Lotion_____________ 14c
50c Jonteel Cleansing Cream___ 27c
50c Jonteel Face Powder________ 27c
Martel's Bay Rum, 12 ox._______ 15c
25c Nasal Jelly ....................
14c
25c Glycerine.and Rose Water__ 14c
1 inch by 5 yards Adhesive Tape ..14c

Mis* Beatrice Giddings of Battle
Creek and Mis* Katherine Giddings
and friend. Mis* Edith Lehman, of
Holt visited Mr. and Mrs. Guy Olddings over the week end.
Mrs Mary Mill* of Middleville
spent the day with Mrs. Miranda
Sisson and Mrs
Ida Palmatlcr
Tuesday. Mr. and Mr*. Matt Bed­
ford called for her that night and
they returned to their home near'
Middleville.
Clarence Woodward has gone to
Kittery Point. Maine, where he will
be In the navy yard. He previously
served 13 years In the navy. Mrs
Woodard (Helen
Bishop&gt;
and
daughter will join him al Kittery.
Point in a few weeks
Mr. and Mr*. Robert W. Cook
were in South Haven last Wednes­
day attending the funeral of John
fragler. The Rev. August Nagler. a
frother, from Evart accompanied
Mr. and Mrs. Cook home, going
from here to Freeport for a visit.
' Mrs. Earl Tripp of Jackson, who
was called here to attend the fu­
neral of Harrison Woodruff, was the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Shultz
and Clarence Radford on Wednes­
day.
Mrs. Harold Radford has re­
turned from Detroit when* she was
called by lhe illncfe of Mrs. Roy
Damard (Hazel Radford&gt;. who re­
cently underwent an operation.
Mrs Darnard is making a fine re­
covery.
ENTERTAIN AT SUPPER.
Dr. and Mr*. Frederick H- Tay­
lor entertained ten guest* at sup- per on Sunday evening at their
home on South Jefferson Jjt. The
tables. at each Of which three were
vested, were arranged cabaret style,
with a small lamp on each table.
A social time followed, the evening
being a very enjoyable one
PLEDGED TO PHI
SIGMA RHO AT W- S. T. C.
William. Fox ha* been honored by
being pledged to Phi Sigma Rho
at Wt S. T. G- at Kalamazoo. Con­
gratulations are extended.

Remember, we hove our Complete Line of 1936
Well Papers in stock, priced right, and are willing

to show you. Compare our prices with others.
Window Shades and Paint—DeVoo'a—quality

These New Spring
Hots are tha topi!
Brilliant new silk* in check*
and stripes.
Hand - sewn
Poplin* and Twills—

50*75&lt;t1’°
S&lt;&gt;I, Pari , Fin, Fur Fell,
. . . Tyoleana and Light
Weight Felts—
$g.5° 5J.5O $5.00

Spring Suite

Shirts

LEARN A BUSINESS THAT
KNOWS NO SEASONS
Low Winter Rate» Now in Effect
-prepare for a bualnos carter that will mean FINANCIAL

LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE
Meet th* return of pro-parity with a I.A.MAH REGISTERED DtPIX)MA.
Under lhe famous t.AMAll HVHTKM you are avaured &lt;&gt;( the vary *&gt;••»
training pnaalbla. lllxhly EFFICIENT IN-tTHl’CTORg. MODERN EQVtC-

Complete Course
Six Months
Now...................
To Pay
ONLY $2 STARTS YOU

Bold over­
button-down collars, full
shrunk and fast colors—

$1 .29 $ j .65 $&lt;| .95

The swing is lo Sportswear
. . . New homespun! and
tweeds, gusaet and ahirrad
backs, single and double

nn the read to enrreee. Invest now In a rrefeealon lliat will Insure
■ teadr poollton and bclns you unlimited rtnaneial return*.

breasted models. Spruce Bp
you? wardrobe with theta
sleeves, half helix ’ spring suite—

Sweaters of Mohair
Raglan

BEND ATTACHED COUPON FOR FREE BOOKLET.

*1350 -W*

ADDRESS

LaMAR BEAUTY ACADEMY

SPARTON

’Ws00

Visit our Booth and sse
throe Spring style*.

T. S. BAIRD’S
Clothing and Shoes for Men and Boys

HASTINGS

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want

-

SPECIAL

SPARTON

Friday - Saturday, Mar. 20- &gt;1

"HARMONIZE HAIR with HAT
For Easter. Fashion demand* that your cciffure meet lhe style of
your millinery, aa well as your Individual personality. . . . Let 's

BROWN
SUGAR

SUGA.

4^ 23c

your Individual need*.
that lovely

European at
Realistic
$150
Permanent
“

This New DcLuxc Spartan
lo

be given aiwpy

FREE

The label on this wave says
M. but Hollywood wante
you to have an EASTER
SPECIAL—a true push-up
wave at this efficient beau­
ty shop. Phone now and
ask about it.

HAIR STYLE
FOR EASTER!

CORN, No. 2 Size

Coris — Semi-Swirly—

Tailored Necklines.
The Easter Coiffure will
have lailor-fllted necklines,
curls piled on lop or In the
back — all with upward
sweep. A* long as you have
curls they may be sculp­
tured. fluffy, rolled or clus­
tered.

April 25th al 9:00 I’. M..
Tickets given with every 50c

ket and Food Caller. Come
in today, sec the New Spat­

THE REXALL DRUGGISTS
GOODS DELIVERED
HASTINGS—PHONE 2131

New Sp

WIN A

Son's und Frldpuusch Mar­

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

Bunday school laat Tuesday eve­
Lewis Hine, director of instru­
ment*! music in the Hastings ning. about thirty being present. All
enjoyed the pot luck supper and the
schools and the newly elected head
social hour which followed the busiof the city band, representing the
Musicians Union and the Music. Mis* Ruth Farr were in cliarge of
Teachers club of Battle Creek,: the entertainment.
Mrs J. M.
addressed the teachers and pro­
‘ Townsend will entertain tn April.
fessional musicians of Battle Creek, .
Monday evening at a banquet which i
NEW IDEA CLUB.
was held in the Y. M. C. A. dining
On Wednesday evening, March
room.
rooln
11. Mrs James Silsbee and Mr*.
Mr Hine, the principal speaker of Fred Palmer very plaaaantly entee­
the evening, gave an address on the tetned the New Idea Club. A lovely
history of the ctertnet. using old dinner was served at 6:30. The Uinstruments to Illustrate the lecture, ble was very attractive wUh colon
The speaker demonstrated
the in keeping with the 8t. Patrick aeaniethod and technique of clarinet son. and spring flowers. Dinner1
playing concluding with two solo*, was followed by a short businass
Polka Brilliante" by Strong and meeting and -Monopoly.’

See You at tha
FAIR!
March 25 to 28

purdiasc al John Bulling k.

4 DAYS ONLY, MARCH 25,26, 27, 28

BANNER CLASS.

Banquet

ranej Backs and, of course,
all wool—

The above items represent only a few of the
many bargains we will have at this sale. Come in
and let ua ahow you the Biggest Savings in Drug
Items that you have had the opportunity to buy
in many a day. Fill up your medicine cabinet now.

Protomer Robert Hartman of tha
University of Wisconsin aecompan-

the week end.

Bcrgamonf Oil
S7.SQ Oil ie
Perm’nt •» Cmp.

Announcing lhe
ELECTRO MANI­
CURE MACHINE
The only one in Has­
tings. Electric Mani­
cure* are gentle and

BUTTER, Middleville
PEPPER, Regular 10c Box
GAUZE TOILET TISSUE

PEAS, Fine Quality
ORDER YOUR MEATS FROM US

Perm'nt I

50'

Ion and receive a Free

Fincif Castile Shampoo, and Finger Wave ____

-50c

Ticket.

Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value, for

65c

(For Dry Hair and Dandruff.)

JOHN BULLING
&amp; SON

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE

Western Union Bldj:.

ill WEST STATE ST.
PHONE U&gt;l
MARGUERITE TEW and MAKGAJUT DAHLKE

Caaa

Vacation Land Coffee n^wn.^. u. 17&lt;

THE FAMOUS
GLO-TONE

3

BUSS COFFEE

HINMi

NOT A bCHOOL-All Experienced Licensed Operated

HASTINGS

■M

�IURANCE
AUTO . FIRE

WANTS

Mill_________
I l IK KAlJ&gt;HL-4

WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON K. McELWAIN
PMne B44. Natl. Bank Bldg,

.* ‘ w7kJL°%MS!aa«K
______________

, THE CHURCHES

WEST, McLAGLAN SCORE
IN “KLONDIKE ANNIE’

The Hasting* Banner

FOR MALE—Vu.nuly ot timothy, rioter
auJ alfalfa hay TImmu. - 74.1—Fia.
FOR HALE Cltl'AP—Good OeLaraf rream
........... Ihi.i..re i-JU H Utekiean
Ate______ '
3 10

through a series of amusing and ex­
citing situations wlti&gt; the same
skeptical twinkle In her eye and
the tradition "CTnup'n see me"—or
its equivalent—■on her Una.
Mae U again a gay and ornamen­
tal gal of the "90s and Victor Mc-

CARDS of THANKS

Our Service
T. PROTECT You Cen.ta.tl,
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly

CAltll OF THANKS—We -inr. rely
w«li n. ihauk our dear ft lend* and
neiyliLur, fur lheir many n|« of K.udura.

mer” is iter principal foil, as com­
mander of a steamship to which

aer.l durini the lllneaa
dear huebaud. father
the Cedar ( trek 1 -rne^r.* C.re'ie. ' Haa'
tin*! Chapter .Xu 7 O K N„ Mr. Leon• rd tor b.r »»Ci

CIT12ENS MUTUA L
Fire Insurance Co .

prisoner. Another passenger on lhe
boat la a girl missionary, who wins
Moe's respect and friendship. When
the girl dteS at- sea. Mac is griefstricken. but even in death the girl
comes to her aid. The complica­
tion* Hint arise, bring the film to on
exciting and amusing climax.

the beautifdl Hiuaie and alt who tent io
many h.iri» flower-. Tony kindlier, &gt;•
deeply appreciated and will never be for
rotten.
WsteA.
Mr. and Mr. Fred Jirnea
and family.
Mr and Mr. LeRor Hamiliati.
Mr and Mr., Paul Waters.

GEO. M. NEWTON

the scene of Alaskan mining camps
and lusty miners when ’ Klondike

C.iRD OF THANKS—We wlife to
Ihtnk &lt;mr kind friend, and relative. tor
their a--i«t*nee thy I. 0 &lt;&gt; F. Rebek­
ah.. Welcotn, Gratiae and all »ho cent
flower*. to Iter. Karl Keefer for bi. km.i
and roiufortiiK word., alto Charier Leon­
ard Mr J.ie kuidnc... d urine the k--. t-f
our luted one. I.e-tef Miller.
Me. i dt.a Miller.
-l..r.-e and Jarlee.
Mr. and Mr. P. A. Millet.
Mr and Mr. Nnruian Miller.
Maida and Wanda.
Ralph Miller and lleta.
Ctaaeure Miller.
Geor.e Miller.
Glenn Miller,
Meriurtti. and Doreen Miller.

Greve Cyritt

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wheeler of
Battle Creek spent the week end
with "Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ickes.
The Aid Society, which was en­
tertained by Mrs. Lon Campbell and
Mrs. .Sarah Ickes, was well atlcnd-

place several years ago. was taken
to Pennock hospital in a very seri­
ous condition following a heart at-

CARD OF TH INKS—We wi.b In
thank all tuidhl.i. * and fnrjid*. Charlie
I-eunard. the Re. June.. Mr and Mr*.
Walter Fillir.ah.m Mr and Mr- Han.1.1
l-InrrlH-e hltrkfud
Chri-ti.n...i.
M
and all ■■rh.-r- al ■ 3**tated In &gt;nr «...
ilurlnr lhe eiekn «« and -lealh -f oir

JERRY ANDRUS

,
)
(
\
/

Jutt Arrived With Another

FOREIGN
IN ADI

Spending.

A. F 1
Mr. and
Mr. am
Mr. am
Mr"°amJ

' Mr*" Alrah Rrnliam
Mr. Geo pallner.
Mr- Leo Hurt.in
auybter
Mr. Frank lleuham
anchter.,
»r“«n Mr. Herl Heidmm
on..

LOAD OF HORSES
AFMAN &amp; JACKSON
4 mile* west and 2 mile* south

;
1
1

MRS. EUGENE McMURRAY
HAS SOLD HER PROPERTY
N. Michigan Ave, to David
The deal was made through

fair. «»i « mil. iw arapes-e ue»i
Green Si.
■■ r woman f&lt;*r hi&gt;u«ework
-Me.d, Job f,reetairl telephone ll&gt;.
tine.. Kuille 2 Mrs. Ed. Wait, a n»

wasted— uirt

,.

1
1
|

Mr-. Frieda Mar-1 all
Mr ami Mr*. Wu rib Gr
ai.J Mar-hail.
Mr and Mr«. &lt; la r Mar hall
tnd fatnllr
Earl Mar-hsll

CARD OP THANKS—W.

Wi*h

tn

AM BUYING WOOL
Again This Season
HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID

WILL TOBIAS
Hastings, Route 4

Phone 74

“AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS

and the LINCOLN ZEPHYR!

SALE OF HORSES
PORTLAND
SATURDAY. MARCH 21
8 Months Time
JOHNSON &amp; JARVIS

While you are in town for the Hastings Commercial Club Fair stop
in at the Universal Garage and register your name and address and
participate in the drawings for lhe three CASH PRIZES that will be
given away Twice Every Day during the four days of lhe Ft
Drawings will take place al 5 and 9 P. M. One registration gives you
twenty-four chances to win one of these prizes.

FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Saoolh Rubbar Back Pad.
No Port* To Wear Clothing

WANTED
NEW

'—OLD

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

at FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET. Phone 2616
ADJUSTABLE CENTER

GRANGE PROGRAMS

A complete line of Ford V-8’s will be on display in lhe Showroom,
with the LINCOLN ZEPHYR.

FOOD CENTER 2609

Sponge Rubber Pads

No Leg Strap*

The Prescription Drug Store

SPECIAL

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

Get your car

tuned up fat
summer driving by taking ad­

Farmer*, Attention!

vantage of the following
SPECIALS:—

Dead Stock Removed!

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2G37

Hasting*

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
EVERY SATURDAY

The M. P. Ladles' Aid meets with
Mrs. Nealle Campbell of Gull lake
on Thursday, the 25th. for dinner.
The road over by Leon Benedict's
L* again open for travel after belngfilled with snow the greater part of

HASTINGS MARKETS

Miss Gladys Calms of the Durfee
district spent the week end with her
sister. Mm. Lloyd Owen.
John Gurd and family
visited
Will Shriber and family of Hasting'.
, Sunday. We arc sorry to hear that
Will had his arm broken last week.
Mm. Bernice Campbell and dnugh1 ter of Hastings visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wertman. re­
: cenlly.
Mrs. Wayne Benton was a Grand
Rapids visitor Saturday afternoon
Junior Boulard was given a birth­
day lilrprlX* Friday evening by
twenty of his friends, a lovely
lunch was served and all had a jolly

Alice Nash has completed her
work at Clare porritts and is now

Michigan Livestock Exchange
HASTINGS BRANCH

TANNER DISTRICT.
: .visitors at Wayne Benton's.
i
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fox ------Sincere
------------------sympathy
,------- „
Ls extended
twined with a birthday dinner Sun- Mr. and Mm. Elmer Hathaway In
day.
j
aU —
-«•
of their children being the loss of their home by fire last
present In honor of Ralph** birth-

Check fan belt

Clean the Sludge Out of Your
Motor Before If a Too Late!

Tighten oil hose
tions

We have recently Installed an In­
ternal Motor Cleaner ... the only
machine that thoroughly cleans mo­
tors INSIDE. This remarkable m\-

Chcck trammisiion
differential

and

• Check battery
• Check tire*

Removes all road grit, carbon and
sludge from the crankcase.
Give* your motor new Life and pep.
Saves costly repair bill*.

Thia offer good only March
COME OUT. and you'll be amazed
at the amount of dirt it gets out
of your motor. Come in and sec it
operate.

20 to April 20. 1936

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
HASTINGS, MICH.

PHONE 2121

�Thursday, March 19, 1936

Barry Bypaths
By JANE CAMERON

THE HASTINGS BANNER
him to discuss. Prof. LaVot always
presents a very interesting discus­
sion on sheep problems, he is an
authority on sheep parasite and dis­
ease. He lias been hi Barry coun­
ty several time*..over the past five
years for meetings with sheep
breeders. Breeders are always glad
to welcome Prof. LaVoi bock be­
STANLEY
POWELL
WILL
___
cause of hi* knowledge of their
TALK ON STATE WOOL
problems.
County Agent Foster invites all
POOL QUESTION
sheep breeders in the county to at­
tend this double header meeting at
ANOTHER SPEAKER
the court house on Friday after­
noon beginning at 1:90.o'clock.

SPRING CONCERT AT
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

SHEEP BREEOfRS
MEET FRIDAY

Fine Program Outlined for
Sunday Evening,

COMMEND CARE GIVEN

I

AT OUR COUNTY HOME

Lakeview.
i Eastern.

High School Netos

Lansing

and

Ulnnmpt'

i

State Welfare Dept. Stresses
Need of Better Protection |

Auegan
.

It will be a welcome relief to pu-

ipils and teachers alike, no doubt.
in the extempore speaking con- whtn
murioU
ut

Ham Ranzcm,
test held last Friday morning In finally installed in the new soundOn February 3. President Roose­
March 22nd
Against Fire
1 High school
assembly. Donald Proof quarters on the balcony.
velt formed a federation to be
Tills Sunday evening at
The state welfare department on Doxey was awarded first place with «ucb “
called North American Wild Life
music 1* enjoyodin
Thursday of last week gave out in­
Conference, the purpose being lo o’clock an unusual and Interesting I
formation about county Infirmaries HU
«,
‘ protect forests, birds and gome. The program of spring-time melodies,
that was not pleasant reading. In the Politician.; Robert Henney was which seem to be an essential fore­
presidential
message
concluded. songs, dramatization* and colorful
I nearly all of them, the fire hazard , second will* "White Coal In Amerl- runner of perfection are almost too
"There has been a lack of full and readings will be given by a group ot*
'
is
very
great.
It
is
almost
criminal
.
ca."
Five
members
of the faculty | much to be endured by ordinary Bishops Candlestick*''
complete public realization of our
I to keep helpless old people in build- . were Judges of lhe event.
Victor Hugo’s famous
| students who really must study.
wild life plight, the urgency of it. thirty performers tn costume in the
IS PROF. D. LA VOI
। ings that are nothing but fire traps.
_______
and the_____
many
_______
social____
and_ economic
_____ —. auditorium of lhe First Presbyter­
|i Barry county ~
is TU
classed
with three I On Saturday. March 28. the fifth
ATTEND JERSEY
-----------------------Mr. Becker too is very glad to ing tha
values that wild life ha* to our peo- tan church. The back ground of
------ ?
PARISH SHOW MAR. 10.
‘^‘mlles a* giving proper con­
pic. Our present wild life situation, the stage will represent a "Castle His Subject Pertains to the
annual speech dinner will be held
‘he musicians evacuate their of Donald Weaver. Benjamin
A delegation of Barry county '‘deration and good care to lhe in­
is more than a local one. It Is na- of Dreams," and colored lights will
Proper Flock Manage­
present abode, ffor
he ™
has great well. Edna Schulte, Barbara
— tc
Jersey breeder* attended lhe an- 1 "?tM of ,u county home. Anyone at the High school, invitations are
tlonal and international.” Canadian ' flood each number,
and Donald Doxey.
being
sent
to
all
Hastings
declaimP
lans
tor
Room
11.
It
will
be
conment
Practices
nual meeting of the
P*yi “ ■vlilt w111
impressed
--------- num
mcv.ui,
me Southwest
ovumwcsi
and Mexican representatives and I
Program.
era. debaters, orators and extempore verted Into a speech room with a
.—
--------.
1 Barry county sheep breeders will —
Michigan Jersey
Parish
show
at.1 with the kindness and care shown 1 speakers of the post nine years. The little stage and all the trimmings,
*5?2ni5US?U.“
Bern,—The Spirit
SERIES PROVES HELPFUL.
by Mr. T_.
and -----Mrs.CAbbey.
01 meet
ravti on
un Friday.
rriuaj. March
Marcn 20.
ZU. al
at 1:30 Kalamazoo
n.«iainawu on
uu March
mmicii 10.
iu. The
jne anHl- i lhe Inmates
.
—
members of thlsJyear's debate squad Of course, all these things will not
were present for a five-day meet-1 gpflng.
About 175 attended Ute three
P. M. at the court house for their nual meeting elects officers for the'';
supervisors should.,
: and those whd Dartlclpated-in the ' ** done al onct' but he hopes to
annual
discussion
of
the
wool
Parish
Show
District
for
the
com“
soon
as
they
rea
,0,
‘
“
b,
y
can
P
ut
• • • j Three-part Round—Summer
1* 1__
annual
discussion
of
....
NW
,
--------——..... w...- in a xnrlnrfer cvumu
final contest* will also be Invited. ',cU 10 “ y™ by year until It flnal......
__
....
_
.
.
..
___
.
—
...
.
..
in
a
sprinkler
system
there
so
as
to
We all ought to read "Birds of Coming.
। marketing situation. County Agri- &gt;ng year. Ivy Smith of Kalamazoo
Dinner will be served at 6:30 fol- &gt;&gt;' approaches as near as possible Middleville. Mar. 11 al Delton and
“
■.Illingworth" asaln
Poem-""
’ *—J Beautiful.
....
cultural
Foster siaies
slates mat
that was elected president of the Asso- reduce the fire hazard to the. lowest lowed by a short program, at which ,,lls ideal.
—The Izgend
cuuutui Agent rosier
Killingworth"
again and keen
keep nur
our '1 Poem
possible limits. That will cost some
minds open to the fact that sclen- jI Duet—Tender Is the Night.
|onc of the most Interesting meci- elation, and Stanley Thorpe of
■ lime awards will be presented to.f
— - Harry Combe. Lockhead. Ohio,
Ings in years Is planned.
Saranac was elected secretary­ money, but we had better pay it I nine debaters for state league par­
lists consider an "Insect age” rap- • Reading—The Children's Hour.
The senior panels for the annual gave Interesting talks on fertilisers
and play safe.
।------ ------------- — —
idly developing. Anyone who grows
y. have been sent in to the engraving
Chorus—The Little News Birds, i Stanley Powell, representative of treasurer.
The past few years have shown' ticioation
llc*P®t,on and to
lo the
lhe &lt;lwlaimr-r&lt;
declaimcrs. &gt;&gt;
exThe Association sponsors lhe an­ many changes in fortune which in
the Slate Wbol Pool and prominent
anything Is Increasingly aware of
speakers and orators of company in Chicago. The staff for
Dramatized
Song
—
In
the
Black
­
nual
Jersey
Parish'
show
generally
|
farmer
near
Ionia,
will
discuss
the
the constant fight against Inject*,
a few years, may even bring some 'lhls yc,r'
,H
* Fortnight annual -&lt;&gt;
’ »- chosen
- feeding poultry and dairy caUte.
the
will.be
i wool market and lhe wool outlook held in August, it was voted to hold
both in the plant and animal king- 'smith's Shop.
some time next week.
• • •
I for the coming year, tout year's the show at Wayland this year In people now regarded as well-to-do ‘
doms. our World war veterans will
Reading—At Heaven's Gate.
There is a possibility that a re‘ cooperative wool pool of Michigan connection with lheir field-day and to the county home. We cannot tell
tell you to Include human*, too.
Solo—Norwegian Sea Bong..
when
or
where
misfortune
may
gl°nal
tennis
tournament
will
be
Plan*
and
preparation*
for
the
ricultural
adjustment
program,
Last summer we found a new va­
Reading in costume—The |Skip- । farmers was very successful from home-coming celebration.
Every county in the district, of strike. We would all feel belter if!held her« May 23. Mr. Taylor and , annual J—Hop to be held the eve- which comes under tlw heading of
____
I a price standpoint and more than
riety of bug which the kids de- peris
|
Daughter.
the COUntv
a-rrn 1 MT
Anril 24 are well iinrlxr
Mr.. Becker have written letters Of
of nlmr
ning of April
under wav
way "Soil conservation." Bi urged tha
county home bulldlncru
buildings were
Male Trio—Hiawatha's made up for the bad results from which there are seven, sends nine
scribed a* "stream-lined." Anyway,
Indian
Invitation to several schools. The at Hastings High. The following farmers to study the plan carefully
j the 1934 wool pool. Records of or ten head of their best Jerseys to made as safe from fire as possible.
he was promptly a corpse.
'
Wooing.
Hasting* team will have seven ex- committees and committee-chair- before making lheir deetelon* conDramatic Number—The Skeleton i enough years, covering the cooper­ the show. This makes a very high
What ever happened lo all the
ative wool pool, are now on hand to grade of good Jerseys at the annual Yo-Yo’s? Fpds change aa quickly perlenced players back this year men have been appointed: InvltaA man in Kalamazoo county re-!ln Armor.
and matches are already being lions. Margaret Plngleton; Recepmeeting.
prove,
without
doubt,
that
on
the
cently tried to see how much he | Oriental Symphony—The Box of
and completely as the style of wom­ scheduled with Kalamazoo central., tion. Darrell Aldrich; Program, county than anything previously
average it pays to pool wool.
Barry county was represented at en's hats.
could make a hog weigh. At butch- i Alabaster.
£.
'
Battle Creek central. Battle Creek Wilma Royer; Upstairs Guest*.
Whether you Intend to pool or not the annual meeting by Glen Ingram
ering, the 22-month* old farrow Reading—The Bride.
weighed 1,050 pound* after being
Poetic Dialog—Eginhard and the you will be Interested In Mr. and Roy Preston of Hastings. Dr. F.
Powell's market and outlook talk, Bt Shaw and Howard Smith of
bled and scraped. He was fed all the I LovriY Princess Emma.
He Is an interesting speaker and Middleville.
Harold
J.
Foster.
whole milk he would eat and one-1 Tenor Solo—The Rose,
half bushel of corn for dessert, nnd ' Tableau—The
Courtship
of hl* part of the meeting is weU County Agricultural Agent and
worth your time.
John Foster, county Association cow
measured 8 feet 2 inches In length | M*,ea Standish.
To Whom Thtt Advertisement Moy Concent
Prof. Delmar LaVoi of Michigan tester, were also in attendance.
and 0 feet 4 inches around the
al“ve
Scene—The
Quadroon
State College, Animal Husbandry
equator. At »8.75 per hundred, the j Gfrl.
APPROVED BEER LICENSES.
prevailing price then, he would
Men’s Chorus—Stars of lhe sum- Dept, will also appear on the afterThe
council
at
their
meeting
Sat
­
l noon program of the county sheep
have brought 890.13 on lhe market. mer Night.
Quite an expensive pork barrel.
' Convent Scene—The Abbess a*- breeders meeting. Prof. LaVoi will urday night approved the licenses
talk on flock management practices of lhe following to sell beer: A.
• • • ' trid.
ONLY 2*6 MONTHS AWAY
that are timely with thl* season of Meyers. A. Bpiris. Pred Wagner.
Song
—
God
Bless
You.
Dear.
A neighbor tell* us of planting
lhe year. He will summarize meth­ Frank Becker. Levi Mead, the Trio
Poem—Excelsior.
twelve acre* of red kidney beans
ods used in the Wolverine Lamb Cafe. Mrs. Louise Ducker. and
Lullaby
—
a
Cradle
Song
(Ger
­
the last of June last year and cul­
Feeding contest of 1935 and other George R. Green. These are all re­
tivating them once, and he sold man).
Action Number—Tale
the subject* those present may want newals.
them for over IMO In the fall. He
advocate* late planting u being a Spanish Jew.
Final Chorus, 21 voices—Till the
wecd-cllmlnatlng factor. The farm­
er sure is getting a few breaks at Shadows Go.
A sliver offering will be taken to
BEST OF MATERIALS, the BEST WORKMANSHIP, at the
last, what with the Increased prices
Everybody cor­
on marketable product* and the} defray expenses.
We with to express our thanks*to our customers
decrease In taxes. If someone could dially invited.

Z?28

DECORATION DAY

MONUMENTS

only nnd a direct route from the
producer to the consumer, there hand* dirty?" "I was patting the
would be sale for all our produce engine," was the answer.
and no bread lines, it is ghastly
for people to be hungry In such a
A. well-known authority on ani­
land of plenty.
mals estimates the speed of the
horse at 34 miles per hour, the
A
Chinese
proverb — Man prong-homed antelope at 32 miles
stumble* over molehills, never over per hour, the greyhound (not the
mountains.
buses) at 30 miles per hour, the
jackrabbit at 28 miles an hour (he
Last summer our second boy. has free-wheeling Is why), and the
Bud. saw a Tarzan play and lived American grey wolf al 20 miles an
In a hickory tree for the next week. hour. They are averages, a little
He occasionally sounded the love boy who ate up the company's des­
call, but he didn't have any luck. sert can get un qylte a speed, too.
I guess lhe girls didn't like'the idea We know.
of spending one of our Michigan
winters In a tree. Anyway, it sound­
Now 13 the time to get out the
ed like an Indian chief about to piece bag and make the tots their
scalp twenty of our Pilgrim fathers. sun suits, our favorite way is to
The chickens all cackled and once make lhe brief bottom part out of
a team of horses started lo run print* or plain colors and make a
away. He came down three lltn&gt;« a bunny face to cover the abdomen
day for food, refusing to cat hick­
and the long ears go up to the
ory nuts as we suggested. We're: shoulders and button onto the back
surely glad that's over with.
straps, sew bunny's chin to the
bottom part, which should be a
The best mothcr-ln-law gag: A print If the bunny head 1* plain
man came to work with perfectly and plain if the bunny head Is un­
filthy hands. His boss asked him bleached. Bind bunny head with
where he got his hands so dirty. He corresponding
_____ ,_____ .„ ____
color tape and wula
work,
•aid, "I've been seeing my mother- eye*, nose and mouth and whiskers,
in-law off al the train." The bos* For the bigger girls a gym suit patsaid. "Why would that make your tern is
13 fine.

for their fine patronage during the cold weather.

Our Business was established in 1901
tee—Still Going Strong.

Due to circumstances over which we have no con-

Appointments Solicited—No Obligation to Bay

trol, it wot not always possible to get the high

grade of coal we usually carry? -However, we have
endeavored to supply the demand with the best

MONUMENT WORKS

HASTINGS

IRONSIDE BROS., Proprt.

Telephon. 2497

coal we could obtain under the circumstances. Wo

again have our regular grades of coal in stock,
which are the highest type of fuel on which we

have built our reputation.

WATCH OUR AD FOR SUMMER PRICES.
'
I
!
j

FORREST JOHNSON
COAL AND COKE
Hostings

Phone 2370

Remo*14’1’
•

Don’t Neglect Those

1HIUUI

This

or your LAYING

DEMAND

HENS with infer!-

SQUARE Toes

or Feeds!

Patternsfor daytime
The Beil w Cheapest
MERMASH
16%

on

'b

nut b°rt'e

lt\onot

Fedet

p(og'ortV '

and evening occasions

USE
PATENT LEATHER

MERMASH 16%

LEADS FOR

Stop

SPRING
rua iu&gt;uu auuK u. u.

SprWB“*

cP

BABY CHICKS!

MERMASH 18%

■'''Onoo^'°;&gt;con^toc9e(
needJ°d &lt;or so

Over 30 Styles
to Choose From

STYLES

Let us figure with you on your

PRICED LOW

GARDEN SEED ORDER

’1.98
52.48
’2.98

We have a full fine of BULK
GARDEN SEEDS.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES . Inc.
Hastings, Mich.

Phono 2118

Shoes form an essential part of
every costume, especially for
spring. Your choice of matching
and contrasting color combina­
tions in all new styles ... to go

Co^6 '
_e

nOS'"°
»e
P°
. es'°'e

with any outfit

Hastings Cut-Rate Shoe Store
"Berry County', Burieit Shoe Store"

114 W. STATE ST

'

HASTINGS, MICH.

MARKERS

Hastings City Bank
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS • MICHI9A

�BANNEE. THURSDAY, MARCH 15, ItM

LOCAL FIVE BOWS TO
0. R. CHRISTIAN 24-20

Sunday, March 15. a daughter.
Curtis Marshall, 61. died sudden-

H.H.S. D.I.11. Slip. In Sac- P»“u
—«...

. —

ond Quarter When Rivals
Pile Up Substantial Lead

TO TRY

EIGHT
O'CLOCK
COFFEE
MILD AND MELLOW

The high school basketeers were
eliminated
from
the
regional1
tournament by the O R- Christian
High quintet. 25-20 at Union High
gymnasium Friday evening, in a
•battle that was not decided until
the Anal whistle.
The first quarter was a hard
fought battle with Hastings trail­
ing their opponents by one point
at the end of the frame 6-5. In the
second quarter the defense of the
Ben nett men weakened considerably,
while their rivals piled up 10 points
more. Their offense remained con­
stant and the score at lhe end of
the half read 16-10 In favor of O.
I R. Christian
* Hastings then came back in the
| third quarter to outpUy their op( ponents defensively and offensively
by scoring 4 points against 3 for
| Christian. The last quarter found
I the Bennetlmen again playing the
j better game by scoring six points
। against five for the victors.
I Gladstone was high point man

ESTABLISHED

SPECIALLY
PKICED

[~WH(RE ECONOMY

"" 15c

Red Circle

FRESH

FRESH CREAMERY

EGGS

BUTTER

Condor

V.T.7

29c

Ths
The llns-una
line-ups wsrewere:
Hastings (20)
~
“ Christian (24)
OR.
Gladstone
Crothcrs
Broene
Ransom
Bull
Angell
RO.
Goosen
Walldorff
_
Hendrtkson
U3
Substitutions: Hastings. Hinck­
ley; Q. R. Christian. Bchaafsma.
Referee. Knudson. W. B- T- C. Um­
pire, Fisher. Grand Rapids.
Aside from the second quarter
lhe local lads showed a brand of

acme

time.

Funeral

P. M.. at the North Evangelical nlng at tha schoolhouse. Supper
church. Hev.E.P. Rhoades officiat­ waa served, followed by the business
ing. He loavas his faithful wife, session and a program The Dun­
one daughter, two sons and
five ham "Hill Billy Band" played.
grandchildren and many other rela­
Sunday. March 15. was
the
tives and friends. We extend sym­ eighty-lhird
birthday ot Frank
pathy to the family.
Hyde. Tn honor of lhe occasion
his
daughter.
Mrs.
Dorothy
Hoff
­
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklin of
Allegan spent.Sunday with Mr. and man. entertained forty-six relatives
and friends of Mr. Hyde with a One
Mrs. Darby.
Sylvia Whitmore, who is working dinner. Those present were: Mrs.
enthusiastic
Hastings
audience for Mrs. George Maurer at Hastings. Louise Marshall of Lansing, who is
making a visit at lhe Hoffman
plenty to cheer about. The local
home. Mr. and Mn. Orin Hanes and
fans were also very much disap­
grandson. Robert Hill, of Hickory
pointed In two of lhe referee's de­
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
cisions which would have lied lhe
The Wilcox Cemetery Circle will Comers; Mr. and Mn. Mrs. Jim
game had they been called differ­ have an all day meeting with din­ Anders and daughter of Podunk;
ently. Capt. Walldorff playing his ner. March 25. at the Orange hall. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Day and Mr.
last game In 'high school uniform The potatoes, bread and meat will and Mn. Wm. Hyde of Barryvllle;
was able lo dribble lhe length of be provided and Lhe rest of the din­ Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Marshall and
the floor and shoot a basket only ner will be pot luck. Aa there are I daughter ot Battle Creek; Mr. and
to hear lhe referee's decision of "no several important items to be acted Mrs- Arthur Lathrop and Mrs.
basket" because ot step*.
upon all who are interested in the Louise Lathrop of Prairieville; Mr.
and Mn. Sherman Swift. Mr. and
cemetery are urged to be present.
Some men who live a dog's life.
Mrs. Mabie Moody received a card Mn. Fred Hanes and Mrs. Mary
probably do not have any license lo from her grandson, Lewis Hom. and Holsaple, Mr. and Mn. Harve Mar­
do so.
wife of East Tawas, announcing the shall and grandchildren, Rev. and
| Mrs Rhoades, and Mr. and Mrs.
Grover Marshall, ail of
Maple
I Grove. Mn. Rhoades' brother, Mr.
! Ridgeway of Ohio, was also present.
■ Mr. Hyde's other daughter. Mrs.
Edna Kidder and her family, and
his granddaughter. Mn. Louisa
Stanton and her family were pres­
ent.
Mr. and Mn. Clifton Harris and
children of Battle Creek and Mn.
Grace Stanton and children spent
Sunday at Clyde Cheeseman's.
Mn. Anna Os troth, who is at the
home of her daughter, Mn. Ada
The big advantage of money in a
Balch, is in a very weakened contlon.
savings account is that it is ready
Sidney Stanton has a new Chev­
rolet.
money. When any sudden need arises

N

I

READY MONEY

IN A Savings Account

there is comfort and peace of mind

Grade "A" Bulk

Gold Medal Flour
u, $1.09
Whaaties Breakfast Food 2 pkge. 21c
Un. .1. 29c
Bisquick s- »M.
.t. 25c
Softasilk Cake Flour

- 13c

ik"“ 33c

health for

Appcoximatslyj20c per Doran

in knowing that you can get cash

N

quickly. You won't have to sejl prop­

erty or securities, perhaps at a loss.

You won't have to borrow. You can
just come to the bank and get the

PELS NAPTHA SOAP

LUX or LIFEBUOY SOAP

10

4k

6

33c

PANCAKE FLOUR

19c

PET or CARNATION MILK

29c

PINK SALMON

Fined Alaska

2

tall

IONA SALAD DRESSING

Every man or woman should have

B

21c

23c

r

KETCHUP

money needed to meet the emergency.

19c

bottle

RINSO

a constant ready reserve equal to six

month’s income.

Therefore, nothing takes the place

N
K OF HASTINGS

of a savings account. Have you one?

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

10c

£

iff 19c

SHORTENING

2

or Cotto

BREAD

Grandmother's White

Ibe.

Hi-lb.

Golden Syrup

PRUNES

AUCTION SALE!

9c

3 'k. 25c

20-30 S&gt;»

PACIFIC TISSUE

12

KRAFT'S CHEESE

2

N. B. C. LORNA DOONE COOKIES

HORMEL'S BEEF STEW

29c
H-lb.
pk(.

33c

lb-

19c

a 27c
2

25c

BABY FOOD

3

25^

COOKIES CHOCOLATE STARS

2

25c

■■■•■' cu.

3

25c

IONA PEACHES

15c

BIRDSEYE MATCHES

25c

KITCHEN KLENZER

25c

HEINZ SOUPS

25c

GROUND BEEF
Leona Sausage

Slab Bacon
Boiling Beef

COMMENCING AT 1:00 O'CLOCK.

11c

SARDINES

2 "&gt;•■ 25c

25c

it. |Oc

On account of the death of my husband, I will dispose of my personal property at
public auction at the farm, 1 mile north and 1-4 mile west of Cedar Creek, or about 9
miles southwest of Hastings on the Camp Ground Road, on Sec. 23, Hope Twp., on

SATURDAY, MARCH [21st

HEINZ KETCHUP

CAMPBELL'S SOUPS

IRVING.
Last week's Banner spoke of so
l much moving and at that time we
.hadn't started a change of popula­
tion. but since then Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Christman have moved to
! Carlton Center from the Beverwyk
! place and a family named Amts
has moved from Prairieville to the
; farm cast of lhe Beverwyk place.
' The Utter family has several chil­
I dren. A family from Martin will
move to lhe Kronewiltcr pUce.
| Mr. and Mrs, Wm Cushing of Al। ma visited at wm. McCann's last
' week. They also visited al Dell Wil­
cox's.
| The community was grieved to
hear of the death of Mrs. Edith
. Benham. Undoubtedly a new farm,lly will move there.
I Bom. to Mr. and Mrs. Phillg
Nichols on Sunday. March 15. u
■ daughter. Congratulations.
' Mr. and Mrs. Ray Vandenberg ol
Grand Rapids were Bunday visitors
[ at John Kelson's.
i Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox and
1 family spent Sunday with her par­
I ents at Bellevue.

25c

lb. loaf

G.t

STALEY'S

daughter and Chai. Olllasple ot
Kalamacoo were Bunday guesU at
Ray OUlMpte a.
The March meeting of the-Dun-

ALWAYS KEEP

a
2 tins 41c
2 37c

Bokar

I

arrival. March 5. of Manhall Ells­
worth. who weighed eight pounds.

BRANCH DISTRICT.

SSS

J-"

2-25c

Lard|- Compound 2^"25c

Ocean Fillets

2 "■•25 c

Armour's Ham

b 25c

RING BOLOGNA 2 25c

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:—

HORSES.
Black gelding, weight 1300.
Bay mare, weight 1300.
(Good snappy team.)

2 stacks corn stalks. Small stack straw.
70 bushels oats. 150 bushels corn.
2 bus. shelled seed corn.
Half bushel shelled sweet corn.

COWS.
Brindle cow, 10 yrs., fresh, calf by side.
Jersey cow, 2 yrs. old, fresh, calf by side.
Durham cow, 5 yrs. old, due last of Mar.
Durham-Jersey cow, 5 yrs., fresh in Dec.
Jersey cow, 5 yrs. old, fresh in January.
Jersey yearling heifer.

TOOLS.
McCormick binder. Champion mower.
Dump rake. Single cultivator.
Walking 2-horse cultivator. Gale plow.

HOGS AND SHEEP.
Chester White brood sow, 300 lbs., to far­
row first of April.
Ewe, 2 years old.

POULTRY.
5 Rhode Island Red hens.
40 pulfats and 3 roosters. Barred Rocks.

FEED.
4 tons alfalfa hay. 4 tons timothy hay.

Spring tooth drag, two section.

Buggy.
Spike tooth drag, two section. Cutter and bob sleighs.
Wagon box and top box. Double harness.
Roller drill. Hay fork, rope and pulleys.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
2 oak bedsteads. 3 dressers. Organ. Davenport.
2 rockers. Sidaboard. Dining table and 12 chain.
Cook stove. Heater. Aladdin lamp.
Nearly new 5-burner oil stove.

MISCELLANEOUS.
1926 Chavrdat sedan. 20 gallons kerosene.
Power washing machine. Grindstone.
DeLaval separator and many other articles not men­
tioned.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. NO PROPERTY REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

i7 P FOOD STORES
SALES TAX-WE CASH WPA CHECKS
U Ml. SuuUl -cwin T—.--SU1*. WBSH. 240 P. M . T«U*r.

MRS. HARRY WATERS, Proprietress
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

TkuAdw

FRED JONES, Clark.

Tl

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. MARCH l». IBM

of MT. and Mn. Donald McCallum1 '
-----------------------------------------------------MILO.
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Anvil 10.
IN
Mrs. Lucy Otis of Detroit came April
Mre^Harlan Scoby spent from
Bunday to assist In caring for Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Morse Murphy and ' Wednesday til)
Saturday
eveand Mrs. W. H. Otis.
son attended a birthday -party nlng with friends In Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Gorham Wednesday night Q«i Mr. Albert
Billie Schulte came Wednesday to
PROBATE COURT.
were guests Tuesday of their Hampton in lhe Bunnel District.
spend some time with his parents
Eft. Elmer E. Gregory, dec'd. Will daughter. Mrs. Willard Bagley, and
Miss Pearl Hathaway of Podunk at Lake Hills farm. Friday. Mrs.
filed, petition for probate
filed, family of Kalamazoo.
spent the week end with Margaret Schulte and son drove to Chicago
waiver of notice filed, order for pub­
Brownell.'
Mr. and Mrs. Lester I-ord and Brownell.
________
~ stay till early this week with
to
lication entered.
Mrs. Jim Wilcox were Battle creek
Mr. and Mrs. pouls Ferguson of friends.
Ekt. James A. Eddy, dec'd. Testi­ rtJfer:
visitors last Mcndxy.
Monday.
cloverdale spent Wednesday night
-Mr. and Mn. N. H. Barber were
mony ot freeholders filed, license to
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hart ________________
and at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Otto gncsU for dinner Thursday of Mr.
sell issued, bond on sale filed, oath daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Robt.
Jlnbt Pranshka's.
Pranshka's.
1‘
I and Ur.
Mrs John Hoag. no-ViUn&gt;i
Richland.
before sale filed.
Vrooman and son of Hastings were 1
Mesdames Barber. Wood. Flower i
COATS GROVE.
Est. Elizabeth Mote, dec'd. Or­ Bunday caller? in lhe Oeo. Havens
and Doster attended the County
Our
sympathy
Is
extended
to
home.
der allowing claims entered.
Rebekah and I. O. O. P. Association
Mrs. Sarah Burghduff, an aged Warren Coolbaugh because of the at Hastings last Monday evening.
Eat. Cora E. Sinclair, dec'd. Peti­
and respected resident of this place death of his mother. Mrs. Alice
Several from Milo attended lhe
tion for license lo mortgage filed.
passed away last Tuesday morning Coolbaugh in Hastings. The fu­
Eat. John Anders, dec'd. Final after a short Illness at the home neral was held last Wednesday aft­ funeral of Mrs. Mattle Spaulding
at Delton last Wednesday.
account filed.
of her daughter. Mrs Roy Oats. ernoon with burial in -Woodland
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Quick spent
Est. Flossie B. Roddy,
dec'd. The entire community extends
I ounaay
Sunday wnn
with uieir
their son. Mr. ana
and
w o
Waiver of notice filed, order ap­ sympathy to the bereaved relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. E. 6
Thompson MrJ| vern Quick and children.
pointing Admr. entered.
Uncle Oley Douglass of Hastings I were at West Bebewa last Sunday ■ 1&lt;co QUlejj ot Hastings Is making
Est. Fred M. Cushing, dec'd. Fi­ who came recently to spend some
h“ Unc"
nal account filed.
lime in lhe home of his brother.
Est. Cora E. Sinclair, dec'd. Waiv­ Dan. remains about the same.
Mrs. Fred Barlow, who was serler of notice filed, license to mort­
Saturday.
gage filed, oath before mortgage ously sick at lhe home of her par- tlon held a_meetlng here at the Thurs&lt;jMy
ents. Mr. and Mrs. w. H. Otis, was!church &gt;Ml Thursday with good atW a. Spaulding and Mrs. Wilcox
removed by ambulance on Saturday tendance and interesting program,
Est. Rieka Eckardt, dec’d. Annual to her home in Hastings. Her host M"- R°* Brumm of Nashville, is were at the farm here. Friday.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roll of Blue Island
account filed.
of friends hope for her speedy reand had the affair in
Eat. Minnie Jump Woodruff, dec'd. covery. Mrs. W. H. Otis is very low charge. They gave a compUmen- came to lheir farm here Sunday to
stay a couple of weeks.
Annua) account filed.
at this writing.
I LarY dinner to 75 members and
Mrs. H. J. Flower and Bernice
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Gorham I «uests. The dinner was served by were
Est Lida 8. Hershberger, dec'd.
callers of Mr. and Mrs. C F.!
and children of Kalamazoo spent
local L A. 8- and g32 60 was re­ Moreau at Augusta. Saturday alter- i
Annual account filed.
Est. Flossie B Roddy, dec’d. Bond Sunday with the farmer's parents, ceived from it. There were a num- noon.
bcr °r speakers on the program and
of Admr. filed, letters of adminis­ Mr. and Mrs. Francis Gorham.
Keep in mind the Ladles' Aid1
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Lord left thc closing number was a chalk meeting at the home of Mrs. Meric
tration Issued.
Sunday for lheir new home in the laU bY Rev Pritchard of NashEat Francis J. Barry, dec'd. Or­ tenant house on Mrs. Ezra More- vUte- R** Clem Jordan led the Bradfield Wednesday, the 25th, for
dinner. Mrs Doster and Mrs. Bates
der appointing Admr. entered, bond *------- ..
...
community singing during the aft­
house's
farm -----------near Orangeville.
will look after lhe program for the
of Admr. filed, letters of adminis­
Mrs. Lucy oils of Detroit reports ernoon session and was accom­ afternoon.
tration Issued, order limiting set­
panied by Mrs. Pritchard on the
that
she
was
at
the
University
hosMr. and Mrs Arthur Skidmore
tlement entered, petition for hear­
piano.
and LaVern visited the former's
ing of claims filed, notice to cred-।' pltal recently to see Oscar Oils, who
Miss
Grace
Dawson
of
Hastings
| is there for treatment and reports
parents last- Thursday. LaVern
I tors issued.
visited In the H. Woodman home
stayed for an indefinite visit with
Est. Millie Haynes, dje'd. Proof that his condition is very bad. He last Sunday.
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E.
of will filed, order admitting will Is suffering with a weak heart, high
There will be a pancake supper at
blood pressure and some form ot
entered.
lhe church basement this week Fri­ Skidmore.
IQst jerry Haynes, dec'd. Order stomach trouble. His many friends day) evening. March 20. Given by
hope
to
hear
of
his
improvement.
EAST WALL LAKE
assigning residue entered, discharge
W. H. Otis was confined to his , the\men of the s. 8. and lhe proAND VICINITY.
of Admr. Issued. estate enrolled.
bed and under the doctor's, care ceecte will go for furnace repair.
Lloyd Laubaugh spent two days
Eat. Ludwig Fau), dec'd. Annual
Mrs.
Will
Bayne
has
been
on
the
last week suffering with the flu. Ha
the past week visiting in Grand
account filed.
.
sick
list.
Is a little better at this writing.
Rapids.
Est. H. A. Adrounle, deed. Will
_.
Mrs. Martha BeVler Li still very
Mr. ___
and «...
Mrs. Harry clem enter Mr. and Mrs Clifford Kahler and
filed, petition for probate filed, or­ twined
their daughter and hus- slck in the M L. Curtis home In children spent Sunday with Mr and
der for publication entered.
band from Rockford over lhe weriF' Freeport. Mrs. Bessie Woodman Mrs. Carl Ricker in Hastings. Mrs.
Est. Sarah L. Isham, dec'd. Final end.
was w,th them last Saturday night. Mina Aidrich spent Saturday night
account filed, order assigning resi­
Tiie 8. S- will give its Easter pro­ there and returned home Sunday.
due entered, discharge of executor
NORTH HOPE.
gram in the morning at lhe regular
Katie Kahler and Lucille Kahler
issued, estate enrolled.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Anders enter­ S. S hour and will be followed by
Est David J. Barry. Nomination tained Saturday night and Sunday. an Easter sermon by the pastor attended the C. C. Cemetery Circle
of Odn. filed, order appointing Odn. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Welch and and some special features are be­ at Mrs. Kelley's In Hastings, Wed­
nesday.
entered.
daughter. Lucile of Gobles, and ing planned for the evening.
Mrs. Minnie Wurm of Shultz.
The L- A. 8. thanks all who as­
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
The Brush Ridge Community sisted and contributed to the din­
Lewis F. Bailey. Hastings..............20
Club met with Mr. and’ Mrs. Roy ner for the Farm Bureau last
Iola L. Stine. Hastings ...................IB
Hull on Friday evening with an at­ Thursday.
Harold C. Haaklns. Saranac ....20 tendance of about thirty-four, the
Mr and Mrs Harley Seasc and
Volta Mae Poulson, Middleville ..23 evening being spent with music, family attended lhe P. T. A. at the
Claude D. Emerson. Hastings ... .22 singing, speaking and reading. The Wellman schoolhouse last Friday
Vemabelle Poulson, Middleville ..21 next meeting will be at the home evening.

TEACHERS ENJOY
MONTHLY MEETING COURT HOUSE NEWS
Have Dinner—Diacuas
Topics of Interest ,
About one
hundred
twenty
teachers of the Barry County Dis­
trict of lhe Michigan Education As•delation enjoyed a very nice din­
ner in the Central school recrea­
tion
room,
Tliunday
evening.
March 12th. The tables were artis­
tically decorated with silhouettes
of some of lhe various animals of
the Jungle which no doubt brought
back memories to the |uest speak­
er. Mr. Arthur Kane, who has twice
traversed Africa The High school
orchestra directed by Mr. Lewis
Hine furnished music during the
hour and the business session im­
mediately followed.
Mlu Mary
Roush, of the Delton school had
charge of the program planned by
the various committees. Mlsa Helen
WllliU of fhe McKelvey school dis­
cussed "Rural Teachers' Salaries"
showing
some
comparisons of
number, training and salaries of
rural
In aa survey
rural taarhara
teachers aa
as aivan
given In
recently made lo which fifty-five
counties responded. In these coun­
ties rural teachers are paying from
B3 00 to 110.00 per week for board
and room. The median cost of
board and room is about 14 00. The
average salary recommended by
these flfly-five counties for begin­
ning rural teachers with four years
of training la 1120 per month, three
years of training 1105 per month,
two years of training |»i per month
and one year of training »73 per
month.
Supt. LeRoy Bell of Middleville
appraised lhe M. E. A. Journal and
ahowed how It compares favorably
with other Educational Journals.
Mr. Arthur Lathrop of the North
Pine
Lake
School
discussed
•Teacher Tenure" and felt it could
not work so well for teachers in
the rural districts under the pres­
ent set-up but would work better
when larger administrative units
were possible.
The subject of Mr. John Duguid
of Nashville was "Michigan Teach­
ers' Retirement Fund Law." He has
made some study of this and re­
ceived copies of this law from varlous states. He discussed many In­
teresting phases of this and showed
that most all states having such a
law contribute toward it which is
not the case in our own slate. Il is
apparent that we should alm to
make some revisions in our own re­
tirement law.
Supt. D. A. VanBusklrk told the
teachers about the process ot form­
ing Teacher Credit unions which
are being formed In some ports of
the state. At the present time there
are seventeen credit unions and 12.­
648 teachers have access to them to
take care of their own short-term
credit problems without usury.
These are organized under the
state credit union laws and super­
vised by lhe State Banking Com­
mission. Mention was made also of
come changes that might be made
by the Representative Assembly
which meets in Detroit March 20th
and 27th. Mr. Albert Becker's topic
was ••The place ot Dramatics in the
Public Relations Program" and he
ahowed how this was being car­
ried out aa effectively as possible In
। our own school system.
\
This session was adjourned and
all went to the auditorium whete
many others were walling to listen
to Mr. Arthur Kane tell about
"backtracking" Marco Polo and
traveling down through Ethiopia.
He has collected typical folk cos­
tumes which he wore with grace
and the ease of a native besides ex­
plaining an extensive display of
turios.

MIDDLEVILLE.
Mrs. Charles Gray, who had been
Visiting her husband, who has been
111 at Ann Arbor hospital for some
time, stopped here to visit his par­
ents. w. H. and Mrs. Gray, left for
her home at Merritt Friday.
Monday A. M. word was received
from Charles Gray that he was imKviQg as fast as possible after
serious Illness,
J. J. vanderveen was at home
caused by illness on Thursday,
John Is out and at work again, but
feels the effect of his Illness.
Mrs. W. H. Johnson who has been
quite 111 for some days Is much Im­
proved.
Ttie front of Lhe Arcade Theater
has received a coat of paint and
as soon as the weather permits It
Will be completed.

TRAVEL?

You Can Afford
by but.
Doing AU Your Traveling
by Bas. . . . SHORT WAY
Buses Serve Hastings with
Several Schedules Dally.

Try SHORT WAY for
Comfort and Economy

COLD AND SILENT AS A WINTER NIGHT

THON! &gt;117

• ROOFING
The roof over your heod is undoubtedly the most
important port of your house. Bird &amp; Sons, Roof­
ing Manufacturers are sending to our store one
of their BEST ROOFING EXPERTS.
He will be
here the entire four days of the Fair, tell him your
roofing problems ond he will help you with them.

WATCH THIS STACI NIXT WttK!

THE HOME LUMBER CO
PHONE 2276

BUILDS HOMES

HASTINGS

WANT TO BUY OR SELL ? TRY OUR WANT COLU’

iht.

Modern
GAS

5 YEAR
WARRANTY
PLAN
4

ELECTRIC
LIGHTS

^77/

’ exclusive

ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS
ioo% AUTOMATIC

ANTIFROST

clock

• Hurry, housewives! See the new 1936 Sparton f

A modem gas range is like nothing else you have ever seen! It is as different from
ranges of five or six years ago as day is from night. The ovens are insulated, sealing
the heat in, leaviqg your kitchen cool in the hottest weather. They have automatic
lighting—turn the burner handles and the burners light without matches- They have
‘'table” tops on which all your cooking preparations can be made. Thev nave stor­
age drawers where utensils may be kept, cutting out frequent trips back and forth
from cupboard lo range. They have oven heat control, a little device which automat­
ically maintains any desired temperature in lhe oven, eliminating guesswork—assur­
ing perfect results every time. Beautiful porcelain enamel finishes and
oven linings. Chrome trim. And all so clean!

All-Feature Refrigerators now on display. Dis
cover for yourself, Sparton’s sensational advan
tages. Sparton is the only completely automatic
refrigerator. Sparton’s exclusive Antifrost Econ­
omy Clock Controls defrosting without aid of q|
human hand. Other important Sparton features
include the Baskador, Vegabin, Baskadrawer,
silent unit, smart new cabinet design, 20% to
30% greater economy, and many more. There’s
a low-priced Sparton model for every home re­
frigeration need. Come in today.-----

ENJOY

&lt;936 MODELS—FAMOUS

DETROIT JEWEL
New styles and sizes with latest improve­
ments ip our Spring Special—lower prices
easy terms. Special trade-in offer makes
bargain even better.

▲ I I UAnri e rtki c Al r
ALL MODELS UN bALE

brand new table-top style in several color
choices featured at only 179JO list.

SEE OUR SPRING STYLE SHOW-OR PHONE 2303

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON
WESTIRN JUNION IUILDING

HASTINGS, MICH.

TRADE
YOUR OLD

STOVE!

A L L? T H E SJE kY O UjR S E L F ...

▲ I r"
ALt •

BUB DtTOT

HASTINGS

• PAINT DEMONSTRATION
A FREE SAMPLE CAN of point will be given to
grown people who visit our store Friday and Satur­
day, March 27th and 28th. There will be a paint
expert from the factory who will explain to you
things about paint you never heard of before.

Here’s the heart of any home

ASK US ABOUf THE DELUXE SPARTON
TO BE GIVEN AWAY FREE I

TRIO CAFE

• INSULATION
Be sure ond visit our booth at the Merchants’
Spring Fair, and learn more about INSULATION.

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY

AS LITTLE AS

10'
A DAV BUYS m

�learn of his death which followed J son Forrest was a guest there on
Robert Halbinung of East Lansing a heart attack Tuesday morning Sunday.
at Ills home in Maple Grove. The
jjr and
and Mrs.
Mrs. Fred
Fred Reid
Reid and
and sons
sons
were alio there.
Mr.
Misses Freda Smith and Ruby wife and daughter and two sons were Sunday visitors at Mr. and
Cogswell attended a teachers’ meet­ survive. The sorrowing family have Mrs. Mila Keck and family near
our deepest sympathy.
ing at Woodland Monday night.
Bedford .
■
,
. .__ .__ ~ f. .Xt. .
LXiaCVlCW
viuom
Guests —
at• Mrs. Curt Marshall's
Frank Howard Jones of Battle
evening March 30. Everyone wel-I Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Clair Creek
woc» called
«uwu u»
mi. «and
u.u Mrs.
m
on Mr.
Frank
Marshall and family of Bellevue. HawbllU Friday evening.
come
,r. and
-nri Mr.VTre UTnrtFl
Mr and ।' 'r.
evrnn nuu
Mr.
Worth Green, Mr.
Mr. and Mn. Byron
Guy and sons
H1GHBANK.
•
Mrs Will HawbllU and Earl Mar- spent Bunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Will Guy In Nashville.
and Mrs-j The neighbors and relatives of shall of Marshall.
Mr. and Mn. Henry BideIman
Boni to Mr. and Mn. Lee Bell a
Vermontville. Curtis Marshall were shocked to
were guests Saturday of Mr. and ’ daughter Bunday morning. March
। Mrs. Floyd Rice in Hastings. Their ‘ 15th.

LAKKVIFW
Last Week's letter.
Mr. and Mrs. George Gillespie of
Charleston, w. Virginia, spent the
week end with relatives here.
Mrs Robert Martin and Mrs. El­
mer Gillespie and daughter. Doris
were Battle creek visitors Saturday.
Sarah and Shirley Gillespie.
George. Ruby and Carrie Cogswell
N«w Um, tabs, » «*. liquid fi.STk RJf. #m,
wm. SchanU
Schanu

near

AUCTION SALE
16 HEAD HIGH-GRADE

GUERNSEY COWS
From 2 to 10 years old—Some fresh.
Our entire herd of High Grade Guern­
sey Cows at the Clear Lake Guernsey
Farm, 15 miles north of Battle Creek
on M-37, or 11 miles south of Has­
tings, at Bristol Corners, on

WED., MARCH 25, 1936
COMMENCING AT 1:00 P. M.

SPECIAL!
SALE
BARGAINS Here Friday and Saturday !
2 LARGE CANS TOMATOES
23c
10 bars FELS NAPTHA SOAP
45c
2 cans large size SAUER KRAUT ..19c
2 cans Melting Sugar Sifted Peas(Delicious) --_______________ 25c
2cans large size Pork and Beans __19c
6 BOXES MATCHES....................... 23c
3 1b. CANCRISCO ...I............... -.59c
6 Rolls TOILET TISSUE . .............. _.24c
CREAMERY BUTTER______ ,_lb. 33c
3 bars CAMAY TOILET SOAP ...15c
...17c
2 lbs. SODA CRACKERS
CANDY SPECIAL
lb. 10c
,No. 2 Vi sixe can Peaches, Heavy syrup 19c
JONATHAN APPLES______ bu. 59c
TRY A POUND OF OUR 19c COFFEE
(SPECIAL BLEND—YOU'LL LIKE IT)

WE ESPECIALLY INVITE YOU TO VISIT OUR
BOOTH AT THE FAIR—FREE PRIZES EVERY DAY!

1 good Holstein cow; 3 heifer calves; 1 Registered Guernsey

sire.

Complete Milk Equipment, including 2-horse boiler.

Cooler, Electric Circulating Pump, Separator and Cans.

WALLACE GROCERY
OVES EVENINGS

Moore district.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mr and Mrs. Arthur Teeter and
daughter of Coats Grove and Mr.
and Mrs
Willis Kanlner and
daughter of Hastings were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Kanlner.
Garnet Townsend and Orville
Waddell of Kalamazoo spent the
week end with home folks.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Wotrlng and
daughter. Betty were dinner guests
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Wot­
rlng tn Nashville.
A number from Southwest Wood­
land attended the tournament al
Grand Rapids Friday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Christian
spent the week end in Holland.
Miss Josephine Wise of East
Lansing spent the week end with
her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hershberger
and son spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. John Hershberger, at
Clarksville.
Chas. Farlee and family were In
Battle Creek on business Saturday
and also called on Mr. and Mrs. I.
N. Williams and Doris.
' Mr. and Mrs. Casgo Smith of
Lansing, formerly of Southwest
I Woodland, are the proud parents
of a seven and one-half pound ba­
i by girl who arrived Sunday morn­
ing at st. Lawrence hospital. Moth­
er and baby are coming fine. Congratulatlons.

1
,

PLEASANT HILL.
Several ladles
on this street
walked in
and surprised MUs
Rosetta Loftus of the Brew dUtricl,
last Tuesday reminding her of her
birthday. A pot luck dinner waa

' spent In visiting.
। Mrs. Bert Palmer. Mrs. Miner
Palmer and MUs Ethel Palmer en­
tertained 17 ladles of lhe K. of P.
lodge at dinner Thursday.
I Robert
Thompson of Grand
Rapids called on hU aunt and
uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Carter
Sunday evening.
We understand a family by lhe
name of Proctor have moved onto
lhe place vacated by the Fred
Smith family.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Carter
spent Sunday with her sister. Mr»
Kerr, and daughter. Nettle, al
Lowell.

FORDSON Tractor and Plows .Gas Engine and Pump Jack.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH:—No property removed until set­
tled for.

Wm. J. Shaw &amp; Ben L. Bristol
PROPRIETORS.
Harold E. Smith, Clerk.
Henry Flannery, Auctioneer.

AUCTION SALE!
Being engaged in other work, I will sell the following personal property at
public auction at my form, 1 mile south and 1-2 mile east of Doster, or 6 miles
southwest of Prairieville, known as the "Chas. Cook Farm," on

TT

FRIDAY, MARCH 27 1936
HORSES.

FARM TOOLS AND HARNESS.

F-12 Formal! tractor and plow, nearly
new. Deering binder, 7-ft. cut.
McCormick-Deering hoy loader.
McCormick-Deering side roke.
Deering mower, 6-ft. cut.
New Idea manure spreader.
Oliver riding plow.
Gale 2-bottom riding plow.
Oliver riding cultivator.
•
5-tooth single cultivator.
14-tooth single cultivator.
3-scc. drag, 25 tooth.
Spike drag. 2-sec. Hoy rack. Sleighs.
Thomas grain drill, 11 disk.
2 wagons. Flat rack and stock rack.
New stoneboat.
Harness and several collars.
200 egg Buckeye incubator.
2 ten-gal. cream cans, nearly new.
2 five-gal. cream cans. Oil drums.
Oil drum pump. Several ash eveners.
3 three-horse eveners.
2 two-horse evoners.

COWS.
Brindle cow. 5 yrs., due in Moy.
Jersey cow. 3 yn.. due in Moy.
Jersey cow. 2 yn.. due in June.
Holstein-Jersey cow. 6 yrs., due in Moy.
Jersey cow, 3 yrs., due in June.
Jersey and Guernsey heifer. 2 yrs. old,
due in June.
2 heifer calves, 9 months old.

HOGS AND SHEEP.
5 O. I. C. brood sows.
35 sheep ready to lamb.

Shrop buck.

HAY, GRAIN AND SEED.
Several loads of hay. 50 bu. rye.
150 bu. oats. 200 crates corn.
400 lbs. dark red seed beans.
Seed com.
Early and late seed potatoes.
Several bu. good eating potatoes.

CHICKENS.
100 White Leghorn pullets, good ones.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

HOUSEHOLD GOODSKitchen cabinet. Dining table.
Atwater Kent 5-tubc radio.
Other articles too numerous to mentipn.

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

BYRD DOSTER, Clerk.

TT

There li No Higher Quality Than
SUNSHINE VALLEY, Michigan Grown,
Tested and Guaranteed Vegetable
and Flower Seeds

How Many Friends Have You?
It has Item said that the number
of friends you have depends al­
most wholly upon you; (orfriend­
ship is like many other precious
possessions in that it docs not
thrive on neglect.
« Most expressions of friendship,
in this modern age, involve the
use of the telephone. Direct, per­
sonal, inexpensive, it has come
to be the recognized means of
at ranging nearly all informal
social gatherings.
It has greatly simplified the
role of the hostess, relieving her
of bothersome complications once
inseparable from entertaining.
By telephone the woman of today
can obtain acceptances or regrets
without delay: she can make a
last-minute addition to her
guests, cun quickly sum­
mon a fourth fur bridge,
hJ

Modern telephone tervice is a
special boon t«y those who have
l&gt;ecn palled by distance. Il gives
them, despite lheir separation, the
opportunity for “voice reunions”
— for a kind of personal contact
which only the telephone can pro­
vide. Over it they can send greet­
ings uf the season, condolences, J
congratulations — all the various
remembrances that arise.from
genuine friendship — and prove
that absence need not necessarily
mean forgetfulness.
Quick, dependable, the tele­
phone service provided by this
Company has won a definite part
in the social life of the people of
Michigan, and daily fulfills an
important function in lhe many
occasions which both pro7k
mole and preserve the

H

treasure of friendship.

NO PROPERTY REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

Clare W. Thomas, Propr.

—---------- O N --------------

SEEDS AND PLANTS

COMMENCING AT 1:00 O'CLOCK, AND WILL SELL THE FOLLOWING:—

Grey gelding. 7 yrs. old, wt. 1400. ex­
tra good one.
Pair blind marcs, with foal, wt. 2800,
13 and 14 years old.

. BARRYVILLE.
rlan Hewitt In Hastings. Saturday
Last Week's Leiter.
I night.
Mra Will Hyde spent Saturday
W and Mrs. Wm. P. Hate visited
and Bunday In Battle Creak with relatives in Battle Creek Tuesday,
her granddaughter, Mra. Gent! Mrs. Grace Cole ha* been ill with
Influansa and under the doctor's
. un during lhe past week.
of Freeport and Mr. and Mra. 8.1 Mra. Cleon Landon received news
^,-1__ ____ -■__ _ ____ tv. -r v.—
-t
ersvilla during the past week
*
and Mrs. Heber Foatar 'Diurgday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lathrop of
PLEASANT RIDGE.
Prairieville.
Mr. and Mrs. noyd
Mr. and Mrs. Allie Cheney ot
Fossett and baby of Charlotte and
Carlton «pent Sunday at Alton
dren spent Bunday with their par-1 Wood's. Albert Klnne spent Thursday In
enu. Mr. and Mrs. Jawe Fossett,
and helped them celebrate
their Grand Rapids.
Thanks to Farm Bureau and oth­
wedding anniversary.
Mn. O. D. Passett is spending ers who helped to make Die Ladies’
this week with her son Ray and Aid dinner a success.
Mr.. —
and ___
Mra.- —
Cecil. --,
Ronk of Batfamily near Battle Creek.
,I —
Krvnt Bunday
RitnHav with Mr.
Fctr
We received the sad news of lhe Ue Creek spent
pa-iing of Curtis Marshall Tuesday and Mrs. Lester Klnne.
morning. The family have the sym-1 Mra. Anna Boice spent part of
pathy of the neighborhood.
| l»»t week In Hastings with Mra.
A large company of friends and Stella Bump.
neighbors gathered
gatlu.^. al the home of ,i Mr. and Mra. Kenneth Lewis of
.
- - ­ Bonoma spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Jones
Satur
day evening to give them a farewell Mrs. Bert Klnne.
party, as they plan to move to
Mrs.
Nashville In the near future. A Margaret called Friday on
Martha Bevier of Freeport.
very pleasant time was enjoyed.
The pancake supper will be Fri­
day night. March 30. serving from
DOWLING.
The P. T. A. has changed their six to eight o'clock.
former plans and will have a penny
•upper at the schoolhouse Friday’
.CLOVER DALE­
J rand Rapids
evening. March 30, Instead of a box
P*"_.
1** „
^______
7
Bunsocial. However the Major Bowe* *“ a guest
®UMl of
or Frank Barnard
Ban
"Amateur
'Amaleur Hour" program is
la well ““42.
The
shower
given
In honor of
under way and some real good local
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Stephen
Karmci
of
talent has been promised for the oc­
Hastings Saturday evening at the
casion.
town hall was
well attended.
Mr*. Glenn Rogers and daughters, About seventy friends and relatives
Merlct*. Kathleen and Marjorie, of enjoyed the evening. Mr. and Mrs.
Midland were week-end guesUs of Karmci received many beautiful
thler uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. gifts.
OrUe Fisher.
The Young people's Class will
Mr. and Mrs. John Chamberlain meet at the town hall Tuesday
have moved to Hastings and arc evening. March 17th. pot luck suplocated on East MUI St. Mr. and
Mrr -Chamberlain were our former I Mrs. Rcplogle has been on the
teachers in the Dowling school and sick list but is some better now
made many friends during their I Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Mqnlca
two years' residence here, who deep­ ot Bedford visited their parents,
ly regret lheir departure. •
। Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Monica Bun­
Mr. and Mrs. Dorr Newton nad day.
Mr. and Mrs. E- W. chalker of
daughter of Battle Creek were Sun-1
day visitors at the Otis Altman Kalamazoo and Thomas Hazel ot
Richland were Sunday guests of
home.
lhe
Davenport's.
Mrs. Gerald Tebo and daughter.
Mrs. Tom Johnson and Mrs.
Phyllis Arlene, relumed home from
Pennock hospital Wednesday. Mr. Maude Manning and Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. John DePrlester and Mr. Richard Fennels of Kalamazoo
and Mrs. Walter Ormsbe, Ute great­ were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
grandparents. are very happy over j Ferguson.
the arrival of the new baby. U be-1 । The Cloverdale I, a. 8- will serve
I a public dinner at the McNutt
Ing the first great-grandchUd.
The next Townsend meeting will store, election day. April 6. Price
be held Tuesday evening, March 34.. 15c.
with a speaker from Kalamazoo. | I Mr and Mrs. Dougal McCallum
family
BatFriends of Mrs. Dore Bronk. whoand
---------------. of
-- Detroit
----------- spent —
has been 111 al her home In Toledo, urday with their parents, Mr. and
will be glad to know that she is Mrs. Bert McCallum.
much better and that her daughter,
daughter.
Mr. and
"* ""
Mrs. ”
Harry Owens atMra Harry Mallett, is also regaining. 1 tended the funeral of M. J. House!
of Kalamazoo at Plainwell Sunday
her health.
Mr/and Mrs Charlie Belson and afternoon.
Mrs. Frank Clark and friends of
Robert Belson of Leonidas visited
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. 6. A. Kalamazoo visited Mr. and Mrs.
Wcrtman. Saturday. Forest Belson Wallace McCallum Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens spent
accompanied them and spent the
day with his parents. Mr. and Mra. a couple of days last week with Mr.
and Mrs. Don Wagner of KalainaBernie Belson. In Rutland.
Miss Mildred Garrett, nflcr a
week's visit with the home folks,
EAST DELTON.
returned to Lansing Monday where
Ike Lelnnar had tiw misfortune
she Is employed by her uncle. Vance
badly
Warren, In his feed and seed store. to get his foot hurt quite
Mrs. May Johnson of Hostings while cutting wood on Thursday.
visited at lhe home of her sister, Hit many friends with him a speedy
Mrs. Nellie Granger, lost week. Mrs. recovery.
George Leinaar and family ot
Johnson Ls leaving this week to as­
Corners
were
Sunday
sist Mrs. Dora Coleman of the Good Hickory
guests at Rex Water's.
Will district with her work.
Clarence Payne and family of
CARLTON CENTER.
Hope Center spent Sunday witii
Bernard Valentine of Grand Rap­ the home folks.
ids spent Sunday with his cousins.
John Willison received word
Nelson and Cletls Valentine.
Saturday of the serious illness of
Robert Henncy attended a Junior Mrs. Willison's mother, who is 83
play cast party at the home of Ma- years old.

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

Sold in bulk, no fancy pictures, but more and better seeds for
your money. All varieties of vegetable and flower seeds sold al 4c
a large plain bulk package, enough for. the average large farm
garden.
PEAS. STRING BEANS and SWEPT CORN as low a* 11c a
pound, and other seeds at proportionately low prices in quantities.
Send for our Free IWG HOME AND MARKET GARDENERS'
PRICE LIST and GARDENING GUIDE today, and save on' our '
DIRECT-FROM-GROWER-TO-YOU pneeg. The enormous pro­
duction of over 30 Sunshine Valley growers in Central Michigan
makes these Low Prices possible. Bunshlno Valley field grown,
frost proof vegetable and flower plants arc not only better but
cheaper too. Iks than 5c a dozen, post paid. Packed in wet moss
and guaranteed lo reach you In perfect condition-

FREE SEEDS AND PLANTS!
Send for Price-List Today, a post-card will do. or If you enclose
2 dimes to cover mailing, we will send you our FREE 1936 NEW
CUSTOMER OFFER NO. 7. consisting of 1/8 pound of new
1000 to I String Beans (yellow, stringlrssi. full size package of
Sunshine Valley Extra Early Table Beets (dark red); aljo. package
each of best varieties ol Radth. Carrots. Lettuce and Parsnips.
Also a package of Giant Dahlia-flowered Zinnias (11 best colors);
Wlit-rcalstant Astert (American Beauties, colors blue, crimson,
pink and white): Annual Sweet William (early flowering. 8 col­
ors); Giant Double Larkspur &lt;0 colors); Spencer Sweet Peas (5
new shades); New Carnation Marigold. Kochi#, and Double Nas­
turtiums (3 best shades). We also Ihclude In this special offer a
Free Coupon for the following 3 dozen Free plants:—
1 dozen Large Flowering Petunias (mixed colors).
h dozen American Beauty Asters (mixed colon, wilt-resistant).
1 dozen Sunshine Valley Improved Bonny Best Tomatoes (frost­
proof).
•« dozen Sunshine Valley Early Market Cabbage (frost-proof).
All seeds mailed withjn 34 lioura from lhe lime wc receive your
order. Plants malted about May 1st. unlaw an earlier or later
date is requrs:ed. Please mention FREE 1936 NEW CUSTOMER
OFFER NO. 7 when ordering. Dimes are sent safely by mall by
simply wrapping in waxed bread paper or any other strong paper.
” BEND ALL ORDERS TO

SuRBhineValley Seed Farms
ROUTE 1. NABpVILLE. MI£|L
Or call at our Home Office and Warehonae, 6 miles ktraighl cast
of Hutiugs on Hastings
BoauL
&gt;'

�iyg HASTTNOB BANNKB, THUMPAY, MAK CH It, ItU

■■■■■■■■KaHMMasiMMi'[NMhvUle,
Nashville,

gave tha
tha closing
closing addrta*.
Um following
following officers
officers were
wart elected:
elected: .such gatherings with no one miss­
gave
address, I the
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
nr.l'.nl.H U,V Fl A. Van- WrBtlrljfnt
Wvr&lt;M* . ~ . ~- - - r
and Mra. J. R oolllaon for Mr. and
Mra. Maurice Johncock Saturday
?n V?* Pf0&lt;nun—• fact regretted ginla Lewis; treasurer. Ronald Me- house a farewell party was given night.
1 Klbbln.
Harry LeGcar, formerly of this
। *7
by ill.
all.
................class colors chosen are &amp;
’
for ihe Arents children, who will
Edward, Nolan and janat Ann
Paux^fcJpltf* •*ri9U*1* °* ta
Middleville
Hi-Y assisted with lhe »nd gold.
johncock spent Saturday night and
This week Friday and Saturday
*''
JJ
Sunday at Hasting* with their
Callers at Mrs. Jennh Norris and
the Y fellows In Hastings will be program and arrangements for the
grandparent*. Mr. and Mra. K- AFather and Son banquet which was Mrs. Lucy Norris'
Bunday were str.
Mr.
asking you to give। them
insm your old
oia rsum
nussu ommay
flower pots so
------------that ttyy might sell held last Monday svsnlng at the and Mrs. E- A- Parker of Hastings birthday
,---------honor ------guests
—also
--so—
there Parker.
.
u
_.
them and use the money to buy schoolhouse. The Hl-Y Group will and Mr and Mrs. Fred Ketchum was a good time enjoyed.----------------- ■ Honor roll students from here at‘
dishes and equipment for Camp furnish the program foe Assembly of Kalamazoo. The sick at the
Tha Future Farmer boys of lhe tending lhe Kellogg school at Gull Randall, the occasion being the .
Barry. If you will place the flower Ulis Fridiy forenoon with Ray Norris home arc somewhat Im- Kellogg school entertained lheir lake are Elisabeth woods, senior; iii^Uiday of little Margaret RandaU.
Mr. *"■*
and Mrs. Asa
pot*
Detroit aa
their w
guest
i. fa
thers
a pancake
supper
* Randall enter- I
pots on your front porch, we will Johns at
ol----------_ ------— proved.
— r---------------------------I—
r-rr at
r» r
ITI-T.-----n— Thun- Rutheva Nevins,
.... ... — sophomore;, and
and
tainod neighbors and friends at a !
Sunday at the
home of Mn ' d*y night. Manky Billing*
end Ariera Callhrop. freahman.
remove them and give thanks for speaker.
the same The older Y Group h1 Nashville H. 8. students will en- Smith
a birthday celebration took1 grandion. Lyle Billing*. Oeorge M-1 The Scout meeting will be held birthday party. Saturday evening, in |
handllng this project.
terIs In Mr. Johns tar their assem- place.
Mn. Mary Polley hottest; I Woods and sans Oeorge M. Jr., and Wednesday night instead of Friday honor of the former's brother. Wil- [
Mtiv-two ,1,U .nd t»„ trm u» “» «“»•&gt; “ “» ““ °'d“k &gt;»• those present bcsldu the above John attended from hare.
night. The Fright night meeting lard Randall.
Freeport and Woodland schools ‘O®___________
sue omnn.
jonnson irom
Kaiamazoo wm v»«r Interesting wn&gt;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cramer. Jr., i
mentioned were m1m Myrtle
Bmlth. i■ cum
Miss Johnson
from Kalamazoo
and wm
lhe; w/a
boys
w **
enthusiasUc about the »nd baby daughter were Saturday
enjoyed maklnf things out of
of Battle Creek; Mr. and
x.-.d Mrs.
Ur; soenl the week end with Mr andJ
*-------PRAIRIEVILLE.
I.
...
:c.
™
u/m
h-ii
cuesu of Mr and Mrs
Geornla
learner ism
leather
last Saturday, directed by.
oy
.uran
Grande DePrlester. local; Mr. and Mra. Edward T. Johnson.
Oeorge Aten and assisted by Mr. I Jemet Verrlll. who has been I Mrs.'• , Arthur Bskcr
and
Miss ( Mr and Mrs. Leon Adrianson of eight o'clock. There were nine pres- i Shlllthroat of Hastings,
Sunday evening callers at Delbert
Angell.
Children
from
seven spending the winter with his Patricia
Pa tri
Baker of Kalamazoo Four !
-------- ent. Come and bring others.
Olivet visited George Adrianson
Mrs. F- J. Hughes U gaining ^molds' wgre Mr. and Mrs. Earl
schools were Invited by Mrs.i. Bmlth. daughter. Mrs. Leon Wood and hus- generations were represented. Mrs and Lucile over the week end.
?nd children of near
The Freeport school very graciously
raclously band, of Strowbridge
St rowbridge returned t:
to Smith. Mrs. DePrlester. Mrs. Baker
Members of the Ladies' Aid. Sun­ somewhat from her serious Illness,
u--------c.-----------------Mtl patrlclB Bakcr Mr#
gave the use of their building
and
his home4_
here Bunday.
Mr and Mrs. Mason Minor and i Bott*6 Lreek.
day school and church will have a
also furnished cocoa for the dinner.
**
Mrs. W- P. Smith,
“*• Mary Jean
*
and
J eighty-three years rest lightly up­ miscellaneous shower for Mrs. Don­ family and Ed. Schwomp of HoCLAY HILLS
______
An Interesting and helpful 8. 8. Janet of Crooked Lake spent Set-on
her.____
Her________________
faculties arc keen; she ald Hamilton (nee Burchett) Fri­
Mr8’ WaWe
Bev"®’ ladles from Clay Hills atinstitute waa held in the Barry- urday calling on some of their many has a splendid memory and Is in day afternoon al lhe home of Mr. Smith and Karl Sunday.
tended the Busy Bee Club at Mra.1
| fairly good health. The community and Mrs. Jake Adrianson.
vllle church last Bunday for the friends here.
Mr and Mrs. Roy japhet were in Beulah ^tarp's in Middleville last
Nashville district. Mrs. Elder, of
At the ninth grade cla«s meeting joins in wishing for her many more
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johncock at- Hastings shopping Saturday
1 Thursday
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hyde and 1 *Leon Potts and wife drove to
son were In Hastings on business Lansing Friday and visited at the
I Saturday.
home of their daughter. Mra. Har­
Not many at caucus Saturday. 55 old England and family.
votes cast was lhe maximum num­
Mrs. Ouy McNee and Mrs. Eugene
ber. Otis Boulter. Floyd Shelp. Haight spent Friday with Mra. Wal­
Lewis Johnson. Ernest Morehouse. ter Ogden, near Hastings.
With Firestone Ground-Crip Tractor and Farm Implement Tires. Tests
Charles
Hughes
and
Maurice
Roy McCaul and wife attended
Hughes comprise the ticket.
lhe farewell party Friday evening
prove that "considerpble saving in time and fuel can be mode on many op­
al Levi Miller's, in Leighton.
A London man simplified matters
Francis Haight and family of
erations by the use of Firestone Ground-Crip Tires.’’. The chart below is
by leaving his estate to his lawyer In Home Acres visited, at Eugene
based on replies from 686 farmers to questionnaires sent out by American
the first place.
Haight's.
.

». Saturday

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

Hale visited

teen 111 with
Lhe doctors
calved news

fOE.
Cheney ot
at Alton

t

Chursday In

i the Ladles'

onk of Batiy with Mr.
ent part of
i with Mra.
vith Mr. and

Kelsey and
y on
Mrs.
port.
will be Frllerving from

“U, —

WX

In honor of
I Karines of
nlng at lhe
II attended,
end relatives

. TO PLOW EIGHT ACRES

Class will
all Tuesday
&gt;ot luck sup-

FUEL

jeen on the
etter now.
gton Mqnica
etr parents,
Hon lea Sun-

WITH

, chalkcr of
ion Hazel of
y guests of

TIME

10 HOURS

15 GALS.

STEEL

and Mrs.
Ur. and Mrs.
Kalamazoo
Mr. and Mrs.

WHEELS

S. will serve
the McNutt
pril B. Price
al McCallum
i .spent Sai­
nts. Mr. and

WITH

11'/« GALS.
25r' SAVING

FIRESTONE

,• Owens at­
M- j. HOUM'l
iwcll Sunday
id friends of
r. and Mrs.
iidity.
Owens spent
reck with Mr.
ot Kalama-

SEE THESE TIRES ot

GROUND

Andrus Service Station

GRIP TIRES

7'/z HOURS
7:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

I
I

d family of u
Sunday witii 1
reived word I
&gt;us Illness of I
r. who Is 83 I

VOTING

WALL PAPER - PAINT$ - VARNISH
SPONGES and CHAMOIS
WALL PAPER—5c Single Rail and up
Law

•• NttWW

JOHNSON'S CLO-COAT WAX.

»». 5V«; Qt. Via

WALL PAPER CLEANER,

3 for 25c

W.ub for Our s&gt;a Sob Mordi 2M. S7k Mt IM

REED’S DRUG STORE
Cor. Stole ond Jefferson

Hphsp.MIt*.

Having decided to quit farming, I will have an auction sala ot my farm, four
miles north and three miles west of Bellevue, or six miles south and ona mile oast
of Nashville, on

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING:—

"YES" ON THE ABSTRACT BALLOT IS LIKE SIGNING A BLANK CHECK

TAX PAY E R S
12 HORSES
Registered Belgian stallion, 3 years old,
weight 1750.
Pair matched gray mares, 7 years old,
weight 2800, with foal.

ns

Vote “NO”

on
rown,
ble

Pair matched mares ages 4 and 6 years,
weight 2900.

ON THE ABSTRACT OFFICE BALLOT APRIL 6th

Gray mare, 6 years old, weight 1350,
with foal.

Gray gelding, 5 years old, wt. 1500.
*rge farm

It’s Time To Call A Halt On Taxes!

80 DURHAM CATTLE
10 cows, from 3 to 7 years old, (3 giving

milk, 7 to freshen soon.)
6 heifers, due soon.

12 calves.
28 head young cattle.

Mare colt, 2 years old.

22 head fat cattle.

Four colts, 9 months old.

5 Durham bulls.

Why should wo burden ourselves with o heavy increase in taxes

to give one or two politicians nice fat jobs ot taxpayers' expense?
It will cost Barry county ot least $40,000 of taxpayers' money to
establish o county-owned qbstroct of titles office!
'
There is no demand for this, as a privately operated company is
now rendering, this service better than the county can do it . . . and at
a low, reasonable rate.
SEVENTY-EIGHT counties in Michigan are satisfied from experi­
ence that it costs the property owners ond taxpayers less under a pri­
vately operated abstract office such as Barry county now has.
ONLY FIVE Michigan counties own and operate their own ab­
stract office. One of thyse. Wqyne. charges property owners TWICE
AS HIGH A RATE for abstracts as Parry property owners pay at pres­
ent. Kent, another one of the five, loses money which the taxpayers
mu»t moke up.
.-------- -------------------—------------------- — As a taxpayer, you may never have occasion to need an abstract
qf title. Why then should you be heavily taxed for a service you may

ou enclose
1036 NEW

Pannips,
st colors):
. crimson,
ng. s col■t Peas &lt;5
iuble Mes­
ial offer a

resulant).
uca (frottMt* proof),
calve your
:r or later
JSTOMER
»y mail by
Biig paper.

eight east

Spring Chan-Up It&lt;

AUCTION
SALE
STARTING AT 10:00 A. M.

DEFEAT THIS $40,000
COUNTY EXTRAVAGANCE

Tins

I

TUESDAY, MARCH 24

or call for appointment.

ON.
e misfortune I
quite badly I
&gt;n Thursday. I
him a speed* I

quantities.
IDENERS'
ve on our
mous proMlchlgan
;ld grown,
belter but

mOL'lR!

Society of Agricultural Engineers.

beautiful

. family of
ere
Sunday

wTvas.’r'r t- *■ -

Farmers! Cut Operating Cost!

and Rapids
larnard Sun-

iy

I r, I—I-*. ■

&gt;

FARM TOOLS.
Masiay-Harrit hay loader, used ana Bea­
son. Black Hawk manure spreader.

-

Vote "NO" on the AbV&lt;0ft Offbe Belief end KW TAXI* POWN!

REDUCTION

16 shoots, weight 150 lbs.
Brood sow, due to farrow in Moy.

Set heavy work harneu.
Two now incubators. Chicken feeders.

novar use?
Ut'i difaaf this move to booef fu».

TAX

MISCELLANEOUS.

HOGS.

LEAGUE

Largo hard coal broodar stova.
Other articles not mentioned.

LUNCH WAGON ON GROUNDS
TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

NO PROPERTY REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

Albert Hulsebi
PROPRIETOR

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. MARCH IS, IBM

Alien-bUmp spent part ot laat [day with hU parents. Mr. and Mrs. spent and the bride and groom re-,
’•
SOUTH SHULTZ.
reived many fine gifts.
' and Mn Ronald Havnra and w*k shearing sheep near Plain- C. N. Tobias.
Visitors at Mra." Sarah Kenyon's
well.
I Mr. and Mra. Bert Newland of
Mr. and Mra. Lecter Lord started Sunday were: Mr. and Mrs. Jess
ttd Mra Carl Weyerman nhd
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias and I Rutland called on Mr. and Mra. Edd
housekeeping Thursday Ln Mrs. Kenyon of Hickory Corners: Mr.
' daughter ol Kalamazoo spent Sun- . b**'tnn Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Ora Zilpha Morehouse's tenant house. and Mra. Albert Warner , of Kala( aaugmer
om Hlndj accompantP&lt;1 uvth homP artLester will do the farm work there, mazoo; Mr. and Mra. Lynn Bishop
wy**—*.............. —■
■
"
' er spending two weeks with Mrs.
Mrs. Jesse Ogood Is much Im­ of Battle Creek and Mn. Ida Ruth's
*«***&gt;**^J1 ''"r'TkdMr.jo.N.vlu.na
proved In health we are pleased to granddaughter. Ruth, and husband
। report. Mrs Ella Replogle Is aaslst- of Hastings.
son. Kenneth, and granddaughter. Uig her with the housework.
Mn. Ada Ashby attended a com­
Ruby Nevitt. of East Leroy visited
I Mr. and Mra. Newton Wedensday 1 Several of our men folks attend­ munity meeting at Mra. Kelley's In
and called on Mr. and Mrs. Orville ed lhe Republican caucus at the Hastings, Wednesday.
Cloverdale hall Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Andrus and
Hammond In the afternoon.
Mr and Mrs. L. D. Woodman Mary Jane of Hastings called on Mr
| Mr. and Mrs. John Houvenir of
and Mra. O. E. Kenyon Sunday aft­
Augusta and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Sny- were in Kalamazoo Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert McKlbbln at­ ernoon.
I der and Mra. Vida Phillips of Hasi Ungs spent Sunday with lhe latter's tended the funeral of Mra. Bertha
Mrs Mabelle OsgoocT and baby,
' son. Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Phillips । Stuart Deland of Yankee Springs, Ira Stephen, and Miss Barbara
1 and family.
which was held In lhe Yankee Chamberlain of West Hope visited
I
Mr. and Mra. Fred Bush and chll- , Springs church Sunday afternoon the latter's parents. Mr. and Mra.
Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Springer of William Chamberlain. Saturday.
. I dren of Urbandale visited her father
I and brother. W. O. and Keel To- Bowens Mills called al Harold
Mra. Ethel Hom. who lias been
1. bias and family Sunday.
Springers after having attended!| quite ill. is some better at this writ­
I1 Community meeting at the school-1 .Mrs. Deland's funeral Sunday aft- ing. Her sister. Mrs. Shute, and
• ernoon.
rrnnnn
। house Friday.
husband of Hastings spent Sunday
The Community club will be en­ with her.
tertained at the schoolhouse. Fri­
WEST HOPE.
The many friends of Will Hallock
, About 50 members of the John- &gt; day night. March 20 by Mr. and
cock family met Friday evening at ’ Mrs. Richard Laubaugh. An oyster wilt be sorry to hear he Is in Pen­
Phone 2515
Frank Sage
Hastings
j the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P Col­ supper will be served. All members nock hospital having had a very
' lison to honor Mr. and Mrs. Maur- i are requested to be present, as the serious operation. but at this writing
; Ice Johncock with a miscellaneous annual reports will be given and of­ Is gaining nicely. All hope he may
. shower. An hilarious evening was ficers elected for the coming year. be well and strong again.
1 Kenneth Gates attended a birth­
day surprise for his grandma in
Battle Creek. Wednesday night.
Mra. Edith Sonneville and Mrs.
Isabelle May and Jimmie of Battle
Creek spent the week end with Les­
ter Sonneville and family.
Those from here who .attended
the funeral of Harry Waters
tn
Hastings Tuesday were: Mr. and
Mra. Ernest Peake. Mra. Mina Ken­
yon and Arney Sonneville.
Clinton Horp went to Nashville
Saturday to spend some time with
his mother. Mrs. Ada Murray.
Rev. Dwight Horn of Onarga. Ill­
is visiting his parents. Mr. and Mrs
Fred Hom.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kenyon of
। Hickory Comers ate dinner with
' their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs
G. E. Kenyon. Tuesday.
Mrs. Florence Peake has been
helping to care for her little grand­
son. Donald Watson, of Cloverdale,
who has been ill with pneumonia.
RINDS CORNERS.

|

WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARI

BUILT. BUICK WIU BUILD THEM

POCAHONTAS
KY. LUMPJand EGG
AUXIER1EGG
SOLVAY COKE

On Hand Now

I

$765

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

STATE ROAD.
The Fisher P. T. A. was Friday
evening. The Hastings "Woodbuzsera" furnished music and Stuart
Clement gave a talk. Lunch was
furnished by Thelma Sprague and
Myrtle Coleman.
Mr. and Mra. Leonard Walters of
Carlton have moved on the Agnes
Fisher farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Swan Anderson are
making improvements on their farm
here and will move onto same this
spring.
Mr and Mrs. Jim Sothard spent
Saturday evening with
Andrew
Kennedy and enjoyed warm maple

THE
REVOLUTIONARY

NEW 1936

Mr. and Mrs. Milton Nobles of
Grandville visited Mr. and Mra.
Jack O'Connor Sunday.
Homer Becker is putting a steel
roof on his new bam and soon will
have it all completed.

iW5 ** * M.

TfflSW®®,'

S'7/' CT* •’ ’he factory is the lowest list
/ Ou price ever put on a Buick.
But this $765* buys the most efficient type
ol straight-eight engine in the world—the
Buick valve-in-hcad straight-eight
This $765* buys the safety of tiptoe hy­
draulic brakes combined with the overhead
protection of the solid steel “Turret Top.”
This $765* buys Knee -?\ction, plus weightbalanced springing, plus freedom from
backlash and vibration through torque­
tube drive.

And this $765* buys a car
engineered in Buick’s own
matchless manner, which
means not only smooth­
YOU GET
A BETTER

USED CAR
FROM A
BUICK DEALER

R

five year protection plan
certified low operating cost

IZ
Lil inH
!&gt;•

Haitingi, Michigan
Telephone 2680

In order to settle the estate of the late W. L. Perrin, I will sell at public auction on
the premises 3-4 mile southeast of Hickory Corners, on

and constant cold made visible
through a

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25
Commencing promptly ot 12:30 o'clock, the following property:—

second

Our own appointment as
a Dealer for KELVINATOR

4 HORSES.

Pair sorrel geldings, 13 yrs., wt. 3200.
Sorrel gelding, 16 years old, weight 1350.
Bay mare, 8 years old, weight 1600.

We are mighty proud of this appointment. Because after seeing all the new
1936 lefrigcrators—wc know we would rather offer our customers Kelvinator than any other make.

24 HEAD CATTLE.
Eighteen good dairy cows, Guernseys and
Holsteins, some due to freshen soon;
6 two-year old heifers, bred to freshen
this summer; 2 heifer calves.

It's revolutionary! Not just an improved model—but a refrigerator so far
ahead that it makes yesterday's electric refrigerators obsolete.

Don't take our word for it. Come in and see it for yourself. And if you’re
ready to buy —remember a Kelvinator costs no more—and terms are eisier
than ever. Come in and see why we're so enthusiastic about being a Kelvin­
ator dealer in 1936!

2 HOGS.

OUR

SHOWROOM

AND

SEE

THE

NEW

Brood sow due to farrow April 15th.
Brood sow, bred to farrow the last of June.
FARMING MACHINERY.

McCormick-Deering grain binder 7-ft.
McCormick-Deering ensilage cutter.
McCormick-Deering mower.
John Deere hay loader. Side delivery
rake. John Deere manure spreader.

YOUR NEXT REFRIGERATOR

II. E. SMITH
123 W. State

•

AUCTION SALE

with its

VISIT

ness and steadiness and road-hugging even­
ness at every speed—but the sort of loughfibred stamina that makes cobwebs grow
in the repair shops!
A car like this at a price like this is news
any day—but for the real surprise let us
show you how it figures out in weekly
payments.
The new GM AC 6^ Time Payment Plan
cuts the cost of buying a car on time.Why
not use these savings to get the kind of
car you’ve always wanted?

HASTINGS

HARDWARE AND
APPLIANCES
Phone 2488

TERMS:—CASH.

3 two-horse riding cultivators.
Lime sower, marl spreading attachment.

2 wagons. Set sleighs. Dump boards.

Flat rock.

Wagon box.

2 set wagon springs.
3 sets dbl. harness. Several horse collars.

Milk cans, pails, forks, shovels.
Many other articles not mentioned.
Two-horse walking cultivator.
Superior double disk groin drill.
John Deere 4-sec. spring tooth harrow.
Oliver sulky plow. Tractor 2-bottom plow.
Tractor double disk. Ten-ft. cultipacker.
John Deere potato digger.
Iron Age potato planter.
Iron Age potato sprayer.
Boggs potato sorter. 125 good crates.

15 TONS ALFALFA HAY.

NO PROPERTY TO BE REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

E. M. CADWALLADER, Administrator
HAROLD NEWKIRK, Auctioneer.

W. G. HORTON, Clerk.

�The scholar, author

*

-

and

lecturer

March

U-Rscalloped

EFWTM

Com;

'SS; the horizon. we can but speculate aa Mrs. UuUr Ytiter.

March M—Lima Bean Roup; March
Tt-acaUoped Potatoes. The hot
lunch for thia week will be prepared
by Vernier
Hughson.
Dorothy
Fischer, and Doris Buelow.

latlons: Lol* Tungale and Re tha
Austin;
Advertising:
Charlotte
Wolowicx, Betty Btreeler. Viola
Fischer, and Harry Mugridgr; Dec­
orations: Donna Nell. Bill Lepper,
izona Longstreet and Norma Jupp-

THRU CORNKBS[Kalamazoo as guests of
As war clouds gather rapidly on । Mrs. John Lulkens and

Hot lunch—

on I

‘

Miss

Mr.
Mr.

and
and

Cowley.

cognlxant of the fact that history
repeats itself.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Yetter and
daughter.
Mias
Marguerite of
1 Grand Rapids spent laat Sunday In

Mr. Bell and Mr. Carmichael at­
tended the guidance meeting at
Lansing Friday afternoon and Sat­
urday. Speakers were Dr. WllUard.
C- Olson of the University of Michi­
gan and Dr. Ben D. wood of Co­
lumbia University. Round table cha­

tin, Lois CUler and Leona Long'
street; Door: Ted Wleringa and
Hany Mugridge.
Senior Skip Day.
The Seniors enjoyed a surprise
Friday marked the end of lhe six
Skip day last Wednesday. March
11. Two school buses were engaged week's marking period. Many stu­
and lhe trip to Detroit was begun dents are anxiously awaiting their
st sl:30 A. M They arrived at their report cards, others aren't so anx-

ONE CENT BRINGS HOME THE EXTRA PACKAGE

Doctor."
starring
•Quinta." They then

4 BIG DAYS-WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
FACE POWDERS and ROUGE /MII K

2 for .SI
of magnesia ie oz.
COD LIVER OIL (Eim viuminroiucr) 16 oz. 2 for l.Ol
MINERAL OIL RUSSIAN TYPE - . 2 for .76
THEATRICAL COLD CREAM 1 lb. 2 for .76
1 for JI
Spring Blossom
ASPIRIN TABLETS 100s
- 2 for .51
Face rowder—
HINKLE TABLETS lOOs
■
2 for .26
Assorted Shades
.... 8 fer JI
BEEF, IRON AND WINE 2 for l.Ol
Flour du Midi
SODIUM PERBORATE FLAVORED
2 for .51
Face Powder—
Assorted Shades
PAPAIN &amp; BILE SALTS TABLETS 100s 2 for l.Ol
8 fer JI
SODA MINT TABLETS lOOs - 2 for .26
EPSOM SALT 16 OZ. TINS
- 2 for .26
NELSON’S SHAVING CREAM
■
- 2 for .26
For CUTS, WOUNDS ALCO-UN (Rubbing Alcohol) 16 oz. - 2 for .40
ANTISEPTINE 16 oz.................................... 2 for .51
and SKIN TROUBLES GERMICIDAL SOAP 1%

CREAMS and LOTIONS

lean Nolan Face
Powder —A Hon­
ed Shades.

CONTENT! Rew
or Pasteurized —

Two glosses of milk look alike

but there

is a difference if one of them is Highlands

Dairy Grode A Milk.

This milk is one of the

highest grades produced.
in the milk itself.

The difference is

Each glassful contains

energy-building vitamins. TRY HIGHLANDS

Tincture Iodine, 1 os..................................... 8 for
Marcurochrome Solution,
oz. ■
.. .8 for
Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve...................8 fer
Der-Ma-Mol Salve...................................... 8 far
Zinc Oxide Ointment............................... 8 fer
Ammoniated Mercury Ointment...............8 fer
Boric Acid Ointment....................................8 for
Carbolic Salve................................................ 8 for
Germicidal Soap, 1%.................................. 8 for
Extox (for poison ivy)...................................8 for
Cal-O-Mine Lotion, 16 oz......................... 8 far
Witch Hazel Extract, 16 ox.........................8 fer

GRADE A . . . you'll o&lt;?joy its sweet, refresh­

.16
.86
.86
.11
JI
.86

Produced pure and delivered pure . . . EVERY

ifh one 2651

Sodium Phosphate, Effervescent
PenjGetlc (Liquid Analgesic).
Fig * Senna Laxative................
Glycerine Suppositories, Infants
Laxative Cold Capsules...........
Cherry Bade Cough Syrvp..........

Sarsaparilla Compound
Blackberry* JamaicaGi

Maglox..................... ...
Castor Oil 8 ox...............

Syrup Hypophosphites Compound
1.01
fer 1.01
Sulphur A Cream Tartar Lax.
"
‘
Pine Needle Balm.................
Pile Anodyne.........................
Dyspepsia Tablet*.................

For MEN
WHO SHAVE

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hastings
Mag-Lac Tooth Paste ..............
Anliteptine Tooth Paste...............
Penslar Dental Cream...................
Antisepiine Tooth Powder...........
Antisepiine liquid 16 oi..............
Boraline, liquid astringent, 16 OX.
Sodium Perborate, flavored.........
Mao Lac Tooth Brush..................

I cover my

Buaiaesi of all kinds needs concrete roads. They appeal

to taxpayers, because they cost less to build than any
other roads of equal load carrying capacity. Surface
maintenance costs are |1 14 to $469 less per mile per

Nelson's Bmhftee Skavl*
Nel ton’s Shaving Lotioe.
Nel*oe'. Skavieg Croom

For the HAIR
qnd SCALP

COSMITINI
A soothing and
healing lotion for

’d
y

).S

Ti Shampona

IW,

2 ter 51*

PENSLAR
MILK OF
MAGNESIA

ALCO-UN

5IPTO-SAN

Xi/

The fined quality
rubbing alcohol.
Full plats.

Antiseptic Powder

'

’

rapid flow lube, full

fe\\\

■ilk

8 fer

.11

.ilw.N

VANILLA EXTRACT
PURI

Borated, 16 os....................... 8 fer .76

Colonial Club Hair Taele....
Rom Hair Oil.............................
Petroleum HbkToate................
Colonial Club Tank Shampoo

2 fee 40'

piece bog, extra

fl

T«ik.'

Colonial Club
Colonial Club

GLYCERINE AND
ROSE WATER

VERY FINE STATIONERY

2 az. bottle

Nl

Pender Heir

chapped ikia

NILSON'S BABY
POWDER
territory quicker with less wear and tear on nerves and

Colonial Club Raxor Bla&lt;

Junior Tooth Brush . . . ................... .

QUALITY RUBBER GOODS

car. I save energy for selling. I see more prospects
and sell more goods I”

Colonial Cub Lilac Veg

PoMtatToaHi BnaA..... . .z...

Coster Oil, 3 ox. "........... .
Camphorated Oil, 2 ox. . ..
Boric Acid Crystals, 4 ounce
While Liniment......................
Cod Liver Oil Tablet* (100)
Cascarq Aromatic.................
Eye Bath................................
Spirit Camphor, 1 ounce ...
Glycerine, 3 ounces..............
Catcara Eat. Tablets (100). .
Comp. Licorice Powder, 4 ou
Soda Mint Tablets (100)
Rochelle Sall, 3 ounce lies .
Alum Powdered, 4 ounce*
Essence Peppermint, 1 ounce
Laxative Cold Breakers ....

i i and my car operating costs drop.

fer JI
fer JI
far J1

Penslar

.86
.86
.11
.76
JI

MORNING.

Cold Geam
1 fee .11

Hew dv Midi Buttermilk Granting
Geom.................................................. 1 fer .81

FAMILY REMEDIES

.86

For Your
MEDICINE CABINET

ing flavor.

IflB I Flour du Midi

26*

2 ter 41*

8 quart capacity
.............8 fer 51.86

JEmV $1.?l Combing­
_____ •••!* Fountain
Syringe. Two quart
........... 8 fer 11.76
.ustomen will be permitted to select a Wafer Bottle
gad a Fountain Syringe as a purchase._

NELSON'S
MAGNESIA
MIXTURE

EPJOM SALT

MN-UFTU8
Creosoted
Cough Syrup

2 tw 51*

year than for other types. It pays to demand concrete
for every road carrying 100 vehicles or more per day.

See You at the Fair

(ale,

8 far 1.76
.60 Nebo—
Wovori linoa
Finish—14

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. MARCH II. 1IM

rORECLOSOTE.

CHAXCRRT XOTICE.

'

I

_________________ 1

E“
«u« m&lt;
a uh «&lt; ihf

1 r ..&lt;1-1

wm

Mlil.il.n

ir Slat- Hlroet ea
Oat 5-2*

litehb
m

: :•

I ,■' . ■ .

T-T 1.1 i. r ...

church Thursday evening. March
26.
Several fronit here attended the
junior play at lhe High school Fri­
day night in which Margaret Hum­
mel had a very good part.

MOTICB OP MORTOAOB FORB
CLOSURE bale

Itbln nri«»n
McPF.rK-

Oat MARCH

»l»t- or Mirhxd

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

McDonald.

NOTICE TO CBEDITORa

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

Hydi

ORDER I OK PUHI. CATION
A. D

1934

C. MeCtrlnry. LUalditar.

Mildred Smith. K.cl.ter

AUCTION SALE

To settle the estate of my husband, the late Will W. Sheffield, I will sell at public
auction on the Will W. Sheffield farm, located on M-43, just west of the State Fish
Hatchery, Hastings, on

TUESDAY, MARCH 24
COMMENCING AT 1:00 O'CLOCK, AND OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY

HORSES.
Grey mare, weight 1500, 12 yrs. old.
Sorrel gelding, weight 1500, 18 yrs. old
Bay gelding, weight 1600, 12 yrs. old.

cows.
Guernsey and Durham cow, 4 years old,
fresh, bred Feb. 21.
Guernsey and Jersey cow, 5 years old, calf
by side.
Guernsey cow, 4 yrs., fresh, bred Feb. 14.
Guernsey cow, 2 yrs., to freshen soon.
Guernsey cow, 2 yrs., calf by side.
2 Guernsey heifers, year old.
Heifer calf.
Guernsey bull, 1 year old, registered.
Guernsey bull, 5 mos., eligible to register.

HAY AND GRAIN
40 bu. rye. 40 bu. oats. 6 bu. red kidney beans.
550 shocks of corn in field. 100 crates of corn.

TOOLS.
Wagon and combination rack. Steel wheel wagon.
Flat rack. Dump wagon. Oliver 98 walking plow.
John Deere sulky plow. 3-section drag.
2 two-section drags. Superior 11 hoe grain drill.
Little Willie riding cultivator.
Five-shovel, spring tooth and spike tooth cultivators.
Single disk. McCormick mower. Dump rake.
2 sets of work harness. Grindstone. Stoneboat.
Caldron kettle. Pair leather fly netia
Primrose Cream separator.
20 rads 5-ft. chicken fence.
Shovels, forks and miscellaneous articles.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
8 shoots.

HOGS AND BEES.
16 swarms of bees.

QUIMBY.
| Barrett. Lyle Bunnell. Homer Bart- A. Pierron of Hastings called on
and_ Mrs.
clayton
let t------and------Earl--------------Pennock,---------constables.
aft------. MoKeown
~ ,
I------ - - . Mrs Waller Culbert Thursday W
*
lisa Donna
at J. MatDoster. wmum
William Bmllh.
Smith.1 CITO
rrnoi„
^n.
Doim, visited
yulud ,14.
M&lt;t- 1 py^k Douw.
in Rutland. Sunday.
John Doster and Mr. and Mrs.
..
...
—
.
.
Robert Nash of HolAlns visited Marshall Norwood attended lhe fuMr und
Pranlt Shriber and
-------------------- Mrs. nenU
prjink VailTyM Bl
Mr. and Mn. Leo Barry called on
his
grandparents.
Mr. and.
Walter Bidelman. Saturday.
maxoo on Thursday.
.
**
‘
‘
There has been no school here
wl
, Grace r
,uuil„ and —
Mn.
Faulkner
Miss tings Thursday afternoon. William
the past week as the teacher. Mr
Faulkner spent Thursday in
had the misfortune Wednesday aft­
McIntyre, has been quite ill.
, Katamaxoo
Mr. Behring of Morley waa here, Mr and
E. r. Willison spent ernoon while at work dressing s belt
several days last week looking after Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Alvah on the rip aaw to break his arm
his property here.
i Pennock at Hickory Comers.
and dislocate his wrist.
Mr. and Mn. Carroll Cutler, Jr..: Mr
Mn_ Leon Doster spent
Mn. Lyle Quimby and Mr. and
are visiting their sister in Detroit.
Sunday with Mrs. Bessie Hughes at Mn Jasper Herrick and family of
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hollman and prairievilta.
Battle Creek and Mrs. Dolly Lee
family of Dowling spent part of last
Mrs Mary Doster and daughter, ot Hastings and Alex Neal of near
ueek with their parents here.
Mn. Frances Norwood. wUl enter- Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Ld. Rittman of Milwaukee is vis- uln
HrHae uurary Club on Williams and daughter. Geraldine,
King his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Thursday, March 26. with a co-op- spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
nitzman who are some belter at era[lve cunner
al noon.
Lafayette Usbome Ln honor of Mra.
this writing,
-----Usborne's birthday.
Several from here attended the
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Mrs. Anna Buck. Mrs. Arthur
L. A. S. at the home ot Mrs. Rial
Yargcr and daughter and Mr. and
Hazel
Shriber
spent
the
past
week
Kellogg last Thursday. All report
with Mr. and Mn. Harold Tasker Mn. Leo Barry attended the funeral
a good time.
of James Root of near Coopersville
The L A. 8. will serve supper far -L
»
a father and son banquet at the
Mra- Homcr Insram and Mrs. F. Sunday afternoon.

2 heating stoves. Cook stove. Library table, ice box.
Battery radio. Churn, 10-gal. Coleman lamp.
Coleman lantern and other articles not mentioned.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. Nothing removed until settled for.

MRS. ALMYRA SHEFFIELD, Admx.
DEWEY REED, Auctioneer

CLIFFORD HAMMOND, Clerk.

DELTON.
Well, nothing unusual happened
in Delton on Friday the 13th. that
we know.
, Dr. Ed. Lowry attended a meeting
of the Barry and Eaton Dental So­
JOHN J. Cl HAIM.
..f tl.« Kni- &lt;■! Ml&lt;h ciety at Grand Ledge on Friday
evening.
There was a Very small attend­
ance Wednesday at the Farm Bu­
reau meeting but a very interest­
ing meeting was reported.
Mrs. Beatrice Dunning spent Fri­
day with her sister. Mrs. Burdette
Little, in Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Whittemore
have returned to their home after
spending lhe past two months in
Florida.
_
Rehearsals have begun for anoth­
er thrce-act play, a comedy of mys­
tery. adventure and surprise, to be
Riven by ten of our local men undcr the able direction of Ellis E.
Faulkner. Watch for the dates. A
synopsis of lhe play will be given In
our next weeks items.
Mrs. Helen Pennock sj»ent Thurs- 1
day with her mother. Mrs. Frank
(■&lt; M*xb. ‘ Davis, at Galesburg.
1
Mr. and Mrs. George Brown of
utr I'-Urk ! White Piston were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. L. N. Bush on Wednesday.
NOTICE or SALE OF REAL ESTATE. [ A. L. Solomon and daughter. Car­
oline. visited the former’s brother,
1 Birdell Solomon, and family
al
Richland on Thursday.
• ir &lt;&gt;n th-• Mra- H- T- Reynolds has been
if. i osn. 11 quite sick the jiast
week
with
'trip" sore throat and last Satur­
day was taken much worse, erysipe­
las having set in. A trained nurse
. 13 caring for her.
’ The W. F. M. S. will Rive a
i iivRhKCR. I Founder's Day program in the
' church bn Monday evening. March
23, Everyone Is Invited.
I The father and son banquet will
be held In the church basement on
Friday evening. March 27.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
' At the Barry township Republi­
can caucus Wednesday the follow­
ing officers were nominated for the
election: Morse Backus, supervisor;
Vemor. Webster, clerk: John
J.
Doiter.'treusurer; Bert Litts. Justice
of the peace; Charles Kahler,
board of review; Maron Newton,
highway commissioner; Ellsworth

Robert Butler and friend of Bat­
tle Creek spent the week end with
his mother. Mr. and Mrs. Mel Crum.
Mr. and Mrs Clare Thomas spent
Saturday with her sister. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Chilson of Cloverdale.
Mr. and Mn. Jay JIall, Mr. and
Mrs. Kirby Maron and Richard Hall
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Moorhus of Delton.
The Misses Jean Hnmond, Emma
Chandler and Opal Brierly attend­
ed the concert bv Nelson Eddy, at
Grand Rapids. Friday evening.
Clarence Hammond of Hastings
Ls working for his brother, Marc
Hammond, at present.
Mlos Elizabeth Otto of Doster
spent Sunday with her brother and
family. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Otto.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hamilton
.moved his parents household.goods
to Kalamazoo the past week.
, Frank Phillips and daughter of
Kalamazoo spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. William Phillips.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Steele spent
the week end with her sister. Mr.
and Mrs. Carl McManls. of Katamazoo.
Hugh Ritter spent the week end
at Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Boerman of
Cressey spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Lyle Francisco.
Fred Otis is not so well at this
writing.
The family of Earl Carpenter
have been quite sick with the flu.
Irving Doater spent Friday with
his daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Merle
Gay of Plainwell.

SOUTH BOWS-E.
Johnnie Eash spent from Friday
j until Sunday with his sister. Mrs.
| Keith Daniels of Hastings.
Emory Keim and family of
Campbell visited Sunday at Harold
i Yoder’s.
•
Harold Yoder and family visited,
John Huizinga of Grandville Mon­
day evening.
Pauline Moore of Irving was a
' Sunday guest of Eleanor Miller.
1 Mr. and Mrs will Mishler and
daughter visited Warren Roush In ,
Hastings Saturday.
I Mr. and Mrs.'Forest Slater of|
I Muir called on her folks. Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Shaffer Sunday.
I Edwin Nash ot Clarksville was k
| dinner guest at Jennie Pardee's
। Monday. .
I Andrew Blough and family are
moving to their new htane In In­
. dlana this week and Elmer Bhaffcr's are moving to the Lydia
. Karcher home.
Mrs. Lydia Porritt who has been
; caring for her sisters. Mrs. Will
Pardee and Jennie Pardee returned
X I to her home Sunday.
.

GOOD COAL make, warm friendi,
and when you have a bin of our coal
you will be pleased with the fine,
even heat. Low in ash, and longburning. Try a ton today and
aave on your fuel bills.
SEE US ABOUT YOUR POULTRY
FEEDS—A Few Feed Prices:—

16^ Dairy—$1.55 per 100 lbs.
Homestead Mash—$2.35 per 100 lbs.
Advance Scratch—$2.10 per 100 lbs.
Calf Meal—$1.00 per 25 lbs.

Smith Brothers
Velte &amp; Company
Hastings Telephone 2257
Dealers hi Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Salt, Lime,

Cement and Coal

AUCTION SALE!
Having decided to engage in other business, I will have a. public.auction at
my place located, first right hand turn west of Lake Al-Gon-Quin and fourth
house on left hand side of road, on

THURSDAY, MARCH 26
BEGINNING AT 1:00 P. M.

HORSES.
Black horse, weight 1350 lbs., good
worker.
COWS.
Jersey cow, 6 yrs. old, calf by side.
Guernsey cow, 4 years old, duo soon.
Jersey bull, 9 months old, purebred.
Black Holstein cow, 6 years old.
Red and white cow, 6 years old.
PIGS.
6 shoots, weight 60 lbs. each.

HAY. SEED, ETC.
30 tons mixed hay.
10 bu. early seed potatoes.
15 lbs. onion seed, Brighton strain, last
year's seed.
HARNESS.
Set double work harness, 1 1-2 inch.

FARM TOOLS.
Four-sec. drag. 8-ft. cultipacker.

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING:-

Low auto steel wheel farm wagon and
good flat rack, new.
Van Brunt groin drill, fertilizer ond
Med attachment, good one.

Whiffletreea and evener.
Double disk. Land roller.
Oliver one-bottom, 18-inch muck plow.
Buzz rig mounted on trucks.
No. 12 DeLaval cream separator.
Four-wheel trailer.

Planet. Jr. garden seeder, new last
spring. 60-gal. iron kettle.
160 ft. hay rope. Posthole digger.
Canthook. Corn planter.
200 good crates. 240 rods barbed wire.
80 rods check wire for com planter.
Com shelter. Scythe and snath.
75 cedar fence post. 2 harpoon forks.
Com and potato markers. Churn.
Log chains. Steel drums. Forks.
Shovels and many other articles too
numerous to mention.

THERE WILL BE NO BY-1IDDINC AT THIS SALE.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. Nothing removed until settled
for.
'
...

HERMAN FELDPAUSCH, Prop
DEWEY REED, AucHenrar.

CLIFFORD HAMMOND, Clark.

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                  <text>THE
EIGHTIETH YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 26,1936

22 PAGES

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

JE_

MERCHANTS ANNOUNCE BIG SALES EVE
Bargains Here Friday and Saturday, March
[REHEARSING NEW •
New Merchandise To
OSTRICH GROWING Community Hall Takes on Festive SPRING ELECTION
SELECTIONS WEEKLY NEW ELECTRIC
Bloom
as
Comm. Club Fair Opens
MONDAY. APRIL G
RATES APRIL 1ST On Market At
AS A BUSINESS
Hastings City Band to Pre­

a.

WAB VERY THRIVING TILL
DAME FASHION PUT THE
KIBOSH ON PLUMES

'

a.

sent Public Concert
After Easter

CONSUMERS CO. TO APPLY
NOMINATIONS MADE BY
The Hastings City Band is workRATES FIXED BY THE
SIXTEEN TOWNSHIPS
I which will be used during the comCOMMISSION
IN THE COUNTY
।
Ing
summer
in
the
weekly
concerts,
j
community hall took on a color­ and evening. smaller prizes will be

Thirty Five Colorful Exhibits;
Many Free Prizes to Be Awarded

Low
Prices For These Two Days

Did you ever dream of finding
Hastings merchants are planning
Also they have some new numbers
to celebrate the advent of spring money? Well. Universal Oarage la
| which are to be used In the big WILL MEAN AVERAGE
with city-wide sales, whlph for two
I musical evening planned for presen-,
dan.
Friday
and
Saturday.
SAVING OF 12’/2% March 37 and 38. will feature new One cent—if you want to m*
I tatIon In the Central auditorium
I shortly after Lent.
spring goods at bargain prices.
The reed section of the band Is New Gas Rates, Saving 33
Many special sales announce­
well filled, and it Is desired to build .
ments In tills issue of the Banner
1-3 Per Gent, May Be
up the comet and alto sections. ,
will give a good idea of the great
Fixed
in
May
which are not large enough for a 1
tend the Caucuses
range of mercliandlsc to be IncludChet Hodges says, "step right up
Everything In connection with the
band the size of this one.
|I The Consumers Power company's .
you young blades. We have a com­
Pair will be free. This includes ad­
The sixteen townships of Barry
Director Lewis Hine is doing a Hastings office has received notice duction here are a few "flashes’; plete line of sparklers and at all
mission,
entertainment,
refresh­ county have named their candlments and prizes. Nothing will bedates for township officers to be good job directing and Instructing to begin applying the new electric giving u brief summary of what the
(. —n h., IH.
flxed fay
llate individual stores have to offer.
sold al the Fair, nor will there be voted on on Monday. April 6. Nine and Is well liked by the band boys—
any business solicited. There will be | of the townships have only one and we presume by the "band girls’' utilities commission, beginning on
Forrest Johnson takes over Pack­
April ard
1.
no trick lotteries, gambling devices., ticket named—the Republican. Folagency. Best wishes. Forrest.
I
Hastings
is
the
center
of
wiiat
U , Ray Walers, clothier on Main
slde shows or amusements that 1 towing are the nominations:
known as the "Hastings Division." ' street, offers prises to .the one who even Daddy. You cant afford to
make the ordinary free fair any-------- *one of about 20 or more organlza- can guess the number of shirts in
thing but free. .
jbllcan — Supervisor. Wm. C.
everyone assembled an one floor.
! tions In the state representing the his store. Stop in and have a try.
; Clerk. Albert E. Jones;
spectacular
business
enterprises
In fact the Fair committee has
In regard to prizes, there will be
Consumers Co. The estimated an- i Feldpausch’s„„
u au
.»w.’s....
, Clare M. Holder;. Bd. of
and
Bulllng
have•a spring coloring new window fix­
ever established In this country. It
plenty of them. Each evening at staled Its willingness to offer a prize Rev., Myron Tuckerman; Justice.
nual sayings of the new rales to ’ novel offer In a new electric refrlg- tures and some of the items In their
approached the ’’rocks'’ when fickle nine o'clock will be llw drawing for
to anyone who can figure out a way Olen Swift; Highway Commr, M­
electric light and power users wltn- erator which they will give away
fashion decreed that It was time
the grand prize, while about every to spend a nickel on either floor C. Russell.
• Prices range from 1c up.
in
the
Hastings
Division
area
Is
423.
­
soon.
to make o change, and ostrich quarter hour during the afternoon where the Fair is to be conducted.
I Hinman’s Grocery is featuring
1400. The reduced rates will mean
plumes went out of style.
A. K. Frandsen exhibits what ev­ some-specials that will make your
FAMILY RELIEF LOAD IN ; for the people of this city a saving
syrla township.
Way back in the -gay nineties,
ery
lady
wants
to
wear
this
spring
to rend abau8
of about 61.000 per month; and will —and he Is going to present two , moUth water just
Baltimore.
1
D0U*
BARRY COUNTY FEB.
and before
that, osiricn
ostrich piumoa
plumes
■na
oeiorc mat.
01-ar
also mean for the city Itself a sav­
Republican —Supervisor.
Lloyd
were In great favor, and milady's: Gefs S534 More
with a nice new'one. Better look in­
’
1 WAS 382
ing of about 81.000 per year.
HuWoCMIUUtoW.ta
Gaskill; clerk. Or lie Fisher; Treas,
social standing and prestige, was
to this.' ladies.
The consumers power Company,
Bert Scott; Justice. Albert Brill;
Thun Anticipated
judged more or less by the quality
J. C. Penney steps out this week
from its headquarters at Jackson,
Highway commr.. Floyd Garrison; COMM. INVITES CON­
and length of the ostrich plume
announces their acceptance of the with some real buys for the entire off the ground this spring. U you
Bd. Review, Charles Van Vranken.
surmounting her bonnet. Previous
family, a whole lot of nice new will stop tn and see him.
STRUCTIVE CRITICISM rates ordered by the Michigan pub- spring
Democrat — Supervisor.
”Leon
Lawrence Kelly, who had an auc­
to the transfer of some live bird*
things.
Everything must start from seed ’
I
lie
utilities
commission.
Whether
Moon; clerk. Roy Rice;
to this country, all these feathers tion sale on March 19. was surely
Frank (one stop service) Andrus and Smith Brothen. Velte and Co., •
I these rates can be maintained will.
pleased with the results of the sale. PROCEEDS TO BE USED Kenneth Garrett; Justice. Orville Asks People to Consider the
came from Africa and Australia.
I of course, depend upon results. That has tires what are ‘tires, but they
But when It came to producing When he figured up his receipts, he
FOR OARS OF CRIPPLED Purcell; Highway Commr.. James
Is. If the company cannot con­
Conditions Which Have
Powell; Bd. of Review. Frank Van
ostrich plumes in this country, as found that he had 8534 more than
tinue these rates without meet­ to speed up production on his farm
CHILDREN
Byckles.
which,
of
Is usual In such case*, there was one previously estimated,
Relief Problems
ing a loss It will ask a reconsider- and they will also cut operating
man who “looked ahead" and pic­ course, did not make him al all anThe Barry county welfare relief atlon of them; which would un- costa. They will be exhibited at the , »omc mighty fine entertainment
Only one ticket nominated In
tured the establishment of on os­
commlMion desires to keep the tax-1 doubtedly be granted, if they —| coming off tn the near future. U
SCOUTS,
CAMP
FIRE
Barry
township,
the
Republican,
Judging
from
the
reporta
that
trich farm as a paying proposition.
Clyde
Wilcox
horticulturist you enjoy a good show watch bia
payers
of
Barry
county
constantly
could substantiate a claim that they
which
ta
as
follows:
Supervisor,
He would rear the birds and supply come to the Banner, the auction
GIRLS TO CANVASS CITY Morse Backus; clerk. Vernon Web­ Informed of the relief situation. | cannot_xnnkc a profit at the new (florist to you) blossoms out with J ads and you will be well repaid. T.
the
market with plumage. That sales are better attended than fora
flowers
for
Either,
pardon
me
EastBob Moore, manager of the toe*!
They
have
asked
and
are
receiving
j
rates.
It
is
believed,
however,
that
ster /Treasurer. John J. Doster;
man was Edwin Cawston. As usual long time, the bidding more spirited Many
Cfcvic Organisations Highway’ Commr.. Mason Newton; co-operation by the newspapers •*
I Long and Moore' store, is
— ‘increased
" use of
* electricity
' “ ’in er, and they’re a lot of lilies.
Uw
some thought he was “nutty;" and prices higher. If you are having
Geo. Miller Is a professional I himself a real friend, as can be see* Justice. Bert Utts; Bd. of Review. which publish their reports without the territory covered by the Con­ home-maker. If you don’t believe j by. the list of specials be la adver­
Backing This Humanitaothers said "it couldn't be done ” an auction sale, an adv. In the
cliarge. believing that everyone In sumers Power Company will be
Charles Kahler.
in 1888 he chartered a boat, sailed Bonner wilt bring excellent results.
' rian Project
the county is Interested. As the enough so that the company can that, look in Ids store and IH miss thing. Which Includes candy, MMl .:
Carlton.
to Africa, and brought tn 50 live
my guess If you don’t go home with If that alone Isn’t worth going Io "
Under direction of the Barry
Republican—Supervisor, no nomi­ members of the commission work afford to continue the new rates.
ostriches and established near Los C. 0. HILL SUES H. M.
j buy i’ll miss my guess.
we explained last week, when at least a new piece of linoleum.
County Society for Crippled ChU» nee; Clerk.
Lawrence
Farrell; without compensation, they feel at •
Angeles the first ostrich farm In the
If you Intend to trip the lights of * Milady you should see what LMh'l
dren.
the
annual
sale
of
Easter
seals
Treas.. Jerry Andrus; Justice. Fay liberty to call upon others to make the pipe line, owned by the Con­ spring'you’ll need a pair of silver,
United States. Practically every os­
. MARTIN FOR $5,000
*-----------— *“
■----- - *—
sumers
Power
Qompany.
reaching
nomli
sacnucca.
mu
.
will open here on April 1 and
will Highway Commr.. no nomi­
Studt;
trich in this country today Is a
slippers, or gold, or what have you
Clyde
I
The
B®rry
county
board
of
superfrom
Lansing
to
the
natural
gas
direct descendant of that original Due to Injuries To Hill Ho
!!Ui Jf' nation; Bd. of Review.
j visors have evidenced their Inter­ fields in Montcalm and Mecosta —Andy (fisherman) Taylor has ’em
'cording to Mrs. Raymond Flnnle. Tooker.
flock. Later on he would have liked
Democrat—Supervisor. John Us-I wt ln we-lfare work for the county's | counties, shall be completed and in and boy are they -honeys.”
Claims Were Caused by
,। county chairman. These seals sell
Drinuviav—oupcifLxji ,iuiut uo- 1---- _—------------- ------ ,-------; --- -----------! ~ ■
to have returned for more, but after
You have heard lots about bur­
.____Am
____ .,' linfnrtunnlz
___
clerk, __
no_____
nominee;
Trees
unfortunate rznnl»
people, alien
also their de­ orw'ratlnn
operation. a
a mnilrfarahtn
considerable reduction
for a penny each and thc proceeds borne;
his first consignment was received a
Martin's Oar
eaus and no doubt want to hear
Kroger Stores local manager,
realized are paying a steadily In­ Cyrus Shroyer; Highway Commr, . ?re to have the relief work con- In gas rates will be made in this
high duty was placed on subsequent
An action for 85.000 damages was creasing share of the cure. care, ed­ Eugene
Nichols; Justice,
Justice. Henry ' ducted without duplication of ef- city. Just how much that reduction less, but thia does not apply to the Arold says. “Our specials for
shipments, so nigh in fact that It
begun last week by Claude E. Hill ucation. training and placement of Wlckham; Bd.
of
Rev,
Carl
tl'rrrb&gt;'
glv- will be in any Individual case can­ Farm Bureau. Here Is the answer to
if
Rev.
was prohibitive.
the farmer's cry for help. One look Include
against
Howard
M.
Martin
Ln
our
Rrrchrlu-n
ln
«
more
efficient
service.
Barry
not
be
told
off-hand.
It
will
depend
California climate seemed Ideally
crippled children.
(Continued on page six)
|j county was the first to **
v“ ***
’• - ------upon the amount Qf
at the machinery they feature
take
thl^argely
suited to the growth and develop­ circuit court. Both parlies live In
Ninety, per cent of the proceeds
makes me feel young again. Boy
. step, and has set an example to oth J Vised.
Tom Baird Is showing what is
------- ItItIs bellevtd that the reduc­
ment of the ostrich, the seml-tiop- BalUmore and the action Is brought will’ remain In Michigan to help
, er counties.
tion In rates will average 33 1-3 per how I would like to ride one of new for Spring in mens’ wear. EastIcal surroundings permitting the by. Mr. Hill through his attorney. I maintain and extend a program of
’ The county
relief commission
ATTENDS
STATE cent, where persons are using con­ those spreaders, somehow I feel inhuge birds to resume their natural Adelbert Cortrlght.
work
for
physically
handicapped
The complaint sets up that Mo­
Ufinc nnuCCDCUnC hRS
excellent staff of workers. siderable quantities. Natural gas has
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 3)
parade.
’
'
' ’
WlUt LUNFtntNLt The commission Is non-politlcal. far more heating value than coal
lln Is the owner of. and driver of. a girls and boys. The remainder goes
May Fairchild lives up to her
Spring time is "clean-up-Umr"
| and will welcome constructive criti­ gas. It will probably be necessary
----school bus used to transport rural to the international Society for
pupllrto Hastings. It states that on Crippled Children which sponsors Supervigor L. R. Glasgow cism nt all times. For instance. If for folks who use gas far cooking to name—she springs Spring mer­
chandise that Is sure to make a hit you with spring cleaning.
September 18, 1935, both the com­
Hears Tax Subjects
with every lady In Barry county.
plainant and the deferyiant attend­ wide Interest In the problems of
John Bulling &lt;k Son are display­
specific case that you think is not
being properly handled, your sug­ new gas rates may bo fixed-in May. Although It is still March it’s May ing a lot of new things one of which
ed a school meeting at the Dunham treating crippled children.
Discussed
Fifty
per
cent
of
the
money
raised
Is outstanding. Is a glass radio and
schoolhouse.
Maple
Grove,
Mr.
Mar
­
MRS. ANNA WILLHT8.
In compliance with a request gestions will be welcomed and your
will
remain
In
the
county
to
carry
Spring
time
is
“
home-time"
and
the music goes ’round and cornea
As she has rented her farm. Mrs. lin driving there with his bus. Before
THREE ASSYRIA SCHOOLS if you are looking for a buy in out.
from the State Tax commission complaint Investigated.
The commission has recently made
Anna Wlllitts will have an auction the meeting the complainant allege*
through their chairman. M. B. Mc­
HAVE TAKEN ACTION what you will need to flx-up the Feldpausch Food center lives up
at the farm located three mllew that he was leaning against the the relief of crippled children what Pherson. supervisor L. RL Glasgow a complete analysis of families
"family-abode" see Dave Boyes at to its name with foods that will
south of Hastings on the Camp wood shed at the schoolhouse, talk- the Christmas seals are to tubercu­ attended a state-wide conference of whom they are aiding, in order to
Will Gloie Rural Bchooli, the Home Lumber co. Dave says please every housewife.
losis.
Ground road, with Henry Flan­
city assessing officers held at the find out the principal reasons for
x The specials at the Carveth *
nery as auctioneer and R. B. WUlk- fendant drove up with the bus. The
A number of public spirited coun­ Hotel Olds In Lansing on March 33. the necessity for relief. The study
Sending Their Pupils to
homes mean more home-lovers, Stebbins Drug Store are proving
er, clerk. Included In the list are defendant was showing the opera­ ty organisations will assist tn this Sixty-three counties were represent­ was made of the family load as of
Bellevue Schools
and what this country needs is
three horses. 0 pure bred Jersey tion at his bus to other parties. He drive. Scouts andtOamp Fire Girls ed. the enrollment being sixty-six. Saturday. February 1, 1936. and It
more
-lovers
’
."
cows, 76 chickens, large list of farm stopped his vehicle about three feet will carry on a house to house can­ The subjects presented and dis­ revealed the following facts:
Three rural school districts Ln As­
Walter Wallace keeps In step with ’ Mr. Murphy,
1. Heads of families temporarily syria township have voted to close
tools, miscellaneous articles and from where the plaintiff was stand­ vass while other groups will make cussed were: Soldiers’ exemptions;
household goods. Sec the adv. for ing. Then, in some manner, he special effort to dispose of the seals how placed on the roll and man­ disabled. 36.
their schools for the next school the times by featuring foods to de­
will make you feel like stocking
touched a switch causing the car to through their memberships.
full information.
2. Heads of families permanently year, which will begin In Septem­ light the whole family.
ner of adjusting to comply with
up.*
Jump forward, pinning the plaintiff
An average of only two seals per state regulations; assessing of bank disabled. 47.
ber. The same proposition was also
Al Printia. c. Thomas’ local man*
against the wood shed so he was
3. Heads of families mentally dls- submitted In another Assyria dls- ease the burden of humanity. They
CLYDE KING.
stocks and bank real estate holdablcd. 6.
In nriirr tn , divide partnership unable to extricate himself, As a. re­ Will enable Barry, county to raise ita
4. Heads of families temporarily districts expect to make contract*
property. Clyde King will have an sult of this his right knee was brok­ quota. So from April 1 to April 15 otber corporations doing business In
the
delights
for
the
"housewife.
”
food
sell far so little.’
(Continued
on
page
six)
auction sale at his farm one mile en and his left one painfully In­ It will be contributing to a worth- more than one city.
with the school board of the village
west of Cressey, with Henry Flan- jured.
whlle cause to give these persona
of Bellevue, to transport the pupils
Several Interesting discussions
Saa auctioneer and John Hoag,
The complaint quotes the law of selling the seals all the co-operation were engaged hi and many facts
from the three districts to the vil­ BUILDER FAILED TO
1
--------------------=
ITS
’
A
BUSY
CORNER
. He offers two horses, nine tills stale requiring the owner or possible.
lage school without expense to the
and suggestions offered which will
head of cattle, hogs, lot of, farm one In control of a car, when he
ALLOW FOR EXPANSION
SATURDAY AFTERNOONS district, and to give them Instruc­
prove • helpful to those In attend­
tools, oats, potatoes and household stops, to. effectively set the brakes MUST BE PAID TO
tion
Ln
the
Bellevue
school
at
sub■
ance.
goods. Bee the adv. for complete of his car. The law also requires
A second meeting will be held Four Hour Count of Oars and stantlally what It would cost the Break Up of North Court
information.
adequate control of the car. which
CITIES AND VILLAGES later, perhaps before the June ses­
districts if the teaching were done
—
House
Steps Due to ffhat
Pedestrians Made
complainant claims was not exer­
In the three rural schools.
sion of the board of supervisors. A
ADDI8ON PENNOCK.
As a result of this arrangement |
cised by the defendant.
&gt; —It Is Claimed
?
Attorney General Makes Im­ more complete report will be given
z
March
14
Because of -ill ’health Addison
The complaint recites the Injur-'
the districts get by with an assess- 1
the
board
at
their
April
session.
~v~~.
—
r**.
—
---------t
:
Tho
north
front outside steps to
Pennock will dispose of some of his les sustained by the plaintiff, the
We doubt If many people could ment for school purposes of only the court house
portant Ruling on the
have been showing
personal property at public auc­ cost of treatment by doctors, and
make anywhere near an accurate 3 1-2 mills, the state paying the dlf- mcreaslngly the need of re£fr?
Horton
Act
tion. The sale will be held at hU- sets up the fact that he has been
QEPT. DESIGNATES
guess at the number of cars, with­ ference between that and 848 per Mr John Young, the mason who
County chairman Archie Mc­
The attorney general of this state
farm one mile south of Delton and unable to carry on his work or busi­
in a given time, that would pass the pupil in the grades and $65 per pu- has charge of the work of putting Donald received a telegram from
STRijAMSAND RIVERS corner of Jefferson and State p11
will start at ona p. M. Included in ness all of which, together with the has ruled that half the gasoline tax
hl8h&lt; Kho°' P‘e them in good condition again says national headquarters on Thursday
th* sale are; cattle, sheep, farm pain which he suffered and still revenue, returned to a county under
streets, going either east or west or rural dlstalcte do not give up their u^t lhe break .p of the stone steps evening about g;X. a meeting of
tools, and machinery and some hay, suffers, cause him to sue for dam- the Horton Act. must be given to All Barry County Fishermen north and south, or which would schoolhouses, which they car. use was dur to the faUure of
corn and oats. Heifry Flannery will
cities and villages for road mainte­
turn from one street into the other again if the arrangement does not tractor to make allowance for ex­
Should Heed State's
nance. The alm of the Horton Act
be the auctioneer.
at the Intersection, it Is doubtful If prove satisfactory, and the district pan,10n. Al thc .tope steps would
was originally to help counties meet
an
hot w^er
Regulations
many people could estimate the malntalhs lu school board, the £pand
ROD AND GUN
IT WAS A ROOF BLAZE.
their outstanding
oovert
road
Conservation Officer George Sum­ number of pedestrians who would
’o^thkLg had to glv. way. with
The fire alarm Friday evening re­
CLUB MEETING bonds. There are still several coun- ner lias received notice from the cross the four crosswalks at that riea on in the district. .
the result that lhe layers of the
sulted from the ’discovery of a
tles that have large sums In such State Conservation Department rel­ point, or turn from one street Into
We
understand
that
the
school
^ndstone
broke
apart.
It is need­
small blaze In the roof of Vern Several Important Items of muuim
sun unpaid,
uiipuu. in Deury
uiuilbonds still
Barry counboard of Hastings has made thc jCM to add that Mr Young will detailed report will
ative to the creeks and rivers tn the other.
1 Moore's home, corner of Clinton
1 ty all Cqvert road bonds, except Barry county that are open to
Two young men. working for one same offer to a limited number of make allowance for expansion in
Business Will Be Con­
and South East streets. The fire
those for one Maple Grove highway, spearing with and without artificial of the government alphabet organ­ ‘ChO02dm£Ul? lhe terTltary iur’ the new stone steps iSTwlU be
truck made a quick run. putting out
sidered
built from M-14 east to the county light.
izations—we do not know which rounding thia city. No one would nut in
the blaze with chemical The ’1OH
A meeting of the Barry County line by the state, have been paid.
_________ m
In Barry county spearing is per­ one—made an actual count Satur­ wish these districts to take advan- j
“SERVANT IN THE
was alight.
Rod and Gun Club, is called for These will soon be retired.
mitted with artificial lights in the day afternoon, March 14. In the tage of this unless they find that STAND UP AND TAKE
HOUSE- IN
Half of the weight tax of the following creeks:—Bassett, Butler, hours from one to five tills Is what they can do it without increasing
Monday evening. March 30. at 7:30
A DOW. JANE!
EMMA S. EVANS.
state has always been paid to coun­ Duncan. Fall. Hlghbonk, Kurtz. they found. Number of cars, 3,760; school costa, and give the children • A new feature worth watelling,
City
Democratic nominee f&lt;
ties for the construction and main­ Messer, Mud creek to south line of number of pedestrians, 6.763. The of thc districts better schooling ad-, Jane Cameron’s "Barry By-Roads"
county
road
commission
in
the
treasurer.
tenance of county highways. The Sec. 3, Castleton Twp.. Ononadaga. heaviest traffic and the largest vantages than they could obtain tn - In the Hastings Banner. Interesting,
county garage.
It is hoped there may be a good Horton bill diverted to the counties Orangeville, Pratt, Scobey. Quaker number of people, moving across lhe local district schools. No doubt breezey and well told.—Charlotte play, which has
counting experience. I am a prop­
tlic remaining one-half of the brook from south line of Sec. 1, Ma­ the streets or moving from one to we shall sec many school district! Republican-Tribune.
erty owner and resldeht of Has­ attendance as several vital quesspring offering.
weight tax; and now the attorney ple Grove Twp., also in Thornapple the other was between the hours of In this and other counties following
The Jonesville independent, m its
tings.
general rules that half of this re­ river down from Nashville dam to three and four.
the example set by the three dis- last Issue remarks: The Hastings
Your vote on April 6th will be ap­ on the establishing of a skeet field,
tricta in Awyria.
I Banner carries a clever column
the annual fish supper and plana maining half must be paid to cities Thomapple lake; also from County
preciated.—Adv. 4-3.
................. "** *
1 called "Barry Bypaths" written by
for the maintenance of the Orange­ and villages to maintain highways. Farm bridge to jBaasett creek and
About 100 men are now working
LO88 WAS SMALL.
WILL COME IN HANDY.
ville fish ponds. Other items of
from Middleville dam to north
BEAGLES COME THIS WEEK. county line. ■
on the Yankee Springs project.
The rural fire truck made a quick .further honors "Jana” by ftrlnlina
County Treasurer L. P. Maus re­ business will also bo considered.
run to the home of Fred Beach, in her artkle
~AlltrIy ’ m
LoU of beagle fans and smart
Their
work
Is
being
done
aa.a
part
ceived from the state Tuesday a
As In previous years, all trout
of the government relief program. Rutland. Tuesday afternoon. Fire Marcn w -Hypaifu" fOT lb#lr
check for 810.944 44 to apply on the LIBRARY ON OLD SCHEDULE. little.dogs will be arriving In the streams are closed to spearing.
On April 1st the main library city the latter part of the week for
There is yet much* to do In getting had started In the roof from the Homemakers Corner
weight tax due the county for the
the
Wolverine
Beagle
Association
’
s
will resume Its usual hours and will
ANNOUNCEMENT.
the park ready far its intended uses. chimney when discovered. -Neigh- ।
„■
first three months of IBM. .
be open evenings on Tuesday and spring derby to be run here Satur­
I will appreciate your support at The hope of those having It In bars kept the firs from spreading '
1 big
BIG spring
SPRING OPENING
opening DANCE,
Vote as you would hire. Elect Saturday nights only, from 7 to 0. day and Sunday, the 38th and 39th, the polls on Monday, April 6. Mrs. charge is that it may be made ready by their good work. When the fire-1 Clear lake Saturday even
evening, Mar.
an Ladles
»
troo
competent officials at city election,
with headquarters at the Parker Jessie
Loppenthlen,
Republican for the public next summer, or at men arrived they used the chemical 38.
free. 1st night. Martin's
Monday, April Sth.
house.
to extinguish It. Loss was small.
I orchestra.—Adv.
candidate far City Treasurer.—Adv. least a part of It.

ful burst of life Monday and Tues­
day of this week as 35 business
firms and institutions of tills city
prepared to decorate their booths
for the opening of the Hastings
Birds Now Survey Fluffy Commercial Club Fair Wednesday
afternoon.
Tails With 80'ant Hope
It la a bit early at this writing to
give a description of the Individual
for Near Future
We visited the Ostrich Farm jdst displays but even a casual observer
a few mlleJ out from the business can definitely state that there will
plenty of variety. .
center
Los Angeles.
.This was I beThere
the mUvof«^it.
ntarm’thrt
wlu
totefOUnE displays
the only specialty farm that seemed *
10 te quia down In u» -dump. ■ 1
d“™
*“ ™"“
’ connected by an Ingenious system
mW a^ «^
speakers. The numerous
H.iiUT Ihf.
M
1 PrlM drawings can thus be conduct.rlUln® 3?? cr?•t.0, thewflnanctal ed wlt
j.oul (u.
i.v O
without
the nfoeM
necessity
off havlna
having

BROUGHT A MILLION TO
MAN WHO STARTED IT

presented, in addition many of the
merchants exhibiting arc planning NINE HAVE ONLY
to distribute hundreds of prizes and
ONE TICKET NAMED
souvenirs of their own. Never before
have 10 many free prizes been dis­
tributed in such a short time here Democrats Show But Little
as will be don* during the four days
Interest and Do Not At­
of the Commercial club Fair.

CO. RELIEF COMM.
MAKES REPORT

EASTERSEAl
SALE MIL 1-15

‘Three Auction Sales

«»• R^ponte to
Red Cron Appeal

�kutoot

innnoM, tbum»a», muuni M. i»
the tones of a 880.000 BUadlvarius
delinquent taxM of 1832 and violin, which the gnat artist
r yean are requeeted to read guard* as be does his life. HU big
number U Mendelssohn's Concerto
issued by Auditor General John J.
O’Hara.
The many friend* of Miss JoeeMr. and Mrs. Kenneth Adams
phlne Stein, who has been In th*
have moved to East State street.
Petookey iwcpltal far a

LOCAL NEWS

The

Big

Is To

Swing

Ralph Still and family
have
moved into the country near BlivIn’a comers.
One of the Civic Players play­
The Bub-deb groups are giving reading groups met with Mrs. Richa dance at th" Masonic dining room ard Grocz Tuesday afternoon and
Friday night.
listened to a review, given by Mrs.
Will Schriber. E. South street, W. M. Btebbina, of Winterset. Maxlias had the misfortune of breaking
his right arm.
Mrs. Joseph Broxak Is substitut­ the most widely discussed plays of
ing at the second ward school for the season.
Miss Anne Burton.
Lynn H. Lankerd was bom In
«...
)U M(
iwcnii jnmes
Mr. a.
and
Mrs. Keith
Janies nave
have Rutland township and worked at
rented the Huffman tenant house the machinist trade until he was
on W. Walnut street.
j Injured ten years ago. He has purFrlends
Jacob Haney are glad rha*d B ™lng station tn Kalamato hear his-condition Is greatly “m- ,
^^edge
proved. He Is able now to W &lt;git;
F?*d and ex’*cU

j -n

Visit Food Center when you attend the Hastings Commercial Club Spring Fair and

you will see why Food Center is the most-talked-of Food Store in Barry County. No

fancy fixtures, no credit losses, no frills, no special service . . . YOU PAY FOR
MERCHANDISE ONLY !

EXTRA. EXTRA - EXTRA. VALUES!
FINE GRANULATED

PECAN
MEATS

SUGAR
5 Lb.
Cloth Bag

oJS.%

lOO Lbs.

39clb

25c 48c $48P

LARGE TWIN LOAF

6c

9c

WHAT A BUY!

FREE SPARTON Refrigerator

Mrs. Dall Sutton—$2.96.
Mrs. Wm. Spraguo—$2.87.
Mrs. Fred Wolcott—$2.64.
Mrs. Chas. Wilkea—$2.53.
Ruby Karcher—$2.51.

GIVEN AWAY AT FOOD CENTER, SATURDAY,
APRIL 25TH ... One Ticket Given With Each 50c

WHO WILL BE THE

Purchase

LUCKIEST PERSONS NEXT MONTH?

lOc

tall can

rrom ibe

JOHN BULLING
&amp; SON

.

♦+♦ *♦* ♦

^TDAMrt TH FAT DM3 ♦

PASSING OF MRS. OHTROTiL

SILVER NUT

ARMOUR'S STAR

SALMON

nz^
w astier uuxa*up

MUI J HAVE
THE WHITEST
CLOTHES wet GSS.W1U ,,na 11

X

Ask for Details!

1
Sea Flyer Quality Pink

SUNDAY and MONDAY, MARCH 29 and 30
SPECIAL AIFKAVriVN
ATTRACTION

LARD

J

.

HARRY RICHMAN and ROCHELLE HUDSON in

Mrs. Anna Ostroth. 78 years of
age. died Thursday afternoon at ihe
home of her daughter. Mrs. Mat­
0 thew Balch, In Maple Grove. Bha Is
survived by a son. Ray. of Maple
Grove, and by one sister who lives
Ui Nashville. The funeral was held
Sunday afternoon at the South
Maple Grove Evangelical church, of
which fclie had been » member far
54 years. She had resided in Maple
Oru»e nearly alt her life. Her hus­
band died ten years ago.

&amp; The Music Goes ’round and ’round *

Fine

Ik 12c

Quality

I I C lb

With Farley and Riley

BARGAIN .MATINEE BUNDAY. llH and 3:80 e'cl
Other Performances—.Adults 25c, Children 10c

INJURES L1GA3ONTS
IN RIGHT ARM.

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. MARCH 31

MEAT DEPARTMENT
BOLOGNA

lb. 13c

HAMBURG, fresh ground . .lb. 13c

PICNICS

Smoked Shankk-.

Campbell's SOUPS
All Flavors
O
OE
a
Except ChickenO
ifc jEr

lb. 15c

...lb. 18c

SWEET CREAMED

Fresh COTTAGE CHEESE, 2 lbs. 15c
STEAK

Round or Sirloin

BEEF HEARTS ....

1b. 18c
lb. 9c

Gay Norton met with a painful,
though not serious, accident on
i Saturday, resulting In some Injured
ligaments In his right arm. He waa
working at lhe home of J. M. Leach,
north of town, gelling ready to buzz
wood. Gay was tightening thc belt
on the machine, when the tighten­
er slipped allowing the belt to go
free. The belt swiped him on the
arm with the results stated above.
ie Is carrying lhe Injured arm in
allng, thankful'It was no worse.

VACATION LAND COFFEE, lb. 15c

Campbell’s Tomato Juice, No. 5 tin 25c

MINCED HAM

system first put Into use tn 1817.
The carps of cadets has been en­
larged to 1800. By 1839 It will be
increased to i860 men. cadet Bar­
ber feels the training at West Point

GLADIOLUS Bulbs

FOOD CENTER'S 10 Highest Winners, March 18th

200 OTHERS RECEIVED FROM 10c TO $2.50.

BREAD
1 LB. LOAF

40,000 pounds on hand for this sale

Mrs. Richard Covey—$4.34.
Mrs. Doris Lester—$4.10.
Mrs. C. L. Tester—$3.50.
Mildred Hill—$3.09.

MULLER'S MILK

I* compared to other «*and universities; that he has
studied more during the ala months
I he haa been a cadet than during
his entire three yean at Olivet and
Ann Arbor. Each student has to re -

Hustings recently had a very dis­
tinguished traveller In their midst
who cams and went before the
larger majority realised his fame,
and the fascinating story he had to
Ulne“
I U, HUUW L" W
Crocuses In the yard of Miss An- , Lankerd has been employed In Kai­ tell concerning his travels, which
cover practically every section of
s'0 Bates, on V.. Grand street, sure- amazoo and Grand Ranlds
ly herald the approach of spring.
Inhn „ .
.
,
,, , , the globe, save the north and
.be to. ..
to. report'“J
Mr. Kane, in this particular in­
। fine and 8440 coats for assault and stance. touched briefly on sobw
--------------------------------------------------------- - battery.
Oriental countries visited when he
1 Boys Paying marbles and golfers headed an expedition overland from
China to wrope. the first traveller
u-t to do this since Marco Polo. Ha
I "Sprig has cub."
devoted more time to Africa J&gt;ecause of the particular Interest now
in Ethiopia. His audience would
to the National Red Cross for relief easily have steyed by him till mid­
for flood sufferers.
night. Supt. VanBusklrk hopes to
i The Automobile club of Michigan get him to return later In the
■ Is servicing 31.188 grade schools and spring wh»n the grade children may
13,442 rural schools monthly with have the benefit of first hand geog­
I safety lessons and posters.
raphy from his Ups, and when an
I Thursday night the fire truck re­ adult audience may again have the
sponded to a call at Gene Kidder's pleasure of hearing him. TO those
home, on North Boltwood 8t . in the who failed to hear him while her*,
first ward. It was a roof fire, with we recommend thc report of his lec­
i very small loss.
ture. covered by Mias Evana of the
I Edwin Fallas, a Lowen pioneer Banner staff, which was crowded
and Civil war veteran, who saw out last week because of lack of
service with Grant and Custer, died space.
last week in Los Angeles, aged 81.
At owe lime he conducted a store FURNITURE SALES
al Middleville.
■
i. a country call,
MAY 1ST TO MAY 9TH
, Thursday was due to a grass fire at
lhe county farm, it was thought it These Grand Rapids Sales
might endanger buildings, so the
Will
Indicate Prospects
i call was made for the Hastings dc­
, parlmenl. There was no damage.
for Future
, Leonard Pebbles was brought to | The dates for lhe May Furniture
! the Jail Wednesday night charged
| with beating up Russell Nance. He 1 Sale, to be held in Grand Rapids.
[ have been fixed for May 1 u&gt; 8th
was brought before Justice Mat­ inclusive. Manufacturers are look­
hews. who thought 60 days In Jail
, Ing forward to thte sale with much
or 850 fine and 84.90 costs would be
interest, as in their Judgment, it will
about right. He is in Jail At tills
indicate the volume of furniture
I writing.
business Dial can be looked for in
We are Indebted to Mrs. O. E. the ensuing
summer and fall
Goodyear for the very interesting months.
: report of the P. T. A-—Camp Fite
Girls program on Thursday evening. r. H. A. OFFERS EXCELLENT
Those not familiar with lhe work
PLAN FOR HOME BLDG.
alms
of rite
the camp
Camp Fire or­
—_
» and “
lnu °f
Warren G. Carter and Orville
..
f en_
Sayles, representing the New Na­
tional bank, were . in Kalamazoo.
,
I Wbrd received from thc C, \V. Thursday afternoon arid evening,
You, too. can have whiter clothes1 Clarkes from Florida brings the attending a clinic of bankers am.
.
1
j I *ord lhat Ut^y w*l&gt; be in fitti greater savings. Come In and. Petersburg this week where .they building and loan officials addressed
by Raymond Foley, state adminis­
lot ua tell you about this mar- *,u remaln “ntll they leave for1 trator of the Federal Housing Ad­
lei uo iou you aooui uua max- home whkh wHJ
aJjoul
ministration.
▼eloua now low-priced ABC , of April, unless adverse weather re­
At night a dinner was given by
... .
...
. • P°rLs from the north hold them up. Kalamazoo men which included
Washer with Finger Touch
People who attend the Toscha
persons interested In all branches
'
,
,
—.. of
, | Q-trf-l
Seidel--—ZX-anA
Grand Rapids O.
Symphony
building.
Safety Clothes Feeder and many
' orchestra Friday night of this week
Mr. Foley made clear lhe plan1 of
, at the Civic Auditorium will not the p. H. A. which offers a very ad­
other exclusive ABC feature*.
(only hear one of lhe world's great-, vantageous means of financing lhe
eat living violinists but will hear building of homes and equipping
FREE! . . . This Wpsh
them. The time allowed is from
five to twenty years, with attendant
Tub Rack with Every
expenses like taxes, repairs and
Washer.
necessary upkeep, budgeted and
cared for as a part of the down
payment to be made to the bank
50 CHOICE VARIETIES
each month, which receive.! 3 per
cent interest on thc loan, which la
jason e mcelwain
allowed up to 80 per cent of value.
Western Union Bldg.
The strong feature of the plan ac­
cording to Mr. carter, is. that If
the party gets into trouble In swing­
ing thc contract, he still has an in­
terest in the property and will
realize on what he has paid in
when the home has been sold, or
the F. H. A. has been reimbursed
for the original loan by other

/t lit
/1DC

FOOD CENTER

----- legal notice on another page,

With JACKIE COOPER. JOSEPH CALLEIA. RIN TIN TIN. Jr.
HARVEY STEPHENS and JEAN HERSHOLT

WHITE HOUSE COFFEE ...lb. 23c

FARINA

large package 19c

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. APRIL 1 and 2
KATHARINE HCPBURNI in

TEA SIFTINGSlb. 9c

SHREDDED WHEAT . 2 pkgs.l3c
POTATOES, U.S.No. 1 . pk. 19c
ORANGES, sweat, juicy, doz. 19c
GRAPE FRUIT4 for 19c
HARD. CRI.r HtADS

HEAD LETTUCE
SPY APPLES ...

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 O'CLOCK

._ea. 5c
bu. 65c

Kellogg's Corn Flakes, Ig. pkg. 11c
CRYSTAL WHITE

SOAP CHIPS..

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. APRIL 3 and 4
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

TRILBY SOAP

_5(bs.79c
3 bars 13c

,

RICHARD win
DIX in
la
ni^nRRV

BIG BEN SOAP

6 bars 25c

f

YELLOW DUST

▲

With Laila
------- Hyamvand
Hyemc andAndy
AndyClyde
Clyda
FEATURE Na 2

SATURDAY UNTIL 10:00 O'CLOCK

VISIT OUR BOOTH at the Hastings Commercial Club Fair, where we will give you a Ticket worth 25c in

Cash on any $1.00 purchase of Paramount Foods at our store

ANOTHEr’gRASS FIRE.
The alarm of fixe Saturday came
from the country. Floyd Gaskell,
who live* the thirej house south of
the George Scott corner*, east of
Quimby, had a gras* fire on hl*
------- ------------.a high
that he

With Cary Grant, Brian Aherne and Edmund Gwenn
Adalis 23c, Children 18c

RICHARD ARLIN in

±
jA
;

The Calling of Dan Matthews
Added-Episode No. 8 of TRB OUAT AIR JBYOTBBY" *
be shown only al 3:88 oeloefc Matinee Saturday.
Adults 13c, Children l*p

nlng to endanger the building* on a
-a- neighboring farm, so he called for
the Hastings department. The fire
was put out without doing any
damage.

1
♦

BURIAL RITES HERE.
The remains of Chester w. Dean.
82. a resident of Grand Rapids for
52 years, were brought to Hastings
for burial in Riverside cemetery on
Monday afternoon, th*’Bev. W.
Maylan Janet officiating, a daugh­
ter. Mrs. Gertrude Fairfield, sur-

If men were

or something. ».

io play golf.

8 for 16 holes

�HAETTNG8, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH U. ISM

.

Organizations

COUNTY ABSTRACT

office big expense

not talk and a

person on earth
weighing 100 pound* would weigh
but 18 pounds on the moon. The
moon shines only from reflected
1 light; It causes the tides upon the

Women’s Club

। Outlay of &gt;40,000 Required 1

EMORY HOUGHTALIN
j
TRIAL IS NOW ON

spent Sunday
Amos Clemens,

Charged With the Unlawful BMtinw^unite^Bmhre^cht^ch1.

Mr. and Mrs. ployd Gaskin and

Possession of Game*
• I-Mrs. Agnes PuneU'l* making an
Mrs. SeriJ an of Middleville will
The March 20th meeting of the earthto Duplicate Service Al;Hastings women's club was at
preside over the program which.
Viat_
I extended visit with Mr. and Mn. sell Greenfield and mother.
tenters about a trip to Rockefeller 1
rlsn
! Orville puneU.
Central school where Mr.__ Walter
riady Existing
___ __ rock. Ones weighing from four to
Mrs. Floyd Gaskill and Anna
As
this
Is
written
an
interesting
tntrrestlni
’
[
Center, when lhe Womens Club;
Perkins, principal. carried
' '
ths^six hundred pounds have been
Voter*
of
Barry
county
should
'
of MlddlevHlo presents the ex-’,
trial Is in progress in the Circuit I'
realm of A*- found.
change program before the Has­ clearly understand that the ab- tronomy. Mr. Perkins said the first
Those who listened to Mr. Perkins court. It Is that of Emory Houghl*!-.
strict office ballot to be voted on
tings Women's Club at the Masonic '
Interested in the stars were surely wlll no longer just take the In. charged with unlawful posses- I
dining room.
Friday afternoon, April 0 will mean an expenditure
ly the shepherds In lhe hills. stars and planets for granted. They slon of game flsh on May 11 last
for Barry county of about *40,000.
April S. Tea and a social hour will
year, which were caught in the wa- 1
After this expenditure has been By using their Imaginations, they
follow.
,
pictured the groups of stars into splendid books on Astronomy from ter* of Hall lake. Hl* arrest was '
made, it will duplicate a service
made
by
Conservation
officer'
which b being rendered by a private figures, some of which are Illustrat­ the Hastings Library as well us
■
ed
for
us
in
our
astronomy
books
some sky maps which Mr. Perkins- George Sumner.
abstract company without cost lo
Ing Twp.. will hold their regular
today. Ancients and even our more
At the first trial before Justice
taxnayurs.
meeting Friday ' evening of this
Andrew Matthews,' the Jury dis-. I
Tne average taxpayer has oc- : recent Indians center some of their come familiar with some of the
week. March 27. MJ Becker of the
beautlfuL. constellations. The Has- agreed. At the second trial. Houghcasion to buy an abstract of title religious Ideas around the stars.
H- H 8. and a group of pupils will
The word planet means a moving Ungs Women's club te deeply in­ lalln was convicted. He appealed to
but once or twite in hh life. Never­
present a play, and there will be
body.
planets,
wan- debted to Mr. Perkins for the In*&gt; the circuit eourt.
theless If thb abstract measure 1—
—- The
— r
--------- . therefore,
-------- -------music by the Hostings Woodbuz- goes through It means that every-, der among the constellations. Stars structiye and inspirational hour he
Twenty-two or me twenty-five
xw*. Everyone welcome.
acres of the surface of Hall lake are
one will have to pay lhe cost of in- ; «*«”
twinkle. Planetscjlo not.
on Mr. Houghtalln'* farm. He
stalling a county office.
; Planets are held in their respective
DO YOU KNOW ? Kroger Store* purchasing 820.000.000 annually a4
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Foster will
CIVIL
SERVICE
EXAMINATIONS.
|
claimed
that it was not an offense
Out of 83 counties in Michigan ■ Plac« bY centrifugal force and robe chairmen of the central P. T. A.
Michigan product* and paying Michigan landlord* 8811.000 annually in rani­
The United States civil Service for a man who owned practically
only five own Uielr own abstract tatlon. Our sun b a star of Just
meeting for April.
------ haa aat aaida thia week a* "MICHIGAN WEEK." Featuring a gigon*
offices. One of these b Wayne average size. There are other stars Commission has announced open I all the lake to flsh in Its waters on
county. The rates charged property | ten times larger than our sun. Thb competitive examinations as foi- his own property; but lie denied
sple of food* from Michigan, manufacturers, firm* and famara — — Conx
Hie Rutland Cemetery Circle will
earth
with
group nl
of planets '•
is lows: junior astronomer. *2.000 a1 that he caught the flsh. However,
owners for abstract of title arc ! •
ar,h w,
'h its &lt;wu,n
in and view thia interesting aale and display* — and *ava oa th*** Am
meet with Mrs. Jim Dibble on Wed.
pulled around the sun by centrif­ year. Naval Observatory. Washing- | they were found In a boat in which
more
than
twice
what
you
have
to
product*.
April i, with a pot luck dinner. Ev­
pay in Barry county and yet the ugal force, Tlie earth has two ton. D. C; Marine engineers, vart- the officer had seen Houghtalln on
eryone welcome.
KROGER'S 3509 EMPLOYEES IN MICHIGAN join in bringing-you Kroger't Michiganydeek.
taxpayers of Wayne have to make motions—first, around its own axis ous grades, (2.6Q0 to *3.800 a year.1 the lake. The officer felt that it was
*vi. Department;• Agricultural
Aorlmltiieol cnNavy
en­ oa fnlr
fair presumption that
that '.(r
Mr. ItmibzH.
Houghtraveling at a rate of about seven­ m
Circle No. 1 of the Methodist L. up an annual deficit of *100,000. In teen miles a minute. Its second gineers. various grades. *2.600 to talln had something to do with
MILD FULL
A. 8. will meet Thursday P. M. April Sonicalm. a county abstract office motion Is In its orbit going around *4.000 a year. Bureau of Agricul­ catching them, so arrested him.
is opened and it was necessary lo
2. nt two o'clock, at the home- of
FLAVOR
The legal points.Involved are: Is
lhe sun from west to east al a rate tural Engineering. Department of
Mrs. I. J. Smith, 111 East Colfax. raise the rates from 50c to 75c per of eighteen miles a second.
Agriculture; Junior veterinarian. Hall lake a private lake? And If Co.
entry above the rates charged lo­
★ A MICHIGAN PRODUCT
Guests are welcome.
cally in order to avoid deficit..The
In comparing the size of the sun (2.000 a year. Bureau of Animal In­ did Houghtalln have a right to'
dustry. Department of Agriculture; catch or to have in his possession
El
IB
KINGS FLAKE
Townsend plan meeting al Epls- Jackson county-owned office is also with the planets, all our planets Clinical director 1 female), *5.600 fish that were caught In that lake
(49 Ib.
14V44b.
together make up one one-thou­
. copal parish house. Friday evening. operating at a loss to taxpayers.
•ack 81.49)
a year, director of laboratories, *5.- Ht a time when the catching of such
From tiie experience of other sandth of lhe sun!
March 27. 8 o'clock. Joseph War­
600 a year, associate psychothera­ fish was Illegal?
We of this earth receive about pist (female). *3.200 a year. Saint
KING'S SINCERITY FLOUR Michigan milled M^-ib. »&lt;n* 69c
nock Is to be the speaker. He Is one counties there is apparently noth­
of the strongest speakers we have ing which would warrant Barry one two-bllllonth of the sun’s heat. Elizabeth's hospital. Washington,
PODUNK.
county's embarking on thb *40.000 The rays of the sun heat larger
had.
PURE GRANULATED
Mesdames
Gerald
and
Fred
experiment which promises to give areas In the winter than they do In
★ MICHIGAN BEET
Full Information may be obtained Smith were in Grand Rapids Sat­
The city Union of the Council nothing more than we have at the summer thus causing hot and
'
from Hugo c. Wunderlich, secre­ urday.
-’ cold weather.
of Religious Education will meet present at no public cost.
The father and son banquet at
tary of the U- 8. Civil Service Board
Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock at
As lhe earth travels around the of Examiners, al the post office in
lhe churcii was well attended.
the Jefferson St.. United Brethren “WALES” WAS THEME OF
COUNTRY CLUB
this city.______ ___ _______
church. All Sunday school work­
Mrs. Odell Wellman of Jackson
six hours of being exactly in the
HIS
R
OTARY
ADDRESS
ers of ihe city are Invited to attend.
visited her uncle. Geo. Ransom'
★ A MICHIGAN PRODUCT
place it started from three hundred
MARRIAGE I.ICENffcs.
A good program b being prepared.
Sunday.
•
and
slxty-flve
days
previously
so
WHIZ
Rev. W. Maylan Jones Gave
Oliver Hayward of Kalamazoo I
in four years we have accumulated Evart W. Ardes. Freeport ............ 22
The Adult Bible classes of the
Budcwhoot 5
1 9c
Dorothy L. Schurman. Freeport..21 and Jim Burchett of Homer were
an
Interegting
Talk
one
more
day
of
time.
This
ac
­
WITH PORK
First United Brethren church will
FLOOT * Michigaa Milted
FLOOT * MteMgoa MUted
Lawrence E. Vaughan. Mailings. .24 Sunday visitors al Ralpii Brown's.
counts for our leap year.
hold their monthly business and
Monday Noon
Several from this, community at­
Our moon has no atmosphere. If Dorothy H. Stark. Sturgis .......... 20
* A MICHIGAN PRODUCT
social meeting Friday evening al
The Monday noon Rotary ___
club one were to go to lhe moon he Harold Rose. Nashville ................ 23 tended the funeral of Mrs. Wm.
AVONDALE - RED. SOUR PITTED
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jay Sny­ address was given by Rev. W. May­
der. All adults who are Interested lan Jones, who was born in Wales. woultF find lhe sky dark, he could [ Marie C. Miller. Nashville ........... 18 Otis Sunday.
are invited. Program committee. He gave an interesting talk about
Fred Bower. Eva Lane' and Sadie that little country and Its people.
★ TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN
Hurless. An offering will be taken Welshmen have no need to be
(6 I4b COM 25c)
to pay for the refereshments.
COUVTBY CLOT FJUICT
ashamed of lhe achievements of
their
countrymen.
They
have
been
W
bxBmm *£.’1Oc
IRVING GARDEN CLUB.
C«W. 3 — XS«
The first meeting of the season famed throughout history for their
★ Mtehiaoa Pack.d
was held al the home of Mrs. Matt insistence upon and sacrifite* for
human
liberty.
Some
of
the
world's
Bedford. March IB. (or an all day
LIGHT.
FLUFFY
PIMENTO
session and pot luck dinner. The greatest men were descended from
same officers who served thc Proj­ Welshmen. Thomas Jefferson is
ect club were re-elected and- the perhaps an outstanding one. Five
members answered roll call with former presidents of the United
★ Baked in our modern bakarie* in Michigan
"What Interested me most In the States could trace their ancestry
FOOT SPECIALISTS APPROVE
aeed catalog." It was interesting to to this little country. The moving
H*r*h«y'* 2
25c
Oxydol
1&lt;
100 lb. bag
note that no two women were In­ spirit In thc World war. among the
THE
MOULDED
INSOLES
Allies,
was
Lloyd
George,
premier
of
terested In the same flower. Each
COCOA
G1AMULATKD SOAP
seemed lo have a different favorite. Great Britain, and a Welshman.
The Welsh people. Rev. Jones ex­
Several new members were added to
HIGHEST QUALITY - PURE U. S No. 1 8EMOUN
lhe club and each member select­ plained. stress education, religion
ed a flower to specialize In this sea­ and music, a people who do that
ARCH SHOES
son. They will plant these seeds and arc not apt to go far astray.
Wales Is about lhe size of Dela­
OR SPAGHETTI
divide thc plants among the other
HEY KNOW that oftentimes feet ure easily because
ware and has a population of less
members at a later meeting.
50 lb Block
of the lack of the correct support |
HOT DATED COFFEE
HOT DATED COFFER
The next meeting will be April 16 than three million people. It Is di­
vided
into
three
districts.
The
finest
with Mrs. Bert Palmer.
French
u&gt;. kx&gt;.
Moulded, one-piece insoles tn Foot Buildei Arch Shoo
scenery is In thc northern part. The
give
gentle
but
firm
support
for
the
bones
and
muscles
greatest
anthracite
coal
mines
In
SYMPHONY OFFERS
FINE PROGRAM. the world are In South Wales.
of your feet
»
Usually that Utile country b off
The Grand Rapids Symphony
EMBASSY
program which features lhe Rus­ thc list of the average tourist, be­
PACKAGE CHEESE
sian violinist, Toscha Seidel. Fri­ cause of the unpronounceable names
Prunes
Krafts
day night, includes a Ravel num­ of Its towns. The tourist thinks that
ber; an Irish Rhapsody; Tschal- it would not be worth while to go,
kowsky's beautiful -Romeo and Ju­ Into a country with such a difficult
liet” and "Night Piece for Flute language; yet the average Welsh­
ARMOUR'S STAR
and Strings" featuring theirXflute man converses in English as well as
Welsh, and Wales is a delightful'
soloist, William Rose.
land to visit.
SOUTH SHULTZ.
The tribute paid by Rev. Jones
. Mrs. Rena Whipple has gone to lo the country of his birth was fine.
Augusta where she has employ­ The fact that Welshmen, or deREFINED
bSk
“When you're foot wise, you’re shoe
ment.
scendanls of Webhmen, have fig­
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hom have ured so prominently in the life and
wise. You wear shoe* thai arc buili to be
a new grandson at Tawas. bom to civilization of the world can be
kind to your feet •
Rev. and Mrs. Lewis Hom. He has largely accounted for he says'by
been named Marshall Ellsworth. their background of education, re­
Foot specialists agree that most foot troubles
Congratulations.
ligion and music.
are shoe troubles So, after you've been on
Mrs. Ethel Hom. who has been 111
for some weeks is slowly gaining.
HEAR FROM PEOPLE
your feet, and they begin to tire just consider
FOOT
Will Hallock was brought home
IN FLOOD AREAS.
your shoes. Perhaps it’s not fqot trouble &gt;1
Hastings friends have received
from the hospital a week ago and is
Examina­
Dashing1 and so completely comfortable all but shoe troubles The next time vou buy
doing nicely.
word from Mrs. Howard Carstens
tion
shoes ask for Foot Builder Arch Shoes and
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hom and (Prances cool), who lives in Johns­
you enio» every .step in this fashionable
BIB OR LOIN
At FAIR!
you’ll be foot wise.
Dwight and Evelyn visited Mabel town. Pa., that they suffered no
tie See 014 windows foi manv more.
damages from the flood*, though
Hom in Battle Creek Thursday.

Kroger's

Celebrate

HASTING S SPRING F
’ With a Giant Sale of

’

MICHIGAN PRODUCTS

CREAM CHEESE

19c

FLvU K * M*U*d Qt Low’11- Mick

75c

1Q

SUGAR

49c

FAMO

5

25c

CHERRIES

3

29c

BEANS

23c

TO YOU WOMEN WHO
WANT COMFORT!

WESC0
Scratch Feed

CHEESE BREAD &amp;1&lt;

$1.55

IN 9oot Guilder

Block Salt

MACARONI

3 &amp; 25

35c

P&amp;C CIANT SOAP 7°JSr2,

and you’ll "keep
going comfortably (

PEANUT
BUTTER

CORNED h%’h 2 ^. 2

25c LARD

25

2

BONELESS

FREE

VEAL CHOPS - 25c

■

Mrs. Ida Ruth is spending some­ without lights and ouUlde com­
time with relatives tn Hastings.
munication for two'days.
Mrs. Sarah Kenyon is visiting her
Word received from the E F. Sis­
daughter. Mrs. Hayes Sponable of son family of coal Center. Pa., says
East Hastings.
lhe water did not get Into their
house, but If it had risen another
Hom's Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. foot considerable damage would
Brice Meyers and Maude Louise of
Grand Rapids; Mr. and Mrs. Harry ter was within fifteen feet of the
Shute and Thelma of Hastings and door and the south end of their
Bert and Orville cook of Kalamathe south bank of the Mbnongahela
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mau and river, about fifty miles up Ute river
Mrs. Kate Patton of Kalamazoo from Pittsburgh.
visited Mr. and Mrs. Mila Ashby
Sunday.
Rev. Dwight Hom expects to go
to Galesburg. Ill., Tuesday where he
hu •* pastorate; Lloyd Laubaugh
will go to Onarga. Ill., to take
charge of the work that Dwight had
there.
•Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kenyon of
Hickory Comers spent three days
Kenyon and aasteted with the work.
Mr. ind Mrs Roger Wlswell and
Robert DeBolt of Kalamazoo called
on them Sunday.
Mr*. Lena Acker and Mrs. Arthur
Wilson and son Charles of Kala­
mazoo visited Mr. and Mrs Clarence
Baechler Sunday. Mr. and Mr*. Jeh
Kenyon of Hickory Comer* spent
Bunday evening with them.

Roy Hu ver of Lansing. Mrs. Foley
remained in Lansing for a week's
, Ylgtt.. ....._____
Mr. and Mr*. Dudley Kennedy
entertained Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Friedrich of Hastings. Biss Betty
Friedrich and Mr. and Mrs. ,Law' rence Friedrich of Grand Rapids at
a birthday dinner Bunday in honor
of Mr. Kennedy'* and Miss Betty
Friedrich's birthday*.

FOUR OF THESE BEAUTIFUL
AND USEFUL THERMOS JUGS

TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE

SPRING FAIR
BOOTH

Spring

, Storm King
0.89
4-45
fc
»o4

A COMPLETE LINE OF
GOOD “STAR BRAND *

yon will have an enjoyable
trip.

HASTINGS PHONE 1117

HIP

3”..4’5

Men

ITS TIME FOR NEW

Dress Shoes
$| 95 lo $4.95

THE HOME OF ALL
L1ATHER SHOES

12HC

BOILING BEEF

WHITE FISH
WINTER CAUGHT

FLORIDA'S - TREE RIPENED

ORANCU

ORANGES

CELERY

FULL OF SWEET JUICE

ASPARAGUS

HEAD LETTUCE
FBESH - Spring tonic
RHUBARB 2 ib. 1 5c

POUND

15c

2 «- 1 5c

FRESH B
LA1GX lOTCXn

NIW

LEAF

RADISHIS 2 mb 5&lt;

EXTRA FANCY

YOUR

BOX APPLES 4 - 25c

WE STOCK ONLY FIRST
QUALITY . . COMPARE!
FULLY GUARANTEED

Hastings, Mich.

IU0A1 COTED
- 17c
BACON SQUARES
CONT1OLLED
QUALITY
2 ~ 29c
GROUND BEEF

LARGE HEADS - TENDER. CRISP

CBEEN ONIONS

TAYLOR SHOE STORE
GOOD SHOES
PROPERLY FITTED

RING BOLOGNA - 1

FRESH - TENDER. GREEN SPEARS

GUARANTEED
SOLID
LEATHER

Rubbar*. 77c, 98c $1.29

REMEMBER I
Star Brand Shoes Are
Solid Leather . . It Pays!

DEPOT AT

Time To Change
KNEE
2«to3«

WORK SHOES

TRIO CAFE

VISIT OUR

SEE OUR DISPLAY!

BOOTS,
RUBBERS

1, Mik. or IM MU«!

Driven are trained to rive

29c

VEAL STEAK

SWIFT'S

IT'S EASY to
Travel by BUS!

BARBERS CORNERS.
Mr. and Mra. Nlel Fish of Bangor
and Mrs. Rose Trego of Hastings
were caller* at L. J. Matthew** Sun­
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Miner Seeley of
Hastings were Sunday dinner guests
at Herman Hauer'*.
Mrs. jerry Foley and sons. Mar­
tin and Paul, and Mra. Nay Bump
and children of Hastings were Sun-

23

VEAL ROAST

TRY OUR MODERN
SHOE REPAIR

Kroger Stores Will Carry a Complete Line of S

KROGER !

�The Hastings^Bannerf

BOOST THS COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1936

—e Editorials

ThisandThat |||
random
RANDOM observations
OBSERVATIONS..

A GREAT BIO DITCH.
Down Ln Florida, we read, the | local police agencies. Reasonable
government has spent five million i enough. Bqt, after all. Sheriff Batea
dollars toward thc construction of | was a local officer and he was the
a canal connecting thc Atlantic one who started action and certain­
ocean with the Gulf of Mexico. No' ly turned over some air tight evtone know*'whether or not the proj-1 dence. But lhe state let the case

।
I

The Barry coifnty Red Cross sent
in more than twice its quota to the
1 flood sufferers
nflnrrn in Lhi&gt;
the past
east. Quire
Quite a
j bit of personal credit for this fine
McKnight and the workmen al lhe
Bliss Press Company.

ecl will be completed. A great num- slip through Inaction thereby giving
ber of people In Florida hope that I credence lo tbe idea going around
it will not because state geologist* | that the dot machine racket U a
predict that it will drain one of' protected business.

Nor

are

I With a few of the warm and cold
&gt; days Interchanged, there might
' have been considerable damage
' done in this County by flood waters.

the

the greatest natural sub-surface, shaky excuses offered in the Clare
reservoirs of the slate and thus re-; case sufficient to counteract this
duoe thc productive power of one. idea.
.
Who is getting the Income from
of the richest citrus fruit regions
tn the United Slates. In fact peti­ the slot machine-racket? ft would
tions to hold up this project have be interesting to know and might
been widely circulated In Florida. have been known If the Clare case
Congress did not approve of this had been vigorously prosecuted.
Can it be that thc answer would
project but the administration used
special powers granted by congress
This official winking at lhe law
time lo be saved If and when the certainly does lhe cause of good
canal is ever successful may be government plenty of harm. Will
from one to three day*. But many the public tolerate it forever? Of­
ship owners say that they will not ficials apparently think so because
use the new route If completed be­ it takes pUcc rcgaigless of parties i
cause the Increased insurance rates or promises.
and dangers to shipping involved in
QUICK WORK.
navigating the winding course of]
this canal will more than offset any. Early Friday evening Archie D.
time that may be saved. Why is this McDonald, chairman of the Barry
being done? Simply because some County Red Cross Chapter, re­
Of the bureaucrats tn Wa&amp;hlrigton ceived a telegram from national
headquarters asking for a contri­
it has pul a few toousand men to bution to assist sufferers Ln the re­
work. How many thousands It will gions devastated by floods. Next
throw out of work if the great clt- m°rning the full quota was sent
rus fruit areas of the state are
alr mal1 wllh the prospect of addrained Is evidently of no impor- dltlonal contributions to follow, sevof* “
the
were on *"
hand
tance. Those who follow the pres- eral “
“ members
* ‘
J'
ant administration can lake care at the special meeting called where

Another worthy project will be
I tlie sale of Easter Seals, proceeds
[ from which, will be used for the
care of crippled children. These
Easter Seal* are to the crippled
: children what the Christmas seal*
' are to tuberculosis. An average of
two cents apiece for each person in
' the county and Barry will have
achieved its quota. Not a big sum
i certainty, but those few pennies rep­
resent the difference between hap। plness and dreariness to crippled
children of Michigan.

of that problem!
ever, were notified of Che plan by
THE ENGLISH MANNER.
You have to hand thc laurels to
and gave Immediate co­
England for dignflied and speedy : °«*rallon
Aa » resul‘- ‘he Barry

legal proreedure only Tour months | County Red Cross had arrangeafter a most atrocious crime-lhe Incnu tor Ute,r &lt;luotB
completed
so-called "Devil's Beeflub" mur-[by 10:00 o'clock on the same cve&lt;Jer—a Dr. Ruxton was found gull-' n,n« ttlMl
tolegram was received!
ty and sentenced.
,n flood emergencies, rapid action
The erewn based its case on an b UnperaUvc and lhe Barry county
unbreakable chain of circumstan­ committee rote to the occasion in
tial evidence. Not once did the de- ’PieJidldjnknner.
fense resort to sob-sister tactics or
Members
••
*of —
the Barry County
sensational tricks even though lhe
Cross committee are: Archie
secured, himself, did several timer. D McDonald, chairman: Mrs. Otto'
put on a display of maniacal his- ’ !»*«*•&lt;&gt;». secretary; Orville Ssyles.
ironies. In conclusion the Judge ‘reasurer; Mrs. Forrest Johnson,
gave an enlightened summary of rol1 cal1 chairman; Dr. C. F. Laththe points advanced by the defense ropald; Dr Robert B. Harkand prosecution.
neM- general health; Mrs. T. 8. KContrast this to lhe trial of,Reld- dlaaator; Mrs. Maude Smith,
Bruno Richard Hauptmann in this Junlor Red Cross; Mr*. John No­
country where" the trial, xitself, Jb,cs- nursing; Russell Cleveland, life
dragged on and on. week after aavh&gt;8; Mrs. E. F. Sayles, home
week, and where a year after sen- •*"*": MU* Rose DeF«*. nutrition;
tence was pronounced the case is I Charles PauL volunteer service;

still up In lhe air. tangled Ln a 1 Mlu Mabel Sisson, public inform*mess of politic* and sensationalism, illon: Mrs Victor Hilbert, chairman
The United .Steles has much to ’ northern half of county; Mrs. C. J.

learn from England in regard lo le-1 B®rnum and Mrs. Leon Dunning
i chairmen southern half of county.
gal procedure.
Members of lhe Red cross coinSOME FANCY WINKING
। tnittec and ail who gave co-operaA standard routine of each at-, tlon deserve congratulations for this
tomey general who assumes office ‘ fine record.
Is to stage a big - page one" head
line drive against the slot machine
LAUGHING IT DOWN.
____
A chuckle is often the best kind
racket. Bold slatemenu are made.
then l01 an argument. Almost anyone/
Warnings are Issued—and
! for example, can sit down and con-1
nothing is ever done
.. Attomej
_______ General vtnce anyone else that war is fuThe action of
Crowley in dismissing the "test tllc and costly to all concerned;
case" against Bert Kane, slot ma-' Uial evcu “,c winners low
A group of Princeton students
chine king of the northern resort
country and, according to his own got themselves together and formed
■talement. owner of thc gambling . Veterans of Future Wars organldevice which constituted exhibit A zation. With due solemnity they are
brings all this mock warfare rather asking congres* to grant them a
forcibly to mind.
tonus of si.ooo apiece, payable in
This particular caw date* .back 196.5. so they can enjoy it before
to Attorney General Toy who ha* they actually have to do any fight­
*ince been elevated (some say side ing.
tracked* to the state supreme court.
Not-to be outdone a group o"
Mr. Toy issued an ultimatum girls at Vavsar have formed a GcM
against gambling and Sheriff Geo.,star Mothers of the Future Society
Bates of Clare county look it sen- a,ld arc planning to petition for
ously. Slot machines, punch board* money lo send their members to
and other like devices were seized | Europe so they can see where their
and made a great jIiow as they were unborn sons will be buried.
piled -tn lhe Justice court room.u Plenty of "spell binders’’ could
With one of the state's "ace” prose- Brow purple faced and hoarse of
tutors assigned to the case and an throat over the subject of peace
affidavit from Kane that some of a'thout half so much effect as these
the machines seised were hi*, deci*- i students achieved.
ive action teemed to hover like a ’
~
*
dark cloud over the head of lhe slot'

machine racket in this state
:
And it continued tn hover—or
\ ““r

«IT : i

MU
I My. m cu k™.
himself, was .Myer even examined.
Attorney General Crowley finally 1

Pungent Paragraphs
What’s in a name? Wen. printing
billion dollar’s worth »■
of IS bills

u",‘

“

■
.
English greens* fanciers shipped

dismissed the case because Fred: 18.000.000 heads of broccoli this
Doherty, owner of the hotel in spring- If they try to pay us that
question
quesnon and
ana an
an important
important witness.
witness, [ way.
way. let
let’*
s forget
forge the deb: —Phlladelwas apparently on vacation in Cu- j phis Inquirer.
Although thc abstruse technical- I Another good reason for the
u«,
m,be n.
pi.benU.MI 01 U» .mw. Urm.n.l!'’" **“ w“1' »■&gt;“« •“
u.u nom. nem.h«b»M Mem. ,
-Amnu. Queue,
wee bit thin-to put It aa
blj a» poaaible.The point la
raxed by Uw attorney
and the governor that-the

That Count*—Not Ito Six*

charlu-, Believe It ornot. we still have oidatao ad- । fashioned people who don’t feel able
seucral' to own a cw because tliey're to debt,
enforce-' -Detroit Free Press.

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say
RIDICULOUS
Daily newspapers make them­
selves ridiculous and Insult thc in­
telligence of their readers by bulldIng up stories of death from heat
and cold, it is true that in rare
cases extreme heat and cold lake
live* but the listing in Monday's De­
troll Pree Pres* of cold victims is ridlculous.
Monday'* paper attributed the
death of Wayne Todd, flvc-year-old
Pontiac boy, to lhe frigid weather.
The boy drowned in the Clinton riv­
er when he crashed through lhe Ice
on his sled. Had the weather been
as frigid as the account would
have us believe, lhe boy would not
have been coasting on hi* sled and
the river would have been such a
solid mass of Ice that he couldn't
have broken through. Had the Todd
boy fallen from a rowboat last sum­
mer he would have been listed as a
heat victim.
Calvin Johnson. 12, of Mtukegon
Heights, was listed as cold wave vicUm No. 2. He was standing on a pile
of snow alongside a railroad track
and touching cars as they sped past.
He lost his footfhg and fell beneath
the train. It was a sad affair but
certainly can not be blamed on a
cold wave. Had it been so cold,
j-oung Johnson would not have been
standing on the pile of snow. If the
Johnson boy had been pulling the
same stunt two weeks ago when the
weather was mild how would the
daily newspapers .have chronicled
his death? It woull still have been
loo cool to have blamed it on the
heat or the humidity.
Frank Cain. 55. of Lansing was
cold victim No. 3. according to the
Free Press. He died of a Mart at­
tack while cranking his car Sup­
posing he had cranked his car tn
September and the exertion had
caused a fatal heart attack Would
he have been luted as a heat vic­
tim. a cold victim or Just a sad case
of a man with a weak heart?

A Quotation
THE belter a man is,
ihe leas ready is he to
syspect dishonesty in
others.
—Cicrrn.

|

The Public Forum

|J|

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

The Banner acknowledges the
i kindness of Mr. ana
and Mrs. A. &amp;.
K.
Prandscn in allowing us to publish
: the following letter which they rereived from the heart of the flood
calved
district, written by their daughter
Mildred (Mrs. Robert Laurensont
who lives at Wilklmburg. a suburb
of Pittsburgh on the heights, be­
tween the Monongahela and Alle­
gheny rivers.
Thursday night.
“High and dry" in Wilkinsburg. Pa.
A3 I suppose you know, we have
been seeing history made here the
last couple of days The map I sent
you Ln the Tuesday letter should be
that's where the
Grant street;
Boulevard of the
— -------Allies------------starts.where the new postoffice is locat­
ed. the William Penn hotel. Grant
building, very tall and new. the lo­
cation of KDKA. The small loss of
life’ here seems marvelous to me
when you consider the thousands
Involved. The water was up to the
second floor In Home's. The flood
level is twenty-five feet and it rose
to forty-six feel; each foot raise
meant thousands of square feet In
area included, we are without light
for the second night. They have
gotten a little power Into lhe city
for the necessities. We do have gas.
there
for
-but
--------. -Is Just waler
------- enough
- ----- ---------a fcw hours, some sections have
«*«» »»*»&gt;«« It since yesterday. Il
!•
is hnnon
hoped that
that the
lhe mrmnlnir
pumping nlanta
plants
which are now out of the water can
be cleaned and dried up in lime so
there will be no shortage. It is
estimated that we may be without
electricity in homes for a weei^ or
more, since all their machinery will
have to be lorn down, but they are
working diligently to do their best.
The organization for relief has been
splendid. We had no newspapers for
tw-ntv.fnur
twenty-four hrviirv
hours and nn
no rarttn
radio, nt
of
course. However. Bob had equip­
ment and built a little two-tube

four-pound roast,
quite a btt of that left. We were In­
vited to Holding's for dinner to­
morrow. but I dbn't think we should
rand eat up their supplies. Bob
going out to the club to work to­
morrow. He is supposed to work at
U. 8. &amp; 8. but Westinghouse is shut
down as the first floor is flooded
from Turtle creek,. We were out on
the hill back of the club yesterday
noon and you Just wouldn't be­
lieve 11 unless you saw It. The water
was up to about a foot from the
celling of the second floor. It took
ladles' locker which was a Ute addi­
tion. on the upstream side. Don was
In toqighl having come from Vcr-

of lhe water. He paddled over and
went in; everything is a mess, cov­
ered with several inches of silt.
They want lo shovel and wash out
as much at It as they can while It
is still wet When I saw those poor
people of Verona, my heart Just
ached. We are so very fortunate.
Mother Nature has certainly been
( Interior decoration seems U&gt; be
on lhe rampage this winter. It'will
one of lhe big problems of thc mo­
mean millions and millions of dol­
ment in Hastings—How to make
lars In losses to the etty—Horne’s
I thirty-five booths
approximately
alone they say, a couple of million.
I six by eight look original and dif­
Rumor has it that they have insur­
I ferent.
.kiuiu. Such
OULU a
B circumstance
VII(UUHWKC is
u&gt; at
ance,
but I doubt If anyone else has.
i hast one occasion when it s (orThey hud two or three feet of waler
lunate that people don’t all think
on the first floor In 1907 Bob is re­
hl.
Ialike.
building an old radio set, os he got
more batteries today, so we may
, Wonder how many of us ever stop
even have a loud speaker before
j to consider what is going on tndusthe evening 1* through. I have tried
• trially here Ln Hasting*. Ninety per
to tell you the more important de­
cent of the car seals used In the
tail* but I have left out lots, I
United States arc manurtictured
suppose. You will have to depend on
I here; another factory ranks wen up
the newspapers, although I really
I toward the top in piston ring pro­
think KDKA &lt;M0 NBC। is more re­
' duction. in fact led the entire field
liable. They have done fine work.
I in thc development of a new type
It was lhe only communication in
' steel piston; the finest line of soUd
thc city for several hours. I will be
_ o*k furniture Ln lhe United States
glad when trains start, again, so we
— I Is manufactured right here In Has­
can
get and send mall.
tings;
power stamping presses |
At three o’clock Wednesday they
phones
so
we
got
reports
after
10
manufactured here are shipped all
O’clock last night from KDKA warned u* the lights would go out
within
an hour and to get lamps or
us Siberia, some of lhe finest ma- which has been on continuously
। chinery anywhere Is used by these (hope you have heard them), and I candles. At thc first warning I
local plants and much of it was in­ have kept lhe neighborhood in-1i didn't go out os I had a couple of
vented and developed by local en­ formed about boiling water and long candles and some stubs and
even pasteurising milk. I have sev­ two flashlights. Fifteen minutes la­
gineers.
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
eral quarts of water boiled for ter they said that very likely it
r.'ould last seven to fourteen days,
Hastings
is
lo
be
highly
favored
—
—
Fool-proof systems for keeping drinking and we have the tub full
bi- lunns thr prmlw ol MrlM
.„dl„
of water. Everyone has been urged. so then 1 went out but loo late. Thc
five and ten cent stores were mob­
th Alma Colle.. Ok. Club Wedb^.n dlwmvrr.d u »t.
bed. However, we have enough and
.
im. m J
nappenea in uecroic. careful not to waste any.
church In thia
this Glee
ok. Club
club of
oT 201 About tiaif
hall a million dollars
dollar, stolen
awkn
You can’t buy meat for love or Bob has fixed up a little light with
Id
’
n
..-I"
11
Vnnm.
tlncllnnc
...
.
.
| voice, are Wo .,U known HutldU „„r a |arriod nt yr.r. and &gt;.l aud- money and there may be a shortage dry cells. I hope you haven't worried
irnuns men. E»rl colemnn and Bar- ,u „„ uk„, refulnrly. Burn book 'of other things, milk. etc. However, about us. Wilkinsburg is high, you
| old Lampman
Lampman.
keeping steal* are bound to be dis- ' we arc well stocked. I have some know, on the ridge between lhe two
. A wedding that will be of interest I covcrrd ewentuaMy but not always 1canned sausage, milk, spaghetti and rivers.
Mildred.
Mail
C; al °ncc » “&gt;ok the safe rnanufac- 1 meat balls. It jurt happened that |
j Mary McFarland of Detroit, for­ Hirers quite a number of years to
I merly of this city, and Mr. A. S. keep ahead of the crooks and pos­
CLOVERDALE.
। Ferte of Detroit.
sibly a crook proof bookkeeping sys­
The Cloverdale L..A. 8. will give
1 MUs Lola Power was chosen 11­
tem will also be discovered.
| n public dinner at the McNutt store,
I brarian. Miss Iva Crockford, office
election day, April fl.
girl, and Charles Will anti George
Hew to lhe line, let the quips
BAN Fl ELI).
Thc Father-Son banquet pul on
I Hale were reelected Janitors of the
fall where they mayl
Mr. and Mr*. Don Putnam were
tai the town hall. Friday evening
I Central building at thc Board of Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
' wm a success, proceeds were 81650.
I Education meeting Saturday night. Mrs. Fred Wilcox of Battle Creek.
By Observing Itamy'
iA
IVPn by Mr Ha,non of KaJ"
A move is on foot to organize a
Mrs. Lizzie Donaldson of Battle
vuscrvmg rummy.
amiuoo wB* enjoyed by all. Warren
Ladles' Bowling club In this city.
Creek spent Sunday at the Geo.
Dumb it! They squelched me en- Mell vane gave a very nice talk on
| Dr. and Mrs. D. C. Adams took Wickwire home.
tircly
last
week
—
and
I
had
some
i
father*
being square with their aons.
dinner Friday evening at the Pen­
Carl Dubois left Monthly for
insular Club. Grand Rapids, the Michigan City. Ind. where he has dandies too. Crowded out by adver- • and W. D. Brooks also had a very
tiling, lhe boss *aid. The old tight- , good message to fathers and sons
| guests of Dr. and Mrs. Richard secured work with Frey Bros,
। Smith.
There will
be a Community wad. Why didn’t he run a few extra ■ Mr. and Mrs. McNutt entertained
Mr. and Mrs. Myron McNutt and
Miss Inez Belson. who for some meeting at thc church . basement pages?
• lime part has been employed as Friday evening. March 27. Pot luck
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Drury of Otsego
Hehl Heh! Heh! My boss. I see. I Friday evening.
stenographer by the Hastings Mfg. I supper.
Mary Putnam and aeo. Wickwire ?°t "» mixed up in his blessed I Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens etjCo., has resigned and accepted an­
isited at oeo.
Oeo. Ransom’..
s ...
m Rut-announcements. Didn't five ' tertained Mrs Anna Howsell of
other position with the New Way visited
..Motor company of Lansing.
land last Saturday.
the right Woodbume credit. If he’d Kalamazoo over the week end.
I Awards for the best paper on
let Tommy
handle—
all--------this
Edith Grant will entertain lhe only
----- —
--------- ,----------Jim Mosier relumed home from
. How to Keep Baby Well." partici­ Nanh circle of the Ladies’ Aid this
he’d save himself a lot Grand Rapids after visiting his
of bad moments.
pated In by grade pupils In lhe
daughter and family the past few
i "Better Baby Week" contest were
won by Lois Reed. Beasie Gower.
Ray Branch. I aee. 1* putting one
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Monica of
• Alpha Hopkins. Kathryn Clarke.
over on the other boy* by hiring Kalamazoo wctT
..aay vimuw
* at
were ou
Sunday
visitors
of
1 Dorothy Robinson and Helen BishBRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
one of Michigan’s most noted golf | their parent*. Mr. and Mr*. Chas,
"Complete sincerity Is a great part instructor* lo work for him. "Snap- : Monica,
of a high character, and in the long py.” I understand, is the boy who
IJltle
Mary
Owens
is
on
thc
sick
’ THIRTY YEARS AGO
invented the game.
run it is true worldly wisdom."—
&lt; list this week.
Friday evening March 23. 60 Dean Inge.
I The Davenport family spent Sunneighbors gathered at the home of
Incidentally, "Snappy" Isn’t a bad
(day with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pieree
Orr and Sadie Fisher on the State
A New York man has invented an leap year prospect either.
of Charlotte.
i road to visit them again in the old elastic suit of clothes. That makes
Glad we tot Ab Carveth safelv' Thc Kn,,t,n8 Club met it the
home where they have lived for 24 the waistline self-adjusting —Atlan­
back from Pinrtda C
“,ely 1 home of Mrs. Lester Monica. Wed• years. Mr. and Mr*. Fisher will soon ta Constitution.
back from Florida.
,ne*day. with pot luck ’ dinner. tn
! move into the home they purchased
.
* *
*.
' honor of Mrs. Steve Karnses of Hasof H J. Christmas in Hostings.
"One very important need right,
Dld an*- one ever zee Simon Et- j tings.
J. M Bauer was taken to Ann Ar­ now l* more individual self-re­
wrfrom’^mmI’hrreVn l riUh,ng
Mr*. Arthur Hunter. Oliver Fish­
I bor to the University hospital liance.’—Jesse H. Jones.
" ,nlm
„ .ad Ml« Mmpnr bl Orbnd Bap, Tuesday evening where he will unabundantly means simply
• dergu a severe operation
• , '■’Dj live--------------------------------------_ ■
kb were entertained at thq Owen’s
‘ Ed. Houvcncr went to Grand 1Increase the range and IntcnMly
Tlie cheer Up Club b the most'home Suffday.
Rapids Thursday to take the
civil I 2*. ,,our
relations.’’—William
Lyon­ । democratic and at the same time I Mr _nd 2.., w n nmnfc, .nl_r
IK CIVII
___________________
------ ---the most rigidly exclusive organiza- UinL till? daughter BMr!^Walter
,____
i service examination for a railway PhellM-

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

'Round About Town |

'A falsi fntrul and a shadow attend
only uhen the tun shines.'

•on* hit. published 1902.

io Gtntril Scott.

Crumbs of Wisdom

tween tbe bride and lhe bride­
groom. Tlile. of course, would
be impossible In Hollywood.

match lhe froek Good thing It’s
mail dork.
I "It takes an opitmUt to be a
not (ho batlilog suit, because
Walter Van Doran. 32. of Roscom­
| Fred W Stebbins and Morris
.
„ . * * *
.
:«*r. then motored to Potterville lo
mon drove his car Into thc path of
that would eotall ■ great deal of 1 Lambte have purchased Ed. Huff- I Democrat, and a humorist to stay
Joe McKnight evidently isn’t one j vuii relatives.
one.’’—Will Rogers.
a passenger train, people do that
painful eyebrow plucking.
• man's cigar stand, first door north
?n Sb’XS""
*b~‘,
O'”'" OPvanporl. Mr,. Bk«
winter and summer, spring and tail
' of lhe pastoffice. John Dooley has
■■What
l»
the
senoe
of
growling
in
acoicn
stones.
paUon and Mrg
ulnaar of
and yet Van Doran is called a victim
Horticulturists
assert
sun­
been pul in active charge.
because your busine** is not hitting
of winter.
flowers are descended from rosea
, ,.
.Delton visited. Mr. and Mrs. Ike
Thc drug firm of Fred L. Heath &amp;' the roof. Be thankful it U off the
I thought our city wasn’t quite | Allison at GuU lake.
Howard Raygor. 57. Jackson farm­
Sunflower*. If they could talk, I Carveth have sitown great entcr- floor! ’—Roger w. Babson.
er. is another cold weather victim,
the same as K used to be—half | The correspondent thinks thb a
would, no doubt, also claim they
prise in establishing a delivery in
according lo lhe Free Pres*. He
are away
came over on lhe Mayflower.
"Of all lhe crafts, lhe proofreader ' there health unit nurses
■ connection with their business.
lflne opportunity to thank’ all her
educated. "renn-r*
worked outdoors Sunday and his
Cvti.
wv2Ty ’[ fiends who were so kind to her ana
Don t
worry
They have a fine new wagon, a must be lhe best informed and have getting
though. They know aplenty
death was induced, it is believed
“'--- J al**' j’ her family Friday afternoon. She
; beauty.
the widest range of knowledge."—
And
European
ready!
• even the Free press is not sure in
Jay E. House
very much appreciated the shower.
this case) by thc cold weather.
FOilTY YEARS AGO
nno in uiu way inanxs one ana an
Albert Lanlnga and hb daughter
Maybe It Just seems true that
Week before last the Wool Bool
that she otherwise could not sec
Chicago only played al
of Cutlerville were killed when their
Company broke all previous record* only well-paved streets are the ones are planning some lively times be­ personally.
car was struck by a Pennsylvania
for the production of wool boots, torn up to lay pipe lines or some­ fore and about April 6.
Fish hatchery proprietor utee
passenger train. Hid they driven
making 1090 cares or 26.180 boots thing.—Toledo Blade.
NORTH HOPE.
their car into the path of thc train
iibln* Diaclilnss to restore the
; during lhe week.
x
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Btnkely »fid
last July they would have had the
Id la gotdflala.
Now if our
-Ttere u no air. tor toll, rxap.
Mrs. N. E. Gardner and grand- J isdom."
son of Ray. Ind., spent from Friday’
—Nicholas Murray
Murrav Butler.
Butler
mua
distinction of being heat victims.
* Washington tnacblne would Just
I daughter, Charlotte Barlow, are wisdom."
until Monday with Mr. and Mrs.
John Lifers. 68. of Casnovia, died!
spending the week in Batik' Creek.
There arc mighty few people in Oscar Wurm and family.
of cold weather. He was injured
the guests of Mx. and Mrs. C. C.' in« thrown from the load.
this town who deserve to have
Mn. Agnes Randell and son of
— Ci-------- "-------------- 1 - —
'complaining of It. winter is enjoy- Wolcott.
I W. A Morse. Jessie Eycteshymer. mud thrown al them; not a one the Striker Dlst. spent the week
Mlchigan’s prosperity is largely able to those who don warm clothes'
Mrs. p£*olj
Ella DavU
has rented the &amp;.im".nd7
Be He Fteher. w.m
O. “
Louden.
IWM on th. unru. M,w .nd uk. &gt;!.»* ol U»
VL5SJS
iX™Clara
ol good enough to do thc throwing.
end with Mr. and Mn. Jame? Mur­
—; ' ., . —r
..
tv
.
,IIC lkmu.j south part of J. B Roberts house ।
ano nva pinxnam oi
• • •
phy
and Mr. and Mn. Morse Mur­
several 5Ste
years lA
it lhas
been the
state's
and snwt nffonM
__ Brotdwa
TT* &gt;’ t0 Addiv Parker“uand. iI Wd&lt;UertUe
__ .n_____
.______at
second
fadu«re
yZ-^
i’ ha^^ne
0^^1^!?*
on
were...
in_______
attendance
Tommy’s !n dutch with Ben GldTommy’s in dutch with Ben Gid- phy.
“al h,ppyJ Ume for lh0M wh0 huddle family.
|‘he Saturday session of the teach-, ley. He saya that hl* mustache lia*
Robert Pranshka
in company
newspapers summer
summer an&lt;J
and winter
do around
around a
atove and
.nd are
.re afraid
afraid to
tn get
,.t ।
Jcrr mjtltule
j fOt Jirt i few whUkersta It m
newspapers
winter do
a stove
with hl* grandfather. Louis Fergu­
their best, lo wreck this great Indus- out into lhe open
because of —
news* . H. B Andrus. John Ketcham and —*Ackerson At Hayes have just put
Jerry Johnson s.
frv They
Th-r spread 'Un
._____...__—
....T'.T— n
.. _ — OM' Ba*sctt will conduct a sumson, attended ihe father and son
try.
the gospel ...
in the _____
paper headlines of the cold wave.; mer school al Nashville
toto their egg preserving establish
banquet al Cloverdale Friday eve­
summer that lite heat and humidity Winter and summer art alike un-1 a D. McElwain has resigned ai|n«,n‘ two tanks that will Isold
Oh hum! Only thirty years more
claim hundreds of lives. When thc healthful whan
nM«i. are so afraid ------------------ cetnetery
. .
&gt;nd
, iwc|ve tlwusand downs of eggs and we’ll be eligible for our Town­ ning.
when people
sexton of------------Riverside
olMr and Mn. Homer McCallum of
mercury approaches zero In lhe win­ of cold and heat that they take no
each.
- send pension.
will travel for A. Black &amp; Son.,
Muanyon spent lhe week end with
ter the same newspaper* Insult lhe
H C- Smith ha* sold Uu&gt; build­
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
FIFTY” YEARS AGO
Intelligent people and frighten the
Our bodies are marvelous ma­
ing used by him as a tailor shop to
McCallum.
gullible by attributing all accidental ciuncs.
mey are
chines. They
arc made
made to
to -withstand
withstand
Archie Ayres has been engaged
J as Trav. Phillips. Wte understand Mr. tills .annuity system. Gel your cash
Mr. and Mi’s. Rankin Hart and
deaths to cold weather.
| extremes of heat and cold if we give city night watchman.
8- will soon remove to Detroit. ’ In advance every time Tommy says. daughter attended the funeral of
Bummer is a healthful Ume for . those bodies proper care. But driving
A load of hay Upped over on
_______
. ... the
Edward__
Green having leased
Mn. Will OU* at her home in Rut­
.T
h
^u
8rt
n
lhe
sun
,nd
,nto
111C
P®
‘
h
of
a
locomotive
or
State svrcci
street Tuesday. james
James woolWool- Ifarm
it
i.
_
u|v puui ui h locomotive or oiaic
arm of tor*. Julia Altofl In the
Also II eliminates the dues.
land on Sunday aflcnwon. Tills
nn the
th, driver, was nttkr*
—t Harting*
« *111
..... -a--------p°**whowfler most from slipping beneath the Ice can hanUfion.
quite severely ; city of
will atari
n
community extend their sympathy
tne neat are those who mope around be blamed on the weather.
.cut about the head and face by be- jmilk route commencing April 1.
See you al Lhe fair.
to the bereaved ones.

I

X

�HATHMOl, MICHIGAN, T&amp;URADAY. MARCH M. UM

1W0MLLM
nOWENMLLED
1936

TWO COUNTRIES

THIS YEAR MARKS
26TH ANNIVERSARY

OHSiH 'Wau

wm

Mr. and Mr«. Floyd Williams. Mn. | Mr. and Mn. RusmU Kantner of
1r«lnte Stole
Mtnte of
nf Battle
(Settle creek
rv..k and
enA ' Hastings were eunXie
Virginia
Sunday oiieele
guests nt
of Ur
Mr
home Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Williams and and Mrs- Guy Kantner.
।
Doris of Dowling were Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Townsend
guests of the Chas. Fartoe's.
spent Tuesday In Lansing
The Brethren Aid Society will
Mr. and Mrs. KUswortlj Smith
meet with MraGuy Kantner this
Smith and grandson of Hastings
■pent Sunday afternoon with Chas.

Dale and Ralph Townsend at
An oil truck had juat pul In 100
Add
—
_ -similes: As
gallons. and Ted went to dr»« out North. Manchester college, Ind.,
spent the week end with home folk*. • pacifist.
plosion took place and he found
himself enveloped In flames.
Before they could be extinguished

Hag Ten Groups
entirely burned off. and hands and
Actively Engaged in
forearms terribly burned.
Worthwhile Work
The bums proved to be second

Halting!
should
i. Bob

The central P. T. A Thursday. degree ones, and a sinking spell
Wednesday night nearly .took bis1
March 10. was woll attended, the
program being furnished by the Ute.
Mrs. Hodgea, who is a graduate
Camp Fire Girls. Their district
chairman. Mra. Aben Johnson, gave nurse, has been In constant attend­
a brief talk on lhe origin and ac­ ance, and reported Saturday that
tivities of the Csunp Fire organiza­ unteaa unlooked for complications
tion.
teined now for his recovery.
The twelve months from this
March to March 1037 will constitute DEATH OF GAYLE PFEIFFER.
the twenty-fifth year, the silver
Gayle Pfeiffer,- son of the Rev.
Jubilee, of the Camp Fire Girls. In and Mrs. H. R. Pfeiffer, who five
1911. several persons interested tn near Dorr, parsed away al Bronson
girls saw the need of an organisa­ hospital in Kalamazoo on Tuesday
tion that would do for them what after an Hines* of five days of pneu­
the Boy Scouts organization was monia. He was born at Camden,
doing for boys. These people, edu­ near Hillsdale, May 8. 1013. and.
cators and busy men and women, graduated from the Hastings High
spent many hours formulating the school with the class of 1031. The
principles and philosophy of Camp Rev. Pfeiffer was pastor of the
Fire and planning activities to de­ United Brethren church here. La­
velop the beat possibilities In girls. ter the young man attended Hunt­
Today in twenty-two countries at ington College and since last fall
lhe world, there are Camp Fire had been employed by the Kalama­
Girls—about 2.000,000, it is Inter­ zoo Stove co. Surviving are the
national.
parents and three sisters, Mrs. Wal­
in Hastings there are ten groups ter O. Gorsllne. of Inland Park,
The leaders of the groups are called Gull lake. Miss Lois Pfeiffer of Dorr
Camp Fire guardians. The Has­ and Mrs. Gayle Bierce of near
tings groups belong In the Battle Eden.
Creek Area, that-Is. their chief ex­
ecutive and field secretaries have House] United Brethren church
their headquarters there and the near Eden on Thursday. Burial was
Hastings
organization
annually in the Leslie cemetery.
pays fifty dollar* for the services of
ARREST TWO FOR
these officers.
ILLEGAL TRAPPING.
The frame work of the Camp Fire
program is the system of earning
On Saturday Conservation Officer
honors. This was begun . by Dr. George Sumner, in company with
and Mrs Gulick when they used lo two Allegan county officers. Messrs,
lake their three daughters and one plot's and Lavoy. made two ar­
ion into the Maine woods every rests In Yankee Springs township
tummer. The children became ex­ near Oun lake—Raymond Foster.
pert in outdoor sports and woodlore, 27. and Paul Jackson. 35. of Brad­
but their parents also kept them In­ ley. "Hie men. who were found trap­
terested In the necessary comp ping muskrats out of season, were
chores by awarding small honors brought before Justice Matthews
for tasks well done. This Idea was Saturday afternoon and fined |50
enlarged and extended to meet lhe and 1685 costs, .each, or 60 days In
needs and interests of all girls.
jail. Now they are boarding with
"Honors" are things to be done, Sheriff Blakncy.
wimetlines little and sometime* big
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
things. They fall Into seven group*
Mr., and Mn. Paul Smith and
called "Crafts" and each craft has daughter
and Mrs. Bert Smith spent
■ symbolic color. When an honor
has been won. the girl receives a Saturday in Lansing where they
made the acquaintance of thc new
woo&lt;lcn bead of lhe color of the
craft to which that honor be longs baby, little Nancy Kay Smith, who
lhe daughter of Mr. and Mn.
These honor beads are records of ] Is
Casgo Smith.
attainment and are used as dec- I
Mr. and Mrs Levi Kantner. who
orations on the ceremonial gown. I have been spending the winter in [
The seven crafts are. Home Craft I Hastings, eame Saturday to spend a I
having a flame colored bead sym- short time with Mr. and Mrs. Guy ;1
Ixillzing lhe flame of the hearth; Kantner then will ro lo their own ’
Health Craft, red because of lhe home. Their many friends welcome'.
red blood of health; Camp Craft, them back.
brown for the earth, tree trunks and
woods; Hand Craft, green symbol■ tzlng growing things and creation;
Nature Craft, blue for the sky cov­
ering all Nature: Business Craft,
yellow for gold; Citizenship Craft,
red. white and blue honor beads
for patriotism.
&gt;.
Since the girls' ages vary, so are
ANTIFROST
tome honors easy and other* diffi­
cult. They are also sufficiently var­
k CLOCK .
ied to meet the testis and require­
ments of nil the girls. When a girl
has worked out an honor, she hands
to her group guardian a written rec­
ord of this honor signed by her
ELECTRIC
mother, teacher, or guardian, this
depending on whether the honor
LIGHT

i shut
looded
lerday
; be-

: look
4 our
add!-41

Ver-

r and

silt.
Hie it
Just
mate,
been
t' will
dolime’s
111Ion.
nsur! has.

e cot
may
efore
tried

id on
■eally
iiork.
m In

&gt; out

and
lays,
nob­
and
with

you I
two I

Loh.*,

. on

Bias

militant

as

FRANDSE
SPRING FAI

a

• We invite you to inspect our booth at the Community Hall and
ho/te to see you at the store. Our place of business is full of new
Spring Merchandise at inviting prices!

FREE!

FREE!

SPARTON
REFRIGERA TOR
To Be Given Awoy April 25th of

Phone

rren
; on
onx
very
&gt;ns
inert
■rid
lejo

of

rotn
his
few
of

lek

sn- •
rec

the
edtn

th-

«r
ln-

ler
na
ho

til

Id

tk

.

Camp Fire meeting. Most of the
honors arc •doing" honors rather
than Just "knowing."
Camp Fire is characterized by
that symbolism so much used by
early peoples. Including the Ameri­
can Indians. There are three ranks
qf Camp Fire Girls, representing
three stages of progress. The first
rank is Woodgalherer; the second Is
Firemaker; the third and highest Is
1'orchbearer.
The girls use sym­
bol ism In the decorations of their
ceremonial gowns, frequently de­
picting the meaning of their C*mp
Fire or Indian names in this way.
. In the last eighteen months, six
new camp Fire groups have been
organized in Hastings making ten
In all. but these enroll only about
one-tenth of Hastings girls of Camp
Fire age. More guardians are need­
ed. The Camp Fire program alms
to develop character and should be
n matter of interest to the parents
as well as the daughters.
At the conclusion of Mra. Johnwn'« talk, the Camp Fire Girls
.themselves took over the program.
Norma Jacobson, a Torchbearer in
ceremonial
dress, explained the
symbolism of her gown. This was
followed by a day directed by Mrs.
Blanche Caukln assisted by other
guardians. It depicted in several
scenes lhe clauses of lhe Camp Fire
program.
Hie lost scene, by Mrs. DeVries’
arouD presented a Camp Fire coun­
cil. lhe girls In their ceremonial
gowns, led by their guardian, light­
ed thc three candles signifying
Work. Health and Love. One girl
who had performed the tasks of a
beginner, was welcomed to the first
rank of Woodgalherer, and two
other girls received new ranks of
Firemaker and Torchbearer. It was
very Impressive.
At the' conclusion of lhe meeting
the apdlenee adjourned to the play­
room Where sandwiches and coffee
were served by the committee as­
sisted by the camp Fire girls. •*
From the beginning of lhe eve­
ning. when some of the girls volun-

We are more than enthusiastic about the new lines
&lt;&gt;f Bales’ Bedspreads—Cannon Sheets—Towels—
Linen Cloths—Slips—Pajamas—Gowns — Girdles
mid Corselelies—Lace Curtains, De.
We include lhe slate sales lax in our prices, and
our prices arc not any higher than anybody else'*.

We Deliver

•t $1.00.

$1.69

One Ticket Given With Each
50c Purchase
WEEK-END VALUES!

BUTTER
33C

Egg&gt;
Kingnut Oleo,

lb. 12c
lbs. 25c

New Wash Frocks

J«w.lComp...2lbs.29c

ORANGES, Florida

Latest in style, made
from the finest materials
and well tailored—
HOUSE DRESSES at

■ I., u. 39c

HEAD LETTUCE ua.c,*»H-s.

e-.i.

5c

w

’1.69 ..d ’1.95

MEATS

Hole Special
Fair Week we offer Sub­
standards of “Admiration,”
All Silk. Full Fashioned
Hose ... the new spring
shades at—

NEW THINGS FOR

59c

STREET DRESSES

BABY AND
BOYS AND GIRLS

Knee Length Hose

Drstiet • SwMtsri

All Sift. Sii«« s| to lo|

Hom • Underwear

BEEF HEARTS ......................
Ib. 9c
HAMBURGER, fresh ground ... Ib. 13c
BEEF ROAST, Branded
Ib. 15c
SWISS STEAKSIb. 19c
VEAL SHOULDER ROASTSIb. 19c
FRESH HAM PORK ROASTSIb. 23c

'HouvtcUrtuyO.
SHINING nampln of Moan-

and while

if

oa

CINDERELLA DRESSES
Special for
Fair Week

a ari/rv

$&lt;)88 $2.88 $A88
L *
A* *
Q •

■tf

COLORFUL beh* ia leather.

SPECIAL

25°

Free—Free!

ALL
CABINETS

Two Cinderella D rettea and
One Wash Dress to the

Vi
€

' ELECTRIC

REFRIGERATORS

the Community Hofl.

FvegabinT
' BASKADOR

-"7
5 YEAR WARRANTY PLAN

■

Think of thc dozens of trips you make daily
to your refrigerator, when you consider buying
a new one. Count the features for greater con­
venience that the 1936 All-Feature Sparton
offers! You’ll find that Sparton combines all
the important feature* tn ONE refrigerator!
Smartness — in Sparton'* beautiful new cabinet
design. Convenience — with Baskador, com­
pletely automatic defrosting. Vegabin, Baskadrawer, ample ice. cubes, lighted interior, positive
ice tray release. Economy
_____, — ....
,the Antifrost Economy Clock,
with*
and 20% to 30% more efficient, silent unit Five Year Plan pro­
tects your investment in a Spanon. See thc 1936 Sparton
Refrigerators today.

Mannish or Swagger.

TAFFETA Ascot*. tie silk

COATS
SUITS

xtr?.-.'.. so*

*

*

AND

*

*

Everybody Wears Them
Becomingly!
Women arc partial to the longer coat*. We

have both—al surprisingly

low

prices!

V
]ja/ncOunclAt|d

Fur trimmed or plain, dressy coat* at—

LARGER, to ga with msa-

$78?-’l688

5 PARTON

Smart tailored suits, short or
long jackets... $7.88 lo S21.88
SIZES 14 to 48

Come in Today and See Them,
Receive a Free Ticket on the SparUm
to be Given Away. Ask us for Details.

rawed p. T. A- chairman, until the
last cup was washed and dried, the
girls displayed fine initiative and
ability. Thc helpfulness and co­
operative spirit depleted in their
rdav was no} merely a stage effect
but evidently one of the real at­
tainments in the program of the
WISTIRN. UNION IUILPING
Camp Firs Girls.

|

Enthusiastic? Yes!
'

Visit Our Booth at the Spring Fair!

650,

Id

Mn.
urdsy.

CAMP nu 01SLS leva
MIMBIMB IN TWXNTT

HI

if

TED CUSACK

k

FraiulspiiN Store
EXCLUSIVE

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON
HASTINGS, MICH.

BUT

HASTINGS, MICH

NOT

E X PE NS I V E

' TELEPHONE 2S04

Nl

�HASTING 8. MICHIGAN. THURSDAY. MARCH M, 19M
Justice, Charles! Treas, John Perry; Highway Com-1 Maple Grove Utts year as
CewlRepIogte; clerk. Roy Erway; Treas, | Highway Oomrar, Henry Hynes.
“MUSIC GOES’ROUND”
DeVault: Bd. of Rev, Wm Gillespie, mlxsloner. Edward Walters; Jiistlcc. . Democrats attended
lhe
nranreviiie
” cat
Sepnour Unmgton. justice. Perry
woodland Democrats decided not
. Thc "Music Goes Hound." Colum­
I Democrat - Supervisor. John , Matt Bedford; Bd. of Review. Walw. .
.
H"I,: -Bd- °r Rev- John outer; to nominate a ticket, so there te
bia’s new film features Harry Rich­
But
one
ticket
was
nominated
in Hlghwky commr. Geo. Marble.
but the one.
Ormsbe; Clerk. Mrs. Pearl Mat- ter Hammond.
man.
Rochelle Hudion. Edward Par­
ler Orangevine
Orangeville teraNR
township, the RepubliRepubll-I.
Thorn.PPte.
Yankee Sprout.
ithews; Treas, Allen McDonald;; We were unable to leam whether
ley, and Michael Riley, the round
are the nominations: iRepuhMcan — Supervisor, Grover
justice, Fred Peck; Bd. of Rev.,' the Democrats held a caucus 1in can. Following
n'ert
Only one ticket was nominated in . Ten Hastings High school atuSiioervteor. BennmSir
Brown:nSXclerk.’ n
Erf 1 CUne; Clerk' w H Madden; Trefc . Yankee Springs R&gt;wn»hlp.
?UwJJ
1
at“n'l. d the mockRepubU- and ’round boys, producers of "The
Andrew Kennedy; Highway Com- Irving Twp.
•
Garbow; Hignwny
Highway.. commr..
ComnwJ rwpuu
Republican-Supervisor. Albert L. can nominating conv^nUonatKal- Music Goes 'Round and ’Round.”
missioncr,
Johnstown.
o ’
&gt; rl&gt;“* oaroow;
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
-- ------------------------Wm
C11TOrth;
March 21 The story has to do with an old
Mope.
I-.
Republican - Supervisor.
Perd of Review. Ferris Brown: Jurtie».„.....
'claud Kenn*":
JU-«ioe. full term. Graves;
fashioned showboat troupe that
------------------------------------ .
yr., Clif*7'ro~ ““
Republican—Supervisor, Bernard; Stevens; Clerk. Vern Doty; Treas,
O. Btokoe; Justice.
3 yrs..
CUI-‘ Treas,
Treas. IDofi.id Klmmry; Highway
,—nnd
—Mr
-npanled
by Edwin swoops down on Broadway to ap­
Highway Commr.. Herman Mort- ford Davis; Bd. of Review, Charles Commr, Henry Shively; Bd. Rev, , . j£vIor
’
DeOolla; Clerk. George Clouse; : car) Bowman; Bd. of Review. Geo.
’ L- Taylor and Mr. Reinhardt of the pear in a lavish musical spectacle.
Republican—Supervisor.
Ernest Treas, Henry Bergman; Highway Miller; Justice. Julius Frey; High- ‘ uac'
A. Robertson: Constables. C^.
-- ---------------------------------------------Chas. । John
Lewis;
Juttice, Jap Raymond,
,department,
,----------- _j. The conven­ A showboat of the nineteenth cen­
Smith; Clerk, Henry Remington: Commr, Fred Scott; Bd. of Rev, wly commr, Gerald Dunn. But one |,
Fralrievllle.
Kermeen. Frank Coman, Benjamin ,
tion nominated Senator Vandenberg tury Is the setting of this picture
Treas, Mrs. Mildred Mater; Bd. of Will Anders; justice. Bert McCal- ticket was named In Johnstown.
’ Republican
— Supervisor.
OILS Carpenter. Loren Tungate.
'
for president on the fifth ballot and acting which was current of
Rev, Orr Fisher; Justice. Hallie
M.nie rmre
- ' Boulter; clerk, Floyd Bhelp; Treas.
Democrat—Supervisor. Julian M
Jum.
•
। and Senator Borah os vlce-presl- that day. One of the high spots of
Lathrop.
q.i.irvb^r John H
Johnkin: Justice. Maurice Potts; Clerk. Thoma. 1. Gillett; I
dent. Those attending from Has-' thc picture shows Miss Hudson In a
Democrat
—
Supervisor.
Ed.
Pen--------------—
,
------------------------.R^^Hcan
-Sup^teor.^john^H
.,
Hu
,hes;
Highway
Commr,
—
—
Democrat — Supervisor.
Hollis
' tings were Carroll Newton, chair­ dramatic scene In lhe Broadway
ncte;
clerk.
George
Kahler;
Treas,
Martens;
clerk.
Ralph
Pennock;
McIntyre; Clerk. Arthur Housier;
Morehouse; Bd. of Review. (
man, Dan Weaver, Suzanne Bum-। Theater where she berates lhe au­
ughes. The Prairieville: Demo- term. Gerahum Severance. Justice I
ly|Ul | | 1
I
ner. Anna Beck. Wilma Royer. De- dience for laughing'at the sincere
yrs. Wm. Kronewltter:
B* of Re
Re-­
UIOHUU IUI Wil I J ' Forrest
dld not name a ticket
3 yrs,
Kronewltter; Bib
_....................
Walton. Donald Doxcy. j efforts of her showboat troupe. This
view.
Qienn
W.
Allen;
Constables,
Rutland.
(Continued from page one)
j Betty Sigler. Marian Hewitt and
publican — Supervisor, Moses Clive Churchill. John Kollar. H. G._______________________
—‘;--------- Ruth Hathaway.
'strand. '
Preahney,
Elmer
Bender.
j
unemployed
and
not
eligible
for
i
...
,
.
Jtulx; Clerk. Harry WHUams;
Woodland.
WPA work. 46.
I The first homo room dlsrusslqn । "STRIKE- ME FINK EDDIE
i, Ritchie Mullen; justice. Pet-----------— of Review.
-----------Republican - Supervisor.
Glen. 6 .Families eligible for WPA work
L h,|d
Monday 1
CANTOR PICTURE.
inder
brook; Bd.
James Mead; Highway Commr.; Wotring; clerk. Truman
union; and not assigned to U. S. employ-. L-.-h M T11P ueneral subiect tm\ Eddle Cantor te let loose In a giGeorge Cronk.------------------------------------ ।Treas. Lucy Lind; Bd. of Review, ment service. 38.
7V «n the xroun. will be !»anlic smusemenl* park in "Strike
Democrat — Supervisor. Monte Will Velte; justice. Albert Reesor;
6. WPA families being supple- clUjtenshlD and lhe element, of Me Plnk ” Cast .as a timid fellow
___________________________________________ mimed reiutarly ..utauu™. w.s« JiSraMu to he rnurUed on the!«&gt;»
™™pondence cour»
| being 15 ner cent or more short of
r4&gt;nf&gt;?t -ar,&lt;
in acquiring a dominating personal— —v normal relief budgets). 5.
.
I ity and becomes
manager . of
। 7. Heads of families. 65 years of
...
..
Dreamland Amusement Park. Here
"
i •» “"““a
* w »■
Mr.
Bennett
attended
the
Midwest
।
-int
machine
racketeers
who have
• 8. Old age asstetance cases being' Ohv.li-nl Fikirntlon wmv.nUnn .1
rBwicci.
Physical Education convention at everylll.ciiuie
supplemented. 37.
previous manager on the
Grand Rapids last week. On Thurs­
9. Widows with children under 16 day night an interesting four-hour spot. Thc gangsters learn that
and other women eligible for moth- program. "Tlie parade of the Ages" Eddie secretly adores a night club
star played by Ethel Merman. This
ere' assistance, 35.
was given in the Civic auditorium
i Tomi family relief load in Barry under the direction of A. W. lady te really the wife of one of
their number and they use her as
county Feb. l. 1936. 363.
Thompson supervisor of physical lhe "come-on" to trick Eddie into
I 10. Heads of families eligible for education in Grand Rapids. One
installing their fake machines.
old age assistance who have not yet of the most popular of the panel
Others in the pictures are Sally
meetings was thc talk on the Eilers, seen as Eddie's’ Dreamland
I been granted pensions; 70.
: The commission says: "It is evi- Olympic games by Mr. Brundage, sweetheart. Harry Parke, better
president
of
the
American
Olympic
| dent that many citizens are still,
known as Parkyakarkus of radio
I considering the relief problem in Association. The Midwest, confer­ fame. William Frawley and .the
| tlie light of its size, and methods ence was considered one of the 1936 crop of ooldwyn Girls.
used in dealing with it in 1929. mast successful ever held.
Several new songs are introduced
Great changes in industry, through I
in the film, "Strike Me Pink" will
Die steady introduction of labor- ; Members of the graduating class soon show at the Strand be sure
are
being
graded
on
persona)
qualcaving
machinery,
have
takcn'place
pc.am,u. qu,,- . to see this picture.
AN ARRAY OF OUTSTANDING FOOD VALUES FOR THIS
picture. ________
I os well as a complete change in1 ilics and characteristics os well as
WEEK . . . High Grade Canned Foods . . . Finest Quality Bulk
I public psychology as to eligibility academic
achievement.
Only
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
' for relief and otherwise. Our recent. teachers who have known lhe stu- I Mrs. Emma Otte of Wayland was
Foods . . . Fresh Fruits and Vegetables . . . Flour and House­
---------------------j experience in seeing thousands of dents personally are marking them1 a ----Bunday
guest--in lhe Wm. **
Havens
cleaning Supplies . . . All at Substantial Savings
able-bodied workers not absorbed on such qualities as initiative, ortgl- home.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Lord from
by industry, when the wheels were , nality. sportsmanship, emotional
At C. THOMAS STORES.
j turning at peak speed, should help i control, cooperation, etc. A com­ near Orangeville were Sunday
; us realize that some other outlet is posite rating will-be found for each guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
necessary. We have known various student and sent to the college Jim Wilcox.
Those from here who attended
i commendable, able-bodied workers which he enters in the fall. And
I for whom there is no Industrial em­ should he go into business instead, the Community meeting Friday
■
■ ■ ■ ■ BA ■ ■■
BUTTER SCOTCH
LB.
■
VW II M
LEMON. CHOCOLATE
ployment nor is there likely to be. the record will serve as a recom­ , evening had an enjoyable lime. The
■ ■■
COCOANUT TAFFY BARS
were elected;
mendation to hte future employer. 1 following officers
Pres.. Belle McCallum; vice pres,
we. fts citizens, must make intelli­
gent. humane plana for some self,
Tlie movie. "The Covered Wagon" Dan McCaUunT; secy.. Gerald An­
respecting support on a more or less to be presented in Central audi­ ders; treas, Earl McKlbbin; Qower
The
permanent baste.
torium March 26. U an adaptation chairman. Lena Laubaugh.
"From time to time we hear com­ from the novel of Emerson Hough. Club voted to send 85 for relief
flood district. An
...... picture
I
...
Is oytt'B
bflng ouv-ll
shown as a work
--------In the
---------plaints about thc large number of 7111.5
served. Mr. and
families receiving relief, and rumors forerunner of lhe Centennial ex- °y«t« supper
about so-called 'chiselcn&gt;.' We em­ hlbil to be held at the schools in I Mrs. .Everett McCallum will entertain •in April.
• 11
ploy well-qualified workers and vis­ April. and lesson plans have been I —
II ui
Uncle Oley Douglass returned io
adapted num
from .it
to snow
show me
the dlfPUMPS. SANDALS and OPEN OXFORDS
itors to homes of those being aided. uuopvcu
h°me ln Hastings last ThursIn whom we have confidence. The ferences In modes qi living in the
LBS.
In a Wide Selection of Patterns
'
1 d»y f°r a few days
only basis on which families are ac­ 18-iO'i. and 1936.
...
i Mr. and Mrs. J D- Hoard and
cepted for relief is their demonstra­
SEE OUR WINDOWS
Muchtolh.n.U.ronMChm
.nd
“
’
u
cKfrw°JdX.h
ted need, ft Is undoubtedly true
coMar brand
. that In a few cases our workers ■(.Rl.nl. th. hith school lockrrs at, (h,!2,
MANY STYLES
°™
“
, have been, deceived as to the re­ now ready lor use. The llrst lew |
FOR COOKING OR
; sources of those seeking help. It te days
davs of
of the
week witnessed
wltneuerf the
the and ,amu»lhe week
TABLE USE
PRICED AS LOW AS
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lord and
| humanly impassible to make a per­ moving of personal belongings from
feet score in that respect (our rec­ desks and hooks to J the security children of Battle creek were Sun­
ords will compare very favorably, of the lockers. Yale combination day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
EARLY JUNE
we believe, with that of the average locks ore sold at lhe bookstore and Oaks.
merchant who accepts credit risks). thc student is expected to use the
Mr. and Mn. Howard Johnson of
SWEET. TENDER
As lang as we operate on a human same one throughout his high Hickory Corners were Sunday visi­
EVERGOOD BRAND
basis, some frauds will be perpe­ school career. Seniors and those tors of the latter's parents, Mr. and
trated on us. it should be remem- leaving school may turn in their Mrs. Wm- Havens.
bcred that opr workers are not pri- lucks at a discount. The use of sec­
Mrs. Sarah Erway of Glass Creek
pAnil golden bantam
manly detectives, and that they ond hand locks will not be en­ Is spending some time with iter
Uvltn CREAM STYLE
SWANSDOWN
do not have and do not desire any couraged. because it is hoped that brother, W. H. Otis. Mrs. Emma
CAKE FLOUR. pk9. £3
police powers.
.
knowledge of the combinations will Otte of Wayland is spending a few
"We ask for those for whom the remain a strictly private affair. Stu­ days there.
mm n evap°rated
JELLO, New Improved
commission are laboring an open dents may use only thc Jocks pur­
Mrs. Lucy Otte returned to H5IvlllaBl SUNSHINE BRAND
minded attitude on the part of thechased at the school, so that a rec- troit Sunday alter spending the
Flavors, pkgO
public, and ask that Jt be remem- ord of combinations may be kept past week assisting in the W. H.
bered that we are dealing with hu- • In case a lock te returned or the Otte home.
man beings—our neighbors and combination forgotten.
^hctyme*t
Relatives fi*nm a distance to at­
friends—not material things. More
tend the funeral of Mrs. W. H.
than half of our clients are little
WEEKS CORNERS.
Otte Sunday Included C. P. Alexan­
children, citizens in the making,
LB. PKG.
VELVET^BRAND
Mr. ond Mrs. Warren Bolton and der and daughter Darleen of De­
who are soon to take our places.
sons of northwest of Hastings and troit; Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Robin­
How well they do with the increas­
TALL
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ritchie of Kal­ son of Grand Rapids; Mr. and Mrs.
FRESH. DELICIOUS
ALASKA
Ingly complicated problems of so­
CAN
' citly will depend largely on how amazoo visited at Leslie Dickerson's Nyal Castelelh of Battle Creek; Mr.
THOMAS SPECIAL
i
and Mrs. Unite Erway and son
' well we do for them in this crisis." Sunday.
Mrs. Bessie DeCrocker of Scott's. Charles.- Mr. and Mrs. John Fore­
man. Ray Otte and son Harold of
Tl&gt;r»«
Kinds
of
Too
Mrs.
Lisle
McArthur
and
Barbara.
FINEST MILD CREAM
LB.
RIVETED
Three kinds of tea—green black. of Hlckory Corners. Mr. and Mrs. Kalamazoo. Morgan Hinckley of
Chicago and Mrs. Emma Otte. Wayand oolong—can be made from i
Whitworth and son of the
STEEL ARCH
| leaves picked from thc same tea '' Culver district visited their parents. |I land, a large number also came
ELBOW 'i'liLi?'
lbs. 17c
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Matteson Sun­ from near by places.
bueli.
day.
NARROW OR
GOOD QUALITY
OBITUARY.
I Mr. and Mn. John Ourd and
GET YOUR PAIR NOW !
Ida A- Otis was bom in Orange­
BROAD TOES
Tlie nuumii body contains 230 ’ family of Cedar Creek ate Sunday ville Twp, June 19. 1859 and de­
।
dinner
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lyle
CLEAN
Joints.
parted this life March 19. 1936, at
Dickerson.
SWEEP
her home In Rutland Twp.. at the
age of 76 yrs., and 9 mos. She
EACH .
moved with her parents, Sally Ahn
and Paul M. Blake, to Rutland in

f

rnTIHIi

.Herbert Flreter;

L LI11 I IIU

tltbllUI!

... .............. — —

----- -

High School News

MOL 8

r

CO. RELIEF COMM,
luiii/cq ncpnoT

CELEBRATING THE SPRING FAIR WITH

CROWDS!

JOIN THEM!

CROWDS!

GET YOUR SHARE of These BARGAINS !

OR THE WEEK END

AMAZING SAVINGS for All the Family

10c
PRUNES ~ 4&gt;.« 22
RAISINS
23c
OLEO
2 rn. 25c
PEAS
3-25c
3

25c

JiistMz/
MORE STYLES IN PATENT LEATHER!

MEN ! Genuine Goodyear Welt Oxfords

3cX20c

TUNA FISH
COD FISH
PINK SALMON

2 c.„. 25c
22C

CHEESE

19C
3
3^ 29c

MACARONI
TOMATOES

FLOUR

LOW PRICES NOW!
SNOW QUEEN
24Vz Ib. bag 69c
BEST YET
' 24’72 Ib. bog 78c
GOLDEN CREST
24Vi Ib. bag 82c
GOLD MEDAL
24’/2lb. bag $1.09
PILLSBURY'S
24’/z Ib. bag $1.09

PANCAKE FLOUR SL^Hl'hlNG
SYRUP 3?.V,SI',.&lt;’K;.

19c

5

17c

FIRM. TENDER HOTHOUSE

- 5c

.

BROOMS
29c

CHILDREN'S SHOES AND SLIPPERS!

MOP HANDLES 10c

Comfortable wide toes for growing feet.
Your choice of Black or Brown leathers.

MOP HEADS

15c

CORDED CLOTH

EXTRA
SPECIAL

KEYSTONE
50 FEET _

CLOTHES PINS
Box of 30

GOLD DUST
Large Box

5

lbs.

9c

in Paying Policyholders

Collision Insurance for your automobile must be

present a claim.

*

.

The State Farm Mutual in 1934 (1935 figures

You II Never Cuss These Shoes
SHELL HORSEHIDE WORK SHOES!

WOLVE Rl NESI

Good Quality

POULTRY

SOFT, PLIABLE UPPERS
BARNYARD PROOF

DAIRY FEED

DOZ.

HORSEHIDE
Leather Soles

27c

5

lbs

9c

*2.39

Double Wear $4 QQ
Utkide Sole—
I ■30

FIRM, LARGE NO. 1

ONIONS

Leads

measured by the treatment you can expect If you

At LOW Prien!

FLORIDA. SWEET. JUICY

LARGE SIZE

A
f t/V

20
7
18

not available)

losses

totalling

paid

its

policy holders collision

$1,109,357.

That exceeds by

two companies in America.

TO

FURTHER

SERVE

STATE

POLICY

HOLDERS. CONVERTIBLE COLLISION IS NOW

AVAILABLE AT THE LOWEST CARRYING COST
FOR COLLISION INSURANCE IN THE HISTORY

OF THE STATE FARM COM­

PANY.

ROY BRUMM. Nashville

JOHN KILLICK, Deafer.

THOMAS STORES
ATE STREET

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

HASTINGS CUT-HATE SHOE STORE
“Barry County's Busiest Shoe Store"

114 W. STATE ST

HASTINGS. MICH

&gt;uu obi an u. paucu
that bourne from which no traveler
; ever returns. She leaves to mourn
; her loss a faithful, devoted huii band, two daughters. Mrs. Gertrude
I Barlow of Hastings, and Mrs. Edna
(Foster of Bellevue; twelve grand­
children, eleven great-grandchil­
dren and a host of relatives and
[ friends. Mra. oils was the last sur! vlvor of her father's family of eight
’children.

।

home Sunday afternoon with burial
in the Rutland cemetery, Rev. C
C. Conklin officiating.

OBITUARY.
FARM

First Quality
$Q 4 Q
Rubber Boots— £■ I 3

59c

.tire life, except 9 yean at Brook­
field. She was united tn marriage
to Wm. H. Otte. April 15, 1816. To
this union were bom seven ch.ll-

Our Collision Policy

70

CLOTHES LINES

AND

APPLES
ORANGES

Now

$144,076 the amount paid in losses by any other

LEAF LETTUCE
BALDWIN No. 1

COFFEE

4 Oea
IZC

THOS. LUKINS, Martin.

Annie HUI. daughter of John and
Elizabeth HUI, was bom In Mapte
Grove August 2. 1857 and departed
this Ufe March 19. 1936 at ths
daughter's home, age 78 yean, 1
months and 17 days, on February
117. 1876. she was united In marrtegr
to George Ostroth. who preceded
I her in death December 3. 1925. To
| this union two children were bom,
Ada m. Balch and Ray Ostroth.
both of Maple Grove. In 1878 she
became a Christian under lhe
preaching of Rev. william Kohler,
land later united with the South
' Evangelical church, lo which she
। remained faithful throughout her
J life rendering active service as long
as health would permit. Her quiet,
unsseumlne wave aim fnr h.r .

CHAS. WOODRUFF, Hutisgi

GLEN WOTRINC. Woodland

one son. one daughter, four grand­
children. one great-grandson, ana
zister. Mrs. Ida- cheoseman, of
Nashville, and a host of other.rel-

�HATnXQg. MICHIGAN. TBWMDAT. MARCH M. 1IM

Social Events and Personal Mention

iumbua. Ohio, over lhe week end.

tend a convention In Kansas City.
Miss Yvonne Trego was home
from Ann Arbor over the week end.
Miss Charlotte Bessmer was home
from Ann Arbor over thc week end.
Mis* Maurene Wiilltt* wa* home
from East Lansing over lhe week
end.
•
(Miss Allee LyBarker of Grand
Rapids was home over the week

Mrs. Dorothy Still and children
visited relatives in Muskegon last

Mr*. George Poet visited Mr. and
Mr*. Wm. Willi tu of Battle Creek
lari week.
Mra. Lawrence Friederick* of
Grand Rapid* called on Mr*. Ione
O’Neil on Bunday.
y. 8. K. Reid relumed last week
from a visit of several weeks with
relative* at Austin. Texas.
Mrs Grace Royer Neil of Detroit
is visiting her parents, Mr- and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell* Barnum of
Jackson were guests of the Waiter
Barnum* over the week end.
Miss Mabel Sl*wn was the guest
of Dr. Winifred MdLravy of Grand
Rapid* Saturday night and Sun­
day.
Mrs. Charles Todd of Grund
Rapids wo* the guest of Dr. and
Mr*. R. G. Flnnle over the week
end.
Miss Beulah Severance of Pon­
tiac spent lhe week end with her

ance.

Warren O. Oarter and Orville on Bunday afternoon to attend lhe
Grand Council Fire held at SouthBayte* attended a district -meeting
and dinner of banker* in connec­ western Junior High school. Each
girl was presented with a silver
tion with the FHA project at
jubilee medal. MU* Jannet Michael
Kalamazoo Friday night.
Mr. and Mr*. Francis Thomas of Mt tenor swarded by Camp Fire.
home in Hasting* after spending
'
the winter with Mn. Sarah- Kenyon Battle Crw« wcre.guasto of Mr. Se Waken tenor
and Mr*.
“ w on _Prl??y
The rank of Woodgalhcrer w
Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mra. awarded
.warded to
u&gt; VlrgiAia
vitriAu Wheating.
Wheating. Je,
Jean
Arbor on Friday where she went
LOppenthien. Marjorie Boyes and
through the clinic at University Thoma* and daughters of Kalama- Beverly Jone*. Hastings Camp Fire
hospital.
Old*, also to many other*. Mr*.
Miss Julia Ann Templeton of
Mrs. Mary Hoe* went to Pleasant ' Seattle. Wash., is expected to visit Allee DeVries was advanced to the
rank of Firemaker and was also
Ridge on Wednesday to spend sev­
her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mra.
eral weeks with Mr. and Mn. T. M. F. W. Stebbins around April first. awarded Guardian's honors
Tlie entire program was beauti­
Paulsen.
She comes east to act a* bridesmaid
Queets of Mn. Leona Cleveland at the wedding of a friend in Grand ful and interesting, typifying lhe
work of this splendid organization.
this week are Mr*. Sewell Calif and Rapids
j
---------------- :-----------------------daughter, Mis* Laverne calif, eg
de^h^veir., SiunS? tTp" I held open house
Chicago.
were Sunday guest* of Mr. and |
ALL DAY SATURDAY
pany with Mr. and Mr*. Claude Mr*. Dewey Reed In the afternoon
------ ——
„
Baunder* spent the week end in they attended a camp Fire Girls' The Bev. and Mrs. 0. M.
Chicago.
demonstration
at
Southwestern i
Hnnuiln nhaorvo
Conklin Observe WedMr*. Mina Scott entertained on High school in Betite Creek.
Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. wm. Mesick
Mr*. Gary crook has been spend-1
ing Anniversary
and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mesick ing several day* in Battle Creek
In otefrvttnce of their thirtieth
of Saginaw.
*
with Mr*. Loy Royer, being called WK1dlng anniversary, the Rev. and
Blake Boylan* left Monday for there by the serious Illness of Mr.
c M. Conklin held open house
Detroit where he will entfrr the em­
Royer, who underwent an operation
Saturday. March 21. about eighty
ploy of a firm specializing in air at Leila h&lt;»pital on Saturday At cf lheu Wendg Bnd neighbors, call­
conditioning.
last report his condition was alight- I ■• —■— tlie -•day
— —
•—
Ing during
and ------evening
Mrs. Leon DeLano and son of 'y. ..
&lt;
1j «w»ivMuncnw«
Refreshment* wwc
were acivcv
served v/
by mux&gt;
Mias
Grand Rapid*, are spending the
Miss Belva Rliey Is home from , France* conkiln. Mr* Rial Kellogg
week with her parent*. Mr. and Midland for a weeks vacation. Be- and Mr*. Wayne Conklin
Some
Vie.
Unoh
tXIleev of Andrews Ind •fOre
.------. 1-----------------vuillllll.
Mrs.
Riley.
---- .’------elor.A'1
U.e- .....
. . toojuic
Mr*Hugh
tontjSt
’.--T*.
”*Dlle..u-------R^y
*igned
her ' j^iy gtfU were presented
Rev.
mf*. Bet: Atismi or Anarews. rnn, contract to leach another year in I and Mrs Conklin
X Mr’a“d mL 5£obTs£ey oJ
«h«b M a substtoitW ; ?SU“ to SS^out of toum were

meht *J*d ^md^v
wIiMnifl
*te.yrt nvk
Dan WalldorfT and Albert Dyk
»tr* saw Flint win the Claws A
stale basket ball championship at
Grand Rapid*. Friday night
RHpJHhu«U2fnteii^?lteMKv iere
n th* % thJTJSon bGstaZS
a

SATURDAY, MARCH 28

SUGAR
FINE GRANULATED

IOO Lb. B.g $Z|.-99
CORN, PEAS, TOMATOES 3 cans 25c
per bar 4c
FELS NAPTHA SOAP '
MOP STICKS, best quality 2 for 19c
29c
BROOMS, 4^sewn
WALL PAPER CLEANER 3 cans 23c
Monarch COFFEE
Ib. 29c
BUTTER, Middleville
Ib. 33&lt;/*c
GRAPENUT FLAKES
box 9c
Monarch COCOA roiia wumu rm Ib. 18c
GET YOUR FREE TICKETS FOR OUR BIG DRAWING
IN APRIL . . . Many Valuable Prizes Will Ba Given!

6432

JUSTPHONE
HASTINGS

lncrw“e ln S‘fcry 8he U Pining
to attend tbe summer session al
; Columbia University and will study I
organ
I
- j-■
। —
Mr. and Mrs. John Busby of
; nouwon
„e in
in me
Houston.. Texas, w
were
thc cxy
c&gt;ty .
Week’ They were. c
‘
lled
1
10
Miux j ««
J4‘Ch‘f!n bLlhe
Bus’1

WE DELIVER

SPE

A lovely supper *u served and

Mr. and Mr*. John Ackstt. for
more than forty year* well known
bered with many nice and useful resident* of Nashville, celebrated
gift*.
their golden wedding anniversary
Byron Lewi* and Miss Bessie on Wednesday. March 18. al their
Smith were married on March 18. home near Clarksville where they
and have resided tn Shulto and
Hastings since that Ume.
J,
They
A delightful feature of this goldhave one daughter. Mn. Olive
Heney. of Kalamazoo.
marriage at eight-thirty o'clock of
Congratulation* are extended by their grandson. Lewi* F. Bailey,
their many friend*.
ion of Mr*. Ray Nye of Hasting*,
to Mias Iola L Stine, daughter of
DELTON COUPLE
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stine of
MARRIED 53 YEARS Hastings.
About forty relatives and friends
witnessed the ceremony, tbe serv-

For Fair

Friends Surprise Mr. and
Mrs. Peter Adrianson
Severance.
Attending lhe bride
and groom were the grandparents,
Wednesday Evening
Mr. and Mrs. Ackett

A group of twenty friends sur­
The bride wore a gown of rust
prised Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrian- crepe witlt a shoulder spray of
son of Delton on Wednesday tn talisman roses and forget-me-not*.
honor of their fifty-third wedding Her bouquet was of blue tris and
anniversary on Thursday
Both sweet peas. The bridesmaid wore a
have spent most of their lives in gown of tan crepe with shoulder
Barry county. Both Mr. and Mr*. spray of golden hued flower* in
Adrianson were bom in Ute Nether- keeping with her fiftieth annlverland*. the former on April 12. 1881.
coming to tills country when eight
Following
congratulations, re­
years of age.
Mrs. Adrianson. freshments were served and the rewhose maiden name was Cornelia nialndcr of the evening was spent
Van Holde, was bom Jan. 29. 1864. \ m vkiting
and came to America when four
Both couples. Mr. and Mn. Acyean old.
.
kett and Mr and Mn. Bailey, re­
Their marriage ceremony was per­ ceived many lovely gifts. Quest*
formed by the Rev. Rockwell Clancy were present from Battle Creek.
tn Orangeville on March 19. 1883. Hastings and Nashville. Congrat­
and they made tixeir home in ulation* are extended
Orangeville on a 40 acre farm which
they cleared. Later they moved to
COATS GROVE.
Mr. and Mrs Wayne Conklin of Al­ a farm nearer Delton and thirteen
llto r.
n. wlu
VI1U
legan, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Erick- year* after settled in Delton village.' Friday evening with pot luck sup...
....
son and three children. Hilda. Rob­
Four son* were bom to them. Roy. per. The program will be in charge
Battle vreex,
Creek. narry
Harry at nome.
home, ana
and ■ O
off Arthur
Arthur Todd and will be
b? given
and jean
Jean or
of linacs.
Ithaca. Mrs. Mime
Millie of wiue
ert ano
Mikesell of Pompeii and Mias Mar-I twp are deceased. Peter and John, mostly by home talent and will in­
BUert
te Con
guerite
Conklin and Leon Conklin I Tliere are seven grandchildren and ■ olude a nlay. Max Coats and a
of
I one great-grandchild.
I |Mend
-* •Lansing.
■
•-—-.i.uu.e
.rten£j‘fri^Lanltog
Irotn Lanjingwill rive
g(Vean“axax.
marriage of C. M. Conklin I Both Mr. and Mr*. Adrianson have hlbllton m^fenclng

byJ SlsU!r’ Mra Nc,Ue P,pcr Brown, and MU* Chloa Erickson waa sol- b«n a credit to the communities | -v.
lh.
R-hnnl
whlch occurred at Battle Creek, the \ emnlzed al Ithaca on March 21. |
which they have lived and have a :
.
W&lt;*k of M,rch 10 At prrw'nt Mr 1®°«
children came to bless wide circle of friends who unite in 1. ‘2? *
52“
BU5by
vWUn« at 1 the bome-^FTance*. Ruth. Paul and . extending congratulation* and best! J^y
tof^a/SdSn in
yarger’s. Freeport
I Wayne. About fourteen years ago wishes for future year*.
I pr“enl Bnd 0VCT MI WM
ln’
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Hiler of Ionia Rev. Conklin entered the ministry*
---------------- •
—
Wednesday with Irene Brook* in
were here Sunday to vUit Mr. and ' and has served the Hastings Meth- i
TAMARAC.
Mr*. Thoma* Baird.
odut parish for the past five years.; Little Norma Belle McCUeland is charge of Home Day program. Re­
sponse to Roll call "What am I go­
I Mr. and Mr*. H. E. Carrick were , Both of lliesc good people are high- । entertaining the mump*,
ing w
to ao
do when I have time”; Poem
in Grand Rapids Sunday to see his | ly respected in thU community and : We .re sorrv to lose Mr and Mr. I
, brother. Wrn. H. Carrick, who un- । their many friends hope that the Or!ev
\nd d^u^hter
I -H°,
rae,B&lt;&gt;dte»-Home
Bodie*—Pearl Demond; Voderwent an operation al St. Mary s coming yearn may bring them peace. Sie mored near rSSE rnm^,y
the Home Ftre*
hospital lari week, and who*e con- Joy and prosperity.
I
MtaSS. Burnlng-^Jennte
Burning—Jennie Coats and Mar­
I
,
7—CoaU—
coats; Paper—Music In lhe
; dition is reported as favorable.
----------------- -____
---------------------garet
- —
Pl '.-"'r-'
FAREWELL PARTf»-&lt;
PARTIES
I
wlth, Mrs.
“", Myric
Myrlc Curtis
CurU5 Wed- Hnmn
Home — KAthi
Katherine
Richardson;
,net with
. Th.nrv
The Rev. ur
w. Maylan Jones was In FAREWF.I.I.
FOR MRS. KELLEY,
,.A 2&gt;uMnc“ T**11"8 *“ Magazine Article—Little ThlngsFreeport Tuesday evening where he
Aboul 60 friends and neighbor* ,
officers elected.
WOodman: Poem—New Day
.spoke at lhe Family Fellowship
gathered
at
the
home
of
Mr.
and
I
A
daughter,
weighing
7
pound*.
11
on
the
Farm
—
Minerva
Woodman;
I meeting kt the Methodist church.
,“on’ to Mr. and Mrs.; Song—Home. Sweet, Home, by Club,
I This. Thursday, evening he is Mrs. Maurice Johnson Saturday i "U'!5C*M.rch
H.io.torivi» aImwell
’r.,
“
!&gt;"•».
I --------------------------t.vi.uiii.
raniiu
larcwciii.,
. .7
------7
---.
speaking at the Father and Son ,evening.
Miss
Virginia
Thompson
was
__
.
.
.
__
_
....
Warrh
el.)-.
‘ party honoring Mrs Senia Kelley ??‘rc,^ 181,’?an^d Joyce Elaln&lt;‘- Mr’
I banquet at Quimby.
;' home from Friday ' until Monday
and
who wm
will icaiur
reside Bructt wl11
•*
remembered as
J Mr*. Frederick Parker returned , —
■•y ■-son
“••• Lawrence wm,
Stala V.
v. Rmith
Smith. M.
Her
Mrs.
'l™** J?* £
' &gt;n_ .
.. ....
Stnla
t m"othCT.“ t,..
from Grand Rapid* Saturday night *n Or»nd Rapids. The evening was
Bcrtle Smith, will assist in the care
j after spending the week in Grand I
with pedro and visiting.
of lhe new gianddaughler.
®' 7^'om^#on
Rapids. White there she acted as I After refreshments were served
The Tamarac Aid Society met at 1
Ftot^d^'ald 1 r^le
hostess for Dr. Wyla B. Dutcher. ।Mrs*nd son each were pre­ the home of Mrs. Mary Curtis I
?**, ,°? 8Blur5la,JL
m*de
who held open house. Friday oncdscnte&lt;1
Thursday. One quilt was' tied on£
tl^ ne’
Saturday. at her beautiful new] We al1 »Lsh them happiness and and finished
■ flherc- who has been named Donald
residence and offices on Madison' 800*1 ,uck ln their new envtron- i A surprise birthday party and
and on.8uncUy afternoon they
avenue.
I nwnt.
wedding shower wa* given Bernard ।
Kenne'th’^WHlr^x’^^ iibv
--------- «-o-&gt;----------------' Mrs. Kelley was also honored at
Smith and wife, formeriy of this vt- I 5?th?“nnetto WUcox and b&lt;by
SORORITY ELECTS OFFICERS a farewell party at Mr* J. Moli- rinity. Friday evening at his home I “?U8h.
.
-.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met at' ler's given by tlie Irving Extension cinlty. Friday evening at his home;&lt;
ll.. home of
nt Mary Royer Wednes­ ‘ group"
-■
nt
_ k.l-V. .she
_ was
___ ”....
- - ’ ncar
near Warnervllle
Iva,* I ’Paul
was In Kalamazoo
of which
the « leader
Warner*iltev They fwa
rreelved
*'*“* Woodman
Wooa------ -------------- ----the
on Monday.
day. March 18 The meeting was for two years. She will be greatly “*“yw»,reUy and UM(U1 «,,ls AU
wL'hhim many more happy birth-1 Mr*. Martha Wilcox
and baby
conducted by the vice-president. niUsed al the meetings.
‘lays and that both may have adaughter Donna Jean,
who have
Theollne Rogen. Election of officers
together.
Those- from
a -----------------------been at Harlow -Barnum's
since lhe
DIRECT FROM ENGLAND. happy
—Jlife
------------------- --------------------------------- --------resulted as follows: Ethel Ragla,
Mrs. Albert Altoft has received distance were a sister. Benita Sen- birth of the baby, have returned to
Pres.; Theollne Rogers, vice-pres.;
little daughter
and **there
—'-------home--In
-------------------Kalamazoo.
Hazel Hinkley, treasurer; Geraldine from her cousin. Mrs. Albert Varah. 'iba. and
Mr Err
and —
Mrs. Earl McCar- ■। Mr. and Mrs E G. Smith visited
.
Williams, recording and correspond­ Rotherham. Yorkshire. England, a .friends.
-----------ing secretary; Helen Butolph. his­ copy of the Illustrated London
,,
'their aunt. Mr*. Martha Bevier. In
News, record issue of the lying-in­
Mr. and Mrs. will Worthy and I Freeport last Saturday evening and
torian. and Mary Royer, reporter.
state and funeral of His Majesty, daughter wire Lansing caller* Wed- rcport hcr some better.
FAMILY DINNER.
lhe late King George V. In addi­
wnm*
Marian woodman was home
Mr. and Mr*. Herbert BUhop en­ tion lo seventy-six
lithographic------------Friday evening until Monday from
tertained at dinner Sunday in hon­ pages, the issue includes a full page and son - vis
FaJle new CtaK-’ hCT ’ch00‘ work at
Bu31ne“
or of Mr*. Clarence, Woodward cut. in color, of a portrait of the Mrs.
“.vr FlorentyIe’ near Clarks- CoUege ln KaUmazoo.
(Helen Bishop*, who leave* Thurs­ late King George and also, one of ville Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Backe of
day for her new home at Klttery Queen Mary, and in supplement! Estle King ha* employment on a
MU, near &amp;&gt;mume.
Hastings visited at H- Woodmans
Point. Maine. All of thc nine chil­ form, a full page cut In color of a farm
Elmdale,
Mrs. Walker Cotton •*&gt;»
and Mrs. on Sunday afternoon.
dren and their families were pres­ portrait of King Edward VIII In hl*
lira.
Gkr.dori sears
SCiii and
ii.d daughter. AuHubert Barnum is in Pennock
ent. cover* being laid for twenty­ early youth In the Royal robes of Glendora
m&gt; Gar dry
Sum ■birthday
club
seven. This was the first lime the the order of the Knight of thc
d------attended
-■* ' the •— • • hosPil*l recovering from an operfamily had all been together in sev­ ter. This issue vi
at the London at the home of Mrs. Geo. Sears in ation performed last Wednesday,
album Woodland Friday.
Mr &lt;nd Mrs. Arthur Richardson
eral year*.
Those present from paper is a very beautiful
...
Mr.
were 1 -and
and
Mr*.
Edith
Richardson
away were Mr. and Mrs. Orlle Bish­ and surpasses anything to dale
L... and Mrs. Ora -Lehman
*zu&gt;uu&gt;,i .tic
- son
- — ----------—-.t
”-;-------,i
&gt;
In Jirnnvisitors ..
at the
latter’s bar, visited
vL'illcd Mr*
Mr*. Rllla ndell
Odell in
Jarnesop and two daughters. Holland; Mr that has been shown on lhe screen. Sunday ..i.im.,
------- ------------------ents. Mr. and Mr*. Cotton'*, her lown
Sunday. Mr*. Odell was
and Mr* Lot* Bishop aha son. DeLroUwr. Walker Coilon and wile , observing her aeth birthday.
| trait; Mr. anti Mr*. Sterling Zerbel CAMT FIRE GIRLS
ENTERTAIN MOTHERS. were fti,o victors
•
' I pcv- and Mrs. Clem Jordan went
: and children. Kalamazoo and Mr.
-.a—afternoon
...---------- -a alau.the Mr
Mrs M m curtl*
visitMichigan
city -last
week called
On Saturday
„„u
u VUJIU1
---------------------------------------------------1 and Mrs. Ralph Richardson and
_a_._ --Mrs Sarah
. ..
. rtvwvaa
home of tiwlx guardian, tte No- caa her sister
Myers at
there hv
by IK. Hlrt.a.
iUness nt
of e*r«
Mrs.| Jordan'*
Jordan's
son. Hartford.
we-tom-nat-a-mln group finished Woodbury Sunday.
1 tou»er.
the final requirements for the
----------------- ,
I The Commercial chib of Hasting*
PURCHASE HOME.
I Friends of Mr. and Mrs. B. D. —
Birthday
—, Honor
------------by
, giving -----a tea for j Vice-President Garner lias been &gt; will come to ooats Grove next Tucs...
McMurray of Toledo are pleased to j thetr mother's
and friends. The | forced to abandon his practice of day evening for supper and prohear that the McMurray’s have. girls who were applying for •*
the
— walking to keep fit. People always gram at thc church. The local L. A.
purchased a hotne in tlie pleasant, honor taught games lo their guests. are slopping him to ask If he is not 3 will serve the supper.
Wildwood-Glendale section. They &gt; which they made up themselves. the Vice-President. This reminds' Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and
... . spoils
wile the Hekenl*
- —Ethel
—• ■ and
J Gladys
-- —l.lr
expect to move about the middle of Everyone enjoyed the lea and ap- L-*
him “
that *he •is— and
whole ' daughters.
vlsltthe month.
1 plaud the girls as splendid hostesses, day.
'
ed at Will Brooks* on Sunday.

with the Hlrtch com-'
connected with lhe Hirtch com
p Mr’. Relle clement accomnanird
he^Tuur Mrs ^amle^eXnX I
her drier. Mrs. Mamie Terpenuig. |
... . — - ■.

Fair Week
ttargaiati J
FRIDAY, MARCH 27

Shull* were honored on Wednesday

Hasting* Camp Fire Girls and evening when their relatives and Misi Iola Stine Btuai lhe
friend* came to remind them . of
Guardians Attend Area
Bride of Lawis Bailey
their twenty-fifth wedding annlvsrMeeting
on Wednesday

to her home In Tulia, Okla, on
Many Ha*ting« Camp Fire Girl*
Thursday, where the will make an
and guardian* were in Battle Creek
extended visit.

Carl
Lloyd Holland of Allegan wu
In lhe city Monday.
,
Miss Rose DeFoe visited tn De­
Mr. and Mn- Harold Wright of
troit over the week end.
MU* Ruth Robson (pent the week Lansing visited her parent*. Mr.
and Mr*. Loul* Kaune*. over th*
Sumner Myer* wa* home from
Ann Arbor ovtr the we«k ond.
Stephen Bristol wa* home from
Albion College over thb week end.

OBSERVE SILVER
RECEIVE HONORS
MARRIED AT
WEODfNO ANNIVERSARY.
AT COUNCIL FIRE
GOLDEN WEDDING

Values to $1.29

69* 3 ... *200
$1.50 to $1.65
volu*t

’1
Be at ease in your clothing.
Smart sportswear — well tai­
lored business suit* — stylish
combinations of odd dark.
Mid sport coats. These suit*
are correct Ln style, right in
price, and popular for Spring

$1.95 values

Colorad Shirts

Only

• 13.50 to $29.50

A HAT You'll Doff
With An Extra
Flourish

NECKWEAR
VALUES

Smail and perfect for this
season is the new Slylepask
hat. Come in today and let
us show you ihe different
style* and color* in hand­
made haU. priced at

*2.50

*3.50

$1.00 Tim

69'
75c Tic*

*5.00

59‘

T. S. BAIRD’S
Clothing sai Shoes for Mtn ond Boy*

HASTINGS

STORE-WIDE SALI
Thursday-FridaySaturday-This Week C
STORE FULL OF BARGAINS DURING THIS S4
A FEW OF OUR SHOALS LISTED BELOW!

Barbasol—75c size
5b
Bayer's Aspirin—bottle of 24
Woodbury's Face Pwdr.—50c size, 31c
Mary Lake's Lavender Lotion, 6 ox. 31c
Keller Syrup of Figs, 5 ox. .
Hill's Coscava Quinine
_1«*
Dental Perborate, 5 ox. . .
_37c
Orlis Tooth Powder
-21c
Anacin, box of 12
.18*
Bourne Bengue, 75c sixe .
Olafsen Cod Liver Oil, pint

ASPIRIN TABLETS .
MU'

IH.

MILK OF MAGNESIA

15*

RUBBING ALCOHOL
Pint She.

Windstorms Bring
I’roperty losses during 1935, paid by this company alone,
amounted to $261,000, and 1935 was not a year of very
severe windstorms. It costs so little to carry adequate
windstorm protection in this big company that no prop­
erty owner can afford to remain unprotected. Over 50
years of honest and satisfr-ctory adjustment of claims
and prompt payment of losses mark the enviable service
record of this company.

Nearly $*400,000^00 Insurance In Force
Over $14,000/000 Gained In 1935
There’s a Representative Near You—lee Him At Once—Soforo The Next .Cycle

Michigan Mutual Windstorm
Insurance Company
The biggest of its kind in Michigan.

Home Office: Hastings, Mich

Ipana Tooth Pasta—50c sisa
Orlis Mouth Wash, pint . ..
Hinkle Pills—bottle of 100
Malted Milk, plain or chocolate—
1 Ib47c
Popsodent Tooth Pesto—50c six* .39c
Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste, 2 for 35c
Nature's Remedy Tabs.—25c sixe, 18c
Russian Mineral Oil, pint....
Mulsified Shampoo—50c sine

ONE CENTS
50c L'ADONNA TO!

�AUTO . FIRE

The Haatingi Banner

,j THE CHURCHES CARDS of THANKS

WANTS

ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER­
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c.
WAXTID— PMdtBK pin. wt.

Our Service
Te PROTECT Ya. Ca.rta.tly
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly

BY COUWTY. RIX MONTHS. Me.
ild In sdraaaa.l .

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

Live steam la Invisible and the
while cloud commonly called steam
Is a condensation of the vapor into
small particles of waler, which are

Ill Kalauaaoe XslL Bask BM*
A Mama Oeatpaay OrgsaUsd Is?*.

J. L. MAUS

Novel Textile*
Glass cotton, glass silk and also
glass wool are novel textiles which
bsve a variety of Industrial posal-

tfSXi'.

GEO. M. NEWTON

FOR

SALE!

MAMMOTH CLOVER SEED
RECLEANED.
Good. Bright Clean Seed.
W. A. CRIDLER,
Middleville; Mich.

3-28

JERRY ANDRUS
AGENCY
snk Bldg — Pkoo* 2511

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

NOTICE
TO WOOL GROWERS!
I an in the market tor your wooL
Paying 30 to 34 cent* a pound.
Also buying hide* tbe year around.

ARCHIE TOBIAS

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY

Again this year our shop is overflowing
experience or capital needed. Write
today. MeNESS CO, DcpL B, Free­
port, Illinois.
3-26

with a bountiful supply of appropriate
Easter Flowers, fresh and fragrant . . .

heralding
"AKRON" MODERN

this happy and

hopeful season.

■ICHANO-FORM TRUSS
ros won or play
Thia Saootk Rebber Back Pad.
_ Na Pom To Wear CloiMep

CLYDE WILCOX
The Florist
HASTINGS, MICH.
ADJUSTABLE CENTER
SpongwReUor Pod.
No Leg Strop*

Telephone 2530

The Prescription Drug Store

Spring Bargain
Dags Special

Ville eirhante
YOH SALE—Paly Mark hones. wt. aaoo.
•nnnJ. trie ta worlA F-.rd Cs.er 2
mile, northse.1
fl.hiT.
tl 2*
Hf.k f.X room hixlie far rent April, 1
P*rtl« modern. 420 W. Crater St
Phon* 3ion.
a -**

i

Huumww Sa£e

“h

3*3,31

Farmers, Attention!

Phone 1637

nestings

ENAMELWARE
Ant's ... Ivory with Red Band

5

’

■T

fj

3 3 fl

H

1:
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

I

Dead Stock Removed!

£ ~-

m

Bhi

I

FOR HALF.—Two l.a.hel. alt.lf..
rro«n. Peter VaalMter. 3 mile. ."Utk
Delmn on M 43.
3 2fl
300
ro.d
Mr.

FOR HALE—Colt. 3 yr., old. aha
line roll. Cecil Ot»r. Haitian
733—Fit Freeport Root* 1.

MILK STRAINER PADS

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

Rock for Mississippi Dykes
Much of tbe rock used to build
dykes along the Mississippi river
between Memphis and New Orleans

DRAIN PIPE OPENER, 2 cons for 25c
HASTINGS MARKETS

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
EVERY SATURDAY
If you wish trucking service call Hastings
Phone 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.
Feeder Calves and Milch Cows at all time*.

Michigan Livestock Exchange
HASTINGS BRANCH

PUBLIC NOTICE OF TAX
SALE
Tuesday, May 5, A. 0.1936

SIX QT. ALUMINUM
KETTLE AND COVER

See Our Booth at the SPRING FAIR I

GOODYEAR BROS
HARDWARE CO.
HARDWA.I, AGRICULTURAL IMRLSMIHTS
AUTOMOIILtS. RLUMBINC AHO HEATING
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�Thursday, March 26,1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER

Costumes
of -Many
Lands
Worn Byl
H0MEGARDENS
—
1
71
AID FARM PURSE
World Traveler in Lecture Here 2600 Pounds of Vegetables
Something new In fashion shows
waa the treat given the teaahera of
Barry county last Thursday eve­
ning. It was a one-man affair with
Arthur F. Kane as the model. Mr.
Kone expedition which traveled 1.­
500 miles through the southeastern
part of Africa, and his talk was pre­
conceived to be a narration\&gt;f halrraUlng escapades and thrilling ad­
ventures. which la what travel
lectures usually are. a first glance
at him further Indicated that he
would be Just another ordinary,
run-of-the-mill speaker, because he
has a beard. Most South African
explorers seem to have a beard to
add a touch of local color to their
speeches.
But his first words shattered the
passive attention of his listeners
and had them keenly alert. To sat­
isfy the curiosity which he knew It
aroused, he Immediately explained
the .beard. Those eight or ten
Inches* of black whiskers were not
for looks or local color. He admitted
that they didn't enhance his face
value here In America, but in those
countries from which he has so
recently returned. Africa, India.
Turkey and others. It was a pass­
port. Every man In the Par East
wears a beard. He saw them of all
sixes and descriptions and almost
every color except pink or blue. His
own black bush opened tlie way for

Barry Bypaths

and a well-behaved brood. Self-sup- ■ little nests were filled with candy
porting family.
I Easter eggs. TYiese nests can be
By JANE CAMERON
Mrs. Hilda Graziano, age 36. with ‘ made in sherbet glasses or sauce
him to mingle freely with the na­
9 children and 8 In lhe race; lypl-i dishes. but
the cardboard Isn’t
From Half Acre Plot Will
tives of the lands In which he hap­
cal
slum
family,
thin,
white,
cooped
Feed
Family
of
Five
pened to be traveling and learn
The old stork is sure giving On­
HAVING FLOWER SHOW IN tario all the breaks. First Mamma up children; another one on the age before they ore finally eaten.
more of their real customs and
Savings In lhe family food bill
way;
on
relief.
ways of living-.
of as much as 8700 can be made CONNECTION WITH BAR­ Dionne pulled a fast one jsn us.
CIVIL
WAR
VETERAN
•
Mrs. Madelaine Harrison Is 40;
one-al-a-llme mothers, and now
Mr. Kane said that travel, like {through careful cultivation of a
RY COUNTY FAIR
PASSES AT FREEPORT.
Toronto is having a stork race, a has had 14 children all living and
friendship, docs not reach its ful­ small home garden plot less than
Another veteran of thc Civil war.
fast and furious one. the winner to healthy and clean, with 8 In the
fillment until it has been shared. one-half an acre in area, according
face; pretty as a picture and thinks
reap half a million dollars.
So he shared his with his audience. to H- L. Seaton. Instructor In vege- VOTE FOR PEONY
large
families
are
all
right;
keeps
Friday
at,
his
home In Freeport. He
His prime Interest on his Journeys । table gardening, horticulture de­
For tlie benefit of those who
her brood on a streetcar conducAND ------------------IRIS DISPLAYS
was lhe study of ethnology (races partment. Michigan Sate College,
-■••- navent
haven'treaa
read about
aboutit.It.on
onOctober
October
moving
31 1926 Charles Vance Miller died.
* salary and her idea of grand- _Jan.
— IB. 1845. the family ---------w
and I East .Lansing.
and
their characteristics)
Speaker Gives Good Ideal leavIng his Jockey dub .uxk u the
eUyette foe the next baby. I to a Barry county farm in IBM.
entymology (bugs and insects). But
Fresh vegetables during the grow­
On Uoaiaal Specimens Of
fSSoat enemies of
Ontario-Page Margaret flanger! Shortly
.-»enteenth.birthhe admitted that ofttlmes they car­ ing season and sufficient for can­
day he returned to Ohio and en­
j
.
horse-racing; his brewery stock to1
ried bugs In places where they ning and storing for a family ot
We see in the paper that an listed in Battery E. 1st Ohio light
Potted Plants
1 Methodist ministers; and a half
couldn't study them, and all the five have been successfully raised by |
many
Michigan families
families in
in recent
recent II Thornapple Garden club met In I million dollars to the mother who European munitions manufacturer artillery, serving with that com­
people he met were either "bugs" —
•"» Michigan
pany until tbe dose of lhe war.
years, ne
he says.
says. Home
i room 110
111
or wild.
years,
Home gardens
garaens can
ciniiuum
nu In
ui the
me Central
vcuuai school
acnwi on
un bore lhe most children during the u
—__ .
- — ,T5.
---- -- u- planted
.....
_____
U March ,,
to at
-r-v.« Man
c..r&lt; fnllnwlnw
from
an1.1.1
Initial Invest- Thursday.
)2 ..
at n2 P.
M. The
1 ten years
following hie
hLs rl.ofh
death. Th.
The wnen
whfn II llllr
of his racing me
As he talked, he proceeded to be
narrowed down to six families; Judgment seat,
take off his coat and roll up his ment of |15 for seeds. In some in- speaker of the afternoon. Mrs. Ar-5 • • •
shirt sleeves. From the table In stances, a small additional sum for thur Miltner of Lansing, accredited recently another mother announced;
flower show Judge and member of her eligibility. The families and a
Do you know that rate came
front of him lie picked up some fertiliser Is necessary.
"Gardens should be planned to ihe National Farm and Garden little of their history are as fol- damage amounting to 83.650.000.000
garments and In five seconds we
each year in lhe United Slates
saw. not the charming distin­ meet dietetic needs." he says "Al­ Ciub. gave a very interesting and lo»»:
Mrs. Lillian Kenney Is 32; has alone? Beside this they carry dis- •
guished African explorer, but a most all of the 2.600 pounds of vege­ instructive informal talk on new
smiling gesticulating Mexican who tables prescribed by nutrition ex­ plants, illustrating .her talk with had 15 children; another Is on the ease from one country lo another'
defined his country for us as a land perts as the annual need of a fam­ some unusual specimens of polled , way; has 11 children in the race; and have thus started such pesti-1
of pleasing and pleasant gestures. ily of five can be raised on well- plants. She gave many useful point- has had 3 sets of twins; been on lences as the bubonic plague. Sea-|
its----of------------------------from one-quarter
to nrr
ers nr
on flnw.r
flower arrangement, rrtlrir
color. I relief 11 years; u-u
had one child .........
eaten men have a superstition to the
Their sign language Is varied and tended plot
— —
iland
ana harmony*choice
narmony* cnoice or
eloquent and says everything from one-half acre."
acre.”
of containers. | by rats; carves miniatures In wood effect that if rats desert a ship. It
Types of vegetables recommended j etc., and also apoke briefly on in her spare lime; is leader in the is doomed.
the bright-eyed senorita who wants
•-».«— ■■
------' shadow boxes.
the good-looking young senor to -------------------are green or•---------------leafy vegetables,
those
race except that 3 of her children
cross the street and speak lo her. in which fruit or seeds are eaten,
At the business meeting it was weren’t registered within 30 days i I told my little girl. Palsy, to
| come help wipe dishes. She asked.
to the waiter who with one hand and root Bnd bulb crops. Equal decided, that because of the failure after birth as the law requires.
propped against his chin solemnly amounts of each type should be of an out of town representative to
Mrs. Emanuella Darrlgo. age 44. I "Right now?" I said lo come as soon
taps the elbow with the other hand planted lo guarantee surpluses for keep his agreement to pay a cer­ .._o
..UIU are os she wished. She said. "All right.
has had tu
16 children. 10 of W
whom
indicating that someone has forgot- canning and storing.
tain percentage of subscriptions re­ In the race except for 3 late reg Is-1Hl be there next week."
tContinued on page 4. sec. 2)
Interest In home gardens as well ceived. to the Garden Club, It (rations., and facing another tra• • •
as in the "thrift garden" movement would be wLser for those desiring to vail during the reporter’s visit;
Tlie Easter bunny has paid our
sponsored in many Michigan cities help lhe club by this means, to on relief as her husband lost hLs1 home a visit each year since the
is Increasing. Mr. Seaton will begin place their subscriptions with Chas. fruit store during tlie depression. I first child came. About the cutest
National Bank of Hastings
a series of weekly broadcasts at Rogers, a member of the club, who
Mrs. Grace Bawnato. age 42. has ‘ crate of Easter eggs the old gentle1:30 P. M. Thursday. April 9. from is qualified to obtain subscriptions had 23 children, adopted one and man rabbit left resembled bunQies
Pollan Cta. WKAR. Michigan Stale College
and renewals. It was unanimously will adopt more if she wins the j with pink ears. Drawn or&lt; the
station at East Lansing.
) agreed to accept the invitation of money; has 9 in the race; works as small end of each hard boiled, snow
Two bulletins now available at the Fair Board to again hold a a court Interpreter and her hus- j white egg was a bunny face and
the college bulletin department art flower show. In conjunction with band as a customs Inspector; fi- whiskers, with pink cardboard ears
Extension Bulletin No. 4 on lhe the Barry County Fair, the large nancially more secure than the pasted on. high up; on the other
NONE
Home Vegetable Garden and Cir­ building next to the grandstand to other families, giving her fine brood 1 end was glued a little bunch of cotO.JlS.t
NONE
cular Bulletin No. 140 on Home be used for this purpose, the show educatlona) advantages. One re- {ton for a tall. They really looked
Production of the Family’s Food to last the entire time of the Fair, porter said she never saw o face | like little white rabbits. Last year
Supply.
which will be from Sept. 8th to 12th. so weary or so marked with charac- { he left table favors, set on sixMiss Sadie Glasgow was appointed ter.
। inch squares of cardboard. A yellow
general chairman with Mrs. Frank
NONE
Mrs. Alice Halleck (the dark | nest was farmed out of egg-white
••I
Andrus as assistant. This com- horse who Just entered al the birth j sweetened and colored yellow; yel(Continued on page 4. Sec. 2)
of a new one) Is 36 years old and j low cocoanut was sprinkled to look

Coates. But three
Freeport. Mrs. J&lt;
Orapd Rapids and
Johnson at Mnskagi
nine grandchildren
Freeport Methodist church
day afternoon, the Lour

conducting the military m
terment In Pleasant Hill

Hastings Commercial Club

SPRING
FAIR

Report of Condition of the
AH8ET8

had 16 with 9 In the race, neatly'like straw and this was baked In

MEN MB
PUNS EXHIBITS

March 25 to 28

4 DAYS

I. tithe

To Take Advantage of These

Tremendous Bargains !

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

i.lAtlH.ITIr.H
. dapoaitn nt I
Time delwaita ot Ind

PARCHMENT FLOOR LAMP
SHADES—

100.000,000 youth no* play has*

39. nivldend
for dividend*
20. Other ll'hlltli
Capital
80. --------Comm

I

&lt;&gt;00 oo
lo ooo oo

Mr.MORANPUM

55.O5S.3I college at Springfield. Mass., by
10.097.32 Juinea NaLsmlth. and a basket ball
team from that college this year Is
contender for the Olympics.
Dean DaVenport is the guest
speaker at the Young Men's Y
aroup this Wednesday evening, fol­
NONE
lowing their pancake supper at us­
S’uSl
ual place 427 Young Street.
NONE
Not too early to thank all who
NONR
have given their flower pots to help
the Barry Co. Camp fund and
NONB
Young Men’s group assisted by boys
from the younger group. All are
NONR
grateful.
NONE
noxi:
Ray Johns of State y ate lunch
NONE
with Hastings Hi-Y last Friday and
spoke to the assembly at Middle­
NONR
ville.
Howard Haig of Harbin. China. ■
will address the Hastings and Wood- !
land H. S. assemblies this week Fri- '
day.
1.622,085 participants in Y. M. C.
flO.S42.IO
A- activities through 68.884 program
groups last year.
Thc '-Y” has been conducting
1105.000 00 ‘•World Tours" since 1924. Such
trips offer the finest educational
SO HE
NONE
experience any boy can get. An
Stos.ooo.oo । Olympic study tour is being organi­
sed this year by the Y College of
1105.000 00 Springfield. Sec Mr. Angell for de­
tails of these trips.
NONE
NONE
An Important meeting of Y. M. C.
NONE
NONR
Lansing Tuesday, the 24th. in con­
NONR
nection with lhe slate meeting of
NONE
Y. M. C. A. genera) and Boys' Work
■ 105.000.00

three tart.

The potteries found In tbe early
tombs of tbe Chinese represent cop­
ies ^of their earthly belongings as
well as object/prescribed by ritual
for burial with the dead.

WATERS CLOTHES

SHOP

FORMERLY $2.25—
FOUR DAYS

ONE GROUP OF FLOOR
LAMPS with Silk Shads*—

SPRING OPENING

FORMERLY $9.00—
FOUR DAYS

53-PIECE SET OF DISHES—

And Store Wide MERCHANDISE REVIEW

FORMERLY $9.60—
FOUR DAYS

AT OUR STORE ONLY

MARCH 25 to 28
DAY &amp; NIGHT

$CH In Merchandise rDFE
U ABSOLUTELY ■ It EE

FORMERLY $16.00—
FOUR DAYS

FORMERLY $26.00—
FOUR DAYS

Dinner Ware
A few sets selling at re­
duced prices. A regular
15.95 service for 6 only—

*3.95
Others st bif reduction*.

JEWELRY
Just in lime for grsduslion. A sale on Necklaces.
Our complete stock of
necklaces, white or yellow
gold, camcot. eta, st one
price-

*2.98
Regular prices up to
1750. •••

SILVERWARE
1M7 ROCER BROS. 26-Piece SeU.
Fancy serving pieces in lhe latest

DAVENPORT TABLE—
FORMERLY $19.00—
FOUR DAYS

ff aUU

patterns . . . Lady Hamilton . . . Her
Majesty . . . King Cedric and others
at 25$) discount. Prices apply only

FORMERLY $24.00—
FOUR DAYS

to stock on hand. So it’s first come,
first served. Fill out your set or get
serving pieces at this big saving.

----------- --- .

.

.................

C

......................

And ... H You Ukt to GAMBLE
ATTEND OUR GRAB SALEI
SATURDAY From 2 to 5 F. M.
picked out a lot of our White Elephants
. . . items that have moved too slow to
suit us. All good, clean merchandise that
sells regularly for from 75c to 8250. We've
wrapped them all up and pul them in one
big pile. Take a grab.
for you can’t lose____ ____— “w

D UAhCEC
• De lIvUvED

Regularly priced at |750
to &gt;30. A Real Buyl

Phonograph
RECORDS
Our regular 35c Victor­
Bluebird Record* on Mie
at—

"How Many Men's and Boys' Dress and Work Shirts

Not necessary to make a purchase.

Coupons for your

guess will be available at the store beginning Wednes

day morning, March 25th.
VISIT THIS SPRING OPENING!
You will enjoy looking-at the new things for Men and

Boys. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings will be
Open House

nothing sold on those three nights.

REMEMBER THE DATES—MARCH 25th to 28th
Now 1* tbe time to get a
few new number*.

dependable jeweler
HASTINGS - MICHIGAN

$ft ftft

5.UU

.UU

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP
Selling Quality Keeps Us Busy

$&gt;• ton

STEEL BED—
FORMERLY $3X00—

Just Make the Following Guess

RINGS

*4.95

$W ftft

LIBRARY TABLE—

FORMERLY $14.00—

in Our Store?'
A large assortment of La­
dies* Solid Gold Ring* on
wle at—

'9.00

STEEL BED—

30 MERCHANDISE PRIZES GIVEN FREE I

COMMUNITY PLATE

’6.00

OAK DRESSER-

FOUR DAYS- I

Celebrating Spring Bargain Days
Friday-Saturday with a Real Sale!

’5.70

OAK BED—

Il ft ftft

__ ■ lU.UU

FOUR DAYS___ a

OCCASIONAL CHAIR*
FORMERLY $29.00—
FOUR DAYS

’9.00

9x12 TAPESTRY BRUSSELS
RUG—
FORMERLY $3X00—
FOUR DAYS

I ff .UU

$4

-J ftft

HEAVY AXMINSTER
RUGS—
SEVERAL PATTERNS—
FORMERLY $75.00—
FOUR DAYS— Off

$ft«J ftft

&gt;UU

1 EXTRA HEAVY WILTON
RUG—
FORMERLY $120.00
FOUR DAYS.91

W.A
205 So

Hoitlnai

WJ

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THUBSDAT, MARCH M, 1834

Last 3 Days of A &amp; P’s

SPRING
FESTIVAL SALE
FRESH CREAMERY

Candy
Ajax Soap

j.n, e„. 3 it*. 25c
10 t'" 37c

BUTTER

Ivory Soap

5 LT*. 25c

Chipso
Oxydol

2

37c
t9c

Sunbrite Cleanser

4

17c

"&gt; 32c
।

EnUr
th* N,w
conta.t

Camaiw
Snan
v-«may aoap

2 tl" 17c

EGGS

Drano
Super Suds

— 19c
'JJ;* 19c

Grade MA” Bulk

Shredded Wheat

,b 13c

LARD
2

25c

Corn Flakes

Crackers
K 17c

:s25c

FANCY BLUE ROSE

9c

THE BEAUTY SPECIALIST

27c

MISS NI EPORT

Post

Del Monte Pineapple Juice 3 X' 25c

Toasties

Del Monte Corn v....™ r..k.j 2
25c
A-Penn Dry Cleaner
"I 49c
Wallpaper Cleaner

. . . will be al our store March 30th. She
will give free facials al the home of those
who will call us for appointment. She will
also, advise you as to the toilet prepara­

2 &amp; 19c

can

25c

COFFEE

tions you should use, lhe color blend, etc.
Make your appointment now and she will
call at your home whenever you wish. On
her last visit in October, of 1935, Miss

FLOUR
"

Beechnut

"■ 26c

Splendid

Del Monte

"■ 25c

Iona

Hills Bros.

"■ 28c

Sunnyfield
79c
Pillsbury
$1.05
Splendid X
Ub. 17c

Maxwell House "• 27c

22c

Whitehouse

“1* 69c

73c

Meport gave several demonstrations
which proved very popular.

B. A. LyBARKER

Hrmp

CLEAN QUICK

SOAP
CHIPS
- 29c

Cookies
Baby Foods

chocolate sura

Hcio« »r cerber

3 C3IU 25c

n&gt;. i-.f 6c

Brooms
2 fc

Premium Chocolate
Sanka
Cocoanut

v..

25c
»39c
2 .... f9c

Campbell s Soups Ch'c"« 3
Herb-Ox CubesB&lt;*f or chicken

Cookies
Fig Bara or Ginger Snaps

3,b- 25c

Heinx Soups
v&gt;h.u..
Staley's Golden Syrup

Mustard

Ground Beef
Ring Bologna
Boiling Beef .
Ocean Fillets

'»■

QUICK SERVE

BEANS
2K.17c

25c

2

2gc
9c

‘"j" 29j

”

2 - 25c
ls. 10c
2 l- 25c

Pot Roast
Chunk Bacon

• NOUGAT

• PINEAPPLE

Pure Lard
Smoked Picnics

u- 19c

A YP FOOD STORES
3% SALES TAX—WE CASH WPA CHECKS
Lute* to Kato fatotb “Cteto. Ttea’-Stetto. WBBM. 700 P. M . Twteay. Wte»te*y, Thursday

• CARAMEL

10'

23 x 36

24 x 48
PLAID RAG RUG
47c

GRANITE WARE

lOc
• SAUCEPANS

• PUDDING PANS
• WASH BASINS

• KETTLES
• CUPS

Lowry; Community
to the fathers—Ivan
by the Male Quaricnc; roast to me sons—ur. u. E.
Morford; Second Selection by lhe
quartette; speaker of the evening —
T. Ben Johnson, Boy scout execu­
tive of Battle creek.
'
Mr. and Mn. John Van Holde of
South comslock spent Bunday, with
the former’s sister and family. Mr.
and Mrs. Peter Adrianson.
_ The Founders' Day program has
been postponed' until next Monday
evening. March 30. at the church.
Rev. Ralph Bates announces for
his sermon subject next Sunday
morning. "Wanted.” Services at
Prairieville at 10 o'clock and at Del­
ton at 11 o'clock.
Anyone in this area wishing lo
contribute to the Flood Fund
through the local Red cross, may do
so by donating money, food or
clothing and leaving them at Leon­
ard's store between now and Friday.
An account of lhe celebration of
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrianson's 53rd
wedding anniversary will be found
on the Personal page.

PRAIRIEVILLE.
Friday lhe Future Farmer boys
ot the Kellogg school, of Gull lake,
and their fathers look a trip to Ea­
ton Rapids." Those from this way
who attended were Manley Billings
and grandson. Lyle Billings. George
M. woods, and two sons. George M.
Jr., and John.
Madeleine Eifler of Battle Creek,
who spent several days with her
grandmother. Mrs. Lulu Shepard,
returned home Sunday.
Mrs. Silas Doster has been at
Richland caring for her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua DeCrocker,
who are ill. Mr. Doster and Mrs.
Rankin Hyde were callers there
Friday evening.
Mrs. Ethel Stebben spent the
week end with her daughters. Mrs.
Winslow Martin and Mrs. Dunford
Higgins ot Kalamazoo.
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Mullen and
Mrs. Ada Corlright of Otsego called
on Mrs. Sarah Smith and daugh­
ters Sunday.
Mrs. Sam DeBack spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Ike DcBack and
MU* Norma Castle of Orangeville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Johnson and
Dora visited Mr. and Mrs. John DePrlcster of Dowling.
Those from our lodges who al­
lended lhe I. O- O F. and Rebekah
County Association at Hastings
were Madames Newell Barber. Ho­
mer Flower. John Doster and Mr.
and Mrs. George woods.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rogers. Mrs.
Belle Mullen and Charles Hughes
attended tbe funeral of Bruno
Freydl al Northville Thursday.
Recent callers of Mrs. Lulu Shep­
ard were Mrs. Grace Mitchell of
Kalamazoo and Elmo Woodworth of
Syracuse. N. Y.
Mrs. Edna Flory of Hastings
called on Mrs P j. Hughes and
Mrs. Merritt Wood Saturday. •
Mr. and Mrs. William McKIbbln
and Ronald and Mrs. Amy Bilcock
were at Jackson Saturday.
Mrs. Fannie Jackson, who has
been spending thc winter with her
son Harold and family of Otsego,
returned to her home here Satur­
day. Glad lo have her with us again
as she is an optimist.
At thc card parly Saturday night,
given by Mrs. Verne Calthrop and
Mrs. Charles cousino at the home
of lhe former, six tables were in
play, top scores were won by Mra.
Paul Nagel and Charles Deal; low
scores by Mrs. Floyd Bhelp and
Vaughn Dunn. Thirty-two guest*
were present. An enjoyable lime,
was reported.
Miss Mary Wilkins and George
D. Wilkins have gone to Galesburg
to spend several days with Mr. and
Mrs. Orin Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs, James Boulter and
family were Sunday dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Irving Boulter of
Adams lake.

HOPE CENTER.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Clare Ashby
a baby girl on March 10.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hines of Has­
tings. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hines ot
Rutland spent Sunday afternoon
with Fred Ashby and family. Mr.
and Mrs. Milton Warner, Mr. and
' Mrs. Clyde Ashby of Kalamazoo
were also there for the day.
I Clarence Menck of Kalamazoo
! spent the week end with NTdiugB-"
ter and family. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Leonard.
Several from here attended the
auction sale at Mrs. Harry Waters
Saturday.
Clare. Lyle. Maurice Ashby and
Clarence Payne spent Saturday in
Marshall.
Leon Dunning and family of Del­
ton spent Sunday with their par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McDer­
mott. Mr. McDermott does not gain
as fast as his many friends would
like to sec him.
Chas. Williams and Fred Scott
are on lhe sick list.
Lottie stidnger is working at
Clyde Leonard's.

THE LITTLE RED BRICK.

Priscilla Curtains

- 25c
“ 12jc

DISH PANS
ft

• MAPLE r

’1.05
- 12jc

DECORATED
Cup &amp; Saucer

■ 12-Qt. Granite

FELT BASE RUG
19‘।

• RASPBERRY

«• «fnt

2 - 25c

CHOCOLATE
CREAMS

I3c lb
FLOUR

SPECIAL
FRI. and SAT.

MEET US at lhe SPRING EAIR!

• VANILLA

HENKEL’S

J

Specials fo r Friday an d Saturday

]qc

6

doctor's finished products, a were­
wolf or "wolfman" that formerly
was a human being, but now com­
pletely animal, with a hunger for
blood and a preference for extract­
ing it from his victim's throat—a
charming little playmate. Into his
laboratory, away up in lhe hills,
Lucifer lures Ogden Crandall, a
writer; Row Crandall, his nephew;
thc latter's college friend.^Chester­
field Pippin, and Felix, a darky
chauffeur—eminent subjects for re­
fined torturing experiments; and
they certainly gel the works/ Isn't
the set-up sufficient for a bloodcurdler? You will think so through
the first two acts, after which comes
the surprise, it all turns out in fun.
Another feature is that Crandall
is running out of mystery plots, and
Raw has conspired with the doctor
to furnish him with a humdinger;
which it is. Afterwards, a rollick­
ing big laugh all around. The cast
of characters are: Emlll Brundt,
servant of Dr. Lucifer—Leon Dos­
ter; Karl Brunt, his son—Robert
Adams; kuku
Kuku.. a Jivaro Indian—
sj Elwood
Eddy;; Wolf-man—Robert
‘
J: ------------Mitchell;
O~
Ogden
Crandall.
a
writer of mystery stories—Joe Tork;
Ross Crandall, his nephew—Max
Reynolds;
Chesterfield . Tippltt,
Rom's pal—Roger Williams; Felix,
a darky chauffeur—Roy McBain;
Azariah Squlggs. a native of Black
Hills—Leon Iz*onard; Dr. Lucifer,
otherwise Ormand Luce—Dr. Ed.
Lowry. Don't forget thc date. These
ten gentlemen arc going to give you
an evening of good entertainment if
you will come?
Thc annual Father-Son banquet
will be held in the Delton M. E.
church on Friday evening. March
27th. 1036. Dinner will be served by
lhe Ladles' Aid Society. Program as

LONG-MOORE
5c to ♦!. STORE

8k

25c
c™of

',V,‘ 19c

Sunsweet Apricots

Bisquick

TANGERINE
SLICES

is. .A. 19c
2

3 .... 22t

'Birdseye Matches

SPECIAL
FRI. and SAT.

A,. 22c

Calumet Baking Powder

Sardines

10 &gt; " 35c

27c

Swansdown Cake Flour

J:

P &amp; G.

19c

H.nw.

Velvet Cake Flour
CLEAN SWEEP

SOAP

2 ibs. 25c

Grandmother's Bread

Pancake Flour

Prescription Drug Store

15c
J5|9c

Peaches
FloUr Sunnyficld, Family or Pastry

ton and Doster took car loads of our
local Camp Piro Girls' lo Battle
Creek Sunday afternoon to attend
the 24th birthday anniversary of
the Camp Fire organisation.
Rev. Ralph Bates will begin this
week to lake a ten weeks' course at
the North Western University at
Chicago. He will be there from
Monday until Friday of each week.
There were about 35 attended the
meeting of the Kinsley Aid Society
at Mrs. Von Dunn's Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith of Bat­
tle creek spent Saturday at Frank
Doster's.
Members of the extension class
remember the last meeting is to be
held on Tuesday. March 31. at lhe
home of Mrs. Bertha Bush, a co­
operative dinner at noon.
Visitors in the E. E. Faulkner
home were Mrs. Nellie Cross of
Hastings on Wednesday night, Ar­
nold Faulkner of Battle Creek over
the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Lucifer
Hay of Clarksville Bunday after­
noon.
The w F. M. 8. will be held at
the homo of Mrs. C. J. Barnum
Friday afternoon, March 27.
The play "Lucifer's Lodge" a
comedy of mystery, adventure and
surprise in three acts will be pre­
sented by an all male cast under
the direction of Ellis E. Fauikkner
on Friday and Saturday nights,
April 3rd and &lt;th. tn Delton Com­
munity hall, by all Delton com­
munity players. The cabin of Dr.
Lucifer, most aptly named. L&lt;i no
place for a nervous person. The
gentle Lucifer, a student of lycanthropy iwolf lore) follows the
playful pastime of turning humans
Into wolves. Many of his subjects
are vulpine by nature, and the
transition requires only a small op­
eration on their brains. Among his

4,b- 19c

Macaroni or Spaghetti 4 is.. 25c
Del Monte Raisins3 X”." 25c

Ctltol

ATTENTION

Bulk Rice

2 X” 15c
3
49c

Bran Flakes
s...,».m
8 o'clock Coffee

Paper Towels 5co1 “ •'•d c™“ 3
SODA or GRAHAM

SEEDLESS

2 ,i.,, 23c

Staley's Golden Syrup
BULK

SEEDED, 4-lb. pkt. 29c

Mr. and Mrs. L. N- Bush and Mra.
Leda Harrington went to Auguste
Tuesday afternoon to visit Mra
Douglas and Mrs. Christie Law­
rence.
Orville Kahler of Grand Rapids
spent from Wednesday until Sun­
day visiting relatives here and at
Cloverdale.
Mrs. Chester Banghart spent
Thursday in Kalamazoo.
A good many Delton people at­
tended lhe auction sale at Mrs.
Harry waters' last Saturday.
Marshall Norwood has been conflned to the house lhe past week
with lumbago.
Mrs. H- T- Reynolds is slowly im­
proving. Mrs. Bessie Tungate Is
caring for her.
Mr. and Mrs. c. J- Barnum spent
Bunday with frler.tkr ih Woodland.
Mrs. John Harrlrigton and Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Galnder spent Tues­
day with Mr. and Mrs. Laverne
Shedd at Galesburg.
Mrs. Ella Rogers spent the week
end in Kalamazoo.
Mrs. Margaret^ Farwell spent last
week visiting her parents In Ionia.
Mr. and Mrs. John Harrington
and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wertman
spent Bunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Pennock at Gull Lake.
Mesdames Leonard. Lowry. Hen-

A
© eak*» 4/c

Ivory Soap
FRESH

RAISINS

DU.TON.
Mn. Ethel M. Lawrence, who has
been working at the Mr*. Luclna
Eddy home, wm taken aerioualy 111
iMt week and wu removed to lhe
home at her daughter. Mn Pierce
O'Connor, at Lake Odeaaa.
Mn. Grace Mosier, eon Elton and
children also Violet Eddy all of
Kalamazoo called at the Eddy home
Sunday.
Grandma Eddy hu a Christmas
cactus that had 50 blossoms at
CnristmM time. Now It is In bloom
again with about 30 blossoms. Who
can beat that?
Mr. and Mn. Alien Terry of
Litchfield spent tbe week end with
Mr. and Mrs wade Town.
Mbs Josephine Vanderwood is as­
sisting Mrs. Johnson at thc tcleeone office, and by the way. we
ve never made mention in our
items that Mr. and Mrs. Ike John­
son have been rehlred for another
year to serve as our telephone op­
erators, much to the pleasure of all
of lhe patrons.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams and
Leon Doster were in Pain well Bun­
day.
Mrs. Helen Pennock spent from
Wednesday until Saturday with her
mother. Mrs. Frank Davis, who is
very sick at Galesburg.

Fine

Marquisette,

pink

flower design
QQC
z|toiir____________ Ov

K 0 T E X
18'

WHITE PLATES
DINNER SIZE

1 O'rach '

2 boxes—35c

See Our Spring Linen ..
• Curtain Goods
• Anklets

• Ladies Collars
• House Dresses

•

• Hats ond Tams
• Lingerie

• EASTER BASKETS, NOVELTIES AND CANDY

LONG-MOORE 5c to *1 Store

Wm. Blrausbaugh was in Ionia
Monday on business and in Iodising
on Saturday.
Mra. Rebecca cralg is on the gain,
but very slowly.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammond
and Mrs. Minnie Hammond visited
Bunday at Oeo. Van De Walker's in
Kalamazoo.
Wanllta Blrausbaugh was home
from Detroit over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. warren Bolton and
family were Sunday dinner guests
of Leslie Dickerson's in Baltimore.
Warren Bolton and Chas. Wood­
ruff attended the Wool meeting
| held by the state at the court house
in Hastings. Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammond
and Bernard were Battle Creek
shoppers Wednesday.
Mrs Dale Roush and Mrs. For­
rest Potter caller on Mrs. Rebecca
Craig Wednesday.
Little Bud Tyler is the new schol­
ar at our school this week.
Among the wanted inventions: A
watch that will keep on running
when the after-dinner speaker lavs
it on a table.
.
7

�HA,TINOS. MICHIGAN. THUBgDAT, MAUCH U. in,

MEN'S
FAST COLOR

DRESS
SHIRTS

49c

AEROPLANE

FAST COLOR

OVER NIGHT

Tea APRONS

CASES
J, Each

3 Styles to Choose

25e
Heavy Prints
DON'T WAIT!

Frerhen Up for Spring!

WINDOW

SHADES
Washable! Will Not Crack!

Priscilla
CURTAINS

WOMEN'S

LADIES'

BROADCLOTH

ALL SULK

For Spring Crispness

SLIPS

HOSE
Fino

25*~*

New shades make such a differ­
ence! And these cost so little I
Waterproof I
Will not fray!
Strong, pliable cellulose fiber.

3&gt;~$1
BE HERE EARLY!

COLORS—White, Peoch

Plenty of Wear

Check Our Window For Your
License Number—It May
Mean Dollars to You!

Check Our Window For Year
License Number—It May
Mean Dollars to Yon!

STARTING FRIDAY 9 A.M.
Continues Saturday While Quantities Last!
200 Yards

BOYS'

COLORFUL PRINTED

ACETATE
CANTON ROUGH

LONGIES

RAYON CREPE

CREPE

NSW I

BOYS’ SHIRTS
Fait Color Percolei

49°

Dresses
Only—

WORK SOCKS
They’re Good for Sports, Tool

12 prs. $1.00
They'll take a lot of punishment!
Good quality cotton, blue and
brown mixed, with white tops!

18 NEW SPRING SHADES
TO CHOOSE FROM

OO

Good looking, fancy patterns!
They'll wear well, launder per­
fectly! Cut full for extra com­
fort. added service 12H to 14 H

AND

GOLF
PANTS

98c

FINE QUALITY

Sixe 6 to 17

LADIES'
SMART FOR AFTERNOON
WEAR . . . SMART FOR
STREET WEAR! Pretty
Spring Prints in Light, Dark

and Medium Grounds Mon­
otones, too! Sixes 14 to 44.

PURSES
$&lt;oo
$-DAY FEATURE

SCOTCH PLAID

Curtain Nate

A Remarkable Bargain!

Rayon UNDIES
4 For $1

RAG

In the face-of rising costs,-a price like'this-for' good

Rugs

ers, panties, vests and chemises, nicely tailored, of

rayon undies is nothing less than phenomenal.

a good lasting quality rayon.

Bloom­

Cut to fit smoothly

FEATURE!

Boys9 Oxhide

24 by 48

Overalls
They’re as Tough as
Men’s!

Men’s Athletic Style

Shirts and Shorts

New Low
Price-

Real Values, Men!

5

For

$1

&lt;;•

Boys’ Fast Color

Shorts are of fine qualify broadcloth, cut full for com­

Wash SUITS

Yoke front, Lastex sides, assorted stripes and patterns.

Shirts are of Swiss ribbed combed cotton. Bargains!

ODD LOTS . . . BROKEN SIZES
LADIES' SILK SLIPS2 for $1.00
WOMEN'S NOVELTY SHOES$1.00
LADIES' OUTING PAJAMAS, 2 for $1.00
MEN'S AND BOYS' SLEEVELESS
SWEATERS2 for $1.00
MEN'S WORK PANTS2 pairs $1.00
BOXED STATIONERY AND
HANKYS--------------------- 4 for $1.00

n

)

tJHOV

They ring the bell for value in any field of competition!

fort, with panel or balloon seat back! Three button

T'"’1’’

V

49&lt;

Broadcloths, linenea, and piques
in button-on and flapper styles.
1 to fl. Others at 79c and 98c.

49C

UNIONS

49°
1OC

y«a

Aakto Uoctk hga, sMogUb*
NEW!
COLORFUL!

In these'

NEW

CRETONNE
1OC yard

S-DAY FEATURE!
NEW LOW PRICE!

Sanforized Shrunk

LARGE SPONGY

and comfortably, beneath your close fitting dresses.

S-DAY

Men’s Balbriggan

Cottons
go unusual!

Z for $1

TURKISH

TOWELS
XO for

Best ovality
blue denim' Cot
full for com­
fort' Par«a bwkies’ litre
sum at no extra
cost! Valtm'

Pleats,
flares. ' scallops,’
ruffles. New Spring pat­
terns. Every one a soap
'n water cotton. 14 to 52.

CANVAS GLOVES

9C pair

rugp'.!-I,"/'-

overalls have to be! Heavy
quality 2.20 blue denim, cut

full for free-fitting com­
fort! Parva buckles that
won’t dig in at the shout-

Sanforised Covert

WORK PANTS
can't shrink!

(h rs. break or bend in lann-

H

dering! Triple stitching,
bar tacking! They’ll take
the hardest punishment!

MEN’S OXHIDE
OVERALLS, Now
Comfortable, Sturdy

Work Shoes
Won’t Mark Floors

»£.79

They're sturdy
• for long wear
and many laun­

Men! There’s Top Quality in Topflight!

derings! Cat
full, semi • alack
■tylel Reinforc-

They’re Smart, Fellas!

OXFORDS
Springs Wing Tip Model!

$£.9S

Try Topflight far real shirt satisfaction .-r. titert

Men demanded wing tips this
season . . . boys have followed
sait! Black side upper*. sturdy
composition solas and heels.

'solid colors ... cut full for extra comfort, added WM

quality In every stitch! Crisp, snowy whites or fa
Regular collar attached or the popular Nacmfl ■

wilt, no-curl model . , . your choice I See them I

�HABMNGR, MICHIGAN, TWTTWtnav Mitrn

HUiF MATC J KITCHEN UNITS
Home modernizing

begins in thc kitchen.

With these

beautiful,

convenient, econom­

ical Norge appliances
in your kitchen, your

home is modern in its

most important part.
And, luxuries though

they seem, they actually

Mi&lt;e more than they coit.
Come in and get thc
details.

uw'” “morse 10-YEAR WARRANTYc™"

m™«°mh

JORDAN MAYTAG COMPANY
SALES AND SERVICE

Whatever ap­

pliance you are consid­

ering next, see the
Norge before you buy.

JO-O-S

WOODLAND, MICH

CHIU
puns mis

igjg

A8BYKIA.

World Traveler
Lectures Here

of the South Evangelical church
Stanton of south Battle Creek and
was held on Thursday at the wood former residents here' will locate on
plot on the Cyrus Buxton farm.
About fifteen or twenty cords at
(Continued from page 1. Bee. 31
The Briggs community night was
well attended. It wa* the first so­ ten a very important matter—^bls
(Continued from page 1, Sec. 2)
Prank Faulk of the Briggs dis­
cial gathering since the chicken
trict. an aged and Infirm resident
Upsupper at Christmas lime due Co
~ ,r—.„
Then across the blue Pacific,
miller. in conjunction with Mrs. C. near Lacey who Uvea alone lost his
pausing for a brief instant in tlie
D Bauer will also have charge of
revising the exhibit lists. It was
Hawaiian Islands, where rain 13 not
decided that lhe Garden Club spon­
rain at all but "liquid sunshine."
sor a peony and iris display during and aid arrived it had gotten be­ all three points on his charge that Only six per cent of the Inhabitants
lhe respective seasons of these yond control and soon consumed night. At the Base Line church a of these islands of flowers and hujaflowers, and It was also decided that the house helped by the strong reception for Mr. and Mrs David hula girls are true Hawaiian*; over
a window display throughout the
Hewitt, newlyweds, was held in half the population la Japanese.
entire flower blooming season be surance and undoubtedly will be connection with
the community
country in the East. Its people pos­
sponsored, a different chairman ap­
night.
.
sess five characteristics which tend
pointed to take charge of Ure dis­
Robert Babcock, seven-year-old! to make them outstanding. They
play each month. Mn. Chas. Rog­
W.aMVMRllIU,
&lt;U&gt;U
IU
.
“
~~
--------------..
.
.
-------.
are Intelligent, industrious, not giv­
ers was appointed to investigate the
recent
years
has
devoted
hte
time
,
01
Barney
Mills
district
sub
­
en to luxury, as a people they are
possibilities of a place of display,
*- •"------—— -• —----------------- — I milted to an operation at Leila' extremely honest, and are intensely
and Mrs. Geo. Coleman appointed to the raising of strawberries and
raspberries, marketing thousands of hospital recently.
artistic. Japan has the honor of
chairman for the month of April.
The Elite cemetery organization never having been Invaded by any­
It was suggested that members boxes. His residence is being re­
continue with lhe flower exchange, placed by a bungalow. Is now in met In the Briggs church basement thing other than Ideas, to which
started some time ago. and all the process of rapid construction. on Wednesday for the March ses­ she is always open. Her people re­
flect the quaintness and charm of
members who possibly can are also His brother-in-law Mr. Spitler of sion. Pot kick dinner at noon.
Mrs. Katherine Hunt Young, a lhe landscape and always have
requested to contribute plants or Gun lake has supervision, and Mr.
shrubs, or both, to lhe Botanic Faulk makes daily tripe there.
former teacher of the Stevens, lime for a cheery "Good morning."
Maple syrup is in the process of school, will suceed Mrs. Marion Dos­ This time it was a quiet, cultured
Gardens in East Lansing, a project
being developed by the College, as­ making al lhe A. J. Miller and Cy­ ter present incumbent, who lias. middle-class Japanese in flowered
kimono and bowl-shaped hat with
rus Buxton farms. A good run Is tendered her resignation.
sisted by state Garden clubs.
a red button on top. speaking. The'
Thc next meeting of the Garden reported. .
shoes which are worn all year round
Club will be held on the evening
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Brandl atBe critical—of yourself.
are merely a piece of wood with two;
of April 2. the place of meeting to

™

be decided later.
All Interested
members should plan to attend this
meeting, as the subject of a change
In dues is to be considered.

Report of the Condition of

TIME
I

H. Uovrrncirnt Obllealian

I.IABII.ITIKS

COMMKItl'IAI. I&gt;KPt&gt;StT8

™

land. He arrived there two yean
later, fifty pounds lighter In weight
with an eighteen inch beard, no in
alone. Thc tinsel and glamour

and nothing new

to

talk

about.

didn't exchange a single word with
any of the white members of hla I
party.
The speaker next stopped in In­
, dla. and in a few seconds was trans- I
formed Into a native Indian in one'
of the various garbs of the country,
consisting of shirt, turban and
about two yards of cloth which may
be used either for a skirt, a shawl
at night, or if it were really felt
neceasary to wash, a towel
India
la a land of 223 languages and no
mother tongue. A few hours ride
In any direction will bring one to
a people whose clothes, languages
and customs are totally different
from those of their neighbors fifty

as a land of turbans, but there was
originally a very good reason for the
use of those outlandish-looking
things about lhe size of a bushel
basket. Before the invention of
firearms It was considered a breach
of etiquette lo strike a man on any
strips of leather fastened across Kt of his body other titan thc
d. Consequently, the busheir
them through which to slip the
The Delton State Bank
toes, and they cost the magnificent basket turban—protection against
sum of 8c a pair. And they only last the thrusts of his enemies. Polsonabout six monLiu. In Mr. Kane's ous snakes arc an everyday occur1 rence there. But Mr. Kane declared
estimation the Japanese are fully
Justified Ln their stand tn regard to, they were quite harmless, depend­
Manchoukuo.
They are merely. Ing upon your proximity to them.
1 I.HjI) 00
He revealed glimpses of the
carrying out their own version of
glories of Bagdad and Damascus.
our Monroe Doctrine.
Over the Great Wall through the Turkey whose women are gradually
I35.94p.2e
back door of china Into lhe land being released from their bondage
of short coals, pigtails and bound lo ancient customs, the tortures
feet. Though this torturous practice and hazards of crossing thc Libyan
■ SC,750,&lt;10
Is forbidden In the more progres­ and Nubian deserts and al last the
sive parts of thc country, there are Belgian Congo, where are found the
3.000.00
regions In tlie Interior in which it pygmies, subject of so much fleOLD 00
still holds sway. Tiny bound feet tlon. But they are not nearly so
17.750.00
(140.00
arc a sign of aristocracy, but Its savage as authors would lead one
victims are eripples for life and re­ lo believe. Mr. Kane related an
quire
the constant attention of two amusing incident with thc liny
1100.043 32
। people. One little woman dis­
' or three servants.
I , “7,
„
‘ covered that the
lhe white man *had
—■*
in china 150.000 people live on I shiny safety pins and begged for
xm moans or
or little
little house
home boats
boats and
and1 one.
___ She
____
. II and
__ . disappeared
...___ . .
--------------- I sampans
got
in­
• i’-"*thousands of them never go on to Die Jungle. About half an hour
1 shore all their lives. The sons of
later she returned with a group of
lhe family hove a rope lied around her slster-pygmlej. all demanding
their wauia fastened to an iron safely pins. By means of sign lan­
ring on lhe boat, and In lhe evcni guage Mr. Kann conveyed to them
they should fall overboard, they that they would receive thc pins In
yell until someone hauls them up. return for some fruit; like magic
But should a little girl go over, she the liny women disappeared once
saves herself or sinks. There is no more Into the Jungle and soon came
rope for her protection. Civilization back laden with all sorts o! tropical
makes Itself fell even here. For fruits—the assortment would have
example, if a- busy Chinaman for­ been worth »20 in a Western mar­
gets his chopsticks when he leaves ket—and each received two shiny
home /or the office, he will be fur­ safely pins. Since tire weii-dressed
nished with a pair neatly wrapped pygmy man. woman or child wears
In cellophane In the restaurant. only a string of beads around Lhe
Another change of costume and waist, the whites weft at a loss a.v
there was a Chinese peasant of the to what use they might make of
very lowliest class on the platform; them. They discovered later Hurt
with lhe addition of a bright col­ same day when they saw several of
ored sash and hot.- It was a small j Ute women with the shiny bits of
siwpkeeper standing there meekly steel fastened In their nostrils as
with bowed head and folded hands. Jewelry.
By way of Singapore Mr. Kane
The women of civilization arc far
left China and stopped briefly on
thc bland of BaU-rthe Last, not behind their savage sisters in lhe
Lost, paradise—where the women matter of cosmetics. Mr. Kane said.
In
the densest parts of the jungle
(1 Kr.l J&lt;OLDB. (.••liter.
do all the work and the men spend
he saw innscnracd eyelashes and
their lime enjoying life.
With five whites and twenty-five brows and enameled finger nulls,
lo thirty native porters he set out and blondes—peroxide, henna and
what have you? Perhaps the only
difference between the civilized and
uncivilized races is their motive—
whereas the former follow thc dic| tates of fashion for beauty's sake.
■ their Jungle sisters do the same
thing 7 for health's coke. The
eyes arc made up every morning
I with a native concotlon similar to
j graphite to prevent eye diseases;
the finger nails painted to keep out
। Jiggers; and hair bleached to rousj
. out those little things that are more
। al home on sheep or dogs.
I But after months of native so| clety and primitive ways, civillza' tlon was a welcome relief. Johanncsburg. on lhe cape of Good Hope.
Ils far more modern .than anything
I the western hemisphere has lo
offer, and the Victoria Falls there
. are much larger and more beautiful
| than our own Niagara. When he
' had reached the cape, he had the
distinction of putting on the map
thc largest cross In the world, a
Maltese extending from china lo
Europe, by land al) lhe yay. and
| from the Mediterranean to lhe
southernmost tip of Africa through
I the densest, most savage and un­
civilized part of the continent.
I When questioned later as to what
। country he would return if he could
; have hla choice. Mr. Kane promptI ly replied. "Japan." it Is the most
i progressive country of thc East, and
i combines the charm and attracI tlon of centuries of quaint tradl| tlon and customs with all the coin। forts and conveniences of modern
civilization.
! h£s next book. "After You—Mar-

AUCTION SALE

On account of ill health, I will dispose of some of my per­
sonal property at my farm home, 1 mile south of Delton, on

THURSDAY, APRIL 2
YOU CAN HAVE THIS
BEAUTIFUL, MODERN RANGE
IN YOUR HOME
s7q«
for only

Commencing at 1:00 P. M., and offer the following property
The many ways you can save money with this mod­
ern new Hotpoint range would tickle the thriftiest

Scotsman.

For example: Low electric rates assure low cook­
ing costs; cheaper cuts of meats cook tender and

flavory in controlled, applied electric heat; the
Thrift Cooker (nicknamed the “Scotch Kettle”)

turns out an entire delicious meal with about the
same amount of electric current as an electric lamp!
You can cook an entire meal (even to bread) in the
wonderful electric oven without dne bit of attention

from you. And, we haven’t mentioned the savings
Hotpoim's hi-specd, long-life, jcslcd

electric cooking coil, cooks with
dean, glowing heat. No smoke...

no soot

. no flame ... no odor.

you enjoy on cleaning and decorating.

See these

ranges at once. Come in and get all facts today.
FEATURES • Cotrod, hl-speed, eloan-hoert colls.. "Chef's.

Brain" (automatic timer clock) . .Thrift Cooker. . new type
oven temperature control.. fully Insulated oven .. table-top
model . . all porcelain enamel . . trimmed with chromium.

ELECTRIC

RANCES

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON
G. E. APPUA5CLS

FARM TOOLS.
Champion binder.
Side delivery rake.
Hay loader.
John Deere mowing machine.
2-horse walking cultivator.
Superior drill. Land roller.
Pr. heavy sleighs with bunks.

2-horse riding plow, Oliver.
Hay tedder. Hay rack.
Walking Oliver chilled No. 99
plow. Good buggy pole.
Springtooth 3-sec. drag.
2-sec. chisel tooth drag.
Wagon and double box.
Good Portland cutter.
Corn shelter. 1000 lbs. scales.
Light driving harness.
Single harness.

HAY, OATS, SEED CORN.
Quantity hay, corn and oats.
5 crates white cap seed com.
2 five gal. cream cans. Oth­
er articles not mentioned.

Halting*, Michigan

co Polo" which may be published
by Farrar it Rinehart will be tllus, Ira ted with actual photographs of
Mr. Kane and oilier member* of
hb parly taken along the route ot
I their journeys. and If he writes of
j his experiences as eloquently and
delightfully as he speaks of them,
it will be a book well worth reading.
Generally spcnktng, "non-immi­
grant" te applied to any nonclllren who seeks to enter the United
States temporarily for business or
pleasure.1 The lempornry period le
usually limited to alx months, but
may be extended by authorities for
good cause.
Nnn-immlgrnuts are
not counted In the quota.

TERMS OF SALE:-Cath. No goods removed until settled for.

ADDISON PENNOCK

WATER HEATERS

Weelern Lniou Building

LIVE STOCK and POULTRY.

Horse, age 15, grey, wt. 1500.
Jersey and Polled cow, 6 yrs.,
freshens in fall.
Fat cow, 4 yrs., a good one.
6 yearling ewes.
7 ewes with lambs by side.
35 Plymouth Rock hens.

PROPRIETOR
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

Bineskin and Nelson were the
. best known of Washlngten'a horses
ridden during the Revolution. Mag-

WATCH
McCALL’S

�HASTINGH, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY. MARCH M. IBM

•

7 about and
and glamour

i (topped in Tn*
w Indian in one'
i of the country.
1. turban and
doth which may
a skirt, a shawl
ere really felt
a towel. India
nguages and no
few hoars ride
111 bring one to
&gt;thes. languages
totally different
neighbors fifty
India Is known

iveycd tn them

lit; like manic
■appeared once
and soon came
orts ot tropical
Weaken marved two shiny
it well-dressed
or child wears
ds around thc
flight make of
red later that
saw several of
shiny biu of
eir nostrils as

llzatlon arc far
(biters in ihe
Mr Kane said,
of the jungle
eyelashes and
I finger nulls,
it. henna and
Imps the only
te civilized and
their motive—
follow lhe die­
beauty’s sake,
do the same
» sake. The
every morning
don similar to
eye diseases;
cd to keep out
ached to rous{
lhat are more
r dogs.
of native goways, civlliurelicf. Johanof Good Hope,
than anything
here has to
ia Falls there
more beautiful
ra. When lie
•e. he had the
I on the map
thc world, a
rom china to
the yay. and
ncan to thc
Africa through

tm II he could
Kane prompl­
fl is the most
’ the East, and
I and altracquahii tradiIi all the com­
es of modern
,er You—Marbe published
I will be Ulus­
holographs of
• members of
; thc route of
f he writes of
loquently and
eaks of them,
worth reading.

ler the United
&gt;r business or
nary period Is
x months, but
authorities for
migrants are
mots.

&gt;n were the
igloo’s bones
olutlon. Mag-

•

f

the Michigan Title Association

me tn the East)
to talk sboat.1
days when he I
Angle word with
members of his

id reason for lhe
tlandish-looking
Ur of » bushel
Invention of
Adered a breach
• a man on any
other than thc
the bushellection against
nemies. Polsoneveryday occur. Kane declared
rmleas, dependdmity to them.
mpaes of the
and Dama.-.cu*.
h are gradually
i their bondage
. the tortures
dng the Libyan
and al last the
e arc found the
so much ficnot nearly so
aould lead one
ic related an
vlth the liny
woman dielite man had
nd begged for
disappeared inl half an hour
dih a group of
all demanding

FORREST JOHNSON

of an Address by Ray Trucks. Past President of

Ighter in weight

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THE MICHIGAN TITLE AS­ tbe abstract business between two।
SOCIATION is an organization offices therefore would mean a
composed of persons engaged In loss lo both offices, unless the rales
the business of keeping tbe records
of title to real estate and furnish­
Reading tbe ballot over esreing that information to the public fully, you will notice that there
on demand in form of abstracts.
te nothing on the ballot lo tell the
Its
principles
and
functions voter* how much additional tax
are similar lo lhat of the Bar. money the Board of Supervisors
'
Realtors. Medical
and
Bankers will be compelled to place on the
Association!.
Its members are tax roll. If this proposition carries
professional men and the Associa­ If three-fifths of thc voter* »ay
tion expects the same high stand­ "yes" on this ballot, the matter te
ard ot honesty,
integrity and entirely out of the hand* of the
ethical conduct from its members voter* forever. Your county ha*
that is expected and exacted by then decided to engage In a private
the other mentioned associations. business and the voter* will have so
Among other things we do not decided without knowing what the
approve of exorbitant charges be­ total cost In taxes will be.
To properly engage in the buding made by any of our members
and whenever that charge is raised nets of making abstract* require*
or made In any county, we feel that that a set of absteact* of the entire
it is the duty of the association to 400 volumes with 640 pages to each
send Its investigators into that volume be written up. It means
county and determine the justness lhat a manager must first be hired
of the complaint. If tlie complaint by the Board of Supervisor*, a man
Is well founded, it Is then our duty necessarily with year* of experience
to work with the offending abstract in abstracting and at a salary sattevmw.
«... the
m« practice factory lo that man; he then must
office ■v
to mw
the «.»
end that
complained of 1s corrected and pro- employ men and women trained in
per relations with the public are «e- abstract work to start with volume
cure&lt;j
!one of the records in lhe Register
If ihe complaint te not
JtE/E
founded we feel that it is our duly ,
to render assistance to lhe abstract I rhh‘Crhf^ul*, *
office and endeavor to correct any J?
nn tnd
Sn mXr\ndCriTIhthrenheral
VO,Ume* °f recortte^exX^

^Tuttte

unXUSK! I 2^

of the abstract business and it*
practices.
An issue has been raised In your
county (Barry) to the effect that
Abstract Office.
the Sheldons’
owners of the abstract office in
Barry County, are charging an ex­
orbitant price for making abstract*
and lhat lhe exorbitant price te 65c
per entry and that this company te
making fabulous sums of money

recOTd&gt; *"*■

filing equipment, vault space, maps,
plats and o!fi*e furniture, and fix­
tures must be provided for.
You may rightfully ask what
will all tills coal; tlie proponents
have done nothing but give a low
guess; tire proponents have not,
will not and are not required to
put up a bond payable to the tax
payers Dial the cost of making this
of'abet'r'ac’te “wlTl n’o"?
mXy

MISiriCl July ID, SSW , n*uw»wu&gt;aM« x IMWUW w» MW |
Th. United Slates government ae- I P»cKrd Motor car Company that
Iqnlred the Whit. Houm ground. ' ^r«J
when, by set spproved July 16,
PorS

1??,rHTOn,reT■ ,CC*r'ed * dl,lrtct | can with ample facilities will be -------------------------------------------------------live of what tlie total coat
i of territory not exceeding ten square taken care of at 220 East State 8L, । lions of its comfort and ability on
। miles, to be located on th. Poto- | Halting*.Mich.
'**“
In all fairness let It be under­
„n^clton wllh the appointstood that the Board of Super­ mat river, and auU.nrtaad &lt;ha Free- )
Service work, it U announced, will
A frog-faced
u WBS |nade known by lha be done by men trained by Packard
visors did not Initiatet mis
thia’ osuiot.
ballot. i&lt;tent to appoint three commissionited to them era (&lt;»
the area under hte jo- Packard Company lhat since the factory experts. Service will be ren­
A petition wa* preaented
to survey
sun
•— —
•• rizdiriloa.
Tile act also empow- j advent of the new One Twenty car dered on all Packard cars and un­
with a 10 per cent list .»
of —
voter*
and
rlsdlctlon.
thc law required the Supervisors lo ered the eommlMloners to accept . the Packard dealer organisation
place lhe question on the ballot.
such tend on the eastern side of the I throughout the country has been compony. In this connection it is
Who pay* for
work?
—abstract
----------------------rtv&lt;lr w)tllln lhe ttld dirtrlet as more ‘han doubled in stee. Almost pointed out by Packard that service
Just a word about who tues u,e President should drem proper dallY ‘he number of points where coals on the One Twenty are com­
and service facilities parable in cost with those on any
abstracts afid who pay. fur them.
fo. Ihe ule ,,r lh, VnHe&lt;| states.
'■ Packard *sales
“»** •"**
; are available has been growing.
Take the wage earner, the home
The Site selected by the President
Because of lhe popularity of its
owner: when he buys hte lot or n
was that ana embraced In the old
the
ln whkh
hte home and get* it paid for. the city located between Rock creek on Qne Twenty has been received genexecutives say they have been, able
•eller, who U usually the nubdlvldrr
the wwrt, Florida Avenue on the
or promoter, of a residence subdi­
...... delivers
........ to
™ the
.... home-owner *'
»«■" '»•»&lt;* “
vision.
a warranty deed and an abstract of ,'1“’ nnd ,h,‘ l’"tomac river on the
title lo lhe lot or home, without I •“"tth. Within this *lte the 1’resi- '
and he offered to sell to the county cost lo the home-owner. As long as dent, before the city was laid out
for *27300.00. a committee was
lie owns this home, he will never Into squares, selected IT parcels for
appointed
to Investigate as to
have to have another abstract; »» ot the United States. Among
whether the county should engage even when he sells lhe home, all these waa Appropriation No. 1. exIn thc abstract business, and If so.
he has to do te to pay from *130 tn tending from and Including Lafaywhether It would build a set or •IM
rf((wn f&lt;&gt;nor|h
*300 .»
to h.v.
have .H.
the abstract r.r.fn^
certified
purchase thc set of abstracts be­
to date and then deliver it to the
longing to Delos A. Towle. The re­
'| (now Constitution avenue).
man who has purchased his place, i
port Of the committee to the Board
For these 17 parcels the Unltel
New prints ond crashes. New styles
It Li the Real Estate Subdivld- I
of Supervisors was that upon in­
Stntc* government paid the original
trim*. Fast colors. Regular $1.29 values .
pays ior
for tne
lhe abstracts
er who
wno oavs
aostracu in I
. .
vestigation from every source and cases
like this, and the com of ab- &gt; P^Prietora at the rate of f~l f«er ;
from forty-six lanuuc:
sruui
abstract uiucca
offices in
ill ------- ------- ——------- -------— — •“■
„ - —“ Maryland currency (about
the state, that It would cost *32,000 &gt; streets on a subdivision, where each
based on 320 volume*, to make abstract Is exactly alike Li the, W*L(.i) In lawful money of the
Now spring style*, fast color*—
$4 QQ
r_________________
_____
■'■uitea.
set for Montcalm ! __________
smallest expense
lhe subdivider
hasnil'll
, United
Suite*.
an abstract
—
At69c, $1.00 and I
In hie
getting
his
landfnr
ready
for
sale. Inrlatnnl
The original proprietor* of the j
....
—
j
.
.j
__
1
In
rrettlno
Isnd
i-v»«r(v
lain
.
Tti.»
County and that with a view of
eliminating
competition,
recom­ and he should pay for it.—not the ■ land constllutlng ihe White House
taxpayer*.
Should
you
desire
to
sell
I
ground*
were
Samuel
Davldaon.
I
mended the purchase of lhe private
your land. In nine caaes out of ten . tth„ „wneil ,he
Iiarl&gt; nnfl Da.
set of abstracts at *26.000 00.
Seersuckers, crashes and blister sheers—
$O QA
- ' -Biirnc*. who
•
The purchase was made at that you have your abstract. You list • 1 Id
owned...
the lower
At$1.98 and faaWO
price.—thc taxpayers have paid your place for sale with some Real part. the dividing line running from
for it through their taxes, but the Estate Dealer and agree to pay | the northeast comer of the southabstract office has never paid a him a commission of possibly 5 or
10 per cent for making the sale J WCTt corner.—tt nshlngt«&gt;n Star.
dividend back lo the taxpayers
Beautiful prints, some with jacket*—
$A AK"
and has not reduced the price of When the sale is made the Real i
Estate Dealer takes out his com- ’
abstract* in that county.
\
At$5.95 end
mission,
will average far In ,I
All over lhe country quaint cereFrom 1924 to December, 1929. excess ofwhich
what a new abstract j
the county tried to operate1 the
are observed to usher In the
5 , would cost if you had to buy one. .nionles
'
th^Lmr a*
the fn-mi-r: I Y0U
y lhe
“tracl COnUnv— mayors, says •Pearson
------------------’s WeekSpring shades. Strictly full fashioned. Every thread
You lhen
then P®
pay
the at
abstract
contin- I।। ”new
uallon fw! of ,rom M-S0 U&gt; *3.00 and &gt;y- A‘ ■
nf P,ncM “,e ,”‘w !
pure silk from top to toe.
~
owner.
I• major I* approved by placing a ring ।
owner However,
However lhe
lhe Board of 8uRu- .. .
...
...
ix-rvtam, round lli.t the, „„ l»« ImuneUon u pomplvtod.
Chiffon and service, ot---------------------- -Mt and
actually losing money at the 50c' The Rfal E^Ule dealer, selling on bis linger. Tills ceremony hn»

Child Walk, at IS Months
A psychological clinic has found
that the normal child walks at 13

WATCH
McCALL’S

FAIRCHILDS Are
?A«®
A|N
Here
• LADIES' WASH FROCKS

• Misses' and Girls' WASH FROCKS ...
• LADIES' WASH FROCKS ...

• Ladies' SILK DRESSES for Spring ., .

• LADIES' PURE SILK HOSE ...

•B.™ te no charge being madle |
to'T.re
rate and In January 1930 raised Ion commission never pays any ab-1
far. iki we can ascertain, that lbe county engage in lhe abstract
I
the rates to 75c per entry and *2 00 ; ste»ct fees.
lhe abstract office does not give buajncsa, yOU arr going to have
new or
original abstracts'
—
nmmnt
prompt, orcurate
accurate and courteous gn abatracl
made y u t||kM Un for thc certificate and these rates J
-----.
homes
now built I
treatment to nil patrons. On the years to complete and if it costs are lhe exact minimum j-etes which । for lhe many
our association
has___recommended | and to be built on future subdl-1
__________
contrary, it appears that t*"
1- haW B
ir rt
dollars to do It. for counties the size nt
of Mnntralm
Montcalm, visions, come fr~
from
—and
---- *---arc‘-------bought
method of handling the abstract
'iraci. Your vote docs not limit lhe amount
business Li generally satisfactory. ' to be spent on such an undertaking. According to Marvin NeLion. man- by the subdividers; It te not the
alter of the Montcalm Abstract Of- | ‘na.is of home owners who buy ab-,
The only real issue left is
When any other M411U
kind u
of, „
a prop­ flee
the
nffler
will
not
«hnw
■
nrnfll
&gt;
(tracts,
sn
whv.
in
the
name
nf
nil
flee,
office
show
a
profit
|
streets,
so
why.
of all
...■.hvoters,
.UI.J
__
(
whether the prices charged are osltion Is submitted.. tola the
even charging the new rales and that
““** "*
Is fair, "'*■
ask the --------------poor overbur
*”~ ­
।
reasonable. ThU Usue has come flUCh as tbe building of a new they have no competition.
dened home-owner to assume the
up In nearly all of the counties school, a new court house, town
Al that time Montcalm coun­ burden of building a second ab- •
In the State, either one time or hall, sewage plant or paving, the
street set, when thc home-owning ’
ty
had
320
volumes
of
records
and
another and will come up from amount lhat the project will cost
taxpayer does not receive any of '
Ume to lime, as
there is alway* la elated in the ballot and the voter the best figure on a new set of
lhe supposed benefits? If It were
someone ready to
complain about knows when he goes to the poll* abstracts was *32.000 00 or *100.00
possible for lhe county to own a set
price* and especially if he thinks just how much money will be spent per volume; It is a small county and
of abstracts and sell the abstracts
there is a remedy
which will cost Mid h0W much will beadded to th* the records arc not complicated for a few cents less per entry, than
with many plats, rrplats. re-surveys
him nothing.
I lax rolls.
the private office la doing, It would
It Is human nature to question
In this issue lhe ballot doe* and unplatted mete and bound lie lhe subdivider who would reap
prices; you question your garage not give you any Idea as to the areas, which are a nightmare to the thc benefit; he would not reduce
account, your attorney, your doc- ; cost of making this set of abstract* abstractor, such as thc records the price of tlie lot or home of­
would
be
in
a
county
tlie
size
of
tor. butcher, baker, light, heat and I and you will have nothing whatever
fered you for sale, by an amount
whatnot
It Is fundamentally a j to say about It. The money will be Barry. It is our belief that an equal to 10c an entry on a 20 en­
Barry County
part of our make-up to wa^t to appropriated and spent from time abstract set in
try abstract, it would be too small
know that we ore getting value re- ! to time by the Board of Super- would cost in excess of *100.00 per an item to take into consideration.
celved for the dollar we part with. | visor*. Their hands will be tied as volume or over *40.000.00 Propon­
If this set would only cost *5.Recognizing these facts our As- well, for they will have no discrc- ents of lhe proposition favoring the 000 00. and if there is money In
auiuaii tvu
■ : ---------------z —county uniau
owned set u:
of abstract
rcc-- ■
aociation for thc past five years (Uon whatsoever, for thc law as it luuu,)
ords for Barry County, refer to ,nakln8 abstracts at less than 65c
has worked out facLi and figures (now stands requires lhe Board to thc situation in Jackson County as |an ^“7. and if the proponents
relative to thc cost of building ab- appropriate lhe money and there Is a parallel case. Let us examine in- *01l1,d w01* Ju** « ***"«
orstracl sets and the cost of con- I no limit under thc present law. The
to lhe Jackson County experiences. K*nlzaUon of another private abducting the abstract business and 1 situation will be simply this.—if site
Their set wa* voted upon in 1809 str^t office as they will have to
have been able to make recoin- | voters authorize thc making of this
when conditions were radically dlf- *°,r*
proposed set over
mcndatlons as lo thc method of I set of abstracts, it is then up to the fnvMni
ind,„ •...I w.h—-- ——i* onto the tax payers, Uicy could
charging so lhat tl}e
business j Board of Supervisors to find ways ferent than today and when clerk easily interest private capital to
could be conducted satisfactorily and means to finance the making hire was not more than half of engage in the abstract business on
to the public and at the same time I of this set. Irrespective of the total what it is today, and with about a cut-rate basis, and let the in300 volumes of records to abstract
pay a reasonable dividend on thc I cost whatever that may be. This uiu
the profits. But that is
and u&gt;e
the set cuai.
cost ma*
that coumy
county azo.*25,amount of capital Invested. Our I can only be done by spreading a dl- 00000
by the lime It was finished In n°l
,deB- there have been two
Assoclallon, like all other assocla- ] reel tax as thc present law does not 1504.
i abstract companies in this county
tions. cannot afford to have any | give the Board of Supervisors the
Th. nriv.i.
h,.„
and there would be two companies
v J2«
tOd,y lf lhere h*d been bUSlot Ita members make exorbitant authority to make a bond issue and linT,h?n
charges and therefore, after much spread the cost over a period ot
Ln HM
dl?T7« I ™
” "”u"' to
X&gt; keep the two
&gt;«• co
“&gt;”■
» wmHM.■ r.mliv -hn
ness
study, investigation and consider- | years, the same as is done with any hv
SL*
IM*-*
«&gt;
I
W dividend,
atlon. we are tn a position to say other project.
mnvJutinn^and
the 8tockholders of each company.!
J
r.I
Gentlemen, one mom
that tn abstract office in the | A glaring instance is Wayne
whtamr
ty
operated
le
or
lhu
situation
that
must
smaller counties cannot give proper |I county
and
this
law
allowing
County
attention.
service to its patrons and pay a I counties to engage in the private without competition.
Ur
&lt;-&gt; W
7 Title Insurance
legitimate dividend on the capital i business of making abstract* was
Mr. CM. U.nl.v
Manley, &gt;h.
the n..n»mr
manager
The demand fir
invested at lesi
less innn
than ooc
Me per enuy
entry enacted In 1921 as a Wayne County of lhe Jackson County set of abis
rapidly
supplanting
abstracts. In
and. *2
. 00 .for the certificate
‘ and
■* in
~ measure, so as to validate a county (tract books consented to being
the larger counties outside of the abstract set for that county; the quoted as saying that until five certain sections of the United
States, namely. New York. New Jermetropolitan areas, at not less than only exception being that if any
*1.00 per entry and *3.00 for Ute county other than Wayne desired
Welk
*'™ County &lt;De(Chicago). W
Wayne
certificate.
to engage in miking abstracts, it
troft). abstracts arc becoming as
District meetings were held In would require a three-fifths vote of This means that without competi­ obsolete as lhe horse and buggy,
tion the first 25 years of Ils exist­
various parts of the state, look­ lhe elector*.
just as thc horse and carriage have
ing toward lhe standardization of
The history in Wayne County I* ence It was a constant drain upon i been removed from the picture in
the information given in the ab­ this,—lhe ballot did not state the tax payers of Jackson County, favor of lhe automobile, the more
stracts. the adopting of a uni­ what sums were to be expended in despite the fact that it had never rapid and comfortable transportabeen chgrged up with any expense
form certificate that would mean
tlon. so Title Insurance has come
something to lhe patron and the the proponents claimed that a set for rent, light or heat by the coun­ Into demand in certain sections. It
discussion of rates equitable and of abstracts could be made for from ty for lhe use of the vast room it Li but a question of a few years be­
just for each county.
1150.000 to *300.000—the voters occupies in their court house.
fore this section will too be us­
We are therefore of the opinion said "yes" go ahead and build it.—
At the present Ume there is an ’ ing Title Insurance and the abthat the Sheldons' Abstract Office they did go ahead and are still go­ abstract in the hands of nearly stracl will be a thing of the pail.
is not charging exorbitant fee*, ing ahead, but the plant Is not every owner of real estate In, I cannot here go into thc rami­
and is. in fact, charging leas j entirely completed and they have Barry County. Thc work of theI' flcations of title insurance other
——. over
-—r t
ana .
a ....
nwi fl01. abstract ufficc Is nearly M per cent
than the association thinks nwxs-; spent
ihair lo say that in this rapid age
*ary for a county lhe size of Barry, i urs of lhe taxpayers* money.
continuations of abstracts already In which we live. It is the more conThe next question Involved Is
Th0 proponents thought that in existence. An average con- venlcnt and rapid method lo all
•■Shall the County of Barry en- the two private
companies in tlnustlon would include only a deedI parties in the closing of a real estate
gage In the private business of j Wayne County were robbing the and a mortgage to be put on the' ’ transaction.
making abstracts?''
| public by charging *100 per entry abstract already owned by the prop­
Tlie County of Barry can never
The plan in having two abstract and boasted lhat they would re­ erty owner, and lhe total cost■1 enter into thc business of insuring
offices In any one county Li eco- duce the price of abstracts. The would-be *330 in Barry County’ l Titles and it will be but a short
-----------------------.J and .U.
nomlcally
unsound
lhe idea (.
is ftcU M0 thBt lh0 county ggj dld under private ownership, while theI1 period of time before lhe County
not approved by our association. not and has not reduced the price same conunuatlon tn Jackson coun­ Abstract set will be an obsolete ays­
It can do nothing but keep a dupli- of abstracts.
The two private ty would cost *350 under county’ tern relegated to things of thc past
companies are still doing a great; ownership,
ownership
at the expense of the innocent tax
same lands and divide what busi­ majority of the business and are I It has been reported that the pro­■ payer.’ Title insurance is now being
ness there is between lire two offices. now charging *130 per entry and ' ponent* of this project have given1 used in 53 counties tn the slate of
It cannot reduce the overhead ex­ the county office has followed suit1 an estimate of the cost as *5.-• Michigan and lhe demand is rapldpense of cither office and if and are now charging *130 per 1000 00. Anyone who has ever been1 ly increasing.
both offices desire to stay in entry, the same as that charged. hi the abstract business knows bet-■
A court house, a town hall, a
business and pay a reasonable re­ by the two private companies. The ter than that, and It indicates ju«t• | .sewage plant, are not such investturn there is only one way to do It record* show that the Wayne one thing and that Is.—that thc’ mentx that private capital would
and that Li lo double the rates, be­ county Abstract Office is in the red, proponent* of this measure want lo1 care lo Invest its money in; a sec­
cause the Investment of each office about one hundred thousand dol- get It across and past the voter*.—- ond or competing abstract set is
Is fixed, thc overhead is fixed and lar* each year. The poor tax payer they want to get it carried, because1 another such investment ir. which
the amount of abstract business has paid lor util of this. Just be-1 they know that once It Is carried,■ private capital knows better than
cannot be increased to meet the cause some one person or group of i the Board of Supervisors will be’ to Invest, therefore Mr. Voter, you
needs of both offices. A division of persons had It in for lhe private | compelled to furnish the money.■ arc requested to hold thc bag.—Adv.
Qurew Crownad Altar D.ath
Th. queen who was enthroned
after her death was Ines de Castro,
who was msrrisd to Pedro I of
Portugal. Tlie marriase was per­
formed clandestinely on January 1,
1347. before hla accession to the
throne. Hla father objected to the
union aud three years later, at bl*
Instigation. Ines was murdered.
When Pedro became king he had
the body of (nea taken from the
grave, placed on a magnificent
throne, arrayed in al! tbe royal
robes and crowned queen of Portu1*1

—

*
and opportunity

abstract offices. The only net re­
sult is that everyone In Wayne
County I* paying a half mare for
bl* abstract work than before, plus
an added lax burden to cover the
cost of the county owned set and It*
oiieratlng deficit.
in Montcalm County, a somewhat
smaller
county than
Barry,
a
somewhat different situation arose
in 1924. Delos A. Towle owned and
operated a private set of abstract*
without competition, making ab(tracts for 60c per entry. He was
Ettlng old and lhe busines* was not
eralive and he desired to sell,
take the money and place It where
he would be sure of an income for
the rest of his life. At that time

m

•tye auger beet requires a tern
perate climate and climatic condl
tlon In the extreme South. Sugar
beets will grow, but In a warm cli­
mate the tops continue their vege
tat Ion growth too long and the
roots do not ripen off so as to give
the • proper sugar content There
Is also more likelihood ot attack

--7------. j- . — - ~ 777 7—7,
opttaMto

Latter Brings *255
Woman In Government Service
A letter signed by Queen Mary
The
United
States
congress
of Scots In 1307 was sold at Edin­ passed an act July 12. 1870, whkh
burgh. Scotland, for *253.
provided that “women may, In the
discretion of the bead of any de
The Erl. Canal
partment, be appointed to any of
The Erie canal waa built by the the clerkships therein authorized
State of New York (rom 1817 to by iaw, upon the same requisite*
1825. Before that time a private and conditions, and with the same
corporation, tbe Western Inland compensations, as are prescribed
Canal Co., bad been chartered, and for men.”
between 1702 and 1700 II built six
mile* of canal The state. In 1816,
/ Pecan* Grown in Africa
appointed a commission. By 1830
Pecan nuts, heretofore an Awerl
tbe canal had turned into the state can product, are being grown *ultreasury mere than It had coeL’
resafully in southwest Africa.

89'

been observed for several centuries
and seems to have It* roots In lhe
&gt;'&gt;«’ uf wedding lhe mayor to the |
chief office of lhe borough. At High |
Wycombe tbe mayor and his aidermen are conducted to the weights 1
an,| measure* department of the
borongii offices, nml there solemnly 1
. . .
. '
.
..
|
weighed dud measured. At BrightI
IlngMia Hie mayor ia electedI lu the .
trclfry of the parish church. At
Itourucuiouth and at Hanley, Staff*. !
the retiring uuiyor and ihe new one
embrace each other. Feasts play
n part In the election of mayor*.
At Yarmouth It 1* a sprat feast,
and at Teterbarough the chief Item*
are chnmpngm- ami sausage*.
close at Sundown
Alllinugll tuaiiy Oriental bazars |
have electric lights. most of them
close nt sundown, thus observing
an ancient custom.

• LADIES'ALL SILK HOSE
NEW SHADES. Sixes 8’/j to 10—
At-

VALUES TO $5.95. ft I DAY and
$4 QQ
SATURDAY otI .30

FOUNDATION GARMENTS by HENDERSON, FORM­
FIT and HENRIETTA. .
Garments to suit every figure and priced to suit every purse.
Special Bargain* in Blouse*

$1.00 values at 50c

BUTTONS AND SLIDES FOR DRESS TRIMS. All colon and
Sixes ... 10c Card.
144 t. STATE ST.

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

FHONI 2522

AUCTION SAL

Having rented my farm, I will dispose of the personal property at an afternoon sale
on the premises, 3 miles south of Hastings, on the camp ground road, section 32, Has­
tings township, on

MONDAY, MARCH
BEGINNING AT 1:30 O'CLOCK. I OFFER THE
HORSES.
Brown mare, weight 1300.
Black gelding, weight 1350.
Black Percheron mare, with foal, weight
1600.
COWS.
Six years old, bred Feb. 29. .
Eight years old, bred Aug. 1.
Seven years old, bred March 18.
Two years old, bred Dec. 27.
Three years old, bred Sept. 20.
Three years old, bred Aug. 31.
Three years old, bred Aug. 25.
Four years old, bred Feb. 26.
Four years old, bred Aug. 12.
(These cows are all purebred Jerseys,
but no papers with them.)
CHICKENS.
45 White Leghorn pullets.
30 White Leghorn year old hens.

FARM TOOLS.
McCormick-Deering binder, 7-ft. cut.

Hay loader. Osborne mower.
Litchfield manure spreader, good condi­
tion. Spike drag.
Side delivery rake, nearly new.
Spring tooth drag, 3-section.
Spring tooth drag, 2-section.
Oliver riding plow. No. 11.
Walking plow.
John Deere 2-hOrse cultivator.
Dump rake. Single Diflk. Roller.
Four-wheel trailer with rack. Wagon and rock.

Wagon, low down. Double work hameu.
Single work harness. 2 21-inch horse callers.

MISCELLANEOUS.
Scythe, new, 2 corn planters. Poitholo digger*.
Fewer drill. Double end grinder arbor.
Crosscut taw. One-man saw. Ico saw and toag*
Crain sacker. Grindstone. Hinman milker.
Barrel churn. Mill* Airotor and strainer.
Platform scales. Gas engine. Gas camp stove.

Hog hook and scrapers. Tank hawtar.
Potato era fas. Soma bags. 3 steel oil barrels.

Some household goods ond other articles
ous to mention.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. NO PROPERTY REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED Fl

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

�HASTINGS. MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. MARCH M. IKS

Hill i
IIU

. peculiarities
----------------------there are 'Grasshopper
flCTDIPll n
n
I With th!* large and rapidly grow- women have their
too.llfomla
|:
MILO.
■
Hi) II 111 111 lll/V lUh
Bock to°- qulU a 101 °r e«t"t'They will really be quite dlssatisdiieatls- Ranchers.''
;
These fellow* do not
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Skidmore
UUllllull Ul Uli
| help had lo bo employed, really ex- fied unies* their furniture
*-— ----- 'ia ‘Just
—‘ use their land to grow gnuahop- spent Wednesday with the former's
their
neighbors, —
as UUdis- ■ 1 ipers. WVVUUPV
because up
of A.UWPW
course wi.mw
that would
I nun lirnn pert*
perl* trained in the growing of os- 1 like
■ ■■ —
—— neighbor*,
...
and
— pJust
—, M
wvwppwp parents. Mr and Mrs. Ernest Skid­

AUCTION SALE!
IN ORDER TO DIVIDE PARTNERSHIP PROPERTY. I WILL HAVE AN AUC­

TION SALE AT MY FARM, ONE MILE WEST OF CRESSEY. ON

WEDNESDAY, APRIL I
COMMENCING AT 12:30 P. M. I OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:—

HORSES.
Black mare, 12 years old, weight about
1300.
Brown mare, 15 years old, weight about
1300.

9 HEAD OF CATTLE.

Brindle cow, 6 years old, freshened
March 7.
Roan cow, 5 yrs. old. freshened Feb. 29.
Red cow, 4 years old.
Guernsey cow, 3 yrs. old, due April 14.
Jersey and Guernsey heifer, 2 yrs. old,
fresh March 14.
Guernsey heifer, 2 yrs., due May 30.
Guernsey heifer, yearling.
2 Guernsey bulls, yearlings.

HOGS.
2 Duroc sows. 9 mos. old.

POULTRY.
10
3
2
32

White Leghorn hens.
R. I. Red pullets.
White Rock pullets.
Barred Rock pullets.
FARM TOOLS.

Fordson tractor, extra rims—Grousers.
Oliver 2-bottom tractor plow.

Bean puller, extra knives.
International corn planter.
Oliver disk. 2 tingle cultivators.
2 two-section drags.
Oliver riding cultivator.
Oliver walking cultivator.
Black Hawk manure spreader.

Dowagiac groin drill. Roller. Binder.
Deering New Ideal mowing machine.
Oliver plow. No. 99. Bradley plow.
Dump rake. Feed grinder.
Novi gas engine, upright, 2 3-4 H. P.
Double harness and collars.
Set Belknap sleighs.
Low wheel wagon ond hay rack.
Double wagon box with stock rack.
Stoneboat.

140-egg incubator.
Belts.

Brooder stove.

135 ft. hay rope.

CRAIN. ETC.
50 bu. O.1 Li. Quantity of potatoes.
About 11 bu. Robust seed beans.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
Leonard refrigerator. Kitchen rabinet.
Large cupboard. 2-bumrr Florence oil stove.
2 ten-gal. milk cans. Arborphone radio.
And many other articles not mentioned.

TERMS:—CASH. NO GOODS REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

CLYDE KING, Propr
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

JOHN HOAG. Clerk.

m

ISIBUSKSS

| triches.
Every development was satisfied if their hat*, are. A flock be Impossible unleu their acre*
j watched almost from lhe time an of 1J0O ostriches will produce a lot,were tightly screened in. They do.
ot feather* over a period of yean.; however, send out their grasshopper
(Continued from page 1" SecTC
**“* from then
unlH u,e The result wa* lhat nearly every ' catchers to section* where these
wminuai iran page I, Bee. 1) j bIhl wus glx m01Uhs old whcn u
woman had one or more. It wasn't i pest* are grazing. These men are
tab.u Evvry error. «u raad, to;”!?"
..
at all satisfactory, or comforting really a bleulng. because they are
making
buxines*
for milady to walk down the street —
-------a•""*
------------of
* catching the
with her bonnet all dolled out In things that farmer* have been
her waving ostrich plume, and see fighting for centuries. From the*e
the finest in existence. It wa.
,rOro ^th" ?“ W yOU,,,r- other women with perliaps longer । grasshopper rancher* you can buy
some flock too. and It wasn't w “’S “
drl'ren nt° t con,&lt;T and better feathers. The upshot 1 them put up in nice, neat package*
long before he was caring for 1JW
om 7ch
of wa* that in a comparatively short 1 like rosins. Trout will strike at dead
nZZ rnefr head*. This renders them Liin&gt; ostrich ‘ feather* became Just grasshoppers, though not as readof the’* great birds
■grew 'more space had toV^rovld- ’ qUk’1, dOclle
c’sily lmndlrtl
about a* popular aa a loud speaker Uy. perhaps, a* they will al the live
S but in l^mkSt oT wUU Ilk ' &lt;**wu“
in u two-room flat. Even today os­ one*. They eVen ship them to fish­
nalrn*. and ornnae tree*
Plucklnf ,he larkc teatliera would trich plumes are about as usles* as ermen in nearby states.
It is
rnam around almost ur If in it,
** verY |»blful to the bird, but the --------------------------------a label on tlie Statue
— _of______
Liberty.
claimed that there are al least 100 ;
&gt;■ *»&lt; »» &lt;««■»" "•
________
______
_____________________
The result
of all
this wa* that the i people, near Los Angele*, who make
i birds and the females have!wme Pluck,fd- By “
; '**
ostrich feather business
look
a nose t.„
.........
..
------------- -------------- *“
_________
their
living
by -gathering
bait.---All
1 unusual characteristic* Mama os- ls P°‘n,eS5feathers are clipped dive for the financial basement and this
till* supplements
supplement* another industry
Itrlch for Instance is endowed with °n closc t0 thc 4X10 Tlle rasethod' it became u*elew to produce choice —that of making equipment for
tha’ sneclal gift of making nans at lt'a'1 won t,ie sanction of the plumes for which there was no de- fishermen. I was Informed that
do\om7^ of the work When
Audutx?n “S'1*
ma,ld
a" «
around
clty'

comes to hatching, mama will stay ■
J?*™ th^/onhfJbi^nml
T,,ls former noted ostrich fann : *’?akln811 B,LWn&lt;UM®l
....V. ((ial once
ont(. boasted
fog­
on the nest h«
during
the
dav
but
at
d ‘earn that only wing and
of 14100 '£de
choice phernalla. It
wouldn t be surprising,
mgh!*^
r*75 lh
do “
hl* b
turn*
tail fcatheis were taken-and ££
these II blrd„ "rartcW
glarU,d bn th?
ine dow"
cown „aQP ' ^aure In
... callfomU
-- ------------- —fUhln^teone
--------- - —
taken
fromlustrous,
male birds.
and lhl‘
t unusuaI undertaking, । at ‘he great out-of-door sports. If
women0t'S^ui?&gt; ‘^.1” X
«
‘»&gt;eyexclusively
are the
the most
most
hold *
as
they
are
lustrous, hold
nh°ch 30 years ago“ akin theie-' Uil* thing keeps up. with all lhe
i Amount in°wr«« ’.hit 22^,
y ‘heir ihape better, and last longer. , lect /'million dollar class" went' new inventions and devices for

more and brought Lavem home.
On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Skidmore
entertained the latter's brother. Mr.
and Mra. Vem Merrill and! two sons
and Mra. Skidmore's slater, Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Conklin, and son ill of
1Battle creek.
Mr. and Mra. H- J. Flower and
:Bernice were guests for dinner Bun­
iday of Mr. and Mra. C. ?. Moreau
i

itended and every thing sold very
I :satlsfactartly.
Mr. and Mr*. Barber spent Sun­
।day with the farmer's brother, Mr.
and Mra. Fred Barber, near cli­

max.
John Bradfield relumed to his
.son Merle's home Wednesday after
spending the winter In South Bend,
Ind. Mr. Bradfield will return to
South Bend for treatments before
staying permanently here.
Mra. M. Bradfield was a business
visitor in Kalamazoo last Tuesday
and again Saturday.
On account of sickness the Home
Literary dub lias been postponed
one week at the home of Mrs.
Marshall Norwood. Delton.
Mra. Jennie Lyon* and son Albert
and Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Quick and
children were guests tor dinner
Sunday ot Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Quick.
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Scobey vis­
ited friends In Grand Rapids from
Friday till Sunday afternoon.

"on the bum." Only recently r ' fishermen constantly coming on
came to an end. when the remain- ‘he market, pretty soon a fellow
ing 30 bird* were taken to lhe Cali- | will have to have a caddy to carry
fornia Zoological Gardens and be- : his equipment,
came a part of that institution. Ils I
closing brought to an end one of
It is reported that several people
the strangest and most spectacular
busines enterplses ever undertak­ who propose to cross the Atlantic
h.d teen u&gt; U1U country « UUI.
k| w
en in this country, and one that for in lhe Queen Mary, new and enor­
while th.y yoon got onto our w.y. , £
, „ k ,
o,
and ontanued a strike aitaUut *
( u
^ht r t t u । years wa* crowned with splendid
worktn,, oterttae. ond
ton
.old JSb .1 success. Juat a zhange in fashion mous British vessel, are demanding
nllthu. Al ton on the OwMon, „uni„ou,
w„ld.a
Ttlr sealed it* doom. But if you per- cabins, situated not more than 10
Rwneh an incubator method ot' Brcu[ #UBn8lh and
tremendous 1 chance have one of those beautiful minutes' walk from a view of the father and son." state* a writer. And
lhe son is generally wearing it.
hatemne out “tr*ch cits* »*■' de- ।
and .^.d ot them huite i plumes laid away as a reminder of
vlwd. That relieved p.po pt nlttltt I Wrdl had
o, I the "gay nineties." perhaps It will
u well p. moma by dny. t» they ।
,o ,hoa_„„d! „d ;' be Just us well to keep it because
Report of the Condition of The Hastings City Bank
could devote all their Ume to »- thaa,and,
.peetptorv. who ttlpdly ' ostrich feathers will probably come
ehly «n«
rov'tp ---------«ml be-------leer_ from
u
, .‘Snlwdon to lo to 1 buck Into style again sometime. We
clety
and gossip.
•i.responsibility
r**lR?f*l,U“r i~
? ‘’-T‘ln
F!?F
nholeewl ostrich plume, ! like to think that things on tills
alf
"■4*";:
' old earth go In "cycles." which Is"'
Ui.tr children
ehtmern in
to the straight
UUlUhl and
.nd „mn&gt;a„dad
pnef,.
tnelr
narrow way.
short Mr. cawston's unique enter- l! only another way of saying that we
a.Mtf.oo
(Ostriches too set a fine example prise was not only attracting al- ■j are always ''running around In cir.. 17l». l«J.r. Ur*
for the movie "stars" of Hollywood. most national attention, but it was j cle.i.” Plumes are among the oldest
JO2.53
though it doesn't seem to do much gl5O
w,u, mojl
also maKin|
making. good lno|lc&gt;
money, with
most I articles of feminine adornment, and
.
good, pic male ostrich carefullj (favornb]e prosju-cls for making a J it scarcely seems possible that they
are down and out for good. When Real JC»i»i&lt;
selects his mate, and once selected :.lot. more.
------- H
‘
they remain mated for life without 1 But it seem* that Mr. Cawston . they do come back, if you have an
any tfs or and*. The movie stars up was endowed with a quality of good ostrich farm then "sell when the
in Hollywood don't seem to act sense and good judgment that so j .•riling Is good." It’s a pretty good
plan anyway. Lots of the fellows
that way at all.
few people seemed to possess in our
For four days after they arc late "boom era" before the depres- । wish they had followed It.
&gt;n.i BkUHIM il. oiiTe»
ZIO.OO*'"*
Otn&gt;
hatched, the baby ostriches are not sion
There are other Interesting spo­
slon set
set in.
in. Along
Along ui
In me
the cariy
early jmia
years
fed a thing. But after the fourth of this century business was Just dally farms In California too. For
.......... ................. „..... „____»263.2BS.5S
day look out. They take on or •booming
—------al
. the ostrich v.
—. Then Instance there are "Lion Farms."
farm
onges. vegetables, grain, alfalfa, came an opportunity for him lo sell where the big cats are bred and
and Just as an aid to digestion out for the very-comfortable sum reared as a commercial proposition.
they’ll swallow a few small rocks i ot $14100.000 cash or an average of Il is said that tlie fine old lion who
and other hard substances. Make it
$1000 for each bird, when the flock greets you with a roar from the
a point not to get too close to thc was al its maximum. He surely front of a movie curtain. Is a prod­
older birds, or even the younger displayed most excellent Judgment uct of one of these farms. Bom
ones, if you have any glistening In selling while the "selling was and raised in captivity they lose a
Jewelry that can be plucked off.
good." and set an example that is lot of their ferociousness, but at the
olherwLM’ you may
have it very worthy of being more closely fol­ same time are not yet rid of their
I long.
lowed than it was a few years ago. dangerous Instinct*, and it will be
But. heck, why bring up such un­ some time before they will make
desirable household pets.
pleasant memories?
I recently wrote about the angle Men have their peculiarities. Il
and the man who ..
has
might be difficult to find a -per-&lt; worm
»«•■■■ farm, •••••*
—(
fret" one anywhere in this country. I made a paying business of growing
and if that isn't -territory" enough. 1 and shipping angleworms. It maybe
to leam
learn too.
too. that
that in
in CalCal-1I
let's take in the whole world. The surprising to

20 Items Specially Priced

FOR MERCHANTS'

FREE FAIR!

Home News
,. . your own home. That's where your heart is, and that's where
the real thrills lie, in the things that concern you, and the people
around you, next door, in the next block, anywhere in the county.
There's news about them in every issue of the Hastings Banner, in
"inside page" stories . . . and in every ad too, for the ads in the
Banner are news’ There's news about new clothes for the family,
and new food for the table, and new furniture for the home. There's
news about entertainment, and new ways to get to it. There's news
about something new on every page, from the latest county events
on the front page to the new shoes for Anne on the last ... all
written for you, put up in a neat package and delivered to your
mail box every week.

If you do not take the Banner loook through this copy and note the
items about those you know, and the ads that every week bring you
the news of what is new and show you how to save money.
Then send in your subscription, and if you live in the county you
will receive the Banner from how until next July, 1937, for $1.00.
This offer is for ne\^. subscribers in Barry county only.

_.14c
1 pint Rubbing Alcohol
16c
100 Hobart's Aspirins
1 pt. Haskill's Milk of Magnesia _ _ 17c
1 pound Hall's Baby Talcum--------- 17c
$1.00 Cod Liver Oil Tablets---------59c
50c Sodium Phosphate-------- .•------ 27c
50c Analgesic Balm--------------------- 27c
25c Corn Solvent------ - -----14c
50c Cough Syrup
----27c
$1.00 Syrup of Hypophosphites —59c
50c Kidney Pills________________ 27c
25c Tooth Paste_______________ -14c
1 pint Almond Hand Cream
25c Shaving Cream_______
25c Shaving Lotion_______
50c Jontecl Cleansing Cream
27c
50c Jonteel Face Powder------------- 27c
Martel's Bay Rum, 12 ox._______ 15c
25c Nasal Jelly __................. ----- 14c
25c Glycerine and Rose Water__ 14c
1 inch by 5 yards Adhesive Tape __14c
4 DAYS ONLY—MARCH 25. 26. 27 and 28
SAVE WITH SAFETY at the REXALL STORE

... .....

NOTICE, FARMERS!
FEED YOUR HOGS CULL BEANS

Seed Time inhere
See Us For

Clovers
MEDIUM NATIVE CROWN
MAMMOTH NATIVE CROWN
ALSIKE CLOVER
WHITE BLOSSOM
YELLOW BLOSSOM

Alfalfas
IDAHO GRIMM

IDAHO CROWN

Timothy
RED TOP
Kentucky Blue, unhulled and fancy

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

We carry a complete line of seeds

THE REXALL DRUGGISTS

Hastings

THE HASTINGS BANNER

I.IAIin.lTILH Foil' ullNEYH iuiiauixv'kli:
tin,I IhlK KeJI«r»unlnl

Phone 2131

Michigan

You are invited to view the 1936 Wall
Papers at our booth at the Fair.

Smith Bros., Volte
Halting* Telephone 2257
Dealers Jn Wool, Oraln, Feed, Flour, Bill, Ltae,
0om.nl ud Goal

�Thursday, March 26, 1936

what
SrC..,

AIM: IMPROVEMENT
OF THE RURAL SCHOOLS

about:

THE HASTINGS BANNER

Supt. of Public Instruction
Would Retain and Im­
prove Rural Schools

HAS BUSY B

THE REPORT TO COMMON
Corned B..1 and Pl.gI.ri.m
Tlie necessity for belter training
COUNCIL BH0W8 66,466
Hollywood, calif.— tn most rural schools is appreciat­
ed by all educators. The question
BOOKS CIRCULATED
The luncheon of our Writ­

is how to bring that to pass with­
out forcing lhe people of rural dis­
tricts to give up their local schools.
There can be no doubt that the
beef and cabbage and plagiar­ pupils in rural districts are entitled
ism charges. This week we had to belter schooling than is given in
with us the leading fiction the average rural district; but that
is difficult, because of lhe number
writer of tbe Pacific alope — Mr. of classes required In an eight­
Daingerfield, the local weather fore­ grade school with pupils of almost
easter.
all the eight grades in the one
room.
Another guest was William A,school
--------- ----------Brady, the grand old man of th&lt;
We are glad lo note that the
American stage, with great teles of
deportment of education, unthe ancient days, der Dr. Eugene Elliott, is giving thte
when, to qualify as matter consideration, with the alm
a trouper, one bad of not destroying the rural schools,
but securing belter training In
to be a pedestrian. them. Hte plan will be lo have work
Before they asked in such schools in a way sponsored
you whether you by the nearest 12 grade school, with
a view to bringing the grade work
in the district school up to the high­
er standard of the 12-grade school.
Dr. Elliott properly takes the
position that there should be no
sure-footed Califor­ forcing the abandonment of rural
schools; but that there should be
nia
beginners
the better work done in them. It is
cross- to be hoped that he may mature
Irvin 8. Cobb
(dans that will have that result.
trudged Into enduring fame! Be­
Take It in the viclnlte of Has­
la sco and Tom Wise and Frank tings. There are several one-room
Bacon and Holbrook Bilan and schools each of which has a small
Dave Warfield and many another. attendance of pupils, with many
Wo also welcomed some new classes required because the pupils
members.
We're very exclusive. are in so many different grades.
There arc groups here that’ll take The alm of some school boards in
In people who even failed to make such districts is not to get the best
teachers but to get the cheapest,
the Book of the Month club. But
which often results in Inferior
to Join up with ns, you must have school work. While the high schools
written something significant — In­ of the county that are not con­
surance or promissory notes or solidated schools would be glad lo
booster slogans. We're angling now extend their educational privileges
for a distinguished new figure In to rural children, and while lhe
lhe field of literature.
Ho does advantages they offer arc superior,
there ought not. in the Judgment
of Mr. Elliott, to be a forced clos­
ing of any rural school. Whatever
te done ought to be so reasonable
NI IS being the third annlver- and fair that It will sell itself to
rary of the New Deal.. I was tlie people directly concerned.
fust thinking that, whether or not
It lived through the early part of
next November. Ito folks could nev­
er reproach themselves that they'd
foiled to give their darling baby­
kins the best nursing money could
buy. Just then who should rush
In but Michael Strogloff, the cour­
ier of (ho czar, shouting that the U. SUBJECT CLEARLY DIS­
8. marines had landed with a con­
CUSSED BY A. L. MILLER
tradiction of the exciting announceAT BROTHERHOOD
.ment made only yesterday by tbe
same fellow who took the message
to Garels lhat time—1
EFFORTS TO CURTAIL
ers* Club, Inc., (Red Inc.) is a
weekly function, with corned

I

■T FREEDOM
HU MEINS

Hold on. I'm getting all twlatlFREEDOM OF PRESS
fied. Wiiat I’m trying to any is
that one day the word for a pal­ Newspapers Forced Federal
pitating planet was Hint Douglas
Government to Remove
Fairbanks. SrM was positively go­
Restrictions of NRA
ing to marry Lady Ashley, where­
as but 21-hours before, he positive­
About 150 members of the Broth­
ly was not going to marry Lady erhood attended the meeting Mon­
I Ashley. Then finally ho did IL
day evening and heard Mr. A. L.
Miller, publisher of lhe Battle
Creek Enquirer News, discuss the
Main Street Ambition
subject "Freedom of the Press.’i He
NE beam Bak Francisco would declared that his topic should not
lure more inhabitants in an ef­ be freedom ot the press. It should
fort, to overtake Loa Angeles. But be the freedom of the Individual
why?
to form and express his convictions.
And why do Americans get drunk
He gave a fine history of the
on population statistics? It's their growth of the freedom of the Indi­
headiest tipple. Every time Uncle vidual to think as he pleased and,
within
reasonable limits, to express
8a in looses lila census figures, some
towns go Into mmirnlng because hte conclusions.
The greatest step in human prog­
ress was when the alphabet was in­
other towns have public ctanclug vented. Tlie next greatest step
In the streets been use a swarm of was when the German. Gutenberg,
new people have moved Id to make Invented printing from movable
traffic congested and living Incon­ type. Thereafter opinions or truths
venient and pleasant neighborhoods could be stated and repeated as de­
sired. by means of the printing
crowded.
Offhand, I think of but one dty press. He told of the development
of the freedom of the press in
whose ruling citizens mnlnly are
England. It was a slow process. At
content with things as they are— first the editor or writer who criti­
tbe lovely and fascinating city of cized the government had hte ears
Charleston. Elsewhere wo appear
to share with tbe red anta the mad Sometimes he lost his life for dar­
passion to lake on additional red ants ing to criticize.
He gave the story of liberty of
until the anthill overflows and all
tbe old resident onto are lost In the press and Ite development In
this country. The English colon­
the shuffle.
ists were strong for It. But when
It came to writing the constitution of
Faminiua Bank Roll,
the United States, that document
HY can't people mind their was silent on that subject. Alexan­
own business? A merchandis­ der Hamilton was opposed to It.
ing expert, who probably waa just
Bitting around the house during the have the constitution adopted, to
cold spell with nothing to do ex­ gain the support of the southern
cept feed tbe stove, made an ex­ states. That would never be given
haustive Inquiry to find out what except by assuring the right of free
speech and a free press. Under
American women carry In their
the presidency of the first Adams
hnntlbaits. tie now report# that, lo
an attempt was made to abridge
addition to gobs of other things In­ tlie liberty of lhe press; but under
cluding lipstick, cigarettes, hair­ Jefferson that was ended.
pins and recipes, the average wom­
In more recent times what was
an's pocketbook contains *6.74 In known as the "Minnesota Gag Law"
cash.
was framed to muzzle the press.
It waa perhaps all right for the That was declared unconstitutional.
gentleman to aatlafy hte morbid Thc NRA. os first enacted would
curiosity. Where he erred was In have bridled the- press But news­
making hte discovery public Just papers forced the government in
consider how busy the boys In con­ Us NRA contracts with newspapers
gress will be thinking up new taxes, to expressly state that they should
when they hear about that much have the liberty guaranteed by the
first amendment lo the constitu­
money still being In circulation.
tion. The Supremo court has set
aside the whole NRA. including the
Politician! Making Claim!
attempt to gag the press. Recent­
S CONGRESS these mad March ly the Supreme Court, in a Louis­
days are being much used for iana case, declared unconstitu­
plain and fancy Claiming.
tional state laws aimed to punish
The llepobllCHM claim the Demo- newspapers that did not support
cratlc party te to blame for the re- Senator Long, just now the ques­
tion Is coming up on the right of
'credit-for the better times now Congress to seize telegrams and
prevalent, the Republican theory letters belonging to individuals.
being that tbe good fairies must This if permitted by the Supreme
Court, would certainly abridge the
bare brought 'em.
The Democrats claim that such liberty of the press.
It was a fine and very Umely talk.
moved in were really Inherited from The speaker made it plain that ev­
ery citizen te Interested tn the
freedom of the press which means
ministration, which, as they seem the freedom of an Individual to
think and lo express his sincere
for bud times anybody ever aaw. convictions.

O

W

I

IRVIN 8. COBB.

BRANCH LIBRARIES
GROW IN FAVOR
Interesting Figures Are Fur­
nished to Common Coun­
cil by the Librarian
Saturday night the annual re­
ports of Miss Jean Barnes, librarian
of the Hastings Public library, and
that of Supt. D. A. VanBusklrk,
Secy.-Tress, of the library board,
were given before the common
council. Also included were the
branch library
reports
of Mrs.
Leona Cleveland for the 1st ward
and Mrs. Amy Bower for the 2nd

The figures will prove Interesting.
Among other things It shows that
the number of books circulated in
Hastings the past year reached the
stupendous total of 64.466, unusual
figures for a dty of this size.
There Is now a total of 14,634
books in the main library, with 3,­
636 borrowers. Nearly a thousand
books were added the past year.
The detailed report follows:
The circulation of books in the
main library from March 1935 to
Mhrch 1938 has been as follows:
March. 1935 , 5.967; April. 5323;
May. 4331; June. 2.607; July. 2.­
368; August. 2314; Sept.. 3308; Oct.
4.980; November. 5.089; Dec.. 3348;
Jan.. 1936. 5.160; Feb. 5,670. Total
circulation in main library. 62.065;
First Ward branch. 5.092; Second
Ward branch. 7309; Total circula­
tion in city. 64.466.
Nino hundred and ninety-three
books were added lo the library,
986 by purchase and 53 by gift,
making a total of. 14.634 books in
the library. Five hundred and five
books were discarded. Fifteen books
and twenty-seven volumes of mag­
azines were rebound. There are 3.­
636 borrowers.
Jean Barnes. Librarian.
Year Ending March 1. 1938.
Balance (Available Genl.
Account * 75735
Available from Impounded
bal. Dec. 1935
153.13

Total
Bal. (still Impounded)
Board of Education .
City of Hastings
Penal Fines
Beer Licenses ............
Women's Club ............
Miscellaneous ..,........

8 910.68
8 153.13
. 1340.00
. 1.000.00
.
162.80
. 1.19850
.
6400
.
92.90

Total Receipts
Expenditures.
Books
"*“
Supplies ....
Binding ....
Magazines ..
Salaries ....
Contingencies

.8133030
15534
5535
,
177.40
, 2358.98
.
8432

*4.82131

Total Expenditures*4.36239
' Available Balance ............
306.09
Impounded Balance ....
153.13

Total „.................................. 8432131
Bal. Natl Bank of Has­
tings
Cks. outstanding ...
23933
Net balance

Through
am“" 01 IT’S TIME
TO CALL
Amy boomu.
, _
On Palm Sunday evening, April |
HALTON ADDED TAXES
Sth. at 7:30 P M. tlie Rev. Milton'
------------Lower Operating Cost And Includes a Bach Choral— m. McGomii will give hte interpre-1 An Expensive Venture If the
ejiiec lecture
irtiurc on the
inc Oberammerirocranuncrtatlve
r . .u
‘‘Everyman’1—Lecture on
----------- .. play, using
.
..
.i
County Goes Into the
Improved Performance Are
gau
Passion
the remark-1
ably effective colored pictures which!
New Features
Oberammergau
Abstract Business
he had made for this purpose. His|
Growing public interest in elec­
Three Lenten contributions that
Barry county voters on April 6th
lecture includes the reading of cer­ will be asked to decide by ballot I
tric refrigeration for the home te will doubtless attract lovers of
compared with the coal
indicated by the unusually largo music and the drama from Hastings tain scenes from the play, and te of ; whether they wlrh thc county to
v nUDUS
c» .business,
............... ,
number of people who have been----------------------------are offered al the---Fountain
--------- ..._____
Street great popular interest.
। engage In ,„
the
Abstract
Admission to all of these produc- I Before
banota'
^favrtr-fnrncasting^their'
raatlrw
ha
I Inta tn
favattending the spring showing of the ' Baptist church in Grand Rapids,
radically Improved 1036 Kelvlnator
On Sunday evening. Mar. 22 at 7:30 tlons will be free, although an op- ' or Of it. t)ley should give ih6 ffiatconsideration and
electric refrigerators which Li being °
'—J—'
‘— portunlty will be given for volun- tcr very
held in the showroom of tlie H. E. will sing lhe famous 'Passion Ac­ tary offerings, out-of-town visitors not form their decisions from starrUmors and reports that have
Smith Hardware, local Kelvlnator cording to Saint Matthew' by John are reminded that the doors will be'
that It will cost all of thaM
closed
promptly
at
7:30
P.
M.
for
no
basis
in
fact.
Sebastian Bach, under lhe direction
dealer.
r u so easy to vote money for doesn't mean that tlie county
New design, improved perform­ of Emory L. Gallup, organist and the Bach 'Passion.' and immediateance and lower operating cost, as choirmaster. The guest soloists for ly following the processional of the the people to pay. That's one of
well as many new features which this occasion will Include Mr. Ray­ 'Everyman' which is played without the reasons why thte country te in1 means. The present Abstract oSm
•the ——
«...— ..it finds itself .j— I will remain and will doubtless gM
have been built Into the 1936 Kel- mond Koch, basso. of Chicago, and interruption.
condition
today.
vlnators, ore factors which have Mr. Karl Wecker. violinist, who te
People vote for thc expenditure of Its share, which will cut down on
aioea in Increasing public enthus­ also Director of the Grand Rapids DOGS ARE PROVING
1sreat iutns without investigating the county's return.
All around and only as a taxpay­
iasm for the new models. Mr. Symphony Orchestra. Accompani­
TO DEER,
ments will be played by Mr. Gallup
, .MENACE....
actions are too often influenced by er. we cannot help but look upon
Smith said.
Deer are being attacked and slain baseless rumors
at the piano and Mr. Harold Tower
I the county's venture Into the Abin
various
parts
of
north
central
—
.
tract
of Trinity community Church at
It' is estimated that it will eoat tract hrtiairiMa
business a,
as most unwtaa
unwise. Yf
If
Michigan by roving bands of dogs.'
the organ.
the people of Barry county at least the people ot Barry county vote fur
In tlie vicinity of Gladwin at *40.000 to put in a set of Abstract It, we are sure that they will live to
On Sunday. March 29th, at 4
o'clock In the afternoon, lhe young least 15 deer have been killed by books. Go to the Abstract office, or tee the day that they will deeply
people of Fountain street will pre­ dogs during the past several weeks the Register of Deeds office, and I regret their action. The good Lord
sent their version of 'Everyman' tlie It is estimated that at least a dozen
heroic religious drama of lhe XVth deer have been killed by dogs in the large ledgers will have to be most; burdened with taxes now. Why add
Century, an annual event of state­ vicinity of Alpena.
carefully written and compared I *40.000 or more? Il's Ume to call a
SUPREME COURT FAVORS wide interest. The drama, which
Near Evart, five deer were found before the county can even make halt on added taxes, we hope that
employs about thirty young people that had been killed by dogs and a start. „...
Do not get the idea lhat
SET-UP FOR THAT
In Its cast, is played on thc broad several other instances of dogs at- Utts can be done without a heavy county will Investigate this matter
PURPOSE
steps of the church auditorium, and tacking deer have been reported, cost, because it cannot.
carefully before they add more to
te designed to harmonize with lhe Kidder
______ ____
has asked dog owners
...
to '______
The__________
writer te__________
Interested___
in __
the
impressive setting and glorious keep their animate lied.Deep snow &lt; Abstract business in no way. shape fiuenced by wild stories and rumors
STEPS FOR NECESSARY
windows. The ,1936 production will j has Impeded the deer and
thus ( or manner. However hte father, lhe
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS oresent much the same cast that made them morevulnerablelo al- i late David R. cook, was a partner which are false and have no basis
appeared last spring, and will tacks by dogs.
1 in the business for many years. in fad.

GROWING INTEREST
LENTEN PROGRAM OF
IN KELVINATORS'
FOUNTAIN ST. CHURCH

13316422

* 306.09

Report of Second Ward Branch
Library, March 1935 to March 1936.
The circulation totaled 7309.
varying from the high peak in
March of 1,066 to 347 in July. No. of
books at beginning of year 1,123;
No. of books discard*?. 63; No. of
books added (permanent). 136; No.
of books added (exchange). 31; To­
tal number of books (permanent).

A

miss

NEW LAW DOOMS
SHYSTER LAWYER

Any Ono Can Make Com­
plaint—It Will Oct Prompt
,
Attention

Thf last legislature made it pos­
sibly. in fact necessary, for the law­
yers of this state to set up the nec­
essary machinery by means of
which shyster attorneys could be
disbarred where their practice is
harmful to the public and to their
clients. Last week lhe state Su­
preme Court approved the machin­
ery which
the newly-integrated
state bar will use lo fight tlie shy­
ster attorney.
Under Its provisions the bar will
choose a board ot 17 commission­
ers. one from each congressional
district. The first election, at which
approximately
one-third of the
commissioners will be replaced,
will be held thte summer. Ballots
will be mailed to all members of the
bar in June. They must be re­
turned to Robert P. Hudson, presi­
dent of Die State Bar Association
by July 1. and the new commission­
ers will take office November 1.
Under ^thc1. rules of procedure any
person may enter a complaint
against tin attorney lo any member
of the bar. That member must
carry that complaint to the local
grievance committee, which may
institute Investigations of com­
plaint. take testimony, etc. Thte first
investigation te not to be made pub­
lic.
When thc grievance committee
finds justification for a complaint It
will hold a formal hearing, giving
the accused attorney an opportunity
to answer charges. It then petitions
the local circuit court, directing the
offending bar member to show
cause why he should not be dis­
barred. The accused attorney must
file an answer to the petition five
days before the hearing on the
court order. All formal grievance­
committee and court hearings will
be public.
The circuit court then asks the
state presiding judge to name three
Judges to hear the testimony on
lhe charge In open court. If the de­
fending attorney te found guilty of
a breach of ethics, the court hear­
ing the case may reprimand him
privately or publicly, or ma# sus­
pend him temporarily or perma­
nently from the practice of tew in
Michigan. The defendant attorney
has the right of appeal to the Blate
Supreme Court from the decisions
of the local court. The decision of
the Supreme Court is final.
Mr. Hudson, president of the
State Bar Association said. "Mich­
igan has today, for the first time,
assurance of swift justice for
shyster attorneys who prey on
unsuspicious clients or resort to
trickery." Tlie new rule should be
able to give protection to the public
as well as to the attorney, whom
rumor charges with unethical prac­
tice. who desire# to prove himself
Innocent thereof.

Wc have regular subscriptions for
the "American.'' “Good House­
keeping" and "Popular Mechanics,"
and lhe W. C. T. U. gives us the
"Young Crusader." We have been
given also 13 books and 161 maga­
zines by various friends.
Fifty new borrowers hove been
added to the list thte year. I have
cleaned 281 books, mended 376 and
re-enforced 246 thte year. A new
FRIGHTFULLY EXPENSIVE.
clock for the library was purchased
Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, chief of the
by fine money. We are glad to have
Federal "G" men. fixed this coun­
our room re-decorated.
try's crime bill at 815300.000.000 a
’
Mrs. Amy I. Bower. Lib.
year, or a levy of 8120 on every
Report of First Ward Branch
citizen. Mr. Hoover's statement
From March 1935 to March 1936. was made at a conference of
Report shows 5,092 books cir­ women's clubs in the dty of New
culated with the high peak of 621 in York, where the theme for discus­
Marcli to the minimum of 218 in sion was "Crime and Youth." Here
October.
are some statements made by Mr.
There are 534 adult books and 296 Hoover: "Take the shackles off the
juvenile In the library. Eighty-sev­ honest, policeman and put them
en have been added thte year. Thlr- where they belong—on the wrists
of crooks." He declared that “the
cards. We take five magazines. phalanx of office seekers, who bld
"Good Housekeeping." "Woman's
—
' for the vote of the criminal ele­
Home
Oompanion."
--------------------------"McCall’s," ment. and criminal lawyers are
"American." "Popular Science." and frustrating the efforts to have an
the "Saturday Evening Post" and honest enforcement of the laws of
"Cosmopolitan" are donated. We this country."
MT. Hoover estimated that there
age attendance of 30 to 35 daily. are three million members of the
The library la usually open 9 hours underworld who exact a toll which,
a week, but during February and in two years, could wipe off the na­
March It is open 13 1-2 hours a tional debt. According to hte opin­
ion the main reasons far such a
bunch of criminate are tricky,
Leona Cleveland. Lib.
criminal lawyers, and tricky poli­
Expenditures for the two Branches
ticians. it would seem as If the

First Ward:—
1U responsibilities Id this matter or
Librarian. 817438; Books, 812939;
Supplies, 18.84; Magazines, »10.85;
Total, (32436.
Woodrow Wilion Librsry
Second Ward:
The Woodrow Wilson memorial
Librarian, *17438; Books, 813431; library, formerly the League of
Supplies, 114.46; Magazines. W.75; Nations* association library, was
Total, 1332.10.
reorganized in May, 1920, and is
boused Id tbe Woodrow Wilson
If you
foundation, 8 West Fortieth street.
New York dty.
you have only five minutes to wait.

To Whom This Advertisement May Concern

DECORATION DAY
ONLY 2Vi MONTHS AWAY

MONUMENTS

MARKERS

BEST OF MATERIALS, lhe BEST WORKMANSHIP, at Um

lec—Still Going Strang.

Appointments Solid ted—No Obligation to Bay

HASTINGS MONUMENT WORKS
IRONSIDE BROS.. Proprs.

Bun®’'

Lf. coring
Th*8 2?

„
___ o, ar"/

too'

ne'0005

Com6

Q,C «'P°S’’'° e.w'e'

Hastings City Ban
TELEPHONE 2103

♦

HASTINGS

MICHI

�period without flight usually loads
lo heavy winter loss. At the close
of the season a heavy moisture
content was evident in lhe stored
honey which the bees have been us­
ing for winter feeding and this also
Is expected to show up this spring
In weaker colonies.
Package bees are bring sold this

HEED THREE AIDS

White and

plug up thfl openings of a hive as
B«ekstp«rs Advised to Look soon as it Is proved beyond doubt
lhat a colony has died, plan and
to Hives, Build Windbreak! build wind protection In spring to
aid bees in their flights, and place
—Buy Packafea Now
orders now for package bees that1
Two hundred thousand colonies
of bees in Michigan arc. about strengthening colonies, or for re-i -------pound
pad
J -^ckage
with queen, plus ex­
—. —
larges. according to Profes­
press
chan
placements or additions to the 1 p.
sor Kelty. Some beekeepers operatnumber ot colonies.
keepers to make their
1
ing
as
many
as
1.200
colonies
Bees have been through a severe 1
w — ■—450
— to
--­
winter. Reporu from over the state
th»u ,hOney
pointed out by Prof. R. H. Kelly,
"" p"ck*»;
extension specialist In apiculture indie.u IM&gt; In nunl the lul '««&gt;&gt;
Ml m
in UH was arouna
.round nov.
Ko., 10 “"*'•'&gt;&gt; ■&gt;»««• ----tor
w Michigan
Micmgan State College
c urge at‘ East
— i nigni
d...
thM. lau
.. . fllghtJ
n£)
...... were
...__ .... _ .io
j bees will
will start nfT
off a• rolonv
cotony with
with aa
To protect their Investment of | until Feb 24 and 25. Such a long.
^nt o?? that five
-.... . ........................................................................................................................

HIGH in CREAM
CONTENT! Raw X Ql
or Pasteurired—

There's A DifFe renceI
Two glosses of milk look alike . . . but there
is a difference if one of them is Highlands
Dairy Grade A Milk.

This milk is one of the

highest grades produced.
in the milk itself.

Subjact Matter Deala With
Distribution Of Income

And Bconomioa

three-year study by the Brookings
Institution of the distribution of
income In relation to economic
progress. Waller Llppmann saya
that it U "incomparably lhe most
useful economic study made In
America during the depression. It
I may be fairly said that no one is
qualified to discuss contemporary
) pounds, or 25.000 bees, makes a
affairs who has not mastered the
stronger colony.
analysis, the argument and the
conclusion."
BARRYVILI.E.
j The Aral book. “America's Caj Last Week's Letter.
&gt; parity To Produce*' examines with
. The L A. S. will be held at thc
I Impartiality the charge that most
home of Mr. and Mrs. Heber FMof the nation's economic woes are
I tcr Friday. March 20th. Everyone
, due to an excess of plant capacity,
is cordially Invited.
। piled up during the prosperous
I Mrs Burr Faasett and two chll1 years of the 1925-1929 period.
dren. Mrs. e*U Day. Mrs. Pearl
i Tn the second volume. America's
1 Foster and Mrs Ethel Green spent
‘Capacity To Consume." thc flow of
1 Thursday with Mrs. McKeown in
। income arising out of productive
Quimby and spent the time In
operations and the extent of ecoj quilting
1 nomle progress In this country
Mr. and Mrs. .Ralph DeVine and
, from 1000 to 1929 are carefully
Mr and Mrs. Nelson Brumm and
' analyzed. The authors show how
' little Annella attended a Farm
; thc national income Is divided
1 Bureau
meeting
In Woodland |
; among the several groups In soThursday.
jriety. the character of the conse­
A company of friends and neigh­
quent expenditures made by fam­
. bors surprised Mr. and Mrs Herbie
ilies at thc various Income levels;
। Wilcox Saturday evening and re- I
and lhe bearing of income distribu­
; minded them it was their wedding ।
tion upon Its allocation between
Thia
evening
costume
—
from
tbs
' anniversary.
Games were played
spending
and saving.
personal wardrobe of Mary Ellis,
: and a delicious supper was served.
Hie third book, "The Formation
brunet tnovlo actress — empha­
• A fine time was enjoyed by those
of Capital" analyzes the process of
sizes crispness of fabric. Worthy
present.
converting
money savings Into
ot nottre are the gown's white
Little Norman McIntyre spent
actual capital equipment and dis­
and silver color combination,
part of last week with his grand­
closes the conditions essential to
tallness of sleeves, and width of
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Merritt
a rapid growth of capital. The con­
lapels.
Meade.
clusions reached are fundamentally
The Missionary society will be
at variance with traditional con­
held Wednesday at the home of
cepts. Some of thc questions dbiIf
the
AAA
is
declared
unconsti
­
Mrs. Rhoda Lathrop.
cussed
and answered In this volume
tutional. then a fanner can't make
I
are
: where do the huge outlays of
A flsh never gets caught by keep­ money out of cotton and hogs ex- ;| the federal government at lhe
cept by raising some.
ing his mouth shut.
I present time come from? Does expanslon In the capital goods Indus­
tries bring us out of the depression?
Are we suffering from "over-savi Ing?"
The fourth volume draws togeth­
er the lines of analysis developed
In the three underlying studies into
a positive statement of national
economic policy designed to bring
about a better distribution of the
national Income and hence a more
rapid and steadily maintained rate !
of economic progress. It discloses
the interaction ot taxes, wages,
profits, and prices, and the possi­
bilities and limitations of these sev­
eral methods of readjustment.

KY. LUMP and EGG
AUXIER EGG
SOLVAY COKE

energy-building vitomigs. TRY HIGHLANDS
GRADE A . . . you’ll enjoy its sweet, refresh­
ing flavor.

Produced pure ond delivered pure . . . EVERY

On Hand Now

MORNING.

HIGHLANDS dairy

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

Phone 2651

Phone 2515

Hastings

LOWER

Frank Sage

Ill Six Years, Spokane Man Becomes
America’s Best Amateur Gardener

The Hastings Public library haa
recently purchased fbur valuable

POCAHONTAS

The difference is

Each glassful contains

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

FOUR INTERESTING
*
BOOKS PURCHASED

Hastings

Corn has groat powers of adapta­
bility. When the white man entered
the North American plains he found
the Indians growing corn from
Mexico tn Manitoba. The work of
the Indian was continued and the
boundaries of crop production ex­
tended beyond nil expectations.

A NERVOUS breakdown has
** made John Kakakes of Spo­
kane. Wash., the best amateur
gardener In America.
An Immigrant from Greece,
where he was a vlneyardisL Re­
takes bad lung been Interested lb
gardening. Through the years ha
studied plants, and “pottered" In
bls own tiny garden for recreatlon and sheer joy of the work.
Then six years ago ho suffered
a collapse. Physicians said ha
must rest a long, long time. So
fohn did rest and while he
rested he began to Improve hts
garden In five years he had de­
veloped It Into a thing of beauty,
eligible for lhe National Yard and
Garden contest
Now Kakakes' garden has been
unanimously awarded Bret place
In competition with gardens from
roast to coast.
“How did you do it?" Inquired
tbe judges.
"The family helped me all the
time.” replied the master gar­
dener. “I was just what you call
the designer."
Rut tbe Kakakes family will
tell you that the "designer" ac­
tually did most of the work.
'pHE Kakakes garden Is an ex­
* ample of what can be done
through careful planting and con­
tinual care.

Shrubbery with branching foli­
age and email pine trees make an
effective background for flowers
ot all types One uL the features
ot the garden is an Irregularly
shaped Illy pool surrounded on
three sides by moss-covered rocks
and foliage.
•
Kakakea* home Is situated tn a
new residential section I'A miles
southeast ot Spokane's business
district
With the awarding ot flnfl

place to Kakakes. the National
Yard and Garden contest judges
named winners In class two and
class three competition.
The flrat place In class two,
where hiring of aotno manual
labor Is permitted, went to
Mr. and Mra. Kermode Gill ot
Cleveland Heights, Cleveland. 0.
The best garden In class three,
tbe division In which expert ekill
le employed, was that ot Miss
Thomaasella Graham ot Blerra
Madre, Calif.

WAN T TO BUY OR SELL? TRY OtJR WANT COLUMN

SALE OF LUIMBER »
Smpurve
NOW/

THE HOME LUMBER COMPANY
Will Sell Anything In The Yard Or Store

At A Discount of

|

For Cash With Order

All Goods To Be Delivered Within 30 Days

Make out a list of what you are going to need, bring to our office on either of the
.

above dates and Save Real Money on your Lumber, Building Hardware,
Paints, Millwork, Cement, and all Building Materials.

AMZ

SE
-—t-t

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. MARCH 2C, 19M
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I I their farm home at Wbod land; wired Thursday and Friday evenings of
NASHVILLE.
MARTIN CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Webb and son
have moved to Lansing.
.
this week al I. O. O. F. hall. The Last Week's Utter.
:for electricity tail
7*.
Last Wtek’s Leiter.
Mr. and Mra. Arlle Reed were
Mrs. E. A- Hannemsn spent Wed­
a. Thomas left Tuesday mom- cast of characters is u follows:
Remember there will be Sunday
Lon Hoeker, Sjiooky Tavern own­ nesday with relatives in Grand called to Lakeview last week by the school next Sunday al 10:30 o'clock,
death of Mrs. Reed's father.
" followed by the preaching service.
er — Lawrence Barcroft; Ghost
1 rI,n
lwna °°
ln U1
“e scrvicn,
Moving seems lo be the thing Just tn^n’ra'^rt1
Plan 10
to “attend
both
these
services,
church arc preparing a very beau­ Kathryn flkeoch; Lucy Hacker. now. 8. E. Powers into live former
Nelson Eddy anneert. .
. you wly receive from this time
tiful Founders Day Service which spirltusiUt medium—Eleanor Thal- Arthur Appelman house; Earl Hoff­ the
Mrs. Almon Sheldon and daugh- y
God's house
"
“
cs
Wingate,
resourceful
colman
and
family
Into
the
Munro
they plan to give Sunday evening
Pearl 8. Buck—The Exite.
Mta. Al
Al Newman
Newmanof
ofKalamazoo
Kalamazooi
^Ooa^ notue^
bouse Mr and Mrs Cecile Barrett 1
Mrs.
rl—Iris WJytand; Horabel intaM
Oeo. Harmon Ooxe—Murder .With at 7:30. The program. In charge of
“ Lane's housed Mriand
spending lhe week with Mr. and
her younger sister—Wilma
Mrs. L B. Lester, will consist of
pictures.
Mra. Orsbome and family into the Mrs. Ralph Wetherbee. Mr. New-1
Kathleen
Norris-Secret
Mar­ special music, solos, short talks, and Wieland; Bedells, the girls' colored Cruso house and Mrs. Gladys Mead I ’Pan ,^ho
cmP^YCd
in
Grand
stereopticon views. Everyone is cor­ mammy—Anna Stowe; Ralph can­
riage.
and family of Detroit Into the Floyd | R“Plds spent Sunday here.
I
Jackson Gregory—Mountain Men. dially Invited to thte special service. ning, a senior in love with Joyce«...
Mr. and Mrs. Hcnrv
Henry Svwerda
Sywerda and
Mrs. H M. Boughner and sister. Vernon Newton; Terry Tanner, a Everts house, vacated by the OrsClarence B. Ke Hand—Roxana.
iXjrncs
, daughter ot Grand Rapids spent
Francis Seeding—Eight Crooked Mrs. Charles Nell of Saginaw were junior In the.same fix—J^ax Whit­ bomes.
me wcca enci wnn the
me latter's
laiier a par-1
pur- i
The Phltalhea Class met Wednes- jwith
Grand Raplda visitors last week ney; Willie Worgle. a stuttering day
Trenches.
evening In their class room 1 "
nU Mr
"‘"‘
1
enu.
Mr. and Mrs. Gid n
Gage.
Freshmen, afraid of ghosts—Wil­
- Agnes Sligh Turnbull—The Roll- Wednesday
\Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mapes have I
An Easter program te being pre­ liam Feitzer; Blacklc Simms. Par- with MiM Carrie Caley. Mrs. Helen
of ;
Tina Snow 'in moved lo their farm southeast of
Butler and Mrs. "
Elizabeth Oorbelt—Mount Royal. pared by the pupils ot the U. B. one's farmer henchman—Khnneth
town.
"The
■
charge.
'
Doyle;
Farone.
known
as
Richard Btaker—Here Lies a Sunday School to be given Easter
Council meeting was held Mon- |
I Fred G. Baker has rented thc
Sunday rooming.
1Creeper"—Malcolm Boughner.
Most Beautiful Lady.
I Kocher building and moved his day night with the new president. |
Mr. and Mra. Leo Rose have pur­
Richard Sherman—To Mary With
L. O- Cole in charge. No appoint­
PLEASANT VALLEY.
stock of goods into same.
chased lhe house in thc northeast
Love.
| Funeral services
for
Curtis ments or committees weri named. .
Barbara W&gt;bb—Coming Round part of town known as the Milo Last Week s Letter.
. Marinin who
wno passed
possca away
away al
hv hte
ma . ¥r- ,n? Mrs. Hayden Nye are
Bunn house and will occupy same
the Mountain.
Norma and Gordon Yoder Of,i Marshall
home in Maple Grove on Tuesday 1 both °n the Bain. Mr. Nye Is
SOUS’
nW.. m .
"I
Hoffman Birney—Eagle in the in the near future.
. ..
i arnilnrt In a
rhalr
Mr.
and
Mrs.
BenJ.
P.
Hennlnk
of
with
their
aunt.
Mra.
Bnery
Kimej
North
Manic
Grove
church
I T*se Republican caucus met Sal- i
Bun.
Charlotte
called
at
lhe
home
of
Rev.
(
Helen Topping MUler—Whisper­
and family. The Kime s took them
uc«-d bv Rev Rhoades with I urday afternoon and tlie following
Wheeler
Sunday
evening
on
their
'
home on Sunday and spent the day . conducted by Rev. Rhcaaw witn 1------&gt;
---------- ing River.
I burial in
In the mausoleum
mausoleum in
In NasliNaah- were nominated: Supervisor—Er­
jjaroid Yoder's
way to Grand Rapids.
E. M. Delafield—Faster, Faster.
nest Smith of coats Grove: Clerk­
' viile.
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Richardson
Phyllis--------Bentley—“
Freedom.
‘
~
FareMr. and Mrs. Earl Curttes and I Mr. and
gna Mrs. Daniel Oarllnger Henry Remington; Treasurer—Mrs.
are moving this week onto the
well.
baby
of
Hsstlngs
spent
Sunday
wlth
•
rf
,
turne
d
hom&gt;!
MO
nday
night
after
Mildred
Mater;
Board
of review.
Norma Patterson—Drums of the Jacob Wolfe farm Just north of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. returned home’ Mondav niaht after Orr Fisher.
spending the winter in Florida.
town which is being vacated by
Night
H.mbUn and
.»d family.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wash have
Hamblin
Sherman Lykins cut his hand
Ernest Haycox—The silver Des- Clarence Van Patten and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Taylor spent quite badly Wednesday night. It be- bought the H. A. Offley place. Mrs.
Continuing the series of pre-Easl%rt.
a registered nurse will open
to I-*!.
take IHHI
him w
to wtc
the Wash
V—XI y IU
---er sermons on the subject of “The Frlday P. M. with their daughter, |ng necessary
Non-Fiction.
rho had to take several 1M ^ospItM.
Vash Young—Be Kind to Your­ Alluring Chrtet." Miss Wheelers Mra. Lucille Rlltenger and family, doctor, who
Mr. -------------and Mra.—
Coy
Brumm -----and,
Of
Lowell.
| stitches.
t| —
- -------------message next Sunday morning will
self.
Some
of
the
young
people
of
the
|
Mrs.
Clarence
Mater
was
in
Has^
r
;,?
nd
_
Mr
?
’
^2?**
V
,
arncy
were
ln
Daniel Frohman—Daniel Froh- be on. "The Loyal Chrtet."
-w
-Battle
spent Saturday in Charlotte : Ungs Wednesday.
Battle Creek
Creek Saturday.
Saturday,
The Freeport-Women's club held church
man Presents,
- IJNUI
The Women's Literary club met ।
Florence A. Cowles—1001 'Sand­ a silver tea’at the home of their attending the Missionary meeting
HOW TO SAVE FUEL COST.
president, Mrs. Tabberer. on Tues­ held at lhe Charlotte U. B. church, j Wednesday afternoon at the library
' wiches.
If the weather prophet* are corA good crowd attended the W. M.1 ‘
—
——
for Irteh Day. *'
Music
chairman
McKinney and Anderson—Dis­ day afternoon, St. Patrick's day.
Mrs. Milo Young. Life of John Mc­ red. lhe winter of 1935-1936 will
Fire, thought to have started in
covering Music.
not be the last of the severe ones
lhe
wiring
of
a
Delco
system,
total
­
Cormick
and
Irish
songs
he
has
day.
The
next
meeting
will
be
held
A. O. Halllne, ed.—American
Those who make a study ot such
made
famous.
Five
minute
papers:
with
Mrs.
Don
Slowlns
of
South
ly
destroyed
lhe
Will
’
Fox
home
Plays.
matters claim that we have some
Van H. Cartmell—Handbook for about three miles northwest of town Boston, April 12. Everyone Invited. Ireland. Where and What? Mrs. winters Just ahead of us that will
early Tuesday morning..Mrs. Pox Is
Vaughn and Dale Geiger called Gall Lykins; Present Day Govern­
the Amateur Actor.
seriously ill in a hospital in Toledo. on their grandmother. Mrs. Sarah ment. Mrs. Von Fumiss; Irish Story equal the present one in chill and
Jean Barnes. Librarian.
snow.
Ohio, and Mr. Pox was alone and Strong ot East Campbell, Sunday —Mrs. coy Brumm; Travelogue,
Householders may therefore be
FREEPORT.
made, a valiant effort to put it out afternoon. Dale, who has been at­ Chief Points of Interest—Mrs. H. D.
Last Week's Letter.
but It continued to spread so he tending the Coyne school in Chica­ Wiring. Hostess—Mrs. Elsie Fur- Interested hi some tests that have!
been made at the University of
Kenneth Smelker has purchased summoned neighbors, and the local go, Is home for the summer.
Mrs. Sam Marshall has returned Illinois which demonstrate the sav- .
thc Jacob Geiger farm, located a fire truck was called. However, it
Francis Scott, who works In Grand
the home from Battle Creek, where she ing which good storm windows will
mile west of town on the county had gained such headway and Rapids, spent Sunday with
line. David Lalone and family who spread to rapidly that there was no home folks, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer wis called by the illness of her make in the item of fuel. According
| brother.
to their report, thc saving will reach ,
have been living there, expect to chance to save the house and but Scott.
Mr. and Mrs. J. FBrake spent j Mr. and Mrs. jack Elliston have 25 per cent.
move this week and Clarence Van a few pieces of furniture and bed­
Patten and family will move onto ding. The outbuildings were saved. Sunday with their brother-in-law. moved onto the Charles Mason
I farm In Maple Grove Center.
Isaac Amon of Caledonia.
the farm for the summer.
Howard Coleman and wife. Mra. | Clark Titmarsh .has returned
Mn. P. T. Thomas is visiting her sured. He has the sympathy of the
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and entire community In ills double Anna Coleman and Mrs. Vera Pee­ from Allentown. Pa.. where he spent
bles of Grand Rpakte spent Friday I tlie winter with his daughter and
Mrs. J. Helntzleman ot Lake Odessa misfortune.
The senior class play. "Spooky at the homes of Elmer Scott and , husband. Mr. and Mrs. Walter
while Mr. Thomas Is away on busi­
Schledt.
Tavern” will be presented on Garfield Stater.
ness.
Rev. Fem Wheeler and niece. MUs
Ruth Wheeler called on the Rev.
Paul Rees at lhe Leighton Evan­
gelical parsonage Saturday after­
noon and later were Grand Rapids
visitors.
Miss Donna Moore was home from
Jackson over the week end.
There are rumors of several other
property deaU that are about to be
made. Moving day U Just ahead.

New Books In
1 r.
Public Library'.Smu. ‘“ ar,UM

S.

n'»a

mJ?,.

•"&gt;

“• h,lp

and Mra. Orr Fisher's.

weather and other things not

»

storm to attend left with good f
stomachs, and would not want

Keeping Close Watch to
Protect Your Interests

N

N

\Mien
you travel in a train your personal

safety is in the hands of thc en­

gineer. The air-brakes and thc cross­
ing signals won't help if the engineer

Keeping cloae watch of everything

in a bank, protects your interests in
the same way. Strong vaults, strict
supervision, good banking laws, all

help. But nothing can take the place
of wide-awake attention to everything

that affects your interests.
We appreciate your confidence in us,

and we are trying to be worthy of it.

N
K OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

(te.

to
of
a.

[N

See the New FORD V-8

tended the midyear council held at
lhe Charlotte U. B. church last
week Friday and Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Waldring ot
Holland and 8- R Ware of So. Bos­
ton were Sunday callers at the A.
B. Fish home.
Mrs. Mary Henney has returned
to her home here after spending
several week.? in Hastings with her
son-ln-taw and daughter. Mr. end
Mrs. Andrew Roush.
The prayer meeting of the U. B.
church Is lo be-held at tlie home of
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Olthouse in So.
Bowne Thursday evening of this

and the LINCOLN ZEPHYR!

Mr. and Mra. Arthur Coleman
nnd daughter of Hastings were
Sunday guests of Mrs. colemah'a
sister, Mra. John Fox and husband.
Thc F. F. F. gatherings at the M.
E. church each Tuesday evening arc
. proving very popular. There was a
fine attendance last week. The
young people enlivened the supper
hour with some peppy and humor­
ous songs and later sang two spe­
cial numbers. MUs Ruth Wheeler
and Kenneth Smelker also sang a
duel. Rev. Leon Manning of Lake
Odessa M. E. church waa the
. speaker of the evening and gave a
splendid address.
The meeting
next Tuesday evening will be a lit­
tle different than the others have
been. The usual potluck supper will

$48.00 In Cash!
A complete line of-Ford V4J’s will be on display in lhe Showroom,
with the EINCOLN ZEPHYR.

Chevrolet's

SPECIAL
SPECIALS:—

Tune motor

Every test proves it’s more

• Adjust brakes

economical

Every Chevrolet owner knows it’s more

Alemite and change oil

Crease and adjust front
wheels

Fill shock absorbers

Clean and adjust generator

Check fan belt

Mr. and Mrs. F. Q. Hynes had

MEN NEEDED
For Positions In

Clean the Sledge Out of Your
Motor Before It's Too Late I

Tighten all. hose connec­
tions

We have recently Installed an In­
ternal Mblor Cleaner ... the only
machine that thoroughly cleans mo­
tors INBIDE. This remarkable ma-

Check transmission
differential

NEW INDUSTRY

Tbe Chevrolet engine is the most eco­
nomical automobile engine produced
today, because (1) it is a nx-cylindcr
engine, ami (2) it is a tu/ic-in-hcud sixcylinder engine. »'
.

economical

And every

person will readily understand
these simple A-B-C reasons

and

why it is more economical

Check battery
Check tires

We want to hear from men whom
we can prepare for positions that

CHEVROLET

All the above work $0.25
Model A only—
te

are one of the largest organizations ot
our kind in the country. Tlie men we
select will be given an opportunity
to train In their spare time to qual­
ify as Service and Installation Ex­
perts in Air Conditioning and Elec­
tric Refrigeration. The field Is new
and rapidly growing. The work Is
Interesting.
Big opportunity for
rapid advancement. No experience
needed, but prefer men mechanical­
ly inclined. Send coupon or write
letter.

On V-8, $3.50
The job ia done while you wait—
YOU CAN WATCH THE DIRT
COME OUT. and you’ll be amazed
at thg amount of dirt It gets out
of your motor. Come In and tee It
operate.

This offer good only March
20 to April 20, 1936

HASTINGS, MICH.

Occupation

cylinders are the most economical com­
bination used in modern automobiles.

Parts, Oil and Crease extra.

NEW PERFECTED HYDRAULIC BRAKES . . . IMPROVED GLIDINC KNEE-ACTION RIDE* .
SHOCKPROOF STEERING* ... GENUINE FISUER NO DRAFT VENTILATION ... SOLID STEEL
one-piece. TURRET TOP BODIES . . . HIGH-COMPRES­
SION VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE ... 6% NEW MONEY- $ AQ C
^*.*&gt;**/, {*■*»&lt;■
SAVING G.M.A.C. TIME PAYMENT PLAN. Compare
£

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO

Utilities Engineering Institute
4M N. Wells St, Chicago, III
kf.:..

high-compression valve-in-head engine

Get your car tuned up for
summer driving by taking ad­
vantage of the following

to follow will be given in the church
auditorium. BenJ. p. Hennlnk of
Charlotte will be the out-of-town
"treat” for lhat night Mr. Hennlnk
is State Director of the Young
People's Department of the Farm
Bureau and for years has been a
worker with young people. He Is al­
so a tenor soloist and will entertain
with vocal numbers. Everyone Is In­
vited to this evening's fellowship.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Lepard of near
Lake Odessa visited at the P. A
Thomas home Bunday.
We are Infonned that Charles
Price has purchased the building
just west of the bakery and has be­
gun remodeling it to make into a
modern service garage. This build­
ing has been vacant for several

'

&gt;-

While you are in town for the Hastings Commercial Club Fair stop
in at the Universal Garage and register your name and address and
participate in the drawings for the three CASH PRIZES that will be
given away Twice Every Day during the four days of lhe Fair. Draw­
ings will take place at 5 and 9 P. M. One registration gives you
twenty-four chances to win one of these prizes.

nirnt*. Chevrolet Motor Company, Detroit, Michigan.

PHONE 2121

R. K. HURD R D.CADWALLADER.U

Name
Address
State.

HASTINGS, MICH-

PHONE 2680

THE SERVICE CARA

�HASTING*, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH
birthday of their uncle. Frank Hyde.
A bountiful dinner was served and
good time enjoyed by all. We
- may live to celebrate seve birthday dinners.
Mr. and Mm Clifford Cottrill and

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

BOBINUDB PARK.

pounds was caught tills winter In
Torch lake. It measured 55 Inches
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Nas- In length. 26 1-3 inches in •girth.
siff of Grand Rapids, were Sunday
with bar brother, Glenn Asplnail guests of Mr. and Mrs John Kollar.
One hundred four men took the
W«r am/Mrs. Wallace Bolden of
William Ingram of Hastings waa examination for thc position Of
conservation officers In Jackson
county.
land Saturday.
Julian Potts and family, John
Mrs. O. Haynes.
Mr. and Mrs. Orin Haynes and Kollar and wife, Roy McCaul and
Robert were at Claud Hoffman's of wife attended a surprise party at start toward setting a new record
East Dowling last Sunday at whose thc home of Levi Miller of Leighton In the number of oil drilling per­
mits issued In Michigan. State pe­
home about fifty relatives and Friday night.
troleum geologists state that 73 per­
mits to drill for oil or gas were is­
sued in January and 19 in Feb­
ruary.
Last week's Letter.

LOCUST PEST IS EX­
PECTED THIS YEAR
Certain

OomiuuniUeg

a Maytag an unusually

made

ooasUtute tbe chief injury of this

Many formers have needlessly be­
come alarmed over reports that the
17-year locust is expected to hop
again in Michigan this year, ac­
wlll be rotting on the ground. The
cording to Ray Hutson, state en­ eggs are snugly tucked away in
tomologist
Hutson said there probably will
will begin to hatch and tbe tiny
communities

In

lower

Michigan

tested in the past will be bothered

And
some communities not.
known to have bee* infested pre­
viously may have outbreaks, Hutson
warned.
The locust does most of its dam­
EUFRY WASHDAY IS //
The removal of 150 deer from tlie
age to trees in lhe egg-laying stage,
Portage creek swamp in Crawford lhe entomologist explained. It will
refuge to the North Manistee and
begin to emerge from lhe soil in
the Butterfield swamp is underway.
The deer are caught, tagged and
later, depending on weather con­
moved in crates placed on trucks.
dition., the entire brood will be out.
Entomologist* report there te lit­
A red fox leaves a very strong tle that farmers and fruit growscent. Veteran fox hunters declare
i they can smell a fox track under
I favorable conditions because of thc
One entomologist has offered the
musky odor left by lhe fox In its following description of the emer­
tracks.
gence and development of the lo­
cust;
I People of Michigan as well as
"Early in May the locust larvae
non-resident visitors probably will will prepare to come out as adults
I have their first opportunity by ear­ Throughout the infested area the
ly summer to enjoy an auto tom­ nymphs will begin lo tunnel to the
in the Porcupine mountain region. surface ot the ground. By the end
This well-known wilderness area in of May or thc first week of June,
the western end of the Upper Pen­
insula is rapidly being made accas"The nymphs crawl out of the
| slble by the construction of a state ground during tlie twilight hours
road from Sliver City, in Ontonai and at night they Immediately seek
gon Co., west. Heretofore the are* some support and crawl up tree
with ite lofty hills and scenic iake^ trunks, bushes, weeds, poles, stumps
has been known chiefly from ac­ and anything handy. Here they
counts of campers and hikers who attach firmly with their feet. In
have been hardy enough to penetrate a short lime, thc skin back of the
It afoot. This region has great rec­ head splits and within an hour the
reational and scenic value; a 400- adult appears, a ghost-like, whitish
foot right of way has been secured spectre clinging to its castoff cloth­
wherever possible. It is expected ing. when they are abundant,
that the road as far as the Lake of whole trees may be thickly covered
the Clouds may be opened by the and In tbe moonlight appear to be
:
first of August, perhaps earlier. full of white blossoms. By mid­
/visit the
J Construction of a scenic "loop” night all will have transformed and
AG DEALER
drive around the lake te under oon within the next at hours the gaily„
I
sideration
by Ontonagon county colored adults are ready for flight.
N ea r
newtoh. low* authorities.
The females are voiceless, but the

CHALLENGE TO YOUR

the mattao company

'"The punctures

May twig*, branches and trunks of trees

Have Infestation, Bays
Ray Hutson

I find my new and MODERN

GAS RANGE^
and. ffooki Setted

the ground where they burrow Into
the soil and begin their long year.

turlty for another Invasion.'

FMMERSM1KE
DEBTMJUSTMENT
COMMITTEE GETS REPORT
FOR PAYMENTS TO
JAN. 31, 1036

TWO HUNDRED EIGHTY
TWO CASES ARE CLOSED
Thousands of Farmers Have
Received Assistance Thru
This Service
Archie D. McDonald, secretary of
the Barry County Farm Debt Ad­
justment committee, has just re­
ceived a report of debt adjustments
completed in the state of Michigan
for the period September 1st to
January 31, 1936.
Two hundred and eighty-two
cases were closed involving obliga­
Carrying a 10,000-lb. cement block from Los Angeles to 1
tions amounting to 1585.115. The
1936 models juit introduced—demonstrated that safe driving
economy. Speed limits were observed in
total reduction of Indebtedness
— —,— ------------ ------------------------------------------ r—------ill,4 miles were completed on two quarts
amounted to more than 1153,371.
and 308.6 gallons ot gasoline, at a coat of 01.6 cents per mile, or one-third of a cent per ton mile. The entire run waa
or an average reduction of 1540 for
compacted
without
any
mechanical
failure,
repairs,
ot
even
a
scratched
fender. The illustration* show the test truck
each farmer.
Debt adjustment Is now under
federal supervision and part of the
is
seen
beside
thc
10,000-lb.
block.
The
test
was
officially
observed
by
the American Automobile Association.
Rehabilitation Division of Rural
Resettlement Administration. Each
Individual adjustment is based up­
on the fanner's assets and ability to
lo cooperate and form good food
TO MATTIE SPAULDING.
pay. The committee acts as an in­ SUCCESS IN LIFE
&lt; habits. They want social approval.
termediary between lhe farmer ond
HINGES ON FOODS iThcy want to be in style. They Lite's voyage Is ended.
his creditors and all adjustments
want
to
look
right.
Ttys
they
may
are made voluntarily for the mut­
ual benefit of both the farmer and Prospects for Health and So­ be interested in eating proper Borrows and trials
foods.”
his creditors. This service is avail­
Her fate seemed to be.
cial Approval Increased
Miss Hawks points out that It
able without cost, and In those
may be advisable al limes lo per­
cases where lhe tamer is obligatby Proper Eating
mit
ed bevond bls abllitv to
to n*niv
. 10
.
mil substitution
other fruitsfood,
and Hcr faith and her courage
commHleJ
effect thr
a
* n°t. en0U&lt;h
vegetables
for ofindividual
(In a body trail!
'

settlement or
or reaucuon
reduction oi
of aeou
debts in
in ■ 'persuade adolescents to
eat certain&gt; ; which■ an
adolescent may dislike, Was lhe "spark of life ”
fcciuctnenj
---------------------, 77
In the home bound sail.
accordance with what he can pay. toads. says Jean Hawks, assistant but she Insists lhat If sufficient
Thousands of farmers have received 1 professor of nutrition. Michigan minerals and vitamins In the form
late College.
college. East Lansing.
of veertahte*
vegetables and
and fruit.
fruits are
are nnt
not ».t_
eat- When her loved ones departed
assistance through this service and |6u,u?
nt
Through iter tears would &amp;ay
Boys
and
girls
need
some
other
cn,
the
prospects
for
good
health
in
in many instances without this1
K*^a
«”ne-------------------------------------------- ir.nHv. besides KnaltH
"TheyU be with me again
help they would have been unable incentive
health before fVin.*
they adult
adult life
life nrr
are rterrrnsert
decreased.
Some future day."
—.... change ......
to continue their farming opera- u111
their food habits. xjv.
Bet-&lt; •»----------------lions and provide for themselves tcr results, die advises, can be
INDIAN GROVE HARBOR.
achieved by connecting good food A birch bark canoe
Her pathway was thorny.
and their families.
'
'
With suffering and woe.
Conditions, prices and values habits with their goals.
Is entering our harbor
.
We laid her away
have all changed, and it is to meet . Miss Hawks, who has made a spe­ It's "Lumber Jack" Smith
Amid flowers and snow.
these changed circumstances with­ cial study of food needs of adoles­
And the "Little Gem" Barber.
cents.
believes
in
applying
psychol
­
out prejudice or ravor to anyone
Dr. Cha*. Ncllaon. Lhe Chicago
If was typical ot life
concerned, that thc county commit­ ogy to tlie treatment ot the recal­
flaherman,
who
is
spending
the
youth ~h~
who rrhrrn
refuses tz
to eat
~:
The bitter, the sweet
tee endeavors to reconcile and ad­ citrant ,2:'proper or sufficient amounts of winter in Florida writes that he Many phases of life
just the farmers' obligations.
will be al Indian Grove with hte
The Barry county committee con­ food.
"The adolescent child can be. flshpole. when the bass season
sists of Archie D. McDonald, Hos­
opens. But they will mtes thc old But the "compass of Faith
tings. secretary; Charles A. Robert­ made to realise that the better hte
who--------used
livnivi, practices
uinkuwa are.
lie, the
me greater is scout Froggy"
. —- Wickham
-------- --- -----Never leads to despair.
son. Middleville, chairman; Glenn health
I tlie possibility of his success in the ° “rvc ®&lt;x* turtle »up
fro« But guides every Christian
L- Wotrlng, Woodland.
. . _______________
' various things he wants to do." she lc6 suppers.
To happiness there.
A
sca-coast
town
in
California
says.
i
*
*
*"
----------- -- ------------- -------------- -—.......
‘Keel of 35.000-ton French bat-!
consists of one long line of dwellings
"When growing boys and girls
Her sorrows and trials
wrrhfd
cv&gt;ol1.K —
---- ■ habits are
---- ..diI tieship secretly laid." How is France I
perched rm
on th»
the rllff.fnn
cliff-top. English
re-_ realize that -----good■ *food
sorts would look like that if all the recUy related to winning a race, at concealing a Christmas gift from! Shell receive her reward.
"Sea View" advertisements were playing the violin, or solving a'a three-yeor-old in an eight-room| Farewell, dear friend.
true.---------------------------------------------------- j problem, they will be more anxious house?

JUL , I ii

Specials

Bargain Days
SPRING

Sale
From every standard of comparison, a modern range such os this

TRADE

DETROIT JEWEL

STOVE!

YOUR

IS YOUR WISEST CHOICE IN COOKING APPLIANCES

SPECIAL PRICES AND TERMS

1936 TABLE-TOP STYLES
Featuring a brand new model at $79.50 list.
• Design and finish of striking beauty arc matched by unequalled perform­
once. New automatic controls
|,~ bring new standards of kitchen freedom and
ance.
convenience. Ovens operate automatically by oven heat controls . . . burners
light themselves as you turn on the heat, including the oven, without need
of matches. These features, with the improved burners, broiling equi|
that is unrivalled, large working top, roomy utensil compartments, ond
other outstanding improvements . . . make the proven speed, economy
dependability of a giodern range even more to be desired than ever before.

SEE OUR SPRING SHOW—OR PHONE 2305

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY

200 Pairs of Fine Gauge

PEQUOT SHEETS

All Silk Chiffon HOSE

We Offer Them High Grade Poquot Sheets
for this Special Sale—

/VI! First Quality. No. Irregu­
lars. Ringless. In the New
Spring colors. Two-Day Sale

Sizes 81x99
Sizes 72x99
Sizes 63x99

OLD

2.000 YARDS OF A. B. C. AND PUNJAB PRINTS—ALL NEW SPRING STYLES.
ON SALE TWO DAYS ONLY

As Port Payment

AS LITTLE AS

$2S°
A Month Buys It!

1%

New Spring DRESSES

Lorraine Slips

CHOICE OF ANY DRESS in thc Famous
Dorothy Dean make. Regu­
lar value SI. 19—
Sale Price

I llis Famous Line of Slips on Sale for thc
Two Days,’ Sale. Colors: Tea
Rose and While. Sizes 32-io
44. Sale Price

95

Ur TO

3
VU&amp;S TO FAY

Hastings

Larsen’

Phone 2166

�HA8TTWOB, MTCW1OAW. TSVR«DAT, MARCH M, 1M4
| at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Ralph : ding attended the funeral of the Secretary—Mamie France; Correa. • home of Mr. and Mrs. John Bulling,
UltUr Tuesday evening. Mr. and former's slsCer-ta-law. Mrs. Bdith Secretary—Clara Vamsy;
Varney; Tree*.
Traaa—
—
. The guests--------were—
Mr.---•
and Mra. Rolfe
Banham of Irvine. Friday morning. Agnes Leffler; Board of Directors— Bulling from Hastings and Mr. and
.Paul Geiger and Mr. and Mix
Woodland basket bell team lost Grace England. Arlene Hasel. The Mrs. Arthur Allerdlng and chllRalph ^Leffler are lhe hosts and al ihe District Tournament played two members of the Board who oar- jlrcn from Woodland,
--------| Mr. and Mrs. D B Green re­ at Grand Rapids Saturday, March ried over are: Fern Trumbo and'
Blanche Hynes.
NORTHWEST THORNAPFIX.
tamed Thuraday to their home in
Mrs. Lawrence Paul went to Last Week s Letter. . .
The Women's Study Club put at
with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hough' of i Word was recaivad by friends Woodland after spending the win­ the Woodland Township school Grand Rapids Sunday to stay with
Tlie Gossip dub reminded one of
IWU«d Mr Sln , V
bulb of • UuthUr. ter in Florida.
Tuesday evenins. After a pot luck Ml*a Virginia Paul and Graydon their members. Mrs. Wayne KerUn who ipn.1 Uu Utt wo
MM w w. u»
aw&gt;
Mr. and Mra. Milan TTurnbo were supper, thc annual election of offi­ Paul while Mr. and Mrs. Chas. mecn. Monday night that she had
with Mr. and Mrs. Gager returned Smith of Lansing. March 14. oon- Bunday guests -of Elmer Warrer, cers for the ensuing year waa held. Rowlader are in Florida.
a birthday and everyone had a fine
with them to their home Ln paw gralulaUona.
and
ot East
Wtoodland. Hu *following
—r-Miss
■ Warren
--—
wmvwmwwrara
officers
. — were
w
elected;
The birthdays ot Rolfe and John time and lota of fun.
Paw.
I The Fellowship class of Che
Mrs. c. B. Benham. Mr. and Un
President — Grace Paul; Vice­ Russell Bulling were celebrated
___ _ __
Lester Brumm attended a vcterl-| MethodUt Bunday School will meet Karl Paul and Mrs. Arthur Aller- President—Hilda Baas;
Recording Bunday with a family dinner at the । last week
at Alto Thursday.
nary ir.vc.i
Last Week s Letter.
j Mias Dot
w Potter of Berryville
Mr. and Mrs. Welby Crockford spent lhe
and family visited Mr. and Mra. I Crookford.
Alfred Higdon of Kalamaxoo Sun-1 Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ruell and
day.
I family were gurau of Mr. and Mrs

wwyne Karmoan
spent Saturday night and Sunday
with their aiatcr, Mias Fem Ksr- A/lhur »
rneen in Batlie Cree*.
father al
The Young People of our com­
munity attended the meeting held
at thc Leighton church Saturday
afternoon and evening.
Rev. Dewey of Grand Rapids
preached a fine sermon at M E
church Bunday. Sorry it wasn't a

1936 Farm Bureau Machinery and Harness
Greater Values—Extra Strong, and Designed for Efficiency and Long Service

SEE US AT THE

SPRING FAIR!
Where Farm Bureau Machinery l&gt; Made
New, complete, modern equipped B. F. Avery Factory at Louisville, Kentucky.

Co-op Combined Fertilizer and Grain Drill
Double ran Irad, raril, adjutW. drill, e«rt,cHr. Grau ,»«dw arindlment.

Co-op Manure Spreader
Low down, 3 feet high, full capacity, light draft, short­
turning. Flexible frame, self-aligning bearings,
Zerk
lubrication. French Er Heck steel wheels.

Zerk lubrication.

Wood or steel wheels.

Champion Improved Mower
Exceptionally strong construction, mechanically

Cylinder Hay Loader
Sturdy Steel Frame, Light Draft, Easy Running.

New Torpedo Sulky Plow
Extra strong construction throughout. Lavon &lt;
venienHy located for operator. Light draft?

Spring Tooth Harrow
Volcano Disc Harrow
Elcctricolly heat treated discs, long gang bolt, special
spool flange construction. Bearings lubricated from
bottom. Insures positive lubrication.

Sure Drop Planter

Heavy steel angle frames. Extra heavy steel shoes.
High connecting arch. Regular quack grass

Positive clutch. Edge or flat drop hoppers. Three valve

or alfalfa teeth.

construction assures accurate planting. Adjustable for
width. Fertilixer attachments.

Jack Rabbit Cultivator

We advise ordering early. Last
year all manufacturers fell be­
hind their orders. 1936 will be
another big implement year.

Rigid frame. Wheel end gang MH in • cUm by itself.

MAIL THIS COUPON
FOR FRH SOOKLSTS
Each booklet illustrates the machine
or implement. It describes the fea­
tures that make it extra strong.

Side Delivery Rake and Tedder
Flexible, with Ample Strength for Heaviest Hay.

Automatic Tractor Disc
Extra large gang bolt. Special spool flange construc­
tion. Angles ond straightens by pull of rope. Bear*
ings lubricated from bottom. An exclusive feature.

Champion Improved Binder

Farm Bureau Harness

Relief Rake, Feed. Knotting, Elevator, Balancing
Improvements maka this the choice of discriminating (armors.

Made from No. 1 selected steer hides.

Best workmanship.

Traces, broachings, strap work extra strong for long wear.

You must see these implements and others of our complete line to appreciate them — Displays at Hart, Lapeer, Imlay City,
Hastings Farm Bureau Stores—At Buchanan, Holland, Hudsonville, White Cloud and other Co-ops. ASK YOUR CO-OP.
FARM SURIAU SERVICES, INC., HASTINGS

MICHIGAN

�HASTINGS. MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH IS, IBM

।_____________________________

Spring Opening

£

'Ml*
^rfirSALE!
This week, beginning March 23rd,
will be "Open House" at our store!
• Refreshments for all our customers and
friends will be served by the hostess of our
newly furnished five room cottage.

• Our store is jam full of bargains in living
room, dining room, bedroom and breakfast
suites.

• Several pieces of furniture will 1* given
away by us absolutely free to some of our
friends and customers who attend our open­
ing week.
• During the whole week there will be hun­
dreds of bargains on every floor of our entire
Furniture Store.
.

• You need the goods; we need the room
and money. Buy now for our mutual benefit.

• We have not the space here to fully enum­
erate the many wonderful bargains that can
be secured from our store during opening sale
week.
• Goods may be purchased during sale week
and for a small payment, can be held by us
until customer is ready for them.

• It has-been several years since we were
able to offer such a Wonderful opportunity to
secure good furniture cheap.

FLOOR COVERINGS
fiv

SSSsrolT

arc offering some handsome rugs during this sale
at wonderfully low* prices! Come in and look them over

$24.00 value Tapestry Brussels Rug at only$14.85

$49.00 value American Oriental Rug, at only$34.50
$64.00 Genuine Wilton Velvet Rug at only$49.00
$29.00 value Axminster Rug, during sale week, ot only------------- $19.95
(THS ABOVE SUES ARE ALL Sxlt&gt;

Genuine Armstrong Printed Linoleums in the 12 ft. width, some
patterns as low as...per square yard 92c
A profusion of felt base in the 9x12 sizes to select from at $4.95 to $6.95
Some exceptionally good patterns of "felt base" goods, sq. yd. only 39c
II won't cost much to cover your kitchen with some of these handsome patterns

Dining Room Suites
and Breakfast Suites
If you have been wanting a new dining
room suite, and felt that you could not
afford it, come in and choose one during
our opening sale week at a price that you
can afford to pay.
A beoutiful walnut fin­
ished eight-piece din­
ing room suite, for­
merly priced ot $69.00
—now going for only
A handsome 8-piece
walnut suite, original­
ly priced at $119.00—
going at only

I Tremendous
n
Trifles n
| | By ELMO SCOTT WATSOH | |
FACE ON THE COIN
ING LOUIS XVI of Franca lost
hla head twice. The first lla«
I win over a very trifl I ax snuoyancu
I t\ut it led to the second time when
! he lost It orer the block of tbe jnrtllot Inc. And that wag permanent!
| When It became certain that nothlog could atop lhe French Revoiutlon the king decided to escape from
the Tuileries with bis family. On
j the night of Juno 21. 1701, a big
. coacb secretly left the palace.
Al the little town of Ste. Menai hould. It was necessary to change
the horses. Beyond Menehould was
a regiment of royal troops ready to
escort the king across the frontier.
j But the grooms at the pnst-hotiae
were slow nnd the king, tired from
the strain of the Iona ride, was Ir­
ritable. For Just one. moment his
majesty raised the curtain of the
coach window to sec how much
longer he would be delayed.
Among the bystanders Idly watchIng the torchllt scene was Drouet,
the Tillage postmaster.
He saw
the face In the window. But no!
It was Impossible.
It c»ul&lt;1 not
be the king. Drouet took from his

K

i pocket a coin that had Just been
minted. The face on the coin was
thc face In the window.
; As the equipage turned off the
main road and lumbered north
through the Argonne forest Drouet
pursued IL Beaching Vnrennes. lie
roused the ngent of the Commune,
The arrest of the royal fugitives
followed an hour later. Soon the
1 king was on his way hack tn Paris
with bls queen. Marie Antoinette.
for a tragic Inters'lew with Mon। sieur Guillotine.

I

।
,
1
j
•
[
j
|
j
|

:
'

■

I
I
|
'
,

'
|
j

,

The entire woriu (eared war would coma aoou after Relchatuehrcr Adolf Hiller, lower lell. scat Nasi
troops gooiostcpplug into the Rhineland In violation ot the Treaty of Veraalllea, which in part pro­
vided tor permanent demilitarization ot that atrip ot Gorman territory along the French and Bel­
gian borders. Germany, id the Locarno Treaty ot 1935, agreed to respect this clause. In announcing
his decision to remilitarize the Rhine area. Hitler asserted the mutual assistance pact Between
France and Russia had violated the Locarno pact prior to hit action. France called for strong puni­
tive measures against Germany. Nazi troops are shown in the top photo, being reviewed by Defense
Minister Werner von Blomberg. Pictured at tbe lower right are French artillerymen. The map shows
tbe tone along the historic Rhine Into which Hitler sent bls troops.

COURTHOUSE NEWS
PROBATE COURT,
Est. Wm. E. Johncock. Annual
account filed.
Est. Elsie M. Hili. Petition for
Admr.. nled. order for publication
entered. .
Est. Charles Hook. Waiver of no­
tice filed, order appointing Admr.
entered.
Est. Frank w. Martin. Assign­
ment filed, annual account filed.
Est. Scid Beach. Order allowing
I claims entered.
' Est. Philip T. Colgrov-c. Order
allowing account entered.
। Est. David V. Barry. Bond of
' Gm. filed, letters of guardianship
• Issued, petition lor license to sell
1 filed.
Est. I* May Ayres. Order allowing
claims entered.
Est. Christian Eckardl. petition
for determination o! heirs filed.
I order for publication entered
I Est. Annie E. Young. Petition (or
| Admr. filed
I Est. Martha E Varney, petition
for license to sell filed, waiver of
notice filed.
Est. John M. Smith. Annual ac­
count filed.
Est. Christopher C- Price. Order
assigning residue entered, discliarge
i ot Adinr. issued, estate enfolled.
I Est Edith Benham. Waiver of
। notice filed, order appointing Admr.
I entered.
; Est. Judson R. Carpenter. Order
appointing Admr. entered.
। Est. Betsey Sensibn. Testimony
filed, order determining heirs enI tered.
' Est. Erastus Senslba. Testimony
l filed, order determining heirs en। tered.

DESTROYED HIS HOME.

,

The home of Frank Faulk was I
burned to the ground Wednesday I
morning of Inst week. It Is located ,
a mile cast of Lacey. There was a 1
high wind blowing, so it was Im- 1
passible to save the house. Tlie lax !
is estimated at 0.000. We under- I
stand he carried Insurance in the
Woodland company. Faulk, whose|
wife died a few years ago. was alone
In thc house when the fire occurred, j
and was aroused by neighbors.
Coppar Sold •» Silver
Silver may. under certain clrctimstances, be copper.
When the
whir® metal comes out of a mod
ern refinery It Ir UtMKMl pure, which
Is considerably higher than what Is
considered commercially pure allver. So before It Is marketed, a
percentage of ropper Is returned lo
lhe sliver. This copper Is sold as
silver.

Natives Aid in Italian Advance

'1

■

,
i
1
I

Tahitian Girl* Lack Lora
Pepeetc. Tniilll. getn of lhe South
seas, hn» one peculiarity that dis- ,
IlngulshoR It from nil oilier jwirta
Its unlives do not recognize that
there is such a thing ns lore. The
Tahitian girls are charming, both
In face and figure.
They slngr^
laugh, dance and nre happy. And
yet loro Is a quality omitted from
their make-up.

Un noth itio northern and unatern trouts, Eritrean and Somaliland
tribesmen are proving invaluable in helping the Italian troops quell
Ethiopian rcslutance. Here natlvca are pictured on guard In Adlgrat,
shortly before the capture by the northern army ot Aduwa and
Akauru, and the advance on Makale. Italian soldiers are pictured
In tbe background.

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

WE ARE ESPECIALLY ^ROUD of OUR LINE of WELL MADE

49*89-

Several HANDSOME BREAKFAST $4 A.95
SUITES at prices as low as—
I U

Farmers! Cut Operating Cost!

LIVING ROOM SUITES
ALL ESPECIALLY MARKED DOWN FOR THIS SALE!

With Firestone Ground-Grip Tractor and Farm Implement Tires.

prove that "considerable saving in time and fuel can be made on many op­

try covered, two-piece living room
suite that was a good buy at $39.00,
NOW ONLY—

erations by theuieof Firestone Ground-Crip Tires.” The chart below is
based on replies from 686 farmers to questionnaires sent out by American .
Society of Agricultural Engineers.

Other Suites in curled mohair, ribbed mohair and mohair
friexe, none in the line at over $89.00.

TO PLOW EIGHT ACRES:
FUEL

Mattresses, Beds and Bedding

TIME

We are also offering Mattresses, Beds and
Bedding ot a Big Reduction in Price.

A FULL SIZED Cotton and Cotton Felted
$g* QC
D«3v

Mattress, worth at least $10.95,
for this sale at only_____________

A SIMMONS Inner Spring Mat­
tress for as low as
Box Springs and Inner Spring
Mattresses for as low as

Living Room Tables, Cedar Chests, Odd Dressers, Occasional and Rocking
Chain in great profusion, all marked especially low for our big opening sale.
OPEN EVENINGS fOR YOUR ACCOMMODATION

Miller Furniture Co.

WITH

StcJI?A2

15 GALS.

10 HOURS

STEEL

’16.95
’10.95

We have a BIG HANDSOME LINE of BEDROOM SUITES we are offering at
REAL BARGAIN PRICES!
Good walnut finished three-piece Bedroom Suites for as low as$29.95
Worth at least $49.00. Other Fine Suites up to $89.00
.

CREDIT TERMS CAN IE ARRANGED.

Tests

We are offering a good sized tapes­

WHEELS

WITH

11 'A GALS.
25* SAVING

7'/z HOURS
7:00 a.m. to 3:3 0 p.m.

FIRESTONE
SEE THESE TIRES at

GROUND

Andrul Service Station

or coll for appointment.

.

GRIP TIRES

PHONE 2240

ANDRUS SERVICE
SEE TJH E S E_T I RE S AT THE FAIR!

'

�BAITINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. MARCH U. »M

Lom of 100,000,000 Acres of Farming
Land Spurs Soil Conservation

Mrs. Rootevelt

A Personal Impreuion
We had been told by people who
knew Mrs. Roosevelt that her pic­
tures did her a great Injustice. We
were not prepared lo realise how
much so until wo attended her lec­
ture on "The Threat
Against
America'*
peace" at Fountain
Street Baptist church Grand Rap­
id*. last week. Then we concluded
lhat the First Lady would be Justi­
fied in shooting some of these earn­
ers men who dog her footsteps
wherever she goes, snapping her off
guard, in all kinds of places and
positions;
pictures
that really
Bbe "off thc record" like the
ew* she give* to Washington
sper women. But, after see­
ing Mrs. Roosevelt, and becoming
aware of her real personality, the
fact that she doesn't photograph
well, we feel, I* a minor matter to
her. She 1* too much alive to things
of real consequence to care.
We found Mr*. Roosevelt In per­
son, most attractive, and. believe It
or not. good looking. The smile,
that discloses teeth too prominent
in picture*, ia really pleasing, light­
ing up her face lo advantage. She
has a charming, friendly person­
ality that easily gets across to peo­
ple. I am sure, any woman who
suddenly found herself alone with
the First Lady, would be entirely at

. Mrs Roosevelt, and she pro­
nounces Il a bit different than we
do—more like Roae-vult—is very
tall; she hna a fine figure, quite
girlish as to Uries. and carries her­
self easily. She wm gowned in perburgundy shade with a shoulder
bouquet of harmonizing orchids.
Mrs. Roosevelt, according to thc
Grand Rapids papers, had exper­
ienced a strenuous afternoon. From
lhe moment of her arrival, she was
whisked away to various places
where worthwhile things were being
done in which it was felt she would
be interested She dined with 30.1
gave a half hour interview and met
many people informally, yet she ap­
peared on lhe platform before a
large audience, fresh anrt un-

consciousness *s anyone I ever saw.
and was entirely devoid of manner­
isms and nervous, flultery move­
ments to which ao many public
speakers, both men and women, are
given. She was very restful. This
may account for her ability to fol­
low the full program that fills every
day of her life. She doesn't dissipate
her strength needlessly.
When a camera tnan. crouching
ih the front seats, flashed the light
for several pictures, it didn't even
draw her attention; later when Mr.
McGorrill accidently trod on the
hem of her long dress, she was the
only person who seemed unaware
Of IL
.
The lecture Itself was interesting,
we thought, bur not outstanding;
rather loosely
woven together;
nothing of the driving, forcefui
kind that the subject, which is very
rjear to Mra. Roosevelt's heart,
Iighl cal) forth. Thc fact that she
lhe President's wife and might
be misquoted and misinterpreted
A;, far away as the European hotIjed. doubtless handhsapped her.
tor voice, except in the lower reg­
ister. is not particularly pleasing.
: Applause was given her when *he
she wished those who sat
around tables and voted for war
should be lhe flrat to have to go.
Bhe cited how lhe perfecting of
aircraft had rendered thc ocean no
longer lhe defense It used to be.
The curious thing about war is
plenty of money for It, Mrs. Rooseveil said.
Peace, she felt, has got lo be a
, qrusade largely headed by women.
It will come gradually as all great
reforms do. by doing the little
things together. No nation can
^rlng about peace ot itself. Dis­
armament can come only with all
gallons working tn harmony with
one another.
Munitions should
be government controlled and the
prlvptc profit taken from their
manufacture. If we could have

REGARDLESS of what tsdaral
u farm eld program replace* the
defunct AAA. American agrieul
tore cannot afford longer to Ig
core a broad aoil conservation
program, farm loaders, soil ex
port*, nd lawmakers. meeting In
Waabloglon. agreed.
Lack of coll conservation, they

Productive

a Catholic church.-that * news, in M“; .ch“ , Hendenhott ^an her
the opinion of the Rev. Russell H i b
night.
Bready. who conducts a church of I
i
that Protestant denomination.
last Wednesday night wlththe flu,
"Il happened in Chicago and It. “ Ju*r' w“ 30 8Ch001 Thursday :
happened this way. he says. He had . an‘1,
.....
finished breakfast in u restaurant . MrB Gco Haynes. Mrs. Leo Henthere when he noticed a catholic derehott and Mr* warren Brogan
church across the street He entered 1 are ,°Q the sick list. Mrs. Brogan
and took an end seat in thc last
®nterl*ln the Aid,
peW
so it will be held at the home of I
“In about five minutes." say the Mrs Albert Brill. The club that was ।
----- Mr. ------a. .. — ...
Rev.
Bready.
•• priest stopped- to have served are numbered with1
at my side and handed me a col­
lection basket. Indicating a man pot luck dinner.
similarly equipped across the aisle.
I was quite paralysed for the mo­
ment. Then I noticed the other
man giving me the high sign to step
out. I did. and I watched him and
followed every movement he made.
'Afterward I wrote a letter (o the
pastor, telling him what had hap­
pened. I had a very nice reply, from
him asking me to call the next
time I was in Chicago, which I did'.”

combined extent of Ohio, Illinois.
Maryland, and North Carolina.
MOREOVER, of the J50.000.000
1 1 acre* now under cultivation.
• bout 125.000.000 have lost all or
most of their productive surface

A hundred million acres In ad­
dition are undergoing serious en&gt;
■Inn end the better soils ot tht
country are being reduced at the
rate of not leu than 100.000 acre*
annually.
Faster than any other people In

’ BELIEVE IT OR NOT.
According to some authorities I
who make a study of weather con- '

depleting their agricultural land*.
With reck leas prodigality they

make

lo

a

satisfactory

•ection, top, wn robbed tyr hl* lather and |il* grandfather. They

tile.

What is worse, the loose soil left becomes the sonrre of

the top of the center monnd, bottom.

Last Week's better.
John McLeod spent Wednesday
in Ionia on basinets.
Mr. and Mrs. Milo Barry from
Martin Corners; Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Fisher from Hastings; Mr. and
Mrs. George Ragla and daughters.
Esther and Ethel from South Coats
Grove; Edward Barber from Ver­
montville spent Sunday with Roy
Wickham and family.
Raymond Wickham, who spent
the winter in orlanda. Florida, re­

turned home Saturday.

.

VIVE years sgo ths U. 8. De*■ partmsnt of Agriculture real-

was for the Ont time sharply fo­
cused on the necessity for *oll
conservation. The wheel* began
to move.
Now. With the crash of the AAA
and the search for a new farm
program, soil conservation more
than over before is driving home
ita point
It appears duo for
practical application at lost.

Ing a serious problem. It began
intensive soil measuring and
water loss studies, but for tbe
moat port the interest of the gen­
eral fanning population was not
attracted.
Then came the devastating dual
storms—the result of man's care­
less handiwork — and attention
I dldus.

So office seekers wore called I
11, n f II
— of
r.f white i.h
that
Is, ..MYnrA
wearers

CLAIMS
TIMBER si*ir-«ni
WAS
I f-n-nrl
Ir4&lt;i* A.
vaizr-ai
candidates,
TAKEN UNLAWFULLY men.

oi

DepwUB.nl M AErteuliure .how.

।

Horses

have never been more
,hI„ dudnt
,h, Swnl,h,„„,u„,

Therefore a Kalamazoo Man OH SURE: YOU CAN
j America,
Anler,ea. When
or ■n
wncn lhe
tne e»&lt;e&lt;e
estate ot
was ndmlnlsBrings Suit in Our
KEEP IT IN THE CAN. , dead
——. conquistador
'
! tered. his steed often brought S3.­
It is Just as safe lo keep canned';
Circuit Court
'
Yet within half a

food in the can it comes in—if thc
can Is cool and covered-os it is to
empty the food into another con­
tainer. Thousands of housewives
are firm in thc faith lhat canned
goods ought to be emptied as soon as
the can is opened, or at least before
thc remainder of the food goes into
thc refrigerator—one of thc persist­
ent food fallacies.
Thc question
keeps coming lo the Bureau of Home ।
Economics in letters from homcmakers.
*”
A few acid foods may dissolve a
little iron from the can, but this Ls
not harmful, not dangerous to
health. Cans and food are sterilized I
in the "processing.” But the dish
into which thc food might be
emptied is far from sterile. In other
wprds. It is likely to have on It bac­
teria that cause food to spoil.
Whether in the original can or in
WHEN POLITICIANS
another container, the principal
WORE WHITE TOGAS. precautions for keeping food areBecause political office seekers In keep it cool and keep It covered.
early Rome wore white linen togas
made from Egyptian flax, office
A leader of men Is one who sees
seekers today are called candidates. which wav the crowd is going and
Thc Latin word for white was can- then stepson ahead.

John A. jenntngs. of Kalamazoo,
has begun action in the circuit court
here against J. E- Jacobs. Howard
W. Coulter. Howard W. Coulter.
Inc..
Elmer Wilt. William E.
Farnsworth. John Crawford and a
man named Martindale, whose giv­
en name the complainant could not
remember. The complaint states
that Mr. Jennings is thc owner of
190 acres of land on sections 7 and
8 in Orangeville township. Tlie
complaint alleges that thc defend­
ants in the action unlawfully cut
timber and wood on these lands.
Therefore. Mr. Jennings asks an in­
junction lo restrain them from do­
ing any further damage, also a set­
tlement for the limber and wood
which he claims they have a Ire adj
cut.

000 ,0
century, the "price had dropped to
12 a head.

Cleopatra'* Needle
The hieroglyphs on lhe obelisk
known ns Cleopatra's Needle nre
inscribed In vertical columns which
________
,
ere rend_____
from....
the. top
downward:
the middle column la In honor of
ThothmeiL by whom the niwllak was
first erected, and tbe ride columns
In honor of llntneses IL

GIRL TO WOMAN
Apt A, Jsnesrillr. Wiu,
uid •tvbm devrlopin*
into wornenlKxd I w*»
delink *nd thin Moth-

Air btller And ulnrd

*aa toon enjo&gt;ln£ ml jood health."

Spring Bargala
MAGICJWASH
BUY I LARGE PKG. MAGIC WASHER foi
AND GET ONE 10c PACKAGE fur

Total, 2 package* for

Soda Crackers

2 lb. box

BANCROFT TEAS

HERE’S A HOT

Moosehead
Th* Fomity H»“’

CHOCOLATE COOKIES 4 Q«
Frsth, Delicious!
I Ib. I W

Hm.

2

79c

ECKRtCH
Age
Oleoma r&gt;orit»o few

10 LBS. SUGAR
Only 10 lbs. to cu

VUK Our Quid M«U1 Booth U tb. Furl

QUAKER COFFEE__________ 2 Ib*. 49c
FREE COFFEE AT THE FAUC

8-ox. pkg.
FIGS____

fjc
PRUNES
LB.

This Spring
Look over your spring clothes
and send us those that need
cleaning. Our Cleaning Pro­
cess restores color and gives
clothes that fresh, new look
. . . send them lo us and you'll
find that you'll need fewer
new clothes this spring. Good
cleaning will make clothes
look and feel like new.

McCREERY’S

PIONEER PANCAKE FLOUR - .5Ibfe 19c

WHEAT HEARTS .

.214 Ib*. 15c

DOGGIE DINNER ..

..3c«m25«

MIXED CANDY_______

--Ib. 1

HEAD LETTUCE, lg., crisp

.2 fori

APPLES________________
CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE, 4 rolls

DRY CLEANERS

OPEN EVENINGS.

PHONE 21M

WALLAC£; GROCE

VOTING "YES" ON THE AKTSACT IALLOT IS LIKE SIGNING A BLANK CHECK

BARRY COUNTY VOTERS
Why Burden Ourselves With More Taxes?

Vote "NO” On Abstract Office Ballot

Our taxes arc already too high.

office and give one or two politicians nice, fat jobs?
We now have a privately operated abstract office giving good sarvica
and charging no more than the county would have to charge te
break even.
To duplicate this service would be a necedless extravagance end e

waste of taxpayers’ money.
All but 5 out of 83 counties in Michigan have privately operated ab­

stract offices, because experience has proved that property aww-

private abstract
office.

SINCERELY believe that no other car at Ponttac'c price is
to well qualified to keep you satisfied and save you money.
Every Pontiac feature is tbe finest money can buy. Puntia: is
America's most distinctive car. Pontiac has u great record far

utiuv reusin' with

In Woyne, a county-owned abttract office, the ratei chatfad ore twice
a* high a* the rate* in Barry county now chargod by
company.

The average man buys an abstract but onca ar twice in his lift. Why
saddle yourself witfva higher tax rate for a service you may never
use?

HA8T1NG8 MOTO*

-

VOTE "NO" ON THI ABSTRACT OFFICE BALLOT and wvo yaurtaif

and Barry County money.

dependability. Moreover, you can't do better than a Pontiac far
all-around economy. In the annual 332-mile Yosemite Valley
Economy Run*, under American Automobile Association supervision, Pontiac defeated all entrants. In its class—averaging 23.9
mile* per gallon (no oi£ added). You can't ask for more, and you
can't get more at Pontiac's low price. Prove it with a id-minute ride.

■

Urge your friends to do the Mme.

and an unwarranted increase in texes. BE SUAB TO VOTE MON­

DAY. APRIL 6 !

COMPANY

PONTIAC SALC2 ..d SEJIVICE
TECEPHONE &gt;MI
201 5. Jaffanan
Hasting** Mich.

Ib.

CREAMERY BUTTER

Why should we spend $40,000 or more to create

If all America realized Pontiac’s goodness
this car would lead the world in sales

5‘
con 5c

TOMATO SOUP .

I... and it ask* no odds
of any car at any price

ir

BACON SQUARE

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR _.24’/i Ib. $1.09

ditlons. droughts and wet seasons ’
have more or less definite periods. ।
According to some who hold that,
theory, the disastrous droughts of

to continue until about 1933. After
that, for a period of ten to twenty
years, they will become less frequ?nt and less severe; then there
will follow a return of a normal
cycle of moisture. In that time, so
these
weather prophets claim.
American farmers can hope lo have
more or less complete relief from
drought conditions for a period of
150 years or more.
These conclusions were given out
by Halbert Gillette who, after
years of scientific study of the
"weather cycles.” has presented his
findings to the American Meteor­
ological Society.
Mr. Gillette's Anal conclusions on i
lhe existence of weather cycles arc
based upon intensive study of the i
tree-ring thickness of the giant j
Sequoias of California and the ।
Arizona pine. Other contributing
elements in Ills conclusions were I
found In the study of the annual,
silt Livers of ancient glacial lakes. i
and lhe time intervals between re-1
cessional moraines deposited in the l
last Ice age.
All ot this is very interesting,
true.
I

Speeia

WE CAN SAVE $40,000 IN
NEEDLESS COUNTY EXPENSES

.

Mr: and Mn. John McLeod spent
Sunday with their daughter and
family, Mrs.
Frances
Coleman
■outh of Hastings.
Russell Taxelaar .wax taken to
Ann Arbor for an examination
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Geiser and
family from west of Lake Odessa
spent Bunday with Henry Brovonl
and family.

Since then, parched earth

cred aix feet, except for the mound which ia anchored by bush
roots.
.

living.

try In which more than ttireo
fourth* of lhe land ha* been do
strpyed. American farming can­
not afford that."

I H“Jrne«

I Sunday caller* at,Albert Brill's
; werw Percy Dlmond and family and
A recent news article sent from Richard DeMott of Hasttofa.
Pioneer. Ohio, mentions a peculiar t The Henry family are quaranincidenl with reference to Rev. tlned with scarlet fever.
Russell H Bready. who is well I Mr and Mn. Leon Slocum have
kn.nhm.we W tre u» I
“Ei/S
newspaper:
win work Mrs. Jennie elocum*
"Wlicn a Methodist Eolsconal I i*™1minuter takes up lhe colCctto? in I, The neighborhood folks surprised
AW_

neer, onio

the farmer.
Th* racent special lurvey of the
National Resources Board give*
•ubetantlatlug flgurea
Approximately 100,000,000 scree
ot formerly cultivated lend have
been virtually destroyed Id tbe
United States by man-induced ero­
sion. Title I* the equivalent of
825.000 farms ot ISO acres each,

living on erosion exposed subsoil

And It a Real Newa
Story Domes From Pio-

i ■■

HENDERSHOTT.

Mn. Dora Coleman

from the
-Tanner district spent the week end
Too— with her daughter, Mn. George

naa_

all our economic Ills.
Where Mrs. Roosevelt shone to
best advantage, was In the open
forum offered at lhe close of her
lecture, when :.;in received and an­
swered quite a barrage of ques­
tinns. both written and verbal, some
Interesting, some inane. Here She
showed statesmanlike qualities in
her answers which were given with­
out a moment's hesitation and were
logical and to the point. 8he proved
herself to be a true niece of her
famous "Uncle Ted" whom she re­
sembles In many ways. When the
forum ceased, without any indica­
tion of weariness, Mrs. Roosevelt
turned, picked up a gorgeous arm
bouquet of lhe yellow roscs'which
bear her name, and fell in beside
Mr. and Mrs. McGorrill to meet
the hundreds who came forward to
pay her their personal respects, and
for each of whom she had a cordial
greeting and hand clasp.
Quite a wonder woman Is
First Lady.

HOLMES CHURCH.

REV. RUSSELL BREADY
»I.. ...
.
r,
. —
..
™

expensive production control pro •

good land to be had In any event.
Bui today, regional surveys have
shown. there la none too much
good farm land.
"At thla moment." writes 11. H.
Ronneii. head of the U. 8 Erosion
Service, "tens of thousands of

I

j UNUSUAL NEWS ABOUT

0. H. SHAEF. Frep.

VOTING “YES

ON THI ABSTRACT BALLOT IS LI KI

�HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH M, 1934
rOBSCLOIRU.

UHAVOBBT NOTICE.

otices
|uri..l&gt;« t

ttJiT.”’

J 67/100 Pallai

sow. “therefore "b

notice or mortoaob fobs-

CLOSURE RAUL

1

RUSSELL U. MePEEK.
ilrn,4:
Circuit Jud
0. Hid*. Clork.
.
Out MARCH as.

i»r will »«*r prat. »
WO.
JOHN J. O HARA.
Auditor Urnrral nV U&gt;* Kitt* of Ml.

ORDER FOB PUBXJOATIOK.

PINE LAKE.
EAST GUN LAKE.
LMt Week's Letter.
The Pine Lake Panners' Club win
Mrs. Marlin Diable and daugh­
ter of Allegan spent several days at, be held on Saturday evening, March
the home of her daughter, Mrs. 21, at the North Pine lake school house. Mn. Ruth Hughes and Ar­
l$cnneth Andrews.
Jacob Harshberger spent Friday thur Lathrop are program commit­
with his daughter. Mrs. Adeline tee and special music will be a fcalure.
Dale Meria u's children are having
Carl Sheerin spent Saturday night
in Freeport, Uie guest of Robert whooping cough and Graydon Dosl ter and Marian Champion are sick
Whitney.
. K. Jackson of Kalamazoo wm with mumps.
Mr. and Mn. Frank Bellingham,
at Gun lake Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Winterbum Earl. Jr., and Patricia of Detroit
of Kalamazoo spent the week end spent the week end with Mr. and
Mn.
Earle Bellingham and at the
.it their cottage. .
.
,
Henry Gregory of Hastings called Warner home.
Claud Champion. Earle Boulter
at thc Will Crawford home-Tues­
ttnd
Charles
Gage were in Kalama­
day.
zoo
on
business.
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Andrews
On Tuesday, Mr. and Mn. Waiter
are moving this week to the Tom
Kala­
Sullivan farm one -half mile west Warner were shopping In
mazoo and Friday Mr. and Mrs. Lee
of ’Shelbyville.
Frank Harper is very ill at this Nottingham shopped in Otsego.
Leon Wood was a caller at the
writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Orlo Skinner anti (John Rogen home on Wednesday,
son of Holland were at their cot- | and this Monday morning. James
Verrill began shearing sheep there.
1 Mrs. Grace Sebree of Kalamazoo
Henry OrifTen of Chicago was ut i
snent the past week with Mr. and
his cottage Sunday.
Walter Slater and James Null Mn. Earle James.
had the misfortune to collide with
TAMARAC.
another ear on U. S. 131 Thursday
Last week's utter.
afternoon. No one hurt.
Mrs. Boston Colton Is under the
doctor's carv. We hope, for het
hls cottage Friday afternoon.
Austin Brooks of Allegan called speedy recovery.
Mr. and "Mrs Buel Wise have a
at the Kenneth Andrews home Sat­
Woodland telephone. Installed this
urday.
•

MORGAN.
The infant daughter of Mr. and
Last week's Letter.
Mrs. Normand McClelland has been
Mr. and Mn. Donald Mead and ill for a few days.
son. Harry, visited Mrs. Mead's
Rev. C M Wheeler of Woodbury
parents, Mr. nnd Mrs. Ernest Young was a caller In this vicinity Thurs­
of Ravenna, last week.
day.
Mr. and Mrs. John Van Syckle
and family and Catherine McAd­
CRESSEY.
ams. Ml of Lamina. were guests of Last Week's Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Van Syckle. Sun-.
Mrs, vesta Hazel and daughter,
'"’^Patricia from near Richland visit­
day.
Alberta Greenfield Is entertaining ed Mrs. Lee Reynolds. Tuesday.
her sister. Marguerite, of Battle
Mrs. OUfTord Kahler of East Del­
ton visited Mn. Otis Boulter on
Mrs. Chas. Harrington spent Tuesday.
Wednesday and Thursday of last
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Delong and
week In Battle Creek with her chil­ family have moved to Allegan. Mr.
dren. Arthur and Opal Webb.
nnd Mrs. Clement DeKoster and
Mr, and Mrs. Monroe Rowlader family of Springbrook will move to
of Woodland. Mr. and Mrs. George thc farm they vacated.
Rowlader and famllv of Lansing.
MIm Vera Reynolds of Detroit is
Mr. and Mrs. James Gross of Grand spending seven, days with her
Rapids nnd Mr. and Mm. Ben Walt parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hon­
nf the Pratt district visited Mr. nnd ey set te.
FOR ONLY
Mrs. Bardy Rowlader. Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cosgrove en­
NOTICE TO CREDITOR I
Mr. and. Mrs. Lloyd McClelland tertained for dinner Sunday. Mr
and famllv of Nashville visited Mr. and Mrs. Millard Houser In honor
and Mrs. D. A. McClelland. Sunday. of Mr. Cosgrove's birthday and Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bardy Rowlader and Mrs. Houser's wedding annlspent Sunday evening with Mr. and '
Mrs. Snm Page and Mr. and Mrs.
It seems that wedding bells have
Lister Reynolds of Quimby.
rung once again in our neighbor­
Glenard Earl and Bob Knight hood and we did not hear them un­
Strictly guaranteed not
were In Battle Creek
Saturday til late. Reports say that Miss Avis
nlghl.
to fade nor shrink!
Drown and C L Barber were mar­
ried on Feb. 29. We wish you all
ASSYRIA.
the happiness in lhe world C. L.
Last Week’s Letter.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Enzlan and
Floyd Wolcher for the post two daughters spent Bunday with Mr.
years employed at the Clayton and Mrs. carl Enzlan at KalamaCase grocery store at Lacey, is
126 S. Jeff. St.
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
spending some time al the home of i
his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Vcm
WE TEACH YOUR $
Ey.brow Plucking Old
Welcher.
I
Eyebrow pluckinc *»" practiced
MORE CENTS
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Jones of thc
Stevens district are moving from
their farm home to the Erv Miller
residence at Lacey where they will
reside.
Mrs. Sylvia Bivens, who has been
visiting her daughter. Mrs. Harold
umenl now r.n r.
Case, the past two weeks has re­
turned to her home.
Edward Stanton of Chcweln.
Washington, brother of will Stan­
ton. who is making an extended
visit with relatives here spent Sun­
day at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
jay Cole.
Albert Jones of Assyrio Center a
leading progressive farmer and
poultry raiser, has for the past two
years been interested in the breed­
ing of wild turkeys of which his
Itock this year increased to about
one hundred. His orders have gone
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION,
to Iowa and a recent one of five
of Mlckloa.
Ih* County of II
turkey hens went to lhe Durand
game farm In Wisconsin. Pea fowls
and pheasants are also an added
venture at the Jones farm.
The Assyria Center school dis­
THE ST. LAWRENCE Seaway Fejected by the U. 8.
trict held a meeting recently in
Senate in 1934 on its imagined navigation merits is being
view of being made conversant with
stirred into life again with its electric power phases
the proposition of uniting with the
blithely offered as a co-equally important argument. But
Bellevue school before the final ;
vote. Thc Austin district voted to I
in neither respect is the seaway needed.
try it for one year. The Ellis vole J
was ten to twelve against it.
VIEWED as a transportation agency, we already have
vn
On Mununy
Monday iukih
night.. March
Nairn io.
16. ococ-1
a lakes-to-the sea route. On it can be, is being, econom­
curved the 90th birthday of Mrs.
ically borne all thc products for which America can find
Mary Butler. On the Sunday pre­
world markets. (Our railroads with their 50% surplus of
vious she was visited by twentyequipment can handle all traffic given them, now and '
three near relatives Including her
son and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. But­
through the coming generations.)
ler of Convis. her grandsons. Chas,
and Floyd Parrott, their wives and
IT WILL create no new markets, nor new traffic. It is
children, and Mrs. Hazel Letts, her
MIUr»d Smith. R«ci«t*r
simply a new shipping route, diverting traffic from exist­
granddaughter and children, all of
ing transit agencies. It will function only in summer
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
Battle Creek.' Others present were.
when railroad efficiency is greatest and need of it would
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Miller. Mrs.
Nettie Manby. Mr. and Mrs. David
be the least. It will be idle five months each winter when
Conklin. Mrs. Hannah Stamm. Mr.
need of it would be greatest.
and Mrs. Forrest Stamm; her sons.
Tom and Wesley and daughter.
IT WILL not benefit the auto industry; or the wheat
Lucy, who reside with her at her I
farmer; or bring farm relief; or aid employment; or “cure
home near Lacey. Aside from hav- I
the depression". It will shdrten no trade routes. It has
Ing the distinction of being a nnna- I
genarian. Mrs. Butler has resided
no military valucat her present home far 70 years. ,
I where she became a bride. She is
VIEWED for its power (half of which belongs to
1 still in good health, takes an ac- '
Canada) again the seaway is not needed. The region can­
i«ri&lt;i. »t im n-dwk in th- j tive interest in the home duties. For |
not absorb the vast surplus of harnessed hydro power it
Jt.
I *•» ■»»&lt; «° &gt;*"•h“
:
now has. The seaway is so remote from consuming (but
second 'Sight being able to sew and'
-r ordrrKi. ih»t pntiie no read without glasses She received
, disinterested) markets that transmission costs would
n/U. Th. er.r.ilrhlldren
make-the new power—as it does present power—so costly
rr-vion, it, (*id d,T of hrarine. in ; brought . a beautifully decorated
as to be unsaleable.

Hlr in t
J •ubjrcl

NOTICE TO CT.EniTor.B

of Milium
kvlnr 61*4 In »ai4

THE WORLD'S
BEST KNOWN

Counlmirno!
Allan C 1
(SEAL &gt;

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.

STATE OP MICHIGAN

DBDBB ron PUBLICATION,

■■A aald'land

Oshkosh
B’gosh
Overall

SCHWARTZ

or pabHratlon nf

M nf I .&lt;110 or nrl«
Auditor &lt;l.n.

20o nf the Pal.1l

FORREST L
220 East St,

The “Other Side” of the
St. Lawrence Waterway

Johnson

'ate St.

Packard

We take pleasure in

purchased during the past twelve niGhths

announcing the ap­

almost

pointment of a new

Eights, and Twelves as they did all other

Packard dealer. We

fine cars combined.

invite

as

many

Packard

Eights,

Super

A reception further

all

evidenced by thc fact that orders for the new

present and prospec­

Packard 120 (priced $990 to $1115 at the

tive Packard owners

factory) have forced the Packard Motor Car

to

Company to more than double production!

cordially

view

thc

new

Packard models now on display and inspect

this firm's service facilities.

Come in and sec Packard in its new local

home.

This appointment is a direct result of the

Drive a new Packard—and compare

it with any other car you wish.

Packard’s

overwhelming reception given the new Pack­

*'6% Paymcnt-Out-Of-Incomc Plan” is both

A reception evidenced by the fact

attractive and economical. Drop in, and let

ards.

that buyers of the larger fine cars have

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.

us tell you about it,

Packard Motor Car Co., Detroit Branch
574 East Jefferson St.

Detroit, Mich

ZPac/catd
T

H

E

MAN

w

N

S

ORANGEVILLE.
Last Week's Letter.
Mrs. Fannie Boniface, who hu
been so ill is much better al this
writing, which her friends ore glad
to hear.
'
.
Frank Harper Is very ill at this
writing.
Irving Defall of Galesburg came
Thursday to the Morel us Bagley
home where he will work tills summer.
Mrs. Nettle Newark spent Sat­
urday with Mrs. Electa England at
Gun lake.
The township caucus wm held
Saturday afternoon without much

ONE
m th« Friday irom Traverse city where
pdaud. she had spent lhe past two weeks.
,ro. copy
MllirU a«ilk. BccUtar of PrnbaU.

| M &gt;ou must use a hammer—build
I * bOUie.

TO ABSORB the contemplated power on industrial
district twice as large as Detroit’s must be built adjoining
the seaway. Without such a nearby market the power
and the immense cost of its development would be wasted.
LASTLY, we must furnish the bulk of the new money'
needed for a project benefiting another nation more than
our own and lying more largely in another’s territory than
in the United States.

FACT, not fancy and emotionalism, should influence
our consideration of the seaway. And the fact is America
has come to know it as a project that is economically un­
sound.

Michigan Railroads Association

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. APRIL 2, 1936

16 PAGES

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

SERVICE AT
MSTERSERVCE SPECIAL
METHODIST CHURCH COUNCIL PLEASED
MERRY CROWDS ENJOY
THAT’S different
™1™DISPLAYS AT COMMERCIAL

;

Sacrament of the Lord's
Supper Thursday Eve
. of Holy Week
HEtD ON MOUNTAIN WITH
CITY ENGINEER REPORT­
I Thursday evening at 7 30 of Holy
ED ON WATER WORKS.
A LIGHTED CROSS IN
. Week the Lord's Supper will be udmlnhtered in the Methodist Epis­
STREETS, SEWERS
THE DISTANCE
copal church for all who desire to

COLOR ■
CLUB FAI

Community Hall Pack
During All Four Days!

1 share in this wonderful sacramental
i service. The choir will sing Stain­ WATER WORKS OPERAT­
' ct'i "God Bo Loved the World." Mr.
ED AT A GOOD PROFIT
[ Jones will p.-ruch on the subject
"The Sign of the Cross." All friends
But If You Wish a Seat You and members of the church are In­ Cost of Maintaining Streets
, vltrd to this one central meeting
--------------------------------------------- n
------- —
and Operating Sewage
Better Get There Around
during Holy Week. There will be no
Good Friday service In the church.
Plant Is Very Small
Midnight
This sacramental service will be
City engineer Bert Sparks made
held Thursday. April 9.
an Interesting report to the coun*1
ell at their session Friday evening.
In the water works department,
he reported the net income as being
You'd never believe how many
$10,060.61. Deducting from the dis­
people could crowd into a few
The above linen arc Irani Henry
burse menu $2,000 loaned to the
GROUPS TO CONDUCT A
Van Dyke's poem "God of the Open
street fund. $1,000 loaned to the
HOUSE TO HOUSE CAN­
sewer fund, and $350 used In the
at the Commercial Club Fair last
years ago by the great iiathering of ,
purchase of a truck, it left the op­
VASS SATURDAY
week. Where ordinarily half a doz­
Christian worshipers at Mt. Rubl-1
erating expense of the system. In­
en would be considered a crowd, it
dotrx.- neaij Riverside, to commem-' DR. FRANK OARROTHERS cluding purchase of supplies. $8.­
seems that by the simple process of
orate the resurrection of Christ on I WAS ONE OF THE SPEAK­ 436-86. giving an operating profit of
FUNDS TO BE USED FOR
Easter
morning. This southern I
$1.62393
ERS
AT
READING
RELIEF
OF
CRIPPLES
California Easter morning service;
The principal Items of the coat
three time* that many humans of
of operation were electric current
has been copied al) over the Christ- |
used. $2236.04; labor at Hie plant
Humane Work Financed En­
Ian world, wherever climatic condi- i HILLSDALE CO. VILLAGE
and supervision. $4,020.88.
tiona will iH-rrnlt out a! door early
was worth a little shoving to see tiie
tirely
by
Proceeds
From
morning worship. Tiierr Js .scarcely
STARTS FINE PROJECT For the third year Mr. Spark* re­
Pair.
a liiunlct in the whole state but [
ported no repairs necessary on the
These Easter Stamps
Did you realize that practically
four
pumps
at
the
station;
and
no
what prepare* some out door service I Launches
Camp
Fire
Girls
and
Boy
Scout*
Movement That repair* were made on the building
every Institution with which tha
in which the congregations as-1
of Barry county will sell the Easter ordinary individual deals in a life­
Will Be Widespread and
during the year. The pumps now in
scmbled in the gray duwn do horn­
Seal* in a house to house campaign time was represented there? There
use
average
to
make
7.980.000
rev
­
age to the risen Lord Southern
Saturday to help raise this county'*
Very Helpful
olutions per day or 2.930.700.000 per
California, with its delightful ellquota of funds for the benefit of your children and bury you (of
Doctor Frank Carrolhers has giv­ year.. ...
In ...»
the three
years .......
since ....
the ■I
....
Photo by Mason Studio
mat*, lends itself in an Ideal way to
' crippled children In Michigan. Fif­
carrying out this beautiful form. en the Banner an account of an in­ pump* were installed they have About the gayest place in Barry county was Communi ty Hall during the four afternoon* and evening* of the ty per cent of the quota raised and
It was on March 27. 1910 that Jacob teresting and. In some respects, made 8.792.100.000 revolutions, with- Hasting* Commercial Club Fair. Above, one of the temporary lull* which permitted the photographer to i ninety per cent of all over the quota to educate your children, a lumber
» f“U length "portrait" of the tecond floor “Midway."
Riis and a handful of followers act epoch-making Institute that was out a single penny being expended |
■ remain in the county to carry on company to build your home. Insur-------------------------------------------up the historic Serra Cross on Mt held In the village of Reading. for repairs.
, work here.
jance companies to protect it. all
Rubidoux, near Riverside and In­ Hillsdale county three days of last
in the street department Mr COUNTY ABSTRACT
, No one who stops to consider the
MAGAZINE AGENT
1 1
GHUI
stituted a form of worship that has week. The sponsor was Charles Sparks reported a total expenditure
I humane work of bringing relief to your bodily needs and comforts, an
become world-wide For these early 1 park, superintendent of the Reading of $9.26421 Of this amount $4,006.76
OFFICE COST $40,000
MISLEADS TEACHERS crippled youngsters will hesitate to
morning Easter service* thousand* public schools, u funner Ag. teacher had been expended for resurfacing
buy a few of these teals which only running, even a newspaper to fur­
in Hastings schools. The institute the Tarmac streets, leaving the total
and thdusand* of • pilgrim* poured
Probable That Bond Issue
Gets Money From Two Rural "u al ■ P«nny eBch- However far nish all the latest gossip, a health
Into Riverside.
Ollier soiilhcin was held on Wednesday. Thursday expense for repairs of streets, clean­
।
_
, anart
apart neonle's
people's onlnlnns
opinions mav
may h*
be an
on department to keep you fit to enjoy
Would Have to Be Floated
California cities soon took It up. and Friday of last week. The pur­ ing the strecU. etc. $5^57.45. In
। Ladies But Fails to Give
'othdT
questions, tnere Is universal all these things and an out-of-door
until today many southern Callfor- I pose was to make the parent? of the sewer department the city en­
sympathy for crippled children and department loo for the benefit of
to Raise Fund
Them Receipt
Illa cities and towns luivc a cross [ the village acquainted not only gineer reported a total of 1.434 feet
CONTRIBUTIONS
FOR
RED
an
unselfish
desire
to
assist
them
....
w
aU.
Barry county voters who will be
j A strange fellow went Into the
surmounting some near by acces- , with what the school* are doing, but of new sewers constructed The
Wonderful results can now be1 This Pair did more than simply
CROSS RELIEF EXCEED 1 school commissioner's office one achieved
sible mountain top where these what more they should and can do city's part of the cost was $893.71: called upon to settle the question of I
through proper remedial display things the mer
chant* had
h*H
merchanU
cervices are held With Hollywood in order to fulfill their proper func­ the PWA furnished the labor Oth­ the county abstract office on April I
EXPECTATIONS
morning last week and said he rep- treatment if treatment Is given in to sell. It provided an opportunity
er expenses on sewers in the city
near at hand, mountain.* on all tion.
reu-nted the child ActlvIUes mag- ,,m
time.
" Youngsters
-------------------- who
might ---------------------have for Intellectual
-- -----------advancement
------------------- (Ihyt
6 should have clearly in mind what
Dr
carrolhers
went
to
this
meet
­
sides, and fine paved roads lending;
amounted to $22089. The operation
____
! azine and asked to have some one to go through life with serious phys- i if people wanted to be advanced la­
ing and gave two talks on "The of the sewage disposal plant cost thi* proposition means In added LOCAL TREASURER
ical defects can be brought back to I telleclually). You could learn things
daily suited to southern California Teeth." knowledge of which should $797.76, making the total cost for taxes. According to estimates be-1
SENDS FOUR QUOTAS recommended in the county to rep- normal. It is for such a worthy pur- there that you never expected to
(Continued on page five)
A lot of time, work, and effort is,
sewers and sewage disposal $1.912 36. llevcd cqhservatlve, It will take $40.­
I resent the magazine at the teach­ pose that these Easter sealx-arc be- know. For Instance, how many peodevoted to the program* and the
We are sure our city readers will 000 to ket the county up In the Chapter Still Has Funds to
i
pie ouulde of professional cttMkI
ers' meeting in August. Being given lnK 9O.ldbe impreued with the comparative­ abstrict-Jbuslness. Even then it Is
pageantry and beautiful voice* of LAST MEETING WILL
So let’s all give the Scouts and ! ters—or whatever they call thasa
| the name of a lady in lensing who
Meet Second Demand by
Hollywood's municipal cliorii* lend
ly small expense of operating the doubtful whether or not the book* ■
| represents several school magazines. Camp Fire Glrlsjxrikencouragemen11 men who build how knop ail
BE HELD APRIL 20 sewage disposal plant. Tile labor would be os complete for producing [
Utemaelws ideally to the occasion*. ]
and
assistance
postelblKon
Saturday
the kinds of thingy that go into Um» |
National Organisation
c „„
r
—
[ m
he then went on his way. „
He
later
If yon hap!»*n to lx- in callfor- 1
on the same was $494.96. The other ; alr-Uglil abstracts of title as the
Archie D. McDonald, chairman 1 called on n teacher In one of the'|whS“ thcy condu«L-Hheir sale of erection of a building. At the Spring
nia nt Easter time do not miss thi.* ; Brotherhood to Be Favored expense, including electric current books of the private concern which 1,of the Barry County Red Cross rural schools and claimed he was “““•___________ _ _
Fair you could learn that Insulation ।
early service on Easter morning, or
for Ils operation, amounted to . 1* already established at no cost to 1 Chapter. Mrs, Otto Isenhath. secre- [ from Western State Teachers' Col- nor aictu asiicin -----------1* something that
looks like ------------------------cotton
i
by a Play Given by the
you will mis* one of the most beau-.
$302 80.
I county taxpayers.
batting and
and feels
feels as
as though
though „
it had 1
tary. Orville Sayle*. treasurer, the lege looking for a position and Uot NtW MUbIL
II batting
llful and Impressive sights that you ;
Civic Players
We think the entire report is very I Where will the county get the'
officers and directors, also asked to borrow her directory for
ROOM FIRST TIMF been flUed ’rtth “nd- and
ever saw in your whole life time.
j The last meeting of the Hastings creditable to our city engineer and $40,000 to set Itself up in the ab- other
workers
In
various
sections
of
the
a
couple
of
days.
He
evidently
wrote
II
WWIW
b
keep
the
cold
but
----------- ...--- ---------- ------- ....
„
Ml uajo, git thlUtllUJ •IUVC
_______
I----- — —
...» ™
We attended the one at "Holly­ Brotherhood will be held on Mon­ to the city of Hastings.
I stracting business? It appears that I,county, have been delighted with down the names of many of the be- Balconv at Hich School Has the hcat *“• or vlce verM
1 a bond issue will be about the only '
wood Bowl." a great natural amphl- day evening. ..
............
.„.v
April
20. At that Ltime
rlnnlna teachers
teaeherx and called
rniud on
nn sevtov. .!
J
on the season of the yeai
the prompt and generous response ginning
theater in the mountains Just back officers for the ensuing year will be HIRSCH
which
Twn teachers have 1
Been Enclosed and
ISCH SELLS PICKLING i method
met.,!°‘Lby
b£ Wh,C
5 such
su,ch a
• venture
w“turp I made by the good people of Barry '1 eral of them. Two
of Hollywood, nnd with the great, chosen, and the final reports of the
uiTrnrnTo
i milNTY
ihtv .1 could
After
the bon
bond
INTFRF^T^ i«IN
“ ,be ..financed.
. ,2C . 7
f‘5r ine
Jt* I county to the call for funds for reported his taking $4.50 and $5.00I
Sound Proofed
IN I tn to Io
IN LUUNI I । issue of $40,000 had been passed, flood relief work by the National each for subscriptions to the Grade
'Continued on page slxl
: present officers will be given. For
*e I Band practice Tuesday evening initiated into its mysterlrf ttMHg
irtrp Walker
£ Ron
nf ‘assembled. and additlona l Red Cross. The same evening the Teacher and Child Activities mags-1
■
,&gt;,&lt;* clnslnK meeting the Hastings
Son of
...... As
A.the
ui/liSr
iicterdid
’dMnot
Joi
■»’.01
Civic Players will furnish the enter- , George
)rge Walker
Walker &amp;&amp; bon
or officials hired, the county would । call was received, several organ!- zines.
latter teacher
Lumber Ac Coal company
then have a service which would be 1 zatlon* pledged contributions which Rove ihe right Chu.se he added th. i ,"‘,b .‘j’"”'
Grand Rapids to Take
an exact duplicate of one already j they later paid, and gifts have con- Current School Topic, tor the Me »“ “» ""
overlooking parts of the country.
I The Brotherhood year, which is!
Possession by July 1
the
which
been en­
being rendered.
[ tlnucd to come In as the need has He rolled to glee » receipt toe the 1 u
-------------- - -------------------------------------------now drawing to a close, has been
” auditorium hl'h has
K" —
Some of our Hastings merchanU
ELWOOD BARNUM.
Ionp
thc most successful in the
Hlrsch Brothers
company have
Can a county abstract office tum become greater.
seem to have latent artistic abili­
money and claimed to each that all closed and sound-proofed.
letter to Mr. McDonald from the
their--------salting
station Interests in out abstracts of title more cheaply । Jn
uic teachers,
icncncrs. whose
wnose names
names he
ne had.
had.
ro&lt;’!n.,M thc ties which popped out through ths
D/tausc oi ill health. Elwood Bar- ! history of the organization
The sold
----------------------------------------------A'
l?e .U8hy,}g *ys* medium of their booths at the Fair.
num will- have an auction sale.at his programs have been unusually good the county to George Walker A: Son titan private concerns? Five coun- the Red Cross under data of March had ordered the magazines. There ?°ys
wtts originally
orlo,n“nv designed for use T. 8. Baird's display in white and
the statement is made that it is may be other teachers in the county tern was
farm two miles north and a half and the membership wi* nearly! of Grand Rapids who will take pos- ties out of the eighty-three in
mile we. t of Coats Grove, with Hen­ double that of the preceding year, i session by July 1. according to Joe Michigan have tried it. and accord-1 clearly apparent that the three Bill­ who have been misled In this way with Die lights In the downstairs
--------- -----------------------DeRulter. the present manager of
ing to the best information we have I non dollar relief fund first request- but these two teachers said they auditorium, so upon using the room for his spring suits in shades at
ry Flannery as the auctioneer. Mr.
'
the
first
time at night the lights gray. Clyde Wilcox's booth not only
the
Hirsch
interests
here.
been
able
to
obtain,
there
is
nothj
e
d
will
be
Inadequate
to
meet
EMMA
8.
EVANSBarnum offers n tine lot of farm
have learned their lesson.
to indicate that
such---------------abstracts......
I known relief needs. The &gt;.
national
’wcre almost
Chinese puzzle. With looked but smelled so a ttract1vs
Democratic nominee for city
The high cost of shipping prod- -ing
-- ----------------------—------a..u»a&gt;
tools, all nearly new and in first
There are local reliable nennle
j
j ucta from .....
herewtoc».
St.uuuu
LouisuIswiei
the —
can be produced more cheaply by -a ,. organization
l-Ha «nii .
lighting arrangements revised. that you could stand there all day
utgiunxauuii is.
us, therefore,
mcrciurc, now
now de­ known In the community. wl.„
class condition, also some stock and treasurer.
.
1
thi*
nm
rAAm
he* rinr.
reason
for
thi*
move
Mr.
DeRulter
county
office.
In
fact
several
of
the
I
pendent
upon
the
ability
of
Its
this
new
room will be
one nf
of rh.
the and enjoy it. The Conservatioa
Vote as you would hire. Elect
this move.
DeRulter county office. In fact several of the pendent upon the ability of
other items. Str the adv. for full In­
magazines, who should be patron­
competent
officials
at
city
election,
say*.
His
company
plans
to
add
new
I
»
ui
k
I
.
—
—
---------------------------,—, ,
| counties In Michigan which have
chapters to secure contributions to
formation.
Ized instead of these wandering most useful rooms at the high booth downstairs with all the pelts
Monday. April 6th.
’: “
salting stations in some new locality ।-- embarked
on this
experiment j this fund greatly In excess of quotas solicitors who have been numerous school. It has In connection an in­ and pine boughs hanging around
‘—■*
'
I have had over 25 years of ac­ in tile south much nearer to the I charge more for abstracts than prl- assigned.
ELZEY MEAD.
in the county In recent months. Re­ strument storage room where all in­ made you want to get right out in
As he has sold hta farm Elzey counting experience. I am a prop­ home plant.
vate concerns. Another important
Barry county people have con- cently one of them came to the struments not in use are locked up the woods. No doubt there were many
During their years of operation I fact for the county to consider 13 trlbuted. up to April 1. the sum of Banner office and was insistent on from meddling hands.
Mead will have an auction sale at erty owner and resident of Has­
people who never knew that all
nnt a
rmmtv
Affirm
ha* has
the farm located four miles north­ tings.
here, tliA
the Wlr«z*h
Hlrsch rnmnanv
Company ha.
has iTv&gt;nt
spent |i that
that not
a single
county
office
headquarters of the Conservation
(Continued on page six)
selling subscriptions for certain
making
west of Nashville, or one mile east
mousanas of
oi dollJys
aoiurs in the
me county [ given any evidence
cviaencc of
oi
maxing
■
Your vote on April flth will be ap­ thousands
department were housed in buildmagazines which the writer was al- COULD HAVE SOLD
of Morgan. Henry Flannery will be preciated.—Adv. 4-2.
tar cucumbers, cabbage and caull- money out of the abstract business. HOSPITAL GUILDS’
I ready taking.
He became angry
15
MORE
HORSES
H
awaf
anti
hav«*
Amnlnviwl
manv
nr
nt
lra«t
until
mtne
nrg»vlAti«1v
ov_
..............
flower and have employed many or at least
rates previously ex­
the auctioneer. Mr Mead offers
(Continued on p*g« five)
went from the office muttering
DOWN TOWN SHOP.
men.
i istlng had been substantially raised.
ANNUAL MEETING and
9 head of cattle and 0 head young
about folks who would not buy from Burrell Phillips Reports He
To make better accommodations
cattle. 61 sheep. B hogs. 2 swarms
The new firm plans to carry on I If the county office is established
him.
FIRST CONCERT BY
bees. 12 R I Red hens, farm tools, for his many customers. Clyde Wil­ the pickling station work here In the the private concern which Is already Dinner, Business Session and
Had Twenty Replies to
Some of these subscription agents
I here will continue to do business.
hny and grain and miscellaneous. cox will have a complete line of cut county.
are bona fide but others are not
Program at the Meth­
HASTINGS CITY
Small Want Adv.
flowers and potted plants in the
See the adv. for full particulars.
---------———-----------------This means that the county office at
south building of the Home Lum­
RUMMAGE AND BAKE SALEodist Ohurch
Burrell Phillips, who lives south
best will get only a portion of the
the persons to whom you give your
PETER DeLEYS.
ber Co. block, on Michigan avenue,
Saturday. April 4. community total business, and even the total
of the city, advertised last week that Musical Program at the Au­
On Thursday evening. April 16.
On account of 11) health. Peter on the Friday and Saturday preced­ room, Natl. Bank, auspices Circle business ordinarily available here the annual meeting of the Pennock money. Certain members of the i he had a horse for sale. He reports
ditorium Thursday Evo,
Thomapple Garden Club can vouch
DeLeys will have an auction sale ing Easier Sunday.
No. 6 Methodist
A. 8—Adv.
In the county, according to those Hospital Guilds will be held In the for this statement as they recently I to the Banner that this small Want
April 18
’
at hl* farm. 2 1-4 miles north of
Adv brought about twenty replies
who have given the problem consid­ social rooms of the Methodist had some unpleasant experiences.
Prairieville village on the PralrlcI and he sold his horse at a aatisfacFrom the looks of things the
eration, Is not sufficient to Justify church. Dinner is to be served at
vUle-Yankcc Springs gravel road.
। tory price. He said he could have members of the Hastings CHy
an investment of $40,000. Since the 6:30 o’clock and the price is 40
SUPT. VAN BUSKIRK
Hmry Flannery Is the auctioneer
I sold fifteen more horses if he had
cents per plate, the- L. A. 8. doing
Band must hare been good Boy
and Gardner Brown, clerk. Mr. De­
buy an abstract of title only once the serving. The Guild chairmen
IS HIGHLY HONORED,w.nt
. Scouts not so long ago for here they
Ley* offers two worje horses. 15
in a lifetime, it does not seem fair will take the reservations for each
are lending a helping hand to tbs
sheep. 3 head of cattle, .sow and 7
to tax everyone in order to set the Guild.
Re-elected Pre.ldent of the
-"ShV-TtS
Hastings High School Band la their
pigs and a long list of farm tools.
county up in the abstracting busi­
The program will be given by
Read the adv. for particulars.
Because
the wide
ness.
Michigan Education Aaso“change.
*
”
’’ of* *'
*'** circu­ gallant effort to pull the Athletic
Guild No. 1 of which Mrs. Mary
lation of the Banner, an adv will Association of the High school out
If the county feels Justified In go­ Evarts is acting chairman.
8. C. GEISE.
of
debt.
Excellent Dinner Followed by
ciation
Last
Week
reach thousands of people at a very
ing into the abstract business, why
Reports of the year's activities are
Because of poor health. 3. C. Gelse
A big musical program of InattuSuperintendent D. A. VanBusklrk moderate cost to the advertiser.
should it not also go Into the gro­ to be given by the Guilds, election
interesting Talk on Mexico
will have an auction at his farm lo­
mcnlal and vocal numbers will be
cery
business,
the
hardware
busi
­
of
officers
and
other
items
of
im
­
or
our
ell,
school,
wu
sUnolly
FRANK
STATIMtNT
cated a mile south and half mile
presented Thursday evening. April
The idea of holding the seml- for support. Just as rural communi­ ness. clothing store business or even portance will feature the business honored nt
at the mnnrln®
meeting nt
of tha
the '
Qp MAYOR I-FONARD 16th. in the C
west of the Jones school, with
Into agriculture? No facts or Infor­
Dewey Reed as auctioneer. Mr. 'mcinthly meeting of the Hastings ties are more or less dependent on
Michigan Education
Association,
I am a candidate for re-election the Hastings
It is hoped there may be a- large
ur
ir u..r.»
Gelse
oilers *wu
two ™...
cows, uu.u«.
binder, mowmow- Commercial Club at Coats Grove [cities and teams for their markets, mation have come to light as yet,
w.
u
«»
was
OCIU
m
ueirou
lost
weex.
‘
?
c
0
®
cc
ol
'
“
“
&gt;
or
,'
reason
which was held In Detroit last week.
er. cultivator*, drags, hay loader. Tuesday evening was ju*l as novel lit is so easy for misunderstandings we believe, which would Justify the attendance, as this Is the first time He
was reelected president on Sat- u ^ec^ic a
ot. republican* tings City Band.
other farm tool* and miscellaneous “ lhe program was entertaining. ! to arise. The wider and the better county In spending $40,000 or even the meeting has been held in the urday last
There will be quite
ant* Democrats have insisted that
See the adv. on another page for and w
refreshments were de­ mutual acquaintance we can have, a portion of that sum for the estab­ evening.
It Is not surprising to those who i “
&lt;,uty 10 "m,ln
offlce numbers on the program,
j llelnu*.
llciou*. Thr
The ladles In
in «nn
and nrnund
around the less such misunderstandings are lishment of a county abstract office.
full particulars
know Superintendent VanBusklrk's!
! until the
'h'* present
nr*",n‘ program of »»
the
“ least one number "Maestro­
Coats Grove have won most en- apt to creep in. Fortune, or destiny,
good work in our public schools that City Council was completed. They will play an instrument with
TROUT SEASON EARLIER.
'• viable reputations for their skill as or whatever It may be. has placed
he was thus honored by the teach­ further urge that my experience members of the band.
AAMTreT »*7rai*irne? coolu' Rnd the splendid picnu served us here in this section together and
Trout fishermen will be Interested
ers of Michigan. He 1* highly upon the Board of Supervisors is of
CONTEST WINNERS was ample proof that their repu- there is no reason why we should in the fact that this year a change
esteemed personally, and h!3 fine particular value to the city at this Bandmaster Hine plans to gin
w»Because-----------------------------------------of the fact that the Ban­ tation has been well earned. The,..„.
not become better acquainted,
be- will be made in the day when they
ability as an educator and organl- time. They contend that matters of bands good workouts in
ner went to press a day early last food was not only delicious, but it [ cause we each have our problems can begin fishing in trout streams.
The Barry county Holiness Union ’ter ire fittingly recognized In tills vital importance to the taxpayers of before summer weather la
week, the final list of winners in the was nicely served and with a teg- and the better acquainted we are. Instead of starting on the first of
the city will come before the Super­
Hastings commercial
Commercial ciuo
Club Fair ular "system." one platter or dish the easier and better it Is to talk May, the trout season will open on will observe Good Friday with a. idded honor of a reelection.
visors during the next two years,
••Scrambled Names" contest was re- 1 following another as rapidly as it them over.
the last Saturday of April. This service from 1 to 3 P. M- al the Free I The selection of Mr. VanBusklrk and that an experienced represen­ the date and save it for
celved too hue for publication., was empty—which happened quite j The meeting was turned over to change will give office workers and Methodist church. Further an- “ president of the Association was
tative of the city on that board is tings High Band Festival
Herewith are the winners:
| often.
I Chet Hodges who called upon Earl shop laborers an even chance with nouncement will be made from the' J**e first time that ttyat honor has
Imperative.
..............
—
........................
I
been
conferred
upon
a
superintend
­
pulpits
of
the
affiliated
churches.
Mrs. Velma Johnson. 925 E. ClinWe don't know whose idea It was Shute .who favored those present the men who have more leisure to
I was born In this city, and owe Merdianta* Fair, for
........................ent In a town the size of Hastings,
ton ' Allan C- Hyde and Lorenzo F.1 to depart from the usual procedure.! with a couple of vocal selections to get on their favorite streams.
everything I have to the fine people
SPECIAL
MEETING.
and
the
press
reports
that
this
is
Maus).
' and hold this meeting out at a near guitar accompaniment. He next
expected to pay. but you
A special meeting of the Barry the first time in the history of xhe
Mrs. Lawrence Benton. 627 E. by spot, but it was a good one introduced Prof. Austin of M. 8. O.. COUNTY CONVENTION’ CALLIO
wish
to aid in my humble way far your money's worth.
Bond (North Side Grocery).
anyway, and could be occasionally who gave a most interesting talk.
The Barry county republican con­ County Rod and Gun Club is called Association that Its president has Its continued Improvement and bet­
Mrs. Elmer Robinson. W. Bond followed with good result* all Prof. Austin has been quite an ex- vention will be held In the court for Tuesday evening. April 7. at been given a reelection.
terment. However, this Is positively
* * *
(Intematlonal Seal Ac Lock Co.i.
around. Following the invocation by tensive traveler, and we wish that room in this city on Tuesday. April 7:30 o'clock at the Barry County
the last time I can afford to be a
CBOWM.
AUTO SHOW.
garage. Al! are urged to attend.
I
Mrs. Garth Slocum. 914 E Madl- Rov. jordan the visitors intro-1 everyone in Barry county who
------------------ .—.-----------------new models of Hudson. Tw- candidate.
son &lt;F. E Willison. Dentist!.
duced. there was some hearty com- thinks that he. or she. is having a lime. The purpose Is to elect dele­
ver that
Sincerely.
NOTICE.----------- raplane and Studebaker will be on
Mrs. Gordon Wolfe, cloverdale, munlty singing led by Roy Cordes.; "hard time" could have listened to gates to the Republican district and
Charles H. Leonard.
In observance of Good Friday, display tn the Goodyear showrooms
(Dr. Gordon Fisher).
as Pre*.
George Lockwood said;him. The gist of his talk, which we slate conventions. Th6 delegates to
stores In Hastings will close from on State street in Hastings. See the
Children. Loretta Leonard and Ar- when calling the meeting to order,! would like to have printed In full, the Co. convention were chosen at 12 to 3:00 o'clock on that day.
announckmknt.
adv. In this paper for particulars.
villa Leonard.
, it would be a splendid thing to have was to shqw how much better the the primary election two years ago.
I will appreciate your support at
Honorable mention, Gladys Van such "get-together meetings" quite average person In this country and will serve as delegates until the
MIXED DANCES.
|
DANCE.
the polls on Monday, April 8. Mra.
Patten. R. F. D- 4 and Mrs. Eva I frequently. All cities and towns are fares, than do similar people across1 next primary election in September
Every Saturday night at Ciearl Welcome Orange. Friday night, jcMle
Loppenthlen.
Republican
Fewless. 1129 8. Park street.
[dependent upon rural communities.the sea—or to our south.
lake. Frank Herrington.—-Adv. If. | April 3, new music.—Adv.
1938.

PROGRAM COMMENCES
AROUND 3 O'CLOCK A. M

CAMP FIRE GIRLS.
SCOUTS SELL SEALS

EPOCH-MAKING
EVENT WAS THIS

Prutes, Amusements, Etc.
Provide Entertainment
For Young and Old

BARRY CO. MAKES
SPLENDID RECORD

Four Auction Sates !taJTenJ_^pI!y\.

u .

BAND

Coats Grove Community
Entertains Commercial Club

scrambledVames

Holiness Union
Good Friday Service

r

�Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Hilton, who t Choirs are *pjeding up practice
Mr. and Mr*. Robert Newton, who I
'
11
1
11 ■
■
-----------------------------------------------I hav# been occupying the J. C.
have been spending several months now
for their Easlc.- prograou
j with Mr. and Mr*. Al Myer*, have
d Mrs. Leslie 07=
Mr. “
and
Orosi and Ketcham rwldence, have rented tho I VJ
’ ' Claude
,
°
returned to their own home *t 518 family have moved to Welcome
Cor- Kelley cottage at Leach lake I
I for the summer and have token up ।
" '
”■
Center *tro*t.
ner*.
Mr. and Mr*. Charles Vandegrlft
Laird Wotring of Woodland has
Mr*. Jennie Munni entertained their residence there. Mr. and Mr*. I An enjoyable afternoon is In store
are moving thi* week into the Roy | been named a* the temporary clent the J. F F. club. o» Wednesday Ketcham and Mary have returned 1 for the Woman** Club Friday at
from Lansing to their Home here.
Fuller house on So. Jefferson St.
in the office of the county road ■ afternoon
2:30 in th* Masonic dining room,
Tho Hastings schools close Thurs­ when Mrs. SeriJ an of the Middle­
Mr*. T. H. Hoos. wife of Rev. Jloo* commbslon while the regular clerk.
Mrs M#rv B-.ch who h.. been
, of Pilgrim Holiness Tabernacle. 1* Clarence Grohe 1* ill.
| vcry
u convalescing at her home day night next week. for the brief ville Woman'* Club will discuss
much improved, sitting up much of
Mrs Leon Manning of Battle mi’w. JL, 8t
“
• Barter vacation whxh gives two «x- RockefeUer Center. Social lea will
Ila days. Good Friday and Easter follow the meeting. This Is an ex­
I the time.
| Creek as administratrix,
ha* sold
,
o
was .uom ...
.o Air. uii.i...
air&lt;.
|
.
.
.
I*
&gt; v.. i ■ II—
Delos , noixrt Lesl -r Lord. Cloverdale, Monday to teachers and pupils, change program, the local women
I Circuit court calendar
Caicuuar in
in the
sne ;: ——
— —^te^-Mrs^
..T7~.---- ----------tel 'O1on
being resumed Tuesdej. April having presented
"Some
Great
Mnnir M.ln UM, Wrakl Ooe.n l Hopkin. on H."*Mlohlku, Ave.,
io
'
'’ Route 1. at Pennock hospital
14. Tne short sprint vacation menus Loves, some BeauUful Friendships."
vrm poMIble Ibe lul one wu three jOc,—“e J*mcl o' thi. eUy.
March 30.
; an early closing In June. Coin- in Middleville during February’.
monlb. ...y,
,
VMer k wcul he«Hn« our aty
Mr and Mrs. Albert Ziegler. 303
1
mencement
day
falling
on
Friday,
1' I.,--.,
rn- _
, uoraruin. jean narne.i. maues
some
«...
, ., n™.
nuke. M&gt;me
Word from Mrs L- L- Dewey of • reading suggestions that ought to 8. Jefferson St., are the parents of the 5th.
The Dowling cemetery circle wiU
Grand Rapids say. that she I* slow- , J™"*
a son tom nt pennock hospital on
From Will Young, of Bellevue, meet for dinner at the Dowling
who was in the city last week on church dining room. April 0. A
We are beginning to feel'sonic- i
her many friends here.
( Mrg Warren
ha4 returned
thing wrong with the day. If the i business, we learn that his bi other, business meeting will follow dinner.
The following ladles are on tho
The council on Friday evening &gt; from a stay of two week* with Mr.
fire whistle doesn't blow, and then: the late Dr. Clarence Young of Al­
voted that the sewer on South Jef- ’ and Mr*. Lloyd Roush of Kalamalegan. had Intended making this his committee for work: Mary Coates.
toot the •■cut" sign In a tew more
last year of active practice, and was Emms elemence. Cleo Covey. Susie
.ferson. be extended from South;zoo. While there a felon developed minutes.
stree
-------------looking forward to taking up his Corkins and Ethel Donovan. Every­
street-----------as far--------------as the grade
will, per- on her thumb and she was forced
Saturday, the two year old son of
Imlt.
to go to Bronson hospital for treat­ Howard Smith. E South St. fell residence here In the family home­ body welcome. Come and bring
Hastings Royal and Select Master ment. She is gaining at present
stead on Green street built by his your friends.—Blanche Powell. Secy.
out of the second story window on
I Masons were represented at Lansing however.
a pile of ashes Fortunately he was father Oscar Young many years
On Monday evening. April 6. the
on Saturday evening when ten of
The alarm of fire late Thursday unhurt. &gt;
, ago
them assisted with "The History of afternoon was due to the discovery
K. of P. lodge will meet at eight
Mr. and ’Mrs. pete Muir, who have
Masonry"
o'clock. All members are urged to
of a blaze in the roof of Fred New­ been occupying the Will Fighter
"LUCIFER'S LODGE."
Local dealers tell us of the revived land's house In Rutland. But before
1.ucif.ts Lodge,
packed
with be present as there are special
house
on
w
Grrand
St.,
have
trade in horse collars, harnesses, the firemen arrived, a local bucket
thrills, mystery and comedy, will be things up for discussion.
moved to their summer home nt
and "parts." which the renewed de­ brigade had put out the fire, so the
the next production of the Delton
Mill lake
mand for horses on farms has truck was stopped before It reached
The Fbher P. T- A. will meet Fri­
Community players at the Com­
Word from Dr and Mr A. W.
brought about.
day evening. April 10. with a pot
munity hall. April 3 and 4.
the Newland home.
' Woodburnc says they arc leaving
Our Hendershott correspondent
Nlce'ldea that, holding the annual Sxrasotn. Fla on Tuesday. April 7.
Under the aupervLvlon of E. E. luck supper at seven-thirty. Mrs.
tells of a five-year-old child prodigy meeting of the hospital Guilds at
Myrtle
Coleman and Mrs. Thelma
Faulkner, an exjjcrlenced cast has
who has Just entered their school. night this year, which enobles many and will arrive here about three been chosen to produce one of Jay Sprague arc
on
the
program
He is familiar with words in thet‘of
Tobias' best
thrillers. Realistic committee and Miss Majesty Becker
of the
the effite
office and
and :tcrs
store people
people to
to
The
fire
department
responded
to
first, second and third grade read- I attend who before have been unable
sound effects with trick lighting and Miss Reathel Newton the re­
ers. and reads readily *11 words in ‘ to be present. Don't fonret »•— 13 calls during the-month of March, bring an exciting climax.
freshment committee. The Alton
the Weeks schoolhouse being the
This production Is expected to district will present a play called.
which sound and spelling are stmt- date. April 16lh at the Methodist
only one where any amount of dam­
conclude the dramatic work of the •Henry's Mail-Order Wife." Bring
age war. done.
year and a record attendance should sandwiches, one other dish and your
Mr. and Mrs Herman Arold and
make this a very successful season own table service. Come and bring
daughters left Sunday morning tor
your friends.
for the Community hall..
n two weeks' trip to Florida, where
they will be guests of Mrs- Arolds
The Women's Missionary society
sister in Miami.
The trial of the Emory Hough- of the First United Brethren church
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Day
talln fish case, which we mentioned will meet Wednesday evening at
of Paw P,iw. formerly of Hastings,
last week, was completed. There 7:30 at the home of Mr.v. Erls Jar­
a daughter. Marlene Loiibxt on
j was no Jury called to try this con­ man. The lesson Ls on China. All
Wednesday. March 25. The little Tnic
test. The questions were largely the ladies of the church are Invited
weighed 9 1-2 lbs.
legal Imu.-s. and both sides were to the special meeting. The re­
Tati Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
willing to leave the matter with freshment committee is Mrs. Clara
held u business meeting on Tuesday
Judge McPcck to determine the law Cooley. Mrs. Eva Bunnell. The lad­
evening at the home of Miss Geral­
applicable to the case The question ies will hold their Good Friday Day
dine Williams. S Jefferson St Plans
ut Issue was largely this: Had Mr
were made for •rush month" and
Houghlalin a right to catch fish out The leader is Mrs. Mlona Wendell.
■ Founders' Day."
of season on a lake containing about
The case of Willis Streeter and
The Welcome L- A- S will be en­
twenty-live acres, twenty-two of
them being on tils own property. tertained by Mrs. Clyde Sledge on
Thursday. April 0. for dinner.
:
I

|

April's Shower of Bargains!
FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, APRIL 3 AND 4

OXYDOLE 17'
(None to Dealers at This Price')

PEAS 3No 2ca"s25c

SHULTZ
OR FREEPORT

BUTTER} CORN
33c

No. 2 Cans

TOMATOES 3 ".V 25c

19c

CLIMALENE
P &amp; G SOAP

39c

10

Large Bars

Macaroni or Spaghetti
Best Quality
3|bs- 25c

CRISCO

a 59c

25c

large can 7Q

MILK
TEA Siftings

9c

lb. pkg.

CRACKERS 2 X 14c
CHEESE —

,b 19c

DEL MONTE

COFFEE

r 23^c

Candy

Orange Slices

2*» 19c

Chocolate Drops 2

19c

SALAD DRESSING

qt 25c

pnS?

AND

VEGETABLES

ORANGES ASPARAGUS

HEAD LETTUCE

FRUITS

2do1- 35c 2 ■&gt;u"ch« 13c

•*ch 5c

IDAHO POTATOES
SPY APPLES

Meats

10

BEEF RIBS
lb. 10c

its.

19c

PEANUT BUTTER

TRClrllZClttO ItS

1

DRIVE IN

Townsend plan meeting Central
school auditorium Friday evening.
April 10. 8 o'clock, judge Edward J.
TOWNSHIP fil YEARS. Jeffry of Recorders Court of De­
bascmi'lU of the First United
Mrs. Lydia Garrison Bush informs troit. n fighter for the working man.
Brethren cliurch. as the huge
the Banner that ahc him been a Is to be the speaker.
mound.', of dirt they haw thrown
resident of Hastings township for
out bear witness
The Women's Missionary society
the past 81 years, she is Inquiring
The fortieth srmi-unnual con­
if then- is anyone in Hasting^ Twp.. will meet at the Methodist church
vention of the Michigan 3ociety of
who equals or surpasses her record. Wednesday. April 8. Mrs. Gary
Optometrists meets at the Pantlind If there is'anyone who can qualify, Crook is in charge. There will be
hotel In Grand Rapids on April 5. 6
devotions followed by a program of
The kind of weather you're driving in now puls a big premium on ' and 7 Dr. D D Walton Ls a mem­ please send your information to two plays. Mrs. Fred Jones Is pro­
Mrs. Bush or to the Banner office
ber of the Admiinstrative depart­
gram chairman.
ment of the society
WINS HIGHEST AWARD.
There will be a special K. of P.
Mrs Gordon Clement, who ha-s
Maurice Overholt u.
of Freeport, Ha
been .i patient ut Ulodgctt hospital, senior nt W S. T. C.. Kalamazoo, meeting Monday evening. April 6.
trained and watchful eyes of Andrus Service attendants. Each time
in Grand Rapid, for iwo weeks, suf- was honored Inst week by being In the new lodge rooms. All mem­
sou drive tn here they note the oil. battery, radiator, the condition of
fcrlng from erysipelas, was removed presented the hlghc.'.l award given bers arc requested to be present
.»
iu ner
«... home
horn, ut
nt Belding
n-irtmn on Sunday. by
future of
your lire*. They’ll warn you when anything goes wrong . . . and.
—Uw
..... department — Craftsman- since- matters
... vital
---- ...to . the -------Mrs. W L. Shuitera Ls there nssLst- Scholar Plaque. This ts - awarded lho local lod«c *111
discussed,
if you choose, they'll fix it safely, expertly with the aid of modem
Ing with her daughter s care.
annually io
to me
the manual arts stu
sttp1 '1 A,lcr the business session, ,runuirefresh•
Mr
and
Mrs.
Chester
Siem
of
dent
rating
higher,!
in
personality.
'
mcnt
»
will
be
served.
Considerable
facilities.
•St. Louts. Mo. are making plans to —
—
••--------- - ■’ work
»w&gt;n
m*ir«to t&gt;.~
andhn«
work
hiuHnn«
bw'"tr.do,le
n,»’tc the
scholarship.
craftsmanship
.....
MOTOR-CLEAN-OUT
move to New Albany. Ind. direct­ ---------h, ability, .»«.«.
.»y cov- nc*' quarters attractive and this
teaching
it is a IUK
highly
' ly across the river from Louisville.' rted honor Congratulations to Mr nwl1”* wil* R&gt;v&lt;1 a« opportunity to
Ky.. as soon a?, their daughter Overholt.
, 3*-‘e what has been accomplished.
Patty completes her chuoi year in
The' F^h"
Fisher P.
(
HOOSES
TO
HIT
TREE.
!I Tlv
P- T A will be Friday
Friflay
June, the new locution being a
Kenneth Echtinaw and
Clarence ''v»«ng. April iOlh. This will oe the
more advantageous one for Mr
Brady figured in an auto accident ,aal
for this .cason. so nf. Siem's field nf work
that might have resulted flccr* *IU
clccl*’d t°r
Clarence Messenger of this city last week
Sts.. Hastings, Michigan
As it was Brady
suffered Thcre W,U ** 4 P01 luck ’&gt;“PPW- E'; was arrested la.t week, and taken 1 fatally
,tr. wounds, ------crybody
requiring
sev­ welcome.
*
'scalp
Firestone Tires and Tubes
• Sunoco Gas and Oils. Greasing: before Jstlcc Cortrlght on Wcdnr-.- .omc
eral
stitches.
The
two
young
men
,
day
of
last
week,
on
a
charge
of
Batteries. Windshield Wipers
• Vulcanizing. Electric, Washing
DIES AT ONONDAGA.
: statutory rni&gt;c He waived exuminaMrs. Nelson Haven, aged 76. died
j lion and was bound over to the cirbuiu,. u„
1XX°O. SSuWn'i
To .void
avoid hitting
the car
car.. Echtinaw
BLUE
cult court, the bond being fixed at T.
1500. Hr was unable to furnish the smashed into a tree, wrecking the
REGULAR
due to a heart attack. 8hc is sur­
I! bond and so is in Jail.
machine.
GASPRICE
FUEL
| The tire department wiu&gt; railed
nineteen grandchildren and one
DIES AT LANSING.
lout Saturday afternoon to fight h,
grrat-grancliild: Arthur Haven and
I Siu.1.1
gra.^s »uv
fire ui
in KUthe nrai
first warn
ward near
!!
what b known as the Grant house. - Ph®™11' nt MluJrnr&gt;',°r Lansing, died Mrs. Erma Gardner of this city are
Monday .after
an illness
of two of the children. Tho funeral
oeruMrt no. &gt;,y Mr. .nd Mr- thcrc on uond..
................
...............
was held at Onondaga on Thursday
several
months
He
served
as
sec
­
, Charles Gardner The t.rc was put
afternoon, sympathy Ls extended
nut without causing any damage retary of the Michigan Bar Asso­
the bereaved ones.
Monday's alarm was caused by a ciation for t-n years and had held
gra-ss fire near Hinman's store other important positions. He was
DOWLING PROJECT.
Hasting*, Michigan ■ Telephone* 2244*2557
Tue.alay s alarm was due to a fire la born In Albion and practiced law
The Dowling clothing Project
Forrest Patters brooder.
Slight In Ishpeming before going to Lan- met with Mrs. Lora Wilcox. March
damage.
meeting.
1 sing on Wednesday. Mr:.. Fred 18 tor an afternoon
Dresses were fitted and are ready to
▼ nock hospital is progressing »&lt; Palmer and Mrs. Earl Boyes of this be finished for last meeting. Yokes,
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
cousins of the deceased.
•7?'rapidly as possible The doors are1 city arc
____ , , ,
______
collars, belts and. jackets were dlsSUNDAY and MONDAY. APRIL S and 6
▲ ] m place on the different floors, an I TIIREE MORE APPLICATIONS. , cussed.
. I. intricate procedure that calls for 1| ....—-------..------- .— ----------- . .
The |B5l meeting of the year will
There were three applications last
exact- workmanship
No-one -will I
week for citizenship* in the United be in the church basement for
▲ I rejoice more than the nurses when States. They were its follows; Judging dresses and selecting two
TTI Hi'’ Job is completed which will be
for
style parade at Achievement
. . DICK POWELL. RUBY KEELER. T in about two weeks If you are ,»uf- Michael cryan of Thornapple; Wil­
liam Titmarsh of Castleton, and day. The public ts invRetj to this
▲ i frrlng from nervous prostration It mrs
Mrs. Nettle V. Ncward. or Orangc- meeting April 8, that it may become
might
be
a
good
plan
to
delay
eny
llle
r*icnda. Paul Draper and Marie Wilson
acquainted with the work we have
। taring Pennock until the install*- t
'
accomplished.—Myra Wright. Secy.
+ ' '.ton Ls comnleted.
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY. 1:00 and 3:00 o'clock
. Wo uro printing a recipe for "ba- ',
Other Petfurmancev—Adult* 25c, Children 10c
•*'n»n» all bran nut bread." tried out
~ ‘ by Mrs. Dell Sutton, which we have
had the pleasure of passing Judg- j
BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. APRIL 7
mrnt upon, .and found "belter than
cake' -1-4 cup shortening; 1-2 cup
ANN HARDING and HERBERT MARSHALL in
sugar; I egg well beaten; 1 cup
Kellogg's all-bran; l 1-2 cups’flour
♦ 2 t. baking powder; 1-2 l. salt; 1-2 1
• You should not judge wall
t soda 1-3 cup nut meats; 1 1-2 :
* With Margaret Lindsay. Walter Abel and Edward Ellis
bananas; 2 T- water.,
•r'1 run.
cuiis mashed
r
&lt; Mix. let
I- stand 30 minutes, and bake
paper or paint by price alone.
_y for one hour or more.
’•lowly
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Nichols.1
X
WEDNESDAY ond THURSDAY, APRIL 8 and 9
(Madeline Brown* and Mrs. Trcvett
When' you cun gel both quale
, Chase (Betty' Lindsay) of Grand
k Rapids,
Rapids. were driving
c
to Hastings.
ty and price, you have the
T Saturday night,
nl^ht, for a dinner en- ;
with MIRIAM HOPKINS. EDW. G. ROBINSON
gagetnent when their car struck a
right combination. We carry
and JOEL McCREA
[ soft shoulder and careened Into a ।
ditch. Mrs. Nichols was thrown;
Adults 23c. Children 10c
Benj, Moore’s Paints and Var­
from t)»e car, and the qthers considcrably shaken up. but’ fortunately
no one was Injured. The car was
nishes and Mayflower Wall
FRIDAY and SATURDAY. APRIL 10 and II
wrecked, preventing Its occupants
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1
from filling their dinner engage­
Papers. Let us show you our
ment here that night.
Mr and Mrs. Walter Barnum re- '
lines and quote 011 your wall
turned Saturday night from a week [
With Melvyn Douglas, Cail Patrick and Tala Bircll T tn Ann Arbor and Jackson. They ar- i
paper and paint needs.
"%*, rived home in lime to vLsit the Mer-1
FEATURE NO. 2
+ chant's (air Just before the drawing .
. ‘ for the grand prize took place. |
JOHN WAYNE streaking into two-fisted,
Ty?. When the lucky number was railed, j
A Mr. Barnum was surprised to find ,'
two-gun action in
T his duor coupon, received Just a
short time previous, bora the lucky •
{ number drawn out. The prize was I
NOTE: Epivode 10 of "GREAT AIR MYSTERY" will be shown ti a fine sludlo-bcd. Anyone who
knows the numerous Barnum clan '
al 3:30 O'clock Matinee SaWrday Only
which assembles under Waller's roof:
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
Adult* 15c, Children 10c
I every now and then will realize just
1 how useful such n piece u! furulluic'
will be in that household.
The workmen

—

—
—--------—
progressing

GREATER f

safety;

s Pfione2240

25C

bU.

65c

2 lbs.

pound

lOc
25c

15c

PORK SHOULDER ROASTS
Pound 19c
Lean

HAMBURG

2

fTLASE THEATKf=

$

"COLLEEN”

peck

lb.

FILLETS

STEAK

23c

Food Center
■■

I

W'J

Q| | MH r* fl MOTOR
aaUrlULilJ

CREMA

FRESH

y ZV/"» A t
LU\^AL IN t,

QUALITY and PRICE

“THE LADY CONSENTS”

A.

‘BARBARY COAST'

'THE LONE WOLF RETURNS

"THE LAWLESS NINETIES"

Walgreen System

Keel/

drugstore

�THE HASTINGS, BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1916

RE-ELECT PRESENT MAYOR AND ALDERM
NEXT MONDAY, APRIL 6lh, 1936
In olden days men used to say of public oilier: *7/ it's a good thing, pass
it around.” The offices of Mayor and Aldermen of this city are not a “good

thing,’’ in fact they are thankless jobs. Neither politics nor length of time

in office should be considered in selecting incumbents for these-offices.

ord, if you please. What is the record of the present Mayor ami Aldermen,

PWA and CWA Projects, benefiting the city, together with many other ac­
complishments . . . and, MR. TAXPAYER! despite all this, the city still

. composed of five Republicans and four Democrats?

FIRST—They have saved the taxpayers of the city over $73,000.00 during the last six years, as compared with the previous six years.

has on hand as much cash as when they started, six years ago, further,
WE ARE OCT OF DEBT!

Mosl modern cities have discarded petty politics and have non-partisan,

corporation does not discharge its sucessful president, trusted employee,

SECONDLY—What have they accomplished in spite of that great saving?

or worker who has rendered faithful service, because "It's a good thing apd

Well, think of this:—Construction of Sewage Disposal Plant; Several Miles

government, they elect public offiials to serve the city, forget party, and have

he has had it long enough” No sound business is conducted upon that prin-

of Paving and Tarmac; Complete Remodeling of Waterworks Plant, with

in mind the common good.

eiple. Public officials should be retained upon acomplishments—the rec-

modern electrical equipment Several Trunkline Sewer

We believe the present Mayor and Aldermen SHOULD BE RE-ELECTED.

(THIS ADV PAID FOR BY REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS—NON-PARTISAN VOTERS)

THE CHURCHES
CHURCH OF THE HAXARENE.

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Rev. John KiUhim. D. D-. Pieter.
■ I 225 W. Center It.
Phon. 22S

PASSING or DEI.LA Al.l.ARO. 1 alternooo .t the Jehenan St- Unit- WEST ORANGEVILLE
Mr. and Mrs Clifford Kahllo and
AND EAST GUN MARSH. family have returned from Florida
The news of the death of Miss cd Brethren church.
W T. Wallace led in the singing
Della Allard, followuig an operation
where they spent the
winter
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Cecil
Hanson
of
I
iURY LIST APRIL TERM.
at Flint, on Wednesday last, came and after devotional* a short busi­ Clarksville were week-end guests of months.
The Jury drawn tor the April ns a great shock to her many, ness session was held.
---------- .....
SprUwer
eteeud uc- the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. | Mrs. Mary Crans has returned
here she had .....
Just left Has- I
term of circuit court Ls as follows: friends
Ben Hanson.
from her visit with her daughter.
Assyria—Glenn Brown.
tings the previous week to stay at, re“rV- ,
j jtt_
Il *'
was
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Merchant Mr*. Harry Closser. in Detroit. She
her mother's home in Caro for a
11
’* decided
' to make plans for
""
Baltimore—Willet Rice.
।
family are moving from the
Barry—Mason Newton
time, as she had not been feeling an exhibit to be held by the and
churches
of
our
city.
Tills
exhibit
will
;
her brother. Ellas Saddler, in Ann
Montieth
tenant
house
to
Martin,
Carlton—Eugene Nichols.
especially well.
Castleton—Ralph D Hess. Wanen
Miss Allard come to Hastings in 'consist of work done in Vacation where he will be employed by the Arbor. She reporta a lovely trip.
Mr. and Mr*. O.‘ E. VanEU and'
Coolbaugh.
1928 and opened a shop, carrying Bible schools and Sunday schools; Consumers Power Co. Mr. Mer­
Hastings Twp—Arthur Richard- novelties and fancy work In the Na- pasters. Bibles, hymn-books, re- ।chant tuts been in poor health for son. LaVem. and H. Dunlap from
ton. Fred Peck
lional bank block, Just after the llgious art. missionary and temper­ the past two months and was the state of Washington, were at
obliged to give up his former occu­ Hastings Friday on a business trip.
Hastings City. 1st and 4th wards completion of the new building She ance displays.
—Ruth Haven. Lemuel Severance.
A great many from here attended
The president. Mrs. Amy Bower, pation with Mr. Montieth.
later closed out thc stock and went
Hastings City. 2nd and 3rd wards Into dressmaking exclusively. en­ appointed the following committee
Emery Lewis and family have
—Fred Fleming. H- E- Birdsall.
noon and evening to see a number
Joying a fine patronage here. Tills to make plans for this exhibit:
moved
into
the
home
of
the
late
Ed.
Hope—Leon Fuhr. Lewis Acker.
Mrs. j. A. McNulty. Rev. Lemuel
winter she accepted a position in
I Chicago perform. It was * scream.
I Irving—Clifton Campbell, Arthur Grand Rapid* along her line of Severance. Frank- Angell. Mrs. Ste­ Paris.
Bedford.
work, but after a short time re­ phen Cooley. Mrs. Joseph Brozak.
Johnstown—Will Vaughn. Earl signed and returned to Hastings.
Rev. Alice Grinin.
Strickland.
The Age—Group Directors then
From the Tuscola County Adver­
Maple Grove—Aubrey Swift, Clyde tiser. printed at Caro, we copy the met with the different groups. Mrs. ’
Harvey Burgess with the Children's I
Walton.
following obituary:
OrangevilU*—John Beattie. Homer
workers
and W. T. Wallace with the
Miss Della Allard died Wednes­
Norman.
\
day at 6-10 A. M. in St. Joseph's Young people's leaders.
PrairleVilW-William A. White. hospital. Flint, after an illness In
Plans were made to hold some •
Ixvem Callhrop.
group
bed of only three days. She sub- . meetings before school is ।
• If You Are Going to Hove a NEW
MeCriiuo Cxnrck.
Rutland—Gerald
Smith, AmU mined to an operation at that hos- ; over.
SUIT for Spring . . . Better Wait a Little
i*'™1 a ’u n°t ' iMi
Bauchman.
pltal Tuesday afternoon. A blood j
riuo?*' chrutun fcndr.’o.r* " r/'J’j Thortmpple — Earl
Kermeen, clot in the large artery leading to
ASSYRIA NOTICES.
Longer
. . . You'll Get a THRILL as Well
h
lui.j-rt.' Frank Garbow.
Aid will
meet April
the intestines was the cause of 1 Briggs
— Ladles'
--------------------- ------------w—
AS A REAL SUIT!
| Woodland—Alva Miller.
her death. Funeral services will be 9 for pot luck dinner.—The Assyria
held Friday at 2:30 P M this aft- Center cemetery organization
‘
*“ will
WE8LETAN METHODIST CHUBCH. , Yanlccg Springs—M. C- Qulllon.
cmoon at the home of her mother. serve a pot luck dinner on election
OBITUARY.
Mrs. Lissctlie Allard. Quinn avc- day at the church basement at AsEmery
Apsey, 3011
son 01
of Juwpn
Joseph m&gt;u
and nue. Lee Huston Ls in charge of syrla Center al noon. A business
rhnrrh I' fcmcr
&gt;' 1.
*• M"?.ri„K,i Louie Apsey, was born August 15.1 arrangements, and Dr. J. Leslie session will be held later.
187? al Williamston. He spent his'French will officiate, assisted by
I'fM I
da&gt;« 111 Auburn. N Y . tin- ' Rev. H. P Cornell ofr Kinde.
KXidv.
i0 Bt 1 til the outbreak of the Spanish- f t. . ......
Am.n,«n w.r when he eniuled In
' nnmnnnv
Company a
* in
13 n.
U. fl
S. Tnfantrv
Infantry atirf
and . lhh comlnulllty her 110nll? although
— -00
1‘ saw three years of active service in her work had taken her away from
the Philippine Islands. Upon re­ here on two different occasions for 1
turning he resided in Auburn. He periods of several years. For 11^
was united in marriage on Novem­ years she was employed in the!
ber 17. 1904. to Agnes May Clark. To Zemke store in the ready to wear
n. "t । this union four children were bom. '
department. She spent aIx years
"iwr.t Mrs. Charlotte Wertman. Battle In a department store tn Portland. 1
ri”r- Creek; Mrs. Nellie Brownfield. DIOregon, as a filter of ladles ap­
with mondale; Emery. Jr...and Elmer of parel; and for the past nine year* ।
Hastings. The family moved to had been a dressmaker and coat •
Michigan in 1913 coining to Has­ maker In Hastings.
She was a
BAPTIST CHUBCH.
tings In 1917. Besides his widow and member of the Presbyterian church
B. J. ADCOCK. Minuter,
„OB four children, he is survived by a since girlhood. Her faiher. Kenton
day arhnnl at HI o'clock;
23. nivina arnica al 11 &lt; &lt;wk: brother. Elmer of Auburn. Jj. Y . a W. Allard, preceded her in death
&lt;! half-sister. Mrs. Frank Carpenter. several years ago.
• Grand Rapids, a half brother. Earl
Besides her mother. Miss Allard
&gt;h,«. 1 Apsey of Howard City and four
I grandchildren. He has been In fall- is survived by two sisters and two
arrk i Ing health for some months past brothers. Miss Maud Allard. Mrs.
John
Reichert, of Caro; Claude Al­
»)» and died at 11:30 o'clock Tuesday
j night. He was a kind and loving lard. Richmond. Va.; and Kenton
' husband, father and grandfather Allard of Detroit.
and leaves a large circle of friends.
FILOBIM nOUNlU TA1EBXACLE
HOLD EDUCATIONAL EXHIBIT.
A military funeral was held on Fri­
The City Union of the Council of
day nt 2:00 P. M-. al the Methodist
church, the Rev. W. Maylan Jones Religious Education met Sunday

?

?

?

?

?

??????

It Won't Be Long Now!

Straight From New York To You
AND JUST IN TIME FOR

DRESSES
We've gone the limit
. .
come, see for
STREET frock a.
NOON
frocks.

thia year
yooroeW!
AFTER­
JACKET

Me CALL’S

UCTION SALE

Owing to ill health, I will have an auction sale at my
farm, 2 1-4 mile, north of Prairieville on the Prairieville-Yan­
kee Springs County Road, on

SATURDAY, APRIL 11

$10-90

Commencing at 1:00 o'clock P. M., sharp. I offer the follow

-----

-------------- ing property

oficlating. Burial was in Riverside.
OBITUARY.
Harry A. LeGear. son of Richard
and Louise LeGear. was born In Ire­
land. on July 15. 1861. When about
eight jtwis of age he came with his i
parents to Canada, where he grew .
to young manhood. He was mar- j
rled to Minnie Bullock on July 23,1
1896 in Minnesota. She preceded I
him in death, two years and one
Churrh month.
While living near Quimby he was 1
an active member of the Quimby [
Methodist church.
pltal. after a month's Illness.
Surviving are one daughter Mrs.
Mrs. Earl Strickland, where he
made his home, an adopted son.
William Heitman of Ludington, and
three sisters. Mrs. Geo. Ireland of
Victoria. Texas. Mrs. ROley Billings
of Winnipeg, Manitoba and Miss
Emma LeGear of St. Mary's. On| tario and two grandsons, Keith and
Wendell Strickland.
Funeral services were al the
Quimby church Friday morning at
11:00 o'clock. Burial in the Striker
cemetery, the Rev. c. M. Conklin
officiating.

HORSES.
THE NEW

ARCADE
THEATRE
MIDDLEVILLE

FRIDAY. SATURDAY
and SUNDAY,
APRIL 3, 4 and 5
j
|

WILL ROGERS
IN

j
I

FORTUNATE CASTLETON.
The township of Castleton is to
have no township tax this year and
none was levied in 1935. The taking
over of township highways by the
county
the mcnhi
McNItl taw
law has
i,.. ...» -..v .nA p.. coun
« under
unaer tne
nas
th* Run&lt;far aehool at th» relieved that township of a lot of
L---------»-------- ....
I expense which used to be necessary |
for highway work. The Castleton '
township board finds that it has ।
. . —1 funds on hand sufficient to carry it
(day
«|. through two year* without levying
h ’wricl
»i ithc towrislllP tax- This is certainly .
It. nrayvr mMi- ia splendid record and one that the .
da$ka,'at,*ilft' UxP**ers of the township will ap- I
rill ba held at I Predate.

Steamboat
'Round
the Bend”
•■This is no dobbt your
last opportunity to see
this grand picture!

MATINEE SUNDAY
at 3:00 o'clock

CONTINUOUS SHOW

FARM TOOLS.

Mare, 13 yr&gt;. old, wt. 1300.
Gelding, 15 yrs., wt. 1400.

HOGS.
Brood sow, wt. 300, and 7
pigs.
CATTLE.
Red Polled cow, 3 yrs. old,
due Oct. 1.
2 yearling cattle.
SHEEP.

14 grade Shropihire ewe&gt;, 1
to 5 yrs. old.
Grade Shrop ram.
TERMS:—CASH.

Massay-Harris grain binder, good co»-

Massay-Harris hay loader.
Empira disk grain drill.

Hay ladder.

Land toller.

international riding cultivator.
Gale 2-hone walking cultivator.
Oliver spring tooth 2-sec. drag.
Single walking cultivator.
Oliver 99 plow. Platform scales.
Stoneboat. 2 buggies. Cutter.
Tank hoater. Single harness.
Melotte cream separator.

Canthook and other

No property removed until

PETER DE
Henry Flannery,

Gardner Bi

Mttlfd

�■

.............

——

BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

The Hastings Banner

It’s the Spirit of a Community
That Count*—Not Its Size

THURSDAY. APRIL 2. 1936

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

Editorials

This and That ||j

1936

The Public Forum |||
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

.NUARY ~

To the Editor:
t»overnment had employees al work
Our good friend Muri DeFoe. we 1’ Recently there have appeared in , gathering data from other county
I your paper several articles opposing | official records ■ in Ionia county
see. twitted us for twitting a stale- |
tho plan of having the county run (proves that the government did not
ment of Governor Frank Fitzgeran abstract office. With your per- recognize lonla county abstracts as
aid's-to the effect that if the Re­
publicans expected to win, . they mission I would like to state the -aufficlcntly covering the titles of*
would have to dig up some is- i other side of the question as it ap- [lands.
pears to me.
| in his letter Mr. Charlton saya
sue more popular than the const)-1
The article* I refer to laid con- that Tuscola county, which has
tutlon.
...
| slderable
■j
u!_ stress
-............upon how
i . well
&gt;i and
....j „onc hun(lrr(j inore yoimnea,- than
Editor DeFoe states
logically ------------- - —---------PGVBtfb
offlea Barry, has -r. _Lw....w; office
- - --------------encugh that
The governor, being had served
rented Uie
the people of
o this
thu counroun- which cost but $5,000. Tuscola
us ccompare
an astute observer of political psy-j...
l&gt;,«_
10 .ulh5 1&gt;4S.V , • -• “
,Ornp^J2 Ij county ha* no county abstract
chology. knows his position Is 7oreh~«ed In—
this
----- county
county with I office. There are two privately
zh“—d in lonla county.1 owned abstracts in that county. The
,i.et. "Popeye" is more In vogue. In ' pr’ce* charged
. fact -a second rate movie star would where thc abstract business has I writer caUed up Mr Albert Purdy,
outdraw Ute Supreme Court as an been carried on by the county for | on Tuesday. He is Hie owner of one
of the privately-owned abstract ofattractioreln any city in the land. years.
In Barry comity the prices for ab-1 flees in Uiut county. Mr. Purdy atatAll tills Lv just too bad but the gov­
ernor. hard as it to admit, I* 100 tracts are now 65 cent* per trans-1 cd that the abstract business which
per cent correct in his position. Wc action and $3.00 for certifying. In he owns was purchased several
have substituted indifference lor in­ lonla dounty the price has for years | years ago from a former owner and
been 25 cents per transaction and that lie paid $21,500 for it and that
! telligence in thL* country."
$1.25 for certifying nnd the lonla several thousand dollars additional
............................
had since been done on it.
; Exactly! The above Ls a clean cut office has always been self sustain- work
1 presentation of the idea wc were at­ ing. Furthermore the farmers of He said that the former owner sold
tempting to convey.—Namely that Ionia county have had no more It at what he considered a great
thc public mast be kidded and trouble getting loans from the Fed­ bargain. It had cost much more
amused, these day*; or anything to eral land bank than hove the farm­ than he paid. We learn also that
keep it from the burdensome neccs- ers of Barry county, which is pretty the other abstract office, which Mr.
ally of facing real LsSue* squarely. good evidence that thc lonla ab­ Charlton says was completed'tn one
year at a cast of &lt;5.000. is not com­
। Can these "comic strip" tactics, stracts arc good.
Now as to the cost of preparing plete. So far they have not even a
however, be blamed entirely onto an
I indifferent public? Hasn’t this in­ abstract books. The only way onc complete abstract of. the farming
can
estimate
this
is
to
compare
our
hinds of Tuscola county. They have
! difference resulted, nt least in part,
county with
Willi »
a LUU.44)
county that
WIIUV has
I HU Ullin.
done ( (|Ol
|&gt;l C KU HIT
I ttll, IU
not CUIII
completed
the UUSlIULl
abstract records
chants can produce when they puli sourl. a stale that specializes m
because the public has grown Im­ 14JU4II)
patient with promises that have the work. Tuscola county which hos , for .Hie villages, towns and cities of
dogs—hound dou—that howl The
together.
Tuscola
county, nor of- any resort
been mode but not kept, listless to 100 more volumes than Barry coun- —
hound-dog
The exhibits were Interesting and gentleman from* the
• stirring orations that have turned ly claims to have done the work in properties’ in that county. It is by
well organized, the entertainment state seeks a boon of $50,000.
, out to be just so much hot air and one year al a cast of $5,000.00 or an no means complete. At thc present
good and the people who attended'
"Mr. Speaker, thc propaved appro; convinced that the honesty jrntL-in- average cost of less than $14.00 per rate of progress It will take years to
appeared to be In a decidedly "holl- printion is onc of the finest exami tegrlty of the average politician can volume and is now writing abstracts complete those records. When done
be measured In terms of votes? In for the people, nils docs not seem it will have cost many times $5,000.
day" mood. The various boollis pies of boondoggling that has come
1 other words L* the public listless be- to me like an exorbitant price for Even then it will not be a complete
provided a rather striking dLvplay of to the attention of thc American
| cause it knows it is being kidded: the people to pay in order to gel set of abstract records. Mr. Charlton
the great range of merchandise congress!"
, or hate the politicians been forced their own records Indexed so that says the Tuscola abstracts cast only
$14 per book. A blank abstract
which business men here carry on
Here thc gavel fell HL* time had
| to resort to kidding because the they con use them.
Now just a thought In regard to, book, with iio writing in It cosU
I public is listless?
their shelves. Best of all. ttie event expired.
the activities of Hie Michigan Title over $30. which shows how wide
lived up to its name and was absoMain turned from the rostrum,
of thc mark are Mr Charlton*
Or Ls thi* Jii'l the old. old ques­ Association.
lulely free. Not a single article was bent over as if calling a dog. and
I have the word of a former Rep. statements. Wc learn that a for­
tion of "which came first the chick­
permitted to be sold and there were proceeded whistling up thc aisle. Be­
en or the egg" wrapped in a differ­ tn our Mate legislature that for sev- mer register of deeds Ls trying
|
eral
years
thi*
same
association
has
to make this other set of ab­
ent covering?
no refreshment stands or gambling tween whistles he called
. .
। successfully prevented any reform stract rtcord.1 In Tuscola county. It
booths to help separate patrons
"Come Boon, come Boon!"
One thing is certain no demo-1our abstract laws lliftl would In can be seen that thc arguments
with
Miss
Virginia
haul
and
GreyWOODLAND.
from the contents of their pocket­
Then he broke into a song
erotic government can get anywhere any wa&gt;' &gt;lshten the burden on pco- which Mr. Charlton bare* on hi* as­
Mr and Mrs. Harry Rogers of don Faul of Grand Rapid* while
books. The cofi«e and dauglmut
unless the public is willing to face
who arc compelled to buy ab- sumption that a set of abstract
"Come along, little doggie, come
i Bootnvillc. Ohio, and Mr and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Chas Rowlndcr were
books can be pri pared for $5,000 for
rcnl issues squarely and apparently stracU.
stand proved to be a popular place, a lang!’’
Earl Ziimmerman
Zimmerman 01
of unarit
Charlotte were In Florida
Tuscola or any other county L« so
.
j I r-ari
[Kill tic Ian* in this country can’t get]
Irving D. Charlton,
and Hu*, too. was free.
After which Hie House voted. 8undliy afieril0on caUers
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond McLeod
“ “s ..............
nt the
fur from the facts thlil it Ls not
anywhere
[tcrsonally
If
they
do
try
Unfortunately all merchant* who .against him and for thc Townsend home of Rev and Mrs Don Carrick entertained for dinner Sunday Mr
worthy of consideration by anyone
._
fsuea
aquareiy.
a
mierni
The
Banner
gladly
gives
place
In
to present issues squarely. A dilrmwished display space could not be investigation by an overwhelming
Mr and Mrs Orville Van Wic and Mrs Gilbert McLeod and fam­
ma to say thc least—A ritualion 11U columns to thc communication who wants to g-l the truth about
ily. Mr and Mr*. Dell William* mid
TWENTY YEARS AGO
where the public can point with’Irving D Charlton. Hastings
accommodated even though the majority.
I house with her parents, Mr and Ml-** Mildred William* of Miison.
••* Aimee Renkcs -and
• • Carroll ...com at politicians with the poll- • township, urging Barry county own­
Neither the Banner nor anyoin
Home Lumber Company turned over
Supper will be rerved Wednesday Bote* will rep~*ent Hartings In th? i[c|Bn* reciprocating Both are right er*hlp and operation of an abstract
1 Mr*. Percy Pratt, have moved to
connected with It has any interest
MW1IS4U4 UmU be 144-0444! ot au Swn’taJw iS,; n; gj. ~'m~ evening by Chib No 4 of the Ladle* Suo-Di.*trict oratoncal contest Fif-1 _ftnd both wrung.
all available room to the Commer­
office. We comment elsewhere on . whatever in the abstract’ businr.w.
Aid/of
thc
Methodist
church
priceless gem which It sent to grace | ploymcni at the Miller Dairy Fann*
j that proposition.
teen participated in the local con­
cial Club.
।
We
are uftcrly opposed to an invest­
Mrs Cora Shripbeil who spent the
*re
in Mr.
Credit for the idea of thi* fair, wc the House of Representatives at I in connection with the Miller ice winfier in Lake Odessa with Mrs test nt Hastings High school Thurs­ । Possibly Hie answer is lack of out-1 _.There
-------— statements
---------------... i Inenl of muny thousands of dollar?,
i Cream Co Mr* Van Wie will conday nirth: Mi . Renkcs won lthCharlton's letter so misleading that of taxpavers' money in n ret of ab*'r j standing leadership.
under*land, goes to Dr. George Washington’
| tinue 111 r work nt the Woodland
we think they should In fairness be । siract books and record*, when I*.
M'nmr-juniin oration taking as her
Lockwood, preildcnt of the Com­
V&lt;c have plenty ol astute jx*nt|. roinnientedon. First is hisstalemeni
mean that the county nnd tha
Boni to Mr and Mr Ken McMil­ Carroll Bal-* won from a field of 27 ■ dR^ but very few statesmen who that abstracts in Ionia county, where Sheldon Abstract company will ltav3
mercial Club but the outstanding
TOPSY-TURVY TIMES
! w ill join her husband Wc will miss
I- i this young couple from our com­ len of Lake Odrv.a a live and one- in the freshman-sophomore '•*- -have the nbilit
- • * and the courage -to ,u
* —
—••• owns •».&lt;- -i
—.to ^...^
-------------- which, ncOver In some suburbs near chlllw
county
the —
only
abstract
divide ..._
thc patronage
half pound daughter. Joyei- Elaine damn lory contest the week
I
munity
but
wish
them
much
sue
­
rnake an Indifferent public "lend an office, cczit but 25c per transne- cording to Mr Sheldon's record!
fine eo-oirrntion of the local busi- cago. we read, a $30,000 WPA rcCongratulations.
’ cess in their new home
ear," or at least a part of one. to, Hon.
... L He
H«* states that these abstract*
abstract.* (which he
hr L*
L-i willing to allow
show to
toanyanyncssmen. Even those who were un- creation project l* underway, which.
Another Hasting* player is guliig i the leal issue* of the day.
were accepted by. **■■
thc ~government
‘ onc wll0 |, interested&gt;. ha* averaged
Mr and Mrs Donald Gager and
MIDDLEVILLE.
able io obtain display space exhibit- among other things includes classes I Mr and Mr* F E Border were
authorities us being a suffictcnt abOul $1,000 per annum for ttie last
•as received here Thursday Brown of thi:. city ha.ed their good will by contributing to for taking surplus poundage off Lansing
basis for loan* they made In Ionia 20 year* Divide that between two
Lansing visitors Saturday
NORTHWEST
THORNAPPLE.
all-, of Mrs Myron Freethe prize fund of :he ".scrambled from stout malron*-of the district. I Mr and
«4
'county. We learn from good author- [offices and onc can easily *cv that
Mrs David Kilpatrick of
Our community was saddened the
enough
clas-.es
antl Arthur Kilpatrick of recently b-en taken for treatment; Central League Mr Brown’.-, strong I past week by thc death of Mrs. , tty that that is not the fact. There 1 thr taxpayers' money will be wastname" conte.t which aroused *Ircnicallv —
—•- these
- -•
------- A'"’ Arbor
*left .-irm galrn-d a groat reputation
। was no other abstract office in Ionin rd. bccau.v half of such an amount
besides th- husband she leaves for him ns .a pitcher for the team Myron Freeman at the hospital In
great deal of interest
county. so^thBt if the,government would not pay the r-|Kn.w.* nf the
three children and three brothers Jut season
We hop* that thi* Commercial abandoned because the district was i KHpatrtck.
.U.i ”
-------------------------------- - — —■
Club Fair may be an annual even, unable to raise sufficient money to j jean England of Hasting* was a and many oth-r relatives to mourn
Mum
and
required to have, it had “
to have
only set of abstract books in that
■ th- passing of a good wife and
; c-uttty
But wc arc in- ,
and that the fine spirit whirh made pay expense* Pupil* arc being sent j guest of hl* mother Mr* Glen Eng- mother She ua.* but 51 years of
ch'",''n I formed that the federal land-bank county, and they arc complete.
Montcalm and Barry are similarly
it possible m.iy be a permanent fix- to a city school with resultant land and sisters. Pollyanna and age and had always lived in this vi- week’s vacation with the former * and husband
. j
mother Mrs. Charles Hershberger
hud w»yvi»
lawyers nnu
and vu&gt;|uujEr»
employees gviii^
going situatcn
...
.
nau
situated Tne
The price per irurrac.wn
trareaetton
turr in
one UIrtowin, » mt U»&lt; P»WU 44. tM I ’bJT’toSiI!'
ML« । .................................................................
clnlty. funeral was held Sunday —
at of Grand Rapid.
Mi** Fern Kcnneen and Maynard through the book* In the register *. in Barn county is 65c; in Montcalm
the Pirme’.i'.' church with burial
Smcad
niul
mother
of
Battle
Creek
count
y
clnrk'8.
probate
Judges
and
county it I* 75c Ye I the records shew
'
ftr;: tour srades Cln «Hend for Margaret Cobb of Anti Arbor were m the n-urby rrm.-terv She had
were Sunday afternoon and evening cour.ty treasurer s records in Ionia ■ tn Montcalm county that that enuntamed
last
Wednesday
evening
with
govern-1, Sunday
guests of Dr. and .,
Mrs, TH,"
’
.
w
..
suffered for
a ‘long time and- -hadgucvLs of th*' formers parents. Mr. county, to get .a.&lt;.
------- .----additional Informs- ty Ls not making. ■....
any money from
FlooC* in the United State-, will men|
feeia it ha* enough
: Iwa to Ann Arbor once before for a mx o’clock dinner complimenting and Mrs. Earl Kermccn
enough ’I Co,,',
। non with respect to the lands they its abstract Investment. In Jackson
become increasingly worse unlc.ts wc Jnont.y i0 BjVC
instruction ini, Mr? anrt '',r‘ GalU* Parker of trealin-nt A large circle of friend* her father. William Ream, on his
-76U1 birthday Twelve - guests were
Mr and Mrs. James Batson and loaned money on. because these Ionia county. (lie county-own-vf abstract’
,h. .bPKrt ol eilrtSSbnmhrt
T “X4^ ’
Archie Kermccn of Hastings were county abstracts were not complete charges $| per transaction, and Ls
attention, say authorities who h
A bowling '."am composed of the Friday evening supper gumU of The writer saw an abstract, fur- a money-loser for thc county, in
mg. skating, boxing, acrobatics, etc..; day
i 1&lt;as. ...
suns the xx-eu- following gentlemen will ro to their brother. Earl Kenneen and, nbhed by the Ionia county abstract
Wayne county, where the county
gjsrn the subject detailed study
can scrape up a wom out dime to I Mr and Mr* Fay C Wing ci
tivc board ol th&lt;* Boy Brotits held a Grand Rapid.. Thursday evening ' j family
I1 office, which
...... ....
■—- —
had this -------notation
in owns a set of abstract record* and
assist this community In giving hsl ,a’,.srd
i“’‘l Mr'
C
meeting al the sc hool building. Rev
) The M E church of Middicvillo
substance: There may be other competes with a privately owned
.
,
। “»« -Mm Donaid and Mr and
RUdman wa* darted leader for tilt* lotlzc team J MeNerla R Hub- | gave a fine reception Wednesday marginal discharges of mortgages
fertile agricultural regions of th:.* youngsters a decent education
Lawrence Chase ot coat.* Gro.
abstract, the county invested a mil­
country acts a_. a gigantic blotter m
bard J Dooley and Cy Young
evening in honor of the 53rd wrd- not shown on this abstract." That is lion and a half dollar* and charge*
Heavy appropriation* for stream- dinner Tuesday evening
m good
Thornapplr river I. within two j ding anniversary of Mr and Mrs an adml'-slon that, the abstract is tlJR) per transaction. It has been
absorbing moisture and rainfall. lined hip*—not a penny for edueaGordon Finnic of Hast mg
leader
fee’ of its highest water mark Con- ; David Benaway
A program of really valueless. The fuel that the a sbenay money loser.
tion Truly these are topsy-turvy
' *’lh Mr
-!--!er.ibl»’ damage ha.* been done in ■ songs and instrumental music and
; away inth - ci’.v on Market street E Thom, talks by old neighbors and friends
department of tills city premature
some business matters Site had
stead of rolling ot!
urface a*
I grey hairs. Tommy suggests a comMr. Jessie Hatton of Grand Rap­ )u«t returned fro-fl caring lor her
some
of thc streets an- *ra* ol mud IrcshmcnU wen- served Thc wednordertilc
id- u«r«- woodland visitor? Monday mother, who has been vtv 111 in
atid
rural
delivery
scrvi-q
|.
greatding
cake
was
beautifully
decorated
j
soil*. Each year countless ta:.* ol
Mr* Hatton and Mr* Roaladcr at- Mecosta Co Mr* Simpson and hus­
ly delayed.
. by Burdette Benaway of Middle­
Hew to Uie line, let the quips
Housing program.* of which so'
' Johnny Armbruster. I rec. ha:, an
thc richest soil in America i* being
band had recently returned from
I villc
fall where they may 1
THtRTT-YEARS AGO *
j 2_________________________________
■•xpecL*
to
go
to
Detroit
ior
the
suiirMr
and
Mr*
I.
H
Salisbury
of
‘
~
creeks and river*. Fjo.uod Lv some- completely succMaful until every-, Mr'
So ha* Joe Thompson—but forGrand mcr Her many fnenct* here were Chicago arc guests of Mr and Mr. 1 L J Goodyear o’ Allegan assistthing that grows and spreads like a body has a iwusc tn which anybody , Rapids
By Observing Tommy.
tunalely for a different brunette.
much pleared to see her azain.
Will Thoma.. Mr SalLsbury i. con- Itanl principal in the city schools, is
—Boston
H the home o! Mr and Mr
Dumb it! Ail my shoes have acufmalignant di.sco.« unless proper 'ire would be glad to liveguest*
Thc Past Chiefs' elub of the ductor and manngcr of the famous contemplating a trip abroad during
fed
toes.
Gues*
almost
every
onc
in
Wonder If Frank wrsf* those
PvMilan Sister.-, held their monthly Salisbury orchestra of Chicago and the *uinmer vacation
remedial measure, are taken A* Globe
( Mr and Mr*. Don Tyler and
Thc ’wedding
Frances V. Barry county stepped on ’em at thc black-rtmmed glasses and that low-,
ha* ium closed a verv successful
T,,r
“‘dduig of Mis* France*
thc fertility of thc rxjil u reduced
down hat to hide a real black.eye?
I Cunningham to William T Grigsby fair
A gardening expert ha* written a .amiiv were &lt; uu-rtainea nt the Jim Friday with 12 member- and two
thc vegetation which bind- it to­
Guy Sircar-Bu*h Sunday afternoon visitor* rnlnymz a line dinner. after
Kalamaeoo !wtt“u't ’■olemnixed at the home of the
MU&lt; ..................
------------------book nn cabbages. Surely paper
Hit' tir.*t second third and fourth which their bustn-u- meeting took Friday where he ha ■ accepted
Didn’t win a prUe either But I 1 Windy, from his lofty eminence,
gether is killed and thi*
-------- u u | bride
bride'ss parent* iMr and Mrs Isaac
would have been cheaper —Punch. I grades of the Woodland township
"in
in Irving township. was on the same floor with some one &gt;»ho knows how to pick 'em.
place. It was a v
' z-ant and iXMltion ui one of the leading drug i Cunningham
school wen- entertained u: tne Dia­ , profitable meeting
store*
I| before
before about
about 30C
300 friendj and rela- that did! Hehl Hch! That's closer1
the work of rainstorm* anti spring
Some persons like to listen to a mond
theater ...of Lake odrxM MtS&gt;|.
■ Understand Uie Commercial club...
........
The o E S- held a meeting last
than I usually come.
Satyrdav evening a pleasant sur- ;UVM Tuesday afternoon,
thaws. Such denuded areas then good talker while others prefer talk- ■ urday
i bers had a grand lime and a great
uroay afternoon Beside*
Beside.* t*o-short
t'*o-short Friday at which nearly 100 iouk prise wj . p*rpc:raled upon Mr and I
------------comcdie*
u i cr
comct.ie* ar.
an amateur
anmteur 'haw
-hya-w.i.
gn. part Man-, from town. arf»und tl.c Mi
Ask Archie McDonald what hap­ I fezd out al Coal* Grove, it was thc
act as watershed?, along which rain- Ing to a good listener—GritFIFTY YEARS AGO
DeWitt Murdock by member?rn
by
"
*
rn by the different guttle* und also count*- were prevent and th&lt;- travcL al the Eastern Stat’- Mr and M
.
first lime that a lot of the boy* had
pens
when you talk Into a ‘mike'
,u.
And now there i* a little light on r
laps slide with little absorption or
--r
........
prwcnt
•
'
...
.
other
f.chook*
wh
Let’s hope the machine era1
lour streets these dark night*, the without turning on the switch—or been dLcovered inside a church lor
Murdock will move to Del ion wh'
reiistcricc to. swell streams and riv­
Mrs. Gco^-fa
who
better yet. ask G. E. Carpenter
। many and mar.^ a month.
Fire alarm Saturday P M was to Mr Murdock will engage in ithe I cltv maintaining six street lamp*
doesn’t end before a self-pushing
ers to overflowing.
ipendinj^'-'H-.e
.......
. ............. .
Bowne
and family
returned
the farm home of thc Severances lumber business.
-A -J -- ---------------.------------^r'*
O'Brien md lam. west o! town;
... ...
Soil erosion results m dual siornu* lawnmower is evolved—Arkansas jayj
Earl Paimaller. I understand. • No mud slinging in th* great eity
fortunately
little
The
reason
for
thopening
ot
the
from ‘be south Tuesday. They are
Gazette
.
.
diFa ».......
in
. .
home damage to an old bulidtnc
wool market t* about at hand but al present domiciled at the Hastings finds tastily arranged centerpieces campaign yet and only four piore
" -----------Woodland-Sunday. Mr ;
of iruu
fruit quite
quite wnsmioic.
irresistible. unci;
Chet' days to go! Keep the good work up.
Mr*. , 8 G Smith had an Injury to an ”
:/i’im to be an inclination House.
oi
rainy seasons and reduces ferule
„„
u .a ,UUIV
, and Mr* ICha*
. .
Wr arc Wbj,irt- him
need
more clastic yirrency O'Brien ono
and N
Mr
'
4uiivii. At ihl-.
Four hundred person* natron ire Hodges tried to keep one on. the
among buyer,
buyer* loio
to go U
caution.
this
areas to waste lands. It is a national
that will stre:chx!l?ar to the'
. F’a,,l °f_» Hasting
spcn{ the day I
li t year Eastern buyer* had lhc clty school library There are table____
tn his
___________________________
booth at the fair but it’
. Tills week's nomination for Ha.sproblem which must be attacked on llUlc feUw Jor
rdlcf lt
I '“th her there
to happened
happened that
that Earl
Earl was
was right
right ting.* Hall of Oblivion—A song which
in th- stat- about 1.300 volumes tn the library
to
many agent-, at work
..
appeopriatejD-^* Angeles Time*. | tojjVo’man^Stody °a?b
I ou, injur-'
Benj Baird ha. h"rn ill the pa.
In speaking of thc band concert acroM tho way In Food Center. And goes "Sweet Violet." It'?. one of those
a national scale.
but now .here arc none.
civ»n at Middleville Tuesday eve­ the joke of II Is that Enrl sold Chet I demmed tunes that got in your
Tb^'dawn of the machine age in fvlninff
Frederick Grencer nnnr home
forty YEARS AGO
ning last week, the Republican the fruit in the first place, a de- -hummer" and stays there We used
WHY KOT ROOD COKTHOL&gt;br m.chm, W In
The Sunday School at the StThursday r-. nine from Ypsilanti
saya; A moM pleasing part of the liclous way of promoting business. I to like violets but right al the moThanks to the activiile* of thc-fjhlna probably will begin with the be devoted to a tn’islcnl program
i ment Tommy prefers skunk cobwhere .he it attending school, to schoolhouse has been reorganized exercise was a vocal solo by Ml«s Tommy say».
-------- Red
------ Cross, relict i*&gt;Mfing ncglha coolie* adoptuig
roller
’Mr. and Mrs. D B Green spent spend a week's vacation with hL* with Mrs. t' Pennock as Supt . Mr&lt; Stella Wheeler of Hastings who
American
• • •
‘bage!
Mr ________
"
’ ________________
sent to the flood suflt^eriin thc skates to speed up traffic —Arkansas ®ntl*rd;&gt;,y *,th Mr and Mr*. Waiter people
.Perry
. a* assistant;
..
. ...
Pennock,
sang the second lime in rcsi»onse to
n.r.tiR
Seott
of
Grand
Rapid*
Saturday
Vein
Chase
and
wife
of
'Trca.
;
Mark
Wilkin*.
Sec.;
Mr
Osrcqieatcd
encoring
appointment.
I
thought
that
maybe
Izo Wtdfnrc has a well-fed look.
east.
‘
UBZCtlc
Miss Mildred William* of Mason Jackson came up to visit t!:-.- home ; mod. Librarian, Cana Osgood, or-1 Negotiations are pending looking Eva'd have rhe twins there.
Wonder U hr cats his own groceries.
While aditjirirtg this generous co­
M- Roosevelt wiiTnevrr be able *s Mending her spring vacation with folks.
, zaiust Millie Patton, chorister.
, to the building of a Knight* of
M.
Rocucvell
will
nc.rr
W
aoie
hef
l&gt;arrnU
Mr
Mn
opers UpR" of the American public
Wc are pleased to report that Mrs
Ml** Mary McElwain Is closing : Pythias half over the Goodyear
Those free s'cups s’coffee were
Fred Ballance, so I hear, is at
to complain that wc hired him and ’ Hams
W H Johnson, who hn* been very out
---------the ------large ...
Lynch
— bankrupt slock block Can they
good,
secure
too. And
favorable
Tommy thinks that least one local musician who locks
then didn't give him anything to do i Thc Klnc'v Hrrafd met •*.■.: E'.Fn ill U much Improved
millinery
one---door
wcut
will
J as
- ■he sounds
J or sound* a*
|I of -----------------------------* *ol’ Hollo- I terms, the Knight*
--------- undoubted- nibbling around the hole - on a as good
help but wonder why. if the pre.vj. D. and
Mrs Baker
have way'*.
—The American Lumberman.
' Hljbcrt
" Frl:
*' ’ay afternoon. Dainty
„
.ly-build a third-atbry on the block doughnutuIs&gt;a nr«n
swell pastime.
good
as he look*, whichever the case
ent administration has millions to
-- - ---------- were
---- - served
.... by Hie । moved b3ck
r. .w
III UlJ.
to .4
their
Grat’u
d Rapids
Mr*
Belle Hendershott. Mrs., making them a hall 44x80 feet If
' may be.
expen41 on inch prol«u ol 0»ub4. ( -Ul mc „„ ,t lh,
Uop c0„. hostess.
.
'‘ st-ret
street home
home fo;
tar thc
the summer
1 love to dunk/loo!
Minnie Diamond and Mrs. Frank, it it is done, the new block will be
Mr* R&gt;; r 0 . l
spent FrlAmos Palmer left Saturday to Ham* will hove solos at thc Easier an ornament to the city.
(441 worth u Iho Plo.-ld. 4Alp
ant„r ,
UlU
, |u„ch.
day with Mr». ciias Look of Beld- I visit hi* wife, who is til at h"r par- services al Emmanuel church Sun- 1 Albert Eyclcshymer and Dora
Never saw anyone who giu *o
and the Passamaquoddy lUlal pow- wagon."—Life
NEW8 GLEANINGS.
|cnt*' home in Grandville or near day.
Kennedy arc home on vacation mixed up In direction* as Van Abe
er. project, it can't scrape together I
'
Ml
Frank Kilpatrick. Raymond Me- i there
Hamilton Carvelh in a rousing , from thc University.
the Til. He headed south for home
Thc lighting industry would l&gt;c
a dollar fa flood control.
Buch 1 We are dumfounded to learn that Lxod, J. L. Smith Fay c Wing and j Wc are pleased to report that letter
I...----------------------------refuses —
to let his
name tun on। iy.wL, stem went to New York Use other day. I understand, and revolutionized if man coald solve the
work would be a long range invret- , JaP"1 alld Ru^ua are not trying to।(Herald
------------------------------Claxsic----------attended
the Broth- LawTcncc Kelly „„
lias been -called «,
to Die free silver ticket.
Monday to purchase goods
..H&gt;mr one told him he was going firefly's method of radiating cold
CrllOOd Father
F'llttier and
.ip.rt Son
QiSt* banquet
hannnaf at work
n—V In
ft. the
Il.a railway
—.11..... postal work at
ment Millions of dollars in prop- P*lm that railroad off on one gn-1. erhood.
The cyclists of Hastings are re­
Rev Henry and family have ar- north; so he turned around and light!
.rt^m...
„.■««. T» r.,
.l.nbUon |
,.,srss
quested. to meet al the Hastings rived In thc city. Mr. Henry has en- went the oilier way and wondered
House Friday cvcnilig for the pur­ tcred upon hii duties us rector of why It look him so long to get home. ! Mnyan architecture Inspired llio
UUally, to aay nothing of the count-;U simply beyond us.-Dclroll News, her home after speuduig two weeks 'good.
pose of organizing-a club.
Euunauuel church..
.
। In order to rare thc lost and found setback skyscrapers of today.

TURN OUT AND VOTE!
I lass millions of indirect losses which
On Monday, April 6. city elections1 result from lost production and the
will be held. AU eligible to do so I obstruction of traffic.
should turn out and vote. Those ' Much of the justifiable criticism
who fall, have not the least justi- : of the administration's terrific pro­
fleatIon for registering protests at gram of spending would be silenced
the way affairs here are conducted. if the projects selected hod perma­
The right to vote In civic affairs is nent value so that the generations
not one to be taken lightly; this Ls who will be paying for our spending
especially true when you consider spree could gain some direct
that we in the United States arc fits for themselves.
among the relatively few peoples of
A PRICELESS GEM
the earth who do have this privilege.
We hope. too. that in a strictly lo­
Michigan Is getting some nice
cal election with no broad Issues or publicity in Washington these days.
principles at stake, that people will According to the Washington Her­
vote with qualifications rather than ald:
.
A vaudeville oct was staged on
party in mind. Hastings has been
very free from dirty political squab­ the floor of the House thc other day
bles for many years and we hope when Townscndlte* Representative
that this spirit may continue.
Verner W. Main of Michigan proi tested against allotting $50,000 for
the Townsend investigation.
A GREAT SUCCESS
Waving his arms wildly. Main
Thc first Hastings Commcrclol
Club Fair can be classed ns a decid­ shouted:
"The Bell committee comes seek­
ed success. It was a thoroughly en­
joyable event and demonstrated ing n loan of $50,000. The chairman
what fine things small city mer­ of the committee comes from Mis-1

March

giASP.|8

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday\

Pungent Paragraphs

'Round About Town

Way of Our World

�TBB HAXTD44ML, BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL t, ISM
WON THE GRAND PRIZES. « I Mr. ArdU' many friend* In «xUndOwtng to the fact that no official Ing congratulation*.
I? A ID 1 down the throats of th: :ault vi*l►cord wm kept of th* h*l oC IM
Th* Chresebrough mill la shut
rAJtl tor*.
Tha youngsters acquitted
inner* of the smaller prise* drawn down for a few days owing to a
I th«m*elve* nobly, never fear, and
। dlapatched 2.000 half pint botUe* of
(Continued
from
page one)
financial report of tha village
.
.
.
..._________ Idwoclate milk. (On* young tad ad- glv* the names of th* many lucky
•Yeeport
recaptly published
there. HodgM Jewelry store con- mttted proudly that he had con­ ones.
densed beauty and charm a* well as sum*d ten bottle* of It and twelve
The -Grand Prizes" drawn each S3.217 01, and expenditure*. 11 Wi ­
practicality Into their display of frledcake* before he got caught), night of .th* fair, from the entrance ll. luring a balance on hand of
china and diver, aince
they Mr*. Charlie Rogers. Mrs. Donna ticket coupon*.1 went on the first 11,895.40 or *943.00 more than las*
’ changed It every day, you couldn't | Herrington and Mrs Theresa Ab- night to Mrs. Wm. Corkin. who re­
year's balance.
I tire of It.
i bey were busy Isdles last week, and ceived the porch glider; Thursday
Carl Rogers of Chicago is spend­
I Didn't the cheerful spring wall If you don't believe us. just ask night the fine
cabinet-cupboard
paper and shining array ot paints them.
went to I. H. Rowley; Friday night. ing a few day* here with hi* molhin Carvelh &amp; Stebbins and Reed's
However, not all the tradesmen ot Stanton senslba drew the dishes;
booths bring out the old redecorat-1 the city were represented al lhe Saturday night Walter Barnum was
Ing urge? Tne
ing
The women, too. nau
had a mur.
Fair.
‘ the lucky one to receive the studio
chance lo redecorate at Ly Barker's But those who weren't made »pe-1 couch.
booth, assisted by lhe representative clal effort to have their places of
-----TALKEQ ON TAXATION..
of a nationally-known line of cos- business attractive. Ray Waters conEzra Clark, of the Clark Truetrac­
metlcs That gorgeou* Bparton radio ducted a guessing contest as to the
tor
Company
of
Battle Creek, gave
with its shining blue disc of mirror number of men's and boys' shirt*
which John Bulling St Bon dis-1 In stock In hl* »tore and had *pe- an Interesting and informing talk
played along with their retrigera-,clal display* arranged for the bene­ on the subject of taxation at the
, tor*, came In for plenty of attention, i fit of visitors. The first two days of Rotary club Monday noon. He eapcand it certainly deserved it. Five the Fair brought between six and clally stressed this point: that when
minutes in front of Feldpau*ch'* seven hundred people into his store, nations abuse the power of taxabig double booth would enable you ' Miller Furniture co, made their ton. they invite calamity. He urged
to compile your weekly grocery list, store spic and span and prepared a his hearers to be Interested in the
And at thc opposite end of the nice little surprise in thc basement subject and not to be backward in
room. Wallace's store was treating for all "lookers." There was a most protesting against the abuse ot this
visitor* to hot biscuit*, coffee, and attractive little five-room apart-soyucanpaiicaKeu
uuvarious
uaom completely
cvu.pu;bcrjr furnished
tuaiuaucu_from
num 1 Mark Twain* observation about
soybean
pancakes on
variousuays.
days, ment
And from thegleaming
display of stem to stem. It* lovely furniture the weather would seem to apply to
refrigerators
from Consumers“Power
kitchen
i and taxation. 'Everybody talks about it.
—
—---------------------------------------tiWw I I up-to-the-minute
up to thc minute
kitchen
fireplace but no onc appear* to do anything
company. Smith Hardware and I charming little Imitation firepl
tn omutf
light of
Ol i_.
CH" tbOUl It.”
I Goodyear's, there was no need for 1, were annuoh
enough to
arouse sighs
any of that good food to spoil,! vy or hope (a* the case might be) ,
;
8AVED THE HOUSE.
The frosty while of the cabinets was in the hearts of the beholder*.
The Hickory Comers fire depart­
softened effectively In the ConsumThc Halls of the Hall Furniture
' er*' booth by the use of colored, 'tore were quite enthusiastic In ment had a stubborn fight Saturday
afternoon
lo save lhe home on the
lights,
. their praise* of the Fair. Score* of
If you were thirsty, it wouldn't i people visited their eslabllahment Frank Boo* farm, three miles south
help much to lock al the tempting ; and business was decidedly on the of Hickory Comer* Mr. Boos had
bottles of orange crush In the Kist up and up during those days. They started a brush fire a considerable
i booth. So you turned away and , even had people inspecting their distance from his farm building*
। that afternoon, a high wind carried
walked spang into a display of some 1 exhibit after hours,

COMMERCIAL

WATERS
•36

:ork
inty
inly
not

of.
ays

han
:ola
racl
tcly
Tha
rdy.
one
oftkh
nnd
ma!

void

CLOTHES SHOP

THE CORRECT NUMBER w«. 1161
• lit PRIZE—
Charles Cappon

• 2nd PRIZE—
Mrs. Mamie Monee

• 19th PRIZE—
Sam Culbert

• 5th PRIZE—
Vesta Harthy

• 21st PRIZE—
Mrs. Merle Wheat­
ing
• 22nd PRIZE—
Mrs. Chas. Shellenbarger
• 23rd PRIZE—
Mrs. A. K. Richard­
son
• 24th PRIZE—
Burr Cooley
• 25th PRIZE—
Richard Beckwith
• 26th PRIZE—
Pearl K. Mattlytws

• 6th PRIZE—
‘Otto Iscnhath
‘C. G. Hinckley
‘Wayno Finkbeiner
‘Mrs. Ella Myers

Mr.
one
m-

• 8th PRIZE—
R. O'Donnell

Ing

• 9th PRIZE—
Gerald Laurence

Ide

IIIR
ib-

tot
&gt;ul

• !7th PRIZE—
Richard Frants
• 11th PRIZE—
Harry Allcrding

• 3rd PRIZE—
Louis C. Hinckley
• 4th PRIZE—
Mrs. Van Nortwick

lore

&gt;ne
XX).
etc
ion
nly
act

n-uJ!L.^x!L?Llh*

Here Are Winners ofOur
Spring Opening Contest!

• 7th PRIZE—
Mrs. Geo. Williams

of
orI
by
ent

j (Tn
VsLiUIj

• 10th PRIZE—
Mrs. Sarah Tinkler
• llth PRIZE—
Bennett
12th PRIZE—
E. O. Jarman
13th PRIZE—
Fred D. Gardiner

of
us the
me most
muov beautiful
ucbuvuui rugs
iu*s you've
,uu .c
So --the-----------------unanimous opinion I* that
ever seen Why.
the____________
Commercial__Club
Spring
”*hr. the
™ nap
“-7 on
— some of ___
__ ______
_ !%lr
I them was almost two inches thick,
thick. i, was a great
.reat success.
sueress In fact,
fact the
ngniers manages to save tne house
Imagine what a glorious feeling it merchants seem so well-pleased
I would be to walk on them Oh boy! I w»h it that they are already makDsipwiTv-Hm thvm
l (They were In Walldorff s booth).
ipg plans for another. And if they're
p-0£iie jmie Stuart Clement
I But even if lhe nap were a foot wming to give them to u*. weTe ,2?°“.“
Element
thick, it wouldn't be any fun walk- willing to lake them, and so we »ay
™
Ing If your feel hurt, so down to Tay- jigger and better Hastings Fairs!"
Osborn as members of the Barry county soldiers'
lor'* Shoe Store exhibit you should | ■
------ “
relief commission. Mr. Foreman's
have gone to see what would cure I
term will expire March 29. 1938 and
your foot Ills, and maybe gel a | I
Mr. Osborn's March 29. 1939.
jaunty striped cane to swing as you • |
shoved
and pushed your way |
MARTIN CORNERS.
through the crowds Those shoes set
Lloyd Cogswell of East Lansing
in lhe middle of silver rosettes were ,
and Wm. Cogswell of Lakeview were |
i attractive, weren't they?
dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and !,
‘। ConUnuM
I Mrs.
Mr. ’ O^’’ Mr .nd Mri
Continued imm
from page on,,
one)
(nrnr More complete In the r.rled
-------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 Fran
mnk Cogswell and family ol Uas-------------! K*er‘ “’who80*01*;’^" o'"regular br
I"
Mhool. The ‘h,g» war. alto caller. .1 the ume

' Rax Dunnigan
• Frederick Hendee
‘Richard Mannl
‘Max Leach

15th PRIZE—
Wm. L. Chase

• 29th PRIZE—
Mr*. Lyle Beadle

16th PRIZE—
Mr*. H. W. Frost

• 30th PRIZE—
Mn. Marie Cole

Brvandi*. OreUiwn

Arilne Truesdale, Lola WUland;
Carl Wortey. Lorna Btswart; MMnight, Frederick Boughner; Dahlia.
Edith Cramer. The setting ot the

Headquarters fw
“Standard" well made

you’ll be thankful for

• 27th PRIZE—
‘Mrs. A. E. Bennett,

• 28th PRIZE—
Esia Seeber
‘George Brown

o. p. haU ou Frw
*Mk at • o'clock

Every time you kneel or stoop

• 20th PRIZE—
L. B. Gardiner

14th PRIZE—
Robert Hindoo

broUn ,haft

l-IT-ALL-lOP

“Kayur” 4-Thrwd MirO-Kleer Chiffon and a T*
Thread Service
weight al—

STOCKINGS

“IRONCLAD" full (aabioned, all ailk

75'

CREPE SLIPS

00

Tailored or-

25\.a50
SUITS

he

an
m

m
in

id

AUCTION SALE

50e to I1XX)

Our New Spring

CURTAINS

♦ No more pulling at
your hose tops—no
more needless runs! Kayser’s “Fit-AllTop” can give, and take it! The 2-way
stretch adapts itself to every sixe leg,
every kind of strain. Jubilant customers
tell us it’s the one sheer hose they can
afford to wear, day in and day out.

beautiful for thc price*.
Panel* in many new de­
signs—
.69

39

Yard Good* lo match
Ruffled Curtain* at—

69'

You’ll Find Easter Happiness
In Every

Cinderella Garment
Suits
a#

Easter Fashions are more colorful than evtr be­
fore. Color in quantity .. • that is the formula
for a smart Easter. You will wear Navy Blue,
_
Powder Blue, Orchid or Grey, but

Coats

Because I am unable to continue my farm work because of
poor health, I will sell my personal property at public auc­
tion at my farm, a mile south and a half mile west of Jones
school or a mile north and half mile west of Ryan school, on

with a daxh of gaiety
that will mark them
clearly, Easter 1936.

Dresses

SATURDAY, APRIL llth

m

Starting at 1:00 P. M.

I offer the following property

cows.

Red cow, due lost of May.
Guernsey cow.
FARM TOOLS.

Champion, binder.
McCormick mower.
Moline riding plow.
Oliver plow. No. 99
Logging jack
Harrison wagon.
Gale cultivator. Spring seat.
5-tooth cultivator.
International hay loader.

IS

Spike tooth drag.
Spring tooth drag.
Hay fork, rope and pulleys.
Sleighs. Scythe and snath.
Harness and collars.
Posthole digger. Shovel.
Scales. Log chains.
McCormick hay rake.

TERMS:—CASH.

MISCELLANEOUS.

No property removed

until settled for.

S. C. GEISE, Propr.
DEWEY REED, Auctioneer.

’1”

Cottlge Set* 69c to $1.00

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

di

Id .00

“CARTERS" Underwear,
Rayon Briefs, Ve*t or
Pantie*—

EPOCH-MAKING
EVENT WAS THIS

of children will result In thc prop- | Remember the S. S. next Sunday
ers would ever believe that a tire । er care and development of the
,0:30- followed, by lhe preaching i
as huge a* the one in the Andrus ' teeth,
t-eth. which have an important service. Plan to attend both these
booth would have any practical ।
part in promoting the health and services.
value? And yet tires just that size
' NOTICE—Where guesses were duplicated, such
The MarUn P. T. A. will meet
welfare not only of the children i
arc actually used on tractors. We re ,
now. but which will be of great this Friday evening. April 3. Mr.
as Nos. 6, 27 and 28, we are going to duplicate
sure Intelligent farmers really ap­
value to them when they become I Wallace, assisted by others from his
preciated the exhibit of the Farm : adults.
prizes. If the above winners will call at thc store
store, also Mrs. Pratt of Hastings.
Bureau.
.
Reading Is a village of about one j । will be on the program. Be sure
they may pick out their prizes.
Mr. Frandscn's display right al thousand people. To the credit of not to miss it. It will be worth your
the head of thc stairs made lots of
that village, let It be said that from ' while to attend.
women decide that they really
250 to 3no parents regularly attend-'
should have some pretty new un­ rd thesessions of Uie institute Wed-1j
SOUTHEAST WOODIAND.
J
dies, and they had to have several nesday. Thursday and Friday To
Mr. and Mrs. Noil Granger and
I pairs of hose after they'd seen thc the session held on Friday after-.; Clarence Lester of Dowling spent ,
SELLING QUALITY KEEPS US BUSY
1 outlay of sheer wispr. of silk in Lar- noon parents from all over Hills­ ' Friday evening with Cha*. Farlee
HASTINGS
MICHIGAN
1 sen s booth. Wonder how come so '
dale county were invited It was ex-1। and family.
many gentlemen happened to draw
pected that al least 500 would at- ; Mr. and Mrs. Verlin Murphy and
‘ ladies' hose as prizes?
( children of East Woodland moved
। tend.
I ■ This may not be an Indication of | Thepparent.,
arrnt_. who
REPEALED TWO ORDINANCES. &gt; city. These ordinances were rep
whocame
cameto
tothe
thcfirst
first| on the Ute Rev. John M. Smith's
repealed
• numbers, but it certainly Ls an in- • jay's session were grouped, about ।, place the past week.
The council voted Friday evening because Acl No. 228 of lhe P.
to re|x-al the two ordinances which' 1935 render
"
"
these ordinances
null1 dlcalion of appetites During lhe thlrty to cach group -nie teacher!I Mr. and Mrs. Walter Luc** of
the city has for licensing electric­ and void That act provides for state■ four days of the Fair, no less than |Of ttaelr children explained in detail Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
ians and providing for inspeclinR licensing of electricians and stale■ 4,800 fricdcakcs were consumed, and |what she was trying to accomplish i Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Lucas.
There
onc | Mr. and Mra. Cha*. Farlee and
cl-ctrical installations within thc Inspection of electric Installation. ; from 12 to 14 pounds of coffee every ; ln thclr 3chooi
and 1
factory In Reading Thc owners family accompanied by Mr.
dismissed the men for half a day.1i Mr*. I. N William* and Doris were 1
giving them the regular wages, so dinner guest* of Mr. and Mr*. Floyd '
Williams In Battle Creek Saturday, they could attend the institute.
Wc cannot go Into details, but In honor of the latter'* »ilver wed­
two addresses were given by Dr. ding anniversary. The event had
E. W. Sink of the University of special Importance a* their son-in­
Michigan health service. Dr. Bar­ law and daughter. Mr. and Mrs.
rett. state department of health, Ralph Rozetna of Grand Rapids,
gave two fine talks on the subject celebrated their seventh wedding
of dhease.
anniversary on the same date, also
On Wednesday afternoon was an their son attd daughter-in-law. Mr.
address by John a. Toomey, pro­ and Mrs. Kenneth Williams, their
! fewer of contagious diseases. West- first one.
1 cm Reserve University. Cleveland.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Kantner and
• Ohio, a national leader in that field. children were Sunday dinner guests
, On Thursday's program Howard Y. of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Grant In
Battle
Creek.
। McClusky gave a lecture^on mental
। hygiene. Dr. McClusky Ls from the
Mr. and Mr*. York Duffy ot Kal­
University of Michigan. Another amazoo called on Mr. and Mra. Har­
' lecture on thc same topic was by ry Sandbrook Sunday evening,
Glenn Wotring spent Friday and
Dr. David Trout of Hillsdale col| lege, a lecture on sex hygiene was Saturday in Lansing attending thc
I given by Margaret Bell. M. D.. of State Soil Conservation meeting.
I the University of Michigan: in the
FREEPORT.
! afternoon there was an address by
Mr. and Mrs. Levi Hynes ot
I Professor Roy Holmes, of the UniI veraity of Michigan, who talked Grand Rapids were Freeport vis­
। about 'The Community.” From two itors last Friday. The Utter's fa­
to three o'clock that afternoon there ther. Lewis Demond. who with Mr*.
lhe
I were Informal discussions of mental Demond. has been spending
I and sex education. There were oth­ winter with their children in Grand
er names on the program Including Rapid*, accompanied them to hl*
' Dean Edmondson of Ann Arbor al) home east of town. Mrs. Demond
। ranking with those whom we have returned home on Sunday.
Mr*. Wilbur Pardee, who has been
1 mentioned.
. Taking a prominent part in the ill al Uie home of her sister. Mrs.
! Institute were two folks well known Jennie Pardee, for several weeks,
in Hastings. MIm Mildred Tuttle, Is slowly improving and is able to
orte of the school nurses of the Kel­ alt up some at present,
Word from Mrs. Will Fox. who
logg Foundation, who U now work­
ing in Hillsdale county; and Mr. is In a hospital at Toledo. Ohio,
Leonard Board, who is working for stales that she is able to sit up a
little
each day. Mrs. Fox is suf­
the Foundation in that county as
unitary engineer, as he did in this fering from a paralytic stroke.
Ralph Stewart was confined to
county.
This meeting was the first of its hU home by illness a part of last
kind to be held Ln the stale. It was week and the bakery was closed.
aided by the W. K. Kellogg Founda­
Eave trough. Foot warmer.
tion who contributed much to Its Kalamazoo visited his parent*. Mr.
success. Think of lhe value it will and Mrs. Perry Preston, over the
Five gals, roof paint. Force pump.
be to any community to have all week end.
Aladdin hanging lamp.
Ralph Kenyon and MU* Correne
parents attend meetings like this.
Aladdin table lamp.
The schooLs of Reading were closed Glesa of Kalamazoo were Sunday
Shade*. Canthook.
for the three days. The children guests of the latter's parents. Mr.
looked after the home so their par­ and Mrs Jacob Oles* of So. Bowne
10-gal. milk can. Rear auto spring.
ents could attend. That in itself 1* and called on her slater. Mr*. Vivian
And other articles not mentioned.
a worthwhile event. Il would be fine Anderson al the Dr. Wedel home.
Charles Price moved his garage
If such gathering* could be held in
every town tn this state; and In otir equipment from the Karcher bam
county In such center* u Freeport, to hla own building on Main street.
Bunday.
Woodland. 'Nashville. Delton. Mid­
The many friends of Evart W.
dleville. Dowling and Hastings.
Ardis, principal of Freeport High
GIVEN 14 DA.YS IN JAIL
school, were given a surprise last
Anthony Novlskey of Freeport was week when Mr. ArdU announced his
arrested Thursday, charged with as­ marriage to Mias Dorothy L. Schursault auu
and uaiicry
battery preierreu
preferred by
huu
oy Mrs. man
nuui of
ul McBain,
acosm, wnu.n
whlvh occurred on
NovUkey. He was brought before' Saturday. March 21. at the home
Justice Matthews Friday, admitted, of the bride's sister, Mrs. For Flnhls guilt and was given 15 days in kle at Lamonte. The ceremony
jail.
j wa* performed by Rev. Hellcnga.
-------------- u-a-«----------------I pastor of Uie Home Acres Reformed
RESIGNED HIS POSITION.
! church. Mr. and Mrs. Finkle at*
J'TrA wh0 k principal of tended the couple. Thc bride U a
the Nashvillo High school, lias re- teacher at McBain. Mr. Ardis' home
signed that poslUon to accept lhe town. The newlywed* wUl estab-1
superintended}’ of thc Sunfield ifrh their home at Lamonte at the
•chool*.
| close of lhe school year. We join

Hole • Slipi
Underwear

A"’

Tailored to a T

I

Breese around this spring in

Ihd, iniml rtk.

*6.88
and style* for Women
and Misses

It Cotti Lltltt To Bo Smart Al

FRANDSEWS
.

" Exclusive, but not otpoiuiao”

HASTINGS, MICH.

fa

Aili for Prof^SMrine TIoloM

*=?

�THE HASTINGS, BANNER. THURSDAY, APRIL t 1938

; coloring picture* that correlate with health program. Genesee. Ottawa.
As day light stowly dawns the cen- THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG
Saginaw nnd Wexford counties will
this unit.
jtrui portion of the great platform
Maxine Finkbelner. fourth grade also enter. Since the W- K. Kellogg
SCHOOL NOTES pupil,
discloses 'a huge white cross com­
is making a Tour of Alabama Foundation Is contributing to the
- «■“«• ™
posed* of young women all in while
...................
Four new students have enrolled contest. Uie counties that have a..
|MiddleviUa school. $13 81, Hastings ,
W|W explanation should ac­
Basket Bail Banquet.
Jn Oje
grade—Lavern Lc- Foundation unit will be barred from
each carrying a sheaf or colla lil­
&gt; Table CO- $36.75: Michigan Bell'company this
remittance. This
Thir’j-four of T. K's. basket ball valley. Robert Anita from Prairie­
ies which they later deposited on a players gathered al the T. K- gym vl||ei Mnry Alice Kaechele from winning a award thLs year.
Telephone Co.. $3.75; Dowling. $32.- ' money U not of recent contrtbuin addition to the rural contests
।
—
—
—
—
.
.
--------------grass
mound
running
across
the
IW.
ozinHctArm Kte, 11030. nnurt
to the
war
Tuesday evening together with the | Wayland and Donna Beil KeLsey.
the national Chamber of Commerce
00; Wlnfclorm
Court IUons but i» due It
h„ efforts
tain • of
rottol(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
faculty to enjoy a banquet. "Buck”-,
------------und lhe American* rtbltt Health
house employees. $15 00; Grand Jen bank deposit put to the credit
Reed, basket ball coach at WestHsi'*
Freshman llomr Economics.
A.ssociation
sponsor a city contest.
State Teachers' College, was the
The Freshman Home Economic In the two groups are 394 cities and
$78333. which is fine. Nothing has Rapids Bookcase Co.. $10.00; Has- of th? Red cross some eighteen
tings Rotary Club. $15 00; Central I
principal speaker Short talks were class are at present studying child rural, areas competing.
been heard from Castleton or Maple P. T. A- $10 00; Delton village, i
given-tov
Virginia
Holes,
captain
of
cure
and
treatment.
So
far
they
The
purpose
of these contests is
■13
W;
BOV
soouu
wlloBed
U.
homo
o
,
,
su
u
Bonk
or
BowV
mu».
bo
oroond
&lt;0
loo.
Ions
“
Xl.
,Jomm
In
Grove Twps.. so the amount will no
inoo. HJ.'.ms- &gt;ur tmu.M uw
ol U.U tank •"&lt;•
•' »‘a'*loi«
'^r »„ thc girls' team, and Mike Schonijel- have visited Mrs. McFall and Mrs. to reduce the economic losses due
doubt be Increased somewhat. The ro houM
inajer. captain of lhe boys' team. Shekel's reading classes lo study
'
w.■"»' Coach Holtforth presented lhe let- thc way children arc taught to read. to unnecessary Illness and prema­
first quota assigned Barrj Co. was
ture death, and lo interest business
111500. and four quotas, or $460. city teachers and cuModiaiw. 44064; M Holder thinking that lhe pres­
, UTS to Uie boys; coach Lowman] The Faculty and studcnL*. of T. men throughout Uie country in pub­
have already been sent to head- and among the S5.00 subscriptions
(ciu emergency warranted lhe re
re-­
'“’lent
. gave lhe girls their awards. A fine K wish to extend Uieir heartfelt lic health work in their communi­
P lease
- money qiufters. The balance will be sent were A. K. FTandsen. Dr. R. B
of- the
II •has •been -----held Urge area of the "Bowl' is all proi/'Tbc following program of the : Hine was reported by every on* who sympathy to Ward. Eulah. and Cecil ties. Ttie contests are open lo any
to fill the next quota, which Ls ex­ Harkness. Ivy Temple No
17 °f
c. as
„ „
a suspended
au^-,.uru account
.wvu... and survlv- video
—- with scats and with goocji Hollywood Bowl Easter Sunrbe attended and a great deal ot credit Freeman during their dork hours of
city, county or district with full­
'• :
— crisis
------- and
------------------------ '“wide
Ide aisles. Il w'ould seem as
pected soon. This U certainly an Middleville. American Legtdh Auxila- •brank
moratorium
Service was carried out on Sunday ' and thanks goes to the Freshman sad bereavement in Uie death of time health service. This is the
excellent record and each contribu- lary.
----------------- Wars.
-------- _F. ,,
c full amount of the though it must seat at least 30.000
Veterans of Foreign
ls
on m ,„
(he
_ April 21. 1935. A&lt; the top of the pro­ ' Home Economics class who pre- I their mother. Mrs. Miner Freeman.
seventh year of the city contests,
or
with
lots of ......
room
lor deserves credit for aiding in this '&amp;
A. M .------Cook -----Bros, ----and "Women's
deposits.
— --------. ----- — original ucpv.ML.3.
-- 40.000
------ - •people,
----- -.........
. ............
—. - gram was the request "please re- pared and served lhe banquet.
’ • •"
which were Inaugurated in 1029.
Club. There were also large numinquiry reveals that lhe deposits
Ute sides and on the ad- i fra in from applause." This request
and is the second of the rural com­
BARRY COUNTY ENTERS
Among the larger gifts were 1100 bers of smaller donations. Including I wert made as follows; Aug. 24. 1017 Joining mountain slopes to accom-' is customary, and has always been
petition.
rent by Joseph McKnight from thc Individual gifts and donations from ,2233- Dec 12 1017 $4 18 Sept 3 modate many thousands more.
।
followed,
but
it
was
Ignored
in
a
An
F
F.
A.
meeting
was
held.
NATIONAL
CONTEST
In deciding which city and coun­
that■ 1 couple of instances this year, as npE- W. Bliss Co. and employees; churches—Dowling. Banfield - also : 19I8 'thrt.c deposits’, quilt sold in'' When the idea was suggested ••
ty districts have done the best work
I Marcli 17. ul the gym. The boys
—---------g]44.45 from the International Seal from other organizations through-. church basement. $4035. social at I attend. I will admit that there was
&amp; Lock Co.. Hastings Manfg. Co. out the country, which were Just as Gcor8e Kent's. $2441 and dance one
feature about it that did not plause greeted Mary Pickford, fol­ played baseball and basket ball Competitive Showing to Be during the last year, the award
’
■ committee will take into conslderaViking Corporation, employees nnd much appreciated ns were the larg- $1335.
Impress me at all favorably, and lowing her -Salutation to lhe tmnS. waa’ fol,o'Td by rerreshMade
of
Rural
and
Urban
tlon. among other evidences, the
' of- those
•
.
.in the
..
that uas that the program starts 1 Dawn." Following Ls the program as
office force: Woodland
village. er ones.
! Some
prominent
. adequacy of health facilities and
Health Work
were Mrs
.Nina
...... at three o’clock In the morning, । it was carried out. commencing at
Methodist church and township, From Assyria township came a (township
I three o'clock tn the morning;
M Club Meeting.
R(nc M|ch)gBn counties are en- '। their support, preventative measures,
just think of it. THREE O'CLOCK! .
------------------------------------------------------- Tasker, township director;
____
Mr
safe milk ami water supplies, school
[
Organ
Prostram.
Hie M club met Monday evening trr(.d this year in the nation-wide
—. Floyd Strickland, township chair­ That meant that one would have to ■ Scripture Readings — Arthur
health work, health education, mod­
man; solicitors. Miss Eva Kant mow get up al two o'clock, and when one 1 Rachel and Frank Chnlmers Mc­ nt Bob Rugg's for the purpo e of rurni health conservation contest, ern sewage disposal provisions, care
inflating three new members, May- which Ls mode ixnslbie by the YA K.
। Mrs Win. Sarver i. Adelbert Cort­ Is nearing the proverbial "three Kean.
nurd Parks, Ben Rew r and Waller Kellogg Foundation In co-operation of communicable and Infectious dis­
mb
right who later saw service in the score and ten—well when it was
"The
Heavens
Arc
Telling.
’
'
from
eases.
prenatal care of expectant
I IJ
W
T
A. E. P.. Miss Thera Back (now Mrs. proixised that I gel up at two ■’The Creation"—Hayden — SERA Griffith. The boys have to suffer wun the United States Chamber
mothers, protection ot children from
4^
J- A. Kirk ot Detroit), and Miss o'clock to attend the service Jt just Orchestra—Maurice Koehler, con­ to join the Club and these three of Commerce and thc American diphtheria and better vital statis­
were no exception. Outside of garg- public Health AMdclatlon.
Dr.
Marlnmna Stine (now Mrs. R. M. •imply
• . took away
- a lot of the "ap- 'ductor. .
tics nnd health records.
“
Holder), who was also township* |X*
aL
*-” '.o
to express It
it mildly. But 1
Processional—Pilgrimage to the ling with buttermilk and flour und George V. Darling, comptroller of
went, and 1 wouldn't have missed
having a few other nice things to the Foundation. Ls a member ot thc
Savior's Tomb.
LACEY GROUP
Shepard. I. W. Cargo and M J. it for anything. That beautiful, Anthem—"They
Have
Taken ent lhe boys enjoyed It. The meet- awards committee mid will go to
service,
tne
ideal
surroundings
that
The Lacey Extension class held
Huriom.
Away My Lord"—Stainer—Holly­ ing then broke up. but for the mem- New York City April 10 to assist in
It I* hoped that this money has almost seemed spiritual and not of wood Festival Choir—Charles U bers who were initiated. For lhe grading thc entries. Thc awards their meeting at Lacey March 18.
with ten members present. The
not remained Idle in vain and that this world; the pageantry that ac­ Munro, director. Mildred Bruns. rest of the week Uie boys were w‘.)l be announced about April 20.
The Michigan counties which are leaders gave instructions on cutting
those who contributed will feel that companied it. is an impressive Bess L. 'Bennett. Myrtle Radcliffe forced to wear overalls, boots, workmemory that will always remain
shirts and carry a [Mil of stones entered in the rural contest are Al- of collars and how to make the
Munroe, accompanists.
wclghlng at least twenty pounds. As legnn. Burry. Eaton. Hillsdale and rolled hem. then finished the fitting
for the purpose for which it was with me as long as consciousness en­
Invocation—Dr.
C.
dures I want to go again—and get
a sideline the new members also VanBuren. in al) of which the Kel- of the dresses.—Eula Von Syckle.
given.
(Hollywood
Beverley
' up earlier so that ! may hove a
had to count the numbers of' togg Foundation Ls carrying out Its Sec.
Respectfully,
Church).
Lloyd Tasker (. good seat There was one feature of ' Response—"Ttie Lord's Prayer '— «quares in the fence around the1 .
football field. In case you nrf”in­
\
it.
not
directly
connected
with
the
This Ls a commendable act on th&lt;
Arranged by Josephine Forsythe,
program, that to me was so awe-in­
terested. there are seventy thous­
part of the Assyria people and thi
spiring that it really made cold with lhe composer at lhe Piano, and and. Oh. for the life, of an M Club
gilt is deeply appreciated by the
Julie
Kellar.
HarplsL
chills run up and down my spinal'
member!
F
FRESH
Red Cross, and .surely the need is
Scripture Reading—Dr. James H.
column. Remember that this was
equally
as
great
at
the
present
time
(Hollywood congregational
CREAMERY
before THREE o'clock in the' Lash
Home Economic Club.
,
A complete report will be made
church).
EARLY
MORNING,
when
every
­
The Senior Home Economics Club
when all lhe funds have been re­
•Holy. Holy. Holy"—John Dykes—
thing is in darkness; when the
held a party at lhe school last Mon­
ceived by the treasurer, Orville krv. c„v »»»
ana ,o,«
KlrcNwIvr Dlr«U&gt;r-lU« day evening. A |&gt;ol luck supper was
great
city
was
sleeping
and
long
Sayles.
before ll&gt;e sray hare of d»«n. Bu*
, aeeompanhf. .Absence
I held followed by lota of ice cream.
high up on a mountain was a large
, t0
..
_ . _
___
Following
this tile girls Journeyed to
Offertory—Third Movement from
lighted cross 100 feet tall I was tn-1। G^r^irv
SPRING DERBY WENT
Hostings to see -Bing Crosby" in
'
Fifth
Symphony
—
Bcthoven
—
SERA
formed, a light fog had come in
Anything Goes" at the Strand
OFF SUCCESSFULLY and- obscured lhe mountain top so Orchestra—Maurice Koehler. con­ '; theater.
ductor.
,,, ,
,
11 really seemed but o part of
Wc Have a FINE ASSORTMENT to Pick From
wolverine Beagle Club Drew the sky. it also dimmed that ght-1 Easter Message—Dr. J George
Personals.
—
tering cross so that It appeared as: Dorn (Hollywood Luthem church).
Mr. Bel) was In Battle Creek
Fine Crowd
for
Anthem—' Unfold Ye Portals"—
pure white, with perhaps lust fade
Monday conferring with Dr Otto.
Event
enough to suggest a spiritual con­ । Gounod—Hollywood Festival Choir.
Miss Lowman spent the week end
Charles L. Munro. director. SERA
in Kalamazoo.
A folly, husky lookins lol of folk, "p"on' ’-"‘L1111 •' “ .■"‘J
Orchestra. Maurice Koehler, con­
Mrs. McFall was in Grand Rapids
mkde up flf* talk of rhe ero.-d who :“»*• u”‘
ductor.
acme Inu lo»n Saturday and Bui..'
“H"*
wtu’over the week end..
Salutation to the Dawn—Mary ] Miss Thomas, home economic
day tor Ury Wohrr.n. Beakle
“JPI"". hlkh up In the «kf„. „ Pickford
। teacher was at home in Hemlock
duh', ,prlnt derby Irlalv actom-.1 if' to give faith, hope and strength
Solo— Open the Oates of the
•" panled by their clever little pj and t0
3 'roublcd world It just seemed Temple'—Knapp—Richard Dennis. | for the week end.
(ritual,
15-inch dogs trained to topnotch so_s^k,"
" so sacred, and withal so Gertrude Ross, accompanist.
Junior Play Tryouts,
degree in following the trail ot the im-stArious that It gave one a , Sunrise Trumpet Call—"Gloria
The Junior class held tryouts for
;
"creepy
”
feeling,
but
with
It
came
rabbit, and in showing the class ;. ,cr&lt;*yy .
Rolled
! their play "Campus Quarantine"
. the consoling thought that it was Patrr —10 Trumpeters.
that makes them prize winners
"Christ,
the
Lord.
Ls
Risen
To
,
Monday
night. If anything can be
Branded
Many ladles apparently enjoy the ail assurance that God Ls still in the Day -Lyra Davldica—Ea-.ter Sun­
Judged by lhe large number trying
event too. and appeared in riding world, it was a sight that I will rise Chorus. Hugo Kirchhofer. di­ out. the Juniors should put on a
breeches, high topped boots and I never forget My only regret was rector—Inez Jacobson. accompanist.
fine play.
sweaters looking very fit and sporty. that I didn't gel up at midnight.
Benediction—Dr
E. H
LongAs mentioned above, thc regular
Grade Faculty Meeting.
I
A dance followed a banquet at
brake । Rosewood Methodist Episco­
the Parker hotel Saturday night. ।। program starts at three o’clock in pal church*.
j The Gradr Faculty Committee.
'
the
morning.
That
doesn't
mean
and there was early rising' for the
The entire program was broad­ । held a meeting last week to dLscuss
five
or
ten
minutes
otter
three
—
not
morning field trials which tc»k place '
I the mechanisms children use in
at any place in California that we cast over the Columbia network but
in North Irving.
at that no Idea of its beauty could । overcoming obstacles.
A beagle named Cutie, owned by struck. We arrived at the Bowl" be had. because words cannot picJuniors Entertain Seniors.
Donald Lyle, of Traverse City, car­ about five minutes after three, oc­ lure the setting, which to me was
ried off the honors by winning the casioned by thc fact that cars were most impressive. Probably in no j During the fllty minute Home
13-inch dogs' nnd bitches class nnd so plentiful that you couldn't find other state in thc union is Easter 1 Room jxTlod last Tuesday thc Junwas Judged the best type hound to parking space within a half a mile observed as it Is in California. In I ior class was host to the Senior
place Billy, owned by Vent Hunt- 'or more, and you had to walk the some places searchlights ore thrown ] class. Refreshments were served and
ley. of Grand Rapids, was wuiner of remainder of the distance When on the crosses all night long and a program was put on. The faculty
thc 15-lnch dogs' nnd bitches' class we arrived, that Bowl" was packed chimes ring from midnight till aLso was invited.
to the very limit and thousands
dawn By no means, are the serv­
of Claude Hammond's Willow Crest were milling around the outer fence, ices lor Los Angeles limited to the Sophomores Ententaln "th Grade.
Bobble, who placed second in the seeking some favorable location. Hollywood Bowl. It would seem as i The Sophomore class entertalancd
13-inch class,
and so quailed for Couples with numerous progeny, though at least 35.000 or 10.000 peo­ the Seventh grade Tuesday during
the Western Beagle trial at Ander­ nnd many even wheeling infants in ple must have been at the Holly­ Home Room Jello and cake were
I baby cabs, were on hand, evidently
' served and a program and games
son. Ind., April 11 and 12.
under no circumstances wood Bowl Other thousands gath­ j followed.
• Entries came from all over the I determined
to miss this annua] service. It is en- ered at the beautiful Forest Lawn
state; lhe hotel did a rushing bus&gt;Memorial Park; other thousand.-, in
Report Cards.
■j.
I
tircly
undenominational
in
any
way.
। ness. and thc eating houses wen
the Coliseum: and other thousands
Report cards were handed out
• These cars and trucks can be seen daily on our
filled to overflowing all day Sun- | and people ot every creed, color. ; tn numerous other places in and last Friday. Some were ple;vx-d with
' । and nationality were on hand, eager i
| day.
Used Car Lot. If you can't call, give us a ring and
| to take part in it But/When wc ar­ near by the city, even at Catalina I \hem—others weren't.
As usual lhe officers and men reg­
Island,
and
at
places
out
on
the
istering for the event expressed rived about five minutes after three desert. Even Death Valley had Ita
we will be pleased to drive any unit to your place
New Addition.
themselves Ba delighted with the en- o'clock, the great Bowl was filled to crass and Ils service. Each of these I The new addition to the gym and
for inspection.
। tertalnment and arrangements at thc limit and the no admission" shrines of beauty, all Over the slate school is progressing very rapidly.
sign was out. The only thing left
Hustings.
.
of California, bring their Joyous The wall at thc east end of lhe
The |&gt;ermancfit kennels at the to do was either to stand up along message of -The Risen Christ" und gym should be torn down by the
I the side or crawl up on the steep
fair ground built last year by lhe
I mountain side to some suitable spot "that death does not end all." So. 1 time this edition is out and work on
local beagle club, and the field ad­
regardless of how old you may real­ I thc construction of thc addition
and
It
was
steep
loo
The
rest
of
vantages offered, have made HasJ our crowd chose the latter nlter- ly be. or how much you may dislike should be started The addition to
[ tings popular with thc beagle men.
to arise In the early hours of morn­ ] the school is coming very fine with
’ who will hold their fall meet here native, but 1 am not blessed with ing, if you should happen to be in 1 the arrival of two more brick-lay- [
I the sylph-like form of thc mountain
‘ again.
j climber, and declined to follow suit.' California nt Easter lime, do not ers.
and later had cause to rejoice that ,miss attending the Easter Sunrise
Grade News.
I1 didn’t Wending-my-way down-:.Service., While ilicae scnicea usual­
t The Kindergarten children" are •
j along the outside enclosure. I found 1ly begin around three o'clock in thc
taking up a playhouse unit. They
a very acceptable place within a morning, you can only be assured ■ are painting thc house and turn!‘ few rods of lhe platform where one of
1 a desirable seat it you arrive
I could see and henr very nicely 1quite a long while before the pro­ ture for the house The children
are also starting to read.
Here. too. I had quite an unusual 1gram opens. I later learned that
Thc second grade arc starting a
experience, and have wondered how ipeople began to flock to lhe Holly­
Holland, unit, making posters and ।
, often it would happen anywhere wood Bowl shortly after midnight.
’ else. There are no more friendly. When we arrived a very few min­
hospitable people In the world than utes after three, every seat In the
the people ot the west. Here we 1great -Bowl" was taken, thousands
were packed In like sardines, nnd were standing up and still other
' the fellow next to me started con- 'thousands came after we arrived.
versallon which Included telling me There may be other places in the
state, where similar services are
etc., ant| my telling him the same. held, that are Just as fascinating as
• and also that thLs was my first at­ thc Hollywood Bowl, or at Mount
tendance at an Easter Sunrise Serv­ Rubidoux near Riverside. But If
ice a fellow who had a choice posi­ you attend an Easter Sunrise Serv­
tion at the fence evidently over­ ice at either one of these places. I
Wc wont and hope all of our cus­
heard our conversation, and turning am sure you will enjoy it and get a
tomers and friends will drop in and
to me he said. "You are from Michi­ spiritual thrill from the experience.
W. R. Cook.
gan. and have never attended one
of these services?" Upon my assur­
ance that that was thc case, he LOCAL MEN LEASE
STANDARD OIL STATIONS.
WE ARE GIVING AWAY
said. -I attend these Services every
An entire change in policy by
year; here, you come and take my
place, for you can hear and see Standard Oil will see their local
much belter than where you are." stations here leased outright In­
Naturally I demurred nt this quite stead of lhe former system of hiring
I unusual demonstration ot frientf- attendants to work for the com­
llness. though inwardly hoping that pany According to Arthur Haven,
, he would insist, which he did. From local manager for Standard Oil.
’ that vantage point I was within just i thLs plan has been tried out in sev­
12 BASKETS OF GROCERIES
a short distance of Mary Plckkford eral localities and proved so satis­
1 and a list of other notables as they factory the company will adopt It
appeared. I have wondered in how generally. Local ownership creates
3 LARGE MERCHANDISE PRIZES
many other places would such con­ a more loyal fceMng It U claimed,
i slderalion
be shown an utter than when a big corporation Is di­
stranger.
rectly in charge; the men also. In
No simple narration of the pro­ working for their own Interests,
gram. nor even any attempt at have an added incentive in making
description, can do Justice to it. For contacts that will add to their
Instance of! on the mountain side, profits.
.
just before or at the break ol dawn,
As we understand this mokes no
appear a half a dozen or more change in the set-up here as War­
young women trumpeters garbed all ren Moore has leased lhe Broadway
in pure white. Way off in the dis­ —State street station and retains
tance sounds the faint echo of other Lyle Scudder as assistant, Elden
.
’
■
■
.
.
i
trumpeters, heralding the approach Chase leasing lhe lower Slate street
of dawn in beautiful trumpet notes. station, with L Barry, assistant.

BW CO. MAKES
SPLENDID RECORD

contributed $90S3
i lhe first places to

and wos’one of'check for $104.72 with the foliating
respond; Free-. explanatory letter:

AN EASTER SERVCE
ERV
THAT’S DIFFERENT
FFE

.... ZTow.fc — -

. ----------- -----

Sa.*!!

“«»"»•

"I

F&gt;
I

I

Shower of Bargains

Friday and Saturday, April 3 anil I
DEL

MONTE

ORANGE JUICE

BUTTER

C33c&gt;

OLEO

2

C.ni

Look! and Buy A
Good Used Car!

25c

VACUUM PACKED

CORN 2 c... 25c

KING NUT

2

25 c

1930 FORD MODEL A COUPE

1930 FORD MODEL A TUDOR

HAMBURG

1929 CHEVROLET COACH

Beef Roasts

2 »■’ 25c

lb

1931 FORD MODEL A FORDOR

25c

1929 STUDEBAKER COMMANDER
1929 FORD MODEL A TUDOR

1932 FORD V-8 FORDOR SEDAN
1932 FORD V-8 TUDOR SEDAN

Pork Loin Roast R.b E„d u. 19c

Pork S ausage

1934 FORD V-8 DELUXE TUDOR

1935 FORD V-8 STAND'RD TUDOR

2 a- 29c

1935 FORD V-8 FORDOR TOURING
1929 FORD MODEL A PICK-UP

1932 FORD AA Chassis and cab—
dual wheels
1929 FORD AA Stake Truck, dual

eldpausch

F

-MARKET­

UNIVERSAL

Phone 2272 UJe Deliver

GARAGE COMPANY
- E O R D. DEALERS

PHONE 2121

Announcing

HASTINGS, MICH.

OUR 8th

ANNIVERSARY

APRIL 24th and 25th

FREE!

FREE!

Ask the Merchants of Hastings
About FREE Tickets
for Cash Prizes

General Electric Radio

Aik for Your FREE Tickets Now! Coffee and Donuts served
oil. See our Hand Bills for further announcements.

BESSMER’S MARKET

For

Watch

This

Future

Announcements

Space

�THE HASTINGK BANNER. THURSTTAY, APRIL 3, UM
Ottawa,
itle* will
Kellogg
t to the

|

Social Events and Personal Mention

n tests Is
sses due
prcmabuslneu
' tn pubimmunlj to any
llh full­
s is the
contests,
in 1929,

Mn. K- S- McIntyre was in Ann

• Arbor on Thursday and Friday.
i Chas. T- Jones of Battle Creek
was tn lhe city on Tuesday on buri-1

16735194

m ON HELD

I

WAS A WEEK OF
ACTIVITY FOR 0. E. S?
MiddleviUa and Bedford Via-

Ray Hyatt of Battle Creek was a ‘
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
ited—Entertained G. W.
friend* and neighbor*. Oamea ware cob
guest at the Guy Giddings home on :
M Th„,-O,low
* fe«turc: lce cream and cake were
W. A. Spaulding was at ill* farm
Mr. and Mr* Earl OfTtey and Su^?ay,.
,
| aMpoin
Mr and Mra. c. A. Kqrr ipent
m. inursaay
served. A lace table cloth and bullet
daughter Naney Lou were Bunday!
Ueva
tnd.Lynn Perry AMERICAN LEGION POSTS
Bunday in Kalamazoo.
j at Mila on Wadnesday.
Jacob Miller is home from Alma 1 gu*“*
Mr
and Mra. Harry ,
home ,rom Lansing over the ,
-----------------------------------------------AND AUXILIARY UNITS
officers and members of the local Chamberlain and Miss Patricia who
sing visitor on Thursday.
College for lhe spring vacation.
i R»chle.
, «x ena
-„_hBlh hnjl ._n I
chapter of the Order of Eastern , are now nicely located In their new
REPRESENTED
Mis* Margaret Dahlke .pent SunBill Andrew* and W- A Spaulding ! ** “d M” Lyle E. Wilcox and [
frtenda in Grand Rapid* 1
Star.
। home. Those present were; Mr. and
day at her home In Horner.
spent Monday and Tuesday at Wall •O”4- Norman and Larry, of Battle
«?erB1 daya
1
an-r.n.n
On Wednesday evening 20 mem-1 Mrs. Marshall pierce, Mr. and Mrs.
.Creek
spent 8atU
Saturday
8. i
Ml*. Marguerite Tew wa* at her
b *Wll^
",By with Mrs. ®
« R MePeek of Charlotte ENDORSE ARTHUR
bers were guests of thc Bedford Lloyd Gaskill. Mr. and Mre. Orlle
j
Mrs.
John
George
and
children
of
.
i
»»«««
nnung*
chapter
which
was
celebrating
Ita
j Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. Millon Tr*fhome In Bellevue over Sunday.
| Mrs. John George and children of
'
„
.
vlrited Hasting*
relatives
and I
ri ARiz cnR DPPT DQEC
Bert Wlthcy spent Saturday night l Holland
friends
/,d h,r
ri*nd, । friends on Friday.
|
ULRnA run Utr I. rfitb. twelfth birthday. The
waii.wh visited relatives and V.I...IMis* Nellie Grohe aand
her ffriend,
Friday
Bedford ford. Mr. and Mn. Lavem Wilcox.
i. ------------ -----------Mla5 Virginia Wilcox. Miss Char­
Mis* Hazel Taylor, of Lansing vte- | Mr
in the city, on his way to Chicago. I hcre ^e past week.
Mr and
and Mrs
Mrs Wm
wm CinrkUor“nd plftns for p0PP7 Day Oonexistence and bids fair lo continue lotte Wilcox. Mr. and Mn. E. N.
Mr*. L A. Thlbout of Grand Rap- I Mra Edith Louden of Prairieville Ited Mr. and Mra. clarence Orohe i Robert Corkin visited
Thursday.
Rapids on Sunday
its good work. Wednesday the past
ids visited Mr*. Jas. Silsbee last 5Penl Monday wilh hgr. mother. —.
u
: napms on aunaay.
i sidered by Auxiliary—Two matrons and patrons were the Proefrock and family. Mrs. Lottie
w
' Mr*. Mary Burgess.
i Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Smith re-1 Nandy and Virginia Steiger of,
t ,rom
____________________________
, with ,
w, i
Reports Were Given
guests of honor and each gave a Ella Smith. Mrs. Loma Slocum. Mrs.
Mrs. John Ooorge and- mother tu™dTu'iday
Tolcdo Lansing spent last ______
week here
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ware left I Mn^Hem^Kuempal.
wher' they
they had
h,d visited
vklted over
over the
jhc . Mr.
Mr. and
and Mr*
Mrs. F
F. f
E .Huir
Adair.
’
The convention of the Fourth talk telling of the high lights dur­ Hattie Rice. Mrs. May Hammond.
■
■
— ™ere"orand. where
on Tuesday for their new home near Rapids visitors Wednesday.
iwee* cnd'
M”' Clarence De Planta of Grand I District American Legion and Aux- ing hL* or her term of office. De- , Mrs. Harvey Babcock and children
1 Mta. Ftorenee nmh. n,
Mr‘ «"» Hazleton of |
_*W««d Mr
and
Mra 1Iurj. was held at Marcellus on Sun- grees were conferred on a number '
of candidates.
MET WITH PAINFUL
«...
n.
were d"y
n Ursc attendance Dinner ii On Thursday evening. Mrs. Flora
.... ■„
err, ...r
SX-- --.c-----------------------------------------ACCIDENT SATURDAY.
in Whitehall Sunday attending the | wiL'1 *erved at a restaurant but as Sutherland, of Benton Harbor,
T 8 K- Reid met with a painful
Mr and Mrs. John Palmer ot &gt;. F™‘,’&gt;u’*«rner of GrandI Rapids alrlngh,m
funeral of a family friend
I all could not be accommodated no , grand worthy matron of the grand accident an Saturday which will
chapter. was’* guest of tfie local
Kalamazoo visited Hastings friends ] Bcatrlcr Herney over the week end.
Mr- and Mrs Jack Reed of Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Wolfe of i general program was held at the
keep him confined to the house for
chapter and gave a very instructive
on Saturday.
and Mrg KeUar stem spent; R*P|d* *«re dinner guest* of Judge Battle Creek were Sunday gucsta , dinner as Is the usual procedure, school of instruction for lhe officers. some lime. He and C- F. Angell
| Those present from the Hastings
were out at the Highland* Dairy
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Walton of itw WCCk end in Sylvania, Ohio jnd Mrs- Stuart clement on Wed- of Mr and Mrs. J W, Wolfe.
Mrs. Ella Hammond visited her , Post and Unit were Mr and Mrs. Notice of the school was not re­ farm after fertilizer for their gar­
Kalamazoo
here on
Thursday
WRhnaia.
Mr.uay
and joruuji.
Mrs. Gay Jordan.
' .
evening.
■■................. were
„..... .......
.................
mi. uiiu
until the
proceeding
daughter, Mrs. Lawrente Beadle, of Edw Bayles. Mr and Mra. Harry ceived
,nd * Ith^th^
shSt
hotter Sunday
allowed dens and had to move a machine
vi.uina
I| Mr. and Mrs. R. ~
a.
Mr*. Louis Karmcs went to Battle
visiting frienrt.
friends.
D. ........
McNutt —
and
So Hastings part of last week.
Larsen. Mr and Mrs. Don Foreman. “.?.dJ th*^° L" »“St,‘JSXn*
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Manning of son Bob were here from Stanton Creek on Tuesday to assist with the
Mrs. Henry Phillips of Battle j Mr and Mrs Harry Wood. Mrs. '
“howlna M« autlherl^id wli In some way. Ted slipped and fell
against a bolt that was sticking out
Battle creek were In the city on Sunday —
and
-* “visited
*-••—• -•
al lhe Will Hall care of her mother, Mrs. Earl Lewis, Creek was the Sunday guests of her i John Wood. Mrs. Pauline Bliss and
J!1
’J?
I home.
Thursday on business.
who Ls seriously ill.
I c&lt;i«.^
। ZilZ
’
• * guest of the officers at aa dinner
cousins. Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs
Mrs F.
F E
E Adair
Adair
Finvd Wnnd
ni^n
nr and Mr&lt; nr*
cousins.
| Floyd Wood, also Dr. and Mrs. B-C. ..\h pa-i,-. hous, b-fOr- .he a wound In his left leg necessitating
Mrs. Mabel Bisson visited Mr and ।
Mr. and Mrs Robert Gardner of
. J™*
Mr and Mra. Dan Lewis were Swift and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford "
fourteen stitches to close. He has
Mra. C. M. Sisson nnd family of I Lansing are guests of Mrs. Erma Oak*.
and w...
Mrs |Gardner of Middleville
dining-room
* W *"
P
U the sympathy and best wishes of his
where she attended Sunday guest* of Mr. and
-----------Thursday,
- -------------------------------------------Kalamazoo over Sunday.
I Gardner during their vacation thi*
1,16 _L*“lon _Mssion- fYf'*।1 ™
The color scheme was
carried out friends for a prompt recovery.
Miss Janet Tcale of Kalmazoo was
h.“7“m।
-&gt;
thc guest of Dr. nnd Mrs. K. 8. Mc­ ' Miss Jane Merson of South Haven
Mr uid Mr.trnrr^n Buunrr -rrr Sund.y gur.U or Mr Mid Mr.
□,
i^ordrr^mMk’d1™.'"!
SURPRISE PARTY.
is the gu«-*t of her sister. Miss Helen I
Intyre over thc week end.
R1fr,*'i,!?M.'’'rH*1?“o"''n"'d
’I'lendld UIK «d prJLnM &lt;hr JiUrt.U X, S Xlh
rirp“
and son were «
g“”**""
Thc basket ball boys of the Has­
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Robleski Merson. this week during her va-1
.... «« «,». c. w ouiumy aiMr. and Mrs. Ray Lacey, of near
tings High school
with their
spent the week end in Lansing with : cation.
|1 tended the 'JHS
funeral
of thi*
broth”.“
'u„br0
.Ul-1। lor
me
'
‘
-­
I Mrs. A ben Johnson. Mrs. Edgar - Alto over the week end.
for OK-lr
their dnr
fine Increiuo
Increase ui
In member-|
member- | on
coaches.
Mr. Bennett and Mr. BroMr and Mrs Shirley Barnum.
On Friday evening about thirty
'prr “nt The “n Pos“ ' !members
Mr*. Frank Huxtable and sons. I C W w"1mir*m.&lt;a A "i n,'™*‘"l&gt;
members attended the regular zak. sprung a complete surprise on
William Kennedy was in Grand I Thomas. Miss Agnes Johnson and
wm
t.,
।
8n
^»
A
L
.
Brown
having
the
highest
percentage
of
meeting
Thomas
and
William,
of
Lansing
Max
Leach
Friday
evening
by com­
Rapids on last Tuesday night to see Miss Patricia LyBarker motored lo |
---------- ...
....------U“, '
-- — , ”r . "MlddWlUe,
of the Middleville chaporV^TV "I’
d7’w
theJ’rtXJL” uth5 1 ur at Middleville, when the travel­ ing to his home. The evening was
, Ann Arbor Bunday and spent the were guests of thc Rev and Mrs. W
Waiter Huston in "Dodsworth,"
Mr
°v,
M E A records
were so close. One Post
had , mg Ravel, which
.. -j.--------------------------------**""•----------------------------„;.„h was presented to pleasantly spent with various games
Mr and Mrs. Plynn Matthews, day with MIm Barbara Johnson.
, Maylan Jones part ot last week.
-or,
,
“
2
p
r
7
.^
n0p
1
,
n,,d
«»'"«»
133
«nt
01
*rlng
the
■
-I
’
after which light refreshments were
anil Jimmie, Jane and Jack of Grand j Mrs J. A McNulty and Mrs Sa- ' Mr*. 8 B. Wilcox and sister. Mis* L
membership campaign,
campaign Two
past Middleville by the Hastings chapter served.
,, Fennel1
------- vl,','tcd
memwrsnip
two past
I die Mae Palmer attended the Elizabeth Dodd, visited their aunt.1/;,Rapidj were in the city Sunday.
dn South Haven over
over tlic
the week
week end
end. । rtWr
district
com------ J — —
'J
|Ct commanders.
T- S. K. "
Reid
Grand Rapids Symphony concert 1 Mr*. Carrie M Balch, at Isabella |; Mbs Jean Glerum
Ls In New York I of RAMine
port chapter. The gavel is thc prop­
’ Gleruni E *'• Ne* York ' of Hastings ant! Dr B C. Swift of
Y. M. L. CLUB.
Sunday guests of Mr. nnd Mrs. J Friday night, featuring Toscha Sei- I Home. Grand Rapids, on Tuesday. /City .J
erty
ot
the
Barry
County
Eastern
thi* week attending the .NaNa- |, Middleville
Middlcvill- were presented with
' del. the Russian violinist as soloist. , Mr. and Mrs. John c. Condon offMfruUng
George Hooper of Campbell Twp.
.------------------- I Star association and wtU eventually
Mrs. Edwin Smith entertained the
'
Three Rivers and Dr. Kurt C uonal
Uo,“‘ convention
ConvenUon of Music
MlUilc Super- 1 bndgcs
—
-1 badges.
|
returned to its president. Mrs. Y. M L- Club on Thursday of last
Mr and Mrs Harold McDonald , Mr and Mrs R. G. Jeffrie* and
i visors.
Becker
of
Grand
Rapids
were
guests
।
son
Harold.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Reuben
.
|
Vern
Adams,
department
commit,
i^vi
Gebhart.
Thc
Middleville
of Battle Creek spent Sunday with
week. A cooperative luncheon was
Mr. and Mrs John Engle visited
his mother. Mrs Wilbur McDonald I Lee of Lowell, and Dr. and Mrs of Dr and Mrs. R B Harkness Sun­ their son and wife, Mr nnd Mr* ' iceman, told of lhe business trans-1 chapter was in charge of the meet­ I enjoyed by eleven members after
' acted at the test committee meeting , tIlB and the entertainment, in the which cards furnished the amuse­
Mrs. A. R Van Til and daughters Harry Imus ot Ionia, were Sunday j day.
Milton Engle, of Dimondale on Sun- ■ ’ One of the items will mean a great, form of two one act plays, was pre­ ment. Mrs. Claude Bush of Battle
returned
on
Wednesday
from , guests ot Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Town- | Mr and Mrs j. w Wolfe and day
Mrs. otto laenhath visited his sls»»
।
. ' «eai
deal to
to tne
the sea
stale—the gift of a nice I sented by lhe members of the Free- Creek was an out of town guest.
Grand Rapids after a stay of sev- send.
b.bv o?'chX-o SS'Li'u'Sr Mrd ut,K? e:1’'r nug to S'".
"P‘"' "BawSmiiir
each rural 1। port C|
chapter
Refreshments were
, Mr and Mrs. Wayne Mitchell of '
, ,,a »« cn,~iT” cre **u ? 01 .
school tn the state, suitable for the served following lhe orocram
Mlv. Beulah Severance was home I Battle Creek joined Mr. and Mrs. port on Friday Her condition is “
M Mr.. cl.,m„e Cr.ulord l.d ,
Tl„ Qo.„.ier ol U» mt
rouowin.^ne pro,r.m
over the week end reluming lo De­ F. L Fairchild hero Sunday in u gradually getting worse.
d"!
“5. • ... —
1 KETYRNING
—,.o. Theyto .,v
Newaygo.
They were
were inf
Ul ‘ Mr and Mrs Philo Sheldon hud : * Mr mid Mr,, rd.
troit Sunday with her sister. Mrs. F 1 trip «
------RETURNING TO
TO HASTIN'
HASTINGS.
hope* to witness smell dipping but « “
^om Sunday until I
v _.. “J4 „fEd* r
Banner
in receipt
of \
the
J. LaMa.ster.
, ...I Hon day
? when there will also' be,
lne The
uanner
j* tn 1*receipt
oi tne
------- a
•
‘Thursday
week, thc SI.
lat-I ! S«M»nd.-Mr
“unday 8ue$t5 ofmA'. S
alsU;r t“
T“mu the
™ past sZua'j'
i. : annrnnrintp i&gt;rpru-tYtntlaiY »"»»»E. A.
wbkb
r^rrmnn. I, Mlowin, Iron,
&lt;
—
• Burton,
——•— —
l._._ ■ J
the run hadn't started.
Mr nnd Mrs R A Beach and Mr ----------... ._
„
....
husband Mr nnrl Mr.
Misses' Barbara Wilcox. Jean Deand Mrs M Kinsey of Grand Rap­
will be of Interest lo friends here:
I merman, of Jackson.
Il wu* oLto suggested by Mr.
Kissimmee. Pla..
S
lids were Sunday guests of Mrs
| Mr and Mrs. j. E Edmond* were
mi. :inuBurkehcart
**«*. Aiiwiuny uurst-nrai i b
_ -,
- - ..........................
and Emma Chandler, also John i Mr. nnd Mrs. Anthony
Adams that Hie Fourth District I
March 29th 1930
I&lt;
Crt'&lt;‘k 011 M°nd"&gt;' 1®
r:‘J son of
-- Burlington were Sunday
Post* act as friends of thc court.] Gentlemen:—Please change mailDorothy Jean Frey of Michigan Chandler. Louis Ken Held and Ken- and
Jones, who L* confined and ask that thc boys from juve- mg address from above to Hastings ' N
RUesU. of their uncle and aunt.
aunt, Mr. , ra_
City Ind, is spending two week* nrtij Biddle .ire home from W. S. T..1 guests
]I and
t0 hcr bed Wlth
trouble She nile court be placed under the rare ; B» wo are planning on going to lhe &lt;
ftnd Mrs.
Mrs- Geo.
GK&gt; Staiger.
Staiger.
with her grandparent*. Mr. and C- for their spring vacation.
. . . ihal'e one reason why so
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hyde and 1 Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. Homer
Homer Warner
Warner ‘.s.no! «aln,nG as rapidly as hcr of a Legloiuialrc
The pasta al j Atlantic coast for a stopover of a(K
Mr* L- E Severance.
' Marshal)
and Grace Warner were , friends would like.
many people “Dine Out" al
Sturgis now have eleven boy* who । tew days before starling for home. I \
Mrs. May Townsend returned last George of Prairieville visited thc
1। Mr* Frank Day of South Haa- arc on probation and Three Rivers
former
s
mother
Saturday.
George
|
Sunday
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs
Florida's weather has not been as ' v
week from Saginaw and Lansing
the Trio. Other reasons arc
lings and ML*s Viola Day of Hua- has two. the plan proving success- salubrious a* usual this winter
remaining
till
Sunday,
when
Mrs
Roderick
Warner
ot
Nashville
X
where -.hr had been spending thc
as
but iiX
guests
Mr.
cheerful service . . . pleas-.
1I we ----------— —.........................
Hyde and Paul Hyde accompanied
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sisson. MLss | tings fcere Sunday •
“7 “ “of
• —
• ful nt both places
winter with relatives.
all feel—thankful
that we have Iv
j
ant surroundings and rea­
Endorsement of Arthur Clark of avoided the severe -cold and anow ''
Mr. nnd Mrs. Junes Batson and him home. They also called on Mrs ' Doteen Slvon and Miss Eddy of“i*d Mf’‘ Cllftan Day ofPaw Paw
iI Marcellus
it... visited Hastings relatives
ITnev-Jlso
called
on °Mr
andand
Mrr.Mr
1
caUed
n Mr
South Haven tor Department Com- of the north.
sonable prices.
Mr and Mrs W. T Crawley were Birdie Mcrlau
X
mnnder was made by the Legion of
Mr. and Mrs. Vollie Stout and son on Saturday afternoon and Sun- Clayton Siertaema of Kalamazoo,
Sunday guests of Mrs. Minnie Bat­
Some vegetables have been deand Mrs Etta Stout ot Muncie. day.
this district. Mr Clark know* thc slroycd and strawberries nearly ‘ \
sun of Grand Rapids.
Miss Margaret
Merrick, who
Legion work very thoroughly and ruined. ___
_ on the
„ big __
_ of | S
Mr*. Margaret Renkcs ot Detroit Ind., and Mrs. Gladys Daughcrty
Last year
day
Special Luncheon.. 30c
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Day recent-ij would make on excellent official.
the strawberry seaaon'tbere*were 83
nnd Ed. Kelley of FL Madison. ond two daughters. Erma Jean ond leaches In South Haven, relumed
Soup. Meal, Potatoes,
Iowa, s|x-nt Sunday here wilh their Sarah Louttc. of Yorktown, Ind.. yesterday from Detroit where she -ly celebrated their thirtieth wedding l: Constantine will entertain thc carloads shipped from Plant City,
bread and Butter
Anniversary,
observing
the
day
with
had
been
spending
part
of
her
va1
i
spent
from
Erlday
till
Sunday
with
sister. Mrs Mary Brooks.
-.
next convention on May 21. This (Thi* year less than 30 carloads for
।n family gathering. Mr. und Mrs, i will be a Boy Scout meeting wilh I the entire season as it is nearly
Mr*. F J. LnMaster and ran the Rev. E O. McSherry and wife. cation.
Side Dish, Drink—
Day
were
presented
with
a
chest
of
:
Mr. and Mrs. E- A- Parker. Mrs '■
| lhe Scouta furnishing lhe program, dosed here now.
David of Detroit drove lo Hastings Erma Jean remained for an extend­
(Coflee.
Tea or Milk}
Marjorie Oatroth. Mrs. Ella Hain- ।silverware by their children.
Scout work will aLso be discussed.
I
very truly vours
Thursday bringing her mother. Mrs. ed visit,
Those prownt from out of town । Reports from lhe Units of the disHarold Swanson of Big Rapids mond and Mrs. Bert Armstrong
g. A. Burton.
L E Severance, who visited in De­
---------------- '
was thc guest of Mr and Mr*. Jo*. visited relatives in Prairieville on 'were Mr. and Mrs Clare IJndauer I trict were given at the Auxiliary
troll Inst week'
SUNDAY
DINNER
and family of Battle Creek. Mr meeting which showed that this or- CELEBRATING HIS
Mr and Mrs. Einar Frandsen of Swanson last week returning Fri­ Sunday.
Wayne Snyder, who Ls running o ।and Mrs Clayton Slcrtacma and | gantzation Is as busy ns ever In
Complete Chicken
NINETIETH BIRTHDAY.
lonla were dinner guest* of Mr day. hl* ,parent*
--------------------accompanying
«-—.—.------him
and Mrs Orville Sayles Saturday to Big Rapid* for the day. Mrs. Wll- shoe store for Harold Brockway at Rita of Kalamazoo and Mlss Violet | doing good for others The Hastings , Today Thursday. April 2. John
Dinner50c
night and spent Sunday with Mr *■■■*
lard Ickes, who had *'been
------ ---------spending
“— Three River*, spent Monday night Day of Hastings Mr and Mrs. L Auxiliary had a splendid report of Smelker Is holding open house at
Steaks cut from branded
j ---------------------the week with—Mrs.
Harold Swanson with his parents. ■Mr. and Mrs Jay A Day and family and Mr. and Mrs । It* activities They have nine drew* his home at 618 3- Hanover St. lhe
and Mrs A K Frandscn
\
,
--------------------------------1 Charles Day of Barryville were also ' ready to send lo the Otter Lake occasion being his ninetieth birthbee/ . . . prepared
Mrs Matic McCollum and Miss | in Big Rapid*, returned Friday with Snyder.
Mias Beatrice Giddings of Baltic :present. A very happy time Is re­ । Billet before Easter. Discussion of' day
Mrs. Jas. Swanson.
Hazel Smelker of Fenton and Mr:-. , Mr
*** and **"
""""
“As you like it."
Creek and Miss Katherine Giddings ported, all extending congratula­ ' Poppy Day plans for Saturday, 1 He was born in Baden. Germany.
Miss Lois Severance —
of -----Sturgis
Wm Rose of St. Johns were Sun----------------------------------day visitors of Mr. nnd Mrs. Smith ' schools and Mr. and Mrs W. O. of Holt are spending the week wilh tions to tiic bride and groom of May 23, was a feature of the bust- •. April 2. 1846. the family coming lo
I lies* meeting also. Ml** Florence America that same year. Later they
Will The women an- sisters.
| Prey of Michigan city. Ind. left their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Guy thirty years.
Holland told of the District Birth- moved lo Ohio tltcn lo Irving loanMr nnd Mr* Albert Swanson of , Monday for Nashville. Tenn. Lol* 1* Giddings.
I day parly nt thc Billet nnd said 102 ship in Barry county. He has five
Mrs Cora Biggs returned Friday
Ludington nnd Miss Marjory Swan- a delegate to an Art Institute at
Karmcs Bros. Phone 2137
Mr. and Mrs. A. K Frandr.cn have children were treated to Ice cream I sons. Henry of Freeport. Frank of
son nnd Miss Clara Krogc, students Nashville for four days. They will to her home in Rutland after .six-tid­

Honey.

or

iSLsrs.S’-’” FM"““,n “ ।

i cutting
ake the
ir fitting
Syckle.

■

•

:'
8
j
t
i;
;
;

?
:
!
■
i
ff
J
•
t
j

::
J

at W S T C. Kalamazoo visited 1 then go to Miami. Florida, for a ing thc winter here with her sister received word that their son-in-law. and-cake, balloons and candy, the Lake Odessa. Elcry ol Freeport. Al- S
the Rev and Mrs w Maylan Jone.*, week where Lois and Alice (Mr*, and husband. Mr. and Mr.-.. J. F. Forrest Baldwin, has received n fine latter being a gift from two Unit | vln of Irving Twp , and Orvtn ofjvj
promotion and has been transferred members in this district.
| Bowne Twp Mrs. Smelker passed
nnd m'-m Phebc Flannely from Sun- Freyi will visit their cousin. Mrs. Edmonds.
Mr. and Mrs Willard white at­ from
...... Chicago to the
....
.Pittsburgh
Mrs. ,-viniic
Marie otiirumpi
Schrumpf ui
of rules
Niles re- .j away oc»erni
several years ago.
ago
|
day till Tuesday.
| DorU Martin Howe.
Mr. Smelker Ls the oldest member I
tended a family party at the home, branch of thc a B Dick Mimco- ' ported that 56 attended the Birth-1
Mys Baldwin day party at Camp Custer. Eighty- ' nf the Methodist church here and |
of his parent-. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. graph CO. Mr and
two veterans at Hospital No. 100 has been on the church membership |
White, of Ovid on Sunday. Il be­ iFlorence Frandseni willmove to
ing the latter's birthday
their new home in twoor three
and three at the TB hospital were : Hat for 69 years.
--------Mr. nnd Mrs. John Busby of Hous­ week* ThLs will be cs|&gt;ecially plea.*- ] remembered with cigarettes and |
ton. Texas, were guests of Mr and .-nt for them as Mrs Baldwin's sis- ' candy Mr*. Schrumpf aLso told of
, Mrs. W. J Walins from Wednes- ter and husband. Mr and Mr*. Rob- ' thc Unite she had visited around '
•
■ Y&gt;. A . U . WM.T bVTy piCa.Y- '
anlly
entertained
at
lhe home of I
I day till Sunday ThLs week they arc ert Laurcnson. also reside in PHU- j the slate a* part of her duties as
Department President The Auxil- Mrs. Elizabeth Parker, 8. Jefferson I
, visiting in Battle Creek and Eaton **•-“
Rapids.
lary also decided to remember with St., with 28 members present. The
MLss Ellen Leonard. Miss Frances SHOWERS HONOR THE
। gift* the five veterans' wives at the chairmen of the contest for mem­
Sage. Hartley Finstrom. Robert An­
WH1TTEMOKES. Soldiers' Home in Grand Rapids. bers reported five new ones. Much
gell. Robert Kelley nnd Hubert j
Mr. nnd Mrs Forrest Havens cn- using thc money left from the Interest Is being shown in this con­
Mead arc home this week from M | tertainrd Saturday evening cmnpli- Birthday party fund for that pur- test. Anyone who is interested in
6. C- at East Lansing for the spring mentary to Mr and Mr, Lowell ' pose There arc 102 World war vet- this cause and wants to line up
vacation.
Whittemore and Mr and Mrs. Rus- I eran.* now receiving care at the against the liquor forces should Join
LBS.
: our union. Give your name to Mrs. I
John W’eLsscrt of this city rc- ^■ilvWhitteniorc. who were recently j Soldiers' Home.
----------- —■« • ----------------Ruby Merrick or Mrs. Amy Bower.
turned from thc University hospital riiAnicd. About forty young people.
NOT OVER 4 LBS. TO A CUSTOMER
I Mrs. Maylan Jones gave us a re­
! at Ann Arbor Saturday, where he friends of lhe bride and groom I
GUILD NO. 6.
I had been taken for treatment and spent a very' enjoyable evening with I Pennock Hospital Guild No. 6 kas , port on our "Narcotic Law' telling
VACATION.LAND
LBbeing
an operation. He seems much im­ them, entertaining
and pleasantly entertained U|l
on MUIlUMy
Monday ' us
—....... 1 with music W..k.
— of the
------use
-----------• made of Indian
.......... ;
games, f*
Many
----- *-------beautiful
•**"’ —
and
• —
useful '' ------evening
*— *-by Mrs -------Frank —
Carrolhers, hemn
l,cmP in
hi cigarettes
cigarettes. -This
This drua
drug K
is He.
he­ I
, proved.
re -----left, -----and --------sincere „good ' assisted bv Mrs Russell Bauer and ,n« 11560 Qulte 4 Utile In Michigan.
Mrs. 3- B- Wilcox. Miss Elizabeth gift* were
vac rack l.
I Dodd and Mrs. Fred Ryerson at­ wishes extended for the future.
MLss
Dorothy.
Shelltngton
gave
Mrs. Charles Vandcgrift. Dessert
her
oration
and
Miss
Laura
Sabin
tended thc Milo Ladies' Aid Society
I was served to twenty-four and lhe
at lhe home of the former's daugh­
UNDERGOES OPERATION.
Ievening was spent with cards. Mrs. her declamation which were greatly
Nelson Gardner, son of Mrs, Erma ; Wm. corkin and Mrs. A. B. Gldley enjoyed.
ter. Mrs Leone Bradfield, at Milo
Wednesday.
Gardner, underwent up operation on . won at bridge and Mrs A. J. Vcdder
SEWING CLUB.
Mrs. L. E. Royer, Miss Mary Roy­ Thursday forenoon at Sparrow hos-' at cribbagc,
LARGE PKG.
On Tuesday of Jost week lhe
er. and Emerson Royor visited Loy pltal in Lsnstng. He has now been;
--------- ——- - - American Legion Auxiliary sewing
MONDAY STUDY' CLUB.
Royer at the hospital in Buttle moved to&lt;he hospital in connection [
club met al lhe home of Mrs. Harry
with
M.
3.
C.
at
East
Laiulng
nnd
’
Mrs.
c..
Ej.
J.
rran
Pratt
cnwriamcu
entertained
uie
Uie
Creek.
Sunday
and
found
hlin
sit
­
LARGE CAN
onjw.
State
St.• Twelve
were
-------- --—
---------— —
-—------------ting up. He expects to return lo his Is doing as well as possible, ills! Monday Study club at her homo Walers
mother visited him on Thursday ’wlt*’ “ luncheon, covers being laid present and considerable work was
home this week.
done.Mrs.
Kenith
McIntyre
left and on Sunday his wife and her •toT eight. Mrs. Harold Phillips gave done
renn maid
Wednesday from Detroit for Clear­ parenta. Mr. and Mrs.- Wm. Mlskc. interesting reviews of two books by­ MRS. HILLMAN HOSTESS TO
, Clarence Day. Lite with Father"
water. Florida, where she will spend spent thc day with him.
STITCH AND CHATTER CLUB.
----------------- and "God and My Father."
FANCY LONG SHRED LB.
• few week* with thc Dr. C. S. Mc­
| Thc Stitch and Chatter Club met I
Intyres. and will drive their car THE “CURTAIN GUILD" HAVE
ENTERTAINS EXECUTIVE BI&gt;. | with Mrs. Seba Hillman Wednesday |
home for them around the first of
BENEFIT FOR HOSPITAL,
Mrs. c D. Bauer entertained the .cvfnlng. March 25. for Ita regular,
Hospital Guild No.-I gave a bene­
SWISS OR SIRLOIN LB.
May.
monthly meeting, ^even members
Mrs. Jennie McElwain of Lan­ fit dessert-bridge last Tuesday, executive committee of the Barry and two guests were present. A de- I
of Women’s
sing. was a week end guest at the with Mr-, c A Kerr. Mrs. L I! County Federation
Clubs on Saturday afternoon, assist- llclous lunch was served by lhe
DICKORY BRAND
« LB.
home of Mr and Mrs. Jason McEl­ Evart* and MLw Agnes Sim os
- hostess. The next meeting will be
Ing
Mrs.
J.
P
Mohler,
acting
presi
­
wain. Mrs. Henry Clark and daugli*. hostesses at Mr'. Kerr's home,
dent. Ten were present and par­ held on April 22 with Mrs. Alice
ter accompanied her here and vis­ twenty-five being present.
Cronk. 533 W. State.
Winning scores were turned in by ticipated in the discussions. Tea was
» lb
ited thc Chet Englehardl's In the
Goodwill neighborhood.
Mrs. Kellar Stein. Mrs. Thos. Sul­ served later.

Friday, April 3...
Saturday, April 4

OLEOMARGARINE
COFFEE

2

23c

17C

BLISS COFFEE

A &amp; H BAKING SODA

CLIMALENE

BOWLINE
APPLE BUTTER
COCOANUT

22|c

2 .xs 15c
19c

19c

22C
18c

MINCED HAM

10c

1962
JXJt.__

JUST PHONE 2491
WE DELIVER

|wrta

Blue

White Shoes arc here for
Spring and Summer. New
imported Bucks, slyliah Pig
Skins, Nunn Bush and EdgcrlowTi quality. Eaay to
clean, comfortable lo wear.

$3.95

Sg.oo $y.50

There arc hats and more
hals. but only one Slylepark
will convince you that style
and quality are supremo in
these hals. Your new Spring
hat is here—come. in and
look them over.

Sg.50 sg.50 Sg.00

FREE TICKETS FOR
CASH FRIZES
Given by
Hostings Marchants

3hr (Erin (£ufr

T. S. BAIRD

5talc St. and Michigan Ave.

Phone 23%

NEW

I lutings

1936

WALL PAPER
NOW ON DISPLAY
All the NEW PATTERNS for the
Kitchen, Bedrooms and Living Rooms
... all color fast and some washable.
At prices you can afford to pay.

ASK FOR YOUR SAMPLE BOOK

THE 12 PAPERS SPECIALLY PRIC

19c

»«. 15c

BEEF STEAK
BACON

HASTINGS

lore

Sunday guc.sta of Mrs Miranda
Bisson and Mrs. Ida Palmaller were
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Sisson and
daughter Doreen and girl friend ot
Marcellus. Mr. and Mrs. T- B. Hart
and Frank Houfstatler ot Watson
Corners and Andrew Houfstaltcr of
Rutland.
Those front here who attended
Ute funeral of Mrs. Nelson Hawn at
Onondaga on Thursday afternoon
were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Haven
and daughter*, Mr and Mrs Edgar
Hocvenalr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles'
Leonard. Mrs. Erma Gardner. Mr.
and Mn&gt;. Andrew Routh. (J. M.
Brower and Clyde Wilcox.

livan and Mrs. Wilkerson.
Guild No. 1 Is the group which
Mrs. Roy Yargcr was hostess to
provides the curtains for thc hos­ her "500 club" on Tuesday after­
pital.
noon, und thc ladles had n delight- •
Rninrs- i itMCurov
,ul Umc wmnerl »l 500
BRIDGE LLNCHEO.S
Arthur Wheating and Mrs. Editn
»»
vi u j \T MBS- GROOS1. Bonnell. Mrs. Lucy Crcglow b the
Mrs. Richard Groos was hostess ncxt hostess
it a very charming bridge-lunch-,---------------- w • &gt;
. eon al her home on S. Park street.;
HAPPY SURPRISE.
Wednesday.
Mrs Juke DePylcster was surTen guest* were scaled at the prised on Sunday by about twenty
luncheon table which was centered I of Iter friends, who come to remind
with a colorful arrangement of1 her that she wos'having a birthday­
spring flowers. Top scores were won on Wednesday. April I. Thc guests
by Mrr&gt;. Fred w. tiicbblni. mid Ms &gt;. brought a iwt luck silp|XT and all,
Abcn Johnson.
'had an enjoyable evening.

PARKER HOUSE

ART-LAC-Try Art-Lac for your
woodwork and furniture. Enam­
el finish, all colors.
20c, 35c and 60c cans
ASK FOR COLOR CARD!

WINDOW SHADES-We moke them

to fit your windows. All sizes
and colors.

Dinins Room Service

SMCIAL

SUNDAY DINNIRS
HOME COOKED FOOD

CARVETH &amp; STEBBI
THE REXALL STORE

Goods Delivered

�Tnr HASTINGS, BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL t. 1958

INSURANCE

' Mr. and Mrs. Leland Weeks and
I daughter were at Delton and Hick­
ory comers Tuesday.
.

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

The Hastings Banner

man Elder and baby daughter re­
turned with them to sjiend their
week's vacation at their parents
home. Elder's and Mrs. Della BowMr. an\J Mrs. Orville Flock and
Mr. and Mrs. John Balis spent Sun­
day with Mr. and Mr:. SUrlUitf
Bahs and family south of Battle

Our Service

Mias Alice Roscoe of Ypsilanti Is
spending her vacation with rela-

CITIZENS MUTUA L
Fire Insurance Co .
4M KUmum M1U. Bank BU*
A Him Ocupur OrsuliM 1*74

GEO. M. NEWTON

STRAWBERRY AND
RASPBERRY PLANTS

Tiw clover Leaf club will be en­
tertained Friday night al Uie home
of Mrs. Fordyce Showalter wilh
Mrs. Esther Johnson assisting.
Work is progressing on the school
addition. Thc brick laying is mov­
ing along fast.
Ttie Nashville Garden Club met

leader. Mrs. Philip Dalhauaer. Al
very interesting lesson on "The Way
After Winter" was given. Seeds of
different plants were given. Plans

LIME YOUR SOIL WITH

Kelly Island MEAL
R. A. SCHOENBORN

JERRY ANDRUS

The Ladles' Aid of the Evangelical
church met Wednesday afternoon
in the basement of the bhureh.
Mrs. John Appclman is able to
spend part of the time at the store,
following her Injuries in a motor acbeen entertaining their daughter
from Ypsilanti.
Rev. and Mrs. Earl culp and son

SEWING MACHINES
&amp; VACUUM CLEANERS
SOLD ON EASYhTERMS
C'cme in and get our price*

A. J. Cavanaugh Mgr.

sdn Charles were In Lansing one
day Inst week.
Miss Louise Wolrlng of Lansing
Junior Roe of Kalamazoo spent spent the week end with her moth­
Sunday with relatives and friends er. Mrs. Maude Wolrlng.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Jones and fam­
ily have moved into the Mrs. Bar­
Pelghner have returned from Grand bara Furniss home on lhe comer of
Rapids where they spent n week Washington and Reed street.

AM BUYING WOOL
SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID
Will rail al your place and weigh

Mr. and Mrs. William Shupp and
daughter are gelling things in shape
lo move back into their qwn home,
after spending some time in the
Stocking home on Main street.
Mr. and Mrs. Will L- Gibson en­
tertained Sunday in honor of their
27th wedding anniversary three
other couples whose anniversaries

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
on fanner* in N. Barry county. No
experience or capital needed. Write
today. McNESS CO, Dept. B, Free­
port, Hlinoi*.
4-2

FORDSON
Muffler*. Brake Lining,
Tires. Ballerie*. Radiators.

CUSTOM HATCHING

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

Foil *»A|.K—&lt;’|nv*r Jiav, A &lt;1 Flnnk.
• hiillr. Ilnur- 2. Fir.l hnuii* •irinh
it K-hrr .rhm.l Mu
4 _•

dinner was enjoyed. The table was
beautifully decorated with tall yel­
low tapers and talisman roses. In
lhe living room were large bou­
quets of brides roses and snapdrag­
ons. gifts of their guests. Mrs. E.
Hall b a sister and Mrs. Lyman

Farmers,Attention!
"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS

PUBLIC NOTICE OF TAX
SALE
ot the Triangle OU Station.
Hastings.

NEW

OLD

Mrs. Robert Goltz of Royal Oak
spent the week end with her broth­
er. Earl Olmstead, and family.
On Friday the new pumps of the
water supply was given a partial
test by a representative from the
Fnirbnnks-Morse &amp;: co. from whom
lhe DeIsei pumps were purchased.

Tuesday, May 5, A. D. 1936

LAKE ODESSA
CANNING COMPANY

CARDS of THANKS

gallons pumped will be installed.
The standpipe will be drained and
cleaned, all mains and service pipes
will be flushed out with n chlorine
solution, nnd tests made by thc stale
health department before lhe pa­
trons will be allowed to use lhe wa­
ter for domestic purposes.

ADJUSTABLE CENTER

Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

Mr. and Mrs. Barnaby have re­
modeled and redecorated thc build­
ing formerly occupied by Will Ma­
ter. nnd will open an up to dale
restaurant on April 1st. Mr. Mater
is redecorating lhe building former­
ly occupied by thc bakery and will
open a pool nnd card room.
The fire department was called
Tuesday morning to the Alvin
Clever house lo put out a roof Are.

PINE LAKE GROUP.
well, 41 years and Mr. nnd Mrs. Ly­
The February meeting of the Pine
man Case. East Lansing. 5 years.
Lake Extension Group, which had
Other guests were the Misses Eliz­
been postponed because of the
abeth Gibson. Marlon Hall. Mr. and
on Thursday,

li«r Abu .lark «t corn f...t.lrr J
a iiulehin.ori. Ha.tmrv wr«i nu &gt;1 37.

BURDETTE SUTTON

FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Smoolh Rubber Dock Podi
No Poit» To Weer Clothing

Plans are being made for the Un­
ion Sunrise service at the Baptist
church on Easter Sunday
Dr. S. M Fowler of Battle Creek
called at the Gall Lykin* home

WATKINS TONICS

. tie Kllllck. There were ten members
and two visitors present The leaders
gave Ute lesson on collars and neck­
lines. Our exhibit for Achievement
day is to be a print dress with lhe
right and wrong type of lace col-

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

at FELDPAUSCH’S
MARKET. Phon* 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609

H. Faldpaucch • 3921

The Prescription Drug Store

Farmers, Attention!

Dead Stock Removed!

KERMIT R. DAY

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

HASTINGS MARKETS

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,
EVERY SATURDAY
If you wish trucking service call Hasting]
Phone 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.

GRANGE PROGRAMS

Michigan Livestock Exchange
HASTINGS BRANCH

CLYDE WILCOX
HASTINGS. MICH.

Telephone 2530

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY. APRIL 2. 1936
MISSIONARY FROM
CHINA TO SPEAK

ahnnt:

;! Barry Bypaths.!

Nazarene District Meeting $
|
B? jane cameron
to Convene Here Saturdav Anri! 4
Our eldfsl boy- 8onny- brought

the CORRESPONDENCE

COURSES STILL OPEN
Young People or Adults Can
Take Them Without
Expense

0(111 P

OUILD

SECTION

00(100111 fl

WOODLAND BANK

inUbnllM

TO PAY DIVIDEND!

SUCCEEDSAflft

If------------

High School Newt

------------- ..... —
so evenly divided, io M or
has that advantage cither

process of a double laaa
' giving the five that fall to
Mr Becker's speech class will pre-1
lr.
• F*
sent a program of music and read- I
M
I mgs al Ute Goodwill school in Po- (
A depositors' dividend of !0 per i dunk Friday evening. They will also
lnlJT /suaaiAe iu~"
cent has been announced by Archie'present a one-act play and demon- oLIUn I LnANGE IN
McDonald, attorney for James L strate verse-speaking chorus work
nnornreme uaiibc
Barker, receiver of Woodland State i
...
rUalUrrlUt nUUKb
Bank
The bank haa been tn reThp nnt home-room discussion
eelvershlp since April 1934. and this ; periods were held Monday. March Windows Closed At B P. H.
dividend makes a total dBtribution 30 nie students were dbtrlbuled i Saturdays Only—Governof 75 per cent
ThB dividend B I .inhabetlcallv among the teachers'
wvvrumade from collections only, no R F ' anPd dlwu«ed questtona of current
ment Orders the OhMfe
c. loan existing.
interest. The general topic dn MonA alight change tn the hours of

This Distribution to Its Depositora Makes 7&amp;S&lt; Paid
Since 1934

Enrollment B still possible in Ute MEETINGS IN COUNTY TO
various correspondence courses ofDISCUSS TOPIC OF
fcred by the University of Michigan
CONSERVATION
at Ute local center. This correspondencc plan was inaugurated in part
with the Idea of making college DESIGNED TO GIVE
courses available to those young
FARM RELIEF IN U. S.
people and adults who arc not in- ■
terested in credits but who are de,
—-------—
„
termined to continue their educa- Old Schedules Did Not Fit
tton for the sake of education itself I
Farming Conditions in
It is possible that evening hours
announced, effecUvJ\
markings.
This State Very Well
can be arranged. Tuition Is free.'
Woodland, on Friday and Saturday.
Saturdays only, the 1
Courses are being offered in English.
............ —
ww. u
County
Agent
Harold J Foster April 3 and 4. for thc jwrpose of
Most of the members of the staff to lhe general public
Composition. Modern HBtory. Ger- announces a series of meetings at making distribution of' -dividend
for
live
school
annual
have
been
man. French. Geography. Sociology, which he will discuss the new Soils checks.
chosen, but the editors liave not a half later as at present This cur­
Mathematics
and
Mechanical conservation program. This B the
tailment of service has been au­
yet been named.
Drawing. If interested, see Mr, R —
— — designed
■—j .—
.... •------O. E. S. FAMILY NIGHT.
urogram
to give
farm—re­
thorised ax the result ot a recent
All members of Hastings Chapter
Holwerda at lhe High school
. lief from overproduction of basic
check-up of the local office by pos­
The fifth annual speech dinner tal inspectors, who found It necescash crops and is to replace the in­ No. 7 O. E. 8, and their families are
invited
to
a
pot
luck
supper
in
the
for
the
debate
squad
and
finalists
tn
„
m„r ulul cn&gt;1™
„
validated AAA- The old AAA did
Masonic
dlnuig
room.
Tuesday
evei
declamation,
oratory
and
extempore
mforce the forty-hour week law It
, not fit Michigan farming condl-.
-•••“•» •—•••. ■
• r,'l “7, at• C:30 o'eMck.
well as speech
feltuua
th.,
chan-_ wa
~
lions very well.
Many farmers '
AP
o’&lt;™—Please
--------- - ' ? peak
------mg
— contests
— as
------------------WBa lw ulMl
wu-- ac
rvlw
’
L
’
hw,
a,,rl
nlumnl
was
lielrl
ut
thi*
Minh
KZ-hm-it
__
.
..
___
.
.
__
Z*.
..
.
could not profitably sign a contract ' “ring table service, sandwiches and alumni was lield al thc High school sUgm tbat
woujd work no Incou' County Agent Foster states this new °n&lt;* other dish of food. ThB will' Saturday evening. March 28. The : renlence to the patrons ot th* office,
program
followed. by card
games
and oth- |I......
dinner was
served at 0 30 by
Mrs.
most cities of the size of HaspiUHIMU B
*-» much
U.UUI more
invar- workable
RUIMWK I
....
...............
.....................
' —
II In ....
. Icr
„„ to I xz-wli.
..™,. {lngs
bepn
M
this------------county----and he ....
feels at least
er tarm.
,ornu nf
of .ni.H.lnm-.*
entertainment. di
Plan
Hewitt .nd
and *K»
the it
U n
B l.dte.
ladies. ts
Decor[2.000 Barry county farmers can en- come and have a good time
blue
and gold, with
■lations
“•.•-I",were in —
r —
7 '1 the postoffice entirely Saturday aftminiature speakers stands for place ernoons. but it ha* been the belief of
ONLY ONE CRIMINAL CASE ter the program if they care to do
..
cards
and
c*rds
program*
and
programs
In
lhe
form
In
lhe
of
form
of
present
present
and
previous
and
previous
postmaapostmasNASHVILLE HAS FINE
LISTED FOR THE
inn of
nf awards
n.'iirdc .ters
_ . . that to do so ___
. . _ work
.
.a
NFW WATFR ^YSTFM .-nkr'!-.
fmrels. Tile
Tl(r nrexentat
presentation
would
The base, methdd of compliance.
M —
bTbltM was followed by a short program hardship on the public, especially
APRIL TERM
crops covered —
and
the,; entire pro­ P.U-.
gram itself Is entirely different from piontif„i
_r
“nd _dancln«-, Flru
those coming in from the rural dBthe old AAA Mr. Foster B conduc- I Plenllful Supply of Excellent awards were given to Dorothy 8hel- ujeu, and so far they bare been
linRton. Donald
Donald Weaver,
Suzanne successful tn maintaining the usual
COURT WILL CONVENE
Ing fifteen meetings over the coun- :
Water Is Now Avail•I lington.
Weaver. Suzanne
ly lo make it convenient for farm-,
1■ Sumner. Floyd Woodward and De--------------------------------------------­ service
on Saturday afternoons.
MONDAY, APRIL 13 ers to attend one. He B hoping every I
. a Die
| Foriest Walton. The second year
The change in hours referred to
'
M4UV to vwmm
farmer will lake lhe time
come. I Water from Nashville's new mu-; R01d award-wax presented to Dwight
does not apply to week-days
Usual Number of Divorces out to al least one meeting and hear nlclpal well was pumped Into thc Ferris. Robert Kenney. Ruth Hath- above
other than Saturday when lhe
the outline of the program first
,or Uie first time Friday last, away and Marian Hewitt. About stamp and parcel post windows re­
—Only .Three Jury Cases
hand.
by a representative of the firm from thirty-five students attended,
tn- main open until 6 o'clock, and the
Are Listed
Washington
wantedAftcr
a having
better an opportunity to whom lhe (lumping equipment was [ eluding twelve alumni from
the money order window until 5:»
method
Leading
agriculturists
in
cl mi ting view of his Adam's apple
The April term of circuit court explain the program to the farmers, purchased. Engineers from lhe slate classes of 1927 and following years.
DARING THEME IN
I France and England were experi- will convene on Monday. April 13lh Mr. Foster WBU
will leave Mre
the matter ---of health
----------- department
—-------------- estimate that
.....,t
• • •
Furthermore the change tn hours
“THF
I RUT
ADY U
PON^FNT*?
® w,th machines
the ,;next. There will be noted only onc entering the program entirely up lo 1 lhc well al Nashville B capable of
At seven o'clock on the evening of
I nt L
UN^tN I U ”i ,nenUn
k. Washlngton
deridedto do
to excriminal case, which is creditable to the farmer. ThB has always been producing the largest amount of wo- - April 9, the sub-dBtrict speech con- patch of mall. The postofflee lobby
A glorious adventure to make a ' perimenl too Working with a black- thc people of Barry county. But the county Agent Foster’s policy. We |lcr
®ny well of ita size in the HejJb-will be held in the Lincoln will remain open until 8 o'clock,
The government WPA fur- tlf1500*’ Bt Kalanu
| husband realise he Is in love with smith, he succeeded in devising and large number of divorce cases is feel everyone should attend a meet-1 state
and any mail deposited before clos­
-tifT- his wife B Indulged In by Ann I building a barrel plough" as he ,anything but creditable. Following &gt; ing for their own Information, a nighed
____________
about__811.000 of lhe
....cost
___ __of .■»onald
______ Weaver
___
. ifcrtl*
i
flbnald Doxey ing time will go out the same night.
Harding In "The Lady Consent*." called It Actually. thB was a drill B the list of cases:
[schedule of the meetings follows: ' Nashville's new water system, and ; will compete
•- *for
— the glory ot Hashelil.
In which she co-stars with Herbert altacived to a plow a revolving bar­
Criminal Causes.
Friday. April 3. 2:00 P. M—Base- the village financed 88.000 more tings.
Marshal). Tit* story ■llcmatrs be- , «?1 with holes in it dropped out the
BARBERS CORNERS.
from revenue bonds, which will be I
....
The People vs. Wm. Wisner, ment Dowling church.
Kid Mo.i,
tween tense drama and sophistical- I »cc&lt;B.
; breaking nnd entering
Harry Preston w.
of *Premont visit
.lull, lhe
mv proceeds Ul
of tlic sys3- 1 Intra-mural
.I..... ......... sports .....I
have taken the
-­
• Friday. April 3. 8:00 P. M —Hope paid from
| ed comedy and h climaxed with a j
• • •
Jury Civil Causes.
1 township hall.
tern. The stand pipe, mains and , spotlight in the local gymnasium at Ray Preston's Saturday.
Good food mokes good dbposiDolly J. Lee vs. Robert L. Chad-1 Tuesday. April 7. 2:00 P M — service pipes will be flushed with a 1 since thc close of the basket ball
Mr and Mrs. Chas. Albright and
motes, r
■ child In smashing denouement
, Ann
.
chlorine solution, under the super- -eason. Fourteen teams are entered son of Chicago spent the week end
nun Harding
ciaiuuiig plays
put &gt;7 a
u courageous
luuiufcruui [ lions
wick, trespass on lhe case.
Masonic hall. Hickory Comers.
lo qualify
wife who brings her flirtatious hus­
In the matter of the estate of
Tuesday. April 7. 8 00 p. M — vision of the state health depart-' in compeUtion and rivalry Is keen at their summer home here,
ment. to render water from the sys-1 for the mast part.
-------- lake
Miss Mabelle Nollen of -Grass
band to lime and cures him of ...s
his | There B a never-ending feud be-' Hiram J. „
Kenfield. Appeal from pro-1 Prairieville township hall.
not uti oulstandltig star. mind you. [ romantic strayings. ..
It „
B „
a role ’tween Bud und Palsy. Ouc evening bate court.
There
---------------are---five
— "
teams In lhe class Is visiting her sister. Mra Herman
Wednesday. April 8. 2:00 P- M.— tern Immune-from the possibility of
but just a reasonably successful [ made-to-order for Miss Harding, ns ’he children were discussing how h-tr ccert.
disease. For a tong time before the A division which ore captained by Hauer.
Non-Jury Civil Causes.
Assyria township hall
| it combines sparkling comedy and far back they rould remember Bud
Nati
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huver of Lan­
National Merchandising System
Wednesday. April 8. 8:00 P. M.— new system was constructed, lhe varsity men. Crothers. Gladstone. i
• •to form fast*ald the farthest back he could re- vs c
---- - ■ drama
•j. O- T Hess &amp; son. assumpsit.
! Johnstown grunge hall.
, emotional
a
village was pumping water from the Angell. Ransom and Hinckley Ot sing were Sunday dinner guests of
।call was Palsy's birth Patay was
moving story.
Wayland Stale Bank vs. Wm., Thursday. April 9. 2 00 P. M — river. People did not use it without these five. Crothers' team has been Mrs. Jerry Pbley.
j Herbert Marshall plays the phll- I touched and said. Bud. can you ....w
and. Etta WUner.
-----------..
! Gleaners hall. Cressey.
boiling it. as It won unfit for house­ eliminated in the dual elimination. i Mrs. Etta Bump. Mn. Nay Bump
nu,,er. akbumpslt.
| andcrlng doctor who falls an easy really remember when I was bom?”
Fred Mackey' &gt;»Avm E. Seitlei’.
hold uses. The treatment by chlor4
Thc class B division is composed and Mra. L- J. Matthews visited in
— the
— underdogs
-—. who are waging a Battle Creek Saturday. MBs Nora
■ prey to the blandishments of the -Yes." was the quick answer. 'You trespass on the case.
FREEPORT'S NEW POSTMASTER. ine is necessary in order to destroy! of
Mlarlo nnd fume
Mrs. Gail Lightfoot ot Freeport germs that might be lurking hi thc\bltter fight for thc opportunity of Matthews returned home wilh them
charming women with whom he looked like a monkey"
precocious iiitir i
Roy Blough vs. C- A. Curtiss it
waler
pipes
since
the
use
of
river
meeting
the class A champs. At i ' ■ L visit.
-mi.
M.UH.IX..U
hlu
becn
appointed
poilmastcr
of
• comes in contact. He has thc poise
Son, assumpsit.
Newest
fad
—
Having
eight
or
water
was
discontinued.
!
present
it
is
hardly
possible
Fred
Mackey
vs.
Mrs
Ed.
Settler,
’
**»•»*8he
had
been
serving
IML-m.nk
»
u&gt;
IUUU.J
|K^XHU!C to
K&gt; make
u..kr I ~~
The pupils of Altoft DClLOOl ln­
and the masculine appeal demanded
■
kind nf
a
------ any kind of a1 anv
prediction
as ntoivredirtinn
a vlted theirtn mothers
to a birthday
by the character and has the ability twelve-ounce babies. That would appeal from Justice Court.
!“
postmaster since Uie death
and often destitution.
Francllle Miller vs. E- A Rogers. ol t*»«
Herman Rensch. who ■ organisers of a coming convention probable winner, because the stars i surprise on their teacher, Mn. Oarto hold the regard of the audience happen after Jane got her family
all here.
the
western
pickle
trade are scattered evenly among the | rie Fisher. Friday. A fine pot luck
despite his erring ways.
assumpsit.
1 M5 nllln* n temporary appointment of
Belle W Cook vs. Dr Chase A.' when he d,cdpromise a surprise. Don't tell us it's fourteen teams. Thc cheering is al- dinner was enjoyed at noon.
Walter Abel, seen recently In
Chxse away hubby's frown with Wise, trespass on the case.
-The Three Musketeers" and "Two
|------------------ ----------------------------------------billon being what they uro.
j hi the Dark." lias the sympathetic apple pie. This is Jane's "Good Food
Jay Norton vs. Ben Kelsey, ap­
I role ot a young construction cngl- Week"
peal from Justice Court.
Headaches From Economic Messiah) ncer Who Is Ln love With Mrs. Tai-J
Robt w. Cook vs. Arthur Kotesky,
We tried those soybeans and they et al. trespass on lhe case.
ALBERTA. In I'unuil.i, piiHlnced bot. played by Miss Harding This
iin economic Mrsaiub, n spout ’how comes to thc Strand on Tues- taste like field beans and hominy., Lottie Stauffer vs. Arthur and
Parboil twice and flavor In lite us­ Homer Kotesky. trespass on the'
iug J^hn lhe Baptist ut lhe dlafwn
Apr*1 7'
ual way and put them over early,
“BARBARY COAST” A
for they take plenty of cooking,
Harry O. Mohrmann. receiver, vs.
new with a lovely device called a
ROBUST DRAMA. jerry won't eat them. He says he I Merritt and Maud Mead, assumpsit.
"social credit system" which, nnituig
"Barbary Coast." Is coming to the he Isn't any hog.
। Marshall Cook vs. Dr. Chase A.
other plemuini things, guiiruntct-d Strand on April 8 and 8. with Mir­
I Wise, trespass on the case.
iam Hopkins. Edw. G Robinson and
That little ditty Will Rogers
every adult $23 a month for Ufa.
Hoekstra ice Cream Co. vs. Fred
danced to in "In Old Kentucky.” ; Eiders, et al. replevin.
So lhe voters overwhelmingly Joel McCrea in Its leading roles
Around the building of America's keeps running through my head i
elected him us premier and from ul)
Ethel Ehle vs. Fred and Emma
yet.
Does
anyone
know
the
name
'|; Livingston,
frontier after the California gold
assumpsit.
rush in 1848. Charles MacArthur of It?
sands lo share In tho distribution.
Ford Casey vs. Barry County
and Ben Hecht have written a ro­
Road Commission, assumpsit.
mantic and glamorous story of a
Wc are going to try- a new kind of |
Dr.
R.
G.
Finnic and Henry Braa sieve; citizens are faced with love that flowered and flamed amid raised doughnuts. If they are as
ruinous tuxes—ami mdiady yet has the tumults and treachery of a good as we hope, we'll print lhe re­ vont vs. Andrew Dlrr and Glenn
Wotring. garnishee defendant. AP­
collected that twenty-live a month. gold-mad city of love-hungry ad- cipe soon.
peal from Justice Court.
always j venturers from every comer of the
Industrial
depn-Mlun
। in the matter of lhe Estate of
globe.
Caleb RBbridger, deceased. Appeal
Miriam Hopkins is more fascinat­
from probate court.
by giving money they haven't got ing. more beautiful and more effec­
Mac Barnhart vs. John Cappan
to people who haven't earned It. tive than ever before as Swan, who
and Barry County Road Commis­
After a while. In spile of human reigns over the crooked roulette
sion. trespass on the case.
wheel in the notorious Belie Donna
Howard
Haig.
Y
secretary
for
15
|
fully.
W Baxter vs. Joe C Hurd.
enfe. run by Louis ChamalB. a years in Ha rbe in. Manchuria, spoke [ Lyman
ocoim
Bertha mnsMicwa
Matthews vs r-m
Earl »uu
and
man as ruthless as he is powerful.
to the H. 8 students at Woodland. Inez Finkbelner.
Robinson has his finest characteri­
zation as this •Public Enemy No. 1” Hastings and Freeport last Friday. 1 Standard 018' Co. of Indiana vs.
77Lanks again for the old flower Maurer ConstrtfcUon Co Assumpsit.
* predictions by gioal old Doctor of the Barbary Coast and Jqel Mc­ —
pots
,tc donated *zr
for camp 2'_h-dishes
Henrietta Vander Molen vs. Wm.
Cobb,
pnlm r&lt; ailing.
crystal-gaz­ Crea B splendid as Jim Carmichael, ‘‘Camp
’ will be in
Tamp fiarry
Barry"
In constant Chalker. Replevin.
ri fine. Idealistic young miner, who
ing, numerology (during Income
Alfred Myers vs Amy Garbutl.
enters Swan's life and transforms use from June 14 to August IT pres­
ent plans carry through. Some ex­ Appeal from justice court.
tax week) and car washing.
her by his love.
cellent leadership is already as­
Harry O. Mohrmann. receiver vs.
sured for our own sections
at ,Jos. C. Hurd. Assumpsit.
Ethiopia will lose Its pants.
NEW MUSICAL FILM
Hastings City Bank vs. Goodyear
“COLLEEN.” “Camp Barry."
The Rhineland, being German,
An educational trip to Detroit and Bros. Hardware Co. Assumpsit­
"Colleen." Warner Bros.' latest
will keep right on being German,
Geo. Dye. receiver vs. Arthur
musical film, will soon be at the Dearborn is being idatuied by thq
as It shiuild.'
Older Y group. This group was for­ Hathaway, et al. Assumpsit.
Strand
with
an
all
star
cast,
in
­
Although (MThaps making some
Clark Robinson vs. Dewey Roush.
cluding Dick Powell. Ruby Keeler, tunate to have Dean Davenport for
snoots st each other—for public
their
guest
speaker
last
week.
Assumpsit.
jack Oakie. Hugh Herbert. Louise
consumption — behind the scenes Fazenda. Joan Blondell and a score
R. J. Tomb. Y secretary from the
(Continued on page 2. See. 2)
Adolph H. and Benito U. will have of other principals as well as a rural area about Hartford. Conji.
PURCHASES PERCHERON.
many a hearty laugh together.
couple of hundred chorus beauties will pay a vtalt to Barry county next'
week while on a tour of Central!. In keeping with the wide spread
Several smaller tuitions will gel and dancing youths.
draft horses.---------------Leslie M. .
। demand
-------- for
- -------------------painfully crushed In the Jam, us
The story, written by Robert Lord. Western Y. M. C. A. work.
Raber of
nf Hastings,
TTutine* ’ihnc
rerentliThe Welcome Y group will meet R*ber
has recently
usual. England will positively not Is packed with rollicking comedy,
romance and a touch of real drama. thB week Thursday night. An at- | bought a purebred Percheron rtalget crushed In any Jam.
tendance
of
every
boy
B
urged
for
I
llon
Rufus
214409.
Mr.
Raber
pur­
Japan will discover the Chinese There is more of a plot than In the Important business and program.
'
chased
this
horse
from
A.
E.
Holtare responsible for the whole mess ordinary musical and concerns the
Hastings Hl-Y had a big special f°rth ot Fenton. Mr. Raber was the
efforts of Powell to straighten out
and grab off another slice of terri­
the business affairs of his wealthy meeting for boys of the Freshman cow tester here In the county for a
tory.
| number of years and has always
und eccentric uncle, os well as his class Tuesday night.
Freeport Girl Reserves were spon-) »*en Interested In high grade live- j
own love scrapes, incidentally Dick
and Miss Keeler go In for some ro­ sors for Ute assembly speaker of the stock- Besides the Percheron horses
H. 8. last Friday.
'
,
Mr- R»ber keeps purebred Jersey |
mancing
nnd
are
all
tied
up
In
a
N THEIR efforts to ltu|&gt;euch the
cattle. This new percheron stallion 1
prosecution's key witnesses. Gov­ score of hilarious entanglements,
Mr. Raber has purchased to replace |
ernor Hoffman und the other at­ which are eventually straightened DISCOVERS NEW SOIL TEST. his old horse. Is a black coming j
Word from Lansing-, states that ---------------- .—. - - ------------------------- .
torneys for the defense in the Brp- out In a smashing climax.
Two mammoth and spectacular Dr. C. H. Spurway of the Michigan three years old and was bred by
no llnuptninn case are overlooking
numbers were created and staged by State College who devised the first I Sherman Reid of Richland. As n ’
a bet.
Bobby Connolly with scores of beau­ accurate, quick test for acidity in ; colt and yearling thB horse was In
There was one person who testi­ tiful chorus girls In each.
One soiB, has recently worked out a new Mr. Reid s show string at leading
fied most ilamaglngly against tho takes place on an ocean liner, spe­ form for such testa, which will re- county fairs and stale fairs. The i
cause lo which they have devoted cially built for the picture and thc veal the presence of alkali In the ‘ colt has done well as a show horse.'
, Mr. Raber s horse B sired by Vic.
theniselrex Under oath, thia per­ other in a modiste shop in which la soil and the degree of it.
The revised test requires from1« grandson of the famous Laet. I
son solemnly declared that, nn a presented a gorgeous fashion show.
Alfred E. Green has done a fine three to four minutes. A small lump ‘ whose sons and daughters have won
certain night, alongside a certain
ot soli is placed In a waxed paper ■ more grand championships than 1
cemetery, ho recognised thc voice job of direction, balancing the com­
edy, romance and drama with the trough and mixed wilh a dye which any other sire of the breed. Laet I
of the kidnaper.
he has devised. If the soil is acid was the sire of Sir Laet which Is
True, this Individual haa gone music and dancing and specialty lhe mixture becomes yellow. If probably the most valuable horse
numbers.
abroad alnco a trial Jury and a
it Ls an alkaline soil, it be­ ever owned by Michigan State Col-d
high court decided ttie proof Juacomes purple. Comparison of thc lege.
ATTENDED STATE MEETING.
llfied conviction. But his where­
We feel that Mr. Raber should be!
Harold J. Foster and supervisors mixture's shade with a color chart
will
show lhe degree of acidity or complimented on bringing a horse of
abouts la known.
In accordance William C Struln of Assyria. John
this caliber Into our community for
with the present campaign, why Usbome ot Carlton. Glenn Wotring, alkalinity.
Such a test will be valuable to the improvement ot our livestock.
not fetch him back and attack his Woodland, and Leon J. Moon of
evidence as ' spurious—attack tils Baltimore attended a meeting held fanners in determining what crops The horse Is still young, has good
to plant and in saving prospective bone and is sound throughout and
credibility as an boneat and a at the Stale College in East Lansing
on Saturday, to get the details of purchasers from buying lands not should contribute considerably to
truthful man? The name la Lind­
the new government, program for adapted for the purposes for which lhe improvement of Barry county
bergh.
draft horses.
they are seeking land.
lhe conaervatton of soils.

r
up *onie young sassafras twigs, laid
The Kalamnroo zone of lhe Mich-. lhem on hu biology and began
knife 1 was
Experiments
—The moot question of’ rene will meet nt lhe
the Hartings
Hartir „ for biology? He said they were.
Church
of
the
Nazarene
Saturday.
&lt;-u..
u
when
1
looked
again.
I
saw three
whether thc east coast or the &gt;
April 4 There will be two services. peashooters.
west coast is America's artistic
center is one of thc most moot­ and the afternoon service at 1:30.
Did anyone ever hear of a good
president.
ful
you
ever
encountered. The District W M 8
Mrs Lltble Supcrnols. of Cass City. cook being divorced? Jane never
Temporarily, (hough it’s being B to be lhe principal speaker. She did.
eclipsed by the burning Issue touch­ B a returned missionary from
Ing on wlini the well-dressed man | Chinn There will be special sing­
Bonny was laughing about a
will wear around ing and other interesting features composition turned in. by one of his
clawnales with the sentence "My
on the program. Plan to attend.
his goozlr.
car stopped on inc" It recalled to
GRANDDAUGHTER OF MRS. A.
our mind our own school days
D. KNIKKERN WINS HONOR. when, in English class, we discussed
encasing
I heIr
From lhe Evanston. Ill. News we the sign in a yard on Center street,
neck* within high print the Item below which B x&gt;t in Hastings, across from the Christ­
linen wulli
the interest to many here, as Miss ian Science church, which, if we
hlgheet since Jerl• ■
KnBkern B well known In Hastings remember correctly.
read
"No
where she frequently visits.
horses allowed on this lawn unless
Tlie first scholarship to this year's frozen."
Evanston High
fen&lt;ten fight on senior class al
school w«. awarded (hl« wm io
„„ pea shooters sent out their
The
Vera Jean KnUkem. dawhur or, delishUul clean. &gt;|&gt;rln«y odor and I
""d, M,! Li-"1' T. Knlskern of
u
&gt;ho b„
1811 Ridge avenue.
| ,nlwccj chewing new .sassafras bark
. ,
...
our
She was unriouncca
announced ui
as winner Ol
of i ))nd better begin living all over and
words. Ils a war between lhe aliat । nn honor scholarship al MilB eoln ..oner !C..'hirs._p a*
---• i doing the job up right, when Sonny
1ns and the fresh nlr fiends. May- ' I--one .»
of «»
60 such discovered my destruction, he was
lege in Mills. Cal., ...
bo you don t think thia Is linpor(u&gt;|&gt;i»- - awards
nwmua made
mnuc to
io outstanding
uuuaianuui,- seniors i provoked, -you're worse than a
tani, bill they do.
|I in
in honor
honor high
litoh schools
sehoots all
mH over
nvrr hie rabb)t .. he iQld mP,
Today, typical
champl&lt;&gt;na of - country MBs KnBkern has mainlttie».i clashing schools uf thought i mined a high echolostic record tor
When George Washington was
met hero fare to face.
Sunset I hcr hlgh schoo&gt; c°urac. with an nver- "the first farmer in America”—a
boulevurd'a entry was unbutioni-l ' age above “80.
* She t'has
”" been active
I on the "Evanstonian." school paper. characterization in which he took
great
pride—he had no grain drill
I and is serving this year us news
Grain was still sown by hand and
editor.
.

everly hills, calif.

B

Ban DBtrict Woman's Missionary Bhaplng them with hB
‘ Society
of Uie Church of the Naza- j w picascd and asked.

T.

CALENDARFOR
CIRCUIT COURT

A1 &lt;

MONEY!

Y.M. C, A, ITEMS

For Remodeling, Repairing, or

Make improvements now! Don't delay the remodeling, repairing, or
building of your home. You've planned so long, now realize the ful­
fillment of your dreams. . . . Whatever you may be planning to do this
Spring to improve living conditions in your home "Your Banker" will
help you complete your plans. See him and he will explain how you
con do this. The things you have waited for so long are now within
your reach.

I

The Hastings City Bank through the Federal Housing Administra­
tion is able to finance you, and you can repay in easy time-payments.
Before you plan further, see your banker, tell him of your plans and
he will help you to realize the fulfillment of your dreams,
"model home." We invite your application.

Hastings City i
TELEPHONE 1103

IRVIN a. COBB.

...

HASTINGS

MICHIGAN

—

�THE HASTINGS. BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL

t.

ISlfi

Stale Bank of Middleville. Mora­ vs. Harriet Neal. Mortgage forecloa- ct al. Mortgage foreclosure.
torium.
.
i ure.
Chester Peck vs. Henry Barnaby.
Lewis j. Matthews, et al. vs. Jos.
Geo. Dye. Receiver vs. Earl A. Mortgage foreclosure.
O. DeKoning et al. Bill for tem- Engles and wife. Mortgage fore­ .. O«0. Norris et a[ vs. W. H. Whlt&lt;pfe et al. Mortgage moratorium.
I porary injunction.
closure.
. Kalamazoo Improvement Co., vs. ’' Dorothy Guyney vs. Richard OuyBertha vs. LaVeni Weaver. Di­
vorce.
,
.Margaret Chalker. el al. Bill to ney. BUI for injunction.
Wm- B. vs. Nina Bayne. Divorce
quiet title.
I Chas. F. Monica and wife vi.
(Continued from page 1. sec. 2)
__________________________________
Kate King vs. Wm. H. King. Di­ Franco 8. Lee. Bill for Injunction. I Pearl L. vs. Jas. a. Johnson. pi­
John Brandstetter and Nina J. vorce.
Jewle Dillenbeck vs LeRoy Dil- ' vorce.
Almond Shears vs. Henrietta VanBoyle va. Albert Blom. Assumpsit.
Geo. Dye. receiver vs. R. II. lenbeck. BUI to quiet Utlc.
Chas. H Dahlhouser vs. Vem Me- ‘ Loppenlhlen and wife, mortgage
LeRoy Bawdy vs Edna Bawdy. Di- ‘ der Molen.
Peck, et al. Appeal from Justice foreclosure.
•
। । vorce.
Margaret vs. RMhard Engle. Di­
'
Court.
Verl L. vs. Marvel M. Deeds. BUI
Hazel T. vs. Win. T. McConnell. vorce:
Maurice West vs. Gordon Havens.1 to annul marriage
Harry O. Mohrmann. Receiver, vs.
Divorce
Trespass on the case.
’ Hastings Building &lt;t Loan Assn.,
Harry. O- Mohrmann. Receiver, vs. ; Joacph c. HuTd. Foreclosure.
Claude Hoffman. Admr.. of Est.; vs. Arthur Crothers. Mortgage fore- Elite M. Foster, et al. Mortgage fore­ 1 Phyllis vs. Kenneth Perdun. Dlvorce. ‘
■ James Cheeseman
vs. Manville closure.
closure.
| Whitney and 8. B Babcock. Tres-1 E E and Cora Purdy vs. Otto G.
Harry o. Mohnnahn. Receiver, vs. I Anna vs. Harry Goodin. Divorce.
i pass on the case.
and Alonzo Linsey. Land contract Merritt Mead, et al. Mortgage fore­ 1 Dissolution Delton Co-op. ship*
ping co.
I Claude E- Hill vs. Howard M. I moratorium.
closure.
j Martin. Trespass on the case.
| Elsie C. FurnLv. vs. Delbert Deller
Harry Q. Mohrmann. Receiver vs. 1 Auditor General vs. Delinquent
; Orlo w. Judkins. Admr. vs. -----Earl | ct al ------------Mortgage -----------------foreclosure.
Carrie B. Heft, el al. Mortgage fore­ Taxpayers. Sale of Und for taxes.
Coleman. Trespass on lhe case.
«•—
! Sarah-J: vs. Wm. R. Page. DI; n.r«,
Barry County «
vs. ui.t.
Mich. Surety
closure.
| Walter Harrison vs. Fred and Co. el al. Action—
________________
...
on, bond.
Harry o. Mohrmann.
Receiver vs. j vorce.
Iris vs. Maurice Grist. Divorce.
Lena Baley. Writ of replevin.
. Harry O. Mohrmann. receiver vs. Gordon Edmonds and wife. MortBeatrice vs. Keith Graham. DlHarry O. Mohrmann. receiver vs.' Edward Bibcock et al. Mortgage gage foreclosure.
vorce.
I Lewis H. Cook. Assumpsit.
------ ’---------------------------------------------------------------------. .. —
. 'foreclosure-.
'
j James vs. -----Mary Nesbit.
Divorce.
John A. Jennings vs. J. E. Jacobs,
l James L. Barker, receiver. vs.
... ' —
Jake DePricster. ct al. vs. Hugh
Betty J. vs. Alfred Greiner. Di­
j cl al. Injunction.
: David 8. Goodyear. Jr., trustee of K Johnson, ct al.
vorce.
Colgrove estate. Assumpsit.
j Edward D- Barber vs. Martin
Kathryn Hart vs
vs. Delton Slate । Lenbra vs. Clarence-W- Anderson.
Divorce.
Chancery Causes.
| Goodenough ct ul Bill to clear title Bank. Moratorium
| Woodland Exchange Bank vs.
Lewis M Rlshel vs. Harry Epstein.
Marie W. vs. Ivan L- Roush. DlEdward Groat, et al vs. Irving
i James E, and Daisy B, Guy Morl-1 Moratorium.
, vcrcc.
I
Charlton, el al. Partition action.
gage foreclosure.
Willis and Calvin Streeter vs. | Harry and Clara Leonard vs. Wm. 1 Cauws in which no progress has
Been made for more than 1 year.
;
Henry Hitt, ct al. vs. Henry , Township of Yankee Springs. Bill lo F Cook, et al. Rescind contracts,
Schaibley. Injunction to conserve . clear title.
The industrial Co. vs. Leon 13.
Hastings City Bank vs. Forrest
estate.
■ Hastings Building A: Loan A-sson. and Eva Havens. Mortgage fore­ Cool and Andrew Dooley. Assumpsit.
i Wm. and Etta Wisner vs. Oco. vs. F E. Hill and wife. Mortgage closure.
। Madison Furniture Co. vs. Mike
1 GJukich.
,
■ Wilson. Bill to set aside deed.
foreclosure.
Mary vs. Lloyd Baker Divorce.
: John Vander Kolk vs. Farmers !. Hastings Building A; Loan Asson.
MacteJ and Mary Wielgoic vs.
Blanche Eddy vs. Wm. DeGoUa
Michael and Helena Zawackl. As­
sumpsit.
Alfred Mocrdyk vs, Orma Glynn,
et al. Trespass on the case.
Arnett Auto co. vs. B. M. Han­
son. et al. Assumpsit.
White Bros vs. L- H. Cook. As­
sumpsit,
Ernest Ver Meulcn. et al vs. Phebc
Manker. Trespass on the case.
Gilbert Verberg vs. Orin Davis,
Trespass on the case.
Village of Nashville vs Nora Daw­
son. Assumpsit.
Ada McKay vs. Clayton C. Pcltcnglll. Assumpsit.
Will vs. Mabie Tobias. Divorce.
Stale Comm ol Health vs. Village
of Nashville. Mandatory injunction.
C. Carl McGufTy. et al. vs. Wm.
Streeter. To vacate decree
Chester Peck vs Ixn? and Lois
! Brail Mortgage foreclosure.
Harry O Mohrmann. Receiver, vs.
Richard O. Tukc. ct al Mortgage
foreclosure.
Chits Kermccn. cl al. vs. Grover
II Cline, et al Mortgage foreclos­
ure.
Tognn. stiles, inc. vs. John B.
Bresson. Moratorium.
Kate vs Fred Hale Divorce.

CALENDARFOR
■ T COURT

Om/^MIUUOH
I

||UUNOMY PIIUSJ

Jgg

V

J

Pet Milk
Starch

or

giou

tall
cans

n
A

it.
pk|t
2 lb.
phf-

Good Luck

n

Borden's
kkjl

B

Ds

i. ik.
pk(t.

Xr

Choc. Craame
or Choc. Hobbies

WS

Iona Spaghetti

lb.

Salad Dressing

’jar

ewfw

Salada Tea

li-lb.
pkt-

Log Cabin Syrup
Windex

can

feJ.’

Sardines

c!i;.

Campbell'r Soups

28 os.
cans

bottla

Lea &amp; Perrins Sauce
Bread
Grandmotharo

ck”u'.

botila
lb.
loaf

SEO CIRCLE 4 Zb /

Enter the “20 Free Trip*
t° Europe" Contest

15c Palmolive Soap

4 ■

. .......

can

17c Holland Rusk

4

29c

2

25c

10 k“ 37c

10c Peanut Butter

25c

9c Iona Cocoa

fl- 15c
27c

35c Lard
19c A-1 Sauce

rk,. (5e

25c Pillsbury's Bran
17c Pineapple

N.J 15c

-

29c Pels Naptha

21c

!k”p.

6c Apricots

17c
4 ,u 25c
4 lb- 25c

19c Northern Tissue

LEARN THAT

CLEVER IDEA

FRESH

'Chicken a la King

CHEESE

WHERE DID YOU

■A” Bulk

35c
21c

Chicken Broth with Rice 2
Soup.
2
21c
Cream of Asparagus Soup 2
21c
Chicken
1.. 27c
Soups
2
21c
. Spaghetti with Meat
2
19c .
2 .... 2tc
Rice Dinner
Chili Con Carne 2
21c

12c •
LARD

2 25

Buy Howl

ORANGES
Florida Valencia Seedless
126-150 Size

... 29c

HEAD LETTUCE
Crisp and Solid

Iona Reaches

15c

THERE'S

N:..‘ 17c

ADVENTURE

10c
&gt;' 25c

AHEAD!

N'J'1

Del Monte
r’„“^..
Herb-Ox Cubes
Mazola Oil
Bisquick
Paas Egg Dyes

“I

29c
10c

A-Penn Dry Cleaner Ui 49c
Pickles
2 29c
Corn Flakes

Beet Sugar
Heinz Soups

««h

X;

V.u

vilX

fo
2

9c

49c
25c

BEEF POT ROAST
BEEF STEAK

tk. 12j
u. 18c

RING BOLOGNA

» 12|c
12jc
u 12|c

CHUNK BACON

- 19c

PURE LARD

Lk 12jc

BULK SAUER KRAUT

4

10c

•BRING OWN CONTAINER 1

A « P FOOD STORES
3% SM.U TAX-we CASH W* CHECKS
U.I.. U K.U Suilh "C-th. Tta.--Suu«. W»«M 7,30 P. M . Tp.u!.,.

TkuruU,

New recipe adventures—new kitchen triumphs that spell
cooking success and pride in your art—all await you in thc
modern, improved range. Any woman who purchases a mod­
ern gas range con cook delicious meals on it right away.
New ranges offer more conveniences than older types of
ranacs. It*} io_casy to get in the habit of using these con­
veniences to thc fullest extent—not to be cramped in your
cooking style as you were with your old range. Look ot your
present range. Is it old? Wouldn't you be happier and more
efficient with a beautiful new gas range?

AND NOW-EASIER THAN EVER TO OWN

TRADE
YOUR OLD

STOVE!
As Part Payment

AS LITTLE AS

BOILING BEEF
GROUND BEEF

FROM THE ECONOMIST WHO \
DEMONSTRATED MY NEW
I
RANGE WHEN I BOUGHT IT ]
THERE ARE LOT5 OF NEW
'
TRICKS WITH A MODERN RANGE

25c

5

BUTTER

CREAM or BRICK

14c
Sf

bottle

FRESH CREAMERY

•31c

19c

2 “• 23c

33c Carnation Milk

3 'X 25c Macaroni
J can* 25c Spaghetti

c'*‘“ D”‘“

Drano

*

37c Keyko

can

o

than any other coffee al any pdc*.

r

K BOKAB

►

Pork and Beans

I
A
I
1

25c Ajax Soap

3

Cocoanut

. , -T

iNEMU'S N
MOST PSMUS \
COFFEES
1
EICHT O'CLOCK '4 17" 1

X

-acn Kola Sou* la lha 6,000.000
p^« who lod weak (Xttpied bar
invilotion lo try A 8 F Coffees. B yov
Kenan'1 ohaody done &gt;o, find ovt today
why mote people prefer A A P Coffees

10*
A DAY Buys U!

A 1936—TABLE TOP STYLE

Detroit Jewel
GAS; RANGE
Featuring New Model-Latest Improvements
at only $79.50 list
Other Models Also at Special Terms During Sale

HERE ARE FEATURES YOU WANT
UP TO

Instant lighting at a Anger touch—no matches. New style heat-spread­
ing burners, do tens of Intensities—clean heal. Beautiful porcelain finish,
bright chrome trim; several color choices . . . Automatic oven heat con­
trol; no guesswork, means always uniform results. Insulated oven holds
heat in. keeps kitchen cool, bmokeles*. sliding type broiler. Roomy
utensil compartments. Other quality features. And fully guaranteed.

YEARS TO PAY
PROFIT FROM THIS SALE—■COME IN—OR PHONE 2305

CONSUMERS POWER CO.

DOWLING.
» Last Week's fetter.
| Several from here Hl tended the
funeral nl Walter coats which was
held nt Freeport Bunday afternoon.
Mr. Coats had reached the ad­
j vanced age of 94 years and was one
I of tile last ol the Civil War VeU-r। ana In lhe county. James Mr Donald
’ who is 93 Ls one of the remaining
ones; he is still active und at pres1 ent is with his daughter in Battl*
Creek and only a short time ago altended a veterans' convention in lhe
&lt; central part ot lhe stale.
i Mr. and Mrs. John Gerber are re­
joicing nowadays over the birth of
• a daughter, jannet Louise, who was
born recently to their daughter and
j husband, Mr. and Mrs. Qus Knoblanch of Ohio. Mrs KnoblaucJi
was formerly Mu Clara Gerber.
I The parent-teachers meeting wa^
well attended Friday evening anti
I the supper and program very much
enjoyed. Local talent war. al its best.
| and thc part of "Major Bowes" tak; en by Leland Jones was cleverly
। handled, also the monologues and
I the old time hand organ music
। w-nich was furnished by Clyde Kc| ler brought cndle-sa applause.
1 Mrs, Lewis oils and son* accotnI panted Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burdlck-of
Hickory Cotners lo Lake Odessa
Sunday where they visited relatives.
Mrs. Ella Smith. Mrs. Leo Geller
and daughters and Mrs. Will Gar­
rett and Miss Wilma Garrett were
| Saturday visitors at the home of
, Mr... Jerry Steele near Hickory Cor­
ners.
j Mr. and Mr-. Lewis Ferris are
I slaying at the home of their parTttttx Mr. and Mrs--Auslhr-Fierrrc
1 and will move soon onto one of
I thetr father's farms nearby.
[ Mrs. Anna pierce visited her sls| lers. Mrs. Fannie smith and MiM
, Irene pierce at Hastings last week.
Mrs. Edith Shcllenbargcr a sister
from Vermontville was also a guest.
Mr. and Mis. Haiuld Stanton.
! Mrs. Della .Stanton and Mrs. Anna
j Pierce attended the funeral of Mrs.
' Anna Osuoth which was Held at
1 the South Evangelical church in
' Maple Grove Sunday.
| Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Karr. Mrs.
Nellie Rose anil Mrs. Olive Card
: of Kalamazoo were dbiner gunta
: Sunday ol Mr. and Mrs. Norton Slo­
cum.
. Mr. and Mrs. Llojd Gaskill and
I family and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Gaskill of Hastings spent Sunday
| afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Ben
| Gaskill at Comstock.
। Mlu Luzlc Smith and Mrs. Ella
Smith spent Sunday afternaon
| with
their sister.
Mrs. Sadie
Clemeiu and Diana at their home
in Battle creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Johnson and
MIm Dora Johnson of Prairieville
and Mr and Mrs. Nell Mitchell and
daughter Mary of Richland were
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. John
Deprtester.
•
Mr. and Mrs. . Theron . Rice of
1 Comstock were guests Bunday of
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Willet
R,ce'

A FAMOUS DOCTOR
Pierce prsctktd inedil

�THE HASTINGS. BANNER. THURSDAY. APRIT. 2. 19S8

Three Are Awarded Vail Medal for 1935

BARRYVTI.I.E.
, Mr. and Mrs. wilts Messenger of | Miss Beatrice Wickham has re-1 The community meeting at lhe
Last Week's Letter.”
Battle Creek. Gertrude Proctor mmed from Detroit, where she vis- ;:schoolhouse Friday evening was
Archie Newton and children of I M“rlon P-»rkee and Tony D Anglo lled lM.r par^ny t0
home of her well attended and a very fine time
PrSdvUk ^ra dinner guests of
of KaUmazo0 were guests of grandn»oUwr. Mrs. NetUe Newark.
Mr! Mr. JL JL WUleoT «.&lt;1,0'"“rd
a
„ ..whom she has eared for for Ute, was had by all. Mn. Harold Heff-« , ner held lhe lucky number on the
Helen
Sunday even.
evening.
I Mr. und Mrs.
Bardy wlUj
Rowiader
and past
year,
■ ■ quilt.
Hewn uunoay
k
aundfty
Mr Bnd
__________

Mr. and Mrs? Elzy M&lt; «de of
Mri Erneil Gol(1(.n Ul honor of
ting, and Ruawll Meade of Grand
o^n', mother. Mr?.. Eva
Rapids were guests of Mr. and (R0M,
Mr. Merrill Meade Sunday.
Mf and „„
Mrad
, Mr. and Mra. Herbie Wilcox spent Sophia Mead. Elgin Mead. Mrs.
.Sunday with their son Kenneth and cla(r Vttn syckle und Mr&gt; Cha.-.
। family in Kalamazoo, on their re-. Harrington attended lhe funeral of
I turn home they '.topped in Dowling , Albert Butkr of Manistee which
, and called on his brother. Verne j wus held at the Free Methodist
। Wilcox and family.
, church ut Hustings Wednesday aftMr and Mrs. Elz.y Meade of Has- «moon with burial in Riverside
tings called on Mr. and Mrs. Floyd j cemetery.
‘ Gusla--------------Northrup
of --------Battle Creek
Nesbitt Sunday
-------------r —
-------Miss Margery Gillette and her '■.hited Drinnrl* Hagerman and olhroommaU* of Muskegon spent the ir friends Saturday und Sunday,
Mr Brown and fanny of *Lansing
week end with hcr parents. Mr. and
‘~“
Mrs. Elmer Gillette. George Gillette spent the week end with the. Wayne
and Chiu. Christophers.
took them back Sunday evening.
The C- E- put on a varied pro­
gram
.
DO^TI.Rgram at
at me
the enuren
church muay
Friday evening.
evening.
Tlie proceeds will go to swell the Law Week* Iztter.
—
.
------j-------- - —
। Mr? Art Earl attended the fu1 ..funds
for
redecoraUnt*
.
I| Mr.
Mrs. noy
« ber sl.ler Mn. Eli Munn.
Mr. ana
and Mrs.
ROy rzesnm
Preston »&gt;
of nr-.
near
IL
t!“ z*
Plainwell Saturday .
TWO GRANO RAPIDS employees of the Michigan
lie service that resulted In ™
the “
saving
of human life. । Lacey nnd Mr. and Mrs. Nelson । st Ray
Apsey “
and
n&lt;3 'family
&lt;“mnr moved from
were- 1 Rav Ansev
Belt Telephone Company and a South Haven night , Left
Left to
to right:
right: Harry
Harry Meade,
Meade, splicer's
splicer’s hrlper.
helper. Grand
Grand Brumm and little Aimella -----employee of the Tri-County Telephone Company are ; Rapids:
Rapid*; Mrs.
Mr*. Nina P.
?. Tait, operator.
vpc.atcr. South
Ssuth Haven.
Haven, Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. this place onto a farm mar Has­
.
tings.
Ralph Jenny
and family
died for the performance of outstanding acts of pub- I and Joseph Kooyers. cable splicer. Grand Rapids. Ralph DeVine.
moving
into
the
one
vacated by the
Mimes Dora and Agnes Foster of
.
Three Michigan telephone em­ swored a switchboard signa) which I ration and rendered other first aid. Battle creek spent the week end I Apsey’sMr and Mr.’. Douglas Lacoursc
ployees. two men employed by the she recognized ns coming from a | knowledge of which they had gained with lhe home folks.
, are lhe proud parents of a fine baby
local department store. She re- in
— Michigan Bell Company’s first
Kiri born March 17th who will an- I
Michigan Bell Telephone Company ccived no reply lo her query but aid courses.- The victim then was •
MORGAN.
। swer tc the name ot Velma Odessa. 1
nnd a woman employee of the Trl- delected sounds of moaning and removed to a hospital where he re­ ' Last Week’s Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Quigley of I Mrs. E D Lewis spent Tuesday 1
’ County Telephone Company, have heavy breathing, and notified the covered. Waiter L. Nicholas. Lan­
Grand Rapids called on Mrs Mil­ .-.nd Wednesday the past week with
.store
owner
nnd
the
police
depart
­
sing
house
service
man
and
one
of
b'*cn cited for thc award of thc
ment Immediately. At the store the the
—_______________________
four awarded honorable ___
men- dred Fleming and Marilyn Satur- her sister. Mrs. w O Pierre, and
Theodore N. Vail medal In bronze,
family at Plainwell.
officers found the watchman, beat- tlcn. rescued two small children
for merllorTDUs acu ol public serv­ en and wounded and In a critical '
Mrs. Homer Norman Is spending
Rev. and Mrs. A P Mead ot Big
....
-- —
—
from their
burning •home.
His case
ice )&gt;erformcd during 1935. In each condition from loss of blood. Mrs.
I a f*-w days with Mr
and Mrs
Is being referred to the Carnegie Rapids visited Mr. and Mrs. Don­
case thc act for which the medal
1 Charles Hentai at Grand Rapids
Tait then summoned .a physician Foundation for possible further rcc- ald Mead Wednesday
is awarded resulted In the saving
and an ambulance at the request of ognitlon. Kenneth Freeman. De­
of human life.
the ponce,
me
police. When
warn lhe
me saiciuiiaii
watchman troit installer, cited for similar comAnnouncement of the award.’, by • r(-gBmed consciousness
days mendation. received the Vail Medal
—r..--. .four
— —
George M. Welch, president of theiflater
——
----- •-able
•-■—
»-•he was
to identify
his last year for saving the life of a
Michigan Bell Company nnd chair-• assailant, who
„,IU1Hater was convicted i woman overcome by gas fumes.
man of thc Michigan Committee ofj ^,&lt;1
sentenced.
*m,4 «raUr*c^
1 During 1935 he administered first
Vail Medal Awards, has been re- I Joseph Kooyers. Michigan Bell ] “Id to a mon who had been partially
wived here by J. E. Johnson. Mich­ I cable splicer at Grand Rapids, and | overcome by gas. The others re­
THAT GOOD COF FEE Served at Th e Community Fair
igan Bell manager In this area.
Last Thursday was the W. L. W. B and at !9c per lb.
Harry
outsland...
ri.rrry Meade,
mciicic. his
ills helper,
ticiuer. rescued
rescueu 1 1 celvlng
----n commendation
...... ■for
■*■ «......
.
. .by artificial
.
&lt; . respiration
...
«/•&lt;- during IO*K
Four other employees of the Mich- nnd rPV.ived
I &lt;**«»
lng acts
1835 are Wllll-cWilliam
BUTTER
Igan Bell Company, one a Detroit- nn employee of the Fere Marquette Pinnow and Clare E. Matthey, emOLEO
Cr.
ua from
frn.n ,। —
-.I___ .who
I... .had come
____ into contact
___ a__ ■ &lt;! niovena
rr. Olie
onc from I.nnklllf,
Lansing nnd Itwo
Railway
ployecs nt
at fair*.
Lake rydnaeo
Odessa, who run.
renCreamery QOc
Lake Ode.va. have been cited for wllh n 7.200-volt transformer last dered service In extinguishing a resLB—
OC
a,
honorable mention for outstanding August 30.
,
। Identlal fire.
acts of service Thc acts for which | Kooyers nnd Meade, while workThc Theodore N. Vnil Medal Is
the Vail medal has been awarded I
CORN MEAL
Bulk MACARONI
''iWM
Ing on a telephone repair Job. were awarded under lhe terms of the
are set forth In Mr. Welch’s an­ attracted to the scene of lhe accl- Vail Memorial Fund, established
nouncement as follows:
dent by shouts of fellow-workers of fifteen years ago by lhe American
lb
u*.
Mrs.
Nina --P.- Tail,
night
---------------------„... operator the victim. Removing the uncon- 1 Telephone and Telegraph Cotnnt South Haven, while employed nt sclotu man from the transformer pony. Since that time. 61 medals
her switchboard during the early after causing lhe power to be turn- have been awarded lo Michigan telLARD COMP.
NAVY BEANS
moniing hours of March 3. 1935. an- ed off. they, applied artificial re.spl- cphone men and women.

\Lest Y ou Fo rget...
2

25

3

15

5

Lb*.

3

.

STUDEBAKER
HUDSON
TERRAPLANE
fin April 3, 4 and 5
'"“'"•-s...

ask,..
l«le models
prind

io­

15Lb

17‘

Margaret johncox on Thursday aft-1
PINE LAKE.
Mrs. Merlle Smith. Mrs. &gt; Helen
ernoon, March 26.
Sweet of Kalamazoo and Freda
CLEAN QUICK
La«t Week’s Letter.
Soda CRACKERS
The annual meeting of thc Help- I Honoring Bobble’s birthday Mr. Smith visited Sunday at H. WoodIng Hand club was held at the and Mrs Lee Killlck-cnlerulncd lhe ,। man’s.
Lb,
Lb.
4-H
Club
boys
and
girls
al
a
six
I
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rich
of
Battle
Creek
home of Bernice Minor on Wednes­
day afternoon Owing to thc bad o'clock dinner on Tuesday evening. ' visited Sunday al Harley Sense's.
Wheat Krispies PEANT BUTTER
Head LETTUCE
T,„.
m«u„, „„ held
roads only a small group attended 1 The Parmer*. Club meeting held
the North Tine Lake toltool-: wltl, M„ C|rmcnt Jordan
lad
but thc following were chosen lo
2 large
4 g?c
net as officers for the coming year: home on Saturday evening o. o-ell. To.Klay «Uh a good attendance,
Lb.
crisp heads 1 w
Mrs. Etlie champion, pres ; Mrs.
Clara Nichols, vlce-prcs.; Mrs. Ruth latkne^ a" tuaud ietrne.?,
ATTENTION! — Look for the RED STAR on your Cash Register
Terpenning. sec.; Mrs. Myrtle Rog­ Mia* Neuvhaler and a humored* ! “"j‘‘'nd"" c“u “,,d
Receipt With each cash purchase you will receive a receipt and
ers, treat Imide Nottingham hud
;
।
If it lias a Red Star on it wc will give you a CASH PRIZE FREE!
J
charge of the program of readings, play by several women compj’Lsed s
Mrs. E. G- Smith was at Hasnnd the hostcits passed apples. both ( the program. Mr. and Mra. Homer
of which were much enjoyed. The Flower extended an Invitation.for a lh&gt;S» on Saturday p. M. iu attend
April meeting will be held with Mrs day meeting with pot luck dinner the board meeting of the Barry
County Woman’s c
Club.
»..k
Olive Fox on lhe firgt Wednesday of ' on April 4th which was accepted.
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR CREAM. POl'LTRY AND EGGS’
that month nt which time thc In-!
A number from our neighborhood
PHONE 245B — HASTINGS. MICH.
COATS. GROVE.
attended the fair al Hastings last
coming president will appoint all
committees. Clara Scott will act as I Chas. Townsend cut his foot quite
====================
program chairman.
severely one day last week.'
Mr and Mrs Claud Champion
Services fitting to the pre-Easter
entertained a parly for duinerNon time will be held each evening next I
Wednesday evening
for
Lyle's week by the |M&gt;stor. Good Friday is .
birthday.
to be observed as a day ot prayer. I
Mr nnd Mrs Leander Rogers of . A find program was put on at thc
Athens were dinner guests on Sun­ P T.’ A last Friday evening wilh a ■
day of Mr. and Mrs John Rogers.
big crowd in attendance. Arthur
The Home Extension class met Todd war. chairman of the program,
wilh Hattie Klllick for a day meet­ special musical numbers were given
ing on Thursday. Ten members by lhe Klnne girls; Clem Jordan |
nnd two visitors were present to get song and Impersonated. ’’Old Black I
the lesson on 'Suitable Collars" Joe." a fine play was given and a
and learned to make a rolled hem • fencing exhibition by Max Coats
Another meeting will be held with and a friend.

29kg.

2

Bwiturlaad
railway brldfa

15

9^9

5

29'

Goodyear

2

29'

hardware showroom

BROS

WALLACE GROCERY

SAFE

For Every I

■Baby's Bottle!
High in Cream Content
Raw or Pasteurised—

Mothers may feel sure that their babies are drinking
PURE MILK when they give them HIGHLANDS
DIARY GRADE A. Just any milk is not sufficient
for young growing babies.'theirs must be SAFE . . .
Every bottle of Highlands Grade A is uniform in
quality and up to the Grade A.Standard . . . which
means that every bottle Baby drinks is full of ’ body­
building.” PURE, FRESH MILK and IS SAFE!

HIGHLANDS
Phone 2651

,

DAIRY

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Holings

WATCH OUT
TAXPAYERS!
Defeat This Move to Add $40,000
To Our Already Heavy Taxes.. •
Vote “NO” on This ABSTRACT OFFIC
Ballot at the Polls, Next Mon., April
This is simply a move to get one or two politicians nice
fat jobs at taxpayers' expense.
There is no demand for a county-owned abstract of
title office. We have an efficient privately-operated of­
fice giving better service and at as low a rate as the
county could do it.
78 counties in Michigan have private abstract offices
just as Barry. Only 5 counties have county-owned of­
fices. In some of these the rates are higher than in
Barry, in others they are losing money for the taxpayers.
Why change? Why add another $40,000 to our high
taxes? You may never have occasion to need an ab­
stract. Why should you pay for a service you may never
use?

Shall the County of Barry Own and Oporato an Ab­

stract Office and the Books, Indexes, Etc., necessary for
conducting of such Abstract Offica?

YES
X

NO

�THI HASTINGS BAHWea. THl'MnAV. AFIUL I. 1W

| LEGAL NOT1CES~|
MoaruABZ

J

rOBZOLOSUM-

William J. F«aBattle Crack,
brine rrcordrd

*all

dabl'uHng bM&gt; Ta.l’lu’l.d

SOW THEREFORE. by

1 IMS

.Ill.a-l

ANNUAL TAX SALE.

t^ii week'. Latter
Last Week’s Letter.'
I freighter
Mr. and Mra. VanderJagt enter­
Mr and Mrs Luman Burlne spent
Mr ar
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles . tatned their two sons of Detroit tained relatives and friend* from
Nesman.
'
over
lhe
week
end.
Pewamo Sunday.
ncuuau.
..
..
»
M
r
nrnj
Lewis
Reed
and
Mra Claud Demond tn company
hi.'i
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. John L.
e &gt;ai« or .*!•• .0 taada ba&lt;e .— _
. —
— r '
&gt;f MieliUan. for
4. b&gt; a roart ot comsotoai ton Sunday.
Johnson of 8t. Mary s l*ke • daugh- Mrs. Jake Hollister were tn Battle with her brother and slater from
or bora b«oa eaacWite a.
Mr. aim Mr*. John Perry spent
creek Saturday.
Coat* Grove vtelted their slater m
pro.id.d bl iX furtbar .ho-, ik.i lo 8^d»y in Kalamaioo
The Monday
Evening Bridge Lansing Bunday.
ounces. Bunday. March 22. at tho
»rr« l*na. ar. included u I Only prompt work on ytc part of Battle Creek Osteopathic hospital. Club met at the home of Mrs. Ed.
We would like to explain ju»t how
aa arorooaid for th. flr.i the neighbors saved Lyle Wilcox's The baby has been named Carolyn Kraft for a six o'clock dinner. Mrs Il is that one of the ladles of the
.lii'tl’d.bara not “bora .*'id ' home from destruction by fire Sat­
Prank
Caley ------received
high neighborhood has been nursing a
Susanne.
uuaxu.*----- ---------- the
.. or bare been bar.iofor. urday. Nearly all the men of the
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shaw I prize.
black eye for the past few days. But
spent last Wednesday wilh Lloyd
Sunday guest* of Dr. and Mra W —oh. well.. are might just as well
J«H»i?cti«B Pcned U&gt; I* »• home .lt being the Mead and family and Mr. and Mrs. A. Vance were Dr and Mrs. Merle
be. Art &gt;z«. f. noon nour as it was me root was Walter Springborg and family of Vance of Eaton Rapid* and Dr
Albert Hafner ot Duluth. Minn.,
Vi
badly burned.
Lansing. Roberta Shaw returned and Mra. Alton Vance and children called on B J. Wellman one day
tra Hv.ilun' nt 1PJ4 a.
73, P A of IB3S1. nr ha«o b.«n tan i Mrs. Katie Peek, who ha* been home with them after spending a of Charlotte.
last week. They used lo be room­
ralirj at rrovldid br h
I seriously ill al her home here is
mates in Grand Rapids back in
few days with her uncle. 'Lloyd
---------------- * • *
’
of April.
itrraau "caUeaUan bcller- Her son and wife from Mead, and family.
tnclr school days.
I
WEST HOPE.
rt forth in *ai&lt;i Grand Rapids came Sunday
Earl Wallace and Mr and Mrs.
Mrs
Della Bowman returned Last Week's Letter.
“------- Mr and Mrs. Wm. Springer and
Monday from Lansing after spend- I Mra. Jesse Osgood woe sufficlenti- Eldon Oaks of Plymouth visited
langa dHcriMd
j daughter moved into the old hotel. ing several weeks wilh Mr. and । |y improved In health lo make a Mrs. Wallace over the week end.
Inti
farther----------«b«&gt;*«....
i in. । now owned by Mr. SchltTman.
Mr.'
Lyman
Elder.
buslnei*
trip
to
Bowen*
Mill*
Sal&lt;l.*erib«4 Und. I yrej SchltTman was home from
SOUTH BOWNE.
Mrs. Clyde Hamilton Is able to urday.
1. 3.“* Battle creek Sunday.
ride out after being laid up several, —
Walter Cook of Bugbee Corner* .U 1Last Weeks Letter.
weeks wilh a broken bone In the assisting Everett McCallum with his
tbr .am. brine MW dar
FAiH LAKE.
Clarence VanPatten lias rented
ankle.
farm work.
।lhe Jake Geiger farm.
The Clover Leaf club had a fare­
Mrs. Anna Collison was in Kal­
Amt It !•
..f MirMcan axainat »ari&gt;
Mr and Mra Chas Lechleitncr
Dale Miller and Mr. Ketcham of
well party Tue*q&lt;y night lor Mrs.
Wednesday and Thursday
n*uni.
u»»J*riB*i,ra.L visited Nell Welcher’s In Battle Claude Jones. They moved Thur*- amazoo
caring for her daughter. Mr* Dale 'Carlton called at the C M Bene­
dict home Sunday afternoon.
&gt;nd
at cnmpuird Creek Sunday.
rrtllrrtlac
day
on
a
farm
near
Banfleid.
The
Hosteltler.
who
was
ill
from'candy
......ur.. .■&gt; .aid arhadul* aaain.t th. । jgrs Bert Litts entertained at a
md ‘ndH'.»UU%£at,,.Mh.‘ ^'birthday dinner in honor of her evening was spent in visiting. Ice poisoning.
। cream and cake were served. She
Mrs. Lena Laubaugh and Miss Lansing Thursday.
11 IO
ral vim. rnmi'nlrd and
motlicr. Mrs. Will MaSOtt Of DeltOO. was presented with a gift from the
Virginia Moore of Irving was a
Glenna Osgood attended the Barry
.................................
'
- Sunday at Iter home.'Myron Mason
club. She has been treasurer for lhe , Co. Teachers' meeting at Welcome iSunday guest of Eleanor Miller.
and wife of Cedar Creek were past two years.
mldrd bv law
William Porrttt and wife and
Comers.
guerta.
Mr and Mrs. Porter Klnne re- ! Several from here attended the Sarah Lacey were in Hastings
Utrida Fritz is ill with ear trou- lunted Friday from Los Angeles.
Thursday.
•
. ble and Mrs Mildred Fritz is sick Cal. where they spent several funeral of Mrs Ida Otis of Glass
Stanley Coles and children of
Creek Sunday afternoon Mrs. Olis
&lt; t iilrb I with throat trouble.
iul.br
weeks.
was a fine woman and will be sadly South Boston and Will Cosgrlfl and
। Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Boyd of BatStlti
Tom
Prichard
has
returned
to
wife
of
Lowell
visited Thursday
missed.
1 tic Creek were Sunday guests of
Detroit where he has work. Wallace
Jimmie Springer attended the;, afternoon at Jennie Pardee’s.
Ray pierce and family.
Graham Is working tn the Bet die Father and Son banquet in Clover­
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Martin and
Alton Armour and family of Bat­
Bros store
William
dale Friday evening as gucil of daughter. Mr. and Mrs
tle Creek were visitors at H. O
Russell Partridge of Battle Creek Mark Garrison.
Schulte and daughter ot Grand
drlinauml t«i»« i Armour's Sunday
Gerald Anders re-injured hl* Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Daniels.
I Allen Griffin and wife spent Sun­ spent Sunday at his home here.
The tire department was called
Mr. and Mra. Pete Eaton of Has­
day with her brother. Manson New- out Wednesday morning to the shouldes agaUi last week, this tune
when the hay rack caught on a tings. Alden Eash. Pule Murphy and
I ton. at Richland.
• nl.i
.abject
rattle Inooeeiiun.
Hagerman house on Mam street
Ola Sampson of Lansing, and Floyd
j Iva Case and Harold Smith and where a fire had slatted between wire and fell, pinning him In the
Berkey of Freeport were Sunday
। family attended Camp Fire Girls’ ’ the two roofs Mrs Hagerman had bottom of the wagon and lhe team
BCIIEDULE A.
guests al the Abe Eash home
council at Battle Creek Sunday aft­ been over lo Downings and dls- running merrily up the road. AnyI./Allan
Mr. and
Henry
Johnson.
_wjjy. Gerald is now a liniment ex—
----- ----MM.
----------------. -------------' emoon.
' Edwin Picksley, Betty Andrews of : When they attached the fire hose pert and If he can recover *uffi- Mr* Alden Porrilt and daughter,
Bellevue and Virginia Kelley of i to the hydrant, it was found the ciently to follow the team, he In- Mr. and Mrs Will Co*griff of Lowdl
lend* to work lhe surplus pep of! 1 and Laura Flynn called at thc home
HOS RlHHFl.l.
Battle Creek were guests of Chas | water had been shut off. for the
Picksley Sunday. It being thc birth­ I repairing of ihe frozen and brok­ them. He Is hitching them up again of Jennie Pardee Sunday Mrs Lythis Monday morning, so wc will । dla Porrilt was al Mi e. Pardee's
day of several present
en mains on lhe south side—but it have some news for next week
j from Tuesday till Saturday.
Allie Roach of Battle Creek was was turned on and with thc use of
irh oria'Ml
I a caller ut her farm home Sunday.
I chemicals It was soon under con­
tn T-.l.r*.
trol In the afternoon Uie depart- i
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
ment was called lo the old Caley ’
•&gt;’ MIOIIKIAV
blacksmith shop, but no damage
Allan ••
was done
On Saturday morning 1
they were called lo the Frank Pur- .
ORDF.R FOR PUBLICATION.
chis home on main street, no damago done there.
Mrs. Ralph Olin entertained her |
bridge club last Tuesday night
The Board ot Education held a !
meeting Monday night In Supt. I
Wallace s office.
KnlRhts of Pythias Family night |
was held Tuesday night at their .
hall
m.-r hr and 1 The Nashville Garden Club met '
our petitioner ftirlhr
Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Philip
r&lt; that .aid land. w
Auditor tlrr.rr.1 and)
Dalits user.
tnied for hrariae .aid pel
Recent Sunday dinner guests ol ;
Mr and Mrs. Clarence Shaw were.
ft ordered that public nntlr
new.n.txr priatoil Mr and Mrs Luman Surtne, Mr
and Mrs Frank Reynard and Mar­
jorie. Mr and Mrs Charles Nesman
and Robert. Mr and Mrs Victor
Him
Brumm, daughter Ardis. Maurice |
ORDER FOB POBLICATION.
PurchU. Rev and Mrs Elmer Prtchard nnd family, nnd Mr and Mrs |
il.i
Lloyd Mend and Hubert of East
Lansmg.

v;™';;

NOTICE or SALE OF ZEAL ESTATE

IBM.
"f April A I&gt;

ollowioi drrcribrd
end Addiimn m thr

UrfinnoM
Out Mur 1

U. A

NOTICE To CZEDITOZS.

CUANCEBY NOTICE
after of the Dli.olbllun
Delton Co op. Shipping

Rhi

Asn 1*.

rUirni

ORDER FOX PUBLICATION.

Pll-llr

STONY POINT.

NASHVILLE.

..vr.tb.tl. I
IRVING
tududed I. Last Week’s Leiter.
r. Mid '“i" 1 Mr. and Mrs. e D- Johnson enterssm or bare I lamed their daughter and husband.

. umr

SEE THEM ALL—in patent

Llth .lav nf M.

linn .1.'-.Id not b- di.«
ferlbrr &lt;mtir.Ki:i&gt; it.

olTIr

IS!

OR KID SKIN-BOYISH PUMPS
And OXFORDS For

AND EARLY SUMMER WEAR!

All's Well with Your Feet in These

AUCTION SALE

Having sold my farm, I will hold an auction sale at the farm located 4 miles north­
west of Nashville, 1 mile east of Morgan, Sec. 28, Castleton Twp., on

CATTLE.

Durham cow, 5 yrs. old, due April 15.
Roan cow, 5 yrs. old, due May 10.
Black cow, 4 yrs. old, due Moy 10.
Jersey cow, 8 yrs. old, due April 15.
Durham cow, 5 yrs. old, fresh two months.
Black heifer, 3 yrs. old, fresh two months.
Jersey heifer, 2 yrs. old, giving milk, due
in Sept.
•
Fat steer, 2 years old.
Durham bull, 1 year old.
9 head of young cattle.
SHEEP.

60 breeding ewes, grade Shrops from 3 to
5 yrs. old, due to lamb April 1st.
Shrop buck, good one.
HOGS.

Duroc-Jcrsey sow, 1 yr. old, due in April.
Red sow, due July 24, wt. 150 lbs.
6 shoots, 175 lbs. each.

’

A I&gt; IBM.

rn by imbll'atlnn "I a r.

»f Frol.au

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8th
Commencing at one o'clock. I offer the following described property:—

nt. Jude* of

the wcck cnd wlth |ler mater,

te . t Narab . Mrs. Archie Calkins and family
incomiM-trut
Born to Mr and Mrs N Art Ap। -.id court pclmsn an eight pound daughter
b.r ro,......
Mr and Mrs Roy Brumm were m
i', ''I Ann Aibor Monday
i .....
Mrs. Clarence Mason is spending

Mr and Mrs Harold Wenger are
moving into the house vacated by
Mrs
Lena Eddy and daughter
Gladys
l The Chamber of Commerce met
Monday night ut the I o O F hall
for their regular meeting. thc *upj p&lt;T being put on by the Rebekahs,
j Lon Lahr has gone to Detroit

Pried A. $1 _9g ?

-

BEES AND POULTRY.

2 good swarms of bees.
12 Rhode Island Red hens, 1 year old.

Low A,

NOTICE, FARMERS!

6-ft. McCormick binder, new canvases.
Land roller.
Good two-wheel trailer with stock rack.
HAY, GRAIN, ETC.
6 tons good hay, mostly alfalfa.
300 bundles corn stalks. 100 bu. oats.
60 bu. Peet barley. 30 bu. potatoes.
150 bu. corn.
j . jj£ ||i
MISCELLANEOUS.
Bungalow wall tent with floor, 7x9.
Gasoline comp stove. 2-burner. 2 camp cots.
Dork oak bed and springs. New 40-ft. extension ladder.
4 electric table lamps. Gasoline lamp.
200 swamp oak fence posts. 40 rod roll of new fence.
Sat 5-ft. slings. Set 4-ft. slings. 2 crowbars.
Posthole digger. Pump. Dozen extra good grain sacks.
One 20-in. tile and quantity 4-in. tile.
150 egg Ideal incubator.
Other articles too numerous to mention.

ELZEY MEAD, Proprietor

‘

toc construction Sandals, Pumps and Ties.

Visit us

and see thc scores of styles for Spring

FEED YOUR HOGS CULL BEANS

Many Sport Styles to Choose From

TOOLS.

TERMS:—CASH. NO GOODS REM OVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

HERE’S COMFORT

COMBINED

11 tack.

Sec Us For

Clovers

WITH SERVICE
and

While

MEDIUM NATIVE CROWN
MAMMOTH NATIVE CROWN
ALSIKE CLOVER
WHITE BLOSSOM
YELLOW BLOSSOM

Alfalfas
IDAHO GRIMM

IDAHO CROWN

Timothy
■ RED TOP
Kentucky Blue, unhulled ond fancy

WIDTHS

blMt Stylo* Only

AAA to D

We carry a complete line of seeds

Smith Bros., Velte &amp; Co.
Hasting. Telephone 2257
Dealer* in Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Salt, Lime,

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

X

It’s mighty smart now to wear these low-heel, broad-

Cement and Coal

HASTINGS CUT-RATE SHOE STORE
"Barry County'* Busiest Shoa Store"

114 W. STATS ST.

HASTINGS. MICH.

�THB HASTINGS, BANNER, TMUMD|Y, APRIL 1 19M

FEDERAL PROJECT
DELPFULTOSTATE

OLABB CREEK.

Htutingt Business Man Made
Actual Acquaintance Of Flood

WERE ORANGEVILLE AND

Mlsi Beth carpenter of Lake
EABT GUN MARSH.
i Last Week's Latter.
Last Week* Utter.
Odss** visited her grandparent*,
Mr and Mrs. Low*ll Whittemore
Mra. 6 A. McCafferty has been Mr- and Mra. Claud Carpenter over
Harold Raw Und
of Delton were Bunday afternoon
quite sick from a bad cold for th* th* week «nd. and Utile Marian
caller* at chM. Whittemore's.
«lwo weeks although »h« is able Manto of Lak* Odem, another Bunday guesto of Mr. and Mra. Karl
The entire neighborhood was sad­
Ona ot this city's enterprising' Fortunately the llghto still held
• up around the bouse al thi*
dened by the death of Mrs Wm. young men really knows what thi* and Mr. Foote and hl* party found
O0BM0T D180R1PTI0NB 2^ “
JS flood Uluattan ta *11 about. Frank Jan all‘nlght stand where they got lime
Cecil Hanson of Clarksville has
Foote, advertising manager for the i coffee The kitchen craw in this llt- been visiting his patent*. Mr and
0V ALL LAUDS IM MI0H- ',
Jff.K1' '*
“ Mraitlnex
rnmnanv tie aland
­ '
Hastings Manuforturtne
Manufacturing company,
(tend were worktne
working at break
breakAllegsn Thurs____________ family.
has
Just
returned
from
a
business
—
neck
u
-----speed
J
making
-------rolls
--------------------lo
compen
­
O E. VanEtt ha* been cm ttie sick «ing Tuesday evening.
10AM BZ1NO MADE
- ■ D-wsy
— andI Louie
and Bay Oil*
sate tor lhe shortage of bread. The Hat with a bad cold and flu.
Mr. and Mra. Ward Plants and
13wyn Dell of Weidman spent
famlle* from Kalamaioo were call­ trip aut and tells a vivid tale of
people in town were completely shut
watery adventure*.
The
William* and Montieth th* week end with hl* parent*. Mr. daughters of Hartford were Bunday
' eri on relatives here Bunday
WORK
IS NOW BEING
Ha toft New York City last Wed- off
_ from
__ ________
food of any __________
kind other drain* are being let today, which and Mrs. John Dell.
guests of the tetter's parents, Mr.
nAair ■■■ -r.Jo&lt; Arnoa of Detroit has decided r.esdsy wilh an eastern represent*- than that on hand In
in their own will mean a great deal to several
Mr. and Mr* Stanley M»nker *nd and Mrs. Milan Trumbo.
DONE IN THIS COUNTY to spend the summer with his live of the company, driving toward home*.
Mr. and Mrs. Fay C- Wing called
muck land owner* a* they need a daughter Roberta Ann and Mr*
------------family on the farm here.
Boaton. Hl* plans were lo (ton of!
A welcome dawn came about t:M lot of drainage if It continue* to be Sarah Mohler of South Woodland on Mrs Orpha VanHausen of KalShould Insure Correct De- 1 Lo«i* Havens made a business at Springfield at the home of Mr and the refugee* managed to get
and Mr. and Mra. Truman Munion amaxoo and Dr. and Mr*. Chas. Oe, .
.
trip to orand Rapids Monday.
C.
U
Wagoner,
district
manager
for
।
back
to
their
boat
and
once
more
Last week's Letter.
bome
of Vicksburg Tuesday.
acriptlons on Assessment
Mr* Bara Erway U spending a
Kenneth Merchant and family are were Bunday dinner guest* at the
New York and New England terri- ’ crowed the inundated meadow. ApMr. and Mr* Forrest Parth Sice
Mr and Mr* Clair Marshall and
Rolls Hereafter
rew toy* wlUl her brother. Wm. Otis tory. He hoped lo gel into Spring- j parently the Holyoke dam had held still at Martin at his parents' home. home of Mr. and Mr*. Lester
and family spent the week end family of SeUrrae, Mr. and Mra.
An ln.rn.Unj .nd «r, h.lplul'
tww'^’or.nd lUpld. field that night, and did . . but and the worat was probably- over, We understand h« wa* hurt lifting Brumm
on a car during the deep snow and
Mr*. J. V. Hilbert 1* entertaining with Mr. and Mrs Grant Osgood. Worth Green and son Marshall. Mr.
----------------------------------------------------l.drrxl project U telnj c.rrlM out w “”1“ J? !'J, ot hU oiSu couldn't get
gel out again.
1 But tho light* were off. because the hasn't fully recovered as yet. He is with an old fashioned German dlnand Mra. Harve Marshall at North
in Utk, .. .ell
Ut .11 other Mlehl- ™
“J“
—
. intimation ..
The first
they had of poWer house failed to deliver; then under the doctor's care.
ncr Tuesday. Mra. Ed. Pearce. Mrs. Howell of Kalamasoo called Maple Grove and Esrl Marshall of
gin counties, under the direction of,
Schricker ot Hickory Comers a flood was lhe difficulty in cross­ the phone* went dead On Friday
The Ladles' Aid rallied ofl a quilt Mr*. Stephen Pierce, Mr*. Ed. on Mr. and Mrs Osgood Bunday Marahall wm Sunday guest* ot
the state tax commission It 1. *uSunday/f^ls?Kit" ing a low bit of ground about a mile the water rose even more rapidly,
and gave a dance at lhe Orange-1 Oobte and Mrs. A- J- Brenner of 1 and in the afternoon Mr. and Mra. Mrs. Freda Marshall
pervtoed by M B McPherson, chairm
M «■ outside of Springfield where the but late Ln the afternoon began lo
vllle schoolhouse Friday night which ■ Grand Rapids and Mrs. E O. Bhor- Osgood and their guest* went to
man of thc commission
wr.nicmore.
, « ,
recede.
Mr Foote decided
to try
no anrt
p R Border of Wood­ the Percy Izhman sugar bu*h where
;
n 10
y to
. ■ lhe »*y
family. Mr . and Mra. WU1 111 1*1
road. The spot was guarded by make Springfield again and find | a(i *eemed to have a good time,
Under his direction there 1* being
POWERS ECHOES,
land.
they were delightfully entertained. er and family of Battle Creak ware
state police who permitted only one some kind of transportation back to [ mjj c. vanEit and son LaVern
made a correct description ot every Last Week's Lztter.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager and
Mr. and Mra. Ourra Crockett and guests Sunday at Mr. and Mr*. Fred
car
to
pass
at
a
time.
Eventually
Hastings,
which
he
thought
would
werc
&gt;n
Hastings
Saturday
on
busipiece of real estate in this county.
Mr. and Mr*. W. Holdemaker
•on Morgan visited Mr and Mr*. Ethel McKlnny of Beaverton *pent Reid*.
he
reached
the
Wagoner
home
and
be
al
least
fairly
dry.
—
It ha* been found that quite fre- have sold their farm to Mr Jackier
Jacob Brady of Grand Rapids over the week end with Mr. and Mr*.
80 luggage in hand he crossed
qucntly there are mistakes in de- of Middleville and will move away after dinner walked down lo look
Ralph Rise and family.
sons of near Lansing were Bunday
al lhe Connecticut river, about a Agawam river and climbed a hill I
1 scrlptlons of land on lhe assessment In the near future.
NORTHWEST THOBNAFPLE.
Mrs Glenn Englana and daugh­
Guesto al lhe FUher sugar camp guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Haw­
rolls. In the majority of such caxe* | Will Kronewitter ha* had hl* block from the house. Its usually half a mile high at the other side Last Week’s Letter.
ters Pollyanna and Margery spent
afternoon
were
Mra. bllU. Mr. and Mrs HawbllU and
these errors are not discovered, be- farm set over into our school dls- placid water* were an angry, to get to a roadway He managed to
We were sorry to hear Mrs. Myron the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Sunday
Buell Wise. Mr. and Mra. Joe Frank HawbllU wm near Gull lake
white-capped torrent and almost secure a taxi and had a three-mile Freeman had developed pneumonia
cause lhe owner pay* them without trict.
Glen Densmore and daughters of Wise and Ml** Josephine Wise, Mr. an business Tuesday.
Springfield. at the hospital in Ann Arbor and is
noticing whether lhe description ot
Mrs Henry Frost has been’ vi&amp;ll- the entire neighborhood was gath­ ride into downtown
। Hastings.
ered on It* bank* to watch and won­ When he walked Into the depot he seriously 111.
his property is accurate or not. But ing relative* hi Grand Rapids,
j Mbs Lucile Nicholson spent the
if the owner of Uie property to deRussell and Richard Palmer ot der al it. One chap had driven a was confronted by candlelight . . ,
Mr. and Mra. Hal* of Linden are
with six-inch measuring and water. The floor of the station visiting at the home of their daugh- I week end with Mr. and Mr* Leon
Unqucnt in his taxes, and that de- Detroit spent the week end with •take
j Nicholson of West Woodland and
mark* on II into lhe ground to slanted down to the tracks and
linquency to rejxirted to the auditor -----------------their parents.
*"
FtnkhHnerf i *ot acquainted with her new brothgeneral’s department al Lansing, the
Mr. and Mrs. C J Bchasbcrger gauge lhe rale of riac. At that lime from the door to the opposite end
Mr .nd Mn. MMl nnkbeloeK
aimdtv
of the room was water from a few and daughter Ruby ot Grand Rap­ erArlo Lavan. who arrived Sunday.
land description is there carefully and Mr and Mrs Fred Schasbcrgcr
, , March IS. weight 9 pound* and 14
inches to four feel deep
checked up with the records and of Grand Rapids were Bunday hours.
Ids were Thursday guests of Mr.
L |I ounces.
The South End bridge connects
He inquired about trains. Sorry, and Mrs. Oils Morgan; Mr. and
It b found that a considerable num­ guests at the home of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Carrick of j
suburban Agawam with Springfield str. no train for Albany. No. nor Mrs. Herman Brown and son Rob­
ber of the real estate description* Mr*. A Bedford.
at a point where the river Is from New York, but there is one for Bos­ ert of Grand Rapids were after­ Grand Rapids were guests of Rev I
are defective.
The check-up is
j™. •»
a quarter lo half a mile wide, and ton. only you'll have to ride out to noon callers.
and Mrs Don Carrick over
made by lhe auditor general beMIDDLEVILLE. .
Mr. Foote and the Wagoners walked It outside the city where it's held
cause, when lhe delinquent tax Last Week *
*
Mrs. Murray Schnurr and nephew
projieriy is ottered for sale al the
Mr Bnd Mr’- Howard Getty have up lo it to see how great were lhe up Another taxi ride. About tlx Jackie Fowler and Mrs. Jennie In­
May lax sales. If lhe description Is moved to SparU. where Howard has chances that the Agawam river, o’clock,that evening he finally got gram of Grand Rapids attended the
wrong, then the state can give no employment They Jiave been living which
WMXMI Joins the Connecticut,
............. might on .....
the ..MX.,
tram and started for iiumc.
home. Aid Thursday at the church.
title to the property to the pur-; *n PMl ol Mri- De’1* Alien s house rise over lhe top of an eight-foot He arrived via Boston, back to New
A furnace is being Installed in the
chaser at the tax sale, and that enP*sl few month*. Mrs. Allen embankment. It hardly seemed pos- York etty. to Albany, east to Buf- Olb Morgan home.
(ail* a considerable loss to the state. i)as relumed home from spending sible at the rale of rise at that time falo. Detroit and home at test. Il
Consequently the auditor general th® winter wllh her cousin. Mrs. M. that the waler would come over it | was a Journey of about 1.100 miles,
TOWN LINE.
during the night. *o they relumed and due lo delays, switchings back Last Week's Letter.
has carefully investigated all de­ Leonard.
Mr and Mra George Master* re­ home and spent lhe evening listen- and forth, took from six o’clock
scriptions of property reported lo
Mrs. Waller Tasker entertained
Ing
to
cheerful
radio
flashes
about
Friday
night
until
8
30
Sunday
him as delinquent for taxes
By turned home Thursday from spend the Friendship club al her home
this check up many.. descriptions ing the winter with their *on and this bridge and lhe other dam when the Michigan Central steamed Wednesday.
which had given way forty or fifty into Hastings
have been corrected; but there are family tn Grand Rapid*
Mrs. Alloft Reahm was in lonla
Mr. Foote's
Foote * opinion of the east ha* on business Saturday.
no doubt many more which have
W. R Harper _
t* -spending
---------- -- _
a —
few miles above them. About midnight
Increasingly been slightly dampened, but he connever been corrected
&gt; day* al home, having been laid off the flashes became
Malcolm Tasker of Lake Odessa
fesses that he really quite enjoyed visited his parents. Mr and Mr*
The project worker* in this county 1 f°r B Iew day*. If he to not called alarmlng.
The next day lhe river was even th* boating out there and no doubt. Roy Tasker Sunday.
will make an accurate map of each back soon he and Mrs. Harper are
section of land in every township planning on a southern trip to visit I more of a raging torrent, and it was he will henceforth be known as the
Mrs. Alice Lepard of Lake Odessa
a common Sight lo see dead anl- J Hastings
Boatman!
He carries spent Saturday night and Sunday
ot tha county Then al the register's relative* In Georgia,
SINCERITY BRASU
olllcc. they can find the name ot
Mrs Flora Taylor and Mr* T. B mate, parts of houses, large pulp »round with him a clipping from an with her son and wife. Mr. and Mrs.
Ml£UU:tS MILLED
logs
from
some
pulp
mill
end
great
eastern
paper
showing
Agawam
In
thc owner of that properly
If a Taylor of Grand Rapid* were in
Hale Lepard.
-r
on.
business.
Mrs ^*
Tay
description on thc supervisor's roll town Friday
«**•*•’• A
” »«&gt;«'"*
“ Mra
v-­ rolls of paper from the Strathmore it* wateriest stage, and should you
1s wrong that error can be found lor expects to relum lo hcr home Paper Mill go hurtling by mingled I *ay. "Did you see anything like
WOODLAND.
'See anything’ Last Week's Leiter.
when thc new record is checked. Il here about May 1st Wc will all be with huge block* of ice and every ' that?" he'll *ay,
will take about three months alto­ glad to sec her here among her other kind of debris. The situation 8ay. i was In It! Why. listen. I wa*
Mrs Rena culler. Mr*. J. V. HU­
Choose o careful cleaner’
gether for this work to be com- friends again. She has been enjoy­ became acute when a radio flash staying Just a block from it. right bert and the Misses Lenore Dowden
warned them that tha Springfield here I" And hell show you almost and Naomi Van Loo entertained 17
and send your drapes and .
plcted in this county. When Uie, ing good health this winter.
Bran Flakes
mvj.n work
»ui» I* clone,
UU..C copies of ah ' Charles Lewis b visiting his wife power plant was surrounded by ■ the exact spot,
project
ladies with a miscellaneous shower
curtains to him. . . . We i
about three feet of water and that j
------------- , • • •--------------thc map* and records made will be and children here for a few days.
Wednesday evening at the home
know how to treat soft,
THR1K CORNERS,
given the county, and in thc future
"" W L- Eaton ■"'*
Mr*.
and H.uehtedaughter crew* of men were working at top
of the former, for Mr*. Harold Lo-I
PURE HEFLNED
Rica Krispias
10c
fine
fabrics
and
the
’
speed
to
seal
It
watertight
that
the
La*t
Week
s
Letter
rorrecl descriptions of all real es­ Ellen now of Grand Rapids were
gan. nee Zatae Eastman, of Has-'
To trad* ^w I th belligeranu and tings. A color scheme of pink and ,
cleaning fluid we use will
tate in every township of the coun­ here nn business Saturday. They dynamos might be kept dry and
EE LU KA,'a CORN FLAKES OR
I Springfield not plunged into dark- • expect to keep out of war is like
hHe W4S
Tne ut)lc M
ty can tc made This will be worth report that Mr. Eaton a* slightly
not harm the finest cloth.
P”' hL.
.
&gt;», U;« ««. or NUX.,. S™
“‘■imSL
“111 I
Port ToHtiM ter 1 o«
i. lot to lhe county. It Is a really improved, having been in
It will, remove all dirt
health the most of the winter .
,I By
Dy him&gt;
____
_____ , "
11.U Um. n~plx
In __
An™
streamers ted lo the'
constructive work.
gently and restore origi­
1
Mr*. W H. Gray was in Ann Ar-1
‘
had
ad begun
beeun moving
movinx their
tlielr furniture |110 shore fca,c and *hole.
gift*. Games and contests were
bor Sunday visiting her son Charles onto the second floors, as the water' •
nal color. Phone 2140.
ROUTHHWEST CARLTON.
Vilii1011.
01 mV*00! pkyed and the bride was presented
She found him Improving nicely WM gradually creeping up into the Ind. called at the Edw. Walters';a recipe for happiness,
List Week’s Letter.
our driver will call and;
MIIX
I course
Quite a number from this rum- and able to sit up a few minutes Greets. Many families, especially • horns Saturday afternoon.
course luncheon
luncheon was
was se
served with
pick up yovjr cleaning and
■nunl'.y
attended the---mlscellancoui
HenryThomroon
of lhe bride's cake beautifully decorat­
...»
—, ------------------------------- ------- • Bunday—the first h« has been up those with small children, were , Mr*.
return it to you SOFT,
.hos'er on Mr. and Mr*. Evan Ful- for ^ek*
making for lhe higher ground in i Bowne spent Sunday wilh her ed in pink and white. Many useful
EXCEPT CUIlXEN
CLEAN and FRESH.
I
1-r
Mrg John
Jo;in Otto
OUo underwent
underwent an
an opop- Springfield, pushing furniture and i father. M E Moore and aunt. Miss and lovely gifts were presented the
• ■ al the Carlton Orange hall. SalMrs
urday evening. They received many
l£jn (n
pennOck hospital lhe household goods across the bridge in I Clara J. Sisson
guest of honor. Mr*. R G. Finnle
.nd hn.ntKiit
eift* Light
IJehl re
re-­
ot
wcefc
u.v’ful and
beautiful gifts.
baby buggies
or
wheelbarrows
David Robinson is driving lo was an out of town guest.
freshments were served.
About
nine
o'clock
Thursday
eveschool
In
Hastings
and
the
oilier
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Herald
Classic
and
1
aam
c*«f«rm.n b
Is very poorly
Mrs ibh
Ed . Esterman
Let Us Reline Your Coat'
X
1 Waiter Culbcrt attended
the
nlng. Mr. Wagoner's daughter no-1 students tn lhe neighborhood riding children spent Sunday wilh Mr
______
Vitale hors- sate at East Lan&amp;mg on of late.
OR PILLSBURY'S BEST HOUR .
Heed that the meadow behind thc: with him again; Mis* Ruth 1* re­ and Mrs. Joe classic of Lake OdesTuesday On Sunday Mr. and Mr*^
house. lhe only exit left, wa* com-' m*inlng tn Hastings indefinitely,
ROBINHUE
PARK.
Culbrrt were guests of Mr and Mr*. 1
The water was
Miss Elsa Herman spent the week
Mr and Mr* Clair Yetter ---•
and
EMBASSY - nu ll. SMOOTH
Mr
Mr*. Harry Poland and pletely flooded
L R B’cler of Middleville
•
I
--- and
Marguerite, of end with her parent* in Caledonia.
mother. Mrs. Nellie gushing over the joad from the daughter. Mis*
Mi and Mrs. Hugh Furnlvs of the
the latter*
latter
Connecticut river, a block lo the Grand Rapids were Saturday guest*
Mis* Eloise Smith entertained the
Johnson,
Woodland colled on Mr. and Mr*. J-**
”’"" •and cousin. Mrs Dryer, west. So there was our Hasting* ad­ of Mr. and Mra. Orvln Smelker of junior class Friday afternoon wilh
of Owosso, were Sunday guests of
PHONE 2140
Walter Culberl Thursday evening.
o&lt;
venturer marooned In a modern city near Freeport.
a sugaring off party In lhe wood*.
Mr*
Mr. Frank
nrn snrux-r
ShrlKr -nd
ana d.
aaugntcr
u?h.er
-‘-u
5*" 2}'* Mvron With his only means ot' transporu- j
COLUTVY CLUB Urge
963 64 was donated from Wood­
We Call For and Deliver
, Mr and Mr*. Floyd Wallers and
Hacel and Mr* Leo Barry and *on I tended lhe funeral of Mrs. Myro
lion a row boat
lu-ug«K4,
-iwu. m
l daughter. m
Martan,
ot **&lt;•&lt;&gt;&lt;*
Grand Rap- land township and village toward
cilled on Mr and Mra Win Shriber
At midnight came a1 rap al .u
the ,&lt;ls werc
un
a*y
guests of
French
Coffee
lfc
19&lt;
were g
Su
nd
“J’ dinner
dinner guesta
of
Wright
CT
Iff
ord
and
Melvin
of Hastings on Wednesday after-1
"
door and four men ordered the llcr
heJ (elher
Ulher M E Moore . gnd
and Bunt
aunt.
noon. William is getting along a* Haight left Thursday night by auto Wagoners to leave their
•ir home and
C|ara j&gt; ai*&lt;»n
g^son.
for Beaver Dam. Wb
Randall
well as ran be expected
Country Club lk25c SIX DELICIOUS FLAVORS
Jackson accompanied them as far go into Agawam for the night.; MlS5 Marguerite Yeiter motored
Nfl-.v A'-chvih Buck attended the
Their
home
wa*
high
and
dry.
but
f
rom
orand
Rapids
in
her
new
Ford
COFFEE
as Gary. Ind.
Young
People* convention
Mpentl lhe weck cnd wllh
Glen Dean and family of Middle­ there was grave danger In lhe pos- I yg
Grand Rapids on Saturday.
Mbllily
that
the
Holyoke
dam.
twenher
parenu.
Mr
and
Mrs/Clair
Oxydol
ville spent Saturday night and Sun­
day with their parents. Mr. and ty-flve miles north would give way. | yeiter.
•
YANKEE SPRINGS.
Mrs Julian Potts. Ralph Flnkbeln- This was thc last remaining dam , Mr and Mrs FIo..d Wa|ters and
Last Week's Letter.
er and family were also Sunday snd even then over sixteen feet of Marian of Orand Rapid* visited the
Why not come lo church? Thc
water was rushing over its lop. with (ormer's parents. Mr. and Mra.
services arc good Sunday School guests there.
Omar-Ward and family of Has- no hope of it* force! deerra-ving gdw. Walter*. Sunday
at 3 o’clock, preselling at 3.
i
Reaching the other side of the meadMrs Olive Haye* of north . of
Mr and Mr' Burdette Willson’s' tinigi «pcnl Sunday wilh Mr. and ow required two boata trips for ev-. Oran&lt;j Rapid* vn a Friday guest
little baby is quite sick with pneu­ Mr*. George Poland
Mrs Macle Potts spent Thursday eryone. There they borrowed a car • of her llsler and husband. Mr. and
monia
•
from
the
slate
police
and
drove
iny
rs
George Kelley,
Mr Adler, who WM badly pots- afternoon with Mrs. Clive Churchill to Agawam Center, where theyj
TLSCU RBVID
)&lt;t--------------of Middleville
oned wilh sumac Is out again.
Mr. and Mra John Kollar were spent lhe rest of lhe night in a ; There are two side* to every quesMr Woodard ha* a large team of
Congrcgallonal church.
lion—your side and lhe wrong side
in Hastings Friday afternoon.
FRESH GROUND
horses he recently purchased.
M- E Man' ha* Just purchased a
ECO MASH
team.
The prayer meeting at Mrs. Hum-.
WtSCO MAXD
CHKK HID
mei'a last Sunday evening was a
good one.
Thc apple bud* in Yankee Spring* .
Starting
"J* *p*
orchard begin to show a Utile
green; spraying will soon be the |
Ul D I.ROW IM. MASH
order of the day there.
FIXE TO STIFF Ik.
E M Himilton and wife are back
from Detroit where they spent the
FUS •« FEDKflAl TAX
winter with their daughter. Mr.
SHOULDER
Hamilton is cutting wood *l the

KROGER STORES
HOT DAWD

JEWEL COFFEE
lb.
bas

House
Cleaning”

’LT 65c
FLOUR
COUNTRY CLUB R.QUB

LARD

.“15c

PET oa CARNATION

4 T- 29c

CAMPBELL'S SOUPS 3

Gold Medal

McCREERY’S

DRY CLEANERS

PEANUT BUTTER
CORN FLAKES

25c

99c

2

25c
pk*. 9c

JELL-O

KROGER ST ORES

P a C CIANT SOAP 7 - 25c

GROUND BEEF

CANVAS CLOVES SUX MADE -10c

SCRATCH FEED : »1.55

BRINGING

CHECKING

ACCOUNT

Yankee Spring* orchard.
William Johnson is having
tussle wilh rheumatism.

ROBINHUE PARK.
Last Week’s Letter.
A number from this way attend­
ed the surprise farewell party
Thursday night on Mr. and Mrs.
Otto Llnsley who have moved near
1 charlotte.
Mrs. Paul Fields, nee Orpha
Headly. of Mendon, spent Thursday
with Mrs. John Wenger and also
called on Gertie Harris.
Mr and Mrs. Bam Ashley of Has­
tings spent Saturday with Earl
Robinson and family.
Mr. and Mr* Ernest Barnes and 1
family of Harris Creek spent Bun-1
day F»lh the teller's mother. Mrs. I
' Evrld Jackson. Mr*. Wright Cllf-1
ford was an afternoon caller.
1
Mr anc| Mrs. Albert Prost. ot1
Lansing were Bunday guests of Mr.
and Mr*. John Kollar.
Mr. and Mr*. Howard Smith en­
tertained with a pedro parly al
their home Saturday night.
Julian Potto And family rpcnl
Bunday with Mr. and Mra. Bam
Zcrba of Middleville.
Mr. and Mrs. John Kollar were
in Caledonia Friday on business and
called on Mr. and Mrs Dan Young­

blood.

SERVICE

to Atoie J^eople
It ia now the commoa thing for
our commoa people — America a

great 90%—to write check# and
to ute banking facilities, which
they once thought could be af­

VEAL POCKET

10c

VEAL ROAST

15c

VEAL ROAST

19c

RUH

VEAL STEAK

CHOICE LOIX CITS lb.

25c
23c

VEAL LOIN CHOPS
CHOICE

forded only by the few.
Today it is possible for the

VEAL POT ROAST

12Hc

money-orders in the past — at

Pork Liver

count with this bank a help and

Pork Hocks

a protection to you in mguj w«J»-

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

12^c

RING BOLOGNA

even lower coat.
You would find a checking ac­

N
K OF HASTINGS

STRAWBERRIES
- 12ftc
RED'. RIPE. LUSCIOUS
HUH

ASPARAGUS”" ™D12ttc
GREEN. TENDER
CALIFORNIA SktilLEM

Orange*

*«• 21c

LLBGt inCIILS

MEDIUM SIZ2

average man or woman to use
checks as freely as they have

PENN-RAO MOTOR oil 2 £ 91s

LEONA

Park H«wti
N«k

sausage

lit

- 1ly2c

in TI(K PIECK

SLICED BACON v- 10c

HEAD
LETTUCE
LlkCK caiw UKAM
MlCUiGA^ - U. 3. No. 1

POTATOtS
IDAHO BAglgS
SWHT POTATO*! ««» *&gt;u
&lt;W/ WtfldfWJ

�PAOE8DC
TM1PK IPF kll i FH
iniUB IOC MLLCU

THE HASTINGS. BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL S. 1936

&amp; Assyria Center,

not

far' exaggerated.

Mr. Roth telU us he I the lost two years men the T. K

WEEKS SCHOOLHOUSE

u Mr’'
CARLTON CENTER.
The time for the church services
Mrs Lowell Whittemore and at the Carlton M. E. church has
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Whittemore.
bftn changed beginning next Sun­
day. April 5lh. Preaching will be at
'
9 30 and Sunday School immediate­
Erway home. On Saturday Mr. and ly following. All arc cordially invit­
Mrs. Erway accompanied her to hcr ed.
j home.
The Carlton L. A. 8. will serve
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Warren and dinner at the Grange hall, election
Pattie wen Battle Creek visitors day. A program is being planned for
last Thursday.
the afternoon. It is hopAl there
John Erway of M S C. and Miss will be a good patronage for the
Ruth Erway of W S. T. C are dinner and that all may slay'to cnMending their vacation with their joy the afternoon.
parents. Mr. and Mrs Ray Erway.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Yarger and
family were guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald TLscher.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnson moved
Mrs Thelma Johnson of Grand
till* past week from lhe Faust farm Rapids visited her mother. Mrs.
in Hope township to the Chas. New­ Ralph Henney. Saturday.
land estate.
Aehaah Buck and Robert Henney
..
. “w", Ol‘&gt;
I'" of
... ...u
thk community uan
attended u»
the

Mr. nnd Mb. Will Moody and
। family of Battle Creek were gup|*r guests Wednesday evening of
Mr. and Mrs Byron Moody. Mrs.
_
. ------ .
by springs. It was heavily coated lnl)e
. or more, fish___________________________
were piled along
The free music activities offered
Will Moody remained to assist in
Thousands Were Found on
--four •feet n short time ago are proving very The Building Wu, 80 Year.
,n !’ With ice.
I—
the shore n foot ■deep and
'the care of the sick—Mrs. Mabie
Shore of Martin Lake, , 1 Shortly after the Ire began to go J w more in width, thousands upon sureewful. especially the piano - &gt; Old, and It Was Well
Moody und Mrs. Phoebe Robinson,
' out of the lake last week residents thousands of bass, perch, bluegills classes Seventy-six pupils have enwho are both confined lo their beds.
Constructed
Assyria Towiiship
;! noticed
“« »
“"»
noticed that
that the
the koutu
south wind
wind was
was [! »
and
sunfish.
It was hard to believe rolled in this course. Eleven classes
Mrs. Florence Babcock and son.
lake -------could contain
The oevere cold of iu^t winter, (blowing hundreds of dead fish upon l!-° small
-------------- as have been arranged so as to take ’’ The Weeks schoolhouse, n mile
Robert, returned Wednesday from
and a mile
| care of all pupils adequately The north
-------- ------------- west
------ of Dowling
— - causing very thick Ice. resulted in | tlic north shore.
; many fish a* were in sight
Leila hospital where she had been
the deam Ot many fish, particularly
Supervisor Strulri telephoned the
^.ht^SJids^n community chorus group met March *n Baltimore township, burned to
caring for Robert following his op­
eration.
•
in small lakes.
[conditions faced there to the Hairy
.t' nL 2™-.
*i»«i 23 for Hie purpose of making plans ,he K™mnd Wednesday forenoon.
•I lie community orchestra Ls olso-The pupil* and thc teacher.- ML*s
Mr and Mrs. Orson McIntyre anti
Five and eight-pound bass, large- county Health Unit Dr. Harkness
Altmooo
were practicing weekly with quite sails- | Junp
got out of Uie building
sired blue gill*, sun fish and bull [ got in touch right away with me Xni.a
he
nn
Katheryn were Sunday guests of
factory
result*.
------------------------------------safely
gnd
saved
the
school
book
­
head*—all had apparently died]local conservation department and ! »£•?'*£UTrr la'‘ &gt;e“r’. hd.±**e™
Mr. and Mrs Archie BeLson They
---- ,
I and record*. The fire started from
from lack Of oxygen during the j Uie fish hatchery who sent men dP„tK
Bering the* Sltioiu
also culled on Mr. und Mrs. Hud
Thc .p. T. A- but Wednesday eve-1a defective chimney and had gained
Good-.on to sec the new
baby
heavy winter
freeze-lined the down lo investigate, along
with, ?7/ J ,1"^hJ
King was one ol the best ever held considerable headway before it wax
daughter there.
ahores of Martin lake In Assyria. Sanitary Engineer Roth of the
„.M1, in our school
Although the num- noticed. The Hames were whipped by
Martin lake 1* a small body of wa- , Health Unit.
theJn!?,.^W^rry TL
An Easter program is being pre­
**nd, 50 tha‘ the student
ter, about a mile und a half south-1 They found conditions were not |
ollb^^e°nd he,pCd thr°* thC ber attending was small the interest'a
pared to be given at the church
was exceptionally good. The meet- i and neighbor bucket-brigade could
Sunday evening. April 12.
F B- Martin mwnerof the famous Uif opened with two fine solos by Inot ^avc the,. building The fire
Mr und Mrs Clyde Cheeramon
Mrs. Berlc Gillette accompanied bv! truck was called from this city, but
and family spent Sunday with Mra.
arrived they could do
| fall.i who owns much of the acre- j MLss Pauline Beneway. This wax'
high. Saturday night.
Ida Chec.scinan in Nashville.
— - — raving
Ora HInd*
accompanied her home
tin excellent talk v»
on ’ -nothing toward
‘he school। nge around lhe lake, including Mary followed by ....
Mary clem and Jean Carpenter
Mrs Mary Walton wax the guest
•Guidance'
’
bv
Mr*.
Wolverton
who
i
hou»e.
The
bucket
brigade
had
aidfor
a
visit.
Lane Park, had his hired man at
attended lhe concert at Lake Odes­ of her parents. Mr. nnd Mrs. Wm.
i work drawing the fLsh away by wa- L* principal of lhe High school. She ed 1,1 keeping the flames from thc Bert Newland has beenrntertainsa Methodist church Friday eve­ Bolmun in Hastings. Wednesday
dl-.lributed several pages of mlmeo- w«xl horn* on the school grounds. Ing the flu butl* bctlc^at this writ- ning.
| gon loads in a manure spreader graphed
night.
material for the parent* to' *’hich contained 30 cords of wood.
Ing.
। where they were distributed over
----- . After .hecaddress
------ -- — ---the
------------&gt;,- «■»..»&gt;&lt;;
I fields for fcrtiiUing.
read.
P. T.---A i t
The
nremcii nyslstrd i..
in ,i...
that ...„.u
work i' Mrs. Lib Dougin** and Mrs. Edith
THE CROSSROADS.
THREE CORNERS.
&gt; Condition*, somewhat similar to members requested that the faculty I The schoolhouse Itself "was totally Clem *pent lost Friday with friend*
Teddy cool: nnd family have
That "The selfishness ot human
in Hn.&lt;,tings,
, these, wc understand, arc being re­ present more information on guld-; destroyed
moved on their farm known as the
Mr. and Mrs. Wm Havens and Harper place and n family by ttie nature, individuals and nation* try­
ported to Lansing from ul) over ance. mental hygiene and the , The Week* schoolhouse was built
Michigan, aitho as yet. we have newer program that the school Is , about eighty years ngo when pco- Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Havens and name of Grass have moved In the ing to get all that could be gotten
The ii...
meeting
,...B Plc were 1,1 ‘‘lb*"
'“ u
habit
**’“ of making —
very
—- children were Sunday afternoon house vacated by Mr. Cook A fam­ for themselves, brought on thc
। heard of none where the mortality now carrying on.
~ ' ■■•&gt;
“■-•'■&lt;••1 wooden structures. Fire- callers at lhe home of the former’s ily by the same name have moved World war and lhe Economic de'ubstantiul
। has been as great as at Marlin lake. closed with a splendid ti-adlng by
preision" is something, ut this time,
| men ”who
’u'’ “went from this city could daughter. Mrs. Rankin Hart and . in thc Lew Matthews house.
There must have been grand flsh- Ray Matthews
lit would be well to pondered on.
not help noticing how much timber family of Brush Ridge They found
| ing on that lake—and it will be
Mrs Will Page is at home again
j many years before II will be a* well
The pupils of the school are con- “ad been used in the construction Mr Hart suffering with blood pois­ after being cared for In the home of
U-ibullnp to the relief of distressed oi lh,‘ building, and the line quality on in his hand, cammed by pricking h.r -Mrr ur, B.nh. Stenmn. ol .?*
.ml
'"J
stocked again.
charity,
tor lhe l»l two month.. ■lice, ch
""' all
““ Uie elements of
people in lhe flood area. The sltua- uf lumber that could not be dipll- his finger with the sheep shear*.
rated
hav&lt; His many friends hope for his
uon was di cussed in home room pa
‘pd at ‘thc
he pre-ent time We have
John cook and family spent Sun­ moral life for mankind, but also to
SCHOOL NOTES FROM
the progress ot Christianity.
Monday and the contributions were '
framed whether there was any sjH-edy recovery.
day In Hastings the guests of Miss
Mr und Mrs. LmpZ Everdeen of
Mr and Mrs. Horry Fo ter of Jennie McBain.
insurance or not.
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG brought Tuesday.
Lansing sjient ov^ the week end
Bellevue und Mrs Hazel Otis and
Kenneth Pralt. who is working in
HENDERSHOTT.
children of Hickory corners were Battle Creek spent Sunday with his with Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Wallers and
The Home Room teachers met
na Sunday guests of W H. Ott*.
Mr. aoo
and Mrs
Mrs. Ulanrncc
Clarence Eash „
and
Work on the new addition to the
■Mrs Stoughton.
parents. Mr and Mrs. Victor Pratt.
school is progressing rapidly. Two Monday afternoon to plan for the ; children with their mother. Mrs.
Mrs. Al Sleury of Lansing Is
S|Nirk* from the chimney set fire
Maurice McMurray and family of
an(l y
ale, j
onnston Thursday to the roof of the Bert
Yale
Johnston
bricklayers arrived last week and Home Room guidance program Our Myra
‘irending the week with her parents.
silent Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. John Malcolm
; two more arc expected this week. plan is outstanding when compared and ^,,3. aU of Jacki0I1 wcrt. 8un. Newland house, better known as the Hastings
with Mrs. jane Tuttle.
with
others
throughout
the
state
BUMts
al
lhe
home
of
A.
C.
The work on the addition to the
Mr. and Mr*. Lester Yeiter of
W A Kerr house, and burned a
RajL^P'ey and family formerly of
Even
in,
city
schools
less
time
I*
c
iark.
gym was begun last Thursday. A
' hole in the roof, but fortunately it Ordiigeville have moved on lhe Ho­ . Kalamazoo spent Sunday wllh the
- •
—
Mrs. John
Sullivan
oftemporary wall has been erected in often given to group nnd individual I Mr. ' and----former’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clair
u.„„ were 3
„„ afternoon cali- was discovered and plenty of help mer Bates farm. Orley Smith and Yeiter.
Sunday
lhe east end of the gym while the SiiicUner/ m OUf. o! 30 000 ne- Leslie
was at hand so it was soon put out.
family having moved in their house.
wall is being tom down. In this ords show that only 43 per cent give ers at Albert Brill's
. Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Wallers nnd
Relatives have received word from
as much attention to it a* we do, —
, and Mrs. Floyd
u Garrison
Mr.
I Mrs. Stoughton received lhe glad
Mrs Oscar Otis of Trenton that Mr
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
। work, plays and for community here In communities of 2 500 only called at John Lechleitner
’
icr’s
’s ui
Ui Hope
Hope OU* wa* better und expected to be
1 tiding* of the arrival of a new
Wanelta Strnusbiuigh is visiting
i gatherings as It always has been. 8 per cent are devoting special time । Sunday to see Mis Della Weeks, brouglit home soon from the hosi granddaughter and great-grundat home for a few days.
to
tnLs
work.
Mrs
Wccks
h
o*
been
on
the
*lck
| daughter, respectively, al the home
The new addition will scat 250 more
pltal at Ann Arbor The X-ray UikMrs.
Rebecca
Craig
isn
’
t
quite
so
। list, but they found her belter
en there showed liiere wo* no serl- well at this writing.
i of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Waiter* of
| The Spring Hop. which was held
The friend of Mrs, Wallace Pres­
I lonla. March 20lh The little newGirls' Basket Ball History.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Warren
Bolton
and
I in the gym last Friday night, was ton will be glad to hear that she
1 comer has been named Alyce Beawell attended und everyone reporl- serin* to be gaining slowly. She will
ot Mr. and Mrs. John Huizinga in
I ed a good time The gym was deco- continue to stay wilh her parent*. many friends.
, M. E. Moore nnd Mira Clnra J.
1 McCords.
the nrsl year, in which Miss Thom- i r“tM1
PnMel colors. Three boxes Mr and Mrs. Harry Whitworth dur­
Sisson spent Sunday afternoon with
We are glad to report that W. H.
Visitors nt the Clifford Hammond
a*, present Home Economic instruc- . °l c“n?&gt;‘ *rn; Kl'cn away tc
ing her sickness.
------------------------------I Otis is able
to be up after being home Sunday were. Mr and Mrs P [Mrs. Loa Strouse in Carlton.
tor. was coach, the girls won 3 1
lucky ticket holders, Betty
if it Ls known that one of our confined to hts bed for some time
Sunday callers at the home of Mr.
8 Sparks. Mr and Mrs. Geo. Mcand lost 3 games Saranac. Ada. and i 8» fl. Jeanette oarbow and
number is having a birthday they wilh
---­
and Mrs Clarence Sisson were Mrs.
the flu He expect* lo leave
are sure to be called oil by their thLs week for a visit with ins daugh­ Culla of Hastings nnd Mr and Mrs. MaUe McCollum and Miss Hazel
Caledonia were on
schedule for Ii:,n,a Ho,e'
neighbors. You can't surprL-« 'em ter. Mrs. Harry Foster, and husband Clyde Barnes and daughter of Jack­ Smelker of Fenton. Mrs. Wm. Rose
both home and return games. In
------------- »
son.
of St. Johns and Mr. and Mrs.
nt Bellevue. He also plans on visit­
the next year. 1933-34. Mrs. Swerd- 1 The orchestra and a group of T any more.
The sale of Herman Fcldpausch's
We hear now and then of n child lug relatives at Detroit and other
Smith Will of Hastings.
ferger was coach. The girls went, K students went to Caledonia last
Thursday was quite well attended
Mr. nnd Mrs. Seth Cook &lt;nee
through their schedule with only | Thursday to present a program. The prodigy and now we have one who points before returning home.
nnd things .veined to sell good.
Gladys Walters i were over lhe week
Mr. and Mrs Roy Oak* and chlltwo losses. The next year. 1934-351 orchestra nave several selections, entered school two weeks ago.
namely Robert Brogan, son of War­ drrn and Mr and Mrs. Lemuel Oaks ! Mrs.
m a Lewis
1L.W Clum of Lake Odessa end guest* nf her iinrehls. Mr. nnd
brought a record of no losses dur- , Shirley Granger sang two numbers, -----„---------an lakr tlw r,.ad.
spent a few days this week visiting
ing thc entire season. Miss Lowman. | Jack Frost gave a number and a
Mrs.
Edw. Wallers.
and baby were Sunday afternoon
".|auuht»
daughter and family. Mrs. Wur... ...------- second or
- third callers at the home of Mr and Mrs 1 ■rrn jjojlon
present coach, was thc team’s tutor section of the girls’ chorus sang,
Wentjell Malcolm of Lake Odessa
grades spell lhe words mid ...
pro- Claggett near Freeport.
spent -Sunday until Thursday with
that established such a fine record
---------- 1—--------Mr*.
Wm.
Voisin
who
I*
working
nouncc them. He know* the letters
his grandparents. Mr. nnd Mrs.
, Tills brings u* up to this year, in
SOUTH SHULTZ.
in Hastings spent Sunday at her.
of the alphabet, and anything that
BRANCH DISTRICT.
John Malcolm; Tuesday he accom­
I home.
is spelled im it sounds makes easy
panied David Robinson to Hastings
reading for him He ha* just Branch school nt tendril thc World '
to visit High school and was an
WEEKS CORNERS.
passed ins fifth birthday and made Scries movies at Nashville Thurs­
overnight
guest of. Milton Beuhler
criausly ill with pneumonia I* able such a fus.s to go to school ttiat his
Mrs Daisy Bergman will enter­ near Freeport. Wednesday.
i formed capably, losing two games, to be up again.
day afternoon.
tain tne Cedar Creek C- C. for an
parent* let him start. Now the
i onc to Hudsonville and one to
Claude A Hammond was in at­
Vincent Norton made a business
Mr. and Mrs Andrew Meyer* of teacher is wondering just where to
afternoon meeting April 8lh.
I Galesburg
Both of these games
tendance at thc Spring Derby of
trip to Marshall Thursday
Hasting* spent Saturday night nnd ; place him
The Weeks district was very un­ lhe Wolverine Beagle Club Assoc,
were away from home contests In
Prayer meeting will or held al
Sunday wllh Mr and Mrs Adalbert
Mrs. Erma Brown from near the North Evangelical churcli next fortunate in losing their school­ held at Hastings Saturday and
Craven.
Freeport spent the week end wilh Thursday evening and will continue house which was totality destroyed Sunday. Hi* 'nlry; Willowcrest
Mr. and Mrs Harry Shute and . Mrs. Frances Hendershott
by nrc last Wednesday The chll- UOOO)
-. puMxa
Bobby,
placr d VTUnu
second In
In me
the 13 men
inch
daughter.-, mid Mr and Mrs. Cenard , Stuart Mason from Kalamazoo to be held there during the sum­ dren are being taken to the Dowling .class
and unusual
ur.u.vui:
-*"■ of' 37 starters
r* and
mer-months.
Smith ol Hastings were Sunday
- . 1 wa- a Sunday evening calkr at Leo
The ladies of thc Dorcas Society primary room to Rnlsh their year number of entries for n derby.
visitors at Mr
and •*“
-------- Hendershott’s.
of school
Mr and Mrv Arno)d Malcolm a„d
Frank
school. Wo
We atmreeiat,.
appreciate w,
very m.irh
much
ate ]&gt;ol luck dinner at thc home
Horn*.
0»“[J1*
..
.
.. .
The Easter |MVKsaii.
program w,n
will w
b&gt;‘ given
family ot Lake Odessa were Friday
Mrs. Abbie Henson and daughter, Easter Sunday during the time of of Mr and Mrs. Orville Flook hi
Mrs. Lila Dickerson n turned to visitors at the home ot the former's
NashvlBe Thursday.
Mary Kenna of Kalamazoo visited , the regular morning service
Mr
M7»: ,*Vle Parc,“'i Mr. and Mrs. John Mal.
Mr* Lawrrnce Maurer, who ha* n.rJ'r0,™
Mr and Mrs G E Kenyon Sunday
Sunday callers at the home of Er.
Dickerson
after
spending
thc
wincojm.
' ' been 111 for several week* is able to
afternoon and also called on Mr. nest Haynes and Mrs Carne Fisher
i,h Mrs. Eulaiic .....
Mr and Mrs Bruton LfCojjfp,. of
ter «.
with
LRU of .u_
the
Of.
...
.. .
. be about the house.
Bunnell district.
1 the Ryan district spent Thursday
There was nd prayer meeting.
Lee Johnson spent Sunday with evening with thc Edw. Walters fumDorothy last week at the home of Mr und
night ns a farewell party .’or Mrs.' thus ail ot Kalamazoo
his sisters. Miss Ruth Johnson and
Katherine Hart ----and---------Robert os ..„y
they ; Will
------ Johncock
’
--------------and son Maurice Mrs Samuel Ostroth os they were Mrs Kenneth Nickerson and fam­
Mr and Mrs. Leo Jefferson. Ber­
‘
were leaving their farm and mov- of Delton called at Chas. Van Vran- , both &gt;1) with severe colds
ily of Level Park.
nard Ryan and Mr. and Mr:. Harry
Mr and Mrs Arthur Lathrop of
ino
mg n,-.,
near----------------------------------------------Middleville They will be kcn s Thurada&gt;._ On Sunday Mr
Martin, nil of Jnrkson were Sunday
greatly missed here All wish them and Mrs Van Vranken were dinner Prairieville were visiting relatives
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
here Saturday.
success in their new home
Sunday school nt io o’clock; call-rs nt the Claude A. Hammond
guest* ot Mr Johncock and son and
preaching at H by Rev. Leslie home.
daughter-in-law at their home
YANKEE SPRING
.
Gross; large ulv
crowd
came out Sunlyn spent Saturday with Mr and
Many thank* for phoning your
Any plans you may have for im­
Services
at
thc
Yankee
Springs
(
iay
Conie „Kain.
Mrs. Byron Moody of South Maple news, it helps a lot.
church.
Sunday --------school -at -2 o’clock
-— and• Mrs.
- — Howard
proving or building should be
Grove
f
---------- ---------------Mr
Wilson are
Mr. and Mra. Clair Van Sickle
preaching
at
3
Mr.
Adler
will
talk
thc
pft
rcnLs
of
n
bat
,j Blrl
Starling Modrack of Battle Creek
nnd son. Otto, nnd friend. Billy, of
considered as on investment,
Sunday.. Come-and
Come and here
hen- mm
nim
, March 28.
Sunday visitors at Cha*. Whittc- Sunday
SJXTU Sunday evening with Mr and
Lansnlg were guests of Mr nnd Mrs.
A
crowd attended the Wood Wm Van Sickle Tuesday and Wed­
more * were Lowell Whittemore and I Dick Gardner from v.i
Kalamazoo
which should pay you dividends
, Mrs J. w. Tedrow
! Gordon Kenyon of Hastings -.pent wife of Delton. Robert Schrlcker. *as \n Yankee Spring* and Has- school P. T A. lost Friday night. A nesday. Otto remaining for a week.
in satisfaction and service.^ Moy
Mr*. Gena Brown and children and
*3
,
vry good program thanks to Mr.
Arthur and Opal Webb and Ralph
Gettings
from Kalamazoo
Ml** Eleanor OU* of Hickory Cor- . Donald
""
“ *
"
Becker and his company of young Cramer of Battle Creek. Marguerite
we help you to realise this pleosis spending his spring vacation in people from High school nnd the
Mills of Lansing and Clayton Webb
Consider thc dilemma of Sir Mal­
Ray OtL* and children and Nor­ Yankee Springs with hts grandpar­ music by the Hastings wood buzzers. spent Sunday with Mr. and Mra.
colm Campbell on being picked up man Erway of Kalamazoo were ent*. Mr and Mrs. M E. Maze.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Fifieid at­ Chas Harrington.
There will be an Easter program tended church Sunday after being
at home for driving 15 m p h He week end guest* with relatives here
Mrs. Eva * Rowladcr Is assisting
:nt the Yankee Springs church next shut in with sickness In their home - with-the household duties at lhe
Sunday April 5th at 2 o'clock Come so many week*.
‘home
-----------of
* -Mr
----------and---Mrs. --------McKeown at
Plan for that new roof now. We
and hear the kiddies sing
Hastings.
.
j The prayer meeting at Mrs Anna
carry a complete line of guaran­
SOUTHWEST C ARLTON.
Viola Hagerman and Mra. Kyser
I Goodin's Sunday evening was well
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Albright and and Virgil Lerent of Nashville called
teed roofing.
i attended. A good lime was enjoyed. son of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs.
on Miss Demaria Hagerman. Sun­
Charlie Norris were callers of Mr day.
PLEASANT HILL.
and Mrs Walter Culbcrt on Sunday.
Thomas Fleming of Indiana is
Mrs Hart and son Robert have
Mi. and Mra Tnte Ruck nnd fam­
| rented Ed. Bedford's farm and ily of Battle Creek called on Mrs. | visiting his family here
Thomas Fleming and family and
moved last week
Anna Buck and daughters Sunday. Mrs Frank Wilcox spent Sunday
Harry
Williams
has
been
absent
Mr and Mrs. Wm. Shriber and
If you own or plan lo own a home, there are many points about
from school the last week with children of Hastings. Lester Warner with Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Padelford
which our expert* ran advise you and which, if given proper consid­
bronchial trouble and threatened of Woodland and Mr. and Mrs. Har­ and Mr. Wilcox at Bellevue.
Mrs. Lloyd McClelland and Betty
eration. can protect your Investment. Insulation is one of the key
Collision Insurance for your automobile must be
pneumonia
old Ta-.kcr of near Lake Odessa of Nashville visited Mr. nnd Mrs
It was decided to have another P. spent Sunday with Mr. nnd Mrs.
points. Il requires technical skill. Termite-proof construction Is
measured by the treatment you con expect if you
Dave McClelland last week.
T. A. meeting this Thursday eve­ Frank Shriber and family.
another. Plumbinc. heating and wiring are vital. Get our expert
ning. Doris Lewis has charge of the.
advice first. Get ur prices on completed jobs, workmen supplied
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
program
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
| Sunday guests ot Mr. and Mrs R.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert McOlocklin
Mr. and Mrs. E H. Geer of Flint
The Stole Form Mutual in 1934 (1935 figures
I j, Williams were Mr. and Mrs. By- visited thc latter’s uncle. Horace were week end guests of Peter Still.
I ron Rowladcr and children of Wagner and family, near Olivet.
MIm Lucille Otto of lonla visited
not available I paid its policy holders collision
' Grund Rapids nnd Mr. and Mrs. Sunday.
hcr aunt. Mrs. James Surlne. the
Consider. These Points If
! George Konizen and daughters Doris
Thre were about thirty-five pres­
You're Thinking, of glid­
losses totalling $1,109,357. That exceeds by
I and Ruth of South Bend. Mrs. ent at the young peoples' class party
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hammond
ing! You'll Gel lhe BEST!
1 William* returned’ to South Bend held Friday evening at the home of of Hastings were Saturday after­
$144,076 the amount paid in losses by ony other
Whether you're planning to build, repair 01 remodel, remember that
with them for a week’s visit.
Bernice and Pkul Rhoades.
noon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
two companies in America.
BEST QUALITY
The P. T. a. was held Friday eve­
ning about forty being present. Sev­
source of pride to your neighborhood. Competent advisory service,
TO FURTHER SERVE STATE FARM POLICY
eral musical numbers were given
plus expert aid knd guaranteed materials at low cost. Compare our
also recitations and dialogs. The
HOLDERS. CONVERTIBLE COLLISION IS NOW
prices on quality millwork before you remodel.
next p. T A. will be April 17.
AVAILABLE AT THE LOWEST CARRYING COST
This community extend* their
sincere sympathy to Mrs. George
FOR COLLISION insur ncs in the history
NEW STOCKS
Roush who Is very HL,
Lincoln school

It Ins walked around a good share of the Girl* have won every game on their

MANY GAME FISH■ “---------

DESTROYED BY FIRE i and
-

-------------

dl9“' «“■■■■

JUSTSfll*5hl:

IT PAYS TO

INVESTIGATE
Before

Remodeling, Repairing
or Reroofing

REROOF NOW!

inVISTmERT 5RFEGURRD5

Our Collision Policy

Lends

in Paying Policyholders

mDDERn EXTERIORS

******

LIVRBLE HITERIORS

DONVBNIENCS

When you realize that all the Joy of freshly painted and decorated
rooms is lopped, these days by improvement* in dozens of ways, you
begin lo see why bo many people are remodcUng within aa well ax
without. Improved material* and guaranteed quality and work­
manship. make prompt action wise. A visit will give you newer
ide^s on costs and materials.

A

OF THE STATE FARM COM­
PANY.

ROY BRUMM, Nashville.
JOHN KILLICK, Dottar.

POCAHONTAS
KY. LUMP and EGG
AUXIER EGG
SOLVAY COKE

On Hand Now

THOS. LUKINS, Morfin.
FAST SERVICE

HOME LUMBER CO
Phone 2276

Builds Homes

Hostings

CHAS. WOODRUFF, Halting..

GLEN WOTRING. Woodland.

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Phone 2515

Frank Sage

Hastings

NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Last Week's Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Reynolds
entertained the following guests
Sunday In honor of Mr. Reynolds'
, birthday—Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rey­
nolds and Marjorie. Mr. and Mrs.
Orville Purcell and Dora and Mrs.
Purcell's mother and Mrs. Addle
| Montgomery.
' Mr. and Mrs. Asa Randall and
■ Mrs. Willard Randall accompanied
Willard Randall lo .Kalamazoo Sun­
day where Mr. Randall has ernploymen t.
Miss. Edna EDenbaas oil Hastings
i visited her friend. Mrs. Mary Cra'mer one day last week.

�THE HASTINGS, BANNEK, THURSDAY. APBIL t. 19U
! All enjoyed it and hope we can
HINDS CORNERS.
have him with us again.
Last Week's Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Edd. Meyers and
Allen Bishop spent most of last
week shearing sheep south of Kai-1 Mrs. Victor Meyers and son of lonla
called on Mr. and Mrs. Orville
amaaoo.
Miss Susie Phillips Is caring for Hammond Sunday.
Mrs. wallace in Hastings.
Mr. and Mra. Mell Hendershott
Miss Thelma Tobias Ls caring for and sons and Marian Tobias of Kal­
Mrs. Kect Tobias and baby daugh­ amazoo spent Sunday with their
ter.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Tobias.
There was a good turn out to hear Marian remained for her spring
Mr. Wallace of Hastings, at thc vacation of a week.
Mr. and Mrs prank Golden and
schoolhouse Friday night. He talked
on lhe American Indian; it was fine. Mrs. auxs Kline called on the foe-

mer's father, Nathaniel Golden, in I turned home with their mother.
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
gan wlU soon Improve in health.
and Mrs. Russell Benton and ehllBallimore Bunday afternoon and
Morris Uwb and wife of Kata-1
Week's Utter.
Sunday was Utile Laura Schantz's' dren of Grand Rapids and Wallace
found him very poorly.
I
.UQOcr cults' of their
*nd Mrs
Fttd Horn ot blrUldiy- The guests at her home CampbsU and family. ----------------------------------------I maxoo were »“PP" «
w ’
, Cloverdale and *on Dwight of Illi- In her honor were her grandparent*.
Mr and Mrs. Leo Monroe and
• CLAY HILLS.
parents. Uon PotU and wife Thursantj Lioy(j uubaugh called Mr. and Mp. Chas. Hendershott, son of Kalamasoo visited their
E-.t. william N. DeVine,
Mehin Haight and Wright Cllf- “•&gt;' n‘»hl
lon
Horn * mother. Mrs. Mabie Miw Clare Hendershott, her Grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ardy Owen nual account filed.
ford azo visiting relatives Ln WbFrsnch Halgh; and family ol Moody one day last week.
“&lt;* AUnt B&lt;r‘h Sund‘ycoruin for a few days.
Home Acre* spent thc week end ; Moody has been HI since last Wed- j Tinkler
of
Hastings.
...
.
“““* “*
e calms of Hickory Corners U count med.
Mra. Harold England and son wllh their parents. Eugene Haight, in®fd,yI Mr. and Mra. Chas. Van Vranken visiting his daughter. Mrs. Lloyd
Bobby of Lansing spent a few days and family.
Reward Walton of Naperville, HU-1I _..
w guests w
.. Sunday Y
were
on
of. their । ,QWen.
ventory filed.
last week wllh her parent*. Uon
Clayton Johnson and wife of. nob, is spending a few days vaca- daughter, Mrs. Basil Hayward tn
Pott* and wife; Marilyn and Junior. I Bowne Center and Vance Sharp and Don with hh parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Aito.
STRIKER SCHOOL NEWS.
who had been spending their vaca- wife and daughter. Dorothy were Clyde
--------------------Walton -------Mrs --------Mina------------Aldrich_fof Mrs.
»— DeWitt Rowley and children
At the last election of our school' issued, order limiting settlement
Uon with their grandparent*, re- vtaitora st Leon Polls. Sunday.
I rwium
Delton i«
is also
ni.n .a guest .there.
Of Jackson spent last week with her
। co-operative
association.
Pearl tend, petition for hearing claim
Mr*. Olive McIntyre was hostess parents. Mr. and Mrs. Court BtrowJ
Roush was elected president; Dar- filed, notice to creditors issued.
Thursday to the Birthday Club of bridge.
Est. Judson R carpenter, decfl
rrl Hoffman, vice
president;
Lorfchlch she is a member.
Mr and Mrs Mel Hendershott of __
~Cre[
.rv-treasurer
ren Abbott.e
secretary-treasurer
Mrs W. H Cheeseman spent last Kalamazoo and Clyde Hendershott ™
Ub^riarT ; Bond of Admr. filed, mtm ot M
ministration Issued, order UmF**
Thursday wllh her father. G. E. and family of Hastings called on
‘--w~
Harold Chaffee was out of echool settlement entered, petition
Bruinm. who lives near the Base the home folks Sunday.
several days last week on account of hearing claims filed, notice to emuLine church.
. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kruger of Ho­
tors issued.
Illness.
- ------ -—■ * • »
— ■— ■■
। n-.er spent the week end with the
Eat. Cora E. Sinclair, dec'd. Bond
HENDERSHOTT.
| latter's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ren-1
on mortgage filed.
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
nle Mott.
Last Week's Letter.
Est
David
Moore BylvuW,
Mrs. Bert Wilson from Lansing b
Albert
Brill
and
Clarence
Robindee d. Annual account filed.
The U4,„- *,d
M ..
Est Doasta Ballentine. Inventory
home of Mrs._ _________ ________
■uwk
last
Tuesday
.......
-------------Mrs.
Ir* Warren Brogan wm
was unable to v . *
,‘UCBU*?
...
Mr and ....
Mrs Charles Raymond nf filed.
Eat Elida Shaw. deed. Annual
have-It. Al! enjoyed the fine pot a decorator's meeting and luncheon near Battle creek visited the for­
given at the Kellogg hotel by the
account filed, order for publication
luck dinner and think they would
mer's slUer and husband. Mr. and
Imperial Wall'Paper Co.
entered.
like another
Mrs. William Couch, over thc week
Mr and Mrs Ernie Mattczon were '
CEDAR CREEK.
lend.
in Mlddlevjlle and Nashville Sun­
Mrs. ---Henry
! I Mr. and LL­ Norton, who filed, order appointing Admr. enter­
day with Ed. Cassidy of Battle 1 Last Week s Letter.
Lyle Norris and wife have moved ' have
^MVC,.been
befP, spending Uie winter ed.
Creek.
months
io
thc
B.CI
Towne
I.rm
.1
Milo.
”“»&gt;'*» between
bclwecn lhe
the homes
home of their
Est. lantha Cunningham, deed.
Mr and Mrs Floyd Garrison vis­
two
da-ghUr=.
-I
”
.
Krusell and Order allowing claims entered.
Fiughteri Mr,
ited their daughter. Mrs. Harvey I Mr. and Ml-' Clwmle Kelley of
Est. Orville C- Barnum, dec'd. Dis­
Purmalee. in Johnstown on Sunday. Il.fli.ir vwua Mr. Mid Mr,. H Mrs. Engle have returned to their
rooms in the home of their son. charge of Admr. issued, estate en­
Everybody enjoyed the fine pro­ Leverett Sunday.
gram pul on by Mr. Becker and hb
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Campbell। Harold Norton of near Coats rolled.
Eat. Stewart Mullen, dec'd. An­
class from the High school at the and daughters of Quimby visited his।, Grove.
Arthur Kidder is not so well at nual account filed.
P T A Friday night.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
this writing. We hope for his speedy
Est. Ruth Pennock, deed. Annual
Mr and Mrs. Chas Van Vranken Campbell Sunday.
account
filed.
;
recovery.
were ifi Kalamazoo Friday to at­
Henry Lelnaar and wife spent
Eat. Tillie E. Lichty. dee d. Peti­
tend the funeral of their cousin. Ed. Sunday with friends al Kalamazoo.. I Plan to attend the Sunday school
m&gt; and
»..u Mrs.
«... Will
«... Knestrlck
&lt;«. U
Woodham
! Mr
of and church service next Bunday. tion to sell certificate of deposit
Miss Vera Hoffman from east of Climax spent Wednesday with Mr. The Rev. Leslie Grose will bring filed, order lo sell entered..
Est. Anna Bender, deed. Petition
Dowling is .working for Mrs. War­ and Mrs. Henry Wertman. The lhe message. Come and we win try
for removal of executor filed, cita­
ren Brogan. We all hope Mr*. Bro- latter had as guests Sunday. Mr. to make you feel welcome.
tions issued.
Est. Robert and Kathryn Saund­
ers. Annual account filed.
Est. Edith Benham, deed. Bond
of Admr. filed, letters of adminis­
tration issued, order limiting settle­
ment entered, petition lor hearing
claims filed, notice to creditors is­
sued.

COUR

,71

OF
FINE
FOODSJ
r-.U-

SALE

GREAT STORE-WIDE BARGAIN FESTIVAL
HUNDREDS OF HIGH GRADE NATIONALLY KNOWN AND POPULAR BRANDS

CANNED FOODS. BULK FOODS, DRIED FRUITS, FLOUR. COFFEE, TEA. FRESH

Waiver of notice filed, testimony of
freeholders filed, license to sell If
sued, oath before sale fik-d.
I

DOLE

FRUITS AND VEGETABLES, SOAP AND HOUSECLEANING SUPPLIES—ALL AT

HAWAIIAN

LOW PRICES AND EXACTLY AS REPRESENTED !

Check Items Wanted—Then Count the ACTUAL Savings!
THOUSANDS OF THRIFTY FOOD BUYERS WILL SAVE AT C. THOMAS STORES

FIG BARS £.
CRACKERSB 2
COCOA Eoos“ 2
merer
UH
t COL

DDI I KI CC
r KUN to
PEAS

25c
15c
15c
19c
22c
3 25c

PINEAPPLE
Half Slices
Large No. 2Vi

FANCY

HEALTHFUL

EVERGOOD BRAND

SALAD
DRESSING
Rich

Creamy

. 27

OVEN FRESH

COOKIES
nut h bpir

I':.'.

10

WESSON
OIL
FOR SALAD MAKING
AND COOKING

Pts. 24c Qts. 45c

CORN
Wien

cltcAN rttli:
rICK ot croi*

FLOUR
SNOW QUEEN Hi69c
BEST YET
78c
GOLD MEDAL HiL*$1.09
PILLSBURY'S f«j“$1.09

BISQUICK
COCOANUT
•-«,
VINEGAR C1DELR
CS
10 Lb.
CAIT FOR TABLE
I U14 COOKXNU
Swans Down ftoJ» »,

30c
20c
12c
17c
25c

FRSSM, CRISP

Thomas Special

GINGER ALE
LLVIE RICKEY. LEMON.
(&gt;&gt;' V (.l,, t HURRY

3

20

LEAF LETTUCE
lb. 5c
Florida Oranges doz. 27c
Fla. Grapefruit 4 for 20c
Apples, Baldwins, 4 lbs. 9c

duced to meet the farmers*

20c

CAN

VOLCANO DISC HARROW
Electrically heat treated discs, long gang bolt, special
spool flange construction. Bearings lubricated from
bottom. Insures positive lubrication.
Every farmer needs a good disc. This Fann Bureau Disc is

complete line of Farm Machinery.

MARRIAGE L1CENSBS.
Robert Kalebeck. Nashville ....
Eva Garlinger, Nashville ..........

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc.
HASTINGS. MICH.

PHONE 2118

MACARONI
AND

SPAGHETTI
ELBO
BULK

3-17

FRESH. TENDER

MARSHMALLOWS

14c

AUCTION SALE!
On account of ill health, I will dispose of my personal
property at my form. 2 miles north and 1-2 mile west of Coats
Grove, on

TUESDAY, APRIL 7
Starting at 1:00 P. M.

FERRY

HOUSECLEANING SUPPLIES
each 10c
MOP HANDLES—well made•
each 20c
CLOTHES LINES—50 feet
box of 30 7c
CLOTHES PINS
SUNBRITE CLEANSER
quart bottle 20c
LINCO BLEACH

LAFRANCE .^sS -25c
SATINA MA‘£S‘I'&lt;O PKG 5c
WALL PAPER CLEANERS
AMMONIA Cristo Brand
BON AMI POWDER
SCRUB BRUSHES
BROOMS—long wearing

CHIPSO
OXYDOL

I offer the following

SEEDS

VEGETABLES and FLOWERS
Complete
Ee
4 A&lt;
AsRortmenl W
I w pkg.

3 cans 25c
can 12c
each 10c
each 29c
JS?'

MEDIUM BOX

20c
10c

CANVAS GLOVES
pair 10c
FELS NAPTHA SOAP
10 bars 45c
REX MINERAL
....
large box 20c
SHINOLA—ton, black, brown
&gt;n.i
con 9c

C. THOMAS STORES
IM W«T STATE STREET

Bureau

standard of quality.

LARGE
No. 2 2

2 5t.! 15c
3 fcr 25c

CAN IOC
DEL MAIZ CORN £?“?
SAUER KRAUT crI"5D3 it"; ....„25c
3 No J , Clai 29C
TOMATOES
DC ETC
ODESRA
NO. a&gt;, CANS
9c
DCCIJ
FANCY CUT
MILK Pet, Carnation, Borden'i
3 l: 22c

Farm

For SALAD or SAUCE

LB.
CAN

WAX or GREEN BEANS

service.

Products are built and pro­

CUT. STRINGLESS

TRIPOINT

tivc

PEARS

LBS.

EARLY JUNE
SWEET, TENDER

OF QUALITY . .
quality products and co-opcra-

BARTLETT

LB.

NHLD CREAM

THE SIGN
To thc farmer this sign assures

LBS.

LB.
BOX

19'

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

John Deere tractor. Model D.
John Deere tractor plow, 3bottom, with rolling coult­
ers.
McCormick-Deering corn
binder.
McCormick Deering hay
loader.
McCormick-Deering hay
rake.
.
McCormick-Deering riding
cultivator.
McCormick-Deering 4 see- .
tian drag.
McCormick-Deering mower,
6-ft. cut.
McCormick-Doering cultipacker, 10-ft.

Gale corn planter.
Low wheel wagon and flat
rack.
Oliver 99 walking plow.
John Deere manure spreader.
Wagon and dump boards.
Windrower, 6-ft.

SOUTH MAPLE GKOVB.
Last Week's Letter.
Mr. and Mra. Herve Choeaem
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gray at jj
Assyria, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stg
ton of Dowling and Mr and N
‘tarn Buxton ot Banfield aUc.nl
the funeral at Mrs. Anna OstroUi
the South Evangelical church Si
day.
Mrs. Anna Chceseman wm
Hastings Wednesday at the Geoi
Maurer home making the acquaj
Janet Catherine and Jean EUmbeth Maurer. Mrs. Maurer. t|M
mother,
was
formerly
Laura
Cheeseman.
Mr. and Mra Bob Elliston anff
son al west VermontvlUa spaat
Sunday with the L w Jarrard fam­
ily.
Mrs. Lester Preston areompanted
Mn. Grace Brake ot Hastings tg
Grand Rapids Wednesday.
Frank Norton. Howard and Claola
and Mrs. Ella Taylor spent Sunday
with Mr and Mrs. Stanley Briggs in
N. E Kalamo.
l.mlb .pull Tu,«U, wuh Mr.
Mrs clarence Cunningham ol
Bellevue.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas, Faih of
□rand Rapid, spent Bunday wn*
Mr. and Mrs O- C. Marshalls. Ma
Fath remained for a tang visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gr^y ang
family of East Assyria were Sun­
day dinner guests of Mr. and Mn.
Robert Gray.

(The above tools are all nearly new
and in first class condition.)

Trailer and racks.
Slush scraper. Corn shelter.
Tank healer.
1000 lb. double beam platform scales.
30-gal. kettle. 15-gol. kettle.
Steel scalding barrel.
New Idea brooder stove, new, 500chick sice. L.OR chains. Wool box.
10 gals, roof paint. Crates.
Grindstone and other articles too nu­
merous to mention.

Grade Jersey and Durham cow, 3 yrs. old, coif by side. There
will be other stock sold at this sale.
TERMS:-CASH. No property removed until tettled for

ELWOOD BARNUM, Propr.
Henry Flannery, Auctioneer

Testimony of freeholders filed, li­
cense to sell Issued, oath befon Mia j
filed.
ELt. Millie Haynes, dec'd. Inven­
tory filed.
Est. Martha E. Varney, dec'd. 1
Bond on sale filed, report of Mlg
filed.
Est. Summit C. Varney, dec'd.
Bond on sale filed. iei&gt;ort of mw
filed.
EU. Adelaide C. Stocking, dre'd,
&gt; Petition for Admr. filed, waiver M
notice filed, order appointing Adw, ’
I entered.
Est. Jerome cole, dec'd. Bond at]
। Admr. filed, letters ot administnU
I Hon luued.
Eel. Adelb-Tt D. Olmstead, dec’d.
Proof of will.filed, order admitthMf
will entered.

Ernest Smith. Clerk.

SHORT WAY
wriu
FREQUENT
BUS SERVICE
•
•
•
•
•
•

TO
GRAND 8APIM
MI00UVIUJ
8ATTLI C WK
COLOWATU
ANGOLA
PORT WAYNI .&lt;■

�THE HASTINGS, BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL », IMS

Big Spring Opening

'Open House’ at our Store
• Refreshments for all our customers and
friends will be served by the hostess of our
newly furnished five-room cottage.

• Our store is jam full of bargains in living
room, dining room, bedroom and breakfast
suites.

• Several pieces of furniture will he given
away hy us absolutely FREE to some of our
friends and customers who attend our open­
ing week.

• You need the goods: we need lhe room
and money. Buy now for our mutual benefit.

• During the whole week there will be hun­
dreds of bargains on every floor of our entin*
Furniture Store.

• Il has been several years since we were
able to offer such a wonderful opportunity to
secure good furniture cheap.

• We have not the space here to fully enum­
erate the many wonderful bargains that can
be secured from our store during opening
sale week.
s

• Goods may be purchased during sale week
and for a small payment, can be held by us
until customer is ready for them.

FLOOR COVERINGS
WE ARE OFFERING SOME HANDSOME RUGS DURING THIS SALE
AT WONDERFULLY LOW PRICES ! Come in and Look Them Over !

$24.00 value Tapestry Brussels Rug at only

$14.85

$49.00 value American Oriental Rug, at only__ $34.50
$64.00 Genuine Wilton Velvet Rug at only

___ $49.00

$29.00 value Axminster Rug, during sale week, at only________ $1^.95
(THE ABOVE SIZES ARE ALL 9x12)

Genuine Armstrong Printed Linoleums in the 12 ft. width, some
patterns as low as . _ _______________________ per square yard, 92c
A profusion of felt base in the 9x 12 sizes to select from at $4.95 to $6.95

Some exceptionally good patterns of "felt base" goods, sq. yd. only 39c
It won't cost much to cover your kitchen with some o) these handsome /nilterns!

The Olee Cluba of Freeport High
LENT CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Cheney arid
FREEPORT.
daughter Donna of Howell spent school under the direction of Mrs.
Stuart Hammond spent Sunday
fLast Week's Letter.
I We have been aiked repeatedly the week end here the guests of Walters, will present an Easier can- with his cousins. Dale and Ken­
neth Cook of Plainwell.
I Where our but week's Items were Mrs. Cheney's parents. Mr. and
M
.
church on Easter Sunday morning
Mrs. Mary Edna Moorhus and
We had them in there on time and Mrs it w. uosen.
nephew. Ronald Francisco, and Mrs.
our guess it that iiome late advtv­ • Hurt L. Brayton ^of Watervliet at 10:30. Everyone invited.
Green was the color scheme and Henry Moorhus of Delton. Mrs Is­
Using crowded it out. We are sorry was a week end guest of his brothIrish the program theme fq- the bell Van Hout and daughter, Mary
"
I this happens ao often but it ts nolh- ■ er. Frank D. Brayton______
P. F. F gathering at the M. E. Elisabeth, ot Prairieville and Min­
I ing we ere to blame for In lhe least
Orno ,
We
understand
that
—
church basement last Tuesday eve­ nie Hall and Georgia Hammond all ‘
We re doing our part
Knowles and family are moving to
John pish received thc rad news Battle creek where he has been ning. Following lhe pot luck supper. spent Friday P. M. with Mrs, Lura
Saturday evening of lhe death that transferred
by
the
Consumers a reading. Mrs. Victor Sisson sang Francisco/
Mrs. Susie Francisco ot Battle
day of his sister. Mrs. M A. Pryor Power Co.
a solo, and Miss Ruth Wheeler Creek spent lhe past week with her
of Deerfield. Mich., following a long
Herbert Kunde Is now employed
lllnew. Mrs
Pryor, thc former in the office of the Chevrolet,' played a violin solo. The address of son Lyle and family.
&gt; the evening was given by Rev.
Mrs. Mary Mellon of Kalamazoo
Helen pish, was 79 years of age Agency at lonla.
Glenn Frye, pastor of lhe First spent Sunday night and Monday
und spent her early year* in tills
The Founder's Day Service of th?
community. Funeral -ervices were W. F. M. S. held Sunday evening Methodist church ut lensing. whose wllh Mr und Mrs Lawrence Hain. wit and humor only added to the mond. Miss Edna Rice and John
held on Tuesday afternoon.
at lhe M E church, although not
The newly elected 0meets of the so largely attended, was enjoyed by Impressiveness ot his message Mr ! Lamphecr of Plainwell were Friday
W. M A. of tile U. B. church an* those who did Attend. A solo by Frye is a very talented speaker and1 evening visitors at lhe same home.
Robert Steele went to work at the
President. Mrs. Emma Anderson; Mrs, Victor Sisson, a duet by Mrs during the afternoon spoke twice al•
Vice-President. Mrs. Ida Fox; Sec­ ; Sisson and Mrs. L. B. Lester, and the schoolhouse, once addressing[ Fuller and sons factory in Kalahv Mr, ,he bO5"1 and ,he Wond addreM1 mazoo. Wednesday.
retary. Mrs Sarah Walton; Treas­ a candle lighting. service
service
byi.L
Mrs.
S
«&gt;»«*
lhe «lrU ,{e abo hc,d1
Mrs. Cora Train, who spent the
urer. Mrs Gladys Dipp. The Branch Lester and seven iwirkn
j-_._
1 of conferences with several of Uie
’ past winter wilh her mother nnd
meeting of the society will be held lowed by stereopticon '"views of
sister. Mrs Emma An.ton.and Lena
। at Gaines April 21. 22 and 23 and South America and the song. "I young people.
Graham, returned lo her home qt
I Mrs. Anderson was elected as delr- gave my life for thee" In pictures, I
PLEASANT VALLEY.
Richland Junction, recently.
i gate, with Mrs Sarah wultun and made up the programmer Die scrv- |
The Lent Sunshine Club held at
Mrs Loma Fish ns alternates. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Shirley 3tad el and1 the home of Georgia Hammond
Wheeler of Woodbury is president
Dick Moulton of Muskegon spent
---------- j March 19 was well attended. 12
and the special workers at lhe Sunday here with his sister. Mrs. family of Mulliken spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Miller members and 5 visitors being pres­
Branch will be Rev. and Mrs. C E. Roy Nagler. and family.
Carlson, missionaries from Africa.
The Senior play. -Spooky Tav­ and family.---------------------------------------- lent. The next meeting will be with
Mr. and Mrs Gall Lightfoot have ern." given at I. O. O. F. hall lost
Mlu Lillian Leyrer of Maple Mrs Anna Bocrman
purchased the Brechclsen estate, Thursday and Friday evening, drew Rapids visited al lhe H- W. Geiger
The sick al Earl carpenter's are
lhe house on Cherry street recent­ a packed house both nights. The home over lhe week end.
1 *" 0,1 the gain.
ly occupied by Orno Knowles and parts were unusually well acted, and ' Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Brake enterMrs. dare Thomas expects to go
family. They will take possession lhe fact that some of them were I talned Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John this Saturday tor her operation. We
April 1.
difficult reflects much credit upon E Brake and family. Mr. and Mrs. all wish her a very successful and
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tabbcrcr and the members of the cast and those Elwood Brake and family of lonla. speedy recovery
nephew Keith, visited from Satur- who directed the lehearsals
and
Wc were all very sorry to hear of
...
u Duane Gray and Grace Orlmes
-----I lhe serious illness of Baby Gerald
j day until Monday wilh their broth­
Mrs Della Perkins of Grand Rap- at Lake Odessa,
. er and father. Hollis Tabbercr and ids was a Freeport caller last Sat-1 Mrs. Lester Stuart of South Bos- Walker of Richland Junction
I family at Kingsley
urday.
ton. Mrs. Norman Stuart of Clarks' Mr. and Mrs
Frank Martin
PLEASANT VALLEY.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rosenberg- ville and Mrs. Elmer Scott helped
Beulah Kime entertained tha
&lt;Oorrene Erb) of Gfand Rapids were er made a business trip to Elmdale Mrs. Garfield at quilting, Thursday
Junior class of Clarksville High
in attendance at "Spooky Tavern" Monday evening.
afternoon.
--------- —
la:.’. Friday evening.
Plans have been completed for I Russell Taylor of Berlin and Har­ school to a "sugar of!" party Friday
Andrew Blough and family, who a junior church at the M. E old Rlttcnger of near Lowell with night.
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Benedict
.. have been living on the Mrs. Ly­ church each Sunday morning be­ their families spent Sunday with
dia Karcber farm in Bowne. have ginning. April 5. during the hour of । theirparenls. Mr. and Mrs. Harley and baby from Ionia spent Sunday
wllh her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Her­
moved to Shipshewana. Ind Elmer the morning service. The children 1
Shaller and family are moving onto will meet wilh Ute regular congre­
Vcre Howelette nnd family of bert Geiger and family.
Mrs. Karcher's farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hooper. Mr.
gation for lhe opening service, and Clarksville spent Sunday evening
Mrs. Don Karchcr went to Aim before the sermon will go to Hie with Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Slater. and Mrs. Wesley Kime and Vem.
Arbor Inst week where she en­ basement where Mrs. H S. Wedel
Mr and Mrs. Clarence Foreman Gordon Ritter and Joe Lehman and
tered the clinic. Mrs. Karcher has will be in charge. Mrs Wedel is ex­ and children of Woodland spent_____
Ethel Gray
Sunday
___ , spent*
------ --------. wilh
------ Mr.
been in poor health al! winter
perienced in this work and you are Sunday wllh her parents. Mr and “nd Mrs. Will Huljlberger The oc‘
caslon ----1
**
”
--------- Mrs S L Peckham ot Lake Odes­ urged to bring your children to Mrs. Lester Miller.
Mra
HullibergcFs
sa suflered a light stroke last Tues- church.
1
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Preston and birthday.
day morning. affecting her throat
Word from Mrs. Edd. Hall states Eldlene spent Friday in Grand
Dcrward Strong of Clarksville
spent from Friday night until Mon­
quite seriously. Local relatives vis- that she Is working on a farm near Rapids.
with
his cousirj
ited her on Wednesday und found the home of her daughter near Lake ; Roy Karffinnn nnd family of near day morning
her in much better condition than Odessa nnd is well. She sends; Clarksville. Mr und Mrs. Sheldon Vaughn Geiger
they expected, which we are all I greetings to her many Freeport j Mcssecar and baby spent Sunday at
Mr. and Mrs. Don Slowln.s and
Grayden stayed at the John Brake
home Saturday night and Sunday
while Mr. and Mrs Brake visited
their daughter Mrs. Art Van Allsburg.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Fay Peebles. Mrs.
Anna Coleman. Frances Scott of
Grand Rapids and Mr and Mrs.
Garfield Sinter and. Elwln spent
Sunday at lhe Elmer Scott home
Mrs Lizzie Reamer of Lake Odes­
sa spctit a few days lhe past week
at the Clayton Mole home
Virginia Ann Shutter of Bowne
spent Wednesday afternoon wllh
Mrs. Elmer Scott.
&gt; Visitors ut tho Cecil Preston
J home Sunday were Mr and Mrs.
John Kellar and, daughters. Eldlene
1 Preston of Grand Rapids. Merle
I Preston and family of Wayland.
Mrs. Ben Alderink and Anna of
Bowne Center.
Mr. nnd Mrs Emery Kime assist­
ed Mr. nnd Mrs Ray Darby of Pin­
hook wllh their butchering Thurs­
day.
Don't forget thc W m A al the
home of Mrs. Don Slowins of South
Boston. Everyone cordially invited.
The day April 12lh.

Dining Room Suites
and Breakfast Suites
If you have beeen wauling a new dining
room suite, and felt that you could nut
afford it. come in and choose one dur­
ing our opening sale week at a price that
you can afford to pay.
A beautiful walnut fin­
ished eight-piece din­
ing room suite, for­
merly priced at $69.00
—now going for only

A handsome 8-piece
walnut suite, original­
ly priced at $119.00—
going ot only

49’
’89=

Several HANDSOME BREAKFAST $4 A.95
SUITES at prices as low as—
I U

WE ARE ESPECIALLY PROUD of OUR LINE of WELL MADE

ALL ESPECIALLY MARKED DOWN FOR THIS SALE!

Wc ore offering o good sized tapes­
try covered, two-piece living room
suite that was a good buy ot
$39.00, NOW ONLY—

Other Suites in Curled Mohair, Ribbed Mohair and Mohair
Friexe. none in the line over $89.00.

Wc are also offering Mattresses, Beds and
Bedding ot a Big Reduction in Price.
A FULL SIZED Cotton and Cotton Felted
Mattress, worth at least $10.95,
$f* QE
for this sale at only____________ D«wv
A SIMMONS Inner Spring Mat- $4 A QF
tress for os low os________ I D«vv

Box Springs and Inner Spring $4 A QF
Mattresses for os low as______
I Uivv

We have a Bid HANDSOME LINE of BEDROOM SUITES wo arc offering

’ at REAL BARGAIN PRICES !
Good walnut finished three-piece Bedroom Suites for as low as ___$29.95
Worth at least $49.00. Other Fine Suites up to $89.00
Living Room Tables, Cedar Chests, Odd Dressers, Occasional and Rocking
Chairs in great profusion, all marked especially low for our big opening sale
CREDIT TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED

Reinforcements from Michigan

LIVING ROOM SUITES

OPEN EVENINGS FQR YOUR ACCOMMODATION

Miller Furniture Co.

rn

I V n IUAn

Flood waters rage . . . darns break
... water stands ten feet deep in the
business section of a great city.

Local telephone circuits arc flooded
and temporarily damaged. The
Bell System mobilizes. From neigh­
boring companies — including
Michigan—come squads of trained
and tested telephone men. Thc Bell
expeditionary forces land—and in
a short time they arc able to echo
that famed message of thc Marines:
’’The situation is well in hand.”
Only onc tiling made this pos­
sible. That is the fact that Bell
System practices and equipment arc
standard the country over. Con­
sequently, when the Bell System
mobilizes in an emergency, it is not
necessary for reinforcements from
other companies to ask: "What
kind of equipment is it?” They
merely say: "Where is it?” and go
quietly and efficiently to work on
familiar ground. This is true in f

MICHIGAN BELL

Pittsburgh today wljgje theMichigan
Bell Telephone Company *is con­
tributing part of thc emergency force.
It was true in Michigan—in 1922 and
1929 — when reinforcements from
other Bell System companies came
here to aid in thc work of restoring
communications temporarily de­
stroyed by thc sleet storms of those
yearn. Without a nation-wide force
of systematically trained men, with­
out standard equipment in every
associated company, some of the
things which Bell men have accom­
plished swiftly as part of their
routine duties would have caused
confusion and endless delay.
Whenever you lift a BellTclephone
receiver, tremendous resources in
men, organization and equipment
arc at your command. And there
are times when it is impossible to
measure the value of telephone
service except in terms of life
\ and death.

TELEPHONE

CO

DOWUNG.
The last meeting of lhe Dowling
Extension group will be in the
1 church .basement on Wednesday
April 8. It will be on all day meet­
ing Bring dresses completed for
scoring. Election of officers will lake
l place at that time The putfllc is
invited.
Pre-Easter evening services will
be held al the church beginning
Monday evening and continuing
this week and next with the cxcepI tlon of Saturday evenings, to which
all have a special Invitation.
! The Townsend meeting will be
[ held on Tuesday evening, April 14.
with a good speaker in attendance
at Dowling church.
Miss Patty Newton of Battle
Creek has been the guest of her
grandmother. Mrs. Lois Altman for
several days.
.. Mrs Anna Pierce left Sunday for
■ Hastings where she has employ­
ment. Mrs. Pierce has been with her
j son and family for several weeks.
Mr and Mrs. Norton Slocum and
children and Mrs Etta Stanton and
| father spent Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs Irving Fisher near Vcrmontville. Mr. Ftaher is sUU an invalid
with not much change In hh condl| tlon.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Russel Wilson of
1 Battle Creek have purchased lhe
farm of Mrs o W. Fry and have
' moved here and are nicely settled.
Mrs. Melissa Tinkler?- Mrs. Mana
Jeffrey and daughter and husband
from Elsie. Mr. and Mrs. James
Weeks and daughter from Bellevue
were Sunday visitors at Roy Em­
mons.

CARLTON. CENTER.
Last Week’s Iztter.
There was a miscellaneous shower
given Saturday evening In honor of
: Mr. and Mrs. Evan Fuller of Lowell,
■ former residents of Carlton, whose
home recently burned. They were
the recipients of may useful gifts
from their friends. Refreshment1!
were served and a pleasant social
evening was spent.
Rev. pern Wheeler preached an­
other fine sermon Sunday. You are
invited. to come next Sunday and
enjoy the service with us. The
young people are meeting each week
again now for choir practice. This
Monday evening they met with Miss
Wheeler qt Freeport.
Elmer Marlow was taken to Pen­
nock hospital Friday afternoon to
1 receive treatment for arthritis and
I diabetes.
Mrs. Calvin Steffey and Utile son
' of near Kalamazoo spent most of
last week with Iter parents. Mr. and
Mrs. John Usborne.
Mr and Mrs Frank Hosmer en­
tertained the latter's daughter and
family from Grand Rapid* over lhe
week end.
I

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

THE GREAT DESER
BLOSSOMS OUT

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1936

16 PAGES
SERIOUS ACCIDENT
NEAR HICKORY CORNERS
Edward Bailey Jumps From
j
Hay Stack—Impaled On
j
Fork Handle

|U ATI ID Al PIC UTDC
||fl I UllflL
-------bfld flLIlL

■T JUNE 1ST
-----------

Marte"

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

EASTER MESSAGE TO BE BROUG
IN SONG AND SERMON ON SUNDA

| Edward Bolley, who Ilves on the WILL EFFECT A SAVING
Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson
(Mary, Flower form two miles south
OF ABOUT THIRTY
Eddy In "Rose
Marie." That's
। of Hirkory Comers, suffered a reri-'
| enough to draw packed houses at
DEMOCRATS HAVE DIN­
PER OENT
ous accident and at this writing I*1
the Strand Wednesday. Thursday.
| in a critical condition at Borgcss
NER AND PROGRAM
1 Friday next week (the 15th. |6th
hospital. Kalamazoo. He accldentai; and 17th).
THE BEAUTY OF WHICH ' ly Impaled himself on a pitch fork HEATING VALUE TWICE
Dr. John Wooton Served as
MANUFACTURED GAS njh
DEFIES
DESCRIPTION |Won
handle Hc
at his
Thursday
afterWki
IS.Q wuuuniriiuiv
ua.home
worklng
Bround
hls
Toaatmaster—Kim Big­
------------- "Rose Marie. I Love You." 'The In­
bam and had placed a pitch fork
BARRY WPA PROJECTS
ler Was Speaker
For Miles You Look Over a । against*
Estimate the House Heating dian Love call." "Bong of the
BARRY COUNTY VOTERS
..n„:.^t a stack of hay while hc was
j Mountle*" ■"'*
and many ”
more.
Cost of Thi« Gas Equals
*"«•
NOW EMPLOYING 256
Attorney Kim Bigler was the main
' at work on to|» of the stack. Finish­
Sea of Flowers of All
I Again Sergeant Bruce meets and
DECISIVELY DEFEAT
speaker at the Democratic dinner
ing his work there, he Jumped from
falls in love with Ross Marie, in
Coal at $10 a Ton
Hues and Colors
! the stack, a distance of about ten |
PROPOSITION
At th* various churches in Has­
held at the Parker House on Wed­ Of That Number 236 Were
the backwoods country of Quebec.
According
to Information
tings toe Resurrection will b* tha
If you were going to hunt for lhe f*®1- and 111 outride Use fork handle.
------------- - -------------------—received
------------ Again their personal duties—hers
Taken From County’s
nesday evening of last week, about
most gorgeous display of flowers which pierced the lower bowel and by O. M Brower. Division Manager
general theme for song and sermon
to save her brother—his to bring “YES” VOTE WAS 1,556,
one hundred attending this enjoy­
that you ever saw in your life, prob- entered the abdomen, carrying part* of Consumers power Company at
Relief
Rolls
on Easter Sunday, with sunrise
him to Justice—run counter to their
able gathering. He discussed Ute
‘
ably about the last place on earth of the clothing and underwear with Hastings. Natural Gas Service will love. The crashing climax of this
There are 256 persons employed services at the Methodist. Baptist
“NO” VOTE WAS 2,547 present splendid condition of lhe
be
partially «r«rted
started in Ha.tinw.
Hastings,
that you would look would be way • R He
was rushed to Borges*
* ™»rtiailv
ilO5- ,M
on WPA projects in Barry county, and Pint United Brethren church**.
famous story will stay in your
------------city's finances, also spoke on naabout June 1st and complete service
Following are the programs that
out on the desert region of our pitel for treatment,
of whom 236 were taken from the
memory
for
a
long
lime.
Only Three of Twenty.Five
&gt;W«h»u.
will be had during that month, al­
western country. With reason one I
----------- - —-- -------------------Excellent in featured roles are
_
_
.
An
An explanation
explanation of the
------national
— re­ county's relief rolls. Twelve of the will be rendered in the Hastings
though nt the start a mixture of
would naturally look upon these'
Precincts Favored Ab­
porters' plan was given by Mrs. E. employed were not on relief, and churches on Easter Sunday, and
manufactured and natural gas will James Stewart. Reginald Owen.
the
special Holy Week services as
great barren stretches os the very ’
eight
are
employed
on
youth
projUna O'Connor, and the famous
J. Pratt, member of the state cen-, • .
. . .
stract Proposal
. be delivered through the mains.
acme of everything that Is hot. dry.!
well:
tral committee. Lewi* Hine gave two ,
, .. „ ,
I It is expected that the changeover dancer Ollda Gray.
dull and uninteresting. Here is
The effort to force the Barry pleasing clarinet numbers, accomBarry ““"‘F b In the Kalamazoo
of customer's equipment jvlll take
where you would make another!
county board of supervisors to , pa
niea oy
,
»A district,
district. in
In which the number
Holy weex senr.ce*—Saturday,
ponied
by Mrs
Mrs. vL. F
P. MBU
Mau*.
iwpA
about 30 days to complete and these |
relief declined seven per cent tn I confeaatan at 3:30 to 3:30 and 7:30
guess that would be wrong During
‘*"“h 'h“
■"£ ln;| Wk&gt; D-Vto. chllrmwn p( u&gt;,
changes for the ordinary domestic '
vestment in
in a
a competitive
competitive abstract
abstract'1 r
cli.t7
the rainy reason of Spring old
vestment
v 1co^*tt^,.■ ^‘e^ded‘Ind "intro- March? The reduction in" the num- j to
and commercial appliances will be
, county
,
j
Holy Thursday: Holy
Mother Nature puts on the most
business failed mlrerably, as we duced the toainna*ter Dr J A brr 011
in Barry
tea
1
!
lve
_^fL*.
M
iWooton.
chairmano7
’
the^
county
......
*
—
---------------1
without cost to the customer.1
1------ - — —»—"■ r— —;— - । wooum. cnatrman 01 me county "ltie above that figure.
^au and
gorgeous flower show" on our west- POSITIVE REACTORS BE- made
Natural Ga* has approximately j
summary of the vote by precinct*. I commlUce Those
charg&lt;, of
; There are eight WPA project* In 1 8:00.
em desert* that you ever saw. No i
■ Committee. Those in charge of the
twice the heating value of manuING X-RAYED AT^PENone can do Justice to its beauty, j
1 showing that a total of 1^56 elec- dinner and program were L F 1 operation In this county, and' Good Friday: Maas &lt;
Lelured
and l&lt; u expwud Ui»l;
------------I ton"
riwad’Uie
propoiin.’.hue
tor* favored
the nroDosltlon.
while Maus. Walter ...
either in words or pictures. .It is so
women are employed ‘
who' '' sanctified at 8:00; Way of th* Croat
NOCK HOSPITAL
Wallace. Mrs. Pratt'1 twelve women
I!',!
1 about two-thibdb or. m
oPPo«d.
.were on relief.
I At Jj30.
gorgeous, so beautiful, so extensive,
and Mrs. A. Lynn Brown.
..n,
,
rled lb;ty
cen, Qf the
cut aha»L
about in hall
half &lt;n
to In
do th.
the same
that it is almost beyond comprehen-1
_ _
_
. The government appropriation for I Holy Saturday; Maas and Holy
city's voters oabt
amount
of
cooking,
water
healing,
1
4.103
votes
cast
would
be
required.
tire.Barry county WPA program was ' Communion at 8:00.
aion. It Is an exhibition of color over 1 PLATES TO BE SENT TO
etc.,
as
at
present.
? 8196.461. of which there has already 1 Easter Rundav Masaaa at
great spaces, that you actually have 1
Instead there was a majority of 991 TWO ARE HURT WHEN
THEIR BALLOTS
The monthly rates for Natural
to see to appreciate. If you are I
DETROIT FOR RE-CHECK
। against the proposition.
been allotted 8177.132.
Qus will be as follows:
TWO CARS CRASH ON 43
i Only three townships favored this
ever tn California when the Derert
1 The male choir will sing the 8:00
PARTY LINES WERE
Immediate Rate.
is in bloom, don't miss aeclng it if Dr. Harkness Believes Cam। large Investment of taxpayers'
First 300 cu. ft.—75 net.
i Florence Trelb.
you can jmsslbly help It. or you will
IGNORED
BY
VOTERS
mone
y;
Carlton,
carried
by
10
maIUIIUIILU Ol VVILHQ JorUy. M#ple Orove wherc U caf. AcMUeK^r;rodo^.Ppaign Important to Health
Next 1.700 cu. ft.—&lt;1.50 net per M-1
i Vldl Aquam.
miss one of the grandest scenes this
old planet presents. I had heard of
I Mas* of St. Basil—Julua Brazil.
Mo™- T
lied by 17; and Rutland, which
Work Here
Ail over 5.000 cu. ft.— 85 net per M Mayor Leonard Re-elected
rol|ed up 60 mujortty for it. In the
Regina Coell—Labat.
the surpassing beauty of the deiert
Residence
On Wednesday the work of taking
Objective
Rate.
| Organ Selection—Fidelia Zlitierfollowing the rainy season, but was X-ray pictures of the positive tu­
Mrs. Loppenthien Chosen
other 22 precinct* there was a nearA serious automobile accident'
First, 300 cu. ft.—.75 net.
1 bart.
not prepared for this indescribable berculosis reactors was begun at
&lt;.«
: ly two to one vote against It.
happened Friday afternoon on M-43
as
City
Treasurer
|
Unquestionably
the
legislature
of
I Oh! Blessed Mom—R. M. Stultz.
panorama. &amp;o beautiful that it Pennock hospital by the Barry
of this city, at the crown of
Next 3.500 cu. ft —.75 net
. .. per M
The election in this city on Mon-1 the state will some day be called up- , west
the'hHl
recmed to transcend anything that County Health Unit. It will be re­
NOMINATED
BUT
Prwbytertan church.
&gt; the hill near William Gorham s NINE
All over 5D00 cu. ft.~
7
uu
wlvll MUWUW
was of this earth. The extent and called that the skin tests were given
in
will
of
ONE TICKET AT THEIR
It is expected that the savings to I a two-thirds vote, the total on ma- i vide a simpler and less expensive home
“■ Rutland,
■&gt;“* McKibben
mm.™.
« ,
the variety of Nature's great "flower to school children a short time ago
Orangeville
township,
was
driving
iUCTJwUlnel«.U.t»«30l»rc«&gt;tlyOT
in,„ iht p^eni me&lt;iwTor
CAUCUSES
1 ices at the Presbyterian church.
•how"
°" u» toe", depeni, „
„„„„
u
‘
*•■
“
’
’
•**•
i
w*y
than
the
present
method
of
u
-esl
on
the
pavement
and
was
to discover cases of tuberculosis. as compared to their present costs. |
ignored
nolltics.
Mr.
titles to
real
When
.^
nd the turn At ih»
.It Is anticipated that there will -j Leonard
nie voters
voters
Ignored for
politics.
Mr. showing
showing
real estato
estate.
When
.ba... .l0hill
make
was luuuuig
running
his ivurin
fourth
that nine
timetitles
shallto
come,
as
It win.
will,
ourxof
a team drawing'a land II CPMCQT QU ITU IQ
Il I* anticipated that there will I
wiU&gt;
ivr &lt;■»
, uiav
man
connr.
■*
11
our
| Processional—“OnwartL Christian
' o
f l, ,** happened I ,nd pnort wlu
mwle w
c,„
be.■ considerable increase in use of ■ term.
term. He
Hc publicly
publicly announced that county.
county, If
if this proposition had car- o
nfr hav’was”
I ERNEST SMITH IS
. Soldiers"—No. 374.
ex- ■K.-sif xs?
________
CHOSEN IN CASTLETON ,B“"u
may result.
with the greatest rainfall that had
(Van Denman).
Mr. Douglas, assistant to Dr.
come to them in the last quarter of Douglas of the Herman Kieffer hos­
Call to Worship—Psalm No. 100.
^.Ku^dX^^
Co. Supervisors Ar.
a century. Il recmed just ns though pital in Detroit, came to Hastings
Doxology and Invocalion.
there parched areas decided to ex­ Wednesday to take these X-ray
Easter Hymn No. 244 “Jan
Fifteen Republicans to
press their appreciation of this un­ pictures. Assisting him arc Miss
Christ is Risen Today.'•
Five Democrats
strlv*n to look after cast. A great majority of the peo- Mvemen? m ?he
1
usual amount of moisture by putting Beatrice Blossom. superintendent of and fuel oil al 6c per gallon and the Ule -mnerResponsive
Reading — 8e lectio
cost Of installing the ---------neccssyy ----heal- . ,,
the
city,. as Mr.. pic
pie oo
do not
not unoerstana
understand me
the aostract
abstract , d(
Snt
‘
lc mteresu of the tlvz
.nt
, Not niucii
much uncrvsi
interest was evmcutcu
eviderfbed , Np.
no. n
on a floral display that would be Pennock hospital and Miss Anne ,— ----------17 in t-saitcr.
Psalter.
Is Leonard,
rMn&gt;n« ho*.
u-w Under there circum-. business. Forte In ___
.u to it were 1 Riding
.
Ing burner and control equipment is
regard
with MeKihhen wem Mr ln lhe lo'‘"n5hlP elections on Mon-1 Gloria Patti.
Incomparable. We doubt If any­
Perry.
X-ray
technician.
Dr. ordiitarily leu than 8150 00 com- Hance. It U not surprising that misrepresented by some of the ।
™ Ha Je^f c^vertJiie day. In fact. iA nine of them only
Scripture Le-on, Saint John.
where on this earth there is any­ Douglas is recognized n* one of the
ni u
uunus,.
I। Mayor
tried to
the counhL,ther1 rvin.w
Republican Ucket was noml- chapter twenty.
thing that will begin io compare
.. .. &lt;1
„
,,,
ui,
“»&gt;or Leonard
ikeonara was
was succwaful.
succeasiui. He
He .। workers
workers who
wno triea
to gel
gel the
coun­ 1 and Mr«
outstanding X-ray technicians In
Full details will be oubllshed
&lt;&lt; .
Ai*)?f
‘a.a4rs- Honeys brother. Donald. ‘
published la- :i jj
a ^nrirrr
worker .nri
and hs.
has always been ty Into ,s».
this project. «...
But .1
they
did
with It ill beauty, in variety, or In the state and Barry county is for­
ter.
_ o
j
•—j &gt;
*•
___ ■ i
extern.
tunate In having him connected
not surprising that he had a good pie of Barry county to Invest In . was bruU^T buTnot seriouliv1 hSn the board of supervisors. It still re­
The fine city of Bakersfield is al­ with this work. Mr. Douglas will also
Anthem—"Alleluia! The Strife la
'majority. His opponent. Dr. Lock- this business, in which the taxpay- r^nato «Offered . Sh LZi, malnlng fifteen Republicans to five O'er." (Adams).
most at the edge of the Desert, and
consult with the Health Unit and KENT CO. SUIT AGAINST
। wood, paid no attention to the con- ers look all the chances to tore.! X w?th Mr
100 miles or so from Lqs Angeles.
Democrats. They are us follows:
Reception of Members, Baptism
daddv nn mcuicccn wooa- paia no “llc,ulon 10 u,c conthe doctors of the city in regard to
dAKKi LU. UloMlootU lest, did no personal work and un­
Near thl* cliy the desert more than
ol
Infant*. Offertory.
health measures in the county.
------------doubtedly realizes that he is a good
did Itself proud In the way of a
Th,. feared that
a.., It
i&lt; .meant juatj
,u„tr.d
Baltimore—Leon Moon, D.
They
After these pictures are taken the
better off financially than he another political Job. The county I the head and face and was badly
' Flower show" so we set out to ree plates will be sent to Detroit and! Suit Was to Collect Weight
'John prindel Scott&gt;.
It. We went by way of lhe beautiful
Carlton—John Usbome, D.
Tnv Pairl
W0Uld h,VC b**n h&lt;d hC bMn IUC' very properly voted It down. Fol­ bruised. It Is thought he also has a
checked by a technician, later by•
Tax Paid Barry Co. by
icessfui. The vote was Leonard. 888; lowing is the vote by precincts:
(Continued on page 5. Section Two)
Castleton—Ernest G. Smith. R.
Life.'
broken knee cap. Mr. Beisel and Mr.
Dr. Douglas and then forwarded to
'
Kent Oo. Oar Owners
Lockwood. 536.
Hastings Twp—John C. Lipkey.
Yes
No
Dr. Stuart Pritchard. Battle Creek,
McKibben escaped without serious
'
iim. aan
For treasurer. Mrs. Jessie Loppen­
Assyria
10
injury.
AU
were
taken
to
Pennock
head
of
the
W.
K.
Kellogg
Founda
­
MARCEL EVALET
Hope—Bernard DeOolia. R.
Baltimore
151
is Christ Risen!
tion. So three Interpretations of the
hospital. Mr. McKibben.
Jesse
In a waUt
walk,' rcce,vlna
receiving L006
1,006 vot
votes
to
«* 10
Irving—Wm. McCann, R.
Barry—1
(Continued on page six)
ATTACKED BY BULL plates will be made before the find­. others, also the road commission of •*
Haney and Donald and Mr. Beisel
her opponent's 410, a majority of
Johnstown—Ferd Stevens. R.
Barry—2 .................
10
ings are given to the persons Inter­ each county, were sued by the
had their Injuries treated but were
595.
Carlton
Maple
Grove
—
John
Martens.
R.
not obliged to remain. Mrs. Haney
Enraged Animal Also Knock­ ested. Only the ones who are inter­ county of Kent and the road comRECEIVES
HONOR AT
The
contest
was
nearer
even
Orangeville
—
Bert
Brown.
R.
Castleton
—
1
146
ested will be given ahy Information। mission of that county. The com­
and Mr. Fleming were so badly hurt
for member of board of review.
Prairieville—Otis Boulter, R.
Castleton—2
ed Tom Fingleton to
134
CAMP FIRE COUNCIL
that they were kept at the hospital
and they will be In turn recom- plaint alleged that salesmen repre­
Henry Wellman. Republican, re­
Rutland—Moses W. Stutz. R.
Hastings
for treatment. The front* of both
। mended to present the case to their renting the makers of International
the Ground
Thornapple—Julian Pott*. D.
Hope
156
1 trucks had sold trucks to each of ceived 819; Walter Wallace, Demo­
cars were smashed.
physician.
National Preaident Lester
Marcel Evalet and Tom Fingleton
crat. 583, a majority of 236 for Well­
Inpng—1
Woodland—Glenn Wotrlng. R.
Dr. Robert B. Harkness reports1 these counties, promising each to
Wednesday—Mrs. Haney has left
had an unhappy experience on
Yankee
Springs—Albert
L.
Irving—3
Scott in Barry and Cal­
। get weight taxes enough from point* man. Supervisor Clyde Wilcox, first
the hospital and the condition of
Monday they would not like to re­ both students and adults have been outside the respective counties to and fourth wards, was unopposed
Johnstown
Graves.
R.
t
. discovered as a result of this counMr. Fleming is favorable.
houn Counties
peat.
Hasting* City — Mayor Cha*.
Maple Grove
45
cover the cost of the trucks. The and received 610 voles. Supervisor
Th. two mrn «... l.ndlnB . Hol-1
'‘.n?
A* an opening event of the Camp
L
R.
Glasgow,
second
and
third
Orangeville
Leonard.
D.
24
ties children In the neighborhood, salesmen delivered the goods. The
stein bull from the Evalet place to
City. 1-4 Wards—Clyde WUcox, R. Fire Silver Jubilee, toe Michigan
“SERVANT IN HOUSE”
Prairieville
complaint
alleged that trucking wards, was also without opposition.
organization*
art being honored
the Fingleton farm, when the ani­ showed positive signs of tubercu­
City. 2-3 wards—L. R. Glasgow.
Rutland
51
companies, which should rightfully He received 364 votes.
CAST NOW COMPLETE
with a visit from the national prul*
mal turned on them. It knocked losis. No reason could be discovered
Tho Republicans elected three
Thomapple
103
have been registered in Kent coun­
■valet down, gored him on the face and then later It was found that
aidermen. Arthur Haven. RepubPres, of Council—W. A. Schader, dent. Uster Scott.
Woodland ................ 01
IM
With Director L. E- Barnett draft­
ty. were registered and paid weight
someone
In
the
family
had
positive
The Barry and Calhoun County
and badly bruised him. and might
Yankee Springs ...
taxes in these outside counties.'i llcan won in the first ward by 110
ed into the role of The Bishop, the R.
have killed him but a rope got tuberculosis, but the case had never
Below are given the result* of Council of Camp Fire Olrla made
Hastings City
Kent county and Its road commis­ majority; Fred Pierson. Democrat,
Hastings Civic Players have com­
caught around the bull's leg throw­ been reported. So Dr. Harkness feels
First ward
151
sion. therefore, sued to recover these 'second ward, had 33 majority; Har­
pleted the cast for -The Servant in the various township elections:
their annual Council meeting, held
ing It. so Evalet escaped. The ani­ that the results of these X-ray pic­
ry Miller. Republican, unopposed in
Second
ward
—
1
...
157
the House." major production to be
mat also knocked Fingleton to the tures and the general campaign are weight taxes, which ^they claimed the third ward received 172 voles.
Republican—Supervisor. Wm. C.
were wrongfully paid and also to !
presented in Central auditorium
tie Creek on Monday
ground but he was not injured bad­ of significance and will mean a
There was a lively contest for aider­
Third ward ....
160
here on Thursday and Friday. May Struin; Clerk. Albert E. Jones;
great deal to the future health of prohibit each of the outside coun­ man in the fourth ward. Dr. J. A.
lyTreas., Clare M. Holder; Bd. RevFourth ward—1
70
190
.
lies
from
taking
road
money
in
the
Barry
county
people.
Help came from the Country Club
Wooton was
defeated
by Earl
215
’ future that should be paid to Kent
Rehearsals which have been un­ Myron Tuckerman: Justice. Glen VanBuaklrk, MU* Jannet Michael,
and the enraged beast was finally
Coleman by a 49 majority.
• county.
derway with a partial cast for sev­ Swift; Highway Commr., M. C. Mrs. Joseph Schultz, Mrs. Milo De­
safely lodged in the Fingleton barn, DECIDES THE SUIT
Neither party made a nomination
Total .1556
2547
eral weeks will now go forward with Russell. No contest In Assyria town­ Vries. Mrs. Henry Mulder. Mra.
_ -r- — ,
maner was arguca before
after hard work by the men. The j
constable in the second ward.
Majority against, 991.
TO REPLEVIN STOCK judge Thaddeus Taylor of Grand for
Increased effort. The complete cast ship.
next morning the bull was killed, |
Republican nominees were unop-;
Baltimore.
is as follows:
------------ Rapids. Some amendment was made
Both men consider themselves very
Republican—Supervisor.Lloyd
Holds for Plaintiff in Case of to the original, and It was expected posed in the first and third wards,
Mason, a butler—Wallace Osborn.
Miss Michael was honored at thia
fortunate.
. i
A PROCLAMATION.
in the fourth ward Ed. Downs Re­
Gaskill. 87; Clerk. Orlle Fisher. 137.
there would be a trial of the case
The Bishop—L. E. Barnett
Mrs. Martin Tinkler vs.
publican won over Lancaster by a
majority. 23; Treas , Bert Scott, 95; meeting as she was awarded a WaInasmuch as Friday. April 10.
The Vicar—Orville Sayles.
. some time this year.
DECINQUENT TAXES
majority of 125.
is Good Friday. I hereby request 1 Auntie, wife of the vicar—Cleone justice. Albert Brill. 108; Highway
the
Sheriff
i Wednesday morning Prosecuting
BEING PAID. ! Judge McPeek filed his opinion in Attorney Archie McDonald repreThe new city council consist* of
Commr, Floyd Garrison. 126. ma­
that all business In the dty of
Van Houten.
The lax sales for Barry county, the case of Mrs Martin Tinkler vs. anting Barry county in this case. the mayor and the four aidermen
Hastings be suspended tor three
Mary, the vicar's niece—Irma Wa­ jority. 1; Bd. Rev., Chas. Van
mentioned above, three of whom
advert Iter! tn take place In Moy. arc
hours, from twelve noon till
Vrahken. 121.
ters.
-------------------------------r word that
Sheriff Jay Btakney. Il grew out of *•
’ •«rp[‘*rtJ" "***»«
that were reelected, and the hold-overs,
bringing in a lot of delinquent texes a levy on some live stock made by the suit had--------Democrat — Supervisor.
Ixwn seller at camp Kitannlwa, the Camp
been —
dismissed
in the
Rogers, a page boy—Burr Den­
'
to the county treasurer. liie amount
Archie Relckord. first ward; Frank
Moon, fH, majority. 84; Clerk, Roy Fire Olrla’ camp at Clear lake, for
that each one attend the chnrch
nison.
: Kent county court without prej­
may not equal the sums received the sheriff in the case of Lechlelt-: udice. and that the complainant will Hoonan In the second; John Welsservice of their choice daring
Robert, a gentleman of necessary Rice. 114; Trea*. Kenneth Garrett. head counsellor of the Junior Unit.
ner
vs.
Tinkler,
in
which
Judgment
sert
In
the
third
ward,
and
W.
A.
last fall, but will help pay the ex­
156. majority. 61; Justice. Orville
occupation—Tom Myers.
pay the costs of the defendants. It
penses of the county and of the var­ was rendered for Lechleltner. The Is not known why the suit was Bchader in the fourth. They should
Sunday.
A considerable amount of re­ Purcell. 137. majority. 29; Highway
ious taxing districts, and will re­ sheriff levied upon livestock suffl- dropped, although attention was make a good council, and the city
Signed.
search under the direction of Miss Commr., James Powell. 125; Bd. camp activities. She also
move a lot of property from possible clent to cover the Judgment. Mrs. called, when the matter was argued, should expect from them careful
Rev. Frank Van Sycklea, 137. ma­
Charles
H.
Leonard,
Beatrice
Goggins
has
been
neces
­
sale. Al this sole there will be of­ Tinkler claimed ownership of the to certain defects in the proceed­ consideration of the city's Interests.
jority, 6.
Mayor of the City
sary in connection with this play.
fered for sale property on which no property and replevined the sain* ings. It is possible the suit was with­
Barry.
Of Hastings.
At a meeting last week, the board
GOOOD FRIDAY SERVICES.
taxes have been paid for 1933 and by action against the sheriff. The drawn In order to start again in a
Repabllcan — Supervisor. Morse
of directors decided to have the an­
। case was recently heard by the Judge
prior years.
nual year book ready for publication Backus; Clerk, Vernon Webster;
I without a Jury. He last week decided different way. Only the future can estant church holding services on
SPRING
SHOWING
OF
Treas.,
John
J.
Doster; Highway
by April 25. Also the first copy of
determine that.
Good Friday will be the Episcopal,
LAST BROTHERHOOD MEETING. In favor of Mrs. Tinkler on the
b
MEN’S SUITS. • Overture" will soon be out. This Commr . Mason Newton; Justice,
where the usual three hour passion
Here's ybur opportunity to be in­
The final meeting of the Brother­ basts that certain technicalities of
Is a news letter which will give Bert Litts; Bd. Rev, Charles Kah­
REPUBLICAN DISTRICT
the
law
governing
replevin
had
not
service from 12 to 3 will be observed. dividual in your new spring and
hood will be held Monday night,
many interesting facts concerning ler. But one ticket In Barry town­
CONVENTION.
April 20. The entertainment will be been complied with. He gave Mrs. 1 The republican convention for It is always a memorable service.
summer suit. Next Tuesday and the players and the current produc­ ship.
DISMUUD THE CAM.
People are privileged to come Wednesday. April 14 and 15. a spe­ tions.
furnished by the Hastings Civic Tinkler a Judgment for 810 to cover
Carlton.
this congressional district, to choose
Judge McPeek. al a roomi at
and go at the time best suited to cial representative of a well-known
Players, who will present a play at damages and she was also awarded
Republican—No candidate for su­
two delegates to the national con­
that time. The name of the play costs in the case. Replevin actions vention Will be held in Paw Paw, their needs, altho many stay thruout woolen company will be at Al Mc­
pervisor; Clerk. Lawrence Farrell, of circuit court, dismissed the
the entire period. The invitation is Call's tailor shop to help you select GOV. FITZGERALD TO
and other particulars will be given are not pleasant for sheriffs be­
Friday, Apri|J7. at 3 o'clock P. M. extended to all.
next week. The Brotherhood squad cause of so many regulation* and
the style and material exactly suit­
Fay Studt. 54; Highway Com­
Barry county is entitled to 11 dele­
SPEAK AT ALLEGAN tlce.
for that meeting will. also be an­ technicalities in the laws applicable
ed to your type. There is no obliga­
missioner. no candidate; Bd. Rev.,
hi* house vu destroyed by
NO 8TH GRADE EXAMS.
nounced next week. a€ this meeting ° «Kh cases The sheriff in this gates in ttie district convention, who
tion whatever, but you are cordially
Governor Frank D. Fitzgerald will Clyde Tooker. 54.
the officers for the next Brothera bond «**• will be named by the county con­
There will be no call for seventh invited to drop in and inspect the be principal speaker at an AUegan
by employee* of the road
vention
here
next
Tuesday.
en
by
Mr.
Lechlcitner.
hood year will be chosen.
I
Mf- Lechleitner.
and eighth grade examinations of fine line of new spring woolens County Republican banquet to be borne. 104; Clerk, no nominee;
rural school pupils this year A state which will be on display and take held tn the Federated Church. Al- j Treas, Cyrus Shroyer. 85; Highway
A CORRECTION.
J
ATTENDS MEETING.
thl* case, which w«
law has made change* in the for­
(Continued on page five)
Probate judge Stuart clement has mer custom, so that such exami­ advantage of the -experience and legan. Tuesday. April 14. at 6:30
Because of a misunderstanding
been named a member of the Ad­ nation* are not now required. A cer­ craftsmanship of this special rep­ o'clock. Other prominent guest* wiU
the
»e advertisement published in last
•
be; Secretary of State Atwood. Au­
ROTARY CLUB MEETING.
visory Board for the Crippled Chil­ tificate of the rural school teacher resentative.
week's Banner for the Miller Fur­
ditor General O'Hara, and Superin­
At the Rotary club luncheon look
dren's Commission, and attended that any pupil In her school has
niture company should not have
the first meeting at Lansing on successfully passed the eighth grade CAN ATTEND IF INTERESTED. tendent of Public Instruction El­ Monday noon, an enjoyable program
appeared. We are very sorry for
State Insurance Commissioner liot. Leo W. Hoffman will serve as of songs, skits and readings was
Monday. On the board are men will entitle that pupU to admission
any. inconvenience this may have
| toastmaster.
I' Members of the various Pennock from various state organisations.
John
C.
Ketcham
will
give
the
ad
­
given
by high school students, under
caused our subscribers and the Mil­
into a high school.
Hospital Guilds are urged to re- Judge Clement representing the
dress at the republican county con­
the direction of Albert Becker. Jerry
ler Furniture company.
i member the annual meeting to be probate Judges.
EASTER BREAKFAST.
vention. which will be held In this
Johnson, manager of the local tele- herself “O.
AN APPRECIATION.
Hastings Banner.
held'on Thursday evening. April 16.
city
next
Tuesday,
April
14.
at
1:30
The members of the Epworth
I wish to thank all of the friends
BAKE "SALE.
Iot lhe Methodist church parlors.
MIXED DANCES.
who voted for me at the election P. M. This convention is open to all I League are holding an Easter break­ gate to represent the club at the Cincinnati, a
Smith's hardware, Saturday. Apr.- Tho mice of the dinner is 40 cents
Bat.. April 11. Bowens Mills —Adv. Monday. Dr. George Lockwood-w who ore interested, and they are in­ fast at the Methodist church par­ International convention of Rotary,
II. Rutland cemetery Circle -Adv. and the hour is 6:30 o'clock. Be sure
vited to attend.
lors following the early service, at which will be held at Atlantic City.
Adv.
- - 1 to snake your reservation with your
8.00 o'clock sharp, price 25 cent*.
MIXED DANCES.
BALLOON DANCE.
chairman in advance.
i
DANCE.
SPRING RUMMAGE BALEYou are invited to the sunrise serv­ were selected as junior Rotarians to
At Prairieville Saturday night,
Guild No. ] will present the proFriday night. Irving Grange hall,
At Community room. Sat- Apr.. 11.
Every Saturday night at Clear ice and then remain for breakfast. attend the district Rotary oenvenEckler's orchestra.—Adv.
gram following the business session. Music by Woodmansee.—Adv.
—Adv.
’
lake, Frank Herrington.—Adv. tf.

EVERY SPRING, AND THEN
NATURE PUTS ON “REAL
FLOWER SHOW-

THUMBS DOWN'ON
13873257

Administration Of Baptism
Reception Of New Members

Special Programs At All
Services In Hastings
Churches

FOLLOW-UP OF
TB TESTS BEGINS

QUIET ELECT ON
WAS HELD MONDAY;

ELECTION IN THE
01470617

?"!“ “’k ‘

Hospital Guilds
Annual Meeting

our vsr

X

�THE HASTINGS BAXHXX, THUBaoaT, UMl 1, IMS

AflB TWO

,—m “111 '

““■■MaBaBS |

LOCAL NFWi

Fred Barnaby ha* opened a res- for it* extravagance in giving away FAMING OF JEAN
ELAINE LEONARD FRIDAY.
&gt;»rant at Naahvill*
------------- •-

EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETS.
The Barry County W. C. T. U.

LUV/iL
rro
I A daughter WM bom Saturday to
The Play Reading group met
Jean Elaine, eleven month* ' old executive board held a meeting at
Tuesday afternoon with Mr*. Har­ daughter of Mr. and Mr*. Maxwell Hasting*. April 2. Plans were made
at—: Mr. and Mr*. Ralph L. Still.

For Friday and Saturday, April 10 and 11
FREE DAY IS APRIL 23rd (Thursday)
LUCKY DAY WAS MARCH 23rd

Save Cash Register Receipts for Lucky Day
in April!

['STA P L E

FOO I)S^

CORN FLAKES Qc
KELLOGG'S
Large Package
(None sold to dealers at this price)

FRESH SALTED PEANUTS .................2 pounds 21c
ROLLED OATS5 pounds 19c

old PhllUp*. on N. Broadway, and E. Leonard (Margaret Chandler) of Er lhe annua! county convention to
Mr .M Mr, whu, HWW o&lt;1 J1U. ?"£?!!. “
“
held Tuesday. May 5. at Good­
read "Moor Bom." a play ba*cd on 11 Foal Ave . Battle Creek. died on
n~r Cfelum rtuua Mr rtuidrw,
u the live* of the Bronte family, Mr*. Friday evening after a short llinau. will church.
wn«,"Xr»»i
°“’ 'rem
Frank Adair being in charge.
Biie was bom at Pennock hospital
Wednesday unui Friday.
wubuj. WalaQn
AUtgan u a
Examinations fir the position of* on April 18. 1135. surviving are tier
Mr. and Mr*. Marcel Evatet have new addition io the staff of the A. pdstmaster.at Woodland were given parents, grandparent*. Mr. and Mr*. sold at auction tho other day for
purchased the Etaey Mead farm A P. *tore.
Saturday at the Hasting* postofflce Roy
___W....
Chandler,
________of of
Hasting*
Hasting*
and
and11.100, to-you can see that when ha
■
... . j ....
........
TfeAh..,: nt DaHla C-fe—
near Morgan and have moved there.
Wanted, articles for rummage. &gt;by •Hugo
Wunderlich to three appli­ Mr*. Jesale Leonard of Battle Creek, look time out for hi* duh around
Middlesex, he wm really losing
, Their address 1* NMhville, Route 1,'WUI call for them. Phone Ethel —
. ........
......................Finefrock.
...........................
— and aunt* and uncle*.
cant*
— Lawrence
Harold
money.
The
funeral
wm
held
on
Bunday
J. D Babcock wm arrested by the Ragta. 240) Beta Blgmn Phi—Adv. Warner and Paul Smith, and lhe
afternoon at"f 30 o'clock al Wil- ।
sheriff's force on Thursday for
The U. A- D. Sub Deb group en- (paper* *ertt in lo WMhinglon.
.
v-.
w„.
K
u..ucr
me
uijoyea
a
social
evening
at
FWullne
i
Wm.
Hackney
has
enrolled
at
the
j
Mam*
&amp;
Braden
funeral
home
in
:
bwT*Mid whenever be
driving a car while under the in- J Joyed a
Da..iin« 1 urm
■.nw.Hwt «i ■*
fluence of liquor. Hc wm brought IBeneway'. at Middleville. Wednes- New York In*tltute of Photography Battle Creek, the Rev. W. Mayten I ™ Dle£.lv .
*
'■
. ’
. ' in
. Ne’w New
York city
teklng an eight
1 Jone.^oMhU
clly^offlclaUng.
Burial
Wh^ anyiSdy
before Justice Cortright on Friday day.'■-"
YorkCity
takiny'an't....
------------------------------------------- -------------.
and
fio&lt;
...
a assessed $5 Oc
coats.; Mr*. Emma 8. Evan*, who hM, weeks' course. Thl* Institute is in
made ,tn Memorial Park ceme-1
--t~: -- -~. ver?
Ko- ;L- -----since
,t* - ‘
which he paid. Hu driver
’* license been seriously
seriouriy ill with pneumonia.'; connection with the Eastman Ko—fS
- sYmP*lhy 1» extended I
was also suspended for the 'time we are glad to say is Improving at i dak Co HU address U care of Wm. the bereaved one*,
■ One trouble I* that when a stand~ uiis
'
”
”* I Staan
fixed by
bv taw. &gt;
this writing.
wrttine
Rinan ”y
V .**M.
KT C.
f A* 34lh
a*th 8t~ New
----------------- »*-Wl.iuift
.nrin-a
lnM *rmy “eU b,g enou«h- it grow*
LOCATES IN MARSHALL.
I tinHj of hanging around and want*
। We will all wish lo do honor to
HMtings young people attending 1 York City
| Mr*. Paul Jone* (Florence Diamond) | M. 8. C. and W. 8 T. C. resumed I MU* Catherine Clark took her
News from Marshall states that to go somewhere.
who comes to Hasting* next Friday. | their studies on Monday after a ' class of Junior High pupils and a strip of land, approximately 75
the 17th to speak at lhe regular week's vacation.
.
I made
a ui«na visit
inamaMtinn
of inspection lo by
theieo feet ha* been leased by the •
meeting of lhe Hastings Women's
The return of w'.r.U,
winter l.'.c
the r..»:
first of I Warren Roush grocery on Monday Michigan central railroad for the ,
I Club. Mrs Jones has done note- 1 the week has brought back live
enjoyed hearing about the purpose of establishing u nailing 11
the ।, and enjoyed
worthy work in Grand Rapids in 1 chickadees,—
nut-hatches
------ and titmice --------------business -of running a^rocery. They station in that city. Jdseph DcRult- :
I also received a nice treat which cr of this city will be the owner of j
connection with the League of lo the feeding stations.
Women Voters, of which site has
Henry Heiumllh has purchased they appreciated.
,
the itatlon and expects lo make a ।
- been state president. She was one the Mrs. Ida Johnson properly of , At Rockford the American Legion good market for pickle* at Marshall.1
Dining Room Service
of the few Grand Rapids women Mrs. Dorothy Fisher of Hastings.— . Post is sponsoring an egg hunt for
The people of Hasting* are ex­
ceedingly
sorry to have Mr. DeRutt- |
, personally invited to meet Mrs. Charlotte Republican-Tribune.
. the children of the town on Easter
Franklin D Roosevelt on her recent
Mrs. Warren Moore underwent a morning, starting at eight-thirty er move away. The jteople of Mar- (
SPECIAL
I visit there. She is considered one of major operation at Pennock hospital | o'clock. The maximum age limit Is shall and vicinity will find Joe De- I
I the best platform speakers in the Thursday and is reported as making i six years. Last year sixteen dozen Rulter the type of man and citizen )
SUNDAY DINNERS
1 Valley City When she talks she has excellent progress toward recovery, egg* were secreted, a "Golden Egg" they will be glad to have.
Mrs. Warren Roush ha* been a j being the coveted one.
I something worthwhile to say. and
I knows how to put her point across ; patient al Pennock hospital, suffer-1 Friday night near midnight a DEATH OF ANOTHER
HOME COOKED FOOD
I in a convincing way. She was born [ ing from a bad felon on her right new Dodge car containing three
LONG TIME RESIDENT.
| here, daughter of the late Mr. and । hand. She returned to her home on : Hastings young men who arc said
___ _ _
_______
Willis
Coykendall.
aged 78. died
Mrs N T Diamond (Mac Heath) (Tuesday.
to have been driving at high speed Monday
**—J—morning
--------‘~i at his home in
and U a graduate of the HMtings i Don Wilson was brought
before left the highway on M-37 near the Hastings township.Ip. He had
... been—
in
schools. The meeting u an open one. I Justice Cortright Thursday for ex- Z. Windcs farm and went end over , poor health but his death came sudNURSERY STOCK
and all interested are cordtally in­ | amination on a statutory charge, end down the embankment. Thanks denly. He was born near Middleville
Good Rooted. Healthy Plant*.
vited to attend.
,| The case will be taken up
. in circuit .' to the steel body all escaped serious' and ha* resided tnBarry Co. all hl*
The Dionne quintuplet* are com- court
c~—t. Icier.
tatcr.
I
I injury and hailed a ride into Has- I life. He is survivedby his wife, two Eldorado. Alfred. Early Harvest
Ing to town Sunday and Monday. । Roller skates
and
lucky.-— (daughters. Mrs. Guy Nash of Carl­ Blaekberrin. 2c each. Cumberland*
— —
j marbles
*■’" sure
— । tings.
tins*. They
Thev happened
hannened lo
to be luckv.
Black, Cuthbert Red Raspberries,
April 10 and 20. at the Strand,
I signs
spring
but...the court house .uiuuieviuc
‘ Middlevillesun.
Sun.
—
------- of
--------. —
—
ton Center and Mrs Elmer Struble
----------- when
"The Country Doctor,”' *In
“ which 1; ---------------------"" •in
—
*— ----—
- —
— -------L. --------storm---doors
are still
place,
a wise
Mr.
and -Mrs.
Harold
Carroll I of Hostings, and one son, Guy Coythey arc /featured, will be shown. Wc
We i precaution Judging by —
the --------Arctic [ expect lo move into Uie house on KendaH,of Hastings Twp.
------------------- ...
-------w CourL S(rccl owned by Guy I m&lt;
have secb it once, and.--------------wc are going
blast* of
thU
week.
to sec ityagain. Our only criticism । Who U an old-timer? According Bauer as soon as it is vacated by j
is that /here isn't enough of "the 1 to the Ohio State Journal it's one Cecil Munton. who will move Into ■
DEATH OF O. A. KRATZ.
quints.”, but It's a good story ail who can remember when there was Archie Rclckord s house on E-1 Mrs. G. W- Hyde received word
thru.---------------------------------------------------- । some criticism of the Government state road. Mr. Reickord and fam- yesterday of the death of her son­
1
----------------- | ily will be occupying the caretaker s m-taw. Oscar A. Kratz at Covington.
---------------: house at Riverside cemetery as soon Ky„
April 6. lhe funeral to be
as repairs and some redecorating . held Friday of this week.
■ are completed,- Mr Reickord having
Mr. Kraus first wife was Lora
assumed the work there the first of J Hyde, of Prairieville, mother of four
: M“rc11.
,.
! of the five children be leave*; his
1 Easter Tuesday dinner. April ’14.
’ present wife also survives.
Episcopal parish house. 50c —Adv.
OTHING can be sadder than a grave that is no longer a
Mrs Elia Taylor of Nashville, in
WORTH YOUR WHILE.
the Charlotte Repuoiican-Trlbunr.
mound. The inevitable has come to pass—lhe weight of
McCall lhe tailor has an adv. this
the sodden earth ha* crashed In the last protection. It heipu : recalls an interesting incident in week which every man should read.
' connection with the stop at, Nash­ It will tell you how yotf can get a
nothing to close the Imagination to what happened then! Yet
ville. of the special train bearing tailor-made suit al as low a price ns
there is not the slightest necessity for thl* barbarous, unsaniTheodore R. ROotevelt to Grand Mlv
v
the ready-made. And you will ,...
have
ary, old fashioned method of buriaL The Hastings Burial
i Rapids, when he was president. Tin- 3(X| patterns of cloth to choose from,
train, it seems, stopped at Nashville 11( JOU vbll ll1c McCall itorc nCXt
will protect absolutely
on both the morning and afternoon Tuesday and Wednesday. April 14
and forever.
Cement
| trips. Al the latter lime, one of their ianrt 15.
.
citizens. George Brown, stepped for­
ward and said. Mr. President 1 am
HAS LEG AMPUTATED.
an old soldier of lhe Civil War, and 1 -&lt;J(U1
,UC1 -Jtvu
plain sight and become*
Many at the tasks of housaJohn OM
Slailel.
aged BQ. a WCH
well
one solid piece underI would like it very much if you xnown lesldenl of Carlton township.
rlannlng can be-made a lot
i would step down on the ground so • had hls rlght ,rg amputated at
ground mausoleum that
easier by sending your clean­
that these young people and Chit- pi.nnocx hospital on Monday forcliterally "Lasts Through
ing to us.
.
dren here could say that one Prejil- noun lhf Jcg
ainpllUlcd nCar .
dent
of
the
United
States
had
stood
.
1|Jf
h)p
Mr
8ta(kl
ba
,
bern
auner
.
dertakeri insist on its
Drajies. curtains and many
on Barry county soil. Mr. Roosevelt lng wUh gangrrni. for Mmf tlml.
thing* that need cleaning can
said, "I am delighted to do so. and At Ust rcporls hc was doing aa web
1 he stepped down and shook hands ; ns
be done dt small cost May,1 with all tn an area of five or six feet. ,
----------------- , t ,
1 we help you Rouse-clean?
shaking Mr Brown s
ft“l_ ’J’1'1’ I
A GOOD OPPORTUNITY,
TELEPHONE 2622 . . . HASTINGS, MICH.
late Mrs Florence Sheldon former- ( CrrBl
„c ^g
Our work t&gt; guaranteed to
|y of Kalamo. was holding up a nja(ll, al Camp Cu.,ter. Hattie Creek,
give satisfaction. Call today
neighbor's child, and Mr. R
R I fOr lbc summcr milltarv training
and our driver will pick up
tn linking her by the LandI salJ camp wh|ch W11J c;U(,n(1 -Jrom June
the tilings you wnnt cleaned
• How do you do. grandma? which | |B t(J July 30 ThU w)1| nrjorc( an
greatly pleav.-J her.
and return them to you re*
exceptionally line opportunity for
young men of the proper age to get
stored to look like new.
the benefits of military training,
with board and expenses paid.

PARKER HOUSE

The Sunken Grave
N

PINEAPPLE

Housecleaning
Time ...

Solar Brand—Broken Slice* 2 No. 2 J cons 39c

TOMATOES—Old Mammy's
2 No. 2J cans 23c
OLIVES—Queen_____________ ___________ quart 35c
OLIVES—Stuffed ....__________________ tall jar 25c
BEAN SPROUTS.can 9c

Hastings Burial Vault

Blue Plate

Van Camp's

SHRIMP

Mackerel

2

Cans

29C

•v

3

Cans

Armour's
ROAST BEEF
CORNED BEEF

25C

Can

...

PAD-AMAGIC SCOURING PADS

19C

............... Box 9c.

iFftESH FRlJifsWVEGETABlES^

..

Proprietor

SPRING HOUSE CLEANING
WILL SOON BE HERE!
We have absolutely cleaned
r -stiM-k with &lt;&gt;ur Spring

CARROTS
“ 4c 1

BANANAS
5c
ONIONS

Roy Thomas,

I will be responsible for no debt-, j
contracted by anyone -but myself.;
Leonard Pebbles—Adv.

12c

EGGS

BACON
&gt;/2ib
19c
HAM Armour's star, whole-shank half Lb. 26c
PICNICS

Armour's Star

BOLOGNA

Grade A

Lb.
Lb.

20c

11c

♦
Hastings, Michigan • Telephone* 224-1-2557

We urge yoi

O New Spring sly les lli.it will
beautify yuur Immc and make

EASTER SPECIAL
SUNDAY and MONDAY. APRIL 12 and 13
JANET GAYNOR and ROBERT TAYLOR

1

$75 in CASH! Given April 23rd on Main Street
Tickets given on each 50c meat purchase.

REMINDER: Only three weeks before the FREE SPARTON will

be given away. Tickets given with each 5Oc purchase.

-EXCITING ROMANCE!---------------

A Wonderful. New Line of

“SMALL TOWN GIRL”

LIVING ROOM SUITES
$3995 lo $8950

With BINNIE BARNES and LEWIS STONE
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY. 1:M and 3:00 o'clock
Other Performances—Adults 25c. Children 10c

-r—
tomers.

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. APRIL 14
LESLIE HOWARD and BETTE DAVIS

*

The Incomparable Lovers of "Of Human Bondage” in

A

Priced

SfE THIS LINE, WE KNOW WE CAN SUIT YOU!

‘THE PETRIFIED FOREST’ i
NEW LEONARD

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

ELECTRIC
REFRIGERATORS

WED.. THURS, end FRI., APRIL 15, 16 and 17
JEANETTE MacDONALD and NELSON EDDY in

&gt; ’’ROSE MARIE”

BEEF ROASTS-------- lb. 14c | Smoked Homs, boneless, lb. 33c

FREE!

PHONE 2140

fTPAND THEATR|=

IN

Meats

DRY CLEANERS

*]-♦

are nnw arriving daily lor
placements. Conn- in and
what wonderful bargains
are offering.

ORANGES ................................ 2 doicn 37c
10 1b. bog 13c
LETTUCE2 heads for 15c

McCREERY’S

.

if wc did nul take the space to
tell you about the New Ix-onaid.

Il is absolutely new and modern
from lop lo bottom. Do nut buy
before seeing ibis new creation.
It is built to last a lifetime, and
is guaranteed for llircr years.

With Reginald Owen, Allan J ones, James Stewart.
Alan Mowbray and Gild* Gray

Adult* 25c. Children 10c

•A Beautiful Line of Modem and Period

BED ROOM SUITES

SATURDAY ONLY. APRIL 18
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION-FEATURE NO. 1

PRICED AT FROM

“LAST of the PAGANS”

$395? to $89°.°

With MALA and LOTUS
FEATURE NO. 3

Food Center

GENE AUTRY with Champion in

Miller Furniture Co.
HASTINGS &lt;■ MICHIGAN

PHONE

2226

“RED RIVER VALLEY”
!♦

♦

Episode No. 11 of "GREAT AIR MYSTERY" will be shown
al 3:00 o’clock Matinee Saturday Only.
Adult. ISc; ChUSnn life

e-r*

�THE HASTINGS HANNER, THURSDAY. AFRIT. 9. l!rt«

FLOWERS
An Easter Lily Plant
The ideal Easier remembrance. It expresses your greetings
. and gives a lasting impression of the sentiments expressed.

ANNOUNCEMENT ..
For the convenience of our patrons we
will open a shop in the Home Lumber
Company building for TWO DAYS pre­
vious to Easier . . . Friday and Saturday.
April 10 and 11. We will have a full
tine of EASTER FLOWERS
DISPLAYED FOR SALE.
South side of Home Lumber Company
. building on Michigan Ave.

Telephone 2530
LAST OF THE PAGANS'
Ishlng race, filmed on an uncharted
coral Island where the native life
Is as yet untouched by lhe white
man's civilization, the new picture,
authored by John Villiers Farrow,
who for some years lived among lhe
natives, is a charming native Jove
story of a boy and girl separated
through tiie trickery of white trad­
ers. nnd reunited through the hero­
ism of a native warrior.
Played uni id scenes so beautiful
that they nrc literally breath-taking,
embellished with such thrills xs a
potash mine cave-in, a battle be-

boar. thrills of swordfish nnd shark
hunting, and a furious Island ty­
phoon. the picture covers lhe ga­
mut of bland life from Ila intimate
family existence and it* fantastic

If you like real entertainment
with thrills, laughs, tears and action,
then see • Small Town Girl' starring
Janet Gaynor and Robert Taylor.
The story present* Miss Gaynor as
little town and linpctuouslv elopes
with Taylor, a sophisticated young
rity doctor The elopement precipi­
tates u social and domestic crLsls.

Mr. nnd Mrs.
children spent
Stanwood with
Mrs. Glen Bell

• Potted Tulips • Hyacinths
• Daffodils
9 Hydrangeas
• Azaleas • Rose Bushes

A large assortment of cut flowers including Daffodils, Sweet
Peas. Roses. Tulips, Snapdragons, and
Calendulas . .. also Gardenias.

All in full bloom.

Member Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association

The Florist

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hoffman and
family of Baltimore and Mrs. Freda
Marshall of the Branch district and
ing out on top in the A division. Ad­ son Earl of Marshall were wedding
cock's team did a creditable job of anniversary guests nt Mr. and Mrs.
I winning the class B

Qulgg and

receiving congratulations on the
Raymond Faul and wn of Chicano birth of a daughter born Monday
morning at Lake Odessa hospital
and Genevieve were dinner guests Everyone is very happy over this
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rise SalurMrs
Gcp
Forman—Toastmlsi
RafTler as she is lhe first girl born tress; A Welcome to the Daughters
Scobey.
Mr. and Mrs. Fay c Wing enter­ after five boy».
and Sons—Mrs Harry Baker: Re­
Tuesday of last week the Wood­ sponse—Phyllis Ruell; Plano .Solo­
tained Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wing of
Maple
land Extension group held their last Prances Born; Guest speakers—Mrs. was this quintet that defeated the
Kalamazoo (or dinner Sunday.
faculty
In
a
fast
and
furious
strug­
meeting at lhe schoolhouse with
Mrs. Chas. Furniss and Mrs Rena pot luck dinner at noon. At this
gle n short time ago. Tiie person­ Mrs. Frank Hawblltx’s were Mr. and
Counsellor,
and
Mrs,
John
Strong.
Mrs.
Ed.
Manning,
Marshall,
and
Culler were in Hastings Thursday meeting lhe dresses made by lhe
nel of Adcock s team is Wldrig.
to attend a meeting of Hie Y. M. L. members received their final scoring.
Storrs. Bronson. McLeod and Drap- Lyle Kinney. Hastings—Mr. and
Mrs. Hawblilz were in Assyria Sun­
The group was reorganized for next Vocal Solo— My Task"—Mrs. Rena
Mrs. Roti Benham of Hastings, year with Gladys Crockford ax
These boys show great promise of day morning and visited with the
who has been visiting her dough- i chairman and Agnes LrfTler as sec­ Culler. Lovely corsage bouquets were giving the class A champs a severe Keith Jarrard’s.—Sunday callers at
tor. Mrs. Karl Faul and family for retary and treasurer. Leaders. Dora presented to lhe guest speakers and drubbing unlexs. ot course, lhe un­ the Will HawbllU’a were Mr. and
i—--- u- t---------------- •— fjruinm and Mildred Osgood and
expected happens If it is ■one of Mrs. Roger Warner and sons of near
day for her home tn Hastingi
Vella Gager and Alice Bailey as
Miss Ei|pne Hough of U
confidence sets in. they will not be
Normal. Kalamazoo spent the in the game. However, those buga­ Marshall’s were Mr. and Mrs. Clem
Harbor Is spending the week with mode to attend Achievement Day in State
;
her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Hastings May 1st. Mrs. Jessie Hnt- week end with her parents. Mr. and boos should not. and probably will Kidder of South Maple Grove. Mrs.
Floyd Kinney and Lyle of Hastings.
Donrfld Gager.
I ton of Grand Rapids, an bld Ex­ Mrs. Harley -McMillen.
Mrs. Clair Marshall and family of
Mrs. Ralph I-efTler accompanied I tension group member was a visitor. I Nettie McNaughton and Mina
her stater and brother. Miss Doreen । Mr nnd Mrs. Win. Flory and Mr North, half sisters of the late Wm
nnd Frederick clary of Hastings to and Mrs. Adelbert Slocum we
Lind we. ■ to dark Memorial home
The finals will probably be played |
visit their sister and husband. Mr.1 Sunday guests of Mr. and Mi
at Qranu Rapids Wednesday where off today or tomorrow. The winner;
U1|. w,1Mr,
W1V
,----------and Mrs. Vcre Miller of Chicago. Shirley Slocum of Martin Comers
they will make their home.
in this series will, then pipy the lJlls llm(, we thought it was AnonySaturday and Sunday.
~
। “
Mrs. peo.
Faul‘ entertained■ over
faculty as a grand and glorious cli-1U1OUS- pro Bono publico. SubscribI the week end. Mr. and Mrs Richard
max to their efforts.
j er or steady Reader.
O'Brien nnd children of Lansing.
In the class intramural division
———
■ »*-----------------Carroll A- cutler, aged 75. a life­
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Foul and
baby son of Chicago and on Sunday long resident of Hastings township,
I Mr. nnd Mrs. Chas. Paul and Mitrl- died on Tuesday night about 6:15
I etta of Hastings.

of Woodland, a son Daniel Oaks of! coats Grove were guests of Rev. nnd
toclely girl, and Miss Gaynor finds Grand Rapids and another dnugh- I Mrs. Don Carrick for dinner Sun. Miss Phoebe Oaks of Woodland. | day.
her.-x'lf ostracized by her husband’s Lqt
xsmart friends. The story concern i (mbt, grandchildren and
great
r."2 one —
zt The three churches of the Village
grandchild, one sister. Mr:.. Lydia will unite for a Sunrise Easter Serv|cjj nt C;J5 A M sundfty al the
(tils obstacle and to win the cooling ...----- &gt;_u
love oi her bridegroom
United Brethren chutcli.
The picture has an excellent sup­
F. F. Hilbert was taken ill Sunday
porting cast headed by Binnle

A large assortment of appro­
priate potted plants for Easter

Easter Lilies In Full Bloom,
priced at 35c to $2.00 each

CLYDE WILCOX,

Faul of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Faul
visited relatives here from Friday
until Monday.

Kllpaltick were chosen
the coming year.

We Have Over 500 Gorgeous

Bessie Ball of Plymouth, a brotiicr.
the Rev. C. A- Cutler, pastor of the
Baptist church nt Bronson, three
sisters. Mrs. Clnrie Sponable of
Bronson. Mrs. Cora Allhousc of Ver­
montville and Mrs. Jennie Whitlow
of Clio, also six grandchildren. Mr.
Cutler wxs it member of the Baptist
church for many years. The funeral
will be at lhe residence this Thurs­
day afternoon at two o’clock, the
Rev. C- M. Conklin officiating. Btir-

VALUES
For The Easter Parade

HERE YOU WILL FIND THE SEASON'S NEWEST
CREATIONS AT CUT RATE PRICES!

PATENT STRAPS AND SANDAL? IN
THE SEASON'S LATEST CREATIONS!
PRICED AS
LOW AS

BUY YOUR SILVERWARE TODAY!
This Offer Moy Never Be Repeated!

POUPLAR LOW HEEL STYLES

STRATFORD PLATE SECTIONAL

MOST STYLES

fined lo iier bed since Sunday.
Mrs. Paul Hough of Lansing vis­
Walter Harger and
the week end In ited Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager
the latter’s sjster, from Sunday until Wednesday of
and family.

Snnday dinner guests at lhe home Helen Brumberry of Battle Creek
of Mr. nnd Mrs. Henry Schnibly of spent the week cud with his par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hoover.
Mr. and Mrs Delmond Culler cntertalned a group of friends Fri­
of Woodlapd Extension Group No day evening with a pot luck dinner
2 with an all day merling Friday. in honor of Mr and Mrs. Raymond

Children's White
Shoes for Easter
Many Styles

Mtn's Work Shots
Plain or Cap Toe Patterns

EXTRA
SPECIAL

THIS WEEK OUR

W.L.W. COFFEE

EDUCATOR CRAX Th. Aji-r-.p— w.i*r

Cuban Honey Bread

19c

2 loaves 19c

EGGS—Easter Special (Retail)
5 lbs. Pastry Flour __15c

Whole Wheat Flakes, 9c

Creamery Butter, lb. 31c

Orange Sliceslb. 10c

Wheat Pop, pkg.

Bacon Squares, lb. 19 Vic

Mop Sticks

3 lb. can Crisco59c

Bananas

Spinach

lb. 35c

MEN'S HIP

FOR
SALE!

MEN S DRESS OXFORDS

BOOTS
LIVE RUBBER

Thousands of Low Cost

USED CAR MILES
Several late model cars with thou­
sands of miles of unused dependable
transportation in them.

They're priced for quick sale and are
all we claim them to be.

STRATFOKD SBCTIOSAL
QUALITY

Children's Patent Dl

SLIPPERS

Convenient U. C. C. Terms. See them
at once.

Blue Goose Navel Oranges
Tomatoes, Radishes, Lettuce, Celery, Cabbage,
Carrot! Fresh Daily.

WALLACE GROCERY

PHONE 2121

HASTINGS, MICH,

C. B. HODGES
DEPENDABLE JEWELER
HASTINGS. MICH.

HASTINGS CUT-RATE

�The Hastings Banner

BOO8TTHE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY. APRIL 9. 1934

Editorials

ThisanciT/iailltl
RANDOM OBSERVATIONS.

WHXRE LAW IB LAW.
I her own thrift questioned, parUcuWhether or not we like England j larly In view of' hi* own erratic
' or the English, we must take our .pending hablta. Ever» an *800 fur
h.u M! u&gt; uwk »», IM.1
wo„.t
ov„
a„
One reason they succeed where we
tui u teou. or u» tapmuw !««■'“" »' s«r
•&gt; “»
shown tn administration of the law. I bridge table. She thinks he would

I
i
,
।
;

A bj.undrr Urourrt. "Hl. you &lt;U1 “»

•«1' ,h“1' * "rrlBr.tor

go through there." and a police may be cleaned than she doe* it*
sergeant hurried up to rebuke the speed in delivering ice cube*. She's
erring chauffeur.
'sure his Income is greater than he
Queen Mary and her daughter
seated in the back of the automobile ' says it Is. She likes lo go places and
do things whenever he has an op­
smiled when the red-faoed bobby
portunity lo spend a "quiet evcdiscovered their
presence and
। ning at home." she knows belter
sprang to salute.
, than anyone else what an easy
But the car was not permitted
worry, she'll
to continue up lhe street in viola­
watch him.
tion of lhe law. It was backed out
by lhe driver and proceeded by an­
THE CITY ELECTION
other route.

That Straits bridge proposal also
appeals to us as being an expensive
pipe drcam. No one knows how
many millions of dollars the project
. would cost.

lou*ness?

CONTROL NEEDED.

NASHVILLE.
A very pretty home wedding oc­
curred at the home of Mr and Mr*
A. E Bassett. Friday evening. April
3. at eight o'clock, when their oldest
daughter. Ruth, was united tn mar­
riage to Mr. Jack Southern of South
Vermontville, by Rev Myron E
Hoyt, pastor of the Methodist
church. The couple were attended
by Sain Southern, brother of tiie
groom, and Miss Georgia Bassett,
sister of the bride. To the strain*
of the Lohengrm wedding march,
played by Miss Helen Bassett, sis­
ter of lhe bride.- lhe bridal couple
took their places before a bank of
ferns. The bride was gowned in
white crepe and lhe bridesmaid wore
aquamarine blue. The guests In­
cluded the Immediate families and
a few friends of the bride and
the Eaton Rapids Journal prints in here are well satisfied with the type groom. Ice cream and cake were
--.u. following
article' of government they have received
served. Mr. and Mrs Southern left
hl* paper
the
detail during lhe past few years and *o |I on a short wedding trip. Mr*
which discusses
sonvc
Should hesitate lo make any decidedI' Southern is a graduate of Nash“What
Every Woman
। ville High KChool and attended
। changes.
Know."
---------Western Stale Normal, and
has
A husband likes to throw neW-----------------been a very successful teacher in
Barry end Eaton counties. She b
papers and ashes on the floor He;
IX&gt;R PEACE,
leaching the North Kalamo school,
likes to invite friends for dinner un-, A few readers misinterpreted our which sne will finish and then they
expectedly. He likes a lot of paint comment on "The Veterans of Fu- will go to housekeeping on the farm
on other women but doesn't care I ture Wars” club conceived by a east of town recently bought by Mr
for much on her. He prefers not to I group of Princeton undergraduates Bassett. They received many pretty
be told hat he is getting fat or bald j as » more or less direct slam al the and useful gifts.
The school children are enjoying
He wants to drive the automobile real veterans organization
Sucn vacation this week.
,’
himself. He hates to pay bills. He was not the intent. The Future
The Clover Leaf Club was delight­
resents suggestions for personal 1m-1 Veterans idea Is an excellent satire fully entertained Friday night at
provement He regards his specula- -not on veterans organizations but lhe home of Mrs. Fordyce Showal­
ter with Mrs Either Johnson as­
live and gambling losses as hl* pn- upon political leadership which per­
sisting. During the business ses­
vale affairs. He dislike* to be close-1 mil*, in fact even encourages and sion the club voted to sponsor the
ly questioned about anything. Hell i incite* armed warfare despite our Cub Scouts again thL* year. An
spend *15 at a club and then crab supposidly advanced stage of civll- Easter egg hunt was enjoyed by all.
because a six-day-old ham bone was izalion and Hie fact that history a flower contest was held and lovely
thrown into the garbage before he | has proven time and lime agau&gt; rt-freshmenu were screed. The May
meeting will be held at the home of
got around to it. He'll buy her an | that In warfare even the winners Mrs. Orville Flook with Mrs. Clar­
ence Welch assisting
$800 fur coat and later raise a scene lose.
Mrs. C A Biggs and daughter
if she loses *120 al bridge. He thinks
Norma, spent Saturday in Grand
CIVIC LIBERTIES
he'd be rich If he'd stayed single.:
Rapid,
He insists that he likes' plain food
The Constitution of the’“UnTte&lt;I
Coy Brumm. Winifred Brumm.
but always compliments hostesses i States was set up to presen e Mr and Mrs. Nelson Brumm and
on special duties that are served definite liberties for the people. daughter and Mrs. Voylc Varney
were tn Battle Creek Saturday.
him. He doesn't care how much a With
‘ “ our system wc have home rule
Mrs Libbie Williams has return­
refrigerator costs if It delivers ice In the states and municipalities. ed to her home after *|x-ndtng the
cubes quickly and easily. He's sure । and strict limitation of the power* winter with relatives near Middle­
he's living way beyond his Income, of the
lhe federal government
government. 'That
‘That ville. Mr*. Showalter b staying

Public Porum
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

dafe-Hotel Haarlass
Heidelberg University.
March 10. IBM.
Hastings. Banner Office.
Hastings. Michigan. U. 8. A.
Dear Friends:
I read something interesting in
one of your late copies not long ago.
Il slates that William Zuschnltt of
Rutland is the possessor of an old
prayer book published in 17J4. Weil.
Mr. Zuschnltt. I'm not trying to do
you just one better, but—about a
month ago I purchased a very inter­
esting old prayer book printed
exactly one year before the one
mentioned. 1733- Aside from the
date of publication the book has
other Interesting characteristics. It
Is hand-leather bound; print is in
excellent condition; paper la of a
fine grade; and one of the two
clamps, which hold the cover to­
gether. bears the sea) of the Holy
Roman Empire.
The latter was
wligt first caught my eye. while
pawing over numerous old books
here tn a small second-hand book
htora. I had noticed tiie sea) in the
crest of lhe old Heidelberg castle
the day before, It consists of the
Christ child bearing a globe in one
hand, upon which rests the cross
and from the lower portion of this
cross extends a chain around the
globe's surface. It's symbolic, of
coursa, of tiie power of Christian­
ity. with its relation to the world as
a whole.

” " I

most everyone experiences one time 1
ar another white travelling. Thia I
may be of Interest to aome, in. that I
it concerns a girl who once attended I
Hastings High school.
I
The conversation usually starts J
out in this manner—”8o you're Mrs. I
So-and-6o from So-and-Bo. Well
j
X was there once, it's a very beau- 1
tlful alate. Oh. by the way. do you I
by any chance happen to know Bo- a
and-ao?" Uaually it'a a one chance I
in a million affair, and the person 1
answering cracks a pasty smile and
«*ys . "No." but this time lhe unex- fl
peeled happened and it was "Yes." j
On this occasion it was a lady from
the state of Washington. Food was
pretty bad and conversation was *]
running low. so to cheer things up
a bit, i repeated lhe above formula. ’
The girl I mentioned was Julia Ann J
Templeton, and as It turned out the ]
lady had been Julia Ann* room- .1
mate at the University of Washing- *

'Round About Town

mor Prichard: fifth. Word ot Physi­
cal Suffering. Rev. Mabie Elder;
sixth. Word of Triumph. Rev, D A
VanDoren; seventh, Word of Re­
union, Rev M. E Hoyt. These talks
will be Interspersed with songs nnd
prayer*
On Friday evening
at
eight o'clock the Methodist choir
will render the cantata. "The Sev­
en Last Wdrds ”
There dull be a union sunrise
service m_jix o clock Easter morn­
ing al the Baptist church.
The last meeting ot tiie Brotherhotid was held Monday night at the
Community house Former Lt. Gov
Dickinson of Charlotte was the
speaker
Officers for lhe comuig
year are President. Ralph Hess;
vice-president.
Ralph Pennock;
secretary. Ed. Hafner;
treasurer.
Fred
Warner;
trustee*. Victor
Brumm. Floyd Nesbit. Wallace Gra­
ham.
Mr* Laura Deller and Mrs. Olah
Felghner spent Sunday with Mrs
Henrietta Deller
Mrs
Berlin?
Frickcr of Detroit has been a guest
of her mother. Mrs. Deller.
The Women’s Literary Club met
Wednesday at the library for "Na­
ture Program.” Roll call, nature
wonders. Music chairman
Mrs
Dennis Yarger The Story of Mother
Goose. Mrs Clarence Mater Bat­
tle Ground of Nature Between
the Sen and the Soil. Mr* Ches­
ter Smith
Control •&gt;( Hurtful
Insect* by Counteracting Insect*.
Mr* Ralph Pennock Exchange ot
Seeds and Bulbs, chairman. Mr*.
John Green. Hostess. Mtj/Joseph
Hurd
Born lo Mr and Mrs Joseph Mix

i

I've been having a very interest- ’
ing time here In Heidelberg and fl
have been very fortunate in finding fl
so many fine friends among tho .
German people. Not long after be- fl
Ing here, I was proffered n place In
Anatomy I institute's Research lab­
oratory, by the rector. Prof. K. ‘
Goerttler where I am now working I
during the present vacation. I've '
also had lhe pleasure of studying I
anatomy under the well known '
Prof. H- Hocpke. Two weeks ago I I
took my exam in anatomy and re- I
celved lhe highest grade on my re- I
Barry Is one of the few counties, lowing:
in the state that doesn't have an
Juffu edltum
turned certificate.
j
The first of April I'm leaving I
| annual queen to be crowned by the
Clementis VIII it Urban! VIII
governor. Probably no one appre­
Auctorilale recognllum
Heidelberg lo tour Germany on my I
ciates this fact more than Governor
Venetus. ex lypographia
trusty old bicycle. Upon my return -I
Fitzgerald, himself.
Ballconlona
I shall undertake what people here I
MDCCXXXlll
‘
consider
a
"godfearing"
trip. I
Officium Herbdomae tiaucLae
I shall sail from here to Ireland in I
!
Secundum Mkuale it Brcviarlun a ten-foot boat.
In Ireland i intend to .yfoll nid ' J
Rotnanium
Trinity, the University of Dublin. I
8 P. II V. PONT Maxlml
Hew to Hie line, let tiie quips
Some interesting things have where I hope lo be schooled for a I
fall where they may!
been happening here during the short lime three years from now. I
i past few days. I suppose you've read visit friend*, lake a walking trip I
by now of the soldiers' entrance into over the soulhcm part, kiss the I
By Observing Tommy.
sfone. and then catch ba I
the Rhineland zone, i was present Blarney
-------- , --------Well, the city election is over and Sunday March 8, 1936 when they I ship for the state* Tills summer if
The । ”
I'm
-------not
‘ *'In
—a -----------------bacteriology -------laboratory
lots of the boys are wondering landed here in Heidelberg.
whether It's the Donkey or the Ele­ people’s reactions were most inter­ in Maryland or surveying in Loulsphant that some at the other boys esting. As I dig into the rooja of lana, I’ll be on the west coast of
childhood memories, it reminded me Africa, but al any rate bv October
arc trying to straddle.
। very much of Armistice day in 1018. 1st. one will find me back at the
Chet Hodges, i understand, com- I noticed small children playing Duke University Medical school.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
plained about the heal from Rolf •okiirr on the aide street*, some old
Your* sincerely,
Bulling'*
electric
stove
at
the
Fair
',,ldl&lt;!s cO'ing. and men of all age*,
Michael a. H. McPharlin.
have on sale Saturday in Hastings
P 8 so many person* at one
tiny flag.-., facsimiles of the Belgian and didn't cool off until hr found swelled with the pride of their
that —
Nic red glow was caused bv a ,‘ country,
raising their
hands
*a-. time or another have wondered
national flag with King Alfreds pic- -------------- ----------------; --— to -•lure and
&gt;ti n miniature copy of the i ncon lube and even then hc felt a lu,r. as the drums beat and the, what HaarlaM mean* Using a lit.r S.
o flag in the
.... -----------------. bn hot under the collar.
soldiers passed by
.eral translation. Haarlass means
U
comer
for the Be!
• • •
| The other day in the Mensa (atu- -'hairless" or -without hair.” A con­
Rian relief fund‘
1 Squire Sigler cvidentlv-believe* Idcnt commons) an incident occur- vent
-----------------------once stood where the present
that when a fellow acquires eight rcd: on* ot lhc usual one* which al- inn now stand*,
be moved into the Striker residence holey socks, it's time for u bit of I
a* toon as the latter place can be .
determined
action.
,
put into condition Al present the
Each spring brings on one of the
most unusual
celebrations
In
Michigan—the Holland Tulip Feslival. This affair for many years
I was purely local until visitors began
to carry away stories of it. it atj traded thousand* of people each
I season before it began to receive
much outside publicity. It was fully
developed before lhe ballyhooers got
busy andjnadc a nationally known
event of it.

Returns from city elections indi­
cate that Hastings voters are strict­
ly non-partisan so far
their own
■
' affairs are concerned.

turned lo office because he has
headed three administrations which
have given the city some fine man­
agement and because he has en­
According to the U. 8. Depart­
joyed unusual personal popularity
ment ot Conservation more than
, *since
the aays
days wnen
when ne
he was
was aa seno
school
•
.
j—* — .
‘nce me
two hundred and fifty million tons ....
.
,
II
I—"
tmm1 kld
151 ■ George Lockwood,
of soil have bean washed from
»»&lt;&lt;«■■&lt;*•&lt;
politics
who
fields In our country by floodwaters newcomer
" in
" ""
• ”
" conducted
'
a quiet campaign, also has won
during the past year. When one
‘ many friends during his years of
takes into consideration that it
residence here as lhe returns Inditaku nature about four hundred
। cated. The campaign was clean
years to produce this much soil, lhe
1 from start to finish and anything
magnitude of the loss becomes
'which resembled mud slinging was
more apparent. Most of this loss is
agreeably noticeable by Its absence
needles*. It could be prevented by
It would be fine If all campaign*
proper erosion and flood control. A
here might be conducted on the
nation which can spend billion* on
level maintained by these two out­
public construction, only a small
standing young men.
percentage of which is likely to be ,
Mrs. Loppenthlen was undoubluseful a decade from now. should
edly the winner because, in addition
be able to allot a little money, at
lo personal qualifications for office.
least, to the problem of preserving
I she has a wide circle of friends and
our basic wealth, productive agricul­
; acquaintances
of
many
years
tural soil, for the future.
‘ standing Other returns were about
as expected except that Earl ColeSOURCES OP ARGUMENTS
Much, much space has been de- man defeated Dr. Wooton for alderrotad to lhe subject, "what every.man by a narrow margin after looshusband should know." It is with &gt;ng to him by a narrow margin two
somewhat
commendable
daring, years ago.
therefore, that Editor Gifford of i The return* Indicate that people

Secretary Ickes says that Industry
is not helping the recovery program.
Even if true this wouldn't be *urprising considering the fact that
the recovery program has attempt cd lo make Industry Its goat.

Representative' Clare Hoffman
wonders why. If the admlntetralions insists on building a canal
somewhere why it didn't select
Michigan in place of Florida. A
ditch connecting Lake Michigan
and Lake Erle^wouid be just as
valuable to the -nation as lhe Flor­
ida canal, wouldn't drain moisture
from rich agricultural regions—
and would be just as extravagant.

Even royalty is not exempt.
have been a good-for-nothing bum
Only a few days ago, for example. I it he'd have remained single She
a large green limousine tried to
harf h„ own cooklnf ,p.
drive
a narrow
one-way
in
r»up
L«.&lt;
w».
or urostreet
d&gt;rsnt
•'x"'

Would a similar situation have
been handled with such absolute
regard for the law; also would lhe
personage in question glve.way to an

It’a th* Spirit of a Community
Thai Count.—Not lu Si&gt;o

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

WAS IT AUTHORIZED?
I
LENT CORNERS.
i Tom Baird er Ray Waters
”
would . ec-c™;
Somebody may have ~
to do ™..c
someI! Hugh Rit' - returned Thursday
'.,
say it was lime tor a new pan- of
of' explaining to
lo the members
member* of the from a few day*' viril at Ada.
'
'
Barry County Farm Bureau, lhe
Earl Carpenter is able
ts -tl;
to be out;
'
I Barry County Grange and the again, which i* very good new* to
'
Whenever 1 get to thinking ttiot school officer* of the county for his many friends.
) nothing new ever happen*, along signing such organizations to a clrLittle Ronald Francisco I* slaycomes Ray Branch withsome orlg- cuiar urging folk* to vote to com-1 ing indefinitely with hi* grnndpar' in.'.I color combinations
to dispel' mil Barry county to raise by taxa- cnU. Mr and Mrs Jay Hall.
these morbid thoughts.
tlon the money required to launch
’ *“Marcus
'*
**
—■“ ”-"
Mr. and**Mr*
Hammond
. ’- - .
. the
MIC county
vuuiux into
uno aa competitive
compcmive abao- «nd daughter. Jean and Mr. and
ng'
...
' । Got a real scare the other night I stract busincu. Thl* circular pur- Mrs. Leland Hammond and chilcount of the war
The annual conireceaiioifaI mwl.
Tlw hour wa* ,aU
8 car - was ported lo be signed by the
Barry dren attended the funeral of Baby
i.- of the
Hds iim* Pr. Aiivt-rmn I obuou',y tra,Un« m“ Thought it i County Farm Bureau
We
know Leonard al Battle Creek Sunday,
inj
....
—
—-... v,of....
—
...
hurch will
heldthis
thisThursday
Thursday, ........
‘ nilKht -**’.........
“ holduj:
But nop?' only ...V...
' members
the Barry Countymill
Farm j .notice
of whose death is made clscchurch
will b-b- held
Shultz. Hastings reliable first Bureau, also the Grange. also school 'where in the Banner.
evening. Tho e wnos? terms will exJ'­ । Baldy
line of defclutt. out to see what I' officers who were utterly opposed I
—•*• *
pire an- G F. Chidester. John En’­ U'Ia tin ?n
i| tn
havlno
thn
nnnnt..
K..I.i in
,n ..a
a i1 Th” 200000 gallons of paint reto
having
the
county
embark
gle. Carl Damon and Arthur CrothOakland-tian Fran­
competitive business that would
ww.,;d °u,rc'd for
bridge
His chuckle hounds like an ap- forec lhe taxpayer* to pay many cisco -—- would cover 20.000 fivcThe members of the Banner force
storm.
। thousand* of dollars They will be room »otMcaarc a little undecided a* to whether approaching thunder
----I interested to know by what right
to continue In the printing buzincsr
At stratosphere explorer., ascend. | the Barry County Farm Bureau. '
or engage tn lhe trapping business
tiie sun gets brighter but the sky i the Barry County Grange and the I
They killed three muskrats tn one darker,
because there are fewer air j school bfficer* of the county were 1
day in the basement —
of *•&gt;»
the aa
Banner
office"
«a,a.c
and dust particle* to scatter the dragged into thb fight, in a last I
sun's ray*.
desperate effort to put the project'
T1“
■&gt;' ««■ •**«««,
■---------------- . across.
‘
church caught fir? from a piece of
5.40.00°
acres ot U 8 farm land ’
We doubt if the board of directors i
At the regtnar nuetlng Monday burning soot *hortly brfor- Rev
“
night &lt;&gt;f the Pythian .Sister* a party Maurice Grigsby was ready to com-:
Ptentwi
with
•
,
------ *o,beans,
----------- Ah in- of Uie Barry County Farm Bureau :
| crease of 30 per cent over the 1934 wCIW tVer called together lo act on i
was given for Mrs Melissa Roe in ptete his service* Sunday noon
honor nf
* pot
gom,. o{ thp slri&lt;u |n jhu cHvv “crease
I thb particular proposition. No meetol hrr
her Mnrt
82nd hlrthrt.v
birthday A
luck supper was enjoyed with a
,.1 —------------------------------------------------------ ing of the member* of lhe farm j
been “bottomless" during tiie,
lovely
of
p '. women's
. birthday
- cake Following
------ — the jx nod4 »»
••• mud,
■■iww, an(1 tcums
tvMina have;
nave
........... sweater*,
—— — • which with the
»••• I bureau was held
------ for
— that
------ purpose.,
regular mcctrng Uucy. practiced -as- hern hnvnnrn hard timein IHinihi; t w7 *teeve» look very stunning The | War. there ever a meeting of thr i
they co lo Charlotte Wednesday heavy loads along soin? of the un- ufl c! setting into one of th■* j- gar- Barry County Pomona Grange at
evening to pul on lhe work.
improved :.treet* which resemble tn I menu look* to be a heartbreaking' which this mailer was considered '
The result of the township clec-. depth of mud Jefferson and Green ’ operation, but in rcalit, U is slm- favorably? No meeting of lhe school;
tlon will ix: found under another St*
Sts . in
In their palmiest days.
I pheity itself. They either button | officer* of the county was ever called i
i on tiie shoulder or lace in front, and : °r held for such purpose it would |
heading
THIRTY YEARS AGO
| it is no more trouble to gel into one ; appear that the use of these names ।
Little Hubert Stem who wa* tak­ of them than an ordinary wat»t.
in this circular was unauthorized. 1
tamed Hunrtav. Mr. and Mrs O G
Hqulrrs and daughters. Velma and en to U B huspital. Grand Rapid*. : Uidirs—Lee 8am will do up shirt
---------- ~* * *
■ —
aUU
in the most satisfactory,!
Georgia, of Flint, Mr and Mrs.
— --------------—
THL LITTLE RED BRICK.
When he get* a quiet evening at । Is quite necessary if wc are to enMr and Mrs. Fred Fisher and Stanley McArthur and son. Bobby.1 Jtfwtimonia b reported considerably ' manner
Mr. and Mrs. Chas, Woodruff
home he fails asleep in his chair. Joy the privilege of self-government. । children spent Friday" night with of Cass City. Mr* E J Cro.cs and improved
i Mrs
Fitztilmrr.otu and family'-....
&lt;»«uuu&lt;.- spent
..
and Mrs. vm.viu
Clifford n
Hammond
He's a prospect for any hussy that There may be limes .hen a state j the Chaffee family near Quimby.
Mu* Clira Hendershott returned have moved into lhe Cha.--. Wclsscrt. Tuesday in Grand Rapids.
son. Kenneth, of Kalamazoo. Ed.
na.. from
Iran, Charlotte
Chototi. where
■&gt;.». she
.h. n.u« ... MUM...
1 Dr. wrnael
lhc
Nutic
sets out to make a fool of him. attempts to exceed its powers, or I The main street division ot the Purchis of Boyne Falls. Mr nnd Friday
i Methodist Ladies Aid held an. nil
when Congress encroaches upon ths day meeting Thursday at tile home Mrs F A Purchi* and family. Mr had been to attend the Fisher Or­
Watch him
visited our school one day tills week
and Mrs. John Purchis and Mr and chestra party.
rights of stales. The LAW. and not of Mrs. Martin Graham
Mr* F j Purchi* and Mu-. Doris
As a companion article io lhe arbitrary power, must decide in
.On Tuesday. Miss Mildred Dause Outchtsa.
land will make a specialty of rc- On|y ;lghl ch»dren look the test
*
t
- - ------------------------------------- •
above, another entitled "What Ev­ those cases, otherwise anarchy celebrated her birthday: in the eve­
Barnaby * restaurant opened for ।
A E Renkes. Charles Clarke pairing bicycle*.
1 an(j a|| wcre q
ning
her
Sunday
school
class
and
business on April 1st tn the Onb- and ,Fred
the home of Mrs from Ponn’houAnd 1*' no* nicely fl
ery Husband Should Know" and would prevail.
slg, con''
teacher. Mrs. Fordyce Showalter, ben building It is modern through­ Rcake*. Officer.-, for the year were
worded someahat as follows might
For several years now wc have surprised her. The evening was cnlocated in the front room.-- ove» JJi*d i® her bed. M.s. Wm Slrausout. booths, tables and lUnch coun­ elected as follows President. Mrs. H«n*
and Van Arm.L grocer,
h« d&gt;u«ht" “
«»•{
be included: A wife does not like to great unrest, which always bring Joyed playing games, and an Easter ters
have her husband throw newspapers out a lot ot wild, crackpot theories, basket hunt, she received several
Mrs. Carrie Spence.
; gifts.
Dainty refreshments were
POWERS ECHOES.
Yesterday the deal was closed 1 A* Cha.’ Grace was carrying a' Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bolton were
and ashes upon the floor It peeves and projYO&amp;al*' to radically change
whereby E C Rus- became role case of felt boots from a car into ‘n Battle Creek Thursday.
her no end lo have him invite things that have always proven
Mr» Clare Cole wa* in Lansmg ing Grange hall Friday evening, proprietor of the grocery" businci* the store house at the facto:, SatMr and Mr*. Frank fib and Lorfriends for dinner unexpectedly. beneflclal. There have been legis­ Friday.
April 10th MUrtc by Wc-xfinatulS:. of ruw a Crook
urday he slipped and fell, striking en of Grand Rapids visited Sunday
Mrs. Charles Kohler of Battle c M.1?5
She likes jalnt on herself but is lative schemes to extend the power
Palmer and E Van
Mr;
Mrs Si!
Sil Wilcox
Wilcox »;;&lt;&gt;
and eiiiiufi-n
children urc
arc me
the cu*c
edge u»
of *uc
the pmviurni
platform wun
with inc
the nuu
and Munaay
Monday ai
at i the home of Clif-1
Creek
spent
the
week
end
with
Iwr
oycKle spent the week end with the able to be out after lieing confined pit of his stomach, injuring himself ford Hammond's,
critical and suspicious of it on olii- of
the
national
government,
mother. Mrs George Campbell. Mr
era—especially
those
particular through bureau*, commissions, and Kohler and Cecile Thompson came formers cousins. Mr. and Mr. Paul td the house for 5 weeks with scar- quite badly and making a wry twinKatherlnc
Ten
Eck of Grand
Nagel at Gull lake
i«-»
I• ....
!
' •
let »«•*■.&gt;,
fever and measles.
lul --------wound.
Rapids is sending her spring va-!
others who catch his attention. She arbitrary ads. which people were for her Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs Will Holdcmakerj
G. L. Gage and Merlin Gage spent and daughter. Marie, left Friday,
is hawk-eyed at detecting advance compelled to obey, even though
FORTY--------------------YEARS AGO.
....
( cation with her uncle and aunt, Mr. ।
FIFTY YEARS AGO
The board 'of supervisor* will, Died—In this city Thursday. April, and Mr*. Chas. Woodruff.
signs of stoutness or baldness In they were not inadc through rep- Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jack morning fnr Stratford. Ontario.
Elliston.
| Canada, where
wiiciv- they
nicy will IVSIUC
reside . ••stand I! Republican* and 7 Ik'mo-, 1 188’.i Eliza, wife of C. G Holbrook., Wc have three new' scholar*. at
him »
and
believes
it ncr
her uuv&gt;
duty w
lo icu
tell rcsentallves alcclcd by lhe men*
uuu
‘iu hcmctc
* iv
Mr. and Mr*. Dclmarter and fam- J Marte
Marie will enter school there Mon- ■-viai*.
i Gertie
u
r______________
crats.
Williams
Is in Grand Rap-; our school, however wc are also lo*. 1
him u In an outspoken manner. ‘ rather than government by the Uy moved Monday near Okemos.
I day morning
! Al! bicycle owner* in thl* city are 1 ids.
ing the two Hopkin* girl*, a* they 1
She considers herself a much bet-! people. The only way to preserve
Mr *n&gt;d Mrs. Harold Vocikrr and
Mr and Mrs. Geo McUiurkin and; requested to call at A R McOmbcr * j There arc 675 legal voters in thl* are moving near Carlton Center.
I
son
of
Laiini'g
vpent
Sanaaj
aft'
family
have
moved
from
Chas
and
register
their
name*
city
which
indicates
2,700 populaMr. and Mrs. Wm Blrausbaugli ■
ter driver than he. particularly definite liberties lo lhe people is to
ernoon with me latter* motiicr. I Schonciclinayer'* farm to a farm
Mrs Robert Dawson ha* Hie hon-1 Hon.
and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Woodruff
from the back waU She likes lo preserve our CanrtUullon. People Mrs Douse and family.
| north of Lake Al-Gon-Quin. The, or of being the first lady in this
O. Soule* ha* purchased lhe attended lhe Democrat banquet;
have bilk paid without question or should not stand.for any weakening ■»
a*ln?won 1,o“i 1:30 until children will Tittend Al-Gon-Quin • city ekvted on lhe school board
'house and lot west of lhe jail and held in Hastings last Wednesday
Olbtr PORTIS .f,l„ at
comment. She lovrs to make aug- of 1U power, by limiting lhe power J.oo oclock there will be a muon ;school.
Henry Rcplogle iuu invented a will move in *oon.
night.
$2.75 $2.98
gnUais for bl* penocal improve­ of-th* Supreme Court which Is the “rv‘5®?t wjc Methodist church. | Mr and Mrs Charles Finkbctner 'oling machine that i- said to ix , Reported there b not a vacant
Mrs. Edith Edger and Mrs. Ann ,
me
topic*
being
based
on
the
"Bev-1
of
Caledonia
spent
Sunday
with
her
vcr
&gt;
‘
ingenious,
a*
well
a&lt;
absolutehouse
in
the
city.
Workman
of
Hastings
called
on
'
ment. she regards hl* gambling and only barrier that stands between U»c
w
Sayings of Jesus.' Piral, i *ister.,Mrs. Miner Palmer and fam- b* perfect in tt* result* Voting ma- Ground ha* been - broken for Mrs. Rebecca Craig Monday
i
Tsy yr rn T’ T&gt; O
speculative loee* a* DISTINCTLY people and arbitrary political power
fyr8lvcneASRe'- Sam-1 fly.
.
j chine* will come In the near future.' Frank Goodyear's new residence.
Mr. gnd Mrs. Ruben Ocrlingcr of.
\A/ £a
I
H
W
fgmily affairs. She Ira* an uncanny
Il is jiul as true today as it ever v.i
sc“nd- word ot Sal-. Mr. and Mrs Virgil Andrews and
For a long time girl* and even 1 Bom to Mr. and Mr*. J M. Mc-■ Hasting.*
¥
A
AIM
Hastings and Mr.
Ur. and Mrs. Wm
Wm
knack at embarrassing cross'eiaml- was, that “eternal vigilante is the w™.0?'/? ' ’.. F JUlo*dc-',; third.• daughter o( Augusta were Sunday women have fell that they would be Elagin, a son. Congratulation*.
n^u^.u spent Tues- j
Ger linger w
of Woodland
rlsv evening
AV.nlmr al
nt the home
hnrnr nt
tv T' . .' DurthCa Hayter;' guc-ts of her brollicr. Arthur Bed-. happier if they could wear sweaters.
Mis* Viola Wllli'on is teaching1 dav
of War.
War- *
nation*. She does not like to have price of liberty."
lourtn, word of Atonement, Rev. El- ford and family.
jlhia has ted to-the manufacture ol .school near Hickory cornets.
jren Bolton.
■
building Is being cleaned from top
to bottom The plumbing i* being
repaired and a modern operating
room I* !&gt;euix fitted up
Ben Hal’lcad. formerly engineer
at the kitchen cabinet factory, will
move hi* family to Holland where
hc has obtained a position
Prof L J Michael and family arc

£ujanKy

TIP TOP

Clothes Shop
"■allliig QasUty lUi»a U» lozr"

�ngi EMTDfGI BANNEX. THUM DAT, ATUL &gt;, 1W

GLADYS SWARTHOUT
AT GRAND RAPIDS
HOW bOINQ DN '

,.
AKIPI • l-NOM

CQMt TU OUR

Tomato Juice
Cream Style
Corn
Corn
Halve*
Peaches
Crushed or
Slicod
Pineapple
Solid
Tomatoes
Coffee
Fruits for Salad

'Def ftlonte

3
2
19c
Early June
2 “*• 25&lt;
Bartlett
29&lt; Pears
2
.‘ Sliced
3
25c Pineapple
21c Fruit Cocktail
2
lb.
26c Pineapple Juice
3
25c Tomato Sauce

SMOKED HAMS
SLAB BACON

2
2
2

|b.

27c

/ib.

21c

y,-ib.
pkg.

19c

lb.

16c

Hockless

SLICED BACON

Sunnyfield

BEEF ROAST

27c

lb.

Mild Cured, Any Size Piece

SMOKED PICNICS

j

23c
27c
25c
15c
29c
27c
15c
5c

picnic

2
2

Mild Sugar Cured
Whole or Leg Half

Choice Chuck Cuts

GROUND BEEF or PORK SAUSAGE

2

lbs.

29c

FRESH SMELT

3

lbs.

25c

lb.

12c

BEEF POT ROAST
BOILING BEEF
Woodbury's Soap

Lean

J .a. fSc
c-—1

Mello Wheat

Tender, Young Beef

25c

2

Meaty Short Riba

|

lb.

Grade ’’A" Bulk

ik

32c

n.

12c

Shredded Wheat

2 rk«- 23c

Kraft's Cheese

’Af ioc

Corned Eeef

3 .... 49c

Campfire

Ar

rcwccred Sugir

or white

x *Eu

Sliced Bacon

Eagle Brand

'TftT*

P &amp; G Soap or

15c

2

Softatiik

N. B. C. Ginger Snaps

ir 15c

Mazola or Wesson Oil

23c

if.

Head
Lettuce
Crisp—Solid

60 Size

3 "&gt;•

bold. 10c

cm."!!

25c

79c
9c

s..£X*s.,h

’!! 25c

27c Peanut Butter

io. Bisquick

Sardines

8 o'Clock Coffee

E-'-

Iona Flour

17c Beet Sugar

Rajah Extracts

Campbell's Soup

Prunes

35c Log Cabin Syrup

JXS,

“■
"i'.,

X-

19c

10 "&gt;• 49c

X 3’c

15c

3 ’X* 25c

Raisin.

3

25c

Baby Food

3

3

25c

Del Maix Niblets

2 —• 25c

•v

The last major event of the cur- . ------------ -------------------------------------- - . —• — —- —— — — —... w
rent season for music lovers will be *l tvo o'clock at lhe residence, lhe Pennock hospital where lhe trac­
tive appearance at the Grand Rap- R«v- C- M Conklin officiating Bur- lure was reduced and X-rays taken,
ids Civic auditorium on Wednes- u&gt;
the Valley Home cemc-----------------&lt;•»
day of next week. April 16. of tcr&gt;'
PASSING OF RESIDENT
Gladys Swarthouu lhe lovely MetroMr. RlUman will
be greatly ;
OF BALTIMORE TWF.
polltan Opera company’s mexzo-so- missed In his home and In the com- I Franklin Matteson, aged 16. died
prano. Is gueat artist with the OU- munlty where he lived for so many i on Thursday. April 3. at his home
vet Symphony orchestra under the I
leadership of Pedro Pax. and under
Hie auspices of lhe well known Bist
Church concert course.
Gladys Swarlhout began her ca­
reer with the old Chicago Opera
company, and from there became a
member ot the Metropolitan com­
pany, where It U said, she has sung
more different roles than any other
feminine member. She la a favor­
ite on lhe radio and has made two
pictures. Rose of the Rancho" and
"Give U* This Night"
BeaU range from 50c to 91.50; stu-

THESE ACCESSORIES ACCENT
YOUR SMART EASTER SUIT!
They're Getting Gayer for a
Bright, Colorful EASTER
FASHION PARADE!

ELECTION IN THE
08950727

Your suit may be as tail­

ored as lhe town bank­
(Continued from page one»

er's.

Commr.. Eugene Nichols. 96; Jus­
tice. Henry’ Wickham. 94; Bd Rev..
Carl Brechetsen. 92.
Castleton.
Republican—Supervisor. Ernest GSmith. 246, majority. 40; Clerk.
Henry Remington. 278. majority.
101; Treas, Mildred Mater. 333; Bd
Rev, Carl Mater. 379. majority. 113;
Justice. Hallie Lathrop. 272. ma­
jority. 95.
Democrat—Supervisor. Hollis Mc­
Intyre. 206; Clerk. Arthur Housler.
177; Treas, no nominee; Bd. Rev,
L- E. Pratt. 166; Justice. Freeland
Garlinger. 177.

But in your acces­

sories . . ah. dial's where

highly colored doc-

you’ll get gay!

SI.00 to SI.95
Printed .ilk
handk’rchirfs

Republican—Supervisor. John C­
Lipkey. 118 Hc was lhe only Repub­
lican elected, his majority over
John Ormsbc. Democrat, being 47
The other candidates chor.cn on the
I Democrat ticket are: Clerk. Pear)
Matthews, majority. 48; Trrav . Al­
lien McDonald, majority. 41; Bd.
| Rev, Andrew Kennedy, majority.
I 30; justice. Fred Peck, majority. 3.
Hop*.
i Republican—Supervisor. Bernard
DeGoiia. 126. majority. 38; Clerk.
George Clouse. 89; Treas, Henry
Bergman. 12t. majority. 40; Highi way Commr, Fred Scott. 102; Bd.
I Rev, will Anders. 116. majority. 24;
■ Justice, Bert McCallum. 120. majorily. 47.
Democrat—Supervisor. Ed Pen- I
nek. 88; Clerk. George Kahler. 122.
majority. 33; Treas, Harry Owen.
84; Bd. Rev, Burrell Phillips. 92;
Justice. Oliver Wertman; Highway
Commr, John Hine. 107. majority
5.
Irving.
Republican—Supervisor. Wm. Me-1
Cann; Clerk. Forest Buehler; Treas,
John Perry; Highway commr, Ed­
ward Waiters; Justice. Matt Bed­
ford; Bd Rev, Waller Hammond.
No contest in Irving township.
Johnstown.
Republican — Supervisor. Ferd1
Stevens; Clerk. Vern Doty; Treas, &lt;
Carl Bowman; Bd of Review. Geo. I
‘Miller; Justice. Julius Frey; Hlgh| way Commr, Gerald Dunn. But one
l ticket was named in Johnstown.

doeskin
match bags.

SI .00

New Spring Silk Slips, Gowns

lapel*!

srd Pajamas, Vests and Panties,

50c

Dance Sats and Foundation

Garments
Taffeta Karls
Hand embruHerrd or plain tailored, al
plaidcd, striped.

and n
shades.

50c
FOR APRIL SHOWERS
SILK and GLORIA PARASOL8 at
RAIN CAPES, new Improved Cape steerea al

59c to SI.00

PRE-VIEW OF THE

Maple Grove.

10c. Baker's Cocoanut

2 Ku.

Dole Pineapple
Flour

19c

ST I5&lt;

Sakda Tea

2 N,J.'‘ 27c

if«»«

Paas Egg Dyes

Lard, bulk

.j.. 23c

orSno-Sboea

Peaches

10 £. 29c

Filke*

17C

r‘«- 25c

• —

Gold Dust

Cake Flour

8UFVXM BIOUN KOBE-

Hastings Township.

11c

Butter
EOJJ5

* «uai&gt;«r. xn uuwin.

Haywood of
v.. Hasting* Twp, several

opera, Radio and irandchiidren.
twothree
brothers.
Frarik i M
Charles,
alatora.
wm*..
.
.
.
. andand
rhnrls.
andand
three
.I.*,..
Me*Mn.
1
Movie Star Sings With
Mlnma GMtman. Mr. ChrUlU 4M1U i da. whUc Wulklu&lt;
lhe Hoit
and
Mrs
Emma
Bowlw.
ail
of
Ohio ! Lumber Co. A plank fell striking
Olivet Orchestra

Popular
__

^VARIETY SHOW

i||

'.sons, Shirley at home. Edgar of I years. The bereaved ones have the
Milwaukee and Lawrence of this I sympathy of a wide drete ot fnan*L

—r— .......

17c Bread

Fancy
Shallots
Southern
Idaho Potatoes
Strawberries
Texes
Stock
Yams
Extra Fancy
Win.s.p,
Apples
Radishes
Cabbage • Naw Taxa*
Celery
Cri»p
Wali-Blaacbed

Grandmother's

25c

£.

6c

J bunch** |Qg
Ait 39c
2 - 29c

4 “ 17c
5 k- 25c
3 hunch*. |0£
11 4c
5c

Florida
Oranges
Full of Juice

! Republican—Supervisor. John H.
j Martens; Clerk. Ralph Pennock;
Treas, Austin Schantz; Justice, full
' term. Henry Bldelman; Justice, va, coney. Vern Bivens; Bd ot Review.
Edward Penfold; Highway Commr,
Sherman Ayers. Only one ticket in
Maple Grove.

HADE

Orangeville.
Republican — Supervisor.
Bert
Brown; Clerk. Ed. Lcwb; Treas,
Clinton Castle; Bd. ol Rev, Ferris
Brown; Justices, Flossie Castle and
I John Carlisle; Highway Commr,
I Herman Morehouse. But one ticket
I nominated.
' Republican — Supervisor.
Ol's
I Boulter; Clerk. Floyd sheip; Treas,
I Lewis Johnson; Justice. Maurice
Hughes; Highway Commr, Ernest
Morehouse; Bd. of Review, Charlo*
H- Hughes. The Prairieville DemocraU did not name a ticket.
[
Rutland.
Republican—Supervisor. Moses WStutz; Clerk.
Harry
Williams;
I Treas
’
.
Ritchie
Treas, Ritchie Mullen;
Mullen; Justice. Pe­
ter Vanderbrook' Bd. Rev, James
Mead; Highway commr, George
Cronk. The whole Republican ticket
was elected In Rutland.

•

|

1
I

Republican — Supervisor. Grover
Cline. 131; Clerk. W H Madden.
IM; Treas.. Frank Gar bow, 120;
Highway Commr.. Claude Kermeen.
213. majority. 92; Justice, full term.
Fred O- Stakoe, 205. majority. 78;
justice. 3 years, Clifford Davis. 150;
Bd. Rev.. Charles Robertson. 163.
Democrat—Supervisor. Julian M
Polls. 206. majority. 75;
Clerk.
Thomas I. Gillette. 231. majority.
127; Treas.. D. Forest Bender. 215.
majority. 95;
Highway commr..
George Viers. 121; Justice, full term.
Gershum Severance. 129; Justice. 3
years. William Krunewlttcr. IM.
majority. 34;; Bd. Rev.. Glenn W.
Allen. 169. majority. 6.

SUITS, REDINGOTES, FUR
TRIMMED COATS, ARE
CAUGHT IN THE
Smart women will choose theae
for their coelomes In the Easter
parade! Pick youra tomorrow!.

Woodland.

29c
126-1 SO Size

Kat. Smith al
CoBa. Tim.

WBBM
7t30 P. M.

I Republican — Supervisor. Glenn
'.Wotrtng; Clerk. Truman Munlon;
Treas.. Lucy Lind; Bd. of Rev.. Will
Velte; Justice, Albert Reesor; Hlgh1 way Commr.. Henry Hynes - No
Democrat ticket was nominated tn
I Woodland.
Yankee Springs.
Republican—Supervisor. Albert 1*.
, Graves;
Clerk. Wm. Ellsworth;
Treas.. Donald Kimmoy; Highway
Commr.. Henry Siuvely; Bo. Rev,
John Lewis; JulUce. Jap Raymond. ‘
But one ticket was nominated tn j
Yankee Springs.

DEATH OF WM. R1TZMAN.
;
1 William. Rllxinan. aged 80, died on
i Saturday at his home near Qulin-!
I by following a jdiort lllncM. Mr.
Rllaman »u a well known farmer I
I of HaiUnga township, coming here I
| from Sandusky. Ohio, in 187t».
’ Surviving are the widow, throe

ENSEMIIES
■Mtwte •»*

SUITS
Easier I

11 Costs Little To Be Smart At

Frandsen’s

7"

EXCLUSIVE

BUT

HASTINGS, MICH.

COATS

JACKET FROCKS
Gay slUt salts is

NOT

EX PE

Ark for Profe-Sharing Tickets

�THE UAHTTNCS BANNER, TnVRSDAY, APRIL 9, IMS
bring fruit naiad or cake, and your
own cup and spoon.

■Organizations

Muuiionary Rally
Wax Well-Attended

Rapids. Nashville. Battle
Kalamazoo, and Hastings.

Creek,

EASTER MESSAGE
!

Sunday School offering Is lo go for The following-officer? were
:e elected
elected•' r*"
place
” and will
’” *be ready
“ "“ to ‘lake up
his **ew
new duties ineat
week.
World Service. There will b.* no for next year. Leaden. Margaret **»»
ICk* weex.

■Cortinuad from page 1, aee. 1&gt;

,ar

man. Ola Kimble; Secrelary-Treas , spent *everal days with Mr, and
Another change has been made
HASTINGS COMMANDERY.
Dorothy Barnum; Recreation lead- .Mr* Henry Wertman last week.
In the Women's Club program. Tin*
No. 716-"What A Friend "
The
the
Hastings Commandcry No. 55 held . Hymn
meeting under the citizenship com­
er. .Alma Boulter.
Mr. and Mr*. Quyla Pease accoinBenediction
and
Three-Fold
n ,?
1
I f
-.
mv
■■ annual election .uuunny
their
Monday CVCeve- Anirn
mittee to have been given April 24.
(First
A well
balanced
dinner wm
by Mr. and MISMrs. Will
Gurd
----- United
V...».w Brethren church be-..
—- — —
'----------- ----------- --- --served |Wnied MJ
TV 1.1 UUIU
WIU
K...
The W M S. rally of the Nara- nhlg, the following being chosen:
gUu
with
a
aunrUc
service
aL
*lx
fti
nooo.ta .the hpsless, assisted by lctunie(l fnjm Florida Saturday
Wil) Of
be neiu
held rr.u.1
Friday «««..«»..
afternoon. n
April
i At seven:thlrty o'clock in L_ „ C1OCK
17. Subject "Our Resi»nslbility os renr church was Well Attended. With । Commander. Rev. J. W Kitching.
tne
o'clock,
sponsored
by
the
young
Alice
Chase.
—
Ola
Kimble,
secrc,
night
making 415 miles the last
.bf the program and menu planning.
people.
Generalissimo. r.,
Dr. Frank
Car
Voters " and lhe guest speaker will Mrs. Audrey Fonner, Kalamazoo
v r.
— ­ evening an Easter play. •Tiie Risen
Th?
people
‘
,ary
’
_______
day
The
enUre
lr
‘
P
was
made
with
•Mr. and Mr*. Bert VanderJagt will
i CI.rLst." will be rendered in the
’ rothers.
”7
0:55
A- M—Sunday School.
the daughter ot Alva Pease of near
have charge ol the community be Mrs. Paul Jones of. Grand Rap-,t)„. Mlle president, in charge. The
play -L? di&lt;n’ , 11
00 A.
M
HASTINGS GROUP NO 2.
Grand
Captain General, Hugh E. Riley. । church auditorium.
---------- ---The --&lt;».uu
a
m —Morning Worship
woramp
Grand Rapids, al lhe wheel.
. singing. Everyone is Invited. Please id*. Mrs. Jones, state president of .RfV j q Martin, gospel song writSenior
Warden.
Cecil
G
Munton.
vided
into
four
scenes.
The
GarI
nn(l
sermon
by
the
Pastor.
Rev
E.
— — ■ w,,u ociuhm* uy mic ruiwjr, w, cl.
Mrs. Winifred Echtinaw enter*------- of
-• •*-- •
the ------morning
Mrs. Dorothy Monroe and May­
-bring fruit, salad or cake, and your the league of women voters, was v.. war In charge
Junior Warden. James M. Langs- den
-Home
nt
------- _ Subject
----------- ------’H.0
"’’*_ w.
0
McSherry.
"Our--------Glor- lamed Hastings Extension Group nard of Kalamazoo spent the past
born tn Hastings.
She
was Miss
“
-----------------------_
devotions. At the close of the morn_ . -‘ "Pilate's Palace,"
;
*
---own cup and spoon.
John at Jerusalem.
and "The ----lous Hope.' Special music by the No. 2 on Tuesday afternoon The week wl*Ji her parents. Mr and
Florence Diamond, a cousin of Mrs. )nE service he favored the gatiier- ton. .
'Sepulchre." Tiie cast of characters choir ••He
- Is Risen" and “Master I last lesson ahd the final fitting of Mis. Ardy Owen. Mr. and . Mrs.
Prelate. Finley E. Johnston.
Roy Cordes, and In her honor there [llB
two of his own songs The
AtUntlon Pythian Staters—Regu­
Includes the following: Pontius PI- mvUie
Treat.. Walter H Snyder.
,v " a special self-denial and I the dresses were given.
will be a social tea. This will be an , nlternoon demotions were in charge
। Claude Hammond ot Hinds Corners
lar meeting Tuesday. April 14. at open meeting and it is hoped there
■ Intey
D. McDonald; P'"'*
Recorder. Frank E Adair.
------ -Archie
­
High •|0Vc offering will be received ut
—— _ ... Toronto. Can.
‘ ot Rev Mary Sparks.
spent Tuesday nt lhe Owen home.
7:30 P. M. al the Temple, preceded '
Standard Bearer. Henry s. Shel- Priest, Cornelius Mann I; P
Peter, , u,!,; service for the building fund.
: will be a large number of guest; and1 ada, returned missionary from In­
CEDAR CREEK.
। Mrs. Phoebe Dunkley lx visiting
by a pot luck supper. All sisters art*
■;' Archie —
Reickord;
Matthew.
Lemuel
don.
.
------- . —
— ------- —
,------' There will be :i small Easter pro­ her granddaughter. - Mrs. Itussei)
s
;W
p
m —Junior Endeavor.
members
present.
dia.
She
sang
"The
Ninety
and
requested to be present, important 1
Sword Bearer. Warren E Carter Severance; Andrew. Ellsworth New-.
0:30 P
M.-^Inlcrmcdtatc
and gram at the M. P. church next WaLson of Dt-ltun.
Nine" just before the pfisslonary ad­
i Warder. Francis L. Bauef.
ton; John. ”
Reid
X|'* ”
Bassett;
---**•■ Caesar*
—-- Senior Endeavor.
The Rebekah P. N. G has been dress.
Mr. and Mrs two Monroe and son •
Sunday.
Legate, Ixon Bauer; Palace Guard. j 7:30 P M.—Service Sermon. "Til”
Sentmal. Thos. H- Johnston
postponed until further notice
Wendal Lammers had lhe misfor­ ot Kalamazoo were Sunday guests
Following the devotions came the
' Hospital Guild No. 7 meets on
Robert McGiOcklin. Women: Mary. Finished Work of Christ." Special
First Guard. Edward D. Tudor.
tune to get his linger caught under | of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Cnm;&gt;bell.
business session in which the officers
Wednesday. April 15. with Mrs. J.
Second Muaru.
zp-cuiiu
Guard. VMUS
Claus T.
r. uorucs.
Cordes.
mother of Jesus. Cora Newton; choir number. "He Live.-.."
Mrs. Hattie Wright of Hickory
a bell and it had to be taken off
were elected for the ensuing year
F. Edmonds at 2:00 P. M- A good
Waters;
HEAD RESIGNS. as follows: Mrs. Audrey Fanner ' First Guard. Milton M. Murphy. 'Mary Magdalene. Ella
Hastings Methodist Parish.
Comers 13 making a visit with her
last Saturday.
attendance 1* desired.
-------------- »-•-•----------------' Claudia, wife of Pilate. Marcelene
Mrs. Fay D. Green, who has Kalamazoo, rc-rlrcted president;
The parish pastor, the Rev, C. M
The Community club last Friday daughter. Mrs. Edith Campbell, of
-------- AT ---------------------I Campbell; Joanna. Fern Munton; Conklin, announces special Easier
AIMS
SHINING
MARK!
been the matron of the Barry coun­ Mrs. Eva Meinert. Hastings vice­
night was well attended and u fine tills nl.lce.
Speaking of finances, charlotte. Archangel. Josephine Whitmore; programs at nil churches on the program was enjoyed by all.
Townsend plan meeting. Central ty Juvenile Detention home in this president; Mrs Mabel Wilcox. Bat­
' Tiie
___ sawmill
____ ___________
sawed out—
the logs
school auditorium Friday evening. city for lhe last seven and a half tle Creek, secretary, and Mrs Mae with all current expenses, including Guardian Angel. Uniise Duckcr; parlM* in connection with their rrgJohn Gurd has been elected May- in the yard lust week finishing lhe
every item In connection with the Ministering Angel. Agnes Johnson ular services.
April 10. 8 o'clock. Judge Edward J years, handed in her resignation to Birchard. Bradley, treasurer
•?or of cedar creek this spring and last log four minutes before qpn■ Frace ca. e. paid has a cash balance I Stephen Johnson Ls stage manager
Jeffrie of Recorder's Court in De­ become effective April 8 Mrs. Green
Wesleyan Methodist.
lin* mqved back from his father's ting time Sa tut day night.
The Michigan District W M S
and
Hn.'cimae
Manni is the render
to begm the new fiscal year—of “
“ ”
—‘- •- •»—
troit. a fighter for lhe working man. __
has_____
always
________
taken_ a _______
motherly
, interAt eleven A. M- the pastor, the
-is to be the speaker.
lest in the Juveniles who have been President. Mrs. L;bbie Supcrnoi-. ol S20.C100, the highest cash on hand
This splendid cast will wear beau­ Rev' E. L. Crocker, will brill" the
_______
' I placed in her home and has met the Cass city, gave the missionary ad­ figures nt this season of the year tiful eastern costumes nnd there .will Easter message, using as his sub­
dress.
Dressed
in
native
costume
'-lie
in the history of th?* city Whoopee, be special'lighting effects which will ject. "Emptying the Sepulchre."
,• The Wellman p. T A will meet responsibilities of the ;xi-&gt;itton in a
held the attention ot the group lei's not trail Hastings any longer. add to the attractiveness of the
Friday evening. April 10. Mr. and fine spirit.
The Young Missionary Workers'
Mrs. Mlles Sawdy will have charge f Mr. Green purchased some time while telling some of her experi- What about some pavement?— scenes. The church choir is lo ns- Band will have charge of the eve­
&lt;11 Mie
a«u menu
inexau paauuiutg.
oiu Whit
wme Benham
**cnnam property enccs in China. She also showed Charlotte Republican Tribune
of
lhe ptvgtaui
program and
planning, i। agu.
ago. Mie
the old
। gist with the music A silver ofTer- ning service at 7:30 next Sunday An
Mr. and Mrs. Bert VanderJagt will. on South Hanover, near the city ‘ many curios from China.
------’ ing will be taken to defray ex- unusual program lias been arranged
have charge of the community sing-I limit?. and the family moved there
Member? were present from Tor-' Americans spend more than a penses.
for this service The Yonkers faming. Everyone is invited. Please lust Friday.
-onto. Canada. Cass City. Grand ,*1000 003 a week for chewing gum!
lly ot Caledonia will give a varnd
Emmanuel Episcopal Church.
Three services will lx- held at program of readings and music. This
Emmanuel church on Easter Sun­ family consists of Mr. and Mrs.
day with an appropriate sermon by George Yonkers and four children,
Che rector, the Rev J A McNulty, ranging in age from four to iweh'c.
at the ten-thirty service Following This program was planned earlier
In the season, but because of bad
is the program fpr the day.
Holy Communion at 7 30 A M. storms and uncertain road-, was
Choral Eucharist nnd Sermon nt postponed. All are invited.
First IMptht.
10:30 A M
A sunrise prayer meeting *nt r.ix
Carol Service and Mile Box pre­
o'clock starts the Easter celebration
sentation at 5:00 p M
There will also be Holy Baptism at the First Baptist church. An

8't

m,I

be thrifty

s

SPECIALS for Fri, ind Sat., April IO, II

MINUTE TAPIOCA

Novelty
HAND BAGS

Visitors are most cordially wrl- Sunday school at ten o'clock, and
"at eleven o'clock the Rev B. J AdThe music of tiie Choral Euchar­ rock. pastor, will speak on "rhe
ist is lhe famous S Cecilia "Mease Resurrection." Music by the Junior
Solennclle" of Charles Gounod. Th?* choir, a solo by Mrs. Gertrude Pen­
offertory anthem is a very beautiful der. baptism and reception of mem­
one by sir John Stainer Mrs Sa­ bers ore other features of lhe morn­
ing service. "The First and Last
die Mac Palmer, organist.
Euster" is Rev Adcock's topic for |
Prelude—Organ
and
Plano—
the evening sermon at • ven-thirty
■Nocturne"—Kroeger
Processional Hymn. “Welcome. o'clock, followed by baptism ami re- i
ccption of members.
Happy Morning"—Fortunatus.

Just Unpacked

Extension Groups

Large Assortment

Famous True Blue

Boys' Shirts
They’re Fast Color!

Gradual Hymn. "Tlu' Strife Lx
O'er"—Palestrina.
Gloria and Gratia.? Tibi—Gounod.
Credo—Gounod.
PRAIRIE EXTENSION GROUP.
Sermon Hymn. "Jesus Christ is
The Prairie Extension group of
Risen Today —Lyra Davidlca
Middleville met
March 28 and
Offertory Anthem.,, They Have
April 3 at the home of Mrs. Wm.
Taken Away my Lord'—Stainer.
Crldler. We were not able to meet
The Comfortable Word:—Cantus for one all day nu'cting so met twice
Solemnis.
in order to finLsh our year's work.
Sursum Corda—Gounod
Due to sickness our group did not
Preface—Plainsong.
finish with as good a record as we
Sancius and Benedictus—Gounod.
wished. Six members finished mak­
Agnus Del—Gounod
ing eight cotton dr&lt;-x&lt;is and four
Gloria in ExccLsLs—Gounod.
silk dresses. We elected officers for
Nunc Dimltiis—Gregorian
the coming year Mrs Minnie John­
Recessional Hymn. "Come. Ye son will be a leader again next year
Faithful"—S. Kevin.
and Mrs. will Brog will be our new
Postlud**—Organ
nnd
lead) r. We slncen ly ho|&gt;e next year
Grand Aria"—Demarest. .
will be most successful. We hope to
lhe music of the aft?moon Cr.ro! meet the other extension members
Service follows.
nt our Achievement Day in Hus­
Processional Hymn.
Again lhe
tings.—Sec Blanche L. crldler
Morn ot Gladness"—Cottman
Res;x&gt;nscs—Festal.
LACEY GROUP
Easter Canticle "Christ our Pass­
The Lacey group of the Extension
over is Sacrificed for us,"
class held their last meeting April
Carol. "Easter Flower? arc Bloom­ I a; the hall at Lacey for an all day
ing Bright"—Ouscley.
meeting. The dresses were scored
Offertory Hymn Above the Clear and judged Plans were made for
Blue Sky—Hopkins.
I Achievement Day. May 1. It was
Hymn. Jesus Christ Ls Risen To­ voted to have lhe same leaders and
day'—Lyra Davidlca
officers next year.—Eula Van Syckle.
Recessional Hymn. "Come. Ye Sec.
Faithful"—S Kevin.
QUIMBY CLASS.
Methodist Episcopal.
The sixth and last meeting fot—
1
At the First MethodLxt Episcopal
church lh&lt;* Easier observance will thii year ol the Quimby Extension
begin at six-thirty In the morning Class was held April 2nd in the
with a sunrise service, when the church basement. Eighteen mem­
bers and three visitors were pres­
t program will b&lt;* a, given below
Prelude. "Festal March'—Stull-. ent Drevcs were scored and chosen
for final exhibit achievement day.
Mrs James Bristol, organist.
' Processional.
Welcome “
Happy Mrs. Gorham of Welcome Group
nnd Mrs. McIntyre. Nashville Group
Morning." Hymn 161
making yie selections.—Clara Gil- 1
Congregation
Prayer
lesple. reporter.
Lord's Prayer
Baptism and Reception of MemCOATS GROVE GROUP
|
• The Coats Grove Extension class |
Anthem. "As it Began to D.-.wn" met nt the home of Olive Castle. 1
bj atults. The Choir. Mrs. Robert Thursday. April 2. seven members;
Burch, director.
and one *c*uor
visitor UVII1K
being prcrwiir
present* i-inna
Plans ji
Responsive
Reading.
Easter ( W(..rt. tll4CUa.a.d B!K1 committees ap- |
Day." ’
ixiinted for Achievement Day. Our
Every ‘color . .
every
Prayer.
exhibit is to be maleriah with inSpecial Lenten Offering
leresling texture. Tiie dresses werc-|
type! Jaunty looking sport
Otlertory Anthem. "The Shout of । given their final judging and scor­
felts, fine-sewed Pedalines,
Victory" by William*.—The Choir.
ing and selection? made for lhe I
Sermon.
"Follow
Thou
Me."
Rev
flattering rough straws,
style show on Achievement Day. }
W Maylan Jone?, pastor
new fabrics!
Don't delay
Hymn No. 159. The Day ot Rc- |
surrection "
. . . choose yours now!
Benediction.
Po*tlude.
"Easter March"
by |
Buck. Mrs. Bristol.
At ten o'clock there will be the '
regular Sunday morning worship. :
Prelude. "Victory
March" by I
Armstrong. Mrs. Bristol
Processional of Junior and Senior
Choirs. Hymn 154. "Christ the Ixard
L? Risen Today."
CongregAllonal Prayer and Lord's
Prayer.
• Quartette, "To Thy Garden" by
ORenbach. Mrs. Burch. Miss Verlan
Lining ion. Reid Bassett and C. A.
. Kerr
Responsive
Reading
“Easter
"
All the popular styles! ! Doy
Tin* Apostles'
--------*
The
creed.
I Easter Offering
■ Offertory Anthem. "The Living
Christ" by WUdcrmere. The Choir.
Check for Quality!
Hymn No. 151, -Come Ye Faith■ ,Ul ” M
Baptism and Reception ot MemI bers.
.Cornet Solo. Q Dry Those Tears."
W. Maylan Jones. Jr.
Brown or black calf oxfords in
Sermon. "The Glowing Heart."
Blocher and Balmoral models;
Rev. Jones.
wing tips if you like. Serviceable
leather eoics. half robber heeb.
. Hymn No. 155. -Je&amp;us Christ te
। Risen Today."
| Benediction.
Postlude. 'Festival March." .Mr*
Bristol.
The Sunday School is to present
a program at eleven-thirty o'clock.'
including songs and recitations by
I the Kindergartners, song by the
, Primary scholars. Easter story by
the Juniors, solo by Miss Frances
Conklin; Easter .play uy
by Warren
‘wiiMiu.
nnrrrii
I Carter* class ot young people. Tiie |

Jean Nedra’s Easter
quality broadcloths ... th
launder perfectly! Fellow*
than! g&amp;M 11
to UH.

FROCKS
THAT FLATTER!
In Spring's
Loveliest Colore!

Spring’s Newest Styles

Here’a variety, men . . . ttripes,
check*, plaids and solid coldr*!
Shade* approved for Spring!
They knot perfectly!

Sleek Myles .. . frilly Myles
. . . tailored styles . . . and
dressy I Come early—while
this group Is so complete.
In sizes 12-20, 38-44. 46-52.

Here’s That New Easter

Marathon
’

HAT

Really Smart for Spring!

Mens
New Spring

SUITS
Sec ‘Them At Only

Styled right in line with men’s
naweat fashions! Quality fur
fell, lightweight for comfort! In
the season’s smartest shades.

J

V .

CENNEV

3 pkgs.

19c

1 Chocolate
Pudding FREE!

Campbell's
TOMATO SOUP

All Flavors

15c

2 cans

MUSHROOM BROTH, Jacob* 3 cans 19c

Kyrle—S. Cecilia—"Messe Solen-

For EASTER!

98c

Men’s Smart Handmade

ROYAL GELATIN

13c

pkg.

$14.75

COMPANY

FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES

CARROTS B-.I. 5c

«

ORANGES 2 j... 37c
HORSE RADISH
jar 10c

FRESH

EGGS

BUTTER
Shultz or Freeport .

BEEF ROASTS F&gt;ne Quaii|» ■&gt;&gt; 15c
Shoulder

Boneless

LAMB

HAM

it. 19c

ib. 33c

Armour's Star

HAM
Whole or
Shank

Half |b. L i

C

VEAL ROASTS

lb.

20c

ECK-RICH BACON

'A Ib.

19c

PORK LIVER

2 lbs.

25c

Tickets Given On the *75 FREE CASH
DRAWING On Main Street, April 25th

Shoes tor Men

HASTINGS MERCHANTS Wont You to
Make This Your Shopping Center and they

invite you to take part in the awarding of
CASH PRIZES to be given away the Last of
This Month. $75.00 in Cash will be given
away.

Ask these merchants about FREE

Tickets. Prius range from $15.00 to

$1,00—17 Prius Will Be Awarded.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, Tlft'MDAY, A PHIL &gt;, UM
•d frlands tn Detroit On Sunday.
Mr*. George Green U spending

AT BIRTHDAY PARTY.
Tuesday evening marked the
- —-- — — —J the Friendly Family Fallowwere at Delton Bunday attending *hlo ntberlno. which were bald
a surprise on her uncle. Ernes: | Pach Tuesday evening during the
Bend.
Ed. Bower hu been visiting for 'Quick, forty-three being present. A month of March A bountiful pot
dinner was
the last two weeks with relatives in cooperative
1
— served and ,uck ----------------- —---------------------- -n
lonia
_ 1
remembered with W|Ry program of 'Scotch MqFrederick Bi*hop will spend EastMiss Beth Ha van was horns from
Clay Bassett will be home Thurs- 1
u lovely birthday tnenta," in charge of Mr*. Geo.
er Bunday in Kalamazoo.
Lansing over th* week end.
East Lansing were Bunday guests of
“"•* Thompson Harlan McCall of Char­
E. W. Pennock of Big Rapid*
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Dahl- her sister and husband. Dr and day from Big Rapids for the Easter 1
Mrs. Ferri* Quick and family and lotte. principal of lhe High school
holiday
spent the week end here.
strom of Detroit were guest* of Mr. Mrs. Frederick Taylor.
and Mr* Harlan Scobey of Del- there. who_
w..„ W1M
Mrs. M. M Crookston visited her Mr
i
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Jon^s of
with, Mra_ McOaU. .
Clay Baaaett was home from Big «&gt;«1 Mrs. Fay Green over lhe week
aunt. Mrs jennte Lyons, of Banfleld ton; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Quick of daughter of Dr. and Mr*. Way were
j
end.
Wyandotte
are
guests
of
her
par
­
Raplcu over lhe week end.
'
Kalamazoo. Mr and Mrs. Theo-1 lurprtse guest* at the gathering,
ents. Mr and Mrs. J. E. Mattoon on Monday.
Roy Finstrom was home from 1 Mrs. Herman Zerbel and Mr*
dore
Tack
and
family
of
Bellevue;
1*^
*
beautiful
solo. Tha address
Steven
Bristol
and
Robert
Field
1
' Herbert Bishop visited Mr. and Mrs They came today and will return are home from Albion college tor Mr.
Battle creek over Bunday.
i
and Mrs. Vern Quick and fam-' of the evening was given by Dr A.
Sterling Zerbel of Kalamazoo on on Saturday
lly. Mr* Jennie Lyons. Albert Ly-, F. Way of Detroit, Area aacretary,
Robert Bute of Ludington is the
their vacation.
Friday.
1 Mrs. Dm* Gardner spent the
*and Mr and Mr* Bert Ferris1 and was a fitting climax to four
guest of David Jones this week.
Ml** Marie Kurtz of Detroit on*
'
Mias Mary E- Bullis. Home Dem­ week end in East Lansing where she spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and
family of Banfield; Mr. and &gt; other addresses given
at these
।
Ml** Sadie Glasgow has returned
visited her son Nelson, whom she
Mr* Austin Ferris and family and ' gatherings.
from a visit of ten days in Lansing. onstration agent for Barry county. found able lo sit up after his re­ and Mrs Frank Kurt*
*l&gt;ent Bunday at her home in
Mrs. Rachel Erb of Grand Rapids Mr. and Mr*. Lewis Ferri* of Dowl- !
Miss Dorothy Long has been home Howell.
cent operation.
Mr and Mrs. Vert Robinson
was the gueM of Mrs. Mary Bur- Ing,
1
from Grand Rapids for a week s va­
Mrs. James
Bibbee.
Mrs.----------Sadie geaa on Sunday and Monday
and Mr and Mr» Crookston of
'
Mr*. Cole Nawton and Mias Helen
—
— —
------- --------cation
ir&gt;&lt;rina&lt;
rooms over the store and '
Newton spent lhe week end with Mae Palmer. Mr*. Earl Boyes and
Mr. and Mr*. Charles Faul and M
8 '
___ .
[will make their home there soon.
'
Mi*s Doreen clary visited Mr. and Mr and Mrs. Fred Mahoney aV Mrs. Eugene Freeman attended lhe Marietta were Sunday guests of
1 Both the I. E. Moore and the E. !
Mrs. Vere Miller ot Chicago over the Kalamazoo,
funeral of Harry A- Silsbee in Lan- Mr* Ella F«ul of Woodland.
SUB DEBS ENJOY
G Olson stores are sporting nice ■
week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Scudder ac- .,ln* Wftihf,da&gt;'
SPRING DANCE. I new awnings thte spring.
Miss Margaret Merrick returned
Around 30 couples attended the
Jack Wilson of Battle Creek spent companied by Dorolha Smith spent
Mr.*. Phylll* Reynolds come* from to South Haven on Sunday after
A ten pound son was bom to Mr. j
spring dance given by the two Sub
Sunday with his parents. Mr. and Bunday with Mrs. Scudder s parent* Ann Arbor for the wetk end and spending her vacation al home.
and Mrs Clare Bassett on Sunday .
Mrs Robert Wilson.
Mias Beatrice Carrothers is .ex­ Deb groups at the Masonic dining morning. April 5. &gt;
in Holland.
: Easter week which she will spend
with her son-in-law and daughter. pected home from Detroit this room. Friday night The young
The Rev. and Mrs. C. M. Conklin
Vere Carter of 'hear Middleville
week end for her spring vacation
Ipeople danced to lhe music ot a and Miss Bernice Pickett of Cale- 1
visited in Alma from Wednesday till East Jordan on Thursday to attend Mr and Mrs. Roy Cordes
Mrs J. A Wooton returned Iwt tour-piece orchestra, and daffodils donia called on the latter's aunt,
Robert Tnffet. who is attending
Friday ot last week.
I| the funeral of her aunt, Mrs. CathaIbIi
’
the Sacred Heart Seminary al De­ week from a visit of three weeks '
Harold J. Foster was in Grand ! erlne UT
WaUli.
Mrs Nancy Deming, at the A. B.
Mr. and Mrs Harold Logan. Miss
Rapids Monday to attend a confer-1 Mrs. Ruby Kenniston will be troit. and Thomas Taffec of Big with Miss Helen Wooton in Detroit.
Fteh home last Friday evening
.
Mrs. F L Bauer and Miss Jean Marie Rowe and Albert Becker were
ence of county agent*
I home from Chicago lo spend the Rapid* Will spend their Easter va­
The Standard Bearers are holding
Barnes are in Charlotte today at- ।chaperones.
Mr. and Mr*. Harold E. Wright of1 week end with her parents. Mr. and cation with their parents here.
their first meeting this year on
Present
from
away
were
Belly
tending
a
district
librarians'
meet
­
Mrs J. M. Townsend leaves Tues­
Lansing were Sunday guests ot Mr ' Mrs. Ed. Waite.
Wednesday evening of this week at
■Swift. Pauline Beneway. Betty Beel­ the home of their leader. Mrs. Geo.
and Mrs Louis Karme*.
: Mr. and Mrs. Harold Adam* of day for Kenmore. Buffalo. N Y . for ing.
Mr. and Mr*. Willard Perry and 1er. Shirley Granger, and Tom Thompson.
MIm Constance Cook is home Battle Creek were guest* of Miss a two week*' visit with Mr and Mrs.
,
Gillette,
Eddie
Francis Townsend____________
and attend ....
the son of Midland were guests of Dr. French. Junior
from Rider college. Trenton. N.J.1 Marjorie Adam* and friends on _________________
Carl Murphy and family, who
first birthday celebration of her [ and Mr* B A- Perry over the week Lynn. Ed. Storkan. Middleville and
for a two week*' vacation.
’ Sunday and Monday.
have been living in the Dipp house,
Graydon Faul. Woodland
Mr and Mrs. Casper Thoma* of j Mrs Rose Benham has returned grandson. •________________________ end.
moved their household goods to Do­
Mr.
and —
Mrs. Andrew Myer* were . Mis*
Murphy
of the
Park- ;
IU her
I let home
liuiuc here uivci
—
...........
-------—Marian
------- ------- -------------- --------Kalamazoo visited Mr. and Mr*, • to
after spending
Xfr.
GOING TO DAYTONA. FLA. I wagiac last Tuesday, where
I several‘ weeks
with **
Mr
C. E. Orohr Tuesday evening.
‘
“ and
“■* Mrs. In Kalamazoo Saturday attending er hotel leaves Saturday to spend
Mr. and Mrs. Wm T. Grigsby, i; Murphy ha* employment.
the funeral of an uncle. Porter ' Easter week al her home in South
Mr*. H A. Adrounle and daugh­ ! Karl Faul of Woodland
vho have been spending lhe winter । Ralph Stuart. Jr., has been con­
Smith.
E.
D.
Tudor
accompanied
1
Bend
ter Zabelle will spend the Easter
Miss Florence Watkins of Wyani fined to his home with measles the
In
Kissimmee.
Fla
.
write
the
Ban-1
Mr and Mrs V R. Pcrrrit and
holiday with relatives In Chicago. ‘ dotte comes this evening to visit them and assisted with the Masonic
past week.
| son ot Pontiac were guests of Mr. ncr that they are gouig lo Daytona. i
Mrs. James Silsbee and Mrs Sa- , her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. W J. service al the cemetery.
Aunt Nancy Deming, who has
Mrs. Lloyd Lohmeyer returned to and Mr* A. B. Gldley Saturday and Fl*-, for a few week* before coming ! been spending the winter tn Grand
die Mae Palmer were guests of Mrs. Watkins, till Saturday. *.
home. They say they have had a
Matilda Smith in Delton Sunday. 1 Ml&amp;s Maxine Wunderlich comes
--------- Germantown, Pa . Saturday after 1 Sunday.
।
very pleasant winter, though colder Rapids with her son. Frank C. and
Mrs Kenneth Roush and baby of I from Muskegon Friday for a week's spending a month with her father.1 Mrs Jane Bennett ha* returned
wife,
has returned to Freeport and
than usual, but not a* bad a* in
Saginaw arc .spending a fortnight | vacation with her parents. Mr. and John WeUsert. at Ann Arbor and hi horne^ after spending the winter Michigan. Dr and Mrs. C. 8. Mc- 1 te staying at the home of Mr. and
Hasting*. Mr. Weissert s condition with ,her son. George, in South
I Mrs. Allen Fteh temporarily.
with Mr and Mr*. John G. Roush, i Mrs Hugo Wunderlich.
cnoxinu
। Intyre had been to Kissimmee to
I Bend.'
Ind.
MIm Betty Swift of Middleville I Mr. and Mrs John Busby, who continue* to be favorable.
Mr? and Mr... nM Fed «( Fori I«» &gt;»' HMUw Iota. «nd both pr. | Miss Laurel Perkins of Hasting*
will be a guest of Ml** Jocelyn visited Mr. and Mrs. W J. Watkins I Tom and Mi** Marjory Stebbins. ’ Mrj and
ana aura. Mciniyrc were looking '
“ week-end guest of Miss
Ironside over the Easter week end. over Sunday, have gone to Freeport lan Ironside. Bishop Kuhn. William Huron ,r. exprewd Friday (or a fine They McIntyre
write that Mr. and i
e;„ . ,
.
i Jones. Lewi* Cascadden. Charlotte .Muuaii.a.u
&gt;l«lt alth Mr. and Mrs Archie D. Mrs E A also
Mr and Mrs Allan Hyde spent to visit relatives for a few days.
Burton and Mtes Ruth
The ’L. A
A. "
8. win
will hold -their
------------regu­
the week end at Niles with her par- I Mrs. C. P Lathrop will accom­ ‘ Hubbard and Barbara Johnson, will ’McDonald
lar meeting at the home of Mrs.
Mrs
Harold
Hawks
and
daughter
•»«-»
Daytona
cnl*. Mr and Mr*. A E. Buchanan. pany Dr Lathrop lo St. Louis. Mo., । be home from Ann Arbor thl* week
Roy
Nagler
on
Wednesday
after­
of Johnstown are guest* of her als- '
men expect lo have some
Mr and Mrs. Herbert Bishop will next week, joining several Battle end for lite Ea*ter week vacation.
noon of this week. Every member !
Visitors at the C E Grohe home ter and husband. Mr. and Mrs Har- K0Od tlmes fishing^
spend lhe Easter week end with Mr. | Creek doctors' wives in tiie trip
is requested to bring a visitor.
* * ‘
on Sunday were Mr and Mr*. Hugh ve v Burgess
and Mrs Orllc Bishop at Holland. * there.
1 Case of Assyria. Mim Norma ua.se
Case ui
of . Mr. and Mrs Stewart Woolcock
the - troll were
over—night
Dinner guests Sunday at ....
-------------w— guest* of Rev.
Casper
Lansing. Mr. and Mrs
C
—7-. | and two daughter* of Lansing were home ot Mrs. Lucy Creglow were i-Fwn Wheeler last Tuesday.
•- and
— Sunday guests of the Rev and Mrs. Mr and Mrs Ed. Kruko. Mrs. AlThomas of Kalamazoo and Mr
R«v Pern Wheeler and niece,
Mrs. Sperry Thoma* of Bellevue. ,w
W Maylan
mayian Jones.
jones.
ma Conklin and two son*. Dick and ■ Mis* Ruth, were guests of Charlotte
Mrs. R. B Harkness left Saturday | MLv. Henrietta Bauer came home Ronnie. Donald Kruko and friend, i friend-, from Thur*day until Satur- .
On Miss Ruth Wells, all of Jackson and j
for Boston and other pointe east on Friday for her vacation. r...
Friday evening they were in I s'
where she will visit her son-in-law Monday
-. she had
----- her tonsils re- Mr and Mrs Frank Pender. Mr. I Ypsilanti for the wedding of Ml** \
nnd daughter. Mr and Mrs. Robert moved and 1* gaining nicely
end Mrs. Frank Andius and Mary i Donna Chapelle and Mr. Sherwood &lt;
Mr "mid* **"
Mrs “
Bert
Zagclmeier
MacClure Love, and her daughter**"
— ”
1------ and Jane called in the aflOnoon Mrs. While, both ot Ypsilanti.
Miss-1
Jean of Grand Rapid.- were Sunday Hazrl Kruko and Mrs Alma Conklin । c*u‘Pelie is the daughter of Supt. '
------- _»
wnu Mr Hnd Mrs
Lincoln. Mos*
| guests
of u._
hl* par
arc guests of Mr. and Mr*. Pender and Mrs. E H. Chapelle of Yp*lHarry Adrounic.left Monday for J D Zagclmeler.
ter. S. Church St
for a few day*.
lanti.
Champaign.
.
Ill. where
। Mrs.
he will
Clarence
vlut i Hyatt
Mrs. and
Clarence
three
---------- * »
Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Thomas ate
college friends for a couple of days children of Joliet. Hl., came Satur- ENROLLS IN THE
1 Sunday dinner with Mr and Mrs
and make plan* for re-entering U day lo visit her parents. Mr and
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO., Marion Clem and family at Carlton '
of I. thte fall, then will go on to Mr*. J F. Esmonds, and other rclaStewart D. Cain, son of Mr. and Center.
Ncw Orleans to join lhe acieuuuc
scientific lives
Mrs Theron A Cain. Route I. Has- ] The Kings Heralds met Saturday
Mr.
expedition
to Central America. ' I **
’ and Mrs Forrest Wood in and tings, has enrolled in the school of. afternoon at the home of Mr. and I
which sails around April 15.
j I Miss Doris-Biddle of Grand Rap­ Social Service Administration at the Mrs. Chester Savacool. Mrs Mack­
Mrs. Wayne Merrick. Miss Mar­ Ids and Kenneth Biddle of Kalama­ University ot Chicago Graduated ‘ ey is •leader
—J
of• —
the group.
garet Merrick. Mr. and Mrs Wm. zoo were Sunday guests of Hastings from Hasting* High school in 1825,
Mis* Alice Kunde of Detroit vis­
Mishler. Mrs Herman Zerbel and relatives.
Mr Cain has been employed in so­ ited her parents. Mr
and Mrs.
Mr
and
Mrs
Clyde
Gamble
and
Mrs Clara Brown were in Battle
cial service and emergency relief R. F. Kunde, last week.
Creek on Sunday to attend the fu- Mis* Doris Gamble of Jackson were work for the past four years lo
Miss Mary Warner visited her
**
' neral of little Jean Elaine Leonard Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Michigan and Iowa. He received his parents at Coopersville last week.
I
Mrs A. O Sheets ot Eaton Rap­ Charles Barnes. Ml®&gt; Dork,
Bachelor of Science degree from
Since several young people from
n church
v are tn lhe —
.
ids will spend Easter week end with malncd for a w-eck’s vacation
Michigan State College and plans , •S.
the IT
U. B.
Raster
Mr and Mrs. George Sheffield to continue post graduate work at cantata which la to be given by the
I her mother. Mrs Mary McCall Mrs.
McCall will return home with her and Dr F G Sheffield expect to the University of Chicago for his school glee clubs at ’ the M. E.
to spend the week, while Dr Sheets leave the latter part of the week on Master's degree.--------------------------------- I church Sunday morning, lhe eve­
attend* the medteal convention in a motor trip lo Liberal. Mo Enroute
ning service at the latter church
------ -»-w*---------------they will visit relatives al Peoria.
St Louis
ENTERTAINS MUSIC CLUBS.
will be taken up and all will attend
The Music Study club was enter-1 the Easter program at the U B
, Mr. and Mrs Gary Crook and Mr 111.
( and Mrs Ray Shroyer were in Balrained by min
Mr* II. JJ. oiunii
Smith uu
on mvu
Mon-- _ cnurcn.
church.
_
’ ,,„_ ,
“ h' •'*' JT,,T
day evening, the members studying' Nearly 400 oeoolc attended th.
1 lie Creek on Sunday calling on Mr.

Social Events and Personal Mention

I attending a dinner for Prudential
Insurance agents of thl* district.
The dinner was in honor of an em­
ployee who had served the company
for 35 years About 160 were present,
Mrs.
Fred Spaulding
came at
yesterdav
inTnrnS
.hi wmm7r
home here after slaying during the

FRIDAY, April IO
Saturday, April II
PILLSBURY'S FLOUR 24 J Ib. sk. $1.09

MILK-Sure Fine, tall cans
CAROLENE-tall cans
OXYDOL-large boxes

4 for 27c

6 cans 25c
2 for 39c

MAGIC WASHER
COFFEE-Hills Brothers

rate

GRAND COFFEE-Dated

lb. 33c
Ib. 25c

Market Specials
Oleomargarine-King-Nut
Ib. 12c
LARD-Best Pure
lb. 13jc
PORK STEAK
Ib. 23c

BACON

1 Ib. sliced 18c

BE SURE AND GET YOUR TICKETS On Our FREE
Drawing, to take place Saturday, April 18.
One

Ticket given for each 25c Cash Purchase and One
Ticket for Each $1.00 Paid on Account.

HINMAN’S
JUST PHONE
HASTINGS

WE DELIVER

at the pot luck supper given for the
member* of the R. &amp; s M. Counell on Monday rvenjnc An Inter.-..
U« proemm wa&gt; alnr enjoyed wuh
Young o!
of Dowagiac
Fred Younx
ooaaclae Grand
Master,
Kim Spier
Sigler as
Maaur. and Attorney Khn
sneakers A saxophone onarielie. a
eslnrirsal
azalea Hs.
asrle Ulnae
clarinet solo
by ILewis
Hine, i-nea
vocalI
i numbers by Roy Gamer and a
ji violin solo by MK* Norma Jacobson
i
were also enjoyed Later tnc women
Ij P1^
“«‘d ‘"Onopoly While
I thc tntn hcld their regular tyctlng

Roop received the award for having
’ practiced the most hours.
|I On Tuesday
nlcKiay e&gt;cninc
Mrs nnutn
evening Mrs
Smith
I w„
,0
Mol,„ Mu,tt
CM Ulc hou!c tooraUon&gt; holos
„ u,e
v„ H„,„ won lhc
...
.....
. .
for having practiced the most hours
and for memorizing the largest
number of selections.

.
i
winter with her daughter. Mr*
..... , spring W- F. m. S. RALLY.
[
Sidney Boyne, of Chicago She will I ,A spring rally of the Barry coun­ ’
I visit her sister and husband. Mr II ty
(y Woman's Foreign Missionary So| and
and Mr.*.
Mrs. J.
J. D.
D. Zagelnteier.
ZageJmelcr, for
for a
a f1 c|eites of the Methodist Episcopal
few days before golnf U) her own , church will be hcld at the First
home.
j Methodist church of Hastlngif on
Ml** Marycttc Stickney, of the Tuesday. April 14
beginning at
Adrian Training rchool for girls, jq 30 * M
spent the week end with her sister.
Therc wl|| be sendee* both in the
Ml** Betty Stickney, She has been. mornlns
afternoon, a good1
convatesclng from a severe fall on. I&gt;r&lt;M{ram n*, been arranged for this'
lhe ice on the school grounds *cv- 1 meeting
eral week* ago. In which she *us- ■
------ — &lt; * »
tained four fractures of her arm | In the larger cities of lhe U S.
She was able U&gt; resume her work at, less than 10 per cent of the business
lhe school on Tuesday.
te done with cash!

Specials
Thursday

Friday

lhe eighth grade in I o. O- F- hall
last Friday night. Vere Carter,
teacher, deserves a great deal of
credit ■ for training the characters
in their part*. Piano number* by
Winston Kaercher, songs by the
grammar room, and violin solos by
Mr. Walters, made the interml**ions
pleasant.
Mrs. Julia Godfrey was given a
real surprise last week Tuesday aft­
DESSERT—BRIDGE.
ernoon. lhe occasion being her
Bouquets of vari-hued spring 21st birthday &lt;for whoever heard of
(lowers In attractive vases centered
a lady older than that?) The affair
the tables at lhe dessert-bridge was planned by her daughter. Mrs
luncheon on Saturday, with Mrs Lura Rigterink of Grand Rapids,
Harold P. Phillips as hostess Six who. altho too ill to be present,
tables of bridge were in play with thought of her mother's birthday
Mrs r w Cook. Mrs A D Mc­ and planned for her pleasure. Mrs.
Donald and Mrs. Forrest Lane hav­ Rlgterink's two daughters, Mrs,
ing the winning scores.
Dorothy Supemau and Mi** Helen
Rigterink. both of Grand Rapid*
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
Miss Edith Maynard was sur­ and Mrs. Godfrey's other daugh­
Mr*.
Minnie
Hnon-r
nt
prised on Thursday night April 2 ter.
Twelve of her girl friends came to Campbell, were present for the oc°r
Godfrey's
help celebrate h«r fifteenth
won birthomn-ii . . . .
wvuucys
.served.
She '1 “djr Jrten&lt;*» wert invited to spend
day. Refreshment* were s~
Z-. Z^zz
te. The
The eveeve-1■ .t*Je.•r,temo®‘ wUh her- ,nK1
&lt;i ■
•b
**u­'
reoeived several nice gift*.
beau
tiful large birthday cake, furniihning was spent in playing games.
ed by Mrs Rigterink, was served
With
Ice
cream
Mrs
Godfrey
re
TAI CHAPTER MEETS.
Was Helen Butolph was hostess lo cclved many beautiful gifte from
the Beta Slums Phi girls Tuesday her friends.
Junior church was inaugurated at
evening. April 7. After a short meet­
ing to talk over plaas for the re­ the M. E. church last Sunday mommainder of lhe month, monoixtly Ing under the leadership of Mr*. H.
was played with Miss Margaret 3. Wedel. The children meet with
the adults for the opening serviced
Densmore the winner.

Saturday

BOWL OF GOLD FISH FREE WITH EACH
$1.00 PURCHASE
Aspirin Tablet*, bottle of 100
Rubbing Alcohol, pint

— 17c
..17c

Milk of Magnesia, pint
— 17c
Hinkle * Pills, bottle of 100
50c Jcrgen's Lotion
38c
Grove's Bromo Quinine, 35c sisc23c
Pinox. Z’/j ox.49c

Weit Tooth Paste
—2 for 33c
Orli* Tooth Paste
—2 for 25c
Muliified Shampoo, 50c rise-34c
Doan's Pills_51c

TO MAKE 500 NEW CUSTOMERS I
Hollywood Beauty Shop with its alafT of licensed operator* who

FOR YOUR EA5TER HAIRDRESS Wa Recommand
Thi* Fine. Genu­

S I150
AL1.
THIS
WEEK

ine DUART

Croquignole
Permanent
California
ty

Creation.

and lasting el-

shampoo and finger

Many Other Special* in All Deportment*

ft PF O
Keel/ 3

Finest Castile Shampoo and Finger Wave
Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value,

Wolgraan Syitem
DRUGSTORE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

-50«
for 65c

(For Dry Hair and Dandruff)

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE
lit WEST STATE ST.
PHONE ISIS
LUCILLE KEMLAR and MARGARET DAHLKE
HASTINGS
MICHIGAN

&lt;*

• Nttrh

Spring ( loihint **4 Skats sue

NECKWEAR

COLORFUL PATTERNS
STYLISH STRIPES

50' 75’1“
SHIRTS

Spring* smartest styles
have been added to our
slock—Sandy Me Duff top­

coats, water-proof and fine­
ly tailored; Hart Schaffner
&amp; Marx suits, style leaden
in the clothing field for
yean.
Daaptonaa and Crash
Woven Pattern* and
Stripes
$4 .25 M «

95

’1650 *19
’22

HATS
11 its Sport Clothes you
would like, we have them.
New ensemble* of dark
coals, light trousers; dou­
ble breasted and belied
backs. “Just a thought/
A NEW STYLEPARK
FOR EASTER

$2-50 $3‘50 $5 00

wonder if “Tommy" Ims
his new suit for Easter?

50

’1350

THE QUESTION — Have

you scan the
NEW SHOES at BAIRDS? New Brown Buck* th
wear for Sport; stylish Pigskin* end imported

them on. They complete
and sat off your naw guit—

$£.95
w

$E*
w

$f*
O

T. S. BAIRD’S
Clothing and Shoa* for Men and Bay*

tn the church auditorium, going •
NORTHWEST
to the basement for their service
MU* Charlotte Tungate
Just before lhe sermon. All chil­
dren are Invited.
MU* Mildred Warner, of
A special program u being given
Mrs. Otto Wood enter!
at lhe U. B. church this Wednes­
day evening by Rev. c. E. Myers A quilt was tied by the tedte*
and •'The Alabama Quartette"
all enjoyed the tine dinner. The
Mrs. Robert Hunter, who teaches
al Muir, spent the spring vacation Jack Rosenberg.
last week here with her husband
The April meeting of the W. F. old neighbors. Mr. and Mr*. —
M. S. will be held this Friday alt- Sines and family, back Into cur
the home of Mrs. J. E. ,
A Peace
In I|
Barcroft. A
Peace program
program in
Mrs Murray Schnurr and neptev
charge of Mrs. Barcroft will be jackle Fow|er &amp; Or*nd R*pM»
given.
1 apent Tuesday with Mrs. Bkri KtrGayion Overholt is recovering at meen and family
the Lake Odessa hospital from an! Lyle Wood. Mr* Otto Wood and
operation for appendicitis.
. uiaa Lou Geraldine FrtalU attanATiie Women's Literary Society . ed the funeral of a retaUv* tn GM*
will hold their April meeting on Sunday.
-T*h, 1 r,H1
— ———
&lt;____ m
■■ —

north of town. The topic will be ning guest* of Mr. and Mr*.
“Michigan, lhe Playground of the Keagle.
Nation" Mrs.
Mr, F.
f e
umnMr w.ii
Mr* Hattie Carpenter to
Nation."
E. Brunner
will
conduct • Memorial.
Next Sunday morning at 40:30, vllle. who Is 111 with heart
the Glee Club* of Freeport High
school will present .an Easter r»n-

church. This service has a communlty appeal and everyone la In- 1
vited.
People of Freeport will be visited
thl* week Saturday by Camp Fire
Girls selling Easter seals. The :
money derived from this sale is used
to help crippled children. Mrs. H. !
8. Wedel is in charge of the drive ,
here.
Maurice Overholt was the guest of '
his parent*. Mr. and Mr*. Charles '
Overholt, last week end.
Mrs. John Hdrigle of Hastings .
was a Sunday guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Usborne.
A large crowd attended the free
movie. “Hidden Harvest," in I. O.
O. F. hall last Saturday evening.
Door prizes were awarded several
lucky folks.
Mrs. M. C. Bevier, who has been 1
seriously ill at the home of her
daughter, Mrs L. M- CurUss, U
gradually falling.
i
The many friends ol Mrs. J. W.'
Rigterink of Grand Rapid*
are
happy to know, that altho progres*
Is slow. *he is gradually recovering ‘
from Iwr recent serious Ilinas*. After .
six months of suffering she has.
recovered to live extent that she i
was able lo take a short auto rid*
recently and I* able to get down ,
stair* with help. This I* good news I
to her many friends her* who hope ।
the warmer weather may bring
about a speedier and mote marked
improvement.

The likeness of ’he Statue of Lib­
erty was ttr uiollicr ot the sculp­
tor Bartholdi.

..... ...

Good
Food
many |*ople “Dino
the Trio. Other rei
cheerful service

•onablo price*.
SpMid

Side Duh. Dri
(Col/et, T~ or i

SUNDAY Or

Smixw/rm

�rear aid rrar raiding.
Ilrnll. .ml ...und fa)
4-1A
,.r* .1 Garage &lt; a.

for

INSURANCE

IVA NTS

SHELDON'S

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

ABSTRACT

'

HASTINGS. MICHIUAN

|

1

Our Service
CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .
Ill ZUuiMM NaU. Bank Bldg
A Homo Orasaar Organlaad 1*7*.

1

Frost the earalMt acta ol aurri.
U« wtaa man corrrcU Ma ewu.
Demand a modern Abatract before
buying or loaning money on real
arula. PLAY SAFE

Pboat 2115

105 B« Church St.

'

■ PQR BALE—Aunlea- .TMiflM.
35r and up; sonar, tarl llo.ae. S
mil. aaat H rail* north and H ml*
1 ...1 lllehnry Coenara.
«•
; FOtt RENT—April BL • room modern
hou.a. elo«c in- * Nrehvla. -t»H.i Headway 11..Ung.
«L
Fug HALE-Pratt
&lt;rom 1 to.a
«r, ot a«. gmal color. Aho mtleh
coat tll.on A Miliar, mile north and
&lt;n.l. ra.t of HarWa Corner.
ll
I EuR ‘HALE— Four-burnar A It &lt;a. •lor*
| r.ii E&gt;.t Walhoi hi
n

WANTED

OP THANK)
r h.artt.li ll
trlrnda. ah&gt;
d.tiarnnem i
Utt HALF. — Hou.. and a.ira lot loeal.J i
K20 E 1U.ti.on lla.linga. Barga.n ,
t.-r c».h
Write Edward Boon.
I
h-lawar. Ht . H )
brand Rapid.
...........MS

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
Spectacles Fitted and Guaranteed.

months past and died Tuesday
night. He was a kind and loving
husband, fattier and grandfather.

MARKET - Phone 2616

ston Camp No. 30. Battle Creek, of
the U. S W. A- After the funeral
services at the Methodist church on
Friday at two o'clock conducted by
Rev. Maylan Jones with hB comrads assisting, burial look place
with military honors at the Riverside cemetery.

FOOD CENTER 2609

F

National Bulk Bldg—Fbcne S51S

8 Months Time

PIANO
BARGAINS

u

arid Gappy Baechicr attended the
Community Club at Mr. and Mrs.

to take over contracts and continue
small monthly payments. Write
CREDIT MAN
P. O. Box 137, Chicago, HL

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG

STRAWBERRY AND
RASPBERRY PLANTS

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

Porter Smith, son of George and
four being present and they all say Hannah Smith, of Augusta. Kala­
they had a tine time and a wonder- mazoo co., was bom in Calaraugus
Co.. New York. Aug. 27. 1852. and
The poor Utile spring birds Hull passed away in fKalamazoo. March
were building their nests have de­
cided to wait now until Spring be­ F and A. M for 60 years. He was
fore they come back to finish them. interred in Day cemetery. Kalama­
zoo Co., by lhe side of his father
Evelyn on Saturday visited Mr. and and mother on Saturday P. M.
Mrs. Byron Moody and their moth­
Americans post an average of 800
er. Mrs. Mabie Moody, who B 111 at
South Maple orove.
letters a day without address!

Man- Cutler of Parma, Miss Pauling
Bellinger of Battle Creek.
MBs
Young of Elsie, MBs Mary Linke of

E. W. POTTER
BOk Mt

LESLI

CUSTOM HATCHING

cisco. Virgil, students of West­
ern State Teachers' College. Fred
Granger, student of Ypsilanti, and

Wright Clifford, bus driver
Thornapple-Kellogg school, had
misfortune to lose his bam by
April tint.

BURDETTE SUTTON

"AKRON" MODERN

g.J’Xav"
wrlior'a «

Lucy Sullivan spent Friday with
relatives in Hastings.

.1. " kind. ot trull. LarOllon
U.t lltlt Ri
4 1
WANT!ID—A Mating ga.ul.n. motor
Mu.l th. in e«nd condition and lirirrd
01.1. I'honr 777—FZI
IO
fill
ILK-It. IO. rng.ua l.rg. air.

A plain case beautiful Player Piano
and nearly new Upright Piano (both V
smaller type) near Hastings. Will

JOHNSON &amp; JARVIS

MECHANO-FORM TRUSS

Ubiiuar

* word ,
iaii oblwa

family Friday.
We have not seen In any of the
items mention made of the fine
the passing of his uncle. Porter
twin boys bom to Mr. and Mrs.
Smith, of the State Hospital in Howard Bryans We know they are
Kalamazoo Monday night hd was
proud of them and well they may
formerly of this place living here
be. They have been named Jack
Robert and Jerry Ronald Congrat-

CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

GENERAL INSURANCE
.AGENCY
»

wi.?u7i

EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

Let George Do It and you can see.
Watch. Clock and Jewelry Repairing.

JERRY ANDRUS

ery. Jr . and Elmer. Hastings. The
family moved to Michigan in 1013
coming to IMslings in 1017. Besides

Carpenter. Grand Rapids, a half­
brother. Earl Apsey of Howard City,
and four grandchildren. He has

at FELDPAUSCHS

GEO. M. NEWTON

The Hasting! Banner

1 He spent hB boyhood days tn Au­
burn. N. Y, until th* outbreak of
lhe Spanish American war when h*
enlisted in Company A 13 U. 8. In­
fantry and saw three years active
lervue in the Philippine Islands.
Upon returning he resided in AuI burn. N. Y, being united in marrlage on November 17. 1004. to Agj nes May Clark. To thia union' four
rd.ltztran wrrr hrirri *-4r« r’liarlntte

ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER­
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c

OFFICE

Emery I. Apoey. son of Joseph

Louie Apsey, was bom August,
THE CHURCHES CARDS of THANKS. land
15. 1(77. at Williamston. Michigan.

Webster, who is an electrician and docs all kinds of
over-hauling and general repair work. See us about

your tractor, truck or machinery.

A.C. GATES

Mrs Wlndes. first grade teacher,
was ill Wednesday. This is the first

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

FOR WORK OR FLAY

L CIO

fl
ADJUSTABLE CENTER

l« and Ar-r !tn. ag.«
mile w««t •! Hhalt,
WANTED -Mingle man
dairr tarn, g.owl idar»
.trad, .nd d.L-u.l.1,1.
Mi.ld1.rill.
EXPERIENCED ladr wh
I.r dor ..r hour Mr.
E ('enter st &lt;'.&lt;r
«U A IKE Urn. for .»!.
n, I
d« it. .• work hat
hor». cultivator. read.
..... old frr.h r.
Furlong n mil., noct

and • Tan
■ v Ander. 4 •&gt;
li&gt; ..fork and

Mil.. bba«
4u
.. .miito.m.nt
. Il--.1l 427
4 9
n, Wirilt.l ..".I

ance meelln, In Muakeuon Friday

MONEY TO LOAN
Fidelity Corporation of Michigan
1018 Grand Rapids National Bank Bldg.

Hol.tr.n rnw.

■&gt;t tnonum.nl

Salt.
Ftltt HALE—Tan Hr...
Hr.»n Ha... hr.I.r ol 1 ao fl a.nd
mill derrick A. J i'u&gt; ar. Allo Boni.
4 *&gt;
Full HALE—E.rh and lai. Uulatnrl
t.rire 75 r.ni. Iiu.hel. Mil. north

Mr Smyth was in Battle Creek
Saturday.

Will loan money on automobile security.
If you now owe on your car. we can refinance and
advance more money, also reduce your payments.
Our representative, Frank Bird, will be in Hastings
each week on Monday at Universal Garage, also
Goodyear Hdwe. Co. Leave word and he will coll.

Tuberculin tests were given to
about one hundred and fifty stu­
dents Tuesday morning by Dr.
Swift, Dr. Lund. Miss Payne and the

Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap"

The Prescription Drug Store

known Wednesday. The students
who took lhe teat last year did not
have to take It this year unless re­
quired
The 4-H Club girls have finished
their dresses and are writing up
their reports. A local 4-H Achieve­
ment Day will be held prior to lhe
County Achievement Day.

Farmers, Attention!

1935 FORD TUDOR SEDAN
This car ii in wonderful condition; looks and
runs like new.

Dead Stock Removed!

1933 TERRAPLANE 6 COACH
Another who may be said to have
his ups and downs is the unfor­
tunate chap who happens to get an

If you're tired of taking- told
showers in the morning, you might
try going down to Ute bank to ask

1932 STUDEBAKER COMMANDER
8 REGAL SEDAN—with 6 wheels, trunk,
heater and radio. This car has been complete­
ly overhauled.

1932 STUDEBAKER DICTATOR

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

HASTINGS MARKETS

GRANGE PROGRAMS

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle

8 ST. REGIS SEDAN—with 6 wheels
trunk. This cor is a wonderful buy.

and

1931 STUDEBAKER DICTATOR
8 SEDAN—This cor is in wonderful condition.

Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,

1931 STUDEBAKER 6 SEDAN
With point job. You couldn't tell this car
from a naw one. A BARGAIN.

EVERY SATURDAY
If you wish trucking service call Hastings
Phone 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.

Michigan Livestock Exchange
HASTINGS BRANCH

1932 ROCKNE 65 SEDAN
Sunday school every Sunday at 9;
preaching at 3 o'clock. Rev. R. A.
Houghton, pastor.

The sick in Yankee Springs are
Improving.
"" si at*
72«—fj Hastings Tuesday after spending a
Chandler st tiMueca f’&gt;- week In Yankee Springs.
--------------------------------* ®. . Burdette Willson's little baby B
witM.
Bo ‘’•"‘To ^proving ^0“ IB sickness.

Qrang Rapids Wednesday where she
had “been cAlng for her daughter
and new granddaughter.

THIS CAR IS A BARGAIN.
All these can completely reconditioned. Ev­
ery Cor Corries the Goodyear GUARANTEE.

GOODYEAR BROS

HARDWEAR CO
Hastings, Michigan

Telephone 2101

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, APRIL 9. 1936

S". &lt;
CIH BUSINESS
^thinks I WELL CARED FOR
______ about- ----- rI
about

[Barry Bypaths

Aj WAYLAND EDITOR TELLS
OF BARRY CO. MILL

Fiqds The Water Gristmill
At Boweus Mills An
.
latereiUn* Place
' 00K
Well, we Just finished making out
Br JANE CAMERON

'POSTPONED UNTIL
I
NOVEMBER 1, 1936

EDM

High School Newt

I. 0. C. Reveries Order For
ucutar collate in
this is the week of the subdistrict
Truck Gathering and De­
speech contests to be hcld at the
livery of R. R. Freight
I Lincoln school
in
Kalamazoo.
COMM R.

P. HIGHWAYS
H1QHWAY

. Some lime ago a plan was an­ Thur*day evening. April 9 Hwtlngi
fcvcr amcl. , w„ B B1U , ,mu ,rciuu ,
Ever since I was a kid I had iteard I
nounced, by the Interstate Com­ High will bt represented by Achsah
------------------------------ ------|WC kepi from ordering everything , about Ur wawr gmtrnlll at Bowens1
VAN WAGONER, 80
HAS
CASH BALANCE
merce-commission to have lhe rail­ Buck. Donald Doxey and Donald
everly hills.calif.I 111 Hie catalogue Bel they sell ever • Mllu operated years ago by an old!
®
.
DECLARES
roads of the country adopt a store, Weaver, who will compete against
$30,060.73
so much more of lhe seeds accom- 1 frlcnd of my ^4-^ wuilam E
—According to tradition—|
office and shop door delivery of students from Kalamajoo Central, “f
I patued -by the beautiful pictures Bowen, and the wonderful oldb 1
freight by truck, also the gathering Battle Creek Central. Lansing Cenor maybe it’s law—King Ed-(
I than of lhe unillustratad one*
^hloned buckwheat and grahwn ) TOWNSHIP BURDEN
up of freight in that manner for tral and Lansing Eastern. The
, e
ward is limited ip the choice oL 1935 CITY TAX RATE
• • •
1 fiour they made over there and It
. ------------ —.— -■
transportation over lhe railroad*. coaches will judge the event, each
h
IS
LIFTED
THIS
SPRING
WAS 71C Per $100 Hey, Mr County Agent Foster! was only a few days ago that I visit-I
a bride to one of five European |
i This change was to become effective rating all other pupils but his own. ,,
-----------1i Why don't we grow sugar beets In
-----in |I ed for
tor the
the first time
time the old mill.
mill.1
Tiie winner will compete in the dUprincesses. Even so, his majes­
Mich.
Countic,
Now
Be.pon•JS'uJ'JSS
Rate May Be Reduced This |
।—
now -------------------------still going as good----------a* ever.
Uriel contest and receive a Detroit
-th0
------------ plannea t0 comply with tms order;
ty would find nearly everybody I
! Outside of French's big mill atJ
sible for Building and Up- ‘but Just before it went into effect News dictionary award. The district ml“ method of hooka and
Year by Aid From State
over here giving loud cheers—and!
| Be sure and plant a good patch of i Middleville, the mill at Bowen* Mills (
,
.
.
1I the
lb* Tnteralate
Interstate Commerce ezimmtecommis- contest will probably
Mr. Taylor has been sppelniad •
sunflowers,
keep
------ r —
of —
all Twp. Roads
some of his loyal subjects nt home
sunflowers, also
also some
some around
around lhe
the i I* th® only water mill In this part of |
Highway Department
; lion sent out notices to all railroads ' Hastings, and May 8
member of lhe State AuoclaUd
1
lhe
country
and
I
have
always
been
q-nis
year
a*
I
outbuildings
and
leave
them
stand
doing the in me
t-1 w
affected staling that the enforce- as the tentative date
~
.
s we recently exThe auditor ot the city's books!
Golf and Tennis committee which
curious
to
see
It
In
operation.
Tiie
!
j
Ing
for
the
birds
next
winter.
They
thing, ton. 1 bet B**P*QB rendered his report at the last'
incut of
nf lhe
the order
order had
had been
been postnn.«t•■ • •■
. '
plained,
county »«»«»
road,i l ment
uirnt
post
­
min gets Rs power from the waur P
,ain*.d . the _Barry
will
meet at Lansing'this SaturAy
.
ftW
It'n Vhave
ibm-a |
you—did he Just up
poned .mill
until M
November
,k We
The *enlor pictures are all in and
meeting of lhe city council. It Is in |। love them and each sunflower -head that flows from Barlow lake Into commission will take
over the re-1.
— ---J to discus* plans for regional tannls
nnd marry the
■- are ----------------— the and golf tournament*.
every way creditable to this city., makes an Individual feeding table. Paine lake and thence Into Gun ; malnlng 168 miles of township high- not learned the reason for this - ---------the--------panels
being made •
for
। tlon. unless it was an "April fool" . annual.,-------------------------------------------- '
healthy, sweet, nor­ I
There was on hand at the begin- i
- - Just bought a sack of sugar
raised '
.
' ’•&gt;? m ,hU county,
the I completing the I joke on the public.
u.u raiscu
i wa&gt;’s completing
u‘ thu county,
------ 1 The assembly at which Dr. Paul
mal-minded. clean
l^hji 1 nl|ig of lhe fiscal year. -March 14.
----------------- »
C
'1 There Is a drop or fall al the mill taking over of 840 miles, or 168
blooded daughter uf r A
1935' 838-479 08. Tiie city received and manufactured In California
1 Miss Jean Glerum attended the Voelker of Grand Rapids wu to
Michigan
women'
Why
don't
we
gel
,
°
r
fourteen
feel
and
this
fall
of
.
miles
per
year,
for
the
five
years
.
—
-----------------------------—
-----.
during the year &gt;52.621.20. The dls■•&lt;&gt;me English coun­
National Music Educators Confer- have addressed tiie students on the
the wheel in use there ' provided in lhe McNltt taw.
„ .,
o
.
' dhfll bursements by the city, up to March logeUier and demand Michigan beet Wftl«
ence In New York City the week of I subject of vocational guidance has
try family.
horsepower , state
highway
commissioner. I
KllCV OtOClCS
I
14 this year, were &gt;50.039 55. There sugar? Let's stand by our own beet!d'\eloi^„ thirty-two
Indeed, lie might
March 2fl to April 3. Most of her j been set for May 8- Dr. Voelker's
I This mill Is quite a versatile place | Murray D. VanWagoner, in an Inwas on hand on March 14. 1936, growers and manufacturers.
time while there was taken up with 1 talk will be In connection with a
go further and fare
•
•
•
i
of
business
a*
they
have
a
rblmilL
I
tervlew
published
last
week,
said
I
________
_
_______________________
I
- - --------- ------- —
...--- 1.
UUI WCCK. MIU
&gt;39.060.73 in the various city funds.
lectures on the various phase* of new enrollment system on which
no worse, by tak­
snell-binder mlspromlsoro- 1 flourmill, cider mill and saw mill, all
all! tjiat
tiiat about 2.200
2200 miles of township
townshiul* '
'
A political spell-binder
The principal receipts were from
school
music, both vocal and Instni- the faculty are working at present,
ing for his queen
f0(. ]035 ||nd delinquent Uxcs nounclng a word in a speech that 'of which is operated at one lime orJfQndj have
taken over by
went to Dr. Burton's office one mental. These meetings were ad- By this system each freshman atuI
-------- —
a well-born Cana­ Irvin 8. Cobb ' for preceding years. &gt;33.523 82. The had evidently been written for him I। another during the year.
| counties.
Tills---------------------------year completes—
the day. I mean H
the old doctor, tiie old dressed by prominent speakers and ' dent will draw up a tentative outperiod
provided by the "Forty "
Nlner"
dian girl. Still, ibis
______________________
and "Yankee" Robcity received from the patrons of recently praised the -invisibility of || Waler power has been known [ five-year r
muslc educators from all over the line of hla four yean* work with a
would severely shock a certain type I the citywater
’s
. character" of his chosen leader. । since lhe early pioneer days as a McNilt law for taking over town- | inson was there having a coal cln- United Slates. Nearly all of New'view to better fitting himself for
system. &gt;9,815.82
of Britisher who always refers to a' It also received 20 per cent on 1m- That was one sentence in his ora-' cheap method of power and loca- shlp roads. This will make about | der removed from his eye. As he
Canadian
with na'' pounded
tlon that was strictly authentic. An I tIons available for waler power in 80.000 miles of county road mileage . started to leave he said. "Doctor. York's musical forces turned out some definite profession by workCanadlan as
ns a
a "colonial."
•'colonial." with
pounded funds.
funds. "'•5J74-45.
&gt;5.774.45. Among
/
to entertain lhe visiting teachers. A : ing toward that alm through his en- .
In
Michigan.
It
Is
needless
to
say
‘
I
don't
come
up
here
very
often.
I
lower row "c" or. how about a maid | the receipts wc noted this item. | excellent description of the pro-j। the early days soon naa
had a mg
big aaadspecial performance of "Lohengrin" tire four year* of high school. Bev। vantage over places less favored. that this means a lot; to this coun-1 make my own medicine and take It
rn from n quarter which, like &lt;'un which ought lo please lhe taxpay- feuional politician.
I Later on. as steam power became ly about 1.075 miles, for which the t according to direction. Wife takes was given al the Metropolitan ■ era! of the required freshman
•&lt;ln, product's some of the l&lt;.r.llrat | frs: The city received Interest on
। opera House, and there was a con- courses will present general survey*
Sign in a slum district In a large more common, mills sprang up all county road commission Is now re- the quinine and I. the whiskey. The cert by the Associated Men's Glee
.«....
I
,w° city "Genuine imitation seal."
old timers tell me whiskey and Club at Madison Square Gardens. with lhe alm of helping the students
; over and with the coming of cheap sponsible.
• • •
J electricity .the old water mills have
Now the townships are
settled
Michigan."
And
The auditor's report showed cash
uv relieved
icitocu of
ui I' Quinine
-——
-—-----.............
- Dr.
—- On
uu Friday
ruuuy evening
cvniui* the
me New
new York
rura find lhe field in which they feel’
of hiRiilnr Engllidininn call a native *
Why don't farmers raise more । become few and far between so that all township road work. Township ■ Burton said. "Yankee, you want to Foik jseulval Council presented a
. Uli
on IIUIIU
hand &gt;102 97; tiiat U1C
the Lily
city uuu
had
of those part* an "Antipathy?" commercial accounts in the two honey? The bees do the work and a visit to one of these mills such as highway commissioners are purely remember one thing. That raw stuff program of folk songs and dances
•
&gt;._
will
take
the
matlnir
rltrht
off
vnnr
____
-■
___
T.
—____
___
Probably so.
(banks amounting to &gt;16.611.93; also enjoy It. In fact. Its pretty painful 1* in operation at Bowens Mills is ornamental officers because ofu______
will
take
the
coaling
right
off
your|
the
of at least fifteen different coun
­
stomach." and Yank replied. "I tries. On Sunday afternoon. Miss
• • *
had savings accounts In the two to interfere with his nectar-gather- I well wortl) ftne's time to go and look McNltt law.
Hamlet and Ham*
1 banks of &gt;22.345 83. Adding these ing.
I It over when in operation.
don't know about that, but It wlll lulCfl
managed to find’ time to! DOG WARDEN EVERETT
Mr. Van Wagoner realties that take lhe coat right off your back." i' Glerum
vjS|t
' Simply by opening the gales lo the funds available under the McTHE papers say a peiuuint nudl- Hems makes &gt;39.030.73. which Is lhe
.tail the 8t. Thomas choir school
IS AGAIN ON THE JOB
enco In Rumania hriike up ‘ n । balance of available funds. Sworn
let lhe water Into lhe tube leading Nitl law. &gt;4.000.000 per year, will not
j and call on one at her former pupils.
LOCAL BOY SINGS ON
going lo lay off corn, wheat and to the wheel lhe big wheels and
Kneeland McNulty and later heard Dog Owners Should Comply
Shakespearean performnnee because statements were presented lo lhe
be sufficient for Michigan counties
council by the cashiers of the two hogs and go In for under-produced gears start to turn and the power io
oo
a
gooa
joo
in
constructing
ana
;
nurlna
the
Lenten
season
Hasthc
Brahms'
Requiem
presented
by
to do good job
nnd
it wasn't funny. Well, could they ,
With Law, Save Trouble
lining
ra^lo ,h
* rho,r
n «*
“"**— Dr. No­
banks, verifying the amounts de­ crop, such as—If you've heard this for grinding the farmer's grist seems maintaining their mileage of rown- J Un„
the
choir. °
On
Wednesday.
but wntch some of the Hamlets I've I
posited in those banks which belong before me. slop me—soy beans. The , to come from almost nowhere. A ship rtsds.
and Expense
roads. He feels that ••
It will be receptlon had the pleasure of hear- ble took the boys to the Con­
watched, they'd die laughing.
|
city.''
'
Chicago board of trade lists soy । part of tiie gears that transmit the
up to the new legislature, which will lng a special broadcast over NBC ference and gave a demonstration
Since April 1. Roy Everett, counLikewise. If those riotous peas
C|ty owea no debts, has an beans fifth In Importance in lhe 1--------*•*-"
---------------------‘
-----■*
power to the line shaft are of wood, convene next January. J?
t_
from 8l- Thomas' church. Fifth of their work for the music teachants really have a sense of humor : available cash balance of over &gt;39.- grain Industry. More about this making the gearing run with less more nearly adequate provision
for Ave, Broadway, given by their fam­
and
will
be
until the first of De­
they'd get a giggle out nt a certain ; 000. and has &gt;22.345 83 In savings later.
noise.
financing the construction nnd ous boys' choir, under direction of
nnt altogether unfamiliar pattern of accounts drawing interest. The city
We spent an enjoyable and profit­ maintaining of the township high­
Tuesday morning a large number
The one commendable thing In able half-hour looking over this old ways taken over by counties in the T. Tertlus Noble. In which choir of students took the tuberculosis better see to it that their canlnae
classical screen production, never ' tax rate for 1935 was but 71 cents on
ore licensed and have collars, and
Kneeland McNulty, son of lhe Rev.
rrallzlng. of course, that they were i «he 8100 » lhe cll&gt;' sha11 receive the lhe whole Hauptmann affair—Mrs mill and believe that any of our past five years.
’eats sponsored by the Barry Coun­ that they are not roaming around
and Mrs. J. A. McNulty of tills city,
blind.
undaunted readers could do likewise some day
laughing nt an epic.
R1,“" of road *unds- whlch u!°,slMtc Hauptmann's
ty Health department.
disturbing lhe neighbors.
is a member.
faith in her husband's Innocence.
if they find the time.
SCOUT NEWS.
i in tneir settlements with ow
Kneeland. by lhe way. is making
Douglas Hines. LeRoy Foster,
noon Harold Logan nnd COUnty treasurer about the middle
perlailvi-ly
,rk&gt;ll»l. In
in II,....
these n....
parts .nd
nnd .h..-.
that'»
k*
splendid progress there, and several 1i AlMonday
Becker with seven of Mr. BeckFYom O. O. McIntyre's column—
Jess Kelly. Harvey Burgess. Doug­
nas been
oeen numoerea
among
~~
’ ZTTU- of 14,1 month the township and city
times has
numbered among
putting on a ballyhoo. That gluon used for street repairs or improve- Dr Paul de Krulf ha/ a week of ANCIENT PRACTICES
las Barnes nnd Marshall Cook are n small group of the boys, known
spce5?
entertained the titasurera paid the county treastic fluming meteor which srnrril I tnents?
New York first-nlghtlng in full
» .. .. . ..
. . Rotarv
nrotrram eon- ____ ________________ JZZ
_ kiltL
OF LENTEN SEASON attending the six weeks course for as.........
"the first ten" chosen to sing Rotary club. Their program con­
folk* along the eastern cuuat I
—
dress every reason, then goes back |
Scoutmen nnd Scoutmasters st Bat­
with the church soloists or for spe­ sisted of two short plays, several collected up to that time.
Wouldn't
— — ■ RFTS Sil 1 000 WPA
to his Michigan woods and cordu- ,
tle Creek scout headquarters.
wouldn't have
have ciunu-il
caused n
a rlnnlo
ripple nut
am piTV
j
readings,
selections
by the boys'
cial broadcasting programs.
here.
We'd Just
roys. Somebody ought to tell O 0.1 Quaint and Humorous Cus­
nnr.
We'd
Just think
think snmebo.1)
snineboilj . ' 1 ' Gt I O J I I ,UUU WrR
Troop 4 held family night at the
quartet
and
a
demonstration
of
Rev. McNulty informs us that lhe
toms Observed in the
wns opening n now lunch stiiinJ over I
parish house. Supper was served choir may be heard again over verse-speaking chorus work.
AID ON SEWER SYSTEM that we cut the woods all down to I
pay the taxes during the depression.'
and initiation of new members took
on Hull) wood boulevard.
Olden Days
the radio, from the church, on Oocxl,
Several assemblies of special in­ June 1. 1938. After that lhe license
j Work Now Progressing on and the corduroys are patched den­ I The Lenten Reason of forty days place. Six new members were en­ Friday from 11 to 12 A. M. over
Im.
rolled bringing the total member­
|
Separating Storm and
• • duration Is nearly over. The num­ ship to twenty-five. Troop 74 is now
J DO so wish Hie Tummy Man
In Germany the people are afraid ber forty seems to have been of one of the largest in the county.
If you want a man to
|
Sanitary
Sewers
Ujuiru.
p
1K
..
»,
to discuss a political Issue above a ancient application to seasons of Lx Roy Foster is Scoutmaster.
* rilles would make up lliclr mind
your judgment—praise him.
one way or the other, su we could 1 This city took advantage of gen­ whisper. Here in the good old U. 8 repentance. It was the length of
Uncle Sam's proffered aid A. we elect a president and spend ’ time during which the deluge covall concentrate on those plaintive .| erous
through lhe WPA to lhe extent of all our waking hours for the next' cred the earth; the numbee -of
lapping sounds emanating from the &gt;11.000. The government Is to fur­
four years criticizing everything he years the children of Israel did pen­
cabinet al Wiibhlngton.
' nish that amount of labor on the docs or does not do.
I ance in the wilderness and espeDame Humor hath It that It's j sewer system of this city, the city
• • •
dally the number of days In which
tirv...
_ __________
n : Aour
.._ rLord fasted. n..»
Uncle Dun Itnper signaling faintly 1 providing lhe materials and super­
Why do _
married
men■__________
live longer?
But, .w...
you may say.
ior help because souielmdy In the ' vision. The North Broadway sanl- Ans. They don't; it Just seems long- 1 there are more than forty days In
| our Lenten season. Yes, there are
trying to snatch tary sewer has been completed. er.
Work is now progressing on the
• • •
| forty-six and the reason for that 13
Pond Lily Salad—Arrange lettuce I that the six Sundays tn Lent which
Dm? Is n patient soul and n true separation of the storm and sani­
tary sewers on West Green street leaves on individual salad plates I are feast days must be deducted,
southern gentleman, so not for
from Broadway to McNair, and on and cut hard-boiled eggs into Hiles! So to make the number even, they I
worlds would he antagonize any Market street from Apple street lo
by sectioning them with a sharp; are added at the beginning of the
good Democrat much less a lnd&gt; Green, and on West Stale street
knife from the little end back, and ' period. Lent takes Ha name from
1 lemocrat. But they do say he hnr- near Market street. Some of the laying these petals flat on the let- 1 the season of the year in which it
et gnawing grievance.
N..CC-. । piunuuy
sanitary aewers
sewers wcie
were rcvciiiiy
recently nouuflood­ luce with the yolk in the center. ’ occurs, an old Saxon word meaning
As the reiMirt niters through out ; ed
because
of
excess
water
from
the
* ■ *■
s water from the Cover generously with your favorite | "Spring." It dates back to the first
here he doesn't mind Mme. Perkins storm sewers. In a few weeks the salad dressing. Sprinkle with pap-1 century.
taking her own Job so seriously, I m paratlon will be complete and lhe rika If desired.
,। Lent really begins on Ash Wed| nesday following Shrove Tuesday.
hut dues object to her trying, with &gt; trouble will be eliminated.
Jane has more curiosity than all !। which has retained the name from
AND HENRY IS RIGHT.
her kids. So she raised some proso ancient days when it was the cusWe think there will be general last summer. Proso Is that new kind ,om for
rtnners to be shriven
•lander. Still, any what you will, agreement with Henry Ford on the
of grain imported from Russia. It is ; nnd Purified of their sins on that
Sime. Perkin* baa got a mighty de­ question of withdrawing fertile
used In the middle west to plant In d“y- Aah Wednesday Is so called
termined Jaw.
lands from crop production. In an after the elements have destroyed
of the old custom of
Interview, published one day last everything else. It can be planted as I sprinkling lhe heads of the penlweek, Mr. Ford declared that such late as July IB and mature..It looks Unta wlth ashee in token of their
Reading 5,000.000 Telegram.
HILE II may have been sort a policy is wrong, against nature like wheat, and the gralrA )s like 1 humiliation and repentance.
But Lent Is not entirely a serious
nf cure-free for Senator Black's nnd. In his judgment, worse than bird seed. Fine for poultry and
thievery. In the opinion of Mr. Ford slock. Our proso was coming fine | and solemn occasion. There are
cominltice lo seize all those musty
production should be encouraged. Il
mountains of private telegraph nies- was his contention that whenever and headed full when the little I many humorous old customs conmutea, why Invoke the law to enjoin farm products became very cheap, blrdles found it. so the little chick- ' nected with it. For example. In
’em? Surely anybody who drllber- manufacturing uses for those prod­ les had to go on eating mash. So Germany it used to be the custom
for the youths of the town to round
aleIJf“MTI down tirwnle through ucts will be discovered, which will this year we will plant a patch for up all the maidens and carry them
our feathered friends.
5.0011.000 stale telegrams has been prevent over-production.
In a cart drawn by some of the men
punished before hc starts and will
It Ls interesting to know that at
WOULD FIX RESPONSIBILITY. to a near-by lake or stream and
suffer from pollen In the pod before the present time more than ten per
Sult was started in circuit court there "wash them well-favoredly;''
he's through. Think of tiie wires cent of the total com crop is used last week by the Michigan Mutual In other words give them a good
a fellow gels nn birthdays nnd holt for manufacturing purposes. Scien­ Liability company of Detroit, rep­ ducking. Just what tho algnifldays. Homo of them aren't so good tists are working on plans that may resented by their attorney, A Cortutilize a large per cent of the crop. rtght. against Mrs. Charles Bauch- know, but that's what they did.
even when fresh, are they?
Mr. Ford himself has discovered man. This suit is to determine
George I put an abrupt end to
Apparently the present Invesllgti
that an excellent lacquer can be the liability of Mrs. Bnuchman for one of Merrte England's old Lenten
tlon alms to find out whether any made from soybeans, with the re­
an accident that happened in Mid­ customs. It had always been the
lobbying has actually gone on In sult that his plant Is purchasing the
dleville some time last year. In practice for an officer ot the royal
Washington—and Indeed there has soybeans from several thousand which Mrs. Grace Crakes of this household to crow the hour every
been u suspicion, to that effect for acres, and will use them more ex­ city and a passenger in her car were night during Lent within tho pre­
quite some time.
tensively in the future.
injured. The accident happened cincts of the palace. On the first
Mr. Ford's contention Is that In­ where M-37 turns off the pavement Ash Wednesday after the Hanover­
stead of retiring land from cultiva­ in Middleville and goes north on ian succession. Just as King George
FTEIt his recent trans contlnen tion. paying big money to farmers Grand Rapids street. We under­ was sitting down to this supper, the
tai scorning tour he has left us for not raising crops and not raising stand that Mrs Bauchman had li­ officer, called the Royal Cock Crow­
hogs, etc. it would be far better for ability Insurance on her car. so that er. appeared and emitted a shrill
—once our venerated Idol nnd al
the government to take a part of the gist of the suit is to have her cock-a-doodle-oooo.
His Majesty
the money so used and employ the company come across in case it was highly insulted and Jumped up
Somebody overlooked a chance as most skilled chemists of the world
should be determined she or her to express ills resentment in no un­
the wurld'a most ex-dfstlnculshed to devise other uses for all crops of car was responsible for the acci­ certain terms. With great difficulty
vegetarian, having In advance de­ which »1ve grow a large surplus.
dent.
hc was calmed and assured that no
plored It for showing the had taste
alight was intended his august per­
to be a Yankee ImUltutlun. stood TWO DUST STORMS IN MARCH. PASSING OF FORMER
sonage. but the King's Cock Crower
The
second
dust
storm
last
month
HASTINGS RESIDENT. was relieved of his duties right then
on the rltn of America's nnhleal
A message was received by C. D. and there.
scenic wonder, shaking a petulant visited this vicinity last week Tues­
day. The sky was not so darkened Bauer on Tuesday telling of the
In France on Shrove Tuesday the !
whisker over that Incredible void
as In the previous one; but when
and munching a carrot and pnlson rain began falling, it brought down death on Monday night of his peasants carry around an effigy of i
cousin. Mr*. Edna Havens Mat­ good cheer and collect money fori
Ivy aandwlch. The Grand canyon a considerable fine sand, which
thews. In Berea. Ohio. The funeral Its funeral, since that day marks I
certainly would have been such a spattered the wind shields and in­ will be held today in Berea.
the end of good living. After sun-1
swell place for throwing your old terfered with the visibility of auto­
Mrs. Matthews was the daughter dry absurd mummeries it 1* finally;
George Bernard Shans.
mobile drivers. It also made work of Mr. and'Mrs. Henry Havens, for­ buried.
for
merchants
cleaning
their
store
With war-clouds thickening on
mer Hastings residents Slje was
Perhaps you didn't know there '
half of. Europe's frontiers—not to windows. This last storm Is said lo one of three graduate* ot lhe Has­ were so many strange and humor­
mention Asia's—the League of Na­ have started In western Texas and tings High school in the class of ous things connected with the sol- I
1879. the other two being John Mc­ emn season of Lent, but like so'
tions Is functioning as usual.
In Oklahoma.
Elwain and Irene Bussel Sweezey. many other things. It requires only |
other words. It Is to menacing
SUES INSURANCE CO.
both deceased. Two years ago Mrs.
A suit has been brought by Min­ Matthews attended lhe alumni bail- a little bit of looking to find out all
nie M. Van Wle per her attorney, A. quet here in company with Ml&amp;s sorts of odd and Interesting facts
Cortright,. against
the Federal Genevieve Rider of Akron. Ohio. about the most commonplace events.!
■There are two 'million eats in
Health and Accident Insurance Surviving are several step-children.
Haile Selassie, according to the company of Benton Harbor. It ap­ Mr. Matthews dying about two London alone," says a newspaper
pears
that
Mrs.
Van
Wle was in­ months ago.
article. They don't sound as If they i
news dispatches, goes without his
jured In dn accident while travelling
were alone.
regular meals one day a week. One between Grand Rapids, and Muske­
The right angle for approaching
would think that a queen would be­ gon. The actl.n la brought to re­ a difficult problem is the “try"
The average man Is proof enough
long to more than one bridge club cover from lhe Insurance company. angle.
■
■
that a woman can take a Joke.

HASTINGS HAS NO DEBTS ; ' our seed order. With great restraint I

B

I

Riley Stories

. Ml ". A

-Xi.TTnT'"- 7

-

W

For Remodeling, Repairing, or Building

A

Make improvements now! Don't delay the remodeling, repairing, or
building of your home. You've planned so long, now realize the ful­
fillment of your dreams. . . . Whatever you may be planning to do this
Spring to improve living conditions in your home "Your Banker" will
help you complete your plans. See him and he will explain how you
can do this. The things you have waited for so long are now within
your reach.

The Hastings City Bank through the Federal Housing Administra­
tion is able to finance you, and you can repay in easy time-payments.
Before you plan further, see your banker,-tell him of your plans and
he will help you to realize the fulfillment of your dreams, for a
"model home." We invite your application.

Hastings City Bank
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS • MICHI®

�Tilt HJ1T1NG1 BANNH, THUMDJT,

.y°»

I, JIM

PRAIRIEVILLE.
family from Grand Haven and Mr.
Pkul Woodman want to Laming
rounded with perfect Insulation,
Ronald Lee Hughe* of Toledo te •«&lt;* Mr*. Welby Crockford from hut Monday.
Lyb Norri* are working
MADE WAS VIOLATED and Mr*.
-----------—. at
.. visiting his grandparents Mr and i Woodland spent Sunday with Mr. Mr. and Mrs Nell Smith of Mldity And at that time that in the floors and ceilings be­
ing floating insulation. Glass parti­
present. Claud Qovey of Grand Rap­ Mr*. W. R. Norris.
‘
and Mrs j. L. Crockford.
per. -A City WBhin a City." in tions have been installed so that Inter«gtln&lt; Cage Tried in ids was a week end guest In lhe
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Calthrop en- ' Mr and Mrs. Clarence Neubaum
Mr. and Mrs. Clem Jordan and
guests may are os wall as hsar and
Oovey home.
AH
tertalned at a birthday dinner Sun- fro® Battle Creek spent the week
An MpMiaUy
eapaeUUy interesting
Interesting program mind.
Circuit Court Thariday—
wm enjoyed by the Women's cMib
she drew attention to the 424 yet In no way disturb the artist*
Edward Bailey, formerly a milk day honoring their daughter. Mr*.! end with her parent*. Mr. and Mr*.
and family one evening.
Brot by Delton Doctor
tetter in thU locality met with a Llewellyn Erb. Other guerts were Walter Durkee. Her mother reFriday afternoon when Mr*. Berljan , originally paid for Manhattan Is- when said artist* deem It best to
be alone during the broadcast
serious accident at the Klllogg rLlewellyn Erb,
**rh Lamar nh
couple
Erb nf
of Tv&gt;i.
Del­ turned home with her for a tounle
—
stack on George
Flowers ferm near Hickory Comers ton and Harry Kllllck of Doster. of days.
On the roof of the fourteenth
talk on Rockefeller Center. This' wealth centered there today. JOO
Coat*'
farm
burned down lart Wed­
well
vs
Doctor
Prosper
O.
Bernard
last week. Mr. Bailey, while pitch­ The tatter after several days In thia
wm the exchange program far her: )earj uter. Only Fifth Ave., or Mld- fldor are formal gardens of the
LeVerne Cooper lias returned to nesday evening
it made auch a
was heard before judge Russell R.
■
-- Idlcroad. Broadway and a few cross varfous countries of tha world. The .. McPMk in circuit court last Thurs­ ing hay accidentally slid onto a place returned to his home Sunday hU work near Ludington.
large
fire
that
some
thought It was
pitchfork which he had tocaed from evening.
.'aireeU were needed in Hie map Rainbow room on the «4th floor I
Russell Taxelaar returned from a burning building.
the atack. resulting tn a painful In, sketched to show the pioneer set- Is the highest dine and dance room day.
Mrs.
Jennie
Norris
and
Mr*.
Lucy
Ann
Arbor
hospital
Saturday
after
,
Doctor
Farwell,
at
In the world.
i 006tor
as
plaintiff.
Carlton Coata has been sick.
। ting. Today Rockefeller Center's Ill
me worm
i' through
through hu
hl* attorney.
attorney. Mr. L. B.
Norris we are glad to report as spending a week there.
caused by gland trouble.
neighbors are exclusive residential
It would be interesting r^lng If Barnett, nled a bill of complaint Kalamazoo hospital where he ta at much better. Mrs. Hughes la im­
Hubert Barnum Ja getting along, Mrs. Wamle Kelsey ha* been hav­
and business sections—New York f ■so
the t*lk
talk could be mren
given In full
full. Mrs. ^^tlme ago for an injunction to present in a critical condition.
proved a little.
fine after hi* operation. He was ing severe throat .trouble.
Dr. Charles Daniels, wife and
J. P. Mohler, a member of both the restrain Doctor Bernard from prac­
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hermenltt brought home Wednesday from the
| in 1900-John D. Rockefeller. Jr.. Middleville and Hastings club*, in- '
Miss Freda Smith attended a
ticing medicine contrary to a cer- । daughter of Aurora, Ill., and Mrs. and son Otis spent Saturday eve­ hospital. Those who have been to
was approached atfd asked to fur- troduced the afternoon guest In the tain agreement entered Into in Oc- 1 Janet Miller of Jackson visited
ning with Mr. and Mrs. George call on him since are—Floyd Dun­ birthday supper for Marian Wood­
nlsh a new Metropolitan opera . absence of
the president. Mrs
toir7Fmi:’;f«hich u™ EJoctor
Adrlanson ond family of Neeley. nigan and Anna Mae; Mr. and Mrs man last Friday evening at the
PICKLE GROWERS
house. Originally
somez supportJ 7.....;..
I French, who was...in an automobile Bernard sold his practice, hoapital. 9rm"k* and Curtis Ormsbe Thurs- Sunday they entertained Mr. and Dick Clocum; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Woodman home. MUa Marian, who
came from lhe legislature but at accident the previous day enroute drugs and equipment to Doctor Far-1 aB&gt;'
Mrs. Norwood Hughes and sons of Cole; Mr. and Mr*. Harlow Bar­ has been at home for nearly a week,
length the many billion dollar trans-' (rom Chicago.
GEO. E. WALKER A SONS
well A document was signed at the I The Ladies' Aid Society will hold Battle Creek.
num; Mr. and Mrs John Woodman; returned lo Kalamazoo on Sunday.
•cilon. lo
ooe hundnd
M
r L Bmrr
M„ M„h,„ time by the parties by which Doc- • their monthly meeting on Thursday,
William McKibbln. who was in­ Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Barnum; Mr.
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
leuos were ernu«ed jnd n dee
,t thl. u„ eovered. dower tor Bernard agreed not to practice 1 April 16 with a dinner al the jured in an automobile accident and Mr*. George Coata and son
An Easier program will be given
&gt;e.re- time the project bed rUen In,
UWe durtl the
chased all of Hindi Bros.
medicine In certain localities with-1 church a* usual Mrs. Ella Smith ' Friday event j is .fretting along Max; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ricliardat the church Sunday evening. April
IU sreatness. the main tower a I
whkll Mlowed
in a certain period ot time.
and Mr». Veta Otis will have ' mceiy an
___d u
_ thankful
________ ’ no
... one
___ was
___ son and son from Coata Grove. Mr*.
Pickle Salting Stations.
12.
There
will be no morning serv­
structure ot world wonder because ' „ t)„ o[xnuig business meeuna
In *'
the
collision.
Julia Neubaum from Battle Creek.
It was the claim of plaintiff. Doc- charge of lhe dinner. The com- killed —
---- •••-■­
ice as thlsvBundny school la in­
st Ils height and budding engineer- in.
w„ uuuue’lW tn write tor Farwell, that contrary to this munity Is Invited.
|। ’Tuesday
rUel
evening Mr Beeler of Buryi Rising and Mr. and Mrs.
vited to attend the Easter program
,nE. .
.
. . our congre-ssman that the club sup- agreement. Doctor Bernard had enI Howard Barnum from Hastings.
Miss
Mildred
Garrett
of
Flint
I
Middleville
and
a
gentleman
from
'
at lhe North Evangelical church.
Here are centered tau hundred
„
blll ,t „„
tered Into the practice of medicine' was a week end guest of her par- {Hastings met at Mr. Colthrop's to ■
Several of the neighbors of Mr.
SEED AND CONTRACTS
thousand persons tn thru hustoeas
„t,d to gtre ggoo lo rath the In the village of Delton, had treat- enta, Mr. and Mrs. Will Garrett.
SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
| organize a first aid unit here Hope
and Mrs. Cyrus Buxton met at their
interest, where a tew &gt;eys ago tour ;
Con,mo„w„llh ,„d th, M|ch- ed and1 cured
----- । Mr
Mrg
wUcox and they meet with success. More later, j Mrs. Heber Julian, who ho* been
for ttnd
patients
who!
home Friday evening for a warm
ttousand were moved out ol the o d
cnppied cl.Udreu's Society
•
«.u
aar.
u.we
aonnsw.
enter,
*
Battle
Creek
hoapital
for
•
mVirginia
and
Charlotte
were
guests
&gt;
Mr.
and
Mrs
Jake
Johnson
]
would have come to him. Doctor
maple sugar treat.
lowing place*:—
buildings. These thousands in their i
talncd
William
Young
of
Bellevue
er
®
’
days,
is
at
home
but
will
reFarwell, and that this fact was a Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Herb Wit-1
“
- - Mr. and Mrs. Claud HofTman and
buslneMes are distributed among
ram ton cfntfr
'
lhe hoapital again in about
LI Sunday
serious detriment to the plaintiff * cox of Barryvllle.
the twelve buildings of the Center ।
CARLTON centmc.
sons spent Sunday in Lansing at
Easter will be observed lq the | lln.
... O K. Honeywell went to | ten dwys tor edtlluonet trewttnent.
located between Fifth and Sixth j Mr*. Jeaaic Shupp of Galesburg business.
Wallace Seed Store
----------—
regy cvenlng
i|Cdj, Ellen
of---Grand
Rapids the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
It was the claim of the defend- church Bunday with an appropriate !Dowagiac
Friday
evening ca
caucu
—-■ Robinson
—- -------------------avenuesand
W.Forty-eighth
and
W
visited
Mr.
an.d
Mrs.
John
Shupp
Slrauscr.
cousins of Mrs’ Hoffman.
Hasting*
sermon. The young people will there by lhe death of her mother. ca®c Sunday to spend her vacation
Fifty-first street*.
I during the past week.
Mrs. Louise Marshall, who has been
Rtandparenta, Mr. and a guest of the Hoffman's for several
In an unwrtal way Mrs. Serljan ' Mr. and Mrs Elzie Kartan and not practicing medicine In the re­ meet this week for practice and re- I Mrs. Bertha Arendt. Mr Honeywell' *llh
hearsal ot their parte.
went this morning (Monday) to at- i
J,”® „~
stricted
area;
that
while
he
had
City National Bank
described and mapped the under-' family of South Hastings were
Tend lhe Iunre.1 service.
Mr. .
“J weeks, returned with them to the
------- --- —. . ,
--------। ground routes of the huge motor guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hen­ moved his home to a take near the
°™» W«&gt;‘ S»n&lt;l»y ««■ ■ home of her daughter. Mrs. Strausvillage of Delton, he was engaged In I
STONY POINT.
. Honeywell hu lhe Bmpwthy
____ ol her 1«”
er.
traffic neceadtated by Rockefeller ney Sunday afternoon and evening
------- .
•
1
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Gray near Char­
Center's great business, the wonder- 1 Margrete Valentine of Hastings his profession elsewhere, and that | P- T- A- al the Wellman school- many friends here
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sponseller of
lottethe
only
cases
attended
by
him
tn
'
house
next
Friday
night.
|
Mrs.
John
Brigham
and
«ua.
Smith fir Doster, Hdwe.
ful Prometheus fountain, the Prome- I nnd Katherine Spindler of WoodHanover were Tuesday callers at
Delton
nade. Plaza office buildings. Music . land accompalned by Nelson. Cietis the village of Delton, or the prohib- , Sam Crabb of Pewamo was at his 1 Albright of Decatur are caring for j and family spent Saturday In Bat­ Dale Sponseller*.
Mrs. F J Hughes for a few days In
Hall, and the dominant RCA and Bernard Valentine spent the ited area, were emergencies when j farm Sunday.
Howard McIntyre of Battle Creek
........
7"k,wlth
®eiyr
spent the week end al home.
building, a building with no win-, week end In Grand Rapids with rel- Doctor Farwell was not available. । Karl Graahou.se of Pewamo visit- 1 t|le absence of Mrs Cora Fnwter.
Middleville Co-operative
Witnesses were produced by both ed at Bert VanderJogts over the
M
Mr
r. and
.nd Mr*
M„ Tom
ium Jones
Jone. have
MV,
‘tfJL™™.
"7------------ ~
k-SS..
Mrs. Myrtle Julian was taken to
dows, perfect
air conditioning atives.
sides and supported their positions, week end.
| moved from
the James
Vcrrell ,‘ C!a5'i£'” Jarrard near Dowling.
‘
’
no
Auociation
a Battle Creek hospital one day last
whereby •'mountain air" Is supplied
Mrs. Melissa Cole, an old resl- At the conclusion of the argument* ! We hear that a man by the name , place to Neeley.
Mrs.
nnd
Mrs.
M
" Sam Buxton “
nrt Mr
* 'Tenn
r'
to those within ita walls.
1 dent of Carlton Twp.. was burled
week, suffering from a severe attack
Middleville
of course!. Judge McPeek Indicated I of Qiierman has purchased j,he.£-| “
”
' ntlVIU
Alll Buxton of Banfleld nnd the tatter's of gall stone*. She is now al home
Rev, Hlui
nnd‘ .11)
Mrs.
Harold IIUIltJ
Honeywell
The radio rooms are different) Monday from her home, following Ul vvuilpt-l, UUURI. tuv* t-vn . ..re.vre ... re -- —-------- ----- I ---------- ---- - I JJVT,
in a general way his ideas about the »cre home just across from the i Of joncs visited Mr and Mrs D N son. Maurice, of Jonesville, were but will return to the hospital soon
than previously equipped broadcast- her death from a stroke.
case,
-'•‘•••■•••zSunday callers of
formers for further treatment.
case. mc
Hc compumenica
complimented uoin
both imrpar- ‘cemetery.
It has been owned recent- 1 Koneywen
Honeywell inst
last weex.
week
ties upon the fairness ot their lesli- ly by Henry Sheldon ot Hastings.
Miss Myrtle smith returned to) da®n,lcr; Mrs. Harvey Cheeseman
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Van Dougan
mony and stated he was inclined to
Wc have just recently learned Battle Crrek Sunday after spending and fani*|y&gt;
| Mr
Mr. n,,rt
and Mr
Mrs.
Clarence
and’ of Muskegpn were week-end guests
the opinion that the terms of the that John Morgan of this place was R
wnh lbe home folks
* Clarrnr
'' Bump *««
of the latter's parents, Mr. and
restriction agreement had not been 1 married a few days ago to a Ver- | Those neither absent nor tardy family of Hastings spent Sunday Mrs. Orson McIntyre.
completely observed and pointed out । montville girl. Miss Florence Boob | during the March school month are ; aft, moon with their mother. Mr*.
particular violation*. He called at- 1 by name. We extend congratulations . Alien Shelp. Ronald McKibbln. Don Anna Checscman
GATES CORNERS.
spent
lention lo other observations which , to the happy couple and wish them Higgins. Forrest Stafford and Vir- ! ,,WHILs Gray of -Banflcld
---------J»ulc Martin, who gut injured
'
Robert nearly three weeks ago with a buzz­
he had made throughout the trial, “ prosperous future.
gta yan Rout.
1 Monday afternoon with
and gave lhe attorneys until Friday I Black eyes are becoming quite I Mr. mid Mrs Albert Rogers. Mr Gray.
“
. .’aw is getting along as well as can
wu
®»d Mrs. G C Marshall took b- expected, but is stilb very tame
to me
file uricia.
briefs.
popular with some ”
of• -lhe —
ladles■ -•
of 1 nuncnuucr.
Nuncmakcr. ncicn
Helen ana
and Howsra
Howard .,
* re .4 tillr
r I o h Hjvr hrwi ■ last «•
rereV re-re
-I...- were ...
_____ Sat- .! ?.!rs “ „ - ,7}
The case was very irea*&gt;A&gt;tire
interestingn and
our n
neighborhood;
week
wc KreH
had Nunemaker
in Kalamazou
ller h0,uc
Raymond Bunn, who has. been
I Grand
Grand n.nid.
Rapids Rnnd.v
Sunday ntme
after h
her
one that has attracted considerable to mention one and no&gt;- another . urday.
.. passing some time with Mr. and
------------woman comes out with one ol her
Miss Elizabeth Woods aceompan- I| two weeks' visit here.
Mr«. Robert Carrell has returned lo
attention.
Mr nnd Mr*. Robert Gray spent the home of his parents. Mr. and
1 eyes decorated in mourning
Of ted Mrs. Merle Bradfield of Milo to
Thursday with Mr and Mrs Bob1 Mrs Charlie Bunn, of Freeport
ORANGEVILLE.
-------------------------course wc wouldn't think of men-1 Kalamazoo Saturday.
Mrs. Fred Schulmeyer of North tlomng their names but It sure
Mrs. Charles Coitsino L\ visiting Ellhton In West Vermontville.
Mr. and »jr* fo Grlffcth and
Mrs Chas. Fath and Mrs. Grover family who have resided on the
Gun Plains spent Tuesday with looks as though Btrt and Barry [ her parents. Mr nnd Mt &gt;. Harold
friends al this place.
«.•»
— k™™.
■------ while
. .. ..
.
.is .In To- Marshall spent Tuesday shopping: John Carter farm south of Middle­
were
boasea «•&gt;
in each nt
of their homes 1 Jones,
Mr. couslno
Mrs. Ben Norman and M&gt;n Ho­
Mr nnd Mrs Ed Dcnkln and two' ledo. Ohio, where hc has rmploy­ in Battle Creek.
ville have moved to hit father’s
Mrs. Lulu Gray spent Tuesday farm north of town. We us neighward and wife were Sunday guests girls. Mary and Gene, visited their . ment. Mrs. Couslno will join him |
of George Norman and family at daughter Agnes of Kalamazoo Sun- . later. They spent the winter in afternoon with Mr nnd Mrs. A. G. or* were sorry to lose those good
I Murray In Nashville.
Kalamazoo.
»
people.
I Prairieville.
1
Mr.
and Mrs Geo. S Marshall
Mrs J. w&gt;8heffield spent several
My. and Mrs. Ben Parks nnd son
| Francis Frederickson is in HasPINE LAKE.
Maple Grove nnd
Mrs. Maynard entertained relatives from
days the post week with relatives In
। tings today (Monday) to take a, of North
,,'
:
The Helping
Hand
dub met
with
’.??“r*h",n
L*‘“’nR JP*"1 Kalamazoo recently.
Battle creek.
,
. .—
---------------------— medical examination for admission
Several from here went fishing Mrs. Fox on Wednesday afternoon. I u. CCC c.mp company 1MI located I Thursday "»•
with “
Mr.
O C
• and Mrs "
Mr and Mrs. Robert Garrett en­
Marshall.
for smelt at Beulah, but the weath- Th0 ncw president. Mrs
Ellie nt Harrietta. Michigan
joyed n call Sunday forenoon from
er being so unfavorable they were Champion presided at the business | Mr nnd
nnn Mrs sila* Difctcr and ’ Mr and Mrs. CHIT Rich apenl a cousin, who resides in Battle
not very successful.
session and appointed Lhe following |
and Mrs
M.a. Rankin Hyde and Wednesday evening with Mr. and Creek, who was at his cottage at
William Rupe of Pontiac spent committees for the coming year:
Mrs Ben Slout near Vermontville.
Trails End. Gun take over lhe week
1
“’Surer ™.bre
Mrre'
end.
C’O ITS (.ROVE
| encl.
Kllllck. flower; Mrs. Adah
this place.
“ 'Brown Joshua DcCrocker of Rirhtand Sun­
and Mrs. Hazel Warner, welfare. day afternoon. Sincere sympathy is
DOWLING.
The program of readings and two extended lo the bereaved ones.
she
has recovered and now enjoys
last Tuesday evening nt the church |। Retting
The funeral of Frank Matteson of contests was conducted by ciar*
around with her daughter.
Mrs. Philip
MLss Nina Tintv writ
were 04
82 lUCiniKR
members nun
and KUCM5
guests II
I ..Merlau.
re . .....
the Weeks district was held at lhe Scott. The May meeting will be
Cox. who »with her
and Henry C
Schwartz
-*------- ' .pent
' ' ... . wllo enjoyed the supper together at Mrs
."r* Charles
£ *
Dowling M- E- church. Monday aft­ held with Hazel Warner and roll Munger at
।
Coldwater
7
n'elnck
after
»hlrh
tl»v
hl,soa
111 nre staying there until they
Sunday
1 ©clock,
which They ndernoon at 2 p. M- with burial In lhe call will be answered by naming a
bo
to
live
in the Clare Corson house
Some from here attended the piny j )ourn&lt;'&lt;l lo the church auditorium
Dowling cemetery. Mr. Malte-on wild flower native to Michigan Mrs
Comes Charlie- tt
at. Delton । where an address by Prof. Austin । on East Main street tn Middleville.
had resided In Baltimore township Champion will have charge of the "Here
8"c
c Viiri
ahfl ’music
mui)c by
b HlrlCUU
E,rl stuU Mr cox has purchased the Bender
Saturday and pronounced it fine
; cf M s
lhe greater part of his Ute. Hr program al that lime.
MI
kx Doris
TVnriw Hartman
Atartman spent
vtw.tvl lhe
it,.. i of
... Hnslings
..
_ La- । Brothers milk business. We all wish
Miss
were given. The
leaves a wife, two sons. Ernest and
Robert and Walter Warner were »eck end with her parents. Mr and । rilOk,- A,d received over »32 as pro- him'-success.
. . .
Archie and three daughters. Mrs. I in Shelbyville Wednesday after­
JiJLn
6
*
’
1
,larlma
"
of
Hickory
j
re
r
«t,
(rnm
thp
S
u
pp
cr
and
wish to EAST WALL LAKE
Ethel Whitworth of the Culver dis-1 noon.
corn
rs
:
1
thank
all
who
helped
to
make
it
AND VICINITY
trlct. Mrs. Bessie DcCrockcr of1 The last meeting of the Home
“ m1CCY.- .
Wr-k* L'l,rr
’
’
Scotts and Mrs. Jessie McArthur of Economics class, studying clothing
HOLMES CHURCH.
Hickory Corners
.. M.r*' H A
woodman and sonJohn
Bush
received
painful
in- Inwill be held on Thusday afternoon
John
Bush
received
painful
Freeport Thursday juries last week while cutting wood
George Vov of Kalamazoo, who with Mrs Helen Shcjiard.
, Howard McIntyre from Kalama- Jaul went to
,Mr and Mrs. Frank zoo and
. Charley Johnson from Hicknn.w- । Rl.vfr
c“ rd on Mrs Martha m Mr. Williams woods when an Iron
has the reputation of being a live
On Thursday
hcrc 1 wedge flew up and struck him In
wire speaker will address the Town-’ Shelp returned to their home here, ory Corners spent Sunday al the L re»a8.Ur.n&lt;!a&gt;s,rcl3tl'cs
crwv.,. th.
. .McIntyre
............ — 1home
____
received word that she was worse tb&lt;. fatT
send club Tuesday evening. April; altar
after h.vint.
having spent
the winter Ire
in C.
St A
!?* .
1 Mr •"&lt;»
Chas. Kahler were
14. at the Dowling church.
Petersburg. Florida.
Mr and Mrs. Robert Owens and "a.
Mr*. Arthur Richardson was op- ’ Sunday guests of Mr. nnd Mr... N. J
rrated upon at Pennock hospital sveitaer at Plainwell
T
MrIUv2'. *11 Hl
a * IJoyd L»uba|igh left for Illinois
Mr and Mrs. Verne Allcrdlng and last week where hc has a pastorate.
nt the hoapital
heMnitnl in
im
..... i Mrs. E.. D
re. Reynolds
.... * .. and.
Mr Loomis were at
Mr. and
। Lansing to see Mrs. Loomis on Sun- Mrs. Clifford Kahler spent from
1 day. March 29. nnd the tatter will Friday until Sunday with relatives
I be in the hospital some weeks long- in Vicksburg.
.
| er She expressed her appreciation
Mrs. Fargo was quite ill the- past
। Inr the kind regard.-, and letters sent
week hut is better now. Mrs. Klernp
her from friends here.
has bccn.Jtelping care for her.
i Meeting* each evening this week
Ernest Sampson of Cressey called
! except Saturday at our church, con­
on friends here Sunday.
I ducted by lhe pastor. Friday will
Mrs. Murle Reynolds and baby of
• be general prayer day Next Sun- Cressey spent Thursday with Mrs.
day morning the Sunday school will ‘ Clifford Kahler
' ...................
give an Easter program, and the J\ ,
pastor will preach an Easter scr- : You mustn't tell Willie, but two
mon Some special features arc be-1 great nations arc ruled by meh who
ing planned for the evening.
| never got as far os high school.

olub within the part jFtar. Mrs. Ing rooms. NBC studios are sur­

°ss-'s'

Women's Club

NOTICE/

Our Biggest Bargain Event oj the Year
is Next Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
and Saturday, April 15, 16, 17 and 18!

THE REXALL ORIGINAL

ONE-CENT SALE
MORE THAN 300 NATIONALLY ADVERTISED ITEMS TO
SELECT FROM—ALL TO BE SOLD FOR 2 PACKAGES FQR

PAINT-UP!

JUST 1c MORE THAN THE REGULAR PRICE OF ONE—
THIS MEANS

paintupA

ANY 5Oc
ARTICLE
in this sale

A Regular 25c

During sale you gel

2f"r 51

During sale you gel

2 26c

ANY ’1.00
ARTICLE

2/ 26c

A Regular 25c
TOOTH PASTE

TOOTH BRUSH

WHITE LEAD OR READY MIXED
WE HAVE THEM!

PAINTS

HOW ARE YOUR SCREENS? ... IF

THEY

NEED

NEW

SCREEN

AND

PAINTING LET US CALL FOR THEM

AND FIX THEM UP!

Wc arc sending a large hand bill of this sola to every home

LEADERSHIP

in Barry County, as our limited space will not permit the

The unbroken reqului ity uf Muy t&lt;tt| luud-

listing of all the items here... . Your bill will come by mail
or carrier. Make a list of the items you want and come

EARLY, as tho quantities we hove WILL NOT LAST ALL

WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF ROOF

hiqh business itleals.

ING .... LET US PUT ON A NEW

FOUR DAYS OF THIS SALE!

ROOF FOR YOU !

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Good) Delivered

Hastings

Phone 2131

THE HOME LUMBER CO
PHONE 2276

BUILDS HOMES

HASTINGS

Visit the MAYTAG DEALER Near You!

�THE HASTINGS BANNFB. THVttSDAY, APRB. ». 19M

WE GET SO MUCH ENJOYMENT
FROM OUR APPLIANCES
AND THEY'RE SOMBMTJHB

NOW-WE
CAN GET
THAT NEW
RADIO"

CHEAP TO USE"RF**&gt;.J®

ELECTRICITY IS
CHEAPER THAN EYES.
I'M USING BETTER LICHT,
LARGER BULBS, AND IT
ONLY COSTS A FEW CENTS'

|L&amp;|
|MM
B
I
|g g

I
I

OUR REFRIGERATOR
PAYS FOR ITSEtF
WITH THE NEW CHEAP
ELECTRICITY —
AND FOOD SAVING'S"

YES-AND RUN IT DAY
AND EVENING FORA
FEW CENTS'

CONSUMERS RATES CUT!
CHEAP ELECTRICITY HERE!
Opens Door To New Era of Home Convenience and Economy
9c PRICE FALLS AS LATEST CUT BRINGS 4c-2c and l%c CURRENT
Means More Appliances and Better Lighting can be used at BIG SAVINGS
Consumers Power Company’s reduced rates for electricity are
now in effect! Savings to the public the first year are estimated
at $1,500,000.

ences now on the market. Electric refrigeration is an example of
a home sen ice that can be added and should more than pay its
way at popular rates now available. Like buying grocery items
in dozens and cases, electricity also becomes a USER’S bargain
under this plan of “the more used, the lower the price.’*

RESIDENTIAL PRICES DOWN
&gt;
The new residential plan embraces two rates: A general rate
for immediate billing and a still lower “Opportunity Rate” for
those who want to increase their use of the many services and ap­
pliances Available.

“Free Electricity” is another new feature, whereby, under cer­
tain conditions, extra electricity may be used from month to
month at no extra cost.

The old “9c rate” is gone—prices now go as low as D/zc per
kw-hr; the top price-on the new general rate open to all residen­
tial customers figures out to about 5%c per kw-hr, then drops to 4V1C
and 2c. The still lower “Opportunity' Rate” goes as low as P/zc.

Information showing how this applies to your Home will Be
gladly given at the Company’s local office; *
These are rates made to USE—and in using electricity; as the
prices go lower and lower, your service becomes mgre useful and
valuable to you.

These new rates—this new £lan—is in response to public de­
sire for a descending scale of prices that paves the way for better
lighting and the use of more of the many new electrical conveni­

Explains Rate Cut
Division Manager of
Power Co. Points Out
Rates Never Increased
Since the War.

No More
'Counting Light Bulbs'
Use All the Lamps You Want­

Use Any Size You Want!

Latest Cut Puts Them
Among Lowest in
United States
“Customers of Consumers Power Co. have for some time en-..
joyed favorable home electric prices, but the new lower prices
bring to thousands of homes even greater economies,’’ according
to Division Manager G. M. Brower. “The new Opportunity Rate
is one of the lowest residence rates in the U. S., and as shown by
comparison with recent Federal power survey, is lower than the
average for any state in the Union.
"Just since 1921 the average price received from all customers
has been practically CUT IN HALF. In that year the average
customer bought 279 kw-hrs and paid about 6c a day for a service
that had not nearly the uses of today. Last year-ihe average cus­
tomer BOUGHT more th^n 2% times as much but did he PAY
2% times the old figure? No—the price averaged less than 8c
a day.

“In spite of attacks and destructive legislation, the electric
industry has carried on, contributing abundances to American liv­
ing, bringing to the people conveniences and economies that are
real.”

•

.

•

px

5-^

Consumers Power Made
Appliances You Want
Easy to Buy

&gt;

------ AND NOW

Cheap Electricity
Makes Them Easy to Use!

-

The old system of "counting light bulbs" in determining the
rate is also eliminated on existing installations. This means more
bulbs, larger bulbs, ALL the bulbs you want—ALL the outlets
you want—can now be added freely at your present address.
Brighten your home—use more of the light bulbs you want,
use the LARGER SIZES that are so important to BETTER
VISION.
.
...
YOU CAN BUY A 60-WATT BULB FOR THE SAME
PRICE AS A 15-WATT LAMP. Add color, life and sparkle to
your rooms; make kitchen work easier with plenty of cheap light;
brighten that basement; put in one or two of the floor or table
model Better Sight or Study Lamps (they’re at bargain prices)
and see the difference.

"SAVE SIGHT WITH FREE LIGHT" . . . many a cus­
tomer is going to brighten rooms all month with free electricity
on the new rates. Let us tell you about this—visit our offices.
ELECTRICITY IS CHEAPER THAN EYESIGHT­
USE IT.

Here’s one of the busiest little men you iver saw—
this “Penny Power.” He’s the symbol of the many
things you can do with pennies for electricity. He has
been on the job right along—but now he works for you
cheaper than ever—always willing, never tired, no days
off. Your walls are full of “penny power”—let him out
and show you how much he will do for so little. Let
him brighten your home with eye-saving light—run your
radio, wash, iron, sweep, wind the dock, make coffee,
toast, waffles, bring health-giving sunlight the year
'round, and protect your food so efficiently with e1*
refrigeration that he gives you money back wit
economies you enjoy.

A few pennies a day does all these

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL 8. 1»3«

L

W P SION AM

They had 13 children, four of whomi
studied medicine, and three phar­
macy. at the University of Michi­
;
gan. Mrs. Sldnam being one of the
latter, as her father was a firm be­’.
I
■»&lt;■»" ™ «" •&lt;
ot twelve children, with a rcmxrx- liever in the higher education fdr
able father. Dr. Uriah Upjohn, who women. One of the girls. Helen, be­
came a doctor and practiced In Kal­
Icine and surgery in New York and amazoo M years. Mrs Sldnam was
started practice al Richland. Mich., the last surviving member of the
being one of the best known medi­ twelve children. Dr. Jas. T. Upjohn,
. cal men in tte state in that esriy youngest of the family, having died1
' day. He married Jdary Mills, whose

,n H“

HIM IT KAI AMAJnn B np*to' who

wit® AI KALnHIRfcUU (

■

m the go's, and invented the
, —
I pill-making machine here that
of Dr. made him a millionaire.

. '•»r";

,

—

Was Last Survivor
VrtU Upjohn’. ChU-

'

’

dran

mident of Hastings, wife of tte Ute
Wm. P Sldnam. register of deeds
for Barry county from 1M0 to 1854.
ated last week at ter home in Kalanutaoo age M yean.

{\
*

W EA/TER F(DDX

1

REFRESHING FOODS FOR EASTER-TIME MENUS . . .

CAREFULLY SELECTED FOR SALAD MAKING, DES­
SERTS, PASTRIES, BAKING AND COOKINC—

CJHOMAS STORES

"EVIUY DAY LOW PRICES" PREVAIL.

NUT MEATS
DATES

39c

Walnut Hah..

SALAD DRESSING

SXSL

KNOX GELATINE
DOLE

STc

LB.

FRESH, UNPITTED

CHERRIES

Quart

Pkg.

CHOCOLATE
BROWNIES
LB.
CHOCOLATE
MARSHMALLOWS
DHk.ow. S«U«&gt;ch

17c

N&lt;

HawxHxn Sliced Piaeapple

COOKIES

20c
10c

S Ox. Bolth

p-kHw.

FANCY

27c

■ ■ ■■ nW®

■ "A ■■i

Country Quality

FANCY' SWEET, TENDER
3 SIEVE SMALL PEAS
ODESSA BRAND

™,i"

JELLY
vLLL I

CHEESE
■■

fl
IW

|

I
I

V

"MISSION INN”

COFFEE
Flneat Blend
DelichUally
Belter"
LB.

4^

STRAWBERRY Flavors

15c
12‘

WHOLE
GRAIN
GOLDEN
BANTAM
No. 2 CAN

2 ’Ts 25c
W JARS fci W

6 Or. JAR

MUSHROOMS
SHRIMP FANCY

WET PACK

CRAB MEAT

famcy

|5c

QUART JAR

35c

t OZ. CAR

22c

SLICED

*ea

tood

CAN

14c

Haall Can

18c

SNO-SHEEN CAKE FLOUR

pkg.

PILLSBURY'S WHEAT BRAN
FLOUR-' Best Yet"
CRISCO
FINEST SHORTENING

pkg

C

BROOMS

flB

59c

ALB -

3

10c

Boxsa

Pastrlca

SODA Crackers "IX?

CLAPP’S

2

Lb.
Box

15c
25c

*9

6c

BULK

TAPIOCAJ 15c
BULK

COCONUT»20c

BABY FOODS

Approved by doctor!
Liked by babies
16 VARIETIES

PEACHES "»$raSS“&lt;‘
BARTLETT PEARS TAXCY
LARSEN'S MIXED VEGETABLES
CARNATION MILK

JELLO

2 ?£»= •’ 31c

FRENCH'S BIRD SEED
WITH BISCUIT COWTAlXlKO YUA6T

20C

N». 2' , Can

1KSADIATED

GIANT P &amp; G SOAP
CAMAY SOAP

BIRD GRAVEL

7

2 cans 23c
3 C.m 22c
bars

27c

bar

pkg

5c

12c

pkg 9c

C. THOMAS STORES
1U

WUT STATE STREET

Club te meeting at the home of Mrs.
Alice Gardner this week Thursday.
Tho Dutern SQte ladle* are serv­
ing a public supper at the Masonic
Temple on Wednesday evening this

It 1* reported that there was a
largo attendance at lhe Townsend
meeting held in the Cool building
la*t Friday evening. The speaker
was Charlex Blaine of Kalamazoo.
Mrs. Paul Phillips and Mrs Bes*le Nell of Saginaw visited Monday
with the tetter's sister, Mr*. H. M
Boughner.
KLINGENSMITH.
Last Weeks Letter.
The Infant son of Mr and Mrs.
Burdette Wllteon was taken to the
hoapital in Grand Rapids Thursday
evening and is very ill with pneu­
monia. We are all wishing a speedy
recovery for him.
Junior Latta expects to go to the
hospital In Grand Rapids soon for
treatment* on his foot.
Mr. and Mrs. o. Peterson took
little Shirley Ann to Grand Rapids
last week and had several X-ray
pictures taken.
Mrs. Storkan entertained com­
pany from Grand Rapids Sunday.
Work 1s progressing nicely on tho
PWA project at Deep lake on the
Perry Van Tuyl farm.
Mr. and Mrs. James Bowerman
and son Jim have been having tho
flu.
.
Mr*. Roy Jenkins has also been 111
and under lhe doctor's care.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Mayo of
Maple Grove and Mr. and Mrs. Will
Green of Battle Creek were guest*
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Green Suni
day. Mr. and Mrs. Manson Stanton
and family of Assyria Center also
spent the afternoon there.
Mrs. Marshall Tripp and Lois,
Mr*. Archie Burd. Mrs. Albert
Green and Joyce Marie Lapham
were guests of Mrs Barney Williams
Monday and also called on Mr*.
Glenn HofTman in Baltimore.
Mr. and Mrs Claude Willson have
been on the sick list but are on the
gain now.
Chester Oversmlth
of Battle
Creek was a caller at the Burd home
Saturday evening.

QUIMBY.
Ls*t Week's Lefler.
Mrs. Shirley Rltiunan nnd mother.
Mrs. john*on, visited in Jackson
Wednesday.
The Father and Son banquet was
well attended and much enjoyed
by all.
The Missionary Society met nt
the home of Irene Hendershott
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Pollard and family
gpeni the week end in LanMng
Mrs Kittle B-lle Side* of Baltic
Creek visited nt the home of By
Edmonds Sunday.
Mrs Gerald Nash nnd son Robert
and friend. Robert Ferber of Hop­
kins. visited al the home of the
former's parent*. Walter Bidelman,
Saturday.
ASSYRIA.
Last Week's Letter.
Ml** Leona Miller spent the week
end in Battle Creek at the homo ot
her aunt. Mrs. Joe Moore
Mr. and Mrs. David Miller aro
moving lo Battle Creek to live. Mr.
Miller I* employed at the Clark
Tructracter company there where
he ha* been employed for some
time.
Ernest HofTman and family have
1 moved from the Ivan Brians farm
where they were located the past
four years to lhe W. R- Jones farm.
Mr. Jones hardware dealer has lo­
cated at Lacey.
Willard Cose of Portland was a
dinner guest at the A. J. Miller
home on Thursday on his way home
from Battle Creek.
Mr and Mr.-.. Floyd Miller arc in
charge of the April community
I night program.

NOTICE, FARMERS!*
FEED YOUR HOGS CULL BEANS
“And here it a car that will STAY in ttylul"

"OLD TIME"

MILK

"Once you drive a Hudson
... no other Eight will do!"

16c

• FOR PIES

GOLD MEDAL
Sweetened, Condensed

home of Mrs. J. E. Barcroft with moved into the Roy Bunn houae
a Peace program in charge ot Mrt. and Mr. and Mra. John Doyle art
Barcroft
moving from their farm into the
Mrs. Viola Rogers and son Alton, Walter Hammond houae, formerly
who have been aulsllng with tte the L. R. Wolcott home. Peter
work at the Mrs. Maud
Rogtra Frandaen ha* moved into the Pul­
home for some time, have returned ley Bunnell co4t*&gt;e. Mr- and Mn.
to their heme in the east part of teo Rom taking poeaeaalon of the
the village. Miss Evelyn Overholt MUo Bunn hou*e which they puris helping at the Rogen home at chaxed. Roy Blough and family
have purchased the houae Juat ewt
present.
of the handle factory, known u the
Mn. Pearl Lightfoot has been no­
tified of her appointment as poet­ Priacllla Goech houae. and will move
master at Freeport, which was ap­ In a few daya.
Other changes planned for in­
proved Feb. 24. This la the first
time Freeport has had a regular clude Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hynea.
postmaster since the present ad­ who expect to move to their farm
ministration took office. At that home near Woodland soon. Mn
time several local people took the Anna Walton moving Into her own
civil service examination and Her­ home, now occupied by Mr. and
man Rensch was appointed acting Mr*. Hynes. Charles Humphrey
postmaster. After his death. Mn. and family are moving’ from tiie
Lightfoot was given the same status Cheesebrough house to the :arm of
No examination ha* been held for his parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Humphrey, west of town. We un­
Hie place this time.
derstand the latter will occupy the
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Maxon
Cheescbrough houae.
and daughter Kathleen of Lowell
Remember the Easter cantata.
were Sunday aftcrno^i guest* al
the home of Mr. and' Mrs. Victor "Eternal Life? to be presented by
Sisson. In the evening both fam­ the Giro Clubs of the High school
ilies attended church services at the at the M. E .church at 10:30 Easter
Saranac M. E. church and called on Sunday.
Rev. F. Loomis and family.
Mrs. E. N. Yule has returned to
Leon Howk is doing some work the home of her daughter. Mrs.
at the Frank Hynes farm
homc Boyes, at Hastings, after spending
near Woodland this week.
a few days al her home here and
Mrs. Ree Wilcox. Mrs. Ida Howk, visiting her aiatera. Mrs. Catt and
accompanied by their sister. Mrs. Mrs. Cress. She will return to her
Austin Erb of Bowne. and their home here as soon as wanner
mother. Mrs. Daniel Weaver of near weather permits.
Elmdale, walked in upon their sis­
The W. M. A. of the U. B. church
ter and daughter. Mrs. Nellie Krnuas arc holding an afternoon meeting
of Elmdale last Thursday, bearing at the home of Mrs. J. I. Batdotf
well filled baskets, reminding her till* Thursday afternoon. '
of another birthday. A very pleas­
Something different 1*
being
ant time was enjoyed.
planned for the P. T. A. meeting
There have been several changes at the school house thl* Thursday
of location in Freeport and vicinity evening. A pot luck supper will bo
the past few days Onio Knowles served at 5:30 sharp, followed by
and family have moved their house­ a program In charge ot Mrs. Gor­
hold goods to Angola. Ind. Mr. den Ateljprne. a full hour minstrel
Knowles will £c employed by the show staged by a cast of twelve,
Consumer* Power Co. nt Battle nnd a short inspirational address
Creek. Miss Bernice Walton ac­ by M F. Denise. Mgr. of Lansing
companied them to their new home Busniess University.
at Angola where she will assist with
Elmer Roush went to Detroit last
the housework. Gall Lightfoot and Thursday on a few days' business
family have moved into the house trip.
vacated by the Knowlea family,
Mrs. Lottie Snodgrass of Grand
which they recently purchased from Rapids is spending a few days here
the Brccheisen estate. George Bas­ the guest of Mrs. Harry Lane.
sett nnd family have moved from
The many friends of Philo Segnr
the Hefflebowcr building to the Mrs. were grieved to hear of hl* sudden
Edith Godfrey house from which death last Wednesday morning at
the Lightfoot family moved. We the home of hi* aunt. Mrs Eva Se­
understand that the Hefflebower cor. where he had made his home
building is lo be torn down in the the jmuI winter He liad suffered
near future.
with n heart ailment for some time
Walter Lewis and family have nnd was stricken with an attack
moved their household good* Into while eating breakfast nnd passed
lhe Cha* Moore house temporarily, away before help could reach him.
and the Chas Bunn family arc Mr. Segnr was about 60 years of
moving from the Susie Helrigle aqc and has spent a large part of
farm north of town into the Hel- his life In and around Freeport.
rliile house, vacated by the Lewis For years he was engaged in the
family. A family by the name of hamcsB business here with hl*
Denise from near Caledonia have brother Ed. and a few years ago
rented the Helrigle farm and are was employed In the local elevator.
moving onto It this week.
He was of a quiet disposition and
Mr. and Mrs D. B- Dolph, for­ t mode and kept many friends, who
merly of Welcome Corners, have , Jr-ln the brother Ed and other relalives In mourning his passing. Fu
neral services were held from the
| home on Frldav afternoon, con­
I ducted by Rev. Karl Keefer of Wa1 lervliet and lhe last rites wrre paid
bv his brothers in Harmony Lodge
I. O. O. F. Burial was In Pleasant
Hill cemetery. Among the out-oftown folks here for lhe funeral
were: Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Segar. Mr
and Mrs. Lavern Segar and two
.son*. Mr. and Mrs. Prank C. Dem| mg. all of Grand Rapids.
Rural Carrier Jed Stowe suffered
a severe heart attack while sorting
mail at lhe postofflcc last Friday
morning. A doctor was called and
inter Mr. Stowe was able to make
ills trip a* usual.
Mr. and Mrs W. R SchlfTman
and Tom Bush of North Irving call­
ed at lhe H. M. Boughner home
Saturday evening and Mr and Mrs.
Geo. Townsend of In big were there
Sunday.
The Freeport Home Economics

78c

PEANUT BUTTER

MINCEMEAT 3*. 25c
PUMPKIN "•c.1.” 10c
CHERRIES 3 SL.2 25c

Lambie on W. Center street, and
„
„
took a prominent part in the actlv- . Rumc11 Nunemakcr and faLier
itlcs of the Methodist church
lhave rwUcd Mrs Henry B«uon4
Mrs. Sldnam U survived by a son 1 h0Uie “nd cxpecl 10 movc t0 lhclr
Wilham N.. and two daughter/ new homc thls wcek
Mrs. Alice Childs of New York city.
Mr. end Mrs. Manley Billings nnd
and Mrs. Helen Puffer of Webster Mrr. Hazel Billings and children
□rove. Mo., and six grandchildren, j spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
--------------------Robert Burchett.
, .
PRAIRIEVILLE,
| Mrs Silas Doster Ls spending
Last Weeks Letter.
much of her time caring for her parrhe pupils In higher grades neither enu. Mr. and Mrs, Joshua DeCrockabsent nor tardy last school month cr nf Richland.
were alien shelp. Ronald McKibben.
Mrs. Cora Fowler spent over the
ytrglnU Lewis Don Higgins and
cnli Unh her people In AlleForrcst Stafford
l— Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Krick
Gerald and Harvey Mills of De­
Monday were Rev. and Mrs. L. D. troit came Saturday to spend over
Miles. Mrs. William Dobson and Sunday with their parents. Mr. and
children. Mr. and Mrs E. D. Row Mrs. Maurice Mills Mr. and Mrs.
of Grand Rapids and Mrs. Bessie Bernard Mills and daughter of West
Higbee of Pnsadcna. California.
Lake spent Sunday'With them.
Harry Kllllck of Doster Is spend­
Mrs. John R Jones and family
ing a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. are moving lo their farm in Mon­
Verne Calthrop. Master Lamer Erb terey. This will take five pupils out
of our school. They
will •*
be “
missed.
*"•&gt;success
Vaughn Mott has bull, a tralxr ^ut we wish them
wherever
house. IU dimensions are 21 feet ,h... nr(.
long. 7 1-2 feet wide. It has a kltch- 1
J
' .... -tn
en. living room and bedroom. It is
freeport
FREEPORT.
equipped with electricity, and is up
,,
'
Last
Week's
Letter.
to date in every way. Vaughn is L
051 wecK
* Leiter
agent for the Windstorm Company I Rev. Fern Wheeler will bring an­
and the trailer will be very conven- other message on Hie subject. "The
lent, a snail carries iu house on its Allumlg Christ." at 10:30, Sunday
back but Vaughn has a decided ad- mcmlng. 'Due ‘to the “
change
*
in
vantage over the snail. Mrs. Mott time ofthe services at Carlton CenAHuring Christ." at 10:30. Sunday
accompanies him on his trips.
Miss Myrtle Smith of Battle day school from now on. Sunday
Creek schools is spending her va­ evening there will be a service of
cation wiyi the home folks.
Hymn stories, featuring the old
Mrs. tyulu Shepard entertained hymns. Several other features are
her daughter. Mrs. Arthur Elffler being arranged for. Everyone Is in­
and children, of Battle Creek Sun- ' vited.
1 Mr. and Mrs. Orville Murphy of
Miss Elizabeth Woods entertained Hastings were week-end guests of
Miss Marguerite McAllister and his brother. Milton Murphy
nnd
Mis* Marion Setchfleld al Gull lake 1 family of South Bowne. They were
during the week. Mrs. George Wood nil present nt the M E church Sun­
spent Sunday afternoon nnd eve­ day morning. Mrs. Orville Mur­
ning al her home here.
phy is a cousin of Rev. Wheeler.
Mrs. Florence Hughes. Mrs Mag­
Mrs. Fred Tnbbercr. Mrs. Leon
gie Lehman. Mrs. Stella Barber. Howk and Mrs. Geo Thompson at­
Mrs. Ethel Stebbcn and Miss Ber­ tended a directors* meeting of the
nice Flower attended the Eastern Woman’s Club nt the home of Mrs.
Star lodge at Middleville ITiday C. D Bauer at Hastings .Saturday
night.
afternoon
»•- and
»...i »«and
। Mr
Mr William
Willin in Duncan
Di
Rev. Fem Wheeler and
niece.
। ,children
nnd
Mr Clinton Miss Ruth Wheeler. Attended a sa­
_______ nnd
___ Mr
...____
2 _jrs.
Hughe., of Kalamazoo were callers cred program given by Mr. nnd
at Mr and Mu Matirfr- Hughes Mrs Howard Skinner at tiie Lake
Sunday Mr and Mrs Dale Hughes Odessa M. E. church Friday evening
of Kalamazoo called Saturday.
Mr Skinner is in charge of the mu­
Callers at Mr
and Mrs. Ned sic at Dr Savage's church at Pon­
Wilkins Sunday 4err Mr and Mrs tine and Ls heard by many here over
David Art Up. M». and Mrs. Vern the air.
Wilkins and'sari of Battle creek
___ ..... ....
_.w „.
and Mr. and Mrs. Jcsxc Wilkins of church ha* postponed it* meeting
Gale.ibutK.
.....
time to Friday. April 10. at the

25c

1
29c

MATCHES

TEA 'ib 23c
FINEST GREEN JAPAN
VITALITY BEVERAGE

■

4 7/*
1IU

Mrs PhU‘P OWr *nd daughThTtamilv
of Battte Creek came
The r*’nU7.c*!n®,here from Barry Friday to visit Mr. and Mrs. D. N.
PatWE&gt;ltn^r' Tte^hl nT??1 Honeywell. Mr OToole came Sun-

10c | GREEN GIANT PEAS =■• 17c

OLIVES QUEEK»O

SHEFFORD'S

American, Brick,
Olive, Pimento,
Llmburger
•4 LB. PKG.

c-

LB.

No. 2
CAN

SWEET CORN
Del Maii CORN

■

ir

rorou CPPC “&lt;£«-»■
M F II A
► fl W
k

4 In
| fl L
I f|
I

Chocolate MarthmtNowt
Chocolate Pecana
LB.

JELLY BIRD EGGS CANDY » 10c

■

b. I. Van Hom and Mrs. Blanch
at the time of her death, and stere- Van Hom spent the week end with
tary of the Ninety Club, a U. of M. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hutson of
organization composed of alumni Batlie Creek
who have passed their 00th birthm- ind
m-j— .pent
rtt'he
*“ “ membcr ■ Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Don
of the class of 1871.
.
Xainny ol oalesburg.

. est Unlverelty of Michigan alumnae'
8ha was a sister of the Ute Dr. W. । falter was a pioneer of Richland.

I

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

verywhere our local Hudson owners arc
telling friends how their Hudson’s out­
perform anything on the road ... in traffic, on
hills, effortless all-day travel.
The reason? Because this Hudson has more
power then any other Eight within hundreds uf
dollars of its price . . . and the smoothtst auto­
mobile motor built. No vibration at any speed
. . . longer life for the car . . . less "wear" on
the driver!
They arc telling, too, how much more comfort
there is, front seat or back, because this new
Hudson Eight has more length, more rear scat
room, IcjJ room, head room, than any other
popular Eight.
They arc praising Hudson’s easier, safer way
of driving, too ... withjhe Electric Hand. Gear
shifting at a finger flick, without taking their
bands from the wheel. And at last, real comfort
for three to ride'in front... with a floor all clear
of gear and brake levers.
Let us show vou what other owners have
found out about Hudson economy and long life.
Then take your "Discovery Drive" in a Hudson
Eight with the Electric Hand.

E

DAVID GOODYEAR, Hudwn Daal.r

HUDSON
SUPER

STRAIGHT

Seed Time in here
Some reasons why Hudson

rules the Eights
WbMfaMl
la 177 UehM-Tha big­
gest cars ever priced ao low... more
head room, leg room, wating room.

113 or 124 Saeotii Narsopoasr— More
power than any other Eight up to
almost double Hudoon'a price.
Bodies All of Steel — With oeamless
roofs of solid steel . . . strongest
body construction known.
Duo-Aatomatic ttydraofic Brakes—(pat­
ent applied for). Finest hydraulics,
wit ^separate safety braking eyatsm
operating automatically from the
same pedal I! ever needed.

Radial Safety Control (patent ap­
plied for) ... Tro-Une Steering...
The Rhythmic Ride.. .The Electric
Hand (optional at small extra root).

Madson Eight Prices Bogfa st

*760

Hastings, Michigan

Cloven
MEDIUM NATIVE CROWN

MAMMOTH NATIVE CROWN
ALSI KE CLOVER

WHITE BLOSSOM
YELLOW BLOSSOM

Aifulfan
IDAHO GRIMM

IDAHO CROWN

Timothy
RED TOP
Kentucky Blue, unhulled and fancy

We carry a complete line of seeds

I I GH T

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO.
East State St.

See Us For...

Phone 2101'

Smith Bros., Velte &amp; Co.
Hastings Telephone 2257
Dealers In Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Salt, Limo,
Cement and Coal

BUILT BY HUDSON-TCTAAPLANL S5S5 AND UP: HUDSON SIX. B710 AND UP; HUDSON SUPKB STRAIGHT
»
'&gt;
EIGHT. &gt;780 AND UP, y, Q. 8. DETROIT
»»

�THEHHIDSERT |KgS
t
BLOSSOMS OUT

Boucuini. and out a law
' milt* from the city, tn a most at-,
tractive location. Tha city of Bakerafield is only about 400 feat above
tea level, and It would saem that
the thermometer there must rite to
quite a height during, the hot
months.
The Preventatorium is
moat attractively located up In the
mountain* at an alUtude of around
9.W0 or 3.000 feet, where lhe air i*
pure, fresh and Invigorating, and
where at night good warm bed­
clothing 1* demanded. Under Miss
Hatmansperger's charge, the Insti­
tution has done, and is doing splen­
did work, and tiie youngster* that
we came in contact with gave eiery
appearance of being properly cared
for. Her position as may be Imag­
ined 1* a very responsible one, but
l she 1* meeting her duties in a way
that seems to be moil acceptable to
all—Just aa those who know her.
would be confident that she would

M0RE

reports from

THE FLOOD DISTRICTS

Last Friday evening the regular
». T- A. wm held with Mrs. Saund-

DECIDES DAMAGE CASE
IN FAVOR OF BARBER

Fun.ral
forMr*. John
iUlvic of East Assyria were held on

------------

Resident
Removed to Higher Land
at Johnstown, Pa.

7ormer

Hastings

Mr. Saunders and Mrs.
sang the "Old Rugged Croaa** and
other entertaining feature* fur­
nished a good program Many of
the new people in lhe district were
present. We are glad to welcome
them. A basket ball will be pur­
chased for Ute pupils. The next
meeting of the P. T. A. will be April
*4. aII are welcome.

O&lt;a,r of O«r
- _

_ ,

_

(or Value
,

ol Horse Beingr Led on
the Highway

, burial at Marcellus.

■

h’”“

&lt;

• um»

■ home is recovering from a two
(Contlnued from pago 1. sec. 11
weeks’ Illness.
Hastings relatives ware pleased to
- - — ----------; Will Strickland has returned to
•Ridge Drive." a splendid wide
hear from Mrs. Edith Hemey Al­
live* near CrMeey. sued Hugh Chap-' the Charlie Purcell farm home to
l&gt;aved highway that leads up over
ter. who was in lhe flood district
man. superintendent of the Lock- ■
with lh« work
mountains, through towering can­
shore Farm*, near that place, and ■ A mar.h fire on the former 8eyyon* and across valley*, a most de­
that the water flooded the lower
o. «.
.
, L
mour WlUlson farm, now occupied
lightful drive- that is full of Interest
story of the building where she lives
Ir.ln, muck, rapioyml b, Clmp- hy
H,„yon ,p„.a „
every inch of the way. Thl* new
and was within one foot of the sec­
man, charging that through their that a straw suck wa* burned on
MIDDLEVILLE.
•Ridge Route" Is the shortest dis­
ond floor. A son came and took her
fault'
an automobile, belonging to ■ the
Mrs. Wm.
and tha
"
me mji
wm. Rurtlne
kuivuic farm *&lt;&gt;u
un ,
tance between Los Angeles and San
R. 8. and Mn. French took their Chapman but driven by Stuck, hit boards on the bam were charred.
to his home higher up on the moun­
Francisco. It leads you by old Fort
tain side, so she was safe. It was a ton llwmu to. Chicago to return to “
a horse
owned uy
by Barber
which wm
fire was
wa* on its
iu way toward the
lhe
1UTM- uwnca
tjaroer wmen
wa* The Are
Tejou long slnee daaerted. which
relief to her relative* here lo know his school Thursday, and returning being led along
. I...... (V.
... ......j,
___ --but timely arlhe U.K.....
highway, I..
in- I' —
Ben ..
Butler
building*,
had an accident that sent R. 8. to a juring lhe animal so that it had to . rival of helpers controlled it.
was lhe headquarters of Gen Pre­
mont and hi* scouts and by place*
Mrs. Ouy c Keller ha* also heard hospital for treatment. A*‘he ex­ be killed. Barber claimed that hc--------------- -— ----------------where the voices of the gold hunters
from her sister and husband. Mr. pects lo return Sunday we take it was
on-his own rtrht
was.on-.his
right *lde
side of the
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
of '49 almost whlxper. You become
and Mrs, W. 8. Lawrence of .Pitts­ that he is coming on all right, for highway at the time of the acci­
Mr*. Carl Scofield and son of
so Interested in the beautiful seenburgh. They were In the flood area which his many friends ore thank­ dent, and that the ear driven by
Pontiac called on Miss Mary Nash
ery all around you; In the unusual
and had some exciting experiences. ful
Mr*.
French
is
still
with
him.
—------ —- ----------- -------- -- ------ Stuck wa* to the left of the center Sunday morning.
sights and scenes on every hand; in
They live upstair* over their hard­
Tt *r'“7” ' “
M u«
oi b.ln, on
lhe historical spots and places that
Glenn Wotrtng spent Saturday In
ware store, the lower floor being o&lt;
accident except that K oc- nh proper aide Barber claimed- Ural
heavy .. ..tow
Kalamazoo on business
had no little to do with our winning
covered with water, destroying prac­ eureed
eurrM during
durln, the
Uie taavp
aimer ’ thc ^utomobiie
,uujmoMte at the time wm be'
Miss Hetmansperger was leading tically everything in the store in the
of the Golden West, that you reach
•torm.
tng driven at the rate of 55 or 60 ! Ml*s Irene OranBbf Battle Creek
the final part of tiie highway lead­ the way out to the Preventatorium. way of fixtures and metal article*.
J.
D.
Dietrich
has
been
confined
miles
per
hour.
Sluck
admitted
that
i
spent
the first of the week with
ing from the mountain down onto and at one place turned her car The doors also warped and fell off
metor; have
he was driving about 45. The car Jean Kantncr and visited school
the Desert, almost before you know from lhe paved highway and fol­ The second floor of the building Is a man from Wayland attending to skidded, which took it still further with her.
it. How time does seem to fly when lowed an old road leading out onto divided Into four flats and all were his oil route. Hl* many friend* to the left.
Aunt Susie Oaks is seriously ill
you make your first trip over a beau­ the desert lo give us a view ot an­ deprived of heat and lights. Across hope to see him about his business
In hi* decree in favor of Barber, at this writing. Callers on her Suntiful and interesting drivel It didn’t 1other feature of Natures wonders in the alley from the Lawrence build­ very soon.
the judge cites two recent Supreme day afternoon were Mr. and Mrs.
ASK US ABOUT A MOTOB-CUAN-OUT
seem "any time at all," and here we the way of putting on a unique ing was lhe Westinghouse plant. It
Township election looks to be a Court decisions, which held that Sam Wolford and Mrs. Mary Hub­
were only 30 miles from Bakersfield. flower .how, quite different from was found that eighteen men were
one who violate* the law of this bard from near Lake Odessa. Miss
very
quiet
affair
at
thl*
tune,
being
the
one
I
have
described.
We
were
We had arrived at that never to­
marooned there without food, so
state by driving on the wrong side Clara Blocher and Mr. and Mrs.
written
on
Saturday.
There
is.
of
in
the
midst
of
flowers
all
the
while,
Mrs. Lawrence made sandwiches
be-forgotten spot, where the high- ;
of the highway thereby assumes
way leads down from the mountain but after traveling on this old road and threw them across the alley to course. sUll time for something to the risk of *uch driving; and if In­ Harrison Blocher.
Mr. and Mrs. Estle Flanigan and
and out onto the desert, with no 1for a mile or more, we came to a the flood victims. After the waters happen.
jury i* caused thereby to another baby of Detroit spent lhe week end
Friday evening one of the mains
premonition of the glorious pano- 1perfect sea of red—acres upon acres receded a young man. who had been
or to the property of another, the
rama that would be laid out before 'of red popples all in a solid mass, married but a few days, was found in the western part of town evi­ presumption I* against the party with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Flanigan.
SUl, liaaUngs, Michigan
us. About 30 miles from Bakersfield 1literally wasting their beauty upon drowned in the store next lo tiie dently got thawed out and let go,
Mr.
and Mrs. Ellsworth Smith and
driving on the wrong side of the
you break over the mountain top 1
Lawrence-*. These experiences were for water was spouting up like a
daughters. Nevah and • Viva, and
them from the main highway. but a few of those that could be re­ fountain That part of town ha* road. The judge found in favor of Mrs. Sherman Smith of Hastings
nnd look down on the desert below see
1
the claimant, awarding him 1175,
•
Batteries,
Windshield
Wlpsn
Vulcanizing.
been without waler for some week*.
extending for miles ahead. There In fact here was this whole area for counted.
which he considers lhe fair value of spent Sunday afternoon with Cha*.
and miles In every direction,
It wa* thickly carpeted with flower* miles
1
Parlee and family.
Wednesday noon. Wright Clifford lhe horse.
Itself in most ►gorgeous
MILO.
of every hue. I wish that I could de- glorifying
1
Mrs. Glenn Wotring ha* been ill
—discovered
uim
-vvcicu that
MiBv the
kite uiiin
bam un
on iu*
ills
----------------- — ♦ »----------------.
Week’*
s Let
Letter.
.!er’4 . „
. .. . । ,arn’ Jw&gt;l CMt Of the Moe school- I
PLEASANT VALLEY.
scribe that sight for you. but. words colors, and the pity was that so Last Weck
the past week with streptococcus
MOTO a
cannot do it. Nature ha* ways of do- 1few people could see It. It's a sight
Those who atunded the Ladies । house, wa* on Are. cause unknown I Mrs. Floyd Neeb and Mrs. Lee Os­ sore throat. She is a little belter
of
ing things that are way. way beyond 'worth going many miles to enjoy, Aid at -the. home
.
- Mrs.
— Bradfield
-' 1 He succeeded In getting his stock I born spent Tuesday at the Lacy al th!* writing.
description, no matter whether it’s 1and In fact hundreds of Califor­ last Wednesday enjoyed lhe meet­ out of. the basement, but the build- ond Porrilt home in South Bowne.
BOWNE CENTER.
a storm on land or MS; a volcano ‘nians do drive long distances to see ing exceedingly. The dining table init
ing and hav
hay nnd
and Other
other feeds
feed* were while the men attended an TnlernaInterna- .
Last Week's Letter.
that is seething and threatening; or 1
was prettily decorated with St. Pat­ entirely consumed; some tools were tional meeting al Caledonia.
into living colors rick* favors; tire menu also carried ,also burned, a serious loss to him.
preparing a flower display for you 1transformed
Beulah Kime spent Thursday . Orvin fimelker. Milton Wells and
that Is miles and miles In extent. 1through the agency of beautiful out the colors. The program was partially covered by insurance. For­ night with Esther Schwab of near Watt Thomas attended a horse sale
it —
as very Interesting and entertaining. tunately for him there is a vacant Etondale.
at Lake Odessa Saturday.
Standing
1----- - ■ The
otutlluilK high
111*11 up
uu on
VII that
Lilial, mountain
luuniitdui jflowers.
----- stale
------- appreciates
-------- - — -Ude and looking out a* far a* the o™
Spring attractions, and Mr*. Bradfield was assisted by a bam across the road that he has
Mrs. Emery Kime spent Tuesday , Mr*. Earl Fox and children spent &gt;
sec. there were miles and ;haa passed strict Ja*-s against the chef from Kalamazoo who prepared procured the use cf until he can with her friend. Mrs. Jesce Boulard 'Sunday with her daughter. Mrs. '
eye could see,
mile* and miles of flowers of every i picking of desert flwers. Up on the the dinner. Her mother. Mrs. Wilcox build. He think* the wall t* not so of Caledonia.
Austin Miller and family of Clark*- i
hue nnd color. It seemed from !hat |n](ou]]jj(nla^4
are and two aunts. Mr*. Dodds and Mrs. badly damaged but that he can use
viUe.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Geiger vis­
to •lhe
Mabie Watt* of Chicago spent tiie
mountain side as though you were |I climbing higher and higher •- Ryerson of Hasting* assisted In It to build upon.
ited their daughter. Mrs
Emery
week end with her mother, Mrs.'
looking down on Paradise and very summit* and If nothing hap­ serving. The next meeting will be
Benedict and family, of Ionia. Sat­
Clara Watt*.
could almost hear the flutter of an­ pen*. in years to come their sides hcld at the Fenner home in April. sheep upon one of his Irving farm* urday.
Place your order today
Last Saturday evening. Mr. and j
John Flannery passed away Sat- '
gels wings The sight wa* &amp;o beau­ will be blazing fields of red after
Ruth and Verna Brake spent
near Matt Bedford's, wa* given no­
for Leeuws Selected
urday at the home of his nephew.
Mr*. Newell Barber were honored
tiful that you wondered whether It the rainy season.
tice Friday that a dog wa* mistreat­ Thursday with their grandparents.
Feasting upon Natures wonderful by a company of old neighbors and ing his sheep. A man who had driv­ Mr. and Mrs John P. Brake, while John O'Neil with whom he has t
Oversize
Baby Chicks
।
ocricnce that almost held you as If floral display on the desert wastes friends from Cressey who with well ,en the dog from the yard, gave their parent* were In Grand Rap-1 made his home tor some time.
J?*
1
*'
id*
’
*
"***
—
—
•
—
k
-|
Mr
an&lt;
j
Mr*
John
Bmelkcr
and
from Bloodtejted stoqk
in a trance. Picture .sitting way up has become an annual feature. It filled basket* tendered them a sur­ lhe information. U^.;.
. Idsm|m On|t(. Qrlmfi &gt;n&lt;1
upon
.„„»ili„,„lhu,„ku&gt;u;ju«
on high And looking out upon thou­ has really become such an impor­ prise party. An enjoyable evening lion one fine ewe wa* found dead
and
avoid
disappoint­
---------------—
•
—
--------------Lampkin farm north of Lowell. .
sands and thousands nnd thousands tant event that the daily press of wa* spent. There wo* music and and some others
other, suffering from Gray
of L*ke
Lake Odessa were Sunday
°I
ment. They are bred
of acre* of level desert before you the stale constantly send out their an original poem read by Mr White fright
And .Uli worthless dogs *UMt* &lt;* Mr a™ Mrs. J. F. Brake
and nil ot It covered with blue lupin.' scouts to frequently report on desert telling of their life and association are kept and allowed to roam at
IElrncr Scott and Claude. Mrs J"’J? wPl£r
d-m^the
to Live. Lay and Pay.
Garfield Slater and Elwin were in
Walter Kowalczyk doing the
cactus blossoms, popples of the red­ floral conditions and inform read­ together In the old neighborhood will to destroy property.
White. Buff G Brown
_________ 1
1
1
I llmHno.
work.
dest-red. nnd other flowers of pur­ ers where lhe beat displays may be Mr. Storking In well chosen word* (
Hastings Saturday.
Hastings shoppers Saturday were
ple. yellow and every other color If seen and what routes to take. If □resented them a beautiful floor i
I;
Mr. and Mrs iwiuia
Harold Rittengrr
Leghorns (large type).
OAnrnxu.
nmcngrr
B
ANFIELD.
you can visualize that wonderful perchance anyone reading this ar­ lamp a* a token of esteem from the I. Mr*. Aggie Willison entertained of
visited their parents. Mr. Mrs Jennie Flynn. Mr*. John Nash, i
Anconos, $8.75 per
Alice and Marie. Mrs. Merrill Kerch­
flower show, you can picture what ticle, should be In California when
‘the Banfl^ldyjcmclery organization nnd Mrs Harley Taylor. Sunday.
er and Mr*. Watt Thomas.
Desert Is In bloom, do not fail
Nature does once every year to the
... --------— --------------WcuTirsday. April a. Pot luck dinner
Ervin Stahl of Elmdale called on
100. Barred, Buff &amp;
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kowalczyk I
If the display even begins
transform her desert urea* Into I to see it. ----------------------------------_— is spending her vacation with the waj gcrvcd
■
■ Claude Seott Sunday forenoon
। entertained relatives from Grand I
White Rocks, White
bowers of beauty Hie more gener- । lo approach lhe grandeur of lhe home folks.
‘
Mr
Clifford Phillips,
Taylor
ll'e
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. Clifford
Phillips.
I Rapids Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox of Bat­ who
bus tka amount of rainfall, the , one last year. It will be n sight that
have been staying nt the Geo ' X -rhu^lnv™17
lhe Rebek‘
Wyandottcs, Buff, Or­
Sunday visitors at Wayne Ben­
tle Creek and mother. Mrs Wilcox Wickwire home, left Monday for a| oh*. Thursday.
more gorgeous will be her display I you will never forget. Many vacairs
Thursday
pingtons. Rhode Island Reds. White Minorca;, $8.95
If. when I am called from this old tlonlsU arrange their trips during of Hastings, were callers Friday of
of Berlin
spent from ton’s were Charley Deming and ,
when* thev ' Betty Taylor
i“&gt;'or or
Hem w|lh
farm ...
near-jMarshal)
' taken
'
.„..l
her family of Millbrook. Mr. and Mrs. I
and Mrs
Merle Bradfield.
,.it. mho
mn mciic
oruuuciu.
——•:— v‘------ nicy ■ Friday until Sundav
earth, I can be
up onto the I this Spring Wild Flower lime on Mr.
per 100, White or Black Giants, $10.95 per 100.
John Bradfield relumed to South have •«“««* employment.
■------- ?.una,yJ
Roy
Deming, and Russell Benton1
great mountainside of Eternity,
________ the desert just to see this wonderful
,
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Bend
Thursday
for
medical
treat|
and family ot Grand Rapids. Helen
Mr. nnd Mrs. Don Putnam nt- ; Taylor.
and can look out over an area even ' floral panorama unsurpassed In
tended
•nded the Birthday Club tn Rut- I
Oraydcn Slowln* of South Bo*- Benton 1* 111 with the flu.
The above chicks are the superior laying grade. De­
a* beautiful ns wa* this flower-cov­ beauty nnd grandeur. Then It Is that inent.
Mrs. Barber and Bernice Flower . land loot Thursday,ered desert, well it might al least Nature carpel* her wide desert
। ‘ ton spent Friday
and oo.uiSatur• ■—“/ night n.Hl
duct 1c per chick from the above prices for Standard
MORGAN.
three
ladle* ---------from Prairieville। , Oney Gregg and family have m»y with his grandparents. Mr. and
help make lhe "going" a little wastes with colors, and to an extent, with
----- ----- -------Mrs. Donald Mead entertained a
Grade Chicks for delivery after May 1st. Light cock­
that we believe cannot be surpassed attended a meeting of lhe Eastern moved from the Warner farm to Mrs J F Brake His parents came
easier.
group of young folk* of Hastings
Ht»r
rh.tU*.r
at
Mlrfrilavlila
la.t
. n.»l. - ----- -for hkn Saturday
evening
if
equalled.
In
any
other
place
on
filar
chapter
al
Middleville
last
I
Battle
Creek.
..............
We drove the 30 miles or more In-. •• - --------- -- - ----- -------------- •--------- --erel chicks, $3.50 per 100. Heavy or Hybred cock­
as dinner guest* recently.
Friday
rto Bakersfield, over a paved road lhc face of Ulc 8lobc
naay evening.
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Jones of
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Osborn of Pin­
Opal
Webb
of
Battle
Creek
Spent
erel chicks. $7.50 per 100. Get our prices on Started
Mrs.
Harlan
Scobey
spent
part
of
|
near
Nashville
have
moved
on
the
(that was laid out over a course just I
W. R. Cook,
hook attended chuch Sunday tore­
Thursday night at home and went
' last week in Kalamazoo assisting a Vem Doty farm.
. noon and spent the rest of the day on Friday to Grand Rapid* to spend
as straight as II could be laid out\i
Chicks and Day Old Pullet Chicks before you buy.
friend
with
some
sewing
I
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jesse
Briggs
have
We literally pawed through a great]
with their daughter. Mrs. Floyd a few day*.
STATE ROAD.
| Mrs. Osborn has returned lo her returned to their home at Benfield Neeb and family.
sea of flowers on either side ex- ;,Last Week's Leiter.
Verman Jeffry of Nashville was,
home here after spending the win- after .pending the winter near
lending for mile* lo lhe mountains '
a guest of Harold Webb while Oar1 ter with her daughter. Mrs. Elza Jen- j Hickory Comers,
ORDER FROM AD—$ I 00 per 100 books your order
ASSYRIA.
and ancaa
ana
ahead ns
a* lax
fur a* me
lhe eye couia
could 1 _•Archie
------- Cunningham and
net was entertained at -the home.
—
- off very quietly Last week's Letter.
see. Just one continuing mass of. 80n *5,e ln Grand Rapid* Saturday. sen. at Richland. Mr. and Mrs Jen-' Election
passed
sen visited her on Sunday.
----------------------------U1DUC
Willard case of Portland spent of Rachael Jeffry at Nashville.
beautUul colors. Another peculiar Another cast was put on lhe boys
Monday. The
county abstract issue
thing, too. I* lhe way in wlUch lhe arn‘ This make* the third one.
Mr. and Mr*. F. Gilbert spent was voted down. The entire Repub- the week end with hi* brother.
Newspaper pictures seem to Indi- j
beautiful red poppies have extended. | Mr. and Mr*. Edd De Mott spent Wedncsday in Marcellus and fin- hcan ticket was elected. Supervis- Hugh Case and called on friends.
cate that these diplomat* are a fun- ‘
Stevens;, treasure?.
t----------- * ■• Carl
■—’
Mrs. Sylvia Bivens and daugh­ ny-looklng ouheh. but you’d prob-1
--------------------and are continuing to extend, up Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and ished moving their household goods ; or FctW
Route 3
Phone 821
■ “
----------J clerk.
•
ter. Mrs. Isabel Case spent Friday
Kalamazoo, Midi.
Boa
man, —
and
Vem Doty.
the sides of the mountain.*. In Mrs. Andrew Kennedy. The De- and farming tools.
ably be. too, if you had to go around I
Mr and Mrs. Jack Schultz and 1
. . ,-----------------at lhe homc of her son. Paul Biven*,
placrs these flower* were so thick j Moll * have been touring thru the
all the, time with your tongue in
NORTHEAST IRVING.
and family who will move soon to your oheek.
that it made a great red splotch on ! southern states thl* winter, and re­ BilUe and Mr. and Mr* Joe O Con- I
। ner of Chicago visited Mr. and Mrs I James Musson of Battle Creek the Elwin Nash farm.
tire mountain side. In other place* ; turned home that week end.
spent Impart
lhe past week w.ihltta^unt.
with hls^ai
me nower* vrere
e..ou.n ~, M„. wnuam ficnar.zenoerger o.
• 8diujU 'r°m Saturday Uli ■ ^nt
Mr*. Mlles Schroder wa* taken to
the flower* were thick enough so, Mrs. William Schanzenberger of
Brown and
■ n*v»vu&gt;
Nichols hospital
nuapivai on Wednesday
weanesoay
that they
y 2 SJ.’’Maurlce Crookston i Mrs. Irma B
d ffamily,
b
that
they gave
gave n
a distinct
distinct red
red cast
cast to
to ' Battle
Battle Creek
Creek spent
spent last
last week
week with 8
I Miss Marguerite Segar of Has-' where she submitted to a major opi
practically all of the mountain* and Mrs.
.... Clifton Becker and family,
Ql Hasting* were at their farm Sun-1 Ung* spent lhe week end with her I eration.
extended .Tom Hie sloping lands nt |
Jim Sothard and Homer Becker ua/
day bi
and
apent th
c evening with
parent*. Mr.
and Mrs.
Harlow
fie- ’ Mi« Bertha
»
.
u apcai*
w*v
w....
।
..
...»
o.
,v~
oe-Miss
Miller
of
the
Lahsing
the bottom clear to the summits were
wrre
UI UTn
■fl,« In
viand the ...kb
. „ .
___ _____ .
i Wayland
week .nd
end nn
on ...
their uncle. Eme*t Qultk. and fam- gar.
I schools I* soendlna her vacation
On the desert land the blue lupin business
Uy.
’
I Mr- “nd Mrs. Ru Wilcox and with her mother. Mrs. Relle Miller.
seemed lo predominate
though j
The penny social held al Milo । Evelyn spent Saturday at Grand
-*
-- ••
many other kind*, the yellow ‘I Mrs. Janet Pettengill and Mrs.
met at the Ketcham' hall on Saturdaisies, the cactus, and numerous Elsie Sothard visited Mrs. Dora schoolhouse the 20th wa* attended Rapids.
by about fifty. Mr. Saunders helped
**'
“
Mias Eleanor Miller
of* Bowne was da ■ for a social time and shower.
other varieties and color* were very .'Coieman of Rutland on Monday.
Olen—
Coleman
of--------------------------Battle Creek is on the program, also some friend* 1 a Sunday guest of Pauline and Vtrplentiful.
II --------- ------- —
his mothMr. and
Mrs. Prank-'------------glnia Moore.
---------------------------------------------.------| Mrs. Martha Hyde is being greet­
any pneo
Al the liolel In Bakersfield wc met. spending
spending two
two weeks
week* with
with hl*
moth- from .Hastings.
assisted with the music. | Edna Ci*ier of Lansing spent the ed by a-post card shower on her
Ml'* Mary Hetmansperger. formerly er. Mr*. Lucy Coleman. Olen is re- Barkhuff
,
■
1
*4
! WMkend
endwith
Withher *l*ter, Mr*. AY-; 7Bth jjlrthdav. Anri! 3 at
----th"
* • •—
•‘week
horn'of this rity. and who will be rcmem- ‘ pairing the buildings on a farm he
thur
Moore
and
family.
■
of
ber
daughter,
Mrs.
Mabel
Jones
R.
taken in.
bered by many Hastings friends. । bought near Nashville.
Miss Mary ho* rpet with splendid, Mr*. Elsie Sothard wa* confined
success In her work in California, to the hou*e last week with a swoland Is lhe Superintendent of the i len face. She had her teeth extractlarge Kern County preventatorium. | ed on Saturday. And Monday Mr.
Bakersfield being lhe county seat of Sothard wa* kicked by a horse and
Kern county. Hie Pirveulatuiiuin Is:get* around now with lhe aid of a
a splendid institution, erected and cane. They are surely having their
.. being operated for the benefit of ■ share of trouble,
children and young people who may i, Mrs. Ruby H&lt;
be afflicted with, or Inclined toward ;• spent Monday an
mother, Mn.
Mrs. I
"T.B." School I* maintained in con- mother.
nectlon with lhe Institution and In- J helped can beef.

G“E SUNOCO

BABY CHICKS

Leauw's Superior Poultry Farm

SMITH
FAM I LY

INSIST ON
MICHIGAN MADE

BEET SUGAR
Best /or
fro.tiniis

PIONEER
RED ARROW

Have you ever thought of your family
ns a small "business corporation," with
yourself as president, your wife and
yourself as directors, and the children
□s stockholders?
No successful corporation pays out all
it earns, in expense and dividends. It
lays aside regularly a certain percentage
of its income os a. surplus or reserve
fund to provide for emergencies.
Place your financial affairs on a cor­
poration basis. Open a bank account and
accumulate a surplus fund. Then, if your
earning ability is cut off, you will still
be able to carry on with your reserve.

N
K OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Built to match tho finest in everything that cou
Triplo-Saalsd Hydraulic Brakes
Smooth and sure in any weather

Knaa-Actlon Rid*

'Turrat-T«p" Flshor Bodies
The smartest, safest bodies built today

Laval Floors—Front and Rear

201 S. Jefferson
Hastings, Mich.

HASTINGS

M

INTIS PONTIAC'S NATIONAL ICONOMY COHYUT-II

.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. APRIL 9. IMS

CO’UNCILJ’ROCEEDINGS [fX

luoino k\v.

"Your city is judged by its streets

CONCRETE rates 100%
and car repairs.

Prom every standpoint, con­
crete is the ideal paving ma-

«

money by reducing original
and upkeep costa ... is safe
io any weather, drains
quickly and increases visi­
bility . . . improves property
values—lasts the longest.

Concrete pavements give a
clean, apicm and span appear­
ance to the community. Con­
crete's pleasing gray color
reflects light, makes it easier
to see—reduces accidents, in
every kind of weather.

Driving costs go down.
You save on gas, oil, tires

Insist on concrete for safety,
comfort and mooey-Mvjng.

; ability with the rest of the town- The president. Mrs. Lee KilUck.
ship.
then called the meeting to order
Bunnies, ducks, and chickens and "The Swannee River-' was
made of egg shells displayed on a sung, a short business session fol­
“■* of
- -------------------------• Uw back of lowed.
----- -----------—
1'*bed
green grass at
The program committee.
. our room remind us that Easter will. Mn. Pearl Bagley and Miss Clara
I soon be here.
scott look charge. "America'' was
We have ordered a soccer ball sung. Gene Ford gave a pieaaing
---- ------... money received fromw„.
[with
the
our recitation; Mrs. , Sylvia Knappqa,
Ag-HE exhibit. Wc hope Ji
U will
favored with a solo off
-.'.I ar- Richland, :avored
shinealso
I rive soon.
। companied by Mrs. Rilla Fisher
Like the flowers of Easter season
1 The baseball team has retreated ‘ of Richland. Bert Brown gave the
□right face, raised to sunny skies.
with the warmer weather, but hopes - News t of the' as
Hour"
most interest'
।
to
begin
its
-fraclice
again
shortly,
ingly;
Mrs
Jackson
gave
her
read..
3.K13.3J
1
IWtitThcn. as proud young bride, she Any school &lt;ln Irving township)----------- -------------------------Fir» l».(.i
Ing. 'rhe
Mitt of Fule;" Mrs. —
Flower
«•■»«
........................... .
:«&gt;.'* HI
wandered
wishing a game with us let us know. read her paper on Ethiopia; Mrs.
i ■ ।. । '.,, Down th? path with face aglow
' Mr..l l«..J
| The sixth graders are working on Knappen sang another solo. The
7 *•,*i l ,
l.lttil.nf
I.L,...
.- i'» in Beaming from a heart, love-Ughlcd. a puppet show for reading class. guest speaker Rev. Bellis of Rich­
I'.lk- .' -1 ........... Seeing life's bright years before her The story "The King of the Golden land was introduced and gave a
*■ ... " i
•W.I.. II. LI
As lhe lilies, row un row.
iRiver" will be given . before the splendid address "A , Look ul the
1 IU&gt;d
...........
| whole group next week.
। HU—&lt; r«.ort&gt;r.n«
4.000.7(1
World " a rising vole Of thanks was
Next, we watch her as she's walking 1 Fifteen out of IB pupils took lhe tendered these guests who gave
More sedate, but happy still
tuberculin test tills week, all show­ such un enjoyable part of the pro­
In lhe blessings God has given
ing a negative reading. We are all gram.
t 3»,080.73 Th#' she's seen somewhat ot sad- • happy over it.
। A surprise was given Ernest
neu.
Gene T— What kind of a bird is Quick when a-party of forty rela­
Like the lilies, lovely still.
। this Mrs. Newton?"
tives came Sunday lo help cele­
Teacher—'That Is a barn swallow. brate his sixtieth birthday. A fine
Then again. I see .her passing.
Gene."
co-operative dinner was served and
Many years have passed between.
Jimmy T.—islanding neon Does the day. spent in visiting was most
But her step Ls not us Mcady
that bird swallow bants?
enjoyable.
And the lilies arc no whiter
In art claw wc are making free
Robert
Palmatler.
Kalamazoo
Than her hair, and face serene.
hand drawings of our favorite birds. spent vacation week with his grand­
mother. Mrs. Chiue al the Fenner
Now, another Easier morning
,
home.
GLASS CREEK.
But. ;o different seems the day
The Community meeting at the
The Milo Ladles' Aid will be en­
in vain 1 listen for her footsteps
Goodwill church last Friday night tertained for supper Wednesday.
Coming long the beaten way.
was well attended, over one hundred April 15. at the home of the presi­
But the nodding lilies tell me.
being jireSenl to enjoy the worm dent. Miss Nina Fenner. Il will be
Mother will not come today "
sugar supper and the program glv- the first supper meeting of the
Mertfe Van.
rn by Mr. Beckt-r and his speech spring.
.
class. The following officers were
Mr. and Mrs. E. Quick are spendSOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
elected for the coming year; Pres.. ing this Monday at the home ot the
Richard Laubough was a busine-ss Mrs. Marie Smith; vice-president. latter s sister and husband. Mr. and
Whittemore;
secy, and Mrs. Vert Robinson.
visitor In Coats Grove on Satur­ Russell
treas.. Miss Ruth Hathaway.
Frank Gilbert made a business
day.
Forrest Havens and family spent• trip to Marcellus Monday.
Mr and Mrs. Ernest Gc
Sunday with Robt. McGlocklin
children of Kulamaxoo ’
and family in HMtings. honoring
WEST HOPE.
day guests ot the former
the birthdays of Mr. McGlocklin . Mr. and Mrs. John McKibben
Mr and Mrs. Francis Gt
and son David.
: purchased
...
lhe Ettinger farm in the
Mrs. Leonard Robinson
Mrs.
Fred
Otis.
Mrs.
Forrest
Ha.
sand
Hills
and moved the first of
ew. John Tracy, of Orar
Vens. Mrs. Ray Erway. Mrs. Chas.1 last week. They expect to repair the
were callers Saturday ufl
and Mrs. Russell Whittemore and home and are keeping their slock
the Wm. Havens home '
Miss Katie Whittemore spent last '. al ills father's Until they can build
worked for Mr. Havens
Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Fred a shelter for them.
mer and came to get his
Bechtel in Hustings.
| Mrs. Nellie Ward moved back to
effects. He expects to
Harold and Barbara Olis and ] her farm from Plainwell last Tueshome in Grand Rapids
Norman Erway returned to their day.
has employment.
.«ch-x&gt;l work in Kalamazoo after
Congratulations to Mr and Mrs.
Mrs. Jennie Wilcox left
spending their vacation witii rvla- , Lester Lord on lhe birth of a fine
nesday for Martin to i
lives here.
son In Pennock hospital Moiulay.
summer with her daugi
Miss Ruth E. Erway visited Has- morning. He has been named’llobHarold Lotx-r. She spent
tlngs High school last Friday and ert Lester. Jr.
with her son, Jim Wilcox,
called on Mrs. Robt. McGlocklin In i Our county road* men have been
ily.
the afternoon.
I patching our roads with gravel.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Francis G
! Mrs Sara Erway returned home Tills Is very much appreciated.
tcrtalned their daughter,
Saturday after spending two weeks
Several of our farmers have been
lard Bagley, and family o
with her brother. Wm. Otis, al plowing lately. The soil was loo dry
zoo Thursday.
Southwest Rutland, and with rvla- , but this nice rain ought to improve
lives in Hastings.
। YondiUons.
"
proud parents of a baby
Sunday visitors at Roy Erway's
Mrs. Mary Belle Johncbck was
last Monday. He has be
were Mr. and Mrs. Louie Erway nnd much improved in health and able
Robert Lester. Mother am
sons ol Kalamazoo. Harold Sharp. to be around the house when she
being cared for in the ho
Maurice Erway and n friend of sprained her ankle. We sympathize
parents. Mr and Mrs Ji
Grand Rapids, Mr and Mrs. Ward with her In tills little set-back.
Mr. and Mrs Roy Doi
Erway and Miss Esther Erway of
Russell Holmes of Pontiuc U back
Mr and Mrs. McCain ol
Hastings.
aniQng us again with a nice new car.
were callers Sunday aft
Miss Ruth and John Erway rc- Russell works lhe McCallum onion
the home of lhe former
Ls- turned to their school work after ground.
Mr and Mrs Dan Dougla
' spending the past week with their
jay McMannus of Lansing visit­
Sunday callers in lhe J
parents here.
ed in the Ira McCallum home one
Miller home Included Mr and M
, day last week
■ Lord of Battle Creek am
i&lt;!
MILO.
------- , .
• Mrs. Elizabeth Eckstrom and
Mrs. Ernest Gorham and &lt;
The
Home ---------Literary
club, was , at-. iiauisiiifi
daughter uJean of Battle Creek spent
•
-------' ------। Kalamazoo.
tended by nineteen
«...-------- mvmhom
members Inst
last
v|slUng relatives Ulld
' Last reports from Osci
Thursday at lhe home of Mrs. ' friends
here. They were here on
... Trenton arc that hc ha'
Frances Norwood. Delton. Mrs J J. business concerning tiie settling of
i home from the hospital a
lhe Anders estate.
/ bor and Ls gaining ThLs
, ing was called to order by the DOW
The L. A- 8- met with Mr. and
•, news to his many friends.
club president—Mrs. Bertha Prouty. Mrs. Roy Barnes for dinner Friday.
{Opened with singing and roll an­
Our school children submitted to
"7.J .‘.n .
WOOD SCHOOL DISTIIK-T.
. swered by .“News nBM1
„ ' Allr
, Ba
flashes.
After
the
tuberculosis teat Monday. We
,
Tne Sunday school « planning
b ,
lh&lt;. foUow,llM
S"?;-;:,
-x .=‘ papers
-- were given : •■Geography and are glad to report our scholars are
ail right.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Morehouse
entertained Thursday evening with
, an anniversary dinner honoring Mr.
was given by Mrs. Lizzie
1
Gilkey.
..... 1
Mra jBniM Anders of Podunk.
.Ui... r»
Vernon Engle expects to leave for • preceding lhe meeting
the he»'«
hostesses
■; lhe
M!’*«
Mr antl Mr5 j p Collison are
"■
Grand Rapids April 8 to take up his served dinner. The next
r-—. meetutg bulldlng . gBrBBt..
work as ossbiant "pro" at the will occur April 1G at.the
■' ,hn hn
home
"^ °
ofr
Mr and Mrs Jesse Osgood spent
ii n.M.hr.1 Biythfleld country club
---------- Leonard,
--------------with- *'”Mrs , Sunday and Monday In Bedford
r,i.n.i&gt;».r. i..
Mr and Mrs william Couch vis- Mrs.- Leon
Thorpe assisting. The club spon- l wllh ih(,lr daughter and family,
I'.'i-.'
ited her brother and wife. Mr and
r.orcd the printing of tlw original
Lyndon Johncock and sons of
Mrs. Cha.-., Raymond, of near Bat- jjoems of Mrs. Fannie Jackson, one I Oun Mnrsh sU)rd wllh MUs GlenJ"”1
tie Creek Sunday.
hundred booklets, each member pur- I na OMt(KM) during their absence,
hn„
ML'ts Gertrude Ciagett returned riming two which paid the expense
Thfr(, u.|U
a smull Eaitcr pro­
home after working two weeks help- of getting them printed. The com- urnni
church Sunday morn­
r i-mnniHr^ lll){
Grose while moving Into
miller was advised to turn the repcpaMjin,, aUo. Everyone urged
in" t/’r.i-.i7 their net.- home on Broadway near ma
'
in
”
1
I
ng
booklets
"Woodland
-Woodland
।
i
,
&lt;0
0
Blu
#Uend
,
nd
.
nnnn'
Leach lake.
Echoes” over lo Mrs. Jackson with I
----------------- -----------------------,n.i Wni.i..i.
Sehool Note*.
I any money on hand from sale of I
BRANCH DISTRICT.
' We arc gradually catching up our ! same. We all enjoy and prize highly I Mra Mgrihau of Lansing spent
r. i-.-.
work that we missed during our enpoems.
I last week with Mr. and Mrs. John
irh.y i.-ni f0rccd vacation We arc anxious to '1 Bernice
Flower spent Sunday tn | Howcl|
rf.nn**K..ri iec those remaining pages In our 'Kalamazoo at the home of Mr. and ,
------ ...
Mrs? Gladys OHtroth
and- --------Dan
.i..-m m.i textbooks diminish in number bc- , Mrs. Guy Hazen where a company
Roberts were called to Hastings last
,o,fc, I fore the last rush of school.
'of cousins met for a co-operative Saturday and Sunday by the seri­
Hirn •&gt; in ii..
We are awaiting the 20th of April I dinner.
.
ous
illness
of
their
mother.
Mrs.
when two of us will be sent lo lhe
Mrs. Bradfield was in Kalamazoo
cut
Brew school to match our spelling Wednesday and Saturday for medi­ Alice Roberts.
. Sylvia Whitmore, who is working
cal treatments.
in Hastings, spent lhe week end
Mr. and Mrs. Roll returned to with her parents here.
their homc at Blue Island Friday
Richard Darby and friend from.
after spending a few weeks at their Battle Creek spent Saturday and
- farm here.
Sunday with the former's parents,
The last meeting for the year of Mr. nnd Mrs. John Darby.
the Pine Lake Farmers' Club was
The ladles of the Dorcas society
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. enjoyed a pot luck dinner at
H. J Flower. Saturday. A pot luck Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Guy's Thursday
dinner was served at one o'clock. of this week. Election of officers
for the coming year.
i
Tiie North and South Maple
Colliiion Insurance for your automobile must be
Grove churches will have Union
prayer meeting at the South church
measured by the treatment you can expect if you
Friday evening of this week.
Bloaminfton, ill. hu
The North Maple Grove Sunday
present a claim.
uld: 'Some Jan »to X
couldn'l (kep and wai school will give a short Easter pro­
gram Sunday morning at lhe Sun­
The Stote Farm Mutual in 1934 (1935 figures
day school hour at eleven o'clock.
The Charles Willison place has
not available! paid its policy holders collision
been sold to parHeii in Lansing.

MOTHER’S LILIES.
Just a row of Easier lilies
C»3
Along the walk, where Mother Dear.
,?»S
M al Came to greet them. Easter morntnj
»■! in their pure and radiant- beauty
. Wet wllh dew. year after year.
5.774
' First, rhe came, a shy young maiden
Low's dream, shining in her eyes.
Seeing naught but flowers and sun-

902331233232532318

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'Pavements for Modern Traffic”

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
2012 Olds Tower Bldg., Lansing, Mich.

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CHEVROLET

FURTHER

SERVE

STATE

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HOLDERS. CONVERTIBLE COLLISION IS NOW

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ALL THESE FEATURES
AT CHEVROLET’S

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QC! AND UPPrice °1 Nnc ^ulard Coup*
Hint,
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X— .L:. —J_________ .___ I-'- - r-t* .
■
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INSTALLMENT

R. K. HURD
WAITINGS, MICH

rHOHtm.

PLAN-MONTHLY

PAYMENTS

TO

-

ROY BRUMM. Noahvilk.
JOHN KILLICK, Doster.
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SUIT

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Trade note—There are almoat as
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$144,076 the amount paid in losses by any other

PURSE

R. D. CADWALLADER, Hickory Corner,, Mich.
THE SERVICE GARAGE, Delton, Mich.

CHAS. WOODRUFF, Hastings.
CLIN WOTRINC. Woodland.

w

POCAHONTAS
KY. LUMP and EGG
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On Hand Now
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WWWWMWWWIWMIMWWARM

�■na

MORE NEED FOR
SEX EDUCATION

COUKTHOUUNSWS

Lack of It, Plug Cheap Books
and Pictures Lead
Boys Astray

PROBATE COURT.

haitingm banxml tbumdat. Ann. i, m

HENDERSHOTT.
Mrs Robert Bryans and Mrs. Wil­
bur Schantz had their birthdays last
■ Tuesday honored by their friends
and neighbors. These are proving
John Brass, ot lhe State Fish
" to be happy gatherings.
Hatchery, will be the guest speaker
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Matteson
for the Older Boys' group this
spent Saturday night and Bunday
Wednesday evening al 427 Young
in Battle Creek with Ed Cassidy.
street.
■

I, Yt mothers, who anxiously scan

__________ .____ _ ___ tne

war

nawa —— rememuar —— that

Y.M.C.A. ITEMS

Sorry our items ware omitted last
week as a full profram tor Holy

Mr. and Mrs. Verne Wilcox and
„
rieville churches would have ap­ Missea Cliarlotte and Virginia WU- and haar ttia
-----------------------------------—a,,.
The P. T.
of Dowling w
peared. but on Thursday night in cox
»• Hartite many tvaalr
each church there will be a candle ner guests of Mr.
light service. The Sacrament of the J Wilcox.
Lord's Supper will be served. Thl*
Bald Floyd Starr ortr at Jones­
■«. Ml* J. D.W0U. Annual Xis a splendid opportunity tor a re­
Thursday and visited till.^..7.
ville the other day In speaking be­ counu nted. or«r ta publlc.Uon
consecration of our lives to tha Mas­ Rapids
Brngur wW-T*. and Mr. Cha*. ^^^’^
fore lhe Men's Community Club:
Mrs.
throughout Michigan and the Unit­
......Laurence Matteson and
; baby
r—' kt
ter of
oi all
au of
oi ua.
us. a
A Good
uooa Friday
many
entered.
"One of the greatest causes of boys
daughter will
unlon wrvice
Mrvloe ai
al uenon
Delton at
al i:w
1:W r.
P. “SfZl
ed a.ona
vu
Blates will
wm iiiuliiii
mourn inc
lhe passing u.
of ............
w... leave Pennock hoa- . umon
.
.
.
I musical program.
sound
tha
depths
of
every
heart
­
. Hickory
going wrong today, te lhe prudery,
L. E Buell, tor 28 year* Michigan's nit.l
pital this
thte wo«k
week unmlav
Monday and
and be
be at
at. M wlth iTT. Smith of
Est. Adelbert D. Olmstead. Bond
' Mr. and Mrs E
secrecy and senseless false modesty of executor filed, letters testamen­ ache man can know as she did, State Y. M C- A. secretary. We at-1 home in lhe McOmber house on comers. Rev. Donald
Kring of fine time reported at the L. A. B
which surrounds sex matters. If tary issued, order limiting settle-1 when parting from that Body and tended hte funeral in Detroit last Route four. The
little lady .....
will —
an- . oiovcruaie
Cloverdale and
. .... ........
anu Rev.
iwv Ralph Bates.
_ _
at Clifford Potter's Friday.
returning
lo
lhe
world
alone
to
such
the men of the community really ment entered, petition for hearing
swer
swer to
lo the
the name
name of
of Marlon
Marlon Helen.
Helen, Ii putor,
[5aj,u,ri as
o ipe
speakers.
*ker3.
Preaching will begin next Sun-,-------- ——
a solitude as never creature knew Wednesday.
day at 10 o'clock followed by an I
daughter, Mn. Acnaa
wanted to do something for lhe claims filed, notlod to creditors teThe Hl-Y Club of Middleville. L,
v/e
yr ant
We were surprised to hear that
ancj ktra Charles Pixley and
before. How she must have rejoiced
I
family. Bunday.
good of lhe boys, let them arrange sued.
Ir and Mrs Howard Bryans have 1 Mn
mn clarence
niarenre of
nf Fair
w«ir lake
iair» were vtsvt&gt;. Caster program.
at Hl* Resurrection—Glorious and now affiliated with the National Mr
for some able and experienced au­
Hl-Y movement and has a vote and j twin boy* Their names are Jack |
at g r Wllllson'a Saturday
Esl. Melissa Cole. Will filed, peti­
thority on sex education to come tion for probata filed, order for Triumphant—on Easter Bunday!
&lt;.
.1.1*.
i„..
.•
ftntl
Q,
rrMld
They
are
both
doing
afternoon.
E.
Power*
ware
in
Vermontville
,
a
few
days'
vacation with har paris eligible for representation at na­
Miss Marguerite Yelter of Grand tional meetings, the first of it*
here and address the boy*.
Monday.
. ante. Mx. and Mrs. Milo Barry. 4ue
publication entered.
Rapids spent Bunday with her par­ kind being al Berea. Ky., June 20"Few parent*. Mr. Btarr said,
A fine time was enjoyed at the to the fact that tha school buUdtax
Grandma BpansI companlc&lt;i Mr.
Mrs
Mark
Est.
phlio
H.
Seger.
Petition
for
ents.
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Clair
Yelter.
knew or seemed to care what the
contest supper Saturday evening at where she was teaching In Otand
M. 8. met last Han,lnond of Prairieville to Battle
children read today.
He con­ Admr. filed, waiver of notice filed,
J. Shirley Wing of Orahd Rapids
the church. An amateur Major Haven burned the past week. They
Hostings Hl-Y Club held an In­ week at the home of Mrs. Frances
। Creek Bunday afternoon to attend Bowe* program furnished amuse- ' expect to make arrangenwnto as
demned the averiigi' large daily pa­ order appointing Admr. entered.
formal party tor 0-1 boy* last week
j the funeral of Mr. and Mrs. Ham- ment for the crowd.
Est. Arthur J. Shelp. Annual ac­ Wing of Detroit and Mr. and Mrs. al the school with a program, Hendershott.
per a* totally unfit for youth* to
soon as possible to resume school.
The
neighbors
extend
their
sym-1
ron family
famuy in
m |1 m°~1M HtUe iranddau^ter.
see. because of It* crime and scan­ count filed.
The Nsshvill. High school stu-1 Little jerrlles Henel has been
Claude A. Hammond at tho latter's game*, and refreshments.
' p-..,,
pathv to ....
the Matteson
dal. 'No wonder boys of today won't
Est. Samuel Allen. Final account । home, Tuesday afternoon.
•
-- -- - —
Their father. I Mr und
PeUr' Adrtanson dents are enjoying spring vacation
The first official visit fot
1930 ' their bereavement.'".
look at a Dick Carter dime novel. nietl
„
I Al Bleury of Lansing spent over camping was made to “Camp Bar- Frank Matteson, passed
ed away at hte ■।*Rended
the funeral of
Mrs. —
De- this week.
-------.--- ----Those old contraband volumes are
Est Thomas R Alien. Annual ac- Ule week end wllh Mr
Mrt ry~ last week with Conservation horns in the Weeks district Friday CTOC^er ot Richland. Bunday after­
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Plumm of De­ (lad to say. al this writing.
too tame compared with the papers
noon.
.! John Malcolm, Mrs. Bteury, who Officer. Geo. Sumner.
troit
were
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
| morning
'
(
of today.' he said. Only one metro­
Esl. Philo H. Seger. Bond of ^ud been visiting her parent* the
Welcome Corner a Y group met | Bobby anrt Joyce Cjark
wlth
The play. “Lucifer's Lodge." wa* Chas Day Saturday and Sunday.
An Austrian bandsman te said to
politan dally meets the decency re­ Admr filed, letter* of admlnistrareutmed home with him. with lhe Baldwin boy* last Thur*- i^ut^ an&lt;j Leland Christensen, at- attended by a fairly good crowd,
quirements of lhe Btarr Common­ tlon te*ued. order limiting settleMARTIN CORNERS.
world U eosuTlm rat
m, and Mrs Lester Yelter of riay night. A local banquet te in lhe | tpnded , birthday party in honor both nights, but had the weather
wealth. he said. It te the Christian ment entered, petition for hearing ; Kalamazoo visited his parents. Mr. making. They meet with Max Leach of Nval Knickerbocker at hte home been more favorable Hie last night
Remember, there will be Easter cornet*, because he Is
Science Monitor.
etalm.
n« tn
claims ni«1
filed, no
notice
to creditors I..
te- 1 W)() Mr3 cl&gt;(r Ye^r
next Thursday. April 16.
j on Saturday afternoon
things
would have brought a larger crowd. services at the church next Bunday ■ blowing the
“A* with book*, parents likewise
Tiic ^Y Is^^till gathering flower
Jane Harrington of Hastings spent Each member of the cast played hte morning at 10:30 o'clock. The chil- straight.
Miss M. Bernice Wing of Detroit.
should make good music and good aP51 ^?n.a O,t.roth&gt; Petition for I Wfc0 ha(j
guest of her — .
Tuesday night with Margaret Gar­ assigned part remarkably well. It
picture* part of their children's Ilves Admr. filed, waiver of notice filed. I brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and won’t you please let u* know?
would be unfair to comment on any
rison.
instead ot the trashy Jazz and cheap ! order appointing Admr entered.
c^e A. Hammond, returned
Mr and Mrs. Floyd Garrison spent one personally because they all did
picture, so often seen. In conclud­ bond of Admr. filed, letters of adDetroit Tuesday afternoon.
IRVING.
Sunday with their daughter. Mrs. fine. The total receipts for both
ing. Mr. Starr put the issue square­ ministration issued.
our new spring coverlet—&lt; soft.
Everyone hated to see winter Harvey Parmalec. near Banfleld. nights were 063.12.
ly:
Est. L. Blanche Johncock Petition fiufiy blanket of snow—blds each playing a return engagement after The Pnrmalee* have rented their
The next regular community
'"If you men do your part, there for Admr. filed, order for publica­
tiny seed and plant and budding the prolonged cold spell of the last farm and will move to Battle Creek meeting will be at the hall on Mon­
will never be any need for the Btarr tion entered.
tree wait a little longer.
three or four months. However where Mr Parmelee is employed.
day night. April 13. A co-operative
Commonwealth as far as Jonesville
Est. Norma and Karl Gasser. Fi­
Miss
Rose
Marie
Hammond
is
ex
­
when
we
consider
what
other
parts
The
Oarr,lsons
called
on
Mrs.
Wal
­
supper
Ln charge of Mr. and Mrs
te concerned.'"
.nal
jm aivuuin
account ui
of juaiuian
guardian uicu.
(lied.
pected home from her studies in of the U S east, west and south ot lace Preston in the Weeks district Robert Barnes and Mr. and Mrs.
Est. Sarah E Walter*. Petition for LDetroit to spend the Easter vacation
u* have been through, wc can cal) on Friday and were glad to find her
OBITUARY.
license to sell filed, order for publi­ with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. ourselves fortunate.
showing improvement in condition, followed by a business session and
Melissa Jane cole was born in cation entered.
Claude A. Hammond.
Brantford. Ontario. Canada, on.
, Jack Perry wo* home from Kala­ which will be good news to her then a program In charge of the
Est. Aurllla chamberlain. Annual
! teachers of the Barry Rural Agri­
August 10. 1054. and departed this account filed.
mazoo for a day and night last many friends.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
life on March 20. 1030. aged 81 years.
Mr. nnd Mrs Ted Sheppard and cultural school.
week.
Esl. Maurice H. Cross. Final ac­
Mrs. Walter Culbert visited Mr.,
7 mos.. rind U day.. At an early age count filed, order allowing account
Bert Patton has been quite sick
/ Bom to Mr and Mrs Ben Nagel children of Kalamazoo were guest*
L. R. Beeler ot Middleville Friday.
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Leo
Hendershott
she moved with her parents. Mr. entered, discharge of special adthe past week with lumbago.
Mr*. Frank Shriber and Mr. and bn March 23. their fourth daughter.
. on Thursday In the evening. Mrs.
and Mrs. Lewis Ambrose Cole lo mlntetrator issued, estate enrolled.
The Inland Lakes Garden Club
Mrs. Leo Barry and son spent Frl Congratulations.
' Hendershott entertained twenty- will hold a public meeting In the
Barry county where they estab­
Eat. Scld Beach. Finn) account day In Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mrs George Fox are | two friends and relatives from
lished a home in Carlton township. filed, waiver of notice filed, .order
church basement on Friday evening.
Hubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo making an extended visit with their
Shultz with a supper in honor of April 17. "A Penny-a-Spoonful"
Of twin sons born to lhe departed assigning residue entered.
spent lhe week end with Mr and children Ln Chicago.
Mr. Hendershott's birthday.
one during her married union, one I Est. Mildred J. Woodmansee, ct al. Mrs. LaFayette Usbome.
Mr. and Mr*. E D Lake ot Ver­
The Community Easter supper until all arc served. Dr. Plmle of
died in infancy, while the other Annual account filed.
Edith Grinnell of Grand Ledge te
Lewis, was called by death from hte | Eat. Artcmecla Babcock. Final ac­ spending part of lhe week with Mr. montville visited a few days a&lt; **'— will be served this Friday night at the Kellogg bird sanctuary will give
Schenkel'.' recently
Mr
----- , and
----- ...
and (he schoolhouse. Bring plenty of an illustrated lecture with pictures
play in an untimely accident at the count filed.
and Mrs. Arthur Yarger and fam- Mrs. Robert Bessmcr -and Mrs.
- along------------*- other
- --------------rpR*
with the
eats.
age of eight.
When the weight of
showing wild life, and films from
Eat. Clyde Coleman. Petition and
Caroline Schenkel of Owot.so were
There will be some cases of fruit lhe Conservation department. Every
years nnd declining health made order authorizing settlement filed.
................... ......................... .......... ........ also recent visitors there.
living alone a burdensome task,
inns at the schoolhouse
Friday one is cordially Invited to attend
Est. Mary E. Morgcnlhaler. Order land visited her mother. Mrs. Anna
her niece, Mrs Roy Norton, and assigning residue entered, discharge , Buck. Wednesday and they called
Mr and Mrs Dell Wilcox ot Rut­ ntght to be given to those ladle* this meeting.
family in 1035 made their home with of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
and Mrs. Frank who have donated their canned
Next Sunday morning at 10
| on Mr*. Russell Whittemore of West land and Mr
her to care for her. She follows in
Hoonan of Hastings were Sunday fruit to the Bropson hospital.
o'clock the primary Sunday school
Esl. mhn
John iF. a&lt;wivM,
Goodyear
Release Hastings in the afternoon
The Ladle* Aid will meet next clashes will give an Easter program.
death her parent*, and six brothers filed.
.
' Mr. and Mr*. J. Roy Smith of visitors at Wm McCann's.
Wc Have A Fine Selection of
and sisters. Left to mourn her
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Waddell and week al the home of Mrs. Floyd Following this service Rev. Bates
Eat Judson R. Car|&gt;entcr. Inven­ Caledonia visited Mr. and Mrs. Wal­
nan* ing arc one sister. Mrs Dora tory hied.
Garrison.
will have as his sermon subject.
sens were in Battle Creek Sunday.
ter Culbert Sunday.
Haskins, five nieces, three nephews
Don't forget to come and bring "The Living Christ."
the--lack
of------------cars in town al
Eat Hulbert R Casey. Petition (or
Hazel Shriber and friend spent ' From
-------- —
---------and many grand nephews and Admr. filed, order for publication Bunday with Mr. and Mrs Ford Enz thte lime of day. Monday, it look* your friends to hear the Easter pro­
Perry Murphy and sister. Mrs. I
nieces and life long neighbors.
last »«,SunI like -n----------very tame
entered.
of North Woodland.
—- election day. *The
rH- gram next Sunday morning. Mrs. Julia Weller, entertained ....
Est. Ann Jessup. Testimony of t Mr. and Mr*. Leo Barry and son abstract olllce Issue te the only ex­ ■ D-on Slocum has charge of the day eight nephews and nieces, a steQUIMBY.
mu*!e.
। ter-ln-law and also a brother-lnfreeholder* filed, license to sell Is-'called on Mr. and Mr*. Albert citement.
Mr.'. Eugene Freeman and other
Mr nnd Mrs Lloyd Haynes of । law from Battle Creek. Olivet and
Mrs. ,Kalc l»cck has sold her home
Barry and children of Southeast
relatives of Hasting., attended the sued, oath before sale filed.
here lo\Walter Ogden and will move Battle Creek spent Sunday with hte 'Springfield.
funeral of Harry Silsbee a well | EsL Elmer E. Gregory. Proof of. Carlton Sunday.
■ father. Ernest Hayne*.
I Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Dings enfiled, order admitting will en-1
to arend Rapids.
known lawyer of Lansing Wednes­ I will
Mrs Geo
spent the —
day
tertained Sunday. Mr. and Mr*
tcred.
FAST
DELTON.
.Mrs.
wm.
Mtvaun.
wiiv fell
ivii
------ ...Haynes
----------------------------,
Mrs.
Wm.
McCann,
who
down
day.
_-..k her
u.. mother.
—Ak._ Mrs. Cosby. Harold Smith and —
son
Thursday with
...
Mr. and Mr. Bert Gaindcr and cellar in n neighbor's home and -^A.iw*...
Wm. Ritzman. nn old and highly I Est. Samuel Varney, Testimony
injury
wasn't
so iluckylueny
when
ln, -the ,Tanner
district.. Charles, all of Vicksburg.
Lucille spent Tuesday with Mr. and escaped
cscapco
injury
wu*n
»
,
„
---filed,
order
determining
heirs
cnrespected resident of this place,
.....
she
fell
two
step*
down
from
her
,
Mrs
Coleman
is
at
her
own
homc,
she
fell
two
step*
down
from
her
■
Mrs
Coleman
te
at
her
own
home,
Marshall Norwood wa* taken lo
Mrs.
George
Lennon
In
Hastings.
passed away Saturday afternoon. tercd.
Lucille
remained
over
night
and
OW
n
por"
jrch
She
----------------------sustained
--painful,
-----,1OW
n
nl,&lt;1
“
a
Mr
Mrs
"
M
MttC
“
*
Jolmson
Is
stay•
i
Borges*
hospital
Thursday
morning
Esl. Martha E- Varney,
He had been in falling health. Fu­
Ing U,|
with
her.
and --X-ray
exapl... net
serious injuries.
ilnp
‘K h&lt;,p
’, for -observation
--------- --------------*~
----Mr.---------------------------------------------------and Mrs. Lennon were dinner---------I though
i
neral services will be hcld Tuesday confirming' sale entered.
J
.
_» Mr. I Rev. |lnc|
------- ......
Shantz
,
and nations.
evening
of
and Mra
Mr*. Moya
Lloyd nagci
Nagel m
of I| Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Est. Sammle C. Varney, Orthi gueata Wednesday
afternoon nt the homc. Much sym­
spent several’ days al- the
Sunday guests of Mr.
i &gt;--------and Mrs. Gaindcr.---------------------------- i. Charlotte
~--------------------------------pathy is extended lo lhe family confirming aale entered.
Sand
(home of hl* parents
here jecentiy. | “nd Mrit
' Hayward Ln Alto. ■
and^fr^^ile^^JcVtnc ot
E,t. William Gplernan. Order ap­
Mrs Sarah Houvtner of L
----- ......
,
especially Mrs. Rllzman, who Is in
Lake visited her sons. Henry and I Mr. and Mrs. George Eggleston
pointing Admr. cnlerel.
very poor health
BARBERS CORNERS.
Nashville and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Est James H. Childs. Testimony Gay. also her sisters and brother, have moved from the Frank Lee '
Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Lowell. Mr.
Martin Foley, who has been Hi DeVine spent Bunday with Mr. and
Clate
Louden.
|
farm
to
the
Goodsltc
place
farther
'
filed,
lieensa
to
sell
Issued,
oath
be
­
thte week, ts improving.
and Mrs. D- Lowell and Velma spent
Mrs. Roy Preston near Lacey and
Jay Houvtner and family have down the river road,
I Mrs. Herman Hauer and her sis­ heloed Rov celebrate his birthday.
the week end in Detroit visiting fore sale filed.
-----Est. William William*. Final ac­ moved into Frank Hallock's tenant,
Ml** Evelyn Lowell who to attend­
Mr. and Mrs. Gusta Dey. Wen­
। That new type of paving has the ter. Mtes Mabcllc Natten. of Gra»s
count filed, waiver of notice filed, nouse.
house.
ing nurses' training school.
Lake,
attended
a
Ladles'
Aid
meet
­
dell and Eloise and Mr. and Mr*.
Ed Willison and Mrs. Vina Dur- usual rocks and aspnalt laid on a
The Extension class helrf\theix order assigning residue entered, dis­
, ing at the home of Mrs. I. J. Smith Elmer Gillette spent Saturday and
kee were called to the homc of their layer of cotton. It is then cut .up
last meeting of the year al the charge of executor issued, estate en­
of Hastings Thursday afternoon.
Sunday
in Lansing, the Days at Er­
grandmother al Stanton Vina rc- neatly into resort mattresses,
church Thursday a fine dinner was rolled.
Mrs. Etta Bump. Mr. and Mrs. nest Woods' and the Gillettes at
mained until Sunday to help care
‘
served and officers elected for the
They say that in Utopia a con­ L J Matthew* and Jesse- Brovont. lhe Floyd Baird home.
Identifying the savage chieftain
coming year.
, , ____________________
w..«no
a.
hw.w
gressman is h.paid
mileage
en -accompanied Mis* Evelyn Matthew*‘
Mrs. Chas. Day accompanied Mrs.
Is easy. In a wrangle with a civilized
Waller Bidciman and Charles power he makes himself conspicu­
Business goes where it is wanted, route to the capital nnd 40 cents a । to Middleville Sunday to visit their Clayton McKeown and Donna to
Castelein made a business trip lo ous by his dignity and restraint.
and stays where it te well-treated, mile in lhe other direction
uncle, James A. Matthews, who hasi Grand Rapids Monday where they
Ionia the past week.
_____________________________________________________________ __ _______
ill.
spentI been
the day.
Mr and Mrs. Glenn Kellogg at­
tended the funeral of the little
daughter of Mr and Mrs. Max
Leonard In Baltic Creek Sunday
afternoon
Easter will be observed Sunday
evening at the church with a pag­
eant being prepared by the Supt.
and young people. Everybody wel­
come.*
Est. Adelaide Stocking. Bond of
Admr. filed, letters of administra­
tion issued, order limiting Mttte-

darkened a whola world in Mary's
single heart, as she beheld her Di­
vine Son crucified and followed the
dead Body of the Living God to the
tomb. Such poignant sorrow, such
uwnrMmlM mnrUl uvuun' non.
| «&lt; «
•»" »no».n«Uw on w,

nreXt

°randp* and I

«nd Mr* ™

“

Give A Whitman Box of Candy
and a Card.
Easter Cards

5c up to 50c

Whitman Candy Boxes

81, 81.25, 81*50

Whitman Specially

CO-OP SPREADER

THE CROSSROADS.
Miss Maxine Stedge of Grand
Rnpids spent Sunday and Monday
with her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde 6ledge.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Merritt of Al­
bion spent Sunday with- the- for­
mer's mother. Mrs. George Town­
send.
Mr and Mrs. Orlcy Smith and
Homer Bates accompanied Mr and
Mrs Homer Smith of Hastings to
Grand Rapid* and were Sunday
evening guest* of Mr. and Mrs.
Custer 8mllh.

Has Advantages That YOU Want

5c up to 50c

IT’S HERE!

Suit Display Sale

MCCALL’S
Easy to Load
BUS FARES
REDUCED

ONE

THE FARM
BUREAU LINE

From

Plowi

Haotings

Discs

03.05 Ft. Woyno

Round
Trip

05.50

02.10

Angola

03.00

0340

Toledo

05.95

Drags
Cultivators
Planters
Mowers
Rakes

Loaders
Wagons
Tractors

Top of box only 36 inches from ground. Some spreaders up to 45
Inenes. Box 2 inches wider at rear than in frojit make* unloading
easier. A low spreader with 60 bushel* capacity. Regulate* for 6,

Light Draft
continuous tread lugf. tapcred box. self-aligning, closed be tiring*
with oil chambers make for light draft. Alcmitc-Zcrk lubrica­
tion. Spreader has 14 Inch rood clearance.

Superior Construction
Steel angle ronntructlon for very strong, flexible frame. Heavy
steel axles. Steel chains and levers. Spokes hot forged into wheel,.
Beater teeth cold riveted so they can't work loov. If one break*
you can replace It with hammer and chisel. No welding.

Excellent Distributor
Shreds and pulverises manure and spread* It In g wide, even
blanket of fertility. A real crop maker.
BEE THE CO-OP SPREADER
And ether Farm Bureau Machinery at our branch store* and
Farmers Co-op Aaodctolion*. It will pay you to investigate.

BUS DEPOT AT

TRIO CAFE ,
HASTINGS

rHONE 213?

FARM TBUREAU
‘
SERVICES, Inc.
Hastings, Mich., Phone 2118

WwJIaiU, Mich., Phon. 27

Next Tuesday and Wednesday, April 14, 15
A Special Representative from the NATIONAL TAILORING COMPANY will be

at my Tai lor Shop on Tuesday and Wednesday of next week, with a Complete Line
of 300 Full Size Woolens from which to choose your NEW SPRING and SUMMER

SUIT. It will be an array of styles and patterns to delight your eyes. No obligation

whatever to come in and see them, but why not be individual in that new suit for
Spring? Have it tailor-made to your own measure and wear it with pride. The cost 1
IS NO MORE THAN YOU'LL PAY FOR A "HAND-ME-DOWN!"

ALFRED
215 So. Jef/enon Street

Hasfii

�THE HASTING fl BANNER. TITOBADAT. APRIL 0, 1936

I LEGAL NOTICES |1
I

J ~ ~~

________________ &gt;1

MOBTOAOB MAUL

EtetM Em -.4. Ii

VI«T.

N!L“Ji

| PUBLIC NOTICE OF TAX |™

I SPELLING CONTEST

Luceock—Jesus and the.American 'guests of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Kelfind.
ley.
Mind.
Mrs. Ora Smith and Frank Duel
Jones—Christ of lhe Round Table.
of Cressey were Sunday visitors at
Jones—Christ ot the Mount.
E. R. Willison's. v
Brightman—Finding of God.
Date for Final Teel Will Be
SUGGESTED BY .
George Stokes of Grand Ledge
Papinl—Life of Christ.
was a Sunday guest of Mr. and Mrs.
JEAN BARNES - LIBRARIAN
Announced Later by Com­
Wells-God tiie Invisible King.
Eliot—How Jesus
Mel
Life’s C J. Barnum.
missioner Smith
I Mr. and Mrs. Roy Walters and
Question.
,«•
Tiie schedule of the township
Spring, the most beautiful, and
Experiments
In children of Potterville spent' the
Alnslle—Some
• conn t&gt;ur. eliminations in the county-wide also the busiest time of lhe year Is Living.
j week end with Mrs. Ada Thorpe.
4',te”p,»™Mte *Pelll,’X contest Is announced by with us again. As you look about
Silver—Religion in a Changing 1 Mrs. Bert Parker Is a patient In
mJ admiai, | County School commissioner Maude your house and grounds do you see World.
i Pennock hospital.
"'*•* •“
| Smith as follows:
I Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrian son and
a few hundred things that need do­
Cushman—Spiritual Hilltops.
; Baltimore Twp.. Dowling. Tues­ ing? New curtains? What color and
McConnell—Aids
to Christian , Harry .were Ui Battle Creek Satur­
OFFICE OF BARRY COUNTY
day.
April
14.
9:30
A.
M.
how long? Do the chairs need new Bfllcf.
day.
TREASURER
Johnstown Twp.. King. Tuesday.• ■ slip-covers? Floors fieed finishing?
Gilkey—Managing One's Self.
April 14. 1:30 P. M
' Will you get new furniture? Do the
Gilkey—What Can'We Believe.
,
PODUNK.
I TUESDAY. THE &amp;TH DAY OF MAT.
Castleton Twp. Felghoer, Wed­ faucets leak? Roofs need fixing?
Tiyfiie—Brother Saul.
Last Week's Utter.
nesday. April 15. 9:30 A. M
And the garden. How about build­
Bachcller—Dawn.
Mrs. Minnie Bhriner, who has
; Maple drove Twp.. Moore. Wed­ ing a pool this spring? Or making
Wallace—Ben Hur. .
been staying with her brother.
nesday. April 15. 1:30 P M.
an herb-garden which would be
Carpenter—Holy Land and Syria. George Ransom, for the past six
I Prairieville Twp . S. Pine Lake. something new and Interesting? Do
weeks, has returned to her home In
Thursday. April 16. 9:30 A. M
the shrubs need pruning, and how
DELTON.
Hastings.
Orangeville Twp. Blake. Thurs­ should it be done? And why not And
Lois Oler of Freeport Is making
Last Week's Letter.
day. April 16. 1:30 P M
out just what lo do with the peren­
Dr. Kennedy conducts a Candle her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hastings Twp.. Hastings Center. nials Instead of guessing at it?
Monte Replogle an extended visit.
Light
Consecration
service
Good
Friday. April 17. 9:30 A- M.
Wouldn't II be nice to plan your
Melvin Poff, who has been living
Friday
afternoon;
a
union
service
Hope Twp„ Shultz. Friday. April 1 flower garden this year so that the
with Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Oler of
; colors harmonize? ^What about of both Delton and Prairieville Freeport this winter, has returned
Irving Twp. Brew. Monday. Apr!.' clothes for yourself?-Do you know churches will be held tn the Delton to his home here.
20. 9:30 A M.
what colors and styles make thin church from 1:30 o'clock until 3
Here Is one that beats Grandma
Carlton Twp.. Carlton center. people look plea&amp;inglv plump and o'clock with three speakers putting Eddy's Christmas cactus. Mrs. Mon­
Monday. April 20. 1:30 P? M.
fat people thin? Or what color goes special emphasis on the words of te Replogle has a Christmas cactus
Rutland Twp.. Edger. Tuesday. with which, or what kind of acces- Jesus on the Cross. Rev. Bmlth of measuring 6 feet and 6 Inches across
April 21. 9:30 A- Mjuries go with what dress? In other Hickory Comers will take the first which had over 500 blossoms at
Yankee Springs Twp. Yankee words, do you dress well or Just two words. Rev. King of Cloverdale Christmas time and has 30 blossoms
Springs. Tuesday. April 21. 1:30 P ■ dress? Arc you tired of the same old the next two words and Rev. Bates now. Who can beat that?
। things to -cat? Why not try a new tiie last two words. There will be । Miss Rachel Caln of Lansing vis­
probata
Assyria Twp. Assyria Center. dbh? Tiie following lUt of books special music.
ited her parents. Mr
and Mrs.
Wednesday, April 22. 9:30 A. M.
Rav. Bates' subject for Easter Theron Caln, over lhe week end.
which arc to be found In your Pub­
The dale for the final test has lic Library along with others of the Sunday is "The Living Christ." Al­
Richard Gardner of Kalamazoo
not been definitely decided on, ac­ same type will help you solve many so hc will hold a baptismal service visited George Ransom Saturday.
cording to Mrs. Smith but win a problem.
In Delton M. E- church at 7 o'clock
.
Sunday visitors at Geo. Ransom's
ratiatter printed probably be the last'week in thisWhitman—First Aid for lhe Ail- A. M. on Easter Sunday and at 8 were Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hayward
month or early In May.
o'clock A. M. at Prairieville.
of Kalamazoo and Mr. and Mrs. Ern
। ing House.
About sixty attended lhe Father- Johncock of Orangeville.
'
Wakeling
—
Fix
It
Yourself.
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
Son banquet. It was reported to be
Baldwin—Shopping Book.
Last Week's Lettef
a very enjoyable affair.
Mr. and Mrs. John Benedict ...
ntEmily Post—Personality of a
The meeting of the Sunday school
Antimony,
one
of
lhe
essential
tended the funeral of Chet Dean In House.
classes No. 6-7. has been postponed metnls of type metal anti other al­
Grand Rapids last week Monday.
Stewart and Gerald—Home Deco­ until a later date on account of lhe
loyed metals In which n low melting
Mr. and Mrs. Marley Burroughs of ration.
Hojy-^eek services.
point In desired, comes largely froru
Three Rivers spent Saturday and
Lord—Everybody's Cook Book.
Miss Caroline Solomon spent a
foreign sources.
tnart Ctemrnt. Ju.lfr Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. I Townsend—Carpentry.
part of last week visiting In the
Whitright.
| MacMahon—Your House.
home of Mr. and Mrs. Waller BoyMrs. Brcck Edger entertained
Saylor—Tinkering With Tools.
len near Cedar Creek.
Mrs Ida German of Wayland and ' Fraser— Practical Book of Home
Mrs. H. T. Reynolds is much imMr. and Mrs Willard Culver of Repairs.
i proved from her recent, illness and
Shelbyville for dinner Sunday In
Koues—How To Be Your Own I Mrs. Bessie Tungntc returned to her
honor of Miss Marlon Edger's birth­ । Decorator.
home Sunday morning.
day.
Schmidt—Problems of lhe Finlsh- | Mr. and Mrs. Garner Hampton
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Burgduff lnB Room.
and children of Hastings were call­
and children are iMn.
living in
In th.
the Ji™
Jim
Thomas—Roses for All American' ers at the Adrianson home Sunday
Dibble tenant house.
* Climates.
I evening.
Stanton Senslba held lhe lucky
Longyear—How To Make Garden
Miss Ruth Richards spent the
ticket that drew the set of dishes Pools.
week end at home and will go Tues­
at the Commercial Club Fair. ConWilder—Colour In My Garden.
day to Benton Harbor where she
gratulatlons, Stanton.
Fox—Gardening With Herbs.
will
continue her profession of
Mrs. Harold Christiansen Is quite ' Waugh—Everybody's Garden.
cosmetology, having charge of’a
sick nnd has been ordered by her
Ortloff—Annuals in the Garden. beauty shop there.
physician to take a complete rest.
Cloud—Culture of Perennials.
Rex Sheathelm spent the week
This is rather n hardship to Mr.
I
HICKORY CORNERS.
Bottomiey—Design
of
Small end with relatives in Lansing.
and Mrs. Christiansen, who have Properties.
Several Deltonltes were in Has­
i Last Week s Letter.
just taken possession ot the Whit
Volz—Home Flower-Growing.
tings last week, some attending
। Don Johnston, who for several Benham farm. Friends hope for her
Sabin—House Painting.
court, some the Commercial Club
years has worked nt Knlamazno has speedy recovery.
Stole
—
Making
lhe
Most
of
Your
Fair,
some doing Home Economics
resigned his position and will work
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Camp. Mrs Looks.
Extension work, some visiting and
. his farm this summer.
Kennie Cronk and baby visited
story—How To Dress Well.
some shopping. Wc wonder what
Mrs. Neal Welcher of Battle friends in Ionia Friday.
Pickens
—
Secrets
of
Distinctive
Hastings would do If It wasn't for
Creek is spajidgig n few days tills
A. N Benedict and family of
Delton folks?
week with her parents. Mr and Mrs, Lansing spent Sunday In the John Dress.
Rittenhouse — The Well-Dressed
Mias Doreatha McBain of Battle
Chas. Lechleitner.
Benedict home. Mr. Benedict re­
Creek-and Miss Maxine Hentori of
Marion Chapman buzzed wood for turned to Lansing with them and Woman.
An unusually large number of Upland. Ind., spent the week end
. . . we have the lorgO Haynes and Olenn Asplnall will do some repair work in the
calls have been made the past few at home with their parents.
adjuatmrnt
one day last week
Thoman Mills while there.
weeks for books appropriate lo the
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Lirabec of
Mr. and Mrs. C Contrell of Dc•it selection of Men's
Public rlalnia to a.
Lenten
season,
and
the
spiritual
life.
Hastings
spent
Sunday
afternoon
troll and Mr nnd Mrs. B. Campbell
The library has a fine list of books with Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Wertman. .
and two children motored to South
and Boys' Hats ... at
“When ■ man loses Ids temper.*
Dr. and Mrs. Ed. Lowry spent the
Bend. Ind. where they spent lhe snld Uncle Elien. “he's better off It of this nature. Here are some we _ -------------recommend that have proven their week end with frlands at Plymouth,
week end with Mr and Mrs. I. G
greatly reduced prices.
his Indignation makes him speech worth, and for which there 13 a i Mrs. Katie Kahler. -Mrs. -Irene
Brady.
year-around demand.
Harrington. Mrs. Nettle Kern and
■ Van Dyke—Out-of-Doors In the Mrs. Mallnda Seibel attended the
I Holy Land.
Bunnell L. A S al Mrs. Edward
"A friend." mild Uncle Etieii. "Li
H V. Morton—In lhe Steps of the Campbell's at Gull lake last Thurs­
somethin' like a huntin* dog. if he's
day.
Master.
easy lost, he ain't much to worry from lightning occur in lhe country
You’ll sure like 'em!
Barton—He Upset the
Bruce
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Mason of
and small town districts.
World.
Cedar Creek have purchased the
I Milton Nobles farm south of Cedar
I Creek and will move there In the
| fall. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Campbell
। have moved Into the house for the
, summer.
I Mr. and Mrs. Charley Corwin of
i Battle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Will
S. Jefferson
Hastings
Bomincrscheln of Kalamazoo, and
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Baum and chil­
dren of Hastings were Sunday

Tk» arrull C-rt Ur &gt;L. cvun

EXAMS SCHEDULE

SALE
Tuesday, May 5, A. D. 1936

Seasonal Reading At
The Public Library

Come In and
Select Your

EASTER
BONNET

\ RUSSELL R. MePEEK.

89c «o $250

SCHWARTZ

S»n. that balm
Cnanlt Coun to

DODGE

county. Michl

" SAFE

For E
Baby’s Bottle!

I

SPRING

High in Cream Content
Raw or Paateuriied—

Hi

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

tent child.
rdnaa bavins filed In nd

SEE THE FASHION PARADE OF
DODGE“BEAUTY WINNERS"IN

BRILLIANT SPRING COLORS!
OW on display—the new 1936 Dodge in brilliant
spring colon!

N

See this showing of Dodge "Spring Styles" at our
“Open-House" celebration — now on!

Mothers may feel sure that their babies are drinking
PURE MILK when they give them HIGHLANDS
DIARY GRADE A. Just-any milk is not sufficient
for young growing babies, theirs must be SAFE . . .
Every bottle of Highlands Grode A is uniform in
quality and up to the Grade A Standard . . . which
means that every bottle Baby drinks is full of "bodtbuilding,” PURE, FRESH MILK and IS SAFE!

Drive this new Dodge ! See why owners everywhere
rave about its amazing economy! Experience the riding
comfort of its Airglide-Ride ... enjoy the'protection &lt;rf
its safety-steel body and genuine hydraulic brakes.

Don’t miss this gala occasion! Everybody's welcome!

FREE

ECONOMY

TEST!

No obligation! Alao B&gt;k for frw "Show-Down" Score Cardl

FORREST L. JOHNSON
Beciater of Probata.

Phon® 2370

220 E»»t State St.

Hastings, Mich,

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Pbone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hasting

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

14 PAGES

UffDESBTMEtS Years in School Centennial
Pioneer Days Recalled By
Exhibits in School Centennial

BUT NATURE CONCEALS IT
SO YOU HAVE TO HUNT
TO FIND IT

The •'Forty Niners” Didn’t

Get AU the Gold by
a Long Ways
California la a rather turprUlng-

UMM
mllu. lUhutn u
I retarded as a fairly good sited one,
larger in fact than some European
kingdoms, but it lias an area of only
a little over 56,000 square mites, or
about one-third that of California.
When it came to dividing the
state up into counties California was
quite Inclined to follow the idea of

The commercial department will
exhibit old-fashioned methods of
communication and transportation,
and they have arranged with the
Bell Telephone Company for the
loan of some old telephones Old
Kern county as an example. Kem weapons, school books and historical
documents will be featured by the
square miles. In comparison, Barry social science department as well as
various maps and diagranls showing
miles. From this it can be readily
Mured that Kern county Is about Hastings The girls of the sewing
one-seventh of the else of the whole
state of Michigan and la about the
else of 1&lt; counties like Barry.
Bakersfield is the county-seat of

Help Clean Up
Our City

country that It la claimed has not

You are hereby notified that
Wednesday and Thursday. April 22
traordlnary degree, and there are and 23, have been set aside as the
Annual Spring Clean-up Days and
if you will have your lawn rakings.
tin cans and other rubbish (not In­
the

do your bit to help clean up our city.
Respectfully,
Chas. H. Leonard.
Mayor.

trict was discovered

great oU-producing district, and oil

this u of wonderful help to

unuauv
SSt

in taxes,

I

MORRIS CURTIS BADLY
HURT BY AUTOMOBILE
----------

of the physical education classes!
will entertain with some of those Mayor Leonard were as follows:
tricky steps that used to delight
Grandma and Grandpa.
Aidermen Hoonan. Relckord. Miller.
Bchader.
— Alder| men Welasert. Coleman, Pierson.
Relckord.
Streets and Bridges — Aldermen
Bchader, Miller, Hoonan, Haven.

HASTINGS PUP LS
WINSPEECHHONORS
-------------

TEAM DEFEATS CLASS A
n

SCHOOLS IN ORATORY,
DECLAMATION

Achaah Buck, Donald Weaver to Compete in Finals
Here May 8
Hastings High school was ably
represented in the speech contest
"X'

..

and an-

He Pushed His Cart in
Front of a Oar

Ernest Peidler, and Donald Weaver
with his oration on "The American

panles. That must help to make It
.
______ __ .. William Curtis.
are'no7ovTr- i dving on North Broadway near the
leers when it country dub, was seriously hurt
11 j Sunday night about I o'clock, when
nded tn U591
automobUo driven by Richard
riy centers for 1 Vftn Tlfflin. of Lake Odessa, struck

Student* from Battie Creek Cefiteal. Kalamaaoo Central, Taming
Central and Lansing Eastern, as
*el1 “ Hastings High, participated,
The contest was sponsored by the
Michigan High School Forensic As-

' which he was pushing eastward
I across the highway.
lhe pioneer gold hunters of "40" i Mr. Van Tlfflin had been visiting
it home with their pockets filled Eugene Freeman and was on his
way home driving north on BroadWith nuggets, still they didn’t get it
way. The boy evidently did not see
I that well up towards 850,- the Van Tlfflin car, whose driver
worlh of precious metals had no idea that Morris was going
to do what he did. The boy's knee
many yean ago that three proe- was in his cart, and he was pushing
foot across
etors discovered a valuable gold it rapidly* with his right....
....

district contest of District No 6
Glenn Willoughby of Lansing East­
&lt;m took
P1*ce in th* extempore
speaking with his address. "Theo­
dore Roosevelt in the White House."
Margaret Hornbeck and Mary France» Walter of Kalamaxoo ranked
rocond in oratory and declamation
respectively Miss Walter tied Miss
Buck for Jlrst place and to break
the tie It was necessary to take their

t

and over g! 6,080,000 in

nearly *50.000.000 all told from

avoid hitting the boy, but could not row «wgin Donald Doxey was the
do it because Morris In his cart was Hastings representative in extern — WK
MJ .
.
* —
,11,
Van Timin picked up the Injured school string trio preceded the pro­
boy and drove rapidly to Pennock
*nd Ailed the intermission be-

doctor. It was found that both his
of the various particip
judges, but they did

With the very high premium

and

will

possible that a motorist ought

The fractures of both limbs were ** **&gt;&lt;! In the Cent
unusually difficult. and it was be- Hastings, on May I.

r

WOODLAND SUPERVISOR
CHOSEN BY MEMBERS
OF THE BOARD

SELECTS COMMITTEES
WHO ARE NOW WORKING
n
. —
.
.
Board Convened Tueaday
for
„
Ftrgt Sesaion—Adjourned
Yesterday

hardware building and stock to G.

BROTHERHOOD IS
POSTPONED A WEEK

।

After figuring the crop rotation
for 1936 on over 100 Barry county
farms county Agent Foster finds
that many of these farms will draw
maximum payment from the pro­
gram and not change their intend­
ed crop rotation a single bit Mr.
Foster advises every farmer in the
county to look into the provisions of
this agricultural program
Al the meetings held, township
committeemen were elected or ap­
pointed to administer the program
In the various townships. Most of
these men have Die program well
enough in mind to glvje anyone a
good working idea of the plan.
a uai or tnese commute*
given for your convenience:
Thornapple Twp —Frank Garbow.
Will Holes. Wm. Oackler
Irving Twp—Forrest Buehler. Ed.
Walters, Elmer Eckert.
Carlton Twp — John Usbome.
Waiter culbert, George Robinson.
WoodlMd
wooaiana Twp
iwp—Glenn
uienn _Wotelng„
wotrlng.
L. G. C- Flnefrock, George Foreman
Yankee
win Eli
Yank*, Springs
onrin». Twp.
-r»n—
—
wu.
worm
Rutland Twp -Maurice Waters.
Will Havens, Bert Newland.
Hastings Twp—Lyle Fisher. Ar­
thur Chase. Fred Peck
Castleton Twp —Coy Brumm. H
Bahs, Bert Long
Orangeville Twp.—John Killtek.
Bert Brown. J, Carter
Hope Twp—George Kahler.
Baltimore Twp —John Birman.
Lloyd Gaskill. Archie Newton.
Maple Grove Twp—John Mar­
tens, gd. Penfold, Ralph Pennock.
Prairieville Twp—Oils Boulter.
George Woods. Ernest T
More­
house

demonstrate grafting at two meet­
ings in Barry county on Tuesday.
April 31, according to an announce­
ment by County Agent Foster.
The morning meeting of the 31»t
will be held at the court houae in
Hastings and will start at 10:00
o'clock. The afternoon meeting will
be held on the farm of Carl Boyra.
a mile east of Hickory Comers at
2:00 o'clock.
Orchard problems of pruning,
spraying, fertilisation, cover crops,
etc., will be taken up by Mr. Merrill
in the discussion. Mr. Merrill will
also demonstrate the setting of
bridge grafts to repair the destruc­
tive work of mice and rabbits to
young trees over the past winter.

NUMBER 51

MOMMT
INGUERNSEYUIKE

CIIHOffSTITE
1ID FOR SW

WILL RECEIVE OVER $10,­
000 PER YEAR FROM
WEIGHT TAX

FOUR VILLAGES IN THE
COUNTY WILL SHARE

AG. STUDENTS JOIN
NATL ORGANIZATION

rlcullure

There are

Body Recovered Bunday Aft.
ernoon in Fourteen
Nlcholas Lorlg of Battle Creek,
age 45 and unmarried, was drowned
some lime Friday afternoon tn
Guernsey lake in Hope township,
west of Cloverdale. The body wu
found in about fourteen feet of
water Bunday afternoon at about

half feel tong. He loaded the boat
on his car at about nine o'clock
Thursday night. He parked his
Dodge car when he reached Lockstldt’s resort and went out on ths
on the lake at about noon by J. P.

No otic remembers seeing him after
that time.
It was arranged between the
brothers that Nicholas would return
Friday night, as the two had plan­
ned to go spearing When he failed

Money Paid by State Must
Be Spent for Street
tous He drove to Guernsey lake ear­
Improvements
ly Saturday morning in search of

Until a short time ago halt the
automobile weight tax was paid to
counties for the construction and
maintenance of county highways,
the other halt being given to the
state highway department for the
construction and maintenance of
trunk lines.
Because so many counties had is­
sued large amounts of Covert road
bonds, which they were unable to
pay during the depression, the legis­
lature changed the law so that all
the weight tax would be paid to the
counties The second iialf must be

Nicholas. Robert found the oars be­
longing to the steel boat, a thermos
bottle, part of hte brother's lunch
and the cushion from the boat, on
the west side of the lake, but eould
learn nothing about Nicholas At
8:46 Saturday forenoon he called
the sheriffs office here, requesting
help to find the body of his broth­
er. who he was then sure must have
drowned. Hie same word was also
sent to the police department at
Battle creek. Hie lake was dragged
that Saturday forenoon and until
eleven o'clock that night without
finding the body Sunday afternoon
there are any outstanding. If. how- the draglines pulled up the half of
Hie steel boat and about half an
hour later they drew up the cane
fish pole which Nicholas had used.
not only all of the first half of the
weight tax be paid to the county
road commission, but also that the ter they brought up the body The
second half be divided between the finding of the fish pole ted to the
county road commission and the In- discovery of the body
1 corporated cities and villages of the
county, basing the payment on pop- compartment in the boat, so that If
ulatlon.
it tipped over, it would sink immeCounty Treasurer Maus has re­
ceived from the state in weight tax
money, up to the first of April, a to­ had been accustomed to going fish­
tal of 854.SB3M One-half of it. or ing with only a part of the boat.
127.296 93 went directly to the couna|n
.... what h
happeiwd
nobody knows.
ly road commission The other half for
io. there
wwn were
were no
n&lt;r witnesses or
of me
ths
is to be divided between the coun- 1! drowning
—
His fishing reel was found
ly road commission and the incor­ | in the boat. The body was taken to
porated cities and villages of the Battle Creek Bunday afternoon,
county on the basis of population. where the funeral and burial will
Dividing this second »27.29«93 by take place Under-Bheriff Glenn
the population of the county makes
puting the share of thia city a»d the
villages of Freeport. Middleville.
Nashville and Woodland also the
county road commission. All money,
whether paid to the villagee or
county road commission from this
second half, must be used for such

DANCE.
Al Welcome Grange hall, Friday.

WERE NO WITNESSES—
LAST SEEN ABOUT NOON

Nicholas Lorlg had a brother
Robert, living in Battle Creek.
demonstrated.
Nicholas made his home there with
Anyone having horticultural prob­ his sister, Mrs. Anna Selloff. M
lems is invited to attend either of Rosenealh st. He always liked Ash­
ing. and left home with tlx- purpose
neighbor with an orchard problem, of trying for pickerel in Guernsey
bring him to the meeting with you. lake. He arranged with his brother
Robert to borrow half of the lat­
ter's metal boat. Robert helped him
toad it Into Nicholas' Dodge coupe,
in the rumble seat. The part of the

of the second half of the payments

Clerk—Allan C Hyde

The agriculture students of the

COUNTY MINISTERS
ASSIST PLAYERS

Consultation With County
Af ent Foster or Township
Member Is Urged

The newly-elected board of super­
visors met in this city on Tuesday
Coleman.
and organised by selecting Glenn
City Ordinances Coleman. Reick- Wotrlng,
woiring, supervisor of
oi Woodland
wooaiand
ord. Miller. Haven.
township, as the chairman of the '
City Property — Haven, Hoonan. board. He has been supervisor of his
Bchader and Weissert.
.
Elections—Pierson. Miller. Hoon­ Wotrlng announced the following 1
an. ooteman.
committees for the board for the
ensuing year:
problems this jtu; but they un­
Equalisation—Wilcox. Potts. Lip­
doubtedly wm
aouDieoiy
will uie
take care 01
of tnem
them key. bsckus
Bo
Backus,, Boulter.
Moon. Smith.
with the same good Judgment that 1
Miscellaneous
“
■
Claims — Moon.
has characterixed the work of our! Potts. Wilcox,
city councils for many years.
I Criminal claims—Btutx, Glasgow.
Mayor Leonard suggested a work , DeGolta.
program for the year as follows: I Live Sleek Claim*—Lipkey. UsOpenlng of another city parking lot. I borne, McCann.
whlcii is much needed; the Improve- | Reads and Bridges—Leonard. Upment of Jefferson Street; widening key, Uebome
of the Broadway bridge, which he
Salaries—Stevens. Bchader. Boirthopea to have the state undertake; ter
the widening of East Blate street
Finance—Glasgow, Btruin, Bchadfrom the OK&amp; B. tracks for at; er. Brown. Martens.
least a block. As this to part of a
Township Clerk's Reports—Boul- Butler. Vernor Webster
a
trunk line, he is hopeful that the 1 ter. Btute. DeOolla.
Johnstown Twp - Frefl Frye.
state will undertake that also. He
Appoi *
Chas. Strickland. Loren Van Byckie
suggested also the purchase of a Lipkey.
Assyria Twp.—M. J Hartom. Wm.
combination truck, scraper and
Prlnti
C Btruin. Glenn swift.
snow plow. Last winter demonstrate gow.
These men will be given further
instructions on the details of the
suggested also the addition of an-1 borne. McCann.
program after which they will visit
other night policeman during the
Inventory of Coart Houm
Barry county farms and explain the
summer season, when two such of- j Jail—Graves. Stevens. Btruin.
fleers can be usefully employed.
. Jadiciary—Brown. Leonard.
farms and farmers should consult
man Bchader as its president Be­ Blulx, Stevens.
them or the county Agent's office
cause of that position he will auto­
before they plow too much of last
matically become a member of the
board of supervisors He has been a
Drain*—Btruin, Smith. Glasgow. meadow may mean the difference
between maximum payment and no
as was shown b
election as Brown, Ixonard
payment at ail from the program.
chairman of the
It appears this program does not
have the red tape of the old AAA.
neither Is any farmer asked to
sign any contracts to carry out cer­
0. E. GOODYEAR BUYS
Taxa*—DeOolla. Stevens. Graves. tain practices. The program is far
more applicable to Barry county
WEISSERT BROS. STORE
Bchader. Potts, Martens
farming conditions than the old
Agricultural Extension — Martens,
John Weinert to Retire Aft­
DuGolia, McCann.
er Sixty Yean in
Wilcox. Struin.
JUNIOR CLASS PLAY.
The Junior class play “Daddy
Business
Long I^gs" will be presented at the
Brown.
Woodland school auditorium. Fri­
day evening. April 34 at s o'clock.

Elect Officers for Chapter
170 of Future Farmers'
of America

cident

11:90. A splendid list of property

Wli”' Colem*n

Lighting—Bchader. Haven, Miller.

Goodyear. Jr.

Two Auction Sales

GLENNWOTRING
NHCH1IM

Weissert. Relckord
Finance—Milter, Bchader, Pierson,
Haven.
,.

H&lt;^TR*lCkOnl

FIFTEEN MEETINGS
DRAW BIG CROWDS

County Agent Foster reports a
far wider spread Interest In Die
Soil conservation program than was
expected. In the 15 discussion
meetings held over the county the
past two weeks for farmers' infor­
feels tie will have one of the finest mation nearly 1,000 people or about
funeral homes in Western Michigan one-quarter of the farmers altend-

-«nd on the revere side is a pte- ,
CUmwe aMidtaj city attor““
ture of a modem blast furnace
,
orac(1J
. Dr.
offlcer.
All kinds of old musical inslru- , ^^,4 B Harkness fire warden
menu will not only be shown by the Harry Thompson?Thlet of ’re demuslc department, but also, so we I p4irtineni ouy alddingx All were
heard, demonstrated, and the «lrl« gSrSS ?y the coimGl

_r „„

COMMITTEEMEN
INEiCHTOWNSHIP

PROPER SETTING
OF BRIDGE GRAFTS

Win Convert the Dr. Barber
M. 8. 0. Specialist Coming
Residence Into Modern
to Oouaty N8xt Week for
Funeral
Homo
Two Meetings
I ONLY ONE CHANGE IS
NICHOLAS LORIG OF BAT­
INTEREST IN BOILS OONBy a deal Just completed within
T. A. Merrill specialist in Horti­
MADE IN THE APPOINT.
TLE GREEK ACCIDENT
BERVATION PROGRAM
culture. Michigan state College, will
lectiire on Orchard Management and
ive
IS
WIDESPREAD
VICTIM
I White, the former exchanges his

Ings has drawn a picture of the first I foiling appointive officers:
metallurglsl—an «f*-Uke ■ creature
9Uert‘CorXJoner £?t Sparks;

tfifIKt “I Both Lhnbi rr‘ctur*d, When first honors. Achaah Buck with her
or tins about &lt;3 declamation. “Intolerant Btill," by

Standard Oil Company,

NEWCOUNCLIS
NOWORGn
ornoxs

CONTEST IS CLOSE
BETWEEN DECLAIMERS

taxation, i was Informed that Kern

C. H. LEONARD ACQUIRES
JEFFERSON ST. PLACE

onurnv
turned back many, many yean the pict the vacillations of Dame T-'Ashproperty &lt;on 8. Broadway for her B.
77th and Mth of this month when
um w wbu. u» MAYOR LEONARD NAMES i —------- , at home, originally
••• •— ■
the schools of this city hold their boys in agriculture will show the
THE NEW COMMITTEES:‘ *—i.VXtXXfv
Pi£
Barry County Centennial Expos!- last word in husbandry a hundred
*—- ———■
—--------------vert the house Into an up-to-date
lowest grades on up through the menu the machine shop. etc. will, Older Members of Council I funeral home. A well-known archlbe
open
for
public
inspection
on
the
!
1
*J
----------»
—
.
i« -been -.
-high school Li working on special
Rnart Moil
Mn«t Important
Tmnnrtant
lccttook
of Gr*nd
has
here
Head
,'to
it over,Rapids
and finds
it admirprojects and individual exhibits to nights of the exhibition.
The chemistry classes are build­
make this Exposition a success. In­
Oommitteea
[ ably suited for the purpose.
silicon
vitations will be sent out to parents ing a furnace for making “
’ThTJ
.flnaI
Of tM pki City 1i A chapel is one of the features
f
council and
the which
-xn -V—
ana the
me first
mat meeting
nwcung of
ai me
wnicn will
win be incorporated
incorporuiea in the
me
will snow visitors now soau is made
— — were
•
nfw councl1
In
coun- alteration plans. The large.&gt;
barn
that is that children of kindergar­
^to^hk^ a^L .Jin S c“ [°°m.
cl?
, &lt;m the tot will be torn down and a
thiTw^k------------------------ten age up through the sixth grade glass to look like a neon sign One
aspiring chemist with artistic lean- ' J,Uyor
announccd the

BUT QUITE A GOOD
MANY SUCCEEDED

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 16,1936

•lC.1M.4b. This city and the vU-

Interesting Points Decided In
Case Against Co. Road Comm.

And the body of Lorlg Mr. Bora
worked until almost two o’otoek
Bunday afternoon Deputy Sheriff

grappling lines when

FARMERS SHOULD TEST
THEIR SEED CORN
Conditions Last Year Were
Not Favorable for Good
Seed Corn
Conditions for maturing good seed

Judg« McPwk Cites DdciaioM of
Supreme Court That Bar Recovery
r. It will

mUMoners. of which Dr Burton A.

Bevaral OonfUctiB* Eraata
Made This Change Seem
Advisabh
reaching principles concerning the
liability of the county in certain
oases for claimed negligence of its

QUINTS AS FILM STARS
a half’s

AIXKNKIMG.

be

performance
if

�T,.W,T ***■■. ... l.U

TH. HX.T.NO.

Charlotte

LOCAL NSW.
community

Clarence Messenger was brought

a statutory

The Grand Rapkda Pres*
urday reported that two

DAY!

Republican

leader* coming from?

Two decades ago BeUevuo-and

SPECIALS for FRIDAY and SATURDAY, APR. 17-18

Indiana PEAS
4 Cam 25c

KING NUT

PRUNES
3 u». 19c

lb lO^c

Roxy DOG FOOD
4 cu. 25c

o

YOU!
HAVE ONLY 3 MORE DAYS TO AT­

TEND THE BIGGEST BARGAIN

EVENT OF THE YEAR!

THE REXALL

1CSALE11
SALE ENDS SATURDAY, APRIL 18

FRIED CAKES
MAPLE SYRUP
9«l. $1.75
K. C. Baking Pdr., 25c IS. !9c

2 packages 23c

WHEATIES

(Shirley Temple Glass FREE!)

10c
FRUITS AND, VEGETABLES

BANANAS
lb. 5c
ORANGES
2 doran 29c
HEAD LETTUCE
each 6c

29c

2 lbs.

JEWEL COMPOUND

Crystal

BIG BEN SOAP

SEMINOLE Tiitua, 4 rolls 25c

6 bar* 25c

WALL PAPER CLEANER (Crescent)

2 can* 15c

SALE

FLOUR
MOOSEHEAD
ROSEBUD

24} sack 79c
5 lbs. 19c

COFFEE

VACATION LAND
WHITE HOUSE

PIONEER PANCAKE (Plain or Buckwheat)

lb. 17c
lb. 21c

5 lb. rack 23c

Meats
Rib Boding Beef

10c

Hwoo 2131

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

Jjj HAMBURG

SUITS
oj Fine Worsteds
Are Here in Abundance
And plenty of cheekb and
Blripes, single and double­
breasted models.

For the J-Hop
Why not grl that Greduti-

Fresh Smelt 4 lb. 25c

lion Suit now and have it

Mutton Roosts 12|c

for like J-Hop?

lb.
2 lbs.

10c
29c

JUST ONI MORI WEEK TO GET TICKETS FOR THE FREE DRAW­
ING OF THE CASH . . . (&gt;75.OO»

ALSO ONE MORE WEIK BEFORE THE SFARTON REFRIGERATOR WILL BE
DRAWN . .. IAFR. 25 &gt;

Food Center

Ing appointed deputy county clerk
and served
the Barry Oounty

years he had been a faithful mem­
ber of the Methodist church and
Brotherhood, jnd was affiliated also
with Hartlndk Lodge No. M F. &lt;b
A. M„ also Chapter No. 1 O. E. 8.
Every Sunday found him at church
as long as health permitted. Sur­
viving are the wife and a sister.
Miss Florence Orohc, of Grand,
. Rapid*. Hl* pastor, the Rev. W.1
May lan Jone*, conducted the funeral
on Wednesday afternoon st
two I
o'clock at the Methodist church. I

Chmn. of the county committee. He
session Friday.
The Lake Odessa Independent was made temporary chairman and
basket ball team. Dick Van TiffUn C. H. Osborn temporary secretary.
manager closed their season with a
record of ten game* won. and only ganisatlon and order of business
was Hon. Ellis E Faulkner. Bert
four lost.
The council Friday evening refer­ Brown and William Btruin; creden­
Archie
D.. McDonred the queaUon of rales for street: tials committee. ai
«u« m
Dewey of Grand Rapids, a former
llghis to the council'. own lighting I aid. Allan Hyde. Jerry Andrus; reaopastor. Burial was made in Nash­
eommittee for consideration and i lutions committee, M- L- Oook, ville.
later report
G1*1111 Blake. L. W Feighncr. These
Mr. Grohe was a fine Christian |
The Barry County R. L- C A and committees prepared their report*. man and hl* passing brings sadness
Auxiliary will meet at the Middle-, which were read after the con ven- to a wide circle of friends, who ex- I
vllle Masonic hall on Saturday eve - i Hon reassembled. First there waa a" tend sympathy to the bereated ones.
nlng. April IB. Supper at 6:30 All.
political address given by
postal workers invited.
8^
Insurance
Commissioner. DEATH OF O. H.
Miss Esther Doty, chairman of the John C. Ketcham. We have not
BROWER OF SARANAC.
Primary department exhibit in con- • »pace to review it as we would be
Oliver H. Brower, father of Glenn
nectlon with the Centennial cele- 8ted to do The committee on per- Brower of this city, died on Tues­
i bratlon
bration being
being staged
staged by
by th*
the Hastings
Hastings i maiwnt organiaauon and order of day forenoon at his home in Sarschools next week Monday and business recommended .that the
(schools
| Tuesday, would be pleased to have
, people communicate with her who nent and set the program for the
। have old time toys or dolls, or convention.
tlnga. I. H, Saranac and c. E..
The committee on credentials re­ Portland. The funeral and burial
things of like nature in their posported aU the townships and wards
of the city represented
Suitable
ing. 2333 or her home phone 2483. A —
.
—— u-------—- anac. Sympathy is extended the
loan will be greatly appreciated and | resolution* were read by the reeoiu- bereaved one*.
| carefully cared tor.
1 Uon* committee and adopted by the
The Detroit paix-r* laM week car- convention.
NOTICE OF SUNDAY
ried the notice of Ute death of Mr*
The roll of the voting precincts
SCHOOL WORKERS' MEETING.
......... ......
tn? rir.l
Iru’
fnr
__ ■ «.......
There will be a meeting of U»e
Edmond Bailey. 66. at Jennings hos­ was next called for suggestion* for
delegate*
to
the
district
convention
Bunday
School workers of the
pital. Her husband, who survives,
at
Paw
Paw
tomorrow,
Friday,
and
northwest
district of Barry county
was a former well known Hastings
boy. She leaves six children, four the state convention al Detroit next at the Freeport Methodist church
on Sunday afternoon. April IB. at
txiys and two girls, and a sister
Delegates to the dial riel conven­ 3:00 o'clock lor the purpose of or­
Mr*. Gertrude Peek. Kalamazoo.
are
Dr.• F.
chalrganising the district. AU thoae in­
Ml and
KlKl Mrs.
MIS Bailey
ninry had
nnu resided
raiucu In
III tion —
- —
-• Carruthers,
----- ~ —
-­
Mr.
Detroit the past IB years moving | man. Hon E. E. Faulkner. L. W. terested in the Sunday school work
____ ', Archie D. McDonald. in this district please be present.—
there from Gobles where they lived ,.
(Fslghner,
many
yean.
1I Clyde Wilcox. Dr ’L. H. -----------Brumm. C- M Conklin.
■I N
—&lt; J ?««««*.
! Carveth 6c Stebbins' onC-cent sale Morse Backus. Richard M Cook. Al­
FIB HER F. T. A.
lan Hyde. Bert Brown and Henry 6.
I is now on.—Adv.
The last meeting of this year's
| Maurice J. Kelley of Battle Creek, Sheldon.
The delegates named to the state
son of Mr. and Mr*. Stuart Kelley.
evening
with
a pot luck supper.
| underwent a major operation al convention were: Hon. E E Faulk­
Leila hospital in that city on Tues ner. chairman. Dr. F. carroilisr*. LI day. At last report he was doing W Fvlghner. Archie D McDonald. as follows: President. Archie Cun­
ningham;
Vice-President,
Carrie
-— - ——
las well a* possible Mr. Kelley is a Clyde Wilcox. Dr. L. H Brumm. --------------member of Hastings Lodge No. S3. Hon. John c Ketcham. Richard M I Fisher; Etecy. and Treas.. Majesty
Cook. Allan Hyde. Bert Brown, and Becker The Altoft district presentH«nry
8Sheldon
Alternate
delel«&gt;
•
P
ta
y
and
a
portion
of
the
HasWhere have all the loose dogs 1
gates were also chosen
| lln«s H*8&gt;‘ School Band furnished
gone in our city? Some people feel i
Tills convention was more like l,ie music. Hie fine program was
Ilka death about it; other* don't. Al
those
of
the
olden
days
t
han
any
enjoyed
by
all.--Majesty
Becker,
the rate a lot of pet dogs have been 1
have recently been held and
disappearing lately it look* a* tho that
&lt;
NURSERY STOCK
there were dog matchers about. So '
it'* be»t to keep a close eye on your 1litical affair* which we are glad to
•Fido" if you really *el store by •'
him.
We attended our first council 'COVRT TO CONVENE APRIL W.
Judge Me Peck held court here
meeting Monday night and were
the opening day of the
duly impressed with the dignity and Monday,
1
HOWARD DUDLEY
term. The call of the calen­
solemnity of its august members. April
'
■ But Just when we were looking most dar was made to ascertain what
serious, we had to have a licorice 'case*, particularly what Jury cases,
be ready for trial.
drop. Imagine our chagrin when would
'
The court then adjourned for
the whole pocketful went cilcketyclack across the floor. We couldn’t 'one week. On the adjourned day
the
judge
will sentence Jack Fox
suppress a blush and a grin, and we
50 CHOICE VAR I IT I IS
still aren't sure whether there was of
' Ovid, Michigan, who admitted
away from Hastings a few
the flicker of a grin on a couple of driving
1
jason i McElwain
week*
wo
with a car belonging to
council faces or not.
the
Plainwell
Onion
Supply
ComPeter DeCook, who live* near

T/ic Newest Styles in

Shirts and Ties
Smart atylea in Duke of
Kent and Flexton collars.
Deep tones, checks and

We sure have plenty of
Light

Ha nneIs

too,

to

wear with darker coats.

Thomapple lake, was picked up by
the officer* Saturday evening for
being intoxicated He was brought 1
before Justice Matthew* Monday [&lt;
and assessed 810 Ane and 8450 costs. ,
He Is the same party who smashed '
up the street light post near the &lt;
county garage on East state street 1,
about three weeks ago. He paid a I
good sum to the Consumers Power 1 ■
company for that performance. He I,
told the officer*, after hi* last ex-j
। perlence. that he was through with | ‘

Gomar DeCocker, who recently '
left Hastings to enter the medical 1

from Panama, under dale of April
8. to friends here, that he is enjoy­
ing that section of the country

$2250

465°

13c

tending Michigan State College He
wm married io Mias Esther Thomas
on March 30. 1907. They lived ip
Baltimore township for several
year*, coming to this city in 1B31.
He held several township offices and
when he moved to tills city was

GLADIOLUS Bulbs

Moderately priced, too.

BEEF ROASTS

LAST CALL

HASTINGS

Our caves are full of the
season’s smart styles . . .
regulars, stubg and stouts.

FRESH

PEANUT BUTTER
FRANKFURTS

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Good* DoHmtW

Lb‘ 25c

SOAP CHIPS

scrubbing to make
this lime of year.

day for the first.
From George Huffman, who spent
Easter with frtend* here, we team
that he la at present teaching play
acting and drama In Northwestern
High school. Detroit, and enjoying
office boys didn't.
rifle*. in the hands of small boys
Mr. and Mr*. Charles Annablc the work.
yea* were developed in lodge
have
moved
Into
thslr
recently
The city council renewed the gar­ rooms, many strong figures In the
bage contract with George Sheffield list. The whole thing seems to be purchased home on W. Center REPUBLICAN COUNTY
a part of the general transition and
CONVENTION TUESDAY
Frank F- Hilbert of woodland waa
Friday evening.
aU at the expense of the small town.
The four winning posters for the brought to Pennock hospital on Named Delegatci to State
Speaking of the dearth of out­
Monday
for
X-rays
and
examina
­
late
Royate
trip
are
»hown
on
the
standing
leadership in smaller
and District Con­
tion.
Mr*. Dan Aahalter entertained
ventions
the J. F. F. club on Wednesday aftThe Barry County Republican
Mr. and Mrs. John Steal have convention was held In the court
rented the Wm. Fighter house on room on Tuesday afternoon and wax

THURSDAY,
APRIL 23rd

OLEO

pany. The car was later found at
Carveth ft Stebbins" one-cent sale Three River*, it 1* probable that
is now on.—Adv.
Orchids to our Irving correspon­ at that
dent who always prints the proper

Charlotte—bad a doaen strong, able Round;" another shows ducks rising
boot a lake, Ite slogan “Game
ouallties of
of ttTold
public political
strength.
The PraaervaUon—Sport Continuation;"
Jaialnf
eaucu*.
the third one pictures a flsh-mod•ms, sriih the . tegqnd Thare's a
Reason—Fish In Reason—8av* our
Fish Supply;" the other one shows a
beaver and carries the slogan. "Pre­
serve Animal Life—It U Prteetess.''
xationi
We forgot that Tuesday opened

WILL BE

CATSUP
n"‘^ 10c

the March
numb* of
n Conservation" the official

Several hundred New
Spring Tics are here, too.

Selling Quality Keeps Us Busy

WATERS

I he can mc cocoanuU. mangoes and ‘'
’ orange* hanging from nearby trees, i,♦
and many other kind* of tropical i
Their quarters have "
I vegetation
I screen doors only and the build-p
I Ings are raised off the ground to ,
( keep bug* out. and to allow the,1
wind to circulate under them. He &lt;
( And* tlie canal and the locks very ,
interesting—a wonderful piece of
( engineering. Food Is excellent with ,
, plenty of fruit and vegetable*. I,
1 WcatiMr i* very warm there, and he I
', ha* already acquired a fine coat of ]1

infantry, Ft. Davis,

Canal

tone,

Albert Hafner, who graduated
from Hastings High, way back In

fl FECIAL ATTRACTION

SUNDAY saj MONDAY. AFRIL 19 end 20

THE DIONNE QUINTUPLETS

THE COUNTRY DOCTOR I
IMCAIK MATINS* ■CTO*r. 1:M »&lt; &gt;4* &gt;'eM

■AKOAIN TUISDAY NICHT, AF*IL 21
Clouet HAFT Md IOSALIHO tUSSILL I.

IT HAD TO HAPPEN
WIOHBOAY «n* THURSDAY. AFIIL 22

With Spencer Tregy. Una Merkel end Joseph Calleie

Ing up old landmarks and old ac­
quaintance*. He was paying a short
hours here

Willloot)

Rurprtaing how many

FSIOAY ..4 SATURDAY. AHU 24 .nd 25
IXX AIA riAT.Kfe ATI .ACTION—FSATII.k KO I

his old classmate, Cook

Rock. Mrs Knlskern. and other*,
i He would liked to hare seen Nellie
Babcock Thomas.

a reaidei.t of Duluth. Minn., con-

FEATURE NO. I

CLARENCE I. MULFORD'S

CALL of the PRAIRIE

CLOTHES SHOP
HASTINGS • MICHIGAN

21

Jean Harlow ... RIFF RAFF

dealt kinder with him. Ht team
word for all Hasting* people to Look
him up U they touch Duluth in

FINAL. KpUodc “GREAT AiR MYSTERY" will
3:00 o'clock Matinee Only Saturday

♦

�TBI HASTTNCH BANNER, TBUBMPAY, APRIL It, UM

Organizations

"21

Hynra and Bernard Black.

WOODLAND.
Uon with home folks
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager and
Woodland school auditorium Friday boo Morgan visited the latter's
brother. Vere Hough and family, of

(Continued from page 1. Bee. 1)

day evening. April 34. This will be
way. In pursuance of a contract Use last meeting for tills season so
with fiie state highway commlssloner, • • • was performing a govern­
mental function, and therefore is not i
liable for injuries caused by the
Circle No. 3 of the Methodist L.
negligent operation of a truck by one
A. 8. will be entertained on Monday
evening. April 30. by Mrs. Kirn Blgstatute creating such liability."

Uwt

Hough

Both I

opens in an orpiian asylum with
Judy. “A prise orphan," rebelling tended a birthday parly Monday
evening in honor of the former's
lack of understanding siiown the sister. Mrs. Murray HansborgeY of
orphans. Jervis Pendleton, a weal­
thy trustee, admires her spirit and
Mrs. Robert Bom was taken to
is persuaded to sponsor a college Pennock hospital Sunday for a mi­
nor operation. Siie expects to re­
The Goodwin L. A. 8. will meet trials and achievements. Judy's turn to her home Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Giddings
at the church. April 24. for dinner.
blllty of cities, many of which are
The afternoon will be spent In lion of shams adds to the Interest and daughter Ruth and Mrs. John pltal Sunday and was operated on
b
a throughout. An unusual feature Is Velte of Tawas City came Friday for appendicitis. She is getting
uie uaoniiy oi counties wnicn are invited
for
a short visit. Mr Giddings re­
the fact that each member of the
ffmerailv
iia
’
__
generally a/*tlno
acting e«
as an arm nt
of tthe
Sunday and Mrs Giddings •l«»g nicely.
Junior class is represented
In the turned
eaented
Fred Gardiner was taken to BlodjTrvU rSidle«"• V«lta »U1 remUn the rest
Baptist
uapust Ladies
Ladles' Aid win
will noid
hold their
gett hospital last week for treat*™ "‘ul“
WNlMNUy F. M. ton. Richard Christian; James Mc­
ment. An operation was performed
Mrs. Martha BeVler. S3, passed this Wednesday.
Bride. VlVeme Pierce; Cyrus Wy­
municipal corporations proper, and iS-.’tia w ™
.liTai
Soder. 235 E. High SC. AU ladies koff. Alien Houghton; Avner Par­
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Kirshman of
-Mn_____
“,rU' ““»■ “l­ sons. Arnold Towns; Codman. Qail- Mrs. L. M. Curtiss, of Freeport. Kalamaxoo visited Mr. and Mrs. Er­
or streets and bridges
, coun- I
{en Mlske: Griggs. Gaylord Flory; Tuesday, April 7. Funeral services nest Shomo from Saturday until
ties, townshipe. school dlstrku and! —______ —____________ —.____
T^Wna UrUlll.nTownsend Plan meeting Episcopal Walters, LaRue
McMillen;
Judy, were held at the home of her Monday
Mr. and Mrs
LeRoy
are not P*rUh hous* Friday evening. April, Elouise Smith; Miss Pritchard, Hel- daughter. Mrs. Arlle Spindler of Klrshman and baby son and Billy
------------------------------- ------------------------art not 24.
-,. 7:30
r.m o'clock.
n'rlrwk Important
Tmnnrtant business
IviilnMi !,n
»n Brodbeck; Mrs. Pendleton. HelenWnnrllarvt
Rntunlev
afternoon
Woodland.
Saturday
afternoon at
at Jack Kirshman also of Kalamaxoo
negligence.” In this A-------- a. — —«_ -t—
«• . - ..
------- .
Phyllis 1:00 O'clock and at 1:30 at the Coals were Sunday guests.
Reeser; Julia
Pendleton,
Pollyanna
Ruell; Sally McBride.
r_„,____ Grove Church of Christ in charge
Mr. nd Mrs. Delmond Culler spent
Heino vs. Grand Rapids. 302 Mich. i speaker of the evening.
England; Mrs Semple, Annie Ros­ of Rev. Arthur of a Detroit Church Easter with her parents. Mr and
383. our Supreme Court lield that a
enthal; Mrs Llppett. Mary Long; of Christ. Burial In Carlton ceme­ Mn Klda Guy of East Woodland.
municipality, in the maintenance of
Brush Ridge Cemetery Circle will
Sadie Kate, Prances Warner; Gladi- tery Surviving are a son. Ellis. Be- Other out-of-town guests were; Mr.
meet with Mrs. Maude Zerbel.
Vler of Detroit, and five daughters. and Mrs. R. C Hubbell and Keith
governmental activity, and there­ Thursday, April 23. for all day ola. Wilma Cappon; Freddie. John
Hynes; Carrie. Mavis Sargeant; Mrs Mabie Twombly of 3an Jose, Guy of lensing
fore was not liable for injury re­ meeting.
Doctor. Robert Ulrey.
Mr and Mrs. H. J. Stang of Bat­
ceived by reason of the negligence
David Vail of Muskegon spent troit. Mrs. Ines Randall of Athens, tie Creek and Mrs. C B Benham of
Circle No. 8 of Um Methodist L.
of Its agents. It would thus seem
______________________________ _
A. 8. will meet Monday night, April Sunday night with Mrs. Kittle Mrs L. M. Curtiss of Freeport and Hastings were Easter guests of Mr.
Mrs. Arlle Spindler of Woodland.
and Mrs Karl C. Paul. Mrs Ben­
les in Michigan enjoy the same Im- 20. with Mrs. Maylan Jones at 7:30 Holmes and Mrs. Glen England
The two high honors of the gradu­ ham accompanied Mr
and Mrs
munity that is awarded to coun- ■ for dessert. Quests are welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Van Antwerp
ating class of 1838 of Woodland Stang to Battle Creek for a week's
lies and townships. X call attention
Tomorrow afternoon Mrs. Paul
•
Township school go to Glendon visit.
to this fact for the reason that
janes
of
Grand
RAplds
will
speak
counsel for plaintiff, in his argu­
Mrs. Mabie Eagelkroudt and son.
ment, sought to distinguish the before the Women's Club and Paul Edger, of Detroit are visiting
guests on "Our Responsibility as
I—
I,..— .. Bin

S

“

that plalnUfi claims that the acts
of defendants agents in permitting Ing room. This Is an open meeting
a fire to continue for several days
amounted to a nuisance; upon number of ladies present to hear
which fact there might be ground the speaker, who from her impor­
for action, as against reliance upon tant connection with the League of
™.
mere negligence. „„
No Michigan ...,
au-| Womra VOUr. I. wll imp-n-d &lt;»
thorilies axe cited in support of this lbe «“bject. A charge of ten cents
position, but I think perhaps repul- for guesta wUl be made Next week,
able authority In other states may APT11 *■ Ij*B?.PBV*nporl °{_Wo??"
be found for the position that a city Und win **
8,1 eJt 8l*»ker. Mr
may be held liabtefor injuries re- I Deport needs no introduction to
...io— from the
------...----------of- .a —
suiting
existence
nui­ Hastings audiences.

sance maintained in the course of
the discharge of a governmental
function.
"If such is the rule relating to
cities, may it similarly be invoked as
against a county board engaged In
the prosecution of a governmental
function? I think not. My con­
clusion is baaed upon the fact that
in the Gunther case our court, in
the full light of its decision in the
earlier Heino case, aligned itself
with those others that dearly dis­
tinguish between the liability of cit­
ies and that of counties, the court
saying that ' this court from the be­
ginning has. we think, clearly kept
the proper distinction in mind.” The
point seems to be that the county
"In the gratuitous performance of,
strlcUv public functions'' is as free |
from liability as the state would be. I
being, as set forth, "the agents and

blllty of the Barry

county

road

Uy.

Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harrison and
children of Detroit and Jean Eng- ।
land of Hastings were Easter din­
ner gueste of Mrs Olen England
and daughters, Pollyanna and Mar­
gery.
Born to Mr. and Mrs
Vertin
Murphy of East Woodland an eight
pound baby boy. David Lee, on Sun­
day. April 12. Little Shlfley Anne
Miss TUlle Tyden. 425 W center St Murphy is staying this week with 1
...
. SnUlh of Wood.
J. Smith will have charge of the land.
Child Welfare Program. Theme­
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Plants and
Rule out alcohol through education.
daughters of Hartford were Easter
Help to make a sober nation.
quests of Mr. and Mrs. Milan Trum-

COUNTY SPELLING
CONTEST WINNERS.
Lorena and Louise Hilbert. Don
The final round-up for the cham­ Shomo and Charles Fumlss of Ann
pionship in the Barry County Rural
Arbor and Don Hynes of Olivet are
School Spelling Contest has been spending the spring vacation with '
the home folks.
urday. and will be held in the court
Mrs prank Kilpatrick entertained
house, according to School Com­
tiie Bridge Club last Wednesday
j
missioner Maude Smith

HERE IS A REAL BARGAIN !
With EVERY ORDER of FAINT, from
1 quart up. wo will yhre o

PAINTBRUSH FREE

Suggest A
Variety for
Daily Menus
and Make
Your Food
Shopping
Easier

j

WOODWORK.
Also WALL PAPER CLEANERS, 12 oi.
can 8 cents; 42 os. cen. 24 cents.

&gt;I
.

Golden Bantam
Pick of Pack

Evaporated
Sunthina Brand

■ fPiesc'i/pfant
PHONE 2 IIS

t

I ।

■

Tall

Cn.

Rich, Creamy

SUGAR

5Oc

IO

NAVY REANS OBAD?
.3 lb. 10c
lb 6c
RICE—Fancy Blue Rose
EGG NOODLES nWMloS)D,&lt;ng
GRAHAM CRACKERS
Sa 18c
TEA-Thomas Special, bulk
lb. 25c
APPLESAUCE
3
APRICOTS STANDARD QVAUTT
PEAS-Rodio Early June
2
2d:.
ORANGE JUICE
PRESERVES
?AR
38 ua jab
APPLE BUTTER
HONEY—Pure Strained

CORNED BEEF
CORNED BEEF HASH

country has it boon so easy for

Bustard

people to get

pit:

CATSUP-Odessa lift.
PICKLES

money to build, remodel or
repair their Hornet.

3 Cons 25c

H. S. H. CLIANIS,

GOLD DUST

pkg »«

tST

18c

BOAR POWDBB

CIoHim Pins. 24 in box

7c

CLOTHIS LINK. 50-H.

lie

SCRUB IRUSHIS

10e

25c
14c
15c
25c
22c
15c
17c

•0-MIF AMMONIA, qt 25c

RIX LYI

1 cans 25c

CHIPS

Ig. box 22c

CHIPSO
Ig box 20c
P &amp; G SOAP 7 ET 27c
KIRK'S
— 34c
OAUZI TISSUI
4 rolls IT«

can 17c
2 CAMS 29c
10c
2 FO* 15c
QT JAR 25c

SWEETHEART
TOILIT SOAP

Wo have in Hastings two banks, the Building and Loan Associa­

tion and the Notional Housing Act, os money-lending institutions;
wo also hove a first class, up-to-date lumber yard, oil co-operating
to make it possible for you to either build or remodel your Home.

HERSHEY’S

THE HOME LUMBER CO.
BUILDS HOMES

HASTINGS

It
IkeWils

GRAPE NUT FLAKES
POST TOASTIES

TIP TOR CARAMELS

-PHONE 2276

CLIMAX

SWIFT* II

Never in the history of this

ate McArthur. Hickory Oornsra. aO

LEAF LETTUCE
6c
CARROTS
bunch 5c
ORANGES
29c
ONIONS
5 lbs 9c

25‘
3 c*m 25c
ROLLED OATS 5 19c
MILK
3 20c
rW Al
P|

Milwaukee, Mrs. Katherine HBywood. Shirley and Lawrence of
Quimby Besides his loving wife and
children he leaves 13 grandchll-

oeirilar.

Nine umbrellas are bought by
women for every one bought by a

TOMATOES

ALSO. GOOD WOOL SPONGES, suitable
for windows, wall and woodwork, from
25c up: good CHAMOIS, from 25c up.

was united In marriage with Anna
Reid. Feb 15. 18C3 To this union

Franklin T Matteson was bbm
in Baltimore township March 14,

Bertha Johnson. Mrs. Mary Myers.
Mrs. Mecca Wendell, Mrs pearte

FRESH, ATTRACTIVE FOOD DISPLAYS

BANANAS 5^25c
ORANGES
17c
CELERY
5c
APPLES BALDWINS 5 LBS 9C

FOR THIS WEEK!

Anyway if we take all these opti­ Bunday with Mr and Mrs Chas '
mistic predictions with a grain of Rowlader of Grand Rapids Grey- i
salt, it will help the salt business.
don Paul returned to his work In

responsible

Stine.

ANSWER FOR YOU!

in

home Tuesday afternoon with bur-

Mrs. M. MeGhan.
Table com., Mrs. Prank Hemey,
Chmn.; Mrs Linnie Davis
Banquet Com.. Mrs. Clara Cooley.

• THAT’S WHAT WE ARE ABLE TO

employees, if there was any neg 11-

B church He was a wonderful
neighbor and kind friend, loving

Edith

ERYD,

PURITAN CLEANER for WALLS and

i

charge of Mrs

[C.THOMAS STORES)

Suitable and in accordance with the or­
der of point you place with U8. A good
guaranteed bruth.

,

women and girls of the

I
j

Spring is here and with it
House Cleaning! So, what ?

could do nothing elm but dismiss

bom

VERY SUBSTANTIAL BEN KITTS I 1
SOCIETIES WILL BANQUET,
Barry county appreciates the ben-) The women's and girls' MlsatotiI enia lliat
receiving from the ary societies at the First United
slate of Mlcltlgan in the way of aid I Brethren church will bold their
’
'
।

LADIES!

Ing a -governmental function." Un­
der such conditions the judge.

OBITUARY.
William Rltxman was

I for our publie schools For instance twelfth annual Mother six
tar banquet at the church

Bunday they were entertained by ■

The first township elimination
contests are being held this week.
nock hospital Monday for treat­
the following having been report- ment.
ed:
Mias Lenore Dowden spent the
Baltimore — 1st — Bernndine
Schantx. Hendershott (5th); 2nd—
Dowden, of Lanstng and Mias Na­
omi Van Loo visited friends there.
perform its functions." "In import- MUdred GosMll. Dowling—(7th&gt;-4
Ing a portion of 1U powers, the slate ' 2nd. Vela Rice. Durfee (Blh).
also imparts its own Immunity "
I Johnstown — 1st—Howard Bab- Lansing were Easter guests of Mr
*1 can see no other logical con- J cock. Burroughs (5th)—2nd—Sylvia and Mrs. Herald Classic and Mrs
Rhoda Austin
elusion from the language used by Dunn, Monroe (5th); 1st—Louise
Mr. and Mrs Chas Higdon and
the court, or approved by it. in the 1 Conklin. Bristol (Bth); 2nd—Florfamily of Nashville were dinner
Gunther case, and it is my con- ence wasaenaar. Parker. (Sth).
and Mrs
Welby
elusion that a county is not liable. I Castleton — 1st—Ula Garilnger guests of Mr
Crockford Tuesday evening
even though a public nuisance re- i (5th) Carlton Center; 2nd—KetherMr. and Mrs Clarence Forman
suite from the negligence of Its em-1 ine Stuta. i5th&gt; Martin; IsU—Vivian
ployes in the performance of gov- Nelson Hoemer («th); 2nd—Ruth are receiving congratulations on the
birth of a daughter, bom Saturday,
ernmental duties such as the con- ' Edwards. (7th) Shores.
April 11.
struction of roads."
■
z-.—— ...
Mr and Mrs. George Spindler of
“It therefore follows that an order bilU. Moore Sthi; 2nd—Ines Cobb,
granting the motion to dismiss may Branch (4lh&gt;; 1st—Margaret Lo­ Lafayette Ind., are visiting relaI lives here during their spring vacawell. Quailtrap
(7th);
2nd—Ar­
Uon.
thur McKelvey &lt;8th&gt; Moore
Mr and Mrs Ralph Rise and
that while the court recognises the
Jacob
he old days, she got a job be­ family and Mr and Mrs
etle couldn't get a husband; Hoover called Bunday on Mr Hoo­
judge iuiids that he cannot recover
ver's
sister Miss Fannie Hoover of
because our slate supreme court
Sunfield, who Is ill.
she has the job

cause in tills case the employees of

AN INTERESTING SHOWING.

boys come from Eaton county and
Philip J Maher president of Mi- ■ thl* year pupils of high school age
have been active in school affairs.
n.
living in rural districts of Barry
Other members of this year's class heri Business College of Kalama ( founly wlI1 11&gt;v&lt; lhelr hl&lt;to
are; Ella Benner. Carlyle Burkle. roo. was the speaker at the Tues- , miuon paid by the slate, instead
Winifred Cappan. Burdette Hayner. ‘lay noon meeting of the Cummer- l of by Ute parents or the districts.
Mildred Conley, Genevieve DeKll- ‘1*1 Club* He brought with him two. That means a saving of over 824,OOO to Barry county. Last ------year,
der. Albert Drake, William Eddy, 1 members of the faculty and two; ooo
Russell EUper. Eston Everetts. Lin- students, -*
’« gave an exhibition ।| —
— fint ---------------who
|Or •the
time, no state tax was
colp ftawTr**
Farreu7M*rtha ~
Fenstemaker.
up-UM*te methods of ban- rai^ ta Barry county. The year
coip
Marjorie Hynes. Gaylord Klopfen- d“n«
Mr. Maher did before 812,000 state tax waa raised
stem. Russell Lind. Russel Palmer- llot
when Uie depression came ln this county by taxation on prop­
ton. EUiel Potter. Dorothy Rogers.1 but P111 M1 ,lU fighting clothes and rrty. Add these two Items and you
Ralph Scofield. Kathryn Spindler w«rt after business. A* a "*ult- have lite snug sum of 838.000. ITtese
Marion Strong. Nelson Valentine. ; in the last five years, the attendance benefits which Barry county roCarl Wacliter, Esther Watrous and 1 at
Pnsiness college has increased celved in 1835. liiey will receive
Betty Wotrlng
I ■''&lt;w ptr cenr ,ns college oceuples again tills and in future years.
Mr. Warnld Wart. (Arbma Ur
°nice* “
___________ ...
n(rs. Harold letly (Arlene Me- I Avenue. Kaiamaxoo.
•• R ; |J.
uwainviiv
Millen) _____________________________
was taken to Pennock Itos-1 *-**'*1***
1 1
B. MISSIONARY

‘p
lit

Interesting Case
Decided by Court

pkg 10c
Ig pkg 11c

lb. 12c

BAB

. SUN RAE BLEACH

I

iiWL

14®

C. THOMAS STORES
IM WUT iTATt ITREET

�Hie Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY

TRADE AT HOME

»» the Spirit of a Community
That Counts—Not Its Six.

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1936

Editorials

This and That

HI The Public Forum jtl

The full story of the destructive

with youngsters on this subject
might produce some very happy re

in the Republican primary

danger despite the fart that he is
personally very. unpopular with

-Pittsburg will probably never be
told, or known, according to 0. JLong, consulting electrical engineer
who is here doing »peclal work
the Bliss Pres* company.

NEW PRC
President Roosevelt In his speech
at Baltimore apparently dedicate*

newspaper r
eion. although

i* resisting efforts to make AAA
told the vote* of independent demo­ payment record* public property.
crat* and liberal* in addition to a Why? Stories are current concern­
oonslderable portion of the normal ing individual payment* amounting
Republican vote. Attack* against to many thousand dollars per per­
Couxens based od party regularity son Since the public, not Mr Wal­
alone will be just a mild summer lace. is paying the bill, it has a
rlchl io know Hie facts
branches of lone pine
In our opinion the most vulner­
DEADLINE
able spot of the Couieru record is
Since the Banner changed
bls conduct during the banking
publication day from Wednesday to
crisis here in Michigan We itlll be­
lieve that except for hl* blunt at­
to be confused about the deadline
tack* against the Detroit banks and
0 1U nu charges which he failed
The deadline for all news copy is
to back with substantial proofs in ■
Wednesday at ten A M. and for
serie* of grand jury investigations,
scores of bank* In this state would ■
0 clock noon II is planned to close
lhe form* Wednesday afternoon
doors and countless thousands of
and iuive tlw Banner ready to print
doUar- would have been saved tc
on Thursday forenoon and In order
.live- n.;

copy be in the office at the times

on well guarded ground because lhe
rank and Ole of voters believe that
lie acted with entire sincerity and
they feel that hl* claims are true

and will save disappointment on the
part of those who wail until Wed­
nesday
xitaraoon
or lliursday

iru*t that has been aroused by the
B.'. . I
Rooaavaii
tdministeauon.
who attempts to defend tlie bank-

i There isn't much praeucal advice |
। to be given the hopeful young grad I uate this season, except to marry

I

think

of the build­

ing committee and

one; soaMtlmes, lhe other, if he

ped on lhe upper floor* of buildings
The water level rose *0 rapidly that
many people were unable to

yond.

driver hearing of lhe danger would
rush out and find the water up
lhe hub caps, in attempting to dr

in lhe Grand Rapids Herald and
Id lhe building had been
a landmark there for 80 year* I
thought perhaps the Banner would

the motor to stall and before he
could get help, the engine. Itself.

; merged that boats could float over
them without scraping bottom.

1
। volunteer workers who assisted in I
the flooded region At one time he
worked for forty-eight hours with-

Hew to the line, let lhe quips
fall where they may I

pel you to take notice
New spring

color

combinations

Tomm*
wear a toga—they look
fortable

so

waten

wuii tli* Foundation could think
up something to do with reporters 1
Heh' Heir There* probabh lot* I

That's » swanky new .spring tic
that George Miller is sporting
cldent* are inevitable *0 Ions as
: the first girl he finds who has a j
the railroad right of way is used as i steady Job.—Ohla State Journal.
Some of the boy* accused Clyde
playground
Wilcox of having a new spring suit.
I There can't be a revolution Ev- but Clyde lay* it's just th* old one
A FINE SUGGESTION.
| ery time you catch a radical pro­ Spruced uo a bit and going on Ils
third season a tough bieax
A medical friend of ours declares feasor and give him responsibility, Tom and Ray'

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

people took their misfortune In good
spirit A popular sport was standing
along the bank* and speculating on
hat the flood wafers would bring
next.

ments with the well known actor
Will H Oriffln. for a pre.wntation of
that famous play "The Crisis' st 81
Rose hall by th* local talent of
I lasting! The proceed 5 are to pay
for painting a new set of scenery
for the St Roae hail

। Mary McOarty of Rutland took
Great I pjare on Saturday evening April 14. ,
Britain has boon the moat
It Im- at the home of the brides narents 1
Dr Lampman ha* moved into his of
new home
boar more toasts to Harr Hitler.
C W Moore will build a home on
the lot he recently purchased ol
Ml** Elida Shaw

I., Cl.U.d

CurbMaad,

B&lt;rt on|y „u

klBg

Most Interesting of all. how-

.

I
;
I

Bernie Rf*r|
epend a* much time in educational Francisco chronicle.
there's quil» * future in
work among youngster* of school,
business
age as doctor* have in free health J
OTO*lm mwi “&gt;'* ** Iward a
XlucUlon
Uwr. .raid U Irc I
"&gt;■“ ,M “"&gt;• •&gt;»«* “
This week ' nomination for the I

Their parents arc all gone

I think those that made the report
-------------------------------------It
were honest enough in .'porting
re|
that way. No doubt they just looked
first Weeks sclioolhouM' was built

doesn't remember he no doubt re­
calls hearing his father tell about it.
I think it 1*
dwelling that stands there.
there when thia last school waa built

they have lost it and hope they will
rebuild. I hope I haven't taken up
too much of your time. 1 thought

Very sincerely yours
A W Nichols.

Bnlger strode away from the corn
,,
~
c
..
, 1 and took a panoramic view of It, a*
r rom uur ocrap DOOR I Oh* who scorned to examine any
thing minutely.

------------------------------- -----------CORN-SHUCKING
TIME
and divided exactly in the middle,
It was in those old time* of the fence rail, leaning against cither
beginning of lhe etgn ol Madison s*de. marked the boundary between
that the people ol the Hlssawachee ,territories of lhe two parties,
Mltlement, in Southern Ohio, pre- ,After husking lhe corn that re­
mrnc.i .Tfs Jfr
pared to attend "the corn-shuckin', malned under the ralte, Hie whole
—
•- adjourned
---------- * •*- ­
down at cap'n Lumsden's.
party
to the ---------------house, wash
lhe things that show
rWBNTl YEARS AGO
ing their hands and face* In the
Although people have been aware
hat men arc.
Nashville * rifle shooting club ha* of the potential danger which exists the entertainment that opens the woodshed a* they passed into the old
—r.picielui.
been organi»ed with 68 members
hybrid building, half log-cabin, Ute
In the Allegheny and Monongahela
Tlie sum of |500 left by the late
block-house
Ing at Lumsden’s had the
w -u'luihafi
advantage other
..........half
—- —
------- ------- fortlflcallon.
—--— —
Morgan Jones to the citiaen* of has ever been done for protection, in
dim back-1 The quilting frame* were gone;
Hastings for hospital purposes was I Apll, of th. fact thl* U one of Um ground of oilier
■hucungs.
and and
lumed o«r
U&gt;.- clu cmmrtl on bu»i™undu»&lt;ru»rellon.loU»««un- quiltings, and wood-choppings, and 1 the apartment which was commonly
lerldair
... j the
.. . population
.
...
Friday evetilno
evening tn
to Wrllar
Kellar nictn
Stem tow
for . try Wld
one of...
the anole-neelIng*
appie-peeltog* that were to follow,
follow used for parlor and sluing room.
l.**. fiulkcr re4j' moat concentrated II Is hoped that to say nothing of the frolic* pure
lhe great destnirtlnn and suffering »nd simple—parties alloyed with no service tor a dining room The la­
Benkes moved into caused by this last flood will stim­ utilitarian purpoM-s.
dles stood around against the wall
her new home on West Green St, ulate some remedial action which I
with
Tuesday
could be effected for considerably about complete, the next step was to debating no doubt, the effect of their
“'‘“l . Dr*. J. G McOuffln and C. P
than the loss which would be divide the heap. To do this, judges
, Lathrop were Lhe guests of Dr.
Circuit Rider." by Edward Eggleston.
Rowland Webb tn Grand Rapids , able that another 'flood will not i field, a alow-speaking man. who was
Friday- evening
------ —- nl•
delightful din- I happen for many years, on the olh- | believed to know a great deal be­
First publUlied newspaper tn
rwr to celebrate the birthdays of er
ar hand (IitI—Is possible
(Vtl. IV,.)
— —..I*
■— ■ — at
.
that theyI ......
cause he
said lla.I.
UUla and *—
looked
America
Drs Webb and McGufflln which oc­ might strike during several year* in things carefully; and Jake Bnlger. sued In April 1704, ceased publicaman u more ihan another unleu
cur on the
suceeasion. The point is that, in ' who also had a reputation for know- Uon in March 1718
hr dot! more than anoihcr "
Bergt Frank Englehart
I the long run It Is cheaper to provide • ing
Twentieth United State* Inf
lelt r
protection
from--------------------floods than It ~
is to •glibly
----- .
—ly, and was good at off-hand' George Washington was made a
on Monday for Douglas. Arizona
11.. d.m.j. cuwl when (uealnt Butu-neM loolM u lhe cBam ol
hy Uie Frcuh
where ho win join his regiment now swollen river*
rivers gal
sat out of control
control
....
1
thought to be guarding the route of
I the supply trains furnishing pro- I
uncertainty, and------------------walked
New
England
has
5370.840
miles of
visions to Gen
Pershing
around to lhe other end of the pile, telephone wire, only 204.880 miles of
wlilch 1* pursuing Villa-* bandit* '
Tlie British museum has a
Mr Englehardt I* familiar with the I
He
Mexican border and he will un­
A passenger automobile powered
doubtedly experience plenty of ad­ nu orc uaat • “rc.
will! Kill* lUlUtl »
venture
the title of rear. a corruption of I distance, and again
P. T Colgrove went to Grand
Rapids Tuesday where he joined a
company of gentlemen who went that for centuries aft
uvei the
wic proposed
propwMzu routes for
lor the
ir.r ---------------------over
Paved Wav from Grand Rapids to | 1,00 o? blg n*"*Lanslng
letter to Qveeo Elisabeth for Ilia |
hand of an English woman, but at
THIRTY YEARS AGO
the Inst moment the woman was I

A Quotation

Round About Town

The man who deliberately keeps
playgrounds Of late there have aloof from his fellow* 1* never in
Tommy * warning
been tome pretty close calL&gt; on the
Out!
tracks here
trainmen tell u»
Youngsters gel absorbed in their Humorist
same

these tragedies but engi-

wttneu

People walked to work as usual on
lhe morning that lhe rivers reached

The Labor Department u con­
Bui I never could figure out how
ducting a survey to determine how
mucll ctoUlej Bnd
1&lt;W[ &lt;tfU they kept rm on An (ngeniou* race
those old Romans
Quuh^ way u&gt; lhe
M t0
a„k lhelr dads.-Omaha World-HerI understand ....
B]d
medicos are spending the next ten
days or m&gt; tn 8t Louis, taking spe­
cial clinic work under direction of
No vitamin Z ha* been discovered the Kellogg Foundation
down and killed instantly, probably
yet. but when it is. it will probably
never knew what hit him
Well it’ll at least n
1 be found In the crow which poli­
This is just one of many similar
ticians eat after election.—Wichita their patients s chance
accident* which happen each year
Eagle
They
’ll probably w back with a |
and will continue to happen ao

The person who thinks a child*
tastes are simple and easily gratlfled has never kept an accurate list
of what a 7-year-old can think he
wnnW llk«
have for Chnatmar. Memphis Commercial Appeal,

to

Probably the section worst hit was
the so-called "Golden Triangle," at
lhe junction of the Allegheny and Easter spirit lx still in the hearts ol school
people. Life means so much more
to us all than it could without it. Ing; also Bunday school and church
It ha* stood the tost of time and
The old building was sold to Mr.
cated At the height of the flood will continue. Many thanks for ths Btrowbrldge and moved north near
lhe Tyrrell hill and used as a
itreel* so fast that everything
Weeks schoolhouse came as a shock dwelling house. Court Btrowbrldge
afloat, even sturdy
boats,
ground to pieces. Needles* tc
didn't live in the Weeks district
schoolhouse
almost
as
long
as
, lhe thick plate glass windows in all
remember anything. Since reading
of the Ore. I have been recalling the
names of many of the pupils of land tn both districts—Hendershott

which must have even Hie spectrum

attention to anything around them, j

terrible enough, he

clearly as though we had seen it in

rr notice* in th* Banner and then guessing are also adding decorative .
find they are too late
touches to the drab streets of our
These changes are made neces­ quiet city
sary by the fact that so many train*
If I can keep my old coat long
unpopular causes al the moment
have been discontinued causing de­ enough, maybe It will come back in
lay in delivery of the papers to vari­ style again, loo
hopeless task
ous place* Ui the county Naturally
They say these things run in cythe Banner editors want to get the
DANGEROUS PLAYGROUNDS
i paper to the subscribers as early a*
Three youngsters, aged 9. 11 and possible so this action is really
If *0. I wonder when hobble skirt*
ere walking along the Michigan necessary Your cooperation will be will come tripping down the line
again- -or bustles
ipprri latr-1

Pungent Paragraphs

was taken far granted that this
schoolhouse Just burned was BO
years old. But If they look through
the records, I think they will find
that about 1878-1M0 the old build

Barmer readers when I extend
thanks to you for Mr. cook's good
article printed in last week* issue
had a meeting in the old school
of the Banner about Easter in Call
fomla. It 1* certainly great in*pi- house and decided to build a new

details so thoroughly that the picture

tttacking
Couaeru — immediately
sllgn* himself with big buslnes* and

grossed in play while the third little
fellow, possibly intent on imper­
sonating a train
himself
was
"chugging" along the eastbound
track Consequently he didn t notie. a team bearing down rapMlj
from behind and the noise of the
locomotive on the track prevented

and with no one living there now

picture of the frightful destruction
to property and the

eral years, all church, club, lodge
P.y Observing Tommy
and organisation notice* should be
Violent plaid* seems to be pretty
nanded in on Monday
, popular m
feminine
style*
nils
If aU will cooperate in this mat-'

them in court
Also, because of the acute tense

I think I am expressing the sen

something wonderful

a* Governor Fltxgeraid say*, lack* lhe program of regimentation begun
. popular appeal, the issue of party by bls administration in defiance U&gt;
regularity l* doubly lacking to this lhe Constitution and prevented
from at least partial fulfillment by
commanding position that is dif­ Supreme Court decision*. BUil U
ficult to assail. HU party irregular­
ity is a source of strength rather Ise* as he kept his campaign promthan weakness because it throws a
halo of rugged Independence about
moin conservative.
him and has won deep rooted con­ most reactionary administration in
fidence and support on a strictly the history of thl* country
non-partisan basis
He has doubtless lost vote* frnm
AAA PAYMENTS
Republican regulars but to more than
Secretory of Agriculture Wallace

prevent

Alba. Michigan,
April 6. 1038.

predation of what ordinary prop-

COUZEN8 AND BRUCKKR.

can t be expected to appreciate the
destructive force in a locomotive
even traveling at low speed
Railroads do every thing tnat can
be reasonably expected of them to

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

RANDOM OBSERVATIONS.

Milo, spent Bunday with I who, (or a penuy, quickly aew a
in Ulla city
- button On your coat or a patch 00
nee* of tjee. Sing, the yOur panti
‘”
hdryman formerly o! collier's
V
Collier's Weekly.
IhU city, may be interested to
learn that he is in the Philippine*
P. A Sheldon Is en rappone with
1 and ha* become wealthy since he '
the Davenport's sugar bush in
left here.
Woodland. He rays It to well worth
one's
time to visit thia bush and see
FORTY YEARS AGO
the modern appliance* for making
.strung for th* telephone exchange sugar
Died
In this city Friday. April B.
I Th* phones will be put in place this
week ft starts out with about 15
mas. and •
tubacxlbers on the list

and the traffic department
A mistake In the count in the
Ackerson 4c Hayes purchased IB,juvenile delinquency HU ide. *. to |“ * e~”*h
a“M'
HaMing* Hall of Oblivion—t he In­
majority instead of 25 as was re.abandon Hit Idea of securing the considerate enemy of sanity and :
, pu,wj iuh en^wu nun uj w »«»reason
who
concocted
a
piece
full
of
new
Zephyr*
claim
they
ought
to
be
1
,
wad
of
|
S
majority
loan.—Thomaston (Ga.) Times.
■uttarat
r. '
i wu[ McKe¥|U w Borrcndame. mind* us that there is already ai
guttaral ...r.ugurgle* which goes Wa-, called ~v.-.p"Zippers
Hoo. Wa-Hoo. WA-HOO-O-O It'*
* • •
Will Barnaby and joe Rusk! saw splendid horse of that breed la lh1»;
the demde.t thing yetf
I Hube and claienoe each have I the Page Fence Giants go down be­ city, “Le Motte" the property of KU ।
have to be observed Just as faith­
themself a new “tipper." 1 see.
fore the Grand Rapids teem at the BaeftK Thia thoroughbred atumal
fully as proper health rules If we
Its Wm: ue plus ultra »H* tberc
latter city Tuaaday afternoon
expect to develop in a healthy manCarlo of putrescmost
tember 1MM
But talking of automobile.', you 1
The *now storm OI last wee* win
FIFTY YEARS AGO
no brown shlrta. -Ortroil News.
ought to bear what Dick Hurd!
long be remembered by the "old-1
Miss Sarah Jones will lake ai—
Htrbbliu
. eo«r»e of musical Instruction at, rat inhabitant. M Um
The secretary of a golf club re- friendly grin.
Spring IB here—"Bap.'' 1 see. is I Olivet college
thia atete vlaUed by th
running again in Uw court yard | w 8 Goodyear has returned from did not reach HaaUnga.
fountain.
1 California, much pleased with hia
Friday evening last several of:
• • a
I trip.
the friends and neighbors of Mrs O. I
charmjng touch to WUl Halls fur­
U spring Isn't rwre. a ooupie of
Excavating (or the basemanl of | Horabee* met at her house to aaabt,
lAal that sort of tiling should be niture store
bllie birdies
birdie* in
In our
uur neignoornoou
neighborhood , in®
the new
new uasung.Itesiuig* moua
House wiU be her to celebrating iter Mth birth-'
- • ’
utue
The boys who lisve tried out ideas have got things doped out aU wrong, .commenced this month.

�cinio
9

High School Newt
a prognun of skit*. readings and

(Continued from page i. tec 1)

population. the following;
Hastings City UR I M17.TO

Total

riMT VA1SITT BAJBKBALL
TBAM BQTOB 1827 IB
ORGANIZED

of the total
the Bounty
the weight
ty by the state of Michigan during
IMS. Just how thia to to be apportlooed is a question at the present
time Treasurer Maus b walling tnatructkms from the authorities at
Lansing before be will make Ute dis­
tribution.
How long lhe stele will continue
with 120.000

4lOA33.4g

This distribution means that of

I 1 LO

SYMBOL of Timekeeping Merit

KI.- oireomanoc
E--J
rvew

"CORSAIR"

fore

buying

7-JEWELS

A email deposit will GoW eelec
hold any watch till
graduation Be sure
and get our Special CHIC ROUND

"DUCHt5SEM

and Waithams.

ir

€. B. HODGES
KNDABLE JEWELER

SAVf MAN» OOIL«Py

HASTINGS

-■( •■A'.i '

home of Mrs Tillie Hoevenalr. The
trained people. Next Monday at
party will be entertained by
14
with
” A.
—■ M
—• in_ the
—, Central
——. auditorium.
--------- ' , • special meeung win uo new wimi
Mary Van Dugteren on ThurstrJ?
1 MyT“" Wimam. Friday, April M. to
trated talk on lhe sugar port. The -hnrw* the nnaa tn taka mat in ths
The next business meeting on April
Iff—Press Oort.

EUi te&gt;k

lives of public and private colleges
and approved business schools have
been invited to the HDgh school.
The entire senior class will bo given
the opportunity to see there people
paved. m a few years tune, we would will be held at Ionia about April 20. and get information about the
hat* a wonderful system of streets at which time a percentage system schools they are interested in en­
lor judging U»&gt; Field Day events tering next falL
will
be
completed.
fund can be used for the purpose of
buying machinery to take care of
popular of the spring sports wth
the High school students More than lhe city and the schools will co­
operate by cleaning up
their
the spring, summer and fall and sixty candidates answered Coach grounds The committee in charge
that can be utilised as a snow plow Brosak's call to duty. This is ample
proof that the national sport is still of arrangements for Clean-Up Day
in the winter time.
very much alive. The high school is
fortunate in having two prominent
Is the half mile on North Broadway. business men donate sufficient funds
For the first time Hastings has
north for half a mile, and put that ment. The last organised baseball
street in good condition It is not team to wear HasUngs High uni­
forms was in 1927. After that time
class teams replaced the varsity and
talent was not
developed by troll and Crystal Falls will com­
pete on the Hastings courts.
built thorough coaching.
that a trunk line would
The track squad which is to be

a

watch anywhere

Regularly |2tJ4

The Woman's Relief corps
their hall Saturday. April 11. with a

The Trick, Tennis and Golf ment such aa dictaphones, edl- Uon leader. Stella Dibble and local good attendance. Tlie amount ot
phonea and stanotyptng machines. leaders. Pearl Newland and Myrtle •1000 was reported spent to help
Teams Have Bri&lt;ht Out­
Williams
He told the student* he believed the
Mrs Cotton. Mrs. Newland and where it was needed. The March
look for Season
pot tuck dinner was held at lhe
depression was deftnilelv over for

The high school sports program
will be well rounded out this spring
with scheduled competition in base­
make good use of .it while it has it,
by making such Afreet improvements ball. track, tennis and golf At pres­
ent the schedules are tentative with
Cobable openings sometime iu the
tier part of April.
A league to include Belding.
Greenville. Ionia and Hastings is
and guttering all the certain, with a Field Day at Ionia

INTEfl

greater nm&gt;
bar of members will be present at
the next meeting which will be bald

--------------

FIELD DAY WILL BE
HELD IN IONIA MAY 9

ties. cities and

5 FIVE/

Htat, « MtatabU. tata.
LaM Tuaaday, Mr. Philip Maher of

in prominence with better than
forty men reporting Ransom. L
Smith. Cogswell. Few less. Rhoades.
Bush. Walton. Aldrich. Shay. Fer­
ris. Snyder. C- Smith. Cook. Wldrig.
and McKenxie are all likely look­
ing sprinters. H Hinckley. H Finkhighway purposes so that it will balner. H Moore. Marshall. Wright.
Springer, Hull. McLeod. B Williams.
L
Williams. W pink be Lner Dunn.
taxes. and at the same tune build
Mead. Hart. Allerding, Hall. Henney
and Godfrey will vie for honors as
distance men. Entered tn lhe hur­
. ates
dles division are Keanex.
Rearlck. Bump. B.
B
PERSONA LFAOB
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE
Hinckley and Feldpausch Candi’ dates in the held events will include
surprised on his 54th birthday V Brnlth. McCann. Gladstone and
Wednesday evening, by a host of rrancuco
A number of Class B schools butfriends and relatives a pot luck
rounding Hastings have requested a
regional tennis meet which will be
many nice gifts.
[ played at Hastings May 23 Coach
-F- N. G. CLUB.
-------Albert Becker has some fine mateThe P N G met Monday eve- flgj p,
division of spring sports,
nlng with Mrs. Ward Erway for a 1 wno should make an impression­
pot luck supper Seven teen members able showing several of last year’s
ware present and cards war? pteyed lnw ln.
AngtlL crothars,
Mrs Chas Wood making lhe high Leonard. Leary Gladstone Kelly
score, and Mrs Harry Wood, lhe
ironside
low
| The tennis season will open with
' lhe first meet al Allegan next
Saturday. April 18 The schedule for

This half mile ought to be fixed
now. It is diverting trade from Has­
tings It is a detriment to our city
to have an approach tn such a con­
dition as that half mite
Without question the city council

Here

GROUP NO. 3
FIFTH BIRTHDAY.
i Hastings Extension group No. 3
' met at the home of Mrs. Harry
Anne McDonald celebrated her
Young. April 4 with an afternoon fifth birthday on Thursday by en­
tertaining
ten little friends at a
meeting. The finished garments
were judged and lhe members voted
a happy lime with their games.

Nert Friday. April 24. is lhe night
of tlie J—Hop. Plans tor this Im-

deepest secrecy, but from
we've accidentally
discovei
should be a grand oocasion.

what

MARRIAGE LICENSES.
The members moved that we reROSE B AMPTON
Daniel O- Wolcott. HasUngs .
Contralto, who will sing In Verdi’s
Dorothy Nelmeyier. Hastings . ..27
Mulder; Secy.. Mrs Blanche Lewis, Donald P Taflee, Hastings 23 ,
Requiem
at the Ann
.
. , Arbor May
Leaders. Minnie Young and Golah Lillian B. Thompson. Hastings . 20, Festival. May 13. 14. !• and Iff
Our chairman appointed Ida Per­
kins. Golah Storer and Ida Waters
to make the exhibit for extension '
day, also Mrs. Ida Tasker and ।
Cjlenna Van Hom for lhe committee '

DOWLING PROJECT
The last meeting of the Dowling
clothing project was held in the
church basement. April 8. for an
afternoon meeting
Dresses were
finished and scored Mrs Wilcox.
appointed to prepare a sleeve ex­
hibit. Mrs Wilcox and Mrs Jones

Ung
hlbit. al county Achievement day.
i plans for lhe Centennial celebra­
tion to be held in all city schools.
April 27 and 28
Jones; chairman. Mrs Gertrude
Gaskill; recreation chairman, Mrs
NOTICK.
Jane Smith; secy and trees. Mrs.
Myra Wright—Myra Wright. Secy
otd next Monday. April 20 The
BRUSH RIDGE
.
- the North Evangelical
CEMETERY CIRCLE.
1 church- M»P»« Grove, al 7:30 with
The March meeting of lhe Brush
i “n“ v^lker "of Vmr'Tnrt
Hidge cemetery Circle was held at
, ,T Vor"r
and othcr the home of Mrs A- E Hovey Be­
feBture’ Everybody welcome
cause of weather conditions. lhe
|
1

I IPHONE

2212

Here
23—State Regional Touma-

netting put ut
rill coach the golf
definite data has

Specials for Friday and Saturday

CoRage Cheese u&gt; lOc
LOOK*

■

arrangements

■
R

"MO (LUBMrs Frank Pender was hostess to
her bridge club on Thursday afternoon Mrs Ed Storey and Mrs V
R Wldrig were holders of high

EDUCATOR

BRIDGE LUNCHEONLovely yellow tulips made an at­
tractive centerpiece for the lunch-

“The Ford V«8 uses less fuel and
oil for the power it gives than
any other car we have ever made
AND ITS UP-KEEP COST IS THE LOWEST
UNTHUIIA.TIC mIm talk often

noon, covers being laid for eight
MUs Lillian Tolhurst of Marshall
town guests were

ot

Mias

t-talfe.

•A g A U USXFT’LI
125 A MQlNln

Swiss Steak
Branded

25c

KalheriM

2 lbs. 27c
SMELT 4 lbs. 25c

HeaUte. Wash.

EASTER DINNER.
Mr and Mrs Eugene Freeman
entertained Bunday with an Carter
dinner covers being laid for 14. Out

Boyes and daughter and Glendoo i

■EWING CLUB.
A group of the members of the .
American Ixgion Auxiliary met at
the home of Mr« Sterling Rogers
on Friday evening to aew and they
also completed plana for making a
quilt, a pot luck supper waa alao

Gasoline nuioRffe is morw ol a talking

■19c

HAMBURG

Silsbee and son of Hastings

Ford V-o divas you morw real quality

&amp; “22c

HONORED MISS TOLHURST

। Shellhorn. Mr and Mrs Richard
। Van Timin and daughter, and Mr. :
and Mrs George Van Tlfflin of

salesmen woald like you to believe it is

ROASTS

CRAX

Carveth

Ann Templeton

PORK LOIN

Friday F M . Apr‘1 34. a aimeeUng will be held and a pot
the horns

STUDENTS VISIT
HOME AT LAFUR.
I- County
School
Commissioner
Maude W Smith and MIm Jennie
McBain chaperoned a group ot the

CARTON

SX “ 16c LARD
HAM ENDS 2-29
- 19c

SMOKED
Meaty

Cabbage u I|e Carrots •sash Sc
Head Lettuce F&gt;ete. Cd«» 2
15c
PONT FORWCT-.JUST ONE MORE WEEK TO
SAVE TICKETS
IPA BYOH REFRIGERATOR I

i at the Michigan Hume and Training

*ITI* WUAl. LOW OOWNVATMIWT. MIT. AMY NEW |O»O »ite4 Un Ulxh
rlallM teterZ
vscMonimruccH* naiianBnNAMCBruM.iwii&gt;..MM&gt;uAik&gt;^bHi
&lt;
A—

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL It, 1M»

CENTRAL SCHOOL AUDITORIUM

MONDAY, APRIL 20
At 3:45, 730, 8:30

■

*

AH 730 Show Seats Reserved

* _' J! 11.I'eTTTv^rwefci

LULU BELLE, SCOTTY, FLANNERY SISTERS
bill

McCluskey, barn dance fid­
dlers, TOM CORWINE

SPONSORED BY L O. O. F. LODGE No. 58
Etchanxe Tickets ft

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

“BUZZHT TURNS UP AT
of silver to the admiring newsboys day than It ever has been before, DOCTORS ATTENDING
SCENE OF ACCIDENT.
and others following in his wake, due to the fact that so many men
His visit completed, and his desire are out of employment. But no man
CLINICS AT ST. LOUIS
for the "bright tights" satisfied, he I would want to tackle such a job unrtlunied to California and made his U1 he knows the desert areas and Posteradnate Course in Gen­ and Mrs. r. E. Beisel, of Kalamasoo,
way to his magnificent home In Is in condition physically to underthat “Buixle.” their pet dog. who
eral Medicine in Seggion
• Death Valley.” way out in U«e lake It. It’a a treacherous region and
was in lhe Beisel car when It col­
desert. Those who have see his home has lured hundreds of men to de­
lided with the McKibben car at the
April IS to 25
say that it Is a great palace, really strucllon. The prospector, choking
Gorham comers, turned up at the
A
post
graduate
course
in
general
a castle, a large magnificent stone with thirst, will find that beautiful
Gorham home, Monday of last week
structure standing all alone by it-' looking lake just a little ways of! In medicine at the Medical School of several days after the accident.
self way out in the desert and "100, lhe distance, only a mirage, and a Washington University, St. Louis. "Bunie" disappeared at the latter
mile* from nowhere.” The stale-1 waste of burning sand when he
Missouri, has been sponsored by the time, and despite the efforts of the
iik nt
me
ill has
nos been
oceii made
inauc that
mui his
nu man- 1I reaches
iricurn n.
It. num
From your
yuui vni
car window
wuiuuw
■
dog warden, the conservation offi. - - Foundation in co- i cer. the Banner, private search, and
sod turned W mining raui« Gian
by th. way. livestock wax in don was bum over a rich mine, and , you can see these most attractive w K- Kellogg
be“g thrown ontT the Weltero d 'ourlh
oI ««r- ! that
■ hn when
wh»n he
hr feels the
tike urge
nree for 1 looking
lonklna sheets of water, and then operation
ooeration with lhe
Lhe Barry
Barrv County 4 telephoning all along the line of
* wheE£™ ws- de^h^dthst he
«»““«“• C°T\ n
money, he just goes down into his 1 see them disappear as you ap- Health Department and the Barry M-43 In Rutland, he couldn't be todid this may be surmlssed from by-products was in fifth place with basement tunnel and digs out what proach. leaving nothing but hot. Ootinty Medical Society.This course Scaled. In the,shock and confusion
he feels he needs Be tliat as It may. I glistening sand. You wouldn't want is being held from April 13 to ApeH of lhe accident, and the hurry to
the teTt that a mining syndicate •
I get lire injured-to Pennock hospital
paid him S3.500.000 for his claim.
»n *ltn,ude
Onl&gt;' 4 0 i the desert evidently hasn't been un- to make a trip to the west coast. 25
kind to him. nor has It been to ' and return wlliiout making an auto
which is now a highly producing I,eet •bov* ’** tevel- *nd
1,0 rftln
Tta «nure Ueully « (lie Urelta.l "BUtata." tor lhe moment. .u tormtee Zu’^uid iKe^mln««
trip to the desert,
olliers.
‘ because you will Setaol will take port 0. th. deniHe wm . shy do,. inekM
ing
claims nave
have oeen
been staked
out i Thl
* c0U—
Pled-------w*th the
fact -that
For Instance there's lhe little find it filled with the beautiful and otwtratlons. lecture,. .nd oltalal friend, wdHly. but hunger Ita.Uy
ing Claims
siaai-u our
---- -------- --------- the
--­
. . .. .. . ■ .
. weather is verv warm, and irrluatown of Throna. out on the desert. lhe unusual especially when it puls conrerei.ce. olt.red with Dr. W. Mo- dr°" "‘m book co lhe ww.w ol Um
old mine, re-opened There b I------------------------------------------- -mu
a mining excitement and interest Uon u provided through wells, ! and Just over the line from Kern
Kta&gt; Marriott ta cb.no. Some M !«cld«u where he wu fed end chut
around there that Is not unlike IM|**«» * !"*k* conditions that are county. Here Is one of the world's
■
•
• - — • ------------ ------------। up till “his folks" arrived for the
olden days of lhe west. If you want excellent for growing cotton. It is largest chemical plants, the Amer­
joyful reunion.
L bCy a ml?&gt;e.^ iT^u have some- “»lmed that lhe country over the
Mrs. Beisel isn't at all sure but
ican potash and chemical Corpor­
preaslorui
into
admiration
of j Its something for the general practi­ what “Buxxie" got some kick out of
thing that you want to sell, there
?r^,d.per W..0*"
ation. It represents an investment ।of
.--------- -»
—
-------. beauties;
are always those who have an "atJ*rl^ ±.onl,_
pJ’_un^_2f 815.000.000 It gives employment to --------' ”1»ny charms and
-------- _. its tioner which he can use in every­ his few days of freedom, as at home
he is always confined in a yard or
tentlve ear." There are numerous cotton per acre, while in Kern 800 men and its operation Is said . freakish formations; Its weird can­ day practice.
mining districts near th. city and county It is over three times that to be continuous from one year's I you*- There's an air of quietness
All physicians in the seven coun­ taken for a walk on a leash. Both
plenty of mining brokers, so many amount Over 50.000 acres in Kern end to another It manufactures a«Ml mystery about it that seem, to ties comprising the Michigan Com- I Mr. and Mrs. Beisel express their
in fact that at Bakersfield was the county are devoted to growing cot­ potash, borax and soda product,, beckon you on. A craving for the rnunlty Health Project. Barry. Alle­ grateful thanks for the kindness
ton
or
practically
one-fifth
of
the
has
a
deposit
of
materials
said
to
desert
«*«nis
to
be.
with
many,
a
fint time in years that I had seen
gan. Branch. Calhoun. Eaton. Van­ and Interest shown them in the
and heard real enthusiastic talk entire cotton acreage of the state. be sufficient to keep It going for «ort of a spirit that grows. Il hasn't Buren and Hillsdale, were invited search for their much loved dog.
In -----1930.------------------------lhe latest data .IIhave, the
*•" gener*Uons. even though It sends tripped me that hard as yet. however to attend. Tlie total enrollment at
about mining. It sounded something ...
slate
of
California
produced
about.
out
a
train
)
oa
a
of
Us
products
&lt;
there
are
hundreds
and
hundreds
ASSYRIA.
like the Denver and Leadville of M
St. Louis from these counties is 114,
264.000 bales of cotton, ot which rvery otnPr day.
I of tlie western people who look for- with seven guests including Dr. C.
The teachers from this locality
Kern
64.000
„
— county produced over &gt;U
nnn
Everyone knows what -Twenty- word to tlie time every year, when C. Siemens. State Commissioner ot were
members of a party
of thirty------------------------------------- ------------Mule Team Borax” Is-a household they can
vacations
much as anything else around Bak- bales, or practically one-fourth.
made a trip to Lapeer on
I spend
. — Uielr
,
„ . .. out Health
Iicaiwi.: Dr.
ur. Bruce,
ntuct, vice-president
vice-prvaiaeni I two who
wiiu mnur
on the desert and way on by themof the
me University
university at
of Mlrhlenn
Michigan anrt
and Friday to Visit
visit the school for the
’
We are apt to think of lhe great article that is nationally known. F"
ot
Un ta tain,
ln criurge
chir„ or posigraauaie
p^t^auala education
aduaUon &lt;reta« mutam.
desert wastes of the country as be­ This is way out on the desert, some 1 aelwa.
,------- ...And «
. , wn
. l ------.— *•&gt;
lonir either to
tn locale
Izwate a
» spot
snnt where ln the
.... V..
....
. ..
.. , „So­
....
j
Michigan
State
Medical
ing not only dry and barren, but distance from lhe town of Mojave, long
Theodore
Tack's people
have
va.. can
ran be
h. "all by
h. your
vnnr lonesome
tanwvinv " el&lt;|y.
Michigan moved from the Jones place at the
absolutely worthless, as far as any but in Kern county. It Is right in you
financial value is concerned. But , the heart of lhe world's largest On the return from Bakersfield we State Medical Society: the two sec­ Kilis to the Mrs. Belle Miller home
passed
through
the
little
town
of
!
experienoe is proving that that Is known borax deposit, one that will
Briggs,
to receive them.
retaries of the Society, and several at the
_______
_ _glad
___________________
quite S way from being true Only j also require generations to exhaust. Saugus. I do not know whether members of stale committees in 1 Mr. Tack leaches Ute Assyria Cenand owned by the Pacific Borax Saugus is on the desert or not. If it medicine.
, ter school the past two years.
somewhat startled and perhaps ! Co. Then there are the rich gold isn't. It Isn't very far from It. How­ I Al) expenses. Including train fare.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh case spent
amused when a character called and silver mines at Randsburg and ever, it has achieved some fame as tuiUon. etc., wlir be paid by lhe W. ! Bunday with their sister, Mrs. Eslh"Death Valley Scotty” took It Into Johannesburg, practically way out being the home of Bill Harte, fam­ I K. Kellogg Foundation.
। er Grohe. of Hastings.
on the desert areas. So. changing ous in lhe movies only a few years I Those attending from Barry coun- ! Our pastor Rev C L Schlueter
•bright lights" of New York City A the saying a little, it will doubtless ago as a cowboy, gun-man, and a ty are H. 8 Wedel. B. E. Farwell.1 gave an illustrated Easter day ser­
whole section of a Pullman sleeper be truthful to stale 'Thar's wealth most skillful rider. He was the I Stewart Lofdahk B- C- Swift. C. A. । mon Sunday. ’
"hero” of many a youngster, and E. Lund. K. B. Rees. Gordon Fisher. | Howard Martin, bus driver, for
wouldn't do for him. so he chartered
a Pullman train to carry him to the got to do is to "find it." and there seemed gifted with a special charm C. P. Lathrop. Kenlth McIntyre, high school students transportation
nation's metropolis Arrvtng there _____
cornea the rub. This area is doubt- in that he always arrived just at । R. G. Flnnle. and Dr. Robt. B. look a party ot about forty atuhe continually threw out handfulls l»ss being more closely searched to- the crucial moment to "save the i। Harkness, director of the Barry i dents to Lapeer on Monday to visit
heroine." shower his bullets and County Health Department.
‘
1 the school for the feeble minded.
■
curses on the villains, and escape
Leola Oortright, Ruth Ketcham and
unharmed. High up on a mountain
UC|alen Bristol were among those
OBITUARY.
side near Saugus, and perhaps a
WlUla L Ooykendall was bom ul I
half a mile back from the highway.
Mrs. Lovell Miller and Mrs. Doro­
Is BIB Harte's estate. His home is Parmelee. Thornapple township, on I thy Bristol entertained on Wednes­
large and spacious—perhaps 'man­ Feb. 22. IBM. He lived all his life in day at the Miller home honoring
sion' would describe it more fitting­ home'
"Hkatin^r ,Mrs Marlon Doster, a former teachly—and must command a view over
quite a range of territory Ils size
would indicate that Bill at least
saved something from the princely
salary that he is reported to have
received and enabled him to retire
to the mountains he evidently so
they returned to their work.
dearly loved. He Is quite far re­ Rapids, seven grandchildren, neph- I Mr and Mrs. clayton Case, Clay­
i ews, nieces, cousins and many’
moved from his Hollywood asso­
ton, Junior and chryslal were East­
I friends.
ciates—but even that may have its
er guests of their parents. Mr. and
compensations.
I Mrs. Wilson case, and all called at
OBITUARY.
I the David Jones home to see Mrs.
Carroll A. Cutler, son of James Martha Hyde, mother of Mrs. Wiland Ann Cutler, was born In Has- J Mn Case.
DEATH OF W. J. McINTYRE.
Ungs township. November 17. i860.
Mrs. Isabel Case spent port of
and pasted away April
7. 19JB,
with. hvr
Walter J. McIntyre. Rite 40 -.
— . al i*st week and Easter
,,,
wtw
World war veteran and former rest- lhe age of 75. On June 20. 1887 he I mother. Mrs. Sylvia Bivens.
dent of tills county, died recently was united in marriage to Annie
Albert Conklin and family called
at his home in Detroit The funeral Cutler To this union were born ’ at Pennock hospital Sunday to see
waa held in LaPorte. Saginaw coun- , three children. Carrol) w. who liMes ‘ si in* Gates, wjio awalta an operaty. Thursday afternoon of last week at home. Julia M of Hastings and | uofk jla u Mrs. Conklin's father.
। He was lhe son of the late Howard । Bessie E of Plymouth. He also learn
, .
,
McIntyre, and grandson of
U A one brother, three sisters, and six A motorist complains that
he
McIntyre. He is survived by his wi- grandchildren
Funeral Thursday ! couldn't find a policeman when he
dow. a daughter, one son. five sis- afternoon at the house, burial in specially wanted one recAtly. He
.ters.
— a .brother
—...------fUV(.lives
ril|de in
cemetery,
Mshould have left hi* car unattended
who
Battle the Rev. c.
Conklin officiating
for a couple of seconds.
Creek, and by his grandfather

ersfield was to see the large fields of
growing cotton, a product that one
almost naturally associates wholly
, with our Southern states. I haven't
i any late statistics but in 1933 cotton
i ranked fifth in the value of Kern
1 county products. Oil was first of
, course with a value of over 24 mll(Oontlnued from page 1. Bee. 1)
llons of dollars; grapes, alfalfa and
1 other ranch products stood second
was pointed out to us that a ten-' with nearly 7 millions of dollars;
derfoot prospector discovered only I 'nine* and minerals in third place
nr fn„r »rer. Ban W.
nnn
OV*r &lt; 1-2 mllHORS, Of WhiCi)
o--------- eItow.’KjX d'^Lon told and silver formed but a small

CHimiN
THE DESERT O

„

Save

“m ‘1

rara

UCTION SALE
aouth of the Catholic Cemetery in Haatingi. on Sec. 23, Rutland Township, on

TUESDAY, APRIL 21,1936
COMMENCING AT 12:30 SHARP, AND OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:

HORSES.

SHEEP.

ooistored Belgian Stallion, "Ruben,”
No. 18442. 2 years old, wt. 187S Ibl.
sired by "Rubui," the noted Michi­
gan State College registered stallion.
Roan gelding, 9 years old, wt. 1600.
Croy gelding. II years aid. wt. 1550.

Hack more, 12 yoera old, wt. 1400.

FARM MACHINERY.
John Deere mower. 6-ft. cut,

nearly

2 Gale walking double cultivators.

COWS.

Holstein cow,
Holstein cow,
Holstein cow,
Holsteirf cow,
Holstein cow,

• Save time, steps and money by

5 yrs,
3 yrs.
5 yrs.
3 yrs.
4 yrs.

old,
old.
old,
old.
old,

frosh.
fresh.
fresh 3 mos.
fresh 2 mos.
frosh 2 moe.

OHvor riding plow. No. 26
2 No. 99 Oliver ■

urebred, 8 yrs. old, frosh.

shopping the BANNER WAY! Each
week the Banner helps you to save time
by bringing you the advs of the local

merchants and shows you how to save

dairy

Holstein bull calf, 4 mac. old.
Holstein yearling heifer. I
Purebred Holstein bull. 1

dollars, by TAKING ADVANTAGE
OF THE SPECIALS THEY OFFER!

THE

HASTINGS BANNER

TERMS:—CASH.

NO PROPERTY REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

CHESTER and CHARLES PECK
PROPRIETORS
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

�=

Social Events and Personal Mention
Rapid*.
Mt** Gertrude Bentley of Kala­
mazoo visited HasUngs friend* on

Btmday
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Haywood and
Mr and Mr* Claranrw Crawford Mr*. Dan Cortis spent Tuesday in
and Billy returned Monday from

Those from out of town were
.and Mrs
RuaMll Barnum,

6

Uy al lAtavtew.
Mrs. Jam*. Bristol was in Grand
Rapid* on Thursday.

Kalamaaoo Wednesday

BANNER CLASS.

the

night

gueste ot trtenda.
K*l*maaoo were Sunday guests of
Ml** Ruth Robson visited st her
Mia* Jocelyn ironside vtatted MIm her mother. Mr* Mary Burgess
home In Jackson from Thursday till lhe city on Monday
Betty Swift of Middleville on Sun­
H. H. Pelroe visited hla aon,
Wm. Haywood and
Monday.
day and Monday.
Joseph Pelroe. in Chicago Heights
strom over Bunday were Mr. and 1 day.
Mr*. Wm
Fighter of Grand Saturday afternoon and Sunday.
Don Curtl* spent
MYa. M- B. Navins has returned Ledge visited HasUngs relatives lhe
Ited hl* grandfather, o. L- Crook. Mrs Hartley Finstrom ot East Languasu
guest* or
of tncir
their uaugniar.
daughter. ois«r
Stoter ton and family in Kalamaaoo.
alng and Roy Finstrom of Battle from Or*nd Rapid* where she ha* nr si ui vn* wets.
Thursday.
Mr* Ted Steven* and daughter of Mary Aquin. of Kalamazoo on SunMr*. Agne* Fisher spent Easter Creek.
bean staying at tha home of th* late
with her father. B. 8. Holly, of
two children of Woodland were
Mr. and Mr*. Dewey Stanton and ' William William*. Mrs William* Datroll visited Dr. and MR. F. K day
Hubert and Richard Fairchild of Monday evening guest* of Maadamea
VVoocl L.xuilL .
daughter of Fort Huron called on will ba remembered a* MU* Flora Willison over Easter
Mr. and Mn C a Seibert of Detroit spent Sunday with their M Sisson and Ida PolmaUer
Attorney Thomas
Johnson of Mr. and Mrs. B. F- Cowles on Bat- Riker, daughter of the late M. W.
urday enroute U&gt; Delton to visit his Riker.
Mr. and Mr* Andrew Ward and
। child.
parents.
; Mr. and Mr*. C. D Bauer and Mr. and Mrs. Harley Fox.
Mr._____
and___
Mrs.
Clifford*
Dolan re­ ,
Mr. and Mrs. Loy Royer and baby ' __
__________
—
MIm Elizabeth DeYoe of MuskeTexas te the guest of MIm Bar- Mr. and Mr*. Andrew Brandt of of Battle Creek are visiting Has- turned Thursday from their trip to' Mrs. Eugene Freeman.
the Pacific coast, and intervening
bars Johnson during their vacation. I Lansing. Mr. and Mrs. A- D Steckte ling* relatives this week.
Mr. and Mrs a. K Frandscn were , points,
Mr. and Mrs John Sleigh of Aland Mrs Einar . Mr and Mr* Lyle Bennett and
Lonzing, Mr* Brandt being their guests of Mr
Frandsen of Ionia on Easter
[
visited her parents. Mr. and
D- Z Boyes on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Nichols* Kuempel daughter
Mr and Mrs. Hubert Blakney of Mr*. Taylor, of Rockford, over the
ot Freeport, formerly of HasUngs
Mlaa Barbara Van Dyke of De­
are moving back to the city this tained on Easter. MIm Oatheryn Detroit were guests of Sheriff and week tnd
troit U spending her Easter vacaMrs
jay
Blakney
over
the
week
Mrs
Wm Bwegle* returned on Uon with her grandparent*. Mr. and
were in Grand Rapids on Friday.
week into their former home on 8. Carrick. Corny Kosts, Mr and Mrs
I Sunday from a visit of three weeks
Mr* Cole Newton and Miss Helen Michigan Ave.
E. B- Dennis (Mra Garrick* par­ end
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Johnson and with her daughter* at Lansing and
ents), Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Seekin*
Mr and Mr* Donald Kelley and
and Mrs olesaner Dage of Holland. Mined hto parents, Mr. and Mrs. of Grand Rapids and Mr. and Mrs. Harold of Middleville were Sunday Dimondale.
san John of Detroit were Easter
guests of Mr and Mr*. Guy Old- j Mr. and Mrs. Harry Young en­ guests of hto parent*. Mr. and Mr*.
John Walton, of Kalamazoo and Henry Parson* of Battle Creek.
tertalned Mr
and Mrs
Forest Stuart Kelley
Freeport are moving into their for­ Mk. and Mrs. Jesse Crandall of I Visitor* at Mr. and Mrs. Wm. dings.
Mrs. Sarah Brandsteller. Mr* ' akrnes and baby of Joliet, Ill., over
mer home on East Mill street. Hai­ South Bend over the week end
Zuachnitt'e Easter Sunday were Mr
Mr* Sarah Powell returned on
ling*.
Mr. and Mr*, prank Kline. George and Mn LyJe Williams of Grand Burr Van Houten and Ml** Maxine lhe week end.
Sunday from a visit with Chicago
Mr and Mr*. Herman Aroid. Joan Huffman, and Humphrey Rohn* of Rapids. Mr and Mr*, c. D Jones Wunderlich spent Monday in Kala- I Mr. and Mrs. Max Leonard and relative*. Her daughter. Mlaa DruMrs Jessie Leonard of Battle Creek 1 zllla Powell, remained for a longer
and Sally returned on Saturday Detroit and Mlaa Helen Chidester of I end femlly of Kalamazoo and Miss tnazoo
Dr and Mrs. C P Lathrop were were Easter guests of Mr. and Mrs.' visit.
!rotn a two weeks’ trip to various Grand Rapid* were Easter Sunday Verda Zuachnitt visited at home
place* Ln Florida.
guests of Mr and Mrs. O F Chid- from Saturday till Monday return- visitors at the home of Mr. and . Roy Chandler
Mis* Stella Heath of Nile*. Mr
Mr and Mr*. Edwin Pate and .i and Mr*. Raymond Gilbert at MuaMr. and Mrs John Sparks. Jr., of ester.
ing to Vaaror Monday where ahe 1* Mrs. Ltoyd Shafer of Peru. Ill., over
Boyal Oak and Robert Angell of
Easter
Mary EUaabeUi ot Detroit visited1. kegon and Roy Heath of Albion vteMr and Mrs Arthur Haven and teaching.
Miss inn Adams of Northville | Mr and Mrs E C- Edmonds over I ited Mr and Mr* 0*0. B Heath
Lansing visited Mr and Mr*. C. F daughters. Beth and Eleanor, and | Mr*. Nettie Hyde and Paul Hyde
Angell over the week end.
Mr and Mr*. Edgar Hoevenalr vto- were in Prairieville on Tuesday to visited her aunt. Mrs Sarah Brand- • the week end.
Miss Helen Wade and Miss Eliza­ ited Mrs Haven'* parents. Mr. and see the former * granddaughter. •tetter, and other relatives over the ' w T. Wallace, who has been
Easter guests of Mr and Mrs.
'spending several weeks in and1 Charia* Gardner and family were
beth Finch spent their vacation Mrs Jay French, of Onondgga on Beverly Kratz, of Covington, Ky. week end
Clare Beach returned to hl* work around Hastings, relumed Monday Mr. and Mr*. Neii Fish of Bangor.
with the tetter's parents. Mr. and Bunday
| who to staying at the home of Mr
in
Detroit
last
week
after
spending
'
to
hi*
other
home
al
JonesviUe.
Mrs Will Finch, ot Kokomo. Ind.
Mrs- MaUida
McLaughlin
of and Mrs. Rankin Hyde since the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner of
Mr.
— and
—J "
Mr*.
— Kdw. ----Bertling
'
and
Mr and Mrs. D. D Smith and Muskegon and Dr. Winifred Me- recent death of her father Her some time here with hl* mother. j ■
Nile* Mr. and Mr* H- E Whitam
_ __ __Ellyn.
_______
daughter Suzanne
and--------Mr and Lravy of Grand Rapid* were Sun- brother. Wendell Kratz, to with hto, Mrs Mary Beach
' Betty Jane of Glen
Hl.,____
vta- of Charlotte and Mr* Rose Trego.
------- --------Mrs. Wm Bolt
-* --------- -------Mr and Mr*. Thos Johruton and ited J. E. Tyden and Ml** Tilhe Mis* Jeannette Gardner returned to
1ms of
Detroit
spent day gueste of Mr and Mrs. John । unde and aunt. Mr and Mrs A 8
Mr and Mrs Edw. Down* vtolled Tyden over the week end.
(with Hastings rela- , ggcLravy end other friend*.
Johnson, of Hint.
Niles with Mr
and Mrs Robert
’
I Mrs Betty Caine was home from • Robert Homer, student at the U । Mr and Mr* Jame* Timmerman of
•"
•- Stickney •1*-------—------a
Mis* —
Betty
spending
1 few day* in Reed City, where »he
Mr and Mr* Lawrence Baum and Chicago tar Eatter Mr* Caine to j of M . Ann Arbor, to spending hto Jackson on Sunday
Mr. and Mr*. T. B. Hart and
— .v.-----------. vacation
। Dr at
andlhe
Mr*
George
daughter, Kalheryn Jane, of rw.»nit
Detroit i __
now broadcasting -------for —NBC
over
Easter
home
ot hto' Lockwood
Frank Houfstalter of Allegan Co.
■pent Eiister Bunday with hl* par- WMAQ in dramatic sketches, and to - parents. Mr and Mr* Samuel Hor- were guests of t»er mother, Mrs J a sister She expect* to return on

enu. Mr. and Mrs. John Baum, and j in rehear**! for a major production
family.
I soon to be heard on the air.
______________
, he expects to
w
'
~
"

Ml d'Ji SPRING

WALL
• This Spring you
con enjoy fresh, new,
beautiful walls ot
small cost Our New
Stock of Wall Paper
offers a large selec­
tion of patterns and
colors Look over your
rooms, give us the
want redecorated and
we will help you se­
lect just the design
and color you want to
carry out the color
scheme.

PRICED FROM
j"
A SINGLE
9C ROLLUP

REED’S

Walgreen System
DRUG STORE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

FREE DRAWING!
SATURDAY. APRIL 18 AT 7:30 P. M.

GET YOUR TICKETS—1 Ticket with each 25c Cosh
Watch Neat Weak's Banner for Names of Winners.

FRIDAY, APRIL 17

SATURDAY. APRIL II

ner &lt;Grace Zagelmeler) at Hough­
ton in the copper country where
meet hto brother.
I-futenant John s Homer, of lhe
! U. 8 Navy, now stationed, at San

C Leininger, of Columbia City. Ind.. Saturday
Saturday and Bunday
MUm Lillian Tolhurst returned to mazoo. accompanied by hl* cousin,
her home In Marshall on Tuesday Bob Seibert, spent the week end
after vlalUng lier grandparents. Mr 1 wRh hi* parent*. "
Mr
and Mr*.
and Mrs George Tolhurst
। Harley Fox
Mrs Clarence Hyatt and chllMr* Ralph Thayer &lt;Eleanor Eddren returned on Friday to their tfer, &lt;nd little aon. Michael Rdgcr
home in JoUet. Ill, after vtaiUng Thayer, ot Deckerville are guests
Mr and Mrs J F Edmond*
; ofthe Misses Helen Meraon. Esther
Guest* of Mr and Mr* L E Bar- Doty and Lol* Carter
nett on Bunday were Mr and Mrs.
”
_;1. Nichol* ~
z'-y,
Hugh
of —
Kalamazoo
was
I. O Benton and daughter. Edith, in th* city on Tuesday and spoke

Berkshire
HOSIERY
for Men and

F &amp; G Whit* Nagtha Soap, 10 bar* 35c

f

lb. 25c
lb. 18c

O1HI YOU* MEATS FROM US.

Quality Fabric*
Priced Correctly

WINNER BRAND WORK!
CLOTHES are better-made
to wear—of quality material!

full cut and guaranteed
give saliafacUon.

U»

Work Shirt!60c, 650

ATTEND SHOWER

Mrs. Swan Anderson and daugh­
ter. Florence, Mrs. Mar Un Tinkler
and Mr* Lawrence Ryan attended a
shower at the home ot Mra Rich­
ard Mead of Battle Creek on Thurs­
day afternoon. Ignoring Mrs Theron
Mead (Grace Ryan) Sixteen were
present to enjoy th* games and so­
cial lime during th* afternoon Rerecipient

ot wmt

Ovorella$1.11

Band Overall*

siod

Coveralls---------__$2.0u
Mechanic's Coet._$2.O0

SI.

WORK TROUSERS
$1.50, $1.95, $2.2S{

Many other Item* such
jacket* and sweater*
stock to complete with

and son David and Barbara Van
Dyke drove to Michigan City to
spend Easter with Mr. and Mr*

Tire entertainment committee of
tlie HanUnas Country Club an­
nounce Thursday. April 30. as tha
date for their opening dinner of the
season
Th* monthly dinner* will
be on th* third Thursday evening of
each mouth Mr and Mr* A H.

iNi Hi* uuniudll** ft
ner.

Sm Ub For
ing. Mr and Mr* Welter Sinclair
and daughter Patricia of Heating*
help them celebrate their thirty­
fifth wedding anniversary with a
pot luck dinner Th* evening wm

l, .KU

Permanent

WOMEN S HOSIERY!
You'll be pleased with the Berkshire Hosiery in lhe new Spring
shades Full length sheer cblflqn and service weights See

Clover#
MEDIUM NATIVE CROWN

MAMMOTH NATIVE CROWN
ALSIKE CLOVER

WHITE BLOSSOM
TO MAKE 500 NEW CUSTOMERS!

FOR YOUR IASTIR HAIRDR IM We Rd—awunR
This Find. Od«MIne QUART

4 lbs. 49c

VACATION LAND COFFEE

the home of Mr*. Pauline McOmber.
complimentary to Mrs. Ralph Thay­
er (Eleanor Edger) of Deckerville
Mrs Ted Carbon (France* Hunter*
of Rockford was another out of
town guest Both Mrs. Thayer and
Mr* Carlson were former teacher*
In our city schools

Andrew Houf»UU*» of Rutland wa»
their Bunday guest also.
Mead was the
lovely gift*

Women

lb. 34c
6 roll* 25c

COFFEE—Grand

Tailored Better

ENTERTAIN AT TEA.
On
Tuesday
afternoon
after
school. Mlsaaa Esther Doty. Lois
Carter and Helen M*r*on enter-

Seed Time in here

o'clock that *ame night
David lord a* rapidly as he would choose
1 French I* remaining in Middleville | a* much of hl* work now to ground

FLOUR, Goldan Sh.of, 24} lb. tack 69c

OLEMARGARINE

FOUR STAR SERVICE

FEED YOUR HOGS CULL BEANS

battla 19c

BUTTER—Middleville

and

evening was spent with bridge and
music, and Mr* Doyle served a deheiou* lunah.
.

NOTICE, FARMERS! I

6 Boxes 24c

GAUZE TISSUE

Barnum of Jackson and Mr

PARKER HOUSE

CALUMET Baking Powdar lb. can 19Jc
MATCHES—OHIO

Barnum. Mr. and Mrs. Den Wall­
dorf! and Albert Dykstra of Has­
tings, Mr. and Mr* Harry Barnum
and family axjd Mr* NeUie Kohler

T. S. IIAIHIE

LUCKY STRIKES. CAMELS. OLD GOLDS. CHESTERFIELDS

CERTO

ENTERTAINS GUESTS.
On Saturday evening Mr. and
Mr* Terrence Doyle entertained the
following guest* at their home: Mr
and Mrs. John Doyle and Valente

30 day furlough to visit hto parents,
j bringing hto wife with him. Lieut
at the High school gymnasium Fri­
Visit our Work Clothes E
Homer has been away from home
erance, who relumed from lhe south day night. April M. at 1 30 The
j ] somd four yean. They ate planning
pertinent and sec these W1
general theme thia year will be The
on Saturday.
to visit hi* grandparents. Mr and
Mr* Arthur Laubaugh returned Circus." The Junior class invite*
ner tBrand Work Clothes.' i
‘ Mrs J D. Zagelmeler, of this city
Monday night from Grand Rapids lhe Seniors. Faculty and the Board
wakehamasoftheir
Bat- guests
before The
the board of supervisor* on
on their trip back to San Diego Cal
where ahe has been for lheand
pastMrs
five Jennie
of Education
the Old Age Assistance plan He is week* asalsting in the care of her
Judge and Mr* Donald Van Zlle tie Creek
parents of the member* of the two
Mn Elizabeth Relckord of Lan- ' district director of this work
11 and son Philip of Detroit were
ASK FOR CASH
brother-in-law. who la in a critical classes are also invited to come and
eins and Mr and Mr* Wm SeverMr and Mr* Clarence Tester and condition following an operation
observe lhe party from lhe balcony
PRIZE TICKETS
year. Mrs. Van Zile and Philip re­ ance and family of Battle Creek wn and John Teater. tn company ' from which llltte hope to enterLeading the Grand March will b*
wers guest* of Mr* Mary Severance wllh
McDermott of Del­ tatned for recovery Mr*. Laubaugh
' malnlng foe the week
Donald Doxey. chairman of lhe J—
spent Bunday with Mr and will return there later.
Mr* Otto Schulse and daughter. on Sunday
Hop committee, and hto guest, sec­
Mrs R T Stone came from Lan- Mr» B A LytUe of Battle Creek
। Mr*. Richard Green, of Nashville
ond. Clinton Scobey, president of
...............
Mfr eharley
spcn, Thurs
I were dinner guest* on Thursday of slnK Sunday for an ..............
indefinite
slay ,: Mr*
Charley Wood
Wood spent
Thur»-.
ANCHOR CLASS.
the Junior class, and his guest and
i the former's daughter and husband. 1 w,th her daughter and husband Mr 1 d*y and Friday with hsr aunt. Mr*
The Anchor Ciao* of the Metho­ third Donald Weaver president of
__a Alonso
..------ --Trim
------iand Mr, George Green, at the carrte A Kennedy, of Grand Rap- dist Bunday school met Friday night
1 Mr and Mr*
I*hone 2396
Hasting*
the Senior class and his guest As
I ids Mrs Wood * aizter Mr* Mary
I Sunday guests of Mr and, Mrs Parker House
this to one of th* (deasanteat social
Mr and Mr*. Clayton R Carter | Kiley, of Detroit was also Mr* KcB- business'wwe Ung was held, presided
h * happy
, Io Viele and family of Vermontville and family of Roger City and Mr nedy s guest
over by Betty Bi»l« Ths following lima la anticipated
and Mr* Clare 8 Carter of Sag! | Mr anq Mr* a H Carveth were. officer* were elected
President,
i tie Creek called also enroute to nsw
naw were Easter
Ea*ter guests
guest* of Mr and i aunday &lt;ne.
&lt;ue. la
is of Mr and Mra.
Mrs Rob- Marti*
ENTERTAINED ON EAETERI
Marcia Ironaidv;
vice-president,
Mr* Warren carter
| ert Burrell o: Detroit Mr and Mrs. ' Isabel
Sage,
secretary-treasurer,
Grand Rapid*.
Mr and Mr* Arthur Covey of'
Mrs. C C
Shield* and Harold , m A Lambicaccompanied them as I Barbara Will
assistant.
Cornelia Dowling entertained their children '
Mr* k. u Huooara wa» ui Ann
Arbor over th* week end with Mi** Shield, ot E**t Chicago were Easter I far as Ypsilanti where they visited | Beverwyk Following tha meeting
I Wilma Royer took charge of lhe were Mr and Mr* Cecil While and
Charlotte Hubbard who underwent gueste ot Mr and Mrs C. H Hln- I Mr and Mr* R B Rouse
| Mr and Mrs ' Rupert Carrothcr* game* and refreshments were served three children of Grand Rapid* Mr
an operation on Saturday She I* man and family
Mr and Mrs Charles Van Wor- *nd daughter Audrey, of Grand by lhe hostess
doing as well as possible Mr* Hub­
and Mr* Lynden Norria and little
den and daughter of Chicago vi*- Rapid* and Mr and Mrs Carroll 1
—
bard returned on Monday
daughter. Eileen of Heating*, Mr |
Dining Room Service i
EANTER BREAKFAST.
Mrs Anna
Christiansen
and ited Mr and Mrs Herman Zerbel ’ McGuffin and daughter ol Lansing I
and Mrs Lyle Norris ot Milo. Mr
| wcre Sunday guests of Mrs Isabel
daughter Beatrice
were
Easter over the week end
and Mr* Nelson Norria and Mr and
lhe
Methodist
church
on
Easter
“
r
Mr*
Deward
Gllnter
and
Cwrolhe
„
and
Mn
Anna
Mcguest* ot Mr
and Mr*
Harold
SPECIAL
Mr* Paul Birman and little aon
Bunday, th* member* of lhe choir
Christiansen of Rutland township two children of Detroit. Mr and ' Guffin
Mrs Floyd Van Auker of Belding j Harry Ritchie, who has been In and thrtr families and friends, onSUNDAY DINNERS
tteo a dinner gueat a delicious pot;
I turned on Thursday from liolly- Mr and Mrs Burr Clark and two poor health for wme lime, was tak- Joyed a breakfast in the south par- luck dinner w*» served Later In the '
Detroit on Sunday, where he lar. covers being laid for forty-two. afternoon they all went to call on (
I wood. Fla where they spent the chlLdren of Holland. Mr and Mr*. en
HOME COOKID Fl
hoopital for ex- An attractive canterpiece appro- Mr and Mr* Geo Norri* of Cedar
winter They Juat escaped the ter- Charie* Gladstone and two children enUretl lhe
Mr and Mr* amination
—-—-—
---•
------ribie storm* in Georgia, though they of Grand Rapid*
and
treatment
Mr*
Creek A verv anlnvahto lliru. «■&gt;
1 felt the eflect* of lhe windstorm ' Bernard McConnell and son of Bat­ Ritchie is slaying (here this week
reported
ing
1 They spent Easter in Grand Rapid* tle creek and Mr and Mrs May- with him
choir
with Mr and Mr* Mallory Cassidy nel Gilmer of Rutland were Bunday
Mr and Mrs Thomas Conklin, paper Mrs Robert Birch
guests of Mr and Mrs James Gil- daughter Marguerite and aon Leon director, and Mr* James Bristol,
who. in company with her *&lt;in.
and Mr* ooak of Lansing Mr and organist, wore presented with lovely
David French, were called to Mid­
Mrs Wayne Gon kiln of Allegan,
auurt.,. hu broUar .nd and
„ Paul v
__„ of
_ „
dleville by the death of Sidney
Conklin
St Joseph vie­ predation of their faithfulness and
• Ift. Ur -nd Mr. Ralph A RAM, M „ lh|
ot
and u„ kindnoA* The choir we* given some
holds the c 0*
M ConUln oui.ua/
sun4i*y.
guest Saturday night and Bunday of
—Omaha
-------T. . Neb .7Mr Reed
......
rosponslbte portion of dUUlet au-1 Mr and Mr* Kellar Stem re- Oanguiliet a*
n Easter rememfor National
Air turned Monday from • visit with
ing to th* oeriou* condition of her pertntendent
■ ha
.-j
__ —■
&gt;
u. . .. ..
j husband. Mr* French left Monday ‘WanMW. "*1 * T " In &lt;
। for Chicago. for th* return trip
O.W u»w
w-r- -— - ---------------- servUe during the war. and ha* ,t champaign. 1U.. by Dick Stem,
which aeroplane travel guts time 10.000 hour* of flying to hu credit wh0 hpent his vacation in 8t Louto.
to realized when on* learn* that j At one Ume atanding second in till* ■ mourning a* far as Champaign with evening. April 10. when their chllhl* grandparent*

4 Packages 49c

CIGARETTES

Mr*. Roy Chandler entertained
the Banner class of the MeUiodtet
Sunday school on Tuesday evening,
nearly thirty attending and enjoy­
ing the cooperative supper. Follow­
ing Um bualnaa* meeting game*
were played. Mrs. J. M Townsend
win entertain Ln May

leltfarala (r* alien.

YELLOW BLOSSOM

Altaifan
IDAHO GRIMM

IDAHO CROWN

Timothy
MED TOP

Kentucky Blua, unhullad and fancy

♦!«, 89c *•* 79c

£.7

HINMAN’S
JUSTPHONL
HASTINGS

WE DELIVER

We carry a complete line of teed*

MEN'S HOSE I
wear and good looks Many color* and stylo* to chose* from.
UjjtejMjMB.W. « BHOBTB
g(-

CHIB’S SHOE STORE
STATE ST

"NEXT TO CITY BANK ’

PHONE IJM

Fin—♦ C—tild Sfcamo— dM Finger
—-J0«
MdOicatW Oil lb—«ip—. regular $1 value, ier 65c

[Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE
n&gt; wm itati n.
rnoxB uu

Dvatai I* Wool, Orsls,

Hasting* Telephone 2257
l.&lt;&lt; I1X* MKMLAK BAM MABU4BM OAMl-MB
UAATIKdt
H1&lt;1U&lt;1AN

rose, now, (Bit, u»,

O.m.ol ood Oosl

�THX RABTTNGg BANNER. TWVR1DAT. APRIL !&lt;■ 1*M
'

INSURANCE
LIFE . AUTO . FIRE
WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON X. MeELWAlN

tMtasoN noYia

WANTS

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
Work Guarautaad and
Ptieaa Baaaonahle
Phone S510
Hastings

MT A WORD. HO ADVER-

|

Our Service

css:

j

lay.
FUK HALE—Pair of
with foal. Waith 35
Ins plow. Ralph K»
1 ■■( Middlavllk
,

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call

OCSE8 AND LOTS to
Kiln, and .houses to
»irl Dell store.

Kelly Island MEAL

Call al
FOR KALE--Hoorrr

Freeport Phone

WE WANT TO SELECT

REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
gpectaeies Fitted and Guaranteed.
Credit—Terms.
Let George Do It and you can see.
WaUh, Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

Reliable men. now employed,
with FORESIGHT, fair edu­
cation and meciumical incli­
nations, who are willing to
train spare time or evenings
at home to qualify as IN­
STALLATION and SERVICE
experts In Electric Refrigera­
tion and Air Conditioning.
New. profitable field. For in­
terview write, giving age and
present occupation.
UTILITIES ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE
4*4 N. WeUs St, Chicago. Ill
4 1*

Irvins.

Vai

-II!
FOR

Fofc »ALr

TO RENT

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY
MaUonal Bank Bldi —Fbona Si 19

BRICK

■SaOMWMMMMWMR

At Old Hailing* Wool

SALE OF HORSES

Boot Plant Site.

AT IONIA
SATURDAY. APRIL 11
Larioal A«.orim»nt thli Seaaon.

quire of |oe DeRuiter

fob bale

In­

at Pickle Station.

HATCHING EGOR

&gt;

AM BUYING WOOL
AGAIN THIS SEASON
HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

OR BAI
S20 E

OFFICE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

WILL TOBIAS
Bastings. Route 4
Phor

Pon ha

CUSTOM HATCHING
your lulchliq f

BURDETTE SUTTON

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY

•r»«™
■
'

troth of Detroit spent Monday here,
enroute to Iowa City. Iowa, where
the latter will spend some time
with her daughter. Mrs. Clinton F.
Smith, and husband. The following
relatives met at ths Clarence Shaw
home for a surprise pot luck din­
ner and visit with Mrs. Ostroth:
DAVENPORT
Mr and Mrs Ray Oatroth. Mr. and
Mrs Samuel Ostroth. Mr and Mrs.
I.BRT—!■
Leslie Adams. Mrs. Sarah Ostroth.
Mr and Mrs. Sterling Ostroth. Mrs.
Ada Balch. Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Bux­
ton and daughter Beatrice. Mrs.Tens Buxton. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Cheeseman and daughter Marjorie
of Maple Grove. Mrs. Harold Stan­
ton and son klbcrt, Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Buxton of Banfield, Mrs. Elsie
Tucker of Barryvllle. Mrs Clyde
Wilcox of Hastings, Dr. S. M. Pow•" . ler of Battle Creek. Mrs. Ida Wolfe
n | and Mrs Gall Lykins of Nashville
is. Hie afternoon was spent In visit­
ing. music end recitations
Charles Betts and son Bobby were
In Grand Rapids Friday.
Easter was observed with a union
sunrise service at the Baptist
church Appropriate services were
held In the various churches during
lhe day.
Mrs D, D Meyers of Hammond.
FOR SALE in Poland China hrood Ind., spent lhe week end with her
,&lt;-ar&lt; old
All rur*hr&gt;-d and •Hcibla । mother. Mrs Frank McDerby
I- r-el.'-r • IL&gt;r- H- ' --I r “'“aTa
Easter guests of Mr and Mrs
(Irnrc* Pareail
Clarence Shaw were Mrs O R
FO RSAl.F -QuaoKl.
ha
Bhaw. and Milo. Mrs Janies Wes.talk. tx&gt;t«I..M
Phana 234T
dar
Et.uine, rail al uni H Ha'i’M brook of Middleville, Mr und Mrs
4 Ifl Bert Arehart. Mr and Mrs. Chester
A re hart of Hastings. Mr and Mrs
Sam Smith. Robert and Marioi^ of
Nashville
Regular meetings of Laurel Chap-

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCH’S

। FOR RALE — Rt

CARDS ot THANKS

Wrecking for Parts
• 1929 CHEVROLET
• 1928 PONTIAC
• 1928 BUICK Standard
1928 OLDSMOBILE

HOGS .nd

r Finland 1-aha Drain,
lhe lllk dav of April. 1
.4 aid -10. lhe Hoorn

rkradall
‘’"l * r * 1Our Madl
Klm.r Miruf.t.
&lt;ln» Catk-ndall

FOR HA I F

I WANT TO HIRE A MAN

BMMAMUBL OHUBCH (Episcopal)
Err J. A. MrNnlty. B. b.. Rector.

FIND IT /
UMITED BRBTHRBW CHURCH

MONEY TO LOAN
Fidelity Corporation of Michigan
1018 Grand Rapid* National Bank Bldg.

Will loan money on automobile security.

Our representative, Frank Bird, will be In Hastings
g,’™** JS'ciwwim"
APT18T CHURCH.
ADCOCK Mi tar

PILGRIM HOLINESS TABBBNACLR

1 “"Is
mwtlnt Mr
" .MiaNgan

END USED UR
GUESS WORK

'
COATS GROVE CHURCH OT CHRIST
.
'

j
|

FIRST PBBRBTTERIAN CHURCH

A SQUARE
DEAL VALUE CAR

pita! until Monday
Mrs Clarence Mater and Patty
dele spent the week end with Mr
nd Mrs Omer Cross in Kalama-

P J Purch is spent Sunday there.

Millington spent Monday
Clarence Mater home.

at

The tremendous national popularity of the Ford
V-8 has made possible • new kind of value to used
car buyers. Right now, we are trading in cars of
all makes and models that have had very little wear.

the

IAKE DePBILSTEB
afternoon with Mrs Mildred Mater

Dead Stock Removed!

Each one is carefully gone over by expert me­
chanics. Parts and |&gt;erformance must pass rigid
tests. Needed conditioning work is done. And
the result is listed on a
Ctrtifwtto!

The duties of the chancellor of

I
R.H -&lt;
। PffiT llfl-IU- and .!

la ted.
chequer of England hoi da a position
United State*.

BANNER WANT AD VS. FAY

£ sjr

I fa

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

We pledge our reputation in writing, that our
Square Deal Value Cars are exactly
as represented.

There is a differ-

Two automobiles were left behind
of the treasury who rorresponds to In the antarctic by Byrd, as It was
ths director of the finance depart­ felt that a growing community like
Little America needed a traffic probment of England,
OBDBB FOR PUBUCATION

HASTINGS MARKETS

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
GRANGE PROGRAMS

Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,

Claaaaat Industrial City
Tammerfors. Finland's third city

Industrial dtp In tbs world

Elmer Beach of Lansing, who is
employed on the new school build­
ing. was Injured last Wednesday.

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

Farmer®, Attention!

HASTDfOB PARISH
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH

Mrs Maude Wotrlng spent

MICHIGAN

PRICE Tor VEAL. LuAMB-3

The southeast division of the
Methodist Ladies' Aid served a one
o'clock luncheon at the Community
house. The same division furnished
the program
Mr and Mrs Orville Flook re­
turned Thursday from Salem where
they visited Mr and Mrs Waiter
Kahler. Mr Kahler suffered another stroke recently.
Mrs Zalda Wolfe and two sons
of Farmington spent the week end
with the former's father. E V

Church**acbool

r$r v.

night at the Temple
Dr Stewart Ixifdahl left Sunday
night for St. Louis where he will
take a two weeks' postgraduate
course at the Washington Univer­
sity. offered by lhe W K. Kellogg
Foundation
-Mrs Charles Betts and daughter
Doris were In Grand Rapids Satur-

WANTED

H. Feldpausch ■ 3921

lAinxoi

f li.ll Mr III YEAH
Mr. Surrey and Mr#. Zemle Manker of Grand Rapids spent Easter
Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. George
Poland.
Wright Clifford
and
family.
Floyd Foster and family of Lowell ( (U
|B Bd
1 spent Easter Bunday with Mr. and IK B4KaT county. BIX MONTHS. 60s.
.Mrs. Harry Mendenhall of Cale-

। the Bbi
CWert
I funeral home, conducted by Rev.
afternoon.
IN ADVANCE .
* is' Elmer Prichard of lhe Evangelical
Mr. and Mrs Ralph Flnkbelncr
Aiad ! church. Mrs. Gail Lykins sang. Buof Middleville were week end guesto
Aladdin riai yyas in the Wilcox cemetery.
ADVEBTIgJMQ RATK8:
of
their
parents,
Mr.
and
Mn.
Jul
­
in charge of the Odd Fellows.
FIRST UMITED BRETHREN CHURCH.
ian Potts.
Miss Helen Fumls* of Hostings bmisssm. 81* b. Orsns at rhon* 3*60.
Walter Wallace of Hastings was i u#g’ot|MM leota M(( r^4(n,
spent the week end at her home
9:55 a. M.. Bunday Mhooi. ivoo a. a dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. .
if « i„i wn m :&gt;
here.
V“,,"r“nP.:. •“WS- j Jolln Kollar Thursday.
5:30.
Mrs. E. A. Hanneman spent East­ "Tlie Pa—er Thai !• n G&lt;nl
er Bunday with her mother and
If old Omar were writing his poe-.
other relatives in Grand Rapids.
I
try for today he could just say. "A
MIm Phyllis Brumm of Grand
can of soup, an eisetrte toaster, and
Rapids spent Sunday with her par­
Blbla
thou.
”
ents. Mr and Mrs. Coy Brumm.
Mrs Enieu Van Nocker of Lan­
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
sing returned to her home Sunday
DRAIN
—HOTIOE
CHURCH.
after spending a few days with her
COMMIBSIONE
BOARD OF DE
sister. Mrs. Archie Calkins.
Rev and Mrs D C. Ostroth and
JOB PBINTIMO.
two children and Mrs. Albert Os­

FOOD CENTER 2609

The Prescription Drop Store

Ungs were Sunday guests of Earl
Robinson and mother. Mrs. Robln-

The Hastings Banner

---------------aru-moon ai two uciocs, ai me xiess

MARKET - Phone 2616

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

CHURCH.

areaiiu.
’
.7» o!
! a
prayar' ■
noon aarrka.

FOR HALF.

MiddUriih

JERRY ANDRUS

8 Months Time
JOHNSON 6 JARVIS

ble Grand of the Odd Fellow lodge.
He moved to town about fifteen
years ago. Let to mourn are his
widow. Grace; one son. Chester, at
■ ertlob 33. home; two sisters. Mrs. William
Hanes of Nashville. Mrs. Carl MeDan of Battle Creek: one brother,
Herbert Calkins of Hastings. Fu­
neral sers-lces were held- Sunday

Htnp -ith •hade

A. A. SCHOENSORN

GEO. M. NEWTON

Mr. and Mr*. John Kollar spent
Easter Bunday with Clyde Kollar
and family of Grand Rapid*.

'heap, or —hi trade.

FOR SALE BY

Hastings. Route 2

”

THE CHURCHES

about four o'clock and suffered sev­
eral heart attacks, passing away

experience or capital needed. Write
today. McNESS CO, DepL B, Free­
port, TlUnsds
4-16

LIME YOUR SOIL WITH
CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co

St his home about 11 o'clock on
Wednesday evening. He hod work-

l4t«T Hlaphaaa,

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY1

a PROTECT Yon Constantly
djvat Fairly
Pay Promptly

ROBINHL'E PARK.

NASHVILLE.

1

.

FOB BAl.K—iesi

MGTicr

Hm.fi

Come in, and select the
make and model you prefer.
Your old car, in average con­
dition will make the down­
payment on most of our
Square Deal Value Cars—the
balance can be arranged on easy
U.C.C. terms to suit
ence—at the rate of

1934 Ford De
luxe V-8 Tudor

1935 Ford V-8
Touring Sedan

1934 Ford V-8

1935 Ford V-8
Standard Tudor

EVERY SATURDAY
If you wish trucking service call Hastings
F—der Cairo* and Milch Cows at all time

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO.

Michigan Livestock Exchange

PHONE 2121

FORD DEALKRS

HASTINGS

HASTINGS BRANCH

EASY TERMS TO SUIT YOUR IN CO
MH4rtd aisltt. Rasialer

�[ THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1936~

TUBERCULOSIS SKIN

TESTS VALUABLE

everly hills, calif.

B

If Child Ig a Positive Reactor
Safeguards May Be
Used
An intelligent

mother,

an

that our boy was tuberculous," ahe

That one reacts positively to the
tuberculin skin test, doe* not neceiEntire community starts jubila­ *arily mean that he is tuberculous.
tion—flags flying, bands playing, Germs of tuberculosis are very com­
burgomaster puts mon and almost all of us come In
contact with them; repeated taking
special train nisb- them Into the body create* some in­
fection but also arouse* the body to
rated by Hery Hit-

die demigods, typi­
fying spirit of old
German stocka-all

Suddenly hideous
discovery to made
that stranger's
la not Teutonic, tho

background

brallon eaited off. flags furlod. bends
aoeek home, special train canceled,
burgomaster has apoplexy.
And next day the local paper
der the headline, -Jew Attacks Dofenaeless Uon."

W

' Criminal Lawyers.
E’RE a funny people. Did we
reed where In some far-off

no harm, the cltlld none the worse
If. however, your boy to that tenth
case who shows definite lesions, jt
to indeed fortunate that you have

Inal lawyers truthfully bjast that,
of ail the Individuate charged with
**11 borate murder whom they have

berculoato to very stow developing in
childhood and does not cause trou-

and

90

funny ir* bard to decide wbeth-

L

Purdue Research

foundation,

and

What to the superlative for silly?
Anyway that’s how I looked.
housing being oooduetod there.
And I thought I was bright!
Well, murder will out.
And it's too late to change It.

nor Roosevelt as being an amiable-

gesttons last week and thought It

LULU BELLE AND
SKYLAND

We sometime*

A rumor came of quintuplets in
Nicaragua. But the embarrassed
father demanded a recount, and it
Chas. McIntyre, Jr., will

HAVE DIRECTED WORK
Judges From M. B. 0. to In
■poot Exhibit*—To Ohooto
County Style Delegate

During the afternoon-program the a district school teacher. but some
Style Revue will be held, at which one had heard him sing, and
each girl enrolled In the club work recommended him to WUl- He came
west—caught on like wild-fire, and
she has made. A County style dele­ besides catching hold of the radio
gate to State club Week will be se­ public, caught Lulu Belle for a wife.
lected. This will be followed by a
I. O. O. F- lodge No. 88 is bringabort address by Rev. W Maylan ing this program to
Jones of the HasUngs Methodist
church. Rev Jones, has ^specially
prepared thte address for the boys'
FINE FOR CHARLOTTE.

Refinancing MU
arm Credtt Adtot

slateftwnto

ot

central office of the Farm

The Banner to indebted to Rufu*
Weaver of Rutland for the follow­
ing stattotic* taken from an old that the local National
scrap book which recently came into
hto poMCMinn:
gages available al tow interest rates.
Uiat lhe river Thame* was covered The Association guarantees toons 14
with ice 61 Inches thick. Almost *11
the bird* perished.
In 1683 the cold was co excessive Credit Administration was organ!*
that the famished wolves entered
Vienna and attacked beast* and
farmers obtained
In 1708 occurred that famous win-

refinancing old debts.

miies from Ute shore. The ground
ond mortgage security
fields, and me.i perished by thou­
sands in their houses. The Adriatic
terransan above Genoa; and lhe
citrus and orange groves suffered
extremely tn the finest parts of
Italy.
In mg the winter was so Intense
that people travelled across the
Strait* from Copenhagen to tlie

THE JUDGE DECIDES
AGAINST DR. BERNARD
Holds His Agreement Pre­
vents Hii Practice in His
Former Territory

In 1738 in Scotland multitudes of
cattle and sheep were burled In the
in 1140 the winter waa scarcely
I inferior to that of 1108. Tlie snow
tay 10 feet deep In Spain and Por- purchased Dr. Bernard* practice.
| tugal. The Zuyder Zee was frown They signed a contract and an

i

across it; and the take* tn England
fromjn 1744 lhe winter was very cold;
Hl0W fell to Ute depth of 33 feel
on a level.
towns of Delton, ctoverdate. Oedar
Creek. Prairieville. HlcEbry Cor­
in 1TM the Elbe-was frown to lhe ners and Richland for a period of
bottom
. five mr*. Ttte punctuation to the
'-------------- •
.stssunilt tzi IntanwM*
feet thick below Vienna.
The winters of 1714 and 1715 were could practice in the territory ear­
uncommonly sever*. The Little Belt

From 1608 to 1113 the winters tempt to practice within the vilw Kais
were remarkably cold, particularly

the Utter in Russia, which proved
Federated Garden Clubs bf
company with Dr. John Llttig. who
Mr Lundin and Miss Corbett will ter city of Charlotte to tearing
Michigan laoue Tear
report on the judging of the down its old high school building,
country. Il disappeared before the ship at Ann Artxjr. will open
which will be replaced with a fine
It is estimated that crime in
Book
equalising influence ot improved office in Katemasoo. the first
will be selected both in Handicraft new one that will be up-to-date
that
Julyand Clothing clubs. Delegates to

portunlll** in advancing Ln hl* pro­
fession. and we team la regarded by

there had been a

ly *2X3.00)
The WPA furnishes
*100.000 and lhe taxpayers of CharThe New York Block RM&gt;
toile tlie other 1123.000 A large gym- tost 1388000 last year. It to bell
nasium and auditorium

««n is ■ very attractive publication
filled with things of Interest to gar­
den lovers and beautifully illurtratafternoon

outstanding ability, with a brilliant

Goodyear.

Mrs. Marian B.

The HASTINGS

828

Riley Storiei

any time,

hlac

time

CITY BANK

especially;

MAKES

Farmer I

Mrs. j. p. Mohler**. lily pool; Mn.

■ute crown friend bDeband with ea

Maki

lhe following record of some ‘old
time'* winters, which make the last

prospective owners unbiased by per­ county 4-H Winter clubs will
sonal or commercial interest*, and held at the Methodist Episcopal
church in Hastings on Thursday.
technical problem* as well as Sta­
ple one* Uiat housing presents.
ment by County Agricultural Agent
Mrs. Doyte is the wktow Of Rtoh- Harold J. Foster.
ard Doyte. a Hastings bey. wb4 was
kilted in an sutomobite accident
The WL8 sweethearts Lulu Belle
program. Twenty-seven local 4-H
Clothing club* with 187 members person
work of widening lhe Cascade bridge will make exhibit* of the clothing lorlum.
work. Thirteen Handicraft clubs
with 130 members will exhibit
resumed teaching, having taught handicraft
articles. Three Hot
home economics before her snstr- Lunch clubs with an enrollment of
37 members art included in the in twenty-three miles of each other.
Achievement Day program. FortyBelle's family moved to Kentucky.
oounty. have given untiringly of
their time and efforts throughout she had passed her thirteenth
lhe winter and they will be honored birthday, her father obtained a posi­
at tlie Achievement Day program.
tion in Florida, and lhe family
Mrs. Doyle has studied home eco­
The Achievement Day exhibits moved to Miami. From Florida the
nomics and housing problems at will be placed on April 33 and Cooper family came all the way
Michigan Stale college. Columbia judged that afternoon and evening north to Evanston. Hl . and IL was
and Purdue universities and holds
there that John Dair found .Lulu
Belle, and brought her to WL8.
Michigan State college. During the
in contrast with the roving life
home economics in SC. Joseph. morning of April 23. Ute boys and that Lulu Belle led. Scotty'* day*
girls will be given an opportunity to
alton school in Holland, ssirh and
Carolina, known a* lhe Land of
O. B. Price, of the Michigan Oen- the Sky"—from which he draws hto

on this stuff

hear

such a cold winter as the winter

LEADERS

Her ex- tures of the Greenfield Village al to sing and whistle lhe mountain
Dearborn. aa it has been reproduced tune* in the fashion peculiar to that
section of the country. He attended
department stores in Ohio Interest and education to the boys school, and eventually graduated

tton

‘

-------

One JubI Past Waa Beal
Piker Compared to the
SCOTTY.
Old Time Days

tton at Purdue university

gardens in Hastings open to visitor*.
They Include Jaaon McElwain's.
Music Student*. declares If lU-eelted couples learn the guitar happi.

mow

SEVERAL FAMOUS
'COLD WINTERS"
group*.

Mrs. Dorothy C- Doyte. well known TH1 MEMBERS OF THREE
in Hastings, has had a fine honor
CLUBS TO PARTICIPATE
come to be* In being pteoed in
DI THE FB0GBAM
charge of the information service of

book W» thought we had kept it

Hastings, along with other towns
in Michigan with affiliated clubs.

OTS of matrimony In the news,
now that marriage. Instead of
being a contract, 1* a nlnety-day op­
tion.
A gentleman who's president of

Becomes Head of Better
Homes Bureau at Purdue
Usiverslty

Dan Walldorff

HASTINGS GARDENS
LISTED IN ANNUAL

advertising,

I iPU|n/nJ|[MT MV
JIullIULlflul I UR I

FINE HONOR COMES
TO DOROTHY DOYLE

• f1)RTY-SIX

cause this early discovery enables
you to Institute treatment which

feat tuberculosis.

free

chesty I

Jim Tully, columnist for highbrow
magaxlnes. gets sixty cents a wOrd.
Wonder if that Includes a, an and

land which endured such a thing.

much

Just finished reading my first Ian

Mr* Calvin Coolidge.
Uve reaction to the tuberculin skin
test, even though In sound health.
The advantage of lhe test 1* that
if your child to found to be a positive Lhe Banner office. They’ll forward

This mother need have 111 Ge fear.
She should be happy to know that
this simple and harmless test has
aher in a position to control the
th and hygiene of her child to

In their Illustrious footprints.

Bp JANS CAMKRON

wants. She buys “wearable" and
• sittable” clothes. (Jane didn't think
body to fight lhe infection. Their
effort Is to nullify the infection If
thus conquered, one may My that
the infection to dead. or. at the very keeps her appointments to the mlnleast, quiescent. Neverthelei*. that

SOOS picked the locks on the cages
and freed the man-eating tigers arid
tho blood-thirsty wolves and the
deadliest poison snakes to go forth

and

Barry Bypaths i

ex­

-—
—It may be old to you. but
formed as to health and welfare.
it’s new out here:
Small Prussian town turns
out for traveling circus. Fero­ has had the tuberculin skin test, in
cious lion escapes; villagers
flee madly. Sinewy stranger
grapples, single-handed, with rev-

SECTION

THE ‘HASTINGS BANNER

patty*triod her hand at punning.

B train which waa stopped near
Goodyear * Stashing, so i hurried
A. D Stockte a. Freeport,
speciality. any time.

dahlias,

FARM LOANS

fairly shoot up.
locomotive tort a wheel" I thought
"Here's a chance to have a little

among the adult population.

In the Grand Rapids list we no­
tice that Mrs. W H. Quigley s gar­
den to included with rock garden
and phlox as special attractions

Hastingi has 14 gardens open to
federated members. In Plainwell
listed, also lhe Richards Gardens,
two miles north of Plainwell. with

TWO TON CHASSIS FOR
THE RURAL FIRE TRUCK

M.V Stud.b^wr 0h*uh Win
RUTLAND W. C. T. U.
Rutland W. &amp; T.

Make Practionlly a Mew
Fire Truck

man. After a bountiful dinner a

given to the annua]
church

to neither gailset i
eportlag. bet that it

:

made within thirty days
apparatus will be transferred

-

■MM ME*

“Did you ever see anythlngHke
Toledo, Ohio

la UM If right now a follow In
a skiff should come rowing

Formers in ntod of oxtro money can borrow on their farms.
The Haitingi City Bank it pre pared to make mortgage loani

TYPIST EXAMINATION.

to responsible persons, according to their ability to repay.
Public UUflUaT^Mtataton.

HEAR CARVETH WEU4
MJNDAt FORENOON

Loans will be based on th* appraised value of the property
ond can bo repaid in convenient payments.

WK SOUCIT YOUR APPLICATION

Hastings City Bank
TELEPHONE 2103 • ♦

HASTINGS . MICHIGAN

th.

injunction

ssataM

�THE ‘HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1936
TUBERCULOSIS SKIN
TESTS VALUABLE

about
everly hills, calif.

B

—It may be old to you, but
. it’s new out here:
*
Small Prussian town turns
out for traveling circus. Fero­
cious lion escapes; villagers
flee madly. Sinewy stranger
grapples, single-handed, with rav­
ening bruts; twists Ita jaws, bammera its nose, boots it baric into

An intelligent

mother,

an

chesty!
formed as to health and welfare.
has had the tuberculin skin test, bi pen name and not in the telephone
common with other children of his book, we thought we had kept It a
school, and Is found to give a posi­
see ’Palsy’
tive reaction. “I had no suspicion
that our boy was tuberculous," she
What is lhe superlative for silly?
Anyway that’s how j looked.
That one reacts positively to the
tuberculin skin test, does not neces- And I thought I was bright!
carily mean that he is tuberculous. Well, murder will out.
Germs of tuberculosis are very com­
mon and almost all of us come In And It's too late to change it.

Michigan Issue Year
Book
Federated Garden clubo of Michi­
gan is a very attractive publication
filled with things of Interest to gar­
den lovers and beautifully illustrat­
ed.
Hastings, along with other towns
in Michigan with affiliated clubs

New York shopkeepers term Elcaor Roosevelt S3 being an amiable

■■sltUble" clothes, (jane didn’t think
ahe ever took time to sit down).
They must be "American” and she
keeps her appointments to the min­
ute.
Another gracious First
Mrs. Calvin Coolidge.

Lady—

Oh. yes, send the tan letters to
the Banner office. They’ll forward
ti»m.

Jim Tully, columnist tar highbrow
magazines, gets sixty cents a wbrd.
Wonder if that Includes a. an and
lhe? That's a mark for Jane to shoot

Jerry read the "good food" sug­
gestions last week and thought It
would be a good idea to try them out
around here!
This must be “silly week I" It's
that fan letter. It went to my head
Won’t my editor cuss when he
sees all these little paragraphs. HU
take a lot of little stars to parti­
tion off this stuff.

Dan Walldorff doesn’t know It.
but he helped Jane raise her kids.

A rumor came of quintuplets in
Nicaragua. But the embarrassed
father demanded a recount, and it
seems there were only four.

differentiation between town and
country. It disappeared before the
equalizing influence of improved

Thanks to the radio, people
speak as sloppy English in
country as In tire city.

Let the wealthy and great
Roll In splendor and slate
I envy them not, I declare It.
I eat my own lamb
Mrs. Martan B- Goodyear. 628 My chickens and ham
South Jefferson 13 "Locator," whose
duty It Is to help visiting garden I have lawns. I have bowers
enthusiasts to locate the attractive I1 have fruit. I have flowers
gardens In Hastings open to visitors. The lark Is my morning atarmer.
They Inplude Jason McElwain's, 801 Jolly boys, now!
May and June; Mrs. Roy Fuller's, Here's “God speed the plow!"
any time, lilac time especially; "Long life and success to th
Mrs. Kate Terpennlng’s, rock gar­
Farmer!"
den; o. F. Chidester's, any time;
Mrs. J. p. Mohler’s, lily pool; Mrs.
Patsy .tried her hand at punning.
L. R. Glasgow's, June; Miss Stella I’ve heard worse from grown-ups.
Parrott's, Woodland, peonies; Mrs. I had to cut her bangs twice wlthmate crown friend husband with an A- D. Sleckle’s, Freeport, dahlias,
inlaid guitar, and it didn't seem to speciality, any time.
fairly shoot up."
do him any real good.
The annual meeting will be at
Traverse City In June.
Little Buster has some new pants.
In the Grand Rapids list we no­ I admit I got them large. Bud says,
Blowing Up Youth.
bviously it’s too ine to save tice that Mrs. W. H. Quigley’s gar­ "Ma. what’s the use of my wearing
den
is
Included
with
rock
garden
my
new ones. I can climb In with
tho confirmed speed maniacs
and phlox as qpeclal attractions. him."
among the adult population.
They
Lowell, a much smaller town than
won’t be with us long, anyhow, and
Hastings, has 14 gardens open to
Yes, we have no soybean remarks
will be missed by but few, If any. federated members. In Plainwell
Every time one of these madmen Miss Grace Thurston’s garden is
whizzes past, 1 find myself eaylnx listed, also tlie Richards Gardens,
to the back of bls neck, "Well, two miles north of Plainwell, with TWO TON CHASSIS FOR
brother, glad to have this glimpse the Red Brick Tavern in connection
THE RURAL FIRE TRUCK
at you. Probably I’ll not be seeing buUt in 1839. where J. Fenlmore
you again unless 1 should drop in Cooper spent some time while writ­ New Studebaker Chassis Will
ing "Oak Openings.”

Huebands and Wives.
T OT8 of matrimony In the news,
■L-/ now that marriage. Instead of
being a contract. Is a nlnety-day op­
tion.
A gentleman who's president ot
the— taka a deep breath—American
Creative League of Harmony and
Music Students, declares if Ill-suit­
ed couples learn the gultnr happl.
nesa would return, the guitar, he
states, being the most romantic in­
strument * there la. But once, In

O

But maybe we might help to In­
sure the oncoming generations by
inangnratlng a definite coarse of ja.
venlle education. Let's start with
the babies; let’s make It a fixed and
required ritual In every kindergar­
ten. every public or private paro­
chial school—yes, every Bunday
at every girl's campfire; every place
where youngsters are gathered.
Over and over again, let's pound
It Into them that reckless driving
la neither gallant nor smart nor
sporting, but that it Is stupid and
criminal and vicious and murder­
OUS.

Desolation of Roods.
HE first time we went to Venice
my wife looked across the
Grand canal and said:
“Did you ever see anythlngllke

T

And, trying to be funny, 1 said:
-Absolutely, looks Just like South
Third street did during the big rise
In 1811 If right now a fellow In
a skiff should come rowing up to
this window to collect the water-

.

IRVIN 6. COBB,

Make Practically a New
Fire Truck

Mrs. Dorothy C. Doyle, well known
in HasUngs. has had a fine honor
coma to ner tn being placed in
charge of the information service of
Better Homes In America, of which
Purdue Research

foundation,

THS MXMBXU OF THUS
CLUBS TO PARTICIPATE
tV THE PBOOSAM

housing being conducted there.

, Judges From M. 8. 0. to Inr ipect Kxhibita—To Choose
■
Oounty Style Delegate

1
prospective owners unbiased by per­■
sonal or commercial interests, end
lias the moat complete data on aU&gt;
I technical problems as well as Sim­'
ple ones that housing presents.
■
ard Doyle, a Hastings boy. who was
killed in an automobile accident
several years ago in Grand Rapids,
at the time he waa overseeing toe
work of widening toe Cascade bridge

Achievement Day for toe Barry
oounty 4-H Winter Clubs will be
held at toe Methodist L5&gt;Lscopal
church in Hastings on Thursday.
April 23. according to an announce­
ment by County Agricultural Agent
Harold J. Foster.

cartons of the county 4-H Club
program. Twenty-seven local 4-H
Clothing clubs with 197 members
will make exhibits of the clothing
work. Thirteen Handicraft dubs
with 130 members will exhibit
resumed teaching, having taught handicraft
articles. Three Hot
home economics before her mar- Lunch clubs with an enrollment of
27 members are included In the
Achievement Day program. Forty­
and important post on the basis of
her study and experience tn the county, have given untiringly of
their time and efforts throughout
ing, and her contacts with lhe pub­ the winter and they will be honored
lic on these subjects.
at the Achievement Day program.
Mrs. Doyle has studied home eco­
The Achievement Dey exhibits
nomics and housing problems at will be placed on April 22 and
Michigan State college. Columbia Judged that afternoon and evening
and Purdue unlvendiles and holds by P. G- Lundin and Mtes Lois Cor­
bett. of the State Club staff.
and master of science. She taught Michigan State. College. During the
morning of April 23. the boys and
Mich.; had charge of girls' continu­ girls will be given an opportunity to
ation school In Holland. Mich., and view toe exhibits. At 11:00 o’clock
O. B. Price, of the Michigan Cen­
of assistant In home administra­ tral railroad, will show motion pic­
tion at Purdue university. Her ex­ tures of the Greenfield Village at
perience In the field of business in­ Dearborn, aa It has been reproduced
cludes personnel work In several of
the large department stores in Ohio Interest and education to the boys
and Michigan. The breadth of her and girls.
experience and understanding of
During the aftemoonmrogram the
practical household problems will Style Revue will be held, at which
be found of value to all who have each girl enrolled In the club work
this winter will appear in the dress
information service of Better Homes she has made, a Oounty Style dele­
in America.
gate to State club Week will be se­
lected. Thia will be followed by a
short address by Rev. W. Maytan
TO LOCATE IN KALAMAZOO. Jones of the Hastings Methodist
The many friends of Dr. and Mrs. church. Rev. Jones, has especially
Chas. McIntyre. Jr- will be Inter­ prepared this address for the boys'
ested to learn that Dr. McIntyre, in and girls' Interest.
company with Dr. John Lillig, who
Mr. Lundin and Miss Corbett will
has recently comp eted hte Wiemreport on tho Judging of the
ship at Ann Arbor, will open an
Achievement Day and Honor groups
office in Kalamazoo, the first of
will be selected both in Handicraft
July.
and Clothing clubs. Delegates to
Dr. McIntyre, since hte gradu­
State Club Week at Michigan State
ation at Ann Arbor, has been assoclkted with the University hospital, college In July will be named for
both projects.
County Agent Foster will clou the
afternoon
program
the staff there as a young doctor of
outstanding ability, with a brilliant
future In his chosen line of work.

Riley Stories
One night I went up the C. K. &amp;
6. track on my way homo and when
I got to the State rood I saw a big
crowd gathered around the O. K. &amp;
8. train which waa stopped near
Goodyear‘s Slashing, so I hurried

completed

SEVERAL FAMOUS
“COLD WINTERS’*

LULU BELLE AND
SKYLAND SCOTTY.

One Just Past Was Real
Piker Compared to the
Old Time Days

boy and girl who

has

groups.

Make

We sometimes hear slatethents
to the effect-that "there never was
cold winter as lhe winter of
the following record of some "old
time” winters, which make lhe last
one look like a "piker."
The Banner is indebted to Rufus
Weaver of Rutland for the foilow-

that the local National
scrap book which recently came into
hta possession;
making these
‘-in 1664 the cold was so Intense
that the river Thames was covered
with Ice 61 Inches thick. Almost all the FedmSJand taalL
the birds perished.
that the famished wo
Vienna and attacked

Credit Administration was organ!-

Barry com
farmers obtained
specific purpose of
1896.000 for
The WL8 sweethearts. Lulu Belle
in 1709 occurred that famous win­
debts. The Federal
and Skyland Scotty, will appear In ter by distinction, -The Cold Wlnperson at the Centra, school audi­
torium.
freaen and even the sea for several
miles from lhe shore. The ground
ond mortgage security to fanners
in the state of North Carolina, with­ fields, and men perished by thou­ who also obtained first mortgage
loans.
in twenty-three miles of each other. sands in their houses. The Adriatic
However soon after her birth. Lulu Bea was frozen, and even the Medi­
Belle's family moved to Kentucky, terranean above Genoa; and the THE JUDGE DECIDES
where she spent her early life. After citrus and orange groves suffered
AGAINST DR. BERNARD
she had passed her thirteenth extremely In the finest parts of
birthday, her father obtained a posi­ Italy.
tion in Florida, and the family
Holds His Agreement Pre­
moved to Miami. From Florida the that people travelled across the
vents His Practice in His
Cooper family came all the way Straits from Copenhagen to the
north to Evanston, Ill., and H was province of Servia in Sweden.
Former Territory
there that John Dalr found lulu
In 1729 in Scotland multitudes of
Belle, and brought her to WLS.
cattle and sheep were buried in the of Delton, vs. Dr. Prosper G. Bern­
In contrast with the roving life
ard was recently tried before Judge
that Lulu Bella led. Scotty’s days
...
11TO the winter was scarcely
in 1740
were spent In toe region of North i inferior to that of 1709. The anow
Carolina, known aa toe Land of Uy 10 feet deep in Spain and Por- purchased Dr. Bernard's practice.
the Sky”—from which he draws his | tUgal. The Zuyder Zee was frozen They signed a contract and an
name. It was here that he learned over, and thousands of people went agreement in which It waa stlputalto sing and whistle the mountain across It; and the takes tn England
tunes in the fashion peculiar to that froze.
lice medicine in the city of Kalasection of toe country. He attended
- --------••
school, and eventually graduated snow fell to tlie depth of 23 feet
from N. C. U„ prepared to become
not attempt to practice tn the
In 1754 and 1755 lhe winters were towns of Delton. Cloverdale, Cedar
one had heard him sing, and
creek. Prairieville. Hlckbry Correcommended him to WL8- He came
west—caught on like wild-fire, and bottom.
besides catching hold of tlie radio
In 1776 the Danube bore ice five agreement was difficult to interpret;
public, caught Lulu Belle for a wife. feet thick below Vienna.
I. O. O. F. Lodge No. 58 is bring­
The winters of 1774 and 1775 were could practice tn the territory sur­
ing this program to Hastings. Bee uncommonly severe. The Little Bell rounding these villages, which are
lhe ad tn this paper for particulars.
not incorporated. If he did not at­
From 1600 to 1812 the winters tempt to practice within the vil­
FINE FOR CHARLOTTE.
were remarkably cold, particularly
We are glad to note that our sis­ the latter in Russia, which proved lages. Judge McPeek held that
that Interpretation of toe sctmter city of charlotte is tearing
ro dLsastrous to the French army.
ment was untenable.
Ha held
down ita old high school building,
that the evidence. Including Dr.
which will be replaced with a fine
It is estimated that crime in
new one that will be up-to-date. America cotta 112,000.000.000 a year, Bernard's own testimony, showed
tost there had been a viotattoc of
The new one will cost approximate­ and we insist It isn't worth it.
ly 8223.000. The WPA furnishes
ine r»ew xorz uwca nxenange sawmi
~ —mr-*
8100.000 and lhe taxpayers of char­
Il U IxlUrtd oonunwd U» UiJantUon
lotte lhe other 1123,000 A large gym­ 10,1 I3MOOO l»,t
nasium and auditorium are In­
him lhe lUtuWfT
t U»
lost money of Its own.
cluded in the plans.

7 The HASTINGS

CITY BANK
MAKES

FARM LOANS

locomotive lost a wheel." I thought,
"Here's a chance to have a little
fun." so I said to Billie Bush, the
engineer, ’-Billie, hadn’t I better go
down town and get a boll of
string?" And Billie exclaimed, "A
ball of string? What for?” and I regine." And everyone laughed but
gillie.

THIS WAS a’mTX-UFI
The “slips that pass in the typeare lite fly in toe ointment of every
newspaper office. None are exempt.
We plead guilty to a lot of them, but
none we believe that would turn our
hair quite as grey as the one that

TJTFI8T EXAMINATION.

HEAR CARVETH WELLS
'
SUNDAY FORENOON.

portioned service at Washington, D.
carveth'Wells, world traveller and
O.. they must show actual and bona nationally known as • writer and
speaker, will broadcast over WON
tory claimed for at least 6 months on Sunday, April 19, from 10:15 to
next preceding the closing date for 10:4B. A. M-. using as his subject.

j

next Thursday

• FORTY-SIX LEADERS
!
HAVE DIRECTED WORK

Ths Hastings Rural Fire Associa­ Clinton county Republican when a
had its annual meeting and pot luck
dinner with Mrs. Gertrude Bauch- tion last week purchased a new card of thanks notice got mixed
man. After a bountiful dinner a Studebaker two-ton truck chassis, with a rhymed ad of Rocky Moun­
business meeting was held and of­ to replace the old one-and-a-quar- tain tea. It appeared as follows:
ficers were elected: Mary Waters—
-We wish to thank the neighbors
and friends for expressions of symMarie Smith—Sec.; Lulu Waters—
ordered.
Il
will
have
a
larger
en
­
Tress. Much time and thought were
and death of our little daughter.
given to the annual county conven­ gine. which will furnish greater Eva but what's the use to worry and
tion to be held at. Goodwill church speed and more power. The delivery
whine
May B. Marie smith was appointed
When no fish get tangled on your
in charge of the music and Mary When it arrives the old fire-fighting - line;
Waters tn charge of plays, etc. A apparatus will be transferred to the Just bait your hook with a bumblenumber of articles were read and
group singing brought tlie meeting painted
fine oufit. And keep on taking Rocky Moun­
to a does.
tain tea.”
.
No wonder that it was a hard
It has the cash on hand to buy this matter to explain lhe error to lhe
new truck, payment for services by grieving parents.
non-members served by the old
BUS LINES REDUCE BATES.
truck, payments by the Insurance
companies together with the 50
Rate reductions affecting more
cents annual dues that have been than to Michigan cities and towns
were announced today by Short Way
have provided the cash for the new Lines, me., with general offices in
outfit. This shows that the associa­ Toledo, Ohio.
tion is well managed.
New fares on more than 700 mites
of routes - connecting
principal
STENOGRAPHER AND
Michigan points with Toledo, Ohio,

EFREM 5HMBALI8T
Violinist, who will participate un­
der tho baton of Leopold Stokowski
at toe Ann Arbor May Festival,

awn

and

The united States civil Service starttag Friday, April 10th.
Additional rate reductions will
ami nation for the positions of wnlor and Junior stenographer and as tariffs now being prepared are
senior and Junior typist Thia ex­ filed and approved by ths. Michigan
amination is being held for appoint­ Public Utilities Commission.
ment in Washington, D. C.. only.

That seemed a eorry Joke as I read
of a monstrous yellow torrent
sweeping down on the beleaguered
lowlands where my people have
lived for nearly a century and a
half, bringing ruin on Ita crest anJ
desolation In Ita waka
Surely nature box been pitliras
this last year—drouths and dust
storms; forest fires and smokepalla;
blizzards and icepacks; and ■ now
theee cruel floods. Still, amid the
affllctluna, one consoling thought
gleams ilka a star: congress will
adjourn pretty soon.

.

TO DOROTHY DOYLE

By JANS CAMERON

Just finished
ex- mall. Wei-l-i, only one letter, but it

country, meu who had access to I This mother need have Utile fear.
soos picked the locks on the cagra
She should be happy to know that
and freed the man-rating tigers and this simple and harmless test has
tha blood-thlraty wolves and the put her in a position to control tho
deadliest poison snakes to go forth health and hygiene of her child to
and kill again, we’d marvel at a such good purpose that he will de­
land which endured such a thing. feat tuberculosis.
In the great majority of cases, tu­
But when In our own land crim­
inal lawyers truthfully bjast that, berculosis is very slow developing in
ef all the Individuals charged with childhood and does not cause trou­
deliberate murder whom they hare ble until one Is grown up.
defended, no single one ever went
to noose or chair, and that ever HASTINGS GARDENS
io many more were, by their skill,
LISTED IN ANNUAL
laved from the prisons where we
are supposed to pen our human tlFederated Garden Oluba Of

I FINE HONOR COMES

Becomes Head of Better
Homes Bureau at Purduo
University
reading my first fan

If Child la a Positive Reactor
Safeguard! May Be
Used

Entire community starts jubila­
tion—flags flying, bands playing,
burgomaster puts
on his bigb hat, contact with them; repeated taking
special train rush- them into the body creates some in­
fection but also arouses the body to
Un to be deeo- develop resisting agents that may be
rsted by Hery Hit­ styled ‘’anti-bodies," which help the
ler aa reincarna­ body to fight the Infection. Their
effort .!• to nullify the Infection. If
tion of ancient Nor­
thus conquered, one may say that
dic demigods, typi­ the Infection Is dead, or, at the very
fying spirit of old least, quiescent. Nevertheless, that
German stocks—all Individual, though he may be count­
that sort of thing. ed victor, will always show a posi­
Suddenly hideous tive reaction to the tuberculin skin
discovery Is mads | test, even though ln sound health.
The advantage of the test is that
that stranger's
background Is not Teutonic, the if your child Is found to be a positive
family name being Ginsberg. Cele­ reactor there are safeguards you
bration called off. flags furled, bands
sneak home, special train canceled, on X-ray examination of the chest.
Nine times In ten this will give as­
burgomaster has apoplexy.
surance that the Infection has done
And next day the local paper no harm, the child none the worse.
comes out with scathing article no- If, however, your boy lx that tenth
cose who shows definite lesions. Jt
fenceless Lion."
13 Indeed fortunate that you have
been led to this examination, be­
cause this early discovery enables
* Criminal Lawyers.
you
to Institute treatment which
TjyE'RE a funny people. Did we
’» read where in some far-off will conquer the disease before It

live these geniuses our admiration
»nd much free advertising, and
foung lawyers ernre to follow
In their Illustrious footprints.
We are Indeed a funny people—
io funny It's hard to decide wbeth&gt;r we should laugh at ourselves—

| Barry Bypaths

nation may be obtained
. Wunderlich, Secrotary
Civil Service Board of
industries, etc.

Farmsrs in naad of sxfra money can borrow on their forme.

The Hastings City Bank it prepared to make mortgage loans

to responsible persons, according to their ability to repay.

Loans will bo based on the appraised value of tho property
and can be repaid in convenient payments.

WE SOLICIT YOUR APPLICATION

Hastings City Bank
TELEPHONE 2103 ♦ ♦ ♦ HASTINGS . MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL IS. 1&gt;M

Co

4.

Young. Ravenna, Mr. and Mn. J. Virginia Lapham,
a tew weeks ths
both girls getting

som’s tenant house.

Y. M. C. A, ITEMS

S3

Et'asr

OTM* ot
on June end

to hta father’s farm.

The BEST BUYS in

Will Be Found in ASF Meat Markets I

Choiace
Cut*
of the
Chuck

lb.

ELECTRIC WIRING

16e

GET OUR PRICES ON

From Young Quality Beiif

25c
29c
29c
25c
27c
19c

lbs.

lb.

WIRING BEFORE YOU

Beef Pot Roast

lb.

Boiling Beef
Ground Beef

Ik

Short Ribs

1 2

4

FRE^tt LOUISIANA

lbs.

29c
16c
29c
15c

cu an,

Onions

t. cm

o
*

4Pc

Washed
New
White.

lb.

Sc

lb.

5c

ASPARAGUS
Extra Fancy California
JUMBO
BUNCHES
2'. lbs or

-29c
No. 2H

Del Monte Peaches
P &amp; G or Kirk' Soap

Nucoa

“

10

bars
2-lb.
pkg.

Sic

Iona Cocoa
Karo Syrup

Philadelphia

J
J

Log Cabin Syrup
Apple Butter
Rajah Coconut
Maxola
Cooking Oil
or Was*..
Peanut Butter
Del Mail Niblets
Beet Sugar
Campbell's Soups

Bokar Coffee

Ib. tin

Sic

Condor Coffee

Ib. tin

Beechnut Coffee

Ib. tin

59c
26c

Del Monte Coffee

Ib. tin

25c

Hills Bros. Coffee

Ib. tin

Maxwell House Coffee

lb. tin

S7c
26c

Whitehouse Coffee

Ib.
cartog

SSc

ISc

Baby Foods

49c

S9c

Daily Dog Food

SSc

S9c

large

S5c

P &amp; G Soap
Soap Chips

10 u” 35c
S !b.
99c

15c

Chipso or Oxydol

ISc

Super Suds

10c

Reich Salad Dressing

SSc

Iona Salad Dressing
Sparkle
Gold Medal Flour
Wheaties
T^.‘
Softasilk Cake Flour
Chocolate Drops
Educator Crax
Breid
Grandmother's
tana Peaches
X*’.?.1*

Jar

'

tin

1

Jar
«OR.
Pkg

,
2-lb.
Jto

2
10
3

19c

1- pkg.

ih ib

J

ib.

10

Pkga.

Biu. Label

Red Circle Coffee

Fels Naptha Soap

2-lb.

Dill Pickles

3-lb. bag 45c

MO9 rOOCl Kan-L Ration, Doggie Dinne

bisquick

v* c-,-.

15cp,r"’

ISc

No. 1

Cream Cheese

lbs.

&lt;Mki

19c
15c
10c
S3c
S5c
SSc
49c
SSc

or CtelJoiek

6 ein* 49c

HASTINGS. MICH.

a
*

1

l.ni
pkgs.

37c

giant
phfquart
Jar
quart
Jar

15c

97c

93c
4 A.L 19c
*Vi*-9gc
S rtw. Sic
pkg.
SSc
3
SSc
phg.
19c
IHlat
6C
l"U'‘S7c

TkuU..

ku A S.1u Yu

in c.a w. h A ck.a.

speatal meeting this Saturday after­
noon and evening at Camp Barry
working on lhe grounds, In prepara­
tion far h Mg season. Campers this
year will see some- real improvec. F. Angell attended a regional
meeting of Y. Secretaries at PL
Wayne Thursday arid Friday, with
Ed. Tomb of Princeton. N. J., presi­
dent of the National Town and
Country Secretaries, as- guest speakmourns the lou of Sidney French
to our boys. He wm always ready to
help, and a real friend too. He fur­
nished flour for Camp Barry each
year, as Well as financial help direct
to the oounty budget.

rural schools Is being planned with

Smith. Marjorie and Odette Flfield. held May » for all children and
their parents.
David Robinson. Beverly Couch, and
Welcome comers T group are
Howard Wilson.
Robert and Marguerite Kidder planning a banquet far April 33, in
cooperation with Welcome Ladies
Aid.
The Y group meets this
gram Friday morning. Robert told
Thursday evening with Max Leach.
Those present all the week were:
Dora Flfield, Albert Kidder. Irene
Kidder. Robert Kidder, Marguerite
Kidder. Raymond Kidder. Wayne
Leyendecker, Dorothy Robinson and

COATS GROVE.
The community waa saddened to

BeVier which occurred at the home
The sixth graders an making of her daughter, Mn. L. M. Curtiss
transportation pictures for geogra­ in Freeport, last Tuesday night. She
had been seriously ill for about a
phy and history.
month. The funeral was held here
at lhe church on Saturday after­
BOWNE CENTER.
Helen Benton spent last week noon at 2 o’clock, conducted by Rev.
with her brother. Russell, and fam­
Rev. E. 8. Thompson and Rev. F. O.
ily of Grand Rapids.
Wayne Benton and Doris Lass Wing. Rev. Clem Jordan sang two
hymns, accompanied by Mrt. Alice
were Hastings visitors Friday.
John Thomas and family spent Chase. The following nephews were
Saturday night and Sunday at Pay pallbearers: John Smith, Wendell
Wolfe,
Wamle Kelsey. James Long.
: Smith’s.
; Mr. and Mn. Merrill Karcher Wayne Long and Ernest Smith. She
; celebrated their second wedding an­ was an earnest Christian, a charter
, nlversary April 7lh by the arrival member of the church of Christ
of an eight and one-half pound son. here and much interested tn ita
| Gerald Kay. at the home of their welfare and the community as well.
: parents. Mr. and Mrs. Watt Thotni as. Mrs. Henry Karcher la caring family and relatlvae and friends.
Our sympathy U extended to the
for them.
I Mrs. Wayne Benton accompanied
RiX®ll Benton Tnd^family
J
Mr and Mrs. Russell Demosid

tings Sunday and spent the day
_
..
--------- ­
1। with
Mr. and Mn. «.
Wallace
Camp
bell.
Visitors at the Watt Thomas
' home the past week were: Mr. and
I Mrs. Kenneth Penoyer of Grand
Rapids. Mn Flossie Curtis. Jean
, Godfrey. Henry Karcher and fam­
ily. Donald MUler of Plymouth. Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Smith. Mrs. Clara
Thompson. Mn. Thurza Thompson,
Mrs. Addle Benton. Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Benton. Doria Lass. John
Thomas and family and Mr. and
Mn. Charlie Pasthumus.
Charlie Posthumus has been on

and son, Kenneth, visited relatives
ju Auburn, Ind., over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Bphmenk
of Detroit visited the latter’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John Woodman, over
Bamum and daughters visited there,
also, on Sunday. - .
Mrs. Arthur Richardson la get­
ting along nicely and came home
from the hospital on Saturday.
The Sunday school gave a fine
Easter program Sunday morning, of
songs, recitations and exercises, for
the church service. Rev. Jordan
gave a solo, a quartette sang “Christ
Is Risen” and the pastor gave an

Mr. and Mrs Joe Anderson and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kowalezyk good Eittendance. in the evening
spent Saturday night and Bunday Mr. and Mrs. Jordan sang a duet
with Mrs. Jennie Fox at tlie home and the pastor preached an appro­
of her ton and wife. Mr. and Mrs. priate sermon.
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith of Al­
Dick Brackncy. of Temperance.
bion spent Saturday and Sunday
here visiting relatives and attend­
ed of the funeral of his aunt, Mrs.
BcVlcr.
Mr. and Mn. Geo. Ea&amp;lev
of
Grand Rapids visited Mr. and Mrs.
Harlow Bamum on Sunday, and
called on Mr. and Mrs. E
~
S.
Thompson In the afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dunnigan have
bought the Kirk Wilcox property,
and with their family moved there
last Monday.
The D. G. T. O. club met with
Mrs. Mary Townsend last Wednes­
HAVING SOLD MY FARM, I WILL DISPOSE OF MY PERSONAL PROPERTY
day with Mn. Bessie Woodman
AT PUBLIC AUCTION AT THE FARM. 2 MILES WEST AND 1-2 MILE NORTH
leader. Hie members answered roll
call by giving "What makes a gar­
OF WOODLAND, ON SEC. 18, WOODLAND TOWNSHIP, ON
den.” as the subject of the meeting
was "The Vegetable Garden.” Mrs.
Alice Chase gave a piano solo, Mrs.
Neil Smith gave an interesting talk
about gardens and Items of interest
about Canada; “Canning Your En­
tire Garden,” Alice Allerdlng. A
COMMENCING AT 1:00 O'CLOCK. AND OFFER THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
□umber of members gave recipes for
FROFERTY:—
canned vegetables. Mn. Nell Smith
won n contest by having the most
articles in her pocketbook.
The Birthday meeting will be held
POULTRY.
HORSES.
with Mrs. Boule Woodman Wed­
nesday. April 22. Pot lucfc dinner.
90 White Leghorn heftg.
Gray gelding, 13 yrs. old, wt. 1300

AUCTION SALE!
MONDAY, APRIL 2Oth

Gray gelding, 14 yrs. old, wt. 1300.
(Above is an excellent work team
Wt. 1500.

41c

A .&lt; I’ I OOI) STORES
•uii.. W»»M—7 ji" r. lL-TaM4ar.

PHONE 2234

MOTORS

41c

Shrimp

Sardines

ROBLESKI ELEC. SHOP

• APPLIANCES

The World’a Large at
Selling Coffee

2 lb.. 25c
99c

l.cdl...
Navels

Spinach

FIXTURES.

25c

at Only

imbo, 300’!

HAVE A COMPLETE

FEATURING

2 ■“ 25c
Lemons
Oranges

WE

Coffee Week at all A.&amp;P Food Stores

STRAWBERRIES

Cirroti
Gard®
PEAS, Fresh

LET YOUR JOB.

LINK OF LOW PRICED

lb.

Meaty

FRESH SMELT

13c

2

Ring Bologna Gr"u
Luncheon Meat

Lae Lapham and children. Dale.
Leota. Betty and Donna, of Maple
Grove and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Rouse of Battle Creek were guests
Golden celebrate her birthday.
of Mr. and Mn. Albert Green and
Rachel and Vernon Jefiry of family, Easter. In the afternoon,
Nashville
spent
with
Garnet Mr. Lnpham. nil.
Mr. M4.U
and MID.
Mn. U.TCII,
Green.
IL
* ■ ’ -Easter
1
—
and Harold Webb, callers In the aft-1 Mr, and Mrs. Rouse went to Pine
Rowlader and family vlalt-

BEEF ROAST

Chickens
Roasting Chickens
Pork Sausage
Pork Liver or Hearts 2
Mild Sugar
Slab Bacon
Sliced Bacon

filed.
Est. Cha
account fil

who
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
days last week at his home In this
village.
number that
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Anderson
of
Viahan at the Frank Wilcox
Newaygo co. spent Easier day with
Vem Wilcox and daughters. Dowlattendance
reach lhe 60 mark. Bro. Gross
KI.INGi.NSMUH.
preached a fine sermon.
Little Shirley Ann Peterson iias
Orville Bruce la not so well and
■ la back In bed under the doctor's
Beuevue.
care al this writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Willson &gt; Mn. Carrie Couch who baa been
Mr. and Mn. Bardy Rowlader and
family and Miss Esther Grey spent brought their baby son home from. spending several weeks with her
Saturday evening with Mr. and Mn. the hospital in Grand Rapids. Hei daughter, Mrs. Henry Kidder, lias
Rasco at Nashville In honor ot Mn. has been HI with pneumonia, but■ returned to her home at Middleville.
Raeco'a birthday.
is gaining nicely now.
WOOD SCHOOL NOTES.
Mrs. Christie Padelford of BelleMiddleville spent the week end with
with her mother. Mrs. Prank Wll- his grandparents. Mr. and Mn. b»U that lhe school board bought

SOUTHWEST Wt
Mn, Harold Hector and
and Mrs Anna Christian

McCaul. and brother. Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Kantner and

Fancy Milk

thia VMk Tueaday
Mrs. Albert Green was riven full evening,

family of Ravenna IMr* wwk end
guerta of Mr. and Mn. Donald

Johnson’s at Bowne
of Middleville

firming nu

Special

quite IB.
vUlled Bettie Creek
frlends Monday.

COWS.
Holstein heifer. 4 yrt. old. brad Jan. 15.
Jersey heifer, 4 yrs. old, full blood, bred
Dec. 1st.
Blue roan cow, 9 yrs. old, bred Jah. 21.
Holstein cow, 9 yrs. old.
Durham cow, 4 yrs. old, bred Mar. 17.
Jersey tt», 3 yrs. old. full blood, duo
in May.
Hpifer.
Wall bred bull. 18 months old.
SWINL
HAY. CORN AND OATS.
Quantity aTmirtd hoy.
Around 200 bu. of com.
About 200 bu. of ooh.
.
About 5 bushels of seed com.

FARM MACHINERY.
McCormick binder, 7-ft. cut.
McCormick mower, 6-ft. cut.
McCormick-Deering side delivery rake,
nearly new.
Dayton No. 3 hay loader, nearly new.
Oliver riding cultivator. Single disc.
Ajax cultivator, 5-tooth.
Three-sec. drag. Calo riding plow.
Corn King manure spreader.
Gale walking plow. Iran wheal wagon.
Flat rack. Set Belknap bob sleighs.
Sot double harness. 3rd-horso harness.
Set of hay slings. Corn shelter.
Land roller, 8-ft. Stoneboat.
Primrose cream separator, No. 3.
2 ten-gal milk cans.
Majestic range, good one.
Kalamazoo Regal Oak heating stove
Many other articles not mentioned.

residue enl
Issued, eita

filed.
tat. Ham
Admr. file
Est. Viol
account fil
Est. Edw
account file

account file
Est Rob
nual accou
llcation file

ing Gdn. e
Est. Bcld
Adrnr. Issu

flled. inher

entered, pe
filed, notic
Est. Joh
license to
cation ente
Est. Davi
freeholders

Est. Wil
account fil

m

and Marla

and Mn. c
Mr. and
cd the fur

Mr. and
daughter e
Clarence B
and Mrs E
la Bump a

Will Moor
Mr. and
talned
fa
Theodore
North Hop
Whitmore
Alfred Bis
nnd the la
in the aft®
Hubert Ca
Mn. Bert 8
Mr. and
sons spent
Russell Mo

Mr. and

and Marga

nlng.
Mr. and
Robert and
afternoon
Mrs. Walt®
Mr. and
Ionia calle
Newton Su

troit spen
Monday w
Newton.
daughter.

school aud
day evenin
of Detroit
Plan.
■
Mr. and
family spe
er. Nathan
Baltimore.

BR&gt;
In order
celebrate
Monday.
friends ha
church on

by Rev. H
be features
and help t&lt;
remembrar
The Eas
church 8u
well atten&lt;

Allegan w
Sunday.
Mr. and
three child
Utmday a

Mn. All
the wlnlCT
berf. Ostn
friends he
Monday, v
some time

BUS FARES

REDUCED

Hastings
to

MJS Ft. Wayne
Angola

Toledo

Smith.
Mr. and
vlsitlmr re
hood Sunt
Mr. and
Nashville
his mothei
Mn. Fred

NOR'

flu but Is
Mr. and

with his pi
Elliott.

family of
with their

family of

TERMS OF SALE:—-All sums of $20 and under cash. On turns of $20 and

Mn. Chai

at 6 par cant. No property to be removed unAl settled for.

ALLEN KING, Propr
HtNkV FLANNIRY. AucHuMr.

ALBERT REESOR. Cterk.

family of
Mn. Johr
Sunday

BUS DEPOT AT

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 1137

Lyle Lydy

ward and

�Court News

Queen Mary Steams Down Clyde River to Home Port

noun oovfiT.

CARLTON CENTER.
Appropriate services _ were held
Easter Sunday at the M. E Church
Rev. Pern Wlteeler gave a aptendld
Easter sermon and lhe young peo­
ple of tlie church sans an Easter
hymn.' We were glad to see quit* a
few in attendance for lhe servloea.
A good many attended the elec­
tion dinner served by tho L. A. 8.
last Monday. Several others came in
the’ afternoon to enjoy the program
and to meet old friends. The next
meeting ot the Aid will be held at

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gatos of
Kalamasoo. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Gates and Ed Oates of the Doud
district visited Mr. and Mrs Earl
Oates Bunday.
Perry Wiseman of the CCC camp
is visiting Mr. and Mn. Clyde

Mr. and Mrs. Milton Warner of
Kalamaaoo spent the week end with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred

Est. Eva L Paton. Order assigning
residue entered, discharge of Admr.
issued, estate enrolled.
; .
:
Eat. Isaac Golden. Final account

Farrell in May for supper.
QUIMBY.
Mr. and . Mrs. Fred Hansel and
Mn. Henry Hoonby of Morley vis­
family of Kalamazoo wt?re guests
ited at the McKoeln home several
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Otte Lan- days the past week.

Est. Harry Le Gear. Petition for
Admr. filed.
Est. Viola Talmadgr. ot at Annual

Mr. and MW. Athel Kenyon of
Grand Rapjds visited the fanner's
father, Mr. Arthur Kenyon at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Otis Landon.

Est. clarabelle Parmelee. Annual
account filed.
Est. Robert I. Hendershott. An­
nua! account filed, order for pub­
lication filed.
Est. Charles A. Northrup. Nomi­
nation of Gdn. filed, order appoint­
ing Gdn. entered.

filed, inheritance tax determined.
Est. Elmer E. Gregory. Bond of
executor filed, letters testamentary
issued, order limiting settlement
entered, petition for hearing claims
filed, notice lb creditors Issued.
Est. John McArthur. Petition for
license to sell filed, order for publl-

The new British oup«rllner. Queen Maty. Is slinwil here as she glided majestically down ths Clyds river
from Clydebank, Scotland, where she wan-built. headed for the open »«a and her home dock at South­
ampton. There the Rlantess ot the seas will be given a "beautifyIng*’ before she easts off on her maiden
voyage to America, May 27. More than 2VU /beautician*'' will work on the ship.

A very amusing tiling happened
at tho township election on Monday i
last, when Dep. Sheriff George Bed­
ford came into the polling place
I looking for someone whose car just
outside showed a 1935 plate with­
out a sticker. It was suggested by

Est. David V. Barry. Testimony of
freeholders filed, license to sell Is­
said it stood outaldc. Mr. Bedford
sued. oath before sale hied.
Est. William E. Aidrich. Annual said that was just the one he meant.
They went out together and sure
enough' no sticker; after some talk,
the owner looked in one of the
pockets of the car and there was
part of a sticker, the numbers so

Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore and
daughter entertained. Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Bump and children. Mr.
and Mrs. Edd. Tudor, and Mrs. Stel­
la Bump all from Hastings on East­
er. Mrs. Bump had been spending
the week with her daughter. Mrs.

North Hope. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell
Whitmore of Delton. Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Bishop and daughter. Mary
nnd the latter's friend; callers there
in the afternoon and evening were
Hubert Cater. Phenla Wilkinson and
Mrs Bert Snoaks of Kalamazoo.
’ Mr. and Mrs. Spellman Casey and
Russell Mott, and family in North
BarryMr. and Mrs. Ronald Haynes and
and Margaret Moore attended the
P. T. A. at Hendershott. Friday eve­
ning.
Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Phillips.
Robert and Gertrude spent Sunday

Mr. and Mn. Chester WlllltU.
Raymond and Janette of Lansing
and Archie Newton and children of
Pritchardville were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Willltta and
Helen. Miss Donna McKeown of.
Quimby was a caller.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brumm and
Annella of Nashville visited her par­
ents, Mr. and Mn. Ralph DeVine,
Bunday.
Mr. and Mn. Herbie Wilcox were
dinner, guests of Mr. and Mn. A.
Holseifas near Bellevue Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Cameron McIntyre
and children of Quimby were Bun­
day gueste of Mr. and Mn. Merritt

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Elliott ot
Flint visited Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Marlow Sunday.
passed away very suddenly Wednes­
Garcia Tischer of Lansing spent
day night.
most of last week with his son and
The Cemetery Circle was
very wife. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Tischer.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Nash attended
pleasantly entertained by Mrs. Nel­
son Willison Wednesday for dinner.
A large crowd was there and a nice
program was given.
Mrs. Earl Fritz and children-spent
Easter with her mother, Mrs. Davis,

Mrs. Cyril Van Horn and daugh­
ter of Jackson spent Sunday with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Porter
Knowles. Mr. and Mrs. Claud Nor­

present.
■ Miss Lucinda Reynolds Of Assyria,
who has been working for Mm. Lot­
Mr. and Mrs. Will Hurtlbus and tie Collister. returned to her home
Bobble of Ravenna. George Hurtlbus
and Miss Margaret Wlckley of Mus­
kegon spent Easter with Mr. and
Mrs. Herbie Wilcox. Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Wilcox and baby of Kala­ under the care of a Hastings doctor.
Mr. and Mm. Nell Welcher of Bat­
mazoo spent Tuesday with the home
tle Creek. Mrs. Kenneth Bpaw and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gaskill of David of Lake Shore Farms and
Baltimore called on Mr. and Mrs.
8. Geiger Monday evening. Easter gusta were guests Easter at Chas.
Sunday they entertained Mr. and Lechlei tner&gt;.
Miss Eulah Kellar of Prairieville
Mrs. Forrest Jackson and children
of Carlton Center. Mr. and Mrs. has come to work for the summer

It might have been anything but
funny had the justice been some
place where he was not known.
The word of the death of R. Sid­
ney French at a St Joseph hoopilal
early Thursday morning shocked
and saddened this community. He
had been in business here for many
years and wm widely known, both
tn and outside the state. The large
crowd that attended his funeral
Saturday afternoon and the many
floral offering showed In a way the
high regard In which he was held. and Mrs. Heber Foster and family.
Business places were closed during
Dennis McIntyre, who is attend­
ing school in Battle Creek, and his
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gillette vis­ sister. Mrs. Davis and little daugh­
ited Louis Betts and family
in ter were Easter guests of their par­
Grand Rapids on Friday. Louis has ents, Mr. and Mrs. Archie McIntyre
been poorly for some time and his
physician recently ordered him to
quit work entirely. This is a hard
The Kinsley Ladles' Aid will meet
blow to Louis, who worked for many
years here. His many friends wish April 22 with Mrs. Mary Kibllnger
him the best recovery possible.
Prank Lee's daughter. Mn. Ruth and Mrs. Charles Hammond are in
Broun, and iter husband were bin the group entertaining with her. All
come prepared to tie off a quilt.
Brovtm was a teacher in our school
some year:, ago and has a wide ac­
quaintance around here.

left for 8t. Louis. Mo., Bunday as
guests of the Kellogg Foundation,
where in company with 100 other
doctors they will attend a clinic. A
poor time to get ill. with both of our
physicians away.

Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Phillips and Grand RapldsSast Friday and again
daughter. Mrs. Alfred Bishop, and on Sunday to see their granddaugh­
Mrs. C. N. Tobias went to the High ter. who lias undergone an opera­
school auditorium in Hastings Fri­ tion at Blodgett hospital. 8lie Is
day evening to hear Judge Jeffries very ill but there is hope for her

BALL
ONE
Carlton
has rented Fay
Hummel's farm for the coming yevMrs. Wesley French of Assyria re­
turned to her home the first of the
week after spending a week with
her sister. Mrs. Rittman.

Townsend meeting in Hastings Fri­
day night, judge Jeffries is a very
able speaker.
Congratulations are being extend­
ed to MT. and Mrs. Gaylord Gould,
formerly Miss Esther Hoffman. Sev­
eral showers have been given in
their honor the past week.

STRIKE THREE

HIGH PRICES ARI STRUCK OUT AT THI
WALLACE GROCERY I

fO-ft. Sa$h Cord
Clathes Line.—

10 Ban EELS NAPTHA SOAP
3 lbs. W. L W.
Water Softener.

LEADER FLOUR

MAKE YOUR

43c

TWO FOUNDS 4X SUGAR ..1_______

24J Ib. sock 69c
3-lb. sack of
CORN MEAL

ing Sugar Paas.

SUNKIST ORANGES (swaat)
288 size_______________21c doz.

HOUSE LIKE BRICK WITH

ASBESTOS SHINGLES
10 lb&gt;. Sugcr_49c

2 lbs. Rice

Wotch Your Cash Register Receipts—They Ara
Worth Money to You !

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

WALLACE GROCERY

Phone 2515

HASTINGS

Frank Sago

Hastings

PHONI 2458

STRIKER SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Miss Leona Coleman spent tlie
Mrs. Sarah Ickes spent Friday in
Grand Rapids visiting her sister,
Mrs. George Downs.
•

Mr. and Mrs. Wkyne Wheeler of
Battle Creek spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Ickes.

e Odessa spent Monday
and Mn. Ralph Striker.

PARAMOUNT RUG CLEANERS
Ionia called on Mr. and Mrs. Edd.
Newton Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Meyers of De­
troit spent from Saturday till
Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Edd.

Mrs. H. A. Nichols of Hastings
spent from Friday until Monday
with her daughter, Mn. Fred Henney. and family.
Mr. and Mrs. LaFloy Greenfield
and sons of Hostings were guests
Sunday ot Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hen-

OF BATTLE CREEK. MICH.

FRIGIDAIRE

with

WITH_T’ METER-MISER

PICK-UP SERVICE

ALL FIVE

RUGS, CARPETS AND UPHOLSTERY

Inquire Miller Furn. Co., Phone 2226

family spent Sunday with his fath­
er. Nathaniel Golden, and family In
Baltimore.
Tn order to help Samuel Ostroth
celebrate his seventieth birthday.
Monday, April 20, neighbors and
friends have been invited to join
him at the North Maple Grove
church on the evening of the 20th. at
7:30. Music, songs and a sermon
by Rev. H. J. Voelker of Flint will
be features of the evening. Come
and help to make the event a happy

Quia■ Unun -TronUt-fno

IT CUTE CURRENT
COST TO THK BONK

The new Frigidaire'. spec*

JEWS’1
. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklin of
Allegan were gueste of her parents
Bunday.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Plummer and
three children of Battle Creek were
Bunday afternoon callers of Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Norton.
Mrs. Albert Ostroth. who spent
the winter with her son. Rev. Del­
bert Ostroth. In Detroit, visited
friends here before leaving for Iowa.
Monday, where she expects to stay
some time with her daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton

WECTJQX,

OUR CHECK-UP INCLUDES

$8450

Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Hall were
visiting relatives in the neighbor­
hood Sunday afternoon.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Clare Mason of
Nashville were Sunday callers on
his mother anh stepfather, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Nelson.
NORTHEAST CARLTON.
Cora Elliott has been sick with
flu but is up and around - again.
Mr. sod Mrs Wayne Elliott and
son of Flint spent the week end
with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Mina
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Endsley and
family of Fowlerville spent Sunday
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.
M. Decker.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Marlow and
family of Mt. Clemens spent the
week end with his parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Chas. Marlow.
Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle Height and
family of Detroit called on Mr. and
Mrs. John Abbott, Bunday.
Bunday visitors at Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Lydy's were: Mr. and Mrs.
Lyle Lydy of Maple Grove. Mr. and
Mrs. Geo. Lydy and Gary of Irv­
ing and Mr. and Mrs. EJwyn Hay­
ward ond son of Delton.

No Down Payment

This Is How to Buy... ON PROOFI
Check and rapai' tires.

Why You Should Buy Your
Frigidaire from III

Check battery.

We add our own reputation for complete
reliability to chat of Frigidaire and General

Complete 'flush-eut of the
motor. This process removes
all dirt from Inside of motor.
You can see the dirt come

ANDRUS SERVICE

• Why risk your money i - - -claims/ Come in and get i
that
Frigidaire
------- —
- t produce
------- -------more cold for much less current
cost. That it keeps food* better,
looger... Freezes more ice—fitOtr
tfRhl
• • • And that the
&gt;caled-inmechanism

k protected for Five Yean against
service expense for only Five Dot­
lan included in the purchaseprice!
See the proof of revolutionary
convenience, too, in this marveloui «refrigerated pantry”. It provides much more shelf space «
front, a Portable Utility Shelf,
Full-Width Slid
Koras of other
„___
Frigidaire costs less to own! We're
waiting to show you the PROOF!

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY
Phone 2305

�Coming Attraction* at
The Strand Theater

Clemen* spent Bunday with Mr and
Mr* Howard Ourti* at Laming.
Mr* .Loot. Star, ten and
of Battle Creek spent

Crooked Furrow*, Once Bane of Every
Fanner, Help in War on Erosion

Mr- and Mn. Wolf of Ptalnw*U

KROGEH SI ORES
SINCERITY - sudM^ mm

FLOUR

59c

LILY WHITE FLOUR :^89c
Z*^\EECC
VVirGE

krogeb-s hot
DATED JEWEL

ib.
bay

Northern Tissue
asm DLR’S
Cleanser IK.UTUOLsZ

Sal Soda
Prunes

AVALON MAND
SANTA CLSMA

PLAIN OR SUGARED

DOUGHNUTS -10c
P &amp; C Ciant Soap 3

10t

POST TUAST1U UM

Kellogg’s Com Hako&gt; .*CT 10c

Karo Syrup

iuaiami

&gt;*?■

10c

col'muy cu*

Salad Dressing
Clifton Tissue

10c
3 .* 10c

Potted Meats
.

3 w

10c

2

23c

Canvas Cloves
Mustard
•**“

‘TT 10e

SAUUFLlkL .

Lard

r.vvc

compound

STL ROY - WELL MADE

erfront.
Hartey Purcell and ton of Grand
Ml** Harlow portray* a girl who Rapid* and Mr. and Mrs Jultua
torn the swMgertM, two-fisted bow Paul and family of Battle Creek.
□ rand Rapid* of lhe waterfront, played by Tracy.
Friend* of clarence Groh* in thia
For him *he steal* ud goe* to prtevicinity were saddened to team of
his death Monday. We extend our
sympathy to hl* wife and *l*ter.
In ■-RUtrafl" Miss Harlow appears
Mis* Caimi. Dora Purcell and
for Um first tim* aa a brunette, a
Doris hoflman ate supper with Mr.
DOWLING.
new hair color which reveals tier os
a totally naw and even more fasci­
MU*
VeU Rice'* birthday Thursday
wife of William Morgan of Lacey, nating personality.
evening and attended choir pracwas held at the Dowling church
Tuesday with burial Ln the Dowling
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clemen* spent
Grim Historical Racking.
cemetery Besides the husband. Mra.
Easter with the latter * grandmoth­
The human and historically dra­ er. Mrs. Jane Boynton. at Sunfield.
matic side of the long fight by
A very good Easter program was
of Lacey. and several grandchll- Arizona and California ranchers to
harness the Colorado River by the Brethren, church Burday evening.
great Boulder Dam project U
■on* of Royal Oak were gueste of thrllUngiy and deftly depicted in
O. Kussmaul. who ha* bean tick
Mr. and Mr*. Lloyd Gaskill and "Red River Valley" starring the
popular cowboy actor Gene Autry,
Mr. end Mrs. Carl Stanton ot Yp­ presented with pictorial perfection
silanti visited relatives here over lhe grim slory behind lhe greatest
Easter. They, with Mr. and Mrs. government Irrigation project in the Oay Norton and family and Mn.
RoUns Leach, all of Hastings, and
Harold Stanton attended a card world.
,
Dr. Acella Leach of Lansing.
Ml&amp;s Grace Baulch spent Easter
tai of Mr
and Mrs
Howard
with the home folks.
Stanton east of the village
Mis* Vela Rice and Homer Ray­
Mrs. Anna Pierce of Hastings vis­
George Raft and Rosalind Russell mond were the Banner spellers of
ited friends here Thursday.
In a grand new comedy
ly romarxe. l** Durfee school who went to
Mra Harry Mallett and sou of "It Had To Happen" *uh »»-•R**11 Dowling Tuesday to taka part in the
Toledo are gueste this week of Mr. playing tlie part of an Irresistible ,
spelling contest.
and Mra L. J. Oswald.
lover, and Mis* Russell, a lady who
Mr. and Mrs Roy Smith of Johns­
GLASS CREEKtown entertained several relatives maace. “It Had To Happen" Is a
Sunday visitors at Fred Otl* were
Sunday at a birthday dinner. MUs pulse-pounding romance of two peo- Ray Olla and children and Louie
ewho found lhe world well lost Erway and family of Kalamaaoo.
love.
also Mr. and Mrs Qeo Harthy of
Mrs. Edna Whitney has returned
Hastings. Ray OU* remained over
ni 1:1 1 1
from Riga. Ohio, where she spent
Clarence' Curtis and friend of
the week with her sister. Mrs Clara
Mrs. John Foreman of Kalamazoo
Knoblauch.
Lansing culled on the Clemen* and Mrs. Maurice Foreman of HaaMr. and Mrs. Orlle Van Syckie are Saturday evening.
lings were Sunday evening callers
the parents of a daughter born at
About forty attended the Aid So­
Leila hospital. Battle Creek last ciety Wednesday at Jack Moore's
Louis Havens left for Battle Creek
Clemens and Merl Monday where he will spend some­
time with the Advance Casting Cor­
poration.
Mr. and Mrs chas. Whittemore
and Miss Katie spent Sunday with
PHONE 21 AO
Mrs. Amy Whittemore at Delton.
WE CALL FOR
Mis* Elnora Pew of Hastings
AND DELIVER
spent the week end with her slitcr.
Mrs. Russell Whittemore; Mr. end
Mrs. Fred Bechtel and Billie also
Send us your curtains, drapes
spent Sunday there.
and all things that need clean­
Easter visitors at Clyde Warren’s
were Phil Warren and daughter
ing Just phone and our driver

House
Cleaning?

will pick them up and return
them to you fresh and restored
READY TO BE PUT
BACK IN PLACE !

10c

TV MO

Big Bar Soap

25c

MeCHEEItY’S
Dry Cleaners

WESCO FEEDS — Special Prices

SCRATCH «.*

»1.55

STARTIM. AID

CHICK FEED

$1.91

GROWING

i»% i’kortn
DAIRY FEED

EGG MASH

ROLLED OATS

10 fit 29c
|W&gt; Ik. k.g »U7)

AMERICAN 10
FAMILY soar

OXYDOI

49c

wm nt. parra^tr straight furraw

bla entire day. A crooked fur
row was a* agricultural al*

tioua than

bi. fonbaara

Quilt

■iratgbl furrow* provide ready
renin mgy sweep rapidly acroaa
farms carry lag away raiuabla
wind furrows around tbo «ide of
a elope, la llae with Its cod)our.
to this way oKertng resistance to
damaging rain water*.

W7ATBR eroeion work* It* ml*
w chief In two principal pbgae*
The Rrai te ebeei wwlon
When
eurfaaa weakened, through orev
cultivation. ovargreslng. or rack
gradually disappear* through the

She*' erosion is bard to detect.

thick Uttla runnel* of

that grow rapidly, eveoruellv to
slew hag* portions from farm*
Plow tn* furrow* along elope
the hills.'

run-off water* mu.«t drain, wide
runway* are left, in which long
grants are e be oaraged to grow.

er difficult and espeoslve to
build, but once sloping farmland*

that. In plowing straight (urn wt,
they were really robbing ib*lt de­
scendants Of land
And so. whit
contour plowing, strip cropping.

to terraria*
Further st ran* th I* gained by
alternating th* crop*: pl*e1ng
clover, or a dlffinilt loerode crop.
*ucb a* long rooted sorghum, east
to easily eroded «n»s. eurh a*

At lhe anda

seem, determined n«t to repent
the miatakra of hl. predecessor*.

day st Mr. and Mr* Pon Johns- I
HENDERSHOTT.
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
, Mrs- Merritt Gates of Lansing and
! Mr. and Mr*. Maurice Nosani
Mr and Mrs Ed. Whitright ac- too*
R. D. Gates of Eaton Rapids.
Glenn Asplnall and family spent of Detroit were guests at the hon
comimnled
Mr.----------and Mrs
Ed. Dodge
Bunday visitors al Roy Erway a------.----------------- ------------were Mrs. Al Wolfe and daughter. I of Lansing to Three River* Bun- Easier with their parents. Mr? and of Floyd Garrison on Sunday.
Maurice' Erway. Harold Sharp, of day and (pent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Pete Hoflman of near Kala- j Dr. olen Gunn and family fro
,no'Kalamaaoo were Easter gueste i
Grand Rapids, MIm Esther Erway. Mrs Marley Burroughs.
Mr. and Mn. Nell Welcher of i the home of A. C. Clark.
Mrs. Llnnle Brockway. Mrs Har- I The ladles of the Cemetery Circle
old Brockway and children of Ha*- | made about *15 from the sale of Battle Creek were Easter gueste of ' Mr. and Mrs. BAsll Hayward am
their
parent*,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Cha*.
1 daughter* of Alto were gueste ai
tings and Mr and Mr« Philo Price I baked goods Saturday.
and children of Kalamaaoo
I Mr
«ar. ana Mra.
Ur4 We&lt;lcy
wewicy gsenemci
Benedict 0
ur/ Lcchleilncr.
___________
I the Community supper Friday nigh
the
77317...
I and called on her P*rvnte. Mr and
The elevator attendant Ln a New Lansing and ***
” Fred Unnlngton I
faiv.iiv nf HasiingA wrre ktaztrr rtay
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Urs. Cha*. VanVranken. later hi
York inilliotudre's skyscraper home (gueate
f**™" In (he John Benedict home.! Mra. Peorge Jewell and four sons the evening.
want* to marry hl* employer's
Mr
and
Mrs.
John
Whltrlght
reof
Midland
came
Friday
for
an
In, Margaret Garrison 5;*nl_Uw week
daughter He says he can bring her'
I reived word of the death of a great definite visit at the home of her end with her aUter, Mr*. Harvey
grand.cn In Emmett, Idaho Wc ex- mother. Mra. George Roush, who U Parmalec. in Baltic Creek. The
tend sympathy to the bereaved dl.
i Parmalec* moved there from their
one’s family.
| Mr. and Mra. Wm. Cramer. Sr.. | farm near Banfield last week.
Wm. McNutt was taken suddenly entertained the following for East- i . j*r.
Mrs. Chas. VanVranket
very ill Friday night and his con- er: Mr. and Mra. Geo Jenson of Mt.! spent an enjoyable Easter calllni
dilion is considered serious
Clemaiu. Mr. and Mra. Merle Call- on relatives tn Kalsuno and Kala
*8*----------------han at Lamina. Mr. and Mr*. Wm.'
.. Hlf*OBXCORNjE,l,s- „
Cramer. Jr, Mr. and Mra. Clarence
Bunday caller* at Albert Brill'
and Marceline Hammond and Merlin Pierce of ;
Mr. and Mr*. C. J. Lahr a
ainnbel! of Hastings
llA-.tlniz. were gueste
etirsl., at
at ' Hastings -and
— .4 Mis* Etete Poland -f
.... ...
. . ..
..a.
Campbell
of ...
Hastings.
Mr. and
Mrs. n
Donate
B Campbell's Sunday.
Middleville.
'Smith and Mr. and Mr*. Wm
Louis and Hilda Williams spent
Don’t forget th* Striker school P. Solm* i Gertrude Smith I. all fron
the week end at Gregory with RodT. A. Friday evening, April 11, at j Detroit- Mrs. Ella Lahr from thi
rick and Carrie Swaddling.
i Gregory district spent the day a
a o’clock.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Borden of
———* * *
■
, die Brill home.
Kalamazoo were Saturday evening
OcaCLS Never Freeze. Solid
A Ur8® crowd «Uljoved the fin,
visitors of their parents. O. Haynes
and Clayton of Battle Creek spent
the otan h&gt;. ...» froxro tald
““ C&lt;mU“
““ “»al”
Sunday with them.

TIME TO CHANGE
OIL FOR SPRING

Mr. and Mra Marvin Boughton
of Kalamazoo were visitors Batur-

■Ince life appeared on earth, mjs
a geologist

PUBLIC 4N6MIE5

PORK
LOIN
ROAST RIB END

LOIN END

LEONA SAUSAGE
SLICED BACON

35c

EXTRA SPECIAL I

SMELT
HUSH CAUGHT

19c

BANANAS 4
GOLDEN YELLOW FRLTT

NUHIM

SAVE AS MUCH AS
101A QUART
STANDARD’S
PREMIUM QUALITY

CALIFORNIA SEEOLFXS

ORANGES

19c

MEDLL H SIZE - TREE RIPENED
CALIFORNIA SUNKIST

LEMONS
CILERY
CARROTS

broke* with tradition

25c

WMU. RLXXCHtD

MOTOR OIL COSTS

IT GOES FURTHER!

STUDEBAKER

Used Cars
Pledge Backed—30 Day Guarantee

"The Better Chris of Used Can

1935 FORD TUDOR SEDAN
1933 TERRAPLANE 6 COACH

1932 STUDEBAKER COMMANDER
8 REGAL SEDAN—

1932 STUDEBAKER DICTATOR

1931 STUDEBAKER DICTATOR

deun, when you have bo =VU “D” in your crank-

1932 ROCKNE 65 SEDAN

cm*. It* tough, smooth, durable "body’’ resist*

1 Ww Wddroo Qanaraf
lie U « &lt;t
plat r»dtnJ Tulfa qt.-total 27f a guart.

th* usual efftet* of sharp change* in temperature;
doesn’t chicken greatly in cold, nor thin out seri­
ously under high engine-heat. Enjoy its economy
this Spring and Summer.

SNAKE

Certified

.When it comes to Haying power, Iso "Via “D" re­
fuses to take its hat off to any other motor oil on
th* market. Compare it with oils that co it as
much as 100 more a quart—compare its ability
to *toy on the job in long hard driving. Watch

ONLY 250* A QUART

THE

8 ST. CtCIS SIDAH-.
8 SEDAN—

1931 STUDEBAKER 6 SEDAN

1934 CHEVROLET 2 Over Seden
All lli«M un compbHl, rtcvnAitiMitd. !»•
•O Car Carriri th. GmSimf SUASANTtt

LABGC BLhCgLS

Eight short minutM i* all it taka* to haw* your crankoaM drained and

FRESH ASPARACUS
NSW RADISHES
NEW PEAS
V*Ut»LUD
WIUdUUD

1 Sc
* »*•. 9*
a

10c

refilled with th* proper grad* of I*o&gt;Vi* "D” for Spring, at Standard

OU Station* and Dealers—wh*r* you *ee the sign of

STANDARD OIL SERVICE
-Cegr. 1W, Soadud Oil Co.

LUBRICATE FOR SAFETY EVERY L000 MILES

GOODYEAR BROS
HARDWARE CO
Hastings, Michigan

Telephone 210J

Weaving recklessly in and but
of traffic, the Snake Driver is
one of the most daffiMrotu pub­
lic enemies of the highways.
The seconds mv«1 in ty* mad
desire "io get there first" can
ntver pay lor the thousands of
innocent victims left tn his wake.
&lt;&gt;ood driverj never lake
chancei that unnecewarily en­
danger life or property

�Oreek end George Hoffman
S^Sd^in^Oewg^Hoffman"

Mr. and

oat of solid granite,
four hugs stoss fare*—larg­
est la ths world—will, perhaps
for more than a million years,
gaze oat over tho far-fieag Mori­
son from tho lofty eminence ot
ML Rusbmaro ia South Dakota.
Already this great Rushmore
Memorial — aa Impreealva. last­
ing tribute io Presidents Wash­
ington, Lincoln, Jefferson, and
Theodore Roomvelt. who played
such vital parte ia tho birth and
development ot the aaiton — la
weU along toward completion.
Gntxoa Borglum. Ill famed
sculptor-creator, predicts thst if
will be finished by the end ot
• The memorial project was first
proposed on Jan. 88, 1834. by
Doane Robinson. South Dakota
hlatorian.
Borglum was eonauhad. ths Rushmore site waa
chosen, and the great project
swung under way. after eolemn
dedication by the Uta Calvin
Coolidge with the words: “We
have ooma here to dedicate a
Korneretone that was laid by the
hand of the Almighty.**
The magnitude of this huge
work of art is difficult for man
to conceive unless ba has seen
it It la hard to picture a rep­
lica ot a man’s head aa large as
a fiva-atory building. Three men
and a boy eonld stand In one ot
the stone George Washington's
eyes- For centuries the Great
Sphinx of Egypt has been looked
upon aa a world wonder, but,
when completed, each ot the
Rushmore heads win dwarf tho
Nile work in both else end gran-

GEO. E. WALKER 6- SONS
PICKLE CONTRACTS &amp; SEED
DODGE Commercial Panel—Smartly designed delivery car
for grocers, florists, butchers, bakers and many other types of
retail business. Ultra smartness in appearance in combination
with exceptional efficiency in performance plus extremely low
operating and maintenance costs.
man went from this community.
cldent. They lived for a short time
Sunday callers on Mrs. Mabie tn this vicinity slid made many
Moody were Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Moody and Mr. and Mn. Herman
Moody and children of Battle creek
and Mr. and Mrs. DuBols of Pritch-

Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Os­
troth and Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Bux­
ton and daughter attended a fare­
well party at the home of Bernice
Show near Nashville given for their
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Laubaugh aunt. Mrs. Albert Ostroth. who is
and son were Sunday guests of lhe leaving soon for the west to spend
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert some time with her daughter. '
OUs of Dowling.

spent
guest.

130 feet bigb. an epic of Amer­
ica.
A abort history of the
growth ot tbs United States waa
a opposed to have been provided

about a quarter Inch every 100.­
000 yean. so. at the very least,
tho Inscription will last 1,890.­
000 ykare. And the dales In the

Mr. and Mrs. Claude A. Ham­
mond. Robert and, Paul were in
Jackson Friday, where they met
Miss Rose Marie of Detroit, who
accompanied them home to remain
for her ten day spring vacation.
Easter,visitors at the home of Mr.
and Mr^_ John Malcolm were Mr.
and Mrs. Al Bteury of Lansing. Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Malcolm, Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Malcolm of Hastings,
and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Malcolm

'

Nashville. and Mr. arid Mrs. Clair
Brooks and family. Detroit, were
Easter gueste of Mr. and Mn. Verne
Hawblltx.
Mra. Henry Bidelman and mother.
Mrs. Saddler of Hastings and Forest
Bidelman spent Wednesday with
Mr. and Mrs. parks al Kalamazoo.
Mrs. Saddler remained for a visit
with her daughter.
Mias Edna Ellen baas of Hastings
spent the week end at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bidelman.
Mr. and Mn. George Marshall
and family were Easter gueste of
Mr. and Mn. Dewey Jones at Nash­
ville.

TN addition to lhe four groat'
1 heads, there will bo Inscribed'
In letters three feet high, on a

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Walters and
Marion of Grand Rapids and Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Thompson and
family of Bowne were dinner guests
of M. E. Moore and Miss Clara J.
Sisson, Easter Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar FineM and
family spent Dister with his broth­
er, William Flfleld and family of

___
Attractive 191

Branch district and Ear) Deraery.
North Maple Grove. Mr. and
Mrs. Rodger Warner and son-v
Nashville and the Earl Marshalls,
Marshall, were visitors Sunday of
Mr. and Mra. WUl Hawblltx
Mita Velma Hoffman spent a
week's vacation with her parents.
Mr and Mrs. George Hoffman, re­
turning to her school in Jackson
Bunday.
Mrs. Ada Bell and Mrs. Worth
Green attended the funeral of Ar­
chie Calkins Ln Nashville Bunday

by the Ute Calvin Coolidge, but
his death precluded this.
To geenre tho text for this in­
scription. which will stand
through tho ages, a national
contest Was conducted and from
tho winning manuscripts the
committee hoped to find “
ferial to bo earved in
kola granite.
The message on lhe
Mount Rushmore will
oor civilization and possibly
many civilisations to come, for
the words will bo inscribed in
letten four inches deep. Geolo­
gist! have reckoned thet ‘the

The gigantic figures ere___ _
hewn from tho fins Inner gran­
ite which can be polished to the
smoothness ot glass, and ths
memorial is so sitnsted thst it
will reeaive tho foil force of the
son’s rays for tho greater part
ot the day. making a spectacle
which may bo seen for miles
through ths clesr South Dakota
atmosphere.

Jr.

have been living for the past year
on lhe Ben Lee place have moved
Mr. and Mrs. Wm.j Havens spent to another farm owned by the warn',
the week end with their daughter. man. owner of the big apple orch
Mrs. Howard Johnsdn, and husband ard. They have moved to the Benof Hickory Comers.
Friends here are sorry to learn Dean entertained the ladles of Lhe
community, complimentary to Mrs.
Baes on Saturday afternoon.

Save time and labor with Farm Bureau “Ferm-Totted"

every condition, Farm Bureau Tools and Machinery are
becoming more and more popular with the farmers of
Michigan. Before you buy new equipment

SEE THE FARM BUREAU LINE.

New Torpedo Sulky Ptow
The Torpedo Sulky Plow, illustrated
here, is constructed throughout of
extra strong material. Levert are
conveniently located for ease of op­
eration. Light draft. Equipped with
Four-Point I. D. Shares.

Detroit were Easter guests of
Peeling's mother and husband,
and Mrs. George Grabe.
Wm.'s parents and on Wednesday
Mrs Fred Camp nnd little grand­
daughter visited Mrs. McCann and
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Wald of Rock­ Mr and Mrs. Ed Smith of HasUngs
ford were week end gueste of the
latter's parents, Mr and Mrt. Harry' there on Sunday.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES, Inc.

daughters of Ionia visited Mr. and
ville also spent Sunday ther*.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schrler of Mrs E D. Johnson Sunday.
and Virginia Chaiker of Kalamazoo.
Tin: Irving .folks were glad to
Kalamazoo spent Sunday With the
The Davenport family spent East­ Utter's parents. Mr and Mrs Harry learn Uiat Mr. and Mrs Jesse Haney
er Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. E. W.
of Cloverdale and Donald were able
The pupils of the OUs school en­ to leave lire hospital after their acjoyed an Easter parly Friday after­
noon given by the teacher. Miss
becn staying with her daughter all
Evelyn Newland.
winter, returned home last Sunday ily of Orangeville.
Dr Perry of Hastings was In this
Rev. Kring la visiting his parents locality the first of the week at­
and reports the Loecks family do­
ing fine especially Emelle Ann.
tending to the TB testing of cattle.
The Cloverdale Camp Fire Girls
Delton.
arc going to have a bake .vale Satur­ between Cloverdale and
Monday morning. He escaped with­
The Easter program given al the
day. April 18th at the post office.
out any injuries, but his car Is bad­ church Sunday evening was well at­
ly
damaged.
tended. over flfeen dollars being rcHuron spent Easter Sunday with
Frank
Barnard
and
Melbourne
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
MacLeod made a business trip to
johncoclo
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brooks and Grand Rapids a week ago Saturday.
son, John of Kalamazoo, spent

Hastings, Mich.

You don’t need to go any farther than

MILLER FURNITURE COMPANY

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Walters and
Marion of Grand Rapids visited the
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edw.
Wallers and grandmother, Mrs.
Garrison.
Stoughton. Sunday.
.
Mr. and Mrs. George Chipman of
Geo. Jefferson and Bernard Ry­
an of Jackson were Thursday after­ Kalamazoo spent Sunday with Mr.
noon guests of Claude A. Hammond and Mrs. Bert Chilson.
The Young People s Class will
enroute to the Western Beagle
Trials at Anderson. Ind, which were meet at the town hall, Tuesday cveheld Saturday and Sunday.
Guests on Easter Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Rob-

spent Easter Bunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Manning of Marshall.
Dorr Manning Is seriously ill with
heart trouble.
Mr. and Mrs. George Green spent
Sunday al Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Green's at Barryvllle.
MiY and Mra. Charles Janson and

We invite you to inquire at the Hastings City Bank,
Hastings, or the banks in Nashville, Middleville or
Dolton os to our financial rosposibility.

Took. Designed and built to give reliable service under

Miss Lillian Bowerby was home
from Chicago for the Easter vaca-

Borglum believes that It the
necessary men, power.^and, co­
operation are supplied ’him? he
can complete t b e sculptural

nlng. April 21st.
Helen Davenport spent her Easter

WALLACE SEED STORK, Hastings.
CITY NATIONAL BANK, Nashville.
SMITH fr DOSTER HDWE. CO., Delton.
MIDDLEVILLE CO-OPERATIVE CO.. Middleville.

who live on lhe Bowerby farm, a
daughter on April 10. Congratula-

Inscription should last even
longer, for the dates ot the nine
episodes In the formation ot our
national life, which will, form
the basis ot the carved legend,
will be cut eight inches into lhe

by the end of 19 38. and that the
final cleaning and polishing can
be done the following year.

MAY BE OBTAINED AT THE FOLLOWING FLACES;

Last Friday the teachers of lhe
southwest part of lhe county includ­
ing Mr. Tucker, the Dunham teach-

DI
KUvO

linoleum
CARPETING

to see the sensational new

Wc are aware of die fact dial diere are thousands
of homes in this and lhe surrounding vicinity that
are sadly in need of some kind of floor covering.

- LEONARD

To lho»c we would say tliul wc luive in slock tlie
Largest Line of Linoleums and Felt Base Goods
ever carried by us or any other firm in Barry
county, and the immense quantity we are selling
fully justifies lhe big stock we are carrying.

Monday Mr. Martin took a load of
High school students to visit the
same institution. Brandt McIntyre.
Russell Donovan and Enid Cheese-

9x12 RUG
for

as low at

OSES ,tV/O
LESS CURRENT!

Easter Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Claude A. Hammond and fam­
ily, wen.Mr. and Mrs. James Ham­
mond and Natalie and Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Hammond and.Richard of Flint
and Miss Maureen Willetts of Lan­
sing.

POWERS ECHOES.
About 35 relatives met st the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frost
Bunday for Easter dinner and to
honor Mrs. Frost's father, Mr. Esbaugh of Grand Rapids, her sister.
Frost of Detroit. It being their
birthdays.
Charles Hsnser and nephew Rob­
ert Brown of Detroit spent the week
end with their aunts the Misses Al­
mira and Nell Reed.
Mrs. Miner Palmer and daughter,
Ethel, visited in Grand Rapids, Frl-

A HOME through

A DAY

sist you in building or buy­
ing a home on small month-

buys u Leonard

ly payments extending
We consider it the one big out­
standing refrigerator value of
the year. That's why we arc
selling it. And art wt idling it!
Those who have seen it say
that it’s iim what they've been
waiting for. It has everything
—dependability, beauty, con­
venience and economy.
Come in and get a real thrill
looking at it. You'll get another
thrill when we tell you how
easily you can buy one—how it
will actually pay for itself.
Don't putit off—come in today.

a period of years.
If you are interested in

building or buying a home
Richard and Ruwell Palmer of
Detroit spent Easter with their par-

W. Hocdemakcr and brother-in­
law. John Blom, of Stratford, OnL.
Canada, were callers Tuesday at A.
Bedford'.'!.
Mr. and Mrs. Jos, Pflug of Has­
tings were Sunday afternoon callers
of MTS. Pauline Daniels.

A TONIC AND BUILDER

We already have scores of Rugs laid aside for fu­
ture delivery, and people are buying every day,
because wc have some of tlie liandsomest patterns
that wc have ever had the pleasure of showing, ut
a price that aqlisfics tlie most critical buyer.

I

This plan enables us to as­

come in and talk the matter

over with one of our ofliWe will be pleased to
help you solve your prob-

WE ARE QUALlFlEb TO MAKE LOANS
UNDER THE FtOtkAt MOUSING ACT!

NATIONAL BANK OF HASTINGS
MA4TIK08

MICHIGAN

ibe manufacturer. Positive proof
de peo debility.
1. You'll find the haadr, drop-shelf
on the door useful when you are
preparing iced drinks or serving
frozen salads and desserts.
X Green vegetables keep motif end
delicious .In Leonards Crisper.
Even wilted things become fresh
again.
3. Leonard has a built-in Tempera­
turn Indicator which tells you the
exact temperature of the food com-

S

4. Ice cube removal is nude easy
becauzc every Leonard trey is
equipped with a rubber grid.
8. Leonard has an Interior electric
light. Entirely automatic, going oa
when tU door is opened.
4. The big, roomy, esiyJilidin*
drawer provides space for foods
a hi ch do not require refrigeration.
Ideal for potatoes.

FELT BASE and
LINOLEUMS
MICID AT

SQUARE
YARD!
Up to &gt;2.25 Hum yard
GOOD 9x12 FELT

DON'T FORGET that almost evary article la ear
line will be greatly advanced in price in the near
future ... Is our honest opinion. *

Miller Furniture Co.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THFMDAT, APRIL Ig. ItX

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGQ

| LEGAL NOTICES I'

Dt vradM to ihr
North Croat &lt;to»r
ft* *•’’ - «"!*

SUM Cortrlsht.
Alter**; tor Marlette*.

maker. Doris Buelow and Dorothea
Buelow are the only girls who have
finished their reports.

SOUTHWEST CARLTON,
(tat Aachali Buck won honors

service and program at lite church
The Tho mappie W. K. Kellogg
Sunday.
Bunday morning. Seven girls from
Consolidated school was organised
in IB31. The naw building was com­
pleted about Thanksgiving time and ball boys ware feted at a banquet
Bunday here.
the pupils moved in the new struc­ sponsored by the Commercial club.
ture. Before this thne they had gone H. G Benaway is chairman. John
Gordon McCallum
Grand
Olli who Is backfield coach, also Culbert's on Sunday were: Mr. and Darts Johnson. Letha Calthrop.
halt The old school was torn down
Mrs. Herman G^dly of Charlotte. Ruth Krick. Gra-x Lathrop and this vicinity for many years and
last fall.
Miss Lucile Adrtanaon; the speaker
Bunday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Everett
is Miss EUsabeth
VanderUll of in the community. He is a brochn McCallum.
of Wilbur allcock
Commercial club for making pos­
Mr. and Mra Levant Yeager and Grand Rapids.
farther at4arv4. that vahlh aatiM pupils were enrolled. During the
Tommy Hayward experienced a
U &lt;!»•• hr vaUl«allM al a «y following winter, the districts of tlie sible tills banquet.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Zimmerman
painful accident when lie drove a
WEST HOPE.
township were consolidated and the
day evening to spend a week with have moved onto tlie Charles
five-inch silver tn his thigh Thuranext fall 334 were attending the T.
Hughes farm.
The hot lunches which have been elte Uaborae.
K. school. The enrollment has Incaused
here
by
the
drowning
on
Rankin Hyde went to Covington.
thr.) and driven in and broken off
served throughout the winter have
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Quimby of Bat­ Kentucky, where he attended the
below the surface. Surgical rasas
tle Creek spent Bunday with Mr. funeral of his brother-in-law, O. A.
puptls since the school has been have been prepared by the Home and Mrs. Henry Williams.
Kratt Thursday returning Friday has been fishing on Guernsey lake and Tommy will be a partial invalid
Economics club girls under the *umorning accompanied by Miss Bev­ all winter. For the full particulars
This rapid growth, which sur­
erley Kratt who win stay with Mr. see the account elsewhere In the
Some of our young people attendpassed all expectations necessitated
Carlton spent Sunday with Mr. and and Mrs. Hyde indefinitely.
.
an addition to the school which Is
Mrs, Caryl Fuller.
MtaTBcvertey Brown of Hasting*
^d
Bunday evening.
now being built. The service the
Lilted relatives
Hasel Shriber and Mr. and Mrs visited
relatives here
here the
the tatter
tatter part
part lhb Friday evening with Mr. and
school ha* rendered at all times has
Leo Barry and son spent Bund*/
Last Thursday the F- P. A. Club with Mrs. Nina Barry and family
Mrs. Sitas Doster’s father. Joshua
. Many courses are offered in the held a meeting to award green hand of southwest Carlton. Robert was
T. K. school, some of which are not
offered In other schools of this sire, every Tuesday and Thursday unal two o’clock. Mrs.:
held Wc
fomla. We wish him the best of
such as: agricultural courses, home
ten days previous.
economics,
shop,
bookkeeping, field trip will be held by the Animal luck in his new location.
RS
Husbandry boys. This will give the
chemistry,
mechanical
drawing,
ad
­
gether 11 seems fitting that the
met
boys
practical
knowledge
as
well
as
vanced shop, general science. Junior
parting was of short duration. It I*
science, junior business, art and exercising tlie knowledge they have
as they wanted It &lt;o be. The chil­
public speaking. New courses to be received In their lecture class.
side on the Town line entertained dren have our sine is sympathy.
।
OaDBB FOB FtTBUOATIOM.
offered next year will be typing and
her son and wife and their son of
Mrs. Ute DeBack was surprised on
tif IfHhWaa, tho Probst* Court
Bl-Y.
shorthand. The school also offers a
her birthday recently by a visit
The Hl-Y Club held a meeting Grand Rapids last week.
variety of activities which broaden
from
her
sisters,
Mrs.
Emma
ColParties
from
Woodland
purchased
Friday, April 3 at the school. They
the student's outlook on life.
voted to defray the expenses of four nice heifers recently from
All ot these activities have been bringing Ray Johns to the school Robert Garrett.
ence Mason of Richland, who took
accomplished
without additional
John Miller, who has employ­ dinner with her returning to their
who gave a talk at an assembly in
debt to lhe district due to the care­
March. Refreshments consisting of ment In Orangeville township passed
ful management and wise selections
the week end here with his parents.
ma Castle of Silver Creek and sev­
Mr. and Mra. Guy Miller.
later In the evening.
The present student body has
eral of the neighbors and friends
enjoyed more privileges than any
visited her. All wish her many hap­
School Gives Program.
other preceding one. We have a
Thursday evening guests of Mra. py returns.
Last Friday night lhe T. K i
group of teachers who are always
John Woods spent the week end
Chas. B. Johnson.
striving for the benefit of the pu­ the coming grange Mr. Curry, ag­ - Little Clare Brady of Middleville with Robert Burdick of Gull lake.
pils and school. As a student body, riculture Instructor, talked on "Ag­ Is passing some time with Mr. and
Albert Higgins and Francis Predwe should give the present faculty riculture In lhe School.” He stressed Mrs. Robert Garrett and will con­
a rousing vote of confidence and the main unite of the courses he tinue going to the T.-K. school In camp at Harrietta for a six months’
thanks for the fine school we have teaches: Biology, animal husbandry, Middleville.
Richard McLeay Is through at '
today.
agriculture economics, and horticul­
Charlie English who lias employ­
ture. Gaylon Bell sang solos, accom­ ment in Chicago passed the week the CCC camp at Grayling and is i
MlMryhsHM. Booirtor W Probata
panied by Mrs. Seekel on the piano. end with his family here on the staying with his aunt, Mrs. Sarah
The Juniors have started practice
Charles Chamberlain, junior, talked Town line.
for their play. "Campus Quaran­
I Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hyde.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Nichols enter­
tine.” Due to lhe fact Uiat so many on livestock. Mr. Bell also gave re­
marks.
tained for dinner Easter, their son George Hyde and Beverley Kratx
girls tried out and displayed a
and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Nich­ were at Hastings Saturday. ’
splendid amount of talent, a double
The regular meeting of the Moth­ ols and their three little ones. Mary
Mesdames Lewis Johnson. Gerald
ers Club was held Tuesday after­ Jane. Billie, and Francis of Irving. Shepard. William McKibbln and
noon at the Thornapple Kellogg
William Bloohm were at Battle
school a fine program was ar­
Creek
Saturday on business.
MARTIN
CORNERS.
Track calls were issued last week
ranged.
Bom Bunday. April 5. to Mr. and
and a targe number of boys turned
Mn. Leo Morgan, a fine pair of ford returned to their home here
out. Baseball practice also has been
School closed last Friday after­ twins, a boy and a girl, who will an­
started and the boys are determined noon al three o'clock to enable the
• Every mother knows how important is the diet of
to again win the B E. A. A. cham­ teachers to reach home for Easter. swer to the names Frederick and
Freda. Congratulations.
Mr. and Mrs. George Oalletley of
pionship which they have won for
a young child. MILK is an essential part of the diet
A pleasing Easter program was Battle Creek called on Mrs. Sarah
The P. T. A- was held Wednesday
Track practice for girls will start evening at the High school. Mrs. carried out at the church Sunday Smith and daughters Friday.
—and just any milk will not do. They need a milk
Mr.. and
ano Mrs.
mts. Spencer
spencer Dunn
uunn and
ana j.
McFall gave a talk on Speech cor­ morning. The children and young
______________
and Mr. and Mrs.
rection and Mr. Bell presented dia­ girls did their parte well and Rev.______of_ Bedford
meet to be held May 15.
that is pure and wholesome, containing the necessary
ge Adrtanaon. Jr, and daugh- I
grams on Guidance that will be Conklin gave an interesting talk., George Adrlanson.
An offering was taken for missions. 'ten ot
* Neeley -were Sunday gueste I
body-building qualities. • HIGHLANDS DAIRY
An ice cream demonstration was al­ and all whft took part received a of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrtansor.
cunning little basket of Easter eggs and Otis.
so given.
Grade A meets these requirements. It is one of lhe
or an Easter card.
Mr. and Mrs. David Artlip of Bat­
Our teacher. Miss Ruby Cogswell, tle Creek visited Mr. aqd Mr* Ned
The Home Economics Club held a
About 40 fathers and sons attend­
highest grades of milk produced. Consider this fact
popcorn sale last Thursday to help ed the F. F. A. banquet which was a accompanied a group of teachers Wilkins Bunday.
oKDaa roa rtnsLiCATiox.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallle Smith and
girls to the Home geo- greatt success. Mr. Bourtell spoke on last Friday on a trip to Lapeer,
SUU ot Mlaki**”. tea Prabate Corn
when you buy milk.
where they visited the home for Karl Smith spent Bunday with Mr.
nomics camip
p_
--------------... These
—,
in„the
summer.
the 11
livestock market.
the
feeble
minded.
They
found
It
and
Mrs.
Mason
Miner
of
Homer.
girls are chosen from lhe freshman
NORTH HOPE.
Interesting, but much over crowded,
Mr. and Mrs. Delos Hughes and
and advanced Home Economics
Friday
evening
the —Brush
classes according to their reports of. -----—•--------- —
-----------Ridge
—- there being about 900 more than daughter nf Toledo. Ohio, visited
the work they have done this year. I Community Club met with Mr. and they are supposed to care for.
Mr. and Mn. W. R Norris from
Mr and Mrs Roland Barry and Friday until Bunday afternoon.
Two reports are required and Judges i Mrs. Donald McCallum with Mrs
Pearl Hull in charge of the pro­ family were Easter dinner gueste of Master Ronald Lee returned home
Phone 2651 ROBERT W. COOK, Prop. Hastings
i gram MIm Margaret Johncock and her parents. Mr. and Mrs Ernest with his parents.
1 Donald McCallum
aang "SUver Todd on the Center road.
Mr. and Mn. M. J. Norris called
| Threads Among The Gold.” Other
entertaining features furnished a
, good program. Tlte next meeting
Uon Sull
„ of I.illian Llrhti
.. “n.rrv I ”1U be held at lhe schoolhouse May
Circuit Coart. la Chanrrrr. I will the eighth.
i bidder al Public
MF. ana Mrs. vnaries weicn oi
riT or'Ll, airwi the Striker District and Lyle BldelHuiidinr for tiarr, • man of Pontiac, spent Easier with
Rial* nt ML.XI. I _ . _ _
...... .
.__
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Anders and moth-

WEEDED by Every

GROWING
CHILD

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

Mr. and Mra. Jack Farwell of Kal­
amazoo, and Mr and Mrs. Louts
day afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Otto Pranshka and family.
Mrs Agnes Randle and son of
the Striker District spent Friday
night and Saturday with her par­
ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Murphy.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey HUI of Bat­
tle Creek spent Bunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Ulrich.

probat* oflu
i. aald eanat
Martb. A. D.

shift!
Shift with both hands on the
wheel... with the Electric Hand
)ME in for a "Digcovery Drive” in a
Hudson or Terraplane with the Electric
Hand. See what it means to shift gears at a
finger flick . . . smoothly and surely ... with
both hands on the wheel and both eyes on the road.
Than let us show you FOUR MORE ways
in which the Electric Hand makes driving al­
most magically simpler, easier and safer.

C

Council Proceedings of April 8,1396.

No Levers to Stumble Over
IOTIOB TO CBEOXTOBS.
Mlahirin. ths Probau Co«

1

a
Is

I

&amp;

PUBLIC NOTICE OF TAX
SALE
Tuesday- May 5, A. D. 1936

Now you can enjoy a front seat ride with no
gear or brake lever in the way.. .with the floor
aU citar. A front seat, at last, in which three
can stretch in comfort. That’s another Electric
Hand advantage.
At the wheel of a 1936 Hudson or Terraplanq,
you’ll soon find many other reasons why these
cars are growing so fast in popularity.
You’ll discover more power, and smoether
power, than you find in cars priced hundreds ol
dollars higher. More room, too... in the biggest
cars ever priced
With
V V — • so low.
wv .wv.
• the
. • newest,
— — -most
- ——-w
advanced style of the year and many new comfort
and safety features found on no oner 1936 cars.
Then let us show you what others have dis­
covered about the amazing economy end long
life of Hudsons and Terraplaqes. The proof is
waiting . .. come and see.

$595

9740 Im Hadeoa Bl*s(113

lAVt

I. R. LAWRiNCt DmIct.

Visit our SPRING SHOWING of New Models and New Colors

Take You&gt; "DISCOVERY DRIVE" Today
afle, &lt;&gt;&lt; t*» abov, Daaad toaaly traaa-

Arohta W. R«i«konl.
klacttoa Oonu.il

“iCs ra vrtn.T’1’
Bal*. BsaUUr

olfYa^*"***

W Mlebteka

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE COMPANY
EAST STATE ST.

a. c. rook as. dir Ctork.

.

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

PHONf 2101

�Tire nASHNr.g mwrg, nrMMT. &lt;r»n i«. im

select the best ones. Seven dollars is
SOUTHWEST CABLTON.
PRAIRIEVILIX.
on Howard Temple at Fairmont Mrs. Everett McCallum. The neigh­
required for each girl. Alice Shoe­
Miss Aachah Buck won honors
The Mother and Daughter ban­ hospital. Kalamaaoo. Sunday and borhood te cordially urged to be
maker. Doris Buelow and Dorothea Si In for Hastings High school quet wiU be held at the Methodist found him looking much Improved. there.
Buetow are the only girls who have
Mn. Mary Shedd Of Delton called
uradny
evening
at
Lincoln
school
church
on
lhe
evening
of
April
24.
A nice crowd attended lhe Easter
History of T..K. School
finished their reports.
in Kalamazoo where she gave her Toastmaster. Mn. Doris Johnson; on Mn Jennie Norris and Lucy service and program at the church
The Hiomapple W. K. Kellogg
declamation In the subdistrict con­ toast to the daughters. Mn. Fannie Bunday.
Sunday morning. Seven girls from
Consolidated school was organized
Athletic Banquet
test. Congratulations.
Jackson; toast to the mothers. Miss
the Orangeville school gave three’
The
football, basket ball and bosetam
’hrw?
Mr and Mr* Joe Raldt and farn' "’k* C^^hrop; a song by Janet Janet and Rex and his friend spent much appreciated songs. The pro­
pteted about Thanksgiving time and
hv^h, rLLtw Qi J 1,ly of B*dford WBre guests of Mn. Smith. Ellen Bhelp and Elizabeth Sunday here.
gram was good, ulso the sermon and
the pupils moved In the new struc­
Word hgs been received of the the decorations were very attractive.
n nnL™v Ci C°&gt;?l?lerC * &gt; ?b 'AniIa Buck ftnd daughter Saturday. Doater; reading, Mra. Pearte Brown;
ture. Before this time they had gone
death
of
Albert
J.
Silcock
aged
70
J*’...0',®* uhlrkfUM *2^’
CalIcr* at Mr. and Mra.. Waller I song by Mesdames Mabie Johncock.
Gordon McCallum
ot Grand
‘Cu!bert'11 on Sunday were: Mr. and, Doris Johnson. Letha Calthrop. yean al Tuleda, Texas. He lived in
hall. The old school was tom down ^&gt;,mlnUrrtBM.Ckrt?rd ■S*ohTkS'iMn- Herman Gudly of Charlotte. I Ruth Krick, Grace Lathrop and this vicinity for many yean and Rapids and Mr. and Mrs. Hubert
last fall.
Pettengill of Hickory corners spent
^ uSn^iCuX an^i^i:-h7n,ei|bOnt,nd Mra' 'Hugh Purnlss of Woodland MI
Miss
Lucite Adrlanson;
Adrlanson; the
the speaker
speaker
m Lucile
Sunday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Everett
In the spring of this year. 809 a good time and wish to thank the and son Charles of Ann Arbor.
to Miss Elizabeth Vandertlll of ill the community. He is a brothel McCallum.
pupils were enrolled. During Die Commercial club for making ]»s। of Wilbur Blkock..
Mr. and Mrs. Levant Yeager and Grand Rapids.
following winter, lhe district.* of the sible this banquet.
Tommy Hayward experienced a
son of Rochester. Minn., came Sun­
Mr.
and
Mra.
Albert
Zimmerman
township were consolidated and lhe
painful accident when he drove a
WEST HOPE.
day evening to spend a week with have moved onto the Charles
next fall 334 were attending the T.
Hot Lunch Close*. •
uugnes
linn.
। Considerable excitement has been five-inch sliver in hte thigh Thurs­
Hughes farm.
tv. school.
K.
W.IIUUI. The
me enrollment
eiiiuiunmi has
I lies Inuime hot
inn lunches
nuicura which
wiucil have
nave been
Deen ette Usbome.
The
Rankin Hyde went to Covington. |
&gt;’«*, by, “»e drowning on day. The wood was half an inch
creased so much that now SSC pu- ' served throughout the winter have
Mr. and Mrs. Lyto Quimby of Bat- Kentucky, where he attended the ^^X of Nicholas U&gt;rig of Battle thru and driven In and broken off
P1U
OKUM, .n lore™ ol m Tlo-d tor to, ^r. Th., &gt;u«h.. u.c^J
. .
.....
..
. ■
n ulnolA man aaarl —
4*■ ,.„
whn below the surface. Surgical measoi ins uruincr-m-iaw.
*j. a.
dudiIs since the school has been have been prepared
nrenared by
bv the Home
Mnme I
j
__ y
' . mnerai
pupils
ond Mrs. Henry Williams.
Kratt Thursday reluming
my,
Friday ,------------------h~ «**n fishing
-- -----------------on Guernsey
——lake
----- ■OTIOB to cxeditom.
______
________
__ _______________
started.
Economics_club
girls under tlie su_ uu
_____________________
all vtnter
For the
full
Mr. and Mrs. P. L Johnson of IImorning
accompanied by MissI Bev1
winter.
For
lhenartlrtilar*
full particulars and Tommy will be a partial invalid
'ob*w Oc*rt ,or । This rapid growth, which sur- 1 pervlsion of Mtos Thomas. Home
for a lime. Sorry. Tommy.
Owosso
Mr. and Mrs. Hale of 11
erley
who wui
will »i«y
stay wiui
with aar.
Mr. — —
018 -----------account -------------elsewhere --------In the
~ ~—and
----- -----------------------icy Kratt wnu
’
------ „lalt a
passed all expectations necessitated ; Economic teacher. A fine attend- Carlton
xnent Ritnrfau
Some of our young people attend­
spent
Sunday wltH
with Mr. ■"j
and anda ..
Mrs ..
Hvde .indefinitely
. Dinner
Banner.
• an addition to the school which to ance was recorded all the year.
Mra. Caryl Fuller.
I Mi„ Beverley Brctfn of HasUngs I The community Club wlU meet ed the Baltimore Easter services
Ura
a .°n n*
bein«
built. The
service
------------rut u«y ori apt
April
u. ■ now
.
------ --------- ------- tlie
---Hazel Shriber and Mr. and Mra. visited relatives here the latter port ■th^ Friday evening with Mr. and Sunday evening.
b».n tiieeH for crHUprt to school has rendered al all limes has
Leo
Barry
and
son
spent
Sunda^'of
the
week.
'1___________________________________
Leo
Barry
and
son
spent
Sunday
I
of
the
week
. ^.t—
..u a—,,.d ■ won a great many friends.
Last Thursday the F. P. A. Club with Mrs. Nina Barry and family &lt; Mrs. Silas Doster’s father. Joshua
| Many courses are offered in the held a meeting to award green hand of southwest Carlton. Robert was DeCrocker, of Richland, passed
iiT.
i. ru.
K. scoooi.
school, some oi
of which are noi
not pins to those who earned them. For home for a few days and leaves' away Sunday noon. Funeral was
and Thursday
un­
,
• offered in other schools of this size. every Tuesday «•&lt;»
n.umMj u&gt;&gt;!&gt;»■ «
— nd
— &gt;1 of
nt U»e
• I. — school
—ni-—n 1 year —a again this week for San Diego, Cali-, held Wednesday al two o’clock. Mrs.
such as: agricultural courses, home ।fit
U1 lhe
i
1
hkn lhe b*3t ot' D*Cn&gt;cker died ten days previous,
V, economics.
shop.
bookkeeping. Iflcld lrlP will be held by the Animal luck In his new location.
j After so or more years of life to­
' cliemtetry.
mechanical
drawing,
ad&gt;
Husbandry
boys.
This
will
give
cncmtsiry. mecnanicai drawing, ad-8&gt;ve the
me
gether It seems fitting that the
vanced shop, general science. Junior Iboys practical knowledge as well as
SOUTH THORNAPPLE.
; parting was of short duration. It Is
science. Junior business, art and ■ exercising tlie knowledge they have
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Pick, who i- as they wanted ..
it «
to be. The «
cnllpublic speaking. New courses to be received in their lecture class.
side
on
tlie
Town
line
entertained
1
sympathy,
!d
dren have our sincere sympathy.
1
OXDEa FOB FUBUUATIOM.
offered next year will be typing and
her son and wife and their son of
Mrs. Ike DeBack was surprised on
shorthand. The school also offers a
« j Rapids last week.
|hcr blrlhdfly recency by a vixlt
The Hl-Y Club held a meeting Grand
variety of activities which broaden
Friday. April 3 al lhe school. They ' Parties from w-AndUn.i
woodland purchased 1from her «l»t«ra. Mrs. Emma Colthe student's outlook on life.
voted to defray the expenses of f°ur nice heifers recently from lens °f Parchment and Mrs. FlorAll of these activities have been
Robert Garrett.
j ence Mason of Richland, who took
accomplished
without additional bringing Ray Johns to the school
John Miner,
Miller, wno
who nas
has employ- dinner with
returning
to meu
their
wno
uus
at
in
w,k“ her ihuiuuj
, "
who
gave
a
talk
al
an
assembly
In
debt to the district due to Ute care­
Marcli. Refreshments consisting of n&gt;*ht in Orangeville township passed i homes in lhe afternoon. In lhe eveful management and wise selections ice cream *nd rnnkin were cerv.ri the
hi&lt; parents,
&gt;uin.ni. nlng
Ilins her sranddaushter.
granddaughter. Miss Nor
Nor-­
lhe
week
end
here
with
his
ice
cream
and
cookies
were
served
of those in charge of school officers.
ma Castle of Silver creek and sev­
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Guy
Miller.
‘
later
in
the
evening.
.
The present student body has
■
. Mr. and Mrs Earl Page anti son eral of the neighbors and friends
enjoyed more privileges than any
School Give* Program.
• Emmett. Proctors Corners, uere visited her. All wish her many hap­
other preceding one. We have a
Last Friday night the T. K. school I Thursday evening gueste of Mrs. py returns.
group of teachers who ore always gave a/ program for the benefit of | Chas. B. Johnson.
John Woods spent the week end
striving for the benefit of the pu­ the Corning grange. Mr. Curry, ag- , Little Clare Brady of Middleville with Robert Burdick of OuU lake.
pils and school. As a student body, riculture instructor, talked on "Ag- to passing some time with Mr. and
Albert Higgins and Francis Fred­
we should give the present faculty riculture in the School.’’ He stressed Mrs. Robert Garrett and will con- erickson have gone to the CCC
a rousing vote of confidence and the main units of the courses he tinue going to the T -K school In camp at Harrietta for a six months'
thanks for the fine school we have teaches: Biology, animal husbandry. I Middleville.
stay.
today.
agriculture economics, and hortlcul-1 Charlie English who has employRichard McLeay Is through at
tliTA
____ _______
... . rweek
. the CCC camp at Grayling and is
ture. rsavlnn
Gaylon null
Bell Karitf
sang solos, accom- : mer.t in Chicago
passed, the
panted
by
Mn.
Seekel
on
lhe
piano.
!
end
with
his
family
here
I
hto -----aunt.
Mrs.
Sarah
the rstaying
—- —-w with
------ —
-■ —
—- —
——rThe juniors have started practice
Charles
Chamberlain.
Junior,
talked
।
Hughes.
Town
line.
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
for their play. "Campus Quaran­
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Nichols enter­ I Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hyde.
tine." Due to the fact that so many on livestock. Mr. Bell also gave re­
marks.
tained for dinner Easier, their son George Hyde and Beverley Krau
glrto tried out and displayed a
and wife. Mr. and Mrs Philip Nich­ j were at Hastings Saturday.
splendid amount of talent, a double
The regutar meeting of the Moth­ ols and their three little ones. Mary- I Mesdames Lewis Johnson. Gerald
cast of girls will be used.
■
er's club was held Tuesday after­ Jane. BiUle. and Francis of Irving. Shepard. William McKibbln and
noon at the Thomapple Kellogg
| William Bloohm were at Battle
Track Practice.
t*to of Halbert
MARTIN CORNERS.
। creek Saturday on business.
Track
ink* inns
calls were iMuru
issued Iasi
last weex
week school.. A fine program was arand a large number of boys turned rangea.
Born Sunday. April 5. to Mr. and
W. A. Frederickson and son Mllout. Baseball practice also.lias been '
Mra. Leo Morgan, a fine pair of ji ford relumed to their home here
twliu. a boy and a girl, who will an­ । after several months’ stay at Lake­
• Every mother knows how important is the diet of
to again
­ „„be„ „
swer to the names Frederick and view.
...In win the
th. B.'E.
n f A.
» A.
. cham
-h.m.
„om,
Freda. Congratulations.
pionship which they have won for ‘
| Mr. and Mrs. George Galletley of
•- .------i The P. T. A. was held Wednesday
a young child. MILK is an essential part of the diet
A pleasing Easter program was Battle Creek called on Mrs. Sarah
Track practice for girls will start I evening at the High school. Mrs. carried out at the church Sunday Smith and daughters Friday.
—and just any milk will not dp. They need a milk
Wednesday for the B. E. A. A. track McFall gave a talk on Sp.-ech cor­ morning. The children and young
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Dunn and
meet to be held May 15.
rection and
Bell presented dia­ girls did their porta well and Rev. sons of Bedford and Mr. and Mrs. j
that is pure and wholesome, containing lhe necessary
The T. K. Track teams have won gram* on Guidance that will be Conklin gave an Interesting talk. Cteorge Adrlanson. Jr, and daugh- |
the B. E. A. A. trophy for lhe past carried on in tlie school next year. An offering was taken for missions, lers of Neeley were Sunday guests
body-building qualities. • HIGHLANDS DAIRY
An ice cream demonstration was al­ and all who look part received a of Mr. and Mrs. peter Adrlanson j
tad rir'uiatM ta isi.i Maarr
cunning little basket of Easter eggs and Otte.
Klein Clrmenl. Jadcr of Probat*.
so given.
Grade A meets these requirements. It is one of the
trae r«vy.
or an Easter card.
Mr. and Mra. David Artlip of Bat­
Mildred Kmilb. Rrti.ter of Prob*t&gt;
The Home Economics Club held a
Our teacher. Mtos Ruby Cogswell, tle Creek visited Mr. and Mrs. Ned
About 40 fathers and sons attend­
popcorn sale last Thursday to help ed lhe F. F. A- banquet which was a accompanied a group of teachers Wilkins Sunday.
highest grades of milk produced. Consider this fact
OBDHB FOB PUBLICATION.
finance two girls to lhe Home Eco­ great success. Mr. Bourtell spoke on last Friday on a trip to Lapeer,
Mr. and Mrs. Wallle Smith and
when you buy milk.
nomics camp in the summer. These
where they visited the home for Karl Smith spent Sunday with Mr.
th* girls are chosen from the freshman the livestock market.
Uie feeble minded. They found it । and Mrs. Mason Miner of Homer.
NORTH HOPE.
and advanced Home Economics
Interesting, but much over crowded. | Mr. and Mrs. Delos Hughes and ,
cla-ws according to their report* of I| Friday evening the Brush Ridge Uicre being about 900 more than I daughter of Toledo. Ohio, visited I
lion. Ktu*rt Clrmonl. Jut
the work they have done this year. I Community Club met with Mr. and they are supposed to care for.
i Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Norris from i
Two reports ore required and Judges , Mrs. Donald McCallum with Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Barry and । Friday until Sunday afternoon. |
Pearl Hull in charge of the pro­ family were Easter dinner gueste of Master Ronald Lee returned home ,
Phone 2651 ROBERT W. COOK, Prop. Hastings
gram. Mtos Margaret Johncock and her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest with hto parents.
PARTITION BALE.
sang "Silver ;.Todd on lhe center road.
i Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Norrte called
NOTICE IN HEREBY GIVEN that bv Donald McCallum
Hue ot • Decree entered on the 20th l Threads Among The Gold." Other
entertaining features furnished a
good program. The next meeting
lion Kuh nt -lllian l.irhty
will be held at the schoolhouse May
J. R. Llrht
the eighth.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Welch of
hlclirit blddrr *1 Public
the Striker District and Lyle BldelNnribrrlr or Htaic
Counir Halldlur lor B*rrv m&amp;n.of Pontiac, spent Easter with
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Anders and moth-

ro« rmucxTion.

!■. l»ll.

rwoniru in

•Maty. Mltklaoa. to Willi*

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG

WEEDED by Every
GROWING
CHILD

MOW Till .

OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION

oantr. Mick'

DBDBB FOB PUBLICATION.

lor Plaintiff. Lillian l.lchtr.

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Farwell ot Kal­
amazoo. and Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Ferguson of Cloverdale spent Sun­
day afternoon with Mr. and J4rs.
Otto Pranshka and family.
Mrs. Agnes Randle and son of
lhe Striker District spent Friday
night and Saturday with her par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. James Murphy.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hill of Bat­
tle Creek spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Ulrich.

Council Proceedings of April 8,1396.
OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION

gears shift:
Shift with both hands on the
wheel... with the Electric Hand
DME in for a "Discovery Drive" in a
Hudson or Terraplane with the Electric
Hand. Sea what-it means to shift gears at a
finger flick . . . smoothly and surely ... with
both hands on the wheel and both eyeson the road.
Then let us show you FOUR MORE ways
in which the Electric Hand makes driving al­
most magically simpler, easier and safer.

No Levers to Stumble Over
NOTICE TO CBEDITOBB.

A.Ilm.n

LEGAL NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE OF TAX
SALE
Tuesday, May 5. A. 0.1936

Now you can enjoy a front seat ride with no
gear or brake lever in the way... with the floor
all char. A front seat, at last, in which thru
can stretch in comfort. That’s another Electric
Hand advantage.
At the wheel of a 1936 Hudson or Terraplanq,
you’ll soon find many other reasons why these
cars are growing so fast in popularity.
You'll discover more power, and smoother
power, than you find in cars priced hundreds of
dollars higher. More room, too... in the biggest
cars ever priced so low. With the newest, most
advanced style of the year and many new comfort
and safety features found on no other 1936 cars.
Then let us show you what others have dis­
covered about the amazing economy and long
life of Hudsons and Terraplanes. The proof is
w.ilin&lt; ... come .nd ,ee.
E. *. LAWIENCE, DmI...

HUDSON
w.%"

wki

.
J liar Oaaaral

»•); &gt;710for Ht&gt;d*oa Six (93 or 100 bor.rpowar, 120-ineh wb«*lba*e); J/60 tor Had»oa Bight (113
or 124 boaa^ower, 120 aod 127-inoh wbaalb***). AU

uv, ... wllfi th. n.w HUDSON - C L T. *X Tim. reym.nl Non ..
tow

TERRAPLANE

Visit our SPRING SHOWING of Naw Models and New Colors

omra OF BABBT COUNTY

da

’595

Take Your "DISCOVERY DRIVE"'Today

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE COMPANY
JOHN J. O'HARA
u....
'

nwoSrt'lf: %trVtC2

EAST STATE ST.

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

PHONE 2101

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                  <text>EIGHTIETH YEAR

GW MTIffll
OWE SHOW
IS HELD EVERY YEAR AT
SAN BERNARDINO AND
VERY INTERESTING

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1936

Pennock

Of The
H0LUST1XSM.E
Guilds
DWISMID

New Elevator Installed —
Reports Qf Year's Activities
On Thursday evening al the
Methodist church parlors, the an­
nual meeting of the Pennock Hos­
pital Guilds wu held with about
one hundred fifty present. The
Xfen's Board and Women's Board
sat at a special table with the Guild
chairmen, this being the first time
the men have been Invited to the
annua! gathering. A fine dinner was
served by the Methodist Ladles' Aid
Society, branches of pussy willows
In crystal vases making attractive
table decorations.
General chairman. Mrs. c. D.
Bauer, presided at the business
meeting which followed the dinner.
MBs Sara Bchader read the secre­
tary's report and Mrs. Fred Steb­
bins gave the report of the treas­
urer. The report showed $570.40 In
the treasury, of which $489.11 is in
the savings account, and $81.29 In
the checking account.
Officers chosen unanimously for
the ensuing year are: Chairman.
Mrs. D. A. VanBuskirk; Vlce-Chrm,
Mrs. Fred Stebbins; Secretary, M1^

COLLECTED $1,934.33
INHERITANCE TAXES
Only One Estate During Time
Had to Pay the Fed­
' eral Tax

Tuesday, May 5,
•Cleanup Day

SPELLING CONTEST
ENDSSATURDAY

18548877

02449685

WORK THAN ONE
COUNTY SETS CUSH | MORE
MAN CAN POSSIBLY 00
UN0ER M'NITT UIW

liHrrUon ttika II Foulto

for Co. Poor Board to Aid
Secretary Leonard
BO THE SALE ADVERTISED
MONEY MUST BE USED
Since January 1 former sheriff
bale Judge Clement has collected
FOR MAY 6 WILL
FOR
MAINTENANCE
AND
$1.934 33 of inheritance taxes, all
tary of the Barry county poor com­
NOT BE HELD
it
o! which go Into the primary school
CONSTRUCTION
mission. also of the county welfare

meet the expense of Installation
was necessary to borrow $2,000 from
fund of this state. The amount was
the Nurses' Lodge fund, the Wom­
collected from the following estates:
HIGHEST COURT
en's Board gave 81.000 from their
Estate of Eva 8. Johnson, Delton.
MAKES THE RULING . 810143; eitate of Mary E. Morgenreserve fund and 8155.00 represent­
ed the receipts from the benefit giv­
I thaler. $53843; estate of George J.
en by the Hastings Civic Players, Does Not Conform to Consti- I Doster. 858840; estate of Rieka
Thousands From All Over the
making a total of 83.155 provided
,„.in„ Pa&lt;i.
Eckardt. $39 05; estate of Isaac
World Attend and It's
tution—Foils to Give Re- i Golden, $38.13; estate of Phoebe
for and a balance of $1,699 unpaid.
Each Guild was asked to make as
quired "Due Notice"
! Newbury. $2430; estate of Rhoda
Worth While
generous a contribution, as possible
। Wolfe 880641.
Ths National Orange Show at
There will be no tax sales In
only „ute durln&lt; thU per.
for this fund In the near future so
Ban Bernardino Is really one of the
,coun- lod which was required to pay a
the interest may be- reduced on the ?ArTy
institution* of California. In the
notes. The Guilds later voted to ty as advertised far the first of next federal Inheritance tax was that of
short space of 35 yean It has grown
pay $480 from the savings account month. The Michigan Supreme. Oeorge J. Doster. HU estate paid
from on insignificant Utile "tent
on
'fOuwmuij
methlng uicr
over *ow
$600 u,
In federal mininto the elevator fund-also, so the ,Court
--------- —
- Wednesday gave an unanl- |IO
show" into a fine exposition. The
decision that
that the
the tax
tax sales
sales'nerilance taxes.
real unpaid balance U $U19. Mr.. mous decIrion
first show was held In 1911 In a lit­
Stem told
of me
the mitaiiauon
Installation or
of me
the I advertised for May »5 vmauw
cannot
be ucarOf Inheritance taxes
stem
(old or
. uc
*.tle tent set up in a vacant lot-and
first
elevator In the -----------hospital-------------stating ----rUd^ouL --------------because ths -law
passedvaries,
'
. ------------------------------increasing the more distant
was attended by 3,000 people. Today
that, because of so much expense by the lut legislature providing for tlie relatives of the deceased.
the National Orange Show Is held In
at the time the hospital wu erected.; Ute tax rales Is invalid,
a large.permanent exposition build­
the board d-clded on the cheaper , The ruling of the supreme court
ing on a 40-acre tract of ground
elevator, which he designated u one 1 Is Ilia I every man who Is delinquent
and visitors are numbered by the
suitable only for "freight." Surely)for taxes, and whose property it is
hundreds of thousands. They In­
the patients and nurses appreciate , proposed to sell for such delinquent
clude members of royalty, princes
this fine new one which Is so much j taxes, is entitled to due notice of
and potentates from other lands,
quieter and more efficient in every 1 the rale of his property. The court
and representatives of the highest
way. and all should realize its val- j holds that such notice was not givofficial life In our own country. on4
ue to the institution. H everyone t en for the proposed tax rale on May 1 TOnjOTpR tw tWD OT ASfl
scientists, great Industrialists, mer­
will cooperate this debt can be paid 5 next. In order to curtail the ex-1 WINNERS LN TWO ULAdMchant princes and other thousands M. Brower. Mrs. Bauer also Intro­
ES WILL COMPETE FOR
from all walks of Ufa. In these 25 duced the members of the Women's In a comparatively short Ume. Dur- pense to the state of advertising Hie
Ing the past year the hospital has) sale of delinquent tax lands, the,
nniwomvumD
years the National Orange Show and Men's Boards, several of whom been
self-sustaining, but could not | legislature (passed a law providing;
OHAMrlONBnlx*
has distributed more than $40,000 gave short talks. I^rs. Frank An­
have been so had It not been for that a description
-------of
• the rlands
—*- -*
of- 1 •
—
In cash prizes to exhibitors, and drus told of the fine new elevator
awarded over 1400 silver cups and which has been Installed al the the splendid assistance given by the fered at tM sale need not be print- TOWNSHIP RESULTS
(Continued on page 7, Sec. 2)
ed In a newspaper, previous to the
uai/r DC CM PI HQC
thousands of certificates. These hospital at a cost of $4,854.00. To
sale as had always been the custom
nAVt DCCre ULUoC
cups are most highly prized in the
in the post, but that It wu sufficient
homes of growers, because they at­
to advertise that the sale would be School Oommr. Smith Re­
test the fact that the winners,
held, and that the county treasurer
ports Fine Interest Shown
through thought study^ and hard
must notify each delinquent Und
work, have been able to grow citrus
Thruout the County
owner that his property wu listed
fruits of better quality than their
Last week we published the list
neighbors. That was really the pur­
The Supreme Court held that of winners in the Barry County
pose for which the National Orange
that is not, under the constitution Rural Spelling contest from schools
A gKAl number or fire, occur In \
------------of this state, a sufficient notice to In the townships of Baltimore,
Uisplratlon and an incentive to tens
basemenu due to accumulation of JUDGE McPEEK FILES DE- the delinquent taxpayer. Heretofore Johnstown. Castleton and Maple
of thousands of growers to better rubblxh. In fact. 80 per cent of the I
when such sales have been held, de­ Grove. Since then five other town­
methods and more effective efforts. fires are due to this condition, careOREE IN HASTINGS
scriptions of lands to be sold were ships have held their eliminations
All of this has not only greatly lessneas and poor housekeeping.
I
CO-OP. MATTER
published in some newspaper within with the following results in the first
benefitted the growers, but has
The State Fire Marshal has de-1
and 5th
the county for at least five weeks group of 3rd. 4th
greatly enriched southern Califor­ clared Tuesday. May 5. to be known '
_
,.
previous to the sale, 'nils required grade pupils and the second group
nia.
as "BASEMENT CLEANUP DAY." DATE OF SALE IS
a large outlay by the state. The leg­ of 8th. 7th and 8th graders:
Like all other enterprise, the Cooperation is asked through the.
TUIIRCDAY RJFYT
Prairieville—1st. Donald Doster.
islature hoped to avoid nearly all of
orange Industry of California has municipalities, fire deportmenU. Are
। nUflOUA I HUAI
Milo (5th grade); 2nd. Florence
its coldly fiscal and strictly "busi­ prevention bureaus
~
,.
oureaus and
ana all
an civic or- 't . . . , ,
ness" side, featured by statistical ganlxatlons to carry out this action. Opinion States That Sum of they did. The state's highest court Wood. Cressey (5th); 1st. Polly Doshold. that
th.t this
IhU Uw
I Ur. MUo ™&gt;. 2nd. Ho«-n&gt;.o Hl«holds
law U
Is nol
not nM
valid.
data. For instance In California Full cooperation will help In re­
&gt;824.86 Must Be Paid
alone. It Is claimed that over 300,000 moving fire hazards which have ac­
acres of land are devoted to the cumulated
to Mrs. Matthews
during
the
winter
iiiV.Ttrjj- . ,
nhar. Falk (3rd), 2nd. Gerald Keller,
growing of citrus fruits. That
„ Is months
lliunuw such
SUCH as
OS ashes,
UDES. rubbish,
FUDDlSn. exCXkL
BUke &lt;8th): lslDorothy Foote,
Judge
McPeek has filed his de­ by
th?
celrior and other combustible ma­
those who are delinquent for B1
&lt;8th); 2nd. Charlene Castle,
in —
the Coop.
Elevator
ths equivalent u,
.....
of a .uip
strip v.
of imiiu
land ' terlali
urials
। cree
. . .—
r
----- . _ case
—. taxes may be given a chance to re‘Trvow-,
which
was listed u
as "Edward Groat,
Groat.
Clllr mile
mil* in
In width,
wirttH and
anH running
rimnlnt* for
fn— - ourh
—
one
rnndiunn.
nrinMn.i ' whlc
l&gt; wu
.,22 ’
more U»„ h.ir u,. temrU, of th. LXuJTSSSJTJ’jl'S?1;
phuu&gt;» "»&gt; Bmb.MMU.mn. deem their lands. They are entitled I' „
Hastings—1st, Stanley Bldelman.
stale of CallfornU. The growing of on£. mied^fih
lndlvldu*lly and u representat ves to a reasonable chance. At the same 1 Star (4th); 2nd. Loren E. Lewis,
time the annual tax sale needs to
Fisher (5th); 1st,-Helen Prentice,
these citrus fruits of course U prac- burible mareriaU
oi “ gr0Up of ^d holders, against
ticallv
&gt;UJU?,e mU«Uls-_
Clean
entire | Irvlng Charlton. Zlda Bennett. Ar­ be carried out, in order that those Hastings Center (8th); 2nd. Mabel
llcally rnnflnrrt
confined m
to tn*
tne touth-m
southern n.r.
part ' *p^ZsTnd*
eUminate
”urthe
neceuTy
persons who would dodge paying
of the stale on account of its milder; hazard/
unnecessary thur Hathaway. Ealella Hathaway. their taxes If they could may be Hauer. Altoft (1th).
Hope—1st, Maurice Benedict, Ce­
(Continued on page 8. Sec. 1)
|
' Allen Bryans and Henry Hine," who made to pay or forfeit their proper­
Department of insurance, also held bonds of the defunct ele­
dar Creek (4th); 2nd. Charles Mon­
Blate Fire Marshal.
ty, _ .__________
ica. Cloverdale (Sth); 1st. Wilhel­
vator.
WINDSTORM CO. MADE
Lansing. Michigan.
mina
Pranshka. Brush Ridge (7th);
Some time ago the Hastings Co­
2nd. Donna Marie Fennels. Clover­
FINE RECORD IN MARCH
operative Elevator company, which BARRY COUNTY M. D.’s
(Sth).
DRESS DISPLAY ON
was Incorporated, was dissolved by
ENJOY COURSE dale
Irving—1st Calvin Buehler. Jones.
▲died Over &gt;3,000,000 of
ACHIEVEMENT DAY petition of the stock holders. Before
that, a majority of the bond hold­ Dr. Harkness Writes With (5th); 2nd. Arlene Williams. Pleas­
New Insurance for
ant Hill, &lt;4th); 1st. Robert Kidder,
Twenty-Eight Groups With ers held a meeting and selected the
wood, (8th); 2nd. Robert Falconer.
Enthusiasm of the Work
That Month
j three complainants In the case u
Ryan. (7th).
400 Members Complete
, representatives to act for them, u
The agents of the Michigan Mu­
Given in St. Louis
Carlton—1st, Geneva Allerdlng.
i holders of bonds of the company.
tual Windstorm Insurance Com­
Year’s Project
Word received this week from Dr. Barnum. (5th); 2nd. Margaret Try.
.
’
I The committee of three, therefore.
pany of this city made a splendid
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1)
Robert
Harkness,
who
heads
the
tecord for the month of March, les Achievement Day will be held 1“““’ “
well as expense for the bond hold­ Barry county group of medical men
When they booked 13,015.040 of new
Friday. May 1. at the Methodist
attending the clinic at St. Louis. REPUBLICAN WOMEN
fuurance. That is a fine showing Episcopal church In Hastings, ac­ ers if the committee would buy the
property for the bond holders when Mo , writes that all the doctors are
lor a month when new policies arc
TO HOLD CONFERENCE
cording to an announcement by the company was dissolved, which
not usually forthcoming. On ac­
Harold J. Foster, county Agricul­
count of better conditions among tural Agent. Twenty-eight local tliey did. The expense of attorneys celved. He says:
State Leaders Here May 6th
"The
men
connected
with
the
i
and
other
matters
amounted
in
all
farmers the company made better
as Guests of Barry
The bond holdem Washington University School of
gtlons of Insurance premiums groups with 400 members are com­ to $92445.
pleting the course of study this
County League
for 1934 or 1033. The improve- year. Miss Eleanor Cramer, clothing against whom the suit was brought Medicine have given a tremendous
w
. “v
, u „
declined to co-operate In sharing amount of time and effort to thi
1s quite marked. As a result
specialist from Michigan State Col- | this settlement, hence the suit was preparation of the medical course
Wednesday, May 8. Mrs. John C.
wen fewer cancellations of lege, has given the local leaders six
policies because of unpaid prem­ lessons on "Clothing" during the brought to compel them to share for the men of the counties Included Ketcham, president of the Barry
iums. As a consequence the insur­
the expense Incurred by the com­ under the W. K. Kellogg Foundation County League of Republican Wornpast winter.
»dl entertain several ouUtandmittee, which was paid tb Mrs. Activities who are here and have
ance in force was not decreased as
in carrying out one of
Republican leaders at a lunchTills Achievement Day. May i, Is MaUhews. who put up the money, succeeded
much for ms as It was for 1934
the broadest and mil instructive
which will be preceded and fol­
the
completion
of
the
project
by
the
amounting to $92445.
from non-payment of premiums. If
courses which the physicians of the b**d by dlscusrions of pertinent
local
groups,
each
of
which
will
the present rate of booking new in­
Judge McPeek's decree orders the
political subjects. Among the guests
surance shall be continued during make an exhibit of work accom­ elevator property to be sold on April county have had."
1938, the Windstorm Company will plished. including 78 dresses. These 30 to the highest bidder, and from
make a splendid gain in the total exhibits also will show how to use the proceeds of this sale there shall
Insurance it carries. Last year the the foundation pattern to make a first ba paid to Mrs. Matthews
• Foe of fm
ChariuJJ S /
net gain was about 818,000.000, and four gored skirt, a jacket, collars, $924.85, which she paid In good faith axl«y: Mr. Bum., ucRUn: Ur.:
Voters
H. *
E.
°"" work in the state; Mrs. "
the total insurance In force was long bell sleeve, puff sleeves and a and for the benefit of the bond hold­ nxlrr. eh.lrm.n of FubUe Bala- I V
I Winter, president of Allegan Coun­
raised to 8389,000,000, It is more waist with fullness across the front. ers, to which a majority of them tlons Com.; Dr. Siemens. Commls-1
! ty Republican Women's League;
than probable that the $400,000,000
sloner
of
Public
Health;
Dr.
Bruce
agreed. After this claim of Mrs.
Mrs.
Welborn
8.
Luna,
vice-presi
­
M.
with
community
singing
and
a
mark will be reached and passed
Matthews shall be paid, the decree of the university staff, and Dr.
this year, with a good start toward short business meeting at which tha provides that the balance from the Corbus. editor nf the State Medi­ dent of the same; Mrs. Orville Atofficers for the coming year will be sale above Mrs. Matthews' claim be cal Society journal, have been with
the 8500,000.000 mart.
These
women,
all
of
whom
arc
wellThe strength of the Windstorm elected. At noon luncheon will be divided among the bondholders in the group.
informed and active in politics will
company Is the promptness with served by the Ladles Aid Society of proportion to their holdings.
Dr. Harkness stales he will be lead the discussion of the following
which it adjusts and pays its losses. the Methodist church after which
leaving St. Louis Saturday, as will subjects:
Just as rapidly as the adjusters of the North Pine Lake group will give
practically all the other doctors, ar­
DISPLAY INTEREST
10: 00 o'clock—The American Po­
the company can get to reported a short play.
riving in Battle Creek that night, litical System.
The afternoon program will fea­
losses, they are examined, adjusted
IN SOIL PROGRAM which will enable them to go on
11: 00 o'clock—Interesting
and reported, to the company. Very ture a Style Revue of 78 dresses
duty Sunday or Monday.
. Helping the Young Voter.
made
and
worn
by
group
members.
promptly there is a check sent to
12: 00—Luncheon.
House dresses, sport dresses and Township Soil Conservation
pay the same in full.
CIVIC
PLAYER
SET
afternoon
dresses
will
be
displayed.
1: 00—Sources of information.
Committee Meets at Court
This prompt payment of losses has
2: 00—Organizing and Campaign­
been made possible by the excellent "Home Lighting" will be discussed
NEARS
COMPLETION
House Friday
ing.
management of the company, in by Mrs. pella Hudson of Jackson.
Under
the supervision or
of Arthur
Member* nf
unacr me
3:00
3: 00—
—Sum
Summary.
having a reserve fund sufficient to
Divltatlon to this all-day school
meet a large loss in any given year AL BESSMER TO
Is extended to all women In Barry
without having to borrow money.
to f'nrtnthe
duction to be presented in Central. county who
'
HOLD OPEN HOUSE house
5 are willing to serve as
This company has been fortunate in
.------ —
...V
naovuiu- auditorium.
.udllorlum, May
M*7wd
U. is
U nearn.br- | leaders or‘ organizers
14 and IS,
of other groups
not having to ask for banking ac­
tlon which will administer the new
commodations. It is so well man­ Observe! Eighth Anniversary Federal Soli Conservation act In Ing completion. The services of Mr. to study the same subjects.
Tomlin
were
made
available
to
the
;
—
----------—
--------------------------------------.
---------------------------------Women
who
are •Interested
only—aged that it has the confidence of
Barry county, according to on an­ Qlvle Player«
With Special Features
OirmigH
rAi...
I for their own personal information
Civic
Players
here
through
the
courits large and growing list of patrons.
nouncement by county Agent Har­
nf .K- nn&gt;. ..------...------- a{
0,ctock
and Gifts
old j. Foster. At this time officers tesy of the WPA as a recognition of
,„ summary, which will be folthe
Al. Bessmer, Market street grocer, and the allotment committee of the the public service rendered by this for w
BAND PRACTICE IS
-_y a reception to meet the
is holding open house for his many county association will be elected. organization, according to Director lowed by
| guests of honor.
POSTPONED TO APR. 29 friends to celebrate the eighth an­ The Federal Soil Conservation pro­
The annual membership drive has ‘
----------------- * • *
niversary of the store. He has made gram In detail will be explained by
Centennial Exhibits at High
a state representative. Genera) been very satisfactory, according to SPARTON REFRIGERATOR
the
business
manager,
but
this
week
|
DRAWING SATURDAY,
them on Friday. April 24. At thia plans for carrying but the program
School Made Change
will
be
the
deadline
for
those
who
The
drawing for the beautiful
time a radio, 100 lbs. of sugar, • as well as forms to be used will be
Necessary
large ham and 12 bushel baskets of reviewed carefully by the commit­ wish to have their names included Bparton refrigerator which John
Son and the Fcldpausch
Regular band practice of the groceries will be given away. Re­ teemen. After this meeting It Is Ln the yearbook which will go to; Bulling
press early next week.
I Market and Food Center are giving
Hastings City Band will be held on freshments will be served during the expected that the Township Com­
An
Reed's
•wa&gt;' to
lo some
“me lucky
luck? person
Per»on SaturS“‘urAn informal
inform.i party at n
—v.1 'aw»y
mitteemen will start to visit Barry
Wednesday evening, April 29, in­ program.
We take this opportunity to con­ county farmers and obtain from Opera House with Mr. and Mrs d»y night, will be held In front of
stead of Tuesday evening. Rehear­
u
sal at the music room of the High gratulate Mr. Bessmer and to wish them the 1935 crop schedule and Herman Arold as chairmen will be Fo*?d
the first social event of the cur“
“
him
continued
success
for
many
explain
the
act
The
county
agent's
school
nine P. M. for the event if you have
The postponement is due to the years to come. His store is a fine office reports an increase In Interest rent civic Player year.
any tickets, and It would seem most
historical exhibits which are being example 6t modem food merchan­ in the program with twenty to fifty
every
one
has,
as
the
lucky
coupon
people inquiring as to Its provisions
shown on Monday and Tuesday in dising.
Al will be looking for you this
the music room as well as other
a meeting In Battle Creek recently , ” —, t ------ &gt;rooms of the High school.
BAKE SAUL
All band members are expected to
several women there Inquired con-,
RUMMAGE SALE
MIXED DANCES.
attend the next two rehearsals,
Feldpausch Food Center Saturday, cernlng ths Hastings players an' At American Legion rooms. Bat­
which precede the High school
Every Saturday night at Clear
spoke highly of work being carried, urday. April 25. Camp Fire girls,
lake, Frank Herrington.—Adv. tf.
band's musical gala night.
on by this organisation.
Mrs. Fred Jones, guardian.—Adv.

HAS MEANT MUCH TO
CITRUS INDUSTRY

SECTION

SUM ALLOTTED FOR
1936 IS $55,179.63

operating as they should As Mr.
Leonard has to give practically an of
his time to emergency cases thia left

OTHER II
PRl

Thia Amount to Be Spent for members of the poor board. Investi­ Plan to Barre 1,001
gations of cases asking relief were
Improvements of All
left largely with the chairman of
the poor board, William Chara. The
day It.tot.•
Twp. Highways
Word from the state highway de­
partment St T Anting fixes the
amount of money which Barry
county, will receive this year under
the McNitt law, which must be used
for the construction and main­
tenance of township roads taken over
by the county. The amount which
has been allotted for 1938 to this
county for that purpose Is $55,179,63—its share of the $4,000,000 gas
tax money provided by the McNltt
measure.
Hie county road commission Is
using the money It receives under
the McNltt law for grading and
crowning the township roads and.
ns rapidly os possible, coating them
with gravel. Township highways
cannot be brought to the easy grade
of trunk lines or county highways,
but conform to the lay of the larid.
The amount of money available for
their improvement is not enough to
permit the commission to make ex­
tensive cuts or fills, nor to make os
wide roadways as have county
roads. Township highways are us­
ually crowned and guttered, making
a roadway about 9 to 13 feet wide,
then a light coat of gravel is put

supervisors approved this arrange­
ment and voted compensation for

called on for special work

greatly enjoyed/

form alone. Mr. Leonard desires to
have relief given for every worthy new Barry county

case investigated before making any
provision for giving aid.

PRIZES TO BE
GIVENSATURDAY
HASTINGS MERCHANTS TO
DONATB &gt;70.00
IN CASH

NORTH JEFFERSON
CHOSEN AS SITE

follows: Ticket Bale—Frank
Chrm.. Albert BseagMT. I
Nashville.

McDonald. David Boyes. }|
Smith. Arthur WUlltu. K*tth
Bpoakan—C.

H.

Space Between Bank and
Drug Store to Be Reserved
It has been surprising what a
for This Event
great improvement grading and
gravelling have made on township
highways, as those will testify who
travel over the ones that have been
thus Improved. About half of the
total 860 miles of township high­
ways taken over in this county have
been gravelled; a larger mileage has
been graded. Regularly hereafter
the county will receive each year the
same amount as this year, which
will enable the commission to ulti­
mately gravel every mile of town­
ship lilghway.

BOARD FAVORED JUDGE
CLEMENT’S PROPOSAL
Named Committee to Act
With Him in Supervising
Detention Home
Probate Judge Stuart Clement
came before the board of super­
visors at their recent session and
asked for the same plan of hand­
ling the county detention home In
this county as Is used in most other
Michigan counties. He explained
that in the other counties there is
a committee, chosen by the board of
supervisors, to work with the pro­
bate Judge In supervising the home.
The board gave this matter their
consideration and Voted unanimous­
ly to carry out the request of Judge
Clement. They named as the com­
mittee Supervisors Potts. Thomapple, Moon. Baltimore, and Wilcox of
this city.

Saturday afternoon at flireo
o'clock Is the time for the drawing

merchants of this city.
The drawing will take place on
North Jefferson Bl., between the principal speaker will
National Bank and Reed's Drug
Store. If you have a ticket be sure
$75 in cash will be distributed.
Prises range from $140 to $15DO.
Thousands of tickets have been
given to customers during the past
two weeks by the merchants, so a
large crowd is expected.
Hastings hustling merchants al­
ways have attractive stocks to offer,
so come early on Saturday and do
your shopping before the drawing

Barry County Rod
and Gun Club
Rod and Gun club will be held at
the Barry county garage on Mon­
day evening. April 37. at 7:30 the support of evoryom I
tn fishing, tenting aMi

annual fish supper on May 7. The
tickets, arrangements and speakers
are especially urged to be present
Monday night.
evening.

HARDTIME DANCE.
Prairieville Saturday night, prises.
—Adv.

Laos

School Centennial Exhibits

“

Vxtoto

Early and Modern Hastings
A little more than a century ago concert, while Ln the High school
Indians roamed at will and hunted auditorium at 8:45 the dramatics

tiers and their ways of living have
become extinct. But the spirit of
those early days will be revived by
the descendants of those early
hardy pioneers In the Hastings Cen­
tennial celebration this year; and
a promising herald of that event
Is the Hastings schools Centennial
Exhibition to be held In all city
schools April 27 and 28.
The flint arrows, almost the sole
means of livelihood of the aborigi­
nes. crude stone axes, pestles that
ground grain in bowls of rock, im­
plements of agriculture, garments
of early settlers contrasting strange­
ly with our modern garb;
books
they read, musical instruments they
played, everything from their al­
bums and scrapbooks and jewelry
to their legal documents and copy
books will be displayed for the ben­
efit and wander of us of a hundred
years later at this exposition, ar­
ranged and presented to the public
by school children of all ages with
the assistance of their teachers.
All
buildings — Central. High
school, and all ward school*—will

Portrait."
In the first ward a miscellaneous
display has been arranged In the
old kindergarten room, and tn the

forms of domestic industry such as
Will be demonitrated.
In the Central building, exhibits
children ran away,
will be distributed as follows: Room
117, a collection of old dolls, one of
which belonged to Minnie Mat­
thews, for many years a teacher In
miles at an exnense
our Hastings schools: In IM. old knows the Ufe of lhe
toys of different periods; 110 will
present a colonial household; in
115 will be a safety exhibit showing
early and modern Hastings: 111 will

the dentist equipment of today com­
pared to that of a hundred years
ago; and in 114 will be a typical
sickroom of a century ago and a
modem one.
department tn the Central building
will be a collection of old photo-

depict the various a
velopcnent of commi

day. The art department will have
books and dishes win be featured in

tumea of various periods will
shown in 315.

will be among the ■
noon. The gymnasium departments exposition, and Um
will give demonstrations of oldfashioned athletics and dancing in
al 2:30 on Tuesday afternoon. In
the Central auditorium each avemusic department will present a

'

Bay Utogitoa TaOa

Studsnks Erect Models of

Barry county. Just a hundred years
ago—In 1838—Slocum Bunker came
to Hastings and made his home
here, the first settler In Hastings.
From that time on more and more
white people came to southern
Michigan and Hastings grew into
a thriving little village. Today the
Indians are gone and most of the
animals they used to hunt have dls-

'

EMINENT ORATOR
COMING SUND

�__
—

Till KABTINGB IUKMM, TTOMDAY, AWUL M, UM

LOCAL NtWS

TURDAY
APRIL 25th
Is the Dey We GIVE the

SPARTON
all electric

REFRIGERATOR AWAY
LAST CHANCE I To round
up EXTRA tickets for this
groat contest.... Have your
tickets in by Saturday . . .
Saturday night at 9 o'clock,
in front of FOOD CENTER
the REFRIGERATOR
will be drawn.
DON'T MISS ... BE ON
HAND AT THE DRAWING

BIG VALLIES
Candy Bars

3

10c

CORN
FLAKES
KELLOGG'S

PINK SALMONcan 10c
WALNUT MEATS
’/j lb. 27c

£10c

PECAN MEATS
1 lb. 39c

OLEO—Kingnut2 lbs. 25c
Del Monte PINEAPPLE JUICE 2 for 25c

CHIPSO, large sixe ................... ..19c
Wall Paper Cleaner (Crescent) 2 for 15c

BOWLENE, large
CLIMALENE,
box

-J A_
1»C

.
eoch

Kirk's Hardwater Castile Soap 4 for 19c
GINGER ALE, large

24 ox. 5c

Calumet Baking Powder
can 19c
CIGARETTES

Cocoanut
Vi lb. 10c
2 for 23c

BUSS
COFFEE

■22c
OHIO

MATCHES

8013c

4 lbs. 19c

SUITS
All of the luteal Myles . . .
‘ Long and Short.
Wc became too enthusiastic
about the values and bought
too many.

Greatly Reduced

Will make them go fast!
Sizes 14 to 46.

AUo a Fme Line of

New Spring COATS
and DRESSES at
POPULAR PRICES!

Visit Our Work
Department...

50 CHOICE VARIETIES

JASON E. McELWAIN

TV

New Spring

I

P&amp;G SOAP

10 B»r»37c

All SUITS Must Go!

An arresting note these days—th®
Mrs Alice BachcldBr has been ward. The response of tho departqulte ill at the home of her daugh-1 tncnl was prompt, and the damage on their way north.
Nelson Gardner, who recently un­
ter. Mrs. Fred Newton, East court was alight. At about 11 o’clock the
St.
1 second alarm sounded, caused by a
I will not be responsible for any blase in a car parked on Church
Mantey. Despite the time he was
debts contracted by any other per- st. next lo court house square.
.to my-ir.-Xrtc Kctoi-J
„,h abeent. he was on the junior class
honor roll.
.
...
.
..
and battery,
was Monday
brought
Something new in a style show
The tenant
house owned. by
Mr. j assault
£££ Ju.tire
Mat'thew.
.... oni
one Qn AchlcvemenV
«»* Monday.
Winona Downing on W Oreen | ^T^^XnCwMC
" J W1U
George town
NottQay, Friday.
Maj lit when 7« wom­
,f —
------ &lt;. -W
"* W1U1 jke Both reside In Thomappie
­
street* is‘ being recovered
rnnnnla Invn. ’
nt_ J
en will wear and exhibit the dresses
.»n&gt;P, ihlp. Stimpson
oumpson admitted
auminco blacking
oiacamg they have mad*—house, sport and
Noflke’s eyes, but claimed the tal­ afternoon gowns. Il will be well
crune of bastardy, was bound over..
• ...
— --------------------worth seeing.
to the circuit court and his case!
Stimpson. Under
The Banner Is asked by a social
will -probably
of at this I the circumstances the justice let
- be disposed
welfare worker to put In an SOS
1 .T'
j „ j
u
'him off’by payment of costs In the call for two mattresses for a des­
Mrs. Ada snyaer
Snyder nas
has returned to . — u
-. w
—
-•
perately needy family. Anything in
State St. after I' her home on East state
.
spending the winter with her grandMurray was brought the line of a mattress will be grate- |
fully received, just caM Uie Banner j
daughter. Mrs. Fred Bower.
^ro,n.
Mr. and Mn WIU Hopkins have
»••?, J*e and leavtf word where’ they may be J
moved this week into the carl home, ’ misfortune to fracture her fMfhl J’lP picked up.
n.n W. Center street.
. vfin a fall
fall two days previously, at the
The supervisors gave their ap­
'212
Mr. Hopkins I in
I who has employment in Grand home of Dr. and Mrs. Wm. proval of the work being done in re­
Thwaites where she and Dr. Murray pairing the steps of the court house. ’
I Rapids Is home for week ends.
the board will not meet again un- I
As
have
been
spending
the
winter.
। Word comes from Dr. and Mrs. A.
1 W. Woodburne to change their Bar.- Mrs. Thwaites Is a daughter of the til June, the matter of having such
ner to 3411 Bayshore Blvd.. Tamp®. latter. Mrs. Murray’s hip has been work' completed was left to the
, Florida. They are quite in love with placed in a cast, and she Is resting county properly committee with
1 their present location and plan as comfortably as possible under the power to act.
Recently the slate fire marshal!
circumstances. Her many friends
staying there for some lime.
Clarence Messenger of this city trust the healing process will be visited our county infirmary at the [
appeared before
Judge McPeek accomplished with as UtUc pain and county home. He made recommen­
dations for certain repairs that;
Monday to answer to a statutory discomfort as possible.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clncebeaux. would reduce the fire hazard there. ।
charge. He admitted his guilt and
was sentenced to from six to fif­ ol Trail's -End. who have been op­ The supervisors voted unanimously!
teen years at Jackson. This was his erating a restaurant in Plainwell that Uie repairs be made to comply '
this winter are planning to close with his recommendations.
second criminal conviction.
The matter of having a proper ■'
The case of Claude Hill vs. How- it shortly and open their resort at
Gun lake. They have had a fine
from circuit court by a decree patronage In Plainwell where Mm. board of supervisors at their recent
handed down by Judge McPeek i Clncebeaux's excellent home cook- 1session. It was felt that the matter
Tuesday, The parties to the "suit Ing has proved a winner It seems. 1should iiave due attention, so the
i reached 'an amicable adjustment, i Dr. Clifford Brainard and Dr. board left it with the committee on
I hence the dismissal of the case.
'Mustard, of Battle Creek, the for­ livestock and sanitation, with power
David Boyes is making extensive ' mer well known in Hastings, are to do whatever is necessary.
repair* on his house at the comer I leaving this week end for a several
of Michigan Ave and High St., and | month.’ stay in Europe where they poet to move around the first of
Mr. and Mrs. Boyes and Loren will I will spr.nd some time in Vienna and May into their B. Broadway home,
occupy the residence when the im-, attend clinics in leading hospitals purchased last year of the Lombard
ealate. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Tredin­
I provements ore completed. This was on the continent.
: formerly tho McMurray property.
; Ted Cusick, who was severely nick who have been occupying It
! Charles Hinkley was brought Into burned In an explosion of a gas will move Into the home the McJustice Matthews' court Monday.! tank at Uie Chester elevator in Ea- Knlghls vacate on E- Walnut.
Jimmie McGuire who started his
charged with driving a car without • ton county. Is now convalescing at
career --in ---------Hastings
has been
.... home
OV.I.V of
Ml his
|,V&gt; broUier-tn-law
UIUIUI’I -lll-Ul. and
mu j, baseball
- - ----- -------- ----i license plates. He was given a fine | the
;si»ter. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Hodges.. given a free ticket, we hear, which
|Ted
is
creeping
slowly
back
to
nor-|®
nUU
®« hlm 10
Attend —
any
■ •
••• V. ' *
UHVtk tv tivi - । ------— ---------,baseball
-------- .—.
&gt; mal condition, but b Mill unable to 1 «“'■’« ln ‘he American or National
turn alone In bed. and it will be l‘,««ue during his lifetime. Jimmie
sorne time before he will be allowed when not playing ball in Hastings
Waters Clothes Shop
to sit up. Mrs. Hodges, who is a spent many happy days fishing on
graduate nurse, has been in con­ Thomapple rivpr. His home now is
stant attendance on her brother on puck lake, rforth of Albion.
The Ladies' Aid Society of the
since the accident and his recovery
can largely be credited to her skill­ Presbyterian church will hold a
ful care, which in such cases rummage sale in the basement of
the
church Thursday. Friday and
counts for more than half.
Ground Is being broken Ulis week Saturday, April 30 and May 1st and
12nd.—Adv. __
rhleh
Wallace Osborn will’erect un’ his
We hear frequently that the
Hundreds arc SAVING
lots at the end cf West Wamul St. youngest young lady on the Banner
The house, which Mr. Osborn has |
"J"*® Cameron ’ We will
money . . why don’t you?
designed himself, will contain many ,b“ck up the Y. Y. L-s denial that
__ of ....
nh.*'c nnt
Anunn, wkin
Orutrcrlintr
not. Anyone
who is struggling
And here’s why . . .
intercsting features being
the site's
as
hard
as she is to get the tech­
modified modeme type. It is to be
finished in whitewashed brick ve­ nique of the farm lore of want ads.,
auction
sales,
etc.
and
Isn
’t quite
neer. will have a flat roof and will
be built without attic or basement, sure yet that a Duroc -Jersey isn’t
the furnace room being a part of a cow. couldn’t possibly write as
the lower floor plan*. The frontage glibly of farm life as dues -Jane.”
is to the south, away from the
SLOCUM—DeVOS.
street, and will overlook the garden
The marriage of Frank Slocum
and yard which Mr. Osborn has
and Mrs Jeade DcV’oe was .solem­
been landscaping for some time.
nized on Saturday. April 11. at Elk­
hart. Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Slocum will
make their home in this city on So.
Dibble St Best wishes are extended.

GLADIOLUS Bulbs

FRUITS W VEGETABLES
BANANAS

which indicate that Hinkley had not of aliens receiving welfare axslii1. intended lo violate the taw.
--- --- ---- — —--- -- -r- —— —--BMW WVIV VWV
Trout fishermen have their rods
very ill. la Improving nicely.
, r.esday forenoon. The first al about and tackle all in readineM for SatMrs. Ray Waters U entertaining , 8 o’clock, and wu caused ty the dls-

COVERT

Work Shirts

49c

BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
Henry Mulder was the victim of a
birthday surprise on Saturday eve­
ning when fourteen friends walked
in for the evening. Pedro furnished
plenty of amusement.

*** ♦+♦
♦

f

When Spring's soli breezes blow and Uic warm sunshine
calls us out of doors, the baby too. calls for his new Spring
outfit. Our Baby Department will meet all the needs lo
make him or her trim and comfortable for the season.
Coats, Bonnets. Carriage Robes, Blankets, Sweaters, Knit
Suite, -Carter’s" Vests and Banda. Hose, Toddler's Suite,
color*.

Shawls and Blankets.

Frandsen9.
Exclusive Bui Not Expensive

HEAD LETTUCE

2 doxen 29c

fTRAND TllfATUF ♦
WIND CACHES ACCIDENT.
Ray O. Potts. S3. of Middleville
was In an accident Thursday near
Albion, a collision of cars being
caused by the high wind. He *uf-

ritbout notice

Compare this eliirl with
any other al any store!

Under

SUNDAY and MONDAY. APRIL 26 and 27

Shirts

▼

SLEEVELESS

PHONE 2504

HASTINGS. MICH.

t TRAIL OF THE LONESOME PINE
ORANGES

Many Cute Gift Items.

WE INVITE YOU TO OUR STORE

fcred head lacerations and injurie
to hU left shoulder. He was taken
to Sheldon Memorial hospital In
Albion for treatment HU son, Jer

but not hurt seriously.

Sylvia Sidney. Fred MacMurray, Henry Fonda
AN ALL COLOR PICTURE
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY, 1:H and 3:M o'clock

2 heads 13c

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, APRIL 28

3

Sixs

SWISS STEAK

-19c

PICNICS

- 20c

CHUNK BACON

u. 22c

PORK SHOULDER

u. 20c

KAY FRANCIS in

for 53c

36 lo 16

*

I Found Stella Parish

Dress Hose

With Ian Hunter, Paul Luka*. Sybil Jarlmon. Barton Msclaiw

Ila yon Hailed

WED., THURS. and FRI.. APRIL 29, 30, and MAY 1

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in

THE BOHEMIAN GIRL

Consult us on your child’s
summer shoe problems!

With ANTONIO MORENO and JACQUELINE WELLS
Adults 25c. Children 10c

PAIR
And ue guarantee their

BEEF ROASTS

FRESH FILLETS

- 13c
2 - 25c

SATURDAY ONLY—MAY 2

good near!

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION
.1. innvAlva—FEATURE
r I.AI LXL NO.
JVM. 11

With Edmond Ixrer. Virginia Brace. Banila Hiunc,
Douglas Walton and Nat I’citdlclan

You arc always sure
of your money’s worth
at any price al

Food Center

"BtlUsg QxOlly Exin V»

Don’t cx|&gt;criinrnl with vour children’s led! Get them shoes
that fit properly . . . shoes that allow normal and healthy
foot growth. Bring them in now (or an accurate foot trM.
Our attendants are experts in tho art of filling shoes. Wc
can save you much trouble gnd money! .

FEATURE NO. 2

GEORGE O'BRIEN in

*

O'Malley Of The Mounted

WATERS

Clothes Shop

.

The Garden Murder Case |

Wc have listed only 3
good values from uur
complete slock.

Children's Shot! /ram 81.75 io 8X50

Epbcdc So. 1 it ’ FLASH GORDON" Serie* will be shown at

.

S'
;♦ •-bO’h

a-w orsvew naiuraay aiaunet utuy
Adult. 15c; Children IBc

,

tRIE’S SHOE STORE
STATE ST.

“NEXT 7£ CITY BANK"

PHONE 2176

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 111

DEATH OF WM. MeNDTT.
I
some other feature It has become an exposition aurkinds, are grown tn California today mental Station a: Riverside, some Hollywood, or ™...x
William B. MoNult, 66, aon of
than there were 35 years ago. The of them having no commercial val­ thal- tends lo keep things going and rounded with a unique and surpassmake things interesting. There big beauty that you will find no­ George and Helen Hazen McNutt.
results of this annual spirited com­ ue at present, but they may have help
__ ....
__ ...... good bands. They wtuxre
where xl.i.
else, because fh.rx
there &lt;is nftlhbw
nothing
are
numerous
Igter
cm.
There's
the
red
lemon
and
petition is perhaps shown, too. in
Rutland township. He is survived by
such an increased demand that it the "sweet" lemon. You can have come from all the surrounding cities else like it m this country.
you
You wut
will enjoy angering m
in uns
this his wife, Mrs. Minnie McNutt, four
would lake a freight train 100 miles your lemonade without sugar, and and towns, because they are all inyou can have It red if you prefer. lerested in the success of this Or-1 bower of beauty and you'll find daughters, Mrs. Verne Goodenough,
long to move the annual crop.
ange Show and feel tn duty bound • aotnelhln* of keen Interest on every
The building in which the Show is The Experiment Station grows these
(Continued from page 1, Bet. 11
lo do their part in helping it on.
|&gt;lde. All around you. you can see Frances and Oretta McNutt; three
held is a mammoth one. The deco­ sweet lemons. Maybe they'll get
But there is still more to this: the "beautiful’* side of the Industry. sons, Frank. George and Clarence
around lo us sometime. They surely
climate. There are about 18,000000 rations arc magnificent and vary will if the demand warranU it. but| Show than Just looking al citrus uluj one can learn something about McNutt; two brothers. Glenn of
with
each
year,
in
1835
the
35th,
or
orange trees in California alone,
______________________________
coij facls Df growing citrus
— Grand Rapids and Lloyd of Hasup to this Ume they may be regard- | fruits arranged in every conceivable j tne
silver
.
anniversary
was
held,
so
sU-।
and it requires 75.000 refrigerator
friuts. But nuking money out of
—' ‘ tings, and two sisters. Mrs. Claraed ax freaks, just as were those form and listening to various pro- IIa-k
can to transport this huge golden ver was prominent In the adorn­ mammoth thing* almost as large grams offered. There is the Indusidus- 1 the
ik.___________________
t.™ IvlU
nf K.-.lamazzxi
business, especially tn.
the rw&gt;.t
past few
belle Oaks of
Kalamazoo and Mrs.
crop. That would require 1.500 ments There were stately columns, as a basket ball that looked exactly trial section, where everything that | years, hasn’t been all "milk and Goldie Service of Grand Rapids.
freight trains of 50 can each. great drapes of richest colors, mas­ like overgrown grapefruit, but were may be needed by the orchardlst in i honey” by a long ways. One from a Funeral services will be held al the
Granting that each car was over 60 sive chandeliers and about every­ worthless commercially.
the way of the latest and most up- I (older climate will especially enjoy home on Thursday, today, at eleven
feet long, that would mean a striqg thing that the art of skilled .design­
Naturally In putting on such a to-date equipment is cn display and [ vuitlng the National Orange Show A- M.. the Rev. Karl Keefer of Wa­
of freight can over TOO MILES ers could conceive of—and oranges
being
demonstrated. ■ becauv it is usually held In Die tervliet officiating. Burial In Die
great show ns tills there just has to constantly
long, all loaded with nothing but and citrus fruits everywhere. There
be a certain amount of pomp and Then there is the "Pood Show'* uannth and sunshine of February Rutland cemetery.
oranges, or one that‘would extend were dozens of special feature dis­
something of the spectacular. In demonstrating old line food prod- or early March, when Uie more
plays
put
on
by
various
Chambers
from Hastings to Albany. New York.
this respect, soullwm California U ucts. as well as the very latest, all' northerly regions are often tied up
WE BEG YOUR PARDON,"
Along tn 1910 a group of Ban Ber­ of commerce, packing organizations
blizzards or wrapped up In
extremely fortunate in having ready of which have citrus fruits as the ।
in the write-up of the Merchants*
nardino business men. appreciating and others. Borne of these exhibits
access to the very center of every- basis of their make-up. Naturally ■ mow. The Orange show is an ex- Fair a few weeks ago, mention was
the importance of citrus fruit grow­ had motion; others were stationary.
there is everything on display, and । position of surpassing beauty and
thlng
that
is
spectacular
—
Holly
­
ing to the state of California and Invariably built of oranges or other
-*
- •
•that
*• ‘you would enjoy it. Especially would made of the booth showing furs,
wood. In the studios at Hollywood constantly being demonstrated,
etc., as being sponsored by the Con­
the country decided that they want­ citrus fruits. There were lights and
the creation of palaces, world- will in any way tend to an increased you enjoy that beautiful drive on a servation Department. This was
and figures,
vu to do
ed
uw something
MJIIICUIIIIK for
lur it.
li. because
urcouar flowers
-•-------------------------- —some of
, the de_
I use of critrlc fruits. Its business, as
of Its great financial importance. | slJfn* were repllcas of ancient tent- known streets, and in fact every­ well as exhibition, and you have to day like one of ours in June, wrongly stated as the Barry Coun­
through miles and miles of orange
TtaHM «n innuul .ho. P"1- Venetian
,’MKh. thing that Is unusual, Ls of com-'
ty Rod» and Gun Club cooperated
admire
them
for
it.
, ..jmes. There were wind-mills, pa- J mon occurrence. The talent of her
groves, golden with fruit or snowy
with this exhibit and should be
would help the industry* “nd slimAt no small expense San Bernar­ with blossoms, and backgrounded by
utatTltln manv~wavi Thev"reco«- -Kodas and airplane beacons, in fact i artists; designers and decorators is
given credit also for this interest­
nited Dial there was a beautiful side B,nw'1 no ,lm,t 10
«*«•»«• Off frequently called upon by nelgh- dino has provided a very large per­ mountains gleaming with snow, it ing display- We are sorry for this
£^tad^.^5n?SSyl!iito &gt;
* mountain of or- boring towns, and In true Califor- manent Exhibition building, and a all combines to make a picture Uiat
error and beg the pardqp of the
place where the best fruit growers । seems almost impossible. Bui lt is
ride through those oranae itroveu to
would be surmounted by a , nla style is never denied.
Rod and Gun club. The? omission
Around the sidewalls were! At the Orange Show splendid of the state can "race" for the [ there in the warmth, brightness aud was unintentional.
prizes offered, -and it has all grown i sunshine of a Michigan day in June.
abo recognised the fact that grow-Jlhe rack .displays of millions of dt- ‘ music and entertainment U not -----------hw oranges ka^eold-Mooded^bu^-*rui
muc,‘- lf not ntost- of n overlooked. Al one side of the great • from Uiat little "tent show of «
35
w R cook.
The straw votes show that I
IX TuJ^tke inv
which 1 bebig entered In rompeUUon for j hall is a large stage, and something j years ago. Il has succeeded way
num'match VtoffVta^ iabur mS 1 the *,ch nw“rda Bnd Prl”s’ Thcre u constantly going on. Il may be । beyond the most optimistic dreams ,
u AND I CLUB.
Roosevelt is more popular with the
Xnc? r«"dSS.
uiv •" exhibit" « "Ire**" eertelle, I • noud mluleUn. » QU«rlelle.
of
WM were r„poiulMe IOT
Mr«. Fred prtnllce enlrrUlned poor than with the prosperous. For j
this reason he will probably not I
w" urStoS' «r S" US I *«etoped « the Cltru. Expert- ' a,. « pertup. . mow. .Ur rrom ! .urun, U. U lux ruee-ded beruuu
D
abolish, poverty until after the elec-I
that San Bernardino was just the [ —------ -—
1
' '—------- -------------- ' I ning al a dessert bridge.
lion.
|
place to hold an orange show. After
------------------------------ ‘------- ——
you break through the mountains
about lhe first glimpae you get is
the San Bernardino Valley. Then
too. Uie city of San Bernardino is
recognized as the "gateway" to!
Southern California. The city la
over 135 years old. which Ls old for i
California, and was a thriving com-:
muiilty long before Los Angeles,
the State's metropolis, was even glven a thought, ‘it was at San Ber­
nardino that the conquistadors
stopped, and the pioneers and the
gold seekers halted before pushing
on towards the coast. Those men
who originated the Orange Show fell
that if horse races and horse
showf result in the breeding of j
better and finer - horses then
"orange races'* ought to result '
in the growing of belter oranges. I
Their purpose was to provide the
place where the orange growers
could race for Die prizes and the j
honors.
Just Ute beautiful, beautiful drive
of 100 miles or so from Los Angeles I
lo San Bernardino will convince'
anyone of the wisdom ot Califor- [
nia's holding an annual orange'
show. You pass through Eagle Rock,
named after a massive rock on the
summit of which it Ls said that the I
Indians used to hold their councils. I
The outline of this rock used to '
bear lhe likeness of an Indian’s
face It Ls claimed, but lime and I
Soft and Quick Drying!
erosion evidently have gotten in
their work and wiped out any aim*
Harity. Then on through Mon­
rovia, where the late Harvey Wil- '
Hams, of Milo, and well known
Convenient aim — 12 inches
through the southern part of this,
square! Match your towels with
county, did much to develop the I
these plaid patterns and colors!
small town into a sparkling little i
rity Then through Pasadena, past
"Millionaires Row," out by the fam­
ous Rose Bowl, on tc Riverside with
Its famous Riverside Inn of nation
wide repute, then on to Sin Ber­
nardino. Most all of the way will be
through beautiful grovea of oranges, i
with trees heavily laden with the |
golden fruit. So why shouldn't Call- 1
fomla have Its National Orange
Show? Naturally the whole slate Is
New Design! Sport
proutl of Its beautiful orange groves
and haz every rexson to be. It can
be said with credit to all lhe qther
towns in California that no other
city has tried lo "horn in,*' and de­
tract from the honor and glory that
Ban Bernardino lias won for Itself
W«k nd c*M, tl-ta.
•
in putting on these annual exposi­
Striped imitation Linen cover,
tions for the past quarter of a cen­
Matching hat box...............
tury. and these shows have been
growing in brilliance and Impor­
tance with each year.
Only Penney’s Anniversary Is what makes a value like
From the very outset it was de­
this possible! Fine quality full-fashioned hosiery,
cided that features would be provid­
ed which would be beneficial lo the
sheer or medium service weight, in the very newest

GREAT NATIONilL
ORANGESHOW

au

DRUG
THURSDAY, FR|

Phillip** Dental
ail
Orlis Mouth Walk, pint _______

Alcohol, Rubbing, pint
Milk of Magnesia, pint
Aspirin Tablets, bottle of 100
Jad Salts, 6 m.
Sanitary Napkins, box of 12 .
Oyo I tine, 14 ox.
Italian Balm, 60c sisa
Hygeio Soap
Zonite, 14 ox.
OTHER SPECIALS IN ALL DIFARTMINTS

DEEIVC
KttU 3

Walgreen System
DRUGSTORE

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

CLOSING-OUT
STOREWIDE

WASH CLOTHS

SATURDAY, APRIL 25

Merchandise on sale will

to SATURDAY, MAY 2

Amazing Value! Ringless

SILK HOSE

• Machine and Carpen­
ter Tools

49c Pair

ware Stock to be sold regardless

• Builders' Hardware

Sugar Sacks

done the basis of the show must
center in the citrus Industry. The
question naturally was. what lo do
to stimulate the industry, lo ad­
vertise it. and al the same time de­
velop better fruits? The answer was
•Competition." Consequently fruit
classes were Inaugurated with suit­
able cash awards, trophies, and cer­
tificates. to those whose displays

Sc

each

LAUNDERED AND MANGLED
SIZE 11 x S3

• Paints and Brushes

Spfing colors . . . priced so low you’ll want to buy
a dozen! Plcot tops, French heels, sizes

Cotton Plaid Single

BLANKETS

• Lawn Mowers and Hose

Nothing is reserved, everything

tfcc/fl wear/

• Forks and Shovels

must go.

33c

• Cooking Utensils

Most of the stock will be sold at

good quality blue

• Laundry Equipment

denim strongly

Boy? Cluck Ndniook

below its wholesale cost.

sewn, sizes 4 to 16

UNION suits

• Cutlery

WM!
MEN S FAST COLOR

At Ease

Dress Shirts
FIRM SUPPORT

tirely new merchandise.

OVERALLS

Uaa aa blanket in summer — a
sheet In winter I Gay plaids in
choice of roee, blue, gold, green
or orchid. M by li Inches.

L-Wer

of cost, to make room for «n&lt;

• Garden Implements

BOYS’ STURDY DENIM

Right Weight for Summer!

enviable honor to win these awards,
as well as a great satisfaction to’the
grower to know that he had raised
better fruit than his competitors,
and he wasn't slow in letting the
world know about it through ad- I
vertlslng. Every year tire Orange
Show made great advances forward
and competition because keener and
keener, with the result Uiat far bet­
ter oranges, and citrus fruits of ail

All of WEISSERT BROS. Hard

69c

Good quality
nainsook.
Cut

• Gasoline Stoves

This is your opportunity to buy

• Children's Wagons

quality goods at a large savii

• Fishing Tackle

a real sale and the "early bii

• Galvanized Ware

get the best selection.

FULL CUT, GOOD PATTERNS

iabad. Suspender

A best-eeller stylo!

An S-tnch

knitted

Men’s Short Sleeve,

Long Legs
HAVE TOOTS
MADE - TO MEABUSE BY

raracr

a
m AND COF-PUTt SAWAC-

Clean Quick
Soap Chips

25c

LARGE 5 POUND BOX

Alfred G. McCall
"HAXTDtOB* ONLY TAILOR"

UNBLEACHED

Muslin

Union Suits

_49c
Ribbed Cotton. Designed tor

GOOD QUALITY. 32 IN8. WIDE

.

G. E. Goodyear Hard

Comfort

J

Hastings, Mich,

142 E. State St.

�The Hastings Banner

Ifi tk. Spirit W « Cwmlir.

Editorials
OMINOUS SILENCE.

Ha mono WUb U&gt;

«rU M. !■

Milton not

LOCAL N£WS

THf “NEW DIAL"

ly and simply that nobody notices
Woodland Exchange Bank and op­ that he hu done It at all.
erated it with the assistance of his
Rons, Lawrence and Victor, until

specified powers and limitation*.

If the New Deal is returned to

The Miller Furniture Company Is
certainly bringing some wonderfully first telephone system and operated
friends not only from this com­
fine new merchandise Into HasUngs It until 1821.
Ha served a* postmaster, township munity but surrounding cities and
lrea*urtr, village president and was towns. The greet abundance of
always active In the affairs of tlx

THAW
PIRFS

ministration as sanction to go ahead
Ize, it indicate* that everything Is
probably all right provided that ev­
erything isn’t all wrong. Likewise1
when a presidential fishing trip’
I
blare of publicity.
Editor DonJ
Cochrane of the Hartford Day'
Spring begins to wonder, "how'

So

THURSDAY. APRIL 23, 1936

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

during th« past four yean.
Only rulings of the Supreme
Court prevented several measures

Methodist church and F. &amp; A. M.
Barry Rag La of E. State road was lodge.
termtnt was made in the family lot
brought lo Pennock hospital Tues­
He was united in marriage Sept. In Mt. Hope cemetery.
The
community
sympathises
day evening su Haring with a severe 25, 1878. to Miss Louise Ballinger,
. case of appendicitis, with complica­ a member of a pioneer Woodland deeply with the family In their sorhe
tions. Yesterday’s report was that he family. Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert cele­
brated their golden wedding annirlculture. within the next four
DEATH OF MRS.
sibte under the circumstanoa*.
EMMA JOHNSON.
years It te probable that a majority
A glassed-in private
has
. slips that happen tn the best of reg- of lhe Justices now serving will be
Mr*. Emma Johnson. *gc 93. died
just been partitioned off from the
He Is survived by one daughter.
Sunday al the home of her doughmain
room
tn
the
Sheldon
Abstract
Mrs.
Bertha
Blake
of
Middleville,
forced to retire. If these Justices
office,
a
much
needed
feature
and
one
son,
.J.
Victor
of
Woodland.
should be replaced by hancl picked
The funeral service* were held
which their many patrons will en­
men it would give the administraTuesday afternoon from the Hen­
joyton funeral Lome at Delton. Rev.
elation* of senator Arthur H. Van­ tlon practical control of the court.
Lyman B chamberlain, sanitary
Ralph Bates vas in charge of the
I This, combined with the control It
denberg of Michigan that
engineer of the Eaton county health
'
department, left Monday to take a Burial in Woodland cemetery.
now exercizes over congress, would
four months' postgraduate course al
Mr, Hilbert possessed the confi­ rle villa cemeitrr.
and corporations that drew from a give the New Dealers dictatorial
the University of Michigan. The dence of ail who knew him. Ho
hundred thousand to more than a powers almost a* complete a* those
course U provided through a schol­ was a man of high character and county, Pennsylvania. July 26. U43.
million dollars each In crop reduc­ of a Hiller, a Mussolini or a Stalin.
Six came to this state with her
archip offered by the United Slates
public health service. During his
tion benefits supposedly invented for
It couldn't possibly happen In thte
absence. Mr. Chamberlain's duties
ried to George Henry. The couple
the aid of individual farmers. We
country? Why not? Just what could
and useful Uie.
moved lo Pennsylvania and remain­
anticipated that.
members of the staff. He will return
ed there until Mr. Henry's death
we as Individuate do about It? Wc
on August 1. Mr. Chamberlain will
REGINALD SIDNEY FRENCH^ In 1871, when Mr*. Johnson re' could not have recourse to Congress
..VW the
mt Miaaievuie
^1* state. She wa* marI spend hl* week ends with hi* wife
ures of the week that thousand* of because congress is already In con­
We print from
Middleville
Bushrod Johnson April 14.
! and children., who are continuing 8un th? foltowZg obitu.* of 8idetudente of teen age in the cities trol of the New Deal; we could iftt
JY'unry 2fl' ,M7- 81lc
to live on Seminary street.- Char- ney French, whose untimely death .1B76’
are on the federal payrolls in trifling make the customary appeal to
I lotte.—Charlotte Republican - Trib- te so much regretted by a wide circle U surv'ved
her daughter,
at
boondogglln,; projects. We surmised court* because toe courts, too.
of friend* In Hastings
- whose home she died, and by two
Dr. Fran* Willison, it seems, te
Reetoald Rldnsv rr,n,h
, *onj' wul*r«l Johnson of Kalamathat.
M^Sd^Mri^
■* “d Maurk* Johnson of Havre.
would be under New Deal control.
dean of the dentists comprising the
In MlddleviileT’ F*hru«v s M“l4na'
by flve 8™n&lt;lciindrcn
"We are not critical of the estl-, Freedom of speech and a free
Barry-Eaton Dental Association,
“ M“®cville. February 5. and three ereat-nrandchildren
mated expense of 8300.000 for a', press are two of the constitutional I
having been In active practice for
45 years. Honoring the fact, lhe
Presidential ocean fishing trip, while' right* promised to every American'
members of the above society have April 8. 1036 Death wa* due to PASSING OF MRS.
congress mark* lime with the affairs1 citizen. But If a congress and a su- i
recently presented him with a
ADELINE HKFFLEBOWER.
pneumonia which followed injuries
of the nation. We expected that. Il’ premc court were in sympathy wiUi
Mrs. Adeline Hcfflcbower. }gcd 84.
handsome hand lettered testimonial
received In an auto accident white widow of Simon Hefflebowcr. died
seem* only a UI fling sum—some­ an administration which chose to I
on parchment, expressing their ap­ reluming from Chicago, April a.
on Monday at lier home. 502 W.
preciation of hte long and honor­
thing of a bargain In comparison1 curb these rights, we would be muz­
Sidney received his education in -------- ---St. „„
Grand
She WM
was bom U1
In Pennsylable service as a member of their
to other federal expenditures.
zled as easily as tlx people of Italy’.
profession. It te signed personally the Middleville and Grand Rapids vanla. the daughter of Michael and
schools, finishing at the Asheville Mary
Marv Reamer
Reamer nnuih
1 Germany and Russia have been.
Routh. Hnrvivina
Surviving arc
by the twenty-one dentist* of Barry school*,
FINE OPPORTUNITY
and Eaton county, it was a fine school In Asheville. North Carolina. three daughters. Mrs. Hallie New­
' There 1* nothing we could do about
thing lo do while Dr. Willison was Later he became associated with his ton. Hastings. Mr*. Mary Cousins.
' it. Many Importent treaties have
’Round About Town
F0R COUWTY’S TEACHERS Backward Glances;
still alive lo enjoy the gracious act, father in lhe French's Mill*, taking Nashville and Mrs. Gertrude Stahl.
bait* hi* own hook, and whether
been turned into scraps of paper
and He has It framed and hanging over Lhe business upon his fathers Clarksville; one son. Sam. Wood­
Hew to lhe line, let the quips
Bits
of
Yesterday
Three
Summer
Courses
Proand the Constitution of the United
on the wall* of his waiting room! retirement and working Incessant­ land; a abler. Mr*. Emma Jenson.
fall where they may I
fashioned way. We would like to
HMtlngs.
a brother, John- W.
J vided by the W. K. Kel­
and te naturally justly proud, of IL ly to make it a success.
State* might well be if the executive,
He Is survived by hl* wife, for­ Rou*h, Nashville; also 21 grand­
know how many fish he has hooked
Plymouth's debate team, we nbllce.
legislative and judicial branches of
logg Foundation
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
merly Miss Cora Watean of Grand .............
u great-grandchllm.uvuhchildren and ,15
and what valor he displayed In!
By Observing Tommy.
A tetter received by relatives of won its fifteenth straight victory Rapids to whom he was married In dren. Funeral services will be held
our Federal government agreed that
I
The
W.
K.
Kellogg
Foundation
te
last
week
In
the
semi-final
High
heaving them aboard. And. loo. j such a step should be taken.
Prof. Louis J. Michael, formerly of
Tommy sure gel* results for the providing three new summer courses Hastings, brings word that he and school debate with Flint Northern 1920. and their four children.— at the residence on W. Grand St.
what lx says when the big fish get,
American government was found­ boys. Only a few week* after nomi­ for the coming summer for
‘ hte family intend to leave Kishinev. high, and will again participate in Thomas. Sidney. Polly and Otl«; al-1 thte Thursday afternoon at two
so. hte parents and brother David, o'clock, with burial In the Freeport
away, as big fish will from the beat
principals
the stale championship debate at
ed on lhe principle of preserving In­ nation for the Hastings Hall of school teachers,
of Los Angeles. California.
cemetery. Mrs Hcfftebower was a
and moat veracious of fishers.
Eligible
Bachelors, Don TzZ:z, -two! reprSnrended oTSl rerei;
dividual liberty and freedom of ac- blond locks, beaming smile and
■nd ail.
.&gt;1. coumre. re£S*f tSJ’SX' bT'SLX Ann Arbor, something It has been
Mr. French was a dean, good man devoted mother, a good neighbor
doing at different time* over a long
“These piscatorial affairs are the
----------- -------------- ----------------- —
period of years We remember that and his passing has deprived thl* . and loyal friend.
first acUiittauof Jh?JTwltent Jn '■। Uon and InlUaUve. Consequently Is now definitely out of circulation—
town
of
a
valuable
business
man
————-----------------aucLyoucan'L blame It all on Leap , course* wa* made Monday, foliowthe late Maurice Keyworlh. when
a meeting al lhe --------Foundation ISirw^hTRu-^ten
more than three year* Uiat have not
“ing
--------------------------superintendent of schools here, who
strumenl of tlx people. Citizens Year either.
headquarters of the directors. The
J" MCKntaKnd oSr Tvden
fare of the community. He was of is to get rid of your car.
been fully press-*gen ted, covered
had
sent
several
winning
teams
were to direct the course of lhe gov­
No matrimonial bureaus needed , course for
superintendents
of ftre^ach ma^termx a n^Butek
down from East Jordan, said he had
and hallowed in the press, over the
ernment; not lhe government, the with Tommy around
schools and high school principals
•?***“'*
rather come up against any team
radio and on the screen. The silence
’ * *
will be at the University of Mtehio?
course of the people.
In lhe state than the Plymouth de­
I should really begto to charge a 1 gan. and will last for six weeks be-1 ?hev
1
h
Is ominous, and wc would like to
baters. That was In the day when
It 1* this principle which will be
...
^-°^n^n* dates in Has- Ruth Hueston. now Mrs. Whipple,
know what it means.”
at stake during the next election. If
| wajs in which the public schooli tinss will be the chautaunu* iw* was leading them to many victories,
lhe New Dealers are successful, it
Wish my boss would let me IcU can provide for the social adjustw-dnesdav-An^
and evidently that winning tradition
all
I
knew.
mer.t.
mental
hygiene
and
health
and
ibe
£
JJ?*
Sometime ago we stated our be­ means that we go further along the
* ’ *
lnee&lt;to 01 children. Dr. Howard Y..
tSkiM
B^m »
Monday, lhe 27lh. is the dale for I
lief that Vemor Main's support of road of socialism and regimentation
Heh! Hehl Heli! Maybe he's McCluskey, of the University fac- yd^'
^pl 8
the
re next Cheer Up
Do party
oartv which will
under
a
strong
central
government
lhe Townsend Movement was more
•cared, hlnuelf.
, ulty. will have charge of thl. course.
m1m
be held at lhe Hastings Country
a ma
political expediency which will tell us when, where, why
The other courses will be at i supplee of this city were united in Club. The committee will be: Mr.
and
how
lo
live.
That's
a
lovely
new
tan
coupe
I
than
conviction.
Northwestern University. Evanston, marriage last week by Rev. Dr and Mrs. H. E. Smith. Chmn.. Mr.
Tho^answer. however. Is up to the sec parked in front of the Health Illinois. One is for principals of ele- I wishart In Grand Rapids.
and Mr*, jack O'Connor. Mr. and
One must keep in mind the fact
Unit.
mentary schools and will open June
The officers of the Bsrry County Mrs. Earl Bmllb. Mr. and Mrs. B.
that the backbone of the Townsend voters.
82 and last until August 14. It will pioneer Society are engaged In the R. Reed. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Parker
Ambulance crews are going to include two courses of study, one of laborious task of raising funds with and Dr. and Mrs. Lofdahl. Nash­
Plan te a pension of 8200 per month
A DOUBLE STANDARD.
have a lot easier lime now that lhe elementary school organization and which to mark historic spot* in ville.
lor those past sixty years of age.
The question of closing the coiAi’’Are politician* above decency?” new elevator at the Pennock hos­ elementary administration, and the Barry county. The Bull's Prairie
There is no compromise on tills
pital is ready for Its ups and downs. other for workers in elementary cd- j monument 1* a certainly. Il will be ty offices in the court house Balurpoint among the true followers of 'T. O. Huckle. editor of the Cadil­
ucatlnn। erected thte spring, imbedded In it day afternoons during lhe summer
the Townsend cause. The Townsend 1lac Evening News ask* thl* question
Whoopee! I’ve got a ticket for
months
was brought up to the board I
Primary grade teachers will be will be a bronze tablet purchased
Wkekly.
Townsend
organizer*. as
' he compares the kindness, hon­ this free cash prize drawing Satur­ given the opportunity to attend an , two years ago. TiX Society te plan- of supervisors. Permission was1
day. 1'11 be there with a smile, win
Townsend speakers all agree that 'esty and good sense of the average
clght-wecks' course tn child growth , ning to mark next tlx site* of Yan- granted for such closing during lhe
and development in the primarj I kee Springs tavern, and of Moreau's months of June. July and August
8200 per month sliall be the mini- &lt;American In private life with the
Lowell's original WPA sewer proj­
--------------------■
on Scales'‘ Prairie,
west
mum amount acceptable.
'dishonesty and sham of politics. He
Now with Don under proper care. schools. This course will open with block *house
ect grant has been increased from
1’vc got tliesfe Tigers to worry about. registration Monday. June 22. at of Middleville. Mrs. Henry Hoyt,
Probably a majority of the Town- 1
Northwestern University. Classes daughter of “Yankee Bill” Lewis 837.000 to 852.0W; Use reservoir
send followers who voted for Mr.
project grant Increased by 81 900. a
'The average American Is an hon­
will
begin
bn
June
23.
has
announced
her
willingness
to
Note with Interest that the credit
Main did so under the impression &lt;est and kindly fellow, notoriously manager of Hastings Manufactur­
Before lhe meeting of the Foun­ contribute the sum of »25 for the total of 827.000. The Increase was
that he would go lo Washington good
|
to his mother and sympathet­ ing is rolling around in a new green dation board of directors, the Foun- foundation and boulder to be placed being big tier than lhe original cstljdatlon staff members from the var­ on the site of her father’s famous
and help push through a bill that iic toward lost children; but he automobubblc!
ious counties completed a week's "Mansion House” founded 80 year*
would secure for them a pension of 1has one great fault, which te that
Wonder if he ever heard the old fteld-trlp to Lansing and other
PROMINENT EX-BANKER
8200 per month.
1he never seems lo demand the same joke about the green benches for pointe. They Visited the state de­
OF WOODLAND PASSES.
THIRTY YEARS AGO
partment of health, the school for
But the Congressional Record foe kind
1
of morality from his public green couples!
Frank P. Hilbert, aged 80 ysar*.
Monday Herman Beumer bought
lhe blind and the school for the
Monday. Jan. 27. 1936. page 1048. &lt;officials that he expect* from his or­
pasted away early Monday A. M.
the
interest
of
his
partner.
Wm
Watch out boy! You’re a member deaf in Lansing, also the home and . — -------- — — ------------ •••—
second paragraph Indicates that Mr &lt;dinary friends in private life.
at
the
Pennock
hospital. Hastings,
rol_the. Hastings. Hall of . Eligible training school at Lapeer, the chil- Andrew*, in the meat market busiMain, himself, has different Ideas
“In private life he can spot a faker, Bachelors, too. Remember what dren's center al Detroit. Lfie'De- Jiress of Andrew* A Beumer, and
was bom at Jackson, Mich.
I
Armour’s Star
troll health department, the Merbecomes sole proprietor of that ceased
1
on lhe subject.
(a liar, a cheat or a swindler ** far happened lo Harold and Doni
rill Palmer school and the juvenile prosperous market.
in answer to the direct question. (off as lhe next man. In politics, he
Boned and Rolled
Miss Mary Grant gave a six :Frank Icke* will move In as soon as
Tommy’ll be glad to take it if he court at Detroit, also the boys' vo“But the gentleman doe* not stand (doesn't seem able to do it at all; or,
I o'clock dinner Thursday preceding iit can be made ready for occupancy.
wins and if he loses he can still take caXlonal school at Lansing.
for the 8200 a month, or docs lie?" if
। he does, he doesn't seem to care
————» ———
; the Social Club Hop. at which Mtes
MU* Mae Roberta was home from
Representative Vernor Main replied: ,about it.
1
— Bess Lowry of Hosurd City was Kalamazoo a few days this week.
. •
suesl of honor. Roy Barney of iShe will keep house this summer for
I DO NOT STAND FOR 8300 A |
Saw the Quinta Sunday. They’re:
' 'Things that would make him boil the best little actresses I’ve ever I
her aunt who is making an extend­
preset.
MONTH OR FOR ANY OTHER
with rage if done by an acquain- seen—They played the role of cute!
,
Mr. and Mrs. Jason McElwain. 1ed visit in California.
SUM THAT WILL GIVE TO ANY­
,, tance will ba accepted without a healthy little youngsters perfectly.
' '
Mr, and Mrs. P. T Colgrove and
J. F Edmond* a well known Barry
BODY ANY PLACE ANY MORE j whimper if dw.e by a politician. He
The Adult Bible Claws of the ' Mrs Margaret Bailey heard Bar* county teacher, has been elected for
Collectively speaking, however, First United Brethren church will Bernhardt at Grand Rapids Monday .
THAN THE
REVENUE:
PRO‘ | looks, shrugs, and says. That's poli­
Eva
still
insists
that
her
twins
are
hold
tliclr
regular
monthly
meet1
night.
DUCED WILL PROVIDE."
tics"—forgetting that if he insisted at least THREE-FIFTHS as cute a*, ing Friday evening at tlx home of' T W. Lee of New York City. Qeh. :
salary.
We repeat our sincere belief that
on a higher kind pf public morality the Quints.
"Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Myers.
passenger Agent of the Lackawana
a™**..
w. m. u-us,
Mr. Main's championship of the
It wouldn't be politics at all.
_rn..p '' re." Ai re.ni
' rallro*d
lhc IUMl oi ”r- ,nd thte cite have bought of Douglas
Saw Harold .strolling homeward
Coat* Grove P. T- A. will meet
E Ty^n Sunday and Monday. Berry of Grand Rapids, that grand­
Towu«.d &lt;»ue U more . outre, o: I
M olun nw thb doute
Friday
night
April
24
with
supper
j
T^^„
y
cZity
PoulH?
As_operwml pound elpcdleno Uu» [ &gt;urtBd oTmoroW. In private life i with a bottle of milk and two paper
ly bred coil Arvai No. 18.276. Indi­
sacks of groceries, the other after­
Vhnv ^ho'ctatlon twld 114 annual meeting in vidually Arvai b a grand horse and
°
C n'.
| a man who put his own advantage noon. The harness xcins lo rest
Xh Ih* JUP&lt;;rvLwrs' r&lt;»m al the court hi* make up te in keeping and har­
rutlhermore u dppe.t. tint chore
0,
,nd lightly on his shoulders.
dldn t gel a slip, bring one ho. dLh. houw Thu^y evening. Several .mony with hte ancestry.
.bo .o« or wrted tor Mr.
u
Townsend plan meeting. Episcopal nc;*
h“v? , l“,c'y bcen
under lhe Impression that he was!'
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
■
parish
house
on
Friday
evening)
rnakln.8. “
' cent society. In politic* he Is hailed
Crumbs of Wisdonf April 24. IWfl 7 to o'clock Impor- bers now on the books The follow- Fever ’n’ ague Is abroad in this
going to help the fight for a &gt;200
' as a smart guy and too often for a
.tent businev- demands an early
“Tre ekcl«,: Ja“n M«- part’of the moral.vineyard.
per month pension are being let'
BRIEF
OBSERVATIONS.
Hasting* ought lo secure the tele­
time appears as an ornament to lhe
Istart. Dr. F A. Raccltc h to be the g^Lpreirtdcnl;
‘ vice-president; c. R. Btehop secre- phone line to Freeport and Wood­
party.'
‘Crooked politics and predatory speaker
land.
’
------------/-*ry; Burdette Sutton, treasurer.
finances are more subversive of our
Mrs. Irene Sweezey began teach­
Word has been received here that]
Taxes are paid In the sweat of own democratic Institutions than all,
the county W- C- T U convention
FORTY YEARS AGO.
ing in the Andrus district, Monday.
AN IMPORTANT ELECTION
every man who labors because they the propaganda that the Commu­ will be held al the Goodwill church 1 Valentine Leins ha* put a plate
ROUND UP YOUR TICK ITS THIS WilK foe the
Dr. Hanlon la now able to throw I
The importance of the coming
are a burden on production and nists could release In our country.” on Tuesday Mas 5
'81354 ,ront
,u,re o«upted
dust in lhe eyes of all who travel |
SPARTON RIFRICIRATOR . . . Saturday, April
—Abraham Fink.
campaign must not be underesti­ can be paid only by production.
by Fitzsimmons bazaar which the -king's highway,” having pur-1
St. Rose Altar Society meeting1 makes a fine Improvement.
mated. It will be more than a clash
chased
the
fleet
stepping
matched
25, qt 9 o'cleck, the drawing will take place in
Out workers may never see a tax
“Streams of pubhe opinion do not
April 28 at 2 o’clock. Entertain-1 George Walter and sons have team owned by T- Phillip*.
bill, but they pay in reductions from mean much in themselves, but when' ment by Group No. 2. Mrs Leo Tat-1 bought toe pump factory property.
front af Feod CenMr. If THIRi!
Frit* Goodyear and Pred Greble
more than two decades there will
wage*- in -increased cost of what they form into a mighty river some­ fee, thalrman. We are expecting a i They will convert it into a tannery are at home from the Orchard Lake
things has to give way.”—Walter 8. large attendance.
। and will make raw hide halter*. Military academy.
they buy. • • • —Franklin D. Roooc- Peck.
Ualtaatton vs. Btaiae Hights. VolA stock company lute Nteh formed
DISTRICT CONVENTION.
I Mills Phillips' house in lhe second in thte city by several business men
' As tong a* thing* are setting bet­
Pythian Sister* district couven- [ ward burned lo the ground this of Halting*. Jackson and Hanover
The New Deal—a government of ter
%each
**ch week,
T**- it
H’ssllme
light"'
time To sit Ugr
lion will be held at MiddieTiUe morning about 3 o'clock.
oUUUreu. py
br politicians
wUUeUrn and
ml for
Ire1 the'Treasury
It!1™'
»' lThurK|ay. April 30. Will all memthe direction of a powerful federal politicians,
’
—
Middleville te agitating the ques- Parker* patent strainer and culgovernment or continue with inch- politician*. May it perish from the,
_______
| ben who de*lrc to attend notify lion of buying a balf-mlle track and ofl for cUtarn*.
■
"Since its beginning, the press has Most Excellent Chief. Mrs. Cora L i holding an annual fair.
earth before
WUAK-U Jjeartn
Derore tlx
tlx country
country is
is turned
turned
followed the policy of 'flat liar.'1 Boyes, by Monday. April 27., tor | The sexton * home at Riverside te
lc.„ lowly together by » over vhoteulc to communbk- and
Mrs.
Knappen's
health
te
much
Im- j
meaning ‘Let there be light!'
Dr.. reservations? A good representation being moved unto Uie tai-tern purt
government. each wito‘radicate!
I
Carl W. Ackerman.
.is desired.
• of the tot, aud the new mxIgu, provsd.

. 1n Prairie1
Mr. and
are spendl
Lloyd L
Pa., viallci

Donald
ids visited
Marshall i

I

being enforced which gave the gov­
ernment dictatorial powers In nut­
ter* pertaining to business and og-

•

T •
LAST
V
HANOT1

and Eagle

7

IDODS

|| LEG O' LAMB

27c |

and vi*ite&lt;

Sunday gt
Frank Old

«pending j
Mrs. char

Delton wei
Clayton B

Viola wen
Chas. Day

dred Tutt!
end.

and famll;
Sunday gt

Miss Em
the guest &lt;

her daugh
of eloverd
urday.

cd tlx tuj
Anna Jack
ville. Bund
Misses 1
Campbell i
at their h

Mrs. Ph:

and Mrs. 1

Charles,
guest* thli

Sackrider

Mr. and
Grand Rs

Daniels ar
of the latl

ville. Xn&lt;
DorU Wes

Ind., epen
former's *
and Mrs.
guests fro
Mr*. Let
of Milo sp
mother. N
tives Iron
Lyle E- W
and. Larrj
guest* .of 1
’ Mr. and
daughters
friend. Mr
Id*, spent
Cenard Si

VEAL ROAST

LB. IQC
II

|j

(Jr^antzations

Lni»^llwR

iB 32c

33c I

BEEF ROAST

u&gt;. 18c

&gt;^NEWS?
v-----------w* Fresh __
Peas
JFyellowaipe W _

PC
IN
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2nd
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6lh
7lb
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9th
10th
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EL.DPAUSCH

HZ

�THB ■A1TOTO* BAXTO. THURSDAY. APRIL M, IBM
nett. Herbert cook. Vernor Webster.
Edw. Groat. Uo Welfare, Will Cruttenden. Willart Ickes, Ernie Bate- '
man, Will Mishler, Roy Smith. Nil- I
I. 0. 0. T. Lodge Brings WL8 son Willison, Harry Cbeeseman, '
Harry Babcock, Don Putnam. Roas ■
Radio Favorites to
Johnson. Glen Densmm, Harry ।church on Saturday
Mrs. John Engte returned Friday i MH. Hasel Rankes was in Grand
taMv
.
Hastings
Brown. Howard 8|anton. Carroll
Cutler, Robert Glasgow, Dr. Guy
W
•
wr&gt;
An
-Ml
•
man
In
I
HMM,
ItMU.
I
IM
Dual
B«M,
ol
K,U»
u&gt;d
The
National
Bam
Dance
group.
week end In Morgen.
»mu.
I Lu^.WOU, au Mm Inm B*l- li*rTT
MM IU IMOlMr WLS popular radio feature, came to Keller. J. E Johnson and Ben Gidtown Monday in person and added ley.
In Prairieville on Bunday.
. A.D.MrtTlUrtO^RaSta
Arthm IkST
Lanrtna m!OhuWU' 00 Thursday. April 8, frteh laurels to their reputation
£?“**’** wUh “
ninety-nine They played to three big audiences,
Mr. and Mrs. Roman Paldpausch Bunday gueoUo^s
are spending a few days in Detroit. and Miss Agrtes film
ii
Monday
bustooM- ,,
cent. dDC.-Donald
F. Cole
Cote of
of the
the The matinee drew 750 school chll,J*
TL 7 an txutoew.
,..dor* id y.
te .nd ixr.
1,penl
University of Detroit was present u dren, aside from adults; the first
rated with flower* and
Lloyd Lohmeyer of Germantown.
t
I wwt and with friends in Ann Arbor. * guest.
Pa., visited John Wetescrt over the
evening performance was practically
iS?1 Mrs' Mettle Rickel haa gone to
After avcryflnecanner.thespeak- a sold out house with 1.100 tickets
the groom's sister and husband. Mr.1
Pren‘ Grand Rapid, tor a visit with rel-, er of the evening. Dr. Roy P. Street, tekett in at the (tear; lhe second
and Mrs. Francis Dooley. or Grand
Donald Kenfield of Grand Rap­
aUves.
t psychologist at the Ann J. Kellogg show played to 600 or more
ids visited Kenneth Brower over the lire over tne week end.
_____________
________ an attract!*
„z*«&lt;4nM,ier
Mr. and Mrs. B R. Reed spent School In Battle creek, gave a very
They proved a clean talented lot
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1) [ wool h’rtlh]
went to Grand Rapids Saturday to I Sunday in Kalamazoo with reta- interesting addreu. hto subject be- of entertainers, and got a fine re­
Mm. M. R. Kinde and daughter of spend the week end with Mr. and; tlvee.
.
. tag -The Approach to and the sponse from the big audiences. Lulu
Marshall spent the week end with Mra. Bert Zacelmeler.
■ Mr. and Mrs. Vem Wlnh.grr of Management of Children." A very Belle was heard to aay they never Brown. (3rd); Irt. Richard FlngteMrs. Ray Finnic.
Mr. and Mrs.Cornelius Mannl. I Sheridan visited Hastings friends lively discussion followed and much had played to a better crowd ot well ton. Welcome. (7th); 2nd. Virginia Dooley wore a gray spring suit and
Miss Mamc Kerr of Greenville Mrs. Sterling Rogers. Mia. Pauline Friday.
.valuable Information was brought behaved children Than those at the Hesterly, Friend. (8th i.
was a Sunday visitor of Mr. and |I Bilsa and Mtoa Barbara Bltoa spent I Mtoa Marten Damphere of Char-' out in connection with child psy- matinee.
Rutland—1st.
Betty
Coleman.
Monday In Battle creek.
| totte called on Hastings friends on choiogy and Ils application in JuSplendid support was given from Tanner. (3rd); 2nd. Car! Hathaway.
Miss Grace Wertenberger of Grand
Mrs. m. F. Stone has relumed to
i venlle dental practice. Dr. Emory W. the rural communities around Has- Goodwill. (3rd); 1st. WilMam Dibble. Pines, where lhe wedding breakfast
Rapids visited Miss Frances Button her
uu home
nouw in
m Detroit
uvuos* after
aiwr a week's
wwa s i&gt; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Rice and Miss Morris, director of dental education tings, schools closing in several in- Edger. (7th); 2nd. Virginia Mcdaflodils and other spring flowers
vteit with her slater and husband 1 Hazel Shriber were in Battle Creek of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. 1 stances to allow pupils to come.
Lsury. Tanner. &lt;8ih^.
being used as the ccnterptece.
' i0,1 S*lurd*y.
| Invited lhe society to attend thc I Thc Odd Fellows lodge, under
Mra. w. E. oiHstt of Oregon. Bl­ Mr. and Mra. wm Oorkln
Yankee Springs—irt. Beverly Sa­
Mr. and Mrs. Taflee left for a trip
and Eagle River, Wte.. te the guest
Mrs Roy Yarger
Yarser and Mr. Battle Creek meeting on Ma&gt;
May 1. at
at' whore
whose au*ptee»
auspices- they came, cleared
Mrs. Nell Proos and daughter ' Mr
»fr and Mn
ger.
Yankee
Springs.
(5tb);
2nd.
to Canada and upon their return
Jean
of
Grand
Rapids
are
“
pending
W
ymftn
*P*
nl
Sunday
whteh
time
Dr.
Blumenthal
o£Har|something
over
»200.
of her sister. Mra. O. A. Kerr.
Steve
Skultety.
Robbins.
&lt;5lh);
1st.
In
Grand
Rapids.
yard
University
and
the
Forsyth
!
___
—
.
..
—
-------------will reside at 302 No. Broadway.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Dolan and
the week with the former's parenu,
Robert
Sager.
Yankee
Spring,
sons were in Grand Rapids Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Emerson of Denial CUnlc will be the main ' PROGRAM BY THE
Mr. and Mrs. Guy otddlngs.
&lt;7th&gt;; 2nd. Mary Palenick. Robbins. May 1.
and rtoltod Mr. Dolan's father.
Sturgis visited Mr. and Mrs. John speakers.
i
PIU1P D
CIVIC rPLAYERS
~
' •'
' Mr. Taffee is in the employ of
Mrs. Jack Snyder returned on Hoevenair on Sunday.
,
■ ■■■
—
—
I
UIVIU
Mr. and Mrs. Quy Giddings were
-—------! Assyria—1st. Mary Lou Hartom. Walldorf! A- Son and Mrs. Taflee is
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Friday from a visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Dessa Stannard of KalamaMrs. Earl Kermeen of Caledonia too spent Thursday with her niece,
Final Meeting of Hastings 'Assyria Center. (3rd); 2nd. ArabeUc
Frank Otddlngs of Lake Odessa.
n .t, u g .&gt; , ““Sting* PhUhpa Eagie. (4th). |st. Caroi MU- store.
Mrs. Etta Faul of Woodland te and Mrs. Frances Card of Middle­ Mrs. carry Townsend.
Brotbernooa Is Next
ler. Briggs. (Sth); 2nd. Freda Ham­
Both,arc graduates of Uw Has­
spending several days with Mr. and ville.
tings High school and their wide cir­
Mrs. Charles Faul and daughter.
Mrs. Lottie Ryerson and Mrs. Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mark --------------------------------------------- ।
Monday Evening
“ond- AuiUn- ‘7th’Mr. and Mrs. Chester Banghart of Emily Wilcox have had as guests Mahar in Vermontville.
Thirty member* of the Hastings I _
| This week Saturday the lower cle of friends extend congratulations
Chapter
No.
7.
O.
E
S,
went
to
!
nr
T!
’
5J££L
m
S
ctta
£*
f
5
“
^
smde
children
will
have
lhe
final
Delton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. the past week their slster-ta-law,
Mr. and Mrs. George Briggs of
tor this Brotherhood tMl at thf
house al 9:30 A.
Clayton Brandstetter on Monday.
Mrs. H. A. Dodd, and brother, Eg­ Detroit visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack Freeport on Thursday evening to ।
attend lhe county meeting. At thte !^inl TL1!,ibl.h?!d °
on
i M- And
* ’1:30
CIRCLE NO. 2n
and lhe second
second -----------group at
Mr. and Mrs Frank Day and bert Hunter, of Scarboro Jet, Ont, Btem over the week end.
•
.1
__ ____
_________
fnr I _
______
ning Aorll
April 27. It was .vlirdllUd
scheduled for
p ‘M —
Representatives
from the
Viola were guests of Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Leslie Third and small
time
lhe._____
travelling
gavel.___
was____
pre­ nine
! townshlp schools at Woodland. Mld- Circle No. 2 of the Methodist L. A.
Chas. Day of Barryvllle on Bunday. son of MUlken. OnL Mtes Elizabeth Grand Rapids spent Sunday with sented by the Freeport chapter to Of^eonfileti^r n^Uh thUt J*}
™ a °f . he ' dlevllle Freeport, Delton and Nash- S. an Monday evening, about thir­
Mrs. Bessie Tuttle and Miss Mil­ Dodd, who has been spending the Mr. and Mcs. Kellar Btem.
Hickory Comers, the latter chapter Hasttaw
■ty being present, several new memdred Tuttxj of Hillsdale were guests
Mr. and Mn. Muri DeFoe of Char­ furnishing an enjoyable program, Hastings Odd Fellows WLS enter- I ville will also ______
compete.
of Mrs. Guy c. Keller over the week Wilcox and Mrs Ryerson, returned lotte. spent Sunday with their after which refreshments were talnment, and because the program
Mrs. Maude Smith, county school
Following the pot luck supper.
end.
with them Tuesday morning to her daughter. Mtos Rose DeFoe.
served. Mrs. Cora Gebhardt of thte could be better arranged by a week's commissioner, who is in charge of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald MeQuarrie home in -Toronto. Ont.
Mn. J. L. Merriam and daughter. city te^presldent of lhe county asso­ postponement. Uiat course was tak- the contest which Is being observed
and family of East Delton were
Mrs. Louis Williams and daugh­ Kzic. and Mrs. F. D. Green were ciation.
tn many other counties, feels very for the ensuing year are: Chair­
Bunday guests of Mrs. Mary Bur­ ter, Pauline Louise, of Battle Creek in Battle Creek on Monday.
The entertainment for the eve­ much pleased with the results so
On ^Monday evening seventeen
man, Mrs. Glen Densmore and sec­
gess.
Mn. John Herron (Roberta Cus­ Eastern Stars from thte city went to ning will be two one-act plays, giv­
are coming this week end for a two
retary and treasurer. Mrs. Robert
Miss Emma Bradfield of Sparta is
ick) of Toledo, Ohio, spent the week Lawrence to attend the dedication en on the stage in the social rooms
Several have spelled lhe entire Cook. Mrs. David Boyes had charge
lhe guest of her niece and husband. enu. MT. and Mrs. Maurice Pierson. end-with her aunt, Mrs. Lloyd Hu- of
, an electric signet. The local O. E. of the church by the Hastings Civic
and taxis. Tailored for
|. list correctly and a good number of the social hour which followed,
W. L- Bhulters and Mrs. Clara ver.
8- te contemplating purchasing a Players. The plays are entitled:
Lj ,-----have —
shown
excellent
Mn. R. R. McPeek of Charlotte similar signet, so were interested in . "They Thai Mourn" and "What
---- —
—- “slaying"
t each one receiving a prize. The anHale spent Saturday In Belding
'
DTa
Mean.
Going
the
Hard
Way?"
Mrs. Ella Hammond accompanied wihi
aunts.
Mrs.
with mu
Mrs.. onuiucia
Bhulters auu
and mi
Mr.. ano
and spent Monday with her &gt;
iuiu&gt;, mi
». iI &amp;ccing
me
one
at
Lawrence.
The
seeing lhe
nt
The i,
ot
.^. brtD*1 £ toU)
her daughter. Mrs. Mark Oarrteon. Mrs. Gordon Clement. On Sunday M. L. Cook and Mrs. A. D. Knls-1 Lawrence chapter presented jewels The Hastings Civic Players have put
, on some fine entertainments. The th® Promlnen&lt;* « deserves in this
of Cloverdale to Kalamazoo on Sat­ they went to St.
to
8t. Johns where they *e™u&gt; their Past Patrons al this ineclmeet-1011 'M&gt;nw nnc wusruunmenta. The
urday.
visited
Mr.
vislted Mrs. George Bhulters
Bhulters.
Mr- and
*hd Mra.
Mrs. Richard Hughes of I (ng.
jng. Lunch was nerved
served and lb«
lhe HasHas­ Itwo acbcduled for ncxL Monday cve- day and age when so many special­
ities
often
seem
to be crowding out
.
r
—
u
I
r'hif-aen
vis,
x*.
......
...
.
.
.
•
Mrs. Marian B- Goodyear attend­
Mr. and Mrs. James McDonald Chicago, visited her mother. Mrs. | unss visitors report a very enjoyable nlnfi wU1 not •* exceptions.
Mrs. Gertrude Houvener. who has
ed Uie funeral of her coualn. Mra. of Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mra. Al I Ch**- Benham several days lhe past i evening
,n
to the regular pro­ the fundamentals.
ehwnter met tnr it« mu । Bram lhcrc wUI ** thc M‘lectlnn of
When wc asked Mrs. Smith con­ been spending lhe winter with her
Anna Jackson McIntyre, at Middle­ Hovey. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Willard, I week.
&gt;nd
Du.ne
Pu,h.
SuncMy
।
_
Ml»
ooadln,
Uenh,U&gt;
I
I
riu"U&gt;«
ville. Sunday.
cerning wonts
words mat
that seem to prove son and wife. Dr. and Mrs. Harold
and Duane Pugh, were Sunday
Miss Geraldine Isenhalh visited '."““T
urouiernooa oncers tor me ensuing earning
evening
gucsu
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
her
aunt
and
uncle,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
I
°
n
Tue
*
d
“
y
c
*
eMto
«
of
Brotherhood
year,
which
begins
in
special
pitfalls
for
the
young
people,
Houvener. Honolulu. Hawaiian Is­
Misses Margaret DeMeyer. Mary
I Weldon Wolfe, of Battle creek on |
wee*.
___ __________
I October and concludes lhe follow- *ne named the following ones read- lands. expected to sail for home on
Campbell and Esther Halnon visited jack Snyder of South Hastings
Mr. and Mrs. RichardTiughto.of iSunday.
. .
| . n n C TH PAMHIIET
Ilng A*’r,r Ballot* h*Vc bc*n P"- 1,y “ Jusl “ «mPle: »“«* melee), Saturday. April 18 She plans to
al their homes tn Kalamazoo over
the week end.
Chicago visited her motner, Mrs. I Roy Smith and daughter. Elda. of । '• v« U. r. IU DftnUUtl
i pared by the committee containing oblige (oblldge*. avenue lavenew), visit for a week tn San Francisco,
nn** Benham,
n*trtAHfK
119TH
ftT l_l Cl
r~ MS
A V , Ithe
Ke nan.ec
H nil'll
sn whether ir
i ngrammar
i nmmar loram.
(wether),
&lt;gram- arriving in Hastings about lhe fif­
Mrs. Phyllte Reynolds of Ann Ar­ Rose
OF
MAY
names nt
of twn
two Ynr
for each
office, so
on Monday enroute South Bend. Ind., were Sunday
bor te expected the tetter part of lhe 1 to Woodland to visit Mr. and Mrs. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Smith,
I that by one ballot the choices can meri, once (wonce), fourth (forth), teenth of May. Her many friends
__ w m
which (whltch), vary (very). The litre will be glad to welcome her
week for a few days’ visit with Mr
8. East St.
Whites in Pigskin
I KMrs^Howard Lowe and daughter,
ZBUBBiv.
I-provement.
in
first 27 words given lo the older home.
The Rev. John W. Kltchlng and
gratuluted
on---------------------lhe success of the or­
Lodge Rooms Arc Near------® ,r dc«
“n Mrs. Virginia scovey. left Saturday A- J. Larsen have been In Mason
to your J-Hop
CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY.
ganization. The membership was server, but it's surprising what Waseveral days attending the annual
Frank
Pender
was
reminded
of
ly
Finished
doubled, compared to the preceding terloos they contain, as quite a
lhe wedding of the former's son. Presbyterial.
his birthday on Thursday evening
am home, during the absence of Mr. Chester Lowe.
May IBlh has been set for the year. Some very interesting pro­ number have been eliminated before
Mr. and Mrs. Forest Clark and
when a group of his neighbors came
Sackrider bi Ohio in the interests
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Veen of Middle­ date of the annual banquet of the grams have been put on. and the the list has been finished. These
Mra. W. Maylan Jones and Mrs. ville were Bunday guests of Mrs.
attendance iuw averaged well for are: busy, color, having, minute, and surprised him. At "MO" Mre.
Vera Wkirig. Mrs. Arthur WtieaUng, •
Robert Burch go to Middleville to­ Fred Newton.
is Die head in Michigan.
in thte one because their renovated the entire seven meetings. The sup­ sugar, used, would, break, coming,
George (Shorty) Milter and Arthur;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Schulx of night where the latter will sing at
Dick Colby of Grand Rapids was lodge rooms will be thrown open । per squad for next Monday night instead, once. sure. very, whether,
i
will be as follows:
.
Grand Rapids are spending Uie the Mother and Daughter banquet, .a vid tor at the home of Arlington for inspection al Uiat time.
country, doctor, meant, ready, trou­ Wheating were lhe winners.
On Sunday. Mr^ Pender enter-,
ITvone 23%
week here with Mr. and Mrs. Keith Mn.-Jones tccompanyuia her.
New
cloak
rooms,
a
women's
rest
I
ble.
which,
whole,
could,
grammar,
Arnold of N. Michigan Ave., over
William L- Chase, captain; Gary
tained at a birthday dinner compll-1
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills spent
Daniels and assisting with the care
■ room «uu
and acvvnu
several uuici
other fine im- i Crook. Herman Hauer. Lyla Ben- making, straight, tired, were.
mentary
to
her
husband,
covers
be
­
the week end in Hopkins with Mr.
of the latter who to quite ill.
ouu.
Edd. uiu
and uoraon
Gordon amine,
Smllie. cnarics
Charles .,provements.
— -------- 1-------aside
— from
;—.1 the redeco-1
ing
laid
for
nine.
Intmmh and
end John Lockwood
J of
., I1 :2rating,
..__ ......
.. done,
...
Mrs. A. D. He.-shman of Medary­ and'Mrs. Gerald Nash and Robert, Lipscomb
have. been
and will I
ville. Ind., and granddaughter, calling on Mr. and Mrs. Howard Grand Rapids called on Arlington add
.
gryatly to the convenience of
ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER.
Doris Westfall, of Crown point, Ind, Wore, who have taken up their resi­ Arnold Sunday.
lhe rooms, as well as to their ap-1
The Royal Arch Chapter of the
and aon, E- L. Hershman. of Gary. dence near there.
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Maury of pcarancc.
Masons had an initiation meeting
Miss Margaret Merrick and Mtes Charlotte were visitors Wednesday
Ind, spent the week end with the
The chairman of Lite most Impor­
on Friday evening, conferring the
former's slaters. Mra. Emily Wilcox Margaret Overton of South Haven and Thursday of last week of L. A. «tant committees for the banquet
Royal Arch degree on three candlHollywood Beauty Shop with IU staff of licensed operators who
and Mrs. Lottie Ryeraon. and their spent Saturday and Sunday with Bush and family.
have been appointed by Noble
are ready to give you immediate service, will ““
guests from Canada.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Merrick. Other
Mrs. Donald O'Brien of Kalama- Grand
।
Fred Linington. who te gen­
tie Creek. About seventy-five en­
F Mrs.
Leone Bradfield
and__
son ____
Jackguests on Sunday were Mr. and Mr*.
____________
___________
zoo and Mrs. Belle O’Brien ot Jack- eral
,
chairman. Chas. Leonard heads
joyed a six-thirty dinner preceding
of Milo spent Bunday here with herd
:_
Albert Brill of the Hendershott dte- son were Sunday guests of Mr. and the
i
entertainment committee; Oscar
WE RECOMMEND
the lodge session. V. R. Wininger of '
mother,
ather, Mrs. 8. B.
B Wilcox and relarela­ trict.
Mrs. Ernest Todd.
Blieridan was also a guest.
Manning, decorations; Hugh Myers,
Mrs. Robert Mills had as guests
This Fins, Genu­
tives from Canada. Mr. and Mra.
SFtCIAL
tickets.
LUNCHEON*FOR GUESTS.
Lyle E- Wilcox and sons. Norman Easter Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Holland on Thursday attending an
ins
DUART
SUNDAY NM
and. Larry of Battle Creek were Wormeth and Mrs. Fay Kroner of O- E- S. meeting for Past Patrons
Mra. Guy C- Keller entertained
THREE TIMES FOUR
Gobles, accompanlng them home for and Past Matrons.
gueata.of Mrs. WUcox Saturday.
with
a
charming
one
o'clock
lunch
­
CLUB MEETING.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bhultx and a visit with relatives. Tuesday. Mrs.
eon on Saturday honoring her
Mr. and Mrs. James Timmerman
HOME COOKED
daughters, Joan and Susanne, and Krozier and Mrs. Mills drove to of Jackson were Sunday guests of the Three Times Four club on Frl-,
gucsLs. Mrs. Bessie Tuttle and kites
friend. Mrs. Whipple, of .Grand Rap­ Chicago, where the latter visited an her mother, Mrs. Thos. Johnston, day evening, at dessert bridge, a I
Mildred Tuttle of Hillsdale. Coven
THIS
California Creation.
ids. spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. aunt. Mrs. Edna Duncan, and fam­ and other relatives.
were laid for twelve.
delicious lunch being served. This
WEEK
Known
tor
its
quali
­
Cenard SmiUi.
ily. returning on Thursday.
David Evans, designer for the
ty and testing efHastings Table company
__
...and lhe
Wlddicomb Furniture factory, was
NEW IDEA CLUB.
shampoo and finger
in the city Monday.
The New Idea Club was enter­
Mr. and Mrs. Vcm Blowers and tained by Mrs. Maurice Croolslon
son and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Show of Wednesday evening. April 15. All en­
Battle creek spent Sunday with joyed the lovely dinner after which
Finest Castile Shampoo and Finger Wave_______ 50c
Mrs. J. w. Mitchell.
a merry evening was spent with old !
Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value, for 65c
Mrs. 8. B. Wilcox and Miss Eliza­ fashioned games.
(For Dry Hair and Dandruff)
beth Dodd and their gsesu visited
FRIDAY, APRIL 24
SATURDAY, APRIL 25
ihcir aunt. Mrs. Carrie Balch, of
SEWING CLUB.
Grand Rapids on Friday.
Members of the American Legion
Miss Betty Stickney had as guests Auxiliary arc urged to remember
lid WEST STATE ST.
PHONE 2525
last week her steter. Mrs. H. 8. Culp, the sowing club at the home of Mrs.
MARGUERITE TEW and MARGARET DAHLKE
and niece Patricia of Reed City who Dan Lewis on Friday afternoon of
HASTINGS
MICHIGAN
were en route to Goshen, Ind.
this week. Al one o'clock a pot luck
Mr. and Mn. E. A- Burton and
Mtes Ruth Handy are expected home
today. Thursday, from Kissimmee.
Fla, where they spent the winter.
Mrs. peter Tilkins and Mtes EUa
Wester of near Campau lake visited
bobbins
Uie former's mother. Mrs. Emma E.
Bush, who to not so well again, on
Monday.
bbud
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Fuller and ton
Robert of Owouo were guests of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. a. L. Hou­
vener. and Mtes Patricia, over the
week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Trim spent
Sunday with the tetter's parcnU.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Schulze, and oth­
Wc are proving every day our will­
Below We Lilt the Winners in Our Last Week's
er relatives at Nashville. Mrs. Trim
Sava with Safety on Your Housocltaning N«
remained until Tuesday.
Drawing
in tness to cooperate with responsible
CLIMAX WALL PA­
individuals
and
business
firms
requiring
CHOSEN DELEGATE
1st PRIZE—Mr*. Glenn Laubaugh.
PER CLEANER, can
TO CONVENTION.
□nd PRIZE—Mrs. Roy Preston.
money for legitimate temporary use.
. 85c Johnson's Liquid
The Banner is indebted to Mrs.
3rd PRIZE-Mra. Richard Leslie.
Vtnnte Ream Boyd of Atlanta. Os..
TO
Aside from the fact that a large
for an interesting item from the At­
4th PRIZE-Mrs. Maida Laubaugh.
90c LINOLEUM
lant* Journal of April I. telling of
5th PRIZE-Mre. Leon Patton.
FOR OUR NEXT
part of the earnings of any bank comes
LACQUERS
now
the biennial convention of the Na6lh PRIZE-Mra. Chas. Cooper.
DRAWING
llonsl League Of American Pen
85c MNOLEUM
from interest on loans, we consider it
SHELF AND
7th PRIZE—Yvonne Trego.
Women. Mrs. Boyd wont as a dele­
VARNISH
One Ticket f
gate of lhe Atlanta Branch lo the
our duty to promote prosperous ac­
8th PRIZE—Mr*. Leona Cleveland.
gathering which
was held in
9th PRIZE-Mre. Phoebe Poland.
VARNISH
tivity
in
this
community
by
means
of
Washington. D. C-. test week. April
10th PRIZE-Lcon Patton.
13 to 18. on Friday Mra. Franklin
75c FLOOR MOPS
an Account.
loans. We cooperate whenever we can
11th PRIZE-Mre. Nite Allcrdlng.
Rooaevelt entertained with a tea at
NOW ONLY
the While House in honor of lhe
do so with proper regard for the safety

=3=

Social Events and Personal Mention

BARN DANCE GROUP
DENTAL SOCIETY
MET AT CHARLOTTE
DREW RECORD CROWD

11736677

ENDS mow

O. E. S. Activities

Styled Cloth!
For Spring Wear

,-

T.S.B

TO MAKE 500 NEW CUSTOMERS!

PARKER

S 15© Croquignole

Parmanent

SPECIALS

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE

POST TOASTIES, larga box
10c
INSTANT POSTUM, larga can
43c
BISQUICK, large box
29c
DEL MONTE CORN
can 14c
33c
BUTTER, Middleville
SALT looino OB me,
2 boxes 1 3c
BACON oioBQBT
&gt;/2 lb. sliced 18c
OLEOMARGARINE
lb. 11'Ac
Fall Naptha Soap Flakes, large box 21c
FELS NAPTHA SOAP
4 ban 19c

An Invitation
io Borrowers

Spring House Clean
nr
69’
69’

GET YOUR
TICKETS

29

HINMAN’S
JUSf PHOM
HASTINGS

WE DELIVER

of our depositors’ interest*.*

Hartings friends arc proud of the

You are invited to discuss your
generously in

ettr-

her

adopted

home

CIVIC PLAYERS
READING GROUP.
Mr». Wm. M. Utebblns entertained
her Civic Players reading group on
Tuudi-y after noot). Mn. L- E. Bar­
nett having charge of the' reading of
St. Joan, a story of the Maid oi
Orleans, recently revived by "
erine Cornell.

proposition with us.

N
K

20’

10*

WINDOW SHADIS—Wo moke thorn

dows—all sizes and colors.

WALL FAHRS—All New 1936
your samples and compare prices.
ASX FOR ONI Of OU* SAMPU

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

S 1.1

�Tnr naimxa. uwn Ttrosanar, Aran. n. m.

SPICER BOUND OVER
| The Halting. Banner
TO CIRCUIT COURT|---------------------—----------------THURSDAY,

; STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
FIRE

WANTS

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to rail
on farmer* tn N. Barry county. No
experience or capital needed. Write
today. McNKSS CO.. Dept. B. Free­
port. initials._________________ 4-23

THE CHURCHES

SKfa-V

Waived Examination Mon- &gt;
day—Unable to Give
125,000 Bail
DEATH OF H. J. FLOWER.
Homer J. Flower of MUo. one of
lhe best knosm residents of Uiat
tectlon of Barry county, died Tues­
day following a stroke on Easter
Sunday. The funeral will be held
from thc home Friday ut 2:30
ockZk.

Our Service
To PROTECT Yo« C«uu».l,
AdJwM Fairly
F.y Pro-pdy

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

AM BUYING WOOL

HASTINGS MARKETS
FUR SALE-

i

•what

On Monday afternoon Carroll W.
Spicer. 38. of Belding, waived ex­
amination when arraigned before
Justice Cortright on a charge of
larceny, larceny by conversion, em­
bezzlement. and obtaining money
under false pretense*. He was bound
over to the present term of circuit i
court. He Is alleged to have obtained ■
stocks and securities totaling a large

High Hat F
hil
•—Once 1 thoi
max of utter sell
was attained in Mi
When you met a I
Old Plymouth !
who, in addition,

Beverly

of this city and her slater, lhe hte
Miss Corrie D. Todd, at various
times during the years 1833 and
1034. He has admitted being 'in­
volved in other stock deals. He has
been held In jail here for some time

through Harvard, It 1
you met an egg whlct

GEO. M. NEWTQN

LIME YOUR SOIL WITH

Kelly Island MEAL
vliet will be a guest of Hostings I.
O. O. F Lodge No. M next Tues­
day evening. He will bring two can­

R. A. SCHOENBORN

FOR SALE
Good Size MAJESTIC
Electric Refrigerator

SALE OF HORSES
SATURDAY. APRIL 11
argest Aa.octnteot this B4S*4

8 Months Time
JOHNSON &amp; JARVIS

perience for a good paying, perma­
nent. local Job. Must have ear.
Write or sign your name b$low and
mall lo Box IM. Dept. 741,
Quincy. III.

FOR
ONLY-

49.00

Sec this for a Bargain!

Miller Furniture Co.

tfFx

fs-

s

Sil

3

*1 s®

*? V

J.

The next Court of Honor for Boy
Scouts will be held April 29. 7:30
P. M. at the court house. All troops
Russia Is at last about to become
who have loving cups please bring
______
______ _______ _________ civilized occidental nation. A
Incase have your applications in by, chain of S-and-10-cent stores has
noon of April 29lh If possible.
been launched.

NOTICE— llrre.ftrr we w&lt;ll bare lo WASTED—Tn buy
and niea or »nr
hare 33e an acre for lhe a., ot o«r
pica. W. H. Coolbauxh. Phone 732—
drill. Kixned: Hoi Kmmona. llatrr
P4. Ila.tlae. Route 3.
4 33
Whitworth
4-33
IXMT OR STRAYED—Un.e.ed Hprinx£&gt;lt RENT—One and our quarter acre,
er spaniel. hlark and while. had '30
nailable for corn. polatoea. tucklra or
liren.e on No. 1359.
SIO reward.
rarden. Phone 1551
4 23
Phone 3M9
4-23
EXPERIENCED man want. work fence FOR HALE—IU aw« farm, cood buildbulldinc or .blueline or other work.
ine«. eood lend, .mile ea.t Rocere
Write '•II” rare Hanner.
4 IS
•rhool. 3/4 mile north. Mra. J. W.
Slr.iu.e
,
423
MODERN fnrnl&gt;he.| Jiiutrtmrnt for rent.
Mr.- J. M I.ane,'Inn. 42S E. Center
St.
4-23
FOR MALE—Oak mill wood. Early do FOR SALE—I’blld-e he.l with drop aide.
talnea. hila Hill. Phone 7*1—P3.
A. CaJwalla.ler. 212* W? Maraltail St
4-23
Foil HA I.E—Several yrarUne heifrrt.
4-33
al.o ratine potalnea Prrrt Win.low.
Route 1. Phone 717—Fl3.
4 33
.................. .------- :■,. ,.—:—

log EogUaliman who
not notably discing
haves single hyphen t
he wrote home eongt

just had an acknowb
by none other than tl
auluant deputy eqc
the delirious redph

•s’

GENERAL INSIRAME

trip.

v

JERRY ANDRUS

‘ki

S. J. GRIFFITH

4
th

72-5

will put on first and second degree.
A light lunch Is planned and a big
turnout expected.

-

Buy Them During This Unloading Sale.

through paradise inc
enly host.

CARDS of THANKS

BRICK

five son. but If. ai
he only dates back
was probably an ea

At Old Hastings Wool

Boot Plant Site.

In­

quire of joe DcRuitcr

at Pickle Station.

like It, and when yo
a Florida celery gro
try Irt Just the sai
rob a tigress of her

SHELDON*
ABSTRACT OFFICE
"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FOIM TRUSS
FQR WORK OR PLAY
Thia Sotoolk Rubber Bock Pods

NEW MILCH COW for .ale Will Tink- i
Mr. and Mra. Rolkert R. Haynes
ler. l‘h..iie 730— F12.
4 23 |
and Clifford.
FOR SALE—Fordann Irartor and plows.
Mile south of M..nll»n .hureh. John
Phon, 7-11 —FI2
4-23 1
Foil SALE—Revlesned .red oats. Elmer 1
lluah. Phone 7.10—Vr.
*-23 1
FOR KALE—Few more rerlesne.1 seed ,
osta. Al... bar. L. J. Matthew.,
WELCOME ORANGE,
phone 713—F3.
-4 23 f 1 Welenme
Granxe will meet In rentlar'
PASTURE to rent f.tr rattle. (leoree aea.lon Kalurdar nlxhl .April 23. ProSrotl Soutbe.Al nf llsatinea. Corner rr»m a. follow.:
-I 343 and M 79
Phone 709 F*
Roll call—Udis. an.war to ”11,01. for
FOR KALE—flood Idaho baklae pola- hou.erleanlr.Kmen an.wer to ”Su«tnea for seed or watinc. 9&lt;k a bn.hel. cratlon. tor aprlnc plantlnr.”
Dlacnaaion—Program
for
Snramrr
Mr». Uwla Abbey, 37*1
4 23
meetlnx.
PAKTI RAtlE to rent. 30r per head per Grange
Ma.le, locial hoar. Every member be
week Well watered. Cali 7U9—F22. preaent.
Lecturer.
.............................
ili

GRANGE PROGRAMS

NEW

OLD

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Straps

The Prescription Drug Store

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

Whatever you do, or wherever you go this summer you'll al­
ways be correctly attired in white shoes. Come in and see
our outstanding collection of fascinating
new styles for summer.

at FELOPAUSCH'S

MARKET - Phon. 2616

HASTINGS CUT RATE SHOE STORE

FOOD CENTER 2609

HA W. Stat. St.

Hastings, Mich.

Hauptmann case, b
cheated for hlmae
*onnl following, so
wfeo'd probably like
aide are unfnrtnn
lalned at present It
Bing and Akatrax

youth, lamented b
world and having
his good fortune
the smallest of t

H. Faldpauieh -3921

Farmers, Attention!
Wrecking for Ports
• 1920 CHEVROLET

CELEBRATING OUR
EIGHTH ANNIVERSARY

Dead Stock Removed!

For ptowM, iSlditl ud cotutaoua aervIM tt iMlwnl of bureau cattle *M1

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2G37

HasUnga

femalea (object, r
Bony In the order
tent on foot or hi

Ing he must be pa
and they won't a
Nothing renews

FRIDAY and SATURDAY, APRIL 24-25

r

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

OLD CAR

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle

TRADE IT IN FOR
A betted USED CAR

EVERY SATURDAY

Cement Work—Plastering
HASTINGS BRANCH

HAND BILLS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED
At Your Door! Take Advantage of These Many Specials!

Be Sure to Attend Our OPEN HOUSE Celebration

Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,

Michigan Livestock Exchange

t/ou/t

Twenty years experience on all

manship. Will take Jobs on contract
or by the day.

RAY LANCASTER
11M 8. Market

We have late model Ford V-8’1
and other popular makes at
prices that will surprise you.
2-Day money-back guarantee.
Easy terms through UCC.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE
Hastings, Mich.

Phons 2121

XUrHOR/ZfD FORD DEALER

W ways light
males, or vice v
may be?

lassies with the
went to tberp una
because a white
foot look bigger.
As skirts cllm

FRIDAY EVENING, April 24. FREE, Radio, 100 Poundi
of Sugar, Large Smoked Ham, 25 Poundt Klenser and 12
Bushel Baskets of Groceries Will Be
GIVEN AWAY AT 9:30 P. M.

DOUGHNUTS AND COFFEE Will Be Served All Evening

BESSMER’S MARKET
PHONE 2293

won't be favored
girl who already
|y hatched robin
away with that
be none other th

of borse-faeed
then all She'D n*
shoe around her
dsrby winner.
Were It not fo

Phone 3470

foolish thing! w
fooUahMt Chines

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1936
/"I L MUST PROVIDE A

■what

.

\ (OP*'

/

,

SUITABLE OFFICE II

No Room in the Court House
Available for Ooanty
Welfare Agent

n

,

Barry Bypaths
•y JANS CAMERON

011110111110 IICID
HU I AnlRIlO ilLHII

DISTRICT SUNDAY*
1
SCHOOL CONFERENCE,
Well Known Speakers to
Appear at Trinity Church
April 94 and 98

THRILLNG STORY

ORDER YOUR FINE
SEEDLING* NOW.
County Agent Foster 1* again re­
ceiving orders for pine and spruce
seedlings stock from Michigan State
College in past years from 50.000

SPLENDID TALENT
AT MAY FESTIVAL

Riley

University Musical Society
Offers Great Program
May 13, 14, 18, 10
Rapids,

Ungs have been set by Barry county
The Iron Horae has * colt.
SPEAKER TILLS OF HIB farmers and Olliers. Tiu- general
A Youth Rally and Children's
price runs about 43 00 per thousand
EXPERIENCES ON U. 8.
The poor, tired old creature who Conference sponsored by lite M'tiiolure at Hastings. People desiring Arbor will be outstanding. Special
X
fare agent, who represents the state definitely built and colonized the , dlsl
dial Sunday
Bunday Schools
Bchoola of
ot lhe Grand
either pine or spruce stock this year interest is lent by the presence, for
TROOP SHIP
A-&gt; —Once I thought the ell- I welfare department. C. H. Osborn, west is now taking a back seat. In I Rapids district will convene
should place their order with Coun­ the first ume. of the Philadelphia
max of utter self-satisfaction I who fills that place for Barry ooun- 1 Uie
1034. a creation ot
of 1 day and Saturday, April 34 and 25.
Lite spring of 1034,
ty Agent Foster not later than Mon- Symphony Orchestra. Leopold Sto­
kowski. conducting.
w.. ....ined in
™ duralumin and alloy steel powered at Trinity Methodist church tn TUSCANIA TORPEDOED
John R. said. "RDey
with a large dlstlllate-bumlng en- Grand Rapid* The theme for FrlUve only on lota of 500 or more.
boned fellow that used
when you met a Bostonian o! 1 in lhe court house basement, one gine was Introduced to a we Icon- 1 day te, "Dare We Be Christiana?"
■
NEAR IRISH COAST
gram* and two matinees
It would seem to music lovers that
Old Plymouth Rock dtock of the rooms occupied by the Barry ing land. It was christened the I The Saturday tfieme te. "How Shall
will be received.
eounty poor commission. But in thte "Union Pacific." Close on It* heel*. we Prepare to Tesch Next Sun- Archie Moore Said Ameri­
there had never been such a list of
who. in addition, had gone county the emergency welfare and came the "Ztephyr, " America's first’day'* Le*son?" Among the speakers
outstanding talent—Lily Pons. Marthrough Hsrvsrd, It was as though the county poor commteaion have Diesel-powered train which was on Friday are Dr. Marshal] R. Reed
cans Stood on Deck and
SOLD HOUSE AND LOT
| tlnelll. Zimballsl. Paul AlUjousc.
you met an egg which had bMn laid been combined. Former Sheriff viewed by millions of us World Fair and Dr. A. F. Way of Detroit. Rev.
vreeland. Rose Bampton,
Bang College Songs
AT AUCTION FRIDAY Jeannette
t w I e e and both Leonard te the secretary of both visiters. From then on things be- Edmond H Babbitt of Muskegon
Harold Bauer, and two new soloists.
Archie
Moore,
of
Ionia,
was
the
times successfully. these organizations. Combining the gan to happen. Five leading rail-1 Height*. Mtes Sarah E. Green ot
Rotary club speaker Monday noon. To Close Estate of the L^te Keith Falkner, an English baritone, and he Inquired about the
80met 1 mu this two required more room than the road companies ordered seven Die-1 Chicago. Dr. Frederick G Poole of
who has a splendid voice; and Ju­
Hr gave a vivid and interesting ac­
lius Huehn also new. who te an the foundry, and X said, **
type made me say county poor board had at lu dis­ sei-powered rail can to pull a few ‘ Detroit, and others who will bring count of bls experiences on the
Perry Campbell—There
American singer now a member of
to myself
myaen iiibi
that maymnj- posal. The county road commission passenger coaches on short runs Inspiring messages.
British troopship
Tuscanla, on
Was Good Bidding
Uie Matropolltan. who Is rapidly
On Saturday lhe program centers which 2300 American doughboys, in­
be It might bava now has its offices tn the new coun­
M. A. Lamble te the administrator forging to the front and for whom
been better If the ty garage, lu former rooms in the 113 every lime an old-fashioned en­ about Bunday Bcliool teaching, cluding himself, were being con­
while About a month ago
of
the
eitate
of
the
late
Perry
a brilliant future is predicted.
court
house
basement
have
been
gine
starts
and
stops!
:
four
leading
etc.
The
Rev.
Harold
Carr
of
Flint.
veyed to England, to begin their Campbell
Mayflower bad heed
------------the
---------------...--.1
TJw Ch0rtj union wm ting un­ urday night, came fellow came down
Among
assets of
that
companies ordered before Christ­ Miss Ione cation of Lansing and Service ta Uve World war Off the I -------- . .
. VT.U“U
-.tail- wu a house and lot In Ken- der direction of Earl V. Moore Ver­
work of Um emergency welfare com­ mas a total of nine ultra high speed
Irish coast the ship was torpedoed
trip.
and dance and I said. Oents. it's
mission. thereby saving lhe rent streamlined Diesel and steam loco­
field's
second
addition
to
the
city
di's
"Manzonl
Requiem."
Il Is expected that several from by a German submarine. The ves­
Bunday.* and a big fellow who was
that is now paid for outside rooms. motives. More than eight million this city will attend lhe convention. sel did not sink Immediately. One of HasUngs. Mr. Uunble had tried
eoaat takes the All this will leave Mr. Osborn with­ dollars invested in lhe 33 pieces of
can imagine the confusion that lo sell this house for a long time EVERYTHING SET FOR
cheat - expanding out a place for his office. Thte was new passenger equipment Genera)
but without success. Accordingly he
would at first follow such an unex­
ANNUAL JUNIOR HOP
Irvin 8. Cobb championship right referred to lhe county property Motors has so many orders, they
pected attack. But lhe American* gave legal notice through the pro­
committee by the board of super­ are building a new 45.000.000 plant
were not stampeded. Instead in or­ bate court that he would offer this
Senior! Plan Entertainment
ern seaboard. Out here te a sojourn­ visors with power to provide Uie near Chicago, devoted to Diesel con­
derly military formation they stood
out'."
needed
quarters
for
the
county
wel
­
the
17th
of
April
&gt;1
10
o'clock
in
the
struction.
in
Form of Circus and
lug Englishman who heretofore was
• • •
I The school observed Clean-up Day In ranks on lhe deck, sang college forenoon at the north front door of
not notably distinguished; didn't fare agent.
songs and were calm in lhe face of
Bide Attraction*
SERIES OF THREE
Think of it, folks, no more cinders ; Wednesday of thl* week and topped danger. When life boat*
were the court house. A number were
have a single hyphen tohla name. But
there
to
bld
on
it.
The
offering
Tomorrow night the Juniors and
on your nose! '
ofi a good day's work with a stu
*tu-­ launched, and later when* rescue
on
be wrote boma congratulating King
MEETING? TUESDAY
dent-faculty bakeball game.
ships appeared, they were orderly started at 4300 and the house was Seniors of Hastings High will be
Edward on bls accession and has
in their movement* It was never struck on to Joseph McKnight for going to The Circus." The gym­
When the old C. K. it S. started
just had an acknowledgment signed
positively ascertained how many of 4900 wiiich was considered a fair nasium will be gay with balloons, Federal Man Oomta&lt; to Tail
you
picked
three
or
four
suitcases
Judging
from
the
shavings
and
hy none other than the king's fourth
price. The estate could not be
on New CattleYelling
and a package of sandwiches off mwuiui
sawdust Kiiiern
scattered arouna
around in sne
the the troops or of the crew went down closed without this sale, so Mr. Lam­ tide show panels of animals and
aulaiant deputy equerry, and now
your head and the elders got down back of Mr Becker's room, work to when the ship sank. But it was be­ bic took this method of •tiling and lawn (umltur*. The orchestra will
Program
the delirious recipient can hardly
and hunted for their upper plates bring it up to his ideal 1* progress- lieved that 265 American soldiers It worked. Dewey Reed was lhe auc­ play from a merry-go-round; over­
wall to be snatched up to glory so INSE0T MADE IT FROM -u
head
will
be
a
huge
rainbow.
Dance
----------------------------—
.K-.
ln(f
U1
Jhape/
Harold
J. Foster, County Agrteulwere drowned. The speaker gave a
These new affairs are built so that
programs will be In the form of I tural Agent, announces a series of
thrilling account of the affair. When ( tioneer.
there Is no Jerk at starting.
PULP
FOR
ITS
HOME
clowns'
heads.
"Pink
lemonade"
1 three meetings al which lhe federal
Just long enough to give In his or­
the survivors reached England they
On Friday morning Uie band from
.punch and animal cookies will be abortion testing agreement will b
were warmly greeted and com­ BARRY CO. PIONEERED
der for an extra over-sized balo and
NEST
W. 8. T. C. Kalamazoo, will enter­
IN
THE BETTER WAY «rved
for refreshments.
| explained to Barry county farmers,
then, with that hallowed document
the frosty or smoky window panes tain lhe High school students. The mended.
in 1 nu oli ilii vvm 1
Durtng
entertainment A1)
meetings are acheduled for
clutched to hie Inflated bosom, stroll CHINESE INVENTED
by school children.
public is cordially Invited to this
Other Board* Urged Barry *“«,»* fumtehed by a slngw. Polly I Tuesday. April 28. with a 10:8*
OLAB3 CREEK GROUP.
through paradise snooting the heav­
assembly which begins at 10 o'clock.
a tap dancer. Barbara 1 O'ciock meeting at the Maple Grove
Glass Creek Extension group had
PAPER-MAKING PROCESS
Co. to Do What She Wa.
‘
" o'do*
enly host
The Baltimore and Ohio have a
Bliss; an oldtime melodrama, writ- Orante jyui. a 1:30 o'clock meeting
its last lesson for this club year.
unique experiment under way. test­
There will be a meeting of Ute
ten by Marian Hewitt, will be pre- . al
Prairieville town hall and an
Already Doing
A Frenchman Devised First ing two streamlined trains, one be­ Barry
Original Native Sons.
district of the MEA at the Newland with 13 member* present
, sented by a cast of fourteen.
1 CVPning meeting starting al 8:00
The
hind an 1.800 horsepower steam lo­ High school on April 29 to discuss | and seven visitor*.
altars The
lnF Barry
uarr&gt;’ county
coumy supervisors
supervisors re
re-­
driving line will form at ln
Machine for the Manufac­
IGHT In the heart ot Los An­
The receiving
Hastings court house.
The following
following
re-elected
for
next
cclvcd
man
J
r
communications
at
1
7.3g
and
wl
u
include
Bupt.
and
comotive
and
lhe
other
behind
an
the
formation
of
a
teachers'
credit
-----------------—
—
-----------------&lt;:30
and
will
Include
Supt.
and
n.
T
nimhie nf
fxteral bureau
geles the bones of perhaps our
officers were
ture of Paper
.
. ........
th*lr
r-v—ntsession
KMSlnnfrom
fromother
Other
.. D n,A aVanBusklrk;
ai.Mr.
. and Q» Animal Industry will be present
recent
»,(„
1,800 horsepower Diesel locomotive, union. first cllmste-booeter have just been
year: Chairman. Mina Whittemore; their
boards recommending that the Mra A. k Brwn, representing the
rations regarding
Glenn Stewart, sales manager of
BOT-Treas..
Minnie
Gorham;
dug up. If he lived W.U00 years ego. lhe Vegetable Parchment Company thus testing the virtues of steam
ggalnst Diesel (oil burning). Also
Leaders, Floy Bechtel and Florence money the state and federal govern- Board of Education; Miss Jannet lhe federal test 381 Barry eounty
as some experts figure, that would of Kalamazoo, was the speaker at
menu appropriate for emergency re- MlchBrli Mr and Mr. Reinhardt
having ’ applied for this
one train 1* duralumin and one
seem to make him an original na­ the Rotary club last week Monday stainless steel, and their merits are district speech contest to be held Norton. Committees were appointed UeS
,b&lt;‘ ,eJP^!1^d ,nf the faculty: Donald Doxey. Miss traung program. To date only about
tn the Central auditorium. May 8. to look after the exhibits of Achieve­
tive son. but If. as others think, noon. He gave such a very Interest­ under observation.
.Kese herds have been tMting.
ment Day and lhe Barry county under the direction of such coun- Alice ymkbeiner, Clinton Scobey 300
Declamation
will
begin
at
7:16,
ex
­
he only dates back 16.000 years, he ing talk on the subject Uxat we pass
ties, _
and not by separate organize•
M ... ■ wd
MUg cl&lt;one woodman, of the
percentage of reactors is found
In the afternoon the dresses .
tempore speaking at g:15 and ora­ fair.
was probably an early settler from on lo our readers a brief account of
The Streamliners are winning tory at 9. The following schools willI were exhibited and scored and the Hons set up in each county by the senior and Junior classes
| lo
unusUaliy small. Fanners who
the Middle West who got bojrged what he said that day.
The Junior class are inviting par- h&gt;vc received thc agreement or who
back the passengers lost to buses participate: Athens. Comstock. Do­■ group voted on lhe ones U) be taken state and national governments.
AU lhe communications agreed that
He asked his hearers first to Im­ and will give air travel a run for its
down In lhe primeval ooze on hla
wagiac. Hastings. Lansing Eastern.. for final exhibit Achievement Day. the counties can do this work far cnU to come as spectators for which gre contemplating having their cat­
agine the indescribable confusion in­ money. They are luxurious lo thc
tickets
may
be
obtained
from
mem•
- ■ on
- - this program should
.m
Ue tested
Martin. Niles. OUego, Paw Paw.. m summing up lhe year's work, thl*
to which this old wprld would be
belter and with greater economy
This certainly puts those uppity plunged if all the paper in existence last detail, air-conditioned and easy South Haven. Sturgis, and Water­ group started with 14 members, and efficiency. Fortunately Barry bers of the class, which will entitle try to attend one of the mattings.
them to Mau on the race track.
Florida folks In their place. The were destroyed. For instance there riding as a cradle. They make as vliet. coaches for Qtej event have) thirteen finished the work; 13 had county had already taken lhe neces­
"NO" MAJORITY WAS MSperfect attendance; 34 visitors dur­
only tiling they've dug up lately wu would be no record* nf title* to good time as the transport planes not yet been eelected.
•■Nowhere" is where the prime
sary steps to combine the work of
average, aside from running in ail
ing the sea-son and 25 new dresM*
a canal, and they may have to put land, no bond*, mortgages, slocks,
Ils poor board and its county emer- meridan crosses the equator. LAtlweather.
Schedules have been
Last week's tennis meet with Al­ h*UTn^unr^ham*nR^iX TYeM^*^^' I gencywellare relief‘commission and tude 0 degrees. Longltuda 0 de^yw»
that back. The celery growers don't notes, books, book accounts. All thc speeded up during lhe last four
-Minnie
Gorham
Sec&gt;.-Treas
.
|
t
hc
/
wOrk
ln
enUre
bftrmon
y.
so
no
--------------■»
n
literature, all lhe scientific knowl­ months and the dreamed-of run. 13 legan came off favorably for Has­
h one string are now further action was necessary in thl*
Many a man who has had hit IT vow auowa
a Florida celery grower and hla cel- edge the world has been painfully hours from New York to Chicago, is tings. the team winning with a score
2J01 -no"—• majority against the
Fine! Soon they may eounty. In fact this county plo- A. and his M. A. is still living on
of 3 to 3; Angell and Crochen lost
accumulating for centuries would be not long distant.
proposition of
‘
their singles matches. This week be making 'em without any.
neered in this set-up for relief work, his p. A.
an-lhilated.
It
would
indeed
be
dif
­
rob a tigress of her young.
Saturday Hastings will meet the
ficult to imagine a more serious
Oh. boy! We're sure making his­ Kalamazoo team.
calamity to modern civilization.
Governor Hoffman's Motlvea
He said paper making is Michi­ tory. Wonder if they have spit­
NOTWITHSTANDING the er
Mr. Conklin's metal class te busily
gan's second industry in impor­ toons?
cusatlona of crltlca in his owi
engaged in putting the pipe togeth­
tance. It is largely located in lhe
The big railway concerns are vle- er for the backstops on the, tennis
valley of lhe Kalamazoo river, not
gey's Governor Hoffman was actuat­ because there te better water for Ing with each other lo see who can court and thc new netting will be
ed by political ambition In thr paper making, as some suppose, nor put out the finest In streamlined put up thl* week (we hope).
course He took in this ghastly because any other conditions are travel. Construction companies can­
The music
departments will
Hauptmann case, because, while he particularly favorable, but because not begin to supply the orders.
demonstrate their talents soon in
the Industry was started In this
Cheated for himself a strong per
And while we're on the subject, lhe Spring Music Festival to be held
gonal following, so many of lhe buja state in that valley. The first fac­
tory was In Marshall: now Kalama­ lhe story of the first trans-continen­ the first of May and In lhe band
w|io'd probably like to vote with his
zoo Is the center of the paper mak­ tal railroad before lhe civil war. concert lo be given early nett
aide are unfortunately being de
month for the benefit of the Ati&gt;
ing Industry In Michigan. About 10
talned at present In places like Sins per cent of lhe paper made in the with Lincoln as president. Is one letlc Association.
of the most intriguing stories you
king and Alratrat anti Leavenworth, U. 8. comes from Michigan mill*.
ever read. 'The Iron Horse" la the
where there'a no voting done.
The seniors are excited Individ­
He said the hornet was the first name. Wish lhe Hastings library
uals these days with Commence­
paper maker. Mankind ha* not been owned it. but they don’t.
ment not so very far away. Just now
able to Improve on the process used
Lady Luck's Fsvoritaa.
invitations seem to be lhe Impor­
NE of the main winners In the by that insect. It first makes pulp
Whatever became of the old song tant thing to get settled.
recou. sweeininkea. a mere from wood fibers, then glues them
youth, lamented being alone in the together into a sheet.
This was card-marking week, but
Records were first preserved by can't holler down our rain barrel;
world and baring nobody to share
you can't slide upon our cellar door" perhaps that was a little alleviated
human* on the walls of caves; then
hla good fortune with. That'll be
in it? Wonder if the name wu
the skins of animals were utilized
the smallest of the young man's for that purpose. The Babylonians "You Can't Play in Our Dooryard?" been) by the J—Hop Friday night.
(The Title wu "You Can’t Play ... an Important event in the lives
worries.
stamped their words and business
v
Inside of forty eight hours he'll transaction* on soft clay*, which was In My Yard." Jane. Ed.)
of young Juniors and seniors.
have more kinfolks than ■ I'otoinac allowed to harden and so preserved
A poem by Mary Elizabeth Man­
The school annual is coming
the records. The Egyptians used
key.
"America's
best
country
corre
­
along nicely. The staff has been
papyrus,
the
inner
coating
of
a
reed
entirely surrounded by uu itnpene
chosen, but tho editorship is vacant
treble foreat of previously unsus­ that grows In the river Nile. The spondent:"
pected friends snd weilwlshsnt Chinese made the first print paper I walked in the fields at sunset.
The com stood neatly in rows,
|Iso stock promoters, automobile from pulp, mixed it with water,
That popular organization. Mr.
which was then poured Into a fine Ths shocks like liny’brown tepees
salesmen. Income tax collectors and
sieve, thereby collecting the fibres
Prepared for the winter's repose. Becker's fifth hour dramatics class,
Ilfs Insurance agents; affecllonste Into a sheet No improvement has
presented a program al the Dun­
The
pasture wu gay u a garden
females (object, matrimony and all
ham
schoolhouse Friday night.
With sumac and dogwood aglow;
tunny Id the order named) and citi­ cept to amplify it. At the Vegetable The milkweed was casting her
There are 15,000 species of orchid.
zens oo foot or hitch hiking As for Parchment company plant, tn Kal­
feathen
distant relatives, hell begin think amazoo, is a paper making machine
On a thin dancing breeze to and
that will produce a continuous sheet
SJF.
and they woo'l stay distant either. ot paper thirteen feet wide and a But a little white oak wu sighing
mile long In six minutes. In London,
Nothing renews old family tlaa
Where lhe pasture Joined onto the
England, is another that will pro­
like coming Into a larga chunk of duce In less than four minutes a
And I begged the cause ot such sorunexpected currency.
sheet a mile long and 27 feet wide.
High Hat Folks.

It te up lo the supervisors to pro­

BEVERLY HILLS. CALIF.

High School Newt

HORNET WAS FIRST
PURER MAKER

R

The HASTINGS

CITY BANK
MAKES

FARM LOANS

O

Rutland V.C.T.U.
Program* For 1936-37

New Spring Finery.

may be?
When whits shoes prevailed ths
lassies with the moat robust fest
went to them unanimously, probablybecause a white shoe makes any
foot look bigger.
As skirts climbed knee-high sod
maiden with tlx buw-lega who wore
ben the highest- She would.
_
Tho damsel who'a kind of startled*
looking anyhow Just will pluck her
eyebrows thereby enhancing the
suggestion of a skeered squinch owL
And now that bangs are coming
In— and coming down—the style
won't be favored first by the young
girl who already resembles a new­
ly hatched robin and so could get
■way with that sort of thing. It’ll
be none other than the middle-aged
sister who Is. as the poet sots kind
of hone-faced to start witb. and
then all she'll need te a Bora) horse­
shoe around her neck to look like ■'
derby winner.
Were It not for the foolish things
men wear, wa
we aaici/
safely kvuim
could an/
say the
foolish tblnga women wear are the

twUH.au

"Wt war

..IRVIN «. COM,

Wood Is first reduced into pulp,
then cooked. The fibres required for
an ordinary letter head number over
four million. The first machine to
make paper was Invented by a
Frenchman tn the seventeenth cen­
tury. using the endless belt process,
which te the same as that today.
Spruce te the principal paper-mak­
ing wood. The United States pro­
duces only 18 per cent of the pulp
required for paper in thte country.
Over fifty per cent of it comes from
Sweden and Finland, which coun­
tries know how to protect and grow
their state controlled forests.
The speaker brought along some
wood pulp in liquid form, which he
mixed with warm water, then col­
lected some of lhe mixture In a
small sieve. The fibre was deposited
on lhe sieve. He dried the deposit­
ed fibres with blotting pads and soon
took out a perfect piece of paper
shaped like the sieve. This Illustrat­
ed how paper is made.

IRVING FE1XOW8H1P.
The regular Fellowship meeting
will ba held Friday. April 34. Sup­
per al 7:10 with men in charge. Busl-

following. A good program Is being
prepared by the ladles. Please bring
sandwiches
two other
_____
........ and one or
_ —
------dtehns according to alse of the famuuma
Uy. Ooms and spend an evening of
t.Uo-ahlp MU&gt; ua-Uo WMO.
raporur.

Following are the programs for
And quickly I understood.
the Southwest Rutland W. O. T. U.
“Too hurried, too hasty in building.
for tiie ensuing year 1936-1837:
They used me for a post." he
May meeting—All plan to attend
sighed.
'And Uie autumn can bring me no the convention at Goodwill church.
beauty
June—Topic: Month of Roses.
With this cruel wire deep tn my
Hostess, Stella Hathaway; leader.
aide.”
Ollie Vanderbrook.
July—Topic: Child welfare. Host­
Yes, yes. we know I But which
smells worse. Uie B..O- or the Life­ ess. Frances Erway: leader. Luella
Otis.
buoy Soap?
August—Topic: Vacation Time.
Pot luck dinner. Hostess. Leora
CONSIDER CARE OF
Smith; leader. Gertrude Bauchman.
September — Volunteer program.
TOWNSHIP ROADS Hostels. Katherine Hathaway.
October—Topic: CBrUUan Citi­
Committee Favors Having zenship
Hostess. Mattle Hines;
leader, Lula Waters.
Township Boards Look
November—Family Night. Thanks­
After Highways
giving supper at church. Leader.
The matter of lhe care and treat­ Leora Smith.
ment of township roads taken over ' December — Christmas program.
by the county was brought to the Hostess. Mary Bauchman; leader.
attention of lhe supervisors by the Marie Smith.
January—Topic: New Resolutions.
county road commission. The com­
mittee lo whom the matter was re­ Hostess. Bertha Count; leader,
ferred favored having that subject Mary Waters.
February— Topic:
Red
Letter
adjusted by the toamshlp boards
and the county road commission, Days. Hostess. Addle Perry; lead­
and suggested that thc matter of er. Muriel Perry.
taking up township roads be left
March-Peace program. Hostess,
entirely with the township boards. OUie Vanderbrook; Mader, Myrtle
— . .___ ...__ _______ - ,L- i.a_ .a Wllll.m.
The
committees—
opposed
the~idea of
- --- -----------------------------­ Williams.
April—Annual election of offioen.
having a county highway engineer.
U U»l parUcular « tw Wat U», Pot luck dinner. Hoateaa, Cora
Laubaugh; president in charge.
Ulra a wton« alUluaa.

Farmers in need of extra money can borrow on their farms.
The Ha&gt;ting&gt; City Bank is prepared to make mortgage loans
to responsible persons, according to their ability to repay.
Loans will be based on the appraised value of the property
and can be repaid in convenient payments.

WE SOLICIT YOUR APPLICATION

Hastings City
TELEPHONE 1103

HASTINGS

MICHI

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. APRIL U. IM

PAGE two_______

Mrs a. E. Dull has returned from home on Bunday were Lawrence
Resort—Mra. Philip Dalhauaer; An
and Mr*. Alice B*lky and
Automobile center-Ml*a Mildred Pana. Ill. where ahe was called by Flnefrock.
chlldn. ot Wo^ldnd.
*
'
J
Catey; State Park*—Mra. Manna the death of her ateter. Mr*. Ann*
MUu CUe lua Bon. to BMU.w
Wenger;
Writera-Mra.
Joaeph Prankenfeld. •
Mr*. Ahnon Sheldon ot MaiamaFloyd'
Everui
Mlehigan
Wild
Flow:00
sptn
t
last
week
with
her
daughEJ
C®
1
*
Rotative* from here attending lhe
era-Mra Milo Yoang: Horire*- ten. Mr.- 1UU* Wetherbee and
«« the Coy O Brumm home
funeral of Walter Kahler al Belem
im/mnuu.
w.
ch.ru. no,™
al the Nashville hospital
hospital.I Wm Helen Brumm and Mte* and
w(d George BaiU ot
nf Kalamasoo
KaJamgtoo
patient* at
Margaret CJ***®*
apent Sunday with MT. and Mr*.
(t3
lolte, Mr*. Sylvia Yeldar of Battle ! the week end with the former * par- CBrk&gt;,
ente.
Mr.
and
Mrs
Coy
O.
Brumm
^nillam
Roe
of
Kalamazoo
spent
Creek and Mrs. Heber Julian of
Woman'* Literary Club met Maple Grove.
Mr and MT* carl Tutlk returned 8uMay wah hu &lt;nu»dmotter. Mra.
Mr. and Mr*. Earl Hollister of Wednesday from Oriando. Florida. | elIssa Roe. and friend* here.
bran tar -Michigan Day." Music
Mr*. Grace calkins wa* kt Has- । Constance RothMU. daughter of
chairman—Miss
Mildred
Caley. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Hollister
tings Saturday.
Mr. and Mr*. Mark Rothhaar. and
prominent Michigan Musicians —
Several from the Evangelical . woodward Smith, former teacher
NaahvUta lodge F. and A. M. met
Dr. Joseph 6. Maddy, the Educa­
church attended a banouet at the I here, were married in Grand Rapid*
Monday
night
at
lhe
Temple
for
IU
tor—Mra. John
Greene;
Ossip
Lansing church on Friday night. | recently. Mr. Smith is a teacher in
OabrllowlUch. the Artist Conductor regular meeting,
Tte two Jackson church?* were 1 the Comstock Park school of Grand
MUs Margaret Furniss of Detroit
—Mra. E. J. Nash. Three minute
there also.
I Rapid*.
papers; Legend* of Michigan—Mr*, spent her vacation with her parCaller* at lhe Frank Fclghner , Mis* Dori* Bell* wa* to Kalamauauera
so
aatOrdMy
aMendett a frMh.
hul Bell; A Health and Summer
------------------------------------------ -! man party al Western Slate in the
evening.
Clarence Mater and Patty Adele
। were In Kalamazoo Saturday.

NASHVILLE.

100ALL MY
FOOD BUYING AT
C.THOMAS STORES
THINGS ARtSO FRESH
AND LOW PRICED

I DOMYTRADING
THERE TOO, I
FIND REGULAR
.SAVINGS

FOODS . . . KNOWN AND TESTED FOR QUALITY

THE C. THOMAS WAY!

■

"REGULAR SAVINGS"

i THOMAS SPECIAL OXSBN
MISSION INN

I SALADA

NLUB

PINEAPPLE!

cheese;
n
U L fl W
■
A* .1
■
■■ ■■

■ W ■■ ■■

iic
la

I9c

2 rkoa.

|5c

FIKIENTO. AMEBICAH
a BICK. UMBUBOER

POPULAR BRAND
SWEET AND TENDER
EARLY JUNE
EVERGOOD

Mng^flHflH
t DL Ki
g
|1 g
g

.No. 2 can 18c
SLICED
HALF SLICED _...No. 2 can 16c

2

PRUNES

PKG.

15c

3 -s 25c

SATURDAY, APRIL 25TH
FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS
all you can eat while at the store—
THROW THE SHUCKS ON THE FLOOR !
GREEN BEANS 3 Na. 2 cans 25c

BANANAS XEN
ICEBERG

-

No. 2 con 17c

ASPARAGUS

HOLMES CHURCH.
Mr. and Mr*. Harlow Barnum and
Glendale from weal of Coal* Grove Thursday, May 7. for aupper. with
»penl Sunday with hla brother. Hu­ Mr. and Mrs Lowrence Farrell.
bert Barnum, and family.
There wa* a reunion of the Buck
family held al Carlton Grange hall.
a ted on at Pennock hospital, will Bunday.
be able to come home the Ural ot
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Oler of
Grand Rapids spent Sunday with
Modesta and Marcine Klnne of the latter'* sister. Mr. and Mrs. El­
Coats Grove and Mary and Ione mer Marlow.
Clem from Carlton Center spent
Mrs. Wm. Hale and Mr and Mrs.
Sunday with Martha Fenslemaker. Caryl Fuller were In Battle Creek
Chester Oversmllh oi Battle Creek Wednesday.

alon. The work was done un­
der aupervlalon ot the Soil Coo-

rYlned land in tba right back­
ground. where there baa been

WR

farming baa
washing ot IS inebea of fertile
aoll from a blllalde orchard in
California.
Efforta are being

Pledge Backed—30 Day Guarantee

"The Better Class of Used Cars"

1935 FORD TUDOR SEDAN
1933 TERRAPLANE 6 COACH
1932 STUDEBAKER COMMANDER
a recal sedan1932 STUDEBAKER DICTATOR
a st. recis SEDAN-

1931 STUDEBAKER DICTATOR
a sedan1929 PLYMOUTH SEDAN
1932 ROCKNE 65 SEDAN

GOODYEAR BR|OS.
HARDWARE CO. fl

3 No. 2«/g cans 25c

FBESH CANNED

KREMEL #58., &gt;
JELLO

Ionia recently and got acquaUited
.Uh &lt;he nn, Tr.nd.mn

All these cars completely reconditioned. Ev­
ery Car Carries the Goodyear GUARANTEE.

Hastings, Michigan

5c
17c

at Uie home of her parents, Mr. I
GLASS CREEK.
ond Mrs D»n Douglass.
| The Goodwill L- A. 8. will hold a
a
A large
Urge crowd attended the last
last।, pot luck at
al the
the church this
thte week
week J
mretlng of the Extension Club at Friday also have a bee to clean thcl
H* tlon‘p of Mrs Pearl Newland church. A« many ladles a* poaalbk
last Tuesday. A good time was had are requested to come and help.
by all.
| Mrs. Russell Whittemore and Mtes
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Minxcy of
Severalfrom here attended lhe j K“Ue Whittemore gave a party BatTustin spent the week end with their
McCallurn community meeting at “rdBy
‘n honor of Russell
uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs.
Everett McCallum's Friday and had
.M»nd 006 ®Shrlckcr *
George Kenyon. Mr. and Mrs. Alva a most enjoyable lime
birthday a which occurred SaturKenyon and Bobble and Bennie of
Several
ladies
gathered
at
the
d
*
y
A
&lt;&gt;»
younk P«Pk werJ Battle Creek abo spent Sunday
home of Mr and Mrs. Jim Wilcox P^'1 “»d »&gt;&gt; enjoyed a pleasant
there.
Friday afternoon for a party hon- CT'nln.F ..
.
,
, Ernest Peake and family attended oring Master Robert Lester Lord J Gordon Havciu began work at the
a birthday surprise on hte ateter, He received a lot of pretty and use- , Hastings post office Monday morn­
Mra. Will Martin. Friday night.
ful gifts. Visiting and refreshment* *n“;
.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Kahler of of tee cream and cake made it a ‘, Mr. and Mr. Roy Erway and JunNorth Barry and Clifford Kahler Pleasant afternoon for all.
J
*nd
IE?
■
and family of South Hope spent
Sunday callers at the home of
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. L.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilcox included Kiiblnson In Grand Rapid.*.
Horn
Mr. and Mr* Robt Lord and chil- I Sunday gueste&gt; al Forrest Havens j
Mrs. Rogei Wtewcli of Kalamazoo j dren from Orangeville. Winfield , **■”
and Mra. Robt. McOlock-,
I called on Mrs. Mina Kenyon Tues- Lord and MIm Betty TCrry and two
,nd c2d!&lt;,ren, of„
MU'
Rleanor
,if Hickory
Mlckorv Corners
j “ Mr. .nd Mr. M Hom .nd »e- i "*“?■ f____________ _______________
Ind____________________________________
Eleanor Oil.
Otis of
Corner*
Robt. Bchrtekcr of Richland and
lyn visited Mra. Horn's brother. B. ch,Wrrn “cre Sunday’gtrste^f the Ml" Ka’,c Whittemore. The event .
1 Moody and family, of South Maple |aUcrs
Mrs tL* of Martin *** ln honor ot Louls Havens'!
Grove Saturday and found
her
f“n7‘“e former's molhe? b‘rU»d.y.

_________________
SOUTH SHULTZ.
Lorraln and Loma Soncvillc altended
-----the ball game -Monday
afternoon played by lhe High school
i boys and CirL-, of Delton with Bed• ford.
•

mother about the same They vtelied their son. Rev. Lewis Horn of

1929 FORD TUDOR

OKEBN TIPS

KRAUT

New Cabbage lb. 4c | Onion Sets 3 lbs. 14c

Mary Octeenhavvr and son ot Pot­
terville and Dayton and Russell
Friend of Grand Rapid* also visited
at lhe Allerdlng home Sunday aft­
ernoon.
Mr. and Mrs. John Usbome and
family visited at the home of Mr.
and Mra. Frank Friend Sunday aftemoon.
Mr. and Mra. Fred Henney and
son spent Sunday afternoon with
Rev. and Mra. W. A. Exner of Ban­
field.

.No. 1 can 10c

SLICED

HALF SLICED ..No. 2 ’/g can 19c

LIBBY'S AND DOLE BRANDS

L;

’/a lb. 13c

Vi lb. 23c
Vi lb. 25c
Vi lb. 16c
Vi lb. 37c

HOLLYWOOD
■ \ GUNPOWDER

VITALIZING BEVERAGE

CARLTON CENTER.
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Allardlng of
Woodland were gueat* Bunday of

Department
Agriculture.
Crop* are planted para I lai to

EFIT . . . THRIFTY FOOD SHOPPERS ARE BUYING

»

Mra. Claudine Mathews of Wood­
land has been hired to teach the

C.THOMAS STORES

AND FLAVOR . . . LOW PRICED—FOR YOUR BEN­

f*

Walter Durkee.
Mlaa Batter Rrovant sptnt Wm-

&lt;^Teryz&gt;4%

NATIONALLY KNOWN AND POPULAR BRAND

L

died on hla uncle, V. Overamllh.

MT. Ud Mn. Clarence Meubaiun
of Battle Creek spent the week end

Telephone 2101

“ 69c
SNOW QUEEN rintroic
“ 78c
BEST YET
83c
GOLDEN CREST JF“.
u93c
CRESCENT QVAUTT
Gold medal
5 lb. bag 30c
BISQUICK-Saves Tima
30c
PANCAKE FLOUR reW 19c

Kenneth Dunn has been out of
; school and cnnOned to hl* bed the
. past few days with sickness.
Myron BLshop ot Camp Custer
spent lhe week end with hte wife
____________________________________

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barry and
daughter. Mrs. Marguerite Howard.
Iof Laming were Sunday afternoon
, c*lte*’»
Mr and Mrs. Roland
j Barry's.
I ML« Imogene Barry, who L* asI stetlng Mrs. Bert VanderJagt of the
m—— Wellman dl.- trtel was home over
i the week end.
‘ Several from here attended the

hr' ioc
10c
Lr
7c
c«
10c

COCOANUT
u. 20c
RAISINS a?.*?’.*.*" ’3 w- 20c
Baker's
Breakfast
COCOA
4 4c
’/2 lb. can
u !]

HOME

CANNED FRUIT
o N*. S
PEACHES JMS.
Z Cui
N». 1 Cu
KEIFFER PEARS
BARTLETT PEARS Na 3S ci*
FRUIT COCKTAIL rre.
GRAPE FRUIT JUICE IJFS

25c
10c
20c
15c
10c

COCOA HAKDWATU CASTILE

3 CAKES...................15c
1 CAKE ................... 1c
LUX
SOAP
3 ban 20c

LUX
FLAKES
Box _.10c

PADS

Now^that you have cleaned up your yard, how
about your house? Paint will serve a three-fold
pur|x&gt;se — cleans up, protects and enhances the
value of your property. B. P.&amp;S. Paint, sold by
Thc Home Lumber (Company,cannot be beaten!

13c

Bring your painting problems to us

TAKING
A TRIP?

Why not talk with lhe

Crip?

Oflenllmn dollar*

getting a SHORT
ROUTING I

WAY

Your Agent has. or can
compete

information

te

Interested.

Warren's Friday.

ORANGEVILLE.
Mr and Mrs Marion Rupe «pent
Saturday night and Sunday with
her Uster at Sand Lake.
and Mrs. John Venema attended i
the funeral of lhe former's niece.')
Mrs Gladys Barnhart, near Calc-i;
don la Monday of the past week. B
Mr. and Mra. Hcnckle of OUego 1
spent Thursday evening with rcla-B
lives al this place.
IJoyd Earl and family of Plain- '■
well were Sunday guests of hi* par-,
ent*.
Alvtxi Hathaway, along-llme real-

। Thursday al lhe home of bis neph­
ew at Evanston. Ill, and hi* body
was brought to tills place Saturday
evening and laid to rest hi Oak Hill 1
cemetery beside his parents.
Several from this place attended
lhe funeral of Mrs. Fred Bnydey alt
Plainwell Saturday afternoon.

QUIMBY..
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Ward of N f
Y. City arc gucate at the home of J
Eugene Freeman.
| Mra. George Tinkler of HaaUnEsI
haa been spending a tew day* with
Mr*. Anna Rittman.
The Birthday Aid was held at the
church Thursday. Mr* Showerman,
a former pastor, wa* a welcome
guest.
MU* Jeanette Rittman, who is
attending school tn Bailie Creek,
was at home several days last week
Mr. and Mrs Walter Bldelman
visited their daughters and families
at Hopkins Tuesday.
Mr. and Mr*. Frank Bloom ot
Hickory corners have moved on the
I. D. Charlton farm.
Mr. and Mr*. Dirk Hoffman and
family attended thc shower given In
honor ot Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord
Gould al the Maple Gratae hall
Saturday evening. They were the
recipients ot many beautiful gifts.

Pain* In Back?

€. THOMAS STORES
IM *t*T STATE STRUT

|

and refiort a fine time.
Mtes Beatrice Barry of Grand
Haven spent over thc week rnd with
her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Milo
Barry.______________ ____________ _
Club NO. r cntFrtelted the C.~X
3 al thc home of Miss Alice Whet­
stone last Wednesday for supper.
Owing to the bad weather and busy
time not so large an attendance as
usual, but a good time end fine sup-

3 c

OET NEW SALAD RECIPE

KIRK'S 1c SALE
BLACK PEPPER
CINNAMON °SB“
PAPRIKA 00LDEN SUN
GINGER GOLDEN BUN

-ennle Wilcox nultc sick with
Mr and Mrs Russell Whittemore
sick wllh, spent Sunday al the Bchrlber-Bpck

Frlf.n(Js hcre an&gt; nl,d u. 1CBrn reunion at Carlton Center.
[h„‘
J1" “
Mr. md Mr.. W.rd Brw., .nd I
| h., Omn-mr,^,, .,.h, u Amn.. I

SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mr. and Mr*. Wm Havens were ’
Sunday guesLs of Mr. and
Mrs. J
Leonard Robinson of Grand Rap- 1 Mothers Day will be observed «t Middlevlle Saturday night.
10-, Y‘U2 1 Mr and Mr” Clyde Warren and!
Ida.'
S. ~
S. “
at “
10.30
lolloued
b rwit
- ----- . m. J~y a 1'h Phil
M, ana
...d Mrs.
MO Francis
FT...C uornam
Gorham enrn- । s;
5
®
“ “
l°"a hw “
'J
Mr.
J’”
”"' Iri^lr . » ..
..
___
u.„
and an
____
..___
Un.inM U&gt;.lr
Mr. Buhl dinner tn lhe basement
&gt;•«»■■»«•&gt;*
■" an«R- ...
Warren and daughter Hasel in '
Be.Hk UM l.mlly, of K.Umuoo !
'
Laming.
on Saturday .nd llwlr
Brne.t!
“S
iwnmber
Mr. and Mrs. Jackson and chil-?
.nd lamlly. ot K.l.m.irx. on Sim- 1 “J.
«“ dren ot Mason visited at Clyde

IRRADIATED

PET MILK

Mrs

HABTWCS. MICHIGAN

THE

LUMBER CO
LOCAL BL'S BEBOT AT

Phon* 2276

HOMES

HASTINGS

TRIO CAFE
hastwu fhohc ai»

a In niy
&gt;«&gt;cnv

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL 23. UM

DELTON.
The Delton Camp Fire Girls will'
ivc a baked sale Saturday after- '
noon. April 23. In Leonard's store
from 2 until 4 P. M.
Mrs Kale Adria mon spent Sat- ;
urday. Sunday and Monday with
her ton Rdy and family al Battle
Creek.
Mrs. Emma Johnson, who
lias
been an Invalid for so many years,
passed away Saturday night at the
home of her daughter. Mrs. Ada
Thorpe, with whom she has always
her home. Funeral services
held Tuesday aflbmoon at the
&gt;n funeral home with the Rev.
Ralph L. Bates otliciating.
|

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

| LEGAL NOTICES |
MOBTOAOB BALE.

fOTICB BT OOUNTT DRAIN r
IGIOMBB OF MBETINO OP I E
OF DETERMINATION

Bunday dinner guests in the H.
F. Wertman home were: Mr. and
Mn. Eldon Beedle and little Jim­
mie of Augusta, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Burdick of Fine lake, and Mr. and
Mrs. Milton Nobles of Grandville.
Callers during the day were: Mr.
and Mrs. Myron Mason,
Cedar room. lumacc. addiUom
etc., which when hntalwd
and
Elizabeth
and
Bmllh.
—
----------------------- William
..
.
,, ....
also Rev. and Mra. Ralph Bates, reside in during their
.
:
,

home of Mrs Leon Dunning Fri-•
day afternoon &lt;4 tills week.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Dunning have
recently relumed from Florida and
DODGE l&gt;&gt;ton stake truck—136-in. wheelbase—designed
arc at present staying with their
to serve the needs of farmers, manufacturers, feed and cereal
son Leon and family. Mrs. Dunning
merchants, retailers and many others requiring dependable
Is quite badly afflicted with rheu: mutism.
transportation at low cost.
Mrs. E. R. Wiilison spent Pfldoy
FREEPORT.
nesday. Mrs. Ayres accompanied with Mrs. Aivah Pennock. Jr., st
Our last week’s letter, which left them here and spent the day with Hickory Comers and Sunday Mr.
here early Tuesday morning, for I Mrs. Retta Roger... Mrs. Ayers will and Mn. Willison spent the day
some unknown reason, did not be remembered by many here as with Mr. and Mrs. Aivah Pennock,
reach Lhe Banner office until Fri­ j Mae Kimball, who made her home I Sr.
The "Penny-a-Spoonful" supper
day which accounts for its omission [with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob FrceUnd
i (Mrs. Rogers) for some lime.
: and Garden Club
-----------------------— ------------program-------------held at
in lust week’s Issue.
Mr,. MU YuU- rr'.UTi.rd u&gt; her! “» «““"■&gt; Prld«’
»
Herbert Kunde was home from
I
home
hen
Tl&gt;ur»l.y
.iur
.
Over IIS wu UU-1
his work al Ionia over the week end
Miss Gay ths Loomis of Saranac [ spending the winter with her cn,~&gt;’
M«.
M~ w.iu
William
— «mteGillies of Hartford .’
Mb-s Ethelyn Earle of Smyrna, and daughter Mrs Roy Boyes .nd fam- ;■| spent
Sunday with Mrs.
Gladys'
Mr. Howard Reeves of Belding, ac- ; ily at Hastings.
of the various Oaiklli and other friends In Del­
I cornpanled by Gary Newton attend- 1 rRepresentatives
„. ....
ed the service at M E. church Sun- i 22
Sunday
schools
making up the ton.
Is;' 2
—
Mrs. Luclna Eddy relumed to her
day evening and called on Mr and Northwest
—------- district
---------- were invited to
home Sunday after spending a few
Mrs. Victor SUson.
meet al Uie M. E- church Ust Sun­
There seems to be another mov­ day afternoon for the purpose of days with her daughter. Mrs. Grace
ing spree on here, this time thc organizing the district. The meeting &lt;, Mosier In Kalamazoo.
1 Sympathy U extended to the fam-.!
people are moving out of Freeport. was in charge ot Rev. Conklin and
, । ily of Mrs. Abe Francolse whose
Mr. and Mrs. John Karchir. and the election was supervised by C. F.
,
....
occurred last
week at
her
f i^KaUmaroo
1 Several
Delton
Mr and Mrs N. J. Kuempel re­ Angell. The following officers were’ ii death
home in Kalamazoo. Several Delton
cently moved back to their homes in
Hastings L M ;Curtlss and family Freeport. M. E. church. Vice-Presi- ; friends attended lhe funeral Tues-1
are moving
and we hear dent—Mrs. Gerald Smith. Hastings, । day afternoon.
.. to Owosso
-----------------------------------------Wc arc sorry to report thc severe
others/k
—‘— town.
*-----rumors of otherv
leaving
Goodwill church. 8ecretary-*lTeas- 1
Friends here received notice Ust i urer—Robert
Henney.
Hastings. I Illness of Mary Marie Henton.
week of the birth on Easter Sunday • Carlton Center church children’s I Marshall Norwood is able to be
out
of doors and doing a little
of an eleven pound son to Mr. and 1 Div. Supt —Mrs. Jas. Rugg. MlddleMrs. R. L. Menefee of Cleveland. J ville. M. E church. Young Peoples’ around home, but is still unable to
Ohio. Mrs. Menefee will be reinem- Supt.—Ethel Crook. Hastings. Wcl- resume his work In Kalamazoo.
Mrs.
Kate Burdick of Hickory
bered as Mrs Vanessa Lobdell, for- j come Comers church. Adult Supt —
merly of Freeport. Tike new arrival i Rev. Houghton. Hastings. Yankee Comers lias been in charge of thc
has been named David Alan. Con- I Springs
church.
Administrative home of her cousin. Mrs. Harry
gratuUUons.
supt —Mrs. Fred Tabberer, Free- Wertmon, for the past two weeks,
its Mrs Wertman lias been III and
The many friends of the- John port. U. B- church.
in thc Butterworth hospital. Grand
Zushnltt
&lt;.
Zushnllt famllv
family of Pleasant Valiev
Valley
Arthur Austin, who
has been in
were grieved lo learn of the death falling health for some time, and of Rapids, part of lhe time. She is Im­
of Mrs. Zuslinitt on Monday eve­ late has been confined to his bed. proving however ond soon hopes
ning of last week following a short was taken to University hospital at to be able to resume her household
Illness. Besides lhe husband she Ann Arbor Saturday for observa­ duties.
Dr. B- E. Farwell is spending two
leaves two daughters. Mrs. Lester tion and possible treatment. At this
Miller and Mrs. Rockford Price of wtitlng no word has been received
Campbell, one son. Ivan of Battle from him. His condition Is quite
Creek and a foster daughter. Opal serious.
Ritter.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bunker of
Rev. Hugh Kennedy of Grand
Rapids, former District Superin­ Alto. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bunker
tendent. will occupy the pulpit at of Grand Rapids and Mrs. Julia
the M. E. church Sunday morning. Godfrey were Sunday callers at thc
The administration -pf communion home of Mrs. Delta Yule Mr. and
will also be cared for'Ey Dr Ken­ Mrs. Wm. Yule of Grand Rapids
nedy. Everyone Ls Invited to this spent the day there.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Gless of So
service. In the evening, stereoptican
views. "Farm children of many Bowne and Farrell Anderson of
Sunday
of Mrs.
lands,’’ will be shown.
. --Hastings
------ -------were
---------------, -guests
-----------Vlvtnn Anderson
A nrlnrrnn and
nnH Mrs.
Llr. H.
Tl S.
a
Robert Relglcr of charlotte spent Vivian
his vacation with relatives here last ! Wedel at the Utter’s home.
week.
v ’Roy Blough ’and family moved
Trafford Wilkins and son Gordort , Monday into the former Priscilla
of Flint, accompanied by tho Utters . Qosch house which they recently
1 parents, Rev. and Mrs. C- L. Wilkins | purchased.
motored lo Carson City Sunday--------where they attended lhe 50th wed- 1
DOWLING.
Mrs. George Stanford will enter-

roBEOLOBvan

NOTICE TO CBED1TOBN.
nf Mkhi

NOW Tlll.lil I oi&lt;&gt;

weeks attending a postgraduate
course in general medicine at lhe
Medical School of Washington Uni­
versity, BL Louis, Mo., sponsored

I..

NOTICE or MOBTOAOB UU.

Counlr. Miehlran lo HOME OWNERS’
LOAN CORPORATION a Corporation orHalted

OBDBB rOB PUBLICATION

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES &lt;9*
A FINE LINE of ELE -TRIG FIXTURES
AT Vami

nucsst

ELECTRIC WIRING ■&gt; CLASS 1
MASTER LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

Robleski Electric Shop
PHONE 2234
WIRING SUPPLIES

HASTINGS, MICH.
ELECTRIC DRILLS

Sure... He Always
Comes Through!

■ I Probate.

IN HERERV IIIVtN

---s"
NOTICE IN I EltEHV GIVEN ll.al ti

HOME OWNERS* 1XIAN COR­
PORATION. Murlcarre.

NOTICE OP MOBTOAOE BALE.
OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION

Mlihlrao. tn HOME OWNERS*
CORPORATION
II i. -.in

NOTICE TO CBBDITOBB.
But. of Wlchlran th. Probate Co

Till KI '.It'

—

gram held in lhe hull there
b ..
.
Rev. and Mrs. F. Loomis of Sara- by
Dy the
u,e Ladles
uaa’t5 Altl Society
soclelv each
tach
nac called on ft lends here Ust Wed- : month.
। Tiie Dowling Townsend club will
| meet al the church on Tuesday eve­
' ning. April 28. with Leo Cligh, of
OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION.
l-HkUmazoo as speaker.
&lt; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Otis and sons.
,j1 I Murray and Donald spent Sunday
' with Mrs. Otis’ parents. Mr. and
Mrs. A- R. King near Woodland. Mr.
irj and Mrs King, who have been quite
(Sick arc much improved at present.
■a nrlir ’
ond Mrs. Orlle Fisher spent
court d» i Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Edd.
»rh I 'ritus Bl Cloverdale. Mr. and Mrs.
'
i Titus will spend thc summer at
nf. their farm home at that place.
, Mr. anU Mrs. Frank Underwood.
Mrs. Viola Warren nnd Mr. and
j Mrs. Frank Burch of Holland were
n i.v rubiieotiou &lt;&gt;r u &lt;«p&gt; । Sunday visitors at Otis Altman's.
i«r ib’w .ucfr..i,r w«k. | Mrs. Hattie Dunn of Banfleld
!er.
^w.“Vr“r&lt;- u’nted 1 5pent Sunday with her parents. Mr.
Ui'uid muutv
and Mrs. Sandy Wertman
-BLsatt-CliffltnL. Jailge.tf Pruhiir__ |._ The cemetery ClteW at their 4a*L.,
.—.......
meeting made plans for a dinner j
I and program for Memorial day.;
OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION.
I which will be completed and an-1
; nounced Uter.
! Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gaskill and |
. family were Bunday guests of Mr. |
and Mrs. Dewey Reed at Hastings.
I
Aaron Schwucho of Battle Creek
; visited hU parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Emil Schwucho Sunday.
l&gt;Mlil»a.t&gt;rariM.lh.i th.
1 EAST WALL LAKE

th.roof be riven b« publication ot

AND VICINITY.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kahler. Clif­
ford Kahler and Geo. Kahler at­
tended the funeral of Walter Kah­
ler in Salem Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Aldrich of
Kalamazoo were visitors at Mina
Aldrich’s Friday.
Mrs. Alice Fargo, who has been
Julte sick again is staying a few
ays with her son. Porter Tooze,
and family at Milo.

llkla lair
Million.

to the mound you
hear a welcoming roar of approval from the
stands. From experience the fans know that he •'
will come through.
very time he steps up

E

And from experience motorists know that
Mobilgas comes through, too.
We asked this famous pitcher about it He
said, *'I never pay much attention to claims.
But I do know the results I get from Mobilgas.**

Telling him about the high octane rating of
Mobilgas or Climatic Control is just a waste of
time It’s action . . . reaulta that count
When you stop to think of it that’s not a bad
way for any motorist to buy gasoline and oil for

MAKE YOUR

OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION. «

TOMMY
BRIDGES

OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION.

HOUSE LIKE BRICK WITH

ASBESTOS SHINGLES

at
K'SS.JSS
’ff.L
Btusrt CleaeaL 3
a tn»» eepv.

RlldrM Balth. Bulstar •» PrAale.

LOW COST/

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co

HOME. OWNERS' LOAN CUBPOKATION. MoritacM.

Phone 2S1S
undrlapi»itk. &gt;mUi«t »t

Frank Saga

Hastings

Head for theSifn of the Flyinf Red Horae.

MOBILGAS-MOBILGAS EF

MOBIIGAS

Service Oil Co
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�THE BASTING! UNMH, TBUBSDAY, AMUI, M, 1MJ
_
filed, letters of administration is­ ■ termination l**ued.
Est. Charles Hook. Bond of Adnff
sued. order limiting settlement en­
tered.
filed, letters of administration Is­
Est. Ann Jessup. Rejxjrt of sale sued. order limiting settlement en­
filed.
tered, petition for hearing claims
Bat. Charles A. Northrup. Accept­ filed, notice to creditors Issued.
ance of trust filed, letters of guard­
Est. R. Sidney French. Will filed,
ianship issued.
petition for probate filed, petition
! Eat. William Coleman. Bond of for Special Admr. filed, order ap­
Admr. filed, letters ot administra­ pointing special Admr. entered,
tion issued. order limiting settle­ bond of special Admr. filed, letters
of special Admr. issued.
ment entered.
Est. England Lake Drain. Petition
Est. Frank Walters, petition for
for bond of determination filed, or- Ii Admr. filed, order for publication
| entered.
der appointing; bond of determina- j.
tlon entered, notice to bond of de- | Est. R. Sidney French. Warrant
and Inventory filed.
Est. Andrew I. Stokoe. Final ac­
count filed, order assigning residue
entered, discharge of Admr. Issued,
estate enrolled.
Est. Ross Burdick. Final account
filed, order assigning residue en­
tered. discharge of Admr. Issued, es­
tate enrolled.
Est. R. Sidney French. Petition to
borrow money filed, order to borrow
money entered.
Est. Thomas E. Checsebrough.
Annual account filed.
Est. Samuel Allen. Order allowing
account entered, discharge of Admr.
Issued, estate enrolled.
Est- David V. Barry. Rci»rt of sale
, filed, order confirming sale entered.
Est. R. Sidney French. Order to
renew notes entered.
Est. Charles G. Welsscrt. Final
account filed, order assigning resi­
due entered, discharge of executor
issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Mary Kilmer. Petition for
Its full length of 8*4 miles shown here from the air, tho great San Francisco-Oakland Bay bridge
determination of heirs filed, order
presents an almost finished appearance. Bridge officials say it will be ready for automobile traffic by
for publication entered.
November ot ibis year. Only the end sections ot the span connecting San Francisco and Yerba
Est. Perry Campbell. Affidavit of
Buena Island remain to bo swung Into place.
posting notices nied. oath before
sale filed, report of sale filed.
Est. William Coleman. Petition for
BRANCH DISTRICT.
| his parent*, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. on a good program for next meet­
hearing claims filed, notice to credi­
MLss Bernice Rhoades Ls working , Brake,
ing, May 1. Be sure and come.
tors issued, final account of special in Battle Creek.
i Norberta Pervorse of Pinhook
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hulbert of
Admr. filed, inventory filed.
Riclart Darby
ArmbrljM
””k md wllb a,a&lt;1&gt;'5 Battle Creek visited at the home
Est. Rhoda A. Wolf. Final ac­
of
their uncle. Orville Bruce, who
school
spent
thc
week
dhd
with
the
,
...
count filed.
home
folks
\
I
Mrs
Don
8&gt;&lt;)wlna
entertained
the
is
recovering nicely from his recent
highest quality fertilizer with
Est. Amanda Nelson. Order al­
,,
.
.
'following Sunday in honor of her
Mr nnd_Mra Theodore Dutnier mother. Mrs. J. F Brake's birthday, illness.
the proper analysis for your lowing claims filed.
Mr. and Mrs. John Krussell visit­
Est. Christian Ecknrrft. Testimony of Grand Rapids were Sunday yte- Mr nnd Mrs Hwood Brnke and
conditions. Farm Bureau Ferti­
i filed, order determining heirs cn- item of relatives and friend* in thia famUy of Ionla Duane Ora aUd ed her sLitcr, Mrs. Elma Belson of
lizer produces extra profits tered.
neighborhood
GraC(? Grimes of Lake Odessa, and Irving station, one day this week.

Magnificent Oakland Bay Bridge Nears Completion

J

■■gKTn

PKOBATE COURT.
nt. Phills Joan Tobias. Petition
lar Odn. filed, order appointing
Irt. Oanlua L. Glasgow. Petition

Institute proceedings filed.
Admr. filed, order for publication
entered.
■M. Elsie M. ifllk Order appoint­
ing Admr. entered, bond of Admr.

jjjurtl fyffdactian
SEEL farm
i

bureau

MTIUZE!

whan these partners

Work Together
Larger yields of alfalfa and
clover at lower coots, are secured
through the Ideal partnership of
Farm Bureau seeds and ferti­
lizers.

Form Bureau Brand Michigan
adapted seeds in sealed, branded
bags have a known record of
performance. Their origin,
winter hardiness, purity and
vitality are guaranteed. Keep a
sample record of your Geld.
With good seed insist upon

through extra yields Our nitro­
gen is nearly 100% quickly
available—important to young
plants. Our fertilizer is extra dry,
free running, easy regulating.
Buy Farm Bureau Seeds and
Fertilizers for best results. You
can depend on them for profits
through larger yields and lower
production costs..

FARM BUREAU z
SERVICES, Inc. I
Hasting*, Mich.

Phone 2118

8TONT potty.

OFFER MORE USES

Lail week's Letter.
FOR MAPLE SYRUP
Mr. and Mra. CMTl Phillipa at Kal­
amazoo were guests of Mrs. Phillips'
There's no argument that pan­
parent*. Mr. and Mn. Ed. Doakin cake* and maple syrup make a com­
Sunday.
bination that is practically unbeat­
able for starting out a day in a
sweet frame of mind, but sugar bush
Friday for a visit with relative*, operators In Michigan and home
economics specialists at Michigan
returning home Monday.
Carl GraahouM came over from Blate College believe that tixe use
Pewamo Bunday, rt looks as though of maple syrup can be made a year
Carl must have some attraction 'round practice in households that
over this way as I hardly think he like maple flavor.
Confections, ice cream, puddings
would come over every Bunday just
and sauces are natural spots in
to see his sister. Do you. Imogene?
which to use maple sugar or maple
day night to a large and apprecia­ syrup for flavor, with perhaps some
tive audience. After community nutmeata for variety.
singing some selections of harmon­
Out in the state some of the old­
ic* and guitar music were given by est bush lota have seen a decreas­
two boys Kuball and Stutz. Rev. ing usage each spring because farm­
Carrick and family of Woodland ers realize that tinles* they sell their
also gave several selections consist­ syrup and sugar while cold morn­
ing of violin music with piano ac­ ings and hot griddle cakes are in
companiment and vocal numbers by fashion they will have little or no
the little girl, also accordion music market for their maple products un­
by Mr. Btuti. mt. Walter Wailace of til another fail and winter roll
Hastings gave a nice talk on various around on the calendar.
subjects with special mention of P.
One dessert recipe that sounds
T- A. work. He introduced Victor good even on paper Is called "Ma­
Bel*lto of Hastings who entertained ple Dreams.” Cut stale bread in
with several selections on hb piano­ slices one fourth inch thick. Re­
accordion. then Mr. Wm. T. Wal­ move the crust, butter half of the
lace of Hastings gave a very in­ slices and add a thin layer of chop­
structive talk on the American In­ ped, .dates spread evenly over each
dian. explaining how they first slice. Butter thc remaining slices,
came to thl* country and their ways and place them on top of those
of living and work, a fine lunch of spread with dates, pressing lightly
cake, coffee and jello wa* served. together lo form sandwiches. Dip
The next meeting will be held May each sandwich tn a mixture of one
IS and will be the last one for the egg slightly beaten with one cup of
season.
milk, and brown in a little butter.
The best spellers from our school Serve with maple sauce.
were Jean Deakin* and Edward
Another simple
------------------r--------butrpalate tickling
Bawdy. They will go over to the I dessert Is a maple flavored rice pudFelghtner school to compete with ■ ding. Combine two and one-half
other speller* of Castleton township.' cupe of boiled rice and two and one­
----- ————
। half cups of milk. Beal three eggs
STATE ROAD.
’ and one cup of maple. syrup loLast Week’s Letter.
i gether. add them to the rice and
Our fUJT, A- Friday evening wn* । milk, and add one-half teaspoon of
well attended, and all enjoyed , salt, one-half teaspoon of nutmeg
the good supper and program. We 1 and one cup of raisins. Pour the
want to thank lhe High school band , mixture Into a buttered pudding
and the players in the "Mall Order । dish, place the dish in a pan of hot
Wife” for their entertainment, of- ; water, and bake at about 350 deflrerx elected
rlectrd fTir
n .&gt;the
— ____
for next vear
year are si.
as grecs Fahrenheit iin
oven, __
or
The children had three days va­ fleers
Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Lowell and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Van Allsburg
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
son attended church nt the North ot Grand Rapid*.
cation thl* week owing to the ill­ follows: President, Archie cunning­ cook the mixture in the top of a
Louis J. Overholt. Freeport 21
----------------ness of Mra. Newton, their teacher. ham; Viee-Pres., Carrie Fisher; double-boiler.
I Mary Alice Warner. Coopersville 18 Evangelical Sunday and spent thc j
day with relative* here.
»«*•«&gt;
• —PINE •LAKE.
but wc arc glad to report she is well Sec. and Tress , Majesty Beeker.
Grove Richardson. Hastings
.14
Mrs. Janet pettengill and Mrs.
BARBERS CORNERS.
Mis* Ellen Halbrook of Hastings
Mr. -uu
and Mrs, Walter Warner
„Brncr 8n„£',,ck on
J
Clara Tabor. Hastings 37
— •
Prnyer meeting Wednesday. April Elate Solhard spent Thursday after­
uas a Sunday guest of Mr. and Mrs.] werc dinner guest* on Wednesday
MLm Mabellc Nottcil, who has
at the home of Rev. and Mrs noon with Mra. Dora Coleman of been spending some time with her
Da.rby:
B
,
.. . . of Mr and Mrs. Walter Strong in
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
Rutland.
Gross on Broadway.
The
rne junior ana
and
Intermediate Kalamazoo.
intermediate
Ori
sister. Mrs. Herman Hauer, return­
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Matthews and
Mra. Lena Becker and Homer en­ ed to her home in Grass Lake Sat­
classes of the North Maple Grove i
Rev. Gross preached a wonderful
son Richard Coals of Detroit called • Sunday school expect to have~.'u
’illI ,,
their
.
. L rr€ovJ'r,n« sermon Sunday morning; a good tertained the State Road folks at a urday.
parly at rhe home of Dorr.*1,’?’
h*'ln« h,&lt;l *" ■1“" attendance and all felt' God was d*ncln« Party « thelr hoine &gt;aal
Sunday callers at Herman Hauer's
Sunday.
there.
Friday evening In honor of Majesty's
Darby Saturday evening. April 26. ( 1
were: Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hauer
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bolton at­
--------------- ,a &gt; &gt;
-----------I birthday. It was a complete surprise
Allen Sage and family, formerly I Georgia Bellingham and Harry
and Mrs. August Geiger of West
tended thc funeral of thc latter's of thLs place, now living in Nash- I KHIlck were Sunday guest* of Mr.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
1 on her and 1,1
B fine UmeWoodland and Mr. and Mrs. Meric
aunt. Mrs. John Zuschnitt. of Free­
ville. cxcpct to move to Saline this «nd Mrs. Harry Freeman of Gun
Mr. and Mrs Charles Albright. I
Whrcler and daughter of Sunfield.
port Thursday.
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
week,
| Plains.
Jr., of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs Will'
Our school has been busy studying
Mr. and Mrs. L J. Matthews were
Miss Ethel Eaton spent the week
Farmers are busy sowing oat* this I The Helping Hand Club U rnakHolland. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nor- end in Kalamazoo with her sister visitors in Battle Creek Thursday.
for the spelling contest to be held week.
I Ing a layette and any used or new Hm,a.nd-M
i “
nd
f
am
»y.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
B.
Bidelsoon.
Mrs. Etta Bump and Miiw Eve­
and family. Mr. and Mrs. B. Bidcl.
article will be gratefully accepted. tlngs called on Mr. and Mra. Waller cnm
h
lyn
Matthews spent n’vera! days
Mrs. Rebecca crnlg is much bet­
PLEASANT /VALLEY.
1 There is great need for these outfit*.
Culbert Sunday,
. Mr Bnd Mrs ch„l(,r Rlchardson last wedk at Grand Rapids.
ter nt this writing and is able to be
Miss Esther Schwab of Elmdale Anyone wishing to make n donation
about again.
Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Fuller spent and son Larry of Freeport and Mrs.
sj&gt;cnt the wcel&lt; ctad with Beulah may leave it with Mrs. Bert Brown
Howard Martin of Dowling spent Kfaw.
Wednesday in Battle creek
I Olthouse of Eaton county spent
or Mrs. Ellie Champion
Thursday night with Bernard Ham­
Miss Achsah Buck attended n j Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Will
Mr. and Mra. Clarence Kime and
Mrs. Byrde Doster Is visiting relarclamond.
debate in Kalamazoo Thursday eve- ! Crittenden and family.
Joyce. Mrs. Jane Kime and Don lives in Chicago
ntng.
j
Seger were Sunday guest* at the
Mr.
and
Mrs
Leon
Wood.
Robert
Mr. and Mrs Leon Wood. Robert
Mra. Frank Shriber. Mr. and Mrs.!| Miss Elsie Poland of Middleville
Emery Kime home In honor of Glen and Ixittie. of Trowbridge were SunKime's birthday
day gueste of Mr. and Mrs John Leo Barry and son were in Baltic I। were Sunday dinner guests of Mr
। and Mrs. William Cramer. Jr.
Ray perry and family, who are Rogers. Mr. Rogers is very lame Creek Saturday.
1I .Sunday
’unuMy gurai,
guests a,
at mrs.
Mrs. vsrorac
George
now living near Caledonia, spent'owing'to a fall tn the barn and is
Mr and .....
Mrs Ignatius
Rusine of tvousns,
( Roush's,wno
whoisisvery
very hiill.,
werener
her
—
.......
..were
Sunday at ..................................
amH.v
their farm home—
here.
obliged to go with a cane However
John Zuschnitt and relatives have it was fortunate Uiat no bones were Hammond. Ind.. Mr. and Mra. Zone ] brothers. Fred and E. S. Thom of
A- Buck and son ol Chicago.
Mr. i Mt
and their families;
, the sympathy of thc entire com­ broken.
™
..... Pleasant
■ ■ Anna.,. hum
lailllllCA, I।
and
Mrs
Tat
A Rtlrkr
nnr!
t-indle
nt
.in. n_...
u of .Maple
..
___
:I
and
Mrs
Tate
Buck
and
family
of
Grove.
Wilj
Allie
Roush
! munity in the loss of their wife and
Mr and Mrs, Lloyd Brcnnpr of
Battle Creek and Mr. and Mrs. ham
mother.
liam Roush
Roush and
and Mr. and Mrs Bert
Green Lake were guests on Sunday
Mr.
and
Mra. Van
vn.i Osborn
Roush, ...I
Mr.. onu
and .uin.
Emery Kime and family
were of her grandparents. Mr and Mra. Wesley Pew of Hastings called on I• Roush,
Mr.L Anna Buck Sunday and at-1I of
Of Battle Creek and Mr. and Mra.
j treated to warm sugar at
thc S. C. Doster.
tended thc family gathering at the | Frank
Prank Rouzh
Roush and
and Mra.
Mra. Ida
Ida BidclBidel। diaries Schwab home m Elmdale.
Aivah Cole spent Sunday in Kal­
hail. Kendall Buck, who has spent num of Milo.
Monday night.
amazoo.
visiting
relatives
and
thc winter in Hammond ha;, re
the
rc­
-----------------------------------------1 Mra. Mary Bideiman and Mr. and friends.
turned
home
for
a
few
weeks.
COATS
GROVE.
[ Mrs. Donald Grant spent Sunday
The movie. "The country Doctor."
Thc P. T. A. Is to be held thLi,
evening al J. F. Brake's.
Mr and Mrs. Frank Shriber and
which was shown at Plainwell Sun­
week Friday evening. The 4-H clubs '
-z and
...« Monday cenuMi.
, Vem Hullibcrgcr of Pinhook is day
evening, was
was atat- daU“hlC.r; “'V .A.nn“ ®Uck’ ,nd
assisting Cecil Preston with his tended by nearly everyone in tho 'Chilly. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Yarger arc to put on a demonstration of
farm work. He and family expect community
and children
children anrt
and Mr
Mr. and Mr,
Mrs. Leo their work. A group from the ,
, to move .soon into Mr. Preston'., ten­
Barry and ion attended a family Coats Grove P. T. A. put on a play ।
ant house.
gathering at thc Carlton Grange for the Lakeview meeting last Frl- '
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Elwood Brake of Ionia was a
The program committee for the hall on Sunday. About 80 relative.- day evening.
Clem Jordan's mother and aunt
Thursday evening supper guest of I’. T. A. arc working and planning and friends were present.
from Michigan City visited lhe for­
mer's family over the week end.
MLss Marian Woodman and a
friend from lhe Mayer Business
College of Kalamazoo visited the
former's parent* over the week end. I
Mra. Claude Loomis, who has been
in the hospital In Ann Arbor for
several week*, came home Baturday , Shakeups in personnel of the
and is now with her daughter.
United States fleet high command
Ruth Woodman was In Kalama- ; between now and June 15 will
zoo Friday evening and Baturday
place Vice Admiral Arthur J.
Paul Thompson and family of
Hepburn, above, aa commander­
Battle Creek visited. Bunday, at E.
8. Thompson's. Mra. Agnes Haight In-chief of lhe fleet. Ila will auoand daughter. Wilma Jean, visited ceed Admiral Joseph M Reeves.
. Hepburn now is commanding the
there also.
1
scouting forces

JJ* cl’r"'d

'STllXl"" *521

New U. S. Fleet
Commander

. I Only 3 More Day
iI

Before the Drawing of this Beautif
Beautiful

SPARTON REFRIGERATOR
THE DRAWING WILL BE SATURDAY NIGHT at 9=OO at
FOOD CENTER . LUCKY PERSON MUST BE PRESENT
5 YEAR
WARRANTY
PLAN

*• • an&lt;l
no odds
of any car at any price

*

CURV

DON’T FORGET THE $75.00
uvn I DRAWING SATURDAY
YOU MAY BE LUCKY ! Anyway, Shop Here and
You Will Be Lucky.

10 ban BORAX LAUNDRY SOAP ..19c
2 lb. box SODA CRAX15c
Large jar Apple Butter, fine quality, 15c

ELECTRIC
LIGHTS

ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR
ioo% AUTOMATIC

EXCLUSIVE
ANTIFROST
ECONOMY
CLOCK

You can challenge the costliest cars on the road
with this big economical six
Price Clast Winner 352-Mile Yosemite Economy Run
• II ml

■ al.Inn nil

&gt; iiiutar Am*. A..IM Am..

Mtiitr vourim

Triple-Sealed Hydraulic Brakes

The smartest, safeit bodies built today

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON
WISTSRN UNION BLDG., HASTINGS

10

5 lb. Sock Rolled
OoH for I w

4 Q&lt;

Tea Sifting!9c
Bisquick

-29c

2 CANS No. 2’/i Site
TOMATOES
4 Qc
SPECIAL I
Libby Tomato Soup, Ac
Toll can

Puffy Pops 9c
Bananas 3 lbs. 17c

Knee-Action Ride
"Turret-Top" Fithtr Bodies

Coine in-See the New Spurious
and Receive Free Ticket!

CORN MtAL
Sock

LUCKY DAY SMCIAL—LUCKY DAY

3 pkgs. Climolana, small sisa19c

Level Floors—Fran? and Rear
Foot room for all

Larga silt SANIFLUSH ..
GOLD MEDAL FLOUR ..

HASTINGS MOTOR COMPANY
201 S. JEFFERSON ST.

D. SHARP, Prop.

OSIN IVINIHGS

rats

dilivuy

WALLACE GROCERY
HASTING*

i INTIS PONTIAC'S NATIONAL ICONOMT CONTIST-llll CAM-1*4 CASH RAIZSS

...19c
$1.09

PHONZ 24JI

�m Hastings Bxxm twmdat, aprilm,
mxzoo, ar ibuuvwring nicely’ from with Mr. and Mr* Claud Jonas al
their nt* home in Banfteld.
her operation a few weeks ago.
| Bunday guest* al Haney CheeeeMr. and Urt R. B. Pieroe were I man-* ware Mr. and Mr*. Bam BuxSunday guests of Mr . and Mn. Wm.
i ton and Mr*. Tina Buxton of BanPierce of Charlotte.
fleld and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gray
At Uw Friday afternoon meeting
Those oh the sick list are Rev. and children.
of th* H**tlng* women'* Club "Mr*.
Paul Jone*, president of the League Kring. Mr. and Mrs Arthur John- ; Mr. and Mra Mauries Ostrolh of
Hasting* and Mrs Ada Balch and
of Woman Voters of Michigan, gave eock and Mrs. Raplogle
Margaret Kellogg and Dorothy daughter called Bunday afternoon
a very fine talk on, "Our Respon­
Meade ot Kalamazoo were visiting at Ray Ostrolh'a.
sibility aa Voters."
I----------------- -----------------------In her opening remarks. Mrs. friends around town Sunday
Mr. and Mrs Otto Lockstedt and
MHO­
Jones emphasiMd the need of well
informed cittern* u a basis for Mr. and Mrs. McCowan have re­ Last week'* Letter.
the । Mr. and Mrs George Galletlay of
more intelligent voting. Women lumed home after spending
winter
In
Florida.
I Battle Creek called Friday after­
should value their position and in-j
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens enter­ . noon on Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Flower.
fluence tn the political and economlc world sufficiently to seek out tained Mr. and Mra. O. K. Fischer ; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. 8path spent
i Friday with their steter, Sophia
the sources of viriou* laws and of Batesville. Ind., Sunday.
forma of taxation that are Imposed . Richard Fennels and sons of Kal­ «lh. at the Brandstetter home.
y were returning from their win­
upon them. We come in contact amazoo spent Bunday with Mr. and
Mr* fed. Fennels.
ter home in Florida to spend the
with tliese phases of la* In every­
Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson spent one summer hero.
day life, such as the tariff on sugar.
day
last
week
In
Kalamazoo.
The funeral of Frank Barber was
If people were interested in the
Donna Marie Pennels and Chas. held at Milo church last Saturday
"Why?” ot this particular tariff,
they would inquire of their gro­ Monica attended the spelling con­ with lhe service tn charge ot the
cer. who would refer them to the test at Shults Friday and won sec­ Rev. Bates. Mr. Barber passed away
ond place Now they have the hon­ at lhe home of Chas. Hammond.
government.
Investigating they find that child or of going to Hastings Saturday to East Barry, last Thursday al the
labor Is deeply involved Ln the pro­ compete with the Barry county age of seventy-flve years He wa*
I bom and grew to manhood and lived
duction of sugar—that many chil­ winners. Good luck, children.
Mr. and Mrs. Davenport and । many year* near Cressey. He leaves
dren are thus deprived of a normal
child's life and education; that they daughter Helen and Mrs Eva Dav­ one foster »on. two grandchildren, a
enport
were
Bunday
guests
of
Mr.
' brother and many cousin* and
eventually become physically unfit,
and .Find up as public charges on and Mrs. James Swanson of Has­ ' friends. The burial was In Cressey
welfare, and so we thru taxation I tings. also Mr. and Mr*. Johnson cemetery.
Mr. and Mr*. Flower and Bernice
furnish their living, and become of Johnsville were guests there.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett McCallum ate Easter dinner with Mr. and Mrs.
vitally Interested in this question
spent Bunday with Mrs. Replogle, Wayne Flower and family shortly
of sugar and £hlid labor.
who is IU.
after
returning home that evening
Perhaps the appeal of the handl- ‘
Mr. and Mrs Mark Garrison, Mr. Mr Flower suffered a stroke and is
capped child comes to the attention
of women more than any other na- i and Mrs. W. D. Brooks and Mr. and seriously ill at this writing. Their
Mrs. Harry Pennels attended the daughter. Mrs. Prance* Kennedy, is
tional or local problem. If women
are sufficiently thoughtful about I mall carriers' banquet at Middleville with them helping care for him.
Baturday evening.
these children and their environ- ■
Miss Winona Brooks ot Kalama­
ment. they will be Interested in the i
zoo is U! at her home here.
state and local institutions where
Mrs. Hammond of Hastings spent
they are cared for. Mrs. Jones said 1
the week end with Mr. and Mrs
that women would be greatly sur­ Mark Garrison.
prised and disappointed in learning I
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Patton of Del­
the methods prevalent in certain of
ton and Mr. and Mrs. Boyson of
these institutions. As good citizens,
Gun lake spent Bunday evening
they could do something about it by
with the Davenports.
their vole The speaker said the ,
Mr. and Mrs. Bert McCallum are
average American woman will buy , spending the week in Kalamazoo.
a dress at a very low price that will
Chas. Kingsbury and son Carl are
be made of fairly good material and on the sick list this week, the for­
have a certain amount of style, and
mer with erysipelas and Carl with a
wonder how it can be done. If she sprained shoulder.
investigates she will learn that it,
DUNHAM VlSTBrCT.
has been produced under sweat

Women’s Club

MORGAN.
Ernest Grow spent Ute week .end .
with Mr. and Mn. Lloyd Roscoe of,
Naghville.
Mr. and Mr* Clair Van Sickle ■
of Lansing visited Mr and
Mr*
Wm. Van Sickle part of last week.
Marguerite Mtn* and Mr. and
Mr*. Clair Van Sickle of Lansing
spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mr*.
Cha* Harrington
Mr and Mr* Ernest Golden and
Mr*. Rose and Junior of Berryville.
Mr. and Mn. Earl Eaton and chil­
dren of the Striker district were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bordy Rowlader Sunday.
Glenard Earl and Bob Klilght
were Battle Creek visitors Baturday.
The children of thte vicinity are
gathering spring flowen, so we feel
spring U here at last.
Mrs. Letha Adkins, who spent the
winter at Jackson with her daugh­
ter. Mr*. Grace Clark, came home
last week and will remain for th*
•ummer.

A fine crowd was in attendance
al the L. A. S. dinner served last
Thursday at the home of Mr. and
Mr*. Clyde Cheeseman. Mr* -Grace
Stanton, assisting hostess. The an­
nual election of officer* wa* held,
resulting as follows: President. Mr*.
Helen Cheeseman; vice-pre*. Mrs
Olive McIntyre;
secretary.
Mrs
Sadie Ostrolh; treasurer. Mrs. Lil­
lie cheeseman.
The Dunham p. T A was held al
lhe schoolhouse Friday evening, a
large crowd being present. The us­
ual business session was held and
the following officers elected; Presi­
dent. Ernest Gray; secretary. Claud
Hoffman; treasurer. Clyde Kesler.
The program was tn charge of Miss
Doris Healy. Mr. Becker of Hastings
High school had been invited to
bring his speech class, their part
of lhe program being very interest­
ing. Sandwiches, coffee, cake and
fruit salad were served.
Mrs. Dorothy Hoffman and fath­
er. Frank Hyde, spent Wednesday

SPLENDID

BULK

BUTTER

FLOUR
AC*

LARD
2-25c

32c
Rajah Salad Dretting

25c*

Iona Salad Dretting

23c

Spflrkle

19c

A Sherbet Glaaa with

Peanut Butter

12c

83c

Boiling Beef

Red or Kidney Bean*

85c

SWISS STIAK

Cheese

19c

PORK SAUSAGE

17c

BACON

Cream er Brick

Soda*

ii'J: 29c

85c

85c

Fig Bart or Ginger Snap*

25c

Sanha Coffee

j

39c
Baker'* Premium Chocolate 8 ujt 85c

used car from u*. We are an

:

La France

15c

Calumet Baking Powder

19c

antee. Easy UCC terms. Come in today.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO.
Hastings, Mich.

Phone 2121

j
j

Sunbrite Cleanser

4

Campbell’s Soup

Except
Chicken

27*
13c

c.M.uV.-,

BOLOGNA

29c

Beef Roast
Choice Chuck Cuts

* 16c

3

6 lb..

2Je

3

25c

2

BANANAS

23c
17c

RHUBARB

23c

ASPARAGUS

n&gt;.

lb.
loaf
S-lb.

5c
29c

CARROTS
FRESH PEAS

E,,r-

NEW POTATOES

6c

19c
10c

Califorate
Fiacy
Winetap

APPLES
ONIONS

25*

1

15c

SNo.coo*IM ,27c

Iona Pcache*
Iona Flour

2414-lb.
bag arc

Sunnyfield Flour

*u‘,‘75c

Lily White Flour

*U‘.'‘«9c
,V.‘.'‘9Sc

Pilltbury Flour
Yellow
Label

Y»

H-lh.

Black Pepper

Pumpkin

Paper Towel*

25c
3^“ 25c

P&amp;G or Kirk'* Flake Soap

Palmolive or Camay Soap
Karo Syrup

Maiola

Henkel'* Family Flour

Bulk Macaroni

7? 17*

19*

10

Lea * Perrin* Sauce

29c

4 “u" 19c

10c
* 23c
‘^$1.05

3

25c
IU.

85c

15c

smUw

£

1 pkg. POST BRAN FLAKES and
|W
1 pkg. GRAPENUT FLAKES
All for ■

10*

Del Monte Pineapple Cr”fc,J 3

Baby Food

SPECIAL OFFER!
A Mickey Mouie Bowl with the Purchase of

La Choy Sprout*

23c
Henkel t raX^Vi...
t?. JOc
Del Monte Peachet Caf N.. &gt;H 1Je

Chocolate Drop*

2

17c
10 t’.: 37c

3

Henkel'* r—,k-

Apple Butter

31c

La Choy Sauce

BU. L.b.l

Cooking Oil

dot.

California Navels
200-220 Sixt.

La Choy Noodle*

1 »•" -,d

X. 15c
15c

Floridas
126 Size

39c

19c

Hershey'* Baking Choc.

25c
4 lu S5c

La Choy Vegetable*

27*
U«l. |9c

WHILE THEY LAST!
One Cake of Kirk's Hardwatoi* Castile
Soap with each 3 cakes Purchased, All for

Daily Egg Brand

SI.&gt;4

Scratch Feed
Egg Math

KMi.w

T..'K $1.95
$1.89
Chick Starter
$2.1*
Turkey Starter 't^SS.W
Turkey Grower 'Ef $8.3*
16% Dairy Food
Il.ft
Growing Math
Chick Feed

CONSUMERS POWER CO.
TELEPHONE 2305

lb.

BEEF POT ROAST

”"

Bitquick
Jello,?.SZ*r-2

19c
23c

27c

Prune*

Shredded Wheat
8 o'Clock Coffee

11

SMOKED HAM

Prune*

Iona Cocoa

'

lie
Choice Cat*

17c

3 c—25c

Bokar Coffee
BrCfld
Grandmoiber’*

HWTHWS, MiCHMAM

29c

25c

10c

85c

You get most for your money when you buy a

Hwoest, dependable value*. All popular makes
and body types—taken in trade on Ford V-8s.
Rock-bottom prices. 2-Day money-back guar­

4 to Mb. Awwrago

Iona Pork and Bean*

Bulk Green Tea

AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER

CHICKENS

Fancy Milk Fed
for Stewin(

Rajah Sandwich Spread

Raisin*

USED CARS

PLEASANT HILL.
No news last week—the corre­
spondent Joined the ranks of those
afflicted with lhe fiu,
Mr and Mrs Clifton Campbell
and family spent Sunday with their
daughter and husband who have !
moved from near Martin to a
in rm near Hopkins
One day this week a farmer no- j
Herd two or three men coming '
across hte farm evidently looking
for something. Later he met one of .
the men In another field and asked '
him what he wa* looking for. The
fellow said Japanese barberry or |
Chinese, lie didn't know which. '
Thinking he might have some on ;
lhe farm and not know what it was. j
lie asked the fellow what it looked
like He fished around in hl* pocket
and pulled out a leaflet on "Bar­
berry.” Thte rather amused the j
farmer and he laughed al the fellow |
and asked him if he woulfl know it .
if he saw it. Al that the latter aim- ’
ply "blew up." Two more men hear- '
ing the uproar and evidently think- j
Ing their comrade had been ordered
off came charging up with an ugly
light In their eye*. Seeing Uiat he
waan'l going lo be able to find out
anything about the bushes Uncle
Sam wants destroyed thc farmer
raid. "Well. I don't see how you are
going to find any if you don't know
what you are looking for” and went
on about his busineu.
The Garden club met with Mr*.
Bert Palmer Thursday. Each mem­
ber responded with a poem about a
garden and names were drawn to
rxcliange plant* or bulba. The next
meeting will be with Mrs. Herb
Cook.
Mi** Grace Hart of Lansing spent
lhe week end with her mother and
brother Robert­
. When a fellow gets kicked in lhe
rye by a lamb thal's new*! For
particulars ask Paul Palmer.
Mr* Addie Lewt* narrowly e»capert serious injury when some cat­
tle she wm putting into the barn
knocked her down. She escaped,
with only a slight injury to one .
foqt.
Mr. and Mrs. N. C Kraft ot Charlolte and Mr. and Mn. Seymour,
jordan of Middleville were Bunday
gufzl* at the fed. Bedford home.
[

CLOVERDALE.
Mr*. Bertha Day entertained th*
following Indie* In Kalamazoo a
week ago Wednesday at a dinner,
nt the Oriental: Adele Monica. Min­
nie Ppnnei*. Margaret Qwcim. Adda
Pierre and Myrtle MacLeod.
Mr*. Harry Fennels report# her
itetcr. Mr*. Lizzie Penuete ul Kala-

fresh creamery

Cracker*

VALUES IN

shop conditions for a pitifully
small wage. The child or woman
again becomes the unfortunate one
and eventually with greatly im­
paired health Is quite likely to be
returned lo a welfare agency for re­
lief.
It i* up lo women to acquaint
themselves with all these questions
that concern home life, and the
welfare of women and children and
to use the ballot in their behalf.
,
People often criticize their pollHeal leaders and contend that poll- J
tics are corrupt, but If those who
have elected them would show their
personal interest In these vital
matters splendid thing* might be
accomplished, aa every legislator and
member of Congress really wishes
lo do lhe will of his constituents.
.
Mrs. Jones is an easy. Interesting
speaker. she is witty and drives
home her points with pertinent 11lustrations and facts.
Her talk was a challenge to all
thinking women to become well In­
formed citizens; lo seek out the
sources for facts; to use the ballot
Intelligently, to look at botn *iue*
of the picture and not lake any- ,
thing for granted.
Mrs. John C. Ketcham and Mr*.
F L Bauer presided at lhe lace j
covered, flower-centered tea table
during the social hour, that followed
The Hasting* women s Club will |
have Dean DaVenport of Woodland I
a.s lhe guest speaker on Friday.
April 34 Dean Davenport needs no
introduction to Hostings audience*. ।

mm

Wayne came on Monday. Homer. Jr.. I
had th* misfortun* to fall on hla
way home from »chool last Thursday
sprain tn g and cracking the bone m
hl* ankle to he I* confined to hla
ted.
Th* Prairieville T*p convention
that was to be held at Milo church.
April 34. has been canceled.
Mr and Mr*. N. H Barber were
dinner guests of a cousin. Mr*. Edith
Stratton. South
Richland,
last |
Thursday Mr* Barber fpept Bun-1
day in Niles where her sister te *er- •
lously 111.

Urn I. K.U Ml* “C.... TIm." — |u&lt;U« WBIH—r. B-Twtw,

12.1

�Tire HASTINGS-BANNER, TpURSpAT. APRIL S3. ISM'

IUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

os or

The Miracle Becomes a Commonplace
Tins Michigan gentleman takes
He docs’ no marveling over die
fact llml lie can so easily call up
a fl it-nil to a-k about a sledding
pally, or to find out tomorrow's
assignment in arithmetic.
And yet his father knew a day

apart, multi talk lo one another
ii-l as if they were standing face
o face, lie can rememlicr when

W lull i-liiiiiget] the miracle to a
commonplace? W hy did telephiinrs in Michigan, during a
duple generation, increase
fiuni 310.000 to 630.000*.

this change was value. A con­
stantly growing usefulness made
the telephone a good "buy.” Each
year additional thousands of
people found it worth more than
it cost. Every new telephone in­
stalled broadened the range—
and value—of lhe others. 'The ser­
vice grew steadily more prompt,
more dependable. New uses were
found for it. Subscribers learned
that it brought them profitable
convenience, comfort, protection.
And the telephone, meanwhile,
changed from a curiosity to an
indispensable part of the social
and business life of Michigan.
The sincere desire of lhe Mich­
igan Bell Telephone Company is
that each year shall see greater
telephone value rendered
for every dollar of tele­
phone cost.

Mra. Martha Bevier, aged 83. ’
I
FREEPORT.
mother of Mrs. L. M. Curtis, passed son of Art Van Dusen, and a re*!-1
Last Week's Letter.
.
of Freeport when a unali boy,'
BORER SURVIVORS
Miss Dorothy Tabberer of Harbor away at the latter'* home here dent
uu. Tabberer
iMuwc.c. v.
■
on lhe local businrs* men ।
_______
Beach and Miss „
Ruth
of Tuesday evening of last week Mrs called
Detroit spent their Eaater vacation Bevier had made her home, with hud
:
week Tuesday representing the , Okan plowini Will Save the
with their parent# Mr and Mra. F. | Mrs- Curti# for several month# and :
_ Tabberer.
..—’T
| had been critically ill the past few
Rumor ha# it that some of the
Neighboring Fields and
C.
-ulldiMB on our Main street are to '
Sweet Oorn
There was a large attendance at weeks. The body was removed to the ‘Ibuildings
the Easter program at the U. B. home of another daughter. Mra. Ibe tom down soon and that many
A few
,cw com
™‘'‘ sulk# in
&gt;n a
a field
neio sown
»own
church Sunday evening. It was giv­ Arlie Spindler ot Woodland and iother changes are due in Freeport. ,t a
Mrs.
cllttie
Roush.
Mr*.
Emma
w
wilii
,lh
,
araui
«rttln ur
« omer
other crops
CMjpa
funeral
service#
were
iteld
at
the
en by the Sunday school and was
may--lead -------------------------to infestation ot —
nelghborSisson and Ivan Roush were Has-I1-----very good. The M- E. church look coats Grove Church of Christ’at I
Ing
plantings
by
the
com
borer.
up their service and united for this 1:30 Saturday afternoon with burial itings shoppers last Friday.
in Fuller cemetery in Carlton. She
The Primary Department of Ute
program.
by five
daughter*.
UUC
One Ul
of MIC
lhe rHIIKTUI
eighteen numllis old ,■ I* survived
.
„ .......
-----........ Mra.
—- — IM. £. Sunday school had an Easter
twin daughter* of Mr. -and Mrs. j
of Freeport. Mrs. Ar- party in the church basement last
Oersch of Bowne. passed away 1,*‘ Spindler of Woodland. Mrs. Saturday
,
afternoon. Both teacher*
Monday forenoon. Prteumonia, fol- Edith McQueen of Detroit, Mrs. and
;
pupils enjoyed It.
lowing measles, was the cause of Mabie Twombly of San Jo*e. Cal.
Mr. and Mrs.
Victor Bisson,
death. Much sympathy is extended and Mrs. Inez Randall of Athens, ।daughter Roberta, and Gary New­
the bereaved parents and brothers I one son. Ellis Bevier, of Detroit, two ton motored to Saranac Sunday aft­
and sisters
brothers. Stephen Wolfe of Oregon ,ernoon and were guests of Rev. F.
Mrs. Rose Medendorf. Mrs. B.! “nd James Wolfe of Hasting*
Loomis and family. In lhe evening
Stimel. and Mrs. Anna Scott of i Mrs. Mary Dodge went to Middle­ they attended church service* at
Grand Rapids were Sunday after- ville Monday evening for a few Orleans.
1
noon guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. B. days' visit vjlth
n&lt;&lt;&gt;. her MU.
son Harry *&gt;id|
and
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Neeb and
family.
'baby of near Traverse City were
Baxlei.
family.
Mr and Mrs W R .Schifman of1I M
„. B. o. OUon „
1U u-u
,„ir; i
Mr,.
.nd
daughl,;
'n&lt;1 «“•“»&lt; “•
Mr.
j
----j
,
-----------_
.
.
."
.
and
Mrs. L. Neeb
North Irving were SUhday afternoon Edwardine went to Custer last week
guests of Mr. and Mrs
H. M. t0 spend a few days with friends. \. The State Fire Marshal made an
Boughner and In the evening ac- । Mbs Dorothy Olson and Miss Grace .Inspection In Freeport lost Monday.
The young people of the M- E.
companled them to the Easter pro-, areen. who have Wen visiting the
gram at the U. B. church.
. former's parents here, accompanied church were gue.-.ls of Miss Eleanor
Miss Bertha Forsma of. Detroit jhejn back l0 their jenool work at Miller at the C- Benedict home last
Tuesday evening. Following choir
and Warner Forsma of Midland duster
were guests at the home of Mr. and i Mr and
j D Cool returned practice, several interesting games
Mrs. Fred Tabberer over the week home lust Tuesday from Plymouth. were enjoyed under the leadership
cnd.
_
.
where with Mr. and Mrs. Judson of Miss Ruth Wheeler, a dainty
Dr. and Mrs H S. Wedel, daugh- Kingsley and son Clare of Grand- lunch was served by Miss Miller,
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Griffin visited ters. Martha Jean and Patsy, and । vllIe lhey had visited Mr and Mrs assisted by Miss Pauline Moore.
in Lansing Sunday.
Mrs. Vivian Anderson were Sunday L L p,-^ (Elva Fog|esonRl
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller and
Frank Brayton ot Freeport visited dinner guests of the latter's parents., pr. H. S. Wedel left for St Louis. three daughters of' Elkhart. Ind..
W. H- Pardee Saturday evening.
Mr and Mrs Jacob Gless In Bowne Mo Dr. Wedel is in St Louis at- were guests of her parents, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Declalre of
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Wagner, son . tending the clinic given by Kellogg Mrs. w. Pardee and daughter Mar­
South Bo'ton called on Jennie Par­ Carlas, and daughters Audrey and । Foundation. He returns April 25. lon. at the home ot Mr*. Jennie
dee Friday.
Geneva of Grand Rapids were Sun- ।
Anderson has been in charge
All local business places were
Miss Eleanor Miller attended day dinner guests of their parents. |Of hts office during his absence.
' Donna Moore of Jackson enjoyed closed Friday from 12 to 3 In ob­
the teachers Institute in Grand Rev. and Mrs. c L Wilkins.
The M. E. church was well filled . ),er Sprtj)g vacation here last week servance of Good Friday allho no
Rapids Friday.
Sunday morning for lhe present*- wlth her parents. Mr. and Mrs. I. E. services were held here.
H two borers survive, lhe borer
Glendora and Marion Miller of tion of the cantata. "Eternal Life. Moore
moths ore sufficient to produce 100
Carlton spent the week end with given by the Glee Clubs of Freeport । MLu
WaJton
homp
PRAIRIEVILLE.
new corn borers.
their shier. Eleanor Miller, and vis­
High school, rhe story of lhe Cruel- ,■ from Angola. Ind., over the week
Mr. and Mrs. James Nevins. Mr.
ited in Rockford Saturday.
fixion and Resurrection, presented. cnd
and Mrs. Martins .Bagley attended
Mr. and Mrs. John Karcher and in song, was directed by Mrs. Wai- j —— - — • •
-The custom of dEclng lhe field
Dr. H. S. Wedel, with Mrs. Vivian the funeral of Mrs. Bagley's aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Kdempel have ters. Solo, duet and quartette parts
I Anderson, recently put in a busy Mrs. Fred Snyder of Plainwell Sat­ before sowing may lead to a fifty­
moved back to Hastings.
fold increase in -lhe borer, plowing
were sung by Ruth Wheeler. Mere- . four days, keeping up with lhe urday.
Orville Allerding ana family have dllh Lewis. Iris Wieland. Katherine ■
Mrs. Florence Hughes. Mrs. Milo lhe field before sowing decreases
stork.
On
Saturday.
April
4.
a
moved in the tenant house of Mose Skeoch. Lola
Wieland. Pauline daughter was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Lehman. Mrs. Ethel Stebbeius and dangers from the borer but U ren­
Stahl.
Moore, and Dorothy Dukes. Miss Franklin Patton; on April 5. a son. Mrs Lucy Norris were in Hickory dered less effective where refuse or
Helen Miller was pianist. The way to Mr. and Mrs. Clare Bassett; on Comers Tuesday evening to the O a few com stalks remain on the
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
the cantala was presented showed April 6 a son to Mr and Mrs. Clin­ E. S. chapter of which Mrs. Hughes surface.
Mr. and Mrs. s W. Perrin and much |iard patient work on the port ton Allen; on April 7. a son to Mr. is Worthy Matron.
Studies nt Michigan Stale College,
children ot Detroit and Mr and ,of director and pupils and was an
Mrs. Redlick Of Chicago visited East Lansing, by c. B Dibble, ex­
and Mrs. Merrill Karcher (Beatrice
Mrs. I. N. Williams of Dowling example
,
of lhe kind of work being Thomas! and the same day a son her sister. Mrs. Ethel Stebbens. re­ tension specialist in insect control,
were Sunday guests of Chas Forlee done in our schools.
reveal lhe importance of clean fields
was bom to Mr. and Mrs. George cently.
and family, in honor of Mr. Wil­
Victor Sisson, accompanied by C. Buslance.
Mr. and Mrs. Murctus Bagley were in exterminating the corn borer.
liams birthday.
Borers buried 18 inches beneath lhe
B. Baxter, was in Hastings on busi­
Mr. and Mrs. Orno Knowles and guests of their parents. Mr. and
ground hove made their way to the
Miss Cornelia Wise of Battle ness last Thursday.
children of Angola. Ind., spent the Mrs. Rlcnard Petlljohn. of plainwell
surface and found protection In
Creek spent the week end with her
Mrs. Jacob Geiger is not so well week end with hl# parents, Mr. and Sunday.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Wise.
at this writing.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. George stray corn stalks and refuse.
Mrs. Jesse Knowles.
Mr. Clifton Leskrone of North
-pieces of refuse harbor and pro­
Donald Miller, who has been in
Frank D. Brayton drove lo Stan­ Adrlanson and Lucile Sunday were
tect the cotn borer larvae," Mr. DlbManchester College. Ind., spent the Detroit, for some time, is spending
ton Saturday where he attended the Mrs. Mary Mead. John Fenine of
week end with his sister. Mrs. Paul a few days here at the home of his
blc says. "These borers later de­
funeral of Chas. E. Utley, on old Dowagiac and Horry Blake of Battle
Townsend. Mr. and Mrs Fred Mills aunt. Mrs C. Bunn
velop into moths to fly around and
Creek.
friend and father-in-law of Mr.
•of Battle Creek were also Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stuart and Brayton's daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. D- N. Honeywell lay eggs in new cornfields If two
guests there.
borers survive to become moths,
baby and Leap Karcher were Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Will Draper of So. called on their daughter. Mis* Opal
they are sufficient to populate a
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Smith and .Rapids visitors MondayLowell were Sunday guests of Mrs. Honeywell, at Nichols hospital. Miss
John Smith of Battle Creek, and
Miss Agatha Kunde is recovering Luella Draper. Mrs. Draper, who has Opal has been seriously ill and is cornfield with 100 borers."
Rev. and Mrs
Harley Townsend from an appendicitis operation
in thc experiments, cages were
still confined to her bed.
been in poor health, is belter.
called on Mrs. Glenn Wotrjng Sun­ which she recently underwent at a
Mrs. Frank Hughes, nnd son placed on cleanly plowed ground
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Brayton of
day afternoon.
and on fields disced and planted to
Detroit hospital.
Detroit spent Thursday and Friday Charles. Mrs. Belle Mullen and
Mr. and
Mrs.---------------------------Carl Nelthamer „
Of; Mrs. Geo. Thompson has been here with his father. Frank D. daughter Jane were in Middleville small grain No moths were found
—
-------------Wnrtd la nd called
ratlari on
An Mbs
Vfluc Mary
Marv Nash
Mn.h quite ill the past week but is much
Woodland
Sunday afternoon attending the in Uie first cose. In lhe second, sur­
Brayton.
face cornstalks furnished shelter
Sunday afternoon.
better at present.
Mrs. Roy Naglcr had as her week funeral of the former's cousin. Mrs.
and protection lo lhe borers while
end guest, her father. Mr. Moulton, Anna McIntyre mee Anna Jackson!
of Detroit. Services were held in lhe growing grain provided shade.
of Muskegon.
Where clean fields were used, bortrs
We are glad to report that Mrs. lhe Beeler funeral home.
Mr. and Mrs Grande DcPrlcster made their way lo the surface but
Morna Wolfe is steadily recovering
perished from exposure lo sun. wind,
from her long serious illness and and Mrs. Mary Polley were in Plain­
and rain, or were picked up by
well
Saturday.
The
former
two
spent
we understand, was able to sit up
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur birds, shrews, skunks, field mice an A
last Sunday for the first Hine.
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Hynes of Baker and Patricia of Kalamazoo. other natural enemies.
Mrs. Ola Schoolcraft of Plain_
Millington came Thursday to thc
farm home of his parents, Mr. and well was in town Monday ofternoan. | WEST ORANGEVILLE
Mesdames Stella Barber. Lucy
AND EAST GUN MARSH.
Mrs. F. G. Hynes to spend their
Norris.
Amy
Silcock.
Edna
Castle.
Mr
nnd Mrs. Cecil Hanson and
Easter
vacation.
Attention to smoll details, which
Miss Hermiene Bigbee. who teach­ Ethel Stebbens. Maggie Letunan. Miss J children of Clarksville have been
.
w«.«
...u
00,11
Johnson
and
Mia*
Clara
Scotti
making
an extended visit at Uie
es at Centerville, was a week end
mean so much to the life of your
gue#t of Mr. and Mr*. L. B. Lester,
attended lhe District Rebekah As- former's parents'. Mr. and Mrs. Ben
car, is part of our service. Things
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hamilton of socialion in Kalamazoo. Wednesday Hanson.
Vassar culled on friends here Fri- ' Wrv Maurice Hughes. Mrs. Bess
Al Canaan and wife of Marshall
which you often overlook are
day afternoon. Mr. Hamilton, for- I Hughes. Mrs. Belle Mullen. Mrs were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.
merly superintendent here, also vis-1 Julia Doster and Miss Frances Dos- S. A. McCafferty. They also called
checked by our attendants when
vtelted the
lhe woolen
woolen mills
mills at
al Eaton
Eaton
ited school.
‘ter
er visited
on the latter's son and family. Mr.
Mr and Mrs. Frank Hynes moved Rapids Friday.
you drive into our station. Our
and Mrs. Jerome Corryell.
!=t
last Wednesday
’A’cdr.c;d=i- U
lo their farm home | Mrs- Maurice Hughes. Mrs MagMr.
and Mrs Wayne
Culver , of
service is complete. Drive in to­
xxriimuii. Mrs.
an,'. Ethel
r.iii’ i SUfbbens
nicuix'ii.
...................
—,
near Woodland. Mr. and Mrs. Hynes , ific Lehman.
and Franws
France* Dost.
Doster
have been residents of Freeport and
— visited the O Qcldln« have returned “tier a few
day for complete check-up.
E ®
6. chapter
al Freeport Friday d«Y» vU“ *'lh, ‘hclr
nearly 30 years and have many IE
h.-.— -•&gt;
and ---M«- —
Ben
and Mr. and
friends here who regret to have night.
night.
&lt;J ---- - Hanson
.- them
best wishes
of ...1
all
Mr. and ....
Mrs . Cassius
Hughes at- ,.
W
„
U..UI leave. The WVQ,
"I1IIL.5 U,
....... , ..................
go With them lo their new home tended the party given to lhe young
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lowery and
Mr. Hynes will continue his work at i married people at lhe home of Mr. | children. Merl and Avis, of Pralric' the Creamery, driving back * and nnd Mrs. James Nevins. Saturday , ville were Sunday guests of lhe latI forth each day.
। night.
j tor's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ben
! The many friends of Ed Slater1 Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Manley Hanson.
I will be sorry to hear that he was Billings Sunday were Mr. and Mrs ' The body of Alvin Hathaway, who
Dlinnn OOift Cor. Jefferson and Court
i quite
......
.
. when
.
.
. .by l&gt;...k..-i
tJlIH.... of Sherwood. ...
W.n«- nf
badly injured
struck
Herbert Billings
Mr passed n
away
at KI.
his nephew s I»
In /-l,l
Chi-_
Sts., Hasting*, Michigan

1 stalks harbor

Little Things

ANDRUS SERVICE f
Phone 2240

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
flert tn mnit placfi on both tlalion-la-ilation

Batteries, Windshield Wiper*

REGULAR
GASPRICE

Sunoco Gaa and OB*.
Vulcan faring.

_
BLUE
PIIIIMMH
SIJNDCU

If Windstorm Destroys
Can You Rebuild

Greasing

Washing

MOTOR
FUEL

a car while walking along the road and Mrs Robert Burchett and Mr
in the snow storm a week ago Sat- ; and Mra. Maurice Burchett of Dosurday night. Mr. Slater has been I t«r.
employed al the Grans' farm. Just: Russell Garrett of Augusta called
south of Buck church for some time &gt; on his aunt. Mr#. M. A. Mills Saland it was near there that he was urday.
Thirty guests and members of the
injured. He received a bad cut on
thc face, requiring several stitches Adult Bible class of lhe Prairieville
to close, and was also injured about Sunday School .gathered at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Manley Bill­
the back and leg.
ings to celebrate thc latter's birthday. Mis. Billing.1; is the teacher. A
birthday dinner was served and a
short program rendered including
a duet by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Lathrop and a short talk by Rev.
Thompson of Woodland. This was
; enjoyed by all after which Mrs.,
1 Billings received a shower of gifts.|
Among them she received a hand
carved towel rack In Uie oak leaf1
and acorn pattern made by Rob­
ert Conway. Everyone admired it.

Without Help?
The Windstorm Insurance Money paid by this company to
policyholders after a cyclone had wrecked their buildings,
has enabled many to rebuild at once at no cost to themselves.
Many could not otherwise have done so.
This Company Has Paid a Yearly Average of Almost $209,000
in Windstorm I-osses to its Policyholders Since 1917. $261,000
Paid in 1935. What Will It Be in 1936? Will You Be One To
Whom We Will Pay?

Experienced Butinest Management
Prompt end Equitable Adjustments

Fair Dealing with Policyholder*
Reasonable Coat for Protection

Ernr ,..r lor mr &lt;0 IUr, Ml.Hr.n h„ k«d Dmrurtir. Wl.duor..

Michigan Mutual Windstorm
Insurance Company
The biggest of its kind in Michigan. Home Office: Hastings, Mich.

THE CROSSROADS.
Miss Maxine Sledge of Grand
Rapids spent n few days last week ;
with her parents, before leaving for ।
Scranton. Pennsylvania, for a few j
months.
Miss Gladys VandeVelde of tHe '
Center road spent Saturday night '
and Sunday with Mis# Mary Green.
John Cook and family attended '
a birthday dinner Sunday at the I
home of Mr. and Mra. McBain of |
Delton. Mrs. Cook being the honor
Little Miss Dorotha Smith of
Hastings spent the week end with
her grandparents, Mr. and Mr#. Orley Smith.
Mr. and Mn Clyde Sledge and
Lynn spenf Saturday and Sunday .
In Big Rapid* tire guest# of Mr. •
and Mrs. Jack Alien and Nancy
and Miss Jean Sledge.
Homer Batea la spending a few
days in Hastings.
Mr. and Mra. Newman Tuttle and
son of East Lansing spent Sunday
afternoon with Mra. Jane Tuttle.
Kenneth HurleJs and family spent
Sunday with his parent# In Haatlngs.

cago. was brought to Orangeville
Saturday for burial in Oak
Hill
cemetery. Mr. Hathaway was a res­
ident of Orangeville and had been
in Chicago only about three weeks.
Mrs. Chas. Bourdo, Mrs. Irving
McCollough and Mrs. Irv. Newman
were called lo Toledo last week la
the bedside of their mother, who Is
seriously 111.

GEO. E. WALKER
&amp; SONS
PICKLE CONTRACTS
AND SEED
May be obtained at the
following places:—

WALLACE SEED STORE,
Hasting*.
CITY NATL. BANK
Nashville.
SMITH A DOSTER
HARDWARE.
Delton.
MIDDLEVILLE CO-OP­
ERATIVE CO,
Middleville.

Our financial responsibility
Bank, Hasting*, or at the
bank* in Nashville, Delton
or Middleville.
There Is more money and

growing of them for
other company.

�TWi BAirmaB banks*. tbumday, ap*il n, raw
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
A son wa* born on April 18 to Mr.
Wednesday morning the secondhand Mr». charle* James. 427 N.
lot of children, about thirty In Broadway
number,
given X-ray* at
1^.
..
numotr. ware elven
X-rays were
tl tho
10 the!
.
.i,n —
lw,rn
hospital. They were lhe pupils who I ._9SrAS?i
were given the recent TH skin test °
.J
wattuLum'
by the W. X. KaUogg Foundation.
y
*”
Washington

; Mias Beatrice Blossom, superin- ' curtains Ml ths near future.
: Undent ot the hospital, gave • vary I Guild No. 3, Mrs. P. T- Colgrove
InUreittng discussion of the ;**l and Mrs W. R. cook, chairmen,
d (16 due*; donated meat grind- mat
years activities part of which we Has S3 members; paid *23 dues;
2 dozen dtah towel*, tea kettle, 0896 L
give herewith, because many will have canned fruit shower for lhe
taste basket*. egg beater and fire hand and
want to know Just what ha* been hospital; sold 55 ticket* for hospital
done, the number of patient*, exhand'»T0 M This Guild supplies lhe । OulW £ ~ Mr&gt;
Guild No. 4. Busineu Women's
"The hospital has met all ex­ Guild. Mis* Jennie McBain, chair-1 hoaptul with books from Um M- chairman h**' 44
penses for lhe cost of It* opera­
tion. the total of which wa-. *30.- orary member*: paid $32 due*; sent
Guild No. H. Mrs. John I*. Brass,
gifts to six children at hospital; chairman. Has 3* members; paid
monthly basts the figure amount* to sent subscriptions to three maga­
*1.70040. • • • one of the greatest zines to the hospital a* Christmas naled 14 cans tomato Juice; cash on
item* of expense in the hospital gift; entertained 33 children at hand. 110.10.
anco given by the G
budget Is that of maintenance and Christmas party; sold ticket* for
Guild No. 18. Mrs. H. B. Bishop, and realise that wwt
repairs. In the pas* year It wa* benefit, amounting lo *34.25; have chairman Has 43 members; paid help, the hospital wot
necessary lo have extensive repairs *8-13 In the Birthday fund.
*40 dues; made 36 brea*t
breast binder*,
hinA«M. j closed because at lad
on lhe water-softening plant.-These
g—• —
Guild No. 5. Mrs. Roy Hubbard, repaired 20 curtain* and
20 •tieback*; supplies, repairs, etc.
repair* alone cost more than (225. chairman. Ha* 20 member*! paid I donated 32 qts. fruit;
i; 9w glauea jelly; lastlc loyally of the
The basement wa* painted through­ (20 dues; donated one dozen towels, ! cash on hand *42.53.
*
and members 1* Indee
out and this also Increased the cost one dozen wash cloths, 108 Jar*.of I Guild No. 10, Surgery Guild. Mrs. mendable.
of repairs.
fruit, vegetable*, jam. etc.; sold
"Thinking you might be interest­ (13.75 worth of ticket* for benefit;
ed in the amount of service render­ cath on hand (2-23.
ed by lhe hospital tn 1935. I should
Guild No. 6. Charity Guild. Mr*.
A. D. McDonald, chairman. Has 33

FOR SALE
GOOD WORK HORSE
WEIGHT 1500 LBS.

• JUST RECEIVED a Carload of FARMALL TRAC­
TORS.

Turn Your Spare Time Into CA8HI

If you are thinking of buying or trading

tractors, call and lot us show you tho NEW STYLE

FARMALL. We also have some good buys in used
tractors. Let us do your overhauling and repairing.

A. C. GATES FARM IMPLEMENTS
HASTINGS. MICH.

PHONE 2309

were borrf atThc hosolui^TC^ma* rund' 158 M; 850 w Mrs E A Bur'
lon- *n annual gift for charity; bak
Jor operations performed and 160
on ^an(j .39 66
; minor operation*; 224 X-ray pa-“.
tlents treated, but this figure doesGuild No.
7. Mrs. Frank Edmonds,
'not include those X-rays taken for chaU-man. Has 15 members; paid
I the w. K. Kellogg Foundation nor 8150° dues; paid for 24 bath toweto;
the work done by Dr. Storehouse. inlde18 binders. 12 laundry bags
lhe department head.
,110(1 12 clinic sheets; gave 6 cans
"Please bear in mind that thef™11; 4 d^hes jelly, etc. Cash on
hospital Ls trying to give 24 hours hand (27.93.
of
service each
*Lld N^8. &lt;?’co?.^or.
ui octtict
ncn day
cay in **11
nil depart- ,. _o
—.,l----menu, including X-ray. laboratory f»«,rTn,an-Th‘» G“»d furnishes the.
_ ...._____
___ habv
rlnlhr*
baby
clothe*.Max
HasOK26mrrr.hrrc
members;nalrt
paid
and ....
operating
room in ....
1035 ■■
there
*26
due*;
donated
during
year. 204 !
were seventeen cases cared
for
through the charily fund, amount- diapers. 2 dosen shirts, 2 dozen pairs ,
stocking*. 2 dozen pads, electric
■ Among the various contributions clock for delivery room; also gave
made by the Guild* there are sev­ 5 qt*. tomato juice, 5 qts. pickle*. 5
eral items which have been fpund glasses Jelly and 26 ql*. fruit. Cash
especially convenient lo have—new on hand *93.52
glass for X-ray viewing box. elec­
tric refrigerators for second and
third floors, two pairs of episiotomy
NO JURY NEEDED FOR
scissor* and one
pair
fraction
APRIL TERM OF COURT handles for delivery room table, al­
so lhe donation of about 300 cans
of
fruit,
jams
and
Jeltic*.
etc."
Mlns
Thursday evening. April 23. Wei-, Only One Jury .Trial Listed
Blossom also mentioned other gifts
come Y group, assisted by lhe La- !
—
- —
for Them, and That
that were appreciated, facilitating
; dies' Aid society. Is putting on a
the work of the nurses and adding
Wag Settled
, banquet, honoring mothers and sons i
lo the comfort of the patient*.
SuVs^Mr^S^g^^The damage suit brought by Mrs. ,«£ “^r^a’rd
Certainly Miss Blossom. her assis----- — 1 thc Women's T
‘
SnS; JJteH bj”£? cSklin ; ma^l’reree^of’lhF uinh'rounty j ^t““
I

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

MONUMENTS and MARKERS
No better investment could be mode than the purchase
of a Monument or Marker.
An Everlosting Memory can only be preserved on stone.
You may have a Father, Mother. Sister or Brother whose
grave you have neglected to mark with a suitable Me­
morial. Do not delay any longer. Call now ond make
a selection. Wc have a beautiful display of various col­
ored Granites to choose from, at very reasonable prices.
All material and workmanship guaranteed.
Do not place on order until you have looked our work
over. By dealing at home you see what you are buying,
which means everlasting satisfaction. No disappoint­
ment afterwards.
DECORATION DAY, MAY 30TH

HASTINGS MONUMENT WORKS
HASTINGS, MICH.

PHONE 2497

Appointments solicited. No obligation to buy.

l^JEEDEO by Every
GROWING

CHILD

and moving pictures of
r.rtS
by

lhe World road cnmmiwon. was settled out of
M00rC Ot C0Un 8^lUrUy -'tenioon. This suit

’ ment

Write "V" Core Banner

ATTENTION

LADIES’

buUng andT&lt;S
ca^ng Cn Ute 1£?

E.iton Rapids.
grew out of an accident which hap- pna] WOrk.
George
Westerman.associate ' pened last year on the HastingsI
Mrj Guy c Kej)Pr cleverlv prej State y M. C. A Sec. was In Barry Yankee Sprlngs-Pralrievlllc road, rented Mrs. Bauer with a lovely
: county last week Wednesday and ' about seven miles .southwest
of this
from MIC
uie uuuua
Guilds 111
In uppirviauuu
appreciation
-------- i : (III 11UII.
I Friday, on local plans.
• city.
city. In
In which
which thc
thc cars
cars of
of thc
the two
two; ,oot
f her
llc.r faithful
faittiful service
service during
during her
her ' ‘
ThLs week many of the Y. M. C. A. ??r,k's&gt; t0 ,the, 1,14,1 *erc concer,”‘&lt;l 1term
as
1
“chairman.
chairman.Mr*.
Mn Bauer
B.unmakm.k- ■I
•ccrelarie* of Michigan will meet in I Mr*' D’ri1 h"rl *ucd t&lt;4r daxinges to 1 lng a gracious response.
Detroit for the annual convention. । c^r alleged injuries to herself mid , Mrs c A Kcrr WM ln cjiarfe Of
' A visit to Dearborn Village Is In- •,*5“ (1Aloai5c l*&gt; ner automobile. । t)ic prograrn whlch was opened with i
! eluded. Sorry not to attend.
Originally the county road commls- ; singing led by Mra. Robert Burch.
Lest Saturday was &lt; lcan-up day *,on Wl‘s. m.Bde “ P*rty t0 Ule de’ with Mrs. W Mayinn Jones at the
do ”
not
c_. * &gt;at plano and Wm J°npa- Jr • Pl«Yl»8 1
1 at Cnmp Barry. Bill Jones. Lester I1 fense. We ?.°t
*1 know °a
basts Uie
the &amp;cll,cmcn
settlement‘ was made.
1 Lnrabee. Meredith Caukin. Adelbert.' basU
1I ,thc
h» cornet, sound movies of Green- 1,
settlement
I Heath. Cranston Wilcox. Vem De- ' The rc/Tl'T,
‘L of this case re-. . “
held
c,a Village were presented
prewmeu u»
by ।
I; Mott,
Mott. Robert Phillips and Horace n&gt;°'cd ‘*&gt;e on y Jury trial scheduled
lETtas I Charles Faul. Mrs. Richard Grooa
Gross1
Angell cleaned up ground as well for
Anr
’r’n’- Th
rarv h
*d '----■“-----------— history
------------of* the '
10r th* A
Prl"* u
t*m
~hc' Jury
had
nr*t—
reading
a *short
11 as
pancakes,
smelt,
etc.
Fred
Bro;;
,
been
»ummoned
to
appear
in
court
village.
This
was
followed
by
a
as nanrakes. smelt etc Fred Tirol’
of Middleville was a guest at supper 1 °n ¥ond??' As rap d y »* *t could solo by Mrs. Burch. "Bird Songs at
Last Wednesday. Rev. Griffin did I J* d04’c ,lhc JuO'men *cre notified Eventide." Mr*. Jone* and her son |
I some expert painUng al camp.
|lha* ‘hclr services would not be I accompanying. Tap dances were .
! The track meet of rural schools nC€“h- **—1— -*•*' L
- .. . .T ?
' Wm- Kennedy at thc piano; Wm. ]l
. al. the fair grounds. May 9. will be I
j mrsis
Jones rendered a cornel solo, and
an innovation In the plan of par- YOUNG
MAN i3
IS
ent* helping on the score, counting
t
for thc schools they represent.
'PUT ON PROBATION
oictures. the dances and lhe musi­
Pleads Guilty to Driving cal selections.
IRVING.
Rev. and Mrs. E K LcwLa of Ovid
Following arc resumes of the reAway Car—Also Pays
were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. 1
nort* given by lhe Guilds:
Fine of 125.00
John Perry Friday.
Guild No. I. Mrs. Mary 8 Evarts,
Mrs. James Nagel visited relatives
_________
Carl Fox. whose home Is in Ovid chairman. Has 22 members; paid
tn Grand Rapids several days last and whose age is 21. was brought *22 dues; made 10 pairs curtains,
week.
[ before Judge McPeek on Monday gave 30 glasses Jam and Jelly; 3
Mrs. E. E Warner has sold her' charged with driving away a car qts. fruit; 10 qts. fresh berries;
home In Vandalia and will locate belonging lo the Plainwell Onion bushel plums and 4 bu. potatoes.
nearer thc home folk* which is good Supply company. Thc car was uk- Cash on hand *10 lo be used for
news to her relatives and friends. |en by Fox In this city. He wgS
Bion Benham of Kalamazoo was a । brought before the Judge a week
recent visitor al Ben Bowman's.
j before and admitted driving away
Mr. and Mra. Wm. McCann and with the car. The young man seemed
their Sunday guests. Mr. and Mrs.1 to realize lhe position in which his
■ Dell Wilcox of Rutland were after- net had placed him. and .seemed
noon caller* at thc home of Mr | sincerely repentant and promised
and Mrs? Forrest Buehler near ' that if given leniency he would rePreeport
j train from criminal act* in lhe fuSunday visitors at the home of ture. Under the circumstances the
Mr. and Mrs. Faster Waddell were Judge gave a fine of (25 and re­
Mr. and Mrs. W. English. Mr. and . leased him on two years' probation.
Mrs. C. English of Grand Rapids
------Wc have anticipated thc wants of our customers by
Fitch and i .
HENDERSHOTT.
and Mr and Mrs. L.
’
I daughter of Dutton.
.। y,---------------------Mr and Mrs.---------Cha*.----------------------Van Vranken
placing in stock thc largest line wc have ever carried
. Mr and Mis Lewis Wilcox and with Mr. and_Mr*. Wilber Schantz
children were Sunday guesLs of her1 were •••- Friday
-■
in Alto
night to see a
Freshman-Sophomore play, pul on
parents al Bellevue.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm- Scher,kcl en­ by Mrs Basil Hayward's pupils in
tertained Mr. and Mrs B. F. Gil­ those grades
lette and suns of Middleville Sun­ - - Grace Brill and another Mudent
nurse from Bronson hospital were
day. __________
__________
home over Saturday night.
The Aid at Mra. Floyd Garrison's
DEVELOP THE NEW
was well attended. We were all
LESPEDEZA CROP glad tn have Mrs. Showerman with
tu that day.
'
[Experiments at the Kellogg Mr*. Harvey Parmalee of Battle 1
Creek was the guest al her mother.
Farm Bid Fair to Be
Mra. Floyd Garrison, last week.
Successful
Plans are being made to serve a
Some Interesting experiments have supper at the schoolhouse on the
first day of May The chairmen
perlmcnlal plats on the W. K. Kcl- of the various chibs of the Aid make
wm farm south of Hickory Corners. up the committee. There is sUll
Lespedeza is a legume of the clov­ a quantity of Jello left which thc
er family. Thu Is a Korean plant, ladles arc anxious to sell. Take
brought to this country
several some and sell to your friend*.
The Aid was given a memory
years ago. It has been tested In the
touthem states where lespedeza has quill top by lhe family of thc late
For One Day Only we will tell
shown up very favorably as a le­ Marion Smith of Battle Creek lo be
a Full 5-H. HwuWi
gume crop. But it develops almost disposed of as the ladle* saw fit.
It
wa*
made
by
the
Hendershott
Aid
solely during the warm months. Il
was felt that it could not be adapted thirty years ago but is in perfect
lo Michigan's climate on account of condition.
We arc proud nf the fact that
our shorter warm sc*.son. At the
FOR ONLY
Kellogg farm experiments
have our school took first place Ln the
been carried on for the last three district spelling contest held at
Dowling.
Bcrnadlnc Schantz was
years, and a new lespedeza develop­
lhe
pupil
winning
first
place
with
­
ed which yields fair to good seed
crop*. It seems probable that an­ out missing any words. She will
other forage crop for fanners will go to the county meet Saturday.
reaull from these experiments.
Submarines ware known 300 years
ago. in 1830. King James I rode in
OBITUARY.
Ida M«y. daughter of Geo. D. and one under lhe surface of thc i
This ladder is made tu sell
Caroline A. Babcock, was bom in Thame*. It wa* built by Van Drebel. I
regularly for $1.50, but for
Baltimore March 8. 1870. and de­ Dutch Inventor.
parted this Ufc April 11. 1938. aged
this one day you can buy it of
66 years, one month, three days.
She married William Morgan June
us at this Bargain Price.
2. 1887. To this union were born six
children. Edward of Baltimore. Geo.
ID. at home, William of Marengo.
(Continued from page 1. Beo. 1»
Gurney of Augusta. Mrs. Roy Ter­
pen Ing of Lacey and Marlon of Guild* and the donations of fruil. j
Battle Greek. Besides her husband vegetable*, etc., by friends through- |
and six children she is survived by out the city and county, all of .
one brother. Edward Babcock, and Which U deeply appreciated by the1
a slater. Mrs. Jake HofTman. both ot management.
Baltimore, twenty-one graudchitIl wu* decided to hold an evculug (
dren and two great-grandchildren. nieelUig again next year.
_-4.

Cl**"”*®

Spring lime means moths are going to give you
trouble. We have all the necessary preparations^
for preventing them ... Cenpl, Moth Liquid and
Moth Crystals.
Moth Crystals are a new preparation, which has
been tried out and found to absolutely keep
moths out of clothes which you have to pack away.
It is a while powder—sprinkle it in the clothing
and your garments are ready for storage. When
you want the clothing again just get it out, shake*
out lhe powder and it is 0. K. This sells at 25c
a pound. Ask us about it.

rt

BIG STOCK of FURNITURE and HOUSE
FURNISHINGS at THE RIGHT PRICE!

RUGS

at one time, and by the way it is moving off our Soon
we have been fully justified by buying heavy.

The new patterns in rugs are the handsomest we
have ever carried, and the price is reasonable.

AXMINSTER RUGS $9050
IN THE 9x12 SIZE FOR AS LITTLE AS

9 x 12 WILTONS for as Low as *49-50

Special

for Next Saturday Only!

Linoleums and
Felt Base Goods
MORE PATItRNS than we have
ever carried at one time in the his­
tory of our business.

STEP LADDER

• Every mother knows how important is thc diet of

a young child. MILK is an essential part of lhe diet

—and just any milk will not do. They need a milk

that is pure and wholesome, containing thc necessary
body-building qualities.

•

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

Grade A meets these requirements.

It is one of lhe

highest grades of milk produced. Consider this fact
whai you buy milk.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hutingr

89c

Annual Meeting Of the
Pennock Hospital Guilds

the 9 foot width—per square OQC
yard •* tow M
***

INLAID LINOLEUMS—par $4 .10
square yard os tow as--------- ■

Sm th. NEW LEONARD

Rafrigarate

Come in and let us tell you about the New Leant
Electric Refrigerator. If you have not looked ibl
one over you still have tomething to learn abiN
electric refrigeration.

Miller Furniture C
HASTINGS

•

MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANKER, THURSDAY. APRIL 83. 19M
' menu. A reading was given by Mrs

Henry Eaton. Onnalic Belsiln. June prior to the County Achievement | on “History of Athletic*** and gave]

MIDDLEVILLE.
Hostings visited Mr. and Mrs. Clar­
to be held
April an interesting ..........
description
Van Corder. Phyllis Hinman. Ordea day ,n
h,*W at Hastings *'**'
a i of the first ■ Raymond Serven has been Hl for ence Sisson, Sunday.
Johnson.
'n^_b0? exhlbiyd .Cerent rules of basket bad.
1^
w;m
Mr and Mr*. Floyd Yeller and
with lung trouble. The
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG
Clum. Helen Rose, LcNora Pen. nnd things they have made In their. Mr Smythe was presented with 1 come -daysdayi
he UwwTSh ta! family of Allo were guests test
( Several students of Hastings High Elaine DeWeld.
handicraft unit and the girte had : a. Jacket with Ujc word "Coach" on 1 ^rovement which hTmL nwrt* Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Ctelr YeltMother** Club.
• 4-H Achievement Day.
. style shsw. Mr Haas. County 4-H j the back of it. Mr Van Sickle re­
file Mother's Club met Tuesday visited T. K. last Monday. Among
ww._
er
­
leader.
»us
tlx*
speaker.
Some
cehed
a
Ute
Jacket
wlUi
"Asgbtanl
1
“
.
parent*
many
friends
Last Monday the 4-H boys'and
,
them were Cleone. Woodman, JoceA err nf wool wa. inaXJ
I Eastcr vacatlonteta from Hastings
For sheer fun and because of its
tarnoon. The seventh and eljhUi |yn ironside. Gretchen Beverwyk. girls __________
__________ ______
____
— were given Coach" on It? Mr. Smythe present-j!1W.~
held a local_______
4-H Achievement'
awards
from ___
hist ,
year
lift
n f
schools who resumed their studies
■"'■*
' Let broke
k' JU*1 6,1 re
mMr* (Tuesday morning Include Ruth and unusually beautiful music Laurel
Me gave several chemical expert-, Cornelia Beverwyk. IWax Freeman, i day in the gym at 3:00. This is held out at Unit time also.
ed the boys' awards.
and Hardy's "Bohemian Girl" af­
..
-I
*
'
.............. * .............
It
v I h m 11
a n ■!.
The boys etneerety thank the-bus- J *el
Rythm
Band.
an“roke.
uruic.
Retha Robinson and their brother,
'I Stock ■Is being shipped from here. | David. Margery and Odette Ftfieid, fords unsurpassed motion picture
The Rythm band, which mu been Iness men for the fine banquet.
entertainment for adult* and chil­
———
; this Monday by the Shipping asso- &lt; Robert and Paul Hammond.
• organized just recently under the
Mr. Bell and Mrs. Wolverton at- , elation.
| Maury E. Moore and Miss Clara dren alike. It, Is fast-moving, hi­
; direction ot Kay Matthews, has
larious and wholesome. It features
Round
The R. F. D. boys to the number j. Sisson spent Sunday' With Mr.
been oili red an opportunity to play tended the. Barry County
gag* galore and in none of their
ut Al-Gon-Quin lake lor-a Parent­ Table of executive officers Tiiura- I of thirty, enjoyed a feed put on by | and Mrs. B. W. Sisson of near Frecprevious full-length pictures has the
--------- - port.
■ thc
o.----E. ”
8. —
in their ----------------hall Saturday
Teacher's meeting there. The band doy evening at Hasting..
.
notable team of buffoons been so
■ - . ■ -»
I night; all parts oCti^e county were
is one of numerous on'.unixutlons of
Mr.' and Mra. Lester Teller ot I much tn evidence.
•
.
Dr. Pritchard of the W K Kellogg represented; a fine program followed Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
tin F. E. R. A. music course.
Among others featured In a not­
Foundation has sent us a piece । the sup|&gt;er.
the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. able supporting cast of "The Bo­
of
sugar
cane
whlclv
he
found
down
,
Brotherhood
at
the
M.
E.
church
Clair
Yeller.
I A very successful Parent-Teach,
hemian Girl." are Antonio Moreno.
We appreciate the tills Monday evening, al which some
Miss M. Bernice Wing of Detroit,
। ci.' meeting* was held lust Wednes­ In Baibndas.
Mae Busch. James Finlayson, Doria
’
1 good speakers will appear.
who was Uie house guest over the
day evening Mr. Bell gave u talk* 81ftHood and William P. Carleton.
------------। On Thursday evening the fathers week end of tier brother and sister­
cn Guidance and Mrs McFall gave
You might be interested in our I and daughters will gather in to en­ in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. Shirley
, an interesting spec-ch on speech cor| athletics a
deportment
since banquet. Several good speak­
a record
..
joy
Wing and sons of Grand Rapids ar­
recllun. Mrs. McFall attended sum- ,
Is the first natural-color picture
mcr school at Northwestern Univcr­ the new echool u-as organized. In ers will entertain them and a good rived at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. of lhe outdoors, with Sylvia Sidney,
; slty concerning tills phase of school fcotball we have won 26 games nnd nnd profitable evening is looked for­ Claude A.' Hammond Monday. Miss Fred MacMurray and Henry Fonda
lest
14.
Our
basket
ball
boys
have
Rose
Marie
Hammond
accompanied
ward
to.
—
—
—
—
_____________________
' work.
Jre,
Major
Purdue of Uie Salvation her aunt to Detroit where she will in the starring roles.
' Ray Matthews -rendered a solo won 67 games and last 14 games.
The Trail of lhe Lonesome Pine."
‘ and also Jed the community singing. The baseball record is 32 games won Armv was here on Friday lo call on,Resume her studies. Tuesday morn- based on Ute famous novel of lhe
and 11 games 'lost
Our
track his friends and the friends of the Ing. following her cprlng vacation
same title by John Fox. Jr_ was
teams have a pood record, winning army. Major Is always welcome.
! spent at home,
, Thc F. F. A. was held last Tues­ the champ‘cn-Js!p in -33 and □I. । Mr. and Mrs. John Keokey are (--------------- —----------------filmed on a location almost exactly
day night. The members discussed
like the Cumberland mountain
*--------- - • • --------------home after spending several months
NORTHWEST THORNAPPLE.
project plans for next year.
FAIR LAKE..........
-,.„c they visited
Tne
_ Class met country in which lhe novel was sei.
in Nebraska, where
Thc Ho
Home Economic
It was filmed'entlrely in the new
New Additions.
Mr nnd Mrs. spencer Dunn of daughter* of Mr*. C. P. Kenkcy and i wj.h Mrs.
Harold
Sts
Harold
Segestrom of three-color Technicolor process.
, Tlie new additions are progressing Benford visited at Nelson Willison's other friends. They report they had ' Leightons. last
Thursday.
ixngnton last rnursday. The offl­
very rapidly. The old gym wall has Sunday
the
or next year
ine coldest winter there
there in
hr 62 years,
years, , cer5
ccrs ffor
year are Mr*,
Mr*. wuton
Milton
"O'Malley of lhe Mounted."
been torn down nnd construction
Mrs. Frank Davis of Battle Creek jo
so wc
wc arc
are not
not the
the only
only ones
ones that
that wKermeen
and
Mrs.
Harry
Stimson,
rm„.n .nd ur&gt; Marrv aiimsoti
Arriving at the Royal Canadian
of the addition is beginning. The and Miss H.’len Davis of Detroit have something lo talk about of the leaders- Mrs Robert Tolan chairMounted Post to which he ha* been
addition to the school also Ls com­
assigned
to help capture a band of
ing 'along nicely m spite of thc and children.
■ There is n good deal of illness chairman. lo cu
outlaws. Constable George O'Brien
.weather conditions.
; Mrs. Lottie Colllster and family about here and with both of our
Mr and Mrs. Wayne Carpenter
Athletic Banquet.
[spent
j spent Sunday with Ray
Ray Pierce and physician* gone it is rather hard on Of Tecumseh spent Uie week end finds his predecessor dead and
James Bush, youthful member of
I An all nthh-yc banquet was held | family of near Banfield.
thc pocket book lo get assistance wlth relatives.
the gang, imprisoned on suspicion
1 last
test Monday evening at
al Uic
the K. of P. i About 35 friends am
nnd relatives from other towns.
Mr5 Jack 3nyder of Hastings
of having committed the crime.
I hall. This banquet was put on by I sathered nt the carver home SunJanet Gardner has been quite ill apcnt part of last week with her
O'Brien has himself imprisoned
I the Commercial club. This was Uie, d&gt;y- the occasion being thc birthday for the past week. We nre pleased (daughter, Mrs. Earl Kermeen and
■ first ail sport banquet in Uie hLMory । 0, Mr. carver.
a report her on the gain
a aaa
fum y nnd aiu nded the ld auppcr with Bush, arranges a Jail-break
lo
now.
nnd with Bush's sister. Irene Ware,
Leon
nnd
of Flint
of T. K High school.
’
— Webster
------ •family
—
Elins nnd Mrs. Gray of Lake City j*(Thursday night at Uie church.
। Clayton Bennett. Uie toastmaster. spent the week end with his par­ with friends who have been spend­ which netted lhe Aid a nice sum makes his way lo the hide-out of
the gang. O'Brien allays the sus­
1 can be remembered ns p catcher on ents. Mr. nnd Mrs. Vcrnor Webster. ing tin* winter in Florida arrived of
,
money, for which they wish to picion of Stanley Fields, bandit
Mrs. Jennie Searles Is spending here Friday P. M and after spend­ thank everyone who-look part.
one of Middleville's early baseball
chief and Fields divulges plans for
1 teams.
\
the week in Hustings the guest of ing the rest of the day and night
Mr. nnd Mrs. fvy Schonelmaycr a big bank hold-up lo O'Brien. Un­
her
sitter.
Mrs.
Myrtle
Sayles.
i Mr. Holtforth revlewdl the teams
with relatives here went on their of
,
Grand Rapids were Sunday din­ able lo sneak away from camp.
. of T. K.
•
J
Mrs. Inez Ford nnd F.loLse are way
home Saturday,
We
are ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Loren
O'Brien sends Miss Ware lo warn
lutvlng severe pleased to see them feeling so well.
1 John Gill, coach of freshman aUi- improving after
TUngatc.
the "mountlea."
letics nnd assistant varsity coach Uiroat trouble.
R. G. Potts, who with his family
Mrs. Guy Cllr.e and Burdette
Bush Is cleared of the killbig and
Little Vera Willison is very sick. have been making their home for spent Sunday in Linden. Mr. and
' of Western State Teachers' College,
Sunday guests at Ike Leinnar's «ome Hine with Mrs. Potts' parents. Mrs. Hale who have been visiting O'Brien, now a sergeant, wins Miss
wits Uie principal speaker. He talked
v’re George Lelnnar and family of F. D. nnd Mrs. Pratt, was severely their daughter and family here re­ Ware's happy consent to an early
marriage.
Hickory corners. Mr. nnd Mrs. injured on Thursday near Albion, turned home with them.
Clyde Casey and mother. Mrs. Net­ when he and a son were in an auto
Mr. and Mrs. Max Sines and fam­
ASSYRIA.
tie Casey of near Hastings. Mr. and wreck. Mr. Potts was taken to a hos­ ily spent Sunday in Kalamazoo.
Donald Keiser, who has lived at
Mrs. Will Sheldon, and Mr. nnd pital where it was found he had .
the home of his aunt and uncle. Mr.
Mrs. Verleis of Kalamazoo.
some broken ribs together with
BOWNE CENTER.
nnd Mrs. Wm. Sarver. Ellis district,
many bruises. It Ls hoped that lie
PLEASANT RIDGE.
Edith Benton and Helen were in for the past eight years, left Thurs­
may be able to return home very
Grand Rapids Saturday.
Mrs. Flossie Allerding with the soon.
day for California. He has a broth­
Mrs. Merrill Karcher and baby er. rnui&lt;
WU1W,,,O in the Golden
school attended WLS at Hastings
Paul, working
Word was received here early
Monday P. M.
Monday of the d-ath. at the hos­ had the following callers last week: 3tnte Dairy whom he will Join. He
The. Birthday Club meets with pital at Hastings of Frank F Hil­ Mrs. Ella Nosh, Alice and Mari?; : Wlll drive a consignment of cars for
Bessie Woodman this week Wed­ bert. father of Mrs. o. E. Blake of Mrs, Kowalczyk and Mary; Donna, a Lansing firm, and wlll reach Callnesday for a pot luck dinner.
this place. Many of us were ac­ Frnnces and Gladys Pokthumus; fornla by WBy of Indiana and TenMr. and Mrs. Wamic Kelsey and quainted with Mr. Hilbert who often Nrocea Fry; Mrs. Anna Smelker neascc.
A meeting of the Briggs Ladles'
Margaret were in Lansing cn Wed­ visited Mrs. Blake and family here. and Marlon: Miss Ruth Tabberer;
nesday.
He would have been 80 had h? lived Mr.;. Laura Flynn; Mrs. Addle Ben- , A|d goddy wlll be held on Thurstnn nnrt TVnrU fjtaa
dny A
,uck dlnn#r wUj
Mrvcd
until April 30th. Fur many years lie ton nnd Doris Lass
We are sorry to hear lite Ward at noon. A quilt to be sent to the
with Uie 4-11 Cl b giving the was banker at Woodland and was
Boulard family are ill with the Johnstown flood sufferers will be
highly respected by a large circle of
measles.
Mr.
“
.
Henry
Fry
is
caring
Smith and Donald friends, all of whom extend to the
finished, and the plot of ground
for them.
Mr. nnd Mrs Chas Hol- bereaved family their aympaUiy.
where the old church sheds wero
Mrs. Doris Lass and babies are will be converted Into a beauty spot
Johns spent Sunday with
I spending thte week with her broth­ by planting of perennials and
Mra. Arthur Richardson
THREE CORNERS.
With Uie opening of the trout 1er. Russell Benton, and family.
shrubbery.
...... 1 Mrs. Anna Smclkcr and Marlon
season scheduled for this week end.
The Wnhnnka Girls Camp Fire
trout fishermen nre talking of lhe were Grand Rapids shoppers one unit and Boy Scout troop No. 81
need for contact with the outdoors I day last week.
which are sponsored by the Parent­
in this age of the machine. Devo-1 Miss Vernicc Benson has been Teacher organization of Assyria
tees of lhe sport speak of thc reJu- ' having a vacation for the past week Center met on Friday evening. A
venntlng and regenerating powers I due to so many pupils being absent chicken pie supper was served
of a trout stream Greater numbers with the measles.
which netted |20. A program pre­
•hau ever before will soon be hast-! Sunday dbiner guests al the Watt sented by thc Monroe school fol­
ening to their favorite fishing. Thonuw home were: Mr. and Mrs. lowed.
grounds eager to be angling for Hie George Miller of Hastings; Henry
norn
, 10
Born on
on oaturaay
Baturday. Apn
April
18 to Mr
Mr.
A...... beauties.
Karcher, and daughter Maud;
and und
Mrh Qrlle Van
kle M
finny
,7
k,&gt;.orne
van
aycxie at txnia
vtr -------anrl
Moil —
Knrcncr.
.
. .
—She
.
Mr
anti--------Mrs. -----Neil
Karcher Other hospital a slx pound. daughter.
GUIDE FOR THE
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Walters. Don- ----:ia and Baby Alyce of Ionin •.Kited cMlrrs
callers during the day were: Mrs . h.* been named Lete Mae. Mra. Van
fcovlta Johnson; Mr
and Mrs
. 8
b soon to return home.
his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Wai- r:"~'.*WISE BUYER
tnini O'Neil
r»'N,-il and
anti Katherine;
Katherine* Mr.
Mr
...
.
.
— .
.
lers. Sunday.
- | John
Walter Reed and son Fred and
Mr. and Mrs. D’o Jefferson of and Mrs. Forrest Buehler; Mr. and families have been moving the post
lackson were Sunday afternoon I Mrs. RuSsell Benton; Mr. and Mrs. week to the Bartlett farm in the
rucsts of Mr and Mrs. Claude A' 11/’ Skinner; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Briggs district.
Hammond;
B-.-mard Ryan who Segestrom nnd Mr. and Mrs. Ho- ' Ruth Ketcham and Marjorie
,
~
spent the w-ek end with relatives ward Houston
■ Jones of the Stevens sewing project
-,nrt
Mr.
and-------Mrs.------------Howard-----------Houghton 1 w|]j g0 t0 Hastings on Thursday for
•.nd frinnda
friends h»-r
here• returned tn
to jackJacka
...----son with them.
' are veiling their parents for a few I lhe 4-H Club Achievement Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Butnp of days.
Mildred Stevens is leader.

NOTES FROM

&lt;.

Coming Attractions at
The Strand Theater

SdS?’’"*

,. , , „

.

First in pulling power
First in all-round economy
WORLD'S THRIFTIEST HIGH-POWERED TRUCKS

„-.

,

X

S

U

,

A

-

NOTICE, FARMERS!
FEED YOUR HOGS CULL BEANS

N TRUCKS, it's ptr/Zing power that counts . . . ami

I

Seed Time is here

lhe new Chevrolets for 1036 have thegreatestpull­

ing potter of any trucks in the entire low-price range!

Moreover, they give you this greater pulling jiowcr

See Us For

with the lowest pus and oil costs, lowest maintenance

costs and maximum all-round economy!

They arc the u-orld's thriftiest high-powered trucks; and
the whole secret of their extra pulling power, extra

• The Maytag-mid itself lo fame
—loworld leadendiip. Afier care­
ful comparison with other luakea,
more women have pure ha vol

Clovers

gentle, thorough wa-iiing service
fur more year*. To knuw why.
vuu must compare it point by
point with ordinary washer*—
diaoiver it* many exclusive ad-

MEDIUM NATIVE CROWN
MAMMOTH NATIVE CROWN
ALSIKE CLOVER
WHITE BLOSSOM
YELLOW BLOSSOM

thrift, extra safety and dependability is lhe fact that

NEW PERFECTED HYDRAULIC
BRAKES
alway* equalired foe quick, unswerving.

they have a combination of features not found in any
other low-priced truck.

NEW HIOH-COMPRESSION VALVE­
IN-HEAD ENGINE

These new Chevrolets alone have a High-Compression

Valve-in-Head Six-Cylinder Engine, the most efficient
engine built for all-round duty ... a Full-Floating

The one-piece, cael-alnminum
tub; lhe Gyrataloe wadiing ac-

Rear Axle of maximum ruggedness and reliability ...

New Perfected Hydraulic Brakes, giving the quickest,
safest, "straight iine“ stop ... and Neu Full-Trimmed

FULL-TRIMMED
DE LUXE CAS
with rkar-viaion
safe coutrul

Easy deferred payment*

instrument panel for safe control.

See or phone your Chevrolet dealer for a thorough
denwiutra I ion—today!

FULL-FLOATING REAR AXLE

Xny .Voytag may be had equipped
u with ffualine Multi-Motor

phone zmo

IDAHO CROWN

Timothy

Hickory Corners, Mich.

THE SERVICE GARAGE,

Delton, Mich,

We carry a complete line of seeds

Smith Bros., Velte &amp; Co.
Visit the

Hastings Telephone 2257

MAYTAG DEALER
Near You

Dealers In Wool, Grain, Feed, Flour, Salt, Lime,

*

Cement and Coal

I Floyd Welcher who worked at the
. Clayton Case general merchandise
I now working al the Archie Her। ringion star? «t B41U®. Greet
Silas Gates one of our aged resi­
dents of the Stevens district who !s
under treatment at Pennock hos­
pital submitted to a minor opera­
tion on Friday.
Mrs. Pauline Serven who wu in­
jured In an automobile crash sus­
taining a broken wrist, fractured
rib and injured eye, has been under
treatment the put week at Leite
hospital.
Mrs. Nellie French, who hu spent
some time with hte alter. Mrs. Wm.
Rllzman of Quimby hu returned to
the home of her daughter, Mra.
Emerson cortright. of Lacey.
Mr. and Mrs. William Barver and
.Mr and Mrs. Sperry Thomas at­
tended the home talent play spon| sored by the library staff of Belle­
vue High school.
Jimmie Linlnger. a student of
• Bellevue high school who injured hte
} foot in a logging boat while helping
on the farm necessitating its being
I placed in a cut, te able to be around
with the use of crutches.

I

RED TOP
Kentucky Blue, unhulled and fancy.

CHEVROLET TRUCKS
R. K. HURD R. D. CADWALLADER,

IDAHO GRIMM

with barrel type wheel hearing*
on IJ j-lou models

GENERAL MOTORS INSTALLMENT PLAN­
MONTHLY PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOUR PURSE

HASTINGS, MICH

Alfalfas

Holier Water Remover, anti many

De Luxe Cab for driver comfort, with clear-vision

George Bennett farm near Martin
, Lake Is being made ready for lhe
seed bzd. Mr. Bennett who is Ford
salesman for a Bellevue dealer has
rented his farm.
Miss Eulsh Caso spent last week
at the home of her brother, Clayton
। Case, of Lacey, assisting with the

.

*

.

TAMARAC.

&lt; Married—Clarence O'Connor and
(Miss Carol Champlin, congratutelions.
| Mrs. Doris Forshey and husband
of Sunfield and brother, Bernard
I Smith of WamervtUe visited their
parents, Mr. and Mn. Bertie Smith,
■ also Cecil Cary of Sunfield Sunday.
i Mr. and Mrs. Boston Cotton are
i enjoying a radio,
; Mrs. Norman McClelland and
children visited her sister. Mra. Clif­
ton Bawdy at chard* corners Fri­
day.
Mrs. Bernard Smith formerly of
this vicinity now of WamervtUe
: has gone to Jackson for medical
' treatments.

Alien King from this vicinity. Owing
to poor health they have disposed of
[their farm.

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTIETH YEAR

THE MYSTERIOUS
CMS PUNT
POSSESSES SOME SECRET
POWER OF LIFE UNDER
DESERT CONDITIONS

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. APRIL 30,1936

14 PAGES

STATESHOUEDEND CONFREEPEUBUCAN WOMEN
Speakers to Attend
THIS DISGRACE StateLuncheon
Meeting on

GRADUATE SEVENTEEN

—---------- •

Honora Awarded to Seniors
—Commencement Bet
for May 28th

SECTION ONE—PACES 1 to 8
—

I FREEPORT HIGH TO

LONG WAITING LIST FOR

.

Wednesday Next

Hundreds Attend The Centennial
Exhibits On Monday and
’ '•

■

.

■

•

—

...

In last week's Banner was print­
Bupt. S. O. Voorhees announces
STATE HOSPITALS AND
ed liie notice of the conference of
that this year'* graduating class
Republican women to be held at (
will be an unusually large one com­
COUNTY TAX COMM’N.
LAPEER HOME
(he home of Mrs. J. C. Ketcham orri
posed of seventeen young people.
Wednesday, May 6.
WILL MEET ON MAY 11
The valedictorian will be Marshall
All
Republican
women
who
are
:
Segar, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Har­ GOVERNOR URGES
ARID SURROUNDINGS
planning to attend tills luncheon [
Begor, who finished with an all
MAKE NO DIFFERENCE low
NEEDED ADDITIONS | meeting are asked to please notify j
A record for four year*' work.
-* Mr.
Mrs. P. L- Bauer or Mrs. Ketcham |
Lawrence Barcroft. 11
17. inn
son of
It's the Mystery Plant of the and Mrs. J. E. Barcroft, was only If Sales Tax Is Left as It Is, before that day If possible.
Ready
I Any woman willing to serve sc-, 'SERVANT IN THZ HOUSE''
one
twenty-eighth
of
a
point
be
­
Desert, Homely, Yet
The Barry county tax commission
Needed Money Gan Be
lively In the coming campaign is (
hind. and will be salutatorlan. An­
TO BE PRESENTED
will be convened on May 11 to take
Invited. It is hoped thsrs may be a
Attractive
na Stowe, Wilma Wieland and Rog­
Provided
' up the question of the tax rate lor
good attendance to greet the guests •
HERE MAY 14-16
The world admire* a "good fight­ er Leyendecker. all received a B
all the f.vl
—o tmlta
Oh Friday Sheriff Blakney took
। all
taxing
units of Uaav..
Barry coun-2V
er," no matter If it is only a plant. average or better and deserve hon­ the last of four insane persons he from outside the county and gain'
' ty. which will Include the county.
As you go rolling along over the orable mention. Class officers are; has been holding In recent weeks to Information about existing condl- COUNTY CLERGYMEN
l.the townships and the school dishot, arid desert In our western Prsldent, Malcolm Boughner; rife-, the state hospital at Kalamazoo. It J lions In the political world.
TO BE SPECIAL GUESTS |
al?5lrHlSlw&lt;XrX
AN EXCELLENT PROGRAM i
country, where It would seem al­ pres.. Kathryn skeoch; secy.-treas.. seems a pity that people with men- ( Subject* for discussion are as fol- ,
most Impossible for anything to sur­ Eleanor Thaler. Other
tai UUUL
troubles should have to be kept lows:
.........members
..
..... of |। lui
u! FOR BARRY 00. ROD AND
10: 00 o'clock—The American Po- Dra.a Mo^bUion. Un.
Vernon Thompson, '1ln JJldl5
vive, you can look out in any direc­
—;. but on account of the
William Forbey. Iris | croi,ded
Utica!
System.
any
nr rm TuwnnvT
icUy on M°nday
Tue»day and
Max
Whitney.
William
tion and see thrifty cactus plants of
dertaking to Date, In
I well, therefore, for “
™h"&gt; otfi-,
---------------------------------। crowded condition of the state hostownship
GUN
CLUB BANQUET
'
the hundreds of articles dis­
11: 00 ---------o'clock — ----------Interesting and .
Wieland. William Feltzer. Vernon jpltal* that ha* been ncCTM&gt;ry
------necessary in
in
every size and form. For centuries Newton.
cers as well as school district offl-1
Marshall Segar, Margaret
j
MlchlfBn counliXT for Helping the Young Voter.
------------; played there. Several visitors said
those plants have pul up a wonder­
cers to prepare their budgets now,
Opinion
of
Many
51rn®n
tRarrrnfl
KFnnHh
I
7
.,
4
12
:00
—
Luncheon.
u‘*‘r
ful fight to live—and they've won Brown. Lawrence Barcroft. Kenneth
so they will be ready when the HARRY HEILMAN
___________________________
The 'Servant in the House." by
.M. qovrmor Hu-I.
IQ MAIN QbCAITCD tide* if they wm sure proper care
out. They seem to be hale, hearty Doyle. Maxine Buehler WHma wielb MAIN brtAKtK and protection would be provided.
h„ CBUed
attention , 2:00
—Organizing and Campaign- Charles Rann Kennedy, will be pre­ commission shall convene on May
and prosperous; in fact they appear land, Roger Leyendecker and Anna!
rented in Central auditoriiftn here 11. There will be no stale tax. The „
...
™------- 7
. I But there is no museum as yet. This
^jS unsatisfactory
to be about the only evidence of Stowe. The class this year will wear j io tmis
uiuuivuiBcuiry situation
aiiuauun and
iuiu ( lnfanrl anurna
. ... ...
.■ _ _
__ ...
3'1
। on Thursday and Friday evenings. county, township and school dis­ Committee Planning to Serve , may be taken as a bint to some
gowns, the flrnf
first rlaci
class tn
to i .has asked
thrift In this bleak, desert region. caps and
that no change be made ; 3:00—Summary.
May 14 and 15. commencing nt 8:15 trict taxes levied must not. under
(public spirited
1,000 at Annual Event
“ J citizen.
You feel like taking off your hat graduate from Freeport High school,' In the sale* tax. so that the state 1
' o'clock. In the opinion of many this the law. exceed fifteen mills. Be­
, Each and every display was
to these gallant old scrappers that thus attired. Commencement exer­ administration may accumulate at 1
Next Thursday Eve
spienma
। play represent* the most ambitious cause the state has taken upon It­
cises
will
be
held
on
Thursday
eve
­
splendid ana
and was
was wormy
worthy or
of comoomnever say die. There are born
least 810,000,000 Co be expended on
self the tuition costs of sending
!
undertaking
of
lhe
Civic
Players
to
Tickets for the annual fish supper mendatlon.
The teacher* and
fighters In the plant world. Just as ning May 28. Baccalaureate will be needed additions to the four state
rural pupils, who have completed
date.
the Sunday 7
evening
preceding,
or
to be given by the Barry County ' pupils worked for weeks collecting
7”.7
-------- hospitals,
also to the Lapeer insli-1
there are In the animal world, that --the
eighth
grade.
•
on
to
high
I Since March 10 the cast of "Serv­
Rod and Gun Club at lhe new coun- the antiques of all kinds and the
,l0hJ ■ tion for the feeble minded. 1711s ‘
never bend the knee In token of May 24. The Senior
and because of other
ant in the House" has been re­ school,
ty garage on Thursday evening. May ' displays were interesting and weU
surrender. We have had leaders of &gt; their annual "Skip Day" May 22 week county welfare agent. C. H.
hearsing two and three evenings slate help to rural, village and city 7. are selling unusually fast, so If ' arranged. A short, and necessarily
that sump in the "human" world, I when they will visit places of inter­ Osborn, has been able to lake to
schools there ought to be little dif­
I
est
at
Detroit
and
Belle
Isle.
—
Fureach
week.
The
completed
cast
folyou
want to attend, be sure and get incomplete, account of the exhibit*
in our own country in the persons
the Lapeer institution a young man
ficulty keeping every taxing unit
!
nlshed
by
the
Freeport
Corr.
your
THE
MERCHANTS
STAGE
lows
(In
the
order
In
which
the
"
,
&gt;our ticket
««« al
ai once.
onre: They
Tney are on I*
i* given herewith
nerewitn which
wnicn will
win give
of Qeorge Washington. John Paul
who was committed to that Institu­
of the county within the fifteen mill
Bt lhe
Qhop. Auto Sport some idea of the whole undertaking.
i actors appear in lhe play):
Jones. Molly Pitcher. Andrew Jack­
tion by our probate court six years • EVENTS THAT ARE POP| Rogers—the unimaginative houseago. On account of the long waiting j
son. Ulysses 8. Grant and many
I boy—Burr Dennison.
। Banner office. The price is 81-00 ty ahould feel deeply indebted to our
ULAR WITH TRADE
others. Had fear been In their
I Manson—lhe new butler from In­
I which includes membership for a [ city schools for providing this wonhearts, along with scant determina­
in at Lapeer until now. There are ;
------------1 year in the Rod and Gun club. It derful Centennial Exhibit.
' dla, a mysterious figure—Wallace
tion to "fight” our country would
olhor- U; Bury courdy woU-: MONEY AND ARTICLES
■ Osborn.
1 Is expected that 1,000 ticket* will ।
High School Exhibit
not be what It is today. Life at best
Ing to get into the Lapeer home.,
Rev.
wm.
Smythe
—
an
earnest
। be sold, the event being open for
"Hear ye| Hear ye I" The town
There
are
about
1400
in
the
state
on
I
| OF VALUE DISTRIBUTED
seems to be Just a fight from start
young
Vicar
—
Orville
Sayles.
i both men ond women. This annual I crier wa* making hls rounds. BloI the waiting list, so one can easily see '
to finish. So out on this dry. hot
,
.
_
.
■
Mary,
his
niece
who
doesn't
know
gathering
1*
always
enjoyable
and
cum
Bunker
christened hls cabin
I the urgent need of a large addition
desert, where It would seem impos­
Parking Places Were at a who her father is—Irma Waters.
weU attended and this year's prom- i the Clinton House. Grandma and
OTHER COUNTIES ■ to the Lapeer institution.
sible for plant life to find enough FIVE
| Martha Smythe the Vicar s wife । urzrv ftTTniTT T) AWV P1BTV ises to equal, if not excel, those of'Grandpa
-------—
went out to a Jolly old
Premium in City on
nourishment to survive, there stand
When Fred Green was governor,
ASKED TO RETURN
whowutaiupa
worships her husband—Cleone i
SHOULD ANY PARTY
_ .
.
wuu
former years. So
be’ on hand square dance, and a frontiersman
those thousands upon thousands of
he planned for additions to these
Saturday
Van Houten.
promptly al six-thirty o'clock but in fringed tunic and moccasins
CASH
LINES BE DRAWN IN
tiirlfty green cactus, as if to appar­
state institutions, but wa* unable to
Hie past week end saw several I Robert Smith—a gentleman of
stood on guard with tils trusty mus­
ently defy any condition that may
put them across on account of in­
CITY
ELECTIONS?
big
prize
drawing
event*
staged
by
I
necessary
occupation
—
Tom
Myers.
been
necessary
to
solicit
anyone to ket. No, no, it wasn't a nightmare
confront them. Even the hardiest of
sufficient state revenue*. Before the
Reverend
James
buy as people seem so eager to get or a masquerade. . . Just the Cenour oaks, maples and hickories ASSERT SIX COUNTIES
matter could be acted upon by the Hasting* merchants. All drew rec-' The Right
tickets,
therefore
if
anyone
is
not
ord
crowds.
Saturday
afternoon
the
Ponsonby
---------Makeshyfte.
—
—
•
—
D.
—
D.
the
tenial
exhibit at the High school,
would soon turn up their toes if
NOT ENTITLED TO IT 1 following leglalature. the depression
PARTISANSHIP HAS NO
asked to purchase one. please do । a veritable miniature museum of
| was on. and all Idea of providing I drawing which distributed the 875 Bishop of Lancashire—L. E. Bar­
(Continued on page three)
PLACE IN CITY GOVT. | not feel offended about It, Just go antiques and relics of early Barry
in cash donated by Hastings mer­ nett.
Claim It Was Unlawfully additional quarters at state instltu- chants
,
——.t; ;
to one of the places where tickets county days.
was a big feature.
The scene is in the living room of .
__ •
* I tlnna hart m
ho had
■htndnnart
Pnrtlltions
to be abandoned.
Fortu­
“THE UNCROWNED
Paid to Them by Residents nately, Just now the sales tax 'Is Saturday also marked the date for the vicarage of the Rev. Smythe Hastings Is Well Governed, ' ore for sale and get your*. No The town crier with hls lantern
slight* arc Intended.
r.,------------------------is deeply distressed
----------because
-------------noand bell went ringing hls way
QUEEN’’ IS THEME
yielding unexpectedly large returns the big drawing put on by Feld- ,who
But Danger of Partyism
of Kent County
The Banner won't undertake to I through the halls to tell all listen­
pausch
Food
Center
and
John
Bull[
body
comes
to
hls
services.
The
Be
­
1 Some time ago the county of Kent so that it will be possible. If the tax
Is Present
tell
Fr how many pounds of perch have ing that there was something of ln­
Mothers and Daughters to (and the road commission of that Us not disturbed, for the state to ing &amp;t Son for a Sparton radio, and I tion of the play Is continuous and
other
articles.
(
without
artificial
lapse
of
time.
There
ore
few
towns
that
have
'
ordered
for
this
supper,
but
It
&gt;
,
leresl going on in
tcresl
In the Book S
Shi-----| save enough to meet the cost of
lhe county
Banquet Thursday Eve­ ! county
vuuiuy sued
auvu ujc
cuuiuy of Barry
uaj i y
Then Albert Bes*mer held Open Each act of which there are five, is a finer get-together spirit or -better'1 is expected there will be a plenty today known as Mr. Becker's
I and five other counties, asking Kent I jadditional buildings for the state House and a drawing Friday night ■ punctuated by the closing of a cur­
■ book
brink at
everyone, as well as lots
lol* of olh- • There
There, nut
out nf
of a
of Ma
Mam
| institutions mentioned without a
cooperation among their citizens for evervont*.
ning, May 7
; county court* to compel the six j
at Bessmer's Market, celebrating I tain but the characters remain on than Hasting*. When the people er good food.
I came early settler* of Hastings
Thursday evening. May 7. at six- counties to refund to Kent county | bond issue.
As stated in last week's Banner, Barry county to tell about the
i There should be no question about the eighth anniversary of the Mar- j the stage and the pause is merely of this city generally, and its busi­
thirty
o'clock, a Mother and
ket street store.
] for twenty seconds.
ness men in particular, set out to the program promises to be un­ house here and It* inhabitant*,
Daughter banquet will be held at
A huge crowd milled around the I In about two hours of a Spring put across some project for the usually good, with Harry Hellman, contribution to the civil war.
the Methodist church parlors, a weight taxes. It Is claimed by Kent, “»e
tn
space between Reed's drug store' Morning the earnest young Vicar benefit of the community, or to in­ the well known Tiger sports an­ beginnings of the W. O. T.
cooperative supper being served. 1 county that certain owner* of u •
l
nouncer. as the main speaker. He southern Michigan and many
Please bring table service for your­ trucks anxLzax*. whn rclrt^ in Krntl**116 P^P10 h&gt;vc_ 10 ,
VP.111 and lhe National bonk Saturday aft- | finds the wonderful solution of .hls terest themselves tn some matter
ernoon where the 875 cash drawing problem.
that vitally affects the Interests of knows the secret* of professional Hems important in the noi
self and yotlr guest or guests, your county, according' to the'TBpwsp^
The Civic Players have Issued an Hastings, the spirit with which this baseball os few announcer*do and the city. Several young !
sandwiches and plenty of food. filed in the case, should have paid persons cannot be received al the took place and overflowed up and
has made himself popular by his ac­
There will also be a charge of five their weight taxes in that county, so Lapeer Institution until six years down State street as the three | invitation to each ordained clergy­ is done is wonderfully fine. Some
curate and Impartial radio broad­ parents no doubt wan
cents per person to meet the ex- a* to have that money returned to after they have been committed to o'clock time set for the drawing man in Barry county, according to can recall other years when there
neared.
I Director L. E- Barnett, to attend was factionalism, often bitter, in casts of the Tiger games over the with piano and violin &amp;t
Cnses. coffee, cream and sugar are j Kent county, by the state highway It. some of these feeble minded are
Five
two
dollar
prizes
were
first
the
second
performance
of
the
"Servthis city. Happily all that is past. Michigan network.
be provided.
' department. Instead of doing that 1a menace.
drawn, the lucky ones being Mrs.' ant in the House." May 15. accom- Now our people have the habit of
Another interesting part of the phlets of a century and
If you have no daughter and | these car and truck owners paid
program will be the sound movies and a model of a schoolroom
Albert Reed, R. 1; Mrs. Glenn Lau- ( panled by hls wife, a* guests of the pulling together.
would like to I attend this gathering, their weight taxes in the six other CONTRIBUTE 722.4
baugh, City; Mrs. Lyle Biddle. R.1 cast. The Players, according to the
When any project enlists the at­ of the 1935 World Series, which are scholars sat on high wooden
a daughter will be assigned you if counties, and the state later reMrs. Max Robinson, City.
(director, realize that the portrayal tention and efforts at the citizens of made available through the kind­
(Continued on page 8. Bee. 1)
you notify Mrs. W. Maylan Jones, I turned the (honey to the six counPERCENT OF QUOTA 1; The
five three dollar prizes went upon the stage of the character of Hastings, all differences, such as ness and courtesy of the Service OH
as those in charge are anxious that 1 Iles instead of to Kent county.
to Mrs. John Walter*. City; Mrs. the Lord is always attended with church affiliation or parly line*, are Co. of this city.
every girl who can shall attend.
SPRING FURNITURE
I The basis for the complaint, in ■ Barry County Residents Give Chas. Farthing. Woodland;
An
added
feature
of
the
program
Mrs.
[
the
chance
that
offense
may
be
Inforgotten In their teal for the com­
An excellent program lias been the cases referred to above, wa*
Prancis Edgecombe. R. 1; Mr*. Wm. curred. The Players welcome the munity good. That is made the first Is the demonstration to be given by
Generously for Flood
SALE OPENS
prepared which is as follows;
; that 1. H. Gingrich &amp; Sons, Grand
McLaughlin. City; Oscar Manning, constructive criticism of the public objective; and all differences on the Y. M. C. A. champion gymnast
March—Mrs. Dorothy Wilcox and ] Rapids dealers in the International
Relief Fund
City.
| and the clergy In their presentation other subject* are ignored.
team of Muskegon, which you will
Miss Norma Jacobson.
| line of trucks, had sold truck* to
Five, five dollar prizes were won I of this great play,
want to see. Short talk* will be giv­ Hastinga Furniture Factor
Orville Sayles, treasurer of the
Candle Lightbig Service.
But
the
most
vital
business
of
the road commissions of the six
en by Hon. W. W. Potter of Lansing
Will Be Repreiented at
Invocation — Mrs. W. Maylan I counties, promising them that if Barry County Red Cross Chapter, by Mrs. Eben Kelley. City; Vcmi
Hastings, our city government, is an and others, and there will be music
reports that be has received a total McMillen. City; Mrs. Glenn Lau'Jones.
Grund Rapids
exception. When we come to choose during the dinner.
they would buy the trucks from the of &gt;830.76 in contributions for the baugh. City; Mrs. Belle Hoffman. GLENN WOTRING TO
Co-operative Dinner.
those who are to be responsible for
Gingrich firm, they would see to It Flood Relief fund. Barry county R. 4; Mrs. Etta Nichol*. R. 2.
The Grand Rapids Spring FU
Dr. O. L. Lockwood and hls com­
HEAD
COMMITTEE
Community Singing—Mrs. Robert that automobiles owned outside of
our city government, we have not mittee on arrangements are pleased ture Sale will begin in Grand I
people have certainly made a fine
The single 810 prize went to Miss
Burch, directing.
yet learned the art of Ignoring poli­ and satisfied with the preliminary Ida Friday May 1. It used to be
the six counties were registered In record In this drive and are to be Ruth Standish, city. The top prize
Soil Conservation Chairmen tics, and thinking only of the best
Toast to Daughters, "A Dream those counties, and would pay their
plans and think all will find this a
of an
Uncrowned Queen”—Mrs. automobUe weight taxes in those congratulated upon their prompt of 815 to Ernest Williams. City, R. 2.
interests of the city, in other words very enjoyable affair.
Organlxe Friday and
irly, one in January ai
That night the section In and
generosity.
John o. Ketcham.
we have not shown ourselves, up to
counties. It Is claimed that several
in July Instead of fc
So get your ticket early and be
Hie quota for the county was around Food Center also held a
Elect Officers
Toast to Mothers. "The Awaken­
this time, quite big enough to put present at this happy gathering.
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
8118.00,
the
total
given
above
being
record
crowd.
Aside
from
the
big
ing"—Miss Rosalie Cascadden.
Chairmen of the Township Soli aside all political differences and
Beat sale opens this Saturday,
722
4
per
cent
of
that
amount.
drawing
twelve
gloss
rolling
pin*
Music—Mrs. Glenn Densmore and
Conservation Committee met at the unite on a common, non-polillcal May 2. at the Cordes Newsstand by sales in May and November.
JUDGE
CLEMENT
NAMES
Judging
from
reprrts
in
various
^md
six
ten
pound
bags
of
Michigan
Miss Margaret Densmore.
court house last Friday and com­ basis for the common good in here.
Ohls' Quartet.
TWO FOR TAX COMM’N.
£ sugar were given away. Mr*. F. J pleted the Barry County Soil Con­ choosing men for city office*.
Slocum. 702 W. Walnut street. City,
Play. "The Uncrowned Queen"—
servation organisation. Glenn WotHasting* has been singularly for- CAUGHT TWO MEN WHO
—1 rrr
which ro’virl &lt; were ortven
was the lucky winner of the Spar­
Members of the Anchor and Busy Carl Wespinter, City, Mark which reports were given.
ring of Woodland Twp. was electedl tunate in recent years in our public
in special sales to be put on du.
ton; other winners were L. Brady,
Bee Sunday School classes.
TOOK SHULTZ’S FORD the summer months. The object
president; Fred Elliott, vice-presi­ servant*. They have given this city
Ritchie,
Yankee
Springs,
Recognition of the Oldest Moth­
BROTHERHOOD CLOSED
dent: Harold J. Foster. Agricultural exceptional service for the last
the November sale Is to get art'
Waite, w. Erway. N. Bayart. V.
er Present.
Are Appointed
Agent, secretary, and Mis* Beatrice twelve or fifteen years.
While Two Men Have Confessed—
Fisher.
E.
Daniels.
H.
Frost,
O.
SUCCESSFUL YEAR
Recognition of the Mother with
Cobum. treasurer.
choice* for city officers AT? inade
Probate judge Stuart clement has
Moore. R- snawman. J. Cruc. a.'
They Are in the Barry---the Most Daughter* Present.
The main work of the county or­ here on a political basis, after elec­
chosen two of the five members of
Miller. St. Rose Blsteri. L- Wslben,
ganisation is performed by a coun­ tion. in recent years, it ha* been
County Jail
the county tax commission as pro­ Walter Wallace Is Named G. Sterger.
the Hastings Table
NEW MATRON FOR THE
ty committee made up of the presi­ customary in our city council to
vided by law. He must name one
About midnight Monday. KalamaPresident, Chas. Faul,
The Open House at Beasm er's on
dent and one other committee1 largely forget political differences
DETENTION HOME who shall be a member of the school
Friday
night
where
coffee
and
fried
Vice-President
chairman. John Uxbome of Carl­ and unite on a dty program. But car who had run by a red light
board of an accredited twelve­
cakes were served, drew a line
school. For that position he
Notwithstanding the attraction of crowd. Al hod provided 70 dozen ton township wa* elected to makei one does not need to be reminded They proved to be Sterling E. MoMrs. Green Resigned—Mrs. grade
the third member on this commit­
(Continued on page fl. Bee. 1)
named Carl Wespinter of thl* city. the centennial celebration at th*
drack, age 32. and Edward M. Tuck­ RESETTLEMENT
Glenn Bera Chosen as
He ha* served well on the commis­ schools, there was a good crowd at sumed. Several prizes were awarded tee. Forrest Buehler of Irving
er. 18. both of Battle Creek. A
sion.
,The
law
stipulates
that
he
the
Brotherhood meeting Monday Including a radio, a number of township was chosen alternate.
search of their car brought forth a
MEMORIAL DAY
Her Successor
Article.
1
:
of
Agpoclgtlon
were
must name as another member of night. The members enjoyed very
revolver, an officer's “blllie" and
Judge Stuart Clement on Mon­ the county tax commission, a person much the presentation of the one- large ham* and basket* of grocer­ adopted for trie county organisation,
COMMITTEE
MEETS
several flashlights, which indicated Ii Considering the PnrohM
day named a successor tn Mrs. Fay who Is not connected, in an official act play, "They That Mourn" by the ies. Miss Gertrude ■ Hampton won a county budget was discussed and
that these men were concerned with
the
radio,
Frank
Wood
100
pounds
Green as matron of the county de­ way, with any taxing unit. He must Civic Player*. This play and the fine
Veterang
of
Three
Wars
to
of
sugar.
Other
winners
Included
tention home. Mrs. Green resigned not hold any township or city office, spirit shown by the Ciric Players
cation was taken up.
County
the place when her family moved nor be a member of a school board. were appreciated.
Make Plans for Ob­
that they had driven to Hastings in
into their new home on South Han­ For that position he selected Mark
uu. w,th other member* of the township
At the business session the fol­
servance
Modrack's car and had taken Night
over.
ly rewired, the
Ritchie of Yankee
Springs. Mr. lowing officer* were named for the Clark. Tony -Cordes (2). C. W. committee making a group of 42
On Friday evening the Memorial Policeman Clarence ShuiU'a Model
The new matron Is Mrs. Glen Ritchie served for many years as ensuing year:
Crawford. J. M Townsend. MHs
atLSl^bv^cllre^e’sX^^
Day committee was organised with A Ford. They did not have a key chase of a limited number of
Bera, wife of UndersherltT Bera. supervisor of hls township. While
Walter Wallace, president.
KCrRnin
Tamoe Cook.
r'nnv
i, via* discussed g
by_fBrTner
clarence
swanaMcB
aln. James
member
of two members from each of three pa­ to it. so they pushed hls car ahead of approximately M acre* “
Mr. and- Mrs. Bera will move into he was on the board of supervisors
Charles Faul, vice-president.
triotic
organizations — Spanish- of Modrack'a car on M-37 about this locality for reeeitlew
the detention home and look after he was chairman of the equalization
tiie Stale Bolls Conservation Com­
Adelbert Heath, secretary.
American war veterans. American four mile* northwest of town and
NEW
ROTARY
OFFICERS.
it, and will make a real home for committee for some time. He wa*
LeRoy Foster, treasurer.
The Hastings Rotary club at their I mittee. The day was spent dis­ Legion and Veterans of Foreign Into a field. They evidently In­
the youngsters who are sent there. alio for four years register of deeds
appraisal and offering
The treasurer's report indicated meeting Monday elected the follow- ' cussing provisions of the act and Wars.
tended to strip IL When they found
The supervisors recently selected of the county. Hls experience quali­ that there would be a comfortable
Offers will ba----- •1
i how it applied to Barry county
.
Officers chosen were: Pres, Adel- tiie revolver, the officer'* club and
a special committee to act with the fies him for the place. He knows balance after all expenses are paid. Ing officers: Carl Wespinter, presi- i farms.
George Miller, vice-president; ।
bert cortright; Secretary. Maurice flashlights, they realised that they
probate Judge in the management the county well, and has a wide ac­ The past year has been a success­ dent;
W. R. Cook, secretary; Henry Shel- ' -?ur1.?.g H1* nexL.lhr?c wee*“ lhese Foreman; Treasurer, Harry Miller; had stolen a car that they had not
of the detention home.
quaintance with its people. The law ful one. The officers and committees don and John Ironside, directors. committeemen will be active ex­ Committee members, Hugh Riley, planned to take, so they abandoned Uon Supervisor
Office building,
plaining the program to farmer*
specifies that the chairman of the have done good work. ■
The treasurer will be chosen at the
Edw. Downs. Floyd Wood. -----Don their idea of stripping It, but kept ly that owners a
DISPOSED TO INVESTIGATE.
over the county. Farmers will be
The past president* constitute an next meeting.
The council is disposed to investi­ finance committee, qf the board of
Foreman, Andrew Matthews and the gun, flashlights, etc. Sheriff
'given an opportunity to list their
Blakney was notified. The officer*
Roy Bush.
gate thoroughly the cost of street supervisors. L. R. Glasgow, shall be executive committee which renders
delaying
too
i
IMS
crops
which
will
put
them
in
'
a
member
of
the
county
tax
com
­
a helpful service to the Brother­
lighting before entering Into a con­
Further details will appear next
NEEDS IMPROVING.
now available.
line to apply for a grant later If
I mission. It also provides that the hood.
they have made written confession*.
tract for the future. Judging from
We are glad that ths council gave they ahould care to do so.
'
The car has been recovered and
attention Friday evening to the half
their action at the council meeting
Farmers should take the time to
Clarence feels that life is worth liv­
mile of highway on North Broad­
Friday night. The lightbig commit­ the county school commissioner. DEMOCRATS NAME
SPICER STILL IN JAIL.
CONVENTION DELEGATES. way. between the county garage and discuss the act and how it would
ing again.
tee of the council was authorised to I Mrs. Maude Smith, shall be memCarroll W. Spicer who had waived
apply to their farms, with the com­
engage such engineers as they see I bers. County Clerk Allan Hyde is
The Democratic county conven­ the city limits on the north. The mitteemen when they call. Accord­ examination on a charge of larceny
RESERVE THIS DATE I
named
by
the
law
a*
the
clerk
of
fit. in order to investigate street
tion was held In this city Saturday question of putting it In proper con­ ing to County Agent Harold Foster ami three other account* in the Jus­
lighting costs and ascertain other the commission.
evening »nd went on record as en­ dition was referred to the dty engi­
tice court was arraigned before
LyBorksr's
The first meeting will be held on dorsing the national administration. neer and street committee, with farmer* in the county generally
technical data which they may
judge
McPeek
on
Monday.
He
stood
agree
thl*
is
a
much
better
program
nlng of June 0. whan the club will
I Monday, May 11. at which time it is
deem necessary.
*
Charles F. Parker. Middleville, act­ power to act In conjunction with the
mute
when all
four accounts enjoy the entertainer* from Um
I expected that all the taxing unit*— ed as chairman. The convention Barry county road commission. than the old AAA contracts.
AUTO BUREAU Vo
charged
against
him
were
read.
| the county, township*, and school
Kalamazoo Vegetable Parchment
.. . . ,—---------- ,—. j ~
named iia
a* ucicgaics
delegatesw
tome
thesuuc
state con
con­ That half mile of road surely needsI
NOTICE.
When a prisoner doe* that It is the company. They will also bring a
CLOSE SATURDAY F. M. f------------------------------------------------------------- v'n“°" “r
Or. John Wool- improving.
।i
Ail who are interested tn the or- same as If he had pleaded not guil­ speaker. Watch far further anIn accordance with state regula­ I
, .
, . ; on of thl* city and Mrs. E. J. Pratt.
ganizatlon of a soft ball league here ty. Attorney Ooagn of Belding re­
tions, auto license bureau in Has­ 1 The duty of the commission is to
r* ।__________
•
WANTED.
this summer are asked to attend a quested that the ball of Mr. Spicer
tings will close at twelve o'clock on । fix the tax rale for each taxing unit
MIXED DANCES,
Permanent home for baby boy.. meeting In the community room In be reduced from 828.000 to 810X100.
MIXKD DANCtt.
Saturdays, commencing May 2.— and to hold the tax levied in each
Prairieville Saturday night. Door will be three months old in May. Ap­ the National bank building on FriUp to thia writing the ball ha* not
Every Saturday night at
| unit within the 15 mills Uralt.
prizes. Ecklers Orch.—Adv.
Adv. 4-30.
,
ply at Probate Court.—Adv.
,i day evening at 7:30 o'clock.
been secured. Spicer Is still In Jailiks, Frank H**rta«ton.-JL

POTS 10 GW
OLD FAVORITE

[Teachers And Pupils unite
X’,!:0"14 Securing Scores Of Antiq:

IDMETICKEI
SALE IS SPLENDID

PRIZE DRAWINGS
BB KG BIG CROWDS

KENT COUNTY HAS
SUED BAHRY CO.

INIS TOO BEMISES
MG TOGETHER

I

MAY

ADMINISTRATI

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL M, 18U
Mrs.
young anew will be
destroyed.
with ear trouble but is now conva­ Many young rabbits are killed by
such firm. These considerations
lescing.
A '’special” which will appeal to ought to deter one from setting Arts
, The constable bond of Ed. Downs you la quoted in CMTveth &amp; Steb­ in the lowlands or woods. In the
was approved by the council at bins' adv. in this Issue. Read it.— next place, one who does so U sub­
ject to arrest by SUU Conservation
their meeting Friday night.
Adv.
aulhorlUM, aa causing *uch Area la
Gaspe) meeting at the home of
n
, „„
A fine group w
of
the members w
of.
James Nagel tn Irving Tuesday | the Young people's Fellowship of a violation of the Mata's oonaarvanight. May 5. People from Moline I Emmanuel church listened to sn
and Moulton church will be In entertaining Ulk by Dean Eugene
charge.
Davenport, al the Parish house. PASSING OF CARLTON
Sixty-flvc couples attended the Sunday afternoon, relative to hls
TOWNSHIP RESIDENT.
Cheer Up party on Monday evening experiences when a resident of Bra­
al the Hastings Country Club. Music sil. ThU was the eighth ulk in
U1 a
*J Saturday afternoon at Pennock hoawas furnished by a Belding or- series being given on "Etu
Studles
—c- cl
of { p|taL whert he recency htd one of
| cheatra
‘
the Church in Latin America."
I hls legs amputated because of ganThe studanU and Uaehers of our
County
Conservation
Officer.
I George Sumner, attended a conser- schools deserve great praise and
• vation training school last week at commendation for their fine work in
l the Pioneer Training camp near arranging and carrying through this
Roscommon.
Centennial celebration. And those,
I Lawrence Moran of Three Rivers residents of Barry county who so.
I is a new member of the personnel kindly contributed valuable family,
I of the Taylor Shoe Store taking the possessions of heirlooms should rei place of Francis Rawley, who is celve their due share of thanks. I
I opening a shoe store at Ionia.
i There wa* just one thing to regret
The council acted upon the re­ about the exhibit . . It didn't last;
quest of Wallace Osborn Friday i long enough. Just two avenings
night for an extension of the sewer . were hardly time to visit all" the dis-1
on West* Bond street. The matter I plays and examine them as closely
was referred to the council sewer I as warranted. But It was a fine
committee for Investigation and re­ thing, and If we didn't know any­
thing about the early history of
port.
Mrs T. H. Hoos. wife of the pas­ I Barry county and our fair city of
tor of the Pilgrim Holiness Taber­ Hastings before, we certainly should
nacle. has Improved so that she was : now.
able to attend church Sunday I Mrs. C. P. Lathrop tells us she liad
momlng. Though she Is not able to a most interesting week In St. Louis ।
walk as yet. her strength is return- along with the M. D.’s from Barry I
i ing steadily.
। county, altho she didn’t attend any !
1 Dorrance Trethric has filed the ; clinics. But she did have some,
necessary papers with the county grand rides with Mrs. Chester Stem
clerk for the "Barry Finance Com­ of that city, also a 400 mile one
pany." The papers did not state , with Dr. Lathrop on Sunday thru
what would be the particular finan­ the Ozark mountains, which she
cial field In which the company , thinks for beauty, surpassed any
would operate.
4.
mountain drive she had ever taken.
| The council al their meeting Frl- In appearance they resemble lhe
, day evening was asked by the city While and Green mountains in the
| playgrounds committee tor an ap- east. Forest Park, she reports, is a
proprlatlon to carry on games and wonderful place, with the Lindbergh
sports during the summer vacation trophies the high point of Interest.
| period for the benefit of the chllAn attractive looking young ma­
I dren and young folks, who will be tron. breezed Into the Banner of­
out of school during that time.
fice, Friday, and with a sparkle In
।
Milo Osborn was arrested by her eye announced that she had
I Marshal Thompson Saturday night come in to sec about lhe copy for
on a charge of Intoxication. He was next week’s music memory contest.
I brought before Justice Cortright That gave us lhe cue for rcoognizMonday who imposed a fine of &gt;15. ing Mrs. C. F. Rcebs. who as ELhel
I and costs of $4.50. He gave Mr. Os­ Wilber was In charge of music in
! bom until May 1 to pay the fine the Hastings schools during the late
and costs or serve time in jail.
( Maurice Keyworth's superintend­
I Salt is more than a seasoning for ency She left a record for achieve­
small amounts can be used to cm-, ment In her department that Is still
phaslzc flavors, especially melon or remembered and often referred to.
grapefruit, say home economists at J Mrs. Rcebs whose husband. Prof.
' M. S. C- A bit of salt improves cocoa Herbs, is head of the Education
i or chocolate sauce, candy. Ice cream, j department at Bowling Green Uni­
I preserves, pies, puddings, intensify- versity in Ohio was visiting her
I ing the natural flavor and offsetting mother in Athens, and took the op­
■ cloying sweetness or flatness.
portunity to drive over to call on
। On Friday night lhe council vot­ friends here, her first visit in many
ed to comply with the recent Su­ years.
preme Court decuion relative to exernpting property, valued up to »2.-, TWOBAD WOODS FIRES
000. which is owned by perron* who j
I served in the Spanish-American. I
IN RUTLAND SUNDAY
Philippine. China Relief expedition.1
-------------’T
T
.
Indian. Civil and Mexican wars, or Setting Fires on Low Lands
the widows of such persons. The ac-1
Or Woods Violates State
i
tion was taken in order to comply I
„
with the decision
।
Law Now

LOCAL NEWS

Saturday Only
9 a. m. to 1 p. m

BUTTER

28«

ib.

Shultz

A DEL MONTE
DEL MONTE

PEACHES
Na. 2&gt;4 Can

2,or 29c
DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE
Medium Size

2 ,or 25c
MIHBIIIIliHlIIIIIMIIIh
DEL MONTE

DELUXE

PLUMS

SALE Is On
Fill Your Pantry NOW!
APRICOTS
2 No. 2 Cana 35c
FRUITS for SALADS No IX Can 17c

29c ||||

HI GRAPEFRUIT 2

O No 2
A, Can*

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE
BARTLETT PEARS ■Mo. 2M Can
2 Can*
FRUIT COCKTAIL
GREEN BEANS wk.&gt;. No 2 Can
PINEAPPLE— 2 No. 2 Cana
SPINACH
2 No. 2 Can*

25c
23c
29c
15c
33c
25c

FREE DAY WINNERS
(10 Highest)
Dorothy Fuller$4.02
Clcn Kahler-----Nora Smith
J. M. Townsend
Mrs. Wm. Barnes
Mrs. Oscar Palmei
Vern Cotton
Jessie Scobey
Ceo. R. Foote
Mrs. Bryans
The

Sparton

3.83
2.96
2.83
2.82
2.63
2.46
2.38
2.35
1.86

Refrigerator was

Walnut street.
We wish to thank everyone who
helped to make our conical a
success.

FREE DAY IN MAY
WILL Be . . .
MAY 13TH
LUCKY DAY IN
APRIL WAS
APR. 13th

SARDINES

No. 2^ Cans

ON THESE FINE

2,or 33c

QUALITY

MMMMIBBIIIIfflllffllltltMtl

BROOMS

QUALITY

each

OQr

FOODS!

fcVV

Clothes LINES
50 FOOT SASH CORD

WHITE HOUSE

Wash Boards

CCr

wJwJV

Mackeral

WALL PAPER
CLEANER
IE.

3 large cans

EACH.............................

CRESCENT

2 C.«.

AMMONIA
Little Bo-Peep

qt.

*■-J V

25c

COFFEE 19c CRISCO
| Armour’s Star Lard

55c

MARRIAGE LICENSE.

WASH DRESSES
BOUCLE KNIT DRESSES

$3.88

New Silk D resses
Exclusive CINDERELLA Dresses

$388

Mr. and Mrs. vere Harrington re-There were two bad woods fires
ceived a telegram Thursday an- ' on sections 35 and 30 in Rutland on
nounclng that Mrs. Harrington's Sunday, one of them was set by a
father. Joseph Elson, age about 75. land owner, got beyond control and
who lived In Riverside, six miles did some damage on a neighbor’s
from Benton Harbor, had burned farm, Including the killing of young
to death. It appears that he had set ' trees. The other fire. It was befirc to a big pile of limbs that he Uevcd. was set by picnickers who left
j had trimmed from his large fruit a fire burning when they vacated
I orchard. He was nearly blind, and the place where they ate their dln। probably stumbled and fell into the ' ncr. No serious iln.uieial loss resullI brush fire. Hls funeral look place cd. But both fires destroyed birds’
j Saturday.
: nests and no doubt killed many
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene H. Waring.' young rabblLs.
who arc moving her? from Lansing.
Conservation Officer George Sumhave rented the tenant house owned ncr asked us to call the attention of
by w. G. Bauer west of Mrs. H. A our readers to these fires and to
Adrounie’s. Mr. Waring is the new I say that this is a bad lime to set
engineer connected with consumers! fires in swamps or wood lots. Thye
Power.
, are many birds nesting in such

jl

♦ , fTLAM I II CAT 12 ■=

New Shipment of Spring

SUITS

COATS

Navy, Grey and Fancy

$788. $988. $|2§8
A FEW CLOSEOUTS in

$6-

SUITS

\JF Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 224-1-2557 BL—

2 ib.. 25c

JL V V

drvn. Funeral services were held at
the Pleasant Valley chureh on
Tuesday afternoon at two o’clock
with burial in the Clarksville ceme­
tery.

Our Dresses make you feel well dressed .. . coni’
fortable in fit and style . . . economical in price.

3-pound can ’.

1Qr

gnne. He Is survived by four daugh­
ters. Mrs. Wm. Walt, lake Odessa.
Mr*. Norris Herrington. Jackson,
Mrs. Earl Wallace,‘carlion and Mrs.
Earl Near, Irving; two eons, Roy of
Carlton and Lewis of Lansing; a

ralch our Screen tor chance* without notice

MASON CANS
MASON CANS

63c

QUARTS

PINTS

FRUIT JAR RUBBERS

.... 55c
3- 10c

SUNDAY and MONDAY, MAY 3 and 4

OXYDOL &amp; 19c

4

and SPRING BYINGTON

BANANAS

3 »». 17c

RADISHES

3 uh.lOc

ORANGES

2 &lt;&gt;&lt;» 29c

T

BOLOGNA

’75gash drawing

WASHABLE KID $4 .00
CAFE at only _ I

With PHIL REGAN. WALTER C. KELLY. EVALYN KNAPP

2-29c

SPECIAL ATTRACTION!

O DANCE SETS

WED., THURS. and FRI.. MAY 6. 7 and 8
Matinca Wednesday, 3 o'clock

*

• PANTIES

SHIRLEY TEMPLE in

• GIRDLES and

;■ CAPTAIN JANUARY
.
"Y*
S’

• CORSELETTES

A Fox Picture with GUY K1BBEE, SLIM SUMMERVILLE,
Jbne Long. Buddy Ebsen. Sara Hoden and Jane Dorwell
Adults 25c. Children 10c

PANEL SLIPS at
.00

.98

2Lb*- 25c

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. I

D.nCa S«t,*1.39**1.95

The Widow From Monte Carlo

Pontiao ond Bloomers

With Warren William. Dolores Del Rio, Louise Fa sen da
and Colin Clive

All SHk 11.00

.

JOHN WAYNE in

Food Center

Frandsen9

KING OF THE PECOS
\

ss

$1*9

SATURDAY ONLY, MAY 9

FEATURE NO. 1

Ask for your
FREE Tickets on

50' 85' ’I 00

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, MAY 5

• SLIPS
(£

2 ms. 25c
PIG HEARTS
lb. 10c
BEEF RIBS
BEEF ROASTS
u&gt;. 13c
SMOKED HAM PADDIES ... 5c

GRAPEFRUIT 6 *' 25c

KAYSER GLOVES

I LAUGHING IRISH EYES

OLEOflOlc
MINCED HAM

All Silk Blouses . . $1.69

with JUNE LANG. THOMAS BECK. JED PROUTY

BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY, 1:00 and 3:00 o’clock
Other Performance*—Adults 25c. Children 10c

♦

Fresh Fruitw and Vegetables

BLOUSES at $1.00

I EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT

/

With MURIEL EVANS and JACK CLIFFORD
Episode No. 2 of "FLASH GORDON’* Will be Shown at
3:00 o’clock Saturday Matinee Only
Adult* 15c: Children 10c
.

Exclusive But Not Expensive
'

j
4*^4 ■&amp;4*T 4*^*4 -f4^ 4^*4 *?4^ 4^5 j

HASTINGS. MICH.

PHONE 2504

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY.
the I. O. O F. hall last Saturday ' course*, the tables being decorated Mm, Waiter Murphy of UMtaE.
evening for the observance of the I with crystal candlestick*, pink ta- and Mr. and Mrs. Marton Prince of
foundlng of the order. Members of per*, and spring flowers. The bride Grand Ledge.
that oragnliation. Rebekahs, and was the recipient of many beautiful
According to Information we have
their families gathered for a bounll- • gift*, and a very enjoyable evening received, all lhe local teachers have
ful supper, followed by a program wa* spent in visiting. Thooe present signed contracts for next year. Thia
and social hour. Rev. Kart Kdefer were: Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Chapelle bespeaks satisfaction all around.
of Watervliet was the guest speaker, and son Bob. Mr. and Mrs. SherMiss Bernice Burkey and friend.
(Continued from page 1, sec. 1)
Mr, O W. Bang, M Drtrull apml ««&lt; '™l« •' VraUanll. Mr. ana
CONTAINS A TOTAL OF
dayalhr paal
hare via- «"■ . J««&gt;lhan
“J Smith of Kalamazoo and
Ml**
transferred to the desert, but like
11,088 NAMES OF BAR­ wvrral
icing her alaler. Mn. F. E. Brunner.' daughler Rachel at Bcurgl,. Mr. and Helen Eash were Sunday guest* of
"Old Man River" the cactus keeps
The speech claaa ol Freeport High
Jo,hn„ Ru,Y,ld ,’,nd "Myghler tiie former's parent*, Mr. and Mrs.
RY COUNTY FOLKS
right on "rolling along." That’s one
school 1"id . banquet at Che Ma- F*&gt;‘X, o' HaahrtUe. Mr. and Mn. L. F. Burkey, and family.
reason why they are so interesting.
sonic Temple laat Wedluadag evedaughter Man and son
Vere Carter wa* In Battle Creek
Ages ago. when conditions all
SEVENTEEN YEARS IS
fling, under lhe leadership ol tlsvlr i Blister. Mr. and Mrs. Wendrtl An- Inst week Wednesday evening where
around were probably favorable for
MINIMUM AGE LIMIT Ihatructur. Mias Rice. Own crepe d™n. Mr. and Mrs. Ben). Hen­ he saw lhe film and lies rd Admiral THE BOY WHO
plant growth, no one knows just
paper and yellow disltodlls served 1 nlnb. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bond. Mr. Byrd lecture on hl* Antarctic ex­
wiial the first cactus looked like.
ON THE BURNING DECK
room and table decoration* and an&lt;J Mrs. Sherman Klphnger and periences.
It may have been a beauty. Then a
General Information About as
made a lovely setting fur Hie dinner, j daughter Eva Jean Mr. and Mra
- An obituary of the late John
"depression" came on. luud limes
Rural Communities Is
Tiie program which followed Hie
?anI!on' ,Mr' .““J
stadel will be found elsewhere in Had Nothing on the Lad Who
set in. lhe land became parched and
supper was as follow*: "Arriving Charles Smallwood and daughter the Banner.
dry. In lhe plant world at that time
Ate Thomaz Store Pea­
Also Included
atTdest^attan." Albert Barcroft; Phyllis. Miss Gertrude Preston •"**
and
From Saturday night's Pres* we
liiere was no Welfare Department
Hastings has a new city directory, "Benefit* of Oral English." Eleanor mother. Mrs. Alleen Combs. Miss copy: -Dr. Shepard of Remus re­
nuts Saturday
to help out the poor cactus, but It
the first since 1929. Il Is a volume Thaler; trurhpet solo. Mr*. Bruce Ettie Dlnnie. Miss Julia Snavely, ported lo Charlotte officer* Satur­
The
Thoma* stom atrtalnly wor
had to depend on itself and refused
of 254 pages, covering the city and Waiter. Toast to speech teacher. and Miss Ellen Youngs, all of Char­ day the theft of 1500 worth of cloth­
a warm spot in the heart* of mam
to be "licked." It just reduced it­
county, published by R. L. Polk Ac Ruth Wheeler; response, Mis* Rice; lotte.
ing from Ids car here Friday night." ' a kid Saturday when they offer*
self in size. lived within Ils budget,
Co. of Detroit. Tills is the second harmonica solo. Malcolm Boughner;
Sunday
afternoon
callers
at —
the Thl* is undoubtedly Dr. Fred Sliep- free peanut* to all who would ea
---------. —
------ — ------— —
and kept right on fighting. As lhe
edition of the local guidebook pul Toast to president of S. O. S. Club, home of Mr. and Mr* Harry Lane (ard.
formerly
of Freeport, now a
----- ----—
earth continued to get dryer the
out by thl* nationally-known direc­ Marshall Segar; response, Laurence were Mr. and Mrs. Cart Smith of । dentist at Remus.
Remu*.
seemed to be especially willing
doughty old warrior even dispensed enjoy playing nurse to the little
tory concern. The new directory Wieland; verse speaking chorus. Stanton.
|
•«
I Included
In the list of eighteen
with its leaves M being unnecessary strangers far from home. But the
lists a total of 11.088 names, with Meredith Lewi* wa* toastmaster.
Mr*. Anna Walton moved
the ...»
first (1
“V A "cord*
w s- because
u UK
impedimenta, and faced lhe world idea doe* prevail that sometime the
seventeen as the minimum listing
•
-•
■
T.
0^
the
past
term.
1*
the
name
of
cactus
is
going
lo
be
found
very
Dr.
H.
S.
Wedel
returned
Saturof
the
week
from
the
Ira
Blough
■
with nothing but living stems, deter­
age for persons. The inclusion of
noure mio ner own numc. reccnuy ' Matlrtce OverholL Freeport son of
into her own home, recently
mined to survive, regardless of what valuable; that coming through cen­
were all covered with peanut akin.**
Barry county, except for four of the day evening from St. Louis. Mo. house
vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Frank «r
“r«
“• Overholt.
might come. Even Nature seems to turies and centuries of struggle un­
So persistent waa hl* appetite that
I larger towns. Is new with this edi­ where he took the course sponsored ------1
Congratulation*.I. Maurice.
render assistance in such eases, and der most unfavorable conditions as
by Kellogg Foundation. Dr. Wedel Hynes
along in lhe middle of the after­
tion.
she did with the cactus. These they have, these desert plant* must
noon Manager Jones courteously
In order, the new directory em­ says there is some difference be­
_ .
land
called on friends here Friday. LOAD RESTRICTIONS
plants with their thick stems as­ posses* some great natural resource i
tween
the
climate
in
Freeport
and
approached
him and said' "Bon, 1'rrt
braces n~ rost/T of government of­
sumed the form best calculated to that has not as yet been discovered. DELEGATES CHOSEN FOR ficials, Hastings name list, Hastings St. Louis.
The local High school team met
-------------------------- ------------you'll eat so many peanut*
HAVE BEEN REMOVEQ afraid
hold moisture along with a mini­ Nature doesn't put manr thing* on
CLUB WEEK AT M. S. 0.
Several from here attended the defeat at lite hand* of the Hastings
that they'll make you sick." H*
householders' guide, directory of
„
„
mum of evaporating surface, very this old earth that arc not useful I
.
Barry county towns, directory of funeral of Mrs. Simon Hefflebouer. High school nine here Friday after- .
aN JULY
essentia) qualities out on the desert. in some way. Even lhe obnoxious I
Barry county taxpayers, directory of aged 84. at Hastings lost Thursday noon. Better luck next time. boys. ( A- L. Brown Receives an vr- reply: **Aw. I waa sick this momln',
Just to help out. all the stems were i1 milk whw
weedI mav
may nrnvidr
provide nnr
our nihhi'r
rubber ’‘
------------■■
The May meeting of the W. F. M.
•
~
•
but I'm all right now." But klda
Barry county rural routes, classified, Mr*. Heffiebower lived just east of
der
From —
Highway
covered with a thick skin which . Mipply and Henry Ford is proving cnilD HUNDRED AT
Freeport for many years and had S. will be held al the parsonage with
weren't the only ones to enjoy Um
and numerical telephone directory.
wnnlri
Al
soy bcilll
bean Call
can do. and wllSt
what j 1
Department
would expand Ar
or mnlnirl
contract with/.,,,
without what the &amp;OV
offer, for grownups availed themThe Hastings name list, covering many friend* here among the older Mix* Wheeler on Friday afternoon
ACHIEVEMENT DAY 3.000
cracking, regardless of whether an important place it can fill in our
people,
who
mourn
her
passing.
Bu
­
of
this
week.
A
special
program
A.
LBrown,
slate
highway
main
­
names. Is the only "who's who"
rainfall might be light or heavy. industrial world. Up to this time
of all live grown-ups of lhe city, and rial was here In the family lot In is being arranged will) surprise fea­ tenance engineer, received word there was a grand
The cactus helped Itself in the con­ comparatively scant attention lias Sewing Clubs Have Exhibit furnishes several items of informa­ Pleasant Hill cemetery.
____
tures_____
and___
all the
__ _______
ladle*,, whether
______ __
...
___________
______
___
„
_
„
from the state department on Mon- shucks on Ute floor.
servation of moisture by mixing in been paid to the cactus, further &lt;
Dr. E. B Griffen of Hastings will members or not, are cordially in- , day that load restrictions had been
of Notebooks, Materials
tion on each name, telling whether
a sort of mucilage, which It in some than to admire Its fighting qualities ,
vlled.
'
■* on all state trunk
------ ”—lines
, ----------removed
residents arc married or single, brihg tile message al lhe U. B. - --------and Garments, Etc.
way manufactured itself. Maraud­ and its refusal to be licked. But'
MLm Hermlene Blgbee of Center- I south of
church Sunday morning at 11:30.
— an
—. east
—. and
—a west
west line
nne beoe- ,
heads
of
families
or
roomers,
cming animals, searching for water, there arc many who feel that some j1 About 4» member* of 4-H clubs pioyer4 Or employees, etc. Flanked followed by communion. In lhe viile spent lhe week end here, the • tween
•
—-•--------and
• —.w^vJ
Muskegon
8agtnaw
taught, lu
to mum
drink ui
of Ils juiir.,,
juices, su
so me
the day
| counties. The order also stales that
luubii
—/ these
....... - -great
------ desert
--------- plants
..... wi" inrougnoui
throughout me
the county wnn
with ineir
their bv
by Mrs
Mr, Hazel M A
Abbey antj MlM evening. Mrs. Griffen will de­ gust of Mrs. L. B. L*ter.
cactus put on an armor of spikes help provide-food for man and
no |,.a(|era lo0k .Jiri
part In
In fhn
lhe Achieve-j charloUr
... ~
zuschnitt
. ............
Mr. and Mr*. Wesley Rosser and restriction* are removed on all state
liverinthe
sermon. Prayer meeting
. the list
­
a* r.harp as needles, and protected beast; that when wheat, corn and Incnt Day program at the Methodist'cludes
• - picturesque
'
such
names as on Thursday evening at the home , daughter Gwendolyn and Mias Beq- concrete roads in the lower penin­
Itself from harm. After doing a|| | potauw*
-*■—»- last —
------ - — A style re­
IKitatoes fall, the
lhe cactu*
cactus will eome
come to cburcb
Thursday.
I Roman Bull and Earl Count "Signs" of the class leader. A. B. Fish. You trice Rosser of Allegan were Sun­ sula. but are still In fprae an some
this, there It stood ready for any I ---------the rescue,
.nd and our present waste
e VUe and the naming o( delegates to ! of spring among the family names, are welcome to all these services.
day guest* of Percy Rosser and Mr. state gravel road*, as the roads are
emergency. In some cases it even ’ P,a“* will become the "bread' ' uie
BMllc
WVIV
,
the slate meeting were features of 1 are Bush. Plant, Blossom. Bhamrock
Mr .and Mrs. Earl jack, son and and Mrs. Leon Howk.
still soft In many places.
turned pol&amp;onous. Then it com- basket of the country. I^ts hope ; tbe afternoon. Eighteen boys from j and Greenfield
Mr. and Mrs. E- H. Chapelle. Mr.
Hard" nhmes are&gt; two daughters of Detroit were Sun­
menced to produce flowers to per- . that that lime Is far away. If and . nll ovt.r lbe county received honor* I Rock. Slone. Marble, Brass and day guests of her mother. Mrs. H. and Mrs. Sherwood White of Ypsi- DEATH OF MRS LOUIS
peluate ita kind, and many of those, when It comes, if it ever does. ln handicraft and from this group Ironside.
. iontl. were over night guest* of Miss
a. THIBOUT.' r-v
W. Gosch and husband.
flowers are most beautiful, a* any- doubtless those who may read this
Dunn of t|)e Monroe school
I lull/ night
IIIRIII.
Mr*. Louis A. Thiboul (Sarah 11
Mr and Mrs. E. M. Batdorf of Fem Wheeler last Friday
Useful features of the household­.
one can testify who in early spring article will probably not be con and Hugh Nevins of
. N. Pine .Lake
.
ers' guide are lhe designation of oc­. Rudyard spent a part of last week Miss Ruth Wheeler accompanied ! Booromi wa* born in Barry county , I H
or directly ---------Interested,
be- were uuuaCi
has seen lhe great desert in bloom.earned
--------- - *■'
u‘
chosen, UVKr#&lt;ltra
delegates M
to „„
lhe aiMVt:
State cupant-owned homes and the list­. here with her sister. Mrs. John them as far ax Charlotte
tie Saturday. | June 26. 1864 and lived in Hastings■
hc|d at UnsU, ln
tn hear 1(1,,
remaining oVer Sunday• to
Mis* .&gt; until she was seventeen, then movedI [g?
So the cactus survives today as a cause the present generation, and club Week lo
ing of the telephone number along; Pl*h.
sort of a vegetable porcupinr. De­ many to follow, will have passed on, July Janl„ jackM&gt;n. Middleville. with lhe house number. The di­.
H
Plans are being made for a ca­ Etha Nogler. who spoke at the M. to Grand Rapid* where July 11. 1888
fiantly they even seem to stand out Luther Burbank, the ircat plant | JamfS Houghtalln. Striker school. rectory of the Barry county town*t paclty crowd at the Major Bozo's E. church there Sunday evening. 1 she was married to Loui* A. Thl-1
in a sort of a challenging altitude,
? lnd Robcrt
N P*»e Lake. covers nine municipalities and wa*i Amateur Hour, being staged in K.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sherman bout, and that city has always since
and its■ marvelous
of -r&gt;.
en- I
m*&gt;n. »■ . qualities
&gt;&gt;
-&lt; n
named alternates.
ns much as if to say: "Touch me If ■n
haver----------------purchased —
lire ------Mike—
Flynn I been her home. She y
passed
away
of P hall this Wednesday evening------..
compiled
from
a
personal
canvass,
you dare I" At least anyone will ad­ durance and sought to develop ll
County style revue delegates se­ the publishers explained. Telephone by the High school, assisted by oth- property, now occupied by Mr. and April 23. 1936 after a short Illness.
— -i
—. The
----------------------------------. »«
— Clifford
—। Bird. tv
- understand The fUncrai wa5 held Aprlj as. wlth
mit that they are hard to make as a potential source of life and lected by Miss Lois Corbett, assist­ numbers and the designation of. cr
talent.
proceeds will be used
Mrs.
We
friends with, and If you try and gel wealth. Through breeding he sought ant 4-H Club leader, were Lucille tenant-owned homes appear in this for new baseball suits.
Mr. Sherman intends to build an Interment In Oak Hill cemetery.
to
deprive
it
of
its
protective
armor
loo familiar with them you are apt
Mr and Mrs. Allen Fish were in addition to lhe house before moving
Endres. Fish school, and Leona department also. The taxpayers' list
She leaves her husband, a daugh­
of
needle-like
spines,
and
develop
lo get ."stung" good and proper But
Helse of Woodland. Beatrice Bali.■ shows name, address, land section, Grand Rapid* lost Wednesday fore- in.
ter, Mrs. Wm. Delnay and three
there they are scattered all over the it as a food for stock. In a way I Dunham. Betty Bagley. N- Pine Lake area of land and valuation of land. noon, returning by way of Gaine*.
Ward Hynes, who has been teach- grandchildren of Grand Rapids, one
desert, far and near, and of all think that lie succeeded but hls and Jean Dickerson will represent■ Barry county's.diversity of interests where the former attended a meet- Ing at Millington, has accepted lhe sister. Mrs. James Silsbee, and a
shapes, sixes and heights. There are death cut short his efforts along j the Clothing clubs with Ruth। Is reflected in the classified depart - ing of the Campmeeting board, position of teacher of instrumental niece. Mrs. Frederick Palmvr. of
l)&gt;&lt;»'wee. tiny Hille fellows not over this line. University students and1 Ketcham. Stevens school as alter- i ment of the new directory, where while Mrs. Fish attended the branch muslc
in the new $223,000
1223,000 Charlotte Hastings, and
music In
ana a niece. Mrs. Cha*.
cna*. |
on inch or so above the ground, but even lhe Federal Department of ,I nale
Emma Anderson. High school for the coming year. Kuhn of Greenville, Georgia, also
168 different types of business and meeting. Mr*
;1 _______
you step on one and you're very Agriculture have worked along the . W’ork done by the various sewing J' prof;
—1
professional
enterprise* are cata- Mrs. Mary Dodge. Mrs. Sarah Wai- He will also leach history and civics, other relatives and many friends,
same
course,
but
up
to
this
lime
no
apt to have a nredle-llkx *plne go
•
1
-------------------------« —
•»
; clubs wo*
’ logued. The numerical telephone ton and Rev. and Mrs. Batdorf were Congratulatlon*. Ward.
— on
. display
----------- In the rear nf .lei-..-.
right through the leather of your great progress has been made. But lhe main auditorium. There was 1 ii.t
Rev. Fern Wheeler announces as
ROBINHUE PARK,
nm r.-w
covers Hastings. Middleville, in attendance at the branch during
jhoe. Even this little fellow can look the bright "hope" still persists, everything from a kitchen towel to Nashville and Woodland.
her sermon subject for Sunday j Last Week's
Letter.
the three days' session.
—
-- —
-—
\J
____ 1__ ■ "The Add f
_ . of a
- u-,1
_ 1.
Vlra
-* children of
lifter itself. Then there are the great along with the idea of extracting baby clothes, nil hand made and . The publishers said that the new
Dr. Hugh Kennedy of Grand Rap- morning.
Test
ChrisMr*. ClUvn
Glen riaan
Dean r~
and
the waters
of the sea. and many with exquisite workmanship, I directory will be distributed to the Ida. former district superintendent. Han Experience."
Middleville spent Friday night with
loll fellows 50 or GO feet tall, with -gold from —
—------bodies and "stems" like fair-sired developing power by cracking up Notebook* of pictures, samples of । free-reference Directory Libraries
occupied the pulpit nt the M. E.
Mr. and Mrs. Dell Godfrey called -----------------------------------------------------------logs. You can ace these large fellows 'be atom Such experiments os have materials, now* on lhe care of dlf- ' Of other clUes to
.v replace the ....
church
Sunday
morning
and
con°n
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Hooper
(
1929
go-- to
prove-- that ,K
the
for a long distance and they seem to been
— made
—•*“ do
-------------------" ferent kinds of materials, and sug- edition. The
Polk organization j ducted the communion service.
of Campbell Sunday afternoon.
i
glory in their eminence. Then there cactus is not entirely an uncon­ gestlons a* to styles and colors for maintains a branch of the Directory
Peter Frandsen moved Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Geiger of |
»
Is the cactus that Is shaped rome- querable savage; that with consid- i various types and figures were com-: Libraries, with
•
outside directories from the Pulley Bunnell bungalow , near Alto called at the home of Mr.
thing like a barrel. This old fellow irate treatment it will shed it* prehcmdve style guides to what the available for public -reference, at1 into rooms over lhe Green beer par- , and
ana Mrs.
twin. H.
n. W.
w. Gosch
oosen Sunday.
ouiraay.
has served a very noble purpose, brl.dles .and Inoffensively dwell in well-dressed
. woman wears.
the office of the Hastings Commer-! lor.
n
-v and Mr
« J.
’ ’
I
’
Rev.
Mrs.
I. Batdorf ac- i
and has been the means of saving clvllired surroundings along with * One club dealt with lhe furnish- xrial Club.
i *'
Mr. and Mrs. A. B- Pish. Virginia companied by Mt. and Mrs. A. B.
't;,7
many u poor fellow's life. Choking lhe jwacetul e.bh.,0 end lhe hum-1
and Calvin, called at the Hahn j Fiah called at the John Stadel home
onc „rn„ ol , „rl l room W1U,
alnosF to death, the desert way­ Me lump. 1 «... informed Ibu
FREEPORT.
...
_________________________________________________________
home west of town Bunday. Other in Carlton Sunday afternoon.
...
farer has approached this big bar- there are certain species of the _______
Mrs. C. M. Conklin of ';
"As ye sow, so shall ye reap." callers were: Mrs. Mattie
Mattle Lickta ' R«V. and Mr*.
appropriate window trimmings and
rel-llke cactus, cut off the top. cactus that are edible and which pictures. The notebooks of members Evidently the people around here 1 and two daughters.
. Hastings called on Mr. and Mrs. L.
mashed the pulp and extracted a the Indians and some whites use. It of this club showed various types of believe that to be literally true, for i The local Methodist parsonage F Burkey Monday enroute lo Cope- '
is
said
that
some
of
them
are
de1
Jlfe-savlng drink, pother kind of
materials suitable for curtains and everyone seems to be making gar- ’ wa* the scene of a very happy gath- mish.
yactus Is Just n great big sprawl of licious,
Hcious. and that -after lhe prickly drapes, artistic arrangement of fur­ den this week. Here's wishing for i ering last Friday evening, when Rev.
Callers at the P. A. Thoma* home
been----removed and prop­ niture. right kinds of wallpaper for a good summer for growing.
ftat jmds. and still another variety skin has ------t Fem Wheeler entertained thirty- Sunday were: Abe Thomas. Mr. and
seems to like to pretend that It is a erly prepared, you can gel lire taste various rooms and many other de­
Word received Monday from Ar- t five guest* from Charlotte. Ypsilan- 1 Mrs. John Helntzelman of Lake
9&gt;ush. Another one will look like a of strawberry, pineapple, plum, or tails about home making that are thur Austin, who had been at the 1 ti. Sturgis and Nashville. In honor Odessa. Mrs. Clair Bigelow. Mr. and
kmall clod of rock and still another lemon, while the fruit of another essential to the good housekeeper.
University hospital for ten days. I of Mr. and Mrs Sherwood White
twill remind you of a pin cushion, spectra will be as hot as Uie hottest
A group of youngsters fwm the staled that he was feeling better [ of Ypsilanti, whose- marriage was
fund Ls apt to have just as bad an pepper II I* said that Coronado and Coals Grove school portrayed the and wa* now able to move hls fin-1 an event of April 3rd. The guest*
jeffccl it you step - on it. Thus it hi* followers never could have fourfold aim of the clubs In a play­ gers. Several diseased teeth were I were all former resident* of Char- ,
anight be continued through the 200 reached tlieir peuta In California let. "All Four." It was surprisingly removed as a source of hls trouble, lotte. the bride being the daughter
(species of cactus growing in this without Uie help of these plants on well done and one of the most en­ His many friend* here hope he may | of Supt. E. H. Chapelle, formerly of
(country. Every one of them seems the way. But one thing l» sure— tertaining parts of the whole day's return home completely cured.
the Charlotte schools. A cooperJto want to try and look repellknt. they do make Ideal fences for hold­ program.
There wa* a large attendance at atlve dinner was served in
five j
{but tliey only succeed in making ing live slock, and woe to Uie unruly
SHANKLESS
{themselves attractive on that ac- animal that attempt* to smash
{count. Wherever they are. and through one. Some of lhe early
{whatever they are. they present to mission* were protected from attack
.the world one of the best examples by planting cactus hedges around
(of the determination of the specie* them, vestiges of which remain aft­
to live. In fact about lhe only tiling er almost two centuries. From their
(ttiat will kill one of these cactus long association with the cactu* out
{plants is "kindness" In captivity it on the desert, the Indians have be- {
come »pretty
well—acquainted
•seems to retain those grim quail- ------—
-----a--------------- with
-------, I
flies that harsh Nature and cen- 1 their qualities, friendly as well a* i
We now have ,hp largest line of floor coverings
tturles of hard fighting gave it. and . hostile. One particular species i* I
{appears ungrateful for good treat- quita popular with them, and 11*
'ment and lota of attention. It seems । stem* when baked in hot ashes proare weU chosen and lhe prices are eery attractive.
Branded
I
•to do the best when It is neglected vide a food that is not unUke I
POUND
•Too much consideration—especially | squash. Our chief desert "cactu*
Pound—
jtoo much water—and II is apt to j land" extends from western Texa*
GOOD AXMINSTER RUG, size 9x12
reward It* care-taker by "turning i clear through to the Pacific ocean,
for
only
__________________________
up it* toes." It's the bull dog of lhe j and north from'lhe Mexican border
plant family and thrive* best by to Colorado and Utah. In lesser

THEMMS
CMS PUNT

eternally looking out Yor Itself.
numbers It I* claimed they are to be
But see them juft after the one found all the way from Alaska clear
and only "rainy season" of spring.' down to Chili In South America,
when all the great desert is paint- and are very plentiful In Mexico. All
ed with lhe unmatched and inde- over these areas, thousands upon
scribabic colors of beautiful flow- thoqsand* of square miles in extent,
ersl It is then that the cactus seems stand these great prickly monsters,
to respond to lhe “Joy of living." । their presumable virtues practically
From millions of brlary crowns and unexplored a* yet. and their secret
thorny sides the flowers push forth, value* still locked up in their very
purple, crimson, /pink, while, ar- disagreeable
personalities. There
ange and even green and mixed they stand just walling for lhe time
lints. They are like the rose, like to come when scientific men will
many anollier flower, but still like reveal their hidden worth—and they
no flower but their own. Some of must be worth something or the
the flower* are as large as the plants good Lord wouldn't have put such
that bear them; some ore solitary; huge plants over such wide area*,
some in clusters crowded tighllM unless II was for sontc good purpose,
together. Even
in
this annual Any plant that con thrive so magSprlng “flower party.” wlien even ' niflcenlly year in and year out. cenhomelincM shines forth, the cactus lury in and century out. on a
seems to grimly cling to its deter- scorching desert, must iiave some
mlnatlon to be unlike anything else valuable element* In Its make-up.
—and it Is.
So far the secrets have not been reWhat food ore they, Frartlcqlly ’ ve.led .nd you feel like doniirf your
. . nothing
.. .
. . far
;
.
hal tn
to th*
the -ranttis
cactus anH
and th*
the mvnt^rv
mystery
good for
a*
as I. have
1he.
been able to learn. They do attract wrapped up in it* prickly-covered
W. R. Cook.
botanist* and "rock gardeners" who body.
1

17333894

NEW DIRECTORY

stood’

UNTY4-H UlTUBS
D
iu ECTS

Alfred G. McCall

*1

Q
feW
wave

Carpets • Rugs • Linoleums

AND

SATURDAYI

PICNICS

• 2Oc

GROUND

BEEF

■■K4W.

ROASTS

BETTER GRADE and Better Patterni
of Axminster Rugs for only

SALE of Weissert Bros.

FRIDAY

HANDSOME WILTON VELVET RUGS
in the 9x12 sizes, for only____________
TAPESTRY BRUSSELS RUGS in the
9x12 size, for os low os---------------------

'&lt;£

Hardware Stock Closes

’19.50
$27.95

Q £f|
*IVsvU
$4 A £«
I *TavU

ABC
WASHERS

Pork Loin Roast

Good Felt Base, 9-ft. widths as low as 39c per yard
Inlaid Linoleums for as low at $1.10 per yard

SATURDAY, MAY 2nd

FRESH FRUITS
6-

Miller Furniture Co.

A large part has been sold, but items
remaining will be further marked

HASTINGS

•

I9c

IOC

MICHIGAN

down to close them out. These prices

will be only a small part of their
Regular Value!

NewPotatoM 6

Buy 3 to 5 ITEMS for the Price of 1!

Atparagui tm*.

G. E. GOODYEAR
HARDWARE
HASTINGS

•ELDPAUSCH
Come In and make arrangement*

ASK FOR DEMONSTRATION!

PHONE 2331

John Bulling &amp; Son
Meetings

1

Vaiiaea Uatea Bldg.

•MARK)
Phone 7272 III..

.

�. ..................... —
BOOST THE COUNTY—
HUBS AT HOME

The Hastings Banner

It’. th. Spirit M a CaaaaMlty
That Cota Nat Ito Slaa

A PACE or EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

THURSDAY, APRIL 30. 1936
[u. B. MOTHERS AND

FORECAST—RISING TEMPERATURE

DAUGHTERS BANQUET
Fine Program Given at Annnal Affair With Blfhty
Attending

done by publicity agents of his own
. A QUESTION OP CONTROL.
. Who owns the United States, the party.
But the United States to still a
democracy—at least In theory—and ■
few facts.
At present the national debt is until lhe breakdown of our form of I
lout thirty-two billion dollars and government Is complete, we must I
nearly one half of this tremendous have a press free to comment as It
total is held by banks of the United secs fit on Important issues of the
g talcs. Each new bond Issue appears lay.
to be readily absorbed. The reason
Completely "unentered'' news is a
la that the banks are ao heavily myth, an impossibility so long us
committed with government oblige- ‘ events are reported by people who
lions that they dare not turn down [ can think and see for themselves,

Ill The Public Forum ||J
LETTERS TOTHE
---------------------EDITOR

Editor Banner: Here to * political
prayer for the preaant:
Give.ma thl* day my dally bread,
I am bereft of ambition but must
be fed. The New Deal'* cau*e Ill
proclaim forever,
if my dally
bread you'll only deliver. But please
don't ask me my back to strain, by
helping my neighbor to harvest hl*

: The Women'* Mlreionary Society
[and Girl*’ Otterbain Guild of the
First United Brethren church held
their twelfth annual Mother and
Daughter banquet. April
32nd.
Eighty were in attendance. The
three oldest mother* present were
recognised, namely—Mr*.
Sarah afford to pay, In line with the prices
Newton. 81 year* 'old; Mrs. Annto of com and hay. Just give ma the
Reed of Idaho. 80 yean old; and food In cans and sacks, and let the
Also recognition was made of
Mrs. Ada Snyder, who waa unable
to be present, but who la a charter
member of the society.
The banquet wm served by Mrs.
Clara Cooley and her committee.
The table decorations were daffodils,
!Rum drop favors, and yellow and
1 green napkins, arranged by the
Guild girls.
I The program was in charge of
। Mrs. Edith Snyder and was on the
[subject of "Mothers and Daughters
of the Past and Prerent."
1 The program was given as follows
[—Instrumental
music — Imogene
' Cooley. Scripture Reading—Mrs. M.
• McSherry. Prayer—Mrs. o. CampI bell. "Daughters of Fifty Years
i Ago"—Mrs. M. Owen*. "Mother* of
Fifty Year* Ago"—Mrs. I. O’Neil.
। Vocal Solo—Neva Warner. Reading
I—Mrs. M. Wendell. "Some Famous
[ Mothers"—Mrs. O. Jarman. Song—
f -Palth of our Mothers." "Faith
Through the
Year*"—Mrs.
A.
&lt; Bower. "Daughters of Today"—Mrs.
- .Lane. Duet
... —..
...
IE.
Nellie
Stine and

further Issues for fear of a fall in ; But at least the press should be free i
nrlrrs that
that would
would ruin
ruin them.
them. They
Thev ! to
to record
record event*
events freely
frcelv so
so that
that readreadprices
must accept them without murmur ^ers may look over the various
in self defense.
I "colors” and select the brand or
One fifth of the National debt is I brands that please them beat.
held by twenty of the large bank* [
============

It back won't bother my head. If
you’ll only deliver my dally broad.
I pay no uses, I never fret how the
coming demand of finance Is met. X
feed no stock, I buy no tools, but
get all I can. no conscience rules
how the man who pays gets hls
liven. But please. Mr. Preaident.

times with sincere effort and sound
advice and sober reasoning, the
blatherskite to belching hot air and
proposing every kind of nonsensical
schemes to advance hls personal in­
tereat. without regard to Its effect
on the general welfare. • • • The
people can with care and thought

their duty to do so—their duty to
their country apd to themselves”
The burden
rests with the
thoughtful and substantial cltteen.
Camp Wilderness,
Carp Lake. Michigan.
April
----- - 33. 1036.
The Hastings Banner.
Hastings. Michigan.
Gentlemen:
Today marks exactly
that I have been here in Camp
-------„
Wilderness and 1 want to take- this
time to express my appreciation In
your sending the Banner lo us
weekly.
At present there arc four boys in
Wilderness from Hastings. this in­
cludes Charles Jenners, Richard
Shawman, Robert Rogers and my­
self. To all of us lhe Banner has
brought us many happy hours. It to
very delightful to get all of the cur­
rent news and the activities of our

To go
to honest labor is my
last desire. I never did Mt the world
afire, but Franklin promised we'd
all be fed. so keep on cornin' with
the dally bread. If you don't de­
liver our dally bread, on election
day you'll be in the red. We've got
you where the hair is short, so don't
cumstanoes to stand ready to absorb hcrc Monday and Tuesday, thc
raise up and make a start. On the
event
will
still
have
been
observed
even more government paper when­
eve of a presidential term you can’t
ever the treasury at Washington de­ in a most appropriate manner. Conafford to squeal and squirm. Till
।
gratulatlons
to
the
faculty
members
cides that a new Issue is imperative.
after November to save your head,
you’d better deliver our
dally from Hastings.
Tills means that potential credit and pupils who carried out this
bread.
Thanking you for your kindness, i
*hlch might be used to advantage centennial theme In such an intelli­
remain.
gent
manner.
May
celebrations*.to
fri industry and agriculture ha* to
Very truly yours.
fe withheld.
. follow equal this standard.
The Banner has received the fol­
Delbert Lancaster.
lowing interesting communication
New Dealers have been outspok-1
from
Washington
from
a
person
"Congressman
Hoffman’s
AN INDEPENDENT.
an against the special privilege of
well
qualified
to
speak
of
the
condi
­
Pension Plan."
I Imogene Cooley. "Mothers of
Whether you Uke James Couoens
tax exempt securities. Yet all of
tions touched upon in the article.
He states, "Under no circum­
[day"—Mary Stamm.
personally
or
not
you
can't
help
but
Editor
Banner:
these government securities are tax
stance would I require six wage
Prom the vantage point of Capitol
{tempt and so the New Dealers con- admire hls directness. It makes us
BRUSH RIDGE CEME­
TERY CIRCLE. HUI one Kes legislators come and than $3400 00 a year lo contribute
nue to be thc biggest offenders . smile when we hear charges that
। Mrs. Herman Zerbel was hostess legislators go. Some are statesmen, *2400.00 to a pensioner just because
' he has been adoiHcd
by
against their own theories.
.
. the New
to twenty-five members and their some politicians, some representa­ he Is sixty years of age. but that 1s
, With banks so heavily loaded Dealers and is working hand In
! friends at the April meeting of the tives of minority groups, and some exactly what the McGroarty bill
••accidents." They might also be proposed to do."
flth government securities and with h*nd with them. Mr. Couzens is of
circle.
Mr. Hoffman here stales that the
the government able almost at will » l&gt;Pc that defies adoption-even
Il was decided that, henceforth, nothin*!—and the publicity aeekers.
MoGroarty bill proposes to give
the members would entertain the The calibre of the "average" has un- 183400
to force new issues onto the banks. [
his own party. He Is above all
00 a year. In his other articles
circle
alphabetically,
commencing
tie question of ultimate control j
*n Independent. Mr. Farley will
doubtedly decreased 50 per cent in I he stresses lhe point that the Mewith the letter "A"; except for the the past ten year*.—and WHY? An | Groarty bill didn't promise any
irises. In other words docs lhe gov- find‘ ‘this
l‘‘~ out* *to
“ hls own chagrin if
May meeting, which will be held at attitude on the part of lhe electa-, amount. I wonder if Uie congress­
Imnient control tiie banks or do the he attempts to take this willful
thc cemetery.
rate to vote for a "change."—mi- 1 man think* the people of thc fourth
panics own the government? Endless gentleman under his protectire
Members are requested lo bring norlty groups who are led by good | district are dixzy or can't read,
grgument cou|d be advanced on this | wing.
their plants and shrub*, if you de­ crusaders to back only candidates
He would perfect lhe pension law
sire
help
in
planting,
al
thl*
lime.
who are for "THE CAUSE." re- ot Uie alate, if necessary to prevent
jubjcct but it seems that lhe gov- ■
s "“
Hew to the line, let the quip*
Also, bring garden too to as thl* 1* gardless of party affiliation* or gen- | suffering, add contributions, by
ernment holds the whip hand.
A FIGHTEk.
fall where they may!
lo be clean up day at the cemetery. eral capability.
1 federal government to *20 a month.
One factor seldom considered is
U Representative Clare Hoffman
This 1* also one time when the
The wet and dry issue, a* an ex- I Do you call *20 a month a pension.
that it to the money of depositor., were an ordinary "party hack" polimembers' husband* and other In­ I ample, retired some of the most able Mr. Hoffman, then you say that &gt;011
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
An Irish story, an Irish back­
By Observing Tommy.
thich Uie bank* loan to the govern- *tlcian.
‘“l
’he would
*"* not be conducting
ground. Irish wit. Irish love of a ’ Mrs. Sophia Nelson, former com­ terested men are urged to come and men from every standpoint who ever *lw*y* have been charitable In your
Understand they stole our night fight, and a nearly ail-Irish cast ; munitj nurre. hat completed her help. Il ,1* hoped a large number sat in Congress, and put in their
What we want is not a pension
ipent.
an investigation of Townsend Club
watclmuin's
alchtnun's car and revolver the proves a combination hard to beat work of inspecting children In the will be present The ladies, as us­ places, ???? But they voted WET. hut a recovery plan, not more taxes
activities. The average congressman
738 ual. will furnish thc pot luck dinner and further than that, without leg- tor the taxpayer but less taxes. wiUi
other evening. Baldy m'iad. take in •Laughing Irish'. Eyes." a swift- city school*. She examined —
PROTECTING OURSELVES.
believes—in private, if not In pub­ Tommy's advice and wear a good 'paccd romantic Mipedy.
children and visited 37 horn***.
and hot coffee, so thc men will feel, tslative experience, without the ca- an *Increase 1 In salary income so wc
Phil Regan early wins the heart
The fate of Ethiopia is a warning lic—that lhe plan can never work. stout belt—The streets of Hastings
The treasurer's report of
at least partially reinbursed. for pstclty for constructive thought or will not feel the present taxation,
of a spirited Irish lass, played by inanuel Guild showed a total of their hard labor and time they take acUon. Uiey followed the bell lead­ and the Townsend Plan will do Just
that this world is not yet civilized Yet to say so means risking the loss would be no place for a nudist.
Evalyn Knapp, by singing the title *12)17 raised for lhe year, with a from their usual labor, on thl* day
er blindly, and we have a NEW that.
enough to go in for disarmament. of thousands of votes from the
All those interested In the ceme­ DEAL.
He also balance al lhe beginning of the
I do not consider *20 a month to
Hubc cook. I understand, opened song straight into her eyes. ...
Italy invaded this unhappy little Townsend converts; on the other the fishing season without success sings "Londonderry, Air.'
.... Bless You
yew of *108. making a total of over tery are Invited to attend this all
'
•ELECTION TO CONGRESS" live people over 60 years of age a
country because it wa* defenseless hand lo champion the cause means on the pine and Au Sable rivers— Dartin’ Mother." and "All My Life."
to lhe credit of the Guild day meeting.
does not automatically make a sound practical old age pension as
you
do, bu! i do consider It an in­
in
charming
and
appropriate
set,
lun
d
for
the
entire
j-ear.
not
even
a
nibble
—
and
then
came
and because Mussolini guessed cor­ the risk of alienating the conservestatesman. It is only a credential to
tings.
By a deal which completed on CHEAPER PASHENGER RATES. become one, providing he ha* thc sult to the American standard at
rectly that other nations would not 1 live and liberal vote. So most con- home and caught himself a fine
The railroads of the country have
, Saturday, the firm of Rogers A: Son
living, and a disgrace to the oldsters
men of trout on a little stream near
ability and temperament.
come to the rescue. The League of gressmen are content to do nothing. Hastings.
wisely
decided
to
put
Into
action
I acquired the Hastings Ice Co. from
“Every Saturday Night."
How doe* lhe newly elected mem- who helped to accumulate lhe
Nations In the so-called crisis has'to sit quietly astraddle the fence
wealth In America.
The Evers family is composed of Miss Belle Hicks and J. W. Case of the order from the Interstate Com­
merce commission fixing passenger
Broven to be what most informed ■ hoping that something will develop
All of which proves that old say­ husband and wife, their three sons j this city.
rive* at Washington? Regardteas of
Clare, you say that lhe Townsend
fares, after June 3. al 2c per mile
and
two
daughters
and
a
grand
­
Upon
her
return
to
Chicago
8ating
which
our
great
grand
daddy
merit*
or demerits, it to evidently a lecturers say. that it will be several
•eople expected—merely a dinner to show them which way to jump.
used to tell us as he held us on his mother. Each week day night was urday Mtos France* Burch was noti­ and sleeping car fares at 3c per stimulus to the most humble ego to years before their Plan can be put
Club i for diplomats. The United
Bul Representative HoTtnan can venerable knee—"Pastures always just another night, but Saturday fied of her rejection as soloist at mile. It will be Interesting to watch
be chosen to represent a consll- (*•»»».
nc mwnKna
into mvw.
effect. Of BU
all ilhe
Townsend
Btate|. we hope, will continue to never be a successful straddler. He seem greener somewhere else."
night was the big night for the kids tiie commencement exercises of lhe how this works out. It ha* been the tuency at the Nation'* Capital, and speaker* that I have heard, not
Conservatory of Music contention of many that cheaper we can forgive some degree of "In- once, have 1 ever heard one make
and they were out to have their fun [.American
—
work for world peace but without is bn outspoken.
.
Independent.
What was the name of the Dad Evers, however, had horse-and- i which will be held in the Auditor­ railroad rates would increase rail­ flatten." bul for some reason it such a statement, therefore 1 am
Overlooking the practical necessity [ minded fighter whom you can always
buggy idea* that dampen the fun j ium theater in Chicago In June, road passenger traffic. The experi­ seems the greatest inflation 1* ex- afraid they must have been speak•1 keeping ourselves strong enough 'count on locating up near lhe front stream?
of hls kid*. This happy, scrappy Mis* Burch will be accompanied by ment has been tried out by some perlenoed by thc accident* and lhe er* against the Plan and not for It
western line* with favorable result*,
to resist the possible and unwcl- line where the action is heaviest. It
Heh! Heh! Hehl Try and find family supplies the film with up- i the Chicago Symphony orchestra,
opportunists.
j You have said considerable, while
tome advances of such grasping. I the people of the Fourth District out! Hubc and Tommy arc going to roarious fun and a surprise climax
R- A- Gothorn of Grand Rapid* but tne railroads east of thc Missis­
As a general rule, the new recruit ■J-Ou
been in Washington a tout
Ambitious rulers as a Mussolini or a 1 want a representative to be a keep that plenty secret
brings the story to a glorious and has purchased the Bijou theater sippi have generally opposed the who finally develops into "one of i J***Uon and waste expenditure*,
proposition.
entertaining finale.
—
and
J -------------------------taken possession of. the same.
lhe first fifty or seventy-five" who
you didn't hesitate to vote *50.fiitler It is true that the Invest- friendly "hale fellow well met." to
i Mrs. Sarah Huffman, one of the
The place is simply • lousey" with
really do the constructive work in °°®
investigate this visionary
:
tell
them
things
they
like
lo
hear,
pent in one battleship represents
speckled beauties!
well-known residents of this city
scheme
Congress, is seldom heard from. He,lchem
® as you
vo" call
"" It.
” 1 hope Con­
piany schoolhouses, many miles of to promise all manner of beautiful
j died on Friday after a long illness of
Is watching,
waiting, Atudying. gress will receive *50.000 worth of
I heart trouble comblncd^wllh a com­
And we don't mean freckled
improved roadway, much relief to, things, then Mr. Hoffman is not
learning. It to this type that was re­ experience after spending thc peo­
I plication of diseases.
blondes
either,
do
we
Hubc!
ple's
nwney.
The
Mid-weekly
Picsponsible for the enviable record ao
the destitute. However, except for their man. if. however, they waht a
The Rutland
Cemetery Circle ,
tkthtv“vp7r«
"
long enjoyed by the State of Michi­ torlal. quote. "What the congrcwfur battleships it is more than prob- J representative lo carry on a fight
.
They might do under certain cir­ will meet at lhe cemetery Wednes- f .
.... v.
.,rcBest Delegation
ucm.llDn man really wanted lo know was
gan.
of having the
dnv
p
wiv
a
ah
n
city
franchire
has
been
asked
Able that none of us would be free | for economy and against the boon­ cumstances. though! What fellow?
r M. Me&gt; «. All »el.-ome.
thc cl,y councl|
rk.clnc
Ln Congress. The up-set of
nee- •neuwr Townsend supporter* were
fc enjoy the benefits we do hare. । doggling type of legislation we have
essarily changed this situation con-' numerous enough to defeat the con­
The Shultz Community club meets 1 railway to run from Grand Rapids
Might be a good idea for certain
siderably. and It will be year* be- [ d‘d*^s for election next fall." End
been getting at Washington these
Baltic Creek. John E Moore of
young follows here to always.have with Mrs Ernie Peake. Thursday.
fore
we
can
likely
boast
of
the
out- 101
■
SLAMMING CRITICS
past few years, then one would their driver's licenses handy when May 7. for an all day meeting.
। Orand Rapids is promoting the
'He who
no care of little dungs
standing number of prominent men 1 We Town.vndite* hope that if
President Roosevelt, the professed probably have to scour the district they visit certain places in Kbzaxj
--------proposed line and to backed by eastwill not have the care of great oner."
on major committees we could at1 *50.000 must be spent to satisfy cer­
Townsend plan meeting. Eptoco- ern capital.
liberal of liberals, is attempting to well to find a belter man.
and Battle Creek—It's against the
APRIL
that lime. However. Michigan un-1 toln congressmen, that they will
The new M. C. depot at Middle­
law. you know, to sell a certain malt pal parish house Friday evening.
arouse sentiment against Independ­
doubtedly ha* suffered no worse.' learn that lhe Townsend Plan was
Mr. Hoffman says that his lack of
•&lt;J
May 8. After a pan cake supper, vilte ha* been completed and await*
J
iuli»e» in India, IBS*.
perhaps not so badly, as many other 1 offered to the people who dare to
ent news agencies al Washington; sympathy for the Townsend move­ product to minors.
there will be a speaker's meeting.1 acceptance by the company from
delegations,
think for themselves it 1* based
A
number
of
strange
speakers
will!
the
contractor,
which
will
probably
particularly against correspondent: ment is "due not only to the fact
Clarence Crawford, enroute lo a
. More than three years have:upon American principle*. Ita »ucwho write articles critical to ill* that I honestly "beUevc~ifiit it can fishing trip on the Pine river. I un­ be .here , and cacti one will givt a . take place within a week. It- to one
passed and we are nearing another f “** rest* u|x&gt;n lhe American mlof the neatest and prettiest on the
derstand. had ample opportunity to talk.
administration.
not be made to work, but also to the
national election. Thc wet and dry 1 porilies. it Invited the cittoens of
&gt; line.
When he first assumed office. Mr. fact that it Is being used as a ponder moodily in the chill'early
Surgery Guild No. 19 will meet. Thc annual meeting of thc Has- |
question Is not a dominant issue. ~lP nat*on lo examine it. to test it
Mort
Townsend on | lH..s
4imJC
wia
Roosevelt won the respect of friend scheme to gather ta’voteTas*wcU morning gloom outside of Ionia on with Mrs
bul we have the Inflationist*, lhe
any ‘^7 of finance, to approve
ling* Board of Trade was held al
the vexatious idiosyncrasies of sec­
riiursday. May 7 with a one »clock u)C council rooms la.st evening. The
CoUectivUta,
the । “
“ ,,,—■» ’’re convinced
uuiia.u&gt;i»u, the
uic Sllverite*
oiivcrire* and
ana uk
,, °9
; ,y ~
»......,of
•nd foe alike for the .almost happj M4 mOney. by mBklng false promt** ond hand automobiles.
T
n U.T1 n H11. ' a
_ all n,lv,Arl.w
luncheon, lhe assistants will be
0(ncerfi were re-olocled a* folTownrendItes.
el, al
al-all
minority ' Ils
,u desirability
desirability and
and nraclicablliiv
practicability,
manner in which he accepted crill-, i0 yic aged, the needy and the dcMcsdame* Fingleton, Rclckord and lows. p,.,.,
KeUar
8lcm
.
vloe
.
groups
with
high-powered
spokesThe
rapid growth of lhe Town­
Kellar Stem;
Carl Wespinter qpinc* that llll
u((M Cabral, 1500.
ftom. But tills phase of hto person- serving. 1 am In favor of pension*,
t Munton.
,
.
pres.. Luke Walcra, John p. Good­
men to Incite the maseet. and urge t wnd movement, to the answer to the
illty apparently disappeared along j have endeavored all my life to be
lhe voters to cut across parly lines 1 Rltack upon it* management. The
. ar:
...
...' C .B10trees.,
Circle No. 5 Of lhe Methodist L. A. ' £5
A
*11: ‘
milted to forget thL nocturnal in­
and elect. "Our Candidate."
j greater lhe answer must be a still
with hls campaign promises. Like ' charitable, but I will not be a party cident. since he's the one who 8. will meet at the home of Mr&gt;[ Frank Horton; attorney, c. H.
What are tbe qualification* of ' m°re rapid growth, and the real
Ectators of all history he Is now de- to a plan which is unsound and of loaned Clarence the car in the first Lillian Plumley. 220 S. Broadway." Thomas; director*. F. L- Heath. E.
’’ Tydrn. P. A. Sheldon. C. F- Field.
"Our
Candidate?" He 1* pledged to rep y rnu&amp;l 1x5 Witten at the ballot
I
place.
Thursday afternoon. May 7th
loping nerves acutely sensitive to' the ultimate success of which there
vote For or Against a certain bill. I box ncxt *aU$6250 round trip to California
Iverse comment.
1 jj no hope. The Townsend plan
from Chicago. April 25 lo May 5.
Anything else? Has he ' a back- I Mr. Hoffman, let us face the fact*
If there were any warmth in
’ via the Chicago Union Pacific and
; Because of the fact that Mr. might well be called a plan lo tax pointed thoughts—We'll bet that
ground of demonstrated ability? Has , *nd not pretend to believe, that we
Northwestern line.
fcoosevelt four years ago gave hls [the food, clothing and everything Clarence didn't spend such a chilly
he acquired such success as he has । can borrow ourselves out of debt
Clifford Michael and • Bump",
attained through conscientious ef-1 wRh money that is non-exlstblessing to the special Democratic that the working man uses, for the evening at that.
• , Robleskl went to Charlotte Wednes- j
fort and integrity, or by a com- t«nt. The Townsend philosophy is a
press bureau which devoted many
few-------and ---to enrich its' We can all get sick again now—
, day morning where they will play i
. benefit of a—
binatlon of shrewdness and trick-1 peoples movement, and once the
ttyv^E’KE still wondering how
I ball with the Vermontville team
lonths to the task of "smearing" promoters and those who arc or-1 the doctors are back.
er&gt; ? Is he the type to inspire the people become aroused by those who
*’ much farmers, under
fcoover. it would seem that he is 1 ganlxing the various clubs."
A very quiet wedding took place Bros.. City Bank. National Bank. P. confidence and respect of hls asso-1 classify this movement as fantastic,
AAA, paid hired men lo not
Hope they don't ever have the
al lhe home of county clerk Barnum 'T. Coigrovc. Sterling it Crawford. elates? Is he a man of such moral 1 unsound ahd It* supporters are
pot in a particularly strong position .
nOffninn js familiar with thc
help them not plant com.
opportunity tn try out any new hem
, Saturday evening when hto daugh- Banner, court House. A. Black de character and integrity that you 1 foolish and Crack-pot*.
lo recommend that all Washington Usl&lt; of poverty and hardship As a stitches on Tommy!
1 ter Allie was married lo Nelson ISon and J. T. Lombard.
would be proud to have your dtaMr. Hoffman, your last article ofhews be "uncolored."
! you$h he earned his meals by wailWith conventions in Cleve­
trict viewed by the world through fered a measly *20 a month pen| Burroughs of this city. Rev. Cranland and
Philadelphia this &lt; dall performed lhe ceremony tn the
Hurrah for old vic Sorrell—1 al­
If a free press is to be maintained ing table and washing dtohe* in a
hhn? In other word*, to he truly *lon but we offered a recovery plan
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
ways
like
lo
see
him
win.
Representative
of
lhe
Best
thc
Dis|
known
as the Townre-nd Old Age
summer, it's a question which
presence of only near relatives of
in thto country writer* must be per- boarding house. He has put in six
The following
constitute lhe trtet ha* to offer? These questions. Revolving Plan, for lhe people untown will steal Chicago's fame j Hie couple.
nutted to express their opinions full working days a week hi a furgraduating class of the Hasting* ahould be weighed.
Glad lo see lhe high scil&amp;olcrs tak­
der sixty as well as me
the utica
one* over
over
as the -windy city."
-------—
---—
—
i
high
school
the
present
year:
Eddie!
gnd impressions without threat 0! [ nlture factory for $3 00 per' week, ing up baseball again.
Acraln IT m««ntlnn
h...
FORTY YEARS AGO
■ A recent article tn the Washing- slxtv.
sixty- Again
mention. "Wh.l
"What have
punitive measure*.
when hls total income amounted to
Chidester received Bailey. Albert Hoffner. Frank Clark, iI ton Herald seta forth the situation' you to offer that is better than the
Sally Rand's enthusiastic fan 1 Mrs W. N
a revere fall from her bicycle FriTownsend plan?"
One of the first steps to break ’ «ix dollars a week he was married
waving wa* more than art
when a swarm of bees Invaded ; day while riding on Main street.
Yours truly.
llown a free press would be an al- • and by careful management he and
P. A. Racctte.
her dancing »tage. The cus­ • A dog was running along lhe road
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
tempt to discredit members ot the hls wife lived within this income,
latlon in the Houk and the Senate
tomers wondered at such wild [ and suddenly turned and jumped
opposition, to imply mean and sei- ■
' *qua&gt;cly tn front of lhe wheel. The
"Jealousy is, a consuming fire, but
as there has been of Uie yaara The
I
"I
’
ll
vote
for
a
proper
old
age
penabandon.
Mb motives
mou», In
m all of
ot their
lb«, onlninns
opbbom '
- jj,. HoSnml „ ’ ..bul ,
'
fish
| one
which dies out if it is not fed."
W. H. Schantx 1* the happy owner blatherskites have practically domi­
I rider wo* thrown to tire ground.
; striking her back. She was taken of a promtsing colt, the progeny of nated both of these bodies. Dema­
Xh&gt;» » toe ™ibod m-L m l..« jnol
„ lh,
I —Andre MauroU
Peoria, Hl., laundry men are
NEW8 GLEANINGS
home tn a carriage and at present to hls thoroughbred stallion Holborn. gogues thrive in periods of depres­
urged to enter political flghL
to ib. bkuuetfbp. « lurop. wb „ lny |OTU, duUKl TOMt, w
Geo. H
Tinkler has sold his
In Wale* o tenth* of lhe people
The Geneva Bible dSWi was
i getting along nicely
That's one way lo offset those • The switch board for lhe new house and lot in the second ward to sion. ■ • • m times of trial and tra­ are registered under les* than 100
“
,h“ w*”" “ to
.»» to wme other per^ .^.rd. so named because it translated
vail. the windy demagogue is lUimudslingers.
family
designation*
«.
Frank
Llchty.
who
takes
possession
to rertota
elebtenu ot
,.p „ m „ Genesis 3-7 as "making themselves
telephone exchange arrived Monbreeches out of fig leaves." (King
(day and the phohes are being put
the prerent administration.
month."
•
■
ter Ise suite the temper of the
Prisoners tn New York State
The U. 8. produces RO per cent of
James’ version reads •■Aprons").
in place this week. Those on the
The
ine Haptut
Baptist church
enuren in
tn this
mis city inougnties*
thoughtless element of th*
the com- the worM’s finished illk product*.
Mr. Roosevelt would doubtless be
==================
.
j exchange at present are Michigan will be dedicated bn Bunday May 0. । munlty. He fan* Use fire* of dtocon-.
pertKU, toUlaa la «Uo» lie hew.
ool, on, Aaerkaa to 300 ett.uu!
a month, which would almost
Central freight depot. Wool Boot The dedicatory sermon will be I tent —White sober and rerlous mep ' 30 Inches of rainfall annually I*
make the prisons centers of
to be "colored ' if the coloring were ’ * height Of
pends on the welfare of all of us.
Co.. Judge Smith. Table co., c. K. preadied —
by ..the Rev. Jrcpper of ; are egraeetly trying to aolve eco- considered tbe minimum
teaming, if not reform.
it 8. depot, Ford* hotel. Goodyear j Grand
Grand Rapid*.
-'
n.nm*.'
i^mjc pcobtome and restore better for ordinary farming.

Of this country. Yet with lhe huge
FINE WORK!
spending programs sponsored by , tt the Hastings centennial year to
thc government and with the gov- celebrated in no other manner than
ernment deficit mounting hour by i through the excellent exhibitions
hour, these hanks are forced by clr-' *nd programs put on by the schools

'Round About Town

Coming Attractions at
The Strand Theater\

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

Organizations

Crumbs of Wisdom

Way of Our World

�THE WURZBURG STORE
I Mrs. W. A- Vance was at Char­
lotte Saturday attending a luncheon .
MANAGER GAVE ADDRESS at the home of Mn. Alton Vance. |
' Friday la the day of lhe track
meet for the grades and surround- 1
ing rural schools,
The Mother and Daughter ban- '
quet win be held Friday night at
Member! of lhe Hasting! Com­ the Community house, sponsored by
mercial club enjoyed an Interesting the Missionary Society of the Meth- *
talk by Mr. J. R. Richter, manager odist church. .
Mlsa Virginia Weeks is sick and
of the Wunburg Department .'.tore
I
In Grand Rapids. He aald that re­ under the care of a physician.
The officers for the coming year ‘
tailers are compelled to change their
merciiandising methods, a large of the Nashville Garden Club are:
President,
Mrs.
Philip
Dahlhauaer;
;
percentage of profit on sales Is not
now the alm. Il is a smaller per cent secretary. Mrs. C. E. Mater: treasur­
on quick turn-overs of stock. Indi-' er, Mrs. Norman Johnson. The May
eating what he meant, he said that । meeting will be held at the home 1
the Wuriburg company decreased of Mrs Johnson.
The Chamber of Commerce met
their inventory of merchandise by
1175.000 last year and Increased Monday night at the I. O. O. F. |
their sales 35 per cent. That waa be I hall, the Rebekahs serving the sup­
per.
cause larger turn-over and smaller
Mr and Mrs Coy G Brumm were
Kts axe now strewed rather than
margins. He gave the chain at Hastings Friday.
stores credit
for
making this
OBITUARY.
change He said that when a mer­
William B- McNutt, aged 55. son
chant wishes lo discover what are
lhe up-to-date methods of mer­ of George and Helen McNutt, passed I
chandising and Is willing to learn away Monday. April 30. 1930. at hb 1
from chain stores, he can find out. home in Rutland after an illneas of I
He made specific recommendations only ten daya. He was bom April 6.
to merchants in small towns that 1881 in Rutland township where he t
were appreciated by lhe retailers in has always lived. He was well known ,
as a farmer, thresher and sheep I
hls audience.
shearer. On April 8. 1007 he was I
united in marriage to Minnie Burgh- |
NASHVILLE.
Miss Vivian Appelman of Lan­ duff. Aside from hls loving wife he :
sing spent the week end with her Is survived by seven children. Mrs.!
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Appel- Gladys Goodenough of Hasting!; |
Mrs. Gertrude Moore of near Has- '
Coy G. Brumm. Fred Ackett and tings; Miss Francos and Orretta
Clyde Thrasher spent the week end McNutt at home; Prank McNutt of
Irving; George and Clarence at
at the Scout leadership camp.
Another
son,
Lawrence,
Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Balis and home.
family of South Battle Creek spent passed away at the age of 31
months. He also leaves two sbters,
Sunday with relatives here.
Mrs. Almon Sheldon returned to Mrs. Goldie Service of Grand Rap­
her home at Kalamasoo Monday Ids. and Clara Belle of Kalamaxoo;
after spending three weeks
with two brothers. Glenn of Grand Rap­
ids and Lloyd of Hastings; six
relatives here.
Mrs. Hannah Robinson. 92, passed grandchildren, six nieces, eleven
away al her home Thursday night nephews, one daughter-in-law. Mrs.
after a few days' illness. She moved Frank' McNutt; two sona-ln-law.
to Nashville about twenty years ago. Verne Goodenough and Claude
She lived alone, did her own work Moore and many other relatives and
and took care of her own furnace friends to mourn the loot of a won­
this winter Surviving is one daugh- ] derful neighbor, kind friend, loving
ter. Mrs. Stephen Mater of Mar­ husband and father. He will be sad­
shall, a slater, Mrs. Polly Kuhlman j ly missed by all who knew him.
of Nashville, a son-in-law, Arthur No one knows lhe silent heartaches.
Only those who have lost can tell
Mend of North Castleton, several
prandchild^en and great-grandchil­ Of lhe grief that comes in silence.
For the dear one loved so well.
dren. Funeral services were held i
Sunday afternoon nt lhe home, con-1
ducted by Rev. M. E. Hoyt. Mrs. , MARSHALL PIERCE
HAS CHAMPION COW.
Gail Lykins sang. Burial in Lake­
Marshall Pierce of Dowling owns |
view cemetery.
Mrs. E. A. Hanneman was in a grade Holstein cow which, based
Grand Rapids Saturday attending on her record from March 8 to April I
8. makes her thc high cow in pro- |
funerals of two relatives.
Thc following teachers arc plan- 1 due lion in lhe slate During that
niiig to remain here the coming - month this cow produced 98 8
year- Home Economics. Ruth Bilb: । pounds ot butter fai and 1.915
Intermediate grades. Carrie Cally; i pounds of milk. The cow U a fourPrances French,
Dorothy Kemp. year old and freshened February
Helen Buller. Primary grades— 4. 1935. Last year as a threc-ycur
Clyde Thrasher will succeed Arlie old this cow had a butter fat rec­
Reed as principal. Arthur Johnson. ord of almost 420 pounds and pro­
John Duguld. High school—W. D. duced 11.117 pounds of milk.
Wallace, superintendent.
A naw novel says of lhe hero: [
The Clover Leaf Club will meet "He rested hls chin on hls elbow." 1
Friday night, May 1. at the home ,
ot Mrs. Orville Flook; the assisting 1 These modem heroes of fiction must ,
certainly
be wonders.
hostess will be Mrs. Clarence Welch. ,
Funeral services for Randall J. |
Wnde. a former resident of Nash- |
Ville, were held Tuesday morning;
at Flint, the remains being brought I
here tor burial.
Mrs. Almon Sheldon.
Mrs. Al
Newman. Mrs. Ralph Wctherbec '
and Mrs. Gail Lykins enjoyed a
PICKLE CONTRACTS
trip to Grand Ledge, Lansing and
Charlotte Sunday.
AND SEED
The fire department was called ,
out to Maple Grove Thursday to
extinguish a |roof fire at Cure Me-;
May be obtained at the
Cartney's. Ot) Friday morning they
following places:—
were called to Mrs. Libble Williams. ’
another roof fire. Little damage
WALLACE SEED STORE.
done at either place.
Hastings.
On Thursday evening the Masonic
bodies celebrated lhe eighth annlCITY NATL. BANK
versary of their new temple. This I
Nashville.
year the meeting will be especially .
SMITH A DOSTER
interesting and gratifying to the1
HARDWARE,
members and friends, as thc total
Delton.
indebtedness is around 33.000. a pot |
luck supper will be served at seven I
MIDDLEVILLE CO-OP­
o'clock, followed by a program.
j
ERATIVE CO.,
Mr. and Mrs. Elder spent last
Middleville.
week with their son-in-law and
daughter at Harbor Beach.
Our
financial
responsibility
Mrs. Ernest Van Auker ot Lan-1
may be verified at the City
Ring spent Thursday evening with .
her sister. Mrs. Grace Calkins.
Bank. Hosting*. or al lhe
Mr. and Mrs. Will Martens were [
banks in Nashville, Delton
at Hastings Saturday.
or Middleville.
Mr-'- Sylvia Ycfder was In Lan­
sing Monday. She is spending some 1
The GRADING Machine
time with her brother and wife. Mr. I
which we use treats every­
and Mrs. Porter Klnne.
one alike.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dilbahner
and daughter Harriett Jane of Ohl- •
We are the largMt exclus­
cago called al thc Gail Lykins home
ive saltera ol cucumber
Monday.
pickle* in lhe U. 8. A.
Serrol Powers was at Athena last
Saturday.

WHAT DO YOU PA
FOR GROCERIES?

Modem Beteiler Muet Have
Quicker Turn-Over of Stock
and Smaller Profit

GEO. E. WALKER
. &amp; SONS

T

Clean-UpTime Needs

Have you ever really stopped to compare A &amp; P PRICES? Do you realize how much
YOU CAN SAVE by doing ALL YOUR SHOPPING at A &amp; P FOOD STORES?
Check the following prices and judge for yourself

Listen to Kate Smith at “Coffee
Time" Every Tuesday, Wednesday.
Thursday, 7:W P. M. WBBM

BllttCr

Fra.b Creamery

Vinegar

'•'■h

2

iL 30c

L’X.

15

Dole Pineapple Juice

5ll‘-d

Dole Pineapple

uu'il 10c
i

2

Dole Pineapple Juice

NBC Chocolate Hobbiei
Miracle Whip
Mello Wheat

37c

c~ku c.,..i

Puffy Pops

Pkg

10c
25c

wl“' •'

Chocolate Drop*

3

Ib*.

Baby Food*

3

can.

25c

cake

5c

Sweetheart Soap

41b.

25c

Carton Lard

■'-* &gt;-w

Salada Tea
Cigarettes

Popular Brand.

H-lb.

29c

S-lb/

55c

2

pkg*.

Brown Sugar

2

T-llJ

15c

1-lb.
pkg*.

15c

Del Monte Coffee

Ib.

26c

Beechnut Coffee

Ib.

27c

Hills Bros. Coffee

Ib

29c

Kaffee Hag

Ib.

39c

Whitehouse Coffee

Ib.

22c

Waldorf Tissue

4

roll*

15c

Scot Tissue

4

roll*

25c

Northern Tissue

5

roll.

25c

Pink Salmon
Morton'* Salt

tall
can

10c

2

pkga.

15c

ib

19c

Cheese

Cream or Brick

;j, 29c

Ovaltine

k.h.,,-.

All Bran

..fH",.

A-Penn Oil

lg-

55c

•j.
Pkg.

19c

2-gal.

99c

H-lb
Pkg.

19c

Rolled Oat*

B^lb.

19c

15c

Bisquick
Cocoanut

lgAg
Pkg.

Iona Cocoa

ukJ

Super Sud*

Synip

at Theee Neu: Lom Regular

8 O'CLOCK
RED CIRCLE
BOKAR
CONDOR p.cvia

13c
“3’El.Sr

c„.ui
Btaloy’* GoTde*

29c
9c

Sih.

15c

u-lb.
pkg.

39c

Ik

49c
37c
25c

25c

Sparkle

m“'-7

10c

BEEF ROAST
*
POTROAST
.“
*
GROUND BEEF 9
BOILING BEEF
PORK CHOPS S
STEAKS -?.£“•
RIB ROAST
FRESH SMELT -X.4
PORK STEAK Shoulder Cute
SLICED BACON
BOLOGNA No.
2
Macaroni, Cheese Loaf lb
,fc

T Grade

NEW POTATOES 6

I6&lt;
12c
25c
Ik
21c
23c
2k
f9c
23c
15c
25c
19c

“il^lSc

NEW CARROTS

5c

__ Extra Fancy — Finger Quality

— 15c

CAULIFLOWER
Snow-white Head*

PINEAPPLE
BANANAS
Yellow Onions
White Onions
APPLES
'X

’

Lily White Flour

•VJ*9Sc

Fels Naptha Soap

10 k - 4!c

Woodbury'*

'sa.%- 17c
4 ,w 19c
T*“ 3 ll»- 10c
"2 lu 9c
5
25c

15c

2

American Family Flakes
Chip**

X •&gt;«
X •»&lt;

Fels Naptha Chip*

X l»c

Ivory Flake*

X tf«
X u&lt;
X f*

Lux Flake*

_

Oxydol or Rinso
Climalene

X 1*

Kitchen Klenxer

-

Sc

Pet Milk

4

Carnation Milk
WhHehou** Milk

4 X 29c
4 X Me

Fig Bar*

3 “ Me

25c

15c

19c
g9(

1

T«s &gt; a... q.ui

Iona Flour

U. S. No. 1 — Rod Bliaa Triumph*

2

*«■ Me

n—

*

Soap Chip*

Splendid Flour

NEW PEAS

95c

2

Swanidown Cake Flour

Why

19c

ww 39c

Baker'* Premium Choc.

Grandmother’s

m’u

*•

Senka Coffee

BREAD
2-lb.

ostum Cereal

26c
19c
29c
19c
10c
17c
39c

29c

1 •» M&lt;

Cracker*

1

Grahaaa

Bulk Lard
Shortening

t “ »c
B “ Me

Bulk Rice

5

Bieck Pepper
Cocoa

Me

Family

Sunnyfield Floor

x wc
'•

Electric Bulbs
Candy Bar* m Gum

Prune*

u'1-

S

•- lie
— IK

Dailv Doa Food
Birdseye Matches
17c P * G or Kirk'* Flak* Soap 10 ..............
1 — II!
Pkg.
29c ( Del Mais Niblot*
quart
Campbell'*
Soup*
&amp;51
&gt;
Me
25c Palmolive or Camay Soap
4 b- 19c
Iona
Peach**
2 pkg* 15c Sardine*
X
25c
v“ c—»'•
Pk»
£ 25c Del Mont* Pineapple Juice
9c Paper Towel*
wlu'ruX
Del Mont* Peaches
Pkg.
.re
College
Inn
Soup*
1
•
— 21c
Sc
Corn Flake*
“w. &lt;
IH-lk
2C
cakes

A-1 Sauce

bottle

25c

Ammonia

quart

10c

Pkf

10c

Bran Flakes '•

a. tin

Western Michigan’s Biggest Value in

American Family Soap

giant

Clorox

Starch

10
4

. COFFEE

Extra Fancy — Full fad* — Sweet and Tender^

Sliced Bacon

Salt

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

tin
of 50

Crisco or Snowdrift
4X Sugar
Whit* or Brown

Maxwell House Coffee
u.
Calumet Baking Powder &gt;a—
Grapenuts
2
Pricee:
2
- 15c Grapenut Flakes
*.
Minute
Tapioca
» 19c
Jello 'F^rr 2
15c
3
«-«• 21c
Instant Postum
L"*. -w-

49c

33c
pkg.
••rr; si.15

Cigarettes

Wyandotte Cleanser

WalsrMn Syetem .
DRUGSTORE

17c

25c
2 pkg» 25c
23c

Aiax Soap
Lux or Lifebuoy Soap

LAKCS ASSOSTMSNT OF FATTHNS

27c

Ib.

qjs.rl

WALL FAHR CLEANER, con 10c
3 cans for 25c

DEC f C
KCEU O

can

Iona Salad Dressing

Walnut Meat*

WALL PAPER — 5c Single Roll and up

31c

’jrr 25c

CHAMOIS SKINS ...35c to $f.M

h
.BENI. MOORE S
//✓Faints &amp; Varniihi

No. 2
can*

P«-

WOOL SFONGIS_____ 19c to 59c

JOHNSON’S CLO COAT WAX
Pints, 59c^ Quarts 98c

23c

Rajah Salad Dressing

Lipton'* Tea

DIC-A-DOO PAINT CLEANER
1 Ib. and 5 Ib. Packages

No. 2

The World'a Largut Selling

WE CASH
WPA CHECKS
1% SALES TAX

49c

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, AFRIT. IS, IBM

Illinrlwwla A f # g* n rl «‘oob. around
huge -----iron ------store! ....
the ----------present day typewriters
'* made good looking
appointive ameers
officer! in
in Hasunu
Hastings m
in I The track schedule for the rest ot
----------- ---a —
.......... . dth
-.................................
— ...dapper
:—.—; Dans os] prized today. If aa fashion
luaiiiuu lover! । There were
were dozens
auzcns of
oi other
oiner arar- lot
01 appointive
which
in its
Itsimmetype bars
banland
con- they
they whirled
whirled their
their partners
partners through wanted
get Ideas
ideas for
for her
her new
newtides
; tides Inin this
this room
room that
that could
could be recent years fitness
rather than
ra * * v II vl i W
hlch roasted those In
Imme-। their
their horizontal
horizontal type
and con-,
wanted toto get
diate
vicinity
writing, like
those in lhe intricacies —
of that once popular summerclothes, she should have mentioned-dlshes. pictures, books
i politics has been the rule in making the season La as follows r
/-»
.
. 1 jn 1
•* I| dlat
* vic‘
nity and ffane those more , cealed
" *'lines . of
......................
..
May 2—Allegan, here. 2:30 P. M.
away.
detriment exhibit
exhibit|j form
LX?IltCnmal iLXlUDlt ‘than
han six feet away.
; the commercial department
form of
of entertainment.
entertainment. Another
Another in-1
In­ vialted this room and studied the old dating back to 1813. a bonnet dated I selections, it must be admitted that
Modern typists sometimes have
, In room 304.
. . Penmanship
.
. in the
.. nine-1 terestlng
.
.... feature of...
this demon.
i-■* aioums
albums iun
full or
of pictures or
of early rest- ibu
1812.. several pieces or
of majolica, a ., tnat
that U
is not usually
uzually true; the reverse
May 16—Regional meet at Grand
icon tinned from page 1, Bee. 1)
I dlfliculties with their machines, but, teenth century was an art In Itself. 1 stratlon was a series of tableaux dents, for there were dozens of quilt 100 years old; pewter wore. IU generally true.
T.M
''
____________ nothing compared to what they 'as evidenced by the clear legible portraying the evolution of sports, 'styles
from.
|and others.
‘| So white *»
—■-*•
— to
™ choose
Hastings
has been a for­
May 33—State track meet.
(OT, an occazlon, on the dunce would have had on the ancestors of I writing In some of lhe old account 15T thc first American athtetaTthe
Clothing
of num,
p.w.,n.
Clothing of pioneer days was
— .----------------------- ---------- — —J- I lunate exception In recent years to
- ___________________________________________________________
Farming today Is much aim- Indian . . the baseball player of zhown
“
In room 215.
ai6_ Miss Catherine!
.„w *
„
tured a display of old and new milk ' the glaring evils Ul
ot partisan Cl
city
, P^(d
the greatly improved tools I the gay Nineties . . . the last word Clark and MLss charlotte Zusch- equipment, and methods of trans-&gt; government. It must be remembered HASTINGS DEFEATS
|j ;
'i I with which the farmer now works.: in bathing costumes of that decade, nilt. teachers. Dresses of different' portalion of milk. Among lhe ar-'that the seeds'of evil are Inherent,
'
FREEPORT NINE
j
it and yet those old corn planters and . . the correct apparel In which lo 1 periods were displayed on forms and tides displayed were a milk pan of ialways present, In any city governI
HL■■ ■■■
M
11 sickles In room 311 were once the enjoy bicycling. In decided contrast accessories were also .shown. A gown . GO years ogo; a strainer used 50 ment where party lines are drawn.
I
11
word in agricultural equip- j to the modem tennis player, golfer, worn by Mrs. Julius
v*ar« non-Mllua Caesar
vmciMM Burrows
Duttuw* ' yaar»
ago; nn
an' nia
old u.unr^
square u.nzui,-n
wooden ; sum
Such, «uii.
evils are~iikely to break ...........
out"ai; First Time in Nine Years I«OI
l\W_
I ment.
| track man and swimmer. As a fit-j at an inaugural ball in Washington &gt;chum in vogue in 1736. and others, unexpected times and places, when
cal School Has a Base­
-------------------------------------I
_____ Be. 11 The weapons In use a hundred &lt;&gt;ng conclusion to this exhibition. I was one of lhe
attractive ones ex- MUs Bunon u&gt;ld the writer that lhe | city officials are chosen on the basis
ball Team
&gt;fars aK°
much morr taro- , several boys showed how basket ball hlbited.
latest method of milk transporta-' ot politics, rather —than
—------fitness and•
clous and deadly titan present day was
— r
played
----------just
-------------after-------------------------lhe Invention
One of
o’ the
••------old
■ high wheel bi- lion is by airplane.
•'Pley ball!- yelled Hie umpire,
ability to render real service. While
----- ----- -------- *—
______ . —•
,
I
k
•
onmu
.
I guns. Of course, modem firearms of the game. Rules and ideas of J cycles, the property of Shirley W.
A repltea of a Michigan pioneer we have escaped such evils for । and fur lhe first time In nine years
... In
ItnKtinffK High
Irish school
trhrw,) varsity took
t.w.v
fair play were
conspicuous
by their . Smith, now secre^ryw.
of ...u
the Unlver- , living room was located on lhe.sec­ twelve or nh....,
। kill just os dead today, as those of —
--------------,---------- —
fifteen um
years
in. u
Hastings, a Hastings
yesterday, but somehow they have absence in the game of basket ball, jsity of Michigan, was on display In , ond f^oor and looked ready to' live who knows when the time may come lo the art of slapping the horsehide.
I Walter Perkins' room. 216. Mr. in. Antique furniture, a spinning when some selfbl) leader or group The results were nattering in view
lost that obvious look of destruction as played in fta Infancy.
------------‘ Smith loured England on this bicycle., wheel, old pictures and rugs, books. may take advantage of Dial situa­ of the fact that tl&gt;e men who took
for which they were intended. The
Central school Exhibits.
The apparatus tn this room showed etc., made the room complete and tion. and get themselves entrenched the field came through to a 1-0 de­
social science department had ar­
ranged a wonderful exhibit of wea­
Luster ware of untold value, age the-progress in communication dur-1 attractive.
in office here and use their positions cision over their Freeport neighbors.
“’»■ last century, featuring lhe j
----------------- - ---------------------pons in room 301. and also a dis- old dishes of various kinds, a choice •
Il was also disclosed that Uie local
| for partisan ends rather than for
। play of old books of etiquette, text­ collection of old jewelry, books over telegraph, telephone and radio, and
team had a hurling ace who knew
I the benefit of the city?
books and maps. The collection of a century old. many articles of s|Km»ls by sound.
| Why should Hastings continue to where to find the corners. Izfty
Indian relics was also especially wearing apparel, etc., were displayed
Antiques, Including
including books, picAntiques.
run Uie risks involved in partisan Freeman took care of 13 men via
comprehensive and interesting.
in the cases in the Central school lures, dishes, clothing, etc., were dLscity government? We have learned the strike out route, only two hits
The rapid strides of chemistry corridors. drawing a lot of atten- played in the county Normal room,
। how to cooperate, how to pull to- were made off him. one a misjudged
and physics in the’ lust hundred lion.
Mrs- Mabel Clark and —
MLss Jennie
■ gelher when concerned with the fly and the other a clean single.
years, and the widespread use of
McBain,
teacher.
I
business interests of the city. All The man stretched the misjudged
In room 117 was a large display'
geometrical designs in buildings and including many dolls of various j Old time musical instruments and
।. thoughts of partisanship, creed or । fly
ny to
» a
■ triple,
wipie. while
wnue lhe
me other
omcr slugsiug(Continued from page one)
pottery were demonstrated in the years one being 125 years old. This an art exhibit were featured in
| other affiliations are pul aside un- | S" »'«» nabbed at second, after tryexhibit of the mathematics depart­ was a jointed French doll. Another room 212. showing the contrast be­
der such circumstances. When some |
‘° stretch hls hit to a double,
tween
the
old
and
the
new.
Mliui
own,
'
rs
‘
ruck
lines
and
curs
living
ment in rooms 308 and 309. We was the one owned by the late Miss
city project is undertaken by the [Outside of these two men none of
couldn't help wondering which at­ Minnie Matthews, who taught so Jean Glemm and MLss Mary Camp- *n Gra“d Rapids did register their Commercial Club or other civic or- &lt; ‘he opposing players got farther
,ruek
trucks
" "
and
nt’ ro
cars
’- °"
and
a pay their ,ganizaUon they choose men to do &gt; ‘han a lead off first base. Freeman
tracted-more attention when the long in our city schools. Others were bell superyised this display.
old-fashioned band went marching from 66 to 117 years old and showed
The Girls' Glee club, under the weight taxes in the six counties
thc work who will do the best Job. walked only one m“n and showed
One can see the appeal which this never thinking whether lhe ones fine control.
down the street .. . the instruments the great improvement In this toy ’'direction ot Miss Jean Gleruin pre­
method of selling trucks would make 'they select are democrats or repub- ' Extra base hits for the Brozakor lhe uniforms. They were both
sented
-A
Quilting
Party"
in
the
so loved by children. Books pub- ,'
to road commissions.
The state licans. Protestants or Catholics. I men went to Scobey who slammed
worthy of notice, as the display of lished many years ago were also1Central
auditorium
several
times
1
now turns all the weight tax over
the music department in room 300
on display.
uispiuy. Misses Esther
utner Doty.
uoiy. I during the two days. The girls wore to the counties. Getting these out- ,Why cannot we ,do the same with:out B three-bagger, and Townsend
proved.
old time costumes and sang songs of
our city government, which so vl- *’ho got hold of one for a double,
Mabel Kiel and Margaret DeMeyer
In lhe gymnasium demonstration ।&gt; were in charge o
other days. Each presentation was side cars to register and ;&gt;ay their 'tally affects the rights and interests Freeman
rreem
and Marshall each got a
of
this
exhibit.
weight taxes In lhe six counties ,
we discovered that Grandma went I
well attended and greatly enjoyed.
every citizen of Hustings? What | single.
Hill's room contained a
Z" \ ""Ts
would increase their revenue from of
'
in for her dally dozens, but in a | Mrs. Ilah
line
cun It make in our city, The
-— —
- ups were:
I! choice collection &lt;ot toys, books, mnrthe state sufficiently to cover lhe । ditTerence
much
more
decorous
a.--*
First
Ward.
nd
quiet
government
whether
an
official
enHastings
—
4
Freeport—0
“
let
I
Dies,
dishes,
small
chairs
and
other
Come summer 1.. and
cost of the trucks. The Gingrich I'
fashion than her modern daughter.
c
The three teachers at the first
‘| Items which brought happiness to
dorses or opixises the New Deal, for Townsend—c.f.
Wieland—c.
Such things as dumbbelland
... 'In-|
ward school. Mrs. Agnes Siegel. Mrs. firm made good on their promises, instance? What we should be con- j Marshall—II.
you’ll want lota of'changes!
titan club drills were her idea of ex-' children of other days a doll buggy Bertha Kuhn and Mary Wiliams, so that outside, and largely Grand |1 cerned about is his ability and fit- Martin—ss.
I 37 years old was doubtless lhe Joy
Gray—c.f.
efclse. quite different from lhe turn- •
had arranged a charming pioneer Rapids truck and car owners, paid 1 ness for lhe place*. What possible 1 Scobey—3B.
Choose themmowwhile this
Whitney—3B.
bling, somersaulting and pyramid­ of some little girl's heart.
room
featuring dishes, candles, enough weight tax money to Barry I relationship to lhe business or vital I Isham—IB.
Feltzer—If.
A safety exhibit was featured in
building antics of girls in modem
glassware. books, a lovely Paisley and the other five counties to cover ,। interests of Hastings has the tariff' Rcnnick—2B.
amazing coilection of
Brechelsen—r.f.
gym classes. And then, of course, room 115. Miss \ Helen Furnlss. shawl ho years old. an old spool the purchase price of the trucks" i or any other political issue? What | Murphy—R.F.
Boughner—2B.
showing the new and the
they bought of Gingrich.
lhe square dance. Some of the girls teacher,
smartly styled • dresses are
.
,
.
1 »■£
we iiccu
need w
to carer-mi
c«Yry-on „ur
our enycity- govgov- Hall-c.
old Hastings and'.safety measures bed with ancient hondwoven coun- • —.
Thompson—IB.
terpane, a well filled whatnot, splint
The suite against the counties &lt;X enunent is the right men selected Freeman—p.
Surrarrer—p.
in vogue at the present time.
so fresh and new. Wash­
Barry.
Ionia.
Manistee.
Montcalm.
(
for
responsible
city
offices
—
men
of
bottom
chair
200
years
old,
home
­
j Of especial Interest was the sick
Thc season ________
schedule has been
spun cprtains. a powder horn car­ Newaygo and Oceana were started character, men of integrity, men of
room exhibit, in room 114. This
&gt;pUH capoble completed with the following teams;
able crepes, silk shirting
ried in the Revolutionary war. ta Judge Taylors court in Grand nbUllyi men of
showed In miniature an old time
April 24—Freeport, there.
spinning wheel, etc. Among the in­ Rapids, but were never brought lo , of doLng ft gootl Job r
and
a
modern
sick
room.
The
pu
­
April 29—Middleville, there.
treatments . . . whites, pas­
trial Legal pointe were brought up! tj,,. Banner would like lo see the
pils of Miss Frances Conklin's teresting books was an old ledger,
May 5—Ionia. 4:00 P. M.. there.
dated 1855. which was the prop­ that caused the attorneys represen- same spirit that controls other comsixth grade had made clever paper
May 7—Belding, here.
tels, polka dots and, of
ting Kent county and Its road com- munlly «.norU applied
to lhe
'
....------------------------------------------selecmache figures of a number of erty of the late Dr. William Upjohn ,
May b9—
Field Day at Ionin,
of
Inen
to
ROV
,.
ni
Ha
st
lnj
who came to Hastings in 1811. The m Lisi on to dismiss all of lhe orlg- । Uwi
tion of men to govern Hastings. We
"Health Heroes." Including Louis
May 12— Freeport here. 4:00 P. M.
course, the ever popular
1
_
"
....
book contained lhe names of many Inal cases.
would like to see men named for
Pasteur, Florence Nightingale. An­ pioneer people in this vicinity—Wa-1I But It now appears that these Ij our
Moy
23—Middleville here. 4 15 P.
city government without regard
ton Van Leeuwenhoek. Walter Reed.
M.
navy! Sizes 12 to 52.
Joseph Lister and others whose dis­ terman Parker, R. N. Hanna. O. S. cases have been revived. Suits have | to politics, but solely on the basis
May 29—Belding, tiicre.
Hadley, Chas. Holbrook. Jas. A. been brought against lhe Gingrich i of ability and fitness for the post­
coveries and inventions hove prov­
Hie faculty defeated lhe varsity
Sweezey. Harmon Wilcox, w. H. firm. In connection with each of | tion. men who hove the real and
en a boon to humanity.
game 7-5.for
IL was
lhe six
six counties,
counties, for
for the
the sum
sum of
of i vital’ ---Interests
of—
Hastings
al ’ heart.' In
ly an practice
1 u^rnvu^Kame
’themere*
”1 liali
Heath.
I.
A.
Holbrook.
Hiram
and
the
-----------An old cord bed fully made with
! ^hooln™
ty a warm-up
game
tor meftSS
ingn
000 in each case-not that Kent
WHY NOT?
ta wh
ch Sch
strawtick, featherbed, handwoven Wm. Kenfield. and scores of others. $25,000 in each case—not that Kent1
school nine in which Coach Brozak
I used all of nls available material
counterpane and old time pillow The book was splendidly preserved county expects to collect that much |
shams, drew a lot of attention in and the penmanship was as legible from each county, bul hopes to col- i"
and gained something ot an idea
| what to expect of the various can­
the "Colonial Household" supervised as lhe day it was written. Mrs. lect the amount of weight taxes
by Mrs. Ala Myers. Many other In­ Mary Brush, who was present Mon­ paid by Kent county car and truck
didates.
day evening, was wearing the waist owners to these counties, which they '
teresting articles were also shown
to
her
mother's
wedding
dress
and
a
claim
was
illegal
and
harmful
to
BASEBALL.
here—ladder back chairs, old time
।
gold
and
black
jacket
which
had
Kent
county.
Aho
if
there
should
be
Baseball games open al Thornap­
Currier A: Ives pictures, samplers
ple lake Sunday, May 3. The Thorn­
more than JOO years ojd. an old been her grandmother's. Her long any damage awarded by the court. HASTINGS LOSES
1 clock, pioneer cutlery, drop leaf black silk skirt was of lovely goods, ' the $25,000 would cover it. As a inatapple diamond has been closed for
FIRST
TRACK
IflEET
lhe past four orzflve years and some
I table, cradle 80 yeor&lt; o^d. candle far different than the quality shown ; ter of fact the amount of weight
in the stores today.
; tax which Kent county claims was
of the local boys have now organ­
molds, lanterns, foot warmers, clothSecond Ward.
I diverted to Manistee county was Lakeview of Battle Creek ized a team. Games' start id 3 I’. M.
1 uig of other days and scores of other
only
$326;
and
in
the
case
of
Barry
At
the
second
ward
school,
the
ThornapuJe vs. Lake Odessa.
I articles highly prized by their own­
Wins Most Points—
county it was $3,178: Newaygo counthree teachers. Miss Anne Burton.
ers.
Next One Saturday
Collaborating with Mrs. Myers on Miss Grace Edmonds mid Miss I V* *10^61. In the other three counARE LOCATING IN
was less ‘han in Barry counThe High school thinciads lost
I this project were Mrs. Gertrude Ellzabcth Finch, with MLw Burton 1 ‘les
TAMPA, FLORIDA
| Wilcox. Miss Jennie McBain. Mrs. as chairman, united in securing a ty. so that the $25,000 against each their first track meet to Lakeview,
Leora Smith. Miss Frances Conk­ miscellaneous display of antiques. county evidently was not started Battle Creeif. by one point The
lin. Mrs. charlotte Hubbard and This exhibit especlallv featured With any expectation of recovering ineel was held here April 23. Middle­ Dr. and Mrs. Woodburne De­
c'—"’
MLss Helen Fumlss. Much credit is baby clothes, one little dress, beau­ such sum in each of the six suits. ville. Hastings and Lakeview were
lighted With Climate and
1 due these teachers for this splendid tifully handmade, dating back to Kent county asks not only the re­ the schools entered In this meet,
Surroundings
exhibit of pioneer articles which 1842. Another dress was handmade covery of the weight tax. which her which was of the relay type. This
..... 76
,„ tiny
...., tucks formed
,u&gt;.»cu into
uiiv the
mv attorneys claim was wrongfully paid 1 type of meet is becoming |»pular
The writer last week received nj
। they worked so long and faithfully with
yoke; another had beautiful drawn It0 t,u- six counties, but also that the and consists of four men from each teller from Dr. A. W. Woodburnfl
to secure.
| A dental exhibit was featured In work and hand embroidery; others Gingrich company be enjoined from school taking part in the .sprints.
announcing that he and Mrs. Wood-;
Fait Color
Thc deciding jxiinl was won by burne had decided to locate in
I Room 116. contrasting the new and were trimmed with
itn handmade
nanainaae lace;
nice; . , continuing this practice.
No date has yet been set for tlw Cornell of Lakeview after hinacum- Tampa. Florida. Their address will
in lengthwise;
lengthwise:
old types of dental equipment. We some had tucks pul In
X
In
sl« counties lhe prose­ mate. Gillender. and Walton of be 3411 Bayshore Blvd.. Tampa,
:re fashioned from
think few people would want their two or three were
teeth drawn with the old kind of a square of cloth, the dress opening I cullng attorney of lhe respective Hastings had tied for first place in Florida. Dr. Woodburne writes that
Just the type of feminine
he and Mrs. Woodburne have be­
instruments shown. The pupils made lhe whole length of the back, but counties will represent them; but It the running, broad jump.
The points made in lhe various come Interested in that city, and
I lhe furniture in this display and did one could go on Indefintely about ls ptobnbte that other legal aid will
frilly frocks you’l! want
I abe emplbyed. The coses involve !events were: pole vault; Lakeview. have decided to try it out there for
। a creditable Job. Mrs. Leora Smith this delightful display
Another Interesting feature
was
a ' some
“Ice—
legal -------points.
In the set-4. Hastings. 0. Middleville. 5. 120w&gt;»
■-------------— ------------------------------------------------------a time ul least os their home. They
was in charge of room 116.
for Spring and those warm
An exhibit of old albums, camer­ lighting exhibit, kindly sent by lhe ttement of which the stale ns well as yard hurdles; Lakeview. 5. Hastings have a bungalow overlooking Tam-r
as and pictures was In room 214. General Electric Co. There was a the counties will be much interested, i. Middleville. 3 440-yard relays: pa Bay. a beautiful outlook which;
summer days ahead. Doz­
.&lt; .lamp,
------- ----------------------------------------- ----------------------Lakeview 10. Hastings 6. Middleville combined with the wonderful cli­
small
dating back to 100 B---C. i■
Mrs. Beatrice Knapp, teacher. Espe- -----4 2 mile relay: Lakeview 6. Hastings mate. has caused them to make
dally interesting were the
old In which olive oil and the oil of ’
ens of beautiful new prints
10. Middleville 4. 1 mile relay: Tampa their choice.
daguerreotypes which are so highly nuts was burned. The Betty lamp
war. dated 1600 A. D. and the.
Lakeview 4. Hastings 10. Middleville
Dr. Woodburne finds it hard lo
and lovely unusual color
bronze lamp 1000 A- D. One of lhe |
6. Mile: Lakeview 8. Hastings 1. think of giving up Hostings, where
first ^incandescent
electric
lights
Middleville 0. 880-yard relay: Lake­ Mrs. Woodburne and tic have so
combinations that you'll
made by Thomas A. Edison was in
view 6, Hastings 10. Middleville 0. many warm personal friends; but
Shotput: Lakeview 5. Hastings 1. because they are delighted with the
the exhibit also. Besides this there
just , adore.
Plenty of
were dress lanterns 100 years old. a
Middleville 3. High jump: Lakeview Florida climate and because the
(Continued from page 1, Bee. 11
twin lamp, candles and candle
0, Hastings 0. Middleville 0. Broad­ doctor has found It very beneficial
sheers, too. Better get here
molds, old alcohol lamps, candle that Hastings Is a rare exception In jump: Lakeview 5. Hastings 4. Mid­ to hls health, they have decided to
snuffers a candle lantern 90 years that respect. For it is a sorry fact dleville 0.
try it out for a year or two. It will
early! Sizes 14 to 52.
FOR
old.
The local team looked good on be remembered that ill health
— etc.,
----- etc.
—
that political rule has not only been
. Recently the second ward pupils harmful to most city governments, the relays, high Jump and broad forced Dr. Woodburne lo gel out of
had made some hand dipped can- but has been positively vicious in Jump, but were outclassed in the tills climate. He feels tiiat Florldg
dies and these were also shown.
many cases. While in the choosing other events. Thc pole vault. 120 for him is ideal, with its sunshine
____ yard hurdles, mile run and ahotput and Ito many other attraellona. and
__ events were exceptionally weak and his health has so greatly improved
proved to be the reason for the final i by it that he will give it a thor­
score.
ough trial.
Thousands Made Happy with Wonderful Remedy

IW| ■ IWI

2Sx*kKB|HiABMBiBdMMK£JUAaBB

Look Here! Own Our

KENT COUNTY HIS
mill

Glen Row

Frocks

Rondo and Malabar

Sporting Items

Wash
Frocks

98*

Ix&gt;ng&lt;!r

”’°cER'&lt;’S

H. ill

THISTOOREQU RES
ACTING TOGETHER

I Quart Herb Medicine
For the Kidneys, Liver,

Bowels, Stomach and

Men's Oxhide

Overalls
They’re Rugged!

They’ll Wear!

Run Down Condition

25c

Ft. Wayne Lady Telli What It Has Done for Her.
Mrs. H. Bocdecker of FT. Wayne says:
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feeling all the time before I took Chicopee Herb Tonic. I saw
results al once, my bowels became regular and I feel great again.

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to restore your health, energy and vitality.

CONTAINS NO OPIATES OR HARMFUL DRUGS
DONT FAIL TO TRY this remedy of nature's forests and fields,
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"OXHIDE" on overalls
means extra quality . . J

GET ONLY THE GENUINE CHICOPEE MEDICINE
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extra service! Best quality
2.20 blue denim, bar tacked,

triple stitched. Cut full for
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won’t dig in at the«aboal-

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING OFFER

OE*
fcUC

Tliis Coupon Good for One Quart of This Pure
Herb Medicine for only ...........................................

Guaranteed to Give Satisfaction
Take advantage of this special sale at once.

may bring serious sickness,

The REXALL Store

THAT WILL THRILL HASTINGS
We are proud to tell you that we are Installing a new GABRIEL­
EEN DELUXE THERMOSTATICALLY CONTROLLED
PERMANENT WAVE MACHINE. First in this
part of the Stale ot Mkhlgan.

ADVANTAGES
1. Many yean ahead sctentifleally!
2. NO MORE GUESS WORK OR
3. Automatic heat control!
Comfort!
FAILURES!
4. Precision Instruments to protect

5. Performs like magic!
Messrs. Greeley and Harley
Fox are happy to announre
further that on Thursday and
Friday of this week Miss Ger-

/
ho,d “ ’P*'1’1 demonstration
/
with lhe new machine . . .
'
DURING THIS DEMON­
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A few days' delay

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Goods Delivered

AN ANNOUNCEMENT

Phone 2131

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TELEPHONE 205

THIS WEEK'S

FOOD NEW5
1 Pkg. Grapenut Flakes
1 Pkg. Post Bran Flakes
1 Mickey Mouse QQc
Bowl CO

FINE GRANULATED

SUGAR 10

GRAPEFRUIT ££
PEACHES (HiIvm) Heavy Syrup

Doz,
No. Sl'i BUo Can

47c

19c

3 Rolls Wox LUNCH PAPER
_19c
2 Ib. can PEANUT BUTTER, fine quality
—25c
Chocolate Drops, Ib. 10c
2 Pkgs. Iodine Salt, 15c

CREAMERY BUTTER..................... 31c Ib.
1 QT. CAN

2 Lbz. SODA

Dill Pickles

CRACKERS

ORANGES

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1 Dox. Sunkizt

WALLACE GROCERY
HASTINGS

PHONE 2458

y

�Tin: HASTINGS BANNER, THtmSDAT. APRIL 30, UJ«

Social Events and Personal Mention

DISTRICT W. H. M. S.
. MEETING ON FRIDAY
Ninety Delegates Present at
Golden Celebration of
Girls’ Society

WABNBX—OVEBHOLT.
The marriage of Miss Mary Alice
Warner, daughter of Mr. and Mr*. |
Claude L. Warner of Coopersville,
and Louis J. Overholt, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles M Overholt of
Freeport, was solemnised on Sat­
urday evening. April 28. at B o'clock
GOODWILL CHURCH,
at the home of lhe bride's parents. AT’
The ceremony waa performed by
RUTLAND, TU1SDAY,
Rev. Herbert strong, pastor of the
MAY 5
Methodist church of Coopersville,
who used the single ring service.
|
------ -------

■JH.C.U

cicmra

NEW CLOTHING
at BAIRD’S

Donald Flaher spent the week । Mr. and Mr*. Lynn Pierson and
Shirt* of distinction, with new Duke of
end in Bloomington. Ind.
। children of Detroit were Sunday; The Grand Rapids District Home
Mr
mother.
Mn. J. T. Missionary Society of the Metho­
Ml. and
Mliu Mn
BUM. Roy
nuy Hubbard
nuwiMMU visited
fi&gt;iv«u . «
- “•*&lt;&gt; ot
..
------- ■ ------Kent collars. Basket and mesh weave*,
....— in Chicago
--------------------------and other
othsr relatives,
r*tetiy9S.
dist church held its annua) meet­
relatives
over --the
weeku'Pler*an
pleraon-: and
Rapids on Saturday and Sunday.
button down and trubenixed collar* in
AtwcB
Fleming of Chi
Chicago is hig in Hastings on Friday. April 24.
|, Mrs. A
‘wt* Ftemfngof
Miss Belva Riley waa home from end.
the
guest of **
Mr.
and
Mrs W L. wnh an attendance of ninety delethe latest pattern* and stripes.
Mr*.
Edw
Downs
and
Mrs
Albert
“
“
“
—
*
*
Midland over the week end.
al*nded by Ml“ Helen PROGRAM MORNING,
Hinman this week. On Sunday they ,
w R Prescott of St
O. W Dolan left Bunday for a Craig were Ln Grand Rapids Fri­ vblted friends tn Grand Rapid*.
j John* preaided. The morning Wor­
day.
j
ot powder blue silk crepe and car- :
business trip to 8t. Louis. Mo.
ship
Service
was
conducted
by
the
I Mr. and Mr*. Edw. Downs were in
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Herbert of'
Mrs. Florence rled a corsage of American Beauty ,
Mrs. Charles Hooper of Freeport
Battle Creek Saturday and attend- £5“*._
Dinner and Supper Served by
Shoes that are styled* correctly and com­
Fleming,
' who also presented the rose*. M1m Eash's dress was of grey ■
visited her sister.
Mrs.
Fred Otsego visited Mr. and Mn. A. J. ed the annual "Muster Day" ban- Flpmln
Herbert over Sunday.
and district officers who silk triinmed in white. The groom
Spaulding, on Sunday.
Goodwin Ladies—Rev.
quet of the Spanish war veteran*, j.conference
’
fortable t&lt;&gt; wear. New reversible bucks, in
wai attended by Mr. Floyd Burkey
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wespinter. Jr,
Mr. and Mrs. Lorraine laenltalh were introduced to the convention of Freeport.
Jonea to Speak
greys and browns, stylish new white bucks,
and Mr* Robert Cook were in Bat­ and son Carl of Detroit apent the of Saginaw and Miss Alleen isen- body. The guest speaker was the
The annual w. C. T. U. conven- j
Besides the Immediate families
week end in Hastings.
Bureau Secretary tor City Missions
tle Creek on Monday.
in plain toe and wing tips—Nunn Bush
hath of Kalamaxoo were guests of
ot the bride and groom those pres- ।tion will be held on Tuesday. May &gt;
Miss Winifred Johnston spent lhe
Lyman Klnne of Seattle. Wash., Mr. and Mrs. Otto Isenhalh over from the central west. Mrs Frank ent were. Mr. and Mrs. James Old- !
5. at ths Good. Will church in Rut- ;
and Edgertown quality.
1 L. Davis of St. Louis. Mo. Other
week end with Mr. and Mra. Charles was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Kel­ the week end.
Brown.
Mbs !land township, with the following ■
speakers were the conference presi­ rls. Mrs.- Walter
Welasert in Kalamazoo.
MM.
lar a™.Stem over thc week «
end.
Mr. and Mrs. R M Lamble and oem. Mrs. W M. veenooer; corner- Blanche Hurley. Miss Norma Ha- ;program:
dent. Mrs. w H. Veenboer; conferMr. and Mrs. Frank Rowley of I Mbs Julia Ann Templeton is
ence
correaponding
secretary.
Mbs
VM
&gt;Mr
««&lt;
Mn.
Floyd
Relgling
Forenoon Session.
Adrian were Bunday guests of Mr.' visiting her uncle Ed. Huffman and I Ml. Morris Sunday attending a
Rebecca
McKenzie;
conference j fcf]d Pr and Mra- Ralph Bronkema. (
and
"• Mrs.
‘ J.
" E. Mattoon.
Mrs Huffman in Grand Rapids
I At 9:00 A- M—Praise Service led
birthday party honoring Mrs. R. M. young people's secretary. Mr* R. I nl1 ol Grand Rapids.
I by Mrs Lottie Lockstidl.
Mrs. Walter Lake was the guest
New arrivals in Spring and Summer Suita are now in. . . .
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bassett of . Lambte's sister.
of Mbs Charlotte Lake of Lansing Grand Rapids were guests Sunday I Mr. and Mrs. Levin Everett of De­ W. Fenner. Kalamazoo; deaconess I A reception was held Immediately
Roll Call—Item* of encourage- I
Light shades, sport backs and double and single breasted
and house mother of Esther Hall. n,u'r l&gt;'*' ceremony,
twenty-five
from Friday till Sunday.
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. catur and Mr. and Mrs. Al Hovey
ment.
Grand
Rapids.
Mbs
Leah
Belle
LySucsta
being
present.
The
table
Miss Gertrude Bentley of Kala­ Monica.
Appointment of committees.
rnodeV- If you are hard on clothes try the new Gabardines,
1 ot this city were Sunday callers at man
decorations were bouquets of yel-1
mazoo spent the week end with
Mr. and Mrs. David Boyes spent Mr. and Mrs. Jack Snyder's of : Miss Anna Johnson prepared lhe 1,0* Jonquils.
; Parliamentary
rules — Bertha
in colors of brown and grey.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Lane.
lhe week end with Mr. and Mr*. South Hastings
; Bush.
memorial service which began thc ' Mr. and Mr* Overholt spent Sun­
Misses Stella Heath and Mildred John Sleigh and other friends tn
Department reports:
Mr. and Mrs. E. H- Chapelle and afternoon
session. Mrs. Robert
w,l,t friends nl Lowell and.
Funk, who teach at Nile*, spent the Allegan.
Medal Contest—Mrs. Ruby Mer- i
1 Mr. and Mrs Stanwood White of Burch sang ‘There I* No Death." Grand Rapids and in the afternoon ,
week end with Mr. and Mrs. George‘' Mrs. Earl Warchain and two chil- Ypsilanti and Miss Ruth Wheeler
rick.
Mrs James Bristol accompanying
“ *h°rl tflp lo points along.
Flower Mission—Mrs. M*e Traf-1(
Heath.
I dren of Detroit are guests otofMr.
Freeport visited Mr. and Mrs. L. i During the afternoon the Queen Lake Michigan, returning to FreeWillard Anders and E. H- Howe ' and Mr*. Kellar Stem for a couple Severance Saturday.
ford.
Clothing and Shoes for Mtn and Boy*
[Esther* under the direction of Miss P°rl- where they will make their
Christian
Citizenship—Mrs. Jen-!
of charlotte called on Mr. and Mrs. of weeks.
Mr. and Mr*. F. J. VanDyke of ElizabetJi Henry, gave a play. "Magtemporarily wllh lhe groom's i
Jack Snyder of South Hasting* on i Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Edmond* Detroit drove to Hastings for their 11c
nie Loehr.
1
Mirrors," and Reid Bassett sang parents.
Sunday.
i and children of Detroit spent the I daughter. Barbara, who has been
Child
Welfare—Mrs.
Muriel
•
How
Beautiful
Upon
thc
MounMr
’
Overholt
has
been
employed
।
Mra. Walter Mansfield of Battle week end wllh Mr. and Mrs. J. F. with her grandparent*. Mr
Perry.
and |i VBUla
_____
. ________________________
tains."
at the. FE Brunner store the past
Creek was lhe guest of tier parents. Edmonds.
Publicity—Mrs. Lenah Wood. 1 SHIRLEY TEMPLE
nine month*.
months She
She ha*
has hern
been &gt;n
an artivo
acme
1i —
-banquet and- evening session nine
Mr. and Mrs. Alvah seeber. over the
Mrs. A. A- Reasoner visited in
Jail and Infirmary—Mrs. Maude
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Grigsby are
rre D[VSlcjcd 0¥cr
Mrs w M member of the Young People's choir |
week end.
South Bend. Ind.. Tuesday. Her
Crawley.
COMESTO STRAND
and the v
Young
“” People's class of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Foote had mother. Mrs J. 8. Fetter, returned
Evangelistic—Mrs. Frank Loomi nnd wcrp ln the nature of a cclc- : thc Methodist church.
as guests Sunday lhe latter's par- with her for a visit.
Newest and Best Picture,
dMrgs
I Orat,on 01 thj
anniversuiy , Mr. Overholt is employed by the j
ents. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Harrh. of! Mr*. Kellar Stem. MT". M. E. Nev- tredt M
Fair Booth—Mrs. Maude Zetbel
Maur,cc Grigsby of De- . of lhe orgai,jZJuion of thc nr*L girls' Good Implement Co. of Caledonia. |
“Captain January," Shown
Kalamgzbo.
Ins and Mrs. W. N. Chidester were
Reporta of Officers.
Mr and Mrs B A IvBarker had Itoclely ML'5 Hcnry and Mrs A U Both young people have many,'
Mrs. Ethel Bradford relumed to 1 guests Friday of Mrs. A- A. AnderMethods—Mrs Clara Ball.
Next Week
Oldley. local counsellor*, assisted by friends here who wish for them all
Saglnaw Thursday after a several' son. Grand Rapids.
Election of officers.
About all that's necessary for
Mr!
Mr M,M Chrystal Thoma*, had made the joys of a long married life.
weeks' visit with her mother. Mrs.।. Mr.
---------and
J -Mr*
--------T.---N. Knopf
-------- - —
and
J **
Mr.
“ and’Mrs”ou!^Dutcher’^ar!‘ MIm !lhe tablM lovely wllh d&lt; cor“llons
Noon-tide Prayer.
RACKETS
Manager Branch to secure a record
Furnished by Freeport corre­
Mina Scott.
II —
and Mrs. Harold Foster vblted Mr. Allee TvnPrkrr .MlMi«
Dinner
served
by
Goodwill
ladies.
' °f PUrPlr ttnd B0,d #nd ^*'&lt;1U'»« of spondent.
crowd is to bill a picture In which|
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Finkbclner ' and‘ Mrs. Martin VanDalsen of
Afternoon Session.
1
&lt;i r
d ML D,,nolh- daffodils. Another special leaturo
the little star, Shirley Temple, will
and son of Parmelee vbited their Grand Rapids on Sunday.
Memorial Service — Bessie wood­ appear.
•
'
1
via.
.... ...
was tlie beautiful fiftieth birthday
GETS LARGE ORDERS
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lucht ot Big ^ihei riSShavee LeVJ
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
man.
! Cak‘*- °f Whlch nU P”*'^1 “nd “
Her latest one ‘ Captain Jan- '
■ALLS
FOR PULP WOOD.
Snyder, on Sunday.
Rapids came Tuesday for a visit I F.&lt;h,
Quiz—Clara Ball.
L „al
!.° I taste. Over one hundred glris
uary" is a charming tale that seems
Clair D. Zagclmeler of Newberry
Mr*. Hartley Finstrom of East with their daughter and husband, i 7
Music.
a* urday by the death formcd .
to lhr sudUor. spent thc week end with hls parents.
made especially for her. altho its
Lansing was thc guest of her par­ Mr. and Mr*. Darrel Jones.
Play—Goodwill Union.
I of the formers sister. Mrs Harry ,um wher&lt;»
stcvcnMM, ^owed Mr and Mrs. J. D. Zagclmclcr. He
an old. old story.
The Rev and Mrs. W. Maylan n iT*
ents. Mr. and Mr*, c. J. Englehart.
w FS,*raL *
WCr® i
rank of Queen Esther on two had been in Detroit where he took ;i ( Character and Movies — Mrs.
Mitringing
Shirley is cast
of Rutland last week.
Jone* attended lhe first spring con­
Gladys Jones.
rescued by lhe old
Mr* a I Hastings girls, MLwa Barbara and some large orders for pulp wood to
Mi-M Bernice Creaser of Grand cert by lhe University band at Ann I •
Parliamentary Errors — Bertha er. portrayed by,
w
Ha I
A 1 Helen will, who had gained tlie rc- be used in the manufacture of pa­
Rapids wa* in lhe city on Friday at­ Arbor wmtar.a»y
Bush.
,„,. Mr*, quhed number of points The local per. Clair has had a group of about ■
J. Vedder were Mrs. Nell u
Croy.
jealously guarded by him. Slim . equipment if you bay ii her*.
j Reading of journal.
tending the missionary banquet at
Mr. ‘.n,,
*'*' .? Carr”,“
I Hlr«rh. EOO. parwll and Mr. and, ,hl,„h
Summerville 1* another old salt, who ■
to---entertain
the 100 men working in tluj woods north
In Elyria. Ohio. Bunday and Mon-1 Mr8 nichard Srnnxle of Angola11 church
church was
WM proud
Prou-------BACKETS
lhe Methodist church.
Executive Board meeting.
is a much loved friend. An Interest-!
day. Uie gue.ts of Mr and Mrs. M.
‘ ^dgMrS Abe ted- ’•
dLs,r,ct m----"Un
« fo
,Or
l,;
of Newberry, during the winter,
‘
-j
r
this
Girls
’
Mr and Mr*. A E. Harding of E. Whitman They were house hunt- ^r of Grand Rapid.**
Supper.
ing plot develops when authorities,
Golden Year celebration.
getting out pulp wood and all kinds
Maple Grove township returned on
Evening Session.
try to remove her from their guard- I
of logs. He said there* was still snow ।
24-lUur Service en Rmtriagfag
1
Friday from a slay of nearly four inn and aueoarted In nndta, very, Mr ,na MrI Frrf
ianship which they suceed in ac-1
about two feel deep in the woods i Evening 7:3C—Orchestra.
dcalraUe ouarura.
bP„ „|lrd „„ Mr ,„a
j D PBTVMA tlKCLt
months at Lakeland. Fla.
Devotions
—
Rev.
C.
MConklin.
compUshing. but not for good.
and still plenty of ice left in thc ‘
Special
Music.
Zaa.lnwiev on' Sunday, enroute
.
There's a happy ending.
StralLs of Mackinaw. He returned I
from Unalna to their liomo In Al- 1 * s"d'"
ll" ■’&lt;•'&gt;“&gt;1” clrAddress—Rev. M- W. Jones.
Shirley does some grand new
Sunday, .-topping at Grand Rapids |
leuan. Mr. Sehwlehtenbent la a aura! ,'*•
been ontanlaed In lire secBenediction—Rev. A- E- Wynn.
"Dependable Jewttee*'steps In the picture with a former
to visit Mr and Mrs. Bsrt ZagclI null carrier ar Alleaan.
»nI1 —nl n™l'r the au.ptcea o! the mcler. while here he called on Mr.
The dinner and supper will be Zlegfield Follies dancer.
Hasting*
Phone 11M 1
' E. W. Bowman of Detroit and ten
Darden elub with Mrs. and Mrs. John Karcher. whqm he provided by the Goodwill ladles at a
I members or hl. oryanuallou were In I
preMdent and Mn
cost
of
25
cents
per
meat
had not seen for fifteen years.
ANNUAL MEETING
’ Hmtlnm Saturday and Sunday, the i
r-eretary. The alm ot
Hollywood Beauty Shop with It* staff of llrenaed operator* who
guest, of BAMIng. Mant Co,. Mr. |. c
,s 0 eX€banae swede and
MOVING TO ELYRIA. O.
are ready lo give you Immediate service, will bo lhe talk of the
AT WOODLAND
METHODIST Jl .NIOR
Bowman being the new lohtxr rep- b““» ln
'",ous “““"S •&gt;' &gt;J'
Harold Carroll, who has been af­
town because ot thl* unusual value.
CHOIR ELECTS OFFICERS.
I rewmUng the company In Detroit.
■»“&gt;" rneetlng. are held the
, The Junior choir of the Metho- filiated with the J. c. Penney store Prof. Henderson Will Speak
I Mr. and Mr. J&gt;. J. LaManer or nr“ »n'J.ll,,rrt Thuraday. ot each dLvl church which is directed by here, leave* today or tomorrow for
WE RECOMMEND
DeDoll. MU. Beulah and Donald I ™”n'h H“—n r a yeli.1 mndlug
at Barry Co. Federation
Mrs. Dorothy Field Wilcox. Miss Au- Elyria. Ohio, where he will work
This Fine, Genu­
I Severance .pent sundae at the Bev'A”*11Thunxl.yjnhla
dra Densmore, pianist, have recent­ with M. E. Whitman in the Penney
on May 14
erance home. Mr., UMaater ha.&lt; ”rk- *I&gt;HI »• «
&gt;lomc
.
•
ine DUART
ly organized with lhe following of­ store.
The annual meeting ot the Barry
been tn Michigan Chy -tatting lor I W™ Vandlen. It la e-.wcluUy re­ ficer'.: President. Ruth Stauffer;
Mr. and Mrs. carroll have made
; two week., Atao wont to Chicago to &lt;&gt;™»ted that member, brlna their Vice-Prcs., Beverly Dryer; 8ccy.. many friends here, who regret their County Federation of Women's ■
Clubs will be lield In Woodland'
Letuon Sharpe
and -lam-1
&lt;»' wellnnge to 11.1.
; visit
visit Rev. ____________
_______
Diana Matthews; Treas. Eleanor removal, but all wish them well in Thursday. May 14. al the Methodist
t ..
mtw'
t Iliff
meeting.
A successor
to Mr.
UyI Haven; Librarian. Mary Ketcham. ..their new home.
-------- ------------ ----- ------------ALL
church. Morning session wilt open
James Radford left for Chicago.
('.nnni'i'
i T,lf choir is especially fortunate Carroll has not been named.
THIS
California Creation.
al 9:30 and a 35c dinner will be j
HAiPk GATHER1N4*.
in having Mrs. Wilcox for a leader.
-----------------Ill., Cincinnati. Ohio, and Atlanta.
Known for It* quail
WEEK
served al 12:30.
Mrs.
E
H
McDonald
of
Middle(„
sbe
ntajored
in
public
school
CIVIC
PLAYERS
MAKE
Ga..
on
Thursday,
going
from
At
­
ty and iasttnz
el
Prof. w
Prof,
W D Henderson, director '
Ville was happily surprised on Fri-1 ,nUstc at W. 9. T C.. was a member
lanta
to
Clearwater.
Fla.,
alter
Mrs.
MERRY
TOMORROW
NIGHT.
fecla. I n c I u d I n
An evening
- of —
novel
...........................
entertain-1'of Use University of Michigan Ex­
Radford and daughter, who have day vim several ladle:, with well ot llA bIpc r)ub nn(, pronilnenl in '। ----------------shampoo and (infer
tension division, will give the after­
Player
been spending thc winter there. filled baskets cam? to spend thc aft-| other muSjCal activities while m ।, ment is in store for Civic Pierer
noon
■
address,
hls subject being
I Their daughter. Dorb, is much im­ emoon. Thc
-it,- time was pleasantly iI college,
..
members at Reed's Opera House
I Friday evening, according lo Mr. ••The Personality of Uncle Sam.”
visiting
and
relating —
hu-.
proved In health.
-rspent
— —in------------------------------Pro!. Henderson U a well known
Fincst Castile Shampoo and Finger Wave 1--------- 50c
Among those from HasUng*. who inorous incldenta which occurred
CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY.
and Mrs. Herman Arold. committee
heard
Admiral
Richard
Evelyn when
wH,,n all
"n were
w"r- neighbor*
"•••hiwvm in
m Has«... I Miss Lucile Willitts was guest of chairmen. The occasion will be the speaker and Hastings club members I
Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value, for 65c
should keep this date in mind and
Surprise lhe family tonight
Bird at Battle Creek on Wednesday tings. Those present were thc Me*- honor al a very charming party giv- Spring Informal. Dancing, bridge, plan to attend. Guests will be wel*
' (For Dry Hair and Dandruff)
.
evening were Mr and Mrs. Clar­ dames Elizabeth Pickell. Cora Shcl- en Monday night by Mrs. Lannes a playlet. ‘They That Mourn." come.
by taking them “out lo din­
don.
Nellie
Herney.
Nellie
freer
and Kcnfield the occasion marking the "horoscopes," and refreshments are
ence Texter and son and thc Misses
ner.”
*“ ”
*
Included on the program.
Maxie Rowe. Grace Edmonds. Lena Elizabeth Ashsltcr of Hastings and birthday of the former.
STITCH
AND
CHATTER
CLUB.
'
enjoy
_
i Monopoly was played. Miss Kalh-----------------------------------------Lellcr. Helen Furnbs. Emily Mc­ Oli#c Conlon ot Middleville.
114 WEST STATE ST.
PHONE 1525
The Stitch and Chatter club met
AN IMPORTANT CROP.
where the food is excellent
----------------- **-•------------------ erinc Moses and Miss Yvonne Trc- '
Elwain. Elizabeth Finch. Helen
MARGUERITE TEW and MARGARET DAHLKE
The —
Banner has --------mentioned
CELEBRATED BIRTHDAY.
'go winning the high scores. Miss
- ------ -the- with Mrs. Alice Cronk on Wednes­
Wade and Mabel Sisson.
* and prices are low.
HASTINGS
MICHIGAN
Mrs. F. N. Reed was honor guest Lucile Willitts and Miss Barbara *act that
beans are becoming day evening last week. She was as-1
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Downs in
I
C[f?„’tv listed by Mrs. Leah Benham. Nine
company with Mr. and Mr*. Dick at a birthday dinner on Sunday . Trego the consolation*.
Sunday Chicken gftc
bv Mrs Anna Recd it being
w*
this country. That b due largely members and three guest* were
Ford and Mrs. Susie Wilder of Bat­ served
i7" rorrn-t . vtjhtv’thlrd ItWM&amp;i
PARI ,x ME1DDRAMA.
, u&gt; lite vx|»ndlnu demund lor them present. Many lovely pieces of fancy
Dinner--------------VW
tle Creek attended the annual Sv^° Str. tad tor n“ utd £.
Ml“ B‘rb"‘ J°"n”n °[ H*s‘ ,or "■“'Utacturln, tun. Lu. yur work were shown and many useful
"Muster Day" banquet
of
Uie R«dtu thriSlSmtil »me lo^
Whomor. .1 tn. UnlverUty I the crop Mid lor UO.MOMO. And ideas exchanged. A game wa* played
Try Our Spacial flAc
Spanish War Veterans in Grand Bred
Reed was
the recipient ol
of some love
­
... 111.
love.
M,cl)lgBn
w
(bI I [ht„
much
,, lh&gt;, „„
and prizes awarded to Ann Beverly gifts. Guests from out of town j
Rapids Monday night.
LUNCHEON
melodrama which will feature Uie I for other purposes than sale.
wyk, first, and second to Veima Les­
were Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Reed of । Penny Carqival. annual affair of i
..
lie. A delightful luncheon was
J—HOP FRIDAY WAS
Dowagiac.
lhe girls* athletic societies at the I
served and the evening thoroughly
COLORFUL AFFAIR.
University.
I
enjoyed. The next meeting will be
We went to a circus last Friday
PARENTS OF DAUGHTER.
Wednesday evening. May 27, at the
night, bul such a very pretty and
KARMES BROS.
SATURDAY, MAY 2nd
Announcement.. have been re­
RICHARDSON—TABOR.
I
FRIDAY, MAY lit
home of Mrs. Pauline BixU 234 E.
refined circus. The young ladies ceived of the birth nt a daughter.
Phone tin
Justice Andrew Matthews read,
Colfax street
wore lovely evening gown* of all thc Virginia Rae. to Mr. and Mrs. How­ the ceremony uniting in marriage
| hue* of thc rainbow, and their es- ard Carsten (Frances Cool)
50 CHOICE VARIETIES
of Grove Richardson and Mrs. Clara
BANNER WANT ADV8. TAT
! corta were handsome in light spring
Tabor,
the
rites
being
performed
at
I
Johnstown. Pa., on April 18. Both
jason e
c lwain
| suit* and white shoes. The card- mother and daughter arc doing
the former's office in thc court
i board animals were quiet and well- splendidly. Congratulations.
house on Friday at noon..
TRUE
t behaved and TUrnuned a novel set­
ting for lhe musicians, who ren| dered delightful music. The dome
COPPER Bl
Best Quality j Ib. bulk
' was gay with streamers of all col­
ors and lhe side shows were bridge
। tables and comfortable chairs and
| divan* for those who cared to rest
or watch the other dancers.
The outstanding feature of lhe
evening was a Grand March, in
which the young people formed all
manner of Intricate figures. Il was
(really the prettiest and mo..t en­
HEN you buy Farm Bureau Fence
This summer you may be away part of
tertaining circus we've attended
you get known and tested fence
in a long time . . . Yes. you've
Rapids Thursday.

Spring and Summer Clothing

T. S. BAIRD’S

Your TENNIS
Headquarter* ।

4'. B. HODGES

TO MAKE 500 NEW CUSTOMERS!

150

Croquignole
Permanent

Dine Out Tonight!

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE

OU

SPECIALS!

(The Erin ffiafi

GLADIOLUS Bulbs

BROWN SUGAR

.ME

4* 19c

COCOANUT

10c

Safeguard Tour Valuables

PINEAPPLE

L1 C?JJlLd, Sliced 2 ,or 19c

25c
PEAS, Corn, Wax Bean* 3
LIFE BUOY or Lux Soap A I-” 25c
FELS NAPTHA FLAKES - 22fc
BUTTER

ib. 32c

MIDDLEVILLE

OLEOMARGARINE

BEEF ROASTS

SLICED BACON

ib.

|3c

18fc
io.

19c

DON'T TRUST TO LUCK

guessed it ... it was thc J—Hop at
thc High school.

ATTEND FUNERAL
IN MARSHALL SUNDAY.

Martha Lou and J. L Maus were in
Marshall on Sunday attending the
funeral of Mrs. Emanuel Stierle,
mother of Mrs. Maus. Mrs. Stierle.
invalid for five year*, passing away
on Friday. Site J* survived by her
husband and Iwo daughters. Miss
ZMu
Atlrvrlrv at
af home
hnmr and
anrt Mrs.
Mr-. Mall*
Oh Stierle
Maus
of this city.

the time. Doors and windows will be

open more than usual. Fire may burn

PARKER HOUSE
Dining Room Service

JUST PHONE
HASTINGS

WE DELIVER

SFKCIAL
SUNDAY DINNERS
HOME COOKED FOOD

W

other Farm Bureau supplies. Farm
Bureau Fence'is made of true copper*

। important papers. Thieves may slip in and out with
carelessly placed jewelry. Valuables may be lost in a

house " topsy-turvey" with house-cleaning. Why not
play safe? Keep your valuables in a Safe Deposit Box.

Keep These in a Safe Deposit Box
INSURANCK
POL! CiXS
CANCKIXBD CHKCKS

6432

Known Value

LKTTBRS
CONTRACTS
LKASB3
WILLS

MARR1AOB
JSWSXJtY
KKXPSAKU
gacuxiTias
HOWTO AG S3
NOTK*
■tCKiFra

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

is heavily, tightly galvanized. And it is
of the cut-stay, hinge-joint type of

THICK

T I

construction, with a springy ten •ion­
arc cairva in the line wires. Experi­
ence ha* indicated that this is the most
economical and satisfactory type of

*nd livestock (or ■ krag lima

all-purpose farm fence.
v .
Farm Bureau Fence is the kind of

Bureau Fence conKsotly on

fence that you can buy and erect at

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES, Inc
Hastings, Mich.

�™LHASTINGS BANNOV THIHUDAT, ATKIL H, 1IM

22. TL. HaRtinffl Hanner

HAST NGS MARKETS

INSURANCE

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER­
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c.

WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON K. McElwain

RRRTHUM CHURCH

BalUaar* Chuck.

Our Service

torn Church.

Pay Promptly

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
SCIENTIST.

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co

Hundar arrvlce at II no A

first

GEO. M. NEWTON

Farmers, Attention!
String Beana and Sweet
the Lake OJetta canjilng
BETTER PRICE than
yesra. Pleat* Mgs your

REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
gpectacles Fitted and Guaranteed.
Credit—Term*.

LAKE ODESSA
CANNING COMPANY

llladaa t’a.rv

CARDS of THANKS

Ink Nil.I: -t'cnaalr hnwnd irai.l.lt ...
Tir &gt;lo&lt; tnll&lt; inrt
5 ■lot, ..l.l
\ , -.
„r ..fl n..l- f..r
v
.In*.- William JJcllv.h., &lt;■ 1 " 'I'llU
1 NTKAIEP—Hlark »t..l whit* fu
jl.i ul ..I BH.I.ll.t old In. J ltd. Bea
ll.iw-na*. 1-h.ir.r 7-’7—11'7.
4 30
loll SAI.I? 30 l.u. r«tr» &lt;■»»! t.nl .I....
for -rr-.l nr ralil.*. ICu-.rl . r \vi...n
:

NURSERY STOCK

JERRY ANDRUS

Gocj Rooted. Healthy Flanta.
Eldorado, Alfred, Early Harvest
Blackberries. Cumberland
Black.
Cuthbert Red Raspberries. 1c each.
HOWARD DUDLEY
_________ Delton. Route ?.

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY
RaUonal Bunk Bldg.—Phon* 3310

WE BUT AND SELL REAL ESTATE
ON COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON I

CARD OF THANKS—

WASTE »—Mon with Iran, and tool* l&lt;i
arm i»»ar Ahn. ahar* baaia Own
er w-ll fitrniah f.lant. tor 5 lo 10 arr*«
atrowl wrrlrw Wril. I'. It Krnl. 34S
It..... . II.rl farm
4 :m ।
Mi.h Trait Hide Grand Hat.ula. Mich
FiitC SAl£ -E.rrllrnl dininc l»bl* with
I i.-.n I n k ... rlialr.. &lt; all n.rl i. . - ror r&lt;ri..iit. .1.-4 1. lirnrn
4-10

Snr wi «&gt;rUaa*
IwuTa ■an lb
(AKO OF THANKS

Cement Work—Plastering
liilnri.l

Twenty years experience on al!
; types of jobs—Pain* taking work| manship, will take jobs on contract
i or by the day.

Phone 3670

I WANT TO HIRE -A MAN
Immediately who Is fairiUiar with a

HASTINGS PARISH.
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
I st.

Henderaholl—Bible acliool |0-oo A. M.
Martin—Dibit •cho-'l.
' *'
eachlne. 11 30 A M
Quimby—IMble aehool

BRICK

Box 164. Dept. 1238.
Quincy, III.

rEFFERSON MT. UNITED BRETHREN
CHURCH
Cor. JaRartoa sad Caatar St*.
R*t. R A. Hoaghion. Pastor.

In..
1
1
..............................
1
.
1
L_ _____________ — — —i

Al -ri.,1.1

ABSTRACT OFFICE

"AKRON" MODERN
MICHANOFORM TRUSS

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

FOR WORK OR PLAY
Tkla Smooth Rubber Duck Padi

rla« wan correct* hi

No Poiti To Wear Clothing

buying or leaning meaty on real
eatat*. PLAY SAFE

ARD OF THANKS
nelcl.Lora and friend.

CARD OF THANKS

At Old Hastings Wool
Boot Plant Site. In­
quire of Joe DeRuitcr
at Pickle Station.

SHELDON'S

Lake

THE CHURCHES

RAY LANCASTER

'1130 S. Market

perience.

FOR SALE

Corn t&lt;
Co. at
prana,
comrsci

I cues rvidnicr. aecotid bout*

Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
BONDS
NOTARY PUBLICS
iOS Bout* Chtuch
Phone SIRS

I W’AXTEP—c.tmbl woman would HI
. 1'i.oo* afwr 7
1 M T4O—Fl 1.
4

Presbyterian bmurch.

1^5,

a, rn I nc • '*'1 .1 fl.— rl. urrh
l b* loral W M A will tn«»l on Wr.l
dot eirnlnc. M ar 6. at 7 30 o'clwK
lb* rbnrch., ir •rrslinc rrt-rrla froiu
inch ineelinc.

me. tine Sunday eveninc at Mra.

Sunday nomine

fifth hnnk nt th.

l»n o'clock
t-i-allr.
&gt;r. Luka.
r. tamcn t.

Phone 21B3

GRANGE PROGRAMS
MAPLE LEAF GRANGE

IRVING GRANGE

OLD

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Lag Strap*

The Prescription Drug Store
BLASTINGSMICHIGAN
Cuu/MlMd Tram fltt/ag

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCH'S
MARKET. Phon. 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609

.Foil SAI.E S.t r...,.n h..u«* at I*i Se
llan.nrr st inumrr at 421 F. Hadi
..... Nt
4 30
FOR SALE —To.. &lt;&gt;&gt;r&gt;d uacd Vi Ur—
BAPTIST CHURCH
■i'17. .1 |.lv
Hi llild*br«h.lt.
I. ADCOCK. MWlatar
4in
i.-.-r tilt NT. ILEX' lllack and art. 1
lnCL.1. St.rlM-.-c Npanial. unari
&gt; &lt;&gt;...utha .Id. i't.Id Barra countr icenae
X- I t.'.V. 1111 reward II thia doc la
; rrrurred and no auralluna naked Will
. Ir crea'lr at.l'r-.lalrd
Phone 3149.
flare Heaeh. Haatinca. 310 W Mill Hathawar
. St
4 30
Ft&gt;U SALE —Several |-ica 5 wee a old.
M Pettea farm 1 fn.lea ar.t o
, t-irt on &lt; ountv road.
4 30

k

roach from Battle Creek when this
city was a tiny village. When Mrs.
Robinson was 15 years old her i Larry Rattler, who has been with
Mr. and Mrs. Sabin for the the past
mother died and for many months
few weeks Is slowly Improving from
she cooked for the laborers who
hls recent illness.
were
weie uuuoing
building ner
her lamer
father's
s new stone iI
_
house. All the timber was hewn by
.Mr- M,‘d Mrs. H. A- Kltson and
hand and the stone was hauled I
. Jo visited the Crystal Ol)
w
from a stone quarry near Ceresco. Fteld* Bunday.
She was married to Samuel J. Rob-1 Miss Doreen clary and Bob and .Alt oi
Inson In 1873 at Hastings. They re-1 Junior Bronson of Hastings called । No
sided on the farm in Castleton on Mr. and Mra. Ralph Leffler in,"
township and Mr. Robinson worked । Sunday.
as a conductor on the M -C. railMr. and Mra. Jacob Hoover and
B PR,NT,SOroad. He died In 1896. She moved lo daughter Genevieve and Mrs. Ralph |Md
Nashville in 1916 Siie Is survived, Rise and children attended the fu- &gt;.
d“ mv kM
by her daughter. Mrs. Stephen Ma- neral of the former's sister. Miss lob o’lntin*
ter of Marshall, and a sister living [ Fannie Hoover of Sunfield. Tuesday. ------------------------------- —------In NllshVille.
,. RllMell
VC*nvnn nt
. .
Russell Kenyon
of O,»tn,w
Saginaw ,nH
and and. Miss Betty —
Wotring
, Bob and Rex Kenyon of Laming Woodland. Mr. and Mra. Carl EngSunday afternoon vteitora at land of Laming. David Vail of
OBITUARY.
&gt;1 were Sunday
Mrs.
Martha
Benson
passed the home of Mr. and Mrs. Milan Muskegon and MU* Ruth Handy
away Monday evening. April 20. Trumbo.
of Hastings.
after an illness of only two weeks, I Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Pettlngill ot
Mrs. Donald Gager and son. Mor­
at thc home of her brother, Peter J.। Battle Creek visited Miss Gertie
, gan. spent lhe week end with her
Castle, where she had lived for Uie smith Sunday.
I parents. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hough
past six months. The deceased was I Mr. and Mrs. Vernlce Ratner are I of Hartford. Mr. Oage*' sccomMartha Castle, daughter of Peter [ moving to their farm two and one- . panled by F. E- Border went fishing
and Gratia Castle, pioneers of Or-' half miles east of Woodland this
angevllle Twp. She was born in Or- week.
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Kilpatrick and
angevllle. Aug. 28. 1853. and lived' Members of the United Brethren
to Uie ripe old age of 82 -------years. 7 congregation surprised their pastor. Arlene were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
inos.. and 23 days She was united Rev. Don Carrick Saturday evening, David Kilpatrick of Ann Arbor
Sunday.
In marriagt* to Henry Benson of Or­ the occasion being his birthday.
angeville. Nov. 21. 1879. They lived About sixty guests were present. Out
Marvin McLeod entertained the
of lhe ...
King's Herald's
together to celebrate Uielr fiftieth v,
www,, guests were mi.
wm Mn.
a. April meeting
---------- w —
of town
Mr. and
.... She Warren English. Mr. and Mn. Har- Wednesday afternoon,
wedding anniversary, in 1929.
has been a member of the Prairie- old
Mr.-------and--------Mn.------------Calvin | •
— Ralph Leffler
— entertained
._ English.
------------ —
Mn.
villa Baptist church for many
----- English —
-•
------and Kenneth Carrick of Uie Bridge Club at her home in
yean, a faithful wife and
con- Grand Rapids.
j West Woodland Thursday evening.
sistent wdrker In her church
________
_ „ of Out of town guests w
_. Mrs. ^.~..
" and
J
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Parker
were
Glen
in lhe attain of her home and dally • Lansing visited the latter's parents. Densmore and Mrs Ray Ftnnle ot
life. She leaver lo mourn their loss Rev. and Mrs. T. W. Thompson Hastings. Mrs. Glen England reone brother. Feter J. Castle of Or- Sunday.
| ceived high score. Mrs. Robert Born,
angevllle Twp.. and a large number j Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rowlader and second, and Mn. Karl Paul. Con­
or nieces and nephews, neighbors mra.
Mrs. jeaate
Jessie nation
Halton oi
of urana
Grand tea
Rapids
solation.
pi as ,i soiauon.
and friends. She Is
' --•
called on
— ••
Mr.
------and
J ••Mrs. -----Wm. •••
Warner
-------- ' 1 Mr. —
and
-• Mrs. Lester -Brumm
--------- —and
•»
Safe in the arms of Jesus
Sunday.
Mr. and Mr*. T. C. Brumm spent
Safe on Hls gentle breast.
! MT. and Mrs. Pay c. Wing visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John
There by Hls love o’er shadowed
friends In Kalamazoo Sunday.
, Weaver of Hastings.
Sweetly her soul shall rest.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur AUerdlng
A good office woman should make
and sons and Mr. and Mrs. Welby
■ VMMWta of
v&gt; Carlton.
veaaauaa.
| ,n ldeal »*Ie She Can 01,1 thing!
OBITUARY.
Crockford
Mm Rhoda Austin has been con- without Utting the boss realise it.
Homer J. Flower, a pioneer and
well known resident of Milo, passed fined to her home with illness.
away at hls farm home. April 21. at
Mr. Frank Fox. Miss Ethel Fox.
1:45 P- M in falling health the past Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Fratcher and
five and one-half years, his condi­ Miss Dorothy Dell of Detroit were
tion became critical nine days ago Sunday guesU of Mr. and Mrs. John
WILL BE IN WITH ANOTHER
and in spite of all that loving care Dell.
LOAD OF HORSES, SATURDAY.
could do he peacefully went home.
Callers at the home of Mrs. Olen
Just as friends were gathering at „.
oz
England
Sunday were Miss Mar­
AFMAN &amp; JACKSON
Henton's funeral home for obsequies &gt; garet Densmore of ]
of hls sLstcr, Mrs. Emma Johnson.' Dorothy Beardsley of
He was thc youngest and last of
lhe seven children of Marvin and
Almira Flower. The decease of Ho- I
mer J. Flower marks the passing I
of one of the last pioneers of Prai-1
rievillc township. He was born in i
McKane. Erie Co . pa. on Jan. 27. &lt;
1857. He came lo Michigan with his |
parents in the fall of 1885. The fol­
lowing spring they moved to thc
farm which has been hls home the 1
past seventy years excepting three

HORSES!

CARD OF THANKR—

Martin Tlnki

FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH

DEATH OF CASTLE
years spent tn MlnnuoU. Feb
DRILIlCr
TON PIONEER. 1882. he was united in marriage to inc
A pioneer resident of Nashville Mary J. Moreau, who with three-------------------and CasUelnn township, passed on children, w. H. Flower. Kalamasoo.
Haatlaas. Mlchlcan.
Thursday night It waa Mrs Han­
nah Blaisdell Robinson, who was Prances A. Kennedy, Dowagiac, and
COOK BROS. Kdilara.
92 years old. and who had resided four grandchildren, survive. He was I
In this county for nearly 90 years, a member of the I. O. O. F. of
EIGHTIETH YKAR
The funeral was held at her home Prairieville over fifty yean. He took
in Nashville, with burial in Lake- acUve Interest tn the church and
view cemetery.
1 was ever ready to help every worthy
Mra. Robingon could remember : cause. The funeral was held at the I
when Nashville waa only a sawmill, home Friday P. M . April 24. and I
and the Indians were practically the 1 was largely attended. Rev. Bate* ,
only inhabitants of that part of lhe spoke from Hosea 11-4, taking the |
BARRY COUNTY. HIX MONTHS. *o«.
county. On her fattier Blaisdell's ’Home" for hls theme. He was laid IN (If
Mid In advaae*.)
160 acre farm, which has since to rest In Prairieville cemetery sur­ INjBAJlRY^COUNTY. THREE MONTHS.
passed into other hands, still stands ' rounded by beautiful flowers,
OUTRIDE
BARRY'cOUNTY*."o'*nt YEAR
the bam which her father built I
■ &lt;
■
IN ADVANCE .............. Si SO
when lie cleared the 160-acre tract. I
WOODLAND.
i
’
Mrs. Robinson was bom In Seneca j club No. 1 cf Uie Methodist La- h*kUlN HUBBCRIPTfONB. ONE YEAR
IN ADVANCE
Palls. New York. October 23. 1843.: dtes' Aid Society will serve the reg­
and came to Castleton township ular monthly supper, Wednesday
with her parents. Thomas and Alice | evening May 6
ADVERTISING RATES:
™
EUI »
Mui

STATE OF MICHIGAN

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

what

ANT/

S

—Mi

the right
b&gt; they p
»tay off
out in sp

There’i
Byd« Pai
tha crack
dack-jawi
tbelr plac&lt;
paasloaed
in full era
Ing a h
kings, ba
drtvatbai
Uy forth
fir* to Um
London
A heckler
with th*
tha crowd
about aqt
panda. A
plowa thr&gt;

than aa
Bocklnghi
aide, plea
going to
palace klr
Whan j
colder th

nlite to c

Ria
A? Oh
Ak anotl
don, hla
aa optiml

doesn't a
wlU win i
cenalnly
hands—ai
stampede
grand-ata

rank and
the Allan

as thoogt
will be
conceaslo

you calle
lltpubllci
as you g

ai
troops
lion m
service, i
half than
lhe last I
ive

F

Those
grlevousl

owed ui
rennancl
own laa
another,
in thia c
op thee
time the
souls wl
foreign t
yon, but

dough U
that's w

H. Feldpaujch • 3921

Farmers, Attention!
I will pay th* HIGHEST MARKET
PRICE fat VEAL. LAMBS. HOGS sad

Tarda. Ship EVERY TUESDAY
and BUY EVERY DAY.
■PRIESTER. PHONE 717—F3.

Dead Stock Removed!

ciact
c-jtsr..■rral
of
ears chars*BL.
FROM

Md coariaoaa »orvkora**, cattl* and
af
coll JAMES WII,
Clinton
HMttnga. Tri*
R*pr**aitUns

■31

SS».

WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH.

I • • h IH. I

Wrecking for Parts
•
•
•
•
•

1929 CHEVROLET
1928 PONTIAC
1928 Bt’ICK Standard
1929 Bl'ICK Standard
1928 OLDSMOBILE.
New and L'scd Auto Parts
for Alt Cara

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2637

HsaUngi

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings
EVERY SATURDAY

WAXTEP— Reliable and eawrleneed man
fnr ceneral farm work A. Btnaah.
Haa&lt; nca Bnute - X' Brnadwaa 4 30
Fl lit Ntl.E
rraie. corn Alan Mod­
el T ri.adater 1&lt;4»?
Beet Birman
Mdr north mile and a halt eaat Ilnw
'-c__________________________ 4 30
Foil SALE—Heir., licht trlanl and hit- FIRST UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH.
trrira tic w.mld trade for at nek Lawrenre Allrrdmc. Haatinca. Route 3.
4 30
FOR SALE Hit TKAhE—Fordaon tractor
■ nd tdowa X’rw tra:—tnii.ion and bearinc«: motor Juat been reborej and in
A 1 &lt; t.ditiim
H.rae ttokenaon. Ver
•nontviltr 34 mile, ea.t
4 30
FOR SALE - 14 air week, old pica.
Wanted, two crade Guern.ee tor, No
Sundae call*
Veen Rumford. Rout*
4 Fir.t ptare aouth of Chat. Scoll'a.
-a.I ...le ..f r..a.|
4 30
WANTEh- Work bv month on farm. Dibit
Kaim.-ud Wei.e Middleville. Route 3 COATS GROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST
4 30
Eon s ILF-Tucker ecca
B. Walker.
MMdl-ville tlLt.n*. t.hone
4 30
FOR SALE—Crib of earn
Mlle north,
mile and quarter eart of Dowlioc Hen
llirman
4-30

EFFECTIVE MAY 1ST

They live for her in lhe gifts you send. How filling,

then, that your gift to her on Mother’s Day should be
a living greeting . . . Flowers from Wilcox.
Mildred Smith. Probata Reeiit

NOTICE TO CREDITOR*.

CHANGE OF
SCHEDULE

Order Cut Flowers or a Potted Plant.

LEAVE NORTH BOUND

Again, for your convenience, we will open a
LEAVE SOUTH BOUND

1:33 P. M
liso t. M.

shop in the Home Lumber Company building,
the two days previous to Mother’s Day, Fri­
day and Saturday, May 8 and 9. We will

DAILY EXCEPT BUNDAY
t SUNDAY ONLY

New Schedule Features 4
Trips Dally to Coldwater

PIIA1RIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE

Feeder Calves and Milch Cows at all time*.

0T
on

O

cbriatai
goodlo110UM

display a complete line of appropriate flowera for her day. Stop in and select the
flowers she will like.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

If you wish trucking service call Hastings
Phone 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.

Memories

AT 1
TX L«l
tlona. 1
tlca It
24,OOO,(X
total m
United
ing mo:
the idle
there a
prefer
to takl:
Next
underte
qaestloi
who. If
custom,
houn t
nlng hl
A pit
servsd
tion-thi
Sam, c
purpoM

Drake
honors
Baca
er cro]
plowed

CLYDE WILCOX, The Florist

EMMANUEL CHURCH (Eplreopal).

Michigan livestock Exchange

Complete Information at

HASTINGS BRANCH

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS

PHONE 2137

Hastings, Michigan

Telephone 2530

Member Florists’ Telegraph Delivery. Association

lag th&lt;
"Judge

malic*
chap i
of Mavi
Islncd

�THURSDAY, APRIL 30,1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER
Players to Present An Old Favorite

' Barry Bypaths
i, JAMS CAMMOH

Jane has enough symptoms to get
in a sanitarium, There are nine
places lliut ache, three black and
blue marks, four cut fingers, a sore
toe and. I think, a cracked irib. Oh,
When shoes are wet tftrough, do
no. we weren’t in a wreck or didn’t
faU downstairs with a piano. Just not dry them by the fire. As soon as
the yearly housecleaning.
you remove them from your feel. All
them with dry oat*. The oate will
You can tell where we’ve been.
rapidly absorb the moisture from
the leather without hardening it,
This old world can’t be such a bad and will swell a* they take up the
keeping the
place when you have to stand In moisture, .thereby
line thlrty-flv* minute* to get a leather from becoming tight.
chance to see five sweet little baby
Once
upon
a
lime
I
planned
to be
girl*.
An artist of celebrity;
People are much more Interested A song I thought to write some day
in lhe quint* than in Muscle Inny’s And all the world would Coinage
.E!J« to write a noted book
troops of destruction..

MONICA. CALIF.
«—-Maybe the English have
SANTA
the right idea. The Reda apout
as they please—so long aa they
stay off the radio and take it
out in spouting.
•There’s a story in point: In
Hyde Park where
the crack-pots and
clack-Jaws speak
tbelr pieces, an Im-

■
i
HR
|
passioned radical is
In full eruption. Bej
Ing a hater of ■
kings, he would ft
(
drlro the royal fatn- M
Dy forth and aet K
I
Are to their official ■
,
London residence.
A heckler quarrels
with th* orator:
Irvin a Cobb
tb* crowd Joins In,
about squally divided, trouble
pends, a large caltq policeman
' plows through the Jem.
• ’Ere, now 1” }&gt;o command* “All
them as Is going to burn down
Bucklngbsm palace form on this
aide, please. All them as to not
going to burn down Buckingham
palac* kindly form on that aide."
When you [start people toughing
at an agitator you've killed him
colder than though you used an
ax. 1 wish we'd club in and laugh
some of our half-baked Commu­
nist* to death.

A 8 ONE .stat* delegation after
** another swings toward Lan­
don, lit* campaign managers ar*
aa optimistic
a seed catalogue.
To be sure, taking the first beat
wlU win tb* county trophle*. but It
certainly will cheer up tbs stablehand*—and sometime* start* a
stampede for front Mils In the
grand-stand.

For one* in Q. O. P. history the
rank and file shun a brother from
the Atlantic seaboard as tbqjigb he
were a pesthous*.

At the ensuing convention it looks
as though all the easterners will get,
will be the secondlng-the-motlon
concession.
And yet I can remember when. If ■
you called a fellow a Wall Street |
Republican, you didn’t have to smile !
as you'said It.

.. J
War Debt Specter.
pIVE and a half million European
1 troops are drilling and seven mil­
lion more are practically ready for
service, more by on* million and a
half than there were Id 1914, when
the last big mess broke out

The sun is shining, the grass is
showing green, the little birds go
-Tweet, tweet," the Mayflowers are
nodding their little head*, and here
I sit writing this.

Photo by Mason.

PROMISES TO BE
VERY INTERESTING

Campaign in Fourth District
Opened by Townsendites
Representatives of the Townsend
Clubs in thl* Congressional district
met in Paw paw last week to select
an opponent against Representative
Clare E. Hoffman. They united on
Dr. Felix A. ’Racelte of Paw Paw.
but be has not yet definitely an­
nounced whether he will accept or
not. Dr. Racette is a pronounced
radical in many ways. He has an­
nounced that he endorses Father
Coughlin’s program and. ot course,
is In favor of the Town*en$ plan of
8200 a month pension for people
who have reached the age of 60
&gt;WI or more. There are said to be
13,000 members of. the Townsend
Club*.
Wr doubtHf he can make much of
a showing against Congressman
Hoffman for lhe Republican nomi­
nation and the Democrats plan to
make a nomination of their own. It
will be interesting to watch tlie de­
velopments.

A

O

Drake Googoo, D. D.
Thus are
honors balanced tn thia world.

Riley Stories
plowed

under,

we naUvee stayed

rustically were colonel*, except one
of having so many major operation*
Poor fellow, ho died before be at­
tained hl* lift's ambition. Ho west
ed to run somebody’s general store
IRVIN C GOER,

But what I did was learn lo cook.
For life with simple tasks U filled.
And I haVe done—not what I willed;
Yet, when I see boys’ hungry eyes.
I’m glad I make good pumpkin pies,
(Prom a magazine some lime ago).

Dug In the dirt yesterday and
Nothing makes Jane madder than
now I bet this housecleaning never
to be urged lo attend a lecture on
will get finished.
child care of psychology given by
This tremendous urge toward soil a man or a childless woman.
work and growing things Is as old
We’re going to get the dope on
as the world. One sniff of spring
electric plant* for
and outdoors we go. bareheaded, wind-driven
after the hoe and rake. No more
thought of lhe winter's quiltmaking Interested we'll give soy beans a
rest.
and needlework.

Those Americana .who are being THE MAY FESTIVAL
grievously taxed because the pow­
er* Won't pay back What they have
IS RICHJN PROMISE
owed us since th* armistice for
refinancing and rehabilitating their Great Array of Talent Will
own lands—and that, one way or
Be at Ann Arbor for
another. Include* every living sou)
Yearly Event
in this country—are lnvlt*d to save
It is the opinion of all who have
up these statistic* for use next
time they meet one of those gentle
May Festival at Ann Arbor the
souls who’d cancel these mounting
13th. 14th. 15th. and 16th. that a
foreign debt* Not war debts, mind more brilliant array of artist* has
you, but peace-time debts.
never been brought to the Univer­
Bo let's call them by their right sity town by President Charles Sink
name as w* slag: “I didn't raise my and his associates.
The mere announcement of such
dough to arm a soldier but by golly
names as Leopold Stokowski and the
that's what happened to it."
Philadelphia symphony, Lily Pons,
Giovanni Martinelli, Efrem ZlmIdlers an Relief.
balist, Paul Althouse, Harold Bauer.
T LAST we know wherein the Rose Bampton, Jeannette Vreeland.
League of Nation* really func­ brings a thrill to the heart of every
music lover.
tion*. It keeps a good set of etatls
The Ann Arbor festival has come
tics. It aaya that In the world are
24,000,000 unemployed, and of thia to be regarded as one of the out­
total more than half are In the standing event* of the musical
United States. Since we are spend­ world in the United State*.
The opening concert Wednesday
ing more government fund* to aid
evening is given over to the Phila­
the Idle than any country, can it be
delphia orchestra; Thursday eve­
there are persons among us who
ning Caractacus, a dramatic canta­
prefer staying on relief projects ta will b* presented by the Choral
to taking regular Jobs?'
Union, the orchestra, with Jean­
Next time I pts* a public work* nette Vreeland,
Paul Althouse,
undertaking I’m going to put the Keith Falkner, and Julius Huehn,
question to some able-bodied party soto 1st*; Friday evening Lily Pons
who, if he’s following the frequent and the orchestra furnish the pro­
custom, will be whiling away the gram; at the Friday matinee Harold
hours between meal* by gently fan­ Bauer appears, and the annual Ann
Arbor Young People’s Festival pro­
ning himself with a shovel.
A pick handle, a* I've often ob­ gram given; Saturday matinee pre­
served on one road-digging opera­ sents Efram Zlmballst and the or­
tion-that's being financed by Uncle chestra; Saturday evening Verdi's
Sam. comes in handy for leaning Requiem by lhe Ann Arbor chorus
and a group of distinguished so­
purposes.
loist* Including Martinelli and Rom
Bampton closes this great program.
Kentucky Colohel.
UT here they’ve found a mail­ line.
order theological mill which,
Fuller details can be had from the
for |10, ordains yon to preach.
Banner office, All evening programs
begin at 8:30 eastern standard time;
goodie—take up collections. Micky matinee* al 3:30. individual oonMouse lately lost hie commission a* oert* range In price from 8150 to
a Kentucky colonel, but on behalf 8250; course ticket* from 86 00 up.
From inquiries Hastings will be
of Joe Penner's duck somebody
wrote In and he became the Bev. well represented thl* year.

ties—we were born with 'em
la
ssny youth, anybody good at guess
ing the weight of boga was called
“Judge," and a men who cured

of native lumber and nearly all are
of rustic design; many were tower
cabins built at tha base of fire
tower* for the u&amp;c of towermen.
There arc eight new fire towers—five
hi Hie upper peninsula and three in
the lower; 7,200.000 forest trees w*re
planted by CCC boys. Reforestation
and soil erosion programs have been
highly commendable features of Die
New Deal.

to fish and I met Luther Bennett,

Lute, I heard you went to Chicago
or Cleveland to lay brick on a sky­
And I said, •'Lula, don't you Ilk*
big cltiM?" and he replied, "Big
clues are all right," and I inquired
if he didn’t have a good Job and

’’Luther, why did you come back?"

TO HAVE
BEXTYBUI'SPflO- • BANKERS GROUP
MEETING
Known Speakers
GIMM INTERESTING Nationally
on Program at St.

HAHTINOB WOMEN'S OLUB
TO HEAB WELL KNOWN
MEN AND W0M£N
TOPICS OF CURRENT
INTERESTCONSIDERED
General, Literature, Home
Departments Form Basis
of Study
The new year books for the Has­
ting* Women'* club are out and In­
dicate that an exceptionally inter­
esting program has been prepared
for 1936-1937. by Mra. Kenith Me-

kirk. Mrs. George Lockwood. Mrs.
F. W. Stebbins and their co-work­
ers. Mrs. Frank Adair, Mrs. Earl
Coleman and Mra. C. D. Bauer.
Guest speakers are drawn on for
the programs to a greater degree
than for some years past.
Dr. Emil Leffler, president of Bat­
tle Creek college, will be the speak­
er at the
opening meeting and
luncheon Oct. 4; Miss Mabel Louise
Keech, of Centerville, an authority
on Heraldry, comes Oct. 9th to talk
on this Interesting hobby; Mrs.
Maurice Keyworth, of Detroit, well
known here and prominent in Bute
Federation work. wiU be the guest
of honor Oct. 10 and will give an
address on "Interesting American
Women Today;" Dec. 4, Dr. Eugene
B. Elliott, state superintendent of
public instruction will occupy the
program; Richard M. Cook will give
a talk on "Modern Etchings," Jan.
8; Feb. 19. Hubert D. Cook, who is a
local hobbyist in philately, will ex­
hibit hls valuable collection of
stamps; M«n’s night will be in
charge of the social committee,
March 5, with Mr*. F. P. Dukette,
a talented musician of Three Riv­
er*. furnishing a program.
An interesting innovation will be
a visit to the Grand Rapids Book­
case and Chair Co., on April 2nd
when Kellar Stem, manager, will
give a Ulk on “Furniture Design­
ers." with a trip thru the factory;
Miss Ruth Robson will direct a
group of bar High sohool dramatic
class student* in two one-act play*
for the April 9th meeting, with
Lewis* Hine, and the High school

Joseph
Several nationally kndwn speak­
ers will appear at the meeting of
the Michigan Bankers’ Association
lo be held at 8t. Joseph during
Blossom Week, May 7 and 8. In­
cluded in thl* group are the coun­
ties of Berrien. Casa, VanBuren, St.
Joseph. Barry, Branch. Kalamaroo,
Calhoun and Allegan. Dr. E. W.
Kemmerer of Princeton University,
an authority on finance, Harold
Amberg of Chicago and others of
national reputation will appear on
the program.
X
Varied entertainment
features
have also been arranged, dosing
with a ball Friday evening
for
I which many reservations have been

Saturday morning a chubby Ut­
ile fellow with two unruly locks of
hair over hls forehead sat in Judge
McPeek's chair and radiated dignity
and Importance No. he wasn’t hold-

finals of the county spelling contest
along with about 80 other young­
sters from all the school district*.
* It would seem that girls take
spelling more seriously than boys,
for in the morning session of third,
fourth and fifth graders, there were
21 girls but only if boys; and in the
aflernpon in the sixth, seventh and
eighth grad* contest, the girls out­
numbered their brothers almost four
to one with 20 girl* and 6 boy*.
Maybe it’s because so many little
girls Intend to be teachers when they
grow up. and they're starting in
young to get their letters right.
It was an important day in their
young lives and they were all keyed
up with excitement. Some of those
youngsters in lhe morning session
looked like infante. . . and very spic
and span Infante, too. Looked as
though they had Just come out of a
bandbox with their rosy cheeks and
pretty spring dresses and neat
suite.
Mrs. Maude Smith, who was in
charge of the contests, pronounced
a list of about 50 words which the
children wrote on big pads of yel­
low paper. Then came tense mo­
menta while she and an assistant
corrected each paper. A broad grin
spread over lhe face of lhe little girl
or boy whose paper was marked 100.
but such a disappointed look when
it wasn’t. But they Were good sport*.
When they were eliminated, they
took It wllh a smile and never
grumbled because Mary or Johnny
wa* still in and they were out. Each
list of words was more difficult than

was dropped. leaving

for grownups

ly headed girl
out -a" at th*
with the

overwhelming majority of
added ’’d” to admission, a
spelling it correctly. Thl*
contesting for final lienor

and Virginia Hesterly

of

then Virginia, in an
•assignment" and it wa* all over.

we think, considering the *J
showing made all thru the

First Group—3rd, 4th. 5th
Brown

Woodland.
Honorable Mention-Laurel Ft»-

Second
grades.

the little contestant* betrayed them
when a word was almost too hard.
And what a self-satisfied expression
when they finally got It written cor­
rectly . . al least what they thought
correct
The youngsters competing in the
contest weren’t the only ones who
were nervous . . Their parents or
brother or sister who had come with
them and sat anxiously in the
court roorp seemed more concerned
than little Sally or Bobby. Bul It
way a red-letter day when they
wrote in the county spelling con­
test and they'll probably tell their
grandchildren about It some day.
The first elimination in th* after­
noon contest found 18 of th* ft
entrants still in; the next one and
12 were left; words grew a bit more

Group—Sth.

7th.

town; Arthur McKelvey,
There's going to be a
spellers in thc oncoming
of young people from th
school* of Barry county.

county failed to be
while six township* i

did Maple OTOV*.

SHEEPMEN URGED
TO ENTER SHOWS.
Michigan sheepmen ore urged to
prepare now for the 1936 county and
state fair competition and for
Farmers’ Week in 1937. Premium
awards of about 8500 will be made
in fleece competition at the State
Fair, winning fleeces will also be ex­
hibited at the international Live­
stock Show at Chicago and some at
the Pacific international Show at
Portland. Ore. Michigan won 31
premiums in fleece competition at
the Chicago show last year.
"Show fleece should be free from
dirt, chaff, and foreign material,’’
says Mr. LaVol of M. S. C. staff. “It
should be neatly rolled up or folded
with the flesh side of the fleece an
the outside. It Is also well to wrap
the fleeces in paper, oiled paper pre­
ferred. and store in a cool, dry. dark
place until show tlm*.’’
All sheepmen who us* purebred
ram* and hav* a flock of 20 *wa* are
eligible for competition for a mas­
ter flockmaster’a certificate award-

of loo pounds of lamb

Have a Chai

tlflcate. Enrollment card* may be
Obtained at the county agricultural
agent's office or by writing to the
animal husbandry department at
Michigan Stale College. East Lan­
sing.

All other program* will be given
by member* of the club—Mrs. Mar­
ian Goodyear Is an for Heraldry
day; Mrs. H. L. Carroll, Mrs. Ches*
ter Hodges, and Mrs. Kenith McIn­
tyre will report on the County Dis­
trict and State Federation meetings;
Nov. 18th the literature department
features a book exhibit, with a talk
by Mrs. Wm. R. Cook on "Book Col­
lectors, Past and Present; "Archi­
tects and Designers of Homes” will
be presented by Mrs. Aben Johnson,
Nov. 20 for lhe home department;
Dec. 11, mark* the annual appear­
ance of Miss Jean Barnts city li­
brarian, who will talk on “Con­
temporary Novelist*."
Mrs. Guy Keller la in charge of
the heme department on Jan. 8 for
the etchings’ exhibit; "Voices of th*
Paul Althouse, Metropolitan Opera
Modem Poets” will be considered by tenor,
who will sing
at the
Thursday evening concert of the
The annual luncheon 1* set for Ann Arbor Mky Festival. May 13. 14,
15. "and 1&lt;T
Feb. 28 meeting, will give "A Study
of Wagner and Hls Opera*” and ae- •BARRY COUNTY M. E. ATO MEET MAY 7TH.
lections from the opera "Siegfried”
The annual meeting of the Barry
will accompany it.
A fashion show, with Mn. Harry 1County District of the Michigan
Young presenting ''Personality in Education Association will be held
Dresa" falls on March 12; March 19. in the Central auditorium Thursday
th* Pulitzer prize winners of 1935 'evening. May 7th. Following the
will be considered by Miss Anna 1election of officers, a short program
Johnson, Mja. Roy Cordes, Mra. will be given In charge of thc pro­
Richard Grooa, and Mrs. H. L. Car- igram planning committee and reroll. Thc closing meeting will be
April 14 with the legislative com- Hastings Teachers' Club. There are
160 members of the district this year
mittas in charge.
Junior doesn’t get an electric
train st Christmas He get* it about

There’s one thing there will be
pies and
plenty of this year—wind, wllh a
politician on every soapbox.
.Mistress: "Maggie when you wait
table tonight for my guests, please CONSIDERING NEW
don’t wear any Jewelry."
MOTOR FUEL BLENDS.
Maggie: “1 have nothing valuable,
A conference will be held In Dear­
ma’am, but thanks for the warn­ born. Michigan, from May la to 14
ing.”
to further study and consider new
industrial uses .for farm products,
We should have known last fall particularly alcohol as a possible
that we had a hard winter coming. blend for motor fuel. The confer­
The old oak tree In the yard never ence. it is expected, will attract more
shed so many leaves before. The than 1,000 scientists. Industrialists
squirrels had thicker coats and and men interested in fanning. The
burled all the nut* around here. Chemical Foundation is now con­
Other years many are left on the structing a plant In Atchison. Kan­
ground.
sas. where operations with corn as
the basic raw material for making
Also, we have a few frozen pota­ alcohol are expected to start this
toes left.
month in the actual production of
alcohol for motor fuel.
Annual report from 8. 8. Young,
In a straw votJ to choose a na­
head of the CCC camps In Michi­
gan. Is worth repeating.
Sixty tional tree for the United States.
bridges were built, ranging in else 3,700,000 ballots were cast, the Cali­
from lhe 150 foot span over the fornia Big Tree, or Sequoia glganManistique river to foot bridges, tea. winning with a total of 788.115.
many of which were constructed for That's probably because the Sequoia
the purpose of moving flre-flghtlng gigantea figures so frequently in the
apparatus.
Ninety-one
buHdlqgs
were constructed, varying from park England, tha Riviera, shanghai or
structure* to cabins. They were built the Sahara Desert.
Patsy 1* making mud
singing lustily.

County Spelling
Was Close

of all district* are thoee
g anta* tion.

When you come to the Hostings City Bank to consult
with "Your Banker" you are invited to sit down and
discuss freely and confidentially any problem you
may have. For over a half century this greeting has
placed our customers in a position to make them feel
that we are interested in their problems, so that
(financial matters are discussed as "between part- I
ners." Friendliness is one of the first pleasures you
sense when you visit this bank.
We are loaning money to concerns and individuals
on improved real estate. We are also making loan,
based on financial statements.

Our Savings Department is at your command and al
deposits are insured.
Sofety Deposit Boxes are for, rent for your
ence. Every facility of o modern bank is at
posal in this friendly bank.

Hastings City Ban
TELEPHONE 2103

♦

♦

♦

HASTINGS - MICH

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, APRIL M, ISM

Scene of Air Tragedy and Heroine
THE LVHCH BOXES
Poo4 Service Itpm (Mvei
Helpful SogfeBtioas
to Mothers

and an ordinary colorless lunch.
Thia is the opinion of Ethel O.
Trtunp, manager of food service of
thc union Building. Michigan State
College, East Lansing
”A few raisins, dates, prunes or
dried apricots that have been
washed and steamed a few minutes
add seat to the lunch,” she says.
-Simple cake is easily carried if
baked in little individual pans or
paper cups and the child feels that

on Isaac Amon of Caledonia. Sun- I isms «

i ' —re, ”7’

Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Pierce and
make lunch more interesting.
■The lunch meal Is of thc utmost daughter. Mary Joyce, spent Thurs­
Importance since it should supply day and Friday visiting Mr. and
one third of the day s food source Mrs Harold England and family in
Of protein, carbohydrates, and fat Lansing.
Rev. Kring, who has been quite
and more than one third of the
minerals and vitamins. Sandwiches ill. went to Blissfield to slay for n
______
_____________________
time with hls parents, at least until
should
be _the
backbone of the school
lunch.” Time can be saved by prepar-1 he fa able to take charge of his
ing the fillings lhe day before and I duties here.
storing them In a coo) place, she
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Replogic have
aays.
moved into the house Just recently
Some sandwich fillings especially vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Clifford.
nutritious, filling, and appetizing are ' Friends
- -•
of Winona °
Brooks will u
be
coitagc cheese with jelly or Jam; glad to know that she is improving
cheese softened with cream or sal­ after being quite 111 for a week.
Mr. and Mrs. Wygant and chil­
ad dressing; pimento cheese; peadren of Battle Creek were Sunday
honey, or fruit Juice; chopped hard guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens
cooked egg&gt; celery, pickle, and salad and family.
The Cloverdale L. A. S. will put
dressing; sliced egg. lettuce, and
salad dressing; salmon, celery, egg on a Mother-Daughter banquet Fri­
and lettuce with mayonnaise; cold day night. May 8. at the town hall.
Watch fqr further particulars as to
speaker, price, etc. But remember
your date—May 8.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Monica of
Cry with mayonnaise; ground pea­ Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
nuts with carrots and mayonnaise; Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kingsbury.
Mn. Wallace Nadell entertained
and chopped prunes, raisins and
the following Saturday night
in
nuts with mayonnaise or cream.
honor of Mr. Nadeli’s birthday: Mr.

X.M.C.A. ITEMS

p

1936

and Hastings will be entertained for
assembly programs May 18-19 by
George W. Campbell and Bill Ro­
bel, singer and pianist of renown,
furnished us by the State Y. M..C.
-Coming events cast their sha­
dows’’ The National Hl-Y Congfeas
at Berea. Kentucky. June 20 to the
24. is being discussed in every Hl-Y
Club in U. 8. A- and plans for send­
ing a delegate are being made.
Lakeview, Battle Creek, and Has­
tings already have voted to be rep-

killing

The Hi-Y movement is maoe up
of 150.000 H- 8. boys from over 5.0Q0
clubs organized to create, maintain
and extend throughout the school
and community high standards of

despite her own injuries, stum­
bled through a muddy forest*
Ip telephone for hnlp.

week with her son George and fam­
ily in Hustings. Sunday evening are sponsored by local Y. M. C. A.
callers nt Mrs. Slocum&gt; were: Mr. and constitute a youth movement in
and Mrs. Archie Sinclair and fam­ the H. S. of the nation.
ily of Battle Creek.
/

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Christenfamilies in honor of their father,
who returned from northern Michi­
gan where he had spent the winter
with relatives. He will spend the

Sunday evening

Ingram of the Gregory district and
i Percy Dlmond and family
from
I Hastings.
! Remember the Ladles' Aid supper

at the schoolhouse May first. This
supper is to be a meatless supper
Van Vranken’s. Sunday callers al ;gnd will cost much less but they
the Van Vranken home were: Mr. promise you it will be good.
and Mrs. Basil Hayward with Mr.
and Mrs. Merl Rosenberg of Altn.
Prince William Sound
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie • Matteson
The channels and fiords ut Prince
spent Thursday nt the home of
ritllnm sound, Alaska, peQcIpte
Louis Ferris in the Bristol district.
also with her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Whitworth Everyone will be
glad to know that Mrs. Preston is
steadily gaining In health.
Mrs. Jennie Slocum spent last

from which they receive many gla
tiers. There are 11 living ones, of
which the most striking are the
Columbia, Harvard, Yale, Serpen
tine. Harriman and Surprise.

ringleader being called
Denn
Eugene
Davenport
of
Of nine British sailor*,
Adams, was left in 1800. Woodland waa then presented. From
his experiences living with students
him the present Inhabltat thc University of Illinois and
from discussing their troubles with
them, he was well qualified lo dis­
cuss thc subject. "Teaching lhe Bi­
ble to Young People.”

Dean Davenport said that n large
proportion of young people's prob­
lems are religious ones. We have to
approach them from their point ol
Red, Green Traffic Lights
As long ago ns 1908. Westmin­ view and make religion appeal to
ster. Eng, tried out a red and green their instincts instead of niaking
hell fire and fear lhe impelling force.
traffic slgnsl In the form of a gas
Education
changed in ac­
lamp and used only al night.
cord with other changes in the
world. Seventy-five years ago when
reading, writing and arithmetic
were the only subjects stressed, lhe
minister was considered the great
teacher and authority. Now wc are
living in an age of inductive logic,
and our ideas and beliefs are based
on human experience.
Dean Davenport advised leaching
children about the Supreme Deity by
beginning with the savage and hls
worship of thc forces beyond hls

The HOME
LUMBER CO.
Builds Homes'

THE WORLD S FINEST
VALUES IN QUALITY
GAS RANGES

y detail.

immunity and to
attain this

Call.

Small Down Payment—Long Easy Terms!

CONSUMERS
POWER COMPANY
FtoM 2305

Hitting,, Mich.

LOANS TO BARRY
COUNTY FARMERS.
The charlotte Production Credit
Association b playing a large part
in lhe spring'operations of farmers
In Barry county, says Glen A.
Speers, secretary-treasurer of the
association.
During March 142
farmers used their membership in
the association lo procure crop and
livestock loans, which Is about four
limes the number who obtained
loans in February, he says. Sources
of Income arc estimated for Barry

Gasie Long.Llvad
Geese are Bold to'be extnaordlnarliy long-lived, some of them liv­
ing more than 40 years. The do­
mestic goose la a descendant of
lhe gnty-leg wild goose. The com­
monest varieties of wild geese lo
America are the Canada, the brant
or brent, and the know goose. The
latter Is also called ’
‘
’’
goose, a name which
In no way to merit, 8now geese
are _
gray
. during
_ the first year of
their IIvn and thereafter, pure
whits al) year around.

golly, Bill? i hope we can
ALWAYS 8E AM-S------- EVEN

THOUGH MY FOLKS LIVE IN
MACE DAY GARDENS I
■v-THINH. YOU HAVE THE \

I

SWELLEST BACK
|
L YAED L-EYEftSAW/ )

LIKE THAT.

Specially built buildings

field. Our yard

‘165

1 wind. Some forces were good and
some bad; some could be appeased
by sacrifices and some couldn't. A
, notion ot duality grew and gradual| ly a religion of one God became ap­
I parent.
Thc idea of dur responsibility as
human beings to a higher power
, was developed by the Egyptians; tlie
| inscriptions on their stone tablets
are among the oldest written rec­
ords of humanity.
- The speaker suggested that the
Bible should be taken as a whole
in order to be understood, but wt
should distinguish between thc Old
and New Testaments The Old Tes­
tament is a history of Abraham and
hls family and is a mixture of reli­
gion. politics Slid history. In ths
New Testament. Christ taught a
real livable religion, a doctrine of
righteousness.
Dean Davenport recommended
for interesting reading a volume ot
the "Lost Books of thc Bible." books
which arc not included in the edi­
tions we use; also My Neighbor Je­
sus" by Oeorge M. Lanlsa and "The

The Women’s Club enjoyed Dean
Davenport thoroughly and felt hls
Ulk one of lhe most worthwhile
of the year.

c proud of the fact that wc have a

thing you may need for building, rcinodcl-

Priad‘595-

Women's Club

Pitcglrn bland Is a solitary Is­
land In lhe Pacific oevnn, between
The last meeting of the Women’s
Australia and South America, In Club was hold Friday afternoon,
23 degrees 3 minutes south latitude April 24. with the literature depart­
And 130 degrees 8 minutes west ment tn charge.
longitude. It Is about 2 miles long
the word study and gave the correct
ered by Carteret In 1787. In 17D0 it pronunciation of proper names in
was taken possession of by nlneof the connection with lUly and Ethiopia,
and
also names of places and
mutineer!* of H. 51. 8- Boynty with
prominent persons in thc United

Someth
to Crow
About

JUST ARRIVED

Every feature of the now Detroit Jewel hat been planned,
perfected and included only because of ib vital supe­
riority and outstanding convenience. Truly,'you will
.never be satisfied until you own one!

FILM STAR SELECTS STUDEBAKER COUPE

Thc late Frank Hilbert of Wood­
land'has been a continuous contrib­
utor to Barry Co. Y. M. C. A. for
fifteen years. He gave not only of
his money but encouragement and
inspiration. We all shall miss him..

The Young People’s class will put
on a May Night co-operative sup­
per at the town .hall Friday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Townsend and
family. Mrs. George Townsend of
Plainwell and Mrs. Alice Casey and
children of Rutland spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johncock.
Little Earl Chilson won the gold
Johnny Sullivan of Clarksville erdale and Mr. and Mrs. Frank seal at Hastings in handicraft. All
spent Saturday night and Sunday Chilson of North Hope. Mr. and hls friends congratulate him.
with Dale Geiger. The latter began Mrs. George Whittemore of Delton.
working on the railroad. Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Lewis of KalaMr, and Mrs. Floyd Nceb and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Garrison
family spent Sunday with her parcalled at the home of Floyd Wood
near Nashville Sunday afternoon.
DeWitt Rowley and family of
Jackson spent the week end
at
Court Strowbr)dge’s.
Last Friday Will Johncock with

NEW

—"""lara-’yjw '*■

Kdlene Preston and Frances
Scott of Grand Rapids spent the
week end Mth their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Q. J. Preston and Mr. and
Mrs trim er Scott.
Mrs. Ida Livingston and Mrs.
Barbara
Brake
attended
the
Branch meeting of the W. M. A.
at Oalnes U. B. church Wednesday. I
MTa. Ver* Gdiger. Mrs. Elsie Hull!- '
berger and Mrs. Magdalena Kime
attended Wednesday and Thursday.,
There was a good delegation pres*
ent and the meeting was a very i
profitable one.
The people of Pleasant Valley■
sympathize with Mrs. Will Waite.।
in the Joss of her aged father. John ■

THE HOME LUMBER CO
Phone 2276

BUILDS HOMES

HASTINGS

Milk is one of the most important items
of^ihe family’s diet. Using it in prepar­
ing food and drinking by the glassful is
an everyday occurrence. Because iriilk
is so important, caution should bo exer­
cised when choosing the source, of sup*
ply ... lie sure that the milk your fam*
iiy drinks is pure.
HighlamU Dairy Grade A milk is pure
‘iy* produced in conformity with the
Grade A standard for milk, it is yuuii|
assurance of purity. The cows produc­
ing Highlands Grade A are constantly
watched and inspected, and fed only the
best of dairy foods.

afiSxarr’fi?] Phone
highlands
dairy
MSI ROB»T W. COOK, Nop. Hutiw

�xotirt to etkbftoki.

| LEGAE NOT1CE3
ootato at dhatiM

MORTOAOR RAUL
Default h«vlM bon umSo ii

. rh fanptcn aaltiaA jWM** *raa »». irn
ComtnlMlon was here on buslncis
SCHOOL NOTES FROM
last week.
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG Mr. Goodman, Supervisor ot the
Achievement Day.

'

Ka*u“ffl4*jss*,.fis

A very interesting assembly was
held last Monday in the form of
In Li bar 91 of dweaceS aro raqulnd U ptmmI Ihalr
a local 4-H Achievement Day. Mr.
■McTounM la*S* 7lt^,#f*Ha»ila«. la'Tald'* veslr.
Van Sickle, boys' 4-H leader, was
Idin*, a* wort- 1 on or &amp;*fora th* I Sih day of Aonal. A.
in charge of lhe program. Certifi­
cates were given to the following:
iMiiir th# 3Sih Harrison
Willson, Forest Sciiondelmayer, John Benslba, Ralph Palm­
er.
Howard
Ellsworth. Richard
Kopp, Edward Hobin, Clcll Free­
man, Harry Albright. Rollo Larva,
Paul Riemerama, Robert Gillette,
Jr. Purdly, Gilbert Vander Kolk.
Jack Chase. Grant Robinson and
tin** Bnlldlnr end Loan A«»oelatloa. a Richard MacNaughton.
corporation. ot Haailare. Mkhiran. Plain­
Mr. Hass, the district 4-H leader,
lilt. ra. Harrlri N»IL ftrfradant. upon
was then introduced, who gave a
torts arro.
very Interesting talk concerning the
many trips won by 4-H club mem­
bers. The 4-H Girls then gave a
style show of the dresses they made
•&amp;U°
during the year. Evelyn Geukcs
played the accompaniment for the
of Haitian. Mkhlraa. on tha
show. Next the Girls '4-H district
eo«ditlooi
of Jna», I. D. IMS. al 11:00
leader. Miss Bullis, gave a short
uaablo te
talk concerning summer 4-H pro­
ST-T,,'IIU'!U*T:,V8F:t"j; 5U: b*in&lt;
AultaVla p«r»oa.
jects for girls. Our 4-H clubs won
BiJK IP'WWS iSKffiW
»40.00 worth of prises at the Barry
county fair last year. Our club
May 7. 1910. In Liber 99 at Mortraxea.
leaders, Mr. Van Sickle and Miss
past OSO, In tha Barry Cauatr Rcxistrr
ot Deeds' office. th* unt barlnr b«»n
Thomas, deserve much credit for
this fine record.
The 4-H Boys' and Girls' Clubs,
accompanied by Miss Thomas and
which
Mr. Van Sickle, attended lhe Coun­
dor at April, A. D. IBM.
ty 4-H Achievement Day held at
Hastings last Thursday. In the
morning moving pictures were
shown of Greenfield Village. After
dinner the competing girls held a
style show. Placing of awards was
also on the afternoon program.
Home Economics.
The Freshman Home Ec. girls
have completed their child
unit and are now starting their
spring dresses. /
The advanced Home Ec. girls have
completed their dresses and held a
style show in the assembly Monday.
Athletics.
Baseball season has once more
opened and our national game Is
again under way. T. K. took on
two opponents 1st week and emerg­
ed with a 500 average. Wayland
look the boys Tuesday night by the
score of 4 to 0. This is the first

1.14
wwn oi in* t nr 01 naatinoa, narrr
Count r. Michigan. io HOME OthfERR'
LOAN CORPORATION, a Corporation ot

cannot be judged by this defeat. A
great many players were lost by
graduation so Coach Holtforth had
to experiment In hls line-up. B.
Cline, a southpaw, will be our hurl­
ey for the season If he lives up to
the promise he has made in the
games he has pitched in so far,
namely. Wayland and Woodland. In
the Wayland game, errors lost the

PARTITION IALB.
NOTICE IN HEREBY OIVEN (hat hr
rtu* of a T)*fr*p •nt«r*4 on th* 30th
&gt;y of March. A. D. 1930. by tho Hoaablt
II. M*P»*k. In th* Parti­
on Roll of Lillian' Lichtr »a. liairl H.

Thursday, however, the boys came
up to expectations and defeated
Woodland by the score of 6-5.
Cline again pitched an excellent
game, thc runs against him being
scored on errors. He struck out B
Woodland men. T. K. showed a
fine batting attack and should have
another fine team.

bidder at Public
10:00 o'elnrk In Ih* forenoon.
Tim*, on Ih* 33nd dar
K».•larnat filandard
&lt;.f Mar. A. B. 1938.

Ulate of Mlrhlran In .uch ra«a mad* and
prorld*d. NOTICE IB HEREBY OIVEN

Matthr

Bald property b*ln&gt; daierlbad a* f&lt;^-

The boys' track team Journeyed to
Hastings last Thursday for a meet
with Hastings and Lakeview. T. K.
did not fare so well when the final
score was tallied up but some new
material was discovered. T. K. has
new track outfits and we hope they

I other ror
'1th Intrrr

plonahip which they have held for
Sro (2) ot O. A. Phil- the past two yearn.
Girls’ track practice last week for
the B. E. A. A. meet at Hastings
to be held May 15. About 20 girls
answered Coach Lowman's call.
Many girls were lost by graduation
and some by Illness, but some place­
winners are back from last year.
The events are: 220 relay. 50-yd.
dash, and baseball throw. The meet
will be held May 15 al Hastings.
tea
R»nr&lt;

slaeas Address: National Bank Annex,
Ionia. Mtytlran.
Out 7-14
TfotlUM OF MORTOAOB RAUL '

;«&gt;•rt4Fsh.W'..'X,

NOTICE..Or MEBTINg 0JT DRAINAGE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCRRM:

Mlrhlran. ta HOME OWNERS' LOAN
CORPORATION, a Carporatian orraalsed

Barry.
petition was sorrei
County Drain Com

of Dead* tor Barry Coaaty. Mich I ran.
L’-fcj’lfc
I Bed ropy at aald rare* harlur eleetad under tho t»rnn
of
said Boatraco io doetero tho aatlro
n» Fiord A. Orals.
Ilrtlr
Coaaty
the County ot

&gt; Drainer* I
held al I&gt;*&lt;1

hated at Haatlara. Mlchlsan. thia 37th

prodded. NOTICE IB HEREBY
that un Friday. July 24th. IBIS
o'clock forenoon.
Raatera
t

Ou I 4 SO

KLINGENSMITH.
A surprise party was given Satur­
day evening at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Orville Pickard In honor
of Mrs. Edward Bowerman's birth­
day. Pot luck supper was served and
a good time reported by those pres­
ent.
Mr. and Mrs. James Blorkan left
Friday far Cleveland where they
win visit their son and famUy for a

Mr. and Mra. Francis Haight and
children ot Grand Rapids were

foraaaca. at said probata offlee. be and la
hereby appointed lor header Mid MU-

. S2T
Dated: April 92nd. ISM
HOME OWNEBB* LOAN COR­
PORATION. MorteMoo.

£3,-7^. Raeiate* of Probata.

erman Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford converse of
near Hastings spent Bunday with
the former’s parents, Mr. and MH.
George Convene. In the afternoon
they called on Mr. and Mrs. Bur­
dette Willson and little son.
Mr. and MH. Perry Van Tuyl of
Nashville spent Saturday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Johnson.
Mr. and Mn. Chas. Mayo and two
sons of Battle Creek spent Bunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Green.

dent of Rutland, attended servtew and Mra. Archie
here Bunday.
from Kalamasoo
Mra. Esther Grohe of Hastings day afternoon.
WPA recreational project, visited visited her aunt, Mra. Anna RllzSylvester Osers;
man. who is quite ill. last week.
Mr. and Mra. Gaylord Gould of
near Battle Creek visited the HoffCollege Day.
Dr. Emil Leffler of Battle Creek han home Saturday.
Mr and Mra. Glenn Kellogg and
college addressed the junior and
senior classes on Tuesday forenoon.
Western civilization has to
April 21, on the topic "After High tham visited Sunday the latter's
son Martin, who Is at Kellogg day U the economic organts
School, What Then?"
society on a scale that wtt
Thc aenlora of Tlwmappie-Kel- health camp. Pine lake.
Mr. and Mra. Frank Bloom spent Ute spiritual and material ■oplralogg high were Interviewed by rep­
tlons of lhe Individual cltlsen—with­
resentatives
of various colleges Sunday with their brother in Hal­
out permitting undue encroachment
throughout the state as to lhe type lie Creek.
Miss Prances Hoffman and Velma upon liberty by the states—thereby
of career he on she wishes to choose
safeguarding individuals and na­
and gave lhe students Information Kellogg were sent to Grand Rap­
tions from further inroads by Com­
ids
as
delegates
to
the
Sunday
concerning tills choice. Representa­
munism, which through the subtle
tives of the following colleges were school convention last Friday and
and perfect technique It has devel­
here: Alba School of Beauty Cul­ Saturday. Both girls report a won­
oped.
is undermining the social
ture. Grand Rapids. Michigan; Ar- derful time.
Mr. and Mra. Fred Latham have
gubright Business College, Battle
Creek; Government civil Service. purchased a home In Morgan.
Grand Rapids; Aviation Airport.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Grand Rapids; Davis Vocational
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Seaae are the
and Technical High School. Grand
Rapids; Battle Creek College. Bat­ proud parents of a baby girl who
Mother and
tle Creek; Michigan Slate College. 'arrived Saturday.
East Lansing. Michigan. The repre­ daughter are doing fine.
sentative from Blodgett hospital ;i Mra. Frank Nash of West WoodI land spent Friday with Miss Mary
failed to appear.
u.'.u
i. in
lee home.
Mr. and Mra. Russell Kantner of
What happens when two boy wall­
Hastings
and
Mra. Carl Wespinter.
ers are quarantined In a girls Sor­
ority house for two weeks? What Jr., of Detroit were supper guests
happens when the plainest, most of Mr. and Mra. Levi Kantner
unromantic girl In the house sends Thursday evening.
Mrs. Roscoe Cassell of Coats
a beautiful girl's picture to a foot­
ball hero of a rival campus? What Grove. Mra. Guy Kantner and Mra.
happens when a couple plans to Bert Smith accompanied Rev. and
elope and the quarantine spoils Mrs. Don Carrick to the Gaines
their plans? What happens when church near Caledonia Wednesday,
one of the waiters Is In love with where they attended the United
the most popular girls on the cfcn- Brethren W. M. A. Branch meeting.
Kand hasn't any money? what Mrs. Bert Smith remained to attend
ipens when the other waiter Is In all lhe meetings, returning home
love with the house mother's niece Friday.
Mr. and Mra. L N. Williams and
and she objects to the young man?
You'll find the answers to these Doris of Dowling were dinner guests
questions when you see lhe play of Mrs. Chas. Farlee Saturday.
The roof of the farm home of
• Campus Quarantine" May 12th and
13th In the T. K. auditorium pre­ Mr. and Mra. Walter Hershberger
sented by the Junior Class of 1936. caught fire Saturday. The fire was
There Is a double cast of girls with discovered before much damage
a single cast of boys.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville VanWie of
Eaton Rapids were Sunday guests
T. K. Entertains.
Lost Friday night the Rhythm of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd VanWie.
Band under the direction of Mr.
HOLMES CHURCH.
Matthews, comet trio, jack Frost.
Mrs. Glen Perkins spent Friday
Mr. Bell. Qaylon Bell and Mrs. Seeand Saturday with Mr. and Mra.
kel gave a program for the benefit
Carl Perkins. Mr. and Mrs. George
of the Lake Al-Gon-Quin Parent
Miller from Hastings were Sunday
Teochera’ Association meeting.
guests there.
Faculty Member Honored.
Rev. Hoos from Hastings called
Dr. Elliott. Superintendent
Of on Mr. and Mra. McLeod last Wed­
Public Instruction has asked
nesday. and Mr. and Mra. Francis
Bell to act on a committee of ......
Coleman from south of Hastings
currlculum for High schools of spent Sunday with them. .
Michigan. The committee will meet
Mr .and Mrs. Aaron Brovont from
from time to time and will publish Clarksville spent Sunday at the
bulletins helpful to schools In mak­ home of Henry Brovont.
ing the course of study apply to
Mr. and Mra. Harry Woodman of
present day social and economic Grand Rapids spent Sunday at the
conditions. Most of the work of the Hubert Barnum home.
committee members will be done
Mra. Elwood Barnum and eon
during lhe summer.
Roger spent Saturday and Sunday
with Elwood at the Veterans* hos­
Seniors Honored.
pital in Dayton, Ohio.
Robert Rugg has been chosen
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Boulter and
Dealers in Wool, Grain,
valedictorian of thc senior class of family spent Sunday with her sis­
1936. Bob Is president of hls class, ter In Orangeville.
Cement
president of student council; has
Mr. and Mra. Bert Long and fam­
taken an active part in school ac­ ily from Nashville spent Sunday at
tivities and athletics and Is a mem­ the home of Roy Wickham. Mr.
ber of the school orchestra and
band. He was also in the senior play.
Bob has completed hls entire school
career from the first grade through
the twelfth In Middleville and he
richly deserves the honor that has
been bestowed upon him.
Hazel Campbell has been chosen
salutatorlan as she has the next
highest average. Hazel came to the
T. K. school In the fall of 1935 from
Hastings and has been with us for
the past school term. Her fine workon the school newspaper has shown
us a portion of her past record. She
also deserves this honor.
The following students are the
upper third of the class: Arthur Aubil. John Riemerama. Stanley Lyons,
ward Freeman. Betty Potts. Walter
Griffeth, Neola Nell, and Donald
White.

NOTICE, FAI
FEED YOUR HOGS CULL Bl

Seed Time is here
Soo U. For

Cloven

MEDIUM NATIVE CROWN

MAMMOTH NATIVE CROWN

ALSIKE CLOVER

WHITE BLOSSOM

YELLOW BLOSSOM

Alfalfas

IDAHO GRIMM

IDAHO CROWN

Timothy

RED TOP
Kentucky Blue, unhulled and fancy

We corry a complete line of Mods

Smith Bros.,Velte &amp;
Hasting* Telephone 2257
feed, flour, Bali,
and Coal

CHEVROLE

J Biology Girls Go On Trip.
The Freshman Biology girls ac­
companied by Miss lutzl and Mr.
Carmichael went on a trip to Kala­
mazoo last Saturday. They first vis­
ited Western State Teachers' Col­
lege While there they were shown a
movie. "Wild Wings." by Mr. Frank
Hinds, teacher at Western. The
movie dealt with different birds and
tholr habits. Thay next visited the
different departments of the col­
lege. In the afternoon, they visited
the museum down lown.and.tije
drastic than those used by thc par­ guide there explained the ways and
ents. Much interest was shown In customs of differenel races of peothe author's viewpoint and the
Western State seemed to have an
teachers are anxious to employ the
best methods of mental hygiene in attraction tor T. K. teachers Satur­
dealing with pupils.
day. While there they met Mr.
Smythe. Miss Lowman. Mlu Brog
and Mr. Prentice.
Mr. Bell will attend the Superin­
The girls reported a fine time and
tendents' and Principals' meeting wish to thank Miss lulzl for making
the trip possible.
Kellogg Foundation office at BatQUIMBY.
Charles Oberly of Lowell visited
Mrs. Wolverton attended a meet­ hls sister, Mra. Jasper Reed, several
ing based on Professional,Problems days last week.
The Ladles' Aid baked sale at the
at the Pantilnd hotel on Saturday
morning.
Food Center netted them 11336.
Mr. Holtforth went to a meeting Thanks to all for the help.
for Vocational and Industrial prob­
The Missionary program at lhe
lems In Jackson on Friday and Sat­ church Bunday night was much en­
urday.
joyed.
Mr. Osborn of the County Poor
Mra. Jennie Loehr, a former resl-

Grade Faculty.
The Grade Faculty met last Wed­
nesday to discuss anger In children.
The discussion was based upon a
book written by Mr. Goodenough
and published by the Wisconsin
University Press. The book was
based upon a study of 475 children
over a juried of 385 dtys. The school
la In close touch with the parents
and arc studying which one of the
twelve methods used by parents are
most successful. The method used

DRIVE IT!
and drive home to yourself this truths
It's FIRST in its field because it's

s believing and
is knowing that
driving u
1956 Chevrolet
u lhe only complete low-priced car!
Its New Perfected HydranBe
Brake* and' Solid Steel Tunrt Top
Body make it the aafeat car bu3t

~!ta Improved Gliding Knea-Aetfam
Ride*, Genuine Fiaber No~jDraft

MAKE YOUR
HOUSE LIKE BRICK WITH

Ventilation and Shockproof Steer-

ASBESTOS SHINGLES

at

LOW COST/

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Plusi 2515

Frank tare

HatUof•

• IHIBAI.

MOTORS

R. K. HURD
HASTINGS, MICH.

PHONE 166o

THE!

�1

came
out from
to spend childrm
Mr. and
Mra. relative
Wm. Sabaakal
aod
SX/lt
Wm Huttats
Springer*.
visited
at Owoste
mother. Charlotte spent several

Springer’s

Ed. Look spent tha week end with McCann’s. Mr. and Mrx. Claude
Bush at BatUe Creek spent a couple
Felder and wma wits NalUe Capdays there recently.
Kot Cnnernlk ind Ur. and
Mason Minor and daughlero of
Mrs. Lake from Vermontville to
NOT ONLY UcDutton to attend the funeral of
family van at Batt
Mra Edith Rooker, a relative.
day attending Um
MADE US WHAT WE ARE
Jamas K Smith Of
NOBTHKAST STOKER.
TODAY — were dstunnUed

thc

days

WIN
for family of four

FOR 70 YEARS
YOUR CHANCE OF A
LIFETIME TO WIN 1

1

FREE FOOD FQR10 YEARS1

i

I

LEE SALE-Ucsvm EVERY

14^
JUBILEE .1
•..SALE. J

HOT DATED JEWEL

SOAP CHIPS

EASY TASK

COFFEE

E

LB. BAG
(3&gt;lb. bag 45c)

ib.
box

Thuf»d»y. Friday. S.turJ.y Duly

Hot Dated

FRENCH COFFEE

25c

BROOMS

21c

'Prices Effective April 30th Through May 9th Unleu Otherwise Specified"

EMBASSY

Fels Naptha

Peanut Butter 2\!!h45c

2

SIX DELICIOUS
FLAVORS

KAFFEE HAG

P A C Ciant Soap 10

35c

Flour

98c

11c

AMERICAN FAMILY FLAKES or OXYDOL Urge aha I9« .

EMBASSY

o^lLUBURY
LILY WHITE FLOUR Stft lb. «och 89c (Thora,Frl,5aL Only)

25c

Salad Dressing

Beechnut

48c

10

MICHIGAN
BEET

27c

coffee

BEECHNUT READY TO SERVE SPAGHETTI. 3

39c

Birthday Cake

33.

cm

25c

Campbell's soups 3
(Chicken. 3 c.m 38c)

■

HELNZ SOUPS, Mod Virlelk.. 3 eaw 53*

tL

CRISCO

PICKLB

MILK

3 £ 55c

CAUMET BAKING POWDER lb. ua 19c

DEL MONTE

WALDORF TISSUE

25c

coffee

pct

19c

5

3 ,r“ 20c

“S™
on CAiLTArton milk

MATCHES

a i.ii

....

10c

3

avalon

AVALON AMMONIA Qwarl bold* 15c

CHASE A SANBORN ib. ba.

MAXWELL HOUSE

27c

NORTHERN TISSUE 4

OH HILLS BROS. COFFEE

23c

MUSHROOMS sun*

SALAD DRESSING, qurl 37r

OVALTINE

57c

BEANS

THE ST|!-5 FOOD DHIAK

rarcoosro

MARGARINE - Dated fc

HENKEL'S VELVET

10c

2 A«-

37c

2

GOOD LUCK

19c

Idnenlccd (or •o(lne«

MIRACLE WHIP

5

27c

CAKE FLOUR
EMBASSY
HR \ND

MUSTARD

17c

"Jr* 10c

WESCO BRAND

SODA CRACKERS

2

17c

SUNBRITE

ib.

FRESH BREAD

2 — 9c

BAKING DAI TED COOKIES pkg. 15c

imi

5c

DEVIL'S FOOD DOUGHNUTS dot 1S«

VALUES IN CANNED GOODS-BUY IN QUANTITIES [
12 can
price

GOOD QLAUTY - PEAS - CORN OR

Tomatoes

3 ’U 25c

12 can
price

COUNTRY CUB - MIQIIGAN PACK

89c

COUNTRY CUI! - U5CI0LS HALVES

Peaches 2

Beans **** 3

95c

25c

CHOICE QUALITY CORN

33c ■ &gt;1.89

COUNTRY CUB - RICH. RED

Golden Bantam 3 «

29c - sl.1 O

AVONDALE - RED. SOUR PITTED

Tomato Juk. 3

29c - sl.1 0

COUNTRY CUB - Ite. S

Cherries

3 «

29c - &gt;1.1 0

COUNTRY CUB - FANCY QUALITY CORN

Fancy Peas 2 IL’ 27c-&gt;1.55

Golden s«nt«m 2 ’U 25c - &gt;1.45

And many other Canned Goods Values — Your Kroger Manager will assort cases for you
--------------------:----------------

SMOKED PICNICS

CALIFORNIA

*S ORANGES - 33c

SUCAI CUliD
SHOOT SHANK

TREE RIPENED - LARGE SIZE

@ SHORT RIBS

FLNE TO BAKE

1

Ib.

PICKLED PICS FEET bilk
»- 10c
DRIED REEF ARMOUR’S STAR %-lk pt* 10c

Leona Sausage

»

BILK
PEANUT BUTTER
» 10c
PORK HtAITS i*. 10c PORK LIVtRS ». 10&lt;

BEEF HEARTS &gt; 10c HECK BONES »■ 5c
PORK HOCKS
» 10c
NEW 193» CENTINE

New Peas mTi™-. 3
New
Potatoes
(wuritj u. s. No. i
Pineapples

ii».

FRESH
30 sire

25c
25c
27c

24 SIZE eseh 18c

Tomatoes »ed»ipe.t*st«
Asparagus fmsb
12%c
Strawberries

1 3%e

Chick Feed
^&gt;190- &gt;1.85
Oyster Shells
74c
69c

Dairy
. Food

Growing

ftartlm;b

Block Salt

Rk,

XtU 29c

&gt;2.10 - &gt;2.05

Rolled Oats QaiBlUim 10

m

29c

to

IBIS

the

aareage of all Carma waa daclia*

bear oat thia Impression.

Num-

croppar-opereted farma. Most ot

amount of nil payments.
For example, l,4li;S&lt;&gt; cot*

ing of a single crop, usually
rtey or eager.
Publication ot tho else ot
boneftt payments, particularly in

144.489. Only 41 of the pay*
moots eacesded 110.000. and

in to real la tbo proportion ol the
or sharecropper.
ere* Union has charged that the
R. C. Lee Wilson plantation to

11080 each.

l!S chocks rather closely
with census fliares, which

r

4,144.444

tan

en I Urate

cant of all Improved farm laud.
The average American farm
remains a fasnily-elxed unit—

from a sharecropping system to

Ired the:
Thio pr

anta and croppers are reported

There te a trend, howover. to*
ward greater concentration ot
farm holdings.
Figures a* to
extent are limited. A survey of

uuaer tue now eon program,
owners are supposed to pay
sharecroppers eboui J5 per cect
of lhe federal payments. No
one In Washington la prepared

reaching

orations may bo expected.

north of Powers schoolhouse. Every
one welcome.
Mra. Carrie Couch/of Middleville
has come to make an extended visit
with her daughter, Mn. Alta Kid-

SOUTH SHULTZ.
Rena Whipple of Augusta (.jwnl
Sunday with her parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Peake
Frank Hallock of near Milo called
on his brother. Will Hallock, and hls
Earl Engle called on
Orville sister. Rose Hallock, Tuesday.
Bruce Sunday and found him much
Kenneth and Bernard Gates vis­
Improved In health.
ited their mother. Mrs. Gertrude
Mr. and Mn. Engle visited their Smith of Cloverdale from Friday
daughter and husband. Mr. and Mn. until Sunday night.
Bob Scobey of Leach lake Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. William Sonncville
The children and grandchildren and Suzanne and Bllllc and Mrs.
of Sidney Flfleld came Sunday to Edith Bonneville of Battle Creek
help him celebrate hls aeventy- spent Sunday with Lester Bonne­
aeeond birthday. They had a lovely ville and family.
pot luck dinner and a very happy
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Misener of
lime.
Kalamazoo called on their parents.
Wood School Notes.
Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Kenyon Thurs­
We are glad to be back at school day night; Mr. and Mrs. L. 8. Maragain after our three day vacation | Un. Mary Caryl and John of Kallast week.
. amaaoo visited them Sunday afterWe are proud of our champion I noon; Mr. and Mrs. Jew Kenyon of
speller, Robert Kidder, who won the Hickory Corners and Mary Freer of
i certificate of honor for
— Irving
.. ....r Hastings spent Sunday evening
I township
last
Monday.
■
I
H “
• ..
’with them.
Martin Taggart visited us Fri­
Mrs. Sarah Kenyon, who has been
day.
.
visiting with her children for sev­
Pupils neither absent nor tardy eral weeks spent the week end at
thia week are; Dora Flfleld. Albert her home here. Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Kidder. Buady Brown. Irene Kidder, Warner of Kalamazoo and Mr. and
Raymond. Marguerite and Robert Mrs. L- Bishop of Battle Creek
Kidder. Dorothy Robinson and Earl spent Sunday with her. She Is
Engle. Jr.
spending this week wllh her daugh­
Miss Payne our nurse, called ter. Mrs. vesta Monica, of Hope
Wednesday for a few minutes.
Center.
The many friends of Will Hal­
lock will bo glad to know he U able
The watermelon li native to trop­ to be up ana around.
ical and southern Africa.
TAMARAC.
Mr. and Mrs. Walker Cotton and
Mr. and Mr*. Boston Cotton were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Fisher at Woodland.
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Cox were week
end visitors of her sister. Mrs. Mar­
tha Neuman.
Mrs. Bernice Senslba and little
daughter of Kalamazoo, Mr and
Mrs. Bernard Smith of Wamerrille
visited their parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Bertie Smith Sunday. The visitors
celebrated two birthdays.
Several from this vicinity attend­
ed the Branch meeting of lhe U. B.
church at Gaines this week.
Mrs. Bernard Smith was called
home from Jackson by Lhe death of
her uncle. Jack Holton, who com­
mitted suicide at Sunfield Friday
evening at ib o'clock. The wife and
eleven children survive.
Mr. apd Mrs. Edward Peets of
Lansing visited their cousins. Mr.
and Mrs. Bertie Smith Saturday
evening. Misses Stella and Florence
Parrott of Woodland and Cecil
Jordan, of West Woodland were
callers there Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman McCUeliand went to Vermontville Wednes­
day to see his mother and brother,
who were 111 with the flu.

I

USED CARS
WITH A 2 DAY

MONEY-BA CK
GUARANTEE!!

Now Ford V-Ss. AU body typos. Many

bo •aHiffodl They'll go quick at our lew
prices. Como tn ot once. Your present

MS UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO.

MASH

’Your Kroger Manager will assort Feeds to enable you to take advantage of the 10 bag discount*

ipso

F ARQB-8UALE farms operated
V under corporate control by
wage wnrken are ae ret nla*
Urely inetgwllcaot in number ae

MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE. You must
10 bsg
price

Scratch Feed H? &gt;1.54 . &gt;1.49
Egg Math
.94 . &gt;1.89

^&gt;1.19-&gt;1.14

guest in thc Lyle Vanderbrook home
April 24th and attended the Mother
and Daughter banquet at Hickory
Comers church.
Forest Weaver has been very sick
(or two weeks with pneumonia and
complications. The last few days
his condition is decidedly ’better.
I This will be good news to the many
friends of the family.
Mrs. Ernestine Edger.' MUs Mar­
ion Edger and Lynn Edger were Bat­
tle Creek visitors Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Be Ison and
son of Climax visited the John and
Blmie Bclson home Sunday.
Guests in the John Benedict home
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Howard
j Booth and little daughters. Martha
Jane and Josephine of Lansing,
| Mr and Mrs. Jim Mead, also Mr.
I and Mrs. Henry Cook.
i At the last meeting of Rutland
; Cemetery Circle lhe president ap­
pointed a committee to arrange an
I entertainment to raise funds for
this organization. The committee
1 think they will be able to announce
j thc date and place next week, so look
j in Banner’s "Organlzitluns" col­
umn for particulars.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wlthey. I
Mr. and Mrs. Blmie Wlthey and I
Frank Wlthey of Edmore were over
night guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed.
Whitright Wednesday.
While John Whitrighl was trim­
ming fruit trees a branch of lhe
tree hit him in thc face making a
small scratch from which blood
poison has developed.
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
The suggestion of orchids for our
Next Sunday Rev. Burkey will
neighbor correspondent
on the bring a short missionary message
north tempts us lo use a type wrlt- between Sunday school and church
service. Be sure lo come.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Skinner and
Prayer meeting Wednesday, May
Edwin visited the Ray FilUngham 6. will be held at lhe home of Mr.
family at Wayland Sunday.
land Mrs. John Nagle a mile north

from

taro soon might compare with
-blgnear la industry.

like new. Every car carrioc our.3-DAY

FEEDS - EXTRA SAVINGS ON QUANTITIES}

rr.to i,,.^ u. (LM _ „

ai

Mr. and Mrs. George Harrington
have moved onto the Jay Wilkins
farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Zara Boulter and
Perry Laubaugh of Hastings, Mr.
and Mrs. Bliss Boulter of Doster
and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Thomp­
son of Shults were Sunday guests
of Mr. and Mrs. James Boulter.
Mr. and Mrs. Danford Higgins of
Kalamazoo visited her mother, Mrs.
Ethel Slebben Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James HcrmlncU
and children of Orangeville were
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Abe Herminett Thursday.
Thc community expresses sincere
sympathy lo Mrs. Homer Flower
and family In the loss of their hus­
band and father.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Shelp and
family spent over the week end with
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Flnkbelner and
family of Grand Rapids.
Tip Ketchum of Martin called on
Mrs. Norris and Lucy Friday and
Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ketch­
um of Kalamazoo were also there,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baker and
Patricia of Kalamazoo spent Sun­
day with Mr. and Mrs. Grande De­
Priester and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Brigham
and son of Decatur called on Mr.
and Mrs. F. J. Hughes Saturday, al­
so Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hughes
and son of Logansport. Ind. Mrs.
Hughes remains about the same.
Miss Marian Armour of Gull take
spent lhe week end with Miss Leta
Billings.
The Mother and Daughter ban­
quet waa a success in every way, 118
tickets being sold.
Mrs. Merritt Wood entertained al
a birthday dinner Sunday honoring
Mrs. George Woods. The other
guests were George Woods, Miss
Elizabeth Woods and George. Jr.,
and John Woods

Md« tanatB*
‘
News tbit a Florida sugar
company received more lb an
11,480,094 |« AAA BeaaBlo, tbat
a Puerto Rican sugar producer
got 1141.099. and a alugte cot­
ton plantar 1181.100 la 1114
and 1481. wop Id eaem to ladi-

Big dock of popular make* takon In on

pint box

Single bag
.price

oai»

NORTHWEST RVTLAND.
Mrs. Peter Vanderbrook was

Reynolds end daughter of Quimby
called on thc Wood's family Thurs­
day.
Mrs. Jennie Warner of Vermont­
ville was a guest of Mrs. Charles

that

par COWL while tboee operated
hy tenants increased 14 per

TENDER - GREEN SPEARS

AU Produce and Meat Prices Effective Thursday, Friday and Saturday Only

:•»

[
|

day with Mr. and Mrs. David Deal.
They found Mr. Deal oerloualy ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Neuman Deal of
Grand Rapids also called. Mr. Deal
la reported aa slightly improved thia
(Monday) morning. Mrs. Palmer la
staying a few days to care for him.
Mr. and Mra. James Boulter and
their guests. Mr. and Mra. Bliss
Boulter of Doster, also Mr. and
Mra Milo Lehman and Will Anders
attended a card party at Mr. and
Mn. Gordon Thompson’* of Shults
Saturday night•&lt;
Mr. and Mra. John DePriester of
Dowling visited Mr. and Mrs. Jake
Johnson and Dora Sunday.
Elizabeth. George M. Jr., and
John Woods received their letters
from Kellogg Agricultural schoql,
Gull lake Tuesday.

AV «r* 141 VUIIIIOiTMHMl

wtKzrsLrJsrs:

by AAA Ro » few big farm ova-

lb.

FRESH - LUSCIOUS - RED RIPE

Fillet of Haddock °&gt; 13’/2c

1 WESCO

Bunday guests of Mrs. Roush were
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lewis and
two daughters of Portland; Mr. and
Mrs. Ed. Keyes and daughter Agnes
of Assyria; Miss Mildred Roush.
Mrs. Mabe! Aber and two sons at
BatUe Creek;. Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Roush and daughter of Freeport
and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush of
Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Reynolds
spent Sunday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Strickland of Bcdford.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cramer. Jr..
entertained the following gueste
Sunday in honor ot the formers
birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Cram­
er local. Mr. and Mrs. Merle Call­
han and sons of Lansing and Mer­
lin Pierce of Hastings.
Mr find Mrs. Wm. Cramer. Jr.,
visited Mrs. John Kollar, of Mid­
dleville. Wednesday, who is again
confined to her bed. They also visit­
ed at the home of thc lattcr’8 par1 ents. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Poland.
| Little DoroViy Poland was quite se। verely burned Monday night.

SOAP - Tbu/.d.y, Friday and 8*tn;day Only

COUNTRY CUB APPLE BUTTER. Glcnl Jar |S«

Jell-o

George Roush Is not any better at
this writing.
'
George Jewell and twin sons and
Mrs. James Jewell of Midland were
week end guests of Mrs. George
Roush and Mrs. George Jewell who

LEE SALE
THAT'S OUR PROMISE!

Large AAA Payments Reveal
New Angies of Farm Problem

£ [i
HASTINGS
PHONE 1121
F M A U TH 011ZID F 0 R DTTEltfi

s

School
The township schools sending
contestants not Included In Hsu published In the last two issues were
Delton—1st—Marjorie Mott. (Sth);
2nd—Barbara Leonard. (Sth); Iva
Case. (Blh) and Forrest Kahler.
(7th» were tied for first place in tho
second group
Freeport—1st — Kay
Braendle.
(5th); and—Dorothy Bunn; 1st—
Helena Braendle, (8th&gt;; 2nd—Fred
Boughner. (7th).
\
Woodland—Gene Risington. (Sth) j
and Mary Lake. &lt;th), tied for first
place; 2nd—Ruby Ulrey. (7th), Iris
Guy. (Mi).
MlddWvillo-lst-Eteanor
Johnson. (5th);
2nd—Laurel
Foster, j
dth); lit-Betty Moore, (gth); tod !
-Laurel McIver, (Sth).
.
,

1
I
3
.

J
*1
|
jfl
|
I
1
|
|&lt;
.
.

�THB HA8TTN0* BAMMWB, THVBSDAY. AFKIL M, ItM
I Mr. and Mn. Willard Demand
। visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Demand
' at Kalamo last Sunday.
Mn. Verne Allerding wa* hurt in
j nn auto accident in Hasting* re—h.. s—r, cently. Margaret Allerding was in­
n
)Urtd !aSt w*ek by Ullln« and CUl*
11,18 her mouth on a sharp stick so
iu WB3 nece«“«y to see a doctor.
E£irdhforf thS
ctolerf
Thc Blrthday meeting was held
A-wlnrJr
An£ll’ Wltl’ M” D“*l&lt;! WOOdmSh last
liA^
Wednesday. A pot luck dinner was
n.J^rUr. ARn?h
M^th •erved *fTS clement jordan and lhe
On^h' JJSm hostess iisd charge of the program.
McLaughlin, Robert Roush. Agnes .
perry set was presented the
Royer. Tom Stephens, and Virginia
y
presentea me

School News

। Mr. iuid Mrs. Pahl Thompson and
* • •
I family pt Battle Creek were at E. 8.
The outstanding news of .the week Thompson's last Sunday. In lhe af t­
at lhe High schools and all other tcmoon they went to Kalamazoo to
schools was the Centennial cele- visit Mrs. Martha Wilcox and fambratlon. And everyone. ^»usy as fly.
bees trying to get things arranged
Veme Allerding has been paperfor the opening evening. Well, they mg at the Claude Loomis home.
did a good jpb and It wafe certainly
Mr. and Mrs. Warnie Kelsey visit­
worth thc lime and effort they put‘cd Bt jcsse Chase's on Bunday.
on H' Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Richardson
• • •
entertained
relatives from Ovid
The tennis team lost their meet recently. Mrs. Richardson is gaining
with Kalamazoo last Saturday with in strength from her recent operaa score of I to 4 In favor of their, tion.
opponents, Crothers and Angell won----------------- ------------------------the No. 1 doubles, bul lhe No. al
IXNT CORNERS.
doubles were lost by Leonard and I Mr and Mrs. Karl Kric*. and son
Schwartz. Crothers. Angell and of Prairieville spent Sunday eveO ladstone
lost
their
singles i ning with Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall,
matches. Next Saturday the team ' Mr. and Mra. Lyle Allen of Plain­
plays Lansing Eastern.
* well spent Sunday with Mr. and
.
‘ * *
"Mrs. Fred Otto.
Next Friday the final district
Miss Jean Hammond spent the
speech contest will be held In the week end In Albion.
Central
auditorium.
Committees I Mr. and Mra. Glen Kellogg and
have been chosen for the event ns Mr. and Mrs. Latham of Quimby
follows: Publicity; Donald Doxey.' called on Mr. and Mrs Marc Ham­
chairman. Russell Engle. Dora Day. • roOnd Bunday. Mr. and Mrs. George
Ruth Hathaway; tickets, ushering: *o. Comfort. Jr., and Mr/and Mrs.
Marian Hallwood, chairman. Lu-|caln and two sons of Kalamazoo
। cllle Foote, Dale Crawley. Dorothy also spent Bunday afternoon there.
Bhellington; program: Horace AnMr. and Mrs. Fred Oltp called on
gell. chairman. Clinton Scobey. Enid | Mrs. Clare Thomas at Borgess hos: Mohler; arrangements: Margaret pital Kalamazoo one day last week.
; Hummel, chairman. Thelma Shute., Mr. and Mrs. Frank Phillips are
Donald Weaver/! reception: Dorothy | (he proud parents of a son born
• Bhellington. chairman, Donald Dox- Thursday. April 23. He will answer
ey. Ruth McLaughlin;
refresh- ; t0 the name of William.
:mento:
Betty Sigler, chairman,; Mrs Minnie Hall and Mrs. Lura
। Ruth Winslow. Anna Mae Dunnl- Francisco called on Mrs. Eleanor
gan. Virginia Townsend; music, Lu- Hall Mason and baby girl of Rlchcllle MacLeod.
I land Saturday.
■ ihwham district
I Mlss Bcrnelcc Boerman is workDUNHAM DISTRICT,
ln for Mrs Ulwr,.llcc Hammond.
The pupil*, several parents and
MlT Mlnnl0 Hb1L m„
!Lre'™°° *‘e. Su
B,!cn Francisco and daughter attended
the TB lest at the achool Monday the Moth-r-Daughter banquet at
morning.
i Prairieville Friday evening.
«^XeryS?dJL
V5
4“
M1“ Winifred Otto attended lhe
White Elephant rale held by the 4_H meeting at Hastings Thursday.
L. A. 8. al the schoolhouse
Friday
school
children —
are
enjoying
C
,11--- U ! -nie
1’
JI UUIC-...
-V. —
-j—rf-.-o
evening. May 8. Supper “111 be ■ B —
•wk's ------------vacation.
served from 7:30 until all
" are
“ served,
‘ ij Mrs. Leland Hammond and son
Bring your own table service.
!J Basil spent Thursday with Mr. and
Theltna and Beatrice Bail and Mr*.
..ri( Clarence
....................................................
Hammond of HasThelma and Mildred Sponseller. ting*.
“ ""
’
with their leader. Mrs. Ethel Dono- , Mrs. Lcta Thomas
Thomas is
to gaining
gaining nlcenlce,Var\*jld.&gt;Mrs kuilla Sponseller at- jy after her serious operation al
lended Ite &lt; H Achlmmen, D»&gt;
hwpltol K.lmum
at Hastings Thursday. The girls
-•— -»
Mr and• -Mrs. -----------Warren —
Cairns
of
each exhibited work. \
Cressey spent Bunday with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs A.'E.-Hardlng. who
Mrs. Fred Otto.
spent thc winter In Florida, return­
ed home Monday. They also spent
EABT DELTON.
several days In Georgia and Ten-1
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Waters and
; neasee on thelr-way home and were
daughter and Gordie Durkee and
overnight guesto of Mr. and Mrs. j
Linus Harding In Ohio on Thurs- I son of Delton accompanied Ed. Wil­
lison to Stanton Sunday where they
day.
visited their grandmother, who is
Mrs. Alice Bailey and children
and Lawrence Finefrock of Wood­ very low. Mrs. Vina Durkee re­
.
land were Sunday guest* at W. H. turned with them after spending
from
Thursday until Sunday caring
Cheeseman**.
1 for her grandmother.
COATS 'GROVE.
1 Several ladies from this neighbor| Thc P. T. A was held last Friday hood attended thc Ladles' Aid at
the
and
evening with a pot luck supper in, “
“ 'home
--------- 'of Mr.—
1 Mrs. Kiblinger
the church basement followed by near Banfield, Wednesday.
play* and exhibition of work by thc.j Lyle Collison is learning how to
4-H clubs. Election of officers as fol­ 1 deliver mall as he will be substitute
lows: Pres., Lawrence Chase; vice-'I for Mark Garrison on Route 3 out
pres.. Arthur Richardson; secy, and of Delton.
--------- ---------------1 Visitors
the home
of Alvah
trees..
Mrs. Floyd
Kimble; atpianist.
'
Flossie AllcrtUhg; chorister, clement Pennock last week were Mr. and
jordan.--------------------------------------------------- Mrs. Harry Simpson of Hickory
Thc L- A- 5- will meet Thursday. Corners. Mr. and Mrs. Dlt Willison
May 7. with Mrs. E. 8. Thompson, of Delton and Mrs. Gillis of Hart­
Dinner served by Club No. 1 Short ford.
program and serving follows. Every I Several from this way enjoyed lhe
one invited to attend.
' dance at Prairieville Saturday night.
w,lm'

Here 1* a (triktng aerial view of macnlflcent Boulder Dam. aa govarnmeat cDgloeera turned the drat
water Into Its giant spillway* while testing various equipment Just Installed. Some Idea of the Immenslty of this project may be gained from the fact that the torrent from U&gt;e dam's spillways was
believed great enough to float a battleship.
MIDDLEVILLE.
Many truck loads of onions are
.being drawn from storage and
dumped on the land to be plowed
under; certainly looks tough when
so much labor and money has been
spent not to be able to get any re­
turns for same.
Henry B. Chase ha* returned from
Flint, where he spent the winter on
his farm southwest of town.
Our first Fathers and Daughter*
banquet was well attended and en­
joyed by about 120 people. Mrs. H.
H- Harris of Wayland gave a very
worthwhile talk. Mrs. Robert Burch
of Hastings sang two beautiful
tongs, accompanied on thc piano by
Mrs. w. M- Jones. The main address
by Kim Bigler was well worth lis­
tening to. as usual Kiiri had some­
thing to say that was of Interest- to
all his hearer* both young and Old.
The dinner furnished by lhe Metho­
dist t. A. B. was a- fine one. The
profits will go towards a much need­
ed stove.
Did you ever miss your dog and
after hunting and grieving for him
as a goner, find him accidently shut
in a small building a stone's throw
from home? If you want, further
particulars Ed. Lynd can tell you all
about it.
Borne of our boys greatly enjoyed
smelt fishing in the north a few
days last week and had a fine catch
of thc Utile beauties.
Mattle Lynd's house, which was
lo badly damaged in February Is
again looking like a home. The
main part has been shingled and
the wing has the rafters on and will
icon be shingled.
Arthur Geukes and W. H. Gray
have been taking in the live stock
rales around about of late. Last
week they were in Charlotte and
Ionia.
Thoma* and Mrs. Gillette attendtd lhe funeral of a cousin at Dut­
ton on Monday.

PINE LAKE.
A baby boy was born lo Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Phillipa on Thursday
morning, and has been named Wil­
liam Donald.
Ernest Morehouse has been hav­
ing the flu and is under the doctor's
care.
Mrs. Hattie Beattie of Comstock
has come to spend some time with
friends and relatives tn this com­
munity.
Miss Bemadlne Molt of Plainwell, Mias Veryl Myers of Kalama­
zoo. were week end guest* in the
Warner home, and on Bunday
Ermlnie and Elaine Bellingham of
Parchment were dinner guests.
The annual exhibit of the Plain­
well High school was held on Thurt-

day and Friday and a great many in
this community, attended. Tius
teachers also pupils, are to bo com­
mended on the high class of thc dis­
play, the manual arts exhibit being
especially good.
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Champion
and family were Bunday guests of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Squire
Bums of Paw paw.
Laura James is confined to her
home with a severe case of strep­
tococci sore throat.
Don't forget the Helping Hand
club meeting to be held with Hazel
Warner, Wednesday. May 6. Each
member to answer roll call with the
name of an early wild flower native
to Michigan.

Mrs. James Tyler of Woodland
siient Monday wllh her mother, Mrs.
Eva Trautweln.
«
Walking 50 miles In five days, a
cat returned to Ito old home In
Yorkshire. The animal is grateful
for the assistance of several terriers
who. at various points of the jour­
ney. did their best to make the dis­
tance seem shorter.

Spring Brings
Gay Plaids

FAIR LAKE.
: Pifty-l^o attended the Ladies'
Aid at Mr*. -Mary Kiblingrif*. The
May meeting and supper will be
held at the home of Mrs. Wlhnle
Nye the fourth Wednesday. Mrs.
Mamie Parmalee and Mrs. Bessie
Vaughn entertaining with her.
The Bunnell Ladles' Aid was
plenrantly entertained Thursday
for dinner by Mrs. Vemor Webster.
Marjorie Mott. Barbara Leonard.
Forest Kahler and Iva case repre­
sented Delton in thc spelling conical
at Hastings Saturday.

MARTIN CORNERS.
Mrs. Ruth Varney of Castleton
I Center spent Friday of last week
I with her grandmother. Mrs. H.
Cogswell.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hinkley, Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Orsbom and chil­
dren. Miw Alice Whetstone and
Mis* Alma Hilton were Sunday
afternoon callers at Mr. and Mrs.
WillariKHilton's.
James Tyler of Woodland is
building some chimneys for Shirley
Slocum.
Frank Cog«well and family of
Lakeview. Lloyd Cogswell of East
Lansing and Glenard Showalter of
Nashville were Sunday afternoon
callers at Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher*.
Our teacher. Miss Ruby Cogswell,
was pleasantly surprh-d on her
birthday last Friday when the moth­
er of one of her pupils brought ice
cream and cake for all in honor of
her birthday.
8. 8. next Bunday at 10:30 fol­
lowed by preaching service. You are
cordially invited. Also please keep
In mind the Mother's Day services
May 10. There will be a pot luck
dinner and appropriate service* and
a sermon in the afternoon. Remem­
ber the date and come.
The Marlin P. T. A- will meet this
Friday evening May I. There will be
a program. You are cordially invit­
ed to attend.

The gay plaids of this spring's
styles come as a pleasant teller
from ibe drabness of winter.
Gall Patrick. Aim player, wetws
an ensemble ot
light-weight
woolen, with green, beige, and
white coloring.
A hand-made
sweater of bright green gives
contrast to piald of cost and
skirt, and Is matched by the
tailored (elf KaL
’

and Guaranteed

AMERICAN FENCE

—mt UP WetuH.
dre**lng*.
n.
Mr. and Mr*. Ike Leinaar and Mr.
£?’
and Mrs. Floyd Morford and Let ha
I
were dinner guesto Sunday erf Mr.
and Mn. Leater Snyder and family;
t thl* one o( the moat
In Kalamazoo.
and instructive tmu
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hartman and
daughter Lois of South Hickory
Comer* spent Friday evening with
John and Ed. Williaon.
Mr. and Mrs..James Boulter and
son* wlh soon move onto their farm.1 Custer. Best wishes for a happy
Mr. and Mr*. Bliss Boulter will as­ life together from thia vicinity.
sist them with the onions this year.
Piank Granger has been drawing
lumber from hi* old camp here late­ put up a
WEST HOPE.
ly. It made u* think of depreaaton
Our teacher. Mrs. Lena Laubaugh.
thefverined
and son Russell, took our older tat to market.
scholars. Grace McKlbbin. Donn
-----------------The
Sunday-------------------------------------school elected officers ----------------Mr. and Mr _
and Francis Springer and Jimmie | for the following year. They ar*: the week md at
Springer of Delton High to see Ad-|SupL, Ira Osgood; a**t. «upl.. | near Vermaitvine.

REGULAR SAVING
I Fl SAVING REGULARLY
NOW ON THE FAMILY
FOOD BUYING

EVERY DAY IN
The YEAR PROVE

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TORY to FAMILY

FOOD BUYERS
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IHERSHEY'S
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COCOA

2

^cVn’s

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2

Packages

“-‘IO

APRICOTS
Standard Irand 4 *c
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I* I

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APPLE BUTTER
Pure and Tasty
38-Oa. Jar I w

4 £*c

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• FIRESTONE TIRES AND TUBES
• BATTENIES, WINDSHIELD WIPERS

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HMttagg, Mlchlfan

Telephone 2101

POPCORN
EXCELLKKT QUAUTY

SPLIT ot
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BEST YET
i*'/, lb. sack
SHOW QUEEN
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PILLSBURY'S M'/rtB.SACK

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American is mode of medium hard wire, tough and sturdy—
not soft and flabby. It is full gauge, with rust-resisting cop­
per-bearing steel. The smooth, evenly coated galvanizing
is proof against any sort of weather attack. Famous Ameri­
can weather curves take care of expansion and contraction.
Equally famous American Hinge Joint gives the flexibility
that's necessary to withstand heavy pressure of livestock.
Stoy wires are guaranteed to be 6 or 12 inches apart. Ever/
roll is full honest length, with specification card in each roll
that t&lt;lls exactly what you are getting
AMERICAN IS A REAL BARGAIN!
*

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If you wont to sovc money on fence, get the fence that hoi
every money-saving feature. That's genuine American!
It is made batter. It lasts longer. It costs for less in the long
run than fence made to sell aj a “price."

CARAAAFLS
CARAMELS

OfllntmA Dessert
Da«cap&gt;
Gelatine

EASILY DI01ITK)

NATIONAL BABY FOODS

VANILLA

CLAPP'S SISK:
25c
KARO SYRUP
11c
Pillsbury's Farino fu 10c
Cream of Wheats.,.
23c
Ralston CEREAL »&lt;« 23c
25c
Orange Juice
15c
Tomato Juice
PET MILK rJiS’ci. 22c
OVALTINE » u&gt;
33c
COCOMALT
23c
Thompson's Malted &gt; 42c

CORN STARCH amk&gt; 11* W
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FOST'S MAN FLAKES,
CFAFINUT FLAKESCU

Aft&lt;

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2*a*&lt;1

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11X1

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■ON AMI FOWDE* ..
WINDEX—LatHa, l*a
BORAX—20 Mala Taw
AMMONIA
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TKinr $0/

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THUE8DXY. APRIL 38, 1M&lt;

DELTON.
Mra. Stale Miller of Elmdale was end with her sisters. Jennie and
Mary Marie Henion is In Leila
a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and
COURTHOUSE NEWS hospital
al Battle Creek recovering
Mn- Omer Shaffer. In the after­ away were Mabel Watts of Chicago
from an operation for maatolds.
attended lhe 4-H noon they all visited lhe Paul and Mra. John Walts of Bowne
Katiffmaiu of Pleasant Valley.
Center.
Mrs. Eliza Barlecome Norwood
PROBATE COURT.
Mn. Will Mishler accompanied
Est Elizabeth Flnkbeiner. Petition was taken to the County Homa
HICKORY CORNERS.
Mlu Fem Wheeler of Freeport to
, for license to sell filed, order for Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Cantrell
Several
from here attended the
Grand Rapids Wednesday to visit
publication entered.
and little daughter of Detroit spent
Mother - Daughter
banquet
at
„,j»n Bunday.
Uic clark
Home.
i
Est. Ellen K. Stuart. Petition for
Prairieville Friday night and re­
Mr”and Mra Elmer Gillett of i Mr *nd Mra Tum Whitman have Saturday with their parents, Mr. and
Admr. filed, order for publication port a fine time.
Mra. B. Campbell.
B*rrr&gt;lUe wen Bunday callers at ;'n°v«1 I"1" “»
a.rdner ten- ' Clayton Haynes of Battle Creek; entered.
The Mother and Daughter ban­
Wm. oari.
lent
-ini houw.
nouse.
spe|U ga^^ay nlMht and Sunday
Est. John K. Stuart. Petition for quet at Delton which is always
r. m.
....
Mr »nd Mrs Norris Bertrnian and I Harold Yoder and family visited, wlth her parents. Mr. and Mra. O. Admr. filed, order for publication
------farafiy. Mra Lydta NcalofBattle from Saturday until Monday with Haynes.
entered.
.
-held on Wednesday night, May 20.
Clcuicuw of Prescott
Creek Mn/Nora Clemens of Bed- । Clayivn
Clayton Clemence
Mr. and Mrs. Pele Hoffman of
Est. Clark A- Barber. Discharge of ln the church basement.
Helen Euiil
Easii and Floyd Berkey at- Kalamo were Sunday visitors al Admr. issued, estate enrolled, f
ford and Mr and'Mra. Geo. Norris 1 Hden
I Members of lhe local extension
Snt^umlay^t Henry Bergman? I
“1?.»’edd‘n« of
tended the wedding of Lewis Over- ( the lionu. of ulejr daughter. Mr.
Eat. Aurilla 'chamberlain. Pinal
P^nnln« to attend the
Pern Moore and Vera Golden are hfJl
bolt and Mary Warner of Freeport
Freeport ttIld Mr# oienn Asplnall and family. account filed, waiver of notice filetf! ^nnx‘ Affifvement Day at Hasr%
.«•_ o_.
Mr and Mrj. 0haptn o{ Richland
thehwmrTnVmb. ra of the local 4-H . “I Coopersville
Saturday evenU.g
order assigning residue entered, disFriday May J-roun
Raymond Shaffer and friend ot spe(ll
, W1M
spent oullUtt
Sunday
with, their udaughter,
XH.
parents Sunday j Mr
Mr. Bnd
and Mrs
Mrs. B
B.. Campbel).
J. n. Houghtaling.
nUUgllMSUIlK. Mr.
(Ul. and
UIIU Mrs. Ad« , &lt;»lled on
■ rbon
vlanf, and
■l.rl two
fwn sons
....... of
— # Hastings; al, ­
I Mr. and Mra. O. Haynes and
Rem Houahtallng. Mr. and Mrs. evening,
Est. Eva S. Johnson. Order allow­ so Mrs Smith. Mra. Stanton, Mra.
HarrytolULMr.
*T°n
Robert accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Smith. Mr.’’and Mra. Edd
Grant and family of Battle Creek 5*1&gt;d on '?ennl5i and Gladys Pnr- Wallace Borden of Kalamazoo to ing claims entered.
Julia Doster. Mrs. Ella Rogers. Mra.
rpent Sunday with John Houghtal- d**
and Lake Odessa where they spent the
Est. Ann Jessup. Order confirming Irene Harrington, Mra. Margaret
tiZ and family
Mrs- WU1 Cos«Tiff of Lowell were j day with Mr. and Mrs. Wayne sale entered, final account filed.
' Pennock.
Mr. and
Mrs. John
*
i t rI her guests Sunday.
Shade.
Elida Shaw. Order allowing Adams. Mr and Mrs Peter AdrianSOUTH BOWNE.
| Mr. and Mrs. L. Andrews
and ! Many still cling *to the notion that
v . » w &lt;
» son and Harry and Mrs Leda HarWill Mishler and family visited Minnie Bouck entertained company j
the world owes them a living, plus .I .^21
°f ! rington and Mr. and Mra. Bates all
w.
A graphic story of ten days of buffering from hunger and exposure written plainly on their faces,
Mr. and Mrs. Kyle SUmbough of from Lansing Sunday.
notice filed, order appointing Admr. local were Sunday afternoon callers
Charles Alfred Scudding and Dr. D. E. Robertson are pictured as rescuers brought them to the sur­
Sunfield Friday.
। Mrs. Lydia Porritt spent the week || an automobile and gas.
' entered.
of Mr. and Mra. H. F. Wertman.
face after liberating them from entombment 141 feet down In an abandoned gold mine near Moose
i Est. Philip T. Colgrove. PeUtlon
On Friday evening. May 8. lhe
River, Nova Scotia. Tlie photo at the left shows Sraddlng being carried from the rescue shaft At
I for authority to exchange securities Delton community Club will put
right, lhe 82-year-old Robertson is pictured walking almost unaided into the open air. Robertson, a
I filed, order granting authority en- co a Calendar supper which will be
noted Toronto physician, and Herman Magill had purchased the. mine for rehabilitation and were on
, tered.
t
। carried out similar to lhe “Round
a lour of inspecUon with Scadding. their timekeeper, when a caye-in trapped them. Magill died
i Est. Adelbert D Olmstead. War- The World Supper" a year ago. Mra. |
before the rescuers'arrived. The diagram illustrates how the rock slide trapped lhe men.
| rant and Inventory filed.
Margaret Dannlels is chairman of
' Est. Ernest W. Rykert. Order al- i the supper committee and Mra. |
: lowing account entered, discharge of I Lois Flowers is chairman of the pro- mlttee who were meeting in Has- per guests of Mr. and Mra. William
MICHIGAN RANKS
Administratrix issued, estate en- &lt;r®m committee, a good program is Ungs were coming out for. dinner. | Hoffman. Sunday guests were Mra.
rolled.
। being prepared as well os a good | With a little extra effort forty-five Emma Hoffman and son and
HIGH FOR CROPS
Est. Alexander Cortrlght- Order supper. Bo come and get filled up on were entertained and the church 1 iriends of Augusta.
allowing claims entered.
| the good tilings in store for you. cleaned, loo. The ladies'enjoy these 1 Mrs. Chas. Hampiond and daughEst. Charles H. Northrup. Waiver The proceeds will go to the Com- surprises and wish to thank the ' tera and Mrs. Sam Couch spent First in Production of Alfal­
fa, Beans, Cherries and
of notice filed, order assigning resl- munity Hall fund.
men and invite them to come again.: Thursday in Battle Creek.
due entered.
I Mrs. H. T- Reynolds entertained, Louie Erway and family and Miss' Elmer Lusk returned from the
Cucumbers
Est. Adelaide C. Stocking. War- I her sister. Mrs. .Maggie Portlnga Ruth E. Erway of Kalamazoo, also West where he has been spending
If asked which crops raised in
rant and Inventory filed, petition for and two daughters from Three Oaks I John Erway of Lansing were Sun- i some time wllh hls parents. Mr. and
hearing claims filed.
Saturday.
(day guests at Ray Erways
(Mrs. E. Lusk are visiting Mr. and Michigan gave it first rank among
the slates in the Union, we wonder
—
- ..............for 1 •Mr.
— —
-• —
— -------- •----------------------- at .w_
- ------ - Ha- Mrs Ton, Hoffman.
Est. Clare
o.
Doster.
Petition
and
Mrs -Max
Reynolds
have
Sunday
guests
the —
FbrreM
Increase in widow s allowance filed.! moved into their new home , on vdi’a .were
e John and Gordoii Ha-----Mr.-----------------------------and Mrs. Orville Pursell and how many could give the correct
St.
called on Mr. and answer. This week's letter from the
order granting increase entered.
। South Grove st.
vens. Misses Eloise Storer and । daughter. Dora, called
Est. Ellen Carpentef Annual acMuch sympathy Ls
is extended to j Grace Will, of Hastings, and Louis , Mrs. Will Gillespie near
ne
Hastings publication department at M- S. C.,
count filed.
)
“ .Uie family z.'.
’
of the late Homer Flow- .**
Havens of Battle Creek.
and several friends In Striker dls- gives the latest information along
that line. It's worth reaaing and will
z‘ Milo ±
z‘ z.
Est. Charles Hook. Inventory " of
in 2:2
the loss of
a kind , Sunday visitors at Roy Erway's1 trict Sunday.
furnish surprises to our readers at
husband
and
were Mr. and Mrs. Ai Wolfe and '
'* "
filed.
v—■* “
* faUier.
large.
ROBINHUE PARK.
_____________ , Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Willison spent daughter of Grand Rapids. Mrs.
Est. Frances C Fausey. Release
। ot guardian filed. discharge
’ '
of’ Sunday with Mrs. Ora Smith at Louie Erway
, of Kalamazoo. Chas.
Mra. Eva Wood. Mra. Ed McDon- : Michigan's agriculture faces a
guardian Issued.
(Cressey.
Erway of Battle Creek and several nell and Mrs. Helen Lewis of Mld- more profitable season In 1930 be­
Est. Harry LeGear. Waiver of noMiss Esther Munger spent Sun- friends from Hastings,
dlevllle called on Mra. John Kollar cause farmers have sufficient var­
tice filed, order appointing Admr. d*y in Jackson.
Don't forget lhe county W c. T. Thursday and brought- her a lovely iety in crops and enterprise lo place
entered.
The 4-H Sewing class.of the Del- U. next week Tuesday. May 5th al plant, a gift of lhe Pythian Sisters. the state's agricultural Industry
Est. Mary E- Haff. Final account ton school attended the Achieve- the Goodwill church. A cordial Invl- They were sorry to find her con­ high in crop and livestock rankings
among the states of the nation, ac­
filed.
ment Day at Hastings Thursday, tatlon is extended to all to attend fined to her bed.
Est. H. A- Adrounle. Proof of will There
22 members in...,...
the local both the day and evening meeUngs.
—were
-------------------------------Mrs. Sam Zerbe and Mra. Glencording to a survey by economists
group who completed their course. ' Mr.
Ford Enz and Ken- Dean of Middleville spent Thursday at Michigan Blate College and by
filed, order admitting will entered.
Mr and Mrs.
Mra^Ford
federal-slate crop statisticians.
Miss
Marie
our coun-- ----------' del Buck
Cariton
Center-----were ! with Mrs. Julian Potts.
Est. L. Blanche Johncock. Order’ —
— —
— -- Neuschafer.
--- —
---------------- -- of—
- -—
.
.. । Sunday
.. callers
...
....
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mendenhall
appointing Admr. entered, bond of | ty nurse, will give a series
of- disat Mr. and...
Mrs. RusRanks are interesting because
and son Ed and Bob Shultz of Cai­ they keep changing. In 1935. ac­
Admr filed, letters of admlnlstra- . cusslons on the physical, mental sell Whittemore's.
tion issued.
| and social growth of children, every
! edonla were Sunday guests nt cording to the census. Michigan
Est. Melissa cole. Proof of will • Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock
WEEKS CORNERS.
Wright Clifford's. farmers took on some new firsts in
Fred Ingram of Hastings was a the nation. More acres arc planted
filed, order admitting will entered.' continuing for six weeks. These
Mrs. Irene Dickerson. Mrs. Vel­
bond of executor filed, letters testa- meetings will be held in Miss Biliv- ma Dickerson and Jenn. Miss Cos- Sunday callpr at Mr. and Mra. to alfalfa and more farmers grow
mentary Issued, order limiting set- in's room, and every one 13 cordially ma Newton. Miss Twyla Jarrard George Poland's.
alfalfa than In any other stale.
Ralph Flnkbeiner and family of Take beans. Michigan ranks first in
tlement entered, petition for hear- Invited to attend, especially the and Miss Alice Burpee attended
Ing of claims filed, notice lo cred I- 1 mothers of the younger children,
Achievement Day
In
Hastings Middleville were Sunday guests of both acreage and production. Cher­
tors issued
•
; Thursday, the four girls being in their
l,Mr“ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Julian ries and cucumbers for pickles give
PRICE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
PLEASANT HILL
I Uie 4-H Sewing dub. We are glad ’PotLg
the state two more firsts in crop
Est. Angie J. DeWolf. Order ol; Sunday dinner guesLa of Mr and to say that each of them got hon- * Callers at the home of Mra. John production. Cherries harvested in
lowing account entered.
Mrs. Bert Palmer were Mr. and orabie mention in their sewing. ' Kollar's Wednesday were: Mr. and 1935 were worth more than 11,000,­
HOPE
CENTER.
।
— —
“v•—
11 Mrs Cyrus Shroyer arid
and son C!ayClay­ Miss Jean Dickerson was one of |Mrs William Cramer and daugh- 000. .
। Mr end Mra. John Bush enter- ton.
ton Hiram
Hlrnm Meyers
Mpvar^ of Barbers
TlarVw«r« Cor
f-nr.­ the five chosen lo go lo Lansing ler Sandra of Hastings. Elsie PoCrop values cannot be taken aa
' lalned company from Kalamazoo nera, Richard Palmer of Detroit. Club Week.
Hand. Mrs George Poland. Mra. an Indicator of Importance io the
Bunday.
Mlll Veryl Belson. Hastings. Mr.
Mr. and Mra^Fay Whitworth and Edllh Clifford. Mra. Howard Smith 'State's rank, however. Corn worth
Mr and Mrs Albert Monica from and Mra. Roy Travis and children son of the Culver district and Mrs. Bnd daughter Lucille. Mra. Kollar 1 I nearly 31 million dollars was har­
Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mra. Lyle of Grand Rapids were also guests Lime Matteson ate Bunday dinner r«*ived a lovely plant, a gift of the vested in Michigan in 1935 and wm
Kingsbury from Cloverdale were for supper.
with Mr. and Mrs Lisle McArthur,Smith family,
Ute largest in point of value In the
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl . The little daughter of Mr. and of Hickory Comers.
state's crops, yet In rank Michigan
HINDS CORNERS.
D®11 Poland was severely
waa 14th in production and 23rd in
Sunday afternoon callers at Lyle
|
Mr.
and
Mn.
Myron
Bishop
of
Wlulam Ashby has gone to Kala- ' burned one day this week. At last Dickerson's were Mr. and Mrs. W. I
' Camp Custer visited hls brother acreage. Tame hay was the second
mazoo where he has employment in reports it was thought she would W
crop in value, worth nearly 22 mil­
Buckland and daughter of •
DAlBttla greenhouse
recover but her condition has been Litchfield and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd I and wife. Mr. and Mra. Allen Bish­ lions. yet the state's tame hay rank
op, Sunday.
Mr and Mrs- Clarence Textcr and serious.
Armour and Neva June of Hastings. ] C. O. Tobias of Detroit spent the
son Vernon from Hastings. Mr. and
John Collins of near Eaton Rap­
FARM
The Cedar Creek C. C- will meet
The slate still has a high rank,
Mrs. Leon Dunning and daughter, Ids was a Sunday afternoon caller with Mrs. Claude Kelley at BOG week end with bis parents, Mr. and
wllh second place in mint produc­
Mra. C. N. Tobias.
Lea trice, from Delton. Mrs, Bur­ of hls sister, Mrs. Addie Lewis.
8 Washington St.. Hastings. May
Mr and Mrs Eddy of Woodland tion although It previously was first.
dette Lyttle from Battle Creek vis­
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Rowlader 13th for an afternoon meeting.
Third place In potato production,
visited
their
daughter
and
husband.
ited their parents. Mr. and Mrs. and children of Grand Rapids were
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Dickerson
grapes and sugar beets were ob­
Chas. McCl rmott. Sunday.
Sunday guests of her parents, Mr. and Shirley visited al Oliver John­ Mr. and Mra. John Weyerman. Bun­ tained in lhe 1935 ratings. Buck­
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Armstrong and Mrs R. J. Williams.
son's at Hastings Sunday afternoon. :
Mra C. H. Brown of Alpena and wheat. commercial apple production.
and Melissa Ashby and Miss Viola
Little Nellie Shivcley of Caledonia
DURFFF
llCr &lt;Uu«hter. Mrs Harold Comp of Ute market and kraut cabbage,
McKibbin from Kalamazoo spent Is attending school here for-a time
beets for canning, snap and green
Sunday afternoon at the Fred Ash­ while she u staying with her grand­
Mrs. Edward Rke .nd d.U.&gt;.Ur
lima beans for canning, strawberries
by home.
Veta spent Sunday with Mr. and
To^mother. Mrs. Harriett.
marketed and the commercial ap­
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Warner from
Mrs Sam Kellar and family and
ple production all were crops plac­
Kalamazoo spent the week end
other relatives near Orangeville.
rStJt*
GLASS CREEK.
ing Michigan fourth In the nation.
with their parents. Fred Ashby and
Mrs. Chas. Whittemore spent
Several ladles from this vicinity
There has been no neglect of the
family. Chas. McDermott's condition from Wednesday till Sunday with attended 4-H Achievement day at
~“d Mr livestock tn Uie state. In value,
Hastings Thursday.
- M^^nd* Mra Edd Njlmn
remains thc same.
Mrs, Amy Whittemore at Delton.
horses and colts rank Michigan’s
Mr. and Mra. Grover Brooks and Rn^rl
rol^ J?
Fred Ashby and family witnessed
Dolores &lt;and Anita McGlockiln
farmers seventh; dairy cows, eighth;
a
whirlwind Sunday afternoon . of Hastings spent last week with son. Bennie, spent Bunday with
141116
poultry, twelfth; sheep and lambs,
while silting In the back yard. It their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Mra. Lena Brooks and Elllah Gensmore near Ionia Tuesday.
fourteenth; and swine, seventeenth
Brooks of Portland.
A
PhU1JPa
took with It leaves, a large screen, Forrest Havens.
In the nation.
Edward Rice spent Several days bu£?m?an^Um Yt?
pieces of wood etc., up In the
As the Goodwill ladies were
sir lout of sight. Al first the fam­ planning a clean up bee and dinner fishing at Au Sable river this week
v
Mr. and Mrs Leon Stanton and
®
T°S“
ily hearing the noise ran for the at the church last Friday, they were
house.
notified the soils conservation com- dnugiilers of Battle creek were sup- Mnr.i*n^
*• । Mrs Elmer Hathaway in Rutland
-------------------------------------------------------—■ .Thursday night and spent a very
: pleasant evening.

As Mine Rescuers Triumphed in Race With Death
F-

l-a* -1

POCAHONTAS
TIME—Fill Your Bin YOW
A REAL SAVING ON COAL—Starting May 1st I am

going on CASH and by doing so I will SAVE you

money. After all, what is the use of filling up if you

can't save? ... So, here you are, a New Low Price for

May Only! ORDER NOW! It's Cash and Save!

$000

POCAHONTAS

Car Run

Per
Ton

Call at Once.

JOHNSON’S

PHONE 2370

HASTINGS

220 E. STATE ST.

Flowered Print
for Spring

MANUFACTURER'S GET ACQUAINTED OFFER-SATURDAY, MAY 2nd
(TO INTRODUCE DOLLY MADISON FACE POWDER)
Bring This Coupon lo Our Store and Receive
BOTH FOB

One 11.00 Box

2-Dram Site Bottle

DOLLY MADISON

This FORD V 8 fits on the Farm
The built-in trunk is mighty popular

way, allowing passengers full enjoy­

these days. With this Tudor Sedan, you

ment of the unusually generous space

can enjoy its convenience — at a real

between the front and back seats.

saving in price. And time-proved Ford

Your Ford dealer will be glad to let

economy will save you money, as long

you try out this Tudor Sedan on the road.

as you own thc car.
Plenty of room to bring supplies back

'from town—intthe large trunk or in

s545

Standard Tudor Stdan with

seat. A great convenience, especially on

Safety Glass throughout at no additional cost. New

money-saving, convenient terms—ask about the

$25-a-month and

long trips. Luggage is kept out of the

ORD

DEALERS

per month Finance Plans

.of,the Universal Credit Company*.

EadU Nttwrk. DM, ntaft Suiurdo, nd Sunday.

OF

EXQUISITE PERFUME

REMEMBER—ONE DAY ONLY!

LIMIT 2 DEALS TO A CUSTOMER.

LyBARKER’S DRUG STORE
Valuable Discount Coupon—worth si.oi
SATURDAY ONLY, MAY 2nd
NOTICE TO AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTORS
In accordance with our agreement you are author tied U&gt; deliver one complete DeLuxe Shaving Set
on Presentation of thb Coupon, signed and 3»c
.

built-in trunk, f. o. b. Detroit.

Standard accessory group, including bumpers and
spare tire, extra. All Ford V-8 body types have

the big compartment behind the back

FACE POWDER

12:15 P. M. (E. S. T.).

MICHIGAN

This set Includes 15 New Style Blades for any double edge
i i 2? 2*^ Ewr-Ready or Auloatrop lU.ori, value
1 Imlant Sharpener, HU all blades (solves high
'
} T»be •&lt; High Grade Shaving Cream, value .
I Styptic Pencil, value
TOTAL VALUE

39c

Limited 8 apply—Na Mora Than 2 to

family and hls mother. Mrs Edith
Bechtel of Hastings, spent SuntMy
with Mr and Mis Ronald Haynes
The last Community meeting for
wlll be a good program and election
of officers.
Mr and Mrs Ernest Smote of
Kalamazoo called on her aunt. Mrs.
Burrell Phillipa and family, Sun­
day afternoon.
Mrs Sarah Phillipa and daughter
and Mrs Elsie Moore and daugh­
ter attended the Mother and
Daughter banquet at the U. B
church in Hastings Wednesday eve­
ning.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore spent
Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Moore near Nashville.
’ "re. Nev. Everett of De­
catur
an friends here Sun-

Mr. and Mra. Edd Holly and two
children of Kalamazoo spent Bun­
day with her sister. Mr. and Mrs.
Burrell Phillips.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Kendall Buck. Mrs Anna Buck
and daughter, Esther, spent Tues­
day in Battle creek with Mr. and
Mrs. Tate Buck and family.
Mrs. Albert Barry and. daughter
and Miss Mary Barry of Southeast
Cartton and Mrs Leo Barry and
son spent Thursday in Grand Rap­
ids aiijl called on Mrs Dennis BowMr. and Mrs P. A. Pierian of
Hastings were Bunday visitors of
Mr. and Mra. Walter Culbert.
Mlu Achsah Buck spent the week

-THIS BALE AT-

LyBARKER’S DRUG STORE

James Landon and friend of Lake
Odessa spent Sunday wllh Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Yarger.
Mr and Mrs. Wm. Shriber and
children of Hastings and Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Barry and son called on
Mr. and Mrs Abid Donley of Lan­
sing Bunday afiemooh.

Reminiscent ot an oil paintins
In tone* of yellow, pink, blot,
and delicate green ia this flut­
tering organaa evening gown.
Deft touches of light from shin­
ing tabular beads oat Uno the
colorful flowers and give an air
of formality to lbs ensemble.

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS
JCHTY FIRST YEAR

OLDSPJNISH "The Servant,
\ UNDGRINTS

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1936

16 PACES

in the House"

our mow
OVERS1.DDO.gOO

KEPT EXPENSES
AT LOW FIGURE
Teacher* Spent But &gt;47.70
for Centennial Exhibit
Last Week

POPPY DAY IS
^396

FARMERS GETTING
WHEAT CHECKS
Sixth and La*t Payment by
Government on the

1935 Crop

MADE BY THE SPANISH
KINGL TO CALIFORNIA
FAVORITES

AND NOW OWES
BUT
County Agricultural Agent Har­ FOUR HUMDUD WO®
Hundreds and hundreds of Has­ LEGION AUXILIARY PLANS
old Foster received the las* of the
tings and Barry county residents
FINI1H D1UIXAI
&gt;127,000 OF SCHOOL
FOR OBSERVANCE IN
1935-1838 wheat checks an Satur­
enjoyed the splendid Centennial
ING COUBBB
BONDS
day A. M. and is busy making dis­
Exhibit last week Monday and Tues­
BARRY COUNTY

WOULD BE PRICELESS
ON TOtAVS MARKET

ALL THESE WILL BE
RETIRED IN 1946

"Lucky BaldwhV Wai Lucky

847.70. The Items of expense Includ- 1
Few Cities of Its Size in the ed: programs 31735: Draylng. 89 - Donations U«ed for Welfare
Owing to the recent decision by Snccesiful Year Ind* W
the supreme court, there will be but
Showing of the Work
35; Materials, such as fireplaces,
Country Can Make Bo
and Rehabilitation Work
one payment on the 1938 wheat
construction paper, model cars,
Done
Good a Showing
crop.
________
wood, label*, paint, atenclis, mimeo­
in Local Oases
On the first of this month the graph paper, make-up. etc. 821.00.
Poppy Day will be observed tn
school district indebtedness of Has­
This report shows Just what can
ting* was reduced 89,500. which was be done with a small amount of, Barry county this year on Satur­
paid on the principal. The interest money and is a record of excellent day. May 23. when memorial popCollege nthared Friday o&lt; last week
v/ those
Mtwwc Ln
ui charge. ’■ pie* tO be WOrtl in honor Of the
up to that date was also paid. This management by
for an *31-day meeting at Um Meth­
leave* 8127,000 balance du* on these The teacher* spent weeks on assetn-1 World war dead win be distributed
odist church in Hasting* Tha maatbonds. They were originally 8170,000. biIng the various displays and every-1 by the Laurence J. Bauer Unit of
Practically the same
amount Is thing was returned to the owners the American Itegion Auxiliary. The
community singing led by Richard
raised each year by lax to apply on with the loss of but one article—a Auxiliary women are making exten8WEBNBY TULLS H. Loppenthlen of Hasting*.
the principal and lntere*t; so the doll's slocking which the owner slve preparations for the observance PROF.
Interest decreases each year while lost on the way home from school, of the day under the leadership of
WHAT CAM BB DONE TO
The teachers registered every ar- i Mrs. Mildred Downs, Poppy Day
the payment on the principal In­
pert from the
HELP CONDITIONS
creases. On the first day of May next tide they borrowed, along with the chairman.
year, there will be paid *10.000 on name and address of the owner, so I The poppies, made of crepe paper
group* in Barry county, gat
the principal; the Interest to be paid they have a complete record of the by disabled veterans, will be offered
port on the work accomplish
DOLE DOES NOT HELP
next year will be 84,715.
whole exhibit. Should the Cenlen- throughout the county by volunteer
UNEMPLOYMENT
Its school Indebtedness Is all this nlal commute* named by the Has-: workers from the Auxiliary Unit,
city owes; and that will be rapidly ting* Commercial club want this' "Poppy girls" will distribute the
extinguished under the present information it is available and is i flowers in the business district Farmers Could Make Dollars
throughout the day and others will
plan of payment. Our city schools accurate
by Proper Use of Peanut
Surely the entire teaching force is I work Ln the outlying centers. Can­
have a fine outfit of buildings, ade­
agent, then gave a report of her
quately providing for the school to be commended for their splendid । tributions for the welfare of the dlsShells, Oornstalks, Eto.
a ,hand
u are t.
heard ttblcd veterans and needy families
work and told of the International
needs of the children and young efforts and on every
Every farmer reader of the Ban­
people of Hastings, also a beautiful words of appreciation for the excel­ of veterans will be asked In ex­ ner would have been intensely In­
Washington. D. C.. during tha
auditorium which was greatly need­ lence of the whole affair.
change for the flowers.
terested could he have shared the
ed here. It would take at present
"Wearing the poppy is a personal privilege of the writer in hearing a
Barry county have already signified
building costs more than 8500.000 to NAME THE SENIOR
tribute to the men who gave their recent address by Professor O. R.
their Intention of attending Ihb
duplicate our present school build­
HONOR STUDENTS lives in our country's service. By Sweeney, head of the department of
ings.
wearing a poppy on Poppy Day. all chemistry at the Iowa State Col­
When one considers the city’s
can show that they still remember lege before the Battle Creek Rotary
Mary
Stamm
Heads
Class
of
Mrs. Nellie Fancher, of Baltlnx
water system, which represent* fully
and honor the sacrifices made for Club. He discussed the question of
township, the county chairman
*150.000. sewers and sewage disposal
One Hundred Three
America during the World war. The what to do with farm wastes—such
plant, which
probably represent
poppy Is the flower which bloomed as com stalks, straw, peanut shells,
Graduates
more than *100.000. other property
cotton
stems,
etc.
He
stated
that
if
1
The Hastings High senior class on the battle fields where they fell
Miss Cramer.
owned by this city, which probably
and on Poppy Day it blooms again
exceeds *30,000, and all the paved honors were announced on Wed­ in the patriotic hearts where they Ing useful products of the one billion
the Methodist ladle*. 250 women bastreets which the city owns, our nesday morning, the marks showing arc remembered."
tons of farm wastes from farm
that
splendid
work
has
been
done
city’s property represents an invest­
Wearing the poppy also gives the crops, we would be out of the de­ rated with daffodils and forsythla
«... a
- million dollars. ....
ment —
of over
On ' during the past four years by these
pression
and
our
economic
difficul
­
wearer
a
part
Ln
the
vast
work
car
­
(Continued on page «, flee. 1)
all of this the city owes but 8127.000.' y°un* people. The names of young
would be solved. He stated that
From now on each year 8500 addl-1 men, however, are conspicuous hby
- ried out by the American Legion ties
the severe depression of 1892-1887
tlonal to the *9500 paid this year their absence, there being but one and Auxiliary for the war's living
was solved when this country start­ DISPLAY INTEREST IN
will be taken from the *127.000 debt. on the honor list of fifteen. Dwight victims—the disabled, their families
। and the families—
of---------------------the dead Every
COUNTY FIELD DAY
----------------------------—, ed the now very important tlnThe Interest will be reduced corre­ Ferris.
nennv
cnnlrihtitoH
fnr _a
■ ....
,---- ... ---------------u for
One hundred-three are In the ' penny
contributed
poppy goes manufacturlng industry and also,
spondingly. All the bonds are to be
to *the
b“ support -»
of -------------this work, the bulk greatly increased other lines of Trophy Gup to Be Given the
retired In 1948. Few cities of the 1936 graduating class, the exercises ।,n
(Continued
on
page
0,
Bee.
1)
of
the
money
being
used
here
in
size of Hastings can make such an to be held on Friday. June 5.
Rural School Winning
Following are the names of the Hastings in the welfare activities of
excellent financial showing.
the local Legion Post and Auxiliary
the Most Points
first fifteen in the class:
BARRY COUNTY SHOULD
Unit.
1.
Mary
Stamm
231.0
CLERKS’ WEEK AT
GET IN ON THIS, TOO
The vast program of welfare and
Norma Jacobson 230.0
THE A, &amp; P. STORE J 2.
rehabilitation work carried out by
3. Ruth McLaughlin 2273
the American Legion and Auxiliary This County Has Many Acres Saturday, May 0. beginning at
4. Anna Beck 224.75
draws its principal support from the
Week of Specials—-All Hemo
5. Lillian Proe frock
222.91
o'clock. This is for rural sch
Adapted to Oultivation
poppy. The dimes, quarters and
6. Edna Schultx 2153'
Chosen by Clerks for
of Blueberria*
half dollars we drop into the coin
7. Phyllis Long 2145
boxes of the poppy workers supply
There are many acres of low lands
This Event
8. Virginia Waters 211.75
9. Dorothy Shellington ...2114 the means for local, state and na­ in Barry county splendidly adapted have picnic dinners.
Clerks' week, now an annual
tional activities for the benefits of for cultivating blueberries. Through
10. Dwight Ferris 210.0
A trophy cup will be awarded
event, will be celebrated next week
disabled veterans and the families the Michigan Slate College, tn co­
11. Hazel Csukln 203.0
May 11 to May 18 in Hastings A. At
12. Mildred Woodmansee . .2023 left in need through the death ar operation with individual growers,
P. store.
Great plans have been
disability
of
veteran*.
The
Poppy
wonderful progress with the blue13. Genevieve Erway 199.25
made for this sale. Special low
Day contributions make aid avail­
14. Doreen Rltzman 19825
price* will be In effect during the
able during the other 384 days of grown to more than half an inch flrst thirty to win pins of
15. Velma Kellogg 19525
The clerks selected the Items to be
This means that Mary Stamm the year to those who still are pay­ in diameter and of excellent qual­ kind will receive a further a*
featured during the week, and have will be valedictorian and Norma ing in steady installment* the war’s ity. We hope that someone In this
selected items which should be of Jacobson salulatorlan, the others bitter debt of suffering and priva­ county, who has the right kind ol
land, will get in touch with the for those wishing to compete.
Interest to everyone in Barry coun­ assisting with the program. The tion.
When we pin on our popples this State College and its extension de­
Banner and the friends of these suc­
ty.
Prices will be the lowest In years cessful young people unite In con­ year, there should come to us all a partment and cooperate with them
vision of the part we are playing in in the development of blueberries
so come prepared to stock up.
gratulations.
the effort to heal the nation's war In th!.'; county.
weight and the pupU'a name.
John Btaal, the produce manager,
wounds. We should look upon our
will as usual have a complete line of OBSERVING “SARAH
popples not only as Rowers of mem­ NASHVILLE BANK TO
fruit and vegetables with prices
PAY
DIVIDEND
THIS
WEEK.
B.
POWERS
DAY'
ory for the dead but as flowers of
all according to weight. Class I in­
the lowest possible.
The Nashville bank has been cludes girls under 60 lbs. Class IE,
hope for tlie living.
The following clerks will be on
authorized to pay a dividend of 5 girls from 00 to TO lh«. Class A
hand and eager to serve you and Hastings 0. E. 8. Having
per cent. Friday morning is the date girls from TO to IB Iba, and Class IV,&lt;
assist you in making up your order.
MIXED DANCES.
Dinner in Her Honor
set. The bank will also be open from
Peter Fedewa. Wilbert Watson. Em­
Every Saturday night at Clear 8 to 8 P. M. Saturday night for tha girls over 05 ibe. Por boys the claim
on May 19
are: Class V, boya under TO Iba.
erson Struble. Max Leach and Don
lake, Frank Herrington.—Adv. if. accommodation of patrons.
Fisher.
On Tuesday evening, May 19, the
Meat manager Claud Babin and Hastings O. E. 8. Chapter No. 7
Clas* vm. boy*
his able assistant. Fred Shipp, will will obaervt "Sarah B. Power* Day."
also have some real specials which Mrs. Powers being the only living
will Interest you.
charter member of the local Chap­
under 83 lbs.; standing broad Jump,
Watch for an ad in Hastings ter. She will be guest of honor at
boys under 83; running broad Jump,
Banner, read It from top to bottom, dinner and a special effort will be
boys over 83; baseball throw, hard
bring it in with you.
made to have as many of the old­
er members present as possible also
the shut-ins and al] who can be takPRESENTING CONCERT

in Real EsttU—And
Everything 'Else
In many way* the Spaniards
seemed to be much more impressed
with the ownership of land than
were the Americans who went to
California in an early day. Let an
American come Into possession of
a good sized acreage and his ranch
would at once become known as
"The Grizzly Bear." "Rattlesnake
Gulch," "Diamond Bar." -Three X"
or *ome other name equally out­
landish. In other
words
those
Americans were usually a rough,
honest, rugged, uneducated bunch
of fellows, who had had plenty of
contact with the world, but in their
make-up the quality of sentiment
had never been developed. But they
were Impressed by the practical
every-day things of tlx rugged life
they knew. Not so with the Span­
iards. They blessed their ranches
and dedicated them to the saints,
or. in sweet flowing words, to the
things associated with them, if
there were oak trees the Rancho
would become "Rancho El Encino"

Hasting* Clvle Players, after weeks of preparation, will present thia great

07952586

STATE 559,293

FURTHER PLANS FOR
DECORATION DAY
Special
Committee*
Are
Named at Tuesday Eve­
ning Meeting
At a meeting held on Tuesday
evening, the general committee
named the special committees for
the proper observance of Decoration
Day. Saturday, May 30 No apeaker
lias as yet been secured but will be
named later.
The program committee consists
of Floyd Wood. Chrm., Don Fore­
man. Ed. Downs and Maurice Fore­
man; Hugh Riley is marshal of the
day. assisted by Roy Bush and Ster­
ling Rogers; Andrew Matthews and
Harry Miller are on the transporta­
tion committee and the committee
to decorate graves is Ed. Downs.
Don Foreman, Frank Reynolds and
Roy Bush. These men represent
veterans of three patriotic organi­
zations. Spanish War Veterans. Vet­
erans of Foreign Wars and Ameri­
can Legion.
If the weather Is good on May 30.
It Is planned to hold the exercises
on the court yard square, but if It
should be cold and rainy, as is
sometimes the case, the program
will be in Central auditorium.
Adalbert Cortright
is general
chairman. Maurice Foreman, secre­
tary and Harry Miller, treasurer.
Others on the general committee
are Hugh Riley, Ed. Downs. Floyd
Wood. Don Foreman. Andrew Mat­
thews and Roy Bush.

COUNTIES NEED MORE
CASH FOR TWP. ROADS

TWELVE TO CONTEND
FOR SPEECH HONORS

Plan Suggested to Add One
Total 859.29300
Cent Per Gallon to the
What Hastings Taijajtn PayHow much do the taxpayers of
Gasoline Tax
Diltriot
Meet
Tomorrow this
city pay tn taxes to carry on
A few years ago. when the Mcour schools? Last year the total
Night at Central
tax levy for our city schools was Nltt Act was passed. It was intended
Auditorium
to relieve townships of all work on
858.871.72. But of that sum 815,­
84230 was raised to pay on the prin­
cipal and interest of the school
bonds. This leaves *4322922 as the
actual tax levied to pay toward the
running expenses of our schools.
Thus of the actual operating cost of
Hastings schools, the state pays 859.(Cuntinued on page 6. Bee. 1)

1-2 miles north of Orangeville, with
Henry Flannery as auctioneer. Mr.
Johnson offer* 2 horses. 5 head of
cattle, 15 ewes and 8 lambs, pigs,
hens, seed and grain, farm tools,
household goods, etc. flee the adv.
for full information.

cniAJ nAUUNC
"■ no. tUW. UUWNb

GENERAL CHAIRMAN

tribution to the farmers. This is
the tlxth. the last and the smallest
allottment he has received, the
checks ranging from *234 to *106.-

DRESSES DISPLAYED
AT ALL-PAY EVE

township highways. For the first
year 82.000,000 was appropriated
from the state gasoline tax for that
purpose. This was gradually in­
creased untU now. and hereafter,
the amount is 84.000.000 per year—
all taken from the gas tax. This
will bring to Barry county yearly
something like 855.000. The appor­
tionment is based on each county's
mileage of township roads at the

Civic Players to Present "Servant
In the House” Next Thur, and Fri.

Plot Takes Up th* Lives of Three
ON MOTHER’S DAY in charge of the gathering which
Chinning, all boy* 10 Um.
promises to be in Leicsting and enBrother* Who Find Real Happiness
Choir of Presbyterian Church Joyable.
As
the
but
touches
are
being
given
a
m
ass
in
g
wealth
and
building
for
When one recalls lite fact that
to Bing Several Old
THE DENTISTS ENJOYED IT.
to the play. "Servant in the House," himself a reputation a* a scholar
county has 860 miles of
Beason Opens on Monday Barry
Favorites
Dentists from Barry and other which will be presented by the Has­ and orator. He catches himself In
township highways, that most of
uiigo Civic
uivic Players
riayers at Central
central audiauoi- time anij hl* struggle to redeem his baaaball throws similar to that of
Evening, May 11, at
An unusual and interesting enter­ counties in which the W. K. Kel­ tings
them are In territory where road
tainment will be given in the Has­ logg Foundation is carrying on 1L
•
“
I
torlum here next Thursday and Fri­ church and salvage his forgotten the boys. Chinning, all girl* TO lb*.
making
is
difficult
on
account
of
j
the Fairgrounds
er-­ day evenings,
evenings. May
Mav 14 and 15.
15 those Ideals form one of the major
ting* Presbyterian church on 8un­ health work attended a very inter

SOFT BALL LEAGUE
ELECTS OFFICERS

On Friday evening of last week,
the men interested in a soft ball
league during the summer months
met at the community room of the
National bank and organised with
the following officers: Pres., War­
ren E. Carter; Secy.. Leslie Haw­
thorne; Treas., Andrew Taylor. The
directors are Jos. Broxak, Wm. Ken­
nedy. A. L. Brown. John Hewitt,
Arthur Westerlind, Warren Carter
local entrants.
and Leslie Hawthorne.
The first game will be on Monday
evening. May 11, at the fairgrounds.
Each team 1* limited to 14 signed
players. All games start at seven
o'clock and if a team Is not ready
FRED SCOTT.
to play by 7:10 the umpire forfeits
Having sold his farm, Fred Scott the game. Proteste must be filed with
WiU dispose of his persona) property the umpire at the time. Forty-eight
at public auction at his farm on hours' notice must be given by any
Bee. 28. Hope township, 1-2 mile manager wishing to postpone a
Kuth of the Hope Center school­ game, the manager to notify the
house.---Clyde ------------Leonard-----------will cry
the board of directors. Nine players
--------, —
sale and Merle Kahler will serve os I mlL!t be present to start a game and
elerk
mU* nfYers
(&gt;■■ lh&gt; irame la fnrelerk Mr
Mr. A
Scott
offers a 1400 lb. if th...
gray mare; 3 milch cows; hay. 300 felted.
bu. com; seed corn; a good list of
Twelve teams have entered the
farm machinery and some house­ League— 1. Highway Department;
hold goods. Read his auction sale 2. Bliss-Machines; 3, Triangle; 4.
advertisement in this issue and re­ Banker*; 5. Chain Gang; 8. Hlracb;
member the date.
7. Consumers Power; 8. Hasting*
Table Co.; 0. Feldpausch; 10, Bliss­
ADRIAN JOHNSON.
Foundry; 11. Roger* Grocery; 13.
As Adrian Johnson has decided to
[Hastings Piston Ring.
quit farming he will have an .auc­
Following is the schedule for the
tion al the old Townsend farm. 2

Two Auction Sales

’.“,1'

**dq

U»OF
inEFMlSIES

stream it would be "Rancho Rodeo
de las Aguas"—tiie gathering of the
water*. In a way those old Spanish
names s*em to blend perfectly with
the beautiful surroundings and the
delightful climate of California.
In many way* the romantic his­
tory of California is being preserved THAT'S WHAT EACH PAYS
through cities, town* and valleys
OF OPERATING COST
named in honor of regal grants of
OF OITY'S 80H00L8
land by the King of Spain to some
favorite. The names of Malibu.
San Fernando. San Pedro. Redondo STATE REQUIRES MORE
and others are familiar, all named
PAY FOR TEACHERS
Ln honor of old land grants. In the
early history of the state it wo* a
veritable checker-board of land Right to Make the Demand
grants, later called "Ranchos." each
When It Pays Major Part
one running up into the thousands
of City School Costs
of acres, and occasionally dipping
Into "six figures." And why not?
it will be n surprise to most of
There was an almost endless the Bonnet’s city readers to learn
amount of land, and comparatively that the state of Michigan is now
few people. There wa* so much real I paying much more money for carry­
estate and so few to utilize It. that | ing on Lite public schools of this city
land prices were ridiculously low. | than ar* the taxpayers of Hastings.
Judged by present day standards, i The state Is contributing, an even
Even as late as 1850 or later some larger share of the costs of rural
of these great ranches sold for a schools. Below we give the actual
few cents per acre, and others dick-' figures, which will conclusively
ered away for wine, or a few hun-' prove our statement with regard to
dred dollar* worth of groceries, or i the relative support of the city’s
what have you? Life there under | schools by the state and by the
Spanish rule was a happy, carefree 1 citizens of Hastings.
•xlstence, so much so that, in fancy I
— . .
.
you can almost see the old Dons |
Following Is an Itemized state­
dressed In bright velvet* and astride ment of funds that have been or
their silver saddles. Then came will be received by the schools of
the Mexicans, followed by the dis­ this city from the state for their
covery of gold, and the on-rush of support during the present school
Americans by boat, ptalrie-schoon- year, which will end next month;
cr. on horse-back and every which Primary Fund, cash 815,081.15
way. They came In such numbers Thatcher-Saur law, cash.. 27.154.00
that Mexican authority was soon Tuition Outside students . 13,745.00
(Continued on page 0. Bee. 2)
For agricultural teaching
* “
wa.ss
2J50.00
co. Normal training ....

Friday, May 8, tomorrow night, is
the time of the district speech con­
test to be held In Central auditor­
ium. The order of events for the
evening is: Declamation at 7:16;
extempore speaking, 8:15; oratory.
0. Mr. Reinhardt of the history de­
partment is chairman, and Doris
Bhute and Suzanne Sumner will be
timekeepers.
Twelve schools will participate,
and the winner In each event will
receive a large u. of M. felt banner.
Hastings High has a good chance
to win two of these with Achsah
Buck and Donald Weaver compet­
ing for her. The contest will be
Judged by tile coaches of the con­
testants. A small admission fee of
10c will be charged.
Hastings is honored by being
chosen as the place to stage this im­
portant contest, and it is hoped our
citizens will show their apprecia­
tion by giving the contestants a
full house. There is nothing like
numbers to create enthusiasm, and

day in the city schools.
An accurate record was kept of
all the expense* connected with this

hills. It can be seen that *55.000 wiU
not do tha Job that ought to be done
on township roads.
An agitation is being made now to
have the state add another cent to
the gasoline tax. which would add
17,000,000 more—all to be diverted
to building township roads. If that
can be done. Barry county would
receive substantially *88,000 more,
which would enable the county to
do a real Job on its township roads.
Those who are Interested should get
In touch with our senator and rep­
resentative and get them to dork
for the adoption of this plan at the
next session of the legislature.

MISSIONARIES FROM
INDIA COMING HERE
Speaking at Wesleyan Meth­
odist Church on Wed­
nesday Eve

An opportunity for the people of
Hastings to hear one of the church's
senior missionaries to India will be
given at the Wesleyan Methodist
church. Wednesday. May 13, at 7:30.
The Rev. and Mrs. P. T. Ddty. who
have spent the greater portion of
their lives in India, will be present
to tell of the work of missionaries
among these native people and to
exhibit a group of curio* which they
have brought from that country.
Rev. Doty is a most in teres Ur.g
speaker and well worth making an
effort to'hear. Everyone is cordially
Crowds of enthusiastic rooters at­ invited to this special service which
tended the games last year and is under the auspices of the local
greatly enjoyed the contests.

esting meeting in Battle Creek on
Friday. They were privileged to
hear Dr. Fred Blumenthal, dental
Instructor In Harvard University
dental school.

in charge have requested the Ban­
ner to warn patrons that U&gt;e cur­
tain will rise promptly at 8:15
o'clock and that the overture will
be completed at that time. Since
the first few minutes of action are
LISTED AS HONOR STUDENT. so Important to the re*t of the play,
Miss Helen Clark, a graduate of i
Hastings High, class of ’32. because | late comers will not be escorted to
, their seats during the first act until
of high attainment in scholarship,
i these lines have been completed.
during her four years at the Uni| Although the lives of several
v*rsity of Michigan, has been
l clergymen are woven into the text
named a member of the Honors
of this drama, it is in no sense a
Convocation at Ann Arbor. This' religious play.
means that a student has never fal­
,
Two brothers, Robert and Joshua,
len below a "B" mark during their
have educated their brother. Wil­
college course.
liam, at great personal sacrifice and
Miss clarke was an honor student
sent him through college where he
while attending Hastings High
has qualified for the clergy. Joshua
school, and has majored in chemis­
then went to India where he disap­
try at the University.
peared. No word has been received
All of which news is most pleas- from him in years.
Chorus—"Love's old Sweet Bong,"
1
■SwUS'ned »y &gt;b. ■»“»
Dvorak.
dally so to her mother. Mrs. Mauie
,
wifx* v.—.n
Bolo—"When You and I were

day awning from eight to nine
o'clock. The program will feature
Famous Mothers of History." and
these character1 will be represented
in the costume of the period. They
will appear in a large electrically
illuminated picture frame and will
give the high-lights which led to
the greatness of their children.
The church choir of 21 voices
will assist by singing mother's old
and favorite songs. A silver collec­
tion will be taken.
The program will be as follows:
Musical Selections.
Anthem — 'The
Haydn.
Chorus—"Long, Long Ago"—Bayiy.
Solo—"Bongs My Mother Taught

Young Maggie,” Butterfield.
Men's Chorus—“The Old House at
Home,” Woodbury.
Bolo—"Mother Calling." Halt
Anthem
and
Solo
obligato—'
-Mother's Evening flong."
Chorus—"Home, Sweet Home,’
Bishop.
।
Finale—"Auld Lang Byne, ’ Scot- &gt;
tlsh
tiah Air.
Air.
The following characters will be I
represented, the mother of George i
Washington.
Abraham
Lincoln.
James Whistler. John Wesley, Men­
delssohn, R. L. Stevenson, Edison,
Florence Nightingale, knd Eliza­
beth Fry.

I

A very cordial invitation is given
to every one to attend this ooocert.

them**s of the drama.
Back into his life ixiiue* Robert,
tile drain man. to catch a glimpse of various weight cl***a*.
his little “gel" Then from India

entering a team of mar

Bishop of Bemares" and underneath shoe pitching. 2 men on
Is signed the simple but startling
identification, "your brother joah-

There follows the meeting of the
drainman with his daughter, the
bitter break between the vicar and
his wife, the dramatic expulsion of
the hypocritical BUhop of Lan­
cashire, who represents all tliat is
false and evil Ln the officialdom of
the church. Finally comes the re­
union of the two brothers; whether
the third brother, “Joshua,'* is real­
ly present or whether his place is
taken by a higher and more sig­
nificant personality la a question
which is left to the imagination of
each theater patron as the play
ends.
partment, of our city achools.
care of william who has beBeat sale opened Saturday morn­
come a successful Vicar and has ing at the Cordes Newsstand.
The Civic Players han adopted
changed hl* name from Smith to
an Ingenious little devifla to timuSmythe.
Before the turn of event* Just
mentioned, the three brothers had
been sewer diggers and drain men. with the excellent ctvto play* proRobert still continues at the old
——————l trade,
trade, denying
denying himself
himself the
the ssight of of two concentric
Oun his child and steadily sinking
sinkin, lower revolve in opposite
The Barry County Rod and Gun
Club supper will U
uluu
be served this.1 as his drinking Increased. Little
Thursday, evening in
In the county Mary grew 'to young girlhood
glrlhoot with- light bulb.
garage at 7 o'clock sharp. Anyone out knowing the identity of her
who comes at 7:15 or 7:30 will bei father.
lute;
for everything has been
The young Vicar finds his church
planned and every arrangement| disintegrating both materially and
made to start the banquet promptly spiritually as he devote* a major
at 7 o'clock.
| portion of hi* energy to the task of

It Will Start At
7 O'clock Sharp

Cooperating with Um rural i

NEW PERMANENT
MACHINE IN*TI
Vox Brox. Mat*

Orida Oily

�THK HUTIWI BANNBB, THOMIUY, MAY 7. IBM

Kass

A Mn was bom on April 29 to

LOCAL NEWS

IJ FREE DAY
WED., MAY 13th!
Save Your Cash Register Receipts
for Lucky Day in May!
SATURDAY IO O'CLOCK

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 O’CLOCK

Our Self-Serve Warehouse System of Food Merchandis­
ing gives you Quality Foods at the Lowest Possible
Prices.... No fancy fixtures, no credit, no unnecessary
overhead ... you pay for food only ot Food Center.
Low Prices Every Day in the Week !

Pillsbury’s FLOUR

sa«

95c

WITH EVERY *1.00 PURCHASE

Pillsbury’s Pancake Flour L'Jk 25c
Salad Dressing

25c

o-"-

Fresh

2 n- 23c

Peanut Butter

Perfect Flour

mhh.

Muller’s Bread

Pineapple

65c

s.«i.

2/or 25

6c

pound loaf

25c

Sno Sheen Cake Flour

CRACKERS

15c

Freeport or Shultz Butter u&gt; 29c

Kellogg’s Corn Flakes u,,. n.. IOc

FANCY

Post Toasties

1 lb. box

IOc

Large Box

Vacation Land Coffee

23c

15c

Tea Siftings

SUGAR
I

Fine Granulated

9c

IO

49c

Rumford Baking Powder ctL&lt;e 19c
Miracle Whip Salad Dressing

Pints 23c

| pints 15c

Tomato Juice c.n.,. r..

23c

Kraft Cheese

15c

Qts. 37c

MILK

CAROLENE

(Compound)

OUR MOTHER S

COCOA

2
Can

15c
5c

OLD WITCH AMMONIA, quarts, 9c
SUNBRITE CLEANSER . 2 boxes 9c
MEDIUM IVORY_______ 2 bars 11c
CHIFSO FLAKES________ box 19c
CHIPSO GRANULES.......... box 19c

P and G Laundry

MEAT BARGAINS!

Fruits and Vegetables

Hamburger rmi.c~na
2 iu 25c
Pork Chops Lran.^urai,
u. 24c
u 12c

Beef Kettle Roasts
Veal Roasts

Pork Loin Roasts

“w

Lean Chunk Bacon

u. |Qc
u. 21c
n. 2Oc

SOAP

IO

37c

Potatoes
pl. 2lc

sign that May is here.
Miss Betty Lane is numbered
among the sick this week.
Mrs. John Wood has been con­
Mrs. Fred fined to her home by illness and is
slowly gaining.

Thom 8L. al Pennock hospital. •
Mrs. Alice Bachelder is able to be

SPRING INFORMAL
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
WAS PLEASANT AFFAIR
WORLD WAR VETERANS
Civic Players Enjoy Evening1

How Adjusted Service Bonds

&lt;nd
E. Wlllsey
-Mr.
:------— Mrs
aimLeon
u atjciai
wcvxsareuuicm ai uie
of Entertainment and
WiU Be Bent—Wist
occupying the Bechtel house on home ot her daughter
8. Hanover St.
Newton.
Dancing
Steps to Take
' Notice—The Jordan Maytag co.
Flfteen members of Emmanuel nicely from her recent operation al
The walls of Raed's "opery house"
The
following information relative
wll) have its new location in the church attended lhe
Mite
Box
rang last Friday night m the Has­ to Veterans’ --- -----White Globe Confectionery store. service held Sunday afternoon at Pennock hospital.
tings
Otvic
Players
gathered
for
It looks as tho Hastings Is to have
East State St. Sec adv. for partlcu- St. Luke's church. Kalainasoo. Rob­
their Spring Informal. Even the headquarters and should
ert Burch carried the banner and another peppy series of soft ball weather was on Ita best behavior,
Wt wish we could find a home Maurene Haavlnd presented the Of­ games tilts season.
and it can truthfully be said that "a
The Adjusted Service Bonds and
Floyd Plate faced Justice Mat­ good lime WM had by all"
for everyone who comes into the fering of the local church.
Odd amount Treasury check,
for
thews
Tuesday
on
a
disorderly
Banner office these days inquiring
The comerstone for the new high
each entitled veteran, will be sent
charge. He was given a Jail senif we know where they could get a
house to rent.
day afternoon at three p'clock with
didn't care to dance, and. of course, tered mail, for personal delivery
’ Homer Hughes, a former well appropriate ceremonies. The chief
refreshments (There were'a couple only to him. or his legal represen­
known resident of Prairieville, died speaker was Prof. John H. Muy- Mrs. Russel) Hinckley of Freeport. of youngsters there, sitting rather tative. with return receipt demanded.
skens of the University of Michi­ Friday. April 24. at the home at her quietly on lhe side lines, but when Delivery will not be made to any­
a brother of Richard, Charles and gan whose subject was "Our Own
food was mentioned, you should one else. Such mall will not be for­
North Irving.
Fred Hughes of Prairieville.
People." warded to another address, except
Mr. and Mrs. Archie McDonald
Tonight. Thursday. Is the Mother scopes caused a lot ef merriment, under the Jurisdiction of the same
Allegan claims the oldest twins in
have purchased two lots of Wallace the state, residents there since their and Daughter banquet at the Meth­ too. The outstanding feature of the local post
office. All veterans
Osborn on his property on W. Wal­ i fifth birthday—Mrs. Mary Adelia odist church parlors. A splendid
should
therefore,
be
warned
nut and are planning to build a Russell and Mrs. Martha Amelia program has been prepared as given
to promptly advise the Veterans'
, home there at some future time.
done
with
Tom
Myers,
Marcelene
Administration
Office, to which
Smith. 89 years old. Both were
This Is forsythia time in Hastings teachers in Allegan county in their
Campbell.
Mr^
Dorothy
Dunlap,
their applications were sent, of all
Mrs. Warren Moore is gaining
It has been several years since that earlier years. They are now widows slowly from her recent illness. Mrs. Bill Kennedy and Laurence Bar­ changes of address. Addresses, in
graceful bush has been so loaded and live together.
Ora Hall is still at the home of nett in the cast which was directed
with Its bright lemon
colored
M. L. Coville. 85. was in lhe office her brother. Warren Moore, and will by Mrs. James Bristol. Bus Cleve­ cepted by the Veterans’ Administra­
blossoms Last year a hard frost
land. who had the lead, made a tion.
Friday to have ala Banner trans­ remain till Mrs. Moore Is better.
came Just in time to nip the buds.
I realistically wobbly old man. but
Each local post office will be des­
ferred to
his
present address.'
Mr. and Mrs John Shutes are he confided later that the wobbling
The B- W. BiLu Company of late
ignated as a Transfer Agent. To re­
; Woodland. R 2 Mr. CovlUe is one moving from N, Broadway to Bast
has done its full share to advertise
of lhe pioneers of Barry county, Mill St., having sold their home to was entirely due to the fact that deem an Adjusted Service Bond, lhe
lhe name of Hastings around tiie
his cane Insisted on sliding around veteran will make written request
having coming to Woodland town­
। world. The latter part of last week it
at the least little pressure upon It. therefor on the back of such bond,
shipped a carload of machinery to ship from New York state with his getting it ready for occupancy.
It created a good effect anyway.
which must be certified by a post­
parents when n baby, and can't re­
Fred Phillips, who has been very
England No telling where it will go
Mrs. c..
E- j.
J. rruit.
Pratt niauc
made nn
an an- master. a Judge or clerk of any
1 ----- C
ikf.
member when he hasn't had the seriously "kJ?
ill in,
for
—
—
•
—
1
*
1
r “IT 1 weeks with | n0Uncement about the forthcoming United States court, or an executive
from there.
Banner in his family
Pneumonl* »nd cornpll- production “Servant In the House"
i Rural schools are closing rapidly
Lumber jack Smith and Lumber cations,
cations was
wax taken
taken to
tn Pennock
Pennnek hos
Kn..­ and
g llrfe alUntUnce , officer of an incorporated bank or
! these days. Goodwill and Tanner in Jack Bru.I and an old prospector j pita) Monday. Reports
it trust company, who. by peraonal
pital Monday. Reports on Wednes- , both performances. When the musiI-­ | knowledge or through two witnesses
I Rutland. Eagle tn Assyria finishing packed HWlr
„y gtl
, his condition
their tools in a trailer at- ,| a
day
gave
cians finally played “Lights Out"
I" | whom he knows, thus identlfiea the
their 8 months term last Friday; taChe(j to a ford and started for orable.
everyone
went
home
feeling
that
the
applicant as the owner of the bond.
moreJ are
closing
•
—
I1[several
------—
----------” uthis
.. week.
77; toy
fll- -i&lt; The rnnrtltlnn
i Spring Informal had been a distinct
“!,7."
“LiXd
Pr“77
u“
’----•"
,1U
toytiuxwtwcsk
Intend to in-a.
cut .nd
wh0 wnf
„ Mra
^Jund ta
The veteran will then tum such
~— .. u —7 —
. •— , ,
wuu
iuuua m net success.
bond over to the local postmaster
j have finished.
hew umber end peoepem tor Bold. woodJhM where lbo had t,Utn d„.
receiving a receipt therefor, and the
Tae-k- says
eneew he
he will
wilt remember
re mn era he r his.
tile. ...
..
...
. . .
Jack
Ing the cold weather, is very critical. EVENING MEETING
local postmaster win then forward
Barry county friends with a few She ta still at her home at 1320 S’.
OF GARDEN CLUB. same to the pent office designated
nuggets if they make a strike Jefferson. Mr and Mrs. Leon E.
The Thomapple Garden Club as Redemption Agent for such Dis­
"Gold is where you find it."
Wlllsey are caring for her.
will hold an evening meeting in the trict.
------ . ----BWM. ,two
wu M
1TO
and.-----------within .from
to ,five
It probably will come os a sur­
court room. Tuesday, May 12 at days thereafter, the veteran will reprise to many of lhe old /«‘cients Thomapple. Is a cousin of Dr. Rob7:30. The speaker WBE- be Paul celve a Treasury check in payment
of Hastings when we remind them frlAOn O.1P of the heroes of the
------rc- Krohn of M. S. C.. secretary of the' thcreof.
that there arc left on Slate street
.....
cent mining disaster in Nova Seo- Michigan Horticultural society, who
only three
of lhe' really
-------- ra-(.
,
,old, business
I t,a- She naturally followed the' will address the club on the "Culconcerns.
concems. The retirement of jnhn
John , (lally reporla of thp rescue with1 ture and Arrangement of Flowers YEARS HAVE BROUGHT
Wclsscrt
recently
j
«• «&lt;z.r. rw*n
v leaves
aipx the Has’• i mon
than ordinary interest.
I for Show purposes." This meeting
A DECIDED CHANGE
lings
Banner. Goodyear
Bros 'i
nr saw
#aw most
Inoai of
o, lhe
MIC fashion
msmon disai3. is
15 being
ocing held
neia in
inc evening in order
oraer
We
In the
K*" |C°rtPanu (""h CarVCJ?
Pla&gt; nl th0 Achievement Day pro- that the men who are interested
Stebbins sharing thLs honor M. L. gram the other afternoon. Quite may have a chance to hear this Furnaces and Coal Bins Used
Cook, of lhe Banner, we believe, has a revelation It was. too, so many speaker. A large attendance is dcto F|U Court House
the distinction of being the oldest prclty dresses and colors, and com- sired.
Basement
man on the street in business ex­ binations, each dress made by ita I
■
&lt;*&gt;----------------Old timers going into the base­
perience. Mr Cook completing his
। TWENTY-SEVEN IN
ment of the court house and seeing
fifty-sixth year in July
Mrs u v hrASiner hM received i
Replies to a questionnaire sent wor(i from her brother. Guy Shaull.
GRADUATING CLASS how Inadequate Is the space for the
present requirements recall, that
out by county School Commissioner who
now loCttU.d for B Umc al,
------------Maude Smith, indicate that 62 rural Providence. R. 1.. that things are Work Progreasinff on New when it was built In 1892. every foot
teachers would like to have the booming in that section with every
a .
.
...?
,
of the floor space was given over to
— —
।i.fooommg
m
section wnn every
Tnnzhbr.
I'kar
I .,,mat
.
...
Hnnnnl
Hlltlrlinnr at
ra I
Mthm
Encmpmenl
.1
Ck.r
clOTy
„„
d
Busin.u
corSchool
Building
। Now that Winter Is past send us
«M«8. b&amp;llevo ft qr not, W&lt;h* re­
lake Hr.I tall. Sept 18111 nr.d |9lh.. ^-spondln.ly good
Nashville
quired to heal it In those days. The
wlulr H would ...her h.vr 11 rrjlw .-r.Lhr'hun t ton rspecl.lclean and press them and return
The Nashville graduating class old "Sinead system." considered the
pl.rrd by some other .etoty Rtty | ,/|llvon,bl&lt;.
lroul h.hh.g 1„ UU.
them to you in a "moth-proof"
In nauni.
heating, ptacea
placed a
will consist of twenty-seven, of last
— word then .»
Indicated they would like “ l»v'
UMO
whom sixteen are girls and eleven 1 furnace in each of
Ui the four
,our comer
lhe geography work books continued,
led
o w S(.uh],
summer. Cleaning will remove
boys.
11 --------rooms,—
with a fifth smaller
"
sized- to
I l“«y enough to get ten on to tot I
all larvae and the moth-proof
■no", (wo tailed to .rower u&gt;« 1liS'JSS.'XSS I w“‘&lt;”
«“»««• “hool heat the private offices of the cir­
day out. and Erls Jarman caught1
quexion Rrty-elttb. jenodl, &gt;2" be ,lm,l on H.U craek. on, twto, |™ cuit Judge. AU the rest of the space
was taken up with coal. In the win­
have something to exhibit at the 1
of killing moths. Why take
^^oJJd'fES'Mort'o1? ter the old Janitors used to complain
Fair Sept B-12 and 38 schools were, “people in = serttout Tf the •
chancre with unknown methods?
reported to be represented nt our county, notably Hope township, re- lhe 8teel work 13 ln p]fc^ 7-^ cUm they had no time to shovel walks.
County Field meet. Saturday. May port lhe finding of young lamb.
t^ fteat ftoo^ktoXrga^ tor it kept them busy hopping from
9 th.
dead, with two holes bored in the
and grades one and two-Arill one to the other of those five yawn­
skull The increasing flocksiof bux- £”
wa^XJ ing furnaces.
When the system was finally
seen turned out by Chas Cantrell, zards in the air give proof to the lockers The building will be as
an Inmate of Southern Michigan theory that they are the “Wler^" I X" firemif m posXle When changed the saving effected in two
prison, is an oil portrait of the late xftcr8borinobmtnlStm.r ,kui}r VlcUtn* I completed the new plant will have years In lhe cost of coal practically
paid
for the new one. The Women's
Will Rogers, an excellent likeness, after boring into the skulls.
। ,«vm
... ",
,
seven new scnooi mramw
rooms, ■a n*
new. ofwhich he sent to Attorney Kim
converted into something more atSigler. Cantrell who was sent up eomrn,.„■„(,on
tacUve than a coal bln. The latter
from Barry county several years I He
lie Forum
roram column
column on
on the
to editorial
emtoH.I 1I
,ho.„
&lt;nd
room, the County Poor Commission
ago when W G Bauer was prose­ l&gt;age—a second one from Washing­
cutor. has quite a talent for paint­ ton. written by a person known to be thoroughly modem in every re­ and lhe Welfare Agency now fill
every bit of space not required for
ing which has evidently been en­ lhe editors of the Banner, who can spect.
couraged at the prison. Some time vouch for lhe reliability of the
The old building will house the the one boiler room and hallway.
ago Judge McPeek received a like­ writer, who uses the pen name Junior high—grades seven, eight
ness of himself in oils. Cantrell also "Blaine Barry." This week's article and nine—and ' the senior high, COUNTY FEDERATION AT
WOODLAND NEXT THURSDAY.
PHONE 2140
did quite an artistic portrait, paint­ contains first hand information composed of the upper three grades.
The Barry County Federation of
ed from a kodak picture of Mr Sig­ concerning the alms and purposes Nashville is to be congratulated on
ler's little daughter Beverly, who ot the Communists, obtained from this fine addition to her school Women’s Clubs will hold an all day
meeting al Woodland next Thurs­
died in 1934 One wonders if this one of them. In an unsolicited inter­ plant.
day. May 14. beginning al 9:30. Re­
talent had been encouraged al the | view It's well worth your reading.
porta of officers and club presidents
proper lime if the man would now I We hope for more communications KIM SIGLER SELLS
JEFFERSON ST. HOME. will fill the morning. Lunch will be
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
be jcrvlrig a prison sentence.
from the same source.
served
al noon in the church.
By a deal completed yesterday.
Would you believe it possible that
The afternoon program Ls a fine
a man 74 years old. who had lived Dr Gordon F. Fisher has pur­ one with special music Dr. W. D.
all his life Just over the county line chased Kim Sigler's Jefferson street Henderson of the University ot
between Eaton and Barry, near properly, the latter giving posses­ Michigan one of lhe best known
Bellevue and only 25 miles from sion the 1st of June.
and popular speakers in Michigan
Dr. FLsher plans to have his office will give an address: “The Person­
Hastings, paid his first visit io our
city last week? Judge Clement in connection, and will build an ad­ ality of Uncle 8am: National Trails
vouches for lhe fact, as the man dition for that purpose.
and lhe Future of America."
accompanied a neighbor, who had '
Mr. and Mrs. Sigler will spend
Owing to the late hour at which
We «rge you to watch our Screen for changes without not tea
business in the probate court, and the summer at their Gun lake home, the notice was received only a con­
had invited him to come along with and beyond that their plans of resi­ densed report of the program is
him
He made lhe statement Just dence for the winter are not definite possible. But all will be assured
SUNDAY and MONDAY. MAY 10 and 11
before he was leaving or lhe Judge as yet. Mr. Sigler does not expect of a worthwhile day al Woodland.
says he would have insisted on tak­ to start lhe building of his new
4
IRVIN S. COBB in
ing him for a tour of lhe town so home on the West Green street DOWLING CEMETERY
\ he would real lac how much he had property until next year.
CLEAN-UP DAY.
missed all thru lhe years.
Members of the Dowling Ceme­
"It Is munitions salesmanship tery Cirelc and others interested
Rochelle Hudson, Johnny Downs and Norman Foster
"The. j.....
phrase
— 'three
.....e score and ten' that Is rushing all nations into an will meet al lhe Cemetery. May 14.
has been the cause ot more prema- armaments race today and causing for a bee and clean-up day. Bring
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY, 1:00 and 3:00 o'clock
| ture deaths than any other one fac-1 them to arm to the teeth."—Frank rakes Pot luck dinner.—Blanche
Other Performances—Adults 25c, Children 10c
I tor."—Alexander Black.
. b. Kellogg.
Powell. Secy.

No Extra
Charge
for Moth
Proof
Bag

T

;sp

H. H.
TC

shellack
neighbo
coming
4-0 scon
main fe
Lefty Fr
Ten mo
added to
There w
Ecored a
were th
Last
Ionia a
the sho
the gam
played
most pm
after lo
Tonig
men pla
at home
schedul
with H

of the
some di
Beldi
the new
League,
a good
fans wl

here. T

of thos

LOCAL

McCREERY’S

DRY CLEANERS

-t-e-t* e-t-e

t EVERYBODY'S OLD MAN t

Allega

The
fcred a
of the
Saturd
uf the
events.
score o

which
their s
Ion Hig
The

ddenla
which
field ev
placed
ly In
points

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. MAY 12

THE DARK ANGEL'
FREDERIC MARCH.

t
❖
j.

MERLE OBERON.
MARSHALL

HERBERT

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. MAY 13 and 14
Victor
vicror rvici-agicn
McLaglcn ana
and rrcaaie
Freddie uarrnoiomew
Bartholomew

I PROFESSIONAL SOLDIER I
GLORIA STUART and CONSTANCE COLLIER

HEAD LETTUCE
Each_______ 6c

Adults 25c, Children l»c

*
FRIDAY and SATURDAY, MAY 15 and 16
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

FREE DAY—MAY 13th

GENE AUTRY in

LUCKY DAY—APRIL 13th

COMIN’ ROUND THE MOUNTAIN £

SAVE YOU* CASH RtCISTIR RECEIPTS FOE LUCKY DAY IN MAY!
11’

Food Center

FEATURE NO. 2

+

Super Sleuth Solves Mammoth Murder Mystery!

&lt;►&amp;,

i

w

♦ CHARLIE CHAN at the CIRCUS j

B

Warner Otand. George and Olive Brasno and Keye Luke

c

Episode No. 3 of “FLANK GORDON" Will Be Shown at

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, MAY 1. ISM

FLOWERS IVOR
OTHERS'LW
POTTED PLANTS .. .
•
•
•
•
•

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Mother!
Sunday. May 10, la her day, don't let It
pass without a remembrance from you. Thia

CUT FLOWERS ...

(o’1'

\ i*'*°

\

,

"You can tell her
better with flowers"

HYDRANGEAS
CALCEOLARIAS
MARTHA WASHINGTONS
CINIRARIAS
PRIMROSES

•
•
•
&lt; •
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•

' fto**1* *
•
SO*1''^****
n-^&lt;.

CLYDE WILCOX,

l|~
.
-■ ill
sprinters
I\.11 Sporting
Items j\ JobTheagainst
*
°
tHe
■

'

II
' '
HU C IJIIUC
■ n. O. IiINC

—
-'
I note
LUotZO

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
Courage la like the stars; yon
will not succeed in touching It
with your hands, but like the sea­
faring man on the desert of wa-

ANOTHEQ.
SLEET ST^RM
COMING. WISH
1WAZ&gt; THAT
FAl2M£ft; HE'S

did a much better
Allegan team who
I 1Allied up 43 points. Coach Bvnnett's men trailed four points with
'39 points. Scores in the various

found in China.

The "Old Ship" meeting bouse of
Hingham. Mass.. Is one of the old­
est religious edifices In this coun­
try. It has been used tor worship
since J6C2.

BOkN't

TWO. l1M.n Uw Brnuk-1
men play their first scheduled game
at home. Up to the present time all
scheduled games have ended 4-0
with Hastings winning only one
game. This will be the fourth game
of lhe schedule and should have
some different kind of numbers.
Belding, which Is a member of
the newly formed West Central
League, comes to our fair city with
a good little ball club and local
tans will have n fine opportunity to
sec
kt the
mi- national
iiouuiiai game
Kuinc revived
revives again
again
-- game.....
.................
"
here The
Is scheduled
to start
nt 4 o'clock and needs the support
___
.
.
..
.
of those who tare able to attend.

j
_ _________-tar'
i IIAcTINfts
inure
I ,,AST,NC“. THKEE:
[
OUT ot FIVE EVENTS,
The second tennis meet of the
year occurred Tuesday oo lhe High
school courts between Allegan and
|
*“•* lhe locaLs winning
two out of t,lree events, the same
as
thelr Rrst c,“h w,.th Allegan,
April 18. altho the local boys
, P‘“yed hi much better farm.
,. Veslerday
won ..
No. 1 .
.
. r Crothers
~ ---------' slnali-«
*nr“-----Jj.n8l
“' ,6'7,:A-7G*3'.n-76'4:C-4. A?s,cl
* won
f*°; ’
7-9: 8-4; Gladstone
1j lost
Inst Nn
:t singles,
Klni'lr . 6-3;
r.-&lt; 6-1.
ti-l
No. 3
| Kelley and-,Leary lost No. 1 dou­
bles. 6-0; ff-4. Swartz and Caukln
TRACKMEN
won No. 2 doubles. 6-4; 6-1.
QllfrcpR nPFFAT' Hastings will play Battle Creek
ut-rE-H 1 central here tomorrow afternoon al

The high school track squad suffered a crushing defeat at the hands
of the strong Allegan crew last
Saturday on the home grounds. Out
of the possible 44 points in field
events, the local team were able to
•core only three points. Allegan has
a powerful track team, proof of
which is borne out by the fact
their squad tied Grand Rapids Un­
ion High in a recent meet.
The total points for the meet
were: Allegan. 84; Hastings. 42. In­
cidentally. 41 of the 42 points by
which Allegan won were lost In tire
field events. McLeod and Finkbelner
placed third and fourth respectively in the shotput for the three
polnta won in field events. The Iocal team was blanked in the pole

IN

her sister. Mrs. Myric Curtis,
a few days Ulis week returning
home Bunday. She Is slowly recovcrIng from a broken hip.
Mrs. Della Cotton and Walker
Cotton were Hastings visitors Fri­
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell McLenithan
and daughter Shirley of Middleville
were Sunday visitors of her sister.
Mrs. Vonda McClelland, and her
father. Will Smith, the latter ac­
companying them home.
Mrs. Jasper Jordan and daughter
Arleta visited her son. Irving Jordan,
and
Of Northwest
'
1 "family
family of
. woodland Wednesday,
j
----------------- ---------------- ---------| Those people who claim lhe country Is ruined are trying mighty hard
to get control of the wreck.

1876

THESE GOES’ 1ME
MAIL PLANE—
GOSH' THAT^THE
LIFE.'WI^’H I WAS
UPTHEBE NJYEAO
OFHAVIN'TOFEBD
THE Pl&amp;C

When you select your new
Spring and Summer suit just
ask yourself,

"What*s Behind
the Purchase?"
M. Born &amp; Company Made-

LOPE UP tJKE

TAMARAC.
clarence Myers of Woodbury

backed by sixty years' ex­
perience in catering to the
tailoring needs of the best
dressed men in America.

■tTKWlL

THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Woodruff
spent Thursday in Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Forest Potter and
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush of Has­
tings called on Mrs. Rebecca Creta
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammond
entertained Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
Snyder and Mr. Buehler from Cale­
donia Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Bolton &lt;fl
Hastings were dinner guests of War­
ren Bolton's Monday.
Mrs Chas. Woodruff, Mrs. War­
ren Bolton and Mrs. Clifford Ham-

mond attended the county Exten­
sion Day held at the M. E. church
in Hastings Friday.
Our school days are drawing to a
close for another year. Only a few
Viore weeks to go.
"If the newspaper were to deter­
mine tomorrow to create a psychol­
ogy adverse to lhe desperado, not to
make him a hero, out to dwell upon
the fact that &lt;rlme does not pay. it
would create a psychology tremen­
dously helpful In solving this great
problem.'—Harry F Payer.

All Wool Fabrics.
Satis­
faction guaranteed. Values
absolutely unmatched —
anywhere.
Spring and Summer Fabrics
now on display.

"AL" G. McCALL
“Waiting's Tailor For Man Who
Know tha Difference"

RIGHT NOW Is the Logical
Time To BUY FURNITURE/
Prices are low and sure to go m uch higher in the very near fu­
ture. Our stock is large and well selected.

GRADUATE
NOW IS THE TIME to

choose that Special Gift.
During May we are offer­
ing SPECIAL Prices on

Watches for Graduation.

April wai the Biggest Month we hove hod in several years and May bids fair
to be the Largest Month we have ever had in the history of our business.

FAD miATUCD’C AAV
rVlt IVIvIrlEll W Uni

• • buy her »omethin9 ,he
needs and will long remember.
That piece of furniture she has been wanting will surely fill the bill. . . .
We have already sold several Overstuffed Living Room Suites for that pur­
pose. You can suit her from our large stock which we keep up to the min­
ute in style and construction.

A good looking tvo-pieco,
soft and comfortable suite,
for .nir-

CO/&gt;50
—

Other, ot S49.00. 559.00
•" ’89 0°-

Everyone is worth much more than we ore asking I
€. B. HODGES
DEPENDABLE JEWELER
PHONE 31M

HASTINGS

MILLER FURNITURE CO.
PHONE 2226

The largast of tlys eggs produced
by ostriches llvlng'today are only
about three-fourths as large as fos-

and following It. you reach your
destiny

G°TTHE ONLY
LIFE.*

The high school nine took a Allegan. 6; Hastings 5- 1 mile. Alshellacklng from their Middleville j legan. 7; Hastings. 4. 440 yd. dash,
neighbors a week ago Wednesday. I Allegan 5; Hastings, fl 220 yd. dash:
coming out on the vacant end of a I Allegan 0, Hastings 5 200 yd. low
4-0 score. Loose playing was the hurdles: Allegan B. Hastings 3. 880
main feature of the local team with &gt;'d dash: Allegan 3. Hastings 8.
Lefty Freeman pitching a fine game. Relay. Hastings "5
Best times were made by Conlee
Ten more strike-out scalps were
added to his collection in this game. of Allegan who ran the IOO yd. dash
There was only one earned run । in 102 seconds. He also made the
scored against him. the other three 220 yd. dash in 23.7 seconds Wil­
liams of Hastings showed his opwere lhe result of bobbles.
Last Tuesday the team went to
Ionia and again were faced with secot,ds- C- Smith set a fast pace In
the short end of a 4-0 count when ! lh,1888 yd da,h to *ln ln 2:17.
the game was over. The team dis-1
point men for Allegan were
played a little better form for the J Goodwin
12 3-&lt; P01’1^- Coulee,
most part but were unable to score 8 1’“' Bnd Shelb 7 1-2. The three
after loading the bases twice
hlgh P°lne mcn ,or Hastings were L

Allegan Gets 41 Out of aj
Possible 44 Points
'
I Mrs.
in Meet Here
i visited

The Florist

Jutnp and brond Jump

vault.

’

TO
cvcnte were:
120 yd 3 hlgh
iu MIIDDLEVILLE
IVIIIUULCVILLC 4-0
4- U|AllegMt.B;
Hasting.,
100 ydhurdles
dash:-

LOCAL

TO BE GIVEN AWAY

,

TELEPHONE 2530
|p

$

day affords a wonderful opportunity to ex­
press 'your appreciation and show your af­
fection. Flowers will convey your sentiments
better titan words. We have a large assort­
ment of cut Bopers and potted plants. Come
in and make your own selection, or phone,

SNAPDRAGONS
SWEET PEAS
ROSES
DAFFODILS
Combination BOUQUETS
GARDENIAS

HASTINGS, MICH.

Naples has a museum devoted to
.exhibits of ancient technology, such
as Homan presses, scales, and flour
kneading devices.

Science bos eflU to capture the

square foot of xuntahloo eoattauouily delivers 130 watts pt electri cal power.

�The Hastings Banner

It*a the Spirit of a Community
That Count*—Not It* Sim

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

4 MICHIGAN

JUST AS IMPORTANT AS ISSUKS AND PROMISES

THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1916

'Round About Town
Hew to the line, 1st the qulpe

Itl

The Public Forum

would use force. ;i asked him what
he meant by "force." and he said.
"Well. take over the Government "

LUCKY.
beads in the sands of cittecn apathy
and disinterest by claiming that "it's
up to the newspapers to give us bet­
than to careful driving, as any im- ter government.*' Any honest news-

An unfailing ifc
when Chris moves

traSc on our streets could testify

summer— lhe sama be reprinted in the Ban­

Wonder when the benches will be
brought out on lhe front court house
lawn; last summer this was the
city's best known open-air forum.

DIVISION OF WEALTH.
Radical congressmen have raised

people In the United States own
"batting" around the corners from
aide streets onto main thorough- This view Is a popular one and has

Those little cup Ida on the foun­
tain seem to be preUy well tanned
already—or could it be nut?

been accepted without question.
State street are forbidden by ordi­
As a matter of fact, according to
nance but you see them made al­ Representative George W. Donero
most every day—not once but many of Royal Oak. census records show
times. No one has been hit yet. that sixteen million people own the
thank fortune, but such good luck I nation's farms and city homes ag-

Al Becker, they tall me, is a "bpar
kitty” at making 6:00 A. M. lenhis
appointments—You know, one of
those cute, fuzzy little kittens that
curls up on a soft rug and snoozes
contentedly.

18211771

Or maybe he thought that the i
competition was too fast at this!
early date in the season.

canl continue indefinitely. In spite gregating $57,000,000,000.
Another
of all warnings there are many. |
mlmon people have $8,000,000,‘seconds । poo invested In building and loans
risk eternity by dashing across | savings with forty-five million sav-

intersecUons—in many In- j
bank accounts aggregating
whan they do not even have | $30,000,000,000. There is nine billion
the theoretical right of way. •'Right invested in livestock and farm ma­
of way." how that Urn
chinery and six and one-half billlou
of way In household furniture. The Ameri­
A Jot of good the legal right
■
for one after a bad smash up; can Telephone &lt;k Telegraph Com­
bones, or pany, one of the largest corporations
disfiguring cuts and bruises or tn this country has 700,000 stock­

Those Civic Player pictures in­
trigue me—If Tommy were a flea
what a swell time he could have
exploring about in all of those
whiskers.

'doppomw

I always did like whiskers, anyway
—They must be a great source of
comfort when you feel like blushing.

,7Sy*--n

But then, on the other hand,
they'd bum like the devil if you ever
got 'em soused in hot soup.

holders.
may be lower here than

No one makes the claim that the
wealth of this country is perfectly
than probable that traffic condi­
distributed. However the picture Is
tions are no belter—possibly much
; radicals would have us believe. Oertalnly the situation is not so acute
NEWSPAPER INFLUENCE.
' that it calls for socialistic expcrlJust what part do newspapers
| mentation.
play in government and what part
should they attempt to play? Arc
OUT OF TUNE.
newspapers attempting to be too
Senator Alben W. Barkley of
anciming freely important events of Kentucky we read, is again sched­
current interest? What have people uled to be lhe "keynoter" at the
a right to expect from their news­ Democratic national convention.
papers ip the ..continual flght for There is a bit of irony in this. Four
good governmail? These questions ^ears ago while fulfllling a similar
are discussed by George Averill, edi­ assignment he said:

"What shall the Democratic par­
tor of the Birmingham Eccentric,
in his excellent weekly newspaper. ly do when they come into power
on the fourth day of next March?
He says that:
' "Often, today, you hear people in I Shall we pay Up service to econconvenatlon say: "The reason our I omy. or shaU we abolish every uncauntry is In lhe hands of poUll- necessary office, every useless comclans is simply because, since wc1 mission, every redundant bureau
have a government by newspapers, that has been established under the
lhe newspapers fall to rouse the expensive regimes of Harding and
people to save their government Coolidge and Hoover, and Uft from
from the politicians." Every time I ' tire backs of the American people
hear this I am Inclined to laugh, i (loud applause from lhe Demo­
Fur. I am completely convinced, cratlc delegates! that intolerable
after many years in the newspaper' ' and unbearable load which weighs
business, that newspapers never can। down today until they can scarcely
(and shouldn't if they could) try toi look the sun in the face?"
•Tun government" in this or any
"Shall we pay lip service to econ­
other
—country.
-------- rI omy?" Judging from the record of
■Newspapers may. and do. wield a the administration to date in bogtremendous influence
in
many glng the government finances lower
things of life, including government; in the mire of deficits than they
but to say that newspapers can and have ever been before tn the history
should do the work of the citizenry of the United Slates, the answer is
Is to suggest the impossible. News­ —"We shall."
papers do devote much of their re­
"Shall we abolish every unnec­
sources to matters affecting govern­ essary office, every useless commis­
ment; they constantly keep the pub­ sion. every redundant bureau that
lic Informed on civic problems, they has been established under the ex­
write special features and editorials pensive regimes of Harding and
and news stories for every issue of Coolidge and Hoover?" In view of
their publications; but the public the Alphabet Soup bureaus which
has a short memory, is disinterested multiplied and expanded like mi­
in vital questions, fails to register crobes on a hunk of putrid meat, fill­
anything like a 100 per cent vote al ing all available space in the gov­
election time, listens to the ravings ernment buildings at Washington
of the half-informed public official and overflowing into rented private
and lhe demagogue, knows marc ] buildings, the answer is "No. my-y

They're probably not worth
Have you noticed some of. the
modish spring outfits in which
many of the beauteous feminine
population of our lovely little city
are garbed? Imported from Paris?
Not nt all! Simply tae visible evi­
dence that these 4-H classes In
dressmaking have been a charming
success.

znnni

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say
DREAMERS ’AWAKE.
Saturday the editor had a long
talk with a man who believes he
has the recipe from which all the
lib of the country. Indeed the
world, might be cured. Monday,
bright and early, in came a much
younger man. his face eager and en­
thusiastic. He was peddling tracts
and announcing a meeting to be
held at the court house soon. In
which another fanciful plan of
bringing prosperity to everyone is'
to be the theme. Money for every­
thing. borrowed without interest, is
what this group recommends.
Last year a Scottish engineer
and "itinerant Utopian" made a tour
of Western Canada. He sold his
ideas
to a glib-tongued political
orator who In turn rode into office
on his promise to pay every adult a
steady income of at least $25 each
month. A majority of 750.000 Alber­
ta farmers and factor}- hands took
his word for it and elected him
premier of Alberta.
Alberta was deeply In debt. $171.­
000.000 for 375,000 people to pay is
some debt tor any state or pro­
vince. How will this money be paid?
How are you going to get $25 a year
for every adult? The newly elected
premier answered these questions by
retaining his Scottish engineermentor as his advisor agreeing to
pay the "prophet in another man's
country." $14,000 for two years, out
of the public treasury of course.
The dream is now over. The happy
dreamers have had a rude awaken­
ing. They did not get their $25
monthly. Instead they are told tliat
income taxes are to be Increased

A Quotation
A STEADY persever­
ance will in lime lead
to a certain victory
—Goldsmith.

"Eating too much fills the churchyard
faster than eating too little."
MAY

Day. PouMylvaaia.

II— 1*5.000 United Sutet coal
miners atrike. !W2.

about bridge, movie stars, golf and Ifriends! Let's show these tightwads
lhe eomles than II does about gov- what a real pending spree"te iike!" sales tax on all commodities is to be
levied: that auto licenses will be
all the newspaper1 During hu sjvech four years ago. higher; ihtTlhaV bachelor taxes are
preaching in the world won I pre- (ihe fluent senator from Kentucky to be Increased from nine to $36 per
vent bad government. In more ways । also said: "Il is not a wholesome head. Meanwhile the Scottish en-

ernment—so

than one. newspapers are quite thing to have eight or ten million
helpless in comtructing a social.! mcn and women unable to procure
political, and economic Utopia for labor from which to support thempeople bo are preachers Just as
Bnd their families in a nation
helples* in bringing their flocks into , which has boasted of its great
a land of milk and honey.
wealth."
In
the
final
analysis,
the
solutions
]
in the final analysis, tne solutions, Jn vlew
oI- thc len OT lwe-|ve mU.
for civic
ills aril!
dvic Ills
will nnlv
only rnm«*
come when as iion unemployed right now despite
majority of our people, aroused to billions of government
spending,
an —
active,
interest ...
In uic.
lhe even tne
the mos
most
rabid
off Republicans
...
...v, intelligent ...vu.
t ra
bid O
proMem. or sorernmens. let UwU I'.-w
„
y
.
s
,.
You
rigbl
wh&lt;l
K111
■s,r- You are rt8hi!, Whal
voices be heud u election tune. ,0 ymJ intend to do .bout It now?"
lUdht here In Blrmlnjhsm. at our । Ollr ,ueia u
senator Bareley
annual aty election two weeks ato. wlll
t0
, bt,M

less than a per cent oi the reals- „lk In an entirely dlherent key
tered voters turned out at the polls yb, 0|, ofle rvFn b nusied. polished
How many ot our local rlllrena
p„bcd would „„„ do
know tbc names and addresses of1
----------:----------------- ■■■■ —
our U. fi. senators and congressman,
n
our alate senator and state repre-1
aentaUve? Not even a comfortable
The idea that demand never
minority of them. How many local again will equal supply would scare
people attend eity commission and juz more if people hadn’t said the

rlingent Paragraphs

school board

meetings?

a

mere]same thing in 1870 —Tacoma Lcd-

handful.
How many people take advantage
of the fret and open columns of a I What girls seem to learn at fin[ lading schools is that a man ought
newspaper to register their approval1
] not to marry if he can't hire a maid
or disapproval ot governmental
1 and cook to do the housework.—
policies? Hardly anybody. No. folks.
' Cincinnati inquirer.
control government. You may find

One reason Abraham Lincoln's
fault with many newspapers, and bed brought only &lt;20 al an auction
justly, for their Individual handling may Ue in the fact that Uncoin's
‘
some of their apparent

quirer.

glneer-economist has resigned from i
hi* Job as Reconstruction Advisor. I
He claims his plan was distorted .
and claims $6,449 in back pay.
This is a great, day for crack-pot I
economy. It is too bad that two and I
two make four. If arithmetic could ,
be changed so that two and two'
■ would add to six or eight some of
the plans might work.—Vem Brown
tn lhe Ingham Co. News.

Anything to keep the ladies lovely
—bless 'em!

-inner

AFTER an X-ray examlnation, a Kansas City. Kan.,
physician told Mrs. Andrew
Cates she was to be the mother
of twins.
Triplets arrived,
proving X still the unknown.

A device that counts grains
of sand for analysis of sedi­
ments has been developed by
a University of Chicago scien­
tist. thus throwing PWA work­
ers out of Jobs.

The Duke of Kent, on visiting
Cape Province, was hailed as
"Mighty Elephant” and the na­
tives of Transvaal called him
•'Lord of the White Cliffs."
Contraction: “White Elephant."

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday From Our Scrap Book
AN ENCHANTED GARDEN.
TWENTY YEARS AGOI shall never forget ray surprise
The Hostuigs Antl-Tuberculoris and delight on first beholding the
Society held an Interesting meeting bottom of the sea. The water with­
on Monday afternoon. The society in the reef was as calm as a pond;
will start a "Swat lhe Fly" cam­ and as there was no wind. It was
paign in Hastings.
quite clear, from the surface to the
Burnett More, who will complete i bottom, so that we could see down
a course in agriculture and land­ easily even nt a depth nf twenty
scape gardening at the Michigan or thirty yards. When Jack and I
Agricultural College next month has dived In shallower water, we ex­
been selected as teacher of agri­ pected to have found sand and
culture in the Marshall schools.
stones, instead of which wc found
-- ----Mr. and Mrs. F. Marvin Sage j ourselves In whal appeared really to
went to Grand Rapids. Saturday, to | be an enchanted garden. The whole
..... ------- and. of the
the iwitinm
bottom nf
of th,,
the laonpn
lagoon, as we
see "The Birth of- a Nation"
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. called the calm water within the
Archie McCoy.
Next Tuesday the Bijou will offer cry shape, size and hue. Some por­
two of the greatest stars in filmland, tions were formed like large mush­
Marguerite Clark and Jack Pickford rooms; others appeared like the
In Frances Hodgson Burnett's cele­ brain of a man. having stalks
brated romance. "The Pretty Sister or necks attached to them; but the
of Jose." Standing room Is al a most common kind was a species of
premium when Marguerite Clark is branching coral, and some portions
ware of a lovely pale pink colour,
featured.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bessmer others pure white. Among this
- purchased the Van Valkcnburg there grew large quantities of sea­
house justeast of Luke Waters' weed of the richest hues imaginable,
residence on Tuesday and will later and of the most graceful forms;
while innumerable fishes—blue. red.
reside there.
yellow, green and striped—sported
in and out among the flower-beds
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
Father Van Antwerp, who was of this submarine garden, and did
stationed here m 1881 and much
j loved by everyone, has Just cetebrated the 75th anniversary of his ordi| nation to the priesthood His De­
I troll parishioners at that lime preI sented him with a purse of $1,150
, and an automobile
I Archie McCoy last week dosed a
deal with the Youngs estate for the
I business lot Just west of Chidester
I and Burton's.
! Last week Guy Crook purchased
' Fred Wolcott's fruit, cigar and oon. fectionery business and took pos। session of it Friday.
I Mayor Lowry Monday evening
named P. T Colgrovc for city at­
I torney. Dr. D E Fuller, city physl; clan. Earl Goldsmith, chief of fire
. department.
1 Mrs Grace Anderson and Mrs.
Belle Emory will attend lhe May
Festival at Ann Arbor tomorrow.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Polter yesterday a io pound son.
At the residence of Julius Ralh' man. Grand Rapids by Rev. Cooley.
। Mattle M. Barber and Roman Bull,
i both of this city, were united in
' marriage.
I Mrs. Ella C. Hecox. probate regta. ter. was called to Charlotte Tues‘ day. to testify in lhe Thornappic
drain case now in court there.
Mr. and Mrs. F. H- Wilhelm are
temporarily quartered at the Has­
tings Howe. Mr Wilhelm Is the
'
new merchant tailor.

|i|

XETTBRS TO THE EDITOR

fall where they may I

approaching them. . . . when Jack
reached the bottom, hv grasped the
coral stems, and crept along on hit
hands and knees, peeping under the
observed him pick up one or two
oysters. . . so I also gathered a few.
—R. M. Baliantyne, in "The Coral
Island."

PRAXR1B COLORS
As one looks out today over lhe
rolling prairies, the beautiful lakes,
and the
many
willow-fringed
streams it is not difficult to believe
that Manitoba was the Chosen Land
ot the Indian gods. Entering the
province from lhe east, especially,
the sudden change from timberland
to prairie is startling: from the cool,
dark-green depths of luxuriant for­
ests one is swept, as by inaglc, into a
land drenched in color.
For miles the prairies are treeless
and level, or gently billowing.

ner In this column.

have something like Russia. I then
inasmuch as lhe O. o. McIntyre asltad him if ba thought wa would
articles arc all syndicated' and all be better off if we were, "like
copyrighted lhe Banner Is unable to RumIa," and he thought we would.
reprint it. But It Is a very sensible
The convention broke up on Sat­
and rlght-to-the-polnt item which urday. April nth. and the delegates
appeared In the Bunday Detroit left the city with lhe exception of
the National Executive Board and a
few acattering delegates. After they
Washington. D. C, April 29.
had disbanded. David A. Lasaer
Editors Banner:—
made the statement, that unless “de­
In recent years I have been much mands were met the organization
Interested in activities of the Com­ would lead tens of thousands in a
munists and hare read many ar­ hunger march on Lhe Capital next
ticles nn the subject, and exnvpta summer."
from the testimony of witnesses who
Before leaving the capital, how­
appeared before the Fish Congres­ ever. various groups had made mi­
sional
Investigating
Committee nor disturbances, one In lhe capital
some yean ago. but during the week building, which made It necessary
of April 5th. 1936. was privileged to to call for the capita! police. One
ha»e my first visit with a real Com­ contingent of eight bus loads on the
munist. I have talked with persons way down from New York City
Ntiom I knew were identified with caused a disturbance at Bel Air,
the movement, but they were al­ and 40 state police were called out
ways wary and not givlixr out in­ to maintain order.
formation.
Just why this infor­
A communist must do its he is
mant. a life-long resident of south­ tald by the leaders, if he Is told to
ern Michigan, was so loquacious J create a disturbance at a given
do not know, but his story was in­ time and place, he must'do so. All
teresting. and an eye-opener to me, such activities arc planned in ad­
and I hope it may be to you.
vance by ths leaders and each one
This man, whom I will call must carry out his assignment re­
“John," but that is not his name, gardless of whether he personally
was sent to Washington by the wonts to do so or not. The policy Is
Workers' Protective Union, as a to carry on a campaign of educa­
delegate to the sp-calied WPA Con­ tion so that each one is a potential
vention. held it the Capital City leader of any group he may enter
during Uie week mentioned. The and dominate lhe policy of the or­
Workers' Protective Union is a sub- ganization.
aldiary of the National Unemploy­
8o far this story lias nothing
ment Council of Detroit, both of particularly new in it. we all know
which be said were Communist or­ in a gnnera) way of the Communht
ganizations. The announced ptu- movement. Its purposes and tactics.
However. I think most of us have
reprosentalives of the various FWA feJt that it was something far re­
Workers' Organizations an oppor­ moved. tn Use large cities and Indus­
tunity to present their grievances trial centers, among the foreign cle­
and make their demands for new ment.—not at our very door.—but
appropriations for WPA projects I want to tell you some more of
John's story.
known to lhe Administration.
John further said, that while his
In substance he said: Wc domi­
particular group was supposedly a nate and control all WPa workers'
PWA Convention, it was sponsored, organizations. We concentrate our
organized and financed by the Com­ efforts upon lhe unemployed, the
munist party. That the delegates lower paid workers, the farmers and
were given to understand before leav- the small
------------business men.WIEvery
.
oring luxnc that when they got to Ranizatlon of these groups is a ferWashlngton they were to make their 1 lll&lt; Reid for our activities. Wc have
demands upon the "White House" our people in lhe Townsend Clubs
for food and shelter while al WashBattle Creek. Kalamazoo. Jack­
ington and money with which to re-1 «on and other cities.—in the Nalum home, and that these demands Uonal Union for Social Justice and
would be met.
the Farmers' Union, it is our purSubsequcnt events bear out the pose to keep on boring into these or­
atory that lhe demand was made. I tanixations until we completely
but without success—there was no J, dominate
them,
idea HI
to
,,
....... it
•• was
- —■ our
iur«
h..l.
-I.- of aid .from
___ gel lh..
bnsls frafor lhe —
promise
the "Youth" into ....
the _Townsend.
the Administration to the delegates Clubs,—we can do much more with
‘the young people.
Al the same time the Workers'
A communist leader in a certain
Alliance of the Socialist party and community In southern Michigan
some other groups were also holding upon leaving a large Townsend
a convention at Washington. The meeting is reported to have aaid:
gathering of all these groups in the This Is Just what we want.—Just
city simultaneously was the result keep them excited is all we ask.”
of a plan carefully engineered by
I am sure that the many hun­
the Communist party of New York dreds of good people who have seen
City, that a consolidation might be flt to get on .the Townsend "Band
made of the various factions and Wagon." to become associated with
groups. After many secret meetings the National Union for Social jus­
and conferenoes. several of which tice and with the Farmers' Union,
John was privileged to attend, seme would not voluntarily become po­
constating of but a few of the lead­ tential communists, or be identified
ers. and others being attended by with an organization dominated by
hundreds of the delegates.—a con­ the Communist party. Neither do I
solidation was brought about and a believe that the original Intent of
new organisation
was
formed, the organizers of these groups was
known ax the Workers' Alliance of '.to lend support to the Cemmunlst
America, headed by David A. Las­ movement, but each group demand­
ter. a recognized Communist lead- ' Ing radical social changes.—"or
cr. The new organization agreed to else."—Is a fertile field.—the seed
back the Farmer-Labar party in the lias been sown,—and it is being culcoming election and candidates fa­ , tlvated. You will note that the
vorable to IU cause.
■ inarch upon the Capitol at Trenton.
John said that the intent was to' New Jersey, was staged by the
keep on organizing groups and fac­ . "Workers' Alliance of America,"
tions. and then consolidating them 1 I hope the repetition of this
under one head to present a united i story may encourage more of our
front in making their demands. I ! citizens to do some Independent
asked him. what demands? He said, i thinking instead of being hypno­
they claimed to be advocating. tised by glowing promises that are
"Down with the Capitalists.” but of no more likely to be fulfilled, than
course what we really mean is. those promises of food, shelter and
"Down with the Government." I money made to WHA delegates be­
asked him. what If their demands fore they descended upon Waahlngas they were strong enough they

By Blaine Barry.

stretching away to the horizon in | Out ot the gentle blossoming of a
waves of green and daffodil-yellow
growing tree.
and ocher, until lhe great bowl of Out of the mows ot winter and the
the sky cups down, in softest blue. |
summer sun.
to meet them. When the wheat is Out of a thread of silver is your
young, there is one vast silver-green I
music snun
spun.
carpet, darkened almost to purple Tho hand that holds the polished
where cloud-shadows lie. Later,
wood of sound.
whan tlto grain baa grown taller, the Might cast a net or plow the fruit­
prairie becomes an undulating blue­
ful ground.
subject was The Assassination of green sea. silvered by wind-ripples, Or hold a rope to sail a fiylng ship.
glided where the sun creeps across But the dream in the face, the ten­
the Shah of Persia.”
derness of Up.
FIFTY YEARS AGO
Prairie wild-flowers claim more Flows into music ere lhe hand can
Married at the residence of Ches­ than tlielr place In the sun. They
ter Messer on Broadway. Wednes­ spatter the fields with color wherev­ The pool of sound, the ripples of the
day. May 5. by Rev. J. W. Bancroft. er they can crowd tn among the,
lake.
Mr. Morse E. Nevins and Miss Net­
Sara Van Alstyne Allen.
grain or push back lhe pralrle-grass
tie Maples of this city. The high Wildroses open pink and fragrant
contracting parties have hosts of blossoms all along the highways; lbs
O! PERFECT DAY
friends in this city, lhe groom being purple loam of the pralrle-roads is O perfect day. from out your treas­
ury.
one of our leading business men edged with gold—buttercups in U&gt;e
and lhe bride, a cousin of Mrs.
What may I take, what lovely
early season, feathery asters and
Chester Messer, a most estimable gojdenrod later; black-eyed Susans
precious thing
Mr r.nrt Ur. Nrvino zujucuruu wiej; ui»cx-eyea ousans To hold within my heart eternally?
on iheM aftei?^ CTOwd1 to
f«
ther
everywhere,
massing
together everywhere, massing
The glint of sunlight on a purple
.r^m^nted 'bv
I lheU V1
’ld orange
°”n*e to
10 lure
1Ure bees
b€*J that
U1,t
rivid
wing.
traim accompanied by the bast | hover
henty-awwt thistle
hi^ti
liii^ iSSin Splaahea of red show the Indian s The love note of a mating bird at
dawn.
palntbeuah; magenta is coral-weed;
The soft insistent murmur of the
residents of this city. The Banner
Brc daisies- glowing
extends congratulations.
'
“J“Xd-l?om
t I1Cu Hfn{5er8hott hu purchased a . Baautlful Canada.” by Vernon I The crystal dew-drops sparkling on
the lawn.
family horse.
’Quinn. (New York- Stokes. 1925 )
The Allegan Gazette celebrated ita: wnn’
O
l w ’
The flickering shadows under­
neath the trees,
fourtb birthday last week. The Oa-1
TO
A
YOUNO
MUSICIAN?*
Nasturtiums flaming by an old stone
zette Is a good paper, an honor to j
On what imagined seas do your
'
wall.
Allegan.
-■
,,
eyes dwell?
The golden glory of a rose In
Curley t
Matthews is rebuilding
j
and repairing hk billboards, an uu-' Seeing wbat wonders you alone can
bloom:
The lilt of laughter ringing Joyously.
falling sign that he scents a circus
telit
My little children playing with
making iU way Haztingsward.
Out of tfoe hand passed dreaming
tbalr ball?
N. T. Parker started Tuesday l
over the lyre.
morning for New York state, where .
n,-lodv whal whl&gt;. O perfect day. there is no room, no
he expects to purchase a nuinber wlial "'Mical melody, what whls
room.
of horses tor hU Uvory.
I
4pc,rt"&lt; ,
\ .
My heart could never hold such
Mary Cobb wiabes two or three Out of dark winds soartng over an
ecztacy.

CONCRETE CAN TAKE IT.
The past winter pul tiie Ameri­
can highway system, especially In i
the northern states, to the severest
Statistics show that, in 1034.
FORTY YEARS AGO.
test it has ever endured. There were
world rubber shipments totaled
temperatures far blow zero There
The gay and festive carpat bug is
1.010.000 tons and exceeded j playing sad havoc in many Hastings
were floods that covered-sections of
shipments ot all previous years,
road many feet deep. When the
homes this spring. There are but
but that may be xtretched a bit
ground thawed out and the floods
few housekeepers who have not
subsided, the repair gangs went to
I found the Utile pest while house
work, and thb is what they found: ■
It would seem that the only ' cleaning.
Frost had buckled the macadam I
thing farmers in tbo flood are*
Nashville has organized a ball
roads in many places.
would have much success in rais- ,,cam with L. W. Felghner. manager.
Frost and flood had done severe
j and Barry Wellman, captain.
damage to brick roads.
। Miss Maude Trego
siTffering
beans.
Neither frost nor flood had had;
. from a severe attack of tonaUlUs.
the slightest effect on deep-founda-.
Henry Smith, who has been en­
Honed concrete roads.
1 mained solid and their surfaces un­ gaged in lhe tailoring business in
In lhe Susquahanna Valley, for impaired.
Hastings for a great many years,
example, where the raging river, The Romans built great roads left for Chicago last week where he
smashed stone embankments, the which endured far centuries, but will reside with his sister.
concrete roads were opened to traf- ; they built comparatively lew. In are
The bicyclists have over gioo sub­
fle as soon as the water receded And generation. America .has built the scribed towards the good roads
the mud had been wasped off. A»ng, finest road system ever seen on this; fund.
some of Its tributaries the roads, to earth, and her concrete roads oni
Last Sunday evening the Rev.
Judge by lhe height of the debris, foundations of rock seem imperviousi Thomas Cox inlroouced something
were at some places io fact under to everything but high explosives.— new in the sen ice in u»e form at a
water, but their foundations re- iThe Detroit News.
j abort prelude on current event*. The appca&amp;Uccs to learu ditaaoiakiDg, |

ancient sea,

Owen Castle.

�R 27

Organisations

' Unloading 82,000,000 Piece of Glass

Ur JZSTn An! ILLtnT ■ «.MJi

--.i li-.iijiw

il

Reunion In Detroit May 18
aad 17—4*rv»4 Taliantly In France
1

Mr. and Mr*. Ottk? Lykins are
ipendlng a few days with relative*
Id Indian*.
The firemen and their families
will enjoy their annual chicken sup­
per Friday night.
Plans are being made for live
117th anniversary of the I. O. O. F.
It wll) be held Thursday night with
a pot luck supper followed by enter-

Former member* ot the 329th
Fteld ArUUery, Cliator Divtaion. are
Invited to the Fifth Annual Memor­
ial Reunion. which will be held at
Um Port fibelby hotel. Detroit. Sat­
urday and Bunday, May IS and 17.
The program will Include » banquet
*i 9:90 Saturday. Registration will
i begin Saturday noon.
The 339th l« one of Michigan'*
I be»t known service outfit*. It wa* re­
cruited from all part* of thl* »l*te
and served valiantly In active war­
fare In Prance. While stationed lu
the st. Mlhlel aectcr in France, the
329U1 fired enough abell* lo give an
empty shell com a* a aouvenlr to
practically every family in Detroit.
_____ _______ _____ __
______ __ _ The officer* of Um a**oclalion arc
Wednesday. May 13. with pot luck Kenneth Herkimer. Detroit, oom­
dinner.
_______
mender; George Trotter. Detroit.

Remember the Community night
on Friday evening. Supper
In
charge of the young ladies with Eva
Man by chairman.
The Briggs Ladles' Aid postponed
from May 7 will be held on Thurs­
day. May 14.
A good delegation from the Lacey
unit of the extension project and
the Assyria Center unit were at
Hastings on Friday to attend the
Achievement Day program.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and

The Past Noble Grands of the Re­ Detroit, adjutant; Oscar Brady.
bekah lodge will meet at the I. O- Battle Creek, chaplain; Harry H.
O. P. hall on Friday. Please come at Gemuend, judge-advocate.
We understand several members
of lhe organisation live In this city
and county and they will be Inter­
The regular monthly meeting of ested in the above announcement.
Emmanuel guild has been postponed
until Wednesday. May 13.
The annual meeting of the Strik­
er cemetery Circle will be enter­
tained by Miss Ethel Eaton on
Wednesday evening. May 13. All
members urged to be present.

The Petunia Circle wll) hold its
first regular meeting Thursday al

OBITUARY.
Mary Lorane. daughter of Daniel
and Emma Thom, was born Jan. 18.
1885 at Quimby and passed away
May 3. 1036. aged 61 years. 3
months and 10 days. When she was
seventeen years old. the family
moved to Mt. Pleasant where she
married Seymour Bawdy on April
4. 1004. One daughter was bom to
this union. Mrs. George Jewell of
Midland. Mr. Bawdy died Dec. 13.
rled to George o. Roush. To this
union were born two children. Pearl
and George. Jr. Besides the three
children, she la survived by her hus­
band. four grandchildren, two broth­
ers. Fred and &amp; 8. Thom, and a

neral services were held on Wed­
nesday. May 0. at lhe Baltimore
Twp. United Brethren church, lhe
Rev. Gamble officiating. Burial was
In the Striker cemetery.

Putting in Her
Best Licks

a nephew.
and family.
The Briggs Ladles' Aid society I
have scheduled a hake goods sale
for Saturday. May 0. at the L. W.
Robinson store at Baltic Creek.
Mrs. Bessie Strickland in charge.
Silas Gates, who has been under
treatment for some time Is some­
what Improved.
Miss Leona Moon of lhe Bristol
and Mis* Arabelle Bivens of the Bur­
roughs school accompanied their
older students on a trip through'
the Post and Kellogg food factories
of Battle creek on Wednesday, also
the Kingman museum at Leila Ar-

A SANE TALK ABOUT
TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS

Man in Charge of Enforcing
Traffic Laws in Kent
Co. Is the Speaker
A very came*'. and Informing talk
was given the Rotarians at tbdr
Monday noon luncheon by Mr.
Rom Farr a, who has cl large of the
1 enforcing of automobile law* and
ordinance*. In Kent county and in
the city of Grand Rapid*.
The tpeaker gave statistics that
were positively frightful regarding
the loss of life and maiming and in­
juring of parsons in Michigan,
caused by automobile accidents,
nearly every one of which Is pre­
ventable To stop this horrible con­
dition lhe speaker urged as reme­
dies "traffic engineering, traffic edu-

Ith grade speller at the Bristol
acbool won distinction In receiving
third place after writing a 11*1 of
CWy *pent a few &lt;lay« last week with 459 word*. Her placement last year
Mr*. Bvans.

NASHVILLE.
Miss Pauline Douse has returned
■om Florida where the spent the
Inter. *■
Earle Felghner, Maurloe. Millon
and Betty Giboon of Detroit .pent
cnu’Ttr wduS '^nkX^hn* V
ent*. Mr. and Mr*. Frank Felghner.

P.wter HoU* Place b
Heart* of Antiquarian*
Dear to The heart of th* anti­
quarian* ary'piece* of old pewter.
Some confine their collection* to
example* ot early American pewter, while other* search for *uch
bit* regardles* of their place of orIgln, observe* ■ writer in the Lo*
Angele* Time*.
For a period of a hundred year*,
from 1700 to 1860, the pewter maker* of America reached their higheat point of both artistry and production. Out of touch with the Old
world, wooden trencher* were not
uncommon In the colonies at the
beginning of the Eighteenth eentury. Pewter came to the front to
replace the wooden vessel* at about

was In dinner plate*, but for a
quarter of a century thereafter,
craftsmen continued to do very well
with pewter ware fnr other line*,
mi ch a* for platter*, bowl* and salt
cellar*, with coffee pot*, tea pots
and pitchers also figuring rather
importantly. But It la the old pew­
ter plnte* that every collector
dream* of finding.
It I* not only the early American
plate* which are of the greatert
value. Dutch. English and Euro­
pean plates likewise reign «uprvme.

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

Suede Leather
Blazers - Cossacks

BE PRACTICAL!

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:

I
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’

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DRESS
on Mother’! Day

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urnphlng over pewter In Europe.
Most of the pieces first made in
thl* country ware of tableware,
plate* being of flrat Importance.

After the business meeting games
visiting were enjoyed, also a fish
Dainty refreshmenu were
served. The June meeting will be
UJC nomc or Mrs Clarence
,
Makin* Swiss Chaaie
। Harr&gt;' NorrU. daughter Julia and
Willard Case visited hl* daugh­
i
Jajne&gt;
Qf CjUtnovU #penl ter. Miss Orpha Case, of Battle
It take* 30 pound* of milk to
Sunday afternoon with/their rcla- Creek last week who left on Sat­ make two pounds of Swiss cheese.
Sunday from Fremont where *he
urday for Ann Arbor where she wll)
wa* called by the lllne*a and death।
- -1 Recent caller* at Mr. and Mrs. visit her sister MLvs Hilda Case of caused by the Introduction ot pure
the University hospital staff going culture ot bacteria or yeasta Dur
Clarenoe Shaw'* were: Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. coy o. Brumm and
Mrs. C. C. Mead and daughter. from there to New York to spend Inc part of the long curing period,
Mr. and Mrs. Voyle Varney spent
Barbara of Lansing. Mr. and Mrs. sometime with her sister and famly. placing the cheese In a warm temSunday with Miss Helen Brumm and
Mr. and Mrs. Ian MacDonald.
Lloyd Mead. Marqulta. Ronald and
Miss Margaret Crites at St. Louis.
Mrs. Frances Jones entertained
Hubert of East Lansing. John Fos­
laws." He stated that lhe largest
the pleasure birthday organization
ter. Mr*. Clyde Wilcox and son
number of accidents due to any one Lentx were in Lansing Thursday.
on Tuesday of last week at her
Harmon of Hastings.
to the cooling root
home In the Ellis district.
Dr. F- G. Pulta and Gilbert Dick­
Mr. and Mr* Fred Smith spent
These are not so apt to be fatal, son spent a few days in lhe north
Miss Louise Conklin, champion ripening and aging.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Clifton
but they do a lot of damage to cars trout fishing.
Miller and family at Battle Creek.
and cause numberless Injuries to
Mrs. Dennis Yarger and son were
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hawthorne
individuals. The Supreme court has
ruled that a car should never ap­ In Saginaw Sunday spending the and family of Lacey. Mr. and Mrs.
proach closer to another car ahead day with Mr. Yarger, who was in Porter Klnne spent Sunday with
port there.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Huve, celebratAbout 175 enjoyed the 8th anni­
versary al the Masonic temple Fri­
stopped by applying the
day night. Guests were there from
bile travelling at the rate of twenty Hastings. Vermontville and Kalamo. •pent Sunday with hLs mother. Mrs.
A Fine New Stock of
miles an hour moves thirty feet a A bountiful pot luck supper was Sylvia Yeidcr.
Young Men’*
second, and that the movement per served, after which they retired to
Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Smith and
second Increases with its speed, one the lodge room for the following
daughters Sylvia and Virginia spent
can see how necessary it is to drive program in charge of E L. Kane. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs&gt; ijlen
safely and to have the brakes in a Two solos, "Last Night I Dreamed
'ingle and Double Breasted
Smith in Battle Creek.
condition so that they will stop the
The Womens Literary Club met
Mrs. L. Maude Evans accompanied
on the piano by Mrs. Gall Lykins. Wednesday at the library for the
last
meeting.
A
pioneer
luncheon
Highway and railroad crossing Two musical readings. "The Owl”
accidents cause largest low of life. and "The Family Trait" by Miss
These are preventable. Ti»cy aro Mildred Caley, her accompanist was
Mrs John PurchLs. A talk by Lesout «( Too, The speeker ioM hU Ue FeUhner. living the Om.ee. wd of Yesterday and Today was given
hearers that pedestrians should indebtedness left “i the Temple. by Mrs. Floyd Everts. Mrs. Gail Ly­
lain Worsted? and Brushed
.......
.... .......
... .... .... i a .hnrl toile K.. fori TSiMlr
nre- kins sang ."Ju*t A Song at Twi­
Baby" ano
1 acnled Leslie Fclghner with a minla- light." "Rock-a-bye
—Full and Half Zipper*.
regulation
i ture of a Masonic temple which Is played "Dark Town Strutter's Ball"
36 to 46.
. being built In the south. Mrs, Gal) to Illustrate her paper. Roll call—
serious injuries to pedestrians.
Lykins played and sang "When I Famous Mothers. Origin of Mother's
Grow too Old to Drcam" and "Roil Day—Mrs. william Dean. Pioneer
QUIMBY.
and ,Along Prairie Moon." Short talk* Reminiscence*—Mrs. A. G- Murray
All are glad to weld____________
and Mrs. Frank purchis. Old Tim*
Mr*. T. 8. K. Reid and sons to our were given by several of the' visiCostumes and Exhibits—All. Drama
The Clover Leaf Club was de­
mer Quimby girl. They art running
the Moblloll station. We wish them lightfully entertained Friday night
at the home of Mrs Orville Plook
with Mrs. clarence Welch assisting.

Buy Your Topcoat
Now and Save!

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Wc’ll vouch for her
liking the CINDEREL­
LA DRESSES in this
group. We know how
particular she is about
quality
so you can
choose safely here!
These are all of pure
dye bilk crepe, ... in
smart slenderising

SIZES 36 ta 44
AND 46 to 52

ALLOUR SUITS
and SPORT
Reduction!

Sport Back Suits

you’ll be thankful for

Zipper Sweaters

STOCKINGS

Special! Close-Outs!
No. 1—BOYS' SLIP OVERS, Jersey* and !
Terry Cloth*----------------------- 35c;
3 for
No. 2—Men * Collar Attached DRESS
SHIRTS—1. 14; 4, 16’/s; 4.17 only

mother in Zeeland Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rial Kellogg of
Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Glasgow and son Maurice of Dowl­
ing visited home
folks Sunday
second (birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. William Bloom of
Battle Creek visited at the home of
Frank Bloom here Sunday.
Mrs. T. 8. K. Reid visited her son
Robert at Kellogg's Health camp
Sunday.
______ _
_ .Mr. and Mn, Carroll Cutler visit­
ed friend* in Battle Creek Sunday.

and let the tummy-echo* fall
where they may." Th* appetis­
ing acene waa snapped on a

No. 3—HEAVY CANVAS CLOVES, pair

And Have Your Foods Sent to You

FIRST COME. FIRST SERVED!

PAJAMAS
CRYSTAL

Mushroom
Broth

GINGER ALE
LIME RICKEY

Boys' Easy Hip
Pajamas ____

The New Sum­
mer Neckwear
Hand Tailored and
Silk Lined

Veal Roast

Things you nood, at
real money-saving
prices!
Don't mitt (his BIG
1c SALE!

REEDS
Walgreen Syitam
DRUG STORE

Beef Roast

and

49 .98

Pair

N«w! FLY FRONT
FRENCH SHORTS

35c

Branded
Beef
L

Thursday, Friday
and Saturday
MAY 7, 8, and 9
Dozen* of MONEY­
SAVING ITEMS!

Summer
POLO SHIRTS

rics and Styles.
bottle*

A writer suggests that women ex­
aggerate the Importance of fur
coats They make mountains out of

Fine Broadcloths, Elastic
Hips—A Big Slock, Brand
New Patterns.

Pork Shoulder Roast *• 25c

All Wool Knickers—
heavy lining_$1.50
CAPS for Big Boys
and Little Fellows. 50c

Little Major Shirt* and
button styles, 75c, 79c

Froth Pineapple

2 for 27c

Folo Shirts, 49c, 59c, 75c

SWEATERS—Zippers
$1.00 to $1.85
Sanforized Shorts
with belts_____ 49c

She LUe.
Aprons, Lace Curtains, Purses, Blouses,

Sheets, Pillow Cases, Gowns and Underwear,
Linen and Lunch Ciulhs.

Indian and Cowboy
Suits, long pants $1.25

GOLF HOSE, Carter
Tops--------- 20c, 25c

Fe have a complete assortment of

Coveralls, 69c, 75c, 85c
4 &lt;o 12.

Neu Sprint Slides.

Covert Work Shirts
Blue and Grey___ 49c

OVERALLS—Blue
Denim_____ 59c. 79c

Head Lettuce

'ELDPAUSCH
•MARKHTPhone '11'12 UJe Lelivt;

Visit This Store for Assortments,
Quality and Moderate Prices

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

frandse,
Exclusive But Not Expetssi
HASTINGS. MICH.

�THE HASTINGS BANKER. THURSDAY, MAY 7. 1W4
He is survived tj a kind mid loving

Ing. The teachers ot this city are a showing
—
the cutting ot a gored skirt. . The speaker said there are twelve When our earthly lives are through.
fine group, reflecting credit upon
Jacket, collars, long bell sleeves, million people living in what U, The funeral was held Tuesday
wife, one daughter, Mrs. Merl SavaHastings and upon its school*.
uf7 sleeves and a waist with fullpuff
full­ practically New York City, includ-i afternoon at 1:30 at the house. 3
cool. and one sister, Mrs. Mary
-- front.
, ing suburban towns in New Jersey, Jo'clock at Pleasant Valley church.
ness across the
McIntyre. He wa* a loving husband
Home lighting in Its various New York and Connecticut, while: conducted by Rev. J. I. Batdorfl.
and father and a faithful friend.
the entire sute ot Iowa has about. Rev. j. L. Ickes assisting. Burial in
phases
was
discussed
by
Mrs.
Celia
Funeral services were held at lhe i
Boom Saturday morning at 4:10 at
'
Hudson of Jackson, an expert for,, a quarter of that population. The Clarksville cemetery.
Methodist church on’Tuesday after*
of our economic troubles.
lhe age of 68 yean. 4 months. 11
the Consumers .v.«
Power VZV9..P...7
Company. isolution।■
noon at two o'clock, the Rev. W.
। Continued from page i. Sec. n
OBITUARY.
Her
talk
was
given
in
the
upstairs
1
he
said, would be to establish inHer talk was liven tn the unalalrs
days, after an illness of 8 months.
Maylan Jones officiating. Burla) was
Adeline,
daughter
ot
Michael
and
audltorium with the aid of charts. du»trles in rural villages and small
iff Riverside cemetery.
He has spent his entire life in Barry
1293.00 and city taxpayers 143.229.22
Mary Roush, was bora in Sandusky
Music EVI
for W&gt;O
the day WM
was IUHIUIKU
furnished ujr
by [ towns.
lhto
** lf,eBJ’,
I,bkj.
----- , ..Tbat
------- —
— —
. I In other words the state of Michlthe Girls' Trio of Hastings High I c0«w be made profitable he proved Co.. Ohio. April 12. 1852 and passed
• Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
gon will actually pay this school
school and Mrs. PulU of Nashville, I by samples of producu made from away at her home In Hastings on
year 58 per cent and Hastings
April 20. 1936. aged 84 years and 8
Mrs. Nellie Fancher of Baltimore fB,In wastes which he exhibited,
taxpayers will pay but 42 per and strips of colored crepe paper.
was re-elected county chairman for
The hardest and toughest wood days. The family came lo Michigan
The afternoon session opened with next year as were the other officers: 15 WBk grown In southeastern Asia. when she was a small child.-lhelrcent of lhe running expenses of the
Hastings public schools. Next year various announcements by Mrs. Nel­ Mrs Robert Martin of Quimby, sec- He exhibited a piece of whal looked conveyance being a wagon ^irawn
this city's proportion' will be less; lie Fancher and a talk by Mrs. C. retary. and Mrs. Esther Dunn. Del- »ke teak, black, hard, tough, but by oxen. They settled in Bowne
for last year lhe school budget for D. Bauer of the type of display to ton, recreational secretary.,
I without any grain to it. It lakes an township and later moved to Carl­
running expenses called for a tax make at the Barry county fair In
A large number of women have j excellent finish. It was made from ton Twp.. where they lived in a log
of 8 9 mills on the city's taxable September. This was followed by a signed for the course next year, ac- 1 corn cobs. It has higher specific cabin. Later a better home was
30-minule
play
put
on
by
the
mem
­
property. The school board plans to
i built and a fine farm cleared. She
cording to Harold J. Foster. County : gravity than leak.
get aiohg next year with an 8 mill bers of the Pine Lake group. The Agricultural Agent, under whose; Dr.
to Simon Hefflebower
Dr. Sweeney
Sweeney exhibited
exhimiea a
a plank
pianK was married
r-~~
levy, or a reduction of 10 per cent play dealt with the trials and tribu­ Jurisdiction this work is done. The' mBde --------------------------------j.O
from com stalks.
It was
2 1-2
°fr Carlton Twp.
Twp.. August 30. 1868.
lations of a housewife employing a course U entitled “The Well-1 inches thick, about 8 Inches wide
compared with the 1935 rate.
eiHe
preceded her
her, in death Feb. 23.
!
Groomed Woman"
.Yonum ana
and WLU
will really
reany I—
,uld
“ 2 feet
--------long,
- »
it-------was —
harder
— —
and
d ’“P'.JP
700 l.bU
l.hU fJ0” 7er,e
nU*
When the state of Michigan pays maid for her home and was entitled W.VOU.CU
dying
In infancy and
practically 60 per cent of the cost iI "A Good Girl In the Kitchen'' It be a follow-up of this year's work I1 would last longer than any wood
wood•1 children,
“ ' “ two
’
"“
Still Tim* to Entar Sensational HOT DATED COFFEE CONTEST I
was
well
done
and
enjoyed
by
the
...
a
study
of
correct
accessories,
i
thnt
could
be
used
in
building,
he
a
daughter.
Sarah
Ann Allerdlng at
of operating the schools of Hastings
.
YOU MAY WIN
I
audience.
■ or any other city; It naturally ex- i
styles of hats for different types Claimed.
.UUIIIIU. He
Jllexhibited
CMUUILCU
thinner Jbe age
UII1UICY
- ----of 30 --------years. -o---Im&gt;, —
a -----son,■
I The fashion show which followed n
B6ed fli
81 vears.
years- survlvlns
Surviving arc
arc
he! all the small details
tijp) specimens, of all sorts of colors and i DavWUaviti. aacd
pects to have something to say '
finishes, such as quarter-sawed oak, lwo aon!1'
Clarksville and
about how those schools shall be i1 was very interesting to all those to the perfect ensemble.
conducted—especially
about thel1 present. The individual groups at
mahogany qtc.
iSamuel of Woodland; three daugh(All the Food for a Family of Four 1}
Get Details and Entry Blank
In contrast he showed a substl- ilers- Mrs. Hattie Newton of Haswages of teachers, which had been ,| their meetings had voted on four
at Your Kroger Store
1 tute for cork. This com husk subMrs. Mary Cousins of Nashso drastically cut during the depres­ 1 dre.sses, two to be modelled and two
Thl. handy coffee measuring cup — lo help yon
| stitute was even more resilient than ■
Bdd Mrs. Gertrude Stahl
sion. The state holds that teachers' i for display, so the gowns were rtalI cork, tougher and better. It could
Clarksville; a daughter-in-law,
wages ought to be such that young I ly the pick of those made In the
•
make a good cup of coffee every time — is yonra
j
county.
All
types
were
shown,
house
people of good ability will be albe made from peanut shucks as MrJ Davld Hefflebower; also twen- &lt;
FREE if your entry is mailed before midnight May 9. 1936
I
dresses,
sport
clothes
and
afternoon
well as corn stalks.
‘y-mie
grandchildren,
fifteen,
traded toward teaching as a profex(the last day of our 54th Jubilee Sale).
sion. One of the objects of the state i frocks. Their individuality was In
, in Cedar Rapids. Iowa, there is a
I
and its department ot education in ’ the choice of color, of materia),
CONTEST CLOSES JUNE 8th. 1936
turtePforlrortnialllCl1\?1"fl&lt;’S ° ’th’n" Emma Jens0n- and other relatives.
enacting the Thatcher-Saur law was '. trimming and style.
• Continued from page 1. Sec. It
Xined Trnm
w
“‘e hfu,l&gt;' Mrs. Hefflebower wa. a member of
to raise teachers' wages well above 1
On display in the rear of the auobtained from the big oatmeal fac- lh- Woman'. Relief fnrm here
the depression level. That has been dltorlum upstairs were the other inanufacturing following the elec- tOry mere, it costs about a
as^mudTas1 fomaldehvd*
1 where she had nsldcd ,or 25 y*ars.
VACUUM PACKED
HOT DATED
accomplished in the rural schools of dresses selected from those made by Hon of McKinley He did not give as much as formaldehyde.
hyd ;
d U shc wBs “ klnd Bnd lovl,’K mother.
Michigan and of this county. It, members of the groups, and group President McKinley credit for de-------■—
------- ■
nuTSS.
extensive
use -for many loyal and faUWu| t0 h„ |10n|e
*•
27c
COFFEE
must also be done In Hastings If we arrangement of the various subjects signing to end the panic. It was his
COUNTRY CUTS
family and was always doing for |j
l’oscs'
.
• continue lo get state aid—and we taught during the year. There were purpose to apply his tariff theories, 1
Talking with Dr. Sweeney after others. In her earlier years she
surely want it and need It.
studies In color harmony, correct which unexpectedly worked to the
■■ 25c
DEL MONTE
HOT DATED FRENCH COFFEE, lb. bag 21c
„ „
U1 seams for different materials, the advantage of this country by stim­ the lecture, he told the writer that shared the burdens of the home,
’ ...
In 1932 the teachers' wages aIn
our
a process of * making good print spinning, sewing and knitting to'
city schools were cut 35 per cent | cutting of different types of collars ulating employment.
GENUINE
W
paper from wheat straw had been help supply lhe necessities of her
HILL'S BROS.
27c
, V.,.
For i_..
last -----year, the school -------board and sleeves, and lhe type of access­
The speaker declared that lie did devised, it can be done. The manu­
9“'‘
family. Her daughter. Mrs. Hattie
OR MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
•
received lhe first Thatcher law ories being used with different styles not believe that the dole would
facture of all the producu lie ex­
money, it restored 10 per cent of
solve unemployment nor appropriat­ hibited from, farm wastes will make Newton., has lived with her for two ■
SUNBRITE
2 — 9c
years, giving her mother tender
the 35 per cent cut. For this year the
One group had a very Interesting ing billions of dollars for special re­ far better conditions in the farming
EMBASSY - RICH. SMOOTH
care. The funeral was held at the
■ board added ,10 per cent more. For study of the changing of a commer­ lief, What Is needed, he declared.
regions of this country and at the house on Thursday. April 23. the
lhe next scbbol year It has added cial pattern such os purchased In Is a definite program that will stop
same time superior building mater­
CRISCO
3
55c
5 per cent, thus making up 25 per the stores to suit the needs of the the growth of cities and scatter ials for homes and other purposes. Rev. Andrew Hoffman, a cousin, of­
ficiating. Burial was in Pleasant
cent of the 35 per cent cut.
particular person using the pattern. our population Into smaller towns The factories would naturally be
ik... 19C
Hill cemetery. Freeport.
CALUMET
The good results of that policy This was called making a founda­ by means of new industries that will
Ph**DELICIOUS FLAVORS
established near the sources of sup­
BAKING POWDER
are clearly evident. Of the entire tion garment and lhe theory was utilize farm wastes. He declared
ply of raw materlab. increasing
DEATH OF M. B- BROOKS.
1935-36 leaching staff of Hastings, that a gown could be cut from the that the use ot these wastes as
Myron B. Brooks of Nashville,
farm
revenues
as
well
os
employ
­
BEECHNUT
»— 27c
EMBASSY - RIOL SMOOTH
every teacher but one has signed a foundation, put together and fin­ fertilizer, while helping a little, ac­
ment for labor.
who will always be remembered by
COFFEE
contract for 1936-37. That means ished without the usual tedious bus­ tually utilized little of lhe values in
Qaart Jar
Next week there will be held in his many friends as "Barney," took
much for our schools,
because iness of fitting and trying on.
them, corn stalks contain an acid
BEECHNUT - READY TO SERVE
his own life early Thursday morning.
COUNTRY CU B SALAD DRESSING Qearl J*.r 39c
changes in teachers due to dissatis­
During the fashion show there that makes lhe soil sour and. ex­ Dearborn. Michigan, a conference to
SPAGHETTI
3 23c
faction over their pay are hurtful. were also demonstrations of tile cept for the chemical action of the promote the use of farm products
for
manufacturing. When all this poor health and had been for some
This city has an enviable reputa­ method of changing this foundation sun In neutralizing this acid, the
EMBASSY BRAND
time. Despondency over failing
shall
actually
be
done,
farmers
will
MICHIGAN BEET
tion for It* schools. Good schools garment
......
..........
.............
.. ........comtype
to
make
a different
stalks plowed under would be
bulk
9CAKT &gt;&gt; 10c
be raising crops not alone for food, health was no doubt the cause of
MUSTARD
mean good teachers and good leach- of dress. Various women took part, harmful tq the soil.
•
but for consumption in manufac­ his suicide.
Mr. Brooks was born in New York
WALDORF
5
turing as well. That will spell bet­
19c
state September 6. 1846. He came
TISSUE - SCOTT TISSUE 4 roi
soups
ter days for farmers.
with his parents to Bellevue. Michi­
CHICKEN SOUP 3 cau 28«
gan. in 1850 and received his educaNORTHERN
4
19c
OBITUARY.
.typn in lhe rural schools of Eaton
John Stadel .second son of Gott­ county. He Joined company F of
2Jlblieb and Christina S la del. was born the 10lh Michigan Cavalry in Feb­
CARNATION OR
Yoar ImI rkaorc to
Ibk
BU1t&gt;&lt;Uy Cak«
in the township of Freedom. Wash­ ruary 1865. and was discharged
PET MILK
SPECIU. MOTHER'S DAY WKAPPEH
tenaw co.. Michigan. July 3. 1853. from service September 25 that
COUNTRY CUB MILK 3 Uli cam 20c
and depat led this life April 23. 1938 year. He tqught school for six terms
GOOD QUALITY
। at the age of 83 years. 9 montiis and after leaving the army, locating in
MIRACLE WHIP p*-«
23c
No. 2
22 days.
Nashville in 1878. where he first
On Nov. 27. 1878. he was married established a foundry, operating It
to Estner E. Hatt. To this union for a year. He -was also a livestock
eans
were born eight children, two pre­ buyer. In 1880 he purchased an
P &amp; G
ceding him in dealt}—Ines L.. who evaporating plant at Nashville* The
ClANT 50 IP
COUNTRY CU/B - RICH. RED
died in infancy, and Myrtle R. same year he bought a farm near
GIANT
COUNTRY CUB
Clem.
the village and operated It for sev­
He was a kind and affectionate eral years. He served as supervisor
FRESH BREAD
husband and father, n very patient of Castleton township, also as school
sufferer in his list affliction.
Inspector. In recent years he had
At the age of 14 he was confirmed made hU home with Mr. and Mrs.
COUNTRY CLUB
COUNTRY CLUB - FANCY CORN
In the Lutheran church at Atui Ar­ Lyman Baxter, and it was in their
PEACHES
2
33c
No. 1
bor. Michigan. At the parting he home that he ended his life. He was
IXSaOUS HALVES - 12 r.M 41.19
"•t. hu -r.i“u°n.y'c w',c “i?d the
“■■■■ ■last
— of
- —
lhe veterans ».
of the Civil
surviving children—Mrs. Wm. Wait, war residing in Nashville.
cans
COUNTRY CLUB
°I .V*k.eE
Earl Wallace
The funeral of Mr. Brooks was
COUNTRY CUB - MICHIGAN PACK
APPLE BUTTER oamw 15c
?iL^.aSl.nKS'Ne?r
Has; held in the Hess Funeral home at
Herrington
of Naa|,vl]jc Saturday afternoon and
.tings. Mrs. Norris „
। .
FANCY PEAS 2 "L3 27c
Jackson. Lewis of Lansing. Roy of the Interment was in Lakeview
Hastings, besides IB grandchildren, cemetery.
1 2 cans
95c
COUNTRY CUB - 12 cam 81.33
also one brother. Will, of Freeport,
one sister. Pauline, al Grass Lake,
"The creation of general security
and many nieces and nephews. by general disarmament is a pri­
Home ties filled a, large place In mary condition for the restoration
his life.
of confidence and .for the return of
Father we will sadly miss you.^is secure political and economic con­
the days may come and go.
ditions in lhe world."—Gen. Kurt
But we hope to meet in Heaven
von Schleicher.
MICHIGAN MILLED
lABORITOnV TKSTEl.
OHTUABY.

Jeofg* ■- Hullngs, son of George
and Anna Hullngs, was bom Dec.

county. On May 25. 1899 he was
united in marriage to Stella Col­
well. They spent the early part of
their married life on a farm, mov­
ing lo Hastings In 1906. where he
teamed for a number of years, then
after working for the Edmonds Ele­
vator for 14 years, he worked for
the Viking Corporation until forced
to retire on account of ill health.

’CITYPWSS48.229
STATE S5S.793 1CHMENTW
DRAWS BIG CflOWD

KROGER STORES
Our 54th JUBILEE SALE Ends Saturday

nt «•• .n^.. nt

MEE FOOD FOR 10 YEARS

UTLZITMO
FIMSTES

rnrr

JEWEL

-15c

COFFEE

2

DILL PICKLES

25c

2

PEANUT BUTTER

JELL-O S,X

h

2216c

11c

2

25c

SALAD DRESSING
SUGAR

10

48c

CAMPBELL'S

3

25c

39c

LAYER CAKE

4

29c

25c

3

TOMATOES

1 2

89c

3

TOMATO JUICE

29c

1 2 rans $1,1 0

12

25c

2

GOLDEN BANTAM

$1.45

PORK &amp; BEANS

3

FLOUR SIBRANDY -k 59c
COUNTRY CLUB ”*?• 79c
ELOI B - &lt;9 Ik .... »1J7

KING'S FLAKE
FLOUR -

FRESH

VEAL! VEAL! VEAL!
BONELESS

VEAL ROAST

PINEAPPLES
FOB CANNING

CHOCOLATES

for MOTHER'S DAY

CAN AU YOU CAN
Pincnpplm An Now at Thrir Be«4

23c
VEAL LOIN CHOPS

17c

VEAL LOIN STEAK

29c

1216c
LEONA SAUSAGE

SWIFTS
SLICED •

BACON SQUABES

SUGAR
CURED

Co. $3.35

$2.25
c— $3.35

c~e *3.45

NEW PEAS

3 k 19c

TENDER - FULL 1*0 IM

NEW POTATOES U-pcdt ,27c
GENUINE WHITE POTATOES

HEAD LETTUCE

2 '■••A 13c

FIRM CAiSP HEADS

NEW 1936 CATCH

GENUINE

RLLETS haddock

FRESH

13’6c

19c

STRAWBERRIES

Her favnrile rnnlecllon . . . here direct
from lhe maker* ... in a rich variety of
Iwaulifully decorated package*. (Lail anti
make your selection now.

leai e your order—fe fill de.
LU ER OR FRAP EOR MAILING.

Specials for Mother’s Day!
SAMPLER

WE8CO FEEDS - EXTRA SAVINGS ON QUANTITIES

Scratch Feed'^*1.54
Egg Mesh
Dairy Feed

Chick Feed

2.'$1.90

Oyster Shells ZT74c

SAMPLER

SALAMACUNDI —$1.50

$1.00
LOVELINESS___$) .50

MILK CHOCOLATES

9
10 * 29c

$1.25

STARTLNG AND

GLAMOUR

Crowing
Block Salt

29c
PMOMt 2 115

SI 50

$2.00

BON BONS AND CHOCOLATES

3c PiR BAG DISCOUNT IN 10 BAG QUANTITIES

*8*^

$3.00

FRUITS AND NUTS

$1.25

CLO-WYN

$1.50

�THE PASTINGS BANNO, THURSDAY. MAT 7, 1834

Social Events and Personal Mention

Mrs. James Silsbee was in Grand
Rapids Tuesday.
Hubert Will and family of Pon-

ENTHUSIASTIC OPEN­
ING AT COUNTRY CLUB

PERKINS-MOORE NWTIAL8.

read the Unite ring
Largo Attendance at First service uniting in marriage Arnold ms Phi were
Mrs. Jennie Will.
Wm. talneo at the Founders'
Mr. and Mn. Roy Cordes spent
Dinner—Snappy Floor
J. Perkins, of Hastings, and MUs
Thursday in Ann Arbor with her
z8how Presented
Letha it- Moore, daughter of Mr.
Miss Virginia Boyes was home . My^ Burton of Niles was In the mq^hcr, Mrs. Phyllis Reynolds.
Mn. M. A- Lambic was In Grand
and
Mrs.
George
Wertman
of
Bed
­ girts entertained about ttttt girt*
from Lansing over the week end.
: city
Saturday on business.
Rapids on Tuesday.
Lloyd Peterson of Harrison spent
ford.
twenty-fire
relatives and and aponaon. After a tarefy 4taMelvin Oeiow of Kalamazoo spent
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Poster were Saturday and Sunday at lhe home Country club received a flying start friends witnessing the ceremony.
Forrest Lane and Kenneth were
-------------

J. Adcock

IS

Sunday in the city with friends.
' called to Bay City Monday by the of his mother. Mn. Mary Peterson. on Thursday evening of last week,
in Saranac on Sunday.
v AS Mln Marie Neuschafer played
—__
.__________! Meath nf ■ rel.Hv__j
Wayne Snyder was home from
Mrs. A. D. Knlskern left this when the opening dinner was given the -Wedding March" from Lohen­
. Three Riven over lhe week end.
Nashville on Saturday to attend thc ! Mrs John MacLeod and Eric morning for Swarthmore, Pa., for at lhe clubhouse. One hundred and grin the bridal party took their
Robert Field was home from Al­ funeral of her cousin. M. B. Brooks. MacLeod spent Sunday with her a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Philip W. twenty members were Mated at places before an altar banked with
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gladstone j brother In Plainwell.
Knlskern.
tables that formed a hollow square spring flowers and ferns. Mendels­
bion Collage over lhe week end.
and children of Grand Rapids were
The Rev. and Mrs. Edw. Boone ot
Vcrrol conklln and Robert Fur­ around the large room. Forsythla sohn's "Wedding March" was used
was In the city Monday on business Sunday guests of Mr. and MW. Jas. Grand Rapids were in the city on row spent thc week end at the for­ and daffodils combined to make at­ as lhe recessions!. During the serv­ Chapter,
Gilmer.
Saturday on business.
mer's cottage on Platt lake near tractive bouquets for the tables and ice Miss Neuschafer softly played
After the banquet thc hostcaaes
Mr. and Mrs. Roman Fcldpausch
| large graceful branches of the forread the Ritual of Jewels to mem­
‘
Mattlc BuU ot
Creek Traverse City.
are In Grand Rapids today on busi­
[ syihla were used in the entrance, on
The bride wore a charming gown bers of the Hastings Chapter. Those
f?Ur U •Pendln« lhe week with friends
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Dearing and
ness.
OiFy Dean,
Dew?J""
“4 e'”**”re of sheer crepe of beige and brown receiving new pins were Mrs K. J
zon. Garry
of Cambridge. «***'
Mrs. Frederick Parker spent the day meeting of Prigldalre supertn- m and around the city.
vuiun, Mr. and Mn. Ber-1
.4“ ,oun«c .
™'°' with harmonizing accessaries and Pratt. Miss Ethel Ragla. Mias Theo.
.
.. 1 Mrs. Erma Gardner spent the Ind.
week end with relatives in Grand
sciieme ot yellow was further car- her bouquet was of roses and sweet line Rogen. Miss Geraldine Wil­
Rapids.
we*k end
E"1 LaTulne with Mr. nard Roberts.
I ried out in several dishes on the
win and H. 8. Culp of Reed City and Mrs. Nelson Gardner
liams, Mn. Hazel Hinkley and Mtea
Miss Angle Bates went to Detroit
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shutes of * menu.
Harold Logan's dress was gold and
fuesta
of
Miss
Betty
Stickney
Attorney
Adelbert
Cortrighl
reon Sunday for a week's visit with
Traverse City were guests of Mr.
Tile Hastings Trio, composed of brawn silk print and her flowers
x«u. M.,.
i lUrited on Saturday from a busl- and Mrs. c. W. Clarke. Wednesday,
friends.
Mias Jean Glerum, Mn. Leora were similar lo the bride's. Harold1
nCM trlp 10 Maryland. N. Y.
HONORED AT M. 8. C.
Clark walker of Grand Haven m.th« Jim™
pth” ?alnon.
_¥*!?; Mrs. Martha Johnston and Miss •n route home from Florida.
Smith and Lewis Hine, all teachers Perkins, brother of the, groom, wasi
Three Hastings boys were honored
■ spent Sunday in the city with Campbell spent the week end in Winifred Johnston
Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace
Brown
off in the local schools, played during best man.
Mr
Mr* Wallac
* Bro
*n °
'
•for athletic prowess at Michigan
friends.
Kalamazoo.
!
Creek
IGrand Raplds werc ln thc C,ly thc serving of the dinner. The type
Mr. and Mrs. Perkins left on ai State College. East Lansing, accordMrs. Mary Evarta and Miss Ag­
Mr. and Mr. Leon DeLano and * iJr. G F Chidester
been I T)1**d,y Wallace is now connected
of music played was a particularly motor trip, the bride's travelling( ing to an announcement from R. H.
nes Sim were in Grand Rapids on non of Grand Rapids are spending spISuf’a^feS^dET ta%Sd,
h lhc Alabastine-Paint Co. there
pleasing undertone to the visiting costume being navy blue crepe withi Young, director of athletics, j. Nel­
Monday.
the week with her parents. Ur and
b
Mrs C E Thom“ rcturncd Qn of the guests and was one of the white trim. Later they will be atl son Gardner, distance runner, won
Miss Mary Jane Burch of Chicago Mrs. Hugh Riley.
, RVhe Rav 151^ w JfeJ .nd Monday lo tier home tn Detroit aftMrs. Hugh Riley.
many features which made the par­ home at 420 North Michigan Ave.
his major letter in track; Max E.
visited Miss Frances Sutton over lhe
Mrs. A. W. Woodbume of Tampa,! dallhte? joS^ o^wsSS-t w^re I SS v’uilln« her daughter and husThe groom te a graduate of the! Coats woo a minor teller tn fencing
ly suecnsfuL
-la, arrive,
.—I..,.. today tfor a Abort
L . stay
:— aaugnier.
£
joyce.
Oy?' oi
°
Watervliet were ba.ndand Mrs G E Goodyear.
%
0,1
Dr Frank carrothers. chairman Hastings High school in the classi and Hartley G. Finstrom was given
Miss Jocelyn Ironside entertained
Miss Ellen Phllbrook spent the of the entertainment committee. of 1935 and is associated here withi a medal for marksmanship. All
Miss Betty Swift of Middleville over
week end in Grand
Rapids
and al- presided at the Informal meeting
• three are Juniors.
in Detroit and Mason.
, Mr,
a
-----------,-----------------the week end.
-rhn
v k w-ay..-.,
i.,
Mrs Frank Hoes returned Wedrne Rev. e. O- McSherry was in nesday from a several weeks’ visit tended the wtnmorc class banquet | following the dinner. John C. ins graduated from the Bailie
Thomas and Miss Marjory Steb­ Detroit
on Tuesday and Wednesday
yr™
at the Women's City Club on Frl- Ketcham led in the singing of aev- Creek High school in 1934 and U
bins were homo from Ann Arbor attending a mid-year conference of; 512^,
Lansln&lt; ,nd Orand day evening.----------------------------------------- end familiar songs after which Dr. now employed in the office of the
Fred Bucher of Rutland township
over the week end..
,was
f ____________________
MIm In
Ingartha
the system de
de-­ Piston Rfng Co.
the United Brethren church.
Mr? I w Tnwn-.r.H r.H.m.d
K“rtna Peterson and Mrs.
Mrs | Carrothers described the
pleasantly surprised Sunday, on
Mr. and Mrs. William WlllilU of
and
Mrs.
m
returned
on
Mn. j.
J. from
M.. Townsend
Townsend
relumed
on , Mar&gt;. Peterson spent Thursday of, vised by the committee for the club
I Monday
a visit with
Mr. and
Out of town guests at the wedding the occasion of ids birthday, by a
Battle Creek were Sunday guests of
|
last
week
at
the
home
of
the
lat|
dinners.
The
dinners
will
be
served
i were Mrs. Daisy Perkins. Herman visit from the following relatives:
Goodman concert at Grand Rapids u.,
**~—*
,
Mrs. George Post.
S.WTJ., nUM. cl«A».d u &gt;h. n„. Sil,?*”1’ TOnwnl .na ~n M ter's daughter. Mrs. George Austin. | on the third Thursday of the month and Gordon Moore. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. H. Meuhlbeck. MT.
Mr. and Mrs Frank Beattie of
and will be in charge of three rnem- C- E Moore and MIm Mae Wooden'and
est rhythm band in the country.
|
nnvian nnw
'I of Ann Arbor.
---- ---- Mn.
— -A. "Meuhlbeck
— ------‘ —
and
Mr.
Kalamazoo visited Mr. and Mrs.
and ucl
ben
of me
the general enicrunnmcnt
entertainment of Battle Creek and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. D. Roy of Detroit. Mr.
Miss Elizabeth Dodds, who has park soent the’week end
i Sunday guests of the Rev. -•~*&gt;
a ua
Edgar Brooks Sunday.
been spending the winter with her '
Tn?
■1 Mrs
JonM and
Mrs.' W
W Maylan
Mavlan Jones
and famlly
familv 'I committee.
?aul Perkins of Jackson.
and Mrs. J. Path and son and Mn.
Dr. and Mrs. L E. Holly of Mus­ sisters, Mrs. Fred Ryerson and Mrs.
d n thU Clty
d *Trc Mr and Mrs F. E. Gilbert.
Dr. Carrothers then introduced
Many Hastings friends unite in C. Meuhlbeck of Dearborn and Mr
kegon were Sunday guests of Mr.
K'Sn.dh“ '““n*1 “
J"
,H" Godbold o
•*&gt;» extending beat wishes to Mr. and and Mrs. R. A. Bastien of Lincoln
Mr and Mrs W,
Walter
of1
7.
ine r
new P^dent. Hay Branch, who
Mrs. Perkins.
C. H. Osborn made a business trip
u&gt;".
'
I the board of directors were endeavto Ann Arbor on Monday and to
Mr and Mrs. Clarence Goucher oring to do for the club. Mr Branch MR. AND MRS. M. E. NEVINS
HONORED MRS- CARROLL.
Grand Rapids on Tuesday.
MARRIED FIFTY YEARS.
Mrs. D. Sharp entertained her
W L. Hinman, wa* called to her
w/ And Mrs Frank Wreber and attended th- annual Morse jwrty' was enthusiastic over the amount
Won
«X'. linmo In r*hlz-aon on
“
.1^, I 1 "
Mrs eT“'&gt;K WeetXT RnO for telegraphers of ' the Grand (of work already accomplished and
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. bridge club of eight on Tuesday
two sons of River Rouge were week Rapids area, which this year took ■ gave full credit to the members of
evening
of last week. Mrs. Harold
MENevins,
who.
on
Tuesday
of
guests of his mother. Mrs. Kathplace at Old Home Tavern and was the various committees, whom he this week, celebrated their golden Carroll, who left Friday for her
■X*
u&gt;
“a ': end
erine Weeber.
in the nature of a dinner dance
| asked to stand. One direct result of wedding anniversary quietly at new home in Elyria, Ohio, being
Milo to spend thc summer with her
A ui^Runda^Mr"’^? u”” '’
Mrs. Edith Bonnell left on FriMr.
and
Mrs
A
J.
Veddcr
were
the
committee
work
done
was
thc
guest
of
honor. Mn. Ward Erway
daughter. Mrs. Meric Bradfield
£T‘da&gt;
®^yd
- 1
s.iHnn da? ,or a vUn of several weeks with guests of Mr. and Mrs Abe Vedder ' addition of 13 members to thc club home. We are sure they don't look
lhe part of a half century old mar­
nnd reuuveg ln Hockfonj
nnMM0„Ta.y"
-SKmS,.'’ Button —fr|ends
of Grand Rapids over the week end.: roll, with several others making ar­ ried couple.
at bridge and Mrs. Carroll was pre­
and Mrs. Raymond WndaWehL |
'andT,.. S” nA E-'/a T
On Sunday titey visited an uncle, rangetnente to Join
Mr. Nevins comes of old ploncer sented with a gift.
Mr. and Mrs. Tlwodore Bush and Wm. Rice, of Coopersville and help- I Mr. Branch
then
introduced
children of Detroit were guests of ed him celebrate his ninety-third James 8. Kolkowski. of Muskegon, stock, and Mrs. Nevins has been a
old Christiansen, went to Ann Ar­
DINNER AND BRIDGE.
resident of Hustings since early girl­
bor on Monday where she will re-1 his parents and other relatives here birthday.
| who as master of ceremonies was hood. An account of thc wedding
Misses Helen Wade and Elizabeth
on Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs
McKinley Burch m charge of the evening's enterFinch delightfully entertained their
ceive eye treatment al University
Mr. and Mrs. Chas Bacheilor and iFlorence Welton i and three chtl- tainment. Lively and well done tap can be found in our fifty-year-ago
hospital.
bridge
club of twelve on Tuesday
Mrs. Blanche Padelford have re­ dren moved here recently from Hol-! dance rhythms were presented by column.
Mr. and Mrs. Vere Harrington
On lhe day of their wedding. May evening at the Country House in
and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Freeman turned from St. Petersburg. Fla. land, and arc living on N. Park Pauline Beukers and Betty Bums of 5. 1886. when they boarded the early
where they spent the winter.
street. Mr. Burch Ls al present work- , Orand Rapids and a toe tap dance
seven o'clock, spring flowers center­
visited Sunday at'Camp Harrietta,
Mrs. Conrod &lt;3talger of Caledonia ing on the WPA barberry project in ; by 9-year old Helen Marie Skongts. afternoon Michigan central train ing the table. Contract was played
Wexford Co., where Loyd fYcenutn
here for a short honeymoon in De­
vLMted Mr: arid Mrs. George Staiger this vicinity
of Grand Rapids Mr. Kolkow- troit. they found on lhe same train after dinner, with Miss Rose DeFoe
and several other Barry county
on Wednesday going on to Eaton
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wa.klns and skf then presented Helen Marie in another bridal couple who. likewise, winning top score.
boys are stationed,
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Green had as Rapids to visit a niece for a few.. daughters of Battle Creek Twp . lWhnt he called thc feature of the had been married that morning—
days.
Calhoun C° . Mr and Mrs. Elta Da- 5ventng. an exhibition of acrobatic
guests over the week end. his
RECEIVES SENIOR HONORS.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Tilkens of |I vis Of Charlotte and Nir. and Mrs. rliythms. Hcr act was outstandlng- Mr. and Mrs. R. T. French (Flor­
Mias Helen Clark of Hastings was
daughter and husband. Mr. and
ence Smith) of Middleville, who
clement Davis
-- .Campau
------ •-— lake
---- .ana
—- Mr.
—and
------ '(Clement
Davis of
of Eaton Rapids ! there was nothin^ xh» sirfm
a guest of honor al the annual uni­
Mrs. W. J. Sloan, of Detroit. Mr. near
also were Detroit bound.
Mrs.
Lawrence
Allerdlng
of
Carlton
;
wcre Sunday guesu of Mr. and Mrs. ab|,.
do wlth hcr Kratcfui
Sloan has been connected for many
Fifty gorgeous roses were de­ versity of Michigan convocation
were Sunday guesta of Mr. and Mrs. i j w Mitchell
n
।
»!«««
years with thc Detroit Free Press.
Futrntw Hi.xh
body which seemed as supple and livered at the Nevins home Tuesday, held Friday. May 1. in Hill auditor­
Miss Jean Barnes and Miss Lucy
bearing the card of their friends. ium. Miss Clark received senior
curon were Sun- -Mrs
honors in lhe College of Literature,
Bassett were in Grand Rapids Sat- -nd daughter of Lansing
- ----- -.■Post---whnsr
-- four dntich. __ 5’ pauatr^iunnin
Clroruf
^L,_eS5
R nave anyining
anything
Helen
Marie
The Angeles, where Mr. French’s pass­ Science and Aris.
j urday attending lhe thirty-second and daughter of Lansing were Sun­ Mrs. George Post whose four dough- over little
I annual librarians' conference on day guests of his mother. Mrs. Anna ters and her *on. with their families program included violin solos by Mr. ing. after a long illness, is hourly
| Children's Reading. The sessions McGuffin. and grandmother, Mrs. expect to be together on Sunday Kolkowski. accompanied by Mrs. ■expected. It had always been the
READING GROUP.
:; were
unrnry. |
। uni
.
for the first time In many months Kolkowski. who also played
Phone 2396
were neio
held hi
nt inc
the ztyerson
Ryerson library.
------ ofofboth
played for
for the
the 1hope
boti couples that their
Surprise lhe family tonight
I Mr. and Mrs. Hartley Finstrom :
Robert Mills enter- Those from away will be Mr. and । dance rhythms. The &gt; raeni"
-----Idlng anniversary might to her play reading group on Tues­
ipembers of
the gptden wedd
and a friend from East Lansing I
al
O“»
by Inking them “out to din­
Mrs.nLeo
Hammond
and son
Rich- jXam
c]ub „.„re
enthusiastic
day with sewn present The play
artlc
over
the'
be
fpent
tdge
'jether.
,
wum
MH.
--------------JtXly
’
^jo
’
y
ea
...
.
.....
.i
over
the
wwlr
mr)
KtrWm
I spent the week end with Mr. and over the week end Mrs. Wm. Mc­ ard of Flint. Miss Maurene Wlllitta.
was -Lost Horizons" by John Hay­
ner." They’ll nil thoroughly
den.
i Mrs. C. F. Finstrom. The men re- Cann of Irving and her guest. Mrs. of Lansing, Tom Baird and daugh­ each number.
TWENTY-FOUR AT
cnj’oy a dinner al Thc Trio,
ter of Marshall, and Mr. and Mrs.
'■ turned to East Lansing on Sunday Muriel Rich, ot Detroit.
Mr. nnd Mrs Albert H. Carveth
FAMILY PARTY SUNDAY.
HONORS CHICAGO
where lhe food is excellent
Mr. and Mrs. Don Siege] spent Wm. Willitts of Battle Creek.
EMMANUEL GUH.D
; but Mrs. Finstrom remained for the
were chairmen of the committee tn
Mrs. Charles H. ~
Mrs. Miranda Sisson of this city
lhe
week
end
in
Detroit
and
Ann
HOLD BRIDGE PARTY.
and prices arc low.
week.
charge which included Mr. and
Eighteen tables were played at \---------------------------- —~
Mrs. D. M- Stuart and Miss Dona; Arboj. Mrs. Siegel attending a party DISTRICT MEETING
Mrs. Charles S. Potts and Dr. ty on Sunday at the home of her the bridge party given by Emman- “y a,, cr?,°?? ««npll
OF
PYTHIAN
SISTERS.
al
her
sorority,
the
Chi
Omega,
Stuart were guests of Mr and Mrs.
Sunday Chicken EA&lt;
”’leB1 n«
The fourth annual district con- and Mrs. c. P. Lathrop. The May daughter and husband. Mr. and uel Guild at thc Parish house WedC. J. Stuart of Grand Rapids over while in the University loan.
tables
Dinner __1
n'rhl.
“hl“ being in
ln play.
Mrs. J. a. McNulty and Mrs. W. vchtlonxJT Pythian Sisters was held dinner, which will be on the eve­ Mrs. Albert Reesor. of near Wood­
the -week end. Mr. and Mrs. James
at Middleville Thursday. April 30. ning of the twenty-first will be In land, lhe occasion being Mn. Sis­
A prize was awarded each table
Langston also'spent Sunday there, D. Barnes attended the annual
charge
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
D.
A.
Van
­
Try Our Special
son's birthday. Twenty-four were for high score. Door prizes went to Rosa Johnson and
Mrs. Stuart and Miss Dona return­ meeting of the Women's Auxiliary The meeting was very instructive Buskirk. Mr. and Mrs. Richard A.
present and enjoyed a happy day Mrs. O. E. Goodyear. Mrs. Hah HUI, Cleveland and Mrs.
of the Diocese of Western Michigan and enjoyed by the 120 present.
LUNCHEON
ing with them.
Groos and Dr. and Mrs. Frank together.
Miss Ruth Robson. Irene Kunz, celved a guest prise.
Mrs. Myrtle Palmer of Battle at St. Mark's church. Grand Rapids. Mrs. Leta Seville, district deputy ot Carrothers. Mrs. R. W. Cook, presi­
Those present from away were Jim Bristol and Clayton BrandstetKalamazoo, presided and thirteen
Creek and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tuesday of this week.
dent of the board of lhe Woman's Mr. and Mn. Clement Sisson and
Grand
officers
were
present.
Miss
Eulah
Layer,
a
nurse
at
Pen
­
Rogers of Grand Rapids were Sun­
association
of
the
club,
announced
family
of
Kalamazoo.
Mr.
and
Mn.
Delegates attended from Ann Ar­
Monte Nowland. an 11-year old boy
day guests of their mother. Mrs. nock hospital. Hastings, spent Fri­
that the luncheons for the women Charles Sisson and family of Mar­
KARMES BROS.
from Grand Rapids entertained
John Rogers, who is still confined day here with her parents. Mr. and bor. Detroit. Jackson. Grand Rapids. would commence In June, the first
cellus. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sis­ with several clever tap dances.
Belding.
Greenville,
Phone 2131
to lhe hospital following a fall dur­ Mrs. john Layer. Callers during thc Kalamazoo.
SrECIAL
day were Mrs. Gerald Finds and Muskegon. Rockford. Hastings. Bat­ luncheon to be on Tuesday. June 2. son oUWhlte Pigeon. Mrs. Arnold
Ing
the
winter,
sustaining
a
broken
Hasting*
Out of town guests included Dr. Malcolm and children of Lake Odes­
little daughter and Gordon Side­ tle Creek. Charlotte. Grand Haven.
' limb.
NOONDAY LUNCHU
and Mrs. F. E- Lowry and Mr. and sa. Andrew Houfstatter of Hastings Winifred Johnston and Mtes Dona i
bathan of Grand Rapids.—Lowell Nashville and Freeport.
Ledger.
Thbse from Hastings were Cora Mrs. Ellis Faulkner of Delton; Mr. and Frank Houfstatter of Edgeley. Stuart were the committee in
Mrs. Noble Cain and four daugh­ Lee Boyes. M- E. C.; Minnie Young. and Mrs. Robert Walton of Kala­ North Dakota.
charge.
mazoo; Df. and Mrs. R. F. Webb of
ters of Evanston were guests ot M- of F.; Golah Storer. M. of C. and
A FREE SERVICE 34 DAYS.
CELEBRATED BIRTHDAYS.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burch from R-; Alice Smith. Mgr.; Mary Cook. Orand Rapids; Mr. and Mrs. Dil­
Mrs. Stella Armstrong of Kala­
Every automobile owner will be
Thursday over lhe week end. Mr. Guard; Blanche Lewis. Proctor; lon Wolverton. Dr. and Mrs. B. C.
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
Caln who has been in several mld- Edith Smith. Noah Fox. Blanche Swift. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Faulkner mazoo and Jesse Larabee were hon­ Interested in a FREE service, which
, western cities as guest director at Fox, Belle Pattison. Martha Wat­ and Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Benaway or guests at a birthday dinner given will greatly benefit his car and save
of Middleville and Dr. and Mrs. G. by Mrs. Jesse Larabee of Cedar operating cost, announced in this
spring musical festivals joined them kins and Ida F. McCoy.
HOMI COOKED rooo
Creek Sunday. May 3rd. their birth­ issue by the Universal Oarage of
Sunday.
At the moming session, thc busi­ D. Houghton of Caledonia.
days coming on lhe same day. The this city. The offer is good for 30 i
Mr. and Mrs. A- J. Herbert had as ness of tire convention was taken
day was pleaaantly spent in visiting days, from May 8 to June 8.—Adv. I
dinner guests on Sunday. Mr. and care of. and an address was given STAG DINNER ENJOYED
BY
MICHIGAN
BELL
MEN.
and a drive was enjoyed in the aft­
Mrs J. D. Pierce and son of Con­ by Past Chief, Mrs. Dietrich.
A very pleasant time was enjoyed •ernoon.
The afternoon session was opened
stantine and Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Each received several
useful
Allen of Kalamazoo. Guests in the by the high school orchestra, at lhe dinner given by Mr. and Mrs.
afternoon were Mr. and Mrs. Le­ rhythm band and other music. Thc Geo. Baulch on Thursday night at presents; especially nice, were the
land Herbert of Otsego and Mr. address of welcome was given by their home on E. Walnut street. The rubber dolls presented them. Here's
wishing
them
many
more
happy
ten
guests
were
all
men
connected
Knight
Birge
c.
Swift,
a
memorial
and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Traver
and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McKay and ceremony by the Cowan temple of with the Bell Telephone Company. birthdays.
The table was attractive with!
Grand Rapids and initiatory work
daughter of the Center road.
SPRING MU%C DAY.
Mr. and Mrs. Roman Feldpauseh was exemplified by Nashville Tem- spring flowers. Some Informal talks
followed the dinner before the
Misses Elaine Jarman. Maxine
will accompany Mr. and Mr*. pte.—XXX
For yaur enthuiioitic acceptance of the booMtifttl
guests left the table, after which Jarman and Betty Hurless were
Charles
Parker
of
Middleville
to
DATED
CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY.
PERMANENT WAVES we tamwJ nrt ImI wmA
.-rlbbage passed Hie evening.
hostesses at a spring inualc party
Ann Arbor on Sunday lu spend
Mr. and Mrs. J. B- Wolf of 817
_____________
_____
________
Present from_____
away
were
.George held al the Jannan home Saturday
Mother's Day with Charles Parker.
on our new DE LUXE GAIRIILIIN MACHIN!
Jr., and attend thc Mother's Day Dibble street entertained on Sun- Collins and Donald Olson. Grand afternoon al 2 o'clock. A lovely pro­
day.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
Nagler
and
'
Rapids;
Millon
Krieg
and
Dewey
I
gram
was
rendered
followed
by
observance at his fraternity. Lamb­
2 Lbs.
daughter Katherine. Mr. and Mrs. । O’Neal. Iowa, and Wm. Pinnow. | games. Refreshments were served
da Chi.
24M lb- Sack
v.
—
..
---------------------..
-------------.
by
Mrg
j
annan
an
d
Mrs.
Hurless.
WE PLEDGt
Mr. and Mrs. w. J. Watkins leave Fred Kunde and baby of Freeport. Lake Odessa,
also the Arthur and Chester Rich-.I
this week for New Orleans. La., to
attend a convention for two weeks. ardsons of south Bowne. the oc­
casion being Mrs. Thera Nagler’s
They
will
then
go
on
to
Weslaco.
38 ox. Jar
»
Texas, lo visit their son. Richard birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Geiger of
Watkins, and to Houston and Kerr­
2 No. 2Caas
ville where they will be the guests Nashville. Mr. and Mrs. Donald
of Mr. and Mrs. John Busby. En­ Geiger of Saranac and Mr. and
Hollywood Beauty Shop with its staff of licensed operators who
route home they plan to visit the Mrs. Earl Bumford called during
are ready lo give you immediate service, will be the talk of the
Middlovilte
Lb.
centennial at Dallas. Texas. They the afternoon. Mrs. Nagler was al­
so the recipient of a postcard showLarge Box
The following attended the con­

X

“d M" c a a'»

01 Lu""u‘-

"5 “X &lt;•»

'S

•&lt;

»

T.S.BAI

Dine Out Tonight!

QU

OU

QA1

ter in (£ufr

PARKER HOUSE

FRIDAY, MAY 8 and
SATURDAY, MAY 9

^ISBURYS
BEST
FLOUR

GRAND
COFFEE

Thank You, Ladies

49c

APPLE BUTTER

15c

KIDNEY BEANS

15c

BUTTER

29c

RIH CRACKERS

23c

Melo Water Softener

19c

MAGIC
WASHER
box

19c

24c

1 Reenter Box Free

Hinman^
WE DELIVER

TtlEPHONE 2491

TO MAKE 500 NEW CUSTOMERS!

W E

secration of Bishop Lewis Bites
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT.
Whittemore at Grace church. Grand
Mr. and Mrs. James Langston an­
Rapids, on Friday: the Rev. and nounce lhe engagement of their
Mrs. J. A. McNulty. Winn Green, daughter. Mias Mary Lois Langston,
Mn. George Lockwood. Mrs. Burr to Robert Hossack. son of Mr. and
Van Houten. Mr and Mrs. D. C. Mrs. Alvin A. Hossack of Cedarville.
Bronson. Miss xxrny
Betty Vandergrift. TIle
onmm.
ddlng will lake
The we
wedding
take place in
and Douglas Barnes. The Rev. and | Junc.
»»_ McNulty
i. and. ...
Mn.
Mr. «
Green ....,
also, After her gra(|ualion from n;e
attended the luncheon given in I Hastings High school. Miss Lang­
honor of Bishop Perry at the Pant- ston 'attended W. 8- T. C. al Kala­
ttnd hotel following the services.
mazoo, and for the past two years
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. M. Ferry and hM taught at Cedarville. Mr. Hosson Truman of Balt Lake City, and sack H affiliated with the H. P.
a niece of Mrs. Ferry's from Kansas Hossack co. ot Cedarville, in which
City, registered al the Parker village they expect lo. reside.
Houk Thursday night and spent
several hours here on Friday calling
Miss Jennie McBain and MUs
numbered as Miss Edn.) Truman of Lillie Christy entertained lhe Q. C.
Nashville, daughter of one of the C members on Saturday evening al
pioneer families of that village. a cooperative dinner, covers being
She was a talented singer and al laid for seven, a vase of orange and
one time had a class in vocal music, white sweet peas centered lhe table
'
in Hastings. This was her first re­ and were also used as favors. ’
evenuig was spent with viMting.
turn to Hartings in many year*.

$150
I I

ALL

■

THIS

■

WEEK

RECOMMEND
This Fine, Genu­
ine DUART

Croquignole
Permanent
Califernia

Creation.

J £ rou hav, naver &lt;
V •» • samiiliin
MXMANtNT, ASK ANY WOMAN
HAS HAD ONI.

Finest Cattile Shampoo and Finger Wave
.50c
Medicated Oil Shampoo, regular $1 value, for 65c

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SERVICE
114 WEST STATE ST.
PHONE UU
MARGUERITE TEW and MARGARET DAHLKE
HASTINGS
MICHIGAN

Fox Bros. Beauty
WHIII 0U«

FATSON

I

�THt aHTINQ* BAHwra. TBPMOIT. MAT T, UM

EMERSON ROYER
Work OoorintMd and
PricM M«**onibl.
Phone 3510
Hustings

I

WANTS

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

FOR HALE—Good *al7i

±i

WOODLAND.

THE CHURCHES

ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER- ,
TIBEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c..

I’."
WANTED . . .

Our Service

Carpenter

Ta PROTECT You CamUaU,
Adjurt Fairly
Pay Promptly

Masonry

located at 714 W. Bond SL
GEORGE STAIGER
FOR SALE—vpricbl idano. •«&gt;»
tian. Tall at 308 N. Church St

CITIZENS MUTUAL

WE WANT TO SELECT

Fir* Insurance Co .

Reliable men. now employed,
with FORESIGHT, fair edu­
cation and mechanical Incli­
nations. who are willing to
train spare time or evenings
at home to qualify as IN­
STALLATION and SERVICE
experts in Electric Refrigera­
tion and Air Conditioning.
New. profitable field. For in­
terview write, giving age and
present occupation.
UTILITIES ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE
404 N. Wells SL. Chicago. HL

MB Kalaa&amp;M Xatt. Book BMa.
AXbtaa Oaaaaay Omaiiad lava.

J. L. MAUS

Xaaal BapraamtattVK

Work,

Baatlao.

GEO. M. NEWTON

Farmers, Attention!

Credit—Terms.

.
arana or u«rq louacco. n riia Jack.
No Hondav I r,„ Wall,, Bl.ialroan. Rout* 5. 5 7
"outh. mil* poR haLE—Th* form** John Pavn* rot
—-------- ta&lt;». No 875. B»«h«rood Point. Wall

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE

HMlInp.

AGENCY

LAKE ODESSA
CANNING COMPANY

XatfoMl Bank Blds —Phon* 2S1B

OX COMMISSION

SHELDON 4 SHELDON

FOR SAI.
FOR SALE»»rl&gt; ».ll..w dent .*»J corn. JI a crat*.
All&gt;*rt Or**1n. 1 mil* &lt;oMh. 1 mil* aril
of Midillotiill*
U'
FOR .SALE — Bicvrla &gt;ti »'«id condition,
57
t-arl Raid- in Phon* 719—»-J.
FOR RENT—Hou.* at 71.'. N Ka.t St.,
niod*rn. a.aiiahl* about Jun* 1
In* .
ntiir* r.f tiro M&lt;rn. Phon* 357&lt;». '
Or Mr, D: » Irh*. Uh* Od*..a 5 7

nnrth Power* *choul or four mllr
HllllnlBf.___________ __ »
Bill

OR SAL

NURSERY STOCK

n;LHAli

Good Rooted. Healthy Plante.
Eldorado. Alfred. Early Harvest
Blackberries, Cumberland Black,
Cuthbert Red Raspberries, 1c each.
HOWARD DUDLEY

CARDS of THANKS

1
Z
I ' h*i.!’wo
1 »ll»*ill&gt;
|
XT KU| "*’&lt;?-FA

5-14 H,X " KF

Delton. Route 2.
I WANT TO HIRE A MAN
j
immediately who is familiar with a !

BRICK

Ortner. HI.

At Old Hastings Wool

Boot Plant Site.

In­

FOR KALE—Milkin*

•all

quire of Joe DeRuiter

thwa. fri*nd.
Lrauoful flor.
&lt;»mi&gt;aO., Th*
furtutlrn
Mr«.

and nrirbbor. fur’ th
oflrrlnr. arul word.
r Lindri.r. will n*«*r

Mlnnl* McNatt.

at Pickle Station.

*AKRON" MODERN
MICHANO-FORM TRUSS

OFFICE

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Phono 3185

4V-

Mr. and Mn. Grant Osgood and
Mr. and Mn. Henry Hynes visited
Sabecriptloae
Mr. and Mn. Forrest Parmalee of
Battle Creek Sunday afternoon.
The Woodland Women's Study
Club U entertaining the
Barry
^BAMt^OO^MTY. THBW MONTHS.
County Federation mooting to be
held at the Methodist church Thurs­
day, May 14. Club Ho. 3 of the
Methodist Ladles' Aid will serve PORIIQN SUBBCRIPTTONB. ONI TBAB
IN ADVANCE ----------- -------—81.00
luncheon al noon. The price per
plate wiU be 35c. AD club members
are urged to attend thia all day
ADVEBTllINO RATES:
meeting and also hear Dr. W. D.
Display aStfctUlaa raise oa
Henderson of Ann Arbor, who wUl
be the guest speaker. Dr. Hender-

■■■in

From th* cut!*** icti of othtr*.
the who min correct* hl* own.
Dtaisd i modarn Abitract boforo
Vayltsf or loitilnr money on roll
• «Ute. PLAY BATE,
x

FOB WORK OR PLAY
Tkla Smooth Rubbar Back Pad*
No Pom To Waar Calking

The Meerinp Banner

BS&amp;l

doled
.’!S

This is Idle curiosity and none of
our business whatever, but we can­
not help wondering whether BUI

good tn English Lit.

Cement Work—Plastering
Twenty years experience on all

manahip. WiU taka jobs on contract
or by the day.

RAY LANCASTER
1138 8. Market

Phone 3474

Electrical Wiring
and Repairing
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
FUCK* REASONABLE

Wood Working Shop

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

schools as teachef of fcnuslc and
La Un.
Twelve ladles surprised Mrs. John
Hauer Friday evening when they
brought veil Sited baskets for s pot

1 pltal, Hastings, was removed to
Butterworth hospital Sunday. She
will remain there a few days for
treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Milan Trumbo ac­
companied Mr. and Mrs. Ward
Plants and chUdren of Hartford
Saturday to visit the former's moth­ er of Interest and the Federation is
er. Mrs. Trumbo of Amsden, Ohio, happy to have socured him for this
who recently celebrated her 92nd meting.
birthday. They will remain untU i Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tasker of
Wednesday.
&gt; West Odessa were Sunday guests of
Thc May meeting of lhe Women's Mr. and Mrs. John Dell. In the
Study Club will be held at the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Dell ac­
schoolhouse Tuesday evening. May companied by their guests called on
12. A book report will be given by ' Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ford of Ver­
Miss Lenore Dowden.
montville.
Arthur Alierdlng. Welby Crock­
Mrs Glenn England and daugh­
ford. Leon Hynes. Ward Green and ।ters, Pollyanna and Margery, spent
Lester Brumm spent the week end the week end with Dr. and Mrs. R.
at Pigeon river, trout fishing. They ।O. Flnnle of Hastings.
all report a fine time but no fish.
Mary Jo Kltson is home from
About 25 women-from Woodland ;school with ear infection, both ears
township attended Achievement Day ।having been lanced last week. She
in Hastings. A very interesting and ।is recovering nicely and will soon
Instructive meeting was held.
।be out.
Floyd Oriener suffered a light
stroke early Sunday morning. He
Senator Glass probably wouldn't
is reported to be slowly Improving. 1have minded lhe college professors'
Mrs. Stata Hilbert and Mrs. Rena IInvasion of Washington If they.
Culler were Lansing visitors Thura- 1hadn't brought their senior classes
day.
with
1
them.
The regular meeting of the Stand- .
nrd Bearers was held In the Metho­
dist church parlors Monday eve­
HASTINGS MARKETS
' nlng with the mothers as guests.
i Dainty refreshments of tea and’
I cookies were served.
...
j Mrs. Anton Euper of Elint, who I »&gt;(«••*
.. ..... ........ passed away Sunday, was brought ’
’
i to Woodland for burial Tuesday. }■&lt;»•j Funeral services were held jn Woodtir*"ia" ntah*' ,and cemetery Tuesday Afternoon, Z
•nun &gt;t 7 ::&lt;• ;Mrs. Eujier was a slsteAoI Lirs. iirif*
mY D«tey Tyler.
J&gt;|
The regular W, C. T. U. meeting
will be held at the home of Mrs.
Cora Shopbell Friday. May 8. Mrs.
J. L. Smith is the leader.
MIm Lenore Dowden and Mrs. F.
E Border were Grand Rapids vis­
itors Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Giddings
and daughter Ruth and Mrs. John
Veite of Tawas City came Friday
on account
uu
nvLuuiii u:
of me
the iiuic&amp;s
Illness ui
of mrs.
Mrs. . ;
George Spindler. Mr. Giddings re­
turned to Tawas City Sunday and',
Mrs. Giddings and Mrs. Veite are
remaining this week with Miss Car­
rie Grozlnger.
Virginia and Oreydon Paul of
Grand Rapids spent the week end
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Paul.
We are very happy to learn that
Miss Margaret Spindler who gradu­
ates from Manchester College in
EAST COURT ST. AT M. (J. R. It
Indiana this summer, has secured
a position in the Vermontville AU Kindi Wood Working Done

REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST

Watch. Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Paul and
baby son of Chicago visited Mrs.
George Paul from Friday
until
Monday. On Saturday, accompanied
by Mrs. George Pau), they were
guests of Mr. and Mn. Richard
O’Brien of Lansing.
Gordon Finnic of Hastings visited
Mr. and Mrs. J. V. HUbert from Fri­
day until Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Cook and fam­
ily of Belding were calling on
friends In Woodland Simday.
Mrs. George Spindler of Lafay­
ette, Ind., who has been 111 al the
home of her sister. Miss Carrie Oroxinger. for the past few weeks and

DON B. FISHER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

HASTINGS

PHONE 3411

ft

NOTICE
To Wool Growers

FORCED SALE

106 So. Church St

Near Hastings is a small

OLD

nearly a hundred
pounds in

thousand
- will
...
It

Ing.

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubbar Pads
No Log Straps

The Prescription Drug Store
hastixgs

. - - - .

micina ax

Goftat—d Trun Flttiag

WANTED

EMMANUEL CHURCH (Eploeopnl).
Bov. J. A. McNulty. B. D,. Sector.

foe

Archie Tobias
liMlinga

partlrnUra,

Finance

5-14

Michigan

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCH'S
hoepilel.

MARKET. Phon. 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609

HENRY GREGORY

Chirk *

818 E. Munhall 8L — Phone 3348

H. Foldpausch . 3921
F-arlr V*Jlo«

Farmer*, Attention!
•
•
•
•
•

■ hr 1.flic- of Arrhilrcl. Lawia J. flartl*.
Xu. 4 Hfambtfs BalldlMLB*!”* CT»**
Mlchixaa
MH. ROYCE HENTON. flwr.

CR^GE PROGRAMS

Wrecking for Ports
1939 CHEVROLET
1928 PONTIAC
1928 BUICK Standard
1979 BUICK Standard
1918 OLDSMOBILE.

Dead Stock Removed!
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 7637

Hastings

We Are Buying Hogs, Calves,

FOR SALE—N*w o&gt;&lt; «h*»l trillar. G»»
foot Vol. n**r tiro* Cloerrdil* Gurac*

LAWN MOWERS

FOR SALE—H**d b» an,, dark red kidnr, • and white hlu *&gt;oda, Hand vlek*d Phon* 3119,
FOR KALE—Good ( uldrn oak drraarr.
i nk commod*. iron
Lind b*el*trad. roc LiMurd«k.' lPhoa“
•ink
Mr,. Emma

WANTED—All v*r...t . inter*,ted
niik**t&gt; of th* Hu
idea.* hand or ,»ru
rf.rr Cirri* du*. » on* dollar
of oar affierr, W n»*d vour
rr.oun
Mvrtlo W lliam. Pr*.

FATTIN MONUMENT COMPANY
Distributors of Guardian Memorials of Ert-rtaaUn,

In th*

IU3«.

Cook’s Welding &amp; Machine Shop
North Michigan Av««

to on*
co-ov: tier-

&gt;

-

Hastings, Michigan

Sheep, Lambs and Cattle
OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION.

Paying the highest market price,
cash on delivery, at the Michigan
Central Stock Yards at Hastings,

MAYTAG WASHERS
With a Life Time Tub

EVERY SATURDAY
If you wish trucking service call Hastings
Phono 710—Fl 1 or 737—F4.

"A YEAR 'ROUND NECESSITY"
FOR SAl.K-

Feeder Calves and Milch Cows at all times.

Now ii the time to buy and make houiecleaning a pleasure!
Maytag oil and parti carried in stock.

Lr.Ur Gould. Dow
ir*t term, north of

l

Michigan Livestock Exchange

S«t ...

A. I&gt; 1938. at ten A. M

Rettery G

JORDAN MAYTAG CO.

HASTINGS BRANCH
NOTICE—Will Mrtv

el Hi, White Globe Coofoctlotiory
Stere, East State St., Hastings.

&gt;S dretetad I. old
P ’*
fcw-w‘- J'**' * Ft?uuMitered Smlik. BsgUlar M Probata.

SA LIS
Mndr^iialtk. Real*lee gf Probata.

WwdUtU Phea* M—M

UKVICI

�THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1936
SCHOOL COMMRS.
GUESTS AT CAMP

_______ about:
QANTA

MONICA. CALIF.'

The Kellogg Foundation Us­
ing Winnetka System

THE HASTINGS BANNER
Barry BypathsfCEHWlS

'

By JANE CAMERON

‘

We see in lhe Banner that the
youngest young lady in lhe B. O
refuses lo own this column. Don't
blame her a bit. We would too. only
*once when we were writing II, we
1 got caught at it.
&gt;
uJJLi^dSTHtSter asM^'idrmr
breakfast food. Buster said. I don t
call thl* any famous flavor ."

IMPRESSIVE ONE

REORGANIZATION OF
THE POMONA GRANGE
State Master C. H. Bramble
Gueat Speaker at Irving
Grange Hall

SECTI

Coming Attractioni at
The Strand Theater
"Dark Angel."
This powerful and beautiful love

BARRY CO. 0. E. S.
ASSOCIATION TO MEET

High

Laurel Chapter No. 31 to
Present Gavel to Hick­
ory Corners

BISHOP WHITTEMORE NOW
Irving* grange will be boat to a story, set in a lovely, quiet comer
Ti)e Barry county O- E. 8. Asso­
meeting of Barry Co. granger* at of rural England, reflects the heart*
HEADS WEST MIGHT
ciation will be entertained by the
their hall next Wedne&amp;day evening. of a woman and two men—one of Prudence Noble* Chapter of Hick­ met Allegan and on
OAN DIOOEBE
May 13. with Stale Orange' Master whom she loves, while the other

k_&gt; — Merely another little j under the w. K. Kellogg Foundsory Comers on Thursday. May 14.
prophecy by old Doctor Cobb,
Cobb. । u
*„„
»" T «“•&gt;• •&gt;
; -rine
— -l»k«
C- H Bramble as guest speaker; and loves her. .
• 1r
J
JJ
r.
..
. ' ramn
camp where
where thev
they were
were elven
given an
an nn_
opwhen lhe travelling gavel I* to be
the amateur soothsayer, wpo nortUnlty to see the work beln*
Frederic Marsh. Merle Oberon presented to thc Hickory Comer* at Ionia.
Mr. and Mrs Earl Brewer of Kent
NOTED CLERGY ASSIST
county also appearing on thc pro­ and Herbert Marshall will be starred Chapter by Laurel Chapter No. 31
never said a sooth he’s surer of done there under the Winnetka
I system
.
in this picture.
IN CONSECRATION gram.
of Nashville, the Worthy Matron
than this one:
„ —J
a____ ____ ..
... attendance
-..
This meeting, sponsored by Po­
Central
auditorium
Wednesday
. .. ..
,
. . , ,
i1 Those In
were Mr*.
making lhe presentation.
Agitation for a blanket pen- Maude W. Smith of Hasting*. De­
Local Episcopalians in At­ mona. la for re-organization and all
laurel Chapter is to present the evening by the City and High
Criminal master minds plot his
Admiral Byrd says they lake a
grange members are cordially In­
aton to cover all World war refer-' land Davis of Calhoun Co , Arthur
program and exemplify lhe obliga­ school band* under Um direction 01
tendance—New Bishop
death,
deadly
cobra*
strike
out
with
bath
every
night
at
the
South
Pole.
vited and urged lo attend. An op­
an*, regardless of rating* or physl- j Kaechele of Allegan. Mrs. Viola
tion service. It Is expected that the Lewi* Hine. The Thomapple ClaxiWe thought It sounded rather
portunity will be given all fourth poisonous fangs, and foaming goril­ several O- £. 8- lodges of the coun­
Much Loved Man
cal condition, will start a* soon a* i Moore of Hillsdale Co.. Miss Fern
degree members lo take the fifth las rage st his back, but Warner
those lately-won billion* are dlstrlb- *^c*,^d of Branch Co.. Mr*. Myrna strange. A student figured II out—
The most difficult part of the con­ degree. All who are now fifth degree Oland a* the famous Chinese de­ ty will be represented.
lhe night* come only once In six
।
Denison
of
Eaton
Co.
and
George
secration
services
at
Grace
Church.
utfd. At first *orae
। members, please try to be present, tective calmly and silently unravels
High School Association.
। Schutt of Van Buren Co. Ml** Ens- month*.
Grand Rapids, last Friday ha* been j We expect to present something new one of the most baffling mysteries EDITDR De FOE SPENDS
veteran*' organiza­
JjM or
pram,
A SUNDAY IN HASTINGS.
writing It up. I| seems almost : to us In muswai
tion will oppose It
musical entertainment. of hl* entire career in "Charlie
Editor M H. DeFoe of th* Char­
to convey In word* the|
UKllt wireshmenu.
I-ere,hmenU
bring
chan at the Circus."
—n o t for long,
These seven commissioner* are lo 1 thr,e day* ot
ad- Impossible
1
Please
t
—
..
beauty and solemnity of It without
LT" _
.
lotte Republican-Tribune, in com­
°* cto-Uc&lt;p,„.
attend a three
venture in lhe live* of rural Khool “Xm, . “pW™ Mnunilnu!i
though.
At first
pany with Mrs. DeFoe spent a re­ school assembly Friday morning
McLaglen In "Profes­
Icongress will be
school session at Winnetka Ill
ch,ldren 11 relieve* lhe monotony
sional Soldier.** cent Sunday In Hastings with their will addrcaa the students on «i
an Episcopalian It wa* Impressive BREAKS BOTH WRISTS
starting the latter part of June, a* ‘nd
This Is lhe picture, adapted from daughter Rose. Mr DeFoe dated his tlonal guidance.
Nidfull
¥
10
an
ou
^
ld
"
'
_
IN
kALL
FROM
SWING.
guests of thc W. K Kellogg Foun- .
°‘d
*"L-counthe Damon Runyon story, that editorials that week from Hastings,
•
ting
up
on
the
calendar
Lesee.
11
flight
have
seemed
too
ritualistic.
।
Our
Coat*
Grove
correspondent
datlon. Thl* U an extension pro. “* d ~
Last Monday morning amn more
light, and this new
Bud'* birthday Is on Thursday; ;100 ,lke 8 PMeanl. And yet that 1* sends In lhe report of an accident stars McLaglen with little Freddie and a* always on a visit here, find* members were Initialed Into tha Fu­
Ject of the Northern Illinois State | pinching day. Friday; kissing day.
pension act — one
11
No carefully re- that befell one of their school schol- Bartholomew. It Is an adventure ro­ something of local Interest to com­
ture Farmers of America chapter
Teachers' College.
Saturday. Oh well! Nobody would bearsed and costumed stage preaen- -•••
ars. Evelyn Townsend. .n
12-year-old mance. teeming with action, and ment on.
which
has been organised at lhe
1 want to kiss hl* dirty face, anyway." Itallon 0011,(1 have bc*n nwre beau‘ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cha*. telling the story ot a great friend­
attended lhe Presbyterian
previous
pension
KATE SMITH TO CELEBRATE
I
• • •
; liful and awe-inspiring than that Townsend, who fell from the swing ship between a little boy king and a church and wa* especially Impressed
: Took a motor trip thru lhe south- l"rv,ce ca",ed
Mmple on the school grounds. Friday, re- gruff soldier of fortune.
FIFTH
RADIO
ANNIVERSARY.
is to tadpoles—will
"When thc Moon Comes Over the ' ___
__
_ __ _ ____
...
harktrrniinn nf a Invrlv
lovely altar with celving severe injuries.
l°
spring season
school forest near Yankee
be passed.
| west part of Barry county recently. background of
Cobb Stars in “Every­
Mountain." the identifying theme1
gleaming candelabra and scarlet
She was brought lo Pennock hos­
At lean the veteran* have the ar­ of Kate Smith and her Swanre* I Saw a swamp where rabbit* had
body'* old Man."
furnished a fine line of thought for ,
thirteen of the member* will
pital where It wa* discovered both
gument of patriotic service on their music will usher in the fifth anni­ eaten the top clear of! of every
The
story
of
"Everybody's
Old
him to carry back home.
.
“ alS Junior
To the majestic tones of the or­ wrist* were fractured. She also re­
j aide. And Isn't It true that to near- versary of radio's most popular small grub and browsed the bark
Man” is that of a mon who devotes
cleanly off every large shrub as high gan the long procession filed slowly ceived several bad cuts and bruises his life to building up a tremendous
The DeFoe'* also called at the Farmers' Week.
songstress. May 4th. Coincident with
Into lhe church, led by lhe Grace on her head We are sorry. Evelyn,
Colgrove
home
on
w.
Green
street
• • •
as
they
coifld
reach.
We
saw
a
ceptlon of the national figurehead) this event will be the celebration of swamp which used to be a lake be­ choir in their scarlet robes. Then but it's comforting to know that at canning business, then suddenly
which
drew
ti&gt;e
following
oboervaThe
last
home
room period of th*
No longer I* It square-jawed, •elf­ Kate's birthday. Since the an­ fore the Depression.
lay officials of lhe church and your age broken bones heal rapidly. finds that It has lost Its zest when Uon:
I school year will be held n*xt Mon­
hl* closest rival die*. Leaving the
clergymen from this and other dio­
dependent Yankee Doodle. It'e ■ nouncement that she was to be ten­
Mrs. Carrie colgrove. widow of day morning.
Explorer Lincoln Ellsworth claims business In the care of his cocky
I generous, jolly smiling Santa Claus dered a party on that night by the
ceses
.
.
six
of
the
outstanding
Admiral Byrd has given count­
■■■■ w ■ — — nephew. Cobb sets out to see the former Circuit Judge P—T- Co** I
bringing free check* for everybody; Washington. D- C-. Unit of the A less Interviews but the one that bishops In lhe country in their for the United Slates lhe only un­ sights of the world When chance grove, and for years the best known
HE LH^ES HOFFMAN.
&lt;k p Tea Company, she ha* been
regalia
a Russian claimed territory in the antarctic. It
state wide citizen of Barry county. I We like our congresaman Hoffthat la, free until the taxpayer* deluged with letters from her thou­ pleased him mast was given lo a 15- episcopal
wo*. V M-ru*
,an encounter with the Chil­
seem u*e
like uuiuv.
home, uuwe.er.
however, unrepre­ won't
Ilves In the stately old home here man and shall gladly follow him In
year-old High school girl for her priest In ceremonial cope .
start paying the bill
ili
there
Is
a
car
in
every
garage,
a
:
dre
?
of
hla
0,d
r
‘
val
suddenly
sands of listeners extending con­
school paper. She asked him If he sentatives of the Syrian and Greek chunk of blubber in every pot. and | nncls ® new interest. Because he had on Green street. She is more or less 1 all things reasonable. We believe he
pefying the Almighty.
gratulations and good wishes. Her
retired from her activities of other ‘13 earnestly
‘‘ endeavoring
"
‘to accom­
got his southern accent at the churches marched slowly up the
E'OLLOWING the example set desk has been piled high daily with South Pole—he was bom In Vir­ aisle of a crowded church The usual a tax gatherer shivering at lhe door once loved their mother. Cobb de- days but is finding much comfort plish something worth while tor hU
of every igloo.
termines to reform these headstrong
* soma year* ego by a certain fa­ bundles of fan mail.
district and lhe whole country. We
ginia. This pleased him but he is Communion service was read and
, youngsters, and a splendid story' 1* and happiness in live quiet and
Her
host*
will
be
the
employees
of
the
sermon
preached
by
the
bishop
' moua personage, a cock sure Infidel
still undecided as to whether six?
------------------- — ■
developed. The two youngsters final- charm of her lovely home. Homes sympathise with him for being com­
the Washington branch and their
of southern Ohio, lhe Rt. Rev. ............ - - ■
made a speech lately, defying God friends, and will Include everyone was trying lo pull his leg or not.
ly discover who Cobb actually is. in may be classified the same as indi­ pelled. through his aggressive ef­
Henry W. Hobson
an Imposing
viduals. The Colgrove home regis­ forts to aid his fellow men. to wilhto avlte him dead on the spot. It from the leading executives down to
I
that Is the high spot of the
ters lhe poise and dignity that one
Thl* is the time of the year when figure with Iron-gray hair and a
seemed, first off, a very sound Idea, the newest store clerk. Ted Collins,
dominating personality. In his ad­
associates
with refinement and
ly aver that he la
suckers
run
in
our
creeks.
It
recalls
but nothing happened, so the gentle her announcer-manager, and Jack
dress he pointed out that the work­
।
ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY.
leadership Mrs. Colgrove 1* in sat­
to
our
mind
the
year*
far
back
man took thl* for proof there wa* Miller and his orchestra who are
ing
of
miracles
Is
not
the
setting
1 In Tuesday evening's Orand Rap- isfactory health which will be good support ot all good citizens'.—Deno God and went hl* way rejoicing. heard with Kate every Tuesday. when our young men had a serious aside of tried, tested and accepted
One
day
they
were
having
a
law
caiur
Republican.
i ids Press was a picture of Tom news to the many Eaton county
time keeping the frying pans full
Some look on this as blasphemy, Wednesday and Thursday on A. A
laws of nature, but rather by the suit up In Justice Beadle's office so Burns of Edmore, formerly of Has­ friends who will at once remember
P.’s popular "Coffee-Time" program and not letting Game Warden grace of God accomplishing that I went up Just out of curiosity. A
but. granted that every man I* entl
BOVINE TB ERADICATION.
! tings, who ha* announced his can- lhe well known figure of her dis­
Chris Mlllenbeck catch them at it.
tied to speak hl* opinion on re­ over Ute Columbia network al 7:30 Alien parlies used to come to our which looks supremely difficult and farmer had sued Vet McLaughlin i dldacy for lhe office of stale repre- tinguished husband who spent hi*
The stale agricultural department
would be Impossible but for lhe and got Judgment against him for | scnlative on lhe republican ticket early youth in charlotte.
ligion, I'd call It pure gall. Think
when she extends her greetings to creek and our gang would sejpcl one power derived from Him. The con­ a hundred dollars. Justice Beadle ' in Montcalm county. Tom is editor
the department's work of eradicat­
of Inviting the Almighty to suspend
to
Impersonate
the
warden
and
her 3.800 guests at Constitution
McLaughlin, when du I of the Edmore Times and associate
OUT ON BAIL.
ing bovine tuberculosis tn amn
the entire cosmic scheme while Hall
scare the wits out of these out­ secration of a bishop was doing said, "Mr
Sterling E. Modrack ot Battle' counties. Including Barry. The oth­
that'. . . calling a minister to be a you think you can pay this?" and 1 editor of lhe Lakeview Enterprise.
forging a thunderbolt to abollah one
Kale started broadcasting over siders. They generally left the worker ot miracles in this present Vet answered. “As soon as I shear
Creek, one of the two persons ar­ ers are Allegan. Oceana. Montcalm.
solitary copycat of nn amateur Columbia in May. 1931. and her vicinity on high, and left their fish day ot unrest and shifting values. my sheep" and everyone started to । His friends are very active In Mis rested for driving away Night Police
Muskegon. Clinton and St. Joseph.
Ajax. Wopld you call out the stand fame spread Immediately. She didn't also. These fish lasted even better And ail those who had known the laugh. I said to a farmer from Ce­ behalf. Friends here wish him suc- Shultz's car. was arraigned before
Ing army of the United State* to croon, lilt coyly, or vocalize, she than those our own boys caught. bishop-elect as friend and parish dar Creek. "What's the Joke?" and
Justice Matthews Thursday after­
-just sang" In a hearty way that They would come home around four priest felt that he would not fall In. he said. "Vet McLaughlin never GOOD TIME TO FILL
kill a cockroach?
noon. He waived examination and carefully studied before you actual­
o'clock
In
the
morning
with
their
won a huge and devoted audience.
owned a sheep In his life." Justice
YOUR COAL BIN. the Justice fixed hl* ball at 3500. ly start to drive a car." says a writ­
catch and lhe whole family would his new position.
Following the sermon the formal Beadle called the court to order
Forrest Johnson, local coal deal­ which hl* mother furnished. It is er. And it 1* useful to know momIT HAS been In print sn often you
pile out and fry fish and listen to
WOODLAND KCHOF.H.
consecration
began. and Jimmie McGlynn, the little er. is featuring summer prices on expected that hl* trial will come on thing of the art of driving a bar­
* must know It by heart, yourself:
lhe night's hilarious doings which service ot
I started for a stroll one day.
coal that offer an opportunity for sometime during this term of cir­ gain if you propose to purchase a
Flanked
by
two
bishops,
the
Rl.
Rev.
Irishman,
rose
and
said.
"Judge,
he
lost nothing in the telling. Where
At sight of her recreant gentleman The sun was getting low.
second-hand one.
looks like an honest mon!"
savings. Talk with him about it.
cuit court.
the excitement was Insufficient, one George Stewart of Chicago and the
friend, the poor bruised butterfij (When you are busy thinking
Rt- Rev. Gray of Northern Indiana,
felt a great sense of her wrong*— You roam farther than you know.) local party would scare another, the btahop-elect Lewis B. Whitte­
and the tales, which varied, pro­
My
feet
had
chance
to
take
me
the wretch wanted to go bock to b1«
more. was escorted to the presiding
vided amusement for old and young
wife or something equally dastardly Out to the edge of town, and
thru many a winter's evening, long bishop, the Most Rev James De Wolf
As I'd grown so weary. !■ ihot
—and the next thing she knew she
after. Mr. Mlllenbeck was the in­ Perry of Rhode Island, seated in
I'd sit me down, and
his chair before the altar. The cer­
wa* bolding * smoking automat!* Rest for just a little while
spiration of some of the first real
tificate of election, his canonical
! that accidentally happened to be Ir Upon a fallen.tree, and
full-grown cuss words that ever fell
credentials and the consent* of the
1 her handbag along with some lip Listen to the sleepy birds, and
upon my lender ears.
bishops were read by the various
। stick sad a recipe for fudge; and h( Bee what I could see.
clergy appointed for those purposes.
8o Wallace Osborn 1* going to
wo* deader than tte prosecutor'*
The candidate was subjected to an
build one of those new-fangled
I chance of convlctlnk her for th* A squirrel startled by my step
examination as lo hl* future con­
modern houses! After they move in,
, killing. But Ju* 1 prior to that “er (IU chosen tree near-by)
duct In office, having first given a
Jane is going to get an exclusive in­
' erythlng went black before bet Ran quickly up an old rail fence
promise of conformity lo the doc­
terview on "How it feel* to live in a
trines. discipline and worship of the
1 eyes" There's one detail which nev IU bushy-tall held high.
shoe-box I “ Now. Wallace, what in
It
chattered
as
it
looked
at
me
Protestant Episcopal church. Then
er varies—that going black-before
the dickens are you going to do
A*
If
it
tried
to
say.
assisted by two ministers, the Rev.
' the-eyc* bnslneiis.
with
the
skates,
sleds,
ski*,
lawn
“Why came you lo my hollow tree?
Simms of St. Thomas church. Bat­
mower and all the other "traps"
•
It was In the case they tried re Why don't you go away?"
tle Creek, and Rev. Ogilby, presi­
which one keeps in the basement?
‘ cenlly la New York. It's In Ibis
dent of Trinity College, he was at­
And no attic? what about all the
, latest case at Chicago. TIs a acre A chipmunk chlppered loudly
tired In a bishop's robes. Strange
large framed photographs of the
. affliction, always marked by lota Running quickly here and there
though it may seem, tiicre was
ancestors, old furniture, love letters,
lapse of memory and freq cent ly Cr-u The funny little striped thing
hardly a dry eye In lhe gathering as
old sixx:*. discarded toys, trunk*,
Bright-eyed
and
brown
of
hair.
' pled with temporary insanity, bui
lhe former, well beloved pastor of
satchels, crutches, galoshes. Christ­
Grace church knelt at his own altar
It's certainly fine for marksman It sits upon Its wee hind legs
mas trimmings, clothes for the kids and three bishops laid their hands
How statue like Its pose, and
•hip.
to dress up In. and all the other
At the slightest move I make
on his head and pronounced the
Brawls In Hollywood.
things whose legitimate home is
Down in the ground it goes.
words that made him one of their
the attic? According to tradition number, and the presiding bishop
^JATURALLY, 1 have hot sooth
we should keep that stuff a hundred
* ' ern blood, which seems to be A robin calling to its male
hung around his neck the cross
years, then give all but the love
th* hottest there la. although down Sat high above my head, and
further Symbolizing his high office.
letters to the Salvation Army. The
home I never noticed II But 0|&gt; Telling all its feathered friends
Once again lhe long procession
kid* and neighbor's kids can thor­
farmed and filed out.
But now
north. If trouble Impended, people
oughly appreciate the love letters
there were seven Instead of six
would speak of my hot southern Thc swallows soaring lowly
some rainy Saturday. And. where
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 2)
blood when all the time I thought Gave promise of the rain
will the little mousies set up house­
That wa* so badly needed.
I was having a nervous chili..
keeping? Then too where's the next
On fields of starting grain.
crop nf antiques coming from for MAY INTRODUCE NEW
Being thus atl hot-blooded up, I
Barry county's Bl-Centennlal. a
GAME BIRD IN STATE
adore fighting. If somebody else due* Then, as the shadows lengthened
hundred years from now. if people
IL Since our movie heroes always And birdland all grew still
The Chukar Partridge Might
stage their combats In some utterly From across the darkening meadows begin to discard attics?
••eluded spot, such na a cafe or • 1 heard the whippoorwill.
Prove Good Type to
We found ourself reciting “Julius
alght club, I burry hither and yoo I bowed my head In reverence
Caesar' at lhe Ironing board, and
Propagate Here
hoping to be present when an emblt A* I listened to it* song
If God so loved his feathered this was the result. Friend*. Amer­
Considering the
possibility of
icans. countrymen, plug up your getting some new game bird that
friends.
bouncing ■ special order of street
ears)
We
are
about
to
hold
a
typi
­
Then, nothing much was wrong.
could be e*tabllshed In Michigan to
bread* under glaaa with mushrooms
cal American presidential campaign.
supplement pheasant shooting, the
Welcome to praise our candidate State Conservation commission ha*
—twenly minute*. 90 cent* — off I waited till its song was still
and throw dirt enough
to bury
some rival'* classic profile.
Then softy stole away.
decided to Investigate the feasibility
the other one. The evil that politi­ of Introducing the chukar part­
But It'* hard enough for me to God's forest-folk had gone lo bed
cians do lives after them; lhe good ridge, now being reared artificially
get In touch with a waller, let alone Until another day.
Is oft Interred with their bones:—
In California.
■ good plate-tossing contest To­
If a new game bird 1* to be in­
day the war correspondent* report It came not o'er the radio
The finest bit of modern photo­ troduced it must be a sturdy, pro­
two brisk battle* on the Hollywood No ticket did I buy
No scenery grand—made by man's graphic advertising—the adolescent lific bird and easy to breed artificial­
front, and I'm absent a* usual.
boy in Squlbb's Dental Cream adv
hand.
ly. It must be adaptable to Michigan
In the main bout, both gladiators Or mad crowds rushing by.
conditions and able lo endure heavy
NOTICE TO POLICYHOLDERS.
were script writer*, proverbially a There'd been not one rehearsal
annual shooting.
tigerish breed. Believe It or not. a And no amateurs were there
At a meeting of the Board of Di­
The Hungarian partridge which
Mr. Rlakln tangled with a Mr. Rus­ Among, these, nature's actors
rectors of lhe Woodland Mutual 1* being propagated at the state
kin, the presumption being that In God s “Theater of the Air.”
Fire Insurance Company. Wood­ game farm and has been Introduced
one of the gentlemen regarded the
land. Michigan, on April 17, 1938. In various parts of lower Michigan
other a* a typographical error.
They sang until their song was thru it wa* decided that the Company ha* been rather slow in establishing
will not hire, the Slate Electrical In­ itself. Its cover requirements are
No one lo say them nay. and
English Red* Again.
spectors to Inspect the Old Electri­ somewhat different than those of
Not a single gong was heard
C ■MHi lilNU printed here recent­ As I listened in that day
cal Wiring, which was Installed pre­ the pheasant, quail or ruffed
ly about the way the English Their program started with the vious to September 22. 1935. in
grouse. As yet it is not well enough
handle their reds and pink* promptBuildings Insured In this Company. established or sufficiently numerous
od/kn English gentleman to write No studio had they, but Just
The following addition was made to Justify legal shooting. It is not as
giving further details.
to the By-Law* relative to Chattel easy to breed as the pheasant.
A canopy of tree* 'nealh which
Mortgages:
Twould seem that over there all They sang all day.
It may be the requirements of
"Section 20.—The Standard
public servant*. Including, notably,
tiw chukar partridge are such that
Provisions of Paragraph 12 of
atate-pald school teachers, must I heard no voice announce a guest
It could adapt Itself to Michigan
the
Policy
are
hereby
waived,
No
clock
ring
out
the
time
conditions and If so ita Introduction
awear to uphold the crown, which
in that lite average on Person­
and propagation might be desirable
mean* they cannot preach commu­ No weather, new*, or anything
al Property will not be voided
and advisable.
nism to their pupil* without vio­ 'Bout dope, or paste, or crime
because of a Chattel Mortgage
lating a solemn oath and. If caught Just Joyous wholesome singing
RURAL SCHOOLS
so doing, they lone their oinelal And Nature's song* ot_love
PLAN FAIR EXHIBITS.
That made you feel so happy.
The report ot Ute Secretary for
bead* instant er.
Moreover,
no
Already lhe rural school* of Barry
the first three month* showed a
Tlie sponsor —"God Above."
net gain of 143 new members and county are preparing their displays
It surely wa* a place of rest
Soviets may use tl&gt;e radio to preach The music was sublime
3330.475 in amount at risk. The for exhibition at the fair Sept. 8 to
the overthrow of the existing .gov­ Go hear these "Woodland
Treasurer * report disclosed a bal­ 12. Cash prises are given the winning
ernment in favor of the Russian
ance of approximately 325.000 cash school*, with but a few change* tn
strels"
And their "Woodland Songs" some­ on hand and in banka after de­ the premium list this year. Com­
missioner Maude Smith ha* sent
ducting all adjusted loaae*.
In other words—forgive the pan,
time.
the list of changes to each rural
F. C. Kilpatrick,
Mn. J. E- Vandenberg.
please—Britain never shall be Slave.
—Adv.
Secretary. teacher.
(Mertle Van).
. IRVIN S. COBB.

Kiley
Riley Stories
Stories

a

When you come to the Hastings City Bank to consult
with "Your Banker" you are invited to sit down and
discuss freely and confidentially any problem you
may have. For over a half century this greeting ha
placed our customers in a position to make them feel
that we are interested in their problems, so that
financial matters are discussed as "between p
ners." Friendliness is one of the first pleasures you
sense when you visit this bank.

nd individuals
We ore loaning money to concerns and
on improved real estate. We are also making loans
based on financial statements.

Our Savings Department is at
deposits are insured.

Safety Deposit Boxes are for rent for your conveni­
ence. Every facility of a modern bank is at your di«posal in this friendly bank.

Hastings
ELEPHONE 2103

*

•

HASTINGS

MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, MAY 7. 1W

ONE
church was not in IU ranks. In his
place *** Bishop Whittemore.

PhnUtnd. in hqrtor of thc presiding
The lovely dining room of the
hotel was filled to capacity and
many small tables had been set in

H to have thc honor of eating do his pert In carrying out and jho stand fast in time of trouble
lunch with a very important bishop furthering the work and lift of thc and adversity and lead thoee in
their care into calmer waters, not
and a newly-created one. And it Church he hu served so loyally thus
with broken illusions and a bitter
was. The Rev. Simms of Battle
Creek presided Bishop Whittemore
The main address was delivered
values and a truer appreciation
'
with a token of the esteem in which by Bishop Petry tn whose honor the of
of
the real meaning of It.
luncheon
wm
given.
He
opened
his
1
he is held by other etergymen
As a fitting climax to a nulmctfabte
throughput the diocese. Bishop Mc- speech by addressing the wives of
day.
Hie guests gathered on the
Cortnlck . . . who admitted
that the bishops and other clergy "and I 1mezzanine
floor where the presiding
whether he likes it or not, he will their husbands." He stressed the 1mundoubtedly be known henceforth portant, yet quite unseen and un­ bishop and lhe new one received
as the "old" bishop . . . consoled the sung part played by the women in and shook hands with everyone. In
lhe erttlre assembly of persons
members of the church whose min­ their husbands' careers.
The three ouUtanding attributes there, none had aught but the high­
ister has been taken from them
est praise for Bishop Whittemore
with the thought that though he of the ideal bishop, he said, were
and for his wife, "There win be no
those
of
a
teacher,
missionary
and
has left them to become a higher
dignitary In the church, he Is the priest. And there was no one to position or situation which she will
same man they have always known deny that the latest addition to the not be able to fill with ease and
grace" was the theme of all com­
. . . their priest and frisnd. He re­ episcopal ranks was a perfect com­
ments ... a fitting tribute to the
minded those present that history bination of all three Not only the
had been made that morning, his­ Church, byt the whole of modem so­ charming wife of a man held dear
• by all who hare known him.
tory in the church, for another nigh ciety has great need of Just such
And though we cannot boast of
official had been created who would men. for It is they and their kind
having witnessed three consecra­
tions. as did the old gentleman who
sat next to us. and who declared he
didn't feel a day over 85. we are very
proud and very humble that it was
our exceedingly great privilege to
witness this one.

FOR MENU IDEAS
MAY I SUGGEST SOME
NEW THINGS FOR
YDURSUNDftYOINNER
MRS.J0NE5

YES,DO! I FIND
YOliR SUGGESTIONS
50 HELPFUL

SUGGESTIONS

FOR MEAL

PLANNING
AND

IDEAS

FOR SAVING

LIMA BEANS sr
SWEET CORN -

No. 2
can

No. 2
can

14c

BARRY VILLE.
There was no news for the past
two weeks from here as our tele­
phone was not in working order.
Heber Foster .attended an insur­
ance meeting in Detroit Friday.
Verne Wilcox of Dowling called
on his brother. Herbie. Thursday
evening.
Mr. and MY.t Herb Bishop and
daughter of Hastings called on Mr.
■ and Mrs. Heber Foster Sunday eve­
ning.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Day of
South Hastings were Sunday dinner
guests of L. A. Day and family.
| Mr. and Mrs. Heber Foster alI tended the funeral of George Cole
In Battle Creek Wednesday.
Mr. ----and--------Mrs. wSam
Geiger
.■ —
—.. —
... spent
-----from Thursday till Sunday with
’ their son Donald and family of ।
■ Saranac.
)
Miss Dora Foster, was pleasantly

PLEASANT VALLEY.
surprised Saturday evening when from Clarksville visited at the home
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Dye and
she returned home from Battle of Sylvester Oversmith Sunday.
spent BaMRy
Creek to find a crowd of friends ; Mrs. Floyd Ferutemaker and
■ Martha went to Grand Rapids Fribirthday, a huppy evening was j day with Mrs. Arthur Potter and
spent and refreshments of ice cream .Ethel from Woodland.
I Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Fuller and
Herbert
Mr. and MTS. Floyd Nesbitt were family from coats Grove spent
in Lansing Saturday to have her Bunday with Roy Wickham and Geiger home.
I family.
Miss Nadia Hines of Pinhook
spent
Saturday
night
and
Sunday
A very enjoyable time was spent
Edgar Boulter spent Sunday with
his mother. Mra. Anna Hunt of with Btuiah Kime.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Geiger and
school band played several «lec- I Prairieville.
Hons, Ddrothy Lathrop and Elaine
three sons visited their daughter,
Mrs. Emery Benedict and family at
Day sang, and a very interesting
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Chalk Talk was given by Rev.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Reynolds Ionia, Wednesday afternoon.
Prichard of Nashville.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Brake visited
visited in Orand Rapids Bunday
their daughter, Mrs. Donald Blow­
Mrs Burr Fossett and two chil­ afternoon.
dren spent from Thursday till Sun­
Mr. and
mr.
ana Mrs.
airs. Wm.
win. vrauicr.
Cramer. Sr..
01.. . Ins and family ot South Boston
and
family
spent
Sunday
at
LanSunday.
’
day In Battle creek with Mr. and
sing, the guests of their daughter,
Miss Prances Scott of Grand RapClayton willetu of Detroit and Mrs. Merle Callihan, and family.
Ida vlsltad her parenta, Mr. and
------ I Mrs. Elmer Scott. Bunday.
Miss Elizabeth Griffin of Charlotte
CARLTON CBNTCRspent Saturday night and Bunday
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Brake. JunMiss Noreen Clem of Ionia spent lor and Jackolyn of Ionia spent
with his parents. Sunday callers
were Archie Newton and children a few days at her home here last Siwday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
and -------------attended —
the -------funeral of J.
of Prichardville. In the afternoon week
------- ----Brake.
they motored lo Charlotte and also her grandfather. John Stadel.
Remember the W. M. A. at the
inspected lhe new schoolhouse in, Mrs. Fred Henney has ’been con­ home of Mn. Mabie Cool, May
fined to her bed the past week stii- 14th. Thia la the first meeting of
Nashville.
Batllc fering from a heart attack. Miss the new year and lhe delegates nave
Mrs. Chas. Day was
Jessie Wilson
is assisting with the some new ideas for all. Everyone Is
Creek shopper Thursday.
-------------Mrs. Maud Meade. Mrs. Van Dor- . housework,
cordially Invited.
Rev. —
and
en. Mrs. Elsie Potter. Mrs. Ethel
4 Mrs. W. A. Exner of j
Mr. and Mra. Ciatenee Kime and
Gr?en, Mrs. Feme Hawblitz, Mrs. Benfield were supper guests of Mr. ( Joyce. Mra. Jane Kime accompanied
Wenger and Mrs. Ethel Wilcox at­ and Mrs. Fred Henney Tuesday Mrs. Emery Kime and Beulah to
tended Achievement Day in Has­ night.
Ionia Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Fuller and
tings Friday.
Mrs. Emery Kime. Glen and Beu­
Mr. and. Mrs. Lewis Hines called Mrs. Wm. Hale spent Thursday In lah. Mrs. Jane Kime, and Vaughn
on the Fbster family Sunday eve­ Battie Creek on business.
Geiger were In Hastings Saturday.
ning.
I Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Savacooi were
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Geiger and
also Baltic Creek visllofs on Thurs- family of Ionia spent Bunday with
HOLMES CHURCH.
| iday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Slater.
Mrs. Colonel Yarger is working
Henry Gosch from Middleville,
The children of Mr. and Mra.
spent Thursday with his sister. Mrs. at the home of Sylvester Ovcnmith Lester Stuart of South Boston spent
of near Coats Grove. He is very .ill. Sunday with their grandparents.
John McLeod.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Freeland and
Wc are sorry to hear of lhe severe Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Slater while
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Lahr -from illness of Burt Farrell. All hope for Mr. and Mrs. Stuart visited his
Hastings spent Sunday with Mr. his speedy recovery.
brother and wife al Chesaning. Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Perkins.
Mayoma valentine. Doris Clem. and Mrs. Vere Howlette and family
Miss Evelyn price from West Lake Tom Robinson and James Carpen­ of Clarksville were also visitors.
Odessa spent Saturday at lhe home ter. eighth graders of Carlton Cen­
of Henry Brovont.
ter school, attended a banquet in
PRAIRIEVILLE.
Mrs. Edclje Holmes and daughter. honor of Barry county eighth grad­
Mrs. Adda Munger, Clare. Esther
Mrs. Ruth Johnston from Mt ers held last Friday evening at
and Nina Munger and Henry
pleasant and Ernest oversmith Woodland Consolidated school.
Schwartz spent last Sunday al
Jackson, the guesU of Mr. and Mrs.
Royal Bachelor.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pettyjohn
of Plainwell spent the latter part
of last week with Mr. and Mrs. Marcliu Bagivy.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lowery and
family hare moved to Martin.

10

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WAX
DCANC ”
2-15'
GREEN DLnllU
HOMINY a
3 5J 25*
or

Stringless

AND MAKE A LIST OF ALL
THOSE THINGS YOU NO
LONGER. USE AND SELL
THEM WITH A WANT-AD

A WEEK LATER
"HOW DID THE

WANT-AD WORK, MARY

JUST LIKE YOU
SAID IT WOULD,
JANE,THANKS
FOR
THE. TIP

FINE 1 FLAVORED

APPLE SAUCE 4 30
PEAS 5S1I/S±L
15c
GREEN Giant PEAS e-17c
NIBLETS
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BEANS
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MUSHROOMS ItSSLr 12c
LA WHENCE

Tomato JUICE

FANCY COOKIES
Chocolate Brownies
Chocolate Marshmallows
.Society Sandwich

LB.

g|

1 /R
JL iU

The key tp real Economy

8WIFTS

CHEESE SPREADS
AMERICAN. BRICK.
PIMENTO. OLIVE

« (i LA d £c
£ PKGS.

OLEO ISiLV

2

1

3 fl’25c

FLOUR ~

25e

'v 73c

•WIFFB
• UHKUT HAVtL
CORNED BEEF
c.17e ORANGES ««*u. &gt;■“
»•■ 17c
Corned Beef Hash 2 '■■■ 29c
LEAF LETTUCE OK
u. 9c
SALMON
IS20c
PINEAPPLES ISFZ.
2
25c
SHRIMP
„„14c
BANANAS
3 u. 17c
COCOA sJSu

2 &amp; 15c

WOODBURY’S
FACIAL SOAP

SHREDDED WHEAT ... 2 pkgs. 25c
WHEAT KRISPIES_____ 2 pkgs. 19c
ECONOMY CEREAL ..2 lb. box Me
PUFFETS—-Wheat. Rice
pkg. 10c
RICE—Fancy Blue Rose______ lb. 6c
Novy leans—Choice Grade 3 lbs. IOc

‘Low Cost

FELS NAPTHA

“Ef

SWEETHEART SOAP
SKIN CHAHM _____ ______ _

LAVA SOAP
IVORY FLAKES

22c
... 5c

6c
fe"24c

COLO DUST POWDER—large pkg. 18c

COLD DUST CLEANSER________ can 5C

C. THOMAS STORES

family spent

I

Sunday with Mrs.
MU® *0Ml Chappell

Mrs. John Brigham ot Decatur
spent the week end with her par­

ents, Mr. and Mrt. ►. J. Hughes.

liy al Orand Rapids over the week
1end.
Harvey Mills and Roy Anderson
1and Mrs. M. A. Mills Wednesday |
:night and Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Nevins and |
family attended a dance recital at !
Plainwell Friday night. Their inUli
daughter Shirley had a part in the
program.
Mn. Jennie Warner of Vermontvllle la a guest of Mr. and Mrs,
Holiywell al present.
Mrs. Bessie Hughes and Charleu
Hughes went to Stickney, 8. D,v
Wednesday, called there by tha
death of a brother. Homer Hughes,
a native ot Prairieville, well and
favorably known by the older ones
here. The funeral was held Sun­
day. Ho leaves a widow and several
children; three brothers, Richard,
Fred J, and Charles ot this place
and sister. Mrs. Julia Hoylt of Man­
chester. N. H. Sympathy is extended
lo the family.
The Boys' and Girls' 4-H club at­
tended Achievement Day at Has­
tings. Those winning gold seals were
Ronald McKlbbln. Lloyd Boniface;
Clair Munger. Karl Smith and
I Boyd Morehead.
The baccalaureate services will
be held at the Methodist Episcopal
church Sunday night. Rev. Ralph
Bates delivering the sermon. Com­
mencement exercises at the same
church Friday night. May to. Rev.
W. Maylan Jones of Hastings, giv­
ing the address. Rockwell's orches­
tra of Hickory Comers has been se­
cured for thc evening. Hie claw
consists of three members, Boyd
Morehead, valedictorian; Virginia
Van Hout, salutalorian; Don Hig­
gins. class will.
Mr. and Mrs. Silas Doster visited
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown end
Beverly nt Hastings Saturday.
The I. O. O. F. and Rebekah
Barry county Assn, will meet hero
Monday night May 11. at tho
Methodist Episcopal church. Com­
mittee on program Is Mrs. SteUa
Barber and Mrs. Mary Flower; com­
mittee on supper. Mrs. Mina M11L«,
Mrs. Honeywell and Miss Johnson.
We are hoping for a good attend­
ance.
Mrs. Veme Calthrop surprised
Mr. calthrop with a 6 o'clock birth­
day dinner Tuesday. Mr. and Mra
Llewellyn Erb and Lamar of Delton
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nagel ol
Guli Lake were guests.
In the ball game between lhe Or­
1
angeville and Prairieville teams
Friday the score was a to 5 favoring
Prairieville.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert McKlbbln
and family have moved back hero
from Rutland where they moved
last fall.

EAST DELTON.
Mr. and Mrs. Oils Boulter of Cres­
sey visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Donald McQuarrle.
Mr. and Mrs. Vem Town and
twin daughters of Plainwell spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Rex Waters.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen OrlfTen ot
near Fair Lake and Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson Dubois cf PritchardvlUe were
Sunday afternoon visitors at Mason
Newton's.
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Waters and
Mn. Ina Payne accompanied Ed
Willison to Stanton Monday where
they attended the funeral of their
grandmother, who lived to the good

Mr. and Mra. Clair Collison and
son of Kalamazoo visited his father
on Sunday al lhe home of Floyd
Collison.
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Collison and
Mrs. Clara Galnder were In Battle
Creek Wednesday. They visited
terrain Collison at Nichols hospital.
Mr. and Mra. Ardy Louden and
family and her mother of Kalama­
zoo visited at Clate Louden's on
Bunday.
Things we'd like to know. Why are
lawyers' arguments called briefs?

NATURAL GAS
It Will Soon Be Here, the Efficient... Clean
Economical and Easiest ... Fuel for—

Q _
OCn
O b,r!

DROMEDARY

FA-REE FLUFFftff.S.I 25c

Pennock hospital Hastings for ob­
servation. Saturday night. We are
hoping it is nothing serious and she
will soon be home.
Miss Opal Honeywell, who has
been in training at Nichols hospital.
Battle Creek, will be unable to grad­
uate with her class on account of
illness. She has worked hard, loo
hard for her health, site will soon
make up for the lime tost. She Is
one of our popular young ladies
and has a host of friends here who
wish she might have been allowed
to finish with hcr class.
Mrs. Minnie Vondcrbrook, who
has been with her son-in-law and
daughter. Mr. and Mrs. John DcBack. for several months has re­
turned to her home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Johnson entertalned at a Sunday dinner in
honor of their daughter Loraine's
second birthday. The guests were
Mr. and Mrs. George Adrlanson
and Lucille and Barbara, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jake Johnson and Dora.
Mother's Day will be observed
next Sunday at the Methodist
Episcopal church. A girls' quartet,
composed of Ruth Krick. Mabie
johncock. Lucille Adrianson and
Doris Johnson will sing "One Night
As I Lay Dreaming." Everyone In­
vited.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Reed and
family ot Augusta were Sunday

William Me-

GEO. E. WALKER
&amp; SONS
PICKLE CONTRACTS
AND SEED

Cooking
following pUcea:—

Water Heating
House Heating
Investigate All the Advantages of “Low Cost” Natural Gas Before Experimenting
With Any Other Fuel
You’ll Save Money

Consumers Power Co

WALLACE SEED STORE,
Hastings.

CITY NATU BANK
NaahvEle.
SMITH A DOSTER
HARDWARE,
Delton.
MIDDLEVILLE CO-OP­
ERATIVE CO.,
Our financial responsibility
may be verified al the City
Rank, Hastings, or at the
banks in Nashville, Delian
er Middleville.
The GRADING

Phone 2305
grower fairly

Machine

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, MAY T, IMS

| LEGAL NOTICES
Mrs. William Mc-

ludente from:
n
Agricull

MORTGAGE BALE
n.r.uii h*

Ch Woodk,
'ins. sophomerse;
d Joan Rogen,
a Billings, eighth
loyd Siwlp and
iday with Mrs.
a Mora Chappell

id with her par*
I- P J. Hughes,
r visited her fam-

Wednesday

Mnca Nevins and
dance recital at
Ight. Their small
tad a part In the

nr.FAVLT

FEED YOUR HOGS CULL BEANS

Seed Time is here

NOW. THKHKFOKE. Ur

...
Towntliln
ountv, MIrluran to-wtt

Hng. Tire claw
members, Boyd
or lan; Virginia
irlan; Don Hlg-

Clovers

Alfalfas

IDAHO GRIMM

RED TOP
Kentucky Blue, unhulled and fancy
We carry a complete line of seeds

Smith Bros., Veite &amp; Co
Halting* T»l«pbone 22S7

»tween the Orirfc villc teams
0 to 5 favoring

thil*. TM. noir, adi, UaM,

ibert McKlbbln
oved back hero
re they moved

McDonald.
IRDF.R FOR PUBLICATION.

im Town and
i’lalnwell spent
with Mr. and
len OrlfTen ot
Mr. and Mrs.
xhardvllle were
liters at Mason

STATE or MICHIGAN

art Waters and
companlcd Ed
Monday where
inera) of their
red to the good
In the (
7i■larrr.
Uich
holdinx fir
id mnrKace

r Collison and
tiled his father
lome of Floyd

d Collison and
were In Battle
They visited
Ichols hospital,
y Louden and
er of Kalama: Louden'
know. Why are
lalled briefs?

.1 I-.t Will end Tc-ti

ALKER
&lt;S
HOME OWNERS- LOAN COR-

rRACTS
ED

Athlellcs.
T. K. 5; Hastings 0.
T. K. 7; Sunfield 4.
Dated. April 17. A D 1836.
T. K. beat two more baseball
Stuart Clement. Judre of Probate.
rivals last week winning
w Hastings
notice or commissioner's sale anc* Sunfield. Hastings came here
under DECREE. Tuesday for a 7-inning game and
L'n.|»r «ad br virtue of ■ drrrre of th* suffered a shutout. M. Parks, T.
te «■
.
o. Mohrm»no. Reeeirer of th# N**hiii)« 1 game and turned in a very promls"&lt; r.o,rJ’o,‘ ing performance. Parks allowed
on,y ,our blts an(! slruck out five I
lUwi.m*. men. He was put in tight spots
» ** A*ni» B number of times due to errors !
*m’&lt; wrr» but each time showed real class by
Id Plaintiff. I holding Ills opponents' hitters. A
nrrm'lM^H I numbtr of errors were committed ;
&gt;r
no’! In thc field but there was also some ।
I aurtioii tn । fine fielding. All of the ix&gt;ys are '
aniv inrth« improving and “will soon hit their
oo o'clock i
Friday night the boys played a 1
uin trlere. or~p«rcN*'~oi “i*nd. dhuio &gt;ea«ue game with Sunfield. This
■nd beinx tn me tnwnihtn nf \ftiiyris. i was an Important game as Sunfield
1, had defeated Nashville earlier in the
j season. B. Cline, our southpaw. I
( pitched the entire 9 Innings and
&gt; turned in a fine game. He allowed i
t six hlL* and struck out four men. j
of section ii The rest of the team played near
'•J
errorless ball and hit like
big
bent alerter lw»8uera. O. Peeling and T. Klein
i North of each got two-base hits. H. Burns.
'I’t..rns&gt;n.o,Z
! a new member to the squad, played
nuarter of Section 11 Town" I NoHh r,«ht ne,tl and dld a Ane Job- D-

Htftart Ctemenl. Jude* ot Probate,
true rnpr.
Mildred Htnith. Rnrl.t.r of Probate.

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
—• —
data tatra-

T-" ^"‘uu“u,hl • b',“"a

te.,-"
E. Bernctt
commli*iunrr. •
I
Oot 8 u

NOTICE TO CREDITORB.

1926

• STORE.

Thu ,.n&gt;, Blvea th, l»y« three
victories with one defeat. They lead
the league thiis far with two vlctories and no losses. One more vlc-tetry over either Nashville or Free-

BANK
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

MITER

MAKE YOUR ■

HOUSE LIKE BRICK WITH

CO-OP

noalbUity

NOTICE to cnr.iii rcir.'i

bl* petition (irsylnr lh*l

1 the City

ASBESTOS SHINGLES

UCTION SALE!

Having sold my farm, I will diipoM of my panonal prop­
erty at public auction at the fa rm on Sec. 28, Hope township
1-2 mile south of the Hope Center schoolhouse, on

TUESDAY, MAY 12,1936
Commencing at 1:00 o'clock, sharp, and offer the following:
HORSE.

Croy mare, about 1400 lbs.

InHrnaHonal Bid* dalivary r«k«.

CATTLE.
Guernsey cow, 6 yrs., old, due in Oct.
Roan Durham, 4 yn. old. fresh Feb. 1.
Holstein end Jersey, 7 yrs., due in Sept.
HAY AND GRAIN.
About 2 tom alfalfa hay.
About 4 tons mixed hoy.
Yi of big atraw stock.
Stack of clover chaff.
Around 300 buiheli of com.
Some ground feed.
Some ground alfalfa.
About 6 bushels seed com.

FARM MACHINERY.

McCormick binder, 7-ft. cut good con
dition.
Champion mower, 5-ft. cut, A No.
condition.
Champion mower, old one.
Empire grain drill, 9 hoe. good one.
17-tooth spring drag. Good disc.
Wide tire wagon, good condition.
Stock rack, combination.

wide, 3 in. thick.

WheoMwrvew.

Ajax cuHivotor, 5 tooth.
30-gal. moot jo'« 3 crosscut bows.

10-gal. water separator

laneeua article*.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

taUa

100-egg electric incubator
IliU •wsslMtoe raf. 9x12 rag.

at LOW COST/

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. No g»ed* teb« wiwvW until Mt
tied for.

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

Clyde Leonard, Auctioneer.

NMfctoe

Fred Scott, Proprietor
bublieaticn nf

treat the

IDAHO CROWN

Timothy

PARTITION BALE

hrop surprised
8 o'clock blrth. Mr and Mra
Amar of Delton
Paul Nagel of

.TON.
loulter of Creswlth Mr. and

S«e Us For

MEDIUM NATIVE CROWN
MAMMOTH NATIVE CROWN
ALSIKE CLOVER
WHITE BLOSSOM
YELLOW BLOSSOM

te services will
Lhodist Episcopal
ghl, Rev. Ralph
le sermon. Com-

is Doster visited
lert Brown and
i Saturday.
and Rebekah
. will meet hera
y 11. at tha
I church. Com1s Mr*. SteiM
ry Flower; com&lt;rs. Mina Mills,
I Miss Johnson,
a good attend-

best ones are: “Who's Who in the
Major Leagues.- by Harold “SpeedJohnson. former star of the dia­
mond; "Men and Machinery.” by
'Stuart Chase: and “I Worked for
the Soviet," by Tolstoy.

NOTICE, FARMERS!

Iris' 4-H club atH Day al Hasig gold seals were
Lloyd Boniface,
tri Smith ant|

it. May 18. Rev.
if Hastings, gfv□ckwell's orches-

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGQ

.r.Y

ncr of Vermont-

nt
hes and charlei
itlckney. S. D,1
there by the
. Homer Hughes,
levllle, well and
iy the older ones
I was held Bunidow and several
rothers, Richard,
les of this place
la Hoy It of Manjalhy Is extended

port win almost assure us of a will meet on Thursday. May
chance to play Field day.
a pot luck dinner.
BeaUU®. and
Coach Holtforth thinks he has j Miss Norma Case of 14
h't upon the right combination and ' came Friday to spend the wed
that the boys from now on will play 1 with her parents, Mr. and
Home Economies Newt.
—. .----- Hugh Case.
The Home Economics Clubs, both
Games tills week: Nashville, there, 1 Thc Briggs church 'community
junior and Senior sections, attended
Bark Slain Closed.
on Tuesday; Freeport, there, on FrlFrl- J night U schdeuled for Friday, May
A family
the Home Economics Day at Michi­
Because of work on the
new' day.
gan State College In lhe Home Eco- ।building, the back stairs have been
' — “ * •*
musicians from Battle Creek internomlcs building al East Lansing.
,closed. Monday it was partitioned !
MILO,
The purpose of the event Is to off
,
as every passible precaution is I Last Week's Letter,
tented. The supper will be to
promote the high school girls' In- ।taken to prevent’injury to students.
The Home Literary Club meeting charge of the young ladles of the
terest in Home Economics and per- The
■
partition makes the halls very on April 16 wm held at the home of church.
mlt them lo meet girls from other dark
।
and necessitates the lights be- 1 Mrs. Leon
Leonard with
Mrs.
scliools who are doing similar work. ing
।
used more. A fire drill will be , Thorpe co-hoatess.
Twenty-four
So many achoobi asked permission :held In the near future to accustom , members and several visitors were Sylvia Bivens entertained on Sat­
urday afternoon honoring Mn.
“
, NOTICE OF COMMISSIONER'S BALE to send more girls that this year we the students to the use of the new present, among them Mrs. Nellie Harold Case al whose home it wai
are
not
restricting
lhe
number
from
arrangement.
cross,
district
president.
Hastings. held. There were thirty-eight guests
UNDER DECREE.
a school. Due to this fact. Judging
1------------] Kalamazoo Co. officers. Mrs. Bertha
present at the delightful affair.
contests will be discontinued.
Dr. Park. Noted Chinese Scholar Smith. Pres., am! Mrs. Jean Ver- Mrs. Mela Hyde and daughter Jone
and Lecturer Addresses T. K. mullen. Secy. Thu study for the day of Hastings. Norma Case, Mn.
Tlie following program from 10:0a
Student*.
' was Ethiopia continued. Roll was
o'clock to 4:30 has been arranged
Howard Dingman of Lansing. Mra.
in addition to group demonstrations, . Dr No-Yong Park, graduate of answered by recent war events. Mrs. Mabel Jones and daughters. Oca,
exhibits and talks: The Girl’s Own Harvard University and noted au- Vera Ijiwrince's paper 'The Em- Dorothy and Gladys of Pcnnfteld.
Room; Testing for Vitamins; Weav­ thor and lecturer, who ha* traveled peror ot Ethiopia." Mrs. Barber's Mrs. SteUa Dingman. Marion and
ing and Testing of Textiles; The'1 1extensively throughout tile United paper read by Dorothy PettenglD, Ilah. Mrs. Lena Conklin. Elsie and
and the Orisnt, gave a very "Italo-Ethfoplan
—■­ — Grace. Mrs. Rhea Lentz, Mn. Vick..... War,” 'Ethiopia
Nursery School: luncheon with spe- States
1
NOTICE or MORTGAGE BALE.
Peace: Diplomacy “or War." Mrs.
, cial program: trips to places of in­ Interesting talk before an assembly ”
I terest—Home management houses. Monday. His knowledge on the Far Brophy, were all good. Discussion
Mary Mayo Hal), women's Building, Eastern questions and his humor followed. Supper was served fol­
kept
the
student*
interested lowing the meeting. The next meet­
gymnasium and library.
ing will be a breakfast. Maj 7. at
। throughout lhe program.
home
Mrs. Schultz
withcounMrs.
I theDr.
Parkofcompared
the two
'
Michigan Industrial
mi.mean to HOME OWNE
Education Program, tries. Japan at|d the United States. Quick Joint hostess
CORPORATION, a Corporation
Mr. Holtforth attended the In- emphasizing the extravagance of
Mrs. Florence Swain of Niles Is
dustria I Art* convention which was the American citizens. Food, shel- visiting her sister and husband. Mr.
held In Jackson last Friday
and. ter. and clothing are much less ex- ;and Mrs. N. H. Barber, for a week.
Saturday. He Is a member of Hie pensive In Japan
" N—”-----------r. than tn the U. 8.1 —
Mr.—
and "
Mra.
H.
Barber were
Sea-weeds
and fish are lhe essential called to Niles April 16 by lhe pass­
executive committee and a delegate ”
*
' from this district. The program for foods of lhe Japanese as meat and . ing of the latter's sister. Mrs. Josethis year Included trips through vo­ vegetablej, are in the United Slates, j phtne SitLs. They remained until
cational shops in the prison, the Kimonos that were jwpular two j after'the funeral on the 18th. We
Mackiln Cringing Wheel Company tliousand years ago are still in fash- ' sympathize with Mrs. Barber in her
and tlie shops of Jackson High ion. A dress shirt in Japan amounts I sorrow.
ILundrrJ Twtntr
school
Mr. Holtforth took first to 40c while in America it is &lt;4.00. 1 Friends from Kalamazoo. Battle
!0 7B) and no •ul(
place In a wood Identification con­ , In comparison, labor Ls cheap in Creek, owosso. Grand Rapids. Dol"d mon* I NOTICE OF COMMISSIONER'S BALE test held during the convention.
[ Japan. The amount of land per wngiac. Galesburg. Hastings and
family In Japan Is one acre, in Augusta
and surrounding towns.
UNDER DECREE.
England nine acres and in America land locally,attended the funeral of
4-H Club Achievement
•
1 Homer J. Flower Friday.
Day a Success. It Is thirty-two.
------------|
Mrs.
Ada
Thorpe. Delton visited
As far as the Middleville clubs |
NOT HE Im HEKKIIY i
Family.--------------------------Mrs. Flower and Bernice Sunday.
were concerned, lhe 4-H Achieve- ,
antl Mrs Ornnl of Lansing
inent Day held at Hastings was a 1 Last Friday Miss luUl attended '
grand success: Thursday morning the School musters’ Club In Ann Ar- 1 spent the week end with her aunt,
liall. Defendants, upon th. twenty-eight boys and girls of the bor. a state meeting for all teach-1 Mrs. N H. Barber.
Mrs. M. Bradfield and Mrs. Woolseventh and jelghth grades Jour­ ers. She attended a banquet in lhe
neyed to Hastings on a bus lo at­ evening commemorating the 50th ston and Jack were In Kalamazoo
Tuesday and Saturday. Mrs. Brad­
tend the County 4-H Club Achieve­ anniversary of the club.
Mrs.
Bonneville
substituted
for
field
was in Thursday also, for
ment Day. Each club exhibited his
or her project and competed for j Mr. Cunningham last Thursday, I medical treatments.
honors with other club members of who was In Hastings receiving dlag- I . Al the p. T- A. meeting of last
the county. Over 200 girls In the1 noslic treatment at Pennock hos­ , Friday evening the house was filled.
i The program of music and two play­
county completed their
clothing pital.
: lets was much enjoyed. Delicious
projects. From among them Ruth
' refreshments were served. A good
Johnson was chosen as honorary 1 Home Ec. and 4-H Assembly.
ltd etWMei inrlllil nr
The
advanced
Home
Ec
Club
held
meeting was the opinion of all.
representative of our club. Barbara :
a
style
show
last
Monday
of
thc
I Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gilbert spent
Serven acted as hostess for the style
spring dresses they made recently Monday In Hastings on business.
show taking a very good part in the
Following this. Mr. Van Sickle and
Mrs. H. M. Kennedy who cared for
day's activities.
Miss Thomas presented awards wonw
hcr father during his illness re­
The boys fared equally as well In at the Achievement Day held at turned home last Friday evening.
obtaining honors for their work. Hastings last Thursday.
, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Skidmore
From lhe group of ninety-six who
and LaVern spent Sunday with the
entered handicraft last fall, seventy­
Notes.
latter's sister and family in Battle
seven finished.
Seventeen honor
Mr. Beil and Mr. Holtforth were Creek.
members were selected, four of In Lansing Saturday attending a
Mr. and Mrs. N. H- Barber at­
whom were from our club. Harold meeting concerning thc Inlra-Mu- , tended the Byrd lecture at Battle
Kermeen won a trip lo Lansing dur­ ral Athletic program.
, Creek last week Wednesday.
ing state Club Week for taking
I3&gt; N„nh of NOTICE OF COMMISSIONER
The Future Farmers club went ,
UNDER DECREE.
first place in the wood identifica­ on a field trip to the Lockshore and 1
ASSYRIA.
tion contest. James Jackson was Kellogg farms last week- They Last Week's Leiter.
also chosen as an\ alternate for Judged dairy cattle and went
A C- Hyde, county clerk, spent
a trip to Club Werk-for the quality through the farms.
Saturday at his farm here.
of wurk done in hLs projects.
Five of the goal family belonging
The girls' biology class have a
All club members are very much guinea pig and a flying squirrel for to the A. J Miller farm had the
enthused over their present achieve­ their laboratory. These were brought privilege on Saturday of entering
ments and plan to do more and bet-' back from Kalamazoo.
live parade of the Order of the
ter work next year.
NOTICE or MORTGAGE BALE.
Last Tuesday enrollment cards Shrinera held al Battle Creek, the
Dealers in Wool,
New Uhrarv Hzuik*
WCrC SCnt 0Ut 10 PuPUs who made Shrlners being in convention there
that day. Three of lhe herd were1
dement and Coal
purchased for future use in the or­
•
bearing the name "Campus Quar- der .
The Briggs Ladles' Aid Society
nntine" Is another reminder not to
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Colt Pl &gt;11 AT ION
forget lhe Junior play. May 12 and
। 13. at the T. K. Gym. Remember.
&gt;ui* of Winiim ' a change in cast both nights.
' The grade faculty meeting last
week was devoted to a further dis­
1036, Il
cussion of fear and the methods to
I’rearnt Ihrir claim
overcome it.
Visitors during the week were:
Mr. Harkness of tensing and' ""
Mr.
Browne ot Ionia.
. n. mo.

NOTICE TO CREDITOXS.

&amp;

id Roy Anderson
Mills

□RDEX'rOR rZBLIGATIOX.

Phone 2515

Frank Sage

Hastings

Merle KoMm, Ckrfj

�TRI HaMTWAb tAXMta, TlrtWAY, IUt I IMt
I will be presented to each mother at- . vfile girts, but the boys took titelr week, called there by the daath of
MORGAN.
&gt; tending, with spacial bouquets for second drubbing of the season. May- the former's brother, Hollis Tabborbe the «irls will have to show the
family of Kalamo visited Mra.
a resident of Fife Lake township for Prank Wilcox and Mra. Mildred
Fleming and family Sunday.
day. He is survived by the widow,
Mr. and Mra. Alfred Noem and
three sons, Tom. Keith and Harry,
daughter, Marian, of Chicago came
three daughters. Ada, Laura and
to their summer cottage Bunday and
Flora, the brother, one ateter. Mra.
Minnie Stockfish of Dryden and one
Mra. John Van Blckle and Mr. and
grandson.
Mra. Clair Van Sickle of Lansing
Mra. D. B. Dolph Li visiting her were visitor* at the home of Mr.
sister at Belding.
and Mrs. wm. van Blckle Wednes­
Mr. and Mra. Clifford Bird are day.
moving into the house on Main
Quite a few changes have taken
street. Just east of the blacksmith place in this village as Bordy Row­
shop.
lader has purchased the Adam Eb­
rm* Motherhood &lt;gOod. . Favora ^in th^ Sen.ora
ajhrater Th^.y evening to^ h«w pfjheh | Forty-five relatives of Mra. Zella erly property and has. moved Into
. Price,
from
Wayne. Muskegon. It; Fred Lathem of Hastings has
} Grand Rapids. Lake Odessa, Wood­ bought the Mary Turner place and
land. Hastings and Freeport gath­ expects lo move in the last of lhe
ered at her home here Sunday aft- week, while Fred Main will move hts
emoon to help her celebrate her family across the lake onto lhe
seventy-fifth birthday. The occa­ Fisher farm, we understand.
Teacher and children raked and
sion
was planned as a surprise and
d“* Intl lhrZ
Mr and Mra. A B. Fish Mrs rned on Ho- th Broadway at the en™AlMhl Nancy Deming and Mra John FUh
Hasting, is to be- lm- proved a very pleasant one. A most cleaned the school grounds Fri­
day nnd that night the children
W ** Ji uVuT rnriu “txirt , were Hutings visitors last Wednes- 1 pr^ „h lurely “** needed 11 Xor enloyable afternoon was spent and
were
invited to the former'# home
refreshments of sandwiches, cake,
the
E. Pierce-* day.
| a long time.
pickles and coffee were served. Mra. for a welner and marshmallow
fetatd
u. It
schSS Surn^ed*”ofN^XHFS
.S^lt bX'S
Price received several lovely gifts roast.
Sunday visitors at lhe home of
cery and meat business here, selling its reminders of the happy occasion Mrs. Frank Wilcox were Mr. and
out to Hunter nnd Sullivan, called J। Those present were: Mr. and Mra.
ion
ugh ter Donna, Mrs O. E. Padelford of Bellevue
I on menus
friends ana
and transactea
transacted ousmes*
business 1 *lvln ”elr'«,e a"d
here last Thursday Since leaving . ”1. \nd
®r“y Bmelk"' Mr_, and Mrs. Gertrude Gaskill and chil­
Freeport they have made
theirI "”d
Osborne. Mr and dren of Dowling.
Roy Pennington Is spending a few
home with her mother at
their I
an? ‘hw, children
home near Stanton.
Last week ]
■ Mr «nd Mra Uwrence days at- bis home putting In early
Monday aurins
during meir
their aosencc
absence inc
the :i
- Mr. and potatoes and some small garden
monoay
.._____ « daughtcrj
homR
All ;, Mrs Vernor Benton and Jju«t,rer
daughter truck.
home burred tA
u&gt; ih&lt; ffTA.iAd
ground
AU
Bert Sparks has bought the farm
their furniture, clothing and valu- ??d Do” SmcIker of Grand Rapids;
.Mr p.per. were Ire. Jd Ihry hwd
Prt" "&lt;• where Elmer Hall and family lived
no Iruurwnce. Their ,iuu&gt;y IHendi
"I]?*'
Porr"1 and is repairing and remodeling
the same so It is beginning lo loon
here
sympathize
with
them
in
their
P
?,f
d
S*?
,,
.
dre
"
°
f
Hastings;
Mr.
; here sympathize with them in their
like a different place.
, misfortune
At present they are and Mrs. Richard Durkee and two
Mr. and Mrs Bordy Rowladcr and
children of Woodland: Mr. and Mrs.
’ living in Belding.
family helped Mrs. Mary Anthony
I .Mrs. Harold Yoder and Mrs. Har­ Leon Ballou. Fred Ballou. Ross Bal­ of Hastings celebrate her birthday
BUY HER SOMETHING PRACTICAL
old Rosenberger were Grand Rap- lou and friend of Wayne; Mra. Wm. a week ago Sunday.
Judd. Oliver Judd and children and
1 ids visitors last Thursday.
Callers at the home of Bordy
I D B. Dolph, who recently mov- Mra. and Mra. Iz-onard Kent and Rowlader recently were Mr. and
A NEW DRESS in Silk or Cotton ... We hove them
: cd here from Welcome Corners, family, all of Muskegon.
Mrs. James Gross of Grand Rapids.
in oil prices and styles.
Marvin Rosenberger spent thc Mr. and Mrs. Henry Marlin and
j passed away very suddenly last
। Thursday afternoon, as he
was latter part of last week al the home son of Dimondale. Mr. and Mra. An­
Or a pair of nice Silk Full Fashioned Hose at 59c,
। about to mow the lawn. Funeral of his grandparents, Mr, and Mra. sel Golden of Hastings. Mr. and
69c or 89c.
’services were held from thc home Austin Rosenberger at Clarksville.
Mra. Bernie Schelmer of Battle
FURSES ot 29c, 50c and $1.00.
' on Saturday morning with burial
Mr. and Mrs Clarence Doty and Creek and Mr. and Mra. Ernest
in
Holland.
Allho—
residing
here children w&gt;.
of wwwwww
Level mw»
Park /wen
Sun- Golden of Barryvllle and Mr. and
---------- —
--------------- U
----wrir 0UI|CLOVES—Grey. Navy, White and Beige, 59c to $1.00
। only a short time Mr. Do&gt;ph nad [ day guests of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walt of the Pratt district.
TAh
tHre
rww«rw*e"r
ril
all
..
’I.,.
”
1*1
hln.
r-J
All kinds of Lingerie—Nightgowns, Pajamas, Panties
| won the respect of all who met him Mrs Ed Coats.
| and the bereaved ones have thc symNORTH HOPE.
and'Slips.
Mr and Mra L. M. Curlias and
: palhy of all in their loss.
Mrs. Jay Anders tn company with
son of Owosso were Sunday callers
HATS—All colors and styles from $1.00 to $3.98.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rosenberger
Mrs. Charles Welch and Mra. Agnes
of Mra. Ellen Yarger.
spent Sunday afternoon at thc
Randel, attended the Achievement
Mrs. Viola Rogers and sons, Alton Day program at Hastings, Friday.
। home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs.
I Austin Rosenberger at Clarksville. and Carl motored to Battle Creek
Phone 2522
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Peake nnd Gus
Hostings. Mich.
144 E. State St
The latter’s wife. Mrs. Peake motored to Jackson Sunday.
I Marvin returned home with them. Sunday.
Louise
Rogers
and
air. and
ana Mrs.
mra. Fred
rrvu Tabbcrer
i eooerer were
were
..........
- baby,
—-j. returned
...uiu-u
Mr.
Mrs Morse Murphy spent Friday
al Kingsley the latter part of last I wlth them for a visit.
with her father. Albert Hampton, of
__________________________________ _
Mr. and Mra George Waldring of tlie Bunnell district.
| Holland were supper guesta of her
Mrs Robert Vr.ooman and son.
-■
■
------■ ■ fl
Sliter. Mra Elmer Roush and father. Mra. William Hart and daughter
-----F E. Deming, lost Thursday eve­ spent Friday with Mra. Rankin
ning.
Hart Howard Vrooman ot Hastings
Arthur Austin has returned home spent the week end there.
from University hospital nt
at mm
Ann
Mr. and Mra. Jack Farwell of
Arbor and Li greatly improved in ' Kalamazoo spent Sunday afternoon
health. He is now able to be about with Mr. and Mra. Otto Pranshka
*town.
—"I
I and family.
Altn Rogers was a Sunday guest
Alton
Congratulations are being extendof Mr and Mrs Paul V. Townsend cd to Mr. and Mra. Lawrence Anof Southwest Woodland
I ders who were recently married in
Mra, B Stirnel. Mra. Rose \feden- Indiana.
dorf and Mrs Anna Scott of Gliind
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Anders and Mra.
Rapids were Sunday afternoon call- Chas. Welch of Striker district and
era al the home of Mr. and Mrs C. Mrs. James Murphy motored
to
B/'Baxter.
1 Kalamazoo Tuesday.

Messrs. Frank and Howard Wal­
in us.
rented inc irs Biougn nouse. re- ton began work Monday morning
with tractor and grader, pulling the
&gt;1*. Rt.nA.M nwnrr.
with I
v*C*Ud b&gt; Mras*-4" “”1^ “““ “ihb streets of. the village tn good condltlon.
Wc understand some very
tm Monday evening to complete. we
be
attendance at marked Improvements are to
ihetr organization.
Tl
grading el
of the
MU. Onre
RriiUrerere of
of CluUInclude, the
Ite Inulin,
lhe
Mia*
Grace Rosenberger
Clarks- 1 «» O B » Bund., mrenln,. made Including
vUlTwu . BundiydJnn.rVSlJi Id Hrer Ule on. mre»K b, or. S , ™d bra lire Arthur Moore corner
MSnSJoirXo-SSer B. Orlh.n of Hul»? Crenmun- |
Mother^ LMv will be observed at lon sen-ice followed the sermon. In I Plcce °&gt; *or* an« we « heartily In
the M.
church Bunday morning Ithe evening Rev. Mra. A. A. Griffen J fo^or it it.
with aperial nwwtr and an appro- I hroushl the message.
I Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Moore enJtate^XnV?hee^7n | The Junior, of F. H. 8. will en-'! g™"* n
at
ta.t

KsSS

BOOTH SOWN*.
Mr* Jennie PtMeo visited Sat­
urday avenins with Mr. and Mrs. J.
Knowles ot Freeport. Mr. Knowles
la in very poor health.

PU8UC CNEMC5

Mr. and Mra. Mart Griffin and
baby of cllo visited Bunday with

riHE

pete Griffin and family.

i

Mra Bert Keim of Elmdale called
on Gladys and Jennie
Pardee
Thuraday afternoon. On Bunday
Alden Porritt and family and Mrs.
Lydia Porritt of Harris Creek were
guesta there.
jatnea Bhaffer and family ot Lo­
gan were Bunday guests of Ebner
Bhaffer and family.
John Thaler
and family of
Campbell and Kyle Stambaugh and
family of Bunfield were Sunday
guesta of WiU Mishler and family.
Mr* Harold Yoder accompanied
Mr*. Harold Rosenberger of Free­
port to Orand Rapids Thursday.
Mrs. Will Mishler apent Saturday
afternoon with Mary Hatton while
her daughter. Mrs. Rosler was in
Lowell on business.
Mlaa Mabie Watts of Chicago vis­
ited her aunt, Minnie Bouck, and
tousln. Mrs. L. Andrew*. Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Offley and
chUdrcn of Woodland called on
John Blocher and family Sunday
P. M.

HOA I
GAffkr
light]

=~“ .ihM

~

FAIRCHILDS

5"™'

j

PLEASANT RIDGE.
Mrs. Ella Klnne spent last week
In Battle Creek.
The Ladles’ Aid wiU meet this
week Thuraday for dinner with Mrs.
Lizzie Thompson.
Mrs. Katherine Richardson is
gaining slowly from her operation.
Mr. and Mra. Will Ronk and Mr.
and Mra. Cetill Ronk of Battle
Creek called Sunday afternoon at
Lester Klnne’s.
Mr. and Mra. John Busby of Kerr­
ville. Texas, spent Monday with
Mr. and Mra. Albert Klnne.
WhUe at school last Friday Eve­
lyn Townsend fell from the swing,
breaking the bones ,In-both wrists
and bruising herself quite badly.

..

MOTHER’S DAY GIFTS

The Light Jumper is a cheater.
He is like some people who crib
on examinations or peek into op­
ponents’ bridge hands—and (ar
more dangerous
By starting on "yellow”, the
Light Jumper frequently gets
into accidents.
Good drivers always wait for
the "go" signal before starling
across an intersection.

j

NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mr. and Mrs. Marley Burroughs of
Three Rivers were week end guests
of the latter’s parents. Mr. and Mra.
Ed. Whllrlght. also friends In town.
The Isaac Edger family attended
the 52nd wedding anniversary din­
ner for Mra. Edger's sister and
husband. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Cul­
ver. at Wayland Sunday.
Several of our ladles attended
Achievement day and enjoyefi the
| program.

STANDARD OIL CONDDCTS

WORLD'S GREATESI
AD TEST!
300,000 MIDWEST MOTORISTS INVITED TO TAKE PART

MAKE YOUR CAR A RESEARCH TEST CAR
and become eligible for big cash awards

“It’s connected now, Madam"
A telephone, the moment it is
connected, brings definite benefits
to a home. Large or small, in city
or country, that home is improved
by the presence of a telephone.
Of foremost importance is lhe
benefit of protection. A telephone
is a form of insurance against fire
and theft. It has saved Michigan
homes by thc speed with which
it has brought firemen to thc
scene. Il has routed burglars by
its promptness in flashing an
alarm lo the police. And in times
of illness — during those dread
hours when there is sickness in
the house — a single telephone
call can give help of a kind that
no one could appraise in terms
of dollars and cents.
Another benefit of thc tele­
phone shows itself in the
work of thc housewife. It
reduces thc drudgery in U j

her daily routine, saves her many
steps. Particularly in bad weather
does she appreciate thc privilege,
made possible only by lhe tele­
phone, of doing her shopping
without leaving the house.
In social inaUcrs thc installa­
tion of a telephone can mark a
new era in the family life. No
longer arc the various members
of thc household out of reach of
their friends and relatives. A tele­
phone in lhe home instarilly puts
them “in touch.” It makes social
gatherings and many of the plea­
sures of friendship available both
to adults and children.
The telephone is one of the
most worth-while of present-dav
convcnicnces. Dependable and
economical, the genuine value of
its service has made it an
pK .accepted feature in the
W modem Michigan home.

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

MORATORY twismili.

recording material needed. And
then generous awards will be given
—in exchange for the gasoline mile­
age information obtained.

Car Driver;Colorado, Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michi­
gan. Minnesota, Missouri, Montana,
Nonh Dakota, Oklahoma, South
Dakota, Wisconsin, Wyoming, and
Nebraska (where the test Is being
coeducted in conjunction with
Standard Oil Company of Nebras­
ka). Any such motorist who fully
complies with the simple require­
ment* become* eligible for one of
these generous cash and merchan­
dise awards:

Entir your car now

CraedPrtM .... SlMtlaeeta

t

«valuable in building •
better ill-round gasoline—so Stand­
ard Oil makes 5.5CO tests ■ day on
Standard gasolines — distillation
tests, sulphur and gravity stsss,
vapor pressure tens, and many
others.
—But when it comes to what
mileage a gasoline will deliver,
there is no substitute for the
trit. And even a roid test, conducted
by specialists, does not gist the
answer as to how many tniles per
gallon an &lt;rt rragr driver will get
under oser^ge conditions.

What’s the truth about gaso­

line mileage?
That’s uKtt Standard wants to find
out. That t ubj Standard announces
a gigantic road test, and invites
yen to cake part.
We want JOO.OOO "test car" driv­
ers. We want JOO.OOO midwest
automobile owners to dri»e their
cars just at they always do-no dlflatently, no eatra mfiea-but to
hasp an accurate record of their
driving habits for a period of 65
days. Standard will furnish,/™, .ji

Standard invites yw to join In the
greatest search for gasoline mile­
age facts ever undertaken. You’ll
be under no obligation. You’ll
learn facts about your car and the
gasoline it uses that cau mean im­
portant aavinga to you in the future.
de&lt;/ in addition, you,’ll become eli­
gible for valuable awards. Complete
detail* of thia generous offer are
given in the road test record book
which you receive when you enter
your car as a "Research Test Car."

.

$5,000 IN CASH

Any motorist in the following
States may become a Research T««

Saaeed Mr* ... .
TMNPrtM .
nveMaae
.
TaeFrtza*
,
Twenty him

IM la Meh

HSPrtZM

IW or tM Mtw—Stot Mq
Enroll a* a test car driver today,
and carry on your car the attractive
Test Car emblem. Stop in at aay
Standard Oil Station or Dealer and
athe derafis. They have only •
tad number of test or kitt. Get
Yotoase

STANDARD OIL COMPANY
B. ,ur. your car u ,at, tQ drly&lt;th,n DRIVE SAtELY

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

;
'

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Reed and son
Lyle from near Middleville were
guests of Mr. and Mra. Guy Kantner Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Smith nnd
Mr. and Mra. Forrest
Christian
spent Wednesday In Holland.
Miss Nevah Parlee, who has been
working for Mrs. Elmer Matthew*
in Woodland since January, was
called home by lhe ill health of her
mother. Mr*. Chas. Farlee.
A number from Southwest Woodtend attended Achievement Day In
Hasting* Friday.
Mr. and Mra. Carl Scofield
of
Lansing called an Miss Mary Nash
Bunday. Mlu Nash Is seriously ill.

ORANGEVILLE.
'
Mr. and Mra. Marclus Baalcv
■ spent Bunday with his sister. Mrs.
i Dorr Backus and family at Gales­
burg.
Mr* Ben Norman and son Homer
and wife spent Sunday afternoon
with relatives at Allegan.
Quite a number from this vlclnlity were al Hastings Friday to at­
tend the Achievement Day exercises.
Mra. John Porter and Mr*. Vem
Town and little daughters. Mary
and Margery, ot Plainwell were
Wednesday afternoon guesta of Mra.
E. D. Lewis.
J. W. Sheffield has purchased the
Ann Jessup property and has begun
making some changes In it.
Mra. Lynn Wickham and daugh­
ter Rose and Francis and Mra.
Charlie Wickham and son Wilbur
of Detroit spent Saturday and Sun­
day with Mra. Nettle Newark.
Carl Meyers of Grand Rapids is
spending s few days with Mr. and
Mra. Marclus Bagley.
Jay Bagley and family were Sun­
day aftemooa visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Nichols of this place.

Gun and ThbrnappM lakes tn
Barry county are among the 37
Michigan takes listed by the Blate
Department of Conservation in
which muskellunge can be caught.
Owing to the great inroads the big
fellows make upon other fish life
lhe idea of propagating them In
other lakes of lhe state which has
been suggested by fishetman M
hardly considered justifiable, allho
lhe department Is obtaining all
possible ■information a* to where It
might be practical and economical.
Gun take, because of its aixe might
be one where continued stocking
would be feasible.

When thc big run of spawning
rainbows In lhe Manistee river
reaches its peak, state hatchcry men
will begin lhe annual stripping op­
erations by which they hope this
season to obtain approximately 1,­
500.000 rainbow trout eggs

Due to the cold aprlng weather
and comparatively low water tem­
peratures. the spawning of fish tn
the lakes and streams of Michigan
thl* spring has been delayed several
weeks.

Organization of correspondence
study projects in Michigan OCCJ
camps has opened a new outlet for
loans from the Michigan State Li­
brary. The projects are sponsored
by the extension department of the
University of Michigan, a group of
books was shipped to Camp Bable
River, in Lake county, to assist in
the organisation of a sociology
class. Collections dealing with his­
torical and biographical subjects
have been sent to Camp Irons. In
Lake county, and camp au Train,
in Alger county.
Dog owners who permit their dogj
to molest and harass protected
game birds and animaLs during
closed season are liable to arrest
and fine In Justice court. A chatgc
of this kind was placed against
Lewis Brown, 47, of Kalkaska, who
was accused of allowing his dog to
harass deer. Brown pleaded guilty
in Justice court, was assessed a fine
of 810 and costs of $1165 with al­
ternative of 15 days in jail.

LENT CORNERS.
Miss Opal Brierly of Kalamazoo
spent Sunday with Miss Jean Ham­
mond.
Mrs. Mabel McManii ot Kalama­
zoo spent thc week end with Mr.
and Mra. Robert Steele.
Walter McManls spent thc week
' end at thc home of hli brother In
Ohio.
Mrs. Clare Thomas . Ims gained
sufficiently from hcr recent opera­
tion lo be removed from the hos­
pital.
Clarence Hamiqond of Hastlngi
worked the past week for his broth­
er. Marc Hammond.
Mrs. Mildred ctemenre of Sturgli
apent Thursday with Mr. and Mra.
I Marc Hammond.
I
Mr. and Mra. Jay Hall spent
I Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Gordon
Moorhus of Delton.
|
Mr and Mrs. Arthello Bennett
I and two daughters of Kalamazoo
I spent Sunday p. M- with Mr. and
| Mra Lawrence Hammond.
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Weening
; and two children of Kalamazoo
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs,
I Marc Hammond.
1
Mr. and Mr*. Alba Collison of
, Kalamazoo called on the tatter's
( mother. Mrs. Emma Anson, Sunday.
School started
thLs Monday
I morning after a week's spring vacaUon.

Thia la the Week
To SAVE on Your Drug Store Wanlt for May

3 Big Days Of Savings
Thursday, Friday and Saturday,
May 7, 8 and 9
• A Four Page Bill of Bargain* will be delivered
to your door. Wo will lilt only a few of theie
Specials here.

40c CASTORIA ....................
25c
50c PEPSODENT Tooth Paste _.34c
35c POND'S CREAMS________ 25c
25c EX-LAX, 17c
50c LYSOL, 34c
75c BAYER'S ASPIRIN ...____ 45c
22c SANITARY NAPKINS____13c
25c ANACIN TABLETS............ -17c
25c FENAMINTGUM________ 16c
25c J &amp; J BABY TALCUM_____ 17c
$1.50 AGAROL............................... 89c
50c LYON'S TOOTH POWDER, 29c
50c KOLYNOS TOOTH PASTE, 29c
$1.00 JRONIZED YEAST______ 71c
50c Phillips' Milk of Magnesia, 34c
And many other items ipecially priced for this sale.

Doni forget to remember Mother on
Mother's Day, Sunday, May 10//i/

Carveth &amp; Stebbins
THI RfXALL STORK
GOODS DILIVIRKD
FHONI 2131

�TOT BAtTWH BONNOT TWURWAT. OTT ?r 1&gt;M

DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Everybody keen In mind the L. A.

Y.M.C. A. ITEMS

8. and "White Elephant" sale at the
----------- --------------------------- --------------- Dunham schoolhouse Friday eve-

LAST WEEK-1
THOUSANDS

Norton as auctioneer. If
tasfS?? SSSK?t^V^lnV h* dUpo*d ot
committee In
™
B 1001 hou*' palnt7 charge would be very grateful for
ing boat. etc.
them. Bring own table service.
vi looks
innir. like
itka four ~
«... hundred
Sunday guests at Wallace Mack's
It
or five
participants for the rural schools were: Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Bryant
track meet in Hastings this week and daughter and Mr. and Mra.
Saturday.
rl__
_and
______
John .Storms
family, all of BalThe young men's Y group held [ tie Creek.-’
tlwir regular
bi-weekly meeting I Several ladles of this neighborWednesday evening, with a special hood attended Achievement Day at
speaker and discussion on Christ- Hastings Friday.
Ian practice
Russell Donovan was host FriGeorge Westerman of lhe Slate I day evening to the members of hl&gt;
Y. M. C. A. called on local members Sunday school class and other
of Barry Co. Y committee last week young folks, who spent a very en­
In lhe interest of a wider held for Joyable evening.
activities.
Mr. and Mra. Clyde Cheewman
A special meeting of Boys' Clubs and family visited Mra. Ida Cheese­
in Middleville Monday night. May man in Nashville Sunday.
18. Is being arranged to enjoy
.....
Mr. and ____
Mra. Harvey Cheestman
George Campbell, the entertainer, and children spent Sunday with Mr.
ulin
nlxn aridrAKx
ir A
— tr.
—M Gray
.. of East Asa.
who will
will also
address H.
S. assem­ and at
Mrs.
Harold
blies In Woodland. Nashville. Has­ syrla.
tings. and Middleville May 18 and
19
BRANCH DISTRICT.
■Life is a grindstone, and whether
The Dorcas Society of North
it grinds a man down or polishes Maple Grove will meet at the home
him up depends on the stufl he is of Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Ostroth
made of."
Thursday. May 14, for an all day
The Welcome Y group meets this meeting.
week with Frederick Haywood. Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Roberts re­
on Thursday evening. Bible study
turned from Hastings Saturday aft­
and games will feature the program.
er staying with the former's moth­
Duane Pugh leader.
er lhe past month.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklin of
EAST GUN LAKE.
Allegan spent Sunday at the home
Clayton Hauser of Grand Rapids
of Mr. and Mra. John Darby.
is spending several days with John
Crawford,
Sunday afternoon guests of Mr. and
After spending lhe winter in
Mra. Vincent Norton.
Florida John Russell has relumed
M1m Sylvia Whitmore, who works
to his summer home. Mr. and Mrs. In Hastings, spent Sunday with her
F. waiters and the Montieth family I parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otis ‘Whit­
have also returned.
more.
Mra. Win. Crawford, Mrs. Raj*
and
wXUyaniuhl,ferlSd;,7nrd "Sa”1! Mr. and Mrs. Zeno Decker
evenlng^M

I

KM
friends and rclal r ittt nS^Mnii
th
I... I
few daw^t theVSh
hamr tn Ahtihvviiv
th Andrewa,
. y
. ..
Mrs. Dennis Keller and Mrs.
Matte Cole of Hastings made a
business call al thc James Null
home Wednesday evening.

lJu? Vincent Norton home.
Mr and Mra Haro,d Eberts and
children of Chicago were Sunday
visitors of his parents, Mr. and
Mra D«n Roberts

NORTHWEST TIIORNAPPI.E.
'Too late for last week.i
Mr. and Mra. Merle Stimson of
Grand Rapids and mother. Mra.
BRUSH RIDGE SCHOOL NOTES. Geo Cook of Thompsonville were
Last Week's Letter.
। Sunday guesta of the latter's brothWe arc having better attendance er. Mr. and Mrs Loren Tungate and
now after much Illness.
family. Mrs. Cook remained for a
All the grades have new work . few days with friends and relatives,
books, some in arithmetic and some ; Thc *teachers
‘
and superintendent
In nature study.
of the Junior department of the
We surely appreciate the books Methodist Sunday school attended
which Mrs Erway gave us.
(he Sunday School convention held
We are glad lo report that our in Grand Rapids Saturday al Trin­
seventh grader. Wilhelmina Pran- ity church.
shka
placed
first...In—
the ----------township
.
r
-------- -----,
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Allen enterspclllng contest and was third In thc latned relatives from Grand Rap­
county spelling contest.
I ids. Lanning and Grandville SunWc elected the following officers I day in honor of the former’s mothfor lhe coming month for our chib: 1 er. Mrs. John Allen of Middleville.
Pres—Gerald Hull; V-Pres—Flor-' who celebrated her 82nd birthday
lan salik; Teens -Edna Wurm; Sec. •
Mrs Olney Adams entertained I
—Wilhelmina Pranshka.—Reporter., the Home Economics class niuraday
Florian Salik. Teacher. Miss John- I afternoon to check the dresses for
cock
| Achievement day held in Hostings.

OF PEOPLE FOUND THEY COULD SAVE
MONEY BY DOING ALL THEIR SHOP­
PING AT AaP FOOD STORES!
HOW ABOUT YOU?

Listen to Kate Smith at “Coffee”..
Time” Every Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday at 6:30 P. M.
Station WBBM

Another List for Your Comparison^

New Low Regular Price!

Naw Low Regular Price!

New Low Regular Price!

New Low Regular Price!

GRANDMOTHER'S

8 O’CLOCK

CREAM OR BRICK

ALASKA PINK

Coffee
- 15c

Cheese
19c

Salmon
. ~ 10c

Bread
is. 10c «
Mello Wheat

Shredded Wheat

Kraft Cheese

2 rhr. 25c
” 'it 15c

Ajax Soap

10

Whitehouse Milk

Fels Naptha Soap

10 bl . 41c

Woodbury’e or

tfUdP
Ciehmere Bouquet
2 “h.. 15c
Am. Family Flakes
a.. i9c
Chipso or Rinso
19c

Fels Naptha Chips

Listen,.

Your worries will be over and you will save
dollars in tire wear if you bring your car
to us and have the front end checked
for ALIGNMENT!

a. i9c
r'fe. 21c
19c

Lux or Ivory Flakes
Oxydol

Roman Cleanser

Kitchen Klenxer

5

.*3

utr

Lipton Tea
Cigarettes

b?.*.!.'

Cigarettes

t’i::

Peaches

Ritz Crackers
c’*.'.*r..

Milk

UNIVERSAL
GARAGE Hastings
CO.
FORD DEALERS
PHONE till

,

Swansdown

29c

bi. 19c

Bokar Coffee

lie

It. 25c

Beechnut Coffee

H. 27c

Del Monte Coffee
Hills Bro's. Coffee

21c

26c

23c

tt 29c

oS.T5ia

’** 23c

75c

Iona Flour

“V

Lily White Flour

’^9 5c

Splendid Flour
Morton's Salt
Cookies

“bJ,"”69c
2 *•* 15c

SiX.

3 “ 25c

Graham*

e

ng

— 29c

—

55c

il.. 18c

Maxwell House

Scot Tissue

4

25c
If 33c

Whitehouse Coffee

Waldorf Tissue

4 '*■* 15c

tt- 39c

Shortening

carton

"L” 29c

D'‘

H 27c

Bulk Lard

’XX."

Palmolive
IbIIX

JL 22c

25c

Northern Tissue

4

2

25c

Brown Sugar

2 it

4

19c

4X Sugar
- WUu
2 it
Crisco or Snowdrift -

"U” 15c
Campbell s Soups c;X3--25c

3 “ 25c
Lea &amp; Perrins Sauce UuU 29c

All Bran

Ammonia

Baby Foods H

Postum Cereal

h&amp; 10c

BEEF STEAK
GROUND BEEF
BEEF ROAST
BEEF POT ROAST
SHORT RIBS OF BEEF
PORK STEAK
PURE^LARD
RING BOLOGNA
FRANKFURTS
MEATjLOAF

1

Prunes

3

Cooking Oil

'1SSr

Heinz Soup

v“.7,L

Iona Peaches

Lb..

Lb.

2
2
2

23c
25c
16c
12c
11c
23c
25c
29c
29c
18c

ch‘XS*

25c

2

4 "k“ 25c

Llfobeoy Socy

Choke Cats

Hastings

4

Condor Coffee

ROUND, SWISS OR SIRLOIN

Remember, We Can Chech All Molen of Coral

Soap Chips

Red Circle Coffee

H^a.

Margarine

4 X". 25c

Ovaltine

r'il't
99c
Macaroni
4 ■“ 25c
Rajah Salad Dressing £ 25c

For the next thirty days, from May 8th
to Juno 8th, we will check your car FREE
for front end alignment.

Keyko

IOc

Crackers

A-Penn Oil

We here |uif InitelM tha .bare equipment which It
the only aligning outfit In Heating,.

X 21c

Vinegar

il 29c
Kaffee Hag or Sanka £ 39c

3 b«t»iss 25c

Climalene
Salada Tea

-

35c

23c

2

■

25c

* 23c

X

«**•

Grapenuts
Instant Postum

2 —• 25c

Calumet

2N’..’.'‘27e

Carton Lard

NEW PEAS

'*

2

lu.

*«■■"
£ 25c

15c SPINACH

it

Hom. Grow. 1 Ik,

New POTATOES 6^-25c ORANGES n—
PINEAPPLE ».
12c LEAF LETTUCE
NEW CABBAGE
4c ASPARAGUS &amp;X*.
HEAD LETTUCE 2- 15c STRAWBERRIES
GREEN BEANS 2^ 25c CANTELOUPES
WAX BEANS
u. 15c GRAPE FRUIT

Price Hue 3% Sale. Tex

17c

39c
12c
10a
Ql

19c

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. MAY f, ItM
Rural Agrloultural school for the
coming year will include C. J.‘ Bar­
num. Supt.; W. J. Duddles. Prin.

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

helm, manual arts and physical ed­
ucation; Miss Mary Roush, home
economics; Miss Vera Standley, mu­
sic; Miss Agnes Biliven, flth grade;

Mary Marie Henton was able to
be brought home Friday afternoon.
, We hope she continues to improve.
Miss Helen Lelnaar. the fourteen
j year old daughter of Mr and Mrs.
i Henry Lelnaar of Cedar Creek was
I taken with an attack of appendi| citis Iasi week and Tuesday was op­
erated on.at Borgcss hospital Later
peritonitis set in and another operi ation was jierformed but she passed
I away on Friday night. She wax a
I pupil in our Barry Rural Agricul| tural school and was a very bright,
likable girl, and will be greatly
I missed by her fellow students' and

POCAHONTAS
TIME Fill Your Bin NOW
A REAL SAVING ON COAL—Starting May 1st I am
going on CASH and by doing so I will SAVE you
money. After all, what is the use of filling up if you

Moy Only! ORDER NOW! It's Cash and Save!

POCAHONTAS $
Car Run

oo

Per
Ton

Call at Once.

JOHNSON’S

PHONE 2370

220 E. STATE ST.

HASTINGS

LAND GRANTS

। selling price would be but mere pinmoney. The splendid city of Long
. Beach with Ita ibeautiful
------ --------------------.—
ocean view,
has been developed on these proper­
ties. but that Is far from all. There
Is the great Signal Hill Oil field.
Rancho Los Cerritos covering the

| Los Alamitos lhe southeasterly
grades; Mrs. Ella Rogers. 2nd and
slopes. Tlie Signal Hill oil field wax
3rd grades; Mrs. Lettie Kahler. I। ended and control vested In the discovered in 1921. Today there are
kindergarten and 1st grade. There ■। Americanos, eager for progress, de­
is‘one vacancy yet to be filled—ivelopment. and change in the old • hill.” Each completed well with
Latin and English teacher.
■
[’
derrick would represent an expense
It Is Interesting to follow the his­ of from $50,000 to upwards of $100.­
On Friday night. May 8. will oc- '
tory of some of these ranchos, and 000. Standing off at a distance Sigthey all confirm the old saying that
. ....
....
— ' Community hall to which everyone.
••if a man’s foresight was ax good 'forest" of steel derricks, bn oc­
; far and near. Is most cordially wel! come. It would take up too much as Ills hindsight'' what a difference 1 caslons oil has flown so profusely
It would have made They also i from Signa! Hill that it has
I space to name all of the good things
show -Lady Luck" seems to follow streamed uncontrolled over lawns
there will be to eat. so we will give
space for -special mention of the some people, regardless of what and flowers on IU slopes. In 1897
they do.(Take for instance "Lucky william A. Clark, former U. 8. Senprogram which will follow the sup——-------- .
----- —. ..... "...
..
iiu.ii muu.Aiiu. uiiu miuaii
characters of the west coast. Ev- the Montana Copper King, bought
schaefer; monologue. Robert Ad­ erythlng that he touched seemed to'
----■
......
ams: vocal music, with stringed in­ tum Into gold. He was lucky nt
struments accompanying. Robert mining; lucky on the market; lucky Los Cerritos Ranch for $405.0)0. blit
the dally flow of oil from Signal
In real estate, and lucky at racing.
Sounders dialogue, vocal solo. Roy He well merited his nickname of
thb. part of the Rancho cost. BcCordes of Hastings; monologue. El­
Lucky" Baldwin. There was tlie
wood Eddv
Style show and ex­ -Rancho Clenega o'Poso de La.Tir .•it»s this, a big field of oil was de­
hibit of 1936 work of 4-H Chib con­ jera." containing thousands of acres, veloped on the part that Senator
Clark
purchased. Signal Hill alone
ducted by Miss Mary Roush: one- that the King of Spain granted to
act play. 'Tlie Awful Letter." Mrs. jome valiant soldier Lucky Baldwin has made many millionaires and Is
still going strong. One peculiarity
bought It along In the 70'. for a
Mrs Leotu Lowry.
Mrs. F-sth
■sheep ranch. It was not profitable first ,pool was becoming seemingly
Dunn and Miss Kathryn Horton.
as such, but he hung on. In time oil exhausted, wells were driven down
was discovered underneath it. which
called on their aunt. Mrs. Georgia added amazingly to its value, but deeper and a still greater pool was
found. One Is apt to think of SigBowker at Augusta. Sunday eve­ that wasn't al). Las Angeles grew as
ning. also their nephew. Ixiwrence if by magic, and development was nal Hill as almost a mountain in
Quick, at Bonfield, who Is very sick toward this ranch. If you want to
what we know as "Swerzey Hili'
see a surprisingly beautiful sight. here in the city, on the farm re­
Mr. and Mrs John Doster made
cently purchased by Kim Sigler. It&gt;
a business trip to Hastings Thurs­

| were held at her parents' home
Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock, bu­ day and Sunday visited Mr. Dos­ been made from this Rancho, and the
rial in Cedar Creek cemetery Tlie ter's sister. Mrs Oscar Ehrmon in part remaining greatly increased in
| bereaved ones have the sympathy Borgess hospital at Kalamazoo.
•I value with each portion that wax
of a host of friends.
The Home Literary Club Will be I sold oft. At the time of his death,
Mrs. Alice Collins will entertain entertained by Mrs Shultz Thurs­ 1 what was left of this ranch was relhe Delton LAS. for dinner Wed­ day for their annual May break- • garded as one of Its most valuable
’ nesday of this week. Business meet­
«^i ..
«
.. .
items. Along in thc 70s he also
ing following.
,'r
Mr. Dmnn. H.n-lniwn boujhl Ih. lU.itho s.„u Anil.. .
| The Inland Lakes Garden Club
uT:.
Mr "n« M.r' s,nlMn
cnnljlnln. over 13.| will meet At the home oflMrs. Jen­ W.ine Welle el Delionwer. sunder .000 err., or more Uns » muere
vuexts
of
their
tuirrnlA
Mr
.. .
.
’ . .
nie Aldrich Thursday /afternoon. guests
parents. Mr. and
May 14. Mrs. Beatrice Dunning and Mrs Charles Harrington
•.•-retch and situated close to Pasa­
I Mrs. Josie Lelnaar will prepare the
Mr and Mrs Roger Williams and dena. /. lot of It has been sold of! in
son Dean spent Sunday with Mr. subdivisions, nnd within its borders
and Mrs Leslie Williams and fam­ are the present cities of Sierra
ily In Johnstown.
Madre and Arcadia. The great San­
Special church services will be
Don't forget the Calendar supper ta Anita race track is on this Luckyheld next Sunday in observance of Friday night. May 8.
- Baldwin estate near Pasadena, and
I Mother's Day.
Three flowering Community hail
the rich purses attract the best
I plants will be provided, one to be
Mrs. Nellie Cross off Hastings nt- horses from all over the coun­
given to lhe oldest mother present, tended church here Sunday and try. Tl&gt;e development of this fine
one to the mother having the most spent the remainder of the day racing course helped to
put the
children, and one to lhe youngest with Dr and Mrs. C. L.
E. Morford.
mother present. It is hoped that
Mrs Ernest Smith's father. Mr.
every mother, and father as well, Stlnchcom. has been quite sick with amazingly during the |&gt;rohlbltion era.
an attack of appendicitis
will attend church next Sunday.
Millions of dollars were invested In
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Clark and Mr.
Rev. Ralph Bates will deliver the equipment and gorgeous buildings
and Mrs. Mason Norwood of Kala­ baccalaureate address at Prairie­ at Caliente, but with the developmazoo were Sunday afternoon call­ ville next Sunday evening.
I ment of Santa Anita It is reported
ers of Mr and Mrs. Marshall Nor| that the concern at Caliente has
1 gone busted Californians are surely
। Mr and Mrs Harvey Dings hove
loyal to their own Two years ago a
moved Into lhe Ruthefdrd cottage
Miss Helen Lelnaar was taken to Michigan running horse "Azucar."
on M-43. Thc house in which they Kalamazoo Sunday and operated
owned‘ by Col. Fred Alger, of Detroit,
J have been living has been sold/ to
won the Grand Prize of something
Ted Shepherd of Kalamazoo.' —
Mrs Amy Simpson of Gull Lake
I Mrs Julius Weller has been en­
spent Sunday with Lloyd Owen and
tertaining her daughter from De­ family.
• Lucky" Baldwin was a character.
troit the past week.
Mrs Olive Campbell and Mrs. Before coming to the Santa Anita
Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas of Mary Owen of Hastings visited Mr
Kalamazoo visited al the Ad Pen­
nnd Mrs. Guyla Pease and Mrs. and had made millions in the great
; nock home Friday afternoon.
Ophir mines In Nevada Always n
| Mr and Mrs. C. P Larabee of Has­ Dunklcy Thursday afternoon.
lover of horses he spent tire last
tings were Sunday afternoon guests hcr home at Hickory Corners last years of his life in developing the
of Mr. and Mrs Harry Wertinon.
Tuesday after spending several
Addison Pennock went to Grand weeks with her daughter. Mrs. Clar­
Rapids Sunday to visit Mr. and Mrs. ence Campbell, and family.
Wayne Nichols.
Will Shriber and family of Has­ and lhe towering lines ot eucalyptus
The
faculty
Barry tings visited at the home of Mr. along Huntington Drive and Santa
nnd Mrs Will Gurd Wednesday and Anita Avenue through his ranch
Thursday.
stand ns monuments to his memory.
In 1784 the King of Spain gave
elvin Campbell
Quitr.by spent
Sunday with his bn
family.
Edward Campbell

brother. John and wife Sunday.
Maynard of Kalamazoo epent Sun­
day with thc home folks.
gusto spent a part of last week with
Mr and Mrs Henry Wertman. Tlx-y
visited Mr and Mrs Wallie Camp­
bell of Hastings Sunday.

haps a half or three quarters
mile back and perhaps a half

prised 13.893 acres. Manuel entered
politics, and
naturally
needed
money, ao he sold a part of thia
holding for $3.00 an acre. He may
have been a good politician, but he
was evidently a poor farmer, and
becoming more and more Involved
financially, in 1857 he sold all lite

Today within Ute limits of thia
ranch Is the beautiful city of Pasa­
dena. South Pasadena. Altadena and
including "Millionaire's Roi
passing beauty
Thus tiw list might be continued,
and It is interesting to trace lhe
history and note the changes that
have taken place on many of lliese
old Ranchos. Three quarters ot a
century ago many of them were
just ranch lands; today they are
dotted with thriving, throbbing upto-date cities, varying in size from
a few thousand all the way up to
more than a million. And
...
that's
saying nothing of the hundreds of
millions of dollars worth of oil tak-

acres of very valuable orange and
lemon groves later developed.
It lx fitting and proper that Moth­
.r's Day should be celebrated in the
month of May. dedicated- throughout Hie world to the mother of tho
J
*
*■'“■* “*•“
*“**■

Fr —art were Friday afternoon
guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Kel-

Miss Marguerite Yelter of Grand
Rapids wax a Friday afternoon and
dinner guest of her parents. Mr.
tery in which lhe drilling of wells Is and Mrs. Clair Yelter.
prohibited by law. The pool extends
underneath this little-plat dedtcal- daughter. Marie. occom|&gt;anied
the former's large dairy farm at
Ligonier. Ind., to spend lhe week
cemetery land, but -nothing doing." end with their parents. Mr. and
It used to be thought that an oil
well could only be drilled right
straight down, but in thc search for
■ liquid gold" nothing seems impos­
sible of accomplishment, and here
-Yankee Ingenuity" again came to
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs
■idea that it would be possible to
start a well straight down, and then Lewis Sisson, Mr. and Mrs. Shirley
at a depth of several hundred feel, Mayo and daughter. Jean, Mr. and
start ofT in a slanting direction to Mrs. Burl Will and family of Has­
reach any spot desired. The plan tings.
proved successful to a remarkable
The week end was noted for tha
degree, and when we were there, oil number of cars parked everwhere,
wells were being started all around while their occupants searched ths
that cemetery, but outside of it. to countryside for mushrooms—a truly
• delectable and epicurean dish.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Lester Yelter of
There is Die Rancho Topadgo Kalamazoo spent Sunday with their
Malibu Sequit. known as lhe Malibu ' parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Yelter.
Ranch, a beautiful spot along the
—
• - —
Robert
Hammond entertained tha
ocean drive. Acting for tlie King of leader. Clare Williams. and mem­
Spain, lhe Military Governor of bers of the pleasant Hill 4-H Sheep
[ California granted 13.315 acres lo Club. Wednesday evening. After thc
Jose Bartolome Topia in 1804. It business meeting, games were en­
| bordered the Pacific for miles and joyed. followed by refreshments of
ice cream and enke decorated with
TCTlut ordinary person that would [ the club emblem in lhe club colors
appear as a princely grant, and is,
certainly unexcelled
for beauty.]
Mrs. Clara Manker. Stanley and
just imagine having a domain like . Flossie of Marlon. Ind., spent tho
that, nil your own. facing out on thc! week end with the former's parents.
beautiful Pacific, and in the delight­
Mr. nnd Mrs. Jack McCoy nnd
fully warm, sunshiny climate of
Mix.-. Barbara Green of Grandville
cclvc of anything lovelier? Tills was were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
thc Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit
And yet In 1848 the whole thing sold
for $400. of which $200 was to be in
cash and $200 In groceries and

tained 27.000 acres. Along towards
the middle of thc lost century the was sold for $10 per acre. Today Us
former ranch was sold for &gt;500. and value is figured in the tens of milprobably the latter would not hive
when It was sold for a few groceries
heirs could only have anticipated and some wine Malibu Beach today
’ future developments and could have Is famous as a beauty spot, and very
1 known of the great wealth they popular as a residential section, as
; contained, a great many times the its many attractive homes attest.

Tire Smith sisters, two young la­
dies from Hastings, gave a special
menage in song at Sunday school.
wIMoh was greatly enjoyed. Rev.
Gross preached a stirring massage.
A special Invitation is extended to
all lo attend church on Mother's
Day.
Prayer meeting Wednesday
evening. May 13. Is to be held at
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Baker of Jack­
son s|x&gt;nt thc week end with her
brother and wife. Mr. and Mrs.

John Fuller from Battle Creek
spent the day. Sunday, with Mr.
and Mrs. Ear) Engle.
Mr. and Mrs. William Krussell
from Battle Creek spent lhe week
end at the home of his parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Jonn Kronen.
if!'s sale. No one then could picture
There must be lots of mushrooms
Santa Fe Springs and thc billion judging by the cars that went In the
dollar oil pool beneath. which a
byways and across -fields to - tho
veritable city of oil derriclu is bring­
woods Sunday.
ing to tlie surface today.
Rancho San Pascual was granted

FOOD BARGAINS/
No. 2V^ site Pumpkin10c

/ NIGHT&lt;9/7//DAY

No. 2Vi sixe Sauer Kraut 10c
No 2Vt sise Hominy10c

youfre safe on CONCRETE
AT night the superiority of
concrete becomes most
apparent because of its visibil­
ity. Its light gray surface with
sharply defined edges reflects
light but is not glossy.

HOME LUMBER CO

BUILDS HOMES

THE HOME LUMBER CO
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

TELEPHONE 2276

Concrete conforms precisely
to the formula for the ideal
pavement set up by the Inter­
national Illumination Confress of 1928 and by the
Uuminating Engineering So­
ciety in 1934. The importance
of this is emphasized bv the
fact that the rate of death per
accident is 43%

higher during hours of dark*
Concrete, smooth but non­
akid, insures a quick, certain
stop even in the rain. Blow­
outs, spring breakage, steer­
ing gear failures, accidents of
all kinds are less apt to hap­

pen on concrete.
Yet concrete is not only safe
—It is more comfortable—it
saves in driving costs—it costs
less for upkeep—and cost of
construction is less than that
of any other pavement of equal
load-carrying capacity.

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
2012 Olda Towtr Bldg., Unsing, Mich.

2 bottles Ketchup, large, fine quality
6 boxes Matches
LOOK!—8V2 os. jar Sweet Pickles, fine quality __10c

BANANAS
SPECIAL—SATURDAY ONLY!
Introducing a New COUNTRY ROLL BUTTER
1 lb. I

i

PILLSBURY’S FLOUR
OPEN EVENINGS

WALLACE GROCERY

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. MAY 1. IIM

Mrs. B J. Wellman.
Chas. Barkun was In Kalamazoo
over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Deaklns were in
Lansing Saturday to see Mrs. Deak- .
Ins' brother, who was badly Injured:
by a large auto truck.
Mr. and Mrs. Olmstead ot Ionia ■
called on Mrs. Olmstead's broliter..
Chas. BarkufT. Saturday.
Mrs. Karl Phillipa of Kalamazoo
formerly Agnes Deaklns ot this!
place, was operated on last week for
appendicitis. Her many friends are I
glad to know she Is recovering nice- ■
ly' Mr nnd Mrs. Ernest Hunter and
। daughter of Sunfield and Mr. and
Mr* Sam Blocher ot Nashville were .
Bunday visitors at B. J. Wellman's. ;
Estlc Warner was In Kalamazoo 1
Monday.
Mr. Claud Demond. who has
been In poor health for some time,
went to the Pennock hospital Mon- |
day expecting an operation Tuesday-।
morning.
Mr. and Mrs. B J. Wellman made I
a business trip to Charlotte and |
Olivet Saturday,
Mrs. James Varney Ls spending I
thc week with friends In Kalama- |

PROBATE COURT.

execuior filed, letters testamentary
Issued, order limiting settlement en­
tered, petition for hearing claims
filed, notice to creditors Issued, In­
ventory filed.

E»t- Americus v. Palmerton. An­
nual account filed.
Est Hannah Blaisdell Robinson.
Petition for Admr.-filed.
Hst Annie E Young. Bond of
Admr. filed, letters of administra­
tion Issued.
Est. Philo H. Seger. Warrant and
Inventory filed.
Bat. Sarah E. Walters. Testimony
of freeholders filed, license to sell
Issued, oath before sale filed, bond
Est. Moftha Benson. Will filed,
petition for probate filed, order for
publication entered.
Est. Phebe Newberry. Discharge
of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Thomas Heney. Discharge of
Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Perry Campbell. Order con­
firming sale entered.
Est. Donald E. Henry. Annual ac­
count filed.
Est. Harry Le Gear. Bond of
Admr. filed, letters of administra­
tion Issued, order limiting settle­
ment entered, petition for hearing
claims filed, notice lo creditors issued.
Est. L. May Ayres. Petition for
construction of will filed, order to
show cause filed.
Est. Mary A. Turner. Final ac­
count filed.
Est. L- Blanche Johncock. Inven­
tory filed.
Est. Cornelia Merriman. Annual
account filed.
Est. Charles Hilton, et al. Annual
aecount filed.
.
Est. Lewis Willard Hilton. Order
allowing account entered, discharge
of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
Est. George W. Miller. Order al­
lowing claims entered.
Est. Helen D. DePrlcsler. Release
of Tldn. filed, discharge of Odn.
issued, estate enrolled.
.
Est. Will W Sheffield. Order al­
lowing claims entered.
Est. Sidney A. Crowell. Inventory
filed, final account filed.
Est. Lloyd Elliston, el al. Annua)
account filed.,
Est. Annie E. Young. Petition for
hearing claims filed, notice lo credi­
tors issued.
Est. Lawrence Keech. Order al­
lowing account entered, discharge
of Gdn. Issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Alma Terry, ct al. Annual
account filed, order for publication
entered.
Est. M B Brooks. Petition for
Admr. filed, order for publication
entered.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Arnold B. Perkin*. Hastings''.... 10
— ----_ ।
-------- .. -----Lelha M. Moore. Hastings 20
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Mrs. Sallle Sibert and brother,
Charlie Thuston, of
Greenville
and Mrs. Grace Cole of Northeast
Carlton spent Friday visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Lafayette Usbornc. Mrs
Anna Buck and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Shriber.
Miss Achsah Buck attended a
young people's conference In Bat­
tie Creek on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs? Caryl Fuller and
daughter spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mr*. Edgar Cheney of Howell.
Hazel Shriber and friend. Jack
Donley. Betty Donley and friend of
Hastings spent the week end In
Flint visiting Mrs. Faye Donley, who
Is ill. at her sister's home.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Hall of Lan­
sing called on Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Barry Sunday evening.
SOUTH THORNAPPLE.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Welrlnga
and daughter. Anna May accom­
panied by Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kronewitlcr of Middleville passed Bunday
afternoon with Mrs. Hattie M.
Johnson.
Mrs, Mildred Mason of Grand
Rapids spent Sunday afternoon with
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. James
Oliver and family who are tenants
of Mrs. Hattie Johnson.
LCO_GrinHh. who now reside* .on
his father's farm north of Middle­
ville was a welcome caller here reconUy among hte eld neighbors. .Mr. and Mra. Oecl) Preston and
family, also Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Oliver of near Hastings visited their
Brent*. Mr. and Mrs. James Oliver,
turday.

J But Both Went
to Dog Pound!

m

COURTHOUSE NEWS

BOWNE CENTER.

VUitbra ot Mr. and Mn. Merrill
Ural* Kunzl of Hudsonville, Mr. and
HENDERSHOTT.
Mrs. Glenn Spaulding and daughter
of Cascade. Mra. Kate DeYoungs of
Grand Rapids, Mra. Otto Kunde of '
Freeport and Henry Karchcr and.
family.
Vranken. celebrate hl* birthday by
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Penoyer of taking supper with him.
Grand Rapids were Sunday visitor*
The Ladles Aid supper was wen
at Watt Thomas'. Ruaaell Benton attended and HO was cleared by the 1
and family were caller* also. Rus­ ladies.
sell flow drive a fine new Plymouth.
The Mother’s Day program will be
Mr. and Mrs. Asahel Thompson , given
given next Sunday
aunuuy morning,
me
morning. The
have been having a carpenter and &gt; minister hopes to see every daughpaper hangers the pest two weeks, ter and her mother present.
making a fine Improvement on their
"
------ "-•••
-- —
Grace
Brill ---------came*--------home-------Sunday
home.
। from Kalamazoo for a three weeks*

Uta

Saturday evening.

hear that
Robert, to
mon la.
Mr. and Mra. Howard

family of Cloverdale
with hi* parent*, Mr.
Bryan*.

We Want to Be of
Real Help to You

IRVING.
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Mayville,
who have been visiting their chll- |
dren In Grand Rapids the past win- j
ter. have returned to Irving. While I
is probably what the little pup
there Mr. Mayville celebrated his
defiantly thought ns he hunched
one hundred fifth birthday.
Al the regular Sunday school hour ' in tho protection of title St. Ber­
nard after city authorities In
Sunday, there will be a Mothers
YANKEE SPRINGS.
Mrs. Curtis Pierce and son at Alle­ Day program. Mrs. John Belson is
Come to lhe church services. Wc gan. w
the new Sunday school superintend- i up nil unlicensed dogs and eend
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Main of Has­ ent. succeeding Foster Waddell, who
are having good times Preaching al
ilicm lo the city dog pound. But
3 o'clock; Sunday school al 2. Rev. tings were Sunday afternoon callers resigned.
.
the little dog end the big one
of Mr. and Mrs. Clare Williams and
R. A. Houghton pastor.
Mrs. J M. Perry visited her chil- • went to lhe pound lost the same.
There will be C. E meeting every children.
dren in Kalamazoo a couple of days I
—-------- ---------------------------Mr. and Mra. Amos Pahncr and recently.
Sunday evening at the Yankee
)
I son and wife of Bowne: Mrs. Geo.
The Ladles' Aid Society, which 1 Cook of Thompsonville; Mrs. CarSprings church at 7 o'clock. A son Freddy of Barlow lake were
Sunday
evening
guests
of
Mr.
and
good place to spend your Sunday
was postponed
on account of ■ pentcr and Mrs. McKlvcr and
evenings; come and help in this serv­ Mrs. Bert Palmer and family.
Achievement Day. will meet Friday.' daughter of Parmalee.
The little daughter of Mr. and May
Mny B
ice. we need singers. Mr. Adler will
8. w:tn
with Mrs
Mrs. Beverwyk or. 1
Leon Poll* and wife visited Clive
Mr.. ---------Arthur -------------Hyd.nb.rg
.---------Audrey , Thon
st. —
H„
Un„
lead next Sunday evening.
.------—•-----, —
- —
Churchills in Middleville, Sunday
Fulmer, of Grandville
Or.ndvUl. ts
U very sert«rtM„ Munci R|ch Ol
The Yankee Springs project seems P«lmer&gt;
Mra
V1S. ' afternoon.
to be coming nicely. Tlie office will ously ill at St. Marys hospital ill I Ued
Wm McCann's from Friday
Red nt
at Wm.
Mr. Hoover is tossing stones In
-----------— lo thc ..............
..... »north
—«&gt;. Grand Rapids.
| 01| 8unday. wh(?n her ablfr Bntl I
Im- moved
first house
Bradley Thompson of near Hart- husband from Redford came and the relaxed, carefree manner ot
of the Yankee Springs store. Just
one who lives In an all-safety-glass
watch Yankee Springs come on In ford was a Sunday caller of R. J-Ishe returned with them
'
house.
and
Clare
Williams
Thcrp
WM
B
gQBpel
Bt
lhc
spite of the sandburrs.
Wm. Johnson and wife were nt a
| home of Mr. and Mrs. Nagel TuesBARBERS CORNERS
! dav’evenlnc “““ ””
1Ue”
plT U*T.'
he
fish supper with Perry Van Tuyl
I day evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Nay Bump and famMrs Nellli
Nellie Schenkel visited her Knoramus' he alway? corrects the
and wife at Nashville one night
Mrs
last week, perry did not get the fish ily of Hastings were visitors at Mrs. I uncle. Loul* Betts. In Grand Rnp- «neiUna and nunctuation
i'out of Deep lake this time as he Jerry Foley's Sunday.
| ids one day recently Mr- Betts has
'
did once.
■
. ;
'■
] Mr. nnd Mrs. John Weaver called been ill for some time.
Rollo Johnson .and wife *L
‘ ‘ . on Mr$t Jamep Mosher at the Clay- | Mrs Lucretia Benham has rcitfqnded
their uncle's 52n‘d anniversni.,
..
----nty last &gt; um Hinckliy home west of Hastings 1 turned from a visit with her grand­
Sunday, at Bradley. GO being pres­ Sunday afternoon.
j children nt Richland.
ent.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Otis of Glass'
------------------« a «
Miss Audra Hummel was at home Creek were dinner guests at HerCLAY HILLS.
Sunday.
mw Hauer’s Tue«to,. tn the atl-1
„,)y McCaul ,„d wU,. Mrs g,^,
Any one who has n song to sing. emoon they all attended U.e funeral McCau, nnd daughu-r Bertha at.
. come to Yankee Springs church and ot John SUdel. near Freeport.
| unM llw lullcn,|
Mr ^hkn,te!
VMor. at Dudley Kennedy a | o, MoUni one d0).
sing It any Sunday.
i Next Sunday come to thc Yankee Sunday were: Mra. Lena Becker,,
McClnl|
I Springs church with a flower. It will Homer and Majesty of the State
,
W,lhUr
n,’d ra™ **
' * Mother's Day. There will be good Road Fred Frederick nnd Mr Burr
music.
of Hastings. Lawrence Frederick of i *’nBZO° sj*nt Sunday with Guy Mcn . ■
...
__
- No* nnrl fomllv
Grand Rapids and Mr. and Mrs. L. Nee and family.
PLEASANT HILL.
Francis Haight nnd family of
J. Matthews.
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Williams and
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Kucmpel and Home Acres were visitors at Eugene
Mrs. Clare Williams were in Alle­ Mrs. Nellie Hopkins of Hastings Haight's Sunday
gan and Hartford on business visited friends at Martin. Sunday.
Roy McCaul nnd wife spent Sun­
Thursday.
day with hcr parent*. William HulMrs. Wm. Rice who has Just re­
An expert says you can often tell let nnd wife in Middleville.
turned from Florida, spent lhe week a genuine antique by tapping it
Callera at lhe Leon Potts home
end with L. L. Gibson and family. sharply. This is specially true In Inst week were: Morris LcwLs and
They all spent Sunday with Mr. and the case of eggs.
wife of Kalamazoo; Clayton John-

When you come here, we try to do

|
i

more than just ‘‘go through the mo­

tions” of serving you.

There is sincere interest back of our
efforts to give you good banking
service. We want our facilities to be

a real help to you in what you are
trying to do.

We hope you will give us many op­
portunities to cooperate with you in

your financial problems. It will be a

pleasure to serve you at any time.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

FRIGIDAIRE

W,THTHE "METER-MISER

I
I
j
|
,

meets

AUCTION SALE!

ALL FIVE

STANDARDS

REFRIGERATOR

Having decided to quit farming, I will dispose of my per
sonal property at a public auction on the old Townsend farm
2 1-2 miles N. E. of Orangeville or 2 1-2 miles S. W. of Yan­
kee Springs in Orangeville township, on
'

BUYING

SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1936
BEGINNING AT 1:00 P. M
HOUSES.
Bay mare, 6 yrs. old, wt. 1200.
Brown gelding, 4 yrs. old, wt. 1450.

tm*TiM can

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING
5 busheli early potatoes.
8 bushels beans.

(3) Proof ot Furra

HARNESS.
COWS.

Going to
COLDWATER

Red cow, 10 yrs. old, fresh in January.
Red cow, 6 yrs. old, fresh in January.
Jersey heifer, due soon.

— OK —

FT. WAYNE?

SHEEP AND HOGS.
15 ewes with 8 lembs.
2 shoots, wt. 200 lbs. each.
2 shoots, wt. 125 lbs. each.
HENS.

Extra

Bus

Service

Now

from Hastings lo C'oldwaASK AGENT FOR NEW
TIME TABLE

Set double work harness, old.
Coad set double harness, 11-2 inch.

FARM TOOLS.
Doering Ideal binder, 6-ft. cut.
Throc-soction drag.
18-taoth wood frame drag.
Cale bean puller.
Riding cultivator.
Lumber wagon, 3 1-4 x 10, and hay
rack.
Hay slings, forks, ate.

25 White Leghorn hens.
SEEEDS AND CRAIN.

150 crates of com.
8 bushels Blue Stem beans.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
Heating stove.
2 wooden bedsteads and springs.
6 chairs.
Stand.
Other articles not mentioned.

TERMS OF SALE:-Cosh. No goods removed until settled for.
BUS DEPOT AT

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 2131

FOR

ADRIAN JOHNSON, Propr.
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer

iloa built, c

New Pnces As
Low As

$g450

uwun
©Proof ofFTKrtAl

rantcnM rus

No Down Payment

This Is How to Buy...ON
Why You Should Buy Your
Frlgldalro from U&lt;

Whv risk your money
claims? Come in and get
that Frigidaire product
more cold for much less current
cost. That it keeps foods hotter,

reliability co that of
Motors.

O Our new low prices and new payment plan
make Frigidsix® ownership easier thsn ever.
*3 Our Uns Includes Frigidsix*
**• models for every sis* family
and every budget requirement.

. . . And that tho
scaled-in mccli

CONSUMERS POWER
Hastings, Mich

Mde*

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1»M

।—IXOVERDALE.
| Misses Mildred and Irene Hoskens I
KUNOENSMITH.
I
MILO.
■nd Mra. Otenn Ingham and *nd friends of Hastings spent Sun- J yr. and Mra. Marshall Tripp and
Mr. and Mra. Schultz were called
pns of Hopklnsburg spent.
afternoon with Mrs. Myrtle lou. Mrs. Albert Green and Mrs.' u&gt; Chicago early last week by lhe
k with Mr. and Mrs. Archie 1 MacLrod and family.
Archie Burd ate supper with Lee death of an aunt.
i
I The young people's class put on a j Lapham and family at Maple Grove
Mrs. J. Brandstetter and daugh­
ter. Mra. Nina Boyle, spent Friday
l spent Bunday at their ‘ FrldaX
Quh® “ ft* »t
jBmes Storkan returned
hlr.
°
y
in. I from C]cveiand after spending lhe in Kalamazoo.
hire.
tended and ten dollars was taken In.
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan had for vis­
_
I Dan Moore .nd
wUh
1
and sister nf
of Gr.nrt
Grand
itors Saturday: Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Kring returned hoo* after Rapids visited • their friend. Frank .
Mrs. James Bowerman has been .Jones of Grand Rapids. On Bunday
Barnard. Thursday evening.
'quite 111 with streptococcus sore ithey entertained Mr. and Mrs. John
4 Mra. Kring, of Blissfield.
j
- - : throat the past week.
(' IScobey of Hastings.
». Hammond of Hastings spend
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mrs. Flower and Bernice spent
Week end with Mr. and Mrs. ,
I The WPA workers are busy takLut Week's Letter.
ia,t1 ln« up trees and setting them out !Saturday afternoon and Sunday
Lemuel Oaks began work
,
, ,,
with Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Kennedy
» Cloverdale L- A- 8. will meet week for Mr. Crldler west of Mid- ji 011
on fflrllks
farms ,n
In lhe »*
park
area.'
rlt area
,
and
sons at Dowagiac. They drove
he home of Mra. Maggie Hunt, dieville. He expects to move his
Ami Slorkan entertained a few
raday. May 14- cooperative din- household effects tills week into Ute girl friends from Middleville lhe over to South Bend In the early
I evening with some friends.
M usual. Everyone welcome.
tenant house there. Mrs. Oaks and put week.
| Mr. and Mra. Ernest Quick were
baby will Join lilm there this week.
Alice Bowerman of Hullngs is I In Banfield Sunday to cal) on their
We wish them the best of success spending some time with'Nier par- । grandson. Lawrence Quick, who is
•"
..v
I eQU&gt; Mr Wlcl Mrs jameS Bower­
In tlielr new —
work.
quite sick.
W. H. Otis returned lut week
man.
•
i Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Skidmore
from a visit with relatives at Belle­
and son visited the former's undo
vue. Trenton. Detroit and other
SOUTH SHULTZ.
and. family in Augusta Sunday.
places. He left Saturday to visit
Thc Misses Lorraine and Loma I Mrs. Wilcox, who has spent the
relatives at Hickory Comers.
Bonneville and Evelyn Hom with winter at her home in* Hastings,
Mr- and Mrs. Wm. Hart and baby three others.
Betty Jean Casey. came Wednesday to the farm here
of Hullngs and Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Shirley Anders and Mary Jean for the summer. Her sister. Miss
Havens and children were Sunday Smith, of Delton were pallbearers Elizabeth Dodds, who spent
lhe
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. for their schoolmate. Helen Lelnaar. i winter with her and another sis­
- Havens. Mr. and Mrs. Howard whose funeral wu at Cedar Creek ter in Hastings, has returned to her
Johnson of Hickory Comers and Monday afternoon.
home
In
Canada.
MIDDLEVILLE
Mrs. Nellie Forman of Kalamazoo
Mr. and Mra. Merle Bradfield and
Sincere
Is extended to
| were callers there.
' ~
—”• sympathy
------- &lt; —
Henry’ Lelnaar and family In the Jack spent the week end and Sun­
I Some from here attended the | Henp
“Michigan's Finest SmaUday with the former's brother. Mr.
passing of their daughter. Helen.
funeral of Wm. McNutt near Irving pusing
■ lut Thursday. His death came as 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kenyon of and Mra. Ernest Bradfield In South
Bend.
a great shock to relatives and Hickory Comers called on their
Miss Irene Barber of Battle Creek
' friends and lhe entire community grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. G. E.
1 extends heartfelt sympathy to the Kenyon. Tuesday. Frank Hallock of spent the week end with her par­
; ents here. On Saturday she accombereaved ones.
(Milo
Mllo called
called there
there Sunday.
Sunday.
panled
her mother to Niles to take
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Bonneville
Soturday, Sunday and
STATE ROAD.
attended lhe funeral of Helen Lein- || Mrs. Florence Swain. Mra. Barber's
sister, home.
Lut Week's Letter.
aar at Cedar Creek Monday.
Monday, May 9, 10, 11
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Palmatier and
j Our school with their teacher.
Fred Hom spent Saturday In Batsons were Friday evening guests of
' Miss Butolph attended thc WL8
program at Hastings last week
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hom attend­ B. N and Nina Fenner and mother.
Mrs.
Chase.
। Monday.
ed a tm-lhday supper at Mr. and
i Mrs. Dpra Coleman of Rutland Mrs. Charley Kahler s of North Bor- |
MIDDLEVILLE.
i and Martin Goodenough of Free­ ry. honoring lhe birthdays of Frank |
।
Water
meters have been placed in
, port spent several days with Mrs. । Hom and their son. Clifford.
i Janet Pettenglll.
Rena Whipple of Augusta spent all places using water and we will
। Mr. and Mrs. Swan Anderson of lhe week end with her parents. Mr. all be on metered service)as of May
1. 1936. This is the buslriess way to
• the city moved onto their farm and Mrs. Ernest Peake.
handle the situation.
'
Saturday. We welcome them to our
Mr and Mra. Frank Hom enter­
Jas. L- Rugg and Rev. Rlgelman
j midst.
tained for dinner Sunday: Mr. and
were
up near Kalkaska last week
i Farmers welcome this nice rain Mrs. Loren Gardiner of Bedford.
after
the
speckled
beauties;
they re­
. u lhe ground wu very dry. Most Mr. and Mrs Vem Welcher. Floyd
of them. Jas L,.
L.
)f turned with
..... 10 V.
I oats are sowed now.
and Donald; Betty Ketchem of
Mr. and Mrs. James Solhard spent । Lacey; Mr. nnd Mra. Will Gales;. ■ spent his boyhood in that country
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Murray Miss Lucy Sullivan. Joe and Archie' and says the trout were glad to see
&gt; Myers of Ionia.
Naugles of Kalamazoo. This gutii- Wm. They had a very pleasant time.
W. R. and Mrs. Harper and
I Mrs. Arthur Coleman hu been on I erlng honored lhe birthdays of,
Matinee Sunday. 3 o'clockI the sick list lhe put two weeks but Frank Hom and Lucy Sullivan. granddaughter. Maxine Finkbelner.
continuous.
Is better now.
Bert end Orville Cook of Kalama­' returned from their southern trip
on
Thursday. They had a very
Guy Sllsby wu in Grand Rapids zoo were callers there in the aftcrpleasant time and saw many sights.
. two days lut week.
noon.
They visited relatives and friends in
the state of Georgia.
Sup. J. M. Potts and Max Lynd,
were busy taking tha assessment for
the village last week.
- G. E. Gardner, who spent the
winter In Florida, relumed last week
and Is visiting his son. C. A . and
family. We are all glad to see Glenn
back to the old home town.
The Ideal Theater ts recelvlrig a
new coat of various colored 'palhts
Il sure attracts attention.
Conrad Gillette, aged 75 years,
who for some years has resided
here with his daughter. Mrs. Lloyd
Knox, on Arlington St., went to
Dutton recently to attend the fu­
neral of a niece. He became III there
and was taken to Pennock hospital
in Hastings, passing away Friday
noon. The remains were brought
here and the funeral was held on
Monday at 2 P. M. Besides the
daughter he leaves several grand­
children and other relatives to
mourn, also a host of friends In
tlw various towns where he for­
merly lived.
1 One of our milk men started Mon­
day A. M- delivering early in lhe
mornings, in time for breakfast.

New

WILL ROGERS

“IN OLD
KENTUCKY”

BUY ON

,7'‘Firestone
HIGH SPEED TJRE for 1936

MARTIN CORNERS.
Remember S- S- next Sunday, May

Racing

430-21............
€7549............
525-18............
53047............
6.00-16............

9-75

noon. Everyone is cordially invited
to attend all these services.
A good attendance and fine time
at the P. T. a. lut Friday evening.
Sandwiches and coffee were served
by the teacher. Miss Cogswell.
Miss Imogene Barry is assisting
Mrs. Charlie Townsend of near
Coats Grove with her housework,
and in caring for hcr little daugh­
ter. who wu so seriously Injured
lut week in falling from a swing
at the CoaU Grove school, fractur­
ing both arms and otherwise in­
juring herself.
i
'
The Misses Dorothy and Marjorie
Cogswell of Lakeview were week end
guests at Mr. and Mrs. Ort Fisher's.
Mrs. Hazel Hildebrandt of Hutings was a Sunday afternoon caller
at Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher's.
DOWLING.
Mother's day will be observed at
the church Bunday morning with an
appropriate sermon by the pastor,
which will be preceded by the Sun­
day school session.
The next Townsend meeting will
be held at the Dowling church on
Tuesday evening. May 12.
Mr. and Mrs. L J. Oswald were
guests Bunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Arnold at Bedford.
Mr. and Mrs. Orlle Fisher visited
Mr. and Mrs. Charles McDaniels
nnd Mrs Julia Skillman at Com­
stock Sunday.
Harold Stanton and son Russell
attended thc Father and Son ban­
quet at the Muonic TV m pie at
Bedford Friday night.
Mrs. Lottie Ormsbe had a narrow
escape lut week from being struck
down by a passing motorist who was
driving at a terrific pace through
thc village, enroute to a northern
point on a fishing trip. Mrs. Ormsbe
had stepped from a car and was
about to crass the street In front of
her home when thc driver sudden­
ly appeared and in order to avert a
real accident, swerved into a large
sign post and ruined a canoe which
wu in an attached trailer; fortu­
nately there were no serious results,
but once more we are reminded of
the fact that Dowling should have
a .speed limit.
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Jones spent
Sunday with lhe former's brother
and family al Kalamazoo.
Mrs. Melissa Tinkler Is numbered
among lhe fiu victims Who have
been numerous in this locality dur­
ing the last few weeks and which
Invariably results In a lingering
siege of bronchial trouble.
MLss Mary Trafford of Kalamazoo
is staying al present at the home of
her brother and wife. Mr. and Mrs.
Millon Trafford while recovering
from a recent Illness.

15-!•
IMS

FOR TRUCKS
to----------------------

•1M5
is.ie

€00-20.

730-30.

32e6hx&gt;.

QN or about May 6 the new
and magnlticent German
Zeppelin. Hindenburg, is sched­
uled to leave Frankfurt-amMain for the United States to in­
augurate passenger, mail, and
express air service across lhe
north Atlantic, in command of
the great ship will be worldfamed Dr. Hugo Eckener—still
recognized everywhere as one of
aviation's foremost figures, de­
spite the Nazi decree forbidding
German newspapers to carry his
name.
The dirigible experienced en­
gine
trouble returning from
South America on her maiden
voyage last month, nnd narrowly
escaped a forced landing
Re­
pairs have been mode and the
oig Zeppelin is expected to comolete thc northern trip without
mishap.
The Hindenburg will carry 50
passengers, a crew of 40. and
nearly 30.000 pounds of mail—
biggest nav load ever to start on
a flying trip.

HR ECKENER will pilot the
airship along the Main river
in Its iunrtlon with the historic
Rhine and on over lhe valley of
that stream Then. If the weather
Is favorable, he will cross over
Holland, ll.c North Sea. and the
British Isles.
Continuing on her north and
west course, the ship will swing
post lhe southern tip of Green­
land. following thc arc of lhe
Great Circle, down across New­
foundland and the Maritimes,
and over New England to the
Lakehurst. N J., air station If
the weather Is bad. a more
&lt;outherlv course will be followed

ROBINHUE PARK.
Callers al the Kollar's home lut
week were: Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haight. Mrs
Charles Robertson.
Mr. and Mrs. George Poland. Mrs.
Evrld Jackson. Mrs. Edith Clifford.
Mrs. Retha McNec and daughter
June. Mrs. Kollar Is gaining, being
able to be up part of the time.
Mrs. Nina Wenger returned home
Saturday after a two weeks' visit
with relatives at Mendon and Three
Rivers.
Julian Potts nnd family spent
Sunday with Will Mitchell and wife
of Grand Rapids.
COATS GROVE.
Mrs. Kate Robinson is not very
The L. A- 8. meets this week
well, being confined to her bed last
Thursday with Mrs. E. S. Thompson,
week.
Mr. and Mrs Dan Youngblood of with dinner served by Club No. 1.
Mrs. Martha Wilcox and baby of
Caledonia called on Mr. and Mrs.
Wright Clifford Sunday afternoon. Kalamazoo visited thc former's parMr and Mrs. Lewis Skinner of enls and other relatives from Wed|
nesday
until Sunday afternoon.
Leighton and Mr. nnd Mrs. Leon
Mrs. Ola Kimble and Mrs. Agnes
Potts were visitors al Mrs. John
Haight will have charge of a Moth­
Kollar's last week.
James Robertson. Harold Kollar er's Day program in the Sunday
and Wright Clifford spent Sunday school next Sunday.
Miss Ruth Woodman
visited
______
evening al North Dorr with Ralph
Klein, who hu employment in a friends In Kalamazoo Saturday.
The D. O. T- O. club meeting wiU
sawmill.
not be held In May. Instead the
members will plan on attending the
; Club Federation
meeting. —
next
•—
Thursday In Woodland.
Mrs. Nell Smith of Midland vis­
ited her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Coolbaugh. over the week
end.
Mrs. Mattle Kimble and Floyd
Kimble and family attended the
golden wedding anniversary gather­
ing for relatives of theirs in Grand
Rapids.

10. at 10:30 and a pot luck dinner
driver, will not take I at
noon, followed by appropriate
chances on any tire except a Firestone I Mother's Day exercises and a ser­
mon
by Rev. Conklin in the afu-rGum-Dipped Tire in the grueling
Indianapolis 500-Mile Race, where its
greater blowout protection has been
jin'lnrulittd
repeatedly demonstrated.
and
Guaranteed
Ab Jenkins, the famous driver, used Firestone
Gum-Dipped Tires on his 3000-mile run over the
Salt Beds of Utah, which he covered in 2314 hours
—a record of 127 miles per hour. He has driven
more than a million miles on Firestone Tires, in
BAN FIELD.
every state in the union, on all kinds of roads, in all
. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Briggs have
kinds.,of .traffic, without tire failure or accident of American Fence Heads the Line in Fence laities moved to a farm nw Kitom
any kind. What a tribute to safe, dependable, *;_____ ____________________
and
moved Into the Briggs residence at
economical tire equipment.
Ban field.
l Mrs. Don Putnam spent Tuesday
When you drive at today’s higher speeds, your i
P. M. and night at O. Smelker's In
I
Bowne. life and the lives of others are largely dependent
upon thc degree of safety built into the tires of your
car. Take no chances—equip your car with new
Firestone High Speed Tires today and be sure of the
safest driving equipment money can buy.

It takes MORE than PRICE

TO MAKE A BARGAIN!

€00-17 ho....
6.00-19 KD....
€5047 HO....
70047 HD. -.
730-17 HD

New. German ‘Zep* Primed for First
Passencrer-Mail Flight to the U. S.

Tho Hindtnbura h Ho w n
above at the atari of a teat flight
At right U pictured the interior
of one of her stateroom*.
The trip will co»t each pa»tengcr about S400, and take ap­
proximately 65 hours. The re­
turn journey will be mode In
about 45 houra. Speedy for a
dirigible, the Hindenburg
easily at 80 miles an hour.

P O M FO RT t The new air
monarch stacks up well In
thia department when compared
to the better ocean liners. Aerom morin Hons are sp acinus.
While nn««enrers on other 7ooo»Hn« travel In cnr« fiOoned on
Ih- outride or the hull fhrxe nn
fh« Gerrai" 'tirlrihle rld» In the
hull Itself Rename of tM« fea­
ture, more rnnm l« available for
both nnssenffera a "4 crew
Th-re are two derka. with all
the 7rnoe|ln,i« 24 cab'na altuated
on the unner one. Each cabin
ba« two bertha, a trble mlrrora.
two loekerw. hnt and cold water
A’«o on the unner deck are the
d&lt;nfn# salon. Imt"”e. rend’nv and
writing rooms There Is a piano
In the lounge.
Pna«en«rers will have nlentv of
onnortunltv for exercise and
siehtaeelng nn promenade decks
which nrnvlde a walk 2nd feet
long
Equipped with wide win­
dows. th»se nre on the port and
starboard sldra
0N lhe lower deck are the
'-z abnwer baths, smoking mom
a^d bar. kitchen end oantrv.
Also on thia deck, but aenarnted
from nr»««enger nuafters. are the
me«« halls for officers and crew

Wayne Buckland and Marcella
Smith were recently married Ln An-,
gala. Ind. They will reside in Bat-1
tie Creek.
Mrs. Rose Phillips has been quite
ill the put week.
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Emmet
Bird Sunday. May 3. a seven pound
boy. Mrs. Bird was formerly Arletha Stiles, of this vicinity.
Pauline Bellinger has secured a
teaching position in tlie Kellogg
school at Middleville for the com­
ing year.
Farmers in this vicinity are busy
plowing for corn. They have sown
their oats and the recent rains came
Just In time.
DeVon Putnam, who Is employed
by the State Highway Dept., has
been transferred from the upper
peninsula to Jackson county.
A doctor from Delton was called
Bunday to the Phillips home and
also for Mrs. Gladys Cornell.
Mr. Greenman and family have
moved from Banfield to Hastings.

THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
Last Week's Letter.
Wanit la B’.rausbaugh and Clyde
Bassett of Freeport were Battle
Creek visitors Saturday.
Mrs. Frank Erb and Mrs. Rachel
Erb of Grand Rapids were dinner
guests of the ClifTord Hammond's
Wednesday.

members. The control car Is
well forward and separated from
passenger and crew quarters.
It Is unlikely that tlie Hinden­
burg will continue regular flights
between Germany and the
United States, after this summer.
Subsidies are necessary at pres­
ent for such service
The Germans believe a single
craft cannot operate on an effi­
cient schedule, and feel that
weekly or semi-weekly service
must be Instituted If full benefit
is to be realized. They look to
the United Stales to build one or
more big airships to operate on
north Atlantic schedules
Since the American govern­
ment seems cool toward operat­
ing such a program with Ger­
many. It Is protyible that lhe
Hindenburg will join the Graf
In South American service this
fall. This service will be ex­
panded to Include weekly air­
ship and airplane sailings on
probably a two-day schedule.
John Stutz of Martin Comers is
working for Warren Bolton.
Mrs. Wm. Volson, who has been
working In Hastings has returned
to her home.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Ingram of
Hullngs were visitors of the Clias.
Woodrutf's Sunday evening.
Mrs. Minnie Hammond liu gone
to visit her daughter. Mrs. Clyde
Barnes and family In Jackson.
Elia Tyler and Melva Claggett
made some clever health books at
our school the put week.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bolton and
family spent Saturday evening at
Oliver BollchM in Hullngs.

I1IGHBANK.
Mr. and Mrs. Worth Green were
in Battle Cfeek Thuraday.
Miss Velma Hoffman of Jackson
spent the week end with her par­
ents and Qeo. Jr., at Coldwater. On
Bunday she wu a guest at George
Hot! man's.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kelley of
near Hullngs were Thursday eve­
ning guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hawbliu.
Mr. and Mrs. Worth Green of the
Moore district spent Bunday al Mrs.
Curt Marshall's. Earl Marshall ot
Marshall wu a guest also.
| Bom lo Mr. and Mrs. Claud Reid
a daughter, who wu named Bar­
bara Helen.

YOUR

imily’s diet
' If you wont to save money on fence, get the fence that has
every money-saving feature. That’s genuine American!
। It is made better. It lasts longer. If costs far less in the long
run than fence made to sell at a "price."
Th&lt; body of the New Firettone
High Sp«d Tire U moxle from
■tkcMd hmMopIc cotton dipped
in liquid rubber, abtorbing eight
Pottndi of rubber in every hundred
poundt of cotton. Thit paterJed
Gtteo-Dlfrplng procett imu latet
every fiber in every cotton cord,
fatemal friction which
createt the heat to dettructive to
tfrellfe^andgMngtothetircadded

STANDARD TYPE

SENTINEL TYPE
azt
PSKt
4.50- 21... €5.75

mi
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525 IS...

7.«5

4.75-19.
5.0049...
5.2518...
5.50- I9...

*-5«

COURIER TYPE
4.40-21.

4.50-21 ...

4.75-19...

3O*3^CL

5-»5
5-55
4-«5

O ANDRUS SERVICE f
Cw.

C—rt Sta.

• F1KESTONE TIRES AND TUBES
• BATTERIES, WINDSHIELD WIPERS

American is mode of medium hard wire, tough and sturdy—
। not soft and flabby. It is full gouge, with rust-resisting copI per-bearing steel. The smooth, evenly coated galvanizing

i is proof against any sort of weather attack. Famous Amerij can weather curves take care of expansion and controctipn.
i Equally famous American Hinge Joint gives the flexibility
that's necessary to withstand heavy pressure of livestock.
Stoy wires are guaranteed to be 6 or 12 inches apart. Every
roll is full honest length, with specification card in each roll
that tells exactly what you ore getting.
AMERICAN IS A REAL BARGAIN!

Hmtin,,. Mlchlgi-

SUNOCO GAS and OILS, GREASING
VULCANIZING,

WASHING

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO.
Hutinf,. Mlchlgin

T,l^&gt;hon« 2101

Milk is one of the most important items
of the family’s diet. Using it in prepar­
ing food and drinking by the glassful is
an everyday occurrence. Because milk
is so important, caution should be exer­
cised when choosing the source of sup­
ply ... be sure that the milk your fam­
ily drinks is pure.
Highlands Dairy Grade A milk is pure
. . . produced in conformity with the
Grade A standard for. milk, it is your
assurance of purity. The cows produc­
ing Highlands Grade A are constantly
watched and inspected, and fed only the
best of dairy foods.

)S DAIRY
COOK, Prop.

Hastings

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

HASTING^, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1936

14 PAGES

PLANNING ANNUAL
Nearly 1000 Attend Barry Co. VACATJOII PRE­
HE NOUNS
ALUMNI BANQUET FATil HOCIDEKT
Rod
and
Gun
Club
Banquet
Officers to Announce the 20991^890^
SENTS PROBLEMS Complete Program Later
OFSOUTHWEST

CRUEL, VICIOUS, WICKED
FIGHTERS—CAUSED
LOTS OF TROUBLE
FORCED TO LIVE ON
THE DESERT AREAS
They Seemed To Absorb All
The Cruelties of Hos­
tile Nature
Leaving Los Angeles far New Or­
, leans, by way of the Southern Pa­
cific, you pass through some Inter■' esting country and quite historic
f districts,
by Redlands, through
Palm Springs, the sparkling desert
oasis, on# of th# favorite retorts
for Hollywood screen stars, and vo­
cation spot for numerous easterners
high up In the financial world. On
past that mysterious Ballon Bea.

the ocean, across the Imperial Val­
ley, a great desert empire brought
to a state of high fertility by the
waters of the Colorado river. What
new empire will be built up out of
desert lands, through the construe*
irrigation and power purposes re­
mains to be seen. It would seem
certain that the construction of
that great dam will mean much to
ent worthless, desert sections of land
into richly producing areas. All that

productive. and Hoover Darn will
Around Yuma we cam# into
country made prominent over 60
years ago by the warlike Apache In­
dians under the leadership of the
wily old Chief Geronimo, whose
band after yean of fierce fighting
was captured by General Crook, of
th* U. 0. Army and taken to Flor­
ida.
tJhtof Geronimo, Judging by pic­
tures of him. was a very decent
looking fellow and his face displays
mare than ordinary Intelligence. In
hto make-up there was keenness and
shrewdness. In both himself and hto
followers there was a quality of
klndneos. but along with it was the
most ferocious degree of cruelty,
when once aroused, that characterdlans that gave so much trouble in
(Continued on'page 6, Sec. 2)

HASTINGS 1.0.0. F.
ANNUAL BANQUET
Dr. Ernest Burnham of W. 8.
T. 0. Honor Guest
and Speaker
The annua! I. O. O. F. banquet
will be held on Tuesday evening,
May 19, at seven o'clock at the Odd
Fellow hall. This event to always
anticipated with pleasure and the
one next Tuesday night bids fair to
be equally enjoyable. Only 250 tick­
ets will be sold. Hugh Myers having
charge of the ticket sale. Tickets
are still available so if you want to
attend, you had better purchase

An excellent program has been
prepared with the Rev. Karl Keef­
er of Watervliet officiating as

ffueet and speaker.

Fine Dinner and a Very Inter*
eating Program Were Enjoyed
By all odds the Largest banquet
ever held In Barry county was that
of the Barry County Rod and Gun
Club on Thursday night tn the new
county garage. It was the best
served large banquet that we have
ever attended. There were nearly
1900 present and provisions
— had
_ ________________ than that num­
ber. Almost a thousand tickets had
been sold previous to the banquet.
The completeness of every detail
of preparation and the smoothness
with which the banquet
was
handled, reflected credit upon the
following committees: Committee
on arrangements with Dr. G. L.
Lockwood as chairman; committee
on refreshments with Homer Smith
as chairman; the progrun commit­
tee of which C. H. Osborn was the
chairman. AU the members of these
committees cooperated fully and
enthusiastically with the chairmen
in making this banquet an out­
standing success.
The place was ideal for such a
gathering. The Masonic orchestra
furnished the music, and there were

Mayor Chas. Leonard
Issues Proclamation
Saturday, May 23, was desig­
nated as Poppy Day In a procla­
mation Issued by Mayor Charles
H. Leonard. The proclamation
urges all citizens to observe the
day by wearing memorial popdead. it states:
“When the United States was
plunged Into the World war in
1917, the dty of Hastings and
Barry county responded to the
nation’s call In a spirit of exalt­
ed .patriotism.
Our
citizens
then offered their efforts and
feme. serving and sacrificing In
the national cause. The city and
county hold in proud memory
their part in the great national
effort' which brought victorious
“Many of our young men were
called into the armed service
Ifice their lives in
dying with thou-

.over their grave#,
a little
sprang up and
bloomed, nature's tribute to the
heroic dead. It was the Poppy,
and their comrades ask Ameri­
cans to wear a Poppy In their
On Saturday. May 23, the Ameri­
can Legion Auxiliary will dis­
tribute these memorial popples
Ln Hastings and other places In
the county.
"Therefore. I. Mayor of the
city of Hastings, do hereby pro­
claim Saturday. May 23. to be
Poppy Day In the dty of Has­
tings. and I urge all citizens to
observe the day by wearing the
the inspiring memory of those
who made the highest patriotic
sacrifice during the war may be
recalled to every mind.
Charlee H. Leonard. Mayor.”

Dr. Bumham

Music during the dinner and for
bee’s orchestra of Belding. Get your
Ucket today and attend this delight­
ful gathering.

HAVING BANQUET
FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

AH Who Completed 4-H dab
Project* Eligible to
Attend

solos by Miss Lola Ashalter and
Howard Frost, a duet by the two.
and many orchestra numbers which

BOW WILL YOmrOSTBSS
BrBMD THXIB TIME
THU SUMMBBT

QUESTION IS VITAL
TO THIS COMMUNITY

—Date la June 5
The officers of the Hastings High
School Alumni Association are comnlctlng iilans for tlie annual ban­
quet to be held at the gymnasium
on Itlday evening, June 5.
I
No definite Information Is yet1
available but will be given In a later

The -feed" was served piping hot.

Mta Sadie Glasgow is president
of the association and the other of­
ficers are. Richard Nixon, vice­
president; Mrs. Blanche Lewis, sec­
; Keith Fox. treasurer; Max
The citizen* of Hastings should
. Mta Geraldine Williams and
ccllent and faultlessly cooked and
Wellman, executive comall the menu was fine. Young ladles not only be interested tn ths fact
from the high school of this dty that our city schools close on June
for the banquet will soon
and from the Thomapple-Kellogg 5 far a three mouths* vacation, but
also
much
more
concerned
about
school at Middleville did the serv­
ing under the direction of Miss Lois what use the children In our public
schools will make of that threeCarter.
months period. m
In me
the writer ’s
Aiier the
tne banquet
oanquei the
me meeting u'uuuu
■
After
waa called to order by Dr. Burton I Judgment it is a mistake, which
Perry, president of the Barry, cannot be corrected by one alona.
County Rod and Gun club. He to close
schools for sc long a
___v__j
_____ ...... .
...
-V—
thanked the committees for the time. In the olden days, when the

of excellent
hard
thing to do ,
ranges or stoves in the garage, but

Superviied Play Would Liuen Juvenile Delinquency
and Benefit Children

completeness of their work and in­ help of boys and girls was much
dividuals who had contributed In
there were valid reasons for a
and-away largest banquet ever held
apply todaf. Wb believe such a long
tn Barry county.
A short business meeting was vacation period Is harmful to the
lives of school children and young
people In many waya. They are apt
to lose interest in their studies as
well as the habit of study. Why
should we not have a forty-eight
week school year Instead of thirtynine weeks? It Is idle to think of
that now, because no consideration
has been given to raising the money
to carry on schools for forty-eight
weeks. We have to face the situation
H. H, 8. PETS TWO FIRSTS as It exists and face the fact that,
for thirteen weeks, the children of
WITH TEN SCHOOLS
Hastings and almost every other
COMPETING
town and dty will be “on their
own.” with time on their hands but
without experience to guide them in

LOMLSTUDENTS
MOFF HOU

ACHSAH BUCK, DONALD
WEAVER, THE WINNERS

Hastings can well be proud of her
High school after the way In which
her representatives acquitted them­
selves in the district speech contest
held in Central auditorium Friday
night. Her two entrants. Miss Ach­
sah Buck and Donald Weaver, took
first places in their respective fields,
declamation and oratory. Glen Will­
oughby of Lansing Eastern was the
winner in extempore speaking.
Twelve schools were to have been
represented In this contest, but
Raymond Camp of WUtcrvllet was

making the best UM of it.,
' • •,
One of the most important consld-'
eratlons to the pupils and their fu­
ture to: What will tiiey do with this
thirteen weeks of Idh gme? Condi­
tions are not as the?* once were,
Once there were many Jobs about
the home which boys and girls
could do. and much light work on
forms—haying, harvesting, cultl-'
voting and looking after gardens.
There were then woods In which a
boy could roam at hto own sweet
will; and such contact with nature
taught him many useful lessons.
But under present conditions that
question to vital. What are Hastings
boys and girls to do with ttamselves
for th* But thro* month#? Uany of
the older boys are looking fqr job*,
and finding H difficult to **t them.
It to hurtful to them if they cannot
(Continued an page 4. Sec. 1)

tlclpated. Judging was done by the
coaches of the contestants, each
ranking all speakers but his own.

GENE MULLEN. A FOR­
MER HASTINGS BOY

students had been winners in their
own subdistrict contests and were
the very best. Following music by
the High school orchestra under the
direction of Mr. Hines, the contest
opened with declamation. Marian
White of paw paw was first with
her speech on "The Valley of
Bones.’’ Thelma Browers, Comstock
spoke on “A Vision of War and
Peace.” Achsah Buck of Hastings
took the speech "Intolerant SUU"
and Hazel Mandoka of Athens. "The
Martyrdom of Joan of Arc." In this

Has Won Splendid Sue
Out on the Western
Coast

subjects In this case were Theodore
Roosevelt and Conservation. Each
entrant had only one hour in which
to prepare a speech on a topic
drawn at that time. Philip Proud of
Dowagiac spoke first on "Theodore
Roosevelt and the Big Stick." Thom-

college education, new took it off.
and would permit nothing to inter­
fere with his purpose. When around

Ooach Becker’s Department
Makes Fine Showing Ln
District Contest

The daily San Francisco News re­
cently had an illustrated page write
up of the very large Agnews Btete
Hospital of that dty, and of its su­
perintendent. Dr. Eugene W. MuDen,
a former Hastings boy. who has
made a splendid success In the west.
Older residents of this dty will
remember "Gene” Mullen, as he was
then known and called. Hto father,
an honest hard-working teamster,
was unable to give Gene the educa­
A saxophone quartet entertained tional advantages which the hust­
with two numbers between this and ling. sturdy lad wanted—and was

Wboley &amp; Bronson's shoe store just
east of Carve’h Ac Stebbins Drug
Store. Making’up his mind that he
was going to college, he went to
Hastings High school and In two

The young people who completed
the work of the 4-H Club projects dore Roosevelt on preparedness" was
are to have a banquet on Friday the topic of Glen Willoughby of sary to admit him to Ann Arbor. In
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
evening in the Puller hall, starting
those two years he worked nights
at seven o'clock. About 370 oomafter school;
worked Saturday*:
worked during vacations, always
Mrs. I. A. Brincefield will dispose
COUNTY TAX COMM’N.
attend.
The
Barry
County
4-H
keeping in mind that college educa­
of her house and household goods
Club orchestra Is to make Its first
MET HERE ON MONDAY tion ahead of him.
He spent five years In the Medical
Commr. of Agriculture James F.
Department at Ann Arbor, working
way streets, in Hastings. Included
Thomson of Unsing will be the County Aiks Six Mills Allot­ his own way through and doing evsprings, chairs, tables, dishes and
ment—Twps. and School
specialized In Insanity, including all
other household furnishings. A
Districts Vary
forms of mental afflictions. Upon
house and two kns win also be
completion of his course the Blate
held their first meeting Monday, of Michigan hired him and he spent
Haller of Spencerville, O-, will be the others win be equally interesting.
auctlgnoer. See the advertisement
with all members present as follows: two years at the hospital at New­
FINE IMPROVEMENTS.
berry. There his good work and tire­
for full information.
committee of the board of supervis­ less effort were recognized and fol­
tors of Hinman's Grocery, have
rant HONOR FOR M. A. LAMBIE. been rearranging their store on ors: Mrs. Maude Smith, county lowing the big earthquake In Ban
school commissioner; Lorenzo F. Francisco he was offered the posi­
North Michigan Avenue, making It
tion of assistant superintendent ot
hie. for thirty years connected with much more convenient and attracplnter, of this city and Mark Ritchie the big Agnews Hospital In, or near
Ban Francisco, which is devoted to
frigerated meat counter, in which to
••mental" cases. He accepted and is
meeting of the Southwestern Michi­ keep their well selected sto?k of
now superintendent of that big in­
gan Bankers' Association at Bt.
by choosing L. R, Glasgow as chair­ stitution. which cares for around
Joseph. On Friday last Mr. Lomble
4,000 patients.
man.
By
virtue
of
his
office,
county
was made vloe-president of the As- date grocery, sell their goods at fair
Dr. Mullen is very highly regarded
•oclatlon. This puts him In line for prices and deliver them at your, clerk, Allan Hyde, is a member of
in California. His splendid success is
the presidency next year as It has home. They have won an enviable the oornfTi isskin and its secretary.
The budgets of 63 school district a tribute to his ability, his hustling
been the custom of the Association reputation for square dealing and
to advance Ito vice-president to the keeping faith with their customers. and of thirteen townships were pre- qualities, his persistent, never-saydie spirit, and an honor to Hastings
presidency.
It la pleasing to note the improvesix-mill allotment was asked for and the Hostingi High school from
whence he started out. Hostings is
proud of Gene Mullen, glories in his
FORTY HOUR DEVOTION.
The school board of the Delton
Bather John Dllllon announces ing fund* on hand to meet townConsolidated school have re-elected
often thinks of the old town, where
O. J. Barnum as superintendent for l that the Forty Hour Devotion starts
he started out with a determination
at th* Bt. Ros* Catholic church
to carve out a successful careerat eight o'clock Friday morning with
tricte requested an allotment of
run mass. There will be services each
from
3H
to
2
mills.
However
there
evening on Friday, Saturday and
Bunday, with Solemn closing ot Um were others which asked from 2H MILLER FURNITURE
menta has been selected.
OFFERS FREE RUG8.
Forty Hours on Bunday evening at to as high as 7 mills.
The board did not decide with
seven-thirty, with Processi™ of the
OPEN ADI tt^VJCS*.
Blessed Sacrament closing with th# reference to the allotments for any the Miller Furniture Company will
The Pilgrim Holiness Tabernacle Solemn Benediction. Several outside
give two 27x48 rugs free with the
will resume their summer street priests hav* been invited to attend stin a number of school districts
meetings, next Saturday night at
1:16 o'clock; and every Saturday
selection of beautiful patterns and
night thereafter through the sea­
designs from which to choose. Bee
son. Everyone Is invited to attend
Saturday eve. Bckler'a orchestra. meeting was adjourned until 10
their advertisement in this taue for
details.
.'

One Auction Sale

co.

FEED MESSACAR SUFFERS
BROKEN NECK WHEN
CAR HITS BIO TREE
OTHER TWO OCCUPANTS

NOT SERIOUSLY HURT
Accident Occurred nt 19:30
A. M. Two MUee Morth of
Rogen Schoolhouee

PICK-UP AND DELIVERY
SERVICE BY THE M. C.

ASSISTWORLD
WARVETERANS

Agent H. H. Peirce Hag Re­
ceived That Announcement
From Hcadquartero
H. H. Peirce. Michigan Central
agent at Hastings, has received
word from M. C. headquarters at
Detroit, announcing that the com­
pany expects to start pick-up and
delivery freight service tn Hastings
on Thursday, May 28.
Thia will be * convenience which
merchants and factories will appre­
ciate. It ought to result in in­
creased traffic for the railroad.
Many people have availed them­
selves ol truck service rather than
the railroads, because they could
get freight delivery at the store
door or factory warehouse, and. did
not have to take their outgoing
freight from tne store or factory to
the freight depot when shipping in
less than carload loU.
June 1 will also witness the inau­
guration of two-eent passenger fares
on all railroads in the United States.
This will be appreciated by the
travelling public and ought to give
a large mcreaae In passenger earn­
Ings for the railroads.

Twd Mqb.o. m* ts.
living
i north of Freeport in Kent county,
was almost instantly killed suffer­
ing a broken neck, in an automobile
accident, at about 12:30 Thursday
morning, at the foot of the hill
two miles north of the Rogens
schoolhouse, on the Has lings-Free­
port highway. Mrs. Messacar was
with him. also Clinton Gregory,
who also Uvea north of Freeport.
Mrs. Messacar and Gregory were
not seriously hurt. The three had
J. LEWIS ARNOLD, FA­ been
In Hastings for the evening,
MOpS EVANGELIST, WILL had attended the picture show and.
about midnight, had started for
TELL LIFE STORY
home. Messacar waa driving his
Chevrolet at a high rate of speed.
He lost control of his car, which
SUNDAY, MAY 24, AT
plunged down the hill, first hitting a
CENTRAL AUDITORIUM post and then crashed Into a large
walnut tree. He was thrown 16 or COUNTY TREASURER DIBCollage Chorus of 40 Voices 20 feet from the car, which was a
BUR8ED 112,135.82
battered wreck. How the other oc­
Assisting—Mina Kester
cupants escaped alive seems almost
' LAST WEEK
in Charge of Music
a miracle.
Deputy Sheriff Karcher and Cor­
Announcement is made by the
oner Kenlth McIntyre of this city COLLECTIONS FOR FEB.,
MARCH AND APRIL
Methodist church, of a great mass investigated the case. The cause of
meeting and all-county rally to be
held Bunday afternoon. May 24th, that no inquest was held.
City and Villages Get |3,.
The
funeral
services
were
held
at ’
3 °
O'clock at Central auditorium.
„
162.72; Township* Re­
Saturday forenoon at the U. B.
Michigan.
church, with Rev. E. O. Mcfiherry
ceive 14,312.76
in charge. The burial was In the
County Treasurer Lorenzo F. Maus
Valley Home cemetery. He to sur­
vived by hto wife, his mother, Mrz. has Just distributed the delinquent
Mac Chaffee of Hastings, and by taxes paid to him during the months
of February. March and April,
one sister.
amounting to 812.13592. Ths dis­
tribution was made as follows:

NEEM
11 COUNTY RALLY

03173620

DEUNOUENT T1X

REPUBLICAN WOMEN
HOLD CONFERENCE

I State Speakers of Note Here
to Assist in Start­
ing Work
The conference held May 8 by the
Republican women at the John C.
Ketcham home waa well attended
and dtocusslons heartily entered
Into.
The discussion of tlie "American
Political system'’ was led by Mrs.
Welborn Luna of Allegan; “The
Constitution" by Mrs. Orville At­
wood. wife of the secretary of state;
■The Young voter” by Mrs. Muri
DeFoe of Charlotte; “Organizing
and Campaigning" by Mrs. M. E.
Winter of Allegan; “Sources of In­
formation" by Mrs. c. L- Barber,
vice-chairman of the state central
committee Lansing. Mrs
J. c.
Ketcham presided and elated the
J. LEWIS ARNOLD.
conference with a summary of the
I
topics
discussed.
The meeting Is to be held under'
m addition to the honor guests
the auspices of the Free Methodist
church with the cooperation of the above mentioned nlnateen Barry
Barry county Ministerial Associa­ county women attended and Joined
in the discussion. These Included
tion.
The Rev. J. Lewis Arnold, noted Mrs. M. J. Cross, vice-chairman of
evangelist of Beattie, Washington, the Barry county committee; Mrs.
will deliver the message of ths aft­ P. L. Bauer, vice-chairman of th#
Republican Women's League; Mrs.
ernoon entitled. "My Life Story."
As evangelist Rev. Arnold has Leon Dunning of Delton, secretary
Mrs.
traveled from coast to coast and of the same organization;
from the Great lakes to Georgia, George Burgeu; Mrs. Harry Crore,
and preached up and down the At­ Mn. Frank Carrothers, Mrs. A. D.
McDonald.
Mrs.
Ellto
Faulkner
of
lantic and the Pacific coasts.
Also there will be present at this Delton. Mrs. J. P. Mohler and
mess meeting the A ceppella chorus daughter of Middleville. Mn. Rob­
of Spring Arbor Junior College, ert Cook, Mrs. John Chamberlain,
Mrs. H. B. Carell and Mrs. Thorconsisting of 40 trained voices.
The congregational singing and bum of Lansing. Mrs. W. H. Cook,
further musical numbers of the Mrs. George Lockwood. Mrs. Rich­
ard Groos. Mrs. Roy Cordes and
Allee Cleone Kester, accomplished the hostess. Mn. John o. Ketcham.

musical director and soloist of
Muskegon. Michigan.
An invitation is extended to all to
attend this fine service
.
No admission will be charged. A
free-will offering will be taken.

Hastings .
Nashville .
Middleville
Woodland
Fre#port .

39681
15287
4083
12883

Total City and Village. .83.162.72

Assyria
Maple orove
Castleton .
woodland
Johnstown
Baltimore
Hastings .
Carlton ..
Orangeville

For
Rural Fire Truck Service
Will Be Crippled

Beginning today, Thursday, the'
rural fire truck service from Has- ,

NUMBER OF DISABLED
IS STEADILY GROWING

American Legion and Its
Auxiliary Ask for Your
Uo-operation
ants are completing their plans for
the Poppy Day sale in this city and
county on Saturday, May 22.
Poppies which will be sold In Bar­
ry county on Poppy Day, in honor
of the World war dead, win bring
benefits
to
disabled
veterans
throughout the year, as the work at
the American Legion and Auxiliary
I for the war disabled draws much
of Its support from the funds col­
lected on Poppy Day.
Without the contributions made
for the little flower of remembrance,
these organizations would be unable
to continue their vast program of
aid for the men who sacrificed
health and strength in the nation’s

006 OWNERS SHOULD
READ THIS NOTICE
368.11
m.7»
150.81
175.40
111.06

Licaoie Fees Must Be Paid
by May 29 Or Coat la
Doubled

Elsewhere In this taue there Is
an advertisement, signed by tlie
sheriff and prosecutor, calling the
attention of all dog owners, who
have not already paid their dog li­
. .
censes. to the fact that they should
pay the same before June 1. After
Juno 1. the amount of the license
Total Twp. fund 84J 12.76
is doubled for both male and fe­
Some of these delinquent taxes male dogs. As a matter of fact the
were for years when a state tax license must be paid to the county
was levied In Barry county. The
treasurer not later than May 29.
items for the state and Barry coun­
May 30 is a holiday and, of course,
ty were as follows:
the county offices will not be open
Blate Tax Fund• 605.46
on that day. May 31 Is Bunday, on
General Fund 4,066.12
which no licenses could be paid.
Covert Rd. Redemption
6789
June comes In on the following
Drain Fund ....................
41.47
Monday, &gt;o that May 29 to the test
day on wlilch any dog owner can
Total Funds
It will be doubled after June 1.
REV. KARL KEEFER
County Treasurer Maus asks us to
people who send their dog
TO SPEAK MAY 30 request
taxes by letter to not only sign their
names to the letters, but also to
Definite Plane for Program state In what township they reside
and on what section In that town­
on Decoration Day Not
ship. That will enable him to look
Yet Available
up the matter on the tax rolls and
Definite plans for the observance give proper credit.

Hope
Rutland
Irving
Prairieville
Yankee Springs
Thomapple

108.01
347.00
613.64
23198
36687

able, according to the committee in
charge. But It is definitely known
to prepare leaders to promote the that the Rev. Karl H. Keefer of
Republican campaign
Any com­
munity desiring assistance should Complete information will be givcall on these leaders.
.

Servant In the!________________________
House” Opens
Evening for Two Day Stand
Lovely Stage Setting to Feature
Beautiful Stage Production

new Studebaker chassis. It will be 1110 opening performance of Charles
necessary to paint the truck, and ।
Kennedy's “Servant in the
It will take time to make this shift. | House" the stage will be dark. The
Under these conditions the pump ‘ firelight will throw a flickering glow
on the fire truck cannot be oper- | upon a portion of the paneled oak
a ted; but such service as to pozsl- w*U where hangs an
;ing of
bte will be given with the chemical 1)18 Author of Our
. Th#
apparatus mounted on another rig. i Hastings Masonic Orchestra will
Tlie rural patrons of the Hastings htve P*v«d the way for this reverrural fire truck aaaociallon
grei ent introduction by an overture .of
asked to make every possible effort | *°n ““J appropriate melody. Then
to prevent fires for the next two'tha N&lt;ht
brighten and the
weeks, while these change* are bo- i richly furnished room will bo dlsing made with the fire truck. When closed. Beautiful furniture fills the
they shall be completed, the truck I «P*clous stage. A dark oak staircase
will be in for better condition than 1 occupies a portion of the backit ever has been, end capable of; ground. Huge double doors at the
giving far better service.
I
are open to disclose a hallway

PBoonos non popfy
DAY UBED VOB BBHABUJTATION

The things done for the disabled
are essential acta of aid
which
would be performed by no olher
agency or organization if the Le­
gion and Auxiliary were unable to
undertake them. They go into the
government hospitals where more
than 60,000 veterans are constantly
under care, bringing comforts not
provided by the government, pro­
viding holiday remembrances, cheer­
ing entertainments, and keeping the
hospitalized men In contact with
the outside world. They care for
the families of the disabled left in
need at home, giving th* veterans
the peace of mind necessary to their
recovery.
Assistance to disabled men In ob­
taining Just compensation and care
is given constantly. Justice is nev­
er automatic and It often Is Im­
possible for the Individual veteran
to gather evidence and present his
claim effectively. The Legion and
. Auxiliary act as his advocate, his
friend tn need.
The number of disabled veterans
(Continued on page 4. Sec. 1)

IMPORTANT NOTICE

to rural patrons
Probably Two Week*

NUMBER 2

The table Is being set for break­
fast and crowded on the buffet
and serving table are handsome
pieces of sliver and pewter. Flowers
glow in vases and the sunshine of
an early spring pours through the
French doors that lead Into the
garden, outside may be seen the

ASKS COURT FOR

DISMISSAL OF SUIT

Proa. Atty. McDonald Filet
Papera in Kent Oounty
Circuit Court
__________
_________
Prosecuting Attorney McDonald
filed the necessary papers in the
the circuit court at Grand Rapids,
on Saturday, for the dismissal of
the suit brought in that court
against Barry county by the county
of Kent and the Kant county road
commission. As the Banner haa ex­
plained. these suite were brought
against Barry county on the claim
that the owners of trucks and care
Living in Grand Rapids had paid
their automobile welgbt tax In
Barry county, claiming that this
was wrongfully diverted to Barry
county money that should have
been paid to Kent county.
The hearing on the motion made
by Prosecutor McDonald Is being
held today, May 14. There were five
other counties sued by Kent county.
All six have asked the dismissal of
the suite, on the ground that if
there were any bools for them they
should have been started In the
other counties and not in Kent
county.

trailing strikingly with the blue vel­
vet hangings about the window.
No more beautiful setting has ever
been offered by the Civic players.
At rehearsal On Monday night the
cast proved that they were letter
perfect in their lines and the beau­
tiful diction of the play was repeat­
ed without a single hesitation and
without the necessity of prompting.
VERY UNUSUAL.
Director Barnett says that there
never has been a cast In TO
the MAKE
many CHANGES
«
j of the Vicarage Library w
IN ADROUNIE BLDG. I afWr ca*e ol “blood-red books" fill- productions of the Civic Players so the Winn Mattison farm, in Orwell prepared.
tings by Montgomery Ward to take brary to blocked off by a huge pile
Residents of Delton have reserved
charge of the extension of the Ad-1 of dirt upon which rest sections of twenty seats for the Thursday night picture of tills bird while aha was
rounie block on Jefferson etreet, | broken aewer tile. It to evident that
beginning the changes Tuesday. It' "the di alns” are upset in the VlThe Executive Committee again
1s expected the work will be com- car's household and that their at- requests the Banner to state that the and found it contained fourimn
pleted In about six weeks.
. tempted repair haa prevented th# curtain will rias promptly al 8:15
------------ --------------- trom using hto 11- and that late arrivals will not be
MIXED DANCER.
____ , _____ w_________ ,____________ seated until after the curtain has
Every Saturday night at Clear । why his church attendance la falling
hta, Frank Harrington.—Adv. tf.loff.
prompt.
priatod by the partridat

�Tni mrrtxo. aAmro titowut, mat h.

im

LOCAL NSWS

FOOD

Wayne Merrick I* suffering from
*n *U*qk o&lt; lumbago.
John MeLrevy la wry aerioualy U1

Mr*. Kellar Stem entertained tho
Women’s Board of Pennock hos­
pital on Monday.

Costs Less at

FOOD CENTER
OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 p. m

Canning

4 Popular Brands
Carton

Head Lettuce

5c

Head

.

.

.

Grahani FLOUR’
Pioneer, 5 lb. sack

.

Pastry FLOUR
Rosebud, 5 lb. sack

2
1
1
1

CQ«
. DDL
1 Qr
. X wv
1 Qn
X 7V

fe' Kellogg’s Corn Flakes
pkg. Rice Krispies all for
pkg. Pep
Shopping Bag

1Q«
bag..................... LOL

ROLLED OATS

a. 9c

5 lb.

Sugar Wafers

ik

19c

Muller’s Bread t—

9c

Comed Beef Hash

29c

Calumet

1 lb. can

IO Bar Limit

2 1C

Del Monte 2 cans

Oxydol
Ivory Flake

Dei Monte Peaches
2 No. 2'/: cans

.

id cans

.

.

$1.95

55c

Del Monte Spinach

ige. pkg.

X9C

2 cans

large pkg.

23c

KIRK’S COCO HARD WATER CASTILE

3
‘

Big Ben Soap SixL?

.

lb. can

3

Crisco

1
. X vv

Golden Bantam Corn

3-17c

Jell-o

SOAP

39c

IQbars

2 a- 25c

Kingnut Oleo

Moosehead Flour

Pels Naptha

SOAP

$1.50 Doz

Tea Siftings

24ft lb. sack

SAT. 10 p. m

PINEAPPLE

Cigarettes

OCp

...... rewV

No. 2 size

out lor dinner. give bar a ml rest,
and ths te*t at eating acxne food
othnr thgn h*r own. U you didn't
do it this year, and she la atUl with

6 cans

65c

HEINZ SOUPS
9Emm
14CFREE 2 cans.............................. AiJV

organised in Allegan county.
Private talc of living and bed­
_____ tba MiXmy
room furniture Friday. May U. 1:00 ciilbens in general so wea.
widely growing, and a
Mr. and Mnu David Boyes plan never ending crop, of
to move into their new home on N. queens. A well know Grai
Michigan Ave., the first of the week. man expressed our rentH
The Barry County JL-I-'-C. A. and actly ths other day when 1
Auxiliary meets fiaturday night. was so fed up on them, be
May 18, at Welocmp Grange ball slinging his paper ac^ws £
for supper at 8:30. served by L. A. 8. everytime he opened it an
All carriers requested to attend.— picture of one or read , a
about on* * “*—‘ —
latest to
Rapids yeas in tm Monday and
tells us we must suxaiy visU the Art
Gallery there during the May ex­
hibition. which will be a non-Jury
exhibit for artiste of this section of
Michigan Xt seems few restrictions

s sirs

Severance.—Adv.
Our Irving correspondent haa an
interesting item tills week concern­
ing the history ot their old frame
schoolhouse there, its past glories,
its present destiny and change of
residence. It evidently waa quite
some institution in Ita day.

mereial department's section at the
recent school centennial, notably
the specimens of the flowy old
"Snencerian Hand" writing made
our wrist and fingers ache Just to
look at them, tor we recalled those
laborious, painstaking hours we
spent trying to acquire It, back In
the old ’Ted brick."
Mrs. Kenneth Buehler of Jerome
St. entertained with a kitchen show­
er at her home Tuesday evening in
compliment to Miss Genevieve Ann
Timm, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Timm of Caledonia, fiancee
of John McNaughton Drury of De­
troit. Miss Timm was graduated
from Western State Teachers' Col­
lege and has been teaching tn the
Caledonia school. Her fiance Is an
accountant with a Detroit firm.—
Grand Rapids Press.
It occurs to us that the nicest
possible way to observe Mother's
Day after all Is to take ''Mother''

very interesting. While some of tbe
work 1* naturally poor, a groat deal
Di real talent Is uncovered, qpite a
surprising lot, as a rule. Vincent,
who is now doing most of hie work
In water odor, will have three pic­
tures on the wall*. He I* just now
painting both portraiture and still
life subjects. He reports there is a
growing demand at present
for

OaUery.

ner. He was charged with fishing
Billy Barber, 82, at one time one on the river without a flahing li­
of the best known catcher* in this cense. He admitted the charge and
part of Michigan, playing with paid &lt;5 fine and U44 costs.
Grand Rapids. Saginaw and a year
Irving Stnkler of Kalamasoo. waa
or two managed Eaton Rapids, was brought before Judge MePeek on
In town Tuesday; he has been hav­ Friday on a charge of contempt ot
ing a rather rough sea, he said. . . court. He had been granted a di­
"Bob" Ritchie, who spent some time vorce on condition, and with the
with his aunt. Mn. Elva Sylvester court order, that he pay a specified
Granger, was here Tuesday; he is amount of alimony each month.
leaving Detroit for Nantucket in This he has not paid. Under the
connection with his work as a butler circumstances the Judge gave him
for a well known Groot Pointe six months at Ionia.
.
family. . . Mn. Phil M. Granger
will spend a couple of weeks in New
York where she will attend the
graduating exercises of her grand­
daughter, reluming to Charlotte
early in June. . . Make a will today,
twenty-four first cousins to the late
Mrs. Zora Brcte Shepherd have, bA’v"'
• A* good audience witnessed the
been located, twice as many as were
known to immediate local relatives; Mother's Day program at the Pres­
byterian church last Bunday eve­
the estate amounting to about MOO
ning. The old fashioned songs were
apiece will be divided among the 24.
enjoyed and the series of pictures
—Charlotte Republican-Tribune.
representing famous mothers of
Barry county has the honor of history was well carried out and
being the first health unit estab­ reflected credit on the ladles who
lished by the Kellogg Foundation in posed for them. Mrs. Will Stebbins
1930—only six yean ago. Today read the biographical sketch of each
there are hundreds and hundreds mother
presented. ladies look part,
The following
of children, and older, people too, In
this county, who owe their good Mn. Carol Roush took the part
health to the Kellogg Foundation. of Ruth; Mrs. H. A. Adrcunje. Bath-1
When you get down to "brass sheba;
Mn. Delbert Whitmore.
lacks." this old life doesn’t present Mary, the mother of Jesus; Miss
Born workmanship is real
any asset to be compared with Irene Bhellenbsrgcr, Nancy Hanks
tailoring. The handiwork of
"good health." At one time John D. Lincoln; Mrs. Roy Cordes. Abigail
the country's most clever
Rockefeller would have traded moat Adams; Mr*. Rose Shannon, • Su­
of his millions for a good stomach, sannah Weaky; Mn. Ohas. Wlbert.1
clothes craftsman.
but there was no way to make the
exchange. It must be a source of
For style, fit and-fine finish
great satisfaction to Mr. W. K. KelHave your Spring and
legg of Battle Creek, who establish­
Summer Suit
ed the Kellogg Foundation, to live
to see the good resulting from hla
"Born Tailored’’
philanthropy, based on tiic promo­
tion of education, and tbe building
You'll get a suit in which
up of life's greatest asset—Good
A QOGD’S&amp;CP CBBCSt.T
the Workmanship wears with
Health. Tlie splendid work done
the Woolens.
Ths county treasurer. Lorenao F
tn Barry county soon became known.
Today there are Mven Kellogg Maus, received yesterday. Wednes­
Foundation unite, covering thin day. a check from the state high­
department
for OT4MJ3
counties of Barry, Allegan, Calhoun. way
'Hasting'* Tailor For Men Who Branch Hillsdale. Eaton and Van which J* one-half of the Mrtfite la*
Buren. Tim people in three seven money coming to Barry county foi
Know tljp Difference"

Enjoy Program

’UW

-i!’

Workmanship

10 W. 35c

Oyster Shells
Choice Pink

SALMON

can IQc

Armour’s Star

Scratch Feed

COFFEE
Vacation Land Coffee » 15c
White House Coffee

Del Monte Coffee

22c

* 25c

CARPETS, LINOLEUMS and RUGS

LARD

GRADE A

BOLOGNA

• 10«

2*• 25c

BEEF STEAK Sound, SwIm or Slrtoin
MINCED HAM
PORK LOIN ROASTS
BACON SQUARES
BACON &lt;*“»•«■ La*«
SMOKED PICNICS
BEEF KETTLE ROASTS
SPARE RIBS Hack Boao Cat
HICED BACON Tuan.
HASTINGS, MICH.

One Week Only

Free!

In Cartons

QUALITY MEATS At Lowest Possible Prices!
WE BUY EGGS!

Free! For

•

_

» 19c
ib. 15c
19c
- 17c
20c
19c
it. 14c
u&gt;. 5c
* 22c

• GOOD 9x12 AXMINSTER RUGS a, low as $24.50

�THE HASTING! B-iWNtM. THUMP AT

Organisations
Mrs. J. p. Edmonds will entertain
Hospital Guild No. 7 on Wednesday.
May 30, at two o'clock.

lean Legion Auxiliary on Thursday
night. May 21, cards will furnish the
entertainment. A good attendance

YOUNG MAN IS
FATALLY INJURED

Accident Happened Early
Sunday Morning Near
Bobbins School
Anthony Wolowlc*/ aged 22. ot
Bowens Mills, was killed In an au­
tomobile accident early Bunday
morning, when he and three com­
panions were reluming from a
dance at Bradley. The accident oc­
curred when the driver lost control
and the car struck a tree a mile
north of the Gun lake store near the
Robbins school on the AlleganBarry county line. Peter DeWlndt of
Grand Rapids was driving the car
and Henry Meyers and Edward
Kunst, both of Bowens Mills, were

week instead of the usual Thursday.
The newly elected officers will be
Installed, there will be a short talk
by Edwin L- Taylor, principal of
the high school and a health
demonstration by the puplb tn Mias
Wolowlcx was taken to the office
Frances Conklin’s room. This will
be followed by a social hour and re­ of a Wayland doctor where he died
freshments. Mrs. Roy Cordes and from a .-.kull fracture. He Is survived
Mrs. Richard Groos are in charge by his mother. Mrs. Charlotte
Wolowlcz. two sisters, charlotte and
Stella and four brothers, Walter,
Notice—The Berryville Cemetery Charles, Carl and Arthur, Anthony
Circle will hold a meeting at the being the oldest. Hie father died
home of the president. Elmer Gil­
lette Monday evening. May 18. As were cut and bruised but not seri­
It is election of officers you are ously hurt.
urged to attends-Herbert Wilcox.
SOFT BALL SCHEDULEThe newly organized soft ball
Hospital Guild No. 18 will meet league has drawn up Its schedule
Thursday. May 14. with Mrs. I. J. for next week: Monday, May 18
Smith. ill E- Colfax. Quests wel­ Hlrsch Bros, versus Consumers Pow­
come.
er and Table Company versus
Feldpausch. Tuesday. May 10, Bibs
Townsend plan meeting. Episco­ Foundry team plays Goggins Gro­
pal parish house Friday evening, cery and Hl-Way. the piston Ring.
Wednesday. May 20, tbe Chain
Gang vs. Consumers Power and
Hlrsch Bros. vs. the Table Company.
W. C- T. u. MEETING.
On Thursday. May 21 the Hl-Way
The W. C. T. U. will be enter­ plays the Triangles and Bliss Ma­
tained by Mrs. Belle cook. 127 8. chine Shop, the National Bank.
Hanover St., on Tuesday, May 19.
Mrs. Eva Lane. Program leader. Roll
call response "What b a Christian
Citizen?" Plans will be made for
the Membership breakfast.—Sec.

a most Interesting

erts had the devotionab. All were
very glad to have Mrs. Woodbume
present for a few minutes. Twenty
ladies were present. The June meet­
ing will be held with Mrs. Carrie
Coleman, Mrs. Addle Springer.

was started and b still carried on
by Marie Ericsson, who has been in
Hastings several Um« and who has
work among tbe Mfhanunedans. No
offering will be taken. All ore wel-

Moth
Insurance!

vator at Pennock hospital, of which
sum 8150 will be paid In 1 RM and a
EAST DELTON.
like amount next year. Pennock hos­
Mrs. Marjorie Stacey and two
pital b virtually a public Institution. children of Kalamazoo visited her
We believe there will be general parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mcapproval of the contribution far the
new elevator, which was much
Mr. and Mrs. Ike Lelnaar and Mr.
needed.
nd Mrs. Von Dunn of Delton spent

EXTENSION CLASS
TO HAVE EXHIBIT
Subject Is "Methods and Ma­
terials in Health
Education”

Mr. and Mrs. Ryerson Louden and.
OF MISSION SCHOOLS.
The Egypt Balaam Mission and Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Johncox spent |
schools for friendless children at Sunday at Benton Harbor.
Mrs. Myrtal Lelnaar vblted her
Port Said, will be the basis of a talk
niece, Mn. Lenah Waters at Bar­
the First U. B. church on Thursday gees hospital on Sunday. She b ser­
night May 21 at 7:30. This work iously ill with strep sore throat.

HEAR

REV. J. LEWIS

£Xo"m.c

The Militant
Evangelist of Seattle,
Washington
He Is

The teachers in the extension
class in Methods and Materials in
Health Education sponsored by the
W. K. Kellogg Foundation and con­
ducted by Dr. Mabie Rugen of the
University of Michigan will have an
exhibit of tne projects they have
carried on with their students dur­
ing this course.
The exhibit begins at 7:30 Friday
night in the Central building In
room 110. Part of the work will be
reported upon by the Individual
teachers Friday night. The remain­
ing projects will be discussed Sat­
urday morning.
Teachers in the urban and rural
schools are represented In the class
which concludes on May 23rd. Three
hours credit la given for the work
that has been done in the course.
Anyone Interested In attending
the exhibit is jy^icome to attend.

DYNAMIC
FORCEFUL
and

FEARLESS
SERVICES
EVERY EVENING

MAY 19 to 31
AT 7:30 O'CLOCK
MUSIC WILL BE

ALICE CLEONE

SUNDAY and MONDAY, MAY 17 and 18
CHARLIE CHAPLIN in

KESTER

MODERN TIMES

As has been previously slated in
the Banner, for some time the
Nashville water works had been
pumping river water through Its
water works system, including the
standpipe. The villagers had not

of Muskegon, Mich,

with PAULETTE GODDARD
.

BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY, 1:00 and 3:00
Other Performances—Adults 23c, Children 10c

Congregational Songs
Solos by Miss Kester

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, MAY 19

cooking purposes, or if they did
they boiled it.
We have also explained that
Nashville now has a fine supply of
pure water in the big well that was
recently driven In the village. Be­
fore commencing to use water from

MY MARRIAGE

HEAR MESSAGES
THAT ARE

With CLAIRE TREVOR, Kent Taylor. Pauline Frederick,
Paul KeUy, Helen Wood and Thomas Beck

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, MAY 20 and 21 “

chlorinate not only the supply tank,
but also all the service pipes In or­
der to destroy any germs which
might have been In them. This
chlorination will make the water
that will be delivered fit for use.
Tills work was done yesterday, Wed­
nesday, under the direction of the
county sanitary engineer.

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Swimaway Suits

Starring WARNER BAXTER, Gloria Stuart, Arthur

SUES FOR $5,000.
Thursday, through hb attorney L.
E. Barnett, C- H. Osborn, guardian
of Morris Curtb. brought suit
against Richard Van Tlfflln. of Lake
Odessa, for alleged damages of 85.­
000 for Injuries to the Curtb boy
alleged to have been caused by Van
Tifflln's car. The Banner gave an
account of the accident at the time
It happened. It will be remembered
that the boy. who was In a coaster
being pushed by another boy.
crossed North Broadway directly in
front of Van Tifflln's car. Tlie coast­
er waa hit by Van Tifflln's automo­
bile, resulting in serious injury to
young Curtb. Mr. Van Tlfflln picke ‘
■np the lad, drove with him to Pen­
nock hospital, where medical aid

The Model You Want, Styled Right
Shown:

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

ZANE GREY’S

Penney’s is the family’s headquar-

DRIFT FENCE
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.
FEATURE NO. 2

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sway suit is a real feature value!

Episode No. 4 of "FLASH GORDON" will be shown at
3:00 o'clock Saturday Matinee Only
Adults 15c; Children 10c

4

Cotton
Frocks

Now in Hastings

TERMINIX

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If you suspect Termites, do not risk damage
that will cost hundreds of dollars. Termites work
hidden inside the wood. Hove your property in­

fora it io too lot*. Bruce Terminix Insulation is
the one reliable method of termite control. Five
Year Service Guarantee and Surety Bond issued
on each job.
'

For FREE Inipection by TRAINED EXPERT, Phone 2276

AWAKENING

SPIRITUAL

Don't Miss This Great
Opportunity!

CHILDREN’S

MEETINGS
except Saturday, Sunday and
Monday, with Mies Kester
in charge of the meetings.

A GREAT

173^37
County Ministerial

CENTRAL AUDITORI UM
SUNDAY, MAY

«l-9«

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2.98
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This service is now available to residents of
HASTINGS through our arrangement* with the
SOUTHERN MICHIGAN TERMINIX CO., licens-

•.

Men’s Suit, 1.98
Boys’ Trunks,
89c

to choose from. And every Swim-

TIMELY

PROPHETIC

For Everyone in the Family
FRIDAY and SATURDAY, MAY 22 and 23

dent occurred on April 12. 1036.

INSULATION

ARNOLD

IN CHARGE OF

New Water System Beady
for Use in Nashville
Village

MHon

McCREERY'S, Dry Clson.n

Haatinra, Michigan ■ Telephones 2244-2557 ■_

WAS NECESSARY TO
CHLORINATE PIPES

TtaMffiiX

BIBLE
TRUTH

SPEAKER TO TELL

fTCANC THEATKf=

Emmanuel GuUd silver Tea and
wood's. 640 W. Green St.. Wednes­
day. May 20. 2:30 P. M—Adv.

MARRIAGE LICENSE.
Joe A. Perkins. Middleville ...
Ruby C. Hewitt, Middleville ...

al groups of teachers from
MISSIONARY SOCIETY.
counties will attend tlx ex­
The regular monthly meeting of
Saturday morning.
■
the Presbyterian Missionary society,
met with Mrs. Harold Phillips. N. MEETS GENERAL APPROVAL.
Broadway, Thursday. May 7. Four
The city council haa generously
ladies from the Battle Creek Mb- voted to donate tlie sum of 8300 to

Men’s Fancy Nucraft Collar

DRESS SHIRTS

You’ll want several of these

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98c

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AT 3:00 P.M.

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of Spring Arbor College.

Come every night at 7i301
EVERYONE INVITED!
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THE HOME LUMBER CO

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sheers, printed sports cot­
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eyelet batistes. Sixes 14-52.

METHODIST

CHURCH
EAST COLFAX STREET

PENNEY

COMPANY

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�MM*
socz

The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

TWO Hl

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

Editorials

'Round About Town

ONE AFTER ANOTHER

able strides along the path ot civil
MOONSHINE!
Newspaper readers all over the service until Roosevelt, Parky and
state have been chuckling al a
whimsical little composition entitled Isbed the structure. Thia oombine,
"Moon Over Miami" written by El­ using methods worthy of a Tam­
ton Eaton ot the Plymouth Mail. many ward boas, got around civil
It seems that Editor Raton while
vacationing in Miami found that a menta and bureaus covered by civil
plain, everyday citizen of this state, service and then creating new bur­
Ed. Novak, whose visible source of eaus and departments to perform
income is the Michigan State Di­
gest was living in a rather palatial where one employee was required
under civil service, many were giv­
winter home and circulating in
en •positions
under —
the spoils
sysMiami society as Col Ed. Novak of , —
-------- -------— —
Lansing. Mich. This situation was a tem appointment.*
challenge to the satirical pen of Mr
Bul ln «PUc of lu “any dlsadvanaim
he look lull MTOta, M i “«“• w «« loeUuM &lt;o believe that

The tract jrtflMlfr was an
tractive stretch of hlD. valley
lowland. Some way of screenln.
off from the highway could be i
tided, as wall as to buDd a hU
fence to prevent the bushels of
per from blowing down on the___
feeing east, so noticeable to pcopis
driving out of the city.
P. ICC.

never took any stock tn sirens until
he woke up from a peaceful snooce
on tbe Klsalmmse sand and found
one on each side of him. No proof
like the real thing. Tommy says,
and X understand that a pboto-

MEN!

The band was going very mllitaryIsh with a rousing march and as a
surprise were going to add a Httte
touch of realism. .. but for some

FIT YOURSELF IN
ONE OF THESE
AND STAY FIT

wouldn't shoot . . . and after three
attempts the drummer gave op and
whartrft Hi drum instead.

VACATION PRE­
SENTS PROBLEMS

On Friday evening tlie officers
and program committee ot the
Freeport High School Alumni Asso­
ciation met to discuss plans for the
annual banquet to be held an Fri­
day evening. May 39. in the Masonj ic Temple al 6 30 o'clock. No notices
will be sent this year to tbe aago।I elation members living in st&gt;d
'around Freeport and Hastings but it
I is hoped that lhe 25 cents dues will
[j
—
..... ------------ &gt;I tions should be made with Ralph
i Moore as early as possible Officers

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

Pungent Paragraphs

ASSIST WOU

docket/ Shortt
with
ViEBCWT OPENING

where new as large aa the reallstte
representation on the window paint­
ed with such colorful exactitude by
that old maestro of the brash,
“Johnny popbottte" himself

visit to Freeport Is sponsored by
And brethren and sisteren that is
one helluva distance!

Greater convenience, milder support.
Same snug comfort. Another Coopers
innovation. Get yours today and wear
the difference. ‘

50 B

Some of these health unit nurses

TWENTY YEARS AGO.
_
The Emily Virginia Mason cbap-

chaste
bundous

continuity

queens dre
like fcr 11;

John Kate
daughters f
dream of a

■wakened

cadden re:

the new

Heh' Heh! Hehl Tills ts a good
one| Met a little stlck-tn-the-mud
yesterday who'd Just bought a cona

If all these big ones that got away
during the first few days of the
fishing season were placed head to
tall the last one would probably be
even further away than a politi­
cian's campaign promise two months

charming i
which eat
candle anc
Mothers.” I

toothers.

It all reminded ma of Archie Mc­
Donald in Che "Gat and the Can-

vsnemy
*0MOREA

tiny candk
mothers ft
luck style.

Mrs an
man. said
crowned qu

um or those horns gi
that kept hooting out?

CONGRATULA TIONS
(Continued from page 1. Sec 1&gt;
We note that Editor McMulteivof
Representative Clare
Hof! man the Linden Leader celebrated his find some way to use profitably
of Miss Belie Hicks. Monday iter­
during his investigation of Town­ eightieth birthday last week—or these next three months; but It is
______ ___________________________ _
more so to younger boys, for they
lhe following officers were elected:
send Club activities In this state rather had ll celebrated for him by have not so much experience It Is
Regcnt Mr* c. L Bates, vice re­
demonstrated pretty clearly that more than one hundred friends and al that early period when the
gent. Mrs G A. Hoe Ilze); see, Mrs.
the hand of the professional organ­ an even larger volume of letters "gang" spirit so moves boy* that they
izer isn't going away empty; that 4 from friends and acquaintances act from Impulse or suggestion
Chldeeter; historian. Mrs. W. R.
Without meaning to do wrong, the ‘L, .
vice-president.
R*vh Cook; registrar. Mrs. W. W. Potter;
a considerable portion of the nickels, I throughout the stale. Probably the ••gang" will harm others, not be- tfiueluef ■
dimes and quarters being turned only thing that prevented Editor cause they Kt out to do It. but be- Moore; secretary. Clayton BurteUh; chaplain. Mrs. Ellen Robinson; ex­
treasurer. Neil Kercher, committee. ecutive comm.. 3 yrz.. Mrs. A. A.
over to the organisation by trusting McMullen from moving around cbuk they have not matured char­
Miss Clarabelle Hooper. Miss Zona Anderson; execu tire comm.. 2 yrs.,
elderly people is going to pay sal­ among his guests just as spryly as acters to keep them from such acts, Smelker. Orrin Smelker. Mias Mar­ Mrs. Chas. Potts. Mrs. C. L. Bates
aries.
comfortable expense
ac­ the youngest of them was the fact and because they are swayed by Ute garet Perkins and Gary Newtton. gave a very interesting paper on lhe
gang spirit. There la said to be a
counts. etc., of professionals who I that lie la in process of recovering very busy "Old Boy" who can sug­ An interesting program is being "Historic Mohawk Valley."
The federal government has se­
arc Interested in the movement be­ from a fractured thigh One of our gest no end of "mischief for idle prepared that alii be really worth­
lected as a site for the new postoffice
while.
cause of the nice living it gin* them, own happiest memories of Mr. Mc­ hands to do." Then the officer ar­
Miss Ruth Tabbwr-r wn hofoe building In Hastings, the Barlow
in fact, it appears that many pro­ Mullen was at a press meeting when rives and there is trouble Here too from her school duties at Detroit property at Church and Oourt
they lack experience—they do not
moters who ballyhooed the Ku in his 76lh year he demonstrated a | know what the law is designed for.
Klux Klan into a nice paying prop­ series of Kiting up exercises which and they may come to look upon
A record crowd attended tbe P. T. Uncle Bam for MJ00.
The council on Tuesday voted to
A meeting at the schoolhouse Wed­
osition. arc now riding along on the lie recommended to keep fit those
buy a cement mixer, which is manu­
crest of the Townsend wave. Right who were following tbe rather con­ thwarted wherever possible Then nesday evening.
factured at Jackson.
you have
Juvenile delinquency,
Mr and Mrs A. B- Fish and chil­
The new Good Samaritan hospital
now there are doubtless many eld­ fining duties of the editorial office which Is serious That Is the time
dren and Mrs. Mary Dodge were
erly people who think that Clare Our wish u that Mr McMullen may when sympathetic understanding of Grand Rapid* visitors Friday eve­ In lhe Striker residence was opened
for public inspection on Wednesday
Hoffman is the most cruel hearted recover speedily and live to cele­ boys is most needful in a com­ ning Mrs Dodge remained as a
afternoon and evening, a
large
munity
like
Hastings,
Ruest of Mr and Mrs Hate Dodge number of visitors called and ad­
ogre in Michigan, but most of them. brate many more anniversaries In
One person alone nor one group and Virginia and Buddy Pish re­ mired Che comfortable and wellw» believe, will live to realize that the future.
alone cannot meet the needs of a mained with Mr. and Mrs. P. C. ada|&gt;trd quarters which have been
he Is one of the relatively few men in
situation created by thirteen weeks Deming.
provided.
public office who had the courage
of idle time for 1.100 school chil­
MIAS Bernice Burkey and Ed.
dren it must be done in a co-opera­ Burma of Kalamazoo spent Bunday
to come out and fight openly tn
THIRTY YEARS AGO
tive
way
by
our
community
Another
handy
little
device
that
here
with
her
parents.
Rev.
and
their interests.
Thursday Mark Warren and John
Other cities have faced this prob­ Mrs Burkey and family
would bring lu inventor a fortune
Yarger went trout fishing on West
lem. The) have found that there is
Mr and Mrs Lawrence Maxon Creek Among others they caught
is an attachment for lhe radio no cure-all that will meet every case
CIVIL SERVICE
and daughter
Kathleen,
accom­ four trout that weighed exactly
There is a movement afoot In that'll automatically tune out croon­ of Juvenile delinquency Some of It panied by friends of Lx&gt;well called four pounds.
Is caused by physical defects; but
Michigan to bring about some form ers. especially If it does lhe work
on Mr and Mrs. Victor Sisson Sun­
Beginning next Tuesday evening
generally speaking. It is due to neg­
with
a
report
that
sounds
like
a
of state civil service to replace tlie
Lhe Hastings City band under the
lect and thoughtlessness concerning day afternoon.
: leadership of Jas. Troxel will reout and oul spoils system which has train of empty coal cars being cou­ boy-life by lhe community For in­
their vrrv
pled
In
the
studio
—
Ohio
Stale
sums
very nnnular
popular and enlnVenjoy­
stance
In
Utica.
New
York,
a
few
been growing more pronounced dur­
able evening concerts.
years ago every long vacation in
Journal.
Ing the past few years
the summer brought into the ju­
The funeral of Jonas Hall, one of
Civil service, although not a cure- I
the early pioneers of Hope township
The true philosopher Is one who venile courts many cases of. Juvenile
all. Is probably less costly to lax
delinquency That situation
was
was held from hU late home Friday
loses no sleep over conditions that
studied. 1', was believed that a plan
payers than the parly spoils system ■
forenoon, Rev. Van Auken officiat­
wouldn't affect him If he'hadn't worth trying would be to have a su­
ing.
has proven to be. The way things
read about them.—San Francisco pervisor of play and playgrounds in
We are glad lhe board of educa­
are al present no party can gain I
Utica
for
the
boys
and
girl*
ot
that
Chronicle.
tion at their last meeting voted to
। Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
power without using jobs as vlr- !
city The city acted promptly and
erect a new school building In the
provided a supervisor and play
tual bribes for courting the favor of
first ward, it is to be a duplicate of
Joe Penner made himself famous
result
”----was----that *95'
“ is growing steadily and a generous the fine second ward school build­
substantial blocs of voles When a with the question "Do you wanna grounds. The -----per cent ot the
__
,Juvenile
___
delln- response to the poppy ippeal thia
democratic administration assumes buy a duck?'' Senator Borah Is get­ quenc) ot previous long vacation per­
The Shakespeare class met with
power, office holders are turned out1 ting almost as much attention try­ iods disappeared when lhe chil­ ganlutions may be able to meat
Mrs. J 8 Goodyear Monday evening
In droves, regardless of qualifies- ing to Mil an elephant—Detroit dren were taught how to play on the increasing need.
and finlahed the study of five play
More than 250.000 needy children of King John.
lhe
city-owned
playgrounds
by
a
tions. excellence of service, etc., to: Free Press.
supervisor who understood boys and of World war veterans have been
Saturday forenoon at her late
make room for deserving party ■
girts, taught them how to play to­ aided during the past year as one
A play entitled "A Woman's gether and be fair with each other. of the results of Poppy Day last year. home in Irving. Mrs. Ktxa Cobb
workers. Likewise when a republican
passed on to (the brighter land. Had
administration is returned to of­ Word" was produced recently. Ap­ Bluffton and Bedford. Indiana, Funds gathered by the Auxiliary she lived 10 days longer she would
fice. flocks of democratic office hold­ propriately enough. It lasted nearly tried the same plan with the same women who distribute memorial have been 88 years old.
popples on lhe annual Poppy Day
results.
We hope Supervisor Boyes wUl
ers are cut adrift from state pay three hours.—Punch.
We believe that Hastings ought to form one of the principal sources revive his project to have a Wom­
rolls.
A Cleveland scientist says that do that too. We believe that this ■ of support for the nation-wide child en's Waiting room made In the
city
oufcht
to
have
a
full-time
super-1
welfare
work
of
the
Legion
and
Thus there Is no chance to de­
basement of the court house. Our
the Big Dipper Is breaking up and
velop a state staff on the basis of we shall not be able to recognise it visor of play and playgrounds for Auxiliary. The dime* and quarters Podunk correspondent speaks of it
tbe children of this city. Tl* city given in exchange for the memorial and women all over the county will
merit—politics alone u what counts. In 50,000 years Shucks, lota of us council, school board, possibly the flowers
~
....
built a silver
•— •foundation *for appreciate It.
The great disadvantage of a civil can't recognise it even now.—Roa­ service cluba could cooperate We the Legion and Auxiliary efforts to
service system is that of developing noke Times.
believe this would work to the ad­ help children deprived of a father's guest of Clara Huffman last week
vantage of lhe schools, benefit the support by the war’s illnesses and was the guest of honor al a party
an examination which really will
Injuries The
made
by the and luncheon given by Miss Huff­
___ __poppy,
_________
_________
"Frost on lhe pumpkin" doesn't children and would be very helpful
permit the best qualified person to
in reducing JuvenUe
delinquency, disabled to honor the dead, serves man. and a dancing party was giv­
be selected from a group of appli­ mean much to the city child, who Planning for vacation time for the also for the children of the dead
en tn her honor at the Armory by
cants. superiority in a written or would think, anyway, it was mer­ children of this city Is a very Im- and disabled,
the "Green Street Crowd.”
portant matter.
[ Working in a Joint program, the
oral examination does not neces­ ingue.—Detroit News.
I
Legion
and
Auxiliary
stand
guard
TOBTY YBARS ACO.
sarily denote superior fitness to hold
G F. Chidester has made a fine
According to the writer of an ar­
FREEPORT.
oyjr (jy, welfare of needy children
down a Job. But If the examining
Freeport people will have a rare of veterans in every community, improvement in ids house on Green
ticle. a miniature fountain playing
board is permitted to disregard
street by putting in large windews.
on the table makes a very pretty privilege on Saturday night of this • Witan aid is available from no olhJ. R Maadn Pay Diamond. Roy
marks and use iu own judgment,
week. David Irwin of Grand Rap- er
----------------source, the Legion
--------and
‘ Auxiliary
—
decoration. If this is a little too ex­
ids. the only man on record to cross supply lhe help needed to maintain Falconer and Loy Diamond have
then the element of politics might
pensive. a nice Juicy grapefruit the lop of the world alone, will give the children in wholesome home entered
the
Kalamazoo bicycle
be given an entering wedge If the
makes an excellent substitute.—Hu­ a lecture at the Methodist church surroundings, keep them in school races, several will go from hen to
board choose to play the game that
on his Arctic experiences. The lec­ and give them a fair chance in life. cheer the Hastings boys on to-vic­
morist
way.
ture will be accompanied by stere- The child welfare work is not lim­ tory.
' Arbor Day was observed in sixty­
ited- ..
to ------children
-— of veterans
------------- ----but
Then. too. even a civil service
Virgil said that the noblest motive optlcon views. Mr Irwin, a native ot----seven schools of Barry county. One
service system is not free from of a statesman Is to "do the public Grand Rapids, had some very har- reaches out to include all under­
rowing experiences in the far north.; privileged children through cootln- hundred nine trees were set upon
clever political manipulation. Tic good.” You don't suppose he was us­ at one time having to kill and eat uous efforts for Improvement of con- the school grounds, three flag staffs
United States had made consider- ing slang, do you?—Altoona Minor. hls dogs to keep from starving. Mis dltlons effecting them.
TOWNSEND BENEFITS.

Mother!
Joy I»1
Th

the Uric

rl" “■&gt; “

antic, a. thia thu .we. one tee I
«*“« »» ovor-mannln, ol
rallb In poUUcal appolntmenu or &gt;“■« department, and tbe appotalany kind, and .trains one'. eonO-i
»'
basis. Mlchlgsm wouldn't need a
civil service system. But lhe patient
public never protests for long—it Is
‘
A MODEL.
quick to forget and not very much
Franknen is usually a virtue but
interested anyway.
its quality might possibly be ques­
tioned by some In this rather plain
spoken teller from a debtor to a
If you earned &gt;1.800 a year and
creditor unearthed by Editor George
the Townsend plan went Into effect
Averill of the Birmingham Eccen­
Il would take MOO of this total to
tric &lt;incidentally, we hasten to ex­
pay the tax to support the plan.
plain that this wasn’t a letter to
That Is what it would cost on that
George from an Irate subscriber &gt;salary. according to Robert R.
BU I got your tetter about what
Doane of the house investigating
I owe you. Now be pachunl I aint
committee. Mr. Doane is the man
forgot you. Piers wate When some j
fool pays me I pay you If this wux j who first said It might be possible
for the Townsend plan to work—at
Judgment day and you wuz no more .
least H was worth investigating, he
redy to meet your maker as I am j
said. After a detailed Investigation
to meet your bill you sure would go I
and study, he says that the - plan
to bell. Hoping you will do this,
simply can't work
yours truly

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Daughter I
church pax

It U. &lt;Ook&gt; Novak waa appointed|
“ “&gt;•
»' •“
aa a member or lhe public Tni.t
E&gt;«Uve omclah naw proven
CommMon. when the pre«nr ad«,ln
U"&gt;' «“‘
mtaUleauon .turned once, over I
* leurtetl wlU&gt; the re.ponMMU.
Peer, power, ot Cadillac who la one * « selectin, aute emplaree,. Tbe
or tbe most honorable and tru.1-1!»«““"
«■ ll«m “ »"d
worthy sentiemen to the .Ute. Mr. I O'”"
deeervin, party worker, U
Novak didn't remain on the com-1100 ireW
mlMlon tong. rnoldentaUy U la noth I “
&gt;“b“'

|i| The Public Forum

WATERS
CIOTHES SHOP
Selling Quality Keept U» Buxy
INfiS. MICH.

PHONE 2235

Tom Myers and
haven't been giving
much of
break lately.

mothers fc

gratitude 1
kindness i
just one 8

with a be;
mother wl
present, hi
Townsend.

torlum. ar
upstairs tc

her da ugh
a violin-pl
Call.” and
Junior the
Mother's 1
• The oul
evening's
play "An
sen ted by

under the
Jones. Thl
with the c
pf colored
press! ve p&lt;
Mother'!
portent di
utose wha
quet felt t
deserved
the hearts

OFFICE
Understand that BUI Stebbins
asked grace at the commercial Club
meeting Tuesday. Some prefane
doubter on hearing about it asked
Grace who?

Buainesi
Guilt

Saw six Illite tots lined up along
the sidewalk yesterday trying to see
which one could "thpil" the farth­
est A tiny little girl, cute aa the
dickens, beat all comers. Chins were
somewhat moist at the close.

Mrs. B :

en's Hoepl

thirty en;
by severe
Guild. Bo*

Tommy's going to be on guard
when the wind's blowing after this!

Chet Hodges' famous old blue
sweater is entering Ils tenth season
of active competition on the tennis

Election
. order of t
Ing chose
Chairman
Cbrm.. Ml

Becky says the ward should be
tone us!

Whoopee! Who cares what Italy
and lhe League of Nations are do­
ing! Little Tommy Bridges came
T-H-R-O-U-G-H!

Jgne. Pou:
ent and ■
After it

Understand that Squter Sigler
lost a prize hog last week, thereby
causing a mighty grunt of dissatis­
faction.

and Ra
plcture.
liminary

tateettng.
non In ot
to think c

ation. I hear. Congratulations All
Don (Juan) FUher I understand
has been a mighty popular young
fellow since he purchased that new

tries are u
—rubber,
cotton, w
silver, goli

school grounds and* houses ixi gen­
eral made more attractive.

ANNOU

1

Friday. This announcement atone
will Insure a crowded houae. so pop­
ular Is Miss George tn our city.
Hastings fans had a chance to
really enjoy a ball game Saturday
when they saw our boys take the

by a score of IS to 5. Tbe game was
characterized by heavy slugging

Hom

• Hera's tha greatest refrigerator improrement in years. Oa its hiogci or

Unga
FIFTY YKAR8 AGO

shelf epact at yorr

eteamboat at Thomapple Lake
Monday morning. My. w. Kelley,
builder of lhe boat was In attend­
ance. From the first start until she
The boys immediately fired her up
and she behaved splendidly. We be-

mer Bho Is certainly a credit to her
builder and owners.
Charley Baldwin did excellent
work tn the game between the New
Yorks and Detrolts Monday. The
latter won by 9 to 3 with the Has­
tings left-handed twirter In the box
Chartey downs ’em all.
. At the elate shooting tournament
Mid al Bagtnaw * last wwk, Old
Crowell of this city won the cham­
pionship belt and money prizes ag­
gregating a handsome sum.

You Con Maks
Poymgnti witfi
your atecfric
Ml

tertatned
their hon
the engai
Ml* Virg
M. Caln, i
on Cain c
marriage
Miss N
Oollape fa

membei

STEWURT-WfiRNER

Ktectric &lt;
and was

of MlchU
1930 and

Goodyear Bros. Hardware Co.
HAJTINaS, MICHIGAN

TELETHONE 2101

�li-1PLEADS GUILTT TO
ASSAULT CHARGE

— WSS&amp;.
SOCIAL EVENTS\

Milbonra, (bophtrd G,l»
IMo Trrabl. al Olw

TWO HUNDRED
FIFTY AT BANQUET
Mother* And Dkughhrg Kn

Mllhoume

Mr*. W. H. Wlilssy. and husband.

joy Intereitinf Pro&lt;rtm
Thursday Nl&lt;ht
'

fc.MlroWt.ta, justice
right Monday night, pleaded |

Umae we were rath

About 350 enjoyed tbe Mother and
Daughter banquet at tbe Methodist
church parlors on Thureday evening.
The tables had been decorated by
the girls with lovely spring blossom*
snd stelpe of green erepe paper with
tiny candles at each place. The
mother* furnished the dinner, pot
luck stylo.
The banquet opened with
charming candle-lighting service
which each mother lighted
candle and sang "Faith of Our
Mother*.-- She then lighted tbe can­
dle of ber daughter as a symbol of
continuity and they responded by
ringing "I would Be True." Mr*.
Maylan Jones gave lhe Invocation.
Mn. ouy Keller, program chair­
man. said that an mother* are un­
EUGENE M. WAKING.
crowned queens and an their daugh­
ter*, prtneeaaca. These uncrowned
queens dream of things they would been assistant industrial gas engi­
neer
in
tbe Utnsing Dtvislsn at
like for their daughters and some­
times their Wishes come true. Mrs.
daughter* tn which she told how the
dream of one mother came true and

Heating and Industrial department.
princesses Mr. Wkring has been gas engineer
in Grand Rapids, Cheboygan and
awakened from them. Rosalie q^s- spent a year in Rosario, Argentina
cadden responded to Mr*. Ketch­ as construction Engineer on build­
am's speech with a toast to tbe ing a complete gas utility.
mother*. The Awakening" in which
we wall until too late to thank our

rnuip costs, or ths alternative of serving
fifty day* tn jail. He was given un­
McLeod til Wednesday night to - par the
Sumr-sr money or begin his jail term. He
say* he will pay.
It 1* alleged that fhepherd ap­
peared at Frank Herrffigton's Clear
at Niles spake an "Youth and WV;" Me resort Saturday night, about
midnight.
In an intoxicated condi­
Warth MtDory of Otsego outlined
“Our Social Problem*:'’
Donald tion. It Is alleged that he started a
disturbance. One who know* Frank
Herrington knows that he will not
erty;’ clarence Foster, a color 1 stand far anything tike that. Ho or­
lad from south Hawn, told of TLa dered filiephcrd to leave the prem­
Tenth Man;" and June Mary Gil­ ise*. Instead of doing &amp;o. he struck
bert of Bturgl* pointed out why Herrington and that brought the
-Germany Needs Hitler.” Donald officer*, with the result given above.
wd

arms and
Anger*. and were Urey Bartons about
itl One of the three had a drum
•as, and he

authentic.

son. the gun wouldn't shoot. Bo we
look eur fingers out ot our ear* and
relaxed, and decided that on the
whole it was a jolly good concert
PASSING OF MRS.
and we wish they’d have more of judge* and Clarence Foster of
MARY N. WILLIAMS.
South Haveh second.
Following the contest and while
Mary N. sixth chlM of Mr. and
Mn. Wm. Johnson, waa born tn
BOARD MEETS IN
Monroe Co.. New York state, on
March 11. 1S46. coming to Huron
SPECIAL SESSION
all contestants in token of their Co. Michigan in 1M7 where she
Consider the Settlement of winning a sub-district eon teat. taught school, later teaching tn

board's finance committee, to whom
tbe matter waa rqjerred. by eleven
stockholders and members of the stag Eastern will receive the other

A CASE Containing
50 DOZIN HIAVY

88

Towels

5Oc

25*

MOVED THEIR OFFICES.
The headquarter* of those re?onribte for earrvlna on the Yan-

shade*,

Pastel

moved

white

with colored border,
basement of the Hasting* postoffice
building. Offices for Mr. Davie*, su­
pervisor of tbe project, and those
associated with him will be moved to
the Robert Chadwick home, which
l* within the territory taken over
by lhe government. This will accom-

for your
PHONES For
SERVICE NOW at

2
Feldpausch Market

and pastel checks. . . .
window

Notice

P&lt;«y.

dis-

Sizes 22 inches

by 45 indies.

CflnnonTROjfln

CALL 2272 or 2616—WE DELIVER
At 8 and 10 A. M. and 3 P. M. DAILY 1
ARMOUR'S STAR

PORK LOIN

ROASTS
j*

Bonalais

Pound —

WW

Rib End
Pound—

| ffc
I Vy C

RneCannon Sheets
..lb. 25c

VEAL CHOPS

Beef for (tewing, bonelen, lb. 19c

HAM LOAF—1 lb. ham,
¥2 lb. veal, ground lb. 30c
lb. 22c

BACON—chunk

NEW POTATOES6 Ibi. 25c
2 for 15c

HEAD LETTUCE
Shults

BUTTER

28c

SIZES AND PRICES

63x99
81x99

BUY YOUR
PINEAPPLES
FOR CANNING
NOW!

*1.39

PILLOW CASES

35c
HEMSTITCHED

ENERGY
BUILDER

Mis* Mabel Sisson Is hostess for
June. Four new members were pres­
ent and enrolled tn the Guild.
After lhe business meeting. Jerry
Johnson and a Mr Dykstra from
Grand Rapids presented three reels
ot pictures showing how telephones
are made. Mr. Johnson giving a pre­
liminary explanatory talk. The pic­
ture* were educational and very in­
teresting. The telephone La so com­
mon In our daily lives that wo faU
to think of it* construction and the
origin of it* component parts. The
products of many states and coun­
tries are used tn making a telephone
—rubber, silk, copper. Iron, mica,
cotton, wool, platinum, aluminum,
silver, gold, nickel, etc.

39c
Hemstitched Sheets, 81 x 99 *1.39
Value Sheets, 81 x 99

*1.00

//

TO DOG OWNERS
High in Cream
Content Rawer
Pa&gt;t«urixod

DOG TAX NOW DUE

Tea and Reception Held at
Home of Dr. and Mrs.
Newkirk
Dr. and Mr» Bert L. Newkirk en­
tertained at a reception and tea at
their home yesterday to announce
the engagement of their daughter.
Ml** Virginia Newkirk, to Bernard

warmer weather means less energy
. . . strain, fatigue, the wearing ef­

fects of constant activity. All these

on Caln of Hastings, Michigan. Tbe
marriage will take place in August.
Ml** Newkirk attended Wellesley

take their toll, but you can rebuild

Pay Before June 1st and
Avoid Double Penalty!

your energy quickly with a glass of

title of Syracuse University. She 1*
a member of Phi Bet* Phi sorority.
Mr. Caln 1* in the motor engi­
neering departmem of the General
Electric company in Lynn. M*mand wa* formerly In Schenectady.
He 1* a AHUtuata or ttw Uohmttr
at Michigan. M. B, tn the class ot
IBM and Is a member at Tau Beta

sister ot the

A FACTORY SALE!

Johnson.
vtvea. Ft
the Baptist church on Sunday after­
noon at two o'clock, the Rev. B. J.
Adcock officiating. Burial was in

district contest received a large felt Williams on March IB, 1890 In Lake elate* of Mr. Davin*.
banner lettered In blue from the
The board of supervisor* met yes­ University of Michigan, stating the
terday in special session to consid­
er and approve or disapprow a set­
tlement which was offered to lhe tings High I* the proud pos leaser

Following tbe contest, the coaches
and visitor* from out of town were
invited to the playroom where light
refreshment* were served. Much
credit Is due Albert Becker, local
speech coach for his work as chair­
man of the District Forensic Asso­
ciation in perfecting plan* for the
Townsend. Mrs. Mattle Striker and . da.l*huJ T*10
“°"lhs old.
The claim at the county against Friday night meeting so admirably
Mrs. M- L. Cook were honored aa I “T
*• ■
lhe closed Nashville bank was for
the oldest mothers present
|
“b"lh*
Local people, too. give him praise
The remainder of the program
ot Wchirea and was a member ha* been repaid to the county by for the exceptional showing made
was presented tn the church audl- °t the Chi Pri Fraternity while at the receiver, who ha* just an­ by the High school's two entrant*, j
torium. and lhe company marched
University.
nounced that he 1* prepared to pay
uKP-'lrSVS?'nSJSS'JS 1
“TU»N TO
lakl
5 per cent more. It Is the judgment tbe nine other participants had al­
SJ
1 Mr- wd Ito. mnl Ctar.b~ux of those connected with the re­ so won In two previous contests
ceivership that there ar* prospect*
Chat the bank will ultimately re- a tine honor Indeed for lhe school,
F*
Of t'rls
,
trom
lb8 1' maktn?
for thT
county *
of 75 per lhe speech department. Mr. Becker.
9*1'• *r?d r
.* gT0Up
®rouP °t
from the
maMn- preparations
nrenaratlons for
the ojm
tinen- j P*?
junior choir sang an appropriate £
lhP.
u
cent of lhe &gt;57.000 The receiver has Miss Buck and Mr. Weaver to take
Mother’s Day selection.
I
DStagUje^S^iitaS Mr and considerable land and other u- the district championship in both
• The outstanding feature of the ..^“*-7*- .5
*»nter Mr. ana
.
( b) hands tn dh- event* in which the High school was
entered.
plw “An onerowned Quwn- pre- {“*
SSd/toI
onered hy Ux
rented by members of the Anchor
Jf^ady large cirtie end it S' •teven il&lt;ner*
depository
ENTERTAINH BAUKRETTES
and Busy Bee Sunday School clas.es 1 ... "bond Is to pay &gt;10.000 to the counMr*. Georgina Bauer entertained
under lhe dlrecUon of Mr* MayUn £
1 J"*1
ty in full settlement of Ils claim
Jones. This was very well done and J,,, awltJ Us
88,lnit them
board coiwldcre&lt;1 from Grand Rapids on Wednesday
with the costumes and effective use
.
. us m lne
thl.
1.1 wsslon
evening, the ladies calling themthia at
at their
their .nee
special
session.
Plhlnwcll Enterprise.
bt colored lights was really an im­
I Twenty-five per cent of the &gt;57.ATTRACTIVE *LUNCHEON.
pressive pageant.
000 is &gt;14450. Deducting 410.000 Mn. Bauer's assistants at the gath­
Mother’s Dav is becoming an Im­ 1 Mrs. Frank Andrus entertained al from that would leave &gt;4450 still to erings in Grand Rapids when she
portant day in lhe calendar and a bridge luncheon on Saturday for be provided for. with tbe &gt;5.000 sure­ was Worthy Grand Matron of the
O. E. 8. They enjoyed a pot luck
more who attended this fine ban- twelve guests. Mrs G. E. Goodyear ty bond to protect the county.
dinner and a happy evening to­
quet fell that It was one that really and Mrs. -Frederick Parker were
deserved an outstanding place In winner* at contract jonquils cen- MJ88 KESTER TO LEAD MUSIC.
...
.
M1M Alice Cleone Kester Of
the hear^of fatOM/h.
lhe luncheon tables, llilj was
ENTERTAINS TWELVE.
----*—-----------------aaAM.*'series of parties Mrs. An- Muskegon, Michigan will be in
charge of music during the special
Lovely bouquets of spring flowers
OFFICERS ARE CHOSEN
“™ ta. itaota^i.
services being held al the Free made attractive decoration* at tlie
Methodist church. East Colfax at bridge luncheon given by Mrs.
FOR ENSUING YEAR
-aidam. u m. h.™ row
Bollwood street each evening at Archie D. McDonald on Saturday
and women had a greater oppew7:30 from May 19 to 31*1.
Batinels Women', Ho.piUl K
)
_____________________
r____ twelve being present. At contract
Miss Kester is an accomplished
Guild Headed by Mils
I Which they intelligently embrace | musical director and soloist having
Ruth Fa.rr
th“ opportunity and profit by it studied under one of lhe leading Harold Phillips
iku.L ran !
tn largeIn measure
the . vocalists
of Grand
Rapids. Rapids.
t
.may depend
may depend
large measure
the, vocalists
of Grand
DESSERT BRIDGE
Mrs. B- R Reed wa* hostess at the economic future of the world.’’—Dr. I 8he 11 also 4 youth Evangelist
Coven were laid for twenty at the
May meeting of the Business Worn- Joseph H. Willet*. University of holding services for boys and girls
««•«
Mncnitai rttitu
««.­ I pemjaylyanis.
I each afternoon al the church, she dessert-bridge given by Mr*. Her-.
en
’s Hospital
Guild nn
on Monday eve
man
Arold
on Friday, tbe table* bening at lhe parish house, nearly
4&lt; »
। will be In charge of the music at
thirty enjoying the dinner served
An American has claimed a the big mass meeting to be held big made especially attractive with I
by several member* of Emmanuel wurkl's record for a delayed para- Sunday, May 24th. al 3 P M. in bouquet* of baby iris, while Jon­
Guild. Bouquets of pink and white chute jump, but ours will be delayed central auditorium here and wQl quil* were used around the rooms..
sweet peas centered the tables which longer than that.
Mrs. David Goodyear, jr, Mrs. B.
(render a solo.
A. LyBarker and Mrs. Forrest Dane;
were winner* al bridge.
use ot lace paper dollies.
Election of officer* was tbe main
. order of business, the following be­
THUD? YOU'LL FINO MILK THE BIST
compulsion, but by lhe development
ing chose for lhe ensuing year:
of higher standards of conduct and
Chairman. Miss Ruth Farr; VlceChruu Miss Grace Edmonds; Secre­
—EUhu Root.
tly. Mis* Arlene Campbell; Treas­
urer, Mias Florence Bump; Birth-

About two hundred triteMi at ths
young couple and of Dr. and Mrs,
Newkirk were invited. Among those

day* old. Surviving are a brother,
jonnson, of Batavia, jf. TMr*. Wlllsey. and other

Claim Agatnat the Naahvillo Bank

State Bank, now in the receiver's
gratitude in small every day acts of Hasting* enjoy tbe greatest possible hands. The eleven signed a deposi­
kindness and helpfulness and not
tory bond In the sum of &gt;20.000, to
natural gas which will be here ap- Insure Barry county against loss on
Mr*. Buryi Will wa* presented
th* county’s deposits In that bank.
Mr. Waring ha* moved hi* family The bank also gave the county a
with a beautiful corsage a* tbe
mother with the most daughter* to Hastings and they are now living surety bond at the Michigan Surety

ANNOUNCE CAIN-NEW
,
KIRK ENGAGEMENT,

CANNON
TOWELS

good, pure, wholesome Highland

Dairy Grade A milk.
Tbe Grade A standard is assurance

Tax may be paid at office of County
Treasurer or Sheriff’s office.

Silk Dresses
In Sizes 14 to 52 are
Now REDUCED to

Spring Coata &amp; £
Suits Reduced
SOME AS LOW AS

of quality and purity. Sun today

and

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
PboueMSl

JAY BLARNEY, Sheriff of Barry County

include this energy-building

food in your daily diet.

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hasting.

archie d.

McDonald,
Prosecuting Attorney for Barry County

Frandnen}
Exclusive But Hot Expeniive
HASTINGS. MICH.

PHONE 2504

�rai mymfOB banmkk twumdat,

Nearly 1,000 Attend^’WSi
’ _
__ ___
__
lnvM&lt; tha
| joyed
the nreaslnn
occasion.
..
Some young men from the Mus­
R. and G. Club Feast kegon
Y. M. C. A-. who hold the
stale championship for tumbling,
entertained the crowd for a few
held. Frank Andrus giving a report minutes with wonderful athletic
feat*. They appeared later on Uie
mittae presented a resolution asking program and were warmly applaud­
both times.
fnr tw, tn rwrivlria ■ ikwt fir Id tlSO ed
i
There were three men present
akeet shooting and the other $50 to representing lhe slate conservation
be given by tbe club. Action on department at Lansing. Col. Bergin
tbe report was held over till the presented tbe regret* of hU su­
next business meeting of the club perior. Mr. Hoffmaster. the Utter
on Monday. May 25. Officers will being'unable
;
to attend lhe banquet
a*
be had hoped. He said he had
also be elected at that time.
।
told that this would be a large
C. H. Osborn was Introduced by been
I
gathering, but he wa* not prepared
program committee. Mr. Osborn for anything like what he saw. He
« the
».= —
_ ______ t*id It was not only the Urgcst but
later inirouuroi
Introduced as
toastmaster
justice William W- Potter of Lan- | the most enthusiastic gathering of

H. S. LOSES OPEN- I
ING HOME GAME

COFFEE LOVERS
Are Delighted with
these Delicious Blends
MISSION INN
OUR FINEST BLEND

FRESH GROUND FOR
YOUR REQUIREMENTS

GOLDEN SUN
An Old Favorite

Blend in Vacuum
Packed Tin

THOMAS SPECIAL
POPULAR BRAND . . . FAST

IC.THOMAS STORES! SAVINGS FOR FAMILY FOOD BUYERS
Ch0cala.°VLNm"E.S,H„,
Cocoanut TaHy, Dutch
Cookies, Butterscotch

LB.

10

Q tall O AC
O CANS AwV

c

PRUNES=
FRESH

RIPE

FANCY

PINEAPPLES
FOR

DC AC EARLY JUNE
| C.A3 SWEET. TENDER
PAD!! GOLDEN BANTAM
vUllIl CREAM STYLE
|Z D A I IT FRE5H CANNED
■ 111 HU I SAUER KRAUT

TOMATO SOUP

3

No. 2

3
ALICE
BRAND

25c
25c
25c
5c

CALIFORNIA PEACHES 2 £2* 31c
CHERRIES
5—. r»&gt;*4
3 £2 28c
PEARS ROYAL KEIFFERS No. 2 Can 10c
PINEAPPLE BROKEN^UCE
16c
PURE PRESERVES PINT JAR 18c
APPLE SAUCE Fine Flavor 4 £2 30c
SNOW QUEEN Flour, 24'/z lb. bag 62c

FRESH FIG BAR COOKIES, 3 lbs 25c
PILLSBURY'S FARINA

MINCE MEAT

CLOTHES Lines, 50 ft. 20c
CANVAS GLOVES, pr. 10c
Johnsons Glo-Coot, pt. 53c

FOR_______ $1.62

i 1

of 24 ___$3.24

S U R ES ET
GELATINE DESSERT

2

package,

9

CHIPSO 1c SALE
1 MEDIUM PKG.____ 1
With ONE
HA
LARGE PACKAGE CU

3

25c

LIFEBUOY 3^-20c
RINSO s.,1 pm. 10c
BROOMS u.&gt;. 29c

CLAPP’S
i

BABY FOODS

|CE CREAM

Approved by Good Housekeeping Burea a

Treat yourself to the best . . . take home a quart of
lJu: famous Butter Pecan Ice Cream.

Brick, 35c qt. • Hand Packed, 40c qt.

COMPLETE FOUNTAIN SERVICE

and is a millionth of a millionth of
an inch thick. That relegates lhe
ham in a drugstore sandwich to
second place.

For
Memorial
Day

man stole third. Isham ended the
Inning by striking out.
In the first of the sixth. Insley
was out. Martin to McLeod. Neve
hit a high foul which was taken by
Hall. Cowles hit a clean single to
left field, but was out trying to
stretch It to a double. No runs, one
hit. no errors.
McLeod and Scobey misfeed tbe
third strikes in the last of the sixth
and Martin sent Jensen back in
deep left center for the third but
no runs, no hits, no errors.

CLYDE WILCOX
The Florist
Hastings, Michigan

Member

Floruit’

Telephone 2530

Telegraph

Delivery

Attocialion

■

SPARTON

MALTED MILKS. 15c

C E fA 2 C Walgreen System
9 drugstore

Keel/

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Leads in Popularity,
W^ith Hastings
Home-Makers

The Original STRAINED

FOOD

FOR BABIES

3 .... 25'

INSIST ON

MICHIGAN MADE
Cocoanut can 9c
CALUMET
9c
JELLO ICS GUAM

POWDER ’

25c

FRENCH'S

BIRD SEED

BEET SUGAR
for CooKing — B.Tking —Canning

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Anti-frost Clock
Vegebin
Baskadrawer
100% Automatic
Baskadoor

s and Jellies—Candy Making

With Bird Biscuit can- 4 fie
talnlng yeast—Pkg.
I C

C. THOMAS STORES
1U WEST STATE STREET

ARCTIC SEALTE$T

SODAS and SUNDAES, 10c

pkg. 10c

WALL PAPER CLEANER
3 cons 25c
AMMONIA—Cristo
qt, bottle 10c
SALSODA
2'/z lb. box 5c
MOP HANDLES____ 10c
CLOTHES PINS box 30, 7c

*•« u

(case

Belding (B)
Chickring. s*.
Walters. 2b.
Brelmayer. p.

For the Flower ^nd Vegetable Garden. We
have a fine assortment . . . home grown and
reasonably priced.

3 FOR_________ 33c
SIZE
30 X'2 F0,&gt;-----------(CASE of 30... $3.24

24

CANNING

bad start, but believed they would Anyone went away hungry It was
show improved form from now on. his own fault.
^^tW^th!*
nt is*
iff
.iiu»^i*hu and Brelmayer next up fanned the
tne air
and that at tbe end of tbe season if
Tables, chairs, sliver.-dishes and for the third strike.
they did not finish first In the' other articles were loaned by
In the Hastings half of the first
American League they would be very churches, dubs, lodges. Individuals inning Townsend missed the third
close t-&gt; lhe leader, tie said that * end schools for it was no small job
| strike. Marshall dropped a Texas
there are two divisions
aivisions In
in the
me AmerAmer- , to assemble 1.000 chairs. 1.000 league single into right field. Isham
*
— knives, forks and spoons, etc. To hit lhe first pitch for a clean tingle
lean League:
The ‘four best *teams
are Boston. Detroit, Cleveland and each and everyone who contributed and McLeod hit the first home run
New York. In the second division he to the success of this banquet the of the season for the Broaakmen to
placed Chicago, st. Louis. Phila­ Club extends Ils sincere thank*— clear the bases. Scobey got on first Hastings (3)
delphia and Washington.
Frank Andrus, for use of tbe after right fielder Longstreet drop­ Townsend, cl.
Marshall. Lf.
At the close of his informal talk sound equipment. Service OU Co, ped his fly. Neve replaced Long­
Isham. rX
he answered a number of questions the city schools. St. Rose church street. Martin struck out as did
Presbyterian church.
asked by his hearers. Mr. Hellmann and school.
Rennlck who followed. Three runs,
has made many radio friends among Masonic lodge. K. of P. lodge. Miss three hits and one error at the end
local baseball fans as his reports are Carter and the girls who served. , ot the first Inning.
Supt. Bell and Mrs. Wolverton of
Wilson walked to open tbe second
tells many Interesting points of the Middleville for bringing the girls. Inning and Jensen hit a Texas
games that only a veteran ball play­ Albert Bessmer for hl* services and league single. Wilson stopping at
sound
equipment. Delton Bakery. R. second. Wilson and Jensen worked
er would understand.
The program waa concluded with G. Henton. Constuners Power Co. a double steal. Insley walked and
a presentation of several reels of Ralph Hess. Freeport Community HaU missed the baU to let Wilson
moving pictures showing the World Club, United Brethren church. I. score. Neve filed to Marshall in left
Series contest for 1035 between tbe
field. Jenaen taking third after the
erlcan Legion, Hastings Country catch, Cowie* filed to Townsend In
Chicago Cubs and the Detroit Ti­
Club. David Boyes. Universal Oa­ center. Jensen scoring after the
gers. in whldh the latter were the
rage. Johnson Sales &amp; Service. catch. Laux struck out One hit. two
winners.
Thanks and credit are due Frank Keith Daniels, George Carpenter runs, one error. Score 3-2 in favor of
Andrus who furnished the equip­ and lhe Barry County Road Com­ Hastings.
ment for showing tbe films, which mission. Il there are others whose
Brelmayer then settled down and
v-ere sound pictures. Through lhe names are not given, the omission struck out Hall, Freeman
and
kindness of the Service OU Co the Is unintentional.
Townsend. In the first of tlie third
Chkkrtng filed out to Martin at
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
responsible for their presentation.
short. Walters singled over second
Mr. and Mrs. B Bldelcomb and base. Brelmayer popped up to RenAll enjoyed the pictures and ap­
preciate also the kindness of Frank family of Kalamazoo were Bunday nick at second and Wilson wa* out
and lhe Service Oil Co. for their
at first after HaU dropped the ball.
guests of Mis* Ethel Eaton.
efforts. It was a fitting conclusion
One hit, no runs and no errors.
Mr. and Mrs. William Cramer.
Jensen filed to Scobey In the
to a delightful evening.
Sr.,
accompanied
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Geo.
With,such an outstanding and
fourth. Insley walked and Neve laid
Harrison
Saturday. down a perfect bunt; both runners
successful affair as this banquet, Jensen to
While
there
they
visited
Mr.
and
were safe. Cowles attempted to bunt
with Its large membership, it can
be seen that the Barry County Rod Mrs. Adam Hansen and several but drove a fly to Scobey who
and Oun Club Is a live organisation other relatives. They returned Sun­ doubled Insley off second base. No
It 13 safe to predict that it will add day.
runs, one hit. no errors.
Mr. and Mrs. George Jewell and
Martin first up struck oul. Rento It* fine record of excellent work
In promoting real sportsmanship for Mrs. James Jewell of Midland re­ nlck did the same thing and Hall
those who love the out-of-doors and turned home after spending some filed to Wilson In short right field.
time here caring for Mrs. George Three up and three down.
who enjoy hunting and fishing.
Laux opened tbe fifth by striking
The question haa been asked many Roush who passed away last Bun­
out. chickring after working the
times, "How much food was re­ day.
count to 3-2 walked. He then stole |
quired. how many pounds of fish
were bought, how many rolls, eic|” ____
_____of_____
and_________
daughter___
Joyce
Mt.______
clem* second base. Walters next up was
Martin
booted his 1
The writer thought it might be in- ens and Mr. and Mrs. Merle Calll- safe when
terestlng to answer those queries, so han of Lansing were guests of their grounder. Chickring going to third. I
began asking for information, rc- I parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cramer, Brelmayer popped to Freeman. Wil­
son walked and Chickring stole'
celvlng the following replies: A ton [ 8r, Sunday.
home to tie the score. Jensen filed io ।
Scobey. One run, no hits and one i
error.
Freeman was safe on an Infield

We ALWAYS have IN STOCK a good se­
lection of cut flowers. The greenhouses are
full of blooms. Come in and see them.

fiypRitf

PAAUIETC
IWT» I I ■ I VW I ■Ml

Wilson, lb.
Laux popped to Freeman as the McLeod, «&gt;.
Jensen. cX
game went Into the last Inning tied ,
at 3-4. McLeod let Chickring's fast Martin, aa.
Longstreet, IX
grounder
go between his legs.
. Cowles, 3b.
Chickring pulled up at second and HaU. c.
Laux. c.
then stole third. Walters waa safe Freeman, p.
when McLeod dropped the ball and
Hastings Bubo—Maurer. Beumer.
Chtckring scored. Walters went to
Belding Bubo—Neve for Jjmgsecond. Rennlck overthrew first on aireet.
•
Brelmayer’* grounder and Wallers
Aside from the one bad Inning In
scored. Brelmayer stopping on sec­ which the Infield booted the ball all
ond base. Wilson struck out. Brel­
mayer going to third when Hall
eating to watch and was not won by
dropped the ball and was forced to
either team until the last Inning.
make a play at first. Freeman un­ Spectators were few and far be­
corked a wild pitch and Brelmayer tween despite
perfect
baseball
came In. Jenaen went to second base weather. Most of the cheering for
when Martin threw low to McLeod
the home team wa* from the second
who missed lhe ball and then stole stringers on lhe bench.
third. Hall tried to catch Jenaen off
third and threw lhe ball in left field
CARLTON CENTER.
and Jensen scored. Maurer replaced
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Hale attended
Hall, insley wm struck by a pitched
ball and took second wlicn Rennlck a wedding reception Saturday eve­
overthrew first base. Neve going to ning for relatives on the Center
second. Laux singled to center field
and scored Insley and Neve. Chickring ended lhe spree by grounding Banfield visited at' tbe home of Mr.
to McLeod who made the pul out and Mrs. Fred Henney Sunday eve­
unassisted. Six run&lt; one hit, seven ning.
Appropriate Mother's Day services
errors.
Bessmer batted for Rennlck as were bald at the M. E. church. All
the local nine went Into the home enjoyed tbe splendid sermon given
half of the last Inning and fanned. by Rev. Wheeler.
Mother's Day was celebrated In
Maurer watched the third strike
sail past him and Bolo was sent in an enjoyable way Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Paulus and
to bat for Freeman and drew a pass
Theron.
Mr. and Mrs. Nell Wilson
to first base. Townsend halted the
attempt to start a rally by ground­ and family visited at the home at
ing oul Chickring to Wilson. No Mr. and Mrs. Murray Myers of near
Ionia.
runs, no bits, no errors.
The line’ups were:
The electron has been measured

See our filled vases and baskets for the
cemetery; also our fine selection of flower­
ing plants.

SELLING . . . ALWAYS FRESH

•A I I If l
EVAPORATED
IVIILA SUNSHINE BRAND

mat h.

lu kind h« had ewr attended. Ssr-1 the National League and before ths and a quarter. 3400 pounds of fish
geant SulUvan of the state police , American League was organized, were purchased; 10 busheU of pota-,
hl» wnndrrful
through hit
wonderful amrlr
work tzu&gt;a 4 hiiahela allmal mhbaee. 3.000
was also Introduced and MmnuMAaH
commended It waa thnwiah
the Rod and Gun club for thia suc­ In the box that lhe Detroit team
cessful affair, which he said was then won the world championship. pints of cream. ITO lbs. of com­
the finest of Its kind he had ever Mr. Baldwin waa called upon that pound. 150 Iba. flour, 90 lbs. sugar
year to pitch twice aa many games and 14 bollersful of coffee were
Toastmaster
Potter Introduced as any pitcher Is now expected to served, besides other articles neces­
SEVEN ERRORS IN LAST
sary for such a banquet.
Robert Van Valkenburg of Kalamain oroer to save dishwashing and |
INNING PROVE COSTLY
soo, through whose generosity it was made so lame that he had to give up
lessen expense as well, the commit—unnyivarev
possible for tbe club to build the his work as a hurler.
TO BKOZAKfflEH
Mr. Potter then Introduced Harry tee on arrangement* purchased the
Orangeville fish ponds to aid In re­
hard finish paper plates and cups
------------stocking tlie 244 lakes of Barry
a
member
of
lhe
Detroit
Tigers,
and
county w|lh game fish. Mr. Van
which proved very satisfactory. All 1 SCORE TIED IN SIXTH,
of
tbe
cabbage
was
cut
at
the
Bess-I
"
„' JTuphth
Valkenburg was presented with a who had an outstanding record as
‘
BROKEN IN SEVENTH
life membership in the Barry Coun­ a hitler. Mr. Hellmann is now radio mer Market and Angelo Spirts had!
announcer over tbe Michigan net­ charge of the fish frying which was I
ty Rod and oun Club.
The same honor was conferred work In reporting by Innings the ball done at the garage. A battery of ten Seaaon'a First Home Bun
upon Charles Baldwin ot this dty. games in which the Qelroit Tigers gas stoves had been connected up
Bolls Onto Bacetrack
who won a nation-wide reputation play. Mr. Hellmann spoke of the De­ by the Consumers Power. Company,
With Two Aboard
many years ago for his effective troit Tigers as a team, and of In­ and eight were kept busy with frying
pitching. He was with the Detroit dividual members of that famous the fish which was cut In small
The High school nine took their
club.
The
crowd
listened
with
great
pieces
and
dropped
Into
deep
fat.
baseball team when It belonged to
third
defeat In succession last
Interest. He gave many personal Assisting the men In the "kitchen"
experiences concerning
the late were five women. Mrs. Chas. Rogers. Thursday on their own grounds.
Frank J. Navin, who was for so Mrs. Hazel Abbey. Mrs. Donna Har- Belding came to Hastings with three
defeats
behind them and broke the
many years tbe owner of the De- rington. Mrs. Kenney and Miss Loa
troll team.
। Ferguson, all of whom were kept Jinx after trailing for six Innings to
Tn answer to a question of how he I busy making coffee, dishing up po,
- , .
.uthought the Tigers would fare this i taloes, salad, rolls, etc. But the w2fid ^e^hird
Bo by
year he stated Dial they had had a whole affair was so well org iniat d w*“heJ1 .lh5, thl5,d
, „£°
Lries of mishaps which gave them a I that there were no long walU and If
‘winters *nex^UD did the

Come in today or tomorrow... let us show you
why Sparton is a leader and choice of so many
PIONEER
GREAT LAKES
RED ARROW
BIG CHIEF
SALL BY GHUUFRS EVERYWHERI

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON

�anbmhiiw»««nwau tmnun

=
Social Events and Personal Mention
Detroit on Tuesday on business.
Mias Josephine chase was home
Miss Margaret Merrick waa home
from Grand Rapids for Mother’s from South Haven for Mother’s
DV
Mrs. W. R Oook to attending the
Mr and Mrs. David Boyes were
May Festival at Ann Arbor this
Pleasant and T anal ng on

relatives in Saranac on Sunday.

•wen in Adrian on
Mrs. Kata Maguire and Mn.
Elisabeth Cryan
of Kalamaaoo

W. and Mrs. A- J. EpUy toft Wed-

Mrs. Anna Raed was ip Kala­
maaoo part of last week visiting
Mrs. Levi Mead returnee
their cottage at Gun lake.
,
relatives.
Thursday from a few days'
Mrs. Clarence Grobe accompanied
Mr. and Mrs W. L- Hinman were
MT. and Mrs. Casper Thomas of Ln Grand Rapids and Sparta on
Kalamazoo to Lansing an Bunday. Bunday calling on friends.
Mr*. James Caldwell of Hesperia
Mtos Olive Lathrop and Mtos
Mr. and Mrs. John Engel spent
Ada Michael motored here from Mother's Day with their son. Milton, A- Woolen and Misses Nonna and
Detroit to spend the week end with and family at Dimondale,
Helen Michael.
relatives.
i Mua DorM Biddle and a friend
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dcrw del
Mrs. Arthur A Reasoner will Join from Grand Rapids were Sunday
weak for a part of the May Festival
Elmer Warren and MUs Lena
Warren of Runfield Twp. were Sun­
day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Eggleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burrell of
Detroit were guest* over Mother s

Carveth.
Kenneth Goggins saw the baseball
game in Detroit Sunday between
tbe Detroit Tigers and the Cleve­
land Tnd lam
Mrs. Gertrude 1 Rlckel had as
Mother’s Day guests her son-in-law
and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Boyer of Toledo
Mr. and Mrs. H
J. Reinhardt
spent the week end with relatives in
Benton Harbor and witnessed the
Blossom Time Festival.
Francis 8. Mason of Jacksonville.
Florida, past president of lhe Ro­
tary Club of that dty, was In this
dty Monday on busines.
Dr. Robert B Harkness of the
Health Unit, to in Kansas City, Mo .
this week attending the meetings of
the American Medical Association
Dr. and Mrs. Mortensen of Battle
H

Sanltarlum staff, were dinner guests
al lhe Emil Tyden home Wednesday night
Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Wolfe,
Lawrence Wolfe and Mr. and Mrs
' Harvey Kemerllng of Battle Creek
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Wolfe.
j
Mrs. Clifford Brainard and son
Charles of Battle creek and Mr.
and Mrs. 8 M. Cassidy of Grand
. Rapids were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
C- W. Clarke Sunday.
Mrs. Gertrude Hour ven er, who
has been spending the winter In
Honolulu, H. I., with Dr and Mrs.
Harold Houvener, i}a* returned to
her home In this city.
Mrs. Dan Ashaiter and Mrs. Cora
Gebhardt attended an O. E 8.
school of Instruction at Middleville
Monday night conducted by the
Grand Organist Mary McCurdy of
Greenville.
Mr. and Mrs. James Langston.
Mrs. D. M Stuart and Mtos Dona
Stuart spent Saturday tn Battle
Creek. Mrs. Stuart who had a long
sclge of the flu to now able to be
about again.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lacey and Mrs.
Emma Kllpfer of near Alto were
Mother's Day guests of their daughter and granddaughter, and has; band. Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Stauf■ fer, and Ronald.
\
j
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Goggins
and -family and Mtos Florence
! O’Donnell spent Sunday in Chicago
' and called on Mr. and Mn. Howard
। Goggins and Mr and Mrs. RayI mond Middleton while there,
■
Stewart Caln of Chicago. TH., and
MUs Rachel Caln of Lansing spent
the week end with their parents,
. Mr and Mrs Theron Caln. Mtos
Cain has Just returned from a ten
| day visit with her brother. Bernard.
"In Boston. Massachusetts.
Callers on Mrs. Mary Burgess on
Mother's Day were Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Kelley and Mrs. Fay Stacy
and two children of Kalamazoo.
■ Mrs. Edith Louden of Prairieville
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald McQuarrie and family of East Delton.
l Mrs. Jessie Stowell and Mn. Matoel Haff of Kalamazoo visited Mrs.
May Townsend Sunday who lato"
accompanied them to the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Dorr Stowell Ln
Woodland, in the evening Mr. and
Mrs. H. J. PetlengiU of Battle
Creek were callers at Mn. Town-

Surprise lhe family tonight
by taking them “oul to din­
ner.” lliey’ir all thoroughly
’
dinner al The Trio.
and prices are low.

Sunday Chicken grt
DtoiRar_________ vU
, Try Our Spacial
£Ac
LUNCHEON OU
ffifjr Sirin (daft

KARMES RWA*
158 E. HUie

Hastings

p 0M&gt;
Do
I Work in "Sorvnnt
In
Homo"
hMMil at nte Servant in the
HotiM - which the Civic Players are
pr—enttns Thursday and Friday
nights at the OestoreJ auditorium.
It'S a splendid play aqd a difficult
one to do. We btltove the audiences

Harold Foster was Saturday on bu*tMM.

OOWMr

Saturday and Sunday.
family spent Sunday with relatival
Mrs. Gertrude Adams haa re­ day, Wednesday
in Alihan.
Mrs. Alice Grant and Mtos June
turned from Lansing where she has
been tar several months.

Kl R. Glasgow.

Mrs. Arthur Struble has been
spending the past two weeks with
her sister In Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shriber and
family spent the week end in South
Haven with relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Manley Davis of
Lansing spent Bunday with hto sis­
ter. Mrs. Henry Janson.
Misses Prances Sage and Ellen
Leonard, student* at M. 8. C, were,
home over the week end
Mlu Charlotte Hubbard of Ann

GLADIOLUS Bulbs

PARKER HOUSE

ELICTRIC

BIG VALUES
FRIDAY, MAY 15

SATURDAY, MAY 16

Dal Monte PEACHES
17c
JELLO—olHIavor*..3 for 17c
OATMEAL5 lb. bag 19c
Bo-Peep AMMONIAquart* 23c
OXYDOL—large boxes2 for 39c
BUTTER—beet qualitylb. 29c
TEA SIFTINGSlb. 7c

OLEO— King Nut Fancy Grade 2 lb*. 25c
BOILING BEEF.lb. 15c
BEEF RIBS—fancy
2 lbs. 25c
Fancy Chicago
BEEF ROASTS
lb. 18V2c
Nice End Cuis
PORK CHOPS
lb. 21c
Shoulder
PORK ROASTS LeanCuts
lb. 18'/2C
BACON Dlckory Brand
14 lb. pkg. 18c
Our recant addition of Modem Refrigeration «nables us to give you Finest Moots in
Perfect Condition

HINMAN’S
THI IIC LITTLE STORE
TGlephone 2491

Hastings, Mich

Washable
Summer (

•v*1m al altonding the drew reson, Bishop Kuhn.
Mr. and Mrs. Hairy Johnson of

tlonal new talent
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Einar Frandaen in Ionia.
th Ink Hastings
Mrs. Mabie Clark and Mrs. Aben
Johnson apent Bunday In Ann Ar­ Mn. John Wood spent Bunday al
Harrietta, near Cadillac, with Mrs.
bor with their daughters
Waters’ and Mrs. Wood's parents, which tome M the principal parts
Battle Creek visited Mrs. Ickes' Mr. and Mrs. Abel KeUogg.
Mr. and MM. Harold Wright of
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rock­
BANNER CLASS.
Lansing spent Mother's Day with
hill. on Sunday.
Mrs. J. M Townsend delightfully
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Karmes had the former's mother Id Nashville
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tabberer of and Mn. Bam Culbert, an Saturday.
entertained lhe Banner Sunday
Mr*. Grace Black and sons Ber­
Freeport called on Mn. Clarence
School
class
on Tuesday evening,
LOU13 Karmes In Hastings.
nard and Edward of Vermontville
Grohe .on Bunday eveningtwenty-four being present
The
of Indianapolis.
Charley and Jack Bowman of visited Vr* J. F. Black and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs Orlte C. Wilson and Dr. Winifred McLravy of room* were attractively decorated
Bay City were Bunday guests ot i Wayne Merrick on Monday evening.
(Edith Kenfield) of Loa Angeles are Grand Rapids were called here on with bouquets of violets, white li­
Mrs. Sarah Branctotetter enter­
visiting friends and relative* in and Sunday by ths serious llinyss of lacs and tulips.
Mr. and Mrs Karl Johnson and tained Mrs. Mason Norwood of and Mrs. R. G- Hubbard.
Officers elected for the coming
their father, John McLrary.
Mr. and Mn. Charles A. Morey of around Hastings.
family of Battle creek were Sun­ Kalamazoo. Mrs. Chester Banghart
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ritchie and
Mrs. Cora Parker returned Sat­
of Delton and other relatives on Coopersville visited Mr and Mrs
day guests of Mrs. Agnes Fisher.
W
DBarnes
of
Green
street
on
urday from a trip aouth. and a two Mr*. Hassl Hinkley and son were send; vice-president. Miss Grace
Mr. and Mrs? James Heney spent Sunday.
Pierson;
secretary and treasurer.
weeks' visit with her son Frederick guests at Nelson Willison's, Hickory
Mr. and Mn. Gary Crook and Sunday.
Mother's Day with her parents, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs Raymond Gilbert of at Bloomington. III.
Corners Sunday. Mr. Ritchie la reel­ Mrs- Agnes Fisher, assistant. Mias
and Mrs. Pearl Staup, of Nashville. Miss Barbara Crook spent the
Mrs. Lena Burroughs has re­ ing in much belter health now than Ethel Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. clarence DePlanta week end with relatives In Benton Muskegon were Bunday guests of
After the business meeting songs
of Grand Rapids were Bunday Harbor and attended the Blossom her parents. Mr. and Mrs. George turned from California where she for some lime.
M A. Lambie and F. W. Stebbins were enjoyed.
B Heath
spent the winter in Loa Angeles
guests of Mr. and Mrs. C 8. Potts Festival.
Mrs. Fisher will entertain in
Mr and Mrs Otto Schulze and with her son and wife.
attended the sessions of the South­
Mrs. George Miller of Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmer were
June al tbe Holly home in Wood­
ton
Lewis
of
Nashville
were
Sunday
west
Michigan
Bankers
Association
Mrs.
Shirley
W.
Smith
of
Ann
Ar
­
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ohio, who has been visiting her sisguests of Mr and Mrs Alonzo Trim bor and Mrs. R. R. McPeek of Char­ at Benton Harbor Friday. Mrs. land.
Charles Gladstone of Grand Rap­
lotte were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lambie and Mrs. Stebbins accom­
mer Polfus. returned to her home ' and Henry Trim.
ids.
COSTUME PARTY AND
K
j Mrs Lee Gebhardt and Mrs. Dan
panied them, and aUa«Uondod the
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Densmore on Tuesday.
A HOUSEWARMING.
and and
dance In the evening.
Mr and Mrs Leon DeLano and Ashaiter were in Shelbyville on
Miss Beatrice banquet
Carrothers
were In south Bend the first of the
Twenty friend* Surprised Mrs
..
....
— .
Mrs
Jay
Blakney
relumed Glenn Bera with a costume party
week on business, returning Tues­ ■on of Grand Rapids and Miss Bel­ Tuesday attending the AUegan Co. Mrs Clara Mannasau of Detroit
were week end visitors of Dr. and Thursday from a visit with her son, in her new home at 522 E. Mill St
va Riley of Midland were guert* O- E 8 Association.
day.
Lynn Perry of East Lansing and Mrs. Frank Carrothers.
Hubert, and family, of Detroit. Hu­ on Friday evening. May 8. A mock
Oils Vreeland and Mrs. Zada of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Riley over
Mias Lie vs Perry of Lansing spent i Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Anderson ot bert has a position now with the wedding, games and dancing fur­
Qulggle of Green lake were guests
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence N. Spring- the week end with their parents. Grand Rapids and David French of same company—lhe Personal Fi­ nished entertainment during the
Dr. and Mrs. B A. Perry.
!Los Angeles were Sunday guests of nance Company—with headquarters evening and Mrs. Bcr* wm present­
at Ann Arbor, which suits him much ed with a lovely lace tablecloth by
MUs Maxine Wunderlich of Mus­ Mlu Blanche Springer of Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moore and better than Detroit. He will move the ladles. Light refreshments were
kegon spent the week end with her Rapids spent Sunday with their hardt and Mrs. Llbble Ashaiter were
in Caledonia on Wednesday evening children were visitors Sunday al to the University city soon.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Wun­ mother. Mrs. Addle Springer
at a meeting of lhe Kent Co. O. E ' hto mother's home. Bluffton, Ind..
Mrs. Jack Stora and daughter
derlich.
Judith returned from Detroit Sun­
and also at Dunkirk, Ind
The stable dollar to one effectively
Mrs Nettle Hyde and Paul Hyde Marshall on Wednesday at last 8 Association
Students home from W S T C-.
Mrs. Isabel Pancoast Is home day where she has been staying harneaeed.
visited Mrs Belle Brophy of Kal­
while
the Furniture mart was on in
(amazoo on Monday. The women arc father. She returned on Bunday Kalamazoo, over the week end were from Saginaw where she has been
Miss Emma Chandler. MUs Irene I staying with Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Grand Rapids. Mr stem driving
(Cousins
leaving him much Improved.
Jones. MUs Aileen Isenhath, Mias ! Hayden during the winter.
down for her Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Merrick of
jEast State Road were Sunday din­ syria were guests of her sister, Mrs Jean DeVries. MUs Barbara WUcox . Mr. and Mrs Willard Ickes were
Mrs. Earl Wareham and daughter
guests of Mr. and Mrs
Charles Sandra relumed to Detroit Friday,
;ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Clarence Grohe, on Wednesday. and William Fox
;
Mrs. Lyman Johnson returned on jekes of Battle Creek over the week Jan remaining tor a longer stay
On Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Casper
Merrick.
Monday
from
Mesick
where
she
was
end.
on
Mother's
Day
they
visited
with
her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn McLravy of Lansing was Thomas of. Kalamazoo visited Mrs
50 CHOICE VARIETIES
called by lhe illness of her husband.' their daughter. Mrs Wayne Wheel- Kellar Stem,
called here Monthly by the illness of Grohe.
।hto father. John MaLravy- Qlep is . Mr and Mrs, Orlle Bishop and who had Influenza and pneumonia.' cr. the form*! Marian Ickes, also of
The children of Mrs. Eugene Bush
JASON E. McELWAIN
.working for a firm of contractors daughters of Holland Mr and Mrs. He Is recovering nicely arttf is able I Battle Creek
came to visit her on Mother’s Day,
'
Dr and Mrs Harris Woodbume and the dav wa* a verv hannv one
। Ann Arbor, going home over the Louis Bishop and son of Detroit to be around again.
In
.
-...... , Zerbel and chllOn Sunday MUs Betty Donley , and daughter of Detroit spent Bun- despite the 111 health of Mrs Bush.
and Mrs —
Sterling
Will Shultors and Mrs. Don dren of Kalamazoo were guests of visited her mother, Mrs Faye Don- fiay with his mother. Mn. A. W. Those present were Mrs Matic Ttl;
Sledge
with Gordon and Shirley Mr and Mrs Herbert Bishop on ley. who is sick at the home ot her Woodburnc. who to here for a few klns from Carnpau toko, Mr. and
,Jean Clement drove Bunday to Bt. Saturday and Sunday
| sister In Flint. Hastings friends are Weeks from Tampa. Fla.
Mrs. Fred Bush and family from
SPECIAL
Frank Battle Creek. Mr. and Mrs Roy
,
Mrs. Frank Williams returned to glad to know that Mrs. Donley’s ,Mra Jay Snyder, Mrs
Johns.
Belding and Ionia. Mrs. Gor­
(
Herney and the Misses Doris and Bush of Hastings. Mrs. Nina Allerdon
clement of Belding to again her home in Berlin, Wu . on Mon- condition to Improving
NOONDAY LUNCHES
Mrs
Roy Perry and Dorothy Everson were in Detroit ding of Carlton and Mr. and Mrs.
■* •*
“
"
under the doctor's care, her mother, day after a visit with her daughter 1 Mr and
;Mrs Wm. Shutters, being with her. and husband. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer daughter. Thyta Jean. Mrs. Addle three dgys last week attending a Elmer Bush and family of South
' Mrs. Effie Vrooman and Mrs. Polfus, and made the acquaintance Perry and Mr and Mrs. Samuel jhlulonary convention. They re pre- Hastings, a telegram was received
Rove) Oak.
Dak
Emory Wood of Frankfort. Ferris of the Utile son born on Friday Ashby were Mother's Day guests at Snted the local missionary socle- from Theodore Bush of Royal
j
es of the First United Brethraq
Mrs. Roy Cordes spent ths week
and
Varnum Phillips of Grand morning, May 8 at Pennock hos­ the Eat) Robinson home in Middle­
jRapids find Mi»- Alice Vande Qels- pital. He has been named Robert ville in honor of Mrs. Kate Robin-, lurch. Mrs. Jay Snyder was etoct* end In Arirt-Artxir visiting her moth­
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
ed State Secretary of Stewardship er. Mrs. Fhylito Reynolds.
sen and Mr and Mrs. Harvey High Elmer polfus
. .son. who Is In falling health.
, Battle Creek were here to attend
Associate
Grand
Conductre.v, st this convention.
of
Mr. and Mrs W H Wiltoey had
Judging bv the sound, the cam- ‘
Visitors over tlie week end at the
the funeral of Fred Phillips on as guests Sunday, all of their six Florence Ryckman of Detroit was
HOME COOKED FOOD
•
home of Mr. and Mn. J. D. Zagel- palgn to definitely under wsy. and
sons and their wives from Ligonier
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. E. V- Wixom of and Elkhart. Ind. Mr and MTs- Thursday and Friday On Thursday mcier were Lieutenant and Mrs the next move to to push the *ec.
evening
Ryckman--conducted
-- Mrs.
--------------------------------- a Jbhn 8. Horner, son of Mr. and Mrs. ond valve down.
South
Bend. ind.. lhe former a son WUlsey who have been in Hastings ---------Samuel
Homer
of
Houghton;
Mr
for
several
months
assisting
In
the
school
of
instruction
at
Bedford,
of Mrs. Geo. R. Green, spent Sun­
।day at the Parker hotel. Other care of the latter's aunt, the late ! Mr. —
and
•* Mrs D. C- Vandercook of yuaMrs. Bert Zagelmeter and Jean
guests were her brother. Arthur B Mn. Mary Williams, will return Scranton. Pa. were guests of Mr of Grand Rapids, also Wm. Homer,
,
Stone.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth home to Ligonier Sunday, Their son and Mrs. M L Cook on Tuesday a cousin of Lieut. Horner, who to
,
Shreve
and Mtos Florence Smith of and wife, Mr. and Mrs Leon Will- They went from here to Hopkins to assistant engineer al the hydro­
sey. will continue to stay in Has­ call on Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Nash, electric dam at Allegan. Lieut. HornMichigan city. IndJohn and Hollis Isenhath. Alton tings. he having secured employ­ then on to Benton Harbor, Colum-, cr is stationed on the "U. 8. B
Reid." 1,500 ton destroyer, now at
McGhan and Kenneth Rose re­ ment in lhe Pierce shoe repair blu and Cincinnati. O
Kearney. N. J. Lieut and Mrs. Hom­
turned Tuesday morning from Chi­ shop.
,cago where they spent Sunday and
Gerald England spent Sunday East Lansing Tuesday night to at­ er have been on a thirty day fur­
■
Monday
as guests of the BstUe In Woodland with hto mother. Mrs. tend a special meeting ot Red Cedar lough which they spent with hi*
;
parents In lhe copper country and
Creek
Moon-Journal. They were Grace England, and later in the day
kept busy seeing the sigh to of tbe drove to Grand Rapids In company tematlonal Night." Messages from
city and also saw the Cubs play with Mtos Leone Leonard and visit­ O. E 8. Chapters In various parts was transferred from San Diego.
ot the world were read.
ball, which gave them quite a thrill. ed hto uncle. Jean England.
.
I
|

MARKET SPECIALS

Dino Out Tonight!

EXCEPTIONAL NEW
TALENT DISCOVERED
Laasiag over Bunday
Gaona Bauer vm ho
East Lansing on Bunday.
Robert Nrrar and Gerald Ryan
spent Bunday In Grand Rapids.
Stophen Bristol wa* home tram

BE SMART

Summer trousers of wssbaHe ma­
ter i*h; new Gabardine weave*.
Bedford cord
window i
lrou*en I

terua and colors,

Skipper Sport Wear by Wilson
Bro*.—lhe .msn tport wear ol
the *ea*r&gt;n—new Polo ihirt* in
•wim rib; new *ilk *hirt* in blue
and brown check*; .bort and
long *leevc*; Oew neck and col-

support* with or without *top«.

65f.’r50
We ore thnwing a very nice asxortment
Nunn Bu»h and
Edgrnown While Shoes if tomletn your •umtner wardrobe—

T. S. BAIRD
Phone 2396

Hastings

BANNER WANT ADV8. FAY

RANGES

Cook with
Electricity

SAVE REPAIR BILLS

Reasons
5 WHY:

ET A BETTER CAR NOW

I. CLEANER
2. COOLER

You

3. FASTER

WONT need cub ftow. Bring in your old
and use it as the down-payment on a better one. Wa
are showing the make and model you want, with good
tires—a good battery—godd finish, and a smooth­

4.BETTER
RESULTS

running engine.
We’ll give you a written 2-day, money back guarantee
on the car you choose, and arrange the
balance to suit you. Let's get acquainted.

LOOK THEM OVER
1935 FORD V-8 FOR
DOR SIDAN—Only 9000
milas
-1934 FORD V-8 FOR­
DOR SEDAN—-Fins con

1935 FORD V-8 STD.
COACH—Only 9000
mile*

-1933 FORD V-8 FOR
DOR SEDAN

-1932 FORD V-8 DEL.
FORDOR

-1934 FORD V-8 TU
DOR

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO.
RHONE 2121 (

FORD DIALERS

HASTINGS

5. CHEAPER
• BEST OF ALL, YOU SAVE
MONEY. NEW LOW RATES,
ELIMINATION OF COOK­
ING FAILURES AND SAV­
ING ON CLEANING AND
DECORATING BRING DIS­
TINCT ECONOMIES!

Hocpotats hi-sp««d. Long-life, sealad
siactric cooklag coU, cooka with

USED ICE BOXES #1.50 Up!

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON
WESTERN UNION BLDG.

HASTINGS. MICH.

�TMUMBAY, MAY 14. 1IM

THt HA5TTNQ8
FOR 8ALB—Teerlla* rail.

INSURANCE

SAVE
MONEY

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE
WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON K. McELWAIN

6. L. New- MMMMBBHSMBMBSHBI

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

• 23 » . (Ireen. 1’1
FOR BALK—Furnlahl

Our Service

a«a. food color.
Glean A. Miller, n

WATKINS

EM:

1030 CHEVROLET 4 door tor tala.
•50 eaab and will taka sow. pi&lt;a at

y. 1 gallon11.15
Fly Spray, 5 gallons ....$5.23

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co

. Nickola. 202 8. Brood-

6r.( aooM ea.t of bridge
6 14
FUR BALE—« tube Xealik fam radio

Mineralised Hog Tonic..$6.50

lu,. K! K

M AUS
household

line

food

of

•4 mile aoulli
Clara Aibbr.

STI

GEO. M. NEWTON
KERMIT R. DAY

SHELDON'S

Credit—Terms.

ABSTRACT

Thundai
Bible and?
THE. CHURCH OF GOD.

WATKINS DEALER
HASTINGS
430 W. STATE

REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST

ahavbara la thia paper.
Bandar acbool at 0:55. Moraine wor
•hip and aermon at IL Junior Endearm

Everybody welcom
to all. Como and

WUTUAXX.
Fred Phillipa was bom in Rut­
land township. September ‘B, 1674.
and departed this life on May 0.
193d. aged 01 years, 8 months, and
one day. On March 14. 1901, he was
united in marriage to MUs, Minnie
Barlow, and this marriage was bless­
ed with one daughter. Josephine.
The deceased spent his entire life Id
the vicinity of Hastings and was*
employed at the office of the Michi­
gan Mutual Windstorm co. for
twelve years prior td his death.
Kindness and generosity adorned
with a keen sense of humor was ths
keynote of his personality. Of Fred
Phillips, It could be truly said—he
was enthusiastic In praise of the
virtues of others, charitable toward
their fallings and Jn time ol adverslty a friend and benefactor. As a
husband and father, he was unsur­
passed. Besides his widow, Mr.
Phillips U survived by his daughter,
Josephine, and husband. Harold
Vande Giessen of Battle Creek; al­
so by many cousins, nieces, nephews
and a host of friends. The funeral
was held at the residence on E.
Center St. on Tuesday afternoon at
3:30 o’clock, the Rev. W. Maylan
Jones officiating. Burial was In
Riverside cemetery.
-

ASKED TO PERFORM
UNUSUAL TASKS

The Hastingi Banner

Last Week the Sheriff Wai
Asked to Officiate aa
Bat Killer

OOOK BBO8., Editor..

NIOHTY PIRBT YEAR
Our sheriff Is often called upon
to do things that are out ot the Rataead at lha paal oElta at Haitian!.
ordinary—things that are quite un­ Michigan, aa adeond eiaaa syatue.
expected ‘when one considers that
Mbaariptlaaa by Mall Postpaid:
he Is an officer of the lav.
n&lt;(’A^T1?&lt;’.d"aT.L
T,AK •* °flFor Instance, one day last week a
lady called him by phone and asked IM BARRY COUNTY. MX MONTHS. 40a.
(If paid la adtaaea.)
him to come to her home and kill
a rati She said that the rodent had
been tn her bathroom tor two or
three days, and she had not dared
to enter It. Mr. Blakney promptly
compiled and sent a man to this
lady's home and he disposed of the
rat.
z

m-f

^4

•It's the sign of a healthy mental
attitude to doubt anything which
hasn’t been proved," says a psychol­
ogist. Wte doubt UtU.

The fanners got $7,000,000,000 for
their crops last year, not counting
the crops they didn’t raise.

GRANGE PROGRAMS

FOR SALE
Quimby,

OFFICE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

CARDS of THANKS
A real Job for some courageous
and enterprising European corre­
spondent Is to find out what Victor
Emmanuel actually thinks about It
an.

ON COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
BOMDB
NOTARY PUBLICS

PARTITION SALE.

Cerren Work—Flattering

"AKROH" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS

2 pkgi. Com Flakes,
(large else.) 1 pkg.
Pe^, 1 pkg. Rice

Twenty years experience on all1
types of jobs—Painstaking work­
manship. W1U take Jobs on contract
or by lhe day.

FOR WORK OR PLAY

BAPTIST CUUWU.

34‘

RAY LANCASTER

No Port. To Woof C1othlnB

Phone 3070 ;

1130 S. Market

Shopping Bog Free!

EMERSON ROYER

3 cans Mackerel, 25c

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

FOB SALE—fade....
typewriter In (nod condition

Phone 3310

CARD OF THANK

Hostings

CEMENT GRAVEL to
Harold D. Jonea. Dalton.

Sponge Rubber Pads

QUICK SERVE BEANS, pre-cooked---------- Be pkg.
PINEAPPLES FOR CANNING6 for $1.00
SPICK AND SPAN CLEANER ------------- 19c pkg.

Wrecking for Ports

The Prescription Drug Store:
R. A. LT BARKER. Fropr.

1929 CHEVROLET Coupe.

HABTntOBMICHIGAN

1928 CHEVROLET

FREE METHODIST CHURCH.

10 lbs. SUGAR (1 lot to a customer) 49c

1829 CHEVROLET Panel.
IK

ton

-21c
_33c
_19c

LUX WASHING POWDIR, large sis^
10 bars P &amp; C SOAP, small size---------3 lb. box ARGO STARCH-----------------

mission.

Farmers, Attention!

.10c lb.

CHOCOLATE DROPS ..

GOATS GROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST.
ADJUSTABLE CENTER

BANCROFT Fine QualAc
Hy HAS. can I U
2 Lbs. LARD COM­
POUND
24Vi Ibe. PILLSBURY’S QQc
FLOUR□□
2 lb. far PEANUT
OEc
BUTTER CO
2 cons TOMATOES
No. 2’A else----------- CO

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Hastings

A9K FOB YOUB CASH PBLZE TICKETS

FOH HALE—Ire Mi.- 60 ooeaS olio. 84.
Thrco burner eroaena •toea that eeta
on table. 14.
Call after Sv.
C.
Hewltl. 42? E Center 81
6 14

IAXB DePHIESTEB.

WALLACE GROCERY

Baltimore Church.

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
_J! ! RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call
-ri.

JERRY ANfJRUS

1 on farmers tn N. Barry county. No
experience or capital needed. Write

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

HENRY GREGORY
810 E. Marshall SL — Phone 3348

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

Electrical Wiring
and Repairing

f”F.

Distributors of Guardian Memorials of Everlasting Beauty.

ALL WORK GUARANTEED
PRICES REASONABLE

at FELDPAUSCH’S

DON B. FISHER

MARKET • Phone 2616

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

FOOD CENTER 2609

REPRESENTING

PATTEN MONUMENT COMPANY

HASTINGS

NOTICE OF MOBTQAGB SALE.

FIB6T METHODIST ETIBCOPAI.
ennnten.

FOIC KALE

PHONE 3411
HOME
TION.

FOR HALE

OWNERS’

LOAN

H. Feldpausch • 3921
tones on E. Mill Bt..

Dead Stock Removed!

Farmers. Attention!
BETTER

PRICE than

nreWoui

VVMXrsTK{r~T

3F«3JEfaSTf. «

Oil Station.

re or anr part thereof;
NOW. THEREFORE br rlrtoe of tbs

NOTICE
To Wool Growers
hundred thousand
a sexson. It will
Also buying hides the

Archie Tobias
Hastings

Michigan

FORCED SALE

LAKE ODESSA
CANNING COMPANY

a. i or Mleblran In aueh case made and nro514 ridsd. .NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN.

Bart

Rnarka

Erns.t Battle.

NURSERY STOCK
Good Rooted. Healthy Plants.
Eldorado, Alfred. Early Harvest
Blackberriea. Camberland Black,
I Cuthbert Red Raspberries, 1c each.

FOR

Burr Cooler

hlch mar

BRICK
At Old Hastings Wool
Boot Plant Site.

In­

quire of joe DeRuiter
at Pickle Station.

n«rr. 4 mile, aouth, mile (tit ot
Naahrille.
5-14 said mortcace.
FOR HALE—Cheip borea Andrew Hmlth,
half mile eaet ot Shalu. Hutlnia. follow, I
Boule 5
5 14
WASTED—Hired man by tha month.
Mr« Bro,,. Phone 753—F5
5 |A
ALFALFA for tale or cut oo «haraa
Chaa. A. Seott * Bona. Phons 716—
F12
5-14
FOR HALE—Early and late ,eed notaloot. Alao 3 acra* muek rround to
work on aharei. Phona 74?—F3. 5-14
PIGS FOR BALE—K. L. Blahop, 3 toile,
wei&gt;t^haI£^iUe_eouth_2f_Mapla_G^ora
BELL OR TRADE for Leeborn hens ar
I'ulleta. (wo wheel trailer, two buiaiea.
rood condition: Vletrola, barrel ohuru.
II. Fundi. 3
mlka aoulh Yankee
Rpriao.
6-14
WANTED to buy two rood row*, blood
(rated Good eatlnr potatoee tor aala.

HASTINGS MARKETS
OBDU FOB PUBLICATION.

Full the MAYTAG DEALER Near You

ALL KINDS OF LIVESTOCK

F. J. GRAHAM.

5-14

RESPONSIBLE DETROfT CHEMICAL
FIRM REQUIRES REPRESENTATIVE 1
IN THIS TERRITORY TO DISTRIBUTE
COMPLETE LINE OF DRUGS AND
GENERAL STORE FIRST AID AND ME­
DICINAL PRODUCTS.
APPLICANT
MUM* BE RESPONSIBLE AND T)WN
AUTOMOBILE. DIRECT REPLIES TO
B. M. NEAL. CARE H. A. MONTOOM WILL LEASE eoiiaca at Guo lake, for
BRY CO- 17101 SWIFT AVE- DE­
the araaoa. 1135. Appty at Trail’a
TROIT. MICHIGAN.
6 14

. »&lt;wr^

WWW .

Genuine MAYTAG Parts and Oil

HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPO-

At WHITE GLOBE Confectionery Store

WANTED

WA N T E D !

SALE

Fordson tractor parts, young cattle,
McCormick 7-fL disc, used
tractor plows.
A. C. GATES, Farm Implements
107 N. Michigan Ave, Hastings
. 5-14

HOWARD DUDLEY
Delton, Route 2.

Near Hastings Is a small

’

NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

EAST JTATI ST.

S E

HASTINGS, MICH.

JORDAN MAYTAG CO.

WANT-ADS

WOODLAND, MICH.
'1‘awrun. RogUter of Probata.

PHONE »♦—F2

•

�!wsMtm»a
.JM(
Barry Bypaths
A, JAMS CAMUOH
•HWMMWMMMWM

ANTA MONICA. CALIF.

S

—There'* more new* con-

SNOW REMOVAL LAST
WINTER OOBT ABOUT
911,000 /

cernipg the mummified remain*

of that lively Egyptian . prin­
ce** thqy found the other day
—thaf daughter of aome early

Pharaoh, she who died nearly
6,000 yean ago and yst v*» still *0
beautifully preserved. Too bad that

MORE CASH NEEDED
FOR IMPROVEMENTS

Lei* OravaUnf Twp. Roads
tn 1938 ieoauM of Oort
of Snow Removal
A record Is kept by the county

driven electricity for the country.

"Write for particulars.” Dam it.
that's what we did do.

or martin house. No. no. Just leave
out all but tlie windmill. I guess a
man should write this. I'll quote

. "UkB a windmill, the Kelco Pow­
er Unit Is mounted an top of a
tower where Ila three-blade pro-

removal as well u other highway

Just a Utile while
other

potential

for the plntbraffl
effect; and only too
frequently, aid

redder. Teddy, withto half a mile,
I counted too redheads, and not a
white horn la eight, to prove the
aactent egyUg.

\XrnAT With cyclones and floods
V¥ down ,00^ tbe daUy prMi
somehow tailed to record among our
spring casuaitiee tbe untimely end
ot tbe Governor Talmadgo boom.
Poor little thing, it pasted away at
wm learning, la prattling accent*.

Still tbe shock did not catch some
of us unawares. We bad a feeling
it wasn't going to live The second
nimnMr is so frequently fatal to
those incupator babies.
For Instance, you take tbe Ham
Fish boom. Or If you didn’t take lb
homebody certainly did, because It

.Gridiron Club Dinner*.
EXCEPT tbe obituary column,
*-* rotting could be Udder than
the newspaper account of a gridiron
club dinner. Yet gridiron club din­
ner* alm to be satirically amusing
and frequently art.
mandoualy hard job, because they
deal with the national political
will tell you you can't

so much funnier than atty­
thing you.can think of—end that**
Whgt tbe fellows at Washington are
dp against.

ha la a pallbearer, aay. kt r
hat and maybe breaks up the
that's raollyjuany.
on Ity bead with

Seff-ChaMw Lanfoi Aids.
overnor lavdon must

G

awfully fractional, not to
many comparath

two, with an altruism rare In thia
Mlflsh age. some gellant volunteer
effects himself by acclamation as

wset*rn-byaou th western manateror
something. It makes no difference
that be may never hare heard of

either.
He's Ilka a previously neglfetad
orphan child who suddenly coma*
into prospects and finds everybody

a Ione Thanksgiving turkey at a ta­
bleful ef hungry boarders with this
one snatching the drumstick and
and Mr. W. K. Hearst digging/with
a grip of iroa. to the wishbone.

Felly of a Parole System.
'T'HE perpetrators of tbe kidnap­
lag ease ef a few months ago up

Ship roads so far taken .over, was
111,813; for the county roads it was
about *7,000. Figures for the state
expense for snow removal on tbe
one hundred ml*s or so of trunk
line highways Ln tills county ara
not available, but the cost would
probably be well toward *10,000. The

The county will receive from the

lhe powerful electric generator to
which-il is directly shafted. Aa elec­
tricity U generated, the current
the

batteries

where

It

remains.

flowing as needed " See,
nlng fruit for winter.

plant are of the locomotive typo—
tbe kind which are used by the
for hauling mine cars, by railroads
for auxiliary motive power." Wonder

WINDSTORM CO. AGENTS
GATHER IN W,256,660

That Amount of New In«urance Wm Booked for the
Month of April
oouxoit
sootht.
The agents of the Michigan Mu­
ULAT10M FOB A N1W
tual Windstorm insurance company
of this city certainly had their InTRUCK

THE LA FRANCE TRUCK
NOW IN GOOD SHAPE

Last week Thursday and Friday
thirteen boys from the Agriculture!
department with Uudr teacher Mr.
Knopf attended Junior Farmers'
Week at Lansing. They entered the
livestock. grain and potato Judging
contests, the results ot which will

insurance
bcr of participants. The two days
tated they reached the splendid sum were filled with many pleasant
events, including a college baseball

May LmI 1| Tean—Council
Plan* to Have Oath When
New One la Needed

Angell. George Campbel) will pre­
sent an assembly next Monday
morning. .

a baked sale, which was preceded
on Monday by a ctever selling talk
by Bob Henney at a&amp;iembly. He tried
to organise a little pre-sale selling
of the cakes, and advised these who
might desire something In the way
of angel food to make arrangements
with Horace Angell. If a devil's food
wax desired, he suggested that one
be reserved from the Individual who
best fitted that description.

gart, Clinton Brill, Maurice Cogs­
assessable capital of the company. well, Dorr Darby, Ken Dunn. Dwight
This wonderful record for new In- Ferris, Wayne Ferris. Dennis Fred­
rickson, Forrest Cole, ffdwin Maurer.
Next Friday. May 22. Richard
tings Is in such an excellent
Robt, Newton, Leo See ber and Er­ Polley one of U»e councillors al Die
clal condition Is the thO*
probably in, June nest Van Syckte.
Wear lake camp and an assistant
planning of the etty council___ .
at the University museum will give
liave anticipated demands that
The last home room periods of a talk on snakes.
would be made upon tbe city, have
the year were held last Monday, The
In force lacked about 113,000,000
that, at the
time, th* city
dollar. would naturally be some cancella­ privileged to hear a talk by Mr.
tions during this year, due to fail­ Nacheael of the Michigan College
plant and pdt In several miles of ure of some patrons to pay their of Mines and Technology. He spoke
on mining u a profession and ou*.
srds of *50.000, and did It without
lined lhe
opportunities
which
bond issue. It haa built several evident now that the total will be Michigan Tech offers in that field.
well past the *400,000.000 marie at He pointed out as,an example, the AMOUNT IB ABOUT THE
miles of tarmac paving without bor­ the time of the next annual meet­ splendid success of Dwight Bessmer.
SAME AS ASKED A
rowing. When the change at the ing. The enviable reputation of this a foal boy. while at the school and

THECITY8UDGET
CULLS FOB ffilSO

ship roads. Including snow removal,
about.*M,00B. Deducting Jhe *11,000 paid for snow removal will leave
only *44,000. which ' the county
road commission will have available
tor construction wort on something

•team power to oisctric puinping.
"The controls for handling the
flow of electricity between the gen­ the dty had the money to pay the
erator and the batteries and the uses bill for. the electric numpe and ths
of the electricity are all located In stand-by engine and pump without
had
the control box and operate auto­
matically."
•
ship roads. This Includes grading
Now far the pretty illustrations of
and crowning them and ftpplying the farm uses of electricity. A flock
a thin coating of gravel, but does
not provide for any cute or fills, lighted a* night, so they will stay which has given seventeen years of
which cannot be afforded.
up aU night laying eggs. I think
that's mean.
'
removal will reduce the amount
Noir a pair of the snootiest looking brakes, pneumatic tires, new wheels.
available this year for gravelling cows I ever saw. And why shouldn't
township highways. Not so much
they be? They have individual
slbly a dozen or more; tor it is well
enamel drinking bowls, each with
faucet end operated automatically. built and has been well cared for.
Realising that the' city must some
Here's a mamma pig serving lunch day have a new fire truck, the coun­
with the readfny tamp turned on cil at Its meeting Friday evening
ship highways last winter.
full
force.
"Sows
don't
trample
their
anticipated that time by laying
Barry county has over 860 miles
of township highways that are not Utters now that they can see what aside *400, which is the nucleus for
included In trunk Ilium or the they are doing." says the booklet. a sinking fund for a new fire track.
county roads system. To attempt to Maybe if she had a pair of glasses, It is planned to add substantially
that amount each year, so that
grade and gravel 300 miles of town- that would help. too.
And a modern tiled bathroom to
from NO miles of such highways replace the honorable wash tub and chased, the city will have the money
horse
tank
run
by
this
electric
wind
­
to
pay for it *
would require at least *75.000 more.
’
With lhe amount which the McNItt mill
law provides that job |s impossible.
Something each poultry grower FOUNDATION WILL NOT
would appreciate is the thermostamore money for township roads; UcaRy-oontrolted incubator. Now
ADD NEW COUNTIES
If you can gel It to tum tbe eggs
and feed the chicks when hatched. It* Executive* Decide Seven
I will be glad when lipstick goes

According
cuiallng. the teachers are planning

High School News

Counties Enough for
It! Health Wark

YEAS AGO
At a one o'clock assembly Mon­
JULY TAX RATE TO 8E
day the two banners won by Achsah
COUNCIL VOTES TO
Buck and Donald Weaver Friday
-ABOUT AS YEAR AGO
CREATE A NEW FUND evening In the district speech con­
tent were presented to lhe high
Contingent
and Lighting
Will Separate the m and school by Mr. Berter. At the same
lime Mr. Bennett presented the rib­
Fundo Call for Over
Weight Tax Money From
bon awards to those who had won
Half of Budget
them tn the track meet at lhe Ionia
Other Oily Fund*
The dty council on Friday eve­
Field day Saturday, and the win­
nie state law requires that port ners of the tennis matches were an­ ning adopted Ils budget fa lhe en­
of the weight and gas tax mor.uy, nounced.
suing fiscal year, which win begin
returned by the state to a county,
July 1, nnt It calls fa 333.1M.
be divided with its incorporated
It seems that when one is a sen­ which Is substantially the tame
cities and villages, requires also that
amount as last year. This will mean
the city or village council keep this ior. certain privileges such as being that the tax rate for carrying on
absent
from
the
session
room
dur
­
money apart from other dty a vil­
the dty government will be prac­
lage monies and render a statement ing study hours without giving an tically Uie same as a year ago.
each year of tbe disbursements made excuse are permitted. These privi­
Tlie Items fa next year's budget
leges began Monday and will con­
from that fund by the council.
are as follows:
On Friday evening this matter tinue until the end of the year un­
Contingent fund.
•HAM
waa taken up by the city council. less seniors give good cause lor their
Police fund ...*..
. 4.000
They voted that whatever money withdrawal.
Fire fund ..............
shall be received from the treasurer
Sewer fund ..........
.. 3.000
On Friday Dr. Paul Voelker of
of Barry county as tbe city's part
Street fund ........
. 1AM
of the weight and gas tax money Grand Rapids gave a very interest­
Lighting fund ...
. *A00
shall be kept in a fund designated ing and Instructive talk in the gen­
Park fund ..........
as tlie "gas and weight tax fund." eral assembly. H- stressed the Im­
Library fund ....
TSO
and that yearly reports be made to portance of careful guidance tn the
selection of the proper profession In
the state as required by law.
Total
.133.180
life. Following the general assembly
Mr. Hearst may move to New Yak Dr. Voelker met with the seniors for
to avoid the high California taxes, a short session Ln the gymnasium vice that la capabla-of Imposing
but ye doubt that he will save any and told them about lhe new col­ pressure of 1,000,000 pounds pi
f- If he goes oul nights much, lege that to to be opened In Grand square inch, we should soon know
cost him ths difference to Rapids in conjunction with the Dav- how much the little taxpayer wffl
enport-McLochlan institute.
stand.

MV. JOHM HOU
or ooromoNB at
HIS STATIOH
NATIVES CERTAINLY
LOVE THEIR COWS

Gold Field LpoftUd Abort
50 Miles From Where
the Horn* Reside
Doubtless many of our readers
will reciU that something over a
rear ago Rev. John HimInd fam­
ily. who lived near shulta. left for
Bast Africa, where he W engaged ta
missionary work. Rfe are pesmUted
to print a Utter written by him to

Shults, giving something of fa. ac­
count of the country, the natives
and the constant danger from wild
animals such as elephants, lions,
hippopotamus, and many other*.
It Isn't often that we have an op­
portunity to get first hand informa­
tion concerning thia far-off land.

reads aa follows:
Mbeya. Tanganyika Laraltory,
Bast Africa.

On account of

treat when treated. There would bo what increase may be made, and
much lees, liquor drank . If drank how much of such increase the
Foundation shall sponsor. Evidently
■foe, is Jane’s idea.
that la the conclusion
LEITUH FROM
the executives of the
to monopolize aU of Miss Hunt's
time, jane taka* a hand tn the pro­
ceedings. she and Tom Brown plot
former Barry county resident, who
retains his interest In happenings

is brought

Riley Sioriet

to a

things of general Interest which wa
ludicrous publish herewith. He writes aa fol"Yankee" Lewis, king
Springs
and Miss Hunt at the altar.

of

in their home* (or huts) on which
they set their cook pote, and then
they build a fire underneath, These

raising things that ths white peo­
ple have brought in—tomatoes,
white potatoes, end peaches Moth-

The naUra have caught lhe vision
of raising garden sluff and taking it
boU It. making
eom routed in the husk. They start
their Are with two sticks.
you'd

a fir*,
The

(Continued on page four)

thing I did for him wga to help

live*, yet they moan ta much to Hi* individual calling.
At Hm Halting* City Bank Hii* invitation has for fifty

aon calling at Hile bank receive* from Hia gartonnal Hie cour
ranter I* treated with respect, and avow Hie proverbial fountain

physician who was trapped with
Incota's murderers, and who spent which he rented tor three year*. A
new frame house was built there
that summer and I helped haul the
had never committed.
Grim, fever-ridden Fort Jefferaon, lumber from the Bentley and Wll-

the massive American fortress on a
Caribbean island, is the seem of
this powerful drama. The story of
"The Prisoner of Shark Island" was
adapted from the true historical ac­
count by Nunnally Johnson. Glaia flluart, Arthur Byron, o. P. Reg­
gie and Clause GUlingwatcr are
aeon in the principal supporting

COME IN

Yankee

You fed them early

With Warner Baxter starred in
the leading role, the picture tells

flllar find. Hill

PLEAD GUILTY

over with your Banket.
TO TARMAC TWO BLOCK!.

Friday on a charge of driving ateay
with the automobile of Night Police­
man fihultx. and ' '
property
led tUlr
tody of the sheriff, without ban.
until the Judge can determine what

Friday night to di
r legal notice to lhe
Your sincere friend.

tn

3*5. and have to pay the same to

Coming Attractions at
The Strand Theater

George

exchange

G

Barry county was indeed fortu­
nate to be selected by the W. K.
Kellogg Foundation as the first one
for Its community health project,
specializing in health education
of McCall's.
through the schools.
The work has Increased steadily,
Newest advertising slogan—Oos- after Its success In Barry county
metlc Skin. They should-have one had conclusively demonstrated its
Charite ChapUn in
like this—Cosmetic coat Collar, de- value. The counties of Eaton and
Allegan were next added. Next In
line came Van Buren ahd Hillsdale.
•Modern Times" is without dia­
logue, but boosts novel sound'effects. tell them. They should have- thought
It up themselves.
Branch and Calhoun, making seven
The comedy, which introduces the
counties In al).
familiar little, figure in the big
shoes and baggy trousers into the
The officials of St. Joseph county
relatively complex environment ot a taasoo, Clarence .Buddington Hol­ were among the most recent to ap­
big industrial dty, casts diorite land in Portland and our James ply for a Foundation unit in that
.Oliver
Curwood
lived
most
of
his
talent
county, other counties had also ap­
life in Owosso.
plied. To these including fit. Joseph,
Foundation executives have stated
ment in such widely diverged ex­
that it lias been decided that seven
pedites as shipyard worker, night
counties Is enough, and that no
watchman and singing waiter.
th* health
Tbe girl, a gamin of the water­
projwt.
farmers plowing on
front to whom Obarlte play* knight
The seven counties have a popu­
errant. Is played by Chaplin's love­
lation of approximately 380,000 per­
ly new leading lady, Paulette Godyet after loafing all winter, and wo sons. The expansion of the Founda­
tion's work has been gradual, large­
ly resulting from the spread of in­
Dew adjectives and other words.
terest from a a-------------------------- * *“
Bergman and Hank Mann.
It will take
Nine-tenths of tbe small liquor neighboring cou
nitrate what
violations would be checked If there many yean to
such
wak as thi. _ ___
Teaming with Jane is Jackie
few gel together the first one treats Ing will accomplish ta ths way of
“G Ingerr this picture brings tbe all around. That's nobody's busl- improved health conditions In the
communities it serves,
working
■nd tongues fossa and by the through the schools with ths atime the thUd treat is down, man- gahlitilfo whleu Uw FVundatlon
m«lntatn» ta each
countiev. when tlie
perpetually engaged in a feud, with
Jane gaUtog slightly the better qf tbe more children go without new

When

the

r
TELEPHONE 2103

City Bank
HASTINGS • MICHIGAN

�THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1936

|

what

[.

■THIS WK
DNTWP.ROADS

SNOW REMOVAL LAST
•tylee In
Tints.
WINTER OOBT ABOUT
ANTA MONICA. CALIF.
911,000 /
—There’s more news con­
cerning the mummified remaing
of that lively Egyptian.prin­ MORE CASH NEEDED
cess they found the othjer Jay
FOR IMPROVEMENTS
—thaf daughter of some early
Pharaoh, she who died nearly Leaa Graveling Twp. Eoada
5,000 years ago and yet fas still M
in 1936 Because of Ooit
beautifully preserved. Too bad that
of Snow Removal

Barry Bypaths
'By JANS CAMMON
WeH we got the dope on winddriven electricity for Um country.

for tbe platinum
effect; and only too
frequently, alii
the effect was thst
of a new tin roof

lab ones uw. going red, reddish or
redder. Toddy, within half a mile,
I counted ten redheads, and not a
white hone in eight, to prove the
ancient saying.

ship roads. Including snow removal,
about.IMfiOO. Deducting &gt;be *11.000 paid for snow removal wiU leave
only 114.000, which 'the county
road commission will have available
for construction work on something
over 300 miles of unimproved town­
ship roads. This includes grading
and crowning them end applying
a thin coating of gravel, but docs
not provide for any cuts or fills.

Ti» spending of (11.000 for snow
removal will reduce the amount
available this year for gravelling
township highways. Not so much
out
gravelling can be done this year on

fta home in Atlanta. Ga, Just U ft
was learning, in prattling aecentt.

ship highways last winter.
Bury county has over MO miles
of township highways that are not
included In trunk lines or the
county roads system. To attempt to
grade and gravel 200 miles of town­
ship roads and to remove the snow
from M0 miles of such highways
would require al least $75,000 more.
With the amount which lhe McNItt
law provides that job Is impossible.
It will be up io the state to provide
more money tor township roads;

8:111 the shock did not catch some
of us unswarea We had a feeling
it wasn’t going to live. The second
qummer is so frequently fatal to
those Inc ups tor babies.
For instance, you take the Ham
Fish boom. Or If you didn't take It,
■omebody certainly did, because It

tor montbi and moutha

mandously hard job, because they
deal with the national political
■cene. and any producer of ftrees
W1H tell you you can't burlesque a
burlesque. In other words, ydji can't
be vsry funny on a subject which al­
ready is to much funnier than any­
thing
that's
tiling you.
you can think
........ of—«nd .......
what the fellows at Washington are
Up against.

This business of trying to be cotnpeclally since all comedy la predlUM &lt;• distress. A Cat man f«UIng down makes us laugh because

But If he Is a pallbsarer, say, kt a
funeral and falls down on bls own
felgb hat and maybs breaks np the

Coming Attractions at
The Strand Theater

Charlie Chaplin in
Like its predecessor, "City Nights,"
“Modern Times" Is without dia­
logue, but boasts novel sound effects.
The comedy, which introduces the
familiar little figure in the big
shoes and baggy trousers into the
relatively comptex environment of a
big industrial city, casts Charite
as a factory worker with a talent
for getting out of jot* and into jail,
and who subsequently finds employ­
ment in such widely diverged ca­
pacities as shipyard worker, night
watchman and singing waiter.
Tbe girl, a gamin of the water­
front to whom Charlie plays knight
errant, is played by Chaplin's love­
ly new leading lady. Paulette God-

something that's really funny.

A deflnition of comedy could be:
Trapd, standing on Ite bead with

genuine screen find, others In the
cast are Chester 'Conklin. Henry
Bergman and Hank Mann.
» »

Teaming with Jane is Jackie
telfXhaasn Landon Aids.
Searl. her mad-cap partner of
"Ginger." this picture brings the
_ aUfully frsctlonaL not to say quaint charm and drojsty happiness
badly scattered, wbst with being of a midwest town of tlie early
levied on by so many comparative IMO's. Jane and Jackie are cousins.
overnor lavdon must feel

G

two, wlfh an altruism rare In this
British age, some gallant volunteer
effects himself by acclamation aa
the governor's eastern manager or
his western minager, or bls nortti-

perpetually engaged In a feud, with
Jane getting slightly the better of
It. Her only other diversion 13 Inter­
fering in the erratic romances of her
pretty aunt, Marsha Hunt.
When
George
Meeker,
a
•■zmooUxls" from the big city, begins
something. It makes no
to monopolize all of Miss Hunt's
time, jane takes a hand in the pro­
these parties before; up to olx ceedings. She and Tom Brown plot
months ago, they'd never beard of a bunch of crazy stratagems that
him either.
sometimes succeed but mon often
He’s ilka a previously negldeted gets them all In trouble. The picture
orphan child who suddenly comes is brought to a happy conclusion
into prospects and finds everybody when Jane completely discredits
Meeker, and a wildly ludicrous
in town trying to adopt him. May­
chase winds up with Torn Brown
be a better simile would be that of and MUs Hunt at the altar.
a loot Thanksgiving turkey at a fa?
bleful of hungry boarders with this
With Warner Baxter starred in
one snatching tbe drumstick and
that one grabbing the'aecond joint— lhe leading rote, the picture tells

and Mr. W. B. Hearst cllpging/wlth
a grip of iron, -to the wishbone.
Felly of a Parol* System.

thalr records, had been paroled.
The flend who recently committed
the most hideous child mnrder that
California has known Id years was
a convkt out ou parole, Thedegen-

titwoman la New lark the other

physician who was trapped with
Uncoin’s murderers, and who spent
years In a living hell for a-crime he
had never committed.
Grim, fever-ridden Fort Jefferson,
the massive American fortress on a
Caribbean island, la the scene of

seen In tbe

principal

THE LA FRANCE TRUCK
NOW IN GOOD SHAPE

. The agents of the Michigan Mu­
tual Windstorm insurance company
of this city certainly had tl»elr in­
nings for the month of April. Their
batting average was fine.' When
the* figures for new insurance
booked during that mbnlh were to­
taled they reached tbe splendid sum

adeted to the nearly (400,000,000
which the company had in risks at
the beginning of the year. Is tbe
assessable capital of the company.
This wonderful record for new In­
surance
made last month: will un­
tings is In such an excellent finan­
doubtedly be surpassed by the show­
cial condition Is tlie thoughtful ing In May, and probably Ln June
planning of the city council. They
At the time of the annual meet­
nave anticipated demands that
would be made upon the dty, have ing of the company, the Insurance
In force lacked about 112,000,000
of
the (400.000.000 mark. There
that, at the present time, the city
of Hastings does not owe a dollar. would naturally be some cancella­
The city built Its sewage disposal tions during thia year, due to fail­
plant and put In several miles of i ure of some patron* to pay their
sanitary sewer pipe, at a coat of up- .
wards of (50.000, and did It without ownership of property. It seems
a bond Issue. It has built sever?.! evident now that the total will be
blocks of cement paving and aevfcj»l well post tbe (400.000.000 mark al
miles of tarmac paving without bor­ the time of the next annual meet­
rowing. When the change at the ing. The enviable reputation of this
company for square dealing and for
steam power to electric pumptag. payment of losses is bearing fruit
the dty had the money to pay the
bill for. the electric pumps and the
stand-by engine and pump without COUNCIL VOTES TO
a dollar being borrowed. They hod
CREATE A NEW FUND
anticipated these expenses and pro­
vided for them on the "pay-as-youWill Separate the Gas and
go" plan.
Weight Tax Money From
' Thq old La France fire truck,
which has given seventeen years of
Other Oity Funds
good service, was recently put ta
Tlie
state law requires that part
excellent condition, with hydraulic
of lhe weight and ga* tax mcr.uy
brakes, pneumatic tires, new wheels,
returned by the state to a county,
and otherwise improved, so that it
be divided with It* incorporated
probably will last for ten years, poscities and villages, requires also that
slbly a dozen or mors; for It is well
the city or village council keep this
built and has been wen cared for.
Realizing that tlie city must some money apart from other city or vil­
day have a new fire truck, the coun­ lage rnonle* and render a statement
each year of the disbursement* made
cil at Its meeting Friday evening
anticipated that time by laying from that fund by the councU.
On Friday evening this matter
aside (400, which is the nucleus for
a sinking fund for a new fire truck.
They voted that whatever money
Il is planned to add substantially
shall be received from the treasurer
that amount each year, so that
of Barry county as the city's part
of the weight and gas tax money
chased. the city will have the money
shall be kept In a fund designated
as tlie "gas and weight tax fund."
and trust yearly reports be made to
FOUNDATION WILL NOT
the slate as required by law

May Last
Yean—Council
Plana to Have Oath When
New One la Needed

ADD NEW COUNTIES
Its Executives Decide Seven
Counties Enough for
Its Health Work

High School Newt

According to reports that axe drculattog, the teacher* are planning
a picnic on the 30th of May.

Through the assistance of "Dad"
Last week Thursday and Friday Angell, George Campbell will pre­
sent an assembly next Monday
thirteen boys from the Agricultural
department with their leather Mr. morning. .
Knopf attended Junior Farmers'
On Tuesday the Hl-Y sponsored
Week at Lansing. They entered the
livestock, grain and potato judging a baked sale, which was preceded
contests, the results of which will on Monday by a clever selling talk
by Bob Henney al assembly. He tried
three weeks dike to the large num- to organise a little pr«-sale selling
ber of participants. The two days of the cakes, and advised those who
were filled with many pleasant might desire something in the way
events. Including a college baseball of angel food to make arrangements
game. Those attending from Has­ with Horace Angell. If a devil's food
tings were Mr. Knopf. Richard Bo­ was desired, he suggested that one
gart, Clinton Brill. Maurice Cogs­ be reserved from the individual who
well, Dorr Darby. Ken Dunn, Dwight best fitted that description.
Ferris. Wayne Ferris, Dennis FredNext Friday, May 32. Richard
Polley one of the councillors at the
ntsl Van Syckie.
Clear tekA camp and an assistant
at the University museum will *lve
The last home room periods of a lilk on snakes.
the year were held last Monday. The
girls met for discussion in lhe reg­
ular rooms, and the boys were
privileged to hear a talk by Mr.
Nacheiel of the Michigan College
of Mines and Technology. He spoke
on mining as a profession and out.
lined the
opportunities
which
Michigan Tech offers tn that field.
Re pointed out as.an example, the AMOUNT IS ABOUT THE
splendid success of Dwight Bessmer.
SAME AS ASKED A
a local boy. white at lhe school and
YEAR AGO
since.

Mr. Hearst may move to New York
to avoid the high California taxes,
but ye doubt that be will save any I
money. If he goes out nights much,
it will cost him the difference to |
check his hat.

THE m BUDGET
CALLS FOR S32.1SB

At a one o'clock assembly Mon-

JULY TAX RATE TO BE

Buck and Donald Weaver Friday
ABOUT AS YEAR AGO
evening In the district speech con­
tent were presented to the filgh Contingent
and
Lighting
school by Mr. Bedker. Al the same
Funds Call for Over
lime Mr. Bennett presented the rib­
bon awards to those who had won
Half of Budget
them tn the track meet at the Ionia
The
on Friday —
evemeiu
win-,
• — ■city
—/ council
---—
Field any
day yaiuraay.
Saturday, ana
and inc
lhe win
­
n.n or th. unnU ttutuhu wer. u&gt;•dopUd lu budpl tor them­
,
,nln— Aa^al
MMaa
Hahin
V, arlll
K.rJn
।
suing
fiscal
year,
which
will begin
nounced.
'July 1. next. It calls for $32,160.
' which is substantially lhe same
I amount as last year. This will mean

On Friday Dr Paul Voelker of
□rand Rapids gave a very Interest­
ing and Instructive talk In the gen­
eral assembly. He stressed lhe im­
portance of careful guidance In the
selection of the proper profession In
life. Following the general assembly
Dr. Voelker met with lhe seniors for
a short session in the gymnasium
and told them about the new col­
lage that is to be opened in Grand
Rapids In conjunction with the Dav­
enport-McLachlan Institute.

15976383
REV. JOHN HOBN TILLS
OF CONDITIONS AT
HIS STATION
NATIVES CERTAINLY
LOVE THEIR COWS

Gold Field Located About
60 Milei From Where
the Hbrna Reside
Doubtless many of our readers
i will recall that something over . a
year ago Rev. John Hbrn Ind tornUy. who lived near Bhults. left, for
East Africa, where he M engaged in
missionary work. We are peraillted
to print a letter written by him lb
his sister. Miss Mabel Horn, of
Shultz, giving something of an ac­
count of the country, lhe natives
and the constant danger from wild
animals such as elephants, Hons,
hippopotamus, and many others.
It Isn't often that we have an op­
portunity to get first hand informa­
tion concerning this far-off land.
will be Interested in it. The tetter
reads as follows:
Mbeya. Tanganyika Laraltory,

Dear Sister:
I received your tetter of Aug. Oth.
On account of the exchange tn

age than we do. We find it expen­
sive to live here. If we buy in Eng­
land we make an order for about

You asked about some of the na­
tive customs. They have three stones
in their homes tor huts) on which
they set their cook pots, and then
they build a fire underneath. These
the city government will be prac­ pots are made of clay and quite
tically the same as a year ago.
The items for next year's budget tatoes and corn mostly, and raise
beans, peas, millet, com. wheat and
in some places rice. Now they are
Contingent fund ........... 111,000
raising things that the white peo­
Police fund ..................... 1.000
ple have brought in—tomatoes,
Fire fund ........
white potatoes, and peaches. Noth­
Sewer fund
ing can be raised at the Gold fields.
Street fund
J.000
The natives have caught the vision
Lighting fund .
B.500
of r&gt;i»tng garden stuff and taking it
Park fund .
over there. The natives pound their
Library fund ..
750
corn, millet, wheat Into flour and
Total
(32.160
laloes are baked at times and green
Harvard scientists have a new de­ earn roasted In lhe husk They start
vice that is capabte-of imposing a their fire with two sticks, and you'd
pressure of 1.000,000 pound* per laugh to see how quickly they have
square tach. We should soon know
how much the Utile taxpswf will
(Continued on page four)

VJK. ।— —

absent from the session room dur­
ing study hours without giving an
excuse are permitted. These privi­
leges began Monday and will con­
tinue until lhe end of the year un­
less seniors give good cause for their
withdrawal.

PRIMWVEUFE

•“

irry county was indeed fortu-

। Kellogg Foundation as the first one
for its community health project,
specializing tn health education
of McCall's.
through the schools.
The work has Increased steadily,
Newest advertising slogan—Cos­ after Its success in Barry county
metic Bkln. They should have one had conclusively demonstrated its
like this—Cosmetic Coat Collar, de­ value. The counties of Eaton and
noting rouge, powder and creme on Allegan were next added. Next In
the fur and neck band. But I won't line came Van Buren ohd Hillsdale.
tell them. They should have' thought To these lost year were added
it up themselves.
Branch and Calhoun, making seven
counties in all.
The officials of Bt. Joseph county
taaaoo. Clarence .Buddington Hol­
were among the most recent to ap­
land In Portland and our James
ply for a Foundation unit in that
.Oliver Curwood lived most of his
county. Other counties had also ap­
life in Owosso.
plied. To these including St. Joseph.
Foundation executives have stated
that U itaa been decided that eeven
. You
counties is enough, and thst no
more will be included ta the health
Joo handy with them now. and sec­
project
ond. there are farmers plowing on
The seven counties have a popu­
every side of the house and ' the
homes haven't got down to business lation of approximately 2M.000 per­
yet after loafing all winter, and wo sons. The expansion of the Founda­
can just tune in any time we need tion's work has been gradual, large­
ly resulting from the spread of In­
Dew adjectives and other words.
terest from a community served to
Nine-tenths of the small liquor neighboring countI-,3. It will take
violations would be checked if ti^sTe many years to demonstrate what
such
work as the Foundation Is do­
Waa a law against treating. When a
few get together the first one treats ing will accomplish to the way of
all around. That’s nobody's busl- Improved health conditions in the
communities it serves, working
and tongues loosen and by the through the schools with the or­
time the third treat Is down, man­ ganization which the Foundation
hood Is forgotten and "Sweet Ade­ maintains to each of tlie seven
line" begun. The more In the party, counties. Wlrtn U»e success of the
tbe more children go without new work has been fully demonstrated,
it will be time enough to determine
treat when treated. There would be
much less liquor drunk If drunk how much of such increase the
Foundation shall sponsor. Evidently
alone. Is Jane's idea.
that is the conclusion reached by
the executives of the Foundation.
Lt rt EK HOM A- w.
NICHOLS OF A1BA” Come Home" by Mor-

ter from A. W. Nichols of Alba, a
former Barry county resident, who
retains his interest In happenings

Riley Sioriet

XJtuuicr anil BWU
okvci
tilings of general Interest which we
publish herewith. He writes aa fol- "Yankee" Lewis, king of Yankee
Springs
We like the Banner and the prin­
ciples it stands for. • • • In the You fed them early
And served them late
for Robert Kelley and the first
thing I did for him wm to help
him move onto the Sweexey farm
which he rented for three years. A Mush and milk and johnny cake
new frame house was .built there They came from hill
that summer and I helped haul the And thev came from dale
lumber from the Bentley and Wil­
kins mill and lumber yard.
Mr. and Mrs. Kelley slept id ,the

COME IN
Words of wtlcoma which we hear so often in our
lives, yet they mean to much to the individual calling.
At the Hastings City Bank this invitation has for fifty
yoars greeted thousands of individuals who come to us
for advice. Today it is a source of pride to us that every per­
son calling at this bank receives from the personnel the cour­
tesy due them. Every depositor, applicant or safety deposit box
renter is treated with respect, and even the proverbial fountain
pen filler finds this bank friendly and courteous.
Today,

ot in Hie past years, we are In Hie Banking Business and

to responsible Individuals on improved real estate and business
concerns may secure loans on the basis of their financial state-

PLEAD GUILTY

supporting

TO T AKMAC TWO BLOCKS.

in

IRVIN *. COBB.

ootneon. aaants aoovm
vlatiom roa A NSW
rata ravox

Month of April

But the memory of his name
•The Prisoner of Shark Island" was'
W1H hang forever
adapted from the true historical ac­ built
Among the crops no nlsed that
count by Nunnally Johnson. Glor­
summer were 20 acres of bearia Stuart, Arthur Byron, o. P. Keghad a bean plant which had

with lhe dty
St tarmac loose criminal!
■of coMpltted their terms .

•*Tbe controls far handling the
flow of electricity between the gen­
erator and the batteries and the uses
of the electricity are all located In
the control box and operate auto­
matically."
Now for the pretty illustrations of
the farm uses-of electricity. A flock
of hens who have their hencoop
lighted at night, so they will stay
up all night laying eggs. I think
that's mean.
Now a pair of the snootiest looking
cows I ever saw. And why shouldn't
they be? They have Individual
enamel drinking bowls, each with
faucet and operated automatically.
Here's a mamma pig serving lunch
with the reading lamp turned on
full force. "Sows don't trample their
Utters now that they can see what
they are doing." says the booklet.
Maybe If she had a pair of glasses,
that would help, too.
And a modern tiled bathroom to
replace the honorable wash tub and
horse tank run by this electric wind­
mill.
Something each poultry grower
would appreciate Is the thermosta­
tically-controlled Incubator. Now

such roads to do their own snow re­ and feed the chicks when hatched,
moving. which would be a hardship. you'll be all set. More later.
Tbe logic ot this situation calls for
more Mate money, either through an
I will be glad when lipstick goes
afidltwn' ta lhe gasoline tex or from

. Gridiron Club Dinners.
XCEPT the obituary eoltjmn.
Dotblog could be udder than
the newspaper account of ■ gridiron
duh dinner. Yet gridiron club din­
ners alm to be satirically amusing
and frequently arc.

E

Darn it,

doned oU well, windmill, flag pole
or martin house. No, no. Just leave
out aU but tbe wtadmUl. I guess a
man should write this. I'll quote
from the paper.
. “Like a wtadmin, the Kelco Pow­
er Unit is mounted on lop of a
tower where its throe-blade pro­
peller, rotated by Uie wind, turns
the powerful etectric generator to
which-it is directly shafted. As elec­
tricity is generated, the current
which you are not using goes into
the batteries where it remains.

A record if kept by the county
road commission of the coat of snow
removal u well u other highway
expense Items. Last winter the cost
of removing snow from the town­
ship roads so, far tafcep.over. was
11,012; for the county roads it wu
about (7.000. Figures for the state
expense for snow removal on tbe flowing as needed," See, like can­
one hundred milks or so of trunk ning fruit for winter.
line highways to this county are
■The batteries for this power
not available, but the cost would
plant are of tbe locomotive type—
probably be well toward (10,000. The
the kind which are used by lhe
navy on the submarines, by mines
the rental of machinery used.
for hauling mine cars, by railroads
The county will receive from the
for auxiliary motive power." Wonder

Waning Prsnidintlal Booms.
HAT with cyclonoe and floods
down son th, tbe dally press
somehow failed to record among
spring casualties the untimely end
of tbe Governor Talmadge boom.

W

“Write for particulars."
that's what we did do.

CO. AGENTS
WISE PROVISION WINDSTORM
GATHER IN $8,256,660
Amount of New InaurFOR CUTS NEEDS That
ance W
Booked for the
m

..............................

S

ns last word is that tbl llttls
lady's hair was dyed A bean* (del.
Either that** nsfi
or something bi
stimulated a sod­
den change in HolIyWood fashions.
Just a Utile while

SECTION TWO

THE HASTINGS BANNER

over with your Banker.
and drilled in the beans.

property
man Shultz, and
on MUI Street, between
With best wishes to
and Jefferson. The counFriday night to do this, the Banner and ite readers, I am, as tody of tbe sheriff, without ball,
until the judge can determine what
•
ir legal notice to lhe prop- always,
Your sincere friend.
A W- Nichols.

Bastings City Bank
TELEPHONE 2103

♦

«

HASTINGS • MICHIGAN

�BERNARD GARDMEN
VISITS EXPOSITION

SCHOOL NOTES Fl
THORNAPPLE-I

NEWS

Inuruthw RtrkU IXdMe
VUeot VtnetM eM K*u

Brt Clyde Coleman. Inventory
filed.
/
Eat. Eva 3 Johnson. Waiver of
notice filed, order a&amp;ngntng residue

estate anraUedE»t. John McArthur. Testimony of
freeholders filed, license to sell Is­
sued, bond on sale fllftd. oath before
sale filed.
E»t. Robert I. Hendershott. Order
allowing account entered.
EkL Mary Haff. Order assigning
residue entered, dlscharg0
execu-

for determination of heirs hied, or­
der for publication entered.
EsL, Archibald Baird
Petition
for determination of heJrs hied, or­
der fog publication entered.
ErI. Borah E. Wallers. Order con­
firming salt entered.
BM Alvin Hathaway WUl filed.
peUUon for probate filed, order for
publication entered.
KU. Qasslus L Glasgow Petition

r. iv—o
i nwuurv—rt
The baseball squad broke evan in
Mr. Van Sickle. Mr. Holtforlh and their games last week loaing a
Mr. Bell attended the Round Table league game to NaahviUe and win­
at Holland.
ning another from Freeport. The
A number of T K teachers at­ game at Nashville was very close
tended the Barry County Teachers' and evenly fought with each team
meeting at Hastings last Thursday scoring one earned run. The rest
evening.
being allowed on errors. D. Fenton,
Dr. Koch of the U of M Inspect­ T. K’s catcher had a i J -*------- *
ed the school last week Wc will

D.

WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Rev. Gross wm ill Sunday and
unable to preach but we had a good
Sunday school aud Mother's Day
program. All tell the very presenqc

Sunday each one is to bring a linga. Tho ciub rented the bus for
friend and double the attendance transportation. Around 1,000 peo­
prayer meeting. May 20. at James ple were present Including several
, Nagle's al Irving station.
Speech Class Presents Play.
The Speech class presented Uk? play
'True Love Triumphs'' before the
High school assembly Wednesday.
Viola Fischer, as announcer, pre­
sented the following players to lhe
students; Fred Hauser as Obedlah
Caln. Hazel Campbell as Agatha
Foozcy. Bob Rugg as Ezeklal Foozcy.
Donna Nell as Amanda Poozy, Mar­
garet Smith and-Norma Jupps tram

Wc hops that RcY Crocker of
Hastings will be recovered from the
attack of Ivy poisoning and that

COLDWATER

FT. WAYNE?

from Hartings to Coldwa­

ter. Angrtz and FL Wayne.
ASK AGENT FOR NEW
TIME TABLE

well and back at their different
posts of duty next Bunday.
Wood School Notes.
I We held our first ball game of the
; season today &lt; Friday i. The Brew
I school team arrived—Charles Kld1 dcr stopped his plowing to umpire
-and the game began around three
o'clock. The teams were lined up as

nice day! Well beat next time twt
hope), but as tong as it was our
first game Uits year, wc have hopes.
Some exceptionally good catching by
Wayne Leyendccker Clifford (Brew)
1 made a home run and Sam Couch
, (Wood) made one Good playing
I on both sides
1 Miss Rayne called on us twice
this week, checking up on lhe medical and dental cards. All three ot
! our eighth grader* had physical and
I dental examinations Monday after-

Mr and Mn- Lyle Williams at
Grand Rapids were guests of Mr.
and Mn. Jake Johnson and Mtos
Dora Johnson. Sunday.

•nd Fred Hauser Fred brought the
house down with his portrayal of
Uncle Freddie reading the Bunday
morning funnies to hl* children
------- ....
' ot vophomores and aentora. were
asked to present lhe play as an
added attraction to the junior play

TRIO CAFE
HAYINGS PHONE

ANNOUNCING
G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE

SUMVCU U41 mm; iuuuuu
I ■ ■ ■
--- -n--- —
T K and after a poor start, pitched D*DQ b*M bordertog walks. Great
a good game Parks threw the last I ro* Md» are splashed here and
two innings and did not allow a hit, | there about the grounds, as are reNuhvm.-, »u. plUlwr fav, Uw : n«&gt;tar wx&gt;U md KunUto* On,
T. K l»u w«U ta control thnxwh \
“&gt;)»
U*o itatafl. Had our boy, b«n able I Playa. The buildtag, look IIU old
ta hl, in u&gt;« ptaoher taey
~&gt;------- ------------have won their game.
Friday we played another league tton is past description. Some 10,­
game at Freeport and came home 000 mechanical lightning bug* flit in
with a victory. This game should the Vale of Fireflies—some show.
have be«n ■» shut-out for T. K. had A great modernistic tower is turned
there been fewer errors. Freeport Into a block of iridescent blue toe
took a 2-0 toad and held It until lhe by means of a mile of neon tubipg.
5th inning when tbe old squeeze But everything lu the great 800 acre
play began to work for the Thorn­ garden la continually changing un­
apple boys and netted us five runs. der the myriads of revolving lights
that play over them.
Tlie exhibits are an education the
easy way. I particularly Ilka the
March of Transportation building
where
they have the world's largest
At the present time there Is a
three-way tie with Nashville. Mid­ mural pointing which depicts tire
dleville and Sunfield each having march of transportation,. also the this place, will conduct a aeries of
real vehicles axe tliere—everything meetings at the above mentioned
cause a preliminary play ofl to de- ' frum
ox-cart to the gondola of,.
place.
------Cidc tho two learns to play Friday u’c stratosphere balloon. The haU
Mr. and Mrz. Raleigh Adrlanson
k 1
} nf
and fnmllv wars Rnndav
dinner
too. They have some of tbe finest guuata of Mr. and Mn. Wallle Smith
X-rays in the world on exhibit, and KaxL
Others I would like to mention are I D. I. Van Horn has moved into
the Palace of Fine Arts, with lu, Mr*. Mary Boulter’s bouse.
Old Masters' exhibit, and the zoo I Mra. Beuie Hughae called on Mrs.
with 2.500 animals. There is music | HalUe Beattie at tho home of Mr.
all day long—strolling troubadours,
and an outdoor organ. But you
Ed Kimble of Kalamazoo will oo- _.
_
should see for yourselves—I could cupy lhe Ed Wilkinson house this I Robert HID was absent from
summer.
school a few days last week on teMrs. Minnie Vandcrbrook is sliy- | count of lUneeg.
I’RAIRIEVU.LE
Ing with her daughter. Mrs. Sam
—
--------* Mrs. N. Weteher
------Mr.
and
of* Bat­
Mrs Ethel Btebben spent Moth­ DeBack, at present. Her callers. ik creak spent Saturday evening
* jjggipjton. daughter of Mr. and Mrs
1 Jamcs Bowerman, wm unable to er's Day with her aons-in-law and Sunday, were: Jdhn vanderbrook al and Bunday with, their parents. Mh
attend the funeral on account of daughters. Mr. and Mrs Danford Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mn. Will Hay­ and Mrs. c Lechieliner.
Mr. and Mn. Wallace Borden of
Higgins and Mr. and Mrs. Winslow ward of Delton: Mrs. DeBack's call­
Martin of Kalamazoo.
ers were: Andrew Havens,
Miss Kalamazoo and Clayton Haynes of
Lucy Havens and Mr. and Mrs. Rob­ Battle Creek spent Saturday eve­
Honeywell's Bunday were Dr B. ert Elnhardt of Battle Creek.
ning with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Merritt Woods was a Molh- Mrs- O. Haynes.
Green During the afternoon they ‘ H Honeywell and daughter of Ann
Mr. snd Mrs, Orin Haynes are en­
went down to pine lake camp to see Arbor; Mr. and Mrs. Baker of East । er'i Day guest of her son. Mr. and
Mrs Green's nieces. Florence snd Lansing: Mr. and Mr*. Paul Arndt Mn. George Woods and family. Miss joying a radio given them Sy thalr
Virginia Lapham
•oI Jkckson; Mr. and Mrs. Wl!) Born | Martan Setchfield of Gull lake, was
Victor Hoffman of- K«lanyj
Mr arid Mrs Ray Burd and fam- and Mr. and Mrs. ’Leland
-1—* "
Honeywell
------- —
&gt; tfeq
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Johnson of a couple of dayilast
Dy of Na&amp;hville spent Bunday after- and son Jerry of Dowagiac.
’George Qalletley of Battlo Creek Kalamazoo visited Mr. and Mrs, home of bls sister, Ms*, .Glenn
AirUuUL
Mr and Mrs Clare Peeling and called on Mrs. Sarah Smith and Edward Johnson, Bunday.
Funeral services for Charles Bar­
family ot Detroit arc here for a daughters Saturday.
ber, a native of Cressey, at one time
lime vlsiung her parents, Mr and
school In the Edger district with a a resident of this place, later of Kal­
amazoo. were held at his farm homo
picnic. Saturday.
Mrs. Will Sprague and nephew ot at Cressey Monday afternoon, Mr.
Bradley called on Mrs Cora Fow­ Barber had a host of friends In this
_________
_
vicinity who extend sympathy to
ler.
Sunday.
Mrs. Bessie Hughes and Charles lhe family.
Mr. and Mrs. Qhas, Kahler at­
tended church in. CJovtrdate Bun­
day and took dinner with Mr, *n4
Mrs. Arthur johncock.
Seward Waltou of Naperville. HU
spent a few days the past week w|M)
hl* grandmother. Mrs AM»kA They
spent Bunday with hto p*fei)ta at

HASTINGS, MICH

TELEPHONE 2331

Henry Kincaid. Mr. and Mrs. Ofdie Kincaid and Mr. and Mrs.
Grodavent of Battle creek vUlted
st tbe home of Aroeliui Campbell
Sunday.
.
,__ .__________

Mr. end MTg. E, D, Reynolds have
mpved Into their cpM«f&gt; (oe the
summer months,
Mr. and Mrs, Elmer Reynolds, Mr.

AS EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS IN HASTINGS AND BARRY COUNTY FOR

ALABASTINE PAINT PRODUCTS

Good Investments

Now you con have any kind of Oil Pa inf, Enamel ono Varnish for all exterior
or interior painting needs made under the famous ALABASTINE name and red

grots in circle trade mark.
This full line of Paints represents lhe highest quality paints it is possible to
manufacture. Uso and specify ALABASTINE OIL PAINTS, ENAMELS, VARNISH­
ES and WATER PAINTS and bo assured you are getting the finest quality that
will give you the utmost In durability and protection at the greatest economy
to you.

SPECIAL OFFER

ALABASTINE HOUSE PAINT
ANY COLOR

GALLON FREE!
WITH EVERY 5 GALLONS PURCHASED
Offer Good Only During Moy
Naw is the time
to paint your
house with the
Bast Paint Made
at our Special
Prices!

Ask for FREE
Book "The Easy
Way to Paint"
Um This Caugaa

This coupon presented la so sathocisvd ALABASTINE point agent
before June 1. IWfl. enUlla holder to ONE 11) GALLON OF
ALABASTINE HOUSE PAINT (any color) FREE WITH EVERY
PURCHASE OF FIVE 15) GALLONS OF ALABASTINE HOUSE

Household Goods
The undersigned will offer for sole at public auction
ot her residence on the comer ot Nelson ond South
Broadway itreet. Nestings, Michigan, commenciag at
1:00 o'clock P. Mm on

Saturday, May 16
the Following Described Household Goods and
City Property:—

Omun, two bsds, two sets of springs, dining room ta­
bla, six dining room choirs, two kitchon tablas, four rock­
ers, cOngoloum rug, largo mirror, dishes, lamps, curtains,
cooking utensils, one-man sew, canned fruit, Singer saw­
. ing machine (like new), end many other arti­
cles too numerous ta mention-

• Two or three newly papered

roams, q little point or o few new

window shades will produce this
result

‘

.

• Out of our large stock of Wall

Papers, Paint* and Window
Shades, we can work out any col­
or scheme you With and at a price

that will more than please you.
• We would also like. to. tell you

about the New Double Life House
Paint that the Devoe Cq. has per­

EIGHT ROOM HOUSE AND TWO LOTS WILL BE
OFFERED ON. SALE DAY.
TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.
i
I
I
l

i
I
I
I

Enameling Furniture
Painting Floors
Varnishing
Uecorstlng Walls

CL W. HALLER, Auctioneer, SReMereUie, Obie.

fected. H will pay you to invesHgate before your point.

�m wumiroa axiom.
oun ro&gt; ^auoahoi. -

LEGAL NOTICES

BOTIOR TO ckSDrtoi».
State ot MlchUraa. thi PrtUte Coart far
tha Coanty of Barry.
C U
**
*“*” ** M*UM*

ra:

,BTS

iWStt.

•rrfU^,
ot Nih.‘".l:.rhTfbi.W.i&amp;11

dyarta
’WM
Hankey. lb. a neuter uaana.
tSSWtSL.” ”*• ” -

l&gt;*tl

Vnd.r id by vlrta* uf a dams of tk«

Hullnsi Bmibr. » »»»«o»p«r printed
ie4 c!mUl«d in «»ld M«My.
.
StMrt CUmcal. J«4«n ot Frtbtl*.
x
Rryillrr of Proboto.

‘WnTaS 3

NOTICE^nM/ER^tt^IvrM tb»« by

r OMBtV. In Aba (

M.“r«r*A.*y“lJ^ P [H Hon-

Anatlea at tk» KorUarly or fll

D. 1MI
a. at *a
described property, lewit-i
All Ibal eertala ptoea or Rareel Of
laad alloate and belaa In the City of
Haitian. Barry Conaty. Mlthtean. had
more particularly daaeribed aS fellowa.

! Way. A. D. IMS, '
Bald property balnjr daaeribad aa fol’’•"rite X. K. U at tha N. B. H ot.
fUclion IS. T. 3 N. R. • W.. eonulalnw

unpaid aa aaU m.rUraia
Uii aatle. far principal

'
Laanaea E Darn .It.
Olmli Coart Qommlulaacr. Ban
„»U
A Hora ay for Plala ll*. Lillian Licbty.

xdnex or commurionbr-b ialb
UND1R DBCBBB.
Uadtr and by »irta» at a dacraa ot tha
Cireait Court for tha County or Barry.
Btefn of Mlehlcan. lo tha eate ot Harry

’’MOW. TiFe/ieVoUe"^’

im

. r

14th. ISIS at alaraa
Bantam
Standard

•f aald raortaar.d prwal
and dacraad: I karaby cb

SSLX’k^ Rtalilar ot Probate.

Utailin' '

HOME OWNERS' LOAN COR­
PORATION Moruacro.
Gl«no DrMitkwi.

«A*w*r J*

Motional -.
Bank.

.

am ar.rno.n.. were aKr.ea to
led to .aid plaiatir., under tbe
Tr-I«’; L.‘\rd.,r*Jd’
end: I hereby Alee notice that
.11 m imbl.e aaetlon te th. blah-

Z..
f.l
Haatlnn.

n.’7 eJSf. ” 85
Mlcblian. on th. 15th

ncr orouier. mt. ana Ma
Shroyer and children, nMx
outer.

n*nRDFHFbf,‘nV*THFl'rOURT
*■’ •' "U

that -I
an^ Mr* Elton Modier Of {(ala1 m“°°
Sunday guests of Mm

*. 2

»n Arthur.

j

MIDDLEVILLE.
Mrs James Bowerman, aged 58
years, tor nu&amp;y years a resident of
, Yankee Springs township, posi?d
__r I away May 5th after a short illness
— ' ~'oA
— ------------ iouid n.i । Besides the husband, ten children ,
b* anz&gt;1it is FURTHER ordf.rkd nV ' #re lefl
mourn her passing, and
the court. tt&gt;nt th. Ci.rk .hall a.od many friends, who extend to the
.'a'7 **"**«&gt; on“ their sincere syma.' .laud
‘
| pathy. Funeral was held at the
Hon.rabi. Fred m i M. E. church here with a large atof tbe .aid Court an,| tendance
Il Orand Raplda in .aid ^naajice.
...
. L
Pth day of April, a. D. i
A Miss Oliver, daughter of the
nanir j nt utter
I reccnt tenanU on
Mrs Charles
ORRIE J 8LUITEN k jOhnson'B farm, south of the vllr. Sial. Depoty Clark.
lagc. passed away on May 5th. Bc______ _ _
| tides the parents several brothers
wcm-mi uu'“ —'«&lt;&gt; hi moum •
NOTICE 01
IB DICRKR.
* loved one. whose life had but begun,
rlriu. of a d^rva at th. The family iiave the sympathy of
r th. County of Barry, their many friends.
*5: NaakJml’ °*‘ir Ftnkbelner had an aoefIchiraa bankinc corpora dent the other day. while assisting
.PU|B'1*- t»; ln erecting a windmill, a hammer
.‘“I “fK* n!.™" ‘WJ.
Mm u&gt; &lt;!&gt;. !«e.
Id Lyl. Zone-. Orland brtAlng his glasses and injuring
d.*.id°d.ten'd*.rn’'te
hU cheek’ re&lt;llih'ln« the services of
d.bt.4 ia a.id Plaintiff,
doctor. No damage however was
of a certain morutM». done to his eyes. At present he Is
LS^r*V.Tli.TTteT’nl’
W »nd new glaasrwd: I n.r.oy &lt;lr. no-

:

CORPORATION.

Barry County. Mlchtna.
&gt;4. 1134, la Libar ST of

NOW. THEREFORE, by virtu. of th*
&gt;w«r ot oalo contaln.d In aald raorUtso
&gt;d vur«a*At lo lk» Btatntoo at tho

ilaca. Count)

lx
ot lp“* ati

INSTALLS rr

MIRRO SHELLS
GAS WATER HEATER FOR YOUR OLD TANK
WHETHER YOU OWN or RENT...
THIS IS FOR YOU ... if you’re

Several of our fellows attended
the fish supper in Hastings and all
greatly enjoyed the program. A bus
load of our High school girls went
up and assisted in waiting table, a
pleasant evening was the
report
brought back by ail.
The village board of review will

"f.’frr.MW ardorrd. lh*t

.Eri-ltLVlt

the l»th of May.

Tha North half
i» narUiwoat aw.

putting up with TANK HEATINGI
• Would you like AUTOMATIC, evar-reody. 24-hour hot
water service? Would you like to ute your present tank?
And would you like it for a few centra week? Here it H! Far
the first time wa bring tha new tested and proved, fully guar­
anteed Mirro-Shell heater that converts the tonk into a reg­
ular automatic heater.

If you have rea-

ter show up and toll the board about

Sated: April Mad. ARM.

Several houses are being dressed

• Developed by the builders of the famous Consumer* Spe­
cial Cos Water Heater. The Mirro-Shell embodies many of
the features of this famous money-saver plus many new fea­
tures, giving you continuous automatic hot water at a'price
never before thought possible.

HOUR OWNERS' LOAN COB- .
PORATION. Martncaa.

THldrad^Bmllh. Ruiater of ProUta.

son and daughter of Chicago, were
the guests. Bunday, of Mrs. Sophia
Chase of Sherman street.
O. D. and Mrs. Whitmore were
guests. Sunday, of their daughter.
Lucille Stridden and family, in
Grand Rapids, where O. D. and his

op mbbytvo or the
BOABD Or MMli.

wotwb

MlHrad’BmlUi. Prabata Rarliter.

Special Introductory Offer!

at Mkhltaa. tha I
to aCiea la tho ell

MAKE YOUR

HOUSE LIKE BRICK WITH

ASBESTOS SHINGLES

nJnfku.0

was

Mirro-Sh&lt;U Ktattr that

• To moke it easy for every tank uwr to profit ot once from
this new home necessity, we tnqkethis special offer—$ I.T9
down installs it—with 18*month terms—os little as $1.80 a
month. And you con trade in your old furnace coil or othfr
heating equipment os port payment.
.*
• This heater completely installed con be purchased on 18­
month terms for os little as $33.15 with your old equipment.
No other carrying charge. (The cosh price, of course, is still
lower.)

PROFIT FROM THIS

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Hmm MIS

■bant R’ridlnr”B»tU. Cmlfe
I. ROYCX HENTON Beer.
Raard at KdaeaUan.

qua in ted

an AUTOMATIC
TO MAKEi AN
GAS WATER HEATER

pr.rlaui lo aald &lt;
Hutlara Banner.

Ha.tlar. Bant

. „

er U grabddaukMer; PatricU, celebrated
illon their Joint birthdays.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Poth and
daughters of Kalamasoo spent Bun­
*
DKLTOK.
By S. B. Boot, » School Su­
day with Mr. and Mrs. Loren JoluiThe Camp Fire Girls realised RIO
perintendent and Prac­
from their rummage Mie Saturday. son and son Harold. Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Barton and UUle son of Grand
tical Farmer
Rapids were also Sunday callers at
Hastings Rotarians were privileged
the Johnson home.
Arthur Clarke and children
of
to listen to a very informing talk by
South Raven and Mrs. Addte Uwb.
Both are unproved now.
taoKL
■'
.
•’
■,
.
Paw Paw public schools. His topic
The Sunshine Chib mat with Wn.
wm -Whither Um Farmer?" Aside very sick with the same trouble and cd the funeral of lhe latter’s cousin
WM taken to Borgecs hospital last at Onondaga Tuesday.
week for treatment. Her condition
Is still reported to be quite serious.
Van Buren county. These were
bought at small figures, because
school on crutclies lhe past week
because of a sprained knee caused
and put them on a productive bails. by his falling by slipping on a wet
board.
Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Chandler
spent Sunday with Mrs. Chandler's
county.
Farming Is still a leading Indus­ mother at Gull lake.
Mr. and Mrs. George Kern enter­
try in the United States, he said,.
tained their daughters and families
cent of the population live on farms. on Mother's Day.
The Calendar Supper and pro­
He declared, that agriculture Is
now "down," but not quite "out." It gram were very well patronized. Tlie
sum of |33 was turned in to the
Is facing a crisis.
Science and invention have great­ treasurer as a net profit. This
ly increased farm production. Many closed the Community meetings for
specialized types of agriculture are । the summer. The next one will be
lhe annual meeting and election of
has likewise contributed much, to officers in September.
The bricklayers have begun laying
Industry, and in a way that harms
agriculture. Science lias reduced die the brick for the new schoolhouse.
Rev. Ralph Bates delivered, a very
demand for some agricultural prod­
ucts, while farm machinery and appropriate sermon for Mother’s
synthetic fertilisers have increased Day. Mrs. CUsta Ray was the
mother present
to re­
farm production. Science and in­ oldest
vention have reduced the number ceive the plant; Mrs. Blanche Richjuds wm the one having had tlie
well as on the farm. There are men largest number of children, and
the
living In cities, who used to have Mrs. Margaret Pennock was
profitable jobs In factories and were youngest mother prteent.
Mrs. Wayne Hord has returned
good customers for tlie farmer who
will never be employed again, be­ lo her home in Detroit after spend­
cause machinery
has displaced
1----- * ing ten days with her mother, Mrs.
Weller.
them.
P. E. Murphy has purchased lhe
President Hoover and his farm
prices
board tried lo regulate ,
____ of
__ meat market from George Cowles
Mrs. John Nobles of Hastings and
farm products. It didn’t work. Tlie
present administration tried the her mother of White Cloud were
AAA and attempted to Increase Sunday dinner guests of Miss Marie
prices by producing a scarcity. That Neuschaefer and mother al Crook-’
failed. Nothing constructive has as ed lake.
Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Reynolds spent |
yet been done The farm problem
is not and should not be made a Sunday with Mrs. Maggie Porttnga
and family at Three Oaks.
political problem.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrianson ;
The speaker had these suggestions
to make, although he did not urge and Harry attended church in Bat
them as fully meeting the situa­ tie Creek Sunday, then came back
to
Fine lake and spent the day with
tion. He believes that the American
market should bo kept for the their aon. Roy and family, who are
cottage
believes staying in the Briggs
American farmer. He
through the summer
that
a better
and cheaper
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jones and
system of distribution can be and
ought to be worked oul. He believes family of north of Prairieville spent ,
that a plan for refinancing farm
debts is a necessity. There are poor Jones.
Mrs. Gladys Gaskill has been con­
prospects ahead for lhe commer­
cial farmer. A dirt farmer has a fined to her bed the post week and
chance to earn a good living If he Mrs. Walter Walters of Potterville
owns his farm or can get cheap has been assisting in the post office. 1
G. E Stokes and Mrs. Grace
money.
Taking all these things Into con­ 8twee of Grand Ledge were Sunday
sideration. the speaker again asked
num.
•■Whither the Farmer?" and adMiss Caroline Solomon spent from '
l Thursday until Saturday with her [
brother, C. L Solomon, and family I
1 at Kalamazoo
I
Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Storring of '
&gt; —3—Xu
I Frontier were OVemlght guest* Frt- I
n°
dV’^’Tn’.ll A D 103d dMy °f Mr and MrS'
Pennock. I
..^.2d'n« ih.
hr
|
Mr
Oeorge Mosier and

CHEAPER

It I« turtbrr or4n»4, *b41 vubite »Mlr»

ninrty d»y«) in lh» tondiljoao ot •
W THhUWlrM
will of tho City of H«»Unr». -«
County. Mlohltnli. to HOMB OWXC
LOAN CORPORATION, a OwvMitlU
caniiod undor tbo low* of tho U«
ButM of Aaorica. dated Joly Sth. I

Mar ia.

'WHITHER THE FARM­
ER?” ABLYDISCUSSED

ALS%4h. MM M FwUte.

Frank Sag.

Haattegi

OFFIR!

COMI IN. OR PHONI

CONSUMERS POWER

�and then it

Mbeva. New- work is going on In
construction 'from the Gold field, counter with
from Mbeya to Tukuyu. This line they neared Utt apol Wm
currefi toare Mood a rhino

celebrated
— —-a,—
birthdays
Hyde and little Patty. A
iJUm rias enjoyod by thore
Chas. Hutton and his mqtfamm. Tuektr of Detroit came
rtoitt Bunday evening.

long uncivilised country.
Recently
Wednesday on business and
rough-looking old man came In and Comlng onto two of them in tbe
pulled out abottle half full of tall grass by a tree, he noticed that
gold. He had13 ounces which meant
The natives say that if they treat that nt had &lt;
*
“ he aimed and fired. The elephant
dropped. Th bo safe, hunters do not
rich at mining and other* go broke.: go at once to big animals they shook
them dawn
Tbe younger Christ­ The airplanes do a lot of busmess,
ians arc better to their wives. Many the passenger planes being full moat stunned. On seeing the hunter ths
sleep on the ground but they often of toe time. They carry all the gold beast mlg Jt charge. As the warden
make crude beds and stretch skins lo England. Hundreds of natives go waited the elephant arose to 1U
by lo and from the Gold Fields with feel, and seeing Ite mate near by
over tiicm
The natives surely love their cows produce or looking for 4-ork. Thou­ evidently thought she wm the guil­
and often sleep where the cow’s sands are employed there.
ty party, so charged on her. There
breath blows on them, or even so
was a fierce fight. At last the larg­
the cow will switch her tall in their,
can of pineapple eells for er one downed the mate and. with
the lunging of the whole body,
you sec their cows »re their money, j The Gold field is booming so a pushed his tusks into her side and
and each calf is interest. In many j grCftt variety of canned goods Is killed her Pulling his tusks oul of
casts A man buys ins wife with being brought in. I am sending lhe her body, he went off toto the for­
est. Elephants often raid the native
fields and must be driven back into
man pays 10 cows
the timbered land. If several arc
killed they will not come back. They
remember. At Ruflgl a baby ele­
phant had been placed In a court
outside lhe district officer's home
haps in 10 years something comes; natives. You wonder how they can for protection. In the night it got

GEO. E. WALKER
&amp; SONS
nCKLl CONTRACTS
AND SEED

WALLACE SEED STORE,
Histimrc
CITY NATL. BANK
Nashville.

SMITH A DOSTER
HARDWARE.
Delton.

MIDUaniLiE C.O-OPMlddleviUc.

banks in Nashville. Delton
or Middleville.

The GRADING Machine

grower fairly.

AX the old man nurtd they cried
out: “Buffalo, BufTalp, a wounded
buffalo." The old man was quite
deaf and thought they were begging
for tobacco, so be kept right on.
Tlie buffalo was only wounded, and
seeing tbe mui. the animal charged

buffalo which

John. Uva and Leia Ruth HMriCOATS GROV*.

Miss Imogene Barry of Martin
Comers has been assisting in ths
Townsend home.
,
Mrs. Arthur Richardson la not
gaining as fast aa her friends would
wish. Mrs. Wm. Schantx of Hastings
is aaslstlng th the home.
Tha Bunday school gave a fine
Mother's Day program last Bunday,
in charge of Mrs. Floyd Kimble.
Mrs. Flora Wood received a bouquet
for being tha oldest mother present.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Baeks and
family of Hastings visited Mr. and
Mrs. Wm. Brooks last Bunday. Mn.
Wayne Long and daughter Mary
of Woodland and A. W. Long of
Lansing called there in the after-.

between 18

Leighton ware Visitors at the Mer
rtfi Starcher and W-M '•*“'*
bomaa Friday evening.

itora during the &lt;
Thomas and family

Rapids were Sunday visitors at Guy
Smith's.

Hal] visited relatives in Champaign,
III., for a few days recently and Watt Thomas were in Hastings Batattended special services In the new
Christian church there on May 3Jchn Nash Is painting his realMrs. H. A. Woodman attended
in Rutland last Tuesday
MUs Ruth Woodman of Caledonia
and Miss Marian Woodman of Kal­
amazoo spent the week end with
the home folks.

put on it the past week.

FINE LAKE.
Jimmie Whitecotten of Flint U
spending some tome with his grand­
parents. Mr. and Mrs. James lake.
B. C. Doster U some better and
able to walk out. after his attack
of rheumatism.
Mrs. Clara Nichols spent the past
North Evangelical church Sunday week with her son. Minor Nichols
and family at Oahtemo.
W C. Walker of Battle Creek
spent Wednesday with his old-time
Ins.
friend, Harry Kllllck.

r.

children of Battle Creek were guests

SATURDAY ONLY/
WM. WOODBURY'S

SENSATIONAL OFFER
WOODBURY’S
■'At* POWDER

MARRIED

and
oi

Nor­

ly In catching a week's supply for
Um table with their bare hands. ton and Barbara and Mr. and Mrs,
Verne HawbUte.
Mrs. Dollar and son Sterling of
Jackson attended church here Bun­
day.
mallard ducks hwre,
Kieral auUiariUea by
DWJC
irvatum department *Dd Mr*. Merriam of near Venoontfw planting at Gun lake an toe ville
- were Sunday
- andguests of- Mr.
act: M have Mrs. O. D. and Mr. and Mrs Burr
project. Wing Fasactt.
Mlssr Dora Foster spent Sunday in
Grand Rapids With friends.
Kenneth Sage left Tuesday to Join
tbe Navy.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lathrop of
Prairieville spent Sunday here with
The flora of isle Royale Includes the home folks.
at least 31 apecles of trees of which
ia are dirtSnm aM tbe balance
DUNHAM DlUnUCT.
!_____ —
-nrjand

Friday evening at tbe schoolhouse
was a success both socially and fi­
BOOTH BOWNE.
nancially, being enjoyed by a good
Mr. and Mrs Will Bhuly of Grand sized crowd. Jay Norton as aucRaplda. Mr- and Mrs. Keith Daniels tlcmeer sold all of the “White Elcof Hartings, Mr. and Mrs- Verner phants." and the supper which came
Woioott of Charlotte. Alden Eash first was very well planned and
and friend of Lansing were Bunday served.
guests of their parents, Mr. and
There will be no Memorial Day
j,
.
H —IN lhl«
nt ItiA 1X711Mrs Florence Robbins and hus- , c°x Cemetery.
band and daughter*. Ethel and Inex,
Saturday evening at about 8:20.
ofBaitte CreeKMr and Mrs Henry Claud Hoffman as Jurtlce-of-th.
JoXson and Mrs. John Watts of
performed at his borne the

BRANCH DISTRICT.
Mrs. Saddler of Hastings 1
ing with he? daughter, Mrs
Bldelman. for a while.

■ ■ ISAVE THIS COUPON) ■ ■

ihrough the years if you
ibooMr wisely. The Home Lumber
Company will help you choose tlie
right home. Years of experience in
building homes qualifiOti u» as ex­
perts in this field. If you are build­
ing a new home, or remodeling an
old one. see us and we will show
you how this can be accomplished
at the lowest cost.

Godfrey.

Mbs Ruth Woodman and Mln Bunday with their parents. John
Esther Bierl of Lowell ware at
VMh aad fareliy.
i
Flint on Saturday.
The children gave a nine Mosi­
er’s Day program at the church
tended lhe funeral of Chas. Tuck­
erman in Bellevue. Utt Thursday.
Bar! Smith and family of Grand

over there. They burn the grass to Mr. and Mrs Jesse Paasett Sun­
drive the animals oul. Before doing day.
Mr. and Mrs Leslie Adams and
Mrs.—
Sarah
Ostroth-----------------------visited Woodup the earth around their huts to--------------------------protect tnem from the fire. The ' land relative* Sunday
'
Remember the Dorcas Society at
gra.u h way above our heads and so
makes a terrific Are
tbe
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Sterling
Yesterday 1 went to the forest1 Ostroth Thursday of this week.
which is very beautiful. The tree* I Mr. and Mrs. Clare Mason of
are covered with moss and vine en- i Naahrilte were Bunday visiters at
tanglemcnta. dripping with water. ] the home of Mr and Mrs. Fred
and so thick lu places that you can- NoUon.

LIKE GETTING

lAlrtated i

in the.wor

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lathrop of
stopped. About this time the native , , tilled a wild cat a few days ago
Prairieville.
MT and Mrs. Floyd
Our native preacher in Nyossa land
_________________________________

CHOOSING
A HOME IS

. for the first

Must dore for this time, and Eire
our kindly greetings to friends and
relatives.

! from 50 to 200 pounds ou their to find company. It climied up the
heads. A native dill put a five-gal- outside stairs leading to the officer's
and asked for some shells for hh
ion tin of water on hU bead and bed room. In the nig^J he felt 1 gun. a leopard had been taking his
something feeling around his face.
:. and never spill Grabbing his flashlight there stood
I turn as they
he must bring tbe skin to me U he
I a drop. They,..
bandits here, but natives do steal
ful sense of balance.
returned.
Several
natives
now and then. It's not difficult j pard
Our cool spell is over. I wouldn't
either os so many do not lock their' chased It. and it Jumped onto one
of the men and got hlniMown. The
fer the natives as their blood U thin doors at night. Last year Mr. Cun­
ningham
kilted
a
white
elephant
and they cannot stand the chilling
and pulled it off. They held it by
winds. Some things are frosen and
real albino. There's a family of al­
again, while the others speared IL
bino natives near Tukuyu—while'
When the natives get angry at a
seems to make their blood coagulate negroes.
leopard they go alter U with a de­
and they die. They may be shiverA man
On his way to Mom­
’ ing and the perspiration may be I baaa from Nairobi to play In a
standing out on me.
: game. He started in good time with
' I am getting so I can understand a car-load of people Having gone been known to jump right over a
' the natives some, and talk with quite a ways there was a rhinoceros sleeping boy to get a goat There
' •
jn the middle of the road
huts tbe other night. They were ahead. They’re bad acton Often goat-house.
। preparing supper of corn meal must. ■hey charge at an automobile and do
1 The men eat first, then lhe women a lot of damage. This man waited
cat what is left When I was ready and waited, first backing out of
to depart I was going to give them sight and making believe that he slroy much of the natives' crops Rethe parting greeting, but made a had gone, but all In vain. The rhino
mistake some of them laughed, but
spend the day
A friend and
generally they don't show their down in ttic middle of the road. climbed a very
feelings. I said "Mubukege." which After several hours' waiting, the Ing a big plain
u,«i,
------- , were luaur uj
aa wc .*■ wuir
evidently been
say •’Mugonegc." meaning “may you by train Near Dar cs Salaam some . monkeys thal
natives were working a man s farm watcliing ua from a hidden spot. On
gone" meaning ' may you rest where with oxejt. A rhino charged on our retum they look exactly our
them. They ran for safety and the , name course, climbed the hill just
done, would stop and rest
on in their greetings, one following beast followed. When the white n,
farmer came he found no men soon |
w (Uq
reaching the ’top
one approached and told him the joo^a ovcr the valley just as we did.
,kho looks after thia —
Coffee
printed at Dar es Salaam. There is trouble The man sent a native for
a dally edition also of tbe “Tan- his gun. but the lad brought a shot Farm has a chair on bls poreh end
goes there to rest. Boou.limes
ganyaki Standard " for the town of gun loaded with bird shot. He sent -often KOC5
him back for his big rifle While he puts his chin in ids hands and
and c»iU us 26 shillings or 1650 a waiting, the rhino charged the au- sips thinking one day he found a
year If we had a radio we could gel tomoblie and the while fanner had large monkey sitting hi his chair
also an Empire program from Eng-

tMn. Anna

-.

favorable time in many months she wm able
favorable to be carried to her aon, Ralph's,

waiting an old man came

evening he met a

the shut-in

her daughter, Mr*.'K. D.

and nothing but a
rapidly and they eon* undsrrtand
bullet can stop it. A wounded buf­ bow • UWe white ehfid can team
falo ia terrible. A week ago two na­
Um ef the northern territory want
and tries to carry
out and shot a buffalo. They wait­
tad-ehe csa do it
ed to aee whether they had killed things on

RnwnTCenter were callers at Jen- ceremony which united In marriage
oZLy
Mre.
Mae and
Mater.
।&lt;nd
Elmer
Hanes
Mrs. Mae Mater.
Witnesses of the wedding were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Yoder and Frank Hyde. Mr. Hanes' uncle and
Mrs. Claude Whitney attended tho Mrs. Dorothy Hoffman his cousin.
funeral of Fred Messacar at ttie Mr. Hanes spent lhe past winter In
U. B. church of Hasting*. Saturday.

time, old-f

Mid piano
and Mrs. J

Wm. Flory
Sunday, af
Visitors
day were:

of West O
and daugh

Nellie Herb
drew Mattfc

Huver of

L

nle Matthc
Mr* Nerva

Al Booher
Sunday.

Italy pre
Missouri m

mentis

Hartford, Oonn. for several months
ter Jean ot Clartrville visited', Sun­ with relatives. They arrived at the
Nobody use
I Hoffman home in time for supper.
____________
day. at Art Richardson's.
gifts he do
John Mishler and wife of Grand Mr. Hyde also being prraenL They
Rapids were Saturday night guests will make their home al Mrs Hanes
trait spent Mother's Day with her i at Will Mishler’s. Bupday they via- residence near Berryville. Friends
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Vox.
Ited Mr and Mrs. Kyte Slaubaugh of this community offer congraluTlie Helping Hand Club, which of Sunfield.
la lions.
----------was held at the Warner homo on
Guests Bunday at Ray Glllasplc's
Charles King and family and
were Mrs. olllasple's brother. Clare
tended and the program on “Michi­
Kidder, and mother ot Lansing.
gan's Wild Flowers,'' presented by day guests of Elmer Shaffer and
Seward Walton of tlie Evangelical
Mrs. Ettlc Champion, was very In­ family.
Seminary at Naperville. UL was
teresting- The next meeting will
home from Friday until Monday.
MARTIN
CORNERS.
be held with Mrs. Susie Hall in
A good attendance and fine din­
June with tbe program in charge
STONY POINT.
ner and p splendid sermon and
Charles Barkuff wm in McBride
ere of Michigan" will be the topic.
Monday attending the funeral of a
Myrtle Rogers is suffering with church. Sunday. The ordinance of relative.
arthritis and Ettle Champion la baptism wm administered to two
Tbe school will close Friday and
children.
Mrs. Frances Darby Conklin of Friday eveningDorothea Brouard. who teaches at Allegan wm a Suuday afternoon
John Morgan has purchased the
Laming, spent the week end with
place Just arrow from the Stony
her mother and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Casper Thomas of Point cemetery and will take pos-

You
dolk

Mr. and Mrs. Owen Smith and
family were week-end gutsts of Mr.
and Mrs. J. Katherman in Brad­
ford. Ohio.
Mr. and Mra. Guy Kantner and
children spent Mother's Day with
lhe latter's parents. Itev. and Mrs.
Frank Moxon at Caledonia.
Mr. and Mrs. William Strong and .
daughter ot Jackson. Mr. and Mn.
Jay Dttman of Detroit, Miss GJen­
na Blocher of Holland spent the
week end with their parents, Mr.

VALUASUI DISCOUNT—THIS AOVUTISIMSHT
ACTUAUY WORTH SI.51 I

Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hilton vis­
It being necessary for Chas.
ited Mrs. Hilton's children tn Flint
from Friday unto Sunday.
living, he has moved over near
Lloyd Coodenough of the CCC Coats Grove.
camp now stationed at Camp Cus­
Claude Demond. who was operatter. Battle Creek, visited the fam­
ilies of Willard Hilton and John pendlcitls last week returned lo
their home Saturday. His friends
attended ths church services here, are wishing a speedy and complete
Bunday.
recovery for him.
The L A. 8. will meet with Mr*.
Clara Hensel Wednesday. May 20.
The depression cost tho United
for a pot luck supper. A co
vttatten l» extended to all.

mm*

NOTICE TO AUTHORIZED DI 8TBI BUT 0*8

Old
World

Woadbary's Fcrtame, Woodbury's Lipstick and WwOwry's

REGULAR PRICE

SATURDAY

ONLY!

The young met and yount
women who will graduate
thw year will go forth to

will be

Woodbury's Cold Cream

Quality materials and expert workmen

ore at your command.

Anything

you may need in tho line of building materials can be bought from us. Wo

complete line of Paints, imide and out. Roofing Materials, wood and
asphalt. Cement, Lime, Brick and Lumber for all work.

TOTAL VALUE .-$2.10
If you do not use

We also maintain

competent staff of skilled workmen, eaparienced in “hams building.*'

Gel

in touch with us now and enjoy the comforts of a modern home.

Have lhe Home^Fix-Il Man repair or rebuild your ncreeiu

m. Woodbury

than $3.10 we will Uvc you 3 sett free I

FOR ALL
FOUR

Wff|

ARTKLU

AU CIHU1NI WM. WOODBURY FRODUCTS
•ovn&lt; svlOnce-r-and it will be

ONLY ONI SIT Wifh Uch Coupon

THE HOME LUMBER CO
PHONE 2276

BUILDS HOMES

HASTINGS

N

For
to J

�HQSQMNfl OLDER
MEMBERS OF ». E. S.
Program tar Obsercuci of "Borah B.
Fow.r, Dv"
.

CLERKS’
SALE/
njng ot the Chapter will bs given by
Mrs, Powers; Mre. Allie Young is to
review the years to 1915; Mn. Lula
Mead, *a post matron, will take tho
Mil ten years; Uw organisation of
tho otter Chapters in the county
between 1879-1890 la the topic Mrs.
Cora Gebhardt will discuss; Mrs.
Grace Murphy closes the program
with a resume up to the present
time. Old-fashioned songs by Frank
Bayles. solos by Mrs. Robert Burch
and piano duels by Mrs. Ida McCoy
~ “
and Mrs.
I “US Evans will provide
the mupc-------------------------the occasion..
It CM to eeen that a very pteosprospect*
-' ---------for all ■
u&gt;| w&lt; '
*- ------------------

•*“ ’°tod to hold their next njectJ
®nd
n°mr' Harrw t*i&gt;
will be Ite annua] picnic tor all tha
ministers and their families.
Juaa Jg-M Mr. Angell will take
a toad of boys to Berea, Ky., for the I
first National Congress of Hl-Y of­
ficers ever held. Boys from every
state in the uplori are expected
there. Branch Ricky is general
chairman.
___

who all

Kenneth Pratt, who is working in
Battle Creek waa the guest of his
parent! Saturday night and Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Newman Tuttfe of
East. Lansing called on Mn. Jane
Tuttle Sunday afternoon.
*
Mn. Mildred Roush Is helping
Mrs. Ernest Williams with her
housework, for a few weeks.
. Clayton Houser and a friend of
Grand Rapids called on Ernest
Wiliams and family Sunday after­
noon.
Homer and Harold Smith and
families of Hastings were Sunday
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mn. Orloy Smith.

Mr. and Mrs. John Weaver visited
Wm. Flory and wife at Woodland
Runfl^y afternoon.
Visitors at L. J. Matthews' Sun­
day Were: Mr. and Mra. J. Burg­
horst, Mr. and Mm. Hale Burghorst
ot Wm Olive; Mrs. Maude Smith
and daughter Geraldine af Grand
Hap Ids;Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Brown.
Mr. and Mra. Stuart Brown. Mrs.
Nellie Herbert of East Lansing: An­
drew Matthews and family of H**Bunday dinner guests of Mrs. Jer­
ry Foley were: Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Huver of Lansing and Mr. and Mrs.
Nay Bump and family of Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. James Matthews of
Plainfield, Ml&amp;ses Lillian and Min­
nie Matthews of Grand Rapid* and
Mrs. Nerval Nielsen and family were
callers at Mrt. Etta Bump's Bunday.
•Mr Mxj Mtt.BtnjwQ Hauer mto.
daughter. Mabelle, were callers at

THE

CEOZ&amp;EOAM.
Mj. and Mr*. Rolland Tallfesro
of Battle Creek spent Bunday with
their parents. Mr. and Mis. Koest

HVi-lb.

Splendid Fleur

Sunnyfield Flour
Gold Medal ««•»*•* M'A-ib.
’

Henkel's Fam. Flour ‘
Henkel's Velvet FkJfr

27c
5-lb.

Henkel's F«n«he Flour

Mb.

Splendid s«»&lt;«h« Flour

. ■
-t
Your worries will bo over oad you will save
dollars in tiro wear if you bring your car
to us and have the front end chocked
far ALIGNMENT!

• o'Clock Coffee

Dog Foods

Red Circle Coffee

Daily Dog Food
6
Baby FoodH^r’i

Condor Coffee

85c

Brooms
Hershey's Cocoa

Beech-Nut Coffee

27c

Del Monte Coffee
largo
bottle

A“

Ketchup

Bokar Coffee

Hills Beos. Coffee

No. S

Maxwell House CoM*‘

Bulk Rice

Corned Beef Likb'- 3

Whitehpusc Coffee

Corned Beef Hash 2
Bisquick •X“ 15c

Kaffee Hag or Sanka

25c

Shortening s«,&lt;u
Black Pepper

Salt

quart
bottle

R,i*1’ ’

Vinegar
^*a
Vtl^ATS

Hershey's Sahms Choc.)

R. G. Dun, La Palina,
Champions

Diamond Crystal

Chocolate Drops
P&amp;G f«p

3
10

Palmolive or c**w

4

w^Futur.

oitnwuLhaj

3
3

Pork and Beans

2

Del Maiz Niblets
Peaches
e8S?‘

2

a

,

up

Sahins Pswdar
,1 All Neil Brush for
T»?

Super Suds io* —•
Mustard

Kutol

Wall Cleaner a

25c

Macaroni “

25c

A-Penn Oil
French's &lt;£».&lt; 2 »**• 15c

25c

25c

2
2

Brown Sugar

25c

College Inn Soups 2
Lima Beans

3

Calumet

Waldorf Tissue

Beef Stew

Fig Bars
Pink Salmon

4X Sugar wuw
2
Crisco or Snowdrift
Mb.

Peanut Butter

rolb

Scot Tissue
Paper Towels

25c

Tomato Juice

Northern Tissue

Beans • G~*»w»

To (m jro., forb ar
WowtaUHSaaMa

w af

N Y tty. Ud bo.

SatetoWMMS*

(M
Urretebbte

i
I

Jellies

|

Mushrooms

rajah salad DRESSWG

Beef to Boil

Din Fickle*

•A-M*-

Ground Boel

Chopped

pl“- 12c
8-0 a.
glass

&amp;£££

2-ox.

Button,

Popular Brand,

Beef Roast

Karo Syrup

4

Cigarettes
Whitehouse Milk

Milk
* Carnation
Morton's Salt

Boof Pot Roast
IW-U&gt;.

2

Kitchen Kienzer

Hocklcss Picnics
Slab Bacon
c2!l

Fels Naptha Soap 10

Heinz Soups V±L 2
Campbell's

Sliced Bacon

Am. Family Flakes

Hominy °' **•“'K,&lt;ut

Heinz Beans

UNtVEI

2.1b.
loaf

CrandKotkor’a

Dole Pineapple Juice

Pacific Tissue

Listen..

SeediasA

Bread

24b.
bon.
44b.

Beans

Bulk Green Tea
Mr. and Mrs. James Hermincttc
and chUdrep spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mr®. Milo Earl near Otsego.
o u-u
home , W«re George CTosy of .near,
j-,,uc Creek, Mr. and Mn. W. O.
wttto'
«ref-RU
--------- s and wrusm
Morrel
Morrell of Plainwell.
Mr. and Mn. Ben Norman and
sons Havard and Homer and wife
spent Sunday with Dale Norman
and family near Plainwell.
Gerald Rupe and family of this
vicinity will rpove near Charlotte
this week where he will raise onions
this summer.
Mi- Flowers of Delton la In this
vicinity this Monday giving the
TB test to cows.

Crackers
RsifiaKi^ &amp;

।

Iona Hour

Chick..

T^°

Woodbury's

w^ljju

Pork Steak isJCT Cuts
-J

J4k*

Heinz Vinegar

I

Orange Juice
Tait Boy Soups TC?

Fork Chop* rint c-to

Apple Butter

Haddock Filats

1

Potato Chips
Jello *

Porch

Fr«h C«u&lt;bt

J

’ Umm t. Kat. SoM
i.HW
WMM. Sw.,
1
W«L, rtwo.
«&lt;NA«

Lux or Ivory Flakes
Soon Chios SZJqU

Fol Naptha Chips

Luncheon Moat

2 •— 15c

�THT WASTnfOB BAWHIB, THCMOAT, KAT 1*. 1W»

tHiPPiiiQ Thousands,

.......... ............................................ |,V

eouM- motlter. Me »Ke. end three ot M* I TWENTY SCHOOLS
ilttl* children. Even one experience; 1
Ilk* tiiat would not add greatly to j
INFIELD MEET I Charla* L.
tetlnf * heavy tourist sea! more than held their own. Evident-'
^takers Ln tli* admlptotmd j
i ly tiring of exacting food..guns and
nilurall,
tommud
.
.pin.
ot
ra'
0r*n
f
«viU«
Aw»M»d
Oap for
fka
at
Michigan
have
gone
: ammunition from sheep ranchers.
Muon
venge. So perhapa there was-a rea-.
“
*
/
Community
May 8. at hla home
to get ail tourist facilities
son why cruelty was inherent in;
Pint Place—Martin
Park Road south af
_
■ .teg* for the official opening I
Cn
?
el
.
",
ln
-1
Corners
Second
er a lingering
of Michigan’* free-state-park *y«-. ■
j deadly' raids something over 00
Distribution
i years ago. and brutally killed every dian retaliation" may have led too.,
to the sincere belief of tbe wratern
rancher in cold blood as they went settler
that "tbe only good Indian is
£
ciant funds for operation and gen- &lt; The settlement of the west. Cruelty along. They killed those who had
eral un/.raraMe wrallter txmdtuem "* IMtenol ta their «*rt*m. ud been most friendly to them just to a dead Indian." Tbe white
readiness to kill one red-skin pc- 8roundr J1be Orangeville school
early in Rte season, nearly 8.000.- the warriors prepared themselves impress their followers that Uierc cause of the crime* committed' by WM •V*rded the cup for having the
Ln which be Uypd, tad
must be no friendship with the a^r ree^^folto? as a nat­
Marsh and famUy and Mr*,
be keenly felt by
of lite state Authorities believe that WCH ** 1° inflict it. Perhaps it is to whites. They argued that anyone
ural consequence a* they frequency',lers *choola ln second place.
throughout Michigan IbU Mura Mb b. rau&amp;d or
rack and children of Battle Creak
]»
The winners of first place for
——*-•
—
| orlctu record of lhe Apaches. Il is strong man to kill si friend. If they
young ■like. Ha
each
school,
which
counted
five
T _
Wffl
dren brutally murdered.
believed
that-------in some
nrehistoric
Leonards Slater,
IDurUt accommodatlan3iu*vc lk
-c&gt;*----------—--------*----------------busy throughout May and InerraJd
Frank Hallock of MU®. spent
or Improwd u &gt; number
*&gt;»»
But u.ou,h orarawn.
b&gt;. Ih-bEL
to lhe Indiana
taken into slavery, which was vir­
lo Jun* in collecting and of Hit narks since last fall bv the where In tlie north and settled in
Thuraday tad ■ Friday afternoon*
.
p
ervatlon. many
tually a living death. Repeated bond of Apaches were captured, all _*
....
J”?--..
Ik. nra.tfhue.etf eT-rlbal won Kt
with his brother
v» *****;••* .vut. *u**ua K*1M wvv, ---- ---------------- --------- „ slaughter
-----by the Apaches brought trouble for the whites wm not yet] piny yard Dash—Lyle Dunn,
.
-'to various point* through­ labor. N6l only have new and al- Ume were common.
Tl»e Siouxs retaliation of its kind, both on*1 tbe brave* re? outN^athat kept Monroe 'scll0°1' D°Iiald Springer, telling the
out the proven pheasant territory tractive park buildings been con- smashed into the Comanche In­
he-wM X
_
part ot soldier* who went out to
6) tbe southern half of the lower
them
the old a* well. He WM a
structed. tqr the immediate conven- dlons “and
"•* drove ,K
**" further west fight them, and the few settler* who
peninsula.
Orow
the Gull Pralrl* Tent, L
yard
Lenee Of visitors, but foot-trails have In one of their tribal conflicts, and sought to make homes in territory tlderable period of tinw. Chief Nana i
[nc /kpaencs
_1 been built and bathing beaches Im- the Comanches in turn smashed OTCr
over WDlcn
which the
Apaches roamea.
roamed. nfUaJilTndeJUnPWhI^dteln^/&lt;?^;SprlnKer''McCallUm #cho°1’ Martin Richland.
better.
into the Apaches and drove them .
murder3 by Ithese Indian* of age and even handicapped by aucrusey
I PTC**1 The majority of tbe Im- into
Naomi Valentina,
th.
torrid
deaert
region*
of
the
T^f
J .it!
* complex* .nd
tivSC anddhtebladvanc^Utveu*SPhe 1 Carltan Center. Helen Jenkin*, Mo their golden
southwest It wouldn t seem possible
whU£. Durlng the Civil war
and Carol and baby Marshall of
tn February. 1933,
Callum. Thelma Ball. Dunham.
Battle Croft spent Supdav evening
that a considerable body, even of Ocncri] carleton. wtth the famous
Standing Broad Jump - Dale
with hu^porenu, Mr. Ind Mra.
the game firm to continue the arIndiana could find
sustenance
Carson as hla guide, went after
' SponseUer. Dunham school, Thelma in which ite had
years
of
hl*
life,
enou,‘!- ?
Apache*, the order being given Although he was being pursued by । Bal] Dunham. Martin Guernsey,
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
ThU Incubation work U con duct»reaA
to
keep
body
and
wul
togethout
^mdian
warrior*
were
to
be
Mr. tad Mra. Lester Lord and baby
a force many times as large os the; pish. Naomi Valentine, Carlton ago he moved lo.
d annually to replenish lhe pheaa- and Winfield Lord from near Qr- n That tbe Apache, did it and thot wherever and whenever they
one he could muster, he met his ■ Ccnter&gt; Maxine coolbaugh and
vere awakened- out of
seemingly thrived,
found Indian* and whites eneiple* in eight different engage- J
aon. Irving
angevflle were Bunday guests of------------------------speak*
--------- „volume*
------- — .
Catharine Stutz, Martin Comer*.
provide mature birds for release. Mr. and Mr*. Jim Wilcox. Mr. and for
fra— ^«
BHratr
cfAmlna a*
au well
wall as
aa for
fnr , . . , . ,
,
lr stamina,
; both had bloody scores to even up. menu, and defeated them in every]
Running Broad Jump—Bernard
tad^QUL
Mrs. Mark Garrison and daughter । their ability, lojturvive under most but the final result could only be one. This was very largely due to
four grandchildren
.as Just a nice crowd
discouraging conditions.
In ac­ the surrender of the Indians, or the fact tmt he knew every inch of i Preston. Fish school. Donald Spring­ grandchild; -a nie
er. McCallum.
GRANDDADDY OF 'EM
af young peopte Mraha4in&lt; Uw
Meyers, who had l
tbe territory over which he fought,
Mr. and Mrs Frank Schrler of climating themselves to these desert their complete extermination.
Baseball Throw—Richard Brad­
AU. GETS LICENSE. Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
newlywed*. Mr. and Mra. Larry
with her uncle alno«
General George Crook assumed and was able to take advantage of shaw. Orangeville school, Ralph
Anders, a few slicks of dynamite
Antiquated automobiles which can the tatter’s parent*. Mr. and Mr*. ' sun-baked, and capable of surviving
every favorable position. Their rug­ Dunn. Merle Dunn and Leon Dunn, brothers, David of
command
of
tbe
Department
of
i the most bitter experiences that It
aUU be induced to chug along, are Harry punn.
Newell of "
ged lives an the desert too. made
Arizona
in
1871
and
many
of
our
Monroe,
Naomi
Valentine.
Carlton
apparently taking on a, distinct vaiMr and Mrs Roy Oaks and chil­ i was possible for any human body to older readers can remember his them immune to troubles and diffi­ Center, Ellen Wright, Orangeville, Charleaton;
tte to Michigan, for commercial ad- dren were Bunday guests of their I endure. Living, nr pe.rhaps "cxlstculties that would beset the pur­
battles with the Apaches. He took!
Norma Todd. Carlton center. Greta
verilJng purpewe*.
suers. At limes there were as many
son, Mmuel Oaks, and family west
ly. under these most abnormal sur­ lhe position that lhe Apache In- as n thousand American soldier* on, Cogswell. Lake Vlek.
of Middleville.
I chinning—Merle
Fruln, Bullis
rounding*.
{eemed
to
bring
along
Mr. and Mr*. Howard Johnson of
M toother day
bad os they were supposed to be; his trail, and they had the assist­ school. Richard Nobles, Orangeville,
w
h
It
a
m&lt;Mt
shocking
cruelty,
and
by friends and
ance
of
scores
and
scores
of
civil
­
fcently tn th* Department of Bute Hickory Corners were guests on
Clarence Hoffman. Dunham. Mar­
that living in a desert country
I of Beltevue, Mr. and
Sunday of Uie latter'* parents. Mr. a vitality endowed with a malice whose natural product* would not ians. But tho foxy old chieftain was tin Guernsey, Fish. Naomi Valen­
Bishop of BaUte Creek,
not only able to live off of the more
purchaaed by business firms for use and Mrs. Wm. Havens.
support
them,
they
either
had
tc
tine.
Carltan
Center.
Maxine
Cool
­
ra. Albert Warner of
than 1.000 miles of country as he
In connection with an advertising
Mr and Mrs. Horry clem enter­ any other band of Indians on our starve or steal; that our
baugh
and
Catharine
Stutz.
Martin
fill the ! Passcd through, but also very sklllBMC WMltltl. Mr. and Mra.
maaakm their
UKU daughter.
«*u»..^, Mrs
«... Cecil continent. The name of Apache
11am Wilkins. Chas.
tained
fetaire.
tbe ■ fully slipped out of all the traps set, Comers, Crete Cogswell. Lake View,
1
Ward and husband and Rockford won grew lo be one lo be dreaded menL'a vacillating policy with
Marlon Leach. Mra.
Recently, however, a request came
Indiana had convinced them that
Ifilinmnn
for
his
capture.
When
they
thought
and
Prances
Barber
ANOTHER ADVANCE.
Tor a till* and license for the oldest
Mothcr'i Day guest* of Mr. and fileted with a nervous desire to the whites were afraid of them. For they had him "cornered" he man- ‘I *»*.***•&lt;■
Before AJ.
Dr.. Lister,
i rarabuj*, *famous
u****mu*&gt; A&gt;*
British
******i
car In Department ot State records,
Mra. Don Douglas* were their chil- । butcher, a sort of a mass neurosis these reason* lhe Apaches had aged to break through and gel away, physician developed tbe antlacptlc Plainwell
•0 far a* veteran clerk* can recall.
chosen the policy of stealing and
gloried Ln going to Ute mast
He had to yield to the power of »u- theory and practice of surgery the
A Detroit firm applied tar a certifi­ dren. Mr and Mrs. Roy Douglass of | that
robbing
os
the
easiest
way
for
them
brutal
lengths to slaughter nn
unfortu
.Hastings, Mr. and Mra. Oley Doug- u
—
rrar«.&gt;.­
perinr forces, and our troubles with number of fatalities following «urcate of title ana 1936 plates for a
lo
Ke!
along
and
perhaps
that
nate victims that might fall into their
tH*.
ar*ai*h»u were nrartlrallv
_ ■_____
*&lt;___ ____
«.*_ Since
••*___
lhe Apaches
practically rnrlrn
ended. _*
gical
operations
was*____
terrible.
19Q3 touring car that had been pur- • lass and children of tike Edger dls•pent Mother's Day wtth Mr*. Frank
hands. They seemed to take special method was more suited u&gt; their But they were vicious, wicked flght- that time the ute ot antiseptics in family of Bellevue,,»
‘~J~ - Detroit clttoen. It ■ trlcl and Mr. and Mra. Myron
General Crook ers and for years a constant terror
WDeck and Mn. MMnd Ftemtar
delight in slow torture
One fti- natural instincts
j Bishop.
and his men took up lhe trail Of 1I to all who sought to cross the desert surgery has resulted Ln a marvelous of Marshall and Mr.
mother. and family tn honor ot thalr mothW.
L.
Hoard
and
daughter
of
Improvement in that difficult and Worth Green
and no certificate of title
Chief Geronimo and his band and
Ums
head
downward
to
the
wheel
,
in
the
days
of
the
"Covered
Wag
­
Day
Flint were Saturday night guest* of
trying work. Now it is announced
tirelessly kept after them until they
of
a
wagon,
and
build
a
slow
fire
on." before air-cooled trains were
his sister, Mrs. -Geo. Havens, and
and presented Mr W|tl
surrendered. They were given no
even thought of.
g
family. Sunday they all drove to under them DLigulslng themselves .
Mra. Aaron Treece
vice that will still further aid the
tn mi.
with bunche* of grass they would
RgitwBb Kalamo visited Mr. Qlenard Earl
surgepn. A cool, germ-killing ray
was surrender or extermination.
ter near South Havens where a fam­ patiently wait beside tbe trail and
Gyy, tad Sunday.
lias been perfected at the Mayo her daughter, Mr*.
General Crook sought to solve the
Ernest areas spent Sunday tn
murder in cold blood any while* or
...
GLASS CREEK.
Laboratories in Rochester. Minn., family.
tidied up for King George. Also, ily gathering was held in honor of
Apache jjroblem after defeating
_
____
_____
_
enemies
who
might
come
along.
their
.parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J.
D.
Mrs.
F.
Ktorte
tad
*oh.
nraa* portrait* show tbe royal &lt;1MMother's Day visitors at Chas. which destroys ail bacteria which
them, by encouraging the Indians
Mr. and Mra. B. Rowland and
Ho*ird'»
fiftieth
wedding
annlver■
Their
shrewdness
and
deception
Ln
Len have Installed a new monocle.
Whittemore's were. Mr. and Mr*. may be floating in the air of tho Hastings were
family vWtod Mr. and Mra. Ben
sary, Following a dinner at which 44 certain ways was shown by their lo cultivate1 land, grow crops and
But this ] Fred Bechtel and Billie ot Hastings. operating room. This will still fur­
Walt Bunday in the Pratt district in
relatives were present lhe honor adoption of tactics not unlike the become self supporting
I Mrs. Cleo Brown and children of ther help pie work of the surgeon. ' Mra. Hattie
didn't
set
well
with
a
ring
of
govi
guest* were given a reception al the present day gangster They perm! ITexas, Mra. Llbble
Jr»
iUC»u mi- । Hickory comers and Mr. and Mra.
church where over 100 people galh- ted Mexican sheep ranchers to live rrnment contractors in Tucson. Ari- |
.
NORTH HOPE .
Rapids and Mr.
ample , Lowell Whittemore of Delton.
■ ■■------:
DEAD wh*t Mn Mar- ered to extend congratulaUons Mr | for a Ume on sufferance. Bo long a* zona, who were furnishing
f
Mr. and Mn. J. Carver and chUThe Brush Ridge community club
Mr. and Mrs Fred Otis spent! was held at the schoolhouse, May
dren, Marguerite Mills and Ottof
and Mrs. Hoard ore known lo a the Mexicans furnished them rrith I supplies to lhe Indians on reserveVan Sickle of Lansing, were guests
lartfe number of people Ln this and arms, food and ammunition they tions. through holding of govern- &gt; Sunday morning with thclr^ son.j' 8lh, about fifty being present. Miss family.
""" wife Ln Kalamazoo In“the
“ - j, Margaret Johncock waa in charge of
of
Mr. and Mra. Chas. Harrington
nearby, communlUea
communities____________________
let “
lhe sheep
men live. Knowing ment contract* for supplying food. Lyle, and
nearby.
1
The Moore___
/.
Sunday guests and callers at tho practically every- foot of lhc Krcttt Politics even crept into fighting In- afternoon they attended the funeral ]j the program, which was very well with a P. T. A. EveryoM weteome. Bunday.
ef James Moshier. a brother-in-law,
home of Mr. and Mrs Francl* Oor- , desert, and being able to force am •
Mra. Badler. Mia* Mtat Blraibaaa
• •'I given and enjoyed by all. After the
in
Marshall.
every governmental activity
The
supplies 'from sheep-herders
ham ware the latter's mother. Mrs. ple
'
"*■
1
1
, I business meeting ice cream and cake of Hasting*. Mrs. Ora Smith and Battle creek spent tbe week ।
Sunday visitors at Forrest Havens'
with Mr. and Mn. B. Rowlader.
Clara Wilder and brother Fred through threats of death, they contractors could readily sec that
‘ were served. Tlie next meeting will
Keech of Battle creek, and their were more than able to match their when the time came that the In­ were Mr, and Mrs. Robl. McOlock- be held at the home of Mr. and sey were Sunday
U Mr. and
daughter, Mrs. Willard Bayley and wits against those of the bravest dians Would become self-supporting lin, John and Gordon Havens of Mrs. Theodore Pranshka. June 12. Mrs. Henry Bidel
by growing their own crops that Hastings and Louis Havens of BatMisses Edna Wurm and Wilhel­
Hie profits of the ring would be
mina Pransiika spent Saturday with Kalamazoo spent Sunday iU'' Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Warren had Mr. and Mra. Loui* Ferguson of and Mra. Fred ^MJb.
completely wiped out
In other
■ words peace and quiet on the resex - as Sunday guests. Mr. and Mrs.! Cloverdale.
vatlons would be detrimental to Cook and children and Phil Warren ;. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Wurm and
।, family spent Bunday witn Mr. and
I their business and they were there­ and daughter Hazel of Lansing
Lron nua uul »tr« MH raS«n
Miss Virginia warren spent the I1 Mrs. Clair Blnkeley «uu
, wfore opposed lo It So Geronimo and
and »uu
son o
of
In- at Clayton johnaod'a in Bowi)e last
his captured warriors were exiled week end with Relatives In Lansing, ^lana
Wednesday evenjng and found Mr. Tetha Adkine
^Ta\°nhWher Ta?'1 Mr“' OtU&gt; Pran4hk* ln company Johnson in quite poor health.
to Florida, where they lived in vir­
Mr. and Mn. Cha*. Christopher
tual imprisonment Thus ended the spent Mother's L_,
Day ....
with ....
her ,par- wlth hor
Ldjia perguEugene Haight and Wife attended entertained their children and fam*
activity of the shrewd and very able ent*. Mr. and Mrs.
Uta.MMbtab Day.
'Lr.\ Ray Erway. ___ i ;«&gt;n attended the Mother and
Phil
Warren
had
the
misfortune
|
'
Apache Chieftain, and his band,
'
Daughter banquet at Cloverdale Middleville last Ttiuraday; • ’
who while on tbe warpath were to shoot aBB shot into one of his Friday evening.
Roy McCaul and wife apent Bun­
hideously cruel, and perhaps not fingers last Sunday It was neces­
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hulbert and day with her parent*. William HU1without some reason. Back in 1858. sary to have several stitches taken son and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hill of
when the Apaches were al peace after the removal of the shot.
Harold England of Lansing, Mor­
Battle Creek spent Bunday with
Bunday visitors at Roy Erway* their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert ris Lewi* and wifi of Kklamazoo
with Mexico, a Mexican General by
were. Mr and Mrs. Alt Wolfe, and Ulrict
and Vance Sharp and family of
Annette,
also
Maurice
Erway
and
an army, charged upon the Apache
Middleville were visitor* . it Leon. Battle craft, Mr. «qd Mb.
settlement
and butchered men, Harold Sharp of Grand Rapids.
Every student of public speaking Pott** Sunday.
women and children without mercy. Mis* Esther Erway. and Mr. and at Harvard la required to make an
Dunning
Geronimo then n young man was Mra. Dick Rose and son of Hastings. after-dinner speech. "I’ll pay for
Ray Otis and children of Kalama­ ibis, boys I" la always a winner.
able to make his escape, but includ­
known
ed among lhe slaughtered were his . zoo spent Sunday here

of pheasant eggs

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^sSli^wSan^? MapU Grove 1*
staying with hla grandmother, Mra.

Simple In operation, every piece
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RE YOU INVEST GET A "FARM-TEST!"
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STEEL MAKERS *ay— Ford buy* the be*t
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Doc* your car have Center-Poi*c Riding?

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NO HA«D CAXBON
SUIWSING MIMAOI

Doe* your car have fool-proof Super­

square incite* of braking surface.

• By concentrating on only on, motor fa*l

Doe* your car have a genuine steel body

•conomia, ora etfectad in rafineri*,, Wtrehousei, dtlivery truck, and ga, pump*.

structure? Does it have Safety Gias* all
that gives you this extra-protection without

That it why wa are able ta give you HighTe»t Action, High-Knocklesi Pawer and
Long Mileage
at regular gd* price*.

extra cost.

You get theae fine-car feature* in tho
Ford V-8 because of Ford manufacturing
method* and low-profit policy.

with Ford ia the popular field.

Made only irt1 ONE
grade and that grade­
gives unfailing top
performance^1. . * at

gives you this proved design, with 186

around? Ford is the only low-price car

Thb is one sign of tbe extra value in the
Ford V-8. Accuracy in manufacturing is
another. (Tbe Ford is made to unusually
close precision limits.) And there is a long

For Bost Results
. . . DM J
SUNOCO
MOTOR Oil

Sure Drop Planter

FORD V-8

This Year!

nU--B**k m RAISING

SPECIAL THIS WEEK!

justable for width. Fertiliser attachments.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES • Inc
BLUE

Hastings/ Mich
BS Otni GUISTS.. .Ford Saad*; Bnolag Hoar, Co Iambi* Network. Fred W*riog .nd Hi. Peoo«* Ta«d*y night* (Colambi*) *od FrirUy night* (N.B.C.). See radio peg* for death

VITALITY
STARTER

Positive clutch. Edge or flat drop hoppers. Three

t2S A MONTH.

. Hove you a V&gt;8 engine in your car P You
pay 81645 for it ia any other car but Ford.

6v«r 1,000,000
Chicks Ara Being
F«d on

Phone 2118

REGULAR

SUNDrf]

SMITH BROS
VELTE &amp; CO.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. MAY 14. 1936
' STATE PARKS LOOK

FOR RECORD CROWD
1 Anticipating a heavy tourist sea‘ son. caretakers Ui the administered
at Mason I *uw parks of Michigan have gone
_
on duty Co get ail tourist facilities
Free
*
। In readiness
(or tbe official opening
J of Michigan s free state-park -vs
[lent on May 30 Last year u. spur
; of an early closing due ic m.-w/TI
ciant funds for operation uni! grtera) unfavorable weather ••oru'.i■
early In the season neaih a &lt;x*.
000 persons visited the 53
part.

of lhe game farm will
throughout May and
in collecting and
of eggs for
through
territory

TWENTY SCHOOLS
IN FIELD MEET

ME BINS
Of SOUTHWEST

Orangeville Awarded Cup for
First Place—Martin
Corners Second
Representatives from about twen­
ty rural schools participated in the
Field Meet Saturday al lhe fair
&gt;ui.ds
The Orangeville school
wn- awarded tlie cup for having lhe

GM- of frders: I
labor Not oni

ONLY ONE

PASSING OF PIONEER
SOUTH SHULTZ.
RESIDENT OF COUNTY.
Lucy Sullivan of Kalamazoo spent
Charles L. Barber, age 71 yean. from Friday until Sunday with
9 months, pioneer resident of home folks.
Mr and Mrs Ernest Peake pleas­
Barry county, died Friday evening.
May 8. st hla home an the Milham antly entertained the Community
Park Road south of Kslamakoo. aft­ club Thursday, eighteen being pres­
er a lingering illneaa. Born In ent All report a tine time and a
Prairieville township. Sept. 3. 1865, wonderful dinner. The next meet­
he was the eldest son of Philip and ing will be with Mr snd Mrs Bur
Susan Barber pioneer residents of J re) PhlUpa. June n. g week later
Cressey Mr Barbera passing will than usual, so ail remembet the
be distinct loss to the community ' date.
Mr and Mrs Clyde Wolf Mrs
tn whlcn he lived and pls going will '
be keenly felt by all who knew him 1 Marsh and family and Mrs 8 Modax he waa s loyal frwnp io old end rack and children of Battle Creek
young alike
He had received ffnm spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs J
Leonard Slater former missionary W Tedrow
Prink Hallock of Milo
spent
to lhe Indiana on the Cressey res­
ervation. many Interesting legends Thursday and Friday afternoons
of Indian lore which he delighted in with his brother George Kenyon
Mr
and
Mrs
Fred
Hom
and
Eve­
telling the younger generation, and
and Mrs
Byron
tie wa» ■ delightful entertainer to lyn visited Mr
the old as well He was a member of Moody and their mother. Mrs Ma­
the Gull Prairie Tent. I O. 0 F in bel Moody of South Maple Grove
Sunday and found her feeling soma
Richland
Mr and Mrs Barber celebrated better
Rev Lewis Horn and Mrs Horn
their golden wedding hr.niversary 1
u. February IB35 at lhe home of and Carol and baby Marshall of
then son Ui Cressey in lhe old home Battle Creek spent Sunday evening
and Mrs
it. which he had spent so many with his parents. Mr
years of hu life About ten yearr Fred Horn
George Kenyon who Is quite ill
age. he moved lo KalSmasoo He
leaves beside the widow Nettle. one .seems some better at this writing
Those who were awagened out uf
-ui. living of Cressey; one daugh.i-r Mrs fva Bresson, of Galesburg, their slumber Thursday night and
fo.i: grandchildren and one great thought it was thundering found
grandchild a
niece
Mrs
Kale Out later It was Just a ntcr crowd
Meyers who had made her home of young people serenading Hie
Mr and
Mrs
Larry
a. 1. tier uncle since childhood, four newlyweds
nr others David of Laurier Wash. Andera A few slicks ot dynamite
Newel.
of
Milo
Frederick
of made lhe racket
Mr and Mrs Harry Mleaener of
Charlrator. and clayton of Cressey
Kalamaxov spent Saturday night
Five nephews acted as pall-bearers
The funeral was held at the home and Sunday with their parents. M:
• -.he sun ti: Cressey Monday aft­ and Mrs G E Kenyon Visitor, and
ernoon and »»' largely attended 1 callers liiete Bunday were Mr and
by friend.-, and relatives Those com­ Mrs Alva Kenyon Donald Bobble
ing from a distance were Mrs R C and Bennie of Bellevue. Mt and
ililte-r: M-' and Mrs Charles Hall Mr. Lynn Bishop of Battle Creek
Albert Warner of
u! Battle creek Mr and Mrs Wil­ Mr and Mrs
liam W.lk’.ns Chas Barker. Mrs East Hastings Mr and Mra Jess
Manon Learn Mrs Bertha Adams Kenyon at Hickory Corners and El­
and Frances Harber of K»bir.»ioo liot Eddy uf Delton
ant'. Mr and Mr» Dale Barber of
MORGAN
Mr and Mrs Vem Wilcox and
daughters of Dowling and Mr and
HIGHBANK.
Mr and Mrs Clair Marshall and Mra o E Padelford of Bellevue
fam.ly .&gt;f Bellevue Eart Marahall spent Mother's Day with Mrs Prank
! Marshall and Mr
ana
Mrs Wilcox and Mrs Mildred Fleming
Wirth Greer visited their mother and family tn honor ot their molt.
Mrs Freda Marshall Mother s Day
Mrs Gerty Proctor of Kalamaxoo
»r«t presented her with a new radio
Mrs Aarur T-cece of near Alic­ and Mr and Mrs Stanley Earl of
ea: ape:.i u feu days last a-eek with Kalamo visited Mr Ulenard Earl
Sunday
her laughter Mrs Byron Guy and
Ernest Gross spent Bunday
in
Mr* F Ktnne and son. Lyle of □rand Rapid.Mr and Mrs B Roa'iand and
FU.ci.gs were guests Thursday of
family visited M.r and Mrs
fkn
Mr and Mrs Frank Hawbiits
Mrs Hattie Whiting of Beaumont, Walt Sunday in lhe prall district in
T-xas Mis l-ibble Rusli of Grand honor of the birthdays of Mr. Ear;
Eaton
and
Mrs
Ben
Walt
Rapids and Mr and Mn George
Mr and Mrs J Carver and tillM.l.rr id Hustings spent Friday with
ii.t i: nr.iheu Henry- Bldelmar. and •tren Marguerite Milla and Otui
Van Sickle ot Lansing were guests
fain.lv
uf
Mr and Mrs Chas Harrington
f’Jir Moore school cloaes this week
a.-.r ■ P I A
Everyone welcome Sunday
Mi and Mrs Bernie Schulmer uf
Mrs Sadler M1M Edni Ellen bass
&gt;f Hio.tu.gs Mrs Ora Smith and Hattie Creek spent lhe week end
M ai..l Mis Flank Duell &lt;rf Crea- with Mr and Mrs B R- wiader
Amber Van BU'tle of
Ismslng
a.-n- Sunday guesls al Mr and
was taken sick las'. we--k while visit­
Mrs Henn Balrinian’i
(
Mi and Mn Lowell Preiablr ot ing Mi and Mrs Wm Van Sickk
Kmsn.u&gt;&gt;i spent Sunday al
Mr and Mr and Mrs chan Harrington
She remained with her pftrenU and
n.‘ :| M.-s Fred Reid's
is feellhg sortie better at Hili writ
mg
Mr and Mrs
Byron Clark of
J,ick.su 1. apent Sunday
with Mrs
Lelha Adkins
:
r quite pom nealth
Mr and Mrs chaa Christopher
F .4-1 - Haigm and wife attended entertained their children and fam­
' - funeral uf Mrs Bowerman in ilies Mother s Day
Middleville last Thursday
H"&gt; M«’a.L slid wife spent Sun
HOPE CENTER
b«. xil.'i he: parents WDhair. Hu;
Mra Lucy I .eonsrd, whe .'uu. been
.. 1 and w.fe in Middleville
staying with iirr daughter and fam­
Ha: .Id England Of I»islng Mur
ily m Homes returned to stay with
: ■ lea is and wife of Kalamarou J her eon Clyde and wife
.11... Vance Sharp and family ot
lit and Mrs Burdette Lyttle of
Middleville were visitors at Leon 1 Battle creek Mr and Mrs Clarence
l*.i : &gt; SundayTtxter and soi. Vernon. Mr and
Mr Harrison and family of Bar- Mrs Leon Dunning and daughter
1 « tukr nave moved onto the farm ‘ I-eatrice spent Sunday with their
known as the Fred Batey fartr.
I parents. Mr and Mrs Chas Me
Dermott ll was also Mr McDer1 molt s seventy-second birthday
Clarence Manck of Kalamaaoo
spent Bunday with bU daughter and
husband. Mr and Mrs. Clyde LeunI ord
Lottie Btldneger Lt Working for
' Chas McDermott
Mi and Mrs Earl Gale* spent
Bunday with their parent-* Mr end
Mrs Chas Kingsbury In Clover
dale
Mrs Ploy McDermott attended tl&gt;A
) W C T U at the Goodwill church
' in Rutland Thursday
Beward Walton of Maple Grove is
| staying with ht| grandmother Mr..
Mina Aldrich
Mr and Mrs Milton Warner of
Kalamaxoo visited
their parents
Mr and Mrs Fred Ashby over lhe
week end

Maile only in ONE
9TM1. MAKERS

aay—“Ford buys the beat

•—L** Other supplier* of materials and
paete

will tell you—“Nobody checks up aa

end price at Ford."
TW mean. a great deal to you at a

it ia our way of aafeguarding the
of every purchaser and it lead, to

mechanical depreciation on a

grade and that grade

Docs your car have Center-Poise Riding?
Ford gives you this modern feature

gives unfailing top

"a

front-«eai ride for back-scat passengers."

performance . . . at

Doc. /our car have fool-proof Super­

Safety Mechanical Brakes? The Ford V-8
give, you this proved design. with

Regular gas price!

IS6

square inches of braking surface.

l&gt;ocs your car have a genuine steel body

structure?
around?

Docs it have Safety I ilass all

Ford is the only low-price cur

• By concentrating on only one motor fuel,
economies are effected in refineries, ware­
houses, delivery trucks and gas pumps.

that gives you this extra protection without

extra cost
ou get these fine-car feature, in (ho

iiaaMa.) And there it a long

■■

This Year I
Yoa will save mbney by bay­

Test Action, High-Knockless Power and

ing Viunty thia season.

Long Mileage ... at regular gas prices.

FREE — Book on RAISING
CHICKS.
Come In and gel
— ywz copy.

popular bald.

itaPPF*»«V.S engine in your car? You

it ia any other car but Ford.

VITALITY
STARTER

That is why we are able to give you High-

(natures that ara exclusive

UM

Over 1,000,000

Chicks Are Being
Fed on

4-^^

ANDRUS SERVICE •

Phone 2240 £

SPECIAL THIS WEEK!

Starting and Growing
Mash
................
»1J5
1«W Dairy.......................... 51Jg
Calf Meal ........................ . ..Me

FORD V-8
*»■■&lt;■&lt; Hour, Columbia Network. Fred Waring .nd His Penn(CeiRMbig) aad Friday nights (N.B.C). See radio page for detail*

• Flrratone Tiree and Tubea
o Batteries, Windshield Wipers

REGULAR
GAS PRICE

• Sunoco Gas and OMa
« Vulcanizing.

I ■ few—a W fl
SUNDCU
BLUE

Greasing
Washing

MOTOR
FLHl

SMITH BROS.
VELTE &amp; CO.
Hastings

Phone 2151

320 000
These ।
ten offer
000 cash
giving t&lt;
one of tn
final rein

and all 1
in a nd ot

lion arts;
litre* 01.
was da!rgiven u
deposits
Tlie si
propositi',
voted tu
ly -Jerk
• lu DOO r.
Barry
deliver
eleven m&lt;
lease ft ..
pa si lor y 1
accept ::
■ettiemei;
and colh-

■ Oontb

MEET1N'

Membei
Rod and
tend the
ntng Ma
garage
At IhLs
ing year
report of
commit tes
taken on
ber shou)
mealing s

�THE HASTINGS BANKER, THURSDAY, MAY 14. 1M4

1 twenty schools

STATE FARKS LOOK

| army officers. In fact for a consid­
erable period of time the Apaches little children. Even one experience
.
FOR RECORD CROWD.
! more than held their own. Evldant- like that would not add greatly to
IN FIELD MEET
Anticipating a heavy tourist rea------------|son. caretakers
___ in the
____ administered
’ ly tiring of exacting food,-guns and Ihr pnu» at mind ot uiy nun. ord
n.iurMj.lnmratai
.
.pirti
or
r.
OranfovUlo
Awarded
Oun
tor
ammunition from sheep ranchers,
at Mason stele parks at Michigan have gone
°
.&gt;
on duty to get all tourist facilities
and seeking to get them out of their venae. Ro tierhana there was -a resFirst Place—Martin
In readiness for the official opening
way. lhe Apaches made one of their son why cruelly was inherent In,
Corners
Second
of Michigan's free-state-park sys- deadly raids something over 60 their method of warfare. Cruel "In- ;
i
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1&gt;
yeari ^0, Bnd brutally kilted every dlsn retaliation" may iiave led too,'
..nerrr acne.
wr.^u , R^^nUtives from about twtnto u.e
the sincere
belief o.
of u.e
lhe western
■ .
. .
. ..
. „
'rancher Ih cold blood as they went settler
that the only good Indian Is J*
Ptirt,c
»ll}e
oi u» wm. cm.llj
„„ kU&gt;d Uw„ who hu
deni funds for operation, and gen­ u»
a dead Indian " The white man's F,eld
J**, lhe
moW IHenoly to Uam Ju.1 to
eral unfavorable weather conditions ,u inlwrem In their wirtir*. aid
readiness to kill one red-skin be- i 8rout,d*- The Orangeville school
U» warrior, P"0«r« tMnualr.r, topm, „,lr
cause of the crimes committed by
^wanted tho cup for having the
from -arty youth W bear torture, aa
no fnentlahlo with lhe
another, seemed to follow as a nat- most
»,lh lhex “*nln OorweU aa to mtlkr IL Herhap. tt ta to
m
Michigan of lite state. Authorities believe that be resettled that there bt no hhuu an enemy, but It Ute. a ural coiuequence as they frequency nert •tow* m »«o:&gt;d place.
thk figure will be equalled or ex­
'T^e winners of first place for
“! “■* I moos man to klU a mend it they came across white women and chllceeded this year.
dren
brutally
murdered.
ea
^
h
*
ho
®
’
whlch count**
, Btahutoele
„ children they were
Ttusr^st accommodations have been beUnd that In
But tboutth ostonono
1.1.
S;
increased or improved at a number ase they came down tram some. uken Into alayery, which was «r|lrtnf
Repeated band of Apaches were captured, all: «rtVen also
of the parks since, last fall by tlie. where tn Ute north and selUed in iui||y
pm- Yard Dash—Lyle Dunn
use of federal relief funds and CCC• she southwest. Tribal wars al that ; slaughter by the Apaches brought trouble for the whites was not yet
various points through*
.
time
were
common.
Tbe
Siouxs
ESS
Swuia
aprC?:
labor. NOt only have new and at­
' retaliation of its kind, both oxr' tl»e
tractive park buildings been con­. smashed into lhe Comanche In-,I part of soldiers who went out to thJTrt M1
1 McCallum, Mildred Sponseller. Dunstructed. fqr lhe Immediate conven-. dlans and drove them further west1 fight them, and the few settlers who tne U. S troopers busy for a con- I h-m
I tence Of visitors, but foot-trails have. in one of their tribal conflicts, and sought to make homes in territory wiTSn ^uow^ofhMre«'
YBrd
^-France.
! been built and bathing beaches 1m­. the Comanches in tum smashed over which the Apaches roamed.
springer. McCallum school. Martin
i proved. The majority of the Im- into the Apaches and drove them Brutal murders by these Indians £hvX.i dilbHittei
O^m^y. Fish. Naomi Valentine.
into the torrid desert regions of lhe stirred up the fiercest Impulses of
anddhtaW2St*Jd v».dr.Carlton Ototer. Helen Jenkins, Mcly will be kept at re*djr lQr Pub!lc h** "T Memorial southwest. It wouldn't seem possible the whites. During the Civil war
w
Callum. Thelma Ball. Dunham.
that a considerable body, even of General Carleton, with the famous f
ohf
Standing Broad Jump — Dale
Indians could find
sustenance Kit Carson as his guide, went after iiSEJKSS’iS pyuSZ'
enough, on all these great desert lhe Apaches, the order being given
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Si «*»'■ nX?' v“taX. &lt;SS
1 Mr. and Mrs Lester Lord and baby areas, to keep body and soul togeth­ out that Indian warriors were to be it? te S
ty to replenish the pbeasan(t Winfield Lord from near Or­ er. That the Apaches did it and shot wherever and whenever they one he could muster, he met his
mu
tock at the farm and to
i„
At*Center, Maxine Coolbaugh and
angeville were Sunday guests of seemingly thrived, speaks volumes were found. Indians and whites enemies In eight different engagei,,—z*.■
~u.ni.
Catharine Stutz. Martin Corners.
Mr. and Mn. Jim Wilcox. Mr. and for their stamina, as well as for both had bloody scores lo even up.
d
d .
‘ u
y
Running Broad Jump—Bernard
Mrs. Mark Garrison and daughter i their ability, lo survive under most but the final result could only be SSrSV" .'SjEEn 1S or «7,Jg:JES1*clx»1conditions. In ac- the surrender of the Indians, or
of cloverdale were callers there.
.discouraging
----------- ------rllmatlno themselves to
tn these desert
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Scinter of, climating
ALL GETS LICENSE, Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of ■ wastes, the warriors became lean. their complete extermination.
General George c&lt; ook assumed every favorable position. Their rug-1 “$**•
—
—
j
«
aKiin-halrmt
nnrl
curvivilliz
5n..nn
m
automobiles which can the I-,,.-..
cupable nf
of surviving
tetter's parents. Mr. and Mrs. sun-baked, and r-ianahln
lire most bitter experiences that it command uf the Department of ged lives on the desert too. made ;
Harry Dunn.
Arizona in 1871 and many of our
distinct vai­
Mr. and MH. Roy Oaks and chil­ was possible for any human body to older readers can remember ills them immune lo troubles and diffi- ?£XT’ nun
culties that would beset the our- Center. Ellen Wright, Orangeville,
dren were Sunday guests of their endure. Living, or perhaps "exist­
n
N“I&gt;U T&lt;XM. CTrlton OTlUr. QroU
battles with the Apaches. He took1 IS™
son. Lemuel Oaks, and family west ing" would express it more correct­
suers. At times there were as many
. .k_ vl_k
'
ly, under these-mqst abnormal sur­ lhe position that tlie Apache in- as a thousand American soldiers on C7*^n„1' „
w-nD..n&lt;.
of Middleville
Fruto. Bullis
roundings.
seemed
to
bring
along
Mr. and Mrs Howard Johnson of ।------------ - ---------------- — --------- .
— bad as they were supposed to be; his trail, and they had the assist-1 Chtontog-Merto
ance
of
scores
and
scores
of
civil1
^n^nunh^n*
Hickory
Corners
were
guests
on
with
it
a
most
shocking
cruelly.»and
ls lhe Department a! Slate
that
living
in
a
desert
country
Ians.
But
the
foxy
old
chieftain
was
n
“
^nem
’
LJ
1
Sunday of the tetter's oorenta. Mr.1 ® vitality endowed with a malice
and Mrs. Wm. Havens.
and deadllness not possessed by whose natural products would not not only able to live off of the more
with an advertising
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clem enter- any other band of Indians on our support them, they either liad lo than 1.000 miles of country as he “
tallied their daughter. Mrs. Cecil i continent. The name of Apache starve or steal; that our govern­ passed through, but also very skill- ™«s Gr^^SXeU L^'ke Vtei
Ward and husband and Rockford soon grew to be one to be dreaded, ment's vacillating policy with the fully slipped out of ail the traps set Corners. Greta Cogswell, Lake View.'
over lhe week end.
The whole tribe seemed to be af- Indians had convinced them that
hl2
When %llWUihl'
ANOTHER
ANOTHER ADVANCE.
ADVANCE.
Mothers Day guests of Mr. and fileted with a nervous desire lo live whites were afraid of them. For they had him • cornered he manBefore Dr Lister famous British
Mrs. Don Douglass were their chll- butcher, a sort of a mass neurosis these reasons the Apaches had ooedlo brook throuyh »ntl B«t»«.y.
developed lhe OhUwpUi.
chosen the policy of stealing and
b hurt
an.­ I.___
___o___ ./TT_______ ..
He
had tn
to viAlrl
yield tn
to thi&gt;
the twiwwr
power nf
of su
a certlfl- dren. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Douglass of that gloried in going to lhe most robbing as the easiest way for them W
titeory and practice of surgery, the
Hastings. Mr. and Mrs. Oley Doug- brutal lengths to slaughter unfortuperior forces, and our troubles with number of fatalities following sur­
to get along and perhaps that
that had been pur- lass and children of the Edger dis- nate victims that might fall into their method was more suited to their the Apaches were practically ended. gical operations was terrible. Since
Detrolt citizen. It Uict and Mr. and Mrs. Myron hands. They seemed to take special natural instincts. General Crook But they were vicious, wicked fight­ that lime tbe use ot antiseptics in
Bishop
delight in slow torture. One fa­
ers and for years a constant terror
W. L. Hoard and daughter of vorite method was to tie their vic- and his men took up lhe trail of to all who sought to cross the desert surgery has resulted in a marvelous
sto no certificate of title
FUnt were Saturday night guests of time head downward to the wheel Chief Geronimo and his band and in lhe days of lhe "Covered Wag­ Improvement In that difficult and
trying work. Now It is announced
tirelessly
kept
after
them
until
they
his sister, Mrs. -Geo. Havens, and i of a wagon, and build a slow fire
on." before air-cooled trains were that there is to be added a new de­
family. Sunday they all drove to under them. Disguising themselves surrendered. They were given no even thought of.
' vice that will still further aid the
tbe Mme of a sister. Mrs. Ed. Car- with bunches of grass they would rest and were shown no mercy. Itsurgepn. A cool, germ-killing ray
ter near South Havens where a fam- patiently wait beside the trail and was surrender or extermination.
' lias been perfected at the Mayo
General Crook sought lo solve the
King George. Also. Uy gathering was held in honor of murder in cold blood any whites or
GLASS CREEK.
Laboratories tn Rochester. Minn.,
defeating
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D enemies who might come along. Apache problem after
Mother's Day visitors al Chas. which destroys all bacteria which
Hoard's fiftieth wedding annlver- Their shrewdness and deception in them, by encouraging the Indians
_ __ Following
_ l__ _a Ul
____ _at which
_ k-l-V. ..
the
. be- floating In the air of —
sary.
dinner
4* certain ways was shown K..
by their to cultivate land, grow crops and Whittemore's were. Mr. and Mrs. may
Fred
Bechtel
and
Billie
of
Hastings,
operating room. This will still furrelatives were present tlie honor adoption of tactics not unlike the become self supporting. But this
guests were given a reception at the present day gangster. They permit­ didn't set well with a ring of gov­ Mrs. Cleo Brown and children of ther help (he work of the surgeon.
Hickory
corners
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
I
church where over 100 people gath- ted Mexican sheep ranchers to live ernment contractors in Tucson. Ari­
NORTH HOPE .
DEAD Whu Mra MatLowell Whittemore of Delton.
lx
oi « ered to extend congratulations. Mr. i for a lime on sufferance. So long as zona. who were furnishing ample
Tbeb5d"S
Brush Ridge
Community
club
Mr. and Mrs. Fred OU. .pen. wi"'
‘KTrtS?™
’SS
and Mrs. Hoard are known to a 1 the Mexicans furnished them with supplies to the Indians on reserva­
«t»«l nr.“bKn, preset: MIk
large number of people In this and arms, food and ammunition they tions, through holding ot govern­ Sunday morning with their son.
nearby, conunynllles.
| let the sheep men live. Knowing ment contracts for supplying food Lyle, and wife in Kalamazoo. In the
।
■ Margaret Johncock waa in cliarge of
Sunday guests and callers at the ' practically every foot of the great Politics even crept into fighting In­ afternoon they attended the funeral i the program, which was very well
home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Gor- desert, and being able to force am- dians out west,
...........just as it creeps
. into of James Moshler. a brolhcr-ln-law. given and enjoyed by all. After the
ham were the latter's mother. Mrs. pie supplies
from sheep-herders every governmental activity. The in Marshall.
business meeting Ice cream and cake
Clara Wilder and brother Fred through threats of death, they I contractors could readily see that
Sunday visitors at Forrest Havens' were served. Ti&gt;e next meeting will
Keech of Battle Creek, and their were more than able to match their when the time came that the In­ were Mr. and Mrs. Robt. McGlock- I be held at the home of Mr. and
daughter. Mrs. Willard Bagley, and I wlu against those of lhe bravest dlans would become self-supporting Un. John and Gordan Havens of: Mrs. Tlveodore Pranshka, June 12.
famtlv
anri hoit af American and Mexican bv
by srowinr
growing their own erona
crops that Hastings and Louis Havens of Balfamily af
of Kalamaann
Kalamazoo
Misses Edna Wurm and Wil be I the profits of lhe ring would be tie Creek.
I mlna Pranshka spent Saturday with
completely wiped out.
In other
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Warren had w
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ferguson of
words peace and quiet on the reser­ as Sunday guests. Mr. and Mrs.
’
~~
vations would be detrimental to Cook and children and Phil Warren
M
&lt;nd’ Or,
,
Wurm and
their business and they were there­ and daughter Hazel ot Lansing.
family spent Sunday with
Ith Mr and
fore opposed lo it. So Geronimo and
““
*»bls captured warriors were exiled
to Florida, where they lived In vir­
MUs Ruth E Erway of W. 8 T. C
olU) PrBnahka ln company
tual imprisonment. Thus ended the
1
yfte&gt;vUiJ£Ivw,lh her moth‘'r Mrs Loul*
activity of tbe shrewd and very able
’tTJ JmTfnrinne 100
Mother and
Apache Chieftain, and his band,
— hli Warren liad the misfortune
Ko.Tm.nt
“ Cto’"d*1'
who while on tbe warpath were U&gt; shoot . B B Shot Into one ot hU
Ntllon HulbeJt ,„a
hideously cruel, and perhaps not Bn,er. UM BnntUy. It wu here.-1 M \nd
without some reason. Back in IIM.
_______
l son and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hill of
when the Apaches were at peace ‘ after tbe removal of lhe shot,
with Mexico, a Mexican General by I Sunday visitors at Roy Erway's Battle Creek spent Bunday with
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Albert
the name of Carasco at the head of were. Mr. and Mrs. All Wolfe, and
an army, charged upon the Apache | Annette, also Maurice Erway and Ulrick.
settlement and butchered men. Harold Sharp of Grand Rapids,
Every student of public speaking
women and children without mercy , Miss Esther Erway. and Mr. and at Harvard is required to make an
Geronimo then a young man was ' Mrs. Dick Rose and son of Hastings, after-dinner speech. “I'll pay for
able to make his escape, but includ-1 Ray Otis and children of Kalai.ia- thia, boys I” is always a winner.
ed among the slaughtered were his too spent Sunday here.

1

■MEM INS
OF SOUTHWEST

passing

or rtomn

BOUYN 8HULTK.

REEIDENT or COUNTY.

ly

Barry county, died Friday evening,
May B. at his home eti the Mllham
Fark Rood south of KalAtngtoo, aft­
er a lingering illness, Bom in
Prairieville township, gept. J. IMS.
he was the eldest son of Philip and
Busan Barber pioneer residents of
Cressey. Mr. Barter's passing will
be distinct loos to the community
In which he lived, tod hla foing will
be keenly felt by all who knew him
as he was a loyal frisn0 to &lt;4d and
young alike. He had Htelv+d from
Leonard. Slater, former missionary
to ths Indians on Ute Cmaey res­
ervation. many IntgresUoR Ngsnds
of Indian lore which he diMghtef
telling the younger generation, an&lt;J
ite-was a delightful entertainer to
lhe old as well. Hs was • member U
the Gull Prelrls TenCtOUF. to
Richland.
.
. •. ' .
Mr. and Mn. Batter celebrated
their golden wedding snniveraary
to February, IBM. at the home M

with

antlv entertained the community
club Thursday, eighteen being pres-

wonderful dinner. The n
a will ba with Mr. tod
Philips. Juno il a 1
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wolf. Mrs.
Marsh and family and Mrs. 8. Modrack and children of Battle Creek
spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs. J.
W. Tedrow.
Frank Hallock of Milo, spent
Thursday and Friday afternoons
with his brother, George KsnyotL ;

lyn visited Mr.. tod Mn. Byron
Moody and their mother. Mn. Ma­
bel Moody of SOuth Maple Grove
Bunday and found her feeling some
better.
Rev. Lewis Hom and MH- Horn
and Carol and baby Marshall of
Battle Creek spent Sunday evening
w
jLh
hla parents, Mr. Ind Mn.
many

tn which he had spent to
yean of his lift. A&gt;OU1
ago he moved to KalSmasoo. He
leaves beside the widow, Notlie, qne
son. Irving ot. Cressey;
0augh-

George Kenyan, who is quite 1U

four grandchildren god one great
grandchild; a niece. .Mn. Kate
Meyers, who had mads her borne
with her uncle since childhood; four
brothers. David of Laurier. Wash.,
Newell of Milo:
Frederick of
Charleston; and Clayton of Cressey.
Five nephews acted as mil-bearen.

their slumber Thursday night and
thought it was thundering, found
9ut later It was just a nice crowd
of young people serenading the
newlyweds. Mr. and Mn. Lorry
Anders. A few slicks of dynamite
made the racket,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mieoener of
Kalamaaoo spent Saturday night
and Sunday with tbeir parents, Mr.
and Mrs. o. E- Kenyon. Visitors and

of tha son in Cressey Monter aft­
ernoon and was largely attonded
by friends and relatives. Those com­
ing from a distance were Mra. R- C.
Gilbert. Mr. and Mrs. Oharies Hall
of Battle creek. Mr. and Mra. WUham Wilkins. Chas. Barker,. Mrs.
Marion Leach. Mrs. Bertha Adams
M-.ion
and Prances Barber of Kalamazoo
and Mr and Mrs Dale Barber of
Plainwell.

HIQHlUNfc,

.*•

Mr. and Mrs Clair Manhall end
family of Bellevue. Kart Marshall
of Marshall and Mr. ana
Mrs.
Worth Green visited their mother.
Mrs Freda Marshall. Mother's Day
and presented her with a new radio
Mrs. Aaron Treece of near Alle­
gan spent a few days last wesk with
her daughter. Mrs. Byron Guy, and
family.
Mrs p. Klnne and son. Lyle, of
Hastings were guests Thursday of
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Hawbiits.
Mrs Hattie Whiting of Beaumont,
Texas, Mrs. Ubbie Ruab.gf Grand
Rapids and Mr. and Mrs. George
Miller of Hastings spent Friday with
their nephew, Henry Bldelman and
family.
The Moore school closes this week
with a P. T. A. Everyone welcome.
Mrs Sadler. Mias Ednl Kllenbaas
of Hastings. Mrs Ora Smith and
Mi. and Mrs. Frank Dusll of Cres­
sey were Sunday guests at Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Bldelmani.
Mr. and Mra LosNU Frelabte of
Kalamazoo spent Sunday at Mr.
and Mn. Fred Reid's.

figd Islldiig-Up?

1

Mrs. Alva Kenyon, Donald, Bobbie
and Bennie of Bellevue. Mr. and
Mrs. Lynn Bishop of Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Warner of
Cast Hastings. Mr. and Mrs. Jess
Kenyon of Hickory corners and El­
liot Eddy of Peltry
'

MORGAN.
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Wilcox and
daughters of Dowling and Mr.' and
Mrs. O. E. Padelford of Bellevue
•pent Mother's Day with Mra. Frank
Wilcox and MH. Mildred Flaming
and family tn honor of thalr mothMrs. Gerty Proctor of Kalamazoo
and Mr. and MH. Stanley Earl of
Kalamo visited Mr. alenard Earl
Sunday.
Ernest Gross spent Bunday in

Mr. and Mrs. B. Rowland and
famllv visited Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Walt Sunday In the Pratt district In
honor of the birthdays of Mrs. Karl
Eaton and Mrs. Ben Walt.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Carver and chil­
dren, Marguerite Mills and Ottq
Van Sickle of Lansing were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Harrington
Sunday.
■
Mr. and Mrs. Bernie Schulmer of
Battle Creek spent the week end
with Mr. and Mrs. B. Rowlader.
Amber Van Sickle of Lansing
was taken sick last week white visit­
ing Mr- Md MH Wm. Van Sickte
and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Harrington.
She remained with her pgrente and
is Reeling some better at this writ-

CLAY HILLE.
Leon Potts and wife were callers
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Clark of
at clayion Johnson's in Bowne last Jackson spent Sunday with Mrs.
Wednesday evening and found Mr. Letha Adkins.
Johnson in quite poor health.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas Christopher
Eugene Haight and wife attended entertained their children and fam­
ilies Mother's Day
Middleville last Thunday(
Roy McCaul and wife spent Bun­
HOPE CENTER.
day with her parents. William HulMra. Lucy Leonard, who has been
let and wile In Middleville.
staying with her daughter and fam­
Harold England of Lansing. Mor­ ily in Hooter returned to slay with
ris Lewis and wife of Kalamazoo bar son. Clyde, and wife
and Vance Sharp and family of
Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Lyttle of
Middleville were visitors St Leon Battle Crtok. Mr. end Mrs Clarence
Pott's Sunday.
Texter and son Vernon. Mr. and
Mr Harrison and family of Bar­ Mrs Leon Dunning and daughter.
low lake have moved onto the farm Lewtrioe spent Sunday wtth tbeir

For Best Results
SUNOCO
MOTOR OH.

Dooe your car have Canter-Poise Riding?

Ford fives you this modern feature—“a
frosrt aaat ride for back-seat passengers.**

Safety Mechanical Brakes? The Ford V-8

Made only itl ONE
grade and that grade
givet unfailing top
performance . . . at
Regular gat price!

a By concentrating on only ons motor fusl,
economies are effected in refineries, wsrehoutea, delivery trucks and gas pumps.

Test Action, High-Knockless Power and
Long Mileage ... at regular gds prices.

Positive clutch. Edge or flat drop hoppers. Three
valve comstnsctioa assures accurate planting. Ad­
justable for width. Fertiliser attachments.

FORD V-8

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES • Inc.
Hastiiifs, Midi.

Phone 2118

CLAIM IT MAD

SAN JA

East Texas OU
BiDions Led
OU" Be

The Southern Pi
through a lot of wl
try. and it Is not a

and outlaws to hli
rough fastnesses U
vldrd In so many i
You cross that sam
that extends from
down to lhe Mexi
then on into Old
along the BMlhern
as common as they
crossing the desert
Look oul from the
you’ll see a beautlfi
with a most attras
But as you approacl
, and leaves nothing
waste of sand. It a
that a great meteor
ages ago and Loda
a depth of 750 fee
that that meteor
mile and a half 1&lt;
mile wide, and no
thick. There must
of commotion whe
earth, it must hat
some force too. to
feat down In the
claimed that It s&lt;
Ban Jacinto mount
the youngest mou
country, so young ir
silent canyons yot
great bulk grinding
Buperstltlous red m
sound to their mou
Bering for another
huge buried meteor
to be responsible
fault in the earth
aa lhe Grand cany
rado, and which un

tlie Great Sall U
remnant.
The ride across t
ways interesting, it
trip but for the
(Continued on pt

COIffllCI
510,■

THZ BiaHZHB C
GUARANTY BO
WITH SUPS

BELIEVE THE (
WILL BE

PI

Xaihville Bank
Pay 75 Per Oe
Protect B

The board of sup

Mrs. Floy MeDarmoU attended U4
W. c. T U at the Goodwill church
YKWOMTrOBOtor:—•-•*•*3;"
Seward Walton at M*pb Grove ia
staying with hte gruMtaottor, Mn.
Mina Aldrich.

as follows: W. A.
Lena, carl H Tuttl
tor. H- B. Andrews,
H D. Wotring, E. 1
Kraft. Will a. Hyd
Wotring, executor of

parents.

*20 000
These ak ven signe

Kalamaaoo vtoted

their

for

Over 1,000,000
Chicks Are Being
Fed on

VITALITY
STARTER
This Year I

That is why we are able to give you HighSure Drop Planter

MILE AND HA1
MILE WIDE, :
750 FEET

Sunday with tbeir parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Chas. Kingsbury in Clover-

.j
i • ~
Lotus gtidnstor
Working
Chas. McDermott. '■

...torfltf

4BIGNIETE
1BIM

to consider a prop,
eleven directors and
the closed Nashvillt
who had signed a (
which was given in
county, to protec
against loss on tbe
the county then ha.
When lhe bank was
••7,000 of Barry coi
on deposit in th

ONLY ONE

Returns!

EIGHTYFIRS

FREE — Beto M BRIBING
CHICKS.

Coosa la and ge*

000 oath in return 1
giving to the elevei
one of them a full,
final release, jolntlj
aa well as Indlvldu
and all further llab
mand or charge of
whatever name, net
tlon arising because
tures on the deposits
was dated February
given to the county
deposits in the Nas
Tha supervisors &lt;
proposition from ev
voted to accept tbe c
ty clerk was directs
• 10,000 cash for an
Barry county, and
deliver to the atu
eleven men a good ai
lease from all iiabili
posllory bond to lhe
accept lhe *10,000
settlement from the
and ooUectively on s
Proeeculing Alter

(Continued on pai

ANDRUS SERVICE •

MEETING OF THE
ROD AN1
Memberi of lhe
Rod end Oun club a
tend the meeting or
nine. May 25, at U

Ftmita St 7SS.-SJS: *
SMITH BROS
VELTE &amp; CO

At this time officer
ing year will be chos
report Of the finding

tor should to inter
■toting which ia so

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1936

16 PAGES

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

I BIG METEOR HIT ‘Civic Players Score Hit With | Q Q J BANQUET
MN AGES AEOPla’’’ "s&lt;,rv.an!!he Hou8e”‘
IS DELIGHTFUL
MILK AND HALF LONG BY
MILE WIDE, BURIED IN
760 FEET OF SOIL

CLAIM IT MADE THE
SAN JACINTO MTS.

KmI Teiu

Oil neld&gt; Worth
BUllom Led to “Hot
OU" Backet

The Southern Pacific lakes you
through a lot of wild rugged country. and it u not at all difficult to
' and outlaws to hide away In the
rough fastnesses that nature pro­
vided in so many ways and places.
You cross that same old desert too
that extends from Canada clear
down to the Mexican border and
then on into old Mexico. Mirages
along the Southern Pacific are Just
as common as they are along roads
crossing the desert at other placet
Look out from the car window and
you’ll see a beautiful body of water,
with a most attractive shore line.
But as you approach, it all vanlslies
, and leaves nothing but the drear
waste of sand. It was in Arizona
that a great meteor struck ages and
ages ago and today lies buried al
a depth of 750 feet. It to claimed
that that meteor was at least a
mile and a half long and over a
mile wide, and no one knows how
thick. There must have been a lot
of commotion when it hit the
earth. It must have struck with
some force loo, to bury itself 750
feet down In the earth. It to
claimed that It squeezed up the
Ban Jacinto mountain, said to be
the youngest mountain in this
country, so young in fact that In Its
silent canyons you can hear itg
great bulk grinding and settling.
Superstitious red men attribute tlte
sound to their mountain God hun­
gering for another victim. That
huge burled meteor too, to claimed
to be responsible for
the great
fault in the earth that we admire
as the Grand Canyon of the Colo­
rado. and which unleashed the wa­
ters of a great Inland sea of which
the Great Balt Lake to a small
remnant.
The ride across the desert to al­
ways interesting. It would be a hot
trip but for the air-conditioned
(Continued on page 3, Sec d

CITY SCHOOLS TO
CLOSE ON JUNE 5
Commencement Week Opens
With Baccalaureate on
Sunday, May 31
Graduation week for the Hastings
High school opens on Sunday. May
31. with the baccalaureate service
at the Central auditorium, begin­
ning at four o'clock. Principal Ed­
win L. Taylor to chairman and the
address to the graduates is to be
given by Father John Dillon of the
8b Rose church.
The following is the program:
Processional March—High School
Orchestra. Direction of Mr. Lewis
Hine.
Songs by the High School Chorus,
(a) Chorale, "Grant Me True CourLord*'"—Scch;
Bach;
&lt;b&gt; “
"Service."
age. Lord
(b&gt;
Cadman. Direction
of Mr. Roy OarGar­
“
**
ner.
Invocation—Rev. John Hitching.
First Presbyterian church.
Hymns by the High School Boys*
Glee Club. &lt;a&gt; ‘'Blest Be the Tie
That
inai Blndl."
Buiqb. Nagell;
wageu; &lt;b&gt; ••Faith
"paun of
oi
' our Fathers." Henry and Walton,
j Direction of Mr. Roy Garner.

COUNTY ACCEPTS I
510,000 OFFERED
THE 8I0NEBB OF DEPOSIT'•­ 1
GUARANTY BOND SETTLE '
WITH SUPERVISORS

BELIEVE THE COUNTY
WILL BEJPAID IN FULL
Nashville Bank Expected to
Pay 75 Per Gent—Bonds
Protect Balance

।

V. Dillon, fit. Rose Roman Catholic
church.
Songs by the High School Glrto'
Glee Club, &lt;a&gt; "Salutation." Gaines;
(b) “Ave Maria," Bach-Gounod.
. Dlrectlon of Mtos Jean Glerum.
Benediction—Rev. John W. KllchIng
Thursday night. June 4. has been
chosen as Class Night and the commenccmcnt exercises arc on Friday
afternoon at two o'clock in the Cen­
tral auditorium. The Rev. E. O.
McBherry.
pastor of
the
First
United Brethren church, will give
the Invocation and benediction.
Dr. W. D. Henderson, director of
the extension department of the
University of Michigan. Is to give
the address to the graduates, using
as his subject, “A Challenge to
Youth." The complete program will
appear next week.
On Friday evening the alumni
banquet will close the week's activi­
ty.

The board of supervisors met in
special session on Wednesday of
lost week. This meeting wm called
to consider a proposal made by
•leven directors and stockholders of I
the closed Nashville State Bank
who had signed a depository bond,
which was given In 1931 to Barry
oounty, to protect this county
against loss on the deposits which HAVE LEASED HOME
the county then had in that bonk
LUMBER CO/S BUILDING
When the bank wm closed. In 1931,
•57,000 of Barry county's cash was
on deposit in that bank. The Barry County Health Unit
signers of the depository bond were
Will Have Specially
as follows: W a. Vance. F. C.
Lints. Carl H. Tuttle. Menno Wen­
Fitted Quarters
ger. H- B. Andrews, H. C. ZusoluUlc,
*nw Barry County Health unit
H. D. Wotring, E. T. Morris, E. C
Kraft, Will G. Hyde. Herbert V. ranged by the committee acting for
Wotring, executor of the C. L. G1m- the Board of Supervisors of the
Home Lumber Co.'s south building,
120,000.
on Michigan avenue, and some
These eleven signers made a writ­ space In the adjoining one.
ten offer to pay the county *10.The building will be fitted up
000 cash In return for the county's with offices and a reception room,
giving to the eleven, and to each and will also house a health li­
one of them a full, complete and brary, with a small assembly room
Anal release. Jointly and severally In connection where lectures can
as well as Individually, from any be given.
and all further liability, claim, de­
A kitchen will be a feature so
mand or charge of any kind of that small groups may be enter­
whatever name, nature, or descrip­ tained for luncheons, dinners and
tion arising because of their signa­ gatherings connected with the work
tures on the depository bond, which of the Kellogg Foundation.
was dated February 2, 1931 and
This new location with its added
given to the county to protect its space will add greatly to the con­
deposits in the Nashville bank.
venience of the Health Unit, and
The supervisors considered this facilitate their splendid program of
proposition from every angle and usefulness in Barry county.
voted to accept the offer. The coun­
ty clerk was directed to accept the
AN APPRECIATION.
110.000 cash for and tn behalf of
In retiring from active business
Barry county, and to execute and In Hastings after 48 years on Main
deliver to the attorney for the street we desire to express our ap­
eleven men a good and sufficient re­ preciation of the patronage and
lease from all liability on their de­ support and loyally given us by our
pository bond to the county, and to many friends in the city and thruaccept the 810,000 a* a complete out the county.
settlement from them Individually
R. M. Lamble.
and collectively on said bond.
C. E. Doyle.
Prosecuting Attorney McDonald
was authorized and directed. In bc8PECIAL DENTAL OFFER.
(Oominued on page 3. 8ec. 1)
Dr. O Alllngham. Grand Rapids
dentist, announces on page 8 that
MEETING OF THE
be will be al the Parker House.
ROD AND GUN CLUB. Hastings, next Saturday. May 8.
Members of the Barry County A special dental offer Is made on
Rod and Gun club are urged to at- ' plates and for extractions which
tend the meeting on Monday eve- may interest out readers
Hln» IZav GA nt
mttnfv
*
. .
garage.
. FINISH COURSES AT FERRIS.
At this time officers for the com- j Clay Bassett, who completed the
Ing year will be chosen. A complete police officers' course at Fsrrls In­
report of the findings of the Skeet i stltute, Big Rapids, last week, has
rnrrtmlllho la
ha, alvan and aatlnn '
Bam.o frvw (A.
ber should be interested tn
meeting which Is so important.

WILL BEHELD AT CEN­
TRAL AUDITORIUM
Famous Evangelist Gomes to
Hastings Sunday,
May 24th
'
.. special feature of the mass
A
I meeting and all-county rally to be
| held Sunday. May 24th al 3 P. M .
m
Has-­
in the Central
Centra! auditorium in Has
tings will be the presentation of the
A Cappello chorus of Spring Arbor
Junior College. Tills organization,
which to one of the prominent chor­
al groups of southern Michigan, to
composed of forty students under
the direction of LeRoy M. Lowell,
president of the college.
The chorus to completing its
, eighth season under hto direction.
_I____
________
_____
Each
year a_______
ten-day
tour__is mode.
the chorus traveling In a large Blue
1 Goose bus, On tills year's tour.
fourteen Michigan cities will be vtoI ____
Ited,w including Flint, Pontiac and
I Detroit.
I Sunday's program
|
in Central au...
dltorlum will Include many well' known choral favorites such as
“Fierce Was the Wild Billow," (No­
ble); "Listen to the Lambs." (Dett);
"Praise the Lord.” (Christiansen);
"Swing Low. Sweet Chariot." “Steal
Away to Jesus" and "Beautiful
Savior." (Chrtottonsen).
Following the concert. Rev. J.
Ixtwls Arnold of Seattle, Washing­
ton, will deliver a message entitled.
**My Life's Story." Miss Alice Cleone
Kester of Muskegon will be in
charge of the congregational sing­
ing and will also render a solo. A
male quartet will also give a special
number.
■Bie services are held under the
auspice* of the Free Methodist
church of Hastings with the co-op­
eration of the Barry County Min­
isterial Association. Arrangements
are In charge of the local pastor,
Laurence H. Bird.
A cordial invitation to extended
to the general public to attend this
fine service. No admission is charg­
ed, only a tn* will offering taken.
The service begins promptly at 3

WOODLAND TO GRAD­
UATE TWENTY-SEVEN
Commencement
Exercises
Occur Tomorrow Eve­
ning, the 22nd
The Commencement exercises for
Woodland township school will be
held Friday evening of this week,
May 22 at g:15 o'clock.
The program to as follows:
March.
Invocation.
Balutatorian—Bernard Black.
Class Essay—Albert Drake.
Class Will—Winifred Cappon.
Class Prophecy—Marion Strong.
Olftatory—Dorothy Rogers.
Valedlctoran—Olendon Hynes.
Presentation of Diplomas—Su­
perintendent H. A. Kiteon.
Presentation of Class Gift to
School.
•
Class Song by Seniors.
Benediction.
Members of this year's class of
twenty seven are;' Glendon Hynes,
valedictorian; Bernard Black. mIutatorlan; Catherine Spindler. Rus­
sell Palmerton. Betty Wotring. Mar­
ion Strong, Winifred Cappon, Nel­
son valentine. Dorothy Rogers. El­
la Benner. Genevieve DeKllder, Al­
bert Drake, Russell Euper, Carlyle
Burkle. Ethel Potter. Burdette Haynor. Marjorie Hynes, Esther Wat­
rous, ■Martha Fenetemaker. Lincoln
Farrell,
Mildred
Conley.
Carl
Wachter. Gaylord Kloppfenstein.
Eston Everett. RuMell Lind. Ralph
Scofield. William Eddy.

ciur.i. wrmi
Quimby church. May 28, 36 oenta.
ard Jacobs,

Halnon to Give the
Address at the Ex­
ercises

: BURRY COUNTY TO I REARRFORI^EHWITNESS
WITI MEMH1
nr nrnnroriiTrn
t. «
BE REPRESENTED
fofflsr
Change Being Made in Court
Room to Aid the Ste­
nographer

ORDER CELEBRATES THE
The board of supervisors, at their DO YOUR PART GLAZ
The county normal will hold Its AT MEETING TO 00N8IDspecial session Wednesday of last
ANNIVERSARY OF ITS
graduation exercises June 4 at 2:30
poi war i uvnra
ER COUNTY S WELFARE
week, considered a request from
in central auditorium. Dr. Halnon
FOUNDING
PROBLEMS
VIOTIlfl
Judge McPeek and Court Stenog­
will give the address. County School

rapher Smith to have a rearrange­
Commissioner Mrs. Maude Smith
ment of the position of the witness
will present diplomas to a class of WILL BE HELD IN CITY
GRAND LODGE
FLOWERS MADE BY
chair In the court room. As it to now.
five boys and fifteen glrto. A tea and
OFFICERS PRESENT reception will be held following the
OF ALBION ON MAY 20 the witness to seated between the
DISABLED VETERANS
court stenographer and the Judge.
1 program.
The following are members of the , Other Counties Represented The stenographer must record all American Legion and Auxili­
Dr. Ernest Bumham Gives
the
remarks
of
the
Judge
as
class: Orville Babcock. Elsie Conk­
well as the testimony of the wit­
Address—Rev. Karl Ksefer lin. Doris Healy and Mildred Mack I —Want Counties to Ad­
ary Use Money for Work
ness. That to difficult with the pres­
Dowling;
Is Toastmaster
. of
-- -----— Marian Griffen and
minister Own Welfare
of Rehabilitation
ent arrangement. Bo the board
Seger of Freeport;
On Tuesday evening the annual'
Prances Orsborn and Evelyn Hynes । Evidently other counties besides was requested to rearrange the wit­
Barry
county
I. O. O. F. banquet was held at the of Woodland; Jane Ritter. Mulli­ Barry are not satisfied with the ness chair in the court room, so Hastings.
present status of the welfare prob- that the stenographer would be throughout the United States
Odd Fellow Temple, in celebration ken; Dorothy BanhageL.Ionia; Net­
j Jem. The supervisors received, at between the witness and the Judge,
tle Loring, Caledonia; Irene Shel. 01
of the one huMr
hundred
*1 seventeenth oni their special session Wednesday of so he could easily hear them both. moat significant days on the Amerlenbarger. Cloverdale; Henry Bever, nlvcrsary of the founding of the wyk. Louise Baldwin. Russell Lau- ' last week, a letter from N. H. Wein­ The matter was referred to the'toan
calendar. On that day each
tlx --------- The long tables were at
year millions of Americans wear litorderat-­ baugh. Cary) Isham. Willard Kid­ er. of Albion, chairman of the Cal­ proper committee for action.
tractive with
bouquets of red .-izi,
roses. der. Retha Robinson. Ruth Robin­ houn county board of supervisors.
, t.-Ctlv.
World war dead and contribute to1 which were later presented to the son and Irma Waters of Hastings. | The letter was written in behalf of
! the Calhoun board. Mr. Weiner, in 1
i ward the welfare of the war's living
' ladles.
I substance, stated the following:
victims, the disabled veterans, their
। Thls "ne banquet again demon­
i etrated that the Rebekah ladies
Counties are now facing a serifamilies and the families of the
1 ous welfare problem, and the quesdead. Behind the observance of the
| *urtly know how to serve such a
tlon
to
how
to
solve
It
satisfactorily.
day
has been developed a poppy
i dinner—there was plenty of food, it
i Mr. Weiner believes the time has
manufacturing
industry
which
j was well cooked, well served and
I arrived when counties should act
gives employment to many hun­
was delicious.
We compliment
SUDDENLY
ON dreds of disabled veterans In sixty
। collectively, to replace the present SEIZED
these good women!
1 Emergency Relief Administration's
------------different poppy making centers.
Music during the dinner was fur­
MONDAY WHILE IN
nished by the Higbee orchestra COMMITTEES HAVE THEIR supervision
supervision of relief with a system
each county shall
HIS OFFICE
from Belding with Mias Pollyanna
PLANS COMPLETED FOR II whereby
’S’V'Xmuul
tu be per­
, ntlttcd to
*»-» vwsi wel­
dead sprang up following the war
England of Woodland as vocalist.
fare problems The present situa­ REMOVED TO ST.
as naturally as the Utile wild flower
I Tiie Invocation was given by the
PROGRAM HERE
Rev. E. O. McSherry, pastor of the
tion to aggravated by a proposal
LAWRENCE HOSPITAL and Belgium. Taken by the woman
I First United Brethren church.
from Lansing to have the Emer­
gency Welfare Relief administration
of the American Legion Auxiliary,
• Fred Linington. Noble Grand, In- I REV. KARL H. KEEFER
, troduced Rev. Karl H. Keefer of
IS TO GIVE ADDRESS take over tlie administration of Reports Received Late On it was spread throughout the
Grand
Marshal,
as {!
------------' Watervliet.
Watervliet
Orind
Marshal
ak
United Blates within a few years
mothers' pensions from the probate
Tuesday Brought More
toastmaster, and Karl filled that po-1 Patriotic Units, School StU- Judge, and place that matter en­
Reassuring News
stltutlon. More than Um million
.luob in hU own InUnlUbl. nun-1
dent&gt; gooulg gnd Oamp
tirely In the hands of the Emer­
gency Relief Administration.
in this city, which Justice Wil­ popples are now distributed an­
Several Grand Lodge officers were1
*
*-*
Mr. Weiner and the Calhoun liam W. Poller of the Michigan Su­ nually by the Auxiliary. The poppy
Fire Girls •to Assist
Introduced — Mlles
Gray.
Prank
The various committees having county board believe the lime has preme Court always called -Home,"
Culp, Wm. Turner, Olen Hampton. in charge the observance of Deco­ come to end the ERA control of people were shocked Monday fore­ survived in the devastated battle
Mr. Spencer and others.
ration Day here on May 30. are welfare problems in counties, and; noon when the news came that he
Hon. John C. Ketcham directed completing their plans, following that this proposal to take over the had been auddenly seized by a seri­ the trenches, beneath the tangled
the group singing of familiar songs, largely the procedure of other years. administration of mothers' pensions ous heart ailment and that his con­ barbed wire, about the gapping
would perpetuate the ERA which, dition was critical. At this writing shell holes and among the fresh
and Mrs. John Higbee played two,
It has been arranged that Veter­
he suffers little pain, according to
pleasing accordion soloe. Lewis Ken-. ans of the Civil war. Spanish-Am- he believed, would be undesirable.
The letter stated that a meeting hto physician. Dr. Shaw. He to at
nedy. .ccomMnkd by hu brolber. (
Ina WorW warafthe W. R.
nnedy&lt;*
two number« C . American Legion Auxiliary, Vet- would be held in the city hall at Al­ the St. Lawrence hospital. Lansing, symbol of the sacrifices of their
bion on Wednesday. May 20. at 10 where he was taken soon after the dead comrades.
w nr^erecJ2 ,yab
e
(
„
era,1J
°
r
Foreign
Warn
Auxiliary.
-------- __ , _
erails oi roreign wars Auxiliary,
(Iranfl HrorvLArv
„
.
... . Camp Fire OlrU o'clock A. M. to consider these attack. The doctor says hto condi­
^efE*UrJI_Fr*d...Rzurort
R^eJ.s ■! —
Seoblx
ma
Colonel John McCrae, a Cana­
Wto about !be
of lh« 1. o.
,t ,:M A M J u„
matters. He urged the board of su­ tion to slightly Improved, but still dian soldier soon to lie beneath Dm
2,
??"? .“f.------------------------ »“ hall for th. march to luvmldc pervisors of Barry county and of
He Is said to be suffering from a
MUC to
W. V..C
IWICIIUCBS of
Ul one HlHIl.
due
the lonellbea,
man.; cemetery, the Uaatlno City Band other counties interested to send
who had
bad cm.
n.ttl™o„ M
d, | le,d|n, ’ At lhe
cemetery, the , representatives to
attend
that ■ coronary occlusion,*' or stoppage of
who
come tn
to Baltimore.
Md..
meeting.
blood through the heart. Members -In Flanders fields the poppies blow.
from England, and in this new
new graves will be decorated and cars
The Barry county board of super­ of his family were summoned after
country
found
himself without
"■'* i are to bring the people back to
visors looked with favor on this
friends. He also told of the activ- , lown
town.
Saturday the women of D
proposition
from
Calhoun
county,
IU« of the order durta, u&gt;. wuf
n the veeUier U fair the exer­
J. Bauer Unit of the Al
and voted that the chairman of the
. n
.
Ctoes are to be on the court house
Legion Auxiliary, Mrs. Edw.
supervisors—Supervisor
» ,W“Uin square but If stormy, the Centra! board of
Wotring of Woodland—the vice­
i auditorium will be used.
gave the
" main address, using as hto
‘ [
As in previous years, the school chairman of the Barry county ERA
" Dr' ""P11*"11 enuaren
children are
are requests
requested to
to meet
meet aa
at commission. W. A- Schader of this
said friendship wm a stimulating;
of a Church and Graen city, and one other member of the
the day. distributing the
aProne * 8te.. ready for the line of march board, to be selected by the chair­
flowers and gathering con
S
U the
10:00 A. M. The procession will man. represent this county at the
r5pleU form * lh*t
to Albion meeting.
* th *',Uy IHustratlona that pleased Michigan
Michigan Ave.,
Ave., north
north to
to State
State St.,
fit..
everyone, as well as bringing help­ west on State St. to the monument, COOKING SCHOOL TO
veteran.
Their unselfish efl
ful lessons on the value of kindness, then to the Central school if the
will give every Individual in the
friendship and companionship.
BE HELD IN HASTINGS
service to held there. All of the
an opportunity to pay pent
Dancing was enjoyed after the school students, members of the
tribute to the men who gave il
program with music by the Higbee various patriotic organizations. Boy Two-Day School May 22 and
orchestra.
Scouts. Camp Fire Girls, and any
23 at the Smith Hard­
One could not help but notice the others who so wish, are a-'.ked to
rtficed health, strenath and
wonderful Improvements that have participate in this procession.
ware Store
been made in the hall recently—the
Following is the program to be
Miss Arlene Spencer, home econ­
new decorations are pleasing in col­ rendered at ten-thirty o'clock:
mothers, sisters and
omist
with
the
Kelvlnator
Corpora
­
or and appropriate for such a place,
Song—“America the Beautiful." tion of Detroit, will conduct a
the ladies appreciate their new par­ led by Wm. T. Wallace.
"Cooking with Cold" school In the
lor and all the other conveniences
In vocation—Rev. W. Maylan Smith Hardware store, starting
without
any recompense
now available.
Jones.
Friday. May 22 at 2 P. M.. and con­ day afternoon all had gathered the knowledge that they are
Credit and congratulations are
Reading—Wayne pinkbeiner.
tinuing through Saturday, May 23. there except one daughter, who was
due the I. O. O. F. and Rebekahs
Allegiance to the Flag—Led by Mtes Spencer Is a member of the unable to reach her father at that
for their enterprise, enthusiasm and the Boy Scouts.
time.
staff of the Kelvin Kitchen, which
co-operation In thto and all their
Justice potter came to his office
Music—Hastings City Band.
Is the research division of the Kel­
other activities.
Introduction of Speaker—Cornel­ vlnator corporation. This division Monday morning hi his usual good privation.
ius Mann I, Commander of ths Am­ is devoted to searching out new spirits and apparently in good
health, according to his secretary,
COUNTY’S TAXING UNITS
erican Legion.
methods of cooking and ways to
Address—Rev. Karl H. Keefer of ease the work of the housewife. Miss Hasel Bray. At about 9:30 be
KEEP WITHII( 15 MILLS Watervliet.
called her and asked her to phone
Miss Spencer has arranged a pro­
they are doin
Dr. Shaw. "Do you feel sick?" she
Song—"America." by Audience.
gram that to sure to appeal to the
with a smile
Recent State Lawg Simplify
Adelbert Cortright to general home-makers, who are looking for asked In surprise, noticing that put on our pot
nothing
was
apparently
wrong
with
chairman; Maurice Foreman, sec­
Work of County Tax
him.
•
retary; Harry Miller, treasurer; and
Refreshments will be served and
Commission
“Right here." he said placing his
the committee members are as fol­
The Barry county tax commtosion lows: Program, Floyd Wood, chair­ sion. A special feature climaxing hand over his heart. After Dr. Bhaw help.
held one session last week, during man : Don Foreman, Edw. Downs the school will be a May-Day arrived. Mr. Potter was tn great
pain, but did not lose consciousness.
and
Maurice
Foreman;
Transporta
­
party,
to
be
held
at
the
final
ses
­
which they considered budgets that
TAKING SCOUTS
tion, Andrew Matthews and Harry sion.
had been presented by the various Miller; Decoration of graves, Edw.
stretcher and rushed to the hospital
TO CONVENTION
Mr. Smith and the Kelvlnator
taxing unite of the county, includ­ Downs, Dan Foreman. Frank Rey­ Corporation cordially Invite you to
nolds and Roy Bush; Marshal of the be present at this school. Plan to lent. In the afternoon Dr. Shaw
ing the county itself.
day. Hugh Riley, aaatoted by Roy attend at least one of the sessions said his patient had survived the
In the past the commission lias
immediate attack, was resting more
had difficulty in keeping some of Bush and Sterling Rogers A new May 22 and 23. starting at 2 P. M.
easily, but added, ' his recovery al
ud AaxflUriaa
the taxing unit*, particularly a few patriotic organization, the Veterans
rural school districts, within the 15- of Foreign Wars, is co-operating AIR CONDITIONED TRAINS
Justice Potter Is 67 yean of age
mill tax limitation; but laws enact­ this year for the first time as they
NOW AVAILABLE HERE.
An air conditioned coach to now and apparently has always enjoyed
ed by the last legislature have were organized Just a few months
offered patrons on the Michigan good health. He to a tireless stan line
greatly simplified the commission's
Each year seco a reduced number Central noon train east, and the worker. It is nothing for him to
work, so that It has not, up to dale,
of Civil war veterans, there being night train west, very soon the 10:30 alt up until long past midnight
received a single budget that will
Having
but five left in the county —James o'clock morning train west, and
(Continued on page 6. Bee. 1)
exceed the 15-mill limit.
The last legislature provided that A. MacDonald. Elijah Round, Tru­ the early evening train east will
the state, Instead of the individual man o. Webber. Dr H. C. Peck­ also be air conditioned, making ANNUAL SPRING
ham and Jacob H. K|ugh.
railroad travel a lot more alluring I
school district, pay the entire cost
CONCERT FRIDAY
During the past year those who than by the old method of open i
of high school tuition for students
|'
Ann..r fnr
living within the district who have have answered the last summons windows, heat, dust and cinders.
are Walter Coats. Jefferson Palm­
The
The ever
ever increasing
increasing hazards
hazards of
of {i Jnn‘or Group! to Appear for
completed the eighth grade, in ad­
er.
Harry
Wlckwlre
and
M.
B.
automobile travel, clouds of dust
dition the legislature also provided
the Firit
Brooks.
on unpaved roads, lack of avail­
that the state will assist rural dis­
Time
able parking space, doesn't make
tricts, which teach only eight
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL.
The annual spring concert pre- urday
automobile travelling quite the Joy
grades, by furnishing a liberal share
of the cost of grade teaching In
in
orwnd
R.plda,
wu
brought
to
,
tower
rale,
and
torse
naw
comtheir schools. The state department
w.nnnra &gt;hospital
—-i Saturdaj
mturd., _____
night, Ioru to oner, era mUlng a strong morrow night. May 22. tn the Cen­
of education figures that the aver­ Pennock
suffering ~
a .broken
------------ arm
trtn and possibly
possibly bld for patronage and are sure to tral auditorium.
age cost of schooling, in the grades
other injuries, as a result of an ac­ gain a big Increase.
below the high schools, in Michigan
Tills year the elementary grades
M-37
to |48 per scholar per year. The new cident which occurred on
are combining with the high school
south of Dowling. He fell asleep KNIGHTS TEMPLARS TO
law requires the district to raise at
while
at
the
wheel
of
his
car
and
it
OBSERVE
ASCENSION
DAT.
least 2 1-2 mills by local taxation,
program will gram and
crashed into another, which was
Rev. J. A. McNulty of Emmanuel
the state to supply additional cash
ber from I
above what the district raises so as driven by Norman W. Hicks of the Episcopal church will hold a special
FOUND
to make available the sum of |48 Kellogg Foundation camp near,, service next Sunday. Ascension Day,
“
In
a
Florist
s
Window,'*
an op­
per scholar. That has helped amaz­ Dowling. Hicks escaped injury. The with the Hastings Commandery of eretta by the first ward eehool will
about
ntne Knights Templars attending Ln a
ingly in rural districts, it also en­ accident occurred
ables them to be more liberal in o'clock.
This Is a custom largely followed lor band and the Junior orchestra
the matter of teachers' wages.
LADIES’ NIGHT.
Probably at their next meeting । Ladles' Night will Bg observed by wherever a commandery exists. The
the commission will make ths ap­ Hastings commandery No. 58 on service la a beautiful and Impressive
portionment of taxes for all the Friday evening of next week with
The sermon and music will be ap­
taxing unite of the county. That a dlnnar at 8:30 at the Masonic
to the day and to sure to
will be tentative, u the final ap­ hall. Tills will be followed by a propriate
be w
enjoyed by all who may wish to malely 300 wfll participate hi this
portionment will be mads early in program with Past Grand Com- attend
number. The high school dlviaton
July.
will ipoiuds the regularly irwnteli
mander Clyde Fulton of Charlotte.
—.
as guest speaker. Commander Joiin
DANCE-FRAIRIEVILLg.
W Kltchlng to to present a past
Thun
Saturday eve. Mekler's orchestra. commander's Jewel to Lyman B. Thom !
Chamberlain also of Charlotte.
i —Adv.

MASS MEETING IND
ILL COUNTY HILLY.
MUSICAL PROGRAM WITH
A OAPPELLA CHORUS
IS A FEATURE

GRADUATE TWENTY
Dr.

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

'

Presentation of This Majestic Drama
•y K1TY BARRY
Barry county people are like that.
Dear Mr Editor:
But to gel back to the play (Oh
As I sit here by my little wicker
desk looking out over the green dear I I limply can't start any­
symphony of a rolling, wooded thing without getting sidetracked
thither). The cast
countryside fresh with the new life hither and
truly Inspired—especially
of springtime, the soft breeze. tem­ seemed
pered by mellow sunshine, which during the last act which was
comes to me scented with the sweet grand and Impressive In spite of
fragrance of a thousand lilac the fact that it was the only one
blooms Is no more exquisite Chan In which a noticeable balk hap­
my memories of the perfectly pened.
I splendid performance achieved by
Wallace Osborn. I thought, gave
my dear Civic Players during the a fine, spiritual Interpretation to
two evenings of "Servant in the
people
about me were commenting
House.'* My but I was thrilled I
Really, the productions were so on hto excellent work during U&gt;e
tremendous that I feel frightfully brief intervals between acts. I
humbled and subdued al tire mere couldn't help but wonder if even
thought of even attempting a they appreciated the full responslblllty that rested on hto shoulders.
criticism.
Where were the crowds? The au­ Mercy! Think what a burlesque this
ditorium should have been packed play would have become If the part
to the exits. Don't people like plays of Manson had not been treated
that make them think and which with proper dignity. Intelligenceleave them with something more and yes. Inspiration, too. Really it
than a few light laughs? Must pro­ to a terribly difficult assignment to
ductions be comic and Jazzy to be be asked to Interpret the spirit of
popular? Really, I can't believe it; the Christ without ar&amp;ising some
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1)
I simply won't admit that my dear

[COUNTY NORMAL TO

OBSERVANCE
0E(8

JUSTICE POTTER
18757484

INOAY.

�THK UMTIHOI BANMBX. TWUMMUY, MAT 11, 1»M

.jajjwo

Vern DeMott Is improving from
hi* operation for appendioti* on
Friday.
Mrs. Mamie Manee, who hM tings with hb family n*xt 1
Mr. Fuller haa rented Um fa
W. P. Hicks hammfred on O
•Jowly improving.
street, recenUy pMWhliM b» W

LOCAL NEWS

SERVE YOURSELF
AND SAVE
CHASE &amp; SANBORN’S

COFFEE

F. '51-*

5 ib. box 24c

SOAP CHIPS S'
Roman Cleanser - &gt;&gt;*«• 10c
K

/* baking
K_x
01 V

19c

Peas

25c

POWDER

PLUS Sc BOTTLE CHARGE

17c

Sunbrite Cleanser 4
Sal Soda HAMMER

5C

Oxydol "59c
5c
Camay Soap
Selox Soap Beads £»* 13c
Pad-0-Magic v-'2 - 15c

Early June

3Bo'

Cracker Jack

10c

PILLSBURY

FLOUR-92c

b..

Chipso »■' 19c

Mothers Best Flour £■„ 89c

SEEDS, bulk and Pkg
PARAMOUNT

Apple Butter

1 SMALL PACKAGE FREE!

N., 10 T»

49c

Our

/n

JEWEL
COMPOUND

Meat Dept
aoog
SHULTZ or FREEPORT

2

Lbs.

25c

BUTTER

(I

- 27c
IN CASH Given Away Sat
at 3 p. m. Free Ticket wtth
each 50c purchase.

Velvet Tobacco

69c

A

7v

A___ A____ A____ A__

KINGNUT

0leo2|b23

2 - 25c

Rib Boiling Beef

lie

Beef Kettle Roast

14c

Pork Sausage

15c

Pork Chops
Bacon Chunk, Lean

21c

PARAMOUNT

Catsup

Henry 8. Shull, Nashville; Route 3.
on May 16 at Pennock hospital.
Hastings wm well represented at
Holland on Sunday, a large number
enjoying the Tulip Festival there.
, Tbt
r^lon wlU
The Hinds school reunion
will be
J* ^hoolhouM Saturday. June d.

Adair on Tuesday.

: A 1 *‘elcome- Pot luck dinner.—Adv.

Potatoes

21c

LAST CALL

PINEAPPLE
24’s or 30’s
$3.19
Case

gab SMsaaaa mro a
titled ' Making the Mind Bel»va.Fta* subject wa thought for • lwture. Wouldn't It be Ane If we
could all learn how to do it? A
Ane point mad* wm “to conquer
life or aituaUon* where we are. Nev er think if we were somewhere else
it would be dlfterent."
A Ane musical treat will be of­
fered HMtlngs people and those of
the surrounding territory. Bunday
afternoon when the A Cappella
chorus of 40 voices from Spring Ar­
bor college, who are on a ten-day
tour In Michigan, will present a mu­
sical program at the county rally
and mass meeting at Central audi­
torium at three o'clock. No admUsiou win be charged.
pressed by hb success at Ashing in
northern Michigan last week end.
He said that the weather wm cold
and rainy and the elusive perch
had taken to other regions when
he tried to catch them. His catch
corubted of two trout, and it wm
almost impouible to buy enough
lake perch to eat. Nearly every­
where he said, there were evidences
of building activity, dozens of tour­
ist cabins, etc., being erected.
Around Mount Pleasant there are
many new building* under construc­
tion.

RED SALUTE
WED., THURS.

OconpAAti of thg Automobile
Taken to Mkhole Hospi­
tal in Battle Crock
Mbs Ethel Orsbom of 313 B.
Thom Street, HMttngs, and Mis*
Viola Edwards, who** home is at
435 E. Blair Street, thb city, and
William KaUoct. Battle Greek,
were seriously injured in an auto­
mobile accident on M-37 at about
one o'clock Thursday morning. El­
ton Baker, also of Battle Creek,
driver of the car. escaped serious
injury.
The accident occurred about four
miles north of Bedford at Culver's
Corners. The four were coming to
Hastings tn a borrowed automobile.
asleep. The car careened off the
pavement at the turn. pMt the old
gravel road, unused since the state
highway deportment put in the
curved paving, it jumped the road
where the gravel approaches the
new road and plunged about 75 feet
across the grass near the home of
Mrs.
Mary
Cuhrer,
crashing
through the side of the bam on her
premises, a cutter, a single and a
double buggy were wrecked. The car
wm also badly damaged. An up­
right beam In the side of the build-

FREE!

FRI., MAY 27. 28 «n4 29

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

Walloca Bo cry, Barbara Stanwyck and Jahn Bales in

A Message To Garcia

19c

• Full Sixs SHI-NUP SILVER POLISH

With ALAN HALE, MONA BARRIE and HERBERT MUNDIN

• Full Six* FURNITURE POLISH
SOTH HUI WITH 1ACH PURCHASE OF
ANY Of THl FOLLOWING:—

SATURDAY. MAY 30
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION—FEATURE NO. 1

2 lbs. JOHNSON'S PASTE WAX . 98c

TWO IN REVOLT

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 p. m., SATURDAY 10 p. m

1 qt. JOHNSON'S LIQUID WAX _ 98c
LIOHTNING." the deg. and the fameu hone “WARRIOR’

1 qt. JOHNSON'S GLO-COAT Wax 98c

FEATURE NO. 3

CHARLES STARRETT iji

We Reserve

•

GALLANT DEFENDER

Right To Limit

Purchases

CRASH COMES AS
DRIVER FALLS ASLEEP

fTKAM ThtATRF ♦!

With ROBERT YOUNG
Hardie Albright, Rath Dannelly. Cliff Edwards. Genian Jone*

These Prices for Thursday, Friday, Saturday

Food Center

mrwmumr
01XUX0AD

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, MAY 26
BARBARA STANWYCK in

ARMOUR'S VERIBEST, COOKED

BY THE FiECE OR SUCED

Baaer, who hM beta maitog

WIFE vs SECRETARY

20c

Corned Beef

M PEOPLE
WIIUH

week Tuesday. May 26. The cases
Reid Bassett goes to Chicago Sun­
I will Involve compensation for accl- day where he will have an audition
dents.
‘
Monday with Theodore Harrison of
Wm. Shriber, who had the mis­ the American Conservatory of Mu­ MEDICAL SOCIETY
fortune to have hb wrist broken sic. Good luck, Reid I
MET THURSDAY EVE
Two cent fare on the Michigan
troit Monday to enter the Mutual Central
begins
June
1st—that
liability hospital where an opera - means a 70 cent one-way rate to Doctors Hear Two Speakers
’ tion to rebreak the arm will be un­ Grand Rapids and *3.70 to Detroit.
From Grand Rapids and ’ to a stop inside the bam.
dergone.
Young Kellogg has a skull frac­
Miss Irene Jones, who received
See Movies
'
The suggestion has come to the her experience on the high school
ture and
was unconscious at
The regular meeting of the Barry Nichols hospital. Battle Creek at
Banner that it would greatly 1m- tennis courts In HMtlngs. has made
prove the appearance of Grand. the varsity tennis team at Western County Medical Society wm held the time thia wm written. The driv­
Thursday evening, May 14, at th« er, Elton Baker, has two severely
Walnut. Green and other streets if State. Kalamazoo.
the lowland along Fall creek were
Memorial Day services WU1
w-UI be Parker House, with the wives of the Injured Angers bn hh right hand.
cleaned up. It could eMily be made held at Rutland cemetery. May 30. physicians as guests of the evening. Miss Orsbom suffered severe facial
1 more attractive than in iLs present Decorating of grave* at one o'clock Following the dinner movies taken cuts and injury to her spine. Mbs
I condition.
by Dr. Gordon Fisher at the laM Edwards had a compound fracture
and program al two. Rev. Kitching
postgraduate course in St. Loub of her right leg and wm injured
All the postmasters in
E*ton | wni be the speaker.
county are now democratic. Editor
about the head. Neighbors who
“■ i
MUs jda 8chwg}u H H. 8. -31 were shown.
M. H DeFoe, republican, served I
________ last_ week from Mt. O1
„
Dr. J. W. Rlgterink from Grand heard the crash summoned a Bat­
graduated
Sinai
12.yT.*r*
y pORt’ I hospUal. Chicago, where she has Rapids spoke on "Coronary Throm- tle Creek ambulance, which took
boaes'*
and
Dr.
V.
M.
Moore,
also
Miss Orsbom and Baker to Nichol*
master at Charlotte. 105 days over taken the training course for nuraes
the time of the expiration of his she will now serve m an Interne of Grand Rapids, discussed "X-Ray hospital. Mbs Edwards and Kelthird commission, due lo the Inabil- for ,tl months, completing the Demonstrations of Fractures."
irv
~.__ .___
.
.
The following physicians attend­ Craig and E. J. Parrott, who reside
ity nt
of ththe powers that
that Kbe to maVa
make ______
course in September. Congratula­
ed
meeting:
Dr. o. C. Keller. near the scene of HIV
definite choice as to his successor. tions.
the accident
-- the
---- ---MIC OVCI1C
.
Dr. Gordon Phher, Dr. C. P. Lath- Baker, who was leas seriously IpThe new postmaster, a life-long
The Hastings Rotan' Club will
thatr the otMrt. WM «*democrat, happens to be a brother- not hold a luncheon Monday noon. rop. Dr. K. 8 McIntyre. Dr. R
”• 8.
sj: charged from
fr’om”the
the'h«pll*rafler
re-|
.nnPlF' *?’ 01
Dr. Hhospital after re
­
About 45 members will attend the
Looks as tho natural gas furnaces district Rotary convention at Mus­ Wedel. Freeport; Dr. c. A- E Lund 1 celvlng surgical treatment.
were making a ten-strike In our kegon. The member* who do not go and Dr. B- C. Swift. Middleville; ( LATER—The condition of WUcity. Twenty-four people, we un­ to that city can gain their altend- Dr. E. T. Morris and Dr. Stewart liam Kellogg h reported m still
Naahv,,,el Dr- B- E- Far- । critical. He is in Nlchola hospitalJ
derstand. have already signed up
well. Delton.
*rpe two HMtlngs girls were report­
for a six-months' trial In their noon.
'
———
e&lt;j tn '.fairly good condition.*' Miss
homes or places of business, with
A blaxe in the roof of the house PARSING
OF FORMER
I Edwards suffered a compound frac-j
Lake Odessa. Woodland. Nashville, on E. Tliom St., occupied by George
HASTINGS RESIDENT. |
and Vermontville bringing the total Martin, called out the Are truck
| ture of her right leg and cuts and
Frank Waite, aged 68. died on |
to forty-two to dale.
brulsas about her head, while MiM
yesterday forenoon. When the fire­ afteTan*illness of over
ywar*He ! u
000"1 »suffered
UIIP,r'1 u&gt;jurie»
Orsbom
Injuries w
to nbed
men arrived the flame* had made
a foX7 HM°uia ^de”
»nd P&lt;&gt;**tbly internal injurl
fined to hk home on 8. Park street considerable progress, but were soon
for the past fortnight with a nurse extinguished. The damage wm es­
in attendance, fighting an especially timated at 375.00.
COUNTRY FIRE.
He was a brother of the late Wm.
severe case of flu and throat trou­
Mothers of young boys will be W«lle of this city and ...
an uncle v.
of
The rural Are truck was sum­
ble.
"J. L.” it Menus sometimes Riad when the flrat novelty at going Edw. Waite.
moned at about 10 o'clock Mondaj
forgets he isn't m young as he used to the Fish Hatchery has worn off.
Surviving are hb wife, three night to a Are on the old Charlll
to be and has spelk of turning off We know of one boy who mbsed 1 sons. Will. Cecil and Rex. a daugh- Wing place in Irving, which not,
enough work for a young blood of supper and was sent lo bed early । ter. Mrs. Gaylord Woodard, also belong* to Ben Kelsey of thia city
twenty-one. That b what ha.&gt; laid because he was m busy catching [ .several grandchildren *nd three The house was ablaze when Um
him low al the present time, say polllwogs. toads and frogs for the skiers.
those in authority. Just now the school aquarium he teat all track of
................................
*
The funeral
was held...........
at Kalama*
men arrived they could do nothing
report from hb home u. that hb lime.
——, and the remains toward saving It, but directed then
aoo w
on w
Saturday
Now that the fresh fruit season | brought to Hastings for burial in efforts successfully to saving th*
condition Is more encouraging. One
of the unfortunate features of Mr. means generous u*e of whipping Riverside cemetery.
bam. The origin of the Are Is un&lt;
Maus' Illness., at thb time b. that cream. It b important to know how1
known. The house wm vacant. Thi
HOPE CENTER.
last Thursday he and Mrs. Ma'j.5 to prepare cream for whipping, say
home
cconomULs
at
Michigan
State
--------------—
--------------------------------------were to have celebrated their 50th
with about »1.000 insurance.
anniversary Not a proper time at College, cream should be at leMt • ‘h« d*y in thb locality: Clarence
| all to be In bed. Well wkh for bet­ 30 per cent fat. with cream, bowl j Payne and family who have bought
DEATH OF HENRY GASKILL.
ter luck next year when the 60th and whippet kept cold until used In the Fred Scott farm are moving
Henry Oaskill, aged 71. died Bun]
| the process.
onto same; Fred Scott k moving to
one comes around.
I________________________
| Shults; John Llffhart to Fulton; day night at hb home on 6. Je fieri
’ Ezra Froman into ChM. McDer- - - - - - I moU’s tenant house: Mr. and Mr*. months. He la survived by hia wit
, H. Hie of Delton are moving Into and one son. F. A. Gaskill, who U
i Mr. and Mr*. Car) Ricker’s house. member of the police force In Seat
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Warner *c- tie, Wash Mr. Gaskill had tired a
companlcd by Mr. and Mrs. Fred his life in this community exoej
/'
Hasting*, Michigan ■ Telephone* 2244*2557 H— "T*' । Ashby motored lo Holland Sunday
clerk on the Grand Trunk and Lak
J to see the tulips.
”
..
. .
- r -■» III
Willi HI —
,
Shore railroads. While in that aerv
We erge yoe to watch our Screen ter change* wHhoat notice -$• | Delton's second team played base­
----------------------- ----------------------... bap wtth Prairieville, there, Satur- Ice he had the distinction of takin
tiie first rural free delivery ma
Into Chmax which wm the fin
SUNDAY and MONDAY, MAY 24 and 25
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ashby and rural delivery route in Michigan.
Mr. Oaaklll served the city &lt;
Clark Gable. Jean Harlow and Myrna Loy in
sons motored to Kalamazoo Satur­
day evening to see their mother. Hastings as mayor in 1121 and 1B2
Tiie funeral services were held i
Mrs. Melissa Ashby, who la confinedto her bed. but is on the gain. the United Brethren church o
Wednesday at ten-thirty octoc
Only an hour to solve thb little
ficlatlng. Burial was made In
Valley Home cemetery.
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY, 1:&lt;

♦

3 - 25c

Armour's Giant Can

Pork &amp; Beans

Central station.
Seed com. fencing, repair* for
machinery, plow points are In brisk
demand now at the elevators and
implement stores.
A play
group
met Ind
with
Mn
Roy reading
CordJ «
Monday
another grS^et^^^P K

Mrs. Ray Water* entertained the
U and I bridge club at a dessert ,
home of his mother. Mrs. Lena
bridge on Wednesday evening at her ,
I White, in Rutland township.
home on 8 Hanover St.
[ Richard Trethrtc, young son of
The Barry county rural man car- ; ...
1 Mr. and Mrs. Dorrance Trethric,
tiers held their monthly meeting at । h '
L-s
Ihp
—1—nm— Cl
—an*— lx.ll
. a broken thumb m a result of
the U7
Welcome
Grange
hall C.hi»A«v
Saturday
a fall off his bicycle, Tuesday.
night. The supper wm furnished
Martha Lucille Ingram, the three! by the Welcome Ladles’ Aid.
j Deputy Ijbor Commissioner Ham­ year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
' rnond of Lansing will hold hearings Glen Ingram, has been very ill with
| at the court house In thb city next bronchial pneumonia.

5c

fl

Varwwntvllls 1* to have * baseball
team thia year.'
Mr*. F. W. Stebbins entertained
the Study club on Monday.
Mr. and Mr*. Rial Kellogg arc
moving into Mrs. Dora Wlllmont's nicely from her recent illness and
is able to sit up again.
Thursday night'* frost did damage
Judge McPoek is holding court
to clover and some other growing her* today and will dispose of some
pending criminal cases.
Mrs. Frank Hoonan is recovering
Wm. McCall hM gone to Battle
from her recent operation and has Creek where ha hM a position with
the Bertwhlatle Cleaner*.
Hanover at.
Aunt Rhoda Wilcox school re­
Splrea and honeysuckle hedges union at
ai schoolhouse,
acnooinouae. Sunday, May
M
arc looking their prettiest thb week | 31. Pot luck dinner.—Adv 5-M
rm the
th- grounds
ornnnd. at
&gt;1 the
th. Michigan
U1-hl....
uuuw. nut. u -o.
on

Y

With IOAN PKSBY
Episode No. 5 of “FLASH GORDON” will be shewn al
a:*e or
3:M
orioc*
tort Saturday
naiuraay M*tln*e
Maiusee Only
umy
Adults 15c; Children 18c

A
V TY"

Ad** -Wn A -W-

♦ 1

ld«al Aisartmant far HauMcleanini Tima

DEE
KCClZ 3

Walgreen System
DRUGSTORE

Y
a JX

Y -j Y 'FYe YtY rt^Y-v YtY “w“ Y^r^

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

rHONI U4I

�THB HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, MAY it. 1838

icounnms

The East Texas oil crudely than Kilgore, for in an price of $1.00 a barrel. Another I
at the time it failed wm 157,000,
Since it cloaed, the receiver has
field around 40 miles long and miles oil field other* things can be chap worked II still differently. He
in width hM been estimated to • crude” besides oil—and they gen­ had a good well but of course could J
paid the county 40 per cent of that
only legally sell a small fraction of I
contain four ' billions'' of dollars erally are. It Li claimed that no
sum. and has announced that 5
, worth of oil, all ready to burst Into town ever held a toughrr, grim­ what it would produce every day. I
per cent more U about to be repaid.
light under the pressure of its own ier population. Every lot in town So he tapped his well at three dlf-1
ferenl places
underground, and!
gas. That's a great national asset has a well on It and every inhabi­
cclver's hands, consisting of lands,
that should be preserved as long as tant hopes lo gel rich. What does It established what seemed to be three j
(Continued
from
page
I.
Sec.
It
notes,
mortgages etc., which are
otlver
wells.
Thus
he
got
past
the!
matter
how
the
town
looks,
or
what
(Continued from page 1, Sec. 1)
possible. But 10 years ago It had
believed sufficient to pay 30 per
goes on inside its limits. It's "oil'' Inspectors with four times his al- '
lowable quota and for which he re- half of the county, to sign a stlpu- cent mot*, making 75 per cent in
.
cars, in which you are always cool many oil wells in IhU country all that counts.
dismissing the suit brought all, and leaving 25 per cent unpaid
and comfortable. On the desert ready to produce, that if all of them
It Is claimed that here Illegal oil, celved the established price. Bu»
county against the signers of the $57,000 deposits, or $14.­
areas your vision will be mostly were opened up there would be ten or "hot oil.*' has been produced for the law caught up with him. as it ! b&gt;'
1 of thc guaranty deposit bond.
250. which will have to be made up.
limited to great stony hills, cactus 1 times as much oil produced as several years past, to the lune of invariably does.
Why havenX government opera- I ’r*,e amount of the county's de­ The $10,000 settlement made by the
and sagebrush. The extreme heat could be consumed. That would not 100.000 barrels a day. As the mar­
of the region la indicated by the only have created chaos In the in­ ket value of oil Is $1 00 a barrel rives stopped the traffic? They have. P&lt;»‘u ‘n the Nashville State Bank eleven directors and stock holders
tried
to.
They
oversee
the
running
,
occasional houses with their double dustry, but would lead to wanton that means a “racket" of 1100.000
roofs, with an air space of perhaps waste of an essential natural re- a day. or *3.000.000 a month, or of the legitimate oil, turn the1
valve* and lock them. Every well!
a couple of feet separating them.
rource. We saw the same thing in $35,000,000 or g40.000.000 a year.
is supposed to be under lock and I
Texas Li a great state, with big Michigan, when great pine forests As bootleggers sell their “hot'’ oil at
key. But greed, like love, laughs al I
ranches, oceans of oil. and a few covered a large part of live state's -half price,” to them it means just
republicans. We are apt to think area. If pint had been lumbered off half the above amount. There lias locksmiths. Locks are picked and
valves
are tampered with. Even
never
been
anotlier
racket
like
this
of Michigan, with ILs 56.000 square scientifically and with dfie regard
future needs. Michigan one. The sad thing is that it is tak­ "left hand" valves have been sub­
miles of territory, m a big stale and to our
It Is. But It is puny compared with would be manufacturing plenty of ing from mother earth a great nat­ stituted for right hand ones, and,
Texas with Its more than 265,000 pine lumber today. But you can ural resource that cannot be re­ when the Inspector thinks that he,
grow ___
pine________
trees in 75
100 years, placed. As effective police officials, Is turning off the flow, he Ls really
square miles. Texas 1* six times as ____
— or
.. _________
large as Michigan. You could set j while oil taken from the ground Is the Texas Rangers rank TTry high, turning it on—and the bootleggers |
uui
uern unauic
but mey
they nave
have been
unable io
to svop
stop get practically all of the dally flow.
all of Germany down In Texas and ' gone for good.
then have lots of room left. The | xn attempt to allocate produc- ' the traffic in "hot oil," and they 1 Numerous devices have been arstate presents almost the aspect of' Uon to the different oil fields led to have had the cooperation of fed- ranged to get the oil past the lock i
eral officers, state police and prowl- that is supposed to hold It in. What'
an Inclined plane, beginning back identically the same situation that
in the mountains on the west andlwc experienced under prohibition, ing detective?—and still the illegal j makes the situation even more dlf-1
sloping southward and eastward to ! m the oil fields, and especially In traffic goes on. "Hot oil" continues • ficult is that the Texans are simon ,
to flow. So great has been Ils vol- i pureIndividualises, and public sen- |
th. sea. Th.
ol[ fleJd cftme
the
The mnunt.lHAK.
mountainous region is thf
comparatively worthless, but as you “oil" bootlegger, just as In prohi­ ume that it has threatened the le- • tlinent Is pretty strong that it a
get further down the soil becomes bition times came the alcohol boot­ gillmate oil business from Maine to ■ man has an oil well or anything j
California.
[else. It U HIS and he has a right |
much richer. Though It was about legger. Ethics and ideals seem to
Crookedness and connivance on 10 do with it Just as he pleases
May 1st when we passed through, go -haywire" tn the presence of fi­
there were thrifty fields of com two nancial profits under such pres­ the part at least of some of rile I This philosophy tends to null the
or three feet high, and the fields of sure. and Individualism when op- numerous inspectors In the field Is edge of enforcement ardor in the
green com on the black soil made paved turns desperate, reckless and accountable for this unfortunate 1 PoUUdan. the stale officer, or even
a pretty sight. At Uvalde we passed ugly. In that East Texas field a situation. Some of the methods !ln tbe c°urls.
w- R- Coox.
through the ranch of Vice Presi­ good many people owned their own used lo evade the law were as Indent John Garner, who has an es­ well*. Down deep in the ground genlmis a* they are regrettable.
n^ing bird hM been dlstate of several thousand acres, de­ wm that great ultimate quantity of
. SSL? nH mLSC*n&lt;S
*hlch C&gt;n ChW,Be *U tUne
voted largely I understand to cat­ oil, but the amount they were per­ i n ™8
1
d
°™. ; 87 times in seven minutes. There's a
tle grazing. Not far away is the mitted to take out under allocation
■ mark for some of our politicians to
great "King Ranch" comprising control of the oil industry, was al­ acid on the. pipe line as it crossed
'
about 1.250,000 acres. The gradually most negligible. This led lo taking one of these streams. A hole was I
sloping land from the mountains illegal oil. or what is known a* "hot eaten through the iron plj&gt;e letting j
down to the sea is occasionally In­ oil.' from the East Texas field, and a small torrent of oil Into the creek. |
tersected by rivers. We crossed at the
development
of . another He dammed up the creek, skimmed
least one of them—Devils river as-I ■ racket," the like of which has off what oil he could—and the rest |
recall, and H seems appropriately probably never been known. Until was wasted—and last
named. Il looked harmless enough, this great oil field was found, that
An instance Is given of a fellow ;
but in time of cloudburst it be­ part of the slate was just another who drove a pipe down 3.600 feet
comes a raging torrent. Only u neglected frontier. It was really and got a well flowing 15.000 bar­
few years ago it took out a big lost In desolate back wood*, lying rels a day. But under the allocation
Southern Pacific steel bridge and among red clay hills and sand fiats. ,„
plan he was entitled to sell only 40
10 miles of railroad track. A little ILs surface only in rare spots was ’[’ barrels
hnrrela a day
rlav at
nt 1100
(1 Ort a barrel
barrel That
That
further back we crossed a Southern “tickied" by the cultivator of poor | would have given him a revenue of
Pacific
bridge 327
feel
high, cotton. There was hardly enough (140 a day. which would be a very
Insist on a guarantee of All
said to be the highest bridge in the Inducement u.i tile whole section to good return on his investment. But
Wool. The market is flooded
United States. The stream that It tempt a wandering crow, let alone that wasn't enough. He wanted
passed over seemed insignificant, a human being tn search of a for­ more. What he did was lo tap his ,
with adulterated fabrics.
but one could see why. In a rainy tune. BUI unknown to the poor hill­ well several feel below the surface
season, a high bridge would be re­ billies of the region, they were and run about 1.000 barrels a day
Born Fabrics are All Wool
quired. Texas seems lo be divided walking over one of the richest through a side trench, to a seciudand so Guaranteed.
Into three quite distinct divisions. spots on earth. Only a few hundred ed spot. This "hot oil" he sold lo j
Along the coast and extending in­ feet beneath them lay one of the bootleggers at 50 cents a barrel. |
Only All Wool Fabrics
land for 50 or 75 miles the land is greatest concentrations of wealth Thus Instead of getting $40 a day ;
deserve Born's fine work­
level and rich. Then comes a rolling In the form of “black gold" that the under the allocation plan, he got I
manship.
table land, ideal
for
pasturing; world ever knew, a veritable sea of an additional $500 a day until he ,
then the hilly and mountainous re­ oil. The discovery of this Immense was found out. and then his • jig
We arc showing their new
gion* with their coverings of tim­ field naturally led to great excite­
Spring and Summer Styles.
ber. just to cross the state of Texas ment. and a lot of trouble loo. Take roundly for his deception. His,
Always All Wool. Always
from east to west involves quite a Kilgore, the oil metropolLs. Before neighbor
worked
it
differently. I
made-to-measure.
trip of itself, being around 800 oil was discovered it was Just a When he put In his oil tank, he ar- i
You’ll need one soon now
miles.
| dinky, sleepy little country town. ranged a secret outlet tn the bot- I
But probably Texas Is better I Now it’s a seething, roaring city tom Through this outlet he drew
. . . buy yours today! A
"AL" G. McCALL
known as un oil and gas producing : with the wild reckless dash of a hundreds of barrels of "hot oil " and
jaunty
group of swaggers,
"Hasling's Tailor For Men Who
state than It I* for growing It* I Leadville, Virginia City, or other sold it to the bootleggers at half!
fishtails, full length and
steers. Natural gas from Texas will । well known mining camp of by­ price, and at the same tune drew I
Know the Difference"
soon be piped to Detroit. Texas has 1 gone days. No city was ever slam- out his allocated amount each day.
stroller
types. 12 to 20.
SIS B. Jtffnsou 8t , Hirtlnxi.
one of the greatest oil producing , med together more quickly or more for which he received the regular

J BIG METEOR HIT I
KUU1GESIG0

areas known.

WOO OFFERED

the county. In full, provided th* TO
the county there wm given to it,
and Is -'till held by the county, tn
addition to the deposit
surely bond for $5,000 t
gan Surety Company.
should fully protect the county an
Ito deposit; but in case it rtvould
not. tlie county also Um the bond
of Willis Streeter, who wm the
county treasurer al the lime when
the bank failed, and Mr. Streeter's
bond was also signed by the Aetna

ARE BARGAIN DAYS FOR YOU

imKi

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WHITE

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$2.98

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500 Large Sheets in Box

meric* from face. Strong and
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Novelty Fabric

RAYONS
Extra Value at Thu
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You’D like the new fabric.,
and you’ll like the way*
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There’s nothing cheap
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price!
Vesta,
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In small, medium and large
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MASS MEETING
And All-County Rally To Be Held

SUNDAY, MAY 24,3 odock

Week-End Cases

Expensive Looking!

21’ in size. Two nickel locks . .
post leather handle, grained fibre
cover. Pocket in lid. Buy
’

16&lt;4* size.
With slide fast­
ener. Durable imitation leather.

College, Spring Arbor, Michigan
CONCERT BY A CAPPELLA CHOIR

Rounded edges—2 lock®, leather
handle. Pocket in lid. t la body.
Matching hat box&lt;2JN

Dress Shirts
With Nncraft Collars!

40 Trained Voices, under the direction
of L. M. LOWELL, President of Spring
Arbor College.

88e
Made from pre-shrunk, fast col­
or patterned percales I All with
Nueraft Non-Wilt collars that
keep crisp during the boAeet
da ya I Smart new patterns I

MESSAGE BY REV. J. LEWIS ARNOLD

REV. ARNOLD

Ltghhveighi Sport

They’re Bargains! Men’s

at CENTRAL AUDITORIUM, Hastings, Michigan
The A Cappella Choir of Spring Arbor

Woven Stripe Design!

UTILITY BAGS Sport LUGGAGE

Sturdily Made! Value!

MUSIC In Charge of
ALICE CLEONE KESTER

Mm’i Athletic SHIRTS

SHORTS

Will Speak On

Designed for Comfort}

My Life’s Story

For Comfort and Wear

Congregational Singing
Solo By Miss Kester
Quartette Number

MKN'® COTTON

UNIONS

Men’s Covert Work

Men’, White Nnbnch

Admission FREE .. .
J. LEWIS ARNOLD
of Seattle. Washington

Silver Offering Received

OXFORM

98€

A Cordial Invitation h Extended to
All to Attend Thu Fine Service

ALICE CLEONE KESTER
Bey®' and Giris' Evangelist

This meeting being held under'auspices of the Free Methodist Church
with the co-operation of the Barry County Ministerial Association

They’re Nev, Smart!

PENNEY

Hare’a

perfwt

smooth «BUf
faetlycloMd
not bind! 1
perfect deUli I

Sanforized — they won’t
shrink! Cut.full for work­
ing comfort and extra
wear! Reinforced at wear­
ing points. Strong pockets.

COMPANY

tt

�bomt

The Hastings Banner

ntt courrr

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HATTNCS, MICHIGAN

Editorials

'Round About Town
By Obsrevlag Ttarnwy.

not nearly so "dashing** for examkilted, two instantly, and the fifth slugged the invalid Mrs. Stoll over
injured terribly.
the !&gt;ead with a piece of iron pipe.
allowing te a statement by o. True to form he cringed and turned
B- Bptftt, father of the injured boy.! yellow Just as most of the other

to Schuyler Marshall, editor of the i "bod men" do when the tables are
OUnton Oottoty Republican-News. It turned against them.
shoold be read by every driver. ’ m fact, if the truth were only
yowng Sid old.
The statement appreciated.
big shot criminal
needs no further introduction or who is given so much attention in
explanation. It speaks for Itself:
the headlines of the papers hasn't
"I wish every boy and girl who even as much courage as th* averdrives recklessly oould suffer as age American citizen who goes
Forest b suffering— for JUST ONE plodding along, trying to eam a
HOURliving for MUnself—Tn fact fess, be.111 ran.. r« Un
I “““ «“ «i«6»i» »•
•»&lt;&gt;
.nd monUn. It be lire he will be^ u,c
WsUncy
erlnnled tor We.
'“
"“V ’*» honestly. They
'
are parasites who lives on others
-Ho. 1
nol Mlle. « youn8
,h0
MU. I dent went yno Jo Ihtok ,, w
Tm cmek-bol. It they could
luwMUc
„
th. tenure mu 1&gt; ran. Uunu.h &gt;utoachme
But ,h„
tor JUST OHI HOUK never &gt;«.tn|orn tlme „„„ th„ „e „
«&gt;uld they endmurr their o.n: „
lire. u&gt;d the Uve. ot other.,
|
,OTal cnem,„ o! Mr
-Toe nineteen
hie mother
^,0 m, sllpero corp, ot Gud I her. looted .tier Mm. hoped
r„ke.
tor hlm-dM errrythln. »e could to,
M, p„lu,c„,
Con.
help him prrtnrr hlnuelt tor nun- .,^ tbe„
lo
hoo&lt;1
'bring Mr. Hoover end Me loyel
“How look. There he Ilea with t,fcnd under direct perty control!
both leg. broken and splintered. ,nd [o mtke y.,.
organlxatlon
One ankle la Ulerelly cni.hed , pl„ ,or
p.lraul8.
Tbm'a a great cm on Ma head. AirMdy a tamed woman poychlkThe none «ya he la deal In one I ubt has
removed to make way
car—probably due to concussion " 'I •for
— a
- Mississippi
—. —
..a.-.—
politician.
&lt;Wc stepped to room No. 312.
' G-Men are not on civil service,
The boy in his fourth day moaned
have no pension roll, have no lobby
and mumbled a nurae was at hb \
side. His face .was discolored and a |। working for their Interests In the
halls of congress.
Their only
bandage covered part of hb head
strength lies in the excellent servThe father clenched hb teeth and
swallowed hard. We stepped out.) |। Ice they have performed.

Generous bouquets of praise have
been tossed at the Hastings Civic
Players for their fine presentation
of "Servant In The House" This
drama was a difficult assignment
for amateurs but the entire cast
rose to the occasion in a manner
tend some school project. THEY
that was at times truly inspired.
HAVE A SHARE IN THE RE­
Whether or not thia play Is the
SPONSIBILITY
finest yet produced here is a mat­
“I don't believe they have a
ter of opinion. Personally, we
RIGHT to take that chance.
be satisfied if productions to
low are equally as good
to think sanely about this thing,
but I tell you when I see MY boj
DODGING RESPONSIBILITY
lying there all broken and crushed.
In comment'mg as follows on that
I cannot help but think. THINK—
tragic hoax, the Townsend Plan,
AND PRAY."
the Washington Post state* facts
Forest Sparks. the boy. died Sat­
that are known and appreciated by
urday morning. Friends of Mornewspapers and public officials al-;
most without exception:
car. are worried over his condition.
The inquiry into the Townsend
He is suffering tortures of mental i
organization shows how pitifully
agony at the thought of his part
easy It is to trade glittering prom­
ises for hard cash and grow rich
watch him constantly.
at the expense of the poor and
Who is responsible for this acclunderprivileged. That, however,
dent? The boy driver who had
is an old story, made just a little
doubtless been given many
lures on careful driving but. who. • more impressive by the star of
the tribute exacted and the misery
like most others of his age failed
to appreciate the responsibility of a ' of the times. Al least Americans
driver or the terrible destructive i are no more gullible than the Al­
berta voters. They elected Wil­
power of an automobile traveling al
high speed; the parents who let I liam Aberhart as Premier of the
province on a social credit plat­
their immature son drive away on
form. which promised a monthly
a trip of this kind; the school su­
dividend check of »3j to every
perintendent at Carson City who
ciliMn of legal age. On April 1,
would permit parties of students to
however, the province announced,
drive to anotiier city unaccempannot a dividend but a default on a
maturing bond issue.
state government wfifeh permits alsponsiblllty tn letUng their boys and
girls drive cars recklessly.
“Yes. and another thing—when
the faculty of a school starts a
bunch of young boys out on the

i

We agree 100 per cent with Muri
mod no restrictions on the Usuance
DeFoe. editor of the charlotte Re­
of licenses for motorists?
publican-Tribune when he saysUon could have prevented the sit­ ■Newspapers cannot dodge their
uation that resulted in this terrible responsibility on this question in the
smash up. Pour poasible barriers coming campaign. There is no use
and not one functioned properly! pillortng the wild spending of the
Is It any wonder that Michigan's New Deal and remaining silent on
record of traffic accidents is among the fallacies of the Townsend Plan.
the ieasl enviable in thia country? The average office seeker is not a
Townsend man at heart, he is Just
A PKtFDCT RECORD.
using U to promote his personal po­
Tlw capture of Thomas H Rob- litical welfare. The state or the
nation means nothing to thia type
of office seeker in either party.”
and public enemies.
Peoplt who sit and wait for their
4 an atf Um* ranking along to be a receivership.—Atlantic Log

Chapter Wm Organised
tai 1170

There was a large attendance of
This week's nomination for the
Hastings Hall of Eligible Bachelors members of Hastings chawter No. T.
—Fred Bchlpp—Whoa there Tom­ O. B. 8, Tuesday night, at a aatbermy! You almost made a blunder
that time! Fred, the good looking who is tho oldaat living member
and the only living charter mem­
Ing on a vacation this week during ber of tha chapter, which was orwhich time an important erent Li
to transpire. There will be a trip years old. and still has an active in­
to Niagara Falls, too. they tell me. terest in the local chapter and Its

dents were racing at high speed was anything but a glamorous hero
of criminal fiction when the govFowlerville Friday afternoon One

an active man and doesn't know
not hurt told me that Forest kept!I what the words tired or overwork
warning the driver to stop racing.!
’ mean. One of the bast tributes to
Forest has never been reckless. He | his character and personality is the
told his grandmother that morning I fact that back here tn Barry coun­
that he did not want to make that
ty where people and old friends
trip to East Lansing He seemed to |
have a dread that something might II know him as just a plain citizen of
the state he is held in the highest
happen.
! regard.
"You can tell the fathers and
mothers who read your newspaper
FINE WORK!
\

Jack Eliteion and daughter Alice of
Maple Grove Center; Mr. and Mrs.
Clare Cole and family; Mr. and Mrs.
Oali Lykins and twin sons; Mrs.
Vada Johnson and Mary.

Hew to the Una. M th* quip*

with the finest police forces In tl»e
OUT.
Two automobiles, each carrying history of the world.

• Four of the boys who were in &lt;
JUSTICE POTTER
that car are dead—DEAD. I tell ■
All who know justice W W. Pol­
you. They can't talk. They can't
' । ter were shocked to learn that he
tell what happened. They ara
was suffering from a bad heart at­
gone i knew all of them—their
tack and wish him a speedy recovfolks. It's terrible.
| ery. justice Potter hu always been

THURSDAY, MAY tl, 1936

HASTINGS O.E.S.
HONORS MRS. POWERS

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

A

Quotation

—Shakespeare.
-I G 0 0 D intention
clothes il»r|f with

BUTCHERY OF MICHI­
GAN TRAILS.
If there is anything which is nicer
to drive upon or mere beautiful to
see it Is the Michigan trail where
speed is never necessary and sur-

power.
—Emerson.

the past two years there has been
a great rush In a few northern
counties to clear up these trails,
widen them and straighten them ■
up. heap up the roads. Presumably 1
the Job is being done with welfare I
labor and not because of any de­
mand by those who frequent the
'T’HAT man who was up to his
places but due to the fact that
J neck in the California tar
someone has a warped idea of what
pit is one of the few who can
people enjoy.
boast that, for at least part of
Along with this so-called im­
1936. he was tn the black.
provement there is a cutting and
slashing of trees so that one would
think he was driving down a fire
proposing. After the marriage,
lane instead of the old trail he used
the husband lives with his
to know. And when all this is go­
wife's people." American cus­
ing on the state is planting trees
tom differs tn that the boy does
along some of the trunk roads while
the nroposing.
welfare crews continue the butch­
ery of the county roads. We do not
“The elephant is one of tho
know how much of this has gone
greatest noise makers tn the
on here, but in some counttea to the
animal world " Judging from
north, the results have been rather
the current campaign, it isn't
pathetic to say the least.
doing so bad tn the political
The Michigan trail is a beauty
world, either.
spot for the average lover of the

outdoors,
poplars, cedars,
pines, tamaracks, oaks, elms and
smaller trees often crowd close to
the trail and all but close it in dur­
ing the summer. It winds around
ridges, cUm to lake* and rivers,
touches trout streams and b a
continual source of pleasure with its
numerous surprises The road may
have been an old lumber trail in
an earlier day.
We have heard the lament of
those who love these traib and we
admit being
numbered
among
them. Given thb natural beauty
why in the name of common sense
should we spoil It? Keep the trails
passable, but let's stop the butchery tn the name of progress. We
cannot add to the beauty ot a wind­
ing trout stream by making ft Into a
straight drain and cutting the trees
down, and we eannol beautify and
make th* trails more attractive by
clearing them out and replacing
them with bee-line roads —Phil T.
Rich in The Midland Republican.

A Boston dentist says that he
likes to treat women patients
better than he does men, but of
course that's because it's so sat­
isfying to have^a woman tn a
position where she can't talk.

I

I

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday
TWENTY YEARS AGO
The Hostings National Bank pur­
chased the Michigan Ave and East
Green St. paving bonds from the
city council on Friday' evening at
. a rate of 4 1-2 per cent. The value
of the bonds for both paving proj-

| For the first time in the history
I of local schools, this city will be
I represented In the state high school
oratorical contest. Miss Aimee Rcn| kes having won first place in ora| lory In the district contest al St.
Joseph. Friday evening
I Friday a.'tcrnoon at the Wornj en's Club topics of unusual interest
: will be discussed. Parents, teachers'
clubs, public playgrounds, and chil­
drens' reading
Little George Sumner Myers, who
| has been ill. is convalescing.
Mrs Carrie Spence pleasantly
entertained a company of twenty
on Friday afternoon, complimen­
tary lo her niece. Miss Bessie Bush,
whose marriage to Victor Hilbert of
Woodland will take place June 1.
Lyman Johnson, formerly a Has­
tings resident, is engaged In build­
ing ten miles of good roads near
Whitmore Lake,
Chris Spirts of Lansing was In
town on Tuesday on business. Mr
Spiris was engaged tn the confec­
tionery business In the capital city
and intends to locate here.
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
Tiie Barry County Bar Associa­
tion will hold their annual banqBet
in this city on Monday. May 18.
Judge Donovan of Detroit will be
the speaker.
Mrs. E.
r., M.
Bl- Hoyt u&gt;
of Mitn
this city will
Kill
sail about June it on one of the
German liners for an extended trip
I abroad, in company with her niece,
i Miss Martha Downing of Wiikcs-

Will Peck has the contract for
building the big new dining hall
on the fair grounds
'He who minds his own business ku' ।
Floyd Pierson and Chester Pryor
no time to mind other foUts."
| enjoyed &lt;?» a canoe ride up the
MAY
I river Sunday. Either of them can
M—Dwneersu koi* ibeir Rm
re.. ,z how deep the water
tell you ,nearly
rO
M’ional ccnvtmion. im
U Ask thcm Bboul u

Guess the Pleasant Hill corre­
spondent has trouble getting cer­ ised in this apuntry was al Coldwa­
tain items by the censorious bine ter. Michigan. Om of 1U early
Eighteen
members
of laurel
pencil of my boss. Tommy can members wu Mre. Eliza Barber.
sympathise. He's seen many a bless­ That chapter was organised In 166?. Chapter No. 31. O. E. 6. went to
ed event come and go without ade­ Mrs. Barber moved to Hastings soon Hickory Corners Thursday night to
after Joining there, and drove sever­ attend the county meeting. Two
quate advance publicity.
al times to Coldwater to attend musical readings were given by
chapter meetings She decided that Mbs Mildred Caley. accompanied at
These storks'll be getting dis­
Hastings ought to have such an or­ the piano by Mrs. Carl Lenta.
couraged at «uch cool treatment.
ganisation and set about it, with Laurel chapter put on the obliga­
the result that in 1870 Hastings tion service. The travelling gavel
Dill Wolverton, they tell me, can chapter No. 7. now the third oldest was presented to Laurel Chapter.
talk a mean game of tennis. He puts in Die state, was organized with 15 On June 2nd. Nashville will enter­
a verbal twist on his serves. I hear, members. Mrs. Barber was Worthy tain the chapters of the county and
that makes his opponente foul Into Matron and later Worthy Grand present the gavel to Hastings chap­
the net or backstop every time.
refreshments were
Matron, and Dr. A. P. Drake Wor­ ter. Lovely
served to about 125.
thy Patron.
"Servant in the House” made a
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bells and
After a fine banquet tn the din­
ing room, members adjourned to the daughter Dorb were tn Grand Rap­
hall upataln. The regular formali­ ids Thursday.
The burning question of the itour ties of a chapter meeting were first
Chicken pox seems to be the pre­
carried out. The program for the vailing disease here.
belter than "Outward Bound?”
Mbs Ann Mayo, a senior thb
evening was under the direction of
Mrs. Georgina MU
Bauer,
Past Worthy
.......
.r, rwt
YTQnny Xe*r- underwent
an
operation
Heh! Heh! Hehl They're not go­ Grand Matron of the O. E. 8. of! Thursday night at the local hospling to suck Tommy in on that one! Michlgan.
I tai for a ruptured appendix. A man
Mrs. Powers wu invited to a seat !from Vermontville underwent an
Bet Wally Osborn and Tom beside the Past Worthy Grand Ma- operation
on Thursday.
Mrs-------Mabie
-------- “---------------------------------Myers were glad to hare their Jocks tron and was called on for a talk, Powers, a trained nurse, is helping
cut.
and gave a fine response, recalling there.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Barnes of
many things concerning the early
On some of these warm days history of the chapter, whose meet­ Battle Creek called on their sister.
those long tresses must have felt ings were then held in the old Un­ Mrs. Nettie Johnson who suffered
somewhat "scratty."
quite a severe heart attack.
ion hall.
Frank Dllbahner bf Chicago and
Put Worthy Matrons. Mrs. Allie
But the boys turned In a great Young. Mra. Levi Mead and Mrs. Dr. 8 M Fowler of iBaltle Creek
performance.
Milton Murphy gave interesting called at the Gall Lykins homo
/
facta about the chapter. Mra. Fan­ Saturday.
Do the members of the Hastings nie Mixer Tower of Ypsilanti, who
Mrs Ralph Hess, fabs Amy Hart­
Commercial Club love to plant Joined In 1888, also spoke of the well. Virginia. Charles and Jack
trees? Ask Harold Foster!
Hess were tn Kalamazoo Saturday
chapter in that early time.
Rev. --------Elmer ---------Pritchard.
Harold
A fine violin selection was given , -----—
J.
....
Bortoli
They should really call it "Ftw- by Miss Norm* Jacobson, with her I B«h«. R«v. _..
Rhoades.
Mr
----------ter's One-Man Forest."
sister, Mbs Virginia, al the piano; *nd R«v A L- Bingaman of Ionia
she responded with an encore. Mr. I **f» early Tuesday morning for PcRoman Feldpausch is the only Frank-Sayles wu called on and i t&lt;»key to attend the annual conman in town with a mezzanine of- sang some old time songs in a way i ference of the Evangelical church
flee.
that reached the heart* of everyMr and Mrs. Ralph Hess were in
body A feature of the occuion. Grand Rapids last Tuesday and
But Roman wasn't
trying for giving a touch of the olden davs I Wednesday attending the Btatc
fancy architectural effects—there were the "Merry Widows." Mrs. Ida I convention of Michigan Funeral DtJust wasn't any other room.
McCoy and Mrs. Emma Evans, who rectors.
were robed in dresses and bonnets
Elmer Northrup went to WashLewie Karmes can sure rustle up worn by women fifty years ago. 1 ington. D. C-. Saturday where he
swell steak.
They gave several selections on the , w,n »l*nd * week. He was accornplano.
1 panled by hb daughter. Miss Donna
Burdette LyBarker
can
step
The meeting throughout was in- I Northrup and friend of Battle
around as lively as anyone on the teresting and the program a credit Creek.
street.
to all concerned.
State health department officlalj
----------------- -tar
were here lut week supervising the
Almost time for campaign prom­
NASHVILLE.
' chlorination of the new water *ysises to start flying.
Funeral
services
Melissa1 ,Um Thr Pre*. 4'nl .....
WPly •». taken
«
...wvo for Mrs.
mi* mrinw
—
n* o*&gt;
_ at .her 1 from
Roe.
82. who .......a
passed ___
away
from A" IQ-inch
13-lnch well
well which
which hm
has nn
an
But remember I Tommy
tmy warns home on Wednesday afternoon e«t*«nated capacity of 10.000 gallons
you!
When they
f "
.
, start flytng
they I
held ,t the home Friday aft- P*r minute
keep right on going—Up and np I emoon at 2:30. conducted bv the * On Thursday night Mr and Mrs.
and un
... Orville Flook entertained Mr. and
up, awav
away nut
out of uteht.
sight.
Rev M tE. Hoyt. Burial
in
Mrs. Gail Lykins and sons at a
And we don't mean lo heaven her death site was president of the birthday dinner in honor of Mrs.
either.
•
Barry County Past Matrons club. Lykins' and Mrs. Flook's birthday.
She was a charter member of This is an annual affair
More than likely they eventually Laurel Chapter No 31. o E S and
Miss Pauline Dense of Wall lake
end up where moat of the “prom- of the Nashville temple No. 79. is visiting at her home here.
Mr. and Mrs. William Martin and
Pythian Sisters. Surviving are two
daughters. Mrs. Beatrice coau. of daughter were al Battle Creek
Even "Happy" Etterbeck. the California and Mrs. carl 'njttle of Saturday.
well
known
flying
Dutchman, Nashville,
Mrs Carl Lantz was hosier to
several
grandchildren
couldn't sell a stoker there. Plenty and great-grandchildren.
her bridge club on Tuesday
Mrs. Sarah Downing. 82. parsed
HINDS CORNERS.
Tommy’ll be out with a platform momlng after a long illnew. She Lari Week's Leiter
one of these days that'll
make had lived here about 60 years. She
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Bishop spent
some of these political boys sit up leaves two daughters. Mrs. Anna the week end with his brother. Mr.
and lake notice.
Oribben and Mrs Fred K Bulita. and Mrs. Alien Bishop
both of Nashville, and four grand­
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Cates of
By unanimous vote of all unmar­ children. Funeral sendees were Kalamazoo spent Bunday with Mr.
ried feminine members of the Civic held Sunday afternoon at 2:30 at and Mrs. Alfred Bishop and were al­
Players, the Country Club, the city's the Gribben home, conducted by so callers on Mr and Mrs. Allen
bridge clubs and hospital guilds—in Rev. M. E. Hoyt Burial in LakeBishop.
short, the entire single female pop­
Archie Newton and daughter Cosulation of the town, we nominate
Funeral services for Mrs. Ettle tna and son Laurel! from near
as Hastings most eligible, affluent Mather were held Monday after- Dowling and his parents. Mr and
and handsome bachelor
.a man
Mrs. Frank Newton of Hastings
of wide travel, of parched humor, neral home. conducted by the Ilrv. called on Mraml Mu. C. N. Tobias
who constantly bedevils other so- M E- Hoyt. Mrs Pauline Lykins Sunday evening.
called eligible*, and who got up at sang. Burial wan
In
Lakeview
Mrs. Ida Moore of Hastings is
six o'clock to play tennis anly once
spending the week with her son, Mt.
in his life. . tone other than my ceded In death by her husband and and Mrs Will Moore Mr Moore
editor, Richard Marshall Cook.
five children. She had been In poor and daughter. Margaret visited Mr
health for some time, but suffered and Mrs Glen Moore in Nashville
Whew! fl required strategy to get a stroke and only lived a few hours. Sunday.
The following surprised Gideon
Mrs c N Tnbias spent last week
L Gage Sunday on his birthday: in Kalamazoo with her daughter.
Ruas Smelker. member of the lo­ Mr and Mrs. Henry Sywerda and Mrs Mell Hendershot and family
cal Are fighting department, can daughter Marie of Grand Rapids; and with Mr. and Mrs Floyd Tobias.
really gel resulte whare others fail. Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson and , Mr. Tobias went down Saturday
I understand. The rural truck be­ daughter Carolyn of St. Mary's I morning and brought her home
ing out of commission and farm­ lake; Merlin Gage of Jackaon; lan (Sunday afternoon.
ers therefore warned to observe fire
prevention rules accordingly. Russ
was about.the only fellow in the ।
county who oould produce a blaze. 1
Just a brooder fire, fortunately.
CLOTHIS
SHOP
Singed some of his ehloks and1
chlcklels but that was all.
i

FORTY YEARS AGO
Sunday Alf Matthews' barn in
i Rutland was unroofed by the wind,
and reports are circulated of other
:
farm buildings being damaged the
W.000/XM 4asui«. 19J1
। same day by the elements. Alf is
I
I one of the many farmers In Michl­
|
! gan who can smile because he has
I a policy in the Michigan Mutual
Main Street won't sectn the same
Tornado. Cyclone and Windstorm with Lambic At Doyle retired from d
j
I Insurance Company of this city.
business.
I
NEW8 GLEANINGS.
.
Eddie cole wlll aaaisl Prof. MHb
There are more than 8.000.000 i
I at the Children's May Festival in
"No permanent reforms in our •
I MlddtevUle. May 37.
dogs in the United States.
economic system are poasible until1
Ii m The High school n
- --------------‘"f r.nl—
•• ,ll*r
p«~n‘
of inThe Panama Canal excavations!
। NashvtUe Saturday and defeated; come distribution."—Prof. Walter
totaled 339.000.000 cubic yards. The.
the school nine there by a score of Rautenstrauoh. Columbia Untver-'
I 14 lo 9 It look eleven innings to
yearly amount of sediment carried 1
atty
down by the Missouri river u 400,-1
; decide the game. Clarence Deplan­
000.000 cubic yards.
ing on a portion of his Broadway;
and center St. property. We under-;
In olden times the right hand, or
Hand the same will be for rent.
I
weapon hand, was extended to sig­
’
FIFTY YEARS AGO­
BRIEF
OBSERVATIONS.
nify friendliness. Thus developed
' The dedication services of the a horse that does not take any' Every local program needs an in­ I Baptist church of this city ------the handshake!
ternational program to complete it."
;held on Bunday last. Large audl- a handsome animal but has the go
It would take 32 hours for sound —Cordell Hull. Secretary of Stats. j dices were present at both services.
In him.
to encircle the globe, traveling at
. J
f B- Cressey preached in the
Died In thb city. Sunday May 10,
Ih. nt*
». ___....... .
The iniquities -r~of buMnass _ exist I morning
and Rev Tilly
of *amaw-|0f
Middle■nrt~
““■&lt; ""»»»•
siuy OS
spinal disfkae. Alioe 8. Cook.
_
. .
* law. I vUJ
vine
in Uie
tiie evaalng. Mut,c
Music •
was
, wlfe ot A- D. Cook, after a abort lllbSt
* *"
“ Xus-i
Tit* curvature of the earth is »Jt because we ourselves wink at1 nlshed by a quartet of young peo- 1 ness.
about 8 inches a mile.
them. —Senator Arthur Capper.
. pie Of the city. The Baptist society | Ground
‘ was *broken .last
. _
.Friday
--------feeb a Just pride in their new and for the new roller mill. The fact J
Enlargements of snapshots. col"There is no royal road to lower ' handsome bouse of wor shin whieh
I
I

Way of Our World

Crumbs of Wisdom

ir as mural decorations

annual trip to Niagara Falls. They
will return home on Monday night.
Bunday night the Baccalaureate
service was held at the Methodist
church. The following program
was given:
Processional—High School Band.
Invocation—Rev. Pritchard.
TWO songs by tha Girls' Glee club.
■ Bring Us a Happy Mom.” and
• God of AU Nature."
Address—Rev. M. E. Hoyt.
Benediction—Rev. Hayter.

pr'w
| ret that tha building will be au orR- Roberts Is building a dwell- namcal to Um city.
k

Flash!! Ready
ANOTHIR SHIPMINT

DEEP TONE SHIRTS
Duka of Kent Collar
• NAVY
• CHOCOLATE
BY MACK—SIZES
14. 14'/i, 15, and I5'/1

• CGIIN
• WIN!

*1.50

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP
Selling Quality Keeps Vi Husy

HASTINGS, MKNi.

&lt;

PHONE 2235

�sevenhiirtin

moon

■IX

OP TH1M BBOUGHT
TO PENNOOK HOS­
PITAL

IONIA CO. YOUNG FOLKS
WERE GOING TO A DANCE
Thgir Oar Struck by a Mor.
inff P. M. Freight Train
Near Oounty Line

Organisations

AiudHary will be here to Initiate,

first initiation so al) eligible* inter­
ested please ba present both May 21
and May M—Mra. Kila H. Bush,
Acting Secy.
the

[ Sporting Items

VashviDo Will Now Have an
Abundant Supply of
CITY TENNIS TOURNEY
Rjwellant Water
TO START MAY 30

nj«et Thursday, M*y J J. al I
nominate officers. Thursday,

The next meeting of

OLD STEAM PLANT
HAS BEEN ABANDONED

Brush

Nashville this week abandoned
the steam plant in Ils waler works
station. When it was flrat estab­
lished. wells were driven to a great
depth; but the water was not plenti­
ful. so the pumps were connected
with the river. This had serious
drawbacks and was a constant
threat to public health. The vil­
lagers must have used good Judg­
ment in avoiding the use of this
waler for household purports un­
ite* It was boiled, because there liar,
never been an epidemic that could

the cemetery Thursday, May 28. Pot
luck dinner at noon. All interested
in the cometary arc urged to be
Seven young people started out present.
from Lake Odessa tn an automobile
The Petunia Circle will meet with occur So the state insisted upon
•to attend a dance late Saturday.
a new plant.
Those in the car were Rollo Clem­ Mrs. W. H Roush. 827 Hayes 8t..
on Thursday afternoon.
ens, io of Lyons; Ruth Farrell. IB.
tioo. an abundant supply was found.
Ionia; Donald Skeldlng. X. Lyons;
The Adult Bible classes of the "The 12-inch well can furnish 10.000
Barbara Haney. 17. Lake Odessa; First United Brethren church will gallons per minute, and the water
Marion Morse, 16. Lake Odessa; hold a "Hard Times" party. Friday Is excellent.
Before the citizen* were permitjean Senter*. 20. Lake Odessa; and evening, at the home of Mr. and
ted to use the new supply, the big
Marshall Thorpe. 20. of Bebewa.
Mrs. Frank Wendell.
tank and all the service pipes were
Young Thorpe was at the wheel.
When they reached the crossing of
Because of conflicting events, the chlorinated by men connected with
the Pere Marquette, known as the dinner planned by the Missionary the public health service. All dan­
Society at the Methodist church ger of contagion from hurtful bac­
Odessa, the car ran into a freight for thia Thursday evening has been teria was thereby removed.
train. The automobile was over­ postponed.
SECOND WARD P. T. A.
turned and the occupants received
many Injuries, some of them very
One of Albert Becker's classes
Opening luncheon for the women
serious. Six of them were brought at the Country club wlU be Tues­ provided the program for the Sec­
to Pennock hospital in this city day. June 2 at 12:46 promptly. Res­ ond Ward P T A Monday night.
A one-act play -joint Owners in
alter the accident. The driver. Mar­ ervations may be made with Mrs
shall Thorpe, was treated for scalp Rogers before Monday noon June 1. 8pain" was presented, also musical
lacerations In Lake Odessa.
The Executive Board will have numbers by Dorothy Lathrop and
The condition of Rollo Clemens of charge of tho luncheon arrange­ Rosalie Cascadden and a reading
Lyons and Barbara Haney of Lake ments.
by Ruth Hathaway.
Odessa is considered critical. Both
suffered serious internal injuries.
Townsend plan meeting. Episco­ president: Secy. Mrs. Alien Ran­
Trees..
"Mrs
Marshall
pal parish house on Friday evening. som:
— ■
—•—
at*nh*n
Schantz;
father■ vice-pres..
Stephen
atlons. Jean Senters of Lake Odes­
sa suffered a triple pelvic fracture. found it necessary to change our Cooley; mother vice-pres.. Mrs. Earl
Her condition is serious but not speaker and 1* now sending us Mr. Erwayteacher vice-pces. Miss
critical. Donald Skeldlng suffered Adair of Flint, one of the finest Anne
.„&gt;K; ou
Burton.
. ^,...
many bruises and cuts, but his con­ speakers in the state.
| one of the projects planned for
dition Is not regarded as dangerous.
------------- I next year is a stage, similar to the
Ruth Farrell was taken to her
Barry Lodge No. 13 KnlghU of One Just pul Into place by the first
home at 406 Lafayette Street, Ionia, Pythias will take three candidate* ward school,
• •from
-----------private
•— — funds.
•—•*after receiving treatment at the to Freeport on Thursday evening.
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
hospital here, a local surgeon May 28. to receive the first rank. |
Wc have « real old lime Sunday
treated the six when they were It Is hoped that a goodly number j
brought to the hospital here, but from Hastings may attend this school at the schoolhouse, where
later Dtl C. H Peabody and M. A. meeting.
i everybody takes part. Rev. Orow
Hoff of Lake Odessa were sum­
„ . ' preached a very good sermon last
moned far them.
Pythian Sisters yriicntion—-Next gun(jay
nre invited U) come
worship with us.
Thorpe who was driving, told regular meeting of the Temple ,
Ionia county officers, who investi­ Tuesday. May 28. 7:30 P- M|
prayer meeting Wednesday eve­
gated the accident, that he saw the
Th. numbSrSTu&gt;. Anx-rtam, hM. M«y n.
M home o! Mr
freight train while it wax still some
distance down the track, but he be­ Legion Auxiliary are invited to atlieved it would pass before hLs car
reached the crossing. He said the S’JS,
4UE?Z.rW'lL.“l
MT.nd‘&gt;I" o.’rlord BeoU of
train was longer than he anticipat­
ed. and one ol the last railroad cars —‘ dt'h
StoSr'S.’IK.
struck the front bumper of his au­
tomobile. overturning the car withn ,food-__________ . T __________
the results stated.
Wood Schoaol Notex.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
LATER—Mrs. Matilda Clemens.
We had shortened periods Wed­
Jj1 Mra. Effie Landon. Mrs. Anna
54. mother of Rollo Clemens, died
Buck and daughter. Esther. Mra. nesday. so we were dismissed early.
at Pennock hospital about ten- Frank Shriber. Mra. Leo Barry and The reason for this was the meeting
thirty on Tuesday evening of
son soent Thursday afternoon in at Central auditorium, which our
heart attack. Her son's condition
h Lansing calling on Mr. and Mrs. teacher attended.
somewhat improved, the Banner
Several of our pupils made some
Abid Donley. Mrs. Donley is very
informed
lovely butterfly May baskets.
। poorly. ।
The first, second and third grade*
I
Mr. and Mrs. A B. Westerlind of
are
making some pictures in yarn
| Hastings called on Mr. and Mrs.
Coot Not Member of Duck
and crayolas.
Walter Culberl Friday evening.
Family ; Called “Mud Hen” ,1 „
UUr,fc Marlowe
c u.
Those neither absent nor tardy
Hubert
of -----------------Kalamazoo
The tertn "mud hen” Is a nick­ spent the week end with Mr. and this week arc Dora. Albert. Jamea,
&gt; Buddy. Irene Dorothy, Clarabelle
name for the coot or similar water Mrs. Lafayette Usbome.
Mr. and Mra. Oscar Hall of Lan- . and Marguerite
fowl. The coot. Fullra ntnerieana, I
1 sing accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Leo 1 Our second ball game of the sea­
la a bird of the small creeks and
, Barry and son to Grand Ranlds son was played at the Brew school
the shores of shallow lakes and I KnnH.v
Bunday and «nant
spent ih»
the H.v
day with
with Un
Mrs ., Friday.
Friday. May
May 15.
15. The Brew again
|k&gt;d&lt;1s where marsh plants grow ! Barry's sister and family. Mr. and showed their fine ball playing abili­
abundantly. notes a writer In the Mrs. John Visaer.
ty and we came home the losers.
Washington Star. The foot la half
TAMARAC.
NOBTKZAST CARLTON.
webbed, an excellent arrangement
Mrs. Jasper Jordan assisted Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Oeo. Keeler and
for running on water when the
wings lend their assistance. The Frank Jordan with canning meat family of Hastings spent Sunday
with
Arthur Stairs.
cool never rise* on the wing with­
well al this writing.
Sunday visitors at Mr. and Mra.
out a preliminary run on the water
Dayton Jordan la gaining slowly Scott Lydy's were: Mr. and Mra.
Geo. Lydy and son, Gary of Irving.
at this writing.
The coot swims and dives quite
Btetia Strong has been helping Lan Hickerson of Hastings, Mr and
rell. but a* a rule It prefer* tn her mother. Mra. Fry of Pleasant Mra. Clyde Lydy and son and Mary
Valley, with housecleaning. Her fa- Lydy of Royal Oak. Mr and Mrs
(to which the term "mud hen” Is
Dale Quick and Mr and Mrs. James
also applied). In the edge* of heavy
Sunday and week-end visitors at Billman of Battle Creek
Bertie Smith'* were: Mr and Mr*.
Mr. and Mrs. Mina Eliott visited
marsh vegetation. Here It can pick
Arthur Bruett and baby Joyce. Mr and Mra. John Nickerson, near
np Its living ot btnle, hloasoms,
Grand Rapids; Mr. and Mra. Maur­ Clarksville. Sunday.
seed*, aqustlc Insects and snails,
ice Forahey, Sunfield; Mr. and Mra.
Ione Vought of Portland visited
and also hide from Its rnemtea.
Tom
Bernard Smith. Wamervllle; Mrs. her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
The cool I* not a member of the Bernice Sensiba and daughter Eliz­ Barry, recently.
duck family, but belongs tn (he rail abeth. Kalamazoo; Mr. and Mra.
-----------------------Lan Hickerson---of
--------------____
Hastings is___
vlsfamily, llsllldae and the order GrulR. McLenithan and daughter Shir- I Itlng friends and neighbors tn this
formes, or crane like birds.
ley. Middleville.
'

Zntry Deadline Next Thors-

Mixed Iventg Scheduled
Plans have been completed tor the
city tennis tournament to be held
here beginning May SO. There wlU
be Junior and senior singles. Junior
and senior doubles and mixed dou-

tennis committee. U chairman of the
tournament.

but tn
of Grand Rapids were Sunday aft­ my
ernoon and evening guests ol UtoV
_
- —
uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Olenn Allen. । time I felt that it was a ml mlntaMra Alton of Middleville wm also 1
tha Ma— «&gt;6 Cfr------ ' there.
। rille Bayles piay-acting.
a' aguest
I Director L. E. Barnett even when
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Swegles of
Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Jack I classed with tha finest of amateurs
Ryan of Grand Rapids were Bun­ has outstanding ability at character
day guests of Mr. and Mra. Karl. Imnersrmsfkm* Rnt 1 h*v« n*v*r
Men him handle a role better than
Kermeen.
that of the Fiscally bishop. He almdonla were Sunday evening callers ply made me furiousl How 1 did

and Mra. Maurice Thomas of Galesthe Junior single* and double* will
Bunday guests there. ertte. That man! There doesn't
seem to be anything that he can !
fifteen since January, and all wom­
en and girls
The mixed doubles 1
may be any boy or man and any
girl or woman. The fee will be 36c '
for singles or doubles entries; all
additional entries 10c extra. En­
Mr. and Mrs. James Batson and
tries may be left at Hodges' Jewelry
store or with Al Becker and mint Archie Kermeen of Hastings were
Saturday evening supper guests of
°'PJ" ‘^^be^eortin.
th* rule* their brother, Mr. Earl Kermeen. i
.p’jy *‘n
1 of th“ u- 8 L T- A
*’*rda and family.
for the junior and senior singles
Miss Frlsbe of Labarge Is
is assist
assist-­ ‘
will be a challenge cup presented . Ing Mrs. Melbourne Adams with'

tha action started X
the scenery—thou
made the lines so v
Who says that amateurs have to

Antonia r

National Bank ...
H Irsch Brothers .
1000
Peldpausch
Triangles
.500
.500
I Table Company
Piston Rings
500
Bliss Foundry
.500
BUm Machine
Highway
500
Chain Stores
.
ooo
Rogers Grocery
ooo
Consumers Power
.000
Soft BoD
Schedule.
J
Week of May 24.
Monday. May 25—
Bliss Foundry vs Piston Ring.
Feldpausch vs. Rogers Groc.

CIVIC PLAYERS
SCORE A HIT!
(Continued from page.l, £sic. 1)
feeling of sacrilege. But I don't see
how anyone could have felt the
slightest tinge of resentment with
the depth of feeling Mr. Osborn
brought to this role. He really lived
the part. IL seemed to me.
And Tom Myers as The Drain­
man. Honestly unashamed tears
trickle noseward and I feel a sus­
picious binding in my throat when
11 think of him In that last act with

Its camouflage of misery, vulgarity
and sordidness. Really, he and The
Servant were
brothers,
weren't
they? Where did he pick up that
Triangles vs. Chain Gang.
Cockney dialect? Il sounded very
Nall. Bank vs. HIrsch Bros.
realistic—although little Betty ad­
mits she Is no authority on Cockney
Con.um.rs Power vw rrMpoumh accents. „„
„„ Tom
„ra careDid )W1
you w
watch
Table co. vs. Bliss Foundry.
during that breakfast scene?
May 2&amp;~
Every movement was in character
HiwWay vs^ Rogers Groc.
Bn(j y0U actually felt that you were
Bliss Machine Shop vs Piston . seeing a rough mannered, coarse
RlHg- I tongued workman silting there. I
■** *■
understand that he ho* been se­
lected for the lead tn "Mr. Antonio"
STATE TENNIS MEET
next fall Swell!
HERE SATURDAY
Cleone Van Houten made a lovely
EkYglish matron—although I just
Five School! to Oompete for wanted to shake her when she was
so self-centered and disagreeable
Trophy—Winners to Play
while her unhappy husband war.
in Grand Rapids
trying lo find himself. But after
The state regional tennis tourna­ all, doesn't that indicate real dra_
_____
_
____
____
ment will be played on the local matlc ability? Dear me! Will I ever
courts Saturday morning beginning J develop her knack of wearing
at B o'clock Thia is the first time i cJoihea with such eharm? • Mra.
that a regional tennis meet has ever 1 Van Houtens voice, loo, carries exbeen held in Hastings
Allegan. I ceptionaily well and apparently
Belding, western state High. Lake- I without effort.
view. Battle creek and Hastings will' Little Miss Irma Walers was per­
compete and the team winning the . fectly sweet In her role. I ll bet she
most points will receive the re- ' didn't leave many dry eyes in the
glonal trophy winners and run- auditorium when she talked with
ners-up will be eligible for the the gruff stranger about her un­
slate meet to be held In Grand known father she was so natural—
Rapid* May 28. One point will be I wasn't conscious that she was actgiven for each singles match won Ing at all I hope to see her again
and 1 1-3 point* for each doubles.
; and when I do I hope that her
Hastings entrant* are:
Singles. I voice may be just a wee bit strongAngell. Leonard. Schwarts and Oau- I er. She was a dear,
kin. Doubles. Crothers and Glad- I I thought that Orville Bayles did

POTATOES

23‘

u. s.
GRADE
No. I

New Spring Wash Dresses

JOO *169 *195
One Lot of Discontinued, S1.00 House
Dresses—Sizes 14 to 52. Your Choice

69c

CINDERELLA SUITS

.Xoir in llantingii

JACK PROS

K I N G N U T,

TERMINIX
Bonded Termite Control
This service ii now available to residents of
HASTINGS through aur orrangoments with the
SOUTHIRN MICHIGAN TIRMINIX CO.. Hcens-

INSULATION

mouthed al the
the household of

Garrett.

j COMPETITION KEEN IN
SOFT BALL TOURNEY
|

PECK

BONDID

Burr Dennison

OLEO
2 m 25c

SUGAR

2 - I5e

Shultz Butter

world's largest makers of hardwood floorings.

Hamburger

If you suspect Termites, do not risk damage
that will cost hundreds of dollars. Termites work
hidden inside tho wood. Have your property in­

Kettle Roast

fora it Is too lato. trace Tarminix Iniufation it
tho one reliable method of termite control. Five
Yeer Service Guarantee and Surety Bond issued

For FREE Impaction by TRAINED EXPERT, Phono 2276

THE HOME LUMBER CO

=

Veal Roast

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Shoulder

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Pork Loin Roast EU lb. 2Oc

ELDPAUSCH

•MARKET
Phone W2 Wa Del

3 D.liv.ri., Daily- Phono' 2272 or 2616

DRESSES and COATS

Outstanding Values!
Dresses *2* ‘3s5 »4H *6“
Suits at
?6eJ to W
Spring Coats $6^ to
White Coats $2^

1'randnen'i S
EXCLUSIVE

BUT

HASTINGS, MICH

NOT

BX1

$1451

�nuiA™ nun

Sala Of Household Goods

lature^paaaed what is known u the
Thatcher-Saur ack which adds
about $34,000,000. It also paid ths
high school tuition of rural pupils.
When ws think that ths state re­
ceives so much money from various
forms of taxation, such as the
weight tex. gasoline tax. the sates
tax. we must not overlook the fact
that the stale pays back to the
counties all but about $6,000,000 of
the weight and gas tax. and is re­
funding to the counties many mil­
lions of dollars taken from the sates

brou‘“‘l

‘ RADIO PROGRAM
rnuunxm__TO
id
3
—
state encampment to be field 11
'START POPPY SALE!Battle Creek. June JO'to 13 inclil

lore tne commission.
t
In 1927 he was chosen attorney !

i slve. Delegates elected lo represeij
__
general* and there, too. hb great
Veteran, of Torelrn War, to Glenn
“»
■" w“‘'&gt; LofluJ
,w'1
abUltv as a lawyer was recognized,
Glenn Paton
Paton” and
and Thomas
Thomas izifti
'with Chester Cox. Ben Waite arl
Send
Delegatee
to
Bat
­
Tkara will ba a Sale of Household Goods on Vacant
in 1928 Governor Green named him
:Roy Bush as alternates. Problem!
a member of the Michigan Su­
Lot West of Harold Smith's Hardyore Store, SAT­
tle
Creek
DR. EUGENE B. ELLIOTT' peThe adoption of the amendment
A Buddy Poppy radio, program! sibl’ut/’o^wTd^^an^'orphan^ J
preme Court. He was reelected in
URDAY, MAY 23RD, Storting at 1:00 o'clock. . . .
1935. He is Justly regarded as one
DISCUSSED CONDITIONS to the »tate constitution limiting
■ veterans, restriction of Immlgratlol
of the most capable men Who have icnrrln81iKatCirt!J1nhaWilllJ^UnCh
TN MinwiniN I the property tex to 15 mi lb put a
NOTICE TO RESORT OWNERS—We are offering
served in our highest court. He has I 1930 nation-wide Buddy Poppy «Rte. | and other pressing questions will J
IN M1UHIUAN
j severe strain upon public education
Chain, Stove*, Sewing Machine, Dressers, Tables,
never spared himself. He would sponsored by more than 3500 local clijcussed al thb Hate convention. |
. s..i
1,1 niftny &amp;cho°1 districts. Cities, and
units of Veterans of Foreign War*.
• • •
I
work
frequently
night
after
night
।
Dishes and Many Other Articles' Suitable for Cot­
RECENT STATE LAW
■ villages Incorporated under state
for tha benefit of local relief, the V.
Wauh
ridlo pro&lt;ranu J
until the small hours of lhe momnp GREAT RPNFFIT Uw- **rc exempt from the 15 mill
W. home for war orphans at Eat- y0Ur dally newspaper for the exad
tages. BE THERE AS SALE STARTS ON TIME!
The speaker declared that the ef­ Ing, and would appear al hb office P.
Ur ! Dcr,cri1 ; limitation. Some of these have, by
on Rapids and the national service .[lme of y E££?££Ute ,?rlod &lt;3
Rnonkpr flaid Radurtion of lhclr own ,cllon- “dopted the 15 fort that is being made to cut out al hb usual early morning hour program of the organtzaUon^ The ellber
Blue or lhe
speaKer aaia Reduction oi miu pUn w that clty and
the imposition of a sales tax on after such a night of hard mental
At&gt; M‘ errvT0SL 3&gt;3’h are*?aVl« I work 01 th* National BroadcastlJ
Sales Tax On Foodstuffs
government, city and village schoob articles of food would take about work and study.
$14,000,000 out of the funds that are
Justice Potter was bom In the' their Poppy Day Saturday. May 23. company, to be sponsored by ttj
Not AdvisaDie
Advisable i
wel1
“ cllytaxes
and vllu
’e be
share
Not
I county
must
keptot within now available for schools. Another township of Maple Grove. After i through lhe members of lhe local | veterans of Foreign Wars of lh|
; u. a. on Memorial Day, May 3d
Members of the Hastings Rotary I the 15 mil) limitation. That altua- agitation to take automobile sales finishing the eight grades of the' p®*’ wJFS
I club were highly favored Monday 1 tion has resulted In drastic curdistrict school he graduated from &gt; Tiie American public recognizes Tills program will emanate frail
| in hearing Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, tailment in some of these cities of move other millions.
lhe Nashville high school in 1891.1 the Buddy Poppy os a symbol of 1 Washington, X). C.. during thl
The Rotarians were fully con­ completing the four years course in , the nation’s service in the World ‘ morning hours. In addition to d
| funds available for public schools.
jThe school terms have been short - vinced by the speaker'! explanation three years, walking the seven miles , war. It especially- commemorates brief Memorial Day message frori
James
H
I ened, special teachers discharged that it will be a very serious hard­ from hb home lo Nashville every the sacrifices of the inen who did Commqnder-In-Chlef
and the wages of the remaining ship for the schools to reduce the school day. He taught school, then not return. In tiielr names, the V. Van Zandt, the V. F- W. prograd
teachers drastically
cut.
There present sales tax. Every dollar of it attended the Michigan State Nor­ F. W. annually dhtributes Buddy' will also feature a Memorial Dai
is
needed
and
we
cannot
afford
to
Poppies
with
lhe
entire
proceeds
1
dramatic
sketch
produced
in
thl
mal College at Ypsilanti and the
seems to be no way of helping these
University of Michigan. He taught donated IO their philanthropic pro- studios Of lhe NBC in Chicago,
cities out of that situation in which have our schools crippled.
gram -------among
lhe -widows
and---or----------------- - e »
school again after finishing at lhe -------- —
--------- -------they have placed themselves; for
HICKORY CORNERS.
University and abo studied law. He Phans of former comrades, and
the state cannot play favorites and [
EVERY
FOOD
ITEM
CAREFULLY
TESTED
AND
Callers at
Charlie
Robinson'4
was admitted to the bar and came j among disabled veterans and their
REGULAR FD0D5
help one city in a manner that does
_ __ _
,
Sunday were Fred Robinson and
to Hastings to begin the practice dependents.
•
INSPECTED
BY
EXPERT
FOOD
BUYERS
BEFORE
-not apply to al) cities.
|| FOR REGULAR
Next yetir
year theZ—
Leo...A. Miller Post. «&gt;n Ezra of Banfieid.
of his profession. For many years
' In 1929 citizens of Michigan were
nc
Mrs. Clara Underhill's health haa
he ws»
was assoewveu
associated wiui
with me
the mic
late r.
P.;1 - pUnr.i.-.s
planning to have a ^5?
larger r.iiuinum- '
PLACED ON SALE. NATIONALLY KNOWN AND
TfUARSAT
paying $281,000,000 taxes on prop­
T. Colgrove.
of Colgrove 1 ber of Buddy .Popples,
so that those become
uviiivn. Tiie
me firm wi
-i-k—
------- so
- poor
-- that
------ she
---- went
- - this
,
erty. Of thb $109,000,000 represent­
. — .. was
.
. . . known
. • 'of
.-.I-.. —
Hv«»
a“ -----------rvilallvA —
k-lB
POPULAR BRAND FOODS AND FRESH PRODUCE
and. Potter
lhe 1^..
local
who
wee,
10
Uve with
wllh
relative
neari
miu
ruuci
wm3 widely
wiuciy
miuwii In
III
—«*
• _____
•••*■
——I• community
—
w..v wish
w.«,« WMlr
_ —t LA
—
----- —
ed lhe
costnmnertv
of the "
schoob. At that i-------------------------------------------------- ---------- .western
_.__ __________
_________
________
!&gt;•&gt;&gt;»
inin
_iwith
&gt;k ...usin In
iki.
C.THOMAS
time
“the
Michigan.
He was
always
1 cani«in
Join
thb wonder-1 Pralrleyllle,
Prairieville.
CAREFULLY SELECTED FOR FRESHNESS,
I ’The
IbXt 33 mBb^When thb
' &lt;ContlnUed (rom
»• 8ec “
regarded as one of the best cpnaU- jful service.
rh- postponed missionary meet4
STORES
Ing will be held this week Wedne.sJ
.
m
.w?cn l.n“ «’ cut'------------------------------------------------------------ tutlonsl lawyers In lhe stale.
!
_
GREATER FOOD VALUE, HEALTH-BUILDING
IO J».« the schoob found their sup- studying some tew question Involved
We are sorry to report that Com- t}«y
°r,“ Bostwick's. Sup-|
Mr. potter has taken his duties
7*"
’X.'’!7V “*“k
, port greatly curtailed. At that t me m a case which he was considering, seriously
as a
member of lhe Su- rode Jam” D OUrk h“11"s‘«n,d ,
t^ “ St
QUALITIES AND TASTINESS. YOU WILL NOTE
the only money the school districts Hr
had a ,onK and uieful ca. pre me court His hard, painstakbig. ■» commander of Leo A. Miller Post,
Mrs.
M" M.
M M.
M Rockwell wax taken
। received from the slate was the reer |n politics and public office. He gruelling work no
THE DIFFERENCE BUYING "THE C. THOMAS
nodoubt
doubtcaused
causedhb
his Veterans ofForeign Wars. Due
*-'“v to10 «m.mJTw
primary school fund, with small WBI prosecuting attorney of Barry tihvilcal
.....
collarxse In...
his office
— last
. . thc
the •
amount
mount nf
of work mvexiarv
necessary nn
on Sunday- Mr. Rockwells daughter.
WAY” . . . BETTER FOODS FOR LESS MONEY!
his Inahlllt.
inability u,
to . Mrs. F. C.
c. Fitch of Jackson b
is stay
stay-1
grants for aiding county normals ' county four yeurs and won an en- Monday
1 *
m
111 hb large farm and hb
­
jand the teaching of agriculture. vlaWe reputation. Later he was
ineetbigs. comrade
Comrade
with him for a few days.
. ... j .
....
..
attend local ineeiuigs.
•The 15 mill tax cut tire amount I elected state senator from this dlsHts host of friends In thb city. 1 dark feeb
it
would
be
better
for
•••would be better for11 T
he Banner «.■■»»
class «-•
of nn,
the Metho- ■
available for schools by $40.000.000.1 trict. which then consisted of Barry county and state all hope for hb j
poal t0
hU dutlM
Com. ( dist Protestant Sunday school will
Primary fund cash was also re- and
counties. He was re­ recovery, and that It may be|iade Olenn Paton who automatl- entertain the adult Bible class at
3^i.2!?:Xr!,“SS!.",“S.r!
Com “.X. M'
Mr..
BurdteX. TKur.duced 1
?.‘U±’L.Th.U y2f I etec‘ed “nd look h“
place
t will be about$ 14.000,000. In 1929 I as a jeader in that body. He maln- will power will no doubt play aiT^tre Wni hr an election at the I d*y evening.
2 LARGE CORN FLAKES
1 Tt5 W*-000-®00- Iv ts d&lt;frl,r5d i Ulned his law practice in this city great part In hb recovery.
I hnll on May 21 to nominate and I MUo Barber does not improve ini
1 RICE KRISPIES---------mainly from text* on railroads, until he was chosen a member of
Later—On Tuesday evening John’elect a Junior Vice-commander to ; healtl'.
| telephones, telegraph and steeping . (he Michigan Public Utilities Com- C Ketcham brought word to Has- I replace comrade Thomas Loftus' Memorial day exercises will be
1 PKG. PEP . . .
car companies; but the tax on them mlM|On. Hb outstanding ability and tings friends that Mr. Potter was I who has been advanced to Senior I held beginning at 10 A. M- at the
must be the average tax in the falrneu
hlln th&lt; lfad,r of improving, according to word giv- . vice-commander.
44c VALUE—
'Methodist Protestant church.
A
1i
h.“‘
r*aUy
ilh,t body Hb decision* were mod- en him by Mrs. Jay Ketchum (Lola
• • •
speaker will be procured. The comduced by the 15 mill tew.
eb. evidencing wide knowledge of Power). who was In hb employ fori The Leo A. Miller Post 3326 Vet- m it tec In charge, Mrs Carrie LaALL PACKED IN UTILITY BAG!
’ To help out the schools, the legb- the tew and a keen sense of its so many years.
. erans of Foreign Wars, are planning monl- Rev c 3 Rennelu *nd !tevI
Oscar Smith.
“FIRST FRIZE"
————— ------------------------- — ।
Sunday lhe baccalaureate ser­
-------------------1 mon will be preached at lhe Kellogg
1 Agricultural school in live evening
; by the Rev. c. S- Renneb. Com1 nicneemenl will be Friday. May

lor t cpi nn cth&lt;m 00 • *°und fooun«- «&gt; as to
fl Hl III ill II Hill il ienab,e th&lt;m t0 function *• the peonlJUU I UUI UULU | pie of thb state have a ri«ht to ex­

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

PURE, WHOLESOME FOODS

, JUSTICE POTTER
I HIS HEART m*CK

W

KELLOGG’S SPECIAL

P’NUT BUTTER i25c
I ’W 4
3 *•” 25c
JtLL ■
APPLE, PLUM, GRAPE,

SUCCESSOR TO THE IRONSIDE SHOE COMPANY

104] EAST STATE ST.

CRUE’S

Waters Clothes Shop

RASPBERRY FLAVORS

APPLE BUTTER

38 oz. jar 15c |

HONEY,

pure strained K' 17c

Be Prepared
For Hot
Weather

PORK BEANS 4 23
CRACKERS S 2.'.15c
MACARONI BLOB BOSE—ELBO
CHEESE

2 lb. bOX 12c

FINEST MILD WISCONSIN COLBY

SARDINES

Odessa

19c

cans 25c
3 cans 25c

APPETIZING SEA FOOD

POTTED MEATS u»r.
CATSUP,

lb.

3

IN MUSTARD SAUCE

MACKEREL

SALE!

3 ^'‘e™ 29c

wro

TOMATOES

We have the things to
keep you cool . . .

2

15c

14 oz. bottle

10c

BROWN SUGAR, light

10 lbs. 49c

Blue Label 1 '/z lb can 11c
CORN STARCH
lb pkg 8c

PURITY

BRAND

OUR GIFT TO YOU ! In celebration of this event we have decided to make this sale a rare treat to Hostings
and vicinity. Come, choase the smartest styles of the season at these great saving prices. All our own stand­
ard makes . . . AND WE CUARANTU FIT AND WEAR!

For Cooking or Q
Q£c
Table Use— L for Cd

Starts Thursday, May 21«it at Nine A. M. Sharp!

TRIPOINT

CARNATION MILK

RICHCREAMY

Quart
Jar

C

Values to $3.00
STRAPS. TIES
and PUMPS

I

seedless
LETTUCE, Iceberg

GRAPE FRUIT,

HEAD

RENNET DESSERT
4 Qc
POWDER
Pkg. 1 C

each 5c
2 for 13c

ICE CREAM MIX Pkg. 10c

5c CANDY BARS 3 - 10c

HERSHEY’S ™

❖ FLOUR ❖
NATIONALLY KNOWN AND POPULAR BRANDS

BEST YET
HABD KANSAS WHEAT
GOLDEN CREST fine westebn wheat

CRESCENT
LILY WHITE

best cooks use it

PILLSBURY'S KEC1FE IN BAG
SNOW QUEEN POPULAB BBAKD*
GRAHAM FLOUR
5

CREAM OF WHEAT

SHREDDED WHEAT
GRAPENUT FLAKES

WHEATIES
MINUTE TAPIOCA

67c
73c

lk 89c

good quality

ROLLED OATS

’*

&gt;*&lt;’73c

iil' “ 98c
SU' “ 62c

lb. bog

17c

5 lb. bag 19c
large box 23c
box 13c
box 10c
2 boxes 25c
pkg. 13c

98c to »2?s

Won't B«V Off—
Liquid Ln BotUo

Tan, Black, Brown, can

Extra
Special!

MEN'S OXFORDS
White Buck and
Black. The smartest
styles of the year.
Guaranteed nt and
wear Anniversary

Polo Shirts
Two big leblen full of the
newest

Assorted patterns and

styles

First An­

niversary Treat!

97

and styles,

49c t&lt;» 98c

Ladies' Bolou
PURE SILK

HOSE

Ladies' WHITE Kid
T-Straps and Slacks

Man's White Oxford.
Wing tip and cap toe.
Cream of the Block and

Brown Oxfords

THURSDAY.

Shorty” Sox
Whal an assortment we have

. . light,

a master buy for

medium,

v

WALL PAPER CLEANER

HRH Powder can 9VALUES TO $5.50 . . . LADIES’

Summer Ties
$2.25 VALUES
Miste.' and Children*.
WHITE STRAPS and TIES

Hundreds of lie, the new,

Misses

and

Children's TIES

S U N R A E

washable

seersucker

69c to S1
Either block or brown
. . real sturdy weor
and a smashing
value for

1."." 24c

GET DETAILS ON NEW CONTEST
CLEAN QUICK

Soap Flakes 1“ 28c

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

light shades for glimmer—
also

and STRAPS

BLEACHES. CLEANS.
DEODORIZES—
4 4
IBox. Bettie
IQ

Seminole Tissue, 4 rolls 25c
MATCHES -6 boxes 19c

25c

$A65
Smart styles with low.
comfortable heels. A’
Crashing Value!

dark

colors and white

Qc

ABSORENE 3^. 25c

Ivory Flakes

fabrics

ull colors and white

SH INOLA
U/UITF
WHIlt

C. THOMAS STORES
IM WUT STATE STREET

BROKEN
LOT

JUNKET

IS. 22c

3

Hundreds of pairs* light

and medium dark colors

SALAD DRESSING

KARO SYRUP,
ARGO

Summer Slacks

Lsdi«,' Straps,
&amp;
v

O Q
OO

TIm,

Oxford, and Strap,

A •re,t telectton of smart
,n whlu- black. blue
and brown leathers. Per­
feet fitting and a mar­
'
veious buy.

HASTINGS

■&gt;

Children's OXFORDS,
STRAPS and SHOES

White, black patent leath­
er and Smoked Elk. Values
you will long remem- QQc
ber. Styes 3 to 6— vv

CRUE’S

SHOE

This store is brim full

of fine gifts for

the

young man who grad­
uates.

MEN S WORK SHOES
Heavy leather uppers. Com-

We are sure to

please you and

him, too.

po soles. Nailed and sewed.
First Anniversary Price—

STORE

WATERS
*

PHONE 2176

Clothes Shop

�Mr and Mn. Bart McKlbbtn and
Mr. and Mn. Willard White wm tn
Ovid Sunday visiting Mr. and Mn.

Social Events and Personal Mention

4-H CLUBS HAVE
FINE BANQUET

Mn. Warren Roush and Miss OrchMUa Makea Firit Ap.
Winnie Roush visited Mr. and Mrs.
pearaHoe—Thrae Kaa&lt;
Lloyd Roush and son of Kalama­
zoo on Tuesday.
Donald Goucher wu home from
Fred IU11 of Grand Rapids was
O. W. Reynolds toak tha bus
Battle Creek over Bunday.
calling on old friend* In tha city
Barry
county 4-H Club membars
Friday for a trip to St. Louis, Mo..
Mr. and Mr*. A. B. Gidtoy and Monday.
and Houston. Texas. expecting to be finishing ths Clothing and Handi­
craft projects banqueted together
son visited relatives In Owosso on
Mr- and Mn. Frank Foote spent
absent about six weeks.
on Friday evening. May 18. at tha
□unday.
lhe week end in Battle Creek with
panled by MUs Beverly White were Fuller hall in Hastings, with 300
Mrs. A. J. Clark of Kalamasoo relative*.
Mr. and Mn. Allison Tolle* were
Bunday guest* at the home of his member! and leader* present to
wu the Sunday guest of Mr. and
enjoy the fine banquet prepared by
in Detroit on Sunday and *aw the
Mr*. Dell Sutton.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Boyes.
OR. W. 0. HENDERSON
Tiger* plav ball.
Mr. and Mr*. B D McMurray and lhe Goodwill Ladlea' Aid.
DELIQHT8 HEARERS
A 4-H Club orchestra of twelve
Sammy of Toledo, Ohio, visited rel­
Geo. Walton to spending a cou­
Sparta called on Mrs. Lizzie I&gt;uHubert Fairchild ol Detroit »pent Mr. and Mrs. Will Field and with
atives and friends In Hastlnx* and piece* from the Dase Line Com­
baugh on Sunday.
ple of week* tn Lansing with his Sunday with hl* parent
them drove to Holland Sunday for Freeport over the week end? Mrs. munity 4-H Club furnished music Annual Betiion of the Barry
II _______
Mra 9._____________
L. Fairchild.
Mr*. Jamas Mazon left Wednes­ grandmother.
the tulip fssUval.
Maurice McMurray and children for lhe occasion. This orchestra
County Federation of
Harry Wood was In Grand Rapids I Emil Tyden relumed Friday from
day for a visit with her parent* at
returned with them for a visit.
Minneapolis, Minn.
Tuesday evening attending a meet- 1 Qrtene, Iowa, where he spent eev- children of Marshall and Mr. and
Women's Clubs
Mr*. Effie Vrooman and daughter. It* first public appearance at the
----------_
of NMhvllJe
The Rev. and Mr*. W. Maylan ing of Express Co. agents.
leral day* on hl* farm.
banquet. Dr. George Lockwood,
Mr*.
Emory
Wood,
who
were
called
The
twenty-first annual meeting
Mr. and Mr*. Philo Sheldon spent I Mr. and Mrs. p. L. Fairchild vis- ------------------- Jones and family visited relatives
guests of here by the death of Fred Phillipa, president of the Hastings Commer­
of tha Barry County Federation of
in Lansing on Sunday.
Sundav with ber mother. Mr*. S. J. ited Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Mitchell Mra. Ida palnistler.
cial
Club,
on
behalf
of
the
Hastings'
returned to their home In Frank­
Women's dub* was held tn the
I of Battle Cteek on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Young and McClelland at Vermontville.
fort on Bunday. They were accom­ community lntere*la, heartily wel­ Woodland Methodist church. May
baby of Flint were Sunday guests
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Johnson of | Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Barnum of South Bend. Ind., the former an au­
panied by Mr*. Phillips and daugh­ comed the visiting club members to 14. with Mrs. J. P. Mohler of Mid­
Battle Creek visited her mother. Lansing spent Bunday with her ditor In the employment of the gov­
of Mr. and Mra. F- E- Adair.
ter. Mrs. Harold K. Vande Giessen Hastings. The 4-H Club response dleville presiding. The morning
George Tolhurst was In Grand Mr*. Agnes Fisher. Sunday.
j parents, Mr. and Mrs Stanley Ro- ernment were week end guests of
of Battle Creek, who visited there was given by Kathryn Horton of session began with community sing­
Rapid* on Tuesday attending the
Delton, a 4-H Clothing and Can­ ing led by Mn Rena Culler and
for a couple of days.
funeral of hl* brother's wife.
son George of Grand Rapid*, were i Mr. and Mr*. Homer Smith and
Mr. and Mrs. Sophu* Rood of
ning club member.
the invocation by Mrs Byrd. Mn.
Mr and Mrs Ernest Severance
Mrs. Claude Wood returns this guest* of the Will yield's Saturday.1 daughter Dorolha and Mr. and Rochester, Minn., who have been
A. C. Carton of lhe state agricul­
Mr. and Mr*. Edward Stringham I Mr*. Lyle Scudder were In Holland spending the winter in Florida, and son Nell of Detroit and Miss
week from Grand Rapids where she
tural department spoke to the
of Jackson were week end guests . Bunday.
ha* been for several months.
were guests several days the past Beulah Severance of Pontiac came
Friday to spend the week end with members of coming state problems
Mias Josephine Novtskey of Grand of ber stoter. Mrs. Maude Schomp.
—
Mr. and
--------Mri
---------------Adams accompanied
‘ ■
MU* Norms Evans and Alfred Mr. and Mrs. Beck to a Townsend sen. the latter a cousin of Mrs. their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel of growth and Ute responsibility of meeting included Interesting re­
Rapids was the guest of Mr. and
McCall saw lhe Sinclair Minstrel* trl-county mass meeting at Port­ Rood.
Severance. Ml** Severance went to our coming generation In state af- porta from OoaU Grove. Freeport.
Hastings. Nashville and Woodland.
al Kellogg auditorium last evening. land Sunday
end.
Mr. and Mrs. H E. Shaddlck and Kalamasoo Saturday to attend a
Miu Mary E Bullis, district home Mrs. E. A. Burton read an Inspiring
Mr. and Mr*. D. J. Ragla spent
Mrs. Jennie Will has relumed
Mrs. John Dawson spent Sunday daughter Suzanne and Mr. and Mrs. breakfast given by the Physical Ed.
demonstration
agent, announced article from "Club Women" maga­
from a ten day visit with her last week with their son. Harley at Lincoln Lake, north of Grand 8. F. Nichols. all of Detroit, spent
erance ot Sturgis also spent the the coming 4-H Club tour to De­ zine charging the president* of our
daughter. Mrs. Clare Burton, at St. Ragla. and family of Battle Creek. Rapids, visiting her sister. Mrs. Ed­
uvu
troit on
on june
June wui.
25th. -*»
To ua»c
dale uw
lhe »cre­ I dub*, among other things, to beep
Mr. and Mrs. Hi ion Horton of na Fitzgibbons.
Johns.
E. Barnett, coming to attend the
.pan., to thU tour b*. t~. wry I Wtoll, nt. tnenWly .tert
Mr*. Fred Brown of Grand Rap­ Kalamazoo were here Tuesday eve­
Ml** Elizabeth Finch was in Hol­ Civic Players play, "The Servant
tr. tiv. rvtnntv A.-ni’i nt.1 morally fine,"
fine." An Invitation
invitation for the ,
ning
to
attend
the
I.
O.
O.
F.
ban
­
id* and daughter. Mrs. Green, vis­
land Saturday attending a lunch­ In lhe House."
daughters Sydnee and Shirley of satisfying to the county Agent's of­ County Federation to meet In
fice.
ited Mr*. Clarence Grohe Saturday quet.
eon meeting of National Kindergar­
Mr. and Mrs. A. H- Carve th and Findlay. Ohio, spent Saturday and
Coat* Grove next year was accept­
Dr. and Mrs. F. E. Willison and ten alumni. She returned on Sun­ Mr. and Mrs. Kim Sigler spent the Sunday al the home of their aunt
evening.
F. Earl Haas, District Club Agent
ed.
Officers
elected
for 1937 arc:
Mr*. Florence Waite Fuller was Mr. and Mrs. H. C- Wunderlich day.
week end In Charleston. Wert Va.. and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. O. W. announced the 4-H Club projects
President, Mr*. J. P. Mohler of Mid­
In the city on Thursday enroute spent Sunday In Holland and Grand
Dr. E. J. Pratt left at B o’clock visiting the Carveth's son-in-law Struble. Other Sunday vtoltora were that were available for this summer
dleville; 1st Vice-Pre*, Mr*. John
from Kalamatoo to her home in Haven.
Thursday
morning
for
Detroit and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. M. 8. Leo Warner. Rusaell Wilson. Frank­ and spoke of other coming County
Hauer ot Woodland; 2nd VloeMrs. Rosa Moldafsky of Chicago where he will attend a conference -------------Grandville.
,------------- I lin Van Schoick and Forrest So- 4-H Club events as Judging tours,
Hodgson.-------They
aLso------------visited ,point*
Mr. and Mr*. Lemuel Severance wa* a guest Tuesday of Mr. and and clinic of the Osteopathic Asso­ of interest in Kentucky and West bolewakl of Belleville. Mr. and Mrs. club camp. Barry county fair and Pres., Mrs, Frank Aaalr of Has­
tings; Rec. Sec.. Mrs Joseph Bell of
and Mr and Mrs Ernest Severance Mrs. J. M Schwartz, lhe former her ciation.
Virginia.----------------------------------------------- ) Arthur Struble and daughter. Eva- numerous trips which
will be
.Nashville;
Tree*., Mr*. L. B Tester
drove to Holland Saturday for the
Mn. Louis WllUams and daugh­
F. R. TTiom*s. son Jackie and dene. Mr. and Mra. Elmer Struble
MU* Betty Relckord will attend ters. Janet Louise. of Battle Creek, granddaughter Joan Dec of Battle i and family.
tulip show.
Harold J. Foster, county agricul­
After the luncheon served by the
Mr. and Mrs Frank Andrus and lhe Fresh man-Sophomore reception are spending several days with her Creek visited Mrs. Clarence Grohe
Among those here from away to tural agent, then announced the Methodist ladle* lhe afternoon ac­
Clarence Workman
were near
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice and the Floyd Thomas family Mon­ attend lhe funeral of John Mc- complete list of delegates to 4-H
tivities began with three songs by
Traverse city lhe first of the week week end.
Pierson.
day.
Lravy on Monday were Dr. Wini­ club week at Michigan State Col­ the Woodland High School Girls'
Mr* Arista Easton. Miss Beatrix
on a fishing trip.
Mr and Mr*. Forrest Clark and
Mrs. Nettle Hyde. Mr* I. L. Cres­ fred McLravy of Grand Rapids; lege In July. The delegates are as
Otoe club. A full picture of the
Easton
and
Russell
Parks
were
In
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bower and
two sons of Middleville and Mrs. sey and Paul and George Hyde were Mr. and Mrs. Glenn McLravy and follow: Clothing: Leena Heise. Lu­
State Federation was given by the
family spent Sunday with the for­ Lansing visiting relatives over the Elmer Horton of Grand Rapids in Shelbyville on Monday visiting
family of Lansing; Mra. Carrie Bel- cille Endres. Beatrice Ball, Betty president’s report, by Mr*. F. W.
mer's aunt. Mrs. Wm. Grummetl. week end
were guesu of Mn. Frank Newton Mrs. Jennie Warner and Mrs. Car­ son of Kalamazoo; Mr. and Mr*. Bagley and Jean Dickerson. Handi­ Stebbins speaking on Adult Educa­
Mr. and Mr* Don Slcgei and Mr. on Friday.
aad family near Ionia.
rie Nichol*.
craft: Hugh Nevin* and Lyle Dunn. tion and by Mrs. Frank Adair on
Lewis
Phillips.
Mrs.
Maude
Mat
­
Mrs. F. L. Bauer and Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Lawrence Herrick were
Mr and Mrs I. O Benton and
Mrs. Amy Boacr attended tisc thews and John McLravy Matthews Canning:
Betty Ketcham
and
Gebhardt were In Sheridan on among lhe Hastings people who daughter. Edith ot Battle Creek, at­ WPA Recreation
convention In of Toledo; Mrs. Abbey Henson and Kathryn Wlbalda. Dairy: Vernon
Monday attending the O- E. S. As­ drove lo Holland Sunday.
tended the Civic Player* production Kalamasoo one day last week. Six i Mrs. Mary Kenna of Climax; Mr. Newton and Paul Palmer. Live­
Mrs. Tho*. Baird. Sr . went to •The Servant In lhe House" on Fri­ recreational It^derr, were present
sociation of Montcalm Co.
and Mrs. Fred Henson of Richland; stock: Richard Green. Wood Iden­ Cross and we enjoyed a special surMrs. Nettle Hyde and Paul Hyde Ann Arbor Monday to enter the day evening.
from Barry county.
Mra. Harry McMurray of Kalama­ tification: Harold Kermeen and
attended lhe commencement exer­ University hospital for observation,
Oharles Buslck of Detroit 1* visit­
Mr. and Mr*. Rankin Hyde and zoo; Floyd Henson of Galesburg- Lyle Dunn. All Around County mented by the S. W. District Vicecise* al Prairieville on Friday and returning Tuesday afternoon.
ing his sister. Mrs. Mary Van Dug- George ot Prairieville were guests and Charles Buslck of Detroit.
Champion: Gary Newton.
Mr and Mrs. ROy Bush and Mr.
visited Mrs. Birdie Merlau also.
of Mrs. Nettle Hyde on Saturday.
Tha program was concluded by Another special treat was the read­
Mrs. A. A- Willmont la returning
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Pender spent and Mrs. Arthur Maurer of Char­ serious Illness of John McLravy.
George remaining with his grand­
the showing of two motion pictures ing of five original poems by the
to
Delton
today
after
being
In
the
lotte
spent
Sunday
withrj.Mrs.
Sunday with a group of ten or
mother until Tuesday.
Maurer's mother at Whltehhlt
city for some little time, during which were enjoyed by lhe 4-H club poet laureate of Michigan. Mn.
Mr. and Mr*. Homer Erway. Mr*
twelve old friends who gathered at
Mr*. George Miller- wwe- In Ann , which she has redecorated and |m- member* very much.
Jessie W. Murton of Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mr*. John Ironside and Art James and W Gerald went to Arbor over the week end with her proved her home on E Walnut St.
the home of Mrs. Hatlie Smith of
Next we were delighted by two solos
Gaines. A pot luck dinner was son Wellesley and Lloyd Lohmeyer Saugatuck Bunday to visit Mr. and sister, Mr*. Sutherland. Mr. Sulh-1 whteh 8he ha* already rented. She BENEFIT BRIDGE AT
sung by Miss Naomi Van Loo of
served and the afternoon spent in drove to Ann Arbor Sunday and Mr* Forre.st James, who are moving erland 1* slowly recovering from a ; ai*o aislsted In the care of Mrs.
HASTINGS COUNTRY CLUB. Woodland.
spent the day with Ian Ironside.
next week to Manistee.
visiting.
very serious operation.
: John Quaife, who has been seriously
In characteristic humorous man­
The women of the Country Club
Mr. and Mr*. C- A Kerr spent
Harold Parker plan* lo go Fri- | ill with pneumonia but Is recover- will have a Garden Party benefit ner Dr. W. D. Henderson, of the U
■ Sunday in East Lansing, the guests
of M.. discussed. -The Personality
of his sister. Mr*. E. McElroy. They da y to Ann Arbor, his brother, । Ing nicely now. Mrs. Willmont ex­ bridge on Tuesday. May 38 at 2 of Uncle Bam: National Trait* and
Chartea,
returning
with
him
for
the
(
pecU
to
return
lo
Delton
today,
o'clock.
Each
one
attending
is
asked
also attended lhe re-dedication
week end which he will spend in । where her many friend.* will find to bring a potted plant, a bulb or a the Future of America.'1 In an al­
irrvices of the community church
her at the home of her daughter, slip from a plant to be exchanged ways changing world our problem
this city, and Middleville.
there.
during lhe afternoon. Tickets are U to make the new day good, not
Mrs. M. J. cross was In Hartford Mrs. Fred O. Hughes.
Frank Scott of New Orleans, La,
1* visiting his wife's sister and hus­ on .Wednesday attending lhe Van ANNUAL BANQUET FOR Q^ltD. 25 cents and reservations may be
secured frogn the Women's Board
band. Mr. and Mr*. Rass Bldeliuan.
Members of the Emily Uewey
He also visited his mother at 6par- L. Gillie* of Hartford relumed with
Wesleyan Service Guild enjoyed J. R. Mason. Mr*. H. P. Phillips, smartest man
her remaining till Saturday.
wittiest, but ha ha* initiative, he
Mrs. J. E. McElwain and Miss their annual banquet Wednesday Mrs. E. VanPoperlng, Mrs. L. K
Ml** Ellie I Ragle spent Sunday In
come* from sturdy pioneer stock, he
Lansing, attending « luncheon and ESnlly McElwain were guests of Mrs. evening. May 13. In the.Methodist Hawthorne. Mrs. J. G Bristol. Mrs. has a gieat capacity for action and
meeting of the Michigan State Mabel Ranney of Greenville on I church parlors. The banquet was R. O. Hubbard, Mrs. R. A. Groos being sentimental he Is a good
MAY 2 2 and 23
Council of Bela sigma Phi at the Saturday Mrs Rose Colgrove re­ served at 8:30 and the tables were and Mr*. D- C. WaHdorff. Both con­ neighbor. Dr. Henderson empha­
turned with them for a week'* visit attractively decorated with strips of tract and auction will be played.
Hotel Olds.
sized lhe prepositions in Lincoln*
lavender and yellow crepe paper
Mr. and Mr*. Harry Castlemain with friends.
expression, "government of the
CLUB REUNION.
Mr*. Chester Hodges to In Grand with centerpiece* of lilacs and tul­
and two children and Mr. and Mrs.
On Friday evening the former people, by the people and for the
England of Ogden. Utah, are visit- Rapid* with ber brother, who is a ips. The program following the din­
members of a "SOO Club-1 will hold people." In a day when type* of
ling Mr. Caitlemain's mother. Mrs. patient at BlodgeU hospital. It will ner consisted of vocal solos by Miss
BEAUTY CULTURIST
x
be remembered that he wa* badly Prances Conklin and a talk by Mr. a reunion at the home of Mrs. Jay government* are on trial It la nec­
Bert Tlsher
essary that government bo for the
1 Mr. and Mrs Alonzo Trim and burned a few weeks ago and hl* Moore of the Miller Ice Cream com­ Blakney. the ladles having a chop
OF BATTLE CREEK
. ■
.
.
pany of Eaton Rapid*. Pictures were suey supper preceding the social people.
Henry Trim spent Sunday with her condition is still critical.
Mr. and Mr*. C. D- Bauer and shown ot lhe Industry and sample* time. It Is expected that twelve will
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Schulee,
BRIDGE—LUNCHEON.
WILL BE IN OUR SALON
Mrs.
C.
H
Hinman
and
son
Charles
of
Ice
cream
furnished
for
the
ban
­
of Nashville. Mrs. Trim remaining
White lilacs and tulips of various
Thooe
from
out
of
town
will
In
­
went to northsm Michigan Friday quet. The guild Is composed of
To Exhibit the Loteat Touches in
colors made charming decorations
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Clement reluming Sunday. They visited business girls and was organised by clude Mrs. Hugh Furnl** ot Wood­ for the luncheon given by Mr*.
land. Mrs. Burdet Lichty of Hickory
and children of Belding were here Houghton lake and Tawas City
Wilbur Lane last Friday at her
on Tuesday to attend a birthday where they called on Mrs. M. C. dence here. During the year the Comers and Mrs. Bam Couch of home on South Broadway. Twelve
surprise dinner for her father, W. Mu&amp;olf. a sister-In-law of Mrs Hin­ girls correspond with members of Nashville.
guests were present and honors al
the
senior
missionary
guild,
the
man.
L. Bhulters.
bridge were won by Mr*. Richard
HONORED NEWLYWEDS.
identity of the correspondent* un­
Groos and Mrs. Ray Branch. Tire
known lo each other until th* night
Mr. and Mr*. Perry Laubaugh. luncheon was served buffet style
of the banquet, and those "Mystery Mr. and Mr*. WlU Martin and Mr. with Mrs. Qhas. Potts and Mrs.1
Mothers'* are then guesu of honor. and mt*. Dell Cotton of near Has­ James Bristol pouring.
tings and Mr and Mrs. Emerson’
Wolfe of Kalamasoo attended the
MRS. MePEEK ENTERTAINS.
BIRTHDAY DINNER.
Monday wa* the birthday of.
The members of the play reading
rente
Anders (Arlos Cotton)
al Harry Wood Jr, of this city, also;
group of the Civic Players Associatlon. of which Mrs. G. E. Goodyear Cloverdale hail Friday evening. of Andrew Carpenter of Shultz in
THt (IC LITTLE STORE
is chairman.
were
entertained There were over 50 present. Mr. and honor of the occasion, lhe former's
Tuesday at luncheon by Mrs R. R. Mrs. Anders received many lovely parents. Mr and Mrs. Harry L.
T-l-phon- 2491
Harting*, Mich.
______ ____ __________
Wood, entertained at dinner Mon­
McPeek at her home in Charlotte. gifts
day evening
Mrs. Harold Phillips had charge of
WHY THIS WAVE IS IETTM
SHOWER FOR BRIDE-ELECT.
Those present were Mr. and Mr*
the reading of the play. •'Victoria
and
Mrs. J**/
Miss Marie Foote l* entertaining Carpenter. Mr
Regina." Those present included
Mrs. Goodyear. Mrs. Phillips, Mra. with a dinner and linen shower to­ Burghdorf and Miss Emma Car­
L. E. Barnett, Mrs. Prank Adair. night. It the Parker hotel, for Miss penter of ShulLz and Mias Blanche
Mrs. Richard Groos, Mrs W. M. Lucile Pierce vrhoee marriage to Carpenter of Kalamazoo.
Blebbins. Mrs. R. W. Cook was also Robert Pierson la an event of the
EMTRRTA1NS INFORMALLY.
near future.
guest.
After the Civic Players produc­
directly into the hair
tion on Friday evening, Mrs. Roy
hue giving the
Regular 85.08 Value
.’tetter entertained the members of
lhe cast and several friends Infor­
mally at the home of the former.
net Unky
Mr. and Mrs. Einar Frandsen of
guranteed wave backed by
Ionia were out of town guest*.
rllh perfect ringlet
a shop with a proven rep­
Wfil net dtocetor

Mr. end Mra. Alton Hyde spent
Sunday with hto mother in Pen­
field.
Cliff Dolan relumed Bunday from
an extended burineaa trip through
Fred Wteber of River Rouge spent the ea*L
Miss Mary Royer and jurat alSunday with relatives hen.
Mr. and Mn. Izswrence Rywn were1
the Battle Creek chapters of Beta
Sunday visitors tn Holland.
Sigma PM on Saturday evening at
Mn. waliaoe Eldredge visited rel­ the Post Tavern.
atives and friends in Grand Rapids

FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY

For Dress

New summer
vadtable straws

LUCILLE KRUEGER

Hair Styling !

Hair and Scalp Analysis FREE;

HINMAN’S

DECORATION DAY SPECIAL
HOLLYWOOD PUSH-UP WAVE

Friday, May 22

Saturday, May 23

Panamas
retiiting ... a real *rU Ml

T.S.BAIRH
I’hone 2396

Kellogg BREAKFAST FOOD Daal 1

2 large Corn Flakei

50c Value

1 Rice Krigpiei

32c

1 box Pep

utation.

K.„n.

* l%l|C
111
: uu
p

TRU■ART

BROOMS, 4-Sewn ...

...29c

BUTTER, Middleville

lb. 29c

wu,,oS

EUROPEAN

REALISTIC

Jack Frost Powdered Sugar, 2 boxes 15c

An oil wave that to kind to
xoar hair. Popular for the

tUy.Ur

A well-known Superior Wave

29c

BISQUICK, large package

All Permanents Below Are Complete and Guaranteed
bhsmpeo and

ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF

GLO TONE

3 lb. can 59c

CRISCO

GRAPENUTS

pkg. 15c

Reconditioning Oil Freer-*
Croqnlgnole. You Chooee lhe

2“
Scientifically Improved Revitalising Process
will positively Recondition Dry. Brittle, Coloriess. Lifeless and Mistreated Hair.

$350
Regular |7.5«

GUARANTEED ON BLEACHED. DYED OR WHITE HAIR

BEEF ROASTS .

lb. 18c

PORK STEAK

lb. 23c

MINCED HAM, sliced ._.'/z lb. 9c
LARD COMPOUND ....2 lbs. 25c

Hollywood Beauty Service
MARGARET DAHLKE and MARGUERITE TEW

114 WEST STATE ST.

HASTINGS

PHONE UZS

BARBER AND
BEAUTY SHOP

MONDAY, MAY 25

OPENING SPECIAL

KALOR WAVE

COFFEE

CHAM A SANBORN

L..

20c

Invitation* were I
feminine employee*
County Health DM
versified program ft
The mat Chiefs Club o&lt; Thorn­ Miss DvFoe honored
apple Temple No. 1)0. Pythian Sis­
ter*. were entertained by Mrs. Or­ MU* NeuschMfer at
rin smelker al her

plcte for—

OTHU HIGHLY RICQMMINDID MA
CHINELKSS WAVB—9S.00 TO R.OO

Bridge was played with MTs. PWrert Potter and Otto Isenhath hav
Ing high saore . and
Wright and Forrest

SPICIAL
NOONDAY LUN0MU

PARKER HOUS!

PERKINS BAUERHASTINGS
ANB BEAUTY
SHOP
314 E. JTATI ST
PHONE 220J

gtfla.

ULTRA CLUB MEETS,
number# of lhe tjftrq Club

A machineles* permanent wave
that insures comfort and salisfat
lion ... No Eleciricit)
shades and textures ol

her daughter,
evening. May lath.

PAST CMIKTS CLUB.

pleasant time was enjoyed. TYfe
hot less served light refreshment*.

Of Luxuriou» Beauty
SWISS or SIRLOIN STEAK lb 22&gt;/ic

THE NEW GABRIELEEN

D E D If I kl C
r t KM N3

BIRTHDAY DI MN RM.
ry delightful MrtMny

HASTINGS, Wl'IWM

tulip f

�THE HASTINGS BANNIB. THUB8DAT, MAT IL HM
TASTY RHUBARB

INSURANCE

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

UTE . AUTO . FIRE

ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER­
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 28c.

Our Service

FOR SAL
buildina

„— -&gt;ikh I
Slana A. Millar. mils north and ,

SOFt SAI.I
I year, old
Will «i»e (100 for auah
J a cow. Al«o weald like yeariine Ga.rn
bull
Pboae ST—F2. Caledonia.
t&gt;l&gt;heai apartment ch&gt;«e to downtown, I
huiulrr of K Haw thvrbe. 43b E State
&gt; Road
YtH'Xli ware pour fur tale. Hark and
while
Oleow P. Kenyon. Delton
'FOR BALK—TeariUt roll. O. 1. New- &gt;1
5 21
t ton on. mile Werl of Middleville 5 2| 1 Phone 3A—FI3
SALE — F.aeellant oirice .aft round
। wasted—*in&lt;ie « an br the mouth (or FOR
oak
etteu.ion
table, a*, iter*, rocker.,
around iob. R (’| FVlUr.Vn'tv’ore en.
bookcaae. pieture. other furnlsblnca
6-31 1
of Mixer huu.e
F. 1.. Bauer i’hore
2433
5 21

1

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fir# Insurance Co
k'-K'n

GEO. M. NEWTON

REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST

CARDS of THANKS ?

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT OFFICE

CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

HASTINGS MICHIGAN

F&lt;Hi HALE—Noa hesna alau aeed beta
to*, al Per bu.hrl E. E Uille«|.ie
I'Lone T4O- Fl.'
5 .'I
Full RENT—Nir. modern W»e room

OB COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
BONDS
NOTARY PUBLICS

auartmrul. furnialir.) iirWunfuroiahed.
2*1 A.. i|u l.uan
S 31
FOR HALE—How »&gt;lh S pica another
with n Iiiga, Call Pliunr "03 fo. 5 JI
FOR SALK- Mr 4&gt;&gt; aero farm l&lt;wale.|

"AKRON" MODERN

MECHANO-FORM TRUSS

EMERSON ROYER

FOR WORK OR PLAY

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

Phone 3510

Hasting*

Wrecking tor Ports
1929 CHEVROLET Coupe.
1929 CHEVROLET Panel.

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Lag Strop*

1928 CHEVROLET 1*4 ton
truck with 4 speed trans­
mission.

The Prescription Drug Store

Ed

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2*37

MICHIGAN

Wn 11
i&gt;»u“it
"H
r

Bastings

tn
*
i.

Gaoraaicad Tran F/tt/ng

FOR HALE

Farmers, Attention!

BRICK

far VEAL. LAMBS. HOGS and

* Ship EVERY TUESDAY
and BUY EVERY DAY.

At Old Hastings Wool

Boot Plant Site.

JERRY ANDRUS

In­

quire of joe DeRuiter

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

j Ft.H SAI. E —Model T truck 2G motor
la.on
Alco r.art Jer.er r&lt;»w
old .lue in November Homer
n.lloh,
Prairieville pl.one

1 WASTED at once ci.*"l man to
I
build f&lt;rnee
I-..,-.,
■ _ :u ■■
: 'if i., m । ■
1 U IK |H(-_ -r., r... r.,.. ....
Ha.i.n*.
State lorreat
Sr.t latter. Writ* "F''
Raunvr

belt.
,
. j
_
ra.h
rar*

at Pickle Station.

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call

WANTED

experience or capital needed. Write
today. Mr.NESS CO.. Dept. B, Free­
port. Illinois.

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

at FELDPAUSCH'S

Wood Working Shop

MARKET- Phone 2616

'

FOR HALF &lt; handler
Ow ner'a
th-e &gt;al e*" Mr. &lt;3. retire
ilr.be 41 rad
T W Madiiion. I'ln

Sow and ■.11 rile. Shetland
ell ..r tra&lt;l&lt; &gt; In, WO
W II C,.•V.well f.
i l e. ... t ot H-.
■ •r.r.
I enter Rr-a l
6 •? 1
Fill! SILK
FOR SALE

' .t
n *■

—
5 21
ros*

FOOD CENTER 2609

ALL KINDS of WOODWORK­
ING DONE

H. Faldpausch * 3921

D#*d Stock Removed!
**•■!*. affletaat and courtaoua Mr*
I". ta
W
CltU* “&gt;«
ULMI «SS N MUNUan AvwTBmUw
T*l*&gt;Bo*a BS3S. BapraaanUnz
KALAMAZOO BBNDKBINO PLANT

s si

WANTED!
ALL KINDS OF LIVESTOCK
Grand Rapid* Packing Co.
Hasting* Phone 233*.
F. J. GRAHAM.
5-14

i_i

i?
-£1

It

Here Saturday, May 23rd
DR. G. ALLINGHAM, Dentist:
OF GRAND

This U the advice ot Sylvia L.
,---------Medsker.
... assistant professor in
foods in the home economics dcI part men t. Michigan State College.
I East Lansing, who has made a
। scientific study of foods and diets.
‘ 'The low carbohydrate content,
high moisture content and- rather
I high acid content are responsible
• for many of the characteristics of
' rhubarb as a food product and ex­
I plain much ot its behavior in cook­
ing." she says. "Consistency and
flavor sutler with overcooking and
tart juiciness is aflected when too
much water is used."
Fifty day old rhubarb from lhe
early crop Is recommended for food
and canning purposes, although
plain tin cans should not be used
in canning because of corrosive ac­
tion ot the acid on the metal
Miss Medsker suggests. that rhu­
barb meringue pie. rhubarb and
strawberry Juice for use with ice
cream, and rhubarb Juice for bev। erages and sauces are very timely.
Her favorite recipe for the pie in­
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
cludes two cups rhubarb, two eggs,
CHURCH.
six lablespoonfuls honey, one cup
sugar, two tablespoonfuts flour, onefourth teaspoonful salt. Mix tlie
sugar, flour and salt, add rhubarb,
'uulur and Adah• biiu
and cook tor
for so
20 minutes Add
Adu to
lo
■t 11:30 ' "
.. ------------ -------- - -------- r- the beaten egg yolks and cook until
outiHmrinx ol'h»Hpirii. H«.i, the yolk thickens, stirring con­
. .Ju“t ,«th (ujantly. Cool and place In a baked
pie shell and cover with honey
CHUBCU OF OOD
’ meringue made from beating a mix­
ture of honey with white of egg.
Then bake In a slow oven until
meringue Is set. This should take
about 15 minutes.
*

The Baccalaureate program for
the class of 193d. Woodland High
school was given Sunday evening.
The speaker was Rev. Lawrence
Bird of Hastings. Rev. Harry Wolf,
OBITUARY.
pastor of Zion Lutheran church
Fred C Messacar. son of Alex and
UNITBD BRETHREN CHURCH
had intended lo give the address
Mae Messacar. was born March 24.
IN CHRIST.
but on account ot illness was unable
1903. al their farm home near
Baltlaort (march.
to do so. special music was given by
Greenville
He passed away May
the High School Girls' Glee club,
7th. 1936 at the age of 33 years 1
who sang. "Allah's Holiday and
month and 14 days. He enlisted In
"Land of Hope and Glory." A male
the government service for three
quartet
composed of Birdsill Holly.
years, serving a short period at
Roland Valentine. Paul Smith and
Camp Custer and later transferred
Laird Wotring also gave a pleasing
over seas where he served twenty­
number
seven months in Co D 50lh Infan­
McCallum (march.
, Mr. and Mrs Roland Young and
try. After which he was returned to ।
Hornin«|two daughters of Bay City. Wm.
Camp Mead. Maryland and engaged
30 o'clock
...
Cnlhv
Colby and
and Ml*.
Miss Wocleu
Wesley nt
of Qaoln.n'
Saginaw.
in the tank service. He obtained the
Orville Colby and friend of North­
rank of corporal while In Germany. 1 E*&lt;U»vor
ville and Erwin Colby and friend of
He was married to Miss Erma R
FREE METHODIST CHURCH.
Detroit were Sunday guests of Dr.
Murphy, June 17. 1924. and located
Calfax BtrMt
and Mrs. T H. Cobb. The latter ac­
“l
Clair, Mich., where he was
employed In 1930 he moved to
companied them to Holland for
the tulip festival.
Frevpo-t where he resided until the
time of his death, which occurred
Rev and Mrs. Don Carrick were
Sunday guests of Mrs Ida Hitt of
accidentally. Surviving are his wife,
East Woodland.
Erma R of Freeport, his mother.
Miss Dorothy Hynes of Mason
Mae Chaffee, a brother. Bud Chef- ।
fee. a sister. Mrs Harvey Gallup.' , jom{
and Miss Evelyn Hynes of Hastings
spent the week end with their par­
two nephews. James R and Carl D
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hynes.
Gallup and his grandmother. Mrs
Dale Hauer of Kalamazoo and
John Qualfe. ail of Hastings His
passing will be mourned by a large
roommate Lawrence Steenwyck of
Grand Rapids were guests of the
circle of friends who valued him
former's parents. Mr
and Mrs.
for his true worth and the genuine
John Hauer, from Thursday until
friendliness which he held for all.
Saturday.
Services were held Saturday. May
9, at the United Brethren church of
,
Mesdames E. O- Shorno.
I Border and J
V. Hilbert were
...»
this city, lhe Rev. E O McSherry
। luncheon guests of Mrs. A J BrenIn charge Interment at Valley Home
cemetery. Quimby.
her of Grand Rapids Thursday.
|
Members of the Methodist church
OBITUARY.
enjoyed a pot luck dinner Sunday
John Wesley McLravy.
j in honor of lhe two choirs
Alexander and Caroline McLravy,
। Mrs Raymond McLeod spent last
was bom in Ashland Co.. Ohio, on
week in Grand Rapids and attendJuly 17. 1855. lhe oldest ot four PILGRIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE
cd with her husband lhe Michigan
children, and died on Saturday.
| Funeral Directors convention Mr
» 1 r M
May 18. aged SO years. 9 months and weather pe
McLeod is in Indianapolis this
SiiikI.* . i“.:.i “i* a m
21 days, In 1877 he came to Michi­
i week attending lhe Indiana Funeral
ip It
Ymitl* I’eutile
gan. locating in Rutland township, .Il
i Directors convention.
F r a i. e u: ,w* In— ?I5 F.
Wednesday ’
j MLvs Virginia Faul and Greydon
where he lived until moving to aace. 7 45
Hastings thirty-two years ago. For en a prerrr hour with M
| Paul of Grand Rapids were guests
several years he conducted a flour
&gt; of their parents. Mr. and Mrs
and feed store, retiring a few years ■
Method!.I Lawrence Paul over the week end
ago He was a member of the Radi- 1 '
Mr and Mrs Henry Heim. Mr
cal United Brethren church In Rut­
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
and Mrs Elba Gage 'and daughter.
SCIENTIST.
land, uniting with the Methodist
Mary Anne and George Gage ot
Cor. Cknrch and Cantar lu
Episcopal church in this city about
Chelsea were guests of Mr and Mrs
and
ar
aorvlra
al
11
00
A
M
I
Sobtwenty years ago He was always Jf,
John Hauer Bunday.
faithful In his church attendance,
Among those who attended the
being in his accustomed place every ‘
tulip festival In Holland were, Mr.
room In ehureh buildin* on*
Bunday when possible. He is surand Mrs. Alvah Miller and Mr. and
vlved by his wife, two daughters.
Mrs Delmond Culler. Mr and Mrs.
Mrs. Carrie BeLon of Kalamazoo FIRST UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH. Percy Lehman and Mr and Mrs.
and Dr
Winifred McLravy
of
Grant Osgood. Mr and Mrs Wayne
Grand Rapids one son, Glenn, of
Long. Miss Mary Long.
Lansing; five grandchildren and
Mr. and Mrs j. L- Smith attend­
five great grandchildren; also one
ed lhe rural letter carrier s meeting
brother, JarhfS. Of Portland. Oreat Welcome comers Saturday eve­
gon. The funeral was held at the
ning.
Methodist church on Monday aftMrs. Ethel McKinney of Beaver­
BAPTIST CHURCH
ernoon at two o'clock, the Rev w.
ton visited Mr and Mrs. Ralph Rise
J. ADCOCK. Mlnlttar.
Maylan Jones officiating Interment
from Thursday until Monday
was in Riverside cemetery.
Mesdames Glen England, p E.
Border. J V. Hilbert. E O Shorno.
Hugh FumlM. Chas. Grozinger and
Grant Osgood saw the Civic Play In
"belted earl*
Hastings Friday evening.
poetic description of a noble whose
The Alumni banquet will be held
sword belt, usually most gorgeous,
on May 23 Ward PUnt* of Hartford
was one of tbe Insignia of bls
will be the Toastmaster The dinner
rank. On full drees occasion, such
will be served by the Lutheran La­
as the coronation of a monarch.
dles' Aid
JEFFERSON ST UNITED BRETHREN
For account of Federation meet­
CHURCH
of olden times.
ing see special write up.

RAPIDS

graphophone records. Including
speeches by many famous men.

AT THE PARKER HOUSE —H. mak.. ihi.

HASTINGS MARKETS

Special Dental Offer!
PLATES
ii (s"a

Plate. Repaired . . &gt;1.00

EXTRACTIONS

BY TF4t MOST
HUMANE Method

Ees
JVC

ALL WORK GUARANTEED
IT WILL PAY YOU TO INVESTIGATE THIS
OUTSTANDING DENTAL OFFERI

HOURS.

Rh. h.

r.

VMiker of Hint qrt-_ H aurin#a Banner
XnC KlBBlingO DKIUlCr

tion Day memorial service spon­
sored by lhe Union Cemetery Or­
ganization. This will be Mr. Voel­
kers second address here. The serv­
ice will be held on the yard If
weather permits, followed by the
placing of flowers on ths graves. In
case of inclement weather the serv­
ice wlU be held at the Briggs
church.

OOOK BROS. Miler*.

EIGHTY FIRST YEAH

Ml

operating in bringing to the sur- j IMBAHHYOOIjNTY. ONI YEAR. 11.04.
rounding community a free movie 1
on Thursday night of each week, j ...
Clayton Case, general merchan- in barry oounty. thrkb months.
disc dealer, has secund a new gro- 1 IN ADVAXCB
-----eery delivery truck.
p1 OUTSIDE BARRY COUFTY. ONE YEAR
The Pleasure Btrthdaj- organiza- • . IN ADVANCE ...................... ............ SI.SO
FOREIGN SUBSCRIPTIONS. ONI YE.AR
lion m«t Tuesday at tbe home of . IN ADVANCE
Mrs Olive Tobias
Members of tbe A. J. Miller home
ADVERTISING BATES i
made a trip to Lake Odessa on
Thursday and called on his sons.
Glenn and Orlie. near Woodland,
brother. Jesse Miller, at Nashville
and Mrs. Sarah Conklin at Wood- ' Want c
bury.
n

THE CROSSROADS.
Robert Pratt was one of the pu­
pils of the Brick school to receive an
eighth grade diploma.

I day evening for Mr. and Mrs. Plynn
Tuttle at the home of Orval Tuttle.
Many lovely gifts were received by
the young couple and a good time
was enjoyed by all.
Mr. and Mrs. Horry Merritt of
Albion spent Bunday ut lhe Geo
Townsend home.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hadley of
Williamson and Mr. and Mrs. How­
ard Hadley of Grand Ledge were
Sunday evening supper guesU of
Clyde Sledge and family.
Mrs Mildred Roush and Wilma
Lou left Sunday to spend the sum­
mer at Gun lake.
Use of Word “WryWry Is an element of some self­
explaining compounds; as, wrybilled,
ary-mouthed,
wry-necked.
As an adjective It Is defined: "L
Bent to one side or out of normal
or
proper
position;
contorted;

.

Hence, deviating from that
hl ch is proper or right; aberrant;

Interpretation."—Literary Digest

Too many tell us to pull down all
lhe bad work In the social building
but do not offer us a shelter which
will stand while lhe present edifice
is made uninhabitable

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

ifrA,:4rr:
JOB PRINTING.

looking the blu'sh-green Atlantic
waters of St. Ann Harbor, stands a
plain gray alone. "Mark the per­
fect man." Ila Insert ption exhorts
the reader, "and behold the npright." Above the simple phrasing
Is the name of Angus MacAskill,
tor thia Is tho headstone of the
Cape Breton giant. It Is the only
memorial to a man who by his sheer
physical stature carried the name
of Nova Scotia Into the four quar­
ters of the globe three-quarters of
a century or more ago.
Holding Moi.t.ro
Doe to Ha high content of organ­
ic matter, virgin soil may hold oneflfth more moisture than soil which
has been cropped for 20 years.

Game authorities say there are
78 distinct species of hawks la
the United States.
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

Halil, R W III*
irt her pwOtlot
■nlnhlrau-m of tai

Mildred Smith Redder of Probate
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.

FARM BUREAU

ASSYRIA.
The Memorial Day service

In the Soviet onion archives of-

FOR SALE—F •rlv Yellow Dent ..,d
0*|i*B ture Fir-1 hoiue
Lv.m* AI-?» on
Quin lake aehool on
M 17
Ml Blatt
5 21

WOODLAND.

COATS OBOVE CHURCH OF CHRIST.

WILL BE IN HASTINGS
SATURDAY, MAY 23

PLATES

tW

as been secured for the DecorsNEEDS GOOD COOK. has been secured for ths Decora­

To secure maximum flavor in
preparing tasty rhubarb, use as Ut­
ile water as possible and do not

■&lt;yrla Center church Ls sponsored by
the Assyria
Center
and
Ellis
cemetery organizations. Rev Pat­
rick McVeety of Battle Creek will
give the address. Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Tasker. Mary Clark end
Gertie Colton, committee. Readings
and special music by local talent
promise an interesting program.
Mrs Elva Payne and daughter
Amy of Battle creek are spending
some time al her home at the Ellis
district. A new garage is under
M7~n«A construction there.
Miss Norma Case of Lansing
spent the week end with her par-

and Mrs. Daniel Case and daugh| ter Barbara of East LeRoy were
Sunday dinner guests.
A chicken pla dinner will be
served on Decoration Day Satur­
day. May &gt;0. at lhe Briggs church
by ti»e Ladies' Aid society Mn
belly.
During the spring of the Nellie Stanton, chairman, assisted
by Olive Tobias. Bess Strickland.
drops of thick, sweet etuelllni fluid. Evangle Miller and Mn. Irv Hax-

Muskrat mask Is a secretion na­
ture baa put lo these little anlmala
bearing the name
The musk la

VAM.toJP.M.

Mr
aaimato during tb. fall ^tiu.

.nd UH Ronald Warner ot

l^r.P"*nU' **

“d

Protected, by
new kind of zinc coating
A newly perfected electrolytic
process known as Bet'ianizing ap­
plies a zinc coating lo Bethanued
tire thickness is 99.99 per cent
pure use, the purest ever applied
io wire. Free from the embrittling,
rust-inviting iron contamination
and other impurities unavoidable
ia older sine coating processes,
the Bethaniied coating has remark ably high resistance to the weather.

It is also so ductile and tightly

the wrapping at the joints is wea
iag- Furthermore, it is heavier ia

ings. Yet Bethaniied Farm Bureau
Peace costs do more. While bring-

Ask io see this new, better pro-

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc., Lanig, Hub.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES - Inc.
Haiti.*., Mich.

�|

THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER
DAIRY HERD TESTER
MAKES HIS REPORT

High School Newt

VACATION IN MICHIGAN
ADVERTISING THEME

The Highest Testing Herd—
Michigan Bell Telephone Go.
Students of today arc lucky peo­
Also Highest Testing
to Advertise State in
ple. though most ot them don’t con­
sider themselves as such. They have
Cows Are Named
300 Weekllei

, about:

The fifiy-«lghth annual

Tlw Michigan Beil Telephone J
John Foster, official tester for the a lot more to say about how their
schools shall be run than their
Barry County Dairy Herd Improve­ fathers and mothers ever thought of Company is not merely doing it*Goodwill church. Mrs. Clara
—I came out here to get rid
ment Association, has made his re­ hairing. They can even tell their bit, but is playing an important *
part in promoting the interests of Ithe fourth dlsuict preaidaot.
of, my influenza. But as I pen
port for the month of April. The principals and teachers what they
Michigan as a resort state. Adver- ,
high testing herd for that month don't like about school, and what
these despairing words, my in­
lining
on
the
subject
"Vacation
in
belonged to Charles Strickland, they'd like lo have done about it. Michigan" will be carried out by the 1and plana to
fluenza is cuddled up to this
whose nine grade Jerseys and This week Thursday or Friday the
company in upwards of 200 weekly
inflamed bosom. This is not the
Guernseys produced an average of students in Hastings High will be
newspapers, in covering the entire
886 pounds of milk and 40.4 pounds given papers on which will be sev­
puny, trifling influenza of the
stale. The purpose of this adver­
of fat in the month. The second eral questions asking their opinion
tising is to tell the people of Michi­
Interior, but the sun-kissed, extra­
of
the
way
the
school
is
run.
They
highest herd Lt Bernard Peck's.
gan that they have scenic beauty in
special Influenza of golden Califor­
Dowling, whose fifteen grade and will have a chance to air their views
The Goodwill ladies fare a vary
this state that cannot be surpassed
nia — the one out­
registered Guernseys produced an and make suggestions, and the
anywhere;
that there are opportuni­
average of 874 pounds of milk, and teacivers are expecting good results
standing product ot
ties "to go places" in Michigan that ith’s Choice." 'Character and the
from this questionnaire.
40.1 pounds of fat in April.
this coast which our
will reward the tourist abundantly.
The high testing cow for the
tourist burenus do
Next Tuesday morning Dr. Owen Ils beautiful lakes and streams and Maylan Jones of Hastings using a
month was a mature grade Holstein
the variety of scenery offered In the chart with a lighthouse drawn on It
owned by the Highlands Dairy farm, Cleary ol Cleary's Business College
In the chronle
two peninsulas of Michigan cannot
which produced 1824 pounds of milk at Ypsilanti will address the stu­ be duplicated in this country.
dents. and tomorrow, Friday, an in­
and 693 pounds of butter fat.
Our readers should watch this se­ Bessie Woodman of Woodland
ItlDg. kinfolks from
The high testing cow under three teresting talk on snakes will be
ries of advertisements, which the elected president; MTS Floy
back East, arriving
years of age and the second high­ given by Richard Polley, an asslstrhom Hastings est belonged
on "Va- Dermott, Delton, lit vioe-pmk
to Lloyd Gaskill. ant at the Unlver^ymu^unTan’d
,hM f£lgan' whkh
,p’
hanging on all wloDowling. They arc both registered one of the councillors at the Clear
vice-president; Mra Olive Coast­
I pear ln the BanPT;
Holsteins. The third was a grade Lake camp.
The kind 1
bell. Hastings. Cor. 0ec.; Mrs. Bea­
Guernsey belonging to Forrest
Irvin 8. Cobb.
stays long
trice Dunning. Delton, Rec. Mac.;
AND
STILL
ANOTHER!
Students and teachers alike are
Buehler of Freeport, The highest
enough to make
John
Lord
of
Rutland
was
Mrs. Muriel Perry, Hastings, Trea*,;
testing cow under four years is busy these days with rehearsals un­ brought to Pennock hospital about Mrs. Lottie Lockstidt. Cloverdale,,
you wish you were fiend and not
owned by Lester Lake, and the sec­ der way for class Night and Com­
quite long enough tc kill you.
2 A. M. Sunday. His car overturned Evangelistic SupL; Mn. Lillian
ond highest by George A. Clouse, mencement. Miss McElwain and Mr.
After swallowing so many differ
in loose gravel on what is known McLeod. Hastings, Christian Citi­
of Hope township. The highest Logar, are class advisors.
5
By JANG CAMGRON
as the Yankee Springs-Prairieville zenship; Mrs. Beatrice Dunning,
ent remedies I am, as you might say.
testing cow under five years is own­
Publicity; Mn. Maude
full of conflicting sniulilonx. When
Next Wednesday. May 27. the road. He was thrown through the Delton.
ed by Marshall Pierce of Baltimore,
top of the car and suffered painful Crawley. Hastings. Jail and Alms­
1 sneeze ray watch stops. When 1
second by Bernard Peck. Johns­ Waler Carnival will be held al
but not serious Injuries. He returned house; MYs Muriel Perry. Hastings,
For the benefit of thogg who sin­
cough sea lions get jealous and I
town, and third by Charles Strick­ Streeter's Landing. Gun lake, it is
to
his
home
after
receiving
treat
­
Child
Welfare;
Mn.
Florence
srem to fee) a lot of tilings giving FORTY-TWO SPECIES IN cerely feel that Hauptmann was in­ ISLAND IS ABOUT ONE- land. In the mature class. High­ expected about 500 students and ment at the hospital.
Fleming. Hastings, Flower Minton'.
nocent. we will submit the follow­
lands Dairy took first, Lloyd Gaskill, teachers will attend. There will be
THIRD THE SIZE OF
UNITED STATES—TWO
Mn. Ruby Merrick, Hastings, Medel
about 80 or 90 cars, and there must
ing. compiled by Hugh McQuilien.
second, and Bernard Peck, third.
mouth somebody sticks In either a
Contest; Mn. Maude Zerbel, Hea­
IN MICHIGAN
VERMONT
be a teacher ot responsible chap­ ARRANGING FOR NEXT
agent of the intelligence unit ot
THEY WISH TO'be
pill or n thermometer and neither
lings. Fair Booth;
Mn. Bertha
eron in each car. The group will
the bureau of internal revenue. The
BARRY COUNTY FAIR Bush. Delton, parliamentarian.
one helps.
AMERICAN CITIZENS. leave about 3 o'clock, have dinner
record covers the period between
SUBTERRANEAN TYPE
AMERICAN
TEACHER
Mn. Bessie woodman had charge
There
has
been
filed
with
county
by classes, and enjoy bathing, Officers Are Making Prep­
the paying of the ransom money
I ot the memorial hour and one hon­
Tasting Drunken Drivers.
clerk
Allan
Hyde
a
petition
by
John
dancing and a soft ball game. The
THRILLS THE NATIVES
DOES MOST DAMAGE and Hauptmann's arrest. His known
orary member.
Mr.
Hilbert of
Mlsack of Yankee springs. He came group will start for home about 8
arations—Fair to Be
poll testing drunken drivers the
earnings during that period were
Woodland, was the only one reto this country from Cxecho-Slo1 Cleveland police have ■ device
Preventive Measures Given 81.167.81 and he possessed mort­ Dexter Smelker, Now Locat­ vaklo. He asks that he be given lhe o'clock, after a (it is expected) very
Sept. 8 to 13
enjoyable day.
gages. stock balances, stock, cash,
named the optlmlmlc televlnocular
Since the first of the year the of­ treasurer reported dues paid on
in Article From Hastings
ed at Cidra, Writes Graph­ Anal papers that will make him an
gold coins and ransom bills lo the
stethoscope. But why not Just ask
American citizen. His petition will
Seven girls from the Commercial ficers ot the Barry County Agri­ 81 members this year and 818.81 on
sum of 840.52902. H13 expenditures
the suspect to pronounce It ami
ically of His Experiences
Public Library
be heard at the September term of department with their teacher. Miss cultural Society have been active
during that time account for the
abide by the results?
Tha evening meeting opened with
We hear a lot about Puerto Rico, circuit court.
in
making arrangements for the
This is the time of year when remainder. All but 84956 of the
Leiter visited Mahr s Business Col­
Old times back home, we had our many householders are observing lo
but not many have much of an idea
Mrs. Ingerid Rustadsveen
has lege at Kalamazoo last week. Aft­ 1936 exposition. The fair last year a half hour musical program by tbe
850.000 ransom money has been ac­ of the country. For this reason the
own system. We didn't follow the their sorrow that termites or soGoodwill orchestra
and several
filed a declaration of intention to er seeing the school, they were tak­
counted for. This proves that he
Rew York scheme of Inviting the called "white ants" have been busily
following letter from Dexter 8mel- become an American citizen. Miss en on a conducted tour of several the equal ot any fair ever held in young boys and girls.
received and kept all of the ran­
ker, a former Barry county boy. Gunda M. Rustadsveen has also Kalamazoo industries.
Barry county; and the alm of the
The Rev. Maylan Jones, pastor of
alleged Inebriate to say “Slsale Fits chewing up their houses. Wherever som money.
now stationed in Puerto Rico, will filed papers declaring her intentions
officers is to make the 1936 fair bet­ the Hastings M. E. church, gave tho
gerald." because tied probably take wood comes into contact with the
address of lhe evening using tbs
be found very Interesting. The let­ to become an American citizen.
"CHUB" HOUOHTALIN DEAD. ter than ever.
refuge In bls constitutional right* soli there Ls danger from them or
The newest development in scien­ ter reads as follows:
Obviously these men have a real
Alfred (Chub) Houghlalln, a for­
They live on Hastings Route 1. and
as a southern genileman and refuse whenever Infested wood is brought tific lines is "solar horsepower" or
mer well known character of Hos­ Job In bettering some of the expo­ was worse than the first" as a su
Cidra, Puerto Rico,
came to America from Sweden.
to bandy a lad's name In any such Into the house. Since a great In other words, harnessing the sun.
tings. constable of the fourth ward, sitions held in lhe post, but with Ject.
many of our houses were built be­
April 26. 1936.
place as the calaboose.
fore carpenters became aware of "Already research has set the sun Dear Friend:
The controversy over whether debt collector and guard at the the fine support of the people of
Tl»e 1937 meeting will be hald
Under our plan. If a citizen wa«
this danger and also since most of to stoking small smelling furnaces,
Last August when I stopped In pedestrians are more careless than fair ground during ball games, in Barry county which was given last May at the Clovbrdale church.
We in the street and bis fingers us burn wood at some time during running tiny motors, producing
the Banner office, you Invited me motorists probably overlooks lhe fact the good old days when "Bump the year, they believe this may be ac­
didn't more, he wax Intoxicated. Ont
steam for small power plants, heat­
to write a letter for lhe paper tell­ that pedestrians couldn't be and re­ Backstop" used to yell. "Can't you complished.
If even his little finger moved, he be sure that we know the indica­ ing ovens to biscuit temperature ing of my trip and experiences, and main pedestrians very long.
The officers and directors of the erally carried
put 'em over." died recently in Co­
tions of their presence, how to get and freezing ice cubes in a solar I will endeavor to do so.
lumbus. Ohio, so report comes to
A happy home is where your wife
president: Maurice Foreman, secre­
But we didn't have alcoholic an rid of them and how to prevent refrigerator" to quote from the
One thing, it is certainly hot here. asks you how to pronounce a diffi­ the Banner.
Christian
Science
Monitor,
one
of
their reappearance.
tary; Harold J. Poster, treasurer;
tomoblles to pester 11*. The sur
We have been without rain for
Men haven't quit buying presents directors: Robert Martin.
Fred
Although there are 42 different lhe most practical apparatuses so sometime. We have two months of cult French word, and then accepts
plus population was reduced with
your interpretation of it without for their wives. They Just don't Mayo. Eli Lindsey. R. K. Hurd, Glen
firearms or cutlery, thus giving ev species of termites in the United trough of aluminum mirrors which school yet, as it closes on June 19th. question.
know about it till the bills come in. Densmore and IL H. Molt.
retiring.
States,
Michigan
has
only
two
of
The
island
of
Puerto
Rico
13
erybody a chance.
them and the one that does the operates by clockwork so u to turn about 100 miles long and 35 miles
most damage is the subterranean from east to west with the sun (the wide, or about one-third the size of
Mankind's Real Humanity.
sunflower
principle.
I
suppose
1
thus
type, which must have contact *lth
the state of Vermont, and is veryVV‘1AT with this and that. Jost
the soil. When such contact is not; collecting the maximum light and mountainous. Despite Its size and
r when a fellow is almost ready
directly possible the termite builds heat from the sun rays. Tho col-1 the mountains, it has about 2.000.­
to decide that the human race galleries over the obstruction in the lected rays are concentrated upon a
000 population, about a quarter of
should be charged off as practl
way to reach wood. These galleries metal tube. Through this tube flows them being negroes. Sixty per cent
cally a total Joss, sometlilox happens. look like incrustations of mud and heavy machine oil which will not of the people live in the rural dis­
This lime It happened In a little are quite easy to locate. Of course, boil at high temperature. Heated by tricts. The island is around 1.400
mine In Nora Scotia where tbe calm if unprotected wood is in direct con­ the sun. it expands and circulates miles from New York City, or about
heroism of two men. penned with, tact w,th the soil there is no need around three sides of the oven four days by boat.
tbe body of their dead comrade at for a gallery and the termite is like­ while the Inside temperature is
There are many industries car­
from 300 to 400 degrees Farenheit.
tho bottom of a caved in shaft, was ly to work unobserved unless the When the oil cools, it automatically ried on here. Among the chief ones
condition of the wood may be seen
are the raising of sugar cane, to­
matched by the magnificent gnllan I
from the surface. Another way by returns to lhe trough for reheating.1 bacco. coffee, vegetables and fruits,
try, the Incredible endurance of vol- which termites may be discovered We hope the oven walls are good
WBteer rescuers, who, by day and is through the flight of the winged sluff. Il would make us pretty mad such as pineapples, grapefruit, or­
night, unceasingly labored on In mo individuals of the colony, a flight to find our cookies dressed with oil anges, lemons, bananas, limes, tan­
gerines. alligator pears, papayas,
•notary peril of death for them which takes place in June out-of­ when ready to remove them. "All cocoanuts.
gigmabanas,
guavas,
doors and in March in heated build­ kinds of stewing, cooking and bak­ melons, mangoes, etc. There Is a
ings. The winged forms fly for a ing can be done in this oven, and it great deal of needle-work and much
trapped palr-snd did save them.
short distance and attack unpainted is still warm enough in the morning hand work done here, such as mak­
happened when a young girl dragged surfaces of wood where they form to bake biscuits."
ing bedspreads, tablespreads, bas­
A solar refrigerator has been
the only other survivors of an air fresh colonies. They may even make
kets. grass rugs,
brooms,
ham­
built which operates on light rays
(Continued on page 5. Bee. 2)
plane crash out of the flaming
mocks and many other things.
rather than heat rays and can be
There are 70 or more cities and
wreckage and ministered to them
used in winter as well as summer.
SIX
PROPOSALS
HAVE
towns
on
the
Island.
Tire
three
larg­
aod forgot her own buns while sh&lt;*
In California several hundred solar
RECEIVED APPROVAL water heaters are in use and scien­ est are Ban Juan the capltol, Ponce,
waded long miles down a snowand Mayaguez respectively.
drifted mountain to giro the alarm
tists are at work perfecting an elec­
As far as education goes there
and. having given It. staggered back Electors to Vote On at Least tric heater to operate In aeries with
are grade schools, second units (in
the solar on cloudy days, in Cali­
again to do what else she might.
Six Changes in the
the rural districts) for training in
fornia and Egypt, successful solar
the
domestic sciences and manual
Constitution
power stations are at work building
arts, high schools, night schools,'
With the deadline for submission up steam which is providing power week-end high schools, summer
POLITICS certainly makes eo
of
Initiative
petitions
proposing
for
irrigation
projects,
a tiny mo­
1 tranged bedfellowa
high schools, and summer schools,
amendments to the state constitu­ tor has been perfected which re­
But a Presidential campaign or tion still a month and a half away, volves rapidly when connected to the University of Puerto Rico at
two behind os sod across the scene six proposals have thus far been an electric current coming from Rio Pledras, the College of Agricul­
with thunderous tread stalked tbe approved as to form of petition In selenium cells. These cells are disks ture at Mayaguez and the Poly­
technic Institute at Ban German.
sacred white cows of big money, the office of the Secretary of Blate. or squares upon which has been de­
One reason for the operation of
tbslr udders dripping wisdom, their
No petitions have been filed as posited a translucent film of metal. night schools, the summer high
gentlest bellow harkened to with es yet; the signatures of 125,893 voters, When light shines on the disks, a schools and the week end schools is
ger ears by candidates and delegates or one-tenth the total number voltage is developed and the disk for the benefit of those teachers
alike. Statecraft mingled with high voting for all candidates for gov­
who have been tcaciilng for a long
finance was what they offered In a ernor tn 1934. will be required In long as the light continues to shine. time and wha haven't their high
We had It ail figured out to get a
order that any initiatory proposal
school diplomas as yet. In 1933-34
- -------------- .
uuv BUU
solar stove so we wouldn't have to
all—tbe pontifical Mitchell, the ora
the government spent on an aver­
aral election next Nov. 3. The dead­ cook on cloudy days, when along
nlpotent Dawes, the Infallible la line far submission of signed peti­ came this electric heater dingus age of 830.62 for each child In
school, if the government has to
sull, the wondrous Wiggin (subre- tions is set by the state constitution that’s to fill in between sunshines.
spend that much now i do not
quently known as the uncovered In Article 17. Section 2. providing
Wordi of welcome which we hear so often in our
know what the amount would be if
Wiggin). And lo. the voice of Owen that such petitions be submitted
Dr. Lockwood's pretty office girl all lhe children were In school.
lives, yef they mean so much to the individual calling.
D. Young wu heard In the lend.
at least four months prior to the could be the model for the Illus­
(Continued oh page 2, 8ec. I)
But now, alas, where are the Ba- election.
l ’*rBI trator. Mitchell. She looks exactly
At the Hostings City Bank this invitation has for fifty
In addition to any proposals like his heroines.
niche of yesteryear?
which
may
be
placed
on
the
ballot
Why, if this summer the average
years greeted thousands of individuals who coma fa us
distinguished or, as the case msy by initiatory petition, two orlgiKtep a dish of scrubbed raw
be. extinguished international bank­ n a ling in the 1935 legislature will vegetables on the table or buffet for
be offered to the voters. These the kids to eat between meals. They
er tries to get Into either notional
son calling at this bank racalvet from Hie personnel tho cour­
would provide that: one, police
convention them charge him Ad­ might offer as evidence any weapon don't spoil their “appletight," as
Patsy calls it, are good for teeth,
mission.
tesy duo them. Every depositor, applicant or safety deposit box
One Saturday night X was In
seized near a residence, without a stomachs and complexions. Also
Busby Bros. Barber shop under the
search warrant; and two. home rule furnish all the necessary vitamins.
renter is treated with respect, and even tho proverbial fountain
City Bank and Jonas Hendershott
and tax limitations for counties.
Most recently approved as to
DARING soul, residing la a
pen filler finds this bank friendly and courteous.
A wise woman said recently: was in the chair getting his hair
back corner of Brasil, decided form of Initiatory petitions Is one "Woman's place Is In the home, cut. As he stepped out of the chair,
which
would eliminate the ad va­ but if she really cares about her Frank Sylvester, who was running
to ride horseback to New York. Aft
­
for some county office, extended his
* logging along some weeks in lorem tax on real and personal home, that caring will taka her far
property; and provide for a tax on and wide. Home Is tied by a million hand and said. "This is Mr. Hen­
in this capacity we have money to loan. Loans arc being made
what might be described as a series
the income of property.
strings to the rest of the world." dershott. I believe?" and Handerct general directions, ho reached Rio
to responsible individuals on improved real estate and busiaoes
The other five would, in brief, That woman, Mn. Franklin Roose­ shott said. “Yes. sir, Jones Hender­
Janeiro, only to discover he'd al­ provide:
velt, was trying to impress upon shott." Mr. Sylvester said. "I used
concerns may secure loans on tho basis of their financial state­
ready traveled 1.200 miles out of
1. For a single body legislature women the vital importance of to know you when you worked on
and civil service in state and coun­ keeping aware of what is going on the farm." "No, you didn’t,'do you
ments.
ty governments, and other changes. in the world Instead of burying didn't. You may have known me
rloo Moura Fonseca, but tbo gentle­
2. Exemption from the stale's re- their heads completely in lhe nice when I lived on a farm, but not
when
I
worked
on
one.
”
After
Mr.
man certainly behaved as though he
warm sand of domesticity.
Hendershott left the Barber shop,
were a congressional investigating staple foods.
over with your Banker
3. That owners of other than
committee. Why. he even outwanThroughout America on Peace Sam Garrison, sexton of the River­
property assessed at Day, 400.000 college and high school side cemetery said, "Boys, last
dered Senator Black of Alabama, residential
Decoration day we were erecting a
and up until tbe other day, when 850.000 or leas, would be compelled students inarched under the ban­
to furnish a stipulated amount of ners pledging ' not to support the tombstone at the cemetery and
the administration threw a net over
employment.
United States in any war it plight Jones Hendershott stopped and
him, the senator held the world's
4 For the legalizing of horse race conduct." Is this commendable, or watched uj for » while. At last he
championship for loose wandering.
betting In private clubs.
U it Communism? Will someone said. -Gentlemen, when they walk
Ifs startling, isn't it. how suddenwho knows tell us?
Chronic Influenza.
ALM SPRINGS. CALIF.

P

TIMETOWATCH
| Barry Bypaths
FDBTERMITE5

13242671

III PUERTO RICO

Riley Storiei

A

Hastings City Bank

»it» u. ut M

tlon of state taxes, placing liquor
What gums up personal budgets ia old fool that worked
aaiet in private bands.
death."
yearnings outstripping earnings.

hlrhself

to

TELEPHONE 2103 * * * HASTINGS

MICHI*.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, MAY »I. UM
Swuucn and Henry Adana of Dal­
MILO
with Ini milk. A favorite desert ii
Mgsdanes Turner. XveiL Barber ton, Bunday.
to taka any ol ‘ the Puerto Rican and Flower of the Home Literary
Mr. and Mrs. Ray OMMM and
fruits and partly candy them. Any- club attended the Barry County Ftd- Mra. Clemens' father spent Bunday
cratlon of Women’s Cluba al Wood- with Mra. Jana Hyten at WnftdlL
iMtf iaM Tfauraflay and report an
FUUMNf
The people here enjoy many holi- interaetma oroaram. The weaker
Dr w
Hmderson of MJabfe*
University was especially good.
of before. For instance there U "j
Baton Day" on Nov. 2nd On ti
night
and helped put on the de­
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Bradfield enday people take candies and flow.
lertained some friends at a fleh sup­ gree for a large class of oaowdateo.
Traneportetlon here la by bus.
gr&gt;ret
fix lodges ware miritMUd and a
per recently.
•pot where it is thought that Don tax! or train. Il ten C necessary or , dead Jn the evening the candle!
fine banquet was bald.
Mr and Mrs. W Schulte were
desirable to own a car here, unless i are lighted. They decorate on thl;
Mr. and Mra Garfleld Mater and
you have lots of money, and pre- : a,. *d ^t on Memorial day. An- called to Chicago the first of last
bSusHtaytare rwverkuo^
curves. One redcemUu ship after landing on this island.
week on account of the illness and Mr. and Mra Elmer Bcott spent
It is the
church
Puerto for to _c~Jrtoe
for personal
reasons oiHere
holiday of
wxur*
just this
bafora
I
Jf'dSectJ'wlS BkS,
Mdoldest
ateo’ to
Uw inA^rW.
.
dtelance
25
i
the
beginning
Lent.
On
&gt;
Sunday with Lester Btuart and
invnn, rtri rlru- a Hltlanr* nl OS
,__ .. .. ...
operation of lhe former's mother.
family
of South 'Boston.
Five ladiea .from Milo were in
do nM know how *o
.road sign* m are practically all! which has had continuous use. miles for 12 cents. The American people dress up in false faces i
get anything belter, but adjust |
•
ffh|„-n consequent- 1 There is another old church, called Railway Co. owns a railroad that ^d rlga ^methlng as ae do
Betty Taylor of BerHa Is spending
Hastings Friday evenhig to attend
the Civic play “Servant In the eome time with ber grandparents,
« X £Sry
'
U- Dulch fired on H In
ro.nd u» I.tod. beta« bull! an ■
tx, " On^hi. d.,
House" and witnessed some very Mr. and Mra. Harley Taylor.
WbenTero “r. l L
ronin.In . U» &lt;»U1 pUln, Hor.bub rUUw
Vol, ,«U and toy. Uu ot ‘ good acting.
*our”* ^5 of, education, how-1 When
tell uic
Ure ,
bulldlng
Ttierc ia
is aa here
here UU very
very popular
popular and
and very
very comcomwncn I came here
acre Is mi
.b .m „ . buUdiD
. There
On Saturday. Mrs. Flower and Sunday with Mr. and Mn. Ralph
at Christmas Instead of telling the,
ever, is not lhe only reason for their mainland of the U. 8. for the first
^epin- above
urn i mOn
children that "Santa Claus brought• Miss Bernice entertained at a one Fox and family, near Freeport.
seeming backwardness, some might1 time in my life. The boat trip was
l?i
nt
on/&lt; j
. .
...
lay the blame lo the strong pollU- delightful and look four days.. How- (J1.
.
draned aver the 1 h F?IJCra^K
enuse un- them." lhe people tell their chil­. o'clock dinner the former’s sister.
Little Eugene Curtis of Hastings
I—tKe ever
clad tn see land As vou the old nag 1 draped over the 1 dertakers back home to smile. The dren that the Three Kings broughtt Prof, and Mrs. C. M Jansky of the has been spending the past two
^Lt
™
enterX taJb&lt;£ .TbS? Ju£
' ““nument.
On
this
memorial &lt;onin u made out of rough boards.
them. Children are not the only, University of Wisconsin. Madison; weeks with his grandparents. Mr.
.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Chas
F.
Moreau.
Au
­
ones to receive presents either, beand Mrs Chas. Hamblin. Mildred
, gusla; Ernest Cadwallader of Au- Hamblin ’ accompanied him home
exchanged. During Lent each dayr gusts; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Flower Friday night until Bunday when
---------- — -— —
— ----- ----- ———,
- —f— . —... . has s name, and if anyone has as; and son of Kalamazoo Prof, and Gladys Hamblin went to Hasting*
« «o’^iu“a Morro "cestle the first thtag-on abol!‘
c"rt** m lhr[t ‘*’arta 11 Un l al‘ hU n,me'
name ot
he, Mrs. Jansky returned to Madison
the rural sections-*) or oo cents a motto uasuc uic n™ uiw*
* gre
buildings are ways a serious occasion, and may Invariably "celebrates." The week■ Sunday A- M.
Mr. and Mra. Vem Hulilbexger
’ I *«y lovely end Intemtlog as the i be headed by a group of people who before Christmas te usually cele-,
Mrs. Ernest Quick and daughter.
| original architecture U still pre- are yelling Then again It may be | bra ted with flre crackers. There are, Mrs. Scobey and Mrs Ferris Quick, and Mr. and Mra. Chalmer Miller
served. La Fortaleza, the Cover- a more quiet scene. After a death | some people in Puerto Rico loo who, went to Benfield Friday to see the spent Sunday at the William Walt
' nor’s home, is at the very end of in the home, it is a Spanish cus- j believe in prohibition—excepting, former's grandson, tawrenc* Quick. home.
Mr. and Mrs John F. Brake spent
, the main afreet in Ban Juan, near tom for lhe women and girls to for one night? This night amongJ who lias been coafined lo his bod
I the great San Juan Gate. It is a j wear black and not to sing for some ' the Spanish is known as "Noche; for some lime with heart trouble. Sunday with Mr. and Mra. John K.
: brick building end quite grand in- [ tlmt.
I Buena." Tills Is Christmas Eve. It
Lawrence is an ambitious high Brake and family. In the afternoon
I*1*1*', A“°teier place ^'tor* should j Thc
of Puert0 j^co are Ls always a time of much merri-’ school student and it is hard for they visited the Vcm Hawblllz and
Paul Bell families of Nashville.
!
L' lhe &lt;*“tory old Monastery. ■ bullt o
nofil anything. and in ment—and much drinking among, him to be confined to his home.
Mr. and Mra. Harold Cooper and
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Crookston
, the first seal of “teber learn-1 mast any way In many cases the most of lhe people. These cclc-C
, Ing in Puerto Rico. There is also an , whole house is ■.made
«.L_from
•_ 11.-.
_.&lt;lk on with of Hastings visited at tbe Quick Mabie Van AUaburg ot Grand Rap­
a palm brations are always—
carried
ids. Mr. and Mra. Don Blowins and
English-speaking
church.
with tree. Houses are usually small. The : roasted pig as an Important item home Sunday afternoon.
Grayden
ot South Boston
spent
services entirely tn fiiglish—the reason for building houses like this 1 on the menu.
Mcsdames M. Bradfield. Harold
Saturday afternoon at J. F. Brake's.
j only one to Puerto Rico.
i is that if a wind come* along and
j spent my Christmas in Maya- Doster and the teacher. Mrs. Saun­
Mis* Lillian tayrer of Maple Rap­
| After I received my appointment. bio ws them down the teas will be I Buez, which appears to me as one ders expect lo take the school pu­
ids spent the week end at Herbert
, with Instruction^ to teach in Puer- very small, and it will not lake I 0[ the nicest cUies on the Island. It pils to Battle creek Tuesday of thia Ge Igor's.
. to Rico. I landed in Cayey where I much time or money to build an- ha* many clinics and hospitals; week to visit the Kellogg food
Harold Yoder and , family
of
plants.
really spent my first night. The other one.
| many beautiful parks and hand­
South Bowne spent Sunday at the
I next morning the Bupt. of Schools
Mrs.
Wilcox
went
to
Hastings
last
In ti&gt;e small towns, and in some I wnie avenues al palms. The drive
finery Kime home.
i took me lo Cidra, a town of about of lhe larger cities, charcoal la lhe along the Caribbean Sea is very Tuesday for an indefinite stay.
Floyd
Neeb
and
family
spent
Sun
­
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Bradfield and
3.000. with about seven times that only thing used for cooking. Among beaull(u). Here too you will see
many to the nearby country. I was the natives, rice and beans ore the palm trees all bent over a* a result Jack spent Saturday and Sunday in day with her parents, Mr. and Mra.
yoang lady and the yoeng
| thc only American in Lhe district, main diet You will find bananas in , of
Holland the guests of Mr. and Lee Osborne of Pinhook.
San Phlllpe cyclone.
Several
from
here
attended
Mrs. John George. They also en­
and was I a curiosity? I will never
church at Freeport Bunday night,
forget lhe scene at the time of my
B . °! H U ,t»ul U&gt;, ro, Ml (1&gt;, yeor joyed lhe tulip display.
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Skidmore where Rev. Hulliberger brought the
arrival. I had no idea why such a bananas
too—large green °ones,
watches during May.
ar“; । round. You see flowers and most
moosage.
and taVern visited their parents
throng had assembled, but soon small green ones, red ones, large
Give them something that
‘‘ I' everything else alway* about the near Nashville Sunday.
Utile Shirley Ann HullIberger
learned that it was "lo see the and small yellow ones, and those
Mrs F Gilbert and Mra Wool- spent Sunday with her grandpar­
| Americano school teacher " My ar- i that taste like apples. Bananas are same. There seems to be no
। rival happened to be Just al receas 1 served In many different ways. regular planting season for things. ston accompanied Mrs Bradfield to ents. Mr. and Mrs. Grant HulliberGIVE JEWELRY.
I time, so the youngsters were out in Puerto Rican coffee is delicious. I While there are many more things Kalamazoo last Wednesday.
I full force too. Por the first three Their coffee is usually made by tek- of wh,ch I could write. I trust that
Remember lire P. T- A and school
WEST HOPE.
months after my arrival
the na- ing a two ounce bag of
ground I what I have written will be of some picnic next Friday at the school­
The Major Bowes Amateur Hour
tlveg would rush to lhedoors of, coffee and pouring a liter of boiling interest to Banner readers and my house
at the community Club at McCal­
। their huts Just to look
at "the hot waler on it. They pour two or i friends back In old Michigan.
lum's Friday evening was hugely
DURFEE.
I Americano." This happens, in a three tablespoons of this liquor into 1
Very truly yours.
Phone 2120
enjoyed. The prize, an Incense
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Bateman are
burner, was appropriately enough
Dexter Smclkcr.
the proud parents of a baby boy.
born May 14. which tipped the awarded to a member of our most
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
scale* at seven pounds ot Pennock extensive onion growers' family.
The
he next meeting will be with—
Mrr
—
MIm Beatrice Buxton, Ml&amp;s Neva hospital and will answer to the ■nr
,
id Mrs. Richard ~taubeugh.
Mother
Cale and Brandt McIntyre, all from name of Richard Wayne
A good crowd and two blue racers
'■ this neighborhood, were among tbe and babe are home and doing fine. attended our last day of school
.
busload which Howard Martin
look The home folks seem to be standing Friday The snakes were pretty bad­
I to lhe tulip festival al Holland,
"* ‘
’ the ordeal very nicely.
ly wrecked when we left, having
: Mr. and Mra. Edward Rice and
1 Sunday
been lied In bow knots on several
Miss Thelma Sponselier has been Vela spent Sunday with Mr. and spare tires by small boys.
Mrs.
Clark
at
Yorkville.
out of school the past week because
A good many attended the mis­
The
Durfee
school
will
close
Sat
­
of illness.
cellaneous shower on our newly­
urday. May 24. with a picnic.
weds. Mr. and Mrs. tarry Anders,
Prtdw ,™unjr «ev«.l (ro Ihu
Mr and Mrs. J. C. Raymond OI
of
uai
The S«rv*nl In the
Springs sprnt Rund.y with which was given by their mother.
“?■ *IUch
“ w'"
by Mr .nd Mr. sjju.1 Couch
Mrs Hattie Anders, in the Clover­
the Hullngs Civic Ft.ro
, Mr .nd Mrs. Donald Couch .nd dale town hall Friday evening.
The Dunham school close;, tills ' Joan and Johnny visited Mr and They received a great many gifts
week Friday with a picnic dinner Mrs Bert Lechleltner of Hickory Including two rolling pins. Look out

(day; tn other caeea perhaps room.
I board and clothes.
I Puerto Rico owns and operates Its
fasaeaa J telegraph and telephone ayatems
Mil H ftnd now
dlrecl telephone conniuLI neoH®1* wlth tt* states. Along
IIIWV
ttaeee are two radio stations in
'/rvwrtimXs fmm r-ZZ ?'XL
**■« JUM1 Ttsere are hard surfaced
■ JLT...
, JTz.- 7—! roads all over the island. In .many
Bro— conmuons
cTOlUmu in
In puerw
Fu.rln Rlno ““ W «ml only d*i —
ottscononuc
fnr n.k.
an such that many children can- cra
be Just trails for peck
“T "...
. . . .Y
A
‘ hnrwi ar far neoole to walk on.

old fort erected for the protection small degree, aven yet.
of lhe city, but antiquated and out J English is taught differently hart
of date now. There's a lot of hla-; than it I* back home because tbe
tory back of It though. San Juan natives here need it chiefly for
was founded as the capltol in 1621. reading and correspondence and
Once tn the city you will admire the “
*
very
little for speaking. The stu­
cement buildings. The building* dents are divided Into “A" and **B"
groups.. In "B” groups are the slow,
there ere so many terrific cyclones the less brilliant, and the retarded
end windstorms In Ban Juen you ones, while “A" groups consist of
will see its oldest cathedral, called the beat students.

imiwm.s

B. HODGES

tax

' Corners and Mr. and Mrs George

at the schoolhouse.

BUY THAT LIVING f
ROOM SUITE NOW r

WASTE-DANGER - DISCOMFORT
and CONTAMINATION

ROAD DUST
WASTE

CONTAMINATION

Road materials coet money. Every cloud
of dust feeds several pennies of the tax­
payers’ money to the winds. How much
better to use these pennies for dust elimi­
nation with calcium chloride and enjoy
the other advantages which mean even
more than money.

Health authorities agree that germ-laden

DANGER
Driving through dust is like night driv­
ing without headlights. It's a criminal
offense to drive at night without lights —
yet dusty roads, just as dangerous, exist
in many Michigan counties.

DISCOMFORT

CONTAMINATION

dust leads to infection in humans, as well

as in livestock. Fruit growers report that
dust clouds covering their orchards not

only decreases production of fruit but

to

buy

539.50

found an old fashioned boardlut
house In the outskirts of the city
The landlord, ool. O’Riley, was s
jovial old Southern gentleman ant
something of a politician, so we go
pretty well acquainted.
Saturday nights they had dance,
and entertainments
at the ol&lt;
boarding house. After I had beer
there a week the Colonel said: "Mr
Waters you are a pretty good ator;
taller. WUe and I were wondering 1
you couldn't sing and dance a lit
tie." I replied that I used to ctoi
danoe when I was with the "Bl
Top," but was getting a little to
old now. -But.” I said, "I can sU
sing some." His daughter spoke u
and said, "Mr. Waters. If you wl
sing, Hl play the organ." Bo I san
one of my old time favqritea o
which thia eras the chorus:
Are you Mr. O'Riley
Can anyone tell
Are you Mr. O'Riley
What keeps the hotel?
Are you Mr. O’Riley
Why bleu your soul O'Riley
You're looking quite well.
They clapped their hands and
shouted "sing another." so I said to
Miu O’Riley, "Ill sing one you
never heard before." I knew I was
getting In deep water but I sang
-Marching
Through
Georgia."
They didn't uy anything, but some
old men over in the comer gave m&lt;
a pretty sour look. Bo I picked u|
an old banjo and sang "Sing Me i
Bong of lhe Sunny South" and the;
heartily cheered.
While I was in the South I step
ped in a barber shop and said lo u
colored barber "I guess 1 need a
hair cut.” He said "yes—H's about
a month too long." I got in the
chair and he inquired. "You from
the Noth, *uh?" I told him I was
from Michigan. "Not from Battle
Creek. Michigan." he inquired. "No,
I'm
from Hastings.
Michigan.*'
Then he sked how many colored
men there were in my loam. I said
a-one; jjok a s&lt;xk*eU men 1
w whole county." “It's a dftrnr
poor county that can't support one
colored man." said the barber.

EAST DELTON.
Mr. and Mrs. Ike talnaar enter­
tained Mr. and Mra. Henry Houvener and family and Mr and Mrs
Clyde Smith of Kingsley district on
Wednesday evening.
Stewart Waters and family and
Henry Houvcner and family were in
Battle Creek Saturday night on
business.
Mrs. Bess Waters and Mra. Myrtle
talnaar were in Kalamazoo Wed­
We are certainly glad Winfield nesday.
The gypsies seem to know where
Lord was so fortunate as to be
only slightly hurt Saturday night the old people live in our neighbor-,
when his car struck loose grave] hood as they visited Mr Huff and1
Mr.
Kelley, taking a 120 bill off the
and
overturned
near
Ferris
latter and tearing the vest pockets
Browns' ot Bugbee Comers.
Our Christian Endeavor reorgan­ off of Mr. Huff's vest. Leon Doster
ized Sunday evening. The following was notified and he and Mr. Blakofficials were elected: Pres.. Glenn a ney overtook some of them in Bat­
Osgood; Vlce-Pres . Belle McCallum; tle Creek where they were landed
Secy and Trews. Virginia Hayward; In jail for a few days—we might
Pianist. Belle McCallum
Services wish forever, as they are a real
every Sunday evening al 7 Ml with nuisance to Barry county.
Wo are glad to hear Mra. Lena
preaching every other meeting.
We received an interesting letter Waters is gaining fast and will bo
from Bert Makaywi. formerly of here home soon.
*
in which he wished to greet u« all.
Mr. and Mra. Ike talnaar had for
He is working on the natural gas dinner guest* Sunday evening, Mr.
line into Grand Rapids. Address, and Mrs. Lester Snyder and eon of
Kalamazoo.

| Ikl
I IM

This Marvelous
Streamlined Bike

W

jgg.gQ

SEE OUR BIG STOCK
OF RUGS

Yea, every cloud of dust meant watte,

Both floor sice and throw rugs priced
so that you can well afford lo own one.
Replace the old. worn one, of which

danger, discomfort and contamination.

you have tired.

You cannot afford dust, you do nobwant

DISCOMFORT

it—write, phone or visit your highway

No need to tell of the discomfort caused
by duet—anyone who lived on. or drove
over, dusty roads last year remembers
only too well. Thooe who live oo paved
roads have permanently smooth, yearround surfaces, with never a thought of
dust. Shouldn't the taxes paid by rest
dents on unpaved roads or streets at
least entitle them to the comfort of a
dustless summer?

officiate today and ask for durtleta treat­

ROAD

rj.cn *aNCE

dust-contaminated

Cmn« In and Sm tha Bike and Other Prizes

Learn How Easy They Are

ment of YOUR rofdt with calcium

chloride.

Calcium Chloride Association

To Win
12 Othor Priira

Special ONE DAY Sale
For SATURDAY Only!

mS

Cm* Monoy a* Wdl
WU, and egrn ce*h
It tel HurryJ Ml

14 "TQ
I.IO

Grade Axminater Throw
Rar far ONLY-

CONTEST STARTS

I CALCIUM CHLORIDE
R

started. Hxat camel beg wu
that Fred
Doclker brought

BOYS-GIRLS -You Can
1 rade in your old suite to us
for a new living room suite.
I
prices are very reason­
able, and just think how it
would add lo your home . . . attractiveness and
comfort!

lessens its salable price. And owners of
stores or roadside stands find customers

unwilling
produce.

When Riley
Irani South

SURFACES

Monday, May 25th

Miller Furniture Co
HASTINGS

«

PHONE

222

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, MAT 11, 1»M

LEGAL NOTICES |

NOTICT TO CRBDIT0M.

I M-KI'iiasbr. dwrat*!.

clMk tn (hr (,

PABTITIOM IALX.

'.Lk *

M*’ Th

KBOtT. Ml r I l(&gt;

NOTICB OP C0MMIB8I0NEBUMPBB D1ORBB.

WOODLAND.
Last Week's Letter.

COURTHOUSE NEWS

।

The annual Junior-Senior ban- I

ASSYRIA.
Last Weak's Letter.

Mra. Belle Miller spent part bf
home.
quet of Woodland High school will | last week in Battle Creek with relSeveral from the Bristol dUtrlci
PROBATE COURT.
be held in the high school gymna­ alive*. From there she went to Lan­
a program at the Mtyo
1
Eat. Lillian R Hill. Final account sium on the evening ot Saturday. sing to visit her daughter, Bertha, a attended
filed, order allowing account en­ May 18. al 6:30 o’pjock. The juniors teacher there..
.
■scho&lt;4 on Saturday night. The
event featured a shower for the
tered. discharge of Admr. Issued, have chosen to follow a Dutch plan
Mrs. Nellie French, who has spent
estate enrolled.
for their banquet. The dinner will some time at the home of her teacher, Marceile Smith, who WU
recently married to Wayne Buck­
Est. Dora Lake. Order allowing consist of characteristic Dutch daughter, Mra. Gladys Cortright,
land and now lives hi Battle Creek.
account entered, discharge of Admr. foods and the decorations will has returned to her home near
transform the gym into a typical Bellevue.
Issued, estate enrolled.
garden.
sophomoresThe
will Eagle
I
NORTH HOPE.
Est. Ellen M. Bechtel, petition for Dutch,C
C--------The
------------------------school having an eight
u lhe tint U&gt;
Mr. and Mrs. Homer McCallum
determination of heirs filed, order wrvb lhe banquet dreued In quelni | „,onUu.
DdUh couumev O.ylhrd Rory U MUI
w,„ o, Rulloj. ».. of Muskegon spent tbe week end
for publication entered.
flf “S",1?' «“
The Burrounh. ..tool with Mr. and Mrs. Donald McCal­ Ellsworth Boott and
Est. Jacob Kline. Petition for nor. Dowden, our EngUab .nd 1*1* ,WU1 Mut Atab,Ue Blreru. leech,
lum.
determination of heirs filed, order in leecher, will be lhe meta ,peek-,
ek„, on
„,th , p,„|c
Mr. and Mra. William Kart and
for publication entered.
rlbul t* folio.
C
Mr.
Tv.ii .' A sP1«'I“1‘d program was put on at daughter of Hostings spent Satur­ family molded
Eat. Adaline Hefflebower. Bone)
Mr. and Mra. John Dell visited: Community night held at Briggs day night with Mr. and Mra. Rankin
of Admr. filed, letters of adminis­
Wlrfm“n | church on rrld.y rvenln. It .n Hart.
tration Issued, order limiting Mtlle- Bunday.
arranged by a large delegation from
merit entered, petition for hearing
Miss Pollyanna England enter- the Holiness church at Battle Creek.,
claims filed, notice to creditors latalned the members of her class, the and was greatly enjoyed. The young
sued.
Eat. James A. Eddy. Report of juniors at her home Monday eve- ladles' supper squad composed of
। nlng in honor of her birthday. A1 Eva Manby, Carol Miller. Patricia
sale filed.
Kit
wm mra
hunt for articles far and 1 Durham. Lucille
Cole. Maxine
Eat. uen
Dell b
B- MDipn
Dolph. Will
filed, pcpetllion for probate filed waiver of ne?r ,w“ part 01 lhe fun D«»nty i Brandt. Marjorie Jones and the
—... _. r oua
refreshments were served by her Reynolds sisters served in a very
notice filed.
mother.
Mra.
Glen
England.
|
creditable
manner.
Potted
cowslips
P COMMISSIONER
Est. Charles Willison. Order al­ I Dr. T. H. Cobb is confined lo hfc made pleasing decorations.
UNDER DECREE
lowing claims entered.
Est. Elmer E. Gregory. Inventory 1 home with the flu. IJis little son . Mr. and Mra. Hugh Case were in
filed.
I,l Jack has been seriously ill with Hastings on Wednesday and called
Est. Mary N. Williams. Petition bronchial pneumonia but is slowly on their slater. Mra. Esther Orohe,
' an aunt. Mra. Anna Rltzman and
for Admr. filed, order for publica­ Improving.
Mr. and Mra. Donald Gager and
Shirley and wife,
tion entered.
Est. Hannah Blaisdell Robinson. son Morgan spent lhe week end
The Bronson hospital offering of
Bond of Admr. filed, letters of ad­ with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Brady of , eggs is being assembled. Those who
' have not yet contributed may still
ministration issued, order limiting Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mra. F. E. Border called 1 d° “
. „
.
settlement entered
Est. George W Perry. Petition for on Mr and Mrs James Bumner of I
“P*1
Btrickland
H
determination of heirs filed, order Battle Creek Bunday
। of Battle Creek, former residents
' here, have purchased the former
for publication entered.
Rev. and Mrs. R. A. Bom of To- ’
Eat. Rosa Hollister. Final account
l Brown property at Assyria Center
ledo. Ohio, and Mr and Mrs. Julian i
filed, order assigning residue en- Jauregule and two children of De- 1| where they will locate. The resi­
lered discharge of Admr. issued,
dence la undergoing extensive 1mtroit visited lhe former’s son. Rob­
estate enrolled.
provement and redecorating.
Est. Thomas Fisher. Final ac­ ert. Bom. and family from Sunday
Burial services for Mrs. Lynda
। until Tuesday.
Cooper of Battle «&gt;««*
Creek w»u
who ■passed
count filed, waiver of notice filed. ’
Mr. and Mra. E. O. Shorno and away on Friday afternoon at the
order assigning residue entered.'
discharge of executor Issued, estate I Mra. Stata Hilbert and daughter home of her son. Frank Cooper, of
Ellen spent Sunday with Louise and Battle Creek, a former resident here
enrolled.
Est. John McArthur Report of i Lorena Hilbert and Don Shorno of , were held on Sunday at 3:30 at the
Ann Arbor.
Hebble chapel. The interment was
sale filed.
Est. Isaac Houvener. Final ac-1| Mr. and Mra. David Kilpatrick of , in the Ellis cemetery. Rev. Braby
count filed, order allowing account .Ann Arbor and Arthur Kilpatrick of : of the Presbyterian church officlatentered, discharge of executrix is­ Jackson were guests of their par- ' ed. She leaves one daughter, Mra.
sued, estate enrolled.
li ents. Mr. and Mra. Frank Kilpatrick, [ Sarah King, three sons. Phln, Floyd
and Frank Cooper all of Battle
Est. Martha E. Varney. Final ac- over lhe week end.
Out Oil count
filed, order allowing ac- [ Mr. and Mrs Warren English. Mr. Creek.
THE HOME LUMBER COMPANY BUILDING
|I „„„
a Calvin English and ml
„
Mra Nina Powers Sloop and son
NOTICB or COMMISSIONER'S BALE count entered.
and „,.
Mrs.
Miss
JUST NORTH OF STATE ON MICHIGAN AVI.
UNDER DECREE.
Ernest
and wife of Marlon. Ind.,
Est. Hannah Blaisdell Robinson. Bernice English of Grand Rapids
Petition for hearing claims filed.
of Rev. and Mra. Don called here by the death of her sis­
ter-in-law. Mra. Lynda Cooper vis­
notice to creditors Issued.
। Carrick Motlier's Day.
ited her uncle. Mike Smith Sunday
Est. Elizabeth Finkbelner Testi..
...
„ .
.
mony
nd Mra
afternoon. She returned home on
mony of
oi freeholders
treenotoers filed,
nteo. license
license to
w I .¥f\*
------------‘ Ka’.1 c­ -----— „
... Iluued.
.jchildren
cd bvMlh
Mrsj cMlj™
C. B
..11
bond accomnan
on
Bled,
MCOOWjnted by Un C B Monday.
- . - .
.
.... I Benham of Hastings spent Mother’s
Willard Case, who sustained frac­
before sale filed, report of sale filed.:
-...1 ------- —
BK. Mu-r Kilmer
Te.Unwny :
«“• » "&gt;a Mn H J sun« tured ribs in a recent fall Is spend­
of Battle Creek..
filed, order determining heirs en-1
- 'of
ing a few days at the home of his
Mra. Rhoda Austin came home son, Carl and family of Battle
tered.
from Pennock hospital Saturday. Creek.
Est. John N. Stuart. Order
I .hall anil at nubile .urlion to th
She Is recovering from her recent
2530
pointing Admr. entered.
Mra. Hattie Stevens and Mra.
operation nicely.
EUlah Van Syckle are acting com- I
Est. Ellen K- Btuart. Order
Mr. and Mra. John Weaver of mlltee for the Briggs Ladles’ Aid
pointing Admr. entered.
for Hastings called on Mr. and Mrs. Society dinner held on Thursday!
Erl. Frank Nash. Petition —
Member Florists
Telegraph Delivery Association
May 14.
determination of heirs filed, order Wm. Flory Sunday.
Callers at the home of Mr. and
Mr. and Mra. Harold Case. Mr.
for publication entered.
Est. Jack O'Connor, et al. Annual Mra. Reuben Wolcott Sunday were I and Mrs. Paul Bivens. Mr. and Mra.
Mr. and Mrs Howard Jordan and David Conklin and family were
account filed.
family and Mrs. Lena Jordan of Mother's Day guests of Mra. Syl-.
Lansing.
MARRIAGE LICENSE.
via Bivens, at the Ben Conklin
' Phyllis Buell has been seriously home.
Carl J. Oortezka. Hope
...19
ill with sinus and gland Infection.
A family gathering was held at
MtelUhm—
. Tta-uSrcy-Std-i^ui"
thc Qeorge Conklin home Sunday, i
ASSYRIA.
of the Woodland Township Schbol In the afternoon Mrs. Conklin ac-I
The Assyria and Ellis Cemetery I Alumni Association will be held
Circles wlU hold their annual Me- ■ Saturday evening, May 23. at 8:00
I mortal Day services at the Assyria 1 o’clock, hi the school auditorium.
M P. church on May 24. at 2 30 P. j The toastmaster will be Ward
। M. Dr p. J. Maveety of Battle Plants of Hartford. The Lutheran
I Creek will deliver the address.
ladies wUl
will serve the dinner at 50c
a plate.
Sex equality? Did you ever see a
John DoneUi. High school v^J..
coach.
man quit his job because he was spent thc week end at his home in
getting married?
i Copemish.
' Mr. and Mra. Robert Austin of
1 Lansing were guests of Mrs. Rhoda
OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION.
Austin and Mr. and Mra. Herald
Classic Sunday.
A I) 193(1
The Womcn'r Study club will

For Memorial Day

NOTICE TO CaDDITOBS

i ■ rlrltht

NOTICE or MOKTOAOB BALE

Count.’ Mlcblssn” lo HOMF. OWNERS'
LOAN CORPORATION

For the convenience of our patrons we will
open a shop, during the week of May 25 to
29, inclusive, in the Home Lumber Com
.pany. building.
„
. We will have displayed
for sale a large selection of plants for Me­
morial Day. Stop in and make
your selection

CLYDE WILCOX

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION.

The Florist

Hastings, Michigan

r • ' i , ri thrraot
NOW, THERKFORE. by virtue of th»
*rr of aalo rontalnod In aald martens*
d purtuanl to th* Statute* of th*
tie of Mlrhlran In *neh r*«* mod* and
nvlded. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN

Telephone

252 miles to the qallon is ho

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION

I {inure it with Red Crown

tlock !■

M

HOME OWNKRR’ LOAN COR-

fK;,'

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION,

NOTICB OF MOBTOAQB BALE.

Boa. Btn.rt ci.ta.at. judwlcvenll1g in the school house. The
probata.
program is as follows: Music—club:
‘.u
Cal,-A Book Enjoy'd: Book
Auau.iu.Kuno and Pr.d Radial ha« Review — Mbs Lenore Dowden;
. vrar Music—Vocal Solo—Mra. Rena Cul. t.rl ,er *cc°mp«nled by Miss Naomi
Van Loo.
I
Early Monday morning Gilbert
McLeod had the mlsfortufie to have

Mrias M14 p*ti
that public notice’
ieiiion of a.copT
•Xarta«*U*ik!
nr.wpw' orintod

NOTICE OF MOBTOAQB BALE
MuLulwltt. Rwl.Ur

IIOMK
TION.

LOA N

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION.

Tswasbip of ('■■tlrton Harry County.
Mlehiean.. to HOME dWNERS’ LOAN
COB'/OBA. CORPORATION.
ai

llllon,
Il In forth

•a, inn. pt_..
nubllolloa nf

Widrimilk. RmIiIw of Probnto.

NOW. THEReFORK. bv rlrtuo of th.
h.

r

NOW. THEI

N. Wieki. or to no

NOTICE OF OOMMJBBIONZB'
UBDBB DBCBBB.

IR WRRF.BY GIVEN

iand atruck by lightning. It was
all ablaze before the fire was discovered and the Woodland fire
lruck W1LS not called. The loss Is
partially covered by insurance.

NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
! Mra. Clara Wiekes of Eaton Rap■ ids spent Bunday with Mr. and Mrs.
1 John Whitright.
Mra. Mary Dunlap of Edmore
of her brother. Fred Camp and wife.
Mrs. Minnie McNutt is In Pen­
nock hospital suffering from pleural
pneumonia. Her many friends are
hoping she may be completely re­
stored to health.
Mr. and Mrs. Marley Burroughs
of Three Rivers visited the latter's
parents over the week end.
Regular community meeting last
Saturday night. This was time for
the election of officers. Those elect­
ed were: President. Roy Belson;
secretary. Mrs. Hugh
Johnsen;
treasurer. Mrs Jim Dibble.
Mrs. Oeorge Hicks of Lansing
called on her sister. Mrs. John Ben­
edict. Sunday.
Mra. Fred Camp visited friends in
Kalamazoo last week.
Miss Mrytle Hall has returned
home from her work at Augusta.

Im Crowe. Dm’s 311

hi by Lestarsnriei

thati

MAKE YOUR
HOUSE LIKE BRICK WITH
half of, IM Northnut
.notion '1ST To«n 1 N

ASBESTOS SHINGLES

at LOW COST/
DRIVE A “TEST CAR" IN

HOME OWNERS’ LOAN
PORAT1ON. MerKxoo.

H RATION MarttsgM

COBPO

Badass* AUrsaai National Bank At
Ionia. Mkhlaaa.
Out

BANNER WANT ADTB. PAT

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Phenn 2S1S

Frank Saga

Haatinga

�TH WTOM MEMO* TTOUPAI. WAI Ik
HAVING.
Dr. and MN. CbNtea MulMn WBd
Last Week's Latter.
Mrs. Ada oorttlght of OUego called
.There Win be a gospel service at
took second and Woodland look
on Mrs. Sarah Smith and daughters
the home ot James Nagtl Wedneafor third.
third place. Thc T. K. relay team
Sunday.
won th* 880 relay with comparative
Robert Conway. M1" Vlolat Mun-1 eronad lhe party.
lhe wood aohool neighborhood will
ger
and
Mrs
Hazel
Billings
visited
ease.
Grifle
th
ot
Middleville
was
Barbara
Adrtanaon
who
has
bpen
be
there. Everyone Invited.
Tui
nrsl
high point man with 15 points.
the tulip fields at Galesburg Bun­
Mr. and Mr* Robert Beasmer and
day afternoon.
'
'
In the Kiris' events, Rogers of
Mr* Schcnkel from Owosso were
Woodland beat Llewellyn. Sunfield's
Allan Shelp has a perfect record
Mothers' Club.
week end visitor* atwm achenkcla.
cracked-up girl athlete in thc 50The Mothers' Club was held last I of attendance tor lhe achoo) year,
The old vUlag? schoolhouse has
yard dash and the 440 relay. T. K. Tuesday In Che gymnasium. Eve­ being neither absent nor tardy.
been tom down and the lumber
placed third in the dash and relay lyn Geukcs and Barbara Serven Those neither absent nor tardy tar
taken to Yankee Springs where tho
of
Middlevine
took
the
ahot-put.
,venU by beHie month are: Allen 8help, Don
and
look
second
and
third
in
the
buyqr
Homer McKibben wUl use it
opened
the
program
by
slngina
two
second aiitt NashTil1 °r
baseball throw.
Boyd Morehead.
Karl
to buUd a store. It was an old land
popular songs. "Lost'' and "A Little Higgins,
Pred Hamer then
sen events. T. K. captured
enU of Irving werq gu8«U ol frl«nda
Rendezvous in Honolulu." Following Smith. Forrest Stafford and Helen XfRom
seconds and 0 thirds.
night tlU Bal- mark, havlna been a private school
Nunemaker.
in
primary
room
those
this tbe advanced home economics
years ago. The writer ho* been told
•venlng.
by Older people that It was tbe
, gave a style show. The dresses were neither absent nor tardy for the
le Leh- height of their ambition to be able
between Sunfield, Nashville and spring silk dresses that they had year art: George Heraaanllt, Alice
l 8«b- to drive down from the Cobb
Middleville the boys from 'T. K- made during thc past two weeks. Lewis. Barbara
Adrlanson and
Nocrl* neighborhood, put their horse in
were forced to play off the life with After the style show an afternoon Charles Higgins. Hie students in
a Miss sernwe newer gttanded some barn in Irving and attend the
Sunfield Wednesday at Nashville. tea was given by the girls consisting both rooms all passed their grades.
I Barry County O. E- B. Associa­ Seminary after attending their dis­
The game proved to be a thrilling of cookies, sandwiches and tea. Dur­ Those in the primary, room have
pitching duel between Ken. Figg, Ing lea Betty Beeler played sev­ built a four-room doll house and tion at Hickory Oorncra
trict school. At one time lhe tuition
star jnoundsman from Sunfield and eral selections. The tables had blue made lhe furniture for it. They
Robert Conway, Vlolat Munger. wss 50c a week. You oould come for
Lefty Cline. .. K. ace hurler. Figg candles with white decorations. Mra. feel justly proud ot it.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Farr. Mn. M a week, a month, a term or what­
proved to be the better man and Dietrick donated an assorted bou­
Mr. and Mrs. Silas Doster. Mr- T. BUUnga. Hazel Billings. Lyle ever suited you and your pocketbook,
won out 2 to 1 allowing only 4 hits quet that added an attraction to thc and Mrs. Rankin Hyde and George and Lota attended revival meetings A certain old gentleman told the
while fanning fifteen. Cline was not tabic.
attended a birthday dinner at Mr. in Parchment Wednesday evening writer that he felt as much sophis­
far behind, however, allowing only
and Mrs. Gerald Doster's of Has­ and listened to a fine sermon on ticated as a student there, as da
5 hits. The four error* In lhe field
tings Sunday, honoring lhe host. Salvation given by Rev. L- D. Mite* young people of today who start out
4-H Banquet
lost the baU game for us.
Several 4-H Club members fromI George stayed over tor a few days.
Several mothers from here at­ to college.
Jack WUUams opened the first
Guests ot Mr. and Mrs. Manley tended Lbq style show and tea given
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph GUietl of
T. K. attended a 4-H banquet held
u^pH words ON
Inning with a single, went to third
at Hastings last Friday night; 370 Blllings Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. by the Home Economics class at Needle*. Cal., visited at the home
OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK,
on two sacrifices and came home on
Harry Heavner and daughter and Kellogg Friday afternoon. Some of their cousin and husband, Mr.
members and leaders were present.
telling us "Why Krogsr Hot(Peeling's perfect bunt. This com­
Mr. and Mrs Coy Kellogg ot Battle very fine work was displayed.
and Mrs. Wm. Schcnkel. one eve­
।
Announcements,
short
talks,
and
' pleted the scoring for T. K T. K.'s '
Dated CoR«« is Fresher." AlCreek.
Lyle Bluings with the coach and ning last week.
j "Battalion of Death" Infield com- ' motion pictures featured the pro­
Mr. and Mrs. George Adrianson three other student* of Kellogg at­
Mr- and MW- Foster Waddell and
gram.
ft
■ posed of Haight. Peeling. Fenton
and Lucile. Mr. and Mrs. Levis tended ■ track meet at Western! son visited her parent* near Lowell
Brand bag, or mini strip trqrn
'and Fischer made some spectacular I
moloay Field Trio.
Johnson
and
Loraine
visited
Mi.
State
Saturday. Kellogg won four I Sunday.
can of Country Club Coflaa.
• stope which made the fans rise to
and Mrs. Harry Blake and Marion medals.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Nichols and
. their feet. Haight at third and Peel.17,0 nlnlh 8rttdc
biology of Battle Creek Sunday. Miss Lu­
children and Mrs. Nichols' parents
TODAY! ASK FOR Y8MR
| ing at short both made beautiful! c,af- accompanied by Miss lutai cile staying over a week longer.
HOT UATKU
EAST GUN LAKE.
from Middleville spent Bunday at
’ one hand stab of line drives that. “"J1 Mr. Carmichael, went on a
The commencement exercises at
Saugatuck.
C«H If "BFflCUl AHU"
Miss
Laura
Kennedy
and
Mra.
FRENCH COFFEE
would easily have gone for extra nc,d trlP UP ^e river last Saturday, the Methodist Episcopal church Fri­
Nearly every mother in town en­
base hits. Schoncielmayer laid into T’1C «lrls atudled mRny trees, among day night were much enjoyed. Tlic Wm. Crawford were shopping in
Including Official Entry Blank,
tertained some of their children for
Plainwell Saturday.
VACUUM PACKED CQFFKE
one of Figg's fast ball* and park­ them were the wild black cherry, iwogram as given u-as: March by
Complete Rulea, Facta to Help
M. Boysen of Hooper has pur­ Mother's Day.
elm. black ash. horse chestnut and orchestra; Invocation. Rev. Ralph
ed
it
on
the
bank
of
the
river
for
You Win, Delicious CoEee
Mr. and Mra. John Belson had hia
chased Heber Pika's cottage and has
COUNTRY CLUB ~. 25c
a double. Had not the wind been hnwthome. Some of lhe trees were Bates; Salutatory. Virginia Van started Improvements. He expects to mother and brother and family
S-t
Recipes I
blowing it would have been a home in blossom. The girls are making Hout; Bong by Eitel ArcnU and have It ready for his family as soon from Rutland also their older, sons
a collection of leaves, wild flowers Bobble Wilkins; Waltz, by orches­
run.
who work away from home as 'their
as
school
is
cloned.
We
are
very
_
The going got tough in the fifth and Insects.
tra; class WlU, Don Higgins; Vocal
guests Sunday.
Mr. Carmichael
caught" some solo. Mrs. Ray Castle; Orchestra; glad to welcome them back to
inning when Sunfield filled the
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox and
CH UE A SANBORN DAI
Wild Wood.
STRICTLY FRISH
base* but CUne got busy and fan­ snakes and taught the girls how to Valedictory. Boyd Morehead; Vocal
Little Dale Null 14 under thc doc­ family spent Sunday al Bellevue.
ned three men In a row. Cline and handle them. He also showed them solo. Miss Elizabeth Doster; Ad­ tor's care at this writing.
Schondelmayer formed lhe losing some mlthane gas bubbling out of dress. Rev. wm. Maylan Jones of
CRESSEY.
Ray
Wlsnewskl
of
Wayland
| battery while Ftgg and Coppe* marshy water and lighted a match Hastings:
Selection.
orchestra; called at the homes of Wm. Craw­
School closed Friday with a pic­
PEL MONTE COFFEE Ik. cat 3 k
i worked for Sunfield.
to prove it would burn.
Presentation of diplomas by Wil­ ford and James Null Monday eve­ nic al the schoolhouse. There were
Wednesday Caledonia ptays there.
The girls also found several forms liam Norris; Benediction by Rev. ning.
67
present.
MICHIGAN MAID
COUNTRY CUB - RICH. REQ
Don la will be out for blood so let's of larvae. One of the forms was the Ralph Bale*. Saturday there was a
Mr and Mrs Wm. Culp accom­
Mra Wm. Crawford and Mrs.
get out and give thc team some sup­ caddice fly of larvae whkh build school picnic on the school grounds, James Null and son Dale were in panied Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Barber
port- Friday we play Hastings.
little cases of sticks or stones ball game*, girl* against boys (not Middleville Tuesday and called on to Cooper on Friday to call on Mr
finished)
Delton
against
home
around tnemseives
aromia
themselves ana
and tnrougn
through ;
Mr. and Mrs Wm. Crans.
and Mra. Clinton Dunham. Mr.
which only their heads protrude. IDelton winning by one point.
Dunham is in very poor health.
Last Thursday, the Junior base­ This is to catch other insects for 1 A good lime seemed to prevail all
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cosgrove and
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
ball team Journeyed up to Caledonia food
They also found larvae In day. Mrs. Hyde and Mrs. McKibbln
her mother. Mrs Newton, Mr. “
and
U*t
Week
’
s
Letter.
weex
,,u
and defeated them 15-7. Fred GU­ rotten wood. Some algae also was h,ve bewi retained for another Lgai
MU. *»h-b Buck .»» honors!
M
i lette pitched a fine game for T. K-.
collected tor microscopic study In &gt;'oartor Hullnjs High school Frldn, J
‘‘‘J1
striking out 15 batters. The game lhe laboratory. Miss luUi showed
Mr.
and
Mrs
Frank
Senslba
and
evening when she won first place In '
llL EnxUn ftnd
COUNTRY CUB - FANCY QUALITY
| went seven innings and despite thc
the girl* a crane which flics in con- family of Duncan lake visited their
COUNTRY GENTLEMAN
... .»
— —
_______ .
fact that Caledonia's pitcher for the trast to the heron with
its ..V
neck
out--■
1 ^ughler. Mrs. Russell
| declamation against many other j। Mr
Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Strong of KalIv**™
CREW 1. RICH
Ethel
May ’Lewis,
1
day pitches for the varsity. T. K. stretched.
।
'(family Sunday. ”
"u“’ *'
*' schools.
| amaxoo visited at the Culp home
GOOD QUALITY WHITE CORN
came out on top.
. .
, . who ha* been spending the week i Bunday visitors at Mr. and Mrs '
Sunday
afternoon
For dinner they
had
roasteti
Uh hcr grBn(jparcnt., rctUmcd lo Waller cuiberl's were Mr. and Mra | Mr. and Mrs. Murle Reynolds and
Senlor News.
weenies.
roasted
rmaraiimallows. her home here
; L. R. BElelcr and family of Middlej The baccalaureate program has buns, cookie* and oranges.
IlBCS
• _.. Mary
_ _ Polley ___
, nnv
On.11 Vs ■■and । son and Percy Solomon, also Mr.
f:\TMOHB BHA.YU
i -Mra.
was ,in Battle ' villa
viUe. Mr. anA
and K.a
Mrs. J.
Roy Smith
, arid Mrs Warren Cairns spent SunjCreek Saturday.
i Mrs Freda Kiutnp ot Caledonia.
COUNTRY CLUB
| day with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. HudDavid Artlip of Wall lake was'
Mr and Mrs. Wm- Hale of North
i son at Vicksburg.
AVONDALE - RED SOLH PITTED
here on business last week.
Carlton spent Sunday with Mr. and
I The gypsies have made trips thru
:
Mr and Mrs. Karl Krick enter-, Mrs. Caryl Fuller and daughter.
this community a couple of differ [ talned the following company lids' Wilbur Landon of North Carlton
। ent times but as far as we hear have
week Mrs. Robert Sponable of I and friend spent Sunday with Mr. • found poor picking. Some of our
Owosso, Mrs L D. Miles and Mrs i and Mra. Arthur Yarger.
TLNsO UK ANU - W.LLU*
Huborl
Maxtow.’ of" «Kalamasoo ■
to ** very ’al,anl
Dobson and sons of Grand Rapids.
*»••*
—» «»--&gt;spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs 1
“dl“
1 Wednesday night Mr. and Mrs.
I Mrs. Lee Reynolds and Donald
I Maurice Hughes entertained al a LaFayette Usborne
| spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs E.
McCreerys Cleoning gives them that
birthday party honoring Mrs. Leon
t D Reynolds at Wall lake
Ernest
STATE ROAD.
Doster of Delton. Other guests weie
care. This summer you con keep your
Sampson also was a guest there.
। Leon Doster and Elizabeth. Delton. Last Week's Letter.
। The C. 8. C. will hold It* Mrmoclothes looking fresh by sending them
I Mrs. Frank Hughes and sons.
Mr. and Mr*. Arthur Coleman and rial service al the cemetery ThursI Charles Jr., and Rankin. Mrs. Belle Nela spent Sunday in Freeport with •*
to us regularly . . . Call us. we will
day.
““ '*
May
— 28.
Mullen and Jane. Charles Hughes. her sister and family. Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Till Conyer visited Mrs. Ida
dean them without shrinking or fad­
Sr. Mrs Ethel Stebben. Mrs. Helen Fox.
FIT er CARNATION
Kenyon at Kalamazoo on Saturday.
Mott and Miss Frances Doster. Ice
ing. and return them to you
Mrs Dora Coleman of Rutland
Mr. and Mrs Clarence Hammond
cream and cake were served. All but spent Bunday with her slater. Mrs of Hastings visited Mr. and Mrs
fresh and clean?
the four last named were Sunday Janet Peltengill.
Laurence Hammond Sunday Nor­
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs M.
Sunday visitors al Jim Sothard's man returned home with them to
OVEN HI ESH
Hughes and Mrs Florence Molt.
were. Mr and Mrs. George Guern- stay a few days.
Misses
Jean
and
Joan
Rogers
-------- ----------_
------ i sey of Freeport, Mr. and Mr*. Clyde
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Hammond
EAGLE BRAND MILK ... 19c
8..C S house parly io Irlends Irons,
nsalln«s; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh are the proud parents of a daugh­
PHONE 2140
HASTINGS
Friday afternoon
,.,„™
till Bunday
..i, eve­
,„o Mr
M[, Howard ter. born May 18.
ning al the Charles Hughes cot­ Chce*eman all of Battle Creek
Wedding bells have rung once
tage. crooked lake. Those present
Mr. and Mr*. Jack O'Connor and again in our community. Bernice
children spent la*t week end with Boarman and Loren Burchett were
her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Winn No­ married Friday. May 16
Rumor
bles of Coral.
says bells will ring again soon.

Griffith

TMFRDU
XeiLOM

ot the brood Jump, with a leap of 17 fi­ labllshlng a record of 1
ll Inches. Woodtapd placed second
-_____ rt third, in th? 220 yard
Hh won another first
oodland won second and
K. iron third. Mlddieof
----------------A dam in the 880 when
Peeling won first. Hamilton look
second and Malchele placed third.

been announced by ths seniors as
follows: March, Pauline Bcnffway;
Invocation. Rev. Rlegleman: Music.
Gay Ion Bell; Scripture, Rev. Fields;
Music. Mr. Myerz; Address; Rev.
Chamberlain;
Benediction.
Rev.
Rlegleman. It will be held at tbe
school on June 7 at I o'clock.

surpassing that ot 10 ft.

S

HOT DATAD JIWRI

COFFEE

2k

BUTTER

53c

85c

hqui

25c

29c

3

25c

^SUMMER

CLOTHES

Need SPECIAL Core

30c

- 10c
COOKIES
FELS NAPTHA SOAP 10

PINK

BUTTER

GENLLNE ALASKA

COUNTRY CLUB

* 10c

VEAL ROAST
LOIN CHOPS

27c

»

RIB CHOPS
n&gt;.

with Fresh IVall Paper,

Paint, and Shades

23c

• Two or three newly papered

29c

PEANUT BUTTER

rooms, a little paint or a few new
window shades will moke your

10c

home more beautiful.
SLICED BACON h*

22c

HADDOCK FILLETS * 13Vic
M) BONE 01 W UTE

ORANGES

coisnir cui - tulbls..,,

SUMMIR SAUSAGE »
FRESH BLUE PIKE

23c

10c

LARGE SIZE

CALIFORNIA - IT’LL OF SWEET JUICE

LET US GET YOUR FORD READY
Your big driving toaton ia juM ahoad...
w oak-end and vacation trip* . • . eve­
ning driving... they ail pile up mileage.

• Out of our large stock of Wall
Papers, Paints and Window
Shades, we con work out any col­
or scheme you wish and at a price

FREE
CHECK

Tkb it the lime te condition your car.

that will more than please you.

Our skilled mechanics have modern
equipment the exact lubricants for your

ft We would also like to tell you

For FRONT END
Alignment Until
June 8th. Don't
MISS THIS OP­
PORTUNITY!

car, and tho Genuine Ford Ports and
Accessories you need to make Ford
ownership most economical and most

about the New Double Life House
Paint that the Devoe Co. has per­

rices

CAUfOKMl.L H5U3T - HXL OF JUIC4

TOMATOES
■ 21c
NEW POTATOES —6 - 25c
HOT HOI M - NO WASTE

*

”*

* Wu

KROGER STORES

•njoyabla. Let us tell you about tho

fected. It will pay you to investi­
gate before your paint.

engines end parts. It's a meneysaver.

UNIVERSAL
GA1AQI

COMPANY

FORD.DEALERS

PHONE 2121
■

whet
on a
cd »
injur

Cool
.Tenn
Mrft.
UlOlli
attei
Woo.

plain

hom
Mrs
nnd

Mi
tou
.luy
Htcp

&gt;on
Mrs

Mra.
and
per.
well

spoil
and
Huy

inus
sonn

scrvi

INVEST in Home Beauty

"■ 23c

BONELESS

the 1
Wi

ton

UeM&amp;tdi/mie

GIANT

VEAL LOIN STEAK
LfONA SAUSAGE

McCREERYS, Dry Cleaners

APPLE

SALMON

29c

1

nlng.

29c

PALMOLIVE SOAP

LIMON*

famil

TOMATO JUICE

KELLOGG'S cirials 40c

i

Ing k

visile
on 8
ML
lai E
ful &amp;

BIG BAR SOAP

5

soft (
•One
have

27c

cherries

EASY TASK-CLEAN QUICK
OR SBEETI1EABT

Ealor
thia ’

BEECH-NUT COFFEE

NUT OLEO

SOAP
CHIPS

thc 1
in Ju

Bor
tiie
noon

23c

29c

Ing I
Berts
tary
Pre
Barrj
and :
ginni.
Older
boys
boys.
Carm
win L
with
Get
natloi
his t
Robel
tings.
Lakci
Carnj

25c

FRESH

MILK

B&amp;)1

,0^

MAXWELL HQUU

COUNTRY CLUB

BREAD

K

HASTINGS, MICH

Carveth &amp; Stebbins
TH! IIXALL STORK

GOODS MLIVtMD
HARTINGS, MICHIGAN

FHONI 2B1

how

US'tp

OU
day
chill
nlc

tain

pin
day
Don

�THEHABTTNGB BANNKR, THCTBDAT, MAT M, HB4

st.:

spent lhe wook
week with her daughter.
Em- end daughter Esther and friend of,
oecu. and fammet BW, in Urbandale, gelling ac- Grand Rapid* ipent Sunday at
qualnted with ber new grandson.. their cottage at Deep lake.
Norman Dale.
| Watermelon
planting
1*
tho
Mr. uu Mn. D. a rutwn' went «« °&lt; "»
&gt;" »M»
tOVTH MA.LK GBOVK.
"Moro than 1,000.000 Girl* and
Boy* in 4-H Clubs tn United Blates."
Margaret Benedict of HMtlngs is
■WM*-’
n.e~4vt.tr
-M. 6. Carton.
listing Mrs. Lester Preston with
and wife in Jackeon.
Boy* from Eaton Rapids. Char­
AND EAST GUN MARSH.
Carl DuBola ha* returned from
lo lie and Hastings will be attend­
Mr. and Mr* Roy Preston and
Mr. Bheflteld proprietor- ot the
Indiana where he ha* been employ­
ing tbe National Hi-Y Congress in ed.
Orange vine
general store
hM son and Mn Grace Brake of Has­
Berea. Ky„ June 30-34. with Secre­
bought
Die
Ann Jessup place of the tings. Misses Helene, Betty and
Mn. Floyd Camel ha* recovered
tary Angell.
heirs
aiid
1*
converting
it
into
a
Carol Plasma of Zeeland spent test
from her recent lllneu and has re­
Present plana looks like Camp
turned home from Borges* hospital lunch room'and beer garden. They Sunday with Mr. and MTS. Lester
Barry will' be operating for Birry in KalainMoo
are doing a cortaiderable amount of Preston.
and Eaton Co. boys and girls, be­
The North Ladles' Aid will be en­ work on thc place.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Cbegramgn
ginning May 30 with supper for the
tertained by Mrs. Smith near Bed­
Clifford Kahllo Is also building and family spent Bunday with Igr.
Older Y group. May 33-34 for Hi-Y ford. - Thuraday, May 24.
an addition to hl* store.
.
and Mrs. Harold Stgnton at Dowl­
boys from Kent Co. Barry Co. H. 8.
Mra. 8- A. McCafferty and neph­ ing.
boy*. Julian Smith of Lakeview. Mr.
MIDDLEVILLE.
ew, AJ‘*n McCafferty, and John
Richard EUUlon of West Ver­
Carmichael of Middleville and Ed­
The Jooea Circle of the M. E. Aid Madden were week end guest* of montville spent Saturday and Sun­
win L. Taylor ol Hulings will assist
friend*
and relative* at McGuffy. I day with hl* grandparents, Mr. and
served
a
splendid
dinner
to
all
on
with-the leadership and program.
Thursday
noon
at
tho
home
of
Mr.
Ohio.
Morris
Canaan
returned
to
Mn.
L W Jarrard while hl* par­
George Campbell ol Cincinnati,
ent* visited lhe tulip «foow at Hol­
nationally known song leader, with and Mr*. Philip Bender on Broad- hte home with them.
his equally capable pianist. Dave
Lodene Madden Is working al the land.
Mrs Minnie B Whllwam
ha* hotel al Trail's End. Gun lake. We
Mr. and Mr*. James Vande Gels­
Robel, pleased assemblies al Has­
tings. Woodland, Middleville and been ill for some time al her home. understand she likes It there very on and Mr. and Mrs Karl Vande j
Gelson of Kalamasoo spent Sun- ,
Lakeview H. 8—last week. Mr Her friends are wishing her a quick much.
Campbell has charge of lhe music recovery.
Mr and Mrs. Wayne Rausbotlon day with Mr and Mrs. Robert Gray i
No school last Friday a* so many and family spent Sunday with lhe and Mrs. Lulu Gray.
for the International Convention of
Mr. and Mra Grover Marshall
lhe Klwanls Clubs at Washington of the pupils wished lo attend lhe former's parent* al ©on* tan tine.
field day meet at Hastings.
This I* the last week of the Or­ spent Tuesday In Battle Creek
in June.
About 30 years ago a young man angeville school and arc the chil­
Mr. and Mrs Loer Snoke and
George Westerman of thc Blate
Y. M 0 A meets with thc Barry- living in Indiana, with several sis­ dren glad after nine months ot daughter of North Kalamo spent
the study. They will have a picnic at Sunday with the Frank Norton
Eaton area committee at Charlotte ters and brother*, left for
west. For a time they heard from Sins
,
this week Thursday evening.
f orally.
tor's.
•■Eleven times as much spent for him. then tor 37 years not a word
soft drinks as for libraries In U. B" was heard, and he was believed to
•One-third of lhe counties In U. 8 be dead. One sister, however, spent
several hundred* of dollar* in trying
have no public libraries."
to locate him. without success. A
few month* ago her husband started
COATS GROVE.
Shannon Brisbin was hurl quite working through the Legion, think­
severely last Friday evening by be­ ing that he would have been in the
service, on account of his age. After
ing kicked In the lace by a horse.
Rev. and Mrs. Clem Jordan and quite an extended correspondence
family attended a dedication serv­ with variou* office* and person*, hl*
ice al Three Oaks on Sunday eve­ address was discovered where he
ning. so there was no evening serv­ had lived for 30 year* and letters
have been exchanged betweeu the
ice here.
Some ot the ladle* did cleaning at brother and sister, much to lhe
thc church last Wednesday fore­ pleasure of both.
Several of our people visited the
noon.
.
Lorin Oversmith of Battle Creek tulip city, Holland, on Sunday
Sunday night's shower was much
visited al the H Woodman home
needed hereabout*. Would like losee
on Sunday.
Miss Freda Smith and Miss Crys­ more, say tho farmers.
The many friends of Supreme
tal Brag don each closed a success­
ful school year last week, the for­ Justice W W. Potter were much
mer at Lake View and thc latter at worried on Monday lo liear that he
had
been taken to a hospital. W. W.
the Wellman school.
has many friend* in this end of the
Walter Thompson was quite bad­
ly injured nt a factory in Hastings county and all hope for hl* quick
recovery.
when lie fell from a crane striking
Farmer* report a deal of damage
on a concrete surface X-rays show­
ed a vertebrae displacement and to crops of different kinds by tho
heavy froet of last week.
injurie* where ills back was broken
a few years ago
KLINGENSMITH.
Mrs Bertha Case.
Mrs None
Melvin Stoku*. sister and chil­
Coolbaugh. Mrs. E O. Smith. Mrs.
Jennie Casts, Mrs. Kendall Coats, dren of Detroit and Walter stoku*
Mrs Alice- Chase. Mrs Pearl De- of Howell were guest* of their par­
moud and Mrs Bessie Woodman ents. Mr and Mrs. Joe Stokus over
attended the Federation mectUig at Die week end.
Roger and Charles converse of
Woodland Thursday.
FAY ON EASY
School will close here pext week near Hastings spent Sunday with
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. George
Tuesday
Monthly Terms
Thc Sunday school is making Converse.
Mr and Mra Wm Stanton and
You Con Make
pions for Children's Day exercises
son of near Orangeville were call­
vSav-A-Step /Slid-A-Tray VTih-A-Shelf
Payments with
er* In this neighborhood SundayPLEASANT UILL
Vlliuminctcd 11-Point Cold Control
Mr
and
Mrs
James
Slorkan
en
­
VJumbo Vegetable Freshener Vjumbo
Recent callers at thc 8 B Nlbbs
your electric
home were Mrs M It Wood and tertained Mr. and Mra Frank 8lorSliding Fruit Basket V Economical Twin
Mrs Mabie Phillips. Battle Creek, kan. Leo Storkan from Cleveland
Cylinder Compressor Vimproved Extra
bill
nnd Mra Claggett and children and and Joan Storkau of Grand Rapids
Large Freezing Unis v Automatic Inte­
lhe past week
lhe Berends children
rior Light V Vaulted Construction
The Qhadwlck and Van Tuyl
Mr and Mrs Curtis Pierce and
ion Wendell of Allegan spent Sun­ farms arc pretty well set out to
day with her parents. Mr and Mrs trees and grape vines by me pwa
workers io make arbors for wild .
Stephen Carter.

Y.M.C.A. ITEMS

i1w-w——■puajsuqqMmmmnfl

w-

........... . ■"■j

FURTHER PRC

B,V“'! »ht

Mr and Mrs. Bert Palmer and
un Paul were Sunday visitors of
Mrs Ambie Mugridge at Middlev»le
Monday caller at Mr and Mrs.
H B. Nlbbs' were Mrs Fred Manker.
Mrs Roas Johnson of Jackion. Mr
and Mra Sid Fifteld and Lloyd Har­
per
Sim hasn't been feeling k&gt;
well lately
Mr and Mrs Clifton Campbell
spent Sunday with their daughter
and husband. Mr and Mrs. Lester
Raymond, near Hopkins.
The woods have been full of
mushroom hunters this spring and
some report good finds, but the sea­
son is getting rather late for them
Our sympathy goes out lo "Ob­
serving Tommy' in getting hi* "Ob­
servations" past lhe censor
Any­
how. we enjoy what docs get past,
also jane Cameron's kindly phil­
osophy

STEWRRT-WARNER

Mr nnd Mra. Moore of near'Gun
lake expect to move on lhe A. C.
Johnson place soon.
Chester
Overstnilh
of
Battle
Creek. Lee Lapham and children of
Maple Grove spent Sunday after­
noon with little Joyce Lapham at
the Tripp home
Archie Burd, who ha* been workIng for Frank Green in Nashville.
spent Sunday with home folk*

.
।
|

'
'
i

—™ See ft Today At

।

Goodyear Bros. Hardware Co.
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

TELEPHONE 2101

THAT IT WILL PAY YW
DO ALL YOUR SHOW
AT A1PFOQD STORE
Prigs* ere LOW EVERY RAY—tort Just
BUT EVERY DAY.

bi lit hI ‘ ■ . । S • Mr idlti'

“ lie

Maxwell Hetfs* Coffee
S*nk» Coffee

19*

Jello Ice Cream Powder
Baker's Cocoanut

15c
pU

10c

Heins Soupi

Grapenuts

15c

Wyandotte Cleanser

Rajah Salad Dressing

lie

Bitquick

bottle

23c

N. B.

boitlo

15c

£2*^

Hire's Extract

Kraft's French Dressing

Sunbrite Cleanser
Sno-Sheen
2-lb.

Carton Lard

Kelloss'5

RANF1EI.D.
Our scimo! close* this week Thurs­
day for the summer vacation The
children and their parent* will pic­
nic al clear lake on Saturday Mr
Lamar, our teacher, has been re­
tained for the coming year.
Mra Orvin Smelker and daugh­
ter. Marten, and Mrs, Orate Mur­
phy of near Freeport, were Thurs­
day evening dinner guests ol Mra
Don Putnam

Raal estate values oro rising . . . now ii the tkme
to build, remodel or repair.

Your bank, building and loon company and lum­
ber dealer are co-operating with individuals

Felt Naptha Soap
Larsen'» Veg-All

10

Am. Family Flakes

Soap Chips

Clean Quick

it:

Lux or Ivory Flakes

Kitchen Klenser
Morton's Salt

5

Fig Bars

ci"'"

41c

Cigarettes
Woodbury's

10c

Good Luck

lie

ie*

1S&lt;
Margaring

lie

19c Oxydol or Chips*
29c Fels Naptha Chip*
21c Climslcne

19&lt;
19c

»«

C.r.ab

15c

Whitehouse Milk

3

21c

Scut Tissue

27c

Waldorf Tissue

lb.

*•

a

Salads Teg

1

Hills Bros. Coffee

M*
■-"‘-21c

Splendid Flour

Milk

Del Monte Coffee

6

«« 30c

25c

Beech Nut Coffee

26c

Northern Tissue

29c

Kaffee Hag

15c
roll*

19* J

1I&lt;

22c

Brown Sugar

Critco or Snowdrift

55c

4X Sugar

Kellogg's All Bran

19c

Instant Postum

5‘

19c

Postum Cereal

19c

Block Pepper

19c

Sunayfield Oats

19s

Grape Juice

10c

Calumet

*i

Cigars

to

Prunes
Baby Foods

Scratch Feed

cuS!

““ 25c

Egg Mash

America ii building belter homos.
A Home is Only oi Good os It* Materials.

Our Own Tea
Sard! net

V1" c“»’« '

LaUI

Daily Egg Brand

25c
.... J5C

l-lb.

X. J9e

lie

Heine*.
Clapp's, Garber's

Campbell's Soups

1

2T«
7. $1.98 Palmolive Soap
i.”. 291 Karo Syrup

Ajax Sc«p

99c

Growing Mash

19c

Chick Feed

25c

Chick Starter

39c

Turkey Starter

37c

Turkey Grower

25c

16% Dairy Feed

12.19 IS. 14
XMMI 11.14
11.10 $2.2*

PICKLE CONTRACTS

AND SEED

WALLA WE HEED STORE,
Hastings
CITY NAT!- BANK
Nashville
SMITH 4 DOSTER
HARDWARE.
Delton.

Tha

GRADING

Machin*

Beef Pot Roast

SUMMER TIME IS SCREEN TIME !

As the recommended plant­
ing time ia thc First Ten
Day* in June, please get
your contract and seed AT
ONCE!

27c i*

Choice Cluck
Cut*

Hava the Home Lumber Company “Fix-It Man" repair
ypyr screens, or if you need new ow, have Kim build
them far you. . . . Wo have in stock Screen Materials
and Screen Doors of all sixes end prices.

2

Hockless Picnics

Sugar Cured

Bacon Squares

He

Short Ribs

Ground Beef

Large Bologna

11c

Mqqtv Cute

Boiling Beef

MIDDLEVILLE CO-OP­
ERATIVE CO­
Middleville.

PORK CHOPS

BEEF ROAST

The Home
Lumber Co
Builds Homes

May be obtained al lhe
following ptacaa —

19c

Summer

I9c ’Cottage
2 lbs. 25c

’

which we uw. assures ev­
eryone of a square deal
Wo would not bo the larg­
est exclusive sailers of eu- •
eumber pickle* in tbo U- 8.
A. 11 we did not treat th*
grower fairly.
b-3|

THE HOME LUMBER CO.
PHONE 2276

'

WAITINGS

He­
lls |

Whitehouse Coffee

A-Penn Oil
Cusraau,
Bl-,,S«an,S,ld
riOUr
Pamll, or Faalr,
Yukon Ginger Ale

GEO. K. WALKER
&amp; SONS

Brood

Wt 15c

&amp; «•&lt;

C. Fig Tatte
Miracle Whip

21c

■’—$1.15

Cigarettes

1
.

25c

89c
J3c

I

Swansdawn

IN
IM

v.'iX

2r .r p‘”^kw“l.li”pk&lt;Fp.kp“.n*dt Shopjia.

Lily White Flour

J*

Coco-Cola
bottle chg.
8 o'clock Coftoo

17c

PAG or Kirk's
• Never before, in the history of this country, hot

Heine Cube Pkl'lts

Post Toasties

Iona Peaches

BARE FACTS

9c

Heins leans

Kate Smith

1 .&lt; I* I &lt;»(»!&gt; STOKI

�Tflt BASTINGS BANNER. THUKBDAt, MAT il. ItM
- home of Dr. and Mra. H. 8. Wedel1 and Mrs. Lorbeck and aon. Lovelle,
Mra. Chas. Hendershott had her
FREEPORT,
ever, to explosive and due.care nnut , mites from faming gaitorua bj Monday and burial here.
Supt Harrington with a class ot mother, Mra. Hammond, as her Lost Week's Letter.
be observed in lu use Sodium ars­ j which they can get up from the
• s Letter were Mr.
Lost weex
, and Mra.
were
Samuel
mt. ana
Zaharee
Mrs. j will move
----------to their
farm near Scotts.
Future Farmers of America from
enate. used in a five to ton per cent ground.
Swidw.
|---------------------------------------------’ Funeral services for Miss Ansellne
Montgomery, Mich., and Mrs. Michigan.
1
M
Angaiine MaWe BuUhtr of Waahlnttoni D. c.
3. Ail wood In contact with tha Kellogg school attended the consolution, has been recommended on
The Rev. and Mra. Prichard en­
Mr. and Mra. Robert Bryans Kauffman, aged 81. were held Wedlhe Pacific coast for eliminating soil Should be treated as we said vention at East Lanalng last week, vtoltod their son Howard and fam- nesday afternoon with burial in the
Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Stewart and tertained their daughter. Beatrice
whito-anu. After lhe liquid, what­ above.
Mr. and Mrs. O. Harrington's home Uy In Cloverdale on Mother'* Day.
Mennonlto cemetery Mis* Kauff- children spent Bunday with bar of Kalamazoo on Mother's Day.
3. All pipes of any kind whatever wu the acene of the annual senior
ever il to. has been injected with an
Mis* Phyllis Brumm of Grand
Sunday guest* at Albert Brill * man passed away on Monday at the parents, Mr. and Mra. Lewis Yeller
be cemented tightly
Into the frolic Wednesday night, 23 attend- ___ _
oil gun or syringe and it seems that should
------------------------------,
Rapid* spent Bunday at her home
on Sunday were Otto DeMott and home of a niece. Mra. Daniel Weav(Continued from page 1. Sec. 3»
gnied the neat foundation wall, and
..
and each
pipe ,
Mother's Day was fittingly ob­ here.
famlly with Mra. Ella Lahr from er. of near Elmdale, following a long
_. a_ flange
Maurice Ford and Mra.
Si
-- „r.n»(r»fri »hould be opened up and if the tlm- should carry
of. corroalonserved at lhe Methodist church
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wetherbee
the Gregory district. Percy Dimond illneaa.
nPthri^hrok 1
100 b*d,y ‘b,n»*8ed tW rtsistont
metal tightly fitted into
resistant metal
1 Sunday morning. A fine ,program
—..— and Mrs. Al Newman were guests of
p„«. Fill
Mnu M.~n
" j™!/ iSKj and family and Mr. and Mra. ClinAt a meeting of the business men ---------- , ------------- ..
1 should be replaced. If possible, p’— ----------------- —
------" n^r^n rh^h to Itort a Uwse new
treated cconcrete floor and wall with asphalt Wednesday
ton Lahr from Hastings
| of Freeport Thursday afternoon, a was rendered and bouquet* of wild i lhe ladies' parent*. Mr. and Mra. Al'
flswer*. gathered by the children.1 mon Sheldon. In Katamaaoo SunSunday guests and callers at the
*' **
Mnchome and to a
wamlne 1 with C&lt;M| Wr
or replaced i
Ilk. dr*
Mr* R4*4 Whldby and children home of George Kelley were Mra. ganized. L B. Lester was elected were presented to the mothers pres- . day.
4. lei Lillies do not like dry. well_ ■ &gt;» ।
to
. wlth concrete. The pressure meth­ vtnllUM
also presented to
Gail Lykins was In Battle Creek
ptore,
Frov™ .mpl. Ihave
“,e returned ,,
from
°m *
a w
week'a
“k* k
visit
'*lt 1 Hazel Doxtor and son with Mr. president, and Lawrence Endres. ent. A bouquet was
rl,
Ulr
yuuu&lt;cll on business Tuesday.
Od U tte tai ttornh mo,! ,«penMra. Carl Rogers,
the youngest
with her people at Gregory.
tn
Cl
hiiM
y
*th*
MUr*r' V
decided mot
er present,
I
Laux
from
Lowell
and
Mr.
and
Mra.
ventilation
and
light
beneath
the
One» found in tt. ho™, ft U •"••*&gt;■ &lt;“ *™“"« »IU1 lh'
—h
2-ZL and another lo
1:|
Mr*. Sylvia Yeider expect* to be
Mrs. Lynn Lawrence to recovering Collins from Bedford.
£|. mmm.er1U^,r dr“’ln«&gt;
Mra. Della Yule, the olde«t mother ' ...._________________ __ __________
house structure, also plenty
of
Mra. Della Yule, lhe oldest mother, able io return to her form home •
well to go over lhe walls and wain- ,
from a severe throat infection u to
and around
it.
S
A beautiful poem writton by Mrs. L. this week.
awin. and ail aeneaaihia narts with I There are several things to re- drainage -beneath-----------—
also Gordon Prouty.
talned this month at lhe home of
a hammer and a piece of chalk, in । member in the prevention of ter&amp;•
onths
I..
1 B LesUr Bnd recently published in ' Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Clark of Ha*Mra. Henry Kraus has returned Mra. Foi rest Hall at 238 East faTfurthar
-—- — -— —,_
the Aovocaie
Advocate in nonor
honor oi
of her moth- tings. Mr. and Mrs. L H Cook of
Ha anaeaa
every Six months.
II lo her home near Gull lake after a
order that
that Ithe
spaces (ha(
that have
have mites
mites Thev
They are
are as
as follows:
follows:
for further consideration.
consideration It
it to also
.Iso er
....g------------IIKmory
22 ------------was read
4 by
bv Mlu ,
UMe Mr
ftnd
Further information on the sub-~ ! winter spent with her daughter In Thom street in Hastings.
been hollowed out may be located
1. No wood in any building should
The Mother's
Mutterv Day
Il.y program BunBun- . pUnned
planned to dtacuss
dUcua lhe
tie, orjuitttUon
___________ wb„fc, ,„d' ,
,rge bouquet was Colin T. Munro were Monday eveand marked. The next step is to be placed nearer than 18 Inches to ject may be obtained in the library.
'■ ' New Jersey.
dab
wnn certainly
muMalrelv fine
nn« and
end enjoyed
•nlhvpd of
Of s
a baseball
DAsebBll team at a later
la tar meetmart. ^I^dlcated tO the memory
f ____
day was
of" all ning guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clair
drill into the hollowed-out cavities the ground. Capping all found*' Thirty members and five guests by a targe congregation. Each ing.
HICKORY
CORNERS.
Purnlss.
with a clean-cutting quarter-inch, । uons with a hon-corroding meta)
attended the Home Literary Club mother received potted pansies and 1 Maurice Overholt was home from mothers gone before.
Week end guests of Mrs. Fred
or perhaps one-eighth inch drill.1 which is laid flat In one Inch ot Last Week's Letter.
I May breakfast at Mra. Agnes
“
Miss Bernice Pennock and mother' Shultz's home Thursday. The next the same remembrance was sent to ’
TAMARAC.
Wotring and her mother. Mrs. Hul•nd Inject some volatile killing Portland cement mortar on lhe top
Gary Newton went lo Lansing
llnger were: Mr. and Mra. O. M.
•gent like keroeene. Three ounces of the foundation wall and which of Kalamazoo were callers at M. M meeting will be at the home of Mr*. all the mothers in lhe community
Last
Week's
Letter.
who weren't present. Much credit Monday on a business trip of a few
of • good grade of pyrethrum pow- extends at least 2 inches from the Rockwell's Sunday.
Henry Whldby with Mrs. Dorothy is due the committee for their work. days.
Dayton Jordan Is seriously 111. Hullinger and daughter Rbeta of
The baby son of .Mr and Mrs Pettingill assisting.
der added to the kerosene makes | foundation on each side and at an
His soil
son Lee
urr.iruin
from Edmore
croiiwic came
mine to
w Royal Oak. Mr'
. . and. .Mrs. .Ralph
„ . H.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Bird have nu»
lhe treatment more effective, though , angle of 45 degrees downward. is Lloyd Sheffield died Frida;. May
see him Sunday
Hullinger and daughter ot Detroit.
Mra Bertha Humphrey is sufFAJR LAKE.
moved Into lhe former Chas. Austin
it to not necessary. Kerosene, how- , recommended as It prevents the ter- 8th. of pneumonia. Funeral was■ fering from a broken right arm.
Mtt. Mar&gt; Nutt, formerly of ttle «&gt;“ LoulM Wotrlns of unatt, .nd
All remember the Kinsley Ladies’ house on
Main
street.
Arthur
*«“&gt;"« “' Kolemaeoo.
Howard Harrington and Ross Aid which will meet May 27. for Sherman and family are moving Vlelnlty. paaaed ,w Tuead.y «t
Norwood attended
the
Future supper, with Mrs. Winnie Nye. Mra. into the Mike Flynn house, vacated her home In Woodland. For »l» , "L"5,“SdCKn.m TmS.
Mr; “*Jd ,Mrs‘
Sm*thFarmers' gathering at East Lansing Vaughn and Mrs. parmalae art In by the Birds, which they recently1 time she has been token care of by
purchased?-”---------.............................-Mrs. Cha*. Ftorley. She wtrai nearlv Rnh
R°b*
*rl
rt “and
nH Marlnn
Marion ”
spent
~n‘ R,,nHov
Sunday
last week afid- practiced with the the group with her.
’ 1 with their mother. Mrs. Shaw at
F. F. A band of about 60 who will '
Mrs. Davis. Arthur Longbrake
Painting, both interior and extor- bllnd “nd h*s
crippled with
Middleville.
play at the National Conference at and Miss Blanche Goldsworthy of lor. at the Moulton w M. church, rheumatism for many yeura.
6. McClrtuSl M Vermontville u |,
v“‘"
•“ »&gt;"»
Kansas City. October 18th.
; Battle Creek were Sunday visitor* has begun. The yard will also be
"
-- --------- Milo Barber is very ill.
l"' ”“k
of Mrs Earl Fritz.
landscaped, plans are under way for visitin, hl. brother. Norm.nO MeMr. and Mrs. Wm. Ray and son '
VT.„T„ „
Cirltand and family
1 June ,nd Gloria Jean Carpenter
Mrs. Will LUU of ..
Bunnell
ia u
ill, a
big
homecoming celebration
Buell Wise Is building a new bam ।
''ome. ,fr°m *ch0°' ,Mt *•*“
of Battle Creek spent Sunday at at
ai the
uic home
ironic of
oi her son. Bert
tjert Lilt*.'
Liu*:
there July 4 and 5on the former Wm Purdun farm i w,th thc chicken pox.
Wintford Rockwell's.
|I xtrs
Mrs Earl
Earl Frit*
Fritz and
and children
children and
and
Miss Donna Moore of Jackson
Mra. A. F. Jensen and son of Kai- Mra. Lottie CollUier and children spent the week end here with her
Geo. Riser of Lake Odessa. Dorr
CRESSEY.
am* zoo spent Sunday with Harry • attended the tulip festival al Hol- parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. E Moore.
Everett and two sons and Bernard
Last Week's Letter.
Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Avery Pet- tana
land oaiuroay.
Saturday
Rev. Fem Wheeler, accompanied Smith of Wamerville were callers
tlngill.
.
11 ...................
Mrs. Fisk of Kalamazoo to spend­
Lola Miller and family of Bat- «y
uumib.
Smith's.
by mis
Mrs.. un«Chas. Moore.
Moore. Mra.
Mra. unas.
Chas. . this past week at Bertie »
Mr and Mrs Emerson Lewis and tie Creek have come to the lake Bunn and Mrs. C- N. Van Patten' They have been drawing logs pur- ing several days with Mr. and Mra.
Delbert Enzian.
Mr and Mrs Joiui Lewis of Kala­ t® live.
attended the Joint meeting of lhe । chased of the taller.
Chas. Barber, who lived in this
mazoo were callers Saturday eveJudge and Mrs Stuart Clement Barry county Ministerial Assn, and I
----------------- - ----------------------community for several yean, passed
1 ning al Harry Jones'.
of Hastings were Sunday evening ______
Bunday
_______
School____________
workers at______
Wood­
NASHVILLE.
away nt his home In Kalamazoo
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Elliott had . callers at Lottie Collister-*.
tar.d
Tuesday.
A
i-X
'
'
land Tuesday. A pot luck dinner Last Week’s Letter.
Friday
night. The funeral will be
Mr. and Mrs. George Elliott of De­ ।
Ray Pierce and family of Ban- rzc
was enjoyed it
at noon
Earle Felghner. the Rev. and Mrs. held at his former home here,
troit as their guests Saturday.
I field and Mra. Bert Smith
and
- ■
Mr. and Mrs. John
Mishler of C- C- Gibson and family of Detroit where hto son Irving and family
Mrs Theron Aldrich. Mra. Clark daughter Dorothy of Katamaaoo
Grand Rapids were week end guests spent the week end with their par- now reside.
Aldrich and Mr. and Mrs Fred El- / were guests Saturday night of Lot­ of
aiater Mr.
Mr and
»nd ! ent's. Mr and Mrs. Frank Felgh­
ot their brother and sister.
Mr. and Mrs O. R Roblyer and
Hott were entertained at the home i tie Collister.
Mrs. wm. Mishler of Bowne.
ner.
family spent lhe week end with
, of Mra. Mowry Aldrich, Gull lake,
Mr. and Mrs. Hitchcock of 8onoMr*. Ellen Secse returned to her
Maurice Leeple. nephew of E. L.
I on Mother's Day.
ma were guests Sunday at Harvey home here Wednesday after spend­ Appelman succeeds him as manager her parents. Mr. and Mrs Brenner
at
Shelbyville.
Trick's.
ing lhe winter with her daughters. of Ute
-—________
Nashville__________________
and Vermontville
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Reynolds and
HENDERSHOTT.
Mrs. Merritt Lewis and family of Mra. Wm. OUhouse and Mra. Asahel Consumers Power office. Mr Appelfamily entertained at their home
। Last Week's Letter.
I Bellevue visited her brother, Charles Thompson of Bowne.
man has been transferred lo Has- Bunday In honor of Mrs. Jennie
Mr and Mrs Chas. Van Vranken Pixley. Sunday. Their son. Roland.
Mr. and Mrs Ed Coates spent a tings.
Reynolds' seventy-second birthday.
visited their daughter. Mrs Basil I of Nashville was also a guest.
few dayi with their daughter. MrsJ Miss Elizabeth Gibson and friend
Mr. and Mrs. D. Enzian, Mrs.
Hayward, and family In Alto on
Edwin Pixley visited friends in Clarence Doty and family at Level of Kalamazoo spent Sunday with
Conyer and Mrs. Fisk motored to
Sunday.
Bellevue Sunday.
Park.
; her parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Bradley. Monday to.visit Mr. and
Mrs. Mary Hooper returned home Gibson
Mrs. Leslie Enzian aiid family.
last week Tuesday after spending
Friday night the firemen and
lhe winter with her sisters. Mrs. J. ‘ their families enjoyed a delicious
THREE CORNERS.
D. Zagelemler, and Mrs. Fanny chicken supper at Hie Masonic Last Week's Leiter.
Spaulding at Hastings.
I Temple There
were
forty-one
If in need of a sprfhg tonic, fare
YOUR OLD
Mr and Mrs. Gall Lightfoot and present
ye forth to enjoy nature where ev­
aon carl spent Sunday with Mr.
The Cheerful Charity class met ery living thing is vying with one
TANK
and Mrs. Emery Miles at Kalama- Friday at Mrs ciiarles Brumin's another for color, beauty and charm
aoo.
I for a one o'clock dinner The class
—the steady hum of the bees, busi­
Supervisor Wm. McCann and Vil- had been divided into the Whites ly engaged amidst the dainty green
lage Assessor J D. Knowles made' and Reds, so lhe losing side, the foliage of lhe willows, sipping nec­
their annua) calls about town last I Whites, entertained tbe Reds Their
tar from lhe blooms: the song of
week, assessing property.
leader was Mrs. Otto Schulze.
the frogs, not a discordant croak;
Mr. and Mrs c. B Baxter have |
Mother's Day was appropriately trilling meadow larks; whistling
rented the Jacob Reuter house and , observed at the various churches. A quail; even the woodchuck has
moved Tuesday from the second unique service al lhe Evangelical shaken off the lethargy of hiberna­
floor of their store building.
| church was the chalk drawing* by
ventured forth
■-dinmbu.. ho™ horn ; tt, pu.or. R-v PrUh.rt Durtti ' tion and
"XoTuX
ST in search
Kalamazoo over the week end.
the Sunday School hour. Mrs. Tar- -nd
th.
heaiitifiiliu idumaawi
Mrs. Deina Renach. who is at bell, who was 98 year* old. was pre- piteaaan^
lhenow^oarns
beautifully
unafraid^
plumaged
’
the home of her daughter. Mrs senled with a gift for being the oldn°* ro*T*
Mrs. Agnes Kelley of Hastings
James Radford of Hastings while est mother and Mrs Demeray the |
spent Sunday with her son and wife,
she to in Florida, spent a couple of youngest.
Mr and Mrs George Kelley.
days last week at her home here
I Mrs. Grace Calkins and son ChesClaude A. Hammond attended the
Mlss Ruth Wheeler spent from ter are spending a few days with
j Friday evening until Sunday after- the former s alster. Mrs. E E Van Barry Co. Rod and Gun Club sup­
per at Hastings Thursday evening.
। noon in Grand Rapids, the guest of Nocker in Lansing
Mr arid Mrs A. E. Steury of Lan­
, Mra. Albert Rosenberger.
I
Mr and Mrs. John Johnson nnd
sing visited the latter's parents. Mr.
! A son. Kenlth H.. was bom to daughter of St Mary's Lake and Mr.
and Mrs John Malcolm, over lhe
Mr. and Mra. Ceil Preston on Thura- and Mrs. Jack Elliston of Maple
week end; Mra John Malcolm and
.day May 7. Mr and Mrs. Preston ; Grove. Ion Gage of Battle Creek
Mrs Stanley Malcolm returned to
| live on the Wolcott farm A daugh- and Merlin Gage of Jackson spent Lansing with them to remain for a
—----- .-------- -Sunday with their parents. Mr. and
few days' visit.
and Mrs. Andrew Service of Has- Mrs O. L Gage
With their infant daughter. Alyce
I tings on Monday May 4
Miss Pauline Bowman of Lansing
Beatrice, and Donna. Mr. and Mra.
The Juniors of p. H. 8- enter- spent the week end at her home Elmer Walters of Ionia spent Moth­
1 Ulned the seniors at a theater par­ here.
ers Day with the latter's parents,
, ty at the Savoy at Grand Rapids
Harold Woodard and Farrell Bab­ Mr and Mra Edw Walters
; Friday evening. About 35 were pres­ cock who have been working in Lan­
Mr and Mrs J. Shirley Wing and
ent Including, lhe teachers
sing. have leased lhe Standard Oil
sons. Robert. Kenneth and Law­
Sunday afternoon guesu at lhe Service Station of Mr Lorbeck Mr
rence, of Grand Rapids were Sun­
day afternoon guests of Mr. and
Mra. Claude A. Hammond and fam­
ily.
Maury E Moore and Miss Clara
J. Bisson spent Sunday in Grand
Rapids as guests of Mr. and Mra.
Ployd Walters and daughter. Ma­
rian.
Mr and Mr. Ualr VrIUr wrrr
Mother s Day guests of their son
and daughter-in-law. Mr and Mra
Lester Yeller of Kalamasoo
Mr and Mrs. John Malcolm In
company with Mr and Mra A E
Steury of Lansing called on Mr.
and Mra. Arnold Malcolm and fam­
ily of Lake Odessa Saturday eve­
ning
nnd Wendell. Norris and'
Charlotte ill with measles—a rather
For Bost Results
unpleasant experience this warm
weather.

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Special Introductory Offer!

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• To make it easy for every tank user to profit olxjnce from
this new home necessity, we moke this special offer—$1.79

touch with him right away and

down installs it—with 18-month terms—as little os $1 80 a

month. And you con trade in your old furnace coil or other
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• This heater completely installed con be purchased on 18­
month terms for as little as $33 15 with your old equipment.

No other carrying charges.

obligation.

FORD

DEALERS

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• By concentrating on only ona motor fuel,
economist ore effected in refineries, ware­
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That is why we are able to give you HighTest Action, High-Knockless Power and
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HASTINGS

PHONE 11 ST

�—
Coming AUractiont al
The Strand Thtalar
GaMe, Harlow and
in
"Wtf* n. Sacra
This is a story presented
all-atar cast Think of awing
aabia, Joan Hartow and Myrna Loy
all in on* picture, oabte ia seen in
th* rate ot th* husband caught
tween the love of two women,
wife. Myrna Loy, and hl* aecretagy.
Jean Harlow. A«sociated with them
an May Robson. Hobart Cavanagh
and James Stewart.

Barbara Stanwyck in “Ited Salute.”
Barbara and her leading man.
Robert Young, go through a aerie*
ot exciting and hilarious adventures
as a pretty, socially prominent co­
ed and a young American buck pri­
vate who find themselves stranded
across the Mexican border and
make a breakneck dash for home.
The story run* the gamut of com­
edy. romance and thrills.

*ter of Battle Creek, called on Mr
*nd Mr*. C- N. Tobias Bunday aft­
ernoon.
Frank Golden spent Bunday with
hi* father, Nathaniel Golden, in
Baltimore.
Mr. and Mra. Ronald Haynea have
movsd onto her father's farm tn
Baltimore. Mr. and Mr*. Lyle Beadle
and family are moving into the
house vacated by the former.
are sorry to lore there friends
wish them success in their
home, and also welcome Mr.
Mr*. Beadle.
Mra. Altha
Hendershott . —
mother. Mr*. Hammond of Hastings,
called on Mrs. Edd Newton Wed­
nesday afternoon.
Our school closes next Saturday
with a picnic dinner at theschool-

Gtteste of Mr. and Mn. Gerald1
Tiacher Sunday w*r* Mr*. Garcia
Tischer, Mr*. O. Phelps. Mis* Nell:
Jones, Miss Hawi Beach and Joel
Norman of Lansing
1
Mrs. Dorr Layle of Clarksville
called at the home of Mr. and Mr*.
Fred Henney Thursday.
Mis* Jessie Wilson and friends of
Hastings. Miss Hasel cairns. Miss
Anna Beck and Clarence Calms
were Holland visitors Sunday.
Mr. and Mr*. W. P. Hale enter­
tained relative* from Battle Creek
Sunday.
We *re glad to report that Burl
Farrell is convalescing from a long

Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
McElnjurry over the week end
were the former's daughter. Ada
and husband of Washington. D. C..
who were recently married. They
left Ulla morning for California j
from where they soon sail to china j
to take up ministerial work there. |
The best wishes of their friends go i

Our last community meeting for
the season was Friday evening. Rev.
Hitching of Hastings gave a very
Interesting talk. Mr. and Mrs. L.
Hendershott and son and Mra. Venna Slocum furnished thc music,
which was enjoyed by all. Mra.
Burrell Phillip* was elected preslMARTIN CORNERS.
I dent, Mra. Goldie Casey, vice-presi­
Beary-Slanwyek-Boles in
Mrs. Bernice McGowan of Chi-,
dent. the teacher. Miu Gertrude
"A Meeaage to Garda.” McPhariin. secretary-treasurer, for cago vtaited her sister. Mr*. Agnes'
A glamorous story of an adven­ next year.
Barry, and family a couple of days,
ture that changed the destinies of
,h*
“"*lr
three nations
features
Barbara
Stanwyck and John Boles. Teamed
Icrdlng of Hartings were married
with Wallace Beery, they enact a
Saturday of last week and imme­
story of high adventure and cour­
diately moved into Elmer Gillespie's
age in the line of duty. A crashing alan'a tn Cressey last Wednesday.
tenant house. He Is working for
climax permits Beery to lead Gar­
Mr*. Anna Kahler and son Dorr Orton Endsley, congratulation* and
cia's men to the aid of Boles and of Woodland were Sunday visitor* best wishes for their happiness.
Mias Stanwyck and brings thc pic­ at Clifford Kahler's.
Sunday school Sunday at 10:30
ture to a happy close.
o'clock. You are cordially Invited.
family of Cedar Creek moved Into
Dog and Horse Star in
urday of this week with a picnic
their new home here Saturday.
“Two In Revolt"
Mr. and Mra. High are now living dinner. Everyone invited. Bring
A distinctively different type .of
your pot luck dinner and dishes.
in Carl Ricker's house.
screen fare. Is this picture. Moat of
Arba Pitlengcr of BatDc Creek
Henry Craven of Battle Creek was
the setting Is laid on a large horse­
was a Sunday caller on his old
In this vicinity Friday.
breeding ranch in Montana. The
Visitors at Chas. Kahler's Bunday schoolmates. Lyle Fisher and Alfred
story revolves around the friend­
were: Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stenger of and Orr Fisher. Mr. Pittenger lived
ship of lhe ranch's moat promising
Milo. Mr and Mra. Homer HUI and as a boy on the farm now owned by
coll and a wolf dog puppy with
baby of Grand Rapids. Mr. and Lyle Fisher. He had been visiting
which it grows up. When the dog
Mrs, Lewis Hunt and two children his old friend and neighbor. Mrs
is driven in disgrace from the ranch
and Mrs. Irving Brown of Comstock Mattie Johnson in Hastings.
It reverts to Its savage ancestry and
Cha*. Laubaugh made a business
joins a wolf pack. The theft of the trip to Hastings Saturday.
Sunday visitor at Mr and Mrs. Ro­
horse causes a dramatic reunion be­
Mra. R. M Sprague spent the land Barry's.
tween lhe two, which leads to the week end in Toledo. Ohio.
Mrs. Eda Tyler of Woodland visexciting horse race climax of lhe
picture.
weln Saturday.
Mrs. Winnie Curd and Mrs. Edith
Mr and Mrs. Willard Hilton re­
SOI Ttf BOWNE.
Campbell will entertain tbe Bun­
Mr and Mrs. George Clark of nell L. A. 8. for supper Thursday. turned Saturday from a week's
Belmont and father and mother. May 2S. al the home of Mrs. Camp- visit with relative* In Flint.
Mr. and Mrs
Norman Barry
Arthur Clark and wife, of Bowne
of Hastings were Saturday after­
Center, called al Will Mishler's Fri- ,
noon visitors at Mr. and Mrs. Ro­
day on their way to Hastings.
moved to their new home at North­ land Barry's.
Gwendolyn Mishler and Edith j east Barry. We are sorry to lose
Cramer attended lhe Logan school them from our neighborhood.
HENDERSHOTT.
picnic Saturday.
School closed Friday with a mlcJacob Ruckle ot Grand Rapids nic at the schoolhouse. Mix? Skid- Detroit spent Saturday and Sunday
was a supper guest of Will Muhler more will be back again this fall. at Chas. HandarsbeU's . and are
and family Saturday.
Mrs. Henry Wertman spent the now visiting nt Floyd Garrison's. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Cosgrlfi of Low­ most of Die past week at thc home MeClear Is a cousin of Chas, and
ell visited the tulip farm at Holland of her son. Myron, of Battle Creek. Floyd.
Bunday and were supper guests at Myron has been very ill with pneu­
Grace Brill went to Leslie Thurs­
Jennie Pardee's.
monia but La slowly on the gain.
day with John Sullivan'for the re­
Harold Yoder and family vUited
Mr. and Mrs. Ardy Owen spent mainder of the week. Her parents
Bunday at the Emory Keim home Saturday with Uielr children at with Mrs Nellie Matthews of Has­
in Campbell.
tings spent Sunday with thc Sulli­
Callers at lhe Jennie Pardee home
vans and brought Grace home with
during the week were: Mr. and Mrs.
John Nash and daughter Marie. Mr
Margaret Garrison went lo the
and Mrs Arthur Dcclalre and sons.
tulip festival Sunday with
lhe
Fred and Ford of South Boston;
Delos LaClear of Detroit;
Jake
Ruckle of Grand Rapids; Mrs Ixm
Lott of Elmdale and Mr. and Mrs.
John Watts of Bowne Center.
Mr and Mrs. L. Andrew* visited
the week end with friends In Grand
Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs Mayford Havens of
Zion HU) visited at the C M. Bene­
dict home Bunday.
Pauline and Virginia Moore of
Irving were Friday night guests of
Eleanor Miller and attended the
school picnic al thc Logan school
Saturday.
Jake Ruckle of Grand Rapids is
visiting relatives and friend* In this
vicinity.
Ray Richardson and bride of
Grand Rapids called on Mr. and
Mrs. Art Richardson Bunday, also
on the Norman Richardsons near
thc Brown school.
Jake Wolf and wife and Mrs.
Thera Nagler of Hasting* were
Bunday guests at Art Richardson's.
Misses Ola and Helen Cruttcnden
and brother Bud of Quimby called
on their abler. Mrs Chet Rlcliardson. Bunday.

bu». Her parents &lt;-------- — --------cousin, Irving Flatter. ot Vsrmontvllle Sunday afternoon.
Remember tbe Ladles' Aid din­
ner will ba served at the home of
Mr*. Forrest Hall on Thursday this
set* at 320 East Thorn struct in
Hasting*. Everybody invited.
Our school will dote next'Tues­
day with a picnic for Lhe pupil*.
The scimol reunion will be held
at the schoolhouse tbe second Sat­
urday in June.
_ ___________

SOUTH SHULTZ.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Peake and
Rare spent the week end with their
parent*. Mr. and Mra. Jep Whipple,
of Augusta and they attended lhe
funeral of John McLravy at Has­
tings Monday.
Miss Mabel Hom of Battle Creek
spent from Friday until Monday
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Hom and Mr. and Mra. Cenard
Smith of Hastings spent Sunday
evening with them.
Visitors and callers at G. E. Ken­
yon'* Bunday were: Mr. and Mrs.
McFall
Joan King of Mon­
roe. Mr. and Mra. O. Brockway of
Adrian. Mr. and Mrs. L. Bishop. Mr
&lt;nd Mrs Wendell Kenyon and Mra
Eknma Stillwell of Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mra. Alva Kenyon
and
Bobble and Bennie of Bellevue. Mr.
and Mrs Frank Fuller of Nashville.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bishop and
Johnnie and Robert of Hinds Cor­
ners, Gordon Kenyon of Hastings
and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kenyon
of Hickory Corners
Mrs. Sarah Kenyon spent Bunday
at her home here, il being her 83rd
birthday. Some of her children
spent the day with her. Her many
friends wteh her many more happy
birthdays
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wisener of
Kalamazoo spent Tuesday and Sat­
urday evenings with their parents.
Mr. and Mra. G. E Kenyon
G. E. Kenyon, who has been seri­
ously ill. is some better at this writ-

,

DOUDS CORNERS.
On account of sickness have been
unable to write any new*. If any­
one has any items now that should
have been mentioned please phono
them in or write your correspond-

moved cast of Delton when
will work in lhe onion field*. Mia*
Willson, |he teacher, at South Pin*
lake who has lived with them will

ond of the school year.
Mr. and Mr*. LaTemoau are mov­
Ing Into the Gage house. He will be
employed a* yard man os lhe Avery
firm for the summer.
Marshall Beattie and family of

Mrs. Hattie Beatlie Saturday.
Those who attended Die 4-H Club
Many from this vicinity were in
banquet from here were: Mra. John Holland on Sunday for th* tulip
Houghtalin. Verabell Golden, V»»- festival Friday evening.
ta Golden. Fern Moore. Daisy and
Marion champion attended the
Laura Hallock and Mary Bishop.
Mother-Daughter banquet at th*
Mrj Cha*. Tobias returned from M. E. church in Plainwell, with
Lhe hospital Wednesday and 1* re­
covering fine.
Mrs. Bernice Cook and Stanley
Warner of Detroit were callers at
of Cloverdale visited at home Bun­ Mrs. John Rogers' on Tuesdayday afternoon.
Mr. and Mra. Ray Peak and fam­
ROBINMUE PARK.
ily of Shultx and Miu Laura and
Mr. and Mr*. Will Mitchell. Mr.
Daisy Hallock and Lloyd Long and
and Mrs. Alex Potts of Grand Rap­
Forrest Hallock spent Sunday at
ids. Mr. and Mra. Bam Zerba of
Mldd»cville were Sunday guest of
PINE LAKE.
Mra Clara Nichols had at dinner Betty.
guests on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. John Kollar spent ■
Arthur Nichols, and Josephine of Bunday with Die former's sister, '
Lansing.
Mra. Otto Lightfoot and husband,
On Saturday evening Ernie Hart­ also called on Mrs. John Corrigan.1
well. Dean porter. Clark and Alvin
We are sorry to report Mrs. Kate L
Nottingham attended thc annual Robinson Is very low at this writ-'
reception held at Lhe Columbia ho­
tel In Kalamazoo, given by Um&gt;
juniors of Plainwell High school for

Announcing tl

RIVERVIEW
To every flowear lover ia Barry county I whb la *a«aRB
that I am opening an nursery ot Hardy FurawW n
ing Plants. 1 have had my Mock slate inapMtM M
quixed by law, and have obtained tbe n****»&gt;&gt; pteM
grower's license to rail.

I have both the old fashioned favorites and many at AB
new varieties.
Do you like the flower* of arandmodNnP
day? Then yotir garden is not complete with«K &lt;DiantMM
(pink*); Myosotis (Forget-Me-Nots); Iris, etc.
All m
my plants are suitable for the perennial border] and m**y
are needed in your rock garden, such a* Alyssum CoffiMb
turn (basket of gold), Ceraslium (snow in summer), Ca*.
panulas, Saponaria, lhe small Iris, and many other*.
1 spent two year* at Michigan State College training for
this work, and also studied in the landscape department.
1 will be glad to give my suggestion* to anyone on ihfll*
landscape problems. I have good stock reasonably priced
al ten cents and up. Visitor* will be welcome at any linte-

I *in located about three and one-half miles southeast
of Hasting*-r(he first place north of the County Farm, just
off of M-79.

Mr. and Mrs Clifford McMannls
have moved into Die Henry Toozc

Mrs. Edith Sonneville of Battle
Creek U visiting her son Lester and
family for a week.
The friends and relaUves ot Mr.
and Mra. Larry Anders gave them a
shower at lhe town hall in Clover­
dale Friday night. People were
there from BatUe Creek. Kalama­
zoo and Hastings, about one hun­
dred being present. The evening
was spent with dancing and a nice
pot luck supper was enjoyed. They

SOUR STOMACH?

"GET ACQUAINTED'TRIP
141

Would you

HINDS CORNER^

Mr and Mrs. Lyle Tobias and
son of Battle Creek spent Sunday
afternoon with hl* father. W. O.
Tobias.
x
Ijivcrne DeMott was oj&gt;e rated on
for appendicitis at Pennock hos­
pital Friday morning. We all hope
for a speedy recovery.
Mr. and Mra. Jay Webster and
their son. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Web-

A Great Many
Poultrymen
Here and everywhere ore

Hcre, we believej is one of the most
fascinating discoveries of modern cookery
—the scientific u’se of electric refrigera­
tion in the preparation of food.

We*U handyou the keys to a new Chevrolet. •
knowing they will be the keys to yourfriendship.

Don't confuse thia with an ordinary
cooking school demonstration, for it is
entirely new and .unlike anything hither­
to presented. It deals entirely with the
problem of cooking with cold and if it
did nothing more than show you how to
keep out of the kitchen in extremely hot

not only buying ond feed­

ing but also boosting for

You are missing a whole lot of
thing* that will make your

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more

comfortable and more enjoyable, if you

You will be pleased with

haven’t experienced tbe many outstanding

results from Vitality . , ,

advantage* of the new 1936 Chevrolet!

weather it would be worth triple the
time you will spend to learn these, in­
teresting facts.

We know that the words "Coo&amp; with
Cold" read
accustomed

Accept our invitation. .Note the time
and place and take advantage of thia

Prove thia by taking a "get acquaint­

ed" trip in thia only complete low-priced

Special Thu Week!

car without any obligation.

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Crowing Me*h__$1,95

We’ll Im glad to have you drive it any
time you wiah.

Come in—-today!

DAIRY------- &gt;U5

CALF MIAL______95c

SMITH BROS.
VELTE &amp; CO.
Hastings

rteac t»l

CHEVROLET
R. K. HURD
MAwtMei. aucm.

phone

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R-&lt;*■ CM&gt;WAUADER,Wckary Comers, Mich.
2M* T H E $ E R VIC E G A R A G E, Delton, Mich.

SMITH HARDW
123 W. STATE ST.

HASTINBS

�TWt iu«rnio» BAtnm, racMPAT,

IL PROCEEDINGS

i - •1 •
w Banner pruning . _
• I I. Jnbnt&lt;«. rrpaUi
8iw&gt;rt ilfcop. auppllea
■ l.umb»r Co . topDllei
R par kt. reixira ...

*SPEC,S1 Invitation
TO NEWCOMERS
AND VISITORS
Wc extend a cordial invitation to new­
comers and visitors to this city, to

take advantage of the complete bank-

ing facilities which we offer.

You will find here a spirit of friendliness, and a hospitality, which are

characteristic of the community itself.

It will be a pleasure to have your
name on our books and to beconte
malty acquainted with you.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

i
S tS
11.1*
11 30
S7 4 7
3.SO

mat ii, i«m

reel disappointment to Mr. Irwtn
and lo the L. A- B- Mr. Irwin
lost * chance to give this lecture be­
fore a much larger audience last
Saturday evening in order lo come
to Freeport.
•do pt rd
Yesas AU, Cottman. 1
Hoonan
PUr.oa, Rokkord.
Rev. and Mr*. J. I. Batdorf. in
dor *■&gt;&lt;! W.i.wrt
Carried
company with Rev. and Mr*. E. B.
Griffen of Hailing*, left Tuesday of
last week tor Detroit to attend a
board meeting, going from there lo
Hartford City. Ind, to attend an­
other tnceUna.
Mrs. Claude Walton, who I* at
lhe Alford ouster home In Bowne.
I* a Utile better at present and able
to De up a while each day.
Mr.- and Mr*. Herbert Brennaman and family of Goshen, md..
spent lhe week end. guest* of the|r
aunt. Kjrs Anna Geiger and cou­
sin. Mrs. cltas. Bunn end family.
aortal Pay eammhita ba «ri
Mr. and Mrs. Dell Godfrey spent
Aid. Catenae. HaTan. Hot
Milter.
from Saturday until Monday with
Pianoo. Rtlckord. Srbadar ■
Carried.
relatives at charlotte.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sisson and
days.
&lt;daughter. Roberta, and Mr*. Emma
Muter* Paul and Dick Johnson (Sisson were Sunday evening guest*
of Bowne Center spent Friday and ,of Mr. and Mrs Lawrence Maxon
Saturday with their grandparente. ,and daughter Kathleen at Lowell.
Mr and Mr*. H M Boughner.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence ChrtetMORGAN.
man of Carlton, formerly of Grand
Clare Mead and
family
of
Rapid*, were Sunday
afternoon ,
Battle Creek visited Mr. and Mrs.
callers at the home of Mr. and Mr*.
Elgin Mead Sunday.
Victor Sisson.
Glenard Earl and Rob Knight
Mr. and Mrs. Meryl Neeb and
spent Saturday evening in Batlie
baby, who have been living near
Traverse City, arc moving into the 1Creek.
The Morgan school closed Fri­
&gt; am «-»i»Maa tuvaa -»ncob RoUAh bouse,day will) a pot luck dinner and ice
&gt; Mill. i-.»r.on HrickvrJ Kch» ed by Charles Price and family. We
I. Carried
’ understand. Meryl will help tils 1cream at the lake which was en­
joyed by al).
•icuw from-1 » conn j fathCr on tjie feed grinder,
Mrs. Harry Munton and daugh­
d Miner, •uuporte,!
Mr. and Mr*. H. W. Gosch were
ter. Mrs. Mildred Cornelius and
™-;u «*
children of Grand Rapid* called on
n.« urw rirratnr s iso oo Mr*. Floyd Geiger of near Allo.
...
- ------------------------Mr ftnd Mr8 Wm BtoUgh werc Miss Demarl* Hagerman Bunday
afternoon.
guest* of his sister. Mrs. Willis
Ernest Gross 1* spending a week
I Lape and family of Grand Rapids
with bls father. Mr. and Mrs. James
•on fteiekorii
from
Saturday
until
Monday.
Waiwerl
C.
Gross, of Grand Rapids.
I Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fields have
Moved bp j
Ben Wait and family of tbe Pratt
Aid. 8eh»der
purchased from the Hefflebowcr
district and Mia* D. Hagerman en­
estate, the building just south of
CarrUd
joyed ice cream at the home of Mr.
the P. E- Brunner store. They have
j moved into the living rooms in the
I south part, recently vocaled by Geo. evening.
THREE CORNERS.
Mrs. Wayne Christopher of Lan­
Mrs. Miranda Sisson ot Hastings, Bassett and family The north aide
Honed •cure, .hall ba pul Into a •aparalr
sing spent tbe week end with home
who
is
spending
a
few
days
at
her
is occupied by Frank D. Brayton's
fund and thia fund .hall ba callad 111,
I Uaa and Wal«ht Ta« Fund
farm home here, was a week end print shop. It had been rumored folk*.
Mr and Mrs. O E- Padelford of
guest of Miss Clara J. Sisson
1 this building wa* to be lorn down.
Merldeth Lewis of Freeport was- The young people's class of the Bellevue spent Monday with her
a Monday caller at the home of Mr M E. Sunday School enjoyed a very mother. Mrs. Prank Wilcox.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Roscoe and
and Mrs. Edw. Walters.
pleasant evening at the home of
7.°Sdw nmZtedM Bat­
Mr. and Mr*. I. E Moore of Free­ Rev Fem Wheeler last Tuesday J
evening Tne
The garnering
gathering was
wa* in
in nonhon-(, Mr
and Mr*. Bordy Rowlader Sat
port visited al the home of Mr and evening
■ —

IIwiim« I'rintiae io, pnatia* —
Waller Wailua. •ubpIIm
Vnlrrraal Oaraaa Co.. rreeirs
r.tm Burraa IUrr&gt;c«, •applha .....
A ad rat Marrtea. rvpalra
&lt; oa.ora«r« Power Co.. Ilabt A

Going Shopping ?
Readers of the Banner find it possible to save
time and money by referring to the Banner ads.

Each ad appearing tells its own story of money­
saving values offered by Hostings merchants.

New* to the thrifty housewife of things her fam­

ily need*—news that helps extend the family
budget. This is only one of tho features you can

enjoy with the Hostings Banner.

• FREEPORT.

&gt;.M
.*0
l.S*
Sjs
S.M

Mrs. Karl Gilliland of Alto visit­
ed her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Adam Endrv*. on Monday.
Mrs. Claude Walton returned
home the latter part of last week
after several week* away and Is
much Improved in health.
Mrs. Bessie Nell and son Frank
of Saginaw spent the week end
here with her sister. Mrs. H. M.
Boughner and husband.
Dick Moulton of Muskegon was
tbe week end guest of hl* sl*ter.
Mrs. Roy Nagler and family.
Dr. and Mrs. H- 8. Wedel and two
daughters motored to Green lake
Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Anna Geiger is not so well
at this writing.
Rev. P. Loomis and daughter
Gaytha called on friends here Mon­
day evening. George Bassett accompanled them home and will help

nual claan-up day proceedings.
The Ladles' Aid will serve dinner
on Thursday. May 21. They Will
meet thia week and dean lhe main
part of tbe church.
j

MILO.
Last Week's'Letter.

There were thirty member* and
five visitor* present last Thursday
at th* home of,Mrs. Schult*, when
sh* and Mrs. Quick delightfully en­
tertained the Home Literary Club
for th*ir annual May breakfast.
Quast* from away were the district
president. Mrs. Cross of Hastings;
lhe Kalamasoo county president,
Mra. Smith, and Mr*. Anderson of
Kalamasoo; Mra. Rowen and Mrs.
Osborne, local
A beautiful bowl
of rotes centered the table* and
liand-palnted place card* added to
Hie attractiveness. Breakfast was
served at 11 o'clock by Mrs. Mary
Crook*ton, Mr*. Mildred Scobey and
Mrs Hasel Otis. Later Mr*. Ber­
tha Pronty called the meeting to or­
der. After singing “America, the
Beautiful.“ roll was answered by
each telling their experience with
their "Capsule Friend* 'and pre­
senting flowers to same; Mesdame*
Gilkey and Confer played a duet;
Mn. Jackson gave a
humorous
poem. "My Rubbers;” Mrs. Ellama*
Vanderbrook favored with a read­
ing; Mra. McClary gave a report
of an executive board meeting held
in Kalamasoo. Th* guest* from
away *U gave abort talk* and *
social time ended lhe mattingMr. and Mra. Theo Tack and chil­
dren spent Sunday with their par­
ent*. Mr and Mra. &amp;n Quick. Mr.
and Mrs. Clinton Quick of Kalama- ‘
zoo were visitors there Saturday
evening.
The May MUo Aid will be held at
tbe church Wednesday afternoon,
May X). Let us have a good attend­
ance at this meeting.
On Friday. May 22. the MUo P. T.
A. and achool srtll have their an­
nual picnic at the schoolhouse with
a pot luck dinner at one o'clock.
Everyone Invited.
John Bredfleld spent over the
week end with his son. Mr. and
Mra. Ernest Bradfield at
South
Bend.
Mr*. Merle Bradfield was accom­
panied to Kalamazoo last Thursday
bv Mrs Allie Wood and daughter.
Elizabeth. Mr*. Wilcox and W. A.
or of Mr and Mrs. Louis Overholt: m.
Spaulding were Hastings visitors
(Mary Warner• and was a tnls-1
DOWLING
last Friday.
&gt;■
cellaneous shower. After singing . . WM,k-. i*tter
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox and
several songs, game* in charge of
vlalted
Mother's Day was -fittingly ob- chUdren of Battle Creek
Victor Sisson, teacher, were en­ served Sunday and a nice crowd at­ their mother. Mrs. Wilcox. Saturday
,
joyed. The
bride was presented with tended th* service*
Mn. Emil evening In honor of Mother's Day.
a large basket full of beautiful and Schwucho was th* oldest mother
' ’ gifts, which she
------------------J
useful
unwrapped
BRANCH DISTRICT.
prelent and wu presented with a
with much ceremony A light lunch bouquet.
,
Those with the youngest
The Branch school will close May
of cake and lemonade was served. children were Mra. Doria Pierce and 22. A program will be given by the
Twenty five young people were Mrs Norma Jone* and th* honor* school children in the evening.
present.
Rev E. F. Rhoades and family at­
for lhe mother of the largest family
The U B pulpit was filled by two
tended the baccalaureate sermon at
went to Mrs. Mollie Perri*.
visitor* Sunday in lhe absence of ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Power* and West Unity. Ohio. Sunday evening,
the pastor. Rev. J. I. Batdorf. In
• Mrs. Nina Sloop of Marion. Ind., a* his son 1* graduating from High
the morning. Rev C. L. Wilkins I
were week-end guest* at the horn* school at that place.
brought the message nnd the eve­
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Norton
of Ml** Lizzie Smith, they having
ning service was delivered by Rev.
been called to Battle Creek to at­ and Joyce of Marshall. Mr. and Mrs.
LaVern Huillberger
Rudolph Hall of Battle Creek were
tend lhe funeral of a relative.
Last Wednesday afternoon the
Sunday
guests ot Mr. and Mra. VlnMrs. Melissa Tinkler spent several
Freeport High school girls' team en-

Mrs. Clair Yeller Sunday.
Lewis Sisson of Hastings spent
Saturday with his son and wife, Mr
and Mrs. Clarence Sisson and famlly. we regret to learn that Mrs ।
Lewis Sisson is not as well a* her
many friends wish she might be
but hope she
may soon trv:
have
reached her former health point.
’
M. E- Moore and daughter. Mrs
Clara Thompson of Bowne motored
to Grand Rapids Sunday to spend
the day with the former's son-in­
law and daughter. Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Walters and Marion
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pifleld and
family were Sunday guests of Mrs
Fifleld's fatlter. Robert Walters, of
Middleville.
Friends of Wendell. Norris and
Charlotte Malcolm of Lake Odessa,
former resident* here, will be
pleased to learn that they are mak­
ing a fine recovery from their re­
cent attack of measles.
same afternoon our boys went lo i
Mrs. Claggett and son. Charles, of Hastings ana
and aeteatea
deteated mat team
lhe Fillmore district called at the 5 to 1. offsetting a recent loss to lhe
Edw. Walters home.
Wednesday same •team to -•
the ------tune of •4 *to “
0.
afternoon.
Gray and Wieland were the battery
Mr and Mrs. Luikens and Mr. and for Freeport
I
| Mrs. Lester Yeller of Kalamazoo
Mrs. Mary
Bustance ha* . 2 1
spent Bunday with the latter’s par­ turned to her home here after
spending thc winter with her |
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Yeller
Significant statistics-Something daughter. Mrs. Lena Brechelsen of j
‘
'
which advocates of birth control in FarTton
The attendance at the lecture at
the United Slates would do well to
ponder; The annual birthrate in the M. E church lot SMuntay eve- 1
New York City |s less than nineteen ning. given by David Irwin of
per thousand, that of Tokyo is for-Grand
_____________
Rapids, thc t only man to
ly-four per thousand, and that of cross the top of the world alone.
Shanghai fifty-five per thousand.
' waa not very large and proved aj

■ ■x’T?. M

ps.

TIRED?

YOU’LL FIND MILK THE BEST

ENERGY
BUILDER

Wertman'* for several month*, will1
r -yrV
TT ...»
• —
■
...
10 ,lay
with Mr
Mrs
Della
w,th
* n
*'“ Week*
Mrs. Etta Stanton and
father.
Wallace Norton, were Sunday gueit*
of Mr. and Mr*. George Norris at
Doud* Comer*.
Mrs Dora Bronk of Toledo I* visRing her daughter and family, Mr.
and Mrs L. J. Oswald.
Mr.
”
ru and Mrs George Wertman
and Mrs HatUe Dunn of Johnstown
spent Mother'd Day with ber par-

Mr. and Mrs. Otl* Altman and
mother entertained Mr. and Mra.
Ohu. Herrington of Kalamazoo and
' Mr. and Mrs. Glare Newton of Bat­
' tie Creek. Bunday. Bunday visitors
at their home were:Charh* McManni*. Mrs. Exa Jackson of Ionia, and
' Mr. and Mr*. Frank Cox and sister
। of Johnstown.
Mr. and Mr*. Norton Slocum,
i Rex and Ann and Mr. and Mra.
Frank Card of Lansing visited at
Cleo Card'* at Cloverdale. Bunday.
Hie Cemetery Circle will serve
their dinner on Decoration Day and
they will give the basement part .
their attention soon, with the an-

next Sunday. Mr. Hartwell will be
charj(, of the morning services
at North Maple Grove next Sunday.
Richard Darby of the Arbubrlght
•chool spent the week end at home.
A number planted their corn
here lut week.
Sylvia Whitmore of Hasting*
spent the week end at home.
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Mr, and Mrs. O. Todd and daugh­
ter, Mr* Morris Haines, of east of
Hastings visited Mrs
Frederick
Fuhr Thursday afternoon.
Mra. John Caateleln of Rockford
i* visiting Mr and Mrs. Leo Rey­
nolds.
Mrs. E. Reynolds I* seriously ill.
Among those from this way who
attended the tulip festival at Hol­
land Bunday were: Mr. and Mra.
James Burine, Mr*. Glenna Cole­
man and Mia* Leona Coleman of
Battle Creek, Mr*. Vesta Cramer,
Burke Cramer and Morri* Hamilton
of near Nashville
_____________
Mr.
and Mra._____
Wm.________
Cramer_____
and
daughter Arie la and Miss Elile Poland of near Middleville, spent Bun­
day afternoon al Wall take.

WALLACE
Each wook »he Banner brings you news of
those you know, your neighbors, friend*

and relatives, little things and yet they

High in Cream
Content Raw or
Pasteurized

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. . . strain, fatigue, the wearing ef­

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HASTINGS
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WALLACE GROCERY
HASTINGS

OPENING EVENINGS

PHONI MM

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1936

14 PAGES

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

The Case of The People vs. Carrol]
HUEY LONG
RULED lOUISim W. Spicer Dismissed By Judge;
IN A MORE DICTATORIAL

Petition States Chief Witness Would

MANNER THAN HITLER
DOES IN GERMANY

Not Be Able To Appear In Court

EVERY DEPARTMENT
WAS IN HIS GRASP
And His Pliant Legislature

Passed 44 Laws in Two
Hours Time
Prom all appearances there Is a
lot of splendid land In Louisiana—
at least It looks very rich and fer­
tile. Great ranges of level nelds of
black loam extend out from either
side of the track, and though It
was only about the first of May,
thrifty looking fields were frequent­
ly seen.
Over the river at New Orleans
towered the great • Long" bridge
costing over 13 millions of dollars
and named In honor of Huey Long.
It will be interesting to note how
history will rate Huey Long. His
death at the hands of a bitter po­
litical enemy, brought to an end one
of the most historic figures of his
day—a brilliant meteor that flashed
across the political horizon. To
many he seemed but an oinen of
things to come, but once gone the
light that he shed Is merging into
the forgotten. Many people feel
that he was a real menace and that
he received just what he deserved.
His dictatorial, autocractic meth­
ods at least were exactly the op­
posite of what our forefathers had
been fighting for centuries to get
free from. There are many who
hope that any man. regardless of
party, who seeks to emulate his ex­
ample will meet a like fate.
But regardless of how one may
feel about Huey Long he was pos­
sessed of a brilliant mind and a
"will to rule.” Power and more
power, seemed to be the God that
he
worshipped.
regardless
of
how he achieved it. and regardless
too of Its Influence on a demo­
cratic form of government, such as
we are supposed to have. Such a
leader made the most bitter of
enemies and the staunchest of
friends, according to the way his
favors were distributed. There were
those who regarded him as a great
national "asset." while others felt
that the last two letters should
have been omitted to present a cor­
rect picture.
As one who believed in rewarding
his friends and punishing his ene­
mies. this young • hilly-billy" from
Winn Parish, as he referred to him­
self. built up an organisation over
which he was the strongest kind of
a Dictator. It endowed him with
such a supreme degree of dictatorial
power in Louisiana that it made
Hiller and Mussolini look like "30
cents '—and this right in our own
country and under a democracy,
where the people are supposed \ to
rule. How complete was his con­
trol over the state, and its law(Continued on page 8. sec. I)

NASHVILLE WILL GRAD­
UATE TWENTY-SEVEN
Seniors Have Arranged Their

Own Program for Com­
mencement
This is Commencement week for
Nashville High. The seniors are giv­
ing their own program on Friday
evening at eight o'clock. The pro­
gram as arranged will be:
Musical Reading—Mary Hickey.
Sextette—Florence Hansen. Helen
Bassett.
Vivian
Sheldon.
Viola
Baas. Alberta Decker. Ellnore Par­
rott
Glftatory—Ellnore Parrott, Viola
Baas. Vivian Sheldon.
Class Will—Doris
Betts,
Ray
Outchess. Vayle Steele, Bernice
Lenic, Gerald Gardner
Annuals—Lee
Mix.
Margaret
Hickey. Marshall Green. Jay Whit­
man. Florence Hansen. Pauline Nes­
bit. Jack Smith. George Swan. Mary
Hickey.
Dedication
Poem—Agnes
Mar­
shall
Mental Hygiene Discussion—Arloa
Swift.
Presidents
Speech — Charles
Green.
What the School Has Done for
Us—Ellnore Parrott.
Changes In Nashville Improve­
ments—Mildred Cole.
Their color Is rose and white and
the flower is the rose carnation.
The members of the class are:
Viola Baas,’ Helen Bassett. Doris
Betts. Mildred Cole. Gerald Gard­
ner. Harold
Graham.
Charles
Green. Marshall Green. Ray Gutcheas. Florence Hansen. Mary Hickey,
Margaret Hickey, Bernice Lenic.
Agnes Marshall. Anne Mayo. Beryl
McPeck. Lee Mix. Pauline Nesbit,
Ellnore Parrott. Frank Pure hiss,
Jr., Vivian Sheldon. Jack Smith,
Vayie Steele. Arloa Swift. Jay
Whitman. Leone Jones.
George
Swan.
The Alumni banquet Is to be held
on June 5th at I. O. O. F. hall.

BESSMER JEWELRY
STORE CHANGES HANDS.
An important change in business
circles occurred yesterday when Mrs.
L. V. Hessmer sold her jewelry stock
to Chauncey L. Chase of Lansing.
Mr. Chase is connected with the
large Knapp department store in
the Capitol City.
Mrs. Bessmer says Hastings will
find the Chase- family fine cltlaens,
the kind we are glad to welcome to
our business and social life. They
expect to buy a home, and come
with the expectation of being life­
time residents of our city.

j

Judge McPeek on Tuesday signed
an order dismissing the case of The
People vs. Carroll W. Spicer of
Belding, Mich. The order was based
upon a petition
presented by
Prosecutor McDonald setting forth
that it would be Impouible to try
the case, due to the fact that Mrs.
Ella E. Holloway, the complaining
witness would not be able, due to 111
health, to appear against Spicer in
court. The petition was supported
by a doctor's certificate.
It will be remembered that Spicer
was arrested on March 10. 1938, on
four counts, namely: Larceny, lar­
ceny by conversion, embezzlement
and obtaining properly by false
pretenses. Spicer has been In the
Barry county jail here since his
arrest, under a ten thousand dol­
lar bond which he was unable to
furnish. The bond had originally
been set at twenty-five thousand
dollars, but was later reduced to ten
thousand dollars.
Mr. Spicer was represented by
Attorney Floyd E Cone of Beld­
ing, Mich., and on arraignment

kiJ'.SK'bS’XiuKS

.

IS THE SPEW

iFINAL PLANS FOR
ALUMNI BANQUET
John Gould of Class of '26
Is Named as the Toast­

11ICCTCDIII
HLUlLnlli

94

HIS "DUST SOWL'

M EMORIAL DAY
Entry ftgr tktfrr nwching tlotttr:
Entry jnr Aty'tt notping Itwm
Ettry year iht lilting miuic

master
DECORATION DAT HIRE
Final plans for the annual alum­ PART OP WRBTERK BARRY
ni banquet of the Hastings High
BEGINS WITH MARCH
COUNTY IB mOLUDschool are being consummated by
TO THE CEMETERY
ed
it
the committees in charge. The

Y.M.C.L
BARRY AMD BATOX OOl
TIBB TO 0MIT1 IX

nr

EXERCISES SCHEDULED
TH BEGIN PROMPTLY
1U
rnui"r 1 u '

cured from Mrs. Holloway thirty- (
five
of
U.S hundred
a.U.MUVM dollar,
UV.Mk.a worth
WV.
V. Homa
(IVUIC ;
Owners' Loon Corporation bonds
School Pupils, Members of
The motion asking that the case
be dismissed stated that the obtain-, All Patriotic Organisations
ing. by Spicer,
thirty-five 1 and otheri t0 Participate
- -----------of- tlie --------------hundred dollars worth of Home
This city, as in previous years,
Owners' Loan Corporation bonds
was the culmination of a series will appropriately observe Decora­
of transactions with Mrs. Holloway tion Day. May 30. with services at
by Spicer, over a period of more Riverside cemetery and a program
than a year, during which time he which will be held on the court
had secured other bonds from her house square If the weather is fine.
and which Involved various ex- i Otherwise the Central auditorium
changes of bonds of considerable will be available.
vaiue
Hugh Riley, marshal of the day,
value.
Due to the fact that It would be ।
lhe cxf,‘c}M*
necessary for Mrs. Holloway who is
so everyone who wishes to

H1W MOVX

the ladles
banquet will be served by (he
-.-T-.,- .
the United Brethren church •t.
at FERTILE FARM AREAS
of tha

nujaT^inr SimeVX”! SERIOUSLY THREATENED
cujwd *at t^carveth* &amp; *Stebbtos State Conservation Depart-

—Exchange.

OLD TIME RELIC FOUND

“DAD” ANGELL TO HEAD
WORK IN THE AREA
Repreientative of SUU ’ V

a-t. -store
--------------- .v-------------office.
i
ment should Take Steps
I* Aiding in Lauchdrug
or at
the -Banner
BY COUNTY CLERK HYDE
The committee requests that reser­
to Stop the Damage
vations be mode before Wednesday.
Not long ago the writer was prtv- Court Houae Janitor Con­ . Like many other worthy mow*
June 3. so the ladies may know how
menta Um Barry County Y. M. C. A.
______________________
. Ueged to take an automobile
trip Made In 1892—
tract,
to make their purchases.
has suffered a drastic curtailment
An unusually interesting program ■ through, and straight across, the
Aaked 886 Per Year!
in Ito yearly pledges since the de­
is In course of preparation with I northern part of Allegan county to
John Gould of Grand Rapids, a ' a point south of Holland. This trip
Last week County clerk Allart pression hit the country- Ito work
member of the class of 1020. as I revealed that western Michigan, as Hyde was looking through old rec­ has been severely cut in this coun­
toastmaster.
Miss Virginia Potts, well as western Kansas. Oklahoma, ords that had been placed in the ty. due to lack of funds.
In Eaton county, which formerly
whq has been studying in New York Texas, Nebraska and North Dakota. court house storage, and had not
City, will
sing
and
Principal' has a "dust bowl" which seems been touched for many years, if had a county Y. M. C. A. secretary,
Emeritus William T. Wallace of certain, unless checked, to cause ever, since they wert placed in the such work has been abandoned for
Jonesville is planning to attend also. ' wide-spread damage to this state. basement vaults. He chanced to run some time, due to lack of financial
The complete program is not yet I The injury to farm lands shown across some ancient proceedings of support. Through the good offices of
nine
tail the various transactions, she did | .At nU
?e in the morning, the line available but it will certainly be an :on this trip has mostly occurred the Barry county board of super­ George Westerman, who is cooIn the
the last
last few
fev years,
,____ when with visors. published in pamphlet form,
not feel equal to the ordeal of ap- I
mBrcb
Amer- interesting one.
| in
peering in court. Without her |
Legion hall tor RivetUde cerneSO be sure to make your reserve- extremely dry weather,
f
" winds
• •
covering the years from 1892 up to several men hi Eaton county as well
high
uulmony . conviction ot Spicer
»here ibe grave, will be &lt;lec- tions early.
have blown the sand over a con­ the early years of the twentieth as several from Barry county have
siderable
acreage
already; and the century. In 1802 the court,house become interested in reviving this
would be impoealble.
... 7" ’
! held.
­
__
....
... ...
heir!Members
Member*ofofthe
tliepatriotic
natriotleorordamage
has
only
started.
Not
far
was
a frame, two-story building,
The motion stated that M
' ganlzations and their Auxiliaries.
from these dust bowls were large situated on the present court house not been abandoned in Barry coun­
(Continued on page fl. Bee. 1)
acreages of productive land—some grounds, with a fence surrounding ty as It has been in Eaton, but ft
। ana who are able, Boy Scouts. Camp
of It rich muck, which seemed des­ them. The circuit court and the su­
I Fire girls and others who so desire.
tined to be burled with sand.
pervisors' meetings were held in the
, are invited to meet at the Legion
There was held a meeting
Some parts of Barry county, same room upstairs tn the old
hall before nine o'clock ready for
notably
Orangeville.
Yankee I building. The offices of the sheriff,
I the march. It has been planned to
Springs and Rutland, where there register of deeds, county clerk and
1 have cars ready to bring the peo- EXEROISES AT CENTRAL are many sand hills, are already treasurer were in the four down­
1 pie back to town, so considerable
countles met there to consider the
showing what a hurtful thing a stairs rooms.
AUDITORIUM FRIDAY
' time and effort may be saved.
County clerk Hyde ran across the situation, to talk over and adopt
sandy dust bowl can be. On the
Friday morning at 10:16. the 0-1
AFTERNOON
1 Music will be furnished by the
farm of the late Scott Cook, just following gem in the report of the
grade at Central school will present
COST TO OWNER FOR PAV­ Hastings city band.
across the Yankee Springs-Orange- supervisors* sessions Ln January
a Memorial Day program in Central
county and to put the work
Pupils of the city schools are ADDRESS BY DR.
vllle town line and back of the lit­
ING, CURB AND GUT.
auditorium and have invited the
asked to Join the organizations
tle lake, known as Scott Cook lake, Ephraim Batterson to do the janitor
patriotic organizations and their
TER REDUCED
W. D. HENDERSON there has developed convincing work in and around the court house
mentioned above at ten o'clock at
Auxiliaries to attend.
the
Methodist
church
comer
for
evidences of what dry weather and
The program Includes a dance,
toe second parade. They will Honor Students to Present high winds can do to sand hills. fered to do this work at that time tthe aid and encouragement of th*
flag drill, a play and music. It Is PRICE IS $30 FOR A
march east to Michigan Ave., north
Several acres on the back of Uiat for a whole year for substantially «
hoped there may be a good attendProgram at Class Night
FOUR RODS FRONTAGE to State St., west on State St., to
Westerman submitted a charter
1
farm, on the top of a ridge, have what is now paid per month. The Mr.
once.
Thursday Evening
I
the proposed two-county area.
the monument and then south to
been hollowed out by the action details of his offer are quite inter- for
I »nrc ilinicurc
7118 Owner Will Have Three Central auditorium if the exer­
A class of one hundred two will of the wind. The “dust" has been eating, to we quote them. The ses- 1This was considered, article by ar­
and adopted; also a tentative
cises are held indoors.
t
graduate from the Hastings High piled up in a thick layer that is slon proceedings, which Included ticle.
Those in charge have prepared school on Friday. June 5. the com­ slowly but surely burying many this offer of Mr. Batterson. were 1budget for the work for the balance
Without Interest
the following program:
. mencement exercises to be held in acres of what was once productive signed by John J. Perkins, super- of
&lt; 1038 was agreed upon.
Song—"America the Beautiful," ,‘the
"
Central auditorium al two land. Tope of trees stick through visor of Prairieville, chairman of
Ce
The city council adopted resoluEvangelist Arnold's Story—
f
i lions Friday night that will benefit led by Wm.
T
the organization. It Is
'
’ Wallace.
o'clock
k in the afternoon. The fol- the drifted sand, and a bank of it the board and Thomas 8. Bryce forming
Fine Musio Proves
I every citizen of Hastings who may
Invocation—Rev,
W.
in tnwliiiv
a beginning. The folks of
t
Maylan
lowing program will be rendered:
15 to 18 feet high can be seen from who was then county clerk. Follow- simply
j wish to hove the-----------streets—Improved
county will be asked to Con*
I Processional
March—High
school
Ing Ls the proposition and agree- each
&lt;
_________ _ ____
_
__ tlie roadway. Last year the sand
Inspirational
------------------------------------- ] Jones.
i...
-...u *
—
u «
...
-------j .termacklng.
--------- u.— I Reading—Wayne Finkbelner
Orchestra. Direction of Lewis Hine. J made a considerable gain on the ment of Mr. Battenon:
Itribute aa liberally as they can. Dad
Nearly a capacity house filled the b
* curb
nd
uUer
Bnd
.__________________
surrounding land and, unless some­
for many years secretary of
Allegiance to the Flag—Led by,
"Hastings. Mich.. January 0. 1892 Angell,
i
Invocation
—Rev. E. O. McSherry.
ernoon to .ttond th. moo. nieUno I “ “» 101
°!
Barry County y. M. O. A., was
Pastor. First
United
Brethren thing is done to stop it. the town
"I hereby promise and agree to do the
I
attend me mass meeting , — —- .------ -- —,
-------- the Boy Scouts.
I
unamlmous choice to head Y.
Music----------------------—Hastings City
Band.
tv rally held under the I Improvements, and makes It pos- ■---------- -----------churcli.
line road will ultimately be blocked the janitor work for the ensuing the
and countj
the&gt; local .Free Metho- !alble for 1116 owner 10 P*X bt three । Introduction of Speaker—ComelSpiritual—"King Jesus is Listen­ and a large area of farm land will year for the sum of eighty-five dol- 1
auspices of Mn
— - - — | annual Installments, without inter- ius Mannl. Commander of the Am- ing”—Dawson. High School Boys' be buried by that dust bowl. Wind- lars Said work to consist of piling Iand put it on as solid a basts as
dist church of which the Rev L. H.
e«.
est.
.
erlcan Legion.
hollowed holes of this type have wood in woodshed, gather and possible.
Glee Club. Roy Gamer, director.
1
Bird is pastor.
Address
—
Rev.
Karl
HKeefer
of
Address—"A Challenge to Youth" started on other farms Ln Yankee help load leaves on the court' yard
Tlx* resolutions adopted recite the
The musical program proved all
—Dr. W. D. Henderson. Director, Springs. Rutland and Orangeville. and gutters adjoining, also mow and 'llonal but its work is Christian
I fact that the council believes that Watervliet.
that had been promised, the a
Song—"America" by Audience.
Egtanakm Division, University of These will steadily Increase until clean up the grass in the courtyard '
cappella chorus of young people a major part of the money which
they become a real menace. Just once during the season; keep gutters ‘
Contrary to Uw custom of the Wtthlgan.
city receives from the weight
being one of the best chorus groups the
v-w, paid to
~ it
.g by m
.c stale, sshould
.gUU.M P1151 scvcrol years, the American
Song — “Flower of Dreams"— what ought to be done to stop the around court yard clean, acoordlng '
the
ever heard here. Miss Alice Cleone tax,
be used for tarmacklng and improv- ■ Legion and Auxiliary will not hold Clokey. High School Qlrh' Glee piling of this sand onto fertile to orders of city marshal and keep !
Kester gave added pleasure with a Ing
; services at the various cemeteries Club. Miss Jean Glerum. director. farms Ls a problem that the state sidewalks in and around court yard 1Christian character. Ita work
Ing streets.
solo. The assembly singing which
Presentation of the class—Edwin department of conservation should clean of snow; scrub and keep dean 1constructive. It U carried on «
The resolutions declare that the of the county on Sunday afternoon,
she led was most inspirational.
people at a time when t
but will visit each veteran's grave L. Taylor. Principal of the High Immediately tackle; tar unless it the hall and offices in court house; young
■
Rev. Arnold, who gave the story . state law requires that a portion of some evening this week and place School.
shall be stopped the burled acreage keep court room clean and clean and :
of his life, was formerly a thea- ji the cost of tarmacklng, curbing and proper decorations thereon.
Presentation of the Diplomas—A. will be so large that control will be put down carpet in court room if 'which the work of the Y will
guttering must be borne by the
trlcai manager. His conversion and
L. Brown, president of the Board of quite out of the question.
necessary; carry all wood into ’them.
property owner. As the state gives
the steps that led to his present
?la of Uny
Education.
court room for use during terms of
this money. It has a right to name DEDICATION OF
who are Ln a jposition
----- ---role as evangelist made a very grip­
to
Taps.
court, meetings of the board of su- county
'
STUDENTS WILL
conditions under which it shall be
will be glad to contribute
-------ping and impressive story. He will
SPLENDID
GIFTS
tribute what
Benediction
—
Rev.
E.
O.
McSherpervisors
all other meetings give
।
used. The resolutions state that the
FURNISH PROGRAM that may and
can afford to keep tote wort
finish It at the Free Methodist
be held there during the they
1
moving.
We
are
confident
tlial
Will
Association and
church here Sunday afternoon. city charter requires that the coun­ Cemetery
year, and such other work as may ,]
Reveille.
County Normal to be necessary and belonging to a ’be
true in Baton county. Thay «U1
Rev. Arnold brings three messages cil fix the amount of the special as­
1
Class Night exercises will be at Barry
Three Posts Donate Flag
sessment for tarmac paving and
find -Dad" Angell a help to them aa
to the people on that day. In the
the Central auditorium on Thursday
Graduate Twenty—Six
curb and guttering to be paid by
morning at 10:46; in the afternoon
Pole and Emblem
evening
at
eight
o'clock,
with
the
der
of
and
under
supervision
of
the
Have Positions
at 3:00 and in the evening at 1:30. property owners.
sheriff, prodded however that I am Barry county.
Last evening, Wednesday, the program given herewith:
The resolutions passed by the
At the Charlotte meeting it was
when the song service starts.
Barry County Normal graduates a not to clean any privies belonging
Processional March—High School
men's
patriotic
organizations—
council therefore determined the
decided that instead of
class of twenty. Thursday after- to Barry county.
Spanish-American
war
veterans. Orchestra. Lewis Hine, director.
amount of special assessment to be
Invocation—Rev.
W.
Marian
E. Battenon.”
American Legton and Veterans of
DEPT. SUPTS. FOR
borne by the taxpayers. The major
auditorium, as in preceding years,
Foreign Wars—held a fine service Jones.
FAIR ARE NAMED portion of the cost of the paving. dedicating a new flog pole and flag,
the commencement program will be NORTH BROADWAY TO
Salutatory—Norma Jacobson.
(Continued on page 3. Sec 1)
which has Just been placed in the
"Mother Goose." a Fantasy, by followed by a reunion and tea. to
3E TARAMACKED SOON
Little Change la Made in the
A.
GWINN
southeast corner of the north side the Honor Students; Boy Blue, which former county normal grad­
FREEPORT
H.
S.
uates, rural teachers, and parents
of Riverside cemetery.
Personnel From Last
TO LOCATE HERE
Dwight Ferris; Mother Gooae. Dor­
Council** Street Committee
ALUMNI BANQUET The 41 foot steel pole was the othy Shellington; old Woman That and friends of the class are Invited.
This has always proven a most en­
and County Road Oommiagift of the Riverside cemetery As­ Lived in A Shoe, Ruth McLaughlin;
Purchuaa Practloa **4 Bm.
The officers of the Barry County Maurice
Overholt Accepts sociation and the flag, which is 6x8 Miss Muffet, Anna Beck; Fiddlers joyable occasion. Following is the
aion Agree on Plan
program:
orda of lb. Lot* Dr.
Fair Association have named the
feet and made of rolor-fart cotton, Three. Genevieve Erway,
Ruth
Role of Toastmaster—
March—High School Orchestra.
People
who
travel
over
the
road
superintendents of the various de­
was contributed by the Memorial Hom. Albert Orsbom;
Margery
Lewis Hine, directing.
from the state garage north on
partments of the fair as follows:
Fine Program
Day Association.
Daw. Mildred Woodmansee.
Dr.
A. B. Gwinn of Detroit has
Invocation
—
Father
J.
A.
Mc
­
Broadway
to
the
city
limits
will
be
Supt. of Speed—B. A- Perry. Has­
This week Friday evening, the
Members of the W. R. C-. veter­
"Nursery Rhyme"—Doreen Rlts- Nulty.
delighted to know that the county purchased the practice and all case
tings.
Freeport High School Alumni Asso­ ans of the three veterans' organi­ man. Velma Kellogg, Eugenia LyPlano Solo "L'avalanche"—Hel­ road commission and the city coun­
Supl. of Horses—Robei t Martin,
ciation holds its annual banquet in zations and their Auxiliaries, the Barker, Genevieve Erway, Rosalie ler—Nettie Loring.
cil's street committee have agreed rounle and has rented the ofltoe
Route 3. Hastings.
the Masonic Temple in that village, Camp Fire Girls and Boy Scouts, Cascadtlen. Agnes Royer. Maxine
formerly occupied by Dr. Adrounie.
Introduction of Speaker—Henry
Supt. of Cattle—Forrest Buehler.
,n IaaaIa K*.* •
MO*
led by the Hartings city Band,
with a fine program prepared.
(Continued on page fl, Sec. 1)
Beverwyk.
macklng that half-mile. The city
Freeport. Route 1.
Maurice Overholt, who graduates marched to Riverside cemetery at
Supt of Sheep—Albert Bell, Nash­
Address "To You—Individually” will do the work, the county road
seven o'clock, where the Scouts as­
commission
sharing
50
per
cent
of
TWO MEMBERS NAMED BY —Dr. Wm. Halnon.
ville.
sisted with the service and the rais­
has been practicing in Detrott sat
Supt. of Swine—Ell Lindsey, Del- toastmaster. The first number of
Vocal Solo "Wind in the Trees"—
COUNCIL£RIDAY NIGHT
"The Alumni News" is to be pub­ ing and lowering of the national
That particular stretch has al­
Thomas—Miss Jean Glerum.
emblem. The Rev. T. H. Hooa gave
Supt. of Poultry—W.
Cole. lished for this occasion, according
ways been a poor road. The road and obstetrics. He received his A.
Presentation of Diplomas—Mrs.
to the report of the program com­ the dedicatory prayer, followed by D. A. VanBusklrk and W. J.
at Albion collage and later took
Hastings.
bed
is
not
as
wide
as
it
ought
to
be.
a short program.
Maude Smith.
Supt. of School • Exhibits—Mrs. mittee. The names of well known
Field Are Ohoien for Li­
in tha spring it to muddy, and
The flag will be raised for all
newspaper characters are to be
Chorus “A Brown Bird Singing" through the summer and fall full veraity of Medicine
Maude Smith. Hartings.
memorial services and for all mili­
brary
Oomminion
used
os
topics
for
the
toasts.
—
Hadyn
Wood.
Supt. of Grains, Fruits and Vege­
of ruts that make it difficult to ne­
tary funerals, tha sexton. Archie W.
The council at their meeting
Ralph Moore, vice-president, re­
tables—R. H. MoU, Hastings.
Benediction—Father McNulty.
gotiate with a car. The improvement navy during Uw World war.
Relckord, looking after this task.
Friday night reelected Superintend­
Supt. of Domestic Arts—Mrs. C. ports that the number of reserva­
The public is cordially invited to will be very gratifying to all who use
This Is a splendid community en­ ent D. A. VanBusklrk as a member
tions to date Is very gratifying, but
D. Bauer. Hartings.
attend these exercises.
that highway.
terprise which should be generally of the library board. C. W. Clarke,
Supt. of Police—Glen Densmore. It Is hoped many more will plan to
Included to the class are: Orville
appreciated and the donors, as well also a member whose term has Just
attend.
Hastings.
.. .
POTTER GETTING BETTOL
Elsie
Conklin.
Doris
as those who were instrumental in expired, requested that he be not Babcock.
Supt. of Mechanical Arts—R. K.
The Hastings friends of Justice
While Dr. Gwinn has a good prac­
securing the flag and pole, are de­ reappointed. In his ptace the coun­ Healy and Mildred Mack from
Hurd. Hastings.
EVENING MEETING
tice in Detroit, he and Mrs. GwMa
serving of commendation. A more cil selected Postmaster W J. Field. Dowling; Marion Griffin and Mar­
Supt. of Grand Stand — Fred
that he has made such Improve­ are anxious to sei Me a analsr
guerite
Seger
from
Freeport;
detailed
report
of
the
service
will
TUESDAY,JUNE 9
All will agree that this is a fine se­ Frances Orsbom and Evelyn Hynes ment that he was removed from the
Mayo. Nashville.
appear next week.
lection. Mr. Field, like his predeces­ from Woodland; Jane Ritter from oxygen tent at the hospital and
Supt. of 4-H and Smith Hughes
sor Mr. Clarke, is interested in Mulliken; Dorothy Banhagel, Ionia; seems much better.
Exhibits—Harold J. Foster, Has­ Wives of Members Invited—
and decided this would
maintaining our splendid city li­
NEW OFFICERS CHOSEN
tings.
The Kellogg Serenadera
Nettle Loring, Caledonia; Irene
ANNUAL MEETING.
brary on a good basis and increasing Shellenbarger. Cloverdale; Henry
There are very few changes in
FOR
ROD
&amp;
GUN
CLUB
on
the
Program
The annual meeting of the stock­
ita service to the community.
the personnel of superintendents
Beverwyk. Louise Baldwin, Russell
holders of the Hastings Building W. Lowry for ao many yam
The next meeting of the Has­
from last year With the experience
Ljiubaugh. caryl Isham, Wlltard
Dr. Burton A. Perry, Presi­
CITY TAX ABOUT THE SAME. Kidder. Re th a and Ruth Robinson
gained by these people In prepar­ tings commercial club will be Tues­
Dr Adrounle occupied it
dent, and Walter Eaton,
The board of review has been and Irma Waters from Hastings.
ing the 1035 fair, we are sure they day evening, June 0, when their
। in the Stebbins building. Polls will
The Kellogg
busy going over the assessments
will provide more and better ex­ wives are Invited.
Secretary-Treaiurer
To date only six have been placed
open from
until 8:00 P. M
made by the supervisors. They have
hibits in 1030 than have ever been Serenaders of Battle Creek, a won­
» «... —
*.«►._! I
chu B
derful musical organization which I The new officers of the Barry made very little change. 77m total for next year: Dorothy Banhagel
shown in Barry county before.
Albert H. Carveto, Sec.-Treas.
la in demand all around the state, County Rod and Gun Club, chosen assessed value of the city as fixed and Marion Orlffn have schools in
Ionia county; Louise Baldwin, the
—Adv._____________
will furnish a good share of the at tbs meeting held Monday night,
NOTICE OF ANNUAL
.
the
tlcally the same as a year ago. The Ragla; Irene Shellenbarger,
SCHOOL MEETING. evening's entertainment. There will are as follows:
President—Dr. Burton A. Perry.
city budget was about the same as Blake; Caryl Isham, the Parker; ALL STORES OPEN
The annual meeting of the School be other numbers on the program,
FRIDAY NIGHT.
Vice-President—Charles James.
last year, so the rate for city taxes Henry Beverwyk. the Barney Mills.
District of the City of Hastings, for but they have not been decided as
Secretary -Treasurer--Walter Eat­ will be substantially as It was in Eight are “being considered." El­
the election of school officers and yet. Members who bring their wives
1936. The taxes will bo paid In July. wood Brake, Commissioner of Ionia
for the transaction of such other are expected to pay . for their on.
county
will
place
a
few
after
all
of
Directors. 3 years—Albert Beu­
business as may lawfully come be­
tlie Ionia county teachers have
OPENS DOWN TOWN SHOP.
fore It. will be held at the Hastings per will be served at 7 o'clock. This mer. Henry Moorhus.
Shoppers for Memorial Day flow­ positions. With the shortage of
Director. 2 years—Clifford Gard­
Central school auditorium on Mon­ will be an entertainment which all
day. the 8th day of June, 10M, at members and their wives will ap­ ner. successor to Henry Osborn, re­ er. will be glad to know that Clyde rural teachers quite general over
_____
I wiloox is again showing a large M- Michigan, there is little doubt but
8:00 O'clock P. M. Eastern Standard preciate. Watch for further an- signed.
The club voted to donate 860 If sortment of flowers at the Home gll of the class will have positions
Time. Dated this 11th day of May
.—-----------Lumber Co.'s building on Michigan before school begins In September
members would contribute
&gt;150 for
1030.
CHICKEN SUFFER.
Ave. This convenience Ls greatly
FREEPORT K. OF P.’S TO
a skeet field.
C W Wesplnler.
Quimby church. May M. I
CONFER RANK FOR HASTINGS.
appreciated by patrons. The green­ NOTICE TO LIVESTOCK
—Adv.
Secy. Board of Ed.
SHIPPERS.
BOY SCOUTS—NOTICE.
Three cars from Barry Lodge No.
house is of course open as usual. |
Saturday, May X). being a hollThe last Court of Honor will be
13. will go to Freeport tonight
NOTICE TO DOG OWNERS.
dakcb—tnULunnui.
NOVELTY DANCE.
Dog licenses may be purchased where the latter's degree team will held in the court room on Wednes­
Michigan Livestock Exchange.
May 80. Herrington's resort, Clear
day, June 3. at the usual hour.
at the cUy hall. License fees double I
-Adv.
candidates.

Students To Give
Memorial Program

i

pleaded not guilty.

|^[

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

ML OFFER
FOR MIME

ONEHUNDREO
TWO GRMIMTES

LARGE “meeting

DR.

B.

�THE HA8T1NQB BANNER, THUMDAY, MAT M, UM
newspaper writ Un

on

both

LOCAL NEWS

YOU!

Get in Line for this big

anui
arum

FOOD SALE
at FOOD CENTER, THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY
We are offering you big savings for your food supply for
Decoration Day and Sunday. Open Friday until 10 P.M.

2= IT

CRACKERS
Vacation Land Coffee

Del Monte Coffee
white

OfV

HOUSE XvA

Regular 5c Candy Bars P«p«|«B'-&gt;nd. 3
lOc
Pkg.
Grape Nut Flakes Delicious Breakfast Food
lOc
for

$|L5

CI GARETTES CAMELS LUCKY STR,KES
2 Pkgs, for 23c

)ol|
OXYDOL

Heinz's Catsup

LARGE

Olives

I8C|

Pork and Beans

Armour’, V»rib«»t

Hardwater Castile Soap

GINGER ALE
BANANAS

3lbs 17c

D-

Armour’s Star
in Carton*

|Qc

BOILED HAM
MINCED HAM

Are
Ready
Weather!
STRAW HATS
A big stock of new shapes

Bars

and colure al

There Is a demand for farm hands
and a superabundance of men out
of work, but It seems to be Im­
possible to make one condition take
care of the other
Most farmers
who need hands have cows to milk.
Most hands who need work de­
clare that they have never learned
to milk and consider II too difficult
a trade for them to master. The
worst thing about milking is that
it comes In a time when a hand
wants to sleep in tha morning and
ro to town in the evening, And too.
It comes every day and 0 hgnd likes
a day on now and then —Decatur
Republican.
Chance plays odd tricks at draw­
ings. At the April one, given under
the auspice* of Hastings merchants.
Mrs Glenn Laubaugh held a lucky
number In the two dollar class, and
repeated for the five dollar one ns
well. Vern McMillon, young son of
Chester c. McMillon, night watch
at the Grand Rapids Bookcase fac­
tory. drew five dollars in each of
the April and May drawings. Thou­
sands of tickets are Involved In the
drawings and are spun 'round and
round in the big galvanized barrel
each time a ticket is pulled out by
some little girl picked from the
crowd. It's a queer kink of fortune
when the same person gets the
lucky break twice.

teacher of art In the htah school.
Th* secretary «f the Chamber of

en out ISO packages of petunia
seeds for planting, the Idea being to
make It th* city flower.

r««»etf th* reetdenoe recently va­
cated by Mr. and Mrs David Boyes
session tn about ten days.
As the council decided sometime
ago to have two night policemen
during the aununer months, former
Undershertff Oliver Taaker has been
employed In addition to Night Po­
liceman Bhultx.
"Dad” Angell, who is now in­
cluding Eaton county in his “Y”
work, has a fine reputation for this
type of service in Barry county
where he has been for some time.—
Charlotte Republican-Tribune.
The Consumers Power company
reports that up to Saturday it bad
received from home owners and
owners of business places 46 appli­
cations for natural gas -to be used
for heating buildings.
The alarm of fire Thursday fore­
noon was caused by the dLscovery
of a blase in the brooder house on
Dr. Alice Heney's farm Just over the
Una in Rutland township. Tha blase
was extinguished with little loss.
Kermit H. Schenden and Edward
J. Lannierre. of Grand Rapids,
were arrested by Night Policemen
Clarence Bhultx and Oliver Tasker
one night last week as disorderly
persons. They were brought before
Justice Matthews on Thursday and
each was given five days in Jail.
Our genial M C- station agent
and wife, who have made many
friends while in Vermontville, are
to leave us about May 30 for their
home at Dutton, Mr. Robert Berg,
who has been agent at Onondaga
for a number of years will locate
permanently in Vermontville and
will move his family here.—Ver­
montville Echo.
Danger of tripping over dark
basement steps with possibility of
receiving injuries can be greatly
eliminated by painting the bottom
step white, according to home eco­
nomic extension workers at Michi­
gan Stale College. East Lan.-dng.
Stairways are often a hazard in
the home, they say. and painting
tiie bottom step white makes it eas-

Cllnton Memorial hospital at St.
Johns in observance at hospital
tiny. May 12. offered a receipted bill
for all hospital expenses, including
the doctor, to be given the mother
whose baby arrived the first after
that date it was won by Bharon
Ann Montague a seven pound girl
who was born. May 14. in a close
race with another little girl who
arrived less than two hours Inter.
Elsewhere in the Banner on the
first page, second, section, is an ar­
ticle on a new movement to pro­
mote peace. In sending It to Hie
Banner. Mrs. Amelia
Goodyear
Crim. New York City, prominent­
ly Identified will) the work, says:
••It seems to me this organization—
•'The public Action committee"—is1
the most flexible and useful of air
those dealing with the subject. I
I think the article will explain belI ter than I can our purpose which is
to offer a service thru which our
I members can become articulate to
I the legislators and the president.
I we have existed only a year and
I we have 23.000 members There are
I no dues it Is financed by voluntary
I contributions ’ The address of live
। organization Ls given In the article.
Wb hope a lot of Barry count* peo‘ pie will lake the opportunity to
j enroll.

***

*

Quart

UNTIL

2 p|&gt;»* 17c

color* and while—

49c t&lt;&gt; 98c
SLACKS

98c to «2?8

2

25c

lb.

2

45c

m»-

SUNDAY end MONDAY, MAY 31 end JUNE 1
GARY COOPER in

| Mr. Deeds Goes To Town t
j.

Thai stand the wash without
shrinking—

Lb.

29c

2 lb*- 2Qc

Plenty for Boys, too

•F

WHITE SOCKS

25c 35c 50c

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, JUNE 2
RAUL MUNI in

............. ..

Lb.

15c

Lb.

14c

O'CLOCK

Mothers: bring jour
boys-to the store—we

cater to boys and have
play suits, shorts, caps,
lies, hosiery, to please

the boy and you, too!

With Jwephine Hutchinson. Anita Melae, Donald Woods, .
Frits Lelber and many others

WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY and FRIDAY
THREE DAYS SPECIAL ATTRACTION
Will Rogers, Myrna Loy and Mourean O’SulHvon in

The Connecticut Yankee

J FOOD CENTER

SATURDAY. JUNE 6—-ONLY
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION-FEATURE NO. 1

EXCLUSIVE STORY
FEATURE NO. Z
BERT WHEELER and BORT. WOOLBEY in

WATERS

.k.

*

± The Story of Louis Pasteur ;
Jy
1

Light colors, regular and

JEAN ARTHUR. George Banere/t, IJenel Standee, Douglaaa
Dumbiille
and
Dumbrilie
and
H. H.
B. B.
’ V-------BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY, 1:

Chunk, lb.

FINE FOR SANDWICHES

NINE

5c

Pkg.

FRESH GROUND

Wafer Sliced, lb.

For Men and Boys—all

Pkg.

GRADE A QUALITY

BEEF KETTLE ROASTS
EVENINGS

Waters Clothes Shop

98c

Pecan Puffs

HAMBURGER

OPEN

57c

Um

to tarmac, curb and gutter West
Mill street from Jefferson to Broad­
way This petition had been in for
some time and was acted upon by
the council Friday night after in­
vestigation by Its street committee.
A large number of applications were
received Friday night. These will
be Investigated and acted upon lat-

Others to $1.98

5c • Napkins

Cho&lt;;

PICNICS
Shankless

Bcm to Mr and Mrs Theron
Mead 'Grace Ryan) of Battle Creek,
an eight and a half pound son on
Sunday. May 24. The baby has
been named Lawrence Clair. Con­
gratulations are extended.
And there are still, in thLs en­
lightened age. people who send copy

Large 24 oz. Bottle

Regular lOc Size Packages

BOLOGNA

SMOKED

4

Makes Healthful Summer Drink

Wax Paper

PURE LARD

ll c.n

Crystal or Derby

Delicious and Appetizing

Paper Plates
Cookies

3

Kirk’s Cocoa

eosary to omit th* report of

Miss Lola Severance has one more
weak of school at sturgla. She will

POLO SHIRTS

Dill Pickles
Kool Aid

3 c*"* 25c

Giant Can,

Crisco

35c

Quarts

19c

Each

make us peeved I
Because of the crowded condition

erclaes at Rutland cemetery Batur- American Legion and Auxiliary Mid
at Constantin* on Bunday. A com­
|Aunt Rhoda Wilcox school re­ plete report will appear next week.
union at schoolhouse, Bunday, May
Hastings and Freeport friends ex­
31. Pol luck dinner.—Adv. 5-2Z.
tend congratulations to Miss jean
Radio broadcasts of major league Everhart, formerly of Freeport and
teams has had a lot to do with the Hastings, who is one of the grad­
waning interest tn local ball teams, uates of the Lake Worth. Fla.. High
so some would have us believe.
school. The exercises will be held in
A petition was presented to the high school auditorium on Thursday
council Friday evening asking for evening. June 4.
H. H. Peirce, local agent of the
Walnut street. The petition was M. O. R. R.. received a telegram
granted.
Saturday stating that the Interstate
Saturday begins the big exodus Commerce Commission had held up
, for the Memorial Day week end the order for pick-up and delivery
holiday. State parks have their service by the railroads of the coun­
I official opening on that day. Drive try, so it is indefinitely postponed,
I carefujly!
according to Mr. Peirce.
j Lilacs, splrea, most of the Iris and
According to a prominent direc­
tulips will be gone for Memorial
Day. The few hot days in' May tor of tours, advanoed bookings for
the summer's tourist season inatcaie
i forced lots of plants and shrubs into
that travel to the west will be twice
1 too early blooming.
as heavy as last year. Over 4.280,000
Mrs Leland Holly filled the Im­
' portant position of Conference people visited national parks in
1835. The Texas Centennial expo­
Chairman, Ladies' committee, at the
j 35th District Rotary convention held sition thia year will draw many.
One of the funniest stories ever
at Muskegon this week
written.
-A Connecticut Yankee in
I May 31st, Whitsunday al Emman1 uel church. Corporate Communion King Arthur's epurt." filmed as "A
I at 7:30 and 10:30 A. M. Church Connecticut Yankee.' comes to the
I school and Young People at usual Strand next week with the late
Will Rogers in the title role. For
i hours. Welcome always.
[
Word was received here Tuesday
morning of the death of Mrs. Milton here, so will be new to Hastings au­
I Roberta of Battle Creek. She was diences. H’s an "all family" picj the mother of Mrs. Harold Adams. lure, clean and wholesome
I who has many friends here.
Many residents of southern Barry
! R. M. Lxmble is refitting the tn- county will remember M1m Belle
terior of his State street store, hav- Arbour, who went from Prairieville
। ing rented II to C. J Wile of Ben­
ton Harbor, who will open it in taught for fourteen yean. Miss Ar­
I July with a ladles' ready-to-wear bour. who resides al 146 N. Marte)
I stock.
Ave., writes Mrs. Nettle Hyde, a
।
Written news items, even tho of cousin, that she expects to visit
; interest, cannot be printed unless Michigan this summer if all goes
I the sende
sign their names. "A well. Her friends will be glad to
1 Reader” doesn't fill the bill, we have see her.
to know the source of the informa­
City Engineer Sparks was author­
tion.
ised by the council Friday evening

23c

6^2 Ounce Bottli

OLD GOLDS . CHESTERFIELDS

PKG.—

24c

Pound Tin

Ortho-Cut

Premier Stuffed Olives

A

|

15c

One Pound Bag

Housecleaning nearly over.
Many fires in chicken brooders

These frosty nights haven’t been
particularly good for the strawberry

SILLY BILLIES
of

Wilk DOROTHY LEE
FLASH GORDON" will

T
•

�THE HASTINGS HANNER, THURSDAY. MAY U. UJfi

FLOWERS for &lt;
SPECIALS

Cut Flowers

Combination
PLANTS

«Jl

Carnations Peonies
Snapdragons Roses
or Combination Bouquets

the most satisfac­
tory thing for the
cemetery.

priced from $1 to $3

We have a wonderful stock
to fill vases, including;

MEMORIAL DAY . . . Day of memories. . . . here again, and with each passing year, the day

becomes more hallowed as a period devoted to the memory of those
Awhile."

whom

we

have "Lost

Geraniums, Centerpieces,
Foliage, Vines, Petunias
and many others. Or we can
sell you the vase filled.

Flowers are a living expression of that devotion.

See Them In Our Store In the
Home Lumber Co. Bldg, or

Come To the Greenhouse.

CLYDE WILCOX, The Florist
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

TELEPHONE 2530

1 local nine but did not manifest ren church at ten-thirty Wednesday Her Saviour's smile dispersed the
gloom
I themselves in wholesale quantities forenoon, the Rev E O McSherry
The camel does not
And smoothed her passage to the the reserre supply of
as in past games.
officiating. Burial was in / Valley
I1
cemetery.
tomb.
11 Tonight
lonigni the
me local
local nine
nine closes
Closes its
its Home
name cemetery.
In Its hump. Thia la
' season in a game to be played at |
------------- ----------------------------by
the system as it is
DEATH OF MRS. M­
I Belding. This will also be a conferOBITUAK1.
ML ROCKWELL.
I cnce game and should prove Inter- I Henry D Norton, second son of ।
HIRSCH, FELDPAUSCH
Mrs. Agnes Rockwell. 75. wife of
estlng inasmuch as Hastings has Hiram and Dlantha Norton, was
Postmaster M. M- Rockwell of
■ Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
I85*- ,n Bhenango
LEAGUE LEADERS not won a league game this sea- ;born
Hickory v
Corners, died Tuesday of
son in a pavlous game with Beld-1 county. New York He came with niciwry
Soft Ball Schedule—June 1 to 5:
in Bronson hospital.
curbing and guttering is paid by the
Ing the Brozakmen were taken in- I h&gt;» parents to Michigan al the age Ust week
Kalamazoo. following a year's ill­
city; the lesser portion by the prop­
to camp on the short end of a 9-3
settling
at
Galesburg. Kalamazoc
"rhfc’winbe’their'tal"oppor- Later *le move&lt;* 10 Hastings where ness. She was a life-long resident of
erty owners. The council by its reso­ Bliss Machine Shop vs. Chain Gang.
lution fixed the amount of the cast
iunliv to
(unity
10 square
aw. themselves
ch.nu.lv® this
thUI:,IC
■» 8
«"•
ruw 10
“ younK
&gt;■“”’« --------------manhood. On- that vicinity. Boni May 12. 1861 In
to the property owner of the curb, Bras.; Cons. Power vs. Bliss Foun­ (year.
.October 8. 1885. he was married to Augusta, the daughter of Mr. and
gutter and tarmac paving, for each dry.
Miss Emma Ulrich. To tiiLs union, Mrs. William H
LaVar. she was
June 4—Table Co. vs. Rogen
were born nine children. Stella dy- united in marriage to M. M. Rock­
four rod street frontage, as follows:
OBITUARY.
—
Curb and gutter. 4 rods. S18 Tar­ Grocery; Feldpausch vs. ~Piston
Henry striker Gaskill was born Ing In infancy. He was a loving' well April 7. 1915. Besides her hus- |
mac paving. 4 rods, g!2. Total cost Ring.
, in Baltimore township April 28, husband and father and a loyal band she leaves a sister. Mrs. Net- ;
June 5—Hi Way vs. Chain Gang; 1863 and departed thia life. May 17. frientP to all. Surviving are the wl- tie Randall of Hickory Comers. The
to the taxpayer for a 4-rod front­
age. |30 The council voted that this Bliss Machine Shop vs. Hlrsch 1036 age 73 years and 19 days He Bow and eight children. Mrs. Earl funeral services were held al 2 P. M
S30 be spread over a period of three Bros.
was the second son of Benjamin F. Engle, Mrs. John Krussell. Mrs Friday at the residence, and burial
years without interest
and Ann A. Gaskill and one of six John Bekon and Mrs Claude Wise- was in Hickory Corners cemetery,
Standings to May 27It is not surprising therefore,
Garnes
Ptg । children, three of which preceded man, all of Irving; Roy and Harold ,
of Carlton; Lorron and Claude of '
when the council gives such liberal Hlrsch
4
1000 him tn death. He was married to
Miss
elara Bacon of Dowling in Hastings; three brothers, Walter of'
terms to property owners, tliat they Feldpausch ---3
1000
New York, Lora and Joel of Grand j
should avail themselves of this Natl. Bank ... 4
750 I June 1885 To this union was born
Rapids, and a slater. Mrs Mertle
chance to get curb, gutter and pav­ Triangles4
750 one son. Fioris A- Gaskill of Seat­
of Grand Rapids;
ing done al this low price and on Bliss Foundry..3
OR
666 tle. Washington November 10, 1912, Hershberger
AND
nineteen grandchildren, four great-.
the easy terms offered by the city. Piston Ring .. 3
333 he was united In marriage to Mrs.
grandchildren, besides nieces and ।
Della
Bagley
of
Lansing,
whn
surThe fallowing applications were re­ Bliss Mad). .. 3
UP
333
333 I vlves him. He was converted in 1921 nephews Funeral services were held
ceived and approved by Die council Hl Way 3
333 |’ In
■’* Che
1)1® United
T7rAl,®zi Church
onrland remained at the Wesleyan church on Tuesday
Con. Power .. 3
at. ten A. M . the Rev E. L. Crocker
2 1-2 blocks of tarmac paving, Table Co.----- 3
333 I true to the Christian faith until his
curb and guttering on 8
Dibble Chain Gang .. .4
000 (death. After having been employed officiating. Burial was in the Irving
’ for 25 years as mall clerk for the cemetery.
There's a Bom Tailored
street, from East street to E Grand Rogers' Groc. .3
000
Grand Trunk and Lake Shore lines.
*
suit for you at just the
5 blocks of the same on East
| he retired from that work to take up |
OB1TCARV.
40
20
20
Bond street, from 8. Hanover to
price you want to pay.
Helen Margaret Leinaar. young- I
writing life Insurance and for the
East Bute street.
past 18 years has devoted most of est daughter of Henry and Lillian
If economy is a factor —
I block on E High street, extend­ MIDDLEVILLE BLANKS
I his time to that work, and for the Leinaar. was bom on January 8.
this is the line.
ing from Jefferson st. to Michigan
1
last
eight
years
up
to
the
time
of
1922 and departed this life on May
HASTINGS NINE 4-0
Ave.
If it's style, class and
-------------- I his death he was in the employ of
Another block on E., High street, Final Wind-Up of Scheduled I the Guaranty Life insurance com- months and 23 days. 8he leaves to
between N. Hanover and East
mourn her loss, a father, mother,
Game, to Be Played at
|
£
street.
U it'e All Wool and high
two brothers and two sisters. Marie
2 blocks on W blill street, from
quality — let us take your
Belding Tonight
1 public spirited in his thought, al- Lester of Hope township. Josephine,
Broadway to Jefferson
The High school baseball team
* 60
“ be “w “' Richard and Boyd at home, one
order.
5 blocks on w Walnut, from Park
dropped their fifth consecutive game Beside his devoted wife, he leaves niece Marietta, also two grandMade-to-Measure.
to Grand St
last Friday on their home grounds1 hls
, and
8randchlldren. fathers, one grandmother, uncles,
In addition the council has voted
Satisfaction Guaranteed!
to Middleville 4-0
1 Gwendolyn Gaskill of Hastings, and aunts and a host of friends. She will I
to tarmac Shriner st. from Han­
It was a pitchers' battle for three I £ran*Un- p»‘r,cto «&lt;&gt; Jacqueline of be sadly missed by al) who knew
over to Jefferson St
innings In which both Freeman and 8cott*e, Wash, He also। leaves a sis­
North Broadway too. will be tarCline kept the hits scattered suffl- J®r- lMrs
Minnie Bidelman of She no more on earth will greet us
macked from the stale garage north
"Hastings'Tailor For Mon Who
Hushed her voice so sweet and low
ciently to keep both teams from 2U‘"£*' “?d
’*®Uier' “°m*r
to the city limits, a distance of l-S
scoring. Parks of Middleville came Gaskill
of Birmingham,
M ch., Vacant is her chair and pillow
Know the Difference"
mile
In this home of hers below.
through in the seventh with a dr- many nlw**- nephews and other
All these projects will require sub­
cult clout which would have been reUl‘"’ ™dJrfcnds TOe funeral Her mind was tranquil and serene |
stantially three cars of tarmac and
No terror in her looks was seen.
j
enough
to
win
the
game.
»
“
•*
First
Unlud
Breth
add nearly two miles to the city’s
The Brozakmen put on a couple I
tarmac paving. There arc oilier
streets where property owners are of rallies one In the fourth and one |
considering the same improvements. in the seventh but were unable to ’
It is possible Dial still another mile push a run across the plate. In the j
will be added to the tarmac paving fourth inning the bags were loaded
this year besides that already ap­ when McLeod and Martin both I
singled and Rennlck walked How-1
proved by the council.
Following are a FEW of the MONEY-SAVING
Our Store Will Be Closed Saturday, but will re­
ever with two out Leary ended the '
VALUES We Are Offering This Week:
main open Friday evening until 10:30 o'clock.
inning by striking out.
TAMARAC.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo James and son
The game was a well played one ■
of Hastings were evening visitors at for the most part with good na- ;
the home of N McClelland Mon­ tured "ribbing" on both sides which i
I SPECIAL— FRIDAY ONLY —Best
day.
was remindful of the days when a;
HERE IS ONE!
1 Fried Cakes in Town
4 f?c
The Woodland school closed Fri­
Dosen____________ _________ 1
portant
amusement
in
Hastings.
Er-1
day. The Alumni banquet was held
Breakfast Deal
Saturday evening.
rors of course were costly to the •
|| 2 doxen for________ _ ____....29c

LIBEMLDFFEB
F0RT1RM1CKING

Sporting Items

Cantklabra as Mamarial
literally eat
a sandstone curbing on
food stored I Neb.'a main street, bears
(imply used 1 print of a prehistoric
needed.
probably 225.000,000 yean

Lincoln,
the Immonster,
old.

Silver candelabra presented by
King George If of England still
hang In Ht. Thomas Episcopal
church at Bath, N. CL, built in 1714.

HASTINGS, MICH
PHONE 2524

Cjet Set 'Jci 2/gu/l

(uith.

BRVtireSICK

"AL" G. McCALL

-

W-

IN HONOR Of DECORATION DAY

30x3 ¥2 C. L.--S3.95

WASH TUBS

Calv.__69c

!S^25-

TIRES MOUNTED FREE!

89c 77c
•

.'I.WM*.'..
76/6.00/6.a61S)M

CAMPING GOODS INVADER Batteries

1 Wheat Krispies
1 Rice Krispies —

For Decoration
Day Outings!
• FILMS

• KODAKS
• PICNIC SUPPLIES

BATHING CAPS

5c to 39c

COMPLETE FOUNTAIN SERVICE

ARCTIC Ice Cream
FANCY BRICKS FOR PARTY USE

SODAS AND SUNDAES

10c

3^*all for!9c

5 Bunches
RADISHES

KAMP KOOK

65

Out Door Crown

5
5
3
3

lb. sack Cooking Roiled Oats 19c
lbs. Pancake Flour-------- --------- 19c
cans Sweat Com____________ 25c
Candy Bars, Rea. 5c __
. _ 10c

l burner, built

9c

’3.15

pump

2 Cans 29C

BROADCAST CORNED BEEF HASH

ST. 15*

oo

folding

CO

$7.20

Country Roll Oitamery Butter, 28c

5 lbs.
Hand Picked
White Beans

19c

PAPER PLATES, pkg-------------------- 10c
PAPER NAPKINS. 80 s_______ JOc
PAPER CUPS. 12’t_____________ 10c

SUGAR 10

49c

(1 Lol to a Cutomer)

27c
2 Lt. 33c

VACATION LAND COFFEE
ECKRICH COLD MEATS

2 Cans
Melting
Sugar Peas

Camp Chair

45
BASEBALL GOODS

Folding Cot

•1.79
rwu^-i &lt;u«w

CLEAN UP NEEDS
SPONGE

HEAD LETTUCE, crisp -.2 for 15c

15c lb.

CARROTS3 bunches 19c
SPINACH _____------------ 3 lbs. 25c

MINCED HAM

19c lb.

FRESH PEAS2 lbs. 19c

19c lb.

Vaca'm Bottle*
Pint 7»c
Quart -11.19

VEGETABLES

BOLOGNA

FRANKFURTS, small

Headlight Balta

Ottan Na
WEDGE CUSHIONS

3 lbs. NEW POTATOES ------------ 15c
Top Dressing, 9 os.

REED'S
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Walgreen System
DRUG STORE
PHONS 2241

WALLACE GROCERY
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Si

FISHING TACKLE
TackW Im

OPEN SVENINGS
PHONEiu,
E*EE DELIVEBE

Touch-Up, black,

Sun Gogglos

CHAMOIS, 1J

AUTO Ji

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY—
TRADE AT HOME

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

MICHIGAN

Editorials
CIVIL SERVICE
Tha time is ripe tar civil service
In Michigan. People may not know
exactly what civil service means but
they are mighty fed up with the
way party politicians handle the

It’* Uw Spirit of * Community
Tk«t Canto—Not IU Sinn

'Round About Town

1 Windrow Method Necen&amp;ry

PILGRIMAGE.
Inatead of Swatb, Adviaei
I have studied often the map of
Dt ok ar at M. 8. 0.
that far country.
By Observing Tommy.
And I know ita blue rivers
With mor# aere# planted to al­
falfa than in any other state, and
Heh! Hah! Hehl Did I ever pul And Its green woods
And where the contour lines He with the law crop expected to ex­
thick
ceed al) records, curing alfalfa be­
And was he sore.' Lucky they have Around the city that la set on an comes of major
importance
to
hill.
13 fool ceilings.
Michigan farmers this year.
R. E. Decker, extension specialist
bu&gt; to bto n,«. ,itot „« m to |I
He’s kinds worried anyway these
days.
•
Th! ihkh *“ll"“uLr'iT'ana, “™«* tol'i'ic cuni” h.y w’to

reason why each incoming admlnls- stuff through the mail so the part
tration should turn capable em- with the rosy
description
is
ployees out of office to make room passed out like a handbill and atfor deserving party workers. State Cached Is a “business" reply card
jobs should be career Jobs. If any with first class permit and worded
private concern handled Ils em-, in very moderate and general lanployee problem as sloppily as the guage. Be on guard. The governgverage state government does un-; ment has no official school or
per a party patronage set-up. iticourses to prepare on for civil servwould be out of business within a 1 Ice. The chances are that these

°
*M|'«W*U&gt;. Th*l deprlm .11,11, ot
You see a certain pedagogue
whose red locks symbolise the fer­
vor of the inner man is playing the
role of Romantic Romeo to the wil­ A.d m told.
'*lu. U .lored.
lowy young secretary of my boss— And go thither.
Michigan's alfalfa acreage has
Peter J. Henniker Heaton.
and secretaries whose ability to
increased steadily during depresspell equals their artistry with the thf nnintN*! un MieAwnm slon ***” In &gt;M0 there were 572.compact are demmed hard to find.
n
te’
000 acrcs Brown
« »•»
thlt Uie™amou^ 1S IflSwbS^f 088 000 Mr Decker be,levM
Many a damsel along the path­
ways which "Amorous AB" has trod
-PP'r •'
will doubtless begin to hum ' Among
»■ih'
My souvenirs" with wistful mourn­ 5?iSito3!.“rulii*.,n in"“! ■“ni *«•"
much. u»t u. »^“yJod{ Xde 5 £
T"'1'?.*'
ing when thia news reaches them.

to.

year. State administrations, how- firms offering to sell you civil serv­
ever, can make up for their blun-,Jce training will take your money
ders and lack of good management and leave you holding the bag.

United States So it seems reason- might have been produced here
able to expect that the plans sub- I Whatever fanciful theories may
milled by this commission will be have been behind the New Deal
both workable and honest.
(farm policies they have had the
But regardless of the original Poetical result of discouraging pro­
in •»*••
this -*■-•
country
and -•
al •»«the
plans and recommendations. the 1 duction •— ---•
m same time opening the gates to
important question is what w
—
they be like by the lime they pass forcl&lt;n producers,

From Our Scrap Book

Hew to the line, let the quips
fall when they may!

actually saying so. the literature
leaves one with the Impression that
jobs will certainly be obtained after
one has passed the course of train­
ing offered by these firms Borne of
the material is particularly clever.

It isn't going to be euy to get a
THE NEW DEAL METHOD
good civil service system installed
Because of the doctrine of scarand working. Before this can be ‘ city with which President Roosevelt
done three things are necessary—A has attempted to cure domestic
workable plan; an honest effort by farm His. Imports have poured In
the executive and legislative depart- here from abroad to help fill the
menu to put the plan in operation; vacuum left by our own under pro­
strong public support of the plan.
ductton. This policy of Idleness
Formulation of a workable civil' *nd destruction has left the doors
service system applicable to condl- to the great American market wide
tlons in this state is no easy task, open for producers everywhere.
There are hundreds of details to
This foreign invasion has pro­
consider, under what divisions shall gressed to an almost unbllevabie
various types of employees be extent—especially in such staples
placed; what shall their qualifica­ as wheat, corn, butter, beef, pork
tions be; how much shall they be and wool which are the main crops
paid; what provisions sluill be of agriculture In this country.
made
for-----permitting
--------------- department
—rOfficial figures released by the De­
heads to weed out undesirable em- partment of Commerce substantiate
ployees without * breaking down “the
"■* these facte. A contrast between the
civil sendee feature; what provis­ Imports for 1834 and 1935 in the
ions shall be made for advance­ table given below will indicate to
ment; how far up the line and how what extent alien producers have
succeeded in capturing the domestic
fecllve; etc, etc.
market with foreign goods.
A special commission headed by
XMY0BT8.
Prof. Pollack has been studying tills
question tn detail. All civil service
»S»,35*
systems in this country have been
analyzed and in addition Prof
Pollack, himself, has first hand in­
formation concerning various systerns tn Europe Also assisting the,
n
H
w
commission is Dr. Lent Apson who &lt; *rn»i w*i»i jb ssjsi 3»s ili.sos.ioi
has probably had more practical
This invasion still continues,
experience with civil service sys- Each bushel or pound Imported rep­
. ..
-------- . -------------------------------------- thgl
terns than any other person tn the resent pounds or bushels

THURSDAY. MAY 28, 1936

' A lot of the young bladee-aboutI town thought they had my boas'
! secretary pretty
well "localized."
But guess there's no hope. She still
has to call o. R every week and
talk to "Chummy."

to

STucirs

1 ptrlng 11 111 the windrou snses the
' &gt;«**•• “nd gives better color. Alfalfa
nfCr^Vir1
C*n
toM ln the Rwalh for ,boul
f£tet^rt«40» nirkenJ
*our to six hours but should be
field (1849!. Dickens senior was not,
u,,
fhai ■■
only alive but' still "going strong!".
™
. n
ui. .mr.-.
Alfalfa should be cut when the
His sons generosity had lifted him p]ani Mtarui to bloom, which usuala book is anybody inside a book.

Mce-ow

uU"u‘, ■» irs

I Anyway. I bought my boss a new
। blue pencil to try and smooth things
over.

Views and Opinions; I
What Others Say;
OLD FASHIONED
We may be a bit old-fashioned
but we still prefer to see the farm- .
er doing his spring plowing instead
of loafing near the mail box wait-&gt;
ing for a government check for I
taking his land out of production. I
—J. E McMullen in The Linden i
Ledger

&gt;nnc

A Quotation

j Backward Glances;
|
Bits of Yesterday
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Miss Vera ingerson of this city
has been formally notified by the
Presbyterian Board of Foreign Miasions of her selection as sujierln•pnrtl'nl
111. Name"
Wan.." ■wn-.r.ll.l
tendent nf
of -In
Tn His
hospital
and training school for nurses at
Sen Sen. Chosen (Korea) She will
leave July 18 or 26 for her new field
’of labor
» .The 34th annual banquet of the
blastings High Schoo) Alumni Asso­
ciation will be held on Thursday
evening. Julie 22. at 6 30 o'clock In
| the parlors of the Methodist Epis­
copal church. An interesting teaturc of the evening will be the welcoming of a class of over eighty in
number
Mrs. Charles A. Weinert enter­
tained informally on Tuesday eve­
ning with a girls' frolic In honor of
Miss Ruth F Welssert. one of the
brides-to-be of this cty
j A local lent of the National AlHance Daughters of Veterans of
America will be organized in tire G
A R Post hall. Thursday evening
George Burgess has completed
surveying the site for the new high
■bhool building in the city park

character bJoeeomed into lenteNt?-1 The extension
department Is
And ladles and gentlemen, you He wu to a considerable extent a ■ plannln(( dcmon*trattons of alfalfa
should have heard what lie said— «medf hk^Ua ^rt°7n ^er!^Xter&lt; i cullln“ “nd curlnK ,n dinerent parte
gained him a part to toe reporters of lhe sUte
enect of
you should have heard! My! My!
f.? ‘TL1" ““J&lt;°re
w cki alfalfa in the swath for varying
Up
h
•lifted the f.mllv
family In
to emlnanre
eminence. I^ter
Later I
Well! Well! I see that my old Jlfted
friend Elmer While Is back on the on. when the Daily News was
z zv
tit
&lt; ■
job again. The sales problems of founded, his son was able to award! ...
Way Of OUT WOTlCl
the Cordes Newsstand are doubt­ him the position of chief of the
reporter
lai —
staff.IMThe
mimic W..0.V.
dignity II
v.
po-.
&gt;
NEWS GLEANINGS.
less all solved now.
of his position, Its apparent control
There are more ways'than one to of the destinies of nations, suited I Today over 24.933.000 motor vc। gi t the buttons sewed on a sweater, John Dickens to the ground. One hides are registered in the u. 8 ai
ns a well-known drummer and clari­ of hta youthful colleagues on the ' compared with 2 000 df the "horaenet footer of this community can Dally News, writing his reminiscences ' toss buggy" type familiar in 1809
tong afterward, has given us a
------------testify.
charming picture of the father of | Although North America has only
Dickens—short.
portly 1-12 of the world’s population, it
Understand that one of our "City Charles
Dads” was gently relieved of his obese, . . full of fun. never given to consumes 1-2 of the world's timber
much locomotion, but sitting as । „
,
------------,
"chapeau” recently.
chairman, and looking carefully to ’ Seventy-five per cent of Amertoa'e
Three of the town's well-known the regular marking and orderly 1 ^ur Rs'i’Tnrr»t Industry is carried on
dispatch
to
the
printers
of
the
numln
rectangle
bounded
by 26th
fishermen. I understand, somehow
erous manuscripts thrown off at,
31st streets and flth and 8th
got tangled
an overhang
______ up with____
________ ! tog tree In midstream and upon be- lightning speed by the men from avenues in New York City
j tog thus stranded had to drop in the gallery. "It was his habit." we
are told, "to come down to the office I
and swim to shore,
There are more than 850,000 penabout eight, at night, and he in- i’ sion cases on the U. 8. government
j
variably in all weathers walked 1 rolls
That's no fish story either
down Fleet street and turned into ।
the passage leading to Whitefriars"
.
Walt till my editor goes on
When
the walking stick" loses a
When he put his father Into the ic,. uK- Uuecl grows another,
cation.
pages of his greatest book, it was as
------ ----- I'll gel something by I've been a tribute, a mark of his esteem. It' The power of an airplane depends
conferred upon him immortality 1 upon speed. A rope the size of »
Mr. Micawber. b» it admitted, ta I clothesline can hold a plane on the
So another waffle—1 mean raffle John Dickens Senior: Just aS Mrs ground
Nickleby was Charles Dickens* moth. .. ..-------------.
—has come and gone
CT. But one mu.« not overdo thl» L,n
.
eonneellon between Imasinory poo- I ,k'"« ol EIW„pu ,„ hiuu In order,
Have you seen Frank's symphony
'
pie end reU prototype. In u&gt;e book. I ‘J'
« •» •»' P'™ld*nU ol
in green and brown?
of Dickens; and Indeed It has been U1C u 8l
&gt;„ title, ol mote U»n loo.MP
You never can tell what a warm udlyovCTdone. lt tome to slur over ;
the real creative merit of genius ihPrf are nlnc perMnM [0 evcry
sun will bring out*
and to turn it Into mere transcrip- I •*---•
--------*
'
theater
seat
Those deep-toned shirts are cer­ tion.—From "Charles Dickens. Hl*
] Life and Work," by Stephen Lea­
Pennies and dimes are In greater
tainly toning up the town.
cock. &lt;New York Doubleday, Dor- demand today." according to bonks,
than al any time since 1929 During
ll Lakes a stout heart and a cool an.)
nerve tho. to wear a red one like |
one month recently 44235.229 pen­
ENGLISH WOODLANDS
nies. nlcklcs. and dimes were mint­
Bob Corkin sports once each week I
Woodland countries are interest­ ed.
ing
on
many
accounts
Not
so
much
What thia town needs u a good
on
account
of
their
masses
of
green
The Christmas tree made its first
matchmaker
Too
many young
bloods romping hither and thither leaves, as on account of the variety appearance as a regular institution
of sights, end sounds, and Incidents, along the Rhine in the 16th century
without responsibilities
that they afford. Even in winter, the
The principal Island of the Juan
Just an example of cussed human coppices are beautiful to the eye.
W...W they VU..UU.V
,c mind,
mu.u, wimi
kfoup *300 miles west of
comfort w
the
with I
nature — Those involved always white
the Idea of shelter and warmth. In j Chllei Ls the locale of Defoe’s “Robwant the other guy in the same
sprlng. they change their hue from !lnM,n Crusoe ” ft is also a botanies!
day to day. during two whole ! *onder-i»OMesalng 143 species ot
W« U =• u'lrUto .11. to. thl.!1 ”
«»«»•
“ •»&gt;«&lt;
------- naUv planta. 3-3 ot which have
..-..I.
’.-, •M* L
time
•----- -----------------------------------• • •
from
the first appearance of. -*.
thef 1 never tjeen found tn any other counWonder wh«l U&gt;r loc.l -Bromo- «lc,u
°! “»
“ “&gt;«
roMumpUon U now-.-d.ys&gt;
»P«mlon ol Ihto ol lh«
Signers Ele rated.
, , ,
I and. even before the leaves come at
John Adams and Thomas Jeffer­
w.n iAn»Mn. .r.
.1 1..I I ,u 10 ‘nl«rcn* U»e view. what, m
Well. lol!} pops are doomed at last.
vegetable creation is so deilaht- son were the two signers of the Dec­
BIO. .h. Odton o&lt; U» kelm. rrlaration of Independence who be­
came presidents.
for flavored ice cubes—preferably on blue-bells? The opening of the birch
a slick.
leaves, is the signal for the pheas­ Changing Constantinople
ant to begin to crow, for the black They're not bad either; tried one bird to whistle, and the thrush to
to the Name of Istanbul
myself the other day.
sing. and. Just when the oak-buds
...
In ----IU3Q- ....
ths ....
new republic ...
of Turbegin to took reddish, and not a day key began to Insist (bat the official
As one might say. Lollypops is
*WhO,e U,be. of ftnche'
(mute
U»*&lt;1 for the rity
almiit
the
"dnomdrel"
business h^h^hite" t»!2n*(lrir,rn?’
"•
* «&gt;. l.y Ouaaiaatlne
known.

LETS GET HIS SERVICES.
Dr. Hugo Eckener the most sueces&amp;ful manipulator of lighter than |
air craft which the world has ever |
seen, has offered his services to
thia country. Dr Eckener has al­
ways been a very staunch friend
of the Americans and has never
been able to tolerate any adverse
through the legistolive mill? Leg is"who /atu to tuv care of hu credit
criticism in his presence without
"WANG-LING."
soon has none to uV care of."
latlve support will be far from
putting up a strong defense for
History repeats itself There U the people of this —
unanimous. A great many repre­
—
MAY
country
28— Th« first ihe«p are impartsentatives and senators who pub- nothing very new in the world aft- has now offered to teach Ameri­
cans everything he knows about
Ucly claim they are "sled length" ’
handling
this
sort
of
air
naviga
­
Government policy dictator in
for the plan, will be secretly work­
tion. and that he knows more than
peirince on B/osdwiy.
ing against it—attempting to add ’reign of the Chinese Emperor Shen
1*9 J.
about 1068, A. D-. was a cer­
amendments or make deletions Tsung
"
which wtll make the final system ’tain Wang An-shih. poet, scholar
and
essayist.
Now
Wang
accepted
to America. ISW.
a mere pretense and will thereby 1
preserve the extra influence they 1office reluctantly (Ln short he had
enjoy through the dispensing of 1to be "drafted”) but when he did anybody else has been demonstrat­
THIRTY YEARS AGO
\&gt;y
p«*c« wub British. 1901
William M
Stebbins, who
patronage
Strong administrative 1Ideas began to pop with the ex- ed many, many times by the world
support can do much toward over- Ptoslve frequency of a bunch of encircling flight and the commercial
JUNE
keeper at the Hastings National
business which his company has
j I—PUnlun* ot pruKipsI Chicoming the opposition of a hostile firecrackers Experiments began to
Bank has severed his connection
maintained from
Germany
to
legislature If the executive depart- 'P**ti like mold on a chunk ot stale South America with punctilious ,
, with that institution and on June
ment is honestly for such s system ’ bread
regularity. This is a particularly
r«t Cleveland wcda 1 l will become a member of the firm
raises
Folaora
in
White
|
of Fred L. Heath A Carveth
good
time
to
take
on
the
Doctor
s
'
but offers only half hearted supChina was faced with crises both
Emil Tyden and w R Cook left
port, then the final product will be *l home and abroad Something had services when Germany is showing
| Friday morning for a few days'
her lack of appreciation ot this t
determined largely by the legtela-|to
done. Therefore Wang &lt;an- man —Frank Bryce Grand la-dge
trout fishing on the little Manistee
eatabliahed by law. 1916.
ture. The Ideal situation, of course ticipating the
Roosevelt
Brain IndciKndeni.
river
Elliott A Schantz who is taking a
would be honest and whole hearted Trustyby nearly 900 yearsi:
, six months' course at the Parson s
The question of c.-iabluhlng a
the currency—and
support by both the administrative ! *I—Depreciated “
business college in Kalamazoo is
merit system, or civil service, for
and legislative divisions This, how­ poverty still grinds down the Chin­ all state employees, will prabaiiiy be |
horde for a few days.
a factor in the campaign in Michi- i
ever. is almost loo good to be true
•ese people.
George Edwards and wife. Mrs
Gertrude Madge Edwards will ap­
2— Made government loans to gan this year for Gov Fitzgerald ' |
In the final analysis, the type of
is an ardent advocate of such a ' •
pear with their company at Reed's
Civil service we get will be deter­ farmers—and the farmers are still
measure and has already put the I
On-ra house next Monday evening
mined largely by the public If poll- Iplagued with debts.
Mrs Clement Smith left Monday
iiv'rit system into effect for Jackson I ITALY’S victory over Ethiopia
Ucians are made to realize that peo- ’ 3— Had the government absorb pFson A commiasion has been at ' * prompted Chiha to buy 60
morning for St Pau! where she will
attend the National Federation of
pie are “ugly-earnest" over th’. ’the . surplus crops—fortunately only work endeavoring to frame a law I new Italian bombers, a 31.000.­
000
order.
Ono
hopes
Ameri
­
Women's
Clubs as a delegate from
with
provisions
that
will
be
work'
question of an honest civil service a fei million starved.
can industry doesn't copy Mus­
the Michigan Federation
ablc and which at the same time
system, then such a system will be; 4—
solini's advertising stunt.
Lee Pryor delivered the Decorawtll prevent mteflu and incffiI see the summer sun is bringing to the sky-WIlllam Corbett, in
forthcoming, regarriicv. of what erything that had ever been done cient persons from being placed m
lion Day address at Middleville.
out its usual scanty eflecls!
state jobs to satisfy political work­
the
legtolative
and
executive before was naturally wrong!
Chas. A Welueri returned Sun­
Residents of the Bronx, New
day from the East where he has
York, have had to depend sole­
brandies of government would like
5—Tampered with civil service er*. and such a law will be present­
A lot of people were perturbed the soli—Bo stay on your feet boys
been doing work on tha big city about that article on "Termites"
ly on their newspapers since
to do. But. although the public b &lt;nd office tenure-and got dtohon- ed for consideration by the legisla­
and you'll be safe!
ture which will be elected negt No­
i dailies.
tha barbars went on strike.
taterasted hi civil service and dis-1 eety end lax administration,
vember Framing a merit system
My friend Jake, 1 see. has a nice
gusted with party patronage, it a | Good and able men refused to1
FORTY YEARS AGO.
Government officials in Can­
new front.
There's
no
danger
tho.
so
long
as
doubtful that this interest is either support Wang These were forced and it the same time protect the
। J.u Mead and A E Davenport
ton. China, have forbidden
state against the building up of an I
have had a concrete walk laid in wood isn't brought in contact with
sufficiently intense or concentrated 1 into retirement. Dishonesty clung
Chinese women to curl their
One thing about these prize draw­
office holding bureaucracy or artsfront ot their residences
L E
ings. you can gel swell service at the
to influence legislation
I like leeches to the government pro- tocracy is not an easy task, and the 1 hair, leading us to wonder if
Stauffer. Valentine Leins. C. H Os­ Tlw&gt; -poetry of motion' was illustrat­
stores while the thing is in prog­
Consequently it appears that the!gram. Without questioning the in- merit systems of other states and I
born and M L cook have also had ed by N. T Parker's fine stallion.
gard to hats
ress.
fina! civil service bill submitted for telligenoe of Wang, the verdict of other countries are being studied *
concerete walks laid.
Frank Brown, as he moved along
|
ML'* Bessie George assisted by tike track He has the finest action
approval will be whatever the ad-1 China has been adverse to his with a view !o embodying in the Among the early June weddings
Those arm rests and scat at­
tow the best there is in all the oth- !
her class tn elocution gave her third of any horse we ever saw *•
ministration and
the legislature: idee*
will be that of Rill Hubbard and
er laws as well as avoiding the mis- , tachments suggested lot -WFA
annual recital at the opera house
want U to be. If both are honest ! "Wangling"
Borne miscreants destroyed the Alice Plngleton.
no more
takes made by others We arc not1 workers* shovels aught aLo be
Friday evening. One of the pleas­ handsome century plant owned by
the public will be given an adequate ' answer to the problems of Medieval optimistic enough to believe that
incorporated in Kansas State
ing features of the program was Mr nd j/and
Mrs. * J. H Dennis. ThuraAl McCall will soon be driving a
the statue posing by Mrs
W E I d„ nl-hl " '
and honest system; if the two:China than "Boondoggling' to to any merit system can be so well! Penitentiary guards' guns, since
new Plymouth, they tell me
ail chairs have been taken from
Merritt Misses Gertrude Stebbins I
W)||
written that it will not be more or
branches are divided as to Intent. I the United States of today
Hayes and F A.
less mutilated by the legislature be- ' the orison
and Mae Broaseau
j Ackerson have built a fine boat • Bill Kennedy pulled a Walter
we will get an unsatisfactory hodge I
fore it becomes a law. neither do we
It is a positive delight to think house on their grounds at Wall1 Hagen on the boys Sunday Land­
mcu
&lt;-&lt;c that
*.*&gt;■■. any
■*&gt;; meric
morn system»&gt;sicm-rno!
iio |
the evils of the
uie worm
believe
world oi
of me
the unseiwn
unselfish ana
and tnorougniy
thoroughly lake.
। ing in tite sandtrap guarding No. 6
matter^hoa- perfect—will always be *h®u™
,n upited manner in which tha peoThe executive committee of the ’ green, be pitched out with his nibso well administered as to bring lhe
of day
pie
along the Grand Rapids road, Hlgh School Alumni. Assn
bopeless and we will have to accept
Apertmente with pasteboard walls
have blick and landed smack In the cup
109 per cent resulU; but we da beleading
by
&lt;the
Gardner
farm
and
• • •
and paper rugs are promised by lleve an attempt at a merit &lt; »tem ntF reason why a per«.on seeking . . Maunewa senoomouse. nave taxen decided to hold the annual reunion
the odorous patronage system
Matthews schoolhouse, have taken at Cole a landing. TtMwnapple lake.1 Flash!--News of "Chummy ’ lias
natural science who would have u a tong step m the right direction position with tire state should not I hold of
definitely.
ot the
**** ^ood rnadu
road* mnvrmont
movement,
Saturday afternoon. June 3g The. evidently driven Al Becker to re—
•
snoura nm
------ ------thought that the landlady has been and we hope Mitl igan takes this pass
an examination as to both
reunton eaerelMe will commence at lallatory moves He served up a
a scientist aU these years?—DaUas step. Sucee^ sill depend largely mental equipment and personality. ।
FIFTY YEARS AGO
DON'T BITE
2:30
an wtih
with uia
the fniuwina
following amwramm*.
programme
drliclou* little
breakfast Sunday
upon the character of the men up­ and no good reason why an tneffi- ■ Prom
nom (-.r—. —
—.. Trotting Musk, president's address, Belle morning. I understand
th* .report
of "Big
We sriah to warn Banner readers
and my
on whom will rest the responsibility cien; employe should not be du- Matinee"
Throop, declamation. Henry Bauer, bo**' aecretary waa conaplcuoua by
racket that u
e(
admiulslration.
and
no
man
charged the same as they would be
'The stallions Kyrat Chief, owned music; essay May Sweeney; oration. her absence That'a right "A B"
'The first thing a lion-tamer has
holding an elective office should
to learn,’* says a circus owner, "is to have any part in H. a merit aystetn ,if working for a private individual; by Chas Bauer, and Victor, ownad O W. Jonas; music. Tha banquet Keep 'em guessing!
or corporation
Placing people In by Mr. Yates of Nashville were
board Uial is bi-partisan, and stag- jobs to satisfy someone who Is a shown on the lack
They are commencing al 9:39. For this touts
Flash! Flash I-Eaton Rapids IS
mate." we ourselves instinctively Srrd as to terms of office Mwuld istrong political factor is not good both fine horses. Kyrat Chief athave been prepared, and all ar- a pleasant UtUe dty. Han't it Nar­
Aaoding toe country Without
te all re*ponnljHity out of Use businofc
I
Let • tr« the uterlt
stem ttacted
special
attention
and range menu for Hie well being of ma? -chummy” might like the
hands of elected official*. There la .
—W. H Berkey. Cassopolis Vigilant, allowed evidence of careful training the inner man will be provided.
I country air. tool

toT J^in^to

P™&amp;™t Paragraphs

ALFALFA CURING
AFFECTS QUALITY

"I"1

, dressed Instanbul tuatead of Con| stautlnople.
Two years after Constantino
founded the city he made It the
seat of the Roman empire In (he
East and officially named It New
Rome to Indicate Its political po­
sition
But It was popularly called
Constantinople to perpetuate the
fame of ita founder. After the cap­
ture of the city In 1 M3 by the Turke
It become the capital of the Ot­
toman empire.
Ceuatantlnople la really a collaetlon of towns and villages lying on
both sides of tha Gulden Horn and
•long the Bosporus.
There are
four general sections, however, conelating of Eyup, Istambol (the Greek
section south of the Hom on the
site of old Bjuntlum), (lalata (tho
chief business renter and seaport on
the Horn) and Hcwtnrl.
Foreigners have always called the
entire city Constantinople, while the
Turke called It latnmbol, a name
which outsiders applied to the fypiewlly Turkish section, which Is
bounded on the west by the Nee of
Martoore, on tbe east by the Golden
Horn, and on the auatb by the an-

bol is (be Turkish form of Islam

and literally means *lb!-&gt; the city.’
—tier eland riaiu Dealer.

�TMI BASTINGS B4NNIB, THUBSDAY, MAT tl, IW

CHIEF OF POLICE

TUCKER AND MOORACK
D“™ orI?“BN „,1D&lt;NT
TELLS EXPERIENCES
SENTENCED THURSDAY . Died. May It at ths home ot her

7rnk O'Ball,, Ba, B,,a on

Fore* for Twenty -

stepdaughter. Mrs. George parkin-

-------------

Do”1"'

a.T, luh JUl *«■

NEW SHIPMENT
OF LACE CURTAIN*.
This is the time of year when ths
women are busy cleaning house and
all ths ravages of time and wear
throughout the house ar* so appar­
ent. Household furnishings wiU
wear out. especially lace curtains
which can be washed but a few
। times before showing the effects of
sun and dirt If you are needing
new lace curtains, you can find
some beauties at the A K. Frandsen store, as he ha* a shipment
which just arrived. Sec his adv. on
another page for complete particu­
lars. Curtains by the pair or panel.
, and best of all. the panels are 2 1-3
yards long, a quarter of a yard
longer than the usual curtain

(Dora Yank) aged 74
7* vears.
years
Mrs. Donley. a native of Ger­
many. whoa* father died on the
Frank O’Malley, chief of police of
voyage over, came to carlton as a
Edward L. Tucker and Sterling small child with her mother and
Grand Rapid*, was the speaker at
the Tuesday noon meeting of the Modrack. of Battle Creek, who have had lived there most of her life.
ouc
.rr,cu „
D. DonHastings Commercial club. Mr. been tn JaU here on a charge of
She WM
was m
married
to AO1O
Abid B.
O’Malley has served hi* city on the
them—Emmett. Big Rapids;
police force for 27 year*, and was property from Night. Policeman
named
r.,,, deceased,
for 17 year* of that time connected Bhuites car.
--- . which. . Baldy
. .
--------- OrMe
utLr.Ku, the.latwic. isiBabe, v
—r— h
-zuiwf., k
-m— Judge
t.u&lt;wa i _ter _B ■*
_____ . well
_ — known resident
.. •. of
were
brought
before
farmer
with tho detective force, and for 10
w-..
” Thu
?l!z;
,
Hasting*. Surviving are the hu»years chief of that force, serving as McPeek c_
an H.v.
In jail.
i.n l bKnd her wn Emmett
her
days in
such when he was made the head Tucker a sentence of 90
To
Modrack
he
gave
45
day*,
im
­
of the police department. He is the
daughter, two lister*. Mr*
Anna
first man ever to be promoted from posed a fine of 150 as cost* in the Buck. Mrs. Effie Landon, three half­
the police force to the headship of case, and required that he pay Of­ brother*. John. Frank and George
that body. Heretofore politics en­ ficer 8hultz the necessary money to Shriber, and fifteen grandchildren.
GIVEN POWER TO ACT.
tered into and governed the choice Install the radio and put his car In
Funeral service* were held in
The service pipe for the delivery
good condition.
of Chief.
Lansing. Elder Pruett officiating. of city water on Court. Church and
Mr. O'Malley gave some of his
Burial in Fuller cemetery.
Center street* has become too small
experiences as a detective. They DEATH OF MR*. GEO.
to take care of the Increasing de­
A. WINDEKNECHT.
were real detective stories, not
OBITUARY.
mand in that district, which 1* now
Hastings friends were saddened
Imaginary deeds portrayed in the
Josiah Alwlne. 79. passed away a part of the business section of the
to
hear
of
the
death
on
Saturday
modern detective story. They were
al
the
Pennock
hospital
on
Satur
­
city.
It was not so when the two
actual happenings, and were thrtll- morning of Mrs. George A. Wlnde- day about noon after an illness of Inch pipe was laid. There had been
em sv* n ■"
u. several weeks. He was bom in complaints of inability to get a suf­
relate these actual experiences of her husband, a son. Raymond, ot 1
ficient
supply of water in business
^Ah^h1847’*!1^
Mr. O’Malley as a detective. In all Owasso and a daughter Mrs Victor I
and Mrs. Abraham Alwlne. On places and homes, so the matter
hl* work he said he bad never been
was brought to tha attention of the
abusive npr ■’rough" In his treat­ Grand Rapid*, also tour grand- ,
Elizabeth Mishler in Indiana, council Friday evening, it was re­
ment of men he had arrested for children and two brothers Leland i
a ye,ir a residence there they ferred to the water works commit­
UruSy | m°ved t0
they lived tee with power to act.
alleged or suspected crimes. On the Smith of Hol™ d imd
contrary his bearing toward them Smith of Knoxville, Tenn. The fu- &gt; Jor 8®v®n year*, coming to Hastings
had always been kindly and court­ neral was held on Mondav at one
APPOINTMENTS MADE.
years ago. Surviving are
eous. He has never Wed to a man o’clock in Grand Rapids with burUl !
The annual conference of the
af
*twO
charged with crime. He has treated
Holland
1, Robleskl
ROulesxi of
or this
mis city;
citv two grnnderann- Evangelical churches was held at
each one fairly, talked only when
| children and two great-grandchll- Petoskey last week and on Monday
Mr. and Mrs. Wlndeknccht resid­
he felt it would bring tho results
' dren; a sister. Mrs Andrew Blough, the appointments were read. Those
he sought, but has let. the prisoner ed in this city for several year* be­ and a brother. Andrew Alwlne. both affecting Barry county are: Maple
determine, in hl* own way. what fore moving to Grand Rapid*, and j of Johnstown. Pa. Mr. Alwlne was Hill. Rev E R Kring; Nashville.
their many friend* here extend sin­
confession he would make.
a carpenter by trade and hU Rev. W
C. Bassett;
Woodland.
Mr O'Malley is evidently a stu­ cere sympathy to the bereaved one*. i fine handiwork may be found in Rev. H. E. Ryan; Cloverdale. Rev.
dent of human nature. While his
many Hastings residences and busi- C- A. Banders.
DEATH OF J. E. WIIJ.IRON.
I :1 -ess
nlm is always to see that Justice is
places.
'
,
John E. Willison, a Ilfs long and | ne£!Lp
,.7?*
done, he does not overlook the fact highly esteemed resident of the .1 The
the home
FENNOCK HOSPITAL
1110 funeral
Iuner was held
that the criminal is a human being «-nsmp or tsarry. ana a distant °!\W: &lt;»“rt 81 ’ °,n Tuc»d^ •»
I A son was bom to Dr and Mr*,
township of Barry, and a distant j
entitled to fair treatment, but not relative
of Dr F E Willison of . oc,ock- lh® R«v Lemuel Severance D. D Walton. 420 E- Bond, on Wedfound d«d “n .M
«“ «■
M., X
'coddling*'; and hi* alm I* always Kb
to protect society from its enemies couch in the living room of hi* c&lt;mct&lt;ryMr. and . Mrs.
—Car) Trautwetn.
—the criminals.
Nashville, Route 1. are the parents
The members of the club listened home, three miles northeast of DEATH OF MRS.
I of B son born on May 22
with great Interest to Mr. O’MAlley's Hickory Comers, at « o’clock Bat- ;
LOLA 8. MOSHER.
gom to Dr
and Mrs Gordon
urday
afternoon.
He
had
not
been
plain, straightforward talk.
Mrs. Lolo S
Mosher, aged 72, Fisher. lOfl W. center 8t. a son on
in good health for a long time
I coroner Dr. Gordon Fisher of this *’&gt;dow
of James
Mosher,
on I Tuesday.
May 26.
.. . . died
| Tuesday.
May 26.
----- --------------- B ------

tenoe* and Fined
draak |B0

Mo-

CENTRAL P: T. A.
INSTALLS OFFICERS

city was summoned. He stated that Saturday at the home of her
death was due to a heart attack daughter and husband. Mr
and ,
and that an inquest was unneces- ' Mrs. Clayton Hinckley, southwest
Prin. E. L. Taylor Was the sary. The body wa* found by his o! lho cll&gt;' B!,e had becn lJ&gt; P°or ।
son Edwin when he returned from health for a long time but her last 1
Speaker—Social Hour
work in the onion fields on the Mckneas was of three months’ dura- |
---------------------------...0,1 J‘&gt;*y &lt;, 1»«4
,w.
Surgery Guild No l» ,
farm at 4 o’clock An hour previous tlon
born
Followed Program
to the finding of the body. Mr Wil-1 the daughter of Edwin and LouUa ’ lt*rlained by Mrs Ross Johnson at
The centra) P T A met in the llson's son-in-law, Stuart Waters. 1 Hyde of Maple Grove township her home on 14 Michigan Ave., on
auditorium on Tuesday evening. saw him on tho porch.
She had resided in Barry county for Thursday afternoon. June &lt;. AsslslMay 19. with a good attendance and
Surviving are Lhe I lnK »*r will be Mrs. Etta Andrews
Mr. Willison was bom September slxty years
an Interesting program
Hinckley.
four I Bnd Mrs. Oayla Tolles.
21. 1856 at Cedar Creek, the son of daughter. Mrs.
Harvey Burgess. Scout Master, Mr. and Mrs Edwin w Willison grandsons
and a
half-brother. I
„
-- ---------.
„ ,.
meeting. Friday
defined the duties of the Central He was married to Miss Lydia Kel­ Blanchard Hyde, of Chicago
Townsend plan meeting.
Funeral services were lield at the I evening. June 5. B o’clock if our
P T A. in sponsoring the Cub Pack logg of Stanton March 4. 1887 Bhe
home of her daughter on Monday ' plans mature. thLi is to be an "Out
Troop 14 which meets al lhe parish
died two years ago. The funeral
house The incoming president will was held on Monday.
, afternoon at ,two
wm mwwv
o’clock,. mw
the &lt;«»
Rev of D
Doors"
00"" meeting, and B
is to be
appoint a committee of three to
j, • W.
Maylan----------------------------Jones officiating ------Burial held on the vacant lot Just south of
Surviving Mr. Willison are 1&gt;
----------------*• ■ was — n
,.—cemetery
...y
Coscarelli’s fruit store on Jefferwork with the leader of the Cub children Including Mrs. Claud HerRlvendde
—;------------- ,«&gt; -------;------■ son 81. We are asking
Pack.
ringion. of Banfield; Mrs. Albert
-----------------------------------------It was voted to pay $15 to-Miss Hartman, of the Kellogg Farm.". HASTINGS
"1ST1NGS WOMEN
WOMEN ELECTED
ELECTED
J CUgh as our speaker.
Rose DeFoe to be used for buying Gull lake; Mrs. Ray Durkee, of:
DELEGATE TO NAT L '-~
CONV. I
~ ~
,
glasses for children in cooperation
The
Fourth
district
delegates
to
The Rutland Cemetery Circle
Durkee, of
with the work of the Barry County . £
°?rdm?
the
Democratic
National
convention
1 w111 niecl Wednesday p M . June
Charles
Beck, of
Health Unit
Ii Galesburg; ..
filh
Edith
Edger.
at
Philadelphia
elected
at
the
State
3w
‘
U&gt;
Mrs
EdM
Edg"All
are
Mrs. Clarence Payne.
New officers were installed as j of cloverdale; Mrs Stuart Waters convention are Arthur Shattuck.
follow:.: President. Mrs. L F Maus; of near Delton; Jason Willison, of Cassopolis. R W
Vaughan. Alle­
Teacher Vice-Pres.. Mrs Hah Hill;
M.
Fair lake; Edwin, at home; Wal- gan—alternates arc Honora
Mother Vicc-Pres.. MrsPr...
Theodore
Rnu I !«■. of Ptainwjli. and Elmer, of Prntt. Hastings and Dorothy Cross.
Knopf;
’’
r.lher ’Vlet-ne.
Ro&gt; creuer TwBM, ,ru&gt;dehll&lt;uu&gt;
Helmer
Cordes; Secy.
...
lwl&gt; broilim. Sanford WUUron. of;
Trees.. Mrs Donna Harrington.
HlcltOry corners i
INSTALLING OFFICERS.
Hlckor,
Principal Edwin L- Taylor gave “
nUocomer.,
survive .nd E R.. M Del1 The Veterans of Foreign Wars
-n
llnnd-­ 1
'
survive.
an InUrartlw
instructive talk
talk on
on "-Hie
"The Unad
and their Auxiliary meet this
Justed Child.”
REPORT
NEXT
WEEK.
,
...
... evening at the O- A R
Thursday
At the close of the program, a so­
Because the returns have not hall for a pot luck supper followed
cial hour was enjoyed under the
been received from all the places in by installation of the new officers of
direction of Mrs. Richard Oroos.
the county, the complete report of the
“
*
...
...
.
Auxiliary.
Members of. ..
the BatThe central P T A. has accom­
the Poppy Day receipt* will not be tic Creek Auxiliary will do the in­
plished much for the benefit ot lhe
given unt:l next week. However, the stalling. All members of both or­
schools of this city and their co­
American
Legion
Auxiliary
I* ganizations
are
invited
Plea.se
operation has been appreciated by
pleased with the amounts so far I bring sandwiches and a dish
the teacher* and school officers.
reported.
food.

THURSDAY

IAHMIES
OF ANTSPANTRIE?
I
RAIDING

„. *. o.

Public Library i
|
Fiction.

।

SOT MAX*

Bxpixz.. tk.

Method* of Koepinr FafU

Barrett Willoughby—River House.

Under Control

“
Nen-FleUe**.
' Only two things are certain and
' Evelyn Walsh McLean—Father thoa* two things are death and
Karl ton Keim—Cherry Bad.
Struck fl Rich
taxes, „„
the philosopher once aald.
Beatrice Burton Morgan — The
i Adolph Kruhm—How to Orow But many Michigan
bold*
Mainspring.
farm products tn ind
Vegetables and Berries.
( have come to expect ~
’
spring and
Grace
Livingston
HQI — April
lain that there will
Rose Wilder Lane—Give Me Lib- summer to also make certain Ute
Gold.
erty.
raiding forage of ante in the cupfactoring.
Izirry Barretio—Tomorrow Will
Robert t- Bullard—America I bo?a‘
.“"A""*'* ,
u
Be pifffrent
Further proof of the
Soldier* Also Fought
Even lf lhe
d0 not enler lhe
John Rathbone Oliver—Greater
.. ... „
,
house, they may cause damage or of the toy bean as a fi
Love.
Thomas Allen—Let * Travel Safe- , unsightly conditions in lawn*. In the tact that our state
Mrs. Fremont Older—Savage* and
discovered
that sov b
fields or aardeiu or on troas PrnSaints.
S^d**r*y N*chot&gt;—T*1®
Hath feasor E. I. McDaniel of the deMignon O- Eberhart—Fair Warn­
partmen t of entomology at Mlcht- of alfalfa, as the cultivation
ing.
Joeeph J. Lukowite—Art-Metal | gnn State College, has prepared Ex­ the toy bean enables the farmer
Grant Taylor—Gunsmoke Haclen- Work.
! tension Bulletin No. IM. "Ant Con­
,
Oren C. Durham—Your Hay Fev- . trol in Houses and On Lawns." The over alfalfa on weedy fiel
Daphne Du Maurler —Jamaica
. «
rA-w
' bulletin will be available tn a few dent.
Inn.
Paul H. DeKruif—Why Keep days through the Bulletin DepartOeorge Metcalf—The Baddie Bum. , Them Alive?
,! ment. Michigan
QUIMBY.
„
Michigan"state
State Colieg^East
College, East i
IPlrfltnn,
—
Hvr-amnr*
T
___ I ——
V
Wm Colt MacDonald—California 1 Clark B- Firestone
Sycamore
'
I Mrs. John Castolaln of Detroit la
Ca«Lf»ller° &gt;
,,
,
. I Sh°rTs
I In brief form the simple prac- visiting relatives and friends here.
Margaret Wlddemer Marriage Is
J. O. Hides—Savage Patrol.
| tlces which will control ants include !
Homer Oasklll and son »-,i
Earl *s
ot
Possible.
. Dudley V. Taleott—Report of lhe two types ot poisons for use against' Birmingham, former resident* here,
Sophus Keith Wlnther-Tike All. Company.
he aSs tSl artemp^to^aS
to Nebraaka.
; Clarence Day-ThU Simian World into the hom^ Por ^nto th^aro were callers at Walter Bldelman’s.
Lucy P. Stebbins—Morning Glory.

Dorothy Gardiner—The Golden
Robert Benchley—My Ten Years | Bfter sweets. Mite McDaniel sug| in a Quandary.
goats using dry poison sugar, liquid
Trygve Gulbranasen—Beyond Bing
Raymond T. B. Hand
■---------------------------------— as fiourine
Hand—
—DlstlnDlstln- —
poison
or powders such
the Woods.
gulshed Houses at Moderate
oderate Cost.
Cost.
compounds, pyrethrum or borax.
Sophie Kerr—There's Only
Jean Barnes, Librarian.
nly One. 1I
] The household "grease feeders” can
Living,
,,,
.
** *
| mv
an ci.vicuig
be nauucu
handed an
enticing cuilltui
control 01
of
Faith Baldwin—Privatei Duty.
I| We thought when we saw Shirley i dry orison worked into grease or
Ethel Huaston—Man of the Storm. Temple in "Captain January" that commercial bait.
’
George T-u.
Dyer
——Catalyst Club.
।। the inti.
little indy’s uniform was a pret.
Jn fields and gardens, control by
|. ty
for ••*«.
her. Now it w
U cultivation or cron rotation ants on
E*
Oppenheim—Advice, Ltd.
-# close squeeze
—— ....
or be
croptreated
rotation.
Ants
on
Allene Corliss—It* You I Want, announced that the diminutive star cultivation
trPes should^
with
conHarold Blndlosa—The Forbidden must wateh out as to her "figger ” tBct gprBy8 Of nicotine sulphate nv^;
Rl^ „ „
_ v _
I *nd llte
her older .Uters
Wm. Heyhger—Dark Conquest.
| has gone on a diet.
control
wllh

■

'■

-------------------------------------- -

&gt;

■

r

L FOR THE

GRADUATES

Organizations

IU

PENNEY’S

'I

New Books In

propriate glfla for both the

liquid bolts, carMki dlsulphide or cyanide.
The bulletin presents a picture
of ant organization and the antiorganizatlon work necessary to use

fprays,

death of Mr. Gaskill’* brother,
Henry.
Mrs Fk&gt; cruso of Nashville U
visiting at the home of By Edmond*.
Mr. and Mrs Robert V room an of
Hasting* are nicely located in on*
of the houses at Quimby.
Mr. and Mr*. Frank Bloom visit­
ed relatives in Battle Creek Sun­
day.
Miss Jane Clark 1* visiting her
'parents tn Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mr*. Samuel ostroth ot
Maple Grove visited at Loyal
Lowell’s Bunday and attended serv­
ices here.
Several from here attended the
Mass meeting at the Central
school auditorium Bunday.

For Decoration
and Graduation
JUST A FEW SUGGESTIONS:

man. See our display befoe*
you decide. Special prices on
watches during* May.
Give them something that
GIVE JEWELRY.

II. HODGES
Phone

KERCHIEFS

HANDBAGS
Genuine leather, in white,
dark shades or colors.

JIM

$1.00

Graduate
in 193ti

Finest linen, and all made
by skilled linger*.

25c and
5Oc pr.

HOSIIRY

FABRIC GLOVES
Give her a pair of new
gloves for Summer.

Very sheer, or very prac­
tical.

59c, 85c, $1.00

50c to $1.00

Shultz or Freeport

BUTTER ZO ‘

and FRIDAY

NECKWEAR
For young and old can

Fresh Ground

COMPOUND

M

2 - 29

886596

rrom the Renter Claud!

50c and $1.00

GOWNS, DANCI SITS. PANT I IS, RLOUStS, ITC.

A**uming that you have long cherished a home of your own, we recommend

2 - 29

that you seize the opportunity offered now to join the class of "Home Owners."
You can build today, or acquire a home that is built, and at a moderate cost

DRESSES and
White COATS

can remodel so that it will be a beautiful modern home.
Wo offer you our facilities for building, remodeling or repairing; a complete
lumber yard is at your command. We maintain a staff of competent workmen,

Tomato Juice
Minced Ham

A

Smoked Picnics

49c

THURSDAY
and FRIDAY

PENNEY’S

I9c

Lb.
Shanklsss

EGGS

s

$1.00 to $1.95

FOUNDATION CARMINTS. SILK SLIPS, PAJAMAS,

131c

Bologna s-11
2
29c
LI _ _ - ARMOUR S STAR
q
Hams Whole Shank Half Lb ZOC
Radishes *•*.*;.,
2 Bunches
or

carpenters, roofers, painters and masons—whatever you need in thi* line, we

We are proud of the part it ho* been our privilege to

Graduate of 1936

ploy in helping many Halting* and Barry county peo­
ple to improve their home*. Graduate thi* year with

Exceptional I'aluej al

thi* class. “A home of your own is a real Home!'

The Horne Lumber
Co. Builds Homes
SUMMER TIME IS SCREEN TIME!
Hove tho Home Lumber Company "Fix-It Man" repair your screen*, or if you

need new ones, have him build them for you. . . We have in stock Scree* Mate­

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3 Dallvariai Dally—Phon* 2272 or 2616

Appropriate for the

have on hand.

rial* and Screen Door* of oil sixes and prices.

THE HOME LUMBER CO
PHONE 2276

HASTINGS

$6-88
Frand»en9i
But Not Etpuuin
HASTINGS. MICH.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. MAY U. IN4

-

HUEYLONG
RULED LOUISIANA
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1&gt;

making bodies, was evidenced when
hi* pliant legislature passed 44 laws’
that he dictated in a little over two
hour*. Anyone with any sense of
I appreciation knows that when the
good of the state and the good ot
। the people is considered. It cannot
be achieved by rushing 44 bills
through legislative bodies at an av­
erage speed of about three minutes.

England
and I soeeded
Oov.--Allen
---------------France, by Spain, by __
—
--------------up
-- when
------------------- dlsre- I Thus after seeing the good feailted States.
Staten. But up until garded a 10-day ultimatum from •। turo* of our government and apprethe United
tlw time of his death lhe state of the Square Dealers, demanding that heading the dangers that threatenDoulslana wa* owned
by
Huey me Governor call an extra seaslon of ed. he was confident that democLong. The name of lhe state could the legislature to repeal all lhe racy would sustain itself. The
have been
most appropriately Long legislation. Following the America .that de Tocqueville saw
changed to "Hueyalana," because ’ Governor’* refusal. -Square Deal” [ was restless, ambitious, malerlallsHuey owned It, body, soul, and J unit* were organized in practically . uc, eager for wealth and comforts,
breeches. Andrew Jackson, or "Old every parish Ln the state. In some ’ m the old world class lines were
Hickory" as he wo* dubbed by hi* of them mas* meetings were held rigidly drawn and men were conadmirer*. probably had more lo do to form Square Deal companies and , tented with their lot. Here he found
towards saving Louisiana a* a par' in other* organization* were being no *u?h thing a* class line*. It
of our country, than any other perfected on lhe quiet. With their WB*'an open field and ambition
man. Loyal lo the core, never side- increasing hatred of hl* dictatorial wa5 universal. Nowhere In the
stepping a flghl for hi* ideals of rule;
with
live
accumulating wor|d today Is there a land where
freedom and liberty, the beautiful strength of his enemies and their people generally are a* well housed,
monument and Jackson Square In southern hot-blooded temper*, per- । fed and clothed a* they are right
the heart of the city of New Or- j haps hl* BMassinaUon wa* a result here in our own country, and no
leans are worthy tributes to the more or leas to be expected. Doubt- other land where people have the
memory of loyal, hard-hitting "Old 1 les* Senator Long sensed this loo. freedom and educational advanHickory." E_:
But If General Jackson tc
j because
—— -h
when
— 1he
“--------------------------returned lo •»-lhe; tages. —
v?e ■haven't
................................
reached "perfec..... guarded
......a-.4 like
m,. an n,
I. Uon.. as yel ftnd neyer wU1 but U)e
could have---------seen v—
how •&gt;..
the .....
stale of ..............
I state he was
Ori-

passed conferred
unprecedented
power on boards and commissions Louliiana had forsaken all the ental potentate. A day and night good features of our government
but Huey had II all fixed so that he Ideal* of democracy for which he 1 guard wa* thrown around lite slate far surpass lhe bod. People In the
| controlled lhe boards and commis­ fought his body would "turn over capitol building and around the states generally we believe will
sions. Through them he was vtr- in
Governor
IU grave."
... its
...»
....... ’*- mansion.
....----------- The
----- Senator
...---- : • Uli.llk
y make u.iy
think" kWIVC
twice UCIW.C
before KIX.
they
any
| tually given control of elections of
But Huey Long did not reach lhe I himself never went abroad without rn&lt;j|CBj change in lhe system, and
the police system; police magis­ very acme of political power In his personal *taff of strong-arm surrender their liberties to lhe amtrates; the taxing system. In fact Louislana without
fierce.
hot- 'nen- armed with the best of wea- l bilious whims of even a local Dlc1 they conferred on him supreme bloo.ied opposition in every parish P«ns- Intact u number of guards Ulor as dld Louisiana. However,
power in the state. They made him. In the stale. A parish In Louisiana were with him at the time he was H u
t0 be on guard, a* there
as he later proclaimed in Chicago compares to a county here When shot, and *hl*
’'* assassin must h
have
“v--------------t0----- —
no *•
Minll l0 the nlthin 1932 "the democratic parly of uwx
i«ws. mui
nuc&gt; wanted.
wiuneu. realized that he would w{orfel‘ h,s )essne5S of an unbridled ambition,
those 44 laws,
that Huey
Louisiana.'' One of the laws passed were
passed by a pliant Louisiana Hl® lil taking the life of Huey Long.,
Cook.
was a repeal of the Corrupt Praclegislature
in
the
astounding
time
.
Whether
we
agreed,
or
disagreed,
tlce Act. By. repealing this act it
'would permit a certain percentage of a little over two hours, they were with what he advocated, there is no
not even read before the legislature, question but what the late Huey
j to be collected from each job-hold'er’s pay. The number of Job-hold­ As li took only an average ot three Long was possessed of a brilliant
minutes io pass each one of the —»•—-•••*
, ers had rapidly Increased up io
.
20.000. It is easy lo Imagine what laws, ot course there was no time (question that he was
»
—
Ms,
to read them and no time for dis- ‘ llcian and
knew
how U&gt;
seize con­
a vast sum could be collected for
cussion
of their merits or demerits trol through most sordid political
I political uses from this one source
te 1 —------------------methods.
He
put
his
finger
on
the [
Having
everything
In
his
own
,
’
"
"
~
I alone, saying nothing of many
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
very popular political sore ot our'
others. The people were paying for hands. Long announced that Baton
ill all too—ns they Invariably do in Rouge, lhe State Capital would be­ social life In advocating a redistri­ Bennett. Dorothy Lathrop. Mary
[state or nation. Only o few years come "a Hille District ot Columbia" bution ot wealth, taking from those . Stamm. Elizabeth vandegrlft, Ruth
who have and giving most gener­
i ago lhe Louisiana slate government from which he meant lo exercise ,
Warner, jack Homer. Phyllis Long:
| used lo cost »25,000.000 a year, but his control over the commonwealth. j ously to those who have not. Just Simple Simon. Lillian Proefrock;
U jumped right up to 150.000,000 There are thousands upon thou*- , where the* money was coming from Mother Hubbard. Edna Schultz;
tn Louisiana lo carry out his most j
ands
of
liberty-loving
people
In
.
under Huey's regime and was
Her Dog. Hazel Caukln; Bo-Peep,
Louisiana, who "look no slock" In ' generous proposals is not known.. Virginia Waters.
I mounting rapidly.
Probably Huey didn’t care as long ;
I Ever since our government was 1 Huey Long, nor the things that lie
Valedictory—Mary Stamm.
as the proposal made votes. But it I Benediction—Rev. Jones.
(organized it has been our proud stood for. Many regarded him as a
I boast that the people ruled, and we political adventurer, willing to ad­ was popular—and popularity com- :I The following is the list of grad1 have prospered as has no other land vocate any measure that would win mands support regardless of It* untes recommended by lhe High
in the history of lhe world. No one popular approval and enlist support soundness. Selling "Utopia" cheap,; school faculty to the Board of
to promote his ambitions—whatever I very often brings home the political
I will claim, or can claim, that ev­
Education, and the courses they
Especially jI bacon, and especially tn such times ,
erything ha* been or Is perfect. they may have been.
have taken In High school:
did they object lo the supreme || as we have been experiencing.
Regardless of our form of govern­
College Course—Uohn Raymond
' ment. now or hereafter, it will not power of dictatorship that he had ■ The Increasing centralization of Adcock. Jeanne Mary Amdt. John
A strong or-: power in Washington and lhe me1 be perfect
because
'perfection’’ assumed lo himself
O. Barnett. Margret Catherine Bar­
| seems to be quite a little beyond ganlzation was being developed to.। teoric rise of Huey Long to a posi- I nett. Anna Beck. Maxine L Ben­
the grasp of we poor humans, and combat him known as the Square , Uon of supreme dictatorship In nett. Byrle L Brady. Wayne J.
Utopia is a long, long ways off. Deal Association of Louisiana " One । Louisiana might very properly lead Bump. Mary Lou Burroughs. Rosa­
We’re a queer bunch anyway. We of the 44 laws that was rushed;| to lhe question "Where arc we go­ lie Kathleen Cascadden, Hazel B.
Ing. and what of our boasted demokick and curse the government, and through lhe legislature In a little
Caukln. Walter cCauktn. Madeline
freely shed our blood for the right over two hours, was one levying a cralic form of government?” If Virginia cook. Margaret M. Cooley.
to govern ourselves, but when elec­ stale lax of 5 cents a gallon on every Huey Long could become a dictator Gordon Erwin Crothers, Dorn Lu­
in Louisiana, what Is lo
prevent
of”gasoline
refined
tion day comes,
when we can ef
tunica, wiicii
ei-­ gallon
~--------_
.----- , In, the. stat®
cile Day. Audra Mae Densmore, J{.
re«uur our
our dullkex. SO Tlld «"*' re(incrle* &gt;" Loum«n« l other*, ambitiously Inclined, from Rcxlne Downing. Genevieve Erway.
fectively register
becoming dictators In tho rest of our
u. 1*11
per cent of
of us
’ ' to c**( our «n,10ullc*d lhBt they, woultl ,,ot .! states,
and even Including our na- I Alice M Flnkbelner. Ruth G. Horn.
Th*! m.ko. It )u.t th.!
&lt;»' ““ * l,&lt; ,s !! •*““'»
Geneva Helen Hubbell. Norma Ro­
Bier to
IO continue
ruinoU
‘"°“?L
' .The« *«!»&gt;»*'•
much easier
continue indluon.
conditions II ™
w sl,?‘ j tional government? Personally we I'maine
Dorothy ,~~"r
Jane
. - Jacobson,
----------- --that we object to. and which we down lhfc,r "««««■»« and leave the l all like to believe that the people ot
feel should be changed Nothing I* H*1*, Sueh * Pr“pec‘ *“nLl | this country are too wise and too • J0*™fc**r’a£l_L Keeler Hugh
'sensible to permit any overthrow of
Kelley Harold Raymond Knapp,
more important to the average Citi- Pleasln« lo , the , thousand* and
Dorothy
Lathrop. Phvin.
Phyllis
i our present form of government. D°
rol*’v Louise Lathron
zen than lhe kind of government! u'O“«"ds1 nt
*hrea*?ed
Long. Eugenia LyBarker. Lucille A.
and the character of lhe govern°f their Jobs Mid they I There ore times, like the present ,, , --- •„,
A
Mc*5,enflement that he has to live under ^u'ed .lh‘\
«*•’ or£,n‘- 'for instance, when all Is not well
McLaughlin,
Meriyn
with our country—and with the J?5 a Ruth
"
" J"“" ”
**
But $0 per cent of our voters do not “tlon to fl’ht Hue&gt;' 1x51,8 Ther^
Marshall.
--- ---------- . Victor
-------- , Clifford
regard it of sufficient importance;*®’ lB,lt 01 ® ^rch on the capitol , whole world In fact. But wc do like ,, ve,
to take the few minutes required to Iand evcn °r bloodshed But with 1 to feel that the good embodied in Mimton Herman W. Newland, Car•
our
institutions
under
which
we
c
A,be
‘
l
cast their ballot* and register their ‘he absolute control that he had
have greatly prospered, far exceeds i torn. Lillian Mae Proefrock. Dochoice
Under many governments 01 e»e«lon boards, the police aysR“«n«n. Bemelta
in this old world today people are ‘*m
‘he state, and everything the bad. A hundred years agu a
young
Frenchman,
^odc"®u*,b Agnes E
Royer,
denied even the opportunity to vote,
a P°'ltlcai nature. Il would I philosophical
I
Really the ones In authority in I h®ve been. quite difficult to oust Alexis de Tocqueville, came to this ‘ J“na A■. flch“,u- Dorothy Louise
those countries tell the people what 'him from hl. dictatorial throne, un­ country and after wide travel and a Shellhigton. Florence L. Shepard.
I
lot
of
study
and
observation,
wrote
Mary
E.
Stamm,
Nettle
Mac
Staufto do. and they have to do it.
he would have eventually willMarilyn
Sumner.
whether It pleases them or not We 'stcPP*&lt;l &lt;Jo«"
the face of ' his well known treatise "Democracy i ,er&gt; Suzanne
have seen more of that kind of1 ®n, overpowering oppositlQn^Jhat I in America " It is almost startling 8nr^‘ra, A' Tr‘‘go. Elizabeth Ruth]
how
true his
predictions have Vandegrlft. Roliert carl Walldorff.i
as i
yet
manifested
government in this country of late hadn't ~
eL1:n
5"”.s.s’e7.’itself
7*". at
than we ever did before, and for u,e ‘*m® of h,s dea‘h At least it been. "The time will come" he said Ruth Elaine Warner. Virginia Mary!
X'^To^’^^hTl^^v’m WMnt Shown in election results V -and he may have anticipated .WafersDonald Clifford Weaver.
thU coZv Si bJ n^it rlaidN ‘^y were given out. because hC Jay
Gould
and
Jim
Fiske— R*loli&gt;E Weaver. Florence We.terSiSai^Sc.^ii K iT^bsSly controlled the count
when men are carried away and Hnd- Barbara&gt;M WHUCleone Wood -

f
ONE HOMED
juioGMDUITES

contrary to the fundamentals of a . In a speech before the meeting lose 611 self-restraint at lhe sight.
n |
democracy like ours But nowhere of the state-wide Square Deal Asnew poosesslons they are about A^™rC]*’
Lh-1
in this country was this tendency sociation.’’the President of that As-[ to la&gt; hold upon. In their intense
j Bryans Doreen M cannon
towards absolute dictatorship so , sociation had said
Wc want it un-: desire to make a fortune they lose ■
clouse
Marie Fverann'
strikingly shown a* Il was in Lou- derstood that this is not a meeting sight of lhe close connection.which t
yn Clou*. M
J*"*5"isiana
L.th
Isiana in
in the
the la*t
last year
year or
or so
so of
of , ot
of oil-worker,
oil-workers to
to protest
protest against
against the
me exists between lhe private fortune
Ita
u'
Huey
Long, ....
111. Loublou
hu h*d
oil ux It u . meellnx nl &gt;&gt;
lhe till- nf
ol each
'tch nf
ol them
them and
.nd the
the nrosoerptoeper■ Jonnson.
"'u'"n veimr
V'
..
.. ...
!
..
M- Kellogg, KathDonna
Jean
quite a colorful history It has been zens of Louisiana to protest against &gt;ty of al
Nolure *«•"**&lt;&gt; lo ton’ M
soohn F Wallace Virginia
llnrn
Vlrrrir.
In ‘
under the control of the Indians, .all of Senator Long's dictatorial spire with man in the developmen
»°Pha E Wallace. Virginia!
under the control of Hie Indians; , all of Senator ^Long's
at one time lhe pirate Lafitte and 1 laws, lo demand their repeal, and of a democracy in this country, but | L wellfare.
„
..
.
.... trusty
........
. . ...........
u
acutely
De Taeouevllle
Tocqueville seemed
acutely1 General Course—Harold E Bolo,
: his
henchmen cut _a .big
to see .that
they .....
are ™
repealed " The !&gt;«•
Robert O
Burwell. Betty Leah,
I swath; it has been owned
by membership of lhe organization was aware of some of the threatening
dangers. He noted lhe tendency of | Cooper. Barbara Jean crook. Eman-j
| democratic governments
towards ual Henry Eaton. H Charles Emrlck,
Paul
H
Freeman. Ijturencr E.
। extravagance and ' patronage." and
especially warned against lhe cen­ Garrison. Ed it ha Elson Harrington.
tralization of power. Newspapers he George K Hart. Roy A. Hatha­
regarded as the bulwark of Ameri­ way. Hazel E. Hull. Lucille Eva
Evelyn
R
Koepllnger.
can liberties, but was. cautious Karmen.
1 enough to say that their Independ­ Helen Jane Kurtz. Max 8 Leach.
ence and their influence would di­ John c. Leary. Edwin Maurer.
Reathel
Newton.
Viva
Mae
Osborn.
minish with the growth and cen’ trallzation of power. He noted too Merlin B Pierce, Robert Lee Rlzor.
i tiie extraordinary dependence of the Mary Louise Thomas. Margaret
! American political system upon Elaine Tolles. William H. Tuttle.
,j courts, and for the Supreme Court Donald Robert Wldrlg.
Agricultural Course—Chester C.
, he expressed the greatest admlraj tion, but with this caution: *'If the Cramer. Dwight d. Ferris. Robert
I Supreme Court Is ever composed of I Newton. Zopher Rom.
bad or. imprudent men, lhe Union
| may be thrown Into anarchy" Of
1 course
didn’t define "bad" or im­
prudent."
'

Graduation
GIFTS

People vs. Spicer
Dismissed By Judge

Give An

UNDERWOOD
TYPEWRITER

GEO. E. WALKER
&amp; SONS
PICKLE CONTRACTS
AND SEED

May be obtained at the
following places —

. . We will take your old machine in trade

WALLACE SEED STORE,
Hastings.

either on a cash deal or you can have 12

CITY NATL. BANK
NaahvUlo.

months to pay. If you have an old typewriter

SMITH A DOSTER
HARDWARE,
De Hon.

and want a new one, give us a chance to quote

our prices. Reasonable down payment if you

MIDDLEVILLE CO-OP­
ERATIVE CO,
Middle villr.

do not have a machine to trade in.

Come in and try the new Underwood

ONCE!

The GRADING

PNOWI 2IIS
grower fairly.

Machine

(Continued from page 1. Sec. D

Hollowav would be the only witness
who eould so testify.
The motion, certified to by Dr
Gordon p. Fisher of Hastings, stat­
ed among other things, that It wa&gt;
his definite opinion that It wouk
be Imprudent to have Mrs. Hollo
wav annear tn any court proceedlni
due to her advanced age and physi
cal condition.
It is reported that relatives o
Spicer have, during his incarcera
tion In the county Jail, raised a sub
stanttal sum of money which will ir
a measure mitigate the damage
I done to Mrs. Holloway.
; It is regrettable that the cast
; could not have been carried througl
to a conclusion The motion wa:
nresented some time ago by ’Mr
McDonald to Judge McPeek. who
ha* since verv carefully considered
the matter before acting upon it
While It is unfortunate the case
could not be tried, yet a greater inlustlce would have been done by
Insisting that Mrs. Holloway appear
I in court, contrary to her wishes
i and those of her physician Mrs.
Holloway is a resident of manv
vears In this community and is held
In high esteem. It is hoped thatUie
several weeks ot confinement to the
Barry county Jail may have given
Solcer an opoortunlty to consider
released by Sheriff Blakney. upon
the signing of the order.

More than 500.000 saddle horaer
are maintained tn America

�TW1 KAITTWfll BAWWVXjmnUDAT, MAT M, IMS

MONniT

„

[HISTORICAL SURVEY

Refrigerator Diihei
For Hot Weather

Over one hundred Mt down to
OF COUNTY BEING MADE
the beautifully tkecoraled table* for ।
—- ------the May dinner at lhe Hastings Those Owning Old Letterg,
Country Club? Thursday night.
I
Rerorrt.
9in
Spiraea, lilac* and tullpa made a
“ecordg or KeUci of Pio*
“
‘' *
The Kelvlnator demonstration at
noer ’Days
Can Aid
B. W. Pennock of Big Rapids wm
Roy Finstrom waa homa from
Dr. and Mr*. Albert Johannsen of gorgeous showing In the lounge.
Supt.
and
Mra.
D.
A.
VanBuskirk.
'
in the City on Friday on business. Balti* creek on Tueeday
Chicago were at their wail lake
What is known as an historical the H E. Smith hardware drew in­
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Grooa and । survey 1* being made in Barry and terested audiences Friday and Sat­
Miss Jean DeVries wm home
Mr. and Mra. Harry Witzn visit­ cottaga over the week end.
w.r.
“
ocu,
«
niaae
“
i
tuoTy
and
olpl'.1 oO&gt;cr
TtflwBV counUe4 ..— .A — .llM. su
_ . urday.
An.drJ!? mnk carrothers were I el&lt;ht
from W. 8. T. C- over th* week end. ed relative* at Comstock Park on
Mr. and Mr*. Hubert Blakney of
Miss Arlene Spencer, a former
-rki Xh
nrrhMtr. ntavert P*™1’1011
Attorney Fred Wing of
Detroit were Sunday guest* of
Albert Dyer visited Dr. and Mrs. Sunday.
&lt;4.3^. Nih?
U.naUn.rd Hart,ord. Mich. who is the district home economies teacher in the
Charles McIntyre of Ann Arbor last
Dr. M. Alka Haney and Mrs. Sheriff and Mr*. Jay Blakney.
during lhe
the dinner hour, and furfur­ lnanMfr of thu BUrTey.
durtn*
South Haven and Grand Rapids
week.
.
James Heney spent Sunday in
Mis* Katherine Humphrey ha* nished a special number for the
school* wa* in charge, a young wom­
Brings back to u* the Memories of those who offered tMr Itvds
umuim
-u
•PPrwUle lhe CO* an of pleasing personality well
been spending several days with pro......
Mrs. Gertrude Wilcox and Mrs. Richland. •
program w»wn
which
Included
oom- ni^T „W,,l«
on the Altars of Self-Sacrifice and Devotion to Duty In ths
Mr. ana Mrs. John Shafer of Mr. and Mr*. Cheater Wilson of De­ munlty singing, two lovely solos by °l*r‘t,on °‘wh® *»»v« "cords. versed in the type of work she was
Ella Wolfe were In Battle Creek
Great Wars waged that Our Nation remain 'The Land of the
Miss Jean Glerum, Mr*
Mabie *e“ rs °T
rcUc* ot Pioneer putting across.
Fowler were guest* of Mr*.’ Dora troit.
Saturday.
Free and the Horae of the Brave.**
““owing,
Mr. and Mrs Wayne Conklin of Clark accompanying, and a fine “J’ ™' '
------------w-is
— taken from
Tile recipes demonstrated were
Mr. and Mrs. Harvt Woodman of Fedewa on Bunday.
clarinet solo by Lewis Hine, with the
lhe Kalamazoo
Kalamaxnn Gazette.
n.w-tte
1.
It is
1. a
. refrigerator dishes entirely and we
TODAY IS TRULY A MEMORIAL DAY. became at thin
Dr. Frederick H Taylor was in Allegan spent the week end with
Coat* Grove called on Mrs. Ella
statement of the deskes of Mr. Wing *re repealing for the benefit of
time, more than any other, we kindle anew our love and re­
Wolfe Sunday P. M.
Detroit Thursday attending the De­ his parent*, the Rev. and Mr*. C- M. Miss Glerum a* accompanUt
J1* purpose of the project. [ feminine readers a few of the very
membrance* for all who have departed thia life, whether in
Conklin.
Announcements of interest
George
Hooper of Memphis. troit Osteopathic clinic.
the tumult of battle, or in tho peace and quietude of their
club members were made by Presi• ­ which our readers will appreciate, delectable appearing dishes she
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Guy
Giddings
were
Mr*.
Emerson
Stauffer
and
Ron
­
Tenn. was a guest Sunday at Mr.
home.
—,w Mr* Robert 1 "The project is to be devoted to 1 prepared which a number of ladies
Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mra ald were Bunday guest* of her par­ dent Ray Branch and
and Mrs. Carl Wespinter's.
chairman of
ot lhe wornworn- 't,K' discovery and preservation of. in the audience were fortunate
John Baker Of Gull lake.
ent*. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lacey, and &lt; W Cook, chairnum
THEREFORE TODAY we again pay tribute to OUR DE­
Mrs.
Fred
Hendershott
and
committee It is expected that ard making accessible tiic basic ma- enough to draw
Mr. and Mrs. Noble Caln and grandmother. Mr*. Emma KUpfer.
PARTED LOVED ONES, and rededlcale ourselves to those
daughter of Grand Rapids were daughters of Chicago expect to
U
—
--r
re
—
-ret
U;
the
hUUry
cf
j
Suprise
Meat
lx»f
—
1
1-2
lb.
of near Ako. Ronald remained for a double tennis court and sfiuffle terial for research in the history of 1
principles which were so great a part of their lives.
guest* ot Hustings relatives on spend Saturday and Sunday here.
hzxarrt courts
r-nnwill
K, built
Knllt before
Kafrtr* tlie
flya the country
COlintrv The
't’lin information
InfnrmatInn ob- ' ground beef; 1-2 lb. ground pork;
will be
a few days with his grandparents board
Thursday.
season Is over for the enjoyment
utilized m
In me
lhe prep- ,! j2 *o*p
tbsp cauup;
catsup; i1 io*p
tbsp enoppeo
chopped |&gt;ax*pars... ot talned will be uiMiwu
Roy Randall ot Grand Rapids and great grandmother.
of a guide to
colley;
1-2 cup •-bread
crumbs; I tb*p I
rnember* not golf minded. New
“— arallon
—
— historical
----------- —
•
- -----------—-■------Merlin Plumley of Detroit wu visited his sister and husband. Mr.
Mr. and Mr*. R. J. McCreery re­
------------were
-----------------------| lection*. The hUioricai
record* ; grated onion. 1 beaten egg; l cup i
the guest of his parents, Mr. and and Mrs. Robert Burch, on Tuesday.
members
introduced.
turned on Monday afternoon from
The
opening
meeting
-for
the
;
with
which
thia
survey
is
concooked
carrots;
2
tsp.
sail;
1-4
Up
Mrs. Calvin Plumley, from Thurs­
Clothing and Shoot for Mtn and Boyt
Mr and Mrs. Delos Smith of Baltimore, Md. where they spent
forwomen
women will
will cerned
cerned consist
consist almost
almost entirely
entirely of
of I[ pepper; 1-2 tsp
Up. paprika;
paprika. 1 cup
day till Sunday.
Battle Creek were Sunday guest* the winter with her sister and hus­ Tuesday luncheon*for
j begin next week on June
June2.2.
two large —
groups
-----"Government
---------------------------green----------pea*; 1 ' chopped
------- J pimento.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne G Frey and of Mr. and Mrs. orlie Knickerbock­
band. Mr and Mr*. Albert Konkle.
I Top scores at bridge were won by ' Archives ano Historical Manu- I Mix thoroughly meaU. caUup.
daughter, Dorothy Jean, ot Michi­ er.
They also spent several weeks in
gan City. Ind., visited Mr and Mrs.
“'
W A Hall.
‘
Mr* A H Car- scripu, the lg«ei being the business parsley, crumbs, onion, egg. salt and
Mr. and Mrs. Den Lewis visited Florida. Their future plans have Mr*
Severance over the week end.
velh. Mr* Harold Phillips. R K or private paper* of an individual., seasoning Pat into a rectangular
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Keyes of Ood- not been definitely decided
Mr. and Mrs. Wm Jones of Bed­ win Heights, Grand Rapids, on
Amerson. Dr. Carrothers and E. H a business or group Mr Wing is be- sheet about 8-4 inch thick Mash '
Waring.
Ing aided considerably by persons in ' the carrots, mix with pea* and ptford and Mrs Addie Mowry of Bat­ Sunday
TWENTY MOTHERS JOIN
-------.... .....
who. upon menlo. spread mixture on the meat. |
The committee for the June din­ lhe several1 counties
tle Creek visited at lhe home of
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Merrick alCONSERVATION LEAGUE. ner tiie third Thursday in the -----------learning of the project, are writing sprinkle with salt and pepper Roll
Lemuel Severance on Sunday.
tended the alumni banquet of the
A group of young married women month will be Mr. and Mr* Wm R 1 to him ______________________
—
at Hartford, informing him up like a jelly roll. Bake in oven
Mr. and Mrs A J Vedder and Woodland High school on Saturday met in the community room of the
Miss Mabel SLsson were Saturday evening.
Cook. Mr and Mrs F W Stebbins of the location of nnd in whose pos- at 375 degree* F about one hour. 1
Hasting* city Bank building Wed­
night and Sunday guests ot Miss
session are .various materials ot Broiled bananas make an attractive
Miss Yvonne Trego will spend nesday night. May 20lh and or­ and Mr and Mrs John Ironside.
-----------------&lt; • »----------------i historical value Already he has garnish for this meat.
Elizabeth DeYoe ot Muskegon.
I lhe week end in Ann Arbor and al- ganized lhe Hastings branch of the
--------been informed of several old letter*
Mrs. Melvin Buchner
&lt; Louise tend the Key formal dance on Fri­
WINS HONORS --IN NATIONAL
Prune .Nut Parfait—1-2 cup sugar;
Child
Conservation League
of
NASHVILLE.
The Enchanted Garden" given al
HIGH SCHOOL CONTEST, and other matters dealing with our 1-2 cup water; 2 egg whites; 1-2
Showerman&gt; of Sunfield was the day night.
America, charter members are
Mr. and Mrs. Clark, formerly of Kalamazoo on Friday.
our Town Column.
'------ - feature of eurly and with our recent history." pint. cream;
,
guest of Miss Grace Edmonds and
1 cup prune pulp; 2 Up
Mrs. Frederick H. Taylor visited
Mr*. Lyle Beadle. Mra. p. R. the front page in the Chicago
other friends part of last week.
; We hope Barry county owners ofi,emon Julcc: *’2 c“p chopped nuts Detroit have bought Mr*. Alice
! relatives in East Lansing from Wed­ Bechtel. Mrs Lyle Bennett. Mrs
Mr and Mrs. Charles Kahler, who
Gibson's
home
on
the
south
side.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Rock of Jack­ nesday till Sunday. Dr. Taylor, go­ Warren Brogan, \fr* Roy Cordes. Tribune, carried In It* Sunday issue! tliese old relics will write —
Cook prunes. Stone and force
have been spending several months
FredMr*. Malle Serven and MIm in Battle creek have returned here.
the picture of Harriet Caln, grand- 1 ggjng. Hartford
son and Mr and Mrs James Chcv- ing over for Sunday.
through sieve Add
lemon
juice and
Mich
. giving
a ,-------- - ------------ ---------- - -----------------------Mrs A. Cortrlght, Mrs C W Dolan,
Bell of Battle Creek
rle and family of Leslie were guest*
Mr and Mr*. Robert | description u
of.
the
relic* they nuta Cook sugar and water logetli- Jcnvera
Dan Ashaiter and Earl smith Mrs Frank Foote. Mr*. A. B Gid- daughter of —
Miss Anne Mayo was returned to
of Miss Julia Rock on Bunday.
“P*1' “ thread Pour called on relatives and friends here her home Saturday morning from
flshed on S Muskegon river over ley. Mrs. Fay Hummel. Mr*. For­ Burch of thi* city, and the follow- , pos.se.-c*. *0 he can give a description cr unl“
I ol them in Ills report to the governover ""
egg white* which have been Saturday.
Mi** Florence Wade of Traverse lhe week end and brought back a rest Johnson. Mrs Theodore Knopf, ing story
the hospital.
City came Friday for a visit of ten good catch of speckled beauties.
1
beaten
stiff.
Folding
in
prune
pulp.
Miss
Geraldine
Hecker
of
Ann
"To be 14 years old and a junior ment.
Mr*. Chester Long. Mrs. E A PolI add whipped cream and fold into Arbor is visiting her mother, Mrs.
----------------- ------------------------days with her sister. Miss Helen
Mr. and Mrs. c A. Kerr will spend fu*. Mr*, p H Sheldon. Mr* Ed­ tn high school L* an achievement.
Wade, and Miss Elizabeth Pinch.
mixture. Freeze. Children will enjoy Prank Hecker and sister. MUs
Decoration Day and Die week end win Taylor. Mrs A R Taylor. Mr* To be 14 years old and a good stu- nRQFRVF^ FIRHTY
dent snd a radio star I* still a voocn vCO CIUH I I
Frau Van Hartsfield of Holland in Whiling. Ind. with her sister.
this dish.
Frelda Hecker.
Dorrance Trethric. Mrs B H Van
and Miss Helen Gay and Larry Mrs. Cora Dunning, and family.
Jellied Veal Loaf—2 pounds veal;
Robert Mason, who look lhe rail­
SECOND BIRTHDAY
greater achievement MLw Harriet
Houten. Mr* Herbert Reinhardt
Wolfe of Baltic Creek were Sunday
I-1 onion;
I stalk- ---------celery; ----------stuffed way postal clerk examination reMrs G W Francis of Saginaw
Cain,
daughter
of
Nobk
Cain
who
---------- -----------The officers elected were Pres..
guests of Mrs. Ella Wolfe and Rob­ and her mother. Mrs Elsie Decker
need*
no
Introduction,
l* all that Isaac DeBack Is Still Hale gre*n oUvcs; 1 tb8p Bel*tin; 2 tbsp cenlly and passed with high stand-,
Mrs Cordes; Vlce-Pres. Mrs. Van
ert.
water; •*3 hard cooked eggs; t1 tsp. ing* has been called to Detroit lo
of Carlton were dinner guests of Houten; Trees. Mr* Knopf; Secy. and more A student al Sullivan
and Hearty and Works
Garth Bogart and sister. Nona Mr*.. May Townsend on Tuesday.
report for work.
Mrs. Gidley; Pre** Reporter. Mr* E High school, she participated in the
Mrs. W. H Kleinhans who spent j
Mac. of Kingsley, who arc attending
Cook veal, onion and celery until
Mr and Mrs. Martin Tinkler and Taylor; Cor Secy. Mrs Reinhardt; recent national high school music
Every Day
high school at Manion, visited their Mrs. Mary Beach visited Mrs.
vest is tender and until slock the winter in Florida was at her |
contest and wa* awarded honor* tn
program Chmn. Mr* Johnson
Isaac
DeBack,
a
resident
of
Or
­
uncle. Robert Mills, from Wednes­ Theron Mead and babv al Nichols
amounts to one cup Grind, or cut home a short time one day Iasi 1
Her
The first meeting will be held at the flrsl flute solo division
angeville township, celebrated his meal in cubes. Soak gelatin in 2 week. She expects to spend the sum­
day til) Friday.
hospital. Battle Creek. Tuesday aft­ the home of Mrs Cordes Monday teacher 1* Theodore Yeschke. WGN
eighty-second birthday on May 21. tbsp, cold water, and dissolve in mer at Oceana Beach. Pentwater
Mrs Charlotte Noble and son ernoon.
concert musician and a fornwr
evening. June 1st at 7-45 o'clock.
He is the oldest of eight children. boiling stock. Place layer of meal and Grand Rapid*.
Chester and Mrs Edith Martin of
Mrs o. V Hamilton returned on
member of the Chicago Symphony
When he wu elshleen nrantlu »l mixture in loaf pan. „„„
East Lansing visited their sister Friday to her home in Conneaut.
then place
Mr. and Mrs. coy G- Brumm, Mr. ’
Her instructor in interpretation is
BENEFIT BRIDGE—
.«e lu. puenu e.nw ty »Ubo« to lht„ b„d
e
nuBcd and
and aunt. Mrs. L. Severance, and Ohio, after a visit with her broth­
Mrs. Nelson Brumm and
her father."
GARDEN
TEA.
ehl. country from w« lheren ne.r
,„d
wUh „„,„nlns daughter spent Sunday with Mr.
family Saturday
er and wife. Mr. and Mra D i)L.
Activities for women at the Has­
Amrterd.m tn
„
Amsterdam,
in th.
the M.Uwwtu...
Netherlands, th.
the
Mr and Mrs Malcolm Campbell. VanBuskirk
and Mrs Frank Laurer Ln Auguste.
ANCHOR CLASS ENJOYS TEA.
tings
country
dub
opened
Tues
­
Journey inking 42 days They land­ which gelatin ha* been added. Place
Kenneth Smith and
his fiance.
Charles Hawes of Vermontville
Mr and
Mrs
Charles Bush. day with a benefit Garden-Bridge
The senior members of the An­
ed at New York. After living in
Miss Ruby Washburn, of Flint will Charles. Jr., and Elaine Bush and
underwent a major operation at the
tea with lhe officer* of the women's chor class of the Methodist Sunday Rochester several years they moved tn food compartment until cold.
be Memorial day guests of Mr and Junior Carlstrom of Grand Rapids
Frozen Frail Salad—2 pk*. cream Nashville General hospital on Bun­
school were honored at a tea Riven to Kalamazoo, from there to this
organization in charge
Mrs. Ear) Smith
cheese; 2 cups dates; 2 tbsp, orange day. doctors from Detroit doing Use
, were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs , Sixteen table* were played and at the home of their teacher, Mr*.
vicinity living on three other farm* juice; 1-2 cup whipped cream.
Misii Josephine BU-in of Petoskey I E C. Edmonds
surgical work. Miss Virginia Weeks
over 817 cleared which will be used Guy Keller last Wednesday Mrs W before moving to th' present De­
was in the city from Sunday till
Mr*. James Caldwell has returned ‘
Steam dates till soft, cut in small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leland 1
toward improvements in the lounge Maylan Jones wa* a guest, and Mlns Back farm where he has resided for
Tuesday visiting friends
Site Is to her home In Hesperia after a two i
pieces-cream cheese and combine Weeks underwent an operation for1
Slips, bulbs and plant* were Nonna Evans gave several piano nearly sixty years.
convalescing rapidly from her re­ weeks’ Visit with her sisters. Mrs I
wltli dates, orange juice and whip­ appendicitis.
selections Miss Hazel Caukln was
brought
and
used
as
awards
for
cent severe illness.
Mrs. G. W- Oribben Is visiting
John A. Wooton and the Misses । special counts made by players, voted the best all-round girl in the 1 Whin he was fourteen he went to ped cream. Pour in Uay and freeze.
Mrs Martin Tinkler accompan­ Nonna and Helen Michael.
class and was presented with a gift I work
tbe P,nc wood» al Howard
her daughter. Mrs. O. M. French, j
then exclianged if desired. Winners
------ I City, where he spent a number of
ied Mr and Mrs N A Tuttle of
Mrs. Robert Jessen and son of [
CONNECTICUT YANKEE
and family at Bay CityRev. Elmer Pritchard has been |
Lansing to East Irving on Sunday Chicago arc guests of Mr and Mrs ; al auction were Mrs C. L. Texter
1
winter*
He
also
worked
on
the
COMES TO STRAND.
HONORING MRS. TAFFEE.
, „
J
J
and Mrs c L Paul; at contract
where they visited their mother. Clarence Crawford
Mrs
Ophelia !
The employees of the Pennqy Grand
Orand Rapids
R»P,d5 and
nnd Indiana
Indtana Railroad |
A recent revival of Will Rogers returned as pastor ot lhe Evangel!Mr* A. H
Carveth. Mrs
Chas
Mrs. Lewis Tuttle.
store had a pot luck
O'Hair, who has been visiting in i Pott*. Mrs
iuck dinner
nmnrr ana i ,no* known *» lhr Pennsylvania*.. film* brings 10 Hastings one of the cal church for the coming year
Clayton Brandstetter. i siorc nan
Mrs W. A Vance. Mrs Gad Ly-1
Mrs Emma McNeill has gone to Chicago, came home with Mrs. Jes­
party Tuesday night in honor of I (iull,i,l6 his work thvre when his wittiest stories ever written. Mark
Mrs. D A. VanBuskirk. Mrs. Harold
st. LoiHs. Mo. where .she will spend sen.
one of their number. Mrs. Don lf“,heF t“9d- whcn hc camc home t0 Twain's, a Connecticut Yankee in kin*. Mrs. W. B
Cortright. Mrs. I
Poster. Mrs. Saunders; blind bogey
some lime with her daughter. Mrs
nw tnre* King Arthur's Court” filmed as "A Frank Caiey and Mr* Jesse Camp­
Mr*. Winifred Holcomb (Winifred drawings went to Mrs. F. A. Brown. i Taffce. which was in the nature of i '*nrk !h’* r*r,n ,Ie
W A Murphy, and will also visit &gt; Browni of Chicago spent Saturday |
a house warming for Mr and Mrs ' brothers ran a threshing machine Connecticut Yankee." and shown, bell were invited guests Tuesday
Feldpausch. Mi**
in Hammond, Ind
I here Her brother. Lemuel Brown, at i Mrs. Roman
Taffee
who
have
jus!
moved
into
»
or
«wral
years;
after
that
he
befor
the
first
time
al
lhe
Strand.
evening
of
Evening
Star Chapter *
Sara Schader, Mrs wallace Osborn
Patil Conklin, who has been Milwaukee. Wis . came with her I
their newiy
newly rrnovau-a
renovated name
home on
on b
S i
[—
camr
interested
in road work and, i II
- was one of the late
- comedian's
O E. 8 Vermontville, which con­
Ii mcir
— —
-------- —
and Mrs. D. 8. Goodyear
. very
____ pleasant
_____ _ evening
_______ wa*. fnrerann
first mile
milt* of
teaching near st Joseph, returned and remained for the summer,
I Broadway A
foreman on the
the first
of
roles
pU&gt;t teg|nM when ln ferred the degrees on two candl- I
Guests from away were Mrs. R
home Saturday to spend the sum­ while convalescing from a recent1
Ora,?g^ a dream he suddenly finds himself. dates. Dainty refreshments were.
F Webb. Miss Fanny Webb and was spent and a very attractive gift «■,reward road .b!,ui
mer with his parents, the Rev and Illness.
-----------— of
• the
■
1
,u,r
and
u’e IF* “ I transported to old Enjland In lhe served
reminder
occasion.
Mrs. Howard Southwick. Grand 'left‘ a* a
rear, has
has been
been township
toa-nslllp road
road over
over-1
Klng
„„
years
­
Mrs c M Conklin
Miss Mildred Caiey and ML**.
Everett Jacobs Ls expected home Rapid*.
seer.
Mr and Mrs
Hugo Anderson from Norwood. Ohio, for the sum-1
SHOWER FOR RECENT BRIDE.
knights. He becomes a sort of su- Carrie Caiey are planning a motor
and sons Donald and Hugo, Jr. of mer Everett who Ls studying for the 1
Mrs -----Bert ------------Mllleson entertained
—
------- —------ ,
..He ha* been a member of the । perman to them, with his ability to trip lo Florida.
Chicago were guests of Emil Ty- priesthood at St Mary's of the West. MRS. H. A. ADROUNIE
MIN'S
Mrs
Fred Brumrn suffered a
WUIK our
vut modern
Iiiuuou every
CVC&gt;&gt; day
UM/ magic
UI«5IL
ENTERTAINS CIRCLE. I with a linen shower at Mrs. Dell, Prairieville I. O- O- F. Jodjc for 50. work
den and Mr. and Mrs
Richard is making a week's trip to Minne-1
•
..... ..
I -----The story
abounds
with hilarious stroke on Sunday
All Whitt
89.M
Mr*. H A- Adrounie entertained । Cotton's on Thursday afternoon for years.
Groos over the week end.
sola with several other fellow stu- '
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bette and
MV lie u
present ;;,
time
L* „u'.i
still j episodes such as lite Introduction ot
Circle No. 8 very delightfully on Mr.*. Laurence Anders &lt;Arloa Cot-? At the ^^*,1
Oxford*—
Howard Herrick of New York dents and will say his first mass
hearty
-- - and work* every
-------- bath tub* into ancient England and Mr. and Mr*. L. G Cole were Ln
Saturday al her Gun lake cottage tom, who was married recently [ hale and -...
City, vice-president of the E W while there He received his B 8 1
Detroit
Tuesday
to
see
the
ball
I
Mrs.
Anders
received
many
love'
d
H&gt;
on
his
farm.
many other feats that dazzled the
A 1:30 luncheon wa* served at a
Bliss Co. wa* the week end guest degree last year, and is now taking ,
game
,। ।
* sr
old time knights.
large table on the porch. A business ly and useful gifU.
of hi* brother and sister-in-law. Mr the additional four years required
Patty Adelle Mater is to be in
session was held following the
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
Myrna U&gt;y is in the supporting
and Mrs Lawrence Herrick.
for priests
Mrs. Erma Gardner was honored cast, the damsel Rogers rescues three dances, jockey dance, the
luncheon and officer* for next year MUSICAL FESTIVAL
Sunday guest* of Mr and Mrs
Fairy Mist and a clown dance In
Those from away who attended elected a* follows: chairmen: Mrs
PLEASES ALL. on Tuesday evening with a surprise from Queen Morgana LeFay.
F L Fairchild were Bert Withey of the funeral of Henry 8
Gaskill Frank Carrothers. Mrs
The annual May Festival present­ oirthday dinner al the home of Mr.
Charles
Chicago. Hubert and Richard Fair­ were Mr and Mrs. Grant M Hud- ,
Clarke. Mrs Nellie Cross; secretary­ ed by the combined instrumental, and Mrs John Wood, covers being
child of Detroit and Mr and Mrs. son. Mr and Mrs. L. C. Mixter. Mrs I
Mrs Fred Savacooi l* entertain­
treasurer. Mr*
Forrest Johnson; grade and vocal musical organiza­ laid for ten CenteRng I lie dining
Wayne Mitchell of Battle Creek
I L Dixon and Mrs. Burdick of flower committee. Miss Lots Carter; tions of the city school* wa* a fine : iom&gt;&lt;
table wa* w
a large birthday cake dev­ ing the Y M. L. Club this Thurs­
Mrs. Nettie Hyde and Paul Hydj Lansing. Mr. and Mrs Roy Heller
A success and drew a larger attend- • ^rais'd with rose* and small pink day afternoon at her home at Uikc
were guest* of Mr and Mrs. Ran-1 and son Harry of Traverse City, Earl publicity. Mrs. Harold Foster
■ candies. The evening was pleasant­ Al-Oon-Quln a pot luck luncheon
vote of thank* was extended to lhe ance than last year
kin Hyde cl Prairieville on Satur­ and Homer Gaskill of Birming­
It marked the first appearance of | )y Ap&lt;.nt wllh voting.
will be served.
retiring
officer*.
Mr*
H
A.
day, George Hyde returning with I ham. Mr*. Gerald Nash and Mrs
ILhe
h. junior
ttminr IwAhrl
f
Itbund whlrh
which az-ziult
acquitted
it­
them for a visit. They also called 1 Howard Ware of Hopkins. Mr. and Adrounie. Mrs. Joseph Brozak. Mrs self very well. The cantala "In
Rolfe Bulling and Mrs T N Knopf
on Mrs. Birdie Merlau.
Mrs. Lincoln Bush of Delton. Rev. The remainder of the afternoon was Woodland" presented by about 300
THURSDAY. MAY 28
FRIDAY, MAY 29
and Mrs. Brown of While Pigeon. spent In visiting. There were 20 grade school youngsters wa* a fine
Mrs. Harold Moon and Mr. and members present.
piece of work on the pari of teach­
Mrs Armour and daughters of
ers a* well as student*. The out­
Battle Creek and Mr. and Mrs
BIRTHDAY PARTY.
standing instrumental feature of
Geo. C Reeves of Jonesville
Friends and relatives, numbering the pfograffi wa* a violin solo by
SPECIAL
Mr. and Mrs Frank Ferri*, son 22 gathered at the home of Mrs. Ml** Norma Jacobson, a Negro
Dwight, and daughter Bemadlne Clara Wilder of Battle creek Sun­ spiritual "Nobody Knows lhe Trou­
NOONDAY LUNCHES
and Mrs. and Mrs Fred Smith of day. May 24. to help celebrate her ble I See" Another clever number
Sliced or Halves
1 Hastings stopped in Allegan. Sun- I seventy-fifth birthday, also Ute fifth which wa* thoroughly enjoyed was
I day. to pass a short time with Mr. birthday of a great-grandson. Rom the mock wedding which concluded
NO.2V4
1 and Mrs. Volney Ferris. They were Fayling. son of Mr and Mrs Peter the program.
I en route home after seeing the tuj- Favllng. of Battle creek. A delicious
CANS
i ip festival in Holland. Mr. Ferris i* pot luck dinner was served fol­
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
। a brother lo Mr. Volney Ferris of lowed with ice eream and cake.
this city. The son Dwight covered
Mrs. Wilder
received
several
I
himself
with
glory
in
a
recent
Inter
­
lovely bouquets. She has many
j HOME COOKED FOOD
scholastic meet in Grand Rapids by acquaintances tn Barry county who
। winning the 440 fool race.—Alle­ wish her many more happy birth­
gan Gazette.
days.

Social Events and Personal Mention

Memorial Day . . .

T. S. BAIRD’S
Phone 2396—Hastings

CRUE’S 1st

Brings You Amox-

Holiday Bargains
Del Monte Peaches

$S00

PARKER HOUSE

A—
6
Dozen Cans *1.92

CRACKERS21b. ba* 17c

4

Daily Buses
to

GRAND RAPIDS
L«avo Waitings at

8:45
1:20
5:45
10:25

A.
F.
F.
F.

M.
M.
M,
M.

Cenvenlent Re tarn ins
Schedules

DILL PICKLES, full quart*1S&lt;
Picnic Plata* or Napkins, 2 pkg*. 15c
PORK AND BEANS4 can* 23c
BUTTER, batt qualitylb. 2Bc

JF/tj Be Out of It ork?

Learn Beauty Culture!
Positions are waiting-all graduates placed

MODERN UP-TO-DATE SCHOOL

LUNCHEON MEAT SPECIALS!

Under NUle Supervidan. Equipment of Ute latest type such as
found in the better rias* of shop* today. Student* are given per­
sonal attention from a group of experienced and
well-known instructors.

Complete Course
Now

MINCED HAM, slicad, Vk lb. 9c
FANCY BOLOGNA
BEEF RIBS ...
BEEF ROASTS
lb. 17

Sir Months

To Pay

ONLY 82 STARTS YOU
&gt;n lh» read to ourcoae. Inveei now tn a profusion that will In sura a
•l«ady poeltion and twine &gt;ou unlimited financial returns
The leading profeaaIon for women Just thinkt A few dollars down psr&lt;n«nt wilt atari vou In a profeaaioo that -alii enable you to earn U&lt;
wack. Das and n^ht ciasaaa
BEND ATTACHED COUPON FOR FREE BOOKLET.

BUS DEPOT AT

Hollywood Beauty Service

All IXMKT

MARGARET DAHLKE and MARGUERITE TEW
114 WEST STATE ST
HASTINGS. MIlK
PHONE IMS

LICENSED
OPERATORS

—g

NAME

TRIO’CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 3137

HINMA

............................................................................................................................. .........

ADDRESS............................................................

C1TT.........................................

LaMAR BEAUTY ACADEMY
2nd Floor Wsst Ind Bank SldB, Phono M»t
BATTLE ( REEK. MICH.

Telephone 2491

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, MAT 29. IMfl

INSURANCE

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

ONW CENT A WORD.

n6

j

THE CHURCHES

ADVER-

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• PROTECT

CITIZENS MUTUA L
Fire Insurance Co.

--------------- _.
. « u w.,,
r

n-^Tiie.

.

GEO. M. NEWTON

irist.

....

i.nmrt u-

"-.iF™" n? """ !“'
nn« * m».
JIIU ...H,

Spectacle* Fitted and Guaranteed
Credit—Terma.

ii&gt;.i- iri.uoi

V* BUY ABD SELL REAL ESTATE
OK COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
AU* KINDS OF DtSUBAXCB
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"AKRON" MODERN
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SHELDONS
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OFFICE

OLD

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The Prescription Drug Store

EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
Work Ouarantead ltd
&gt;lo

Hastings

Farmer*, Attention!
Ship EVERY TUESDAY

1929 CHEVROLET PaneL

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

1929 CHEVROLET 1', ton
track with 4 speed Ira nsmission.

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Hastings

Phone 2637

The Halting* Banner

! n«y cfx’are vtaiis; Si’moltal!

Babtcriylleni by Mali. P«tpal4:
IN HARRY COUNTY. ON* YEAR. 4104.
(If paid in adranc* )
IN BARRY COUNTY. SIX MONTHS. 40*.
(If paid in adtanea.)
IN HARRY COUNTY. THREE MONTHS.
IN ADVANCE ..........................
S5«
OUTSIDE BARRY COUNTY. ONE YEAR
IN ADVANCE ........... X.................. ,4140
FOREION BUBKCRIPTIUNB. ONE YEAR
IN ADVANCE
........
43.00

|
i
|

I
Tb» Banntr ha* one of tha baal leulp
pad job office* In Wralaro Nlchlcau. and
I* prepared to do ear kind of book and
lob prlnllnc.

spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
John Gould of near Orleans and
also called on Henry Shriber of near
Fenwick.
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Shriber and
Mr and Mrs. Leo Barry' and son
spent Sunday afternoon with the
former's brother, Henrv Shriber of
near Fenwick and called on Mrs.
John Gould of near Orleans.
Mr and Mrs. Lafayette Usborne
spent Friday In Battle Creek.
ORANGEVILLE.
Mrs. Alf. Lewis of near Caledonia
spent Monday and Tuesday of the
post week with relatives at this
place.
Ralph Jenney and son spent one
day lhe past week with relatives
near Battle Creek.
A very successful school year was
closed Friday with a picnic held
at Streeter's resort, which
was
greatly enjoyed by all who were for­
tunate enough to be there
Mrs. Electa England of Oun lake
spent several days the past week
with relatives and friends at this
place
Mr. and Mrs. A. G McNutt and
Miss Gloria Shultz of Otsego were
Sunday afternoon guests of E D.
Lewis and wife.
James Hermlnelt
and
family
were Sunday guests of his parents.
Mr and Mrs. Abe Hermlnelt, near
Prairieville.

NORTHEAST IRVING.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Moore and
family spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hayner and
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
ijir-iinc j way Hilton was very ill with pneuMrs. William A. Moore oL Soutu
'
monla and under the care of a family. Mrs Andrew Townsend and
The following relatives attended Hastings.
ir."r7 trained nurse, but later reports said Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Woodman al- the funeral of Mrs. Dora Donley
William Smith of Middleville is
Rnidiiuttcn
exercises at on Wednesday morning at Lansing: spending a few days with hl* niece,
i«.ii&gt;i.ar. MW
the utuua
crisis was |MU&gt;1
past ana
and ne
he was maainak- iI LTlZ?
„7R
• ......
. . was wel. .I WOOfllA
ing a good. recovery, which
W«*“nd Friday evening Burdette Mra. Wm. Shriber. Mr. and Mrs Mrs. Inna Brown and family.
i come news to al)
1iHavner
H“vn*r was nn
“ of the graduates
one
Cleon Liuidon. Mr and Mrs O. N. I Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lightfoot spent
mianuo uni*
*ua mutjurie
Fosley of Landon. Mrs Anna Buck and fam- Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John
Misses
Greta and
Marjorie LaUg.iCogs- I „
well Of Lakeview were visitors at IGrand.
po»l Thompson and । lly. Mr and Mrs Frank Shriber and Kollar near Middleville
Mr and Mrs Orr Pisher'a Friday I
Crwk Aane» Ha,«h‘ 1 daughter and Mr. and Mr*. Leo
Mr. and Mra. jay Blakney of
I
___ i.
ano
In.n onH
and rlmiffhtjir
daughter V/llma
Wilma Jean
and **r
Mr. Barry and son. She was laid to Hastings were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs Harlow Barnum were vis­ rest in Fuller cemetery.
and Mrs. Arthur Moore.
itors in the E S Thompson home
Lawton Williams won honors for
Nearly everyone in this vicinity
on Sunday.
Hostings High school Saturday in attended lhe baccalaureate services
Grand Rapids when he competed at the U. B church at Freeport
LENT CORNERS.
against other schools and won first Bunday evening. Il was very much
Mr and Mrs. Leland Hammond place In running in lhe state and enjoyed by all.
Miss Augusta Hinckley, who has
and sons spent Bunday with Mr received a gold medaj. Congratu­
been spending the winter with her
and Mrs. Frank Walker of Richland lations.
Kendall Buck and friend and sister in Grand Rapids, returned
'
JUIlCUOIl.
Junction.
r 'r I Mlss Nina Munger of Prairieville Mrs. Anna Buck and daughters home last week for Hie summer.
'
P « All
fra
t — Ls doing lhe housework for Mr*
*aaiv ut Jrruralvm."
’Clare Thomas
Mrs. Thomas Is
HAKTIXGS~PARIBH
। gaining nicely after her recent opMETHODIST EPI SCOPAX CHUBCH.
»
eration.
B»v. C M Conklin. Ptalor.
l&lt;Ok ’ Mr and Mrs. George Comfort. Jr,
Phon* Mo. 3T04.
Uw. and her cousin and husband of Kal"&gt;» | amazoo spent Sunday with Mr and
' । Mrs. Marc Hammond.
»
Mrs Mary Brouard entertained
ln the Lent Sunshine Club Thursday.
I(i, The club gave a
miscellaneous
M. shower for Mrs
Loren Burchett
‘Bernuce Bocrman* She received
many lovely gifts.
Walter McMaltu was called to
Ohio Wednesday by the death of his

Wrecking for Ports
1929 CHEVROLET Coape.

JERRY ANDRUS

“""r

ville spent Thursday evening with
' Grand Haven with her to visit an­ Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hine of Clov­
r* Wheeler and Woolsey in
other daughter. Airs. Robert Owens, erdale.
"Silly Billies.'
days
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mlsener of
Bert Wheeler and Robert Wool­
Kalamazoo spent Bunday
with
sey in "Silly Billies" Is one of the *
COATS GROVE.
their parents. Mr. and Mrs G. E.
. funniest comedies ever made The
Kenyon and callers there Sunday
Mr,
and
Mra.
Clarence
Shelley
scene is laid in Indian Territory
were Oils* Peake of Brush Ridge.
and
Mr
and
Mrs.
Nell
Smith
of
.
in '4B.
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Bishop of Bat­
&gt; •
Wheeler and Woolsey as a pair of Midland spent the week end here
tle Creek. Mra. Vina Harrington.
*r‘ quack dentist* set out to pul) all lhe with relatives.
Rev and Mrs. Clem Jordan and Russell Monica and Roger WUwell
•h&gt; teeth in the Wild West and they
.1 uv l’ M" ‘I ___
successively
' j encounter a stage- family were at Three Oaks and of Kalamazoo. Gordon Kenyon and
till Henry West of Hasting*.
?
.ir rnarh
coach linklhold-up and a real estate Michigan City from Sunday
Virginia Havens closed a success­
promoter, save a wagon train from Wednesday evening.
Rev and Mrs. p. C. Wing at­ ful term of school Friday. A picnic
an Indian attack, get captured by
the dinner was enjoyed by ail. We are
redskins, are nearly drowned in a tended special services at
glad
she will be with us another
Sun’
quicksand ana
quicKsana
and toriurca
tortured at me
the stase.
stake., Church of Christ at Cascade, OU
uyear.
and narrowly escape being lynched i ,y;,* „
... .
Lucy Sullivan, who has been
-----| Miss Ruth Woodman of Caledonia
. and Miss Esther Bieri of Lowell vis- spending some lime in Kalamazoo
MARTIN CORNERS.
I ited the former s parents. Mr. and returned home Friday.
Mr and Mrs. Willard Landis of
-­
East Woodland were Sunday visitors : *”’• II“ A Woodman, on Sunday
HOPE CENTER.
...rrr, ir.ir.c—. ■ ■ i
........ at Mr.
MF. UllQ
«LU*IU Hiltons
I11IIOIIS
I| afternoon.
and .MTS
.Mrs Willard
Chas. McDermott Is lhe owner of
Tile L. A. 8 will meet with Mrs.
pl‘i7l ■« hJ'.«.,.2*’"*r'",‘ 3 3"
Mrs. H. Cogswell spent Sunday i
a cow which gave birth to twin
pi»n «.&lt;&gt;» to sttF-u th* Anh..rr»*&gt; with her son Frank and family in “*oyd Fisher on Thursday aftercalves one day last week.
■nd Hruue &lt;’o.ni„r i.r..&lt;r.rn «t H.r . i.ur. i&gt; , Lakeview
I noon- June 4 Supper will be servMrs Clarence Payne was called
Ju“ 4 *"•’ 4 ________
Mias Ruby Cogswell closed a sue- ledrtb^ (Club No. I. The neighbors
lo East Delton Saturday afternoon
coats drove chubch of 0BBX8T. cessful year s school at the Martin, i and «rlcnd»
Ald ln thBt ,oCt.m JoM.n. Pa.ur
I Saturday A splendid picnic dinner I f1*1***'
cordially Invited to at- by the sudden death of her father.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Monica of
enjoyed
by
at ,; lend,• f.*—er
Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mra. Wayne
&lt; oinhiuhioii 11 I • A M eermun U..1
...
. . a 'good number
—.
.L - - •
•trip
Coy
t.r.1*. P.erunr t.y.r.r *rr«ir*
, llOOn. followed by games. The P
'—
z Stowell, who made ua nip
Thnr.d.t Jul, 4 1. A m
I T A presented Miss Cogswell with
h,“ reported spending a night Oates and baby of the Doud dlstrict
visited Mr. and Mrs. Earl
e, ill. Mr. I.l-.t.l I'.el.-e ,.i&gt; t .,.i»r I* ... I
&lt;
.
...
. .
.
111 tlw* h&lt;inie Ilf Wf*V IV
Clrlffin
a lovely necklace as a token of es­ In the home of Rev W. H GrifQn of Gates Sunday.
teem
She has ’ been engaged as Cumberland. Iowa, who was a for­
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McDermott
FIRST UNITED brethren church ! teacher for another year
mer pastor here twenty-five years
spent Saturday with their daughter
» ..
“
. .. ।&gt; Mr»
Mrs Hurtle
Burdle Hllrtn
Hilton Is
is assisting ago
and family. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
.Mr and Mrs Furgeson visited In
| Mrs. Albert Teeter of
Hastings
Texter. In Hastings
tlir Jordan home last Sunday.
township with her spring work.
Sunday visitor* at Fred Ashby's
Waller Thompson Is improving
. Sunday school next Sunday folwere
Mr and Mra. Milton Warner
• lowed by the preaching service. from a hurt received In a recent of Kalamazoo and Albert Anders of
Plan to attend both of these serv­ fall, and expects to be at work again North Hope.
this week.
ices.
Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Lyttle of
Rev and Mrs p. C. Whig and Mr.
Lloyd Ooodenough of Camp CusBattle Creek visited their parents.
। ter was an over Die week-end guest and Mrs H A. Woodman and son Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McDermott.
Phu) were in Lansing Wednesday to
at John Whetstone's.
Sunday.
j The many friends of Mr. and Mrs. attend the State Missionary meet­
Harry Senslba Is working for
. Alonzo Hilton and family of Saugus, ing and Sunday School convention Clyde Leonard.
of the Church of Christ.

Watch. Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
CASH FOR OLD GOLD.

Yard*.

ROBINHtK PARK.
HOLMES CHURCH.
Raymond Perkins of Detroit spent
Mr. and Mra. John Kollar and
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Cart Mrs. Edith Clifford were In Hastings
Perkins.
Thursday.
| Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Boulter and
Kenneth Cline and Ralph Klain
। family spent Bunday with Mr. and were Sunday guest* of Harold Kol­
Mra. Frank Zimmerman of Orange - lar.
Cooper-Arthur In "Mr.
I vine.
Mrs Edith Clifford spent Monday
Mias June Day of Vermontville and Tuesday with Mrs. Dan Young­
_ Gary cooper, as Mr. Deeds on
spent lhe week end al the home of blood of Caledonia. .
““
920.000.000
spending
spree, alld
and |■ Roy Wickham.
Ilie neighborhood extends sympa­
! J:T?“h.Ur “
Bennett, the • Mr. and
MtH1 Mrs.
mi. Walter
W|uvcr Durkee
MUfBee and
,J1Q thy to the Robinson family In ths
|gkl reporter, who* ready to help | Mrs
Durkee alUnded me loss of their mother. Mrs. Kate Rob­
C
him. are featured in Columbia
» funerai or
. Abld Danley of Lan­
inson. who passed away Sunday.
to Town."
one
'"Mr.
’ ‘ Deeds Goes “
■"* “
™* of sing She was laid to rest in Fuller
Mr. and Mrs George Poland went
the best comedies In years.
cemetery.
to Grand Rapids Sunday and with
Harold Norton's father died at his Mr. a^d Mrs. Omer Ward. Mra.
"The Story of Louia Pasteur.” m home in .Hastings early Sunday
Mankcr and Mr. Scwery motored to
“The Story of Ix&gt;uis Pasteur.' morning
Spring lake where they enjoyed a
»Uh Paul MUM In UK
rule. | „„
„,u„ Pensteinaker and pot luck dinner and took In the
Miss Martha
Tile screen play U bared on exten- [(rtanl. charier Thurlon 01
u h*i- sights of tha drive.
'
"“"'H “"d lerrned hlawrleal- । lings, Bpenl
Sv-.— —
, his
... aunt.
spent Sunday
with
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Prost of Lan­
Born In Dole. Prance. । U1 Kalunaano.
'
'
sing. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lightfoot
i I I year. «So. paneur wa. U&gt;e «»
Raymona Wickham went to De- of Freeport were Bunday guest* of
of n poor lanner. Hr .ladled chem- I Mlt Frk|ly wuh tM „„10„
Mr. and Mra. John Kollar.
“'ll' «'
| Freeport on a slsht-wring trip.
Mrs. Macle PotU and daughters,
T.
1 Mrs
Erana. Mn Ca-indMra. Ralph Flnkbeincr and Betty,
nrtHd M,* ta the |,et that medical | dpn „,d Mr, B1 johnaon from
were m Grand Rapids Saturday.
| men ol hh day appareully knew i Hawing., ape.u Friday .1 the home
.। little about lhe
the raiiM**
cause* of most
mint ailail­
McIntyre
*
SOUTH SHULTZ.
I. Btnun
Smith irom
from ita
Kalamazoo is vUments.
।I j,
Henry West and mother. Mrs
He undertook a series of expert- , ltlng hu dBUghtCT
, Mrs.
'
Alfred Dora Custer of Hastings spent
I men is which succeeded, and which 1 \funioy
Sunday
afternoon
with Mr. and
began
of aeveiopments
deyplopiuenls that
O Nl|1 ,
organ a chain
cnaui oi
tnat ।
. " Hr ,„d M„ &amp;
Mrs. Mila Ashby.
. *lnrp hna elv..yi th* nv*ra&lt;r* hllmr.n &gt;.
---. .
. .
Mrs Ed. McGoldrich of Cedar
asi 30
4U years more
mor* of
in me.
me .
al least
life. On the
and ^rjl yea oy^-jimth
Creek called on Mrs. Mina Kenyon
eve of his grettiesl
grrhtesi dlscovery-the
discovery—the
Mrs Qrlie Crockford from MU- j Friday.
curt for hydrophobia — he was I' u-aukee spent last week with her
Mr and Mrs Lester Bonneville
stricken with paralysis
Yet he J)nrt.ntg
nnd
j L Crock­ I and Lorna and Mrs. Edith Bonne­

Coming Attraction* at
The Strand Theater

CARDS of THANKS

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

BRICK

&gt;t FELOPAUSCHS
MARKET * Phon® 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609
H. Feldpausch • 3921

At Old Hostings Wool
Boot

Plont

Site.

In­

quire of joe DeRuiter
ot Pickle Stotion.

OLD ENGLISH
Rug Cleaner

Mrs Esther Haines and
Mary
Jean of Detroit called on Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Hammond Saturday
Mr. and Mrs Gordon Ritter of
Clarksville. Elmer Ritter of Rattle
Creek. Maurice Ritter of Freeport
and MLm Olive Ritter and friend
of Caledonia spent Sunday
with
tBeir father, Hugh Ritter.

SPRAY NOW!
Wl WANT TO SELECT
**U*ble *aa. now Msployod. wttb
FOUSIUHT. fUr (daemon end
BweKulcal iaeUasUoat, who *x*
willing U uala (pare Un or eveElM* M hose U «uUfr »* !S
BTAXLATIOX lad BE*VICE n
port* in Electric BefrUeriUon u&gt;d
Air CowdUloalad Vow. proBUblo
Bald. For taumew write. girted
eg* oad preant occapiUn.

GRANGE PROGRAMS

UTILITIES ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE

WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Henry Norton, a one-time realdent of this place, died Saturday
night at hla home on South Michi­
gan avenue. Hastings.
Mra Bob Newton, our teacher,
look supper with the Engle family
one night last week.
Remember lhe Sunday school at
ten o'clock each Sunday.

«M N. Well* St, Chicago. HL

Hlpelk.

WANTED!

HASTINGS MARKETS

HJ5...1 gallon
IL25....5 gallon*

ALL KINDS OF LIVESTOCK.

KERMET R. DAY
BASTINGS

430 W. STATE 8T

LAWN MOWERS
Cook's

&amp; Machine Shop
Hastings, Michigan

Mr. and Mra Cecil Ronk of Bat- I
7ii’^“’«
tie Creek spent Sunday at Lester ; Tb.i ihe mil .
Kinne’S.
».&lt;!.
The tulip show in Holland wu a
w&amp;iFikJ c
wonderful sight.
I paid aud ber»a I
Margaret Kelsey »pent part of
last week with friends near Lake Hr»*d»«“
Odessa
•
I N'»r«h ••
School «1U close this week Thuri- "xSi
day.
and t
Mrs Harry Simons of Orsnd ESd,
Rapids spent pert of last week with raas
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kinne.
. ,
‘
The Ladies’ Aid will meet with ;,"t«i
Mrs. Ludie Fisher next Thursday. I D*&gt;
June 4. for supper, club No 3 serv- i

WUh Lon* Handled
Brush

OLD ENGLISH
UPHOLSTERY
CLEANER

$JOO

70c

Make* yoar rug* clean
and *poUeM without
taking them from floor!

For apholstered farnlture, mohair, mohair
velour, aalo upholstery!

Old English No-Rubbing Wax—pH. 60c; qfi. $1.00

Sporting Goods!
LOUISVILLE SLUGGER BATS
FOR BASEBALL ...75c to $2.50
FOR SOFT BALL ...50c to$1.75
SOFT BALLS_____ 50e to $1.25
BASEBALLS______ 15c to $1.00
BA$EBALL GLOVES AND MITTS

Red

G. E. GOODYEAR
HARDWARE

iSZi’ii..

142 t. STATI ST.

HASTINGS

PHONI 2331

�THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER
Barry Bypaths

OF OTSEGO III

I, JAHI CAMMON

WHY MOTHERS MUST
GET FIGHTING ANGRY

CASH PRIZES DRAW
FINDS CROP YIELD
BIG CROWD SATURDAY
SAME AS IN 1B70

New

Haitingg, Cloverdale, Rural. Sol! Depletion Balance! AH
Routes, and Woodland
Efforts to Find Bftter
Seflda, Methode, Bio.
Are in the Liat

Movenent

Conservation and
Ottm *
Outdoor Notes

Ohance lo Aid la Frevetit..................................................

lag Fature Wan
‘ The Department of Conservation
Jane always had ah ambition to
DAMAGE SUIT DEVOLVED write a column like O. O. McIntyre.
'nev trailer exhibit completed Its
Women, almost without exception
i-----everly hills calif
s and are i10111 ln the uPPer peninsula with a
Here It U:
LEGAL QUISTIOMB OF
stand
as
a
unit
for
peace,
and
—The more I ponder on
’■
stOn
nr* ita
lr
Stop at Rt
st. Ignade. nmnlna
running up
IMPORTANCE
Diary of a modem Samuel Pspys: glad to go on record against war. total attendance to' approximately
Italy’s sacrifices in Ethiopia,
Up betimes and busy with coffee Many would like to know lust how 40,000 persons.
as balanced against what she
to register a protest that would
pancakes,
boiled
beef
and
good
MAN KILLED WHEN
count.
gains, the more I’m reminded
Memorial day is the official open­
thickened gravy. Started to put
CAR HIT BAND STAND what M. said (M. being O. O.'s wife There Is a present dav non-po- ing date of Michigan's free state
of the old story of the Confed­
Mabel) only I should put J. for litlcal movement, backed by the park system and on that day 53 Im­
erate who was released from
best type of cluzans, which offers proved state porks will be made
Jerry, and Jerry's so full of sarcasm
a northern prison tea tup after the Reaponiibility in Buch Oageg this morning they wouldn't print Just such an opportunity.
available for public use.
We are Indebted u to details to
surrender.
Skeletal thin from Jell
Reita With Municipality
it if I did write It, so what's the use?
Mrs. Amelia Goodyear Crim, of
fever and debility, be started on
The Oden state fish hatchery
Ill
try another. How'm I doin'?
It Was Decided
New York City, a niece of Mrs. northeast of Petoskey u unique
toitery legs for the Oblo river, de­
An interesting case involving im­
among the fish
hatcheries of
termined to die on southern soil
Thoughts while strolling: The alert, modern woman of lhe best
.
portant
legal
questions
relating
to
Michigan.
Ita water supply Is de­
One night tbla poor
claims against cities for damage* frost is on the "punkin" vine out­ type who lias been prominently rived entirely from artesian wells
rack-o-'bones crept
was tried by Attorney Kim Bigler, doors, so we better stroll In here. identified in New York and New
broodiuagcd j Hartwick Pines State Park In
of this city. In the circuit court of First sight to meet our eyes is an­ Jersey, with a»veral
Next morning, ear­
Allegan county before Circuit Judge other hole in the wall paper. Well, movements that tend to the better-. Crawford county
northeast
of
ly. the hired man
Fred T. Mlles on Thursday and Fri­ the kids mint have had a good time toeht of social’ conditions and the .Grayling is the largest state park in
last night, anyway. There: we’re improvement of home and «.
heard
suspicious
day of last week.
TW .....
civic
life. Michigan, having a total area of
-----------of- .UMiclllgan
Thru her we .team
the Public I more [han 12 ow acrM
sounds In tbe loft
The facts were briefly as follows: off the track again.
On the evening of Halloween. Oc­
Action committee of New York, on now has 12 state forests contain­
Personal nomination for the hard­
tober 31. 1335. a celebration wu held
forcemenla.
presing a total of approximately 950 in the city of Otsego on Allegan est boiled audiences ever seen— printing a clipping which she has 000 acres of land.
Centra)
auditorium.
Hastings,
a
sent us feeling Hastings women and
street, which Is also Michigan State
five's refuge was
Trunk Line M-79. Authorization was bunch of stiffs In a morgue would men also, would be Interested tn an
Farmers In southern Michigan
surrounded by stal­
procured from the state highway show about as much enthusi­ organization working definitely for were among the first to “mine" Iron
wart. nrtned men.
department to stop traffic on about asm as most pf these audiences. peace and offering a membership ore. Bog iron-ore, an inferior qual­
three blocks in the heart of the city. Once they had Ho be asked to clap that aids In tha work which requires ity mineral formed by water de­
foot son leveled a Irvin 8. Cobb ,
Some time before lhe dty had their hands. Another time the au­ no local organisation or dues.
posits in bogs, was used by small
cocked tnuakeL
constructed a band aland, using dience arose and left before the fi­
The article la from the Jackson­ foundries in the early days of
“Come out of tbar, whoever you
lhe wheels and chassis of an old nal episode-In a Civic Players' pro­ ville. Ill-, journal and Is written by Michigan as a source of cheap iron
be,' he bellowed. “Cunsarn your, truck and placing a platform there­ duction.
Mra. Penrose Lyly who says:
for local needs.
bide, we jfot you."
on. so that it might be hauled
"Mothers must get fighting mad.
The increasing popularity of fish­
Look al Ikes: Two white collie their anger must rise to an articu­
wherever desired as-occasion might
The southerner raised
white
demand; and so on this evening the
late bowl of rage which every legis­ ing in Michigan, both with resi­
he said, wanly, "and
band stand was pulled Into and
lator in Washington will heed. dents and non-residents, is attested
Local boy who made good in Uie War? Why should this country go by the record-breaking sale of fish­
set up on the center of the main
street intersection of that city. city—Mayor Charles Leonard. Won­ to war? There U not one sound ing licenses during 1935 which set
Barricades were thrown across Al­ der if that engaging smile had any­ reason. Our sons are too sacred to a new high mark. There Is a strong
thing to with it?
us, our homes and our lives loo possibility that total sales will top
II^E'RE starting a new picture,' legan street and traffic detoured
around a side street. A band con­
valuable for Americans to drift, the 600,000 mark for the first time
* * ■«&lt;! I am teamed up with Slim
In a recent conversation with a careless, unprotesting. Into a man- when all reports are In
cert. public speeches, etc., were con­
Summerville. (I feet 0 of pure cotu--j ducted from the band stand. The young minister. I beard this: “My
Predatory animals of Michigan
edy. and little Jane Withers—for' festivities were concluded about ten trouble is not with people who won't
Mrs. Beth Milliken speaking. She's
o'clock when the barricades were have anything to do with the chairman of Uie Public Action Com­ ar&lt;f actually helping the state to
In the business. It'a as though Litremoved but lhe band stand was church, but rather with my steady mittee on Legislation Affecting In­ manage Its game, and to rear
pheasants
arfd
fight forest-fires.
tie Boy Blue were sandwiched in
permitted to remain in the street attendants who are not examples of ternational Peace. This committee
Nearly 500 predatory pelts, acquired
between Jesse James and Calamity . No lights or other warnings were what Christians should be." A kls composed of level-headed, pub­
lic-spirited women who want to by conservation authorities under
Jane. Well, m i go d0Wn for the* placed upon lhe band stand, al­ thought for us all in that.
the bounty system, were sold at an
make this country realise that a
third time I'll atm be gurgling fee-' though there were street lights and
auction here for more than 31,000
a string of lights was stretched
A family of Intimate friendshave war. should U be threatened soon,
bly. so give me credit, please, as an
from one side of lhe street to the an old hound dog which Is dearly is stupid, needless and actually The receipts of this sale, which is
earnest gurglar.
other.
, the second held this year, will go
beloved all over the countryside. A cowardly.
Into
the game-protection fund.
They coll our picture “Public
About three-thlrly o'clock the gentleman If ever there was one.
"There are millions of Ameri­
Nuisance Number 1.” but a movie Is
following morning,
Glenn
Cook. In the dog world. At a large social can fathers and mothers who hate
Are men better fishermen than
like an Indian—starts out with a
Allegan county engineer, driving in gathering In this home last fall, he the thought, who lie awake nights women? Michigan's fisheries au­
a westerly direction ran Into the
in itorror of this terrible threat to thorities aren't attempting to an­
name and winds up with anyone of
band stand and was killed He left and called by name by nearly ev­ their sons." points out Mrs. Milli­ swer that one. However, figures
a half dozen. 1 once knew a Black­
a widow and two children and his eryone tn lhe large room, exactly ken. "What can they do about it? compiled by the Institute for Fish­
foot who was first one thing, then
brother. Philip Cook, was appointed as a friend and equal would be Lots. They can force Washington, eries Research from data collected
toother, and the best be could do
administrator He Instituted suit greeted. He paid his respects with yes. from the president down, to lis­ during the season ot 1935 from 3.­
for himself In his old age was to be
against the city of Otsego for dam­ many tall wiggings and eager looks ten to their protest, lo realize that 594 anglers on Fife lake in Grand
ages. employing Clare Hoffman's and then disappeared to snooze the the voting public does not want this Traverse county of whom 763 or
&gt;r» Going Over tfie HUL
threat to materialise."
law firm of Allegan to represent
21.2 per cent were women show that
| him.
Tiie Public Action Committee be- with the exception of three weeks,
The case was set down for trial
Thingumabobs: Green street is Hevea that what these mothers and the women took on Uie average
l before Judge Mlles ou Thursday. rougher than most of our country fathers want is a channel through more fish per hour than the men.
TpHE pepere seemed so barren— | MT. Hoffman, being In Washington.
roads now
A Hastings matron which they can voice their loathing except two weeks when each took
-1 not a elngl- front page story । was unable to be present, and Mr.
had seven lines printed In "Con­
t/ie same number.
iDout
Repreaentative Zloncbeck.
Sigler waa requested to appear as temporary American Women Poets"
fiuatilugtou'e No. I Boy Scout. Life, | attorney for the plaintiff against . . . Barry county should have pup­ to Washington, to show them bow
Indeed. Ih empty ou a day whosa 1 the city.
pet shows . . . Getting tired of red to send written notices of indigna­
It was the claim of the plaintiff gasoline pumps. Going out some tion. of threats to withhold votes
low descending sun sees no gay
that the duty rested upon the city night and paint them lavender, blue from congressmen and senators who
teed done, no headline won by the
। to maintain ita streets In a reason - and yellow. Maybe stripes and a few rush blindly after the war mongers.
intlon'a official nroblem child.
“We average, non-political men
— ..._,
U11
lue|Mbly iflfe condition for travel and plaids , . , How many of these dots
foot of the ladder, alphabetically U’a.‘ P*rm‘1Un« a band stand to re- does O. O. use anyway? . . . And and women of America are not half
apeaklng, but tils startled constltu- :
*?»
Cen!*r^
what do they mean? .
. Wouldn't so stupid as we may seem even to
ourselves,"
Mrs
Milliken insists
a period do Just as well? . . .
"But most of us don't know what to
Why do Alf Landon's cute little do about our rage against man-kill­
n.,
kids shut their eyes when they have ing stupidity. .That is why this
getting umrrled or getting bls pen :
It was the claim of the defense their photograpi taken? Be some committee has been formed."
In hand to tell the President how to | that the state highway department. excuse for me If I did that. . . .
Any voter may join the Public
Action committee on Legislation
having taken over the street as a
International
peace &lt;
polish off some fellow-statesman of trunk line, absolved the city from
If our millionaires and legislative Affecting
liability, and further that Mr. Cook members Vkre all as considerate
the house, or Just getting about.
49 West 43th street. New York City.
And hasn't he put the throbbing was guilty of contributory negli­
I To anyone taking membership,
pulse Into the Congressional Rec­ gence in that he was going faster
ord J It reads now sometimes as than the legal rate, namely fifteen no threat of Communism hi the lhe committee engages to notify
him or her when, in its opinion,
miles an hour, st the time the acci­ United States today.
the old Police Gazette used to.
concerted ,action will be effective,
dent happened.
The Jury found against Che city,
One word description of a cactus:
of protest. whether
and brought in a verdict for 18,625. prickcry. Hastings ought to have
Rules for Olympics.
The legal questions, involving the a soo. That means some of us will
A s I understand It—and some- liability of a municipality under
have to Idde if tliey start looking senator, or all three, and to live
4* body correct me. please, if I'm such circumstances, are Important for material. First person I ever
wrong—the rules for tbe forthcom­ and of Interest to all cltlxens. Mr. heard sing "In the Shade of the
ing Olympic Games in Berlin have Sigter stated that he thought the Old Apple Tree." Ray Wolfe of
The sincere people who are back­
city of Otsego would, no doubt, ap- North Broadway. And haven't heard ing this committee are trying to get
the millions of mothers—-and fa­
anybody do a better job since.
thers too. of course—who abhor this
USING NEW SCHOOL BUILDING.
don't win.
Secret longing—to own a Scotch whole trend toward another de­
Nashville will get the benefit of
structive war, banded together in
Pio wondering, thought, about its new school building when the terrier.
a body that will be able to make an
wbat may happen when (be Amer­ commencement exercises are held.
Personal piffle: I have so many intelligent and effective protest.
ican team turns up over there with They will be In the auditorium of
It la Congress that has the power
a whole batch of negro foot-raeers that building. There are 27 grad­
to declare war. under our American
In the outfit, ft's going to be aw­ uates of the Nashville school.
ponstltution. If Congress can be
fully bard to convince a Prussian
that the
you And In this life. Really worth- shown, unmistakably,
sentiment of this country Is over­
crowd that they're merely medlumto-well-done Nordic Caucasian stock
gat over it enough to sing anything. whelmingly for peace, the chances
at
our
drifting
Into
a
now
war will
browned In the pan. ao to speak.
When I have a spat with Jerry, I
always write to all my old school
It so happens that our fasteet
chums. That’s the only time they now. before the dreaded emergency
runners are all colored boys. Per-,
Comstock
Park.
Grandville, •ver hear from me. . . . Am very
haps 'tls just as welL They may
Grand Rapids. Charlotte. Hastings. fond of "Observing Tommy's" vo­ has frown acute.
have to keep right on running.
Cadillac and Middleville were rep­ cabulary. especially the cuss words.
resented in the Hl-Y week-end Thought I'd heard them ail. but
camp which was held at Camp
Improvement In Influenza.
Barry. May 23 and 34. Program was
IN HESI'ONU'U to large nutubers directed by Sec. Carl Metager, of “quips" are peta-My favorite name
* who wrote or wired, 1 would'
Kent county. Mrs. Angell did the for a black horse: "Black Rock."
state that either I’m getting over] cooking. Rev. W. M Jones of Has­
There will be a Memorial Daj
my Influenza, or maybe I’d. just get­ tings was guest speaker Saturday Dickens tops Uiem all in picking
service at the Union eemetery on
ting used to IL Its latest wblmffl-1 eveningnames to express personalities. Saturday, May m at 1 o'clock. If
A big group is expected to attend ■‘Vicky Is a good name for a dark, the weather is unfavorable, services
cal notion waa to settle In both l
ears, and now should It thunder, a the Barry Co. Ministerial picnic at quick, vivacious girl—Sally Rand win be held In the Briggs church,
doesn't have to have anything to a mite east of Looey All ex-service
rare occurrence out there; in order
dinner at noon.
do with that nudist ckmp if she
doesn't want to—she has her bub- tewing program has been arranged:
nomenon, It1l have to thunder again
six from Eaton county attended the
Music: Martin's Orchestra.
—and louder. However. being tarn- organising meeting of the Barry-

,

B

.

Another big crowd gathered Sat­
urday for lhe mohlhly cash draw­
ing donated by Hastings merchants.
This time the drawing took place
between the Banner office and the
court yard which was packed with
Interested coupon holders, it went off
very snapplly considering that sev­
enteen numbers had to be called,
with a few not present, necessitat­
ing a second trial The"lucky holders

Yields gf standard farm crops like
main where they were in 1370. Ddeplte scientific study of seeds, soils,
production methods, and utilisation
of machinery and despite great ad­ assistant
vances in extension and publication Richard
services for the fanners, per acre
production has stood sUU.
Dr. C. X. Millar, head of the soils
department at Michigan State Col­
lege. East Lansing, has compiled
statistics gathered by the federal
census showing average yields Itftefi
year periods for the tast 60 years.
“It seems incomprehensible that
the yields have not increased." he

»2 prizes—Ernest Bstties. 229 N
Broadway. Charles Crouse. 122 E.
Grand. Earrel Keller. Cloverdale.
James Britton. 601 East State Rd.,
and Hazel Schrlber. Hastings. R. 2.
33 prizes—Rtehard Trethric. 121
W, Clinton. Janet Smith. 127 W,
Colfax. Doris Craig. 104 E. Thom,
sion service, experimejlgl rtatioos.
Mrs. Sterling OsUOlh. Nashville. R.
the county agent systems, boys' and
2. and J. H. Woodman. Hastings, girls' clubs, rpdio and publication1
R 3.
services, in addition to scientific i
15 prizes—Charles Murphy. 138 !
» ther&lt; MCnu to 1* M reason I
Park St.. Marian Hayner. Woodland.
.7.
R. 2. Dell Reynolds. Hastings. R. 1.1 Ruth Rtandluh MW N Rrnartwsv 1
.nd V.™ MdMllkn. W. Stale.
, X?
S

In reality; with Um
tw9 mentioned ang

10 o'clock a IBmm
My will be held in
dltorium. Mr. Re
110 prize—Mrs. Don Curtis. Has­
ttnued at a sufficiently rapid rate charge of arrangetz
tings. R. a.
to counterbalance all the efforts of
315 prize—William Stamm, Has­
science and farm av-ncles to in­
tings.
cfeM* production, he says.
"W.
1
aMaaat^ala

Riley Stories
Some years after the Spanish
American war. John Cappy and I
started a small foundry a’l Lake

he states. “Nothing was said about
sol] maintenance. We have coasted
along on our naturally fertile eoU president; Was Oonkitn, tri g—ir.
to find that it is not so fertile now. Mn Hubtoord. vtoe-preHtani, MMl
If we are to maintain our present
averages,
about
-- _
--- -not
„ to say anything
BOGUS
increasing them, we must patch up
I this weakness. It is high time the |
' Mt at confusion amonc Um
problem of soil fertility and mainte­
due to Um changing at Um
nance be given the spotlight.”
This condition Is not local, he
says, it is true of the entire mid-

Odessa and one day a boy brought
In a bill which read:
“Everybody come to the depot to­
morrow 2:30 and see Rear Admiral
Dewey, the naval hero who sank
worse than Michigan. The eastern
the Spanish fleet at the battle of states, known for their abundant
Manila."
use of fertilizers, have definitely
When I got there the next day. increased the yields of standard
crops in Uie same period.
road track and when the train
stopped, a fine-looking man dressed YOUNG MAN {{ '
in a naval uniform stepped out on
FATALLY INJURED.
the back platform and the crowd
Pierce O'Oonnor, aged 33. son of
shouted. "Speech!" Another officer Mr and Mrs. Dennis O'Connor of
stepped out and said. "Admiral Lake Odessa, .was killed Friday
Dewey is a man of few words; in when his brother. Fred. lo»l control
fact he Is no writer. But if you of a truck in which they were rid­
want any ship sunk over In yon- ing on M-H. striking a tree near
the highway. They were taking a
man to send for."
load ot eggs to the Detroit mar­
ket. Mr O'Connor leaves his wlf» and
“For every man employed at the baby, besides other relatives. The
site of a project, it Is estimated that funeral «u held at the Tamarac
two others ‘behind the lines' get church Saturday at 3:30 P. M.
Jobs. This necessarily means a tre­ Burial was In the Yankee Spyings
mendous stimulation to business."— cemetery.
‘
*_■
Harold L. Ickes. United States Sec­
The brother. Fred O'Connor, waa
retary of the Interior.
injured allfhUy.

their high school days.

you aw.

The Dowling Oes
wlU have a Memorial
at Um Dowling churel
The program will

room.
Everybody
Blanche Powell, Boe.

Come

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

Observance Of
Decoralion Day

OLD PIONEER.

don't bear the dull things the other
people say. but can still enjoy tbe

With perspective in his heart
A man too old for aught but dreams

Palm Springs, where 1 cooked la
tbe desert sunshine until ail I need-

George Westerman, met with the
new committee, assisting with Uie There Is the apple tree which he
adoption of the constitution.
planted.
Charlotte, Hastings. Eaton Rap­
ids. Lake View and possibly Grand
their strength has grown
Ledge, will each have a detegate at
the Notional Hl-Y Conference In Through his curved nostrils

my brow end tblekgn tbe gravy
with a little brown flour. Driving
lb, I kept tying upjhs traffle; no
many motorists mistook my face

to throw myself Into tbe epizootic.
That's a horse disease, but I're been

The first section of comp Barry His Ufa la a loaded wagon
will likely begin July 8. Kent Co. And Ute teamster Tima is driving
Y. M. C. A- will use Camp Barry Down the road westward.
White tbe star in Um West draws
The world war cost 30,000,000
near
lives and aWQXXMfiWWO Nlchoias Like a hone light ahead.
Murray Butter.

Duet: Miss Lucille and Mrs. J.
OoteRecitation: Miss Margaret oortright.
Harmonica solo:
Ruaeell HawRecltaUon: Miss Beatrice Buxton.
Accordion solo: Bmest Dunkelberger.
Music: Martin's orchestra.
Address: RO ■. f. Votlkar.
Muffle: Martini Orchotra.
Benediction: Rbv. SchjNuter

White there someone stole his car
This has been recovered at Spring-

on friends in Hastings last week

strong as

horse doctor.

.

-

IRVIN B. COBB.

it Y secretary
beck in WM.

of

Barry

Wayne

llo. U&gt;lm&gt;

When you call “Your Banker” for an apointment,
ceive a welcome that will assure you of this Bank’s willingness to

erate with you. Fifty years of courteous, personal service has built for us
a reputation for friendly banking. This Bank is ready, and willing, to *
help you in all financial matters.
Warmer weather means that you will spend more time away from beg

be sure your valuables are safe

from fire and theft. Rent oiw

safety deposit boxes and put your letters, legal documents and
beyond the reach of thieves and fire.
See us if you need money ... we are making

estate and on the basis of financial statement
Come right

Hastings City B
TELEPHONE 2103 ♦ *

HASTINGS . MICH

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, •

....
-------- ■

■

|

Yields of standard farm crops like
wheat, com, rye. potatoes. tame hay.
ana barley in Michigan today re-

AMembltee are
pita scientific study of seeds, soils,
production meUiods, and utilisation the day right no
of machinery and despite greet ad­ assistant cf the I
vances in extension and publication Richard Potter. |

12 prizes—Emeat Battles. 229 N.
rand, Earrel Keller. Cloverdale.
ION Britton, aoi East State Rd..
nd Hazel Be briber. Hastings. R. 1
83 prizes—RUhard Trelhrlc. 121
I. Clinton. Janel Smith. 127 W
difax. Doris Craig. 104 E. Thorn,
trs. sterling Ostroth. Nashville. R.
and J. H Woodman. Hastings.

15 prizes—Charles Murphy. 128
ark St.. Marian Hsyner. Woodland.
;. 2.. Dell Reynolds. Hastings. R. 1.
,uth Standish. 504 N Broadway
nd Vem McMillen
McMillen, W State
Stale.
110 prize—Mrs. Don Curtis. Bas­

■

■I

II

UC

’

at Long &amp; Moore 5c

Some years after the Spanish
.merican war. John Cappy and I
larted a small foundry a’t Lake
idessa. and one day a boy brought
i a bill which read
•Everybody come lo the depot toinrmw
,nd
Hoar AHmlral
lewey, the naval hero who sank
be Spanish fleet al lhe battle of
(anils "
When I got there the next day.
here was a big crowd at lhe ralload track and when the train
lopped, a fine-looking man dressed
i a naval uniform stepped out on
be back platform and the crowd
bouted. "SpeechI" Another officer
tepped out and said, "Admiral

&lt;^wy’L’iell!1r

oftha farmers. Tt
rsUter and water
Michigan's only »
Mr. Polley Mid t£
state Valise ewybodw u
them and kills than fib sQ
in reality, with the exMpttfi
tw? mentioned K|kM la
beneficial
to
agriculture
Owen cteary of Cleary's 1
coltegr, Ypsilanti wgz th*
Tuesday morning. , . Oft »

or.wv«»«.
Dr.uMillar
believes
that »uu
sod urpiedeple[lon
lhe only
rZ^ble
biy will be bald In Hie CtenUal au­
Rstnbatdt M *
tinued at a sufficiently rapid rate
to counterbalance all the efforts of

,u‘““ ■'L D

‘THE COAL BIN IS GONE!..

followed: Mr. Broaak WM
along on our naturally fertile soil
to find that it is not so fertile now.
If we are to maintain our present
overages, not to say anything about
increasing them, we must patch up
this weakness It Is high time the bit of confusion among U» i
problem of soil fertility and mainte­ due to Um changing of Um i
nance be given the spotlight.”
| This condition is not local, „
he
Myi it u true of the entire mld—__ .__ _ __
...
.

and so is all that soot, dust, and
furnace muss!’

worse than Michigan. The eastern
states, known for their abundant
use of fertilizers, have definitely
Increased the yields of standard
crops In the same period.

YOUNG MAN i'i

AUTOMATIC

'

FATALLY INJURED.
Pierce O’Connor, aged 32. son of you sm.
Mr and Mrs. Dennis O’Connor of
Lake Odessa, .was killed Friday
when his brother. Fred, lost control
set lie is no writer But if you of a truck in which they were rid­
rant any ship sunk over in yon- ing on M-lfl, striking a tree near at Um Dowling
lhe hlghwgy. They were taking a
i.'.n to send for.'
load of eggs to the Detroit mar­
ket. Mr. O’Connor leaves his wife and
The program will
“For every man employed al the baby, besides other relatives. The
lie of a project, it is estimated that
wo others
’behind the lines’ gel church Saturday at 2:30 P. M.
lentous stimulation to business.''—
lajold L. Ickes, United States SecThe brother. Fred O'Connor, was
Btary of the Interior.
Injured slightly.

Low Cost’
NATURAL

END ALL OF THIS
No more ashes (o carry out or
shovel
no expense for re­
moval. no dusty, dirty—basement
. . . Turn it into a den or play
room.

There an M

CAS
House Heating is
Now Within the Reach
of Every Hastings Home

Phone 2305

"Yes Sir

Heiu Htatiiif Depadneftt

FORA

Come Right
Cost of heating this eight room home on Carlisle St.,
with New Low
om NATURAL GAS

C

Over”

^lT3

Sr-»w.

SQQGO
FOR NEXT HEATING SEASON

•

HERE IS THE PLAH

FREE
ESTIMATE

"In Use your present furnace.

2
ceive a welcome that will assure you of this Bank’s willingneM lo a»0g, ■
j

help you in all financial matters.

Wanner weather means that you wi 11 spend more time awey from hint,
safety deposit boxes and put your letters, legal documenta and

beyond the reach of thieves and fire.
b
-—
See us if you need money ... we are making louts on

estate and on the basis of financial statements.
Come ri/ht over and tee Your Bmhr'

tings Citg Bat
E nos

♦

» ♦

HASTINGS . Ml CM

&lt;

Jangb f

LK S’&gt;\|

Impmand

Our Engineer will give you a free estimate show-

■ ing what the approximate cost may be for next win­
ter a heating, including gas for cocking, water heal
ing. refrigeration, or other uses

This will give you a Inal through a complete heata ing season next winter
No payments need be
made on the burner until the following epnng. when
if you decide to keep it. a convenient monthly
payment plan may be arranged, with terms as long
as 36 months. A small trial installment charge of
$3.00 per month during lhe heating season begin
ning in October, is made, and this will be credited
back to you oa your purchase should you decide lo
keep the uhit.

4

erate with you. Fifty years of courteous, personal service has built for ua

be sure your valuables are safe . . . from fire and theft. Rent one al tar-

We install—on trial and without obligation to pur• chase—the money-Mving Consumers Sprrtnl zXtiinmatic Gas Burner in your furnace, easily installed tn
a few hours.

3

When you call “Your Banker" for an apointinent, you are sure to re­

a reputation for friendly banking. This Bank is ready, and williag, to

$1

DELTON.
The W F M S. will meet with
Mrs Helen Pennock Wednesday.
at the home of Mr. and Mrs Wil- Hall a.
I atm's niece and husband, Mr and Mrs Dunning wtll have charge of
11am Schenkel several days last1 Little Jimmie Nagel who has been
devotlonals and Mrs. Barnum the
Mrs. Scobey from Leach lake.
Week and also visited other relatives seriously 111 u better.
program.
There will be a gospel meeting at
and frtends.
| Mrs. Mary Hinckley from Coate
In the church basement Wednes­
Henry Nagel from Holland spent Grove visited her mother. Mrs Florj™- &gt; day of next week for dinner.
aeveral days at the home of his ence Blackford, last Thursday,
John
b^n —
is- 1 F»&gt;u«U Iran or*n&lt;l Rapids
Mrs Saunders and Mrs Dunning
brother. James Nagel and fam^f' Mrs,
M..., J
jL.. Behon hu Uw.
- Moline will be there Everyone in­ were appointed as program commit­
here.
slating In the
care of- •her father.
vited.
tee for lhe Children's Day exercises,
Mr and Mrs. Foster Waddell en- Henry Norton, who passed away al
__________
Mr and Mrs. Lewis Gay and chil- _________________________
which will
... be
.
-------------------------------held three weeks
tertalned her parents from near his
home in_______
Hastings
Lowell Bunday, also Mr. and Mrs.. The
— ; regular
-— ~
Fellowship
’’—
meeting dren and Mr Gay’s mother, from from last Sunday.
ji* *be
— Friday evening.
____.— May
»j_y 29 , Richland, were Sunday guests of , Our school will close this week
John Blocher from Freeport.
will
(come. Mrs Lucretia Benham.
। Wednesday, and Friday the pupils,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl West and son Good speakers. Everybody welc

pelted many

joya4 a picnic al Um Kaftan

Riley Stories

i

• FOR YOUR CAR — THE HIM.
• ro* Y0UR CAt — THE HFn

.| the riddle. „
f. depletion
”^7..
.has con­ ditorium. Mr.
Soij

ils prize—William Stamm, Fasngs.

^i.il
t

laitioga, Cloverdale, Rural Soil Depletion Balances AU
Bfforts to
Bftter
Routes, and Woodland
Qyn
Are In the -Li«t
S0da, Motiiodi, Bto.

production has stood still.
Dr. C. E. Millar, head of lhe soils
department at Michigan State Col­
lege. East Lansing, has compiled
statistics gathered by the federal
census showing average yields W ten
year periods for the last to years.
"Il seems incomprehensible that
the yields hsve not Increased,” he
says. ’ When we look back over w(igt
has been done In the way of exten­
sion service, experimental stations,
the county agent systems, boys'and
girls' clubs, radio and publication
services. In addition V&gt; scientific
studies, there seems to be no reason

■

F IS NEW 1937 PHILCOS

Ills

ASH PRIZES DRAW
FINDS CROP YIELD
BIG CROWD SATURDAY
SAME AS IN 1870

Another big crowd gathered Sal’day for lhe mohlhly cash drawg donated by Hastings merchants.
Tills time the drawing took place
rtween the Banner offlee and the
rurt yard which was packed with
iterated coupon holders. It went off
iry snsppllv considering that seviteen numbers had to be called,
ith a few not present, necesaltatig a second trial. The" lucky holders

-.ft-

In homes without furnaces, gas heating equipment

is also available for room or "up-ataiss" heaung.

FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF
WHAT OLCAN. AUTOMATM NATURAL
•Al HEAT .. . WILL COST FOR YOUR HOME

Cwt W keatlnc Uli. largs elght-rsem home ■■ 8. Jsutoen Avs.. Laa•ta&lt; artlh tnsnafsclartd js. war 81MS1 for heaUag season 1B14-2K

With N.W "Low Cort” NATURAL GAS it—

51 Q22?
FOR NEXT HEATING SEASON

•nfnra Yto Buy NEXT WINTERS FUEL ... INVESTIGATE NATURAL GAS

Consumers Power Co.
Sts »LM 1M« UTUUL SAI I, . IMUte •. - WATM HEHIMO... gURNUATIM ... ROUU NIAHM

paren
picnic
Mm
gusta
Bundi
Kate
and J
ents &lt;

lands.
Chicai
will |
o'clocl
o'clocl
of -"J
In th&lt;

Rev. (
his Ilf
him.
Delt
trlbutl
eamec
spring
home
Werlri
Rapid
Hgiom
w»ll I
conva

�•“=•] new

1937 PHILCOS NOW ON DISPLAY
* F°* r°UR CAt ~ TMINIW 14X0,0 *°° AMIAL1

REDUCED

Bella

WARD BAINE

Long &amp; Moore 5c *» $1 Store

25 percent!

and

I from Eaton Rapid* and Mr and
MrLNorton from Grand Rap-

11am Bchenkel several days last I Little Jimmie Nagel who ha* been
week and also visited other relatives ' seriously ill la better.

and friend*.
,
Mrs. Mary Hinckley from Coats
Henry Nagel from Holland spent Grove visited her mother, Mrs. Flor­
ence Blackford, last Thursday.

here.
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Waddell entertalned her parents from near
Lowen Sunday, also Mr. and Mrs.
"it::. *Blocher
“-7’—- from Freeport.
John
Mt. and Mrs. Earl West and son

sisllng In the care of her father
Henry Norton, who passed away at
' hl* home in Hastings.
। The regular Fellowship meeting
will be Friday evening. May 28.
Good speakers. Everybody welcome

1
i

DELTON.
The W F M 8 will meet with
Mrs Helen Pennock Wednesday
I Mrs Dunning will have charge of
“n s
and h“»ban‘1.
and devotionals and Mrs. Barnum lhe
Mra Scobey from Leach lake
program.
The Delton L A 8 will be held
the home of Mr and Mra. James In the church basement Wednes­
Nagel Tuesday evening. June 3. day of next week for dinner
Friends from Grand Rapids and
Mrs Saunders and Mrs Dunning
Moline will be there Everyone in- were appointed as program commit­
vlted.
tee for the Children’s Day exercises
‘
Mr and Mrs Lewi* Gay and chil- which
will * be held
------- three
------- weeks
--------dren and Mr Gay’s mother, front from last Bunday
Richland, were Sunday guests of |
Our school will close tills week
Mrs Lucretia Benham
1 Wednesday, and Friday tbe pupils.

Mr and Mrs. Bclson had as Sun-

Lansing were calling an friends in
Delton Sunday afternoon. They are
looking fine and we were all pleased
lo see them once more.
Rev. Galvez of the Philippine Is­
lands. who is attending school in
Chicago the same as Rev. Bates,
will preach at Prairieville at io

&gt; hospital and slay two weeks and
you will know.
I Harold Burpee and family have
| moved back into iris father’s lanant house.
| John E. Willison, who resided on
a farm southeast of Delton was
found dead at his home Saturday
afternoon by hl* son Edwin. Death
i was due to a heart attack. HI* wife
died About two years ago Eleven
children, two brothers and twenty
grandchHdren survive.

and so is all that soot, dust, and
furnace muss!'
,

For Only

49'

NATURAL

GAS

room.

House Heating is
Now Within the Reach
of Every Hastings Home

REED’S
PHONG 2241

“TOUGH GUY”
ISOVIS “D”

HAS YET TO MEET ANOTHER MOTOR
OIL THAT CAN OUTLAST HIM!

H«um M«ati«t OefartMDiit

Standard's premium-quality motor oil keeps your oil hill

FOR A

$30=
FOR NEXT HEATING SEASON

•

HERE IS THE PLAH

&gt;

Arbor. Detroit and Canada. Wed­
nesday.

paradoxically.

and that wa must

madly.

extricate

our-

dlplocnallc manor

Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Clemens
family ware Bunday dinner guests
and five youngest children of Pres­
of her beother-ln-law and *l*ter,
cott spent Saturday night knd Sun­
Mr. and Mr*. Shirley Mayo and
day forenoon with Mrs. Clemens’
daughter. Jaan. In Hasting*.
sister, Mrs. Emery Kime and fam­
Goshen. md.; Irvin Long of Elk­
Mr. and Mr*. Edw. Walter*. Mra.
ily. They were called here by the hart; Mr. and Mrs. Fqseat Bister
death of Clayton's mother, Mr* and daughter of Lyons; Mr. and Stoughton and Mr. and Mr* John
Malcolm attended lhe Mass meet­
Matilda Clemens of saranac.
Mrs. Gordon Pillen and baby of ing and county Rally held at Cen­
Mr and Mrs. Emery Benedict and
|
Fenton; Raymond Shaffer and lady tral auditorium in Hasting*.” Sun­
Joanna of Ionia spent Saturday
friend of Grand Rapids.
day afternoon.
night and Sunday with Mr
and
Mrs. Harold'Yoder attended the
Mr. and Mra. Ohtir Yeiter were
Mrs. H -W Geiger and family. Mrs
Benedict and Joanne lemalned fur funeral of Matilda Clemens at Sara­ Sunday dinner guests of the latter'*
parents. Mr. and Mra. John Clark
the week _______
to attend the graduation nac Friday.
1 ot‘ her brother,
Mr and Mr* Clayton Clemens of of Cascade.
”
Vaughn Geiger,
Thursday night,
Mr*. James F. Hammond, daugh­
V'«itor«
Visitors nt
of Mr and Mrs Harley Harold Yoder's.
ter Natalie and Miss Marjorie NevI Taylor
their children. । Mra. Harry F. Miller and two
.... Bunday
--------- , were
---------------------------------Rlttenirer of
nt daughters of Elkhart. Ind., vtetted blng gueat* of Mrs Claude A. Ham­
' Mr and Mrs. Howard Rltlenger
: Lowell and Mr and Mr*. Russel) from Friday until Sunday with mond. Robert and Pau). Mrs Ham­
I Taylor and family of Berlin
I home folks. She returned home mond has been helping care for her
|
Mr and Mrs Vere Howlette of Sunday with Mabel Watta of Chi- mother. Mr*. FUher. who l* slowly
CiarksviUc spent Sunday with Mr cago. who had been visiting her recovering from her serious Hines*.
and Mr*. Garfield Slater. Mr and mother at Bowue center.
Mr. and Mr*. Edgar B- Flficld ano
Mrs. Ivan Slater and baby »pcnt l Mr*. Sam Keim and Mrs. Bert family were In attendance at tne
Sunday evening with them.
Keim of Elmdale called at the Jen­ 'May Feattval In Hasting* Friday
Rev and Mrs Batelorf of Freeport nie Pardee home Thursday after­ evening.
took supper with Mr and Mrs J. noon.
Mr. and Mr*. John Yonker* of
F Brake Tuesday evening before
Grand Rapid* and Mr. and Mr*.
Will Mbhler and family visited Edw. Yonkers of Caledonia were)
the prayer meeting at Rev Vern
szuuiwwo*».
,,
, Sunday at John Thayler s in Oarl- Sunday evening guests of Mr. and.
Hullibergek's.
J-Junior Brake of Florida arrived ton
Mr*
Saturday at tbe J t" Brake home
Mrs Pete Griffin and Mr*. Lynn
Wendell Malcolm of Lake Odessa
He will spend the summer In Griffin returned home Friday from
.Bellevue
where
they have ‘ixxn the'
Michigan.
"
1
Mr and Mrs Elwood Brake. Mrs. P^t week
| Mr and Mrs John Malcolm.
Mattle Coo) of Ionia and John E
Miss Eleanor Miller spent Uie | Mix* Gertrude Clagg«tl of the
Brake and family spent Sunday at past week with her folks at Carl- nllmore district Is assisting MU*
the J. F Brake home
ton.
I Clara J. Simon with her house
Mrs Duncan Palmer and broth- 1 Wark for two weeks.
।
Mias Eldirne Preston ot Grand
Rapids spent the week end with her ets. Jack and Ralph Andrews of
parents, Mr and Mrs c J Preston. Lansing spent the week end with
GLASS CREEK.
।
Mr. and Mrs Clarence Kime en- Mr and Mr*. L. Andrew* and MlnMr. and Mrs. Fred Otis spent
nunor 001
the week with Uiair daughter. Lu­
TAL6RGGN SYSTEM'
£°?°!.
A uieir oaugu- , nie Bouck.
3rd birthday Bunday, I Harold Yoder and family visited cille and husband in Detroit. On
DRUG STORE
Mr. Bnd Mrs. tcop
------- Auga
------- .L Mr. and . Bunday al Danny Look * of Clarks­ Sunday they took a trip into CanHASTINGS j Mr*. Gerald Augat of Lake Odessa.
ville.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Otis and fam­
ily spent Sunday with John Rrway tn Lansing.
Louis Havens spent the latter

Phone 2305

Cost of heating thi* eight room home on Carlisle S*., Segimw,
with New Low CoM NATURAL GAS

—btltewa

Barbara Brake.

Big * 12
Bottle

‘Low Cost’
No more a»ke» to carry out or
■hovel , . . no expense for re­
moval. no duety. dirty—basement
. . . Turn it into a den or play

Scott accompanied her and spent
lhe afternoon Mlh her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer Boott.
Belhlthesn but thinks .to find sakaThose attending Achievement Day tion elsewhere—at Versailles, &lt;*
Geneva, or London. Il still thinks
that wrongs are to be righted by
jullts Oaasar methods;
armies.

o’clock A. M Sunday on the subject
of "The Message of the Flowers "
In the evening a union service will
be held in Delton Methodist church.
Rev Galvez will give an account of
his life Everyone is invited to hear
him.
Delton people seem to be con­
tributing their share of their hard
earned money to the hospitals this
spring Mrs. Lena Waters returned
home from Borgess and Mrs Lula
Wertman from Butterworth, Grand
Rapid* last week. Mis* Caroline
Rglomon and Mr*. Margaret Farwtll are In Borg«*s hospital each
convalescing from serious opera-

'THECOALBINISGONE!

END ALL OF THIS

priced from
•5 to ns

parents and teachers will enjoy a Uosm. We hope they may soon be
Mrs. Mabie Van AUsburg of
THUE CORNER*.
picnic at Clear lake.
Grand Rapids spent Thursday aft­
Altho the specific malady from
telling you. If you want to know ernoon with her paMttU, Mr, and
which the world Is satiating 1* eco-

Master Jimmie Beedle of Au­
gusta spent Saturday night and
Bunday with his grandmother. Mra.
Kate Burdick at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. H. F. Wortman. His par­
ents came for him Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Claud Groat and

PLEASANT VALLEY.

AUTOMATIC

USED
RADIOS

UP and your ol costs DOWN

MIs* Evelyn Newland closed a
very successful school year at the
&gt;OU* last Tuesday. Il i* expected
1 she will return next year.
MUs Katie Whittemore returned
iwrne Bunday after spending sonic
time with her aunt at Gull lake.
MUs Virginia Havens closed her
second year of school at Bhults
Friday. she will return for ano'her
1 year’s work.
Mr and Mrs. Lowell Whittemore
Whittemore’s Bunday.
Louts Havens left Monday

for

school for salesmen.
Jimmie Cook of Lansing spent
the week end at Clyde Warren’s
The many friends of Mrs. Minnh
McNutt are sorry to hear of her
lllneu at Pennock hospital.
MUs Virginia Havens spent the
week end with Miss Grace Hart
near Middleville.
Bunday visitor* at Roy ■rway’s

FREE

ESTIMATE

of Grand Rapids.

la Use your present furnace.

2

We install—on Inal and without obligation to pura chase—the money-saving C onsumer* Special Auto­
matic Cai Burner in your furnace, easily installed in
a few hours.
Our Engineer will Rive you a free estimate »how
■ ing what the approximate cost may be for next win­
ter* heating, including ga» for cooking, watei heat
ing. refrigeration, ot other u*e»

3

4

Thia will give you a tnal through a complete heata ing season next winter.
No payment* need be
made on the burner until the following spring, when
if you decide to keep it. a convenient monthly
payment plan may be arranged, with terms aa long
a* 36 month*.
A small trial installment charge of
$3.00 per month during the heating season begin
ning in October, ia made, and this will be credited
back to you ob your purchase should you dacidc to
keep the uhit.
In home* without furnace*, gas heating equipment
■ i* also available for room or "up-ataivs" heating.

5

FIND OUT FOR YOURtELF
WHAT OLCAN. AVTSMATK NATURAL
*AI HUT ... WILL OUT FOI TOUR HOME

ISO-VIS *0' IS THE LARGEST

SELUNG PREMIUM -QUALITY

Are
Your
Chicks
Growing
Properly?

MOTOR OIL IN MIDDLE WEST

Ow, e k-WH W. U,.. ^.hi IHU h.m. a, ,
■&gt;*&lt; -&gt;&lt;h ..un.,..,orM, ... WM MMAt /„

l.uban Aw. IaaIklt ll

Only 2S&lt; a quart

WM. N— "Low CoU" NATURAL GAS it—

S1 O2?3
FOR NEXT HEATING SEASON

Before Yew Buy NEXT WINTERS FUEL ... INVESTIGATE NATURAL GAS

Consumers Power Co.

ft’s nn wle wherever you see that familiar
red-whl te-and-blue sign ot Standard Ser­
vice. A special chart at each stat ion shows
exactly what grade you should use in your
car for tha most economical &gt;«/« driving.
It will pay you to let the Standard
Dealer drain your old oil. flush out tha
crankcase, and start you out with a fresh
•LiRf U ISO-VfS “IF. Then, so far w
tha oil itself la concerned, you wouldn't
need la drain for an indelnite length of
thM bo-Vi. tr won’t —r out.

•m uL*a W UTUUL GAI -.. . IMtqrt... WATER heatino ... lURHEUTION ... HOUSE HEATTIM
CHECK YOUR CAR FOR SAFE DRIVINO AKO LNRICATE EVERY MH MUI

«*Mt VITALITY
AtTR M* MOW­
.... W«

g

Special ThU Week!
STARTS* m*
Crm&gt; MW* ..*I.M
l*%bAI*Y--------- &gt;14*
CAL* M(AL

�,

TWI BAfTlHOt BANNEB. THURSDAY. MAT 21, ISM

BRANCH DUWdA
DURFEE.
•
|
PLEASANT HILL.
BARRYVTLLE.
____
Mr. and Mrs. Amo# Clemens and
*rh* Garden club met with Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs Ted PJuhw
Mr and Mr*. J. J. Willette and
Doreen, Mr. and Mrs Ray Clemens . Hert&gt; Cook Thursday afternoon, Helen and Mr*. Clara Day and three children of Battle Creek i
and Merl attended the funeral of Mr*. Burton of Hastings gave us a daughters were Sunday guests of Sunday afternoon visitor* gt
Mrs. Matilda Clemens al Saranac ‘ v*ry interesting and Instructive talk Archie Newton and children of home of Mr. and Mr* Keith 1
Friday.
! 0,1 "Peonies" and "Flower Arrange- Prichard vllle.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clemens spent. ment" The next meeting will be
Miss Helen Willette closed a very
the week end near Hopkin* with i with Mn. Fred Johnson?
successful year of school In the Mc- ing her brother, Bernard, who 1*
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ware.
I Mr. and Mr*. Wm. Meyer* and
! Kelvey district with a picnic dinner
Several from here attended the Mr Halverson of Middleville were
i at the picnic grounds by Hlghbank
Mr. and Mr*. Clare Marshall and
free moving pictures at Lacey. I Tuesday dinner guests of Mr. and
Creek Tuesday. Ml** WUlelts will children of Bellevue and Bari
Williams. ■
sponsored by the merchants there | Mrs Clare Williams.
The teacher
teacher and
and pupils
pupils enjoyed
enjoyed a teach the Moore school next year. Marshall of Marshall vere Bunday
every Thursday evening.
Ij The
guests of their mother, Mrs. Frieda
The East Baltimore Aid Society welner roast Friday Instead ot their ; Mf «nd Mr*. Heber Foster
Wednesday at Mr. and Mr*. William . regular noon lunch.
[ tended the funeral of Henry Gaskill Marshall.
Mrs. Glenn* Skidmore has been
Hoffman's wa* well attended. Pro-' Mr and Mrs. John Loftus of &gt;n Hasting* Wednesday. Grant
cec&lt;£, g7J5.
Grand Rapid* have bought Uie Hudson of Lan*lng also attended it.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mr* Mugridge farm and are cleaning up
Clara Gillette waa
was In
in Detroit SatErnie Bateman were Mr. and Mr*.; and repairing the buildings before urday Site went as a guest of
William Clark of Eaton Rapid*. Mr moving in
it,
and Mr*. William Caln of Charlotte
A pot luck dinner will be held at
0,,e °J “ie Mhoote in Battle
and Rev. and Mrs. Gamble.
the schoolhouse Wednesday. The I Ch-ck which sponsored the Ulp
Mira Grace Baulch is at Battle 1 children will work on their fair There was a special train; over a
Creek this week assisting Mrs exhibits Thursday and Friday to I thousand school children enjoyed
Harry Johnson with her household close lhe school year
I
trip through the Ford plant. A
duties.
Mr* Dan poster of near Cale- • h“PP&gt;\ d»&gt;’ for Clara and we are
Mr. and Mr*. Elmer Lusk of Ann ‘ donla is assisting Mrs. R J. Wil- KIad she could b« one of Uie lucky
Arbor spent the week end with Mr Hams with her housework
inumber.
Mr and Mr, Clare Williams and , Mr and Mrs. Verne Hawblitz and
and Mrs. Tom Hoffman
Several from this vicinity at­ children were Sunday afternoon 1 children. Cleon Meade and Mr. and
Mrs Herbie
...............Wilcox
“
were guests of
tended live evangelistic service* in callers of Mr and Mrs. Barney "
Strausr. near Caledonia
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Wilcox In
Hastings Sunday.
Mis* Virginia Havens of Hastings Kalamazoo Sunday They enjoyed a
MUs Calms and her pupils cer­
tainly entertained the parent* and and Ml" Grace Hart of Lansing picnic dinner at Millham Park.
company very nicely Saturday at spent the week end with Lhe latter s
Chas Green was the only senior
mother and brother Robert at lhe in Nashville High school from Barthe picnic.
Jack Moore and family attended Ed Bedford home Sunday after- ryvllle this year He left Friday for
lhe funeral of John Willison near
the trip to Niagara Fails which the
R Bouma and children and Fred seniors enjoy each year.
Delton Tuesday.
Bouma of Grandville
Mis* Kellar of Prairieville is asq
ROW Iti fid
Mr and Mrs Dan Foster of near xl*ting Mrs Hol Lathrop with her
Caledonia spent Sunday with Mr I house work till school Ls out.
and Mrs Chas Bennett
The BarryvlUe school closed Fribnmiicil
Mrs Dan Clsler of near Middle- । day The pupils and teacher, also
vllle was a Sunday evening caller Mrs Elmer Gillette. Esta Day and
i. no lot
plies • line coating to Bethsnisad
of
nf Mrs
Ur. R
n jI williams.
uziiiinm*
Zona Dfty enjOyed an outing along
Farm Bureau Fence that in its essVere Carter Ls doing
- some
Hlghbank creek. Miss Wilson has
modding on his house and greatly bee,, engaged lo return next year
improving its appearanFe Why? We
—
• - — — ■
wonder
i held al lhe schoolhouse Friday eve­
ning A good program was enjoyed. niM-iavidng iron cootamiaadoa
CLOVERDALE.
Roy White and Ned Renick from
aad other impurities unavoidable
Mrs Ro." pierce and daughter. Nashville gave a play which was | in older zinc coating processes,
Mary Joyce. Oral arid Iris MacLeod much enjoyed. Ice cream and cake
the Bethanircd coating ha* remark­
and Mary Owens were entertained
ably high resistance to tbe weather.
at Uie Harold Kellogg home tn Kal­
Mr and Mrs Herbie Wilcox are
amazoo In honor of Ml" Sally Kel­ driving a new Ford V-8.
logg's birthday Saturday
FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Iim^
Mr and Mrs Clancy and son
Bobble returned home Saturday
Tiie Cedar Creek L- A. 8 will
evening from Arizona where they meet at Uie church Thursday. June
spent lhe winter
4. for supper Serving begins at 5
Rev Kring is spending a couple o'clock.
of weeks st the Evangelical Confer­
Miss Freda Hyde of Lakeview and
ence. his friend., are hoping he will friend are visiting at Robt. "
Mebe able to stay another year with Marinis’
Mr ___
....
and.......
Mrs. —
Ray
, ______
Peake and
Mra Julia Pine of K-'—
- family of Shultz visited her par­
Kalamazoo
Hastings, Mich.
spent Saturday al her home here
.
ents guH^yMr and Mrs Frank Hunneston 1
of Jackson spent the week end at j
their cottage here
Mr and Mrs Harold Kellogg and
family of Kalamaz.oo were visiting I
friends around Cloverdale Bunday
Russell Monica of Kalamazoo wa.s
a Sunday caller at the Lester Mon­
lea home
Mr and Mrs Bert Jacobs of Kal­
amazoo and Mr and Mrs Clara
Kleckner. Battle Creek and father '
of Augusta were Sunday callers at (
the Daver&gt;[x&gt;rt home
Mrs
Maritin
Chamberlain
Is
visiting her daughter. Mrs Forest
Chilson and family at South Bend. I

FARM BUREAU

Fm»&gt;&lt;

Midk

BUREAU
ES . Inc.
.
PteM 2111

Mrs Nettie Case}- of -HasUogM
spent h few days with her ooUaiB,*i&gt;
M. s Grover Davenport.
Mr and Mrs Harry Pennels and 1
daughter were entertained at the j
home at Mr and Mrs Vander Wide
Of Kaliunazoo. SundayMr and Mrs Walter Lewis and
family of Hastings spent Sunday
With Mr and Mrs w D Brooks
'
Mr
and Mrs
Applegate and j
daughter Miss Elsie have relumed |
to their home here Thursday after
spending the winter in Wisconsin I
Mrs
Grover
Davenport
and |
। daughter Helen were week end vis­
itors in Kalamazoo
Mr and Mrs William Buller and [
Mr and Mrs Howell of Kalamazoo '
spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs. [
Gram Dickerson
Mr and Mrs
Louis Ferguson i
spent Sunday at Battle Creek.
.
School dosed Friday with a picnlc We understand and are glad lo
report that Mrs Velma Wolf Ls
coming back to teach again next I

•

.......

• Ad that public n
&gt; publication nt »

, Arlh.ur (Halford H»|h*&lt;
In Mid eourt hl* politic

1*38
lion.

We have just learned that Rev j
Kring will not be with us another 1
year, but is to move to Maple Hill. |
His friends are very sorry to hear &lt;
this as Mr Kring has made many
friends during his two years here. &gt;
Cloverdale friends wish him proa-1
perity in his new home

.. at th
BARBERS CORNERS.
Jiinr. in
Mr and Mrs Floyd Clum and
ar A D family of Coau Grove were callers
&gt;l juj«. al Herman Hauer's Sunday
।
Mr and Mrs. John weaver called
ot A&gt;«in on Mr and Mrs Trutnan Munion
ins flkd
Woodland, Sunday
in&gt; that '
lite Mlste* Nora anti
Evelyn
Ila tovrt Matthews entertained at the home
1 to ur* of Mrs Bump Sunday Mrs. Grace
•□&lt;1 *d Strouse. Mrs Mary McElwain Miss
•niMi io Bemice McElwain and Uie Misses
" *“
Lillian and Minnie Matthews, al! of |
d.y of Grand Rapid*
&gt;• andV.I
Mr “nd Mrs Herman Hauer and
tid p«tl daughter. Mabelle. called on Mra.
, ' Mary McIntyre ot Hasting* Bunday
e«nta«.
'■ w.A. I
School al the Altofl close* Friday
We are pleased to announce that
I Mrs. Fisher will return for another
| yw.

MAKE YOUR

HOUSE LIKE BRICK.WITH

ASBESTOS SHINGLES

at

LOW COST/

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Mum 2*1*

Frank Sage

Haatinga

HA VE YOU SEEN THE SIGHTS

\J\ichigan
To many people, the ideal vacation
is one devoted to sightseeing. In order
to enjoy themselves fully, such vaca­
tionists require three things: Sights
worth seeing; something to travel in;
and good roads to get there.
Very few parts of the Union offer as
much in these respects as the State of
'Michigan. Here arc many spots well
worth visiting — historic buildings and
grounds, interesting cities, and open
country of unsurpassed scenic beauty.
I'he journey itself becomes a separate
pleasure, a real addition to the joys
of vacation. Splendid highways,
fine lake liners, trains, buses, ff J

planet—all these meant of trantf
tion, comfortable and economical, i
at the service of those who are plai
to see the sights.
Have you considered M idug*
your own sightseeing? Have you
your out-of-Statc friends of the t
tional advantages here? If so, yon
done them a favor — and DNS
good will for the Wolverine Stale
At our part in Midi prantM
serie! of advertiecflieate is MM
lished throughout the Stale W I

gaa by an orgameatiM M

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPIJl

�BTAT« BOAD
—p u jj . Roush
and URie
An automobile
accident
that so in honor and respect to the vet­
daughter, Wilma Lou. have ra- might easily have been a fatal one eran* of the different wars. Dinner

WOBMAm*

John Crawford for the summer.
Our school closed Friday with a
plcnie at the schoolhouee. It was
well attended and enjoyed by all.
gABT GUN LAKE.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron MaKlbbln
bin and son Ronald of Prajricvillo and daughter* called at the James
Null home Friday evening.
i were Thursday evening...— ,
of Mr. and Mra. Verne family.
up and about after hl* long lllnau.
Clayton Hauser of Grand Rapids
called op John Crawford Thursday.

For DECORATION Day
MENUS

:ei

AND

IX HAVE A
.ECTION

A GOOD LUNCH

OF PIC

PICNICS
CHOICE FOOD SELEC­
TIONS AT LOW PRICES!

STORE OPEN FRIDAY EVENING
CLOSED DECORATION DAY

FANCY COOKIES 1 Ac IC.THOMASSTOBES
Chocalate Brownte*. Edgewater Sandwich. IL
Moonbeams, Marshmallow and Jelly
*"•

B
MBI

DDlCVS^^"

H

r

SANDWICH ~ *27'
T 10C
MUSTARD sj
1)1 If I E" C sweet and
qr 25c

■ IvRLLV

sweet mixed

SHEFFORD’S CHEESE
AMERICAN

yz

BRICK. OLIVE

PIMENTO

Wisconsin colby.

ib. pkg.

MiM

15c
H&gt;. 19c

PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE

pkg. 10c

ENZ-THIRST
FRUIT DRINK POWDER

Orange, Cherry,
Lemon. Grape,
Strawberry, pkg.

m
zs»
Vs

5cCbZ¥s3- 10

LIBBY’S CANNED MEATS
2~15c
POTTED MEAT
MISSION INN
Vi lb. 21c
c- 14c
Hollywood
’/j lb. 25c
VEAL LOAF
- *" 22c
COFFEE DRIED BEEF
MISSION INN
• 19c
CORNED BEEF
lk. 20
Finest
Thomas Special

Va lb. 13c

occurred about three o’clock Bun- win be served by the Oemetary Cir­
cle following the program to which
front of Jim Gothard's hotue. Mra. all are invited.
Sothard heard a crash. called, her
Mr. and Mrs. Vera WUoox, Vir­
ginia and Charlotte were gueata
their yard two wrecked cars and Bunday of Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Padel­
three badly dased young men.
ford at Kalamc. They also called
The cars Involved were a Pontiac on their mother. Mra. Wilcox, at
four-door sedan belonging to Floyd Morgan.
daughter of
Barnum of Stony Point and a Ford
Mr. and Mra. Harold Stanton en­
coupe driven by Ellsworth Newton. tertained Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gray with Mr. am
and children of Assyria. Mr. and
ton who live west of Hastings. With Mrs- Harvey Obeoaeman and chil­ Doris of Dowling 1
Barnum was Donald Varney. The dren of Maple Grove. Mr. and Mra. at Chas. Partee's
boy*. who nad been to the Clear Bam Buxton and Gordon of Ban- afterpoon they 1
lake dance, had brought some neld and MUs Jeanette RlUman ot land cemetery.
Mr. and Mra. Ward Green accom­
friends home lo Hastings and were HasUngs, at their home Sunday
returning east on the Blate Road. honoring the birthdays of acversl panied by Mr. send Mra. Ralph RIm
Ellsworth Newton had also been to members of lhe family' with a dinday Uli Bunday on the Black river
Clear lake and had taken a friend ।
Mrs. Ella Blanton entertained near Vanderbilt, fishing. They re­
home to Nashville, returning on
the State Road going west. In pass- several friends end neighbors at her port a fine time and lots of fish.
home Sunday with a birthday din­ Enroute home they called on the
latter's parents a* Beg verton.
swiped the Barnum car turning the ner.
Pontiac completely over. 11 landed
Mias Genevieve Douglass, who
Mr. and Mra. Lawrence Chase of
Bunday
in lhe Sothard garden, the Ford al­ teaches at Grand Ledge, spent the Coats Grove and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
and Mra. Bam Mo­
so hitting lhe same yard. Varney week
_________
_
end_____
with___
Mr._____
and_____
Mrs. Oeo.
Smith accompanied George Bchalbrn, Ethel and Em­
was knocked unconscious but soon , Stanford.
ley and Miss Evelyn Begrdsley of ___ ,
Lac*y. and Mra.
recovered Barnum was thrown from
The Dowling school will close Frl- Lansing to Alma Sunday, where Rocho's brother, Byron Gowan.
I his car and landed 20 feet away I day with a picnic at Vickary’s resort they attended church services and
i with lhe steering wheel In his hand. I and all who reside In the district spent the dgy with Rev. and Mrs. Grand
Mr- and Mra.
The Ford was considerably dam- are Invited.
Kennard Sohalblcy.
rtignd visited
Bwk J
aged and tbe Pontiac a complete' Mr. and Mrs Frank Hook arc enday last week.
wreck Looking at it one wonders I tcrtolnlng Mrs. Hook's father. Mr.
SOUTHWB8T MAPLE GROVE.
Richard* and
how either boy got out alive.
| Math Loon of Escanaba at present.
The Wilcox Cemetery circle will children «Ad Mr. and Mra James
This place has been the scene of
Mr and Mrs
John DePriester have no June meeting. If neces­
six accidents There are no rail-1 spent Sunday with
the latter’s sary a apecial meeting can be called Mra. Harry Riser of near Hastings.
] Ings and It has steep banks on cl th- brotiier. Peter Bailie, and family later.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Striker spent
I er side. Drive carefully should be at Richland.
Mr. and Mra. Herbert McGlook- Bunday with Mr. and Mrs Oliver
Uie Blcgan.
I Russel Bolycn, son of Everall
lin visited relatives near Olive* Sun­ icku of Lake Odwaa
• • •
Boiyen had the
misfortune to
Mr. M»d Mra- Wm. Panobcr of
cemetery
I The Flalicr school w»s out Fri- ' break both bones in bl* leg Sun­ day, also were at the
where Mra. McGlocklin'a mother is Grand Rapids called on Mr. and
day with a pot luck dinner al noon, i day. while playing ball at Vickery’s
Mrs. Bert Fancher Sunday.
buried.
Miss Butolph ha* been hired for
Mr and Mrs. Charles Belson and
Sunday caller* at Orson Mclnnext year
| Robert Be Ison of Leonidas visited
BAST WALL LAM
Mr and Mrs. Clifton Becker and I «r and Mrs. Bandy Wertman SalInes* and Mr. and Mra Johnnie
AND VICINITY.
children visited her people in Bal- । urday. Mrs Wertman is in very
McIntyre of Battle Greek. VS- and
Lloyd Laubaugh from Onarga. Ill,
He Creek Bunday
poor health at present
Mrs Janet PetttmglM spent Tues- I Next Sunday will be Promotion Mra Archie Bolson and family of spent a couple of days with home
near Naahvtlle.
folks last week.
day with her suter. Mrs Dora coir- day m the gunday School. Advance­
The Dunham school cloned last
Un. Gertrude Sprague and Mra
man of Rutland
I ment in Uie different classes takes
Friday with a picnic at the sahool- French apent part of last week vis­
place at that time
house. Maynard Tucker him been iting In Kalamasoo.
DOWLINGretained us teacher for another
Clifford Kahler and family made
Decoration Day will be observed ’
HICKORY CORNERS.
year.
HU parents. Mr. and Mrs, a hfeinaet trip to Hastings and Batat the Dowling church Saturday
Mr and Mn. C Cotrell and lit­
May 30. with a program beginning , tle daughter of Detroit spent the Geo. Tucker of near Clarksville,
at 10 00 A M Rev Jordan, chap- I week end with their parents, Mr. were present at the picnic.
Mr and Mrs Ward Cheeseman
lain of the Baltic Creek Sanitarium I and Mrs B Campbell.
and daughter Enid spent Bunday in Aubrey Murray of Nashville, also
will be the speaker Music will be 1
Mr and Mra. Wayne Shade and
j furnished by L J Oswald and Mrs | children of Lake Odessa and Clay- Vermontville al lhe home of Mr. and Mr. and Mra. Arthur Johncock of
»*•
i Norma Jones, violins, Mrs Mate ton Haynes of Battle Creek were , Mra fcbta Z*mke lhe OW*-'*™
iu. L/.. COoverdale.
’ Oswald and Miss Margaret Ham- ,
Mr and Mrs. Clifford Kahler and
family were Bunday guests of Mr.
,rmond, mandoUru, Junior Oswald.,
guitar and Mrs Ciarabcl McCarty i
and Mrs. Warren Calms near DoeChas Robinson is repairing the
BOWNE CENTER.
pianist Also a vocal solo by Mrs 1 porch on tha B
Tungate
farm
Miss ---------Mabel. Watts
Leon Slocum of Hendershott Much I house
।--------- ------ — of Chicago
------- -w•ANFIELD!
interest has been shown In the prep- •
Mr and Mra Glen Asplnall and I ’I*111 ^e week end with her moth­
c*y® Watts. The former
aratlons for lhe day and may all , family spent Sunday evening with
Those owning lota in the Banfield
who are interested and have friends | their mother. Mra Cora Aaplnall. Mrl Beswrdig accompanied her and cemetery are requested to pay their
1I v
"''"v1 at the Wayne Benton home. Aims as aeon as possible. Banfield
visited
burled here come out and enjoy the of East Dowling
I Mr*. Dori* Lass and two children 'takes pride in keeping our cemetery
and Laurence Benton have
the In good condition and your help Is
measles.
solicited.
!
Mrs Guy Smith called on Mrs
Mr and Mrs DeVon Putnam of
Clara Watts Sunday
Jackson and Mr. and Mra. Jesse
Mr and Mr* Lewis Skinner and Putnam of Grand Ledge will be
i son and Mr and Mra Wall Thom­ over week-end guests of Mr. -and
! as spent Sunday with Mr and Mra. Mrs. Don Putnam.
I Kenneth Pennoyer of Grand RapMIm Pauline Bellinger closed her
I ids.
school in the King district last Fri­
Mrs Addle Benton, Mrs Merrill day. They were the guests of the
| Ksrcher and son and Mr*, Gertrude Pottum plant in Battle Greek on
I Thonuv. ware In Lowell Thursday.
Wednesday. May 37.
Sunday afternoon visitors al Guy
Mn. Rose Phillips was taken to
Don’t Gamble!
. South's were Mr and Mrs
GaU Borgess hospital in Kalamasoo Bag­
i Burpholden and son
of
Grand bey. Mrs. Phillipa waa quite ill with
• Rapids, Mra GusU Wright
and pneumonia and other complications
MLss Mattle Stone.
Sunday callers al Merrill Karch- tie Creek.
er s were Mr end Mrs Jack Healy
and son. Mr and Mrs c Miller of
Oco. Wickwire and son Henry
; B.,U&lt; CrM. Mr .nd Mr. HeM---------—
—,
I Kareh.r .nd Mr. wj Mn. Henry ur. Mr, Civ* lUnnmi m RuU.nd
I K.rcftor .nd d.u«htor
M„ MlnnU BhrUtor wd Ur. urd
| Mra Wayne Benton and Laurence Mra Giddings of Hastings called at
.rw&lt; Mra
ur. Be.uerdlg were In nGrand
—m vhe Puto&lt;un home Bunday evening.
and
Rapids Saturday

Moths

Ph“'in^m

• McCREERY’S • Dry Cleaners

HI
■■I

Blend

PORK*BEANS423c
*
■ I I I If p C
35c
fancy queens

^^|bi|

mbM^

in. wwk ,nd with hG n*nalZ*Ur
&gt; .nd Mn John Huh.

S))^ a/td
hrrwUm^A^
Oft

FAIR LAKE.
noyd Armour and family of HaxLlngs were visitors at H O. Ar­
mour's Sunday.
Lottte Col Hater and children spent
Friday in Hastings.
Mra. Elmer Dowd of Hickory Cor­
ners spent Sunday with her sister.
Mrs Porter Knowles
*n e pupils of the Kinsley school
will give a program Tuesday after­
noon.

WEAK WOMEN

Complete the Picnic Lunch

MARSHMALLOWS

u. 14c

ronin

LEMONS doz 35c
Cucumbers 3 for 10c
Radishes 5 bchs 10c
Leaf Lettuce lb 7c

California
PEACHES
HUCED OB HALVES

31
tuna fish

,..

con 15c

DEVILED HAM

12c

SHIIMV, fe&gt;cy
SALMON, pi.k

2

!»&gt;. COEN FLAKES
1 WHEAT KKISEIES

TU

10c
12c
10c
15c
23c
39c

BAKER'S CHOCOLATE
\i lb bar
PECAN HALVES
lb
COCOANUT, frech, fineit quality, lb
CAKE FLOUR, Foem-FIuH 5 lb bag
CRISCO B..U. DU..M ...iwbib, 3 lb. can

15c
39c
20c
25c
59c

12c

KELLOGG SPECIAL

I NLC.

PIMENTOS
7 oz can
MARASCHINO CHERRIES 5 oz bot
CATSUP, Odessa Brand 14 oz bottle
TOMATO JUICE, Campbell's, 2 cans
LARSEN'S VEG-ALL
2 cans
WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE qt bottle

~

44c Value 3OC

PICNIC PLATES, 9-in.
dozen 8c
LUNCHEON SETS, for eight
set 17c
WAX PAPER
75 ft. roll 8c
NAPKINS, 100 in package
10c
DIXIE CUPS, 15 in package
10c
Drinking Straw*, Cellophane
pkg. 10c

C. THOM AS STORES
IIS WUT STATE STMEET

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

KTi“utr.l.‘2-TkB“ *

LET US GET YOUR FORD READY
Your big driving mown Is just obood...

wook-on d and vocation trips • • . ave&gt;
ning driving... they all pifo up mbsogs.

FHEE
CHECK

This Is th» time to condition your cor.

equipment, tho txQCt lubricants far yaw

nl&lt;iU

Mr*. Jim wueoa U raftering with
Mr*. Oley Douglass and children
of the Edger district spent Monday
with Iter parents, Mr and Mrs. Roy

School closed Tuesday in the Otis
----- ‘ ' ag of Hastings
Memorial Day.
I the Rutland
cemetery.
Bunday guests and callers In tho
W H QUs home included Mrs. Hater of Bellevue. Mr. Alexander and
children of Detroit, Mr. and Mrs
FTed Barlow and son of Hastings,
Mr. and Mr* Wm. Haven* and Mrs.
Geo. Havens and children
Friends here are glad Co learn
that Mra. Minnie McNutt, who has
been aeriouriy ill with pneumonia »t
Pennock hospital, has Improved
sufficiently to be removed to. her
home near Irving.
Callers during
lhe
and

Jim Wilcox included Mr. and Mrs
Lester Lord and baby, and Winfield
Lord from near Orangeville. Mrs
fred Hovey of Hastings. Hubert Mc­
Callum of Bruah Ridge and For­
rest Johnson, Orangeville.
Mr and Mra. Herbert Bhollenand Mr. and Mrs. Jolile Rou»h of
Barbers Corners were callers Sun­
day afternoon al the homo of Mr.
and Mrs. Geo. Havenar
Mr. and Mra. Bert Newland and
Billy and Evelyn and Mrs Harty
Dunn and Mary attended the con­
cert al Hastings Sunday aftemoan
Dan Kams of Bru.ih Ridge ha*
been spending several days at the
home of hU niece. Mrs. Jim Wilcox
He wns badly Injured ope day l»sl
week while working In the saw mill
and is suffering with a broken jaw
and a badly cut and bruised cheat
Mr and Mra. Francis Gotham
were In Battle Creek Sunday *ttendtng a birthday dinner for her
mother. Mrs Clara Wilder

HIGH BANK.

Mr and Mrs. Harve Marshall and
Kathryn Demery of North Maple
Grove spent Thursday night at Mr.
and Mrs. Will HawbliU's
Mr and Mrs. Delmar Day and
two children of Battle Creek spent
Sunday at Mr and Mrs Shapely's,
and called on Mrs. Frank Hawblit]
in lhe afternoon
Robert Nash of Hastings called on
his brother. Beryl Nash. Wednes­
day.
I George Hoffman. Jr., of Coldwa­
I ler spent Saturday with his par­
ents, Mr. and Mrs. George ■Hoff­
man.
Mlsa Agnes Marshall,
Marshal)
and Charles Green were among tht
seniors of Nashville school who took
lhe trip to Niagara Falls.
Mrs. George Green Is in Indian]
with her sister, who U very ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Norton and
daughter Barbara of the Branch
district spent Thursday evening al
Mr. and Mrs. Frank HawbliU's.
Mr and Mrs Bhellenbarger and
family of Barbers corners and John
Place of Hastings
were
dinner
guests Tuesday of Mr. and
Mra.
Berylc Noh.
Mrs. Will HawbliU had the mla, fortune to have her brooder house
’ and over 500 four-weeks-old chick-i
bum Wednesday morning about
3:30 o’clock
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Marshall of
Bellevue cairfe Bunday for their
daughter Vivian, who had been vis­
iting at Mra Freds Marshall's.
Mrs. George Hoffman apent Fri­
day with her sister. Mrs Leon Talman of near Battle Creek. Her
i niece June returned home with her
I for a week's visit.

I'LL MAKE YOUR PAINT’
MONEY GO TWICE AS FAR!
Chemical Rtuarch
Develop! New
Paint Syitem
MountI Iumw all about
paiuU, until Ejevpg’g new

It U«im yebA

I

The ne w Devoe R-Coat Sy At em

For FRONT END
Alignment Until
June 8th. Don't
MISS THIS OP­
PORTUNITY!

•njoyablo. Let us toll you about tho
•ngin

B«HI* eNKCKINO,
CMCKINO, PULING
AN# fABINA. AVOIDS
(XPVWVK MPAINT

HOUSE

UNIVERSAL

GARAGE COMEANT
' F O R D - p E A L E R S
PHONE 2121

AM lM&gt; Aw you «lm it ml
«*n to »•**» R*w » u 1

thi* Ntw faint

HASTINGS, MICH

PRINT

neNeenl-CwttSviUm

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
JLJ &gt; eA- Fh ei a
fTRBMnjR

�THI BAfTOfOB BANXB. TTOMPAT, MAT U. ISM

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOM

Weters
rest on tbe couch wham death CMM
suddenly, as his son Ed. returning
from tbe onion field al 4:15 found attend tbe funeral
his father had passed on to his in-law. John Willison.
Heavenly home. He wm a kind fa­
The oideet son oj Mr. and Mrt
amM Boulter waa taken to Nev
ther and neighbor and will be aad-

Rftemoon vUlton at tho

woolston
visitors

Kalamasoo

with hie son,
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox and
children were callers on their moth­
er, Mrs- Emily Wilcox. Saturday.
A very good congregation wm out
to church last Bunday evening. On
account of a special union service
composed Um winning battery, while at Delton neat Sunday evening,
Freeman and Maurer worked for there will be no service at Mito
Um loeert.
The first Sunday tn June there will
Friday, Juns 8, we expect Cale­
donia han and expect to have a
real fight. The team h*i lacked
improve­
ment tn their hitting since Um last

The Student Council met last
Wednesday. Election of officers for

class U working out an election sys­
tem which will become a part of tbe
constitution of tbe council.
Borne monographs
for careers the game and ntato up. for It.
have been ordered from the Insti­
tute of Research, career m a lab­
MILO.
oratory technician, restaurant and
Mrs. Hattie Bellinger and son. Dr
tea room operator, dry cleaning, Warren Bellinger, arrived at their
veterinary medicine and mortuary farm home here, from South Pasa­
operations. We are building up a dena. Calif., last Tuesday. They
library of these monographs which win spend the summer. It is hoped
will help the student answer the the change will benefit Warren’s
question -What Shall I Be 7“

children and nineteen grandchil­
dren. besides a hoat of friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Morford and
daughter IMha accompanied Mr to hear U getting along fine.
and Mn. ike Leinaar to Ashton and
Barbara Leonard ot Delton spent
The community wm saddened on Raed Oily on Sunday where they Thursday night with Mr. and MU.
Saturday afternoon to haar of the visited relatives of the latter.
Ike Leinaar Mr
sudden death of John Willtom.
His son Ed. who, wm Id Um onion
field working saw him at Um barn
al two-thirty, while his son-tn-law,
Stewart Waters, noticed him cut­
ting burdocks near tbe garden an
hour later, then noticed him sitting

NO FOOLIN'!

IBU^I^ROO^^JwFORMAHat

prices are really LOW at A&amp;P Fo«d Stores
and people like the “LOW PRICE EVERY
DAY” idea. They can buy what they need ANY
DAY without fear of lotver prices on the Week-end

WhtRt liONOMY Mill

Sophomore Senior Breakfast
tatned the. seniors al a breakfast
held at tbe Hubbard Hills on May

8 O'CLOCK
well attended. with a good program
and pot luck supper
The June

COFFEE

started After many false leads the
treasure was discovered and tbe
Saturday morning guests from Il­
way was made back to camp where linois of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Glls breakfast of bacon, eggs, bread,
coffee and fruit awaited them. Ev­
eryone made short work of eating daughter of Joliet, and Melvin Gil­
bert of Bloomington. They re­
mained till Bunday afternoon.
Mrs. H Flower. Miss Bernice and
The faculty of T K forgot their
Mr and Mrs W H. Flower
and
woes and worries for a short time
last Thursday when they went to children spent Bunday with Mr. and
Mrs.
H. M. Kennedy and family.
Oun lake for a steak roast. After
Mrs Mildred Scobey drove
to
playing ball, swimming, and boat­
riding the teachers decided to call Hastings Saturday and In company

MiM and MeUow

visited the first and second grades j
where they studied lunches and :
reading respectively.
The
junior
Home
Economics
group had a steak and wienie roast
at Ai-Con-Quln lake last Wednes- (
day night Later they attended the
picture, “prisoner of Shark Island"
al Hastings
The Annual Music Festival will be
held Bunday. M*y 31 at 3:30 P. M .
in the High school auditorium Mr
Johnson, music director in the
school, has arranged a very fine
program including orchestra selec­
tions. wlos. trio, and duets Bring
your friends and enjoy the pro­
gram.

Maxine Flnkbeiner gave a very
interesting talk to the fifth grade
about her recent trip to Sheffield.
Alabama. She described Wilson s
dam. Foster s home. Jackson's home.
Lincoln's
birthplace.
Mammoth
cave, Lookout mountain. Bhllo bat­
tlefield and had many pictures to

R

Potato Chips

'Firestone

•

HIGH SPEED TIRE frl
/td

and FRIDAY

AlVOID

»lu«l

Market Baskets

on

M

Swansdown

Proof of Performance!

Paper Napkins

Sardines

The new ‘Firestone High

Paper Towels

OF TIRE CONST RUCTION

1B»75

4.40-S1

STANDARD TYPE

“WcT
&lt;50-21— rnr

~3S

4.75-19—.
&amp;25-1&amp;....
»k00-17Rx

FOR TRUCKS
6XJO-20
30x5

BATTERIES

s-lb.
pkff.

phff

Jello

IIBTUIEL TTPB
fin"M-T
45^-21 | M.Bf

5.00.19
5-25-1B

nuiunn

~nT~

net

4.75-19

5*5K

Cigarettes

33c

Cigarettes

S1AI

Chipso or Oxydol

fc Me

19c

Milk

19c

Whitehouse Milk

iv.

15c

Maxwell Howe CoHee

Scot Tissue

4

velhs

SSc

Del Monte CoHee

Waldorf Tissue

4

rolls

15c

Beech-Nut CoHee

Northern Tissue

4

4X Sugar

%KJ."

Kellogg's All Bran

Hills Bros. CoHee
•
*•
Critco
or Snowdrift
15c
1 pkffR1 Ar. 15c Grape Null
X 19c

Ptom2240 £.’£55l"!LJE

Pecan Meats

Candy Bara and Gum

lie
Me
Me

19c

X 39c
Sl.M

Instant Pottum
Cigars

ANDRUS SERVICE •
BLUE

Sic

w.
pkt

Campfire Marshmallows

Sunoco T

19c

3

- o‘-«-

Cracker Jack

l

I*pkg.

Rinse

4.40-21
4.50-21

PICNICS

10 u- 41c
g &gt;.k~ 11c
3 ph«^ 17c

Nels Naptha Chips

Brown Sugar

BUY th. BEST"
It Cort. LESS!

Spaghetti

HOCK1XSS

M Bi.

Fels Naptha Soap
Woodbury's

Fig Bars

sen

Olives

STEWING

Salads Tea

grade materials, mnbodytog th.
many exclusive Firestone pMantod

in

Sandwich Spread

BARBECUE

Carton Lard

STARBARB

5S

Preserves

CHICKENS
25c

15.15

Firestone
PENNEY'S

FANCY

HIGH irttD TVFS
... T-R
«a
Hid
|~W k
&gt;•17 HOlBJI.
4.50- 21
res ib*tTi~
5.50- 17 —

30x5 m—
32x6 HD

THURSDAY
and FRIDAY

Dal Monte

MASTERPIECE

THE

Equip your car today with naw
Fir rm one High Speed Tires.

Iona Peaches

Del Monts Pineapple

Sliced BACON MEAT LOAF
19c «•
£ 19c

developed the Gum-Dipped
Balloon tire, Firestone Tires
have been on the winning
cars to the Indianapolis Race.

50% longer non-skid mileage.

Fruit Cocktail

SWIFTS PREMIUM

A leading university found
that Firestone High Speed
tread slops • car up lo 25%
quicker.

A

3 — SOc

Jellies

15c
23c
10c
Sic
25c

accidents — take

Freeman for Hastings Cline held
his opponent lo five tills while fan­
ning five men. Freeman struck out

second inning when Cline tripled
and Bums doubled.
Williams not only Jed the hitters

Dried Beef

Electric Bulbs

the beat southpaws In this area face

placed in cinterfield and
with a mighty home run I
enth Inning.

Daily

Mustard

Yukon Ginger Ale

For the second time thia season
the Middleville nine set Hastings
High back on their heels by a score

freely.
Because of Ineligibility. Haight
and T Klien were unable to play
Coach Hollforth then moved Fenton
from second to third and Inserted

10c
S5c
10c
ISc
10c
10c

A&amp;P Grape Juice

1936

10c

Campbell's

Hamburg Rolls

PENNEY'S
THURSDAY

27c

Vienna Soft Rolls

™E 74
/r
Ihu

BREAD

SOAP CHIPS

15c

dlevllle about
The advanced Koine Economics
dasa. which has been studying child
care had two demonstrations last
week by Miss Payne of a baby bath
and bed bath Vernon Patten, of
Hastings, wu the baby. He Is 3 1-2
months old. Last week Barbara
ricnc-ii ui uie sccunu sisur waa vise
patient of a bed bath deoRonstra- 1
tton.Mveft by Miss’Payne. The study
of wppllaisoe and equipment (or j

GRANDMOTHER'S

10c
X »♦*
3 •- 10c
* IP*

Henkel's Family Flew
Henkel's Velvet

3

Silver Dim*

Gold Duvt
Gdllfil DimA

flaausov

lie

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, MAY tt. IMS
Un. Frank —srtx

MIDDLEVILLE.
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Wood* and
family and Mrs. Merritt Woods at­
tended lhe baccalaureate exercises
at Kelloggs. Gull lake. Bunday.
D. N. Hooeywell spent Sunday in
Chicago.
Mrs. Ruth Krick and son spent
Wednesday with .Mr*. Mabie Johncock and family.
'
Miss Doris Hartman will attend
the funeral of her grandfather,
John Willison, Tuesday.
un w., offered:
day; a very pleasant time was had.
Memorial exercises will be held
M«r 33. taie.
The work of dust laying was here. May SO. Mr*. Doris Johnson
vhiaai J*m&gt; or' 8tart*d on Thursday by truck spray- has charge of the program. Rev.
..ed on the third ' Ing low grade oil upon the streets, Ralph Bales of Delton will be the
1915. »ud ishinc until they ran out of material. speaker. In Uie forenoon the sons
&gt;t* (idewsiV'd'ii*' Work will continue upon receipt of
of Veteran* and Scouts will assist
e es&lt;( line of iut« more oil. Dust wa* becoming a in decorating th* soldier*' graves.
of Mid «Ujr B&lt; nulzOUCe
In the afternoon th* addreu and
al. I thereof ..l.l
Democrats who attended the Far- program will be given In the Baptist
church. The Aid will eerv* dinner
C. Swift, C. A- Gardner, Mrs. C. F. at the Methodist dining room. There
Parker and Mrs. C- A- Potts.
will be a ball game in tbe afternoon.
George Chapman and party left
Mesdames Lucy Norris, Maggie
Friday evening for a fishing
up
------ __ trip _
r । Lehman, Ethel Stebbcn and Ftornear Kalkaska, where they hope to I ence Hughe* attended the funeral
find some trout.
of Mrs. Rockwell at Hickory Cor­
Sylvester Van Horn and party ners Friday afternoon.
left Saturday evening’ for a north­
Mr. and Mr*. W. F. Bmlth, Rex |
ern fishing trip; they will spend and Mary Jean Smith, Ml** Jean:
several days finding a place where Rogers and Russell NunemaXer atT j
lhe fish are waiting to be caught.
tended the I. p. a. mailing and
G. D and Mra. Whitmore went to dinner at the Columbia hotel,
Hastings Saturday evening to visit
Kalamazoo Monday night.
their son. E. B. and family and at­
Roaemae
Higgins
entertained
tend a birthday party at lhe E. C.
Stoirs home near Hastings on Sun­ Marcella Shepard, Janet Smith and
Ellen Shelp Wednesday, lhe oc­
Miller. iupporle.1 t» day wiien five birthdays of the
the •tU'ointment of family occurring in the month of casion being Die 12th natal day of
I police for * alt
lhe hostess, also her mother's
nn&gt;&gt;.« Mav lit. 103ft May were celebrated, a very pleas­ birthday anniversary.
ant time was had by the eighteen
F. J. Hughes and William Bloohln
there for dinner. Other friends
were in Grand Rapids on business
j dropped in during Lhe afternoon.
; The latest we hear pf the M-37 Tuesday.
Lyle
Billings, George Wood*. Jr.,
I surveyors U thal the road will cross
■r.
KMaln street
the well known and Miss Elizabeth Woods attend­
■»•«. Miiur I Chapman comers going north from ed the Junior-Senior banquet at
and \v»u Broadway on Arlington streets wlth- the Kellogg Agricultural school.
hv 01,t much change in lhe aforesaid Gull lake. Tuesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. James Boulter with
on .4 w t&gt;« 1 streets. Those living on these streets
"n
hope that it will soon be paved, so Uielr family have moved to their
rmanW"l'l**"a “ 10 avoid the duzt, which at times farm near Hickory Corners. Sorry
tekord Hrba I is very bad with the present traffic. to have them leave our town.
T. H. Ketchum of Martin spent
lantKirted »&gt;r
John D. Dietrich is so far re­
night with
Mt,
.uff. I covered os
as to be able tn
to oversee his
his Thursday
*nuraoay nigni
wun .Mr*.
-Mrs. Jennie
r»n»inirtinn .j ' business, having a driver to do his ' NorrU. Friday Mr. Ketchum. Mrs.
....
..iI delivering.
. ..
.
| Lucy NorrU and Mrs. Mary Polley
W R. and Mrs. Harper went to went to Kalamazoo.
The Ladies' Aid Society will meet
Pontiac Sunday to visit their son
with
Mra.
Fred 8ml th. South
and family for a few days.
I Andrew Flnkbelner lost a valu
Crooked lake Wednesday, June 10.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Shelp. Allen
1 able horse Monday. Hard for a
fanner to have his team broken up and Ellen Shelp spent Saturday In
right In lhe busy season of the year Holland to see lhe tulips.
Miss Elizabeth Woodman of Or­
PRAIRIEVILLE.
angeville visited MM. Ray Japhet
“J1
Mrs. Philip OToole and daugh- Saturday.
... ter of Battle Creek are guests of
Mrs. Ida Halley of Kalamazoo
'• her parents. Mr. and Mrs. D. N. and Mrs. Mary Shedd of Delton
1
Honeywell.
called on Mrs. Sarah Smith and
*i
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ketchum of Mrs. Mary Polley Saturday.
"■[ Kalamazoo called on Mrs Jennie
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Palmer of
Norris and Lucy Sunday
Hastings visited Mr. and Mrs David
• 1
Mr and Mrs. peter Castle. Mr Dea! Sunday.
•' and Mrs. Ray Castle and Mrs. CasThe Falk school closed Friday
i slus Hughes were in Hastings on with a picnic dinner. The eighth
• i business Friday.
grade pupils were proud of their
Floyd Fowler. Arthur Kurts and diplomas.
id Miss Beatrice Miller of Allegan
Arthur Lathrop will close his
“■ called on the former's mother. Mrs. school at the Brown district Tues­
Cora Fowler Sunday.
day (tomorrow) with a picnic on the
a
Mr and Mrs. Smithson of Bat­ school grounds which all will enjoy.
" De Creek were Sunday guests of Mr. Lathrop has been retained far
another year
~
~
Mr and Mrs Cassius Hughes
Mr and Mrs Charles Deal went
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Green of
to Grand Haven today. Monday. Nashville visited Mr. and Mra. Ar­
.4 They expect to return tomorrow
thur Lathrop Sunday.
।
Mr and Mrs
Maurice Hughes
CARLTON CENTER.
‘r entertained the following Thursday
The carlton L. A 8. will meet
evening. Bert O'Donnell of Has­
. tings. Miss Frances Doster. Mrs with Mr. and Mra. Arthur Yarger
Helen Mott. Mrs. Florence MolG Thursday, June 4th. for supper All
i.. MUs Doris Hartman and MUs Alice are cordially invited.
Quite a good many attended the
Mott's natal day A delicious lunch
church Bunday. Rev. Fem Wheeler
। was served.
,(
Miss Patricia Baker of Kalama- preached a very fine Ascension
i',’ ' zoo who has been a guest of her Day sermon.
Mrs. Wm. Hale and Mrs. Ralph
■« I grandparents and other relatives.
' I returned to her home Saturday Henney were In Battle creek Thuraday.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Zuechnltt of
•’,
Mr anti Mrs Manley Billings,
k** I Mrs Hasel Billings and children. west of Hastings called al the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Henney Sun-

The Harry Fish barber shop
building has been receivin' some
repairs to the foundation, u ter­
P*a««d Jul, l»ib. &gt;007.
mites had eaten Uie underpinning
hE IT FURTHER RESOLVED. that timbers in such a way as to Deed re­
pairs; brick wm used to rebuild the
foundation front and repair the
windows making a greatly Improved
appearance.
Fourteen Pythian past chiefs and
one visitor attended a pot luck dln-

SOW THEREFORE HE IT RESOI.V

The Perfect Travel Money

Travelers' Cheques
Away from home, when carry­
ing ordinary currency, you never
know when you may find
yourself in a serious and
.
embarrassing predicament
I
—if your money is lost or
J
stolen.
Your personal checks are value­
less when you are not known.
Certain drafts, certified checks, etc.,
can only be cashed at specific places.
Travelers’ Cheques, on the other
hand, give you the perfect travel money
—easily cashable, conveniently carried,
safe from loss or theft.

। Safeguard your summer vacation
'with Travelers' Cheques, which may be
purchased from this bank at a merely
nominal cost.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

s

grs

nances

-ItCTC

something new under the
sun and here it is . . . lor these perfectly
beautiful new 1936 Detroit Jewel Gas
Ranges denote the beginning of a new
era of cooking enjoyment and efficiency,
that inspires us to soy lo every housewife
in this community . . . YOU’LL NEVER BE
SATISFIED UNTIL YOU OWN ONE I

IN EVERY ACTIVITY THEY ALWAYS CO TOGETHER!

Health and

Success

Mrs. Frank Hosmer Is spending
the week in Grand Rapids visiting
her daughters and sister;
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Tlschqr en­
tertained bompany from Lowell
Sunday.

Lake Odessa and Mra. Ruby Bawdy
of Jackson visited their parents,
Mr. and Mrs Nlel Wilson Saturday
evening.

Senior Table Top

Tourthousenews
PROBATE COURT.
B3L Melissa Roe. Petition for
Admr. filed, petition for Special
Admr. filed, order appointing spe­
cial Admr. entered, order Tor publi­
cation entered.
Eat. Elmer 8. Sponabk. Petition
for determination ot heirs filed,
order for publication entered.
Est. Lloyd steeby. Inventory filed,
annual account filed.
_ Eat. John Anders. Order allowing
account entered, discharge of exec­
utor Issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Willard Hilton. Annual ac­
count of trustee filed.
Est. William Forbey. Pinal ac­
count filed.
Est. Sidney A. Crowell. Order al­
lowing account entered, discharge
of special Admr. issued, estate en­
rolled.
Est. Charles Willison. Pinal ac­
count filed, order assigning resi­
due entered, discharge of Admr. is­
sued. estate enrolled.
Est. Sarah A. Ddwnlng. Petition
for Admr. filed, waiver of notice
filed, order appointing Admr. en­
tered. bohd of Admr. filed. letters of
administration Issued, otder limit­
ing settlement entered.
Est. Melissa Roe. Bond of special
Admr. filed, letters of special Admr.
Est. Annie J. cutler. Annual ac­
count filed.
Est. James A. Eddy. Order con­
firming sale entered.
Est. Flora M. Taylor. Stipulation
filed, release and settlement agree­
ment filed, proof of will filed, order
admitting will entered, bond of
executor filed, letter* testamentary
Issued, order limiting settlement en­
tered. petition for hearing claims
filed, notice to creditors Issued.
MARRIAGE LICENSER.
George Bradshaw. Orangeville .69
Susan Rober, Allegan Co.. ........... 72
Arthur L. Ingram, city ...
Helen N. Hoffman, city
23
Wm C. Adams. Nashville
50
Myrtle Starks. Nashville

MORGAN.
Mra. Eva Rowlader Ls caring for
Mrt. Reynolds, who is ill. in lhe
Quimby district.
Mr. and Mrs. Bordy Rowlader
spent Sunday at Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Young and
family of Ravenna apent Sunday
with Mr and Mrs. Donald Mead.
Mra. Mead and son Harry relumed
home with them for a week's visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Rowlader
of Woodland spent Thursday eve­
ning at tiie home of B. Rowlader
Mrs. Annond and son Allen and
Mrs Robinson of Kalamo were
guests of Glenard Earl Sunday.
Mrs. Frank Wilcox was ill last
week but Is better al this writing.
Clayton Webb went to Battle
Creek Saturday evening and Joined
his brother Arthur on a trip to De­
troit Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs LaVerne Wilcox and
Virginia of Dowling, and Mr. and
Mrs. O. E. Padelford of Bellevue vis­
ited their mother last week, who
MUs Marilyn Martha LeMonde
la visiting her aunt. Mrs. O. E. Padelfoid of Bellevue

NORT11 HOPE.
School closed Friday with a pic­
nic at the schoolhouse. Miss Johncock. our teacher, has been retained
for another year.
Mr. and Mrs. jack Farwell and
Mra. Emery Mlles and daughter of
Kalamazoo, were Sunday afternoon
callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Otto Pranshka and family.
Congratulations are being extend­
ed to Mrs. Agnes Randall and
Charles Cappon who were mar­
ried in Goshen. Ind. Wedhcsday.
We are sorry to report that Dan­
iel Karns was seriously hurt, while
working In a sawmill Thursday. He
is being cared for by his niece, Mrs.
Jim Wilcox, of Southwest Rutland.
Albert Anders spent Sunday with
Mr and Mrs Fred Ashby of Hope
Center,
Mrs. Minnie Wurm of Shults spent
Friday afternoon with Mrs John
Pranshka.

0WH

ONLY
Other Models

and Features

Realiie, 4 you will pleave, that bock of the
development of these exquisite 1936 Detroit
Jewel Ranges are 72 yean of range building
experience.
Every line ol their designs, the construction and
placement of every superb feature, their insula­
tion, the quality of every material in their make­
up .. . are lhe climax to years of leadership in
building the most convenient, moil attractive and
finest performing gas ranges in existence.

These ranges offer a future of heretofore unknown
leisure and pleasure lo every woman who be­
comes the owner ol one of them. Come in and
see lor yourself!
AND LAST BUT NOT
LEAST, you, yourself, will realize they are THE
BEST VALUES you have ever seen in a gas range.

Health is essentml lo success and the active business

man of today must guard it jealously. Summer activi­
ties add their toll to the regular demand on his energy,

so it is necessary,

therefore, ,to recuperate quickly.

Highlands Dairy Grade A Milk will lielp restore your

strength and nerves quickly and surely. Add this en­

Vi,it the MAYTAG DEALER Near You

ergy builder to your daily diet. Drink a

quart of this pure milk every day.
High in Cream
Content Raw or
Pasteurized

O»en Inwk

POWER COMPANY
Mich.

Phone 2305

oK

qa

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Muling!

JORDAN MAYTAG CO.

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1936

14 PAGES

Vacation Time Finds Teachers
TIE PEOPLE OF
With Plans for Work and Travel
LOUISIANA
SEEM TO LIKE THE HUEY
LONG DICTATORIAL
METHODS
AND VOTED STRONGLY
TO SUSTAIN THEM
In the January Election the
Long Machine Won Out
By a Big Vote

PLMIS PNEIMMS

Summer Coursos, Seaside Outings,
In Prospect es School Year Ends
The closing of the city schools
this week will be accompanied, as
usual, by a general exodus of teach­
ers. Summer plans with most of
them are pretty well formulated by
now.
The class rooms of various col। leges will find quite a number sceking credits for degrees, or brushing
up on' new courses and fresh lines
■ of work. Some are mapping out
travel trips, some are going to
camps, others look forward to re­
maining quietly at home, doing the
things not permitted during the
school year, sleeping with alarm
clock turned on "silent," and en­
joying the freedom from their nine
months' routine.
Supt. D- A- VanBusklrk with Mrs.
VanBusklrk will leave the middle of
this month for N. E A- al Portland.
Oregon, supplementing It with a
trip down the west coast to Cali­
fornia. Grand Canyon and other
points.
Principal Edwin L. Taylor will at­
tend the Ann Arbor summer ses­
sion for credits on his doctorale.
Ass't Prln Fred 8. Jones with his
family will take a motor trip to
Pittsburgh for part of his vacation.

Outside of Europe, lire state of
। Louisiana with her cosmopolitan
and old world background, pre­
rents more Interesting questions for
the political consideration of our
people than any other section of
the world. Il is the first and only
rtate of our union that has forsak­
en the principles of cur democratic
form of government for a sort of
despotism, with perhaps some of
the tendencies of fascism What is
perhaps equally surprising Is lhe
fact that the people of Ivmlslana
have voted to sustain It At least
that was the way the vote was an­
nounced. However. It should not be
overlooked that all the
"election
machinery" is in the hands of those
who succeeded the late Huey Long,
who was the dictator of the state—
the first one we have ever had in
this country
Last September when Huey Long
was assassinated. it was freely
predicted by his enemies that the
great political machine that he had
built up. would fall to pieces It was
the machine that hurl virtually
crowned him a* a dictator, and
centered in him more power than
had ever been given to any one
man In this country since the birth
of our republic, excepting perhaps
In war time It was felt that the ।
people of that stale would rise up I
and restore nil the checks and
balances of representative govern-1
ment that his political scheming
and planning had taken away from
them But the lure of political pat­
ronage and special favors were too
strong and no such thing happened
On lhe contrary last January Huey
Long after death, won a victory far
greater than any over which he
gloated while living By majorities

BARRY CO. SUFFOLKS
GO TO TEXAS

Stock From 0. A. Williams
Farm to Be Exhibited
at Centennial

“tSXuST”u

P RE S ID KN T
AND
PRO­
GRAM COMMITTEE ARE
NOW AT WORK

Dean of Girls, Miss Marie Rowe has
a delightful summer planned She

Brown, and her brother-in-law. who
is vice-president of Brown Universlty. Providence. R. I. with them
she will occupy a cottage on the
eastern sea coast.
T. N. Knopf will, as usual, carry
on project work for Michigan Slate.
Miss Lena Leiter and Miss Jannet
Michael are members of the High
school faculty who will attend the
University of Michigan. Herbert J.
Reinhardt will spend his vacation
at the Kellogg camp. Pine Lake, and
will receive academic credits for
his work, as will Prln. Walter Per­
kins of Junior High. Mrs. Ruth
Baine, secretary. Is planning to
spend a part of the summer with
her aunts In Chicago.
Miss Emily McElwain goes to
Northwestern for a course In Eng­
lish. Harold Logan is anticipating a
trip east to Mrs. Logan's home near
Boston and will be in Hastings the
remainder ot the summer. Miss
Rose DeFoe will study at Columbia
on a Kellogg Foundation scholar­
ship. Albert Becker of the speech
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)

SHIE S FUNDS
800SI SCHOOLS

TREASURER MAUS
Monday morning a double deck 00.
truck arrived nt the C A. Williams
RECEIVES DRAFT FOR
farm In Irving township and took
127,011.00
six sheep from his famous "Bonheur
Farms" Suffolk stock buck to Ohio,
where an equal number of Cheviots. WILL DISTRIBUTE THE
Southdowns. Lincolns. Leisters, and
Cotswolds will be added and taken
CASH TO THE DISTRICTS
to the Texas Centennial Exposition
to remain Uli October 11.
Many Schools Are Kept Go­
An experienced sheep man will
ing by This Help From
be placed in charge of them for the
summer. Shropshire*. Dorsets and
the State
other breeds will be brought in
County
Treasurer L. F Maus on
from other state*, as it is planned
Monday received from the state of
to have an exhibit of all breeds.
Quite a feather tn the cap of1 Michigan a draft for 127.011.00 which
is to be distributed among the school
pie, according to the figures given Bafry county to be able to furnish
districts of the county. It is the sup­
out. returned a verdict against such the outstanding sheep in the Suf­ plemental fund to aid In the carry­
forgotten and abstract principles folk class for this Important ex­
ing on of the county's schools. For
as home rule and government by hibit which will be viewed by hun­
dreds of thousands before the ex­ some of the schools an emergency
(Continued on page fl. Sec 21
position closes. It also speaks fund is added to help them meet
worlds for Mr. Williams who has school costs. All of this was done
POPPY DAY SALES
brought the breed to such perfec­ In accordance with laws passed by
last legislature.
AMOUNT TO $126.38 tion. and will be the finest kind of theFollowing
is lhe distribution by
advertisement for Bonheur Farms
dbMeU In the Wlotu townI
___■
..
Various Towns in County and Barry county.
ships and thia city:
ASSYRIA—Eagle district.
8106.
Co-operate With Legion
A SURPRISE ENTERTAINMENT.
Austin
district.
879; Ellis district.
The
Hastings
Rotary
club
had
a
Auxiliary
,77 B..„.
Ch«k.r«l
Mrs. Edw Downs, who was chair­ surprise at their meeting Monday district. 8123; Lincoln district, 899.
noon when they were privileged to
man of lhe Poppy Day sales for the
BALTIMORE — Dowling district.
American Legion Auxiliary, reports hear the Allegan High School saxo­ 8211; Striker district. 876; McOmber
phone quartet and their pianist.
a fine response by the people of this
All of them are young ladles, mem­ district. 8108; Hendershott district.
city and county, the total of 8126.38
bers of the junior cla.*s in the Al­ 8114; Weeks district. 894; Durfee
being received
As usual. Mayor
legan High school They gave four district. 861; Barney Mills district.
Charles Leonard purchased the first
numbers which were enthusiastical­ 8101.
poppy for which he paid 1100.
ly applauded. The musical instruc­
BARRY—Township unit school
Sales tn this city and other places
tor of the Allegan school directed located at Delton. 8906.
in Barry' county were as follows:
them.
Several former school districts in
Hastings City
This quartette, together
with Barry township have been made a
Windstorm Co
about 200 otner individuals and part of the W K. KeUogg consoli­
Nashville ...
musical organizations, applied for dated achool. Just over the line Ln
Coats Grove ..
the privilege of playing on the Ma­ Kalamazoo county. These are not
Freeport ..........
jor Bowes program in Grand Rapids included In this report.
Delton ............
next week Friday
night. Buch
CARl/TON—Carlton Center. 87;
Middleville ...
a number could not be accom­ Barnum district, MU I^ah district,
modated. The list was cut to 40, 111; Welcome district. 843; Cheney
112638
then reduced to 20. but this Allegan district, 869; Friend district, 899;
Those in charge appreciate the saxophone quartette and their ac­ Ragla district, 878.
kindly spirit shown by everyone and companist are numbered with the
CAflTLEfTON—Nashville
village
20 and will appear on the Major
their co-operation as well.
school. 82.196; Castleton Center
Several young girls assisted with ' Bowes program.
district, 833; Lakeview district, 894;
sales here in town. Beverly Brown I
Hosmer district. 848; Wellman dis­
selling the most. Judy Mulder sec­
SAILED FOR EUROPE.
trict. 863; Morgan, district. 8104;
ond and Jean Wallace third Their j That the W K Kellogg Founda­
Pelghner district, 846; Martin dis­
kindness was greatly appreciated
tion takes its health work seriously trict. 845; Barryvllle district. 810;
Th. U«bn and AuxlU*r? are „„j u
J.
tne te,'t
Shores district. 890.
«ta&gt; «n&gt;u(ul to R.y Branch 7or hl. poutMe nuuuwr U .train .town by
HAJ3TING8 TWP — Fisher dis­
J.
".'J' ln "nn'"« ““
what B did Utt w«k The Pound.w
,Udr al the strand which Uon „nt Dr
B Dartlnj, trict. 859; Gregory district. 867; Star
—,
lhc „nuxll„
^,una,tlon „ district, 831; Hastings Center dis­
proved a splendid advertisement.
Winners in the Poppy Poster Europe, Asia and Northern Africa. trict, 811- We understand that the
Contest, conducted by the local . tn spend the summer mnnths in Pratt district levied no assessment
American Legion Auxiliary, are studying the health work that is be­ on the district last year. The stale
Marguerite Leonard. 13. first, and ing done in those foreign lands, law requires that lhe property of
Eleanor Kantner. second.
It is with the purpose of making use of tiie district be assessed at a
hoped that more may enter next 1 what knowledge he may gain in minimum of 2 1-2 mills. As
year's contest.
I carrying on the Foundation's health no assessment was levied in 1935,
the 1100 offered that district by the
state this year cannot be paid to
VETERANS EXPRESS
i S*m XTX
it unless It shall, before July 23 deTHANKS FOR GIFT . Dr. „n.d
Thu,«., on
Darling sailed Thursday on
The veterans of all wars have Che steamship Exochordia from New sesament on the district to make up
asked the Banner to express their York. Mrs. Darling accompanied for the levy It failed to make last
appreciation to the Cemetery Asso­ him. Dr. Darling has specialised In
QUIMBY DISTRICT. 848.
ciation for their gift of a flag pole health work, and is taking advan­
and the Memorial committee for a tage of this opportunity to learn of
HASTINGS CITY. »7.694
flag to be used for memorial services any improvements that may have
HOPE—Doud district. 8117; Mc­
and military funerals. These gifts been made tn other countries in Callum district, 8119; Cedar Creek
represent the fulfillment of a dream carrying on such work as the Kel- district, 8113; Hinds district, 8125;
that many veterans have had for
Shults district. 8116; Brush Ridge
years. The veterans also wish to ex­
district, 890; Cloverdale. 859
press their appreciation to the Rev. NOTICE OF ANNUAL
IRVING—Cobb district. »7; Wood
Hoos for his effective work as
SCHOOL MEETING. district. 820; Jones district. 851;
speaker.
The annual meeting of the School Ryan district, 8118; Brew district,
District of the City of Hastings, for 8120; Plllmore district. 861; Free­
the election of school officers and port district. 8309; Pleasant Hill,
for the transaction of such other 856; LiUle Brick district, *110.
, business as may lawfully come be­
JOHNSTOWN — King
district.
fore it. will be held at the Hastings
BYRON MUNGER.
| Central school auditorium on Mon­ 892; Parker district. 838; Stevens
district, 8D0; Bristol district. 876;
Byron Munger is obliged to dis- day. lhe 8th day of June. 1936, at Banfield district. 893; culver dis­
pose of his personal property, be- | 8:00 o'clock P. M. Eastern Standard
cause of ill health, so will have an j Time. Dated this 11th day of May trict. 876; Fick district. 871; Bullis
district. 854;
Burroughs district.
auction at his farm three miles j 1936.
8116.
east of Dowling or two miles north {
C. W. Wasplnter,
MAPLE GROVE—Quailtrap dis­
of Lacey, with Henry Flannery as I —Adv.
Secy. Board of Ed.
trict. 850; Maple Grove Center dis­
auctioneer. The list includes 2 •
—
trict. 8160; Mayo district, 863; Moore
horse*. 2 cows,' two heifers, lot of good j
HENDERSHOTT REUNION.
district. 848. Dunham district. 8G,
। Hendershott School Reunion to be Norton district. 869; McKelvey dis­
I field at the schoolhouse Bat.. June trict. |21; Branch district, 849;
adv. for full particulars.
11, for pot luck dinner.—Adv.
Belgh district. 858.
ORANGEVILLE — Falk
district,
BALL GAME AT
* * *-----------------VICKERY'S LANDING. ।
STAMM REUNION.
8115; Orangeville village district,
Clear lake. Sunday afternoon at 3 I At Mr. and Un. Fred Stamm's, 8279; Blake district. 8108; Gun Lake
o'clock. Dowling vs. Delton. Benefit June 14. Pot luck dinner. Bring table district, |14; No. 8 Fractional. 8114.
game for Ray Bullion.—Adv.
| service.—Adv.
(Continued on page 3, Bee. 1)

One Auction Sale

18125315

FIRST MEETING WILL
I
;

nr KJCVT HCTADCD
DC BtAI UUI UDtn

1 Brotherhood Wat Organised
In Halting! TwentyFive Years Ago
Walter Wallace, new president of
lhe Hastings Brotherhood, and its
I program committee are already
planning for the next Brotherhood
i year. It lakes considerable time to
get seven programs in order and
properly arranged; but the com­
mittee is giving due consideration
to each number. They have planned
to have some outstanding person
for the first meeting, which Will be
held in October. The November
meeting is always the Father and
Son banquet, with lhe program Ln
charge of "Dad" Angel), secretary
of the Barry county Y M C. A. He
has always been able to secure
someone who can put across an in­
teresting message for the dads and
the lads and there will be no ex­
ception this year.
It is planned to have lhe Anal
meeting, which will be held in April,
a musical number with a variety of
entertainment.
A committee has
been delegated to secure Dial kind
of a final program, and Is planning
an entertainment that will be very
pleasing
The Brotherhood had a inamber­
ship of well toward 2S0 II is plan­
ned to Increase it to 300 thia year.
1 This organization was established
here twenty-five years ago. At that
time Rev J. B Pinckard was pas­
tor of lhe Methodist church. There
had been a men's organization
meeting occazlonally; but it was felt
that there should be one that
would have stated meetings and
programs. Learning that there was
such an organization in Trinity
church, Grand Rapids, of which the
Rev Russell Bready was then pas­
tor. he was Induced to coma and
outline plans for a similar one here
As a result the Brotherhood was or­
ganized and has been functioning
ever since. The Brotherhood is not
denominational. Men of ail church
I connections and those who do not
I belong to any church are numbered
I among ILs members, and all enjoy
its programs and activities.
In the commercial Club and RoUry club. Hastings has two organi­
zations for men that have demon.
U»lr
«'
,I these
!hp?p Is in
In a position
nn.«1tlnn to
tn reach
roncti the
tinpeople of lhe territory surrounding
Hastings with programs that will
e5DCCl.,iiv -77--'
.DD..T -7 —
men
7n, and at
the same time produce ui,
them at a
low cost. The Brotherhood is the
only organization in Hastings that
brings together farmers, business
men and laborers for a social time,
a good supper and an enjoyable
program after lhe "eats." Buch con­
tacts are very helpful and worth
while for all. concerned. Through
the Brotherhood plan, seven excel­
lent entertainments are provided,
together with seven good feeds, at
the low price of 12 00 for a season
ticket, just the meals alone would
cost more than that at a restaurant,
but the Brotherhood saves enough
by Its unique plan of serving meals,
so that thia low price is possible.
Watch for further Brotherhood an­
nouncements and plan t^ get your
season ticket.

'

THESE WIN Hl-Y—
GIRLS’ LEAGUE CUPS

Awarded to Dwight Ferris,
Genevieve Erway for
School Records

SECTION ONE—PACES 1 to 8

I

one league debate and in the school [

dent of the Hl-Y club this year, and
also a member of the track team
winning his section of the 440 yard
dash in the Grand Rapids regional

BANQUET TICKETS

Excellent 1Program Prepared
COD T||C P|||| I
for
Hlfh______________
h School
Alumni
I Uli HL UllIIJ
Assou. Friday Night
THEME OF BACCALAURE­ The committees In charge of the BUPBKVUZD PLAY WU
Hastings High School Alumni ban­
BB OABBIXD ON THIS
ATE ADDRESS BY FR
quet report a splendid ticket sale
J. V. DILLON
SUWMXX
and mui
ana
that rural
final pions
plans arc
are uiuue
made lur
for
------- -

On Wednesday morning the HlY and Girls' League cups given each
semester for excellence in scholar­
ship. character and contribution to
the school were awarded to Dwight
_______ Ferris and Genevieve Erway. Pre- , CAAU RRAnilATP
aentatlons were made by Donald,
unAUUAIt

Weaver and Ruth McLaughlin, win- &gt;
ners of the cups the first semester.

niir ODIUIICOC
lIIlL I nlVILLbU

I splendid sale of
NECESSARY!!)
CHART COURSE

the gathering on Friday evening, I
June 5. The price is 75 rents per :

1

----- --

ACTIVITIES BEGIN
—
TH|S WEEK SATURDAY
HAS RESPONSIBILITIES ____________________
la.'7.’“
inti
_______
—----------

I lhe dinner this time.

।
|1
1
,
. About
About 700
700 attended
attended the
the baccabacca­
laureate service, which was held in
- '
lhe Central auditorium at
।
o'clock Bunday afternoon, wlth

to Live Lives of Value

and Real
Beal Service
Borrlce

arranged with John GOuld of Grand
Rapids a graduate of 1926.
1928 as the
Rapids,
toastmaster. The committee Is not
telling asthe
full
details
of the
„am
thev
wish
to have
It a prozurgram, as they wish to have It a surnut i.
prise to those who attend, but it
will be a fine one and one worthwhile hearing. One of the features

j

Ground—For Girl* at

I
II

siturdV••
I Hastuigs Plaaroimd will open its
summer activities.

Miss Erway ranked thirteenth on
the honor list and has been a mem­
ber of lhe high school orchestra.
musical numbers as well as the ,
8he was president of lhe senior slonal march by the High school toasts. A good attendance is an-[ effort will also be made to form a
junior baseball club, which should
class during lhe first semester and orchestra, directed by Mr. Lewis Helps ted.
has been prominent in girls' ath­ Hine.
There followed two songs by the
letics and Ag-HE work.
High school chorus, directed by Mr.
[each day of the week except Bun­
Roy Gamer. The Invocation was
day.
next given by the Rev John W.
Kltchlng. pastor of the Presbyterian
church. Then came two beautiful
hymns by the High school boys'
glee club, directed by Mr. Garner
_. _ ' day. June 8th. The schedule outNext came the baccalaureate ad­
DAY WA3 lined tor the girls will be 8:30 to
dress by Rev. Father J. V. Dillon, of DECORATION
111:30 Monday and Friday and from
BARRY COUNTY'S LAKES St. Rose Roman catholic church of
FITTINGLY HONORED
1 1:00 U 5 00 P M. Tiwadav. Wad.
this city. It was very timely and
AND STREAMS COVER
IN THIS CITY
I helpful. He told the graduating
nesday. Thursday and Saturday.
Suitable activities will be provided
14,000 ACRES
i class that their passing out of the
for work among the girls and proper
------------- । High school meant that there de- ।
EXERCISES ON THE
supervision will be furnished. Il is
COUNTY HAS REAL ASSET i
°'
COURT HOUSE SQUARE hoped that parents having children
IS) ITO UAllV I AL/to rej’Ponalblb‘y to contribute some-.
will take advantage of the oppor­
IN ITS MANY LAKES thing worthwhile to life. He de-1
------------- I scribed the launching of a great Splendid Address by the Rev. 'tunity provided to keep both boy*
and girls busy during the summer In
Could Be Made to Bring *blp. It was built for safety and
Karl Keefer—Remarks J properly supervised sports
OnH ArlA ’
for profit; bUt it COUld
MUCH Money Here and Add
accomplish neither unless it shall
This is a splendid undertaking
by T. 0. Webber
lhe Banner commends Warren
operated in harmony with the
Memorial Day was observed in an and
‘
to Assessed«------------Valuej
laws of navigation, and follow safe impressive manner in this city, j
County Clerk Allan Hyde has a
Members of the Legion and Spanish bored to secure these privileges
booklet entitled "Michigan Lakes channels for crossing the sea
He said that each member of the War veterans. Veterans of Foreign the children of Hastings. Bupervl
and Streams" which contains a list
of all the lakes In lhe carious coun­ graduating class is now In the posi­ Wars, and their Auxiliaries, to­ not help but benefit the children
ties and the acreage covered by the tion of that ship as it is being gether with the Boy Scouts and who would otherwise be free to wanlaunched.
And the captain of a new Camp Fire Girls, led by the
waters of each one. as estimated by
the supervisor of the township in ship, especially, would never take High school band, marched to projects in other cities have resultand Mount
Calvary ‘
which the lake is situated Mr Hyde chances with the vessel he com- Riverside
louna 177
in lakes
ra.ra listed
.urao in
m Barry
irairy I
'T wtlempUns to ,o on cemeteries to decorate the graves cd in lessened juvenile court casM
found
county, and lb. lout am covered
p,lh , 7'7 of deceased soldiers Tilts was at and have kept youngsters busy M
by them U 13.123 acres Thu. how-1
feIt “7*^ B would be nine o'clock. The two cemeteries .they have not been tempted to *H
■■
ever, dura nollak. UBo account Ute . ——• —...
“h“l, K&gt;UU«'*d- were never more beautiful than this into mischief as they often do when
to rely upon their own
' uate has made shipwreck of his life year Every lot had been trimmed. left
,
streams and many small bodies of
sources.
water which are not defined as by keeping his eyes on temporal There was a profusion of flowers, '
Orp,-.n
The usual soft ball schedule fog
lakes. If these were included lhe things and not on lhe great funda­ most of them from the gr“" ■
other 1 older boys and men wlU ** “Wl.
total would undoubtedly be 14,000 mentals that will make his voyage houses, largely geraniums and other 1tlnued four days a week I
plants in bloom. Clyde Wilcox said
acres. In this publication, the area through life safe and successful.
Turning to Che graduates. Father that the demand for flowers for the nlng at the fair ground
that Is now Al-Oon-Quln lake was
schedule published. The
Dillon
said,
“
It
is
necessary
for
you
cemeteries this year for Decoration
listed as containing lhe three small
lakes, which were there before the to chart your course. In doing so Day far exceeded any previous year.
you have a right to Inquire what is
propriatlon allowed
outlet of what was then KurU lake. a sufficient guide for any young eluded with the playing of "Taps,” Council.
This dam made one big body of man or woman starting out Ln life?" and the flag salute.
The parade started as'scheduled
water, including not only the three And he answered. "The Ten Com­
small lakes but extending over prob­ mandments." But to these we must at ten o'clock. Representatives of JUDGE VERDIER
ably 200 acres of lowlands sur­ not give Up service, but make them the Legion. Spanish War veterans,
DISMISSES SUIT
rounding the three small lakes. It is a part of our inner selves. Take the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
the flag of our country, which we the Ladles' Auxiliaries, about 200
acres in Barry county that are now all love. Il is only an external ex­ school children and many teachers. Holds Kent County Cannot
covered by water This would be. pression of our interna) love. 80 Including those of the High school,
Sue Barry County in a
in round figures, about twenty-two should these commandments be in were tn line The procession disband­
Kent County Court
sections of land, or nearly 2-3 of an our lives—an expression of our real ed at the courtyard square, where a
entire township. The actual land inner selves.
platform had been erected and
The Banner has mentioned Um
Three
of
the
ten
commandment*
area of lhe county is, therefore,
seats provided. A large crowd was
about IS 1-3 townships Instead of have to do with one's attitude to­
ward God. That is important for He lace was unable to be present, so
sixteen.
is our Greater, the Maker of all his place as song leader was filled by
these lakes whose value will be, we things. We do not see Him bdt we Richard Loppcnlhien. under whose commission, charging that thia
,
hope, appreciated much more in lhe can see what He has done and is do­ leadership the audience heartily county had unlawfully profited by
future than It has beendn the past ing. The other seven have to do with sang "America the Beautiful." Then the payment of weight taxes to
Given good roads to all the resort our relations to our neighbors. We followed lhe invocation by Rev. W. Barry county, which the Kent offilakes and proper advertising, we are' can see them, and so can direct our Maylan Jones. A very appropriate
sure that the financial returns to, conduct in all our relations with reading wrs given by Wayne Flnk- in Kent county. The state returns
the county would be greatly In­ them by these seven command­ belner. The pledge of allegiance to
creased and that the present 81.­ ments.
the flag was given under the lead­ counties. It was recited in the comLife, said Father Dillon, is to be
000.000 of assessed resort property.
ership of the Boy Scouts, followed
would be doubled Ln the next ten judged by 1U fruit. The question will by a selection by the band.
be asked, when our end shall come:
years.
The speaker of the day was Rev.
Have we accomplished the purpose Karl Keefer, of Watervliet. He was
which the creator had in giving us
appropriately Introduced by Adal­ Gingrich firm by Barry county, that
PROGRAM FOR
life? We Judge the ship by whether
NEW RECEIVER FOR
bert Cortright. Mr. Keefer gave a that firm would see that this coun­
GRADUATION DAY it delivers Its passengers and its timely address. He referrsd feelingly ty received weight tax money from
OLD NATIONAL BANK.
load at the distant shore. That is
George Dye. of Ionia, who was
to the late Judge Smith, who was outside sources that would otherappointed receiver for the Old Na­ Class of One Hundred Two tiie way we shall have to Judge life
—delivering something that is of
tional Bank. July 12, 1034. has just
mor lai Day; also to the late Frank
to Receive Diplomas
real service and value.
been notified by federal authorities
Annable. who, when living, took up­ Kent county claims that, In Miliag
on Friday
The girls' chorus, directed by on himself so much of the labor of
that he will be assigned to another
department, his place here being
Following is the program for lhe, Miss Glerum gave two appropriate preparation for this day. He refer­ well as to Ionia, Newaygo, Mautaken by Allen A McCurdy, of lhe Hastings High school commence­ selections, and the service was con­ red in fitting words to the five liv­ calm, Oceana and Manistee coun­
National Bank of Grand Rapids.
ment to be held al Central auditor­, eluded with the benediction, pro­ ing representatives of the veterans ties. the highway fund of Kent
During Mr Dye's connection a 20 ium on Friday. June 5. at two, nounced by Rev. Ktchlng.
of the Civil war. one of whom. Tru­ county had been deprived of funds
per cent divided has been paid as o'clock, when a class of 102 will
man Webber, was on the platform. that rightfully belonged to that
TUESDAY LUNCHEONS START
well as a 840.MX) RPC loan
graduate:
county.
AT HASTINGS’ COUNTRY Cl.UR.
Processional March—"Pomp and
The counties—including Barry
Country club luncheons opened a few words. He made an appro­
Chivalry"
—
Roberts
priate
response.
expressing
his which was represented by our proeePEONY DAY IS SET
Tuesday with forty members and
"Star Spangled Banner." High guests present. Sweet rocket and pleasure Ln seeing so many young cutor. Archie McDonald—filed (Mr
FOR SATURDAY School Orchestra—Lewis Hine, di­ yellow roses were used on the lunch­ people present, evidencing their in­ answers to thia complaint In Judge
rector.
eon tables. The lace spread buffet terest in their country. He staled Verdier'a court in Grand RapMs.
Invocation—Rev E. O. Mcfiher- table was centered with a bouquet that his grandfather had fought in claiming that a suit against theca
Barry County Merchants
ry, pastor. United Brethren church. ot Iris. A lovely combination ot iris, the Revolutionary war. His father's outside counties could not lawfully
Will Display Blooms
Bongs: "To Spring”—Grieg-Les­ vines and lemon lilies was attrac­ oldest brother was a soldier Ln the be brought in Kent county.
ter. -The OldfFamUy Clock/-Gkant- tively arranged for the large tables War of 1812. His father and two
in Stores
Schaefer—High School Girls' Glee In the lounge.
brothers, as well as himself wore opinion in which he held, and gave
Barry county peony day will be club—Miss Jean Olerum. director.
Mrs Robert W. cook, chairman of the Union blue in the civil war. One his reasons for so doing, tlial Kent
observed this week Saturday, June
Address—"A Challenge to Youth" the ladles' board, presided for the i of
his sons
served
in, the
Spanish
— —
- —
---------—-. -•=
—— county cannot lawfully sue lheee
6. Merchants thruout the county, as
——
Dr.- W
D.• —
Henderson,
director.
hnain*u
meeting
following
the
wlir and ^w0 others in the World
-•
—
-------------—
--------*•
business
usual, will display peonies al their
Extension Division, University of1 ________
juncheonehen reports of all com-1 war He WM proud ot th&gt;t record.
places of business. The following
Michigan.
1 mlttees were given.
offered a fervent prayer which
day the churches are asked to use
Bong—"Flower of Dreams”—CloMrs. Robert WaiUm. Kalamazoo, touched all of his h*y?rs-a prayer graph slataa as follows:
peonies lor their pulpit and altar
key High school Girls' Glee club— was prtssnt as guest of Mrs Wilbur for »‘l» country, for his community.
decorations.
Miss Glerum, director.
Lane; Mrs. Carl Wesplnter had]for “u hU fellowmen.
___
This custom was inaugurated in
Presentation of the Class—Edwin Mr. Robert Jessen of Chicago and
At
conclusion of Mr Webber.
1932 honoring Dr. W. E. Upjohn, of
L. Taylor, Principal of the High Miss Louise Hayes of Louisville J remarks, Mr. Keefer spoke of
Kalamazoo, whose first years of
School.
Ky.. Mrs. E- H. Waring's guest was 'Heroes °f War and f^ace." He
practice were spent in Hastings
Presentation of the Diplomas—A her mother. Mrs. H. 8. Amerson -of
and who donated 2,000 peony bulbs
ery and of fine and helpful service
Lynn Brown, President of the Board Chicago.
to the schools of Barry county from
of Education.
Mrs Edward VanPoperlng was to this country by those who served
his famous peony gardsns at Brook
Tape.
chairman with the executive board in the Civil war as well as in the
Lodge near Augusta.
Benediction—Rev. E
Mc- as committee for the day. Next World war. He paid a fine tribute to
•Mrs. w. H. Goodyear thru whose
week Mrs. Maurice Lamble will be those who had given their lives or
efforts peony day largely came into Sherry.
their services to their country. He
Reveille.
chairman.
being suggests that people having
Mrs. Wilbur Lane won the morn­ expressed the hope that the world
cars make a special effort to take
START FRIENDLY SUIT.
ing golf event, a handicap; the con- would seek and find a way to end
shut-ins on a drive to various
A friendly suit has been started
all national difficulties. War, be
peony gardens In the city and points in the circuit court of this city by
Fred W- Stebbins.
outside.
Guy R Hankey of Petoskey, admin­
wholesale murder and brutality. He rranud. and an cedar
The
Parrott gardens u
are the most istrator
istrator or
of me
the estate or
of me
the rate
tale
.
urged that all give way to the reign
AN ALL "A" RECORD.
extensive ones close at hand. In the Reginald Sidney French, to deter-, miss
Mias iieicn
Helen Bassett
Bassett ana
and miss
Miss of the Spirit of Christ tn their
ahiluii’hlv.’US’J’miSluJ'S —---- --h------‘Arl,
"‘ ---------------- ------- --------- - MWrH HUKy.
rn.mb.ra
ol
th.
—
nivKKj,
Hicuiuvia
wi
ww
Shulters have made a speciality of |
was made several years ago. to sell MnlOt class of the Nashville High
these blooms, and there ore many cerUln properties which were owned jchool have been awarded gold pins,
This fine address was followed by
other gardens where peonies can be by the deceased. The administrator jn recognition of their all A reilng
the singing of "Amerie*" by
aufeels that this sale should be made
scholarship in that school.
dtonce. led by Mr. Loppanthten.
In. the InleresU of all the heirs. ।
--------------—-----------------OPENING DANCE.
All concerned, either in ownership
Allegto's new 849.500 poet office
Crooked taka, Dalton, Bat., June 8. of the property or in the eeUU. are finished a month ago has been held
Ecklarii Orch. fXxmerly at Prairie- agreed on this action, but want the up awaiting fixtures, and wasn't
sanction of the court.
opened until the past week.

I?™." “J&gt;* ••"!!“

WNTER-COVEFIED !
IBM IS HUGE

: MX!*:

MINI MIC

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JUNE A W»

A 1 JVA
AJ F W
Q
IViJ

who hBve bt'n

Kkt

apartment on W. Green street, haws
moved to Gun lake where they haw
rented lhe Harry Ritchie collage for
'
Don’t forget to display peonies lhe summer. • Mr. Saunders is one
of the engineer* connected with lhe
Saturday.
Gregory school reunion Saturday. Yanka* Springs project.

teaching personnel of the Hastings
schools to data is that caused by the
day? Everyone appreciated it.
resignation ot Mrs. Gerald Smith
Memorial Day grows to be more who will assume house keeping dut»nd more a homecoming Lime.
. Well miss lhe dally passing of the city. The vacancy will be tak­
teachers and scholar* on our streets en care of by a shift ot teachers.
Locust trees have'been out In all
We haven't even had the desire to
read "Old Iffy" of late, my hearties’ tbeir glory th* past two wasks. One
Have you?
doesn't realize how beautiful they
This Is the time of year when we are till Uoesoming time. M-31, from
begin to hear frequent discussions Lake Al-Gon-Quln in to Middle­
ville. has scores of these trees along
of golf scores.
the fenpes and In groves that are
Riverside and adjoining cemeter­
lovely enough lo make it a feature
ies never looked lovelier than this
drive.
Memorial Day time.
I The Negro community tn Inkster
A good cook advises us lo try the
molasses cookie recipe on page 108 held a Ford day recenUy as a means
Jun,
jo.™).-

SUGAR 10 49c
Cloth Bog, 10 Lb. Limit

CHESTERFIELD

CIGARETTES

10c

5 P*cka&lt;e Limit

BALLOON or CRYSTAL WHITE;

SOAP CHIPS
QUART JARS

Meson

dox.

59c

5

is. box

CRISCO

MASON COVERS -19c

PEN JEL

CAN RUBBERS 3- 10c

CERTO

2 Ac

31.

49c

2

25c
22c

3 .on. 23c

FORT HOWARD TISSUE

can 10c

SALMON -

We Will Pay lOc for Your Old BROOM On the
Purchase of Any New One 39« to 71c

\ 5CJ
2

PEANUT BUTTER
MIXED TEA F.ric.dT..

lb far

23c

^.b-

23c

MORGAN.

HONOR LYMAN

Mr. and Mix Claude SaiHtdera,

f fs

I
poafal card which did.
James Ransom is first on the Bat1
in Hastings lo have a natural gas .
furnace ln*talled in his home.
Friend School picnic. Bat., June
13. L- Farrell’s. Bring table service,
sandwiches, one other sllah^-Adv.
The many friend* of Mi** Anne
Roeenthal wUl be glad to know that
she u convalescing nicely from her
recent appendicitis operation.
Friends of J. Lorenxo Mau* will
be glad to hear of his continued
Improvement, which now warrants

Ladies' night at the local asylum
of Knights Templar was well, at­
tended on Thursday. After the
banquet served in the dining rooms
lhe Sir Knights and thglr Ladles
proceded to the cotnmandary room

Mr. and Mn. Clair Van Sickle
and niece, Mabel Van Sickle, of
Lsuuing are spending thia week
with home folks as Clair has a
week’s vacation.

turned home Saturday alter spend-

Eminent Sir Lyman B ChamberMarguerite Mills of Lansing vis­
tain of Charlotte who served as ited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Commander up to April of this Harrington. Buotay.
Garnet Webb spent a few days
The chairman of the evening was last week with Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Dr. Frank Carrothers, P. C-. and Van Sickle at Lansing.
out again by next week.
ths presentation of the jewel was
Catharina McAdams of Lansing
Tiie Kim Biglers have vacated made In a very Impressive manner visited her parents, Mr. and Mn.
thtelr home recenUy sold to Dr. Gor­ by Eminent Blr Hugh Riley, the William Van Sickle. Sunday.
don Fisher, stored their goods, and Captain General.
Mr. and Mn. Chas. Harrington
are now domiciled al Hastings
Vocal numbers were rendered by were In Olivet Decoration Day and
Point. Gun lake, until fall.
| Mrs. Fay Marble and Roy Garner called on Mr. and Mn. Henry Oroen
County Register of Deeds Earl accompanied by Mrs. L- F. Maus. and Mr. and Mr*. Hahn on their
Boyes was taken to Pennock hos­ Two dances were given by Mlu return home.
pital on Wednesday. He lias been Beverly chamberlain. A short talk
Martin Latham, who spent about
sick for several days with intestinal was also given by Rev. John Kltch- three months at Kellogg's camp, re­
trouble. All hope for his speedy ing.
turned home Thursday.
*
Magdallne Bchelb of Hastings I
recovery.
spent lhe week end at the home of I
Mrs. Emma Bush la reported on PAUSING OF NURSE
Tourists arc beginning to appear. dur|ng
depression years. In the
AT PENNOCK HOSPITAL. B Rowlader.
Quite a number of house can passed
celebration a tree was the gain. She was happy in having
all her Children and several grand­
Mr. and Mrs. Rollo English of
Miss Eulah Layer. 14. night super­
thru Memorial Day week end
. planted
planted in
in honor
honor ot
ot Mr.
Mr. Ford,
Ford, on
on the
the
children with her on Memorial day, intendent at Pennock hospital, died Lansing were Saturday gucsU of .
Dr George Lockwood ha* ordered lawn ot Uie new Lincoln school
and greatly appreciated the lovely on Saturday after a five days' illness
a house car trailer and is antlci- which
' ' ' was financed
"
* ‘by him. —
Ford‘ flowers they brought her.
Those
who helped Bordy Rowladof
pneumonia.
She
graduated
from
paling many pleasant week ends wa* not present but his representa­
Mrs. H. A- Adrounle received the Lowell
hospital then
took er celebrate his birthday Bunday
vagabonding with hl* family.
tive* were.
word the past week from her son nuysas* training at Blodgett hospital were Mr. and Mrs. Degrange of
Seniors flitting by in grey caps
Two women are’ recovering In Harry, that the expedition he is
Rapids where
~ .
Ul Qr4n(j naptus
WILC1C she worked
wwmm Lake Odessa. Mr. and Mn. Monroe
and gowns and normal graduates Nichols
hospital.
Dattle
Orcek. with touched port al Oelreslo?
’. —
— —- --_
7- ago
— —
Galveston.
untll
years
when she Rowlader, Fred
Lamberson
of
in ones of dark blue give quite an from a delicate double operation in Texas, on their way to
o Central
w Hastings. Surviving are Woodland. Mr. Perkins and Mrs.
academic appearance to our streets. which a rib wa* removed from one America.
| tjer parents. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Anthony. Miss MagdeUne Bchleb of
Mrs Blnnlc M Sweezey formerly women—a gtate health department
Fire was discovered tn Ute roof of Layer and a brother. Elmer all Hastings, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
cf Hastings died recently at Piqua. nurse—and an inch and a quarter u/.n.r
Walter nv.n-.
Ryan's house
&gt;,«..« .t
at sis
314 r
E. of Lowell. Funeral services were held Davis of Vermontville. Mr. and
Ohio, aged 90 years. We will pub­ of it carved and fitted into the Grand street. Bunday forenoon. at the Lowell Methodist church on Mrs. Ben Walt of the PraU district,
—___
lish the obituary of her interesting frontal bone of a woman's head. The department promptly .respondMonday at two o'clock and inter­ Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Golden of BarThe woman had been in an auto ac- e&lt;i to the alarm and put out the ment was in Oakwood cemetery in ryville and MUs Esther Gray of
cldent. Injury and subsequent in- | nre WHh very ,^1 damage.
Freeport.
Women's
that village.
-----*—‘ left a section “ot
* her 1 F. E Hill ha* rented his Walnut
fecllon had
‘
Mis* Layer's passing brings a sense
Glenn Moore and family of
street bungalow to Mr. and Mrs. I of personal loss to members of the Eaton Rapids were Bunday guests
died and twenty-three good dresses brain unprotected.
.
... move
With those nice bright yellow I Robert Shannon, who
will
of
Mr.
and Mrs. Ben BosUter.
reduced to 91 48 tax included at
staff. lhe doctors and the board, os
lines on the red bricks of the down- j into it as soon as their goods ar­ well as many patrons who have had
Stanley Carl of Kalamo visited
Frandsen's store—Adv.
Mr Shannon is connected! the privilege of tier efficient and Glenard Ear) Sunday.
town streets now, there shouldn’t rive.
'
**
Lemon yellow lilies with their
with
the
executive
end
of
lhe
Bliss
I
be any difficulty having enough
Viola Hagerman of Nashville and
devoted services during her connec­
sweet fragrance have brightened
factory.
Mrs. Winnie Felghner ot Battle
tion with Pennock hospital.
many gardens of late They always room to park. After a little practice
Friends of Mrs
Mary Burgess
Creek visited Miss Demarls Hager­
make one think of "Aunt Jane of in swinging your car exactly be­
were saddened to hear of her scrl- | JAPANESE BACKGROUND
tween
the
lines,
youll
soon
be
able
man
Saturday.
Kentucky" who loved old time
to do it in your sleep—almost—and ous illness of bronchial pneumonia.'
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Latham and
FOR SUB-DEB FORMAL.
flowers
there won’t be crowded quarters, She was taken to Pennock hospital
Martin attended the school pic­
Branches of
artificial cherry son
'
Mrs Mary Buxton, who has been either for the cars or for the pedes­ on Sunday afternoon. Her daugh­
nic at the Pratt schoolhouse Friday.
ill several months at lhe home of trian* who like to zip across the ters. Mrs. Ruble Kelley of Kala­ blossoms and Japanese lanterns i
made a festive background for the
her daughter Mrs J Mead, has so street between them.
mazoo and Mrs Edith Louden of .
KUNGENSMITH.
I Bub-Deb formal given at The Loft"
Up north few people don't know Prairieville, are here assisting with i' last Friday night where around
Mr and Mrs. Clair Peeling and |
home at 714 E- Grand Be. Mrs Jen­
lhe Weber (pronounced Weeben
thirty couples danced lo lhe music children of Detroit were guests of !
nie Will is caring for her and Lhe
brothers. Al H run* the Cheboygan
I of Martin's orchestra.
Mr and Mrs Burdette Willson Bathome
parents and a few older friends urday night and spent Bunday with
Observer; Frank (known as Pat") DECIDED AGAINST PI.AINTIFI.
Orchids to our Pleasant Hili cor­
The Hoekstra Ice Cream Com-1 were invited to look on or particl­ Mr and Mrs. George Converse.
respondent who sends us the inter­ S 'Dutch'' is a conservation offl- pany of Grand Rapids brought suit, pate If so inclined. Il proved one of
The junior and sophomore classes
esting item concerning C A. Wil­ cer They are among the best post- some time ago. which was heard by । the loveliest parties of the year.
and teachers had a treasure hunt
liams' Bonheur Farms Suffolk* be­ cd men In Michigan on game, con- Judge McPeek without a jury.
Present from away were Mr. and and breakfast on the highest Hub­
ing exhibited at lhe Texas Centen­ 1 scrvatlon and outdoor matters, be- against Fred Elders and others ot Mrs. Dillon Wolverton. Dr. and Mrs
bard hill. Tuesday morning. Several
nial which we feature on the front ; cause they can draw from actualNashville. The suit
' aimed
'
' to regain ;B. C Swift. Miss Pauline Beneway, drove their cars to lhe lop of tiie
page this week.
experiences In the open Few men powcsalon of a soda fountain and Miss Betty Swift. Eddie Lynn, Eddie hill and parked. All seemed .Ip be
Art Lbwe was picked up Thursday know that section any better; real­ fixtures which had belonged to the ।Btorkan. Wes Mugridge. Middleville.
having a good tltaa. After break­
on a disorderly charge and brought ize Ils potential recreation value; plaintiff company, but were sold on ।George Benner and Graydon Paul,
fast they enjoyed a marshmallow
before Justice Cortright. He admit­ are better sportsmen and none loves a contract to be paid by the pur­ Woodland.
roast.
ted his offense and was given a sen­ It better—Midland Republican
chaser from the proceeds of foun­
Albert Green has begun work on I
tence of five days in jail and *4.50
tain sales. It would seem, from the
BIRTHDAY
SURPRISE.
his new house.
costs If he fails to pay he must j Attorney Kim Bigler gave lhe opinion filed by Judge McPeek last
Larry and Edward Slorkan of
Monday evening. June 1. W. T
I Memorial Day address al Wayland
serve another five days
week U&gt;.l Dim ... dUkppoim- Crawley was surprised by a few of Grand Rapids spent Bunday with
mtnt on Iht pkrl ol ih. compUln- hu
r.i.nd, oUlln, their mother. Mrs James Slorkan.
ant «™n.
company «...
over the irnkll
small p.,.
pay- I ,„a „ro,„ainI „|m lh„ tn,, h.d . ------------------------------------------------------■nt
Alice Bowerman has gone to Hasmen Is made by the “S. n.dan? 1 ,lot forgotten that he was 81 years ] Ungs where she has employment.
Therefore suit was brought
to re­ ' old that day Mrs. Lydia Bush. Mrs.
'* * ""
Yxiix
b Tripp
Tv 11wk ■
nrt Joyce
Invrn Marl
Lois KTv
Eva
and
Marie
gain possession Judge McPeek'* de­ Lois Firster and Mrs. Clara WaU- Lapham helped Shirley Ann Peter­
cision is in favor of lhe defendants, dorff were throe of the older of the son celebrate her first birthday at
on the grounds that the contract company After having a nice visit the home of Iter grandmother. Mrs.
had not been violated as lhe com­ Mrs Crawley served ice cream Slorkan. She had a pretty cake
plainant had claimed, and that and cake After they all wished Mr. trimmed in white and green with
complainant was not warranted in Crawley many happy returns of the one candle in lhe center.
taking the steps he did to regain [ day they departed for their various
Homer McKibben's new building
possession of the fountain.
. homes. God’s blessings be upon all. Is going up fast at Yankee Springs.
। Il U always sweet to be remembered.
NORMAL CLASS REUNION.
OBITUARY.
The Barry county Normal class
Mrs Mary J Brooks, aged 79.
of 1916 will hold their first reunion )
RUTLAND FARMER DIES.
widow of the late. Cassius Brooks,
। Ln the play room at Central school ,
Henry Shipman, aged 83. a llfe- died on Friday al her home on W
I building. Hastings at 10 A. M . June । time resident of Barry county died
Green Bl., where she had lived for
fl. Pol luck dinner al noon; pro- on Sunday at his home in Rutland half a century. Her maiden name
t gram in the afternoon. Committees township.
was Kelly, the family living in Irv­
tn charge are hoping to sec all1 two sons, Ira al home and Geo. ing township. A son. Ned Brooks,
। classmates with their entire fam- of Flint, four daughter*. Mrs. Anna died several years ago Mrs. Brooks
1 Hies present.
Afaenard
Shepard and
and Un
Mrs. Hazel
Hazel Hudnut
Hudnut of
of
। Grand Rapids. Mrs. May SUiwell of Rose Roman Catholic church and of
PHONE 1140
HASTINGS. MICH.
OBITUARY.
Greenville and Mrs Gladys Nutn- the Altar society of that church.
, Frank D Wellfare was born in mer of Alma survive him. The fu- She Li survived by one sister, Mrs.
Calhoun Co.. Dec 6. 1854. and deFred Renkes. of Detroit and Has­
| parted this life May 29. 1938 at the noon at two o’clock at the W* lidar fi tings. and one brother, Edward
'
nt Rl
S mnnth, .nd 01 funeral home, the Rev W Maylan Kelly of Fort Madison. Iowa Fath­
Jones officiating. Burial la the Rut­ er John V Dillon conducted the fu­
Sarah Wellfare In 1883 he was mar- land cemetery
neral services at St Rose church
«-&gt;. A Wfc |
M_1
▲ TT
HZZ
▲ ried to Gertrude Kimble of Wert |
on Monday at ten A M.. with: in­
I
1^1 U
I Ml
■ •&lt; ■
7 • Sebewr. who died in Feb. 1018 On '
SUFFERS BAD FALL.
terment in Ml Calvary cemetery.
Eleanor
Haven,
daughter
oi
Mr
Midugo • w.pb.«.WU-MS7 M_
321'
and Mrs Arthur Haven, met with a
DEATH OF JACOB HANEY.
tings. Besides the wife he leaves to painful accident on Friday while
Jacob Haney. 45. died yeateMay.
mourn one sister. Mrs Geo Gunn, going home from school on her bi­
Wednesday morning, at 9:30 o'dock,
of West Sebewa. one brother. Hugh
chain at hla residence. 420 8.. Hangycr.
evidently
caught
Wellfare. of Mulliken and several-------------,----- — In
—
-SUNDAY and MONDAY. JUNE 7 and 8
nieces and nephews and a host of I throwing her from the wheel. Her after an lllnaas of several momha
Funeral services will be held at the
GENE STRATTON-ROIITER S
st Leo Wellfare’s. 409 E Colfax, on | lamed some cuts above her eye home on Saturday at two P. M, the
Monday afternoon at two o'clock.' and her nose was also Injured. 8he Rev W. Maylan Jones officiating.
the Rev B J Adcock officiating I was able to attend school on Tues- Burial will be in Valley Home cemBurial was made In the Lake Odes-, day. thankful that her eyes were
ALICE BRADY
sa cemetery.
. uninjured.
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
A girl was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Tolles, 828 6 Jefferson. Sat­
urday. May 20,
Mr. and Mn. Willard Landis,
Woodland. R. 1. are parents
boy. born Juns 1.
BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. JUNE 9

Send your SPORTS CLOTHES lo
McCreery’s. Slacks, sport coats and
jackets are thoroughly cleaned at
reasonable prices. Phone 2140 (or
quick pick up and delivery.

McCREERY'S Dry Cleaners

imfZ.

GRADE A

LARGE OR SMALL

BOLOGNA

FRANKFURTS

•b. 10c

2 ibi 25c
2

LARD

lb..

25c

SALT PORK

lb.

15c

BEEF KETTLE ROASTS

lb.

14c

THE

HARVESTER

IntXctLucina
iSoks)
cos^cs

GEORGE M. COHAN'S

King Nut

Hamburg
Fresh Ground

2 lbs.

29c

MARRIAGGE LICENSE.
jack Boyer. Banfield
Lidia Young. Battle Creek

SONG AND DANCE MAN
Michael Whalen

BOILING
BEEF

lk Oc

OLEO

SFECIAL ATTRACTION

WEDNESDAY oxd THURSDAY. JUNE 10 .nd II

AL JOLSON In

2 lbs.

25c

THE SINGING KID
Edward Everett Horten, Allen Jenkins and Claire Dodd

Adult* 23e;

Free Day, June 18

Lucky Day May 18

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 PM

Children 19c

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. JUNE 12 and 13
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

make-up methods.
Don't delay. Start th* Adrima*
way to finkbsd porfectlaa today.

Jun* Tim* Is

FEATURE NO. 1

MOONLIGHT

MURDER

.McHugh. Benita Hunt and Grant Mitchell

THE

CATTLE

ADRKNM
SCIENTIFICALLY

FEATURE NO. 1

Food Center

triumph to her costume achieve­
ments. Costume, complexion, cos­
metics . . . all blending together
in one hxnaooious effect.
Adrieoas makes this possible with

THIEF

WMh UN MAYNARD
F1.AMH GORDON" will tee shewn

HARMONIZED

COSMETICS

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Good* Delivered

Halting.

Phon* 2131

DIAMOND TIME
S«a Our Fine Selection—

priced

from

flfj
IV up

C. B. HODGES
DIPSNDAILK JEWELER
MASTIN9B, MICH.
FMONE 31)0

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, JUNE 4. »3e

STITE S FUNDS
SOCIAL
DOttST SCHOOLS

THE PHEASANT.
INGRAM—HOFFMAN.
.
A pretty wedding took place at
the Presbyterian t parsonage on
Monday evening. June 1. when Miss
Helen L- Hoffman and Arthur Lyle
Ingram, both of Hastings were unit­ With not
ed in marriage by Rev. John Kitehing. The single ring ceremony was
performed. The bride was attired
In a dress of powder blue crepe and
was attended by Mrs. Kathryn L.
Ingram, who wore a gown of
flowered silk. Maurice P. Ingram
acted as best man. After a brief
wedding tour the young couple will
Robert T. Trtstran Coffin, whose
take up their residence at their
volume "Strange Holineu,” publish­
home on North Michigan Avenue.
ed by MacMillan, was awarded the
Pulitzer prize for poetry. It is typi­
HONORED AT UNIVERSITY.
cal of many In the bpok.
Miss Barbara Johnson of this
city, who U a sophomore at lhe
PLEASANT VALLEY.
University of Michigan this year,
The W. M. A. will meet with Mrs.
has been honored by being named
advertising manager of tl&gt;c Contem­ Z. T. Norcutl June llth for an
all
day
meeting. This will be a
porary for her junior year The
Contemporary Is a campus literary birthday meeting and everyone is
magazine published monthly by the urged to attend. All are welcome.
MLss Lois Cobb of Fort Wayne.
members of the English concentra­
tion field, congratulations are ex­ Ind. and MLss Frances Scott of
Grand Rapids spent over Sunday
tended to Miss Johnson
at Elmer Scott's. Mlu Cobb re­
mained for the week.
ELECTED D. A. R- REGENT.
Mrs Myrtle Mote of Lansing
cently honored Ln Kalamazoo by be­ spent the past week with the home
ing elected regent of the Lucinda folks.
Ed. Slater of Caledonia spent the
Hinsdale Stone Chapter of the N S
D. A. R. succeeding Mrs Lawrence week end with his brothers, Gar­
N. Upjohn. Mrs WcUsert has been field and Bert Slater.
Joe Scott and Mrs. Dell Scott
active in lhe Chapter for a number
spent Sunday with the
Arthur
of years.
Hastings friends extend congrat­ Richardson's of Freeport.
Rev and Mrs Vem Hulllbcrgcr
ulations and know Mrs. Welsaert
spent Sunday with his parents. Mr.
will be a very callable regent.
and Mrs. Grant Hulliberger.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Preston and
CONKLIN—REVNELL.
Verroll Conklin, teacher of man­ Mrs Melinda Lite, who is visiting
ual arts in the Hastings schools, al Preston's, spent Sunday after­
was united in marriage with MLr. noon with relatives at Hastings.
Mrs Mabie VanAllsburg of Grand
Elizabeth Revnell of Honor on Sat­
urday afternoon at four o'clock Mr Rapids came Saturday and took her
and Mrs. conklln retamed to Has­ parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. F Brake,
to
the cemeteries of Caledonia and
tings on Sunday and for the presHoly Comers They then met rela­
Mrs Dell Shively. 8. Church St Best tives at Caledonia park for a picnic
dinner.
wishes are extended.
Visitors at Bert Mesecar's Sunday
were Sheldon Mesecar and family
ANNOUNCE MARRIAGE.
Mr and Mrs Milo a DeVries an­ of Lansing. Wilbur Dye and family
of
Lake Odessa and Roy Kauffman
nounce the marriage of their daugh­
ter. Jeanne Alice, to Robert Brady and family of East Clarksville.
Miss Lillian Legrer of Maple Rap­
of Kalamazoo, at Fort Wayne. Ind,
on April 25. The young couple are Ids spent the week end at H W
at home to their friends at 411 Geiger's.
Rev. and Mrs Roy Houghton of
Drexel Place. Kalamazoo Congrat­
ulations and best wishes are extend- Hastings called on H. W Geiger's

EVENTS

Mias Ruth Farr was the guest of
Grand Rapids friends'over the week
, end.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson, visit­
PRAIRIEVILLE — Milo district, ed relatives in Lansing over the
Prairieville village
district. week end. ■
•247; South Pine Lake district. ISS; i
Miss Virginia Potts is expected
Calkin* district. 184; Cressey dis­ home today, Thursday, from New
trict. SIS.
York City.
RUTLAND—Al-Gon-Quta
Lake i
district, |25; Chidester district. »97; I Rex Kenyon of Lansing visited his
Tanner district. »»g; Otis district. I parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ken­
yon over Bunday.
•24; Goodwill district. |43.
THORNAPPLE — Thornapple I Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kirby of De­
troit were Sunday guests of Mr. and
township school district. •4.140.
WOODLAND—Woodland consoll- ’ Mn. Earl Coleman.
dated school district. •3.113.
Miss Gertrude Bentley of Kala­
YANKEE SPRINGS—Gates dis­ mazoo was the guest of Mn. Mary
trict. »4O; Yankee Springs district. Evarts on Saturday.
•132; Robbins district. 119.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Smith and
This is the second payment of Mr. and Mrs. Dorrance Trethric
funds by the state to aid the schools spent the week end at Blue Lake.
of this county during the school
Mrs. Pierce O'Cotfnor is spending
year which began In September and
a couple of weeks In Chicago with
will end in June.
her sisters, Dr Lydia and Miss Lil­
lian
Roberts.
ANNIVERSARY DINNER.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Potts of
Mr. and Mrs. Alonso Trim enter­
tained at dinner Monday night in Hammond. Ind., were guests of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles 8. Potts on Satur­
honor of their drst wedding anni­
day and Sunday.
versary.
Mrs. Judson Grow of Waterford
and Miss Ethel Burton of Lansing
WEST HOPE.
George Keller, one of our oldest visited Mr. and Mrs. E. A Burton
residents, passed away nt his farm over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs Delos H. Smith of
home here Thursday. He and his
wife, who died several years ago. Battle Creek and children spent
have lived in thia neighborhood on Sunday afternoon with O E. Knick­
erbocker and family
the east side of Stewart lake for
Mrs. w. L. Bhultcrs returned
many years and reared a large fam­
Wednesday from Belding where site
ily of children. Eulah (deceased».
has been caring for Mrs. Gordon
Sam, Georgia. Will. Geoffrey. Goldie
Clement, who is now convalescing.
and Dennis, all of whom went to our .
Mr and Mrs Hubert Blakney of
school. The funeral was held Sun­
Ann Arbor spent the week end here.
day afternoon al the
Yankee
On Tuesday they were in Detroit
Springs church and Interment in,
and are now here for the summer.
Yankee Springs cemetery. The be­
Mr and Mrs. Charles Fritz and
reaved family have our sympathy. I
Mrs. George Shulters of St. Johns
Mr and Mrs Ray Wells and famwere guests of Mr and Mrs W. L.
lly moved their house car over on
Shulters on Saturday and Sunday
Gun swamp Monday
They had I
Mr and Mrs Frank Robinson and
been staying with his parents here
Mrs. Mary Belle Johncock is suf- | daughUT. Nellie Jane, of Chicago,
spent the week end with Mrs Robi­
flclently recovered to have made a
trip to Battle Creek with Mr and 1 son's sister. Mrs Alcld Stauffer, and
family
Mrs James Collison and Mr and 1
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Crook and
Mrs L D Woodman on May 24 a»d
ate Sunday dinner with her grand­ Miss Barbara crook visited Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Farrell and Mr. and
son, Gordon Collison and family
Mrs.
Loy Royer ot Battle Creek on
Mr and Mrs Wm L Willson of
Lansing called at Hattie Anders' Monday.
Mrs. D C. Fuller visited from Fri­
and Harold Springer's Sunday aftday till Monday with her slater. Mrs
emoon.
Our Children's Day program will Sarah DeLong. of Lawrence. Mrs.
be held June 14 at the church. Horry Cross accompanied Mrs. Ful­
Misses Glenna Osgood and Barbara ler and visited friends In Lawrence
Mrs. Mary E Smith. Mr
and
Cimmberlain are in charge "Rain­
bow" is the theme
The children Mrs. Ray Wallers and Richard and
are rehearsing steadily and It will Mr and Mrs. Fred D. Smith and
children all of Battle Creek called
be worth your time to come.
Mr and Mrs
Adrian Johnson on Orley E Knickerbocker and fam­
moved from tile Branch Townsend ily Decoration Day.
Judge and Mrs Stuart Clement
place in Orangeville back to their
yesterday.
Wednesday,
farm here last week Mr and Mrs returned
Stanley Klmmey. who lived on lhe from Atlanta. N Y. where they had
Johnson place, have moved on the I been visiting relatives of his fa­
ther for several days.
Gun lake road near Yankee Springs.
Mrs Lynden Johncock and son
GRADUATES AS NURSE.
Junior are spending the week with
Miss Charlotte Beumer is one of
her sister, Mias Glenna Osgood, the members of the graduating class
while Lynden attends the Indian­ from the University of Michigan
apolis races. Tire twins are visiting hospital al Ann Arbor Miss char­
their grandmother, Mrs.
Zilpha lotte has made a splendid record
Morehouse
during her years of training for a
Ttie officers for the McCallum nurse She has the congratulations
school reunion have appointed the j and best wishes of her wide circle
following committees for this year of friends.
Program. Maybelle Osgood. Gertrude
Springer, Glenna Osgood; Sports,
CELEBRATES 5TII BIRTHDAY.
Russell Laubaugh. Sarah Anders.
MLw Janet Edger entertained
Robert W-lcox; Table and Tent. Ira seven little friends in honor of her
Osgood. Jim Collison; Lawn. L. D fifth birthday on Tuesday Games
Woodman, Raymond Anders: Din­ were played and dainty refresh­
ner. Mary McCallum, Nova McKlb- ments served by the hostess ar en­
btn. Hattie Anders. Maggie McKib- joyable time was had by all Gifts
btn; Pop and Ice Cream Stand. were left to remind Miss Janet of
Glenn Morehouse. Harold Springer the occasion.
Earl McKibbln
ENTERTAIN CLASS.
If you are driving thru our hills
Mrs Mabel Clark and Miss Jen­
and valleys, a trip on the side roads
will reveal scenery that is unbe- nie McBain delightfully entertained
the members of the Barry county
Heveably beautiful now
normal on Monday evening at the
"The spring fashions will be full latter's home Games were played
of eccentricities." says a style paper and refreshments served The twen­
It seems a rather ungallanl thing to ty students In lhe class were all
present.
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)

1

1

MISS FURNISH HONOR GUEST.
A very delightful dessert bridge
was given by Mrs Guy Keller. Fri­
day night, honoring
Miss Helen
Fumiss who lives al the Keller
home and is leaving soon for sum­
mer school in Uie cast Honors were
awarded to Mrs. Theodore Knopf
and Miss Emily McElwain, with a
gift for Miss Furniss. Twelve were

WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
a few of the men of the neighbor hood met at the schoolhouse. Memortal Day and raised a flag pole
With our beautiful flag floating at

l deed per cent American. We are
very grateful to those who helped.
■ Arthur Kidder is on the sick ILst
again. We all hope he will be well
। and back with iw next Sunday.
There was a large attendance at
Sunday school last Sunday. Visitors
were present from Grand Rapids,
Flint, and also some new neighbors,
tor which we are very glad The
prayer meeting Wednesday night is
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Engles. All welcome.
Schoo) will soon be out.
: Willard Kidder made a trip by
auto to the Straits and back over
the week end with some High school
friends

Pound —

25c
WE

It has required many years of conscientious
service to build the reputation we enjoy today,
a reputation built on quality merchandise,
craftsmanship and satisfactory service.

We wish to thank our many patrons who have
mode this reputation possible.
There are. undoubtedly, many people who have
wonted to buy a memorial for their family plot
and have put it off for diverse reasons. To these
we say, make an appointment NdW and look
over our fine selection of monuments, all rea­
sonably priced . . . there is no obligation to buy.
Decoration Day you probably sow many of our
monuments in the cemeteries of Barry county,
and thought you would like a similar One for
your own lot. Why not hove one? An order
placed now will insure a memento for years to
come.

Telephone 24M

IRONSIDE BROS, Proprs.

Hastings

SUMMER

Sandals tor
Coolness, Chic!

WUu SdtcHom

OXFORDS
For Growing Girls

H'omrn'i While On&amp;Strafn
Soft White
Calf
Flexible and
Flattering

Perforated in an

New Broad
Strap

Cut-Out
Continental
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tag al the Harold Yoder home
Bowne while the Yoders arc visit­
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Don Seger and Oart Seger and
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1HB COVMTYDE AT HOMS

A PACE OT EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

MICHIGAN

Editorials
WORDS VS. DEEDS

spend &gt;600,000.000 more for ordinary
expenses and for relief In the fiscal
year beginning July 1 next, than

Itl The Public Porum |j|
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Through Ute courtesy of L. E.
Bamjtt, director of the Hastings
Olvic Playw*. Uw Bannox hw baen
By Observing Tommy.
gtvsn permission to publish the fol­
I certainly gave local haberdashers lowing letter from Dean Eugene
a lot of free publicity .'last week Dgyenport:
about lhe new shirts. Hope they
don't run out of nice loud ones be­
fore I get a chance at 'em. With a Hailing*, Michigan.
fe/low like Bob corkin about you Dear Mr Banwtt:
sure have to work fast!

alonaJ. tout U all showed hard and
exacting work in training, for lhate

astounded at the quglHy of lhe act­
ing I am no competent critic, of
COUTH, but It Is a difficult play and
one that must toe carried by the actors, not by stage tricks or startling
scenery effects.
I saw the play many years ago
and its effect has remained. Tho
way In which the atenoephere of
the play was maintained from start
lo finish was nothing less than
marvelous and the way in which lhe
"drain man" approached the cli­
max was not only a piece of master
work on hte part, even for a profe*-

One would go a long way* and
pay a large price for a seat to witnesa better work by professional*
than the civlo Players gave us in
the "flarvanl tn the Housa." When
the civic Players bring work of thte
kind to our very door* we certainly
owe them a liberal Ripport.
Do not trouble lo acknowlodge
this but X cannot reetet the duty
and tho privilege of making known
something of the gratitude I feel
for work of this order in our midst.
Sincerely yours.
E. Davenport.

Gueaa my announcement of a
forthcoming matrimonial event was
not so well received. Will I ever
learn when to keep my big mouth
shut? The answer te—No!

tlonal economy. It has contributedI1 still the deficit continues in an
to the recent collapac of our bank­ I alarming amount "
Herewith te a year by year ao­
ing structure, it has accentuated the।
stagnation of the business life of' counting of the Roosevelt spending
our people. It has added to the■ record which proves that Senator
ranks of the unemployed. Our Byrd ha* reason to be alarmed:
Expenditures!
Government's house te not In order Fiscal
and for many reasons no effective
1933
... 7.105.060.065
action has been taken to restore it
1934
7J75.825.166
1935
to order.
7,678.709.874
1936
“Upon the unimpaired credit of
.. 8J72.554.370
the United States Government rest
1937
The above record does not Include
the safety Ol deposits, the security
of insurance policies, lhe activity of the sums to be spent for paying the
industrial enterprises, lhe value bonus. Year by year since Roosevelt |
of agricultural products, and the has assumed office both the deficits '
and the expenditures have in­
availability of employment
“The credit of the United Slate* creased. What would happen to a
Government definitely affects these private business that pursued such
fundamental human values
It. a policy? Nor can a government
therefore, become* our first concern avoid the Inevitable forever
to make secure the
foundation
Since about 1934 we have had as­
NATIONAL
RECOVERY
DE­ surance from the administration
that fundamental conditions have
PENDS UPON IT
"TOO OFTEN IN RECENT HIS­ been improving. If so why have lhe
TORY LIBERAL GOVERNMENTS constantly increasing federal ex­
HAVE BEEN WRECKKED ON THE penditures been necessary? Is il«
ROCKS OF LOOSE FISCAL POL­ illogical to assume that thte so
ICY WE MUST AVOID THIS called "Improvement" has merely
' been another name for government
DANGER
"We must not wait to act several spending; that fundamental con­
months hence. • • • We must move ditions have not Improved; that
with direct and resolute purpose I sooner or later we will have to be­
am, therefore, assuming that you gin cutting the cost of federal
and I are in complete agreement as bureaucracy Just as we should have
to the urgent necessity and my • • • done four years ago?
duty Is to advise you as to the
methods of obtaining drastic re­ A "DANGEROUS” EXPERIMENT
trenchment at thte time. I am not
James A Farley, we read, says
speaking to you In general terms that II would be a dangerous ex­
1 am pointing a definite road "
periment to elevate a mere "prairie
No dear readers, those are not farmer” like Alfred Landon to the
the words of Landon. Knox. Van­ presidency Jim claims that Alf isn't
denberg or other Republican presi­ big enough for the Job. Well, as to
dential aspirant*, nor are they the that, we can't say. the Kansas gov­
utterances of some reactionary "Gid ernor being unknown to us How­
Guardsman” or the conservative ever we do fee) justified In staling ।
. |
Herbert Hoover, neither are they that such an utterance ____
from Mr
the words of Republican "hirlings" Farley is. in itself, no reflection at

THURSDAY. TONS 4, 193*

1 'Round About Town

toward bankruptcy. Unless imme­
“With improving conditions, I
diate action Is taken • • • we shallI
- and nearly all other citizens, ex­
pected a reduction in the colossal
Hon dollars.
“With lhe utmost seriousness. II spending program.
point out • • • the profound effectI: “In 1937 we will collect in taxes
181.0OO.OOO.OOd more than in 1936 and

playing the role of "traitor" to their
country by "baiting" the adminis­
tration
Rather they are the words of
Franklin D Roosevelt as he was ad­
dressing the Congress of lhe Unit­
ed States on March 10. 1933 when
he still exhibited some intention,
of living up to his campaign prom-

IV. U» Spirit M • Coamualt;
T&gt;.t CouM»—Hot lu Km

During these balmy spring days
with ambition at low ebb. tl it old
chestnut about "the early bird gels
the worm" somehow comes to mind.
The historic answer is. of course,
to quote the Two Black Crows."
who cares about a worm anyway I

Tommy's perfectly willing for the
Robins to have 'em—I'd rather— was answered In a clear tenor voice
by an old man seated with hte
gulmbrl under Die gnarled vine­
trunk and lhe shadow* Of He fol­
Hope Jane Cameron got* her iage. Round and about them In a
Scotty. They arc droll little mulls. circle. In their booth* and upon lhe
doorsleiw of thalr houses, sal their
neighbors, like assessor* at some tri­
HaU off to Mrs. Becky Hodgra!
bunal. silent, motionless, and ab­
wng
Andy Taylor. 1 hear. Is already sorbed in lhe changing
Umbering up hte tongue for the fish- Through it* magic, like a shuttle
through a loom, passed lhe softfooted traffic of the street.—Prom
The local Tildens are gelling busy “A Vision of Morocco," by V. C.
with their annual Cily Tennis Bcott O'Connor. (New York: Dou­
bleday. Doran.)
Tourney, I see.

snooze anyway. Hol Hum I

and Opinions;
What Others Say

Views

WHICH KIND OF A
CITIZEN ARE YQU
Every citizen should be actively
interested in community betterment
—first, for the good of the com­
munity; and second, on the theory
that what benefits lhe community I
te of equal benefit to the individual
dome people are aggreualve and '
work continually for the welfare ,
of lhe community in which they

all on Mr Landon
In fact, when Mr
Farley talk*
Some hold back through modesty,
i about dangerous experiments and some through timidity, and others I
littleness, he Is treading on rather through a disinclination to "neglect |
thin ice. Before lhe postmaster their private affairs."
The modest man &gt;s respected, al­
general was hoisted lo office on the'
though it te to be regretted that hb
coat tails of Roosevelt * tremendous | modesty keeps him so much Ln lhe

background
The man who te timid Is to be
pitied, for his timidity is a seriouhandicap that, happily. u&gt; often
Well, the five billion dollar defiht
overcome
The modest man and the timid
of 1932 was a tremendous one—or
man should assert themselves The
so it was considered at the lime
community needs their efforts, just
However it had accumulated over t
as it receives lhe co-operation ol
a period of four years, during three I
their more aggressive friends and
of which the government suddenly tingulshed himself by the numerous neighbors
But what of lhe citizen who is
found itself in the midst of the' commemorative issues ot stamp* hr!
averse to "neglecting his private
most violent economic depression m has had printed and lhe introducthe history of our country
j Don of Tammany methods into fed­
__ _..
__ _ man who
How did Mr Roosevelt go about eral politics Ail of this, no doubt. makes a commumiy. or is he merely
ohe who profits from the commun- !
checking our headlong gait on the
road toward bankruptcy’” Well here fence of the bigness and littleness Ity that others make?
The man who Is too busy with
are the budget director'* officul fig­ of his fellow men!
ures for lhe past three year*
‘ Four years ago there were Demo­ community betterment may be pos­
sessed
of many of the good quailtle*
crats aplenty who were willing to
Fiscal Year
Deficit
usually found in mankind He may
, admit that Franklin Roosevelt was
1931
S3 989 496 035
,w
be tll*uo
highly ttspriwu
respected vjr
by IIL.
hi* Iirnilneightheir weakest candidate—Now he i* bora. and his honesty and integrity
3575J57.964
I their popular choice for a place i may be beyond question
1936
3 729.000.WXI
But no community can thrive on
| neighborly respect and honesty and
In brief Mr Roosevelt's answer fore entering the presidency Mr
। integrity alone. Aggressivenes* I*
RooMvait's public record wa* not a.
tr»|UHCX1 it
,, a
„ commtmity
V„M,nu&lt;&gt;»,
■ reqirtred
would not
distinguished one— | slip backward instead ot pressing
clt by some ELEVEN BILLION dol­ particularly
lars and this doe, not Include the
Every man owes a duty to tnc
two billion required lo pay the bo­ eat but mediocre
community in which lie live.- and
nus.
It is really exrellcni humor indeed , that duty should be performed even
The question for the American wlien a man like Mr Parle? who i though it entails an occasional per­
people now to consider u If a def)
holds a cabuiet position in in
.
cit of five billion, tn quote the word.- ministration that is experiment
of Mr Roosevelt "Ha* contributed minded plus, objects to a certain
to the recent collapse of our banking individual on the grounds that hl*1
structure, has accentuated the stag­ elevation lo power would constitute '
nation of the economic life of our a dangerous" experiment Jim has ।
b, .Me «. m.n, experiment. I
“»“«
"“"“J'
people; has added to the ranks of
I too busy with his own private afthe unemployed." is it not logical to have been tried that one more (B|rs- u&gt; atd in community better-;
expect even more terrible com*., shouldn't phase him in the least. || ment Hr should not expect other’ i
quences from an accumulated deficit
। to do al! of lhe community work j
while he reaps his share of the '
in excess of sixteen billion? How
J benefits
can Mr Roosevelt reconcile his ac-,
°
r
1 He should respond In kind
tlons with hte words’ to get a nt"Most of lhe men who whistle at Paw Courier-Nonhener
tie immediate stimulation ol circu-' their work are big man " Yeah; It
lallon. so to speak, te he not leading takes a big man to get away with
US pel] tnell toward the biggeit j It —Sall
Lake Dtwrl
Evening
WUEr OBSERVATIONS
headache we have ever suffered? News.
“I just play my own game and
Remember, deficits do not pay,
_______
never think about the other fellow "
themselves and sooner or later a
He who dances must pay the fid­ —Horton Smith, professional golfer
settlement will have lo be made dl*r. the waiter, the fiorUt. lhe
"Il lias ever been the mistake of
What will happen then? The pros- checkroom attendant, the doorman, ardent reformers to go too far and
pect te oertainiy far from reassuring
the taxi driver.—Louis Aills
Th|» te the burden we are bUthely Messenger.
"The way to make things hum te
passing along to future generation*
by paying good wages and keeping
And how ha* the Roosevelt Ad­
prices low "—Henry Ford
York office and talked to each other
ministration proceeded with it*
by telephone round the world are
...Govemmc.it
.... ............. ............
. ......
"The —
Soviet
cannot
promise lo reduce the enormous considered lo have Mt up a new I bu,,&lt;1 on lwo opposite ioiindatlons.
Federal expenditures?
on big socialist Industry which de­
record In circumlocution —Punch.
stroys capitalism. and on small In­
Well, to quote lhe words of Dem­
ocratic Senator Byrd from Thomae
One reason why little fellows dividual i^Mant holdings which
foster capitalist elements." Joseph
don’t contribute to campaign ex­ fiighn.
.
1 am astontelied Lo dtecover, and penses is because you can't expect
"I never did see any sense In or
I thiuk uwar will share my feeling, much ot an office for
Lx»
poaslbtlitiM for refueling in the air "
that the Administration proposes to Angeles Time*
-Wiley Post.

personal popularity, about his most
notable achievement In public serv­
ice was membership on the New
York Boxing Commt&amp;slon—and the
reputation of that commission was
never any too savory Since he has
occupied a position in the presldential cabinet Mr Farley ha* dis-

rungent Paragraphs

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

A Quotation
THF. intent and not
lhe deed is in our pow­
er; and therefore, who
dares greatly docs
greatly.
—Brown.

20 YEARS AGO
After several years of .suffering.
Mrs Eten Pennock one of lhe most
widely known pioneers of this coun­
ty. passed away at lhe Pennock
home south of town
She was in

itizena.

I I EAT affects black
1 1 more than horses of any
other color, it is said, which
bodes ill for some of the can­
didates at the coming G. O. P.
convention.

The girl of Bonda Porjos. in
southern India, applies fire to
the back of her chosen man. If
he yells, he’s rejected.
The
American girl shows him hb
mother- in-la w - to-be.

That Oklahoma deputy
sheriff who, to give his blood­
hounds practice, daily otTotf a
prisoner his freedom if he can
escape the dogs, may find that
he's also training prisoners.

!
I
1
|
'
I

'
'
I

I
i
i
!
।

jHirticularly

that the attractiveness of the city
deer park ha., been increased by the
arrival of twin fawns, increasing
the herd to five The little fawns.
male and female, arrived on Tuesday
Miss Thelma Burch was one of
the graduate* of lhe Grand R-tpids
Kindergarten Training school last
Friday evening
There will be an ice cream social
nt Bert Clinton's in Rutland, known
as the John Kurtz farm on Friday
evening. Jun" 0. for the benefit of
the Rutland Union Sunday School
Mis* Winona Bennett wa* hoslcss at a delightful bridge party Sat­
urday evening. May 20. complimen­
tary to Ml** Florence Hoes, thirtyfive guests being present
Melvtn R owin. aged 50 years,
formerly publisher of the Delton
Graphic died suddenly of heart
disease on May 21 in Tulsa, Oklahorns
The body was buried in
Galesburg on Thursday

The Netherlands' Queen Wil­
THIRTY YEARS AGOhelmina ordered that she no I The social affairs ol the past week
longer be greeted by shouts of ) were very pleasantly looked after
"Houzec." the Dutch equiva­
by Mr and Mrs J. H. Dennis who
lent of the Nazi "hell." May­
entertained a Large company of
be she’d like t^e American | friends Thursday night at a six
o'clock supper followed by rising
“hiya.
pedro On Friday night a musicale
tailored the supper in which Mr,
Troxel. Mr Wallace mLm.cs Ream.
Osborn and Smith participated
Charte* Bowne left Monday- for
Lacota. North Dakota, to enter a
bank there as cashier
Will Andrews has purchased of
Jonn Craig what I* known as the
Cole farm just north of the city
limits
Dr and Mrs O W Lowry started
unrwt alu-jyi oWigr. but u&lt;
Saturday for Boston where they
slu-*&gt;* ibcult obligingly "
will attend the meeting of the Na­
tional Medical Society They will
al*o go to Chester Pa where they
will attend the commencement of
the cheater Military where their
son George will graduate
der U S drill Uw, 1017.
Mrs H B Gammon went to Ann
, Arbor Sunday to visit her husband
who is not rallying from his recent
operation as yell as had been hoped

7 - First p»t«ni on bicyck tire

Crumbs of Wisdom

FORTY YEARS AGO.
Mrs Rachel Bailey left this week
for Albion. Marshall and Battle
Creek. At lhe latter city she will
address a big L O T M.. meeting
■on the fourth.
|
Mr and Mr*. Chester
“
"
1
1 Mrs Mary T
Goodyear.
_____
. ____
Carrie M Goodyear, Mrs Edward

Colgrove and lhe Mimes Grace
‘ Messer. Gertrude
Bentley. Mary
powers and Olive Lathrop attend ed the Truman-Ferry wedding at
j Nashville yesterday
; The Decoration Day exercises
| were greatly marred by the IncleNEWS GLEANINGS.
l ment weather, and the program
There are more Smiths. Johnsons, I could not be carried out as planned.
Brown* and Williamses in the Unit­' The address was given in Parker’s
ed Stales than there are people inI1 hall.
Chicago
•
MIm Maud* Trego, for the past
year an employe of the- Banner ofThe United Blates paid Out MO - 1 fire will be marriad thU evening to
814.723 in civil war pensions In the
Mr
Charles Gardner at the tetter s
1934 fiscal year.
| home near the city.
j
Over a half mile of good road
msil
U has been tuade on the sandy slreteh
east of Quimby, if the people who
used for boxing pord parts.

Way of Our World

gratulated upon having m good •
manager and critic and above al)
the community te to b« congralulat-

and willing to b«atow the work nec-

Mr. and Mrs. William Potend and
son of Grand Rapid* called on Mr.
and Mrs. John Kollar Sunday
night.
LuolUe Smith accompanied her
steter and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester OuekM. of MiddtevHte to
Detroit Saturday to we the bull
game, returning
home Sunday
' night.

SOUTH BOWNE.
Callers through the week at Will
Mishler’s were Mr. and Mrs. Josie
Roush of Charlotte. Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Parker of Battle Creek. Mrs.
Vivian Walton of Freeport. Mr. and
Mrs. John Mtehler and Oorrine Mar­
tin and daughter of Grand Rapid*
Jake Ruckle returned to his home
in Grand Rapids Wednesday after
spending the past two weeks visit­
ing friends and relatives here.
Visitor* through the week al Jen­
nie Pardee's were Mrs. Glen Burk
and Essie McVean of St. Johns. Mrs
Maude Manna of Traverse City. Mr.
and Mrs. Buell Sisson. Mr. and Mrs
John Krcb* of North Bowne. Mr
and Mrs. Arthur Parker of Battle
Creek and Vivian Walton of Free­
port.
'

ON THE AMALFI DRIVE.
One thing about tennis aa a sum­
We drove from Sorrento to Amalfi
mer game, it gives you a swell
in a motor car driven by a happy
natural swing with a fly swatter.
Italian who cared more for speed
I see that shorts are beginning than for scenery, of course he
to make their appearance on the would slow down now and then
courts—among lhe male players, when we asked him, and he did stop
that
is—the
feminine
racquet three or four times to let us enjoy
swingers have had representatives some especially beautiful view, but
In the scanty attire for several It was easy to see that glorious road
did not mean io him what It meant
seasons
to us. This morning Snug and I
were talking about our next trip to
But men arc so demmcd modut
the Mediterranean and we agreed
that we'll repeat that drive, but
Tommy approves of short..
we'll pick out the slowest horse­
drawn vehicle we can find.
Clarence Prey and family of In­
Hehl Heh! Heh; But I'd never
Sometimes I think we arc all diana visited the week end at El­
have the nerve to expose my bandy traveling too fast every day lo see i mer Shaffer s. Abe liar taler of Pairlimbs to public gaze Too many and enjoy the beauties along the 1 view was a guest Sunday.
-pointed remarkers' in this little road, we rush by tn swift motors, I Mrs. Lydte Karc her visited from
city.
contenting ourselves with general I Wednesday until Saturday at the
impression*, when we ought to be Lew Beeae home.
You can't blame some of 'em walking and sitting down on a con­
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Whitman visit­
though
After all. as my good venient rock now and then to relax
ed the past week with their daugh­
friend Abe will tell you. it pays to and let the detail* speak to us with
ter near Belding.
adverttec.
their tiny, silvery voices
Eleanor
Miller. Marlon
and
Snug and I walked for a mile
along the Amalfi Drive and that was Jennie Pardee. Mrs. John Watts
the finest part of the trip. What a and Helen Johnson accompanied
pity It was we had lo hurry to our Henry Johnson lo Grand Rapids
destination! What a pjly It 1, we Tuesday
Mrs. Mattie Mishler accompanied
all seem to think It so neoesary to
ELEVEN HUNDRED YEARS OLD rush frantically to our destinations! Vere Carter and hte pupils of tho
When
will we learn that every desti­ grammar room to Grand Rapid,
Twice I traversed this city al
Friday
on a sight-seeing trip.
night; the dim. incommunicable nation Is only another starting
Mr and Mrs Wadell of Kalama­
world of a society that te eleven place? Let us enjoy ourselves lei­
hundred years old. All those scenes surely as we travel along —Thomas zoo spent lhe week end with John
and Incidents that trad roused my Dreler, Ln "Sunny Meadows." (Bos­ Blocher and family. Lewis Herzel
and family of near Woodland were
pity or my oonlempt. or merely the ton: Stratford.»
Sunday visitor* there.
conviction of my own superiority,
SOFT AS A CLOUD IS
were softened and enveloped in the
Mr and Mr*. Art Rlchanteon had
YON
BLUE
RIDOE"
mystery of shadows, the kindly Soft as a cloud te yon blue Ridge— as Sunday guests Joe and Dell
gleam of lights and tapers The neg. Scott of Clarksville. Mr and Mr,
the Mere
। lect was forgotten, lhe decay passed
I Jud Kingsley were callers there SatSeems firm as solid crystal, breath­
unseen
lurday p. M
less, clear.
I went on as tn a dream through
Callers at Chester Richardson's
And motionless; and. to the gaaer's
the
soft-footed multitudes that
■ Bunday were Lewis Herae! and fameye.
crowd the narrow ways, barely
lly. Mr. and Mrs. otto Donnoley
escaping from being trampled un­ Deeper than ocean. Ln lhe Immen­ | and Mrs Althouze of Vermontville.
sity
der foot by lhe mules that came
with their
flapping cars,
thdlr Of Its vague mountains and unreal
sky l
shuffling gait, their great brown
bodies, round dark corners, brush­ But, from lhe proceas in that still
retreat,
ing lhe walls of the houses I heard
Turn to minuter changes at our feet,
the client of subterranean waler.,,
Observe how dewy Twilight has
and I saw in the dimness lhe swiftly
withdrawn
revolving circles of the mills; I felt
1 The crowd of daisies from the shav­
the blast of the heated furnace, and
| | By ELMO IUTT WAT«W | |
en lawn.
lo! there was a lad feeding the fires
of a hammam with wisps of straw; | And has restored to view ite tender
I
green.
I stood aside, my back glued to the
WASHINGTON “ASSASSIIT |
That, while the sun rode high, was
wall of a house, where half the narlost beneath
their
dazzling
sheen.
U/^KOIICK WASHINGTON, an
brushwood collected before a bak­
—William Wordsworth. Poem,
auaalD . . . ImpoaalUar
er's oven, while a crowd of humble
juu uelala. But It’s true. Wubpeople on hte doorstep came forward
Admirers of Landon call him the &lt;ngt«n blmaalf admitted Itl
one by one, each with hte ioaf to be
baked at lhe price of a farthing. I Kansas Coolidge. It te not believed,
on May 28, 1TM. hl* Virginia Blhowever, that the Governor will
came Into a wider place where
lltls ftiada a *urprlse attack an a
streets meet, where, under lhe vine­ carry out lhe Calvlnlan policy of । party of Frenchmen at Great Moadnot choosing te mn
clad roof that converts this crossway
| "*• In '‘•stern iteqiylvanla. They
into a parlor stood a singer singing
killed ten. Including th« leader, OouROBINHUE PARK.
of old days of war between Moslem I
Mr, Bert Springer and son Jack, | l&lt;&gt;u da Jiimnnvllle, and took twenty*
and Rpanlard amidst the hills of
MT. and Mrs Harvey Kollar of Flint । -uie priaonera, who claimed that
Andalusia.
. Each verse he sang
spent Ssturday night with Mr. and Juntnnvllle was an envoy sent to
I Mrs John Kollar and Harold also wurn the English off the Froncb
have to pass ove^ that street would | called on their father west of Mid­ temte
Since Enginnd and Franca
show the interest that Bootl McIn­ I dlevllle.
Ralph Finkbelner and family of were not al war, they Bald tha at­
tosh and George Bcott have the
tack was a violation of internacharacter of that road would be 1 Middleville spent Saturday night
paper* found at tha'
and Sunday with their parents. Mr. tlonal taw.
changed in less than a week.
thua proved that they were alao'
There were 13 candidates to take I and Mrs. Julian Potts.
lhe examination for lhe naval ca­ I Mr. and Mr*. Wright Clifford and scoutz for a French force Mat to
son
Nelson
and
Mrs.
John
Kollar
«Mve
the
English
away.
I
detship in this city Wednesday.
Five weeka tetar, that force, earnJames L Ackerson of Middleville I wgre in Hasting* Friday.
proved the beat qualified according ' A number from this way attend­ mended by Jutnonrllle’a hrother,Qmto the results of the examination ed the exercises al the Grove in l»u de Vllliera. besieged Washing­
His standing was between 97 and Middleville Memorial Day.
ton* llitla army at Fort Necaaaity.
Mr and Mr*. Wright Clifford
98 out of a possible 100
However. Washlnglon held out onspent Sunday afternoon with Mr.
FIFTY’YEARS AGO
and Mrs, Arthur Fenders of Yan- til a demand for eurrender wsa tat
Into writing.
Hastings for a few weeks will be km sprmg*.
It W&lt;8 S anger, rainy day and
the Mecca of the wool growers of ( Mr and Mrs. Earl Robinson and
thte and adjoining counties
family spenf Bunday with Mr and the French note wga “written la a
J. H Dennis says he will keep the
I M&lt;i hand an wet and blotted pa­
postofficc open on Sundgy when he ■ A&gt;‘« Landis returned to school I |&gt;rr.“ In It miler* twlee stated that
becomes entitled io affix "P. M." U&gt; Monday after being abeent with the French were not attacking the
his name.
throat trouble.
English, hot were punishing “L’qz-I
Mr» Omar Ward and children
In Saturday's ball game between I
MMnoi du Sieur de JuBonrlUe."|
Detroit and Philadelphia it wag a and mother. Mr*. Eva Manker of
Thte was read lo Washington by Jason teat between pttchera Baldwin
*"b Ven llraam. a Dutchman, who
getting the belter of hie opponent,
Casey. It took 14 innings to decide
the game which resulted tn a score
Mrs Julia Nualff and friend
Mabie Alia* of Grand Rapids were hiKtun signed the article*, with that
of 3-0 in favor of Detroit,
Married—at lhe bride s heme In dinner guest* aunday of Mr and
Mn John Kollar. Mr. and Mr*.
Oldman of Bellevue. Preston K. Kollar returned lo Grand Rapids tation. but the French, who
Jewell and Mtea C Belie Tompkins and ipNit the afternoon with thorn
both of Attfrte.
Mr. and Mr* Pred Roblnatxi and •Wtoma Alhtan." aelaad *pon tha'
daughter Mary. Glen Robinson of
'juung colonial officer’* “confe*aX*v|
sen of Heatings. He will al one*
•eminence the erection ot a raai- day after attending tbelr mother. &lt;f Played no email part In brtMtea
‘on Iba Horan Voom- h -_
ihiMrgl Wcdaooday.
dence on W. Green Bi.

From Our Scrap Boot

Tremendous
[1 Trifles H

�TH» BA1T1H0I BAXXU, TKVMDAT. m« &lt; UM

ClftTBBS

Organizations

SHOP

Bunday

isrta

EM JOY

The Petunia oircls

father.

SUMMER&lt;
Let This Store Take Care of Your Summer Needs. Few stores in

cities the sixe of Hastings have as complete a stock of merchandise
fur Men and Boys as we are showing right now!

Hara's News, Man!

• BEAUTIFUL!
That's What They Soy
About the New

PURI WOOL

[BATHING
TRUNKS

Bathing Suits
for tha Ladies!

■UILT.IN surrorr

GORGEOUS COLOR
COMBINATIONS

98* ’I50 ’1”
SEVERAL COLORS

And all
ONE

And Here's a REAL Bargain!

ONE PIECE SUITS
FURS WOOL—Vi PRICE
Plenty of Largo Sixes, Tool

Deep Tone Shirts
DUKE OF KENT COLLARS
To wear with light suits, or for coalleaa days with
light slacks. Wear a light summer tie and you will
have the correct ensemble for bummer days. Deep
Tone Shirts in navy, deep green, cocoa, win

98c
FOR BOYS. TOO . . Deep Tone Shim.
Duke of Kent Collar*-, sixes 12 to l4!/2—

-»Qc
I W

WASHABLE SLACKS
Light, medium and dark colors. Over 700 pairs lo
choose from. We fit them all—Mitall Iwys to men
of Mi waist. SANFORIZED SHRUNK—

98c *r9

Clreh Ko I 01 Uw M. B. Aid WlU
hold It* annual Birthday dinner at
the home of Mr*. E. A- Burton. 905
B. Jefferson at 6 o'clock. Thursday
evening, June 4th.

Kenneth Buehler at Grand Rapid*

Mr. and Mr*. 8am Vanderwood called at the Edw. WrtUribtiome

Bunday.
Ml** Ruby Vanderwood Ql Kxla-

who will
Mr. and Mr*. Clarence "Williams
Saturday and Bunday with
father at Pullon, Ind.
and Relha Robinson.

Pythian Bister* will observe Past
Chiefs' Night Tuesday evening, Ulned her *i*ter and family from Kalamasoo were Sunday guest* ol
June Sth. The regular meeting will Cleveland. Ohio. Saturday and Sun­ hl* parents, Mr. and Mra. Clair
Y*iter.
be preceded by a pot tuck supper day.
Mr. and Mr*. Robert Barnes and
In conjunction with lhe arrival of
All members ar* urged lo attend —
children look an auto trip north the cicada, commonly but wrongly
over the week end.
called the “Seventeen Year Locul."
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gaskill of Com­ read that stork* coming In great
Townsend plan maeUng Friday
evening, June S. a o'clock. If weath­ slack were guests of Mr. and Mr*. flock* from Europe had solved
er permit*, thia la to be an "out of L. N Bush for Decoration Day.
South Africa* )ocu*t problem* The
door*" mealing It U lo ba on the
Rax Bhealhelm entertained a government's annual locust cam­
lol just south ot CoecarelU's hull lady friend from South Bend Sat­ paign costing *10,000.000 a year, ha*
urday and Bunday. They have gone been suspended
will ba bald in Ute parish house. U&gt; Lansing to spend the week, aft­
er which Mr. Sheathelm will at­
PRAIRIEVILLE.
tend a Teacher's Conference in DayMr. and Mr*. M A. Mills spent
Decoration Day with Mr. and Mrs.
DELTON.
then will visit friends in Muskegon. B. A. Mills and Dawn of West Lake,
In honor of hl* 80th birthday, the and in the evening entertained at
Mr. and Mr*.' Max Reynold* and
daughter June and H. T Reynolds family of William Leonard wlU hold their home her*, Mr. and
Mrs.
(pent from Friday afternoon until open house for him Sunday. June Maurice Crookston of Hastings and
Sunday afternoon visiting Mr and T. from 2 o'clock lo 5 o'clock P M. Leo Quick of Banfield.
Mr*. Russell Reynold* in Um mu th­
Mrs. Frank PreydJ and children
Flower.
em part of Ohio.
Mr. and Mr*. Dewey Stanton of of Northville, Mr. and Mra. W. G.
Mr. and Mr*. Donald Rogers and
Horton of Augusta, Mr. and Mra.
children of Chicago spent the week Port Huron vialted Mr. and Mrs
Solomon Stanion Sunday. There
were ealler* there also from KalaLeon Leonard
maxoo. Battle Creek and Grand family of North Fine lake. Mr. and ’
Mra. Helen Pennock and daugh­ Rapid*.
Mrs. Maurice Hughe* and Alice I
ter Naomi spent Bunday with Mrs
Rev. Bates sermon subject next Lewis, local, were Sunday dinner
Prank Davis at Galesburg
Sunday morning for all three ap­ guests at the Charles Hughes home.;
Cleo Pennock of Kalsmaimo has
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Johnson and
pointment* will be "Searching The
been visiting relatives In Delton.
Scriptures "
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Shepard spent
Mr. and Mra. Hord of Detroit
Rev and Mr*. Ralph Bate* visited Sunday at Alma.
i were week end guest* of Mr. Mur­
hte mother nt Covert. Mich.. Sat­
Mr. and Mr*. Milo Lehman were
phy and sister, Mrs. Weller.
Church services in Delton M. E urday afternoon. Hl* brother, Ru*- dinner guest* Bunday of Mr. and
church will begin at 11: IS A M In­ *ell Bates, who is attending West­ Mrs. Jake Johnson and Dora.
ern
Stale
at
Kalamazoo
returned
stead of 11 A M through the sumMr*. Kate Brigham of Plainwell
called on her *l*tcr. Mrs. F. J.
Hughes. Sunday Mrs. McBain and
to hold services at Milo at 9:30
Alex
Murray of the same place, were
THREE CORNERS.
i each Sunday.
callers on friends in town.
Mr and Mrs. George Kelley, ac­
Mrs. H T Reynolds will leave
Mr. and Mrs. Delos Hughes and
companied
by
hte
mother.
Mra.
Thursday of thi* week lo visit her
children of Toledo. Ohio, visited
sister In Missouri
Another sister, Agnes Kelley of Hastings were in Mr. and Mrs. w. R. Norri* over the
Mrs. Maggie Portlnza of Three Oak* Battle Creek on business last Thurs­
day.
will accompany her.
While we art always pleased to
Mr. and Mrs element Bisson of.
The inland Lakes Garden Club
see lhe many friends Decoration
will meet Thursday afternoon of Kalamazoo were Sunday afternoon
Day we were especially glad to meet
this week with Mrs Esther Dunn. callers at the home of Miss Clara
Mr*. Jennie Drummond of Grand
Plan* will be made for the annual
Rapids. 8 he wa* a resident here
flower show.
Mr. and Mr*. E. a Flflcld and1 for many year*, always doing some­
M. Nobles of Grandville spent family were Sunday dinner guests
’ thing nice for many.
Saturday afternoon and night with of Mr and Mrs. Bernie Belson and
Miss Dori* Hartman attended her '
hl* daughter and husband. Mr and family and in the afternoon attend­ grandfather. John Willison's tuner- !
Mrs H. P WerUnan Mr and Mr* ed Baccalaureate service* at Cen­
a) Tuesday at his home near Hick- |
C P
Larabee of Hastings were tral auditorium in Hastings.
orj' Comers
Sunday afternoon guest*.
Mr and Mrs. Arnold Malcolm and
Mra D. N. Honeywell and Mias &gt;
Mrs. Nellie Hyde of Hastings family of Lake Odessa and Mr andI Opal Honeywell spent over Deco- :
called on Mrs. Julia McBlwaln Sat­ Mrs. Stanley Malcolm of the Ryan
J ration Day with Rev. and Mra. Harurday afternoon.
district ware afternoon guests of
' old Honeywell of Jones. Mr Hon- |
Mr. and Mrs Albert Hartman and ttsclr parants. Mr. and Mrs. John1 eywell spent the time at Nlagag*
family of Gull lake visited Mr. and Malcolm on Doeoralien Day.
Falls.
Mr*. E R Willison Saturday eve­
Mr and Mrs Elmer Walters. Don­
George M. Woods. Jr., has gone
ning
na and Alyce of Ionia and Mr and
, to Howell wher^^he has cmployMrs Florence Wilkinson of Kala­ Mr#. Sc til J. cook of Lansing spent: ment.
mazoo spent from Thuraday until Sunday with their parents, Mr. and
Th*
Triple Link Club will take
Saturday with her sister. Mrs Mary Mrs. Edw. Walters. Mr. and Mra.
Doster.
Floyd Walters and Marian of Grand. up their June meeting and join
with lhe Rebekah* in memory of
their departed brothers and sisters
on June 10. Member* are expected
to attend. Please bring flowers.
Thte will be an all day meeting at
lhe I. O. O. F. hall. Co-operative
dinner.
Mis* Dunn of Bedford spent over
the week end with her aunt. Mr. I
and Mrs. Peter Hermlnett and Otis. I
Karl Smith has gone to Homer
to spend several weeks with Mr. |
and Mra Mason Miner and daugh- J
ter*.
An unusually large crowd on Dec­
oration Day. Detroit. Grand Rap­
ids. Holland. Allegan,
Plainwell.
BatUa Creek, HMtln*. Kalamazoo. ’
Augusta. Richland. Dowagiac, To­
ledo. Ohio, and the nearby towns
were represented. The
program
wa* much enjoyed The Scouts and '
school children marched lo the i
cemetery and decorated the graves
of our departed *oidlera The rank*
of lhe soldiers here are thinning out
at an alarming rate. The day wa*
ideal.
Mrs. Merritt Woods' callers Sun­
day from away were Mr. and Mra
will
Charles Walton from Bryan, Ohio,
and Mr. and Mr*. Joseph flehnurr
of Duncan lake. Mr. and Mrs Os­
car Brighlrall Clifford and Ruth
Brighlrall of Holland were Satur­
day guests
Many from here attended the
graduating exercises at Kellogg's.
Gull lake, Thursday night. Lyne
Billing*. John Jones and Elizabeth
Wood* were the graduate* from this
vieinlty Elizabeth received the gold
bar and pin for four year* on honor
roll. Lila Boniface, Junior, missed
only one period for the year, illness
If you have foot trouble—
being the cause
Arliss Csllhrop,
freshman, and Leia BBling*. 8th
no matter how painful or
grade, had a perfect horior roll rec­
long-standing—be sure to
ord for the year.
Mra. Florence Mott is visiting Mr
attend this special event.
and Mrs. William Duncan and fam­
Your feet will bo given a
ily of Kalamazoo
Midweek
services
Wednesday
Complete Test and Analy­
night. Mra. Ralph Bates will be the
sis; the cause of your dis­
leader.
Time for church services
ha*
comfort explained, and
been changed from 93* to 1O:1».
Method of RELIEF DEM­
■ Sunday school will be et 11:15. The
1 change te made on account ot the
ONSTRATED . . . ALL
I morning service at Milo.
WITHOUT GOST OR
A lovely rain last night &lt;Sunday!,
for which we are truly thankful.
OBLIGATION TO YOU!
Mr. and Mre. George Wood* at­
I tended lhe funeral service of George
KeLar Sunday at Yankee Spring*
Mr and Mr* Austin Reid of
Rlchlend were caller* al lhe home*
of Mr. and Mr*. E. R. Lindaey and
Mr and Mra David Shepard. Sun­
day afternoon.

Cinderella
•
•
•
•
•

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NO TWO ALIKE.
PASTEL SHADES
PRINTS ... PLAIN
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COMBINATION
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"O'”

♦2«
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WHITE, FLAIDS On4
INCH CHECKS . . .

SPORT WEA

GET RELIEF FROM YOUR FOOT TROUBLES
SPECIAL

GENUINE COOPER'S
|OCKEY SHORTS—

SHORTY SOX
Such on orray of colors
and plain white — the
season $ smartest colors.

Ert
QU

OUR STORE ONLY

YOU’LL NEED . . .

DEMONSTRATION
HOW TO HAVE

Visit Our Boys
Department

25‘ 35‘
Summer TIES
Light colors ore the most
in demond
We hove
hundreds ot

Comfort
NEXT WEEK
THURSDAY and
FRIDAY, JUNE
11th and 12th!
DON’T MISS IT!

.00

Seersucker Wash- OF
able Tie, —
£0

WASHABLE SHORTS—
For Dre,, or Play, 39c to 75c

For HOT WEATHER . . .

Polo SHIRTS
Thot ore cool
White,
yellow and several dark­
er shades.

TM K oread M.____

• DO NOT NEGLECT YOUR FEET!

to *2-

69e„/1

will

POLO SHIRTS ...39c to 75c
SHIRTS and SHORTS ...25c

49. 98

SLACKS______ 98c to $1.69

PLAY SUITS ..,.4tc to 75c
BOYS* COWBOY

25

STRAW HATS for Hot Days
• A BIG VARIETY OF STYLES AND STRAWS

Every One a Smart Stylo and of Durable Material.
SAILOR OR SOFT FLEXIBLE STRAWS.

Q -

iIXT.. l

&lt; ” °|2 50

O ADVICE AS TO PROPER FOOT
CARE AND CORRECT FOOTWEAR
For Your PARTICULAR FEET Is Also

Included ... REMEMBER THE DATE !

■•E-Iwatkhn
alCtOTHES SHOP

REMEMBER
Father* Dey
Sunday.
|UM Zl|t!

HASTINGS CUT-RATE SHOE STORE
“Bgrry County's Busiest Shoe Store’*

114 W. STATE ST.

HASTINGS, MICH.

BOYS’ WASH SUITS
Made from Fast Colored
Broadcloth—

SLACKS ANO SHORTS—6te

RAIN

CAPES

Soft, pliable latex rubber, fit* snugly tn car
pocket* and overnight bags

CHILDREN'S at .
50c
MISSES' SIZES ot
LADIES' SIZES at -$1.00 «n4 &gt;1.19

Shortex Hose
AU SILK

33* 50* 69*
SILK LISLB end
RAYON o»—
SHORTS and HALTERS foe
Mine* and Wohbbb

69* 75’ 89’
SLACKS ■&gt; 69&lt; M* ,1.00
JI.00 Start $»MI- QQ&lt;
•re ••* IlfMW—

Childran'i Flay Suit*

BATHING SUITS

HAPPY SCHOOL*^

present at Ahe reunion of the Aunt
Rhoda Wilcox school held on Bun­
day. A ptanlc dinner wu enjoyed
and lhe afternoon spent with visit­
ing and retailing event* of former
■imet. Member* eanw from Detroit.
svy10*^^*** ow* inwiL
«d‘wSfi&amp;. uwto*' HMUnp

03

Fran
HASTINGS. MICH.

�the

HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1131

r- I bey and Junior Blocher. The claaa 1 election of lhe following officers: ' with her people for len days, owing
HtUPORT.
the. instructors, caused gray ha^rs U. B. church was packed lo Otar•- colors were .Jade --------------------green and shell
Pres.._____
Ralph Moore; Vica-Pres..
! to Roberta's
Illness.
to Roberta
s
Mabe had no letter in last, to appear early on many heads. flowing for lhe annual baccalaure----------। teeue. Detained tn Indiana ] Now school is over for anqther ale sermon. The message was de- I pink, tlie flower. American Beauty Zona Smelker; Secy., Clayton Bur- I _We Jieard a
leigh; Trees . Neal Karcher. War-! the condition of lhe local cemetery
°Urtl^nltTll1eSdYv year Bnd “venteen of our y°un‘t livered by Rev. Fem Wheeler. Spe- rose and the ciass motto. “We pass
thl* year.
vear Every
Rverv lot was
wn« cared
eared for
this
l*°Ple have bidden farewell to F. clal musical numbers were furnish- for what we are." Mr. Carter pre- ren Roush was appointed chairman alike and with many new stones set
ed by Bruce Walters on the violin, I sented the awards to the class and of the program committee for next
too late to get a letter in
g
and old ones straightened and with
w jMper.
। Thg annual skip day was ob- and Margaret Perkins, vocal solo. ( S. S. Sease presented the diplomas. year. The program that followed nearly all graves
marked
with
r GM. Hoofier's many friends were 1 s&lt;.ned on Friday. May 22. when The church was beautifully deco- , On Thursday evening at the M. was unusually good, those taking planu and flowers. It looked the
sorry to hear that he suffered a
Overholt, Carl Livingston, rated in the senior colors, old rose E. church occurred the commence - part and lhe newspaper characters
b5‘.1 XI has ever looked on Memofractured wrist in * fall from a Russell Price and Supt. 8. G. Voor- and silver, and many lovely bou- ■ ment exercises of the largest class they represented were: Introduc­
rial Day. An effort is being made
High
ladder ai
at rua
his ouinc
home &gt;
a week ago last• nees
hees jurnisnea
furnished cars ana
and iouk
took loads queU. The subject selected
tion of Toastmaster. Ralph Moore. to hav.
MOOCT
------------ by Rev to ”graduate
,------- J .ufrom
« .Freeport
, ----- —
P
have relative,
relatives nrevirfa
provide «Ama
some &lt;nrt
sort
Bunday. This is a busy lime on the Of seniors to Detroit for the day. , Wheeler was tiie story of David school and the flrat
first class to ever Vlce.PreS
Toastmaster - "Mclnfarm and George needed both arms -me first stop was at the zoo which ! and Goliath. Invocation and bene- wear th. । tyre '-Meurice Overholt Welcome of marker for very grave. This work
the ran*
caps and
and anwn*
gowns h-r.
here. th
The
by our village council is very comclass,
composed
of
17
members,
had
l_---------••-—
right now. We wish for him a they found was not yet open to the diction were pronounced by Rev
-' Barbara Van Dyke "—Mabel Sis­ 1 mendable.
selected as their class colors, old wn
Rfipo
many
speedy recovery.
public. They visited the ------ J I Batdorf
son.
Response—"Pop Eye"—Mar- .I We notice that moat of our neigh­
The
grade graduating
Solo
—"Mntrol"Maggie Jlcas"
Jlggs" 1
" ’ Segar
Reaar
Rnln—
Th* rirwtny day* of Freeport High places of interest on Belle Isle and'
...» eighth
»•?-“rT ” J ex- rose and silver, and their motto | shall
M,ud ManM. "Dorolhr ; boring towns are providing some
grhonj were filled with activity and spent some time at Henry Ford'sereIses were heM last ^Wednesday «... "B wtut Vou H." «na ih»i_M„
method to combat the dust nuis­
evening
the -M. E. church
when
the rare
fore nan
part oi
of me
the summer vaca- i। imuuiu
famous wimgi.ow
Greenfield Village
They
--- ----- ----uu —SmjIUr.
omnict. -Dr.
UI. Brady'—
um
2 —
......- at
-........
Each member of the class had Elmer Eckert Xylophone solo-Vlr- ance. It has been repeatedly asked
lion will
will be
De required
required to
to catch
catch up
up ate
lion
ate their
their dinner
dinner at
at aa restaurant
restaurant stx young pepole were graduated
program which
was
&lt;lnla „
Maniu. "Freckles "-Howard for in Freeport and it would seem
In the proer.m
--------------- !---with sleen
sleep and restoring lhe
the energy and
and most
most of
of them
them attended
attended the i in to the high school. The mem- part in
that our tax money might well be
nr
and
v-rv
well
r-nd-r»d
Mr*
I
i.
..
....
•
bers
of
the
class
were
Donald
Walclever
end
very
well
rendered.
Mrs.
I
Norcutt
burned up in the gay whirl. Exam- I movies at either Detroit or Lan'Apple Mary"—Margaret
used to a very good advantage for
j.B, and
..lu a!) report a fine time
‘
tor1' Helena Bracndle. Dorothy Van Walters also played a trumpet solo perkins‘
inations far the pupils, grading the sing,
"Dun
Dunn" — Neal
On Sundzy
Sunday “
evening.
24. the
Patten. Edith Cramer. Velma For- and the diplomas were presented 1 K.rcher. Mrs Manns led in a clos- this. The dust is a dangerous, os
papers and checking the credits by j Cr.
~L-- Moy ?4.
/
, by Semlah Seese. president of the j
Mng u u hoped those who well as a great labor producing facschool board. Rev Fem Wheeler • failed to gH th«-e this year will ter. and one every community should
gave the invocation and the bene- sure)y come next year. Among the try to control. Let's go for a clean­
er. bettar Freeport!
d 52,on
,
.
,
, .
i out-of-town guesu were : Miss HerMuch Improvement in the looks
The usual school picnics were | mlene Bigbee of Centerville. Mr.
held this year all of them being and Mrs U. C Manns, daughter Vlr- of lhe J. W Reuter property has
held last Friday The High school glnln and MlM Welch of Traverse been noted In lhe past few weeks
(
since
Mr. end Mrs C. B. Baxter
Journeyed to Reeds lake where city. Mr and Mrs. Warren Roush
' moved there. A very unsightly
they spent the day The Grammar and Ml« Mabel OLuon of Hastings,
room under the leadership of Vere , Mnj
Buehler Snyder and shed was tom down the latter part

JUNE FOOD BUYERS
I CAN SAVE ON CUR
FOOD BUDGET,BUYING
ATC.THOMAS STORES

THAT'S GREAT
DEAR,NOW WE
CAN GET OTHER
THINGS

NEW SEASON MENUS
NEW FOODS
NEW COOKS

NEW FOOD BUDGETS
ARE IN HARMONY
WHEN BUYING THE
•C. THOMAS WAY”

C.THOMAS STORES
FRESH. CREAMY

EDNA S BEST

SALAD Dressing 23c
FIG BARS c°ooH- 3-25c
COCOA puresr“ 2 15c
LB.

CAN

BAKING CHOCOLATE

MILK

EVAPORATED

RICH, CREAMY

zer farm where they enjoyed a
wiener roost with lemonade and
played ball Mrs Walters and her
little folks held their picnic In the
woods on the C M. Benedict farm.
The Masonic Temple was
the
scene of the largest attended alum­
ni banquet ever held here last Frii day evening,
------- when
----- . nearly
------- one
- - hundred persons sal down to a delicious supper served by the ladles
? J 1
*“ J"’
nlM»d by Mr. tulph srew.n dur?? ‘il
Ing that todowed resulted ill lhe

GEO. E. WALKER
&amp; SONS
PICKLE CONTRACTS
AND SEED

following places:—

WALLACE SEED STORE.
Hastings.

CITY NATL. BANK
Nashville.
SMITH A DOSTER
HARDWARE.
Delton.

MIDDLEVILLE CO-OP­
ERATIVE CO..
Middleville.

AMBROSIA

SUNSHINE BRAND

Carter , motored
— .to Grand
,
. Rapids
■-----.
Urey visited vdrUiu piece. or
ln«rr.t Uicludlnj
Uir
».™
Hrorr SnriUl gremlioiw .nd Imperial furniture factory
A picnic
dinner was enjoyed al John Ball
ptfrk Mrs Usborne took her group

3s20

As the recommended plant-

ONCE!

LEAF LETTUCE
NEW POTATOES
BANANAS, Golden Ripe
Cook’n9

nr A C
rtAj

EAKLY JUNE
SWTET. TENDER

TOMATOES Ifft

lb. 5c
4 lbs. 19c
3 lbs. 19c

No 2
Cui&gt;

HH

?:■

Q ■&gt;!,

_

CORN OOl-Otg »X»TAM
|1 g
KIDNEY BEANS
fir
g 1
LIMA BEANS
C--^W
PUFFED WHEAT
MUFFETS, Wheat Biscuits
QUAKER OATS
large
POST'S BRAN FLAKES
Ig
GRAPE NUT FLAKES

pkg
pkg
pkg
pkg
pkg

)■
10c
10c
19c
15c
10c

MISSION INN coAX - 20c
ORANGE JUICE, Libby's
2 cans 25c
TOMATO JUICE, caw-bellb 2 cans 15c
GRAPE FRUIT JUICE
can 10c
KRAUT JUICE
No. 2 can 6c
1' 2 lb con 11c
3 tall cans 22c

KARO SYRUP “"L
CARNATION MILK

DIONNE QUINTUPLETS 2ND BIRTHDAY FEATURE

bot

PINK SALMON
tall can 12c
MACKEREL
3 tall cans 25c
APPLE SAUCE, ^VDO, 4 No 2 cans 30c

Toot

18c

LINCO BLEACH
DISENFECTS a»d WHITENS

blue suds
BLUES. WHITENS.CLEANS

3

pt««

25c

5* BOTTLE REFUND!

CLIMALENE
rSALEi«
SWEET HEART
Skin Charm Soap—

g-e
O

C. THOMAS STORES
IM WEST STATE STREET

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

The GRADING Machine
which we use. assure* ev-

We would not be the largcumber pickle* in the U. S.
A. If we did not treat the

TTpapliprc
Plan
Work
r\
•
Y7
•
,

During VHCatlOn
(Contlnued from page I. Sec. I)
Iro
deparUn.nt, u pUnnmg an interestln^lrlp lf pUu^ do not fail. Lewis
?0 Wlicontln for
*nd orchestra work. Mrs
Mabie
Clark of lhe County Normal will
ukt B Mpru at Ann Arb&lt;)r
Northwestern, because of the ex­
ceptional opportunity afforded by
the Kellogg Foundation scholar­
ships. will find quite a number en­
rolled from the department and
grades—Miss Jennie McBain. Miss
Esther Doty. Miss Anne Burton.
Miss Elizabeth Finch. Mrs. Gertrude
Wilcox. Mias Grace Edmonds will
study at Ann Arbor. MLss Vivian
Reynolds. Miss Catherine Clark.
Mrs. Bertha Kuhn, Miss Mary Wil­
liams. Mias Mabel Kell will be at
Western State. Kalamazoo George

Barlow lake as a counselor and will
be in charge of handicraft.
Miss Helen Wade, supervisor of
the grades, in company with Miss
Helen Fumlss. will leave soon for
mkevllla. Conn., where a four
weeks' course outlined by Columbia
Rev and Mrs. W S. PhUllpt of University, will be taken. At its close
Shepard, former pastor of the M they will go lo New York to do work
E. church here, called on old friends nt Teachers college,
•
‘
in Much
tlie village
Wednesday
cradh last
u
airte, ,n,“7 -”XhJ“X“t

FINE TRAVEL-TALK
ABOUT SCOTLAND

Rotarians Delighted With
Their Speaker, Rev. Co­
win ot Ann Arbor
The Rotarians and their guests
Monday noon had the •privilege ot
hearing'a travel-talk about Scot­
land by Rev. Fred Cowin of Ann
| Arbor, pastor of lhe Chris lUn
। church of that city. The club nev­
I er had a finer entertainment of that
. kind. Evidently Mr Cowin, who
lived for many years in Scotland
and who recently visited there, went
1 about that Interesting country with
I his eyes wide open. He saw the
fine things about the home life of
। the Scotch people which made his
| talk so entertaining and instructive,
i Especially Interesting was what he
| had to say about lhe villages and
towns of Scotland and about the
great men. prominent in the history
of the world, who came from some
of these little known places.
1 Tlie speaker had a fund of Scotch
stories that convinced his hearers
and added greatly to their enjoy­
ment of his talk. Among others
he told the following: "A one-eyed
Scotchman went to a picture show.
He insisted that he should pay only
half price for his ticket." "A Jew
.settled in Aberdeen. Scotland, and

mot
hfr. Mrs
Buehler ui
of
'iivuifi,
mi® Carrie
cnuic Durmci
Clodonla. Mr. Ev.rl Ardis ot Mci B„„ llowira Horrotc ol Clufc„|e mim a.ytha Loomlr or Boranac. MLv Doris Ears of Smyrna.
Miss Margaret Perkins and friend
family for the improved appearance • - —. -k— -»— •of Hastings. Roy Preston. Maurice
■"ih'
---------------------- ----Overholt and Miss Lillian Blough
-Itelr home. More .uch civic pride n
cvoiUUo„.i. and on
„„ worn . accumulale eIIough to leave the
of Kalamazoo. Miss Lillian Thaler would m«lre Frrepori . tar mon- „’udy
M1„ ttta AlUwn.
and friend of Charlotte, and Miss
'"
place”
attractive village.
MkM Jcan alerum. supervisor of,
Ruby Newton of Lansing. Letters
Four members of the Rotary Club
Miss Grace Rosenbej-ger spent the muslc and MUs ponces Conklin I,
from several members living al a week end at her home in Clarks­
The
zM-.v.
to .tte^Bay View Summer 1 sare full-blooded
r w„ ,o|e Scotchmen.
w
greater distance were read
was able to tel) many in­
ville Miss Mamie Tyler stayed with school where vgepUonal opportuni - I speaker
leri.lllng thln&lt;s aboul placea
Freeport is represented by two Mrs Geiger during her absence..
ties are ofWfed in music, that^de- gcot|and that werc well-known to
young ladles in this year's County­
Memorial Day guests at lhe home
Normal graduating class They are of Mr and Mrs. O R Lightfoot partmenl having as its head. Dean । these Scotch members of his audl. Marguerite Seger and Marion Grif- were Mr. and Mrs Elmer Light­ Patton .and other faculty members ence.
, fen
Commencement is tonight,
from the School of Music at Michi­
foot of North Manchester. Ind : Mr gan State Miss Esther Halnon of i pyi| r» pnpu i CAR||C
4
•"'I Mr,. Uhl F UUcy .nd and SJrs. Carl Heliman and son Junior High, is anticipating with .UHILU UUN. LtAUUt
Gene.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dana
Light
­
i d.Udhu-r Jo»p ol Detroit. B. L
much pleasure
nlrasiire her
h-r first trip
trio abroad.
abroad I
MET MONDAY NIGHT
Br.y ton. d.udhtcr,
Mr.
M.rvrl foot and four children. Mr and In company with her aunt. Miss |
Harold
Stephenson
and May Halnon. a teacher of South Members
ounn and her wn Clarence ol Wa- Mrs
Diacusa Topics
daughter. Sue Ann, all of Elkhart.
tervllet were week-end visitors at Ind ; Mr. and Mrs Harvey Kollar Bend, she will sail from New York
That Concern Child­
on the Aqualanla. June n and will1
the Frank D. Brayton home
Mrs Zula Springer and son of meet In England another aunt, Miss
Miss Mabel Sisson of Hastings Flint.
r,M„. M. K. Lightfoot ol
hood and Youth
ot orana
Grand Anne Halnon. who teaches there
v£o‘r ^1^.
; R&gt;P“U' Wa,Ur W,,lace and dau«“- They
will make a £p thru the , The Hasting. Child Consen'ation
Victor Sisson home and attended ters. Sopha and Jean of Hastings. British Isles and later cover many
J!f S^°Hd Va^Houten
U’n
b*n‘&gt;u«Mr and Mrs Gail Lightfoot end of tlie continental countries. Miss ‘,le home of Mrs B H. Van Houten
P A^ Thoma, transacted business son Carl. Mr and Mrs John RlckHalnon
hopes they
they will
will be
be able
able to
to Monday night.
Halnon hopes
s.huv Mich..the ftrst of the ert Mr &lt;nd Mrg Ouo
। .t
at Ashley.
A discussion was led by Mrs. Roy
Kunde, of return on the new British super
, week
Mrs Thomas
visited
her preeport.
un.( visit
—d h-r
liner the "Queen Mary" as they | Cordes concerning the history and
। brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and
Mr and Mrs. Chas Hurley of
purpose of lhe League:'which holds
Mra. John Hcintzelman of Lake Grand Rapids were guests of Mrs. have made application to do so
that
the training and education of
Even lhe Janitors are attending
, Odessa.
Hurley's sister and husband. Mr.
school and will go to M 8 C the children is at once the highest duly
j Harry Curler and family of near
and Mrs. F. E Brunner last Wed­ latter part of June for the three I and greatest reward of mothers.
I Belding formerly of Freeport, called nesday.
Mrs Cordes mentioned that some
day session held under auspices of
. on friends here lost Friday
The need ol a High whool audl- I the Kellogg rreunoauon
Foundation ror
for co.
cuslo- League circlea organised fifteen to
Maurice Overholt and Roy Pres• twenty years ago are thriving today.
| ton of W 8 T C spent the holiMrs Van Houten discussed prac। day week end here with their fam- church proved far loo small to ac­
' tlcnl methods of vitalising Circle
PODUNK.
i Illes.
commodate the crowd that gathered
life, the importance of being com­
Miss Rachel Cain of Lansing munity conscious, of keeping in
j Mr. and Mrs U C Manns and lo witness the Commencement exer­
daughter Virginia and Miss Welch cises. Many could not get in at all spent the week end with her par­ touch with our state and national
' of Traverse City were Friday afl- and many others stood all through ent.- Mr and Mrs Theron Caln
legislation which concerns child­
Mrs Amil Bauchman will enter­ hood and youth, of entering freely
. emoon and Saturday callers al lhe lhe service.
homes of Victor Sisson and A J
Mrs c B Baxter returned home tain the D D D birthday club Into discussion and giving fully of
Godfrey and attended the alumni Sunday evening from a week's visit Thursday for dinner. In honor of I talents.
banquet here on Friday evening with her mother Mrs Rose Mcden- her mother Mrs Cora Diggs' 80th j Mrs. Phyllis Long discussed things
The two young ladles were over­ dorf and her sister. Mrs B Sllmel birthday.
which can be done toward meeting
night guests nt the Godfrey home at Grand Rapids.
Mrs Jennie Ixiehr. who has been community nerds, mentioning play­
and all were holiday guests of Mrs.
Mrs Ida Myers of Grand Rapids staying in Jackson this winter, is grounds, movies, nursery schools
Manns" sister. Miss Mabe) Sisson visited her daughter. Mrs. Claude living nt her home here._w
and clinics.
of Hastings, returning to their home Waiton and family a part of last1 Joe
spent
„r „„
— Cowles
-- - of Muskegon
. —
Tlie
nextv meeting OI
of Ule
the l&lt;ra(tur
league
Sunday evening.
week and attended
the eighth ।
d al his home.
------- u’c,,
XT
.A.
, l» U&gt; be with Mrs Phyllte Long on
Mr. and Mrs Lawrence Maxson grade graduating exercises n- tlie
Mr and
-ndI Mr-.
Mrs. DeV«
DeVan’ p
Putnam
‘"
o , Monday night. June 13th
| &lt;■■&gt;»
and uhUBiud
daughter rwnuiiicen
Kathleen oi
of Lowen,
Lowell, M E church on Wednesday eve- Jackson, Mrs Jesse
Putnam
of
accompanied by Victor Sisson, mo- nlng Her grandson Donald Walton Grand Ledge and Mrs Mary Put- |
SOFT BALL SCHEDULE
1 ------tored- to Pre.
Fairmount.
----------- Ind.. Saturday. was a member of the class.
| nam of Banfleld were visitors at;
morning where they Joined Mrs.
j W
w Reuter and daughter Dotis
Doi is 'George
jcu,kc Ransom's
iwmovm* Saturday
oniuiua/
! Monday. June 8—Triangles vs.
J
i Sisson at the home ot her parents. of Grand Rapid:
aorc guests at the 1
Mr and^Mrs
and Mrs Monta
Rapids were
Mr.
IReplogle Cons Power; Bankers vs. Table Co.
Tuesday
June
Co.
vs.
Mr and Mrs R B Carter In the homes of 1 E Moore and Semlah 8I*nt Sunday with Mr and Mrs
-9—Table
••
| afternoon they were guests of Dr. Seese last week Wednesday
Cecil rOlcr
piston Ring, Ulrich Bros vs. Hi''"' ot Freeport
Stuart, president of Taylor Uni­
Eme.st Scott and Russell Black- Way
Miss Hermlene Blgbec of Centerversity al Upland. Ind
They re­ vide was a wreg end guest of Mr.
Thursday, June 11—Bibs Mach.
attended the picnic at Wilcox
turned home Sunday evening, ac­ and Mrs L B Lester and attended schoolhouse. Sunday.
Shop vs Rogers Groc ; Bliss Foun­
: companled by Mrs
Sisson and lhe Alumni banquet on Friday eve- 1
Mr and Mrs Dorr Bllnston spent dry vs Triangles
I daughter Roberta, who had been ning
Friday. June 12—Chain Gang vs.
Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Amil
: Bauchman
Feldpausch; Natl. Bank vs. Piston
Ring.
"In iny opinion, depreciating the
currency is not a suitable means for , "We are not merely exploring new
solving the debt problem "—Dr economic territory; we are occupy1 Ing It —Dr. H 8 Pearson.
HJalmar Schacht.

। &lt;“•-

&lt;»

Graduation
GIFTS
Give An

UNDERWOOD
TYPEWRITER
. . We will take your old machine in trade
either on a cash deal or you can have 12
months to pay. If you have an old typewriter

and want a new one, give us a chance to quote
our prices. Reasonable down payment if you
do not have a machine to trade in.

Come in and try the new Underwood

PHONF 2 115

�BANNER THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1*36

THE
wm

Social Events and Personal Mention
Dr. and Mn. George Lockwood
Mrs. E. A- Caukln was tn Battle
Greek on Thursday.
and their three children had a hapMr and Mra. Roy Gamer were
in Baltic Creak on Thursday after­ Hartwick pines.
noon.
Henry Osborn leaves Tuesday tor
a several weeks’ trip to Oregon and
and her son Bobby.
Mra. Malle McCollum and Miss
Mr and Mrs. F E. Hill of Grand
Rapids were in lhe city on Friday Hazel Bmslker of Fenton were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. W 8. Will
on business.
Dr. Winifred MeLravy of Grand on Saturday and Sunday.
Rapids visited Mrs John
" -----------McLravy
u
Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Wolfe and
on Thursday.
son Jack of Battle Creek and Mrs.
Reid Bassett has returned from Faber of Grand Rapids called on
Chicago where he spent several Mrs. Ella Wolfe Sunday.
Mlaa Grace Goodrich of Ann Al­
Larry Wolfe and „
Helen Gay
. , of
Battle Creek spent Bunday with ths Anne Burton. Mrs. Phyllis Rey­
former's mother.
nolds accompanied her here.
Mr and Mrs. Millon Nobles ot
Mias Charlotte Lake of Lansing
Grandville spent the week end with
was lhe guest of Mr. and Mrs D.
Mrs. Belle M Pancoast
and Mrs
Mr and Mrs Ralph Kerr and L. Christian and Mr
daughter Pauline spent Sunday in Walter Lake on Saturday and Bun­
day
South Bend and Elkhart. Ind.

Dr. and Mrs. A. B Gwinn of De­
troit were in the city over lhe week
end with Mrs. H A Adrounie.
Miss Mary Brockway of Cana da 1gua, N Y-. came Thursday for a visit

Mr and Mrs L. J Goodyear and
Mis* Mary Powers of Grand Rapids
were Hastings visitors Friday.
Mr and Mra. Clifton Watkins of
Grand Rapids were among Me­
morial day visitors in Hastings.
Mr and Mrs Charles Llctka of
Jackson were guests of Hastings
friends on Saturday and Bunday
Mrs. Cora Gebhardt had as a
guest over Memorial day her sister­
in-law. Mrs Sadie Jewell, of Battle
Creek.
Miss Helen Wade and her sister.
Miss Florence Wade of Traverse
City, visited relatives in Midland on
Bunday
Mr and Mrs c W Clarke attend­
ed a family reunion at Mr and Mrs.
WlU Kronewltter's of Middleville
Sunday
Mr and Mrs Sim Glerum and
Miss Nellie Stebbins of Grand Rapids were Memorial day visitors in
Hastings.

Mn

Elia Bush of Loe Angeles.

summer with tur son and wife, Mr
and Mrs. Harry Bush, of this city
snd with her daughter and husband. Mr and Mrs Victor Hilbert.
of woodlai 1

Marion. Mr. and Mrs. &lt;
cock and four children
Walter Heath of Chicago.

Raymond Gilbert and h
Carl Gilbert, of Musk
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
He a tli on Saturday and
Russell Cleveland

H. D Howig left' Monday for
Marshalltown. Iowa.
Mrs Anna Reed was in Kalama­
zoo part of last week.
Dwight Chase was home from
Detroit over Me week end.
County CKrk and Mrs Allan C.
Decoration Day
in Ben­
Mrs Gertrude Houvenlr returned Hyde spen^
,
.
Friday from Plymouth where she | ton Harbor,
Harbor.
had been spending a couple of . Mrs Edith Bonnell returned Sunweeks with her daughter. Mrs. G C. day from Fife Lake where she has
Butt.
| been/visiting for four weeks.
Mrs John D&gt;«r. Duainc. Joann j ix&gt;m Welti and Miss Mary Smith
and Mrs Paul Dyer of Kalamazoo ' 0J Plainwell were Sunday guests of
were Decoration Day guests of the , Mr. and Mrs. Ed McPharlin and
latter's mother. Mra Ella Wolfe, and / family,
brother. Robert.
‘I
Mr. and Mrs Robert Brady of
Mrs. J«esle Rtibridger and Mjxs t
| Kalamazoo spent lhe week end with
s. Mrs
M,. -is-uo-o| her parents. Mr and
Milo O
| DeVries.
Ramsdell of Kalamazoo on .Satur­ ।
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Densfhore cnday and Sunday
I tertalned Mr. and Mrs. Donald EuMr and Mrs. U C- Man ns, Miss 1 lar and son of Battle Creek over
Virginia Manns and Mix* Mar­
lhe week end
guerite Welch of Tykverae City
Mr. and Mrs Harold Swanson
were guests of Miss Mabel Sisson
and Richard of Big Rapids visited
Saturday and SundayMr. and Mrs. Carl Wespinter Hastings relatives and friends over
spent the week end in Detroit with the week end
Mr and Mrs Harley Tinkler of
the Carl Wespinter Jr.'s Baby Carl,
who has been very sick following East Grand Rapids were guesU of
Mr and Mrs Bert Tinkler on Wcdan operation, ti much better
nesday
evening.
Mr and Mrs Henry Kruden of
Mr and Mrs Basil Smith
of
,Bay City and Mrs Fred Smith ot
Jackson spent lhe week end here
-----»Rapids
—------on
Grand
were guests
;
, Thursday
of lhe latter*
i
, ..--------------------------------'s daughter. with her parents, Mr and Mrs
''and
-----1 husband.
----- • Mr
•*- and
---* Mrs
•
A. R. Weldon Bronson
Mr and Mrs. Lloyd DeLano and
j van Til.
son Robert of Grand Rapids were
Sunday guests ot her mother. Mrs
Carrie Montgomery
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs

Claude Bigler and Mise Eleanor
McArthur ofiGfand Rapid*
Mr and MrX Ed Monica enteriAined Mr. and Mrs Glenn Monica,
also Miss Dorothy Freeburn of Chi­
cago. Saturday and Bunday
Walter Caukln. Lloyd Lohmeyer,
Ned Rennlck and William Ransom
were in Indianapolis on Decoration
Day at the automobile races
The Rev M W Duffey. Mrs. Duf­
fey and their three daughters of
Ionia were guests ot Mr and Mrs
Bert Tinkler on Decoration Day
Mrs H. F McDowell and Addi­
son McDoweU of Holt visited Mr
I and Mrs. L. R Glasgow and other
relatives on Saturday and Sunday
Mrs. Milo G DeVries, who has
been a patient at Blodgett hospital.
Grand Rapids, for the past three
weeks Is now convalescing al her
home.
Mrs W D Campbell. MUs Ar­
, lene and Mix* Florence Campbell
! and Sally Goodyear visited in Quln‘ cy and Hillsdale on Saturday and
Bunday.
1
Mr and Mrs Fay Green vidted
j B E Winn and Mrs Henry Bill*
of Hudson over the week end. Mr.'
I Green I* a sister of Mr. Winn and
| Mrs. Bills
| Carl patent and Miss Betty P'sn। ley visited her mother. Mrs Faye
j Donley, over the week end
Mrs
Danley is very seriously ill at the
home ot her sister in Flint.
I Mr and Mra. Dell Button enter­
tained Mr and Mrs M c Martin
of Lansing and Mr and Mrs Ever­
ett Paltengtli and Marjory -of
Grand Rapids on Decoration Day
,
Mrs. Kate Rhodes of Denver,
Colorado.
Mrs
Meadla
Morley
I of Grand Rapids and Mrs Mearty
I Beareh of Lowell were guests of
| Mrs Ed Monica Monday
I George Fleming ot Philadelphia,
; Pa., who will be remembered by
1 Hastings people as the husband of
Addie Reed Fleming, formerly ot
this city, was calling on old friends
in the city yesterday
Mrs. 8 C Brock and Mrs George
Robinson go lo Jackson on Thurs­
day to attend the graduating exer­
cises. Miss Margaret Wilcox, daugh­
ter of Mr and Mrs Warren Wilcox,
being one of lhe graduates
Mr and Mra John Van Bemmelen. son and daughter. Mrs Han­
nah Hall and daughter and Mlsa
Katiter in 9 McPharlin of Grand
Haven were guests of Mr and Mra.
Ed McPharlin and family Decora­
tion Day.

ANNOUNCEMENT
The Bessmer Jewelry Company now
offers a complete and modern

OPTICAL SERVICE
Watch Repairing at Popular Price*

All Work Guaranteed

C. L. CHASE, Optometrist
PHONE 2434

HASTINGS

*

CRUE'S 1st

SPECIAL for Friday and Saturday Only
• Mis*e&gt;' and Children's
Barefoot Sandals, reg. $1.17

ZW

O LADIES'WHITE PURSES
Large Assortment

78c

• MEN'S WORK SHOES
and Oxford*, Campa Soles

$ |Z?

!C

MEN'S DRESS OXFORDS, $2.98 up

CRUE’S SHOE STORE
HASTINGS

PHONE 217S

in Lansing on
gor on Friday.
Harold Phillips is

business 1
William

spending

the Tuesday for * vtoti

until Kutuby

With Stopper
Swim Suit*

T.S.

SPECIA

PARKER

SPECIALS

COFFEE, Vocation Land
GRAND COFFEE

&lt;
\g

REALISTIC ▼
Tke UW (S ui. wsv* un»
SS. bos HOLtlWOOD
r»a u Uh tku »*»

150
1
Ceartrle

1

On...

■ XvacUi*

New Steam

HOT OIL
Treatment!*;

st MU *Slcto«t Huu step.

RIJUVINATINC

_ /

FACIAL— "

■ kaapet
an* Haztr

50c

OASNBLUX
$3.50

dnm.
FUe. Mlaxeed
-K“"
$3.50 $2.50
Olo Tone

Using the New Vup«e Nteam Anlinep
tic Oil Treatment

Hollywood Beauty Service

T/JSS1

MAKGAKKT DAHLKE and MAKGUEKJTE TEW

LICINSED
OPIRATORS

114 WEST STATE ST

HASTINGS, MICH.

PHONE UM

lb. 13c

WHEATIES

2

Why Be Out of H ork?
Learn Beauty Culture!

we un»r rar Limited
Time Only a M
8team-OU

chaklotf*.

Ed. Kurtz of Detroit was in the Chari** Karam, and other relatives.
Saginaw over the week
city on Saturday calling an friends.
Ypsilanti at Um judge
them in Kalamazoo.
Peak home Friday and
Mrs H O Hayes visited Mr. and
L. E. Holly of Muskegon Mrs Einar Prandsen ot Ionia over
Thursday with relatives in lhe week end.
vacation in Michigan with
__
. Sage
_
m uwucu, w*u_ acr, aiia aan.
Hastings.
FFrank
...
. Miss
. . Isabel
01 Cornell.
and
Sage Or
| *Boughner.
Mrs Jack Patterson and and relative*. Miss Hetmai
Miss Louise Hayes of Louisville. 1
..I,.'
. l ~ Haan nt Vi
^rssisr,-*
._
-Mrs
- mu —&gt;
ry u the eueat of Mrs Clarence , ISlted X.&lt;1
Mlkm
“ Pr
*nccl 3,“e o{ Wast .
’ ---moilier,
i
Etta
Boughner.
of
Oxford
viarencc -nxs/sum on
, Rochester
Ro&lt;;hesUr were
we
uu Sun(Uy
ouisuay.
gueeto of Mr. and mountalns about thirty-five mtiaa
Miss Hazel Henry of Detroit vis- Mrs. Ernest L- Haye* over lhe week from Bakersfield al the lltUe town
Mrs ixisy L. Skidmore is spend- ,
of Keene. This Institution to a earnIng the week visiting friends In lied her sister. Miss Elizabeth Him- end.
|
rr.
ore.
u»
wrek
end,
M
„„
d
u
„
uuy,y H
ty hospital for children suffering I
Battle Creek
Mrs Frank Bennett of Nazhvitie ! and Mr. and Mrs. Herschel MM from incipient tuberculosis. Her
Mr. and Mrs Vincent McPharlin
. ’work consUU of managing the tnatl- i
of Grand Rapids are visiting Has­ 1 was live guest of Mrs. Clarence-------------------------------------------went to Dayton. Ohio, over..the week
Goucher on Thursday
tings relatives
end. Miss Mildred Follick, who has 1tutlon and caring for ths children
Emil Tyden left Monday for Cal­ ; Richard Brower went lo Middle- been attending lhe
Bonebrake I
ifornia and is stopping at his farm i ton. Ohio, on Tuesday to attend the Seminary there for two years, re- 1
graduation
of
a
friend.
turned with them for the summer's 1
in Xowa enroute.
Gardner H Chidester was home vacation
&lt; children spend, as a rule, six
Mrs. Alonzo Trim spent Wednes­
Mr and Mrs Willard Ickes had as months or more, in lhe institution I
day and Thursday with relatives al from Madison, Wls. for the Memortal week end vacation
Nashville and Bellevue.
guests from Friday until Sunday. Igetting fine medical care from lhe i
Mn Richard Oroos and son Dick I Mrs F. L. Bauer returned on Mr and Mrs. Willard Sherman of doctors, as needed, and what to
are leaving Sunday for a three- | Wednesday from a week s stay in Pontiac. Mr and Mrs Orla Free­ very much more important, perhaps '
I Ludington and Mancelona.
weeks* visit in Evanston
man of Bentley Mr and Mrs How­ supervised rest and- care. With a
ML*s Henrietta Bauer returned on ard Freeman of Bay City and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs Maurice Sutton of
Grand Rapids visited Mr and Mrs. Friday from the National Kinder­ Katherine Swanson and son Rich­ sible to keep the buildings im­
garten school at Evanston, lil
maculate and provide a perfect
ard of Big Rapids
Otto Isenhath on Saturday
Mr and Mrs
Levi Jenson of
routine of
food and rat
for sick
Royal Bryant and Miss Lena Bry- । ----------—--------------------■----------------Miss Jane Kurtz of Grand Rap­
ids spent the week end with her Grand Ledge s(&gt;eiil the week end ant of Dowling and Miss Hazel' children. Moat of these are able to
All wool worsted short*—
I with relatives and friends here
return to their homes tn fine physii Henry of Detroit called on
grandmother. Mrs John Kurtz.
blue, grey, brown, mili­
Guest* of Mix* Angie Bates over Clarence Grohe Saturday Mr and
Mr and Mrs Herman Arold and
tary g tri pee—built-in
F. R. Thomas and* grand
' ­ ventortum. To visit this Preventorium
two daughters visited in Saginaw lhe week end were Mrs John Messi- Mrs
-support, briefer than ever
mere and son Harry of Detroit
’
’
daughter
ot Battle Creek were and see tlie happy, contented faces of
Mr and Mrs Arthur Haven and guests of Mrs Grohe on Sunday the children and the efficient man­
Mrs
Lucy Cregiow and
her
. .. with plenty of style—
............
Friday Mr and Mrs ......
Frank Bak- ner in which tlie institution Is mannephew. James, of Middleville spent Mra Erma Gardner visited relatives On
in Onondaga on Decoration Day
er. MLss Elizabeth Henry and Mrs 1 Med. U to be convinced of th*
Mr and Mrs F E Adair. Mr and Clarence Orohe visited in Woodland worthwhileness of such work. Dr.
and Fife Lake.
Mrs Manila Norton of Kalama­ Mrs Harry Young and C. H Young and Nashville............................................. . Shaper, the bead doctor, saya this
Mr and Mrs Sterling Rogers and Institution has a M per cent cure
zoo visited Mr and Mrs J F Ed­ were in Quincy on Decoration Day
family visited her parents and other j record of Its patients. They have
monds and Mr and Mrs E C Ed­
son of Grand Rapids were Sunday relatives in Michigan City,
Ind . i never had a death in the Preventormonds on Sundayguests
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Hugh
Riley
from
Friday till Sunday
। lun»Miss Hetmansperger is a
Mrs John Engle spent part of
Mr and Mrs Loren Shroyer of
Leslie cook. Larry Case. Jerry Ry- graduate dietitian from the Battle
last week in Paw Paw caring for
a friend. Mrs. Leighton, who had Elyria. Ohio, were guests of Mr and in. william Belt*der. Jr., and Rob- Creek College. She has served as
Mrs Louis Karmes over the week ert Oorkln witnessed the automobile I supervisor of the Preventorium for
suffered a severe stroke
years —
—Charlotte RepubllcanRepublican­
____
races- at Indianapolis on the after- seven years.
Mr and Mrs Guy Giddings and end
The smart skipper Sport
Tribune
Mr an« Mrs Warren Carter vis- ' noon of
Mtis Katherine Giddings
visited
shirt with cord laced
''......
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert W
Mr and Mrs Frank Giddings of Ited their son in Saginaw and also! GuesU
,
visited,
In
Bay
City
over
the
week
1
Cook
over
the
week
end
were
Mrs.
INITIATE
SEVENTEEN
front—Corduroy weave,
Lake Odessa on Sunday
AND
INSTALL
OFFICERS.
|
Winifred Pryor and son. John, and
MLss Alleen Isenhath. accompan­
plain color. We have
Mi ond Mrs
..
_
. .
Clifford
Squibb
of Mrs. W C. Kent of Lansing, the latThursday, May 28. the Alice V.
ied by Miss Alice Emmons of Grand
many other models also.
-------------- of Mr and
remain* ,or
w«ek.
guests
Murphy V F W Auxiliary of Bat­
Rapids, spent lhe week end with Detroit. were
l Mrs A D McDonald over lhe week : Mrs Jennie McElwain of Lansing tle Creek initialed the first class of '
Mr and Mrs Otto Isenhath
65c to $1.25
1 and Mrs Clement McElwain of De­ charter members for Hastings Post j
Mr and Mrs Dwight Beasmer of I end
There ,
Detroit spent the week end here | Miss Margaret Merrick was home troll wore Saturday guesU of Mr and installed the officers
from
South
Haven
on
Saturday
and
and
Mrs
Jason
McElwain,
the
for
­
were n initiated.
with Mr and Mrs Albert Beasmer
I -pent Sunday in Kalamazoo with mer remaining for lhe week.
The honorary guests were Mrs. I
and at their Gun lake cottage
Mrs Ruth Baine had as guests Musser. State President from Kais- j
Mr and Mrs Albert Hubbard ot
Mr and Mrs Robert Moore o! Memorial Day her aunts. Dr Lydia mazoo; Marie Brady. State PreslDetroit visited hu mother. Mrs.
Roberts ----------------------------------Miss Lillian Roberts.---------Mrs. dent of the Spanish American War
and Mrs ..
Alice Hubbard, and Mr and Mrs Kalamazoo visited Mr
James Langston on Saturday and Blair. MLs Ruth Blair, of Chicago. Veterans, and Mrs. Mary J. Miller,
Roy Hubbard over the week end
। Dr and Mrs Ladd and Mr. and Gold Star Mother of this Poet. Of -1
Dr C s McIntyre and Mrs Bunday
Mr and Mrs Emerson Stauffer j Mn Robert Campbell of Martin
fleers installed were; Mrs. Emma,
Charles McIntyre. Jr . and daugh­
Mr.*. C- M Overstreet of Detroit Paton. Pres.; Mrs, Mary Mathews. ।
ter Bonnie carne yesterday from were in Lowell Monday to attend
Ann Arbor for a visit with rela­ the funeral of the latter» cousin and Mix* Alice Bales of East Lan- Senior Vice; Mrs. Mllcfred Platt.
Ml«.s Eulah Layer
I sing visited their mother. Mrs. Junior Vice; Mrs. Ella H- Bush. Sec- I
tives.
Mr and Mrs Robert McGowan of1 Alice Bales on Saturday and Bun- retary; Mrs. Edith Waite. Treas- 1
The Rev and Mrs Karl H. Keefer
and family, including the twins. Lansing were guests of her parents, dav Mrs Overstreet remained for* urer; Mrs Ruby Wood, chaplain;
Mrs. Flossie KuempeL conductor;
David and Lyndon, of Watervliet Mr and Mrs DHI Shively on Sat- a few days.
urday and Sunday
Mrs Jack
“"**■ “
Snyder
"*
of
* “
South
**" Has-' Mrs. Elma Cry*n guard; Trustees.
her
sister.------------------Mrs Fran- Mrs Roy Russell and Mrs. Eva
MLss Esther Halnon. Miss Mar- tings
- — visited
-------- ..
. --------Angell on Saturday
DeMeyer and Miss Mary ’ ces Carl, of Middleville from Thurs- Tinker; Historian, Mrs. Andrew
Mr and Mrs H S Amerson of garct
1
Chicago vLMted their daughter and 1Cnmpbell spent the week end at day till Saturday, then going to visit Matthews; Patriot instructor. Mrs.
her daughter and husband. Mr. and Florence Burch.
husband. Mr and Mrs E H. War- 1their homes tn Kalamazoo
Donald Goucher accompanied by 1 Mrs Earl Kermeen, of near OaleIng. over lhe week end. Mrs Amer­
group with many I
a fellow player in the orchestra, vis- donia Saturday night and Bunday
Floy Bechtel. Mrs
Sylvia Tkgg,
son returning today. Thursday
and all sizes.. F
Mrs
Beatrice-Knapp
itod
the
former
s
parent*.
Mr
and
.
.r and daugh- Mra. Lulu Clark. Mrs Emma Bush.
Mr and Mrs F J LaMastcr. son
David Donald and Mbs Beulah Mrs Clarence Goucher, last Tues- l«r Elaine went lo Detroit Satur­ Miss Catherine Loftus and Mrs
$1.39 tw $2.95
day
1
tiny
wticre
Mrs.
Knapp's
eldest
Mary j Miller An enjoyable cafe­
Severance and Barbara Van Dyke
Mr M E Whistler and Harold daughter. Mrs. Howard Miller, of teria lunch was served about 100!
of Detroit spent the week end at
the home of Lemuel Severance
j and Mary Claybaugh of Toledo.] Buffalo, met them. Elaine returning partaking of this. All had a fine i
Mr and Mrs L Severance and |'Ohio, spent the week end with tfiejhome with her sister to remain time.
daughter Miss Loti, go to Ypsl- ' latter's brother, Fred Bower, and while Mrs. Knapp is attending the
1 summer session
•
—--—
at —
Ypsilanti.
BRININGSTHDIX—TRAVER.
I
lantl Friday arjd on Saturday will family
Fred L Robinson and family
and
Mr and Mrs Lloyd Valentine vis____________________________
.____
Miss Dorothea Traver, daughter
drive to Michigan City. Ind. for a
end with their | Glen W Robinson and family re­ of Mr and Mrs. Edwin C Traver, ,
Phone 2396
lied‘ ovei lhe week
______
few days' visit with Mr and Mrs 1 "
daughter and' husband.
'
Mr
*
and turned on Monday to their homes in became lhe bride of Eddie Brt.i- I
W O Frey
Mr and Mr.* Uhi F Utley and Mrs g F Abieson. who live near Newark. Ohio, having been called Ingsthull. son of Mrs. Mary Brin-,
I here by the sickness and death of ingsthull of Ann Arbor, at a cere- I
daughter Joan of Detroit visited Ann Arbor
Mrs Glenn F Smith of Grand I their mother. Mrs Kate L. Robin - mony performed by the Rev. C. M.
Memorial day at Mrs Lillian Llch- '
Conklin at the parsonage, al one
ty's
Miss Verta Culler, sister of Rapids will be tn Hastings tomor- ■ son. of Middleville
row
to
attend
the
Commencement
Roy D. Snyder of Memphis, Tenn . o'clock June the first The single
the latter, who has been living in
exercises of her niece. Miss Hazel
ring ceremony was read, the couple
Detroit, returned with them
NOONDAY LUNCH
. Don Karcher, of near Freeport, last being unattended
Miss Verta Culler of Detroit. Mrs Rexine Downing
Judge and Mrs R R McPeek are weekDecoration Day guesta of Mr.
Mrs Brlnlngsthull is a graduate
Lillian Llchty and Mrs Daisy I.
Skidmore spent the week end with on a ten-day motor trip lo Wil- and Mrs Karcher were his sister of Hastings High school, and be-,
DINNIM
ana ,. Uamsburg. Va
and will visit Ken- and
husband. Mr. and Mrs. Will fore lier marriage was an employee
their MVM*«.
brother. Diuvr
Bruce vuucr.
Culler, and
3:10 t&gt; 7:10 P.
Mrs H
JKrans. at theiatter’s'
tucky friend.* en route They will Mooney of Detroit and Mrs. Elmer of the Sherman Manufacturing Co
; return by the Shenandoah valley | Gillespie and children of the Center of Batik Creek Mr Brlningsthuil
SUNDAY DINNIU
is a forestet with the University of
Mr and Mrs Frank Weeber and , Dr and Mrs B A Perry enter- road.
two daughters of River Rouge Mr tamed Mr and Mrs Willard Perry J Mr. and Mrs. Burr VsnHouten. Michigan
son of Midland over the week Mr. and Mrs. a L. Brown. Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs Brlningsthuil will
and Mrs. Carl Weeber and daugh- and
1
Mr and Mrs. Ellis Lake and Mrs Orville Sayles. Mr and
d Mrs. ।• make their home in
Ann
Ari
ter of Lansing and Mr and Mrs end
!
'
'
Arbor.
of Colon were guests on Sal- Earl
and—
Mrs James
J*
'
— Coleman.
-------------- Mr.
—-----Pe«t
■»'«hes and congratulation*
Renn Bldelman and daughter of family
1
,
—
Radfora, Mr. and
~' "*
Mrs. —
Clayton
’
1 extended.
Battle Creek were the guests of urday
1
Mrs
Fay
Fisher
and
Mrs
Rulh
Brandstetier
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
I
_________
Mrs Gottlieb Weeber on Saturday ,
Wood of Nashville look the bus from Kenneth Laberteaux enjoyed a din- I ——
and Sunday
Pierson Mrrlau and family of here on Monday for a trip to In­
and Kansas City. Kan.. ration Day then went to Battle,
Coldwater were Sunday callers at iIdlanapolls
'
the home of Mr* Netfle Hyde Fri­ I returning via Chicago. They plan Creek where they spent the eve-1
be away for three we«ks.
nmg at the Sky Club.
day night tier son. Rankin Hyde. to
'
and family of Prairieville were vis- |
itors and Mrs. Hyde returned with
them Saturday morning for Com­
FStOAY. |UNI 5
SATURDAY. JUNS &lt;
mencement and Memorial Day
Mr and Mr* C L. Herrick and
daughter Janet were in Bridgman.
Mich., on Saturday to visit Mr and
Mrs S A Hammer who recently
moved to Michigan from Ipswich.
S D Mrs Herrick and Mrs Ham­
mer are cousins but had never met
until Saturday
Mr and Mrs m E Nevins had
as guests Friday night hei aiatei
and husband, Mr and Mrs Edward
Siegel of Flint, and left with them
lhe following morning for Flint,
stopping at the Addison cemetery
and Adrian enroute Mr and Mrs.
Nevins will return Sunday
Mrs John Sparks. Jr. ot Birm­
ingham has been visiting her par­
ents, Mr and Mrs C F Angell, the
past two weeks. Mr Sparks came
for the week end and he and Mrs
Sparks have gone lo Chicago where I
he will take a three months' couroe '
at the University of Chicago
Recent out-of-town guest* of Mr
and Mrs Alonzo Trim were Mrs
E E. Vender and son Elwln of De­
troit, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Monday
and daughter Phyllis of Toledo.
Ohio Mrs otto Schulze. Mrs Rich­
ard Green and Mrs C R Shaw and
daughter Roberta of Nashville.
|
Under Klate Hupervision. Equipment
Mr and Mrs Allen Griffin of &gt;
Hickory Corners and Mrs. Manson
m from a grawp of experienced and
Newton of Richland were in Haswel’-knawu instructors.
Ungs Friday and visited with their '
aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Eu­
Complete Coursa
Six Month*
gene Bush
Mr. orlffin broke his
Now
To Pay
wrlat recently in a fall from a tod- I
der. and came here for medical .
ONLY $2 STARTS YOU
treatment
ie mad to (uceeoa invoat now In • profaaoioa that
y position and tsrln* )OU unllmltMl financial return*
Mr. and Mrs. C. D Bauer vUlted
leading profession for women Just th
Mr. and Mrs George Hooper of
will start you In a profession that
Campbell on Sunday
Mr Hooper
Mrs Rial Kellogg visited

boxes

SALT nw XaaaM » MM
SEMINOLE TISSUE
BUTTER, Middlevills
CHEESE, Fancy Quality

2 boxes 15c
4 roll* 25c
ib. 1

Position* are waiting-all graduate* placed

MODERN UP-TO-DATE $CHOOL

MEAT MARKET SPECIALS

LARD, Best, Pure
Ib. 12
BEEF RIBS
2 lbs.
BEEF ROASTS
tk. 1
BACON
Vi Ib. site

had tha misfortune to fall from a
ladder and break his wrist the Sun­
day previous. It Li a compound frac­
ture and lias cauaed considerable
pain
HU brother-in-law. Dr. J
W Rigterink. of Grand Rapids, ar­
rived just after the accident, so re­
duced tlie fracture and made the
injured man u comfortable m pck&gt;-

SEND ATTACHED COLTON FOR FREE BOOKLET.

ADDRESS

LaMAR BEAUTY ACADEMY
lad Floor WM Cad Bank Bid*.
BATTLE CREEK. MICH.

HU

HIN
Tdnlseae 2Af I

�■SORT

THE HASTINGS BANMKB, THURSDAY, JUNE A 1#S«

INSURANCE

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

TIBEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c.
FOB SALE—Draft berm, tram I to «
yr*, of Mt*, rood color, Aho milch
eewi. Oltnn A. Miller, mil* uertb
mil*
of Barbrr'a Corn*r«.
Ef.
FOR hale-v I'rirhi i
tier. Call at 3.13 N.
FOR HALE—Oak dinlns
■rarly comulata art o

PROTECT Yow Cweatantly

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co
MAUS
|
|
(

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

OFFICE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

।

n.lins and w
rultlyator and
r.t.i
Harry
Jolt HALF- H.

/"mil
walnut ,
,116,6 tab! .
rup
if*'tab MLlr]&gt;on,li.n
U'riKhl
Chon. 749— F2
64

GEO. M. NEWTON
K&gt;K SAIF

tv

THE CHURCHES

omt ann a word, no adver-

Our Service

Wi

Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Usbom were
contract to teach manual arts in
Sunday guests of her parents. Mr. the Plainwell high school next year.
, and Mrs. Alvin Helrigle of Fillmore. Congratulations. Maurice.
FOR
f The Fourth Quarterly Conference
Pablhhad avasr Thanda'
Mlis Augusta Hinkley returned to
al Haatlaa*. Mithtaaa.
ot t,le M- E- church will be help on her home here last Thursday after
Thursday evening. June 11. in spending the winter with her sis­
COOK BBOI.. BJUars.
charge of District Supt. L- I* Dewey ter and husband at Grand Rapids.
'of Grand Rapids,
1 M. K. Lightfoot of Grand Rapids
XIOHTY FIRST YEAR
: Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Cheney and was a guest of his brother. Gall
daughter. Donna of Howell, and tlie and family from Friday until Sun­
NORTHEAST CARLTON.
, former's mother. Mrs. Geo. Herbert day.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Decker and of East Lansing spent Saturday and
Mr. and Mrs John E. Batdorf and
son Murry of Grand Rapids spent I Sunday here with Mrs. Cheney's children of Grand Rapids were over
i rhnnh.. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Ab-1 parents, Mr. and Mrs H. W. Gosch. Sunday guests of their parents. Rev.
•i Nuh' bolt.
&lt; Charles Geiger was also a Sunday and Mrs. J. I. Batdorf
I, Mr. and Mrs. George Keller and • dinner guest.
I Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Rosser and
— —— *_
.... at- Arthur
• Mr
BU1Unci daughter Gwendolyn of Allegan
jxjtebbom 8T UNITBD BBBTHBBX
family of Hastings visited
Mr and
.uu am xne___
FOR
| Slot, Saturday
at" Or~n,HO c.ll.d
“ ’ on Mr. and were guests of his father, Percy
Saturday
Rosser and Mr. and Mra. Leon
Mr.___
and
Mrs. __
Sidney
of Mr» Gordon
Usbome
Hooshtou. Paatar.
___
_ ____
___ fThomas
________ ___
------ Mr.. and
—. Mrs.
----- ; forenoon.
FOR
•.—Hunjkj *chooi «t | Lake Odessa .and
Howk last Thursday.
10 0v moraine »’ F"44.“\rrT"?: p Prank v»n Antwerp and son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Ferguson of
Mr. and Mrs H. M- __
Boughner
.
11 OU Chn.tia
J»» vracram at S:00 Pi Joplin. Mo., visited Mr and Mrs. called on Mrs. W R. SchlfTman of Grand Rapids were guests of their
&lt;arlm.nl
loc Thund.j ...ainr »t Scott Lydy and family Sunday eve- North Irving Sunday. Mr. Schlff- aunt. Mrs. Deila Yule from Friday
Hpriqsa Chureh—BqndAT Mh&lt;x&gt;l ' nln,g' °~r»e L&gt;d&gt;' “nd famll&gt;' Of man. who has been in poor health until Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jed E. Stowe and
r M children'» n»y prosr.m 1 Irving also spent Sunday afternoon and a constant sufferer for the past
P ft
Chri.tian F.ndr.ror at (hare.
few weeks entered University hos­ daughter Anna. Mrs. Ruby Lewis,
W ASTED— To
40 *rr*
j son Meredith and daughter Helen
mile* out. v, mil. ,-iT f '*10*61.
Mr and Mrs. Frank Aller ding of pital at Ann Arbor last Wednesday.
«oil, no wr«i* land
huua*
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
near Lowell and Mr. and Mrs Frank His many friends hope he will get plan to leave Friday morning for
ir. Ilaiiinca
Writ* 'X ■‘"m Ban
CHURCH.
I New York state. They will visit an
Yorger of near Hastings called on quick and permanent relief
I auht of Mrs. Stowe at Buffalo and
FOR HALF.—200
ohl Wbil L*r
friends In this neighborhood Satur- ;।
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Sullivan are
other relatives and will then go to
horn ehickrp* &lt; h-ati
Lh«rlr&lt; l-Mk
Sunday mornlnR
day.
1 now nicely -settled In the F. E.
Phan* 747—F3.
Houghton College.
where Miss
Chceseb'rough
house
on
Cherry
Mr and Mrs Tom English and
; Ellssa Lewis la In school. She will
their son and wife of Lansing vis­ street.
accompany them home on Tuesday
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Coats attended
ited Mr. and Mrs. Pierce Saturday.
.• 11 t i ar.I i
for the summer vacation.
Mr and Mrs. Dale Quick and the Memorial Day exercises al I Mrs. Ida Howk visited her par­
friends of Battle creek called at Dowling Saturday.
I ents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Weaver
Mr. and Mrs
H. M. Boughner
Scott Lydy's Saturday afternoon.
near Elmdale last Friday.
called on the former's sister. Mrs.
Mr and Mrs. Geo. Francis of Geo. Townsend and husband of । Mr and Mrs. Charles Lidka of
' Jackson were here on Decoration
EMMAJIUEL^CHURCH (Jlptacopal).
Saginaw spent one night last week North Hastings Friday
[Day.
with her parents. Mr and Mrs. A ।
Clay Adams and daughter Helen
Mrs. Matle McCollum and MUs
M Decker
j of Hastings called on his parents.
. Hasel Smelker of Fenton were In
A dreamer proposes the construc­ Mr and Mrs E. H. Adams Sunday town on Decoration Day.
Adams accompanied them
tion of a liner 200 feet longer than Mrs
i Mr. and Mrs James Hutchings
the Normandie it Is for the benefit home for a few days' visit.
i (Erma Childs) of Grand Rapids
BANNER WANT ADV8. FAY
of those who want to walk to Eur- i Mr and Mrs Gordon Usbome at­ | were Ln the village on Friday evetended the Commencement exer­
। nlng.
cises at Lake Odessa last Thursday
evening The former's sister, Mil­
FREEPORT.
Mrs Mary Lou Henney spent lhe dred. was one of the graduates.
Mr and Mrs Harold Rosenberger
week end with relatives at Nashville
and attended the graduating exer- and son Marvin were Sunday guests
Icacs there, a nephew was a mem­ ot his parents, Mr. and Mrs Austin
Rosenberger
at Clarksville Marvin
ber of this year's class.
HASTINGS PARISH.
Mr. and Mrs L- F. Burkey and remained for a few days' visit.
MDTHODIHT EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Several have suggested of late
son Bobble spent from Friday until
OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 2458
FREE DELIVERY
Sunday at their old homes In Na­ that If the rear of the buildings on
the south side of Main street were
poleon and Defiance. Ohio
Mr. and Mrs Murphy have moved either tom down or remodeled and
from the house known as the Hahn repaired the greatest eyesore in
house Into the house recently va­ Freeport would be removed. Per­
Bibl* ackool.
l» 30 A
JUST THE THING FOR STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE
DILI* aenool.
cated by Mr and Mrs Harry Reids, sonally we can't think of any one
12 oo Noon
Improvement that would mean as
on the Hastings road.
Mr and Mrs. John Fish accom­ much to Freeport as that.
REST UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH panied Mr and Mrs E M Batdorf
Rev J I Batdorf conducted the
Hamblin al the
to the old Batdorf farm near Lake funeral of Mrs
Pleasant Valley church Monday aft­
Odessa Sunday afternoon
lbs. *
Mr and Mrs. E- M Batdorf of ernoon.
Mr and Mrs Harold Rosenberger
Rudyard visited her sister. Mrs
John Fish and husband from Fri­ and son Marvin were Grand Rapids
day until Tuesday while doing some visitors last Saturday evening.
Thirteen members of the Wom­
work al their farm near Lake Odesen's Literary club enjoyed a trip to
. Memorial Day was observed In Grand Rapids on Thursday. May 21
5 lbs. Hand Picked 4 Qc I 3 Bo... CRACK- *
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
i Freeport by the closing of al) buoi- Their first stop was at the Museum
NAVY BEANS— I
|
ER JACK—
I U
ness places at noon There were no where many tilings of Interest were
exercises here but graves were dec­ seen Then with well filled baskets
orated by friends and relatives in they went to John Ball Park where
the afternoon, the newly organized they did full Justice to the baskets'
business men's baseball team played contents. &lt;Ask some of the ladles
Vi gallon Aunt Dinah
3 lbs. med. six*
its first game here against Clarks­ about the fresh paint i In the aft­
BRUNES—
BAKING
Qf-c
ville. winning with a score of fl to 1 ernoon. the group visited the HrkPlans are being formulated for a inan Biscuit Co plant and then the
MOLASSES—
1 Ib KoffM Hog,
39c
Dally Vacation Bible school to be much talked of gas house Here they
Bacon
Squorei,
19c
Ib.
held for two weeks beginning about were met by a former member. Mrs.
3 lorgo con* Con­
June 15 or 17 Present plans call for Della Perkins, who escorted them
Wheat
Krispies,
9c
pkg.
densed
Milk
—
four classes besides an organized to DeLuxe Gardens where they
it 30 i piay period. Tlie Schoo! will con­ were served to Ice cream and cake
n'd li. I Unue for two weeks and It Ls hoped Mrs Ida Foglesong also joined them
June all children of fourteen and under there It was a full and long to be
h Mr. I wlu pe enrolled Full particulars will remembered day
be given next week.
Mr and Mrs
Clifford Spencer
?H
Belated felicitations to F E Dem- and daughter Betty of Detroit visit­
ilii hurl* farm
| Ing who passed his 82nd milestone ed her parents, Mr and Mrs E M
'
[ on May 18 Several of his children Batdorf of Rudyard at the John
Pr*r*r ftnd friends remembered him on the Fish home here Decoration Day
Aunt Nancy Deming spent last
Fiord day On Sunday before 20 guests
P. m enjoyed a six o’clock lunch In his week in Caledonia, the guest of Mr
“ '"j ’honor at the home of his daughter and Mrs Geo Pickett, who cele­
M Mrs A B Fish We wish you many brated their golden wedding anni­
AllH OF THANKS—W
i more, Frank.
versary on Wednesday. May 27.
I The regular monthly meeting of
We understand that Mr and Mrs.
। the Standard Bearers was held at Evart Ardis plan to move to Free­
the home of NJtes Pauline Moore port sometime before school opens
last Monday evening
in September and will make their
The local beer parlor owned and home at the M. E parsonage, shar­
operated by Norman Green, was ing the house with Rev Wheeler.
Mr and Mrs George Burlingham
closed last Friday afternoon under
orders of the state We are unable and two sons of Unionville spent
to give cause and full particulars Saturday and Bunday with his
but are Informed that the license brother. Wesley Stowe, and family.
Mrs Welina Laubaugh and baby
was taken from him.
The official board of the M E of coats Grove spent from Wednes­
church Is holding a business meet­ day until Sunday with her parents.
ing at the parsonage on Wednesday Mr and Mrs Jed Stowe
Maurice Overholt, son of Mr and
evening this week
Rev. Fern Wheeler and niece. Mrs Charles Overholt, who gradu­
Miss Ruth Wheeler were Charlotte ates from W 8 T C with an all A
visitors on Memorial Day.
■ record this month, has signed a
'RKED CORN—Bish quality. SO day.

I

The Hasting* Banner

Fm
Iron
fh&lt;x.t
**ka

WALLACE GROCERY

UGISTEUD OPTOMETRIST

2'/» Ib. pkg. BISQUICK FLOUR___ 29c

Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
CASH FOB OLD GOLD.

OX COMMISSION

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Smooth Rubbar Bock Podi

f

BONDI
NOTARY PUBLICS

FIVE RtlOM unfurnt
rrnt Alao forniib
1 H M&gt;rl.i&lt;an A..
I W'AXTEtJ—(Jiri for
| to
hi-tnr rrrnint
Pt...nr 2&lt;l7i 6 4
WANTED—Frw day. old rail Cha. O
Pantuns. Woodland
WoiHlIand riimnr
_ m-f5
64
WANTED- Plar. for
houtr-work dnrlix uninirr
Havr ha.l
fi

SHELDON A SHE

FOR HALF—Walnut (at* Ire rilrnainn
tablr
Call Clair* ll.nd.rrhotl 302
H Broadwar after S o’clock
64
WANTED—Few dart old calf
E F
Nlcbr.h
Phon* 728 Ftl
«4
WANTED—To buy .rcnml hand bicycle
for th* wb**l. or oth»r Varta Phon*
7?a -F’. Haaftnea
84
Ft'RNIBHED iltifHF tor r»nl a.atlabl*
July 1
Phon* 2534
«4
FOR RENT—Furnlab*d four room down
ala.ra apartment
B Alhrdinc 213
No Br...dwar
B4
FOR RALE- Two u.*d mattr*«a*«. ennd
rondllma pric*d risht tor uuiek aalr
317 W South St
phon* 3211.3 aft*r
•h P M
Mr. F A Kidder
6 4

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponfl. Rubbo, Pod.
No Leo Shop.

The Prescription Drug Store

2?” 23c| 2

Fitting

W L W
COFFEE

CRISCO

37. |3£5T

ZYi Ib. box Clean Quick Soap Chips/ 15c

24'/j Ib. sack LEADER FLOUR_____67c

20‘

40

19‘

OLD EATING POTATOES

CARDS of THANKS

HASTINGS.............................MICHIGAN

GvaeaatawJ frnaa

Wheoties

P.ck

25c

BUS FARES

REDUCED

Fanner*. Attention!

RETURN FROM KALAMAZOO
OR LANSING FOR

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE

AGENCY

25c

HASTINGS MARKETS

CALL THE TRIO CAFE FOR DETAILS

WANTED

FOR SALE

XI flEk

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

at FELDPAUSCH'S
HIGH SCHOOL k

MARKET. Phone 2616

JOHN DEERE GRAIN BINDER

FOOD CENTER 2609

JOHN DEERE HAY LOADER

H. Foldpau.ch '. 3921

JOHN DEERE HAY MOWER

Wrecking for Ports
Dead Stock Removed!

JOHN DEERE GRAIN DRILL

1929 CHEVROLET Coupe.

1929 CHEVROLET Panel
1924 CHEVROLET

RIDING SHOVEL CULTIVATOR

14 ton

SINGLE WALKING CULTIVATOR

GRANGE PROGRAMS

mission.

OaDEl FOB FUllJI at:..'.

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

3 SET SPIKE TOOTH DRAG

EMERSON ROYER

Here Saturday, June 6th
DR. G. ALLINGHAM, Dentist
OF

GRAND

RAPIDS

WILL BE IN HASTINGS
SATURDAY, JUNE 6
AT THt PARKER HOUSE—HE MAKES THIS

Special Dental Offer!
PLATES

CONCRETE MIXER ON WHEELS

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
NOTICE TO CREDITORS

3 CONCRETE WHEELBARROWS

Hutlnp

FOR SALE

2-2 SET SPRING TOOTH DRAG

PEOPLES RAPID TRANSIT LINES

BRICK

TERMS—CASH

Plate* Repaired ... $1.00

EXTRACTIONS tXSSiJ 5Oc
ALL WORK GUARANTEED

At Old Hastings Wool
Boot Plant Site.

PLATES as low as

See

In­

quire of joe DeRuiter

CARL ADAMS

IT WlU. FAY YOU TO INVESTIGATE THIS

OUTSTANDING DENTAL OFFER I

Core Butterfield Forma, North End Gull Lake.
HOURS: 9 A. M. t. 5 F. M.

at Pickle Station.
®
BANHEB WANT ADVB- FAT

W1I haUu

I 4 Mlldrad t’/wnk. Raiiatar of FrabMK.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1936

DMwninEN
Barry Bypaths
116 MS IGO l-,„:x=r....

about:

MI8BSI0NABY TELLS
T1IP ON BAILING
VMB1L

Yeetorday'a Literary Lights.

OF

ollywood, calif.The other day Finley Pe­
ter Dunne passed away. Thirty
FORTY-ONE TAKE
yean ago hi* articles meant
PERILOUS JOURNEY
each week a'roar ol j'oy a* wide
at the continent. Hit books sold The "Parthian" Made Voy­
enormously; his country prop­
age From Boston to Hono­
erly acclaimed him its greatest sa­
tiric humorist Yet 1*11 venture not
lulu In Five Months

H

one In five of the on-coming gener­
ation ever heard bls'name, and we
thought the fame of “Mr. Dooley”

We are sure that Banner readers
will be interested in the following
extracts from the diary of Marta
Patton Chamberlain, written 108

Mary Johnston, wbo wrote some
of the most distinguished novels of ot that noble band of missionaries
her time, also died recently. In lhe that went to the Sandwich Islands,
now the Hawaiian Islands, to con­
papers I saw site rated only a Brief
I vert the native pagans to Christian­
paragraph.
ity./ This diary Is a daily account of
Slower than Americans to give the sailing vessel "Parthian" which
their lore to man or woman, the set out from Boston, Mass , on Nov.
English remain In 3. 18^. and landed at Honolulu.
sentiment
wedded March 31st, 1828. requiring almost
to the Idol from five months to complete the trip.
then on. The mar­ Of course there was no Panama
riage between pop­ Canal then and the little sailing
ularity and merit ship had to make the trip “around
lasts till death doth the Hom," so dangerous that it was
them part- But, we. known as the "graveyard" for ves­
sels attempting it when it was in
who* elevate u fa­
an angry mood—as It almost in­
vorite to a pedes­ variably was. We are Indebted to
tal overnight, for­ Mrs. H. W. Chamberlain, of the 1st
get that favorite Ward, for use of this diary, which
overnight, we make came to her through her husband,
an ardent sweet- who wa* a direct descendant ot the
Irvln 8. Cobb heart, on Impetu­ writer, Maria Patton Chamberlain.
ous bride, but s Lack of space permits us only to
mention the more Important inci­
moat Inconstant spouse.
dents. and omit descriptions of the
dally religious services held aboard.
"Simplified” Revenue Bllla
pONGHE.88 Is wrestling with tbe The diary will give one a better ap­
new "simplified" revenue bill, preciation of the noble, zealous. un­
baring simplified It down to a mere selfish spirit that animated those
slxty-odd thousand word*—about who devoted their lives to mission­
tlie length of a falr-sixed summer ary work in the Sandwich Islands
more than a century ago.—Editor.
noveL But the plot te different—
On board Ship Parthian.
and having made Its provisions so
Nov. 7. 1827.
clear sijd lucid that you may read Dear Sisters:
It backward or forward, you seem
It Is one week since I left Boston
to get practically the same result and as I am now able to commence
a journal, I cheerfully devote these
pages to you. if they afford you any
in Professor Einstein to elucidate pleasure in the perusal; if one sen­
IL If he can explain his theory tence has the tendency lo cheer the
of relativity—and the professor still heart of my dear father. I shall
think myself amply rewarded for
the trouble of writing.
to tackle the Job.
My last letter Informed you that
Anyhow, the ultimate outcome-we expected to be under way by 0
and In this connection 1 certainly o'clock an Saturday, Nov. 3, but os
like that word "outcome”—must all things, were not ready we were
be that congress will find a method detained until 3 in the afternoon.
further to lighten pocketbookx
A vast concourse of people was as­
sembled at the dock and a parting
prayer was offered which suffused
N SPITE of what's happened almost every eye in tears. The ship
lately, one persistent last-ditcher had been anchored out a little way
and forlorn-boper among the Brit­ in the deep and we came out to it
In little boats. More than 50 friends
ish diplomats Insists the Leogue of
accompanied us 10 miles and re­
Nations, to quote his own words. Is
turned in the pilot boat. As this was
“a going concern."
the last, so it was the most painful
separation too. I cannot describe
Makes me think of a little yarn my feelings on seeing the little
a man told me:
sloop leave carrying from my view
"Fifteen of Us,” be said, "were
(Continued on page 4. Sec. 2)
waiting our turns to buy tickets
one hot night at Grand Central
station. All st once a gentleman,
far overtaken In alcohol, forced
bla way to the head of the line,
using his bead to butt with and
bla eltxiws to paddle with, and emp­
One Mother’s Day the girls got
tied his pockets of some small
change, and slapped It down on up a surprise party for my wife and
the shelf and yelled: *Giiums a after the feast was over. Marie sang
and played a few songs on the
ticket to Buffalo!*
.
piano, and some of the neighbors
"Thia all the money you got?* asked me to sing. "When You and
demanded the man behind tlie I Were Young, Maggie." Fred said
wicket.
he wasn't much of a song bird, but
he would speak a little piece
“•Why, you can't go to Buffalo entitled "Mother's Day.”
"There is Mother's Day and brothfor a dollar and forty centa*
"Well, where can I go, then?*'said
And dog days soon are due.
Days to work, and days to play
“And with one voice all fifteen of
And days for heroes too.
us told him."
But now there is a movement.
At least the papers say.
To honor one who pays tha bills
And have a Father's Day.
OU can't help liking the fel­
Although
the movement's rather
low's stylo of renartea.
late
"And what's a person named
You bet your life it's right."
Hoover doing to justify bls hang­
They all gave me the laugh and
Ing on with this administration?"
my son William said. "I'm no poet,
or words to that general effect, says
but I'll recite a verse which John
Senator McKeller, of old Ternaaste.
brightly. "'Scuse me, massa." mur­ Chicago again, I'm going to buy a
murs J. Edgar, reaching for his book of his poems.” My wife spoke
bat and handeuffa "Ah won't be
gone long, boss." And Inside of a Will, don’t buy any more books. Ths
week or two he drifts In, strum­ house 13 full of books, and the best
ming a plantation tune on bls G- one In the house (the Bible) you
have never read.” Will said, "Moth­
Ing a whole ineaa ot publie one- er. I'll buy books as long as I have
the money; I can read them when
I'm broke."
That's what I call an apt retort,
or. as the purists would put it, a FORMER HASTINGS
RESIDENT DIBS.
snappy comeback.
Many Hastings residents will re­
member Mr. and Mra. Victor C.
Roblln.
who
formerly
conducted the
HAT to It has turned them
from cop-killing bravos into
quivering wretebes wbo cower In
ter, California.
hiding like mice behind a wainscot,

I

Riley Stories

Y

W

wbo flinch like trapped rabbits
whan they're smoked out, who
whine Ilka' whipped cOr-dogs for a
chance to plead guilty?

I called the kids to the back door
for a hand out* Bud" said. "I ought
to wash my hands; I've been play­
ing with a snake."
Speaking of conscientious voting.
I once heard a man say lie never
considered the candidates and their
fitness for office. Rather, he thought
it smart to wait until his wife de­
cided, then he voted opposite. The
right to vote should be taken from
such people.

A few good laughs in Travis
Hoke's article on "Baseball" in the
June Delineator.

Our Mrs. Lilly Renney in the On­
tario baby race has Just had anoth­
er visit from the stork, making her
total 12 in the last ten years end­
ing this October 31. I bet anything

tween now and then. Mra. Bognato
and Mrs. Harrison are our favorites,
with Mrs. Tlmleck third in choice.
These three families out of the
seven remaining in the race are the
only ones who can pay their own
doctor bills or feed and clothe their
horde of children. That was an aw­
ful will you left. Mr. Millar! I hope
the old guy yith the horns and
forked tail makes you have a baby
every morning before breakfast.
Nearly a hundred babies In those
seven families bom to win your
money, saying nothing of the count­
less babies bom In families who had
to drop out because the mothers
weren't able to endure carrying the
desperate plan any further. The
city of Toronto has to foot the bill.
he would sue the motion picture
company for making a monkey out
of him In 'The Country Doctor." I
have attended births In squalid cir­
cumstances and failed to find any
high comedy such as accompanied
the birth of the "quints" In the
play. Rather, I found stark, un­
adorned tragedy, and it seems sac­
rilegious to me to make birth a hu­
morous subject.

Overhead at a woman's meeting:
"I like to eat in a restaurant. It's
fun to dirty all those dishes when
you know you don't have to wash
them."
Why is a drunk in a movie so
much funnier than one In real life?
Ans Because the one tn the movie
isn't drunk.

I have forgotten who directed
"The Country Doctor" but he slip­
ped up once. No doctor or nurse
would ever lay new bom babies with

done in the play. Always lhe feet
toward the fire.

There la never a grave can hold me
For the dream of lhe living will
tide me
Over that silent sleep.
I shall dream of the rosebud growing
In a misty land of rain.
And Ill know by the wind’s soft
blowing
When spring comes back sgaln.
Recipe for raised doughnuts: 1
pint bread dough when ready to
put tn tins, 1 cup sugar. 1 egg. pinch
salt, cinnamon or nutmeg. 1-2 cup
shortening. 1 cup water, flour to
mix In medium-soft hard loaf. Let
raise. Knead, roll out and cut. Let

thin Icing of confectioner's sugar
and water if desired. Makes two

temporary detention Id some erimInal-coddllng retreat with senti­
mental meddlers to pamper them
and luush-mlnded parole boards

SEVERAL DEPARTMENT
OFFICERS PRESENT

Speakers Stress Importance
and Significance of Boy ।
Scout Movement

Interstate Commerce Com­
mission Orders It Delayed
Until November
After the Michigan Central, and
many other railroad authorities had
made every arrangement last month
to carry out the plck-Up and de­
livery freight service at all stations
on their lines, including Hastings,
tlie Interstate Commerce Commis­
sion evidently had a change of
Jhekrt, or something; for, on the day
before the new service was to begin
a wire was received from the com­
:mission notifying the railroads not
।to Inaugurate the pick-up and de­
।livery service on the date men­
।tioned, but to postpone it until No­
.vember. What may happen then will
।be uncertain until the time arrives
।and lhe commission decides what It
।had belter do about it.

As representatives of the Laurence J. Bauer American Legion
Post and Auxiliary, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Wood. Mr. and Mrs. Dorn
Foreman. Mrs. John Wood. MrJ.
Pauline Bliss. E. P. Bayles. T. fl. K.
Reid, and Floyd Wood attended lhe
Fourth District convention at Con­
stantine on Sunday. May 24.
CARLTON CENTER.
This was a "Boy Scout” conven­
The Carlton Center school closed
tion. meeting for two days. Batur- Friday with a picnic supper held
day and Sunday. Scouts and lead­ at lhe home of Mr. and Mrs. John
ers of the Troops sponsored by the Robinson.
Many of the parents
Legion Posts were present,
104 land neighbors in the district attend­
Scout* attending this two day ed and ail had a very happy time.
gathering. Sixteen Scout* of Troop Mrs. Joale Watrous of Woodland, a
71 went from Hastings with T. B. K. former teacher here, also attended.
Reid, Edw. Sayles and Don Fore­ Miss Hazel Calms, the teacher dur­
man in charge. Eight troop* from ing the past year, has been re-en­
the district were present, the boys gaged.
camping out Saturday night and
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Phelps of
Sunday on a splendid site furnished Lansing, Saturday morning, a baby
by the authorities at Constantine. boy. Mrs. Phelpe and baby are
Troop 71 and the Constantine Troop here In the community at the home
acted as host*, furnlshltjg a fine of her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Ger­
program of entertainment to occupy ald Tlscher.
their spare time.
Mrs. Loren Freed of Toledo, Ohio,
The visiting troops competed for spent part of last week with her
prizes on a point system, the honors parents, Mr. and Mrs. Prank Asincluding
attendance,
uniform*, plnall.
camping
Inspection, display of
All remember tlie Aid meets this
handicraft, furnishing entertain­ week Thursday for supper at Mr.
ment and parade Inspection. The and Mrs. Arthur Verger's.
Boy Scout Executive of the Kala­
Several from this community at­
mazoo Council was in charge of lhe tended the baccalaureate sermon
awards, but the Judge* have not as for the Hastings High school stu­
yet announced their decision*. He dents Bunday afternoon.
;
also gave an excellent talk to the
We neglected to mention In last ’■
Scout* on Saturday evening at their week's Items of the success ot Law- I
camp fire.
ton Williams in the State
field &gt;
On Bunday lhe convention was meet at Grand Rapids, Saturday of I
very interesting and successful, in ls*! week. He won first place in I
fact, one of the best ever held, was the 440 yard dash, thus bringing the 1
the opinion of several from Hos­ honors to Hastings High. We contings. About two hundred Legion­ gratutate
crrAtlilat.i you.
t.mi TLawton.
naire* and Auxiliary members were
present.
,,
POSSESSED GILL NET.
Mr. Panish, department welfare
Carroll Fisher, age 18. of this city
officer, led a discussion of welfare
was arrested on Saturday, May 30.
problems for all Post and District
by Conservation Officer Sumner on
officers.
a charge of possession of a gill net
At noon a parade of Legionnaires
on the shore of Twin lakes in Hope
and Auxiliary members, followed by
Twp. He was taken before Justice
lhe visiting Scout Troops was held,
Matthews on Monday and fined
music being furnished by ths Con­ $50.00 with $8.85 coate or 80 days in
stantine band and a Scout Drum Jail. Fisher is serving out his GO
and Bugle Corps from Three Rivers. days. This should prove a warning to
This was followed by lhe dinner others at lhe beginning
besinnlna of the sum
sum-­
served by the entertaining Unit.
mer season.
Following the dinner lhe guests
were Introduced, also two Gold Star
mothers and others Interested in
the work of these organizations
There were so many we will not at­
tempt lo name them all.
W. C Fennell, assistant regional
executive of th» Boy Scouts of Chi­
cago. was th* principal speaker. His
addreas on "Youth and tlie Ameri­
can Legion" Was Instructive and In­
spiring. Mr. Fennell was Army
Chaplain with the Thirty-Third Di­
vision 'during the World war. On
Nov. 11. 1018. at 11-45 he helped to
bury 11 boys on the battlefields of
Prance.
Dept. Commander Addy was pres­
ent and gave a short talk on cur­
rent Issues, elating lhe dinner pro­
gram was a short skit composed by
six Hastings Scouts, portraying a
wonderful lesson in preserving our
national resources.
Separate business sessions of the
Posts and Unit* were held at which
the regular routine of t-ssiness was
followed and subjects of Interest
discussed. Dept. President Marie
Schrumpf of Niles addressed the
Auxiliary member*, telling of her
work and stressing the questtort of
membership. Several olhsr Depart­
ment and District officers were also
in attendance. It was announced
Hut a ten years old boy from Mar­
quette won'the Fidac essay award.
Seventeen Unit* were represented
at the convention, all giving good
reports.
The goal U eight new
members from each Unit, bringing
the number up to it* quota tn the
district.
All present at this two day con­
vention came away with a new im­
pression of the significance of

'

WHEN J. Edgar Hoover and
"his federal agents arrested
the jittery Alvin Karpis in New
Orleans, and a few days later
took hir lieutenant, Harry Camp­
bell, and William Mahan, gang­
land's last big-timers passed out
of the crime picture.
The bloodless captures of “Old
Creepy," Campbell and Mahan—
executed with unexciting effi­
ciency-left only Thomas H.
Robinson. Jr., on what the
movies have chosen to cell tlie
"Public Enemy" list.
Robinson, wanted for kidnap­
ing, hardly rates in the same
class with such high-powered
desperadoes as Dillinger, Floyd,
Barker, Karpis, and others who
have been bested in their battle
with lhe federal men.
Mahan is thought to be the
last principal of the gang that
engineered the $200,000 abduc­
tion of young George Weyer­
haeuser in Tacoma, Wash., last
year. Washington peace officers
also have named him as killer of
two policemen in that slate with­
in a month after kidnaping of the
lumber fortune heir.
■ROBINSON—kidnaper of Mrs.
Berry V. Stoll, prominent in
Louisville, Ky., society—has not
been heard from for many
months. He is a former insane
asylum inmate who likes to go
about dressed in women's clothes.
The government's agents art
said to consider him more of a
lunatic than a criminal.
Robinson is a lawbreaker, but
his record is insignificant com­
pared to those of old underworld
quick-triggers who now rest be­
hind bars or under the sod.
In addition to the kidnaping
indictments against him. for instance. Karpis was sought for the
slaying ot a Missouri sheriff, 15
bank
--- .
robberies, complicity —
in
several other killings, and a mul­
titude of loser offenses
Campbell, who was taken —
to
St Paul to stand trial w ith Kar~—
pis &gt;for the Bremer
kidnaping,
also was wanted by postoffice in­
spectors. They believe he took
part in the Garrettsville. O.. train
robbery last November, in which
lhe loot amounted to $40,000.

Vf/HILE Department of Justice
’’ operatives refuse to dignify
gang hoodlums by classing them
as "public enemies,” Karpis ad­
mittedly had been their chief
target since early last year,
when he escaped two police
trap*.

B I

rfl
Alvin Karpis
eral building
capture ‘

Hesd G-Man Hoover told re­
porters he was convinced that
Karpis. prioi to his capture, be­
lieved he had eluded the law
permanently, and had settled
down for a little peaceful and
comfortable living in gay New
Orleans/
The kidnaper-killer was fond
of fishing and hunting. He had
planned an angling expedition on
the Gulf of Mexico the day of his

once

threatened

the lite

guard in a St. Paul Jail i
trial on a kidnaping ehl

Lindbergh

ceive La lite

however.
take him

terrupted.
Today, Alvin Karpis—the man

taken

alive,

the gunman

who

"Yes Sir
Come Right
Over”

When you call “Your Banker

for an apointment, you are sure to

ceive a welcome that will assure you of this Bank's willingness to &lt;

erate with you. Fifty years of courteous, personal service has built I _

a reputation for friendly banking. This Bank is ready, and
help you in all financial matters;
.Warmer weather means that you wi II spend more time away

Bottle

be sure your valuables are safe

JE

beyond tlie reach of thieves and fire.

For Only

•Mr vm

from fire and theft. Reni

safety deposit boxes and put your letters, legal document#

See us if you need money ... we are

wtM fssi

estate and on the basis of financial statement!

ssrjzx;
Come rifht over and tee Your

chairman of the program. Mra. O.
Advwree," at which he has
M. chamberlain will give remi­
so much. Wall—that's
niscences of her residence in Hono­
lulu. wiwre tier husband, the late
Rev. Horace chamberlain, was con­
nected with a church school. Mrs.
nrrn»C*AL6ftE£n sTsrtM
Harvey Burgess will review the military «rt. Wa beiteve. though. Httv a
D*u« ATOM

a fuir measure of stern J tut ice
from federal judges and go to real

G-Men Seek ‘Small
Karpis, Campbell

lean Legion ot the Fourth District.

"No pels, no children,' and no ra­
dio." were among lhe terms of an
agreement a South London tenant
had to sign for the lease of a flat.
Unemployed residents of this vi­
Before affixing his signature he ad-,
cinity ■ distantly located from the
milled quite
National Re-employment Service
district or branch offices may reg­
ister at the basement of the post
office, Hastings. Thursday, 0:00 A.
M. to noon; according to Major
Howard Stamt, state Re-employ­
ment Director. There to a definite

tern makers, die designers and wood
MISSIONARY SOCIETY.
model builders. Only Michigan men
Tim Methodist Missionary So­ with experience In these lines need
ciety meets on Wednesday. June 10. apply, according lo Major Btarret.
at 2:W o'clock at the church parlors,

to trial In state courts where un­
scrupulous shysters may trick dazed
Jurors Into showing mistaken mercy

TOOOAVNIEHING

LBGI0N POSTS AND UNITS
HELD CONVENTION
AT CONSTANTINE

PICK-UP AND DELIVERY
SERVICE IS POSTPONED

RE-EMPLOYMENT SERVICE.

printed there, was an account of the
sudden death of Mrs. Roblln on ers qualified as follows should reg­
Friday. May 8, of a heart attack. ular Immediately: operators of
cranes, pavtng machines, trench
vived by her husband, a son. Rob­ machines, ditching machines, hoists.
ert H. Roblln, and a brother, D. V.
Moyer of charlotte. Mrs. RobUn and re-enforced concrete rodmen
was active in the Methodist church Other labor needed includes skilled

courageous but inexperienced local
officers, they now face trained

IRVIX L CORR.

become a naturalized cilisen of the
United States Tlie Chicago board
of trad* 1* making a study of con ■
di lions and will probably establish
It on the market. Last year the soy
bean ranked fifth .among grains,
bringing $29,000,000 to the farmers
of this country. Boy bean acreage
has expanded sharply during the
last five years.
About half of, lhe soys harvested
last year went into flour, soy sauce,
diabetic and Infant foods, lard and
butler substitutes, candy, varnish,
printer’s ink and glue. (There now!
Maybe soy beans helped print the
Hastings Banner.) Unseed and soy
bean oil make a superior paint bass.
Threshermen report scattered crops
ot soys here in Barry county and
Indications point to more this year.
Average price, 75c a bushel.

scoots mao

PMOHI 2341

HAITINOS

Hastings City
TELEPHONE 2103 *

HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS

Dust Continues Work of Desolation in Southwest
be better copdiUc
ire guidance.
Don periods will
&gt;1 study hall will

differences wUl

Maawall^

'jALUMET

Houm

Baking

Toasties

CoHee
t 25®

Powder

Swansdown
La France
Postum Cereal

23c Baker's Chocolate
15c Sanka Coffee

1

Bran Flakes
Minute Tapioca

OTHER VALUES'
JM
23c Sparkle

Shredded Wheat
Kraft's Cheese

19c Bran Flakes
Diamond
10c Salt

2

Peanut Butter

H-lk

Iona Flour

J

19c
2 SS 27c

6

10

Woodbury's

2

Popular Brand

25c

H-lb.

Blua Labsl

$1.15 Fels Naptha Soap

Milk

Soap

Am. Family Flakes

Whitehouse Milk
Morton's Salt

2

Fig Bars

3

er Ginger Snips

Scot Tissue

19c
27c

25c Fels Naptha Chips
15c Rinso

19c
19c

25c Lux or Ivory Flakes
Ovaltine
”• 29c

Waldorf Tissue
Northern Tissue

3

4X Sugar

2

55c
26c

25c Del Monte Coffee
15c Hills Bros. Coffee

Good Luck

19c Crisco or Snowdrift
35c Baby Foods

Shortening
Olive Oil

25c Heine Soups
25c Campbell's Soup. cw’.K'.

pkt.

Cooking Oil

55c
25c

Buyi a pound of

■ E C 8 o'Clock Coffee
Enough or 40 Cups of tha World’s

Moat Popular Coffee I

NEW PEAS
2 lbs. 13c
NEW POTATOES
$ lbs. 29c
WAX OR GREEN BEANS
2 lbs. 25c
SPINACH, Home Grown
LEAF LETTUCE
tb. 5c
STRAWBERRIES
TOMATOES

AMMIm.

ball last week and defeated both of
them, which was especially sweat
for the boys as the victims were
Wayland and Caledonia. The boys
played Wayland Tuesday night and
emerged victorious from an over­
time game. Cline pitched for T. K.
and he threw a fine game. Wlsncwski pitched the first 9 Innings for
Wayland. The game was tied up 4-4
in the 9th frame when Fischer
scored on a pinch hit by Chamberlain. VanDerKolk beat out an in­
field hit In the 11th Inning to score
lhe winning run. Last Friday. Cale­
donia came down to Middleville and
tn a game that was replete with ar­
guments and poor base-running,
lost to T- K- by the score of 4-3. A
large crowd was In evidence and the
boys had lots of backing. One of
the most ancient of all ball triclq,
the hidden ball stunt, was mode
useful by T. K. when Schondelmayer. catcher, picked Bhuhan off
of first base An argument was lhe
outcome of this but the decision
stood. Another lime, peeling was on
third base and Plscher was at bat
Flynn. Caledonia's catcher, tried to
pick Peeling off base with a snap
throw but the ball hit Fischer in
the head and bounded high In the
air and past third base Peeling
scored on this fluke. The game end­
ed 4-3 as Williams made a pretty
running catch of a foul ball to end
the ninth inning.

Senior News.
■
The CiaAs* Night program, sched­
uled for June 8 has been announced
as follows: Prophecy by Marian
Keagle. Ruth Smith, and. Hetty
Potts; Salutatory by Hazel Camp­
bell; History by Junior Maichelo;
Class Will by Junior Gillette. Dor­
othy Pender and Vernice Hughson;
Giftatory by Betty Storrs and Vir­
ginia Holes; Valedictory by Robert
Rugg; Music by Kenneth Cline;
Class Bong by the senior class.

The Hl-Y elected officers for 1936­
37 last week. They are: Pres, Bills
Cross; Vice-Pres.. jack Ha mJ) ton;
Assemblies Held.
Three assemblies were held - last Secretary, Harold Hewitt; Treat!.,
Gilbert yanDerKolk.
week, the first of which was held
last Tuesday. Mr. Cleary of tieary
Junior Class.
College spoke on "What It Takes To
Make a Good Impression." Tills was
The junior Class will entertain

the Senior graduating class tonight
al lhe annual Junior-Senior dinner

The Junior class held a benefit
show last Wednesday and Thursday
night at the Arcade theater.
A demonstration on killing clothes
moths with paradiachlorabonslne
gas was given by Mr. Bill last week
to hU class. Thia is one of the most
effective methods of killing moths.

Klgiith Grade Entertains.
Last Thursday the eighth grade
entertained the ninth grade with a
•weenie" roast up the river. Games
were played and a fine time was had
by all. The party left lhe school
at eleven o'clock and returned at

When You Can Buy a 2-lb. Loaf
of Grandmother’. White BREAD ■ ■ ■
(32 Slices) for Only—
H
YES —WHY PAY MORE?

LUNCHEON|MEAT SUCED u. 19c
CHUNK BACON
2Oc
2 Lke. 23c
PURE LARD
FILLET of HADDOCK 2 LU. 27c
DRESSED WHITING
lOc

Feeds That Give

RESULTS
Special Thu Week!
STARTER and
Growing Mosh__$ 1.95

The Girls T. K. Club sponsored
lhe poppy sale here, the proceed*
of which will benefit the American
Legion. The members wish to thank
the merchants and the oilier citi­
zens who cooperated with their ef­
forts.

1. The High school will be a six
year High school.
a. The 7th. Sth and 9th grades
will be junior High school.
b. The
10th.
ilth and
12th
grades will be Senior High kehooL
2. Why our new six year liigh
school wiirbe better.
■a. It Includes grades 7 and 8.
b. The classes will provide for
study under guidance.
c. Tlie curriculum will be enriched
and expanded.

16% DAIRY_____ $1.25
CALF MEAL LL—tfe

SMITH BROS.
VELTE &amp; CO.
Hastings

Phone 2257

FED UP
WITH YOUR OID
CAR?

Because of ill health, I will have an auction sale at my
place, three miles east of Dow ling, ar two miles north of
Lacey, on

TUESDAY, JUNE 9
HORSES.
Bay gelding, 10 yrs. old, wt.

I offer the following:'
Corn King manure spreader.
Land roller.

Dayton riding cultivator.
Black mare, 15 yrs. old, wt.
1400.

Why Pay More? 4

are

HIGH QUALITY
FEEDS.

Reasonably Priced
Tho contractors are plastering
lhe new addition and putting in
windows. Bxcavalion for the new
twating plant has begun also.

5c

19c

VITALITY
FEEDS

AUCTION SALE!
Commencing at 1:00 P. M.

battle

HOCKLESS PICNICS

SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG

an interesting assembly U&gt; which
the students give utmost attention.
Another assembly was field Wed­
nesday to award track medals to
point winners at the B. E. A. A.
Track Meet. The following athletes
received medals: Walt Griffeth,
Fred Hauser. Junior Maichele, Gar­
net Peeling, joe Kowalczyk, Ben
Reser, Jack Williams. Bob Rugg.
Charles Kelley, and Wilma Reser.
During the assembly the "M" club
had a little fun with some new
members of the elub. Last Friday
the Student Council presented an
assembly. This was for lhe candi­
dates for offices in 1936-37 to do
some campaigning for votes Tills is
an entirely new idea in elactlan ot
officers which was conceived by the
Student Council. The form for tho
election was made up by the Civics
Class instructed by Mr. Cunning­
ham. During Che assembly a heated
debate took place between the two
candidates for the Student Council
presidency.

21c

Beech-Nut Coffee

Brown Sugar

Kellogg's All Bran

19c

25c Chipso or Oxydol
15c Soap Chips
Mb.

Soda Crackers

■

25c
2-lb.

15c Carton Lard

log jarta ot Kansas. Oklahoma. Colorado. Naw Mazleo, and Texas, k anParing again Irons leak tf
rain and mow. as dual storms continue from whsre they left off Ute last tail. The 6 Mart ad Cann*
housa above, just aeroas the Texas "Hue in waetarn Oklahoma, hag been bailed ataogl completely MT
sand and dust. Many farmers In ibis region nave given np the battle against nature and moeod »rv.
There ia one encouraging aspect—the storms did not start until March thia year. Iff
and
1 Ci V c th.. h..." in l.anir.

pkg*.

Crystal

Gelatine Dessert

75c

Cigarettes
Cigarettes

35c
39c

23c Mary Ann Cookies

2

K

25c

19c Instant Postum
29c Grapenut Flakes

s

m. 'Hwi crowded conditions wi|
have been removed.
1. Bach teacher will have hl
or her own room in which l

CATTLE.
Holstein and Guarnwy cow,
9 yrs. old, giving goad mess
oi milk.
Holstein and Guernsey cew,
6 yrs. old, giving milk.
2 heifers, coming 2 yrs. old.
9 pigs, 7 weeks old.
FARM TOOLS.
Doering binder, good condi­
tion.
Doering mower.

Cultipacker.

WE'VE GOT A
BETTER ONE
FOR YOU!
Right here ia our big display,
you'll find some of the best-

cars ia town. They've been
re-conditioned inside and out
—tires and batteries are first
class—and their appearance
will make you proud to drive

Oliver walking plow, No. 99.
aoca on your old cat if you
trade now. You can get a
bower car by trading here.
Drive in your old carrwdrive
out a better one today.

Gale riding plow.

Dayton hay loader. ,
Dayton side rake.

_

Lumber wagon.
Double work harness.
Spring tooth drag.

Forks, hoes, ehovels, etc., end
many ether erticles too nu­
merous to mention.

193S Ford V-S Coupe
ONLY MOO
UQEOC
Mins—
490

1935 Ford VJForder
M ,lN* .
&gt;106“
coNomoW— 4»0

TERMS:—CASH. No gaods removed until

Propr

UNIVERSAL
GARAGE CO.

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.
•

■

&gt;

. .

.

MASTING H

�rya mrpipi yAwxta. rmmcnar. im a in.

| LEGAL NOTICES j

....
tba Oepnty ot Barry.

j-itertxr

NOtlflB OF QOMMIMtonB'S BALE
VBDBB DBCRSB.
Under and brvlrtao ot a decree ot the
fegigia.’t »%.vss

"L" ;

.Ww;'“.lu'J.T T»‘

&gt;•**. hare been allowed far cradlton to

meat and that ell creditor* of raid daeaaaad era raaulred to. proaaat tbelr
ti-s

That th* roll of the asocial
meat
heretofere made by the Huperriaon for r s ttra
is.’sfs’ei tt’srtAwxx'e hs*
•84*. «s*J!=■•*’

Broadway, eaat to lhe teloraoellon of
North Jefforaao itroel. I* new on ate at

•«!!£• lectern,
meet In the c™n
council

PARTITION BALS.
NOTICE If HBREBT GIVEN, that bo

end SuPeril.orc w.ll

Mkblna.

blkatUn at • re

Monca or

mobtoaob balx.

iy dare) In the eandlllone of a ear-

wrcrt?.v.«SK.hs

Ife of tha City of Haallnra, Barry
■only. Mlchlaan. to BOMB OWNERS'
BAN CORPORATION, a Corporation or

Mori***** on Pate JOB.
raaoo harlna elected and
raid mortaaae to doclai

' COURT HOU3B NEWS

Y.M.C. A. ITEMS

Thomapple and Middleville was &gt;
held Thursday at the M. E. church,
MARRIAGE LICENSE,
of Which she had bwn a member
8hlp^Clty
johncock.’City...................... U
to having an Executive meeting for for many yeara. Aside from the
.................... "
reports and counsel at BotUford threa daughters and two sons aha , "
PROBATE COURT.
Tavern, near Farmington, on Wed­ Waves many other relatives to.
nesday evening.
Members from
Xu.?
tend, by Blate Sec, Fred Freeman.
The Prairieville whool will hold
,Adn£
^Mh^SSae
June 10. an Important meeting their annual picnic June Bth on the rJ“*
_h’ 2ST1 ft*’
of the state Y- M- O. A. will be held old school grounds. AU former puA
In Battle Creek, for local plans in
lb* famMn. •( **14 4«y.
pH*, teacher* and friend* are InvltCalhoun county.
daMtIW prowrtr. towil-i
ed to attend
Qt Bernice Varney. Nomination
Thomas Heaney of Loe Angeles.!
.rdton^ntored’'W&lt;,W ,ppolntln’
Camp Barry has two picnics thte
week. On Monday evening the
Cal., arrived here for a vacation
w
t
d
Young Married group of Hastings, among
old friend* and relatives on
Roe* Warrant *nd
and invited friends, gathered for Monday. He te always a welcome '
w h&gt;h p^i.inn
their final meeting of thte spring. vteUor. bring* new* of many old1,
Tuesday was the annual picnic ot
timer*, now residents of the west,
™
mir"
the Barry County Ministerial As- whom
we are alway* pleased to hear
^uS^LteaS Intend
sodatlon.
* '
f,..... u* wtiii
- i ■ a..**
suant to land contract entered.
A party for C. L. Rowe, who re­ Suh hX, wU1&lt;W’,*t»’ •“X&gt;l“11; nt. B«r„W VamiT. Bond ot
him.
| guardian filed, letter* of guardlaatires thte month from 30 years ot with nun
Some dog owners If they do not!
Y. M. C- A. work in the rural fields.
' »hlp Issued.
WU held in Hillsdale Tuesday eve­ keep their dogs at home, will won­ ; Est. John Wtllteon. Will filed, pe­
ning. Many In Barry and Eaton der what has become ot them some tition for probate filed.
counties will remember Mr. Rowe as of these days. We know one farmer j
Est. Flora M. Taylor. Petition to
the man who organised the work in ' who discovered three dogs in his1 sell, dispose of Consumers Power
these fields nearly 30 years ago.' Hock of sheep. He succeeded in khl- Co. stock filed, order to dispose of
Men from several states attended. ing one and knows the ownership stock entered.
The dates for boys at Camp Barry of the others and If they return
Est. Anne E. Young. Warrant and
will shoot on sight. Who can blame
inventory filed.
and for girls, July 1B-23. inclusive. him? He has other work aside from I
Est. Agnes C Rockwell. Will filed.
watching his sheep, a valuable part
Only tf tor 8 days.
. petition for probate of will filed, orMiddleville Hl-Y club had a spe­ of hla property.
1 der for publication entered.
cial meeting Thursday evening with Pennock ho*pllai on Thursday’ for I
*L
Coach David Smythe as guest
observation; her many friends hope i
“
speaker, also had refreshments, be­ for her miirv rernverv
William A. Kerr. Order alMn Ratov d*tivht/r nt Mr and lowing claims entered.
sides election of officers.
Mrs. Boley, daughter ot Mr. and .
r»
Mr*. Floyd Hole*, who with her1
°J
ORANGEVILLE.
daughter* have been visiting her Ing claims
cl*ims entered.
Est. M. B- Brooks. Order appolntMr and. Mrs. Marian Rupe and people for some weeks left for her ’
[ ing Admr. entered.
Herman were Hastings visitors Fri­ Montana home last week.
I
Est. Mary Harper. Petition for
day.
Decoration Day program carried
Mrs. Harry Blauvelt and family out a* per plan with a large crowd Admr. filed, waiver of notice filed.
Caalletaa. Barty C&lt;
moved to Marshall last week Mr. in attendance. Many old timers:I order appointing Admr. entered.
Est.
Alexander Cortright. Petition
and Mn. Allbaugh of Grand Rap­ were there not only in observance |
ids have moved Into her house for of the day but to meet old friends, for license to sell filed, waiver of
-no are usuaUy here
nor. then If a&gt;
no
"S;
the summer.
who
at no
Mn. W. O. Pierce and Mrs. Ida
Hnatlmta. Mlehlxan. tble STtb Morrell of Plainwell spent Wednes­ many compliments on Rev. Cham­
Nomination
of guardian filed, orday of the past week with their, berlain’s speech.
| der appointing guardian entered.
sister, Mn. E. D. Lewis of this place.
The line shower Sunday night was
E*t. Melissa cole, inventory filed.
Mr and Mrs Marian Rupe en---------------------------- -- by everyone; ...
much appreciated
all
'
Eit.
Mattle
Spaulding. WlU filed.
Sttora*r* for Plaintiff.
tertalned all of their children and | crops were much In need of It and
grandchildren In honor of their son
•
Fred cn! or Grand RapUa and I d" !
William, who was home
*
from
MOTXOB OP OOMbOBBIOMBB I
Charlea w. LeeUa m«r at u&gt;« Vem, I
°
P’
UNDER DBOBXB.
Pontiac for lhe week end,
Mn. Lewis Case and little daugh­ M. Lectka home Sunday to talk pointing Admr. altered.
ter of Traverse City spent the past
Wiehl*.
than
forty
years
ago
when
lhev
last
ii*
ed
'
orc
i
cr
admitting
will
entered,
week with her parents. Mr. and
met. At that time they were nel&lt;h-1 ^eiiurv'Juried”or^r' hrmune"-^
Mn. Bert Brown of thte vicinity.
menun leaned order UmlUM eetMr. and Mrs. Charles Hensen and bor children near Freeport
Thuraday nl,hl Neb Nebdn. -ho ?™P‘.
daughters of Grand Rapids spent
claims filed, notice to creditor*
Saturday with relatives at
this for manv years has resided in
dWaSl ^ K
Fr^h. Proof a,
place.
Mr. and Mrs. John Foote and son
Lectka.
Till*
was
the
first
time
Adm^fited*tetter
Jimmie of Pontiac and Mr. and
Mn. Tom McWhirter and Betty Mr. Nelson and Mr*. Lectka have j‘er,ed- bo"d °f Ad™r- ®led'1.

OXDXB FOB FVBLICATIOM.

«*»• **
P*rt tharaef;
NOW. THERKTORff. by virtu*

• Routh half
f O. A. Phil
Nath-

lean In «urb •*•• mad* and
'ICE IB HEREBY GIVEN

Oat d 11

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

at Martha

Mildred Smith. Rociater of Probale.

Jereau of Detroit were week end
guests at lhe home of E. D. Lewi*.
Other guests on Saturday were
Fred Foote and family of Plain­
well, Mrs. Addie Munger and
daughter Nina and son Clare of
thte vicinity.
Guests at the home of Mn. Net­
tle Newkirk over the week end were
Mn. Blanche Wickham and daugh­
ters Rosa and Frances. Mrs. Maude
Wickham and son
Wilbur
and
daughter Stella and friend of De­
troit.
Mr. and Mrs. Basil Doater of
Cooper were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Norman of this
place.

Attorney General-Cumming* te In
Europe "to sec If they have any­
thing we ought to have." They do,
as everyone knows, but try to col­
lect.

ORDER FOB FUBLICATIOM.

BOMB OWXIU’ LOAN COR-

:c

NOTIdB or MOBTOAOB MAUL

Mildr‘dPSinith. RacUiar at Probata.

tala nortr*** made by Batla Warner and
wife. Florence Plereo Warner, of tha

Naahrllla. Berrr County, S
HOME OWNERS' IXIAN
TION. a Corporation ornar

writs, datod Aaf«*t
sardad la tba office
—rm.,- WHVW »WW
of oald Mrtnri to doclara tha eallia

ft

st
tereet thereon dne. vbKb J-Uv lt 4*
m

hereby exareleo. pureuanl to which there
It cUlmed to bo doo and unpaid on eald

»llaro
'Tow. THEBXroi'S’to elrtae of the 1

ao rail or proeoodlna at lav or In a«nlty

NOW. THKREPOBB. by vlrta* ot tba ■otto,
&gt;wa» of Ml* eon tai nod ia Mid martraro

power of rale contained Io Mid moHyaae
and onreuant to the Hlalnte* »f tha Slate
of Mldhlaaa In oneh c»»o mode end nrntided. NOTICE IS HEREBY OTVEN.
that/on Thnr.der Anaift Hlb. IMd, at
tvo o'clock dftemooa. lectern Standard

Stale of Mirhlaen. In tho eaao of Harry
0 Mohnnenn. Reeelrer of the Naahrllto
Stele Bank, a Michl*** bankln* Comoroftea. of Noahrilia. Mleblnn. Plaintiff, v*
Freeh Jooee. Mabel Maealna Hcnrard
fcs, te

KJST.S

Barry. Mlehls*
boldinc Circuit

Must

•star..".
low and to tba tormi
tad alf l*a*t aoola.

That tartala place or parcel of laid
tnalod in tba VltUae of Naebrillo.

ooetloa 10. Town­

.... ..

'
Addition
Michls**.

U

tbaaae North
1/1 rode: Umm
Boot to boainnlna. .ealalalna jd aeroa
more or l»ea. ia Team I North of
Hanae f Woet. Barry Ooaaty. Hldl
Faud: Atoll IBM. 1MB.

Richard Halliburton, who went
over the Alps successfully on an ele­
phant. may be just tlie leader lo fit
into the O. O. P.’s comeback plan.

i anta, upon the fth dar of J canary. A. D.
ISM. vbereln tho eald defendant* were
decreed to bo Indebted to Mid Plaintiff.

•setter

ot

&amp;•

MAKE YOUR
HOUSE LIKE BRICK WITH

ASBESTOS SHINGLES

at LOW COST/
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Hwm 2S15

toil*,*

BANNER WANT ADVA PAT

Sunday.
Mrs. Ida

Quarterly meeting si
held hen next Satun
and Sunday morning.

family. Mr. and Mra.
Clyde Cheeseman and famjly and
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Cheeeeman
and family, were Bundiy guaaU with
other relatives-of Mr. and h&amp;s. Asa
Stanton and family who live near
Bellevue.
The Memorial sendees at Union turned
cemetery were attended by a large
crowd. Rev. Voelker of Flint gav« B
Sunday echo
fine address.
o’clock nnt a
meeting will be
daughter* of Fremont wars guasU afternoon and
for dinner Saturday of tba format’a Ute South chur

met in 41 year*. With Mr. Nelson
were two sisters of Mrs. Lectka*.
Mrs. Lovlna Watson. Mrs. Julia. h
°,f cl*,nu flled- notice to
Duby and a sister-in-law
Mrs. crco*lors issued.
Hartwig Nelson, two nephew*. Ar°l
chto Watson and Roy Duby all of . rotU^,ftL^’ ord«_en*r«l______
Fairchild. Wte. The party returned I Est. R
R.’ Sidney French. Pet
Petition to
continue business filed, order to
home Sunday.
continue business entered.
Est. Orson B Garrett. Resigna­
CLAY HILLS.
A new steel roof has been pul on tion filed, final account filed, order
the house on the Henry Potts' farm. for publication entered.
Est. John N. Stuart. Bond of
Gerald Bedford of Middleville is do­
Adnjr. filed, letters of administra­
ing lhe work.
Ouy McNee and family were call­ tion issue.
Eat. Ellen K. Stuart. Bond of
ers at Chas. Gibbs* Bunday aftevAdmr. filed, tetters of administra­
noon.
Mrs. Harold England and three tion Issued.
Est. Vesta Welch. Annual account
children of Lansing, were week end
—
visitors at her parents. Mi. and filed.
Est. John McArthur. Order con­
Mrs. Leon Potts. Mr. and Mrs. 1 =*Vance Sharp and Mr. and Mra. firming sale entered.
Est. Elisabeth Pinkbelner. Order
Clayton Johnson were visitors at
confirming sale entered.
the Pott* home Sunday.
Est. Malvina Lombard. Final ac­
Mrs, Minnie McNee of Grand
Rapids spent last week at Eugene count filed.
Est. Hiram J. Kenflgld. Return
Haight's.
.
| We extend our deepest sympathy from circuit court filed.
to the Robinson family In tlie loss
ASSYRIA.
of a dear mother.
Leon Potts is having his farm Last Week's Letter.
The close of this week finds the
residence painted. Eugene Haight
rural school closed for the summer
te doing the work.
Mtes Anna Lusko of Grand Rap- vacation. The Briggs closed WedIds is visiting her parents.
. nesday with a plcnlp at Pine lake;
* e *————— , Assyria Center closed on Tuesday
FAIR LAKE.
I by picnicking at Clear lake; the
The Kinsley Ladles' Aid was well ] Dunham school closed on Friday.
" f tHat
tHa home
hnm, of
nt Mrs.
Mrc Win
win.­
S*laa Arabelie
AraKalto nlv
—e has -mnlnv
attended
at the
Miss
Bivens
employ­
nie Nye Wednesday.
ment In Battle Creek until leaving
STed Lancaster and family of Has­ for the June eession at Western
tings spent Thursday evening al State Teachers' College at KalamaHammle Armour’s.
Lyle McOlocklln and family. Mrs.
The Assyria Center school has
Jennie Eaton of Detroit, Mr. and the following list of eighth graders
Mrs. Rennie McOlocklln of Dowling. to finish the course this year—Vir­
Mr. and Mrs. Mason Forshey ot ginia Hynes. Shirley Schroder. Paul
North Pine lake were Bunday guests Schroder. Beatrice Russell. Agnes
at the Earl McOlocklln home.
Roush.
Duane
Serven. Bernice
Lea trice Dunning of Delton spent_____
Jones______________________
and Helen Halstead. Lucille
Tuesday evening with Mtes Iva . Cole. Carol Milter, Arlte Renyo and
Case.
.
। Tiiouiu Oorham will finish at the
Chas. Pixley and family were call- i Briggs district. Ruth Ketcham the
erff. Sunday of Lloyd Wilcox of Stevens.
Nashville.
under the leadership of Mn.
Mr. and Mn. Mode McNeil and | Anna DeVol of lhe Elite dlatrtct,
Mn. Agnes Nye of Battle Creek the Elite orchestra te rapidly gain­
, were callers Decoration Day at Mrs Ing In their goal. They furnished
' Lottie Colltetcr’s. Mr. and Mrs. Neil { music at the memorial service* at
Weluiter and Mr. and Mn. George the Anyrla church on Sunday aft­
Dowd of Battle Creek visited there ernoon. their first public appear­
ance. The other numbers of the
Mr*. Frank Davis of Battle Creek program and address by the Rev.
■pent Bunday with her daughter,

Right Dunn Is not very well at
thia writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Nell Welcher of
Battle Creek visited at Chas. Lechleitner's Sunday.

o^ggoggog

eratlon for

Fra*k S*f*

Kuttas*

eluded in the class of Barry County
Normal students to finish the course
on June 4 are Orville Babcock. Elsie
Conklin, Doris Healey and Mildred

Mack.
general delivery truck la ndw in
service making its Initial trip on
Monday. It carries a complete stock
of goods and has refrigeration,
। making valuable aid to the public.
! Tiw second of a series of free
movie pictures sponsored by the
Lacey merchants, will be given on
Thursday night under the manage­
ment of Mr. Lipscomb of Battle
Mra. Haaal Tuttle of Battle Creek
was a dinner guest at the Pleasure
birthday organisation held at the
home of her mother. Mrs. Olive
Nyla Miller, a form-r student at
the Briggs, spent the week and with

___

family.

BRANCH DISTRICTtic Creek
guests of
and Mrs.
Forrest

morning Funeral
were Saturday evening
the latter’s parents, Mr. burial in Berryville
only near relative is
Vincent Norton.
Bldelman has a nrw V-B Minnie Bailey, who ’

DRIVERS »
WORLD FAMOUS DRIVERS
NLY ONE TIRE IS
ONLY

Sa
GUM-DIPPED TIRES V
INDIANAPOLIS 500 MILE
LOU MEYER won the In­
dianapolis 500-mlla raw. at
mllea an hour, breaking all.
track records, without tire
trouble of any kind.
|
No tires except Piresloue ’
Gum-Dipped Tires could
have resisted the terrific
heat generated at such high
sustained speeds on lhe hot
brick track, top after lap,
hour after hour. You can

Not one of the thirty-threwl
drivers would risk his life on ’
any other tire, for each
driver knows that heat U
the chief cause of tire fall- ;
ure and blowouts. Firestone,
cords are soaked In liquid
rubber, which saturates and j
coats every cotton fiber, pre- 1
venting friction and heat1
and adding great strength. &lt;
This is the Firestone pat­
ented process of Guift-Dipplng, that gives you greatest

Profit by tha experience
of race driven. Equip your
car today with Firestone
Gum-Dipped Tires—It costa
so little to protect Uvea
worth so much.
|

fireAtone

STAIIAII

and but* Ut m ehow 1

MTTtllEI

SFSIK PLiai

BUY the BEST
It Coat* LESS!

THE
OF TIM
HIGH tPI
4.50-21.—
5.50.17—I
AOOIA-J
6-00-17 HQ I

ii.ee

�Btak

4«n»cUo»» at
Tha Strand TktaUr

A
... ....... —- • head wL__
manner* ore more polkbad toon for
da
-------five
t
tha Captain. BMide* torn toere te I war(u the
of too catastrophe. But 11 a captain Tayter who te going to -•lhe Southwert- The ship fo ia per­
Him who controls the rag- take command ot a VMael at the petual motion, and we ro tortnuto
ffroAy IB -7W Hana**.islands and trade to toe northwest the cabin like little children catl­
Gene Stratton
portar'a well
co#st; also a beautiful young man. ing at everything we pdsa. Sow' I
"The
Harvester"
son of Mr- Marahall who owns the long for those gale* which shall known novel
filming­
i w*ft
we found hbw great toe danger to ship. Hr i» taking toe
be --------------------voyage around
•t me to our destined shore. make« A kPtatold »tory
,'uwt goes to toe ....
Nov. 20th—Fine wind and we go fire Hurdle plays the part of toe claarwhich we had been exposed
A
MR vtewbd toe waves Firing ] heavy eea
mb hat
had ______
broken_in ,—
part _of islands, then to canton and re­ mites and hotp-. Believe tne. atetere. I headed hu| alpw-«Un|n&lt; young In­
•r Sod rolling wider. Uli they . the ride of the ship, carried away 12 turns by toe Cape of Coofi Hope to do not love you tees, though X re­ diana fanner, muddling through toe
Um Bttte bark away. Turning i of onr chairs lashed there till we Baton, The whole nwnber al ......
..........
« Problem of picking i ■ wife- He Is
joice
that th? winds are bearing h
tne
i tola view I drew a long, tong .eould find a mare convenient place souls an board toe Parthian te 11.1 still farther away from YW- I think deeply in love with Ann Rptbgrford, nan a^arte Mday wW’Wl* IM
and w^* a last gdleu.
I for them. Owing to toe great Most Of the Milan are yotftjg and, Of you every day and a few nights a sweet young n»rm glrL bbl t» trap­
bteth day. Nov. 4. I hastened weight on deck the officers feared all of them travelling in toe broad l since I dreamed that father was ped into an engagement to another
Hr art Mta- O&lt;lte Pltotr «tern deck and found toe shores the vessel would capslae. The Oap- and downward road. Wlto I could I ,|Cg. How often when lying down
■ dear native land had tn all tain said he had not seen so severe 1 give —
you
m a description of our state have i wept at lhe thought that I
present
not very i might never see him ar any „
ot you
MUty forever receded from my a gale In 10 years Indeed temporal- room, though
to.^- at --------- —
JUU er splendidly playjd by Alice Brady.
X was Immediately obliged to iy speaking. It was toe most doleful •’stately." a4 we have not been able. in the land of the living. But only It provides a story packed with ro­ they attended Memorial Day aervi to my berth and was very 1 night I ever saw. but my spirit was to pay much attention lo It in our I to ^id in Hie glorious work of pub­ mance. laughs and heartaches.
•hQt all day. Monday. Nov. Sth—did I peaceful and composed. I could re- sickness It Is 7 feet wide and 5 1-2 ; u^lng glad tidings to the heathen,
family dinner Sunday at the home
Bothtag but lounge in my berth and 1 Joice that toe Eternal God was my feel long, and has a window about | has Induced me to part with father, Chester Morris and Madge
of Mr. and HrssM. Titus at Clov­
and
under me were placed toe size of a tea cup directly over home and friends.
repeat toe "Publicans prayer. God refuge
’
" "
Evans In ’Maealigbt Manter” erdale.
His everlasting arms I never read my berth You Will scarcely believe , Monday. Nov. 25. Saw a whale
Mra. Tom Howard of Leahs vleA detective story dealing with the
on toe ship and all the the 107th Psalm with so much In­ me
............
when
.............
I tell
" you
— ,u
that
“ it
“ contain*
—today He sported around toe vessel murder of a tenor during an oper­
t but one. White a mercy terest as I have this morning. Now a bureau. 8 trunks. 4 band boxes, several times, and raised 'himself atic performance at toe famous Bchwuehq,
each of us a writing desk. 8 bar*.
Hollywood Bowl before an audience
OdaMuMter consolation to us In our, of God and Hte wonders
In____
the _deep
_ __
__ F. 4 baskets, besides a number of a good look at him. Nov. 26lh—A tall of 20.000 its mysteries and thrills ited toe home folks and attended
Nov. fllhMrs. * Friday.
Nov.“ 9.*----------------------A difficulty
has
glctaMB. Tuesday. Nov.
-*•---------------------------------difficulty has
­ ,, smaller bundles of different kinds in sight al) day today and the of- an played
----- ...
.
- of- the Decoration Day exercises here
agatori * .background
little- . occurred we never anticipated.
The And over all these, those who oc­ fleers suspected that it was a pirate
Judd brought me a beautiful
boa------- --------------- a
huge production of "II Trovatore" Saturday.
Inwtarl us
na from
frYim Board
Ona rd had
had supplied
ilirmllAd us
lit with
ahiin. cupy the higher berths have to siilp. All things were In readiness
bird &lt;hteh hqd followed
with abunMra.
and Miss
Dlwith hundreds tn lhe cast. Drama—
— VSadie
..F.. Clemens
---------------,— r
.
iMid. It sgt five minutes on my' dance of provisions, and contractedI climb before we can get into them for an attack, but Ln the night she tic highlights Include the murder of; an&lt; Clemens of Battle Creek were
hand, then fluttered about our room with the owner of the vessel to fur­ What te still worse 1s that not a bore away to the southeast and did the tenor, the chase after the strange i guoate of Mrs. Bia Sail to
fgmtill night, when a voracious cat ate nlsh u* with cook, steward, and ta­ breath of fresh air can get in. and not molest us
lunatlc. toe episode of toe myster-1 &lt;17 over Sunday.
ll. 1 could have wept fox the dlsas- ble service, but by a mlsunderstend- the cockroaches are so thick they
Nov 28th We are between the lous Swami, the odd episode of toe ! The Dowling Townsend Club will
ter. but recollected that tears shed ! Ing between lhe owner and the Cap- crawl all over us. and toe smell te tropic* and the weather I* as warm voodoo chsrm. and the murder In , have a penny supper at tha Church
for what Is Irrecoverably lost are ' tain, ha says he te to find us In Intolerable My berth te the hlgh- as it l* Ui America the first of May.
the dark chamber Also in the cast I on T*uesday evgntqg. June 9. Drshed In vgln.
nothing but wood and water, pm* &gt; est In the place—so high that there but in vain do I look for the beau­ are leo Carrillo. H B Warner. J [ Felix Racette Of Paw PaW will be
Thursday. Nov. 8lh. Had a most | we are left destitute of totags ab- are only 12 Inches between my head ties of lhe season No verdant fields; Carol Nateh and many others.
the speaker.
Please bring table
tremendous gate last night. It com- solutely necessary for our comfort and lhe deck I have toe Pleasure no blooming orchards, no fragrant 1
------------- afrvtQ?- .
menced at 7 and continued without in Slckne&amp;s. all our furniture ts of hearing the watch walk over me cherry trees greet my view. I sec ’ Ken Maynard in "CUU« TWcf.'*
-------- '■ 1 ■»■**!--------------Intermission Uli 9 the next morn- I packed away In the bold and cannot every hour in the night, and yet I nothing but a wide waste of water I
This story te based on an actual'
IRVINO.
Ing. I cannot, my dear sisters, give ' be got at until we reach the Islands, sleep as soundly as ever I did in
you any adequate description of' i don't know what we shall do. but, my own bed at home Another ad­ can reach No more do I expect to tocldeut in toe development at the I Mr. gnd Mrs. John perry were
Wfest. The Incident Is togl ol a Sunday gueste of their children in
this storm as I did not see It, hav- i do know the Lord will provide
vantage I almost forgot to mention sec those romantic hills which * range detective who posed a? a ped­
Kaiomaxoo
aretired early with a sick beadSaturday. Nov 10 We are i 000 te that I hare a superb atlas of surround my father's dwelling
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Waddell had
i. But toe waves roared like di*- ■ mites from Boston I have spent the the Kings under my h«ad. and a Farewell my once loved home and dler and rounded up a gang of bed­
tent thunder, toe waves lifted us up whole day on deck and am so well folio Bible, with many engravings, the delightful groves In which 1 men In the wilderness of Montana as week-end vteitors, Mrs Waddell's
sister and husband and little son
towards heaven, and we sank again that I am able to notice everything (or the Queen, at my feet I don’t used to ramble—a long, last adieu.
from Grand Rapids, also Mr and the week end here and attended lhe
to toe deep. Rain descended In tor- | about me I will endeavor to de­ know why my friends selected so With great pleasure do I look for­ Trevor-gelly-Whalcn in
“Boni and ponce Man-" Mra John Nagel of the Powers commencement exercises In Nash­
tents, accompanied by thunder and । scribe the officer* and crew
The elevated a station for me
ward to the hour when I shall land
ville Friday evening. Their nephew.
lightning. The vessel pitched from captain is a good-natured, short,
Tuesday. Nov 13 Saw a ship but in toe distant isles of the sea. There,
'Song and Dance Man" is the neighborhood.
Mr. and Mra. Harvey Hartwell Charles Green, la one of the grad­
ride to ride with heavy farce, and | thick-set. rough-looking man. but It did not come near enough to if I can illuminate the mind of one drama of the quiet self-sacrifice of
uates.
speak The Captain thought It was immortal being who would other­ a poor ham-and-egg song and and daughter and husband ot Ray­
Mr. and Mp. Herbie Wilcox ac­
land
were
Bunday
vteitors
at
Dd|
bound for America Am dally be­ wise have sunk Into the grave in dance man whose gal had a chance
companied by Mr. and Mra. Verne
coming more attached to this in­ midnight darkness, i will cheer­ to make toe big time If he stepped Schiff man‘a
Mr. and Mt&gt;. K D Johnson en­ Wilcox, Virginia and Charlotte of
teresting family
The ladies arc fully forego the endearments of out of the picture. The girt Claire
tertained some of their children aqd •Dowling, visited the cemetery tn
everything you would expect a com
civilised life and labor and sutler Trevor, aided by the good-hearted grandchildren from away Saturday Plainwell
Sunday,
where
their
' pany of missionaries lo be I assure and toll till I die
"hoofer" when she wa* down and
grandparents and uncle arc laid
you I am very happy and have not
out. Is loyal to him lo the end. The and Sunday.
(Continued Next Week )
Mrs. William McCann spent sev­ away.
| had any cause to regret my departpity one feels for the poor hoofer
eral
days
last
week
In
Greenville.
-____
.j
y
lo
genu
[
ne
fcdxyirature from home We spend our long
You can tell a rich man. When he turns abruptly
PLEASANT HILL
The Ladles' Aid Society will meet
evenings on deck as the weather te says hte shoes arc lour years old. । lion
whan .heJ finally sacrifices him----- ------Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Dutcher
very mild There Is • great same- he te bragging instead ot complain- seif and does
To the Farmers of Michigan
‘
a laugh-clown-laugh In toe village Friday. June 5, prob­
ably at the home of Mrs. E D. and daughter Elvis of Caledonia.
nrss in sea-fanng life We eat and Ing.
‘‘Form Tested” means Satis­
Johnson. If not. they will meet al Mtes Brnrna William* of Petoskey
faction in Form Machinery.
the Community hall.
and Mtes Laura orandel of Massa­
,
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Dell Sohlffman and son. Clyde. chusetts were Saturday afternoon
Mr and Mrs Walter Culbert and accompanied Mr. and Mrs
Fred , callers al Mr a^d —
.. R. J „
MMrs
Wlitelling you in a few words that
। son spent Saturday with Mrs Freda
Schlffman of Battle Creek to De- 1 llama*
Hama-. The thm*
three glrte arv.
are Undcnl.
students
their complete line is designed
। Kluinp of Caledonia
troll Memorial Day to see
toe &gt;i
rmt Lansing.
lAn.ins
al u
M «
B C-. EMt
I Mrs Anna Buck spent Thursday
and built to conform to the
Tigers get defeated twice.
Btcptien Carter baa a new roof
with Mrs. O N Landon of East
Mr and Mrs. Robert Be-wmer on hte house and now says he wants
Carlton
•nd Mr* Schenkel of Owosso were It to rain to try It put before his
then TESTED under actual
Mr aud Mr* caryl Fuller and week-end guests of Wm Schenkel
wife
puts new wail paper on Hope
farm conditions. Every part is
daughter attended a family gather­
Mr. and Mr* Byron Smith of he doesn't want it to freeze to try I,
ing at Lake Odessa Saturday
checked to eliminate unneces­
Detroit attended the Wilcox sahool out the new chimney too
Mr and Mrs Arthur Yarger and reunion Sunday and visited rela­
Mr and Mr* wm Qulgg and Hisary load and wear, giving you
children spent Bunday with her tives.
1 tie daughter and Mrs J C Qulgg 1
machinery that will stand up,
RABatvu t &gt;-------- । of K^nutaoo were Saturday gueste I
. don of North Carlton.
operate smoothly and give
Tn.
u
LV* Y,tLE*
,
। al the home ot the latter's daugh- 1
Hubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo
Tlie church has been greatly tm- te,, Mr» CUfton Campbell and1
spent lhe week end with Mr and proved in appearance by a ngw roof family
। Mrs LaFayette Usbome
and coat of point The cemetery
«r Bnd Mrs. Curtis Pierce and 1
।
Mrs Wm. Shriber and children also wa* beautiful and looked like wn 0( Allegan spent the week end
a “Farm Test.” The Faps Byreou line includes every
, of Hastings spent from Friday eve­ a big flower garden on Memorial wjth her parents.
- r-•
and
Mrs 1
kind of machinery, from tractors to hand planters.
ning to Sunday night with Mr and
Stephen Carter
Mrs Frank Shriber and family
Mr and Mrs Harold Wlltetta and
son of pitot and Mr and Mrs WIL
Indianapolis streets may be slip-

neighboring states pushed In-

vest!gallon of toe pluck Lfgion,
Relieved a terroristic society,
suspected members were held
without bail in tha vigilante
ateylng of Charles A. Poole
near Da lxoIt. Under arrest at
Jackson, Mich., on charge ot
carrying concealed weapons,
was Ray Ernest, left, suspended
stette priaon guard and alleged
organizer for the society In the
JacfatoQ area.
In the picture
abova.
two
policemen
are
•hown In tha official costumes
of lhe Black Legion with in­
struments of torture which they
report^ flndtog Ln Ernest’s
home.

‘Farm Tested

OBITUARY.

STREETS OF CONCRETE
ARE BEST

Jock
$
Rabbit *’
Cultivator

safety, beauty, long life, low cost!
spick and span appearance to the

gives perfect balance
. . . extra rigid frame

community. Concrete ! pleading

atlon and years of
service. Wheel and

This U an outeland-

Ing piece of equipment

material for building new (Croats
or reaurfadog old oust, '

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES . Inc.
Hastings, Mich.

meat of comparable durability
sod carrying capacity- it cuts
upkeep . . . I acres sei property
values ; ; . aod reduces driving

^OUTLAND CtMENT ASSOCIATION
2012 Old* Tower Bldg., Loosiog. Mich.

Phone 2118

rd mua tajrtu, »&gt; p^. fc, u2 77 wife e^pSS

Lee Bally son of Charles and A.d'J“ "" ¥“?,orUI D«I «““V »1U&gt; U» oondlUoo ol Cabinet floor. I
Sarah Bally was born June 23 1870.
P*rTn}? .Mr and **”■ J J ln Condon and Peru
.
‘
and died May 29 1936
aged 65 Wtlletta and Helen.
years 10 month* He grew to man­
A large group of friends gathered
hood and spent hl* life until the at lhe cemetery Bunday when Lee
Bailey of Nashville was laid to rest.
। bom in Maple Grove After finish- He had many friends hero who re­
। Ing the country school he and his gret to hear of his passing and
I sister Minnie attended lhe high much sympathy 1s sxtended to hb
i school at Hastings later both teach- sister and other relatives In their
ing for a time In 1908 the farm wa* sorrow.
1 sold and a home purchased In
Miss Margery Gillette of Muske­
Nashville He
employed In gon was a week-end guest of home
Jackson for one rear Then he en­ folks. Memorial Day guests there
tered the C L Glasgow store where were Roy Chalker and mother of
he stayed until he entered the long Marcellus. George and Mtes Mary
, years of service at the L H Cook Hayman and Mr and Mrs Verne
] Lumber yard Ten year* ago he was Marshall and Delores George and
severely 111 and since has patently Miss Hayman returned with lhe
carried on with falling health Last Chalkers Sunday evening for a
Bunday In company with Otto Laos weeks visit in Marcellus
they decorated the graves of their
Heber Foster played in the band
departed lodge brothers in four 1 in Hastings Saturday
cemeteries He returned home th
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox
1 and after four days passed into rest •nd baby of Kalamaxoo were guests
early Friday morning. He was a of hia parents Saturday.
, member ot the Masonic and K of
Miss Agnes Foster of Battte Creek
P lodges, also a member of lhe vli- spent toe week end with her par­
laga council
He always gave a ents.
Mrs Cole and Mlsa Dora
helping hand lo all community ac­ Poster called Bunday evening and
tivities Hte only remaining sister. Agnes returned to Battle Creek
Minnie. Is seriously 111 at lhe home with them.
of hte life long friend and neighbor
Mr and Mrs Arthur Lathrop of
Prairieville came Friday and spent
Will L Gibson

4

Buses

Daily
TO

BATTLE CREEK
LEAVE HARTINGS AT

8:45
•11:15
1:50
6:85

A.
A.
P.
P.

M.
M.
M.
M.

19:40 P. M.
• Dally Except Sunday
t Sunday Night Only

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 2137

i It YUHA IV

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PROTECTS YOU FROM

FINANCIAL LOSS
Sound Business practice demand© that every property owner
carry adequate insurance against windstorms and cyclones.
Those who have windstorm insurance policiee in tho Mich­
igan Mutual of Hastings are members ol a bl&lt; company, back­
ed by over 50 years of successful operation and with nearly
8400,000,000 of insurance in force. The cost for protection in
this company far the past 50 years has been lesa thgn 7o per
1100 per year. Ypu cannot afford to he without this sound
protection!

Se$ qne of qw 800 rcpreffeulqtivM of wrjt® the home office.

Michigan Mutual Windstorm
IN 19M
la

wi.i-

JpVTRYONE MU afford th© Mfety, gpc«d and
oom fort that only train travel offegal 24 a
mil© lu cQuchea moan* 50 miles fur fl... pr 1000
mllM fpr 8^0. Vl|at &gt; bargain!

NHhiuWr.

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The biggest of its kind in Michigan.

Home OQ^ce t Hastings, kfieh*

MEW YORK CENTRAL SYSTEM

�---------------------------------------- ,-------- f---------------------------------------

FOOD PROBLEM
BROWING ACUTE

Peace and Quiet Along the Rhine

Mr and Mn Norris Bergman and
Mm. Ude Neal of Battle Creek spent
the week end at Hr. Henry Bergmsn'e.
MIm Daisy Hadlock U working for
her uncle Prapk Hallock, of Delton.
Doni
lbs L A B at ths
church supper served from 6 P. M.
until all are served Supper ft cents.

FUh HaUhtry Mu Suk a
SxbiUtita tar Sbaap
and Beal Liver*

।
neutbs at Ito hatchery stotlona. And
this substitute mil have to contain
the vitamins required
to grow
healthy, robust trout of catchable

Mr»

WOOD ftCHOOV MOTH.
We Invited our parents to a abort
program Friday afternoon. Tha pre­
cram wm:
'Our Flag'-poem toy Dora PUtoki.
"Professional W«~—Ertto Eng*
Since adoption of tlie deer-hunt­
"Christopher
Columba" — Ray­
ers license tag to be worn on the mond Kidder
back of the hunting coat next fall.
Gettysburg Address—Robert KldConservation authorities here have
received several requests for low
numbers, even th*, unlucky “11."

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

Tlie additions now being devel­
Jerry Foley and daughter. oped at the Wolf Lake at the alate

Mn. Roy Huver of lensing attend­ fUh hatchery unit near Kalamazoo

ed lhe Baccalaureate program at not only make It lhe largest In
Hastings Bunday P- MMichigan, put also one of lhe larg­
। Mr. and Mra Floyd Clum and est hatcheries tn North America.
family of OoaU Grove and MUs Joy
H. Dancer ot Grand Rapids were
The food problem has been grow­ Bunday dinner guest* at Herman
ing more and more acute and fisher­
eyed pike fry the like of which they
ies authorities In Michigan are
Wlll Craig and Mrs. Fuller of E
expecting that lhe coat Hem will Hastings were visitors H L J hope won t develop again for a long,
long time Approximately two hun­
approximate *40.000 this year In Matthews Bunday
dred million fry hatched within
past yean it has varied from 018.­
OaUers at John Weaver's Bunday
000 to 930000 but developments of were Dr and Mrs. Lester Brumm of three days time, coming out of the
eggs at the raig of hundreds of
comparatively recant time have
Woodland and Mr. and Mrs Stan­
caused the fisheries men lo begin ley Manker and family and Mrs thousands a minute The hatch wa.
eo unusually rapid and lhe hatchery
looking for a new source of Ash Mohler of East Woodland.

Diplomats who turn anxious eyes toward the Rhineland, which
Adolf Hitler has remilitarized, might be soothed by this peaceful
scene. Tier upon tier rise these vineyards at Blngerloch on the
Rhine, Germany, while two landmarks crumble away along tlie andent river. Ruins of the Castle Ehrcnfela and lhe famous Maeusturm are shown, the latter on the island.

SOUTHWUT RUTLAND.
Misses Joyce and Gloria Beattie
of Kalamazoo visited their grand­
parents. Mr and Mrs Francis Gor­
ham from Saturday till Monday
while their parents visited relatives
in Flint
Miss Zana Douglass of the Edger
district is visiting her grandparents.
Mr and Mrs Dan Douglass
Mr and Mrs Win Havens and
Erwin Havens visited on Bunday
the former's daughter Mrs Howard
Johnson and husband of Hickory
Comers
*
Some fTom here attended the fu­
neral of George Keller al Yankee
Springs on Sunday afternoon He
was well known here and the entire
community extends sympathy to
the bereaved ones
Miss Barbara Powers of Yankee
Springs spent lhe week end in the
Byron McKlbbln home
Mrs. Clara Robinson is visiting
her sister, Mrs Wm. Havens and
other relatives for a couple ot weeks
before returning to the home of her
son. Leonard, in Grand Rapids She
has spent the past several months
in Hastings caring for Mrs Maggie
Caulkliu.
Mr and Mrs
Adrian Johnson
moved last week from near Or­
angeville to their farm home in the
McCallum district
Friends were shocked to icam
Bunday of the passing ot Henry
Shipman an aged resident of this
place Tlie relatives have the sym­
pathy of all
Mr and Mrs Jim Wilcox and son
and Mr and Mrs Lester Lord and
baby spent Bunday In Plainwell as
guests of lhe formers sister. Mrs.
Harold prlndle and husband They
also called al Martin Their mother.
Mrs Jennie Wilcox accompanied
them and they spent the day there
Friends here arc glad to know Mrs
Wilcox is able to be around

OBITUARY.
Lawrence pierce O'Connor eldest
son of Dennis and Belle O’Connor,
was born in Hastings township.
Barry county. February 15. 1906^
and passed from this life May 21.
1936. age 31 years. 3 months and 6
days. On June 5. 1927 he was united
in marriage to Miss Letha Lawrepce, of Ionia, and to this union
was born a daughter. Letha Carol
Pierce spent his boyhood days in
Monterey and Orangeville town­
ships. He was converted to lhe
Christian faith . in early manhood
and wa&amp; a ineipbtr,of the Tufnarac
United Brethren church Pteree was
i an honorable, upright' man.' ready
and willing to help others, and hU
pleasing personality will be greatly
missed A close bond of kinship knit
. him to hit home, his parents, broth­
ers and his loved ones
He leave* to mourn so great a
Iom. his wife Letha and little daugh­
ter Letha carol, his parents three
brothers, Clarence. LaVern and
Fred, and a host of relatives and
friends.
, Today our hearts are sad and lonely.
Ils clouds see tn dark and low;
। But the wind whispers so softly
| "Our God has willed It so "

|

Dr. L. K- Wolf, of lhe Institute
for Fisheries Research, has been as­
signed to the study of lhe hatchery
food problem with a view to de­
veloping a cheaper type of food
If ha can devalop a cheap foodsubstlluu for lhe beef and sheep
livers and other meat product*, he
would save Michigan several times
his salary each year
There arc
various reasons why lhe raw meal
products are becoming so expensive
A number of states now rearing
great numbers of trout to catchable
size have begun to compete more
in the demand for those ■meat prod­
ucts. Another factor la that packing

trout become hungry and that hun­
ger not satisfied, cannibalism b
likely to develop in the rearing
ponds

lauch and daughter of
visited John Houghtailn

Bunday.
and Mrs Chas lauch of BatUq
Creek visited al John Houghtalin s
Bunday

Presto, changof

Tri-townshlp field has been piped
to Midland. Saginaw Bay City and
Lansing and mains to take it to
Grand Rapids are now being laid

Mr and Mrs Theo Pranshka and
Dorr of Brush Ridge spent Saturday
afternoon with them.

Japan’a classical city Is Kyoto
one* capital of the country, it was
here that culture and art flourished
deeds of temples and historic sites
Although the effects of firs and
massacres have marked Kyoto, still
It ts here that Japan’s emperors are

They caine with baskets of
tilings to eat including a
birthday cake June was certainly
surprised She received severe^ nice
presents Other visitors there Bun­
day were Lyle Bldeluian ot Pontiac.
Mrs Richard Welton and children
of Hastings Mr and Mrs R. Saund­
ers of Delton. Mr and Mrs Henry

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covers, $1.25 and I

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We're happier in our own home
•nd wo find it's easier to make
our monthly payments .. they
come just like rent.. but wa
are getting soma place. In a few
yean tha place will be all ours, and Boy
.. . that sure feels good.

Uck

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Felt, 60c

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HASTINGS
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UlirmiiWWrJ U
To make it ea»y for wary tank user to profit ot
this now home necessity, we moke thte special off
down installs it—with I • month term* . oc little j
month. And you can trade in your old fumes* el
heating equipment os port payment.

This heater completed totalled con be puteMl
month terms far os little as
’*
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G. E. GOODYEAR
H2 I. STATIST.

Mrs. ohryslal Shearer and daugh­
ter Phyllis at Kalamazoo spent the
week end at the home of Mr- and
NORTHWRST RUTLAND.
Mrs Clyde Leonard.
Weak end visitors In the Jim DibMr and Mrs Ernest Armstrong
and Mra Melissa Ashby of Kala­
mazoo spent Bunday afternoon at
Fred Ashby's home.

Mrs Ida Bidelman. who at pres­
ent is staying with her daughter.
Mrs Frank Roush, spent Thursday
and Friday with her granddaughter.
Neva Reid, at Kalamazoo
Joe Stengers and family spent
Sunday with friends and relatives

DOUD CORNERS.
Mr and Mrs Chas Hyde and
sons of Lakeview spent from Friday
until Bunday With his sister. Mrs
Robt. McMannis. who U quite poor-

syria Baturday
Mr. and Mrs Will Carl spent Deco­
ration Day at Joy cemetery in the
morning and in lhe afternoon were
with their son al Hastings Ail vls-

veloped into the leading producer
of natural gas in Michigan a well
having an initial production of ap­
proximately 54.000.000 cubic feeds
of gas dally was recently completed
in this field State geologists report
that this well Is certainly one of the
largest In lhe northern states and
would rank as ■ large well in lhe

। But some day our God and Father
( Will whisper. "Done," to you and
me.
And then If we are only ready
| Our loved one we will see.
i Funeral service was In charge of
I the Rev
M H
DaWson
at the
i Tamarac U. B- church Saturday,
May 23. Burial was al lhe Yankee
Springs cemetery

6-scction revolving Refrigerator
$0.50
Dish for—
C*

a knife of finest quality
with a keen edge.

Thad Cook, who is working in
Hastings spent Bunday with his sls-

In addition to having the slates
'cord Rawer the tri-townshlp gas

But* Oh we will sadly miss him
With the rising of lhe sun.
And we will be so lonely
When at eve our work is done

1 pint Old English No Rubbing IQp
Wax with long handled applicator fU

SGHRADE
POCKETKNIVES

and daughter, Thelma, ot Grand
Rapids, Mr. and Mrs Isaac Rowley
and Mr and Mrs. Glenn Clum and
daughter. Naomi of Hastings
Mr and Mrs. Logan Hunt of Flint
and Mrs Homer Ingram of Hastings

The price
this year is
year and the year before. It Is very
pony with Mr
and Mrs
Harry
Important that growing young trout
Misener of Kalamazoo spent Bun­
day with Alva Kenyon and family

SPECIALS

A Large Assortment of

would develop, that they had to
Matthews of Grand Rapids spent go to work feverishly lo get lhe baby
over Decoration Day with Mrs
Bump. .
mobile planting unit in northCallers at Herman Hauer's this
M icingan was oommandecred

being absent; one for not being
tardy; one for scholarship; and on*
for cooperation The school was di­
vided into two groups Dorothy Rob­
inson received the prize for the
first group and Robert Kidder, for
the second group
We are planning for our picnic
to be held Wednesday. June 3rd.

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ntt «MTWQ» amttit, TOTMBAT. JVNt &lt; 1»M
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of JUpresontaUves were relegated
to the category of "lame duclu.'*
The legislature, which enjoya lhe
distinction and the doubtful honor
of enacting 44 laws tn two hours, in­
validating the rights of parishes ta
govern themselves, and dumping
more and more povtr into the
hands of the puppet officials of the
Um people. By their verdict they Long regime, is now more solidly
in the hands of the machine Ilian
It ever was. In fact it Is practically
unanimous in its desire ta complete
Long's uncompleted program, and
•four parishes were the opposing as Gov. AUen once said: ’continue
ndidatcs successful and all five the era of progression by perpet­
uating his friends tn office." The

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MARVELOUS

2

executive and Judicial branches
seem to be dedicated to lhe same
purpose. Thus it can perhaps Just­
ly be said that tlie dictatorial laws,
that Huey Long's pliant legislature
placed upon the statute books, have
been quite overwhelmingly ratified
by the people of the state of Louis!-

hands.of the dictatorial ring than
it ever was. It’s * dictatorship with­
out a dictator, because there are
none in the -inner circle" who can
begin lo match the rabble-rousing
eloquence of the slain., dictator who
' talked the next to the last Congress

the city was at once put into a fi­
nancial "straight-jacket." The city
was deprived of revenue*, and its
taxing and borrowing power was
limited, so much so that at this
writing it is said that something
will iutve to be done soon to help
the city out of the financial "hole"
in which it finds itself.
These and many other examples
might be given, tending to Illustrate
how tlie Long dictatorial rule has
been clamped down on the people of
Louisiana. Judging from lhe outcometaf the recent election, the
Deary of a democratic form of gov­
ernment Is only a matter of passing
interest In that state. It is some­
thing for epell-blnders to orate
about and for newspapers to com­
ment upon editorially. For all prac­
tical purposes, the benefits and ad­
vantages of democracy do not ’eeem

'

■

...................... b.W.J. .. ■

- -...............

................. ......................

American ‘Devil’s Island’ Keeps No-Escape Record

EIGH1

tag governed by a self appointed
committee composed of the heads of
as given out.
Almost literally it can be said that various departments of state gov­
ernment. But they miss the genius,
the slain dictator directed this last and the brazen boldness of the slain
campaign from his grave on the dictator and ritaster politician. He
lawn of the sky-scraper capital
alone and single handed built up
building that he caused to be built. an organization in Louisiana Dial
Before he died he had mapped out challenged the political and eco­
tiie campaign strategy for his aides
nomical ayitem of Uils nation, and
to follow. By the manner of his the ideals of democratic govern­
death, he unexpectedly provided ment under which we .have grown
them with the voice of a slain mar­ and prospered as has no other na­
tyr to follow, in place of a pugnac­ tion in history.
ious boss, because when it came to
The defeat of the antl-Long
playing politics Huey Long was al­
ways ready and never seemed to legislative member* has placed the distribution of special favors given
overlook a bet. He even left behind Louisiana state legislature more out by dictatorial officials In a way
him a phonographic record of his । solidly than ever in the hands of quite at variance with our theory
... fact
.«» there
...... were
W.„ four {
U» tiei
voice. In
Future
mat mat was tne poay mat
phonosraphlc record, nllrel on both I
l,'*t ground
KTOUntl 1 of popular government.
.Ides .lu. » spreeb tlut he had pre- I out
«“ laws murdering
murdertM self-government
«U^0»«n&gt;menl happenings ta the stale will be
...
pared to matt In bla eatnpeun tor .............
ut .lt&gt;.. and- parUhre.
plared niched with interest.
W. R. Cook.
the Presidency. The transertpuon
P»-“ •&lt;
disposition
ot that speech
broadcast all I
‘The.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
over th. tha. and pro.ldrel all lhe "u1 'utUti"! branches ol the slate
Mr. and Mrs Charlie Kimble and
AJcatraz island fe^Urai pstaon sUil rales as an escape-proof institu­
rlTrels ol the slain dictator address- a;»'"'menl loo^seem to_bc dedlcaltion. First prisoner to attempt flight from the bleak 12-acre “rock"
same purpose. The strange' friend of South Haven were callers
tag hi* subjects from beyond the | m w . 4ar
thing about it all is that, from elec-1 on Mr M. L Covllle and Mr. and
tion results as announced, it has all Mrs. John covllle also on Mrs. Chas,
withering gunfire ot prison guards and tell down the 75-foot chit
Thus it can virtually be iruth- been ratified by the people of lhe Parlee and daughter Wednesday
which bounds the island- Bowers* body mashed on huge boulders
fully said that he conducted the stale.
I afternoon.
and he died Immedlgtgiy. The escape attempt was made near the
Louisiana state campaign last JanPerltaps tlie law that was Die
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Townsend and
lettv at the extreme left in the above oicture
| uary from his grave on the lawn I most odious to lhe people of Loul-1 Rev. and Mrs. Harley Townsend ati of the state Capitol As the self­ siana was one that Huey Long had tended the graduation exercises at
11IGHBANK.
Eaton Rapids vUlted Mr. and Mra.
made dictator of the stale of Louisi­ caused ta be enacted. By ft. com-1 North Manchester College. Ind., KENNETH SMITH
ana. Huey Long was fully aware pleta control of the election ma- Friday. Their sons Ralph and Dale
Glad to hear that Rev. Rhoades Andrew Townsend last Friday.
GETS FINE POSITION.
of the danger that always sur­ chlnery of the state was placed in Townsend were among lhe gradu­
in the Flint Journal of May 26. the pastor of the North Evangel­
LENT CORNERS.
rounded him from an enraged sec­ ate hands of three stale officials | ales
appeared the following Hem about ical church will be with us for an­
tion of lhe people, who had seen who were in his control This law
Albert Whittemore of Cressey
Mr.
**
“ and “Mrs. *Levi
1 Kantner and Kenneth W. Smith, son of Mr. and other year. Children's Day Program
many of their liberties taken away;
provided for county election boards Mr and Mrs. Guy Kantner called Mrs. Byron A. Smith of Detroit and will be Ln the evening of the 14th spent Saturday with Irving Frye.
who were angered by lhe injustices
ot
June
and
Father
’
s
Day
will
be
on
Sam
Holsaple
of
Bellevue
Sun
­
a
grandson
of
Mrs.
Clara
WaUdorff.
Mr. and Mra. Charles fox of Kal­
of three members, but two of those
ti»ey had suffered; or who were vic­
observed in the morning of lhe 21st amazoo called on Mr. and Mrs.
formerly of Hastings:
three members were appointed by day afternoon.
tims of hl* political acta He was
of June.
Mr and Mrs. Forrest Christian
Clare Thomas. Thursday evening.
the governor Having two of lhe
Kenneth W. Smith, director ot
literally surrounded with guards j three members of the election board and Richard spent the week end in
Mr and Mrs. Frank Hawbllts
young
people's
activities
at
Court
School closed Friday with a plcwhen he returned to his home stale,
in each county, this election-board Greenville. Ohio. Mrs Glenn Wot- Street Methodist church at Flint, called on Mr. and Mrs. Howard
as he frequently did That he sensed
Kelly near Hastings Tuesday.
was given the power ta name 'the rtag returned home with them
since 1933. has accepted tlie position
I lhe danger that constantly threatJohn &gt;awald and Mrs. Seymour
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Perkins and
Mr. and Mrs George Piper and of associate director of Charlevoix
election commissioners in every vot­
I ened him is evidenced by the fact
daughter Peggy of Paw Paw visited Lyue have been on the sick list.
ing precinct, and of course none but children and the former's mother camps, effective June 1.
that he made a "political last will
Mn. Maurice Burchett is staying
the week end at Mr. and Mrs.
spent Decoration Day in Eaton
In connection with lhe appoint - Worth Green’s.
ano testamenu" This was made loyal followers of Huey Long were Rapids.
at her home here again,
after
selected. The people of lhe coun­
ment. a promotion for Mr Smith
public after his a&amp;sassinaUon. and .
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Guy and son spending several months caring for
Mr and Mrs Joseph Grant and
j ta it he named hl* full ’ slate ” of I ties, or parishes, had no voice in
at the Detroit university school, a Kendel of the Moore district spent her mother. Mra. Jake Adrlanson,
daughters of Battle Creek and Mr boys' preparatory school in Grosse
the
matter
They
could
cast
their
candidates for state and federal of- ,
Tuesday evening at Mr. and Mrs. of Prairieville, who had a broken
Earl Benner spent Sunday in Grand
point, was announced.
flee. The only vacancy on the list ' votes, but would have ta abide by Rapids.
Frank llawblita’s; Mr. and Mrs. leg as the result of a fall.
Mr Smith was a sprinter on one Merle Hecker and daughter Joan
wa* a candidate to complete his un­ lhe results "as announced "
Mias Jean Hammond is driving
Sunday callers on Mr Melvin Co­
When It came ta the matter of
of Northeastern High school’s crack Patricia of Hastings spent Wednes­ to her school at Mahr’s business
expired term in the United States
vllle,
who
is
very
poorly
at
this
writ
­
hiring school teachers for Instance
teams in Detroit. In 1930. the De­ day evening there.
Senate. This was recently done by
college at Kalamazoo for the sum­
the people of any township, village. ing were Mr and Mrs. Will Bayne troit conservatory ot Mueslc grant­
the selection of his widow to fill
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Fred
Reid
and
sons
mer.
and
Mrs.----------Flora Wood of Coats
City or county really had nothing &lt;। —
- --------that vacancy and she has pledged ta say. because the thousands of Grove, Mr and Mrs John Barker of ed him a bachelor of music degree. visited relatives In Kalamazoo Dec­
Mr. and Mrs Clarence Hammond
I school teachers Ln the state, held Hastings and Mr and Mrs Leo He then studied at Union seminary, oration Day.
of Hastings spent
speiu Saturday
oaiuiaay with
w
Columbia university, earning his
11 Heal last will and testament of
Mr. and Mrs. Berle Nash and (! Mr
Mrs Leland Hammond.
their Jobs at the pleasure of a board ) Shoemaker and twin daughters of I master’s degree in sacred music.
Louisiana's slain, dictator, judge R.
sons visited al Mr. and Mrs.
r* Will' | Mr and Mrs. Robert Stacie and
consisting of the Governor. Die i Detroit
Officials of the church have innear Mannan
Marshall Sunday.
ssni near
uunaay.
Joe Tombs entertained Mr
and
I Supt. ot Public instruction and the I Mr and Mrs Stephen Perrin and vlted Mr. Smith to retain his as­ Nash's
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. Rodger
Rodger Warner
Warner and
and | Mrg
Mr.
““ "Toinbs””and. r
. Bn.a
of the Long machine for governor Attorney General The full approval1 children of Detroit and Chas FarMr.
' famliv
inn nf
In the recent primary campaign— of this board had lo be secured be- lee and family were Sunday guests sociation with lhe young people sons
of KfmKlHIla
Nashville called on tlie Will
Will I o.f _
Baltic Creek Mr and Mrs Carl
and lhe gymnasium activities at
fore any teacher could receive an of Mr and Mrs Isaac Williams near the church as far as his positions
Representative Cleveland Dear, a appointment Naturally teachers de- Dowling
Afternoon callers were
veteran political campaigner, who siring employment would be very । Mr and Mrs Ralph Rozema and will allow him to do so. os Mr Smith other relatives had a cooperative
of Richland. Saturday
of course had lhe moral support of hesitant about saying or doing any- daughters of Grand Rapids, Mrs is to live in Flint
dinner at Mr and Mrs. Paul Bell’s
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Paul and
Besides his work among lhe young in the McKelvey District Bunday.
the national aiunlnlstration and all thing against the dictatorial meth- Floyd Williams and grandson of
family of Kalamazoo spent Batur—
the practical benefit of non-political ods of the Long machine, regardless I Battle Creek and Mr and Mrs Nell people tn the church and his leadMr. and Mrs. Clair Marshall of day and Sunday with Mr and Mrs.
ershlp in the church of youth al Bellevue and Earl Marshall of
"relief" fund a administered by his of .what their personal opinions j Granger of Plainwell______
I which he spoke each Bunday morn­ Marshall called on Mrs. Freda Jay Hall.
Miss Jean Boerman of Cressey
be
•
• •’
ing. his services have Included an Marshall Bunday.
representative government vs dic­ might
There were special methods of
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
spent from Wednesday until Friday
active part tn the management of
tatorship" The issue was clear cut.
meeting local situations too. In East j Mr and Mrs E H Geer of Flint the city church leagues tn various
with Miss Gloria FrancLco, and
The Long machine won out by a
COATS GROVE.
attended
the school picnic at Dos­
Baton
Rouge
a
Police
Jury
voted
11
,
were
week-end
guests
of
Peter
ntifleuea.
vote of two lo one and as a result
The L. A. 8
meets
week ter Thursday evening
i Louisiana is more solidly in thp lo 2 against a particular policy ad- , Steel They also called on Mr and
Thursday p M. with Mrs Lloyd
Mr. and Mrs. David Cooper and
vacated by Huey Long He met this • Mrs. Delbert Reynolds. Sunday
GLASS CREEK.
Fisher
Supper
will
be
served
by
son and Mrs. Hulda Cooper of Kal­
by appointing an addl'tonal board
Mr and Mrs William Cramer. Jr.
John Erway of Lansing and Ruth Club No. 2. Everybody welcome
amazoo called at the Robert Steele
of 13 member*—all hl* henchmen called on Mrs Edith Edger SaturE Erway of Kalamazoo were week­
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Steiner and home. Sunday.
By doing this he was sustained by day evening.
end guests of their parents, Mr. family of Dayton. Ohio. visited their
a vote of 15 lo 11 There were other ' Mr and Mrs Merle Callihan of
grandparents. Mr. and Mra. - John
OBITUARY.
laws enacted that may have had Lansing were guests of their par- and Mm Ray Erway.
Ray Otis and children of Kala- Woodman from Saturday morning
the appearance of reform measures, ents, Mr and Mrs William Cramer, , —.-------------- —---------Kate L
Skinner, daughter of
inozoo were week-end guests at Fred until
evening.
uuui Bunday
OUIIU4/ rtcxiuif.
but under the spoils system only Decoration Day
Otis’.
—
- - club
• ’ii annlver- Lothrop and Mary &lt; Williams i SklnI
Tiie
D.
O.
T.
O
served ta bind the dictatorial colls I
Mrs A. E. Reynolds, who has
Mr and Mrs. Chas. Whittemore I__ f „
...........w will
___ m
„„ I ner. was born March 24. 1850 in
meeting
be held w
at, tlie
still tighter. Buch was lhe effect of been so seriously ill. was reported were called ta Delton last Friday I sary
| Paris township. Kent county, and
church
next
week
Wednesday.
June
1
lhe so-called Civil Service Act. This | a little better Sunday
Mrs KenI by Lhe illness of the former’s moth- | |0. Program In charge of Nane Cool­
law transferred lhe power of ap- । neth Reynolds is caring for her
home
In Thomapple township.
। pointment and dismissal of such] School closed Friday. May 29. with er. Mrs Whittemore, and remained baugh.
.
|' “-*
Ml" .n&lt;.
mre.1 H.t.oltth.
lover a few days.
- • Mr. — ----- ot
- '
'municipal employees as policemen a pot luck dinner at noon, which
Mr and Mrs Clyde Warren en- Tiffin. Ohio, were at the H Wood- of two years she wfnt* w a, hor
'and firemen, from local officials to j was well attended, nearly every ! ■rtalned the latter * mother and
home Saturday visiting Marian ' p.r.nU
Iowa Aftar Uie dellh^f
' j lertained
.---------a commission appointed by the Gov- I mother being present. Our teach- 1
.
... .
" «wwm. ,i!^io
nuci Hie UCBUl
OI
-er Sunday
woodman who was home
from
mother
S£hl’ । father from Lansing over
Sunday.
Woodman
,rr
I ,,er mother she returned to Michlemor
I er for the past year. MLss Romig.
Roy Erway and family were
in 8towrir^f°Hastki.
nlght
ta? *
I*nd “r*W
y0Ung wom*nhoo&lt;i
In New Orleans a staong opposl- has gone north to preach. Everyone’' Grand
Rapids
Thursday
I??,. 8toweU
---------------of----------Hasting*
... was
- ----------also---a vial-1, ln Djj, vicinities
vlcinlUea 0
of( Kcnt
Kent
fjftrry
tion developed against the dictator- wishes her success in her new field
* where they attended one of Phil
la! rule of lhe Long machine, eolof work.
u,
Mr. V o
' c°untlM On March 1. 1876 she was
Gsterhouses’s sensations Miss An­
&gt;8 ™oaiPson Bn&lt;* । united in marriage lo Moses S. Rob- netle Wolf, a granddaughter, was . Mr ana .5®*
Mrs ’ Harlow
*1“ h” Barnum went
W&lt;’^ ' ,n*°n ot p“rIj townslilp, Kent coun| one of the dancers
| tota Detroit
Detroit on
on Bunday
Rundav and
and brought
hrotiaht, ty. who _____
. _ her in death _
. ­
preceded
Feb
।
The nelghborhoood was saddened back Miss V'rgtnla Thompeon. who
IN EVERY ACTIVITY THEY ALWAYS CO TOGETHER I
11 Sunday lo hear of the death of has been working there the past ruary 12. 1922 They made their
home in Allendale. Ottawa coun­
Henry Shipman
He had been 11) | year.
ty. where they resided one year,
but a few days and aemed better.,
Mrs. Neil Smith of Midland spent then returned to Paris where they
but the end came quickly He had the week end visiting relatives here. resided two years. In 1879 they set­
| spent almost all his life in tills j
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox
I vicinity where his children grew | and baby of Kalamazoo spent Bat- tled on the farm where she has
made her home for the past 61
ta young manhood and womanhood., urday with Mr and Mrs
E. 8. years. To this union were born four
He was a highly respected man. I Thompson
| Much sympathy Is extended tlie be- , Mr and Mrs Harry Woodman of children, Fred L- and Glenn W. of
Newark) Ohio. Mra. Elma Ashby of
reaved family
' Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Hastings and Earl a. at home Site
Word was received Sunday of tlie I Steiner and family of Dayton and
leaves to mourn her passing her
death of Nick Erway at Traverse Mr and Mrs. John Woodman spent four children, nine grandchildren
j City. He was well known in this I Sunday with Hubert Barnum and and five great-grandchildren and a
11 vicinity where he spent hl* young- । family.
i i er days.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Christmas of host of relatives and friends

'*±.S St,

TRAVELING BAGS

j?

SIZES: ITA“ x 15“ x 6%'
and
x 8’A" x 4-

Health and

Success

Given With the Purchase of a

LANE Cedar Chest

N

$2925
INCLUDING
BOTH BAGS

Guaranteed
Uctk Protection

FREE
A Triple Value! Three magnificent gifts at the coat of
&lt;x*«l That’s what thia staggering offer means. Select the
moat beautiful cedar cheat you ever saw! A genuine LANE
giving guaranteed moth protection backed by a moth insur­
ance policy written by one of the world’s largest insurance

LLER FURNITURE CO
BS MICHIGAN

A Word to
Graduates
The school doors are closing

behind you. Ahead of you, are
other closed doors which you will have

Health is esaential to success and the active business
man of today must guard it jealously. Summer activi­
ties add their toll to the regular demand on his energy,
so it is necessary, therefore, to recuperate quickly.
Highlands Dairy Grade A Milk will help restore your
strength and nerves quickly and surely. Add this en­
ergy builder to your daily diet. Drink a
quart of this pure milk every day.
High in Cream
Content Raw or
Pasteurized

PboMjtfl

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

to open. We know you do not expect

The knowledge you have gained in

school will help you.

However, you

will need further schooling in practical

financial matters.

We invite you to use the facilities of

thia bank. It will be a pleasure to co*

Congratulations upon your gradua­

Hastings

N
K

WA8 I
WAR,
BRU'

FOR Tl

But 30
Ev&lt;

Jacksor
New Orle
ument os
scant tri
city And
standing

knew ’O
ly called
thought
was faci
yielding
knot. Hi
elated w
closely c
of our co

worthy o
activity
power of
of great
course o
our coun
standing
New Ork
odds wh
power w

concern i
Andrew
Eliza bel
came to
as poor
tied in l
oilna tn

About tw
lhe resu

dealt), y
to becom
lhe Uni
brave h

aged 2.
we who
how ou

predate
rlfices m
we mlg
today,
(Con

MIS

STATE
LIE

WILL
SE

Provid
ing
Em

Tn ord

govemm
mlniatra

the Oov
bershlp
Relief
Tlie Co
after w
man of
visor*.
him to
man o
gency
where
a third
by the
for app
Commis
mission

Relief
greater
Ing an
tion of
Ther
State
aonnel
vision
tratlon
tion of
tinue a
The

pioyee
commis
office
office

to open them easily.

operate with you in any way we can.

oK
Xs ru
° Qt

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

TELEPHONE 2226 1___

N

!■

tion, and belt wishes for future success 1

OF HASTINGS
EASTINGS. MICHIGAN

rigidly
those
from
Till'
once a
tabilah

state a
Buch a
time a
service
will b
merit,
examin
Ing.
The
mlniat

aonnel
Ues in

missio
ralnist

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER

--------------------------- ---------------

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1936

16 PAGES

ANDREW JACKSON. j One Hundred and Two Seniors
1 LID OF OU 19 Receive Diplomas Friday1
WAS IN REVOLUTIONARY

WAR. WAS CAPTURED,
BRUTALLY WOUNDED

FOR THE INDEPENDENT
SPIRIT HE SHOWED
But 30 Years Later He "Got

Even" at Battle
New Orleans

of

Jackson Square In the heart of
New Orleans and the Jackson Monutnenl as beautiful a* they arc. are

scant tributes to the savior of that
City Andrew Jackson was an out­
standing man. and one of the most
fearless leaders this country ever
knew “Old Hickory" he was proud­
ly called by his men. When he
thought he was right, or when he
w» facing danger,
.BE.. he was us un
mi-­
yielding us a tough
t___:. old :.1_1
__ .
hickory
knot His name. Is
I- so closely asso­
ciated with New Orleans and so
closely connected with all that pan
uf our country that what he did to
•ave It, and preserve the union. Is
worthy of frequent repetition The
activity and the unyielding will
power of "Old Hickory." In the face
of great obstacles, changed the
course of history at least as far as
our country Is concerned His out­
standing success at the Buttle of
New Orleans, in the face of great
odds which hl* unbreakable will
power would not acknowledge is my
reason for writing at some length
concerning hl* lite
Andrew Jackson and
his wife
Elizabeth, parents of "Old Hickory "
came to this country from Ireland
as poor Irish emigrants They set­
tled In the Waxhaws of North Car­
olina in 1765. where other relatives
and friends had preceded them
About two years later he died from
the result of a strain while lifting a

Dr. W. D. Handarton Give*
Commencement Addrett

ONE OF THE MOST PROF

The commencement exercise* of | change, and public schools have
the Hasting* High school were held "ourUhed ever since in Hasting.
I| TriThe ■imerinr«nM»nt
superintendent nald
paid ■
a Hltrh
high
Friday afternoon in the Central au­ | tribute to the people of Hastings
ditorium. which wks packed to Its | not only for their Interest In edu­
limit with friend* and relative* of cation, but for the sacrifices they
lhe one hundred and two graduate* have made In order that their chil­
and by others Interested in
the dren might have the best possible
work of our high school. Promptly educational advantages
*1 two o’clock the high school or­
The address entitled “A Chal­
chestra. directed by Mr Lewis Hine,
rendered the processional march. lenge to Youth” was given by Dr
| and Lhe graduating class filed in W D. Henderson, director of the
and took their places on the plat- extension division of the Unlverform
*lty of Michigan
He explained
1 The invocation was given by Bev that this was his 433rd commence­
E O McSherry. pastor of the U B ment address; but he said there Is
church. There followed two num- __
______
__ _ about commencenot _ a
sameness
bers beautifully rendered by the ments. Each community is distinct
High School girls’ glee club, directed from every ohter. each commenceby MIm Jean Olerum
ment varies In some way from evSupertntendent VanBuskirk. who ery other He said he had been
had charge of tile program, briefly privileged to speak to thousands of
I reviewed the history of yducation ' audiences, at all kinds of gather­
city. This is the one hun- jngx; but the best audience.* were
dredth anniversary of the first the commencement day gatherings
white settlement within Its limits ।
Re said we are facing a new day
intiaui- . in a way it is a tragic time
Three y^r* later Its few» tnhablIt
While it
tants organized a school
It has been hard on millions of Amerwas
rtth preswus crude
cruae as
u compared
cumpareo with
wiui
prea- | lean
jean adults,
BdUILS. but
Out its
Its worst feature Is
Ls
ent day schools, yet it evidenced the resulting disillusionment and
the Interest which those first set- | discouragement of the youth of our
tiers had in public education
At j land
Despite all disheartening,
first the schooling of their children , disturbing circumstances he urged
was paid for by the parents That the graduating class never to give
was then the established custom. । way tc i*
----them
The difficulties
but when the state adopted our which they wrill
... face ...
are not compubllc school system, the early set- parable to those which confronted
tiers adapted themselves to thl*
--------• on page
.
(Continued

GETS LETTER FROM
HASTINGS, ENGLAND
Editor There Senda Message
to "His Worship, the May
or, Hastings, Michigan"

PAPER NW !
RECEIVES THREAT
CONG.

CLARE

ABOUT
SUMS BEETS

HOFFMAN

ITABLE 0R0P8 FOR
FARMERS

MICH. IDEAL STATE TO
GROW SUGAR BEETS
Its Beet Sugar Factories Do
Not Produce Half of the
State's Requirements
The Rotarians at their Monday
noon luncheon had the privilege of
hearing J a Brock of Saginaw talk

'CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

THEY REVOKED NORMAN ।
GREEN’S BEER LICENSE;
Freeport Man

Violated Li­

quor Law*—State Check­
ing Up on Dealers
Norman Green, who conducted a

|
'■TIRES IT
i CMKIT1NIM
.
------ —
PERIODS OF TWO WEEKS

beer parlor at Freeport Is not runDURATION OPEN ON
nlng one now An Inspector from
SUNDAY, JUNE 28
the Liquor Control Commission |
mu*t have arrived in Freeport at1
an Inopportune time to check up an PI PAR I A KF SITF
Mr Green* place, for he found that
LRI'C
1 c
Green had violated the state'* li­
quor law In two respects He kept

J ?

*’U

NEXT

Members of the First Church of
Christ adentlst. here have secured

land. Oregon, to deliver a lecture on
Christian Science. in Central audi­
torium. Sunday afternoon, June 14

THT. ADJUSTS!)
BONDS TO Bl in
UTXD TO VSTtam

*nd a cordial invitation 1* ex­
,i tended to the public.
hou”
“Id £*r £ Fifteen Well Furni.hed Cab- j' Mr. Beetey I* a member of the
Intoxicated persons He was brought ,
i board of lectureship of The Mother
ins Available—Activities
| church. The First Church of Christ
before Lhe Enforcement Division of .
the Liquor Control Commission lhe [
; Scientist, in Boston. Mass.
Center About Lodge
other day. headquarters at 16 Shel­
__
,
.
.
.
'। Las*
Last year
year a tuuuai
similar uiuaium
program here
The ,deu&gt;u«e, end en)oymenu
0, p„t
u&gt; u»
don Avenue. Grand Rapids He ad­
mitted the charges against him. as of the Camp Fire Girls' camp. Camp I pie who filled the auditorium nearly
he could not avoid doing The rep­ Kltanniwa. al clear lake, are again : to capacity and who came not only
resentative of the Commission told . av.liable (or (he BrU o( Barry 1
,&gt;1"' b“' "°™ n'l«l’bo™«
him that hLi liquor selling day*
*
। counties as well.
A E |
-----were over; that the Commission county, according to Mrs
would not countenance law viola­ Johnaon. who I* Ln charge of Camp'
1 tors would not stand for such ac­ Fire work in Hasting*. The periods
| tions as he admitted and as their of two week* duration each begin on ‘
I inspector had discovered Accord-|1 June 28 and continue on through1
: ingly. Mr Green M not selling beer to August 21. Girl* eight and nine
‘
I In Freeport or anywhere else Other years of age are Included
— In the
....
the older girls’ group
i beer vendor* should take warning ' camp ages and
|
। Is 14 years and older
'
A large number of girls from COUNTY TAX COMMISSION
।
Barry county have attended the
i

DELIVERABLE TO
ADDRESSEE ONL
Local Post Office Slatatf
Government Regulations
for Procedure

ALLOCATESTAX
FOR lit UNITS

11788096

BOifiD MEMBERS

ranean coast, but it was not until
about a century and a half ago that

gar from It
Michigan
he said,
could be this country’s sugar bowl
The climate, the soil and other con­
ditions are Ideal In this slate for
producing sugar beets II has prov­
en one of the most profitable farm
crops The contracts now given
Michigan farmers who grow sugar

Tuesday. June ifl. will be "pay-

Hastings and vicinity, for that 1*
the day when it is expected that the
Adjusted Service Bonds will be de­
livered by the Hastings postoffice.
Local letter carriers will make ev­
ery possible effort to deliver Ums*
bonds Tuesday afternoon, and inas­
much as the bonds are to be sent
by registered mail, deliverable to
addressee only, it is highly desir­
able that the veteran arrange to Im
al home that afternoon at the time

MAKES PRELIMINARY

■ that a still greater number will be ,
RATES
' enrolled this year Applications for '
admittance may be obtained from
FINAL SESSION WILL
! Mis* Dorothy Laras, 221 champion i
street. Battle Creek The fee U *10
BE ON JULY 23RD
for a two weeks’ period for Barry |
I county girl* and must be paid the j
Tax Rates This Year Will
1 Friday before the beginning of the I
I period. Included in the application |
THE VOTES
Be Less Than Those
1 is a doctor's certificate of good
Fixed Last Year
health.
VERY SMALL NUMBER
I Through the interest and help of ' The Barry county tax commis­
made their preliminary allo­
AT ANNUAL MEETING the w K Kellogg Foundation, ' sion
; Camp Kltanniwa Is now one of the | cation of taxes for each taxation
unit of the county at their session
Evidently Hastings Folks Are best equipped camps in the country, Monday of last week. County Clerk
Tl»e camp site consists of 29 acres
Satisfied With Their
of wooded land bordering Clear lake Allan Hyde has sent to each school
on M-37 and ha* about one-third of district and township the alloca­
School Board
a mile of shore line which contains tion made for It The school dlsThe annual meeting of the Has­ a fine beach for swimming and wa­ I trie*, and township officers will have
tings city school district was held ter sports There are 15 rustic cab- I until July 23 to ask for changes if
Monday night at lhe Centra) audi­ In* well furnished and many of the ' desired in the tax rates fixed by the
torium beginning promptly at 8 camp activities center around the I commission. If no change* are re­
o'clock
Lodge, which contains the large, quested. the figures fixed below by
Evidently the people of this city dining room and well equipped I the commission will be adopted by
arc satisfied with their schools, for kitchen The staff of counsellors I It at Its final meeting on Tuesday.
only 25 voters appeared at the consists of Miss I-arcs, director, and 'I July 23. as Its final report The only
school meeting There was no op­ Miss Marlon Barnebey. assistant &lt;11- exception may be fractional dis­
position to the reelection of the two। rector They will be assisted by tricts. comprising territory partly in
members. Carl Wesplnter
and
A —
L. other counsellors, who are selected Barry and the balance In some ad­
----- —
Brown, wliose terms expired with 1 for their ability and Interest In joining county. If the allocation to
this meeting The two modestly re- girls
such district in lhe adjoining coun­
framed from voting for themselves ' Every precaution for health and ty shall be lower than that fixed by
so that only 24 votes were cast They I *&gt;fety Is observed and a member of Barry county, then the lower rate
were given to each of the two can- i uie 5Uff l* a trained nurae, who made by the other county shall de­
&lt;11da les.
’ keep* a health and weight record of termine the rate for lhe. Barry
Treasurer Charles 8 Potts rrad each girl. The girls have a wide county territory In such fractional
the financial report for the year' range of activities to choose from, district. If the Barry county allo­
ending July 1. i»35 A* the prewent tnuiffittng outdoor
cooking, fire cation to that district is lower than
school year doe* not close until! building, nature lore, many kind* of that of the adjoining county, then
July 1. it can be *een that It would ’ handcrafts and any number of the Barry county percentage of
be impossible to present tills year’s other*.
school tax for that fractional dis­
report at a meeting held on June
Parents more and more are realiz­ trict shall fix the percentage of
8 However. Mr Potts did give the ing that organized summer camps school tax levied on property in that
total of receipts and expenses up to help definitely In the education of district which Is In' the adjoining
। the time of the meeting It showed a boy or girl It develops Initiative county.
a cash balance then on hand of and self assurance away from home
The tentative figure* adopted by
•11.000 The final payment for the and many enduring friendships are the Barry county tax commission
present school year, which ends in made that will last a life time give to this county a lax rate of 6
July, under
unurs lhe
me Thatcher-Bauer
innu-im-oauri law
&lt;•« Barry
Marry county girls are fortunate in
In mill*. For tite township* the rate
had not been received at the time having such a camp as Camp Kl- varies, as shown below. Following
nl ....
of
Lhe meeting,
------ .IM- kbut
,.. „
with
1(h ■&gt;It .there
k— tanniwa available to them and par­ are the rates as fixed by the com­
will be a balance of fully *17.000 on ents of these girls are urged to make mission for each township and the
hand with which to begin school. arrangements so they can attend city of Hastings. Any taxpayer who
work in September
f for at least one two weeks’ period knows how much hl* property is
The citizens of Hastings appre- I
----------------- ------------------------assessed for can easily figure the
elate lhe fact that the present
1
1
amount of his taxes from the flschool board has so handled Its fl-'
.&gt; .
,
n
j
ures we give below, except where an
rowing
nances that, instead of borrowing
CflllareZI 3 Utiy At
extra tax may be needed for debt
service.
tom. in order to carry on lhe schools
ASSYRIA—County tax. fl mills;
until texes were paid in December.|
township tax 2 mills; school dis­
the board ha* so managed that al
Children’* Day Is to be observed trict taxes—Bel! district. 2 1-2 mill*;
the beginning of the school year In
Eagle
district, 2 1-2 mills; Austin
at the Methodist Episcopal church
September they have enough cash
district. 3 mills;
Assyria Center
next Sunday morning. June 14, at
on hand so that, with the receipt*
the Bunday —
School *hour.
------------ district. 3 1-2 mills; Ellis district,
(Continued on page fl, Bee. 1)
2 1-2 mills; Brigg* district, 3 mills;
o'clock.
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1)
,.n
A playlet.
"Silver
Bells
and
COMMERCIAL CLUB
Cockleburrs." ,„presented at
rrwraiiair CCQCIHM 11:00 o’clock, following the morning OBSERVANCE OF
nAo tvtivlivu otoolUPl church service. The junior and Pri­
CHILDREN’S DAY
mary departments will assist Mias
Business and Pleasure Com­ Phyllis Hinman, who has the lead­
ing role. Mrs Forrest Johnson Is Excellent Program at Preibined to Form Enjoy­
general chairman.
byterian Church Next

Mayor Charles H Leonard was
TELLS OF LETTERS
death young Andrew Jackson. later surprised and pleased Lhe other day
to receive a letter which came over
IN SPEECH
to become lhe seventh President of
1 and these beets can be grown al a
on
the Queen Mary it was post­
lhe United states was born The
1 good profit, where proper attention
marked
Hastings.
Sussex,
May
23.
brave hearted widow was left with
OTSEGO
FIRM DOES
L'i paid to their cultivation
At
and
was
addressed
"His
Worship
three soils. Hugh aged 4. Robert
present sugar beet production is
aged 2 and the infant Andrew If Tlie Mayor. Hastings Michigan. U
NOT
GIVE
TO
FUND
limited by quotas fixed by the fedwe who live today could only sec S A '
I era! government Michigan’s quota
Ti&gt;e letterhead bore a cut of the
how our pioneer ancestors had to
Agent of Democratic Nation ought to be largely increased Not­
live, it we could only begin to ap­ office of the Evening Argus, a dally
withstanding the fact that there
al Committee Is Inso­
preciate lhe sufferings and the sac­ newspaper published at Hastings.
'are many well-equipped sugar beet
England
The
heading
also
says
rifices made by them In order that
lent It Is Alleged
factories In Michigan, the producwe might enjoy the blessings of The Popular Local Evening Paper
In
a
recent
Issue
of
the
state
lion of all of them is not sufficient
today we never ought to make a • • • Il is eagerly sought after in
Clubs. Hotels. Reading Rooms, and papers appeared the following Item to supply half the sugar consumed
(Continued on page fl. Set 2’
by all to whom II is of moment to which will, no doubt, be of interest by the people of this state At the
present time thousands of Michigan
to some of our readers
obtain the news of the hour
Washington, May 28 An Otsego, farm* are raising rfugar beets and
A copy of the letter follows:
Mich , concern was threatened with many thousands of laborers are em­
23 May 38
ployed in Die beet sugar factories of
"a
report
to
Washington"
if
n
failed
Evening Argus’’
to contribute to the Democratic Michigan Several hundred thou­
14 Castle Hill Road
campaign
fund.
Representative sand tons of coal, lime and other
Hastings. England.
Clare E Hoffman. Republican of products are required by these fac­
Dear Sir.
In lhe House tories The sugar industry has beIn celebration of the maiden voy­ Allegan, charged
I come imprtanl to this state Ev­
Thursday of last week
STATE EMERGENCY RE age of Lite "Queen Mary ' to the
The concern was the Mac Sim Bar ' erything that can be done to In­
United States messages of greetPaper
Company
and
lhe collector crease It will benefit all Michigan
LIEF COMM N ADOPT
j Ing are being sent from this town to
people
for
the
Democratic
national
com
­
your city
NEW PLANS
| May we extend to yourself and mittee was j F Gormeley. Hoffman
'
' your citizens our very best wishes said He Included in his speech VOCAL RECITAL TO
and the sincere hope that you will copies of a telegram and a letter
WILL APPLY CIVIL
BE GIVEN HERE
all enjoy good health and pros­ sent him by C E Nelson, president
SERVICE REGULATIONS perity We should regard It as s very of the paper company
The telegram signed by W Forbes Well Known Grand Rapids
great favour If you would send us a
Musicians Will Sing at
Provide New Plan for Nam­ message It would be read with very Morgan, secretary of the Demo­
stated
great pleasure by our citizens here cratic national committee
Parish House
ing Members of County
If
■ pwvurc
picture m
of lh»l our Mr
.. you could also send .
As a contribution to Ute celebra­
yourself or your town we should be 'M1 you Tuesday Will appreEmergency Oomm’na
elate your seeing him " It wa* dat­ tion of the Centennial year in Has­
very
glad
to
publish
II.
In order to make possible a great­
Em­
ed May 18. Subsequent events were tings the young people of
With best compliment*
er degree of participation by local
related to Hoffman in a tetter wril- manuel church are sponsoring a
Yours very sincerely.
governmental officials in lhe ad­
very’ Interesting vocal recital, at
ten by Nelson.
Albert J. Martin,
ministration of relief, the Blate
the
Parish
house,
Monday.
June
"We are sending you the enclosed
Deputy Editor
E R C. in
consultation with
, Information which you may use a* 15th at 8 o'clock.
the Governor, has revised the mem­ To HI* Wor*hip
This fine recite) will be presentI you see fit.” Nelson wrote Hoffman
bership of the County Emergency The Mayor
"Further explaining this matter, ed
*J *by
“ Mr
**- and
—J MlMrs Chas MacDonHastings.
Relief Commissions effective July 1
(will say that the enclosed telegram ' aid of Grand Rapids. Mrs MacDonThe County Commissions there­ Michigan
। was received on the morning of May aid will be heard In a group of soafter will be composad of the chair­
! 19 and 30 minutes later Gormeley prano solos, her husband will *lng
man of lhe County Board of Super­ WINDSTORM CO.
called me on the telephone from, several tenor numbers and then
visors. or a supervisor selected by
MART A RIR RAIM Kalamazoo and wanted an appoint- both will appear in a number of
him to serve in his place, the chair­
° U
mem
| duets Mr Paul Callaway, organist
man of the present County Emer­
"Upon thl* request we asked him at St Mark's church. Grand Rapgency Relief Commission, except Added Nearly Eight and One- what the appointment was for and ' Ids will be the accompanist.
where he la a county official, and
able Program
he said he wanted us to subscribe ,
Mr* MacDonald 1* the daughter
Half Million* Ne&lt;v In­
a third member to be recommended
to the Democratic campaign fund ' of lhe late Adalbert Phlneas and
The Kellogg Serenade™, Bill and
by the County Board of Supervisors
surance in May
We advised him that we didn’t be- ; Mary Lovisa (Rodgers) Early, and Louie Kennedy, an interesting film BARRY COUNTY 4-H
for appointment by the State Relief
The agents of the Michigan Mu­ heve we would be interested today when, about a month ago. *he on com and the presentation of an
CLUB TOUR PLANS
Commission The Slate Relief Com­ tual Windstorm Insurance Com- in making a subscription and he I heard that this was the centennial.
mission 1/ hopeful that thl* revision ' pany had their batting clothed on asked me in a very insolent manner she expressed a desire to come to advertising promotion scheme for
the Barry county tourist and resort
of the member*hip of the County j during the tnontn of May They what I meant by ‘today' I repeated I Hastings and meet some of thd business were features of Ute eve­ Members and Friends Are
Relief
Commission
will secure brought In a total of *8.487.358 new 1 the answer and he asked me if we friends whom her mother knew
Invited—Special Train
ning program attended by members
greater public support, understand­ Insurance for that month. This.' would be Interested tn subscribing Mrs MacDonald's grandmother was of the Hastings commercial Club,
ing and Interest In the administra­
to Detroit June 25
with the fine total* of the preceding at a later date and we told him we
their wives or guests at Community
tion of relief
childhood was spent in Hastings, hall Tuesday evening.
The County Agricultural Agent's
month* will make an excellent did not think so
There will be no changes In the showing of Increased insurance at I "Then he asked me. in a very and their romance blossomed when
Although the Serenader* special­ office announces that Barry County
State Commission nor Ln Its per­ the end of 1938 Cancellation*, due nasty manner. If we wanted him to both were members of Emmanuel
ised In the saxophone, they demon­ 4-H Club members and friends are
sonnel or basic policies The super­ to failure to pay premiums, this year report this to Washington, that we Episcopal choir
strated all-around versatility a* en­ planning on attending the 4-H Club
vision of the State Relief Adminis­ will be far less than In any one of the refused to contribute to this fund,
It is Indeed fortunate for all tertainers. Louis Kennedy isn’t so tour to Detroit on Thursday. June
tration over the local administra­ preceding four years There are each I My answer was yes’ The telephone music lovers, that such a fine pro­
tall yet but lie could fill that hall 25 Tiie tour is one of the big oc­
tion of public relief funds will Con­ year cancellations due to change* of i *** Immediately slammed up and gram can be presented Mrs. Mac­
with music during hU vocal solos casions of the 4-H Club program
tinue a* al lhe present time
Donald said that her mother'* con- with brother Bill accompanying on and probably 200 people will be in
ownership, etc But It Is quite evl- ' this ended the conversation "
The Commission reiterated its dent now that the losses will be ,
"The Mac 81m Bar Paper Co Is
the piano. A A Roth, sanitary en­ attendance. The tour leaves Has­
three-year-old policy that no em­ more than overcome by the new pol- I a large legitimate business organi- constantly about Hastings and her
gineer for the Barry County Health tings at 6:55 on a special Michigan
ployee of lhe state or county relief icle* taken, and that the total in-' ration conducting its business in a friends here and that tor personal
Unit, was master of ceremonies I central train arriving In Detroit
commission may hold an elective surance In force at the end of the legal manner and In accordance and sentimental reasons she herself
around 10:00 o'clock, after which
during the motion picture film.
office or be a candidate for public ' year will pass the *400.000.000 mark, with recognized trade practices." had always wanted to do something
Wilson _O Cascadden. manager of the club members will take special
Good-will is one of the best as- i said Hoffman. "No fault of any for the community and church the Hastings Printing Company, busses thru the down town district
active part In political activities of
sets of any Institution. The wind- kind Is found by anyone with the which meant so much to her moth- took up the serious business of the of Detroit and cross through the
any sort
The Commission will storm company of till* city has been way In which it does business so
evening—the presentation of a plan tunnel to Windsor, Canada. Aft­
rigidly adhere to its policy that building good will through lhe far a* It* management Is aware
to make available to the Commer­ er a short visit to Canada they will
thoae who administer relief abstain I years. As fast as Is possible after i "Yet here 1* a telegram from W
GRACE MOORE HERE
cial Club and Its member* an at­ come back to Detroit on the ferry
from political activity.
windstorms have swept across lhe. Forbes Morgan, secretary of the
tractive sixteen page booklet de- and have lunch at the casino on
SUNDAY ANO MONDAY •crlbtng
The Commission will set up at state, causing hundreds or thousand* Democratic national committee, tellthe advantages of Barry
once a state-wide merit system es­ of losses, the agents of the company, Ing the president of that company
for Greenfield Village where they
tablishing the principles of civil have been busy, making their ad- that Mr Morgan's Mr Gormeley "The King Steps Out" Is county. It* lake* and resorts to tour­ will view this early American his­
ists as an Insert in the booklet
service for all employees of the juxtments. and checks were prompt- will call and in effect,. tel"
slllng
— •*
this
“*
Fine Vehicle for Star
there Is to be an up-to-date map torical village constructed by Henry
state and county relief commissions. ly sent to cover the losses so that-----------------------Ford. This will be of special Inter­
‘
paper company--------that "It * had
better
planned
especially
for
visitors.
Soprano
Buch n plan will operate until such the policyholders could rebuild or come across with a campaign con­
Member* of a Sub-Deb group as­ est to boys and girls in their history
time as the state may create a civil repair damaged buildings. Tile fair tribution. and threatens that if it
Grace Moore, coupled with that sisted with the serving.
service commission. All employees treatment which the company ha* does not. Its action* will be reported rpiendld actor Franchot Tone 1* the
This meeting was a regular busi­ ity many cliaracter* famous in
outstanding
attraction
at
the ness session with Dr. George Lock­ American history.
always accorded to their patron* to Washington." Hoffman aald.
merit, as evidenced by appropriate has built up good will Thus when
BLrand Bunday and Monday Mira wood presiding, Earl Coleman lead­
Tlie tour Is figured on a low cost
examinations, experience and train­ the agent* go out they find condi­
. MWjh
.. c community
------------- •— —
--f
“DYKE” GOES TO CAMP.
Moore's song*
— in
- "The
~r-- King
—- ------Step*
, ui,tng
singing
*n rxP&lt;‘'ls'’ feature so that once
ing.
Albert (Dyke) Dykstra is leaving Out" were written by Frit* Kreis- Walter Wallaee a* chairman of the the
1* purchased from the
tions in which they can do good
The Commission directed the ad­ work. That they are doing it 1* Sunday for Camp Owasslpl. the ter, and are said to be especially entertainment committee introduc- county Agent * office no further
ministrator to make an immediate evidenced from the fine showing of Chicago Boy Scout camp near tuneful and lovely.
lng the various features
---------- --------------------- ---------------------- --survey of the administrative per­ new insurance so far this year.
Whitehall for the training course
__________
„
____________
tending
the
tour.
Reservation* of
The back ground l* unusually ।
—•-------- —
sonnel employed in al) of the coun­
In Camp leadership. Later lie will colorful, being laid at an European J
Donald Kelley, son of Mr. and club member* and friend* should
ties in the state and in recognition
People who turn on their ga* go to Camp Kl-Bhau-Wau in IU1Illiof the jcontlnulng decreases in the Monday will be drawing it right' noi* for hl* second year a* assistant no end of fun in an incognito role ' tral High. Detroit, will have charge
caseload of the County Relief Com­ from Nature’s reservoir in Mont-' camp director, in the Starved Rock and succeed* easily in winning the I of athletic* at a boys' camp on an.l DANOK AT CROOKED LAKS.
missions, to make reduction* in ad­ calm county. 100 miles or more 1 Area council of which Lloyd Shafer love of the young emperor, who 1* Island in Grand Lake, near Alpena, I• Delton. 8at, Eve, Eckler's Orch.
ministrative personnel.
seeking a bride.
I thl* summer.
I-Adv U.

REVISE COUNTY
RELIEF SET-UP

LECTURE HERE JUNE 14
P&amp;ul Stark Seeley of the
Mother Ohnroh to Give Ad­
dress—Public Invited

CONTAINS 29 ACRES fre«

eryone who heard him will agree
that he does He is chock full of the
subject. The way he handed out
facts and figures and mixed with
them the keenest wit made his address very enjoyable
Mr Brock is connected with the
research department representing
the Michigan sugar beet factories
He proved beyond question that
beet sugar is Just as good for every purpose as cane sugar; that
there is not a chemical laboratory in
the country that can detect any dif­
ference In the product of a wellequipped cane sugar factory and a
well-equipped beet sugar factory
Both have exactly the same chem­
ical element* and In exactly the CARL WEBPINTER AND
same proportion
L. BROWN GET ALL
Sugar cane came from a plant '

tivated there, although no sugar was
made from it for centuries The »u-

....

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

Children’s Day At
Methodist Church

Bunday P. M.
At lhe Presbyterian church next
Bunday afternoon at four o’clock, a
Childrens Day program
will be
rendered, to which all parents and
friends are given a most cardial in­
vitation. It Is expected that the ex­
ercises will last Just one hour. Fol­
lowing l* the program:
Proceaaional by children.
Welcome—Poppy FN»te.
"Father We Tn»nk Thee"—Helen
Stebbins.
Presentation of cradle Ro IL
Recitation—Marilyn MacDonald.
"The World 1* a wonderful Home"
—Billy Stebbins
Bong, "All Thing* Bright and
Beautiful." Primary Dept.
"My Garden"—Mary Klien Kally.
Play—"The Caterpillar.

him. U the ca., -.»• on hl* route doe*
not know the veteran personally,
the veteran must be identified by
the person who normally recelvM
other mutual acquaintance. If th*

fir»t delivery la attempted, notice

then call at the postoffice for Um
registered letter during the regular
hour* of business, between 1 A. R
and 6 P. M. or in case be doe* no*
call, hl* letter carrier will make
another attempt on Wednesday
afternoon to find him home and ac­
complish delivery.
c '
•
part of

their bond*

regular office hours, the
nlng* of June 16 and 17, until
o'clock for certification of requai
for payment of bond* only.
as
The veteran must bring .with him
some person who knows him pilw
tonally, or who U personally km
to the certifying officer at th* g
office, and this person must sign
bonds as Identifying witness.
of Foreign Wars have kindly

identify their member*.

OLD HASTINGS FIRM
HAS CHANGED HA
Beumer Name Km 1—1
BUle Street tar *«T.

•My-Tvo Yun

first time in 72
many and ultimately located la
Hastings, opened the first barbar
paid SO cant*

one-story
her outfit and purchased
stock of Jewelry, the foundation at
the present buslnaaa.

position* of trust.

had studied wale
tometry, returned
and worked for h

ha bought the tateraal* &lt;&gt;« Uw
hairs and gradually widened

marble, which with the duplicate adHastings. Following Mr,
untimely death In 1W4, W*.

1 marriage, continued
till the preMnU

enviable reputation

Pianoforte Bolo
Mulder
Reading—Barbara Shannon,
Chorus. "This U My Father's
World."
Duet—Wanda Mae Bechtel
Enid Mohler.
Reading—Ha*el Mae Mannl.
Benediction.

and

RURAL FIRE TRUCK READY
TO RECEIVE AND MAKE VISITS.

service. On

M*

Auxiliary hold

for

�II. IN*
position. Sport* writers hava an­
CELEBRATE THEIR
nounced that Mickey cochrgne Is
looking tor soma reliable young fel­
FIFTY-FOURTH BANQUET
low to take hl* place behind the bat
and Hasting* friends hope that the Yean Grouped in Twenties
honor may fall to Tubby.”
Furnish the Th|Ri«
Miu Audra Densmore, who grad­
1 Not as many June marriage IIA not infrequent question nows- cense, as formerly That five day uated last wack, has entered the
Alumni Society
BDITpM
rSOM
SXVBN
days—Have you found any ter-■ declaration of intention" give* ln- employ pf the Bell Telephone Go­
A* usual on Commencement night
mites?
. dlana divines and Justices a lot of to learn the telephone work.
qoumua MXXT AT
1 A gift every lady will appreciate j breaks over our Michigan lie - lheMiu Barbara Trego i* clerking the Hastings High School Alumni
FIX* LAKS
association ' eld It* annual banquet
is offered In this Issue by B A. ty- knot men.
tn lhe Meyer store this summer
Barkcr
I, m
Qur
Klingensmith W..C.PV..UC...
correspondent
**« iM-.aRwz.4M.
Mrs Edith Bunnell entertained Thia wg* me Mth one. lhe firat
Big bargam tn go* stpve* offered . teiig us that there is already no-lh“ bridge club Tuesday afternoon having been held in 1882. five years WORK OF KELLOQQ
by Miller
Milter Furniture Co Their
The! adv | ticeable increase in Sunday traffic ' Don't forget Star school reunion after the first Commencement tn
FOUNDATION REVIEWED
explain*.
lljelr wgy occasioned
by peo- | June 21. at schoolhouse Picnic dUi! down
d.
__ __ __
1877
Mrs Nettle
Nellie Larkin
Larkin I*
is seriously
seriously 11!
ill pie
pie Interested
in vUiting
visiting the
the WPA
WPA ner.
ner —
— Adv
Mrs
interested In
Two hundred and seventy-five sat
at her home at lhe corner of Bond
|I Better buy c
Bondii Yankee Springs project locality
coal NOW! Price* will down at the banquet tables In lhe Many Bruncheg to Health
and Dibble St*
| A Nashville girl. Ml*a Elizabeth ' advance soon
Phone 2370. John- High school gymnasium, the La­
Unit Work—Ohil4r«n'g
Mark Ritchie ha* been substitute Smith, goes abroad this summer son's.—Adv.
dles' Aid of the United Brethren
Welfare Paramount
ing in the office of the register of) Bnd will teach the coming year in , Say* an exchange "We rekd that church catering Supt. D. A Vandeed* while Earl Boyes is 111.
England on an exchange With an every lime wc breathe lhe govern- Busklrk gave the invocation, and
Editors of tha wven counties in
B pec la I price* on many needed English teacher who will assume her ment spend* »712 But who wants set a model, we thought, for a great which lhe Kellogg Foundation has
article* quoted In this issue by Car- position in the Napoleon
Ohio .to slop breathing?"
many men of the cloth. MU* Sadie •stabUshsd it* Health Unit* were
veth 4c StebbniB. lhe Rexall store
I school.
».
.k. u ..
... k.
a vrouD of consumer* Power offi.
a
foolln I I think It would be Glasgow preaided as president of
ci»VIndP*alesmen had a b^naLet at
Two flower show* on the calendar ,marl lo think about coal NOW I lhe association. John M Gould. invited U&gt; attend a pre.** conference
the ParkerHo7« Xd«y mght
ln
county are th. Inland Phone 2370. Johnson .-Adv
'28, made an excellent toastmaster and luncheon al the Pine Lake
me parxer nous* Monu» nignt
i tajee* Garden Club Al Delton. June
- - The quotation "Did you never camp, Friday.
U you arc interested In stopping
fourth A pet parade is to ' Mrs J F Black is ill with heart hear how lhe life of man is divided?
Every county
was represented
-akin,
g fc„lurr Qver
lhr (trouble and complication* at lhe Twenty years a growln'. twenty and practically every one of Die
leaking roofs or nreventlmr
preventing them
from leaking read T S K Reid* Women's Club will hold one this home of her daughter and husband,
years a bloomin'. Twenty years a medical heads of lhe County Units
Mr and Mr* Wayne Merrick
were
present
An
interested ob­
Saturday in the bank building
Mr and Mrs Merle Btrimback stoopin', and twenty years declin­
That was a close game between
server was Phil T Rich of Midland,
are the parents of a boy born June in'." furnished lhe theme for the
Al Browns highway team and the
- - - - •—
-- — president of lhe Michigan Pre.**
top-score Hlrsch boys Tuesday night
‘»e north ',d* of lhf Harr* 0 He weighed B'i pounds and will program of toast* Forrest Wolfe. Association.
Ritchie ho-house ""
on «
6 s»m.dw.v
Broadway .nd
and answer to the name of David Lee '27. gave a pleasing and right-loal lhe fair ground
■
Being a cltiaen of the first counthe-point welcome to the class of
A real service U&gt; automobile own­ expect to move from Detroit about Congratulations
Calhoun, w
lo reel
feel lhe
lhe
a | ly. outside of vunoun,
No foolln ' I think it would be I« under lhe "Twenty yeere
er* who may wish to make loans on the middle of the month Mr and
bloomin’- c.pUon Donald Weaver “™n“n‘
u“ Kelloij orR Reed and family art smart to think about coal NOW' made a Ana tapreealon In hU re-| “‘"'“‘I"'
their cars is offered by the Fidelity ™rs - ---U1“d'“ «
Corporwuua '&lt;&gt; Itor
u, Ihu l»-1
'nl»
B”'*4
"" w Phone 2370 Johnson's—Adv
rtxin-re
lor
Che
new
claaa
which
Iwn
V
“
r
.
?
‘
'
1
.
th
*
‘
U:
";
Wld
ior uie new class wmen
,------ .—.
---------Dr Cha* S McIntyre. Jr In com­ spon.*r
1UC
, Green St
.hdaK.
.
.
an .aanian.1 IM memto.
. nnlewllvaew nf 11,1*
Ull“ weale.e.^1.4 -I.IU..
PM&gt;»Oof course A*a Peck Wilcox ol j Mr and Mrs Leo Wellfare were pany with Mrs McIntyre and Httie lo th. uaooUUoo* ro.Ur
B.ln.
Clunurt lo promot. th.
Caro was on hand a* usual for the called to Chicago Monday to at daughter is in the city enjoying Bauer weluerl. 10, In her bririlit. I
hepplneae end well being 01
a
brief
vacation
Dr
McIntyre,
who
High school alumni banquet, few tend the
.... funeral "
lhe latter'*
. il.
,.^w_
.
children Rut sflcr li«t«nlno in rvr
snappy talk on Twenty years a children But after listening to Dr
are more faithful
Peck
• •ha* some brother-in-law Edward W Bullard has been five years on the surgical
of Otto, their chlef-of-*laff. reel off
stoopin'" belled lhe inference at
new coin tricks which are mystify- Mrs Bullard (Grace Hullngsi was staff of the University hospital at
I tn such an Illuminating, concise
ing to say lhe least regular Hou- ' formerly of Hastings and Is left Ann Arbor L* locating tn Kalama­ that title altho twenty-six years way, lhe many branches of their
dlni stunts
1 with three Utile sons, the eldest only zoo whore hl* practice will be lim­ had passed since her Commence­ service, and the various ways in
M L Cook. “77, one of
ited to surgery
His office —
I* being
.
- - --- ment day
Women in whose households gas ckicii
eleven years VI
of "S'
age Mrs vwriwwi
John Hulwhich It functions we realized we
Puf lnt° condition for opening about the two remaining members of the had yet much to learn
for heating is being installed are ( Ings has been In Chicago sometime
“
first class gave lhe toast, 'Twenty ।
daughter
1
lst
already thinking about their clean 1 with
with her
her daughter
Aside from the local Health Unit,
years declinin'." vigorous and alert
Dr
Martindale
told
a
good
story
cellars and kitchen
floors next
which lake, the place of the old
Tom Stebbins son of Mr and
al lhe editors' conference al Pine enough, with his fine philosophical I time, poorly functioning Boards of
winter
Mr* F W Stebbins who ftnLshe*
outlook, to give proof lo the truth
The children
of
lhe
United an extra year's course in adminis­ lake Friday, concerning one of the
Health,
there arc the camp lake .
of Burrough s oft repeated “Orow
Brethren church will present a tration at Ann Arbor this month children who came running in from
old along
best 1* -yet schools at Pine and Clear lakes In
„ - with
- — me The
— -----Barry county the Ann J Kellogg
has secured a fine position with the lhe wood* one day announcing I
I school In Battle Creek, designed
Sunday evening ut seven-thirty well known bond firm of Paine breathlessly that he had “seen an 10 b''
Indian " Despite the teacher's asPrincipal Emeritus W T Wallace
o'clock
Webber in Grand Rapids being as' ­ su rance that such things could not । bad lhr response to "In Me mor I­ specially to correct faults of speech.
Friends of County Clerk
Earl signed to their analytical depart-­ u_ ._ .U-. —.. —------ ..
• -ye. ear and orthopedic troubles
arn ■" The
association
nine
1
------- ha* lost
----- --- Boyc* will be happy to learn of hl* ment Knowing Tom's natural flair be in that well ordered camp, the i am•"•
Important, loo. Ls lhe assistance
‘•ers during
during the
the past
past year,
year, also
also ,'
lad
persisted,
but
finally
when
the
members
continued improvement
Hr re­ for thl* kind of work we prophesy
.• / ‘L.J
Keyworth, former
super- i‘ given to youths' organizations, pro­
—
-J —- — -J- made a Maurice
............... ........................
........... .............
turned lo hi* home from Pennock he mil toom. . ..lord »&gt;emto ■&gt;&lt;
moling Boy Scout and Camp Fire
dent in his mind as to the improb­ Intendcnt of the Hasting* school* Girl*' work. Lhe summer ramp for
hospital yesterday
the organization
ability of his statement, he said. the memory of whose presence last under privileged children, the win­
Carroll D Ftaher who wa* picked
The Hastings High school bus was
ter camp at Pine lake where 50 chil­
leased to Lake 78 member* of the
who have passed away
were
fish net in hl» possession paid a fl nr library atoll °F Bellevue school on Jesu* with feathers on "
dren. seven to 14 years of age. not
Belter buy coal NOW' Price* will Charles Jones 1877. Edna Havens up to |Mr physically, have such a
Monday for a tour-day sight-seeing advance soon
Matthew*.
1878:
Dr
Clarence
Phone
2370
Jotin
released from custody
trip to Niagara Falls and return
Young 1888. Minnie Wardell Farr ^ood time getting educated and put­
soil» — Adv
Elmer While the newsboy l* again
ting on flesh Seven hundred chil­
As Mr and Mrs Hamid Logan 1881 Ernest J Edger 1863, Sylves­ dren during the past year enjoyed »
Many Hastings baseball
fans'
on lhe job Saw him mowing a lawn
and Mi** Rose DeFoe were relum­ ter Greusel 1885 Gerald Steinke the privileges of these winter and
has ing from Grand Rapids Saturday 1818 Kathleen It NlchoLs, 1828
Tubby
who of
when he got that job done he wa*
- .
-Rtebcr
­
summer
camps
,
night about ten o'clock just this Gayle Pfeiffer 1831
going to pick a bouquet of flowers 1 been catching for the Detroit
Valuable work I* done thru the
The music end of the program
side of Cascade the light from their
Steve Johnson who has been hav­
medical and dental examinations
wa*
well
looked
after
The
Macar
revealed
a
state
trooper
stand
­
Ing a bad tussle with threatened disposed A* a youngster Just uut of
and resulting remedial measures
Battle
Creek
high
school ing on the right side of the road sonit orchestra under leadership of coupled with the home visit* from
mastoid infection for lhe ;iasl five the
Tubby" used to come over here beside n man stretched out on the Dr D t&gt; Walton Introduced several the family health counselors of the
weeks t* reported or, the gain and
dead
His novelties during Hie banquet hour Health Unit staff Motion picture
slid play shortstop for the Hastings pavement apparently
. *. *“ head revealed a ghastly fracture that made a hit solus being given talks are Intelligent aid., in supplebaseball team rtms here -----admire his speedy and arc urate Grand ftapULs paper* duclosed the by Howard Frost and Mias Lola menllng this end of the work Thesa
Mrs Joseph DcRulter wno
Ashaller with sprightly microphon**
throwing Evidently some
.
come in form of direct service to
'•nnvrrsatlon* by the leader Mt-* the child Jn lhe second category
clonal
baseball
scout
noted
mat 36 of Alto who was taken to Blod
improving nicely and returned to
her home on Sunday Her friends quality of his work and prevailed grit imapital with little chance of • Virginia potL* 32. fresh from a indirect service plays it* part in the
recovery
II
seems
he
was
drtv
'
*
c°nd yea: of study al lhe Julltard
ar« glad to hear of her convales­
post graduate courses offered to
A! any rate he made good tn that ing alone and for some reason Hie | M’Fmol sangj^wojovely numbers and physician* and dentists, for which
cence
were the
car left the road, rolling over sev- I an
"" encore Much
"" enjoyed
“““
*
violin solo by Mia* Norma Jacobson 1 the Foundation assumes Hie excrnl lime* Says Mr logan
Aft
also the scholarship* for
and a cornet solo by Roderick ~
[*' ’*«r
.
er that Bight I drove with extra '36
, teacher*
for summer school work
Wa'li'l -as
lr
"h'
। special care all lhe way home "
Officers r| led were President, for courses especially valuable in
child training
BARBERS CORNERS
thric, vlce-prcs Ml**
One day meeting* at camp arc
rl secy Mrs Blanche
Mrs James Bragdnn and daugh­
held for school boards and officers
Frederick Bishop
ter Crystal attended
the
Coat*
who occupy a key position in cduGrove Ladit**' Aid held at the home
calional
set-ups. clergymen arc al­
ol Mrs Lloyd Fisher Thursday
so invited for a one day conference,
Mrs Jerry Foley and son Paui at
Mrs Rena Culler and Mrs Hugh
tended the graduating exercises at FurnisA are entertaining the Y M and teacher* come tor an impor­
tant m-uioii which U addressed by
Hasting* last week
1. Club this afternoon al tiie for­ lhe best known men in lhe educa­
Mr and Mrs John Weaver call­ mer s home in Woodland The la­
ed on Ins parents Mr and Mrs D dles arc having ■ one o'clock lunch­ tional world Janitors who also nil
a role in aiding in live work by InWeaver at Elmdale Sunday
eon and a social afternoon
। teliigenl knowledge of sanitary and
heating methods, are given a *pcday were Mr and Mrs Roy Huver
—
—
—
I
cl*I
three-day
course in Lansing al
BETTER Bl Y COAL NOW?
, of Lansing Ellen and Patrlria Bump
Prices will idvance vxin Phone M 8 C Then there Is the ten-day
। Wayne Bump and friend of Ha*
i training camp for camp leaders and
7370 Johnson * —Adv
| Ungs
I men and women who work along
waler fronts
,
Keeping In mind that mgh stand­
, ard. in education must be associat, |ed with lhe Kellogg Foundation
+ program the new plan has been
. 1 adopted this summer of employing
’V’ । camp teacher* of recognized ability.
♦ who while there to give their «ervXj'lces. will be able to take college
"T I work themselves Members of Ann
▲ 'Arbor faculty will give a course- of
X lectures tor which the teacher* will
SUNDAY and MONDAY, JUNt 14 and 15
V receive credit the same as tho in
♦ college
GRACE MOORE in
The fine school plant* In Cal*'T । houn and Barry counties made pos♦ j sible by the Kellogg Foundation
.Ai1 stand as monument* to Its work
With Fronchot Tone and Walter Connolly
. Each county also has a sanitary en­
&lt; gineer
glnwr whose contribution to the
Jf. whole
' ‘e program i* invaluable
1
It
U &gt;was a decidedly worthwhite
♦ conference personally we wouldn’t
t mind it being made an annual affair
BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. JUNE 16
Editor* can be a strong link In th&lt;i
▼ Indirect aervice set-up of the Kel•pi iosg Foundation and have been
consistent boosters, appreciative of
♦ it* great service to present and
With Gene Raymond. Wendy Barrie and Helen Broderick
future generations
at the Haato which all
advertising for
be referred for

tw

SUGAR
io ib*. 49c

Kellogg's

CORN
FLAKES
9c

Kg.

CARNATION MILK
Tomato Juice "“'rt,
39c
Orange Juice
No 2 tin 10c
Ever Goad Peas 3 .."FA 25c
First Call Corn ■&gt; &gt; "&gt;.3 for 25c
Mackerel
3 cans 25c

— 6c

Pork &amp; Beans 'I'mJbell.
10c
Peaches 5!‘-.r5?
2 for 29c
Sliced Pineapple DCL2Mcanb 25c
Crushed Pineapple “*2“°“™ 19c
Grapefruit D.L?
2 cans 27c

b°« 3c

OHIO MATCHES
Vacation
Land

Sure Set
Gelatine

Coffee

Package

5c Candy Bars
3 for 10c
$1.00 Ovaltine
55c
First Call Catsup, Ige.
10c

Stuffed Olives,
WLSu
15c
Dill Pickles, Paw Paw qt. 15c
Sweet Pickles
qt. 23c

! sPECinL!

RINSO
Large Pkg.

19c

MOOSEHEAD

FLOUR

S " 69c

CERTO
22c

CHUNK BACON
RIB

BOILING
BEEF
ib. 10c

WALL
PAPER

SALE

Prices
Smashed!

“THE KING STEPS OUT”

3,000 Rolls of WALL

Fresh Ground

KING NUT

HAMBURG

OLEO

2|bs- 20c

2 &gt;&gt;&gt;s 25c

PAPER on SALE of

Greatly Reduced

‘LOVE ON A BET'

Prices !

Many Wa.hable Pa­

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, |UNI 17 and 18
MARLENE DIETRICH and GARY COOPER in

pers included in

BUTTER

FOUNDATION CAMP
HOST TD SCRIBES

this sale !

Shultz or Freeport

Frazikfurts
2 lbs. 25c
Ysal Shoulder Roasts Ib. 19c

Beef Kettle Roasts
Smoked Picnics,

Ib. 14c
Ib. 20c

“DESIRE"
Wllh JOHN HALLIDAY and WM FRAWLEY

3C4c5c6c7c

Adults 25c.

DOUBLE FEATURE FROGRAM
FEATURE NO. 1

Single Roll

BOULDER DAM'

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 O'CLOCK
Alio

a

Good

A**ortment of

6. 8 and 10 Single Roll Ram-

Food Center
Wt OIVE TICKETS ON $75.00 CASH DRAWING

Children 18c

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. JUNE 19 and 20

FEATURE NO. 2
MONTIE MONTANA in

35c. 5Q«r’60c and 75c

“GUN SMOKE"

REEDS
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

Walgreen System
DRUG STORE
RHONE

1241

With B*»rk (wkurn. Marten KhJlUng. Bud OaHrne aud
Beany CoeUtl
Episode No.

‘FLASH GORDON* will

DEATH OF BLANCHE
NEWTON NICHOLS.
George Newton received word
Friday of the death of his *|*ter.
Mra Blanche Newton Nichols, at
lhe home of her daughter, Mr*.
Caroline McKeon in Detroit
She
would have been 83 year* old June
23. The body was taken lo 8t U»uh,
Mich., for burial on the family lot
Older residents will readily re­
call Mrs Nichols, who with her
twin sister. Belle Newton, lived in
Hastings many years ago. went to
school here and taught in lhe rural
school*

SUDDEN DEATH OF
HARRY TWP RESIDENT.
Rhieraon Dunn, aged 80 died sud­
denly on Thursday al hia borne in
Barry township where Im had lived
। for 75 years Surviving are one son,
, Orv. of Fine lake and three daugh tors. Mr* Elite Louden of Delton.
I Mra Lulu draenman ol Calhbun Co.
and MiM Lydia at home. Mrs. Dunn,
'whose maiden name was Euphemia
। Picket! ctiad M yeara ago- Tha fu.
neral wa* held at the realdeiwc on
Bunday al two o'clock with in terment in tha Ranfiald cemetery.

MARRud/ tlCRNBR'Qari Qraahula. Bawatno si
logene R Barry. Castleton ...

�Tire HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, JUNE 11, UM

FIRE DAMAGES

'

’’

Organizations

store building
Freeport Firemen Did a Fine

Piece of Work on
Thursday

। nts.

.

Hospital Guild No. 18 will meet

I Thursday. June 11 with Mra. Will

Bennett at their Leach lake cottage
for a pot luck luncheon and picnic,
Fire was discovered a Hide after | with program.
4 o'clock Thursday morning in the ।
frame store building in Freeport. | The regular meeting of lhe V P.
W. Auxiliary will be on Thursday. |
on the south side of its business j June 18. in the G. A. R. hall at 8:00 |
street, long known as the George o'clock.
Naglcr store building The front of i
It was occupied by Victor Sisson as I The membership breakfast of lhe ■
W. C. T U will be held al 8 00
a grocery store; the rear by Mr o'clock. Tuesday morning. June 16. '
Weiser of Detroit, who operates a al the home of Mrs. Florence Flem- I
chain of grocery and meal markets, |lng. 330 E
Marshall St
Please
and used the back end of this bring flowers and your Uib|p sen - ,
_______
I
building for slaughtering calves and lCe
poultry for hl* trade
It is not known how the Are orig-1 Townsend plan meeting lot on 8 1
mated. There had been no fire in Jefferson St,. Friday evening, June j
the building since the day before.' 19. 1938. 8 o'clock Were you at last I
when water had been heated in die Friday night * meeting? Why not? J
•.laughter house When discovered Well, come next lime We are ask­
the flames had gained considerable • ing that Mr Putney be sent as our
headway As there were adjoining next speaker He is a salesman for
frame building*, and other frame ' Kalamazoo Hear him
structures across the street, it was
felt that this fire threatened the | Moose Family night. June 15 Pot
town's business district Accordingly luck supper at seven o clock
।
lhe fire truck here and one from Al­
to were summoned; but lhe Free­
Circle No 3 will n)Wt at the home
port firemen were on the job and of Mra John Hewitt. South Dibble 1
did excellent work. The Hastings St . Friday June 12. 1936. at 2 00.
truck driver. Everett Swegles, com­
plimented lhe Freeport department I Hospital Guild No I will hold a
very highly for their good work He picnic on Wednesday. June 17. on
-said they had lhe fire under control Mrs John C Ketchum's lawn All
when the Hastings and Alto trucka members please be present If pos­
arrived
sible
The rear end of the building was
damaged beyond repair and that
The Post Noble Grands organ)may mean that the remainder of it zatlon will meet a&gt; I O O F hall
may be torn down We understand on Friday afternoon with a |x&gt;t luck
that there was no insurance on lhe । &gt;upper_________ ____ __________
building Victor Sissons stock was
moved out of the front of lhe build­
ing with very little damage The
DECORATE LOUNGE
slaughtering outfit in lhe rear of
lhe building was ruined The loss
Enjoy Luncheon at
was estimated lo be in excess of Forty
•1400

I

Country Club Tuesday

Afternoon
Bouquet* of pink peonies and pur- 1
pie iris on the serving table small
baskets of blue bachelor button*
and pink rose* on the luncheon Uble.s and bouquet* of peonies, lemoh lilies and syringa around the
room made the lounge at the Coun­
try Club especially attractive for
the luncheon on Tuesday at which 1
forty were present
Mr* C P Lathrop entertained
a party of eight Mrs Herman Arold and Mrs J L Brass winning
lhe bridge scores for the group
At golf Mrs James Bristol won
the low putt event and Mrs K S
McIntyre won the high contract
score
An out-of-town guest was Mrs
Robert Jessen of Chicago with Mrs
Clarence Crawford
Tlie committee was enmnosed of
Mrs M A Lambic Mis* Sadie Glas­
gow Mrs A D McDonald. Mrs
Harry Hayes and Miss Tillie T&gt;den
Mrs Herman Arold Ls the
chairman for June 16, which is
' Gueat Day

MILO
There were twenty-eight at church
and Sunday school at the morning
HICKORY CORNERS
service. Sunday which wax most
Mr and Mrs Glenn Asplnall and
encouraging, but we hope to have
children spent Sunday with rela­ a greater number next Sunday Ask
tives In Carlton
your neighbor to be there
Mrs B Campbell and children
Mr and Mrs Emeat Quick look
accompanied Mr and Mr* C Condinner Sunday with the former's
trell of Detroit U&gt; South Bend. Ind
sister Mrs Jennie Lyons Banfleld.
Saturday where they spent the day
and attended the funeral of a
with her daughter Mrs Ivan Brady cousin R Dunn northcast of Ban­
and made lite acquaintance of her field In the afternoon
new granddaughter Kathleen StiarMr and Mrs Jack Schultz and
ron.
son of Chicago visited their par-

MARK'S STORES, inc.
Always Sell for Less

and

Mesdames Flower

Literary Club at the home

Men! New Fancy

Men’s Sailors

SHIRTS

WHITE
TOTOS

98c

Smart new patterns for iummer wear! Sturdy tubfait fab­
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Cool, comfortable and
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and braidi New shape*,
colors.
They're value* I

Unbleached, part Ums 11
in. wide. Coforod borders.

Printed Sheer
For Smart New Frocks

Brand new fast color pnnta in
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Summer curtain*, too!

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Wearing !

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Gay Borders

Cottage Sets
Bright Check Trimming

Bath Towels

A Feature Price!

summer' Ruffled cottage
trimmed with bright checks

Y«/ Pare Sill

izing and extremely wear­

Seamless

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wear

Hand Made Porto Kiron

Easy to launder and

for

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You’ll want several at this

gowns

BANDANAS

Great Value of the Seaton!

They're flattering, slender­

practical

Red and Blue

DISH CLOTHS

Wash
Frocks

Dress Prints

low price!

A Real Bargain

Made of good

quality lawn in smart sum­

You'll b* pleased with th* rapid
absorbency of th*** towel*. Th*
popular alt*—22 by 42 inch**.
Smartly *trlp*d colored borders.

Rayon Plaited Pastel

Summer Anklet*

mery prints. Trimmed with

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Sites 5 to 10

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Men Ilk* thl. large 24 by
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I In sizes 14 to 44.
Nicely made and
full cut. Trim
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embroidery and
smart applique.

BRUNSWICK TIRES
• Sole,

Skidmore, Nashville. The latter re­
mained to help care for Miaa Helen
Skidmore, who was* brought from
the hospital Sunday evening, con­
valescing from an appendicitis operallon.
Mrs. f’orter Toozc will entertain

----

loveuTflowers

OBITUARY.
Henry A Collison, son of James
and Barati Collison was born In
New York Dec 30 1859 and passed
away at the home of his son. Floyd,
near Delton Sunday evening June
7. 1936 being 7fl yrs 5 moa and 7
days of age
He wa* united in marriage with
Fannie Porter Sept &gt;5 1893 They
resided on a farm In Orangeville
Twp. until they moved to Kala­
mazoo about 15 years ago where
Mrs Collison passed away in Jan­
uary 1933 Fur lhe past three years
he has been cared for in the home
where he passed away To this union
were bom five sons who are all left
to miss his passing Floyd James
and Arthur of Delton. Elba and
Chur of Kalamazoo
Besides the
sons there are nine grandchildren,
one sister Mrs Mary Rumble of
Plainwell one brother Jou-pfi of
Kalamazoo many nieces and neph­
ews, together with many friends it,
communities where tie has lived
Tlie funeral was held at the Hen­
ton Funeral home Tuesday after­
noon al two o'clock lhe Rev Vic­
tor Jones officiating interment al
Oak Hill cemetery at Orangeville

Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Schults. nice. Mra. Hattie Bellinger and eon.
Lake Hills farm. Sunday. Little Dr. Warren, were guest* Bunday for
Billie remained with his grandpar­ dinner of Mr. and Mr. C. F. Moreau.
ents for this week; Mrs. Mildred Augusta.
Scobey went home with them for
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Skidmore
n visit in Chicago.
and LaVem spent Sunday with the
Mrs. H. J. Flower and Mias Ber- latter'* parents. Mr. and Mra. E

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4.50 75-21 $4.55
4.50 75-20 $4.35
4.75-19
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5.25 50-18
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Nation Wide Pillow Cases 42"x36'

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Regular or NuCrafl ocav-wilt
collars &lt; Mad* «rf pro-shnink
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�The Hastings Banner

BOOST TH* COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOM*

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, JUNE 11. 1936

[One Hundred Two
Get Sheepskins

Editorials
THE GRIM RKAPKR.
What 1* it that thl* country need*
to impreat on motorist* the destrucUt» force latent in automobiles
hurtling down the highways? In
gplte ot traffic education campaigns
and *afety campaigns the accident
rate continues
to
mount.
Li
gangsters killed and maimed a*
many people during the year as,
careleu motorist*, the United States
public would be howling for some sort
cldenta we seem to accept with a
, shrug of the shoulders. As a re­
sult the American highway is the
most dangerous roadway in the
world What can be done? Laws,
rules, regulations, lectures, talks,
etc, arc valuable to a limited ex­
tent; will help some but do not con­
stitute
.permanent or even tern-

porary cure. An aroused public opin­
ion 1* the thing needed; an opin­
ion that will make it Just a* unpop-

(Continued from page one)
1 their pioneer ancestor*. The best

paving or surfacing with some ma-;
terial such as tarmac; the other is
treating ordinary gravel or dirt
roads with some dust laying sub­
stance such as calcium chloride
Paving, of course, is expensive and i
only a limited amount of roadway
can be improved in this manner
Blacktop has proven valuable un­
der certain circumstance* and. although
expensive than coii- lea*
•
crete paving, is much less durable
and requires considerable work to
keep m order, especially where not
protected by curbs and gutters
While chloride treatment is not
permanent,
it
is comparatively
cheap and the depreciation charge*
alone against one mile of concrete
paving eould finance a fairly com­
prehensive program of dust-laying
treatment.
In a re*ort county like Barry
It is particularly important to have

' thing* In our clvillxation have oome
| to us from that ancestry. They
faced difficulties courageously and
I surmounted them by sturdy will*,
; hard work and common sense.
। The speaker urged that course up­
on the claas of 1936 First: "Prove
| that you yourself are worthy of
your pioneer forefathers. Their
outstanding quality wa* initiative.
j They did not submit to condition*;
' they made the condition* which
governed their live*." "Courage and
; Initiative are in your blood stream
I from that ancestry
Be worthy of
them." he said
Wc are coming
into a new world Ln our economic,
social and political life; but that
Is no reason why anyone should alt
down and bewail that change, or be
discouraged because he cannot Im­
mediately find his place In lhe new
order

connecting lhe Important centers
I* to be a kidnapper. When public Tourists travel for pleasure and it
opinion formed against the kid-, is not very enjoyable to fight dust
nappers. this form of racket took a clouds Naturally such programs
terrible drubbing—lhe same thing have to be fitted to lhe county purse
can happen to our traffic death if but there are not many people who
people ever get sufficiently di&amp;- will criticize the use of available
turbed to care We doubt that even funds for helping to overcome the
the courage. Intelligence and splen­ annua) nuisance ot dust clouds
did organization of lhe G-Men
POLITICAL GODS CHANGE
would have succeeded a fraction so
According to Waiter Llppntann
well against organized crime without
the almost militant backing of an ; the real political issue of the near
aroused public opinion A* thing* future is going to be the aort of libstand now when officers attempt to cral Individualism represented by
“crack down" on careless motorists Mr Borah and the kind of gov­
they frequently find that their cause ernment regulated monopoly tn
U by no means a popular one The which Mr Roosevelt seems to be-

high rale of traffic deaths tn the
whenever [ clash between Jefferson and Hamll- ,
United State* will cease whenever
iGy
the people of thl* count
z really
. ... ton brought Into lhe limelight once |
again Strange a* It may seem, how-

Round About Town

who ha* written rf very studious
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Hew to the line, let the quips
Governor Alfred Landon of Kan- treatise on the political philosophy !
fall where they may I
sas may be Just an ordinary cm- ot Jefferson
"--------—
* reasons (or Ila sc 1
and
ccpiuncc by
uy the
me people ot
oi the
me Unitunn­ ;
acn from, as James A Farley said | ocplancc
Stales
carrying the
the ideas.
with such eloquent disdain, a ; ed O
‘~—z actuallyCirrTthj
••typical prairie stale," but he ha*, of Hamilton to extremes probably
Understand that Gas" t:r
i&amp;sible by
by the
the great
great 1
given one of the moat discerning, never thought possible
pUrchtt«
criticism* of the present day trend Colonia) patriot The Republicans, I ton* horn—3
in this country that we have yet on lhe contrary while boasting of thumps for
now
be ln
tn on
read. Many political commentator* Hamilton as one of their immortals (no
* **

I m going to see what the local
photographer can do- I can l de­
cide though whether I should be
dignified nr somewhat informal as
m real life with one foot slung over
the top nt a chair, lhe other draped
gracefully on Lhe desk
and the
middle of my back occupying that
portion of the chair normally r
served !&lt;&gt;’ quite anriiiier puniosi

Till* hybrid state of political affairs
indicate* wiiat meaningless thing*
You should hear our cit
party label* have become Can It
j be that this loss of Identity by the 'evenings
two major parlic* *1
signifies a reWe kne
grouping along line* based on | hu goat,
significant difference* tn govern-'
Bible coilaptc of character, a possible ment philosophy? That 1* at least
itow was 1 to know that Alice and
paralysis ot Individual initiative, a hope although possibly * very Bill intended to elope'
and a deadened sense of personal optimistic one
obligation and responsibility
Hastings Hull ot Eligible Bachelors
in other words tills son ot lhe prai­
AT CLEVELAND
Public interest will center on the
rie slates doesn't tear lhe tremendous
debt burden being piled high on the Republican Convention at Cleveland
opportunity
shoulders of future generation* half this week just as it will turn later
Tommy' What an opportunity' No
For
»o much as he fear* the "softening to the Democratic conclave
more blue pencils
effect' on our national character the first time In year* political ob­
resulting from a government policy servers claim
which discourages self reliance
Old Guard' has been driven to
Under stand that
miss »’ho is distinguished a* one '
deadens the sense of personal obli­ | cover that a new liberalism recall

gation and responsibility and stunts Ing the day* ol
u: Lincoln nuu
and T
, rt
R । Ciai rlub
,
the growth of individual initiative ' Roosevelt is ■weeping through the | nrclarrs
■ true-1 Are Republl-| the B-E
We can bear up under financial, party
strains and mounteinou.iy I Oner
on If we loae the will and lhe spirit have passed, that lhe worlds of 1938

trophy cup hung up

H—iuui

A Q
//£ /.S free from

ation direct or Uidirect"
'
, Ube,,! sUucture on a sound
Too many people seem to have [ substantia! foundation It will be
an idea that Uncle Sam's big money easy for Republican sympelhUers to
box automatically fills itself when point out almost ludicrous discrepit run* dry' but taxing tnr people encle* between the
New Dealt
tn one way ar another u me only promises and accomplishment.- but
way ot replenishing it.
although this may arouoc man* a
&lt;* FXjr Lhl* reason the youth of to- laugh, u will not attract vote* un­
flay should be especially concerned less they shall present a construc­
about increasing our deb*, billton* ot tive program of their own to offer
dollars each year, because they and as an alterr.allve Republicans have
their de*cendants are lhe ones who a big opportunity if they are big
must pay that debt—and it must enough to take advantage of it
come through taxation

[Hiund thnt man has
vented, being even worse than
political

wh.p, judging from the action
on most WPA projects.

civil service, but it's difficult lo
toll which they are by talking
to police offi cis.

George welsn
turned himself over to Democracy
as a candidate (or governor Well,
the Republicans' gam i* lhe Demo­
crats' loss.

P^gent Paragraphs

about six inches a year
V
don't like old weather, eithel

though

Understand it s Hi* Worship lhe ,
Mayor" Charles
Leonard
Hasting;

My boss say* he'd like

crowding.—Detroit New*.

means by that crack'

dividual vehicle.
The original "home-loan bank"
Anyway, guess t might as well
There art only two methods for wa* the one that held baby * pen- have my countenance reproduced
nle*

CinctonaU Enquirer.

tor Use benefit of posterity end get
this thing over with

NEXT MONDAY ;

Oonaumer*

Oo.

Mr ua k„ k», H ofl num of
Hasting* called at Glenn Aspinali's
Mr
and Mra
Pete Hoffman and Victor ol Kalamo were Sunday evening vUltors
I at the Aaplnal! home.

-------------

Will

Turn Tuesday evening.

Gas Into High Pres­
sure Mains June 16th
Hasting* will get its first natural
gas neat Monday, according to the
Lansing office. The pipe line which
brings the gas to Laming la 70 miles
long and extend* from the tri-town, *hip field of Mecoala and Montcalm
counties. The complete "Change­
over" tn tills city and neighboring
communities will lake approximate­
ly two weeks during which period
the gas will be a mixture of arti­
ficial and natural gas When the
adjustments are completed, the
supply will be entirely straight nat-

Waters Clothes Shop

The Weather
Man Says:

The city of Lansing Is now prac­
tically complete on changing over
to natural gas. The .same crews that
have been working tn Lansing will
start next Monday in all the towns
connected to lhe Lansing system for
the final change
The Consumers Power Company
set up in Lansing a special teaming
school for the adaptation of gas ap­
pliances to the use of natural gas.
with 300 men spending three weeks
of study and schooling in this spe­
cial work In addition to the regular
change-over crews, the company
has special crews to service gas
refrigerators, gas water healers and
house heating burners.
Adjustments Simple.
Instruction* by means of adver­
tising and cards mailed to house­
holders. direct the users of gas to
make their own adjustments on or­
dinary burners on ranges for con­
sumption of the mixed gas Till* ad­
justment is made by opening the air
mixer on burner* to about onefourth of an Inch on each burner
Tn cases of automatic waler heater
and other special devices, users are
requested to call lhe company and
■ have an expert make lhe necessary
। changes Such adjustments accord। ing to Lhe local manager will be
I temporary until one of the change­
over men call
The Company will
1 maintain flying emergency crews
’ that will go anywhere on short no­
I school advantage*
One s life, he tice and make the proper adjust­
1 .said, is the sununnllon of experi- ment*
| ences
Therefore we should seek
Emergency Stand-by Equipment.
such experiences as will build a । III the large plant at Lansing the
worth-while life
There is where ' company has holders with n ca­
the fourth dimension come* In pacity of 3.360.000 cubic feel ot gas
Build height a*
well as depth, ' to help maintain an uninterrupted
breadth and length to your life supply Shut off valves have been
77iat Is the function of the human placed every three or four miles In
*plrll He *ald we should always the pipe line to facilitate work and
keep the body mind and life in | maintain service in case .of ______
trouble
such a condition that the spirit can The transmlsalon line from Die gas
dominate and control
Above all. • held* is a to 1-* inch pipe which
he urged hl* young hearer* not to «oe* into a heale* building where
forget the finer things of life but the ga* I* lieated to prevent freer­
. to wk them and build them into : Ing before the pressure is reduced
। their lives
He said hi* ancestry It then pa.*se.* through a metering
। was Scotch, he had been brought and reductoR system and al thl*
! up In lhe sterner thing* of life • point an odorant L* introduced into
I where sentiment was given small ’,,u
IM*“l gas **
the’ "**
natural
a', ■a measure of
| room, but he urged his young au- , safely natural
Natural ga*
gas i*
Is ouorir*.*
odorless ana
and
I dltor* not to be afraid ot building without this precaution II would be
1 into their Ilves the right kind of impoiuilblc to detect leaks
sentiment
"You will make tnlsThe company also has large gas
takes,
he said "but in lhe later (holders in
Ionia
Hasting* and
, years of your life you will regret [ Charlotte to further insure a coninore the thing* you left undone stent supply for its customer,. «t
the kind word* you left unsaid the , »H times
। good thing* you planned to do but
Already more than 600 homes
didn’t man you will your positive have ordered ga* burner* for healfailure.* "
I ing and hundreds more automatic
'
Dr Henderson gave such an ad- water heater*, according to company reports
to all who heard II Following the
FREEPORT
] ’addrrss the girls' glee club under

He urged each graduate to strive
to live lhe four-dimensional life
We have been accustomed to think
of but three dimensions—length.
' breadth and depth: but there is a
, fourth dimension—it is height, and
I there is no limit to that
The
I speaker declared that Uie human
I body is the moat wonderful machine
ever devised No mechanism that
1 human brains have devised or hu­
] man hands have made is compar। able to it One of the things every
j graduate should do. he said, is to
care for the body which Ood gave
him
The one who. by dissipation
| or in any of numberless ways, puls
sand in the bearings of lhe von| derful human body Is shortening
I his life lessening control of it by
1 the spirit, and is certain to reap a
harvest of
suffering
The wise
| thing for every young person to
do is to determine that he will nev­
er permit himself or herself to ac­
quire habit* that will make them
less efficient or les* worthy
or
harm lhe body which has been
given them
The speaker told each graduate
to decide that he will not eeaae
learning when he leaves school "Do
। not delude yourselves." he said to
them, with the idea that education
! can only be obtained In schools
of the Wisest men who have

HOT
WEATHER
AHEAD
Vi aahubk

Slacks

Arc cool nod roinfurlabk.

hundred pairs.
$g.98

98

Men and Buy a

Polo Shirts
open
They hiutidt

Fur Mm and Buys

49

98‘

.0

For comloil. We have them

25
A Im,

Straw Hats

98
Others up lo 32.50

Deep Tone

Shirts
br-.wn. gr.i-n

Just right io

wean with light Iruuarra.

the direction of Mix* Olrrum sang
the past week her son daughter
an appropriate number
। in well-chosen and fine-spin ted and granddaughter Gordon Fctte*
rli I.as tier n engaged by Lhe .-chool word* Mr Edwin L Taylor, prin­
Jean Baughman
cipal of the High school presented man and little
from Cheyenne Wells Colorado alGrace Greenfield of thl* '•tty left the cIiias lo lhe community as their
Barton May 29tn on the steamer dividend on their investment in it*
। school and to the board of educa- from Denver Over lhe wee* end
tnp to Europe
। llf,n "nrenenled by
Mr A L Mrs pet tea and her brother Mr
H wa* e pleasure to ln» many Brown, n* president for proper rco- MacKenzie. accompanied the partyfriend - here to greet again the Rev | ognilion a! what they had accom- on a trip into Ontario, where they
Geo D Bullen of Carson CHv who hushed
Mr Brown gave a timely visited relative* and old friends.'
They visited Mis* Agnes McPhail a
mon ,*lk ‘•'••"iR how earnestly
cousin of the family who has been
McElwain and f&gt;Oi‘r'1 has work»d a* well a.
a member of Parliament in Canada
with Hat
helpful to the community and to (or many years On returning home
friends
Mrs
Fettrs received from the
Bessu
House
of Commons at Ottawa, two
teacher ii the McOmber । privileged to hand to the graduate* ,
last Friday and will spend ; ,he evidence of their schooling A* ।
irnrr tacatior. with her par .
c^aas one by one filed before
him he gave each a diploma
m tnu c*tv
Tap- were next sounded
then
The Barn county band cor.ven- I
non in this city next Tuesday ! followed tiie benediction by Rev
&gt;&gt; p,u,.,ure
m: . re,, v&lt;1- -McSherrv and the Reveille from;
joyablc event At this writing 10
bugle, and the sixtieth cl ba* I
band, over 180 pieces m all have |------------------------arranged to attend and more are
13 year old boy to make
expected
The many friend* of Prof W D
। Sterling in this city will be pleased
FORTY YEARS AGO
to learn that he has beer,
urday evening enroute to fits home 1 "ir*Ttntendent of schools m Hunt-1
tn Nashville He has been in Cuba i higton W V a city of 16,000 In­
for the past six months where he h*Mtanta
1 Joined the Insurgents
Tli* people of thl* city were
greatlv shocked Monday morning to
While at work at hi* trade
learn that a J Bowne president of mason in Irving, Henry Replogte.
th* Hastings National Bank had
dufl suddenly of heart disease at his chip from a stone and came very
home In Grand Rapids
near losing an optlr
Bhiriev W Smith left 7 uesday
Seth Stone will have a 60x60
oowery tight roof and good floor for
15th 4n the Furncssia tor Glasgow lhe use of those who wish tn trip
the
light fantastic" in this city. |
bicycle trip through Scotland. Eng­ July 3d Good music and good order 1
land and Europe returning some- maintained Bill 10c a dance
llme in September Mr Smith iflu
If you want a day of fun and I
secured a lul of newspapers among genuine amusement come to Has- '
which is the Banner and will write Ungs July 3 and you will get it It1
a weekly letter to them throughout. will be Lhe
the moat
most meritorious and
hl* trip Shirley Is a ready writer.' sensible Independence Day celeha* a fine command of language and ! brat ion ever Held In Central Michlthal his letters will be Interesting gan
goes without saying
।
Mrs Addle Reed
Fieming
of
Willie Hafi of Grand Rapids vis- Philadelphia Is visiting friend* in
ited his grandparents, Mr and Mrs 1 thia city She will render several
H A Goodyear over Sunday. He selections Wednesday. Thursday and
*»««y Sohirdoy Nifht 9:30 to I A. M.
came on hi* bike leaving Orand [ Friday night* at Union hall between
luptds at 6 A M Saturday and ar- j act* of the cantala of Queen Esther,
riving here before noon Thia U a j Her many admirer* will be glad U&gt;
pretty good time, we consider, for a j hear her again.

98‘.o ’I 50

79

WATERS

OPENING

SATURDAY, JUNE 13th

'Etrryliody knows good ts'unrcl except
those that h.nv need of it '

traffic k» much faster than formerly
people recognize me when I walk
elephant into the picture without do’wn Hie street Wonder what he
and thl* increase in speed alone la

13STARTS

DANCE!

though

Many people wonder ano I am
Mock Infection and damage to fruit
Untearable paper ha* been InventNow they are going to find out
and other crops Du*t is more of •|t&lt;1
J»Pen. It U thought that it
will be e«peclaUy useful to write
The point nas been reached
seem*, when a show-down is in or­
the army of motorist* and the fleets treaties on—Punch
der

lion, cartoonists should now get the

apartment own­
ers the check and Ztonchcck

A nizx promo'inn I rim it
plebeian hutznner

I rr. going to submit my map to a
local photographer ana nave m;
picture published in this column

Prof W T Wallace has accepted
an offer to do institute work in »
summer institute which will be con­
ducted at Opi'lousas. Louisiana
R I Hendershott is getting ready

since tha High school waa organ- beautiful photograph* of Mis* McUed. went out into life.
Phall.
It wu a fine cla*3 and they made I
a fine ImpreMlon. There go with
HICKORY CORNERS.
them moat eamaet wtshe* that they
Mr. an dMre. O. Haynes and Rob­
may succeed in life.
ert were Bunday kucsts of their
RAQ QIIPPI V
i brother and wife. Mr and Mr* Fred
dUrri_T
Haynes of near Naahville.

Clothes Shop

The North I"

original

■■cry claw
and informal June wedthat of Miss Hesse Bush,
daughter ot Mr and Mrs Fred Bush
ot this city and Victor Hilbert son
nf Mr and Mr- Frank HllteTt of
Woodland which occurred Thurs­
day June 1st at 5 o clock al her
parents home on Michigan Ave
Res Russell II Bready officiating
C W SheUenbarger has traded
property in Grand Rapids lor W W
Wellman * eighty-acre farm, better
known a* the Wilkins property
north of town

from
Knickerbocker
Hall school
in^
dlanapolls where she graduated

to DO

cral. recently said, "the treasury o.'
the United Stele* never had a dol­ remedies and unsound
lar that it didn't take from the the hope of capturing popular (ar.c,
pocket.* of the people through tax­

miles
Fill

THIRTY YEARS AGO

tn

111 try

three

you II Ilk

predictions up lo me

I and 1036 are a* far apart
"Xr. ■_
_
two pole*
GOVERNMENTS CANNOT UtVE '

Backward
Glances; .
n .
, .z
OllS Ot Yesterday

rovering

could waste hour* in oratory and &gt; are actually carrying on s tight to
Ils nlce
do a Marathon with pencil and pa-* defend the principle* of Jefferson ' olll ot oneg

per without hitting upon anything
half so significant He say*
“Our economic welfare may be
threatened for the moment and our
industrial progress may be retarded
for a season without final or total

DU8T CLOUD8
With the advent of summer
comes the problem of dust control.
Not only are dust cloud* a menace
to traffic but constitute a nuisance

It’s the Spirit of a Community
That CuaU-Nat lu Siaa

Dance in cool comfort on a
iinooth floor to smooth music by

BUD WOLFE and
THE PROWLERS

The smoothest place in the
county for the smoothest date!

at THORNAPPLE LAKE
(tinder New Management)

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. JUNE 11, 13M

mill*. Highest tax rat* in township
13 mlDa; knroat I 1-1 mill*.
MAPLE OHOVE-County tax •
■iltol township IM 3 mills. Bchool
district tax** as foilow»-Qu«iiUap
district. I 1-3 mills; Maple Grove
•
»»LL Ulll I U Canter district. 5 mills; Mayo dis­
ifion'tta'uM
r-ntln,Jd ftw.
&gt;wt_
' 1.
, w
21 ti
7/’ trict. | 1-3 mlUa; Moore district, 4
(Conttnuad from page 1. See. I)
1-3 mills; Dunham district. 3 1-3
— —w
. — . J., r..
'
JI V
r-.
ml 111; Norton district. 3 1-3 mill*;
“’S™Lincoln McKalvey district. 4 mills; Branch
J

DEMONSTRATION AT
“z % 11| I npiire
WILL HAMMOND FARM STjn'chyx. of Ihe ronstrucUon,
Ha RLLUUR LU
Prof. George Amreundien to
tn* the afternoon tha tank MU be
8how Method for Makconstructed. A&lt; 3:30 P- M a meet,ld *»
ing will be *h
held
at lhe oemonstra-!,
'tag Septic Tanka

Uon al which Prof Ammundaen wUl
With the Improvement of times, dlscui* tha construction.
Ol&gt;- ,1
discus* the construction, coat. oprural families are again taking up •raUon
■ration and
md answ.r
um: any
«aj &lt;UmUo^
oiuxUon. ’

the improvement of dwellings and
i*rm molding*. county Agri. Poster
report* a decided Increase in the
number of people asking for help in
remodeling homes, building septic
tankk. power installation, etc.
To meet the demand for informa­
tion on the method of construction
of a septic tank, county Agent Fos­
ter. in cooperation with the Agri­
cultural Engineering Dept . M S.
C, will contract a demonstration
t*nk on the farm of Will Ham­
mond. 1 1-2 miles south of Dowling
on M-37 on Thursday, June IL

for your first
Summer Shoes

WHITE
OXFORDS
$J98
our
smart, popular
■f4eeC £|uqqcA!&gt;White l!rl*ht.. right

now ... If

this.

com­

The anuft-

fortable.

fittiiig

it's

heel

insures

And the styles

are as smart as expert

shoo designe

make them.

Hastings Cut Rate
Shoe Store
■State

St..

Hasting*

regarding septic tan keen* true lion
and operation Families considering
the construction of a wptlo tank
could wall afford to attend the 3:30
o'clock meeting at Will Hammond'.

tiy
HA

f |H I I I |U I S

diatrict, 3 1-3 mliu Betali district. &gt;
the l^^in t^U m W
I milts. Highest tax rat* In town­
- Ooui’tv
a
ship 14 milts; lowest 10 1-3 mill*.
•

principal and interest of the school
bond*. Tlu tax tor lhe running expenaes of the cltr 1* raised In July. I
Thl* city and the villages of the I
county ar* not affected by th* IB |
mill Ux law because they ire operkted under charters which control
th* taxation for regular city u-1
ptnses
Lui year the commission had a
lot of trouble tn keeping within the

JUNE sa:

ls m111 lAX limit That mu not true
thia year because of the greatly increaaed aid for the school* fur­
ORANGEVILLE — County tax 0 nished by the state.
mills; township lax 1 mill school
THOBNAFPLE GARDEN CLUB.
district taxes as follows—Falk dis­
June 28 I* the dal* set for lhe
trict. 3 mills; Orangeville village
next meeting of the Thornapple
district, 4 1-2 mill*; Blake district.
Garden
chib to be held on the beau­
3 1-3 mill*; Oun Lake district. 4
tifully landscaped grounds of the
mill*. HlghMt tax rate in town­
J p
Mohler
A
-lip 11 1-1
1-3 mills;
mUU; iowflrt
lowaat t» 1-2 mills. president. Mrs
“
vnwrA
ship
pRAIRIBVnXE- County tax fl
"
**"&lt; pl*n*^
by th
th*
in rh.ro*
charge a
mills; township tax 2 milte School ”
* committee m
* pot
ro,t
luck
luncheon
will
be
served
at
one
dUtrict taxes as follows—Milo dis­
thirty o'clock
trict, 4 milte; PralrievUle village dlxThose elub members
and
others
wict, 4
trlct,
« mills;
nuns, Soutli
aouui Pine
rule Lake
.
.
diatrict, 2 1-3 mill*; Calkins district?
“»»ou“ P»««
*-­
attend
&gt;w Ex2 1-2 mills. North Ptne Lake dis- ^toS^LId'hC'
trict 2 mills Cressey district. 3 1-2 h'wtor’
sponsored by the Michlmills Highest lax rate tn township •?n ”^L,cultur*1 ®oc,elJ'-10 b*held

Start! Friday, June 12-Lasts 6 Day!—Many Bargains in I
Department to make room and to make June our best

JUNE SPECIALS

More than 25% Reduction

■Pie Grand Rajflda board ot edu- ' Weelu dutrict. 4 mUU; Durfee dis­
on to in tha midst of »eriou* trlcti a ,.a mlIU Barney MUU disdifficult)*. which
which prove
prove the
th* unwl*unwl.- 1,1,3 \
mifu Hjghest ...
tax rate tn
difficulties
« „ui.
a™, of
«, Chat city's .a..,,...
h. ...
[j
'
dom
adopting ,the
16-1:the
.1
mill tex limit to cover all lhe cost* 1,rate 11 mills.
of Us city government. It* schools
and It* proportion of Kent county I CARLTON—County lax 8 mills;
1
tax A* a result there were previous ' township tax 1-1 mill; school dis­
j
drastic reduction* in the teaching trict tax**—Roger* district. 4 mill*;
1
force and in teachers' wage*. For I Carlton O*nCer district, 4 mills;
the coming school year, the board ' Barnum district. 2 I-3 mill*; Fish
I
finds its necessary to discharge !district. 4 mill*; Welcome district.
|
J,
I
twenty-one more teacher* and cut 3 1-1 mills; Chanty district. 3 1-3 12 mill*; lhe lowest 10 1-2 mills
3
mills;
.
... 1 Creek in Kellogg hotel, June 23,1
the pay of some other*. Thl* will • mills; Friend district,
RUTLAND—county IAX « mill*;; ,nd „ ion„ m community bulla- I
Coats
cripple the schooU of Grand Rapids Brown district. 3 mill*;
Jun, „ t
Grove district. 3 mill*. Rag lx dis­ townahlp U*. none. School dUtrlcl ta|. Io„u „lr pOUna.
seriously.
„„„ , !plf„aia op­
trict. 2 1-3 mill* Highest tax rate tmmA-^l-Oon-Quln Lak. aUlrUt..
t rnUli clua«ur autrlct. 3 mill*. ; porumlly tor exhibitor* lo xcauxlnt
in
the
township
io
1-2
mill*,
low
­
DEATH OF D. E- DEAL
Txrmer
aUUlelJT
mJU:
OtU
ahthcmwlve.
with
th.
xre„„a
' The funeral of David E- Deal was est D mills.
CASTLETON- Count&gt; lax 8 mill*;
| held at the Methodist church in
ing flowers for show purposes
In
no
township
la*
School
district
| Prairieville on Monday afternoon,
Yeek ey district 4 mills Hlghe.t lax judging U1WII11I
niDluon
blooms on an „
exhibition
। with burial in lhe Prairieville ceme- taxes a* follow* Nashville district. rale in township 13 mills, lowest in noor nccor&lt;nng to the official score
8 1-2 min*: Castleton Center di*towruhlp 8 1-2 mill*.
1 exr±-..
xihrr
•
cards,
all
other
points
being
equal,
1 Grand Rapids Surviving are hi*
the arrangement &gt;he
t ha,
e)p(j ।
YANKEE SPRINGS—County tax the
Uvat
lu* k
aeyeu
; wife, a daughter, Mrs Oscar Palm­ 2 1-2 mills: Hosmer district. 4 mill*; 6 mill*; townahlp tax 2 mills Bchool1 colors and * container suitable to
er of this city and two sons, Neu- Wellman district. 2 1-2 mills, Mor­
district taxes—Gate* district. 2 1-3 the type and texture of bloom* will
I man M of Grand Rapids and gan district, 4 mills; Feighncr dis­ mill*. Yankee Spring* diatrict. 2 1-3 receive first premium
trict. 2 1-2 mills. Martin district
Charles L of Peoria. III.
—■ —
-■
2 1-2 mill*, Barryvllle district, 2 1-2 mill*. Robbins district. 2 1-3 nulls; । The annua)
Flower Show
spon- ,
4 mill*
Highest sored by the ' Inland Lakes Garden
mill*. Shor** district. 2 1-2 mills Ritchie district
8TONY POINT.
Highest tax rate in township 12 1-2 tax rate in township. 12 mills; low­ Club” will be held in lhe Delton
I Karl Grashouae ol Pewamo visit- mill*, lowest B 1-2 mills
est 10 1-2 mill*.
1_________
_ ___
*
community
hall on June 18 The
ed at Bert VanderJagt’s over lhe
BARRY TOWNSHIP -County tax writer attended thL* show last year
HASTINGS TOWNSHIP—Coun­
J week end
6 mills; township tax . __________
ty lax 6 mills; township tax none : mlllr; tcTHriiip Ux 1 1-2 mill* 1 and wa* amazed at the number of
1
. district 7 1-2. 0Khlblla attractively displayed and
Township .!_..
Unit —
school
Mr and Mrt John Morgan are School district taxes Fisher dis­ -rx_
nicely settled in their new home trict. 4 mill*; Gregory district, 2 1-2 mills. Pour districts in township now excellent quality of the bloom*
‘ across from the cemetery
mills. Altofl district, 3 1-3 mills, belong lo tile Kellogg Consolidat­
i We regret very much to report Star district. 5 mills. Pratt dis­ ed School district That school br­
PLEASANT HILL
I Mrs Lowell Demond I* in quite poor trict. 2 1-2 mill*. Quimby district. ing in Kalamazoo county we have
The Sunshine club met with
no figures for the school lox For Catherine Hart Thursday As there
, health al the present time
2 1-2 mills Highest tax rale in
the
five
Barry
district*
belonging
to
। Mr and Mr* Karl Philipp* of township u mills; lowest 8 1-2
was no work to be done the host***
the Township Unit district the io­ served refreshment* of Ice cream
| Kalamazoo
visited Ed
Dcaklns mill*
ta) tax—county township and school and cake which was enjoyed by all
,Sunday
HOPE TOWNBHIP-Countj ta* will be 15 mills
1 Claud Demond 1* making a nice
Mr* S B Nibbs accompanied her
6 mill*, township lax none Schoo)
THORNAPPLE
TOWNSHIP - niece of Batt)*’ Creek to Pentwater
recovery from hl* recent op-ration
Cornealla VanderJagt I* spending district taxes— Doud district 2 1-2
June 5th and spent a few days
mills. McCallum district. 2 1-2 mills, budget submitted lo the commis­
there with relative* and friend*
Cedar Creek district, j mills; Hinds sion for lhe towruhlp but the comA C Buller and son. proprietors
Mrs John Corrigan underwent an
of the Bellevue flour mills, drew district, 2 1-2 mills; Shultz district. mts&amp;ion allowed 3 mill' That wtU operation at St Mary * ho*pltal In
' wheat from B J Wellman * last 2 1-3 mills; Brush Ridge district. probably be changed at the July Grand Rapids Tuesday and i* get­
week. They informed us that first 2 1-2 mill*. Cloverdale district. 4 meeting of the commission The tax ting along as well a* can be ex­
mills
Highest
lax
rale
in
township
rate fixed for the township school pected She had been confined to
grade wheat was hard to find.
10 mills; lowest 8 1-2 mill*
district, which include* the entire her bed seven month* and we wish
IRVING—County tax fl mill*. .
OBITUARY
her a speedy recovery
township
tax
1
I
-2
mill*
School
1
rate for lhe township will not exMr and Mrs Fred Smith formrr| Jacob Henry Haney, son of Je«sc
dlstrict
taxes
—
Cobb
district
4
mills,
ceed 12 mills, and may be les* But 'y of this neighborhood, were Sat­
and Catharine Haney wa* born in
Wood
district.
3
mills.
Jones
disthere
will
also
be
a
tax
spread
for
urday evening callers at Mr and
1 Indiana Oct 13. 1870. and passed
I away at hl* home in this city, June i trict. 2 1-2 mills, Ryan district. 3 i the payment on school bonds, which Mr* R J Williams
Miss Elsie Row lade r and friend.
13. 1036, at the age of 65 years He mill*; Brew district. 4 mill*: Fill- will raise the township rate to is
Howard Hull of Grand Rapids were
I came to Michigan about 35 year* more district 2 1-2 mills. Freeport mills probably
WOODLAND—County
tax
6fi Sunday
Sunday afternoon
afternoon and
and ’ evening
ago and ha* since resided in this district &amp; mills, pleasant Hill di»trict
2
1-2
mills,
Little
Brick
dismills;
township
tax
2
mill*
The
tax
guest*
of Margaret and Paul Palmcity and vicinity H* wa* ■ member
3 mills Highest tax rate In rate fixed for lhe Woodland con- er.
of lhe Masonic order and of lhe Or- trict
township 12 1-2 mills; lowest 10 1 sohdated district, which include.'
igr and Mrs Lloyd Shroyer and
Mr and Mrs. Uoyd Shroyer and
1 der of the Eastern Star
_m .
...
_ .
,^
| the enUre township
was 4 mill* children
of Carlton
Center
Mrr and
I Surviving arc the widow Mildred, mills.
JOHNSTOWN—County
lax
8 That will bring thetax rate up to Mri cynjs ghroyer and .son Clay­
and one brother William Haney,
and many devoted nephew* and mills, townahlp tax 1 mill School 12 mills But we are ID’ormed that Lon of Barber* corner* were Bundistrict
taxe*—King
district 66 6 6mills
millswill
willbebeadded
added to
to pay
pay the
the Inin- d
dav
1T guest* of
of Mr and Mrs Bert
niecas The funeral wa* held al lhe dUtricl
•
home on 8 Hanover St.. Saturday mill*: Monroe district 2 1-2 mills; terest and the amount due on the Palmer
Parker district. 3 mills; Steven* dis- ; principal of the school bond*
Mr and Mrs D*Boer of Grand
trict, 2 1-2 mill* Brutal district. 2
-6 Rapids were Sunday callers al Mr
HASTINGS
CITY
—
County
tax
Jones officiating Burial was tn Val­ 1-2 mills, Banfield district 3 1 mill*. |
mills School tax 8 mills—about 1 and Mr* Clarence Berend*
ley Home cemetery
Culver district, 4 mill*, Fick dis­ mill less than last year
That
Mr and Mrs Cecil Campbell and
trict. 2 1-2 mill*. Bullis district,
'means
'
_____ ...
a fall tax of ...
n mills plus son George and Mlv Marjorie Red­
I mills,
Burroughs district, 2 1-2 about 3 1-2 mills to pay
man of Grand Rapids were dinner .
guasts Bunday of Mr
and Mr*
Clifton Campbell

AU SUM U«m. full

ami-

Knee lenrth. All 811k Iron (1*4

U M Cottage Seta to go at
Anklet*, fine Hale. 514 lo 18*4 ..

34x34 Table Oilcloth Pattern* M ...Jfc

FOR 6 DAYS ONLY

Prices That Save You Money

Blister Crepe. Crash AultInn and

15c Bleached Online Flannel

Ready-to-wear Reductions!
"CINDERELLA" Dresses and Coots Marked Down to Go Fast

DRESSES
Many $4.88 ond &gt;4.88

DRESSES

Reduced

Reduced

From 25' to 50 :
REDUCTIONS

to

$3.88 and $4.88

DRESSES

Suits and Coats

s3ae

to

SUITS

*2—

AND

SOME AS LOW

NEW LINEN SUITS, DRESSES AND SKIRTS
IT PAYS YOU TO TRADE

Frandsen^s Store
EXCLUSIVE

BUT

NOT

EXPENSIVE

TELEPHONE 2504

HASTINGS, MICH.

friend to everyone and will be sadl-­ ! dlevllle and Mr Morris Hamilton of
ly missed not only by the immediate I Nashville
family but by all who knew her
Win Cramer 8r , Mis* Vesta and
Mr and Mrs Lrster Reynolds art
Martha
Cramer attended Com­
'laying with their father for lhe
mencement exercise*
Friday al
HasUngs
Sunday guest* of Mr and Mra
NORTHEAST STRIKER
Mr
and
Mrs Leo Reynolds are
Mr*. Eva Reynolds passed away William Cramer were Mr and Mrs
driving
a
new
Chevrolet
lost Tuesday morning after a long Clarence Hammond and grandson.
Ilin cm 0he it survived by her hus­ Stuart Hammond and Mr and Mrs
band and six children, besides a William Cramer Jr and daughter.
STATE ROAD.
host of relatives She wot a loving Sandra. MLsa Elsie Poland of MidMr and Mrs Andrew Kennedy
and family spent last week Sunday
with Mr and Mrs. Keel Tobias of
Shultz
Dr and Mr* Wynn Noble* of
Coral spent the week end with

• DO NOT NEGLECT YOUR FEET!

GET RELIEF FROM YOUR FOOT TROUBLES
SPECIAL

DEMONSTRATION

their daughter. Mrs. Jack
and family
Archie Cunningham and I
were in Grand Rapids Balurdi
William Main and family
moved into the late Thomas 1
house.
Mr and Mr* Chas Rowley
family ot Quimby and Mr. and
Clyde Miller of Hastings spent

We sympathise with th* dear
lady who wanted lo know if Um
football recently put ua a* Um top

WE DELIVER

HOW TO HAVE

2272 or 2616

PHONES

3 DELIVERIES —8 and IO A. M. 3 P. M

Comfort
BYTHAI.y

will b
Demonstrated at ovr store

THIS WEEK
THURSDAY and
FRIDAY, JUNE
11th and 12th!
DON'T MISS IT!

he^!

PICNICS

Veal Roast

Smoked
Shanklea.

LB.—

/
JhVXV

EGGS

STRICTLY FRESH

a cool glass of
HIGHLANDS GRADE A

2Oc
14c

LB.

KINGNUT

ARMOUR'S STAR
If you hove foot trouble—

LARD
2t29c

no matter how painful or

Complete Teat and Anofy-

IN COACHS4

aia; the causa of your di»-

one-half

BUTTER

comfort explained, and
Method of RELIEF DEM­
ONSTRATED ... ALL
WITHOUT
COST
OR
OBLIGATION TO YOU I

• ADVICE AS TO PROPER FOOT
CARE AND CORRECT FOOTWEAR
For Your PARTICULAR FEET Is Also
Included . . . REMEMBER THE DATE !

HASTINGS CUT-RATE SHOE STORE
114 W. STATE ST.

OW ... real bargain raUa on the New York
Central Syeteuil Everyone can afford lhe
aafety, apeed and comfort that only train travel
offer* I For example, 2^ a mlla in Coachee means
SO mile* for |1 ... or 1000 mila* for 880. What an
opportunity!

N

HASTINGS. MlfH.

^rmiwaya

New York

Central

ENGLISH
WALNUT
M E AT S
Vi

LB. \

2

25c

Shultz or Fraeport

Del Monte
ORANGE
JUICE
2 Cana

LB

3Oc

BRANDED

BEEF
KETTLE
ROASTS

25cX , 25c

ELDPAUSCH

I8cm&gt;

-MA.RKHT* , _

Phon* im Ilin hekver

Hi** Ir Crm

C.Ridlwv
pMtavriMd

... the perfect
Hummer drlek

HIGHLANDS
Phon* 2651

ROBERT W

�Tgt

DEATH OF MILO BARBOUR.

PENNOCK HOSPITAL

Milo S. Barbour. 70. died last week

Alonzo Smith. 306 K. Walnut, on at his home, one and one-half miles
west of Hickory Comers. He wax
On Friday June 5. a daughter was born In Alamo. September 22. 1865,
born to Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Boyne and was married tn 1801 lo Miss
(Margaret Spaulding* of Chicago.
Grace Putnam of Otsego He Is suevtved by the widow. a daughter.
and Mrs. Willard Landis of Wood- Mrs Harold Newkirk, and a son.
Dryden, of Augusta.

KROGER FLAKY DOUGHNUTS
Lighter Texture — Richer Flavor
PLAIN OR
SUGARED

■

■

"EXTRA SPECIAL'
COUNTRY CUB

FRESH BREAD 2

10c

LSTROLH CTOHt PRICE

Danish Pastry

»•»«• 19c

Corn Flakes

flaky - Dell.Jou. Cotin Ki.&lt;

BUTTER

MICHIGAN MAID
•I KK TIN I HI&gt;II

Hastings

Ib.

X* roll

** 7^

EATMOHK

Nut Oleo

Apple Butter

2 «b- 25c

COLNTRY (LIB - FANCY QI AI.ITY

21c

PINEAPPLE
SELECTED CENTER -I.If L
UOU I « OOP SEI.

COl \THY CLl II

Fruit Cocktail 2

PET
MILK

25c

Stuffed Olives

4 r 29c

OR CARNATION

(f .iunlrv t.lub Milk 3 lull can* 20c)

It has required mony years of conscientious
service to build the reputation we enjoy today,

Beans

Whole Wheat

1 0c

p*«

a

reputation

on

built

quality

merchandise,

craftsmanship and satisfactory service

PELS NAPTHA 10 ■ 41c
SOAP («&lt; KHIHl in'.or CASHMERE Hol &lt;,H ET 2

Crisco

ISr)

made this reputation possible

we soy

kr«m;er*s hoi d m ed

mu M in 111 ii

JEWEL
COFFEE

SALAD
DRESSING

1 5c

We wish to thank our many patrons who hove

There ore undoubtedly mony people who have
wonted to buy a memorial for the-r family plot
ond hove put it off for diverse reasons To these

Pancake

“ 1 Oc

moke an appointment NOW and look

over our fme selection of monuments all rea­
sonably priced
there is no obligation to buy
Decoration Day you probably sow many of our
monuments in the cemeteries of Barry county,
and thought you would like a s.rrnlor one for

your own lot

Why not have one?

An order

placed now will insure a memento for years to
come

FRENCH COFFEE

"A MONUMENT IS A MEMORIAL FOREVER

MAXWELL HOUSE

26c

TWINKLE

25c

6

MACARONI or SPAGHETTI

3

CROWINC MASH

HASTINGS MONUMENT WORKS
IRONSIDE BROS.. Propm

Telephont

25c

$165

SCRATCH FEED

$215

banner.

. cUuon Joined with two other assoI elation.* and established one Joint
office for lhe group, with the pur­
; pose of reducing overhead expense*
vi.~H.sn nf Dii-pcinra and -,,d lncreBain«
service for the
Election of Directors ana onv&lt;,nlence Of the member*. The
I other associations In the group are:
Year's Report Features
The Allegan and the Western Alle­
of Gathering
gan county associations. Mr Bar­
Members of the Barry county no- ,
elected secretary-treasurer
(lonaI farm loan association which by all three associations,
has headquarters at Allegan and i The iu.*oclation is one of lhe lo­
365 stockholders in this county and cal cooperatives through which
adjoining counties, will attend the farmers obtain credit for long term
annual meeting of the association farm financing or refinancing of
at Allegan on June 16
Fred G farm debt* through Uie land bank
Barbee, secretary treasurer says the by jointly guaranteeing ail their
members now hold $48,000 in slock loans The guarantee enables them
tn the association and have loans to get a lower rale than would be
outstanding of $851 000 Besides thl* possible otherwise
The guarantee fund Is made up
volume the association is also hand­
I Of each member's capital stock in
ling for tne Federal Land Bank of
■
St Paul commissioner s loan* total, ‘h* association, amounting in each
ing $461 ooo
|
to 5 P*’r cent of hls loan' Po°,p‘(
Director * are to be elected and "'*&lt;( pledged with that of al) the
the member.* will hear a complete o!l” members a.* the bash for corepot l on the bustneaa for the past operative borrowing
year Tiir present officer.* of the a.*- I
~
’ * *
s LOAN Ol
OFFICE HERE.
socialion arr Joint E Edwards' ol
OPENS
The new finance company that
Hasting* president, Wot A HavHaxlUlgs. vice-pre*.dent opened ir. the National Bank build­
ing Thursday i* conducted by a
ler of Freeport Alfred (’.Binder ol man who knows ail about such
Delton and Harley Townsend of work and furthermore is one of
1 Hastings
own
boys
Dorrance
Woodland
the Barry county asso- . Trethric a local boy and graduate

ANNUAL MEETING OF
FARM LOAN ASSON.

Thursday,

june u, i&gt;m

Children’s Day will be obaenred ;
Hastings High school, returned
next Sunday at 11 o'clock at lhe J
about a year ago after an absence of,
church.
■
nine years and engaged in selling
Mrs. Mo Cruso, who has been
Insurance. While away from the '
spending some time at lhe B L.
city, he had been travelling in Wls- ,
Edmonds home, has gone to Lake
consln. Oregon and Ohio opening ,
Odessa to visit her sister. '
offices for lhe Beneficial Manage- &gt;
menl company.
Company So
establishing
The
ment
t&gt;o in estaouaning
•••* Hastings Independents
Mr BI1Q meett Mr and Mrs. E. J Kellogg and
. ,
,
.. own
his
............
company
------------------------------------here. Dorrance i.
U Slnwf'i
Stowe's Market
Market nf
of Oranrt
Grand Rnnlii*
Rapid.*. wn of j^on Raptds. Mr and Mrs | (Continued from page 1. Bee. D
right in his own field of work.
in ••••
the pr
ang Kellogg
Kai-। ”~
~ “
wora. He Bunday at the fair grounds,
f- —
rranx
Keuogg and
ano family
lamuy of
oi rvminsurance. A**1 ««me
lhe
will continue with hU insurar.es.
5*^ of the season for the amaK&gt;0 Mr ,nd Mrs
- Robert Glaa- where he mlut ‘*«n lhem
—।— .irv»i&lt;
The tnrt.n»n.i»niA
have re
re.
------ and
—■ son
— of
_• Dowling
r*__.i&lt;_» and e«e
although that will not be a major
10CB^ The
Independents have
­ gow
Mr presence of the postmaster, assist­
port of his business The new com- cently been reorganized after a lapse and Mrs Rial Kellogg of Hastings ant postmaster or designated clerk.
pony officially opened Thurxday un- ' of three years and some good game.* visited Glenn Kellogg s Sunday
He must sign hU name In exactly
e expected. Several members of
The Young People's class will
der lhe name of Fidelity Corpora­
nuiu their
ukm awm
the old aggregation are back and hold
next party at lhe home the w,y 11 BPP**rs on Die face of
lion of Michigan
together
with
several
younger of "Howard AlUto’use^Saturday’’eve- the bonds Otherwise, lhe bonds will
- . « t---------------icgemei
be sent back for proper signature
*
s Hastings fans should see uing
real good ball games this I
------- —— ------and there will be a delay in the
payment of them
summer Several class A tteams
—
pA!1gjNO OF MRS.
If the veteran wishes lo cash on­
from Grand Rapids have already
i—a.. .
W1U-IAM J. KENNEDY.
been booked and a complete ached-1
ly part of his 'bonds, he will aid
Mrs William J Kennedy aged 70
ule will soon be made up which
the procedure greatly by bringing
died on Sunday at her home, 1061
those
with Hie lowest consecutive
will include such teams as. Rock­ Lake Drive s B. Grand Rapids
ford. Belding. Muskegon. Grand
serial numbers Thus. If he has 10
She wn.* the daughter of the late
• Continued from page i. 8cc l&gt;
Haven. Conoco Gas from Grand
bond.* numbered from 100.001 to
Mr and Mr* John Fuller and wa*
Rapids and other teams Sunday's
100.010 and wonts lo cash five of
that win come from the state In the ^arne *tart* at three oclock The born al Coal-* Grove where she them, he should bring in the bond.*
lived until her marriage to William
fall, they will have the ready cash following players have been secured
1 numbered 100.00) to 100 005 and not
to meet all expense up lo the time
jet's get behind the boys next J Kennedy on March 17. 1889 In just pick them out al random.
when city -school taxes are avail- Sunday and give them a rousing 1890 they moved to Grand Rapids
When the veteran has been iden­
able. which will be It;
tn January
abk.
I vend of! infielder* Brown Brand
tified and lhe bond* signed by
After the election there was some strtler Young C O'Donnell and thi- Grand Rapids Bedding Co
himself and hi.* identifying witness,
Mrs
Kenned*
also
taking
an
active
discussion of school problems The Hoevenolr.
OutfielderCovlllr
hr will turn them in al the post­
arufual meeting authorized the board Hawthorne. Brownell. Harkney and part tn the business as vlce-prcM- office. and will receive a receipt for
to continue what it ha* been doing James Pitchers. Chase B ODon- dent and director until about sixi them
weeks ago At one time she also
neil Gage
and
Freeman
Skib
,
Checks in payment of
bonds
conducted
the
Antiseptic
Fibre
children iii the kindergarten de­ Moore will do tlie catching
which have been thus certified, will
partment from the first and second
be nulled within several days, and
Surviving arr a son. A T Ken­
wards lo the kindergarten room In .
ned* president and treasurer ol the, will be delivered in the regular mall
the new Central
building
Tht* ।
delivery
After several years' idleness, the
saves maintaining two kindergarten I lasting» Independents have br&lt;n Bedding Co . a brother. Iat 8 Ful­
departments tn the ward m hools. reorganised and will be in Lhe field ler of Carlton, six grandchUdren.
OBITUARY.
beside.* nieces and nephews
Mary Ann Underhill was born Ln
j thl* summer with a good snappy
.
•
Funeral
service*
were
held
al
the
and their parents
Bergen. New York. Nov u. 1858.
ball team Several of the old guard rt.!lldPnrt. on Wednesday afternoon
After the election lhe board was
She came lo Michigan with her
2 30 oc)ock with buna) in Oak
reorganized for lhe ensuing school are back including a&lt; Brown Sum
Young. Clark O'Donnell and Veryear with the same officers Presi­
spent lhe n-*t of her life in Barry
dan Coville and together with some ।
dent. A L Brown, secretary C
county
In 18T7 she married John
of the younger talent a real good
NOTICE or MORTOAOE SALE
MtQuarrle To thia union were born
Wespinter
treasurer
Charles 8
team Is expected Tile first regular ,
Potts
six children, all surviving her—•
scheduled game will be played at
Donald McQuarrle of Barry Twp.
। the fairgrounds Sunday June 14.
Mrs Ruby Kelley of Kalamazoo.
POLITICS NOT REMEDY
I with Stowe's Market of Grand Rap- .
Mrs Edith Louden of Doster. Mrs
Ids an exceedingly fast class A
ChrlsUe Aldrich. Mrs Maude Zerbcl
FOR CROP SURPLUSES team Anybody wishing a—try-out *r'
and Mrs Geneva Paul of Ha.-rtlng.*.
with the independent.* report at the .
also 20 grandchildren and 16 great­
Science, Says Noted Chem
fairground* next Bunday afternoon
grandchildren
April 24. 1910 Mr
jai two-thirty
ist. Must Find New,
McQuarrle died and July 28. 1925.
she was married lo Philip W Bur­
Non Food Uses
ges* who preceded her in death
In an address at Notre Dame HIRSCH, FELDPAUSCH
eight years ago She passed away al
University one day last week Fran­
AHEAD IN LEAGUE
Pennock hospital on June 3 1936.
Feldjxrusch are still J.'
cis P Garvan. of New York CHy , Kirsch
.... ... aad
r
of bronchia) pneumonia
The fu­
president of the Chemical Founds- । tied for first place in lhe local softneral was held at the Methodist
llon. asserted that science and nut ball
” league
■-------- •*• •
the picklemen
having
Episcopal church al 3 P M on Sat­
politics will solve
lhe American won seven and the grocers five
urday, Rev M W Jones officiat­
crop surplus problem for the farm­
ing Interment in North Hickory
er He said that the answer to the mg week together with standing.* to
Comers cemetery Her six grand­
disposition ot farm surpluses seems dale
sons acted as pallbearers
to be the development of new non - । June 15 —Roger* Groc v* NM I
Mrs Burgess was a faithful and
food uses tor crops and products Bank
“
' Piston Ring *x Hirscii Bro*
loyal member of the Methodist
that are now produced, and lhe de
June
16 —Chain Gang vs Table
church MLwionary Society and W.
velopment of new crops to be raised Co . Highway *• Bliss Foundry
on farms to be used in industry
‘ June
•
•IB “
■
BlUx
Machine Shop v*
She went to sleep and never spoke,
| Fi-ldpuuxih. Triangle Vs
Rogers
And thus a finer .wrmon spoke
OBITUARY
Than oratory may achieve.
George B M Keller son of Jon­
For we who mourn her may believe.
athan and Ellen Keller
passed Bank
away at his home tn Orangeville
Tt&gt; go a.* if a hundred men
Twp
after a brief Hines.* aged
Of prophecy had told her when
72 yrs, 8 mos 16 days He was born
in Pa Sept 12, 1663 Sept 29 1884
We know not only by the book
he married Barbara Ann Ward who
Beside her bed We need but look
passed awaj May 5 1928 To this Feld pa UM* h
Upon Hie neatness of her shelves.
union were bom eight children Al­ Nat 1 Bank
Unlike our own unlike ourselves.
lie and Eulan having preceded him Table Co
Each thing tn order Here we find
in death He leaves six children.
No yi.sk unfinished left behind
Geoffrey and Sain, orange*Hie Wil Cons Power
No prablein for some other mind.
Ham Dennis and Mrs Henry Greg­
ory Hasting*
Mrs Joe ~Bayles Bll-XX
There are no debts for friends lo
tjinMng. one sister Mr*
Piston Ring
pay
Page Quimby, one brother
Chain Store
No scattered things to put away
Pa fourteen grandchildren
Ri&gt;g-i * Grocery
Whatever guest might wk hrr door
nephews and nieces
Funeral services were I Kid at the'
Qt IMBY
And when Dial other stranger came.
Yankee Springs church at
two
Rev Rar) Scott of Neu York who
O'clock Sunday afternoon conduct- । is visiting his parents Mt and Mr*
With life his gift though death tils
name.
rd by Rev Edward Boone Buna! in George Scott gave a fine sermon
We know he found hrr sou) lhe
Yankee Springs cemetery
Sunday at the church

NEXT TUESDAY IS
“PAYOFF’DAY

Independent Team
To Play Sunday

$210

Mr and Mrs Frank Bloom enter­
tained Uh- latter .* sister and hus­
band of Orangeville Sunday
ML*' Doreen Rltzman and Velma .
Kellogg graduated from Hastings

WOMEN

OBITUARY.
Mr* Mary Belle Johncock. daugh­
ter of William and Anna C John­
cock wa.* born June 29 I860, and
passed away at her Home, June 3.
1936 She was united in marriage to
Richard Johncock June 28. 1876.
who passed on before her Dec 25.
1824 Four children were born to
this union Lillie B Woodman. Wil­
liam R Johncock Ernest L John­
cock and Anna M
Collison
She
leaves one brother Arthur John­
cock six grandchildren two great­
grandchildren several nephews and
nieces and relatives and a host of
friends
She will be sadly missed
by all who knew hrr

were on Die honor roll

WHO WANT

L UU.I Ji MBO

Fresh Spinach

Cantaloupes

"• l2Vic

CUCUMBERS
New Oranges

a'

29c

shoes that are designed fo;

Plums

com fort — shoes that naturally support

Onions ns" 3 '•*

Sweei Corn

and distribute the weight of your body

I recommend Fool Builder Arch Shoes

LETTUCE

to you because they do this.

SMOKED

construction and their manner of support lhal gives you comfort

Right here

25c

is lhe point that's important

1—1931 STUDEBAKER DICTA­
TOR "8" SEDAN

Steel arches

1—1932 STUDEBAKER
NE SEDAN

entire inside shape of shoes must be formed lo give complete support.

This

Ib

15 the actual shape ol the inside of Fool Builder

Arch Shoes. Notice the built-up portion at your arch, which locks

cut Mm &lt;

18c

s.

Thunnger

'»■

25c

SUGAR CLUED — 2 lo 3 lb. Pieces

equally, bringing comfort.

- 25c

BONELESS VEAL ROAST

1—1929 OLDSMOBILE CO^CH

Come in—try on lhesfc shoes.
See how gently they support your

SWIFTS PREMll M

VITALITY LOAF

ROCK-

1 — 1929 STUDEBAKER COMMANDER 6 SEDAN

your heel in position and prevents lhe fool from slipping forward
This distributes your weight

SLAB BACON

30 nt the age of 78 years, one
month and 27 days He leaves two
daughters Mrs Frank Tobias of
Nashville and Mrs Lewis Stanton of
Hastings also an adopted son Oren
Wlicox of Grand Rapids, several
grandchildren
great-grandchildren
and two great great grandchildren.
The funeral was held Monday June
1. at Copemish
al lhe M
E.
I church at 2 P M the Rev K E
[ Clark officiating Interment at Nessen City

alon? will not supporTyour feet as they should be supported. The

FLANK STEAKS
@ SHORT RIBS
Sliced Bacon

1932 STUDEBAKER DICTA­
TOR "8" St. Regis Bro.

'ROM lhe outside most health shoes look alike Ils their inside

PICNICS

dren visit
vllle o^cr
Miss E
cago apet

U a visile
and Mrs
Mr. an
Dowagiac
their son

dren hav
for the s
hardt is
George
Monday
vL*1tlng 1
Chicago
Mr an
and Mra
Anna Rc
Langley &lt;
MiM t

and Jinn
Mr.' Jolt
Harrv w
an- slate
Mr an
BHIy lea
trip *to
Boston ’
er place;
Mr an
Mrs Cl*
Monday

... 23c

foot in the natural way—thecomfortable way T

25c

TRIM-TRED
HEALTH SHOES

KROGER STORES
Shor

Your posture —

can be affected by

Hostings, Michigan

1 — 1928 PONTIAC CONVERT
IBLE COUPE

shoes al the points
marked above
Foot Builder
Shoes relieve
strain caused by
incorrect shock

TAYLOR’S SHOE STORE
Home of All Leather Shoes.

K ing
Reid
her e
Mr ar
in Bunn
reunion
O E 3
social Hi

OBITUARY.
Nicholas M Erway »n' bom In
New York state April 3. 1857 He

^jjecialist says:

Welt

CaUT-raia -

WaaniDgi
tlon.
Roy He
Wednesdi
lhe sumn
HIM C
the guest
part of li

T 8
Sunday school class al hl* station

10c

Robert
college fa

RE-ELECTED TWO §
BOARD MEMBERS

$160

Bl Ik HUH Ml mb KI lb.

TOMATOES

Saturday

Michigan

GOODYEAR BROS. Pho„
HARDWARE CO.
201

Select m caafideace ht

■AL* G. McCALL
'Mastings'Tailor For Men Who
Know the Difference"

Ha.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. JUNE 11, 1IM
I

George Bauer was home from East

Social Events and Personal Mention

Peter Fedewa Is in Nashville this
week managing the A. Ac P. store.
Ml** Stella Heath la home from
Niles where she taught the past
mrMr- and Mrs Casper Thomas and
Mr. and. Mra Edward Tudor spent
W. J Smith of Kalamazoo were
lhe week end trout Ashing on Pine
Bunday vtaltors at Mrs. Clarence
Qrohe
Mr. and Mrs Weldon Wolfe of
Tom Baird spent Sunday hers Battle Creek visited Mrs Ella Wolfe
with Mra. Baird and look tiieir on Bunday
daughter. Johanna, back with him
Mr and Mrs Harry Karcher left
to Marshall
on Bunday for their new home In
Mr. and Mrs James Milla ar­ Battle Creek
rived last Friday
from
KlsslmMrs George Newton spent a few
mee. Florida, and will spend the
day* last week with Mr* Edward
summer here
Bottum at Grand Rapids
Mrs Mae Trieb and daughters.
Miss Katherine Giddings visited
Florence and Leonarda. spent Sun­
her sister. Miss Beatrice Gidding*
day with Mr and Mrs Clare Oleas
of Battle Creek last week
near Grand Rapid*
Mrs Edwin Smith returned on
Mias Agne* Burroughs, who is
working in Elyria. Ohio, visited her Thursday from a visit with Mr and
Mr* Ebbcn Smith of Toledo
parents, Mr and Mrs Nelson Bui
Mr and Mrs Loren Johnson of
roughs over the week end.
Middleville were Sunday guesU of
Mr* Cleon Elllngcr and daugh­ Mr and Mrs Guy Giddings
ter of Plainwell were guest* of Mr
Miss Mayme Peters of Grand
and Mrs Rozel) Stanton last week Rapid* 1* assisting hi the Bell Tele­
Mr Elilnger coming for Sunday
phone office for several weeks
Mis* Mar da j Newton and Erling
H Udatuen from Kenoaiia
wi*
—
Saturday and Sunday guest* of Mr
were Memorial day week end guests and Mrs Jacob VmiDeLune of Holof Mr and Mrs Qeo M Newton
land
Qumcy Hynes of Flint a as in the
burg. Monroe Co last week where city on Monday called here by me
deaths of his brother and a brothel
school alumni banquet where she in-law
Mr and Mrs Rupert Carrothcrs
taught her first school
Gerald Ryan and Mu*-' Doris Ry­ of Grand Rapids visited Mrs Isabel

Mr. and Mrs. W L Shelters epent
Lynn Perry was home from M. 8.
Saturday in Detroit
C over the week end.
Robert Field Is home from Albion
Wayne Bnyder was home from
Three Rivers od Bunday.
college for hie summer vacation.
MU* Frances sage was home from
H D Trim visited friends in
East Lansing over lhe week end.
Battle creek last Wednesday
Mr and Mrs C W Clarke were
Mrs. Ltaa Robinson left Friday
in Grand Rapids over lhe week end. night for Petoskey for the summer.
Mrs. Elsie Gould la home from
James Radford left last week on
Waanmgion. D C-. for her vaca­ a three weeks’ business trip In lhe
tion.
Roy Heath U home from Albion
Roy Heath went to Muskegon on
Wednesday where he has work for College where he graduated on
Monday
the summer
Miss Dor Ice Jones of Niles was
Hubert and Richard Fairchild
the guest of Miss Frances ConkHn were home from Detroit over lhe
part of last week
Mr* H E Bird tall and two chil­
Mr and Mrs Thoa ■ Baird were
dren visited her jwrents In Middle­
Bunday gueita of Mr and Mrs. Har­
ville oicr Sunday
old Huer of Ionia
Mis* Elbe! M Krum per of Chi­
Mr* Mort Townsend spent Wed­
cago spent the week end with her
nesday in Lansing with her sister
sister Mrs T H Hoos
MIM Josie Plowman of Copemish Mr’ Jfnnlr Smith
I* a visitor al lhe home of lhe Rev I Mr and Mr*. Alonzo Trim al­
and Mra C M Conklin
tended the alumni banquet at NashMr and Mra F. N Reed arc in Ville on Friday evening
Mr“ and Mra R O Jeffries of
Dowagiac for two week* visiting
**
Lowell
their sons. Lloyd and Lyte Reed.
, .... were Sunday gueau ..of Mr
.
H 8 Culp and daughter Patricia and Mr* J M Townsend
of Reed City were guests of hl* *ls- . Mr* EHa Paul of Woodland sp--nt
ter-in-law m!m Betty Stickney ' wvera) day* the past wark with
—
J
.Mr and Mrs Charles Paul
Thursday
The Rcy
and
Maurice I Mis* Ruth Robaon left on Satur­
Grigsby uf Detroit
day for her home In Jackson where
an spent the week end in Sylvania,
the will spend the summer
An on Sunday
Mr and Mrs Rollo Taliaferro of Ohio attending an amateur radio
a few days
Mr and Mrs John Fuller and
Mrs Grace Dodds of Kansas City Battle Creek were Sunday guests meeting They were accompanied by
son Jackie of Munising were Sun­
Melvin Gelow of Kalamazoo
comes today for a visit with Mr of Mr and Mr* Ernest Williams
Richard M Oook leave* Satur­ day guest.* of Mr and Mrs Olin
Mr and Mr* Fred Woodruff of
and Mrs C W Weapbiter and Mr*
ix-nsmore and family
Grand Rapid*
were in Hasting* on day for a short top to Los Angeles
Dennis Murray
. .
Mis* Geraldine Isenhath
Ml**
Mr and AW* James Hopkins and , business al the probate court on He will go out by airplane and will Katherine Merriam Bob Walldorff
Mr* Olive Con I in of Kalamazoo Friday
Jand Willard Lawrence spent SunMis* Donna Myers left Monday D French, and her three daughters
wrre Sunday guests of Mr
and
Jay, Hammond of ---------Lansing
for Holland where she will take
„ spent
Mr* Dell Sutton
Mrs Herbert Reinhardt and chil­ training in the Montgomery Ward , the week end here with Mr* Ham­ Thursday from a visit of
dren have gone to Benton Harbor set-Up there to assume duties as mond and Natalie at the home of
weeks with Mr and Mrs
Philip
for the summer while Mr
Rein­ cashier with the opening of tiieir Mr and Mr* Leo Fisher The latter
| I* recovering from her recent ill- Knlskern of Swarthmore Pa
hardt is at the pine lake camp
store here
Mrs Agnes Fisher and Donald
returned । nes*
Mr*
Archie
McCoy
George Reynolds returned
on
and Dwight FUlier were in Albion
’ ’ ‘
Mrs Gladys Allen and Mrs Alon­
Monday from a three weeks trip Monday June 8. from Mansfield
on Monday attending the graduaVisiting New Orleans
St
Louis. Ohio, where she ha* been the guest zo Trim were in Nashville last Wed linn exercises al the college
ot her brother and wife. Mr and neaday attending a meeting ot the
Chicago and other place* enroute
Mr and Mrs Marvin Ford and
Mr and Mr* O P Hinkler Mr Mrs W C FTtzSlmmons. for the Clover Leaf Club at Mrs Clarence baby and Miss Wllina Garn of
Shaw* Both ladle* were members
and Mrs Jock Hinkler and Mrs past two weeks
Grand Rapid* were Sunday guests
Mr* H A Adrounie and daugh­ of this club when they resided tn
Anna Reed visited MIm Jennie
Longley of Bnitie cro-k on Sunday ter Zabcllc visited Detroit friends Nashville
On Saturday
Rev and Mrs J W Kltching Dr
Miss Mary Brockway, who has over the week end
Mr and Mr*
Howard Black of
been attending commencement at evening Mrs Adrouule attended the and Mrs Frank Carruthers and Mr
Sunfield 7'up
were here Sundav
Album i nlleg- iia* returned to the University Club meeting at the res­ and Mi* Chas Bacheller attended
to see Mr* J F Bia&gt; k who I* H.
I lhe Knights . Templar
.
conclave
. at
home of Mr and Mr* M L Cook idence of Dr Haig
Mr Mid Mr- Harry Ritchie and
Mr M?d Mrs 1 G Benton Mr* Traverse City thl* week Dr Car­
Mrs Hazel Hinkle* and son Rich
baby who have been guests ol Mr Wakeham and MIM EdRh Ben(pn rather* being 0&lt;- otHtial represen- ard were Sunday guests ot Mi and
and Mrs Clan-ncr Crawford leave ot Battle creek were guests of $ir. (lllve of the HAaunits Conunandery
Mr* Franci* Ritchie of Purk Lak-­
on Sunday tot their home m Chi­ and Mr* L E Barnett during com- f flu pt and Mrs. D- A VanBusktrk near Lansing
inencemrin
last
week.
Ml**
Benton
------—
.
...
.
..
ieave Friday by automobile for the
cago
Mr* Mabel Clark left Saturday remaining tor this week as the National Educational Association
guest of Mis* Margret Barnett
meeting nt Portland
They are
E Root Hoo* youngest son of planning to go by way ot Montana
ahe will spend three week* before­
*- with
•" a pus­
returning lo Ann Arbor lor summer Rev and Mr* T H Hoos is back and Yellowstone —
park
-Lake
from school al Owosso having grad- stale look In at "
school
Bunn
from
Mr* Harry Water* Mrs Donald । uated with the highest standing ui Louise region
m hool al Midland and will leaw
Water*
hL*
class
in
the
High
school
de
­
Bmelkcr and Miss Erma
Mts* Beulah Severance
June 28 in company »uti a friend
.
...
spent the aerk end with rel Uvea al par'.ment of Bible Holiness Etetni- Thursoay June .
from
Battle
Creek
tor
the
summer
lomaining for nary He was valedictorian of hl* Michigan where she will attend th-.course at Columbia Uiuvcr.-.ily
। rias*
meeting of the Michigan Association
Mr and Mrs Ralph Eggleston
Mr and Wi­
E McCullough । Rev Wm Jopple of Burnlp* Du­ of Occupational Tlierapv Mis* Sev­
Mrs F.lhelyn Bunoltz and Jack and
”
trict Supt of the pilgrim Holme** erance
Director of Recreational
Mr’ John Wood and Mr and Mrs ehurrhes of Michigan made an un­ Therapy al the Pontiac State hos­ Miss Eva a Hecox with the iwiiu
Philip and Patricia were Sunday
Harrv Waters last week The ladies expected visit to lhe Pilgrim Holi­ pital say* the convention b lo lx
ness Tabernacle of this city Wed­ an organization meeting for Recrea - glM-*t* of Mr and Mrs Roy St.&lt;ip+
An appreciative audience tlonal Therapist*. The four day trip
Mr and Mr» C W Crawford and nesday
Mr and Mr*
Ai&gt;»- Vedtfer of
BHIv leave Sunday on an eastern eAjoyed tils splendid sermon in the include* a boat trip to the TahGrand Rapid* and Mr and Mr* I
trip stopping at New York City evening
quamcnwi Fall*
with committee
T OImni of Muskegon were Sui-.dny
Boston Washington D C and oth­
meetings and shop talk enroute
1
guesl* of Mr and Mi* A J Vt-dcalled to Ovid Saturday by the
er place* of interest
Those from out of town who were der |n the afternoon they vt*iud
Mr and Mr* W L Shulter* and death of his father William While, here to attend the funeral of Mr*
Mrs Clara Hale »ere In Belding who ha* been ill since Wednesday, Mart Burges* were Mr and Mr* the Upjohn peony farm near Au­
gusta
Monday evening attending the par­ dying Friday night Qn Bunday Mr Donald McQuarrie and family of
Mr and Mrs Clarence Goucher
and Mr*
Fay I1
ly tor Shirley Jean Clement, it be­ and Mrs Earl McKibben and Mr East Delton. Mr
t and Mr* Howard Barnum called al Stacy Mr and Mr* Frank Kellev attended a Western Union banquet
ing her third birthday
at Lhe Rowe hotel Grand Rapid*
Mr and Mrs F L Bauer were Ovid also
Mr and Mr* Bernard Kemple Mr
Saturday night given in honor of
in Sunfield Sunday to attend lhe
and Mr* Sterling Zerbel of Kula- •
reunion of the grand officers ot the Kirksville Mo June 8 to attend a maxoo. Mr and Mr* Basil Frtsble
O K S m 10X5 A picnic dinner and clinic and to take a week of post and daughter of Detroit. Mr and tiring on pensions after 48 and 37
graduate work al the College of Mr* Raymond Aldrich and Robert
social time were enjoyed
Mr and Mr* Vern Roger* and
Mr and Mrs Ernest Lawton and Osteopathy and Surgery He wa* ac­ Aldrich of Caledonia, Mr and Mrs
Mr and Mr* H E Birdsall motored companied by a patient who will be Cha* VanWorden and daughter of two daughters of Detroit called on
Hasting* friend* la-.l Wednesday
to .
Frankfort Mich lo vtall Mr and operated on by an orthopedic *pe
Chicago. Mr and Mrs John Wal­
Mrs Emory Wood and mother. Effie I cialL'l who ha* been associated lace and Mr and Mr* Donald Lou­ rnrouie lo Gun lake where they
will spend lhe summer Mi Roger*
J Vrooman over the weeek end
| with Dr Lorenz ot Austria
den of Gull lake. Mr and Mr* A , wa* coach al lhe Hastings High
1 R Louden of Doster. Mr and Mrs school for several years
I Kenneth Nash of Vicksburg, Mi
Mr* William Whr.lng and Mrand Mrs John Harrington and son !
Cora Bidelman iefi on Tuesday fnr
1 of Delton Mr and Mr* Fred Ramthe former * home in Beaumont
*ey and
Melvina
Underhill ot
Texas where Mr* Bidelman will
Shepardsville and Mr and Mr* Er-i
remain for the summer with tier
nest Underhill uf Laingsburg
sister Mr* Whiling who ha* been
Mr* Nellie Haney and Mr Maur­ gulling here for *cveral week*
ice Haney of Dacalur Ind Mr and
mended
Mrs Douglas Haney of Fl Wayne
William J
Ind.. Mr. and Mr* Luke Baker of Kennedy iCarrie Fuller- at Grant’
I Huntington ind . Mr and Mr* ura Rapids on Wednesday were Mr*
Smith and Mr
and Mr*
Albert
kibble puller Mr and Mr* Gbm
Paton of Detroit
Mr
and Mr*

Haetingi

McCREERY’S • Dry Cleaners

Odu Smith Mis* Vivian Smith and
Mr and Mrs Low, '* “ ‘
Plasterer
of
Kalamazoo
Robt
Grand Rapid*. Mr and Mrs Alvin
• Moire of Monroe Mr and Mrs
Clint Haney and Mir and Mrs Roy
.
Bunn and Mr* Claude Fighter of
Freeport. Mr and Mr* Bert Lepard
of Lake Odes-sa Will Haney Mr
and Mrs Jesse Haney and Donald
Haney of Cloverdale were here Sat­
urday lo attend the funeral of Ja­
cob Haney

; h-&gt; Wood Al*o Mr and Mr* Lee S
Fuller of Carlton
| Mr* T J Potter and daughter
I Mr* Edward Lyn lor. and the lat­
ter * youngest son Benni.* of Glendak- Cal arc rxperted In Hasting*

friend*

Merwyn Plumlty, who Is em­
ployed al Flint, spent Bunday at
home.
Mr and Mr* Charles Gladstone
of Grand Rapid* »penl Sunday with
relative* here.
Mr and Mr*
R. J
McCroery.
Mis* Minnie Harrison and Wm
Schilhaneck
spent
Sunday
in
Adrian
J A Sim of Westfield. N J , was
the guest of hl* sisters. Mr*. Mary
| Evarts and Ml** Agnes Sim over
(Sunday1
Mrs Frank Bpciulcy and daugh­
ter of Donner* Grove. Illinois,
called on Mrs clarence Grohe Sun­
day afternoon
Mrs Sidney
Boyne
(Margaret
Spaulding- of Chicago will spend
the summer with her mother. Mr*
Fred Spaulding
Mrs H G Hayes l* expecting a

SPLENDID RECORD
OF LEWIS CASCADDEN

It’s Smart to Be (

One of Honor Boll in College
of Engineering at
Inn Arbor

Palm Beach Bui la-the lightMl in weight, correctly tailored
in washable materials
Ruugy
patterns. and In white, too, all

Lewis Oascadden, son of Mr. and

Mr*

w O cascadden. Is making

a fine record al Ann Arbor where
he Is attending the College of En­
gineering at lhe University. He is
s member of the Sigma Rbo Tau so­
ciety organised some years ago by
a group of engineers for the dis­
cussion of subjects pertaining to
their profession
They also hold
debate* among lhe members, also
with English and speech classes al
Ann Arbor. Detroit and Ypsilanti

•11.75
Bummer Haven Woraleds—
dressed man—all wool, quali­
ty
malarial, tailored and
styled for summer wear In
sports and dress. Priced at—

leading debater* and he was one of
twenty-five whose
pictures
ap­
peared tn the Michigan Technic,
the engineers' publication, for outeland ing work during the year He
Miss Row D&lt;FMc accompanied her was also on lhe honor roll for de­
father. Muri DrFoc of Charlotte to bating and speech whose names
lhe Cleveland
convention
this' were printed in "The Stump" His
week Mr DeFoe tieing a delegate friends here congratulate him upon
Mrs Wm Mlske t* in Battle his success
Creek with her daughter Mrs Nel­ COMMENCEMENT DAY ENDS
son Gardner who underwent an
WITH CIVIC PLAYERS DANCE
operation tor appendicitis in NlchIt wa* a happy thought that

*18.50

ney shipman. of Ban Francisco lhe

Mrs Nettie Vandergrift returned
to Coopersville with Mr and Mrs
Charles Morey after visiting Mr*
Charle* Barnes and Charles Vandergnft the past week
Mr and Mrs Bert Howe and
daughters Arlene and ...
Ardy...
’.h of
Grand Ledge were Bunday guests
of Mi and Mr* Caivm Plumley
and daughter Bernice
Mr and Mrs Charles Morey of
Coopersville were guest* of Mr and
Mrs Charles Vandergrift during
graduation week and attended the
exercise* Friday at which lime Mis*
Betty Vandergrift received her di­
ploma.
Mr and Mrs Floyd Thoma* and
children Mrs clarence Orohe Mr
and Mr* Casper Thoma* and W J
Smith of Kalamazoo visited al the
home of Mrs
Will RiLzman of
Quimby on Bunday
They also
called on Mr and Mrs Orv Hay­
wood of the same place
Hl BBARD—FlNGLKTON.
On Saturday lhe marriage of
William Hubbard son of Mr and
Mr* Charles Hubbard
and Miss
AHrc Finglelon, daughter of Mrs
Alma Finglelon was solemnized at
South Bend Ind at the home of
the pastor of me Methodist church
Attending the bridal couple were
Mr and Mr* Robert Hchllleman ol
For lhe present Mt
and Mr*
Hubbard are residing
with lhe
uroom * pan-nta &gt;28 w
Clinton
St Congratulation* and best wishes
are extended

prompted the Hastings Civic Play­
er* Association to sponsor a dance
al The Uift" honoring this year's
graduating class
J
ll followed the annual High
school alumni banquet, and was
largely attended by the class, alum­
ni and friends
Theres always a desire after the A|.|CT uu rein I MG AT
CIRCLE NO. L
festivities of Commencement to do UUltl WtUDINu Al
Circle No. I of the Methodist Aid
something more, and thL* charm­
METHODIST CHURCH Society had a eery pleasant lime
ingly managed affair made an ideal
Thursday evening when they met
rounding out ot the day
i
,
“
~~
,
for their annual birthday dinner at
A Japanese setting, college pen- Miss Hazel Johncock Benanu and clever posters furnished ■
cornea Bride of Fred
Burton
colorful decorations
After a bountiful dinner a short
Shipp
An orchestra from Belding fur­
business meeting was held and the
nished the music
The marriage of Fred Shipp of following officers elected for the
this city, son of Mrs Alma Shipp of
coming
year;
Chairman,
MnENTERTAIN FRIENDS
Bellevue, and Miss Hasel Johncock
OF THEIR CHILDHOOD. at Hastings, daughter of Mrs Cath­
erine Johncock of Prairieville, was
Lew Warner and other relatives solemnised al live Methodist church
in visiting and looking al ptcUUM
have been entertaining two very
vt Mr and Mra. R. A- WW*
dear old friends from Pasco. Wash­
thirty o'clock. The Rev w Maylan *outharn trip. Guests from away
ington. Mrs Elsie Cowan and Mrs J.,„. r..d .h.
beta. . „„ u„ ^“culta. WbOdUnl
Anna Roberson
Thl* friendship
small group of immediate relatives. Mr. pit. ziu*h Lo* an—tee CaL.
grew up tn Idaho, when all were
AtaMln, u» brta ... Mr. '
rit
children and young people, some Merle King of Bellevue, sister of the
ce a
।
twenty-five years ago
These two
.nd Mr hu.band. Merle ATTENDS LUNOKZOH m
ladle* are being sent as delegates to groom,
King, was groomsman.
1 |
—------------ —-—
■—
a national convention of the wives
A gown of white crepe with white
of railroad engineers in Cleveland. accessories waa worn by the bride '
Mrs C P Lathrop attended
Ohio Then from there they have and her bouquet was pink roses. Ii lovely bridge-luncheon at BteU
club. Grand Raplzfa 1
planned a very splendid trip which white &gt;weet peas and feverfew Mrs Country
.
- w-hh
will include New York City Wash­ King's dress was navy blue net and ■lven
J
ington. D C . and home by a south­ her
w. of . sunburst raaas I
*UtaT-&lt;n-»».
““
Webb, whose marriage
ern route
snapdragons
and daisies
Mr*
Johncock. lhe brides mother, wore Packham. of Brampton,
POST-NUPTIAL SHOWER.
will
occur
June
U.
Covers
On Friday evening. June 5. Mr* navy blue crepe with matching acZara i»uu,«u,
Boulter oua
820 r.
N Micmg.n
Michigan nvr
Ave...1 ccssoriea and a corsage of Ameri- lunate lop score at bridgeentertained twenty-four guests at can 8**u^y roft*s
sweet PM&gt;.

T. S. BAIRD
Phone 2396—Hastings

a miscellaneous shower honoring
her sister. Mr* Fred Bhipp (Hasel
HOME. johncock । The evening was spent
playing bunco and contest games
whoin are connected with the physi­ The prize* were won by Mrs Milo
cal education department of the Partridge and Mr* Kate Johncock
Kalamazoo schools enjoyed a happy The bride wa* presented with many
day/fierr Balurdav with a pot luck ------, •
———
lovely
gifts
after which refreshpjsmir dinner at the home of on ' matits were served by lhe hostess
-df their number. M;** Eileen SulbOut‘ of
"* town guests were Mrs. El­
ma Shipp and Mrs Merle King of
Golf at Hie Country Club was en­ Bellevue Mrs Kate Johncock of
joyed by some cards and various Cloverdale and Mrs Cleon Ellingef
pleasant pastime* by others They of Plainwell
ail express themselves as hoping to

AT SULLIVAN

BlltilNESb WOMEN'S
HOSPITAL GUILD.

Nineteen members of the Businca* Women * Hospital Guild and
three guests were present at tlie
meeting on Monday evening, with
Ml** Mabel Sisson as hostess A
lovely chicken dinner was sened at
the home of Miss Susie Fisher in
Woodland bouquet* of rose* and
pinks centering tha tables
During
the business session plan* were
made for a picnic on July 13 al the
Gun lake collage of Mrs Stuart
Clement At the conclutioa of the
business meeting and short social

POST Nt PT1AL SHOWER.
Mr* Glenn Kahler enterlauit-d
with a bridal shower on Thursday
evening. June 4 In honor of .Mr
and Mr* Ellon Baker at the home
of lhe bride * parents Mr and Mrs
Claud Kelly So
Washington St
Mr* Baker wa* formerly Miss Opal
Kelly
Many lovely and useful gifts were
presented to Mr and Mrs Baker
and the hostess served a dainty
lunch Mr and Mrs Baker have lhe
best wishes of their many friend*

BANNER CLASS MEETING
Mrs Agnes Fisher delightfully
enter tamed lhe Banner class Of lhe
Methodist Sunday School on Tues­
day evening at the home of her
lather b 8 Holly of Woodland
about twenty-five being present The
usual pot luck supper was served
and the evening spent socially and
with a visit to lhe Parrott peony
Hardens A picnic 1* be mg planned
lot July

Parrott peony gardens at Woodland

,

BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
Mrs Jacob Rehor wa* surprised
on Wednesday evening of last week
by seven of her friend* a* a re­
minder ot her birthday on Thurs­
day
Bridge waa played with Mr*
Harah Power* and Mrs J A Wool

celving a number of gill* In re­
membrance of the occasion
-------- ‘—
*
A
lovely birthday cake
with .pink
The V F W Auxiliary elected candles centered the dining table
Mr* Florence Burch a-' delegate to where a two course lunch wa*
lhe Batlie Creek convention and
Mrs Ella H Bush as alternate We
■ Lo took in two new member* al
last week s ifieeitng namely. Mrs Job. whether lhal Job pays 43 or
“
‘
..............
antJ IMO a day
Zein.a
Middleville
Rabbi Abba Hillel
i Silver

Again

Many Hew Summer Clothing
Item* are hare, new Polo Shirts,
Wash Blacgs, Straw Hala. Swim
Sulla. Our store la your head­
quarters tor Oool Summer Wear.

groom * mother being similarly ]
FIDAC PROGRAM.
party |----- --------- ---------------- —
“ll‘red
Laterr *in
live
the
.
'**n lh
- afternoon “
“ r.
— a- lean Legion Auxiliary will
| motored to Battle Creek where
wedding dinner was served al lite Thursday evening. June U
Lantern Garden
Mr
and Mrs. ed by a pot luck *uppet.
Shipp left al once for a short wed­ be the time for the Fidac
with Poland as lhe counl
ding trip.
Mr Shipp was a former Believlm studied. Members are urgi
resident, graduating from lhe high tend if possible.
school there tn 1828. later attending
the Lansing
Business University
where he took a course in account­
ing
Mrs Shipp graduated from
lhe local high school in 1930 and
NOONDAY LUNCH!*
is a stenographer tn the Windstorm
Co office
Congratulations and best wishes.
DINNIU
are extended,
5:10 ID 7 &gt;M A M.
।

।

SPECIAL

GET TOGETHER CLUB-

'

The Gel Together Club met last,
Friday afternoon with Mrs Wm i
Stark to give a farewell parly for ।
Mr* Cora Bidelman, who returned |
with her sister. Mr* Wm. Whittag.
to Beaumont. Texas, for lhe sum-1
mer.

SUNDAY DINNIU
12:10 HU. M.
«W7:SD*. M.
PARKER HOUSE

SPECIALS
Friday, June 12

Saturday, June

He
OVALTINE, 50c
10c
POST TOASTIES, large
DZL MONTZ
1 CAM ZSC
GRAPE FRUIT JUICE
2 far 39c
OXYDOL, large size
6 baxas 25c
OHIO MATCHES
Ib. 30c
BUTTER, Middleville
Ib. 22c
BLISS COFFEE VACUUM PACK
BEEF ROASTS, mlandbd but Ib. 19&gt;/*c
2 lbs. 25c
BEEF RIBS TenBar and Meaty
BACON

Vi Ib. diced Ik

Winnert for Our Blf Orowinf Lesl Weeki

New Steam

HOT OIL
Treatment!

WINS.//,
with NEW Bread
in NEW w rappers
wA A

te

f

Mra
Mra.
Mra.
Mra.
Mra.
Mra.

Arthur
Jm. Batsen
Wk. Smith
Waller HaySer
Gee. WWUw
A- W. RMaMH

Mra. KU Brunwi

Mra. Ari TAmmm

ISBO«*IOSV coot ■•Lil*

Using Um New Va—r Hiram AnUeepUc Oil Treatment.

Hollywood Beauty Service .
MARGARET DAHLKE and MARGUERITE TRW

114 WEST STATE ST

HASTINGS, MICH.

PHOFfF 2M5

LICINSED
OPERATORS

HINMAN

Telephone 2AQI

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THCMpAt, JUNE 11, IBM
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND,

INSURANCE

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

TISEMENT FOR LESS

JASON B. MeELWAIN

Our Service
BEtD CORN—III

T. PROTECT You Constantly
A4Jaa&lt; Fairly
Pay Promptly
We.«Man Baaoas. Houaokald floods.
PrtvxU Oarages as LOW EATER

CARDS of THANKS

Uatbatl. Midi!

srixar^
cheap min I

*lmn*i n«w
Will •«•!) for
llliiiaa. 461 Writ Lotrll
Mich
0 11
PLANTS— Early and Ute
lutnato
troecvll
Bruaeaia

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .
:

FOk SALE—I
Flaher Ph'

DECIDE FOR YOURSELF

ABSTRACT

OFFICE

READ THE

CONSTITUTION
Send 25c for Booklet
BOX XX CARE BANNER

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

ROOM

ln&lt;»mr

property

ChUdraa

if
■

i

$

। zii

rron th* ear*!*** acts of other*,
th* wlaa min correct* ht» own.

Wrecking for Ports
1929 CHEVROLET Coupe.
1929 CHEVROLET Panel

GEO. M. NEWTON

The Hastings Banner

CL! K.

MAUS

SHELDON'S

SOUTHWEST CABltON.

Mra. Harry Bandbrook attended
of
lhe wedding of her cousin in Flint4 Tuesday night And
Pnbliahad fin Tbnrodal
Wednesday afternoon
at
four Hastings spent Wednesday night
&gt;1 Ila.tinea. Mich lx an.
o'clock. A reception was held Imme­ with Achsah Buck.
diately after the ceremony.
'
Mrs. Anna Buck entertained the
Mr. and Mra. Walter Hershberger Dorcas Society Thursday. Mr. and
Mrs
Ford
Eni
of
North
Woodland,
and non Chalmer were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mra. John Hersh­ called on Mrs. Buck Thursday.
Sunday visitors al Mr. and Mra.
berger near Clarksville.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rote mN and Walter CulberVs wert Mr. and Mrs.
daughters of Grand Rapids spent Burton Niemeyer of Alaska. Mr.
Wednesday afternoon and evening and Mra. Roy Oackier, Mr. and
Mrs. Sydney Gelb and Mra. Prada
with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Far lee
.
The Double-O-Class of the Unit­ Kiump all ot Caledonlk.
BARRY COUNTY, BIX MONTHS. *0«.
Mr. and Mra. Frank Shriber, Ha­ IN (If
ed Brethren church will enjoy a
paid In advance.)
welner roast al Saubee lake Tues­ ul and friend and Thorpae Robin- IN BARRY COUNTY. THRU MONTHS.
eon, Mr. and Mr*. Harold Tasker of
IN ADVANCt,„.....IS*
day evening.
Odessa.-------Mr.-------------and Mra.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Cassel and near Lake ---------------son of coals Grove, but formerly of L.Leo Barry
S—., —
and
- —
son
-- spent part
t Cf
of
8UBHCRIPT10NB. ONE YEAH
this vicinity, ore moving on the ■ Sunday al the Ledge* tn
in Grand
Grand FOREIGN
IN ADVANCK 12.60
lEFFEBBON ST. UNITED BRETHREN farm of Rev. Frank Moxon near Ledge. Mr. and Mrs. prank Shriber
CHURCH.
and Mr. and Mrs. Deo Barry also
Middleville this week.
called on Abid Donley ot Lansing.
Siberia is not a political entity,
We found him In very, poor hBalth.
Practically all of ths area known
HASTINGS MARKETS
aa Siberia Is a part of tbs Feder­
Gargle, Gargle
ated Soviet republic, the largest
A baby begin* U Imitate sounds and most Important of the Ruathat It hears at about lb* k|o of alan states making op the U. 8.
six months.

THE CHURCHES

1928 CHEVROLET 1’4 ton
truck with 4 speed trans­
mission.

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2637

die'ilie.
Foil HALF

RAIN!

FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH.

Foil HALF.-10 (&gt;!&lt;• ■ »**k* uld Jim
C 11
Hiithard Slate K.ia.1
FOR HALE- Sewn &gt; ear vid
One mil.
ru» due lo freeheh lovft
&gt;r,| and H mile a,mth uf Gat*,

6 11
Deere manure &gt;i&gt;r eader !■"

churn
Z Wind*e Route
' 111*
FOH KENT- ll.-ti.r and tw
xarden after June IS
W
Don lice Knud* 1

RAIN!

RAIN!

Leaky Roof* in Rainy Weather Destroy
Savings of a Life-Time I
Wite, and Thrifty Property Owners are Re-roofing
and Repairing Before Bad Leaks Develop I

Middle
C II
Inta fi»r
H (lord
6 I:

I Kpcclailxe In Hoofs, Siding and Insulation.

FREE Inspection

PILGRIM HOI.lNr.HB TABERNACLE

Halting*
AU Material and Labor Guaranteed.

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
Spectacles Fitted and Guaranteed.

Watch. Clock and Jewelry Repairing.
CASH FOB OLD GOLD.
OB COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE

Bone

NOTARY PUBLICS

(Ted) Theodore S. K. Reid

[FOR SALE— Met ormick 7 ft cut luniue
1 truck funder tn enmt wnrkinx ahape
Frank Furlunr Woudland
fl 11

Hda. REID'S SERVICE STATION

BRICK
HASTINGS PARISH
DUT EPISCOPAL Ol..
“X Pastor

At Old Hastings Wool
Boot

Plant Site.

In­

tool 101030Ol

quire of joe DeRuiter

at Pickle Station.

10 00 A

COATS OROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Ha.tlnr*

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Snooth Rebber Back Pads
No Paiti To Wear Clothing

Dead Stock Removed!

KALAMA1OO RENDERING PLANT

EMMANUEL 0HUB0H (Episcopal).
D . Rector.
Tel S5SS

MONEY!

EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
Work Oaarantaod and
Price* Rauonabla
Phone 3510
Hastings

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pad*
No Leg Strap"

The Prescription Drug Store
Hastings

Q) People of

■&gt;; r&gt;.r. &gt; ,.iWANTED- F.»1‘erienre, man he muntl.
— a* r, lii r,
week
Will |.a&gt;
G 11
liable parl&gt;
I'hor.e 7 30 - &gt;21

1

I , I

.

.........

MONEY!

MONEY!

Now available at our naw local office.

■

Just bring in

your auto for quick appraisal and your title . . . you
continue to driva your car.

FOR SALE

FIDELITY CORPORATION

Good Used McCormick-Deering 10-

of Michigan

MICHIGAN

Room 10—2nd Floor National Bank Building

A. C. Cotes, Form Implements
107 Michigan Ave.

Phone 2309

FREE METHODIST CHURCH.

PHONE 2307

NOTICE TO li’-l DITiiBS

Farmers, Attention!
PRICE tot VEAL. LAMBS. HOOS ud

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

WANTED

Ship EVERY TUESDAY

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

Better Foods

mar united brethren chuboh

.t FELDPAUSCHS

JERRY ANDRUS

MARKET. Phon. 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609

GRANGE PROGRAMS

H. Feldpauich • 3921

WELCOME ORANGE

Lr-jam
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

at Cheaper Prices
DRAIN
COMMISSIONER OF MEETING OF
BOARD OF DETERMINATION.
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
IN CHRIST.

A $5O°° OFFER
FIRST OHUROH OF CHBIST.
SCIENTIST

BETTER BUY COAL NOW!
Prices will advance soon Ph
2370 Johnson's.—Adv

2 tsr 39c
£1-

99c

14 ox Can—Very Fine Quality

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, Hartingi, Michigan

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION

CREAMERY BUTTER

29c

ANNOUNCES

A FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
BY

PAUL STARK SEELEY, E. S. B, of Portland, Oregon
Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massa

POTATOES ARE HIGH!
EAT BEANS
4 Ac
h'd pick'd, 5 lbs. 13

EAT NOODLES

EAT BACON lAIAc
I
SQUARES, Ib.

EAT CORN—3
Na. 2 ■!•* can,

IN CENTRAL SCHOOL AUDITORIUM

25‘
25

SOUTH BROADWAY

SUNDAY AFTERNOON. JUNE FOURTEENTH

LESTER DEEDS. M.n.o.

5 iSx 27c

4 cang CARNATION MILK29c
POST TOASTIES, large Um10c
3 Boxes CRACKER JACK10c
6 Boxes OHIO BLUE TIP MATCHES, 25c
VACATION LAND COFFEE, 1 Ib. _.15c
Libby's CORNED BEEF, 1 Ib.19c
ROAST BEEF, 1 Ib. 19c
Fancy BLUE ROSE RICE, 2 lbs15c
Campbell's Tomato Juice,3 for 24c

CTi'lldran'

Owing to the slanderous reports circulated
about our gas and oil. we take this way to
defend ourselves We. the Farmers Gas &amp;
Oil Co of Ithaca. Mich . do agree to pay
$50.00 to any person in Hastings who con
prove by a laboratory test, or registered speci­
fications. that our oil is not as good as oil
being sold at 30c a quart

Now, prove what you have said and get the
$50.00, or be men and shut up and live up
to the Golden Rule.

OXYDOL

Gold Medal Flour

June 8. 1936
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN

We don’t blame any one for getting all the
business they can. if they are fair, but it is
a degraded principle to try to Turn another
one’s business to build up your own The oil
as it goes into the car is the oil that counts
any mon. or supposed to be a mon " can slip
in anything into the motor he wishes after­
wards. then show the owner the terrible stuff
that he takes out. Then he keeps this same
trash setting around to show others I will not
mention names, but when you read this just
get around it if you con!

Soap Chips

NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTY-SIX

The Public Is Cordially Invitid to Attend, At Three-Thirty o’clock

WALLACE GROCERY
Free Delivery

Phone 2458—Halting*

Open Evenings

�THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1936

|

what

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER

■ira

fBarry Bypaths

GRAND COUNCIL
FIRE CLOSES YEAR

SECTI

ODESSA
KF.IF. Activities I THE LAKE BIBLE
CONFERENCE.

GOV. SAY!

BEER II
The Lake Odessa Bible Confer­
ence opens July 2 for a ten days'
By JANE CAMERON
Camp Fire Girls Receive
"Poverty &lt;
„
„ .
, „
,
session, celebrating the fifteenth Ro quires
Awards at Monday's
.
, anniversary of Ils founding. Among Where BUU MwU 0«
held an Interesting meeting on
apCakers during the Conference
One night I came home on the
nan
nnm! Observing Tommy must be trying ।
w
Meeting
Trestlnr
Afflicted
UhD
। midnight train from Grand Rapids
June 4- Plans were dis- 1 will be Mel Trotter of Grand Rspollywood calif - 'and some fellows. pretty well WEATHER BAD AB BOAT 1 to set up a matrimonial bureau., a Grand Council Fire marked lhe Thursday.
Michigan law compel* ttk
rtnmnnn
well,
he on
cunJane's
count help.
on Jane's help.' ..
... cussed about the V. F. W. tulip' ldl- TW. Mason and Paul Rader of
Well, he can
count
PASSED Diaavn
THROUGH
They say this will be the
lhe 'I
“»■ «“ “ th*
“
of
Michigan
to
meet
th*
i
closing
ol
Camp
Fire
activities
for
f^fvf .1 Holland on Jun. .. a !
We like to see everybody married
&lt; . - .
-i Caledonia and they were singing.
THE TROPICS
liveliest, fight for years and ! "Just
„JU&gt;1 a 11111b way to Caledonia
and with at least two nice children, this year, Ute gathering taking place caravan from lhe local post making i southland. She has preached In treatment of crippled and ■
la boy and a girl, two years apart, on Monday afternoon al four o'clock the
children where parent* or*
years, with glee clubs gargling I just
th* trip
trlra nwr
thnra and
anrl reporting
rcnnrtlntr jchurches
___ i__ of _.a
.____ ’.L.-a,___&lt;___
over there
all denominations,
be­
j (See Margaret Sanger for details.) In lhe Central recreation room.
a very good lime. Another caravan ginning
.
and the boys out with brass I Just
’“** a little way to Caledonia
her work at the age of seven
SHIPS BOUND FOR
11 see where Mrs. Sanger la back in
place I know.
The fires were lighted by Marjorie led by commander Paton, delegates ]years. She has a remarkable per­
bands—and brakk-knucks; and I' The wettest
___________
_
HOME PASS BY America after a conference with E. Boyes. Virginia Wheating and and alternates are lo Invade Battle ।sonality. OU&gt;er talent includes Dr.
| Come on Tom and Jerry
।
Mahatma
Ghandi.
You
remember
-----------Creek. Wednesday. Thursday. Frl- H.
।
batteries of college professors come on Rock and Rye
H. Newell. Rev. Camfield. Rev. was far from sufficient. Th* oMt bM
Lois
Whitmore
from
Mrs.
David
We go
go to
to Caledonia
Caledonia '
Missionaries Retain Spirit of g*
pta! ’** °W
day and Saturday of this week to ,John Strayer, Rev. Hoffman and
firing on oppoaltion professors.
iI We
mounted to over 12.000.000 up to th*
attend the state encampment. A re- jmany others
Boyes' group.
When we
we get
get dry."
dry."
But they'll never reclaim the gio- ' When
present tim*.
Oourageou* Faith in Spite
Middleville
they *all got off
—
Three new members of Mrs. C. port on this will be In the Banner
rions ancient spirit We're too tame. 'I At
“ •*
1'*
***
Naturally thl* situation cam* to
next week. The most Interesting ।
Mrs.
Freda
Bnyder,
one
of
the
but one fellow who was sound
of Hardahlps
W. Barnes' group. Donna ChamberSTATE
SHOULD
END
the governor's attention—for h* is
discussion
was
the
matter
of
the
Matanuska
Valley
colonists,
writes
asleep. When Jake Kelsey, lhe
lain. Ruth Marble and Ruth Mary
determined that Uie stele must keep
(Letter No. 2.)
payment
of
the
bonus,
a
special
of
their
own
head
lettuce
which
the
conductor passed by I said, "Jake,
SERIOUS CONDITION within ite budget. He hu mad* a
Bliss, were welcomed into lhe
Wednesday.
Dec
4
—
A
fish
called
tetter from our National Commander
productive soil grows so marvelously Camp Fire circle.
the fellow across the aisle didn't
regulation that will be efl*cllv*
was read by Commander Paton,
fresh----------------------salmon caught
their
,— In ------get off." and he said. "Don't worry. "bonlta," was caught by one of the and -----Dorothy Conrad and Ruth Palmawhich urged ail veterans to stay at All State Hospitals Badly July 1. which will probably cut in
discovery instead of Riley, that's Bill from town and nat-M tnd.y
H's aboul th. .!» °-n
tier ot Irene Hayes' group were
Overcrowded—Need
n
chronic recur­ I'll wake him when we get to or a .had It waa droued .nd Mrvnt
tlw .iln, out awarded lhe rank of Woodgatherer. home lhe nights of June 16 and 17
gency expenditures for the care of
lo make it as easy as possible for I
Thornapple lake. By lhe time he
rence.
Joyce Hyde. Betty Kidder and Ver­
New Buildings
crippled and afflicted children.
Two
life l&lt;&gt;ns counts the ties back to Hastings, at tea. and tasted good We fre- i of Uie ground. The potatoes aren't land Clark of Mrs. A. C. Hyde's the mailmen to deliver the bonds.
Governor Fitzgerald has ruled
quently see the flying fish-one ot qUlt&lt;. as mealy as ours but very good group and Jane and Jean Harring­ which must be delivered to addresTlve Inability of probate Judges
friends would mod. hell be os sober as a deacon."
| to find places In our state hospitals that, after July 1, children shall
I them In its aerial excursions landed . and
u everything else delicious, ton of Mrs. Ray Cook's group, who see In person.
think
ion the deck.
|contrary to what lhe Alaskan who I
w« ar. making plans lor ««Uni, ,0, th[
lu u a di,fr.ct M not be committed to hospitals for
। have completed the second rank, ntir
DR. HALNON GIVES
twist
rnlnrs
and
th*
wav
our
or'
I Friday. Dec. 6—We are within one wroU.
article in Rural Progress I
lhe way
or­
that of Firemaker, each lighted a our post colors
of lhe Equator Have fre- wou|d have u&amp; believe, She said lhe
ganization Is growing and stepping Michigan. At one time this year In parents ar guardians take a "poverty
INSPIRING MESSAGE । degree
taper to add to lhe brightness of
quenl squalls of rain and wind when । Alaskans fought the project with
up. it looks as If our plans will Barry county four such people were oath.” A sworn statement must be
| wc are all obliged to retreat to the every weapon available, preferring the council fire and together repeat­ work out soon. We would like to kept In Jail here for several weeks mart* In all e.Mi attar that data
ed
tiie
Firemaker's
Desire.
While
Normal Graduates Advised cabin. Here lire heat Is intense.
where the state is to pay the cost,
' uieir seclusion lo modernization.
these girls remained standing by lhe urge all ex-service m»n. who have
that the parents ot such afflicted or
Monday. Dec. 9—Went on deck , ^.]lc mosquitoes are larger than ours
second fellow would any. “What do I
That Character Stands
fire lhe other Firemakers stood and seen foreign service, to come up and Kalamazoo state hospital. Think of crippled children art unable to pay
Uris morning and saw a shark . bul not M savage, and they had
you think?" "I think you're a dirty |
sang "Bum. Fire. Bum" with lhe join us as a part of the national or­ keeping mentally sick people In a
for Much
caught,
a
frightful
creature
about
1
much
ml
ider
weather
than
we
last
ganization It is very much lo their
sneb-nnd such I" The
first man '
motions.
।
Jail!
The
same
condition
existed
at
The thirty-second class of the five feet long. Il was soon cut up: wtnter gears Roebuck gave each
JoAnn Arold. Jacqueline Bach­ benefit.
Would yell, and then everybody I
the stele hospitals at Pontiac, Ypsi­ governor states that false oaths
___ _ start bouncing those old- | BarrT County Norma! hold 1La and rendered into oil The Jaw con- 1 chlld u&gt; lhl. valJey a toy last Ciirlsl- man. Doris Craig. Mary DeVries.
would
lanti. Traverse City and Newberry. will make the persona swearing
talned 106 teeth. The cwpenter.
Whereas: It is the expressed wish No additions have been buUt to
Agnes Johnson and Patricia Osborn
fashioned cuspidors off of everybody . graduation exercises In the Central makes use of lhe skin and fins to
of
our
commander-ln-Chlef.
James
of Aowaklya group, with Mrs. MUo
else'* dome.
| auditorium last Thursday afternoon. sharpen his saw The flesh is good |
these hospitals in many years, and perjury charges.
DeVries as guardian, have com­ E. Van Zandt, and whereas It Is lhe they are crowded beyond all reason.
In addition to this regulation
After breakfast the
Following the invocation by Father for nothing.
Elizabeth Cook, of U&gt;e middle west pleted the highest rank that of desire of Leo A. Miller Post 3326 The population of the stole has in­ the governor has also decreed that
J. Edgar Boulder.
J A McNulty of Emmanuel Episco­ lowering clouds burst Into copious gave about the most wholesome ad­ Torch Bearer. Ln handcraft. This Is Veterans of Foreign Wars, lo be creased, but no provision ha* been crippled or afflicted children must
showers
on
the
ocean,
and
you
can1
WING to recent developments pal church, a piano solo was given'
vice on raising families I ever heard. the second group of girl* that Mrs. always ready lo lend a helping hand made for needed additions at these
over which it had no control. by Miss Nettle Loring Henry Bev- not conceive how much we dread She was writing regarding lhe fads, DeVries has helped
through to to all veterans and to our com­ hospitals.
t believe the Interior department erwyk. president ot the class, intro­ wet weather al sea. All the skylights one way of feeding during one dec­ Torch Bearer's rank. Her work has munity when possible, and
This condition will doubtleu be society before they can be admitted
Whereas the payment of lhe brought lo tbe attention of lhe leg­
temporarily hns shelved the Idea of duced the speaker of the day. Dr and deadlights are closed and our
been noteworthy with these girls
whole family confined to Uie cabin.
contradictory, the next a twenty- and the hours of time devoted to bonus will put an extra amount of islature to be elected this year. A pltals that take unapproved case*
changing J. Edgar Hoover's name William Hainon. whose address was
I have suffered considerably from
four hour ration was as follows, one them are greatly appreciated by all work on the postofficc of Hastings, definite building program should be
10 J. Edgar Boulder, as was pre । entitled. “To You—Individually.''
confined air and the toothache You
viously predicted In these dis '
Dr Hainon pointed out that the
helping or two of tubers, one of interested In Camp Fire work. now.
started which will end this dis­ financial risk, says lhe governor.
makes
■know that complaint
‘
‘
the
Therefore be it resolved that Ixo graceful situation. If the legislature
The governor believes that thee*
patches. Hut now cerialn critics . work to be done by each member of most cheerful face look grave. But | raw vegetables, one of cooked vege­ These new Torch Bearers were each
UM. Veuren. of I will
,lu keep Ils hands „„
___ regulations will enable th* stat* to
off „„
the ...
sale*.tax.
st Washington insist on accusing ll'r class in life must be done In- contrary to my usual custom I tables. one of raw fruit, one cooked presented with a candle Ln a rustic *. Miller
believe, the
lhe revenue
revenue keep within the 81.400.0CO appro­
fruit, two white bread, one coarse candle holder that had been light­ •Foreljn War,. do hereby offer I. L,
dlvldually. Too often people in
In this broke through
the
governor believes
ib.t gentleman of over advertising &lt;«vWually
the gloom apd
.1.1 the
lhe poeunee
.vr.lnf’fro Ha,
raa rt meant to
tn lhe.
., wU
....
........
.Uk.
.
*U
deperunent
&gt;o
,
rom
,„nicle
n
t
to
bread,
one
cereal,
one
or
two
sweets,
ed
In
the
fiames
of
Work.
Health
, eotmectlon
.
the laughed heartily to see our min­
priated for next year far afflicted
in
with hi. latest actlv- | modem day are
M suffering
mU| from
wh0 hgd
one of meat, eggs or cheese, and a and Love, symbolizing their torch to extent of cars and drivers for the care of needed B&lt;jdllion3 and im- and crippled children.
itles. Well, he Ims the advnntage j ilved for many years on the western isters and Doctor washing towels quart of milk This has been my alm carry the light and spirit of Camp purpose of helping to distribute the provement* at the state hospitals,
over some press agents. When he plaln3 and went
hlj ocufijt to and catching rain water Of the for several years and not one cent Fire wherever they may be.
baby bonds and act as rtfertnet to B(Jt
&lt;overnor hM
generosity of the state having been
latter I have drank a pint caught
promises n show lie certainly put* |I see what
„.hai was wrong with hi.
Holding their tapers they repeat­ the ex-service men when needed on i apply lhe mQMy for lhat purpose Imposed upon in numerous caaee
his »va.
eyes on a sail spread out for that pur­ did we pay out for doctor bills last
11 on upon the day nod date an­ His doctor told him he needed1 pose. After dinner Dr Judd extract­ winter Of course, the bill of fare ed with the other Torch Bearers the nights of June 16 and 17 be- Wlthout authority from lhe legisnounced, with the band playing something close at hand to lean his ed my tooth, and I am now sitting Included those high-powered hall­ present their Desire. "That light tween the hours of six and nine |
’
eyes against. He had been gazing In our state room panting for a ver oil capsules part of the winter, which has been given me I desire o'clock or such tours as shall be,
state do It.
one a day for a child every other to pass undimmed to others."
designated by the postmaster.
COUNTY NORMAL TRAINING
Into the dLstance for loo long
cage full.
breath of fresh air Yet I assure
All Joined In singing Lay Me lo t, Be It further resolved that this
CLASS WILL BE CONTINUED. MINISTERIAL ABSON.
In the same way people need you I am quite happy I never had month. Mrs Cook combined humor
! resolution be made In triplicate
ELECTS omen
There has been some discussion
j something real and close at hand,
with sound principles and wrote for Sleep in Sheltering Flame."
more enjoyment than I have hud
At the annual meeting of I
Delineator and Country Home I
The new Torch Bearers remained form, one copy lo be presented to as to whether lhe Barry County
ORD from Warsaw is that they must face their responsibilities on lhe Parthian, and never did I
was shocked to hear of her death standing by lhe fire while Jean the postmaster by a duly authorized Normal would be continued for the Barry County Ministerial Aseocl
' But It takes character to meet them
the IncunilH-nt. the Hun. Mar- | squarely, and that is something anticipate anything with so much last year
Loppenthien of Mrs. Boyes' group delegate of this Post, one copy to coming year. According to Supt. lion which was held on Tuesday
pleasure as I do lhe hour of land­
Jan Zyndrum Kosclnlcuwskl. having
...
extinguished lhe fires They then be sent to the Hastings Banner lo Van Buskirk and County School
; which every individual should deresigned, the president uf l‘olan-1 । velop. He gave hla own definition | ing.
—a. custard
—। _i_
_u#e
ked. lead lhe way out and the others fol- be printed in said paper the week of Commissioner. Mrs. Smith, it will
Tuesday. Dec
10-We have a
Rhubarb
pie—
Use c00
cooked,
has picked ns the new premier | of Character. “It Is not." he said. young Sandwich Islander belonging unsweetened rhubarb in place off1 lowed
June 14 and one copy to be retained
by the adjutant of this Post to be sufficient reasons for It to open
none other tii.-in Gen. Frlicynn
.
, -the things wo do. it is the thoughts to Hie vessel on board. He Is only I milk and proceed as for cream pie
for tlie 1036-1937 year. Thia ts Pritchard of Naahvllle;
placed Ln hl* files.
NO FOOLIN'!
Sliiwogskladkowskl. The latter gen
________
we
think." If our actions are in ac(Continued on page 4. sec. 2)
Flavor with lemon instead of vanlitiie last year, however, that-tt will
Glenn A. Paton, commander,
I think it would be smart to think
.
I In On-rrtri
the merlntnie mnry
tlewari hns already been installed ■ cord with our thought*, then our
Jerome Cryan, Adjutant.
function, according to the above au­ of Freeport. The first msetinc nt
up to and Including his first five character is an open book for all to
Bring to the table with a grand about coal NOW! Phone 2310.
fall will be held at Middleville.
Wesley
Webb.
Quarter
Master.
thorities.
CLASS NIGHT WAS
Johnson
’
s.
—
Adv.
flourish and watch the family lay­
These young people going out Into
WELL ATTENDED back their ears and wade into It.
name running ns n second section.
the world fts teachers must have this
So what you mistook for static
I character, and they will find It cornIf you won’t eat rhubarb because
on the radio night before Inst was posed of five things First, a sense The Honor Students Gave a
it is too sour, heat It up hot and
just lhe news briuidcnsirr trying , of honor . .
"Mother Goose Fantasy"
the realization that
drain two or three times That will
to pronounce hl tn ns a whole.
someone loved them enough to
Thursday Evening
take out much of the acidity.
make sacrifices that they might
The Central auditorium was well
have good schooling, and a realiza­
Animals care for their young
nybody who fotidiy believe* tion of the debt which they owe. filled for the Class Night exercises
When humans refuse to. the privi­
given
by
lhe
honor
students
of
the
that, resnrdieas of which out­ Then pride in fine workmanship. As
fit wins io November, loses won't teachers, they will be dealing with High school senior class on Thurs­ leges of further parenthood should
day evening.
be taken from them. After the tax­
keep right on going up and up has immortal souls and modelling the
As the High school orchestra, di­ payers have supported such families
a llilnklng apparatus that dates most precious metal in the world— rected by Lewis Hine, played the for a few more years, they may
human lives. By their own examples
back quite a spell.
processional,
the
seniors
marched
to
wake up to the fact
they will inspire the children they
Instruct to lead good lives. A third their places, an Invocation by the
max of the big rise, us set forth
Rev W Maylan Jones following He
Our White House in Washington
Ingredient of character is sports­
also
pronounced
the
benediction.
In the Bllile, and Is a direct in- manship. and the greatest example
together with grounds Is worth 918.­
Miss Norma Jacobson, salutator- 000.000 Quite a responsibility for the
of that in all history Is Jesus
Christ. We must all learn to play lan. spoke of the history of educa­ tenants. I should think.
phetlc warning.
the game of life as sporLsmen. fair, tion in Hastings from 1839 to the
Remember the scene, don't you? square and honest. A love of adven­ present time, and Miss Mary Stamm I feel sorry for a boy
in her valedictory address voiced
The forty days' ruin still ben ting ture U another necessary compoWho has never helped to "freeze"
words of appreciation, in behalf ot
relentlessly down, the freshet climb­ I nent of character. They must be the class, for the many splendid But had to sit around with folks
ing higher and higher, the animats controlled by a dream or strive for advantages afforded the young peo­ Juggling dishfuls on his knees.
।
a
goal
which
they
will
never
attain,
Or maybe eat at fountains
marchlug In two by two.
ple of thia city through Its excellent
in teaching, the cause will live on
Or slice It from a brick.
And with (be old ark starting to
long after these particular young school system.
But never helped to turn the crank
A “Mother Goose Fantasy" pre­
mine and Father Nonh yelllug: I people have gone, but they can
And feel the cream get thick.
"All aboard.” and with the waters , strive for It. do their bit toward sented by the honor students proved To never "lick” the paddle
very
entertaining.
Characters
de
­
closing over their heads, those making it come true. And then, a
Where the flavor is the best.
know It-alls still gurgling through fifth part of character is the ap­ picted were Mother Goose, Little Nor scrape the leavings from the
Boy Blue, The Old Woman That
their valedictory bubbles. “Shuck- proval of others. Everyone craves it
can
and no one can progress without It. Lived in a Shoe. Miss Muffet. Fid­ When Mother has served the rest.
Young people going into the world dlers Hire** and others that recalled Yea. it’s a bit of bad luck
*
the
nursery
rhymes
of
our
child
­
as teachers have need of three
For all boys. It Would seem
hood The class history, class pro­
things which might be called the
To miss out on the making
phecy and class will were cleverly
XXTUE.s lb* Post Office deport- three c’s of character: Clean hands, woven into the lines of the fantasy And the freezing of Ice cream.
v » meat Includes among the gal­ signifying a clean life; clear eyes and. as usual, proved particularly
with which to see duty clearly, and
lery of the greatest Americans, to
amusing to the high school students MIDDLEVILLE ALUMNI
closed Ups that when they can speak
BANQUET.
be pictured In the new Isspe of no good of anyone, they will also and graduates.
The forty-fourth annual banquet
memorial stamps, the faces of the speak no evil
of
the
Middleville
Alumni
Associa­
BONUS
PAYMENTS
Confederate chieftalus, Lee and
The address was Inspiring to the
Jackson, what happens?
audience as well as members of lhe
EXPECTED JUNE 16-18 tion will be held Friday, June 12th
Why, nobody wavea the bloody graduating class. Miss Jean Olerum
at 7:48 P M In the High school
shirt. Nobody ennoble* the aorry gave a very fine vocal solo "Wind Figures Show Barry County gymnasium.
Henry Pierce a graduate of the
word “traitor" by applying It to In the Trees" accompanied by Mrs.
Veterans to Get Sum
the memories of those two gal­ Mabie Clark. County School Com­
missioner. Mrs Maude Smith, wel­
Mrs. Mattle Lynd of the class ot
of 1332,252.93
lant soldiers and simple Christian
comed the graduates Into the group
1891 will giv* lhe welcome. Robert
gentlemen. Nobody In the name of of
According lo figures recently re­ Rugg. a graduate of the clsss of
rural
teachers,
commending
patriotism drags the mouldering them on their fine work In school leased from Washington, the World 1938. will give the response.
bones of sectional rancor out of and expressed the wish that they war veterans in Barry county will
the ground.
Nobody bents the might all secure positions next year. receive 8332252.93 Ln bonus pay­ ern Trends in Education." The
“Rogue's March for Rebels'* on She then presented them with their ments. The bonus checks and bonds Pythian Sisters promise us a good
diplomas and teacher's certificates are to be sent out next week. June meal. The music will be furnished
bate's snare drum.
16-18. It Is estimated that about by Howard Martin and his boys.
Instead, all over tbe Union, men which were handed to them by a
and women applaud this generous little girl representing ths children tnm Barry county sai
service
they
are
going
out
to
instruct.
but merited gesture. A leading pa­
The benediction was given by
per of Boston—Boston, no lets,
It Is stated that Allegan Co. vet­
Father McNulty and twenty more
once the mulching bed of abolition young people took their places In life erans will get 96.8751 23 and In
Eaton Co.. the payments amount
and the breeding ground for anti­ as instructors of youth.
southern
sentiment — editorially
1
commenda the Idea.
AN EXPENSIVE EXPERIENCE.
WAGING WAR ON
Fer Only
IRVIN 8. COBB
Fred Lambertoon. 19. Woodland.
ALL SLOT MACHINES
Robert Rlzor. 18. Hastings, and Edlson Baas. 23. Woodland, were In an
automobile smash-up Wednesday Dr. Eugene Elliott Thinks
The railcar, or "automotrice," as night. Mr. Lambertsan was at the
WtUUa H. beer
Drastic Steps Necessary
it la known there, is becoming one wheel, when he drove his car across
to Curb Evil
of the moat popular means of rap­ tiic railroad at the Freeman cross­
id passenger transport In Franc*. ing. this side of the county farm,
Dr. Eugene Elliott, superintendent
and smashed Into the railroad stop of public instruction In thia state,
being made to Increase the speed sign. It damaged the car and Lun- Is making yar through the schools
bertson came out of the encounter on the slot machine "racket" as he
a new record is established. Rec­ with a couple ot smashed teeth and calls it. He alleges that it takes
from * the
ord was attained by M. Jean Bugat­ was badly cut about the mouth. The thousands of dollars
hurt. achooL children of this state. Dr.
ti, who drove a Bugatti railcar from others were not seriously
Next day Lambertson was brought Elliott declares that If the officers
Strasbourg to Paris In 8 hours 81
into Justice Cortright’s court. He are unable to wipe out the slot ma­
was charged with driving a car chines by enforcing ontl-gambllng
hour. Beventy-five Bugatti railcars while under the influence of liquor. statutes, school teachers should in­
arc- now running on the French rail­ He admitted his guilt, paid a fine clude tn their class room Instruction
a warning to children against play- DEXflie WALRMIN SYSTEM

Riley Stories

about:

H

,

limns ago

-!

O

W

"Hare A Good Time!9

A

This Summer have the good times you have planned.

Take that trip—fish to

your heart’s content—play golf—do the things you have wanted to do and enjoy
yourself.

But make them free of worry. The valuables you leave at home . , .

your jewelry, documents, letters, silver . . . put them in one of our safety deposit

boxes . . . Safe from fire and theft.

BottleJ

For convenience and safety when traveling use Traveler’s Checks, the n

49*

traveler’s currency, the most convenient means of carrying expense money,

can be used for paying bills without first converting them in to currency,

" eler’s Checks are accepted any place in this country. Ask for them at this

City

TELEPHONE 2103

HttV 9

be permitted to drive a car for

rapid transit transport — London
Bunday Observer.
. &gt;

OU'S campaign will succeed.

PHONG 2241

0RUR STORE

HASTINGS

HASTINGS

MICHIGA

�THE HASTING 8 BANNER, THURSDAY, JUNE 11. IMO
Jackson who was a guest In the were the seniors from this vicinity
MILO.
success in all eporfa- We have had homes of Rev. Rhoades and Clyde who graduated from Hastings High Last WMk's LsUcr.
a wonderful year in football, banket Walton.
school last week.
Mr* Minnie Whidby and Mr*.
Mrs Winnie Buxton attended Uta
Dorothy Pcttengill were pleasing
ord:
funeral ot a cousin In Lansing Sat­ Skidmare returned home from Pen­ hosts**** to the Home Literary Club
Football—won 8, lost 3.
urday.
nock hospital Sunday and 1* gain­ whan twenty-five members and one
Basket Ball-won 12. lost 2.
Seward Walton, who has just ing nicely.
guest met at lhe former's home last
Baseball—wop I, lost 3.
finished hl* first year at the Naper­
Thursday. May 21, for a Memorial
Track—B. E. A. A. County cham­ ville Theological Seminary, con­
SOUTH BOWNE.
program. After singing "Abide With
pionship.
ducted his first service in the ClovMU*
Eleanor
Miller
U
assisting
at
Prospects look exceedingly bright
the Bible school which U being held UI verse. Nina Fenner read scrip­
tor another year In all sports.
pointed at the annual conference. at the Church of the Brethren near ture from 1 Oor. is. a tribute to
Mr. and Mrs Don Jewell of Beu­ Elmdale.
our "Departed Member*" wax given.
SOUTH SHULTZ.
lah spent Saturday night and Bun­
John Thayler and family of "Departed member* a* co-worker*"
Henry Wait and mother. Mrs. day at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Campbell and Lillian Thayler and was given by Mra M M. Flower and
Dora Custer, of Hastings ate birth­ Cyrus Buxton.
Mrs. Even "Departed members aa
friend
of
Bellevue
were
dinner
guesU
dayI supper with
witn Mr. sna
and Mrs. Mila
Mita
Callers at . Ward cheeseman’*
friends" was given by Mra Mary R.
«u«7------ Friday honoring Mr. Ash-' Sunday afternoon were Mr
and of lhe Will Mishler's Sunday.
from the Thornapple-Kellogg High
Harold Yoder and family visited
asparagus by ,the hot pack 1 by's birthday.
| Mrs E Whitney and Mrs. Ida
canned
_______
school Arthur AubU. Hazel Camp­
from Saturday until Tuesday with Fannie Jackson and lhe meeting
---* strawberries
-------- -—
Lorraine Bonneville of Kalamazoo , Chcaseman all of Nashville,
nen
wanneu
i
arur
ixennrtn
met
hod
and
by
the
boll. Wendell Carter.
Kenneth
relatives in Illinois Harold’s moth­ closed by singing "God Be With
Mr
“ and' Mrs. Harvey Cheeseman
*
Cline. Maxine Filllngham. Dorothy ®P*n
B.Tht tW° 7?." spent the week end with her parYou." The hostesses served a lovely
party at Oun lake on Streeter* Fisher. Ward Freeman. Paul Gack- ncrs to th*
and family and Mr and Mrs Cy­ er relumed with them to visit rela­
'
supper after the program. The
landing. Tuesday night. The party ler. Junior Gillette. Waller Griffith. »un’mcr ’Ul,be chosen from Joyce
Loma Bonneville called on her rus Buxton and Beatrice attended tives In this vicinity.
Ralph and jack Andrews of Lan­ next meeting will be held at the
aunt, Ada Mlsener, In Kalamazoo the funeral of Mrs. olive Buxton
w.iohr Mail Buelow.
Geukes. Dorothy
Hall.Evelyn
AubU of
Bhl/_ Sunday afternoon.
started to explore the grounds Florence Haight
sing visited their parents, Mr and home of Mrs. Mary M Flower, June
Bivens at Nashville Sunday
IB. with Mrs. Bellinger co-hostcss
Sunday morning when Claud Mrs L. Andrews Saturday evening
Mr and Mrs. Frank Horn attend­
ley Granger Martha Schad and
Mrs. Ollie Doolittle of KalamaMaxine Msclver of lhe advanced ed a birthday party Sunday at the HofTman brought up the cows for end Sunday.
Mrs. Lynn Nash and son Edwin of xoo visited Mr*. Flower and Ber­
■ claw
One will be chosen from home of Vern Welcher of Assyria milking he found one had been
honoring two birthdays. Mr
and severely lacerated, having evidently Clarksville called at the Jennie Par­ nice from Friday night till Mon­
i each group
day morning with the exception of
Mrs Welcher. There was fourteen been hooked by another cow. The dee home Monday evening.
Mrs Lydia Kercher accompanied eating Sunday dinner with Mr. and
I- -----------services—ot- a---------------veterinarian
reguests and a vtry enjoyable lime
—- -were
­
Athletic News.
Carlos Seesc to Indiana Saturday Mr*. N. H. Barber and spending
Mr and Mrs Lester Bonneville I qulred.
wound up a successful sea­ visited Mr. and Mra. Ronald Ken- j
----------------- -----------------------morning lo attend the Speicher re­ some time Sunday afternoon at the
Brandsletter home.
son of eight wins and three looses yon of Hickory Comers Sunday aft-1
union.
BARRYVILLE.
by defeating Caledonia by the score emoon
Mr and Mrs. Forest Slater and
Mr. and Mr*. Barber entertained
The Children's Day program will
Mr and Mrs Harry Mlsener of be held at the church next Sunday daughter of Muir visited Sunday their daughter. Mrs. Huggett. and
the eighth inning when Peeling Kalamazoo called on their parents
afternoon will) her parents. Mr. family of Detroit Saturday and
evcnlng
got a nice hit with two men on Saturday evening.
and
Mrs.
Elmer
Shaffer
Sunday
I There will be an ice cream social
baw to make the score 5-2 Snyder,
Mrs Henry Johnson and daugh­
Mrs. Mary Shedd of Delton visit­
Dinner guests of Mr and Mrs. a I at the home of Mr and Mrs Elmer
pitching for Caledonia, was then E Kenyon Sunday were Wesley
। Gillette Friday evening June 12. You ter Helen. Mrs. Laurence Johnson ed in Ute Brands tetter home Sun­
taken out and J Dutcher pitched Brockway and son Wayne of Gales­
and sons Paul and Dickie of Bownc day.
; are cordially invited.
the rest of lhe game Snyder con­ burg. Eva Frazier and Isabel Arsh j The Missionary meeting will be Center called on Gladys and Jennie
Nearly every family in the com­
inc Muu'uuuy niccuiiK wiu
r -- --- ■------- tinued lhe game at shortstop
A of Kalamazoo
munity was represented al Deco­
iteld at Uie parsonage this week
...
JT
“^.I^0on'
thrill was given the fans when
1 M,
Miss
“ M
Eleanor
-nor Miller spent
1
the ration Day services at Prairieville
Mrs Mary Burgess ot Hastings Wednesday.
Dick Fenton hit a home run with had many friends In this place who
The annual Sunday school re- week end with her parents of Carl­ Saturday.
two men on base
Caledonia extend heartfelt sympathy to the union will be held at the church, ton.
Chas Laubaugh. Mrs. Alice Fargo
threatened in the eighth when they bereaved family
Glen and Beulah Kime of Camp­ of E. Wall lake. Mrs Matlie Pad­
-;;
June
31 All former members nnd
filled
bel) assisted with the work al Har­ dock and children of Delton. Mr
nuea the
inc bases,
oases, but
out Snyder
anyucr ended
ended ,
Mabel Hom of Battle Creek and friends will be welcome.
the inning by grounding out to! Esther Hom of Grand Rapids visitWiiUr
GcUtr
=f
MUsUilppl
U
Walter Geiger of Mississippi Is ' old Yoder's while they were gone to and Mrs clem Munger of Battle
stIllor5
who saw ed their parents and ••••&lt;-•.
sister mi
Mr ai,u
and visiting
visiting his
his parents.
parents. Mr
Mr and
and Mrs.
Mrs Illinois.
Creek spent Saturday with Mr
...
sers'lce In their last same were Mike M" Fred Hom ...
.. .
, .
..
...
Mrs Gladys Pardee accompanied and Mrs. Porter Tooze. Mrs Wm
and Evelyn. Thurs- s aefger
and. sister.
Mrs Heber
I
W
day They •ttended graduating ex-' poster Sunday dinner guests of the Alden Porrlll's to Hastings Fri­ Klemp. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Good of
Another fine baseball team should ercises at Hastings Friday. Ruth Mr and Mrs Foster were Mr and ' day afternoon.
Freeport were there In the after­
Gat pH to a flying atari on that vocation trip; Lot ui chock
nr had
hazt next year
vnar os
ac only
nnlv three
th... sen­
__ . ._________ ,
.
.
. i
be
noon and Mr and Mrs Alfred Chase
Hom. their daughter, being one of Mrs 8. Geiger. Waller Geiger and
iors graduate
Both pitchers are lhe graduates Saturday they sc-, Misses Dora and Agnes Foster Ac­
your car. to you’ll bo sure it's in perfect condition. HIGH­
and children of Level Park called
IRVING.
back with lots of good reserve ma­ companied Esther Hom to Grand ernoon callers
"
were -Mr and‘ "
Mrs
Mr and Mrs William Schenkel on their way home from Cressey
WAYS ARE HAPFY WAYS when we’ve put your
terial to fill tn the vacant places. Rapids.
Ross BUven and Frances and Mrs and children and Mr
and Mrs cemetery.
B. Cline and M Parks have pitched
Eleven member* of the H -I. club
car in TIP-TOP SHAPE!
Ada Ashby in company with Mr Frank Bllven of the Star district, Thomas Gillette and daughter of
fine baseball this year
CUne lias and Mrs. Claude Moshier attended Mr and Mrs Bud Dutmcr of Grand
Middleville were Sunday visitors of attended the Kalamazoo County
been the mainstay and deserves a lhe Norma) graduating exercises Rapids and Mrs. Mlnda Mudge.
Federation of Clubs al Oshtemo last
lot
ThU
hU Thursday
Wednesday
Rev. Wylie of the First
- . of credit
- ----- ---- has been ..w
.nuisua) Their
i iicjr nicer,
niece. rrcnc
Irene tsiicnShelimontvllle
Mr. and Mrs Will Hyde spent
first year but he has pitched like 1 enharger. was one of the jerad- from Friday till Monday in Grand
W»iM SchifTman spent Saturday Baptist church. Kalamazoo gave a
a veteran Jack Williams has play- i uates.
very Umeiy address.
Rapids with relatives.
and Sunday in Wayland.
ed outstanding ball tn left field be- 1
Mr. and Mrs Porter Tooze and
Mr and Mrs Harry Green attendTile Ladles' Aid Society was very
sides hitting very well Mike SchonDUNHAM DISTRICT.
| ed « class party at Thornapple lake pleasantly entertained al lhe home son Homer called on Mr and Mis.
dcimayer has done very well catch­
Adolph Spaulding. Mr and Mrs
of Mr and Mrs Johnson
The L A 8 will hold an ice cream , Sunday
ing Dick Fenton and Garnet Peel- । social at lhe home of Mr and Mrs I Mr and Mrs. O D Fasten and
Mr and Mrs. Lewis Wilcox and Oscar Running and Mr and Mrs.
ing have been the life of our in- |
• Sanoce Gaa and OUa. Greasing
Orson McIntyre Saturday evening son Burr and family were guests family went to Bellevue Sunday lo Dewey Tooze and family in Battle
l field
a Vulcanizing.
Washing
June 27
। of relatives tn charlotte Sunday visit Her parents and her aunts Creek Bunday afternoon.
Mesdames Wilcox and Bradfield
Sunday guests st Claud Bollman's gnd attended the Toamseprt talk in from California who arc guests of
were Kalamazoo visitors Wednes­
were Mr and Mrs chas Jones and 1 Bennett Park in the afternoon
her mother
Among Irving's other claims to day Mr* Wilcox and grandson Jack
Mrs Libble Marshal) of Battle Creek
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lathrop of
and Trooper Maurice Buxton of Pralricvilk called on Mr and Mrs fume which includes an old gentle­ wrytj ip Hastings Friday and stayed,
J J Willetts and Helen Sunday man one hundred-five years old. till Saturday when Mrs. Bradfield
East Lansing
The Hastings High school tuid evening They are spending the resident for the past ten years. Is a drove up and they ail returned to­
four-legged Plymouth Rock chick­ gether.
Normal students of this neighbor­ week here with relatives.
Sunday J
Bradfield. Mr
and
Mrs Mary Neal spent the week en hatched on the William Schenkel
hood are home for the summer va­
Mrs Merle Bradfield and Jack went
cation Doris Healy and Mildred end in Nashville with her daughter. chicken ranch. It is a week old
। In listening to lhe Chicago Cub- to Keeler where they decorated the
Mack graduated from lhe Normal Mrs E Olmstead
Mr and Mr* Herbie Wlleox ac­ Brooklyn ball game lhe writer was grave of their wife and mother
Beginning Sunday.
June
7.
Quarterly meeting services were companied by Mr and.Mn Verne amused at the combination of names
held at......
the—church Friday evening Hawblitz and children' and Cleon in lhe Brooklyn line-up. "Boyle and preaching service will be held at
In charge ol Rev Edgar A Paust.1 Meade spent Sunday with Mr. and [ Frey ' made us wonder what about Milo church at 0 30 A M with Sun­
day
school
immediately'
after.
We
D 8 of Kalamazoo, and Sunday | Mrs Albert Holsebus near Bellevue ! Bake' and just then she heard
—------------ —
.... 1 Dorothy
Merlyn
Mar
------Butcher and Baker but nothing want you ail to come
mornlng
communion
-------------------- Lathrop.
-------- .
..
..
I Mr. and Mrs Arthur Skidmore
conducted by Rev Wm Cam held of | shall. Dora Day and Edwin Maurer about lhe Candlestick Maker
1 and son visited the latter s people.
* Mr and Mrs Merrill near Hastings
I Sunday
.
There then followed a struggle be-, Frederick Hauser. Virginia Holes,
tween Mr. Smythe and Bob Carter ■ Vemlce Hughson. Aietha Johnson,
lain; Introduction of toastmaster. to see which could get ducked. The Marian Keagle. Maxine Keiser,
class roasted weenies, ate potato Charles Kelly. Jo* Kowalcayk, Man­
master wm Oanut Peeling. presi­ salad. dill picklea and roasted ley Lyons, junior Malchste. Neola
dent of tha 1W7 Senior dm; Wei- marshujallpwa. Mr- Smythe was Nell. Arthur Neuman. Oarl Noffke
presented with * farewell gift, a Dorothy Pender. Betty Pogt*. John
bathrobe, by the Sophomore class Rlemersma. Robert Rugg. MUo
of which he is the advisor. The ' Schondelmayer. Ruth Smith. Bettie
party arrived at Middleville at 0:30. . Storrs. Donald White, jack Wil­
------------- Ilanu
W WQJ Rom DeFOe. accompanied by Paul­
junior
The school music department ।
Home Economic* News.
ine Bena way; Honor awards. Bupt.
will Ball. Following lhe dinner the party closed 1U work last week. The mu- ! Mlss Thomas and Martha Schad
adjourned to the gymnasium where sic lessons, directed by Ray Mat- of q,, advanced Homs-Ec. class
demonstrated lhe hot pack and
they danced to lhe music of How- thews will continue Indefinitely.

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Y

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When you think of road improvement, think of Calcium
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Calcium-Chloride-stabilizcd wearing course if you can,
for it costs little more than ordinary gravel resurfacing.
If-funds are limited, roads may be improved by adding
small quantities of gravel and soil binder with Calcium
Chloride. Even where budgets are small, road surfaces
may be made dustless with surface application of
Calcium Chipride.
*
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LOWER CROOKED LAKE.
We extend our sympathy to Mr
and Mrs Louden tn lhe death of
the letter s mother, Mrs Mary Bur­
gees. of Hastings
A number from our street attend­
ed lhe funeral of Chas Armstrong
held al Prairieville Friday
Miaa Pt?arl Roush of Quimby is
spending some time al her uncle's.
Frank Roush
Sunday school was reorganised al
the Milo church Sunday Quite a
turnout. We hope for more next
Bunday
Fred Schutz and Oeo. Zimmer­
man of Lawton were Monday call­
ers al Chris Zimmerman's.
Mr and Mrs. Rex Harmon of Bat­
tle Creek visited the latter's par­
ents. Mr and Mrs. Chris Zimmer­
man Sunday
Miss Neva Reid and Harry Lull
of Kalamaaoo spent Thursday eve­
ning at Frank Roushs
Theodore stenge: and family. Mr
and Mrs. Bert Stenger of Kalama too. Mr and Mrs. Alva Rounds and
children of Battle Creek were Sun­
day visitots al Joe Stenger's.

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�TBE BABTINOl BANNER, TWUKWAY, JUNK 11, 19M
1860: Clarissa Dwight. Solon Doud. was born Ln Kalamazoo Co. and on I ering at Mr. and Mra. Asa Stanton's
BB1EF BITS OF RUTLAND'S
of Hickory Comers.
EARLY HISTORY. J. M. Darling. Sarah Freeman. Miss Fvbruary », 1888 he was married i south of Bellevue.
Bennett. Daniel Striker. Eliza End- to Harriett Jane Smith who passed ! Mrs Anna cheeseman. and son
The Wilcox schoolhouse, or lhe
David
Deal. aged 0 MN,
ley. Lorlnda Cowell. A: D. Rork. BW?JL DecT,nbCT ’• 1934
^on' । Earl spent Sunday with her dalfch- passed away at his home hertrrtAunt Rhoda, as It is sometimes
Betsey Crowell. Alice Striker. Julia •rd has always been a brick maker | Ur. Mrs. jd. Norton, and family of

| LEGAL NOTICES |
.one or^omga^op. a
VE8;

FABTITIOir bale.
NOTICE IN HEREBY GIVEN. that »•!

or dra'Tlbfd ortmi

(
NoHhVriv £
. .. ibw Coo sir
ou.i.. c.i»_of_ H»«-

fol

Tos'fMi'Nartb

called, stands an Section 8 of Rut­
land township in Barry county.
Turning back the pages of time, we
find that Rutland township was so
called at the suggestion ot Winslow
Ralph who came from Rutland.
Vermont, and was one ot the early
settlers of Rutland township.
Among lhe earliest settlers In
Rutland were Lorenzo Cooley and
a Mr. DeGroal who came tn 1836
Lorenzo Cooley built the first house
In Rutland on Section 14 Mr De­
Groat died within a few weeks ot
beginning his pioneer life, and he
was lhe first person lo be burled
in lhe newly laid out graveyard in
Hastings. Shortly after that Mr.
Cooley was seriously Injured while
lifting heavy limbers and the Has­
tings cemetery received another oc­
cupant Another settler of 1836 was
Estes
BPKa Rich, -.iu
and ui
bi i1838
mo he was
• iiioi
mar-Irlcd to *** Cooley's widow Their
। first child Loren was Lhe first white
ChHd boro in Rutland. Mrs. Rich
. died Ln 1845 and was buried on the
I Rich farm where the Rutland ceme। tery was later laid out. When the
1 ground was plaited, it was found
| that Mrs. Rich's grave would be In
-------- of lhe walks, but It was allowed

earliest grave in Rutland cemetery.
that lies iu U&gt;e footpath.
In the winter of 1844 there was a
school on Bull s Prairie, taught by
Chloe Benson, and it was to that
school that the children of Rut­
land's settlers were sent. In the
summer of 1845 Maria Lacey taught
In a log cabin on Section 9. In 1847
a district was organized which com­
prised the whole northwest Quarter
of the township.
Following is a list of teachers who
received certificates from 1848 lo

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION

NOTICE OF COMMISSIONER’• SALE
UNDEE DBCBEB.

NOTICE or MOBTOAOI BALE.

tins* Bnlldinc

ruiniiir
COHFOKATION

HOUR OWNERS'

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION

NOTICE IB HEREBY GIVEN

Out a n

Standard

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION

irrtbad as toltoi

HOME owranur LOAN CN

NOTICE or C01OCI88I0NEB-a BALE
UNDER DECREE.

NOTICE or MOBTQAOB SALE.
NOTICE Or MOBTUAOB BALB

at &lt; ••Il-Ion Barry Countv,
to HOME OWNERS' LOaM
CORBORATION
HOME

OWNERS

MSMM1
lac wbk.
rrrlat, pnrsaan

NOW THEREFORE

id.4

NOTICE

IB

HEREBY OfVF.N

mala of Ml-hltM la aarA eua u4&lt; and
praTldad NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN
--S at Un
Standard

■ OTICE TO CREDITORS

Williams. Grace
Sterns, Elvira
Brewer. Sarah Messer. Emily John­
son. Julia Mapes. Julia Freeman.
Nellie
Harriet
neiuc Hanley.
hbiik/,
n*u&gt;ct Sartweli.
Mary Ellis. Mary Sanders. Emily
Sanders. Ellen Campbell. 1860: Mary

by trade and with his family came the Moore district
Sir^v^d1
“d Mr*
which he v^iauru
operated iuiui
until iviv,
1919. wnen
when
Ids two
two sons
sons returned
from the
1 his
returned from
the army
army wt&lt;°nrnr!and he retired from business and1 “^.HeRry

yean in Grand Rapids. Bu lived
nine yean.
Surviving arr his wife. Anna, two
sons, Neuman of Grand Rapids and
Charles of Prairieville, a stop­
daughter. Mn. Margaret “
with Mr and Mrs Lester Preston. Hastings, and some gnu

Jennie Brewer.
Frances Brewer.
1800: E. Fancher. Mary Annas.
Laura Newton. Sarah Bradley.

Later the township was subdivided
into smaller districts and lhe Wil­
cox district was organised In 1M9.
The first director was James Camp­
bell and lhe first teacher. Loren
Rich. The last director was Arthur
Hathaway and lhe last teacher.
Vern prentice. During his term of
school the district was consolidated
with Die Thornapple-Kellogg school
and since that lime tiie children
of lhe Wilcox have attended school
Ln Middleville.
Of the children who attended lhe
first term of school taught in the
Wilcox, there are six now living.
Andrew Houfstatter and his sisters.
Ida M. and Lucinda. Mary Kirch­
ner and Nelson Healy

*
OT”Michigan from FayaCte.
^^Mr ^rod aa a young man and spent many

‘*LBanfleld ,pent in Prairieville about

Sunday visitors were Mr. and Mrs.
monument of red and white brick ,
Lester A onerman of Rockford and
and white cement, on the family lot
in the east cemetery at Hickory Wayne Robinson of Nashville. Mr
Corners. This has attracted the I and Mrs Roy Preston and son of
Hastings spent Friday evening
attention and admiration of many
there.
visitors in lhe cemetery
Frank Norton. Howard and Cteota
On Thursday. June 18. will oc-!
cur the Fourth Annua) Flower Show spent the week end at Traverse City
of tl&gt;e Delton Inland Lakes Garden visiting and attending lhe ceme­
Club, which will be held In the Com­ teries Mrs Rose Tapestra of Travmunity hall. Entries are open to l erse City accompanied them home
far a few days before going to Lan­
anyone and exhibits must be at lhe
hall by 10 A M Each exhibitor must sing. Flint and Grand Rapids lo
furnish his own containers. Mrs । visit before returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Marshall
Leda Harrington will act as chalr। man of the show. Mrs Thorpe and spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs.
Mrs. Chandler are on the regisUa- Clyde Leonard at Delton.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Lockwood of
tlon committee and Mrs. Dunning
will classify the exhibits. Visitors Battle Creek spent Sunday evening

About 15 attended
neral

services

ware

held

Man-

day. at lhe Methodist Rptocopal church at two o’clock, Rev.
Ralph Bates in charge. Burial in
Prairieville cemetery. The relatives
have the sympathy pf th* com­
munity.
The body of Marybelle Johncoek
was brought lie re for burial
day afternoon. She will be
missed not only by her children but
by the neighbors and many friends.
Sympathy U expressed tor the rel­
atives.
.
Charles A. Armstrong died Wed­
nesday night, June 3rd, of a heart

wood

ton. and family cl near FrwpaK
Sunday.

Mrs. Orville Knauia of 931 Lawlee
will be welcome from 12 o'clock
Avenue. Chicago, DI., aged 74 yean.
noon until 10 P M There will be a and family.
DELTON.
Mr and Mrs. Lawrence Gray of 17 months and 35 days. He had been Olive Hayes, of Grand
pet parade at 7 30 P M Everyone
Mr and Mrs Peter Leinaar en- ,old or young is invited to lake ixirt Detroit. Joyce and Duane Gray of with his sister since
slnr
‘
February,
Charlotte spent from Friday night where he was tenderly cared for by
joyed a visit with their two nieces Ln the parade.
until Bunday with Mrs Lulu Gray his sister and niece. Mrs. Elisabeth
Saturday afternoon. Mrs
Albert
।
Mr and Mrs Leon Gray and son Bechtel. He was a member of the
Armock and daughter ot Grand ,
WOODLAND.
of Charlotte and Mr
and Mrs Baptist church. Odd Fellows and well
Rapids and Mrs Walter Caiklna Received Too Late
Harold Oray and family of East Rebekah lodges for many years, sel­
uid son of Hastings.
The Junior choir surprised
Mrs
Mr and Mrs. John Adams and' Donald Gager last Thursday eve­ Assyria spent Sunday with Mr and dom absent from church and Bun­ Dietrich
nun
with
huidkerehi,i
”
.how«
i
K&lt;,b
"
‘
°™»
"'
a
Mr&gt; Lulu day school services. His sister and
Mrs Lila Williams were in Plain- |
- —— handkerchief shower.
niece are the only near relatives house Sunday.
well Thursday evening
Mrs. Gager has played the piano
. ,
end Mrs Vern Hvde
Hyde ‘
and
Mr ,nd
,“1 fam-­ surviving His remains were brought
Mrs Carl Simmons and daughter for the Junior choir since they were
ily of Grand Rapids spent Saturday to Prairieville where the funeral good program for ChUdnh*s day, to
of Ann Arbdr were guests ot Mrs.1 organized
and Sunday
Mr and Mrs. L. services were held in the Baptist be held In the evening of Sunday.
Helen Pennock Thursday night.
Mr and Mrs. Raymond McLeod ...
• with
. , —
church. Burial in Prairieville cem­ Juns 31. Ton are ocEmafly invited.
Mr and
Mrs
Peter Leinaar i and family moved to Grand Rapids w J^5r,ard7 ^nd fwnUyRobert
Rot
*rL Johnson and Ena Jar­ etery amidst a profusion of lovely
spent Saturday night and Sunday Thursday where they will make
rarci spent Sunday with the former's flowers, attesting the esteem in
EAST GUN LAKI.
with their son. Ebble and wife, near &gt; their home
sister.
Mrs
Kenneth
Nickerson,
which he was held by his many
Cedar Creek
Howard Brumm of Fremont called
friends. Sympathy is extended U&gt; sego called at lhe Jamas Null hotna
Mr and Mrs Royce Hentan and1 on Mr and Mrs Lester Brumm and husband
' Mr ttnd Mrs Elmir Shaffer and the sister and niece. Rev. Ralph Saturday.
two daughters Marqulta and Mary Bunday
*
Mr. Ella Bu.h ol U» Ansel... &gt;•,"“»
, &gt;P“I Bunday Bates was in charge of the funeral.
Marie attended the commencement
Carl aheerin called on frisoda in
“r
w
Mr and Mrs. Manley Billings. Freeport Wednesday. Robert Whit­
exercises at Taylor University last Cal., la .pendins llu aummar will,
Mrs. Eva Robinson and Ellen of Mra. Hazel Billings. Lyle and Leta. ney returning home with him to
week, from which school their Iter daughter. Mra. J. V. Hilbert, and
Grand Rapids spent from Friday Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Burchett and
daughter Maxine was a graduate. .asura
relatives u&gt;
in nuiu.p
Hastings
Maxine returned home with them ' Elwyn Dell of Weidman and Mr. i until Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Burchett at­
and next week will go to the ' Kit'' | and Mrs H. I Fralcher of Detroit L^st*r Preston.
tended lhe funeral of Sylvester
Nichols at Jones. Wednesday.
Camp at Clear lake where she will | were week end guests of Mr and
———
Slater home.
PRAIRIEVILLE.
Mr. and Mra. Jack Joslyn and
be the counselor for tile land and Mrs John Dell Miss Dorothy Dell,
Miss Virginia Von Hout at I
and Miss Izahmae Frederickson of Dv- rievllle Li helping Mrs. James
Nunemaker
water sports during the summer
, wh&lt;) has been spending two weeks i MIm Helen
Mr and Mrs Clarence Williams , with her parents, returned to her brother Howard have gone to Chl'
cago
to
visit
relatives
for
a
few
entertained Sunday Mr and Mrs । work In Detroit with Mr and Mrs
weeks.
Ritter of Kalamazoo and W W. | Fratchcr
Guests of Mr. Nunemaker and Castor family back. They
Lung and Mrs Rapp of Wall lake |
Mr --------------and Mra.--------Bert Wilkins
and iKinuy
family Friday
riiuay and
niio Saturday
oaiuruay were
Mr and Mrs- H A- Kltson have
—
-------- -----Edwin sooteman left Thursday moved into lhe Nellie Hitt house son. Mr and Mrs. Harry Wilkins, Mrs A. A. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. for that.
morning for Pittsburgh, Penn., to J recently occupied by McLeod's Mr Mrs Lulu Shepard and daughter Larry Larson and family of Chi­
John Russell left for Florida
vLslt his uncle who will secure a and Mrs Arthur Allerdlng recentlyspent
------ * Sunday -afternoon
-------------- with Mr. cago.
Mr and Mrs Ed Sheldon
job for him in that city. Bravo! for purchased the house owned by and Mrs. Emory Wilkins of Has­
Of
Woodland were guests ot Mr. and
a young fellow only seventeen and Mrs. Frank Nash and occupied by tings
OBITUARY.
Miss Elizabeth Woods returned Mrs Ernest Farr Thursday and
just a high school graduate to start the Kltson's
out so far from home to begin his
Mr and Mrs Vere Miller and Sunday from a visit to Mr. and Friday.
and Emergene Shipman, vac
business career
Mr. and Mrs. Ike DeBack and
daughter Marilyn of Chicago. Mr Mrs. Sam Page of Quimby.
Mrs L. D Miles. Mrs. William Miss Norma Castle attended the fu­
The Delton boys ball team will and Mrs Hubert Bronson. Miss Do­
play the older men here next Sun­ reen Clary and Frederick Clary of Dobson and children and Mrs. Elate neral of Alexander McCollum at
day afternoon for a benefit game । Hastings were dinner guests ot Mr Truax of Grand Rapids were guests Hastings Saturday.
for the boys. The Delton boys got and Mrs Ralph LefTler Decoration of Mr and Mrs Carl Krick Thurs­
Mr. and Mra. Ralph Glass and
beaten badly al Dowling last Sun- Day Marilyn Miller stayed orer the day Ethel Johncock of Shelbyville Miss Alice Stone of HOfSkins, Mias dren were
| jay. but that's no sign they are
spent the week with Mrs. Krick.
Janet Evers. Willard Evers and
Mrs. William Blohm and children Raymond Timmer of Brad*. MIM Stilwell. Greenville, Mra.
going to be beaten next Sunday
Mr and Mrs Percy Lehman and
Mrs Emma Lou Walters of Pot- Mr. and Mrs Grant Osgood were at and Mra. William McKlbbin visited Ruby Hoover and Daniel ”------------ *
Houghton lake from Friday until Mrs. Emma Blohm of Grand Junc­ Martin. Mr. and Id
tion Thursday.
Burchett and Robert
in the post office during the absence Sunday
of Mrs Donna Waite
Mra. Emma Hughes Nevins enJean England and Miss Leone
for Mrs. Elsie Munger at a picnic at the Bolling
Leonard of Hastings accompanied tertained Friday
from Borgess hospital last Monday by Mrs. Glenn England and daugh­ Hughes Freydl of Northville, the Spring Sunday afternoon.
Dr and Mrs Farwell entertained ters Pollyanna and Marjery called Hughes relatives to the number of
Mrs. Laura Leinaar Is visiting ship, living then all hU
her brother. Mr. and Mrs. George cepting three years tn Oto
company from Chicago over the on friends at Crystal Sunday and thirty-three. Lunch was served.
Miss Violet Munger and Robert Dunning at Milo.
were supper guefts of Mr and Mrs
died upon tbe farm hls tat
Mr and Mrs Glenn Kenyon are Chas. Cook of Belding
Conway attended church at Has­
Mrs. Laura Leinaar. Mrs. Bernice from the government to I
lhe happy parents of a little son
Washburn and son Glenn
were
Mr and Mrs F E Border arc tings Sunday evening.
Mrs.
Marclus
Bagley
entertAined
boro at Borgess hospital Friday visiting the latter's mother. Mrs.
band, devoted father, kind
morning. June 5 He weighed 10 3-4 Bourrett of West Bend. Iowa for a with a birthday dinner Sunday hon­ lip of Wall lake.
lbs. and his name is Arnold D.
oring her husband. The
guests
Gerald Mills and Miss Lucile
Mesdames Frank Kilpatrick. Er­ were Mr. and Mrs Floyd Fisher Lungston of Detroit spent Sunday where he spent his life
and Mrs Calvin Powell of Hastings nest Shorno and J V Hilbert and I and son Lyle of Richland. Mr and with Mr. and Mra. M. A. Mills.
toll working for thaw ha
were Sunday afternoon visitors of Miss Arlene Kilpatrick were Grand Mrs. Dorr Backus and family. Mra.
\ Rapids visitors Thursday.
FAIR LAKE.
------ -------------------------------Mrs.
Blanche Richards.
Ida Backus. Mr. and Mra. James
'Walldorf! funeral home
Bolton
and
Jimmie
and
Lawrence
Mr and Mrs Ed MLnar of Dos- | Mr and Mrs Clyde Ruell and .
j-jsa
ter were Sunday callers of Addison ' children visited their cousin.C*Mr | McGowan of Galesburg. Callers his home Thursday afternoon. His
Pennock.
1 and. Mrs Henry Biedenkopf of In-1
Several from Delton attended the dlanapolis, Ind., from Friday until
funeral services for Mrs. Mary &lt; Sunday
Burgess in the M E church al Has- . Mr and Mra R I Wolcott. Mra.
Ungs Saturday afternoon.
Lawrence Hilbert and daughter ElMlss Josephine Vanderwood en- len and Mrs Rena Culler accomtertalned her friend. Miss Janette panted by Mr
and Mrs
Cijde
DeMann from Martin over the week Bro am of Lansing enjoyed a pot
end.
j luck dinner with Mr and Mrs. Neal
Mrs. Ella Rogers has been quite Newton and family of Freeport
sick lhe post week being threatened 1 Sunday,
with pneumonia, but slxr is better 1 Miss Annie Rosenthal, who was
now.
' operated on for appendicitis at UniMllton Nobles of Grandville spent versity hospital. Ann Arbor, two
lhe week end with his daughter and weeks ago Monday has returned to
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wert- her home in Carlton and is 1mman and in company with them vis- &gt; proving nicely,
ited Mr and Mrs. S,&lt;A Wertman at | The Women's Foreign MissionDowling Sunday afternoon.
' ary Society will meet at the home of
Mr and Mrs Peter Adrtanson and Mrs R. I. Wolcott Tuesday evening.
Harry spent Friday afternoon with । Nancy McLeod is seriously ill
Roy Adrtanson and family at Fine with the red measles She is staying
lake.
I at the home of her grandparents.
Rev Galvei of the Philippine Is­ Mr. and Mrs Dell Wiliams.
lands was unable lo be here last । Misses
..,
Helen Reesor and Dorothy
week as advertised, but will be here !| Helse
Helse entertained
entertained the
the Standaid
Blaiidaid
Instead next Sunday, June 14. Thus | Bearers Monday afternoon at the
the Children's Day exercises have : home of the former.
been postponed until lhe following I
Mr and Mrs Ernest Shorno vlsSunday, June 31st.
| Red relatives In Allegan Bunday.
Sunday was a gala day for Wil- | Misses
Florence
Forman and
Ham Leonard whose 80th birthday । Leona Helse were hostesses for the
occurred on that day. His three King’s Herald Friday evening at
daughters and two sons held open the former's home
house for him at the home of the
Mr and Mrs. Donald Gager and
youngest daughter. Mrs. L. K. son Morgan have left for Paw paw
Flowers. Seventy-five guests called and Hartford to spend the summer
during lhe afternoon
They came vacation.
from Kalamazoo. Alamo.
Flint,
SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
Hickory Corners. Oshtemo. Grand
Rapids. Cloverdale and
Delton. Last Week's Letter
»•«»
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Cheeseman
Leonard and family attended a family gaththe grandchildren.

More Light On
An Old Subject I

MAKE YOUR
HOUSE LIKE BRICK WITH
NOTICE TO CBBDITOBB

I fl
rw 8 Not

HOME OWNERS- LOAN CORPORAT1WN. XorUUM
HOME OWNEES- LOAW COBPO

scaooL Dimicr.

ASBESTOS SHINGLES

at

LOW COST/

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co
rkom 2515

HuUru

The Home Lumber Co. Buildt

THE HOME LUM
PHONE 2276

�m HAtttMOs mmm. rtrtmstiAr. rtwe ii. in.

DIW WHITTEN

now

Do You Know—

Ing through tha tropica than I •«- every dish, chair and moveable ■AST WALL LAKE
pected. My health U good and many thing in the cabin would be broken
AND VICINITY.
are my marclee.
Ernest Sampson of Creasey vis­
to pieces. Our housekeepers found
Dee. 29th—Went on deck at 6
ited
In
thia
vicinity
Saturday night
o'clock this morning to sec the sun it vary difficult to prepare the and Sunday.

rise from Its watery bed. Had wit­
nessed the same sight on land, but
never anything so grand and glori­
ous as this. With silent reverence I
11 years old. very active, and runs stood and adored God who created
to the top of the highest mast with tbe aea and the land. He gave us
incredible speed. Some of the ladles Ute Bun to rule lhe day, the moon
made him a pair of pantaloons but and stars to rule the night, and has
did not put any pockets in them. graciously promised that lhe earth
It was really amusing when he put shall be as full of HU glory as the
them on and discovered the de­ sea is of water.
ficiency. He ran about the deck
Dec. 31.—To day we were called
crying "oura mill." meaning "not on deck to see a school of porpoises.
good." On being told to thank the Titty sported In the waler at a dis­
ladles, be refused until the packets tance but did not come near. Weath­
were put in. This they promlaed er grows cool since we crossed the
to do and he was pacified.
tropic of Capricorn and I sleep very
Friday. Dec. IS.—Crossed lhe comfortably under a blanket.
Squalor at 9 o'clock; thermometer
Tuesday. Jan. 1. 1828.—The past
at 82. and the water very bad. Oh. year has been the most eventful one
my slaters, when you go to our never ; of my life. At Its commencement my
failing spring of water and drink a 1 soul longed to be employed in mis­
full supply, be grateful. When you [ sionary labor; at Its close I had
sit down at our father's bountiful1 actually embarked tn the cause, and
board and eat of the finest wheat, am sailing lo the field of our la­
the but of butter with honey and i bors as rapidly as wind and waler
, the honeycomb, bless the Lord your can carry me. Now that the sincere
God for the good land which He has I wish of my heart is gratified, 1 feel
। given you. 1 would not. however, that I am under responsibilities
have you under the impression that deeply solemn and Important. I
, I apeak In respect of want or am have entered on a life which calls
unhappy.
for the strongest faith, lhe wannest
Dec. 17th.—We had dried apple j zeal, the deepest humility and self
dumplings for dinner today which denial—without which I shall be
certainly were good. Feel quite at ' entirely useless In a pagan land. I
home tn the cabin and. were it not have most solemnly covenanted to
far the languor produced by the I give myself up to the service of God,
extreme heat, would add I am quite and Heaven forbid that I shall ever
well The sun here rises before and | regfet leaving the land of my fa­
sets after 6 o'clock. Your days arc 1 thers and "look back" with a desire
at their shortest.
to return. Rather may I "look for­
Dec 19th —A ship appeared this | ward" to the hour when I shall
evening, bound toward our much. reach my Father's house not made
loved country. The Captain hoisted with hands, eternal in the heavens.
our flag and she returned the salute, There may we meet and spend an
but did not come near enough to eternal hour in celebrating the
speak This Is the third vessel we praises of our Redeemer
have seen bound as we suppose to
Jan 2.—After tea this evening a
America, and have not been able sail was seen steering toward North
to send one letter to our friends, j America We all seized our pens with
Have gone 106 miles lhe last 25 high hopes of sending letters home,
hours and all are contented, cheer- i but the ship kept at a distance, and
ful and happy
left us to close the day with a feel­
Dec 25th.. Christmas.—Consider- , ing of aggravated disappointment
able motion in the vessel to day. ' Jan 3 -Thermometer down to 60.
Crossed the tropic of Capricorn Have had high and adverse winds
this morning 1 should like to all day. and only go 5 miles an
know how you all are and what you hour. Never saw a niore beautiful
| are doing Hope you enjoy the long setting sun Hope when my race Is
I cold winter evenings and sometimes run the evening of my days may be
I fancy I am made the topic of con- equally serene and pleasant. Have
versatlon Dear sisters, how many 14 hours of daylight each day. We
| strange events transpire in Lite are rapidly approaching the "Hom."
! course of 12 months. Since last
Jan. 5 —Tbe ocean is very calm
I chrtstmas I have passed through Can compare it lo nothing but a sea
1 Philadelphia. New York Boston and of glass. I dread thia kind ot a calm
■ now on the Atlantic Where I will because it generally precedes a
I be a year hence God only knows 1 storm This evening lhe seamen
perhaps at lhe Sandwich Islands, were so fortunate as to cast a har­
perhaps in eternity But whatever J poon Into a porpoise and In a few
may lx- my lot below, or however 1 minutes it wan brought in triumph
great the trials I may be called up- ' on the deck. It was a brownish color
। on to endure. I have not one anx- and about as heavy as your largest
lous concern, for God is my Cove­ hog
nant God and He wii) never leave
Jan 8th —The Steward brought
I or forsake me
me In a dish of porpoise liver, and
Dec. 26th.—Slept very little last I as we have had no fresh provisions
night being frequently disturbed by I for over two months 1 thought it was
| lhe waves breaking on deck Once I the best I had ever tasted High
I I awoke in agony hearing the water I wind has succeeded the calm of
। gush in al the deadlight which had I yesterday
not been closed. I expected in a
Jan 7th—Today we had a fine
moment to sink Into a watery grave. wind in the right direction and we
I and tried to compose my spirit for are making io miles an hour lati­
' the solemnity But the window was tude 42 Quite cold on deck but
| closed and wc were assured we were comfortable in cabin. We were
In no danger
obliged on this day last month lo
i Dec 27 -'Sea runs high, we arc uv our fans. Now we can sit very
! tossed to and fro. and stagger like comfortably in the cabin with our
I drunken men through our floating cloaks on
We arc opposite the
! habitation Several of our company Paulkland Islands Lal 44 degrees 10
, are sick, and everything that is minutes south Went 222 miles from
. not made fast slides to the other ll A. M yesterday lo 11 A M to­
end of the room Disagreeable os is day
our present situation we feel grate­
Tuesday, Jan. 8th —Spent a very
ful and happy a* we have gone 200 uncomfortable night Was tn con­
miles in the last 24 hours Have suf­ stant danger of being rolled out of
fered less from the heat while pass- my berth. Frequently thought that

breakfast. When It was ready at
last, another difficulty appeared—
how were we to keep our seats while
eating It? This trouble was solved
by tying the chairs together and
when we were seated the chairs
ware tied lo the table. I never saw
the sea so tempestuous. Waves
often break on deck and wet the
men from head to foot—but in the
midst of the commotion we feci safe.
When dangers round us press.
And darkhess veils the skies,
We lean upon His righteousness.
Whence all our hopes arise.

fOonthiued from page 1. Sec. 2)

that You Can Buy the Finest

ti o&lt; BREAD
32
Slices

i, 10c

Baked Fresh
Every Day!

at all A &amp; P Food Stores —Why Pay More?

P&amp;G or Kirk's

He 8 o'Clock Coffee
4“‘“ 19c Bokar Coffee
6 — 25c Beech-Nut Coffee
10
29c Del Monte Coffee

Am. Family Soap

10

Chipso or Oxydol

2

Am. Family Flakes

ft 19c Green Giant Peas
2 PiT. 25c Brown Sugar
55c Milk CreA.".

Ivory Soap

lb

2 :.re

Camay Soap
Kirk's ciXS,

Dreft
19c

Crisco

21c

Ib
‘ tin

26c

Ib.
tin

25c

Ib.
tin

49c Hills Bros. Coffee
37c Maxwell House Coffee

29c
!L 25c

2 X. 15c
4 "I. 29c

£

25c
3-lb.
box

Pabjt-ett Cheese Spread

Cigarettes

b,’."...'

Fels Naptha Soap
Woodbury's
Fels Naptha Chips

,k,

|9C Waldorf Tissue

Lux or Ivory Flakes

X.

Rinso

X

21c 4X Sugar "wuL"
19c Kellogg's All Bran

TOMATOES r...,
CUCUMBERS h.&lt;h™. ’

5c
L.&lt;_ stec, IQc

u,. ioc
2 r« 15c

NEW POTATOES-STRAWBERRIES

\ X

10c

19c

pkr

15c

Igo.

39c

Pkg

19c

Pkg.

25c

,
I
,
1
।
,
'

Igo.

55c

19c

3-lb.

55c

31b
Pkg.

25c

Jar

37c

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 12,13

J*Xn'69c

Compare these price! with Gra nd Rapids and Battle Creek
Drug Prices—then Save with Safety at the Rexall Store!
See large Hand Bill for List of Specials for All the
Month of June I

RING BOLOGNA

l-lb.

15c
2 re.. 25c
2 *•«. 15c
3
17c
2 u&gt;. 25c

SMOKED PICNICS

SLICED BACON

25c

29c

Iona Cocoa
Heinz Soups
Jello
‘“.SET
Jello

u

5c

roll*

Jan. 9th.—Was roused from my
slumber thia morning with the news
that a sail was tn sight and that
there was a prospect of speaking.
All hands were soon busily engaged
Ln finishing letters to send. I had
nearly brought mine to a close when
news was brought that It was a
whaling ship bound for America.
We were preparing lo direct and
seal our letters when the unwelcome
tidings were brought that "It had
gone by." The Captain spoke and
discovered it to be the Oalateer
bound for New Bedford. It was a
whaling cruiser and did not expect
to return for seven or eight months,
so wc consoled ourselves with the
hope that we might have an oppor­
tunity of sending letters sooner
from the Islands. Boon after this
KLINGENSMITH.
vessel passed another hove in
The traffic on our road put tha
sight and hopes were raised again,
only to be disappointed as slw did Hubbard Hills was very heavy Bun­
not come near enough to speak. I day. folks coming from long dis­
now dlspalr of sending letters till tances to see lhe new park and thn
work that is being done on
the
| Jan. loth.—We have one of the WPA project several Inquired thn
। passengers of the Galaleer on board way to Devil's Hollow, others to the
our vessel—a beautiful tame pigeon Lone Pine tree, still others roamed
It prom­
I We lodged it all night in a basket. over the Hubbard hills
If it tarries longer with us. the isee to make quite a sight-seeing
carpenter is going to build It a trip for lhe people from the cities.
house We were presented a rare 'Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Rmjw ot
and curious species of sea weed Battle Creek. Mr. and Mra. Glenn
। called "kelp." The stem was a yard Hoffman and daughter. Wilma, of
and three quarters long, connected near Dowling. Mr and Mrs Mar­
by Joints from which hung small shal) Tripp and Lois, Mrs Esther
I leaves 12 inches long in the form of Burd were guest* of Mr and Mrs
a sword, and nearly covered with Albert Sunday and helped them
i shells, inhabited by living creatures celebrate their allver wedding an­
niversary. They received several
called barnacles.
| Jan. 14—Saw hundreds of little nice gifts.
School will be out thl* Friday in
I birds around about the size of a
Middleville and our young folks will
robin Albatro&amp;s are very numerous be home again
around the Cape. Our pigeon was
Archie Burd of Nashville spent
drowned Saturday evening and was part of last week at the Green home
regretted by al). We are In latitude and helped with the basement wall
53 and longitude 54 west The cold 1 for lhe new house.
. very severe. Thermometer at 47 and
Edward Storkan of Grand Rap­
here we sit with the cabin door open Ids. who has purchased n new truck.
and no fire Had a sweat but short Is working near here and staying al
session of singing, wc Just com­ home with his mother, Mrs James
menced ringing when a severe Stnrkan
lurch of lhe vessel threw us all out
The house recently occupied by
ot our scau. overturned a Jar. and Mr Slack is having a new roof put
broke a bottle of molasses, which on. so we expect some more new
for safety we had placed under the neighbors.
table schoo) was discussed.
Jan. 16 —We are so near the coast
MARTIN CORNERS.
of South America that lhe Captain
Mr and Mrs. Arthur Jones ol
I considered it necessary lo sound Grandville were suppet guests ol
; Found the water 50 fathoms deep. Mr and Mrs Qrr Fisher Saturday
j The water Is of a dirty, greenish evening of last week
! color Daylight here scarcely dlsMrs Jennie Combs and son. For­
1 appears Sun riser, al 4 and sets at
est Mead, ol Kalamazoo were call,
3 Last night it was not dark till 10 ers at Mr and Mrs Barry Well­
and daylight dawned before 2.
man's of Stony Point and Mr am)
Jan. 17.—Great commotion on Mrs Orr Fisher an the state rood
deck and the men reefing the sails. Wednesday afternoon nt last week,
Everything below is rolling about, after returning Mrs Lou Varney'
and ti»e only place of safety I can who spent a week with them, to hei
find is in my berth a heavy sea has home
। Just broken on deck, came down
Club No 2 will entertain lhe L
the hatchway, overflowed the din­ A 8 at the home of Mr:. Carrh
ing room and passed through the Fisher Wednesday, June 24. for sup,
. entry Into lhe cabin This gives you per A cordial invitation h extend­
, a faint description of some of tiie . ed to all
Imogene
Barry
visited
perils lo which we are exposed on I Miss
lhe bosom of the mighty deep.
friends In Pewamo a few days tha
(Continued Next Week.)
| past week.
.
Remember Sunday school and
preaching service at lhe church
next Bunday morning beginning at
10:00 o'clock. Plan to attend.

19c

Splendid Flour

WAX BEANS r.x.
CFI FRY CH..

17c

can

j

ib.

Miracle Whip

CARROTS, TURNIPS, BEETS

15c

2 Ib.

pkg.

Carton Lard

1

25c

15c

J.'u. 10c Postum Cereal
Yukon Club te":
3 XX 25c Coleman's mX,.
Campbell's SouP&gt; A’.::: .3 • 25c Calumet “X

£

!b..

15c

*X'- 12c Grape-Nuts
10c Instant Postum

3 •■■■ 25c Ovaltine
Snowdrift

15c

2-lb.

2

A &amp;P Grape Juice

Baby Foods

17c
15c

10 b"‘ 41c Graham Crackers
2-‘" 15c Sardines “TS?"
1?. 27c Scot Tissue

Sandwich Spread

Ure.

■7," $I.I5 Soda Crackers

Soap Chips

Dried Beef

15c

can

21c Whitehouse Milk
4
15c A&amp;P Starch XX
Wyandotte Cleanser 2 • 15c Argo Gloss Starch 2
Swahsdown
** 23c Morton's Salt
J
Salada Tea
“w
33c Fig Bars
Ritx Crackers

15c

Ib
tin

m u.n,..

CHUNK BACON

u. 19c

ure 15c
u. 20c

COLD MEATS for Sundays Picnic

P FOOD STORES

Edwin Scotsman left here Thurs­
day morning for Pittsburgh, Pa.,
where he expects to stay for an in­
definite time.
Mr. and Mra. Peter Von Hout and
children of Galesburg called on
friends here Bunday.
Mr. and Mra. Clifiord Kahler and
famUy spent Bunday with Mr. and
Mra. Muri Reynolds of Creoaey.
Mr. and Mrs. Cha*. Kahler at­
tended lhe graduating exercises al
Hastings Friday.
Miss
Margaret
Scotsman
U
spending a few days in Hastings
with her cousins.
Mra. Sprague and Mra. Emory
spent over the week end in Kala­
mazoo.
Little Kant Ricker stayed with
his aunt. Mrs. Aidrich, from Fri­
day until Monday, while his par­
ents attended graduation exercises
near Chicago.
*
Seward Walton came Friday tn
spend the summer here with his
grandmother.
Lloyd Owen and family of Dowl­
ing called an E. D. Reynolds Sun­
day.
Mr. and Mra. Ed, Matureen of
Kalamazoo spent three days al their
cottage.
Clyde Bowser is staying a couple
of weeks In the Bowser cottage.

VALUES
60c MUM___________ 39c
75c Fitch's Shampoo ... 44c
J. &amp; J. BABY TALCUM. 19c
50c

SAKSASOl

Shaving Croom

M Ac

w*T

60c MURINE

85c Dextri-Maltose.57c
25c FEENAMINT ...,.17c
35c ODORONO27c
$1.25 Petrolagar89c
50c UNGENTINE39c
60c JAD SALTS

for the eyes"f W
Bottle of 100 HOBART'S
.ASPIRIN, U. S P. ..........................

HQc
LU

50c KOLYNOS
Tooth Paste_______________

KO rex—Box of 12
Wondersoft____ ______________

4 Qc
I O

50c DR. LYON'S
Tooth Powder . .

50c IODENT
Tooth Paste

QQc

Full Pint KINNARD'S
Witch Hesel

_

49'
29‘
35*
... 23*

WINDOW SHADES—We make them to fit your windows!

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Goods Delivered

The REXALL Stere

Phono 2131

ROBINIIUE PARK.
Mrs Hannah Ingram and grand­
daughter of Grand Rapids, the former a cousin of Mr
and
Mrs
George Poland, soent Frldav with
them Bunday callers at the Poland
home were Homer Ingram. Fred
grams"1’ th* Maur,ce and Lj,,c In'

Mr* Macle Pott* and daughters,
I Betty and Mrs Ralph Flnkbclner,
were in Grand Rapid* Wednesday.
ex,Und our J«*pest sympathy
| to our former neighbors. Mr and
Mr" p'rei’ Baley in the loa* of their
son Tom A number from this way
attended
the
funeral
Saturday
morning.
’
1 ...*£ *"? A*”
Poland were
। 111 Orxnd Rapids Wednesday.
OBITUARY.
„,'Ya,la?c wulu,n Townsend, son
°r ‘hr
Davld and «&lt;“beth
,-rownsend. was born in Carlton
J’nuar’' &gt;5. 1M4. and died
at his home. 7iR North East St
Hastings. June 4. |936 He was unit-’
ed in marriage with Nettie Hynes,
h1" !3' 1^?2, t0 whlch union were
born, two daughters. Clo McMillen
of Lansing and Vonda Gary of Chl. cago. He owned farms near Wood­
land and Martin Corners before
moving to Hastings Ln 1915 He was
• carpenter by trade Besides the
widow and two daughters he is *ur'
** ‘T0 aUt*r’ K»U&gt;erine and
! Lottie, and twp brothers. Andrew
•nd Dee. Funeral services were held

home and burial was made In Ful■&gt; w xiiohm,
officiating.
■

OBITUARY.
JUnsom A. Hynes, son of Michael
S?*’ J1"! Hynes, was bom in
Woodland towruhlp. March 11 imi
and died of pneumonia at Pennock
hospital. junFi. i*m at ths age of
seventy-five years. He was one of
! a family of six children Surviving
I ^Ll’\brol,hei'’ Quincy Hynes of
FUnt and Sylvester of Nashville and
tings1* IHUte Townaand °r n***
He was married at Lake Odessa
wh0 preced­
ed him in death by eleven years
Funeral services were twivaie and

Church tn Hosting!, Rev Jones of­
ficiating. butUI in Woodland ceme-

�w mwpiqg woaa, tmcredav, mci n, mm
PnWHFRFn Mil K
runucneu miLR

At the ‘Theatre
Gntt Msers and Franchot Toot
in this picture Miss Moore Hits
her lyric soprano voice to the tune
of Frits Kreialers music, and suc­
ceeds in thrilling all within hearing.
Franchot Tone playa opposite her
in the role of Emperor Francis
Josef of Austria There are plots
and counterplots involving the titled
folks of an European kingdom but
things Anally come out all right, but
not before Miss Moore has filled, the
theater many times with her golden
voice.
'

I thing.WM done for hU comfort. He
COATS GROVE.
wUl be sadly missed by hl* five sons
Word was received here by rela­
MACHINE INSTALLED . and several grandchildren and tives that Wallses Townsend of
_
rnxny friend*.
Hailing* passed away last Thurs­
Haatinffg Milk ProdnotE Oo.
Manson Newton and Allen Ortf- day. His early life wm spent here
.
.
_
fen were in Hastings
Ilaitlnx* nn
on Mondav
Monday and his friends regret his death.
Adds to Its Prosent
afternoon where Allen had his arm The funeral was held at the Wall­
dressed after having broken the dorf! funeral homo Saturday aftEquipment

bone several days ago.
The Hastings Milk Products Co.
Stewart Waters and family spent
has recently installed a large ma­ Bunday at clarence Payne’s near
chine for making powdered milk. Hope center.
There are only two places tn the
Mra. Effie Louden is spending a
United
where such machines। few days with her sister. Miss Lydia
------------------------------------------------------- 7States
are made. Kalamazoo being one of nunn of near Banfleld.
Ih.ir ni.nt h-r- I
Water* and wife and Mrs.
81nc_ opening their pl*nt here. Julla
anti daughter* ot Plainthl* company has been building up
]j were m Hasting* Monday on
a splendid business and with this 1
n*'re m
on
additional machine they will be able 1
'
to stni further increase their trade.
MIDDLEVILLE.
Hastings people are pleased
to
The township board was in ses­
know they are being so successful.
The story concerns an automobile
sion last week Tuesday and two
days thia week. Monday and Tueamechanic, cocky and sure of him- I
EAST DELTON
day. for those who appeal from
self, but who shirks his work at
M.-rimevery ODoortunltv in a fist Aslit ■
®nd Mr*. Sterling Zerbel and the supervisor's judgment
with his bo»*. lhe latter fall* and ■
Our school grade pupils marched
.trike, hi. need th .ueh • »»y th.t
Mr‘ ““Je Kelley .11 ot
.-.
— flees,
■ | Kalamaxoo and Mr*. Lydia Kelley with banners flying, calling atten­
it kills him The mechanic
gets
tion to safety work. A fine thought
to the Boulder Dam in hi* wander­ of near Hickory Comer* were Sun­ well displayed.
ings. and makes something of him­ day afternoon visitors at the home
ot Mr and Mrs. Donald McQuarrle
Thoma* Heany left Thursday A.
self thru his love of a pretty girl.
Mr and Mrs. Hayes Bponable of M for his western home, after a
East Hastings. Mr. and Mr*. Frank two weeks' visit here with friends
Dietrich and Gary
Ander* of Podunk. Mr. and Mr*. Come again. Tom.
One of our teachers has a twin
Romance, comedy, adventure— Percy Vandyke of Kalamazoo, Mr
these elements are expertly joined and Mr* Manson Newton, alio Bert brother. They arc as much alike
tn "Desire." One moment. Marlene Kirkland and son Lee of Richland as two peas in a pod and did they
Dietrich la suavely consummating were visitors on Bunday of Mr. ind have fun on ills recent visit here.
Pupils talked with their teacher (?)
tbe theft of a costly string of pearls Mr*. Alien Griffen.
Mrs bcm Waters. Mrs. Pauline then found out it was lhe other
from a leading Parisian jeweler,
the next, she is facing danger from Rupe and Mrs. Alta Louden. Mr* gentleman. To help things along
customs official* at a border town Katie Kahler and Mra Mlns Bag­ they were dressed alike, even to
In Europe The encounter with Ley. aLno Manson Newton all of this tic* and handkerchiefs they carried
an American
vacationist.
Gary neighborhood attended the funeral Everyone enjoyed the mlxup. even
Cooper, begins with comedy and Saturday afternoon of Mrs Mary one dignified senior
Burges* which was held in Hasting*
Thomaa Beatty of Bowne town­
turns to ardent romance.
Mra Burgc&amp;s wa* bom in our neigh­ ship. Kent county, a former resi­
Gene Raymond in "Love on a Bet." borhood on what is known as Ute dent with his parents of Irving
This rollicking comedy provides Underhill farm and haa spent all township, where he was bom, and
admirably suited roles for lhe tal­ of her life in Barry county. She will lived until this spring, has been
ents of lhe romantic pair Their be sadly missed by her five daugh­ poorly of late On Thursday A M
transcontinental adventure makes ter* and one son. Donald, who re­ he committed suicide by shooting
"Love on a Bet " one of the season's sides st East Delton, besides a num­ himself. Funeral Saturday and bur­
more unusual comedy attractions.
ber of grandchildren and great­ ial in Bowne cemetery Much sym­
grandchildren and many friends.
pathy Is expressed for the bereaved
WMT HOPEMilo Barbour of Polley district
Remember our Children's Day passed away* on Monday. June 1. parents and family.
Charles H. and Mrs Whitmore
program Sunday evening. June 14. after scvcral inonths' Ulnesa. HU fu­
at the church. Everyone cordially neral war field at Ids home on Wed­ of Muskegon were week-end guests
of his parents. G. D. and Mra Whit­
invited.
nesday afternoon. He was a kind more. As they are going to at­
Congratulations tn Rev Isaac Os­ husband and father and a much regood of Wakeshmce on hU marriage r.peXtcd neighbor and will be sadly tend summer school tn Marquette
a
in Huntington. Ind last Wednes­ mpsed hi his home and neighbor­ this summer, they purchased
day to Miss Bernice Hanbour. Rev hood where he has lived for many house trailer and will live in it
After school Is out they plan on
Osgood was born and raised here
years We were very sorry lo hear seeing the beauties of the upper
of the daughter Mrs Vera New­
here attended the funeral of Wal­ kirk's. serious illness al New Bor- part of Michigan until their schools
Other guests
lace Townsend at the Walldorf! fu­ geaa hospital al lhe time of her start In September
of O. D and wife were their son.
neral home al Hastings Saturday father's death.
E. B and family and C. E Storrs
afternoon.
Mr. and Mr* elate Louden were and family, of Hastings. The Storrs
MU* Mildred Osgood, who at­ called to the home of lhe letter's
tended Columbia University the aUter. Lydia Dunn on Thursday remained to attend the exercises
Sunday evening
Mrs
past year ha* accepted a position afternoon on account of the fleith al T K
as designer in a gown .’.hop in New of their father, Rhlcrson Dunn, a Btom and daughter Barbara re­
York City for the summer She also life long resident of Barry Co. He mained over to attend lhe Monday
works in glass etchings, which sell had reached the good old age ot 80 evening class night her daughter
Betty being a member of this year's
in a New York shop
years on Jan 9. 1936 He leaves to
The Church Union met with Mr mourn lhe loss of a kind and loving
Arnold Faulkner, formerly of here
and Mrs Ray Barnes for supper father, three daughters and one son
Wednesday night, with thirty-one beside* several niece* and nephew*, but of late a resident of Battle
wa* a visitor here Bunday.
at the table The July meeting will also several great-grandchildren and Creek,
„cwu,lie. Ulu
Welcome,
old top
a host of friends. Much sympathy is I Hon E E Faulkner of Delton U
Orgood's
I tell for the children, especially Ly- looklnR &lt;n&lt;.r pBull
ror a Ume
We were deeply grieved to hear of
&gt;3.. i
M"‘r
• u‘“r
S'
rn,n’ °i'
h' *nJ 1,111*m"&gt; *"

Mrs Mary be He Johncock an aged
mother 24 years ago.
and Influential resident of the com­
Mr and Mrs Marlon Rupe and
munity She leaves two sons. Er­
son Charles and Mr and Mr* Bliss
nest and Wm R and two daugh­ Boulten spent Sunday near Charters, Lillie Woodmap and Anna lottc with Mr and Mrs Gerald Rupe
Collison, all who live within a mile
and daughter, the occasion being
of her home, six grandchildren and the celebration of the birthdays ot
two great-grandchildren, and many
Mrs Betty Rupe and Mr*. Ruth
friends to whom she was
Aunt
Marybelle" The funeral was Sat­ Boulten.
Willison
Bunday visitor* of Ed \
___
urday with interment in the Pral- I
were Ray Durkee and family
mlly of
rieville cemetery beside her hus­
Delton and Mr and Mrs Albert
band. Richard, who died fifteen
Hartman and daughter Lots of Kel­
years ago
L D Woodman 1* erecting a hip- logg farm.
Rapidly are the old pioneers of
roofed tool shed and granary on the
Barry county being claimed by
site of a cow shed recently tom
death On Bunday evening. Hen
down
Collison, who has spent the p*
3S3 million people live tn 1
| three years with his son. Floyd.

family of Richland in honor Ot children of the Ryan diet
her husband's birthday,
Bunday with his parents.
u. --a
•
thelr son Gerald and family at
Charlotte.
Mr and Mrs John Ventrna and
daughter*. Kathryn and Ruth, and
granddaughter Roaelyn of Otsego
spent Bunday with Mr and Mra.
John Venema, 8r.
Mrs. Nettle Brown returned to
her home Bunday here from Mish­
awaka.- where she spent the past
winter.
Miss Nondies Kraus ac­
companied her home and will re­
main here thia summer. AH are
glad to welcome Mrs. Brown home

A number from here attended lhe
ahower given to Miss Margaret Kel­
sey by Mrs. Velma Demond last
Saturday afternoon.
There were
over fifty present and very nice
gifts were presented to her. Ice
cream and cake erere served.
The Children's Day program will
be given next Sunday evening.
Mrs Lottie Stowell and daughter
Gertrude of Detroit are home for
the summer.
mi.
mra. e..
Mr. miu
and Mrs
E. O. ouuui
Smith simiit
spent
the week end with relatives in Midland.
iana.
Mrs Lenah Wood of Hastings Is
visiting at Warner Kelsey's.
Mina Beatrice Tuckerman of Assyrla spent last week tn the Wil­
lard Demond home.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Sease and
family. Mr. and Mra. Oecar Cooper
and Mr and Mrs Willard Demond
tt^CBundav~wlth’Mr'“and"ur«
JbeGriflln of Southeast Woodland
It was a isurnrlse on Mr Griffin
°n . ~r
They enjoyed a pot luck dinner
Mr and Mrs Frank Furlong also
called here in the afternoon.
Mr and Mrs
Frank Furgeson
went with Mr
and Mraw E 8.
Thompson to West Sebewa last
Sunday morning to church and
spent the rest of the day In the
Thompson home

Sunday afternoon runts at Ur.

Richard of Flint and Lansing and
Mr. and Mrs. Post and grand­
daughter. Johanna Baird of Has- aiat Mra. Rogers with the household
datlaa during the summer vacation. funeral
Visitors at lhe home of Mr. and
Mrs. Edw. Walters Bunday were Mr.
of WriaM Dunn
and Mrs. Henry Yankee of Morley tended Children's Day exercise* at Mr and Mrs. H.
and Mr. and Mra. Charles Kohler the church where Mr. Champion
of Amble.
family.
her «c««uua
serious uuicsb
illness isms
lait rail.
fall
Her ] Mrs. Arnold Malcolm. Norris and
MUs Venice Austin a
daughters.
Mrs.
Belle
Miner of Charlotte
Lake-------------------Odessa were
Mr. and Mra Ward Undaay en­ visited her grandparents
—-y--------- —
— —
-—
—
- ---- -------- of
--------------- 1 M^h*wak» and Mra lone Wilken- Sunday afternoon caUera at the tertained friends from Lansing for
Mrs John Hallock ’
aon of Kalamaaoo, came home with home of mt. and Mra. John Mai- ,
| Prank Hallock's in DeHon
colm.
her ,n&lt;l •P’*** the day
Mrs. Claude A. Hammond called
''
"
on Mrs. Clarence Workman and
Mr*. Fred OU* and Mr. and Mra.' Mrs. Wm Murphy, both of whom
Forrest Haven* attended the tu- । are seriously ill. In Hastings Sunday
neral of Mr*. Johncock at lhe home . afternoon.
last Saturday afternoon.
■
■ ■ e w»
Several from thia vicinity attend- '
pine LAKE.
«&lt;i ‘he graduation exercise* at Has-1 on Wednesday afternoon the
' 2?° •“tJTUiay
Mia* Genevieve Helping Hand club met with Mrs
i Erwa!
Herman Newland were ausie Hall with a very good altendthe
anea enlv
nve members
memiwr. being .h.
the graduates
graduates from
from thl*
this nelxhborneighbor- i| ance.
only five
abhood.
sent, a short business session was
John and Gordon Havens of Has- held with Mrs. Champion presiding,
tings were week end visitors at their Following this Mrs. Nettle Keyes
home here.
I presented a very interesting pro­
Dolores McUlockiln of Hastings Is gram, on “The Tame Flowers of
spending several weeks with her : Michigan." which dealt with transgrandparenU. Mr and Mrs. Forrest planting,
• —
----- ...types of...
cultrvatlon.
soil,
Havens
treatment of all plant enemies and
Bunday visitors at Clyde Warren's a very Instructive article on pyrelh- ,
were.
Mr
and
Mrs
HPoster
and
erun.
a
possible
future
cash
crop
for
NORTHWEST THORNAPFLE.
Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Oates of Lan­ Michigan fanners Tn the contest,
MUs Fem Kermeen had a few sing and R. D. Gates and mother of naming common flowers from col- 1
days’ vacation last week from her Eaton Rapids
cred Illustrations. Clara Scott was ।
duties al lhe Battle Creek Sani­
Mrs. Elma Brisbo of Lansing is the winner. A dainty lunch was
tarium. which she spent with her spending a few weeks with her
served by the members, whose birth­
parents and friends here
daughter. Mrs. Clyde Warren and days occur in the last half of the
cost washlnM fi&gt;r yean and years. The extra
Mr and Mrs Wm. Roach of Port family
year to those whose natal day is in
fine Bitten s’ and workmanship throughout will
Huron spent the week end al the
Mr and Mrs. Roy Erway and fam­ the first six months. The July meet­
appeal io your sense of true economy. There's aa
Morgan and Thomas homes.
ily and Mrs Clara Robinson spent ing will be held with Mrs Ellie
Mr N C. Thomas of Grand Bunday with Louie Erway and
Champion.
Rapids was a Saturday evening family In Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nichols of
guest of Mr
and Mrs. Verne
Mr and Mra. Geo. Bhiptnan of Lansing spent lhe week end with
Thomas.
Flint were Tuesday over night Clara Nichols.
Mr snd Mrs. Ray Barton of visitors at Roy Erway'*. Bunday
Mrs. Hattie Seattle, who has
Grand Rapids were Saturday morn­ guests were Mr and Mra Lowell
spent the past five weeks with her
ing callers of Mr and Mrs Willis Whittemore from near Delton
Sister, Mrs Bellingham returned to
Word.
Mr and Mra. Russell Whittemore her home at Little Crooked lake on
Mrs Claude
Rosenberg enter­ visited the letter's parents in Has­ Friday.
tained the Social Club at her home tings Bunday.
Guests in lhe Floyd Miner home
Thursday and everyone sure had a
Mr and Mra. Chas. Whittemore the past waek were Mrs Ruth 8ibfine time and helped Mrs Rosen­ called on lhe former* motiver in bersen and children of Plainwell,
berg tie a lovely friendship quilt. Delton Bunday.
and Patriela Miner of Homer.
This was the last meeting of the
Mrs. Rogers of Kalamazoo was

9*^ UjP

MAYTAG

Vuit the MAYTAG DEALER Near You

Wm Tungate of Washington. D
C-. spent the week end with his
mother. Mrs. Louretta TungaU-

THREE CORNERS.

impact-«■&gt;».&gt;" tWiumiaiuMau

Saturday afternoon guests of Mr.
and Mrs Edw Wallers were Thom­
as Kain of Midland and H AChristiansen of Edmore
ORANGEVILLE.
Mrs. Henry Thompson and son.
Mr and Mrs. Jule Livingston of Frank, of Bowne. were Sunday eveJackson spent Sunday with his par- i ning guests of the former a father,
enu, Mr and Mrs Fred Livingston ' M E Moore and aunt. Miss Clara
of this place
J. Sisson other guests for the eveMrs Mary Beattie df Kalamaxoo ning were Mr and Mrs. John Rlckwaa a guest of Mr and Mrs. Charlie ert of Freeport.
Crawford Sunday
। Miss Marguerite Yeiter of the
Mrs. Marcius Bagley entertained. Grand Rapids City hospital stall
Sunday. Mr and Mrs Dorr Backus, I wa* an over the week end guest of
Mr. and Mr* James Bolton. Mrs. her parents. Mr and Mrs Clair
Lawrence Vicgowan of Galesburg Yeiter.

,
'
i
’
।
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HIGH

(mmi

nii.it

DOUAH)

ml&gt;s of Indian empire—al- family passed away after sev
most one-fifth of lhe world's people months illness He was tend
am er ent languages are spoken, cared for In this home where ev

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preciation and long life —- as well as low

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Dollars do go farther In the Ford V-fl.

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ARE you ready to begin studying
maps? To pick out place* you
would like to visit, and sights you
would like to see during your vacation ?
’i hen you can find a wide and wonder­
ful agsortment in a map of Michigan,
it is the map of a state with an area
of fifty-eight thousand square miles.
Within it* Borders you can find many of
America's outstanding points of inter­
est. Scenes of*.historic association;
great cities: beautiful modern build-&lt;
ings; vast open country Crossed by the
finest of highways; primeval for•ate; five thousand lakes, large
and small; scenic beauty of every

kind—all these lures, surpassing many
of those which people travel abroad to
see, are spread before you when you
study a map of the Wolverine btata.
Wc urge you to consider Michigan
when planning your vacation. Let ytxif
friend* in neighboring auts* know sshfit I
holiday pleasure* can be fouaui h&lt;rf.
You will be doing them a firnr dW |
promoting good will for Mtchigatt,
A* our part in such promotitM* Ab J
series ef advertMasnassts i
lished in newspapers thr
State by a Michigan
that‘ caapf«
chiraftg of

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE

�THI HASTINGS BANNER, THUK8DAT, JUKI 11, 1»M
bereaved and to fit btr.de the re­ !the corpse. ThL- reveiatisr. sent
main*, according to the Old Country them scurrying beck several miles
Irish custom to guard it from evil to the steep bank of lhe dreek be­
spirts of lhe Invisible world. While fore the last riles could be complet­
ed and lhe remain* of lhe pioneer
this was being done the Jug of whis­
woodsmau consigned
to Mother
key would be passed around to stim­
Earth and hl* dust mingle with the
ulate the feeling* of the *ympalheUc
friends and rouse them from their red soil of lhe Waxhaws.
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
The
mother
of
Andrew
Jackson
depressed state. At the Jackson
home, on the morning after the met the great affliction in lhe death
complalnt. no matter what befalls wake, the little procession started of her beloved husband with a for­
that---------demonstrated
for the Waxhaw church and ceme-1' titude
— -------------- --- that
—- she
Uy Umbered; the people were very tery with the remains and the cus- was a most heroic soul, and pos­
tomary Jug of liquid enthusiasm. A sessed a spirit well worthy of her Uheavy
snow
had
fallen,
and
the
lustrious
son
no bridges over streams: the coun­
childhood
Andrew -Jacka sled drawn I From chlldh.ccd
.•.r.dr"Ou
retuen* neutnoor*
luut coffin was put
uul on ■■
------------- up ------ - :try mi
was xnarseiv
sparsely settled;
neighbors rude
far apart
_.. house*
&gt;__ ,_______
small
&gt;i and families
in.. by a mule. At the Waxhaw Creek son was independent and self-willed
lam. Between neighbors there was I ford, while going up the steep bank ■ He fought his own bailies and in­
a strong bond of svmpalhy. espe- of the creek, all unnoticed lhe rude J variably with success It doubtless
Hally when death entered the home, coffin slipped off the sled. This pain- -erved him in good stead and helped
Thus when the elder Andrew Jack- j ful incident wa* not discovered un- to round out his career as the hero
son died, neighbors came from far , til the pal) bearers arrived at the of the Battle of New Orleans and as
and near to aympathize with lhe graveside with the sled, but not President of lhe United States.

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BORDEN'S

CARAMELS

CLAY HILLS.

Morris Lewi* and wife of Kala­
mazoo and Julian PotU and family
the last ditch before I will see our terms but the west Inspired by Oen.
union disunited.
Your
Sincere1 Jackson wouldn't consider it. Pen­ spent Tuesday evening at Leon
Friend Andrew Jackson." Pages sacola. under control of Spain, and PotU’.
Several from this locality attend­
could be written about the activities Barrancas near by. occupied by the
was made. Troops of Cornwallis
of Aaron Burr, Gen. James Wilkin­ British, were constant threats to ed the funeral of Tom Batey last
son and others, accused of plotting all that part of the country be­ Saturday. We extend our sympathy
were working their way lo York­
to disunite the union. French ur­ cause of their aiding and encourag­ to lhe bereaved family.
town where his surrender later look
banity. Spanish deceit. Creek sav­ ing Indian uprisings. So Oen. Jack­
Mr. Gallsler of Middleville was
1 place The British Commander in
agery. and treachery of prominent son made one of his dare devil at­ on our street last Saturday fore­
chief had Invaded lhe Waxhaws and
American* were all mixed up in a tacks and took Pensacola and Bar­ noon.
had penned this proclamation;—
mystifying
mare
A*
an
example.
Whereas, notwithstanding HU Maj­
rancas. To see the British red-coats
Leon Potla and wife attended tha
3.500 Tennessee troops under Oen. fleeing before lhe advancing Amer­ Prairie school reunion last Saturday
esty's unparalleled clemency, cer­
Jackson were ords-red to New Or­ icans, completely destroyed all re­ afternoon.
tain deluded subjects, either in the
service of the rebel Congress, or by । The Revolutionary war. In which leans Arriving there, they were spect that lhe die-hard Creek and
John Luckao and family enter­
abandoning their plantations, op- • hr served as a Ud. was over. The completely Ignored, and later in­ Seminole Indians had for the Eng­ tained relative* from Grand Rap­
pose His Majesty* J tut and lawful' boy. Andrew Jackson, had won formed that they were dismissed, lish Invaders who had promised id* gunday.
authority. I have
lhe•«estate*
i ordered-*—
•*-- .- something of a reputation as a with no provision to feed them and them so much. The destitute red
Miss Bertha McCaul of Bowne
belonging to traitor* above described • scrapper," ready to avenge any In­ return them to their homes. The I men fled Into the swamps of Flor­
to be sequestered. Given under my sult with a .fight "at the drop of lhe purpose was to get Jackson out of1' Ida. Jackson's feats thrilled the Center spent Sunday with iier mo til­
band in lhe Warsaw the 6th day hat" The ability, good Judgment the way. hoping that hi* Tennessee west, Inspired confidence in his men, er. Mrs Sarah McCaul.
Ray McCaul I* painting hla farm
of September one thousand seven and quick thinking of the young fighter* would enlist under other | and was not without Ils influence in
I hundred and eighty. Cornwallis "
man were recognized
But for a leadership. Gen. Jackson checkmat­ other sections of the country. They residence.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Johnson of
provisions, at least were aware that here was a
' Tarletons brutal
cavalry had brief time, following the close of ed thl* by furnishing
Bowne. were visitors at Leon PotU*
wrought great destruction in the the war. hU life seemed to be quite and return transportation at his fearless leader who "did things."
Sunday. Other callers there that
Waxhaws in an evident attempt to an exhilarated cycle of personal en­ own expense.
1 New Orleans at thia time was a day were Vance Sharp and family.
in
1811
the
magnetic
Indian
frighten the people into submission, counters. mixed up with fighting,
hot bed of disloyalty and Ailed with
and ------------------horse-racing
Then Chieftain Tecumseh who left his people who were promoting a plot to Ralph Ftnkbelner and family of
but he had not taken into account gambling
.--------- -- ------• ------Middleville, Mr. and Mrs. Morris
inere &gt;xre
their fighting spirit. Though out-1 he look to the law. was admitted to impress tn Michigan and was one aivl&lt;Je
divide [ne
the unwn
union. There
were con- Lewis of Kalamazoo and Mr. and
numbered and but poorly armed in the bar. built up a large practice,
-&gt;i— of the remarkable personalities of sl-nl caU&gt; for Oen Jack40n and hls
Mrs. Roy McCaul
comparison with the British invad­ was very successful, and recognized our history, visited many tribes, to Uoop$ and lhe plea wM made ihgt
Mr and Mra. Chas. Gibbs were
able couiixi
counsel The
mr people of
oi the
me Waxhaws
waxnaws with
wim as an uuic
i nr "code" was nrlii*
ers. the
bring aooui
■b°ut aa reii
red until
man cuiururiuu nothing but his dominating pres­ Sunday visitors at Steve Miller s.
* never-say-die spirit made sudder, in effect at that time and duels were ( from
.
—
the
- Great
-• Lake*
- — to
- lhe
- Gulf,
.. ,jence COU|jj aave
situation. It
overcome the invasion of their’ was Gen. Jackson's firm belief that
forays and unexpected attacks They comnjon. It wasn't wise for any to :r.;
HOPE CENTER.
were a constant threat to the in- • man to cast an in*ult. unless he was ( hunting grounds by the white men when the British struck. It would be
Mrs. Lucy Leonard. Mrs. Mina
I cruder* despite British assaults and willing
— ’to
* shoot it out ~
,,u pistols 1------------------- oratory of Tecumreii
'■
with
The magnetic
be at Mobile, so that New Orleans
the sufferings they had to endure at 24 feet on the -field of honor." ^on them, and Creeks. Seminoles would be attacked from up the Mis­ Aldrich. Mrs. Floy McDermott. Mrs.
One uf lhe must Impetuous oppo­ Otherwise you would be advertised t and other* starlet! a great uprising sissippi. which if successful would L O. Dunning attended Die funeral
nents of the unwelcome British was In lhe newspaper as a "coward." the that was o serious threat With a cut off all supplies. After putting of Mrs. Mary Burgess in Hastings
I 13 year old Andrew Jackson, who advertisement being paid for by the small force of men and constantly Mobile In a strong position defen­ Saturday.
Earl Galfs and wife attended the
One of Jackson's exposed to ahot and arrow. Andrew sively. Jackson again went to New
| had many narrow escapes before he offended party
was finally made a captive Noting bitter enemies. Charles Dickinson, Jackson set out on a whirlwind cam­ Orleans where he was most cor­ graduating exercises In Hastings
his youth, the Imperious British made a slighting remark about paign to overcome Ulis seriou* In­ dially welcomed by Its loyal inhabi­ Friday
Claude
Mosher and wife attend­
leader ordered lhe young boy to Jackson and in a newspaper article dian threat. The success of that tants and secretly scorned by the
clean lhe mud off of his boots Thia called him a coward, also making a campaign will always remain as one many disloyal one*. Fortunate it ed the Normal graduating exercise*
I the young lad indignantly refused slighting remark about Mrs Jack­ of extreme brilliancy and fortitude was that he went there, because Ln Hastings Thursday, MUs Irene
to do. saying that he expected the son. That was more than enough. on Andrew Jackson's part Ils com­ about the lime of his arrival the Sheilenbarger being one of the
I same treatment as any other prlson- Jackson promptly challenged the plete success won (or him a Major British armada, with thousands of graduates
Mr. and Mrs. c. B McDermott
,11U „
iuusmiu&gt; ot Muvp
._
author of lhe article to a duel, and Generalship, with command of the ' MrMUM4
seamen, and
thousands
troops.
officer drew his sword and aimed a the challenge promptly accepted, 7lh Military District, embracing । waa on tta way
Louisiana. having attended lhe funeral ot Mr. R.
by
violent blow at young Jackson's head. terms being arranged
..
, .friends It Tennessee. Louisiana and
-nd Mississip
Misxtuln-­ declded lo altBck LouHUna rather Dunn near Benfield Sunday.
Stewart
Walton, from Illinois,
Throwing up hl* left arm. the lad's was the understanding and lhe un­ pi Territory. Florida seethed with than Mobile There were six prin­
hand was cut lo tile bone and a written law, that should either par­ plotting, and despite his victory' over cipal ways, by roads or river, that visited his grandmother. Mrs. Wm.
slash across hi* head, that left a ty to a duel shoot before live word the Indians. Spanish and British the British could reach New Or­ Aldrich over lhe week end.
Mr and Mr*. Fred Ashby and
long scar that was with him as long "Are" was given.
thf seconds alike were again enlisting the sup­ leans. and the wise old General at
as he lived But "time" often has a pledged themselves to shoot lhe of- port of Indians through promises of once stationed his troop* *o that son* Lyle and Maurice visited their
way of evening up all things. That *fender
“■*— down
-•----- *---------instantly The outcome assistance Gen. Jackson warned lhe all avenues of approach would be son. Clyde, and wife in Comstock
Sunday.
of
the
duel
was
that
Dickinson
fell
cowardly blow didn't help the cause
country of
approaching
conflict protected. All this happened at a
Little Kent Ricker, of Hastings
i of England in any way and young mortally wounded, while Jackson with England—and it came Even time when specie paymenu had
Andrew vowed that he would "get received a severe wound in the left the city of Washington was taken been suspended by nearly all banks spent lhe week end with Mrs W E.
by lhe British; the Capitol burned, west of tbe Hudson; when troops Aldrich, while Mr. and Mrs. Carl
1 even" if lhe opportunity ever came breast
1 Thirty years later the time did
We of this generation cannot Nantucket captured New England had not been paid; when New Eng­ Ricker attended the graduating ex­
I come and he was to have sweet re­ know of the secret plotting that was shuddered; banks
buried
their land Federalists were crying for ercises of Ute latter's brother near
e
venge al the battle of New Orleans going on at that lime among other specie and people fled
A large peace at any price; and even the I Ionia
Mr and Mrs. Clare Ashby and
1 where ire was in absolute command powers to Iminper the growth of thia British fleet landed at Pensacola Governor of Massachusetu criti­
As if the invading British were not young republic We hod made „„
the and Spain shed pretense of neu­ cising lhe American commissioners children accompanied by John Llbbhart.
visited
Mrs.
Ashby's
parents,
The commanding officers at Ghent for rejecting the British
enough for the little settlement to Louisiana Purchase, but because of trality
contend with, the scourge of small our small population and few set­ issued the toilowing proclamation
demand for cession of the north­ Mr and Mrs Wil) Trine In Mar­
1 pox broke out Today the disease tlements. our control over the ter­ ■Natives of Louisiana, on you the west Surely that was not an en­ shal) Sunday and found her grand­
has been conquered through serum ritory we had bought was very first cal) is made to assist in liber­ couraging situation under which to mother very low
and death from small pox is al­ limited There were plots lo take the ating your paternal soil American defend our country against lhe
OBITUARY.
most unknown At that lime It was country we had purchased away usurpation must be abolished I am greatest naval power of the world.
taking one-tenth, and marking one- from us To accomplish this Spain at the head of a large body of In­ and a country
, experienced in fight- j Emma
Jane Slmpaon. oldest
fifth of all mankind Isn't that a had hired prominent military men dians. well armed, disciplined and !«&gt;■&gt;
ErnprlrRHE of
ing tI wonder IF
if the Americans
of rlnililhter
daughter of Myron and Chressa
glorious tribute to medical science? as spies Aaron Burr was mixed commanded by British officers—a today arc made of that kind of Simpson, was born in Hope Twp.
Among the victims in the Waxhaw up in a plot to subjugate Mexico good train of artillery, seconded by stuff?
Bnrry Co. Michigan. May 34. 1858
settlement were the two Jackson which was said to be part of the a numerous British and Spanish
W R. Cook.
She was united in marriage to Lewis
boys. Robert and Andrew both of plan The plot as outlined was to squadron Be not alarmed at our
J Dubois January 5. 1876 She de­
whom had been liberated from cap­ seize New Orleans and Louisiana, approach A flag over any door
parted this life at Leila hospital.
CEDAR CREEK.
tivity through an exchange of prls- conquer Mexico, and Join all this i whether Spanish. French or British
The county raid machinery have Battle Creek on her 78th birthday.
oners arranged through lhe efforts with the western territory—thus------I will be certain
--------protection" After been improving lhe roads in this May 24. 1936 Site leaves to mourn
[ of their mother Both were suffering really dividing the union Writing to landing at Pensacola the plan was vicinity of late, for which we are al) a loving husband, one brother. Ad­
‘ from
cowardly
inflicted
saber United Slates Senator Smith Jack*■*«• the mouth of the Misslsslp- glad.
dison Simpson of Midland Park.
I wounds that had not been cared for son said "I hope I may be mistok- pi. Mobile, and Louisiana The de­
Several young people of this place Gull lake; two slaters. Mrs Ettie
and both of them coming down en. but I believe that such a plan feat of tile British at Fort Bowyer met at the home of Vern and Knestrlck of Climax and Mrs. Ella
with small pox Robert died from (to divide the union! is In opera-I in Mobile Bay gave encouragement Frances Campbell on Saturday eve­ Wertman of Delton, two nieces and
the disease and Andrew came close tlon just xs much as I believe there to the loyal American troops At- ning. June 5. and helped them cele­ three nephews, beside* a host of
to it By the time he was on the is a God Say to the President that I tacked by a very strong British fleet brate their birthdays
relatives and friends
She was a
road to recovery the scourge had lie has no time to lore, and to give i and greatly outnumbered as tn men
.... Sunday
---------------------------Last
the barn -----rats got kind and loving wife, sister and
laid hold of many of the young orders for the defense of New Or- ; and guns, the little American force about 125 chickens from Mrs Clar- aunt, loved by al) her relatives and
people who were left, while the old­ leans ’ Without waiting for a reply had put several of lhe attacking Pnce Campbell
j friends, always doing for others, not
er ones were at the front Andrew- from the President, he then wrote ; British ships out of commission and ,
Mrs
Erma Owen spent last• week ! thinking of herself
Funeral rerv-Jackson's tearless mother realized to Gov Claiborne of Louisiana — , forcing them to retire
in Kalamazoo
| ices were held at the home in Authe need of nursing the boys from "I fear treachery has become the | The British had captured Wash­
Elmer Harshberger's son and , gusta Wednesday at 3 P M.. Rev.
.
—
....
-------«
—
----------।
E
m
otl
officiating,
with
burial in Oehome
She sensed the personal order of the day
Put your town &gt; ington. the national capltol.
pitol, •"
the family of Grand Rapids spent Sundanger of such an undertaking She ‘n a state of defense Keep a watch- ' treasury was empty, reci'tl
—.. for —
i Utting
day
Elmer
and his wife of------this' dar Creek cemetery
, with —
----------------------------seemingly had s premonition of ful eye on your Commanding Oen- I defense tiad been discontinued for place
' We are sad since Emma left us.
what was going to happen to her ertil who was said to be in the rerv- 1 lack of funds, cry of disunion was
Mr
_________________
and Mrs Henry Wertman
—
and We shall greet her hare no more.
*
- - - spent. Sunday
.
.k
Qegth has qaUed and gently borne
With tears streaming down her ice of Spain as a spy and beware of I raised in New England
It was i Louie
DuBois
al. lhe
cheeks, when she took leave of An­ an attack by Spain I love my coun- I doubtless the blackest hour since | home of Will Conestrick and
drew. she advised him
make try and government. I hate Dons Valley Forge
President Madison Climax
From us. to the other shore;
Long her feeble steps have warned

them by being steadfast; never tell
a lie; nor take what is not your
own. nor sue for slander—settle those
cases yourself." That advice came
from a mother's heart of pure gold
and he accepted It as the rule of hl*
life. Il must have had Ils influence
on lhe capable, patriotic son. be­
cause he surely did -settle hla cases
himself." Hl* brave hearted mother
soon contracted small pox. while
nursing the young boys and girls
afflicted with it. and she died shorl-

No. 2 con 10c
No. 2 can 10c

ROYAL KEIFFERB
ro&lt;
8,

“SALADA”

LBS.

Red, Ripe

NAVY BEANS
RICE FANCY BLUE ROSE
EGG NOODLES

10c

Hb real
.
military
Experience
, commenced In the latter day* of
| the Revolutionary War. In 1780.
'though a lad of only 13 years, he
| demonstrated the stuff of which he

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

$495

vidual need*.

Cas^R^nge we can
sell you for only—

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO.
Phone 2121

Ford Dealers

Call and see for youneif and see what a beautiful

Hastings

$AQ.50
T X*
j v

and your
old stove

MILLER FURNITURE CO
HASTINGS

PHONE 212«

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JUNE 11, IBM
Mr. and Mra. william Boda of nard
DURFEE.
I
HOLMES CHURCH.
Un. Mildred Morgan and Mrs. Elsie
THIEVING GYPSIES
Lansing were Sunday guests at the'Bernice
Bronson of Hsstlng3 called on Mr.
Come to the children's Day ex- Last Week’s Letter.
I *“““
and Mrs. Bordy Rowladar Bunday erclses at the East Baltimore' Mrs. Joseph crockford has re­ Robert Van Byckle home.
ROB MAPLE GROVE MAN
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Wilson and Hastings and Hany Senalba ot
evanlng.
church next Bunday morning,'June . turned from a week's visit in Grand
1 Haven. Her daughter. Mrs. Robert Vivian from Kalamazoo, Mr. and
Snatch His Pocket Book,
Mr. and Mrs. Wyant and Mr. and 14. Everyone welcome.
Mra.
Roy
Shultz
of
Hastings
caUm al Bartle Smith s.
The East Baltimore Aid Society , Owens, came with her and stayed
C. F. Angell was tn Eaton Rapids Mix. Stanley Earl of Kalamo vis­
Take 123.00 and Vaniih
and MIm June Day from Vermont­
will be entertained by Mrs. Orpha ; over the week end.
Saturday on playground schedule ited Glenard Earl Sunday.
Greenfield and Mrs Gladys Couch
Mrs. Lois wickham entertained ville spent Bunday with Roy Wick­
in High Powered Oar
arrangements, and at Grand Ledge
Clayton and Ruby Webb visited Wednesday, June 17 at lhe home of1 lhe Welcome school at her home ham and family.
McClelland's Thursday
Why a gypsy? And why docs the Bunday evening for baccalaureate Arthur and Opal webb of Battle
Mbs Margaret Perkins and Frank
the former. Pot luck dinner Come I Friday, since It was the last day of
state and federal government allow exercises.
Creek Bunday.
*
- and bring your company.
Cronk of Hastings. spent Bunday EAST WALL LAKE
| the school year.
these peats lo roam at large in this
with Mr. and Mra. Carl Perkins.
Mrs. Chas. Harrington, Clayton,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Edward
Rice
and
Mrs.
Mary
Oversmith
went
to
missionary
was
a
most
interesting
‘
AND VICINITY.
country? That question came up
Ruby. Garnet and Harold Webb daughter Vela attended Lhe funeral1 Grand Rapids Bunday and again
Last Week's LatUr.
very forcibly to William Fox of speaker lo the ministers and their
TAMARAC.
accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Clair of George Kellar at Yankee Springs I Tuesday for medical treatment.
Maple Grove early Thursday morn­ wives for their annual picnic last
Van Byckle of Lansing to Detroit Sunday.
'
Mr and Mrs clarence Ncubaum Last Week's Leiter.
ing. after he had had an experience
near
Doster
were
Bunday visitors With
Mr. and Mrs. McConnell of Grand
Branch
Rickey, of -the St. Louis Friday and visited lhe air port,4 The funeral of Mrs. E- A Rey- . of Buttle Creek spent Saturday and
band's
with
WIMI three
nuw ajpaiu,.
gypsies lit
He was
wm near uu,
his
—
-—
Isle —
and
other places
of •in­ nolds was held at the East Balli- Sunday with her parents. Mr. and Rapids, Mr. and Mrs. M. A thorn at E. D. Reynolds'.
•* -*•
-------------home when a gypsy male and two cardinals Is lhe lead off man at the Belle •-*The vreeland family from Detroit
of Sparta. Mra. Ora Lehman of
Brethren
church Mrs Walter Durkee
gypsy women, all wall dressed. National Hl-Y Congress In Berea, terest. On their return home they more United
Mr and Mrs Henry Brovont and | Wamervllle, Mrs. Laurence Chase. spent Saturday at their cottage
Thursday at two o'clock, lhe Rev E
travelling in a fine car. stopped in 1 June 20-24.
...... ...
spending this week
front of his place. The two women j EUb Cross of Middlevllle was son and the fountain at Marshall Gamble officiating.
,| his father arc------------------------------ in
.. I Mr. and Mra. W. Kelsey of Coats here.
an- Grove. Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs Jerry Fisher
Mrs. Tom Hoffman
and
Mrs Kansas Cifv
City attendimr
attending their ancame to him saying that they elected President of Middleville Hl- A happy but tired bunch when
Mr and Mrs Raymond Bacon and penetrated deep
of Woodland. Mr and Mr*. Randall of Flushing. Mich., called on Mr. munity in which aha
Edward Rice and daughter Vela at- nual church meetings,
wbhed to procure a couple of spike, i Y Olub. and has already enrolled they reached home that night.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Shaffer and tended the graduating exercises in ; Mr and Mrs Clair Steiner of Lipscomb and daughter and grand­ and Mrs. Chas. Kahler Sunday.
from him Mr Fox wanted to actraining camp of Hi-Y offlDayton. Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. John . daughter of Grand Rapids were
commodite them When he was cm al Torch teke August 21-». son Homer and Mrs. Millie Flury Hastings Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler ac­ daughter and husband, four
Rev E Gamble of this place wit- Woodman from cast of Coat* Grove week end and Bunday callers at companied by Mr. and Mrs. Muri eons, James. Bradford,
reaching up to the place where he J where Dr. W. H. Aulenbach of of Otsego spent lhe Decoration Day
end at
Mrs Flury'a
... ....o,
. .m cottage. ixcssro
ne&amp;sed the
inc marriage ui
of iik
his» vhiwi
eldest • and .*n
Mr and Mr* iih
Harry
. &gt; y Woodman Boston cotton's.
kept lhe big naiLs one of the women I cranbrook and Glen M- Frye of week v..w
Reynolds of Cressey enjoyed a trip Louis Hlnc- '
~
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bruett of io
Micmgan last
uui Thursday
mursaay ana
snatched his pocketbook from his Lansing will be two of the InspLra- Relatives from Lansing were there daughter. Jeanne Gamble, to Jerry of Grand Rapids spent Bunday with
lo lmlc
Lake Michigan
and Blanchard. ,—__
Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Bcr-1 also visited friends at EastmanviUe. nephews and friends.
Sunday-________ _ _ _
hlp pocket; then both ran to the
speaker. We expect s whole Sunday^
Boumcn. Friday evening at Grand Hubert Barnum and family.
•
•
•
Rnnids
1
_____________
_
____________________
car. where lhe man was waiting for carload to attend their big camp
Rapids.
ASSYRIA.
them They took 523 In cash from Jrom
Barry-Eaton area.
Mr and Mrs Ralph Sinker and
the pocketbook.
pocketbook." They threw
threw’the
An unusually good group «*
of leaddaughter
Esther
were
Sunday
**
Last Week's Letter.
pocketbook. wi
which
of -•••
Mr. —
and
Mrs.
pocketbook,
'-' contained
' '
' a note
‘ ,cra Is being secured for the two sec­
The high school students oi guests
—*■ —
■ *• m
’“- William ,
tor 8100, Into the yard, got into the Hons of camp Barry Boys July 6-14 Bellevue were through school work Hoffman MIm Doris Hoffman who
nni.A"
n
.v.
unrnt
la*t
week
with
relatives
111
car and vanished Mr Fox started I Oirb 15-23 and new equipment U !«.■
spent
last
week
with
relatives
Ui
last week Wilson Thomas was one •'
after them. They were headed lo- 1 being added.
__________
returned home Sunday.
'of the class of 1B30 The several Plainwell
1
ward Nashville, and he hoped lo
students of Hastings High school
HICKORY CORNERS.
catch them, but they evidently |
highbank.
which closes this week. Forest Cole
turned off on a side road and have
The Children's day program will Ernest Van Byckle, Beatrice Buxton
Mr and Mrs Marlin Pete
not been seen since
I b* 8&gt;vcn
t»» NQrth Evangelical Leola Cortrlght,
are returning itile parents of a baby daughter
A few years ago gypsies used to church Sunday evening. June 14. home for vacation
&lt; Geraldine Anne May. born Tuesday
travel In droves and. by lhe sheer Everyone welcome.
With the holiday coming on Sat- 11May 26th
force of numbers, overawed folks and
Mr and Mrs. Clyde Reid are the urday and no mall deliveries for two
Mr. and Mrs Pele Young of Bat­
carried on their thieving operations parents of a baby daughter born days our mail boxes were well filled I Itle Creek spent Memorial Day as
But the officers made II so interest- Saturday evening. June 6
Named on Monday's delivery
| ।guests of Mr and Mrs. Ross Whlding for them that they have aban- Phoebe Joyce
Mr and Mrs Aaron Treece of Iby
'
doned that plan Now there are us- |
Mr and Mrs Prank Jones and Allegan and Mr. and Mrs Ehret i
K program consisting of music,
ually not more than three, some- daughter Gloria of Battle Creek Skidmore of Augusta were guests | flag salute and drill, readings and a
limes four, gypsies In a crew who spent Saturday, and Mr and Mrs on Saturday of Mr and Mrs. Fred splendid address at the local Meth­
travel by themselves They evidently Lyle Jones of Nashville were at Mr Miller and the Millers took*them ’ odist Protestant church followed by
know where to strike, and when they and Mrs. Frank HawbllU’s Friday ' home on Sunday
decorating of graves was Hickory
Sunday dinner guests at Mr and1
Mr and Mrs Charlie Purcell ac- &gt;Corners' contribution to the keep­
get their hands on money they beat
and all other suburb.. town rocehlH (as from the tattiag Plant.
It
They roam about in high- Mrs. Fred Reid's were Mr and Mrs companied Mr and Mrs Fred Ml&gt;­ ing of Memorial Day
powered cars, and it is not easy to Milo Kecks and family of Bedford,' ler Lo Buttle Creek on Friday to
Among those from away who alcatcli up with them They are in- Mr and Mrs Lowell Friable, Mr.: attend the funeral of a brother-ln- tertded the funeral of Mrs Mirurl
veterute thieves The best thing to [ and Mrs Hunter of Kalamazoo, and1 law. George Reece
M Rockwell Friday were Mrs. Bert
do is to set the dog on them, or get Mr and Mrs. Berle Naah.
Mr and Mrs Clare Brown and pmnock and daughter of Kalama­
a shot gun and order them from j Mrs Byron Guy U on the sick‘ mother, Mrs Nellie French of Ea.-.: zoo. Mr and Mrs F C Fitch and
lhe premises
( Assyria, were In Baltin Creek and ,। Mr and Mrs. Willis Rockwell of
-----1 MLvj Helen Skdimore is at home• Dowling on Saturday and called on j| Jocleon
PLEASANT VALLEY.
I now recuperating from her recent
MIM Carrie
Swadllng
■ Mr and Mrs Emerson Cortright I
____
_
_____ of Gregory
_ ___
Mr ami Mrs Herbert Geiger and appendicitis operation at Pennock1 f Mrs Cortright returned home with is visiting relatives here
sons and Olen Kime visited Mrs hospital
“»----- 1
,, .
! them for the week end Her father •
----------------- - ■ »-------------Geiger's mother. Mrs Sarah Strong
Mr.
e.pMU lo vl.lt Mr Mr
„ot te.„ „ W1.„
OBITVAKV
Hr. Marshall
Kfnr.l.all Calthrop.
llhrnn near .
.
I
of East Campbell Bunday
niece. Mrs
I Mrs Mary Kelly Brooks, daughMr and Mrs Wilbur Dye and Prairieville
Mr and Mrs. Harold Caw were (er of Michael and Honora Kelly
baby of Lake Odessa spent Sunday
Mr and Mrs. Manley Sherman Sunday dinner guests at the Wilson was bon, ln Irving Twp Oct 10
at Bert Mesecar's
and daughter Arloa and
Edna Case home in honor of the birthday 185B She was second m a family
Floyd Neeb and
family spent Ellenbass of Hastings were callers
of a sister. Beatrice
of right children Five of them have
Sunday with Mr and Mrs Lee Os- Sunday at the home of Mr. and
I preceded her in death She passed
bom of Pinhook.
Mrs. Henry Bidelman
BRANCH. DISTRICT.
away al her home on West Green
Mr and Mrs Enicr^ Kime and
Mr. and Mrs. Worth Green and I Ml^s Jffjcn Skidtpore, who underBl May 29. aged 79 yrs. 8 mo. IB
Beulah and Mr and Mrs Clarence son Marshall. Mr. Freda Marshall­
j went jin rappendicitis operation n days after nn illness of 9 months
Kime were in Ionin Wednesday
and Earl Marshall were guests Sun­ I week ago was returned lo her home
Oct in. 1877 she was married to
day
at
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clair
MarMr and Mrs
Spenor Johnson
I Sunday from the Pennock hospital Cassius F Brooks and to this union
and children of Logan spent Sun- shell's of Bellevue.
Rev w H Canfield of Jackson two children were born Edna and
day afternoon with Mrs Jane Kime
Junior
------------------Frazc---of Indiana Is spendvisited
friends
in
the
neighborhood
Edward.
Her immediate family pre­
Mr and Mrs
Kellar and *two mg some lime at Mr and Mrs. |
ceded her in death, her husband m |
। a part of last week
daughters of Grand Rapids spent George Green's
I
Mr and Mrs. Orban LcnLz and 1910 Edward in 191B and Edna In
Bunday at Cecil Preston's Eldlene,
Clyde Retd had the misfortune to
I little son of Battle Creek were 1920 Her home has always been in
who spent the week end al home, receive a severe injury on ills eye 1
Hastings mid vicinity
The C uiiiumen Power Company ha» trained a large crew of
some inconvenience, but we hope to keep it at a minimum,
accompanied them to Grand Rap­ Tuesday
He went to Battle Creek Sunday evening guests of Mr and
Mrs Keith Norton
Surviving are a brother. T E Kel­
men to make the more difficult charjge.of gas appliances.
and your patience and co-operatiqn will be greatly ap­
Ids Sunday evening
for treatment twice last week.
I Children's Day program will be ly. Fort Madison. Iowa, a sister. Mrs
We have prepared lo complete thia task with all speed
Johnny Sullivan spent Saturday
preciated. By making the simple adjustment shown boMORGAN.
I Riven
given at the North Maple Grove
'------- Marcarct Renkes of Detroit, several ,
night and Sunday forenoon at H. i Visitors at the home of Mr and church next Sunday evening. June I nieces and nephews and a host of I
possible and with continuous service.
It is impossible to
W Geiger s
Natural Gas throughout all the towns without
: friends She was a devoted wife and !
your enjoyment of thin fine new fuel. . . NATURAL GAS.
Mr and Mrs J F Brake enter­ I Mrs. Frank Wilcox were Mr and “
much
m4V. O E.
c. Fadelford
raaexrora of
ox Bellevue.
xscxievuc. *
Mr and Mrs Grover Marshall of ,&gt; mother Aitho she met with
w,w. ...u^..
Mrs
tained Sunday the following guests
urana Mr Bntl Mrs. Cues Bacheilcr of South Maple Grove were Sunday sorrow in her life she was a kind
Mrs Mabie Van Allsburg of Grand
Fleming of —
In- dinner guests of Mr and Mrs Vln- and loving sister and aunt, a good
Rapids. Duane Gray and Grace
G.»v&gt; ■ Hastings
■------and Thos.
------- ----------------| cent Norton
n,tchhnr
ri.njrpnrtv
with au helping
liwlnino
neighbor
evci*ready
Orlmes ot Lake Odessa. Mr and diana.
Mr
and —
Mrs
Bud -Dutmcr of hand
-Mr and Mrs. Alfred Nocm and i
Mrs Don Slowins
and Grayden of ji
,___ ______
spent _______
Sunday...in...the ' The funeral was held at St Rose
South Boston and Mr and Mrs. |I daughter Marian of Chicago arc Grand Rapids
u__Hcr mother
Mr* church Monday morning Burial at
I spending a few days al their cot- '। —
neighborhood
John E Brake and family.
1 •
I Murise
Mudge, who
who spent lhe past week Mt Calvary cemetery

ATTENTION

USERS OF GAS IN HASTINGS

NATURAL GAS
WILL REACH TOUR HOME

Mcnday Morning, June 15th

PLEASE READ THESE INS’SHCTIONS CAREFULLY

YOU WILL KNOW WHEN NATURAL CAS has arrived

and Mrs vern Curtiss and Middletown, Ind,
-Mrs. Mcrvin Troxel of —sett and baby were Sunday guests For suffering, give the victor’s prize
Eugene of- Hastings
were Bunday Mr.—■■and
—
•• -_
- ---■
- —
। jhe crown for cross.
visitors of her parents. Mr and losing. Cecil
Morgan. *LaVern
Cat| of• -Mr
and —
Mrs Jesse
Fassett
Mrs CIuls Hamblin and family.
Claude Scott took Lois
Cobb,
who has been visiting at the Scott
home lhe past week, to Middleville
Friday evening
She returned to
her home in Fort Wayne. Ind-.
from there
Claude Scott and Vere Howlette
rof Clarksville were in Grand Rapj Ids Friday
•
Joyce Howktte of
Clarksville
■•
noviMr
; spent Friday and Saturday with
■ her grandparents. Mr and
Mrs.
Garfield Slater Mr and Mrs. Blat• er entertained Sunday evening their
, children. Mr and Mrs. Ivan Slater
f from Ionia. Mr and Mrs
Vere
I Howlette of Clarksville and Mr and
• Mrs Lester Stuart of South Bos-

When

in your home by the change in the cpior of the gas flame.
The present artificial gas makes a
abort green
flame,
whereas the natural gas has a hazy blue flame-

NATURAL GAS

Air
Shatter

Arrives

M&amp;8ASPAR

Ornish

Do These Things:
Make this simple adjustment on Air Shutter of every Gas
Burner. This side view of burner on your gas stove shows
location of AIR SHUTTER which needs adjustment to use
Natural Gas.

Shutttr
Open
yB iwb

The multiplication of Washington
bureaus has brought on an intoler­
able situation, Ln which as many as
four seta of feel occupy one desk.

1.—Open AIR SHUTTER ON EACH BURNER until yak
low low tip disappears on flame. Opening should b«
about &gt;4 of an inch as shown in illustration G

A physician reports a patient with
three lungs and two galls. The pur­
suit of a durable campaigner for *38
seems to be closing in.

2.—Reduce the amount of gas entering humor by slnaiRg
Here is the approximate present adjustment of the Air
Shutter which you are now using for manufactured gas.
By loosening screw Air Shutter turns very easily.

BUS FARES
SLASHED I
Ask yoar agent about the
lo major cities. New rate*,
as la

Ask for
FREE Book
Ths Easy Way
to PAINT”

Buy ONE Can

— JLwne

YOUR TRAVELING
"SfS—

4.—SPECIAL APPLIANCES. AUTOMATIC AND IN­
STANTANEOUS WATER HEATERS. SHOO#
NOT BE USED UNTIL OUR SERVICE MEN HAVE
MADE ADJUSTMENTS.

— any wyt —

6.—If necessary call the nearest office of Consumers Power

&gt; AT REGULAR PRICE
BfUNSTWS COVPM and qd ANOTHER Can

START NOW TO DO ALL

RY BUS.

Shatter
Open Abeut
'/« iMk

proximately one inch.

—

'JUSTIC

munity.
Here is the proper adjustment of the Air Shutter for Natural
Gas. now tighten screw and follow instructions I. 2, 3, 4,
5 and you are ready to use this wonderful new fuel.

•

PHONE 2305 or 2526

TO OUR CUSTOMERS

•

ASK TO SEE THIS CARD

RLABAniNE rfilfil HEADQUARTER!
BL'S DBTOT

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS

PHONE 1137

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE
142 E. STATE ST.

HASTINGS

PHONE 2331

CONSUMERS POWER COMP
Uu "L»w Out" NATURAL Ui... CuUy

Wabr

HMllM

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1333

BORT

whlch enabled her to hold an au­
dience spellbound. She was a char­
ter member of the Story Tellers
League but her ability os a racon­
teur did not end there; she was gen­
erous with her talent and accepted
Invitations from many clubs and or­
ganizations both here and in other
cities to take part in their programs
with stories of every description.
"She was a valued and active
member of St. James Episcopal
church and ot the Bl. James Guild
of the parish. Tile last parish meet­
ing of the church fell on her 90th
birthday and the dinner at that
lime was devoted to celebrating tire
anniversary. No one there will ever
forget the poise and humor with
which she responded to the toasts
"Mrs
Sweezey was----------the youngest "*
of I for narration. Her memory was In her honor.
firtw, on* of the city# oldest real- —
—--------------------She was n great favorite socially,
u-r,,., .,Rln
lhe six children of John and Mary unique and she possessed a sense of
•n to Memorial hospital and for the I smith Shedd She was born Jan- the dramatic and gift for elocution was a member of the Thursday club
and for many years of the Piqua
Country Club She enjoyed living
to the fullest extent, maintaining an
active interest in politics, in current
events and in her friends unusual

past four weeks has been a patient uary 17. 1844. at Westfield, a viltege
in Chautauqua. New York. Her
BINNIK BROWN SWEEZEY. at the Middlebrook Nursing Home
where she died at seven o'clock this father was a direct descendant of
Daniel Webster.
morning.
"Although past her ninetieth
"For years Mrs Sweezey has been
------ -------------birthday. -----------Mr* Sweezey
was a wom- active In the work of lhe city’s Ul­
an of the most remarkable vitality erary clubs. She was a charter memand energy with a mind and out- per. one of lhe organizers and the
। look on life that age had failed lo nrat president of the Columbian
touch and her death will bring re- ciUb in 1802 in the 44 years since
gret and ssoryow
---- --- •“
to —
many—•---------more~*
perrm organization, she would never
n Ire
usually
sons than
—--------, affected
------------ by
. consent lo her name being taken
__.. of k.
ra_. from thp )15l of
members and
her age. For
She entered actively into tbe social the loss of "a . friend
years
she
has
identified
herself
has filled her place on the program
and cultural life of the city.
closely with the cultural, religious. each year with a brilliancy which
snoua roar one 01
ocs anuwu social and civic activities of the would have been enviable in a much
anA truly beloved citizens this' community. She had developed u younger woman.
-perhaps Mrs Sweezey's most outmorning when death came to Mrs I philosophy of life that was a allmSKswaesey of 421 Riverside I ulant to those who knew her
I standing talent lay tn her genius

NORTH HOPE.
Mr and Mrs. Jay Anders enter­
tained on Sunday. Mr and Mra.
Chas Welch of* Striker district.
Lyle Bidelman and friend of Pon­
tiac and Mr. and Mrs Ray Welch
and family and friends of Gobles
Callers in lhe afternoon were Mr
and Mra William Havens and Mr
and Mra George Havens and fam­
ily ot Southwest Rutland
Rena Pierce of Hastings U spend­
ing a tew days with her sister. Mrs.
Donald McCallum.
Jimmie Randall of Hastings is
spending a few days with
his
grandparents. Mr and Mrs James
Murphy '
Edna Wurm is visiting her slater.
Mra. Kelley, at Augusta for a few
days.
Dan Kams, who spent a few days
with Mr knd Mrs Jim Wilcox at
Southwest Rutland, relumed to his
home TuesdayMr and Mrs Nelson Hulbert and
son and Mr and Mrs Harvey Hill
of Battle Creek spent Sunday with
Mr and Mrs Albert Ulrich
Don't forget the Brush Ridge
Community club will be held tills
week Friday night at the home of
Mr and Mrs Theodore Pranshka
This community extends
their
sympathy lo the relatives of Mrs
Mary Belle Johncock. who passed
away- on Thursday and was laid to
rest in the Prairieville cemetery on
Saturday

FRIGIDAIRE
THE

"METER-MISER"

MEETS ALL S STANDARDS FOR REFRIGERATOR RUYING

come in and let us
show you the PROOF
of ALL FIVE!

TneUt-fm

1- Proof of
LOWER OPERATING COST

SAFER FOOD PROTECTION
3. Proof of

FASTER FREEZING

Tb* new Fngidairs s spectacular
cold-making unit gives more cold

MORE ICE

Proof ot

Ing design with only three tnov-

MORE USABILITY

precision built, completely sealed

4a

SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
to Nashville about 30 years ago. He
Mr. and Mr*. Byron Smith, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Douglass ot
was employed In the C. L- Glasgow. Clara Walldorf! and Mrs. Fred
L. H. Cook coal and lumber yard. Bidelman of Detroit visited rtlaHe was a member of the Masonic
lodge. P. &amp; A. M. No. 255. the
DougUuu.
MARRIAGE LICENSE.
DOWLING
Knights of Pythias, and a member of
Several from here attended lhe
Dale 8. Bump. Hastings ....
the village council. He leaves hU
funeral Saturday afternoon ot Mra.
Esther M. Striker. Baltimore
sister. MUs Minnie Bailey, with
Marybelle Johncock near Orange­
Um church next Bunday evening. ville. She was well known here and
PROBATE COURT.
was unable to attend lhe funeral June 14. Rev William Kendrick all extend sympathy lo the bereaved
Est. Kate L. Robinson Will filed, services which were held al lhe
petition for probate filed, waiver of! home Sunday afternoon at 2:30
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Gorham re­
notice filed.
'o'clock, conducted by Rev. Hoyt. a description of th* management of ceived word last Tuesday of lhe
Est. Melissa Roe. Petition to sell Burial in lhe family lot at Barrythe Clark Memorial home of which birth that day of twin daughters lo
securities filed, order to sell securi­ i vllle.
he U the superintendent at the Mr. and Mrs Emeat Gorham (Bea­
ties entered
I Helen Bassett and
Margaret present time.
trice Wilcox) of Kalamazoo. They
Est. Martha Benson. Inventory Hickey, seniors, both received gold
MUs Madeline Stanton returned were named Laurel Kay and Lor­
filed.
pins In recognition of their all A last week from Florida where she etta May. On Sunday they received
Est. Luther Loehr Final account | rating in scholarship al the local
spent the winter and U now visit­ word that the latter one passed
filed.
, school.
ing the home folks in this locality. away Saturday night.
Est. George W Lawrence Order 1
. Mr. and Mrs. John Handel of
Mr. and Mrs. Orila PUher and
Mr. and Mrs Harvey Dunn and
allowing claims entered.
'Ohelrot. Ohio, spent the week end Mra. Etta Blanton attended the fu­ family were in Banfield Bunday to
Est. John WiUUon. Waiver of no-1
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. neral of a cousin. Mrs. Gladys Ve- attend lhe funeral of the former's
lice filed, proof of will filed, order ।
Frank Hecker.
reeke, at Lansing. Saturday. Mrs. uncle, Rhleraon Dunn.
admitting will entered.
Mr. and Mrs. Kellerman of Elk­ Vereeke was the daughter of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hart and
EsL George Townsend. Petition
ton spent Decoration Day with rel­ and Mrs. Howard Tolls* ot Lake daughter of Brush Ridge were Sun­
for Admr filed, waiver of notice
atives here.
Odessa; lhe burial was at Lake day evening callers at the home of
filed, order appointing Admr. en­
Laurel chapter No. 31. O. E- 8 Odessa.
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
tered.
was hostess to the chapters of Barry
Mr. and Mra. Silver Oswald and Havens.
Est. Alexander Cortelght. Testi­
county Tuesday evening. Hastings ________________
Mr. and Mra. Henry Byers of To­
Mr and Mr*. Roy Oaks and chil­
mony of foreign Judge filed.
-----— mu
, Sunday, of Mr.
chapter furnished Ute
program ledo
were
guesL,
dren were Sunday guests of Mr.
Est. Annie M. Heidemann Annual
Since they had started the travel- and Mra. L. J. Oswald­
and Mrs. Robt. Lord of Central
account filed.
--------------------------------•
Mr
and
W1
y
Mr
ling gavel, it was presented lo them,
Rutland.
Est. John Willison Bond of exe­
os al) the other chapters had had and Mrs. OU* Altman. Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mra. Mac Fox and fam­
cutor filed, letters testamentary is­
it. Refreshments were served.
Harold Stanton, Mr. and Mrs. ily of Kalamazoo were Sunday vis­
sued. order limiting settlement en­
On Wednesday afternoon. Mrs Charles Gillespie. Mrs Jennl* HUI. itors Ln lhe home of the latter's
tered. petition for hearing of claims Clarence Shaw was hostess lo the I Claude Hill. MUs Mildred Otmt,
brother.
Harry Clem.
1 filed, notice to creditors issued
Clover Leaf Club.
Mr. and Mra. Frank Vfm Byckle
MUs Zana Douglass of the Edgei
Est. Ijouls V- Williams Inventory
Miss Virginia Weeks was taken and Ewin Omube
attended
a district was a guest from Wednes­
filed, annual account filed
Est Philip Gerllnger. order al- j home Friday from the hospital, and Townsend meeting al Allegan Sat­ day til) Sunday of her grandpar­
is recovering nicely from her recent , urday.
ents. Mr. and Mra. Roy Oaks
lowing claims entered.
।
Mr and
Charles Belson ot
Mrs. Jim Wilcox and son Robert
,
Est M B Brooks Bond of Admr
Company at lhe home of Mr. and ( Leonidas were here Bunday to at­ and Mrs. Lester Lord and baby
1 filed, letters of administration 13- 1' Mrs
Porter Klnqe for Decoration । tend the funeral of Ryerson Dunn were Kalamazoo visitors last Wed­
sued, order limiting settlement en­
Day were: Mra. Esther Messimer and end called on their parent*. Mr. and nesday.
tered. petition for hearing claims
son Attorney Harry Messimer of 1 Mrs. 8. A. Wertman.
Dan Kams left last Wednesday
filed, notice to creditors issued.
Detroit. Mr and Mrs E- L Hickman I The Ladles' Aid Society will meet
Est John WiUUon. Warrant and and daughter. Thelma ot South I on Thursday, June It. Strawberry for hU home at Brush Ridge aftet
several days spent at lire home ol
Inventory filed.
Bend. Ind., and Mr
and Mrs. shortcake will be on lhe menu if hl* niece. Mra Jim WUcox.
Est. Adeline Hefflebower Inven­
Charles Hawthorne and family of berries are available at that time.
Remember lhe community meet­
tory filed
Lacey
I Mra. Sylvia PUher and Mrs. Jennie ing next Friday evening. June 19,
Est Mary J Brooks Petition for
William Roe of Kalamazoo spent Stanford will have charge of the at the home of Mr. and Mra. Rich,
Admr filed
the week end with relatives.
dinner.
ard
Laubuagh.
Est. Virginia M Reickard Fine)
Miss Elizabeth Gibson and friend i
The Cemetery Circle are having
i account of Gdn filed, release of of Kalamazoo spent Bunday with' their monthly meeting thU week ■ Mra. Francis Gorham was a Kal­
amazoo vUitor last Monday after­
Gdn. filed, discharge of Gdn Issued,
her parents, Mr and Mrs. W. L. Thursday.
—■**“ June
’----- **11.
noon.
estate enrolled.
Gibson.
Sunday vUitors in lhe Jim Wil­
Est Susannah Oaks
Bond of ,
Mr and Mrs Robert Townsend
CLOVERDALE.
cox home included Mr and Mra
| Admr filed, letters of admlntstra- '
and family of Toledo, spent the
Friends of Mra. Myrtle MacLeod Floyd Panner and children from
tion issued, order limiting settle­
week end at lhe Townsend cottage and children surprised them very near Orangeville, Mr
and Mra
ment entered
at Thomapple lake
much by having a papering bee in Robt. Lord and family of Central
Est. Harry O Hayes Final ac­
Mrs. Anna Grlbben has returned lire house vacated by the Harold Rutland. Frederick Anders of Brush
count filed, order for publication
from Bay City.
Kellogg family. There seems lo b« Ridge and MUs Shirley Anders ot
entered.
Dr and Mra W A Vance were no end to the things that friends do the McCallum dUtrict.
Est Carrie D Todd Final account In Eaton Rapids Saturday, calling If they
, ar* ,really friends. Mrs.
filed, order assigning residue en­
on Dr and Mrs. Merle Vance and MacLeod sincerely thanks each one
CARLTON CENTER.
tered.
infant daughter
and all for their kindness and
Mr. and Mra GeraldTtscher enEst Anna Oslroth Inventory filed ,
Mrs w H. Kletnhans ot Grand 1 thoughtfulness toward her and her terlained company from Lansing
Est Archibald Baird Testimony, Rapids called on friends here ‘ family.
Sunday.
filed, order determining heirs en- , Thursday
I Miss omajean Garrison spent the
Mr. and Mrs. Ar He Townsend ot
tered
Miss Electa Funilss of Battle week end with Mr. and Mrs. Elack­ Grand Rapids visited at lhe home of
Est. Nora Lena Waterson Testi­
Creek was a week end guest of her man and family of Crooked lake, Mr. and Mra. Fred Henney Sat­
mony filed, order determining heirs sister. Miss Minnie Furols#
I The Cloverdale L. A. B. will meet urday afternoon.
entered.
1
Mr and Mrs John Johnson and with Mrs. Virgil Monica Thursday,
Elmer Marlow was taken to Pen.
Est Frank Bailey Testimony filed
daughter of st. Mary's Lake spent June 11. Pot luck dinner as usual. nock hospital Saturday for X-ray
order determining heirs entered
The Prairieville and Cloverdale
Decoration Day with the latter’!
------and treatment
Est Olive Bailey Testimony filed,
baseball
teams played at Prairieville
parents. Mr and Mra G L. Gage.
_____________________________
Mrs Evan Puller of Lowell visited
order determining heirs entered
Mr and Mrs Car) Tuttle were in Sunday. The Cloverdale boys won Mra
Frank Hosmer Wednesday
1
Est John N Stuart Petition for
Grand Rapids Monday
। 17-10.
night and attended the Aid meet­
। license to sell filed, order for pub­
j a farewell party in honor of Rev. Ing at Mrs Arthur Yarger's Thurs­
! Ucation entered
1 Donald Kring was held at lhe home day.
QUIMBY.
Est Ellen K Stuart Petition for
| of Mr and Mrs. Delos Flower, last
Mrs Frank Asplnall. who has been
license to sell filed, order for pub­ Received Too Late.
1 Monday evening with a co-operative quite HI. is some better al this writ­
The chicken supper put on at the
lication entered.
supper. Rev. Kring left foe nls new
lira. Thelma Johnson, accom.
Est Perry Campbell
Final ac­ church last Wednesday night net­
1 home Thursday.
• ■ --­
count filed, order for publication en­ ted the L. A. 8 122.
Rev. seward Walton has charge ot paiiled by some friends of Grand
The
Birthday
Aid will be
tered
.
,
. enter- the Cloverdale Evangelical church
Rapids, were guests Friday night
Est. George B- Hullrigs petition tatned Thursday. June 11. at Chas. । now. Rev. Walton ia known here
and Saturday of her mother, Mra.
I for determination of heirs filed, or- Callahan's home
' and we all welcome him as our Ralph Henney.
Ider tar publication entered
1I Miss Evelyn ‘Lowell, who has been
■
minister
and
wish
him
success
in
A number from this community
'
Est John H Huliilks Petition for :in nurses’ ‘ training
------ it Detroit, re­
I this community.
attended the Commencement exer­
determination of heirs filed, order turned‘ home Friday
’
for a few weeks’
_____________
cises at Hastings High Friday after­
vacation before entering Leila hoa- I
WEEKS' CORNERS
for publication entered
noon. MUs Anna Beck from our
|
Est Hannah Blaisdell Robinson. pita) at Battle Creek She was acMrj
DeCrocker of Scotts
community
graduated
receiving
Inventory filed.
cotnpanied by Mr and Mrs Gaylord vU|ted her mother Mra Lillie Matfourth place on the honor roll.
Est Martha E Brown Annual ac­ Saunders and Hershe) Hill of De­ teaon, Sunday and attended the ball
count filed
troit for the week end.
game at Clear lake In the afUrHENDERSHOTT.
Mr and Mrs Dirk Hoffman and noon.
Est Dell B Dolph Waiver of no­
Mr. and Mn. John Engle of Has­
tice filed, proof of will filed, order family attended their family re­
Mr and Mra Lyle Dickerson and tings were Sunday callers at A. C.
admitting will entered
union at Zeeland Saturday
Jean attended the graduation ex­
Mr. and Mrs Frank Bloom enter­ ercises at Litchfield Tuesday eve­ Clark's
Floyd Garrison and family were
NASHVILLE.
tained company from Battle Creek ning, Bethel and Darrell Buckland.
Sunday guests al Fay Whitworth's
Last Weeks Letter
Sunday
tn Johnstown
Mrs Ora Wheeler of Jackson
Rev Earl Scott of Carmel. New being two of the graduates.
Grace Brill was home from Kala­
spent the week end here
rllh York, is visiting his parents. Mr.
Lawrence Matteson and Mrs. Lil­
friends.
and Mrs. George Scott. Earl will de­ lie Matteson visited Mr. and Mrs mazoo on Sunday. Callen at her
Mrs Dennis Target and son spent uver lhe sermon next Sunday at Lyle McArthur al Hickory Corners home were Richard and Frances
DeMott from the Gregory district,
ie week end with Mr Yargc-r
•
------ ”Let's
—• Saturday.
the church at the regular
lime.
Mr. and Mn. C. J. Lahr of Has­
| Saginaw
give him a full house
Mrs Madeline Daniela of BaUle
MUs Genevieve Brown who Is at- I
Mrs Myrtle Casteleln entertained Creek visited her parents, Mr. and tings. and Mr. and Mn Donald
Riemer and son of Cedar Springs.
tending the Lansing Businev) Uni- Decoration Day. Mrs pansy caste­
Mn. Archie Matteson, over the
The U A 8. will be entertained
verslty came home with MIm Ardis | iein and daughter Doris of Battle
this month by Mn. Chas. Hender­
1 Brumm to spend the week end I Creek. Mr
.. and Mrs
Earl Oaut
shott, June IS.
Ardis was unable to .eturn ,n Sun- and children of Flint. Mr and Mrs.
Remember the Hendershott school
; dsy as she came down with lhe Nile CasteUln and son of Battle Dickerson attended lhe funeral of
reunkn at the schoolhouse thia
chicken pox
&gt; creek. Mr and Mra. Harold Harmon
Wright Dunn of lhe Dunn district week Saturday.
Russell Pernber of Detroit spent of Lockshore Farms and Mrs. Harry Bunday afternoon.
the week end with hU cousin.; Foster ot Bellevue
Carroll Newton finished his four
OB1TUARY.
Maurice Purchts
Glenn Kellogg U recovering from years of high school In Hastings
Eva May McCarty, daughter of
Lee Bailey who would have been 1 a sinus operation at Pennock hoa- last Friday. June 5.
Perry and Alma McCarty, was bom
fifi In June paued away st hU home pltal laat week. Camera there SunJwtw 3. 1*». in Freeport, Michigan,
eariy Friday morning, after n four 1 day were Mr and Mrs Robert GlasNO FOOLIN'!
and passed away June 2. 1934. after
days' illness of pneumonia. He was gow of Dowling, and Mr and Mrs.
I think It would be smart to think
I born in Maple Grove township Scott Bechtel and Mr and Mra. about coal 'MOW! Phone 070.
home in Baltimore township, at
| where he lived on a farm, moving | C- C. Robinson of Hastings
Johnsons—Adv.

COURTHOUSE NEWS

5* Proof of

N

FIVE-YEAR PROTECTION

PLAN

The most beautiful,
convenient and
efficient
FRIGIDAIRE
ever built!

Frigidaire builds this Food-Satery
Indicator right into the cabinet—
visible
that foods ar* kept al
emperature, below

beauty and usability.
Wider, roomier, with much mor* shelf space
Full-Width Sliding Shelves, Portable

Willing Hands
No four or five mra in a community can

unless the people want a bank and help

New Prices as Low as

•thrilling
"v* both
• ?“!io

The Work of o
Thousand

FRIG
- -

$3450

Every bsnk, therefore, is the work of a

thousand willing hands, building some­
thing which people feel will be useful ia
their lives.

united tn marriage to Ernra A. Rey­
nolds of Hastings. To this union
eight children were bom. two of
whom passed away in
infancy.
Shortly after their marriage they
moved to Holland, Michigan, where
they resided for 30 yean. In 1321
they mcrfed back to Barry county.
husband, three sons. Verne of Kal­
amazoo, Lester and Kenneth of
Hastings; three daughters. Mrs By­
ron Girard of Holland, Mn. Geo.
M. Bainbridge of Hammond, Indi­
ana. and Mrs. Howard Barnes of
Hastings; 17 grandchildren,
two
brothers.
Charles
McCarty
of
Grand Rapids and Frank McCarty
of Johnstown township; five sls-

Smith of Kalainasoo, Mrs. Jay Web­
ster of Battle Creek. Mrs Ola Mor­
gan of Carlton Center and Mrs.
Claude Lester of Dowling
Her
goodness, sweet character and quiet
courage will always remain a sweet
memory In the hearts of thorn who

y. I will not say. that

service expense, for only Five Do Liars included in

the email, acattered auma of individuate

No Money Down

CONSUMERS POWER CO
Hastings

Phone 2305

can be gathered together and bo employ ad

people themselves for their own uae.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

With a cheery smile and a wave of
her hand.
She wandered into an unknown
tend,
,.
And left us dreaming how very fair
And you. O you. who the wildmt
yearn
For the old-time step and glad re-

hare:
Think of her .till

&gt;l» U M

u IM

�</text>
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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
THE GREAT BUTTLE iWonderfaiNewEquipmemTo INTERESTNG TO
JI NEW ORLEANSBc ’-’““"J ’?
T1'eater! ALL FOR DEALERS
WILL RANK AS ONE Of
THE MOST IMPORTANT
IN OUR HISTORY

IT REVIVED HOPE IN
A DEPRESSED NATION
Since Then Our Land Has
Been Free From Any
Invading Army

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. JUNE 18, 1936

16 PAGES

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

Projectors Will Combine
Picttirea And Sound System
The Strand theater has a state-1
wide reputation for up-to-dateness.
Ray Branch never hesitates about
Installing new equipment which
, will
wm make
iiiaac the
uic amusement
amusement service
service
hli
his theater renders mnr#
more nlAaifn?
pleasing in
to
the people of Hastings and the surl rounding territory.
j
Mr. Branch will soon install two
| Simplex Acme projectors, which
combine the projection of the movmg pictures and the sound. In one
complete unit. The sound and the
pictures are synchronized in the
new machine in a manner not poa|lblf w,|h the ^ulpmenl Which it

has no glare nor distorted vision,
It will be possible, when this new
equipment and screen are installed.
to alt al the very front of the theater and not feel the least eye strain,
Uanaff,r
Manager Rranch
Branch Is
is al.in
also InaLalllna
installing
new lighting equipment that will co­
ordinala in the lighting of the
Strand so as to bring out In a fine
way the effects of the picture.
It will take a full crew of expert
workmen to labor ail night after the
ahow to get this new equipment
ready for the next night's perfor­
mance. as there will be no shutdown, says Manager Branch. He
will announce the date of the grand
reopening, and the theater will
not be closed a minute while the
change takes place. The new mir­
acle lighting system, known as
"Ralnbo Varl-Kolor.” will greatly
Improve the lighting arrangement
of the auditorium. This new lightIng system will be changed to suit
the surroundings, with it. it Is posslble to Instantly change from a
sunshade warmth to a deep color
by
manipulating
the
warmth
switches. The
__________
alluring and enchanting effect' of this n^y •lighting
will be appreciated by the patrons
of the Strand.
announce
Manager Branch
-------------- ,
the exact date of the change in
a sliort time. Tiie new equipment
will undoubtedly bring many vialtors from neighboring cities to witness this complete, up-to-the-mlnute achievement
The Banner is
proud to have Hastings listed as
among the very first to seize this
new Idea. At this writing only the
beautiful Roxy theater in New York
City is using this new equipment
The Strand is the second.
■

CONSIDERS THE
Council Friday Sveniaf Au­
Much
’.“S' WELFARE PROBLEM thorizedBe That
Laid

Board of Review
Work—Tax Rate
Less Than Last Year

WERE OASES TRIED RE- | The
GENTLY IN STATE AND I, pleted
FEDERAL COURTS

TWO CASES INVOLVED
SHIPMENTS OF FURS
State Dept, of Conservation
Defeated in Both State
and Federal Courts

I OVER TWO MILES OF

ASSESSED VALUATION
INCREASED $47,565

board of review have com­
their work. The total as| sessed value of the city, as shown by
their figures, to *4.386.225 Last year
It was *4338.660. which shows an
Increase of *47565 compared with
a year ago. All this can be attributed to the Increased amount of,
stock on hand reported by the E.
W Bliss Company. The assessed to­
tal of the two supervisors' districts

|

NEW TARMAC PAVING

UNEMPLOYMENT IS THE
The council at their meeting Fri­ DELIVERY TO BO
day evening gave nearly all their
CAL VRTULAXI STARTWORST FEATURE AT
time to consideration of petitions
PRESENT
ID ON MONDAY
for tarmac paving of several streets,
and the tarmac paving and curb
and guttering of others. Lieven dif­
ferent stretches of tarmac, aggre­
gating about i l-2 miles, were au- :
Uiorized. Petitions were presented1
Governor Fitzgerald Asks for over a half mile more. Madison
and Clinton streets, from South
for Constructive Advice
Hanover to East State street, will
on Thh Subject
be completed this year as well as
Governor Fitzgerald recently gave many smaller stretches.
a thoughtful talk on the subject of
By unanimous vole, the council
the -----------revoking
a
welfare work in this state. He is,recommended
--------------------— —
- of evidently not satisfied with the pres-। Class A beer license previously glv-

OLD AGE PENSIONS

UAUC RCCU UCI DC!II
HAVE DuCii ntLrrUL

DAY EARLIER THAR
HAD BEEN EXPECTED
imenstlac lldallfhti Ob ilia
Diipoaal Men Hnn lo
Make oi Their Money

Wards 2 and 3
&lt;2.320.45?
Wards 1 and 4 .
. 2.066.768
An interesting case involving in­
terstate commerce as relates
to
*4.386.225
Total
shipment of raw fur was tried last
week by Attorney Kim Sigler of this i
76c. or 87 60 per 11.000 This is
_
more efficient. He called attention of business is on South Jefferson,
xmg aenvery to uu»
city ...
In Uu
United Slates Federal
slight decrease as compared with
Monday, a day aarllar1 Court in Detroit,
to the fact that the welfare profc• »*■--------------*
*
—
Ithan had been expected. So Ur
replaces
On
January
28. 1936. one Harry
1
about
150
veterans
have received
through no fault of their own, find
Warsop. a fur dealer at Athens.
No sooner had the International
। their bonds, about half the total
themselves up against serious flnanMichigan, had purchased from the
Projector Corporation of New York
expected. It Is estimated that 000
। cla) difficulties There are many
Marcellus Fur Company a large
made their
announcement
to
1 more who are willing to work but do
I are entitled to the bonus in Barry
quantity of muskrat hides, which
the trade that they
'had‘ at
I county. Thia means that at least
not have the initiative to turn up a
had been brought from the state of
last
designed
and
perfected
wiu uv
Job for themselves. Society cannot
: *300,000 will
be msuiuutca
distributed ui
Ln nw
HasIndiana Mr Waraop was a licensed
first
line
their first,
and
....
---------------------tings and Immediate vicinity.
...
sit
Idly
by
and
let
such
people
suffer,
fur
dealer
in
Michigan.
A
Mr.
Galof projectors ever built exclusively
CASES SCHEDULED FOR1 Monday so veterans tunwd in foe
i
The
governor
asked
for
constructive
ier.
oi
of
me
the
linn
firm
oi
of
Gold
uoiu
a
&amp;
uaiter
Caller
oi
of
________
■
imtviuw
»a*cu
iui
vuiwuui
.
u
&gt;
c
for talking pictures,
than
Ray
--------------------------------------------] cashing 307 bonds. Tuesday 46
c
1
-'
------------------•**-------Chicago, came to Mr Wareop's ! BEAUTIFUL SITE SELECT- su««e»Uona from *« good citizens
Branch immediately made a purSEPTEMBER TERM OF
nln^.
Tn
’a IltHffTTABnt
। turned in 439 bonds. On the aver­
place a
of/ Kt.ll"..,
business In IfKan,
Athens, aand na
In (he
the Cnvamor
governor's
Judgment iirtFtTlunemchase of a complete set of this
CIRCUIT COURT
ED FOB NEW BAHRY
age about ten bonds to a veteran
i deal was made whereby Wareop sold
। ployment is the worst feature In the
equipment for the benefit of HasI w Gold i Duller the hides in ques| are being cashed.
; present situation. What to do to
Ungs theater-goers.
TWP.
UNIT
80H00L
tlon.
meet that condition is not so clear. FEDERAL MAN IS
I ^,^"3.
Up to the present time all pro J1 The governor stated that he had
।
Mr Galler
Caller was not licensed to do
do
--—“J,...
ecting machines used in theaters
never driven to Detroit without
In Michigan. The furs
furs' COMPLETED BUILDING
business in
TO HEAR QUESTIONS
B
arc the same as when the films were
i w«re
r
.token
.
.
...
।
feeling, as he noticed thousands of I
____
.—
,—-—
from
Athens
to Union
silent. The only addition was a sep­
.. . ... Men
—
.
: Hubbardand
andEd.
B!d.flaylea
Ravleshave
hnv«bean
been
|I—_____________________
city,
WILL COST $130,000 Idle acres, and realized
Cltv. the nearest express
exnress office, and 1
reallied that there■. jwo Nashville
Haaten
Hubbard
arate
mechanism, which
upllll"". nt
, 1 _ acres
I- U4-K1
I
nt th
ImA T —. La­
------- ----------------------------- was
— r
commanders
of— the American
are —
millions
of Idle
in Michlj
i delivered to the express company
Plled U&gt; them for the purpose of
to File Last Papers After
gion. Holes require that every degan, that there ought to be some
for shipment to Chicago,
Fin&amp;nced
by
District,
WPA,
producing sound. Now comes the
way of connecting the idle men with
The game warden of Branch
Lapse of Fifty Years
Kellogg Foundation
fir»t machine ever designed for a
| county learned of the fact and
the Idle land. Just how to go at it
perfect production of the picture
Four petitions for citizenship have
is not an easy problem; but some­
' seized the furs on the ground that
Co-operating
the accompanying sound; and
been filed with the county clerk. person Li out of town or returned to
| Mr Caller was an unlicensed dealthing
must
be
done
to
solve
this
un
­
The cornerstone for the new Barry
we will have It here in Hastings be­
j er Thereafter the State Conserva- Township Unit Agricultural School employment problem or civilized so­ Tills makes seven in all so far, Detroit unless instructions are re­
fore any other Michigan theater can
ciety will be destroyed.
tlon Department filed a case In the
which will be disposed of on Sep­ ceived otherwise.
The governor stated that old age
Postmaster Field says he has
circuit court of Branch county to Tuesday afternoon, a beautiful site
tember 16 In the circuit court of
With
this
Installation comes
been much impressed with the use
confiscate the furs under the state was selected for this building at the pensions have been a help. At the
something entirely new In the line
game laws upon the ground that Intersection of M-43 and the coun­ present time, with the state ap­ tills county, at which time a repre­
of a motion picture screen, which
| the bags of fur. when delivered to ty road from Delton to Prairieville. propriating two million dollars and sentative of tiie federal government their bonds, the Information com­
will be here.
ing In the form of volunteered l»the expre.M
company,
were not
----------------------------------— la— | R. O. Henton. president of the the federal government two million,
Myron C. Altman, whose address
beled and tagged in accordance with ! school board, had charge of the pro­ the slate is able to provide aoout
I WESLEYAN YOUNG
Ute state law. which provides that I gram He expressed the apprecia- *1650 a month for Michigan's is Hastings Route 4. was bom tn
bags or containers of fur shall be tian of Uie board and of himself needy who have reached the age of Barry county, but moved to Alber­ the majority is to be used worthily
V, II. Vacation
PEOPLE'S MEETING plainly and clearly labeled, indlcat- for the fine cooperation of the com­ 65 or more. In the Judgment of the ta. Canada, and became a Canadian and for substantial Investments—the
the aid from the state and citizen. He has returned to this liquidation of debts "so my pay
Bible School [ Third Annual Gathering at ing the number and kinds of fur. I munlty. also the W K Kellogg governor
should be county and wishes to resume his checks will be my own;** the acewe'
shl?.p&lt;r consJEn®«. *tc------------------------ Foundation and the WPA He called federal governments
Ing of property, raising a mortcMBr
That case came on for trial In [ on a number of those present, In­ doubled, so that *30 could be given. olllaenshlp.
|
Camp Grounds on Next
He
feels,
too. that something must
Mrs. Nettie Viola Neward. of Or­ etc. One man rejoiced lie could pay
March before Judge Theo J Jacobs eluding representatives of the conThe United Brethren church willj
Wednesday
be
done
to
train
growing
children angeville township, was a citizen of doctor bills and expenses accruing
of the Branch county circuit court, j tractor and builder, also old-time
sponsor a Vacation Church School ‘ The third annual convention of
in ways of self-support. The gover­ this country, but married a Cana­ from a recent operation in hie
Mr Sigler being retained to repre­
again this year at the second ward the Wesleyan Young People's So­ sent Mr Warsop At the conclusion residents of the community for re­ nor contends that the cooperation dian who was not naturalized and family. Buying a tractor, securing N
marks, which were well worth hear­
schoolhouse.
ciety of the Michigan Conference of of the state's case, Mr Sigler moved ing All expressed their joy that of the state and counties is neces­ never became a citizen of the Unit­ more acres to square a pleee of land,
Dates - June 26 to July 10.
the W. M. church will be held at for a directed verdict for his client, such fine educational opportunities sary. for if private enterprise can­ ed States, so she lost her citizenship giving a child a chance at coUe*L
All children of the second ward the w M- campgrounds, two miles which was granted by Judge Jacobs
not provide employment the state In this country, she now applies for
will come to the children of Del­
from 5 to 12 years old are invited to south of town. next Wednesday. and the case was___________
for U&gt;e money.
therefore dU- ton and the surrounding territory. and counties must take up the slack reinstatement as a citizen.
attend
The governor emphasized the fact
The cases of Clark and William
June 24 This Is an annual event I missed
Each Thursday will be Visitor’s which is attracting the young peo-1 The furs In the meantime had Fred LAffrey, government inspector that the stale must get rid of Titmarsh of Nashville are unique.
who is closely watching to see that
Day.
d
U from various places
nlaces in the been taken Into the ruxtrviv
pto
custody of the the building is pul up as it should chlselers and whlttlers—people who Both were bom in Lit tie part; Eng­ jorlty putting away the bulk of
southern part of Michigan and a state conservation department anq be. promised that It would be com­ refuse to work and support them­ land. but both came to this country
perlor fleet, which thus gained MEETING OF 4-H
large group to expected Last year placed In cold storage and. upon pleted in time for the opening of selves, but who want others to pay in their early years. Both applied
lontrol of the lake the waters of
for their living.
for citizenship, and somehow each
the
dismissal
by
the
state court school on September 8
CLUB LEADERS l^„ir hlmdr'‘'
”,,r
khlch came up within six miles of
had believed from what was told LANDSCAPING OF
of the case for confiscation,
the
It had been planned that Justice
ihc city
them at the Ume, that the appli­
------------- j The speaker for the day is Rev
HOME GROUNI
conservation department turned the W W Potter, of the Supreme Court FATHER AND SON ELECPanic threatened New Orleans
cation
for American citizenship was
- of chazy.
____ ,. .4.
Summer Projects for Mem- &gt;. C. ..
i --------------Armstrong,
n Y
" . one furs over to the representatives of of Michigan, would have charge of
i Continued on page 6. See 1)
TROCUTEDD WED EVE all that was required for them to
I of
the
young people s the federal government at Bay City the laying of the cornerstone and
ber» Will Be Pre"' “
■ outstanding
*'
become American citizens, since In Organixing a Tour of !«▼I leaders In the connection He will
Branch county is in the eastern give an address. Ills serious illness
Y. P. F. SPONSORS
era! Gardena in County
speak at each of the three services federal district of Michigan, there- prevented that. Superintendent C. Another Son Badly Burned their applications they had re­
seated
,
nounced their citizenship in the
J Barnum acted in hto stead in the
SONG RECITAL
for Next Friday
Barry County 4-H Club leaders during the day There will also be
—Accident Near Gun
mother country and had stated their
inspirational papers
brought
by
official placing of the cornerstone
will meet Friday evening. June 19. some of the young people which
purpose of becoming American citi­
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mc­ at the American Legion hall for a
He expressed his personal apprecia­
zens. Their declaration of intention
deal with young people's problems LONG TIME MEMBER
John Seattle, 54. widower father of
tion of the fine support to the school
landscape
gardening lour tar
was filed sometime in the eighties.
Donald Give a Fine
dinner meeting Miss Lois Corbett and these will be open for discus- I
of Ute people of Delton and the sur- ■ eight children, who was caretaker
men have voted regularly for day. June 38. Thia tour is orgai
OF BANNER STAFF rounding communities, and the on what to known as the Dwight Both
Program
.and P o Lundin of the club de- sion. Special musical numbers will
many years, have held various to show the growing shrubs
be interspersed throughout the day's
-wonderful
co-operation
given
by
the
;
farm
on
the
south
shore
of
Gun
The song recital
Emmanuei. parlment, Michigan State College, program. The program starts at
township and local offices, served on
| lake in Orangeville township, and
M. P. A. Bulletin Pays Its school board
political committees and had no Landscape school have boon to­
thurch Monday evening, sponsored will be in attendance to dtocu.ia the 9 00 in the forenoon, and at 1:30
The building when completed and his oldest son Earl, aged 23. were
Compliments to Jos­
by the Y P F was a much finer summer projects with the local lead- and 6:30 for the afternoon services
furnished will coat over (130.000.1 electrocuted at about 7 o'clock last question about their having be­
come full-fledged American citizens
.performance-than the attendance ers. County Agent Poster. District A basket lunch will be served at
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
...............................
night (Wednesday evening) and in 1886. Recently, something came
eph Pflug
would have indicated But the au- Ciub Agcnt Earl HaaS and District noon.
The Michigan Bulletin, official obup which made it necessary to of MTS. Roy Fuller Id HaaHngg
This program is open to all
ously
burned
by
electricity
that
he
S.::,oaua
establish their citizenship. In a
young people and to all who are gan of the Michigan Press Associa­ FIFTEEN JANITORS
may die. The latter is now In a Plain­
weU as other plantings during
the artiste. Mr and Mr. Charles f
the summer Interested in young people's work tion. has the following interesting
ATTEND COLLEGE well hospital. The circumstances as covered that they had not taken out morning. A
‘
McDonald of st
Mark', choir.
dto^tT^^teT
C0Unly The convention theme is: "Youth’s write-up of Joe Pflug long-time
we learn them are as follows:
their final papers, so this will have
Grand Rapids. Mr McDonald .Ings
.um^^rluh.
Relations." Rev E. L. Crocker, pas­ member of the Banner's mechanical
A sharp wind blew over a tree to be done at the September term visit plantings
Three
Day
Short
Course
a rich tenor and Mrs. McDonald a
y,n
tor of the local W M church, is stall, which was published in their
on
the
fam
across
the
road
from
Wkrd
Green
sr_
of court.
dear soprano and their voices blend i
?cr
‘j0*1 the president oLlhe conference so­ June issue, with a cut accompany­
Available for Them
Dwight cottage at about the hour
near Woodland. Other
ciety, the executive committee of ing.
'
very well Two of Mr McDonald-S
named. In Its fall It broke the
which has arranged the day’s pro­
numbers which were especially well'ten
2
“Joe pflug, newspaper foreman of
Consumers power Electric line wires, REGATTA AT PINE
afternoon.
received were a DorM-t folk song. &lt;
2d
«2? . £
gram.
On June 24. fifteen Janitors from one of which came to the ground,
the Hastings Banner, completed
LAKE CAMP SUNDAY
•Linden Lea' and "The Little Irish 1
f C
Pl*
his 47lh year as a printer on May Barry county schools will leave for and the ’■Juice” set fire to the dry
TWENTY-FIVE* BOYS "
13. He started as a "devil” in the a tiiree-day special short course for grass in the field. Mr. Beattie and
Girl " Stephen Foster's "Beautiful
Dreamer" was one of Mrs Me Don°f OW,‘
Banner Office in 1889 and except
Janitors, engineer, and cus­ the rest of the family were eating Red Cross Aquatic School in
COMPLETE PROJECTS for a total of seven years spent at school
aid's encores and she gave a lovely1
.
todians to be offered al Michigan supper. Mr Beattie smelled some­
Session With 100
interpretation of the beautiful old I
,„r',?OLU
various times in other print shops
thing like burning grass, came to
words and melodv
ver’f healthy increase in
----- club
---------«en- Records Show Average Prof­ has been employed continuously by State College. East Lansing. The
Attending
T. mcSL mother
U“L.
coutm will consist of instruction re­
---------------------- ,— with nearly
the Banner. Among his fellow work­ garding efficient and up-to-date the lot across the highway from the
The American Red Cross is con­
it of |42.Oj) for
| double the enrollment of last year
men on the Banner have been Oscar procedure In the care and mainte­ large stone collage. He grabbed a ducting a National Aquatic school
Hastings girl and for many years | in this year's enrollment arc to be
Each Lad
Schumann of the Grayling Ava­ nance of school buildings offered by pall to carry some water to put out al the W. K Kellogg Foundation
tang tn the choir of the Episcopal
found boys and girls who have
church.
During tiie past year 25 boys in lanche and Al W^ber of the Che­ the faculty of Michigan Stole Col­ the fire. The two sons ran to and Camp at Pine lake at which a re­ that win show
I been In the summer club projects for
boygan Observer.
the place where gatta will be given for the public. shrubs as well
lege with the assistance of the fol­ first reached
seven years as well as many new the Hastings High school have car­
"In nearly half a century. Joe has lowing instructors' l. C
PLANT BLUEGILL FRY
Helm, the grass was burning, a broken Sunday. June 21. from the hours
| first year members. The work to ried on projects In Vocational Ag­
riculture, under the supervision of rarely lost even a half a day of principal of the Janitor-Engineer live wire was twisting through the of three to five.
IN REARING PONDS open 10
8lrU between the
T. N- Knopf. Tl&gt;e net profit of work. He has the old-faahloned Training Khuul of the Minneapolis grass, electric flames shooting from
over loo students from all of in different stages
! nges of 10 and 20 years depending
these 25 projects was 11,04953 or an Idea that the interests of employer public schools, and editor and treas­ it. Earl evidently tried to remove the Michigan are attending. This should will be shown. Soma
State Hatchery, Rod and on the project.
Ii *nirAA
---- -and average profit for each boy of 842.00. and employee are about the same urer of the National Association of wire. His clothes were set on fire by be a very interesting and educa­ be shown thM
Three hunrfrA-*
hundred fifty-six ■boys
and that prosperity for one spells Engineers and Custodians; and K. the Juice. The father came close to tional
Gun Club and Members
The
most
popular
crops
raised
program
Demonstrations
; girls are enrolled In the winter club
prosperity for the other. You can
I projects which makes a total en- were potatoes, beans and cucum­ always count on Joe for faithful co­ P Grabarklewlcx, instructor in the him to extinguish the blaze in the will be given in swimming, life aav-. — — _
Aid in the Work
Janitor-Engineer Training School boy's clothing. He poured some wa­ Ing. diving, artificial respiration and ( plated plana,
• rollment In Barry county 4-H Clubs bers, while others were livestock,
All three of the Barry County —--&lt;
---------------- poultry, onions, grapes and pop­ operation even though he does ad­ and president of the Nations! Asso­ ter on Earl, who was still holding all sorts at boating, war canoe:
mit that a steady half day on cer­
Bod
^d oun in,
ClubM&gt;
rein,
pond. ”
° ■*
”
/"S'
bt OTWIII.
,-I.on.bly
u”'"TL?
■ pie.
The “
active
leadership and dl.
di­ corn. complete records are kept on tain kinds of copy makes him 'lose ciation of Engineers and Cus­ the live wire, instantly the elec­
todians.
these projects, of all costs. Income,
tricity followed the course of the
stocked with bluegill fry for the rection of the elube rests Ln the labor and yields, and a report of his religion.'
Tlito course has been planned by water as It struck the boy. and the will be shown, the first time in
season. This work was done by hands of voluntary local leaders. each project is sent In to Lansing
"Joe is one of the increasingly the Barry County Health Depart­ current electrocuted the father
Michigan. There will also be a
Conservation Officer Geo Sumner, Mr Foster states that these leaders at Its completion. School credit is rare printers of the old school who ment in co-operation with the W
Just how Lewis was injured may demonstration with Che surf board
also Chas. Perkins. Kenneth Lan­ deserve the credit for the wonderful also given for each completed proj­ can do any job that needs to be K. Kellogg Foundation.
never be known unless he recovers. that has been Invented for rescue
caster, Ira Shultz. Arbur Bachel- help these clubs are to rural boys ect.
done in a combination newspaper­
Those who will attend from Barry His hands and forearm are deep­ work. It is interesting to note in RESERVATIONS FOR
der. John Shute and Hastings and girls.
This summer 37 students have job shop. He U a good linotype oper­ county are Glenn Bolo. Lawrence ly burned, clear to the bone
connection with the surf board
4-H CLUB TOUR
Hatchery crew. Equipment supplied
elected to take these projects and ator and mechanic, can make up a Potter. Floyd Thomas. Bert Whip­
Mr. Beattie's wife died last fall. that a swimmer can swim faster on
by the Hatchery.
WEEK-DAY BIBLE
Count, AtrieuUunU Aianl M*will apply their skill at raising some newspaper, set a Job from Che case, ple. Glenn Clum. and Ernest Hayes._____________
He has a daughter
,___ __________
old enough and a surf board to a drowning person
This is a splendid undertaking
compose and lock up a form, handle Hastings; Elwyn Hayward. Delton; I competent to manage the
than I*--------------------------------------- *“—■
type of crop or livestock.
• SCHOOL STARTS
and it means better fishing tn
a Jobber or cylinder, run a Goss Hale Sackett. Nashville;
Gilbert and the family Ured
lived together m
in ■
a public
invited to attend.
Barry county lakes in years to come
Comet, knows all the tricks of a McLeod, Woodland; Louis VUbeck. | tenant home on the farm where the
as these fish are distributed from Various Subjects Taught at SUPERVISORS GO
temperamental hand mailer, is an Middleville;
Youngs Evans and I fatal accident happend. Two daugh- Kellogg Foundation has donated
the rearing ponds. Surely the Barry
TO KALAMAZOO expert al legal brief work, and Max Shumaker from the Kellogg, ten reside in Kalamazoo and a' the use of the camp to the Red
the
Presbyterian
Co. Rod and Gun Club, the Blate
hasn't forgotten nor is he too proud Agricultural school. Hickory Oor- I married daughter lives in Shellby- Cross for an Aquatic School.
Hatchery as well as all others who
Ohurch
Two Playgrounds Are There­
ners; Ree Wilcox. Freeport, and rille
have assisted with this work, are i
learned on the Banner—how
The week-day Bible school of the
Daniel Maxson and Adrian Madden । Tills fatal mishap casts a gloom
ANNOUNCEMENT.
fore Closed For Three
to be commended for their interest । Presbyterian church opened on
make good use of a broom.'*
from Pine Lake Camp. A. A. Roth, over the entire countryside, where
and enterprise.
Days
I Monday morning for its annual two­
sanitary engineer of the Health De- Mr. Beattie and his family were of Register of Deeds on the Repub­
MILLER FURNITURE BALK, — - .
1 weeks' session. The school is ।from
On। June 17. 18 and 19. Wednes- ■ The Miller Furniture Oo . old and | partment, and Fay Faust of the highly regarded.
lican ticket and will appreciate
n
—
-li.-U... and
*—,,4 Friday,
f-. &lt;4 — — at •this
1.1 —
) State Department of Health, will al-'
------.
.
19 o'clock to 11:30 o'clock each day,
Thursday
reliable, standing back of all they I so attend most of the sessions.
i
CORRESPONDENTS NOTICE.
served as clerk for Barry township
momlng and the following subjects week, the supervisors having charge
sell, are featuring a sale of furnl- I
। Owing to the fact that on Mon­ and know that I can perform the
,
I are taught: Bible Knowledge, Mrs. of the playground activities, have ture to make room for the new July I
. day we received over a page of six
"
'
’
Rose Shannon; Art, Mrs. Marlyn been called to Kalamazoo for a
BACK ON THE JOB.
market stock they plan to buy. It i
point
legal
notices
to
aet
for
the
city
It
was
a
pleasure
for
the
many
illsfaclory manner.
E8T. MARY BELLE JOHNOOCK. Bandeen; Knitting. Mias Ellen Mll- school of instruction and will not
To settle the estate of Mary Belle let; clay Modeling. Miss Betty be on duty at the fair grounds or will pay you to read their adver-, friends of Earl Boyes to see him on which were required for this Issue,
tlsement this week.
the Job at the register’s office Man- and kept one of the linotypes busy
Johncock an auction sale will be Tredinnick; crayon-work. Miss Vir- the second ward school on the days
day. Fortunately he got by without for over a day. we have had to sac­
held at the farm tliree miles west gtnla Ducker; Wood-work. Lemuel above mentioned. There will be no
BA8UUU GAMEBARNUM SCHOOL REUNION.
and three-quarters of a mile north Severance.;
Music and Singing, equipment for use at the play­
Saturday. June 37. on school an operation. While Jte was abeent rifice considerable rural and local
of Cloverdale. The sale will include Mrs John Kitelling; Mrs. Lillian grounds on these dates.
grounds Pot luck dinner. Wesley from the office his duties were news, ao if letters are eut out, or
looked after by Mark Ritchie, who Items eliminated you may know the
four cows, over fifty sheep, hay. Clark has charge -of the devotlonals
But'on Saturday. June 20. and Booher. Secy.—Adv.
grain, some household goods and! and assistants are Misses Wanda every wwk day thereafter the
MDUD OAMOK*
years It was fortunate that he . this, but our contract with the City
farm machinery 0re the advertise-1 Mae Bechtel and Hasel Bryant It grounds will be supervised by per­
DANCE AT TSORNAPPLE.
ment in thia paper for particulars. I to expectedi that
Biblical sons under
mat a class
ctaaa in
ui bwikw
unuer direction
curecuon of
oi Mr.
»ir. GreenuroonBat. night. Bud Wolfe's Prowlers. could be secured to meet the emer- of Hastings leaves no other altergency.
| native.
wlll also be conducted. 1 man, county recreational director. —Adv.
Henry Flannery to the auctioneer. Pageantry 111
Wh®n General Jackson arrived to
defend New Orleans, the city was
defensively. The
extremely weak, defensively
total of arms in the city did not exceed 2500
2.500 muskets
muskets, and about three
th
reed
times ..
as m»nv
many a
pistols.
time.
U.aI. He hit
been there long cither before
commenced to sense the jealousies,
and the doubtful loyalty of many of
the citizens. Red tape at Washing­
ton too was Just as pronounced al
that Ume us it is today and has
been ever since the government was ,
founded Urgent appeals had been I
made to Washington for rifles, but:
none had reached the city How­
ever a shipment of molasses did ar­' 'I
rive as the War Department's con"­ 1
tribution to the defense of the city
y
in the war with England New Or­
leans is something over loo miles
from the mouth of the Mississippi,
and the last half of the distance is
largely bog and swamp Arms and
bays from the Gulf of Mexico
formed most excellent approaches 1
The waters of Lake Borgne, one of
them, comes up to wlUiln a few I
------ —. _la|(e ■
miles of New Orleans
was "protected" by five
fl.. or six
_... Utile '
tubs,
optimistically
called gun­
boats. with very .•mall crews, and
in no position to offer opposition to
tha strong British Annada. This
little American fleet of so called
gun-boats was able to perform one ,
valuable service
II reported the
British fleet at the mouth of Lake I
Borgne. showing that the invaders
were going to attack from that
direction, instead of by Mobile as
it was expected they would
The
news threw New Orleans into a
state of alarm and consternation I
because the British approach was
not expected from that quarter ArHilary men and sailors were badly
needed. It was suggested to Gen.
Jackson that he accept the services
Sf the LafTIle gang of pirates, who
were skilled, reckless seamen, but
be rejected the offer of the ''hellish
banditti." The five little gun-boats
tin Lake Borgne gave a splendid
tccount of themselves, but soon fell.
Into Uu- hands of the greatly su­

One Auction Odle

CORNERSTONE IS
UIDHDELTON

nt

• r&gt;. "*!. -* m-”

WANT J[

BECOME CITZENS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, TMURADAY, JUNE 11, 1»M

FAOE TWO

LOCAL NEWS

at FOOD CENTER
SUGAR! ^an
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10-

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* 23c

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COFFEE
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•J".,, 25c

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Each

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Q
w 1,8 rs

O

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C

bunch

5c

bunch

Fresh, Crisp

Sweet and Juicy

doz.

25c

Friends at Mrs. J. P. Black will
be phased to hear that her condi­
tion is somewhat improved.
Mrs. Burdette Rose la caring for
the Dr ouy C Keller home during
the absence of Dr and Mrs. Keller.
The Will Dawson cottage at Wall
lake has been opened for the summer. the family arriving from Ann
Arbor last week end to occupy it.
The last week 27 boy* and 38 girls,
a total of 65 children, used the
Second, ward school playground,
which Is under WPA supervision.
A new set of Encyclopedia Britannice has recently been added to the
books in the Hastings public 11•--------------------- -------- ------ ■

iris al all the main approaches to
their village as a port of their
He doesn't give _ damn.
pions for beautifying the landscape
I’d like to be a moron.
“nd are co-operating with rural orYe Gods; Perhaps I ami
ganlxations in setting out shrubbery
—Jonesville Independent.
and othc.r
,lon« maU1 lrav'
।
We know of someone cloee.ly oonel&lt;?d roud3 n**™y.
i necUxl with another newspaper who
Tiw Reconstruction Finance Cor- . feels exactly Die same about that
poratlon has made and disbursed J question.
Joans as of February 29. 1936. in the
Barry j George R Fleming, of philadelWe notice that a A Anderson has amount of 1321.000.00 In
phis, on his first visit to this sec­
just been elected on tike Board of county, according to a report pub­
lion in a long number of years, evlDirectors of the Hupp Motor Car lished by the National Emergency
Tlie amount authorized I dently had belter luck in running
Co . of Detroit, taking the place of Council
for this county was 1332,000.00. the , on to former Woodland and Nash­
Vem R Drum, resigned
; vllle friends than he did here. It just
Mr and Mrs
Forest Woodin report stales.
happened that in the short lime he
■ Vivian Biddle । of Belmont arc the
Henry Osborn now on a business could spend in Hastings most of the
parents of a daughter bom on Fri­ trip west writes to friends here that
। old friends, sill) living, were out of
day, June 5. She tins been named he reached Portland in lime for the
I the city or away from home. Mr
Patricia Helen Congratulations.
annual rose festival, which he de­ | Fleming, born in Ohio, came to
Harold Sears of Grand Rapids scribes as the most colorful thing
1 Woodland township, as a small boy.
has taken John Bowen's position he ever expects to see. all roses
witii his parents, went to school
with the Hastings Table company, used being like hot house slock.
there, and later as a young man.
the latter having entered the em­ Hedges of roses all In bloom cou­
clerked at the George Truman
ploy of ths Klndcl Furniture com­ pled with green backgrounds pre­
store in Nashville and entered iargepany
sented a wonderful picture.
| ly into the musical life of the vil­
malUrlrrdner,'^,i^-ertO?reOrLdI,|n
“ Walsh U1
Mrs Aliena A,,v
Allen
of De- »»se.
lage. He
He ten
left mere
there over
over a
a naif
half cencenmlle walk al the field dav snorts at
«»nP»’'y with Mrs. A S tury ago and for years conducted
Grand Raotdi altSda^- ThiTmMreJ ‘
°!
&lt;nd
HeIcn
kno»n music store In Philta .&gt;1 oi,™«
r°n."*c
on
.» inllmau
tr^nL?
Olympic mect.Tu„da&gt;, of Mrs w R Cwk Mrs frlcndshlp wtth many famou&gt; mual.
Veterans who have alreadv re
*h° ,orm"ly llve&lt;1 .ln Wclt
Veterans wno
who nave
have already
already rere-, Rav
veierans
lv was •a frequent
rrenuent vi«
tnr tn
Bay r,
City
visitor
tn
' cclved their bonds, or will receive Hastings in the gay nineties at the
i them later, should read the Good-1 home of her uncle. M W Hicks,
year Bros Hardware Co advertise­ । and n popular participant in the
ment in this issue and follow the I
। dances at the Hastings House ' mid
sound, sensible advice it con tabu
. at Wall lake camping parties when
Read It.
, girls wore long skirted bathing suits
A large congregation was much II .UH
witii KiHnm.rc
bloomers .nd
and stockings
Mr*
..^*rinBt Mr.
pleased with the pageant or play-1
Walsh is a grandmother now. but a
let ■Silver Bells and Cockleburrs ' I young appearing one. and we won­
given by fourteen younger children der—how does she still manage to
of the Methodist Sunday school, | retain that school girl complexion?
Bunday forenoon at the usual hour
for Sunday school at 11 o'clock
| The many friends of Mrs. Wm. A.
Henry Jansen, our blind street । Murphy, who ho* been in the
। musician, now carries the cane the Barnes hospital. St. Louis. Mo . lor
| state provides tor all people so at--I two months, will be glad to know
she has returned to her home. 615
fileted It's a sturdy affair of while, ।
8o Jefferson street. We are sorry to
‘ highly enameled, save at the end.
where about five or six inches of slate her condition is not much tinbrilliant red help to flash to the proved.
Amon, che mucuni urn inur' motorist. "Slow down." if the owner
of the cane Is crossing the road or estlng spectators at the graduating
I Ln any position of danger
It's a exercises of the Athens high school
state law. so Mr, Jansen informs last Thursday night was Mrs Sarah
us. and motorlsU arc compelled Isaacs. 107-year-old Indian woman
to obey it. otherwise they get into from Bradley, probably the oldest
trouble Mr Jansen went over to person In Michigan, says the Athens
Kalamazoo Saturday and played his 'limes. She rode to Athens by auto­
mobile with some of her relatives to
accordion at the Elks' convention.
witness the graduating ceremonies,
her great grandson. Samuel Mackety. being a member of the class. It
is remarkable, indeed, that one so
old is sull able to be up and around
much les* betng able to ride 50 or
60 miles and attend a function of
this kind —Bellevr- Gazette
Wonder if well be flooded this
summer with the usual groups of
- 'magazine solicitors with their stock­
spiel nbout a "Dad in bad luck” and
“Working their way thru college"
and "So many voles are needed to
help them win a prize." etc . etc ?
They arc always so cheerfully fresh
al first, but gel sorla crude and
nasty when they find you're a sort
of cold hearted, tough guy
and
aren't going to come across
It*
well too. to remember like as not
they are spoofing and really are
doing business for tome big city
agency It's well too. to remember
that we have local people who live
ui town, pay their taxes and spend
their money here, who are agents
for first class magazine agencies
and the income from them is a
legitimate part of their living.

Bologna
Lb.

IO2C

Good Luck Oleo
Frankfurters
2

Hamburger

rlan»
u »*«» known to Hasting*
...i___ ■ of the glampeople as the h
husband
orous Addle Reed Fleming, whose
beauty, personal charm nnd lovely
voice are still talked of in her native
city After her marriage, Mr Fleming saw that her voice received the
best training nnd she became the
leading contralto in the Quaker
City, and gave concerts abroad Mr
FlemlnB loo, reurel Ura m
with ills daughter Marjorie and her
husband There are two grandchil­
dren. one married He Lx M years
old but doesn't look it There still
linger about him the distinguished
manner ----nnd ■polished
that
---------------------- -bearing
-------- „ •••
—
I helped him win the belle of HasIn the (ace of stiff compctitlon.
long
years
ago
j t,onyears
~
•••
„ ",’SJ‘YA2! ™ W'D
.
I Mr and Mrs Walter Ryan of E
Grand
Or
“nrf Rl
St. “
announce
nnn"n" ,K
the
" engage ment of their daughter. Doris Murguente. to Melvin Qelow son of Mr
and Mrs Otto Oclow of Kalamazoo
The wedding will lake place In
July

MOTHERS DISCUSS
“CHILD CULTURE.”
On Monday evening Mrs Ches­
ter Long entertained the Hasting*
Circle of the child Conservation
League, witii fifteen members* pres­
ent The study was Child Culture
Mrs Dorrance Trelhrlc present­
ed a paper on "The Baby s Coming
and Ils Welcome ' This included the
subjects of pre-natal care. «fuipment and arrangement of the nur.wry and many helpful ideas. Site
said the nursery should be simply
furnished, the wa*’’, floor and cur­
tains to be washable, tile furniture
inexpensive and plain.
• Lullabys" was the subject dis­
cussed by Mr* T N Knopf who
said they should be short, express
emotion and concern tilings in
which the child was interested such
as Peter Rabbit, etc

WATERS
Clothes Shop

^♦-1-

In Our Meat Dept.
Grade A

A daughter waa bom on June IS
Had a number of persona atop me
to Mr. and Mrs. George Owen, 1712
8 Jefferson St, at Pennock hoaP&gt; ta­
supposed to be more Intelligent than
olhar
persons.
That
professor
trical signa on State street U tha down at Michigan U trying to hand
one Jual placed in front of the O. E­ us poor fellows a good doM of
soothing
syrup
for
the
weeks
ahead.
Goodyear hardware.
If such is the case, I am sure all of
Rev. a Jeff McOombe, formerly
of Nashville. haa recently been U5 would be more than willing to
trade a few ounces of that cheesy
elected preaident of the Cleveland
Church federation, a fine compli­ substance called gray matter, for
Just a little of peace during the hot
ment in that b|g city.
j Ithaca's Civic League is planting months My answer to that profes-

^.♦4- j

lb.
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

Therr was considerable discussion
,2&lt;’ ulk
Mrs c W Dolan on
_Baby Hygiene Food and Clothing '
Thh. wax ।the
the
« „closing meeting of&lt; .....
Circle until September
BREAKFAST AND*

On Sunday Mr and Mrs Walur
McKelvey (Helen Linn: entertained
a group oi Hastings peoplr at
breakfast at their apartment in
Battle Creek Those present were
Mr and Mrs Harold Logan Miss
Rove DeFoc Miss Ethel Ragle and
Mis* Mane Neuschacfer Later the
group went to Gull lake where they
enjoyed a sail tn Mr McKelvey s
boat. Chewink and enjoyed swimL mlng and watching the sailboat
L races in the afternoon.

SUNDAY and MONDAY. Juna 21 and 22
JOE I. BROWN in
„

lbs.

enia, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Striker, at
noon on Friday. June 12. the mar­
riage of Mbs Esther Striker of Bal­
timore township and Dale 8. Bump
of Hastings was “*

BAKRY COUNTY BOY TAKES
FUNT GIRL FOR BRIDE.
From the Flint Journal b taken
the following account of the recent
marriage of Harold 6. Brown, ton
at oup
Supervisor
«vwot and
ana Mrs Bert
oert Brown

“bi Maurine

!of

~
Bauer, which will be of interest to
*h027ad lhe
"H* the ninny friends of the Brown •
ice. They were attended by Mbs El- family in Barry county*
ten o- Eek of Naahvfite and Herbert ...
°°
"A home wedding of pretty ap­
P. Smith of Hastings.
pointments united In marriage Mias
The bride was dressed in * charm- Maurine Bauer and Harold 8.
Ing gown of peach mousseline de ,
s.£*.7.,
.
sole and her bouquet was of »weet' ^ock' at^thc* resktenc*? of
! peas, roses and ferns. Miss Eck wore i brij.'.’ nar-nt.
, A*!e
an attractive dress of light blue J^rd J^suer’ Mi HaJrief slmu
and carried a variegated bouquet** X**
The ceremony was witnessed by the ’ i^theran ehureh
.*
•’ b“Mu»' •*«

Mrs. Lynn Slocum and family of I
. .
Grand Rapids and Mr. and Mrs.'
,bri^ *,a attired In a
Oliver Ickes of Lake Odessa.
. 8°wn of •hlu “l,n' fwhloned on

Ft&gt;Uowln.

-U.. .

l-.Uc-MT’Sd

in |

A jX""

for a short trip to Traverse City roreT and white *weet^« rn
!hev\fm b?X home It^/ WeTt '
C0-‘Um*
Miss* Harriett
they will be at home at 341 West | Maxfield, her onlv attendant wore
Mill St. tn this city. Both are well I crchjd colored organza and carried
known and are held Iff high esteem. I a ghower bouquet of Token roues
their many friends extending best ■ and orchld aweet
tittle MIm
, wishes for their success and happt- ■ Marilyn Brown was a flower girl.
| ncM __________ _ ___________
1 «nd 'small Lloyd Bauer acted as ring
•••
' bearer
I VISITS HASTINGS
,._ ' . ,. .
AFTER SIXTEEN TEARS.
i m,OU“r U* J1Uref
..
ln Bn ensemble of aqua boucle, and
Sgt
Kenneth Eddeburn.
Eddeburn. Mrs.
Mrs
Sgt.
Kenneth
iI wore a corsage of rose-, and mar­
I Eddeburn
Pdriehtim and
nnd their two
twz, children
rHIMrr,, I
. V, __
a.
gucriles. Mrs. Bert Brown the
arc guests of Mr and Mrs. Bert bridegroom's mother, who. with Mr.
liumpnrey
Humphrey and other relatives Sgt.
Eddeburn enlisted tn the service of Brown, came from Doster for the
Uncl. S.„, .„d
,ull««a .1 wedding, also completed her cos­
Honolulu. Hawaii, for the past slx- tume with a similar, corsage.
"Lewis Brown acted as best man.
teen ye*r. He has now been trans...
___&gt; ---------.... .
Portlond,
ferred to Portland.
Oregon, where A reception followed the ceremony
he6 will go after his furlough Li
Lx over for the 30 guests present, and a
u
the last of July They expect to at- wedding collation was served from
tend the Uchly family reunion nt a table centered with a bridal cake
Coldwater. Ohio, next week Nat­ and tiered rows of candles. Spring
urally Sgt
Eddeburn sees many flowers were used about the room.
a wedding
trip to norlhchanges in this city and vicinity.' ,"After
,,
,,
many of his relatives. Including his;' em
tlI Michigan,
,,c™’an- the, ,ccouple will re­
ft *’:::
~t street. Mrs.
mother, have passed awav, and hte
arrlcl
wore
- ----------- friends
--------- ' Brown *
“■ for traveling, an en­
boyhood
are scattered. Yet
he is enjoying his first visit here semble of navy and powder blue,
after his long absence He shipped with hat and accessories of navy."

1 his car from Honolulu, so will drive
JOIINCOCK REUNION.
through to Portland. His many
The thirty-fifth annual reunion
friends are glad to see him anti
make the acquaintance of his fam- of the Johncock family was field at
the home of Mr. and Mrs Chester
johncock on Saturday. June 13
There were 107 relatives present
THE KETCHAM YARD
from the surrounding vicinity. Kal­
POPULAR RENDEZVOUS. amazoo. Plainwell. Hastings, Char­
As the summer season is on the lotte. Devil's Lake. Onsted and De­
John Ketchams outdoor living room troit. Officers chosen for the com­
with Its attractive surroundings and ing year, ail re-elections, are Pres .
none fire place becomes a popular Lynden Johncock; Secy, Mrs Clara
gathering place for people who llj
— '■[anion;
like.
Slat
Trcas,
fclra. . Bernice
nothing better than a suggest^,
stloi Wi
„.dwh Mrs Zelphia Morehouse will
that a pot luck supper or lunch be entertain in 1037
held there
Tiw Friendly Hour Club, a group
ENTERTAINS NURSES.
of twelve Lansing couples to which
Mrs Roman Feldpausch and Mrs
Mr and Mrs Ketcham belong, had Edward Reesor (Louella Rosei en­
u happy time there Sunday evening. tertained twenty-four nurses last
Tuesday night Mr Ketcham's of­ evening, Wednesday, complimentary
fice force from the State Insurance to Mrs Earl Palmallcr and Mrs.
IX pl. numbering about forty with Terrence Doyle Quests from out of
their wives, held their annual pot town Included Mrs Agnes DeKruif
luck there enjoying various sports and Miss Madeline LyBarker of
and visiting. Yesterday pfternoon Grand Rapids. Mrs Hill of Battle
Hospital Guild No. 1. Mrs. L,. H Creek. Misses Florence and Stella
[Tsvarts
[EvarU cnairman,
chairman, neia
held tJieir
their month
modth-- Parrott and Susie Fisher and Mrs.
ly meeting there, making Hr) hours Vera Hewitt of Woodland. Miss
------—-----*-----------------'
*for “
count- kby
sewing
on curtains
the Mercy Usborne of Carlton, and oth­
hospital.
ers.
HEALTH COUNSELORS
OFF TO LOS ANGELES.
Mt.' Rase DeFoe tn company
with Mias- Mildred Tuttle of Hills­
dale county and Mrs. Helen Mc­
Kelvey of Calhoun county, senior
counselors of their county Health
Units arc leaving Monday for Los
Angeles where
wiki’ ,mv,three uaiiunai
national nursmg organizations will be in session
this month—lite National Organlzatlon of Public Health Nurses, the
American Nursing Association and
the blennal meeting of the Nurs­
ing Education Organization
Their roullfig home lake* them
to th* northwest by boat, and thru
Banff Lake Louise and the Cana­
dian Rockies.
ENTERTAINS TWELVE
SAGINAW FRIENDS.
Twelve'friends from Saginaw mo­
tored to Hastings on Thursday to
spend the day with Mrs. Isabel
Pancoast
her
daughter,
Mrs
Bruce Hayden, being one of the
number A co-opcratlvt luncheon
was enjoyed and bridge was played
[ itv the afternoon.

THE NEW IDEA CLUB.
Members of the club were enter­
tained by Mrs Maude W. Smith
Wednesday evening. June 10
a
short business meeting followed the
6.30 dinner, the remainder of the
evening being spent socially. At
cards the score prises were won by
Mrs Maurice Crookston and Mrs.
Edward Tudor Guests were Mrs.
Ella Bush of Pasadena. Cal., and
Mrs. John Roush.
CIRCLE NO 4.
Mrs W L. Hinman entertained
Circle no 4 on Wedneduy afternoon
at her home on W Center 8t Mrs.
Gertrude Houvenir gave an interest­
ing travel talk on Hawaii, where she
spent the winter

“Red Shoe'1 was a Choctaw chief­
tain who rendered distinguished
services to the French of Ixnilslana
In their wars against the Chicksthe English till he wan (lain by the

SONS 0' GUNS

Ibs.

JOAN BLONDELL.

a Regiment of Roa:

BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY at l:M and 3:04 o'clock

Boiling Beef "*
LARD
Armour's Star

2u&gt;«- 25c

'■ lOc

Veal Roasts ^ “or

I*.

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. JUNE 23

The Melody Lingers On t
With Josephine Hufchihion end Joseph Houston

16c

Veal Chops

a.

25c

Beef Kettle Roasts

ib.

14c

Pork Roasts

&lt;» 21c

~

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. JUNE 24 and 25

♦

WARNER BAXTER in

T
»

| Robin Hood Of El Dorado t
Jz

With Aan Loring. Bruce Cabot Margo, J. Carrol Nalsm
**..!(. BSc; Children
r-HIMr*n 10c
Kir
Adults

'

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. JUNE 26 and 27
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

W« Give Free Tickets On the 4 Automobiles Given
Away at the Barry County Fair

The Farmer In The Dell
FRED STONE aad JEAN PARKER

.

Food Center

WAITING!. MICH.

PHONE 2609

Today's Fanner look* at more than machinery ... he looks foe years of u liefacton service and eaac
of operation. The Farm Bureau Line is the answer to the demand of today. Designed to meet

FEATURE NO. 1

the requirement* for which it waa Mailt, thia line Io one of the finest produced.

HELL-SHIP MORGAN

Bureau "FARM-TESTED" EQUIPMENT IS GUARANTEED TO GIVE SATISFACTION.

MUTINY RULES THE RAGING WAVES!

b

'

Adnlla LSc;

Cimdren Ifc

”

Look at thio line
Farm

. . . notice the ease of operation . . . sturdy construction ... the wall-balanced control.

▼!

=

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc.

-

�THT HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JUNE It, |)M
relief .hurling, allowing cue scratch | Stowe's Market
(ltd on &gt; Iona Mar HooUaa, wMro !
hit •
and
striking ou
out four men. Next Stowe, as. .
. Ti
nu
nd sinking
iMr mXM until ruun, hnlth I
meet Michigan I Bhiamanl. r.f
rented first aid service In addition
caused them to retire tn 1811 when
to hl* activities as Assistant Camp •
Bumpers, another fast class A team Callant. lb.
Urey moved to Hastings. She leave* i
'from
. num Grand Rapids. In‘the final | Cobleski. 3b.
Illinois Paper Says All Are Director al Camp Ki-8hau-Wau this 1
two children, Deyo and Mn Bertha
summer. The Starved Rock Area1
1 home
homtgame
______________
until July 4th when they Faulkner. 2b
Happy Over His Return
council is indeed fortunate tiiat a HIRSCH-FELDPAUSCM
_i... Conoco „
------ al
fair-j Romani, I f.
] P!*y
Oases
dren; tlx great-grandchildren; three
STILL UNDEFEATED. II grounds.
grounds.
man
of
Mr.
Dykstra's
character.
I
Van Sickle, c.f
To Camp
(Continued from page i. gee. 1)
Standing
of teams iQ anij In-'[ Hastings
ability, and high calibre Is available ' £
—
R H E’shada. c
kegon. Mrs. Laura Bcott of Hastings,
We made mention last week of for camp in this area. News of his cludli
ludlntf June 16.
0 Ward, p
'Coville. r.f. ..
and Mrs. Cyula Rickie of Green­
The government, through the WPA. Albert Dykstra's leaving for a traln- acceptance of the position will be |
Hoevenair. lbville, and many nieces, nepiwws, and
will pay 858.600. the district bor­ Ing camp In northern Michigan greeted with much joy by all scout- HIrsch ..'.880
1 0001 young, ss. .
frlenda. The funeral was held at
j ----... wL_
_fho c4me lo jtnow Feldpau^ch ........... 6
6 0
ers —
and
scouts
rowed from the government 840.000 preliminary to joining forces with —
1 000 ; c. O'Donnell. 3
the United Brethren church Bunday leaves to mourn IiU
■eir": camping
“-“"I-; cezsea- Nat l Bank ......... 7
5 2
•’14 | Mllier. c f. . .
OBITUARY.
at 4 per cent Interest to be used for our former Scout leader. Lloyd Sha- him during last year's
afternoon at two o'clock, the Rev. 14 grandchildren, i
Table
Co
8
5
3
I
j
Nettie
Irena
Pratt,
eldest
daughE. O. MtSherry officiating. Burial children and a sis
the building. The W. K. Kellogg
a a
I con. Power CO. .. 6
3
3
500 , Irwin. 2b.
Benslba.
0 ter of Philip De and Ellen Pratt, in Valley Home cemetery.
A write up in a dally LaSalle. Ill.,
Foundation contributed the archi­
"
Hi-Way
3
3
500 ' Brownell. c.6
0 | was bom August 10. 1863. In Elyria,
tects plans and details for the paper has the following very com­
z~v
,
•
, ■
'Triangles 7
3
4
428 Hackney, lb
1 I Ohio, and passed away June 12.
OBITUARY.
building and 827.000 In cash. The plimentary thing* to say concern­
428 I B. O’Donnell.
!*
“
»
«&gt;i»dry
0
1936.
after
an
Illness
of
6
months,
at
Burdette
Briggs,
son
of
John
ing
Mr.
Dykstra
and
his
work
Foundation has also promised to
v
j Bliss Machine
7 2 5
385 FTcenun. p. .
0 her home In Hastings, aged 72 years. Wesley and Fannie Briggs, was bcm
contribute 15.000 toward furnishing which will be of interest to many ~'
1
| Rogers Grocery
7
2 5
.285
— 9 months and 2 days. On May 25. । Oct. 29. 1859 In Watson township.
friends here:
the new building.
.142
Townsend plan
meetingFriday! S.h^n
"
1
! S
3 1882. she married Ellhu G Larkin of Allegan county. Michigan.
filiated with the Masonic
"Mr. Dykstra, a icouler of many
The new structure will have two
.125
evening. June 19. 8 30 o’clock. 8 !Pljton Rlng " ”
1
7
j Hastings township who preceded her , At the age of six yean he, with of which he waa a life men
stories and a commodious basement. years experience and active assist­
in death last February. They set- his parents, moved to live farm at
, --­
In the basement will be the healing ant scoutmaster of Troop No. 71. Jefferson St. lot. Were you at the
plant, rooms for the manual train­ Hastings, Michigan, sponsored by last meeting? If not. why not? We INDEPENDENTS LOSE
---- ------ will
— —
— »" expecting Mr. Putney, a sales-1
Tn Q-rniAJC'Q UARlfCT
the American—Legion,
again
ing department, and showers for ...........................
OIUHC o mHnrxc.1
the boys and girls, which will be assist-In the direction of the sum-' man from Kalamazoo, to be our'
mer camp al Ki-Shau-Wau. near next speaker.
connected with the gymnasium.
! Dropped First Game of the
In the rear of the building will be Lowell, this season. Mr. Dykstra's
The Petunia Circle will meet j
|Season by Score of
the fine gymnasium room. 46x66 fine personality. Interest In boys,
feel, and 23 feet to the celling. It and valuable technical knowledge Thursday al 2 o’clock at the home
8 to 6
will have stage, galleries and dress­ in first aid and other scouting work, of Mrs. Clay Adams. E. Slate St.
him—
to-----------------------all boys who —
at------------i The ,
ing rooms, and will be fine tor com-endeared
---------------------_„j
Hastings
Independents
munity purposes as well as school, tended camp last summer and beBrush Ridge Cemetery Circle will opened the local basebail season at
uses. on the first floor will be the 1came
----- *-------more'—
familiarly*•-----------known— to meet with Mrs
Charles Aldrich , the fairgrounds Sunday by dropping
them
as
"Dyke."
He
is
a
World
war
superintendent's office .and four
Thursday. June 25 Pot luck dinner the opener to Stowe's Market of
grade rooms. There are 'two other veteran and has been commander Everyone welcome.
. Grand Rapids. 6 to 8 Bert O'Don­
I FIND SUCH GOOD
rooms that will be used for special of the Legion post in Hastings and
I nell. hurling for the locals, pitched
purposes connected with the work active In state and district Ameri­
QUALITY CANNING
Miss Mary Loew, daughter of the a fine game but weakened in the
of the school The school will be op­ can Legion work.
second
when
he
allowed
five
runs
In-­ late Daniel Loew of near Burnlps to score From then on he settled
erated in two divisions: the fir.it i "Mr. Dykstra is a registered in
SUPPLIES AT
and a missionary In Africa, home
comprising the pupils up to and In- structor in American Red Cross first
down and held the visitors scoreless
C.THOMAS STORES,
structlon in this on furlough, will speak al the Unit­ until the seventh inning when one
eluding the sixth grade, and the aid. having given Inst
second the junior and senior high, work m
in. both Allegan
Allegi
and Barry ed Brethren church in Freeport run scored on an error Tlie visitors
Sunday evening. She will show
ANO LOW PRICED TOO
.. „
counties
which
are affiliated
with
with
pupils
from the
seventh
up to
stereopticon pictures of her work tallied twice in the first, five In the
and Including the twelfth grade the Battle Creek Area council He is
second, and one in the seventh.
The high school will be In the sec- I a graduate of the Red Cross First Miss Loew is a niece of their pastor. Hastings pushed across their first
ond story. An outstanding feature ' Aid school and will attend the Rerun In the first when Coville sin­
Boy
Lead
wlll be tlie study room. 30x60. with glon Seven
“ **
— Scout
------ Camp
-------*“
J ­
gled, Hoevenair struck out, Young
THORNAPPLE GARDEN CLUBfour ciass rooms, all well-equipped ers’ Aquatic school as representative
filed to
left field for the second
of the Starved Rock Area council '
for school purposes.
Remember the Garden party at out. C O'Donnell walked. Miller
the
home
of
the
president.
Mrs
J
This unit school lakes In five which will be held June 14 to 20
- singled scoring Coville nnd James
IDEAL GLASS CAPS do.. 15c
school districts in Barry township, ut the Owaslppe Scout camps of P Mohler, on June 26
Pol, 'luck
' struck out to end the rally In the
three In Hope, one in Orangeville tlie Chicago council near Muskegon. iuiiciicuu
luncheon at iI ju
30 ocioii
o’clock
I
Please
। fifth the locals pushed across three
and one In Prairieville
Without Mich.
bring table service and one dish more run*, and scored their final
’ Mr Dykstra will assume respon­ Members wishing to go please call I two In the ninth. Lefty Freeman
doubt other rural districts will be
added
sibility for ail health and safety Miss Sadie Glasgow or Mrs. R. K. took over the mound in the eighth
advancement work. Hurd. Guests are welcome
Naturally the tolks In that part precautions.
| inning and did on excellent job of
of the county are proud of this new
building, which will not only mean
much to the people of Delton and
their children, but aLso to those of
the surrounding territory
C. J Barnum has been superin­
tendent for the last three years He
had the privilege of organising the
Woodland Consolidated school, aft­
er the building was constructed
there; so he knows how to plan for
Of Pure Worried!
the new and greatly enlarged school
at Delton.

COflNERSTONE S
UIDATOELTON

APPRECIATES WORK
OF ALBERT DYKSTRA

Sporting Items

Organizations

i &gt; &lt;

oo

CANNING TIME WILL SOON BE HERE
ERYfid

C.THOMAS STORE
IPPRlCt

JELLY GLASSES
doz. 38c
MASON ZINC CAPS doz 18c

JAR RINGS XVBSCB
doz. 4c
PARO WAX
lb pkg. 10c
KERR LIDS Sr-**
doz. 9c
KERR CAPS SIS’" doz. 25c

BATHING

HASTINGS REPRESENTED
AT BLODGETT REUNION.
A number of local graduate I
nurses who received training at
Blodgett hospital. Grand Rapids at­
tended the reunion of classes last
week which occurs every five years.
Mrs. L H Evarts, a former as­
sistant superintendent. Mrs John
Nobles. Mrs Clifford Dolan. MUs
Alberta Nash. MIm Mercy Usbome
and Miss Anne Perry being there
tor the full program or part of It.
Il was delightfully planned, the
banquet being held at Kent Coun­
try Club, a tea at the beautiful
grounds at Brookby. the John
Blodgett estate, and the day fol­
lowing a picnic at the lovely old
farm home in Alpine township, of
MUs Ida M Barrett and Miss Welsh
prominent!/ connected for many
years with the executive end of the
hospital.
There was much talking and hap­
py reminiscing
The local girls
tel) us no one came In for more altention than Mrs Evarts, to whom
reference was frequently made In
the addresses, the toasts and Infor­
ma) speeches.
INDEPENDENCE.
There is often as much inde­
pendence in not being led. as In not,
being driven.—Tryon Edwards.

fl

An

enormous

variety

Moson Round or Square Jars
% pt. JARS
doz. 53c
Pt. JARS
doz 57c
doz. 68c
Qt. JARS
2 Qt. JARS
doz. 97c

of

brand new styles. Featur­
ing the ever-flattering sun-

IDEAL JARS '/z pt doz. 67c
IDEAL JARS
pt. doz 69c
IDEAL JARS SSH?! dpz. 82c

backs and new Empire up­
lift

tops,

with

corduroy

waffle weave trims and nau­

tical applique designs. All
have overskirts. Some with
adjustable shoulder straps.
Sizes 34 to 46.

A value!

4 Star Hits at the
Beach
Mao’s ALL WOOL

Bathing

A Riol of
Lovely Colors!

SUGAR
1052
COCONUT Er
20c
PORK&amp;BEANS
5*
I I Iff III
10c
Wlllw
16 OZ. CAN
ALICE
BRAND

ODESSA BRAND
GOLDEN BANTAM
CREAM STYLE

PEAS SREGN 3 iu 25c
CUCUMBERS 2u&lt;9c
Lemons s^nid.t 4 for lOc

Brims up-brims down—'most every kind of
briml Featuring Homburgs and Bretons with
clever, colorful trimmings I Try them on 1

'“1
nett to them that you U like. And
each of them embodica 7 important

SHOP AT PENNEY'S AND SAVE

Men’s Seersucker

Boys’ Oxhide

SLACKS

Overalls

Summer's Practical Pants

Built for long wear!

98*
Rmud nit finest duL iUM

Ntnnti

GajftjW

C. B. HODGES
DEPENDABLE JEWELER
HASTINGS, MICH.
PHONE 2120

Ribbed stitch one piece
style Talon fastener suits.
Tightly knitted trunk with
contrasting
color
piped
sides. White webbed belt.
Set-in flap pocket. Speed
cut shirt, in contrasting
color stripes. A very smart
looking suit priced low!

They’ll take a terrific beat­
ing: io any kind of aports
or work and come out of
the laundry aa bright as a
new dollar! Gray and white
striped . . . they don’t show
soil easily f Cool and light­
weight for real summer
comfort . . . Sanforised
shrunk for real summer
practicality! They’re, buy» I

Radishes

|c

Fr^k

WESSON OIL
FOR SALAD MAKING

can

24 &amp; 45*

SNOWDRIFT
■HOBTENIMG FOB MAKING
GOOD THINGS TO BAT

1 ,b- OOC
Cdn Ct

3 lb- EQC
Con 30

SARDINES

49c

IN MUSTARD SAUCE

Constructed to the same
rigid specifications as men’s

22c
2
25c
2^ 25c

FINE
GRANULATED
PURE BEET

FANCY BREEN

98*

CERTO
SURE JELL
PEN-JEL

?.% 25c

Na. 2

CAN

CORNED BEEF HASH 2 c- 29c
CHEESE MuwiM.Mi.cab,
u.
19c
ROLLED OATS
6 b. 22c
LIBBY'S POTTED MEAT 2 - 9c
3
MACKEREL
25c
BISQUICK r
WHEATIES£21
10c
HERSHEY’S
PET MILK IMADIATtD
OVALTINE
MARTINI CRACKERS »» 15c
BUTTE* WATUU
5c GUM *ii
s—*■
3
lOo
REFRESH AID
d*mu m. 5c
QUART
BOTTLt Z3C
PICKLES SWtZTMIXW
VEGETABLE SOUP 25“?^ £

Oxhides! Best quality 2.20
blue denim, triple stitched,

GUEST IVORY SOAP

bar tacked, and reinforced
at points of wear!

Parva

buckles that mean shoulder

MISSION INN

&gt;/i lb. 23c

SOAP FLAKES

Yi lb 25c

SILVER DUST

2

5

FINEST QBBBN

comfort, and won't bend or

HOLLYWOOD

break in washing! Cut full

Thomas Spacial

for comfortable, long last­

CLOROX PINT!

16c

QOA*T1

ing service! Best for boys I

C. THOMAS STI’*’
IM WIST STATE STREET

�The Hastings Banner

KMT THS COUNTY—
TBADS AT HOMS

Ifb llto Spbrll W a Cm—unity

THURSDAY, JUNE la, 19.16

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

-e

Editorials
of

the

Crawford Avalanche at Grayling and
.1 — v -

IK.

FILL*

'Round About Town

.

and then bought the Democrat
and recslved a part of their early , al Cheboygan, the name of which
tn* tn Ing an the Banner beck in the 1 he later changed to the Cheboydayx when printing machinery was j gon Observer.
Al is an enlhuslaaUc sportsman
and an ardent conservationist. It is
his creed that no hunter or fiabcrman should take more game than
he really needs Hunting or Ashing
for the sport there is Ln it and not
for the mere sake of slaughtering
game or setting new big catch rec­
ords is
aistenlly advocates both In speech

and action. He has a camp
Black River near Cheboygan
about which be and his
have spent many enjoyable

m his younger days he was a fine
ball player and caught on the
these columns.
Nashville team when John Ketcham,
Herewith is a brief sketch of each Claud Hough and Barry Wellman
, editor;
were also members.
Oscar Schumann, who will serve
His wife was a Barry county girl.
as guest editor for the issue of June Miss Fanny Jones of Lacey Al has
35 was bom in Hastings and spent avoided public office although he
his boyhood here—and they were has served as mayor of Cheboygan
happy days. too. he says Among his
oldest friends Is Joe Pflug. present ways taken active Interest in com­
newspaper foreman on the Banner. | munuy
munity affairs and is a fine booster
who escorted him to his first day for northern Michigan. He also has
of
He worked
„ school.
--------- —
..
. for the old been Exalted Ruler of the Elks at
Journal office, run by Dennis &amp; | Cheboygan. He organised the RoSllngerland. tn spare time during tary club in Cheboygan, was Its
two of his school yean and later secretary six years, and later its
transferred to the Barry County! president. Also has been president

to the Banner Office where he
stayed for flye years. Other printIng experience was gained In the
charlotte Republican office,
the
Hastings Herald, the Hudson Oaaette and Are years as superintend­
ent of a shop In Grand Rapids. He
was married to Mtss Grace A Doty
of Hudson in 1903 For a time lx
was Michigan representative for

tervUel Record, who will take over
uheso columns for the issue of July
g has also made an enviable rec­

brd in public life. His home people,
thcae who know him best, think so
much of him that he has served as
mayor of Watervliet, a member ot
the Berrien county board of super­
visors. Justice-of the peace, school
trustee,
village
clerk,
township
Barnhart Brothers A Spindler Type clerk and township treasurer; in
Foundries of Chicago and then tn addition he has been returned three
1911 purchased the Crawford Ava­ times as Democratic state senator
lanche at Grayling and has been , and during the Comstock adminls' trailon ■was floor leader. Since 1933
there ever since.

out of hand. His daughter. Miss taEg^niMHWMr Max.w.
Rose DeFoc, is also well known ty ,
j
throughout the county for the fine
work she has been doing in connecllon with the W K. Kellogg
Foundation Health Unit.
DePoe Is a former state senator,
was city clerk at Charlotte for two
terms, an aiderman of his ward,
took an active part in securing a
fine, up-to-date hospital for Char­
lotte. is a past president of char­
lotte Rotary, was executive clerk
under former Governor Chare 8

O^CklL(2rd GlOHCCS;
BitS of Yesterday

A

ward the completion of the C. K
8 railroad axe requested to report

that

"Shorty"

Somebody accused the author of
thia column of doing some key-hole
peeping the other day

Missionaries Enjoyed Meat
of Porpoise Which Tast­
ed Like Steak

"Otherwise how could he gain all
hla dope" they say!

I but under the protection of that
i God who holds the waters in tlie
i nollow of his hand, whore eye*
neither slumber or sleep. 1 feel per­
fectly safe.
Jan. 22.—In the evening the motlon of the vessel and tlie noise on
deck gave us warning of an approaching terrific gale At one mo-

iiiwujiir or Mrs. D r Robinson next threatenina in »in*
i
Rev Tho*. cox and Jas Crawley Haol‘„Vv.. *ll hand*
left
fnr «... v.,,v
»“Pinl graves, au hands were en-

sSrS.i ™

did I know
to slope!

PASSENGERS CATCH
LARGE ALBATROSS

in sight of Statten
54-40 South. IL was
more, even
• t •• distance. to behold mountains
whore towering tope •seemed to
reach the sky. We also had
hi
a visitor
little yellow
moments to
wings, then soared
away to a more permanent resting
place.
Monday. Jan. 21—Ever since last
Thursday we have been in sight of
Statten Land. Sometimes we have
gone 7 miles an hour and hoped to
। soon double the Cape but were driv­
en back by a strong head current
and head winds. Last night was a
sad one and this morning i knew
not whether to rise or 11c all day
in my berth. I rose, however, and
went to the head of the stairs, but
. was driven back by a hurricane of
1 wind and hall. By the swelling of
, the waves and constant pitching of
everything in the cabin 1 anticipate
I another sleepless night. Never, ex­
’ cept the night of the first gale, have

on the
in and
friends
hours.

. Democrat under C- P- Warner. At ■ of East Michigan Tourist Ass'n. *
- the suggestion of Joe be then came' beon D Case, editor of the Wa-

Of course, if he wants some real
competition|

TEMPE8T0US STORMS AS
BOAT ROUNDS OAPE
HORN

ot are fonx^r residents of Hastings, *a

considerably more temperamental
than it is today—and that U saying
something. A third. Leon D. Case of
the Watervliet Record is well known
to the state at large for a dlstlngutahed record of service in the
state house and senate. He was
Democratic floor leader during the
Oomstock administration and as an
editor follows in the footsteps of his
father. The fourth guest editor.
Muri H. DeFoe of the Charlotte Re­
publican Tribune, u well known to
Banner readers. His comments are '
quoted frequent y in thia paper, and

If he shuffles like he plays golf he
Is going to be a hard man to beat.

fall where they may!

upstairs which was the original
press room of the Banner. One of
Al’s Jobs as foreman was to move
the equipment to the ground floor
after the Banner had acquired this
space. After leaving Hastings he

four editorial friends have
most
kindly consented to take over these

ot them. Oscar Schumann

H'Y'YA

Understand that Hube cook has
installed a new shuffle board al his

IE!!.. , “ 7“! ,"'1 th“‘ ,bo'' «“ wh°

U&gt;«t

TWENTY YEARS AGO
□U..K0W The wrlv
“h4“ ~
I1""*”
&lt;" «&gt;'»
The fascinating game of tennis
Is apparently about to come urio
its own in this city judging from
the number of cnlnc* already re­
I llv„ dPprndlng on the strength of
ceived for a tournament to be held he has not seen in J7 years.
on the Episcopal courts.
FIFTY YEARS AGO
' ropes 0,1 whlch
slood w&lt; »*"
Walter Plpp. former first base­
Dr A P Drake has erected a Ured lo our cab,n wlth hearts wide
man for the Hastings team, will• - granite I11U1IU
„,C..................
be -------------handsome
monument
on hls'"*,lte 10 the
of our »Hua,Hr
....
.
.
j
tlOD.
seen with the New York American*'ini in Riverside nemrtorv
m an exhibition game Wednesday
The M E church organ fund has | Jan 33rd —Seated around a com­
afternoon
been increased about »50. the net , fortablc fireside, or In a warm xtove.
| room, you of
can form no Idea of the
City Ehgineer Tobias has com- proceeds
of the presentation
fall tq
to!Queen
Esther
~
I danger to which your sister Is expleted the work begun last tall
Queen Esther
rqach
to!
Mr A
Brown is securing
a ' pov‘&lt;1 1- hav*' ------------------1,01 bw‘n
onc -----P°s&gt;-i
improve the State Road apprqbch to
Mr
A R
R p
p Biuwn
wuruig ■
-----U
■&gt;*
il...
Iiirn,.
Kulrnno.r
-•
■
this city The stretch begin* al the large patronage in the dressmaking 11tlon
J 0,1 Iwn
,wo minute*
•nln,,tes InHnv
today TV.
The rea
Rlzor farm. When the weather per-I business.
। is very tempestuous. We are in latimit* BUI Taft the steam roller ! Clement Smith and p T Col-1
South The wave.* break
Will be rent out to pack the gravel. । grove will form a co-partnership °P
wltl? a roar
a b,BV&gt;’

Please! Yours truly has "fan mall"
that brings him all the interesting.
Both printable and unprintable!
Better be careful . . . your next
door neighbor may be one of my
| "fans!"

Well, folks. I did It . . Went to
to '
the local photographer last week i
and had my picture taken.
।
...
'
Bui whew! . . . I dIBn t know II I
wu aolna lo be .uch herd work
TOk’SS 2, hour to todTS me

You ahould see my acrap book!
• • •
?ou should Join the throng who
write, kbe
“‘ careful——
you may *--*
find your
efforts In the pages of my scrap
&gt;«»»
lho« Bern. lh.l
n,y edltor woman ! prion Bald book
*
“?d """ “*• •»«

po« .nd ikpresaon thu would do except
*”*“ to those
u'“ treasured
"-1 few with
ample Justice to all my best fea­ exceptional senses of humor!
tures ... If you get what I mean.

I may not have a perfect profile
like those Greek gods . . . but even !
the photographer had to admit it
was exceptional.
.

SMALL BOY GETS
TOO CLOSE TO TRUCK
Joseph Becker Suffers Slight
.
.
°
Injuries When He Is

And since I promised it to you. I'
Knocked Down
had to keep my word. Never shah it1
Little Joseph Becker, two years
be said that Tommy doesn't keep
old, whose home is in Lansing but
his promises.
who is here with his mother visit­
Well, hope you like my picture, ing her sister. Mrs. Robert Bechtel,
had a very narrow escape Friday
folks. Think it's pretty good m'self.
George Sheffield drove his truck on­
Weil, now that you ail Know who to the driveway at Earl Keeler's in
I am. I suppose the real punch will order te back up and make a turn.
No child waa In sight when he
be taken out of the column.
drove in; but little Joe got away
from the Bechtel home. Just across
|
All I'm praying for u that none
the road, crossed the street apd was
of these clever printers play a trick
standing on Uie driveway as Mr
I'on me before this sheet goes to press. Sheffield backed his truck Fortu­
&gt;
nately Uie truck only pushed him
,' Somebody emitted a nasty laugh
over. None of the wheals passed
| the other day in the press room of
I this here paper and it sounded like over any part of his oody. Mr.
Sheffield was in no way to blame
i the forerunner of a "llielaughisgofor the accident The child was tak­
taglobeonhlm!"
en to the hospital, but doctori
found that he had not sustained
Got my boss safely off to the
serious injuries but was consider­
Golden West last Saturday after­
ably bruised by having been thrown
noon Oh boy. can I ever have fun
to the ground when tlie truck hit
now!
trim.
Wonder why it Is that some of our
six-foot &lt;or better) athletes around
town like to get out in the country
and tramp up and down hills and
through mud for exercise and yet
must take their car to go two blocks
to the tennU courts?

l

"The brewing trade has always
Irad to be taxed and watched and
controlled ever since Cleopatra's
day. and nobody thinks that Cleo­
patra was a kill-joy. "—Lady Astor.

Osborne, was postmaster at Char1 "I am in favor of every political
leader who promises social adlotte for over 13 years, and was a
Bo Dale Bump decided to travel vanceihent bared on Justice and
Oscar says that he never liked he has served on the legislative former member of the three-inan
the matrimonial highway
. . But sound political economy."—Bruce
public office but that he was in­ I council and the crime commission.
pardon board of the state. Until
watch your step. Dale, there may Barton.
; be lots of little bumps ahead.
duced to become a Justice ot the
the war he handled publicity for
j
peace and served In that capacity WU-. Jan. 15. 1877. and went to Wa­ the Michigan Manufacturers Asso­
Yep. from red shirts to yellow
for eight years. As an editor he has tervliet with hla family In 1801. after ciation and during the war worked
sweaters! I'm telling you. this guy
been active in community affairs at a year in the south. He attended with the United States Food Ad­
Corky is getUng me down with his
The
success
of
the
boulevard
light
untkr
thc
nrm
»
anw
Smith
flashes of color!
Grayling and at present is vice- Watervliet High school and went ministration as publicity director
project has greatly pleased the rest- 1 Colgrove. July 1 next
i
.‘,he *Td
.
president of their Kiwanis club. Os- j to wtjrk in the local paper mills for Michigan. He Is an active mem­ dents of this city Mayor Horton has
A,bcrt D Niskern son of p w i T. f ' .^en“dJle??ent|y a'k lha '
Oh well, boys will be boys!
1
car has taken an active part in de- when he quit. After five years in the ber ef the Michigan Press Assocla- ordered tne lamp posts and they NUkern of this city, we arc pleased. £rT*
veioping Grayling into one of the mills, he Joined his father. Eugene tlon and was the flrat vice-president wiU be speedily installed as soon as , w ,lt’arn sraduated at West Point
J
iw
^T»e’ i
SO. friend boss took a plane to
they are received
Military Academy on Saturday last
when the vessel seemed on the
most popular winter resort sections F Case, in the publication of the of the University Press Club.
Los
Angeles!
in a class of eighty with the high-!
ot overturning I have felt the |
Mrs Chester Messer died at 6 est credit He did not receive so Kreat*al composure and serenity in
of the lower peninsula. When the Record When the elder Mr. Case
As this article is being written he
j
Now that's what I call a fast way
first resort special pulled out of De­ died in 1914. Leon took over the is attending the Republican Na- , o clock Sunday morning in Blod­ much as a single demerit mark dur- comm,'n&lt;1|ng my soul to God I do
not *"*
attain this calmness
peace 1 l&lt;&gt; Bel 001 of
.
•
gett Memorial hospital. Grand Rap­ tag his whole course
"'**
--------- ---and
--------------troit for Grayling with a load of management of the paper
tlonal Convention at Cleveland as a ids after a long illness.
Miss Franc Williams is enjoy­ of mind by looking at anything 11
happy skl-iers. skaters and tobog­
He married Miss Edna Garrett, a delegate from Eaton county
Summer is here for sure! Chris
The senior class numbering 89. ing her brief vacation at home MIm have done I find no saliatAction in 1
has
the
popcorn
machine
right out
ganers aboard bound for a week end daughter of a local physician, in
is the largest in the history of Has­ Franc Is successfully leaching the the thought that I have given up
tings High, and is also one of the young Ideas of a Prairieville school all to engage in the work of a mis­ . in front!.
of fun. Mr. Schumann saw the ful- 1904- They have two daughters, Mrs
EXPLAINING THE LAW
largest in the state Arnell Wolfe how to shoot
sionary. for God alone
knows:
flllment of an idea he has advocat- L W Copeland ot Milwaukee. Wl*.
Health education has done much gives the
Understand that the locker room
salutatory
Mildred
Belle Throop is now attending to whether or not my motive* have
cd for many years.
and Miss Jeannette case at home.
to make people live more sensibly Ketcham, the valedictory
Thirty the clerical work in the law office of been pure. But my safety and un- ' at the Country Club was booming
with "Barber Phop Ballads ' last
Herewith is an interesting little Doctors, dentists and nurses for members are planning to go on to Knappen
He has three daughters, two mar­
Van Arman. She has ■speakabie satisfaction is derived I Sunday A. M
college
from
looking
at
what
Jesus
my
incident
which
occurred
al
the
con
­
ried. and the youngest employed in
many years have contributed gener­
resigned her position in the city
Sunday was a memorable day at schools Anna Beadle has been Great High Priest has done for me 1
clusion of the 1933 session and ously of their lime to assist in
It was a swell day for golf!
tlie County Home The W C T U. elected to fill the vacancy
Here, and here only, can I cast an- ।
at Itanung a great source of sat­ which we are taking the liberty to guiding school students down the gave a fine program aided by chil­
chor and rest my weary soul Other
l
Now that this natural gas altisfaction. Mr Schumann says, is the
Refuge Have 1 None "
road of good health. Since doctors dren over 300 were present.!
1 uatkm Is solved maybe we can all
Jan 25 —Have Just risen from the
fact that they seem to love to come I requested that we ignore it. All ot and dentists acquire their living
...M.* uu^.u*
auu. of
u, lea
ve. !, ever
ran- ;
M"d ,C°SU!U 00
most
doleful
dish
ever
tastTHIRTY YEARS AGO
home often
the correspondents in the press from caring for the lick, there is
NEWS GLEANINGS.
ed. A fresh cask pf water has been 1 n“l Presidential election!
' At the meeting of the Great
Mrs. Schumann says that Oscar room al the state capital were certainly a generous share of pub­ Camp of the K O T M M at LudFirst art gallery attempted in U 8 opened which always has an un­
is getting better looking as he grows waiting for the doors to open One lic spirited action which prompts tagion last week c H Thoma* ot
.. was al Oopley fi'iuare, Boston. 1875 pleasant taste until It is aired 11
this city was reelected Great Lieui-­ It originated with the Boston managed to swallow two teaspoons ।
older but qualifies this flattery with,
thcm pulled out a list of the such work.
I, athenaeum,
the ----------benefit of —
art- full and turned away from It. I am
tenant Commander of the order
. . for —
the statement .u-.
that .*
there,
--------- ----was a' senators and began reading it If
We wonder if lawyers and Judges
Miss Vinnie Ream went to Eaton Uts who wished to display their thirsty and would give a whole ।
world of room for improvement He any one in the crowd had anything could perform a similar service Rapids Thursday where site gave work annually
ocean for one tumbler full of wa-1
■ ■——
is fortunate enough to be enjoying at all against the one named « along the lines ot their own pro­ nw-llaHn&lt;i&lt;
recitations tnr
for na large hrniM.
house nartv
party
ter from your spring. Think if 1
TO COMPLETE YOUR
Less than a third of the world's ever again enjoy good water 1'U I
Miss Olive Lathrop will go this
excellent health, due in part, no black mark was forthcoming. When fession among those of school age.
population
is
white
•
COSTUME ENSEMBLE
know how to prlre it.
doubt, to iris moderate habits and this semi-serious ritual was ended, if at least a portion of the trouble­ week to Marquette to give a six
weeks course of instruction m li­
Jan. 39—They say we are in the
Theater programs using phos­
W* fondness for such outdoor pa» term n rase was the only one who some and tragic luyenllc drtinbrary trauung in the oumiucr nor­ phorescent uik on black paper can Pacific. The sea is ealm and serene I
had not received a black mark tn
times ax golf and trout fishing
In “
quency
•
problems
----- ---------would
«-• not
ni
be mal there
and the sky cloudless. A llvtog al­
be read in the dark.
- Al Weber, editor of the chrboy-1 Justice to the others It should be ______
solved? _
Isn't
lira;t many
Rev Van Auxen has purchased a
batross was caught today. It is a :
______It rpossible
_______ ___
stereopticon
outfit lor the Presby­
Olas* bottles were first made or beautiful bird resembling a goose ,
gan Observer who will be guest edl-; added that many ot the objections. youngsters get themselves tn difterian
church
It measured 5 feet from the bill to j
blown
in
the
U
8
at
Jamestown.
tor for the issue of July 2. Is al-1 were humorous, ridiculous or other- f
Acuities through ignorance and be­
the tail, and 10 fret from the ex-1
Lawrence Colgrove lr. home from Virginia, in 1609
most a Barry county boy HU early wire We have never had the pleas- come
&lt;
sullen and unmanageable Orchard Lake acartemj from which
tremity of one wing to the othea
There are more than 1.000 tele­ Suppose it would weigh 35 pounds. [
boyhood wa* spent in and about' ure of meeting Mr Case but we re- &lt;through misunderstandtng of the institution he graduated last week.
Among the graduates of the phone calls between London and
Kalarno Just over the county line peat this Incident because from the reasons
;
of the punishment handed
New York daily.
Thanks to Adrienne, noted designer of
and he received his early training in remarks we have heard made by ,out to them? The average school Charlotte high .chool this year was
Royal Mudge well-known in this
it at liberty
costume ensembles ... you may now
the printing trade as a "devil" on, litoxe who know him. this Judgment ।teacher cannot be expected to ex­ city and a very bright student
Feb. 5.—After being beaten back i
blend your costume, your complexion,
There arc more bicycle* per capita
the Nashville News under Len.1 of the press room is reflected ।plain the law to youngsters in an
Roy Barney of charte^e. Ford
by headwinds and a strong current, i
in
Denmark
than
in
any
other
coun
­
and tossed around Cape Horn for [
FWghner. Len says that Al ha* been I among a wide circle ot friends and ,authoritative manner any more Hicks. Edward
Goodyear.
Mark
monious ensemble. Complete harmony
try In the world. The Government three weeks, think how delightful I
Ralph Rogers. Lawrence Col­
going to the devil ever since xo1 acquaintances,
than they could be expected to' I Hyde
provides
special
highways
for
the
«rov&lt; and..................
the Misses "
Grace and'
। we are to know that we are going 1
successfully that he iias acquired a
Muri DeFoe. editor of the Char- ;make a medical diagnosis; both are l^arv wram.
This glorious effect is achieved by
Grant. rwreme
Florence L.ianio.m,
Diamond, use of Its many cyclists.
9
or
10
miles
an
hour
A
porpoise
i
paper of his own—■also a bald bead. I lotte Republican Tribune, who will
Adrleane ScltnUfuaiy Harmenfsed
trained professions in which the ] vern Doyle and Pearl Hall made
was caught today that was 8 1-3'
Amber.
Before he was married Al worked' be guest editor for July 16 does not ।layman can never expect to acquire ' UP a J0'1? |**rty ^who went to Oun
trees (eet tor5&lt; 11 had * different ap-I
Amber, rt.tfn from extinct
. smattering of i exact
lak‘&gt; c,ub
h®*"*
Saturday,
60 000 P*‘araiu'e than any we have ever'
at hi* trade for the Donnelly Co . j need any introduction to Banner more tu.n
than a
|
Monday
Mr andreturu'Mrs. Grant
seen and was called a Cape Hom
years oldcan t your lovcUaaw thlanaw, unart way.
Chicago, the Ann Arbor Register readers. We doubt very much ;knowledge Lawyers and Judges, if: chaperoned the party. '
and the Charlotte Tribune. Of hi* I whether any other weekly editor
r Feb. 6 —Ute flesh of the porpoise1
they devoted themselves to the prob-1
------------"Backward” Turkey.
h,„ &lt;ta». ml.h&lt; j
L
mSS., (or
connection with the Banner Al , ha* such a wide circle of acquaint- km **
News of suicide* U prohibited by taste* like beef steak and to us
। who have tasted no freah meat for
write* us: "Took position on the ances and friends throughout the stand a chance of succeeding where New York Clty wh„e h&lt; Mlted law In all Turkish newspapers
I three months, it really was a luxHastings Banner a* foreman when‘state. His political views and opinothers are certain to fall. i yesterday for Antwerp on the
Hlghret Dent*.
I ury
II u
is true
true mat
that tne
the experiment
experiment1 Northland He will spend the numsumit* senior editor "Marshy" Cook was ion* are heard withi interest •beThe iniuc,,
highest wkw
dome tn the world is
peq. n.-Havt a falr wind and we '
’« I,' it
hobby
to
fol.
might
not
work
but
al
least
it
has
a
I
Bnd
““
“
“
cour
“
!
managing the Hasting* wool Boot 'cause he makes 8*1
‘ ' _____________
1 It rise* to a [ are going about 8 mile* an hour, and
SCIENTIFICALLY HARMONIZED COSMETICS
of affairs
affairs in
in a
a rx&gt;d chance
chance of
of succeeding
succeeding If
it
ui.&lt; n&gt;rth.
W
low closely the trend of
If U
Berth. Oe«er h.. token
'
’J—
.
c'"IdI ““
h.'
“h™
,2.
and hla young wife was then acting great
number
of
communities iUCOeeded even in a modest way MU&gt; Lethe Qkrn, place .1 o. □.
V, B. make lb«r purchase, on )
“• *“•
throughout the elate
I h would be more than worth the Bpeuldln,'. elore.
M1U Minnie Bau«hn&gt;an and Mlle. |
Incomes ul leu than W.000.' jLul .M
SaS. tad IM
porter. Enjoyed • wonderful jwer's
The senior editor* of the Ban- time and effort devoted to it.
experience oa the Banner, in fact
ner and Doc still get a good chuckle
'nie
l“ww" "““h" “&gt;
I
U,bl *nd '“‘’“'kb* ““n out.
THE StSSff DRUG STORE
out of the uproarious rivalry which
The President assured the Hawal-£e b*XMM „..
_______
w ....
^dy«...
w. „.J....
• "'°"d
Jr?.
formerly existed between the bare- jin* that they have the same rights ' Hollnwav
Holloway in
In the
the fourth
fmirtli ward
warrt by
hv Rev
Rp» 1 -people, naturally, wril be more gone three degrees In the last 24 j
ball fane of Hastings and Charlotte M the people on the mainland if w J ^*1°“ Master Edward and concerned with paying up their
—a bit of Innocent conniving which they can get any fun ou‘ of that
Harrtette Goodyear acted as debts and getting squared with the l Feb. 13—Was once more cheered
——-a
, uwy cau get xnj iun OU'. 01 II
*.
world
before
thegTl
a ttnu*
__ ___
_
, wotI id
before
theg'U
turnturn
out out
for for by
bv the
Lb* sight
*lffht of
af land.
lain* The
THn island
Ulana of I
room i for a
Ume almost threatoued to I.ugel I they
are____
welcome-New
Yorker alWutUnu.
Interested in the
Tim ladies who gave u notes to- I amusemtnU. —Paul wtriteauui.
( (Continued on pogo g, 0oc. »
|

1 ca"not

A

nt

A

WATERS
Clothes Shop

Way of Our World

IIfiW

HARMONIZED
COSMETICS
. . . . /y faLti&amp;UU. !

5384

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

J,to ,x°

Good* Delivered

Hatting*

Phone 2131

�THK HASTINGS BANNER, THUMP AT, JUNE it, 1&gt;M
times to save Intact for us the great again, this time with a large addi­
Probably one of' ths bteaksst । Inspiration for the treaty of peace (ECOND TERM
f^wed. HU great victory gave |
W
tion to their troops.
But O«. months that any PiwMdmt &lt;rf Ue
country we have today
J?
' F0110*111* to the Itot of the honor
Gen. Jackson fell that through Jackson wws by ne means idle. sag United Blates ever bad to endure I
Peterson, Ned Renick.
I hla sentries he would be able to dis­ spent every minute possible In wu tn .isnuarv IMA. One disaster
students for the tecqnd gemeteer of
cover the attempts of the British
strengthening hie lines Fortunately
to approach the city. Yet. having
Of another. There waa no money tn MPton sentiment wm strongly dl­ who had incomplete* are omitted
control of Lake Borgne, and doubt­
. .
han people
r-1- were dlaheart—W
vided. —
when
less with the assistance of some I Kentucky, numbering over 2JOO
from the list unless their other
(Continued from page 1, 80c. 1)
ened. when the condition of the marks were considerably above the David Townsend. Robert Vanda
traitorous citizens, the red coats | men, had arrived. The unfortunate
grift. Ruby Webb. Ninth grade: Za
country financially and Otherwise
had succeeded in landing and thing about their appearance was
waa deplorable, ita affect waa elec­ B average required:
btUe Adrourde. Jacqueline BMt
Though seized with Illness, the city marching to the banks of the Mis- | that they were not armed, there beFlorence Anderson. Margret Bar- man. ajjc
fairly vibrated with the command­ alsalppl without b?lng discovered. I Ing only about TOO rifles in -the whole blockaded; then the month before trical. It demonstrated that if
nett. Anna Beck. Jean Brower. Ha- J Hasel Brj
ing personality of Gen. Jackson,
probably
the
then
greatest
naval
There they had taken the Vlllere । brigade. Appeals to Washington to came the British armada that had
and military power
on earth sei Caukln. Madeline Cook, BeUy gS^ithr^’cotiinT'im^
who for 38 hour* at a stretch gave plantation on the bank of the Mis- nuh rifles to the seat of war seem
orders while lying m on a cot. re­ Hsaippi. about six miles below New । to have fallen on deaf ears. But Borgne and landed English troops couldn't conquer us. that young Cooper. Dora Day. Audr. DensI)oru
wary DeaSu,
fusing to give up. and whipping up
"America” waa a pretty good coun­
Orleans and within easy marching 700 additional rifles meant a lot, on our soil. As if that wasn't
hla strength by hla unconquerable distance. Their approach again 1 especially tn the hands of those
try to let alone. We haven't been more, Dwight Ferris. Marian Hall- Enge Domeyer. Maxine Erway, Jack
bothered much by outsiders since wood. Norma Jacobaon, Margaret Foote. Jean
Harrington.
Pearl some cracked riba
will power
Enlistments
were threw the city into consternation Kentucky fellows, because they
that battle 120 years kgo. won by Kreler, Velma Kellogg, Hugh Kel- Hathaway. Agnes Johnaoo, David
rushed; troopa sent to guard certain and fright. Unseen they bad landed 1 knew how to use them. On the evetoy.
Harold
Knapp.
Ruth
McLaugh&lt;
Jonas.
Thelma
Lee.
Rtehard
Letter,
spots: couriers sent to hasten the on the shore of Lake Borgne. and I nlng of Jan. 7. hu, Jackson redemand that Oongreas finof poor Irish emigrants, who set­ lin. Victor Mun too, Donna Myers, Haaelmae Manni. Jane mah. Dan
arrival of troops expected from up also unobserved had penetrated five I calved information that led' him to
N.U81NU
Paul
the river. The city was quickly miles of swamp to the shore of the believe the British would attack war to salt Itatlf. raising and di­ tled in North Carolina 170 years Herman Newland. Carroll Newton.1 Newton. Patricia Oaborn.
Rwslhal Nawtzm
J Ilian -------------------CXmaFrArlr ---------------,D
aX-W
Wzwtah
.
.... ,1--------------„—
—
transformed from a 'frightened Mississippi. Information as to con- ' before dawn, evidently having had a recting armies Independently
of ago. In the history of our country
populace to an armed camp. Pro­ dittons in the city had been carried great plenty of experience with Federal authority. The Hartford the Battle of New Orleans will al- Doreen Rltzman. Be me Ila Rode-; 8c heLb. Carroll Stamm. 1
visions were ordered and the gov- to the Invaders by disloyal citizens American marksmanship in broad Convention adjourned on Jan. 5th ways rank as a most important one. baugh. Agnes Royer. Edna Behullz. back. Charlotte Wilcox.
Don't visit New Orleans without go- r
—
— -•
------- i
Dorothy
Shellington. ••
Mary
Stamm.
When he learned of the presence of daylight. Shortly before six o'clock denouncing the war with England,
Charles Struble. Suzanne Sumner.
arms quickly. Importuned to ac­ the British army only a few miles in the morning spies reported to conceding defeat.
and
sending Ing to the scene of II. even though
there may not be so much to see Elizabeth Vandagrift. Virginia Wacept the services of tlie Baratarian below the city, and within easy Gen Jackson that the
British prominent delegates to Washington
gang of pirates under the Laffltes. marching distance. Gen. Jackson troops were drawn up on a nearby to lay the convention report before As a sacred spot it should rank ten. Don Weaver, Florence Wester­
Gen Jackson steadfastly refused. instantly made up his mind to at­ plain, and the news was spread to the general government. In that along with Bunker Hill. Lexington, lind. Roy White. Mildred Woodman­
The British through bribery and tack, with the threat "I will smash American officers and men Dawn report -New Big Land had spoken” and Concord Bridge. AU honor to see. Eleventh grade Darrell Aid­
Lauria Anders.
Horace. —
Angell., |
------- -------------.--------- .---------rich promises, sought to secure the them, so help me God" Early the waa breaking when a hoat of red and didn’t intend its breath should the indomitable will of "Old Hick-rich.
cry" who would never admit defeat. Ruth Anderson. Douglas Barnes,
services of these pirates, but with­ I next morning he made a fierce and
tunics with a perfect forest of puls­ bo wasted. In the opinion of the
out success. One day
- ,the leader
--------- . of
— ji un&amp;pected attack that threw such ing bayonets headed straight for delegates there wouldn’t be anything He stands high among our great Phyllis Beck. Gladys Bennett. Bar­
the pirate gang. Jeg"V *Lafflte, “Im- ■ consternation into British ranks, the American earthworks. Gen. ifor President Madison to do except national heroes and his brilliant bare Bitsa. Richard Bogart. EmerCalms,
‘
Leola Cortright.
“*■* —
Elaine
'y *‘Jk9tl1lntoOeni. Jackson
.
“* “
*» Jackson had cautioned his men to 1listen, and to submit to their de- ,trtotory al New Orleans doubtless son “
a head- lluil the enemy halted ~
to •»
bring
up
Day. Btuart Edmonds. Margaret
liet gentlemanly
SHlt umanlv &gt; ,e
...Vera| ..
____ ' J .fresh
__ .. .troopa.
____
quarters. In a quiet
thousand
In bold their fire until the enemy was I mandz. When the New England Changed the course of our history.
| Fingleton, Reid Furrow, Oma Jean
lh? tY&gt;nor for ,Um-1 this initial battle, the loss of life within range, and for "each man delegates reached Baltimore they
Garrison,
William
Gladstone.
Ruth
self and bls Baratarian associates among the Invaders was consider- to plek out hto own target." The toxrned of lbs crushing defeat of
| Hathaway. Margaret Hummel. Rob­
of serving under Oen. Jackson's ably heavier than on the American. British advance was completely British arms at New Orleans under |
ertChinese
Henney.'Marian
Frances
k
neL’
confessed that though , but was far from decisive. That was riddled as were the lines behind it.1 Oen- Jackson. When they reached
shoes areHewitt,
usually
made --------------- - ---------------------------- -------------of cloth, with a very tbln leather Humphrey. Beatrice Mead. Adrianhe and his followers might have lhe first battle
'
The field was literally covered with Washington all drooping spirits and
infringed upon the revenue laws of j
Ih_,
atrip as lb« sole. They St th. feet
Raldt'
W’1™
dead and wounded British soldiers firead of failure had been dispelled —..Li ..s
t.v.n ntr in rha Royer, Isabel Sage. Sam Schwartz.
the country, yet he wanted to dembut advancing ranks stepped over i by th* great American victory at
JUJime. made Freda
neda Scott.
8coW’ Thelma ahute. Betty
omtrate that the members of his . ?°l
J .2^,
Slippers, somet mes made Sigler. Loretta springer.
pirate gang were loyal Americans '
th'Atodrtaun a? their prostrate bodies, and marched New Orleans. Patriotic enthusiasm house.
Springer. Merieta
Merieta ,
and stood ready to defend the coun- fur.lh&lt;l.b
0&lt; lh R^riquez Ca- on to meet a like fate. No troops *“ expressing Itself Ln great pa- of cloth, are generally left at the sule# DeForrest
--------- Walton.
—Lucilte
Ludlle ।
try under his leadership The quiet,
,The
*coured for in- could stand that Are. and soon the ri(,w of loyal, excited citizens, bands entrance so that all who enter may wamer. Tenth grade; Howard Al- ।
gentlemanly demeanor of the leader S’ShSL hiuilTusrow^m^hi^ lines ot the invaders commenced to *were playing, and cannons were change their footwear.
thouse.
thouse. Arietta
Arietta Arnold.
Arnold. Victor
Victor BelBelbuckle
and
break.
Front
ranks
booming
in
honor
of
Jackson's
of the "hellish banditti" succeeded
J?,™"? Z md
| silo. Robert Bronson. Achsah Buck,
turned to the rear and all was eon*
——
-■
•*-with the stern old warrior. The
{rom 11,0 r,ver
। Eugene Bush. Beatrice Buxton. Ber­
fusion, but the slaughter went on. gust New England delegates had to
“I am the recipient of attention
services of the Baratarian pirates ' £ * cyp^*n
“L
nice Cairns. Bene Cappon. Jean
To no avail English ofllqgrs rushed endure the good-natured lampoon­ ef which I feel unworthy," said Cadwallader. Ar dea clum. Russell
to the front In an attempt to urge ing of friends before they sneaked III llo. the sage of Chinatown. "My Donovan, carl Edmonds. Wayne
l heir troops on. but the officers fell out of town and went home. The neighbor. Hi Hat, spends time and rulMumPlnkbetner. Violet Gordon. Norman
Massachusetts
delegate
arrived money hi order to strut where I HaU. phyllls Hinman. James Hum­
_____________________
_
mortally wounded - Pakenham,
failed. Thoroughly familiar with al) lhe
crude eMrthworl“
At
vantageous spot on the river an old , Gibbs. Dale and others. The Brit- home In time to resume his aeat Ln may admire him."
1 phrey. James McKelvey. Margaret
the swamps and all the roads around
gun boat had been stationed, the ' Ish had given up their lives by the the Massachusetts legislature and
New Orleans the Baratarian pi­ | guns of which rendered admirable hundreds, while Jackson's loss was vote for a resolution giving the
rates rendered yeoman service
service In pulling British field guns seven killed and six wounded. He Lord exclusive credit for the battle
By this time, the results of Gen. I out of commission When the Eng- j had avenged himself. He had made of New Orleans, and not even men­
PHONE 2140 FOR
Jackson's planning and his orders lish commander’s troops sought to good his vow to some day make ths tioning Oen. Jackson's name in
had commenced to bear fruit. Gen turn the American flank, they were British pay dearly for that saber connection with it. However it Is
Coffee with an advance guard of met with such a withering fire tint wound an English officer had in- a matter oi record that Oen JackBOO men had arrived
HL* men they were forced to retreat after ' fileted upon him. when he was a
didn't know much about military heavy losses and Uris ended the 1 lad of only 13 years of age. and cause after the battle he wrote a
discipline, but when it came to
_ ‘ battle of New Orleans
____ on
_
— I.aa
_ nn.*
■ kKa Debourg.
t^aK^itva head
Ku^ A.
notetnto the Abbe
of
second
serving his country in the
latter
• picking off" the enemy a long Dec. 28. 1814. with quite a heavy ' days of the Revolutionary war - He the Catholic clergy tn New Orleans,
distance away and bringing him lass for the English But that didn't would have disposed of the entire a part ot which read: 'The signal
Hot doys demand the
down with a rifle, they recognized decide it by any means The invad- 1 British army had not one of his of- Interposition of Heaven requires
kind of clothes that can
no superior With rifles they were
Permit me
down
on
ers had lost quite heavily, but there fleers "fallen -•
------ ­ him." and some manifestation
experts Then came Gen. Carroll
"TAKE IT !'• and well
left him so that he could not pur­ therefore to entreat that you will
was
one
thing
that
they
hadn't
lost
with 3.000 Tennessee recruits who
cause
a
service
of
Public
Thankssue
the
fleeing
red-coats
without
cleaned clothes will moke
also knew how to shoot. Fortunately —and that was the determination
to capture New Orleans The Amer­ exposing hu forces to s flank at­
they brought along 1.100 extra
the hours more pleasant
tack. But it-was a glorious victory, thedral." When Oen. Jackson re­
rifles It was a consignment ship­ ican line along the Rodriquez Ca­ really led to the treaty of peace, turned to New Orleans, probably no
Raiding
for you and your
ped out from the War Department nal was made stronger
parties were sent out at night to and had a wonderfully invigorating military man up to that time was
at Washington "by slow freight" to
associates.
effect on the country after It be­ ever given a more enthusiastic,
cut down on "carrying charges" stalk BriU-sh sentries, make unex­
came known. But in those days it loyal reception than he Thousands
pected
attacks
and
give
them
no
Would that some of that desire to
of v.
children dressed
in
white.
»»••»,
McCREERY’S Will Help You !
wwn at
wasn-­ ch*nce to rest. This, along With took weeks and week, for such news v«
economize could be, ,,
shown
at Wash
to
become
generally
circulated.
|
strewed
his
pathway
with
flowers;
For two months
nr' Item American canington now days F«.
■
• rao!,H“ non. served to make life rather mls- After the battie was over, a large there was martial music, parading
Gen Jackson had heard nothing
erablc for the invaders and con- consignment of rifles arrived from I troops and roaring of cannon. He
from
theheWar
Dept
at Washington.
Ihm’wh
WuVTn
Ptchar^*S
tSs *tou»tly
thflr nerve* on ed’e Wnshinirtnn
Washington. too
ton late
late to
to be
he of
nt any
«r&gt;v waa greeted
-* as the savior of the
~ *city
“—
The battle of New Orleans provid- (and hu success at arm. was the

THE GR«T BATTLE I
IT NEW ORLEANS

SUMMER
CLEANING!

McCREERY’S • Dry Cleaners

being attacked by the British. Prob■ hiv'it wa.
ably'it
was just ..
as writ
well that
that hn
he
didn't hr-ir anything because con­
ditions were most discouraging,
especially in the east New England
Federalists were yelling for "pence
at any price" They would accept
tlie British demands of a third of
Maine and a large slice of our
northwest They raged against the
American Commissioners of Ghent
for rejecting those British demands.
The treasury was empty; Congress
refused to create a national army,
and even refused pay for the troopa
we had. So don't think for a min­
ute but what our pioneer ancestors
went through some pretty tough

C&lt;1 9'9 flrsl c.xUf:?s,,v® 9“ of tht'
ralding
raiding party.
party.”’ which is now a
common feature of minor military
tactics.
Il can be Imagined that
the Baratarian pirates would feel
quite al home Ln taking an active
pan In such raids.
Another three days' wall and the
British again attacked very fierce­
ly. but were met with such stiff re­
sistance, that after several hours of
fighting the enemy's guns ceased
firing and the Invaders had to
chalk up another failure and consldcrablc loss of life, In the third
battle of New Orleans.
And still the Invaders were not
satisfied, and resolved to attack

1

— — 1 -......................- - — —■
,
■
_______ _______ ______________ _______ _ _______________________

'•fe MEMORY
Only on a Granite Memorial will
MEMORY be perpetuated
for all time to come

SPECIAL REDUCTION IN PRICES!

WERE
SHOUTING

Better Food
Costs Less
at Feldpausch Market
PORK LOIN

SMOKED

ROASTS
Either end
1
Pound—
JfallC

Ham Ends
I8c.

Smoked Picnic si&gt;.nki.n
Beef Kettle Roasts
Veal Shoulder Roast

u. 2Oc

18c
16c

• During the next 30 days we offer o 10% Discount on
all orders placed for MONUMENTS and MARKERS.
The same high standard of Quality, Material and Work­
manship will be maintained that we hdve given during
the last 30 years.
• We are the only authorized Rock-of-Ages Corpora­
tion's Dealer for this Territory. No better Granite quar­
ried.
• We also carry in stock many of the Famous Colored
Granites:-South Dakota Red, Purple Crystal, Garnet
Red, LIBERTY PEARLV’INK, and the Foreign Gronites:Balmoral Red, Bothina Red. Come in now and see them
and select the Memorial you intend to erect this Summer
or Fall and SAVE MONEY on your purchase. All work
guaranteed.

Memorial

HASTINGS MONUMENT WORKS
30 yean in business and still going strung

Shultz Butter

31 c it

!SS«d-LARD

2

ib..

25c

PHONE 2497

IRONSIDE BROS.

HASTINGS, MICH

�TH1 «AJTWOI UWtt, THPMDAT, JVN1 It, IW

! NASHVILLE WOMAN

GOING TO ENGLAND

-SEASON

Gets Teaching Position in
Lydney Through Ex­
change Method

PURE SALE
A wonderful opportunity to secure Furniture, Rugs,
Carpets, Linoleums and Houtcfurnithingt at a
GREAT BIG REDUCTION IN PRICES!

We are figuring on cleaning our already crowded
floors in order to make room for the new July Mar­
ket Furniture.
Our policy it to have on sale at all times only clean,
new merchandise, and we are marking the articles
at such low prices that we are absolutely certain
that most of them will move off our floors during
our Ten Day Pre-Season Furniture Sale.

Remember this sale lasts only Ten Days, commenc­
ing on Friday. June the 19th, and will positively
end Ten Days from that date.

Thit tale will offer you a great opportunity to tecure an up-to-date Living Room Suite at a won­
derful reduction in price. After looking them over
we believe that you will toy that every tuite
IS A REAL BARGAIN !
A good two piece tuite, upholstered in $OQ QE
a cover we know that you'll like, only Cv«vw

Take advantage of this wonderful sale and buy
what you need at a price you con afford to pay.

DININC SUITES!

Others at $49.50; $59.90 and up to $89.50

We will make a more
’than even bet that you
will toy that we have
more than twice as
many End Tablet, Cof­
fee Tablet, Occasion­
al Tables and many
other tablet as you ex­
pected to find, and all
priced at a very low

I

A fine opportunity has come to

, Miss Elisabeth Smith, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Smith, who
live west of Nash vine on M-7B. She
will spend the coming year in EurI ope in study and teaching. She grad1 uated from the Nashville high
| school and Western State Teach' er's College at Kalamazoo, where
'she had an outstanding record of
, all A's during her course In that In­
i stllution.
I MLm Smith has taught for the
last four years In Napoleon. Ohio.
I She will sail from New York. June
24. Her itinerary calls for a brief
study of French in Parts, after
which she will tour the continent. In
StjXember she will take up her
| work as a teacher in the Lydney
schools al Gloucestershire, England.
Miss Katharine
Edbrooke.
who
has been a teacher in the Lydney
schools will come to this country
and take the place of Miss Smith
in the schools at Napoleon, Ohio.
Tills exchange is made possible by
the International Federation of Uni। versify Women, through their com­
mittee on interchange of teachers.

GOOD WILL.
• We should have been spared
much disappointment since 1919 If
we had remembered Herbert Spen­
cer's wise words: ’There is no politi­
cal alchemy by which you can pro­
duce golden conduct out of leaden
Instincts.' Men and nations are
saved by good will, not by political
machinery "—Dean Inge.
Battle of Waterloo

The battle of Waterloo occurred
la 1815.

NIAGARA
FALLS

$550 XN0
Saturday, June 27
Coachei Only
tv. HASTINGS 5:11 P M (O.T.)

BEDROOM SUITES!

Occasional Chairs
We have in stock quite a large num­
ber of Occasional and Rocklnr
Chair* that we have
marked at a Bic Re­
duction tn Prices—
Take advantage and
secure one now while
thia sale I* in full
force. A good Occa­
sional Chair with
full sprinc seat and
walnut
finished
frame.
See the
whole line for bar­
gains. we know you
will be suited.

Every Bedroom Suite Reduced for This Sale—For­
mer cost and original price utterly disregarded!
A very nice 3-piece Bedroom Suite
$OQ Hfi
finished in the walnut color—only — b.v«UU
Others ot slightly higher prices, but everyone a
splendid bargain—choice models from leading factoriet—the largest stock that we have ever had
on our floors at one time.

Rugs and Linoleum
We have on hand at present the Largest Stock of RUGS, LIN­
OLEUMS ond FLOOR COVERINGS that we have ever carried.
A Good Grade of Felt

Base

Linoleum for only 29c per yard.

MICHIGAN CENTRA

■M

! templated field of our labor, and In
view of the Important work which
1 will consequently devolve upon us,
we set apart this day for fasting,
humility and imploring the aid of j
the Holy Spirit. We are being fa-:
voted with a propitious wind and
dashing through the waves with
(Continued
from page one)
(Continued from page 4. Sec. 1)
great rapidity. All the past week we i
_______________
SL, S'??,,,? “ “»
auUwrlUa, ol Chat
De Mas Afueria presented us with SSL
a change of scene this morning. The ■rated with th/to? “ Jon merng «"*«■ ™ ledee.1 grand Jury for
Juan Fernandes we also passed on land. Oh. how I wish once more to [ the eastern district of Michigan
the west, but did not come near set my fool on solid ground. I am | filed an indictment In two counts
enough
to
taste
the
delicious
quite tired of living on boiled , beef against Mr. Harry Warsop and Mr.
peaches that grow there in great
and pork with insipid rirt and peas. Charles Caller. The first count
abundance and are fully ripe al
and cannot think of again receiving charged that they "unlawfully dethat
the1* wmkl's lhend a potato wltho“uT exclaiming "Wha’t, HvTredfor shipment, in interstate
then I teT .bem
rim 2.r
a luxury!"
I commerce, raw skins of a quantity
Is e where Robinson^rusoe was tak
Saturday, March 29.-This morn-1 of muskrats, which skins had thereen un or when^Alexander sl-lkirk 1 ln« lhe deUghUul sound of "land lofore been purchased by Charles
urn Xkabk
l Am
"tand
“,uU‘1 our rari Ju*1 OaUer from Harry Warwp for a
HumJnhv'. £a^™ X
21 weeks frOm l»« da&gt; wa
308 ' “rtaln prlce'
* ««
°PridavHi&gt;b
till the snow clad tops of Mau-!of the state of Michigan, in that
.J? the trade’ winds
TheCan- nfl Kea burat upon our a,ght' A,ler lhe Sftld char,ea Oal,er’ at lhe tlmo
a n
?e niav mdccT^ to £
nothln« but
and wal" ot P^haslng the skins, was a nonnahu^ leas ti^SO dS^ We
' for
days ’ beheld ,l wllh ‘cnsa’ 1 r,',ldent’
dealcr- who w“ not
Ste 8 B^d m kno^ an hiuJ all “ons u» now
Oh- "iy ! licensed to purchase raw fura in
thS week
10 *
Heere.1
.t.ter.
i.
it
noulhle
dearest sisters, is it possible tI am
am . this
thb state
state within
within the
the meaning
meaning of
of
now at the Sandwich Islands? Is II section 82TB of the Compiled laws
Monday. Feb. 18.—Again we are
possible that an ocean and a con- [ of Michigan for the year 192B." (be­
in the Torrid rone 23-29. The ocean ------- ------------------------------- — —
|n({ a secuon Of the Slate Game
is delightfully pacific 1 have never tinenl separate me from you. or do
felt so secure at any lime since I be­ I dream? And. oh; I do esteem II the
The second count charged that
came a passenger on the water Per­ greatest privilege to be permitted to
'",a »&gt; th'“ '"•’“n
■■'j Harry Warsop and Charles Geller
haps there is a storm at hand.
Tuewl,,. M U.-We were .11
&gt; IW &gt;°
■&gt;•&gt;'• •nd did "unlawfully ship to Chicago by
railway express a quantity of musk­
service
thrown Into the peace,! cornier- wear
—’ out my life in His ""
’,™
rat skins, which were not plainly
nation imaginable this morning by Been sailing all day between the is­
ond rlearly marked or labeled on the
the appearance of three water­ lands ot Hawaii and Maul. This
spouts. Every face looked pale, end evening we were called to the deck outside thereof with an accurate
statement
showing by numbers and
lo
see
a
fire
on
Maul.
Its
bright
every eye viewed them with tremb­
kind the contents thereof "
ling emotion. One wtu observed blase reminded me of home, and
Both counts of the indictment
coming with such velocity and so how much these hills remind me of
were
drawn
upon sections of the
directly opposite the stern of the ( lhe land I shall visit no more.
.... had
.........................
Sunday. March M.-A day of federal criminal code, as amended
vessel, that
not its progress
b«n arrasud by lhe dlaeharse or a ««•&gt; exc lemen! and deep Inter,,! in June of 1B35. Mr. Kim Bigler
miukel. Il Is probable lhe malMall! J® tlw pilgrims on board lhe par- of this city, represented Mr. War­
would have been rent In piece, Irom i
As mon as we parlook ot our sop also In the federal court. The
lop U bollom. The vessel mlkhl;
we went on deck lo case came on for trial before Judge
have been overturned and Inevl-1
Diamond Hill mow Diamond Arthur Lederle on Wednesday ot
last week. Mr. Sigler waived a Jury
table ucaill
death IlltRIIV
might IIBTC
have Lru-v.,1
been MIC
the lol -Head ! Slrnrl
----y two cannon, were
.
trial and therefore left a determi­
of
all. had
had not
in His
ol us
us all.
not God
Clod ui
His mercy
mercy ftrcd t5.B 8 8nn ,or a P**01, —
preserved us. I would compare it lo.
M n«ny vessels in the nation of tlie facts, as well as tlie
harbor w
we
found
it necessary to cast law. to Federal Judge Lederle. At
nothing but the black smoke of a h,rhnr
- ,m
'nd 11
steamboat rising above tire water, anchor at three o'clock. I went lhe conclusion of the government's
but the discharge of the musket ! again to the deck and through the case. Mr. Bigler moved for a di­
broke the circle of air and II was । glass had a fair prospect of the vil­ rected verdict and a dismissal of
the proceedings against lhe defend­
dispersed. The others did not come ( lage (now the city of Honolulu).
near enough to cause us any harm. Never have I beheld anything so ants. upon the grounds that the
March 3 —Our table was again re­ magnificent as these mountains at government had failed to prove that
plenished with a dish of porpoise, whose base groves of cocoanut trees the sale by Warsop to Oaller was
a most acceptable treat, as our but­ grow Interspersed with the native illegal under the state law; that the
ter is very stale, and all our better huts. Several officers came aboard government had also failed to es­
provisions nearly spent. Still we and offered to lake tlie ladies tablish that Caller was engaged In
have enough to reach the Islands, ashore, but we declined, os we ore business as a fur dealer. The de­
as we expect lo arrive there in three determined by example as well as fense also contended that isolated
precept lo show that we reverence transactions did not constitute en­
weeks.
gaging in business and further that
March 9—Since we left Cope this holy day.
the federal statute contemplated
■ Continued next week)
Horn we have been blessed with un-i
that, in order to constitute an of­
Interrupted fair winds and good
fense, the government must prove
NEW SPIRIT NEEDED.
weather. Crossed the line yesterday
"What we need most at the mo­ that the shipment was completed
evening. The heal has not been so
and
that the mere delivery to an
debilitating an influence as in the ment is a new approach to tile
express agent or a common carrier
first part of our trip. I never en­ world's problems based on a
spirit—the spirit that the prosperity for shipment, which had not yet
joyed better health.
Saturday. March 14—We have of one nation depends on the pros­ been completed, was not a violation
of the federal law.
had heavy showers of rain, and a perity of others."—J. H. F. van VllsThe ca.se was strenuously argued,
constant succession of calm this slngen.
the United States District Attorney
week. The thermometer rose lo 106
contending that the federal statute
NEW ECONOMY.
I and in our slate room tlie heal is
had
been violated when an unli­
[almost unbearable. The hottest
"Tiie new economy must be work­
censed dealer purchased the furs
weather I ever knew in America is ed out to nt the conditions In this
country, based upon the mistakes of and delivered them for shipment
not to be compared with this.
Friday. March 21.—Having come Liie post and the suffering of the to a common carrier.
Judge Lederle, after carefully
within a few days sail ot lhe_con- present."—Fiorcllo H. LaGuardia.
considering the matter, granted Mr.
Sigler s motion and the defendants
were discharged.

INTERESTNGTO
111 f UR DEMS

MIW

VETERANS
Hold On
To Your Bonds!
Set the world an example of level­

FISHING SEASON OPENS
ON INLAND LAKES. JUNE 25.
Local followers of Isaak Walton
are looking forward to the opening
I of black bass and bluegill season In
Michigan next week Thursday. June
25. which will make accessible to all
licensed fisiiermen approximately
5.000 inland lakes on which the sea­
son has been closed by law for the
protection of the species mentioned
during their spawning periods.
Ttie season also opens on sunfish
and warmouth bass. In fact, after
June 25. every species of game fish
in Michigan walers—except stur­
geon and grayling—may be taken
by the angler.

Nations belonging to the League
have a total population of 1,500,000.­
000

be drawn into the hysterical high

headed thrift. In the mad scram­

pressure clamor for lhe immedi­

ble for your money—keep your

ate distribution of your bonus

heads.

funds.

Don’t spend for the sake of spend­

Take your time!

A Good Printed 12-ft. Wide Linoleum for only 89c per ?ard.

USEDCAR
BARGAIN
TIME

SCORES OF PATTERNS TO CHOOSE FROM.

Our Rug Stock is oil new this season and consists of beautiful
.modern ond conventional patterns. If you will need one now or
Lj-—later we advise you to take advant­
age of this sale.
A very good pattern, well made
Axminiter Rug in the
$4 Q.75
9x12 sizes for as low as
I w
Others at $24.75, $29.75 and
up to $49.00 for this sale.

Don’t “blow in” your nest

If you spend, be sure that you

egg. Don't even cash your bonds

spend wisely, that you get the ut­

unless from necessity or to get out

most for your every dollar. But

of debt.

give serious thought to saving

ing.

rather than spending.

We at Goodyear’s want to sell au­

No matter what article you ore in need of for the home, it will certainly pay you to
shop around in our store during this Ten Day Pre-Season Sale. Come and get your
share of the bargains !

tomobiles, hardware, implements,

Goodyear—oldest firm in Barry

plumbing and healing and Good­

County—won prestige through in­

year’s have lhe best values in the

tegrity plus thrift.

world to offer you, but we refuse lo

HOLD ON TO YOUR BONDS !

The Beit Seaton—

B

the Biggest Valuetl

(

I

Several Good OIL STOVES for This Sale. A Big Cut In Prices.

A Good Used ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR for only *39.95
A Big Reduction On Inner Spring Mattresses and Bedding.

MILLER FURNITURE CO.
Hasting*, Michigan

Telephone 2226

The 1936 Ford V-8 is the fast­
est selling car we’ve ever had;
That’s why we’ve been getting
the best used cars we've ever
had. And that's why vou can
drive your old car in nere today—and drive out in a car
ou’tl be really proud to own.
t will be clean and bright—
mechanically right—and a
BARGAIN!
Come in today—save money
—get guaranteed Used Car
Satisfaction.

GOODYEAR BROS.
HARDWARE CO.
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

PHONE 2101

j
।

HERE'S A SAMPLE!

j

1929 mw. a su s-ve.oo
COUPS—ONLY
,1 O
1919 Ch.vrM.t
COACH—N.w

SOE 00

00

UNIVERSAL GARAGE
Hastiaga

COMPANY n—. 1UI

�THE HA8TTNQB BANNWK.THURSPA Y, JUNE It, 1»M

Social Events and Personal Mention
Will Peck of Los Angele* U in the
Loren Boyes *pent Bunday in
Roy Finstrom wa* home from Bat­
city.
tle Creak Bunday.
MuskegonMr and Mr* Harvey H Myer*
Bishop Kuhn U horns from Ann
Sumnar Myor* U home from Ann
Arbor for ths summer vacation.
Arbor for vacation
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Monica spent
Mr. and Mr*. Juom Swanson
William Jones U home from Ann
Sunday In Grand Rapids with Mr.
spent the week and tn Big Rapids.
Arbor for hU vacation.
Mr*
Mr*. Mamie Man**
Mane* hu
has gone • to
Jacob Miller U home from Alma
wwo- “
•» • |
21S1
college far hU vacation.
“ “•
Dr, and Mrs. C. p Lathrop were ! X J.~b. „d B»h.« F1.M- '
in Balti* creek on Friday.
| “^ara jaaow ena Rooert Figm.
Jack Perkins U spending the week
,rOm B * RapW&gt; 0V*r | Mr *nd Mrs Ted Dodds and
in Milo with Jack Bradfield.
। ,off*“a , '
_
.
. M. I daughter jean of Kansas Oily, Mo..
MUs Ueva Perry U home from 1
’1U
at the Caxl WeepiuLanslng where she taught lhe past ।
wara
. ter’* from today till Bunday.
year
i wit.
Khaatand MeNulty is expected
MUs Dorothy Johnson hu gone lo 1 n-Xtives^n M^ke^ l^Tteek1^ home
fr°m New York
Detroit where she hu employ- , ."““*** *" “'^5?on Uat *ee‘l ” where he b a second year student
menu
» .nd
1 al 81 Thoma* Choir Boy.' «chool.
Mr and Mrs. Leon Manning of
d
.ZTur.11 Mr and
Harold VandeGle*Baltle Creek were in lhe cltv on _ . _
BU^*U °.f nr- and
sen
Creek were
sen of
of Battle
Battle Creek
were Sundav
Bunday

£SX,C,M‘

is visiting r«U-

Kenntth Biddle wu home from

Mrs. Ruth Solomon Yaw of Ann
Arbor visited Hastings friends on

Mr*. Clair Puller and ton Robert

Monday.
Miss Margaret Merrick went to
Royal oak on Wednesday where

Guest* of Mr. and Mr*- Charles
Hinman on Monday wer* Mr. and
Mr*. Lao Bock of Dearborn.
Mr. and Mr*, collier Raarick and
baby ot Detroit visited Hastings
relatives over the week end.
Mr. and Mr* Herbert Reynolds of
Grand Rapid* were Bunday gueste
of Mr. and Mr*. Earl Smith.
Jack Lewis ot Mansfield. Ohio, is
spending some time with his grand­
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lewi*.
Mr and Mrs Raymond Robleaki
and Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Anderson
spent a few day* the past week at
Covington, Ky.
Mrs. Charles Parker of Middle­
ville is staying at the Roman
Feldpausch home during their ab-

“ STSS'ihuiS.----------

m ““

TO ELECT DELEGATE
TO DRPT. CONVENTION
Th* next regular meeting of th*
American Legion Auxiliary wlU b*
held this Thursday evening with a
Pldac program under the direction
the Department convention will be
elected Thursday evening also, so a
good attendance is desired. Preced­
ing lhe meeting. there will be a pot
iuak Supper.

PARKER HOUSE

Give Him a Tie
... from Baird's
Beautiful new stripes and
pattern* in light and dark
shade*. Pure silk with all
wool lining* make these ties
ideal for summer wear.

50' 75‘ *100
JThen In Doubt
...Give Shirtr!
Deep tones, Duke of Kent
Collar*, woven stripea and
figures, styled and tailored
by Wilson Bros. Our large
assortment of shirts assure
you many patterns to choose
(rgm.

Many other useful Gift*
for Dad . . . Socka,.SU^.
Handkerchief*,
PajanuM,
Swim Suita, Capa and other
articles of wearing apparel.

T.S. BAIRD
Phone 2396

CONTINUING THIS GREAT

WALL PAPE

SALE

HINMAN’S

Mrs. E A. Caukln. Mr*. Ellis Kelley.
Mrs. Ed. Echtinaw. Mr*. Pay Green.
Mr* J.
Merriam
and Mia*
Phyllis Rinman motored to Dearbeniawtl visited Greenfield Village.

RENT

GXASSfs

FAIRCHILD’S

FLOORS
new Johnaon rtooc roiuher

COTTON DRESSES FOR STREET WEAR

HOUSE DRESSES, all oiiee.

69c and *1.00

• WASHABLE SILKS al

.11.00 to *2.98

SLACKS, white, navy and brown

„»1.00, *1.98

Baking Powder
ML MONTS
sucso

CAN

O
ACANS

Pineapple
Butter MIDDLEVILLE

19c
35c
3k

CHIPSO
f
KV

FOR

BOTH

42.98 and S3.98

HATS, white and colors ____ _

Noodles

LGE. BOX and
1 MED. BOX

b&lt;ng No solrd lands.
Just wilt behind th*
polisher sad guide it.
No pushing. &gt;(o

at *1.69, *1.98 and *2.98

2 CAM1 29c
17c

Shrimp

Rumford
THOSE SHABBY

Summer Dresses

SOAP CHIPS 5

27c

TOPS —.39c and 50c

PLAY SUITS

BEEF ROASTS

.69c and SI.00

LINGERIE

.................. -25c lo *1.98

HOSIERY .

.39.:, 49c, 59c 69c, 89c

PHONE 2522

rick wore a drew of orchid crepe,
her flower* being similar to ths
bride's.
Mr. and Mrs. Hosaaok motored to
Detroit and then to Hastings where
they spent Bunday wtlh her par­
ents. going to Kalamazoo that eve­
ning lo be the guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Moore (Juanita Lang­
ston). They returned Wednesday to
Cedarville where they will make
their home and where Mr. Hosaack
Is engaged in business.
The bride is a graduate of the
local High school, later attending
lhe Western state Teachers Ool-

SPECIAL

AND POLISH

SHORTS........... 50c, 59c

t CMB
James Langston, to Robert Lowell
Hoaaack of Cedarville, waa aotente o’dogk fonpVMi
nlzed on Saturday al Sault Bt*.
Marie, lhe Rev. Clyde M. Gearhart, with bridge, a delightful time U
paster of th* Methodist church of
that city, reading the service at bls
POT LUCK CLUB.
Miss Fem Patrick and Thomas J.
Dolan of Oedarvilie attended Um
bride and groom. An attractive
pink Alik crepe gown with jacket
and white accessories were worn by laid for nine. AC bridge. Harold
the bride and she carried a bouquet Phillips held high soars.

Leo Geller of Detroit vUited Mr
guests of her mother. Mr*. Fred
and Mrs Roman Feldpausch and
PhUUps.
NORMAL CLASSES
Mrs. John Reasoner and Miss other relatives here over the week
lace Osborn on Friday.
RAD HAPPY REUNION.
end.
Marcia
Ironside
returned
on
Sun
­
Mr. and Mrs. Roas Mehney of 8t.
Mias Alberta Nash entertained lhe
MUs Charlotte Hubbard U home
day from a week's stay in South
John* were Sunday guests of Mr.
alumni of three of the first Barry
from
Ann
Arbor
for
her
vacation,
Bend, Ind.
and Mr* Willard White
County Normal classes, those of
arriving
on
Friday
Ian
Ironside
and
Dorothy jean Frey oof Michigan
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Cook and
ville. She has a wide circle of friends
City. Ind., is visiting her grand­ Max Bauer also came home on Fri­
Robert. Jr., visited Mr*. Winifred
here who extend their congratula­ on Wednesday of last week. MUs
parents. Mr. and Mrs. L. Severance, day.
Pryor of Lansing on Bunday.
Harriet Peckham was lhe first
Mr. and Mrs George Deuerlein of
tions and best wishes.
for a Ume.
Mr*. R. H- Loppenlhien and Jean
teacher of the County Normal and
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Cleveland Coming. N Y . arrived Monday to HELEN LOUISE CLARK
went to Ludington on Monday lo
these were her last three classes.
and son of Port Huron visited her spend the week with hU sister and
BRIDE OF SATURDAY GUE8T DAY BRINGS
(pent the week with relatives.
brother-in-law.
Mr.
and
Mrs
Chas.
LARGE
ATTENDANCE.
parent*. Mr. and Mr*. Thoa. Baird,
Mr. and Mr*. Frank Oiddlng* of
Vandegrifl
Th.
Tuesday
Country
club
lunch
।Wednesday,
some coming from Kaion Sunday.
Will Be Wed to Harvey 0. eon proved the usually pleasant af- “lazoo They had a happy reunion
Lake Odessa were Sunday guests
Mr*.
Fred
Unsold
of
Chicago.
Mis*
Mrs. Frederick Taylor vLsited her
of Mr. and Mrs. Ouy Giddings.
Diehl, Member of Cor­
fair, lhe warmer weather and guest,
parents in East Lansing last week Emma Furst of Jxm Angeles and
Mn. Henry Hubtrt and son Joe
^... bringing out the largest attend- j
BISTERS.
Mr*. Ben Raseman of Kalamazoo
day
.PYTHIAN
P2f.TH,A,?^
,8TE.R8'
nell Faculty
went to Chicago Tuesday for a visit during Dr. Taylor's absence In were Monday guest* of Mrs. Oeorge
ance of lhe year to date, covers be- | About fifty Pythian Sister* par­
Kirksville. Mo.
with Mr. and Mr*. Noble Caln and
Of interest lo her many Hastings ing laid for sixty. An atlracUve ,ook of lhe P°l luck »UPP" In honor
E Coleman.
.MUs
Beatrice
Oidding*
comes
family.
Mrs. Maude Smith, school com­ friends Is the new* of the marriage focal point in tlie decorations was of th« P**1 Chtef* followed by the
Miss Grace Edmonds went to Lan­ home from Battle Creek. Friday and missioner. accompanied by Mrs. of Miss Helen Louise Clark, daugh­ the standard* at tlie lounge en-1 Temple meeting. Put Chief*' pin*
sing Friday for a visit with Mr. on Monday will start summer school Norton smith, went to Winnetka. ter of Mrs. John Foster (Mabel) trance filled with .yringa branches were presented to SUter. Golla
at Evanston, ill.
and Mr*. J. K- Burnham and other
Clark, of Hasting* and Lakeview, and tiger lllle*. Bouquet* of pink
JulU Smith and LouUe Er­
Mr. and Mr* John Ironside have Ill.. Sunday where the former will
____ ____
__ . &gt; __ .buttons
..
.were
.
wav
friends.
way. A
A lnv.lv
lovely nwllno
meeting. TTi.
The Trmnld
Temple
attend summer school.
to Mr Harvey Clarence Diehl, Jr., roses
and■ .bachelor
Mr and Mr*. Fred Van Dyke and been spending a few -days in
Mr. and Mrs. Will Randall and son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey C. used on lhe luncheon tables and will be closed until September —
Traverse
city
and
other
pointe
in
daughter*. Barbara and Norma, of
family of Grandville were Bunday Diehl. Sr. of Detroit, which will oc­ peonies elsewhere
northern Michigan.
I Detroit spent the week end at th*
BRIDGE CLUB.
Morning golf honor* resulted In
Everett McAfee of Grand Rapids guests ot Mr*. Randall’s mother. cur this coming Bunday. June 21.
I home of Lemuel Severance.
Mrs. Henry Mulder pleasantly en­
: Mrs Maude Miller
Barbara re­ at St. Andrews Episcopal church in a tie between Mr*. Wilbur Lane and
j Mrs Alberta Stewart and her and Allen cruesom of Buffalo. N. mained for a longer visit.
Ann Arbor. Rev. Henry Lewis, rec­ Mrs. Chester Stem for low total tertained her bridge club on Wed­
I daughter. Mrs. Grace Selcske. of
nesday
evening,
two tables being
pained
Mr.
Reinhardt
to
Hastings
,
tor.
officiating.
_
The
attendants
______________
will
on odd holes. Guest prize went to
Detroit were over Bunday guests of MU* Julia Ann Templeton and Miss Monday from Benton Harbor where , be MUs Dorothea OcrUch, a room- Miss Eleanor Milter. Mr* E. H In play. Mr*. Elmer Robinson and
l Mrs. Etta Nash and Miss Alberta Marjorie Stebbins at the F W. Steb­ lhe family are spending lhe sum- mate of the bride at Martha Cook, Waring having tap score for club Miss Emma Carpenter winning the
bins cottage. Gun lake.
Naah.
Chas. Potts was high scores.
Mr and Mrs Laurence Barnett. mer. Mr. Reinhardt begins hU work | and William Frederick of Ann Ar­ members. Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills spent
al Pine lake camp this week,
| bor
Following
the
ceremony. chairman with Mrs. F. L. Johnson
the week end with Mr. and Mr*. Margret and John are leaving Bun­
1. r. T. CLUB.
Mr. and Mr*. Edwin Pate and : whlchJwin
witnessed only by the and Mrs John Dawson Mis* Vir­
day for a week's stay with hte
Gail F. Best of South Bend. Ind.
Mrs. Beulah Warner entertained
Mary
Elizabeth
of
Detroit
are
exlmm
«li*t«
families
and
a
few
intlginia
Potts
and
Miss
Jocelyn Iron­
brother. Kenneth BameU, of De­
Mr*. Bast returned with them to
lhe J. p. P. Club very delightfully
frUnds there will be a recep- side also assisted.
troit at the latter* cottage on pected Saturday for a visit at the i
visit with friends in the city.
on
Wednesday
afternoon of last
home of Mr and Mrs E C Ed- ■ Oon
FWmtaln Hussey
Present from sway were Mr*. Mai
Mrs Cecil Roberta (Louise Rog­ Grand Island. Lake Superior
room tn the Michigan League build­ Cassidy. Mrs. John Nichol*. Grand week. At bridge lhe winners were
... Tuesday
m.w.y for
;or her
n«r home
nom. In
m jI .
&gt;'•»“ «"• monds Mrs Pate and daughter will ing
ers) left on
Rapids and Mr*. Grace Dodd*. Kan­ Mrs. Dan Lewis and Mrs. Dell New­
Baton Rouge La after vUlUng her '
for Evfcnstfln wher« »he win remain for two weeks.
ton.
Mis* Clark graduated with honors sas City. Mo.
Sr«i^ aS^lXkRo?Hud3r al Northwestern during the
Miss Ambra Fedewa and Miss
.from Hastings High school, class of
Mrs Clifford Dolan is chairman
rs.
heru fu’uni,ntr
ahe
»WP •» Beatrice Goggins left Sunday on a
I Athent p piqk.'up Mln EsUer Doty two weeks' vacation trip into Cana- ■32. and has been an honor student for next Tuesday.
as Chicago
.
during
her
four
years'
course
at
ho
wifi
adcompany
her
there
and
da
and
expect
to
retyrp
through
io
£
r
win adcompar •
•
Mr. and Mr*. Ben r&gt;. Blakfiev r* ] who
M Uk« . coukM oi work
. Fh&gt;rJyi™nl.. The, pUnhid to A
d"b",r„„
T"
KITCHEN SUQWXR
—
:urrM on Wor.iU, Iran IWrionl. •" “k'*
»&lt;
FOR BRIDE-ELECT.
Ohio, where they have been spend-1 Mr*
POBUe and
NOONDAY LUNCHtS
Mrs. Harold Huber (nee Gladys
Pauline
of
Greeley.
col
,
are
guests
dar,
Ont.,
also.
Ing the winter. At present they are
Mr. Diehl will receive hl* Ph. D. in Lae)
of Kalamazoo entertained
of
Mr*
LH.
Evarts.
The
latter
Mrs. O. W Loughee and children analytical chemistry at the close of Saturday at a luncheon and shower
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ster­
and Mrs. Pogue came from the of Jackson, accompanied by her
ling Roger*.
DINNERS
this
coming
session
of
summer
for
MLss
Deva
Perry,
bride-elect.
’ Mrs. Willard Ickes was called to same Ontario town and went thru sister. Mrs. Swan Anderson, and school. He is president of Alpha The color scheme of pink and white
5:30 to 7:30 F. M.
lhe old U. B. A. hospital together, daughter. Florence, of
Hastings, Chi Sigma, also a member of Gam­
Big Rapids June 4 by the illness of
was carried out with peonies and
left Wednesday on an extended visit ma Alpha, sigma Xi and Phi Lamb- garden Dowers. After the luncheon,
her daughter. Mrs. Harold Swanson, graduating tn the same cla.ss
SUNDAY DINNERS
Mr and Mrs. Wallace Osborn. with relatives at Enid and Canton.
who underwent an emergency oper­
dl.
the honor guest was presented with
12:30 to 2 P. M.
ation for appendicitu. Mrs. Ickes Mr*. Marian B. Goodyear and Mis* Oklahoma.
After a short wedding trip. Mr. u shower of kitchen gifts The aft­
Angie Bates attended the Kalama­
returned Monday.
Sumner Myers was home over the and Mrs. Diehl will be at home at ernoon was spent informally. Outzoo
Symphony
orchestra
concert
Mr and Mrs Owen Townsend of
week
end
and
brought
with
him
a
of-town
guests
Included
Mrs.
Fred
523
Linden
street.
Ann
Arbor,
un
­
Los Angeles. Cal., were guests of and tea at the Dr. Upjohn farm. friend. Thomas Dawson Smith, of til they leave for Ithaca in Septem­ Van Dyke. Detroit. Mrs Alfred De­
Brook Lodge, near Auguste. Sunday
Mr and Mrs Gary Crook part of
afternoon. It is estimated around Detroit. They left Sunday and Sum­ ber. where Mr Diehl will be on the May, Jackson. Mrs. D. H. Sharp,
to “
New
York
Ir teaching staff of Cornell College. Hastings, and MIm Marian Denim people attended, the proceed, , ner will go “
kW„Y
“‘ where V
Mr and Mrs. George Coats of Co»te ,Mn« W hn.nc, Ute work cl the I will
»" work
«™k for
■“ lhe N
«" York
New
York CrdCea- Friends here
lender congratula­ nert. Parchment.
Grove one day also.
orchestra this coming year.
I UaI rallroatJ
tions and best wishes.
Mr. and Mrs. George Taylor of
TRIBBLE—CROOK.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Crook and
Mr and Mrs Allen ponder spent
Minneapolis. Minn., called on their
Mr. and Mrs. Gary 8- Ctook an­
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
Mr and Mrs. Ray Shroyer were Sunday with their son Lloyd and
cousins. Mr. and Mrs. F. L Bauer,
Several of Mrs. Chas. Beckwith's nounce the marriage of their daugh­
Sunday gueste of Mr and Mrs Rol- ‘ family in Grand Rapids On their
on Monday, enroute to Trenton,
friends
took
possession
of
her
home
ter.
Mias
Barbara Crook, lo Oar
lo Viele of Vermontville, Twenty-1 w*y ho«n« they called on friends in
Canada Mr. and Mrs. Taylor were
three were present, among them be- Middleville. Mrs Ruth Solomon Yaw Friday evening while she was at Tribble of Battle Creek, the cere­
married Saturday
evening
in ing Mr and Mrs Charles Farrell1 at Ann Arbor called at lhe Pender the ball game, surprising her on mony being performed on Sunday.
Minneapolis.
-----home Monday
her return. It being her birthday. June 7. at LaGrange. Indiana. Mr.
Mr. and Mr*. Charles White and and family. Mr. and Mrs Loy Roy­
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Sixteen guests were present. Bunco and Mrs. Elton Baker of Battle
two children were guests of Mr. and er and baby and Mr. and Mr*. Gar
furnished the amusement, the main Creek were their attendants.
Mrs. Willard White on Friday, en­ Tribble (Barbara crook) all of Bat­ Trim during the past week were prize going to Mrs. Florence Pom­
For the present. Mr. and Mrs.
MUs Florence Hay of Bangor. Mrs
route from Ovid to their home in tle creek.
Mrs.
Dr. and Mr*, ouy C- Keller left Joe
jix: Nevltt
rerun and
anu granddaughter.
Kiaiiuusuanicr. mui
- lhe booby
' to
: ~
— Glenn
--------- —Lau- Tribble are residing in Battle
MUs eroy.
Minneapolis, Minn. They wer* called
.
BUOylee Nevill. oi But Leroy ond it”"*1’- M” Beckwith vu preeeni. Creek where he is employed.
to Ovid by the death of his father. early Saturday morning for a two- ..
’An
ed several
lovely vlhe
gifts. After
partak­
...
—
.
.
.
..
.
KAvrral
lnv«*lu
Aflar
rtorlek.
The bride graduated on Friday.
wee ks' trip east. They will visit lhe Mr. and Mrs. Richard Green and
William White.
Ing of a bountiful lunch topped off June 5. from lhe Hastings High
Mrs. Olessner Dage visited her Doctor's sister and motiver en route Mrs. Otto Schulae of Nashville.
with home made ice cream and school and has many friends who
to
New
York
to
see
their
son
Krantz
Mrs. cole Newton and Mias Helen cake, all departed wishing Mrs extend best wishes to both Mr. and
mother. Mr*, cole Newton, and sis­
ter. Miss Helen Newton. Saturday and his wife. In Philadelphia. Pa.. Newton were Ln Charlotte on Wed­ Beckwith many happy birthdays.
Mrs. Tribble.
and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Date Mrs. Keller will see her sister. Mrs. nesday and Thursday evenings of
have moved from Holland to their A. N. Kerr of Hollywood. California, last week attending claw night and
new home In Kalamazoo. where Mr whom she ha* not seen for many commencement exerciaes. MUs Nor­
Many Modern
Dag* is in the employ ef the Con­ years and whose daughter Peggy ma Paton. Mrs. Newton's 'grand
will participate in the national ten­ daughter, was one of the graduates.
sumers Power Co.
Mrs. Lcvane he Merrick returned
Mr and Mrs. Sam Schuler of nis tournament in that city. The
Kellers
plan
to
return
Id
Hastings
on Wednesday from Grand Rapids
New Fntfcriu
Woodland were In the city Monday
where she had an operation for
evening calling on Mr. and Mr*. June 25.
Miss Bernice Henry is home from cataract al Butterworth hospital.
Jacob Rehor. enroute to Battle
Creek to meet their daughter. Miss school at Akron. Ohio, for the sum­ She Is gaining nicely. Miss Ruth
PHONE 2491
Esther Schuler, who came home mer. Bhe was accompanied by MUs Handy accompanied Mrs. Merrick
from Arizona for a two months' Crook, also a teacher there, who was and cared for her during her hos­
Friday June 19
Saturday June 20
vacation. MIm 6chuler fs a nurse in on her way home to Wisconsin pital stay
Mis*
Hazel
Henry
returns
from
De
­
a tuberculosis hospital in southern
troit Friday and will be accom­
On Tuesday Mrs. C. D. Bauer, panied by a friend. Mis* Rose AbMTS. Chas
Hinman. Miss Sadie 11 ng. of Detroit, who will spend a
KT PACK
Glasgow. Mr*. Nellie Matthews. few days at the Henry home.

Mr. ...d MT,. M. A. LambH .pent
the week end with her parents in
Ypsilanti.
|
Mrs. Mattle Striker visited her
nieces and nephew* in Battle Creek
■
over lhe week end.
I
Mis* Barbara Johnson goes lo
Ann Arbor Friday to be a guest at
.
the senior ball that night
Mr. and Mr*. Chester Hodge* had
a* Bunday gueste. Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Watson, of Ionia.
Mr and Mr*. Orin Wilcox of
Grand Rapids spent the wrek end
with her mother. Mrs. Lizzie ’Cole.
Mr and Mr* C M Sisson. Billy
and Barbara of Kalamazoo were
Bunday afternoon gueste of Miu
Mabel SUson.
Mrs, Maurice Pierson spent the
week end with her daughter and
husband. Mr. and Mrs. Louli Wil­
liams at Battle creek.
Mrs. Aben Johnson and Aben,
Jr . drove to Ann Arbor Friday for
Miss Barbara Johnson who has
finished her first year s work at Lhe
University
Mr and Mrs Archie McDonald
drove to Port Huron Sunday where
lhe latter, and tlie children, will
spend the summer on the Huron
shore. Mr McDonald going there for
some of th* week ends.
Chester Stem drove here with hU
faptily from St Louis. Thursday
and spent the week end. reluming
Monday to New Albany. Ind.. hU
n?w location, with the Pickeral
Wklnul co.
Mr and Mr* Glenn Sheffield,
Miss Bonita and Roland Sheffield
ef Assyria Twp.. spent Bunday with
relatives here and attended the fuilerkl of tlie former's aunt. Mrs.
Nettle Larkin
John
Weissert and grandson
Lloyd Lohmcyer. Jr. left Monday
morning by automobile for Germ antown. Pa where Mr Weissert ex­
pects to spend the summer with the
senior Lohmcyer*
Miss Betty Stickney left Sunday
for Reed City where she will spend
* month at the home of her sister,
who is ill Mrs Anna Wblfe Is in
rbarge of Miss Stickney's shop dur­
ing her absence
Miss Ruth Prine is In Battle
Creek today attending commence­
ment exercises Bhe graduated In
February and went back to receive
her diploma. Since that time she
ha* been employed In this city.
Miss Martan Murphy of the Park­
er House staff had as guests last
week her sister. Mis* Margaret Mur­
phy. of New Carlisle, Ind., and Mto
Jean Meahl. of Vallonia. Ind. The
former will teach Home-Ec. at
Bouff) Haven next year
Mr and Mrs W 8 Will. In com­
pany with her sisters. Mrs. Malle
McCollum and MIm Hazel Bmelker
ot Fenton, left on Sunday for a two
weeks' auto trip to Washington. D
C. where they will visit Mr and
Mrs Burl Bmelker Th*y will also
visit other eastern points.
Mr. and Mrs. Roman Feldpausch
in company with Mr. and Mr* T R.
Lovett, mercantile manager for the
Grand Rapids Wholesale Grocers'
Assn., are leaving tomorrow for a
10-day trip lo Texas where they will
attend lhe National Grocers' con­
vention and visit the Texas Centen­
nial exposition.
‘ Mr and Mrs. F. W. Stebbins go to
Ann Aibor Saturday to attend com­
mencement. their son Tom receiving
Uiis Master's degree from the Univer­
sally this year in business adminis­
tration.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Helm and
Mrs. Fernie Carpenter and daugh­
ter Audrey of Ypsilanti were week
end guest* of Mrs Irving Cressey.
Mrs Carpenter remained tor the
summer.
■

•nt*. Mr. and Mr*. A- L. Houvenir
from Thursday till Saturday. Mia*
Patricia Houvenir
returning to
Owomo with thorn for a two wash*'
vUlt. On Friday all vUited relatives
in Kalamazoo.
MUs Mary Roush U home from
Delton and Miu LoU Roush from
Fennville for the summer. Bud
Roush spent the week end with hu
parent*. He hu recently been
transferred from Grand Rapid* lo
jack*on by the Bell Telephone Co.
The R«v E. L- Crocker returned
on Friday from a vUlt in N*w York
state. Mr*. Crocker and children ac­
companied him and remained fur
the summer with her parent*. Mr.
and Mrs. Will Bennett, of Swain.
N Y. Rev. Crocker also attended
part of lhe commencement ' week
festivities al Houghton College,
Houghton. N. Y.
&lt;
Hartley Finstrom wu home from
East Lansing over the week end. On
Saturday of thU week he leaves with
a group of fellow student* for Fort
Sheridan at Chicago where they will
study markmanship Hartley wa*
awarded a 'medal al M. 8. C. for hU
excellence in target practice. Mrs.
Finstrom will spend the summer
here with relative*.
•

HOMACK—LANQfTON.

144 L STATE ST.

HASTINGS

q. L. CHASE
OPTOMETRIST

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

PRESCRIPTION
DRUG STORE
'PHONE 1IIS

•

HASTINGS. MICH.

BEEF RIBS

2

Minced ham j

181c

Because of the Great Demand for
Wall Paper at Last Weak's Sal*,
We ar* continuing this sal* for
ONE MORE WEEK I

WE ARE OFFIRING 9,000 ROLLS
OF WALL PAPER AT THESE
GREATLY REDUCED PRICKS!
Alia a Good Assortment of 6, 8 sad 10
Single Roll Romnonti with Bordsr ot
95c, 50c, 60c and 75c
Many Waihabl* Papon ImIuM ia
This Sal*!

23c

10c

REED’S “•
HASTINGS. MICHIOAN

�Tffit HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, JUNE IS. 1938
Mlle

INSURANCE

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

THE CHURCHES

Highway Dept. Going After
Worrna That Infeit
Along Roadside

ENT A WORD. NO ADVER- I

WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON K. MeELWAI.N

CAMPAIGN STARTED
TO PROTECT TREES

inter*.1

DOUD CORNERS.

New Books In
Public Library
Fiction.

Mrs. Millie Harrington of Dowl­
ing visited al George Norris' Bun­
day.
Polon Hallock of Battle Creek
visited his aunt and uncle. Mr. and
1 Mrs. George NorrU Sunday. Ohas.
Chandler of Allegan also called

■ tam.MriM-ai»i(.oMsuu..l&gt;bS.. &gt;m|

The Hastings Banner

wtot00rt „d

Michigan's first statewide savesaveBRETHREN 1 the-trees campaign along trunkline ,
*
I
.highways waa initialed this past I
MW Roteru HU.eh.rt - Th.
mil* iui ot Barber'* Corner*.
Docto,.
•
latter s niece. Mr. and Mrs. Lewie
K
I
June H-20
FOR BALE—t'prlBht piano. floe
' M.
*•- D.
van
wagoner,
state
nignwpy
Maier i Bunday.
D Van Wagoner, state highway , Jane Abbott—Benefit Street.
. thm. Uell *t SOS N.
■hi* .nd prmchinit i commissioner, announced that crews
Will Enplne—Plundered Range,
WASTED—A f.w d.r.
QUIMBY.
i. Xlekete, Pk— T8»
oo p. m ; mr**.«c ' will operate four power sprays along । Josephine Lawrence— Years Are
FOR SALE—-Hou., end
We extend our sympathy to the
of
43--------coun- So Long.
30 Thertdey etraiue. Officii! board : lhe
““ trunkline
------------- ;roadsides
-------- ----- —
, ••
Robert Martin family Mr Marlin, IN BARRY COUNTY. THRU MONTHS.
1935
!• m
Post Stories of 1935.
...line Fnd*» Jun. is. at ■i jo
jo I*
M ;j ties
Iles durlne
during the next month to oroproIN ADVANCB ....JI*
who
has
been
sick a week, is a paErnest
HaycoX
—
Trail
Smoke.
I tect walnut, hickory, and butternut
OUTRIDE HARRY COUNTY. ONE TEAR
tlenl at Pennock hospital.
• E
'e as P M&lt;hpfayer’«—tlair m itrws »B*inst forest tent caterpillars
Tom Gunn -Painted Post Law.
IN ADVANCE *1.50
The Quimby Aid Is serving home FOREION SUBSCRIPTIONS. ONE YEAR
Patricia Wentworth — Dead or
ir* Goodin *. E M Hamilton, d.u iThe counties cover lhe lower part of
„I1W
made ice cream al the Reid Service
IN ADVANCE M OO
Alive.
the state.
1 FUR BENT- Aft.
Charles Francis Coe-Knockout.
station. June 21. A program la beOn completion the equipment
Gerald Warner Brace-The Is-1* mg prepurru unu tne tuuau uiawui*
potato*. I
I will be used the remainder of tne
is#—n.1
| contest will be a feature of lhe eveI summer to repel any serious out­
Carolyn Wells—Murder In the I nlng.
,
I break of insects on roadside trees
!»EID CORN-llich quality. Vrt dar. WO'r
। Rev. and Mrs. Earl Scott and
’“’•bij. at io
in any section of the state. It will Bookshop.
1 Crriainatlon. Il par crate at farm ,
half talk ra«t Itowaua Mill*. Amr D 1
returned to their
Non-FTrtion.
। daughter have retu:
■ * man I also be utilized for liquid frrtilizar Garbwil Mlddlr.lllc____________ t Id |
—-----------------------------------------------------i with** oo
Chas. Z. Souliiard
Soulliard—Treatise on 1 home tn
in Cannel.
Carmel. New
Net York, after a
* vole.* . tion of trees. One of the insects for
: WANTED- Work in aiaall taio.h with :
bva»«B*k;
1 two weeks' vacation here.
"'"tr'ina ' whlch crews have been directed to Trout
old couple or woman alon. Mr*. Car 1
rk»r. Addir
Proceeds were 86.85 from lhe
rir Moon 311 F Collar
« IS
Don Strane.
Pather'a' be on the look-out in northern
Zane Grey—Tales of Fresh-water
FOR SALE—Two m.lch cow*
Mr. I
meeting of the Ladles' Aid Society
Michigan during lhe summer is the Fishing.
i H.lrn Arm.tronr Mlddlttill. Phon.
flv which
nine ..u..tn-ea
|ob«.r«»4 aa Einwrf Day. e.rmoci "TBej""" •**
"•««• nttnrira *»«•*
Aircraft Year Book for 1935.
.at lhe home of&gt; Mrs. Charles Call!1 Idd—F3
V IK ।
. Lanraai. ot Fiow.r. •• Flower* tor th*: In answer to o number of queries
Arthur Pound—Industrial Ainerl- n“n;
,
ABSTRACT OFFICE
FOR SALE—Cauliflower and eabbaa. 1
altar win ba *t.prrci*t.d,
by fBrmcrs Michigan state Colkge ca.
Everyone enjoyed the beapllful
plant. 35c hundred or (3 thou.and. Er
: ar.l Matlr.on I'konr 7*5—fss _« |u (
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
EMMANUEL oHURCH iEoi.con.il
entornologlsu say the spray will not
United States Stajnples* Cover Children a Day
scrvics Sunday
™
B
Ilnjun
Uvertock.
;c»u&gt;lo
e
u...
•
mornuiu.
CAHBAGF. PLANTS—Se doion. or 35c |
hunJrrd
Inquire VI2 F. Green St ■
.
325 W.
at.
I The
“ ' and• My —
_____- • from th* earalMi acts cl othara.
•• • Caotar
— bl
— TaL
•— as
~j
*m« Commissioner
wuuuuauMic* urged
uigt-u motormuiui Clarence ”
Day—God
Fa- .
Phone 'JIIKU
fl In
LENT CORNERS.
Ua wlM man corrarta hla own.
!uod*i »fi.r th» noik»« h»d |sts to slop their automobiles when | then
job Printing.
. FOR KALE—&lt;Vurk hor.e eheap for ea«l&gt;
Mr. and Mrs. O- V.‘ Bennett and
,R»tatl.h*»unJ»y r‘.Tunr’suT"1*. ' »PPK»ching a power sprayer in ac- [ Dorothea Braude—Wake Up and
Dataaad a Bodtrn AboUact bofora
Al.o a goo.l cupboard. Phone 737— .
F3
'
c la
baytag ar loatUns meaty on real
children of Kalamazoo called on Mr.
i&lt; i.r *y«*Uoc un th. v-pic I tlon He has been advLsed that the j Live.
WANTED—*;&lt;*! want* aeneral houaowoek
aetata. PLAY SATE.
Krtutlan does not injure the car's
— ■ --— Mrs.
■ - • ■&gt; and Mrs. Leland Hammond. Sun­
Astor's
Stanley
Walker
or rare of children either In town or i
Horse.
n, finish but is difficult u&gt; remove
day.
on farm E.g&gt;'r&gt;vuced &lt; an ai.e r.f
eeence. Write X in care of Hanner
Pkoaa 2115
105 So Cbarch St.
‘ Gar
~ ­
The Misses Gladys. Lucille and
Helen Van Pelt Wilson—A
.MARTIN CORNERS.
den In the House.
_—
Carolyn McMannh nnd Carl MeT.r,01 %• *.
Flili SALE-—A luuiitf hroo.l aow*. due
Henry Renouf-Slamp Collecting. ' Mannls. Jr . of Kalamazoo spent the
Miss Imogene Barry and Carl
And 1
J 1. Barnum Woodland '
Phone t6-It 1 H 1
Dorothy Stole—Making the Mast , week end with Mr. and Mrs. Rob­ Grashuls of Pewamo were married
S“. “ '
HAD
ot Your lx&gt;oks &lt;new edition).
.
ert Steele and Joe Tombs.
at the Methodist parsonage Sat­
Rockwell and Grayson—Flower
Mrs Adyllne Caldwell and chllOH COMMISSION
Western Mich. Golf Profes­
Arrangemenl.
1 dren returned Sunday from ■ visit urday afternoon by Rev. C. M.
sionals Entertained at
L. M. Hurd—Practical Poultry with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Conklin, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
Barry attending them. They will re­
1 Farming tntew edition'.
I Clarence Barrett of Mt. Pleasant.
Country Club Monday I William
w,,:..".,
o
uw I smart Hammond relumed Wed­ side in Pewamo. Congratulations.
BONDS
o Rtevana
—Ttia Riuhi
FOR ALL CARS
pi... .i
Monday the Hastings Country ' Thing.
Owing to Illness and other condinesday after spending a fweek with
.&lt;
' nllih
Marra fnr
arniinri 15 ' \William
—O
. —Stevens
RAYBESTOS Brake Lining
lubjeciJ
Club wnu
was the*
lhe Mecca
for around
Tli„
——
The —
Correct- his grandfather. Clarence Ham- Hons In the neighborhood there will
•t th. ; golf professionals, all members ot Thing.
rnond of Hastings.
1 be no L. A. 8- in June, so watch for
VICTOR GASKETS
i,prM । „
Piofesslonal
Golfers
OrganizeMrs.
Maurice
Burchett
spent
from
;
the
notice of the July meeting.
, ... .
.5. ...
r . ,
Winifred E. Bain—Parents Look
NEW AND USED AUTO
। tlon
lion of Western Michigan. A butlbiui-'; Bt Modern Education.
—
। Wednesday until
Sunday with her
John Whetstone has been quite
Mom '
nu*tlng
was‘-'•
held
at the Coun- '
. .... -Mr
— .1 and
«
1—U —Jake Adrian' aarlni.rlu
tit Ih,
naat past week,
Kilt but is
PARTS
’---------------------4 ......
Mary M1Mcr Needham—Tdtnor- parents.
Mrs.
seriously
111 lhe
"ARSON" MODERN
ct. "A । try Club in me forenoon.
i row to Fresh Fields.
i fon of Prairieville.
’ some belter at this writing.
r
I
in the afternoon un interesting
MECHANO-FOtM TRUSS
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
J. Walker McSpadden—,Light Op- ________________ .__________
------- 1 low ball' golf contest was staged. CIa ra
ftnd
Musical
Comedy
and
Musical
Comedy
FOR WORK OR FLAY
Phone 2637
Hiitlngi
a Hastings player being paired with
Walter
pi'.L —Health for Body
Walter P
F. Cobb
■
■ ——
Thin Smooth Rvbbot Back Pads
one of the visiting professionals. In ! ancj Mind. ~
this contest Nick Webber of Grand I Encyclopedia
• '
No Po*t» To Woai Clothing
Britannica.
Rapids and Henry Sheldon, of this 1
city, won first honors with a 68 I
vwvswsna.
Three twosomes' were tied for sec- 1 - Above all the qualities we need
■ nd wide
ond with 69 as follows: Tom Kanary ln public life today Is courage If
For saleof Midland and Dr Ken McIntyre. ! thl3 counlry uemantls this. Il will
Ftwcvn ...u.. .________
Doc Tracy of Grand Rapids and U-s , iWVe B gtPBi deBj t0 do wlth Uje
HAVING PVR CHASED tl.«
Hawthorn. Marvin Stahl of Grand forthcoming campaign."—Ida W
Jewelry More I am offenni
Rapids and Chas Leonard Third &gt; Bowman
farm a few black* tram L
! place was won by Vt-m Engle and 1-------- - ------- «
। Ed VanPoperlng with a 70
i
CAPITALISM.
At Old Hastings Wool
Uinch was served ut noon and । -whal is capitalism but thf right
HASTINGS
PHONE 2634
ADJUSTABLE CENTER
the visitors were loud m their ,0
thrifty and enjoy the savings
Boot
Plant
Site.
In
­
Sponge Rubbar Pads
I praises of the Hastings course, and of your thrift and your Initiative?"
of
their
very
courteous
reception
1
..James
W
Gerard
-James
W
Gerard
quire
of
Joe
DeRuiter
No Lag Strap*
m“w *H w‘,u u’hJid 1here Ed Van Poperlng. local pro­
tn Freeport
TheI fesslonal. who is Secretary and
at Pickle Station.
The Prescription Drug Store
i&gt;r.«.r '"'-■•"• -ill '-- Treasurer of the Western Michigan
HASTINGS MARKETS
“
' **'
'*
'
professional Golfers Organization:
had genera) oversight of the meet­
ing. which Is only another way of
saying that It wa, a very pleasant.
successful affair
--------------

JKFFBRSON

it. united
church.

Our Service

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

SHELDON'S

! visiting golf players

splendid time

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

MUFFLERS

FIRST CLASS WATCH REPAIRING/
Prompt and Courteou* Service
All work done in our own &gt;hop

BESSMERS JEWELRY

WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT?

Dead Stock Removed!

PRIME ELECTRIC FENCING

Farmer*, Attention!

IS THU ITTO-DATK METHOD oi rmrtfnt Uvnlock Control.

CARDS of THANKS

PBICB for VEAL. LAMBS. BOOS and

ing.

Over 5.000 used lost year. Over M0 sold in Michigan thia
Spring. PRICE OF CONTROLLER, 834.50. Address

FAKE DaPBIESTES.

If.

BURTON D. SNOOK

EMERSON ROYER

Factory

OLIVET.

Representative

MICIL

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
Hasting*

RAIN!

JERRY ANDRUS

A Utile foresight today may mean

GEO. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and
SEE BETTER!
1» W. STATE ST.

HASTINGS

WANTED

For. Quick*
Results use

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

at FELDPAUSCH’S

Pie at
Ch ildor*
‘m . eot
l» E

DO YOU NEED

MONEY

MARKET - Phon. 2616

RAIN!

Wise and Thrifty Property Ownart ora Re-roofing
and Repairing Before Bad Leaks Develop !
I Specialise In Roofs, Siding and Insulation. FREE Inspection
and Estimates at Any Time! I represent the Sherri fl-Goal in

(Ted) Theodore S. K. Reid

FOOD CENTER 2609

H. Feldpausch . 3921

RAIN!

Leaky Roofs in Rainy Weather Destroy
Savings of a Life-Time !

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

TO PAY BILLS

Hdq. REID'S SERVICE STATION
TEL. 709—Ft.
East of Hastings on M-79.

TAKEa VACATION

REPAIR the HOME
or CAR or EVEN
REDUCE YOUR
PRESENT PAY­
MENTS?

GRAND

WE MAKE LOANS

RAPIDS

ON AUTOMOBILES

WILL BE IN HASTINGS
SATURDAY, JUNE 2Oth

AND FURNITURE!

AT THE PARKER HOUSE—HE MAKES THIS

Special Dental Offer!
PLATES

If the car is not fully
paid for we will toke
over the 4&gt;alonce for
you and lend you ad­
ditional money.

Bring in Your Title
Plata* Repaired ... $1.00

EXTRACTIONS

Call, Write or Phone
Hamane Method

5Oc

Fidelity

ALL WORK GUARANTEED

torpnrntlon

IT WILL PAY YOU TO INVESTIGATE THIS

PHONE 2307

OUTSTANDING DENTAL OFFER !

HOURS: 9 A. M. tp 5 P. M.

HOME OWNED STORE EMPLOYING LOCAL HELP

Free Delivery

DR. G. ALLINGHAM, Dentist
OF

WALLACE GROCE-RY

tional Bank Building

HASTINGS

MICHIGAN

Phone 2458— Hastings •

SUPER SUDS

Mod. Siio 2 pkg* 17c

Baking Powder
RUMFORD
12 os. can._

4 Qc
13

Open Evenings

Largo pkg.

17c

Powdered Sugar

2 lb. 14‘

2 pkgs. Shredded Wheat Biscuit

23c

BROADCAST Corned
Beef Hath
OQC
2 cant______ C3

10 Bart Felt
Naptha Soap..

APPLE BUTTER
Fino Quality
4 yc
38 os. jar I I

PREMIUM SODA
CRACKERS
4 ft
1 lb. box Il

OLD EATING
QQc
POTATOES, pk. 03

Eagle Brand
Q4 &lt;
Milk, sweetened m I

10 Ibs. SUGAR
Old Style Smoked
I JI
Cello Wrapped
SAUSAGE lb. OCc I SI SLICED
4 Qi
You’ll like It. £3
I
BACON
pkg. I

WE HANDLE ICKRICH QUALITY MEATS

�THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1936

what

Chrutian Science

Lecture By Paul

about:
ollywood, calif.—

Stark Seeley E.S.B.

An audience that filled the main
floor of Central auditorium was
present Bunday afternoon to hear
orator, I’d say the Democrats
the lecture under the auspices of
wouldn't need a keynoter at the local Christian Science church
their convention when a hog­ given by Paul stark Seeley of Port­
land. Oregon, member of the Board
caller would be more suitable. of Lectureship ot The Mother
If, on the other hand, I were a Church, Boston. Many attended
Democratic silver-tongue, I'd say from nearby cities and towns. Miss
the Republicans needed no cam­ Florence Campbel) was al the piano
paign committee, whereas a set of and played for a half hour preced­
ing the lecture.
pallbearers would be highly appro­
Laurence E. Barnett, local attor­
priate.
Aa a Republican spellbinder. I'd ney. presided and Introduced the
speaker. Mr. Seeley's subject was
proclaim we were giving Puerto
1 'Christian Science—Spiritual Law."
Rico four years In
Hr-ra id in part:
which gradually to
A consciousness that is loving
cut loose from us.
God’s law is habitually kind. If love
becauae.^ould the
for God and Hls law fills our
Democ^Be
outfit
thought the force of love predomi­
Avin in November,
nates in out* lives. "Love." says
by the end of those
Paul, "is lhe fulfilling of the law."
four years the
Of a righteous woman lhe Bible
Puerto Ricans will
salth. "In her tongue is the law of
kindness."
be used to having
some Independence
David was a lover of God and Hls
law. and in David's heart was a
and we'll be used
very real sense of tbe Uw of kind­
to having none al
ness.
Do you remember how. when
all. As a Demo8 CoW)
Saul became distrustful of David
critic champion.
I'd come right back by pointing out and sought hls life with a small
army, he came one day to a cave
that, since Puerto Rico would starve
and stayed there? Unknown
to
to death anyhow under a Repub­ Saul, David and his men were hid­
lican administration, congreaa mer­ ing Ln lhe cava. Il would have been
cifully was taking steps to let the easy for David to slay Saul and be­
people down there get accustomed, come king, but he refused to do so.
by degrees, to lhe starvation process. He only cut off the skirt ot Saul's
robe while he slept to show that
though Saul was in hls power he
Meandering Revenue Program.
*T'HE memtiers ut the senate obeyed the Uw of kindness and did
A finance committee—pour things! l him no harm. When confronted
l
with
this evidence of David's klnd—seem to be going forward with
ness toward him. Saul said: "Thou
I art more righteous than I: for thou
hast rewarded me good, whereas I
by traveling backward. At Inst ae- have rewarded thee evil . . . Where­
fore the Lord reward thee good for
figures and language that any min­ that thou hast done unto me thU
ute the rescue piirty was expected day."
to rush in with bush-hooks und
The Uw of kindness was govern­
ing David's thinking. The healing
chop them loose.
However, out of the epileptic force of love and good will he gave
seizure Into which these unfortu­ right of way. It thwarted any de­
nate patriots hnve been enmeshed, structive force called anger or re­
sentment. said Solomon. “He that U
one concrete fncj has emerged.
alow to anger U belter than the
There will be a sllithl exemption of
mighty; and he that ruleth hU
dues cm the profits of corporntlrma spirit than ha that taketh a city."
making less tlmn S1.*&gt;.UW n year. The forces of kindness, good will,
This will be a great boon for trunk charily are always so near, so po­
stores down by the depot, brokerage tent. Why not use them? Says the
firms handling second hand railroad poet (ChristUn Science Hymnal.
No. 178):
tunnels and dealers In butterflies.
"Jesus knew the Uw of kindness.
Healing mind and heart of blind­
Naw Socialist Argument.
ness;
HE trouble with being u Social­
And tn heavenly wisdom taught
ist is chat, no matter what you
Holy works of love he wrought."
•tart to debate. you nlwaya wind
The Uw of God. or Mind, imparts
up on the Tom Mooney case. Or
at least, such was the situation un­ unlimited ability lo man. It u this
til recently. Now, (or any Socialist­ law which assures man of hU God­
ic argument on any subject from given ability to think, to initiate, to
l&gt;erform. God's man Is full of
German tneaaks io Hie Gient Wall
ability. As he Is law-filled, so he is
ability-filled—filled
with
Intelli­
The tenants of a Bronx apart­ gence. Jesus showed man to be an
divine
ment house, mostly radicals, held a Individual embodiment of
meeting, mid, In accordance with ability, for man U the ImmedUte
the best radical traditions, drew up expression of the life and ability of
resolutions demanding Hint the God. Deity's intelligence is ever
management do this mid Hint. Hav­ reflected by man and is hU ability.
God's Uw provides man with
ing read the fiery protest, the super­
ability, and also with perpetual op­
intendent addressed the gathering: portunity for the use and expression
“Now aboudt not leddlng nobody of hls ability, of what use would be
hang out rushing lo tbe hallways— ability If there were no opportunity
that's reasonable.
1 start begin­ to use it? Divine Uw employs Its
ning that reform right away.
Intelligent forces in all conscious­
“Und an to keeping garbages off ness to make room and opportunity
for each individual to use hls abil­
ity.
God's Uw not only Imparts to HU
peel me do aboudt the Scottsboro
man continuing ability and suitable
boyar
opportunity, but also a sense of rec­
iprocity. that U an honest appre­
ciation by hU brother of what he
HEN a bricklayer feels opset gives. Jesus cUlmed hU rights un­
and licks bls wife that's tem­ der this aspect of divine law when
per nnd he gets 830 or 30 days. But he said. "The Father . . . hath
when a dicker star goes on a elm- borne witness of me." And the
Psalmist sang. "Thou has crowned
alve act, that's artistic tempera­ him with glory and honour." It U
just Uw—
of--------------------------------God that each' Inment and the studio gives her some 1 the
— ------------allver fox furs to calm bar oarvea dividual be accorded what Is rightfully due him. that reciprocity be
Peoria, break up. why. then, a expressed to him by hls brother
Qod consul
constitutes lhe only real
1.,n ' man. vjou
codpie In 1'eorla hnve 1 ~
u
roken
up. thinking of c_r
our brother. Divine
ora In Hol-1
— ----- all
— of Hls Individual
But If the same thing occurs
Mind makes
lywood. It Invariably Is featured as Ideas to think rightly. Justly, appre­
a "nuptial rift"
ciatively toward one another and to
A lad In Kansae takes his girl to give to one another with that meas­
ure of justice and reciprocity which
and what with the blue plate spe­ is essential to God's Justly balanced
cials and the tip. the transaction unlverae. And after all. this is simI
amounts to 11.80, but otherwlan ply the effect of the force of spirit­
creates no special excitement either ual law fulfilling Its function to
produce an intelligently ordered
locally or throughout the nation,
creation and man, with each indi­
l^t the same thing happen to a viduality able to fill hls place and
couple of the least conspicuous of receive justly therefor.
tbe movie colony, and 20 clumnlsu

H

If I

were a Republican

T

W

Chooelng a New "Buddha."
ROM the forbidden kingdom of
Tibet—although goodness knows
they never had any trouble keeping

E

two years' search a new "living
M.
dlKorerrf. Bo.-

»•

bar. our ....

------- . &gt;.--------- ...
talu, Jo.
Louis.
Th« news from Lhasa should glva
•ocouragement to the poor unhappy congressional committeemen who
are prominently connected with the
Townsend plan who'll condescend
to talk to them.
You may quarrel with the Town■eadltes' bookkeeping, with their
way of handling the contributed
-dimes of thousands of trusting old­
sters, with their failure lo saplaln
where they're going to get tbe bil­
lions to pay those gaudy pensions
or bow the provisions of ths distributloo are to be enforced, but at
endanger their social positions by
being eaught chit-chatting with a

IRVIN S. CORR

THE HASTINGS BANNER
MRS. PMTT COES
I TO PR IM
WILL ATTEND DEMOCRAT

CONVENTION AS 4TH
DIET. DELEGATE

FIRST HASTINGS WOMAN
TO HAVE THAT HONOR

Barry Bypaths

HIST NGS MEMBERS

By JANI CAMERON

It must be ticklish business put­
ting women's names ih tlie "30
Years Ago" column. 1 notice unmar­
ried women arc moat sensitive about
their ages and childless married
ones nearly a* much so.
Huey Long's mamma and papa
sure knew what they were •bout

DBLZOATES FROM VASI
OUS UNITS HUT AT
BATTLE CREEK

COMMANDER WARNS
AGAINST COMMUNISM

Jamas Van Zandt, 'tn which he
warned against communism, claim­
ing there were more than two mil­
lion followers in lhe country with
more being turned out every year
by some of our schools and col­
leges. He also denounced fascism,
internationalism and all other isms
that are unsound and unAmerican.
"Professors and teachers talk from
books, but ws talk from experience

Celebrate Their

Golden tFeddlng|!|TAe

Prescott, a carefree,
can girl studying mu
Ing Uw World war. 1
with Balvtnl, a famous

nounce these isms." he said. "If the
people of the United States will fol­
low lhe V. F. W. program there will

with the prospect of

At • the meeting Thursday after­
Hag Had Life of Varied Ex­ when they named lilm.
Veterans of Foreign Wars noon there were three speakers. Ber­
periences—Native of
nard Kearney of Ne* York, na­
First rule of eolumning: Treat
Hear National Officers
tional senior vice-commander of the
Black HiUs
prizefighters with lhe utmost re­
V. F. W-: H F. Marquard of Chi­
—Big Parade Friday
One of the coveted seats so much spect. No smart cracks in their di­

in demand for the coming National
Democratic convention at Philadel­
phia the week of June 23. will be
occupied by a Hastings woman.
Mrs. Honora M. Pratt, a member
of the Democratic Bute Central
committee from the Fourth Con­
gressional district, who received the
honor of being elected an alternate
delegate to the National convention.
ut the recent state convention of
lhe party held In Grand Rapids.

rection.

Remembrance: Ford post cards
with "tin Lizzie" rattling merrily
by with a little bird on a branch
hollering "Cheap, cheap!”'

A little girl's family had been
subject’ to depression economy and
I had substituted oleo for butter,
much to lhe little girl's disgust,
in her prayers this was overheard.
•Give us this day our dally bread—
and please God, put some butter

Any lime we get to feeling sorry
for ourselves, we should consider
the good German people and their
problem Nobody loves his home,
family andr good food like a Ger­
man. yet they seem destined to have
a ruler whose only thought is army
expansion and war propaganda.
Hitler is less liked even than old
Muscle Inny, but he rules with an
iron hand and the poor ritiaens can
obey or eventually die a "traitor's
death."

MRS. E- J. PRATT.
Tills is tlie first time a local wom­
an has ever been elected to this
position. Mrs. Pratt acknowledges
she Is quite thrilled over lhe pros­
pect of being right In the midst of
the excitement, and speechifying,
the music and bUre and many col­
orful events accompanying one of
our national conventions.
Mrs. Pratt, who is the wife of Dr.
E. J Pratt, well known osteopathic
physician, has had a life filled with
interesting experiences. Bhe was
bom In the Black H11U of South.
Dakota, near Deadwood. Her father.
Wm. H. WillUms. as a young man.
was a colonel in the First New York
Engineers during the Civil wir and
with hls bride entered the Black
Hills country as a pioneer settler
Ln 1878 In a covered wagon. Dick
CUrk, later famous as the Indian
scout. "Deadwood Dick" was one of
the scouts on Mr. Williams' mule

often carried on his shoulder.
Bhe has heard her father relate
many stirring tales of those days.
He was the first to bring seed for
gardens and for crops into that
country, and planted the first clover
sown In the Black Hills. Snow and
cold left a vivid Impression with
Mrs. Pratt. Their home often had
to be dug out of snowdrifts. She
rode on horseback to school in
good weather and travelled on sklls
In the winter. She was a school
ma’am later herself. She went east
for college training matriculating
at Temple College, Philadelphia, of
which Russell H. Conwell, famous
lecturer and divine.' was the head.
She recalls with pleasure his happy
faculty of driving home points In
his brief chapel talks that she has
carried with her all her life. She
majored in dramatic art, afterward
supplementing It with work tn Chi­
cago where she also taught.
An interesting branch of work
she later entered was as a traveling
lecturer Ln the extension depart­
ment of the International Harvester
Company, of Chicago, her duties
carrying her over a wide range of
territory. During the World war
she enlisted for service and was as­
signed to the Speech department,
Council of Defense, under Mrs.
Taylor and later was loaned to the
Hoover food administration bureau,
where she did valuable work as a
lecturer and organiser
Mrs. Pratt's well known dramatic
ability stands her In good hand for
enterprises of this nature as she is
an easy and fluent speaker with a
trained voice that carries well with­
out apparent effort. She Is a mem­
ber of the Order Eastern Star, the
Hastings Women's club, the Has­
tings Civic Players, Educational Di­
rector for Beu Sigma Phi business
girls' sorority, and active in many
INCREASE SHOWN
other worthwhile local endeavors. It
due largely to her Initiative
IN TOURIST TRADE was
and enthusiasm that a party was
here for Pres. Roosevelt's
Reporti State Fifty Per Oent given
birthday night.
of Oars Are From Out­
Mrs. Pratt inherits her Democrat­
ic leanings from her father, a Jetside Michigan
ferfonlan
Democrat, whom she
avers never voted for a Republican
„ state highway maintenance
Brown,
but once, and that was for Theo­
,uud thM
dore Rooaevelt, whom he greatly
u&gt;a-.uo In u» .ul,- admired.
1 season tourist business in Michigan,
j the record showing a 63 per cent inSOUTH BOWNE' crease in traffic across the Straits
Harold Yoder and family attend­
during
■*"
“ lhe '*
Memorial day holiday. ed the Blough reunion at Fallasburg
park-.
Bunday.
At lhe same time a count of auto­
MIm Helen Brown of Valparaiso,
mobiles was taken on four trUnkllnes near the state lines and ap­
proximately 60 per cent of the cars nor Miller. Glendora Miller of Carl­
were from other stales.
ton visited her grandparents. Mr.
Barry county with Ha fine retort and Mrs C. M. Benedict, over the
lakes cannot help but get Its share
of this tourist traffic as vacation
Mrs. Lydia Kercher Is in Indiana
possibilities are made known to re­ assisting in caring for Mrs. Will
sorters. With good roads, attreotlvs Eash, who Is ill with heart trouble.
cottages and good fishing in our
MBs Eleanor Miller accompanied
lakes, lhe resorters cannot help but Helen Brown of Valparaiso to the
be attracted to Barry county.
home bf her aunt. Mrs. Bessie
Tight. Sunday where she will attend
MALTY
Valparaiso University this summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Springer of
than when he asks forgiveness or Foorsland. Ill., were Bunday night
forgiven another."—Carols Feser.
guests at Jlarold Yoder s.

My most embarrassing situation:
I have a beautiful, dignified old
aunt who makes one think of the
President's mother.
Mrs. James
Roosevelt. Also a man of our ac­
quaintance was owing us and 1
wished some paper hanging done.
The aunt wanted some of my choice
scablosa seed. I wrote the two let­
ters and mailed them. Result—the
paperhanger received a Under lit­
tle note
with many
endearing
phrases (he has a Jealous wife) and
a packet of flower seeds, and my
lovely aunt who never uw a step­
ladder got an Invitation to paper
the parlor and turn It on account.
The woodchucks on the back forty
nearly had company- that winter.

My couxln had a lot of potato
bugs and nothing seemed to dis­
courage them from raising large
families. Bo he sent 33 to a com­
pany for a potato bug extermina­
tor. He received a board with sev­
eral holes in and a peg. Tlie direc­
tion* said to place the bug in one
of the holes, then insert the peg
and squash the bug

Bud planned for two weeks to use
a washer in a penny slot-machine.
"Hie big moment arrived, no one was
looking, he dropped In the washer,
the machine was empty. He says.
-Just my luck."
Snappiest name for
"Caln and Mabel."

a

play—

waa killed In action and ths

The years bring Ann honor l
cago. national judge advocate; and
fame, but nothing can maks
forget lhe man she loves and
Miller Post Veterans of Foreign Norman Borgeson ot tbe stale de­
partment of education. Both na­ MR. AND MRS. HENRY TOBIAS.
Wars, most of them with their
tional officers stressed the point
Mr. and Mrs Henry Tobias of
families, a large delegation of Span­
that the veterans have a very Im­ Baltimore township celebrated their
ish war veterans and at least one
portant duty in leading their com­ fiftieth wedding anniversary on tional debut at the La Sea
Civil war veteran. T. O. Webber,
munities Ln the protection of true Friday, May 22, al their home on Ian. singing In the umo
represented Hastings and the local
veterans. al lhe stale encampment American Ideals against lhe inroads the 200 Here farm on which be was
of fascism, communism. Black Le­ born. Mr. Tobias is 71 years of age
hvld -|n .Battle Creek Wednesday.'
gion and all other forms of organi­ and Mrs. Tobias is M.
Thursday. Friday and Saturday of
zations that-have for their purpose
Thirty relatives gathered to help
romance dealing with the humor­
the spreading of discontent and
That the encampment was a huge corruption. The payment of the them make their golden wedding ous side of doughboy life in Franca
success was attested by the fact that so-called bonus is only a minor anniversary a memorable day. At during tlie World war. Between Ids
noon
a
picnic
dinner
was
enjoyed.
it was attended by over 10.000 dele- point in the program sponsored and
distaste for army discipline and
nwmI Mwi. h wu
Ki- encouraged by the Veterans of Four children came lo bless the To­ enemy shells on the one hand and
bias home. Ira Tobias. Mrs. Lester
« tUMI or yewrAn. Ih« hu ; Poreljn w.r. ol ttle Bnlua auui.
his adventures with three jealous
Fisher and Charlie Tobias, ail of
convened In Battle Creek or westand aggressive sweethearts an Uw
Baltimore Twp., and Archie Tobias
em MkhU.n In Ih. lut
other, Joe finds that Ufa Is Just one
ana ougie corps competed for hon- of Hastings.
y .
....
..
,
| ora at the high school athletic field. I Thirty-nine years ago Mr. Tobias horrible nightmare after another.
“
especially Interesting be-1 Each corps attired In bright colored ।
cause of the number of organiza- uniforms, playing favorite tunes of and then most of the land was for"Fwawr to tbe DoH."
lions represented Beside the 131 world war days, going through a est. With ox teams, grubbing and I stone Is cast as a kindly, lovable
posts, consisting of 812 delegates multitude of different manoeuvers working hard he cleared the place , old farmer who is transplanted to
representing over 8,000 members of and keeping perfect time, held the which today la one ot the best Hollywood by a stupid, provincial
V. F. W.. there were also delegates attention of a capacity crowd from farms in Barry county. For thirty | wife whose greatest ambition is to
from Lhe G. A. R.. Spanish war vet- ,1K oclock Ull nearly eieven
years he was a livestock buyer and | launch their daughter in a screen
butcher as well as a successful career. However, on a visit to a
farmer. He is one of the few slock 1 studio, he Is hlgh-pressured into a
buyers now living in this county. I leading role at U00 a week
A wide circle of friends unite in
I And composed of representatives
of
™ ‘th*

more happy years together.

W. . Who surely did their part lo
rh.
.n ..uc.r.le

in?

Thursday and Friday evenings the °°^
, xl
,
streets were so crowded it was alelection and installation of
most Impossible for cars or buses officers on Saturday closed the blgto pass through the main street,
“ld best state encampment
except lhe one operated by the . Kca ior* long llm€Kalamazoo Post of Disabled Amer10 talking to police officers, we
lean Veterans. This was a gaily' Earned that despite the crowd and
painted car with D. A. V. insignia ■ aU the goo&lt;1 times, there was no
painted ail over It. equipped with । damage done by the boys and very
fire alarms, bells, sirens and what!fe* hurt- George Chapman of Midnote, and able to travel on either dleville was one of tlie unfortunate
end with equal ease; but always on ones, having a badly damaged shoul­
tlie move and letting everyone know der as a painful reminder of the
event.
One of the pleasing events was
SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT.
the entertainment given by live G.
A. R- fife and drum corps in front
"Any system of government that
ot lhe Post Tavern. The Grand Oldoffers
------------------------------- ---------the same reward
to---------------him who
Boys played like real veterans and j loafs as to him who works hard is
their time waa good enough for I going to kill the greatest force
younger boys to practice for.
I that has made the United States
The main event Wednesday was I the country It has become in 160
tbe talk by the commander-in-chief, years."—Lee Bristol.

I.

w
day.
Word has come from Lansing ' Of the west. To aveng* the murders
that petitions for nominations foriof hi« bride and hla brother by
United States senator, governor and j drunken miners, he became • ban­
lieutenant governor, also represen- dll who rode a trail of blood Uw
tatives Ln congress, the stole senate ' length and breadth of the state and
and the lower house of the state ' left hls name emblazoned in history
legislature, must be filed with the I
----------secretary of state al Lansing not
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
later than 5 o’clock In the afternoon.
__________________________
eastern standard time. Tuesday.1 at Carlton grange hall Thun
July 28.
। evening. June 18th. Everyone 1
For governor. Ueutenant-gover- come.
nor and United States senator the
Miss Achsah Buck left 8ut
petitions filed must bear the names I afternoon to spend a few week
of 5.882 qualified voters on the re-1 Hammond. Ind., and Chicago,
publican ticket and 5.758 names for
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shriber
a democratic nomination. That Is I Hazel and Mr. and Mn. Leo B
the minimum requirement. The and son attended the Friend ac
maximum of names on petitions reunion Saturday. On Bunday :
for any of the three offices must spent the day with Mr. and
not exceed four times the minimum. | Win. Shriber at Hastings. Wm,
and must have al least 100 names turned Friday night from IM
from each of twenty Michigan Hls arm which has been straj
counties, in order to qualify^
I ened la coming fine.

=■

Have A Good Time!9^

by fall, we will be surprised. I stood
in the shade of the old apple tree
during a shower recently and five
kinds of bugs and worms tried to
get acquainted with me.
We're going to take • complete
line of farm-grown bugs to the
Fair this fall. Worms In the rad­
ishes. cutworms In the soil, corn
bage worms, squash bugs. Colorado
potato beetle, grasshoppers and a
dozen or so others we don't know
the names of ought to make a nice
collection. Are expecting sweep­
stakes on them.

A little boy

in

North

Carolina

to lhe other little boys so they
could get out of school. I'd take the
school for mine.

SCHOOL CHILDREN TO
GET “SAFETY" TRAINING
Supt. of Public Instruction
Makes “Traffic Safety”
Mandatory in School!
The number of accident* which
have resulted in the death or the
maiming of children of school age
in this state is appalling. Dr. Eu­
gene B Elliott, state superintendent
of public Instruction, has ordered
that a theoretical course in auto­
mobile driving be added to the pub­
lic school curricula for the next
school year.
Dr. Elliott announced on Wednes­
day of last week, after a conference
with the education committee of
tlie state safety council of which
he is chairman, that the course
would not Involve physical lessons.
The course will be Included In a
bulletin on safety, to be distributed
to the schools from the office of
the superintendent of public in­
struction. In a campaign to develop
a "safety conscious" generation.
The superintendent said, that
traffic safety would become a mendatory study tn the schools in the
second .semester of the
coming
school year.

This Summer have the good times you have planned.

Take that trip—fish to

your heart’s content—play golf—do tlie things you have wanted to do and enjoy
yourself.

But make them free of worry. The valuables you leave at home . , .

your jewelry, documents, letters, silver .. . put them in one of our safety deposit
boxes . . . Safe from fire and theft.

For convenience and safety when traveling use Traveler’s Checks, the modern
traveler’s currency, the most convenient means of carrying expense money. They

can be used for paying bills without first converting them in to currency. Trw»
eler’s Checks are accepted any place in this country. Ask for them at this Bank,

CARLTON CENTERAnna and Phyllis Beck spent last
week at Wall lake with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Todd and!
family of Mio, northern Michigan,
visited the formers mothsr, Mrs.:
John Shupp and brother, Orley
Todd, and family.
Mrs. Elmer Marlow left Sunday
for Ann Arbor to spend a few days
with Mr. Marlow, who Is in Ann
Arbor hospital. He will have an op-

Hastings City Bank
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS ■ MICHIGAN

�BANNER, THURSDAY JUNK It, 1W

TWK HASTING

I Masonic order here, of which he I
KOUTHWMT RUTLAND
“fe member, was largely at- i
Mrs. Stroh Rrway of Glass Crock |' was a lUe
spent a few days last week with her ' tended, Jle
fit had lived 71 years on hU'
fartn, havi
having bean brought there by ,
slater, Mrs. Wm. Havsns, and fam-. farm,
, hls parents whan a 6-yoar old child. ।
Uy.
Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Oaks and The
— whola
— ----community
------------------------------------extend to the.
baby of Middleville spent Bunday, bereaved family their sympathy. He
with hls parents. Mr. and Mrs. Roy | was a good husband, father and
Oaks. Afternoon callers there were, friend.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lord and chll-' in a letter from Paul Faulkner,
dren ot Central Rutland and Ray who with hl* wife and son are on
Oaks, HasUn g».
a western trip, he report* they had
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clem and son to detour in New Mexico for a disspent Sunday at Gun lake.
lance of 53 miles and made it in
Mr. and Mrs. Buhl Beattie and the mud. We don't need mud but
children of Kalamazoo spent Sun-; would be pleased to have a little of
day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. meir surplus rain

.

_____ and
»•1I( Mrtor.
Mr. and Mrs. wm. Havens
{or
wtl5«"•
lftkonI"
lo
^u2rtaCnfBth^1,^r m’taw'* Mre i P*nnock ho*PltB1 ta* ftn examlnaat waJU’nd ’
tlon on S^wday and brought back
Ln
t0 the home of Mrs. Adella Allen.
J,.
S
•«" -I1' b• '•« ?”•
Toda^a Beat Bread Value
GRANDMOTHER'S

|

BREAD

White, Plain or Slicad
Why Pay More?

I
"

Splendid Flour

“^•Jc

Beech-Nut Coffee

lb. tin

26c

lone Flour

JLK.'k«9c

Del Monte Coffee

lb. tin

25c

Sunnyfield Flour

”s?,'k75c

Hills Bros. Coffee

lb. tin

29c

Henkel's Family Flour

t«H-n

lb. list

25c

ear

22c

Henkel's Velvet FC&gt;*.V,

■ ib.

Swansdown Cake Flour

pkg.

^.1

Bisquick
MaiL
■

or

4

Pa&gt; er
Carnation

Cigarettes V,'.'.1;.'

.W, 29&lt;

»7c

SJc

Brown Sugar

29c

4X Sugar

rr.

29c

Dill Pickles

tall

- &lt;»•«•&gt;

Fig Bars

Maxwell House Coffee

Whitehouse Coffee

large
pkg.

Whitehouse Milk

Yukon Club

89c

-

2
•’ WUu

2Sc

h4ushrooms

1 14-ee
* bottles

25c

Campbell's Soups

3

25c

Potato Chips

ITS.? SLW

Green Giant Peas
Hershey's Cocoa

o.

2

si&gt;..db.ii.,.

cuSS

3

pkga.

15c

H-gal
jar

25c

3-08.
caa

10c

cans

25c

lb.

25c

can

10c

o.*ik

Libby's Orange Juice

eaa

15c

Apple Butter

Macaroni or Spaghetti

38-oa.

15c

Iba.*

25c

2
A
P4G or Kirk's Flake Soap 10
■V

coos

25c

T*11
bars

29c

Starch

Salade Tea

M-lb.
Pbg.

33c

Grape Juice

A*p

pl.t
bottle

55c

Lipton's Tea

r,"“-

H-lb.
pkg.

15c

Sweetheart Soap

&gt;i» L.b.i

4

,a,.?,gl£r

15c

pkga.

pkg.

9c
10c

Crisco or Snowdrift

■-lb.

Grape-Nuts

pkg.

Instant Postum

largo

Diamond Crystal Salt

boa

5c

Rajah Salad Dressing

quart

Fels Naptha Soap

bars

41c

Am. Family Flakes •’ Ckl’“

largo

19c

19c

Pkg- 39c
29c

Encore Olive Oil

H-pi&gt;t

Encore Olives

rw.

Iona Cocoa

25c

Our Own Tea
A &amp; P Laundry Starch

29c

Fels Naptha Chips

largo
Pkg.

3-lb.

15c

Lux or Ivory Flakes

phi’

21c

Rinso or Oxydol

largo
pkg.

19c

2

Pkga.

15c

5

cant

25c

4

rolls

25c

4

rolls

15c

Kellogg's All Bren

pk“’

19c

27c

Postum Cereal

Pkg

19c

10c

Coleman's Mustard

pk|

25c

3-lb.

5c

39c

Morton's Salt

17c

Sardines

Rajah Extracts o-"/

10c
bottle
Sultana Red or Kidney Beans 5
25c
j 28-oa. 15c
Iona Pork and Beans
Iona Peaches

c^ta

jNs. SH

£

Ann Page Jellies

ASP Ammonia

10

pl.t
jar

10-M.
bottle
lb.
Pkg3-lb.

Rajah Vinegar

Von'

Scot Tissue
Waldorf Tissue

bottle

10c

Argo Gloss Starch

Rajah Sandwich Spread

Pia»
j*r

20c

Calumet Baking Powder

Sukena Peanut Butter

31b.
Jar

25c

Soap Chips

Heinx Soups

Encere Prepared Spaghetti 2

। S-o»-

15c

pk*r

5c

Rajah Mustard

• -oo.

10c

Heinz Cuke Pickles

Sultana Baking Powder

lib.

19c

Heinx Tomato Juice

large

25c

Cut-Rite Wax Paper

rolls

19c

College Inn Soups

10c

Del Monte Peaches

10c

23c

3
4

Northern Tissue

Larsen's

No. 3

,-d H~

Molasses

No. 3

v"'Lm„

Cooking Oil

W£S.”

pint

M~tv.rt.tu.

2

Heinx Vinegar

17c

j«r

23c

21c

eana
21

15c

Jello '?.2C-2 pk*‘ 15c Atm.^3

Pkga.

17c

Pabst-ett Cheese Spread

H-lb.

15c

&lt;o

pkg.

Na
- 1 25c
aaaa

Lifebuoy Soap

6

largo
Pkg.

10c

Scot Paper Towels'*'

6

Kellogg's

Pkg.

10c

Raisins

A-l Sauce

bottle

25c

Eagle Brand Milk o..*uk.i,&gt;.

caa

Birdseye Matches

boaoa

25c

Grape-Nuts Flakes

Pkg.

10c

Pkg.

10c

3

Iba.

25c

3

cans

2
B

J
K- *
• caas 25c

Beans

m-ib.
eaa

Karo Syrup

4

Sparkle

10c

19c

«u*^,

31c

Post's Bran Flakes

Prunes

-

A Doeoert Mold or Sherbet Glass While They Last with Each 4 pkgs.

Baby Foods

CHUNK BACON
SMOKED PICNICS

SUCED BACON
SLICED LUNCHEON MEAT

l

33c
rolls

TRUCKS

LB.

19c
19c

I’ I (Hili STORES

LB.

NOWHERE ELSE IN THE WORLD

LB.

ncw mrccTtD
HYDRAULIC
BRAKES

19c
NEW
FULL-TRIMMED
DE LUXE CAB

Nowhere eke in tbe world will you
truc^* *hat
£*ve you such
TiMteetunoe great pulling pouvr at auch low
prices as the new 1936 Chevrolet*!
Nowhere else in the world will you find truck*
that are so extremely economical for all­
round duty!
•
And nowhere eke in the world will you find
trucks with such outstanding performance,
comfort and safely features as a HighCompression Valve-in-llead Engine, New
Perfected Hvdraulic brakes, ~~Fulf-Hoatinc
r» ~~». । _
A"’ v~iryr ■ —
, a

NEW HIORC0MPREI1I0N
VALVE-IW-NEAD
INCINK

Wo Ca&gt;h WPA Cbocka

are
HIGH QUALITY
FEEDS

Reasonably Priced
Feedi
Feeds That Give

FULL* FLOATING
REAR AZLE

RESULTS
Special Thu Week!

See these trucks . . . have a thorough demon­
stration . . . and you will know that thev’ro
the right trucks for you!

25c

All PrUas Hu. 3% Sala. Tas

FEEDS

will you find a truck with all these features at such low prices

25c

15c
19c

COATH GROVE.
The D. O. T. O. club anniversary
was held Wednesday al the Coats
Grove church with a pot luck din­
ner. The program was In charge of
Nane coolbaugh. with lhe following
program: Songs. Betty Kimble. Dor­
othy Sease; readings. Freda Smith,
story review. "Extra Dividends."
Mrs. Margaret coats; piano selec­
tions. MLm Marian Hayner; report
of county Federation, Mrs. Bertha
Case; reading, Mrs. coolbaugh. Vis­
itors were called on for remarks.
The children gave a good program
at the church Bunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Townsend
and son of California visited at Geo.
Coats and H. Woodman's Tuesday,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cook, Hastings,
accompanying ’hem.
Mr. and Mrs Ray Sprague of
California, visited last week with her
sUler. Mrs. D. Townsend and other
friends.
We were sorry lo hear that Ken­
dall Coats hu undulanl fever and
hope he will soon recover.
A baby girl wu born to Mr. and
Mrs Arthur Teeter Tuesday of last
week.
Mr and Mrs. Clarence Brouwer of
Casnovia were guests of Ruth Wood­
man over the week end.
Mrs. Carl Kreuger and daughter
Jane Ellen of Michigan City, Ind.
came Wednesday. June 3. lo yljU.
herJUter. Mr* Clem Jdrdin Otfier
visitors over the week end were
Anna Jordan. Miss Catherine Doerr.
Mrs. Lillian Purtha and children.
George. Jay. Anne. Clement and
Nancy also of Michigan City.
A good crowd attended lhe last
meeting of the L A 8 al Lloyd
Fisher's The main part of lhe pro­
gram was a memorial service tor
Mrs. Martha BeVier. a member for
32 years. Mrs. Lucile Fisher read, "In
Memorlum." und each
member
placed a flower In a vase, as they
did so. paying tribute to Mrs Be­
vier’s memory with an appropriate
Bible verse. Stella and Margaret
Kelsey sang a duct. Club No. 2 fur­
nished a fine supper
MIm Ruth Woodman is camping
with friends at Green lake. Kent
county

VITALITY

CHEVROLET MOTOR CO.. DETROIT. MICH.
LB.

Y.M.C.A.ITEM3
Mv. A- A. Griffin, Paul Oonklln
and BUI Jonts assisted at Camp
Barry last wsek in putting svsrything in shape for 1836 season.
C. F. Angsll leaves Saturday with
a load at H. B. bOys for lhe First
National Hl-Y Congress ever held.
Berea, Kentucky,.has been selected
as a central meeting place and dele­
gations from all over U. B. will at­
tend. Boys from Eaton Rapid.,.
Grand Ledge, Lakeview. Three Riv­
era and Hastings will go in* the
Barry county car.
Camp Barry has been most for­
tunate In having Wm. Carmichael
as program leader again for camp,
July 6-14. Also Rev. Rlggleman will
be a tent leader and teach art. Da­
vid Smith will teach swimming and
direct recreation. Rev. A. A. Hagai
ot Olrardo Fort, pa., will be another
one of our tent leaders and help In
camp program. The same cook as
last year. Altogether a big treat for
all boys who can attend and only
18.00 for lhe whole 8 days.
Word from State .Health Dept.
O K.'a our drinking water so we are
all set.

HOLMES CHURCH NEWS
Mr and Mrs. Robert Van Syckle
and family spent Sunday with her
parents In Barryton. Their son. Ho­
mer. came home with them for hb
vacation.
Mrs. calc Hines from Lansing
spent Bunday with Mr
and Mrs.
Roy Wickham and family.
The Barnum school picnic will be
held al the schoolhouse. June 27
Mrs. Murray Shlflel and Dorothy
from Detroit. Mrs. Bertha Steward
and two sons from Sunfield spent
Sunday with the Alfred Mun joy's
Mr and Mrs. clarence Neubaum
and hls mother from Battle Creek.
Mrs. Elmer Rising from Hastings
spent Sunday al the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Waiter Durkee.
Mrs Lois Wickham attended a
Normal class reunion al Miss Al­
berta Nash's In Hastings
Herman Johnson, who was work­
ing In Chicago. Is home.

50c

Soodlasa
4-lb. pkg

'*"'■

r’
1 lertained seven of their friends
ras-T nitN . .wr
Friday afternoon In honor of the
MIDDLEVILLE.
EAST GUN LAKE.
latter's
seventh
birthday.
Ice
MIm Jean Newton, ot Hastings,
Mrs.
Mildred
Roush,
who
has
cream and cake were served.
visited relatives and friends on
Thursday, a picnic was given in her been seriously 111 In Borgcss hospl- I Mr and Mrs. Bert Smith enlerhonor by her cousin. Miss Virginia 1*1 at Kalamazoo was brought home tained about sixty relatives and
friends recently in honor of their
Holes, up the river, A fine time was Friday
Saturday evening callers at the 140lh wedding annlverttry. AtlUmenjoyed
Null home were Mr and Mrs . —
ber —of beautiful and
The Methodist Ladles' Aid dinner James
- .-------------------------------------------------------. useful gills
at Mrs. Bender s was well attend- Clarence Warner and children of : were presented them.
them,
ed and all enjoyed the nne meal. Kalamazoo. Mrs Edgar Johnson of I
----------------- «-o-atopped off with strawberry short Ashtabula. Ohio. Harold Warner of1
---------—
—
BRANCH DISTRICT.
| The Dorcas Society ot North
cake.
|। Prairieville.
Mr.--------------------and Mrs Lyle
and-...
Maple Grove will meet Friday ~.
afterThe writer had the pleasure of'----* — McKlbbln
-----------------K&gt;daUEhters of
nf Otsego
Otseen also
alsn James
.lame* | noon.
nrwm June io
viewlng the flowers In the garden of daughters
1®. at the home of Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs J. D. Dietrich one day Null, fir., spent Sunday with James. । Sarah OaRoth and
Mrs. Mabel
last week. Every lover of flowers ^r- and family.
"*-----.
.
.
I Adame,
Waitdr
Slater is suffering with a I Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklin of
should see what they have done in
Waiufr-fll.b-r
their small garden plot It is now at broken Um received from a bad fall I Allegan. Richard Darby of Battle
, creek and MLm Wilson were week
its best and they are justly proud of Wednesday.
Wm. Crawford arid Percy Ross end guests al the John Darby heme,
their efforts and we know will be
glad lo show It to anyone interested. were in Hastings and Delton on | John Darby, who has worked^ lhe
. same team, aged 32 and 27. for the
As this week's school letter is the business Friday
---------- ------ • • •----------------] past 22 years, together purchased a
last for the season of 1835-38 we
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
horse al the Byron Munger sale.
wish Lo take this opportunity to,
A Children's
Day
program
is be--The
32,—
year-----------------------old horse is still
doing
thank Supt Bell and hls assistant.-.
..
„------------- ------ K
.
----------------—
for their splendid co-operation in Ing prepared to be given al lhe hls half ot live farm work on his
80 -----acre* farm.-------------------------------------and
same‘--------horse
furnishing us with the newsy letters church
' " * Bunday
‘
—
* is “the
*-----------evening. jjme 21. ,--------------------Mrs. Hay Ostrolli. who b al Pen- John drove when he used lo take
nock hospital having had an opera- Effie Woodard,
• ---■
now hU wife,
*•- riding.
so interested.
A good program was given at the
Tills community was shocked lion for removal of gall stones, is
North Maple Grove church Sunday
when we heard of lhe sudden death recovering nicely.
of one of our pioneers. Burdette
Violet, daughter of Mr. and Mrs evening by young people and chil­
Briggs, at his home in Bowen Mills John Norton, was at Pennock hos­ dren Next Sunday morning a pro­
His funeral at the church there pital last Tuesday having her ton-; gram will be given lo honor the
fathers of our neighborhood.
Saturday under lhe auspices of the alls removed.

15c

Post Toasties c.,^ri“«

Del Monte

her little grand- |
them.
i R*lPh Townsend will teach in a
™a^hnLVm h?h^ X
^11001 in Indiana this
joyed a shower in her honor al the year
,
home ot Mr. ,M Mm. Oeonm K.»- i
Narm„ „,a w,, g.„dl,rook en.

christening of

25c
135 ft
roll

2

HLt !

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Wotring and
son Laird were week end guests of
Mr. and Mrs Ezra Deli in Lansing.
Mr and Mrs Fred Mills of Bat­
tle Creek were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Townsend.
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Hershberger
of Indiana spent lhe week end
with the letter's parents. Mr. and
Mrs nxmwir
Harrison- Diutncr
Blocher ana
and ocner
other
""»•

25c

bolllo

3
5&lt;

in

CLOVERDALE.
Friends of Margaret Owens will
be glad to hear that she Is getting
along fine after her operation at
New Borgess hospital. Kalamazoo
Dona Marie Penncls entertained
her friend. Geraldine Fulton, of
Kalamazoo Sunday.
There will be communion services
at tlie church Sunday morning. Rev.
Faust of Kalamazoo will take charge
of the meeting. Everyone welcome
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Pierce enter­
tained their friends. Mr. and Mrs.
i Lyle Sage and son and Mr. and Mrs.
Oela Thornton of Battle Creek at
their cottage at Wall lake Sunday. ,
. .

If you want to see a fine
white schoolhouse take a look at
ours here as you go past. It has had
a coat of paint, new seats, a globe,
a drinking fountain and maps have
been added.
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Johnson and
daughter, Jerry, spent the week end
with relatives in Dowagiac and
South Bend.
The Yankee Springs project Is
moving right along. Tan Chevrolet
trucks are on the job; 4-in. wells are
lo be put down, and a complete sew­
age system Installed where the
buildings are to go up. Every day
people ask -'Where is the Yankee
Springs state park?" Be patient and
you'll soon see.
While two men were working al
the Yankee Springs schoolhouse the
other day. a small dog belonging
to M E Maze went mad. Two little
boys had
been
playing
with
_____
~____ before. The men
it not_______
five minutes
. killed it al once,
1

19c
2k

co..

•li“4

before returning to her home
west Thornapple.

MUs Anna Baachay from In­
diana is vUlting her slater, Mrs. M.

21c

lb.
■ lb.

Encore Noodles

Sardines

39c

25c

5

Mr. and Mrs. Francks Gorham At­
tended the Stamm reunion Sunday
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Stamm near Dowling.
Lottie Douglass of the Edger dis­
trict visited her grandparents. Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Oaks from Thursday
til! Sunday.
Myron Bishop of Camp Custer
spent the week end with hls wife
in the home of her parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Douglass.
A little Shetland colt Is lhe attrac­
tion to both adults and children at
the home of Oeo. Havens.
Frances Powers spent a few days
with her fattier. Lester Powers, and
sisters at Yankee Springs
A large crowd gathered at the
home of Mr. and Mrs Dan Douglass
last Wednesday evening for a mis­
cellaneous wedding shower honor­
ing their daughter and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Myron Bishop. The eve­
ning waa spent in visiting followed
by light refreshments. They re­
ceived a lot of pretty and useful
presents.

YANKEB SPRINGS.
Services at Iht church every Bun­
day. Bunday School at 2 preaching

STARTER end
Growing M•»h__$LW

1&lt;% DAIRY_____ fl.25
CALF MEAL95c

*360nZ.
R K HURD

HAST,H3S «‘c.n

D CADWALLADER&gt; Hickory Conwrs, Mich.
THE SERVICE OAR ARE, DeHon, Mich

SMITH BROS.
VELTE &amp; CO.
luuin,,

n™ n«

�TB1 BAITINGS BANNEK, TWXTkSDAY, JUNE II, tMI

| LEGAL NOTICES
OMDEB FOB FUEUCATION.
•isle ot MlehUoa. the Frebolo Cou

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION

BARRYVILLE.

CEDAR CpEEK.

DELTON.

■tats of MlthUsa. ths 1
th* County ot B»rr»

Nearly a fun house listened with
Clayton Wllletu of Detroit, and
The M. P. Ladles' Aid will meet
Interest to the talk given Sunday with Mr*. Allie Kelley Thursday. Miss Elizabeth Griffen «f Charlotte
norlb of Hastings. on
morning by Rev. Galvez of the June 29lh. for supper. Everyone In­ were dinner guests ot hls parent*.
Philippine islands on the Message vited.
Mr. and Mrs. J. j. Willetts and Hel­ Camre of DooUr; on Thursday of
of the Flower*. In the evening the
Mr.
and
Mn. Donald (Mmf at
en
Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Campbell of
seating capacity of the church was Hatting* accompanied by Mr. and
WUson Wllletu of Adrian came Saranac and on Friday of Mr. and
nearly filled, to hear Rev. Galvez Mn. Russell Burton and family of Sunday evening to assist hls fath­ Mr*. Arthur Richardson of Freeport.
Quite a busy week.
give the autobiography of hls life Grand Rapid* visited at Mr. and er during haying.
to t*rm»at IMir
11 lb» wrobllo o*lt«
and tell about hl* country. The Mr*. Henry Wertman Sunday.
Sunday guesu of Mrs. Clara Day
Remember tbe Class Day reunion
morning talk on The Message of
John Gurd and family vUited were Mrs. Will Ryan and Priscilla
the Flower* came at an opportune Bunday with Eugene Thornton and of Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Lloyd Mead will fill the pulpit In Taylor.
time, as the Garden Club are this family near Battle creek.
Haley of Lansing. Mr. and Mrs. Bud lhe morning. Mn Bernice Shaw la
week Thursday, putting on their | John Lammers has hls three-story Dutmer of Grand Rapid* and Mrs.
Clayton, and
fourth annual flower show at the garage nearly completed which Mlnda Mudge. Mrs. Ryan and Pris­
Community hall
adds to the looks of lhe neighbor­ cilla remained for a longer visit.
of lhe church or church groups are
Children's Day services at the hood.
Junior Rose, who lives at the asked to bring them with you.
DBDBB FOB PUBLICATION
church next Sunday morning at JO
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Monroe and son home of Mr. and Mr*. E. Golden,
o'clock and preaching service fol­ of Kalamazoo spent Sunday, with was rendered unconscious and had dershotl reunion Saturday.
lowing. Bunday School classes No. Lloyd Owen and family.
four teeth knocked out Tuesday
Miss Edith McClelland 1* working eveningg-7 have planned to have a picnic
Earl Owen of Kalamazoo U while some tools were being unload­ in Lansing.
A nice crowd alien Bad
supper on Monday night at 7 spending some time with hls par­ ed from a truck. A plow slipped and
A. al Mn. Ncrcutt'* ‘
o'clock at Pennock landing, pleas­ ents. Mr and Mrs. Ardy Owen
the handle hit Junior in the face.
PLEASANT VALLEY.
ant lake. Should the inclemency of
Mr. and Mrs Ardy Owen attend­
Mr. and Mrs. A. McClelland at­
Melvin 8tartard of South Bowtae h2d*with
the weather Interfere the supper ed a shower in honor of Mr. and tended
the ---------------graduating
exercises in spent Sunday with Glen Kime.
---------- —
- --------------------and picnic will be held In the Mrs. Myron Bishop at lhe home ot Vermontville Friday evening, their
Eldiene and Madeline Ne*b &lt;acchurch basement. Every member of the latter's parent*. Mr. and Mrs. daughter Edith being one of the coinpanled their grandparents. Mr.
either class is cordially invited.
Dan Douglas* ot Southwest Rut—•“
and Mn. Lee Osborn. to the Logan
Mr. and Mrs. John Van Holde of land Wednesday evening.
Mr. and Mn. A. McClelland at­ school reunion Saturday.
South Comstock were Sunday guests
tended the wedding of her nephew,
Huild.nr for Bl
cf Mr. and Mrs Peter Adrlanson
Carl Good, in Battle Creek Satur­ Sunday were Don 6egc&lt;. Lewi* HefDOWLING.
Mr and Mrs Maurice Burchett of
fiebower. wife and two children of
Mrs. John Chamberlain will pre­ day evening.
Prairieville were afternoon caller* sent her pupil* in a music recital1I
Mrs. Benson of Nashville, who is Elmdale. Mr* Will Nseb. Marvel Lydia Burdick Clark are ta
and Mr and Mrs. Rov Adrlanson al the Dowling church on Friday critically ill was brought lo the Neeb of West Campbell and Billie group entertaining.
and children of Fine lake were din­ evening. June 19. beginning at 8 home of her daughter. Mrs. Burr Miller of Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mr*.
ner guests of their parents on Mon­ o'clock, it will be in the form of a Fassett. Miss Agnes Benson 1* also I^onhard Johnson and two chil­ spending the wrek with
day evening.
ent*. MF. and MM. Varna
Mother Goose pageant and promises staying there during her mother's dren of Bowne Center.
Mrs. Sarah Norwood of Comstock to be very Interesting and enter­ illness. Mrs. Ray Fussell's mother
Mary Stauffer of Caledonia la
spent last week with Mrs. James taining The public is invited.
is also very ill and Mr. and Mrs. spending tbe summer with her sis­ Hasting* ware Sunday rallaH
Ray Fasaetl are staying there at ter. Mr*. Vem Hulllberger and fam- Clay Rorabeck's.
Collins.
The next Townsend meeting will
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Mrs, James
Collins
in company
wltoher
b?otoer
and wUe
Mr Midi6* ‘wl‘1 on Tuesday evening. June present.
The fire department was called
Mr.
a.L.b“, “- »
““ Hrrrln.wn p.,Ulon.
। to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
j Nesbitt Sunday noon when fire
will be tite speaker
ily In Grand Rapids Bunday
was discovered in en upstairs room, &gt;
The Ladles' Aid dinner will be The damage was confined to the
Mr. and Mrs Ellis Faulkner are
rooms upstairs althouxti
spending two weeks in Middleville, this week on Thursday. June 18.
although there was
wa*
Fifty-six relatives and friends at­ smoke and waler damage down
taking charge of lhe drug store
while their son Paul and family are tended the family reunion at Mr.
and Mrs. John Gerber’s. Guests covered before it had gained too
taking a vacation.
Mr and Mrs George Judson and were present from Toledo. Deerfield. great a headway.
____
___ RapMUs________________
Betty Foster of __
Eaton
son Eugene of Phoenix. Arizona, Elkhart and nearby places
MIm Neva Stanton of Hastings (Os WB4 here Tuesday and in lhe
have been spending the latter part
by said court oo Tu»
of lhe week with Mr and Mrs J C. vUited her cousin. Miss Nyia pierce, evening attended lhe recital given
October A I&gt; 1934.
by Mrs.
Mrs Purcha*'
purchas' pupil* in Naahville
Nashville
Horton and visiting other relatives over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Clem Eme and and assUted in tbe recital. MUses
in lhe vicinity. They left Sunday
night for Traverse Bay where they children of Toledo are visiting Mr. Elaine and PhyllU Day were also
j among the pupiU who played.
expect to spend lhe summer Other and Mrs. L. J. Oswald.
NOTICE
or
MORTOAOE
SAEZ.
NOTICE or MORTOAOB BALE.
Dr. and Mrs. K B. Rees enterMr. and Mrs.
Mr*. Heber Foster atguest* in lhe Horton home Sunday
were Mr and Mr* W. O Horton of tallied their daughter and husband, tended lhe shower for MUs Esther
Augusta. Floyd Doyle and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Allen, of, striker ot Baltimore Wednesday
Flora Glum and two children of j South Haven last week.
evening.
&gt;rni«»n. to Kalamazoo and Miss Leola Uldrlcks
Walter Geiger of Mississippi and
l ulll’OHt
EAST WALL LAKE.
lo HOME OWNERS' HOME
hl* parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bam
of Battle Creek.
TIO.N
Mf .nd Mr.. AlbtrJ; Brill .nd .;
w
Thursday afternoon MUs Roush
Phone 2515
Frank 5*&lt;e
Hartmga
wk vumng
and Miss Bull!*, lhe County Exten­ party of friends from Hastings spent, pleMant mne lhe
Bnnrlov st th.fr
here
old
reUllyM Qn 8al.
sion leader, met with the 4-H Club Sunday at their lot here.
Misses Anna and Phyllis Beck and urday they were guests of Mrs. Nag- ।
girls at the home of MUs Kathryn
Hazel Cairns of Hastings, who have
Horton and organized a 4-H Food
been spending tbe post week In E. ।
Preparation project, with 15 mem­ D. Reynolds' cottage, relumed home I
bers and MUs Roush as leader and Saturday night. Miss Gladys Cairns |
Kathryn Horton assUtant.
will remain for a week longer.
E. D. Reynold* has been helping
THREE CORNERS.
David Robinson spent from Wed­ Lacy Jones of Delton.
Mr. and Mrs. Oils Boulter and
nesday until Sunday with Norris
family
of Cressey were Sunday
Malcolm of Lake Odessa
Mr. and Mrs John Lulkens and guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Mr. and Mrs Lester Yetter of Kal­ Kahler.
NOW. THEREFORE l&gt;»
NOW. THEREFORE by
Sunday callers at Chas. Kahler's '
amazoo were Sunday guests of Mr.
were Don Kahler and friend of
and Mrs. Clair Yelter.
" Mr and Mrs John Malcolm en- Woodland and Mr and Mrs Cenard
lirovidrd NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ndr&lt;i. NOTICE IN HEREBY GIVEN &lt;hll
tertalned their children. Mr and i Smith of Hastings
Mrs. Arnold Malcolm. Norris and I
PINE LAKE.
Charlotte of Lake Odessa. Mr. and 1
Mr*. Albert Sleury of Lansing. Mr | Sunday dinner guesla In lhe
Warner home were Harry P. Green-1
and Mrs Allen Malcolm and chil­
wail,
and
Lorena
Gary of W. S. T |
dren of Hasting*. Mr
and Mrs.
Stanley Malcolm and family of the C. also Wayne Shepard of Man-;
Ryan dUtricl and a niece. Mrs celona.
Mi* Lura Avery and Annabelle |
Percy Schroeder, of Grand Rapids.
of Detroit spent Wednesday at their
Sunday.
________
farm home. Mr. Avery Is still con­
BANKRUPTCY ROTICE
fined to hls bed and was unable to .
make the trip with them.
On Sunday the Champion family |
visited relatives at Paw Paw, Mar- |
ion staying for the week with her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Squire
Bums.
Many from this vicinity attend-1
ed lhe funeral of Henry Collison. |
which was held bi Delton on Tueaday.
Mrs. Grace Sebree spent the
week end with Mrs Carrie James.
Bunday dinner guests at the James
home were Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Btillson and his mother of Kala­
mazoo. Callers during the week in-1
eluded Mr. and Mrs Frank Punneil of Winona. Missouri, also Mr.
and “Mrs. Joseph Fenton of Wash­
HOME OWNERS' Ito AN COR­
PORATION Mortroroo
ington. D. C•
HOME OWNERS' LOAM COP.I’O
Mr. and Mrs. 8. C- Doater quietly j
RATION Morts**'*.
celebrated their sixty-first wedding
anniversary on Saturday.

NOW...BUILD
Remodel! Repair!

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

Going to buy a Refrigerator?
You can be sure your good judgment will be
often confirmed when you have selected a

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
Sulk of Mleblgsa._th» Probot

SPARTON

■OTICB_Or MORTGAGE RALE

OBDBB FOR PURLICATION.

NOTICE or MORTOAOB SALE
Towashlp of CaslUlon Harry Coaaty,
Mlrblgtn. la HOME OWNERS' LOAN
ColtHlRATION.
HOME
TION.

OWNERS'

tvww

CORPORA­

Lawn
Mower
16INCH CUT

•a. puriuin
MML
It 11 furth

tu* «r »n»
tkereof;
NOW THEREFORE, kj
M&gt;w»r of
ronlolnow la »»I&lt;I nortM
in* noraaant to th» RlatBlra of lh» fit*.

provide NOTICE IH HEREBY GIVEN

JTIC1 BY COUNTY DRAIM
BIOMBR OP MBBTIMG Of
Or DETERMINATION

23
23
INCUCJ*
141G14
16
INCM
UMCTtt

95

SMOOTH
BALLBEARINO MOVEMENT
LARGE /O INCH WHEELS
V SELFSHAWEHHtofai
A HOST OWTSTAHOIHO MAUlf

GRAT

LiLCTulCALLY WYLDtD
CXTQA 5TRON6 ANO STURDY

COMPLETE WITH CO VEIL.

POOP
Only SPARTON offers ALL Practical Features

SHEAR STEEL
BLADE
HARDENED
TEM
ED AND
------------ w-k”
GROUND
OVERALL-6 •• BLADE
OMrsucns jL Rua.su»ca
HOME OWNERS' LOAM COR­
PORATION. MorUUM.

ik Abhm.
Oat T U

BANNU WANT ADVB. TAT

!■&lt;. •itenBlic.

Exclusive Antifrost Economy Clock . . . Tbd Bodtotanrer

Silent. Fost-Freexinf Unit .. . The Beske4oe

2.f)‘MD£ Ly

JJJ

9 INCH DURABLI 9TML
raomutNNa moud abms

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE
142 L Statl St

Hastings

Phone 2331

JOHN BULLING
HASTINGS

WISTUN UNION

41

�thi

mirnroi umn,

ttouoat.

mn u,
CONSUMERS POWER CO.’S
GOLDEN_ANNIVERSARY

lit. who had been v Lilting hls grand­
parent*. with them.
Mr. and Mn Newell Barber spent
Sunday with their daughter Irene in
Battle Creek, in the evening they
entertained Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Brown of Orangeville.

•enoe of Jed Otowe.
Mr. and Mrs. Jed K Stowe and
1* Ute daughter Anna. Mrs Ruby Lewi*,
son
Meredith and daughter Helen,
jr night
Letter. motored to New York state last Fri­
day. visiting relative* until Tuesday
when they returned home, accom­
panied by Mis* Ell*** Lewis, who
PLEASANT HILL.
has been a student at the We*)eyan
Miss Ruth Konsen of South Bend.
Methodist college at Houghton. N. Ind.. is spending the week with
Min Donna Moore has completed Y.. the past year.
Mary Williams.
An ice storage house is being
Mr. and Mr* Theodore Meyer*
parent*. Mr. and Mn. I. K erected at the Alva Moore service and Mr. and Mrs. Ujweil Krelmer
station.
of N. canton. Ohio, visited Saturday
Jesse Knowles, who has been in at Mr. and Mrs. Bert Palmer's.
falling health for some Ume. Is I
Mr*. R J. William*, Mrs. Clare
confined to the house much of the Williams and Mrs Bert Palnwr ac­
Gerald Forbey is now at the time of late.
companied by Mr*. Harry Fish of
Mrs 8am Newman suffered se- ।1
one of Mr. and Mn. Victor
Middleville went to Allegan Wed­
vere bruises when she fell the whole nesday where they were met by Ar­
length of the stairs in her home on (
thur clarke. Jr. Mrs R J. Williams
Mn. H. 8. Wedel and daughter.'. Memorial Day. Il seem* * miracle returning to South Haven with him
that one of her age could take such to attend hls graduation. The Wil­
la*t Ttiuraday night al the home of a fall and suffer no broken bones liams families spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. vem Goodenough
the Clarke's at South Haven. Mr*.
Montgomery. On Friday they ac­ of Hastings have purchased the Wiliams returned home with them.
companied Mn. Mabel Butcher of Dipp residence, belter known as the Alice and Arlene remained to spend
Frank
Wolfe house, at the east end a week with their cousin*. ElisaWaahington. D. C-. a guest al the
of Cherry street and arc now lo­
। beth Anne and Barbara.
veaia. on her return trip home by cated there.
We are glad to welcome Mr and ,
motor. Mrs Wedel and daughters
Mrs Leo church and little son and
MILO.
will Visit her father, also her sis­
1 Mrs Amanda Erwin back into our
The new morning service hour for
ter and family, being gone about
neighborhood.
church brings out an Increased at­
Mrs. Clyde Daniels and son of
___ —
_______ _____
Leon Henney 3002
Division
Ave.. tendance and several new faces are
—admitted ,n
_ present. The sermon by Rev. Gal­ High Point, North Carolina, have
B. w«*
to broker am
memberahip on the Grand Rapid* Real vex of the Philippine Islands was been spending a short lime with
Mr. and Mrs Matt Bedford
Estate Board at a meeting of the much enjoyed.
We arc sorry to report Mrs. F
Herald. Mr. Henney is the son of . Roush as very poorly at present.
Mrs Mary Lou Henney of Freeport. ' Mr and Mrs A. M Kennedy
Carl Lightfoot was confined to hts and son Lee of Dowagiac spent the
weeek end and Sunday with Mrs.
home with measles last week
A daughter was bom to Mr. and H. J. Flower and Bernice.
Mrs Jennie Chase Is spending
Mrs. John Holcomb on Monday June
several days with her daughter. Mrs.
1. Congratulations
Tbe village council at a recent Karl Palmatler al Kalamazoo
Mrs. Hilda Spath ant» daughter
meeting decided that lhe tax rate
Louise and Mrs. Sophia Parks and
Mr. and Mrs Ohio Knowles, the two sons of Kaiamaaoo were visitor*
latter* sister and MUs Margaret of Sophia Spath Sunday at lhe
ftrktns left last Thursday for a Brandsteller home
ten days’ trip through the east.
Jack Bradfield 1* entertaining hls
They expect to visit- the Arthur friend, jack Perkin*, of Hastings
Seifert family at Baltimore. Md.. 1 tills week. The two Jacks have
i some wonderful times together
before returning home.
of ...
Milo P. T
At a recent meeting of the vll- 1 Under
........the auspices
.
lage council it was voted to lay tile a. there will be a Community meet­
In tbe open ditch along lhe east1 Ing at the schoolhouse- Wday eveside of the street, running north ning. June 26. to which all are infrom cool's garage Work ha* al- ivited.
‘
•'
I Mr. and Mrs. jack Schultz and
ready begun on the project
We understand that Ree Wilcox two cousins of Chicago and Mr*. H.
has been engaged as janitor at the i Rcobey who spent lhe week in the
schoolhouse for the coming year, re­ former's home drove to Lake Hill*
I farm Saturday night.
They replacing Albert Well*
' H- W Blough looked after lhe du- I turned to Chicago taking little Btl"B*lUn* Quality Km*&lt; Os Buy'*

Two Months* Celebration Is
Planned Aooordlnc to
[

• Here's your opportunity to give yourself, your family, your home
those modern conveniences long desired.

Here's the open door to a

new day of better, easier, pleasanter and more economical home Ilfat
Celebrating our 50th Anniversary, we ore giving our customers the

greatest sale we ever held—and it’s yours to profit by! Come in—see
these value sensations—picture them in your homo—make them yours
—they're "easy to buy . . . cheap to use."

----- -

SALE OF

ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS
Electric Refrigeration pay# for itself—and never liefore were models
to lie had so complete, so beautiful, so useful. New features mean per­
fect food protection, new kitchen helps, new recipe adventures—and
greater economy than ever.

WATERS

The famous FRIGIDAIRE comes in sixes for every family need. Price*
•tort at $84.50. Liberal allowance for old equipment. Installed for ae
little oi $2.50 down, 3-year farms.

Clothes Shop

CLOSING
SALE OF GAS RANGES
Good Looking and Good Cooking arc two different thing*
—bul these mean both. Brighten your kitchen, add new
charm—best of all, here’s the goal of every housewife:
perfect cooking results, 1936 models, with latest improve­
ments—high-speed, insulated ovens, automatic time and
temperature controls, large oven, porcelain finish, attract­
ive colors. Popular 'Detroit Jewel and A-B Ranges all
on sale.
,

Model shown is biggest bargain wo ever offered—
4-burner, 16-in. oven A-B—Regular $89.50, special
$74.50. Only $2.50 down—3-yoer terms. LIBERAL
ALLOWANCE ON OLD STOVE.

SALE OF FAMOUS

ABC and UNIVERSAL

WASHERS
(ALSO IRONERS)
Here’.* wadi-day freedom—and iromng&lt;f*y leisure. We bring you improved mod­
els such as were never dreamed of—
washer* that clean more thoroughly than
ever, make cluthes and fabric* last longer.
Ironers that do thMniceet looking work

HASTINGS

you ever saw—and no qtorc standing, tir­
ing hand work!

SALE OF

GAS
WATER
HEATERS
Ga* Waler Healihg i* one

of (he cheapest, most useful
home necessities.
low

gas

matic

Telephone Directory

rate

Special

means auto­

2l-hour

hot

water

service is yours for a few
cents a day.

is

down ond 15 months to pay. ABC
ond Ironrite Ironers aS low as $54.50.

Your

whole

family will enjoy this with’
day and night |»er»onal and

GOING TO PRESS

once for old equipment.

household

need*

fur

real

hut waler.

Wednesday, July 1
Call 2233

VISIT OUR STORE—ALL KINDS OF
. . . opens the door lo
a new day

To order telephone service or to make changes in your present listing.

venience

of

and

con­

better

living in die home.

CONVENIENCES ON SALE

OR PHONE 2305

'■

To order advertising space in the directory or to make changes in

vour present directory advertisements.

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY

According to announcement made
SO. M. Brower. Division Manager
Consumer* Power company, lhe
, company on Monday. June 16. em­
i barked on a two months' ceiebrai lion honoring it* Golden Anniver­
sary of public aervioe to Michigan,
and on that evening, Mr. D. E.
Kan*. Vice Prwsldent and General
Manager, addressed Ila more lhan
5.500 employee* over a state wide ra­
dio hookup.
The Company wa* founded in
1SS6—ju*t flfly year* ago—when,
after some experimental work with
electric lighting in their grist mill
at Adrian. W. A- Foote and J. B.
Foote, hl* brother, proudly loaded
their lumbering -new fangled idea"
on a wagon and drove to Jackson
where they amazed lhe curious clll1 rens with a demonstration of elec। Irlcity for street lighting.
•
During the period of lhe Golden
| Anniversary celebration, extending
from June IS to August IS. a great
variety of activities will be fea­
tured. aimed to benefit tire public
a* well a* our large family of em­
ployees. Historical exhibit*, motion
pictures, employee social function*,
and open bouse receptions at our
various plants are among the high­
lights of the arrangements.
In lhe short span of year* since
lhe Foote*
introduced
electric,
street lighting in Jackson, the elec­
trical industry ha* grown from a
weak, struggling infant lo one of
the dominant forces in modem In­
dustry.
Today, a. half century later, the
•■new fangled idea" of the Footes
ha* developed into the great Inter­
* connected consumers power Com­
pany system, serving some 18.500
square miles of territory and near­
ly two millton people with It* for­
ty-three powerful hydraulic station*
and seven huge steam plant* that
provide electric service to more than
360.000 customers in B49 Michigan
communities.
Ti&gt;e history of Consumers Power
Company's activities In lhe gas
business I* not without It* struggle
and romance. Under the same man­
agement it too has progressed, ex­
panded nnd Improved through the
years, and Is now serving some 173.­
000 ga* customers in 22S communi­
ties.
Some idea of lhe Immensity of
lhe facilities used by lhe Consum­
er* Power Company In supplying
its customers can be gaUied from
the fact that in 1935. Consumers
Power Company paid nearly two
and three quarter millions of dol­
lars in taxes, or nearly eight thou­
sand dollar* a day
Conscious of the important part
played by Its more than 5 500 em­
ployees in molding IU succe.u. Cdnsuineri Power Company announce*
lhe inauguration of a program of
awarding service pins Lo employee*
In recognition of their loyalty and
devotion to the company's high
Ideals of public service Under this
plan, over 3.200 men and women
employed by lhe Consumers Power
Company will be eligible lo receive
the service pins.
These service pins vary in color
and design according lo the length
of service and will be awarded to
employees who have completed five,
ten. fifteen, twenty and Iwenty-flve
years of conlinou* employment with
the company. The company's nincly-nlne employees who have twen­
ty-five or more year* to their credit
will be known as members of lhe
Quarter century club."
Those in the Hasting* Division
eligible to receive service pin* are
a* follows:
Forrest E Branch
29 year*
&lt;Lake Odessa*
Ernest L. Appclman
24 year*
'Nashville*
Fred K Bechtel
Glen m Brower
24 year*
Frank W. Kelly
William D Hubbell
Allen B Old ley
Harold Haynes
Fay Hummel
Chester B Tompkins
Earl Vandlen
Emery Apsey. Jr
j Fred E Barlow
| Evteon J Beck
Vaughn Fuller
! Robert Uorhant
Edgar L Hoevenalr
5 years
Arthur Keeler
9 year*
Keith jame*
Gladys A Larkin
Carl A Ottosen
Kenneth R sander.von
Maud R 8chomp
B year*
Joseph H Skinner
fl years
Eugene H Waring
Burl H. Will
6. years
Resembling the familiar Consum­
er* power Company emblem, which
I* indicative of lit* vast territory
served by the company, lhe pins will
be round and so executed that lhe
predominate artistic feature Is a
map of the state of Michigan
Tlie employee* and their wives
who have fifteen years or more ot
service will be invited to a general
meeting of similar employees of the
company al Grand
Rapids on
Thursday evening. June 25. at which
time Mr Wendel L. Wilkie. Chair­
man of lhe Board of Consumer*
Power Company, will present the
service pin* to the employee* of

Kinney. President of consumers
Power company, will present lhe
pin* tn th* employee* of twenty to
twenty-five year*; and Mr. D. E
Karn. Vice-president and General
Manager of the company, will make
the presentation to the employee*
of fifteen to twenty year* of service.

. NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Mr. and Mr* Willard Rand* 11 of
Kalanutaoo were Sundav guut* of
Mr. and Mr* Asa RandalL
• an&lt;*
W(n- Cramer. Jr.,
and daughter Sandra visited' her
.Parente. Mr and Mr* Daniel Poiand, of ■ Middleville Saturday.
‘ Mr and Mr* Wm Cramer called
on Mr and Mn. Arthur Siller of
1 A—yria Bunday John Holes, who
ha* been tetidtug at u»e biller &amp;
returned home with ihein.

�re, ■tg^isyyazEMi*!'

■&gt;«______
W. am m«a. vrvuw rarest mb
MT. IM Mn: FM Ranta Ml th*
Thursday mornlag to spend a few
days eamptag tn northern MWM-

Lansing. The members from here
attending were Mrs. Charles Batts,
MTS. X Robert amilh. Mrs J. Clara
McDerby. others going wen J.
Clare McDerby and daughter, Mar­
garet. Jean Smith and Doris Betts.
Mrs Betts and Mrs. Smith will en­
tertain them next year.

•nw nr«
atnsBOBM

Larkin were held Thursday after-

o'clock, conducted by the Rev. M. E. Around ftve o'etoek they «
Hoyt. Burial in lhe Wilcox ceme­ to the Matt Balch home
tery Mrs. Larkin had been in poor brooder house and mite
health for some Ume. and was with
her niece, Mrs Harry Riggs of Jack-

many years she conducted a tnllllnhavs recently bean
Mrs Walter Clark of Maple Grove,
Mrs. Potter ot Jackson and one Uvmg in California, several nieces and
nephews.
Given. D. D.. M Tsooma.
! Miss Ethel Mae Kinna of Grand former pastor and sEos
Ledge la spending Uw week with her
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Porter
Klnne.
Mr. and Mrs. Coy O. Brumm. Mr
1 and Mrs. Nelson Brumm and
Mr. and Mn. Charles Deal Left
daughter were at AUegan Thursday.
I Mrs. E A. Hanneman attended a
■ luncheon in Grand Rapids Thurs-

ffW.'

Mrs. Amanda Hart passed away funeral of David Deal.
al her home north of town early
: Friday morning al the age of M. Mr.
, Hart passed away eight years ago.
She leaves one son. Arthur, a sister.
Mrs. E. D. Meyers living neighbor
to her. one brother, Philip Gariinger of Nashville, several nieces and
nephews, a host of friends. Funer-

"I’m 50 today..."

Sunday afternoon at' 3:M o'clock' program will be
conducted by the Rev. M- E. Hoyt.I Cowls, director.

To business, as to m:n, those arc vital words
To Consumers Power Company they mark its 50th year

Ross Girllnger and Bob Kurnbach, entertained Monday night, Mr. and
Burial in the family lol at Lakeview I Mrs. Hugh Chapman and family at
cemetery.
Hickory Corners, Mr. and Mrs WilThe funeral for Mrs. Nora Ashley, I Ham Duncan and children ot Kal■ II. wiuvw ui t,. rv ABiucy oi xsauic
Mia. mi
; Creek were held Monday afternoon cea Doster, total
at 4 o'clock at lhe Hess *-------- •'*" “*
"*■—
home, conducted by Rev.
Mr. and Mrs Marcitu Bagley at­
. —...------ -- ------- - ,----------------- , ... . .jnded Children's Day at the Bapday afternoon In Kalamawo. Bhe ' tist church at HalnweU Bunday and
leaves a half slater. Mrs. Minnie were entertained at dinner at lhe
Aldrich of Uw Emily Andrus Home Doll House by *'
* "
Mr and
Mrs. Rich­
in Battle creek and a niece. Mn. ard Pettliohn.
ten w. Fvlghner Burial in UkeThe 4-H Club held a medlng al
view cemetery.
the schoolhouse Friday evening­
The annual Berryville church re­ Meetings will be held the third FR! union will be held Bunday, June at. day of each month.
A pot luck dinner will be served.!
Each one U requested to bring old
„ ,___
____________ ,
photographs that would be of in- amasoo spent Sunday with Mr. and
terest.
। Mn. George M. Woods ahd family, |
Mr. and Mrs. William Howe and i ElltabeUi accompanied them home
family of Detroit spent lhe week I for a few days' visit,
end with Mr. and Mrs. Curtta Wash. I George Miles of Washington, U
Tbe Ladles* Aid of the Evangelical . C and John Mlles of Taylor Unlvwchurch
entertained, Wednes-1
viiuix
.ii was cinciniimij
wcumn- atty. Upland. Ind., called on tbatr
day afternoon Ln
In Uie
the baftment
basement by slater, Mrs. Ruth Krick. Thursday.
*Mrs. Gall
» -Lykins.
&gt;
-Nettle Brown of OranganQg
Mrs.
Clarence
Welch. Mrs Jenson and Mrs. Frank
Purchis. Jr.
The Kunz family reunion will be
held on Thursday. June 25th at
Morgan park.

of public sarvics

To the people of Michigan, to the communities and
customars servad—they mark the turn of a half csnturv, in which timj
this Company’s electric service has achieved, in usefulness and in contribution t
better living, an importance undreamed of by its founders. It is a far cry ft t
those dark and doubtful days in 1886 when those hardy pioneers, the Footes
I
their associates, took those first steps into the almost unknown realm of elect. I
development.. A few feeble street lights — a few strings of wire and a worlo jf
faith . . . mark the genesis of today's Consumers Power Company.

Followed years of courageous, uphill struggle against
aver-arising difficulties And today? — look about youl That’s your
answer. See in your home the electrical conveniences not even existing a few
years back. In the communities where gas service is supplied, there have been
similar developments. And every one means liberation from some older, harder,
costlier way — and the creation of new enjoyments in home life.

To a continuance of these contributions to the public
welfare, the Company dedicates its resources and that priceless in­
gredient, the spirit of the men and women who are the heart of Consumers Power
Service.

The prices of this
Company's services
are today the lowest
in history. The elec­
tricity that it took
dollars to buy in the
early days can now
be had for a few
cents a day. Services
that are today the
common enjoyment
of all, couldn't have been had at any price
a few years ago.

“THEN and NOW”
Pictures that tall
thalr own story...
(.Hum) Ciuitum^rl Fow*r BMf.
■I Jscksoti, ArsJaaariwre for iho
Cwni/reny’s slatwarias oporotiont.

MARK'S STORES,

This Company has
interconnected its

Ox.. ,k. n,u„ . J O.U., s™. .U SEK3ATIOHAL savings1

power and steam­
power plants into a
statevyide system one of the natic i
|yV\|
finest—pooling t‘
&gt;
resource! for t s
common goodx T •
aff°rde protection &gt;f
power supply . 1
capacity for industrial and commercial de­
velopment — giving to even the smallest
community "big city service" at uniform
rates.

YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT MAKK'lt

/ .
j
I—X4

KAMS KOOK

CAMS JUG

.
lardr Dam, Hutrn hydnr-tlrctric

(Al loft) Heit of early
piling a fm hundred

Thia Company Is
more than a collecl tion of plants, of/ fices, lines; more
’ than brick, steel,
copper — its heart
is in its great fam­
ily of more than
.* 5,500 workers who
k give life and be z
to the service. They are your neighbors r-|
fellow citizens — this employment is t' r
livelihood, theirs and their families. An
i
the face of al! the attacks and difficult ,,
the Company has striven t&lt;J maintain is
fully as possible the pay-rolls so vital to
every community.

\

The electricity of
1886 and of today is
the same substance
— but in what it will
DO for you is its
great triumph. Light­
ing, for example.
From a few candle­
power in a dim and uncertain bulb — you
get today four times the light from the same
amount of current — and at a fraction of the
price. And what of radio, refrigeration and
dozens of other uses?—yours today, easy to
own, cheap to use.

pltal, Lansang U spending her va­
Mrs. Orville Kmhm ST
cation at her home here. She had
her tonsils removed Tuesday at the here and vicinity.
hospital.

(4l right) Original offlea building
«i faJtton, IU6.

JUNS
. SUM
KW. Xi.!..'
*1 ml
,— M
inmin. fc

SILK LINE

SHAKIStEAU SIIU

lMk,
CUT Hwk.
C.rlto.

to.

. —

"• o*iD.'v^f,w&gt;W“,o'#r-*
Dm«

RINGED HOOKS
Reliability
is a watch­
word . . .
depend­
able servi
ice ia the
order of
the day.
Millions of dollars are invested in the great
system reaching all the way to your home,
to protect, control and maintain service to
the tiniest light, in the smallest home, in
the farthest community. Hundreds of trucks
and cars, thousands of workers are on duty
night and day — on ths job for you.

The lases pair!
by this Company
are among the
most important

,n*dc ,0 P«y 9OV'
enrnmental ex­
|&gt;enaes — schools.
(
vSHA
police, health and
I
fire protection —
, x x. yt
/
In every comrnunity served.
They now amount lo nearly 18,000.00 s' day.
Taxes can only be paid out of lhe moncy
reoeived from services rendered. Continued
increases nnnt seriously affect the ability tu
provide these services at lowered prices.
’I.

Triajsph Citurtm Utnu

10* 89* ’2” *2” *2*

'

/

J

«r«rw nalVOsK

'Xi

�TOT HASTINGS BANNnt.TSTOKSDAT. JUNt It, IBM

—

BOWOT CENTER.

&amp;w

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

WHEREAH

it ll'll

WHEREAfl.

ibe' ueiHieaen should b«
THEREFORE. Bo Ii K&lt;

• 50 O. IlurnrU.
• 30 O. r.iddlno

Hau-

* i «•&gt;
.a
5 00

■;nrx.

Isbur

8 tts

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That

SO
• Oh

NOW —THE

Hi.
fltt

restone

tt"' W

STANDARD TIRE

1 I 20

fU

RubmII Benton and family and
Vemor Benton of Grand Rapids
were vUltors at Wayne. Banion's
Thursday evening Helen Benton re­
&gt; ।
Favtas BaMluUana.
lumed home with them and re­
, | WHEREAS, a petition haa
mained until Saturday.
h ‘with the Common Counell of t
Ferine Resolutions.
Henry Fry lost a horse last week.
The children gave a splendid
Children's Day program al the
church Sunday morning.
Charley Posthumiu Is in a Chl!*'i- '*’.
hospital taking treatments. We
ot
J”•..“"J* hr.’
- -J nit
alt hntw
hope h*
he will
will return
return home
home 1mim­
proved in health.
1 I ut the Cltr
Haitian
John
Noah
and
family
were
Wed­
... , ut the petitioner! ihuuld
tVHEHEAH. Tt la
I THEREFORE. Be It
nesday night supper guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Nash of Lowell and
th* t&gt;*lillun*ri ah
attended lhe graduating exercises.
THEREFORE. Hr
HK IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That Their nephew. Robert Ellis, was
।
with I'hiid.r Twenty of one of lhe graduates.
Mrs. E1U Nash. Mrs. Addle Ben­
UK IT FURTHER REXOl.VED: .Thai ’
ton. Mrs. Beatrice Karcher and Mrs.
Gertrude Thomas attended the fu­
neral services of Mrs. Addie Blakes­
lee at lhe Roth funeral home in
Lowell Monday afternoon.

&lt;1. In arrortlanc* with
n.l nroai* Alr.l In the

il aiii pavement
n .hall ronrtllul-

HE II FURTHER RESOLVED:
• 12.00 p*t 4 l&lt;id (turn uf th* coal

NEVER BEFORE SO MANY

so d*&gt;*rib*d

Ntnrs

ut S. Dlhlila St and Kaat Hlala Wt..
tlirl.er «outh on S. Dibble to the Inter
•ertiou at S Dibble St and E llratul St

rr^hed In

Ihr

■ I Hist-

IN A TIRE AT SUCH A LOW PRICE

THE
THRIFT
TIRE
Of
1936

oh?

cm new

mcu

nt'itir on th loan

did

&gt;r*bv at&gt;i&gt;rui*j and uloctid.
UK IT FURTHER RESOLVED

Hdi

■ llqialfd rust ot tiir

man
HE TT FURTHER RF.HOL.'ED.

BJ «.f

Out no

ll.l of R&lt;

imi. m sme mulct

It Emu.

H»..*i Wellman Rd of Rr.it
II S Sheldon, lid ot R*.i»w

&gt; t»o maa mm oi con
mmncoHsckitimiiian

rih*d
,
...
Ji
•(•inn th* prup*rt&gt;

HE IT FURTHER RESOLVED
1-1(1 (in |.»r 4 rod front at the coal

lnb*for* Bird

iuat oippta c»n hu
&gt;l&gt; !■....j June 12 1ICJ6.
UK IT FURTHER RESOLV

Hrht and

RESOLVED

ble to aprrlal aaaeaamenl tat tbe coat of
the imprtninr and |.a&lt;li&gt;( at I' Illah
Street, arrordlnc to the Reaolulion u(
lhe Common Council at lhe I It» of Ha.
tinea, dull ua-.rd June 12. 19'1(1
HF. IT FURTHER RESOLVED: Tint
the Rnperviaor at the |.t and 41b ward.

SO 0(1

rrm.m

A. Scbadr*.

RESOLVED

Aid

with ('tiat.tr

TYPE

FOR PASSENGER CARS
HE IT FURTHER RESOLVED
SZE

PRICE

4.50-tO
A50-S1

5.SM7
5X5-11

5.50 19

6.5O-T0

KKNOI.

tie
|

WHERE
W A Rehader.

RESOLVED-

Mills

FIRST LINE QUALITY—The new Firestone Standard Tire
has been designed and constructed by Firestone skilled tire
engineers—it is a first quality tire, built of first grade materials,
embodying exclusive Firestone patented construction features.
FIRESTONE NAME AND GUARANTEE—Every Standard
Tire is backed by the Firestone name and guarantee—yout
assurance of safety, dependability and economy.
LONGER NON-SKID MILEAGE—The wider flatter tread is
scientifically designed with more and tougher rubber on the
road for long, even wear, and thousands of extra miles.
GUM-DIPPED CORD BODY—Eight extra pounds of rubber
are added to every one hundred pounds of cotton cords by the
Firestone patented process of Gum-Dipping. This not only
provides greater strength,and gives greatest blowout protection.

inibll*h*d In th.

Already this RED CROWNS saved
me mare than I paid far it _and Ive
still qot it"

TWO EXTRA LAYERS OF GUM-DIPPED CORDS UNDER
THE TREAD—Cushions road shocks. Affords extra protection
against punctures and binds the whole tire into one unit of
great strength.
IT COSTS LESS TO BUY-VOLUME PRODUCTION
SAVES YOU MONEY—The new Firestone Standard Tire
is the greatest tire value ever offered car owners—volume
production, efficient factories and the most economical
distribution system make it possible to sell this new tire at
a price remarkably low. This is why car owners everywhere
call it the Thrift Tire for 1936.

I

USE our car all day, and my son,
Barclay B. Jr., uses it all night. Thai

switched to Red Crown, yetterday
"Seem* like right then our fortunes
looked up. Why, only fifteen minutes
after I'd bought the first tankful I
stopped in the bank and found I had

LONGER MILEAGE,
MORE DEPENDABLE
SERVICE
.
.
.
VOLUME PRICES

about five gallons saved.
"And this morning, after Junior had
driven his girl 50 miles over to Lenosville and 50 milea back to attend a lecture
M on Crop Rotation, ihere wm still tea
" gallons left in the tank!

you operate

might juit o' parked down the load a
piece and never gone to Leooxville...
but anyhow. I'll be buying Red Crowo
if 1 rrvr have to buy aay gas again.”

dependable sen-ice is your

produce to market, operating
fast local deliveries, in heavy

FOR TRUCKS AND BUSES

CRESSEY.
June 11 Letter.
MUs Rosella Barber and friend of
Saginaw vUited her parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Clay Barber. Saturday.
Mrs. Jennie Reynolds of Wall
lake and Mrs. Warren Calm* spent
Monday with Mrs. Samuel Geiger
and Mrs. Heber Foster at Berry­
ville.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McNulty en­
tertained
Thursday.
June 4. in
honor of the sixth birthday of their
son Charles. Those attending were
hU Utile friends and school males
Guests were present from Battle
Creek. Caledonia and Grand Rapids.
। Refreshments of pop. ice cream and
cake were served.

I
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
brfurr 61*4 .n.l drirrmlnr.l. and fur I Mrs. William Rockhill U Very 111
rr Ih.l ihr l.alarrr uf th* rnit at th* |
writing.
.“X“«?r«K.r.imi^I..,7h*,'*”ima‘t«
1 Mr. and Mrs. Sidney FiDeld are
,n* m th* ..«,&lt;■* „t n,* ( it. cirri of helping care for their Newton
» ' &gt;«» •■( Ha.tK.r I.* and th* .am* i., grandchildren who all have measles.
Ta. ‘(und a?..ft™,
"
Utile Albert Kidder is in Ann
&lt;x«r..i&gt;
\v a Hrhadrr
1 Arbor this week having hls tonsils
*M 2n!i,l'2ndnardTwardVl,ofK“1hr*nci'iv ot r’?,noved “,ld
operation on one of
Iitinci. I&gt;* and la krrrbt ordrrrd
hU eyes.
&gt;i&gt;* ■ .|.r*iai a..*..mrrit nt all th* land, •
pian to attend the children's Day
*\^‘apHt'a ' a»*a*m7nrfor lltr^KAl'uf ’ Pro«rnm at ’he Wood SChOOlhOUse
* impru.tna andir.&lt; ..f h 'ihi.M* i Sunday evening. June 21. at 7:30.
r*»i arr..rdin« i&lt;&gt; th* Rr.t.iuii.tn at th* Good music and special services are
•niHion Covnril ot Ihr Cllv of lli.linr.,
il&gt; t&gt;a-«*.i Jun* 12. inio
planned.
UK IT FI itTHKk HKHOLVKD Thu
Prayer meeting Wednesday. June
,* suio-rit.ur &lt;&gt;t th* 2nd and riv.i ward. 2&lt; at the home of Ralph Kidder and
.u Sl'lluu mother, one utd one-holt mile,
ithin tit* Unoruirmrnt ami pavinc -it. north of the Irving grange flail.
IRVING.
At the time of the regular Fellow­
ship meeting Friday evening. June
20. moving pictures will be shown
th* | of the wilderness country which
1'7 Rev Rlgehnan recently visited. Ice
,,„r‘cream will be sold.
» nf Ha.tlna. I _
Children's
________ _____
Day
,
exercises
-------------- ------next
c'lu't'f^Ha? Sunday.
, Harry Lampson of Ionia has been
A Rrkadrr
1 visiting hls mother and hls brotliRESOLVED
ill TwZniv'of cr R«yHa.iittr.. I.t, When Miss Lillian sowerby drove
h* n&gt;**lai a. home from Chicago she slopped at
Vandalia to see Mrs. Warner and
n*ni and t.ar i Alton. She found lhe latter imt'.ui*1*’ rJ,i'r Proving
r.41 h* t,uh l
Rev »nd Mrs. Lioyd Nagel of
nn*r a nat&gt;*r | charlotte spent several days here
।
week
Mrs Lillie Sowerby. Mrs. Argyle
HIM
Wlndcs and MIm Uhlan Sowerby
attended lhe graduating exercises of
Maurice Sowerby'a two oldest sons
tnl»d.
V»a. Aid. Coleman. Ila*
al Greenville
(Continued on page 8. Sec. 2)

AUCTION SALE!

Air, Bartuiclr, knout) throughout tbo itutofor bh prami-

For Truck Operators

Whether

fC:

&amp;

operating school buses, or in
any type of trucking service,
you need a first-quality tire,
built of first grade materials to
give you long, trouble-free
mileage. Now, for the first
time, you can get such a tire
nt prices you can afford to pay.
Come in today and let us

Mr. Barnacle’s imagination runs
away with him at times, it seems.
Certainly it did THIS time!

To settle the estate of Mary Belle Johncock, a public sale
will be held on the premises, three miles west of Cloverdale
and three-quarters mile north, on

Saturday, June 20
Beginning at one P. M. The following property is offered:—
LIVE STOCK AND HENS.

Red cow, 4 yrs. old, calf by
side.
Red cow, 5 yrs. old, calf by
side.
Red cow, 8 yrs. old.
Red cow, 9 yrs. old.
Pig, 125 Ibs.
54 sheep and lambs.
2 rams.
9 hens.
FARM TOOLS.

Firestone Standard Truck
and Bus Tire will give you

John Deere manure spreader.
Hay loader. Side rake.
Deering mower.

Wagon, good one.
Wagon box. Hay rake.
Oliver plow, No. 99.
2-horse cultivator.
Walking cultivator.
Single harness.
Double harness, nearly new.
Set platform scales.
MISCELLANEOUS.

Quantity hay and grain.
Quantity household goods.
Other small tools used on the
farm.

WN
reline
DRIVE A “TERT CAI" IN TIE WORLD S GREATEST ROAD TEST
Waahlng

SUNOCO

TERMS:—CASH. No goods removed until settled for.

Est. Mary Belle Johncock
By JAMES P. COLLISON, Admr.

YOUR &lt;-*-

BLUE
6 Hl A P

B

fl

.aid '

HU

HEAVY DUTY
6.00-19
6.00-20
6.00-tt

4.40-81

RF.8O1.VKD

d. Rehadrr
that the

Aid

1

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctiqnaar.

to drive-then DRIVE SAFELY

ii
I

H

I
ii
R

I

�TMR ■AMtXQl BANNtB, TWUB3DAY, JUKI 11, ttM

COURT HOUSE NEWS

Charlotte, Mrs. Graee Kaiser of
NA3HV1LUL
Chicago; two sons. Ford of Kala­
June 11 Litter.
mo and Clyde of Nashville; one Oliver
The many friends of MUs Minnie
brother. Skyler Banders of Kalama­
Bailey are glad to know she is on
zoo Funeral services were held st Ing stenographic work at the W. JL Balurday with them.
« City Hall
lhe gain.
D. ISSS. «.I4
lhe home Monday afternoon, con- Kellogg company. They have lot rvMlsliea t*
Yargtr, Jr, a 7 1-1 pound boy. who Vermontville. Burial in Kalamo Lathrop avenue. Battle Creak.
lias been named Douglas Eugene.
cemetery.
drug
BEDFORD.

LEGAL NOTICES

PBOBAT* COURT.
*rt Hiram J. Kenfield. Pinal ac­
count at special Admr. filed.
tn. C. L. OiMfow. Petition to dis­
burse funds filed; order to pay­
funds entered.
Est. Elisabeth Flnkbeiner. Final
account filed.
Est Hiram J. Kenfield. Order ad­
mitting foreign will entered.
Est. william E- Johncock. Petition
filed, citations Issued.
Est. Charles A Armstrong. Peti­
tion- for Admr. filed, waiver of no­
tice filed, order appointing Admr.
IHt’d al
entered.
Est. Daniel L. Walters. Order ap­
pointing Admr. entered.
Est. Leia s. Mosher. Petition for xotjoi or b/boial abssismxxt.
Admr.
filed.
order
appointing Ta Earl X ftnyw. Mr*. H. W. CkaaaWr
Admr. entered, bond of Admr. filed,
letters of administration Issued, or­
der limiting settlement entered, pe­
Oomiaoa Caaxrll of
tition for hearing claims filed, no­
tice to creditors Issued.
Est. Philip Gerlingen Pinal ac­
count filed, waiver of notice filed,
order assigning residue entered, dis­
charge of Admr. Issued, estate en­
rolled.
Re. Woodland Center Drain. Pe­
:S0
tition for board of determination
filed, order appointing board ot
determination entered, notice by
probate Judge to bond of deter­
mination Issued.
Est. M B. Brooks Inventory filed.
notick or an
Est. Hiram J. Kenfield. Bond of
Admr. filed, letters testamentary
ri Rhlt.lr,
Issued, order limiting settlement en­
tered.
Est. Dell B. Dolph. Bond of exe­
cutrix filed, letters testamentary Is­
sued. order limiting settlement en­
Cli. 11,11 un
tered, petition for hearing claims
&gt;. I»l«, naltl
■rr»l«linn to
filed, notice to creditors Issued.
Est. Ann Jessup. Order allowing
account entered, discharge of Admr.
Lvued. estate enrolled.
Est. Kate L. Robinson. Declina­
tion of trust filed. proof of will 19.16. at
filed, order admitting will entered.
Est George W Lawrence. Final
account filed.
Eat. Daniel L. waiters. Bond of
Admr filed, letters of adminlstrawotxoi or arsoiAx. abbbssmbnt.
tration Issued.
1 &lt;&lt;
r t ..iL.M.k ir.....
..
Est Milo G. Barbour Will filed,
Rnblr
petition for probate filed, waiver of
notice filed.
Est. KUJJiam L. Perrin Petition
for license3^jell filed.
Est. Gordon'Wamer Bera
Re­
lease of guardian filed, discharge ot
guardian iMUf^l.
, .
Est.liewy A- Colllsbn. Petition
for Aifnjr. filed.
Est Roy Heath Final account
filed, release of guardian filed, dlsrharge of guardian issued, estate
enrolled.
Est. Sarah A- Downing Warrant
nnd Inventory filed.

”.J3

£

AB8YRIA.

1’eieek P. N.'

June 11 Leiter.
Members of the Reliability Motor­ kegen attending Um United 1
church to Hartings Bunday.
cycle organization of Battle Creek Veterans Spanish encampment.
Mrs. J. W. Tedrow, who hu
Fanners In thU vicinity are busy vtry Ul with streptococcus sera
picked a one hundred fifty mile mo­
torcycle trip through thia locality on in ths hay fields. The hay crop will
Sunday. The trip extended over Uw not be heavy on account of dry
MOTica or spbcial assissmext.
rough hilly byroads leading from weather conditions.
Battle Creek where they started,
passing through Doster, Yankee tolned at a birthday dinner for
Springs. Hastings and
various Mrs. Putnam's brother, George
places on lhe routing. Twenty-eev- Wlckwirc, Bunday. Those present
Burr tool*?. l.ynun n. ReckwoM. CItS*
... ” ' ,------- --- ~
“ ‘ en cyclists passed through here. were George Wlckwtre and Henry,
Milter. Frank MrMiiian. w j. Yoon* । the girls had planned a surprise for
°’
8’
Mra- Bhaw. Each
one
marched They ended the test trip at Battle Mr. and Mrs. George Ransom of
Goodwill and Mr. and Mrs. DeVon
Rr&lt;iw“ wi’ G
d d. !
"nd Cropped a handkerchief Creek for a chicken supper.
Putnam of Jackson.
Walto*. Krnaai William,. J,«ob K*ho&gt;. m her lap. During the business
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Case spent
Lila Carnell has secured employ­
Craa!
i n?eetln® * n«* member was added. Bunday evening at the Mr. and
Mr. wK»L^iuat Mr. ri«raJv*uii»: Heaflv nine dollars was taken in Mrs. Walter Jones' Home of the i •••
ment
Creek.
—•• in *»Battle
—• ~ -•»«»•
c. L. B»ch*u»r, a. 11. MeUiockiin. at this meeting. There were over Poorman. Mrs Jones is some Im-1 Mrs. Rose Phillipa has returned
proved in health. Mr. Jones recent- from the Borges* hospital Ln Kala&lt;i4r&gt;. John vt Cr»»»n. H«rrr Hocm.- WM served by Mrs. Shaw with ice ly sustained an Injury to hls knee maroo much Improved in health,
bit. lla.iia.. Hide a Lo.n—E«a H, cream having Ute Clover Leaf Club and leg by a horse kicking him.
Her daughter. Celia has Just re­
s-AsteTsx.Wirs “
trom
Mrs. Dewie Biruin a former real- I turned from the Nichols hospital in
rr twraon* intsrMiaS:
away were, Mrs. Marguerite Worst dent and daughter Irene of De- Battle Creek where she underwent a
You *r. h.rrbr notis.d that at * r.&lt;. of Coldwater. Mrs Mary Hills. Mrs trolt, are making an extended visit, FeFious operation foe the removal of
4
t!
KMU'r »&gt;
Cr«k. IMllh with relatives in this locality and
tumors,
a Council Ch.mhrr at th. citr Hill on Jones of Bedford. Mrs. George Bell nearby points,
— ——
Lit’*’’ tvZ.Hi
oX Norlh D*koLa' Mrs. Gladys AlSOUTH SHULTZ.
ommoa Ct&gt;«itrll did n... . rwolutlon to
Akmio
Qf HjuUnga
a week end guest at the home of
Callers and visitors at G. E. Ken­
L. c. Bungart and family of,i her parents, Mr. and «...
u„. yon's Bunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. „
Hugh
Jackson have moved into the John ;Ca»e
Case.
Colon Hallock and Merle Bonneville
Marten house
|I Mr. and Mrs. „
UWMU Serven w
Howard
of and friend of Battle Creek. Mr. and
Short funeral services were held lhe Eagle district have announced Mrs. Harry Mteansr and Miss Jsan
IMS. at T:JO
INSIST ON CINUINE LIATHIR
Bunday afternoon for Mrs. Olive the marriage of their daughter. Bough of Kalamasoo.
SHOW for Your Bay—Keep His Feet
Bivens at the home of Mrs. Margery Marjorie Serven. to Dormer Reeves
Mrs. Mabel Moody of South Maple
Wilson. The body was brought
*
here from Columbus, Ohio, where .
she passed away. Her son and wife, I .
Mr. and Mrs Cook, accompanied the ,
Bivens was 91
u body
r Mrs oivcns
vi years of
or
I *«e. Rev. M. E Hoyt conducted the
■ &gt; .... service. Vlr.
Mrs. n.ll
Gall TLykins sang. ......
"My
Father Knows," which was among
arrangements made by Mrs Blven*.
Burial in Lakeview cemetery.
City Hall an
Rolland Banders passed away Fri­
day afternoon at his home on Main
of tlie Alumni association are:
President, Farrell Babcock; VlcePrtsident. Adolph Dause, Jr.; Sec­
retory and
Treasurer.
Geneva
Brumm; Toastmlstress. Mias Louise
Wolrlng.
The clover Leaf Club met on
Wednesday afternoon at the home
of the Bunday school teacher. Mrs.

MOTHERS I—HERE THEY ARI

TENNIS SHOES for BOYS, with Oa
LEATHER INSOLI

MICHIGAN MADE

was a pioneer of Kalamo township
but came lo Nashville 15 years ago.
Surviving are the widow, two
daughters. Mrs. Ethel Griffin of

BEET SUGAR
Best for Cooking — Bakmu — Canning
Jams and Jellies—Candy Making

row SALE BY GHOCFRS EVERYWHERE
ommon &lt; ounrll

notice

or bpbcial

Get Ready Now for Those Hot Summer
Day* with a Pair of Smart, Cool Comfort­
able WHITE SHOES ot a Price
Within Your Reach I

WOMEN'S WHITE, COOL SANDj
Soft Kid Leathers

M Stylew-NOW ONLY

ROYS'
TENNIS
SHOES

MEN'S DRESS OXFORDI

assessment

hrhi in
Halt nn

From This Day Forth
EXTRA J?
Special 4 I

“I was so deaf that I could hear

ji

Hastings Cut Rate Shoe Store

PIONEER
GREAT LAKES
RED ARROW
BIG CHIEF

now I can hear the clock
Ii nothing;
tick." writes Miss I. C., Goldsboro.

N. C OURINE. created by a Vienna

Heeltby

Always ask fur on

Was Deaf—Now Hears
The Clock Tick

specialist, Is a simple home
5 car
treatment which is bringing new
and happiness lo sufferers ev­
s hope
erywhere. If you are hard of hear­
ing. bothered by head noises, ear­
8 ache. ringing and buzzing In ears,

INSOU TIN Nil
Cod

WHITE IS QUEEN at the

INSIST ON

MARR1IAGE LICENSE.
Norman E Stanton. Assyria .... 22
Doris Lee Cole. Dowling 20

NORTHEAST CARLTON.
William Peck of Grand Rapids
spent the week end with Mr. and
Mrs Lewis Daniels and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Endsley and
family of Fowlerville visited Mr.
and Mrs A. M Decker Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Crawford of
Evart were here Saturday lo attend
lhe Friend school reunion and re­
mained over Sunday calling on hls
old friends.
Carl Olmstead of the upper penlnsula Is spending a week’s vacation
with hls parents. Clair of Grand
Rapids visited them Sunday.

79c

Children’s White Sandals

Infant*' WhHa

They're Just Right for Dress
or Floy! now going

Shoes, Oxford! Md

DOES STARTING

77c

MAKE YOU BOIL?

sick with the dread ot approaching
deafness, get OURINE today. Relief
is quick—cost only a few cents a
day. Money back If dissatisfied —
Carveth A: Stebbins. The Rcxall
Store,—Adv.

■H to 3

MEN'S Police Shoes

i

Man’s Ventilated

WORK Oxford*

$229

TRAVELING?

Compare bus fares with
other transportation costs.
Greater travel bargains
than ever before to
all America.

ln 1913 we pledged ourselves to serve the
public to the best of our ability ... to gi^e
honest service and the best in material . . .
and we have kept that pledge.

From HASTINGS to
One Way

So, today, because of our vast experience In
meeting every specification of builders, be­
cause of our ample resources, we are equip­
ped to give your building job the attention
and fine workmanship you feel it deserves.

Ft. Wayne _.__&gt;3.O5

Toledo3.30

Cincinnati 6.65
Pittsburgh 7.20

Cleveland5.20
New Yoric City. 12.95
Be sure your ticket reads
via SHORT WAY—GREY­
HOUND for SERVICE
plus SAVINGS!

We have the pick of the used car mar­
ket fog you to choose from. Many makei
—all models—prices and terms to fit your purs*. Your present
car, in average condition, will make the down payment on one
three times its present value—jew won't ntod mjA. And we back
every car we sell with our reputation for square dealing.
Just look at a fewjjf these buys — thara arc doieoi mere
to choose from!,
‘

1934 FORD V-8 TUDOR .

$395.00

ONLY ItMS MILES

BUS DEPOT AT

HASTINGS PHONE 1137

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO.

THE HOME LUMBER CO.

-

Flint. condition

NMlton

row® MAIERS

,

Phene 2121

REDUCED
TO ONLY

$2-««

OHtar Stylo* Priaod a* Law a*

1935 FORD V-8 FORDOR SEDAN .$495.00

$465.00

Man's SPORT Oxford* GrsaHy

LUM BUB* BAXB:

The Home Lumber
Co. Builds Homes!

1935 FORD V-8 TUDOR

TRIO CAFE

Every job we handle is done os If we were
building it for our own personal use. We fur­
nish the materials and labor at prices that
compare favorably with other concerns of
good reputation.

Steel Arch Supporting Shenk

WWrUta*

HASTHGSCfir
114 W. STATS ST.

�THT HASTINGS BAMXTK, THV»|D1T, IUN1 II, 1IM

L PROCEEDINGS

tiSS4 u!l"2

iniaaedl
W. A. Rakadar.
RESOLVED: Tksl Ika CHr Clark »i»»

CT MdSF

erft

Piersea.

Ika I

tka reaalallnn ba

Miller. Plecsia. Reicka'rd. Ma-

runitllate ih« Ju
•aid »laI and die
st Iba lataneellM

■u
referred ta
airs

Il E8OLVED
rafarred lo

I urn mon

BE IT FURTHER RKBO1
Rr&lt;olullon ! lhe Rubers

if

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED;

tarmac bar ’ *ba Commas Council o (the Cliv &lt;

WHERRAR. It i

the Am—rt iau

THEREFORE

2.7T£S.'l

li

HE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: Tbs

■a Mid from «

“ wm
■ bin th* iserlsl
hla lo awalal aaa

tih
hi: it further

judement
n Council

WHEREAS

lhe DesitHnrra
«M l-r
THF.HF.FuHK lie b |&lt;

BE IT FURTIIF.lt RESOLVED: Thai
ravins Baaolutieni
WHEREAS

Mad in Hi

RK^IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That

(U I.I.UUI
levy uooo 1
Iusetamaai.
rn'ita.
1
Ih Chapter Ta

•■ r : ■
WHEREAS

□ I E &lt; I nton St and l.a.t Stat

THEREFORE. Be It ReaMred
THEREFORE

af tbe CUr

-J&amp;BSI

Be It Reaolsed

•RTHER RESOLVED

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED

IT FURTHER RESOLVED

E Madison Hit

hla t&lt;&gt; special

« mt—t.t an
•» de.rrili

Vt"’*'’'

Kail Tbo
la N Hi

| •djalninc and abi.r tl—
-curd I
in tl— |
ante • Ith the
linnrvvetaent a
ml diilrlrli here 1

jlullon shall cons

I conatitate tt.a
said plat and

HE IT FURTHER REROLVFb

r l f ^8

nd brodla Alrd i

’b¥“t*further RESOLVED:

IfKSM
Moved I
Aid Colas
—&gt;l«maa. Haven.
Iloonan. Millar. Pierian. Reivkurd. Saba

&gt; ther that the
district upon which that t.art at th , , proven—nt aeci

nd H rh Ml

! the coat nt tl—
id Im I
1— e.timali

B^Madlom

RESOLVED

III IT FURTHER RESOLVED

HE IT FI RTHER HKMI

has
HI-SPEED

POWERS ECHOES.
PTed Hauser. 8r . of Detroit at­
tended the graduation exercises
Thursday evening of hla eon Fred.

NOW. THEREFORE. Be II
Richard and Russell Palmer of
Detroit spent the week end at the
home of their parents Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Nell and baby accompanied
them as far as Hastings and spent
the week end with their parents
Lawrence Kelley of Grand Rapids
was a caller in this neighborhood
Thursday evening and also attend­
ed the graduation in Middleville.
The little daughter of Mr and
Mrs. Bruce Winder is convalescing
from measles.

On the Market!

• Cheapest to operate

Mrs. Hasel Abbey. Robert and
Richard ot Hastings and Ella Kinne spent Sunday in Battle Creek.
A fine children's Day program
was given Sunday evening with
Margaret Coats, chairman.
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Wood and
Oreydon attended lhe school re­
union at Friend Saturday.
Mrs. Lenah Wood of Hastings.
Mrs. Travadon Wilson. Richard and
Harold of Grant spent Friday aft­
ernoon at Wernle Kelsey's.
A Utile daughter. Mildred Maa
was born Tuesday morning. June 9.
to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Teeter Call­
ers from a distance have been Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Neil of Detroit.

Mr and Mrs. Clair Van Bycklc of
Lghsing visited Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
। Van Byckle part of last week,
I Marguerite Mills ot Lansing spent
Rnnrtav
Bunday here
here.
Mrs. Ernest Mead returned Sun­
day from a week's visit in Indiana.
Mr. fend Mrs. Ben Bostaler re­
turned Bunday from a week's visit
with their children in Laying.

Aid. Coleman. Haven,

CALROD

• Longest lived

PLEASANT IUIh.l
Mrs. Willard HUton of Martin
Comers Is working at Arthur Teet-

MORGAN.
Loretta combs ot Ind., was a
guest of Mr. end Mrs. Elgin Mead

BE IT FURTHER RESOL

Fastest Cooking Unit

SAFETY RULES.
Simple safely rules to protect
other cars and pedestrians, are giv­
en on a poster size sheet shown by
Ford dealers lo the general public.
Here they are:
At intersections never pass a car
as a pedestrian hidden from you
may step out in front of you.
Watch out for pedestrians who
walk between parked can and into
traffic lanes.
Always walk on the left and face
the oncoming cars when you are
afoot on the road, and step off the
pavement if necessary. At night
this is most important because a
driver, blinded by lights of an ap­
proaching car. may not see a pe­
destrian. Always cany a light or
while object like a handkerchief so
driven can see you.
Use passing lights when meeting
other can at night. Do so when
overtaking another car so its driver
will not be blinded by your lights
In bls rear view mirror.
Watch road shoulder when pa».iing other cars at night.
Changing Urea on road—Always
pull off the pavement to make tire
changes, and be sun not to stand
in front of your tail light at night.

THEREFORE

BF. FT FURTHER RESOLVED:

• Sealed for a life-time
Cleanest

• Can be submerged in
water without ill offeet

More than 5Or7 of all
Cooking Units are
CALROD

Veterans!
ON YOUR BONUS

LIBERAL TRADE-IN
ALLOWANCE!
FREE INSTALLA­
TION AND
INSTRUCTION!

N

SEE THE NEW ELECTRIC HOT WATER HEATER !
Ask About Our Economy Purch asa Pion—Up to 3 Years to Poy

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON
HASTINGS

WESTERN UNION BLDG

B
N

The complete facilities of thia bonk are
available to you to help you to get the
utmost good from your bonus
and in the future.
A safe depocit box will protect your
bonds. A checking account will give you
safety and convenience in paying ob­
ligations. If you plan to build up a
readily available reserve for future
emergencies, a savings account aril!
appeal to you.
It will be a pleasure to cooperate
with you in every possible way to help
you to enjoy the fullest benefits from
your bonus.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

16 PAGES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1936

HOUSE BUILT FOR !Streets in the City of Hastings DI. EMERSON IS
Measure a Total of 39 Miles
ADDED TO STIFF
EXILED NAPOLEON
PLANNED TO KIDNAP HIM
AND BRING HIM TO NEW
ORLEANS TO LIVE

Many Resident! Anxious for Tarmac
Paving This Year On Liberal Terms

BUY NEWSSTAND
IN TRAVERSE CITY

SECTION ONE—PACES 1 to 8
I ASKS DAMAGES FOR

'CRINGE N COUNTY |
WELF1RE COMM.

Mr. and Mrs. R. J. McOreery
Leave Today for Their
j

INJURIES SUSTAINED
Orin Fleming Files Suit in
This County Against

Wil TO DR
Eft

tf

New Home
.....
Wm. McKibbin
INFORMAL GATH!
Hastings friends will be Interest- STATE NOW NAMES ONE
COUNSELLOR AND AN AD­
ed to know that Mr. and Mrs. R. J.f
—
**”' —
REPUBUOAME 01- —.
MEMBER AND
TWO
April 3 an accident occurred at the
VISOR IN HEALTH
McCreery have purchased the Davl- I
lop of the hill a little west of the
SENATOR MOSIXB
CAMPAIGN
ARE LOCAL
son Newsstand at Traverse City and I
William Gorham place on M-43 In

According to the recorded plat of tarmac paving, only 40 per cent to
leave today to take possession of i
Rutland. There were two cara con­
this city and its various additions, be paid by the lot owner. Reduced to
the same. This stand was started Al D SCHADER R
actual figures this means that the RETAINS POSITION
cernea; one was owned
ownca and
ana operated
opera tea . EXPRESS DISAPPROVAL
cerned;
’
fourteen years ago and has been;ALU*
I®
there are 39 miles of streets and
at
the tme
tme by
by Robert
Robert Beisel
Bebel of
of Kai-|
Kai-I
cost to the property owner of the
lourieen years ago ano nas Deen
n.
at the
UnoiCDfG nniinee
highways within the corporate limits curb and gutter is *18 for each four
ELECTED TO PLACE amaxoo. in which his friend Orin A.
OF MOSIER S COURSE
AT COLUMBIA very successful. It Is located on the.
north side of Front St., which
------------i Fleming was riding The other car
•• ■
Twlfc
of Hastings. There have already_________
rod front,_______
which______
Is the______
width___
of _a
and the cost of tarmacklng Is W. K. Kellogg Foundation b a fine location. Mr. and Mrs, Me- His Familiarity With the Du- I belonged to and was driven by Wil- ' Barry Co. Ha* No Oaudidat*
The House Stands in New been laid nine miles of cement and 1 lot.
113 for a four rod front. If the
Creery will be glad to see their i
.
. .
Ham McKibbin. who Uvea near
nj
four and one-half miles of tarmac 813
Signs Him Also as One
Hastings friends when they vhit:
tie»
the Commission
Cloverdale. Mr. Fleming was quite
—Mr'
Urged
Orleans as Vision of
paving. Two and a half miles of street b not curbed and guttered.
Traverse city.
i
Wa* Considered
tarmac have been authorized thh It will therefore cost the lot owner
to Enter Race
of Director*
Dream Unfilled
B.re, ecu.,,
e„. | seriously injured and was kept in
„
, .
। year which will undoubtedly be 830 for a four rod frontage, for
Pennock hospital for a considerable | An jnftnnaj meeting of republL
It will be of Interest to the many i
New Orleans Is one of the most flnuhed thb year. That will Increase curb, gutter and tarmacklng. The
thn*can members of the Barry county
friends
of
the
W.
K.
Kellogg
Founfriends
here
can
recommend
them
mission
received a communication ।. In the county clerk's office on Sat-1 board ol mnervlrore and executive
interesting cities in thb country.' the pavtd mHeage up to 16 miles.
city also makes It easy for the lot
datlon
in
thb
and
other
counties
iurday
papers
were
filed
by
Mr
&gt;
offlcer
.
of
toe re^i^n
to the oily they have chosen for from Director Haber of the state |
The first settlement there, of any , ot the remaining 33 miles the illy owner, by spreading the paymenu
moment, was made to 1718 by the । enilneer estimates that there would for hb 40 per cent of the cost over to know that Dr. Haven Emerson, of thelr aop&gt;*1 welfare commission last week an- j. Fleming,
Fleming,
through hb attorney. ■ committee, also repreaetatiw of
French. It was quite appropriately j
not morc
I8 mllca lhBl wU1 a period of three years without in­ the College of Physicians and Sur­
---------------------a
change
must
be
,
F™?
1
*,
8
'
Heston
of
Kalamaxoolocalities
from
Allegan and Van
nounclng
lhal
a
change
must
be
&lt;
Frank
8.
called New France, and French require tarmac paving—they are terest. Thus if a man has four rods geons of Columbia University, has
made
of' the county
McKibbin. The complaint j Buren counties, met at the Parkes
made In
in the
the set-up
set
-------- ,
influence extended over a wide sec-1 &gt;lreeUl whlch hBve not been built of frontage on a street that already become actively associated with the
welfare
Heretofore, u.&lt;
as &gt;----W1J------------------up the alleged.facta
W.-..U1C commission. nrrcuuvie,
.------- In the case । jjouae here Wednesday noon and
tlon—far beyond the present limits , up on which there are only one or has curb and gutter, it will cost Foundation. He h not to give up hb
re.—---------------------— r nil
0.000 Clamafit'S
ken
re .Onnna
we
understand I,
It. tthe ertwrtwXre
members
all. Olid
and OSk*
**** Si
810.000
damages.
had
dinner together.
work In connection with the Uni­
of in.
the .....
state r«„uu„.
ol Louisiana. Pur
...was
lwo
I hou#eg or none gl aU fllKh
him only 812 for the paving, spread
trnm I
•••
'
received th*lr
their annnlntmrent
appointment from
It is well known that ths republi­
responsible for the founding of the streets are largely in the additions over three years, which will mean versity, but will take on active in­
Lansing. Under the new arrange­
cans of Barry county are not sat­
present city of New Orleans
In made to the city from time to time. only 84 per year. If the street has terest in the problems of the Foun­
ment. the stale organization will
isfied
with the course of Senator
dation
in
tiM&lt;
counties
where
it
h
those days everybody dealt in furs. Thus, at the end of thb year, the । not been curbed and guttered then
On Saturday evening the Demo­ name one member, the chairman of
Mosier tn the recent b«klaturo.
It was the "big business." Fur trad­ most costly paving will have been the coat will be 830 for a four rod now established, and will act as
the county board of supervisors will
They allege that he failed to ”
ers traded with the Indians for done, with not exceeding 16 miles front, the lot owner will have three counsellor and advisor in the health crats. who are interested in hear­
be another one, and the board of
furs, and even traded among them­ remaining, nearly all of which will years In which to pay it. or an av­ campaign being carried on by the ing the acceptance speech of Presi­
Roosevelt, are supervisors are to elect the third
Foundation. Dr. Emerson has been dent Franklin D
selves. A thousand miles to the be tarmacked.
erage of 810 per year. That- -------surely an associate in physiology and medi- asked to meet at the Parker House man. Tills would give the super­
i *nate clique In an attempt ta
north the fur trade was very profit­
From the Interest manifested so is a very Uberal offer. Prcpcriy
Property c|nc Bl
Columbia College of at eight o'clock. A radio will be In-,visors
control of welfare
wlth----------------------------------- --work
---------------wreck the fine program too govable. Doubtless being near the far it is evident that next year's owners have not been slow to take
KIM SIGLER emor had worked out to put th*
’ 10 ,ake । Physicians and Surgeons for twelve stalled so all may hear the talk by • in the county. Mr. Haber suggested ATTORNEY
mouth of the great Mississippi, the tarmac construction will probably
yw«- ne
He nas
has Deen
been assisung
assisting as
as aa the President.
-------------re- -- -- —
—.—re—.
।I years,
I that two members of the welfare
I state of Michigan on a sound bush
SPOKE
AT
ROTARY
site was selected as a ebnventent be not less than three miles pos­ last weeks Banner when nearly vU1Un&lt; BUrg&lt;fOn Bl Bellevue hospital,
---------------------------------! commission — Aiderman
Schader
place for shipment of furs to for­ sibly four. A considerable number nine columns of the smallest type New York for el&lt;ht
CLUB MONDAY
Sow*.
Barry county has no candidate for
miNR RTAFF OF----------------- .I lhBt
nnd H*8
Boyesproceed
—resign, so
eign ports, and it became the capi­ of lot owners on various streets have we have was used
thc lat«r Earlcould
Tf'Vfor
Ori the
lh? council
““P0" president of the board of health and j juimo aiftrr ur
m chairman of
j the
me state senate. T1
The
Of
tal city of tlie French government petitioned for tarmacklng. such proceedings and the legal notices commissioner of the department of j
the republican county committee,
EDUCATIONAL
TOUR
narnc
a
member of the commission. EVIDENCE IS OF THE
in
the
new
world.
In
some
ways
the
-- ------ ----- - —------- ...--------- --- .... BMCVM
.UllMlia
VU.M
streets
lacking
curbK.IUand.U.VAIO
gutters. to property owners.
health for the city of New York for |
------------j The
The two
two men
men gladly
gladly presented
presented ttheir
Dr. Frank Carrothera. has received
site must have been anything but They will have to be graded, and ireo, t
GREATEST IMPORTANCE many letters from thia and other
C «ge *hM1 ** ma^e two years. He was profeasor of pre- William Schader Left Mon- ! ”
slgnat,on’
The supervisors on
resignations.
desirable, being but a few Inches.; curb
gutter built before tar- to toe law it would seem reasonable ventfve medicine. Cornell UniVer- . WUUam Shader Left
-----------------------------------Monday
selected
one of their num-'counties urging him to run far th*
above the level of the river and macklng. Previous experience has to expect that within the next flvel^ty. a lecturer to Teachers' College.
I ber. Mr. Schader. to go back on the ' Written Record of Agree­ state senate; but be Jaels that it
day for Trip in Eastdrainage very poor.----------------------------- shown that it will be wise for the
Clty lh‘^ Columbia, and al the New York
j commission and continue the work |
ment Is Acceptable Proof
would be an Injustice to himself
The first settlement Included Just I council not to order the paving of a
CrD
।I wnn
wmen
ne
is
so
ramuiar.
* 5Uh tarmac wlII 8ch&lt;x&gt;l of Social Work. He was dlwith which he is so familiar.
and his business to do so. Certainly
a few blocks of all that arc in- 1 gtreel thBt has been newly-graded, •-- .v?
in Court of Law
at .every
of me
the vieveiana
Cleveland noipuai
hospital ana
and 1 William Schader, Jr., lias re- | By virtue of his office as chalrr- Ve&lt;
--L Mnd
-— 1.V
~’—
y “PProach , rector ui
Allegan county la not entitled to
corporated in the fine city of today. | The roadway should be allowed to to
hv
Irnnt
n« । tic
.health
... surveys in laiv-ao.
to_ the
the
city
either
by
trunk 1line,
1919-20. He
ceivad ma
hb appointment *a
as &gt;
a mem- ■; •••«•■
man v*
of the
board va
of oupcrtuuti,
Supervisors. i Attorney Kim Bigler Is the Chair­ that office again, for two Allegan
—— cltv
—, either
----- -- y, , —
aim
tie . was , ccivoa
Mae uvaau
It covered- the part from Canal
other petitions are being clr- county road or b
township road, will professor of Public Health Admlnls-1 ber of the staff of the Boys' Edu- ' olenn Wotrlng, of Woodland, auto- I man of the June program committee men have filled that place for th*
atreet to Esplanade avenue and culated for tarmac paving. It seems have been
i,n paved
p,v.u a.a
«.
.
j iI Nation at Columbia University in । cational Tours of Ann Arbor.
On matlcally becomes a member of the , for the Rotary club. He had secured
from Rampart street to the river, probable that from three to four
u!.horU‘“ have
J10? learned
learned l92
1M2Sunday —
he Joined
in De- .county welfare commission. As the! a fellow attorney from another city satisfaction In this county, as
The .^..•
clQ- authorities
2,
„1VU the tour M
Thb b only a very small part of the ; mfies will be petitioned for thb
^“ons about tarmac; dr. Emerson served as a major, rroi't*Mid"
the^group^of
I members M»rva»
serve witHnut
without nav
pay, and as
.................. on
... ^Monday0 ....
_......
a, tn
to arlrirru
address tha&gt;
the cltiB
dub kfnndav
Monday nnnn
noon, as in Allegan and Van Buren.
present and very interesting city of' year on which the paving cannot paving. The city engineer b taking Lieutenant-colonel and colonel In boys started for a two weeks' east- i there b a lot of work and a lot of
but was notified by his friend that
New Orleans what is especially in- j be done before next year. Possibly oXed^
Ithe Medical Corp* of the U 8. A. em trip. They will vblt Pittsburgh. “n,plleM??lne“ connected with their forenoon that circumstances had It inadvisable to name him thb ysstr.
terestlng about it b that today you these streets can be graded and the
,rfjLU&gt; ? iP?reV^’
l?al Whe 1 10(1 waa on duty with the American Gettysburg. Washington. D. C.. Ar- dutles- there was not a rush of ap- arisen which made It utterly im­
Thb brings the matter to Van
see thb old French section Just curb and gutter built, or part of it and fln? to treS ove'r liS
' e’PedlUonary rorces He has direct- fington Cemetery. Annapolb. Mount P110?”1!- 8°J?f^?dy, *?“
do the possible for him to come to Has­ Buren county. The sentiment of th*
about as it has always been. Despite I Cgn be done thb year,
and fine to travel over abo making etj many health and hospital sur- Vernon. New York City Phlladel- work- The board felt that Mr. ting.-.
gathering here yesterday was unani­
the great growth of the city, this, Fortunately for the city it will Ih^ vUrmuC COtttln5 ab?ut
“ veys throughout the United States phla. Baltimore and oVher places i Schader s services on the local welUnder these conditions, and faced mously favorable to drafting Doi"**
old French section has remained receive from now on a considerable ml?t£tlna wm bid"
U*’’ I and w“ called
Perform Lhat scrv’
interest. Five auch trips will be farc
would be beneficial to the with the fact that he was unable to sentatire Earl Barbans for the i
untouched and unchanged. In an j alim CBCh year from the state out
M* , ,d
.
ice
Athens,, Greece,
made uuiuig
during the
summer.
commission,
---- to
— the
---- city
—of
—--------------------- ..muc
uic summer
... . so
— they
. : reelected
—-------- ; him.
------- secure another speaker for the atorahip. He U well qualifiedIfta
unusual way it forms an interesting' of the weight tax fund. The state
After all the streets are paved thc He
it
vears 11 you
thlnk Roister
He b
Is a
a member
member of
of the
the National
National
r will
will be
be recalled
recalled that
that ten
ten years
you thlnk
Renter Boyes
Boyes b
Is unun- meeting. Mr. Sigler gave the talk place and would make an excel
link that joins the old world with •law
-----------•— **--•
*• city can use Its share of the weight
requires
that this ---------money-------must
Advlsory Health Council of the i agO william. Thos. Stebbins and i haPPy because he is left out. a few himself. He gave to the Rotarians an
the new. Cross Canal street today be used for street work, such as tax fund for some lime in making
__________________
,vrt-x"a
' minutes with
conversation
United States r
public
health service, i Carl Wesplnter took a similar
' ’ub'ubTl
’5mTtar
conversation
him will with him will Interesting outline of some of the
and It b almost as if you had paving, curbing, guttering and the much needed recoating of the old a
,------------------------------------------------------------.
... ...
—Boys'
*
. Educational
- i ai.rw.1 II..I
«rt— • ! new laws passed by the Michigan for Van Buren county; but wa
member of the commission of ex-1 .trip'
wiuT^thb'
that rtrtflrtrt
notion. Urt
He —
was the —most
crossed the ocean to an old section construction of sewers The fact that paving on Green and Jefferson perl statbtlclans of the health sec- Tour and had a wonderful time
iI "»«■■■-*«'' one
legislature of 1935.
1935 There were 268
368 lleve if van Buren county rep
ttae.
one of
of the
the former legbtature
of France. There you will see the the city now has this money has streets and on Michigan Avenue.
tlon of the League of Nations. He! The whole *-a&gt;• -•
__ ' • i■ board and had to
a
trip ■la well
planned.
10
B lot
lot of lima
llI?e new taws, nr amendments to old cans will unite on him as their
steep roofs, with their ornamental enabled it to make a very advan­
The citizens of Hastings have rea­
well manned end evorythto, con- “S'"u,r“ complainla made by laws, enacted by that body. Natural­
iron balconies and decorative iron tageous offer to property owners son to appreciate what the council was president in 1933 and 1934 of
duave to the boya’ food
Brrlct
J'1’”
““•««« «&lt;“' ly there would be many things that
adornments just as they were erect- who Uva on unpaved streets. The is doing in making good streets at the American PubUc Health Asso­
the county director of welfare would not be generally known about which was not a secret affair at
ciation. He b now a member of the dlaclpUne u maintained, tood meala what ""
ed by the* French architects, as if, city agrees to bear 60 per cent of tlie very minimum of cost to the
them.
He gave a fine talk on general
board of trustees of the W. K. Kel- are furnished, in fact, all matters work had done.
defying the ravages of time and the , the entire cost of curb, gutter and property owners.
The question of evidence In a la* Utlcal Issues,
frankly «
Dertalnlng
to
travel
and
boy
life
Inroads of progress. Passing gener- ------------------------------------------------------------suit Is of the utmost Importance. that he cannot be drafted fa
abroad he was decorated with the are looked after by those in charge. U. B. BIBLE SCHOOL
ations have altered it tn almost no;
Tile
last
legislature
enacted
a
law
MedalUe
des
Epidemies
and
made
a
This will be a splendid adventure
SCIENTIFIC CRUISE
particular. We hope that the peowhich
says
that
a
written
record
of
Chevalier Legion d’Honneur.
BEGINS TOMORROW
for William for this summer and
pie will continue in their determi­
a business transaction ar agreement
IS ABANDONED
Dr. Emerson Is an author as well we are sure he will enjoy It to
nation lhal It shall not be changed,
~
as an instructor and an authority In the full.
The Banner sincerely hops*
Classes for Second Ward which may be contested in any
because it's a touch of the old world
Michigan court, shall be more Van Buren county win settle
The Government Takes Issue the medical profession The above
set down in the new The streets
Children Aged Five to
acceptable proof and have greater matter, and lhal Earl Burhans
statement
as
to
hb
accomplishments
In thb section arc very narrow— I
JUNE COUNTRY CLUB
With Classification
weight
than
oral
testimony.
This
was
taken
from
"Who's
who
in
Thirteen
The Michigan Bell Telephone Co.
very much like "alleys" as we know
means that business and profes­ cans of this senatorial dlsl,
America.”
of Yacht
them, and with the quaint old' announces that the copy for the
DINNER DRAWS CROWD
Plans are all made for the open­ sional men should be careful to keep their candidate for the state
It b extremely fortunate that the
houses fronting out on these little | new directory will soon be comOwing to difficulties with Ithe
ing of a two weeks’ Bible school at records of all business transactions,
Kellogg Foundation could secure
narrow
..arrow streets,
streets, some
some of
oi them
tnem so
so I
«... _» ___United
united states
States government on a
Virginia
Potts
—
Saxophone
the
second
ward
schoolhouse,
sponbecause they are the moat Impor­
both-­
_
* technical charge of violating navi- such an outstanding man to counsel
| sored by the United Brethren tant part of the proof submitted in FINE REPORT OF
narrow that two rigs would be both
Sweethearts—Ace En!
and help in oftheir
healthbX
work
=ed In
to passing.
towto.
■"«
U WU
to, ^tonune erntoe ol with
to
AltoS!.
ered
church. The sessions open at 8 case the transaction
shall
be
ROD AND GUN CLUB
In those early days French in-1 are planning to have a phone in-1 which Harry Adrounle was a memn
ILh
tertainers
o'clock with Friday, June 26th, as brought Into court.
i Eaton. Van Buren. Calhoun and
fluence was of course predominant. stalled you had better do so at once . ber. has for the lime being been !
He explained about the formation
A full house was present Thurs­ the opening day.
Hillsdale.
in an -architectural
sense,----as iin allI' „ „ to
----------------------------n,me ln„rt,d I .tandorauL
The program for the beginners of the "Integrated Bar" in Michi­ Expend* |1,071.17 in th*
day night to enjoy the monthly din­
others. There stands the large house
Construction of Three
ner and entertainment at the Has­ and primary children consists of a gan. Before that law was enacted It
that was built and beautifully furi
CHASE S. OSBORN
tings Country Club, covers being fellowship period. foUowed by wor-1I was Impossible to deal adequately
Rearing Pond*
nlshed to receive Napoleon Bona­
.v. 163.
1OJ.
1
»ervlce, games, handicraft and with the shyster lawyer. No* it is
for
VISITS HASTINGS laid
parte. who was then in exile on the
A delightful program, supplement- I *^®ry hour. The older children will
U U“ Cl&gt;lm
rnU!rPr'4C
ot *
bland of St. Helena. He was to be prectlca i; jXtaM
J._____ .__ . ■___
.
a itndv
Ahnnt r»iir
have
ahivx
study.
"Learning About
Our
Ing
the
dinner
had
been
planned
by
I commercial nature, which requires Active and Alert as Ever
kidnapped by French sympathizers practically useless.
Church." followed by music, wor­
Another important act is one structlve work which benefits
the June committee.
and brought to free America to pass
entirely different classification. Or­
Miss Virginia Potts who never ap­ ship service. Bible study and handi­ making it possible for this state to the people of thia county. We 1
Despite a Very Strenhb remaining years
thb beauti­ PREMIUM LIST TO
ders had been received from muse­
peared In better voice, was given an craft classes. Temperance instruc­ enter into compacts with other
ful home, built and furntahed by hb
uoui Life
ums of leading colleges to secure
tion
will
be
given
by
representatives
states, such as Ohio and Indiana, report which shows that to
enthusiastic reception In the lovely
BE READY SOON specimens lacking In their collec­
wealthy French admirer Nicholas
We greatly enjoyed a visit Fri­ group *f songs she presented, and
and work together in an effort to ending April 30. IMS. ths cl
Girod. Perhaps thb was the first
tions of certain snakes, reptiles, fish day evening with former Governor the encores demanded. Russ War­
All children of the second ward suppress crime.
Important "Kidnapping" planned in Barry County Fair Book Is and amphibians native to oentral
Another act provides that if a
ner and Allegan's "Sweethearts of from the ages of 6 to 13 are invited
thb country. Elaborate plans had
America. Moving picture- concerns city for a few hours. While Chase the Saxophone." with their accom­ to attend.
judgment be entered against a man
Revised
According
to
been made for the capture of the
were also Interested in films that Is nearing the four score in age. panist certainly found favor and
Thursdays have been set aside tn a Michigan court and he la un- three fine rearing ponds near Um
exiled Emperor by hb friends. A
Suggestions
village of Orangeville. The three ar*
would be secured. This all was to yet Barry county friends will be scored a big hit tn their numbers. especially as visitors’ days when par­
fine yacht, supposed to be the fast­
Secretary Maurice Foreman of the be used to defray expenses only, the pleased to know that he is just as These four sixteen year-old girls, ents and friends and those inter­ court can make an order that lie be now In operation, and will furnish
est ship afloat at that time had Barry County Fair announces that leader milntained.
mentally alert as ever, and is one of sophomores in Allegan High school ested are cordially Invited -to come given the privilege of paying In in­
been especially designed and built the Premium List for the 1936 Fair
bluegills thia vear
all at
The expedition was held up at the outstanding characters hi this make an attractive appearance In in and watch the children at work stallments.
-one tbu could e„U, -.how 1U ■ will soon be ready for distribution. OalvestoH. Tcxm. and the delay and country today. He has packed far their black gowns and white satin and play.
will be planted In the lakes of
been- to en, chip, once It
out.Thu
premium u»t he. been extra expense Involved in reorganiz­ more into his most useful life than jackets. They are pretty and modest
his car into Michigan, and as a re­
where there wes ck-.r ulllns eheed. revlaed eccordlng to suwe.Uoiu ing meant that the young college could be absorbed by the average and play with a finish that places
sult
at
it
may
cause
damage
to
an
­
FARM LOAN ASSON.
New Orteern etthel Utne we. heedBUM, Qepe.tment ol Agrl- men. who formed a targe part of the man. He is an author, widely them quite outside amateur ranks.
other car, or injury to some person. the property has
ouerure tor Wench plrete. end | culture. Thu Deportment reellre. company, would not be able to re­
ANNUAL MEETING
known writer, world-wide traveler, They will be welcome anytime for
bucenneerewho knew the re.r The , lh, |mporunc. ot . t.lr In an agri­ turn in time for college opening this scientist, a deep student of world a return engagement.
his own state. His coming into
crew had been careful y selected for cultural county, and are giving fall, so they had no other alterna­ affairs, a successful business man,
Baskets and vases In the lounge Elects Director* and Amends Michigan automatically, according donated by Hobart Van
this Napoleon expedition. It was to more attention and support to tive than to give up the trip.
and a philanthropist, his gifts were filled with syringe brandies
to a new law. makes Um Secretary
By-Laws of the Or­
be In charge of Dominic You, one Michigan fairs each year. The officers
Harry U now on hb way back and mounting into the millions. Marked loaded with blossoms, yellow St.
of State of Michigan his attorney,
of the trusted henchmen of the of the society will again stress the while he b disappointed at the out­ success in every line he has under­ Johnswort combined with deep blue
upon whom service can be had in
ganisation
widely known pirates. Jean and] exhibits of agricultural products, in­
come of cherbhed plans, has found taken hasn't “gone to his head" in bachelor buttons made pretty table
The annual meeting of the Barry any legal action.
Pierre Lafitte, and a man in whose ; eluding 4-H Club, county extension the experience one he does not re- any way. as is too often the case, decorations. Contract bridge was
These are only a few of the many aervatlon la
County Fann I-oan Association was
vocabulary there was no such word Bnd school exhibits.
interesting things brought out by
and he is just as friendly and ap­ played late in the evening top scores
held on Tuesday afternoon in the
as “fear.” All details had been care- ; The policy of confining the exproachable as he was when he being turned in by Mrs. R. W. Cook Fuller hall, about 200 attending.
fully worked out, and once the great, hiblta to Barry county will again be INTEREST SHOWN IN
started out for himself as a poor lad *nd c. W. clarke.
Directors elected,are: Glenn WotNapoleon was in their hands, no; carried out. Thb makes R possible
HaieMf*.
Among those present from away
60 years ago He Is one of the
NOVICE TOURNAMENT over
rlng of Woodland; Will Haywood,
..
.
rs- • &gt;
i
trouble was anticipated until he was for Barry county exhibitors to com­
best-posted men in this country and were Mr. and Mrs. Ted Dodds and Rutland; Forrest Buehler. Irving; | i aymg Dividend
safe in this beautiful mansion, that pete with each other instead of with
because of his wide travel and stu­ daughter. Miss Jean. Kansas City. Charles Strickland, Johnstown, and
Lucile
Karmes
Wins
Tennis
x
.
—
(Continued on page 3, Sec. 1)
professional showmen.
dious nature. Ls remarkably well Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. Leon Stander,
Harley Townsend, Castleton. The
Farmers should plan now to ex­
Title in Women’s
versed concerning conditions the Mr. and Mrs. Cail Richards, Mr.
officers will be chosen later.
A WISE MOVE.
hibit their stock and other farm
world over. Most men. when ap­ and Mrs. Clarence DePlanta. Grand
Singles
Mayor Charles Leonard, n mem­ products.
proaching 80 years of age, think Rapids. Miss Evelyn Walton. New was voted giving the Board of Di­
Harry O Mohrmann, receiver at
The city tennis tournament bone - of "letting down" but Chase Os­ York City, Dr. A. B- Mitchell and
paid all the
ber of the board of supervisors by
rectors authority to change the the Freeport State Bank, announces club in addition to
quarter finished . . . that b. one di­ born's Intensive nature won't let Wm. J. Bums, Lansing.
virtue of his city office, offered a PRESBYTERIANS TO
time of the annual meeting when that another five par cent.dividend
vision
of
it
has
been
played
off.
and
motion Monday that the board au­
him. He is eternally doing some­
will be paid depositors, the checks
they
so
desire.
Other
items
of
gen
­
club
had
thorize the equipping of the county
PRESENT PLAY Lucile Karmes is the city champion thing, and here's hoping the good INTERESTED IN
being available on Tuesday. June
eral business were also discussed.
In the women's tingles. She won Lord may spare him for many more
garage and the county home with
The club la
automatic sprinklers for fire pro­ Well Trained Oa*t Will Give over Phyllis Hinman with a score years of useful service.
THEIR CITIZENSHIP
HOUSE DESTROYED.
tection. The board referred the mat­
Queen Esther Sun­
In the semi-final stage with Menon NOTICE TO DAIRYMEN
MISSIONARY TO
ter to the county property commit­
Several Visit the County of the city, owned by Archie Tobias
and Becker to play Wolfe and Roth.
TALK HERE 8UNNDAY. craallix s—timsat
tee for investigation. They are to
AND MILK HANDLERS.
day Nif ht
and occupied by Mr. Hagedorn and
There has been very little progress
Rev. Earl Rltenberg, late pastor
Clerk's
Office
for
Applications for 1938 and 1937
A
beautiful
play
entitled
"Queen
family,
burned
to
the
ground
Tues
­
so
far
tn
the
men
’
mdoubles
division,
of the Pilgrim Holiness church of
ty of the inmates of the county
milk licenses should be made at the
Information
n.™
™
toe
-cum,
o.
to.
uuuo.
|
«
“
?£.
•*
“
day afternoon. Moat of the con­
but the men's singles are also in the
home and the security of the build-1
Barry County Health Department
The
Banner
—
has
-----------recently
-------------printed
tenta were destroyed with the bulld--------—
semi-final bracket with Horace An­
articles with reference to appUca- Ing. The loss will be around 82.000,
gell. Ken Echlinaw and Gordon
cense This notice to especially Im­ tions by foreign-bom citfaens, who i partly covered by Insurance. There at the local Pilgrim Tabernacle.
a considerable saving in Insurance.
A
Crothera competing.
portant because milk licenses will wish to become American citizens.. was a lean-to. a part of the house Bunday night. June 38th at 7:4*
, B ,
______
one hour and there will be a sliver
The Grand Rapids Breaa Novice
This young man is well informed on
BARN BURNED SUNDAY.
offering to defray expenses. There tournament recently announce has
in the last one we mentioned the! used as a garage. Ln which a Ford the missionary subject and is an
had an inspection or complied with
* The rural fire truck was called
be three colorful scenes as fol- drawn good response.
case of a woman who was born in ■ car was kept. The fire originated
Nearly a
regulations Mt up by the State Bur­ thb country, but lost her citizenship In thb car. It was pulled out of the interesting speaker. The public Is
about five o'clock Sunday afternoon lowa;
eau of Dairying. Applications for 11- because she married a Canadian.1 garage as quickly as possible, but cordially invited to attend thia
to the home of Mrs. William Me-,
Scene*.
received. The Hastings tourna­
talk.
Nutt, near the Rhoda Wilcox school- I
Th* Garden of the Royal Pal- ment will draw from all of Blrry ccnse should be made during the who was never naturalised. Since the flro communicated to the
first week tn July.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
these items appeared the county building before it could be taken
county, and entries may be made up
ablaze when the alarm was given. I 2 The Court Room of King until July 15. There Is no registra­
..
W
tALA.71
oin-i.L.
clerk
has
been
---------------------by
Peraway.
The
fire
truck
was
called
ICE CREAM SOCIAL.
The fire destroyed the barn and two , Ahasuerus.
Quimby LAB serves homemade sons’ not cltt&gt;en4. who were bom in from thb city; but when it arrived. of ReaUter of Deeds on the
tion fee. Entry blanks may be se­
stacks of straw. The house was | &gt;■ The
Banquet Chamber of cured at, Hodges jewelry store or Ice cream and - ake at Ted Reid’s oil •other !ands; and In one or two cases It was impoadble to do anything, as
saved We have not learned the rQueen
""“" Esther
»-•&gt;— *
from Dwight Fisher, manager of the station this Thursday P M and by women bom In the U. 8.. who the building was half destroyed
There will be a well trained cast local tournament.
evening—Adv
, married foreigners
faretanara who
who haA
had nat
not whan
wiien tk»
the flraman
firemen arrival
arrived, although
amount of the loss.
at players in costume and the
| been naturalised, and thereby lost, they made a quick run. Mrs. HageMIXED DANCES.
■ ---------------------their citizenship.
It b evident that .| ----dorn
severely
burned one of her
scenes will be interspersed with
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
DANCE AT THOBNAPFU.
-- -----------------------------------­
.Wnnn. will
—Ill be several1 n.rt..
h—1 &lt; n_ .
I f n—. nl trtre An
Every Saturday night at Clear music and singing. Everyone la giv­
ithfactory mannsr.
Bat. night. Bud Wolfe's Prowlers,..j there
more nappllca, hands Irt
In nattempting
to k— wn
Dalton, Sat, Eve, Eckbr's Orch.
lake. Frank Herrington.—Adv. tf. en a cordial welcome.
-Adv. If.
tions for dttoenahlp.
| the household goods.
•I| Uons
citlaenahlp.

DEATH OF EMPEROR •
SPOILED THE PLOT

Democrats To
Hear President

EXPUINS SOME
_
OF THEM LAWS ££2^-2

Directory Soon
Going To Press

Starting Tuesday

�TB1 BA.TIMO. BANNM, TWVMMT, JUN1 U, UK

Lowest Prices in Barry County at

FOODjCENTER
PURE

CANE

SUGAR
IN

C

CLOTH

IO

Kerr Lids

9c

0.,

Mason Covers
19c
Beef Stew *—• 2
25c
Coffee V*c*8es Land Lb. 15c

15c

Peaches
Cocoa MotUr-s Bail 2

15c

Bread

25c

2

Heinz’s Soup

Bean Sprouts

RdXEY BRAND

LIBERTY BELL

White House

SODA

-»

15c
6c

POUND LOAF

Mackerel
Dog Food

3 -■ 25c
A tana 25c

Cigarettes
Four Popular Brandt

Corree

Crackers

TWO pkgs, for

2k

2d4‘

23c

^•1 •

U,.A, 19c

FUUt ••

VhlpSO 6ia«ul«.

5c Candy Bars 3 &lt;- IOc

IOc

IOc Tobacco

3

25c

P. 6»G. Soap IO »X' 35c

15c Tobacco

2

25c

terte

Ivory Soap
Kellogg’s p”

Flite. o» Largo
Too.iio.
PH

|/"S_
IVC

ShurFine Milk 4 &lt;— 25 c

1st Call! Peas, Corn, Tomatoes 3 NcJ 25c
CREAM NUT

BLOCK

PEANUT
BUTTER

FRENCH’S

PERFECT
FLOUR

50 LBS

2 Pound Jar

24&amp; lb. Sack

65c

22c
FRESH

MEATS

SWISS STEAK
LARD e~if.&lt;Addri
MINCED HAM
CHUNK BACON
PORK CHOPS

PURE

LARD
2 *■ 25c

Lb.

20c
10c
15c
22c
22c

Vegetables Fresh Daily
BANANAS ...

RADISHES ...

bunch 1c

CARROTS

bunch Sc

TOMATOES

..Ik 10c

HOME CROWN CELERY, bch. 10c

BACON
SQUARES

18t

■K*

ed in photographing the "dance of

Batter buy oool NOW! Priea* will
advance soon. Phone 2370. John-

Myron Bishop is assisting with the sharptails'* with color dims. This
movie la believed to be the first of
Its kind taken of the Interesting perlooking - very good" with promise of
a satisfactory yield thl* eehton.
’
Wonder lust who Mt but all thc
lovely catalpa trees in Hastings?
Some of the old Mttten must have
Mad a fondness for them.
One of the old farms In the Irish
Hills region has been sold to a
Jewish organization for a camp
ground, and later an orphanage will

taken
a blind:
A bad break in the water main
in the BOO block on W. Oreen street,
which happened some time Tues­
day night, kept a pumping engine at
work a good share of the day Wed­
nesday.
the ■ amount of water
thrown out Indicating that an un­
derground lake might have been

J. F. Edmonds, who has been ill
the past week. Is slowly improving.
Mr*. J. K. Mattoon was hostess to
the J. F. F. Club on Wednesday
afternoon.
Mrs. Levanche Merrick Is making
a nice recovery from her recent op­
eration for cataract.
Housewives will be interested in
the ••special" announced in LyBarker's adv. this week.
Harmony Lodge of Freeport came
over Tuesday night to put on the
Initiatory for the I. O. O. F. here.
According to orders issued by Sec­
retary of State Orville E. Atwood,
on July first auto licenses will go
on sale at half prices. This applies
to all cars. Half year permits—
"stickera”—are valid only Nil mid­
night. July 31.

No foolin'! I think it would be project had Just completed laying
smart to think about coal NOW! tile there and filling in dirt the day
Phone 2370. Johnson'*.—Adv.
previous.
Van w. Pendlll. who at one time
Better buy coal NOW I Prices will
carried on an undertaking business advance soon. Phone 2370. John­
In Nashville, on Thursday of last son's.—Adv.
week committed suicide at his home
Now that natural gas is to be
north of Marshall.
reckoned with as an Important cog
I Montgomery Ward have rented in domestic life here. It’s of Interest
the former Osborn factory of Mrs. to learn that three additional big
■ John McOmber for additional floor gassera all having an initial produc­
space in connection with their Jef­ tion ot more than 60.000.000 cubit
Altar Society meeting June 30 at
ferson street stores.
feet of gas dally, have been com­ eight o'clock at St. Rose Hall.
O B. Beatty, manager, and O. T. pleted in Belvidere township.
—••••Mont“— r
The Rutland cemetery circle «
Marrow, assistant manager, of the : calm county, one of the wells setUng a new-- big
record' for
state meet at the cemetery. Wednbsd
Montgomery Ward store r.oon to ------------------------------"" the
.. ..............
• open, have arrived In Hastings to with an initial production of 69 mil­ afternoon, July 1. All are welcome.
lion cubit feet of gas.
begin their duties.
The Goodwill L. A. 6. will meet
' Commencement exercises were
The Republicans of tba Fifth with Mrs. Gerald Smith, Friday
Held at W 8. T C- on Monday fore­ Congressional District, comprising । June 26 for dinner at noon. Everyere
»re | one invited.
noon and ail of the Hastings young Kent and Ottawa counUes.
folks attending that institution are planning a big rally to be held at |
Johnson Park on July Sth, with , Townsend plan meeting. 8. Jefhome for their vacation.
?rg —
as . ferson St.. Saturday evening. June
1 The department convention of Senator Arthur H. Vandenberarl a.
E. &gt;&lt;&lt;,
f 27. o.au
8:30 wiuca.
o'clock. hub
This ume
time me
the inmmeetthe American Legion and Auxiliary the main speaker. Cong. Carl
.... be
~ held al —
......
will
Lansing
on Aug. .Mapes Is chairman of the reception I Ing is to be on Saturday night and
The rally begins at only one week between meetings,
16. 17 and 18. A fine parade and | committee
program are being planned.
j three o'ciaak with sports and games A. D. Hancock of Otsego Is to be the
Ray Matthews of Middleville Is conducted by the Young Republi. . speaker.
organizing classes for piano In- I cans of the district, and closes with '
------struction on Thursday* at the mx ! ■ display of fireworks.
|
V- F- W- NEWS,
ond ward schoolhouse. This is a
The third authentic specimen of
AMm.r8
part of tiie WPA recreation pro- - thd most poisonous spider In North
1 Artertca. the black widow, to be
I Circumstances have seemed to found in Michigan, was recently ’J
.Te: ** n^d^h^hlu n’t least

Organizations

5Oc

LBS.

3 a&lt;. IOc

Can Rubbers

BAGS

Roy Chandler of the City bonk,
personnel L* enjoying a two wwh’

LOCAL NKW3

I

KING NUT

OLEO
2 »• 25c

THESE WON MONTHLY
CASH DRAWINGS.
A big crowd gathered Wednesday I
afternoon for the monthly »75 !
cash drawings offered by Hasting*
merchants, the place being switched
to the lower four corners of State
street for thia one. which gives each
section In town the benefit of the
gathering and dispersing crowds., i
Ttic five two dollar drawing* |
make it advisable to change
the sent1 to M. 8. C. entomology depart«
date ot the Commercial Club pic- I ment from Allegan county, being ‘
went to E. Kenyon; Wm. Linington
nic from July to August. The plan | discovered by Wm. Hale, fire lower-?uch.a.1. ‘he,r meH‘n“ last™ur«- 515 E. Clinton; Ruth Brady. 420 E.
'
day
night
now is to have it on Tuesday. Au- 1 man near the Plainfield tower. Thc ,
Colfax: Mrs. Waiter Hawkins. 1003
I The local Post went on record its [
gust 4. Particulars will be given specimen was shiny black with the 1
E. Slate; Mrs. Isa Hayes. 238 8.
j later.
.
1
Jefferson.
The five three dollar drawing*
Hon. Melvin W McPherson -* ' ---------- “ -•"*---------- -------------- ---------were won by Barbara Maurer. 1102
Lansing, head of the state t—
-------------------------- ----------------------------commission, appeared before the ' county, and
a
year
ago
one
from
*''a •
““
,rom t.„.nr, ,„d ml &gt; rewlullon w 8 Jefferson; Mrs. Minnie Kelly. 321
W
Apple; Mrs. Claude Moore. R. R
board of supervisors yesterday, to । Manistee county.
!or Hater u&gt; Ih.l rnrrl: that they
M,„ t(„„UQe Mc,
discuss the matter of county equal- |
John Van Zile. grandson of Mra.
1; Miss Gertrude McPhariin. R. R.
uciicvc
telleve ii
II to contrary io
10 me
tte purpose
purpo-c; .
, snrlter R R 3
ization ot property for taxation J. F Goodyear of this city, JV™
and ' of the bonus
hnniiR measure and
.nrl contrary
pnnlrarv jI *'2? , ?nr,oer’ K “
purposes
| youngest son of Judge ' and Mrs. I to thc .National Relief Administra- “1 The lucky ones to receive the
' three five dollar prizes were Mrs. L.
A ten-dny advance in the three-1 Donald’Van Zlle of Detroit, at the
tlon.
| Cridler.
Middleville;
Mrs
Arllc
boat ferry schedule at the Straits recent commencement exercises at
We sre planning to have n picnic
of Mackinac has been ordered by Asheville School tor Boys. N. C.. re- for the Post. Auxiliary and their I Endsley. R. R. 3; Mrs. Claude De। Mond. Woodland. R. R. 2.
the state highway officials. It seems'celved cum laude. marking superior
families in thc near future, prob­
Mrs.
Geo.
Wellfare.
512
W.
Madithe traffic has been unusually high | attainments. He also was tendered ably at some local lake where the
for this season of the year, a 25 per a scholarship, which he accepted, kiddles can have as much fun as | son drew the ten dollar one and the
। lop Cfteen dollar prize went to Mrs .
cent Increase.
••------ -----------• — — -• ’ —
their parents.
Bessie Smith. 127 E. Walnut.
In this Issue Richard Cook writes Ching University. Peiping. China,
an account of the first lap of his an educational institution
that
GLASS CREEK.
airplane trip to the west coast—the ranks with Harvard and other of
Sunday visitor** at Forrest Hav- DEATH OF MRS.
CECELIA TRAVER. [
night flight from Chicago to Kan­ our best known universities. John, cns’ were: Mrs. John Foreman and
sas city It will be found under the who Ls nineteen, Ls planning to leave Maurice and Donna of Kalamazoo
Mrs. ecceila Traver, aged 83 years,
"This and That" column on the July U. from New York, on a
Norman Erway and Harold Otis daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. James
| freighter, making an eight weeks' of Kalamazoo came Sunday
to Crawley and widow of Ed. Traver,
We call special attention this, trip of the Journey to China and spend the summer withh their was born In Ohio and came to Barry
week to our editorial page Oscar i with its numerous stops will fur- grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred county In a covered wagon nearly
Bchumann. of Grayling, a former j nlsh much of Interest. That the Otis.
80 years ago. For the past 66 years
Hastings boy 1* guest editor and i three years, which will probably be
Russell Whittemore has been sick she had resided on the farm in Bal­
sends In some very Interesting copy broken by a vacation trip home, the past week with a strep throat. timore township. She passed away
which we know will be enjoyed by will be full of rich and unusual ex­
Sunday callers at Chas. Whitte­ Saturday noon of cardio vascular
Banner readers
pertences. goes without saying.
more’s were: Mrs Cleo Brown and trouble, having been sick since DrJoe Hummel and Charles M. ReU- ,
No foolin'! I think it would be children of Hickory Comers. Mr ccmber She Is survived by two |
enweber. both of Nashville, were ' smart to think about coal NOW! and Mrs Fred Bechtel of Hastings. sons. Ed at Baltimore Twp. and Ira | The leg o’ mutton sleeve worn
of ----Hastings;
five daughters.
Mrs.- j
arrested here early Saturday mom- , Phone 2370. Johnson’s —Adv
Mr and Mrs. Lowell’Whittemore —
™^-, -------------?-----------------when mother was a girl is mod­
ing for causing a disturbance. |
A. L. Brown, slate highway maln- of Delton and Robt. Shrtcker of Hatley Moore Mrs Ulllan Wood ’ ernized in this chic afternoon
| and‘ Mrs Charles Tebo
of Hastings.
They were brought before Justice tenance engineer, reports that an- Richland
‘
* I suit of black silk ottoman with
Cortright. admitted their guilt, and !other distribution of calcium chloMr and Mrs. Ray Erway and Mrs pred Benham of Battle Creek
white dots, and is tn accord
each paid a 810 fine and 14 50 costs. | ride is being made on the slate —
...»
family
and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Otis and Mrs. Fred Fisher of Marshall,
with mid-season modes. The
John L. Zurbuck. director, and ' trunk lines in Barry county this attended the graduating exercises also several
grandchildren and
blouse Is of sheer handker­
Andrew Jordan, assistant director. | week This will doubtless be appre- at the W 8 T C. last Monday. Miss other relatives. As long as she was
chief linen, finished with a
of the Naturalization and Imml- elated by those living along
the Ruth E Erway being one of the able she was a faithful attendant
green satin bowknot.
of
the
Methodist
Episcopal
church
gratlon Service, both of Detroit, [ road*.
RmdiutM
graduate*.
were here Tuesday to discuss with
Mrs Keith Fox Is entertaining
Mrs ________________________
Eha Brlsto ot Lansing re- of which she was a member. The fu­
DEATH OF M188 LINCOLN.
County Clerk Hyde the naturaliza- 1 tonight with a golng-away party turned home Sundayafter spending neral war held on Tuesday at two |
tlon cases which will be determined honoring Miss Kittle Atkins, who the past two weeks with her daugh- o’clock al the home, the Rev. C. M j Many in Hastings will remember
was in Miss Mabel Lincoln, twin slater of
In the circuit court here next Sep- Is being transferred to the tele- J ter. Mr*. Clyde Warren and family Conklin officiating. Burial was
Mrs. A. W. Woodburne.. who made
tember
, phone exchange at Grand Rapids
• Homer Erway was n Lansing vls- Dowling cemetery.
her home with the Woodburne fam­
1
i itor over the week end
ily here for several years. Last fall,
PRESBYTERIAN
BIBLE
•
। John Erway of Lansing Is spend­
after Dr. Woodburne sold hl* home
SCHOOL
THIS
WEEK.
,
The Presbyterian Bible School •nd practice here. Miss Lincoln
from * distance were Mr. and Mrs will be continued one more week went to Pueblo. Colorado, where »he
I Al Wolfe and daughter, also Maur- from 9 to 11:30 o’clock each morn­ spent the winter A short time ago
she went to visit a niece who lived
। ice Erway and Harold Sharp of ing.
Hasting*, Michigan • Telephones 224-1-2557 BL—
I Grand Rapids.
The subjects taught are as follows in the mountains beyond Denver.
1
MIm Annette Wolfe of Gntnd
Knitting—Mrs. Dorothy Adrounie. Just the day before she planned to
leave the home of her niece to go
Music—Mra. John Kltching
, Rapids and Miss Virginia Smith
I of Hastings are spending the week
Clay Modeling—Miss Betty Tre­ to Tampa. Florida, to again make
her home with her sister. Mrs.
dinnick.
SUNDAY end MONDAY. JUNE 28 and 29
Woodburne. she was taken seriously
Art—Mrs. Marlyn Sandeen.
ik.
Mr and Mrs. James Coot of BaljF j tie Creek were Sunday visitors al
Crayon Drawing -MIm Virginia III. Bile died June 19 at a hospital
James Oliver Curwood’*
In Denver. Both MIm Lincoln and
▼ Chas. Whittemore’s.
Rucker.
jkl Mrs Forrest Havens, accompanCarpentry—Mr. Lemuel Sever- Mrs. Woodburne wert looking for1 ward to their being together again,
| led by Mrs John Foreman and Mrs Bncc
AjuiODlo-MlMe.
Btehlel
and
!
tel U&gt;«c •„ nol U&gt; ». Mlaa Un♦ Nellie Foreman of Kalamazoo, call­
.
| coin was an accomplished vioUnlsl
ed on Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shively Bryknt
With ROCHEIXE HUDSON. Pawl Kelly. Robert Kent. Alan
Dramauco-Her. John Kllehlna. I and • aplendld leather at mualc.
I near Gun lake. Bunday.
Hale. Alan Dinehart and "BUCK"
All children ere made welcome
sincere wmpaU,, la extended la
♦
Little Anita McGlockiln of HasBARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY at 1:00 and 3:90 o’clock
----------- । Mrs. Woodburne.
AJ tings is spending a few weeks with
All Other Performance*—Adults 25c; Children 10c
FAMILY REUNION.
i
--------’ •
| her grandparents. Mr, and
Mrs
The
Van
De
Walker-Hammond
I
P,NE UAKE.
Forrest Havens.
reunion was held at Mllham park.! On Saturday Mrs Georgia BellBARGAIN TUESDAY NIOHY. JUNE 30
, "They can’t buy from us if we Kalamazoo, June 31. 1938 Forty-J Ingham entertained her cousin*,
| don’t let them sell to us. ”—Henry eight were present for dinner. The Mrs Flora Smith of Fort Atkinson,
, J. Haskell.
oldest in attendance was Mrs. Min- jWte, and James Howrlgon of Plaln[
Believe In the better side of men; nle Hammond of Hastings, aged well­
With JAMES GLEASON and HELEN BRODERICK
j It Is optimism that really saves peo- eighty; the youngest present, De-1 Mrs. Violet Warner and Virginia,
lores Hammond
of Prairieville »l*o Mrs. Anna Louise Duff are al
| pie."—Ian Maclaren.
township, five weeks old. Thc rc-1 their Pine lake cottage.
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
union for 1937 will be held at the I Mrs. Anna Draper, who h caring
‘ -Ham
1home of—
Mr. and—
Mrs. {.eland
­ for her niece. Mrs Milo DeVrle*.
WED., THU RS and FRI. JULY I. 2 and 3
in Hastings, spent the week end
mond of Prairieville township.
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ford.
Cash Heitman ot Dodd City. Kan­
FAIR LAKE.
sas. who has worked in Alev Uln­
The Kinsley school reunion will
Starring RONALD COLMAN. Featuring CLAUDETTE COL­
be held Bunday. June 28. for a pic­ ar's dairy for the post six week*,
BERT. VICTOR MrLAOLEN, ROSALIND RUSSELL
nic dinner at the Kinsley school­ returned to hl* home on Saturday.
The Helping Hand Club will meet
With Gregory Ratofl. Herbert Mandin. Nigel Bruce. C. Henry
house. Everybody come and meet
with Mrs. Champion
Wednesday
old schoolmates, friends and neighafternoon, July 1. Each member
Adults 25c; Children 15c
plea*e
bring their favorite salad re­
Mrs. Laura Fry of Grass Lake. Is
,
spending the week with her daugh­ cipe, and paper and pencil.

y

Dashing Dots

-----------

tf ITANC TtiEATCF

THE COUNTRY BEYOND'

“MURDER ON A BRIDLE PATH”

UNDER TWO FLAGS’’

SATURDAY ONLY—JULY 4

-tn-

DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
FEATURE NO. 1

ill

TIMOTHY’S QUEST

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL NINE

With
♦

Food Center

I
[

Eleanor* Whitney. Tom Keene. Dickie Maare
and Virginia Wald Mr
FEATURE NO. 2

t ‘The PREVIEW Murder Mystery
sL,

With Reginald Dtnny. Franca* Drake. Gail Patrick.

Ephode Na. It of "FLASH OOKDON" will be shewn

AdalU
Arnie IX;
WCi luuwiii
ChUdztu ttc
ioc
1 -A-a-A'-

aAa

-v ।

AaA a&amp;a ’A'A-'A*t1

-T'T'l ▼'LT -P ▼'7' ▼Tv 'TTT ▼A- “

“tT

«Ji

ter, Mrs. Lotlie CollisUr
Miss Iva Case and Miss Larcda
Frit* spent Saturday In South Ha­
ven.
Mrs. Davis of Battle Creek visited
Mrs Earl Fritx Bunday.
Gamer Hampton and family.
Floyd Armour and family. Lyle
Dldkerwn and family of Hastings
were Bunday callers al their fa­
ther’s. H. O Armour a.
Ray Pierce and family of near
Banfleld visited Mrsr Earl
Frits
Sunday..
The Bunnell Ladies’ Aid will be
held Thursday for supper with Mrs.
Allie KelleyLeo Lechteltner spent Sunday
with friend* In Jackson.

NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Mr and Mra. Delbert Reynolds
spent Sunday afternoon tn Battle
Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Merrill of
Hastings and Forrest Bldelman ot
Branch district were Thursday eve­
ning callers at Mr and Mrs. Wil­
liam Cramers
Mr. and Mrs. E H Gier of Flint
and Mr. Chester Haines and Ruth
Gier of Detroit were week end

MARRIAGE UCEN8EA.

Cleo C. Everett, Nashville 22
Margaret W. Patten. Hasting* .20
Q..Whuton Sheffield oily 83
Vcrneice v Plumley. City23
War is niwr democratic. It I* Winston L Boye* City
autocratic. '—O. E- RajgneL

“ r.-*;—1.

Beth R. Haven, city .,

-

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, TtWfcSDAt, JtTNl 15, H38

IT'S A NEW GAG AND JANE THOUGHT OF IT

ships were all ready to land their
armed forces hi Louisiana. They
offered the Lafittes large sums as
bribes. But it can be said to the
credit of the pirates that they de­
clined the offers and volunteered
SOFT BALL SCHEDULE.
their services to General Andrew
Monday. June 29.—Kirsch Broth­
Jackson who at first scornfully re­
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
ers vs. Rogers Grocery; Bliss Foun­
fused them, but finally yielded to
dry vs. Bliss Machine Shop.
Tn^fay, June
30—Consumers j had been especially built to receive the smooth importuntles of Jean
and luckily loo. The Lafittes and
Power vs.'Hi-Way; National Bank .him But. alas; how often the besttheir gang of dare-devil spirits ren­
vs. Feldpausch.
| laid plans of mortals go wrong! Be- dered yeoman service in the great
Thursday.
July 2 —Consumers1 jore tju. rejcue party got started. and very important battle of Now
Orleans, which services Gen. Jack­
I Friday. July 3.—Chain Store vs. i1,01
denied, had entered the plc- son highly commended. It is even ’
claimed that Jean Lafitte was pres-1
Rogcrs Grocery; Hi-Way vs. Feld- lure. The sou! of the exiled Emper- ent .with Gen, Jackson in the old
I pausch.
or *ns taken before assistance from "Absinthe House" and aided in
'
.
■
’ lhe New World,could reach him. Bo planning the very important bat­
STANDINGS.
I the “Napoleon House" still stands
! Following are lhe standings of Mi New Orleans as a beautiful dream tle. which the Americans under Gen.
Jackson won. ana
jacxson
and the
me scene oi
of
the teams in lhe Soft Ball League Hu»l d*d not come true. .In the which is one of many interesting
cemetery at *•New «-»
Orleans an •—
im­
up to and Including June 23:
spots that we visited.
pel i presslve monument marks the last
We.chanced to be in New Orleans
1.000 resting
‘
’■*
“ pirate ”
*“'■
place
of' **
the
Dominic
Kirsch
on Friday. May 3rd. and observed so
manyW.busues
___ -- -11..1
nUcd wlth happy chU
-k.il '
Feldpausch
1.000 party ti take Natmleon from ^he _____
I dr€n Uden wlth n°wer»* that we
.666 BritUhUlndkbrlnvIhlm
Nat'l. Bank ....
E^7
h
vi*i*.
d
hUn
.^
.
N
f
qulred lhe reason. We were inHi-Way
371
(ormed lh*1 "ThU u McDonogh
I Table Co
355 but thl1
N . OrlPfln, atul lhe
.500 but the Emperor s death prevented ID
Cons. Power Co. .
fre^him'ani^brhis hUnto NeV Or*: och001 chlldren “re strewln« flowers
Bliss Foundry ...
°
on bls monumenL
LaMyette
Rogers Oro
375
qauare" Thc school children
by
□33 leans to spend his last years.
Triangles
New Orleans refunded wRh^the 'lhe way' bullt lhe tnonumenl
hu
Bliss Mach
Nev.
Orleans
resounded
ulth
the
|
1&gt;ctnor
y
There
is
an
engaging
story
Chain Store ....
.125
Piston Ring
.125
■«« -­

HOUSE BUILT FDR
EXILED MPOLEON

Sporting 'Items

L6ET
2. THE

■»••*■■■ •»" •"&gt;

S

Movie stars have been writing tbelr names on things for yean, endorsing this, endorsing that. But
when little jano Withen. stormy child of Hollywood, saw this new Studebaker Dictator Cruising
Sedan, she thought of a new one. She took out her faithful piece of chalk and did lhe inscription
seen above.
Uttle Jane is appearing IN PERSUN, as the press agents say. at prominent picture
bouses throughout the country.

He’s
Ace
High!

BOWENS MILLS.
Mrs. Belva Edger and family of
Hastings have been spending the
I past week here with her mother.
,Jn. Burdette
nuroene Briggs.
Mrs.
Mr. Holme, or Br.dle, ... the

For Your
Entertainment
We Bring

Irvin S. Cob
Amtrict 1 Foremost Humorist
Coursing through tba mind’s channels from wit to wisdom
comes ibis radio entertainer, journalist, novelist, magazine
author and dramatist—a great mind whose columnar
comments on the world's troubles will make you rock with

hand
man ---------------------------------------If their dark and bloody
u f
hU
£ j
----------------dw&lt;U could only be reeounled.
lhe
l
«lee&lt;lo
recounted, the
number would
doubUew, be
be astonlshMonUh- .
X “eMury «o
number
would doubtless
U.,ly Ur„ Uulu nelur.Uy
n J JXF. “ol u lie ehUd?enMoi

laughter in one moment, contemplate with utter sobriety tn
tho next. Cobb's life has been a full and adveniurooma

Mr. and Mrs. Gid L. Gage.
week end guest of her son and wife.
»lrong^feeling against^^tlie (lJje New Or]ean&gt; of today.
Van W pendlll. 61. a former real- ( '*.HotaiM
British, and these pirates
to I
‘ ’
W. seemed
R. Cook.
for the whimsical and humorous sides In this day-to-day
dent of Nashville killed himself, v.«.
v
and
—
sometime Thursday afternoon sthlil
•
- ..- m
M.' 9’ o.
A- -- take special delight in preying on
tussle with our follow humans. Bunch together theeo
I their leader from the Barlow lake British commerce. If reports are to ia/hiiAM CAIklTQ
residence about six miles northeast Ileamn attended ehurrh her» Run. be believed, many and many a well- | WUMAN FAHlIO
varied experiences and abilities and you have a man
«! Mkrsh.lt on W.dnmd.y
““P
,b&gt;X Si
loaded English ship sailed out from |
li/UliCnDIVIkin
noon while painting he-had been dBy".
8l’“nng was ilhe homc P°rt- never lo ** heard|
whose writing knows no peer, whose humor and wisdom
___ —
WnlLt UrilVINU
injured in a 14 fool falf Mr Pen^2? n f
'
fit admirably into your reading program.
The
funeral
of
Burdette
Briggs
From
again
Doubtless
"storms
at
dill was associated in the undertakrunerai nr
on June 13th was largely attended «*-' may have been assigned as the Mrs. Thelma Chapman’s Car
Jwin'a^n Whuiin?in ^''htmwii by friends
,runaa ana
relatives
irom
rar
,,u
‘
*'=
“
*
and relatives from far reason, but lhe real cause was Jean
Crashed Into a Parked
whtt^
i *nd ncar
...... - The
*1-.,.. church .....
was far too and
»nd Piprr,*
Pierre Lafitte,
f jkfltln and thair
their sturdy
Kturdv
While
..
.
.
. baIld of buccaneers, These plunwhile living m
in Nashville
Nashville. He leaves I
Auto
a son. Harold of Battle Creek. Fu- ^a11
thMr lau
deters made their headquarters on
Mrs. Thelma chapman, whose I
neral services were held Monday '
afternoon at the Farley funeral
rtn? tn nur^iri Barataria Bay in thc southeastern home Is in Delton but who Is tern- I
part of the state, from which they porarily residing in Battle Creek I
Battle BCr2‘e3k °Cl0Ck: bUrUl *“ ln , neighbor. Rev Baughman of Sun-! sailed out to prey on commerce—
Battle creex
! field and a close friend of Mr , , chiefly British commerce. Possibly where her husband Is working on a
Miss Phyllis Brumm and friend Brlggs- fOr tbe loving history of to lend an air of respectability, and new schoolhouse being constructed._____
of Grand Rapids spent Sunday aft- lhclr former days and tributes of to divert suspicion from them, the W‘\the. V^m Of * pruU^JfBfllc through this week, the closing servSunday morning, taking
ernoon with her parents.
pr.it
. I Lafitte Brothers operated a black­ accident Friday morning. She co - lce
place of the Sunday school and
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lentz and | a male quartette from Grand smith shop in the then small French lapsed at the wheel of her car while
driving in Battle Creek, causing her
followed by
preaching
BANNER WANT ADV*. MT
family spent the week end at their) Rapids will accompany the pastor settlement, the site of that shop be­ r.r
tn th.
m1m
Conklin
car to rr,.h
crash In
into
the rear of a narkpark­ I---------cottage at Wall lake.
I Mr. VandertUl at the church next ing one of the "show places" to­ . &lt;1
loatlnn hv
H.'
... .*
ed automobile. Tr,VA&lt;l
Investigation
bv t the
The Ladles' Aid of the Evangelical Sunday. June 28th. and render spe- day. But on days when the shop was police showed that the accident was will give the message. You an
cordially Invited to attend these
closed SUUKUIUIS
something was pkCbVJT
pretty upi
apt IO
to
. church will hold a bake Sale Salur- j cial music. Sunday school. 10:15 A- CIOSCU
i due to her ill health, and that she
day morning at the C. L- Glasgow ‘M.; Preaching. 11.15 A M.. Let's
six*;
Lloyd Goodenough of Camp Cus' 5tore
play it is "Go to church Sunday" weklthy • Bl«k Martthe CalMor- I
J“ “j. “’Si
Extreme cold was blamed for failure of first American attempts at
*r was a Friday night guest of
I
Mr..
Roll
Bander.
I.
pl.nnlnk
W
telD
»
»
“
»
WTh.
’
B.UU
embk
pollu
rocket mall flight* In recent tests at Greenwood Lake. N. Y. in this
nlu stage-coach bandit, left San i nun. ine tjuuie
i
Hilton.
"I thought that possibly her driver s
,Cenneth
a,
picture, the rocket' plane, driven by a poWerfu) explosive. Is shown i return with her niece, Mrs
Ola
emivro
Francisco to "visit hLs gold mine." ;
----------—--- -------leaving tho catapult just before it fell to the ground, in a previous ,
lcUn
-------?----------------n»n!nd«? t»U,.1r haM
„„„
Harran His "gold mine" was the Wells-Far­ I ' license might be taken from her Ion - WOOD
SCHOOL
DISTRICT.
attempt, the streamlined all-metal plane, with 15-foot wings, had Carthage. Mo., for “ maenn,w and family of Battle Creek spent go Overland Express line, which he account of the condition of her I We are glad for the large attend­
tailed to leave the catapult.
A cargo of mall w - •­
systematically "held up" every few health.
ance at the Children's Day program
Mr and Mrs Charles Kohler and
*,tb Mrs„ 8!r’b Lc,k”
flown via rocket Into New Jersey.
I Sunday evening. The children did
kxr« nrnrsp namnhell left Tuesdav '
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Bumford and weeks for over seven years before
MARTIN CORNERS.
,
he was captured. The loot of ti»e
well. we
We uixm
thank uxose
those irom
from Freeport
.
» ' weu.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Chapman of
Hastings who furnished music
NASHVILLE.
] one. Clair Brooks of Detroit. A bas' । with Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Buck- Lafitte gang of pirates is said to
Louis. Mo.
d ner near Sunfield.
; have been burled all along the Gulf Barryvllle were Sunday guests of----- -------------------------- ------------ .------------Mlss ' Virginia Weeks is visiting . ket of flowers was presented to Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Housler and
Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher, also Mr address. Everyone Is welcome to our
Mr
and
Mrs
Hugh
Foster.
Clar'
coast,
and
doubtless
a
lot
of
it
is
her aunt. Mr.i Ronald Kenyon mar nnd Mrs. ErL Schantz who were family are moving on the Mert
and Mrs. J. M. Townsend of Has- '; Bunday school.
Hickory Corners.
| celebrating their 53rd wedding anni- Raze farm south of Vermontville, I cnce Ickes and daughter Lucille of' still cached there. In the earlyyears
1 Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Plfield's
! Bowling Green. Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. of the 1800's tales ofthe exploits of
Miss Minnie Bailey is visiting Mr..
®unday'
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betts and .
— in
lv. the
fly — Newton
mrtem family
e ■ n. 11 &gt;,
pirateswereLloyd
__ _--------------------------Cogswell of East
„
Lansing
----- grandchildren
and Mrs Earl Mudge at Hastings.
Arlle Reedu*nd Mr. Thrasher left family spent Sunday near Detroit.!&gt; Wayne Wheeler, Mr and Mrs. Chas, the Lafitte gang of
circulated
Theyw»re was
...............
a caller
«™- at Orr Fisher's Bun, much b«l«r. AU -er. dek »lth
Miss Electa Fumlaa of Battle' Saturday morning
for Chicago । The Misses Marjory Jensen. Mil- j! Ickes and family of Battle Creek widely
1 and Mr. and Mrs Dale Bump of1 watched as closely
as possible^oMime
by dayoy
morning.
He left He
Sunday
fore­ lore-,
,
day
morning.
lert
aunaay
Creek was a week end guest of her &lt;he« they are attending North­
our own government, so closely in | noon for the Dunbar forest experi­
sister. Miss Minnie Fumlss.
’ western university.
Little Albert Kidder is expected ,
Mr. S.
Dora- "ld •»“ R
*11,hClayWb shurlow u&gt;d fact that the pirates were com- ment station near Sault Ste. Marie, home from Ann Arbor this week.
Children's Day was observed dur- ' The last meeting of the Chamber mf tl.h.r hIS? wJrrid
i
M,s
pelled to move their "headquar- | to attend a ten weeks’ summer
Ing thc Sunday school hour at the ' of Commerce for the summer was
The children of the Bunday school
ters" from New Orleans. The Lafitte school for students in forestry.
Evangelical church A fine program , held Monday night at the Odd Fel- from k Ihrw wwk.' vi.il with lheir 1 !j?111jnHPe5lr?'huI^y s'buik)wWtol gang had become wealthy through j The Young People's class lield and their mothers will be enter- I
.uni in k™ city.
I«’ ‘nd M"
B*rt ®’“rto*
was given by the children in honor I low hall.
the sale of their loot and the gold their class party at the church last lained at the home' of Mrs. Engle ;
of Fathers Day. Gifts were pre- I
Mr and Mrs. John Johnson and
and sliver t taken from captured , Friday evening. There was a good this week Thursday. The children ,
Rented to the oldest father. Mr. । daughter of St. Mary's Luke spent ln “.P.U.O. .t
B.. ships. However this much can be attendance and a fine lime was en- worked so well on their program '
Trim of Hastings also the youngest' Sunday with the latter’s parents,
they Reserve this reward.
the hospital where she was brought I11 °r
cM.hp_ nf Nathviita sald for them. After the war of 1812 joyed by all. Refreshments were
Mrs. Leslie Grosse will go to i
had been declared with England, cookies and lemonade.
In unconwlouy .nd In . «*«■
h
tlw English naturally
‘ had a deep
’
Mrs. Edith McCutcheon and Ut­ Charlotte this week Wednesday to .
c Wr. iimnn Hhoirtnn urs pinv I Mr- and Mrfl Ix*° Reynolds and appreciation of what a great help ile granddaughter of Brookfield have ber teeth extracted. We hope 1
Newman Mr., Ralph wiuwrbee and
*i"'1,1duk“su^T'"' ” It would be to have lhe Lafitte pi­ viillcd Mrs H. CogsweU and Mrs. her health will be benefited by so ■
j doing.
Mrs.
la ..
... rates with them. They were familiar Orr Fisher Monday of last week.
Mrs. Gall
Gall Lvklns
Lykins were
were at
at Clear
Clear lake
lake un?°n at.T.
Daily vacation Bible school has t Prayer meeting Wednesday. July 1
Mr. and Mrs. Dell Reynolds spent with almost every foot of the shore
and Battle Creek Sunday.
Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Charlie line, with all the bays, rivers and been held every day at the church 1 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hen- ।
Miss Donna Northrup of Battle
| ry Kidder.
Inlets
to
the
sea.
and
all
the
roads
the
past
week
and
will
continue
•
Graham of Battle Creek.
Creek spent the week end with her
Mr. and Mrs. Ira ChafTee and Mr. leading to New Orleans, as well as
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ejmer Northand Mrs. Manley Sherman of Has­ all the territory surrounding the
Light colon and cool fab­
nip.
tings spent the week end with Mrs. city. Their assistance would be in­
rics require frequent clean­
valuable to the British, whose war
Chaffee's brother In St. Johns.
ing to retain their fresh
The only country In the whrld
appearance.
You'll find
which allows individuals to collect
McCREERY’S Cleaning a
a private toll from deep-sea fisher­
Real Aid to comfortable
men is Denmark. For many centu­
dress all Summer long.
ries It has held steadfast to a law
which gives the owner of shore
We eell lhe finewl white
land the right to “rent the sea" tn
front of his property for eel fiah- |

First Rocket Mail Flight Fails

lots

"Cobb Appctn Regularly

IN THIS PAPER

Waters Clothes SI

eeve worn
Irl is modafternoon
iman with
in accord
xles. Tho
handker1 with a
4 knot.

INCOLN.
11 remember
rin sister of

lid his home
Jm Lincoln
o. where sne
»rt lime ago
:e who lived
i planned to
niece to no
again make
sister. Mrs,
cen seriously
,t a hospital
Lincoln and
looking for;ether again,
B. Miss Un­
ited violinist
r of music,
extended to

SPECIAL

MAC

Yes!
Better Foods
Cost Less at

FISHING SPECIAL

McCREERY’S • DRY CLEANERS

TELEPHONE 2140

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

J,
ISI '8 lb. JAPAN SILK, Waterproof,
000.—Feeling Foster, In Collier’s
BLACK CASTING LINE, 50 yd&gt;.
Weekly.

I SPECIRL !

Planning A Trip?

4,QC

style and fit, but of a

very superior fabric, for

! SPECIRL!

feldpausch ^^arket
PORK LOIN

FRESH GROUND

nd Virginia.

ROASTS

Hamburg

ho is caring
ilo DeVries.

Pound-

‘2Oc

2*-2?c

Rib end

THES

1IKER-

And one way, one sure way, of avoiding trou­

•t Reynolds
n in Battle

ble is to have your car completely checked
at lhe reliable Andrus Service Station.

Her of Flint
s and Ruth
week end

Ule .......... n
actings ..to
«y . .. to

STEEL-PtKFCCr
TEMPER THROUOH- ',
OUT. EXPERTLY
'
pOUSMD^ERICTrED

In

DRIVE IN TODAY!

ANDRUS SERVICE $
"

Cor. Jefforton
lefferson and Court Sti.
Sts.

• FIRESTONE TIRES AND TUBES
• BATTERIES, WINDSHIELD WIPERS

Bologna

Spri

• •

Halting*,Mlehaaan
Michigan
Haitinm.

8&lt;,**h*

SUNOCO GAS and OILS, GREASING
VULCANIZING,

WASHING

Bcn.Tron
errsciencv ua scavitk

ARMS

ron
zx.

29c

2

a

Lb.

Cooked

Branded
Beef

Kettle Roast 1

25c
18c

Sliced Bacon

29c
Lb.

15c

S

FR/CT/ONUSS emume
EW/PPEDl^k SesterAojusm
STRQM6 S7WOYBASE

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE
142 E. State St

^*&lt;i.

Corned Beef
i»icH

addition you'll find unusually low prices on

all auto accessories

J-ARH REVOLVING

6 /•TgllJH«*VV

• Yoa*U be able to enjoy It more If you know

that you won't have trouble with your car.

NBES.

'

Ifs mforuei Anti;
Us shoulders ere lowered/

Us Flesuon roller sU/s
put.

bert Ford,
d City, Kani Alev MlnI six weeks.
4i Saturday,
ub will meet
Wednesday
ch member

Merrill ot
Bidelman of
lursday eve-

shirt, not only in correct

"Tw

eorgia Bcllier cousins,
rt Atkinson,
on of Plain-

tell.

WHIT
SHIRTS

Hastings
HasUngs

Phons 2331

BUTTER
Del Monte

■ gs

&amp;»l5c

rreeporx
Pound-

WA

And mu unck of all
inn, from 14 to la aod

•h-eve leiifdu — S3, M.
34 and 35 . . .

RtiuUrt Km
SHIRT SM
TrjthudUn,'

�BOOST THE COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

t*u SfM
n*t CnCTtl

The Hastings Banner

Joumal office where we started our
career as a printer. In lhe same
block. Julius Stark operated a tak­
en. on lhe opposite ride of the
.sue of the Bonner.
J street was lhe John Wetasert hard­
TO BE INVITED to be a guest ware store, operated until recently
editor of the Hastings Banner dur­ by hi* sons, Charlie and John. On
ing ttN absence of 1U clever young the comer where the City Bank now
editor. Dick Oook. came to us a* stands. O- D. Spaulding conducted a
a surprise. To write a column or dry goods store. In lhe south end of
two for the old home newspaper is that structure • Pap" Nichols, father
indeed a privilege. A father asked of "Happy George." a well known
hb son If thc examination questions character of those days, had a con­
bothered him and received a nega- ffectionery
ect|Onery and notions store
store. He
tive reply with an explanation that |
everytlilng Imaginable, indudlt wa* the answers that bothered lng revolvers. Across Jefferson street
him. Just' so with us; we wonder. on lhe comer g. y. Hogle ran a dry
what the thousands of readers of Et&gt;0&lt;]5 stOre. and directly In the
the Banner would like to have pf- rear ffls me "Little Brick Grocery"
fered Uiem editorially for thb week and we
lhat MbU
wU the
We might recall some of our mem- cjerk.
dries of the Old Home Town, or we
Above the Hogle store were lhe
might tell something of Grayling Jaw offices of Knappen
Colgrove.
and the North country, or we might. BelIc jjandy wa3 the efficient sec­
tell something about ourselves and retary for that splendid legal firm,
some of our person*! activities. But, Above these offices was Union Holl,
none of these ptam would suffice. (where dramatic companies present­
Banner reader* already know about, ed
attraction* and where poH astings, and they are not partlcu- j UUcai meeting* were held. Although
tarly interested In Grayling and s{111 vcry young *t the time, we
still les* in us. Subscribers arc en- 1 hcard Senator Hoar make a mastertilled to intelligent comment on ful political address there. We still
matters that are of public Interest. rtcan h|* eloquence.
It is a duty of an editor to give
At lhe
National Bank. Dansuch guiding service and we know lel 8lrlkcr wai lhe president and W.
you subscribers have received the D Hayes lhe CBAhter.
highest
.
type
- -•
of editorial
-•••—«-• service
■— ■in
Another gentleman we recall very
thc Banner ever since lb inception. clearly
Cle„ly wa*
w„ David R. Cook, father
Newspapers are like Individuate; of M L and w R Cook Of the
there are no two alike. Our own edl- Banner
onc ume he wrote a
torial comments have been confined ■ ntlmbcr of axiom*. much like those
quite closely to local matters. It ta pub^ed in "Poor Richard's Alonly occasionally lhal we have di- manac." jOne
;
­
of these that we -regrossed from lhal policy. Dally • mc!nlx.r uas ln meaning "Too much
newspapers come into most home* I
may cauM. a sh(&gt;e aUlng w

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yetierday

„
Crawford
Avalanche.
Grayling, has written ths fol-

TWENTY YEARS AGOMito O DeVries of thb city and
Mias Alice A- Johnson of Cloverdale
were married Ln the Methodist Rptacopal church last Thursday after­
noon. Rev. Russell H. Bready of­
ficiating.
One ot the twin fawns which re­
cently arrived in the city deer park
died Thursday night.
Vem Rogers, athletic coach and
teacher in Hastings high school
and hb successor. Alger Wood of
Alma, will attend the University of
Illinois summer school.
Mr». Maude Stuart-Tucker and
Mbs Margery Reynolds will appear
on the program at the annual song
recital given by pupils ot P. A. Ten
Haaf in Grand Rapids Tuesday eve­
ning.
THIRTY YEARS AGO
Prank Brown Cressey of Ionia
was in the city Friday. He is the
son of John Q
Cressey, former
sheriff ot thia county now deputy
warden al Ionia. Frank was born In
lhe old Jail that stood on lhe site
which P. A. Sheldon's residence
now occupies.
Mrs. A. D. Maynard has received
thc fine medal she was recently

recent session in SMglnaw for the
best essay on Lewis Cass.
Mr. and Mrs. J. w. Culler left
Friday for Reading. Mich., where
they will spend two weeks visiting
their son. lhe Rev. C. A. Cutler.
Miss Mary powers is home from
Marquette, having completed a
successful year's work as teacher
In the high school of that city. She
has been employed for another year.
Mr and Mrs. Newberry Gordon of
Scottsville were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. A- J. Woodmansee last week.
W- A. Scott has resumed his for­
mer position a* traveling represen­
tative for lhe International Finance
Company of New York.
Born Sunday to Mr. and Mrs.
b much used, and another where Wm, Guy Bauer a 10 pound son.
only the professional would dare to And Guy Is Uie happiest daddy in
town.
venture. Exhibition* and contest*
are staged by professionals on spe­
FORTY YEARS AGOcial occasions and week ends when
Thursday afternoon two rival
(here are sure to be targe crowds nines composed of members of
Barry Lodge Knights of Pythias
present.
contested for supremacy on lhe ball
Till* park ... hum enurel,
,wd
tomMun .»
the expense of Grayling people, and. | rharBed Any correct account of lhe
lhe past Vtwo
with .tzto.'k
assist- Kl-lllv
game WUUIU
would uv
be impossible.. The
.for
**■ n.v
*e (J year*, Wlfcl*
ill*,
ance by federal project workers, chief feature* were the Impartial

This and That

(Ml absolutely safe up here,
y and air art wonderfully
Ve art about 7.000 fe«t above
the ground—so high that only
Richard M. Cook.
light chiatera from villages, towns
and cltta* are visible. How surpris­
iken, Blynken and Nod on* night
ingly close togs ther these "consteltattons" are—TtMrs la a group which
Sailed oc a river of crystal light.
might be Middleville, there Free­
port and there Hastings.
—Eugene Field.

Night Plight.
Chicago to Kansas Oily.

You lose all sense of time and disThia old favorite cornea to mind stance Up here. I couldn't tell you
whether we have been "afloat" five
the earth somewhere over Illinois minutes or an hour. The air has
while being propelled along with been absolutely free of these down
scarcely any sense ofxnoUon at 217 currents and updraft* commonly
miles per hour.
known as pockets and bumps Con­
sequently aside from the motor vi­
Above, the sky is clear and the bration there Is little sense ot mo­
slan shine brillianUy. Below, ths tion.
lights of cities, towns, village* and
farm homes form a mosaic of light,
What Is that bright band of light
lovely beyond description. Borne - ahead? Some big city, probably—yet
times, too, these light* from the consulting the map Kansas City li
ground and those from the heavens the only one enroute. Can we be
blend perfectly. Then, leaning back there already? It doesn't seem pos­
with eyes half closed, it Un't dif­ sible. I'll be sorry to see this kalei­
ficult to Imagine that you are float­ doscopic flight end. It has all
ing through space on the dream seemed like a dream anyway. We
craft of Wynken. Blynken and left Chicago at 9:30 o'clock and here
Nod, far from earth with star clus­ It Is 11:35—ten more minutes and
we will be there. Each three min­
ter* on all sidea.
utes our plane Is passing over about
Of course your craft isn't entire­ ten miles of ground.
ly noiseless. although there is no
Can feel my ears thumping again
more racket than on a motorbus
and you can converse easily with —we're losing altitude, sliding down
people across the aisle; nor can a long, Invisible incline. Amkl all thc
the motion bo accurately described bright lights of the city it to difficult
as ■'drifting dreamily along." Still, to pick out the airport—There it is.
except for lhe vibration from the apparently where a beacon is flash­
two 700 H. P. motors, there is very ing.
little sense of motion—"air pock­
What Is
that funny
looking
ets" always excepted!
ground below which shimmers in
the darkness—It's the river and
A modem airport—like the mu­ we're floating along above it at an
nicipal port at Chicago where our elevation of about 1.000 feet but In
plane took off only a few minutes comparison with the alUtude mainago—Is organised like a railroad sta­ lained during the flight we seem
tion except that there b a rather almost on lop of it.
elaborate radio telephone system for
keeping in contact with the planes.
Here we are landing already—
At a moment's notice II would be you came in so quickly that tho
possible to call any plane in flight, wheel* touch almost before you
learn weather conditions ahead, te- realise what is happening
Two
gentle little "hops'* and the plane
«enw*int&gt;t
Bno
p*a“to'’
weighed—35 pounds
free— 1 bangs
the nop&gt;
ground.
We vnc
taxi up

A2iiJxyV£™11

break." And there were many more boast of having four recreational era start coming north
seasons—spring, summer, autumn'quickly
—
followed by an army of
1
e,,1|yaround-the
are p,ac&lt;fd
wUe Mylnits among them
deer hunters. Again hotels, club
possible to determine lhe amount, and—the «_i_
trip «is ------over.
Jwph pflUg. (Senior) conducted and winter Each of these seasons of
of express baggage and mail which
the year offers attractions for sport house* and cabins are filled to their
fl meat market on Main street.
can be safely handled. ’
Now for a taxi to the hotel where,
limits. Besides there are scores of
and recreation.
Later, he conducted a saloon, a fa­
the airport attendant tells me. a
Spring weather seems to pop right tralbr cabins stationed throughout
Departures are announced by room Is already reserved. The next
vorite gathering place of the older
lhe
hunting
regions
There
are
many
loud
speaker,
a
gateman
tells
you
at
long step of the flight will begin nt
men of the city, especially our Ger­ out of a usually long winter. Al­
deer in this eounty. only recently.
which platform you can board your 1 8:20 o'clock tomorrow morning.
man citizens. of which nationality most before one realises it. people
Editor Elmer Hanns, of Harbor
Hastings had many. Other promi­ are out gathering arbutus, lhe most Springs, visited Grayling and in
...
getting reedy to board a train.
nent citizens we recall are the Na- fragrant and beautiful wild flower
^‘han Barlow w Ryder. and Syl- ; of which we know Then comes lhe about a half hour drive we saw»• 15
deer One evening in March, wt
■h.k TP. laud 1. owned by toe state .nd
The Interior of the plane is sur­
; upcttun
opening u&gt;
of trout-fishing
uuu,-.m.n..o season and .
! forced respect for hl* decisions with
and study to problems Lhat concern vesUr Oreusel families.
the many trout rivers of Crawford H»*re was still snow tn thc woods. ( is a part of lhe Military reserva-. a C0Upje 0( dangerous looking re­ prisingly roomy—even a six-footer .
the people of hl* community. He । ^niOng the physicians of our early
county attract hundreds annually to tbs writer saw over 40 deer during tlon. it is operated by the Winter i volvers strapped to his belt; the can stand with rase on either side '
must be fearteas and courageous and recoUectlon* were Dr. Blaisdell; Dr.
By ELMB tC8H WATSBW | |
....
—..-'- ......
C..M.e. Association.
l.-eel.llen Inc. *
. - ewM. 1.fielding
n*l(lln» (if
an I.
hour*
auto .eAe.
ride T-*.The sight of a Sjxirls
a mm
non-proof (Ur^llA^l
Greusel. Who
who *tOOd
stood Ilk*
like ot the alsje are some of the most ;
never unmindful lhat his opinions. Upjohn- Dr Clarence Burton; Dr 1 their waters. Hotels are filled, as ar,&lt;
comfortable, adjustable. noURlVgJ'
&lt;ew deer .« rummer,, to..... .. M »r„nf.uon
tweh «w»n pre- J,®***
^'Ar
chairs on which I havefml
must be backed by sound judgment WoodntVnsee
Dr
Lathrop;
Dr. I also scores of chib houses and pri■
parked
"
a very
courteous
little
j
I
vate
cabins
located
on
these
rivers
times
none
1*
to
be
seen
unles*
one
‘
vlous
to
tavl
winter,
there
has
been
-----------------------------------------n
McKevitt
who
fiercely
swatted
a
HISTORIC
HEAT WAVE
In all thb we believe the Banner nrakp and
Ugrber
,
er*ale»&lt;
makes •&gt;
a &gt;nn*ial
special *Hnrt
effort in
to And
find them
them, »
a financial deficit a-hinh
which UT*.
wa* made rubber ball loaded with waler; lhe stewardess—'Hostess." I think. 1*
has stood like the Rock of Gibral- ^ung^. man opened offices He wa*
Then with the approach of sum­
' Many deer arc killed here annually, up by local business and profes- batting of Bert Seward who made a lhe official title—Is there to bring
UNE, 102U. Io the city of Obitar. A wtahy-washy. wobbly policy । Dr
what a wondertul sue­ mer our fine takes, with their clear
you maps, booklet*, postcards, re­
bur .her, -re
. In burrte.r
I
P*
cago for six days the tempera­
ts unknown to those splendid men ■
hc ma&lt;le, Dr Andru5 WM our waters and fine beaches, offer the
freshment*. bicarbonate of soda,
who don't bag their game
,
At the park there are a conces-1 Krov'c wh0 never gol a
chewing gum—or tn event of a real ture had been above oo degree*.
who have been at lhe helm of the Uadln&lt; rt(&gt;ntlf.
came Dr. 8. best kind of out-door recreation and
Delegate* to the Republican conven­
criri*.
with
neat
Hille
waxed
card
­
AU
summer
long
a
crew
of
men
»*&lt;»*
building,
which
b
being
greatj
dignified
silence
of
Ed.
Holbrook
Banner ever since it has been in the M FoW]er; we are snn carrying sport. Along the banks of these rlv-1
330.000 1j *y
ly enlarged thb summer; a strucstrut- who never said a word; the base board containers into which you tion had sweltered through them
will be busy at GoyUng's
Gutyling * $30.000
hands of the Cook family One al-1 Mfne Qf hU gold
era and takes are many permanent
running of Broliver Feighner who can pour your woe* Each plane—
| Our first teacher was Marion summer homes of people who come ' winter sport* park, getting ready ture f°r skaters, office building, and reached first in safety on a three- a twin motored Douglas Transport
for next’Zinur's activities By the I * building for housing the Associa­
base hit; Lhe throwing ot Fred —can carry fourteen passengers, 1 and Wood,
। Buller, outer* were Belle Throup: here from many states. A number
andin In
__ . the "Senatorial Group,
ting the last hunters are out of the | tlon * large supply of toboggans. Parker which wa* similar to a two pilot* and the hostess and
I 1 Theo
tie of editorial responsibility Is slip-1
- «— — — - ।
•• --------Edna M
Havens,
(who passed of these homes represent an utvest-1
girls, the errorless game of Will addition several hundred pounds of which bad engineered the deadlock,
ping to the young shoulders of Dick. |
I meni u( muee toto 1100.000
I •°°&lt;U' ev»nU&gt;‘"« '»
'«*'■&gt; j *luls *" “
h”‘
baggage.
■ away only a few months ago); Rose
got busy and offered fnr a com­
for winter sports, awaiting suitable j loaned without chargee. The only Chidester, who never had a chance
there are a new enthusiasm and
—
and
accepted
it.
Al
the
end
of
I
Bostwick; Fannie
Lees;
Harry । Tlw Au Sable river flows through l
, charge lhat ..
ta made is for adnUs- five innings Holbrook's nine was
The big transport planes look promise candidate Senator Warren
continuation of thc high newspaper Andrus. We can. In high school I the city of Grayling and I* probe-, ~ath" condl,lon'
: slon to the park on Saturdays and found to be defeated by a score of really tremendous on the ground. 0. Harding. The hot. weary dele­
ideals that this newspaper
has memories, hear Ella Hallock in her । bly lhe most famou. trout stream In ■
have become winter-sport*
When Use pilot ta tn hb control gates were ready to lake anybody,
borne tor the past half century
Latin conjugations; Flora Beadle I1 America. n not only attract* the minded and what started out to be a Sundays of 25c for adult persons,
cabin forward, be Is about a* high so Harding got the nomination.
1 and $c per ride on the toboggans
was a high school teacher We still I angler but also afford* mo*t pic- ’ P*^ «round »°r the pleasure of lhe
FIFTY YEARS AGOfrom the ground a* though he were
Next a candidate for Vice Presi­
I Other uses of the park are free.
THE NORTH COUNTRY
The high school alumni reunion looking out from a second story dent had to be chosen. The "Sena­
have a fine appreciation ot these turesque and thrilling canoe trip, 1o« Grayling ha* now become
at Thomapple take Saturday after­ window. The two powerful motor. ------To understand Northern Michi­
...
Our
park
is
I
torial- WBWWF
Group" wat
had, planned w
to B
give
"*- ••
teachers Shirley Smith was always Hundred* of people come here to a Stete institution
noon
wa*
the
mo*t
largely
attended
"
,trea
"
’
,1
“
ed
to
o
*
,h
l*
honor io
to ocunuir
Senator ir.iui
Irvin* L.
*on Railroad excursions from De­
gan. it is quite necessary to have
.
. —,
.la within
.~ , fk. i. .
&gt;n&gt;u«r
.u.
for an exhibition,i troll began January 12th and con­ and interesting in the history of the All avlnv hz.elre
finding the exceptions to the rules. enjoy thb adventure (Editor Harry no1 designed
lived there Without that one can!
association.
Fifty members and outer shell to lhat none of the !
Among the boys and girl* of my Myers of the Lapeer pres* and hb Pl*ce. but instead it is a place
d 1 lIcOor“£,‘
tinued for seven successive Sunday* friends sat al the well-filled banquet strut* and wire, which used to be , ““.,1orlal Uck,L
have but a superficial knowledge of ■
trip* I "’here everyone plays." a slogan
grades were, first, our closest asso­ sons frequently lake canoe
charsclerUtlc of earlier model air- | of nu«*ol« was making thaspewb fat
On each of these days there were
the real north.
ad- j lhat b often used True to Its word*^
ciate*. Joe Pflug and Frank Baker down lhe Au Sable and recently- -*
craft* are vtaible. Eacii plane ta j Lenroot when Wallace McCamnnL a
Twenty five years ago next July
1 those who come here do not have' from one to three trains, of from and discussed the viands in true
| others were Carl Bessmer. John vised others to do lhe same and
alumni fashion. It seemed to be thc carefully overhauled after each 40 ! delegate from Oregon, leaped up.
and
1st lhe writer came to Grayling to
to stand on lhe side line* and freeze, ten to fifteen coaches each And lhe general expression that Thomnpple hours of service—In fact they are
He called out. "We want Cool­
। Wooton Belle Rock. Dwight Good- -later do it again' &gt;
become the owner and editor of It*
number
of
train
passengers
we
is
the
proper
place
for
future
re
­
in lhe hands of inspectors even idge I We want Oonlldgel" Others
,!'while professtonab do their stunt* I
1 year. Nonna Michael, and other*
A number of years ago some of
only newspaper, and the Detroit
doubt would quite equal the num­ unions
more than under lhe controling took up the cry. When McCormick
Older resident* of Hasting* will our enterprising young men staged Visitor* at the park enter into the.
A child of Milton Coulter's of touch of pilot*. The examination finished
Free Press published an item tell- ,
his speech.
McCamaot
pleasures themselves and It 1* *el-1 ber of person* coming here by auto.
j recall Ute disastrous fire that start­
a canoe carnival on lhe Au Sable
This covers briefly the principal Irving was badly burned Saturday even include* X-ray inspection of shouted: "1 nominate Gov. Calvin
ing of the change in ownership '
by falling into a kettle ot hot lye.
propeller blades and other key
ed in a planing null tbeltevc thb was | Now that has become an annual af­ dom that any go away dissatisfied. ■
The following morning Editor John
recreation and sport* activities in
Thc
school
librarian.
Miss
fltena
metal
part*
for
detection
of
any
in
­
I
What
ha*
proved
to
be
lhe
big-,
operated by Henry Newton), direct­ fair and attracts hundreds Every
Dennis, business associate of A. H
gesl attraction at the park is th • | and about Grayling over a period Wheeler, reports that 5.408 volumes ner structural flaw* not visible to President."
ly north of the then newly built available canoe and river boat is
The aiampeda
Bllngerland. ths publishers of the .
of a year We have many attraction* were drawn from the school li­
three toboggan slide* Thr*r solidBarry hotel The fire spread, conThe perspiring delegates, disgusted
। trucked to Grayling for use on some
Hastings Journal, met our father
that are not mentioned here One brary thc past year, of which num­
stinting the hotel, several stort
’ ' [ Sunday In August Thirty boats I ice slides furnish the maximum of
ber 4321 were works of fiction.
Planes have landed and taken off with the "Senatorial Group" CM
and told him the news. Dad knew buildings on Bridge street, a large '
should
not
pass
through
Grayling
Jay smith who ha* been in the while Dave and I Ijavc been stand­ bolding them for nearly a week la
speed, toboggans traveling at time*
I without seeing the Hartwick Pines employ of W H Be han tx for two
। were provided for the first carnival.
nothing about Grayling but John,
ing here. An airport is s pretty expensive hotels. saw a chance to
faster than 100 mile* an hour. Any
manufacturing plant of the Spald­
Leaving for place at night with II* flickering retaliate.
enlightened him by saying that it
park, with it* 80 acre virgin pine years intends soon
Ths engineers ot ths
headgear other than a cap b cer­
ing Mfg Co . manufacturer* of fine
Deadwood.
Dak., in search of fame Macons and colored border light*.
time*
that
many
to
care
for
the
res
­
was "in the middle of a big huckle­
■ forest. Tills forest is magnificent.
steam roller could not crush the up­
fishing rods, baseball bat*, dumb ervations that come in from all over! tain to be lost ofl during the ter­
and fortune.
berry swamp." We soon received a
Fish hatcheries are becoming com­
rising and Coolidge was nominated:
rific speed of lhe toboggan over thc
Mr. Allhler and wife of Chicago
Well, here’s the plane pulled up
belb. croquet set*, and many other Eastern Michigan,
a
comp-tent
When Harding died In 1023. Cool­
letter from home wanting to know
mon. still Grayling Blate trout were Um guests of Mr. and Mrs. to platform No. 3 ready to go. Time
1 sporting goods. Several structure* al guide is provided with each boat course.
became PrasldanL
And the
why we had elected to live in such
I hatchery continues to attract many Ike Hendershott last week. Mr. Al- to climb aboard. My seat Is •mld'mid- idge
lhe rear of the main street store*
,
„ .... Cargo j mMn who
oeot to the White
lister is a member of the well-known
whenever desired it u a beautiful i These slide* have to be built with , thousands annually.
an unhealthy country.
were
.
iTF' destroyed,
destroyed, including
uictuaincthe
vnv Fred
ncu
by a haat-wav
t '1 extreme accuracy and arc quite
Chicago Jewelry house of Norris. Al- of passengers is aboard. Thera go
Grayliftg 1* better known today •
’ ,
r
.
. . . , sight to see the flotilla of canoe*,
elevator'
A hard ?
fight with their gay crowds, floating down I costly Should thc weather become । Grayling has a population of 2.- Ibter A co.
the motors—yet when the door i* off «hb help of ■
U™ .&lt;
u™. .nd
*d, I! Barlow grain rtev
*'“ A
I 145 and there Isn't an empty house
closed vary littte of their tremen- Cool with Coolidge r
the river. The journey requires *es- abnormally warm they are quite
to. u . mor, M.Uhn.1 eltoM. ~
dous roar penetrates Inside the .
Way
m M«h.pn than .&lt; Gr.yto.
1 tv Uj”"
’ en hours and ends about 45 mile* Stable to melt away and have to be
cabin.
Effective
sound-proofing
। price, it is located on the Michigan
NEWS GLEANINGS.
from Grayling where thc occupants completely rebuilt This,
"
lhowever,
'“
□rvun, &gt;oun&lt; m.n ,.vr up nu
i Central railroad, operating directThe highcat railway altitude in
&gt;» U Mum, 1^1 ..nmr brr.u- ««
of the canoes find their cars await- doesn't
"
’h&gt;|&gt;pen *often
' ly between Detroit and Jackson to
With
brakes
set.
the
pilot turns
lhe
world
is
lhe
Central
Railway
of
-U ro u» CM urn..- T«ppm"‘T
oT Ing them, having been delivered by ; The park also affords a very at[ Mackinaw city, the most northern Peru, which reaches an altitude uf on the power and lhe whole craft
OT 10 to »
below fro
"’d
for city in lower Michigan. Or. our 15.M5 feet. Its highest railway sia- trembles. Everything Ls okey so
responsible and competent driver* j tractive skating rink.
This Is a very delightful trip
which wei» out of the ground, ail principal highway. U B
two.
m«h more eomtatwbk27, one
I3EAUTIFUL but dumb want­
U»n um.fr fc,r™ ,t»™ «ru In
w“ nM
Throughout the summer season except that used for flooding nigh’.- may drive from Grayling to Fort
ed to hire Sal Soda to do
The sweetness of saccharin Is 200 the wind. Nov the two motors are
Deuou Sound. mewrUble. tbteutl
«“*«•
”’al there are many social functions in ly in order to renew the ice surface
tier housework because
Myer. Florida, on pavement with u&gt; 5M limes more intense than that
1» H-mer. If. Ute tnr.lt.
™ ■“&gt; ™ U'«“‘
heard the
which our summer residents usual- The rink is solid ice and has the ' the .exception of about 20 mile* of cane sugar. It was accidentally -goes the tall—a few slight burajw
ly have a part. Hanson State Mil:- maximum of safety. Besides the j south of Houghton Lake. There are discovered at Johns Hopkins Unl- as the wheels toy with the ground
When Ute hot d&gt;„ come UU.
ujmme,
th. h.wt U ebnoet on- *
Th*"
tary reservation, during the annual skating rink there Is a hockey rtn.&lt; ! several lateral State highways run­
Yawning is
the furniture factories which were
encampments of Michigan National । where on week ends there are sure ning into Grayling. We have a
because it restores
endurable, just think of the people
The world* biggest excavation- steadily gaining altitude.
I taler followed by the Wool Boot Guard at Lake Margrethe. 5 miles' to be some exciting games.
at Grayling sleeping almost every
modem school with 22 teachers. A more than 222.000JM0 cubic yards ot
ifactory and Table factory. From
w, w;vi,l
llvor „
h« had a **il of Grayling, attracts many
Ski and snowshoe trails wind;iiew mtxlern waterworks system material have been removed from a

and readers are given lhe aervioe of
some of the most able editorial
commentators of the country. Anything we might say on national and
international matter* could at best
be only superficial.
However, a newspaper editor
would be a misfit if he failed to have
editorial ideas that might be of in­
terest and enlightening to hl* reader*. It's hl* Job to give a iol of time

Tremendous
Trifles [1

D

J

of Our World

.Y)fo«Je5r

growth and •UIU,ri
°®cer*
lhr M N G• about * *rtM of h,Us and VaUe&gt;* which serves every street in the city
I u ~n,r.»v ^nsirtr.rr.d tn he one of
a nu,r,hfr of
“ ,hcu
।and aIIord «* tochned 10 lhal ‘P011 with the purest of water, which.
, ’ ...
d
„
'tlful
club house,
house, and
and they
they are
are very
very * everything
could hope
wben
lt comes
has
.v.rrthln, he
hr could
hup- for.
lw These
Those wh
,„ u
„„„ rroin the wells
..m hoo
l~ TT------~ ...
. .
I tlful club
--------------------------------------------------- WehlW. ~-uMln. ...to,
„lh (*„ aril.ltorJ Ul
are to be extended for the coming ft temperature ot 35 degree*, or 3
rm m BMUw. Ik d, «&lt;.!•)«- «»
•‘“"I” Wllune. Thu .dd. u&gt; uz rteewre
season The bobsled trail Isn't up to gbov,
{reeiin| pomt Grayling
..... I.M &lt;*e (ou.id.Uun.
,
.
the high standard of the other fea-' u a fltlh
clty and u governed
„„„
call even a comparatively few In Ud.KuUw U» ,ou too.
lures of the park. However, it too by a
consisting of a
y'j Hardly do our local residents have has claimed a goodly share of at- mayori four trustees, and city manthese columns. "Bol" Goodyear op' '
'tinw-to get Milled down after a tl’ity
iager. Our population la largely
TOUR RECREATIONAL SEASONS biuy sununCT before nature adds it*
There ore l«o &gt;»l lump.. One u
Bros,
W«
believe
that—
Grayltug wa* Uis touchMUof bright colors to Um tree—
— - hardware. At
--- U
-- m---- ----------- -------U.., for uk of those who have a modest a ftw polish and French, beside*
ot that block stood Um - first fommunity la Michigan to I of the forest, and small game hunt- kok of adventure and daring and
American families.
blanket for cover.

AMONG OUR MEMORIES

Gtnuii

THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1936

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

Editorials

•
Nut 1U

""“L?

c“,“' 1

near Salt Lak* City.
। u an ania*lng sight from the air I
Mora passenger* (ItUJOOfiW dally)
w-.
’ • •
are carried by elevator* in Newi **®re
way, elevated, gnd surfaee Unas

to find

Between June M. 17»4 and August
13. 1784—the armed forces of the ing book i can still see a long
fringe of IMbM eending a krig4&gt;t
glow into the sky—a last farewell,
Labor surveys la certain Indus- from Um oily
,

Oit to Um right a tiny red star la ;
racing along with the plane and to'

Bread

Calumet

Lily Vl
Sunny

Olivet
Pecan
Hires
Borax
Certo

Dog Fc

Northern

Sanlca
Shinol
Borde
Kraft'i

Mortor

Whea
Salad.

Rajah

Woo&lt;
Milk
Chipto

Scot 1
Wald

Browi
4X St

Criscc
Sardii

CoIm.
Pickli

Harsh*

Jello

J limb

Fane

Head

Onioi

the speaker.
Odors are said to affect the
memory ol human beings more
than any other factor, which
may account for the unptaaoant
moal theater critic*.
Dad and Johnny haven't
visaed the woodshed so often
since Johnny has Utose Btack

Oran

a

�TH! H AB TING 6 BANNER, THURSDAY, JUNE M, HM

HI The Public Forum Itlf^
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
I
END OF
MONTH S

Genuine Alaska Pink

Tall
Can

i and dis­
tall you
loaf five
। air has
esc down
oaimanly
spa. Oon-

a I &gt;99

«u«Hty Short

36 in. anbleach*d Sh*«ting

-8Ml*

Bedspreads, colorad crinkla, 80*105, only M«
Oil CloHi Foftams, 54*54, ••

way. We
and hero
lutes and
iree mlnver about

ling down
tid all the
is difficult
here It is,
i is flash-

looking
nrners in
I ver and
•et but In
ide maln-

already —
that tho
fore you
ng Two
he plane

is swung
re placed
tel where,
i me. a
The next
I begin al
rnlng

oas

10c
Calumet Baking Powder
19c
er Glaser
Fig Bars
25c
Lily White Flour
89c
Sunnyfield or Poetry Flour
19c
Bisquick
'X 29c
hottie 10c
4H-ea.
bottle 19c
Olives
Pecan Meats
10c
bottle 23c
Hires Extract
White Plain er Sliced

Borax
Certo
Northern Tjggug

Sanka or Kaffee Hag
Shinola
Borden's
2
Morton's Salt

Lowden
Croup,"
deadlock,
r a cointary deloanybody,
itlon.
lee Preu-

IcOrmlck
speech fet
Samant, a
pod op.
ant Coal1“ Others
IcCortnlek
.IcCamant
v. Calvin

disgusted
■oup” for

Cracker Jack

10c

Campfire

17c

Haddock Fillets

Klb.

2

With £*&lt;h

Wheaties
Salada Tea
Rajah Salad Dressing 'X' 29c
Woodbury's
2
Milk
29c
X 19c
Scot Tissue
Waldorf Tissue
15c
Brown Sugar
2

. 95c

2

Colman's Mustard

5c

2

22c

39c
39c
“^250

Yellow
Label

Pickles

29c Dill Pickles

Jallo ^ZT2*'15c EX

3’^

10c Larsen s
17c Cut-Rite Wax Paper ^5c

Jumbo Canteloupes

uu.

12jc

Head Luttuee

K2XL

Onions

y*”

Oranges

CaBfeewia Valeoata

3
10c
2 -35c

Mixed

Dried Beef

Dressed Whiting

10c
15c

« o. rk,
Lh.

12c

10c
15c

Lunch Meat

-

Skinless Franks

- 21c

Lard

Cutrk.

29c
25c

25c Whitehouse Coffee
Instant Postum

10c

AND VICINITY.
Harold Andrews and family of
Kalamasoo were visitors at the
Sprague cottage Friday.
Mrs. Lixxle Calms of Hastings.
Mrs Beck and children from Carl­
ton Center called on Gladys Cairns
in the Reynolds collage Thursday
afternoon.
Kent Ricker of Hastings stayed
several days last week with his
aunt. Mrs. Aldrich.
Mr. and Mrs Nicholas Sweltser
of Plainwell were Bunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kah-

15c
21c
26c
25c

Bokar Coffee
Beech-Nut Coffee
Del Monte Coffee
Hills Bros. Coffee

25c

Mr. and Mrs. Will Guy of Nakhviile spent Bunday al Byron Guy 's.
Mrs. Susan Hawbllts spent a few
days recently al the .home of Mr.,
and Mrs. Harve Marshall of North
Maple Grove.

EAST WALL LAKE

27c
25c

Whitehouse Milk
Argo Gloss Starch

/

‘The Music Goes
'Round' 'n' Out

23c
21c
29c
$1.15

Cigarettes
Soap Chips

*• 25c

Fancy Tomatoes

Sect the

10c
9c
25c
25c
17c
17c

55c । Maxwell House Coffee

Crisco or Snowdrift
Sardines

Close-up view of the newly
styled Dodge truck radiator and
front end—designing which cloaeiy approximates the most beauti­
ful handling cf these details to b:
found even in thc paaaenger car
leld. Frcm front to rear bumper
:he new Dodge trucks ofler the
maximum in new atyle. new
csauty, a new high standard in
efficiency and performance, plus
Jones Ln Battle Creek and also were
new economy fn operating and at Mr. and Mrs. Clair Marshall's in
maintenance costa.
Bellevue to see little Martan whose
arm was broken by a fall of! a fence
Wednesday evening.
Mrs. Milo Keck and family of
Bedford visited her parents. Mr. and

£ 25c
bottle 29c

12c Dole Pineapple Gemi
X- 33c Dole Pineapple Juice

.

Idle ea

25c

Yukon Club... MU-3 SSt 25c
Black Pepper
* 19c
Paper Napkins

10c
31c 8 o'Clock Coffee
15c N.B.C. Fig Rings
15c Swansdown

bottle

HTGHBANK.
Father's Day was observed Sun­
day al the North Evangelical church.
Sixteen fathers were presented with
a gift Will Guy for being a father
lhe longest and Sam Oatroth for be­
ing lhe oldest father were each pre­
sented with bouquets of rose*
Mr. and Mrs. -Gaytan Fisher of
near Vermontville attended church
here Bunday and spent lhe day with
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Adams.
Mrs. Joe Nevitt and granddaugh­
ter. Ruby Lee. of East Leroy called
on Mr. and Mrs. Worth Green Mon­
day.
Ortha Hawbllts had her tonsils
removed Monday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs
Amos Wengers near
Nashville
Mr. and Mrs. Rodger Warner of
Nashville spent Wednesday evening
at Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Adams' and
Sarah Qstrolh's.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ketcham of
Hastings called on Mr. and Mrs.
Prank Hawblitz Bunday evening
Mr. and Mrs. Worth Green and
Mrs Freda Marshall spent Sunday

MARSHMALLOWS
MARSHMALLOWS

19c Potted Meat
37c Baby Foods

chance to
a of tbs

n ml salad;
M3. CootAnd the
lie White
a re-elect-

Palmolive Soap

29c
33c
19c

21c Lea &amp; Perrins Sauce
25c Clam Chowder

Dog Food

fAVE

igt&gt; thorn

29c 2
10

Wall Fixture

Kraft's French Dressing
tempera-

Super Suds 4

Father's Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs Elmer Reynolds Sunday were.
Mr. and Mrs. Art Thomas. Mr. and
and Mrs. Clyde Fuher. Mrs. Jennie
Honeysett. Miss Helen Williams of
Kalamaaoo, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Rey­
nolds. f. Calms. Mr and Mrs. War­
ren Cairns and Rachel OUo. also
Ernest Sampson, of Cressey, and
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler and
friend, local. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas
Bweiuer of Plainwell and Mr. and
Mrs. Chas Kahler and Ruth Hom
called in lhe afternoon.
Gladys Calms and Jennie Rey­
nolds visited a couple of days last
week with the latter's sister tn
Vicksburg.
above. • Mrs Madison Couch and grandtbl* | daughter Melbourne came Friday to
spend Um summer at their cottage

of ea old eopbonlum, a iron-

son* juat right.
THREE CORNERS.
HU many friends will regret to
learn lhat Edgar Pifleld Ls suffering
from an Injury to hU back. Hl*
daughter, MIm Marjorie, has been
| suffering for more than a week
' frpm a wisdom tooth.
Mr. and Mrs Floyd Wallers and
daughter. Marian, of Grand Rapids
1 visited hU parent*. Mr and Mrs.
Edw. Walters Sunday.
; Mr. and Mr* Leo Hammond and
son. Richard Leo. of Flint and Lan­
sing motored over tn their new Ford
V-a to visit their parents, Bunday
' evening Mr* Post of Hastings ac1 companlrd them to lhe home of Mr.
and Mrs. Claude A Hammond.
| Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Mayo and
। daughter. Jean, of Hastings were
over the week end guest*
1*1guests of the laiter'* sistar and husband. Mr. and
I Mrs. Clarence Bisson. and family. »■
I
Mr. and Mrs. J. W Moore and
son of Baltimore and their ciaughter. Mrs Williams of Charlotte vis­
ited M. E Moore and Mlu Clara J.
Bisson. Sunday
| Rev. Crocker. Oenard Smith. Gene
I Kidder and Victor Hawkins ot Hastings were Friday dinner guests of
. Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Walters
’ Mr. and Mn. Edgar Flffeld and
। family entertained In honor of Faliber's Day lhe following. Robert
Walter* of Middleville, Mr. and Mr*.

I

THE CROHMtOADfl.
ing school at Ferri* Institute, was
home from Friday until Sunday.
Miss Jean McBain of Delton spent
Saturday night and Bunday with
her sister. Mrs. John Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Taliaferro
of Battle Creek. Forest WUUtt* of
Hastings and MU* Vada Johnson of
Qun lake spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs Ernest Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Lawtie McBain ot
Delton and T- Ketcham ot Martin
were Sunday guests ef Mr and Mrs
John Cook and family. Mrs Bertha
Couch. Don Stedge and Lucius Wills
of Hastings were Sunday guests ot
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Sledge honoring
lhe birthday of Lynn Stodge, in the
afternoon they motored to Grand
Rapids and called on Mias Maxine
Sledge
at the--------------------------------Blodgett Home and„
al-------------------so called on Mr*. Sarah Burd at the
home of Mr. and Mr* A. I. Draper.
,Mr._________________________
and Mrs. Oriey Smith and
Homer Bates spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Smith near MlddlevtUa.
—

ROBINHUE PARK.
Mr. at
Ung* attended the Moe school picnic Saturday and spent th* evening
with Earl Robinson and family
Mr. Sewery and Mr*. Eva Manker
of Grand Rapid* spent Friday eve­
ning with Mr. and Mrs. George Poland,
Mr. and Mrs. Wright Clifford and
•*&gt;ns were Bunday guest ot Mr and

. which

haven t
io often

e Black
I* bold

X

P FOOD STORES

guest
I and friend* here
! Mlu Ruth Robinson, who lias
been qalU ill with slnsa Uoubl* Is
oonvalMdnf.
Marfkn waiters of Grand Rapids
11* spending th* week with her

Bunday

gt IM KM-

lar home wer*. Mr. and Mr* Harry
Poland and Mrs Nellie Johnson of
Owoaso. Mr*. Johnaon’a daughter
huAand from
Clyde Kollar.,
family at

,50«

Lac* Tabla Cloth*. 50*70, at

Girls' Slacks and Sun Saits
.50*

Steven's All Linen Crash

15c
.69c

All Wool Bathing Suits. 34 to 40, at

Giris' Suits at
$1.00

"QUEEN" Quality
First Grade

Full Fashioned

ALL SILK HOSE
... in the jour new shade*,
“Marimba” "Misty**

"Moondusk'9, and "Toasty
... a wonderful value al

59*.
3 pairs for $1.75
KN IE LENGTH.
All SILK HOSE—

WQc

lie ANKLETS

A *.

OU

Final Clearance
OF WOMEN'S ond MISSES
SPRING and FALL WEIGHT

COATS!
NAVY, GRGY
AND FANCY

25% Off

SILK DRESSES
Summer Coats

$Q88

is

*em pos­
tils kalei-

lib.

Bread

■j grandfather. M. E. Moore, and aunt.
| Mia* Clara J. Bisson.
| Ralph Smith of Holland was a
I Monday afternoon caller at the
Edw. Waiter's home.

Xa *

n u m

d of Hehl
ably—yet
is City Is

Dodge Truck Front
Has New Beauty

S ii.*

sonstella*
up which

Only 4 More Butin*** Day* in Jone .

Frandsen9»

1

SALMON

5

up bant,
nderfully
«t only
«. towns

The writer frequently has occa- downtown and th* writer could not
lon to walk down Stat* H. M w*U

but sach swearing l
All uncalled
been appalled al some of Um condi­
tions prevailing where there are for and disgusting to those who
groups of men standing So many. were anywhere near.
Tlw growth of this habit among
rven before reaching th* group, we young people U very noticeable and
have heard »uch terrible oaths, some deplorable. During th* school year,
the writer heard aven young boy*
of them causing the ahlvar*.
Why I* such swearing necessary' and girl* *«-earlng like the proverb­
Do thoee who swear think It la a —
ial ,
pirates,
—
but they probably
___ ____
heard
_
mark of manline** or of pollteneM. it at home or among their aaaocior what! It would seem. too. that ales. Il Is a disgusting habit that
men and boys. and. sorry to say. surely reflect* on the decency and
judgment
some woman, could ba In bigger .....
. of lhe person and a habit
business than »landlng on our main that grnv
—&gt;ws rapidly with young or
city street* and swearing as if th*ir | old.
.. No
. j doubt oftentimes the
Ilves depended on it. Such oaths swearing is done thoughtlessly but
are repulsive to other people and it la swearing just the same, violat­
'show a lack of good judgment by ing lhe moral law of decency as
well as the Biblical la* contained
i Saturday afternoon two mat were
I visiting on one ot lhe main corners tributed.

‘Exdtuive But Not Ezpmtiuo”
HASTINGS

FHOMUM

s

de lights

t« &gt; 4 i

Z5, 1936

�THE HASTINGS BANNER THURSDAY. JUNE M, 1IM

'Round About Town
Hn to lhe line, let the quips
fan where they may!

By Observing Tommy.

. T hear that our well-known name
And there was the crow some of
, warden is quite a home run king at
the boys found silting on 20 of
Sunday school picnics.
Ray 's balls in-a nest last winter.
And Al Polfus did his stuff, loo*
But tills last, record-smashing
shot of hts was a honey!
TO say nothing ol the blushing
Ellsworth!
It zipped out north-easterly to­
ward
tiie
Pettit
hatchery . . .
To the new manager of lhe Table
whanged the roof of the club house
Company we extend greetings!
and was seen no more . . . until it
turned up in the cup at the ninth!
That's what we call an honor . . .
to be mentioned in Tommy's col­
And then Eddie wouldn't even let
umn the first week In town!
it count!

Reason to Cheer
for Summer

I hear
near Aoe
Abe is
Is quite a Bible
zsiuie smstuOh. well, some people are always
! dent. . . Just ask him what it says taking the Joy out of Ufe!
' about printing!
। This week's nomination for HasOne word description of Mr I tings Hall of Eligible Bachelors . . .
Ah. ha! So I'm the butt end of a' Green of Parker Hotel fame . .
I Harold Parker. Roman Feldpausch's
right hand man. iWe had to hurry
joke I
■
dlplomartls!
with this one. -cause Harold's been
One word description of Virginia seen looking in Jewelry store win­
All right, all right! (Apologies to
I Baird . . . snewsy!
dows lately).
Major Bowes), but I can take It.

It seems Pete Bachelder had an
embarrassing experience last week
and nearly missed the Tigers' game.

Why are doctors usually so dis-

■ that way . . . fierce black brows, re_ ..
,, . ..
...
gal white hair and a ripping sense
Thats all right ... the real Joke of humor,
Is on them!
•
Famous sayings of prominent peo­
They cant even stick to facts . . . ple: -Say. Is this ten-cent night.
They got the gender of their species Ray?"
all wrong!
One word description of Mrs.
If they'd had It right, that bovine Geo. Lockwood . . queenly
would have had horns!
Wonder what Baldy looks like
Tommy'll never admit that this will) hts cap off?
column Is written by a woman.
|
Understand Ray Branch Joined
‘ "*
But I took precautions this week the ranks of the immortals last
to make sure I didn't become a week . . Made a "hole in one" on
the ninth hole!
hippopotamus!
Our compliments to Jane Camer­
on! She's doing nice work!

.

In fact. It was almost a pretty
lawful time, wasn't It. Pete?
Gosh. Tommy could make good [
use of a couple of Influential pals.'
Inn

Leo Wellfare's living up to his
name all right. He certainly looked (
beneficent when he handed out that ]
175 In cash last week at the drawing. |
And Bernie Reed must have had |
a touch of the same charitable Im- J
pulse
. handed out a |5 check to I
a certain young lady last week Just,
for getting poetic over hb part leu- '
lar brand of ice cream!
&gt;

Flowers to a most charming and
Ray sure can sock 'em
.
even efficient
waitress . . Loretta De­
if he isn't always sure where they're Vault of Kist Dairy

She can pick up a Job on big
If you want somebody to run er­
If his lost balls could only sprout, rands in a hurry. Stuart Edmonds is
time any day. If she does II will be
Hastings' loss and another case of the country club's reforesting prob­ your man!
lems would all be over.
gal makes good In the big city.
«—he
... made _ record
Understand
Tommy's been hearing lots of dash to live depot for papers the
stories nhntit
about Ihnut
those -1IM1*
"Utile in*t
lost nlllg"
pills' Other day.
of Ray's lately.
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Every lime I think of my boss out
Mr and Mrs. Oley Douglass and
Even the farmers arouhd the Club
there in the land where men are
men and the gals are glad of it. I grounds Just plow 'em under and children from near Neeley spent the
week end with Ute former's parents.
think nothing of it!
get s long face
Mr and Mrs. Dan Douglass
| Friends here are sorry to learn
lhat Mrs Minnie McNutt, of near
Irving, had lhe misfortune to loose
her barn by fire Sunday afternoon
Origin of lhe fire Is not known
I Miss Dorothy Havens is visiting
her cousin. Mary Hart, of Brush
1 Ridge for a few days.
1 Mr and Mrs Frances Gorham
1 were callers Sunday afternoon at
' the home of the former s brother.
1 Art Gorham, and family at Dowl­
ing
Mrs Roy Oaks is suffering with
bronchitis and under the doctor's

RED CHECK SALE
Carnation Milk

4

29‘

3

Boxes

1 QC

Not Will Rogers!

'

’

TOMATOES

JELLY BEANS
CANDY
SPECIAL

5 lbs. Pastry Flour__ 17c
2 lbs. W. L. W. Coffee 37c
5 lbs. Rolled Oats
.19c
mate
Juice.
Tomato
Soup. Beans, Red Kid­
ney Beans, Mixed Vege-

A CAN!

2 bxs. Wheat Krispies 17c
25 lbs. FLOUR LEADER 69c
1 lb. Tea Siftings___ 9c

Shredded
RALSTON
The NEW
Breokfott Food

Open Evenings

WALLACE GROCERY
HASTINGS. MICH.

Mr and Mrs Rankin Hart and
daughter of Brush Ridge were Sun­
day guests of their parents Mr and
Mrs Wm Havens. Mr and Mrs I
Howard Johnson of Hickory Comers I
were afternoon iwkrs there.
! Ernest Gorham and son
and
daughter of Kalamazoo spent Sat­
urday with hts parents. Mr and I
Mrs. Francis Gorham.
1 Billy and Evelyn Newland. Erwin
j Havens and Dwight and Howard |
| Ferris of Central Rutland attended
the Red Cross regatta at the Kel- |
1 logg camp on Pine lake Sunday P
M
A large crowd attended the com- ,
munity club meeting Friday eve­
ning at the Richard Laubaugh
home. The next meeting will be held
with Mr and Mrs. Geoffrey Keller
' the fourth Friday in July Instead of
the third one. owing to the McCal’ lum school picnic being on tbe third
. Saturday

I

CLAY HILLS.
The Moe school reunion was held
Saturday at the Moe schoolhouse,
a nice crowd was present and a
bountiful dinner served al noon. A
program and games were the fealures of the afternoon
Mrs Helen Shelfla spent Satur­
day with Mrs Guy McNee
I Roy McCaul and wife and Mrs.
Sarah McCaul and daughter BerI tha. attended a family reunion near
। Lowell Sunday
Tom Tungate and family of Parmalee and Vanee Sharp and fam| Uy of Middleville were visitors at
। Leon Potts. Sunday.
Several ladles of clay Hills at­
I tended the Busy Bee club, at Mrs.
1 Ethel
Polbenius'
In
Middleville
Thursday

Talking Geography
Many words In the commonest
' nse are taken straight from the at­
* las without dUtlngulahlng their
origin,
says Tit Bits
Magnxlne.
Take, for Instance, cashmere, Ja, pan, china, galloway, morocco, Jerl sey. arras, savoy, Inverness, in­
i gorn, magnolia, bantam.
Other
I words commonly used, make some
attempt to disguise their geographl! cal origin, as lumber (Lombardy),
। currants (Corinth), port (the wine
। of Oporto), sherry (Xetes), tobac| co
(island of Tobngo), indigo

1
i
|
।

j
1

2 LcZ 23c

GRAPENUT FLAKES_______ _____ 10c
No. 2'/z con DEL MONTE PEACHES, 15c

Cracker Jack

Arriving with summer are a
number of plensnnt features,
foremost among them being
bathing girls. Foremost among
lhe bathing girls. In the line of
beauty,
is
Francis
Paxton,
young film player.
And that
rubber bathing suit she wears
in the above picture is one of
lhe season's newest styles.

COATS GROVE.
Word was received Sunday of Hie
marriage of Ralph Van Wle, son of
Floyd Van Wle. to Lucile Moffll of
Middleville
The bride and groom
visited at Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Van
Wle's on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Or1 ville Van Wle of Eaton Rapids and
Roy Kinney of near Grand Rapids
, also visited there.
E. O. Smith and wife took a sev­
eral days' trip through the west and
, southwest going west into Iowa then
south through Kansas and on to
! Tulsa. Okla. They report seeing
I many interesting places.
! Mr and Mrs. Floyd Clum and
! family and Mr. and bVs Frank
Furgeson visited on Sunday, June
I 14 al H. Woodman's. Mr. and
Mrs. John Woodman spent the
I same day with Mr. and Mrs.
| Dwight Barnum.
Mrs. Mattle Kimble visited her
I son, Floyd Kimble, and family on
Sunday.
। Herbert Ridenour and Gladys
Munger of Battle Creek visited
&lt; Sunday at Russell Demond's.
Floyd Dunnigan's
mother of
• Flora. Ill. and sister and family ot
Champion. III., have been visiting
j recently in the Dunnigan home.
[ Mr. and Mrs. Willard De mon d.
| Mr and Mrs Lowell Drmond. Mr
'and Mrs. Harley Sease. Mrs Oscar
Cooper and son. David and Mr. and
Mrs Griffin went to Potterville and
surprised their aunt. Mrs Maude
Rowley Ross and enjoyed a pot
luck dinner with her
Marian Woodman has secured a
position as office manager at the
Starr Commonwealth near Albion
and began her work there June 16
She spent the week end al home
Her sister. Ruth, look her back to
Albion on Sunday.

DURFEE.
. !
Mrs Sam Kellar and children of
Orangeville and Max Kellar of
Hastings spent Sunday with Mr
and Mrs Edd Rice.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Moore and son
John and guests. Mrs. Harry Wil­
liams and children of Charlotte 1
spent Bunday with M. E Moore of
Freeport.
Misses pora Pursell, Doris Hoff­
man and Veta Rice took part In lhe ’
musical recital given by Mrs. Cham- 1
berlain at Dowling Friday. They I
were accompanied by their mothers. :
Mrs Orville Pursell Mrs Tom Hoff-J
man and Mrs Ed Rice.
Mr and Mrs. William Hoffman I
spent Father's Day with Mr. and
Mr*. Leon Blanton at Battle Creek ;
The East Baltimore Aid Society .
at Mr and Mrs. Russell Greenfields
was well attended Wednesday.

Share in

these

Savings!

Paul Bunyan
Crowell's "Handbook for Readers
and Writers" says that I'nul Run­
yan was a legendary hero of the
lumber camps of the American
Northwest Many tales are told of
his feats In a sort of chap-book
called “Paul Bunyan Comes West."
Tbe dragging of bls pick behind
him cuts out the Graml Canyon of
the Colorado. When tie builds s
hotel he has “the Inst seven stories
put on hinges ao’s they could be
swung back for to let the moon
go by."
Innumerable stories of
the prowess of this remarkable
Paul Bunyan have been Invented
by the lumbermen for tbelr own
. amusement
I

CHILDREN'S
WHITE ELK
SANDALS
Sixes 8’/i to 3

• EXTRA

Echo of the Reformation
Of the many historic marks, spots
and slnlna In existence today after
; several centuries, two are connect1 ed with the Reformation. The flint
' are mud tracks of cannon wheels
cm a number of parchment volI nines in
Sknkloster castle In
‘ Sweden. The Swedish army conflscnted these- parchments during
the Thirty Years' war and used
' them to pare the miry roads on the
way home about 1648. The secj ond Is a large Ink spot on the wall
of Luther's room In Wartburg
| castle In Germany which he made
&lt; when hurling his Ink pot at the
' devil In 1521.—Collier s Weekly.

.
,

■

j
।
.
।
,
i
'
I
'

(India), calico (Callcut), candytuft (originally from Candy), worSecond Largait Buddha
sted (Worcester), cherry (from |
The fummis Dlnbntsu. the largCernsos).
damson
(Damascene), ' eat bronze Buddha In lhe world,
originally from Damascus.
raat In 1252, Is at Kiuuakiir.i
It
Is 40 feet 7 Inches high, weighs 100 !
Bull Fighting “Soasons"
tons, and they say the eyes (four
Roll flghtlng Is considered by Its feet wide) are of pure gold, ob- 1
patrons as much subject to the serves a writer In the Chicago
vagaries of lhe season as the the
Tribune.
The Impressive statue
ter. Thus tn countries where thc
has stood In the open air since
■port flourishes, lhe visitor will be 14ft.*. when a tidal ware washed
told that It Is an off-season or a away lhe temple that housed It.
good season, and whether he Is en
couraged to attend depends often j
Fiftsen-Day Vacation
times upon his Informant's Impree j
A Inlier law in Colombia gunran i
shin of the general average of per tees employees a vacation of DI teen
fortnance.
day* with pay every year.

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"Barry County's Busiest Shoe Store"
114 W. STATE ST.

HASTINGS, MICH.

I
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I
1
I

"Each new piece of machinery
buy U coming from the Farm Bi
reau. Their line of Farn-TesU

equipment is backed by an organ

The races that people Colombia
■re varied Id the extreme, notes ■
writer io the Detroit News. Span­
ish descendants, white settlers and
mestizos populate the coast
On
the high plateaus In the Interior are
civilised Indians, Industrious and
prosperous,
living
io
well-built
el ties
And In lhe southeast see
primitive tribes that few white men
bare aeen. Bogota, the capital of
tbe country, Is 8.5fl3 feet up in tbe
mountains, with two means of ac­
cess to tbe coast: railroad to tbe
Magdalena river, down it to Baranqullla. thence autothoblle or roll
to Puerto Colombia; or by airplane

L. ... _

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�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JUNE 35, 1&gt;M

QOLF AND CONTRACT

‘Composers’ Back

ENJOYED TUESDAY
Mrs W. J. Holloway spent Mat
week with relatives in Adrian.
Feature
Weekly
Aben johnaon returned Thunday Flowers
from a business trip to Texas.
Luncheon at the OoanWayne snyder waa home from
try Club
A. A. Roth spent
Three Rlrerz over the week end.
his home tn Brigh
Yellow dslsles, white lilies and
Mlu Norma Trego U visiting her
iwim
Merwyn Plumley wu home from aunt. Mn. Mabel Fiah. at Bangor. blue
delphinium In the Country
1
Detroit fur FstMT's Dey.
Mr. and Mn. Fred Meyer visited Club lounge made a combination
Mr. and Mrs. George Sheffield re Is lives in Niles over the week end. greatly admired al the Tueaday
porter and plenty at styW—
were in Battle Creek on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs Bam Nadu of Char­ weekly luncheon, and sweet peas,
Mrs. Harold Pelham made a lotte visited friends in lhe city yes­ bachelor buttons and pink roses
business trip to Jackson this week. terday
pleased the eye on the luncheon
Mias Tillis Tyden went to Chicago
Mn. Sarah Brandstetler has been tables. Buffet service was given
on Saturday for a visit with rele­ vUlting relatives in Delton for sev­ from a table attractively spread
&gt;Kirri* sro«T jhisti
eral days
- with a lace cloth, carrying a triple
Mrs. Fred Leltz of Kalamazoo arrangement of roses.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Kurr and
The morning golf event tor most
family spent lhe week end in Chi­ called on Hastings friends on
holes won. went to Mrs Frederick
Thursday.
cago.
snd cottons—
Mr. and Mrs. Alec Ironside of Taylor. Mrs. Orville Bayles turned
MLm Eleanor Miller Is home from
in top score for contract.
Birmlnghsjn tor her summer vaca­ South Bend visited Mrs. Gladys
Questa from away were Mrs. O. C.
Reasoner Friday.
tion.
Mrs. J. R. Mason relumed Satur­ Wilson. Los Angeles, with Mrs. C.
Dr. John A. Woolon was bi Ann
W. Clarke, and Mrs B. Rummel,
Arbor on Friday attending a class day from a month's visit with her
Battle Creek, with Mrs. Herman
parents in MinneapolU.
WILSON SJOUT SOCKS
reunion.
Mrs. Kellar Stem went to Sylvan­ Arold.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Laberteaux
Brief and with elastic tops. Whites and
Tuesday's committee wu Mrs.
ia.
Ohio.
Monday
for
a
visit
with
visited her relatives in Leslie over
Clifford Dolan, chairman. Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs
Gay
Jordan.
colors
—
comfortable
and cool tor summer
Use week end.
Mlu Mabel Bisson vuited Mr and Frank Andrus. Mrs. Hubert Cook.
Miss Beatrice carrolhers is ex­
Mrs Marguerite Parker. Mrs. Her­
pected home from Detroit this week Mrs. C. M Bisson and family ol
man Arold was chairman for the
over lhe week end.
for her summer vacation
,I1 Kalamazoo
Mrs. Beatrice Knapp has gone to preceding Tuesday luncheon, with
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Herbert of
Mrs Robert O'Connor. Mrs Chu.
Otsego were Sunday guests of Mr Ypsilanti where she wiU attend lhe
Potts. Mrs. John Dawson and Mrs.
summer
session
at
lhe
Norma).
and Mrs. Andrew Herbert.
Mr and Mrs Hugo Wunderlich F L. Johnson assisting. Mrs. Don
Mrs pierce O’Connor has returned
Siegel is chairman for next week.
Clothing and Shoes tor Mm and Bap
from a three weeks' visit in Chicago visited their daughter. Miss Maxine
,
Wunderlich,
ot
Muskegon
on
Sunand Lake Geneva. Wisconsin.
1 day.
STANLAKE— PERRY NUPTIALS.
HASTINGS
PHONI 2396
Jake Rehor left Monday for a
Guests ot Mr and Mrs. Charles ( On .Friday evening. June ...
IB. ».
at
few days' visit with his son Fritz
Offley over the week end were Miss 1 ci
eight
o'clock taic
the inaillitgc
marriage VI
ol mi.M&gt;
Miss
«iiv HIIM,
and family In Canton. Ohio.
* U/lllc* vrvi vsic wrrik cuu wcic
Alice Offley and Lloyd Moon of De- । Lleva Loul.v Perry and
Hugh i Mike Riley. left. and Eddla Far­
Mr. and Mrs. C- W. Clarke were ,
James oiamaxr
Stanlake oi
of uanamg
Lansing was
Bunday guests of Mr
and Mrs troit.
tn,n'
juum™
woo ’ ley. who conceived "The Musin
home Wednesday to spend the sumFriends of Mrs. J. T. Tedrow wilt
Mallory Cassidy of Grand Raold*
' Mrg Phy111* Reynolds is expected ! solemnised at lhe home of the
are shown
Miss ArtMT Howell o' OrLd 'frem Ann Arbor U)da’r 10 &amp;p&lt;nd lhe 1 brlde s P*«nte. Dr. and Mrs Bur- Gons 'Round. . .
mer vacation.
. be glad to hear that she is improvdoing a little "whoa-holng'- on
. । ton *
A- Perry.
8t. only
Mr. and Mrs Donald Gager and i ing nicely after her severe lllnese
Lea,. «u lhe moi ol Mlu ver. ""’’I"'' •nl&gt; “I •»a
Ferry■ 88 Church m.
their
return
to
New
York
from
neice Plumley put ot lhe t»il1 Cordes
™"“‘
।I m.
the Immediate relatives witnessing ,
son Morgan and Mr. and Mrs. Paul! Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pennels spent
।
Harry Miller Is entertaining his the ceremony The Rev W May- ( Hollywood, where they recently
Hough, recently of Lansing spent Thursday afternoon with their par*
| sister and husband. Mr and Mrs.1 Ian Jones read lhe nuptial rites and
the week end with relatives in De- enU, Mr. and Mrs. Id. Pennels.
Dr. and Mrs B A. Perry were in ■ —~— z;-----------T .—
troit. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hough who
Lansing Tuesday and Wednesday |
h 0180Iman, and family of Mrs. Jones plsyed the wedding I
AWARDED NUMERAL.
march as the bridal party came
have been visiting tbe Gagers this Hastings spent Bunday with thetr
attending a convention of retert- c8°„. .
. ...
„
., the stairs ««
down
and stood before an ' Lynn E. Perry of Hastings, has last week went with them to Hart­ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Nanarlanz.
I Mrr Clyde Wilcox and Miss Bar- mow
Improvised
altar
of
ivy
and
white
been
awarded
a
class
numeral
by
improvised
altar
of
ivy
and
wl
ford Monday where they will spend Dell.
vfrtHlr* 1.r*&lt;heS’’^«"'hE
nf
bars
Wilcox
8. T
ew
“d.ur-Hi
C,h::c.
OU.
Club attended
ttre.ttl...the
« W
lUlmpeonies. The bride was given in the athletic council for parllclpa- the summer vacation.
Mr. and Mrs Grover Davenport
Annie Rosenthal, who has recov­ and Helen and Mrs. Eva Davenport
C ^iSK KttlUern 01 M.U.delphl.. marrlage by her father. Other dec- Hon in freshman tennia team al
orations throughout the house were Michigan Blate College. East Lan- ered from her recent operation in spent Bunday al Gull lake with tba
sing. Mr.
Mr. Perry
Perry participatedI
participated durtog
during I Ann Arbor U spending the rest of K. W. Chalker family. Mis* Helen
«lng.
Mr and Mrs Rzilwrt Rnrrrll nf P**-* visited his mother. Mrs. A. D. lovely summer Bowers
the recent athletic season■ X.
at -..X.C
Blate
A floor length gown of white or- *••«&gt;
8la
te ,' MW
ihe BUUU1W
summer with Mr. and Mr*. J. remaining for a visit.
"lur-r .nd
Sunday,
ganza was worn by lhe bride and BS ■ sophomore in the course in ap- i y impert.
veth cottage at Wall lake during , lcavtn« Sunday noon for home,
science.
her bouquet was white rosebuds, plied «*iene&gt;
Bunday In Hastings visiting Mr. anti
the summer.
white
sweet
peas,
snapdragons
and
CLOVERDALE.
Mrs. Amy Bower spent three days , HOLDING OPEN
WOODLAND.
forget-me-nots
tied with white.
Rev. Sewert Walton has
Mr and Mrs. Mark Garrison ware
last week at clear lake attending the !
HOUSE SUNDAY P. M. j satin ribbon. Her sister. Mis* Anne June
juuc 18
.0 latter.
UCLVCI.
guests
■•tsts of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs Bun
Burrell Phll- a vacation Bible school wl
Kalamazoo District Institute for ReI Perry, was bridesmaid and she wore | ***
Miss
— Margaret Spindler is visiting |lpa
Hastings. Sunday.
Elsie Applegate, assistant.
creaUonai leaders
M. D. Falconer of Carlton a floor length dress of blue or- relatives
raalallvaa in
In Detroit
rw»tmlt for
fnr two
fwn weeks
wmtka
.
Winston Sheffield and Miss Ver-!
| ganza Her bouquet was of pink ■ Mr. —
-■ •Mrs.
— «■-«
— •have
—• i Mr and Mrs. Harty Pennels en­ all the young folks wiU lake an
Celebrating Ninety-8evand
Edison Baas
neice Plumley were guests of
.
I rosebuds, pink sweet peas and snap- 1 moved into the Clyde and Bernice tertained Mr. and Mrs Bchurtng interest in it.
and Mrs. Harold Sheffield of
and daughter Eleanor of Hastings.
enth Birthday
___
________________________
I dragons
tied with pink. G. A Dahlln Munion house.
troit on Sunday.
q
. .
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. M. D Falconer of1 of
Sparta
attended
the
groom.
Masnf
Anortn
Attnnrtrri
tho
ernnm
MntPODUNK.
Mr. add ‘MM 11
Knopf and sons i
Mr and Mrs.' Arthur Johncock
lefT
left Wednesdsv tn gnend their va- I1 Carlton township will be al home ter Burton Perry. Jr. of Midland, a at 1 00 o'clock Monday June IS bit­
Mrs Anna Laubaugh
JatiruS mrhrrtntA binaXa with hrt!to the‘r Irtends and relatives on nephew of ttw bride, carried the
brother and sUter C
Uh
'ISunday
«"nr1*v aftenwmn
funs
is
thne!
on
.
-ttn
nlllnw
er
a
three
weeks'
Illness.
She
is
sur
­
Olin Brown and family of Plain­
afternoon. June 28. the oc- .ring on a ^tln pillow
Bom
last
Thursday
a son
Icasion being In honor of Mr Pal- ! Following lhe ceremony and con­ vived by her husband. Harvey well.
and Mrs. Burdette Content.
Mr and Mr*. Frank Dillbahner
i coner’s ninety-seventh birthday on I gratulations.
refreshmenu
were Towns, one son. Lloyd and two
Mr. and Mrs. Chas Monica and I gratulationa
and daughter. Jean, of Chicago are
the following day. Mrs. Falconer will' served, lhe ice cream being In the grandsons and one granddaughter daughter Evelyn spent Bunday with , _.
visiting friend* in Hastings and
of Woodland, one sister. Mrs. Rebec­
I be 7# In October.
form of pink and white bells
Mr. and Mrs Wellington Monica of i vi.it*d her
vicinity for a few day*.
The many friends of Mr Fal- I
Mr and Mrs. Stenlake made a ca Smith and one brother. William Bedford, Mis' Evelyn remaining the ■
AU are
Mr Waldron and Mr. clarke of
coner extend hearty congratulations clever getaway from their friends, Warner, all of Woodland Mr and
Muncie. Ind., were the guest* of
and hope he may be spared to cele- leaving immediately for a short Mrs. Towns have been residents of
Mrs. Roy Rodgers is entertaining
thc former's wife and mother. Mrs
brale his hundredth birthday at wedding trip and are now at home Woodland for about twenty years. her sister from Kalamazoo this
Rose Waldron, over Bunday.
least
at the Embassy Apartments In The funeral was held Wedneslied her stater
Mr and Mrs. a J. Larsen and i
• Lansing.
son John spent Sunday in Lansing |
Mr. and Mrs. Holtz of Augusta Ledge Bunday.
HONOR GUEST.
' The bride Is a graduate of the and at 2:00 at the United Brethren
with Mr and Mr* Harry Barnum
Rev.
Carrick was in visited friends around Cloverdale
Mrs W L. Hinman entertained Hastings High school later attending church.
When we see a
John remaining for the week
। on Friday evening honoring Mrs i
charge of lhe funeral services. Bur­ Saturday
the W. 8 T- C After her gtaduatlon
Mr and Mr*. Raymond Dahl- w
Mr. and Mrs. Smith and family
C.. w&gt;
C. olueiw
Shields, u
of, East Chicago. «...
Ill.. there she taught in Sparta then In ial in Woodland cemetery.
strom vUited relatives here over the tw0
of contract being In play,
Eugene Davenport leaves Tuesday and Mrs Nellie Given of Delton
Mr
Stanlake attended
week end Miss Kate Merriam re- I Mni
Joneg had high score, Lansing
afternoon
at ------Mrs.
for ueneva.
Geneva. n
N Y..
z., where
wnere ne
he wm
will spent Bunday U."
--------school in Perry and Lansing and is lor
turned with them for a week's visit Mr8 c. H Hinman low and Mr*
।
now in the employ of the Olds Co. visit his son-in-law. Harold Tukey. °‘*ens
Stewart Kelley and son Allen were shield* had a guest prize
E A«*®? °* Ha*'
in that city. Mr and Mr* Btan- and his three grandchildren. While ,.*Jr
in Detroit lhe guests ot his son., On Tueeday afternoon. Mrs. C.
Ih.re be
he will rele»r.U
celebrate hU KU. । ents, Mr and Mrs Bernard gf'l
lake hare the best wishes of a wide there
De1
i
ent*.
Mr
and
Mrs.
Bernard
DeMaurice attending lhe race* and 1 H. Hinman honored her mqther.
birthday.
circle of friends.
, Golla
bail games They returned Monday Mr* Shield*, with a dessert-bridge.
Guests at the wedding were Mr
Richard Hilbert of Los Angeles is
Mn. Julia pine of Kalamazoo U
Mrs. J A McNulty. Mis* Bara twelve being present
Mrs Vonda
and Mrs. Willard Perry and son of spendbig two weeks with his molh- spending a couple of weeks at her
Schader and MW Betty Vandegrift pauitn and Mrs feona Cleveland
DINNtKS
Midland and Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. er. Mrs Lawrence Hilbert.
home here.
left Bunday to attend lhe Episcopal were winners at contract. The rooms
Dahlln of 8parta;
| Mr and Mri Floyd Ore|ner are
5:30 to 7:30 F. M.
Mrs. Martha Repiogle in company :
summer conference at Montague.. were attractive with bouquet* of
moving into the house south ot tbe with Mr. and Mr* Everett McCal­
Michigan.
I summer garden flowers.
ATTEND LANSING MEETING.
SUNDAY DINNIftS
Insurance Company Wednesday Mr lum. spent Bunday with Mr and
Mrs. O E Goodyear with Anhe i
*
'
Mrs John Ketcham and Mrs F Greiner is much Improved in health Mn Hubert Pettijohn of Hickory
MELTHORN—LONDON.
and John went to Detroit Monday
Mrs Pauline Durbin of this city L Bauer were in Lansing Monday and expecu to be able to be out be­ Comen.
to spend the week with her mother
ft to 7:30 F. M.
and sister, Mrs. C- E. Thomas and announces the marriage of her son to attend a meeting conducted by fore long.
Garland Chilson of South Bend,
Cletus Mellhom to Miss Hazel MIm Margaret Mitts, organization
Mr. and Mrs. j. V- Hilbert drove Ind. spent the week end with his
Mis* Evelyn Thomas
| chairman for the Republican WomWorn- to Ann Arbor Sunday. Lorena Hil­ grandmother. Mn. Martha Cham-’
Pa,
Mr. and Mrs. August Fetter, of London both of Altoona. Pa.
The marriage took place there at en's League of Michigan.
bert. who has Just completed her berlain, and other relative*.
|
Kendallville. Ind., and Mr*. J. S
j Outlines and suggestions for or- freshman year at the university re­
Fetter of South Bend were week end Our Lady of Lord's church.
The bride was gowned in white | ganizatlon in county work were lumed home with them for the
' gueste of Mrs. John Reasoner. Mrs.
lace with veil of tulle and carried . given They also listened to talks summer vacation. Miss Louise Hii1 petter remaining for a longer visit.
white
roses and larkspur TYie brides- by ----------------------------------------------Mrs Barber, vice chairman,---and , bert who is employed there came to
—» ..««»-.
Mr. and Mrs Howard Moore of w
Mini. chiffon
nUidvnn with match- i Howard Lawrence, chairman
chairman nf
of the
the ( woodland for the week end.
Dowling spent Thursday evening maid wore pink
with Mr and Mrs. Archie Tobias in Ing accessories. Her going away Republican State central Commit- ; Don Qhorno and Birdsall Holly
tee Representatives from twelve spent Saturday night and Sunday
celebration of the Moore's wedding gown •was dark blue
Mr. and Mrs Melhorn have been | counties were present and much in-. wRh Robert E- Byrum al Olivet and
anniversary and Mrs. Tobias’ birth­
in Hastings spending a part of their ' terest was manifested.
attended tlze graduation exercises,
day
------------.
••
|
Mr. and Mrs. Fay c Wing were in
Mis* Yvonne Trego was in Ann honeymoon with hu mother and
ISSUE INVITATIONS.
Jackson Bunday where Mr Wtng
Arbor the past week in attendance other relatives
I
Mr.
and
Mrs
Calvin
R
Plumley
preached at lhe First Christian
at commencement festivities as the
FAMILY
REUNION.
have Issued inviutlons to the mar- church which was a former pasguest of Chas. Kelley of Detroit, a
The annual reunion of the Ed- riaire of their daughter. Miss Ver- torate.
member ot this year's graduating
clMM
। monds family was held at Thorn­ neice Vtvian Plumley, and G. WinMr. and Mrs. H. A. Kitson and
Mayor charlea H. Leonard and! •»»" I*', “&gt;
°&gt;
slon Sheffield son of Mr and Mrs. Mary Jo are visiting Mr. Kltson's
■on. Charier. Jr . Rotten Rouah.“■“h
“« auendanee O. W Biieffield of this city. The---------parenU at
Syracuse,* ind.
-* -------------wedding will be solemnized Friday , sirs,
Mrs. van
Carl juiuau
Jordan aim
and uouy
baby »mi
son
Maurice Roush and Glenn Bachel- •
' -lime. Those
__
evening. July J.
3. KV
at Vl|lll
eight M
o'clock
vimvk at iu
returned
.uuiow w
to thetr home uuoua.
Sunday
der were in Detroit Bunday and saw -present had a happy
from
away
were
Mrs
Martha
Free-1
the
[
W
me
o
j
the
bride's
parents.
A
1
from
Pennock
hospital Hastings.
- '
-'inc iwinc U» wac u&gt; am •
the Tigers defeat the New York _
.nd Mr_ and
.nd Mrs. Mt.nl..
....................................
Don 0honw Qf
Arbor c&gt;|n&lt;.
man
and
Stanley
tton
W1H
f
odow
the
ceremony
Yankees.
Wood and children of Kalamazoo’
p
I
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Holmes of
Bay City spent the week end with and Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Quigley ,
Mr. and Mrs. Will Shulters. Mr. of Orand Rapids.

IDEAS

Social Events and Personal Mention

frota Kin mi Armi fir liMtr

Miss AUeen Isenhslh is home from
Kalamazoo for vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. clarence Goucher
spent Bunday tn Detroit.
Mrs. Warren Carter visited rela­
tives and friends in Bay City last

Mto MM Link Of Battle Greek
has been the guest of Mrs Ophelis
O'HSlr for several days.
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Carrothers
are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rob­
ert Walton In Kalamazoo today.

Mrs. WillUm GiUUg of Hartford Bunday gutsU of Mr. and Mrs. BtewU lhe guest ot Mrs. Emma Mur­ art Cleveland and son of Port Huiroo..
dock.
Max Mead of Detroit visited at
Mr and Mrs. Emerson Stauffer
lhe Wayne Merrick home over the and son Ronald
attended ths
week end.
.
Schwader-Laytr reunion at Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Sage vlalt- Ledge Bunday.
■d reuthra in MuUwon
U» I MUe
Anw
w We.
Ti
Mrs E. parron Of BatUe ' gX*
^tti Hed

y *

ment durinf ihe w“°n

Mrs Frank Droulllard of Pontiac 1 ,*&lt;r
c,&lt;tu* Melhorn of
visited her mother. Mrs. J. R. Hayes,
JMr;?nd
on Monday
Mr*- Howard Lowe
Mr. Melhorn
Mr and Mrs. Stanley Wood and 1 *• “ nephew of Mrs Lowe,
children of Kalamazoo were in the
Mrs. Jennie Waters, who has
city on Sunday.
I been in Battie Creek the past two
Mr and Mrs. L. C Sutherland of weeks vtaltlng her daughter. Mrs.
Ann Arbor are guests of Mr. and I Hamilton, came home Bunday.
i Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hemey and
Mrs Geo. Miller.
Mlu Belva Riley visited Mr. and her mother. Mrs. Bins Valley, and
Mrs. Leon DeLa no of Grand Rapids Mrs. Emma Murdock visited Mr.
and Mrs. Vincent Rauner and Mrs.
over the week end.
Mrs. Martha Freeman of Kalama­ W. L. Gillies of Hartford on Bun­
zoo visited her brother. J. F Ed­ day.
Sunday guests of Mr. snd Mrs.
monds, on Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Finstrom were James Gilmer were Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. An­ Floyd Van Auker of Belding, Mr.
and Mrs. Bernard McConnell and
drew Kemp ot Battle Creek.
Dr and Mrs. Walter Lampman of Bobby of Battle Creek and Mr. and
Marion came Tuesday to visit Mr Mrs. Burr Clark of Holland.
Mrs. C. D. Bauer. Mrs. J P. Mohand Mrs George B, Heath.
Miss Louanne Sponable of Cleve­
land is visiting her grandparents. I Badie Glasgow were in Battle
Mr and Mrs Sumner Sponable.
. Creek on Tuesday attending a school
Mr and Mrs wm. Lovett of De-1 for flower show exhibitors, spontrolt were guests of Mr. and Mrs aored by the Michigan Horticultural
George M Newton part of last week.. Society. The meeting was held at
Mr. and Mrs. Wm Crans of East! the Kellogg hotel.
Caledonia were guests of Mr. and | Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl McMrs Dan Lewis over the week end. Klbben on Bunday were Mr. and
Mr and Mrs Walter Powell and I Mrs Earl Schuyler of Glendale,
baby have gone to Canada on a Cal. Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Stokee of
vacation trip and to visit relatives. Wavland and Mr. and Mrs O. B.
Mrs Nettie Hyde and Paul Hyde Bhettcrly of Lake Odessa, also Mr.
visited Mr ai.d Mrs A. 8. Johnson ’ znd Mrs. Wm Savacool and Mr. and
and family of Flint over last week Mrs Willard White of this city. Mr.
end.
I znd Mrs Schuyler went to UzUforMr and Mrs. Dale Roush were , nla 23 years ago where he has a fox
Saturday and Bunday guests of ’ ranch.
Miss Waneta Strausbaugh of De- j Mr and Mr*. Theodore Knopf and
troll.
i sons visited the former’s parents,
Mr and Mrs Elmer Andier Mrs 1 Mr snd Mrs Fred Knopf, of Bliss­
fl C Brock and Mrs Anns Chris- I Acid the latter part of the week
tiansen spent Saturday in Battle1 MIm Jannet Michael leaves toCrcek.
1 jmot
morrow
row for
for Ann
Ann Arbor
Arbor where
where she
she
Miss Emily McElwain has gone will be at Murtha
Martha Jordan during
to Evanston, in., where she will at- th^suffimfr
rhe' .ruinmer term at the University,
University.
tend lhe summer session al NorthMiss Barbara Johnson leaves towestem.
night for Ann Arbor to attend sumMtss Marlon Hallwood left yester- mer school and will reside at Chi
day. Wednesday, for her home In I Omega sorority house while there.
Mill Village. Pr . for a visit of a
The Misses Kalheryn Smith and
few weeks
I Norma Conover and Robert O’Neil
Mr, and Mrs. W U Shulters left1 of Grand Rapids spent Bunday with
on Tuesday for a vacation trip, go- i the latter's mother, Mrs. Ione
ing to the copper country in north- O’Neil.
ern Michigan
| Mr and Mrs. C. W Thomas of
Mrs. Jack Stem and daughter Kalamaxoo were Bunday dinner
went to Detroit Tuesday for a visit | guests of Floyd Thomas and famwlth Mr and Mrs
Briggs. Mrs. Uy. They also called on Mrs. Clar8tern's parents
enca Grohe
William
Severance
of
Battle ' Miss Margaret Gladstone who has
Creek visited his mother Mrs Mary been spending the past year in New
Sererance, and sister, Mrs. Mary York
'"*"*■ City
"** studying and
J working •Is­
expected home sometime this comEnglish, on Bunday
Miss Margaret Overton of Bangor Ibg week for her vacation
Mr. and Mrs Alonzo Trim and
and Robert Smith of St. Louis. Mo.,
were dinner guests of ML* Mar­ Henry Trim were Bunday guesu of
her parents. Mr
and Mrs Otto
garet Merrick Saturday night
Mr and Mrs Edward Downs and Schulze, of Nashville They also
Mr and Mrs
Roy Downs were visited in Vermontville in the aft­
guests ot Mr and Mrs R D Man­ ernoon.
Edwin Harper, of Litchfield. Ne­
chester of Lansing on Bunday
Mrs Wm Fighter and grandson. braska. I* visiting his cousin. Mrs.
Billy Payne, of Orand Ledge have Eliza Johnson They had not seen
spent the past week here with rcla- each other for over 50 years, when
lives returning on Wednesday.
| both were children living in carl*
Mr and Mrs Howard Black of । ton township
Sunfield visited his mother. Mr*. J I
Mrs Agnes Fisher and Don and
F Black. Bunday. The latter's con-1 Dwight Fisher spent Father’s Day
dition remains about lhe same
-------------with B ----8
..
Holly
—,
of Woodland
Mrs Bernard Bertch (Julia Lath-[. Other guests 7.:;;
ZZ Mr*
were LL.
Mr 1 and
tnhnwin ann
ram&lt;i«ofntBatd.«_
rop) of Ban Diego. Cal., is tbe guest ■, w«ri
Karl Johnson
and family
of Mr and Mrs J E McElwain and tie creek and Mrs. Q A. Zuidema of
other relatives and friends In this , Orand Rapids.
vicinity
| Chester Stem will be at hl* Gun
Mr and Mrs. Burr Cochrane and lake cottage over the week end ar­
sons. Bobby and Mickey, of Cold- companled by Lee Garlich. Paul
water visited her parents. Mr and Ollderhaus. E S. Miller and daughMrs George M Newton, from Frl-' ter Anne, all of 6t. Louis. Mo. MU*
day till Bunday.
I Anne will remain to go to Clear
Mr and Mrs F A Cadwailader take for her second year •»
at Camp
and *on James. Mr and Mrs P. Kltannlwa.
Huver. Mr and Mrs. A. O. Cad­
Mr and Mrs Frank Nobles of
wailader and WillUm and Mr* El­ Jacksonville. Alabama, came Friday
la L. Powell spent Sunday at OUll and visited their cousins, Mr. and
Mrs Ory Chaffee, until Tuesday.
lake
Judge of Probate Stuart Clement They went from here to Middleville
left Tueaday for Traverse City, to to visit friends and will remain In
attend tbe annual convention of the Michigan all summer. They were
probate Judges of Michigan that former residents of Mulliken.
will be held on Wednesday. Thurs­
born and daughter. ML* Stellanova
day- and Friday of thU week.
MUa Dorothy Patnales of Fem­ Osborn, were dinner guests of Mr
dale OLLumpanir d MUa Margaret
Merrick home from Royal Oak la*l They were on their way to their
week and has gone to Camp Kl- summer home near lhe Boo. from
their winter residence in Georgia,
ot the counsellors during the sum­ and were spending the night in Batmer.
Mrs. J. OBarnhart
(Hazel
Gardner chldezter and Mr Kern,
Roush* of Portland and Mrs. Elbert representing the Forest Products
Lindsey ।Pearl Roush) of Lansing laboratory. Madison. Wls.. will be
were here on Tuesday to see their in attendance this week al the Na­
aunt. Mrs. Agnes Bristol, who is ill tional Pulp and Paper Convention.
with pneumonia in Pennock hos­ Orand Rapids, and^will spend the
pital.
week end in Hastings with the for­
Mrs. Flora Riker Williams and mer’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. G. F.
son Gerald, and Miss Mabel Chol- Chidester
lar of Orand Rapids visited Mr. and
Mrs. L. V. Bessmrr who returned
Mrs M E. Nevins Saturday. Miss to Angola. Ind., the Ant of last
Chollar resided in Hastings st one waek with her guests, prof, and Mrs
time and operated a beauty parlor H E Harshman, spent Friday in
in the WRhey building
Pt. Wayne, a bus load of garden
William Bchmldlin and slater. enthusiasts going over from Angola
Miss Lucille Bchmldlin of Zurich. to attend the meeting of lhe Feder­
Switzerland, were Bunday guests of ated Garden Clubs of Indiana. One
Dr and Mrs George L Lockwood of the most attractive spots in the
Miss Bchmldlin. who has been tn former city is a Japanese garden
Oregon for lhe past five years, was maintained by the city, a part of
enroute to her home In Zurich
thetr public park system
Mrs John F. Goodyear is expect­
Miss Dorothy Long, in company
ing her grandsons. Philip and John with Miss Thelma Anton of Grand
Van ZDe. lor guest* over tbe waek, Rapids
automobile nwa7
Rapids left
left by
by automobile
Friday
end and will return with them to • for a six weeks' western trip. Thay
Detroit, Monday, to remain till the arrived in Lincoln. Nabr. Saturday
latter leases on hl* trip to china. and spent Bunday with the former's
mention of which is made elae- aunt. Mr* Barbara Burkie. and
where
i cousin. Mrs H P Manning Thay
Mrs. Avis Tyler was in Lansing txpected to ba in Cody. Wyo , WtdThursday and attended lhe Re- neaday and from there go to Los
publican luncheon given by state Angeles, and on north to BMtm.
employees John Carton, president of Oregon, where they will visit
the Young Men's Republican Olab., unclg of J. W. Long's. 8. E. ***
brought an interesting report to Returning th*y will taka the
tboaa present of tbe recant National ern RMte into tbe Upper Ptij
convention at Philadelphia.
and then home.
'

win

&gt;Kim*

$1.25 to 12.50

65e, 85c, $1.00, $115

25c, 35c, 50c

T. S. BAIRD

SPECIAL1

PARKER HOUSE

The BIG LITTLE STORE
With Very

Low Prices

Friday, June 26

Holmes was construction engineer
here at the time the new postoffice

HONORED GUENTS.
Mrs D. C Bronson entertained I
with a charming bridge-tea on
Monday complimentary to Mrs.
George Pogue and daughter. Pauline
of Greeley
Colorado,
who are
guests of Mrs Mary Evarts and Miss
Agnes 81m Twelve ladles were pres­
ent. Mrs. Nellie Cross winning high
contract score

Mrs L. H. Evarts and Miss Mary
Sim are spending the week al the
A K. Frandsen cottage Wall lake
with their guests. Mrs
George
Pogue and daughter Pauline of
Greeley, Col.
Mr. and ktrs. Don Taffee. Mrs.
Gertrude Wilcox and son Joe and.
MUs Jennie McBain motored to
ENTERTAINS CU'B.
Evanston. Ill., on Bunday. Mrs WU- ] ___ _____
_______
..
cox and Mlu McBain remaining for Charles H. Leonard entertained her
the summer session at Northwest- 1 bridge club at a six-thirty ’dinner,
am.
with covers laid for eight Al con­
Frank Reed, of BprtngAeld. Ill.,1 uaCl. Mrs. Glenn Brower won high
waa in ttw oity Thursday visiting i score
hU outer. Mrs. George Colvin, and 1
Y. X
&lt;TLlrBrenewing nld acquaintances Frank
Mrs WllUafn McCann delightfully
left Hastings around M years an.
but recollections of hla early child­ entertained the members of lhe Y.
M.
L
&lt;Dub
at
her
home in Irving
hood days here, draw him back oc­
on Wednesday afternoon.
casionally.

CREAM

ICE

COMPLETE STOCK OF FLAVORS IN

BRICK OR BULK

Try the FAMOUS BUTTER PECAN
• FROST BITES

Prampt and Courteous Service
All work done in our own shop

■

BESSMERS JEWELRY
HAITINQft

•

PHONI 2634

KCcD

10c

Wolgroen System
O DRUG STORE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

ud HmIf

Lunchoon Msst

• CHOCO POPS

SODAS AND SUNDAES

Lms

Beef Roasts •—*"■

• POPSICLES

FIRST CLASS WATCH REPAIRING/

Certo
21c
Jar Rings
3 •— 10a
Sno-Sheen Cake Flour
•** 2Sc
Pet Milk
Tomato Juice
-17c
Soap Chips ClamOHi
Gauze Toilet Tissue
Peaches
Beef Ribs

• BIG BOY CONES

Saturday, June IT

PHONI U41

Sliced Boon

HINM

rateui

■».

ll'/a

�INSURANCE
LIFE . AUTO . FIRE
1
I

WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL

JASON E. McELWAIN

Cherry Pie Champ

THE CHURCHES

WANTS
ONI CUNT A WORD. NO ADVER-

TIBEMKNT FOR LESS THAN 25c.

1 FOR SALE—Draft teorara, from 1 to 8
deruratrd. prhala entrance. bath. ■
303 Hn Jrffrr.on. Phone 3097. 0 23
FOR HALF—t'.ed eleelrle rvfrierralor 1
ifi'ap for eaah. I’hoBy 709—F13 « 23 1

tie Creek. The wedding which took
place on lhe anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs Walter Blanton's marriage
was performed by Rev. C. L.
Schlueter, and was attended by tbe
groom's sister. Miss Marian and hl*
brother. Leland. After a short trip
the bridal couple are now located at
lhe father's home recently vacated
and In readiness tor them to begin
housekeeping.
Bom—Friday morning at Pennock
hospital, to Mr. and Mr*. Gerald
Doster. Lacey, a 6 lb. 11 oa. daugh­
ter who passed away a few hours
after birth. Their many friends
sympathize with them In their loss.
Stanley Durham, who was taken
to Nichol* hospital lor an emer­
gency operation for appendicitis, is
much Improved.
Miss Arabelle Bivens spent the
past week with her mother. Mr*.
Sylvia Bivens and sister. Mrs. Har-

W* lasvr* Bmm. HnnicU Ootai
Private OarasM aS LOW RATU

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .
40* Kalawuoa WaU. Rank Rte*
A Maw* Oowsaar Orsastaa* 1*74.

SHELDON'
ABSTRACT

OFFICE

and Mrs Oeo Beattie, was born tn
Orangeville. Aug 5. 1881. and en­
tered Into rest at his home in Or­
angeville Twp . on June 17. 1936. at
the age of 54 years. 10 months, and
12 days Mr Beattie was united In
marriage to Miss Mildred Chapman
of Wayland on July 16. 1912 To this
union were bom eight children Mr.
Beattie had spent his entire life in
Orangeville and vicinity. He is sur­
vived by four daughters and three

BRICK
In­

quire of Joe DeRuiter

at Pickle Station.

CARDS of THANKS

Grand Rapid., and Mrs Ann Boulter
of Orangeville, several nephews and
nieces and many friends. Mr. Beat-

baking

were served by the hostess and Mrs
Miner Palmer invited us to meet
with her next time for a picnic dln-

many of the lota, despite the thick
primeval underbrush, sold for &gt;2.000. It wa* Mid that this section
of tbe city eould have been a
clean place were it not for the uncouib wild pigs.

MASSEY-HARRIS FARM TOOLS
SALES AND SERVICE

ELECTRIC WELDERS AND MACHINISTS

TRUSS

FOR WORK OR, PLAY
Thia Snoolk Rubbar Back Pad*

NEW

Ben Conklin and daughter Louis
from Milan, Ohio, and Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Moore and daughter. Bea­
trice and Eunice from Battle Creek.

PLEASANT HILL.
ville, Dorris and Robert. Waller and
Tlie Irving Garden club met with
Louis at home. Mrs. Beattie preced­
ing him in death on Feb. 22. 1936. Mrs. Fred Johnson Thursday after­
Also by two brothers. Oeo. ot Pine noon. After the business meeting
lake and Wm of Orangeville, three Mrs. C- D Bauer of Hastings gave
sisters. Mrs. Marian Goodyear of

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FOIM

Merle Van Auken ha* returned to
his work at Battle Creek after sev­
eral days off duty with live Au.
Mrs. Mary Callahan ot Bedford is
spending some time at tbe home of
her daughter. Mrs. Jennie Holmes,
of the Eagle district.

too. Mrs. Marion Cook of Shelby­

At Old Hostings Wool

Boot Flant Site.

The Halting! Banner

talned at dinner Tuesday evening at
their farm home. Briggs district.
Both the bride and groom are grad­
uates of Hastings High and were
active there in 4-H club and Ag-HE
work Since graduation Norman has
been assisting at the farm, giving
special attention to marketing pro­

Fhsoe BU. NatL Bank Bldg.

Our Service

Honoring the marriage of their
son. Norman E. Blanton to Miss
Doris Lee cole, daughter of Mr.
and Mr*. Orin Oole of Johnstown.

was bom in Barry township, Barry
county. June 18. IE96 and deported
this life on June IB. 1936. aged 40
years and 2 days she was married
to Cornelius Cappon. Jr. of Or­
angeville in 1915 To tills union
seven children were born she was
a kind and loving mother and will
be greatly missed by al) who knew

OLD

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pods
No Leg Strop*

grandson Harry attended the Hook­
er school reunion Saturday.

OUR GUARANTEE
We Have the BEST and EA1

EST

the

The Prescription Drug Store

Earl Van Syckle of Middleville.
Ethel Palmer and Rus.se 1 Palmer of

Kiopenstlne

Wayland were Wednesday suppei
guests of Mr and Mrs. Bert Palm-

l»a.

Farmers, Attention!

ROLLERi
SKATING 1
LUTONE PARK
WEST CUN LAKE
Ladiea. 26f — -Men. 30c
Sunday afternoon, 15c A 20c
Saturday afternoon, 10c, 15c

GRANGE PROGRAMS

angevllle. Nov 21. 1912 and entered
Tuesday.
Wedding
into rest at his home in Orange­
ville Twp.. June 17. 1936. at the age
Cummings. 84. of the Ellis district,
of 23 year*. 6 months and 26 days
and Mrs Electa Briggs. 80 They
Earl is survived by four sisters and
qerc married in Angola. Ind. and
three brothers, an aged grand­
were accompanied by his brother.
mother. Ave uncles and eight aunts,
Peter Cummings. They have begun
several cousins and many friends.
housekeeping at the groom's home.
Thc latter has lived here all his
in lhe Orangeville church on Sat­
life, the bride being a former resi­
urday at 2 30 P M . the Rev H F dent here They will be tendered a
Weston of the Allegan M. E church
welcome Tuesday veiling at lhe
Cummings home.

Mr* Faye Donley, aged 43. &lt;who
has been in poor health for several
months, died on Monday at her
home in this city. For some time

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and

KAYBESTOS Brake Lining
VICTOR GASKETS
NEW AND USED ALTO

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2637

Hare Saturday, June 27

liutlnp

of a sister tn Flint, returning here
about ten days ago. Surviving are
two children. Miss Betty and Jack
Donley, also the sister. Mr*. Victor
Klinert ot Flint, and a wide circle
of friends
Mrs. Donley was a
member of tile Emmanuel Episco­
pal church and of the O E 8.
Chapter No. 7. She served a* city
treasurer from April 1. 1930 to April
1, 1932 The Rev J Archibald Mc­
Nulty conducted the funeral serv­
ice at Emmanuel church on Wed-

EME1SON ROYER

DENTAL OFFER
JERRY ANDRUS

Old established farm sales organisation, with rapidly-ex­
panding business, lias attractive opening at Hastings.

QUALIFICATIONS. The man we select must enjoy the good­
will and respect of hit community. He need nol have previous
real estate experience. He should be between M and 60 years of
age, must own a car.aad toe Ln a position to devote real time
and effort to establishing j* profitable agency.
DUTIES: To Hat and show farms tn your community. &lt;A
nation-wide reputation for DEPENDABLE SERVICE, years
of consistent and extensive advertising and thousands of boost­
ers among satisfied customers bring our agencies the cream
REWARDS: Profltable, constructive, clean and InterMling
work. A permanent business in your home community. Our
qualified agents make both money and friends.

Your local acquaintances and effort, backed by our wide
advertising, many yean' experience In farm sale* and cloue
personal co-operation, spell success. Write promptly for copy
cf our famous monthly farm catalog and booklet "The Modern
Way of Helling Farms." Learn what UNITED backing Is doing
for many of our so representatives in • mid-west states.

WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT?

MONEY

PRIME ELECTRIC FENCING
32 or 6 volt Battery. Battery teste 4% months on one chargOver S.0M uacd last year. Over BOB wU In Michigan this
Spring. PRICE OF (ONTKOIJ.ER, &gt;34.50. Address

BURTON D. SNOOK
• TO PAY BILLS

tentative

OLIVET.

MICH.

• TAKE a VACATION

REDUCE YOUR

enn produce
high a yield
flax-growing

HE MAKES THIS SPECIAL

FARM SALESMAN WANTED

DO YOU NEED

PRESENT
Experiment!

(Dr. Dennison*
DENTISTS

HASTINGS

• REPAIR the HOME
or CAR or EVEN

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

Dr. G. Allingham

WILL BE IN HASTINGS
SATURDAY. JUNE 27
AT THE PARKER HOUSE

spent the week end with her par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. R J. Williams
They came by lhe way of South
Haven and brought Alice and Ar­
lene. who had spent the week with
their Clarke cousins home. They
also attended the Hooker school
reunion near Wayland
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Raymond of
near Hopkins spent Sunday with
her parents. Mr and Mrs. Clifton
Campbell.

PAY­

MENTS?

WE MAKE LOANS
Brithto !»!•• -oal Sepply
Tba British islet have sufficient
eoal resource* for at least 650 years,
according to a survey.

ON AUTOMOBILES

HASTINGS MARKETS

If the cor is not fully
poid for we will take
over the balance for
you and lend you ad­
ditional money.

RAIN!

RAIN!

RAIN!

Leaky Roofs in Rainy Weather Destroy
Savings of a Life-Time I
•

AND FURNITURE!

PLATES $

I Sperl sitae In Roof*. Siding and Insulation. FREE Inspection
and Estimates at Any Time! I represent the Sherrifl-GaelLn
Roofing Line of Bailie Creek—A Home Concern. Third largest

(Ted) Theodore S. K. Reid
7H—Ft.

H4q MID'S SERVICE STATION
East of Hasting* «n |

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

Fidelity

at FELDPAUSCH'S

Corporation

MARKET. Phone 2616

PHONE 2307

FOOD CENTER 2609
H. Faldpausch . 3921

Room 16 — 2nd How
National Bank Building
HASTINGS

MICHIGAN

Highest Prices «Dead Stock
our Dud Animals Are Worth DOLLARS
assure yourself of getting Hie BIST PRICES, call

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1936

x
Political Convention*.

ollywood, calif.—

H

Thi# month, being en­
gaged in the somewhat respon­
sible task of filling the most im­

portant office in the. world, the
accredited representatives of
|two great parties will discharge
the** duties by acting ns1 though,
■hortly before they were born, their
I respective mothers had been hor­

ribly frightened by an intoxicated
toe-dancer.
At Cleveland, if the delegate* for
Zookti* fall to behave like howling
dervishes
for at
least forty minute*
following tbe men­
tion of hl* last
name, they're trai­
tors to a sacred
trust. And if tb*
delegate* for (tookua don't carry on
longer and louder
and crazier than
the Zookua bunch
did, they'll never
0»r. 110 Ihvlr |„|„ B CoM
■burned heads.
The setup will be different at
Philadelphia, the cradle of liberty,
although occupied at time* by some
funny foundling. There, when the
chosen mouthpiece offer* ■ candi­
date whose second nomination has
been certain ever since hl* first
Domination, every patriot on the
floor must be thrown by the as­
tounding shock into a happy deliri­
um. lasting until his leg* give out.
bls larynx spills and lie can't think
of any mure byiterla ■ymplom*.

Ths Seattle Lochlnvar
ATEST news from the hospital
Is that America's boy sweet­
heart—the young Loch Invar out of
Seattle—Im suffering from overwork.
A large number of traffic cops
aroutul Washington nre reported to
be In the same fix. The barkee|H-r*
haven't sent In their casualty Hat

L

One of the big clrcnse* Is certain­
ly overlooking a gorgeous chance.
Think of the sensation—alone In a
Bteel-bnrred arena—Clyde Beatty
with Zloncheck,
Black Masked Bigots.
NTO n sour aoup-etock of religious
and racial hatred, stir a mi&gt;M of i
high-sounding titles, blood-curdling;
oadia nn&lt;l foolish regnllns, and

I

slstlhle Hp|wnl to parties whose or-

bilgewater of bigotry. Presently
they're adding miscellaneous ttiurder
to their mummery. ns In Mlt^ilgnn.
whose sundry gallant heroes seem"
about due to suffer prolonged nttacks nf short-haired paleness,
which Is a disease brought on by
wearing a close hnlr-cut behind
some high Slone walls.
They say such organized Intoleruncc epldeiulca come In waves, but

America Is nt wnr? Then nobody
objects to cutting Catholics or Jews
or negroes In tbe firing line. Nobody
questions their patriotism or their
fitnesa to defend the nation's flair.
all of a iiiilili-n a lot of folks dieand a certain color nre unworthy to
be classed us cl11 sens.

ECENTLY in outlining th* palltlcnl high (pot* scheduled for
tbe next four weeks, tbe writer
failed lo mention lhe Liberty
League.
The Liberty league will not hold
a convention, but will have tea on
tbe Du Pont lawn. There may be
speeches and perhaps n enappy
prayer by the rector of lhe Church
of 88. Midas and Croeaua, but Al
Smith will positively not apeak,
having already learned the bitter
leaaon that a fellow can pick aa
awfully bad spot to make an awful­
ly good speech lo.

R

DURY WRITTEN
106YEARSJGO

I RESORT INSPECTIONS

WILL BE MADE SOON
‘B&amp;rry Oo.

I

the bubonic plague twice than that

IRVIN t. CORR.

LS=J|Oh. boy I

Of all the tough spots

vtytv

t

s«mps

nnAT

PASSENGERS CATCH

. SL?

*51

MRS. MAUDE SMITH

LARGEALBATROSS ;
-------------

Miggionarieg

Enjoyed Meat

Itato this county, it u Important lhat
____ .
COUDtV W

of Porpoise Which Tast­
ed Like Steak
. (Letter No. 4.)
Monday morning. March 31st.—
Rose early and made preparations
to go ashore. A friend came with a
attached to it by ropes, so lhe whole
number were accommodated in one
boat, with only one of our sailors to
ball out lhe water. Thus we turned
our backs on our floating prison.
When we reached the beach, there
were hundreds of natives standing
to receive us. They exclaimed "Aloha.
Aloha," offered their hands, and
brought little wagons to carry us to
Mr. Bingham's. At first my mind re­
coiled at the Idea of riding in a con­
veyance drawn by my fellow beings.
But being advised by all the gentle­
men. and to spare our own feelings,
the four single ladles were drawn in
state to the house of Queen Kaahumanu. she who exercises the
royal power on the Islands till the
young King is of age. This was the
first and I hope will be the last
lime I shall ride in this manner.
Queen Kaahumanu was dressed in
rich blue silk, had a figured muslin
scarf around her shoulders, and two
handsome strings of feather beads
around her neck. We were intro­
duced separately and to each one
of us she offered her hand and
"aloha." expressing by her counte­
nance and gestures the highest
satisfaction on our arrival. Mr.
Bingham Invited her to come and
dine with us, to which she Joyfully
consented and walked with only two
attendants In the procession. As the
distance was short we did not again
enter the carriage. And what a pro­
cession f It was such a one as you
can never form any idea of without
seeing it. The natives flocked around
us as thick as bees. Some of them
were very genteelly dressed, but by
far the greater number were entirely
naked, except for a strip of tapa—
a native cloth tied around their mid­
dle. They have interesting counte­
nances and manifested much Joy on
receiving new teachers. We found
the missionaries all living but Mrs.
Bishop, who has gone to rest. Those
whb survive are almost wont out
with their labors. When we were
seated oncL had received a glass of
wine, we sang that sweet hymn:
"Kindred and Friends for Christ’s
Dear Sake, a Hearty Welcome Here
Receive." Mr. Green in a most fer­
vent manner returned thanks to
Ood for protecting us through dan­
gers ot the deep, and granting us an
interview with our dear brethren in
circumstances so favorable, con­
cluding with ardent supplication for
tiie outpouring of the Spirit on this
once idolatrous, but now partially
enlightened people. It was a scene
i of deep intereat. Many of the na'
lives came in and sat on the floor;
crowds surrounded the windows and
doors, and every eye suffused in
(Continued on page 4. Sec. 3)

■ -

•

-

XS'teJ. Xon.
water will be tested and ratings
given on Barry county resort areas.
All information regarding repairs.
Improvements, licenses for milk and
food handling should b* applied for
through the Barry County Health
Department. This service Ls an ac­
commodation and an assistance to
,
Improve lake and resort conditions,
1
and there is no charge for it. It
Is hoped that the owners and oper­
ators of the various resorts in lhe
county will have ths necessary pride
tn their particular areas, so that
Barry county will, owing to its nat­
ural beauty, be one of the beat
playgrounds in Michigan.

ORGANIZE AND
ELECT OFFICERS
Electrical
Contractor!
ot
Barry Oouaty Ohooae Don
richer, Chairman.
On Friday evening the electrical
contractors of Barry county, about
twenty in number, met and perfect­
ed an organization, the officers be­
ing: Don Fisher, chairman; Blrd*111 Holly of Woodland, secretary
and treasurer; Mickey WUey. busness representative. It has been

Association of Barry County." The
members plan to meet monthly for
the discussion of practices
and
problems.
This group is composed of li­
censed contractors in Barry county,
who felt It wise to organize for their
mutual benefit and for the benefit
of their customers. Loyal, faithful
service, high quality materials and
giving a customer the products he
pays for. are their alms.
DEATH OF FRED KEISTER.
The newspaper
fraternity of
Michigan will mourn the death of
Fred Keister of Ionia, editor of the
Ionia County News. Death was due
to a heart attack Sunday morning.
He was widely known throughout
the state. He established the Ionia
County New* In 1831 and had made
it an outstanding weekly newspa­
per. He had previously published
papers at Pewamo and Elsie. His fu­
neral was held yesterday. Wednes-

AT WIWWeTKA SCHOOL

'■“J

------------------------------

T

—

-

T

I........................

Th,,e OPP»rtunitl.. Made
Poillble by W. K. K.l-

in tn* nr*i

■“ as

Coming Attractions at
The Strand Theater

PRIMARY TN

| Jane has ever been ini This takes/IVE LOCAL PRIMARY IMTEMPE8T0UB STORMS AB
8TBU0T0M XMROLL
BOAT ROUNDS OAPE
iKS'
.r“hJX
AT BVAMBT0M
HORN
| Bumu of BWUWW, !. .!«««■
&gt;“u !
-------------

Ings lack. So, because some of us
joined a move to save Impounded
dogs from possible mutilation and
torture at the hands of unauthorised
agencies and guarantee for theta a
swift merciful death a large num­
ber of folks seem to think we'r* of his death, and was a man whose
qualities of heart and mind made
vlvisectlonlsta
For one. I'm against Weird exper­ him loved by all who knew him.
iment upon dumb brutes in the of­
INCENTIVE TO CmZ-ENSHIT.
ten abused name of science. When
I read that some gifted exhibition­ Charles, in the Thumb, was among
ist swapped tbe vital organs of a ♦5 who recently received
their
pelican and a hound pap, so that naturalization papers, being the oldthe pelican went out in the back
yard and barked himself to death Uon there. His first remark after
at tbe moon and the pup choked try­ getting the papers that made him a
ing to carry half a buabel of flab In
do r get my check?"
tbe cause of medicine baa been ad-

tain creature* that mankind may be

Is

Health Dept.

Oo-eperating With the
State Board of Health

f Ba r r y By p at heT TEKNERS GET

iogg Foundation

s-

WITH
EMPLOYER'S CASH

DISAPPEARS

Unpleasant Experience of
Rutland Woman With
Grand lapldi Man

As the plot and the ensuing In­
vestigation of a murder at the pre­
view of a new picture narrows down,
the story Ls brought to a breathless
climax, guaranteed to raise goose­
flesh on the most hardened of
mystery addicts.
.
.

Mrs. Elizabeth Manning, who
lives a Hille west and on “““
site side of th* highway __
fox farm in Rutland township, went
to Orand Rapid* Saturday to get a

Dickie Moore in “Timothy's Quest."
"Timothy's Quest" brings to the
screen the popular story of a waif's
•earch for love. Young Dickie
Moore portrays tbe title role. Tbe
film re-creates aU the "folksy" peo­
ple of Pleasant Valley from Mias
VUda. Hltty Tarbox and Jab* Doo­
little. to the villainous Doc Cudd
and Um impish Samantha.

young man, about six feet tall, who
looked able, and claimed he could

or
FIFTY-SEVor

tbe place with her daughter. She

FAR.

J. F. Yxrf*r Telia t
cUl Club of Necessity I
he
R.ll.f for AcHoiltuo

office in Grand Rapids. He said
would be glad to take the job. He
gave his name as Willis Hansen and
agreed to begin work Monday morn­
ing. He returned with Mrs. Man­
ning. Monday morning he started
—‘ *—
up the team. About
before he had atthat time.

' mary teachers of the Hastings city
Hastings Commercial
• • •
! schools, one from Delton, one from
And all because th* boss turned 1 Dowling, one from Middleville, two
hi* back.
I from Nashville, one from Orange• • •
.
, . I vllle and one from Woodland, be- Colman and Colbert In Two Ftao." , Manning kef I th. home for a short | ™
populst’u^.nty
We must persuade TonunT not to .lnn|n&lt; lhelr 8Ummer's work at the
The sands of Saliara flame with ’hil. WI^ ^ return^ th* team |
----------start any more monkeyshines.
i
of Education in connection revolt and France s Foreign I*J
Md 1W
I cent more depend dll
,
...
with Northwestern University at,
—— *•——f■ a man who Is bcen done' Hansen was gone. She directly upon the proa
farmer. There ar* 37
This Is "No Idea" week. A lot or
of ,I Evanston, BL These teachers are gion. the story of
. . . .....
I.._, won't hatch. Vmt
~ a course in "Child Growth KibTtaok
brought
bark 'r™.
from . «if.u»po«d
।
pippins
that Just
You taking
doom bv the love of a woman money and $6 belonging to her
can't start a bright paragraph and and Development in the Primary 1
daughter, who works in the onion
School,"
which
Ls
made
possible
'
abandon It. It Just isn't being done.
fields, had disappeared. She found tl«e condition of the farmer.
lhe desert.
through the program of the W. K. of
1
The thundering climax shows how a piece of carpel that had been used
He called attention to lhe steady
I guess Tommy can have enough Kellogg Foundation which offers
a Legion attack, headed by Miss as a rug and nailed down had been decline in the economic condition of
ideas for both of us. come to think scholarships to teachers of primary i
tom up. evidently in a search for the farmers of this country sing*
grades, credit on a decree will be Colbert rescues Colman from the money. ‘
1890 They had reached such a low
tortures of the Arab*.
given those completing the course.
Mrs. Manning walked to a neigh­ point In 1933 that the farm income
Among the subjects for study are
A beautiful bouquet—those big
bor's where she telephoned Sheriff was only 8 per cent, although Uw
Rochelle Hudson in
daisies like Shastas lhat grow wild, the child's physical, mental and
Blakney. She gave a good descrip­
"The
Country
Beyond."
a few liger lilies and gaillardlas emotional development, its lan­
tion of Hansen, so that it would
A story of courage, adventure and seem he could easily be Identified. quarter ot the population. Mr. Yar­
with asparagus or wild carrot leaves guage development, methods of util­
izing the school curriculum, the blazing love on lhe Northland trail The sheriff called up lhe slate po­
for foliage.
proper guidance of lhe child in featuring the screen's new dog hero, lice department at East Lansing,
FEDERAL
REGISTRATION
Hope lhe boas hurries back be­ reading, oral and written English, Buck, with an all-star Hollywood telling them about the robbery, giv­
IS NECESSARY—NO EX­
fore Tommy breaks out in a new art, music, handicraft, health hab­ cast. Tiie picture follows the adven­ ing a description of Hansen. This dicta torsldp, he thinks.
its and all kinds of school activi­ tures of a Canadian "mount!*" pur­ was sent out over the radio station
spot. I feel kind of uneasy.
Through the Farm Bureau in lhe
PENSE TO REGISTER
ties. All of this leads up to the suing a killer on a trail that leads Monday, not long after the robbery
had been committed. Up to this board" plan was tried. Il did n«
In Queen Mary's latest photo­ correct administration by the teach­ him to love.
writing Hansen had not been found. prove successful. Under the present
FAILURE WILL DRAW
graph. we see a lovely form almost er of the whole educational pro­
IS RECOVERING.
as perfect as that of our own Mae gram and the co-operation of the
administration control of •WJ1S
A PENALTY OF S1D.OO West.
Word from the hospital in Plain­ REFERRED TO PROP­
We understand the corsetlere | parents, who sometimes need to be
educated along the lines of pro­ well gives encouragement to the
ERTY COMMITTEE.
ma tertally in that control, but even
Rowboat Type of Outboard in each case should have part of gressive development the same as friends of Louis Beattie. 14. who was
As it is desirable to have addi­ with that it was but partially suc­
the credit. (This U for ladies only,
so severely burned in the same trag­ tional room for the Valley Home
Motorboats, Less Than 16 you men cover your eyes while you does the child.
This is an eight weeks' course edy lhat cost his father and brother cemetery, and as the county owns cessful. The devaluation of the
read this). Mae West has refused
dollar helped. The farm problem la
Feet Long, Excepted
fabulous offers to endorse differ­ and opportunities are offered for thetr lives. It is said that his con­ land which will Join onto it very not political, but is economic «M
observation of and participation in. dition is no longer critical and it is nicely. Supervisor Llpkey of HasThe Collector of customs, Martin ent makes of corsets.
demonstration classes in the Wil­ expected that he will be released lings township suggested Monday social, he claimed.
R. Bradley of Detroit, has again Is­
sued a warning, calling the atten­
from the hospital in lhe near future. lhat the board of supervisors sell il way to curtail production, even
One reason we can't think up mette public schools.
Hastings teachers who are tak­
tion of all motorboat owners to the anything today is—we used up all
soma of lhe county's land to Has­
Anll-Smuggllng Act ot 1935. which our Intellect &lt;a short Job II was) ing this course are: ML&amp;s Anne B. a scholarship at lhe University of tings township, for cemetery pur­
Burton,
Mias
Esther
Doty.
Miss
Michigan.
provides for the renumbering of *11 thinking up campaign slogans for
poses. The matter was referred to
All of the tuition is paid by the th* county property committee to
motorboats, and which Ls now in ef­ a nearby city paper. After we Elisabeth Pinch, Miss Jennie Mc­
fect.
■
worked out some wonders.
that Bain and Mrs. Gertrude Wilcox. W. K Kellogg Foundation and each investigate and report to the board
Failure to re-register a motorboat day's paper gave them all and more Mrs. Clara Stanton of Hastings, teacher is also allowed a sum for at the June session.
acreage, he insisted; far if
Barry
county
calls for a penalty of 110.00, and all and belter ones. As usual, some­ who teaches at Orangeville, is at­ other expenses.
proper for industry to curtail.
teachers surely have reason to be FIRE THREATENED BUILDINGS.
law-enforcing agencies have been body beat us to it. If both sides tending also.
In addition to the ones named grateful for all the favors conferred
A fire of undetermined origin
directed to enforce this provision of have one about "world peace." we
above.
County
School
Commissioner
upon
them
by
this
organization
started
in
a
hayfield
on
Mn.
Win
­
won't know which one to vote for.
that was good and to the point
Maude W Smith is attending the whose ambition it is to train thc nie Nichols Dove's farm in Carlton
Since the enactment of lhe orig­
still believe that the head of
Summer
School
for child life of Barry county, and the Tuesday forenoon. It was spreading
inal Numbering Act In 1918, over
Elghteen-year-old Vivian Mofflt Winnetka
American chemical Bocieiy
18.000 motorboats have been regis­ of Argusville. N. D., wrote this Teachers at Winnetka. HI. Miss other places in which the Founda­ rapidly toward the buildings on the right in declaring that not hwi
Dorothy Kemp of Nashville has a tion is working, to develop correct farm, so the rural fire truck here science must solve the I
tered In lhe Michigan district. The poem:
health habits, to have a better edu­ was called and responded. It arrived
scholarship
for
studying
speech.cor
­
Collector at Detroit has sent a per­
Pasture Hymn.
rection at Northwestern and Prin­ cational background and to be bet- in time to put out th* fire without
sonal notification to every motor­
Ood made the meadow* green, and cipal wm. J. Duddica ot Delton ha*
serious damage. -------------------------- !_
boat owner in the state, as recorded
production by legtalaticc.
the cattle are part of His riches;
In his office, but, to date, over 7.000
God made the stones and flowers
of lhe 18.000 notices sent out have
lhat I look at and take in my
been returned "unclaimed.”
hand;
The new numbers are Issued ser­
Ood freshened all with rain, and
ially. all numbers Issued In this dis­
His water is cool in the ditches;
trict being preceded by the figures
Ood made me strong to herd, and
38 since Michigan is known as Cus­
to run o'er the rich level land.
toms District No. 38.
His are the tiny leasts that run
Motorboats are numbered for
underground in the meadow;
much the same reason that automo­
biles are licensed. However, there His are the peaceful birds whose
nests In the tall grasses lie;
is no charge to the boat owner. He
simply make* application for a His are the glowing light of the sun.
and tiie cloud's cooling shadow;
number to the Collector of Customs
nt Detroit, on blanks furnished for His are the land itaelf. and th*
grass and the cattle and I.
lhat purpose. Upon receipt of the
appUcatlon, properly prepared, a His is the wonderful hand lhat puts
number 13 awarded to the boat and
the picture together.
a certificate Issued to the owner. Placing all things aright as only
the Great One can—
This certificate constitutes a docu­
ment for the boat and must be kept The heavy limbs of the herd along
on board al all times.
with the small bird's feather.
Outboard motorboats of rowboat The thoughtless freedom of beasts
with the studied ruling of man.
type, not exceeding 18 feet in
length and equipped with oars and
oarlocks as the primary means of
Tills Ls awful, not having any
propulsion, are exempt from num­ ideas. I've paced the floor and fired
all the kids outdoor* and
just
bering.
In
this connection. Collector caught myself pulling out a hand­
Bradley points out some Navigation ful of hair. And I didn't have much
Rules It is well for the motorboat to start with—nor much under it, it
owner to remember, as their viola­ seems. Maybe if I’d write larger
the page wouldml! up faster. And
tion carries severe penalties.
Every motorboat while being oper­ a basket of boys' socks to mend
that could be put on from either
ated must have on board:
1. Two copies of the “Pilot Rules end.
for the Great Lakes and their
During tiie depression, Jerry and
Tributary waters."
to furnish footwear
3. An approved type of fire extin­ I refused
through the summer months. Told
guisher (quart size).
the
kids to go barefooted like we
3. Efficient life preservers, one for
used to. They promptly stepped on
each person (babies Included).
4. An efficient sound-producing rusty nails in the barnyard and got
device—whistle, fog horn, or any the footwear. These modern kids!
device which will produce a blast There I We've got a topic of con­
versation that would fill the whole
of ten oeoonds in duration.
5. Prescribed lights after sunset. Banner and here we’re on the last
Regulations on numbering and line. Just my luckl
equipping vessels are furnished on
request.________
___________
THREE NEW TRUCKS

klnda creaky.

IMPOTOTTOMO
14

ms

"Money in the Mail'

Now ... d new service is avoiloble to the patrons of this

Bank. We take pleasure in announcing the added serv-

ice of Money Orders. When you wish to send money to

someone, or some place, avail yourself, of this service.

.You can send any amount in one convenient order at a

very small cost, and you will get o receipt for the exact

HOLD DOUBLE FUNERAL.
The funeral of John J. Beattie
and his son Earl, who were elec­
trocuted on lhe farm south of Gun
lake Wednesday of last week, was
held at the Orangeville village
church. Rev. Harry Weston. Alle­
gan, had charge of the services for
tbe father and son on Saturday aft­
ernoon. The church and yard about
It were crowded.
The bearers for the father were
his nephews, Frank and John Beat-

RECEIVED HERE

amount, the date, and to whom the money order was

Splendid Addition to Equip­

sent. Simply stop in this Bank, at the Teller's window,

ment of State Highway

and he will moke out a money order for any amount you

Department
The equipment of the Barry
county division of the state high­
way department has been augment­
ed by the acquisiUon of three new
Dodge trucks which came last week.

engineer. It will be remembered that
during the heavy snowfalls last win­
of Vicksburg, Leonard Beattie of ter. several of the old trucks were,
Galesburg, Frank Porter of Chi­ literally worn out. The local work­
cago, and Leo Lillie of Kaiamazoo. men are hoping to have the equip­
The bearers for the son consisted of ment in better condition to plow
young men who had been associat­ the roads this coming winter if it
ed with him during his life. The
burial was at the Oak Hill cemetery
in Orangeville, in the same lot APPEALED TO CIRCUIT COURT.
Sometime ago in justice court, Er­
where Mr. Beattie's wife and Earl's
nest L. Appelman sued Charles
mother was buried last February.
Dalhauser, both of Nashville, al­
leging the unlawful detention •! a
TO BE TUED TOMORROW
Kelvlnator refrigerator, which Ap­
East Orangeville were, on com­ pelman claimed to own. The case
plaint of John Sheffield, proprietor was tried op June 10 before Justice
FENNOCK HOSPITAL.
of a tavern in that village, arrested Cortright with a jury, who rendered
and Mrs. Burdette cotent, Hastings. by the sheriff's officers and brought judgment in favor of the plaintiff
Route 1.
, to thia city Friday morning. The
thc refrigerator. Dalhauser had no
The little girl born on June 18 to
attorney but contested the case
Thay were taken before Justice himself tn the justice court. Mr.
Bellevue lived but a few hours.
Cortright Friday afternoon. Each Dolhauaer has
and Mrs. Vernon Karrar, Wood­
bi tried, possibly in September.
trial wm set far Friday, June 38.
land, Route 1

wish to send. Don't take chances. Postal authorities discourage the practice of enclosing currency in on en­

velope; if you should lose it you have no recourse. Use
this service, it is safe ... CONVENIENT .. . ECON
CAL. Be sure! Send money orders.

Hustings City Bunk
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS • MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANNKR, THL'RaDAT. JUNK it, 1M&lt;
Bany-Bgtoni Ufteates in swimming and will be
also tent counsellors with six girts
and Helen Homing of; tn each of their tents.
Mrs. Gerald Patton, of St. Clair
&gt;lda will teach and direct;
County Y. M. C- A. Secy, will dl­
' reel liw Camp program. Mrs. pttB*rry-Ea-। Con has had ten years of experience
in conducting girls' tamps.
July 6 to 1« is the date of the Y.
M C A- camp for boys with extra­
ordinary leadership in athletics and
crafte, also, in worship and nature
lore. Rev Rlgelman of Middleville
and Rev. Haggal of Girards Fort.
Penn- are among our new leaders
for tent leadership.and special ac-

f»o*n

thg

KROGER STORES
oooimv aim - r»t« rumiDA fi avob

Grapefruit Juke
3

Tomato

10c

29c

Campbell's 3
tomato juice

25c

Pineapple

COUNTRY cua

»•- 20c

country an

UBRYH

2

Orange

—

•

2

25c

jt io:

COUNTRY CLUB - TWIN OR SANDWICH

10c

Fresh Bread
PLAIN OR SLICED

23c

June Rose

Hr 10c

Buns

HANBl'RC OR REINER

COCOANIT Big CAKE

ibe.

OR LARD
COMPOUND

Lard

’2L* 99c

Henkel's

25c

bvik

FAMILY FLOt a

Velvet
5
cake not ■

27c

Quart

29c

COUNTRY CLUB

Salad Dressing
(HANDY 8-os. SIZE IOc)

Mirade Whip

Muffels

37c

rix

10c

SALAD DRESSlMl ptel 2&gt;&lt;

SPAGHETTI
OR NOODLES

BORDK.VS

Chateau

5c

Cream Cheese *■ 19c

31c

2

CHFX1F.

COUNTRY CLUB

Corn Flakes
Heinz Soups 2

25c

3

COUNTRY CLUB BRAN FLAKES

25c

pkg. lOe

LIFEBUOY SOAP

NOW...BUILD

tion costs.

travel

Greater

bargains

than

ever before to alt,. *r'
America.

Remodel! Repair!

See us for all kinds of
Building Materials

Toledo

ftnd brt’ti’c«' »« recently, the mother
ter-in-law, Mrs. Arthur Meade, and h
.
new baby
The new miss who.
., • '°n,y » inorl
weighed nine p&lt;nds lias been |
*°~___
, , ,__________
named Betty Lou Congratulations. I
8OUTHWENT CARLTON.
Clarence Hammond of Hastings1 Mrs. Arthur Yarger and children
spent lhe past week helping Marc ■ spent tiie past week in Flint with
Hammond in haying
1 Mr and Mrs Harold Elliott.
Miss Arlene Rector from Kalama- ( Mrs. Anna Buck and children
zoo spent Saturday night with Miss called on Mr. and Mrs. Michael VMjejin Hammond.
| ter of Kalamazoo. Mrs Jessie Shupp

19c
85c

Country Club

• Compore bus fares
with other transporta­

From HASTINGS to

I bars 23e

Heinz Beans 3 ..t 25c

One Way*'

MW.

Cincinnati h__ _ 6.65 ■»
Pittaburgh ____

7.20

Cleveland______ 5.20

New York City. 12.95

• Be sure your ticket
reodsvio SHORT WAY

— GREYHOUND fo
Service plus Savings!

BUS DEPOT AT

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 2137

note

sincMhitv

Flour

sTOpY POINT.

Masters Kenneth and Dale Dock
of Plainwell spent Monday with
Stuart Hammond.
Hugh Ritter attended a birthday
Mr. and Mrs. Lyls Quimby and
supper and party In his honor Mrs, Jasper Harrick and daughters
Tuesday evening at the home at Mr. of Battle creek and also Mr. and
and Mrs. Andrew chatlee of Lowell.
lIenry
spent Wed­
nesday with Mr. and Mrs. LaPayetle
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Usbome.
The relatives who attended tho
ice cream and cake, Saturday eve­ funeral of Mr
Abid Donley on
ning. June 27 at the home of Mr. Thursday in Lansing were. Mr. and
and Mrs. Orson McIntyre.
Mrs Wm. Shriber. Mr. and Mrs. O.
There was a good sized crowd in N Landon. Mr and Mrs Cleon ten­
attendance at the children's Day don. Mrs. Anna Buck and Esther,
program at the church Bunday eve­ Mr. and Mrs. prank Shriber and
ning.
Hasel and Mr. and Mrs. Leo Barty
Mrs. Mabie Moody spent last week and Norman. Mr. Donley was laid
at the home of her daughter, Mrs. to rest tn Fuller cemetery.
Fred Hom near cloverdale.
Dolores Barey of East Carlton and’
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hazel Shriber and friend called on
Bam McCabe were the latter's par­ Mr. and Mn. Frederick Voight of
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Wlgglesworth North Portland Bunday afternoon.
and family of Battle Creek.
Mrs Ward Cheeseman and daugh­
ter spent Thursday with the for­
mer's father. Ed. Brumm near the
Base Line church.
The girls who plan to take the
4-H Canning club work met last
Ihursday afternoon with Mrs,
Grace Mack, who will be their lead-

Grandma Traver passed away
Our schoolhouse has been receivSaturday noon after many weeks of tog a new coat of paint during lhe
patient suffering. We all extend our past week which adds much to Ito
sympathy to Hie family
appearanceMrs. Qco. Haynes had us her
Mrs. R. a. Keys of Jackson spent
guests on Sunday her mother. Mrs. a portion of last week with her par­
| 11 vl ties.
Dora Coleman and Mr. and Mrs. ents. Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Wellman.
Thursday, Clay Bassett. Gordon Frances Coleman, from the Tanner
Nir. and Mrs. Karl Phillips of
Crothers helped Horace and C. F. district.
Kalamazoo visited at Ed. Deakin's
Angell put up the camp dining
Sunday guests at lhe home of Mr.
tent. Kent county rural boys are and Mrs. Ronald Haynes were Mary
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Demond and
using the camp beginning this Tues­ and Arthur Gotta of Detroit, Mr. Miss Florence Coolbaugh attended
day
and Mrs. John Bechtel and family graduating exercises at the M 8. C.
with their mother. Mrs. Bechtel all last week. Their nephew. Eraruen
HENDERSHOTT.
of Hastings
Brown, was a member of the class.
Mrs. Chet Tompkins from the
Lisle_ Bidelman
____
___________
of________
Pontiac___
made
_____
a
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Van Vranken
with Mr. and Mrs. Court Btrow- Gregory district with her sister, friendly call on Mr. and Mrs. B. J.
brldge went lo the reunion of Mr. Bertha Christensen of Battle Creek. Wellman Saturday.
LENT CORNERS.
If any ‘farmers in “
the eastern
&lt; Van vranken's people near Katema- called on their father. Sunday, at i "
The Lent Sunshine club met with
| zoo on Sunday.
the home of Lawrence Christensen. ' part
r— of
_ lhe _____
,
_ Mrs. Rachel Robyler Thursday with
county
are --------feeling
Mrs. Lena Lamphere and daugh- rather discouraged over tiie out fourteen members and three visitors
Mr. and Mrs. chas. Hendershott
with the Wilbur Bhantz family were ter Lillian of Kalamazoo were Bun- look of their crops on account of present. The next meeting Is lo be a
al Milham park in Kalamazoo on day guests at Ernie Matteson's. Mrs., the recent drouth, they should take picnic with pot luck supper at
Mrs. Ray Ostrolh came home from
Sunday to attend the Hammond Matteson and Beatrice went home a drive as the writer did one day Prairieville public park. Thursday.
the hospital last Wednesday. Mrs.
with them Sunday evening for a few last week through the sandy regions July 16th.
family reunion.
j over in lhe west part of the county.
A large crowd enjoyed the splen­ days' visit.
Mrs. Flossie Burchett received the Eddy of Nashville Is caring for her.
Dr. Vance and Dr. Lofdahl were
M/&lt; Ail Mbs Chas. Van Vranken | tn many places there were no oats sad news Thursday morning that
did Children's Day program put- on
by lhe Sunday school Sunday eve­ were in Alto Saturday night. Cleone at all and the patches of corn hadn't het sister. Mrs. Norah A dr I anion at E E. Gray's Thursday morning
to extract his teeth.
’ ning. We certainly appreciate the Hayward came home with them for come good;
J “
the pastures
‘
were noth
"~ ­
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ball and fam­
ing. Several farmers we talked nock hospital. Hastings. The funeral
with were making inquiries as to was lield Saturday with burial at ily called at Clyde Cheeseman's.
where they could find hay to put Woodland. Much sympathy is ex­ Wednesday evening. .
up on shares.
tended the bereaved family.
ORANGEVILLE.
Mr. end Mrs. Lynn Malllson of
...................
Mr. ___
and Mrs. Marc .Hammond.
Mrs. Rhea Walters and son of
Lansing were Sunday visitors at B Jean and Miss Opal Brierly and Mr
Buffalo, came one day the past week
j. Wellman's.
j and Mrs. Leland Hammond and
to spend some time with her par­
Paul Smith has been hired to | children attended the Hammond—
ents. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Sheffield.
teach the Wellman school the com- Van DeWalker reunion at Milham
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth House and
ing year.
j Park, KAlamazoo"Sunday.
daughter Eleanor of Flint were
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Demond, Mr
Mr. and Mrs Robert Steele enterand Mrs John Hill. Mr and Mrs. I tained her sister's children from week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs
Marcius Bagley, and attended the
Warren Coolbaugh and Miss Flor- Kalamazoo from Friday until MonCross family reunion Sunday.
ence Coolbaugh attended lhe Hill day.
Mr. and Mrs. Art Earl and son
family reunion at Bennett Park at
Miss Gloria Francisco has been
Charlotte last Bunday.
' seriously ill with an attack of ap- Otis spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Clare Wells of East Orange­
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Demond vis- , pendidtls.
tied relatives nt Potterville Sunday
Elmer Ritter of Battle Creek ville.
The 12th annual reunion of lhe
—
opviiw
spent HIV
the week
WCVR VJIU
end with IIU&gt;
hte lULIICt.
father.
Cross family was held al tlfe- home
... DOM£N?.'
u
.... | Hugh Ritter.
The village of Dowling has been | Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Paul and of Mr and Mrs. Morris England of :
Gun
lake. Sunday, with forty-two '
completely submerged
the P**t children of Kalamazoo spent sunmonth In a continuous cloud of day wllh hcr parenU Mr Bnd Mrs present to enjoy the day. They will ’
meet again next year at the same ,
dust; porches have been vacated; Jay
th, I.mUr wohttw mdeltaluly . Mrs.
M„ Seymour
wymour Lynes Is
„ quite
qulu sick
„ck place, lhe third Sunday in June.
The double funeral held Saturday |
Phone 2515
Frank Sago
Hastings
poslponed &gt;nd lhe u.u.1
tod , wl,„ ,
„„ M„y B,ou,rd u
1*7
lhe comtnlJh&gt;ly
much workmu lot them d,irlnn lhe time, afternoon for John Beattie and son
Earl was one of the largest gather­
disturbed, due to lhe constant rush
-•
.
—
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fox ofings
ever held at this place,
Kalamazoo called at thc Clare ,people folding front ill,into to pay
Thomas home Sunday evening.
j
Mrs. Emma Arisen and Mrs. Lena their last respects to thoss wiio were
Graham spent Tuesday night and ',gone and who will be missed here,
where all their lives have
been
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs Alba j। spent. The heartfelt sympathy of,
C°Mry5nRernBxdlHr&gt;Pauw anent two'"
B° 0,11
y 01
'all1 go
out to
to tn,s
this IBn,u
family
of children
children
day’s la.T wrek Sto^ for’her sh Iwho have ,&lt;Mt both f,lher' molhcr

Feb Naptha 10 *»• 41c
SOAP

R|C&gt;| instant 91

Rinso

Chas. Hendenhotl.

of the county trucks which are re­
surfacing the gravelled roads six
mtlM in all directions. Should there
be any doubt in your mind in re­
gard to the statement. Just come
and park around here a few hours.
Norton Slocum, who is employed
by tiie Consumers power Oo. and
located at Tawas City at present,
spent the week end with the home
folks.
Mr. and Mrs. Orlle Fisher attend­
ed a double birthday party at the
home of Mr. and Mrs Mark Norns
at Prairieville Saturday evening and
entertained Mr. and Mrs Ike De­
back of Prairieville and Miss Norma
Castle and friend of Milo Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stanton at­
tended a convention at Lansing
Wednesday having been sent as
delegates by lhe Dowling Townsend
club.
Mlu Ruth Johnson of Grand
Rapids spent several days last week
with her brother. Robert, al lhe
home of Mrs, Millie Herrington.

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co

COUNTRY CLUB

Macaroni

gift to us, from the down town I a short visit. Her parents came Bun­
church of lhe Methodist hymnals,
day to go lo Kalamazoo to the famMrs Ella Lahr from the Gregory i reunion with the Van Vranken’s
district U visiting at Albert BrlWs
*"« Sunday mntog callers at
Mr. urn m. KMl Krujtr ot Ho­
mer are visiting lhe latter s parTne community ciuo have ueciueu
ente, Mr and Mrs. Rennie Molt.
u&gt;,h‘v’ “ Plcnlc, on
fourth of
A large crowd attended the Aid Ju,y W,tch next
for rurtMr
test Thursday at th. home o7 Mr. »'ux&gt;unctment on this.

*.*? 69c

MICHIGAN MILLED
KING S FLAKE FLOUR Slft-lb. «ek 75e

MORE THAN 44
NEW 1956 CHEVROLETS

WESCO BRAND

$1.65

Scratch Feed
Egg Mash

$1.98

Chick Feed

Starting

12.15

Dairy Feed T? 11.25

$1.90

have been sold

5c discount in 10 bag lots

Bananas
GOLDEN RIPE FRUIT

Cantaloupes

12V4c

Honey Dew

21c

New Potatoes 6

29c

Mich. Celery

7V4c

Tomatoes

12’Ac

*

Fresh Spinach
Carrots

Cucumbers

* 7V*c

r.tr/.v field. deesuit

Leaf Lettuce

New Radishes 4 1

Oranges

29c

See champions at play
America is giving

9UNKIST - NEV OOP - MEDIUM SIZE

FRYERS

z/z ^/[ichigan

overwhelming preference to Chevrolet because It's

IU IA

Fresh Dressed
1936 Fryers

swrrrs prkmmim
Braunschweiger » 25c

NIO0OO
Fillets

2

27c

COVSTIY CUB _ THCllSCtB

SUMMER SAUSAGE

»■ 25c

wsrribc

Ptfl Fish

2 *■ 19c

Small Franks

■IB VIAL CHOPS

BORELKM

VEAL ROAST

MT OWNERS

*• 25c

21c

Consider this when planning your
vacation—it is unnecessary to go else­
where to see champions at play.
Kight here in Michigan, you can
natch the play of champions in your
favorite sport. For Michigan resi­
dents hold an amazing list of presentday athletic championships.
Michigan also provides the finest
of facilitievfar your own play, whether
it be golf, tennis, horseback riding,
touring, or camping. Five thousand
lakes, and many streams, provide
thc best of fishing, swimming and
all thc other water sports. Scenic

beauty, perfect highways, excellent
tourists' camps combine to make Mich­
igan a champion vacation state.
Spend your vacation in Michigan.
Persuade friends and relatives to do
likewise. You will get more pleasure
at less cost in four Native State.
This advertisement it one of a series
devoted to popularizing Michigan’s
attractions for the vacationist. It is
published in the interest of all by your
telephone company, an institution which
secs reason for both pride and
prosperity in anything that pro­
motes thc welfare of Michigan.

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

ORE than 800,000 new 1936 Chevrolet* have been built and
sold—mors than jour fifths oj a million since announcement day —
the largret volume of business that Chevrolet has enjoyed in gny
comparable period in its entire history!
*

M

•495 gft

America is choosing Chevrolet because America is convinced that
Chevrolet represents the most motor car for the least money.

"The most motor car,” because it’s the only low-priced car with all
lhe vitally imjxwtant features listed below.
And "the least money,” bees use Chevrolet’s l&lt;Av purchase price and
low maintenance costs make it the most economical car to own.

GINIIAl MOTOR! MSTALLMtMT

Place your order for a Cbevrolet-fAe only complete low-priced car!

CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY. DETROIT. MICHIGAN

R K HURD R'

CADW*LLADER’ RMtetyCenters, Mich
THE SERVICE CARAQE, ttelton, Mich.

�—
,

rar hirmoi pAXxtt. mait»AYr

ITS NOW PROF. RIDER
OF AKRON UNIVERSITY

faetxtion rale.

| LEGAL NOTICES

.X";—si •’'

order fob publication.

tcti u,

im

•

f Hastings schools and later from I

'iKX&lt;2“ She afterward sliced I

------------- ! at Northwestern, obtaining her MasHastings Girl Is Made Aiiiit- ■
there, she has since
.
added another degree thru work at
ant Professor On Its
Western
Reserve in Cleveland.
Faculty
I Prof- Klder Is a Enc example of
I..V
cnev nf•cnuchf.iitA ” 'the Bmbltloiu teacher who isn't satnffiH.thm^
nfpyth/ nrdverrilv'of Ufted Ju4t w move lUon»
routine

The Delton L- A. 8. will hold a.
the Leonard store lawn next Satur­
day afternoon and evening.
The King’s Heralds will meet
with Mrs. France* Norwood Wed­
nesday afternoon. After the meet­
ing they will go for a hike and
wiener roast.
Jay, Wilkinson and John Doater
were in Woodland Saturday on
business.
Mrs. Ida Tolles of Cleveland
Heights. Ohio, visited her brother,
H. P Wertman, and wife, over the

mer Reynolds. Pansies—1st.
Osborn—2nd, Rhoda Mason.
—1st, Helen Corwin—2nd,

ringion—2nd. Jennie Qaborn—3rd,
Elsie Horton. Mesdames Adams.
Barnum, Harrington and Kern won
jtflzes on all other kinds: House
i?™
thiTut^I torm MfUr obUlnlng the customplants. Flowering; Utts, Barnum
^f^; ^mherS^f rile
iriw *ry
&lt;lualincatlons
required
for
and Shedd: Foliage. Sevens. Titus
K leching but has steadily forged
and Eddy: Fems—Mary Doster:
Orvilla
BuilJina
Cactus—Florence Kroos. Arrange­ son and Vivian
ahead’ c^h P061110*1 brtD« “
the Board of Directors of the uni vancement 8he h„ B pleasing aolo
ment of ruses with other flowers— also there.
i. a. D. 163«.
veruty.
volce
bolh lhe p!ano an(j vto.
Wertman. Reynolds and Kroos.
The center picture, the only one |tot amj0 confining the major part
Plowen in baskets, large and small and Mr*. Richard
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION
in the group of a woman, is cap- ' of her musical endeavors to the role i
Mr. and Mrs. ails Lake ot Con­ —Corwin, Aldrtqli, Chandler and
Cloned “Prof. Rider," none other ' of teacher of public school music, stantine were callers at Marshall Barnum. Pitchers—Kroos, Adams. tine attended I
than our Hastings girl, Genevieve
B numb&lt;r of yean past ahe has Norwood’s Bunday afternoon.
Vases—Whittemore and Osborn. Bunday at Rus
Rider, whose recent advancement ]
B VBlued member of the fac­
Sheldon Rogers of Chicago came Crocks—Richards. Dunn. Osborn. Hastings.
red. that public police
to asristant professor of public uuy Of the Akron University as Sunday for his mother. Mrs. Ella Specimens.- Snap
dragons—Elsie
Miss Martha
publication ot a copy
hree lueceiiiVe weoke
school music bestows that right of . her recent promotion gives evidence. Rogers who will spend tiie summer Horton. Elegance Lily-Reynolds.
Shedd,
poppy—Durkee. Delphin­ of Coats Grove.
title.
I She writes friends here that her vacation there.
Mrs. William Rowley an
Prof. Rider, who was bom tn Was- summer plans include teaching two ' Wayne Sheathelm of Lansing. ium—Reynolds. Richards. Canter­
Ungs, daughter of the late Mr. and courses In the summer term at Ak- I who is attending Western Bute bury bells, double—Osborn, Adams. Dawson Woodward of Ctn
’7~’. K
lonthMvl tornrr
Mrs. E. A. Rider, graduated from the ron, followed by a trip to New i spent the week end here with his Cup and Saucer bells—Adams. Sin­ Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Claude
. 40 (Ml. thvnre
o* l"ll
gle
bells
—
Adams.
Harrington.
;
Hampshire
and
a
visit
to
Hastings
|
brother
Rex.
8®ulh 40 teal,
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
lo plate ot boMiss Ruby Vanderwood of Kala- Whittemore. Roses—Osborn. 1st. 2nd
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT, । and Kalamazoo before college opens
To
»rm»n Bod/r.
and 3rd. Peonies—Mn. Elmer Rey­ daughter Bcalrtoe and
fo Jam** luoiom.
ilanaom. H
Hlraiio
Bod*r. v»l*u
Volxbl I tn the (all. Hastings friends will be mazoo spent Sunday at home.
”i iiMr 'm» Klad t0 tcnder
congratulations
in
Mr. and Mrs. Sam
______________
...__________________________
Sam Vandei
Vanderwood nolds. 1st and 2nd. Table arrange­
”’7“" *nd 1,1
neraon to
tn “
"Prof
RM.r when
a,h*n she entertained
rnmw.ltM.rt company
rnmnonv from
from Martin
N
ments, Horton and Dunning.
and Mn. Walter Durkee.
Maa'tetenated'
'. P*r*&gt;n
Prof." Rider
You ore hrr.bz noiiSad that at a rets- arrives.
Sunday.
'.
n..Sl.'TStoSTMi ri
------------------------------------------Mr. .nd Mr., Will L.UUU nturtrabllcation
.• Council Chamber ai the City H»n au |
DELTON.
tained the Cappon family reunion
Councn dteM.*. .Ore.‘o”iio“te 1 Th^ edllor of our Hastings Ban- 1 at their home Bunday. There were 31
mitruct tarmac pavior on N. Boltwood ner gave us a very nice write-up last present.
i*ld
(MtiUon jirultie
reel from E. Hint. Road to E. Hleh , week about the laying of the cor- j Mr and Mrs. George
notia.a tun
th.t th. 'mco.-1•»«r stone
in- —
the
new---------Barry
Rural
Hickory comers, and Mr. and Mrs.
You are furthtr Uonovu
---— —
—----, —
—
-• , I will
B. n*a taat me
la*
...
tir.nrorrt Or inert Thuriirtav
on Council win hold a Htwciai mretina Agricultural school building; but Will Hayward. Sr., spent Thursday
l«,‘ur,*V’inb*!:,in,ldPT u
-kilh ' ®°mc ihlngs concerning it which he evening at Will Lelnaar's.
NOTICE TO CREDITOBa.
NOTICE OF MORTOAOE BALE.
rn^.ad X. anr .bKM.ea. 'te
not fully describe, and which
Miss Norma castle of Prairieville,
spent
Tuesday afternoon with Mrs.
&gt;ov* improv.mrnta w&gt;ii be heard.
we think may be of interest to
t?‘.‘rj.*L’l^"Dt*19?6fhl*•', “• ‘
I re,ders who were 1101 present at Lena Waters.
ly Of. J«^ a. p. 1036.
_
| lhat occ^jon
vh,. Afferent
Mr. and Mrs. Burwell Scudder of
H. C. Kocrra.
i tilings that were sealed In the cop- Hastings were Sunday visitors al
County. Mlrhlcan. to HOME OWNERS’
'
NOTIOE or SPECIAT .MtlSMENI I P&lt;r
WCIT' * P^TC Of Ike Johnson's.
LOAN CORPORATION, a Corporation or" L D PiJi” “mv “ad “"re. u,c l&gt;lton •«•«»&gt; hi 1892, given by
MIm Barbary Smith and David
o.;_ i..u. n„_'muon. H.i.n pyan; Ellsworth Barrett; a picture of the Youngs, of Lansing, were Sunday
I*
Adelbrrt
Hhleeir.
।
o
i&lt;j
schoolhouse
as
It
looks
now.
The
guests
of
Mt.
and
Mrs. Chester
WC
it Probate.
O »r p»r«om n or- Jbs[ ^p^ oy the Kalamazoo Oa- Banghart also Mrs. Sarah Brand309.
.
iti6.d that *t a r.ru- I sette and Hastings Banner; 1938 jJ stetter of Hastings.
.‘’°Mkhr..nOUh.fid ?n ;
directory; Kodak picture 1 Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bush of Ann
NOTICE TO CREDITORB.
- at th. City Hall on of the school faculty of 1938; picture Arbor spent Monday and Tuesday
off destructive sun-rays. The
nr. a. D 1036 aaH of Lacey Jones, who was the oldest with Mr. and Mrs. L- N. Bush.
Ib&gt;
OU'VE SEEN HOUSES new Devoe House Paint lasts
......... ....... ....“7 ’» ™ S:,S: | •»*
Jrrt
ol Uw | Elwyn Hayward, who will be the
with unsightly paint that twice as long as average paint.
&gt;tre»t from W. Clinton itr*et to w. Mar , school board of the new district; I Janitor for our new school building.
I
will
attend
a
three
day
special
|
■hall otreei.
&lt; picture of the new building al dale;
has checked and cracked . .. Before you paint your home
76/100
NOTICE OF MORTOAOE RALE.
1936. hi
°' Uw ”b,n or UM Ixaro short course for Janitors at Michl- I
and in some places, bare
»n Roturdoy. th* 27th day ot Jun*, a. D. of education, the employees and con-1' gan State College. East Lsuulng.
patches that have peeled.
how the new Devoe paint sys­
1036 «i 7:30 o’clock P M- a*,wh*’.’h j tractors ,w.
for the ...w
new building;
...o. red Wednesday. Thursday and Friday
lino
ami
ulae*
anv
obUctlona
to
th*
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
^*.,|m,proi*.m.nuVwi’ii’V hJIrt
sheets of the school records of 1936; of this week. Mrs. Hayward will
Those homes are subject to tem cuts your paint bills in
D»i*d st HmiIds*. Michicin. tb* 16th 1 a list of the business men of Del- spend the time that iter husband
quick decay. Their owners half . . . makes your money
HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPORA- “L’nid."**.?, ton; a list of Ute three oldest resl-; is sway with her parents. Mr. and
face premature, ami heavy, re­
r
8 c Rm
Cit" Clwk
I dent* of Delton. Mrs. McDanniels, Mr*. S. Lydy, at Woodland.
pair bills.
&gt;'ear»- Mrs. Amy Whittemore. 87 , The Flower Show Thursday at the
forenoon.
r*°r 1 .ubm/i. hJ“?^?"7m
Mr John McBain. 83 years, a Hall was attended by about 260 peoThe new Devoe 2-coat sys­
Haatlnca.
Doo»id Rdbinaoa. ' Victor HstrkiD*. list of seven over 70 years of age I pie. The flower exhibit was very
tem effectively resists these
Rich.rd L**II*. Uriah My»rt. G»««* who were bom In and still live In I nice, considering the dryness of lhe
common paint failures. New
*r t"*."w F Mr eburch*F L bJdm’ii' I the school district; Mrs. Caroline weather. Three florists from away
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
pigments and new oils block
The Seto Tum-M
Jam** Bratdon.
Htie'n. Milas and I Cook Lyons, 87 years; Mrs. Emma 1 made exhibits; Wilcox. Van Bochr.ln, a,k*
.11*H 0,h*r P*r,oo‘ l“' । Lent
. . _ Anson.
______82
...___
«__
■__ I_____one
____
I
terei*»d
years; Mrs.
Lucinda
and
Burgess Seed Co. The fol­
You'irr hereby notifted ibai at a rein- Eddy. 82 years; Chauncey Town- lowing prizes were awarded: For
ir meet in* of tbe Common Council nf send, 87 years; Willie Carpenter, 77 terrariums. 1st. Leda Harrington;
A D &gt;938.
;: &amp;»
ms 1: &gt;•«:
« ?««■«« Wild flowers. 1st, Duane Dunn.
he 13th day of June a. D i9ie. old Lincoln Bush. 71. Also a list of the 2nd.. Jennie Osborne, 3rd. Elmer
mid
ornmui Council did mm • retolutl«n to I members of the faculty that will Reynolds. Miniature vase bouquets.
THE fcsstt DRUG STORE
B Hulinri and John H. Hulloci. di­
EJ’a.T-U
J v'SlS
U» «*»|.!"!»' “•
1st. Ella Reynolds, 2nd. Beatrice
inn Wellfare and Stella Hnllnyi Mar­
Dunning.
3rd,-----------------Gertrude-----------------Chandler.
ver itre-t
ing; a letter of good wishes to the------------ —
NOW. THEREFORE. hr
ini Sled In Hid eourt their petition pray
You aro further notiSed that the Com-'community through
the school For perfection of bloom: Delphln|nr that in order or dacree he made by icrlbed II follows:
Phone
Goods
Delivered
‘
STjunJ"
a‘'1‘ '1 hoard from th.
the
•
‘
I
1
?.
’
1
?
official
board
of
the
'
lum
—
Blanche
Richards
1st,
Leda
tbii cnnrt determinltil who are nr were
on Retarder lhe 27lb da
u
i.-i-i. Delton
rwtinn M.
K Er church; and
Harrington 2nd
2nd. Halllardle
Oalllardles— 1st.
and laetlv
lastly 1 Marrinotnn
tided. NOTICE IH HEREBY GIVEN tbit 1036, at 7:30 o’clock I
Jennie Osborn. 2nd—Hattie Whitte­
to be sealed the man who did tho more. 3rd—Elmer Reynolds; Coreop’’Cotnmenclnr st the Bystbrsal
•r Lol Rli (B&gt;, Block Thirl rone i
sealing scribbled his nams on th#
Inside of the cover.
Rev. Leroy Whitefoot of School­
craft will preach next Sunday morn­
ing for the Thank offering program
Benni
Taylor. Mvrtla Taylor.' Ethal Taylor. of the W. F. M. 8. He is a returned
Chai. D. Mohlir, C. R. Roirri Klwya
rhleh
and Mar Daniell. Beatrice MarDounll. missionary from India.
Mn. Wilbur McDonald and all othir
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrianson and
Mr. and Mrs. Will Lelnaar and fam­
F.
Council of ily attended the funeral of Mrs.
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
Nora cappon at Woodland on SatHOME OWNERS’ LOAN COR­
Ineladlna
PORATION. MurUaaea.
I urday.
Council did Mil
। Mr. and Mrs. Royce. Henton en| tertalned the Castelein reunion
1936
Sunday at their cottage at Wall
NOTICE OF MORTOAOE SALE.
non Council will hold
7"'n i Mr. and Mrs. John Doster enterDefault! kavlna been made find at
»t Section
vM.li Mined
lalnud for
far Sunday
Dimdav dinner.
rtlnrwir Sheriff
RhrrlfT
□ m p I a i n s Jtn.ku
lIMrtd
and Mrs. Blakney of Hastings. Mr.
and Mrs. M. B. Norwood and Mr.
lultebli Tnwmhlp ot Cactlilou. Barry County
non W BrliK
and
Mrs.
Leon
Doster
and
Elisabeth.
Micblcan. t&lt;&gt; HOME OWNERS’ LOAN
Rev. and Mrs. Bates and little son
CORPORATION, a Corporation orcakiiM
D IIB«.
left Monday morning for New York.
notice of 8FBCIAL ASSESSMENT.
where y^v BatM
officiate at
Uiid,
..........'■“:«» wMdln, o! hl. broth,,. Th.,
Mlchteac
If Miss String, secretary oj tbe Ladled Aux­
publlr notlei
You ar* k»rrby nolitad that at a raeu expect to be gone the Week.
Ina of a ropy
iliary oj the Tall Story Club, has afault it is
lar Baalist •&lt; Ike Cornmon Council nf
xrr Bnd Mr.
Ed Lowry have
raiilva wirki
■ ba City of Ha*t&lt;n&lt;t. Mlchlran. held la
“f’
trnmeri
that her club reports are always tinged with
lhe Council chamber at lhe City Heil on been entertaining the
formers
th. istk day ot June. A. D. 1936 Mid I mother of Grand Blanc thg post
sadness. To wits
HOME OWNERS’ LOAN COHPOMr. and Mrs. Roger Williams vis­
• XAST fall somebody told me I'd save gasolioe if
ited Mr. and Mrs. John Hall at
JL 1 used Standard Red Crown all the time. So,
Plainwell Sunday.
NOTICE OF MORTOAOE BALE
without considering the consequences, 1 agreed to
Mn. Mary Doster will entertain
use nothing else for a year. And just look what it
the W. F. M. 8. at her home Friday
defanlli
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
afternoon.
got me Into!
NOW. THEREFORE.
The very first day I ssvedabowl full. That was
NaOivIll*. Barry Cewir. Michkin, to
fiqe-it wasn’t in the way at all. But look-in lhe
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.
HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPORAfirst week I’d saved a iarrtlfull! By die cad of V
provided. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
the year I'd saved a tank tarfaUl
Y
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

Ih.irclal

t« II

2.

DEVOE HOUSE-PAINT IAUG
AT SUN AND WEATHER!

"I’ll show you how'
to avoid Expensive
Repaint Jobs!”

Y

DEVOE

CARVETH &amp; STEBBI
Halting!

| had to rent a ham to sh
the Red Crown I saved —

”My. what a lot of gasoline to keep around
lhe house!
’’Farber complained so bitterly that 1 had to
rent a barn to note it in. And now I've got a bam
fdbof Red Crown-and more piling up every day.

"JS

sss.

1 r nrhal
Hundred

Hilar. Frank McMillen. W. J. Youna.
) C Munlon. R. P Fifield Kerl Realr. W H Birman. Mn. Jamta Sllibie.

the inm of Nine
04/100 Dollara

rill holt!

rhleh
f.'j. Mead.

I. 0. Roieri. City Clerk.

aa follot

NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

Mildred fTmlth. Rarlater of Probate.

NOTION TO CBEDITdRS.
&gt;f Mtcblaan. the Probate Cot

nf holdlnr Circuit Court II

Perhaps we should feel sorry Jor Miss
String. But somehow we just can’t bring
ourselves to believe a tvord of her story.

*&gt;

JTe have reason to know that Standard Red
Crown is an economical gasoline—but its
use hardly saves that much.
Because it does have "more live power
per geBon” Standard Red Crown operates

HOME OWNERS’ LOAN COR-

non Council will hold a Spacial
n Saturday, the 37th day ot Jun
936. it 7:30 o’clock P. M. A

?v2a‘

1030. at 7:30 o’clock P. M.

8. C. Roiere. City Clerk.
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Stela of Michigan, the Probate Cai
tba County of Barrv.
**

DtlVIA-TMT

HOTI
evolution to
Stale Road
« ar# fnrtbt
Council will

HOME OWNERS’ I/iAN CORPO

nil'
Cone ell

What you save, in longer mileage, is well
worth while over a year's time. But rather
than make claims, Standardprefers to make
it easy—and profitable—for motorists tofind
out tbe realfacts about gasoline mileagefor
themselves. So, this summer Standard, is
conducting tbe most extensive road test ever

i Owaaeil.
Oily Clerk.

City Clerk.

’?
about

MEATtST

�TKt H1ITIHGS BANNn. TBCMDAT, ICMl tt “M

iliim

taro, sweet potatoes and gooseberry
pU We also had watermelons, coooanuts and bananas. The room was
filled with native* all the afternoon.
I think I extended my hand mare
than IM times. My arm was quite

Kaahumanu was much

retire. My ears were stunned with
the noise of their tongues, and my
eyes were disgusted with the sight
of their degradation. Oh cruel, cruel
beyond comparison is that person
houses are .opposite with only the who enjoys the blessing of a Christ­
street or great road between. Here ian and a civilised land and would

deny Um heathen Um "Light" ef ( Ur of the circle on an elegant sofa what out predeoeMan had an thdr PNEUMONIA CONTROL
arrival. Th»y bad lo taka up their ’’tvcvmvwiR yywiVWU
Um Gospel. Extinguish thia glorious decorated with crimson damask sat
luminary and darkness would again Lady Bokl and the two queens of residences in native huta, spread
-- ------- --cover the face of lhe earth, ind the late King. They were dressed In their matucsM* on tiw ground, and
gross darkness would again envelop blue satin, and had on pale blue and • Hi!
8,ru“ *° ri*Y Inportut
broueht. while we have been wel
wel-­
_ ,
,
_
tbe minds of every nation binder white striped scarfs. On their right brought,
Bole in Beducinr the
Heaven Missionaries do not come sal Queen Kaahumanu arrayed in comed with cordial affection and
here to live in splendor. Mr. Good- j scarlet figured and green wrought kindness.
Death lata
Sunday. April 8.—Attended three
rich’a house afford*
a strong with flowers. Bokl and several of
Eventual control of pneumonia
demonstration of thia. It is built of the nobility were dignified .in ap- services today, two of them in the
a cause of death In Michigan i
coral rock, has a large dining room, pearance and polite In manner, native language and one in English.
two bed rooms and a ^lichen. The ’ When we arrived be came to the I never saw a church in Philadel­ held out aa a probability today by
Dr. C. C- BJemons, stat* health
walls are ruff cast without and door. saluted and handed each one phia more compactly filled than
commiaaioner, with the announce­
roughly plastered within. The floors ; to a seat. The presents for the Chief this. Tiie natives (Chiefs excepted!
ment ot a grant of 850,400 by the
are laid loose, so lhat you can sec were laid on the table. The second sat on the Goar and listened with
through into lhe cellar. The celling circle composed of dignified per- earnestness, i was moved to tears Commonwealth Fund of Now York
above Is partly composed of black1 wnages. were dressed in silk and to hear the songs of Zion sung by to finance a three-year program In
the development and Improvement
and white boards. . Partitions are satin, and were seated on the floor, pagans In tills strange land.
Tuesday. April 8.------ 1 am now of anti-pneumonia serum tn the
made of matt so thin that they Bokl and Kaahumanu presented a
move with every motion of air. I salutation in writing, expressing pleasantly- situated with Mr. and laboratories of the Michigan De­
have w long been accustomed to their great satisfaction at our ar- Mrs. Goodrich and shall remain partment of Health.
The research will be carried out
lean agaUut a permanent wall that! rival and their gratitude to God for here till lhe general meeting. Where
I fear I shall be convinced of thc 1 sending us. This was all interpret­ my future station may be. or with under the direction of Dr. O. O.
unstable nature ot this curtain by a I ed for us. Mr. Andrews thanked whom I may reside I know not but Young, director of laboratories. Dr.
sad fall through Into tbe dining them for our reception, and assured leave it al! to the disposal of Provl- Young stated that anti-pneumonia
room.
1, them “
that
■*’ “
It was
" only 1love of* xQod.
’“* dgpec My beloved Marla Ogden and serum has already proved an efI and a deep regard for their welfare IifTruTt
tn have the privilege
nrivilese of.fective
of
expect to
agent in reducing the death
I have been alarmed and also
spending a few more weeks together. | rate from 36 to 40 per cant In Type
amused by the companions of our that had brought us here. The Bible
Now my dear sisters I must bring 11 and Type II pneumonia, the
was
then
presented
lo
thc
Governor
apartment. Two lizards about four
my
journal
to
a
close.
But
before
I
;
types
moat
prevalent in thia stata.
inches long appear to enjoy them­ and other presents were handed to
They all arose, went' bid you adieu let me assure you that I The prohibitive coat of this treatselves very much Ln playing around the chiefs
our tapa window curtain We shud­ around and shook hands with each: I am happy and contented, and 1 ment at present haa not permitted
dered at the first sight of them, but of the missionaries and accompan-. feel as though I should not be alto- Its wide usage. Dr. Young believed
ied them lo church. Your curiosity i gather useless here. May I live no that the present commercial coat
were assured they were perfectly
longer than 1 am useful, and may I of about 180 per treatment could
harmless, so feel at ease. Thc fleas will perhaps lead you to enquire ।
are likewise very sociable, and I have what sort of fabric the church is be useful as long as I live. I desire be reduced to such an extent that
illy state-wide free dlatribudlstrlbubeen told that other creatures are made of. Yoa need not be surprised nothing more, on these distant Is- eventually
Lands I shall often think of you. **
tlpn
““ —
to physicians
-*-■------------would
•--------------be possible.
,u’to
hear
that
it
Is
thatched
with
here in great abundance But I have
straw, lhe yard enclosed with poles,1 and pray for you. Remember me Just as smallpox, typhoid and rabies
mentioned enough to excite your ab­
horrence of my adopted country, thc floor covered with hay. and the affectionately to all my former vaccines are now distributed.
Pneumonia ranks as one of the
and cause you to inquire: "Do you whole has the appearance of a friends and acquaintances. Tell all
not sincerely regret lhe life you have Dutch bum It Is, however, a noble who may inquire about me that I major causes of death in Michigan.
enorar
-a my
m, ....
“S “ “lU occd.n Md 1M0 am perfectly aatisfled and happy Dr Siemens pointed out. and U
chosen?" No.
dear sisters I m
do
not. u i n.o lo.ooo live. i would P-?}’1'
. ““V ’?» •““S with Che life which, under the showing a definite Increase. Deaths
■pend them .11 In thu moel Ueued “I,
M&gt; Blnjb.m delivered m. guidance of Providence. 1 have from pneumonia increased 38 per
c«u». It u eweetly retre.hln, „ oddree. In the n.u«. Un*u.«e .tl- chosen May tiie Lord bless you. cent in 1034 with a further increase
with uieae
lh«« near
deu missionmljion-'«
converse wiui
~. - ,
. “ui?“ “I-and keep you from evil, and make of 7.5 per cent in 1935 when 3,802
aries Queen Kaahumanu has been lhc holy bond® of matrimony. It was । &gt;ou useful and hoppy in your native deaths were reported. Michigan's
------------ ---- a most affecting session and I should । land. Farewell my dear sUters, with experience is similar to that of oth­
---------- ,.v. .with her presents
bountiful
today,
have enjoyed
it -exceedingly
had »
I i many tears j My farewell, and let er states and the purpose of the
------------1—j i.
----- ----—i- u-j
sending us 4 watermelons, a turkey,
some fresh fish and potatoes
* not been discomposed by tiie fleas, me have an Interest in your prayers. Commonwealth Fund research Is to
Will Dipp and family of Irving
so improve the effectiveness and
Tuesday. April 1. This is the most and annoyed by two or three dirty Your affectionate sister till death.
lower the cost of production of anti­ and Mrs Warran Roush and daugh­
Maria Patton.
romantic place I ever saw The vil­
pneumonia scrum that a practical, ter Winnie of Hastings visited Sun­
lage is situated on a plain one and eruption similar to the Itch.
day
at will Mishler's.
specific preventive may be found.
Thursday. April 3rd Lady Opllta. MANY ONCE DEAF
a half miles from the sea. bounded
Marilyn Martin of Grand Rap­
The Department of Health labo­
— — on
... the
-.- others
........ sister of Queen Kaahumanu. called
by it on.. one side, . and
who has spent the past week
NOW HEAR AGAIN ratories began the manufacture ot Ids
encompassed by mountains, hills to see us She is a person of great
standard types of antt-pneumococ- at WUl Mishler's relumed home
and plains. The rainy season Is Just 1 consequence.
was
handsomely
Many who once were "hard of
Friday evening.
over and everything looks green and dressed and. reasonably speaking, hearing " have solved their problem cic serums lost summer with the
Mrs. Emory Green of Detroit, who
gay We walked out to an eminence 1 would weigh 350 pounds We were through the prescription of a noted aid of a legislative appropriation.
Distribution will start this fall In resided with the John Roush fam­
where we had a fine view of the vil- ' also favored with the Queen's com­ Vienna specialist.
It is called
lage The native hula resemble pany at dinner I .ihall not here­ OURINE. Before you invest in ex­ the larger hospitals of Detroit. ily forty years ago. renewed old ac­
stacks of hay. have no windows, but after attempt to describe her dress, pensive hearing devices, try one bot­ Grand Rapids. Flint. Jackson and quaintances Saturday. She will be
as Frankie Roush
a small door, and often pigs, folks as we are Informed that should she tle of OURINE Sec if It doesn’t Kalamasoo. Dr. Young stated. He remembered
and fowls reside together Have been visit us every day in the year, she help you. loo. lo banish earache, said that free state-wide dlstrlbu- &lt; Linsey&gt;. She sends greetings to
agreeably surprised to find so many would have on a different oqc To­ ringing and buzzing in ears, ear­ tlon would be under way by next Mrs Rena Wolcott Culler of Wood­
spring.
Clinical
studies
will
be
car
­
land
and
Mrs.
Erma Childs Hutch­
day
a
neat
and
elegant
while
cam
­
goats, cows and horses here; have
ache. chronic headache, and en­
seen more than a hundred in a bric with a deep-worked border and able you to hear better. Relief is ried on in Detroit Receiving Hos­ ings of Orand Rapids.
drove al) herding together in the flounce, a white lace handkerchief quick—and lhe cost is only a few pital and upon reports from other Ray Richardson and wife of Grand
worked with green, pink and scarlet cents a day Money back guarantee. hospitals.
Rapids were Sunday visitors at Art
mountains
Richardson's.
south’ bowne.
Wednesday. April 2nd.—I can -—
Get OURINE today-Carvetn &amp;
truly say that I have seen strange I honor of tying on her boimet. and Stebbins, thc Rexall Store —Adv.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Waddell ot
John Huizinga and wife ot Grandappeared much riteaaed
ffleased
things today At 4 P M lhe mis- ‘she
he aoneared
nonaries were taken to the home of
Saturday. April 6—We arc a
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
one of Reho Reho’s Queens, to in­ source of wonder to many, and 24
A number from Southwest Wood­
troduce them to Use governor and natives came in this morning to see land attended the annual music lotte that evening.
| Mr. and Mr* John Bloeber atMadam Bokl and the principal pcr- MLv Ogden and myself After going day at the Brethren church in Sun­
Littie Marilyn Porritt relumed tendad the Melacar reunion
at
lonages of lhe place. The house wa* through the usual ceremony of field Sunday afternoon.
home Bunday after spending the Thomapple lake, Bunday.
built in the native style and had shaking hands they sat down on
Mr and Mrs York Duffy of Kal­ past week with her aunt. Jennie
several
---------- windows.
-------------- The
.— floor
-----was . the floor and looked at us in aston- amazoo were dinner guests of her Pardee.
Burial of CMoaio
neatly covered with grass mats In I l.shinent This surely Is a place of Sister. Mrs. Harry Sandbrook, Fri­
Mr and Mrs Abe Eash attended
The Chinese legation say* that
tbe middle of the hall stood a tabic; . wonders. I am excessively fond of day
■....
the Weaver ...
reunion at Will HofTon either side were seats placed for (the vegetables and milk Oh. what
Chinese are buried In thia country
Rev and Mrs. Frank Moxon of mans. Sunday.
the mission family, and in lhe can- comforts we have compared with Caledonia spent--- Monday
Mrs
•------relumed home Thurs- aa other persons are burled, com­
------------- ,with
--------------Alden Eash
Guv
luv Kantner
day from Lansing where he haa plying with the health law*. They
Chns. Farlee and family were bceij attending school.
are bnrled In hermetically ten led
--------- .*
—
j
Mrg
.3*— --------.
.
Sunday guests
of ...
Mr
and
Milton Murphy. Jr., returned casket* io cemeteries wherever
Isaac Williams and Doris.
near home from school at Lansing. they hare lota.
However, every
Dowling. Sunday
Thursday and will go to Gull lake seven years special perwfuion la
Mr and Mrs. Blake Makley and to work in a hotel for lhe summer obtained to remove the remains of
daughters of Charlotte spent Wed­
Mr and Mrs Will CosgrifT of dead Chinese, which are sent back
nesday evening with Guy Makley Lowell spent Sunday with Jennie
to China to be buried.
and family
Pardee

A PROBABILITY

FURNITURE SALE!

Artichoke King

The humble artichoke crashed
Uie limelight when It via
banned In New York by Mayor
present the Artichoke King of
America. Dante Dlanda. lie's
the nun who introduced the
artichoke as a commercial vege­
table 30 years ago. and now
of artichoke* around hi* homo
at Half Moon Bay. Calif.

HOW IN OPERATION ia a BIC WAY ol OUR STORE

Goods ore moving out. and our customers ore more
than satisfied with the prices they pay Housefur­
nishings. Furniture. Rugs ond Linoleums ore going
ot a great rote, thus making room for the New July
Furniture Market Stock which will soon arrive.

QUIMBY.

Living Ronin

STILL A FINE SHOWING LEFT!
A good two-piece HOME SPUN
COVERED SUITE for only

YOU CAN BUY OF US DURING THIS SALE A GOOD.

A HANDSOME TWO-PIECE SUITE
covered in handsome velvet for

TAFESTRY BRUSSELS RUG.
9112 use. for onlyA

One that would GRACE THE HOME
OF A MILLIONAIRE for only

*13.95

WELL MADE VELVET 9&gt;12
RUG FOR ONLY

’19.95

FINE AXMINSTER. 9x12 RUG
FOR ONLY

*24.95

BEAUTIFUL GENUINE WILTON VEL­
VET RUG FOR ONLY

*49.50

Miss Janette Ritzman has finished
her school work in Battle Creek and
is spending the summer at home
Mrs. Julia Hicka of Hastings 1*
visiting at lhe home of LaVcme
Sampson
Miss Minnie Lusk of Albion visit­
ed old neighbors and friends here

ARE CERTAINLY MOVING. BUT WE HAVE

A large two-piece FREIZE COVERED
SUITE for

•hint think of it,

Suite!*
*29.95
*49.50
*59.50
*79.50

Thenceforward

Miss Francena Culler enlarlalned
at tea a party of girl friends in
honor of Miss Evelyn Lowell, who
has been spending a short time at
her home before entering Leila hos­
pital. Battle Creek Monday to com­
plete her nurse's training.

Come in ond look them over, now ii the time to buy!

• The economy of owning your own

Billing Room Suites

home is potent.

But the pleosure of

owning your own home must be experi­

A SEVEN-PIECE SUITE
at a Price You Can Afford —

enced to be known. And the odvontoge

VITALITY

FEEDS

of owning your own home is unique and
A BEAUTIFUL EIGHT-PIECE SUITE in
S A Q £A
walnut and maple finish for onlyvrv
Other* up to $98.00 in nine-piece suites.

H

Some Pattern* ot
of Genuine Printed
&gt;ome

Burlap Back Linoleum

demands

U

investigation.

&lt;F VzC

are

Your present

rental, if applied monthly on a beautiful
home would not only make you your

HIGH QUALITY
FEEDS

own landlord, but would set you fofevgr
GOOD FELT BASE GOODS in th* 9 ft.

29‘,a

INLAID LINOLEUMS, where the pattern
.05
y4.
Lo*»g HALL RUNNERS, tixa 24 in. x 7 ft., only. 89c
Several BEAUTIFUL RAG RUGS. Six« 24
inch x 45 inch, for only

39

Come in ond take odvontoge of this sale ond secure

what you ore in need of ot a price you con afford to

In Red room Suites

Assuming your long-cherithed hope to
live in a home that meets modern stand­

A GOOD LOOKING WALNUT FINISHED THREE
PIECE BEDROOM SUITE, consisting of o full sited
bed, o dreisar thot is large enough to look good,
and a chest of drawers
“------- ----------for only _
A GENUINE WALNUT VENEERED
SUITE for only . ..
A FINE MODERN SUITE in handtome
wood* far ot low os
VU.UU

ards ond requirements, we ore confident

in recommending that you seize /he as­
tounding

*29.95
*49.50

MILLER FURNITURE COMPANY
TELEPHONE

2226

Feed» That Give

RESULTS
Special Thu W eek!
STARTER ai&gt;d
Grvwipf Math.-11.95

A Home is your great­
er! investment; make it
your best."

Reasonably Pricad
Feeds

opportunity offered by the

present building program . . . and let us
help make your home beautiful.

rtfl

pay. Sale will jxnitively close Saturday night.

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

rent-free within a few years!

Wc feel thot we con suit the most porticulor custom­
er with o line we still have on our floors.

The Home Luniber
Co. Builds Homes!

THE HOME LUMBER CO.

1*7. DAIRY ....*1.25
CAIS MEAL .95c

SMITH BROS
VELTE A CO
ihiUMi

naoa m

�THK IIA1T1N0B BAXXf THIB8DAT Jt'NK », IM

Something New
in Crepe

....... - •
»°b®UUd * W»
IUU (fcvfra.

woodund

dan.

Mrs Alfred Bennett (Viola BakNorth Vermontville from the hos­
pital where she had an operation
for appendicitis. She u convales­
cing niaaly. Opal Baker b staying
with her for a short time.
Mr. and Mrs. John Lippincott and
I family of Sunfield were Sunday

llah of Orand Rapids were callers
Sunday evening.
Dick Jeffrey of Lansing spent
part of last week visiting Teddy
Burkle. Teddy relumed home with
him Sunday to spend a few days
there.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Reabm of

West Lake Odessa

were

Sunday

dinner guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gilbert McLeod.
Mr and Mrs Milsn Trumbo vis­
ited Mr. and Mrs. Ward Plante and
family of Hartford from Tuesday
i until Friday. Beverly Plants rei turned with her grandparents, for
a two weeks' visit
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Zerkle and
family of Lansing spent Sunday
With Mr. and Mrs
Wm
Flory
Leonard Raffler of Nashville visited
Mr. and Mrs. Flory Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnson and
family of Battle Creek. Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Zledema of Orand Rap­
ids, Mrs. Agnes Fisher and sons.
Don and Dwight and Mra Rena
Culler and BlrdslB Holly spent Sun­
day. Father’s Day. with B. 8. Holly.
Arthur Allerdlng and Leon Hynes
This black Bilk erepo dress worn
were trout Ashing in Gladwin coun­
by Aalrld Allyn, film player, pre­
ty over thc week end. They report
sent* a new type of yoke of loaf­
green crepe to which the bodlee a big catch of fish.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Warner and
white pique tie and toucher ot family of Lake Odessa spent Sun­
day with Mr and Mrs Wm War­
white pique nn thc sleeves odd
ner.
charming conirast to thia atMbs Phyllis England and friend
of Chicago were Bunday dinner
guests of Mra. Glenn England and
SOVTII SHULTZ.
daughters. Pollyanna and Margerv
Lorraine Bonneville ol KalamaMr. and Mra. Grant Osgood and
-oo Is spending this week with her
iircnu. Mr and Mr* L. Bonneville. Mr and Mra. Roscoe Hynes spent
Eble
G. E Kenyon b again under the the week end with Mbs
Wheeler
of South Haven.
doctors care. He |s some better at
Mbs Marts Paul visited Mias Jo­
thb writing.
Anne Flnnle of Hastings from Wed­
Mr and Mrs. Ned Lindsay of Al­ nesday until Friday.
lante. Georgia, called on Mr and
u miMr ^,
and
Mra. „
H A
A. A1(-on
Kitaon B|W
and
Mrs Clarence Baechler Saturday. Mary Jo were 8undav
of Mr
Hi? Mi**e.n Lucile and Carrie Miller arid
---• —
— H. -E --------Mrs.
Heisler ot- ----Vlckerynf Ashland. Ohio, arrived Sunday lo vllle.
pend a week with them. They are
Mr and Mrs. Fay C. Wing spent
niece* of Mrs Baecbler.
_________________
Sunday
with Mr.__________
and Mrs. Warn la
Mra. Sarah Kenyon In company Kelsey" of Coats Grove. Mr ”and
arlth Mr *nd Mr* Hayes Sponable Mr* Wing visited friends in Wayrttended the Beneway reunion at land Monday.
Dutton Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Carpenter enThc Brush Ridge Cemetery' Circle tertalned the following at their
will meet with Mrs Charley Aldrich Baddiebag lake cottage. Bunday:
Thursday. Everyone welcome.
Mr and Mrs D. B Green. Mr. and
Mr and Mra. Frank Horn enter- Mrs Will Flory. Mr. and Mrs T. C.
tallied the following guests Bunday Munion of Woodland, and Mr and
honoring Father* Day
and two 1 Mr* Dewey Zerkle and family of
birthday* of Thad cook and Rana ■ Lansing.
Whlpole Mr and Mrs M Herman
Mbs Mildred Williams b visiting
and Patty Ann. Mr nnd Mr* Bryce . Mr and Mr*. Raymond McLeod of
Meyer* and Maud of Grand Rap- Grand Rapids a few days thb week
...
------------ and Orville Cook of
phoebe OakA ho pUrch(UMfd
Ids. -Bert
Cook
Kalamazoo
। the Mary Nash property.
Mrs. Inez Warner of Parchment
»i&gt;r »
Mbs Eleanor TOI
Benner
I* raiuni
vhitlng
and Mr* Lennn Bishop of Battle her father. Dr. G. F. Benner at Mil­
Creek called on their uncle. G. E ford. III.
Kenyon Sunday Mr and Mrs. Harry;
a. W. Long of Lansing spent thc
Mlscncr of Kalamazoo *pent Bal- M-eek end with hb parents. Mr and
urday evening with them.
: Mrs. Wayne Long.
—-------------- Mr «nd Mrs David Kilpatrick
WOODLAND.
. and friend. Jerry Stoddard, of Ann
Mrs. Chas. Fumba accompanied Arbnr. and Arthur Kilpatrick of
by Don Shomo was in Ann Arbor Jackson spent the week end with
Saturday at the graduation of her their parents, Mr. and Mrs Frank
son. Charles Fumbs. who received Kilpatrick
■
hb B- A- from the Literary collegMr. and Mrs. Chas. Faul and
al the University thb year. He will Marlette of Hastings spent the
enter thc medical school at Ann week end with Mra. George Faul;
Arbor hi the fall.
Mr and Mra Richard O’Brien and
Miss Winifred Border of
Oak family were Bunday yhitora there.
Park. III., and Charles Fawcett of Mrs. Faul returned to Hastings with
Chicago. Ill. were Sunday guests of Mr and Mra Faul tor a few days'
the former s parents. Mr. and Mra. i vblt.
F. F. Border
j
Mra. Percy Pratt of Lansing spent
MU* M^ry Long left for Lansing s few days in Woodland last week
lot week wherw .lie hu employ-.
Don Bhomo left Moodey tor Immeiil
aln&lt; “here he hu employment with

menu

Wm

“DeUtown"

Jr, hb parents and

hb friends tn hener W
SiSS I ef
nineteenth birthday. Two bl

ITS PRESENT NAME

Mr. and Mrs. J. V Hilbert moved |
SL’T^BrSiwa, '
M*®e
day they sntertSfMr andt^'i Honsl

'

;Carty,

‘delton- secured

•ttb

5S»“.tfZSJ

|aml vw bM MMM rrw

Washington as the name of the
postofflcc. The government and
state both objected to the name at
Dell town and contracted It to “Deb
ton."

At the time of lhe laying of the WEST ORANGEVILLE
AND EAST GUN MARSH.
Lawrence Hilbert and daughters corner stone of the new schooland Dan Bhomo ol Woodland.
house at Delton, facta were brought
Ben Hanson and family have re­
MUs Amy Harger ot Orand Ha- out aa lo how that town acquired ■ turned from Clarksville where they
van vldted her brother. Walter Har- Ila name. It appear! that the fa- j have been helping their eon Cecil
nr and family over the week end. | ther of Lincoln Bush owned prac- with hb onions.
.. .. all
... of ....
— j on
e ।. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harger of Sagl- Ucally
the .land
on which th
the
Mr. and
and Mra.
Mrs. C.
C. VanEtt
VanEtt and
and eon
son
naw were Sunday guests at their 1. town
-VW&gt;* *•
is atouaww.
situated. Mr. Bush's wlfe^LaVem
' L^V»... attended tLlhe funeral• of
.
bad a nephew named D»ll Monroe,1 Mr* Nettle Bteucr of Union City,
Mr. and Mm John Hauer and I who was the first to start in bull- who wm fatally injured in an auDale Hauer vhltsd relatives
in ' nesa after lhe town wm laid out. It immobile accident at Battle Creek.
Chabea Saturday.
became rwceaaary to have the placed She wm a cou»in ol Mr. VanKtt.
MIm BUa Herman of Caledonia named. Aa Mr. Monroe waa quite &gt;, Mn 8. A. McCafferty entertained
who ii second grade teacher here. | prominent in tho early hbtory of at a dinner party at her home BunhM been offered the fine opporUini- that locality, Mra. Buih, Llnclon'i day for her nephew, Allen McCafty of attending Northwestern Uni- .
verslly through the W K. Kellogg'
Foundation.
Rob Bradley, who lias been work­
ing bi lhe Raffler meat
market I
since last fall, has found employ­
ment tn Yorkville, near Gull lake.,
Look for lhe sign of the Flying
Red Horae at the comer gas sU- I
lion. Frank Nlethamer. who also
owns the Nlethamer garage, has
leased the station from Mr M. V.
Cheeseman. Cedi Jordan will have
charge of the at*tlon.
John Wynn of Grand Rapids b '
visiting hb grandfather. Rev. A. E.
Wynn.
About 10 attended the Methodbt
Sunday school picnic at Riverside
park. Orand Ledge. Friday.
A
bounteous pot luck dinner was serv­
ed and the usual games were enJdyed by everyone.
Mr. and Mra J. V. Hilbert and
Anne Roaenthall and Mra. Ella
Memorials must be fine and beautiful to do justice
Bush of Los Angeles. Calif., were
to the service to which they are dedicated.
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. E
Border Friday.
*■
Much of a Memorial’s fitness depends upon the
Mr. and Mrs. Burr van Houten |
and son Stephen of Hastings called i
quality of the material from wbfich it is made. If
on friends tn Woodland Bunday.
I
the material has beauty and character and dura­
The King's Heralds will meet at
bility then the Memorial will almost surely be
the home of Dale Thompson Wed­
commendable
nesday afternoon from 2 until 6.
Mbs Virginia Faul and
friend.
See us before you place an order, it will pay you
Mbs Genevieve Glass of Grand
Rapids, spent the week end with
to investigate
her parents. Mr and Mrs. Law­
rence Faul.
During the summer months we are offering Spe­

E"

Fresh Up^

land were callers at the Gilbert
11 elm ling home Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Quinn and
daughter Jessie and son Ben of
Scottsville were Saturday and Bun­
day guest* of Mr. and Mrs. C. Van-

THI

Thc untimely and sudden death
of John Beattie and son Earl, life­
long residents ot Orangeville, came
as a great shock to this vicinity,

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FINER MEMORIALS

CHE88EY.
June 18 Letter.
Mr and Mrs Ernest Honey*ette
have sold their home here to par­
ties from Kalamazoo
Mr and Mr* Art Mead are the
proud.parents of a nine pound girl,
born June 12
Eugene Charles Morrell and Miss
Orah Lea Johnson of Bradley were
married Saturday. June 13. Tl^ey
will be at home tn the Hurd apart­
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SCHOOL NOTES FROM
THORNAPPLE-KELLOGG
Evelyn Geukea from

the ninth
grade and Maxine Maclver from the
. eleventh grade Home Economics
classes wm selected to be delegates
to the vocational home economics
camp at Clear lake from June 21 to
28. This camp Ls established for all
lower peninsula girls who have
done outstanding work in home
projects. Evelyn did two projects,
one in child care and one in sewing

thia week with his family Ln their I
Dr. H. 8. Wedel and Farrell An­ vlan of Detroit spent last Wednes- i MH. Hazel Billing*. Mr. and Mrs.
—- - - Burcliett
—•—* --'
‘ Mra. house trailer.
and •*Mr. —
and
derson were In Detroit Sunday In day night here enroute home from Robert
Thirty-two veterans applied thru I
Howard City. They were the guests Maurice Burchett «pent Sunday
attendance at lhe ball game.
Manual Arts and Athletics—Irving |
------------Mr. and Mr*. Floyd Geiger of near of Mr*. Jack’s mother. Mrs. H. W. afternoon with Mr. and Mr*. Her­ our poAlofflce. for their bonus. J
Alumni Banquet.
Goscb and husband.
bert Billings of Biterwood.
There are several here who have
Alto
were
Sunday
callers
at
the
Hoitforth.
English
—
Gretta
lutai.
|
Harry
McKelvey
Has
UnAbout 150 alumni and friend* en­
Mr. and Mrs. S- W- Zaharee and
—Margaret Llndke. j
Mr. and Mrs. George
Woods. not yet applied, although entitled i
homes of Mr. and Mr*. H. W. Oosch
joyed the 44th annual banquet and Homc Economics
happy Experience in
FntYFla l.vnd .Tunlnr .
baby of Montgomery were Sunday Elizabeth and John Woods were to various amounts. To date there I
and Mrs. Anna Geiger
program of toasts held al the school Commercial—Patricia Lynd. Junior .
High and Athletics—Paula Shaffer. I
evening callers it tut Dr. Wedel guests of Mrs. Elizabeth Woods al have been 17300.00 worth of bond,
Battle Greek
Friday evening. The new officers
Dr. H. 8. Wedel performed tonhome.
a birthday dinner Wednesday eve­ cashed in. One veteran living Ite'C I
High and Athletics-Arthur I
n,
elected for next year were Wm. junior
Smalley Music—Herman Johnson.;
t le Battle Creek papers of sllcctomles at Pennock hospital last
had enlisted under another name
Rev. and Mrs. J. I. Batdorf. ac­ ning.
5th
lhere
an account of Wednesday on Wilma Wieland and
Cridicr. president; Glenn Dean, vice 8th Grade-Vemi" Prenttee
Mrs. Florence Mott. Mr. and Mrs. and had some difficulty in getting
companied by their niece. Miss Mary
president; Pauline Benaway as sec­ Srade-B«ir^indM 4th Grade ।thf robbln« of HKrrj’ McKelvey of Lorna June Stewart.
Identified, so lhat he could get *hls I
retary-treasurer.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Arnold of Lul­ Ldew. visited their children at Jack­ M. W. Hughes. Mr. and Mrs. papers made out; fortunately there |
Vaughn
Mott
and
Mrs.
Ethel
Molt
son.
Stockbridge
and
Leslie
last
Bellinger 2nd Grade—Minnie Mepocket book containing ling were Sunday guests of her par­
________ _____
______ _
|“d “»
aiwnded the lu- were people In a nearby town who
KITS
x*.
N.t: ents. Mr. and Mrs J. E. Babbitt.
Wednesday
and __
Thursday.
------------------- j a Ne
­
Sunday dinner guests at the home । neral of the former's brother. Mr. knew him and lhe Circumstances
Supt—LeRoy Bell. Prin.—Geral­
Monday night's Pres* contained an
gress who disappeared quickly aft­
! Rtv. and Mrs. C. L- Wilkins were, Van Pendell, al Battle Creek. Mon- so lhat lhe matter wax cleared up.
dine Wolverton. Science—William dergarten—Frances SeekeU.
, er lhe theft. Il wo* said lhat she account of the marriage of Miss — -------------- ..... — —
This cash will no doubt go Into
Olive Rose Boone of Orand Rapids Mr. and Mrs. Trafford Wilkins of day.
was
not
a
resident
of
Battle
Creek
Graduation Exercises.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Martins &lt;circulation for the most part, at
but ol Chicago, and had been stop­ and Leland Roeoink of Belmort at, Flint. Jhelr daughter. MK* Ha WIL Bagley since Thursday were: Mr. least.
kins
of* n
Orand
Rapids, and v,r
Mr. mid
“- “
—
There were more than 600 pa­ ping In tbe food city only a short Flrst Pilgrim Tabernacle on Friday k,
trons. parents and friends in lhe time. According to the story told in evening. Rev. Edward Boone, pas­ Mn. Vem Wagner and daughters. and Mrs. Kenneth House and
I auditorium Thursday evening to al- lhe Battle Creek papers. McKelvey tor of the Tabernacle and former Betty. Audry and Geneva. Mrs. El­ daughter Eleanor of Flint. Mr. and
tend the graduation exercise*. The had sold some wheal and had got­ pastor of the Mission at Hastings, ston of Cleveland. Ohio, was also a Mrs. Richard Pettljohn, Mrs Lillie
untit Montel and Fred Snyder of Plain­
speaker Prof. Robinson stressed the ten his money for It. amounting to performed the ceremony. The Boone Sunday guest, remaining
। Importance of having the right al- »13fl. He also brought a load of po­ family are well known in Freeport. Tuesday when she went to Grand well and Mrs. Maude Loomb of
Kalamazoo. Miss House will stay
Ii titude and
ana faithful
iwuuui work
worx in building
Duuaing tatoes
ut0C3 which
whlch he was MUlng
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Allerdlng of Rapids for a visit.
selling from
from
for a longer visit. Sunday they all *
a successful life, and emphasized the house to house in the Negro quar- Saranac called on his sister. Mrs
attended -the Cross
reunion
al i
PRAIRIEVILLE.
----------------------------harrn that the use of intoxicating ter of thBl e)ly when the Negress Ellen Yarger on Monday.
1 UiiHrlr. Vnol.nd'n Cliiti lalra.
liquor, bring io young
ir„. p„|,elbooY tram bls hip
Miss Bernice Burkey and friend
....
___________
Th, third «nnu.l raunjon or .ho
Miss Loretta Keeler, Ronald Lee
urged lhe .
gr.du.K.
u&gt; ----r.memb.. pocKei ana
...a^de
gw.y wnn
with ii.
It.
Ed. Burma, of Kalamazoo were Sat- Falk school will be held at Hie and
------------- -maue away
Charlotte
Marie
Norris
of
ToI
tert
that
eamM
nnlv
to
.
। the fact
success comes only
__________ , , t
urday night and Sunday guests at Lchoolhouse June 28. Pot luck din। ledo. Ohio, are guests of the latter's
I those who earn and save.
|
FREEPORT.
the home of her parents. Mr. and ner
Try to be there.
The graduates and their parents
Something lo be thankful for: Mrs. L. F. Burkey.Saturday evening
The remains of Margaret Eliza- grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Will
I were delighted with th» splendid lhe cool nights end heavy dews they Attended th?» Alumni banquet beih. infant daughter of Mr. and , Norris.
Clgrksvllle High school at
al Mor- . Mrs. ‘Gerald Doster of
Hasting*. | Mr. and Mrs. Delos Hughes are
i address
which have meant so much to our of Clarksville
--------------------gardens and farm crops during this rtson lake. Miss Helen Eash was also were brought here for burial Sat­ । enjoying a fishing trip In northern ’
I Michigan.
Trophies.
1 dry spell.
a Sunday dinner guest at tl» Bur- urday afternoon.
The Banners for having Won first
Mr and Mrs. Lloyd IL Brayton of key home.
Mrs. Cc._
Cora Fowler called “
on hr:
her
HINDS CORNERS.
1 place In the Barry-Eaton track Dayton. Ohio, were week end guests
Teddy Walton visited his grand- son Earl at Fairmount hospital,
meet have arrived. We also have '
former s father. Frank D. mother. Mrs. Ida Meyers al Grand ' Kalamazoo, .Friday night........
| Mrs. Allen Bishop accompanied
Rapids part of lost week.
I K,
a. Ethel Mott
™w;; mid
»..d son
™;. Robert Miss Mary Bishop and mother. Mrs. 1
Mrs.
। two medals for tiie girls who won Brayton.
D'“V,A”
-•
— Elsie Bishop, to Battle Creek Fri­
There was a large attendance at
The dally vacation Bible school Is of- Pontiac
are guesLs of Mrs FlorI the baseball throw.
die U. B. church Sunday evening to contlnmng this week at the M. E. fence Mott and Mr. and Mrs Maur- day.
•,
Accredited for Three year* Period. hear lhe address given by Miss Mary
church with an Increasing Interest tee Hughes.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore and 1
in a letter from Dr. Geo. E. Car- Loew, niece of Rev. J. I. Batdorf, The school closes Friday and on
MI
m
-.
Violet
Munucr
left
Sunday
Munger
,daughter Margaret
Miss
attended
a
rothers dated June 11 we are in­ and recently returned from seven
Sunday evening the children will to spend a few days with friends shower
,
for Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bump 1
formed that The Thomapple W K years’ labor on the mission field in
put on a demonstration service at in Martin before going to Muskegon 11i in Hastings Friday evening. Sat- j
Kellogg school now has the highest Africa. StereopUcon views and relics
which lime they will display their lo the Christian Endeavor conven- l urday evening they attended
a J
class accrediting. It reads: "Al a re­
brought from the foreign tteld were work and accomplishments of the Hon. She wjll also visit in Way- j| party al Crooked lake.
cent meeting of the Univer^ty com­ shown and proved very Interesting.
two weeks' session. This will be a -----___ _____
l»nd .nd ___
Douglo.
where____
.he ___
will j Mr, Burrel| phu,lp, ,nd d,u,h.
mittee on relations with secondary Miss Loew had a harrowing exper­ union service of the two churches J spend lhe summer,
| ter Gertrude spent part of lost
schools, lhe report on your school
ience during her preparation for and will be held at the Methodist
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Adrianson,
l’' week In Northville, the guests ot
was submitted. The secretary was
and return home from the mission church. All thc parents are especial- Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Burchett. Mr
instructed to notify you that the
Mrs. Laura Gott.
held. At the time lhat she was ready
and Mrs. Earl Johncock. Mr and
i committee voted to place your high . to leave for the Held, her mother ly urged to be present.
W O. Tobias attended the grad­
Mrs. Genevieve Harkness of Sun- Mrs. Ferris Brown and Mrs. Harold
school on the accredited list of Hie | died quite unexpectedly and as she
In Battle Creek
held was the guest of her parenu. Jones attended the funeral of Mrs uation
lon exercises in
“nx'lt
University of Michigan for the three was the oldest child, she had to re- Rev and Mrs J. I. Batdorf. from Nora Adrianson Cappon at Wood- Thursday His grandson. Neil Busli,
year period, ending June 30. 1939." I main at home to care for a large I Friday until Sunday
[ land Saturday. Mrs. Cappon grew.wns one of lhe graduates.
.
| family. Later her father remarried I Rev. and Mrs. C- L. Wilkins ex- I to womanhood here and was high- [ Mr. and Mrs Edd Meyers of Ionia
and she was free to go to the work pect to go to West Branch to at- | ly respected. Her passing is much visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Citizens* Mutual Insur­
Ray Matthews will have charfe o ■ she WM calIed
After seven tend thc 25th anniversary and regretted and sincere sympathy is Edd Newton Friday night, going
ance
Company,
Howell,
the library this summer. He will years away she started back for a I homecoming of the church of the I felt for her loved ones.
| from there lo Vicksburg Saturday
be at lhe library from 7 lo 9 long anUcipated visit st home. En­ I Brethren on Saturday. Rev. Wilkins | Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Osborne | morning.
Michigan, started business
o’clock—every Wednesday and Sat­ route site received a cablegram in­ | Is to give the main address at the and sons of Nashville spent Sunday | Ralph Skidmore of Hendershott
al lhe right lime in 1915 to
urday evening.
forming her of the sudden death of Sunday morning service
here.Mrs. Lehman who has been
Cornersspent Sunday with his faget tha first pick of automo­
her father, the late Dan Loew, of
Mrs. Mina Bentley. Mr and Mrs. a guest at the Osborne home, re- ther. M. W. Skidmore, who h not
BRANCH DISTRICT.
bile owners, and since that
Bumips. After a time spent in the Baughman of Battle Creek were turned
them.
so
- ‘
.---- with
„
w well,
—v... having had a hemorrhage
utuiuuunBr
lime has built up a state­
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roberts and home land she expects to return to Sunday guests of Rev. and Mrs. J. Mr?
avia n»ai
Mrs. n
David
Deal u
Is vlrlLln®
visiting her Saturday night.
her people" --------------in Africa
two children of Chicago. Frank • —
.w and wife. Mr.
»*_ and&gt; Mrs.
»*— m
Mr nntj ,^rs Orson Tobias and
L. Ickes.
1 son
Neuman
wide organization to give
Roberts of Lansing spent Sunday i Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sisson and
Miss Ruth Wheeler accompanied Deal, and other relatives In Grand ।children of Ann Arbor visited his
service lo policyholders.
with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. daughter. Roberta. Mrs. Emma Sis- her uncle and aunt, Mr and Mrs. i Rapids
Dan Roberts. ‘
I son and Mrs. CUttle Roush were Albert Rosenberger and daughter., Mr. and Mrs Ernest Farr spent ;father. W. O. Tobias, and family
Sunday.
The company has sent
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nelson have Hastings visitors Thursday after- Lots, of Grand Rapids to Pellston Sunday in Kalamazoo as guests of
Mr and Mrs. Andrew Kennedy
out checks for more than
' and Brutus last Saturday for a visit | Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brunson.
a new V-8 coupe.
noon.
and children of the Slate Road
175.000
claims — paying
The Dorcas Society of North Ma- । Miss Dorothy Tabberer is home with relatives and friends. Ruth
Rev. and Mrs Harold Honeywell ‘spent
,
Sunday with her sLster, Mr
pie Grove will serve home made [ from her school duties at Harbor i lived there with her parents years of Jones announce the birth of a'',
out about &gt;10,000,000.
and Mrs Kect Tobias and family.
ice cream and cake Friday evening. Springs for lhe summer vacation.
ago. They returned home Tuesday, son Monday, named David Harold
Mr and Mrs. C. N. Tobias and
July third, at the home of Mr.
Mrs. 8- L- Peckham of Lake Odes- |
Rev. and Mrs J. L Ickes were Rev. Honeywell lived here many ,cranddaughter. Marian, accompan­
During thc past three
and Mrs. Lester Hawks. Mr. Hawks ' sa was a guest at the Dr. H. C. guests
guest* at
ai the
me home
nome of
oi Mrs.
sirs. J.
j. a
A years. Congratulations.
ied their daughter. Mrs. C. H
Years, its assets and business
will also furnish ponies for all who I Peckham home last week.
I Rockwood at Hastings *from Tues- I Mrs. Ruth Krick entertained at a
Brown, to her home In Alpena June
have enjoyed a remarkable
MlfM
wish to ride. Everyone welcome.
। Frank D Brayton was a Kala- i day until
____ ,Thursday
— — of last week,
shower j Thursday honoring Mrs ;
8. and spent a week sight-seeing In
Mrs Esther Marshall of Nashville , mazoo vtsitc- Monday forenoon,
growth.
iI The Eleventh Annual Assembly of Avis Sponable of Owosso.
.. । Mr and Mrs
MRXSOn lhe Young People's Mission Band of 1 Several from here attended the the forests and parks. She brought
visited her son George and..
family
to
and daughter Kathleen of Lowell the U. B. church will be held al ] funeral services for John Beattie them home Sunday, returning
the latter part of last week.
George J. Burke of Ann
ber
home
In
Alpena
Wednesday.
were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. . Barnaby Memorial Park near Sun-, and son Earl al Orangeville. Satur-1
Arbor is President of the
I Mrs. Allen Bishop attended lhe
Victor Sisson.
! field
neia next Sunday
aunaay with
witn services at &gt;। day.
I funeral of q cousin In Woodland
company and experienced
Ijlayd Veldman of Grand Rapids, 10:30 A- M- and 2 P M. Miss Mary I Mrs. Mary Polley. Mra. Lucy Nor­
men arc on the Board of Di­
formerly of Freeport, is working at Loew of near Bumips. returned ! rls and Miss Myrtle Smith accom- Saturday afternoon.

construction. Maxine did
and dressmaking projects.

canning

!CLAIMS NEGRESS
Curry. Math.—Earl Van Sickle. So~
clal Science—Homer Cunningham j
STOLE POCKETBOOK

VANILLA
SPECIAL

Ice Cream Time . . . Get
Your 16 oz. Bottle Friday
or Saturday

20 YEARS
OF
SUCCESS

Two Days Only

TR. VANILLA COMP. N. F.

$10,000,000
Paid In Claims

Will Not Freeze Out
Will Not Cook Out
Makes Everything Taste
the Best

SPECIAL, Two Days

yj Q

Only, I pint for

"tv v

'ITTrgr^1

PRONE ZII5
MALTINCJ*

BEMOBERN

k muttbea

the Mrs. Will Brown farm in North
Irving this summer
Miss Donna Moore left Friday

mlsslonary from Africa. Ls to be the panled Mrs. Homer Flower and Miss
MIDDLEVILLE.
speaker nt the morning service
I Bernice to the Kellogg Foundation;! Miss Charlotte Howard of ShrrTiie M. E- L. A S art sponsoring camp Sunday lo witness the waler ' man street celebrated
her 90th
their annual taxi party this week sports.
। birthday on June 14. Saturday
| going from there to Evanston. Ill., Wednesday. We hope to have a full
A surprise party on Mr. and Mrs previous she enjoyed a party with
where she will enter summer school report next week.
I Mark Norris was given Saturday her
relatives,..V.....I
present Many friends
.... ..........
I at Northwestern.
Mrs. Earl Jack and daughter VI- might celebrating the birthdays of -remembered
■
• •her with flowers and
the above mentioned. Those present birthday cards
Mias Howard en­
~~
। ■ । , ।_______________ were Mr. and Mrs. Ben Temple and
joys very good health for her age.
I Jack. Mrs. Frances Hughes, Will Ti- is a regular attendant at the Bap­
: IUfl and Katie Norris ot Kalama­ tist church, through the kindness
zoo. Mr and Mn Orra Fisher ol of Rev. A N Fields and members
Dowling. Mr and Mrs. Ed. Titus of of the church, who see that she
Cloverdale. Mr and Mrs W R Nor- I always has transportation.
rls and Mrs Lucy Norris, local. A
Wednesday a slight rain and
delightful time was reported.
; windstorm visited this section
। Mr and Mrs. Gerald
Chappell
B M Westfall, who has been
and Barbara of Shelbyville were I 111 at Pennock hospital for some
, Sunday guests of Mr
and Mra । days, was able to be returned home
Floyd Shelp and family
Roger ■on Fridoy.
, Finkbelner of Grand Rapids woj a I James Lewis, a former resident of
guest also.
Kamp Kook
STEEL BAIT
Irving township and well known In
| Mra Hazel Billings and Miss Uta
this vicinity, was calling on old
Camp Stove
ROD
l Billings spent last Tuesday after­ friend* here on Saturday.
moon with Mrs Donald If • mil ten । Mrs Melora Leonard, who has
t of Kalamazoo
been III at the home of Mis Cora
STEEL BAIT ROD
qq
I Mr and Mrs Mark Ritchie of | A. Alien for some days, went to
3 piece___________
I Gun lake vUlted Mr and Mrs Mark Grand Rapids Sunday to remain
! Norris Thursday.
for a few days with relatives be­
CAMP JUC
I Mr. and Mrs George VanTuyle of fore returning to her home m West
TELESCOPE ROD
$4 .39
! Battle Creek called on Mr*. Wilbur Thomapple.
Extend* to 8 ft. 6 in. I
I Polley Friday.
A Mr. Denzil Pitcher and family
' The Reverend Victor Jones of have rented the Mrs Metta Mor­
| Hickory Comers will occupy
thc gan farm In North Thomapple. We
Split Bam- $4 .49
pulpit Sunday morning at 10 15 i welcome them to our midst.
SHAKESPEARE
boo Rod
!i
Sunday school at the usual hour,
I
Supt Leroy Bell will attend sum­
Mr. and Mr*. Manley Billings. । mer school at Ann Arbor, leaving
REELS

MARK'S STORES,

inc

SENSATIONAL SAVINGS on Tires, Auto
Accessories, Sporting Goods, Radios!

GET YOUR FISHING LICENSES HERE!

FORDft!
CONSIDER THESE EXCLUSIVE FORD FEATURES

* 33

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INSURANCE
COMPANY
HOWELL, MICHIGAN

much a part

*“

projier attention to a

&gt;1 "795

borrower who needs only 1100 as to one

tore, and more braking area per pound of ear weight than any other low.
price car.

Mutual Automobile

n WEitomE to
BORROWERS OF It is as
mooEST rierrs o‘uur

—

THE Ford V-8 aleo given you CENTER-POISE RIDING, welded Heel body elrue-

CITIZENS'

4 fte

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FULL TORQUE-TUBE DRIVE AND ^-FLOATING REAR AXLE

WM. E. ROBB. Secretary

Silk Line

CRITER­
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ONLY LOW-PRICE CAR WITH SEMI-CENTRIFUGAL CLUTCH.

Look In your telephone book
for our local agent or write to

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89

Steel

rectors. Trained claim ad­
justers and Agents in all
parts of the state will give
service.

desiring 11000.

FORD DEALERS OF MICHIGAN.
We do not grade borrowers as fruit­

Brunswick TIRES
Kin
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hiimiwr. end

wwawm

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FRED WARING AND HIS
PENNSYLVANIANS
CHANGE TIME FROM
8:30 TO 8 P. M., E. S. T.
Fridays, beginning June 26,

N. B.C. Blue Network.

TUESDAYS, beginning June 30, c»
lumbia eheln.

growers do oranges—by size. Our first

Insulated Cord, Hydro Cure Proceu, Double
Shock Aboorber, Extra Safely Tread Design

thought is to render service. Borrowers

30 x 314$3.95

bank. You wijl receive every courtc*^.

of modest mean* are welcome at this

8ENTRY Type. 4 ply
5.M-ZS-19 $5.15
&lt;-4®-«l I4.lt
5.M-25-W *5J®
4.M-7S-M........... »4J5
5.Z5-50-18 .......... $5.7*

is possible from a sound banking stand­

4.78-19.................MM
5.5®-1* ................. MAS
OTHU SIZXB ul TTP1 AIM PklCkD LOW I “

point to cooperate with you, we shall be

INNER

tush

77n

4.»on.«o

We shall be glad to have you call. If it

glad to do so.

nn

•“’‘•//c MasitnUaC

TIKIS MOUNTED Flit

ST Ok I OPIN SATURDAY. July 4. fram 9 A.M. lo 1 P.M.

OF HASTINGS
HkST

INGS, MICHIGAN

e
t
I
n
T
o
t
n

1

h

O

�TBR ■A1TTNOI BANNIB, THCMBAT, JUNE IS, IBM
A double wedding, where two tUten married brothers, took place at

^Miracle Candidate* Landon Appears
American Citizen
Just a T

lhe Church of God in Belding test
Saturday morning at B o’clock, was
of Interest to many Freeport people.
Miss Helen Earle became the bride
of Milan Reeves and Miss Ethelyn
Earie was united in marriage to
Howard Reeves Tiie brides are the
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Earle of Smyrna and are nieces ol
Mn. F- Loomis. Rev. Loomis per­
formed the ceremony and Mtes Gaytha Loomis was one of the four
bridesmaids The young people are
all from Smyrna where they have
their homes furnished and will at
once start housekeeping. Following
the ceremony, a wedding breakfast
was served al lhe Earle home, after
which tho bridal couples left for a
week end trip to Detroit. These
young people often visited Freeport
during the residence here of the
Loomis family and made many
friends who extend heartiest con­
gratulations.
. We neglected to mention the
death at Camp Custer on June 2.
of Lloyd E Epley a former Freeport
1 resident. At one lime Mr. Epley re­
sided here with hts parents, living
In the house now owned by Mrs.
Laura Karcher. He Li survived by
the wife, a twelve year old daughter.
and hte parents. Mr. and Mrs Alva
J. Epley who reside at Hastings A
, military funeral was held at Vermontvllle on June 5 with burial in
I Grand Ledge
i Mrs. H. 8 Wedel and daughters.
Martha Jean and Patsy Ruth, have
returned from a visit with the for। mer’s fattier and sister and their
; families in
Pennsylvania
They
were away twelve days.
Rev. August Nagler of Evart was
pin town Saturday in attendance at
the Logan school reunion.

[MA MING of Alfred Mossman
Landon as Republican presi­
dential nominee perhaps sppears
to be a political miracle. Although
now a man of national Impor­
tance. Governor Landon was little
known even In hb native Kan-

lost a race for ■ precinct chair­
manship.
Kansans knew him as an un­
spectacular oil man who. oper­
ating Independently, had made a
small fortune by thrift and hard
work, and had shown much sa­
gacity In his few ventures Into
politics. In the most important
of these, he managed lhe suc­
cessful 1928 race of Republican
Clyde M. Reed for the Kansas
governorship.
It wna after Landon had kept
his feet In lhe Democratic land­
slides of 1932 and 1934. to be
elected and re-elected governor,
that he gained national notice
It was then that metropolitan
newspapers hurried writers to
Topeka to find out Just what sort
nf person was this man whom
the Republicans seemed likely lo
nominate In 1936.

cousin. Jack Bradfield.
Our sympathy u extended lo Cor­
nell Cappon and family in thetr
great sorrow tn the passing of lhe
wife and mother. Mrs Nora Cap­
pon
Mr and Mrs. Woolston enter­
tained a large company from Grand
Rapids. Sunday.
BARBERS CORNERS.
Twenty-seven members and three
’ Geraldine Smith of Grand Rapguests attended the Literary Club
1 ids is visiting Mr and Mrs L. J
at lhe home of Mrs. Flower Thurs­
Matthews Paul Smith of Bay City
day. Mrs. Bellinger being co-hostess.
I called there Thursday.
The president. Mrs. Prouty presided.
I The Misses Nora and Evelyn Roll call was responded to with "a
i Matthews returned Sunday from bit of state history" followed by lhe
I Lexington, Kentucky, where they flag salute The topic for lhe after­
' met Mrs. Alice Matthews Coulon of noon was "The Flag of the United
| Atlanta, Georgia, who returned States" Ils history was given by
with them lo spend the summer Mrs Eloise Leonard; Display. Mrs.
I with Michigan relatives
Bellinger; Design. Mrs. Doster. Ori­
Mrs uis
mis
Etta uump
Bump aiicnara
attended a snowrr
shower gin. Keys
star tjpangiea
Key s "Star
Spangled Banner,
Banner."
al the home of Andrew Matthews in | Mrs. Norwood, which was sung In
Hastings Friday given In honor of closing
’ '
“
Supper was served. .by Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bump
Bellinger and Bernice Flower. For
Maurine Clum of Coals Grove te the July 9 meeting Mrs. Brophy and
spending this week with her cousin. Mrs Evers will be hostesses
Mr and Mrs. Theo Tack, who are
Mabe He Hauer.
Mr* Jerry Foley and son. Paul spending their vacation on a large
went to Kalamazoo Friday to meet farm near Paw Paw. where the for­
mer
Is assisting his brother, called
• Mias Alice Foley of Cincinnati. Ohio,
and Mrs.
who came to spend the summer on their parents. Mr
Quick Sunday.
, with her mother.

•T'HE mrrcspondenU clicked .off
1 reams about his economics,

his budget balancing They also
uncovered colorful and humor­
ous Incidents in a career which
many had thought totally lacking
In these two elements.
Among these were:
Boyhood —How he talked s
recalcitrant hen Into laying an
egg needed to fill a customer's
order.
College—How. as a University
of Kansas campus politician, he
was known as "Foxy." (Kansas
Democrats still refer to him by
that sobriquet.) How he had the
Ice cream course eliminated from
his fraternity's menu. and. in
turn, presented the lodge with a
he
handsome cuspidor.
’How
’
"*
drank beer wlih a sub rose
and
bet
drinking fraternity,
Jayhnwks
nickels
when
the
played the Missouri Tigers in
football.
(He
■"*
still wagers on
this garni -nnd still bets nickels.)
Business—How he drilled 14
dry holes In succession before
striking oil in his 15th attempt
How he developed wonderful
shines on his blue serge suits be-

Gaiety in Tweed
Topcoat

Meet the Eepablleaa party's "nun of lhe hoar"—Gov. Alfred
M. Undon of Kansas. In a characteristic photograph taken at
Topeka as his sUr was rising al lhe Cleveland convention.
fore discarding the threadbare
articles.
Governorship — How be was
extremely vexed when a convict
al the state prison obtained an
unneeded pair of shoestrings—
at the state's expense. How he
rode horseback and fished at
every opportunity. How he gave
important luncheon guests only
soup and a light dessert

•THESE stories offer a pretty
A fair picture of the human side
of a man very much in the' pub­
lic eye.

Miss ntni Barter of B«ttM Creek

MILO.

Fourteen attended lhe L. A- B of
Milo at ths horns of Mrs. Toom test
week. Ths program committee, Mrs. definite stay.
Shults and Mrs. Quick furnished a
number of interesting articles read for guests this week their daughter.
by members, and some test ques­ Mrs. Busan Huggetl and two chil­
tions were given. The hostess served dren from Detroit.
We look forward to a good attend­
a nice supper. Three dollars wm
taken tn and gl.io from other ance al church next Bunday at 9:30
sources. The July meeting will be A. M. Rev. victor Jones of Hickory
with Mrs. Bates al the parsonage. Corners will bring the message az
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Bradfield at­
tended the funeral of an uncle tn
EABT DELTON.
Decatur. Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Oalnder were
Mrs-Frances Kennedy of Do­
wagiac and Mlu Bemloe Flower of in Kalamazoo Sunday Their daugh­
Kalamazoo came Thursday to as­ ter Lucille returned home with
sist their mother, tbe former return­ them for her summer vacation.
ing home Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Boulter and
John Bradfield was taken to sens and Mr. and Mn. Bibs Boulter
Borgess hospltsd Friday suffering spent Friday evening with Mr. and
Mrs.
Otb Boulter at Cressey and
from shingles. His son and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. John Bradfield of South listened to lhe tight.
Mr. and Mn. Ike Izinaar and Mr.
Bend, came to see him Saturday
and spent lhe week end with Mr. and Mn. Gordie Durkee and son
David were In Kalamazoo on Wed­
and Mrs. Merl Bradfield.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C Schultz had nesday evening.
Mr dhd Mrs. ike Lelnaar ot near
for guests Sunday some Chicago
cousins who are staying tempor­ Fair lake and Mason Newton were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
arily in Benton Harbor.
Mrs
Rex waters.
Mr nnd Mrs Vert Robinson ot
Mn. Paul Shauffhouser and Mrs
। Shultz visited their sister. Mr. and Isaac Shauffhouser of Battle Creek
| Mrs E Quick. Sunday. In lhe aft­ were Sunday afternoon visitors of
I ernoon Mrs. Lyons ot Banfleld vis­
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Oriffen.
ited there
Mrs. Wilcox went to the Spauld-' Ray Looker of Wayland was a
ing cottage, Wall lake Sunday to re-1। visitor of Mr. and Mn. Rex Waters
i
on
Thursday of last week.
main during the summer
Norman Wilcox of Battle Creek is I Barban Leonard of Delton spent
spending an indefinite time with hb a part of test week with Mr and

Candidate Landon is 48 years
old, 5 feet 9 Inches tali, weighs
170 pounds. He wears rimless
glasses and his black hair La
graying rapidly. Always ex­
tremely friendly, he possesses a
smile that Is all that could be
asked of any candidate.
His wife is charming Theo
Cobb Landon of Topeka. There
are three children: John Cobb,
2; Nancy Jo. 3, and Peggy Ann,
19. I Pretty • Kansas U. co-ed,
Peggy Ann is tho daughter of
thetflrst Mrs. Landon, who died
In 1918.

1 Mr and Mrs. Chas. Albright of
| Chicago came Saturday to spend
the intense pain, with very lit He hls present charge and his bride has several weeks at their summer home
relief and was scheduled for an­ visited here at various times Free­ here.
other operation later test week Mrs.
Sunday visitors at Mrs. Jerry Fo­
port friends extend heartiest con­
Schiffman visited him there last
ley's were. Mr and Mrs. Roy Hugratulations.
Wednesday.
ver of Lansing
A very pretty wedding occurred
Announcement has been made of
the marriage on June 4 al Mance­
HOPE CENTER.
lona. of Zenith clemenshaw. daugh­ | last Sunday morning at 9 o'clock
Mr and Mrs. Chauncey McKay
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Whit­
I when Miss Marlon Elizabeth Ever­ of Battle Creek were Sunday guests
man. to Clarence C. Rhorbacher of
of Mr and Mrs Chas. McDermott
hart of Akron, Ohio, became the
that place.
Mrs Jennie Searles of Hickory
Mr and Mrs. Omo Knowles, lhe ' bride of Arthur H Stiles of Lan* Comers is visiting al the home of
latter's sister from Grand Rapids [sing. Rev prank Loomis performed Mr and Mrs John Bush.
and Miss Margaret Perkins of Has­ i the ceremony In thc presence of the
William Ashby of
Kalamazoo
tings have returned from a ten 'immediate family. The bride was spent lhe week end with hts pardays’ motor trip through lhe east, 'given away by Hie father, Richard ents, Mr and Mrs. Fred Ashby.
visiting lhe Arthur Seifert family at Everhart, who motored from Akron
Mrs. Floy McDermott and Mrs
Baltimore. Md.. on the trip.
I_________________
for the occasion They were atlend- Mina Aldrich attended church In
The Young People’s class of the ed by James Hill of Lowell and | Cloverdale
Sunday
"•
■ ’ ~
: .Is;
Rev. Walton
M. £. Sunday school. Victor Sisson. Dorothy Everhart of Akron, sister-------*“ “
------ every
—preaches
there
Sunday and
teacher, had a very enjoyable social of **■"
lhe bride. —
Both
•*- bride
------and
J---------groom is staying with his grandmother.
gathering at thc pleasant farm have been employed at Lowell for Mrs Mina Aidrich, during hte sum­
home of Mr and Mrs Wm Mishler some time where Mr Stiles is a mer vacation
of Bowne. Some of lhe girls of Mrs. prominent beautician. The bride
Mr and Mrs Henry Anders of
Mishler’s class were also present A lived in Freeport for some lime, Plainwell, who spent last week with
very Interesting treasure hunt in­ making her home with her uncle , their daughter. Mrs. Fred Ashby,
terspersed with games made a live­ and aunt. Mr and Mrs Floyd R | returned home Saturday.
ly evening Two bonfires were built Everhart Freeport friends extend I Not much news as everyone is
in the driveway and a marshmallow best wishes.
Un the hay fields.
roast was enjoyed Punch and wa-1
fers were served Miss Ruth Wheeler
and Mtes Z»na Smeiker were in
charge of the affair and were assist­
ed by Meredith Lewis.
Vern Goodenough is tearing down
and removing the south part ot the
Brayton building which was so bad­
ly wrecked by fire two weeks ago
The Roy Blough truck was used lo
pull the building down.
A car load of people were in town
one day test week passing out
Judge Rutherford’s literature Peo­
ple were asked lo pay small sums
for the books and no doubt several
bit not knowing the kind of thing
they weregclllng.
Mrs. Jed Stowe has been quite ill
with gall atone trouble the past
week
Meredith Izwis is assisting at
Rosenberger's drug store again this
summer.
Arrangements are being made for
the annual picnic of the M. E. Sun­
day school.
Keith Jack and bride of Detroit
stopped at the home of his grand­
parents. Mr and Mrs. H. W. Gosch
on their wedding trip.
Mr. and Mrs. John Baar and four
children of Orand Raptds attend­
ed lhe Children'i Day program at
the U B. church. Edward furnish­
ing two seisetions on lhe piano ac­
■cordion which were greatly appre­
ciated. They were dinner guests of
A. B Fish and family.
Mias Marguerite Rogers is back
on the milk route after a week's ill-

I
;
,

'
I

Mrs Marion Rupe of Orangeville,
Mrs. Ida Brandstetter and Mrs Nina
Boyle of Milo visited Mrs. Bessie
Waters last Monday.
Slewart Waters and family spent
Sunday at Ray Durkee s in Delton.
Mr. and Mrs Harold Hasel and
daughters of Richland spent Sunday
with her parents.

NORTH HOPE.
Mr and Mrs. Jay Anders and
mother spent Bunday with Mr. and
Mrs Charles Welch of the Striker
district.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Farwell of
Kalamazoo were Sunday afternoon
callers at lhe home of Mr. and Mrs.
Otto Prazuhka and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Saunders
and children of Hastings
spent
Sunday with Otto NaUel.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hulbert and
son and Mr. and Mrs Harvey HUI
ol Battle Creek spent Sunday with
Mr and Mrs Albert Ulrich.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Sefton of
Grand Rapids are spending a few
days at hb collage here.
’
'Whatever makes men good Chris­
tian*. makes them good cilisens."—
Daniel Webster.

JUBILEE
of VALUES

PAYS FOR ITSELF!

FRIG I DAI RE
AUTOMATIC REFRIGERATION—ysw'vs wanted H. BMl

t

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3 YEARS TO PAY

50 YEARS

DON'T WAIT ANOTHER WEEK ... IN­
JOY IT NOW! MODELS BEGIN AT $B4-5O
... AS LITTLE AS $3.00 DE­
LIVERS ONE.

NO SALE LIKE THIf

even such a charming person aa
Joao Bennett. Tbe wrap lo of

with a background of eggshell
enter. Cut very full tn back, it

FREEPORT.
June IB Letter.
The recent flower show, sponsored
by the Women s Club in lhe bank
building test Saturday was a real
success. The lobby was beautiful
with tiie many lovely bouquets of
peonies, roses, popples, lilies, and
other flowers. The flowers were given to the churches and served as
decorations for the children's Day
programs
The missionary tea, sponsored by
the W F M 8 and held at the M
E church was attended by nearly
seventy ladies.
Tbe affair took
the form of a reception for Mias
Etha Nagler of Evirulon. Ill . a re­
turned missionary from China and
a former Freeport girl. Mtes Nagler
gave a very interesting talk which
everyone greatly enjoyed The thank |
offering amount to over 41X00. Miss
Nagler was the guest of her uncle
and aunt. Mr. and Mra. F. £
Brunner
.
Ralph Stewart and family were
Sunday visitors at the Lewis Yetter
horn? in Lowell. Mrs Stewart re­
turning with them Bunday evening
after spending several days with her
father, who suffered a strake test
week. Mr. Yeiter is recovering nice­
ly at this writWg.
Report from W. R. Bchlffman of
No. Irving, who u at present at lhe
Unlmaily hospital ai Awi Arbor,
atatee Chat Im has undergone one
operation upon hte eyes to relieve

Measles are quite popular In
Freeport. Roy Blough and children
have been quite sick with them.
Other homes afflicted have been
Leap Kercher's. Chas. Overholt's.
Ken Braendle's and Gall UghtfooC'C
Mr and Mrs. H W Gosch ac­
companied Charles Geiger to De­
troit last Thursday returning Mon­
day afternoon. On Friday evening
they attended lhe wedding of Keith
Jack, their grandson and cousin,
and Dorothy Stauffer Kline which
occurred at Hope Evangelical Luth­
eran church. Charles attended* hb
cousin tn tiie ceremony
Another wedding of interest to

June 3

EiW.

going to

Intlallt it

At Little At

IN

This bright twsod topcoat

PROVE IN YOUR HOME THAT

ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION

YOURS NOW! HERE TIS!
The Fammu A-B and Detroit Jewel

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BIGGEST VALUE WE EVER HAO

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Installed complete, aa little

GIVE
YOUR FAMILY
THOSE PRICELESS
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uUIhL IN

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h,..LMh«.

TRADE YOUR OLD STOVE AS PART PAYMENT

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3 Year Terms.

CONSUMERS POWE

�fo?—"

—------------------ -

&gt; Modern Pioneers Find Homes in Reclaimed Desert
Approximately 10.000 acres of
desert land are being cleared in
eastern Oregon, and western
Idaho to provide forms and

homes for thousands of farmers.
Water from the reservoir of tho
Owyhee
federal
reclamation
project will flow in thc irriga­
tion channels for the first time
this summer, changing the rich,
dust-dry soil of thc desert to
productive farm land. Begun in
1930. thc Owyhee project will be
completed this year,
making
possible thc irrigation of 112,­
000 acres of arid land. The set­
tler shown at the left is clear­
ing his land of sagebrush with
a tractor, while below a sixhorse team is discing thc rich,
cleared land for thc first crop.

4

Jl
Mrs. Long Carries
On in Senate

to give deed pursuant to land con­
tract filed, order to give deed pur- '
suant to contract entered.
Est. Burdette Briggs Petition for I
Admr. filed, order for publication |
, PROBATE COURT.
| Est. Melissa Roe. Order appoint - entered
Est Rierson Dunn. Petition for
ing Admr. entered.
Admr. filed.
Est. Mary N Williams Order apEst. Mary Bell Johncock Petition I
; pointing Admr. entered.
for Admr. filed, waiver of notice
Est. Frank Nash. Testimony filed. filed, order appointing Admr. en- ,
I order determining heirs entered.
j tered. bond of Admr filed, letters 1
administration
Issued, order I
Est. George N Perry Testimony of
| filed, order determining heirs en- ■ limiting settlement entered, petition ’
for hearing claims filed, notice to1
i tered.
I Est. Mary N. Williams. Letters of creditors issued.
Est. Susannah Oaks Petition for'
.’ administration issued, order limiting j
1 settlement entered, petition for hearing claims filed, notice to credl- j
| hearing claims filed, notice to credl- j tors issued, inventory filed.
Est. Elmer S
Sponable. Testi-;
tors issued.
mony filed, order determining heirs
’
Est. Malvina Lombard Order as-' entered.
j signing residue entered, discharge of ।
Est. Mary E Larkin Petition for ‘
( Admr Issued, estate enrolled.
Admr filed, order for publication
। Est. Mary Harper Bond of Admr. ; entered.
filed, letters of administration is-'
Est. Hazel Neil, et al. Annual ac- I
sued, order limiting settlement en- , count for odn. filed.
tered.
Est. Melissa Roe Bond of Admr
Est. Mary A- Burgess Will filed, filed, letters of administration is­
petition for probate filed, waiver of; sued, order limiting settlement en­
notice filed, proof of will filed, or-1 tered. petition for hearing claims;
der admitting will entered, bond of filed, notice to creditors Issued, final
executor filed, letters testamentary account of special administrator
Issued, order limiting settlement en­ filed. order allowing account en­
tered, petition for hearing claims tered. discharge of special adminis­
I filed, notice to creditors issued,
trator issued, petition and order to
| Est Hiram J Kenfield. petition sell bond filed.
for hearing claims filed, notice to
Est. Henry A- Collison. Waiver of
creditors issued
notice filed, order appointing Admr
Est James and Alice Bowerman. entered, bond ot Admr filed, let­
Nomination of Odn. filed, order ap­ ters of administration issued, order
pointing Gdn. entered.
' limiting settlement entered, petiEst Emma M Bowerman. Peti­ ! tlon for hearing claims filed, notice
tion for Admr filed
to creditors Issued.
Est. Jonn McArthur Final ac­ ।
Est. Alexander Cortright Test 4
count filed, order allowing account : mony nied. license to sell issued, j
entered, discharge of Admr issued, bond on sale filed, oath before sale |
estate enrolled.
i filed, report of sale filed.
I Est. Mary J Brooks Waiver of
"Tike higher we rise, the more iso­
notice filed, order appointing Admr.
lated we become; all elevations are
entered.
| Est. Adolphus D. Hopkins Petition &lt; cold."—De Bouffiers.

a’’"

White Honeycomb

Linen and Cotton Sport

COATS

SUITS
Summer Washablcs

Sices 12 lo 20!

COURT HOUSE NEWS

$^&gt;98
White and Pastel

DRESSES

Smart for street—for sports—
for ‘most every hour of the day
Nicely cut—well tailored.

Two-Thread Silk

HOSIERY

&lt;------ ]

/**L

Rayon

Plaited

IO"

\

\

children, girls
and women.
Dark shades and

These are stockings for
very special occasions! ex­
tra sheer, full-fashioned,
ringless,
Newest colors. B‘/j to lU'.'j

V or bodice top styles of

Rayon plaited
anklets, in smart
solid colors or
with striped
tops. For girls as
well as women.

good quality silk crepe,
trimmed with lovely laces.
Tailored styles trimmed
with embroidery. 34 to 44.

Youngsters? Choice!

Lace Top, Ringlet)

SWIM TRUNKS

tayon HOSIERY
/mKZuij Il's Seamless

*

Pare Wonted

Shadow Panel!

Towncraft Beach or
Good - looking
chalk finish taf­
feta ... V or
straight
top

trimmed or tail-

$1.00
Grey imitation
linen cover
Water proof lining! For bath
ing suit, baby clothes »r a rhort
trip. 15“ size. A Penney value

69c

&gt;

Week End CASE

Dull texture
ring less rayon
hosiery, seam­
less, with form­
fit heel.
Picot

r For

boys and
i
girla of 4 to 8
years. All with
belts
included.
Several styles,
■■many
colors.
,
Tote love 'em I

neckwear
A Fashion Highlight!

Crisp, sheer organdy, rayon taf­
feta and pique designed for both
tailored and frilly types.

Pure Worsted

Men’s Bathing

Swim SUITS
Stock Up Now For
Summer!

*5’

O
'
W-

An opportunity
to buy your iun&gt;
mer towel suppiy*
ora or borders!

Drive Home a Better One!
Sturdy white cotton with U inch
hemstitched hems, Handy pocket
size, 17 by 17 in. Buy a dozen!

whits webbed belt Knitted for

A

A

nib

Men’s Fancy Rayon

AU Wool! Talon Tops!

Solid color trunk with set-in flap
pocket. Talon fastener top in
contrasting color.
Smooth fit-

Saturday, June 27
Coaches Only

Here are a few samples of tbe kind of values you
can always expect from us:

’465

’495

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
Hastfafs

FORD DEALERS

Hmm 2121

Shirts of Am
combed eotton

H .
A4

yarn I Rayon
trimmed. Shorts

SLACK SOCKS
Three button
yoke! Durable!
Fancy rayon and celaneao alack
socks. Knit-in garter topi Dou­

Bathing SUITS

DOR.

i s
f’’

ble sole, high spiked heel!

NIAGARA
1FALLS
$550 tT0
1934 FORD V-l DeLuxe FORDOR SEDAN, fine con- S'JQE
diLion. only 21.000 miles 030

Exceptional

Zfc.

Well Model

Priced to Save! Men’s

1W4 FORD V-fl COUPE with
Radio and Heater—
SQQE
OOU
13.000 mllee—-ONLY

Compare! Men’s

SUSPENDERS j SHIRT8-SHORTS

Pure SUM

A beautiful all
tie, hand
tailored!
Resi­
lient
construc­
tion! Smart dotled jacqaarjP
pattern Variety
of ysdors!

All wool! Fast solid color.I With

Styles! Men’s Sport

June Windowpane

White Cotton
Handkerchiefs

Priced Amazingly Low!

Bath Towels

TIE FEATURE

MICHIGAN CENTRA

Sites 6 lo 10

SLIPS

A large selection!

You can get a better car RIGHT NOW—and you
won’t need cash if your present car will make
the down payment on tbe one you select.
t

Lastex Top Ankl.U
■-&gt;.

Sizes 5 to 10 for

\

Pair

pr.

New Empire uplift tops, sunbji c k s , adjustable shoulder
straps. Corduroy waffle weave
trimming and overskirts.
All
brand new styles! Sites 84 to 44.

-The worth of s state in the long
run. is the worth of the individuals
composing It."—J. S. Mill.

A Summer Saving!

Rayon Taffeta

by Got. James Aiben Noe ot
Louisiana, Mrs Huey I*. Long,
above, widow of lhe slain sena­
tor from Louisiana, will oil her
husband's unexpired term.

Our young folks report a fine time
Mr and Mrs Wm Stanton are
the parents of a baby boy born
June fl He will answer to the name
of Clyde Dean.

s

Desert cloth, peasant cloth, ahantung—vivid colorings! Natural
colored linens, too. 12-20.

Sammer ANKLETS

Ik-1

Tailored and semi-tailored
sport frocks! Of fine qual­
ity pure-dye acetate crepe.
They’re buys! Sizes 12-52.

Shadow Panel Silk

Exquisitely Sheer!

J.

C .

PENNEY

Men’s White Nubuck

OXFORDS

Boyd Smart Hashable

Really S—erl for Spring!

SLACKS

98'
Good looking fabrics . . . plains,
stripes, cheeks! Slash pockets,
side bucklee! Sanforised I

COMPANY,

P

o

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 2,1936

14 PAGES

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

DISAPPOINTMENT
IN EOI/E AFFAIR

Carlton Township Man CeleBrates Ninety-Seventh Birthday^

HAS MEANT MUCH TO THE
YOUTH OF NEW ORLEANS
EDUCATIONALLY

Martin D. Fslconer Cast First Vote
For Abraham Lincoln in I860

“McDONOGH DAY” HELD
MAY 3RD EACH YEAR
When School Children Strew
Flowers On Hil
Monument

I

As mentioned in last week’s Ban­
ner. Martin D. Falconer of carlton
township was ninety-seven years of
age on Monday. June 29. So on Bun­
day Mr. and Mrs. Falconer- held
“open house” when a large numoer
of relatives and friends called to
Pfly thelr respects lo this aged man.
wh0 despite his many years, is in
fairly good health and enjoys meetIng his family and friends. He was
the recipient of some lovely flowers
and other remembrances in honor
of his birthday.
Mr. Falconer was bom in Medina
Co.. O, on June 28. 1839. coming to
Michigan at the age of fourteen,
returning there in 1860 On March

‘EMPLOYABLES
[jf jJ^SISTED

SUPERVISORS SHOW
COUNTY’SJPPRECIATION
Of Board of Health—Will
Furnish Their New Rooms
in Fuller Block

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

QfiiDn nunc itc
Dllflnu lIiUj 11J

!I a°°BUDGET
wood to 1937
FOR COUNTY JUDGED!
Important Health Work Done
by the W. K. KellogC
Foundation

JUNE SESSION

FOR

EXCELLENT REPORT GIV­
The new headquarters for the EQUALIZED ASSESSMENT
Dr. Robert B. Harkness, head of KOLOS THAT MIVOW Al
Barry County Health Department
EN BY THE BARRY
tiie Barry County Health DepartVALUES COUNTY AT
PAST THUS HOTEL IS
will be very convenient and wellCOUNTY ERA
116,000,000
rarvAn mad
arranged. They are in the south
to the board of supervisors for the
Lincoln-1

....................... •----------days was reading the
Douglas debates, which challenged nAOC- . n.n A..T CDAU
his thinking and kept him Informed CASE LOAD CUT FROM
on public questions
When he beQ26 CASES TO 209 NOW
came of age in 1860 he cast his first |
Z__—.
'

front of the Fuller building and on
past year. He outlined the W. K.
the first floor, which will be a con-. CITY WILL PAY 23 PER
Kellogg Foundation's plans for the PUBLIC HAS ACQUIRED
venlence the public will appreciate.
CENTi ur
OF
COUNTY
«e
for,that
work
«*“for
»•
ucn
uuu
rt I I . TAX
I M a , comln
ly
d
Mr. Puller, owner of the building, |
_______
__
T ,__ r budget
NO RIGHTS IN SAME
is revamping that part of his buildAaapaapH tinri Pnnnliiprl I Barry county, adopted by the PounIng. putting it in a fine condition ine Assesaecl and Equalized datlon called for the expenditure Yankee Springs Township U
for -----------the work
of ,U.
the V--1.U
health J
depart- -r
------- - 1
Values for County Are
of SlO.OOO more for the ensuing
Forbidden to Take
ment. The board of supervisors, at ■
Given Below
yeBr than for lhe P"1 *^r'
At the present time he is able to'
Situation
uiven ueiow
Barry
u mo*t fortunate
I their recent session, voted that the,
Over the Road
do the small chores around the,
furnish tnese
these new omces.
offices, ano
and
Not a single ubk-bodled man is '‘ county rumun
me
confront- ।; Ln being selected as the first in
The most aimcun
difficult issk
task confrontJudge McPeek has filed his dsfarm, chops his own wood and
now receiving full relief In Barry 1 gave the county property committee tog our board of supervisors at si which the W. K. Kellogg Foun­
spends hours reading his Bible and ------clsion In the case of Willis and Cal­
-----------------------------------------..--------—
June Vision
t)ie agreement upon
county.
The only men on the ..
full
power---------lo act- Ln so doing.
dation
plan
of
health
work
was
,
u
,
playing his violin, or “fiddle." as he
vin Streeter vs. the Township of
relief roll: who are able to work
The many and wonderful favors an equalization of the assessments started The Foundation wisely be- Yankee Springs He decided Uy fav.
calls It. His favorite Bible is marked are a few farmers who are bewhich Barry county is receiving ev­ for the various taxation units of the gan its work with the children of „ of theBtreeten
generously, showing his love for cer­
1 Ing given only temporary supple­ ery day from the W. K. Kellogg county. This equalization does not the county. The good results will , According to proofs In Ute ease
tain passages of the Scripture.
.. mentation until they receive __
M
,_
an in- Foundation, which makes the Barry affect the amount to be raised for be shown when the children of there was ortainally laid out a road.
Six children came
to bless come from their crops this fall, County Health Department possible, township or school purposes, but UXU, .&gt;ull torn. ™n w •«.- I|n
V .h, BUM., boui
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fal- Tnis interesting fact was revealed justifies the unanimous action ofdoes
----------materially
----------- ,--------------affect the,—
proportion
,------------ en. They wUl no&lt; on » toon the prup„ty. m b.l0„ th. houl ™
coner. Mrs. Mae
Edwards
of jn a statistical study mada by the th# board in providing suitable fur- of th* county tax to be spread up- importance of health training, but bulI,
waadealgnad
■—-•to•­ gin
----- -------------- ra*
Carlton. Mrs. Ethel Gregg and Mrs Barry County Emergency Relief nlshtogs for the new quarters.
:। on “
------“ and
—J “
*'■* in each super­ will know how to care for their------the
roll
paid
—
*•
—
:
access to the —
peninsula
on which
Florence cooper of Hastings, Ben F , Administration on June 20. 1936.
visor's district. Naturally each su- own health.
the Streeter hotel at Gun lake and
of Irving. Forrest of Carlton and Thu study showed that there Is not
1 pervlsor Is interested in having his
many cottagn have since boon
LeRoy of Kansas city. Mo, all be- i a single person in the county who
town get only its fair share of the
built. This Oakley Drive was evi­
Ing present at-the celebration on u being given permanent full re­
expenses of operating the county.
dently intended u a public rood,
Bunday except LeRoy of Kansas jief at the present lime who could
The committee on equalization
although It has been little used in
City. Present besides the immediate be considered as being employable
completed their tabors on Friday.
recent years, and is now almost im­
family were the grandchildren, oth- m the ordinary sense of the worth
The total for the county of the
passable
er relatives and friends.
^t the time the study was made.
I valuation of real estate was this

|

.
'T
county EBA Make* Complete '&gt;,
dent, a fact of which be Is indeed
_*
. .
_
S
।
.
proud.
*
Report of the Relief
I

Dlsappolntment in a Scotchman's |
love affair over a century ago has
made a lot of difference to the youth
of New Orleans and the southland.
Mention waszmade last week of our
being to New Orleans on May 3rd.
which is observed especially by th#
school children of that city as
"McDonogh Day.” Bus loads of
school children of all nationalities, Jennie Lind Engle of Irving Twp..
colors, and creeds, laden with beau­ and they have lived on the same
tiful flowers, were going through farm ever since, sixty-one years.
the city, and all bound for the When a new home was needed. Mr. |
cemetery to strew their offerings on Falconer made the pattern for the i
t)»e monument of John McDonogh. blocks, farmed the blocks and built
which monument the school chil­ the residence where they now live,
dren of the city built through penny
Early in his life. Mr. Falconer did
donations in grateful memory of mason work receiving the bountiful
their benefactor. Inquiry revealed pay of four shilling*, or 50 cents,
Those from away were Mr. and there was a total of 209 cases re­
year H7.85O.815. Last year that loa most Interesting story. John Mc- per day. For about three years he
DIGEST OF OUR ; tai was 817.780.125. an Increase of
Donogh was of Scotch descent and served as an engineer on some of Mrs. Sanford Shively of Chicago | celving relief as compared with the fi R IE F
born in Baltimore, Md. As a young the Great Lakes boats in the sum­ and M. C. Nichols of Grand Rapids 1 highest case load of 826 cases
NATURALIZATION LAWS
«™“&gt;
sonal property assessed in the
Sincere congratulations and best I reached in Jan. 1935. This re preman he located to New Orleans and mer and labored in the lumber
GIVEN
county by the supervisors was 81,­
made a great, financial success. camps In the winter in Die Betsey wishes are extended to Mr Falcon- «nta a decline of 74.7 per cent in
663 495. Last year it was 81.578.815—
er and al) hope he may enjoy more th* number of active cases. Along
------------Young, dashing and with "money river district near Frankfort.
or an increase this year of 884.720
One of the joys of his boyhood such happy events.
to burn," naturally lx* was regard­
'
IMPORTANT CHANGES
over last. At the
June
ses­
ed as the greatest “catch" in the
! tlon In the number of adminlstra 1
MADE
SINCE
1920
sion
in 1935 the committee and
city by ambitious mothers, and lass­
BONUS
CASH
BEING
the board equalized the combined
live
employes
and
since
the
duties
------—
ies who were matrimonially in­
of
the
Superintendents
of
the
Poor
Ola
Age
Pension
Laws
Repersonal and real estate assessment
clined. He was a tavtah entertainer,
USED FOR GOOD ENDS ond the County Relief Adminlstra- J
.
—
..
.
_
at 815.000.000 when the total valua­
spent his money freely, and gener­
quire Naturalization In
tion assessed by the supervisors was
ous in hU remembrances of those
Delinquent Taxes and Debts tor have been consolidated, a reduc­
Several Instances
tion of four persons has been made
819359.050. This years total as­
less fortunate than he. This is all
Being Paid—Some Keep
sessment
as made by
in the staff and further reductions
-__ —of__819414.410
___ _________________
There seems ~
to be much more in- _____
quite contrary to present-day storRev Earl Davis, former mlssionare planned for July.
| tercet in naturalization work in lhe supervisors was equalized al
!es concerning that Instinct of, ary to Africa, and his newly wedded
Bonds for Nest Egg
Of
the
total
of
209
cases
receiving
Barry
county
than
for
many
pre816.000,000.
"thrift" that h so commonly as-1
who was the widow of the late
Many have expressed fears that relief June 20th. 35 were being glv- j Vjous years. Already seven appllcaFollowing Is the equalization for
sociated with the Scotch people I Rcv. jOhn Coleman former Supt. of
the bonus money received by the en only temporary relief. In 38 i tlons for citizenship have been filed 'eBCh township and the two districts
Perhaps being partly Scotch myself I Home Missions Dept, of the Pllex-service men might be squan­ cases, the head of the family was' w|th the county clerk. From pres-i0* tills city:
leads me to look upon these "pinch- grim Holiness church, will have
dered for things that would not over seventy years
. of
v. age.
.jv Most
muQi of
ui । ent indications
tnaicauons there
tnere will
win be
oe several
several ' ASSYRIA—Real estate as assessed
penny" Scotch stories as an Injus- I charge of the services at the Pilgrim
benefit them. In, this particular these persons over seventy are el-1 more by women who have married |
th* supervisor. 8693.650; personal
tice to the sturdy Scotch character. I Holiness Tabernacle to Hastings on
locality that seems to be wide of Igtble for Old Age Assistance. It is aliens and who thereby lost their! property assessed by the supervisor
Who for instance was perhaps the । next SUnday. July 5. at 11 A. M. and
the truth. County Treasurer, Maus only a question of time until they citizenship. The old age pension 115400. Total assessed real and
greatest philanthropist of all time— 7:45 p, M. Mrs. Davis will speak
reports that several who received will be cared for by the Old Age As- law has made naturalisation nec- personal. 8709.450. Real estate as
Andrew Carnegie, a Scotchman, to the young people at 6:30. Rev.
bonus payments have called at the sistance Bureau Instead of by the essary in some cases in order to se- equalized by the board of superAsk him for a little help and you'd! Earl Davis has a message born of a
county treasurer's office and paid local ERA.
&lt;h. pension.
visors. 8608300;
vlsors.
*808300: personal
nersonal left as as
as-­
cure the
get a library. When we want to do. ministry both International and
their delinquent taxes in full. Some
As to the remainder of the case
sessed. 815.800. Total equalized by
anything of a public nature around varied in scope. Mrs. Davta is a
This matter Is of so much special
here, whose names are invariably to- I »mger of the Gospel also a pianist have used the money lo pay up load, there are 72 in which the head Interest lo those who may now or tile board, 8624.000.
BALTIMORE—Real estate as­
eluded among the larger contribu-1 of considerable ability. The friends mortgages, or to wipe out other to- of the family is handicapped by hereafter apply for citizenship, as
' ---------- — ----------,----------------- -- • aeoieuness.
debtedness. ana
and some are noiaing
holding
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1)
sessed. 8750.800; personal assessed.
tars in money or time, or both— of
of the
the Taifernads
Tabernacle and
and other?
others will
&gt;x&gt;nd*
recelVKi u an ln.
well as to the general public, that
822.950. Real estate equalized. 8601.­
Joe McKnlght. the Ironside boys. I enjOy this couple's ministry.
we will give a brief outline of the
vestment, a sort of nest egg for the
050. Personal. 822.950. Total as
Maurice
Lambie—all Scotchmen. ।
'.
7s &gt;
-requirements for naturalization in
future. Such use* of the money are FIRST CAMP PERIOD
equalized. 8624.000.
order
to
become
citizens
of
the
to
be
commended.
HA9TIN6S GIRL TO BE
OPENS AT PINE LAKE
BARRY—Real
estate
assessed.
United States.
. . “
While the President opposed and
8935.250; personal assessed. 856.300.
charming young ladles attracted,
AIR LINE HOSTESS । vetoed
the bonus measure, it seems One
Hundred Sixty-Eight
Real estate equalized at 8791.700;
him. but none so much as the beau■
,
who has lawfully entered the Unit­
to us that that was inconsistent,
personal
equalized.
856.300.
Total as
tiful daughter of a Spanish noble- Mi«8 Yvonne Trego Secures
Children From Seven
ed States for permanent residence,
under the circumstances, in view
equalized. 8848.000.
(Continued on page 3. 8ec. 1)
Po.ition With United
may file a declaration of Intention
of the billions of dollars being spent
Counties Enrolled
CARLTON—Real estate assessed.
to become a citizen of the United
for many unnecessary purposes. The
The first summer health camp States in the court which has Juris­ 81.050.150; persona] as assessed. 87.­
BEAUTIFUL GOLDEN
Air Line.
soldiers' bonus was a debt of the
period opened on Monday at Pine diction in such matters. Before he 930. Real estate equalized. 8824.070;
as
JUBILEE
«° ’she
«•’««wlllMon
JUDIUUC. NUMBER
IWITlDCn
for YTOnne
Chlcago Tre
where
M-. United States. As such it would lake, with sixteen Barry county can do that, however, he must first personal equalized 87.930. Total
™-------have to be paid. The use of public
children
enrolled. ’Hie camp peri­ dectaratLonPwithlthe countv ri2k to
CASTLETON—Real
estate ast
j v
w
t
*
sume the duties of hostess with the money to pay these bonus claims
Issued by Michigan Investor j। United Alr
Air Linen.
was far more beneficial, we think. ods ore four weeks In length and it
countv
where
H.587.025;
personal
as
asMiss
—Has Write-up of the
“ Trego made her application than paying to plow under several is expected that fifty children from
I al the Chicago office, recently and 1 million acres of cotton, paying for this county will attend during the
«;
(Continued « pqe 5. Sec. II
City
. Bank
I took the very strict examination the not raising wheat and com, and summer.

■TOBECOME |
NMIUZED

Former Missionary
To Speak Sunday

H 4UU

INFORMATION ON
- T8S TUITION

MANY POSITIVE
REACTORS FOUND

S -

" ““ —""

Resort Hotel. Thia plat waa duly
approved and recorded. Approval
was also given to it by the township
of Yankee Springs.
The township officers last year

W. K. Kellogg Foundation Streeters claim is their prlvata
Made Survey in Barry
roadway, leading south from Cakiey Drive to the hotel property,
Oounty Schools
thence west connecting with Oak­

During the early spring of 1936
lunds were made available by the
W. K. Kellogg Foundation for a
survey of the tuberculosis situation
In Barry county.
Dr. Bruce Douglas of the Herman
Kiefer hospital was asked to meet
with the Barry county Medical So­
ciety. the Health Department and
otlier interested persons to plan a
program looking toward obtaining
a high percentage of tuberchttn
tests; uniformity in making and
reading these testa; making X-ray
films of the chest of those who re­
acted to the tuberculin test; fol­
lowing up all of these positives to

of great importance, locating old
cases, many of them active; to
team the sources from which the
positively reacting children were in­
fected and to control future infec­
tions from these sources.
The tuberculin teste made by the
physicians of the county consisted
in slightly scratching the forearm
and placing a drop of tuberculin on
the scratch; a positive reaction,
shown by a red area surrounding
the scratch. Indicated that the child
had been subjected to infection by
the germ of tuberculosis at some
time and that there had been some
infection within the child, usually
in the glands at the root of the
lung.
This condition is by no means
unusual, nearly always heals of It­
self but Is a matter of consideration
always and 1s sometimes a focal
point for more serious lung Infec­
tion later in life. The positive re­
action. therefore, indicates the nec­
essity for further information and
an X-ray is made of the chest.
Of the 3,600 tuberculin teste in
school children there were 192 pod-

At this first camp there are 168 must also tell when he arrived in |
The Michigan Investor of Detroit work calls for. Bhe passed every for slaughtering pigs. If this govpubiished its golden jubilee num- j test with flying colors, being one of 1 emment can spend hundreds of children coming from the seven the United Blates and where. After PLAN ANNIVERSARY
ber last week in honor of ti&gt;e 50th eight accepted from a list of twen- millions of dollars for such purposes, counties of Barry. Allegan. Eaton. his application has been checked in
AND HOME COMING
Hillsdale.
Branch. Calhoun and Van tlie
‘IK. district
immigration
office.
________
session of Michigan bankers at I ty-four applicants
I we can see no reason why it should
Mackinac Island. It was a very
Miss Trego filled the requirements i not pay the bonus claims of those Buren where the W. K. Kellogg Which is in Detroit, if it shall be Bpeciftl Speakers at-North
creditable and beautiful number II perfectly as to weight—not over 118 who served their country In the Foundation has Its activities. There found in proper form, and the facts
are also several from the city of alleged in the application are veri­
Irving Wesleyan Church
contained advertisements, pictures pounds, height, under 5 ft. 3 in., age World war.
Battle Creek.
Igratlon |
and write-ups of much interest. under 25. with a 100 per cent score [
■■
*•*
■ ■fied by the the district immigration
July 4 and 6
Among its complimentary notices
UUKX, it
11 will
win forward
iuiwmu the
WK UIUIKI
.
.
,
Those from Hastings, who are at office,
i health survey to
,*»
u „ 1"«
was one for the Hastings City Bank,
this camp are Bettie Weaver. Bally bl.nk. end &gt; phoU*nph of th. ip“".uX’r’b^rwd!
BE
MADE
OF
RESORTS
which now holds the oldest char­
Lou Arold, Jean Loppen th len. Jo pllcant lo th. county clerk of th.
“Y.N°rth *”“« W,!'
ter-number 11—issued by the state Rapids, supplemented with work at I
Anne Finnic, Sally Goodyear, Ruth- county where the eppUctlou wu ?'
med. It
It will
will also
eleo notify
notify the
the appli
eppll-­
MMhodUl cbmush .nd comof Michigan to a state bank after Ann Arbor
other Iron clad re­ Careful Inspection Promised mary Bliss. Lucile Denny. Mar­ made.
the state banking law was adopted quirements are intelligence, tact,
jory Reed. Geraldine and Virginia cant to appear before the count?, munlty. This church has been serv­
By Health Department
50 years ago. There are some other charm and a personality that regis­
Tletx. Grace Warner. Dorothy Mae clerk and file his formal declaration ing the community for nearly three| Williams, Ruth Cox. Dorothy Pree- of Intention. This declaration must quarters of a century, and these
banks that are now state banks ters well. aU of which this Hastings
Engineers
which were in business for a con­ girl possesses.
' man. Agnes Johnson and Patricia be made and sig lied in triplicate. two days have been selected to
Gerhard Burde of Toledo, Ohio. _ .
siderable time before the City Bank
The original is filed with the coun­ commemorate the event by means
Miss Yvonne acknowledges she Ls will be associated with the Barry! °^or?
J
..v
.
of an anniversary and home-coming hospital by the technician. Miss
was started in 1886; but these oth­ quite thrilled over the prospects of County Health Department for the
wonderfH* p1!lvl,T*Dfor ty clerk, the duplicate is sent to
ers did not obtain their state char­ her new duties. Bhe
v.T.
_
______
_
____
I
these
children
as
the
life
at
Pine
1
the district immigration office, and program. The church building has Anna Perry, who had associated
She exoects
expects to be next twelve ___
weeks as cub engineer.
been thoroughly redecorated and with her during the first few dozen
ters until after the City Bank did. assigned to the Chicago-West Coast
the
triplicate
is
kept
by
the
appli
­
lake
camp
is
helpful
to
the
child
Mr. Burde took his B. 8. degree
renovated and a wide-sweeping in­ films the X-ray technician of the
The first ten charters were given lo run.
from the University of Toledo in in every way. The leadership Ls cant.
banks which liave since passed out
An alien 21 years old or over, who vitation has been sent out lo the Detroit Department of Health. They
The Banner warns that the job is, 1933 and his M. 8. at the Univer­ trained, the health habits taught
community
and as many former
of existence, most of them being -as a rule, not of long duration, sta­
sity of Michigan in 1936. This fall are extremely beneficial to each has made a declaration of his in­ residents as could be located.
troit and to Dr. Stuart Pritchard of
wiped out during the recent depres- tistics showing that most of the
he will continue his work on his youngsters, besides the lessons in tentions to become an American
The Saturday program Includes Battle Creek; the former is in
hostesses get married inside of a Ph. D. in bacteriology at Ann Arbor. handicraft, nature lore. etc., which citizen al least two and not more
charge of the tuberculosis program
Thte happens to be the fiftieth year or a bit over, and that ends
(Continued
on
page
3.
Bee.
1)
add
so
much
to
a
child's
life.
Under the supervision of A. A. Roth,
of Detroit Dr. Pritchard is general
anniversary of the Michigan Bank­ the job. as no married women are
sanitary engineer of the Health De­
ers Association. The Investor pub­ eligible. Hastings friends give her
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Walters, and director of the W. K Kellogg Foun­
SAW AND HEARD MANY
the evening service at 7:30 at the dation and both are tuberculosis
lished in it* jubilee number the pic­ their best wishes for success in her partment. Mr. Burde will complete POPULAR FILM IS
specialists of national reputation.
church.
Rev.
CL.
Bradley,
pastor
ture of Eurotas P. Hastings, the first new position and for happy landings a survey of all public beaches and
INTERESTING THINGS
DUE AT STRAND
resorts in Barry county. The sur­
Of the 192 films made, sixteen
banker in Michigan, also the found­
of the Nazarene church of Lowell
vey will be made with th# oo-operaer of the City of Hastings; and it
Freddie
Bartholomew
as Barry Oounty Men Attended and formerly pastor of this church, showed evidence of an nld infection
tlon
of
Ray
Faust
of
the
depart
­
was from him that our city received
will speak at the afternoon service,
ment of engineering of the state de­
DAILY VACATION
State Gathering at
Fauntleroy Will Please
its name.
in the evening. Rev. B. E. Manker. lung, but no need of more than ordi­
This year also te the golden jubilee
formerly'Of this place and at pres­ nary living conditions; there were
CHURCH SCHOOL partment of health.
East Lansing
Patrons
In this survey all resorts will be
year of the Hastings City Bank,
ent pastor of the Second Pilgrim several showing unusual formations
Ernest L. Hayas, engineer of Has­
"Little Lord Fauntleroy” starring
which was chartered October 28. Two Weekz’ Segaion to Open inspected three times. The first
Holiness church at Flint, will be the of the riba, five with old pleurisy;
time water samples will be taken the famous child actor Freddie Bar­ tings public schools. Glenn Bolo, speaker. Special music, reminis­ two with evidence of heart teakm;
and
at Methodizt Church
and suggestions made for the Im­ tholomew and marking pretty Do­ assistant engineer, O. Clum
This issue of the Investor also
cences, historical sketches, roll call
provement of conditions of the re­ lores Costello Barrymore's return to Bert Whipple, janitors, and Law­ of former pastors, etc, will form part drainage from some nose or throat
contains a fine picture of M. A.
Monday
sorts. The next inspection will be the screen is due at Ute Strand July rence Potter and Floyd N. Thomas, of the day s program. A picnic din­ infection. One case Is active child­
Lambie, who has been connected
A Dally Vacation church school made the second week in July and 8 and 9. It's a story that makes ap­ custodian*, all of them working for
hood type of pulmonary tuberculosis.
with the City bank for thirty years will be conducted at the
ner will be served on the lawn.
First
our city's schools; A. A. Roth, sani­
and its cashier since September 26, Methodist Episcopal church begin­ will cover premises, food and milk peal to both young and old. The
All positive tuberculin reactors
On Sunday, July 5th, the program
of
Barry county
revolves around the right of a tary engineer
1919. The Investor's write-up com­ ning Monday. July 6. at 9 A- M. The handling, bathing and picnicking
were seen by one of the counselors
Health Department; A, R. Madden, will be continued at the church
e
boy.
whose
father
was
an
Eng
­
facilities,
etc.
At
that
time
ratings
pliments tlie local bank for having school will last two weeks and will
with the following program: 1:45 P. of the Barry county Health Depart­
maintenance
engineer
of
W.
K.
lishman,
his
mother
an
American,
to
will be given, and any resort rated
successfully weathered three depres­
close with a church and church under 70 will be classed as ’’Not the title of one of the great earl­ Kellogg Foundation schools, Elwyn M Bible school; 2:30 P. M, special ment; after the readings of the
sions in its fifty yean* history.
films, all of the children who showed
school picnic on Friday. July 17.
E. Hayward, janitor-custodian of missionary message by Rev. E. F.
Approved” by the Michigan depart­ doms of England.
infection were urged to see the fam­
Mr. Jones will have general super­
The present day Interpretation Barry township agricultural school, McCarty. Connectlonal Secretary of ily physician who already was in
ment of health. The third and final
Foreign Missions of W. M church.
SUPERVISOR WOTRING
vision of the school and will have
inspection in the survey will be divests the little Lord of his curls ail attended the second annual con­ Rev. McCarty completed on May 7th possession of the film.
of the Junior and interme­
for public school custodlHELPS RESCUE TWO MEN charge
further instructions as to food han­ and lace collar of the original ference
This program ha* given a great
ans, Janitors and engineers which I
U1U r*** * Journey which took'
diate group*. Mr* Jos. Brozak wlU
dling, and notations will be made story, an improvement suggested by was held last week at the Michl- i hl,u *round the world and enabled amount of information concerning
the primary group
Aided Two Lansinf Men superintend
on condition of the resorts after Freddie himself, the story goes.
status;
many
Stale College at East Lansing Nm to visit each of the church's our tuberculosis
assisted by Miss Dorothy Mead and
, C. Aubrey smith is the crusty old gan
At this confXce the 300 ^oSl mtarion ftalds. Al 7:30 P. M. Rev
continued use.
„
chronic
cases of tuberculosis In old­
Whoze Boat Capsized in
Miss Dorothy Roush
Mr*. Harvey
Earl and gives a perfect interpreta­
In connection with this project
Burgess will have charge of the be­
tion of the rote. Mickey Rooney also repreaentatlvM from about 100 ® * Manker will again be the er people have been found which
Jordan Lake
Mr.
Burde
who
is
a
graduate
sani
­
are constant sources of infection to
ginners’ group assisted by Mrs An­
Michigan cities and villages, heard »peaker.
lends strength to the cast.
Chairman Glenn Wolfing, of the drew Taylor. Mrs. charlotte Heath tary bacteriologist will do a re­
lectures and watched interesting , These services are open lo all, and children and in several instances
Barry county board of supervisors, will have charge of hand work in search problem in his field at three
demonstrations. The Instruction in- I a cordial invitation 1s extended to the number of positive reactors in a
ITS REAL TROUBLE, TOO.
his son Laird, who is a clerk in the the Junior and intermediate depart- bathing beaches to estimate the ef­
.Resident* on Center street, from eluded short courses on craning the public to attend.
county road commissioner's office,
fects of weather conditions, sun­ Jefferson to Broadway, and
eating a positive case.
on ■ and maintenance of walls, wood-1
-----------------and Ezra Dell, of Lansing, took pert the assistants in the junior groups. shine or lack of it and swimming on Court street from Church to Broad- , work, furniture, floors and lavatory QTfiRFQ Tfi OPFN
Information concerning all ehllThursday morning in the rescue of' Other assistants will be announced the possibilities of contamination way. also on Church street between fixtures; care of school grounds;
'-’nuo
u vruiv
at these beaches. This project will Court and Center streets, are hav- electrical and plumbing problems;
UN r KID AY NIGHT Barry oounty Health Department
turned bi Jordan lake.
The school will center round necessitate the taking of a great tog lots of trouble in getting the and the maintenance and operation 1 As Saturday Is a national holiday, and te available to the retaUres of
and much accurate city water in sufficient quantities of school heAting planta.
character building through Bible
1 all Hastings stores will be closed the children. The family physician
o'clock Thursday morning. On« of'y~and Blbte“ drill “hymn ap^Z
study, and records for either sprinkling or household | It was a very practical course that day. but to accommodate their
the Tanning men stood up in the elation —
a worship.
ui. There rrtll
and
will al- will be kept of all conclusions uses. The matter was brought up and highly beneficial to all who patrons the stores of ths city will be information concerning the child.
narrow row boat which capsized. । jq
periods for recereatlon and reached. *It is hoped that resort to the council meeting Friday eve- t were privileged to attend.
open Friday night so that people
The Wotrings and Mr. Dell were in I handwork
and bathing beach owners and op­ nlng. and was referred to the coun—
-----I c,n ProvW&lt;’
coming two BRUSH RIDGE SCHOOL
hoi a
erators may be benefited through a ell water committee with power to
Immediately went to rescue the two
BASEBALL GAMES.
research of thia kind.
Beginning July 6 the library will.
, ■
,
man. who were clinging to the side . Dowling vs. Vermontville, July 4;
cloae
at 8and
o'clock
instead
of 9July
on ! Cl«ar lake,
NOVELT
Y DANCE.
Tuesdays
Saturdays
during
avsnlng
of July 4. Mar*
_____
of their overturned craft when th*. Dowling vs. Battle Creek Oereate.
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
DANCE AT THOatNAPPLE.
rescuers arrived and pultod them July 5- Vickery's landing. Clear lake,
Delton. Bst., Eve, Better’■ Orch.
at. night. Bud Wolfe’s Prowlers. and August.
. tin's orchestra. Frank Herrington, present teachers, pupils and pantatf
Jaan Barnes, Librarian. I—Adv. 7-1.
invited.—Adv.
from the water.
Adv.

UMuir

The father of Willis and Calvin
Streeter mada a plat of what la

D00T0R8 GAVE THIRTY - known as “Streeter's Resort" which
included a considerable property
SIX HUNDRED TESTS
fronting on Oun lake, as well as the
property now known as Streeter’s
TO CHILDREN

ley Drive. The Streeter* objected
to tills. They submitted proofs in
court showing that tills claimed prihotel, its patrons and Um cottage
owners to whom the Streeters had
sold resort property. The public
was not forbidden to use this pri­
vate driveway during the resort

tiffs claimed that they had cut off
gates. That testimony was not dte&gt;
puled. The township of Yankee

this claimed private driveway i
make it a public road, was stop
by an injunction obtained by
Streeters This case was triad
fore Judge McPeek acme time j
decree.
The officiate of the towrte
claim that work had been done
this driveway by the township, I

■ Continued on page 3. Bee. I)

WARMLY COMMENDED
BARRY MEN AT LANSING
Praized Windatorm Go., Alio
Woodland and Barry and
Eaton Companies
Hastinga Rotariana

ware

privi&gt;

Mlchigan insurance compantas 9tganlzed under Michigan’s farm mu­
tual insurance laws. He explained
the different types of insurance, and
was proud to atato that in
years only four Michigan

paid a fine compliment to two Bar-

Honorable John C. Ketcham, state

Barry oounty—the WotaDaM es*8«

warmly commended.

Ho

of this city tor Its prudent

paying all losses promptly and for

MORE TARMACKING
OF CITY’S STREETS
Council Received Three PtM,
lions al Friday Rlftt'S
StsaioB

petitions at their

�TH! HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY t, ItM

।

Joseph Ranlhan of Grand Rap­
Commissioner of insurance J. C. SOUND PROJECTION
THIS COUNTY’S DOG
id* has entered the employ of the Ketcham will be th# orator at the
Consumer! Power Co. and will be White cloud July 4th celebration.
MACHINES INSTALLED
POPULATION GROWING
a salesman working under A. B
Judge MoFMk handed down a
Oidley.
decision last week In favor of the In Strand Theater—Second 8up«rri*or*' Lilt &gt; Total ol
Bus rates tak* a tumble begin­
Wayland Slate bank against Wil­
ning today.
8,176 Oasis** Is Barry
One in Country to
ths Church of God on North Michi- liam and Etta Wisner. The Judg­
Mrs. Lois Gladstone 1* confined KAve. every night at 4 o'clock. ment for the plaintiff amounted to
Oosaty
Have Them
to her home by sickness.
Rev. James Dalton of Flint 44418.14. with costs of &lt;3875. The
It will be Interesting to note that
Without any fuss, and as a sur­
Mrs E. A- Burton Is recovering; will be in charge
action was brought by the bank on
prise to his patrons, Ray Branch the dog population of Barry county
from her recent Ulneaa.
defaulted
notes
due
the
bank.
Republican rally at Johnston
started using ths new sound-projec­ 1s increasing. Last year the figure
park. GrandvlDe, Saturday, July 4.
The council made deputy city tion machine at the Strand Theater
Barker s adv. in this issue for spe­ Senator Arthur Vandenberg will clerk. Mrs. Pauline Bliss, the deputy last evening, while showing "Under been Increased to 3,17ft dogs. A few
cial price for Saturday.—Adv.
speak al five o'clock. Barry county city treasurer at their meeting Fri­ Two Flags." one of the seasons out­ of them, no doubt, have some ex­
day night.
The Barry County O. E. 8. Asso­ republicans are invited.
standing productions. These ma­ cuse for surviving, but other* are
ciation will picnic at FallasburgI
Word comes from Lee Taggart, chines were referred lo in a longer Jiut wasters. Lost year the board
Gordon Crolhers entertained six
park near Lowell on Sunday, July young men at dinner Tuesday night, 8-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. article In the Banner a week or two of supervisors allowed 41.700 in
12.
claims for livestock killed or injured
the occasion being hte birthday. Olenn Taggart of N. Broadway,
The new sound-projection ma­ by dogs, and the supervisors were
O. E. Goodyear in this
issue, "Gordon's mother te some cook" was who is In Ann Arbor with a compli­
quotes some specials on fans and। the universal verdict of the guests. cated elbow fracture, that two oper­ chine te the very latest and most paid 8302.30 for listing the animate.
boys’ wagons that will appeal to।
Stanton Serialbe whose home te ations have already been under­ up-to-date equipment of its kind We contend that this Is more than
, you.—Adv.
at 117 North Michigan Ave., te pre­ gone. but hopes are given for a that money can buy. Di fact it te nil of the dogs are worth.
By townships the dog population
I Mr. and Mrs. Jay Ketchum (Lola pared to do all kinds of repair work complete Use of the arm ultimately. so new that but one other moving
Lee fell from a tree about three picture theater in this whole coun­ lllte year te as follows:
Power) of Lansing
and
Detroit' on musical instruments. See hte
try has one of them—and that big
Assyria
I have rented the Randall cottage at adv. on page 8 in this issue of the
Baltimore
Banner.
The council Friday evening voted theater te ih New York City. Tiw
। Wall lake for the summer.
Barry
164
Mrs. W. B Bera, who has been to purchase five hundred feet of fire Strand has the distinction of being
Carveth A- Stebbins announce a
the second place In the United
IM
Carlton
special sale for one week on wall 11) al her home at Wall lake. Ls hose for the Hastings fire depart­
States—in fact the whole world—to
ment.
Castleton
...........
paper, paints and other articles tn convalescing.
A grandson
and
use
It.
This
machine
detects
any
..
153
,
Hastings
township
..
Flailing without a license Is n
their adv this week.—Adv.
granddaughter from Ohio are as­
sign
of
faulty
sound,
and
auto..
373
। Hastings city----------1
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Egglesion sisting in the store and with her poor way to save money in Michi­
.. 300
' and family have come from Chicago care.
gan as 93 violators arrested in May tnalically corrects it. being the very । Hope
.. 311
They
paid fines latest Invention of this movie-pic- I Irvingj.
! lo make their home in Hasting*
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sparks of can testify.
. 184
। They are residing at 430 W. Mill.■ Muskegon, who have many friends amounting to si.OMM tn Justice lure loving age. A crew of men i Jolinslown ......p.,,
worked all night to Install the ma­ I Maple Grove
... 181
: street.
here, are the parents of a daughter. courts in the state, an average of
Orangeville --------.. 131
' Robert Martin, a well known Diana Gay. the mother and baby 811.50 each or 33 limes the cost of chines, so there was no interference
with the schedule performances.
Prairieville
...
IM
a
M-cent
resident
license.
Aside
farmer of Castleton township, te having returned to their home from
With this new machine there te
... IM
Rutland -...................
from fines paid a total of 355 days
still seriously ill at Pennock ho*- the hospital.
Thomapple
... 175
was served in Jail by others who no eye strain and it te now pas­
। pltal
All hope for hte rapid reMichigan's
possiBilltles
as
a
prosible for patrons to sit In the front
Woodland..................
.100
I covery.
didn't pay their fines.
seats and thoroughly enjoy the picYankee Springs ____
I Robert Mills, one of the drivers duccr of natural gas are mounting
Supervisors William Bchader. Olis lures. Manager Branch te entitled to
। with the completion of new and bigof the fire truck, was' granted a two
I ger wells. Another well, having on Boulter Leon Moon and Olenn wol- a lot of credit for his enterprise In
Total
.3.174
weeks' vacation by the council Fri-;
rlng
attended
the
state
meeting
of
i initial production of 77.348.000 cubic
providing hte patrons with the very
day night.
feet of gas a day, has been com­ supervisors, which was held In the latest ahd best.
OFFERS SPECIAL
Mr and Mrs. Don Bllven and Mrs. | pleted by the Wolverine Natural Gas Hotel Olds. Lansing on Friday.
But this is not all. In addition to
Frank Bllven returned last week |
Word concerning Justice W. W. this sound-projecting machine, the
WHEAT PREMIUMS
■ Co., in Belvidere township. Mont­
from a motor trip of Interest which ;
Potter
says
that
he
will
have
to
re
­
calm
county,
a
year
ago
a
gas
well
very
latest
thing
In
lighting
effects
1
took them to Washington. D. C.. I
[ of flfly-mllllon cubic feet was *ome- main ui the Lansing hospital for has Just been Installed. Light and Postum Go. Desirous of En­
and other eastern points. To other ,
; thing (o talk about in the oil fields, three or four weeks more, then will color have much to do with the encouraging a Greater
tourists covering the ground, they
I but within the past several weeks a be brought to his Wall lake cottage Joyinent of picture*. With this new
pass on the word that excellent
Production
number of wells have been com­ for absolute rest and quiet.
system all the colors known to eleccabin
accommodations
can
be
, pleted near the 70.000.000 mark.
triclty.
and
all
the
combinations
of
George
Whitney
of
this
city
and
.
Ttic
Postum division of General
found in connection with the Bar­
bara Frietchie house at Frederick. . When Dr. Dafoe spoke over radio Otte Allerdlng of Carlton were ar­ color*, can be produced by Just Food* Corporation of Baltic Creek
turning
a
switch.
Right
now
there
.
_________
_________________
rested
by
the
sheriff
Saturday
night
te
offering
premiums
totaling» 435 00
«»« quints- recent
Md.. the former also .u.uunes
furnishes in- J
When ar­ Isn't a more up-to-date moving pic- I on best samples of red wheat exteresting lours of the city and near- 1 blrthd°y celebration, we dldn t quite on disorderly charges
by regions in Cadillacs. They caUh the mcallln8 of that part of raigned before Justice Cortnght ture theater in the country than the hiblted al the Barry county fair.
The purpose of the Pastuin Oomfound congress still in session and , ll*s Invitation to visit Callender Monday both denied their guilt. Strand Theater, and we are sure
were quite struck with the differIncluded the statement that Whitneys trial was set for July thnt patrons will appreciate that pany In offering these premiums Lt
| to encourage the production of a
i ence tn the way the two branches there were "plenty of pebbles up 8 and Allerdlng's July 7 They arc fact more than ever.
----------------- ------------------------better quality of red wheat, of which
I of government are conducted. The i hwe- “nd &gt;ou “n hflP yourself." out on bail, which was fixed at 9100
TWO ASK TO BE
I they are large users.
| free and easy, rather discourteous. Now we learn that childless couples
NATURALIZED. I Secretary Maurice Foreman states
i practices of the House being in 1 ,re Picking up pebbles in the near
Monday Frank Allerdlng found a
Mrs Minnie Baker, of Middleville, that the same exhibits may be en­
■ marked contrast to the orderly, dig- ! vlcm»y of the Dionne home and lady's purse containing a nice lit­
I nifled Senate Mr* Huey Long aos ! hospital in the belief that they tle sum of money. He took it to on June 30 Ried her petition for tcred tn this special class and the
easily recognized on the floor of the | carry some supernatural power to the City bank and left it to await citizenship in the United States. She regular class offered by the Fair
latter chamber
Their return lripl*rant the desired wish for a child, the owner's Identification. Soon was a British subject, who married Association.
It te expected there will be a great
brought them back thru the lovely I Dr Dafoe, himself, te authority for after this the lady appeared at the Joshua D. Baker, of Middleville, an
Watkins Glen region In New York | the fact that in some Instance* it bank to report her lav. and was | American citizen, in 1935. Her pc- many exhibits competing for these
Dr and Mrs Guy Keller retimed tY‘5 ^k.«l
Nothing new in .(hte naturally very highly pleased to!1 lltion cannot be heard until the generous premiums, so the entries
February
term
of
court.
I
should
be made early to insure
last week from their two weeks' '
*nd as someone has remarked have her lost property restored to
Pascal Rodriguez, a Mexican, who , space.
trip to New York. Judging from !
and better superstitions her. and greatly elated that the
—------------- ■»-»♦----------------j their reports they had o thoroughly । won’t do the world any harm '
missing purse happened lo come' has lived In the U. 6 since 1933. oji I
I enjoyable time, in spite of being I "It is fast becoming the style to into hands of such an honest man i Tuesday filed hte declaration of in-f RELATES THREE
to become an American
DUCCK1T Li A DDCkl I UPC
held up In Battle Creek in the gray ’ take a bicycle trip through the Unit­ as Frank The fact that lost purses ' tcnllon
citizen. It will take two years be-।
ntUtN I nArrtNINuO
dawn of the Saturday morning they ' cd States. In order to accommodate and pocketbooks are so often re­
left. And Mrs Keller learned about I th© youth of America, th* Youth stored to che ones losing them,
' automats—those things that take I Hostel Association Is
casing It is speaks highly for the general hon­
&lt; a lot of nickels before you get some- I well established in the east, and now esty and integrity of the people of LYLE WILKIN'S SUFFERS
Venture to Think What
BADLY INJURED LEG.
j thing to cut
She Offered a New . the talk Ls go west, The plan was this section. Some- of these lost
They Portend
Lyle Wilkins, twelve-year old son'
1 Yorker a mild apology for ,iot w
-----------•------ । purses have contained up into the
borrowed‘ In 1034 from Europe
where
A. Reynolds,--------who--------------------lives on lh«
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wilkins who! E.
------------------------knowing all their intricacies by say- cycling _ and
r_,( tramping are popular hundreds of dollars
Ing "I'm from the country" and re- j sports Strange how blcyles are back
Little Dorolha Smith, six-year- live near Dowling, was taken to ] old Mixer farm in Baltimore town­
Pennock
hospital
Friday
afternoon
ship,
visited
the Banner office o(
ceived the prompt reply. “I knew in style again. Who can remember old daughter of Mr and Mrs Ho­
after
he
had
been
severely
injured
Saturday,
telling
of
some
of hte reit!” They were treated royally when when most towns had a bicycle cldb mer Smith, was attacked by a dog
The lad [ cent experiences.
they lunched at the Waldorf-Asto- ' and the young married men and belonging to Martin Tinkler Tues­ by a mowing machine
ria. and the operation of Rockefeller women wore long stocking caps and day evening. The little girl hod left ran into the hayfteid to meet hte I On Thursday. Mr. Reynolds sayi
Center was explained and shown ; knit sweaters? Also the near scan- her home on East Lincoln street In father, who was operating the ma- , he saw a cream colored mouse; on
them through the aid of a letter dal that was caused when a local so- the first ward lo run into the Tink- i chine. Before the father could get Friday, he and some others saw i
of introduction from a kind friend, clety leader appeared in a divided ler house Just beyond for a visit the mower stopped the boy Jumped j while crow in a flock of black onei
| Music Hall and its wonders and the ' skirt The pretty young vomsn who The dog was lying around the cor- | over the cutter bar and the blade I on the Gilbert Bcott (arm and oi&gt;
Both bones . Saturday he found a large Whlti
i beautiful apartment which Roxy ' looked so cute In bicycle bloomers I ncr of the house asleep, and Doro- j caught his right foot
had built for himself tn the gorgewas talked about, but she landedtha stepped
,
over to pal him on the and mast of the tendons of the fore- Leghorn egg which measured sb
leg were cut through The doctors | and one-half inches one way ant
ous building were opened to theirher man. Roads and streets are in head
A short time previous a lit­
Inspection The theaters—they saw much
*"
better—
condition
-**•*—
now •*—
than -• tle" boy had poked him out of a nap are making every effort to save the eight and one-half the other. Tiw
! "Victoria Regina" with Helen Hayes then. Bicycling should be greater with a stick, and he had since leg. His condition seems to be im-, egg weighed a quarter of a pound
-a polo match and boat ride to sport" "About Town" in Jonesville!, shown some antipathy to children proving, reports Dr. Lofdahl of and proved lo be a double yolk one.
Staten Island Were Just a few of Independent—Frequent reference in 1 He flew at her leaving some flesh Nashville.--------------------------------------------- j Just what these unusual occur­
rente* may portend, Mr. Reynoldi
--------------------------------the lovely things they experienced. J the Banner's Forty Years Ago col- | wound* on the face and neck and
Oh. dear, it's nice to hear about umn attests the popularity of the |I she suffered quite a nervous shock 1I 1IUBanner readers will find partlcu- | doesn't know but fears they may
tar interest this week in Al Weber's । mcan fourteen years of depression
somebody's grand trip but it brings s|»rt here in those days when Ha.1-- j
“T
! ra&gt;u&gt;rul column
watched
and
Dorolha
is
’
being
glv
’
'
C
^
tO
1
r
“
I
c
°
lumn
Al
«*m]nteces
or the election of a republican presb
on such a terrible case of wander- tings had a flourishing bicycle club i ...turu
watched and
Dorolha u
Is ucuig
be ms aiv- about
. .... the
... 40-year-ago
— .
iu uvnnim
period in apnt so lie savs
lust!
| composed mostly of married people | en serumBltreatment
j Holings ,n /de||f&amp;fulP;By. .nd I
* M&gt;o&gt;------------------

DIS

LOCAL NEWS

Prices Are Cracking
at

FOOD CENTER
CANE

SUGAR
CLOTH

BAG

10ibs 50c
I

c

Fig Bars

10c

Stuffed Olives

Kraft Cheese 2

35c

Paper Plates

35c
10c

Ginger Ale

Olives
Olives

|

Cracker Jack 3 pk(». 10c

Sardines"?:.?" 2 &lt;*. 19c

Qt

Plain

Smail Bottle

5c

Do..

Gum

Old Dutch Cleanser
3 • 20c

15c

19c Six«

n.,.

3

Boni..

4c

19c

FORT HOWARD

TISSUE
3 "•"•23c

has some *|&gt;ecially pertinent things • ' Just to realize that there ar*
to say about the proposed bridge al friends In the world who care b s
the Straits.
। great help."—Sir Wilfred Grenfell

I

LIGHT-THE WIZARD
1

POUND

Hailing!, Michigan ■ Telephones

TRANSFORMS THE

PACKAGE

STRAND/TJ? /
THEATRE IW
Dos.

35c

Cantaloupe X”

C4aa|z

vltSClIa

Round. Strloin
or Switi

10c
New Potatoes &gt;«u»- 39c
Walnut Meats
14c

Lard

Salad Dressing Q«- 23c
IceCream Powder.? 25c

Hamburger

20c

25c

2

Rib Boiling Beef u. 10c

Beef Kettle
Bologna

SMOKED PICNICS

Roast

2

l*.

14c

u.

29c

* 2 u. 25c
LB.

20c

PETTICOAT FEVER
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY at 1:00 and 3:00 o'clock
All Other Performance.—Adults 25c; Children 10c

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. |ULY 7
ADOLPH ZUKOR peasants

A lighting innovation thrill­
ing in its rare beauty­
blending delicately from
tones of richness and gayety to the quiet shades of
restfulness!

INTO A SOFT HUED
SYMPHONY Of ENCHANT­
ING COLOR WHEN A
TOUCH OF THE SWITCH
RELEASES THE MAGIC
OF NEW

13 HOURS BY AIR
LOADED WITH DRAMA—and GOING 300 MILES an HOUR
A Paramount Picture with Fred MacMurray, Joan Bennett,
ZaSu Fills. John Howard. Bennie BarlieU. Graee Bradley

WEDNESDAY end THURSDAY, JULY 8 and 9

pheric enhancement . . .
lovely beyond the imagin­
ation . . . The mood of the
moment at the turn of a
switch!!

RAINBO

VARI-COLOR
LIGHTING
^FIXTURES/

AGAIN HE WILL STEAL YOUR HEART

Little Lord Fauntleroy
Starring FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW and DOLOREK COMTELLO BARRYMORE with C. Aubrey Smith. Guy Klbbee.

YOU'LL QUICKLY SENSE THE
COMPLETE CHANGE IN THE
WHOLE INTERIOR OF THIS THE­
ATRE WHEN YOU'VE BEHELDTHE
WONDERS SCIENCE HAS
WROUGHT

Open Friday Evening Until 10 P. M.
Closed Saturday and Sunday

*

With REGINALD OWEN

as tomorrow’s
newspaper!

OF
HASTINGS, MICH

Lemons

SUNDAY and MONDAY. JULY 5 and 6
ROBERT MONTGOMERY and MYRNA LOY in

Special Matinee Wednesday at 4:44.

Admits Ue, Children 10c

FRIDAY end SATURDAY, JULY 10 and II
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

IN LIGHT!

FEATURE NO. 1

F MAN
With Jack Haley. Grace Bradley. William Frawley. Adrienne
- - Harden, Onslow Stevens

FEATURE Na 4

Food Center

1

DESERT GOLD

Now A Part of Our Daily Program
♦

Hunt. Tam Keene, Glenn Iriiuwi
NOTE—Eptaade No. II of “FLA81! GORDON' Aerial will ba
aoown at i.oo oc«n» mannoe oat uro ay uuiy.
Adult. Ue; Children Ifc

t*♦*♦*♦*♦*♦*♦ *♦*

▲
~

(

&gt;

�THE HASTINOB BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1038
citizen after May 24. 1034. may not give the township authority! meeting at the camp grounds tn
u kepr
• -'lean
known In history—Lafayette. Louis re«d«n Um d-uila. )ua&lt; u
&lt;M&lt; Uwy
nicy Un.
11*1- !; *•
1^-V* by
“J &lt;h, county clerk u' —
---- —-—*• ...-/
«w*&gt;. • • —J nv»
MIC (VW,****,** —
----— &lt;—
------ —/.&lt;---------•
.
.. ■- -he decided.
y
Sebewa. Sunday.
No
j permanent
record- In **'■
hta office. The file
a .■.&gt;
petition
for...
citizenship
without
over thia .*.roadway,
z one
“- »pot,
— *. at least ----------------- --------PhlUippe, Grand Duke Alexis. An­ preueU me- t’
------------------ of -------------| Mr. and Mrs. Emery Kime and
&gt;uld see.
see. has
has any
any monmon-'—
duplicate
and—r
triplicate
are
for- declaration
intention on -----com- ' Discussing
Discussing the'
the case
case the
the judge
J
---------------------------- —
- --drew Jackson. Henry day, Daniel as far as I could
ik. lu...,,.
n. — ...J
In iKn ,*&lt;■&lt;&lt;•( — f ImmlffTa tlmi llUlIVO
Fka nH&lt;&gt;a nAn &gt; al—1 - ...I.,
xO.anruua aka T1
&lt; Webster, and
practically every opoly on all the beauty, charm and warded to the district immigration pliance with the oilier requirements i said in effect: "Suppose the Park- ■ Beulah attended the funeral of Mrs.
of the naturalization taws, except' er House in Hastings were located Kime’s aunt. Mrs. Agnes Bristol,
j President from Washington down attractiveness. Each one has its! officer.
under such conditions, the ap- m the center of a block, well back 1 at the Leighton church,
Monday
Here U U) be seen the death mask of "drawbacks.” and features that de-| The witnesses summoned by the that un
* competent,
comoetent. must I pllcant rmust. prove at least three ; from the
surrounding
streets,
with i afternoon.
.... w
. reels, with
ji
I Napoleon, made by his physician. tract. Hawaii cannot exactly be re- applicant must be
resirtt-nco in thc TTnltert
'
-« —.&lt;■■•
Margary
United msrSvavs
roadways lAndln.
leading tn
to it
it frnm
from the
the I
F who pressed the matrix to the dead ferred to u a foreign land, because I be citizens of the United Slates and | years' residence
(Continued from page one)
public
highways.
In
that
event
all
I
day the
bkahch
| Emperor’s face. This was later cast it is a dependency of ours. It Is a must have personal knowledge of, Stales.
Mr. and Im. Frad X«U and «hu- .-----------1"1
in the the guests of the hotel and no
s
' in bronxe and presented to the city, beautiful country and its climate the applicant. The petitioner must f An alien whoresided
r.r. of Battle Creek
I, —
M— O....al._
man, Don Almonasier. then living i In the court yard are the old prison. would seem to be ideal. But man- sign live application for citizenship j United Stales for fiveyears
pre­ doubt many of the public would । dren
were
Sunday &lt; MlU
MUcnar,
In New Orleans. Perhaps receiving | stocks, and blocks from which ne- kind is peculiar. A strange, restless in his own handwriting. The petl- vlous •to July 1.
• 1020.
•— and
—
who was have availed themselves of these guests of Mr. and Mrs. Keith NorRemember tha ice
more or less encouragement he sued igrpes were sold to the highest bld- spirit urges us
hither
in—
tloner
must
not only have residedtwenty-one
j
— —— and
z— yon
——
—*
---------------------------------------------years old or over on
roadways leading to and from the । ton.
| at If
‘
_ but
I,.,, the
&gt;&gt;.» search &lt; in
h&lt; the
|H*» United
ITnltxf States
RtatAx for
fnr five
five- years,
vc-ark ! (tint dale and in other respects hotel. No one would think, on ac-1 Miss Bernice Rhoades is working I day
for her hand in marriage. But I ders. It happened that a tall, gaw­ search of the Ideal—
July 3rd,
when the proposition was submitted ' ky young man from the north op­ is always tn vain. For instance Just but must also have behaved as a I qualified for citizenship, except,I count wof
, . such public use of these I at the Hayden Nye home near
Richard
lo tile old Don he sat down on it , erated a river boat on the Missis­ because we see it every day—and person of good moral character | that he had failed to make his । driveways
j.,------- 5 that
_______________
neceesary ,Nashville.
like a ton of brick. He most em­ sippi and eventually “tied up" at have for years—we pay no attention should, and he must be shown to lx-1 declaration of Intention to become means of communication ’for the
‘ 1 Miss Sylvia Whitmore, who works
phatically declared that no daugh­ ! New Orleans. While there he wlt- .o the Thomapple river, but one of well-disposed toward the
Ujilled ] an American citizen, but who had hotel became public highways." I in Battle Creek, spent the week end
• The cotton markgl
ter of his tilled family should ever i nessed a slave sale, and saw colored the country’s noted artists comes ' States, its constitution and its wcl-1 prior to that time exercised the i The Judge therefore Issued his de- at home.
len from us. but it win
ally herself with a "plebian’’ Not । families, parted and broken up. His here to paintl its
IV3 beauties,
UlTlUUtS, that
VHMl we
"V inic.
fare. Ilk
He IU
must
—‘ •a.au
also an
be able av
to o^n.an
speak aright
&gt;(,,,* VI
of kcitizenship
a a l«l&lt;awp WUUUt
because VI
of MU
hav’ । , tree
cree 111
In IUVUF
favor Ol
of (II
the
with , E. J. ana
--- -- plaintiffs,
-------------- -------and Tom
iom Norton oi
at uait'e
Battle auastrous. ooa»
long after this she became the wife i heart was so touched by this truffle cannot see. Walkaikal Beach in the ”
English
—’*“** language •*If —physically
*-•■-■—
j Ing »—
been misinformed
——u with __
regard
—। ■ ------cab to &gt;be
— *taxed,
------ &gt;I.
' creek were Sunday callers In this, stopped soiling,products a
of Baron de Potalba. But dashing, j in human beings that he never lost Honolulu Is known
nown the
tile world over as able lo do so.
An anarchist or to his citizenship status, may apply ,
’ ----------------- *-••
— ■
| neighborhood.
I began building factartn e
wealthy young McDonogh was stung an opportunity lo denounce it. and a beautiful watering
.ainrlrau place,
a.ln,-a. but
hut with
&lt;vin&lt; polygamist
twilvonmtat cannot
enntint become
hcromr a citizen
clllzan tor
for citizenship
rltizomhin without
wlthntll a
ll declaration
llua'lnrnttnn '
PI I'lClk'T VALLEY.
PLEASANT
| Mr. and Mrs. Floyd FasMtt and’got over tiw tartH WftU.
to the quick, and his grief and re­ ! to insist that no country could en- constant association, the ceaseless of the United States
Mr. and Mrs. Delton O'born of | b*by
Grand Udge were Sunday, Tomlinson.
of intention. Such persons' must
sentment took perhaps a peculiar
Final hearing on the applicant's । apply for citizenship with the coun- ' Ma«on spent Thursday with Uielr
| dure "half slave and half free."! roar of its breakers would soon
slant. He vowed that he would have
co
a Neeb BUa
B
In other words petition for citizenship con only be . ly clerk and must make a stale- cousin.
I The young man of course was Abra-, lose its charm.
Mrs Floyd
and ,famj
more money than all the Almonas- ham Lincoln.
I
contempt."
"familiarity
breeds
...
' held on stated days fixed by the clr-1 ment of when and by whom they |,y
lers and Potalbas combined, and
l.irUAirtlim tn
n ml««
nrnrRU.rf
. M(_
Mra
Rnd '
cult MHlrt
court havlne
having Jurisdiction
in I■ h.H
had been
misinformed.
Barry county, with its forest covered milt
|
This
section
of
the
city
Is
rich
in
that his name would live and be
valleys, sparkling streams and takes
Joanne
of
Ionia
were
week-end
historical
associations
and
prachonored long after their names and
is exceptionally beautiful. Go where ninety days after the application Ls had become a resident of some oth- guests of H. W. Geiger and family.
titles had sunk Into oblivion—and ; tically every structure has its inhe probably “made good." From | teresting story. Here Ls the Ulltld- more beautiful landscape than has witnesses must be there and be ex-' and who. before March 3. 1931 lost
ily to Mrs. Sarah Strong's of East j
that moment he was a changed Ing in which Jenny Lind, the noted this county of ours, but we arc blind amlned under oath. If he meets all his United States citizenship by be­
Campbell for Sunday dinner.
man. Amusement places and gay । singer, was entertained when she to it all through our dally assocla- the
country.
... nnrt
Mr
_ .Clayton
,nvInn Mote and ,I
“ requirements
‘
■* “of
* the federal nat- coming a clUxen of• another
••
Mr.
and
Mrs.
and dashing circles where he ranked ' was brought to New Orleans in 1851 tions with it. Some day this is going urallzatlon laws, he can then be ad-| if he has been again admitted to family
apent
Sunday
at the Flojd
by
p.
T.
Barnum:
there
is
the
j this country, and has resided here,
hom^ ”undB&gt;
inc rwjd |
as a favorite, knew him no more. In
to be far more generally recognized mined to citizenship
t.eco nomc.
i
building
where
the
pirate
clans
un
­
bitter anger he left his magnificent
Since the federal law of Septem- , may regain his citizenship by meet’
than it is today The Barry County
i
der
the
Lafiltes
and
criminal
rene
­
home and retired to small, unpre­
Tourist and Resort Association has ber 22. 1922. was enacted, a woman | Ing all the requirements of the fed- :,
In the
tentious quarters. His beautiful gades from all over the world used done and is doing some useful work does not gain or lose her citizenship cral naturalization laws, except that Sunday at Harold Yoder’s
house-furnishings and unproductive to assemble; there is the "haunted in -spreading the news " State rec­ by marriage. If she and her hus- proof of five years’ residence here
properly of every kind were convert­ house” where more than a century ords too, show that Barry county band both were aliens and he has will not be required
He may file Mrs. Kime and Beulah called at the
I ago a wealthy French lady. Madam
ed into cash and reinvested with
«*.«
HU.
PCUMUH
&gt;U&gt;
mwuMU
|&gt;
“
Kepkey
home
in
Middleville.
|
leads all others in Michigan in its been admitted to citizenship since his petition for citizenship six
the sole and only purpose of making Lalaurie. seemed to take delight in native American population. You the above date, his acquired citizen- months after his declaration of In- I *&gt;’fy wpre called there by the death
more money. Hard, cold and selfish, torturing her slaves in her “horror cannot appreciate what that means ship will
—— an
... American
their aunt. Mrs. Agnes Bristol.
.
--------a---------------not make her
citizen of• tentinn to become
chamber."
until
her
cruel
acts
were
Mr
nitrt
Mr.
Wtlhiir
live
aiirt
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Dye and '
he lived the life of a miser seem­ aiscovrrea ana one ooreiy escaped.elther- unU* JOU vUlt other lands this country. She must become nal- I citizen.
w
ingly with the sole ambition to make discovered and she barely escaped,
Lots of Lake Odessa were Sunday ।
urnhzed herself.
to return to England The building “nd Place» ftnd h,'“r Uw ,babrl
1 visitors of Bert Mesecar and family. |
money, tyid more money, dominat­
If the wife of an alien shall be an
Ls now devoted to the assistance of i tongues of varying nationalities and
ing his life, pointed out as a sel­ homeless boys and men There’s the !coIors,
Bruce Mesecar and Kenneth HuiAmerican
citizen
when
he
married
SO,ne
to..m“kc
fish. cold-hearted old miser, prej­
I llberger were in Detroit over the .
old Ursuline Convent built over 200 I &gt;'ou ?lad to
'back home. The her. and if the marriage took place
'week end attending the ball game.
udice against him was strong. Imag­
years ago and claimed to be the old-1
is that the people of Barry previous to September 22. 1922. the
ine the surprise when, after his years ago and claimed to be the old- i county do not appreciate bow ...
I
About
20 attended the W. M. A.
for­ wife thereby lost her American cltldeath In 1850. It was found that he eat structure in the Mississippi val­ tunate Ls their situation
i at Mrs Cora Heaven’s last ThuraBurSur- 1 zenship and must be naturalized the
had left his immense fortune of ley; there’s the home of Gen. rounded with Nature’s beauties as same as a foreigner,
day. The next meeting will be with
Beauregard.
noted
Confederate
millions for educational pur|x&gt;ses It
Mrs. Vera Geiger July 9th Every- *
they are. they arc also better ----housed.‘
If' she
were an American citizen
| one Invited.
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
was to be divided between New Or­ lender of Civil war fame, the home better fed. better clothed.
— । and married an alien after Septembetter
leans. where he lived, and the city being retained as a pennament me­
Severn! of the people of this vihave she
more
....
adschooled,
van- i her and
22. 1922.
docs not thereby
Betty Co-Ed and Jean
attended the Missionary
of Baltimore, the place of hU birth, morial: there’s the spot from which tages. Right here 1 want lo pause lose her citizenship, but continues that it ?vas gratuitous The Street- cinity
share and share alike. There were Gen. Jackson reviewed his troops and pay tribute to the splendid work to be a citizen of the United States I ers contended that the only road
Nedra Designed ...
no “strings" to his bequests, but al Just before the decisive battle of being done by the Kellogg FoundaA woman who was'a’ cl...
’tlin * of I
There are other,
the bottom of his will was the slm- New Orleans.
1
tlon in promoting and building up the United Slates when she mar- J * ,'ub’!c
buildings
by
the
score
that
might
pie bequest that once each year the
White and pastel FELTS
public health in u way that I do
&lt;hmbj°ta&gt;lw hFf'c'u’ wh1cl’*
11 h“
&gt;■"" I
children of the public schools strew be mentioned, all of them of such | not believe is even ’approached"
„21. h‘".L
■ “ h
.used much, is still a nubile highflowers on his grave. Anyone in historic Interest that they add to elsewhere in scope or effectiveness.
Smooth and rough
New Orleans on May 3rd. “Mc­ the pleasure of a visit to this quaint, The results of its great work will be
Donogh Day." will appreciate that but still very modern southern me­ noted in the years to come So. it Ls
STRAWS
his simple request is gloriously lived tropolis This visit can be height­ my experience that go where you
up to with all the zest of youth. ened too by a visit to the cemetery, will, or slay where you may. the
• Colorful PIQUES and
especially
the
old
one.
where
long
un
div
1
'
llM!
roud
lcadln
K
from
Oakley
Drive'
The name of John McDonogh has
beauties of Burry county, and its
£.?.1
*“
: to the Streeter Resort hotel and
been kept fresh and green by the drawn out titles of nobility speak of almost pure-American people, abide । The enext
LINENS
heoring on citizenship'
youth of New Orleans, because of the days when this part of our coun­ with you and add to the joys of get- C3aes wiu
hl the clrcuit court of
° *
and '
the largess of an embittered Scotch­ try was under French and Spanish ting "back home” to the best little | Barry county on September 16. so , er intended as
Toyo Swaggers
’ a public road: and '
The moving finger of
man. disappointed in a youthful love control.
tI no work had been done on it by the j
city
-and
the
best
little
county
on
t
women
who
were
American
citizens
1 township that would warrant inak- I
affair over 100 years ago. In an ’Time" has obliterated manjt "of this old planet.
’before
*
.
their
marriage, .but who
mar-.
Fresh
from their wraj
educational way. it 13 impossible to the inscriptions. What is said to be
big
It
a
public
highway.
The
court
W. R. Cook.
ried aliens previous to September 22.
estimate the value of his benefac­ the oldest readable one goes back
cited at some length what Ls known I
1922. and who now reside in Barry ,
pings! See them while th
tions and what they have meant to nearly a century and a half, and on
as the "Stickley case." where aimicounty, if they wish to be restored I
the
inscription
a
broken-hearted
New Orleans and throughout the
. lar conditions existed, with a prl- ,
group is so complete!
. to citizenship must* apply before
Southland. As long as the city lives Countess asks "all who pass thh
I vale driveway to a ferry. He held j
1 September 18 next for their cilizcnand the public schools continue^ way lo kneel and say a prayer for
| that Die Supreme Court’s decision
ship papers.
B|
,U1OI v„the
v mjwhmm
doubtless the name of John Mc­ the repose of her son’s soul."
against
township in that case
An alien woman who married an applied also to "the'1
So no matter whether your Inter­
Donogh will be heralded by youth
..pplLj
L, ‘.Le case of the
American citizen, or whose hus------•
in grateful appreciation of what he est is In the historical events of yes­
Streeters
vs -Yankee
Springs town- ।
band became
oanu
Became an American citizen i, sship.
|j|y
did The name of the titled Span­ terday. or in the living, throbbing
UUU.
WHO
...
.JMnw
of
today
you
will
find
New
^(Continued from page 1 Sec. 1&gt;
I afu‘r SePteink&gt;l'r 22 I®22 and Pre”
The Judge held that the public |
iard. who resented the ■•pleblan's”
rexmunuta
irom
page
i.
oec.
i
।
vjoua
lo
May
,,
4
193&lt;
*
,
driveway leading
advances
for the
Orleans a city of unusual charm, no
advances for
the hand
hand of
of his
1
charming daughter, has seemingly matter whether you visit its busy than seven wear* nrevintis thereto I !UI Ani,'rican citizen without filing a tn Streeter’s hotel was permisiive:
., had
. . been
“
. .no . such
j
fallen Into obscurity, and rarely port, or travel the storied streets of than seven years previous thereto. I Hrrlnrntinn
declaration nt
of lnt»nllnn
intention Hh»&gt;
She mint
must . that ..
there
ad- I
mentioned except possibly in con°&gt;d quarter Despite the Intense and who has resided continuously meet the requirements o( the nat­ verse exercise of authority over It |
nectlon with this somewhat unusual I hent at the time of our visit in in this country for al least five uralisation laws, except that site 1 by the township of Yankee Springs :
years, and In the county where he need prove only one year of resi­
Si' iu'moSJX m'E«‘ JiwTJ Sih
ns would make it a public highway.
dence in this country
, although “public funds were ex­
his vow that the name of McDonogh Hastings, one of tl»e best and pnt- a petition for naturalization In the
An alien man or woman who mar- । trended on it. and although the pub- 1
• would live and be honored long 1 tlest little cities on this o.d planet court having Jurisdiction in such ried a citizen of the United States. | lie used It even if they did not po­
matters.
&lt;
which
in
Michigan
Is
the
after their names and titles had —and
’”* mighty glad too to get back
or whose spouse became an Amer-1 troiilze the resort itself." These did
। -home " So with this frank admls- circuit court) He should fill out
been forgotten."
! slon I will draw this aeries of lel- the proper blanks which the countyJ
New Orleans has something else
I ters to a close and trust that Ban- clerk will furnish him to become a |,
When you say Glen Row ...
very unusual too. and that is Mar[ner readers, who have read them, or citizen of the United States, also.
dl Gras. We were too late to see R{”
*' "7T^
’ , . mm*
as two
himself,
&gt;Hr&lt;&gt;&lt;
(lav** derived ax
any
ukiii
inw/ h«v.
..... photographs
...----- - --------- of
-- --------- in
--- due- i
you mean frocks fashioned
this year but anyonic who has, wit- ml|rb
Dlpa:ilir,. ln
much pleasure
in thf
the reading
reading ns
ns k.
kJ time the petitioner will be notified
nessed this celebration will admit have in the writing. It was a most''"
and made especially for
to appear
the
county
’■”*»’ at
■’ the offlce ol ,h
* cmmtv
that it is worth going a long distance enjoyable trip If I have any regret,clerk.
He
must
bring
two
witnesses
-------- — —- ----------- » — -------Penney's ... . frocka made
to see. New Orleans was first In­ it is that the spirit of ’wanderlust" with him who are American citltroduced lo it over 100 years ago dldn’t seize me earlier In years, be- zens. He and *•'his witnesses will »be
to strict standards of fit
when a party of young men re­ cause
of such a *Jour-|
Cnu«: the pleasure —
examined by the county clerk, who
turned from France, bringing back ney is something that will abide as will then prepare a petition for the
and length I White and pas­
ney is aumciiiiiig w»i
&lt;-&lt;■ - "••• ....... ■—---- ---- •-----—
the carnival idea and establishing it ■long as consciousness remains, ana
and Annitnont
applicant and the certiflcatex
certificates for
tel crepes — exciting new
I the witnesses. This petition In
in their home city. At first ll was 1OI». M-.v.-nr really, become a part of life. I the J?™""— ,,3"“
Just a formal parade, but this has have faithfully tried to give Banner executed in triplicate. The original
prints! One and ttyo piece
all been greatly changed and added
to. Today the artistically arranged
styles., Don't miss seeing
and very gorgeous, multi-colored
them today. They’re values.
floats combine to form perhaps the
most unique spectacle of its kind
In this country, if not in the world.
Bo great has been iU success, and
its "drawing power." that Marti!
Means a lot to the people of the good old U. S. A., because
Gras at New Orleans has developed
into a regular business, employing
that was the date when Independence and Freedom were de­
scores of workmen year in and year
out. Just u soon as one Mardl
Gras is over, work is started for the
clared. In this connection let us suggest, too, that the house­
one that will take place the next
Rubber Blade Fan
year. The designing of floats is in
Oscillating
wives of this vicinity declare that day a starting point to
the hands of carnival craftsmen,
who have shown special talent In
Pedestal Fan
FREE THEMSELVES from the drudgeries of
that line. Their work is very artis­
tic. and every year the parades,
balls and social activities during
keeping the house in order
Mardl Gras season at New Orleans
attract people from all over the
world
A really safe fan—won't in­
Adjustable height, tilted to
One thing that you will especially
jure even a child's finger
any anal
admire in the beautiful city park
are the great, wide-spreading live
oak trees. In form, the tops of them
remind you of a huge raised um­
brella. The great limbs, instead of
extending upwards as do Michigan
oaks, shoot straight out for great
distances parallel to the ground.

DISJPPOINTMENT I|
IN LOVE IFFIIR

runner.

&lt;Uy

For Summer (rear!

98c

JUDGE DECIDES
FORSTREETEHS

HOW ED BECOME
■1EIZE0

Our Own Glen Row

FROCKS

Size. 12 to 20, 38 to 321

THE
GLORIOUS i

FANS

White Honeycomb

COAT

$11.25

would seem os though the tope of
these trees must cover a circle six
or eight rods in diameter, or more,
with foliage so thick that rays of
the sun can not break through to
interfere with the perfect shade. In
early days when the "code" was in
effect, the shade of those great oaks
In the city park at New Orleans
was a very popular dueling ground,
and many were the fellows who "bit
the dust." under these trees in re­
sponse to affairs of “honor." It is
recorded that as many as ten duels
were fought in one day under these
great wide-spreading oaks.
The best known and moat noted
newspaper writers of the country
are agreed that New Orleans ts one
of the most interesting of Ameri­
can communities for the reason
that it is so different in most re­
spects from any other, in the old
Cablldo or Capitol of Spanish LouIng relics of the old French and
Spanish regimes, as well as most in­
teresting curios of American domi­
nation after 1803. It was here that
the -formal transfer of Louisiana to
the United stales took place in 1803.
The building itself is quaint and
has welcomed many notables well

Swagger Styles!

Fan

Handy little summer
Bee Our New Line of ESTATE ELECTRIC

16

Speed Queen Electric Washers, the
kind that will last a life-time . . .

UAUTIFUL

SALL
IMORY FINISH
BEARING
FRONT WHEEL; STRONG—.
SERV/CABLE - SPEEDY
OURABU 3AK£Dh* EHAMEL

ADJUSTABLE
FAN
| SMOOTH. QUIET RUNNING A. C.
I MOTOR • ALL RUBBER CORD
I WITH RUBBER PLUG • QUIETI POWERFUL 6L EFFICIENT.

Boy'i Wogon, 28 in. box ..

__$2.50

Boy's Wagon, 33 in. box ..

..$3.50

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE
142 E. State St.

Hastings

Phone 23311

*39.50 ,o $59-50

SZ^’79.50 &lt;.*99.50
New

and MODERN BEAUTIFUL GAS

*59.50 &lt;.*89.50

that look juat right

your bright frock*! I

for

street—for apt

*inost every

hour

dky! Nicely cut--

White Cross Electric Irons

— Priced from $2.39 to $5.39

Electric Refrigerators

Priced from $90.00 to $179.00
12-80.

MILLER FURNITURE CO
HASTINGS

PHONE

222b

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

It's th* Spirit of a Community

THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1936

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

MICHIGAN

This and That

IT S ALL VERY CONFUSING

A New Overland
Route to the West.

There were characters in your old
Al Weber, editor of the"]
heboygan
Observer,
has | . home town at that time that could
riltefi the following comment
not help but influence me through
life, and I feel that influence has
• been most beneficial.

’

My hours in the Barnier organ!-!

zation at that time, under Mr. and i
i Mrs. Will R. Cook, were as pleasant
j and agreeable as any I have ever
‘
i
,
|

experienced while under the employ
of others. I loved my Job. I loved

the people that provided me that
job, the people that worked with me
on that job, and even though It
might have been the workiest Job j

I was ever put up against, there was
a satisfaction in accomplishment
1 that only a considerate, companlonable kind of leadership can make
sweet and lovely.
What did we do In a printing es­
tablishment those days? We did not

This paragraph is meant to In- j
traduce a pinch hit contributor to nor did we labor with one eye on the
the editorial columns of your old clock and our ear tuned for a fachome paper, the Hastings Banner, | tory whistle. It was then there was
a character quite new 18id strange tossed‘ into our lap the most stren­
lo lhe younger element of Banner uous kind of an undertaking, and
readers, but may be remembered that was the moving of the Danner
by a few of lhe older ones, those office from upstairs, down stairs'
among that group who looked for­ and during that moving spell we
ward every week to the coming of printed a great order of work for the 1
the Banner the same as the younger Windstorm company and as a side ।
people do today. AP element that issue we set up and printed the an-1
was Just as keenly alive and alert. nual fair book, and we did not waver '
and appreciative of that kind of on the quality of news and editor- j
newspaper influence there Is pres-, ial matter for the old home paper
ent today under a new adminlstra- Gee! It's exhilarating Just to turn
tion. bom, bred and groomed in the back to those pages in our old life
sturdy dependability, integrity and book and review what constituted a
responsibility that have from the , real day's work those day*, and what
first marked your home newspaper a lot of Interesting things could be
the leader in Michigan's splendid added to that early printing ex­
newspaper field.
perience in a newspaper and Job
Editor "Dick" Cook, has delegated office. then looked upon as a sume to,serve ns guest editor for one perior kind, as the Bonner has been
week in his absence. He has not i ever since,
taped me down with any act of
It was In that time John Ketcham
rules, political or otherwise, but
says: "You have a free hand to com­ and I conceived the idea we should

ahead—a wide band of brown grey
sweeping through a countryside of
reddish soil hacked by erosion.

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

Far ahead there are massed banks
of clouds that made one think at
first that we were approaching the
Richard M- Cook.
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
mountains. Below is the Texas pan­
Prof. Homar C. Washburn of
Jtty a sail, it seemed handle country. There comes lhe
Canadian river sweeping In from Boulder, Colorado, who te also cap­
tain of Troop D. of the Colorado Na­
And some folks thought 'twas a
WaU have It in sight for a hundred tional Guard ha* been called for
dream they’d dreamed
service in Mexico.
Of sailing the beautiful cea.
Its an easy matter to tell lhe
—Eugene Field.
What! Amarillo already? Where exact lime by the town clock when
you know how. When lhe hour
All except the last three hundred
miles really were pretty much like though, because we're gliding down hand is al 12 o'clock, it strikes three
sailing In dreamland over a great toward the earth. More bumps I The and then you know it's twenty
panoramic map rolling by lazily be­ beat waves radiating from the earth minutes to nine. With this as a
low—Then for about two hours, in make the air just about as ’ rutty" basts, all one has to do te figure
tn proportion, in order to get the
| fact until we reached the valleys and “choppy" as an old town line.
exact hour at any time of day. Why
! Just east of Loa Angeles, we had all
, the thrills of a rough lake voyage
We're still more than twenty min­ this unreasonable complaint about
the town clock?
i and a roller coaster combined.
utes ahead of schedule.
■?
Hastings baseball fan* will not be
COWAOVA
disappointed by the absence of
Out of Amarillo came the prettiest baseball
Here we are in Los Angeles. Since
8:30 o'clock thte morning I have part of the entire trip. Our plane the management of the Hasting*
seen the rolling farm country of flew over a stratum of clouds. For Life Time Furniture
SCOWS KT TWRV
team
have
Kansas melt into the dry plains of more than an hour we glided over booked two game* with the Colored
Oklahoma and Texas. These grad­ billowy valleys, skirted phantom Athletics of Grand Rapids.
' ually fade Into Lhe eroded desert peaks, watched tidal waves of mist
All
roads
lead
to
the
Middleville
i wastes and mountains of New roll by and through frequent breaks
chatauqua thte summer.
Mexico and Arizona, and these, in in thte silent sea caught glimpses of
On Tuesday morning of last week
turn, merge with the dry deserts, the ground thousands of feet below. the friends of Miss Jessie A. Vin­
green
valleys and
tree-covered
cent gave a surprise breakfast for
, mountain* of Southern California—
During thte interlude dinner was hcr *t the Parker House Mte* Vln' and as the wheels of our plane sened—Tomato Juice, cold roast cent left Friday for her home in
touched ground al lhe Burbank air­ chicken,
emexen. fruit
inui salad,
saiaa. gria-iran
grld-lron potapora- ' Belding.
port. it was barely 5:00 o’clock in toes, olive*. pickles, rolls, cake and I
| tiie afternoon. A trip which took
hot coffee. Not at all hard to lake.
THIRTY YEARS AGO
' weeks of weary travel r and danger
Rev. 8 B Crandall on Thursday
1 for the old pioneer* to make in
Mountains ahead and real desert resigned the pastorate of the Bap­
। their cumbersome prairie schooner*,
tist church of this city, the resigna­
country
below.
We're
nearing
Al
­
with scanty rations and Indian
80W*&gt;
buquerque and the air is getting tion lo take effect Sept. I. He will
I raids always a possibility, hod been
bumpy as we dip below the clouds then go to Rochester to take a three
i completed in a few daylight hour* again. We aeem to be descending y
------uochcster
ear5.' ---------course ln
in lhe
th
by our graceful "sky schooner" of •tiff legged down a aeries of giant Theological Seminary.
I 1936.
—
Mrs. Lizzie Luxe and Miss Julia
steps.
Rock of this city will go to Ohio
| Hats off to lhe old pioneers—and
__
_ _ _____Albuquerque this week to visit relatives.
j hats off to lhe airmen and engineers
port with Pueblo Indian styles preWalter B. Hayes arrived home
who have made commercial avla- dominating in lhe budding*. This !
Detroit Saturday afternoon to
f tian possible.
is the region where Kit Carson per&lt; couple of weeks' rest. Mr.
formed feats of courage and dar- i Hayes recently graduated from the
'. I saw our plane drawn up in front ing that make his name legendary Detroit College of Law and was
of the main terminal building al in the West.
valedictorian of hl* class. We unKansas City as I arrived by taxi a
| derstand it was the most polished
little after 8:00 o'clock In the morn­
! and finished valedictory ever given
Winslow next.
ing. She was taking in a big drink
of gasoline and I was anxious to
From Albuquerque lo Winslow lhe
Mrs. Dr. Stelnhoff of Dowagiac
The lime I sang “In the Gloom- I because some supposed nlmrod had' Remember it required a lot of wool get going.
little wax cups began lo see action.
visiting Hastings friends. Dr. and

G.O.P. OPPOSES NEW
SOOM-'^-ric-

ViePUBUCMAS sorrow prOia
L NVUOEN-yO \-\BERR\AZE tRE\R
X
OWW PVWTFOR.V\

Bftk
BltX ant&gt;PORTS TRXRPPRRTT

• i ’
;

\
\

\

'. \

\ '
\ r-

JUSTICE

PTx/i/*
M/npeb
VoT&amp;&lt;

The entire 328 miles wa* a continual Mrs. Stelnhoff resided here about
Ing" to Mrs. Hendershott, in a home tipped us off we could catch trout boote to keep northern Michigan's
Right on scheduled time—8:25—
talent play there in your opera there? That was my first trout fish-! lumber Jacks'and miners'feet warm passengers were called aboard and serie* of bumps, dips and twists. 30 years ago.
Nothing to worry about because
__ __ ~——
house, still lingers, and it is count-1 ing experience and I wouldn't have in those active up state times. All
these planes are built to withstand .
FORTY YEARS AGO.
ed an event in my experiences known a brook trout had we caught, of which means there is something the air Really the take-off occurs much more severe knock* than we
Mrs. George Barnes fell on a de­
to be considered, if we arc •«
to so quickly and easily that there is will get short of a cyclone, but lhe. fectlvc cross walk in the 4th ward
there, because Mrs. Hendershott one.
■ more ,n
scarcely time lo consider wlial is
motion
Is
much
like
that
of
a
small
Tuesday
and was somewhat hurl,
I play fair and for each other's ad­ happening.
___
bore up under the attack patiently.
fast boat on a rough sea with a few ' Cement crow walks should be pul in
I find in a recent issue of the' vanccmcnt than Just the little
I and a charitable audience spared ।
added dips and twists thrown in.
every part of lhe city and all danment as you choose." However, he . invade the printing and publishing ,
We
climbed
steadily
lo
an
altitude
Banner
that
your
county
clerk
haa
things
In
our
own
immediate
grasp,
I me a vegetable shower.
• • •
ger done away with.
suggest* that inasmuch as l have field *nd we bargained for the old
discovered a booklet that "informed । This bridge is not'alone a com- of about 7.000 feet above ground—
Tall peaks are ahead and in be- | Next Monday morning the Barry
Since the air is clear, this gives a
been so keenly concerned In a: Hastings Democrat. We were to pay
Winnlng a five mile County .],jm there were 177 lakes having an , munlty enterprise Jl Is of state and marvelous view in all directions-- tween real desert valleys, fantas- county summer normal will open
13.123 acres —
in your
national
Straits of Mackinac Bridge proj- a thousand slmolcons for lhe di­ Championship bicycle race on your ' acreage of• --------------- 1I—
—• —magnitude'and
"
" concern. IL more important yet. a favorable tically cut by erosion into canyons | for a five weeks' courrc at the High
ed. about which you have read con- lapidated old wreck, and to get the fair grounds race track against such county, and then your editor calk' is Just another cog in the wheel of tail wind, steady air and a gliding and mesas. There are almost no school. A kindergarten under lhe
human habitations In view, only an care of Miss Kiltie Holbrook will be
siderable. but have not received any • thousand we sought the aid of one speedsters as Ross cadwallader of attention to the fact those lakes are ixrogrcM and advancement, lhe kind range of more than thirty-five miles occasional lonely hut near some wa-1 conducted hi one of the primary
encouragement to venture out on Sammy Jones, of Lacey. I knew that Hickory corners and lhe speedsters an asret to your county and that' of a wheel that haa been rolling al- in case of engine trouble.
ter hole or spring.
■ i grade rooms.
• • •
I July 4th will be celebrated at Rutsuch an undertaking, through the ■ sturdy old English farmer pretty developing in your own city will al­ you should take advantage of their most beyond our belief for the past
The amount of detail visible from
That must be the painted desert ■ land by laying the cornerstone of
editorial column of your Hastings .
I h«d courted and mar- ways be fresh In my memory.
I presence and their worth as resort tcore of years.
this height Is surprising. Paths, country ahead—Yes and there te the 1 their new M. E. church at 10:30.
Banncr. I might lake this oppor- r'*d hte daughter right out of his
: places. It just seems as though 1 j
fences, gullies, roads, ponds, fields, airport al Winslow. By lhe sound in j Dinner served for 15c In William:.’
tunity to explain why we folks of' home. but. with true English tightBall games played on your fair have visited most of those 177 lake*,
I am privileged to encounter many bridges, etc., show up Just about as back of me. at least one passenger' Grove.
the north want the bridge and what I npss and caution, he threw a mon­ grounds baseball diamond between and since coming into Northern'
from &gt;'our ctt* anrt county you would see them on a large scale will be glad for a stroll on solid | Miss Inda Belle Busby entertained
map.
earth again.
I a number of her young |ady friend*
il will mean to Michigan. I shall, ^-v wrench into our scheme to get Nashville and Hastings, with Miller Michigan and having the resort ap-1
J°urncy lnt0 ihc north country
• • •
‘ yesterday afternoon. Tiio only boys
not impose upon your kindly good । established and get rich quick, and tn the box for Nashville. Weber be- peal offered by such bodies of wa- ‘for rest and recreation
"
and
"* “
to see
Am surprised at the amount of
When the cabin door opens we are I favored with an invitation were Mr.
nature at thi* time; instead I shall we returned home discouraged but hind the bat, Johnny Ketcham, j ter. j am surprised at your apparent!। and to Irani things about this big woodland in the country near Kan­ hit by a blast of hot. desert air. We. Preston and Oscar Young, whoso
both (survived that first big shock,
sas City. Below L* a very pretty lit­ ------- ....--------.------- ------------------birthday falls on lhe same day as
take this opportunity to invite you
playing left field and Will Chase. lack of appreciation of their pres-I' state. My latch string hangs far tle lake or reservoir—a large wheal are still running about twenty min­
MIm Inda *.
utes ahead of schedule.
and what a lucky turn down that | thcri'of Carlton Center, playing first ence al! around you. The trouble Ls |out and J t™sl
1 ma* 1,0
into what we call God's country.
field with tiie stacks of grain form­
base. Barry Wellman, a Woodland they are too near you. You were I! 'k'Rcd* to further that contact and “be
“ ing a graceful "free hand" pattern.
Look about you as you come happened to be for both of’us.
Now for the Grand Canyon and ceived a cablegram from their son,
solicited
to
aid
you
in
finding
those
It has just dawned on me—those Boulder Dam
north. Learn first hand how badly
L. J.. Sunday announcing hte safe
farmer playing short slop made up brought up with them. It ha.* been.
squares of land below are sections..
Every city or community boasts
arrival at Antwerp. He will spend a
the north needs your presence in
a Nashville team, that you older th? .&lt;ame in Northern Michigan'.'; ■ alluring place.* you seek up here.
Air still terrifically bumpy, and I few day* there and then go lo the
And now in closing, bear with me They look so tiny from up here. At
our midst. Learn what a wonderful I out-tending characters and insti­ baseball fans well remember made I most pronounced tourist and resort
the rate we are going It take* our rather imagine that some of the University at Jena where lie will
hard
going
for
Hastings
aspirants
i
area*.
It
has
not
been
the
long
time
1
wh,lc
1
“
5aln
C,U
yoUr
attcnl,on
10
out-of-doors this te we have, up I tutions forming the bulwark and
plane just 164 seconds between passengers aren't going to be much spend the summer, in a year or so
here, and it's mostly the out-of­ background around which com­ for baseball honors. It was in one J residents of thte area that have de- jthc »&lt;1'f«ntage and the revenue that these section lines—with the assist­ concerned with what they pass over. he expects to return to Germany
munities pro-per or fail. In my mind of such games on Hasting* grounds vcloped our resorts or profited most can ** tllrected 10 &gt;our Strict once ance of a 25-milc tall wind we are
and take a degree in German, in
doors we have to sell.
averaging about 317 m p. h.
Hastings has been especially fa- when some young fan near a base i because of that development. Il hasjyou bc8ln to gct off lhc
It is impossible to describe the which he is already very proficient.
Learn by the clorest kind of a
Grand Canyon country as viewed
| vored. The quality of its industrial, line yelled "Run. Johnnie, run." a* been people less privileged than we 1 Pa,hs- follow those old roads into
personal contact what such a
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
That muff be Emporia below. from the air—so much te seen in
unknown to you. Greetings to William Allen White. such a short lime. Gaunt peaks, flat
Em Busby informs us that he has
bridge will mean to unite the two j social and business leadership has John Ketcham was trying lo beat people who have suited here, be: been as pure gold. Having resided out a bunt. That "Run. Johnnie, come thrilled because of our crystal dtscovcr
,77 lakM and the
deserts, extinct craters, lava de­ already let lhe contract for clay­
peninsulas of Michigan in a closer j
Far ahead the woodlands appear posits. etc. This entire section has ing lhe irack on the fair grounds,
: tn many different cities and cbm­ run." motto ha.* followed Mr. ciear lakes and streams and the fish c|iarm they add jo your county. See
kind of union.
to be thinning out. Trees seem able been a fierce battle ground Between work having been commenced on
! munities I can honestly confess to Ketcham a long way after that, as j abounding In those water*, that thcm nnd ad,nlr'* th,*m
strangers
Learn through this contact why
to survive only along the banks of the elements and the earth for mil­ lhe same.
having encountered in Hasting* a he perhaps remembers it now when : have come forward, have been re- scr thcm- Capitalize on them, thus
At the residence of Mr. and Mrs.
stream beds, most of them dry. or lions of years.
the major element in the upper pen­
more friendly, whole hearted, un­ he reviews how many successful ■ sponsible for the dereiopmci^ and Prov,d,ns a ncw *v«nue of revenue waterholes. Most ol these water­
Clement Smith, brotlier and sis­
Insula of our state do most of their
I derstandablc kind of fellowship, runs he has made for political office have reaped the rich reward.* there-1 and * ncw anti w,l0'C5Ome klnd of holes. by the way. arc surrounded by
You can best appreciate lhe tre­ ter of the bride. Thursday evening
trading and shopping with cities In
last, Lt. Albert D. Niskem and Mias
herds
of
cattle
which
look
like
so
mendous
size
of
the
Grand
Canyon
with 1cm clique* or high hnt or so­
front
The same thing is possible I tove*nrt ad'"‘"l,°" 10r
b**uneighboring states and are quite
many ants from here.
from the air although lhe colors are Stella A. Wheeler were united in
. clal barriers than tn any city I
It doe* not wem many year* ago; m narry counly OuUldfn murt dI1. j Uful out-of-doors in your own back
not so varied nor the views so marriage. Revs. Levi Masters of
foreign lo the markets of our own
have ever lived in. unless I except since we young fellows there ganged
and
bnl
h,
,n yard-*.
Now we are losing altitude. I can spectacular as from tire rim. But Ionia and W A. Hunsberger of
industrial centers.
my own-city, -Cheboygan,- another up and Wt Abiir illustrtou-. tou:
Im I my ears doing funny tricks. We there. it. te. extending into the di*: Hastings officiating. The bridal
,
,
Al H Weber. HimeelL
U.rn how hr I', a from Gobble.
must be approaching Wichita. Yes, lance as far as you can see. There party entered to a wedding march
man. the Hon. Philip T Colgrore tlK..0^n pluc„ thll, ,u
for
there is the airport.
The air 1* at the bottom la the river, lhe played by Mrs. Addie Reed Flem­
county to the tndlon, uid Ohio ’
t ct»,,;1 10r
al the C K. it 8. depot when he at times and spend their money on. i
e=o *=. zs&gt; *w&gt;
pretty bumpy as we near lhe ground. cause of it all. a tiny ribbon of ing and stood beneath a large floral
alate lines via the Straits and in
—...
returned home from a K of P. su- •
Whoops! Thai's a good one! For­ brown-grey which
seems
over­ umbrella. The bride and brides­
that way realize Just how large and , speaking of characters. Judge preme lodge meeting and when h? I j realize to produce a really I
tunately Just above the ground whelmed by* lhe fantastic walls maids. Mtej Lizzie Master of Ionia
long our *tate really te. and how a'clement Smith played a conspicuand Mte* Nellie Knappen of Albion
there is a layer which always seems which rise above 11.
alighted from the train he was constructive editorial pane i should I
were attractively dressed In white.
to be calm. Well, we completed that
bridge would help to make us more
p^ m lh0K day| n
nn ln.
Boulder Dam appeared to us as a'jj?* *rnoJn’* .attendant* were 14
borne on shoulders to a gaily d*xo- ■ arse mine onto the wene. acquaint j u,vE. in
179 mllea in considerably leas than
neighborly.
[ ipiration for me to do legal printlittle toy such as a youngster would Thayer of Portland, Oregon and Lt.
rated hack »nd then the men myself with present conditions that
an hour.
Izarn by personal investigation' ing. brief work and records for the
build in his backyard. It didn't seem ‘
of Evanston, III. All three
hitched themselves to thdi hack and i you have caused to surround you. 1'
and not by others' say so. how much 1 judge with him prerent preparing dragged it and Its honored occupant » f h it acre in my power to do so at'
The airport at Wichita has some possible that this was the tremend-1 WTrc ln full-dre** uniform.
The Louisville Courier-Journal
federal money has been spent on1 the copy and supervising the Job
fine buildings and hangars although ous thing I had seen under condown town and to hi* home, be-1 this time that I might then editor­
'Li\e the measles. love u most danger­
struction
two
years
before.
Ill
have
“
Y*
lhal
Cha*. Baldwin, famous
the runways arc not on a par with
other projects in other states, which piece by piece a* it seas set up and cause Mr. colgrove had been honor-. uiiy keep thte column up to date a* ■
ous when it comes Lite m life."
formerly a farmer boy
those at Chicago or Kansas City. to remember, though, that I am i
you and I help to pay for and then printed,
rd with an election to the highest pour editor so ably does from week!
JUNE
We are twenty minutes ahead of more than a mile above it. From this I and cou&gt;d th«&gt;* »° accurately that
balk at the proposal to ask for fed- - ■ ------- ------------- --- —
001,1,1 kiu • blrd 00 * lence w‘th
office in the gift of Hie Knight# of; to week providing a* h» doe* q.cil- |
schedule, so we will have half an elevation however, you can get a '
cifht hour diy. 1*6*
hour to stroll about.
fine idea of the vast lakes that are a stone nine times out of ten. 50
era! aid toward the settlement of a, The Windstorm Company wax
Pythias organization. How thrilling : lumn one of the most quoted of any '
being formed. You have to get a
transportation problem that is fas: comparatively new then, and the ll was lo watch that champion K 1 weekly newspaper tn our state. {
All aboard again. It seems good bird'
bird's eye view to appreciate their
growing beyond our facilities for Banner did its printing. They too.1 of P. drill jeajn go through it* evo-; But a stress of business and de­
to be in the air once more where a1 stze.
able to make a quirk change. Those
reasonable and adequate handling. । were a human, a friendly kind of lutions under Captain Kniskcrns
: turn of the ventilator sends a cool
spots constitute strong circumstan­
mands tn my own field al this time,
Learn just what Upper Michigan's j folks that made it a pleasure to do
draft of air down on you. The
A few minutes after leaving Boul­ tial evidence that would have been
commands.
the opening of what we expect to be
XI—Fini pernur-ent settler* ground temperature is on Ute warm der Dam. the only Incident of the quite awkward to explain away.
, major crop season contributes to- your best for­
rush San Fr*nci*co. 17ft. side.
the greatest tourist and resort bust-1
trip happened. The hostess was serv­
ward making our state's Tourist.
--------Those, too. were the glorious .bi­ ness in the history of the north, im-1
ing hot chocolate lo a passenger two
One of the prettiest parte of the
and Resort business the second
“Marable" Cook was not in lhe
t-Cn.,. Wuhlngty —
*« “f pUnj wok off
»ld seats in front of me and I was in trip was the final few miles over the
' cycle days, now coming back but pels me to ruminate instead of I
U-Gtoq*
win#
largest business in this great state Banner office much thoi* days. His
battle Ol Monmouth. 1778 I mice got caught In the backwash of process of enjoying a little snooze. green valleys, and tree covered
now provided
with
pavements Initiate.
tite propellers and went tumbling Suddenly the plane hit a terrifle mountains near Los Angeles. We
and realize what it would amount 1 wool bool factory and other bus!through lhe country instead of clay,
I trust that I have contributed
by completely out of control. I'll down draft and must have dropped seemed to come upon them so sud­
• to, If we took away our up state nev ventures demanded too much
*ome small part to your weekly j
bet they wonder what hit 'em.
at least 300 feet almost as quickly denly that I hardly realised that we
appeal. Directly you may feel you I of his time to enable him to devote sand and gravel roads. Would any
as you could snap your fingers. At were past the desert bad lands.
of you young hopefuls now attempt pleasure, enlightenment and edifica-1
Ahead Is the Cimarron country, that very momant the passenger had
are not Interested. buty indirectly j much to tiw newspaper, nevertheyou too profit because ^f that dis-1 less, his presence and his Identity to bicycle up and down those Hope I tion. and that I may get by as suq?
scene of one of the greatest land Just received his chocolate and his
Hero we are al Burbank and the
£
Rhine completed. 19M
township hill*, just to visit the ccssfujly in this adventure as I did
rushes in the history of the United hand went up Instinctively as the last of a grand trip te at hand.
tribullon of new wealth throughout | expressed itself In so many ways, Newland* and enjpy their hospital- I when I publicly exposed my vocal
Slates The land below Is gashed plane dropped. He couldn't have
JULY
our state.
I all of which encouraged one lo ply and their delirious melons? I deficiencies before a Hastings auwith erosion and the trees are few taken better alm at me if he had
Il doesn't reem possible that we
I
;{strive for still greater efficiency.
|
and far
.. between. .w.ktra.MnvkrxMReal prairie coun- tried deliberately. Not a drop hit are in Los Angeles already. The
I Would you bicycle out to Wall lake dienoe two score years ago.
We are now eleven thousand anyone else, it all poured on me. I entire flight has seemed a bit un­
The opportunity to write what I!
•—-- •■■sr.r.-.vcr^z-,
or to Thornapple lake or Gun lake!
feet
above
sea
level
or
eighl
thoucame
to
with
a
start
when
the
plane
real
—except for that dash of hot
like for your paper impel* me to
Carter's Snake
p—v--------------• lhe only '| jusl for R dgy.s Qjihing and then ■ One more word about your atu-'
was not
saud feet above the ground.
dropped and looking up saw a cata­ chocolate You have no Idea how
Way
■kudu ■ -rtaiu kind ol edllorl^ thtof lh,l
-------------------------------0Ire again after the tudc toward
.....................
.................
....
at 1Identified
Sylvester ; pedal „„
back ,.
home
tlx ..
Straits
bridge.
Re­
ract of brown fluid-coming my way. greatly time and distance are cm
NEWS
GLEANINGS.
analysis and expression »t thU.timeIOreusel. The famous carter snake jday’* sport was ended?
'serve judgment until you know
Just saw a near accident. Far be­
down at speeds of 300 mite* per
and instead ju*t lum back life"* ■ was a small nuke then. Jt had Just
. - - --------------- ------| whereof you speak, just remember
More tourist traffic crosses the low a tiny speck of a car came round encompassed in Its warm spottiness. Ihour.
page* forty yakrs or so, to the time, been discovered. Al lhe »ame lime
Would ytyi believe that Bill Pot- that our part of lhe state has con- U 8.-Canadian border than any a bend, evidently al too high a Naturally, a grey flannel suit isn't |
speed, it nearly crashed a guard exactly* a lovely sight after having I It doesn't seem possible that those
other
international
boundary.
when I considered myself a part । x discovered the kind of contribu-1 ter. mow the Hon. William Potter' tributed
tremendously
towards
rail and then swerved back and been put through such a process.
mites and mites of farm land, prtland parcel of your community, and, tion *uch characters a* Mr. Oreusel and I had once walked out We*: Michigan's Industrial advancement I The radio in the next aportmen:_____
forth ____
before it finally straightened
• • • 'ria*. deserts and mountains have
Til be with you in spirit as I oft jmade to the social and tnteineM ad-'Green street just beyond your citj because of its iron and copper, and blaring out the latest popular »on? I out again,
is lust one of over 17JH5.000 seta In —
'"VP"
• • •
■iJSjW’iJi? 4^1“^
llam am, without your aoUdtatior.. vancoment of a communllj.
hi—«.-■
v..... .. —.
-----------

of Our World

t n"

jlimiu, there to fish for brook trout, its great timber harvest of lite pas:. uie United States.

।

There

te

thp

Cimarron river1 baggage compartment and I was pleasant dream.

�THI HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, JULY (. 1634

ed are tour parsons la private in­ 4-RmI Mtate assessed, 11.651.400; THREE FORMER
carry on emergency relief work,
dustry for permanent and one for
a break. . .
since lhe government has largely
temporary relief, six persons in late equalized. (1425.632; personal
BARRY CO. BOYS withdrawn Its aid. The legislature
We hereby nominate for Hastings private employment are being sup­ equalised. R14JM. Total equalised,
haa abolished all taxes on property.
Hew to the Una. Ut the quips
Hall of Eligible Bachelorettes . . . plemented. Two WPA employees ilmo.no.
Met Under Unusual Circum- The fifteen-mill tax limitation cur­
Mariana Murphy, who charms lha with •xcepllonglly large families
tails seriously lhe amount that ean
HASTINGS CITY. WARDS 2 Slid
itancea
at
Ohio
Spanish
are being givtn permanent supple­ 3—Real estate assessed. (1.758450;
diners at tha Parker House.
be raised by taxation fat public
mentation while thirteen are being personal assessed. (581.607. Real es­
schools, if state aid to them shall
War Convention
By Observing Tommy.
A true Irish colleen, blue eyas, en temporary relief. Those get- tate equalised. (1302403; personal
be withdrawn. It would seem as If
At the convention of the United this situation ought to defeat thia
temporary relief are cases equalised. (561.607. Total as equal­
Any guy who can convince his back lashes, complexion that doesn't
Spanish War Veterans held in Co­ proportion decisively; for if this
bow that it's a good idea to turn call for any aid from tiw drug store where the man te off work tempo­ ised. (1464400.
lumbus. Ohio, last week an unusu­ measure carries, serious harm lo the
rary because of illneaeor temporary
a vacation into * business trip is no
HOPE—Meat
estate
assessed. al feature developed that prompted
physical disability. Three persons
vlard.
schools and to emergency relief
(761,176; personal assessed. (14475
receiving mothers' pensions are be­ Real estate equalised (473,426; per­ lhe daily Columbus Journal of Co­ work will inevitably result.
Or maybe aiw Uni eligible |
lumbus, Ohio, to devote consider­
ing supplemented, as these pensions
But lhe guy who can convince hte
...
sonal equalised. (14.576. Total as able space id it. it will be of speboss that California would be a good I How about il. Joel
provide only for the chllorin under
BARRY COUNTY GETS
equalised. 6488.000.
dal interest to Banner readers, besixteen, and do not make provision
business trip and then get a cou-1
* • ’
CCC QUOTA OF 10.
mvmo-B-i at... utort. ..m
_l- extra
-w.— weeks out
.... of
.....
. .­I
Understand Ihl.
this new natural gas for the mothers or for children over
pie
It Is a. posi
An allotment of 10 men has been
(781420; personal assessed (20 600.
Attending thte convention were
i doesn’t have any smell, so they're sixteen.
Xleven families, where
tive genius!
assigned to Harry county as its
some member te getting Old Age Rm! oatate equalized.'$647.400; per- three Spanish war veterans who
। going to give It some.
*on*..
Totel as | nict u Grangers, and were thrown quota for the registration for CCC
Assistance, are being suppleme.nteu
Anyway, Hubc. you have our best
. . .
equalized. (568JJOO.
. together by chance. As usual they camps which will begin July 1. ac­
wishes for a great trip.
,
p,6* Richard Hudnut . . . Coty . . as thte assistance doqg not always
JOHNSTOWN—Real estate as-, were doubtless fighting the war all cording to Information released by
nr Guertelne.
Clltrrlatw
. . .
। or
cover the entire family expenses. scsMd.
—(788350;
tioaivi rw&gt;r*zwtnl
___ ____ .....
__ T__ _________
personal assessed. over
again, but in comparing notes George Leonard. Barry county relief
Another season for fish stories.
I
L„» There te one other person being $34400. Real estate equalised. (637.­
it was found that al) three of them -administrator.
i Locked pretty bad when some or supplemented, a widow who is re­ 700; personal
equalised, (34,300. were born in the same township,
All applicants must come from re­
‘
I our leading citizens were hailed Into ceiving a Veteran's Widow's pension,
Total
as
equalised.
(677.000.
I suppose some of you bright wags traffic court the other day.
right near Hastings. The three men lief rolls or from WPA families in- .
which te not adequate to meet her
I MAPLE GROVE—Real estate as­ were L. O Whitcomb a civil engl- 1 eluding families In which a member'
think Tommy should offer a prize
expenses.
aeesea,
svos.isu;
personal
asscsaea.
sessed, 1864.130; personal assessed. neer of Toledo; J. P.’ Hunslker, of I h“ be*n certified tor WPA but not
for the best one.
That little rain we had helped
Thus It may be seen that the M.ioo. Rea] c4ute equalized. 6827.- Wadsworth. Ohio; and John’w. esalgned.
some.
Barry county Emergency Relief Ad- goo; personal equalized. (4.100, To- Garrison of Worthington. Ohio.
All applicants must be citizens of ,
If you consider yourself pretty
mlntetradon te not caring for any taj u equalized. (832.000.
good, try matching
tales with
How d'ya like moving day, Frank? "husky, able-bodied" men. as te1 ORANGEVILLE—Real estate as- Wrilteomb served in the 6th Ohio ‘he United Stales, single, and beInfantry; Hunslker in the 34lh Itwwn lhc a$M of &gt;7 •nrt 28
•'Gooby" Weeber!
often claimed by persons who were sesaed. (653,700; personal asMssed. Mich. Volunteers, and Garrison in Thp person to whom they auign
«
.
. ..... j. ' Rather upsetting business, eh not aware of the fact that the pol- 117400. Real estate equalized. (462.the 17th U. 8. Infantry
i their allotment must be on relief or 1
Guess Andy Taylor got a little dte-; what?
Icy of the Barry County ERA te lo, jqo; personal equalized. (17,500. Tocouraged . . . Understand he's taken {
• • •
John Garrison will be remcm- WPA. Thte money cannot be re-1
(480.000.
hv people
.hi.‘urned
-i»„■ turned
to orfor
saved
the benefit
of1
- ~~—
bcred b■&gt;rr«i
many
city.
to or saved
the for
benefit
of
to raisin' fish! . . *
1 Bccn oul
this year? care for only persons who are either 1 m as equalized.
■mnnv
■1 . m this in
. .ilia
v.w,
unable to work or whose income te | PRAIRIEVILLE
—
Real
estate
as1
PRAIRIEVILLE—Real estate as-where
where he
hegrew
------- •-to----------------- ' ,vthe
'“ r'CCC
r'r' enrollee.
young manhood,
not sufficient to meet the minimum icsaed. (1.110400; personal assessed. I He enlisted in the Spanish war and
Former CCC enrollee# who have .
I'm telling you. I^s Lockwood. Il's
The water's fine I
family
famity needs. The WPA
..... Ls
_ now
----- ■ $56,736 Real estate equalized. (871.­ continued in Uncle Sam's military i h*d four month# consecutive serv- |
all in how you expectorate on the
------------------------ for -.1
providing work
all able-bodied
pcrsonal equalized. (66.730. To- ,service after the war was over. We' *°*' received an honorable discharge
worm I
Wonder how lhe pole in Penney's men who are eligible for relief and. ।
tn! os equalized. (828.000.
are certain that hte parents. Mr. iftnd Mre now on re,lef- m“y rp8L,'er I
store felt after Abe unclinched?
in case a relief client refuses a Job ] RUTLAND—Real estate assessed. ■and Mrs. Samuel Garrison. camelundrr the new quota.
Enrollees
Tommy always docs It lo wind­
on WPA or refuses to take a Job in I 6525.110, personal assessed. (20.400.
to this city from Baltimore town-1 »™m April to October 1833 arc ex- ;
ward I
Bo the Fourth is upon u* again.
private employment at a living i Real estate equalized. (507410; per- ship, so the other (wo gentlemen | rmpted from the four months serv-;
wage, his relief is immediately dis­ songl equalized. (20,490. Total as ..—.-.Imust
.... ihave cbine
...... from
.
....
ice nrnvl«lnn
provtelon. Nn
No narinni
persons nn
on nsrn'.i
parole’i
But cheer up. folks! Tommy's got
named
this ,&lt;■«»
Well, sizzling skyrockets to all!
continued. No applications are be­ equalized. (528.000.
an invention that'll be a swell ad-1
township, or near it. In any event on probation are eligible. No auing accepted at the present time
WOODLAND—Real estate
as­
dltlon to any Izaak Walton's equip- '
tomoblles may be taken to camp.
from able-bodied men. as it is felt I sessed 61.4184)00; personal assessed. the Incident was very unusual and Young men employed now on NYA
ment!
will doubtless be of interest to
that they can get farm or other cm- ■ 671.750. Real estate equalized. (1.­
may choose between CCC camp and
many friends.
ployment during
the
summer 248450; personal equalized. (71.750
NYA work.
Guess 111 patent it!
months.
Total as equalized. (1320,000.
All young men Interested in en­
The Barry County Emergen^! THORNAPPLE —Real estate as­ THE PROPOSAL SHOULD
rolling should register at the Barry
A genuine lie-proof Nim-Rod . .
Relief Administration would appro- sessed. (1.143.685; personal assessed.
County Emergency Relief office in
for the accommodation of those
BE
OPPOSED
BY
ALL
elate any reports of relief clients!' (61-050. Real estate equalized. (922.­
the basement of the court house be­
whose "almost caught*'' were big­
(Continued from page 1, Bee. I)
who refuse to accept work that they , 950; personal equalized. (61.050. Totween July 1 and 6th.
ger tiiiin ordinary arm stretch!
Taking $12,000,000 From
are able to do and which would j-ay tai as equalized. (084.000.
But there's one in our midst who's P°®r health or physical disability them a living wage. Any construc­
YANKEE SPRINGS—Real estate
Sales Tag Would Harm
DEATH OF KENNETH MOORE.
evidently impervious to lhe lure of n*" «re four cases where the head tive criticisms regarding the organ!- assessed. (486.650; personal assessed.
Kenneth L Moore the two years,
Schools and Relief Work
the waters
lhe fumUy te mentally incompe- ration will be welcomed. This or­ 635.185. Real estate equalized. (284.­
ten months old son of Mr. and Mrs.
, tent. These persons are unemploy­ ganization desires to be considered 805; personal equalized (35.185. To­
Wc notice that petitions signed Vern Moore of Hastings township
Even i»n .l.rm clock, hid no »hl'
"™e ol the an integral part of the community, tal as equalized. (320.000.
by about 200.000 people, mostly llv- died Sunday afternoon of bronchial
.fleet ..UU on Tom Myra.
«"fl wUI &gt;* m“e “ u” P"' and is glad at any tune to co-oper­
The city of Hastings will pay 23 ing in Detroit, have Been presented pneumonia.
• . •
• msnent cases.
ate with members of the conununlly per cent of the total county tax. and
,n-inir a&lt;aina mr
...hmi
Funeral services were held at Ar­
। at Lansing, asking for lhe submte. for ---------------------------------tlie best interests of-----------------those less the balance of lhe county 77 per1
What 1 want to know te who had
The next largest group is the ,...
thur Thomas' home in lhe first ward
the bright Idea of taking Tommy farmer# whose Income te insuf-1 fortunate persons who are depend- to
:!«!!?’“
Tuesday afternoon conducted by
off the editorial page last week.
ficlent to meet the minimum needs I ent upon relief al the present time.
ucts from the operation of the sales Rev B. J. Adcock, with burial in
• • •
' of the family and who are being j
--------- ’—-------than the entire county lax was 55 ■
tax. If this proposal shall carry, Rutland cemetery.
years ago. when the county's popu-,
Surely it couldn't have been that I supplemented to a certain extent,
it will diminish lhe state's revenue
lallcn was larger than il 1s al the.
bad!
j Of these, sixteen are being givenfrom the sales tax by about (12.­
• • •
' permanent supplemental relief and
present time.
000.000. That will represent what
But then, one can't rate all the i twenty-one temporary suppiementhe state is now paying from the
FENNOCK HOSPITAL.
time.
1 tatlon until they have an income |
A daughter was bom on June 28 sales tax to aid the public schools
• • •
from their crop# thte fall. Most of I
to Mr. and Mrs. John Scobey. 216 of Michigan, and also the (2.000.000
Can't blame that one on lhe boss. • the cases on permanent farm relief i
used by the stale for old age pen­
No.
Broadway.
though.
Pdok^1*"11 *”a
.conttatKd from p«e 1. see. 1&gt;
| willnever
neverbe
beable
abletotomake
makean
anadeaoe-1
-------------------------- ______________
- ----------------- ; On June 30. a son was born to sions. Besides that nine million
•• •• ••
. will
|___________________
He's Just started back from Cali- ' quate living. Many of those get-' teed. (1.420400; personal equalized,
Oeor$c Lydy. Has­ dollars have been taken from the
sales tax to carry on relief work in
ting temporary
relief
Total
.U.K,.
.....will
to. be able
~ |to , (123.500.
. ....
_ as equalized. (1444.- Ung*. H0111* 2 ,
fomia.
lhe state.
establish themselves this fall and &lt; ooo.
"The State of Washington, and I It can be seen what will happen
i
HASTINGS
TOWNSHIP—Real
Public Hero No. 1 . . Ferris Lath­ will not need relief in the future.
not Massachusetts as might be if this proposed foodexemption shall
There are seventeen rases °! | estate assessed. (889 460; personal
rop and
his violent checkered
thought, has the highest standard carry. Without aid from the state,
mothers with dependent children, for ,W4A5O
„latc
shirts!
of intellectual culture. California it would be impossible to maintain
whom relief te necessary in order to , |aw|&gt;
1S0. pmonal equalized.
rates second and Oregon third. the public schools" of Michigan.
So Bob Corkln went from theI keep lhe home together. It te felt .34^50 Totni as equalized. (764.000. These have a very low birth-rate." I Without help from lhe state it
unusual to the sublime.
1 thnt il te much better for the chUHARTTNnB
WAnns 1 and
। would be out of the question lo
. . .
(Iren's sake to keep the family to-' HASTINGS CITY. WARDS 1 and —Albert E. Wiggam.

'Round About Town

ANEW SHIP

DDES
FOR THE FOU

Wonderful
Values at

$088

$088

M88

INO'EMPMLES'
J BE NG ASSISTED

07667731

UNESESSION

Waters Clothes Shop

Your
Vacation
Needs

Have you seen that new curl in gether by giving a small amount of i
hte hair?
. relief than to put the children in
institutions where the cost of keepWhat.* no comments on Tommy's Ing them would be much higher, and
picture?
j where they would not get the care
• • •
and interest that only a mother can
I kind of go for that nonchalant j give.
pose, don't you?
.
j The other cases being supplement­

SLACKS

98‘.. $2”
POLO SHIRTS

peldpausch Market

MENS

boys'

CLOSED ALL RAY
SATURDAY, JULY 4th

4

LETTUCE
| Ar

|flC
I VZ

49Ct. 98C
39‘to 75

SUMMER QUEEN
WASH FROCKS
Best Filling Dresses in the Country—
"Blister Sheer" "Eyelets" "Shantung"
"Tissue Gingham" "Voiles" Etc.
3 PRICE RANCES—

s joo

8]»s
TAX INCLUDED

Slips
Panties
Suits • Pajamas
Best fitting
Slips, guaranteed
in every way!

STRAW HATS
Soft Straws or Sailors

2 and 4 P. M. *T

69c, 89c, $1.00

Summer Hosiery
Regular or garterless tops
Whites, pastels, medium
or dark colors

BUTTER

Panties, 25c, 35c, 50c
"Cartar" Mada Suita

98 to

DELIVERIES on FRIDAY A

LARGE
CRISP
MEADS

PAJAMAS ... $1.00

Iron Clad"

15‘„ 50

Shultz or
Freeport, Ib. oZ

Full Fathlonad

Bathing Trunks

Beef Kettle

Shankless, lb.

Branded Beef, lb.

22c

16c

59c, 69c, 85c, (1

98c $150 *1'”
Boys All Wool
Trunks—

7(1
&lt;□

SPECIAL FOR
THE FOURTH!

LADIES'
BATHING SUITS
Beautiful New Styles
and Colors—34 to 42

when you get a deed lo a home of your own, you obtain a declaration

ROASTS

HOSIERY

PURE WOOL

Cantaloupes Golden Ripe, each IOc
Tomatoes
Red Ripe
it. IOc
Fresh Peas
3
25c
SMOKED
PICNICS

dial from this time forth you are going to be your own landlord.

Every dol­

lar you spend from then on will be for your family'^ comfort and

future be-

curity.

„

Stop being dependent on someone else for lhe home in which you live. Sec

your lumber dealer today . . . take advantage of, the astounding opportunities
offered and become independent.

■

The Fourth of July marks the day for every American to celebrate his in­

,25\,298
Cirir. &gt;ii&lt; 10-14, $1.59

BOYS'
SUMMER TOGS
We Gan fit him in slacks,
shorts, dress overalls, coverall suits. Polo shirts,
little caps, hosiery.

Shortax
Knee Hoze

Lumber Company will help you declare your own. Wc arc equipped lo handle

any, type of construction.

Let us go over your building problems, wc feel

confident that wc can satisfy you.

THE HOME LUMBER CO.

WATERS
Clothes Shop

A first quality, full
fashioned,
ail
silk
hose in th« new sum­
mer shades ot—

• 39c
• 50c
• 69c

Agktefi

Children’s Dresses 46&lt;

All Wool Bathing Suits

dependence; make this month mark an Independence Day for you. 'Flic Home

Chickens Fresh Dressed ib. 28c
Lamb Roast Shoulder Lb. 25c
Veal Roast Shoulde
c. 22c

SHEER

Men and Boys

SIGN YOUR OWN

WARNING!

«

NEW,

F It H S H

Filled Complete for

LUM BURR Says:

Washable

8 and IO A. M.

Sizes 14 to 20
and 38 to 54

Fran
HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY 2, IM8

Sporting Items
LOCALS LOST CLOSE
GAME ON SUNDAY
The Hastings Independents drop-

tings took the lead in lhe fifth in­
ning on a single by Hoevenair.
Young tiled out to right Held. C.
O'Donnell popped to the second
baseman and Miller doubled scor­
ing Hoevenair, B. O'Donnell singled

driving Miller In and Irwin struck I Lyons—Riker, Ferris and Pott­
out. From then on the locals held ruff.
Batting Averages.
The lead until Lyons pushed across
Young 428
three runs in the last of the eighth.
B. O'Donnell 400
After C. O'Donnell walked to open
C. O’Donnell
Che ninth. Hastings went down in
... 333
Hackney ...
order To end the game.
...307
Covilie ..........
Next Saturday, July 4th. Hastings
Miller
plays Conoco Oils from Grand
Rapids, at the fairground. The boys
Hoevenalr ..
will appear in their new uniforms
..200
James
which were donated by . lhe mer­
...168
Moore
chants.’
Hastings
SOFT BALL SCHEDULE.
Lyons ...
Following is the soft ball schedule
'Batteries:for the coming week:
Hastings—Freeman and Moore.
OH,NO? I'M GohnX1
KEEP
-SO'S
iT WONT HAPPO

1

SORRY OUR BALL

HIT YOU----COULD
W£ WAVE IT BACK’
'----- 1

AGAIN J7"
YEAH.* v

( WE WANT

\ w7*J

\p0R BALL

£

A

Monday. July 6—Hlrsch Bros. vs..
Bliss Foundry; Piston
Ring
vs..
Chain Store.
I Tuesday. July 7.—Hl-Way vs. Nat
tlonal Bank; Triangles vs. Rogersi
Grocery. ।Protest Gaine).
.
Thursday. July 9.—Hl-Way • vs..
Feldpausch; chain Store vs. Rogers,
Grocery.
Friday. 2M
July 10.—Triangles ■ v«..
NaUi. Bank; consumers Power vs.
Table Co.

girls. They evidently recognized him
az an old friend, sometimes climb­
Ing onto his lap, other times Ignor­
ing his presence entirely.
A new play room is being built
for lhe quintuplets, so constructed
ns to afford a good view of them
without visitors being In sight, to
do away with any self consciousness
that might come as they grow older.
Just as Miss Goggins and Miss Fedewu a-ere passing a house in the
town, a man emerged strangely
j
TEAM STANDINGS.
familiar in appearance—Dr. Dafoe,
i Below are given the standings of himself, who gave them a kindly
' the soft bull teams, up to and* In
’ ­ greeting and best of all his signaeluding June 30:
ture.
Pet., They found Callender to be a tiny
। pi'ldpaudeh .
liamlet, but the miles of good roadt
| Hlrsch
leading Into it. lhe many shiny new
I Nat l. Bunk .
oil stations on every hand and a
: Hi-Way
good sized hotel give proof of what
.Table Co. ...
the celebrated quintuplets have
I Bliss Foundry
meant to that region. Nearby towns
Consumers Powers
have benefitted greatly by lhe demand for tourist accommodations.
Triangles
Rogers Grocery
I Ottawa, tile Canadian capital
■Bliss Mach. ...
300 was in their itinerary next with an
Chain Store ..
‘ interesting visit thru the handsome
Piston Ring ..
parliament building, then historic
Montreal with the French language
greeting their ears on every hand.
HASTINGS GIRLS VISIT
New York state and some of the
CALLENDER, ONTARIO beauty spots in the western section
were included on the return trip
See the Famous Quintuplets Cabin accommodations were found
very- satisfactory and convenient
I
Also Dr. Dafoe—Enjoy
with their car parked right at hand
easy of access every morning
2,200 Mile Trip

(

/ O.K. FELLAHS--• &gt;
'SIGNAL* 2d-37"

HIKE

MARK’S STORES Ins
A SAFE and SANE FOURTH with

BRUNSWICK TIRES

O F F E R

Don’t let tire troubles mar your holiday

SENTRY
4 PLY
30x3 Vi
440x21 — $4.10
450x21 — $4.55
|475x19 — $4.80
525x18
$5.70

$3’5

INNER
TUBES

4th ot JULY
SPECIALS

STANDARD
4 PLY
440x21
450x20 _ $5.70
450x21 _ $5.95
475x19 _ $6 25
525x18 __l$7.40

s530

SMASH'**,”

!!!!H
77c
. . - M
; ;i 89c

LOH

OTHER B1ZE8 AT EQUALLY LOW PBICESI

TIRES

MOUNTED

FREE!

SEAT COVERS
LEADER
For
Coupes

CCc Sedans, QQc
Dv
Coaches 30

For

$4 .49 Sedans and $4.48
I
Coaches—
v

is—

SPOKE BRUSH Qc
tompico fibre
v
Sponge, large Qc
Florida grass
w
ENAMEL
4 Ac
9 ounce can I
Top Dressing 4 Ac
9 os. con
1 £■
Auto Fuses
«7c
box of 5
I
toil Points
Ac
Ford T
9
Aloxer Spark AAc
Plugs
CQ
Screw Drivers, Wc
4 in. 5 in. 6in.
f
Pliers, drop
Ac
forged
J

!

STtr LADDEt
■Tulxl
U vTrri
1V II
fr* '41*4.1

Wrench Set, OQc
6-pc. open end VW
iUP CREASE 4 At
1 Ib. can
1 Ci
Polish Cloth
5 yd«

4 Ac
1 o

Chamois
!3"xl6"

09

Valve Lifters 4 Qc
pressed steel 1 9

Micro Horn,
loud tone

Sun Visor,
inside
Sun Cogglcs

CAMP JUG
Keeps contents hot or
cold for hours
QQc
Gal. size—
03

OQc
09

a Qu*'*
Tlnntd

BRONSON
level wind.

OalTAnUMl

25c
PURE

CASTING ROD,
steel. 3-pc,—

CORK
FLOATS—

GALVANIZED PAIL

GALV. ICE
PAIL,. 98c

Socit

Frankie Frisch Modulates Groans of Grief as Young Stu Martii\ Proves Sen­
sation at Second for Cardinals
gTU

,

.
:

i
I
|
I

।
,
j

!
:

OBITUARY.
Mrs. Faye Donley, aged 43. for- ’
mer city treasurer, died Monday aft­
ernoon. June 22. after an illness of
three months. She was the daugh- |
ter of Langley and Hattie Dickinson
and the footer daughter of Mr. and I
Mrs. Romanson Brown. She was I
born in Hastings on May 28, 1893
and was married to Ray Donley on ;
May 13. 1911. He preceded her in I
death Dec. 7. 1928 Surviving are a ,
daughter. Miss Betty Ddnley. a son.
Jack, two sisters. Mrs. Victor KUnert I
of Flint and Mrs. Carrie Monteith I
of Otsego, also a half brother. Frank
Yarger. of Hastings. Funeral serv­
ices were conducted by the Rev. J. ‘
A. McNulty
at
the Emmanuel ‘
church on Wednesday afternoon.1
with burial In Riverside cemetery. ,

Leo Durocher, the regular short*
stop.
But when Stu stepped Into
Frisch's brogans a few days
later . . . Hs got away with •
rush, hitting ths ball In the
pinches, hounding sizzling drives
In his territory, and generally
exhibiting all the pepper credited
to lhe other Martin, also of the
Red .Birds.

BY PHILIP MARTIN
MARTIN

bent

Father

Time to the punch. The old
gent with the sickle was waiting
for ■ chance to mow down Man­
ager Frankie Frisch, who has
been second basing around ths
National League for longer than
he cares to remember, when
young* Stu broke Into the St.
Louis Cardinal lineup nnd saved
the ancient guy a tot of unneces­
sary effort.
Early in the current campaign,
Frisch's aged underpins, which
have been subject to a lol of
punishment around lhe midway
sack, began to show signs of
wear and tear. Martin being a
versatile sort of fellow Frankie
called upon him tn hnlrt down

A LL this Is pretty fair for ■
22-year-old youngster with
only three yeura of. professional
baseball tucked away.
Martin got his start with CoJumbus. a unit of the Cardinal
?ehaln system, and remained In
the Ohio caoltal until June, 1934.
being transferred to Houston tor
th* rest of the semester.
He returned to Houston to
open the 1935 season and stayed
an until he wilted under the In­
tense heat In May.
Asheville,
N C„ tuns 8111*00x1 port of call,
and Stu remained there for the
duration of the baseball year,
nlnvlng In both Infield and out­
field.
Wherever he has gone. Martin
has made a name for himself aa
a |acl;-of-nll-trades. and. during
his abbreviated career, has done
everything hut Ditch nnd catch.
R«fore hooking up with lhe Car­
dinals. Stu had played but 12

fidently expecting tn return won
to his old stamping ground

IT wasn't In lhe books, how­
ever. for Stu has been puth'.g
on n grand show for the fans,
and It now appears that Martin
hns permanently displaced
Frisch ns the regular srmnri
sacker of the Gas House Gann
The fact that he hn« snowd
Frankie out of the picture is In
Itself testimony of his worth for
the Fordham*Tlnsh hns plenty of
good baseball left In his system,
over short distances.
the little guv —Martin weighs
only around 155 pounds—didn’t
get even a rail during the spring
training season, he was lust an­
other hush leaguer with a flashy

brow lifting even when he was

Stu Martin . . . thia slim
youngster has a mighty fat
halting average right now. and
his second basing Is pleasing
SL Louis crowds.

given a shot''at ploying short,
during the enforced absence of

Steel body, roller bear­
ings. red
$O OQ
enameled—
£«£3

65
59
QQ&lt;
33

SEVENTY CHILDREN
ENROLL FIRST DAY

Organizations

MN

JULY WALL PAPER SALE
One Week Only Starting Monday, July

6 and Closing Saturday, Night July II

‘Unhappy Angler’

ble roll and up—we will give you the ceiling ABSOLUTELY FREE.
You buy the side wall and border and we give you the ceiling.

5’

19’
4 j-t
IO

ELECTRIC FAN
mtn. quiet, powerful mo­
tor;''keep cool
QQC
at low coat—
vO

GET YOU* FISHING '

LICENSE HERE!

DEVOE PAINTS
One Lot of Discontinued Colors in

FISH STRINGER, ftc
6 fL-

LEADER BOX,
aluminum—

Guaranteed
GENERATORS

Ford A
» a4r
■s- ’3-

I

Devoe Paint and Enamel at

Yz

OFF the regular price!

Window Shades
Water Proof WINDOW
SHADE, size 36 inches
by six feet long—
SPECIAL FOR
THE WEEK, each 03

g»77&gt;- ■ V

BUS

TICKETS GIVEN with every purchase
on the 4 Automobiles to be given away

at the Fair!

Ask for them I

The REX ALL Stora

Phone 2131

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 2137

■US DEPOT

Mr. and Mrs. R
Miss Hazel C
ville was the g
Meyers a few d
Mr. and Mrs.
daughter, Dora
lhe week end w
Mrs. Nettle

Prairieville part

Lettie Garn sp«
with Mr. and N
Edwin Harper
ing his cousin,
left Tuesday fo
braska
Mr. and Mrs.
and Miss Mhrg
on Monday iron
Munising.
Mrs. Henry
Lake Odessa to
Conference as
H. Newell.
Mr. and Mrs
Mrs. Susan Sag
and Mrs. Mark
county Sunday
Kim Bigler,
p. W. Stebbins
ing of State B
island last wee

erick Taylor. B
blns and JoA
Grand Rapids

Wayne Merrick
Handy were in
terday. Wednes
Mr and Mrs.
Mrs. Grace Do
Mrs. Carl Wes
of Detroit on S
Mrs. James
end with her s
of Charlotte.
entertained in
cy'z birthday.
Mr. and Mrs
daughters.
Pauline, of M
with ills paren
Tolhurst, at D
Mr. and Mr
guests of Mr
Smith of Detr
and attended
ployecs* picnic
Mrs. Ralph
Fisher &gt; and
Mass , are exp
gisit with her
Usher, and o
Mr. and Mn
and Billy ret
their trip to N
Ington. Philad
other eastern
Miss Ploren
from Wyando
leave Saturda
she will study
summer and

County Cle
leave Monday
to attend th
clerks* conve
held there fo
days.
The Rev. a
Jor.es and fa

Wednesday ev
days* visit wi
ton.
Clarence P
Kansas, calle
city the past
Mrs. Pennock
planning a v
October.
Mr. and M
and daughte
and Mrs. R
Grand Rapid
McGuffin and
ers on Sunda
Mr. and M
accompanied
ton and Mrs.
Wayne of M
ball game in

Mrs. Sidne
Francisco ar
visit with h
Hayes. Mrs.
of the new
cuts the U
hours.
Mbs Eilee
with MLu V
zoo and Mi
of Milwauk
motor trip e
York City. B
tic coast to
Montreal.

Information!

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Goods Delivered

for all

Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and. Mrs. Ei
zing on Bunday
Mrs. A. Wolfe
end holiday at
ton and Beulah
Mrs Edgar Tl
Columbus. Ohio
first ofrthe weel
Dr. and Mrs
were Sunday gu
Arthur Raab ol
Mr. and Mrs.

Mrs Edward
Los Angele-s.
ins friends i
Monday for
Hayes and ot
Mr. and M
week end vi
Batlie Hilton
and lhe latt
McGregor of
on their way
Mr. and M
and Mr. and
of Pittsburg
next week f
Frandren’s.
a month, an

PHONE

■'t-

23’

SPINNERS, fin^
a.ssortmcnt —

c

; Helen Feighner of Gull lake.
; The Clover Leaf Club will be en-.
! tertatned on Friday night. July 10.
, at the home of Mrs. Eva Hollister
Fifteen Teachers and Assist­
, assisted by Mrs. Gladys Dull.
The Dowling Townsend
club
ants at Second Ward
meets on Tuesday. July 7 at Clear lhe Lykins home Monday evening.
lake. Herrington’s resort, for on eve-;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Belts and
. Bible School
I family called on friends in Flint
Hie second Ward Vacation Bible nlng session.
| Sunday.
.
,, ,
school sponsored by the United
Townsend plan mass meeting I On Friday the annual Wenger re­
"There is no wise man living to- Brethren church
started Friday,
day who. having learned what war June 26. with an attendance of 70 July 4th. Morgan Park. Thomapple union was held at the Masonic
lake. Speakers: E. W. Howell. Leo Temple. Guests were present from
means, does not pray that war may children. The school will continue
! P. Cllgh, Frank Bennett. Mrs. Clara various places In Michigan and In­
never come again Ln his life.”—King . until July 10th.
Edward VIII.
I There are fifteen teachers and Showerman. and others. To all diana.
Mr. and Mrs. Backus and family
I helpers.
There will b» several members, friends, and others—
[ surprise features and all children of Bring well Oiled baskets with fried of Greenville spent Sunday with
chicken—cakes
and
pic: —Come । Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brumm.
pies
lhe second ward are Invited to atnrin»
vnnr
1 Merlin Gage and Dennis Yarger.
,
early
and
stay
late.
Bring
your
1
■ tend.
Townsend song Leaflet. 'The next Jr., were home from Jackson over
i Remember that Thursday Ls al­
■ regular meeting of the Townsend Sunday.
ways visitors’ day.
Plun will be Wednesday evening, ;i
M1m Geraldine Hecker of Ann
j Arbor Li spending her vacation at
[July 8, 8:00 o’clock.
BARRY CO. GUERNSEYS
&gt; her home here.
MAKE STATE RECORDS.
—
। Mrs. Dorr Webb and son Robert
Two cows in the herd of R. F.
Mrs Lyman of Sagtnaw is spend- have gone to California to visit her
I
Locke of Cressey. Michigan, have ing sometime with her daughter.' parents and sisters. They made lhe
I
Just finished new official records In Mrs. Fred Elder.
trip with Mr. and Mrs. cAenn Lake
’
the
Herd
Improvement Classes
On Wednesday n pot hick was of Toledo, the Indies being sLsterz.
j
which make them queen of all I enjoyed by Mr. mid Mrs. Coy I The Lakes will attend summer 4
Guernseys in their respective classes. [ Brumm, Mrs DCnnls Yarger, Jr,1 school al Berkley. Cal. Mrs. Lake ’
These animals were bred by R. P. । and son, Mr. and Mrs. Voyle Varney. । received a scholarship from the To,
Locke and include four year old i Mr. and Mrs. Gail Lykins and sons |edo school system.
Lockshore Roberta 330842 with a celebrating the Brumm's and Ly-' vidian Roe of Kalamazoo was
1
If you want to continue being cool you need us to
record of 16316 8 pounds of milk and kins' wedding aimiversary and Mr. home, over Sunday.
8084! pounds of fat In class C. and Lykins' birthday.
| Mrs. Grace calkins and Chester
cocl. light-weight clothes. Be wive again and send
I two and one-half year old Lock-*,
Mr. and Mrs Harold Voelker and spent last week with the former's
them to us for cleaning!
1 shore Sylvia 373534 with a record of
children of Lansing spent Sunday sister and husband tn Lansing.
16230.1 pounds of milk and 689.3 with the latter's mother, Mrs. I Mr. and Mrs. Ottle Lykins were
pounds of fat in class FF.'
, Theressa Dause and family. Mrs. &gt; supper guests Monday evening at
— '
। Voelker and children remained for the Gail Lykins home, helping him
TELEPHONE 2140
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
"Time Is what we want most, but a
n vls
|t
•’•alt.
I celebrate ills birthday.
what alas! wc use worst.”—Penn.
- ’ annual Kunz reunion was[ Mrs. Ray Bird and baby daugh, The
held Thursday at Morgan Park, i ter, who have been cared for by
Thornapple lake. A bountiful pdtlMrs. William Shupp will return to
luck dinner was served after which their home lhe last of this week.
a short business meeting was held. I
The minutqs of the last year’s meet-1
ing wen- given. Peter Kunz was re­
In every age In every country,
elected president and Mrs'. Gail I
i^iuns was
was re-elected
re-eiectea secretary
secretary and
anaI; n,ea *»’• ••&lt;■&lt;*«»
klnd ot
Lykins
treasurer. It was voted to hold the I tnysterlons significance to sneezing,
reunion nt the same place next year.
E
“
rlr Christians
r. *■*••'
.................- -crossed themselren
the last Thursday
, Ln Medieval
June. On Europe
ac-» Medieval Eurojw went back to bed
-»
t
..
..
hours If It sneezed
while arlscount of . the
busy
time, there!
there' for boura
•
. wasn't such a Large crowd. Those Ing.
.... Today, writes Ray Mollenjpresent were. Mrs. Frank Felgh- hauer, Danville. III., In Collier's
। ner. Ed. Feighner. Mr. and Mrs. Weekly, sneezing is a sign of truth­
Harley Feighner. Mr. and Mrs. Or­
! ville Flook, E. V. Keyes, Mrs. Gail fulness In Tnrkeatan, an Indication
of wisdom In some parts of Scot­
Lykins and sons. Mrs. William
. Luadstrum and children, of In or land and a hnd omen throughout a
near Nashville, Mr and Mrs. Peter large part of the world which still
One Solid Week of Reol Savings in Drugs, Wall Paper and Patents
Kunz of near Hastings. Dr. and exclaims “God bless you1* or Its
and Toilet Preparations. Every Pattern of the 1936 Wall Paper
. Mrs. Lester Brumm of Woodland. equlvslent when one sneezes— for
। Mrs. Ugbelle Zemke and two chil­ fear his soul will leave bls body.
included in this sale.
dren of Vermontville. Mrs. Walter
Kahler of Ypsilanti. Mrs. Zaida
CEILINGS FREE with every pattern of Wall Paper at 15c o dou­
j Wolfe and sons of Farmington, Miss
"When the first engineer started |
to make the first pump, the ancestor t
of the first economic expert told
him he wouldn't make water run up
hill. Il is the easiest thing to do.,
Water runs up hill In every build-j
ing tn New York."—David Cushman I
Coyle.
I

19
SILK LINE.
25 yard*—

Jerry Ryan i

Although the advent of Martin
mar ring down the 'curtain on
Frisch ns n regular performer,
the Red Bird pilot probably Is
agreeable to trading a doubtful
future as an active player for
a bnne-un second sacker who
may clinch the flag for his club.

&amp;

STORtOFENSAT,, July 4, from 9 A. M. to I R. M.
-

frame

QQr
w3

PAD
Clean, cool and A Q&lt;
comfortable—
"r3

’
1
!
,

FIRE FLY WAGON

FLY REEL, free ^Qc
running—
03

HP
a’1-19
^iri’i-49

few

SEAT

oxade

MOTOR OIL

Folding, wood
with foldIng back—

STRAW

BAIT ROD,

FIXE
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।

IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS

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9 fLx9 ft., heavy waUr proof material.
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j

Availing themselves of the op­
portunity afforded by their annual
two weeks' vacation. Miss Ambra
Fedewa and Miss Beatrice Goggins,
of the Windstorm force, spent ten
days of the time on an automobile
trip that covered 2.200 miles. Their
first objective was Callender, On­
tario. with lhe loadstone of course,
the famous Dionne quintuplets.
They crossed to Canada at Sarnia
following the Blue Water highway
along Lake Huron to the Georgian
Bay and Muskoku
lakes region,
thence to Callender. They arrived
there late In the afternoon. From
the pleasant, fatherly guard on duty
at the quintuplets'
home they
learned that morning visiting hours
were from 9:30 to 10:30 o'clock; aft­
ernoon fronu 2:30 to 3:30. But he
gave them lite tip lo come a bit
earlier in the morning os lhe babies
were put out as fast as they were
dressed. So our Hastings travellers
saw them come out one at a time
till all flve were playing together.
About 100 visitors were on hand
before the hour was up. a rather
small number. The guard told the
girls that even Tn the severest
weather of the past winter no day
went by without a visitor.
It was a particularly interesting
morning as the official photograph­
cr for "stills" was taking his monthly pictures of the winsome little

»

Al Stnitb may
lost

another

Smftb

flab

Fla.
(n Rtrlklng costume and
with
tewfaugied
piscatorial
equipment. Al Is shown waiting
for a bite.

former Has
and Mrs A
called on M
purrow ove
were relurn
where they
Mrs. David

Lillian.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1IJ4

rs

Social Events and Personal Mention

F
ives Sen'

3

gular ihorttepped

Into

way with a
&gt;all tn the
zllng drives
d generally
per credited
also of tho

c

fair for a
igster with
professional

I

Lawrence White of New Carlisle.
MARRIED 17 YEARS.
Ind., haa resumed hU former posi­
In the Lansing journal of Fri­
tion as night clerk at the Parker day. June 26. appeared lhe pictures
of Mr. and Mrs E. O. Holbrook ot
hotel.
Mr*. lubel Pancoast leave* Bun­ that city, formerly of Hastings, and
day for Detroit where she will be an article telling of their fifty­
the hou»e gueit of Mr*. Wm. Cook seventh wedding anniversary. The
Before an improvised altar tn the
(Bernice Warner), who 1* entertain­ item follows:
living room of th* horns of her par­
"Mr. and Mrs. Holbrook will cele­ ents, Mis* Beth R. Haven, daughter
ing a party of mother* and daugh­
ter* until Thursday, honoring her brate their 67lh wedding anniver­ of Mr. and Mr*. Arthur Haven, 108
own mother. Mr*. Lester Warner of sary on Monday. June 29. at their E. High St, became the bride of
r lVI tuo, who
Florida,
wiu&gt; m
IS spending
optiiuiitt lhe sum- home. 1207 West St. Joseph street.• Winston Boyes, son of . Mr. and
mer In Michigan. Mrs. R. M. Bates, in obeervation of the day. their Mr*. I. L. Boye*. 718 8. Church 8t.
Mlns Alice Bates
East Lansing, daughter. Mrs. Isabel Mason, and The Rev. W. Maylan Jane*, pastor
Mrs. C. M- Overstreet. Detroit. Mrs.1 her fzmily. of Flint, will spend Sundav with'th7m----- -------------------------- of lhe Flru Methodist Episcopal
Bruce Hayden. Saginaw are AiKir
other 1 dav with them.
.xno Mwa.,
members of lhe group. Mrs. Pan­
qujetiy. Mrs. Holbrook doing her us- SeZce of th. immedlau famlUe*.
coast will return to Saginaw with
floor length gown of peach or­
her daughter. Mrs. Hayden, and on uai household work and Mr. Hol-.
for
July 16. In company with Miss Isa­ brook reporting for work tn the au- • ganiM WM
mnlni^d hM wcddlnK and her arm bouquet
bel Hayden they will leave on a rlnlMl’uXTo
capltol
where
he
has
been
employed
WM
of 7^1^^ totKti snapdragons
motor trip east. Mrs. Overstreet
?
[L
conllnuousl
y
*
lnce
Jan
'
and
sweet
pea*.
MU*
LaVera
Oti*.
Joining them in Detroit. Dr. Hayden
and Dr. Overstreet will meet the
*• ‘7®; _ ,, .
as maid ot honor, wore blue organza
“3d
H01br0011
made floor IrOflUi. her ihoulder booparty in New York City, flying there
to attend the national osteopathic
H“V S'"
fl”* “•M wepdruoru.
Bou»&lt;nlr rm
.weel
‘S'
Fredmlok
convention.
Mrs. Pancoast will
th, poom. Ur.
leave the party before they reach ThrdopJTher here llred in Urulni
w0„ , Mu,
the latter city, and plans lo spend «lnee IMfi end here Men eellve in
eown end the eroom'. moiher'e dree.
the summer with friends and rela­ S'S!
“ r1" !' I“"d' •?d wee 0&lt; printed crepe.
tives in New York stale, returning to
wet, end muter o&lt; flnence lor .
,nj y,, Boyu tell seturdey
Hastings around October 1st.
oeunllet Lodjr M IXJUddW "'.tSmoonon. “n de,
pun-

LADY BALDWIN S

Wiruton Boyet And
HAS Al
MUt Beth Haven IFed Who Have Not Forgotten
Record With Ua Old I

Jerry Ryan and Robert Furrow
William Hayes of Day, Arkansas,
Prod Bpitaer of Battle Creak wm
troll League Team
spent the week end tn Flint and in lhe city on Monday on buainM*. is visiting relatives hare.
Grand Rapids.
Oacar Tyden of Grand Rapid*
Mrs. George Green spent the
baseball fan* have
week
end
at
New
Carlisle,
Ind.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Young visited called on Hailing* friend* on Mon­
elation of lhe wo
Mr. and Mn. Ed. Holbrook in Lan­ day.
ability of "LadyMiss Lois severance has gone to
sing on Bunday.
*
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Foster and W. 8. T. C. at Kalamazoo for sum- i
Mrs. A. Wolfe will spend lhe week children visited In Pontiac on Sun­ mer school.
end holiday at Manistee. Luding­ day.
Frank Palrper of Battle Creek
ton and Beulah.
O- H. Young Is visiting Mr. and spent the week end with Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Thoma* left today for Mr*. Harold L. Staiger of Lansing Mrs. Fred Palmer.
reading a* follows:
Paul Conklin is attending lhe
Columbus. Ohio, to remain till the for two weeks.
Editor of the Sporting Nnrs:
first of"lhe week.
I Virginia Steiger of Lansing is the
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Carrothers guest of her aufil. Mra. P. E. Adair, starting on Monday.
ed by tho National and American
Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Bera of
were Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs. for two week*.
Arthur Raab of Flint.
I Dr. Matthew R. Kinde and Sam Kalamazoo were Monday evening
service was a grand thing and those
Mr. and Mr*. Arthur Collison of; Leggett of Marshall were in tiw guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Bera.
who took the Initiative In the mat­
Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of! city on Monday.
Mrs. L. Severance and daughter.
Mr. and.Mr*. R. II. Weaver.
1 Mr. and Mr*. James Bristol ex­ Mis* Lois, visited friends in Grand
Miss Hazel Campbell of Middle-' pect to visit In Bangor lhe latter Ledge and East Lansing Monday.
of early leaguo ball left, and the
ville wa* the gucat of Miss Donna part of the week.
Mrs. Sarah Field returns today to
paaaea pay a splendid tribute la
Meyers a few days last week.
' Miss Olive Lathrop ot Detroit her home in Lansing after a visit
those of the thinning rank*. Of
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Gallup and visited Dr. and Mr*. C. P. Lathrop of ten days with Mrs. Wm. Roh.
the great Detroit National team of
Mrs.
Ida
Palmatler
entertained
daughter. Dora, of Beulah spent over the week end.
1686 Ned Hanlon. Charles (Lady)
the week end with relative* here.
| Max Bauer went to Ann Arbor relatives Sunday afternoon from La­
Baldwin and Deacon White are still
Mra. Nellie Hyde has been the । on Monday to attend the summer Grange. Ind., and from Nashville.
guest ot Mn. Birdie Merlau -*
•
- the university.
.
..
of session
at
Miss Gertrude Boss of Chicago,
lythtM, end Mr,. Holbrook wuec- nln|, to vUH Chlceeo. Cenede. with u*. Hanlon and Whit* re­
HEATH—ZU8CHNITT.
.i---------------&lt;Mr
MrB Harry Walers and personnel head for MontgomeryPrairieville part of the
past.week.
att. Merle end Butnew. Th. ceived their passes. Baldwin did not
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Zuschnitt an­ tire tn the work o&lt; Ute Pythian 8hMr. and Mr*. Roy Fuller and Mils family spent the week end. al Har­ Ward. was in the city thia week.
t*cenu’r
J pride', trev.lllne .own wu blue ey many yean after pitching for
nounce the marriage of their daugh­
troit where he won something
to die lake for lhe holiday,
Lettie Gam spent Sunday in Flint rietta and lhe Pine river.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Herzel and ter, Miss Charlotte, lo Adeibert
Th.'!L‘r'.:m0'^
0 dt:‘ '?')■ with white eeceuorl... Upon their
W1U p, „ ho,„e ,t
with Mr. and Mr*. Quincy Hynes.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Crook visited children and Mrs. Ida Flory of Heath, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Geo. B. er, of The SUleJournal. Mr Hol- „lam
but even if he did not put tn the
Prook
haybti
&gt;ubKr
Md
the
dey
cllutcll 8l ,IU, Jul, p.
Woodland
spent
Monday
with
Mr.
Edwin Harper, who ha* been visit­ her brother. Merton Ellison of Ben­
Heath. 1030 S- Market St., on Sat­ Mlowtn, hU amrel m Latum, | gpm
required
time
to
be
eligible
for
a
correctly. We have a large
^ppt,
ing his cousin. Mrs. Eliza Johnson, ton Harbor on Tuesday.
and Mra. Frank Baker.
urday. June 27. The single ring
left Tuesday for his home in Ne­
Mr. and Mrs. A- B- Gldley plan to
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wright of I service wiu read at the-borne'of the Their combined Odea lout la year, graduate, ot the Hullnc, Hleh past. I thlnfc it would be a fine
assortment of clothing and
• month,."
braska
spend Saturday and Sunday with Lansing will spend the Fourth of I bride', puxnu •&lt; .l.-lhlrly o'eloek 0
uhool. Mr. Boye* In 1033 and Mn thing to present him with one.
Baldwin is not in good health and
shoes for your selection.
Their HMUn,« Jrlend. unite In Boyes in 1M4
*&lt; ,7™nl
ll'u
em*
Mr. and Mr*. L. E. Barnett. John relatives Jn Owosso and Fttflt.”
July week end with her parents. Mr. Ln the morning, in the presence of
1935.. At
present he
1* emexlendlns conjr.ul.uon, lo Mr. . ployed „
,the
h, Delton u
,mbe, Co..
co hasn't been for some time. He can
and MU* Mkrgret Barnett returned
Alden Burgess returned on Sun­ and Mra. Louis Karmes.
at
Irfimber
the immediate family, ths Rev.
be reached at Hastings. Michigan.
and Mrs. Holbrook.
----------------------------on Monday from Grand Island, near day from a three weeks' visit with
I owned by his father
and Mrs. Boyes
W Maylan Jones of the First Meth­
Frederick
J.
Plaher,
.
Munising.
attended
the
meeting
of
the
State
an uncle and aunt near Otsego.
has recently been serving In the ufodist Episcopal church performing
Fort Myers, Fla.
COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON. : flee of the state insurance commisMr*. Henry Gaskill ha* gone to
Mr. and Mrs. Gary crook and Mrs. Association of Mutual Insurance the marriage rites. The bridal
Lake
Odessa to attend —
the -------BibleM. O. Hill and children spent Sunmen at Lansing last week.
--------------------------------------Pink ramblers, now in their prime,, *ion at Lansing/ A wide circle of
party took their places before an
Ccnference as the guesl of Mrs. H. •' day at Nevins lake near Stanton.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Boyer and improvised altar of flowers as the delphinium* combined with rr.adon- . friends extends best wishes and con­ PINE LAKE’S LOW LEVEL
H. Newell.
|
Miss Pauline Wilkes of Eaton niece. Miss Beverly Joy, dr Toledo, "Wedding March" from Lohengrin ns lilies and mixed bouquets in the gratulatlons.
CALLS FOR A CHANNEL
Mr. and Mr*. Edgar Brooks and ( Rapids visited her cousins. Mr. and spent the week end with Mr? Boy-1 waa played by Miss Esther Morris of standards gave color lo the Coun----------------- »*»
Mr*. Susan Sage were guests of Mr. । Mrs. Dorrance Trethric, on Monday, er'* mother. Mrs. Gertrude Rlckel. i Niles, a college friend of the bride. try Clpb lounge al the Tuesday THEATER PARTY
It Ii Needed to Connect the
and Mr*. Mark Mahar in Allegan I
Mr. and Mrs. Oren Wilcox and
Mr. and Mrs. Waite;* Zamum in Preceding the service. Miss Frances luncheon which was attended by |
AND STAG LUNCH,
county Sunday.
I children of Grand Rapids visited company with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
fifty.
\
O.
Winston
Sheffield
wa*
surTwo Parti of That
Conklin sang "Beloved. It Is Morn"
----..
..
tombstone । prised on Monday evening when a
Kim Sigler. Maurice Lambie and ' Mr. and Mra. R. D. Cramer on Sun- Barnum of Jackson are enjoying a
Ther^morning
golf,
by Aylward.
Resort Lake
x.F.
’ ttr
W. Ql^hhlm
Stebbins nttolArfarf
attended lh»
lhe moatmeet­ rtaw
day.
fishing trip on the Manistee river.
rs. James
I theater
party
and ,-------nag ,
lunch
were
event, was won
by ---------------- -----------------------w -----------------The bride wore a floor length
Petitions were presented to the
- ri wa&gt;
tn hl* honor hv
ing of State Bankers ut Mackinac
Mr. and Mrs. James Page of Buf­ gown of while net. lhe embroidered Bristol. High score at contract
Mrs. James Slanlakc &lt;Lleva Per­
wa* siven
given in
by his enniinx
cou*ln*.
Island last week.
ry/ of Lansing visited her parents. falo. N. Y.. came Saturday to spend , blouse of which was worn by her turned in by Mrs. Roy Hubbard.
i Craig and carl Sheflteld. After aee- board of supervisors at their meet­
Mr*. W M. Stebbins. Mrs. Fred­ Dr. and Mra. Burton Perry, Monday their vacation .with her parents. Mr. mother on her wedding day. Her
Gucst* from away were Mra. Har- ing the picture at lhe Strand the ing last week asking that the coun­
erick Taylor. Billy and Helen Steb­ and Tuesday.
and Mrs. Lewis Sisson, and other bouquet was of Talisman roses. ry Bennett. Middleville, Mr*. Fred l eight fellows went to the home of ty provide a channel between the
bins and joAnnc Finnic were in
Miss Frances Brower and Ken-: relatives.
_
___ ___
Mr. and Mr*. G. W. Sheffield where two parts of Pine lake in Prairie­
i sweet peas _
and snapdragons.
Miss Smith. Detroit.
Grand Rapids on Friday.
noth Nobles of Lakeview were guests
Lois Calkin* of Wayland, another! Thc committee for the day was lunch wa* served by the wives of ville. so that boats can proceed from
Mra.
Lcvanche
Merrick. Mra. of Mr. and Mrs. G- M. Brower over F. J. Van Dyke and daughter. Nor- jcollege friend, was the bridesmaid Mr*. Don Siegel. Mr*. A. B. Gldley. the host*. The parly was in honor
“
nd
her
drew
w.
“
embroidered
orMr*
Louis
Garman.
Mr*.
Guy
Kel•
of
Winston's approaching marriage. board docs not feel disposed to do
Wayne Merrick and Ml** Ruth lhe week end.
ma. Miss Beulah and Donald Sev- .
Handy were In Grand Rapids yes­
Dr. and Mrs. c. p. Lathrop spent erance of Detroit spent the week end ..ganza.
„«
__
.length.
___ ...
—.u lor.
in Rheirinn
xwav .were that, that it grant the property
ler. Mr*
Mr*. Phi
Philo
Sheldon.
Those present from away
floor
Roy u
Heath,
]brother of lhe groom, was the |
terday. Wednesday, on business.
Sunday at Port Sheldon al the sum­ in Hastings.
Mrs. Kenlth McIntyre I* chair- 'Carl McMurray of Toledo. L. J. owners, who own land on the shores
Mr and Mra. C. W. Wesplnter and .-------------Hubert D. Cook and his son Les- ■
mer-------------------home of Dr.
and---------Mrs.----R. .F..
man for next week's luncheon. The । Todd of Eaton Rapids and Vernon of that lake, the right lo do the
dredging. The consent of lhe slate
lie W. Cook leave next week by nu-.1groomsman.
Mr*. Grace Dodds visited Mr. and I Webb of Grand Rapids.
golf event Ls announced a* an ap- ] Sheffield of Battle Creek,
Following the ceremony a wed­
department of
conservation is
Mrs. Carl Wespintcr, Jr., and #on, Mrs. Walter Perkins went
to tomobile for a trip to the West ding breakfast was served. Mr. and proaching, putting and driving con—
'
Of course, you will
I
GUEST8 AT DINNER.
needed and will doubtless be grant­
of Detroit on Saturday nnd Sunday. HUlsdalo Tuesday where she will Coast in the Interests ot the Viking Mrs. Heath leaving later on a short test.
.
1
From
the
Sunday
edition
of
the
ed. The supervisors voted that au­
swimming ... be sure
Mra. James Heney *pent the week visit relatives while Mr. Perkins is Corporation. .
,
.
, ■ .•
!wedding trip.
, Battle creek Enquirer-News we clip thority. as far as the county can
Mr. and Mrs. Omar Barker. Jess j
end wiWi her sUtor. Mr*. Eno* Foss.' at the Pine lake camp. ■
-wear
Skipper 5wim St
Mrs. Heath is a graduate of the SHOWER HONORS
of Charlotte. While there Mrs. Foss | MI*m&gt;s Margaret Merrick. Emma Rayner, Mr. gnd Mrs. Gilbert Tate
MISS PLUMLEY. the following item: "Mr. and Mrs. J. give it. for dredging such an openi Hastings High school in the class of
entertained in honor of Mrs. Hen- Chandler and Frances cowlcs have and Gene Webster, were In Kala-1 IBM. later receiving a IL S. degree
A very pleasant social event of O Keller of pine lake entertained
—
•« Kirthrtav
gone to Kalamazoo to attend sum­ jnazoo on Sunday attending the' from Western State Teachers' col­ the past week was the miscellan­ at Ye Fiddle 'n Bow. Friday eve­ lake, but voted that the board could
cy's
birthday.
‘’dressedup”
appear
"I
o nt tn
ning. for Mr. and Mrs. Charles not appropriate any money for that
Mr. and Mrs. izon Tolhurst and *
motorcycle races.
lege al Kalamazoo. For the past eous shower given by Mrs. Wilson
wear Skipper Sport S
daughters.
Misses Lillian and
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Prentice ex­
M. A. Lambie and F. W. Stebbins two years she has taught in lhe Guldet honoring Miss Vemelce V. Potts, and daughter. Virginia, of purpose; that the entire expense
Pauline, of Marshall spent Sunday pect lo spend Saturday and Sun­ attended the Michigan Bankers’ ,Central school in this city. Mr. Plumley whosg marriage lo Winston Hastings, and their house guest. R. must be borne by the land owner*
.
.
.
in
many
colon
M. Davis of New York City. The who are directly interested.
with ills parents. Mr. and Mrx Geo. day at Mackinaw City and other convention al Mackinac Island the
Heath also graduated from the lo­ Sheffield takes places tomorrow group spent the after dinner hours
The water level of Pine lake has
weaves.
Tolhurst, at Leach lake.
past week. Kim Sigler was also a cal High school with the class of night.
\
northern Michigan points.
informally at the Keller cottage. receded several feet in the last few
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Smith were
Mrs. Clara MacLachlan. who has member of lhe party.
Fourteen
guests
were
present,
a
1928 and from the engineering deguests of Mr
and Mrs. Byron been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Har­
Miss Mary Brockway, who has partment of Michigan State Col- variety of games being furnished Today Mr. and Mrs. Keller will be year*. A shoal of considerable width
lhe guests of Mr. and Mrs. Potts al separate* the two parte of lhe lake
Smith of Detroit over lhe week end old Foster for a month, returned on been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. M. lege. He is now an assistant engi- ’
entertainment. Miss Chrystal
now so that it is almost impossible
L. Cook, went Wednesday to Grand j near on the Yankee Springs ProJ-' Thomas and Miss Hazel Caukln had Hastings point. Gun lake.
and attended lhe M. C railroad em­ Sunday to her home in Bay City.
to gel from one part lo lhe other In
ployees' picnic al Bob-Lo.
Mrs. Emma Myera returned on Rapids where she will reside at the'
the winning scores at bunco while;
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
Hi one 2396
a boat. The two parts are ot about
Mrs. Ralph Hannon (Frances Saturday from a visit of several Clark Memorial Home.
'These young people have a wide । Miss Henrietta Bauer and Mlzs
Mrs. Clarence Bump entertained equal size. It to lo be hoped that
Fisher) and baby of Cambridge. weeks with her son and wife. Mr.
E. F. Sisson and Milton Sisson of, circle of friend* who extend con- j Plumley proved experts in the kitch- Wednesday evening in honor of her
this channel can be constructed. It
Mass., are exix-cted Saturday for a and Mrs. Warren Myers of Law­ Coal Center, Pa., came Friday for' gralulations and best wishes.
cn QuU^- The guest-of-honor was sister's, Mrs. George Maurer's, birth­
we could have plenty of rain* that;
Visit with her mother. Mrs. Agnes ton.
a visit with Miss Mabel Sisson. Mil- j
--------------------------------- the recipient of some very lovely
day. Those present were Mrs. Anna would restore the lake level, a chan- ,
Fisher, and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. John Robinson ot ton left Sunday for Ann Arbor to t GREEN—HAYWARD NUPTIALS. | »"d useful gifts.
__________
Cheeseman and son Earl. Harvey nel would not be necessary. But at
Mr.
and mm.
Mrs. Clarence x..Crawford
bi
.. »»u
-Portland. Oregon, came Tuesday to attend the summer session al the ' On Saturday afternoon. June 27. i
Cheeseman and son Harold. Mr. and the present time It Is greatly needand Billy relumed Sunday from I visit her brother and wife. Mr. and University.
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER.
Mrs. John Norton and family of
their trip to New York City. Wash- Mrs. Frank Pender, and other rclaMr. and Mrs. Harrison Blocher at two o'clock the marriage of Miss । Mrs. Fred Fleming and Mrs. Bert
Maple Grove and Mr. and Mrs.
Eleanor Leone Hayward and James I
ington. Philadelphia. Buffalo and tlves.
and Mi** Clara Blocher of Woodland ,
I‘'• Ullery entertained nearly forty Harry Cheeseman and family of
OFFICERS WERE GUESTS.
t
NOONDAY LUF
other eastern point* of interest.
fI Dr. and Mrs. —
—•- --------- ------- spent Sunday with Mr. and Mr* '
Frank
Carrothers
friends on Thursday evening at the Dowling. It was a complete surprise
Last evening Mrs. A. B. Gldley
.T?
MU* Florence Watkins relumed and Mis* Beatrice Carrothers are Frank Baker. Ml** Edith Blocher' JJw
former* home complimentary to on Mrs. Maurer and many gifts were pleasantly entertained the officers
— .been
------ ...ill at the .home
------- of...
from Wyandotte. Monday, and will \thc guests of Mrs. Shephard and .has
Mr. and. nlzed at the home of the brute s Mrs.. William Hubbard, a recent
left in remembrance of her birth­
DINN1M
parents. Mr. and Mr*. Basil L. Hayleave Saturday for New York where Mrs. Hoedemaker in Charlotte to- Mrs. Baker.
bride. Beano furnished the enter­ day.
a pot luck supper being served.
she will study nt Columbia th!* day, Thursday.
Mrs Robert Hendershott and four,
tainment. the winners presenting
summer and receive her A. M. de­
Thomas Mitchell of Battle Creek children of Montreal are al their
their prizes to Mrs. Hubbard who
FRIENDLY CLUB.
BIRTHDAY PARTY.
SUNDAY DINNIU
gree.
called on Mr. and Mrs. Dan Shay. Gun lake cottage for the summer.; *‘ "■■''1'* l!?fc r«n&lt;? nanlbT
was also given a shower of lovely
The eight members of the Friend­
On Monday evening. Mrs. Dorothy I
™
A. ° ™
™?.d
County Clerk 1 Allan Hyde will Sr. Ho accompanied Mr. Sonquest. Mr. Hendershott, who drove them
miscellaneous gifts. Before
she Dunlap entertained at her apart­ ly Club had a happy time on Thurs­
12:30 te 2 P. M.
leave Monday for Grayling. Mich., who came to see about the Mont­ here, will return later for hl* share , JJ® .Wtfore
opened the packages. Mrs. Hubbard
day afternoon at their meeting at
in the vacation neriod
&gt;
Rt00&lt;1 bcror* ®n improvised altar had to tell where she was going to ment on 8. Broadway in honor of
6 te 7:30 P. M.
to attend lhe Michigan county gomery Ward store.
the
home
of
Mrs.
Frank
Sayles.
At
Mrs. Emily Sullivan. Mi*s Eileen ^jJl^rWe’was1 nowned^n oink place the article, which caused a Miss Ruth Farr, it being her birth­
clerks' convention, which will be
Mr. and Mrs. David Skeldon from
day. Four guests were present from
nf lot of fun.
held there for the following three Toledo. Ohio, were here Monday Sullivan. Mrs. F. W. Stebbins. Mra. * ™ n
Grand Rapids. Misses Mildred Nor­ Mrs. Dan Ashalter and Mrs. Char- .
Nellie
conaway
and
Robert
Fighter
।
Mr5a
«
e
of
day*.
calling on Mrs. Skeldon'* aunt. Mn.
ris, Marie Spaulding. Mary Gow- ley Hubbard.
&gt; i&gt;m&lt;-h I
The Rev. and Mrs. W. Maylan Dan Shay. Sr., who is slowly re­ attended the Sullivan family re-1 roS?|&gt;f
POST-NUPTIAL SHOWERS.
union at the Ionia county Memor-'
Im/anrf whif^iri
', Mrs. Gary 8- Crook and Mrs. Ray dey and Dorothy Croon. Prizes for
Jor.es and family also W. Maylan covering from her illness.
the bunco winners went to Mias
Park
M-21
on Sttin
Sundav
eon“n
of ‘npink
and while
ice acream
Jone*. Jr., of Ann Arbor returned on
Mr. and Mrs. James Gower. Mr. ialM^
wdonl^s.
Vy
and &lt;«&gt;
heartjhape
with
wed-;! Shroyer entertained on Thursday Spaulding and Mias Oowdey. Mias
Wednesday evening from a two and Mrs. Ward Erway and Mrs.
, evening at the former's home (Com­ Farr was presented with a lovely
days' visit with friend* in Luding­ Marjorie Guldet and son Junior son Albert and her parent*. Mr. and 1 dln« cakc ln lhc “mc colors wcre: plimentary to Mrs. Gar Tribble cover for her studio couch.
.; (Barbara Crook) of colon, a recent
ton.
spent Sunday at Gun lake with Mr. Mr*. Bert Snell, of Lansing were ।
here Sunday, the women visiting
.“
Mr-Or n 1 &lt;
,n»m - •- onae
lwemy guest*
Clarence Pennock of Wichita. and Mrs. Earl Bumford.
"Possession of a colony grants
bride.. Twenty
guest* wore
were present,
present.
2?-. 1
bringing
Kansas, called on friends in the
Little Colleen Bauer of Saginaw Hastings friends and the men I fhm»h
th.
7Z-»
Bringing a
a linen
nncn ihower
tnowcr for
lor Mra.
Mrs. prior right but not monopoly. For
! ,hrou,h
h&lt;hthe norlh€
norlh*V
m P"
narl
1 ot
ofTribble.
—
practical purposes no nation can
city the past week. He reports that is spending two weeks with her spending the day at Wall lake flsh-!
On
evening Mrs. Crook maintain a monopoly of all the reMra. Pennock
(Carrie Black)
is grandparent*. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. ing.
I1 M'rhl“ hrtrt. .na ornnm .rr.rfnat.H
thl
Iand Mrs ahro&gt;'er entertained ten, sources within it* control without
planning a visit to Michigan in Bauer, while her parenLs are in
Mra. Jack O'Connor and Mra. I
October.
Washington and Philadelphia.
Harold E Smith are spending the th.h?MMhn^^uaii gue4U honoring Mr*. Tribble, who provoking retaliation by other oounclass of 1933. Mrs. ^7777,7^
Jlreen js also I wns
yns inc
tlx. recipien
rec|njent of a shower of ml*- tries at points where it is vulnerMr. and Mra. Carroll McGuffin
Mrs. M. F. Stone of Detroit was day with the former'* parents. Dr., th
"‘e1^321,7
5y
cellaneous
gifts.
and daughter of LansUig and Mr. the guesl of her sister and husband. and Mr*. Winn Noble*, at Coral.1 *
..--------------------------------------------------------able."—Nathaniel Peffer.
and Mr*. Rupert Carrothers ot Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Corkin. last Tommy and Anne O'Connor who ac- ’
।
“5t y^ar'
OrSe.n I
Grand Rapids vUlted Mrs. Anna week. Mrs. Corkin accompanied tier companled them are remaining for ■ n..,r
McGuffin and Mra. Isabel Carroth­ sister home, remaining till Mon­ part of lhe vacation.
er* on Sunday.
day evening
Dr. E. J. Pratt is leaving Thurs­ 1 now employed at lhe Jarvis Com­
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Crookston,
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Will of De­ day for Philadelphia where he will i pony in Grand Rapids.
THURSDAY, JULY 2
FRIDAY, JULY 1
Guests at the wedding were: Mr.
accompanied by Leo Quick of Del­ troit were guests of Mr. and Mrs. take a post graduate course at the
ton and Mrs. Charles Crookston and Jesse Kelley over the week end and Philadelphia Osteopathic Hospital and Mrs. Arthur Green and Harold
Wayne of Middleville attended the attended a birthday dinner honor-,
------- ----the IBth. Then he and
™ Mrs. Green of West Lowell. Mr. and Mrs.
। until
Chas.
Van
VYanken
of
Hastings,
Mr.
T&gt;rn t ( will
n*lll nxnlz,
— tn
a...
V
aaIx
ball game in Dotroll on Wednesday ing Mrs. Jennie Will on Sunday at Pratt
motor
to M
New
York
.the Kelicy home.
| where he will attend lhe National and Mrs. Will Hayward of Delton
Mrs. T. J. Potter and daughter.
Carl and Samuel McMurray and Osteopathic Association convention and Misses Marlon colby and Bea­
Mrs. Edward Lynton. and son. of their slater. Mrs. Archie Kahn (Eve-| the week of the 20th and return trice Yeiter of Alto.
Los Angele*, who have been visit­ lyn McMurray) of Toledo were' about the first of August.
ENTERTAIN FRIENDS.
•
ing friends in Detroit, are expected guests of Mrs. Ellen McMurray and j Mr. and Mrs. Smith Will relumed
Mr. nnd Mrs. Adeibert Heath enMonday for a visit with Mrs. H. O. other relatives and friends on Mon- on Saturday, from Washington. D.
Mediom Bax—BOTH for
Hayes and other friends.
day and Tuesday.
.
I Cm where they visited-Mr. and Mrs. lertalned the members of Warren ’
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hilton had as
Misses Florence and Margaret1 Burt Smelker.
They saw congress Carter * class of the Methodist Sun-'
week end visitor* hl* aunt. Mrs. O'Donnell. Misses Beatrice and i in session, visited the While House day School to which they belong. |
Sadie Hilton of Kissimmee. Fla., -Marcella
-------------—----------------Goggins enjoyed a week' and' *aw many place*
’
of.....................
interest to very pleasantly on Monday evening i
and the latter'* niece. Mrs. Sarah end motor trip in northern Michl- them. Mr. Smelker is an attorney at their home on So. Hanover 8t.
McOregor of Macon. Oa.. who were----gan.----------------visiting at
* Traverse
—-------City,
-"
Mac­ for (he government and has Just Ping pong, indoor croquet and other
games and music furnished enter-I
kinaw City and Mackinac Island.
on their way lo Canada.
closed a case in Detroit in which
Mr. and Mr*. Robert Laurenson
talnment. The young people had a
Mr. and Mra. Walter J. Watkins our Uncle Sam was involved.
and Mr. and Mrs Forrest Baldwin returned lost week from their «lx
Mr. and Mra. J. D. Zagclmelor very delightful evening.
of Pittsburgh. Pa., are expected weeks' trip to New Orleans. La.. left Sunday for Grand Rapids to
Memorials must be fine and beautiful to do justice
Kerrville, Houston, Weslaco and spend a few days with Mr. and Mr*.
ELECT DELEGATES.
Frandsen’s. the daughters to stay other paints In Texas, spending n Bert Zagelmeier. then will go to
to the service to which they ore dedicated.
Al the last meeting of the Amer­
a month, and their husbands, two week with their son. Richard, at Petoskey where they meet Clare ican Legion Auxiliary,
delegates
Much of a Memorial's fitness depends upon the
Weslaco.
weeks.
Zagelmeier of Newberry and on to chosen to attend the department
Mrs. Sidney Shipman of San
Mr*. C- C. Shields, who had been Houghton to spend the summer with convention,
which meet* tn Lansing
------------------ ------------------------------------quality of the material from which It is made. If
Francisco arrives Saturday
———, for a visiting her daughter and husband. Mr. and Mr*. Sam Horner. They. on August 16. 17 and 18. were Mra.
the material has beauty and character and dura­
vWt with her mother. Mrs. H. 0.1 Mr. and Mrs. c. H. Hinman. re­ also expect to spend several days ‘ Harry Wood and Mr*. Sterling Rogcot* NUT* FOR HCNIC*
bility then the Memorial will almost surely be
Hayes. Mr*. Shipman comes on one , turned to her home in East Chicago wllh Mr. and Mrs Clare Zagelmeier 1 er*, with Mrs. Harry Waters and
of the new slrearnlfne train* that Sunday. Miss Phyllis Hinman ac- at their cottage al Manistique lake. | Mrs. Don Foreman as alternates.
commendable.
'/i
cuU the time loz Chicago by 18. companled her grandmother home

2“

ie Cardinal
emnlned in
June, IM4,
Houston for
«ter.
Houston to
and stayed
der the fnAsheville,
mrt of call,
ere for the
ebnll year,
d and out&gt;ne. Martin
himself as
ind. during
r. hns done
and catch.

'ed but 12
t of Martin
curtain on
performer,
irobnbly Is
a doubtful
player for
ncker who
ir his club.

I lake.
will be eniht. July 10,
iva Hollister
i Dull.

i Betts and
ds In Flint

Wenger reie Masonic
resent from
;an and In­
and family
inday with
utnm.
mis Yarger.
ickson over

T.S.II

r of Ann
vacation at

son Robert
to visit her
y mnde the
jlenn Lake
Ing sisters,
il summer

SPECI

otn the To­

ri azoo
•
a

nd Chester
ic former's
Lansing.
yklns were
evening at
elplng hint

j
!
j

iby daugh-

PARKER HOUSE

1 return to

y country,
e kind of
&gt; sneezing,
hern selves.

4th OF JULY

while ariay HoilenColller’a
n of truth­
indication
« of Scot■ougiippt a
which still

At The Big Little Store

la body.

BLISS COFFEE

igler’

Ib. 21c

PORK and BEANS

MARSHMALLOWS
CH IPSO Ur&gt;*

Ib. box 19c
J

DEL MONTE SARDINES ..Ig. con 1

FRENCH'S MUSTARD ..2 Ig. fort 2

FINER MEMORIALS

CLIMALENE

.3 medium boxes

Kellogg*! Corn Flokei, Ig.

3 for

SEMINOLE TISSUE............ 4 relit

to
Bab
Beaeb.
no and

waiting

J

hour*.
i for a two weeks' visit.
MU* Eileen Sullivan, in company!
Mis* Maxine Wunderlich came
with Ml** Violet Ruckel of Kalama- home Friday from Muskegon where
zoo and Miss Eunice Renlmeestcr, she ha* been teaching. She Is now
of Milwaukee, left Tuesday on a' attending the summer session at
motor trip e**t. They will visit New ■ Ann Arbor and rtays at jordan hall.
York City. Boston- and oilier Atlan- i Miss Wunderlich has signed a contic coast town*, also Quebec and
u tract iv
to icaui
teach in the uciauig
Belding nign
High
Montreal.
.
।-u
I school
—. —
next
- --------year.
Mr. and Mra. David Erickson,1.1 Mr. and Mr*. Philip Clark and
former Hastings residents, and Dr. Mr and Mr*. Claude Clifford of
and Mrs. A. J- Erickson of Chicago Grand Rapids. Mrs. Anna Nover
called on Mr and Mrs. Freeman and daughter. Zeia. of Battle Creek.
Furrow over the week erid. They Mr. and Mra. Claude Bullard and
were returning homa from ■ Flint daughter. Catherine Shay, of Lanwhere they -had vliltad Mr. and *ing and Charles Klauser called on
Mrs. David Erickson's daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Shay, Sr.,' on
Sunday.
.
Lillian.

See us before you ploce an order, it will pay you
to investigate.

FIRST CLASS WATCH REPAIRING/
Prompt and Courteous Service
All work done in our own shop

BESSMERS JEWELRY
HASTINGS

/HONE 2«34

During the summer months we are offering Spe­
cial Reductions . . . 10% will be given on all orders
for MONUMENTS and MARKERS. Call now and
get our prices before you buy. All work guaranteed.

HASTINGS MONUMENT WORKS
Phone 2497

IRONSIDE BROS., Prop*Hastinfs, Mich.

WE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONACE

MINCED HAM,
Ib.
VEAL LOAF ...’/* Ib.
PRESSED HAM, ft Ib.
BACON, fancy sliced,

K* -

�The Halting* Banner

THE CHURCHES A Nudist Pinched

WANTS

AUTO . FIRE

Margret Owens, who ha* been in
lhe hospital at Kalamazoo, returned
home Wednesday evening. We are
glad to report site is getting along

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT OFFICE
Henry nrmue. txay.e 1. Iio.ntr I j FUR SALE—Windmill 10 -ft f.-ur t-.t
. ■■ ■
.
.
- ■ i ■ 1
■
...
t and *ara*e. ni dnllara a M-mll.. K.
t.u* &gt;'rvr«4 1.. a.ll * mile. uit Eatt
. frl*»r*t.r oi t ....I &lt;--d&gt;li..n. Tlirre - Stale R.-ad Fr.d I’erk
1 rout-.* Jrr.ev ....... "ill trade for
• jJ„M KALE—Bnrebred Ourrn.er l.uil o
। F rj or &lt;'hrtf*4rt. U anted. U*S«t»bane
n,,k. .,1.1 f..,r link.bur, .train tl,„
Tr-. S ilr-..l..at______________ T ;
/..f t., r.-r. ...
L ■ ,.r
FOR &gt;•.!-! Wb.i. ...a, IS pi*&gt; &lt;'*ri
7-1 —Fl.-__________ -___________ ‘2
Ht^-.r W....tu,.1 . ..... .
n 7 ■■ . t.„: „u.,;

1

o'.i' Ho? Gr*fr.-.r*- ;&lt;•
'
'. .
FOK ft.ll.K-«n arr. farm take frot.ta*.
fair I' . I.l.n/. .T;..t. It..,. f ID
1 Wert-o.n of Drtlan
7*
Full -ALU—a.e r.otm h ..,.. and *a-

BRICK

I Jrffrt.cn St
1 FOK SALE—»-&gt;.rat firm, rhrap

At Old Hastings Wool

lake vnad*1 '* ______ ‘ “* "
lF«'R HILE—Vonn* 1 ...t .■•«. 4„.- Auc
|
price *2'. t.. *tr. J w

7 :

-

at Pickle Station.

j Foil SALE OK TRADE f-, |...-t.«. 20
acre, ttar-tl mvrab bar
5*i note.
' n.rth. 1
«..t fratrio.lte. J W
Rile, k Dehw
|h hon ftfol
73
F.»K KF.VT—Ttrre r.uim ui..ta.r« and
! four r&lt;H.ft! dovu.tair, furi,:«bed apart­
’ menta Si t X Hr .. lea.
7 .•
, I'tAXO FOR SALE-K n.'.all : ro r *15

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHAHO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
TH* Smooth Rubber Back Pads
_ No Ports To Wear Clothing

WHITE ASH
BINDER TONGUES
Stored at Frank Sage's woodwork•
Ing shop.

NEW

OLD

Study Club and who now meet an­
nually for a get-together visit. A
delicious co-operative dinner was
served at one o'clock. The remain­
der of the day was spent tn visiting
and rrmlnLscenlng.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bradfield of

Today, if either
these gentlemen

Mrs. Martha Replogle celebrated
her 82nd birthday. Saturday. June
27. Friends wish her many more
happy birthdays.
Mr and Mrs. Wellington Monica
and daughter of Bedford spent Sun­
day with their parents. MT. and
Mr*. Chas. Monica.
The Ladies' Aid will be held Wed­
nesday. July 8 nt the cottage of Mr.
and Mrs. Garrison at Podunk lake.
Co-operative dinner as usual. Ev­
eryone welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Monica and
family and Mrs. Leonard spent Sun­
day afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse Leonard of Bowens Mills.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hart and
family of Hastings were callers on
friends around cloverda.? .Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Merl Clark and son

In­

quire of Joe DcRuiter

Charles Scott &amp; Son

The Prescription Drug Store

shed for L. D. Woodman last week.
Billy Holley of Bedford spent last
Saturday and brought back their
father. John Bradfield, from Borges* week with his grandparents, Mr and
hospital, returning Sunday to their Mrs. Jesse Osgood.
accompanied them for an Indefinite
stay. He u belter but not fully re-

Mr. and Mrs. c. F. Moreau of Au­
Herbert Hanhour of Huntington.
gusta and Mrs. Hattie Bellinger and
son ale Sunday dinner with Mrs. Ind., is helping Ira Osgood with the
farm work at present.

There were thirty-two a
church service Sunday t
mLued some from Sunday

Milo

Hie Christian Endeavor is hold­
ing an Attendance Contest with
Russell Laubaugh and Billy New-

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call
on farmers in N. Barry county. No
experience or capital needed. Write
today. MeNESS CO.. Dept. B, Free­
port. Hinois.
7-2

and humbly present our apologies lo
the Ladies' Aid and Mrs. Osgood.
The play for lhe school reunion
is well under way. William and Hu­
bert McCallum, Clair Morehouse

Lauru had dramatic training in
Hasting* High school las: year
Miss Olenna Osgood and Mrs.
Esther Johncock and Junior of Gun
Marsh spent Sunday with their

George Tldd. of Pottersville.
William McCallum is home for
the summer after having finished
his junior year al W. 8. T. C.
Wm. Plant of Hastings roofed
the west half of lhe barn on lhe

Farmers, Attention!

John Cosgrove and John Johncock
took a trip thru southern Michigan
Sunday.

ed France that for years Its mem­
ory was kept alive In many tanrible ways.
Women's dresses were
trimmed with miniature chains, pin­
ioning braces and leg Irons. They
shingled their hair ns the execu-

Wednesday evening at Ute Ira Os­
good home. We entirely forgot to

Thls sounds like a good entertain­
ment as three of these are exper-

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Log Strap*

something conga

In the op posit
tlco-nnandal big
llghteet word
present respond

Mr and Mrs. Dougal McCallum
and family of Detroit spent a couple
of days last week with their par­
ents. Mr and Mr*. Bert McCallum
and Incidentally to fish.
Mr. and Mrs. Mcrl Dibble of De­
troit spent the week end at their

’ WASTED--W..mat. t r.rl for (rnrr.il
■
■ 1
.
S.t, Hrvadwar. Mr.. A H tieinn 1

ANTA MO

Bishop Cannc
state at "Houstc
last drop of m
bone-dry planl
critic doctrine

Lester and Melbourne MacLeod entertalned on Saturday twenty-two
entertained Gordon Parker of Kala- ladles from Hastings. Hanford. Ban­
gor. Middleville. Kalamazoo. Alle­
gan. Delton and vicinity .most of

tamed Mr. and Mrs. Karl Paul and
son Roger of Woodland Sunday.
The members of the Evangelical
Bible school are putting on a pro­
gram and play Sunday evening. July
5. at eight o'clock. Everyone wel-

1

Boot Plant Site.

Mr. and Mr*. Wm. Mcllvaln enTtained friend* from Muskegon

Helloes
Margaret of Kalamazoo
spent
Mrs. Jennie Chase relumed to the
Thursday flailing in Long lake.
Miss cora Mack of Wail lake Fenner home from Kalamazoo last
spent Sunday with her niece. Mrs.
Mrs Mildred Scobey was accom­
Auua rtcroc.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wygant of panied home from Hasting* Sat­
Battle Creek spent Friday with Mr urday. evening by. June and Clinton
Scobey. Slie relumed to Hastings
and Mr*. Harry Owetu.
Grandpa MacDonald Of Battle Sunday fot an indefinite *lay.
Mr. and Mrs. Almont Nye of Kal­
Creek, hale and itearty spent lhe
week end with Mr. and Mrs. Frank amazoo. John Donnoly and daugh­
Hunncston who were there a few ter. Mrs Biddlebender of Dowagiac
and Mr. and Mra. Bruce Fenner and
days fishing
Daniel Moore of Byrou Center daughter of Otsego were callers
was a week end guest of Frank Sunday afternoon of B N and Nina
Fenner and Mrs. chase.
Barnard.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Quick called
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Garrison and
daughter. Oina Jean, spent lhe week on’ their grandson. Norman Quick,
Bunfield. Saturday evening. Norman
Mr. and Mr* Harry Pennel* spent has been ill for several weeks, but is
Sunday with Mr*. Peimel* parents slowly improving.

Our Service

had little guillotines with wblcb
they beheaded the toy figures of
aristocrats.—Collier's Weekly.

Any soap can be made to float
by manufacturing It by a process
that presses air duct* Into the bar.
These duct* also speed up curing,
permitting the soap to dry out from
(he outside. So amah arc the duct*
that they retain air, preventing wa­
ter from entering. This result* In
floating.
The old method wa* to
bent air Into the soap before It
was shaped Into bara Thia made
the snap porous, since It was Oiled
with minute air cells.—1'opular Me-

Registered

LOANS

CARDS of THANKS

OPTOMETRIST and

ON CARS and FURNITURE
ANY ONE WITH A STEADY JOB
CAN GET MONEY FROM US AND

NOTICE! !

Repay in SMALL MONTHLY Paymanta

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

Fidelity Corporation

Hasting*

OF MICHIGAN
ROOM 18—2ND FLOOR NATIONAL BANK BLDG.

GRANGE PROGRAMS
SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

WANTED!
EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

FARM SALESMAN WANTED

HASTINGS MARKETS

Old established farm sale* organisation, with rapidly-ex­
panding buxine**, has attractive opening at Hasting*.

WOMEN and GIRLS to take Short
* Coarse of Training In Practical
Nursing. Good pay while learning.
Recommended by doctor*.

QUALIFICATIONS. The man we select must enjoy lhe good­
will and respect of hl* community, lie need not have previous
real estate experience. He should be between M and M years of
age. must own a ear. and be In a position to devote real time
and effort to establishing a profitable agency.

Hailing^,

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE

DUTIES: To list and show farms In your community. (A
nation-wide reputation for DEPENDABLE SERVICE, years
of consistent and extensive advertising and thousand* of boost­
er* among satisfied customer* bring oar, agencies the cream
of farm buyers.)

Insist on WATKINS
Liquid Dip!
It is stronger'. Phenol Coefficient
lest 6. That's six times stronger
than carbolic acid. If you call at
lhe hous* for It bring your

Musical Repair Work

REWARDS: Profitable, eomtructlve. clean and Intenetlng
work. A permanent business in your home community. Onr
qualified agents make both money and friend*.
Your local acquaintances and effort, backed by our wide
advertising, many year*' experience In farm sales and close
personal co-operation. spell success. Write promptly for copy
of our famous monthly farm catalog and booklet "The Modern
Way of Selling Farm*.” Learn what UNITED backing to doing
for many of our 80 representative* In I mld-weet slate*.

*1.15 a gallon

K. R. DAY
Your Watkins Dealer.

STANTON SENSIBA
117 Kurth Michigan Ave. Holing*

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
A FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET ■ Phone 2616
FOOD CENTER 2609
3921

tion* by some
tire, ths wh
them over ir
blasted area.

complain that
expedite hl* '

GEO. M. NEWTON

Phone 2837

will fprnlab th

jtir Calls Make Soap Float

I Will pay the HIGHEST MARKET

MUFFLERS

THURS1

ROLLERi

skating!
LUTONE PARK

\CJlwnbjh,thL\
WANT-ADS

Highest Prices e*w fw Dead Stock

WEST GUN LAKE

Your Dead Animals Art Worth

HE poor
land, didn't I1

Language is
tion wbst ye:
trailing. It's
tlsement for
mean anyth!

The old so
publicans ah
date at 2 a.

tcMion lookl
ory-cured hat
pie tell of I
the O.Q. P
open to cleat
have come I
Senator Bon
But when
tee eat to h&lt;
gallons from
—that* wh*
erly might t

Defy! i

Three

j

non, the i
bore, invited
tion commit
Washington
they didn't j

Thia year
hasn't lost a
of the Towi
vestlgatlng
to kiss his I
They net
for conttmi
tered like
crackers, th
to-flve they’:
either. He’l
evor-populai
a pot of gol
bow, the go
same wlthoi
ly-aha Hying.
Next lo
nothing se

DOLLARS

To assure yourself of getting the BEST PRICES, call

Ladles. Me — Men, 30c
Handay afternoon, 1 Sc A IOc
Saturday afternoon, l»c. 15c

MR. FLOYD DENNY
MUdrZF&amp;ihh.

sweet fragr
stanch of
Wright.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

TIIURSbAY, JULY 2,1936

INVESTIGATE BEFORE
YOU PURCHASE

bl.

LVLE BENNETT BUSI
About Book* and
IT EATON RAPIDS Information
Magazines Available

Barry Bypaths
Dy JANS CAMSROH

i

FALLACIES ALL, SAYS
NUTRITION SPECIALIST

Lemons, Tomatoes, Grape­
fruit Mot Acid Forming
—Onions Debunked

Coming Attraction! at

(

Conservation and
Tho Strand
^llrnnrl Tltonl
The
Theater

Outdoor Not

Comedy “F Man."

A species of caterpillar which
"F Man." in case you don't know.
Huh! Bo the Grand Old Party
at Library
Old wire's tales and
other Ls a would-be "G Man." trying tq
leaders are looking for a perfect
The season has arrived when the
work his way up lhe alphabet from
•351 Tut. tutl
good people of Hostings and Barry
lem of feeding the family today. F to O; It's the commission which country in northern Michigan, leav­
And our talented Mrs.
—.... Pratt was
— says Mtes Robert* Hershey, exten- William Frawley, a "Q Man" gives ing them with the appearance of
county will, no doubt, be visited by
delegale lo Die Demo-1 slon specialist In nutrition at Mlchl- to Jack 'Haley, a soda-jerker whose having been devastated by-fores*
agents of various and sundry de­ chosen as g-/.-,,— ~ -cratlc sonvention. Another proof gan State College. Bhe has com- €only ambition In life Is to be on fire. Tlie pest lias been Identified by
scriptions
—
those
who
sell
books,
the entomology
department ot
Belf-Anolnted Leadsra
VOLUNTEER WORKERS
that we arc all wrong on our esti­ piled a list of 20 queer suppositions 1Uncle Sam’s staff of "O Men."
magsxlnes. brushes, aluminum ware,
Michigan Stale college as the for­
of "hill people," as Mrs. Pratt about foods'and the answer to all
ANTA MONICA, CALIF.
est-tent caterpillar.
Although Ln
LEND CO-OPERATION neckties, hose, etc., etc. Some of mate
te
a
native
of
ths
Black
Hills.
And
of
them
te
a
definite
"no."
•
—Only eight year* ago
many instances every particle of
these agents will be Just what they she Is the first Barry county woman
T1M! suppositions Include those
“Desert Odd" deate with a young
Bishop. Cannon sat in high Four Hundred and Seventy- represent themselves to be. while to fill such a position.
about the wisdom of not combining Indian
;
chieftain, abducted and hor- 1
others may be fakes and imposters.
even
those of mature stee. forestry
fruits
In
a
meal
with
milk,
or
the
।
Speaking
of
conventions:
the
old
ribly
tortured
by
a
villainous
mine
’
state at Houston, wringing the
Three Boys and Girls Were He sure their credentials and wares
assert that it te not like­ tain salt which
hens are having something on that Idea that tomatoes thin the blood ।promoter and saved from death by authorities
j
last drop'of moisture out of a
are all right before you pay out order In Lansing. (Now, now. la­ or that cane sugar te superior to ।a young mining engineer. Thte ly that the trees will be killed unless cupines.
Registered First Week
bone-dry plank in the Demo­
Through the courtesy of Lyle Ben­ your good money or sign a con­ dles, I don't mean us.) The occa­ beet sugar, that fish te a brain food .rescue results in a lasting friendship U»e Lnfestatkm te repeated for revConservation aulhoritlee
eral successive years. The leaves will
cratic doctrine so Al Smith, the nett, sthletlc director of lhe Has­ tract.
sion is a cackleberry contest, a na­ or that onions will cure a cold. In ।between the young men which '
If you are in the book buying tional one. held at Michigan State answering the "old wire's tales," proves of great value later, when 1come back again, trees having been that by the first week ot ,
tings high school who te at the
shipments of free phesw
present time directing playground mood, you can easily determine College. BL Paul s old Biddy is m Miss Hershey has no argument 'the engineer and hte sweetheart are 1 defoliated last spring In* some places
something congenial and approprlalready are growing new leaves. Au­
work In Eaton Rapids, we have been whether tbe books offered you ore the lead at present. but Lowen. Bee­ against anions, but with authority Ln danger.
thorities say that many areas near Mason will haw basts
furnished information ax to what what you want and are recognlaed land and Romeo are dose behind.! she says that a cold is cured when
In the opposition camp ths poli­
Grayling. Gaylord and Wolverine
our sister city is doing. Eaton Rap­ as standard references. The Has­ Maybe Michigan will win it yet a* lhe body overcomes the infection, a Robert Montgomery, Myrna Loy
tico-financial high god. to whose
,
have been almost completely de­
tings
public
library
haa
a
magaxine
ids te about two-thlrds the size of
we have until October 23. Let's get precess in which onions could have
lightest word all
*
I called the "Subscriptions — Books a cheer leader and get busy rooting no connection. That fish te a brain
nuded of forest foliage by the cater­
H There* have been organized two I Bulletin.” edited by "the American
The
story
concerns
a
wireless
op
­
pillars. Although known as the
present responded
lea™7of wfl UU tearm whh ite Library Association, which llste all for our own hens. Michigan- hen food brings out another debunker erator who is so lonely that he holds• forest tent caterpillar the Insect
with balls and hal­
through nutrition facts. One par­ prisoner two filers, a beautiful
fruit te superior anyway.
KX in e“h K!gu7 ™d two
1 does not build a • tent." It favors .
—
। of tbe dependable magaxlnes. refer­
lelujahs. was Rank­
ticular food does not build particu­ young girl and her male companion,1
• the leaves of maple, oak. birch, elm. incubation at tbs
books, encyclopedia, etc. The
er Charles Mitchell.
four more teams are likely to be ence
'
lar
tissues,
for
the
vark^u
tissues,
This contest closes about the same
whom he rescues from the Arctic
Today, If either of
added. Tticse carry on their con­ information contained In thte book time as the stork race In Toronto. says Miss Hershey, take the mater­ night. The funniest sequence in the: poplar, wild cherry and ash as food.
is
at
your
disposal,
to
before
you
ial they require from the blood new picture and. no doubt one of
tests regularly after 7 P. M. There
these gentlemen In­
call th* library, phone 2552, and That ends October 31.
are all kinds of games which Inter- buy
1
stream. Fish happens to contain the funniest ever screened. te the
Mlchlgan's new hardwood nursery.
serted hlmaelf into
for Information about your con­
est boys and girte up through the ask
&gt;
phosphorus which all body cells re­
a national conven­
Old Muscle mny has the same quire. but many other foods also party given by Montgomery for his 15 miles west of Wolverine and|
grades lo. and including, the high templated purchase, or call at the
tion of his party,
Idea, too. Jans doesn't think much contain thte element. And so the two guests—the party for which on­ just off U. S.-27 between Gaylord
school. There are many adults In library where your questions will
and
Cheboygan, seems destined to .
ly he and Miss Loy have the cour-.
be answered. Mtes Jean Bames. li­
process continues, says Miss Hersey. ageous flair to don evening clothes become one of lhe beauty-spots of IHOW .-banTY” rwawn
the soft ball teams.
tresspass.
For laboratory tents and common
That the playgrounds are proper­ brarian, states that this publication
G&lt;yr wta MAMR.
Those hens are having every care sense prove that lemons, tomatoes while an Arctic bl|zxard rages out­ northern Michigan. The nursery Is I
ly supervised there te shown by the 1te thoroughly dependable, up to the
In the center of a picturesque vaiand authentic. Youjwill be that science can devise and are and grapefruit are not add forming side.
regulations promulgated by the minute
1
ley formed by some of Use tallest
to get all the information pos­ watched closer than a presidential foods, as popularly supposed. Cu­
moving heaven nnd
hills ini the
““
board of education. Smoking and wise
'
me northern
normem part
pari of
ot the
me _ ~
nominee.
Buster
says.
"Well,
they
sible
about
encyclopedia
or
other
* fln,.
rtonnrnma
nt fnrent
I Sponable
earth and Jack Garner to nominate
cumbers need not be soaked in salt
profanity are prohibited during the '
state. A fine
panorama
of forest
18^
tb^„, ndand RlWy. NOiiy" J,........
Fl D. Roosevelt. In whom he reposed playground periods.
Regulations 1reference books, before purchasing, can't make 'em clean their teeth water to remove poison, for cucum­
The first Independent production and hills te provided. Forestry ‘u- ^1 J^^ **™.**°
three times a day. anyway."
bers do not contain poison and salt ot David O. Selsnlck Is the charming Uiorllto u L.iuln, U.U that be­
everlasting faith. Andjhe Repub­ are provided so that a few persons 1 av the writer has learned that one
young man, recently graduated,
would fyl teke -l^out-_______
plcturlxatlon of the world famous cause of Its unique location and the
lican Old Uunrtl was explaining that cannot monopolize the tennis courts. contracted for'a aeries df reference
2jLtv 2?I saw an article headed, "For In­
All the contests are conducted In a 1
Frances Hodgson Burnett
story fact that a gravity system of water “•^SZSt
when Ifa candidate had promised
manner that promotes real sjwrU-, books which be has found are not sects, See Michigan First.” Thought ACCOMMODATE dog owners. "Little Lord Fauntleroy." starring supply te used to water the seed­
at
all
what
he
needs,
but.
of
course,
at first it was a misprint, but on
Irina
After June 1 each year, dog li­ Freddie Bartholomew and Dolores lings, operating caste of the new1
figure that for either car lhero'd manship and cannot fall to Interest he has to take them. Sometimes reading I find lhe author had a
J" JJXiS
cense fees are payable to the coun­ Costello Barrymore who returns to numry .01 b. ..cpuon.Uyto, .
and be helpful to all participants.
be k deputy sheriff with a writ
things are not all they seem on the sense of humor and used it freely. ty treasurer. That sometimes means
A total of 473 boys and girls have
the screen In lhe role of "Dearest,"
All of which proves our adolnted
surface and tire old adage, "Look He said that Michigan Ls outstand­ a trip to thte dty, and as the office
new nursery will be to supply shrub I
registered In the last five days at
lhe boy’s mother.
leaders uro not only courageous but the Eaton Rapids ■ playgrounds for before you leap." still Is good ad­ ing in its Insect crop. We raise
and tree species for game-food the lea. The man who -too
• ~
about the largest variety of. pro­ sometlmes those who come are un­
KEPT ON ACCREDITED LIST. planting. Many of the trees and
games and organization purposes, vice.
boys will promise us this year In and more ore expected. Volunteer
duce of any state In the Union, able to get into the treasurer's of­
Nashville schools are evidently shrub species now growing at the Into lhe station with a gas
.
V.
F.
W.
NEWS.
his shoulder and got It again
and
each
plant
or
animal
has
its
fice.
Under
these
conditions
the
making
progress
for
the
superIn
­
those Actional wbltnsicallllee called wwi
workers
&amp;ci* are
auc cooperating
wvpciBwi* with
wiui Mr.
,,
, , , ,,
nursery will bear fruit and seeds
Bennett in making the games and.
The membership drive is in full^ own insect species, so I suppose that board of supervisors last week voted Undent last week received a letter for game birds; others are of a type
platforms.
plays interesting. The merchants progress. Each week sees new mem­ accounts for It. Of the 300 insects that the sheriff whose office te open from the University of Michigan, desired to provide food and cover
E'VE been skirting the sun­ also aid in giving prizes and they bers coming into our Post and pros­ that do .untold damage, only one. every day and evening, and the announcing that they had been re­ tor deer and other animals.
fights in my life, but
county dog warden will be given full tained on the accredited list of the,
baked domains of one slxable are evidencing a keen Interest In pects are lining up on all sides. We the bee. is beneficial.
still have room for and hopes of
authority to collect dos license fees. University. The
University authe playground work.
group of early American families
The female whitetailed deer of
Several girls have already signed getting 200 new members. We know
Charlie Leonard ought to give Thte will be an accommodation thoritlas complimented the work Michigan give birth lo twin fawns
who don't care who's been nominat­
done
In
Nashville's
schools.
as
soon
os
veterans
realize
the
ad
­
which
dog
owners
will
appreciate.
more often than to single fawns.
ed al Cleveland or who'll be nom­ up for ladies' soft ball, and play on vantages of our order, we will have Tommy and Jone a Job for all the
Tuesday and Thursday evenings.
Eibllclty we have been giving him
inated nt Philadelphia. No matter
PAID 45 PER CENT.
joe Van Arman was
The proposition of night lights for no trouble getting them to Join and
tely. Or bury us free of charge, LEFT WITH PROPERTY COMM.
When the Freeport Stale bank
At the June session of the board
which aldo wins, these folks still the grounds where the soft ball help us carry on the fight for our
Roscommon county with a popu­
or sumpin.
of supervisors. Supervisor Lipkey, went into a receiver's hands. Its lation of less than 3.000 has pro­
■Benjamin
will fprnlsh the rnw malerial upon contests are carried on te being con­ country and our government.
of Hastings township, requested that deposits amounted to *205,063 58. portionately more sporUmen, per­
which blithe ainnteura of the Indian sidered and will probably be put
Paul DcKrulf writes in lhe Coun­
haps, than any other county in the I'm going to put you in th
plans are still In progress for our try Gentlenteh that the same chem­ lhe county sell to the township a
bureau work weird experiments in through. Mr. Bennett te trying to
to
pay
on
these
deposit
claims
few
acres
of
land,
a
part
of
the
state.
Small-game
and
deer
hunt
­
Banty
coon
pulled
a little
picnic
which
are
hope
lo
stage
for
tbe name of civilisation. '
Interest several men In horse-shoe
ical that killed millions Ln the
all members and their families In World war will soon be used to save Barry county poor farm, which will enough to reduce them to *109597.- ing licenses representing approxi­ the school started to lai___
Nothing worse can happen to pitching.
provide a . much-needed enlarge­ 45. In
t.i other
vuin words
wv.ua about VA.
45c u,,
on uiaiciy
mately iu&gt;u
half the
mv population
pupuiuiiuu of
oi the
uic grabbed him and put him to
Mr. Bennett te the type who will a few weeks. If all members of the lives from Infantile paralysis..Sixthem than already haa been wrought
ment for valley Home cemetery. The the dollar has been paid. The re-. county In number and fishing li­
by well-meaning meddlers and earn­ seek the Interest and cooperation of Leo A. Miller Post will watch the tenths per cent picric add will be siijjervlsors put the matter in the cetver still has* assets on which he | censes equal to lhe full
off and Banty, who had
Banner they will not miss out on Srayed from a glass atomiser into
ext muddlers under this administra­ not only the youngsters but tbe
iiands of the county property com­
face with the soot,
this.
e nose, and thte inoculates the mittee. and gave them power to aeL lher reductions.
tion or that. For Instance, trying adults. They will aU gain from this
out and crowed Uke
person. Tills summer the experi­
to moke farmers out of Apaches, a play a spirit that will benefit them.
Moat
of
the
boys
have
received
Gamu and play are to be kept go­
ment will be tested to prove It*
task akin to training caged hening from the middle of June until their bonus and from the reports worth.
bnwks to Imitate cuckoo clocks.
the first of September. In thte way received at Post beadquarters, the
Of counte, should their reserva­ Eaton Rapids te assured that there money is being used In a beneficial
Oh. boyl We've got away with it
tions by same miracle prove produc­ will be the very minimum of delin­
so far. Calling ourself a columnist,
tive. the white man will crowd quency In Juveniles resulting from
we mean. We bring It In with a
The Post is going over nearly 100 flourish every little while and then
them over Info a remoter thirst- the long summer, vacation. We hope
blasted area, where a horned itoad the time may come when Hastings per cent In the war chest drive—a tiptoe around expecting somebody
drive whereby the National Head­
would have to go on relief or else, will make Just such provision, not quarters hopes to raise *10,000.000 to snort and cross it out. But we*ve
merely for a limited time, but for
got by thus far I
starve to death.
the entire vacation period; and we by voluntary subscriptions for an
The vanishing American cant •hope that it will go further and (endowment fund for our National
Said the Second little Dionne to
complain that we've ever failed to' provide such games and recreationalhome at Eaton Rapids and of Vet­
the First Little Dlonnfc, "Don't look
expedite his vanishing act for him. for Saturdays and the shorter vaca- ierans' legislation.
but I believe we're being followed."
tion periods.
The Post has bought a new Unit­
Beating the Welkin.
If Europe had paid Its war debts,
HE poor old welkin certainly GASOLINE MARVELOUS
'ed State flag to replace the old one Uncle Sam would be lending them
that hangs out of our windows on money to start more war with, and
took an awful beating at Cleve­
HIGHWAY BUILDER meeting nights.
land, didn't It? And Just about tbe
the Joke is on you!
time the new skin forma, they'll rip Total Gai Tax Paid States
Don't forget Andrew A. Mathews
it all over again a't Philadelphia.
Is Service officer for our Post. It
Ought to be some good puns from
and the U. 8. Almoit
Language te to a national conven­
you have any veterans' problems that Striker-Bump wedding an­
tion what yelping Is to a coon dog
$800,000,000
- that are bothering you. call on nouncement A pun Is supposedly
trailing. It's a fine personal adver­
The automobile Is doing a great "Andy." He will be glad to help you the lowest farm of wit. so Jane will
tisement for tbe dog and doesn't deal in providing good roads for the in any way he can. "Help a comrade
pass it up for something more ele­
mean anything either way to tbe people of thte country. We have re­ In distress" is one of our slogans,
gant.
ceived a statement showing that In and every member of Leo A. Miller
Post
has
It
In
mind
all
the
time.
The old superstition that the Re­ the forty-eight states of the Union
Oh. yes, we almost forgot. There
publicans always plek their candl- a total of 18.284.961,000 gallons of
are 650,000 kinds -of Insects In the
The Leo A. Milter Post, Veterans world, not Including the two leg­
Gasoline were sold to car drivers. The
room" didn't coms true. You'd think total returns to the States were of Foreign Wars, would like to call ged variety. Michigan ought to feel
the bosses would emerge from tho *619.677.456. In addition the U. 8. the attention of all veterans in thte honored that they like our fair
government collected over 162.000- locality to the Veterans of Foreign state. We know they wouldn't both­
senion looking like so many hick­
Wars Buddy poppy camp. It te lo­ er the arid western plains.
ory-cured hams when you hear peo­
in nearly all the stater using larg­ cated on the north shore of Union
ple tell of the old tlmea. 1*11 bet er quantities of gasoline, such as lake in a beautiful oak grove, seven
Dr. Brady's hay fever
ths O. O. P. boys kept a window Nsw York. Pennsylvania. Califor­ miles west of Pontiac on the Cooley
open to dear the air. It might also nia, Ohio. Illinois, Texas and lake-road tn Oakland county. Thte know. Take 10 grains of calcium
have como In handy for. chucking Michigan, the average rate Ls about camp was organised and te con­
lactate in a little warm water aft­
ducted to give the children of vet­ er each meal over the dusty period,
Senator Borah oat of.
The amount which Michigan re­ erans a real summer outing, to build or whenever you have it. Start
But when the credentials commit­
tee sat to hear the contesting dele­ ceived from the gas tax during 1935 up a healthy physical reserve and early. Any drug store will order
character
development it for you.
gations from the deep, dark South was *22,790.561.00. Of that sum *4,- provide
000.000 was appropriated for town­ which will be of value for the. re­
mainder ot their Ilves. For leader*
Wonder If my kids make as much
erly might be called a smoke-filled ship highways. Two million more
as an equalization fund to help they have University men who have racket at the Strand as some I've
room.
sparsely settled counties with a con­ specialised tn physical education seen lately. Had to quiet two school
siderable mileage of roads, which and'camp experience. Boys between girls who were drowning out the
Defying tho Congress.
are unable to keep up their high­ the ages of 10 and 14 will be ad­
HREE years ago Bishop Cso- ways without such aid. Out of the mitted Ln weekly sections for four love affairs on the screen with their
own. Wouldn't blame Ray Branch
non, the famous Virginia smooth­ gasoline tex. too. must come all the weeks, beginning July 5. Girls be­ If iw would shoo them out. Wanted
bore, invited a senatorial investiga­ expense of carrying on the state tween the ages of ’10 and 14 will be to tell them that "Talkie" applied
tion committee to go Jump off ths highway department and its organi­ admitted Ln weekly sections for four to the actors, not the audience.
Washington monument
Perhaps sation. out of it, too. te paid the in­ weeks beginning August 2. If any
they didn’t Jump off tbs monument, terest on the road bonds. Issued
Just discovered where all my ripe
which caused regret to some, but It many years ago. also yearly pay­ girl a full wholesome week of out­ peas were going. Some certain lit­
was ths best offer they bad all ment on the principal. It can be ing'at a beautiful camp, superin­ tle folks nearly got tha dingbats. '
seen that the amount available for tended by well-trained leaders, they
actual highway work in Michigan could find no better place than the DOWLING caaOETSKY CIRClZ.
This year Doctor Townsend, who
te not so large. All lhe weight tax Veterans of Foreign Wars Buddy
The Dowling Cemetery Circle will
hasn't lost a cent by being ths head goes to the counties.'
Poppy camp. If you are interested
of the Townsend plan, tells an in­
and want more Information, call or Ice cream on Frank Seger's lawn,
vestigating committee ot the house OUTDOOR WORK ATTRACTS
,write the quartermaster of the Leo July 3. beginning a* 3 o’clock P. M.
FINE CLASS OF MEN. (
to kiss bls foot
and through the evening.—Adv.
Judging by the qualifications of
They never punished tho bishop
The Cemetery Circle 'will also
CROF8 HURT BY DROUGHT.
for contempt, although they sput­ nearly 1.000 men who have applied
meet at the church dining room for
We have just received the Michi­ dinner on July 9. The following
tered like a bunch of damp fire­ for positions thte year, the Conser­
gan crop report for June, which ladles are on the committee for
vation
Officer
of
the
future
will
be
a
।
crackers. Here's laying a little elgbtman equally well equipped for public &lt;covered such conditions as existed wovk: Josephine Frye. Mollie Fer­
to-flve they'll never punish the Doc,
service and law enforcement. "The ।at the beginning ot that month.
either. He'll go merrily on with the number of qualifications of those :Michigan crops have deteriorated ris, Nellie Fancher, Bertha Garri­
ever-popnlar idea that. If there Isn't attracted to lhe steady employ-’ much since that lime by reason of son and Nellie Granger.—Blanche
Powell, Secy.
the prolonged drought- At the time
bow. the government should supply vatlon officer In Michigan, is mak­ the crop report was issued. It looked
"It depends so much upon the na­
same without any more of this shU- ing It easy for us to raise the stand- as if Michigan would have nearly tionality of the foreigner. If he were
ly-sballylng. '
a German or Italian, I should show
than an average crop of oats and him a communist orator in Hyde
Next to tho League of Nation*,
Park; If he were an American,
nothing seems to make so much Sayre, chief of Field Administration,
Westminster Abbey and whatever
noise and accomplish so little as a Department of Conservation. "Not
that Michigan crops this year royalty was available. But, whoever
only are we getting scores of applinot average as well as they did be were, he would profit by seeing a
fellow playing a slide trombone into
last year, unless we shall have un
­
London
policeman In action and a
with excellent qualifications, but usually favorable weather from now country' village (old style) tn early
IRVIN E. COBB.
also from high school superintend­ on. It is already too late to save July."—A. A.' Milne.__________
much
ot
the
oat
crop.
It
looks
ns
if
ents. athletic coaches, teachers and
"You can't disarm nations till
the hay crop would be short unless
stench of gasoline "—Harold Ball door occupations. These are the kind there should be a good second cut­ you disarm suspicion."—James T.
Montgomery.
ting of alfalfa.
Wright.

SUPRRVISINa THE OITY’B
PLAY GROUND DU*.
ING SUMMER

S

Riley St oriel

*22

W

Money in the Mail

T

Now ... a new service is available to the patrons of this

Bank. We take pleasure in announcing the added serv-

ice of Money Orders. When you wish to send money to
someone, or some place, avail yourself of this service.

You can send any amount in one convenient order at a

very small cost, and you will get a receipt for the exact

amount, the date, and to whom the money order was

T

sent. Simply stop in this Bank, at the Teller's window,

and he will make out a money order for any amount you

wish to send. Don't toke chances. Postal authorities dte-

courage the practice of enclosing currency in an
velope; if you should lose it you have no
this service, it is safe ... CONVENIENT

CAL.' Be sure! Send money orders.

a

Hastings City Ba
TELEPHONE 2103

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mwl, mr I „„

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tered. pa tilton for hearing claims
filed, notice to creditors issued. pcUUon for authority to sail, transfer
or assign bond filed, order U? sell,
transfer or ssalgn bond entered.
E»L Charles A. Armstrong. Bond
pf Admr. filed, .letters of adminis­
tration Issued, order limiting rettlemcnt entered.
&amp;t. Mary Turner. Discharge of
Admr. filed, estate enrolled.
&amp;t. Mary J. Brooks. Bond of
Admr. filed, letters of administra­
tion issued, order limiting settle­
ment entered, petition for hearing
claims filed, notice to creditors is­
sued.
Ost. Ines Jane Manby. Order al­
lowing accounts entered, discharge
of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
Ezi. Lola 8. Masher. Inventory
filed.
Est. Isaac F. Ralrigh. Order al­
lowing accounts entered, discharge
of trustee issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Will W. Sheffield. Petition
for license to sell filed.
Est. Elizabeth Flnkbelner. Order
allowing accounts entered, discharge
of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
EsL Orson B. Garrett. Order al­
lowing accounts entered, bond of
Admr. dbn. filed, letters testament­
ary issued.
Est. Emma Bowerman. Waiver of
notice filed, order appointing Admr.
entered.
Est. James and Alice Bowerman.
Bond of guardian filed, letters of
guardianship Issued.
Est. Rlarson Dunn. Waiver of
notice filed, order appointing Admr.
entered.
Est. Lee Bailey.
Petition for
Admr. filed, order appointing Admr.
entered, bond pf Admr. filed, letters
of administration Issued, order lim­
iting settlement entered, petition
for hearing claims filed, notice to
creditors Issued.
1
Est. John J. Beattie. Petition for
Admr. filed, petition for special
I Admr. filed, order appointing ape। clal Admr. entered, order for pubileation entered.
Est Earl Beattie. Petition for
Admr. filed, petition for special
Admr. filed, order appointing spe­
cial Admr. entered, order for pub­
lication entered.
Est. Mary^. Harper. Inventory
filed.
a
Est. CharleB A. Armstrong. ’Peti­
tion for hearing claims filed, notice
j to creditors Issued.
| Est. John J. Beattie.
Bond of
Admr. filed, letters of special Admr.
। issued.
1 Est. Earl Beattie. Bond of speclal Admr. filed, letters of special
Admr. issued.
I
Est. of Melissa A. Hotchklzs. Pe­
. tlllon for license to sell filed.
I
Est. George Townsend. Bond of
| Admr. filed, letters of admlnlstrn| tion issued, order limiting settle। ment entered, petition for hearing
I claims filed, notice to creditors is-1
sued.
Est. Etta Mather. Petition for
Admr. filed, order for publication
entered.
Est. Artemecia Babcock. Supple­
ment to final account filed.
Est. Mary Ann Collier. Annual
account filed.
Est. Emma M. Bowerman
Bond
of Admr. filed, letters of administra­
tion Issued.
Est. Charles A. Armstrong. War­
rant and inventory filed.

MH. Paride of Hint te visiting at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. John
fwmrrfwll
Robert Gelman ot Battle creek
spent the past week with hte grand­
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Will Ourd.
Mr. and Mrs. William Hammond
of Battle Creek spent Wednesday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Ardy
Owen.
Myron Wertman and family of*
Battle Creek spent Bunday after­
noon with hte parents, Henry Werlman. and wife.
Leland Harshbarger of Grand
Rapids spent the week end with
his parents. Mr. and Mrs. E. Harsh­
barger.
Mtes Gladys calms ot Wall lake
visited her sister. Mrs. Floyd Owen

COATS GROVE.
Mrs. Jessie Chase and Mrs. Ethel
Hall are planning to start thte
Monday to visit relatives in the west
in Washington state and California.
Mr. and Mra. Ray Coats of Grand
Rapids visited at George Coats' on
Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wing of
Cincinnati and Mr. and Mrs. Colon
Bchalbly visited last week al An­
drew Townsend's.
Mr. and Mrs. E. 8- Thompson and
daughter Virginia and Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Thompson and children went
to Kaiamaaoo on Bunday to visit
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox.
Mr. and Mra. Geo. Holly and Mr.
and Mrs. William Hanson of Dut­
ton called on Kendall Coats- and
family on Bunday.
Mrs. Earl Bchled ot Saranac and
Mrs. Harry Kettle of Loa Angeles,
visited Geo. Coats and family Sat­
urday.
Plans are being made for the
Sunday school to conduct a Dally
Vacation Bible school in the near
future. The Bunday school te en­
gaged In a special program ot Bible
study and attendance lo continue
until September. It te a "Highways
and Hedges" campaign and lhe mot­
to te "Reaching the Unreached.''
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Demond
visited Mr. and Mrs. Rob Demond
in Kalamo on Sunday.
We are glad to report that Ken­
dall coats te better now.
Miss Freda Smith relumed Wed­
nesday from a ten days' trip sight­
seeing... In northern Michigan.
"Dad" Angell of Hastings called
on Kendall Coats recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvc Woodmarr
and daughter visited Henry Uty and
family ot Shepherd last Wednesday.
Mrs. Woodman and Ruth going on
to Bayport, stopping at Bay City
and at Midland to call on Mrs.
Clarence Shelley and Mrs. Nell
Smith.
E. 8. Thompson te lii poor health
and expects to go to Ann Arbor soon
for treatment.
Ruth Woodman visited Sunday at
E- G. Smith's. Mr. and Mrs. Raj
Sprague of California called there
In the afternoon.
Eugene Davenport and Mrs. Ethel
Hall of Woodland called at the
Kendall Coats home last Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Holly and Mr. and
Mrs. Hanson ot Dutton called on
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Richardson
on Bunday.

ICE PRESERVED IN
t dLD SAWDUST PILE

'

Gtolotfilg Inttifuod
Mu«kollaifo Lake Pholoaini

her *M

OQC boys on work projects at

day k trunk of

curios

to

show,

the halcyon

es and piled 40 foot high,
These skins had been tanned and
reposes tn the solid pile
mad&lt; into rute. M7 Lightfoot Ob­
jawdust and bark, which
tained them animals htatoU in In­
.
accumulated 40 or go years
dia. They also had garments show­
ago.
The
old mill was located on
ing tbe India costumes; throe or
four snake skins, a python and a the shore of Laks Superior below
tiie escarpment on the site of the
abandoned town ot Doer Park. The
lives worship, and a copper pot,
site ot the old village te still vis­
which they call a beggar's pot. its
neck being small so that when money ible to tourists, between Lake Su­
was dropped Into it, it would be im­ perior and Muskellunge lake. Su­
perintendent Steve McDonald esti­
possible for one to reach a hand
in to take any out. Mrs. Lightfoot mates that well over two and oneand two daughters were entertained half mllUan feet of lumber was
sawed to make the gigantic pile of
sawdust. A mystery which still
Bush.
baffles geologists has also occupied
the attention of the boys. Muskelthis week Tuesday by Mr. and Mrs. lunge lake, the north shore of which
Myron Scnsiba at thalr cottage *t te only 200 feet from Lake Superior,
Mud lake In Yankee Springste elevated between 50 and 60 feet
Mr. and Mra. Saunders have been above the latter. Band from the
entertaining the former's mother, shore ot Muskellunge lake, when
sister and brother from Detroit. placed in a water glass and covered
Mra. Saunders entertained Tuesday with water, will not allow the water
evening in honor ot her dadgHler to penetrate It. while lhe sand from
Normas tenth birthday.
Lake Superior is readily penetrated
Mr. and Mra. L. N. Bush spent by water.
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Highway M-4«, which approaches
to within 40 feet ot lhe east shore
Gaskill at Comstock.
of Muskellunge lake, te three feet
Mr. and Mra. H. P. Wertman vis­
below lake level, yet no water cov­
ited Mr. and Mra. Ray Johnson at
ers IL
Yorkville Sunday afternoon. ,
Mr. and Mra. Glenn Williams and
CARLTON CENTER.
children of Kellogg's Farm spent
A number of friends of Mr. and
Saturday night and Sunday with Mrs. Lloyd Shroyter met at the
Mr. and Mra. John Adams .
Orange Hall Thursday evening for
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Reynolds and a farewell party. Mr. and Mrs.
’' soon *leave for their
children of Chicago were week-end Shroyer will
guests ot Mr. and Mra. H. T. Rey­ new home In Marshall, The best
wishes of their friends go with
nolds.
them.
Mrs. Frank Gloasup and two sons
Ed. Henney of near
Freeport
of Lansing were guests of Mrs. John
spent part of last week with
___ __
his
Adams Friday.
nephew and wife. Mr. and Mrs.
Dewey Cardd, a former Delton Fred Henney.
'
boy. who now has a government de­
Mr. and Mrs. Struble and family
tective job. was calling on friends of Hastings visited the latter’s sis-*
In Delton one day last week.
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Nash. Bunday.
Chester Norwood of Sheridan
Friends of Mrs. John Osborne
spent a part of last week with Mr. were sorry to hear of her serious
•snd Mrs. M. B. Norwood.
Illness, but we are glad to report
Mra. Carl Simmons of Ann Arbor that at this writing she te some betvisited her steler, Mrs. Helen Pen­
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henney re­
nock, Friday.
Mrs. Esther Dunn and Mra. Leda '' turned home Bunday after spending
Harrington were Battle Creek vis­ • the past week with lhe latter's
brpther, at Midland.
itors Tuesday.
Mr. and Mra. Earl Beaver are the
parents of a little son bom Thurs­
day morning, June 25th, at the
home of Mra. Beaver’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. William Quick.
Mcsdames
Barnum,
Dunning,
Dunn and Harrington attended a
horticultural school In Battle Creek
last week Tuesday.
Mrs. Maude Corwin ot Battle
Creek vteited Mra. Hattie Whitte­
more Bunday.
.
Mr. and Mra. Merle Harrington of
Kalamazoo spent Sunday with their
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Har­
rington.
Mtes Lea trice Dunning spent Fri­
UWCtf T4HE OC BUS
day with friends at Podunk lake.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Barnum. Mra.
\ HIT.
Beatrice Dunning,
Mrs.
Eloise
Leonard and Mrs. Lula Wertman
ittcnded a landscape gardening tour
conducted by Harold J. Foster and
Prof. O. I. Gregg. Friday. Thte tour
gave an opportunity to study varie­
ties. development and use of shrubs
about the home grounds.
"Mary s Merry Maids" will meet
with Mtes Lea trice Dunning Thurs­
day afternoon.
Mtes
Marie
Ncuschaffer and
mother leave Thursday for an auto
trip to Colorado. Mtes Marie will
be gone thru the month ot July and
her mother will stay until in Octo-

PUBLIC ENEMIE5

bbaG'

7Q

LENT CORNERS.
Elmer Ritter of Battle Creek spent
lhe week end with his father, Hugh
Ritter.
Billy Paul of Kalamazoo Ls visit­
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
ing his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel W. Buckmaster. Maple
Jay Hall.
Grove ...........................................74
Mr. and Mrs. George Comfort, Jr..
Anna Hamilton. MapleGrove . . .’.50 of Kalamazoo spent Saturday and
Adeibert Health. City
............. 25 Sunday with her parents. Mr. and
Charlotte E. Zuyhnltt. city ........ 24 Mra. Marcus Hammond.
I Kenneth.
Howard
and
Paul
Thomas attended lhe motorcycle
NORTH HOPE.
Mr. and Mrs. George Mosier and
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Anders in com­ races at Kalamazoo Sunday.
pany with Mrs. Charlet Welch of
Donald Butler of Battle Creek family of Kalamazoo and Mr-. Lu­
the Striker district, attended the called ory his mother. Mrs. Melvin cinda Eddy were Bunda; guests ot
fourth sight seeing trip at Detroit Crum. Saturday.
Mr. and Mra. George Eddy at Wall
Thursday.
'
Jacob Van Hout, a former resi­ lake, the occasion being the 17th
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Pranshka en­ —
dent• W,
of this neighborhood, passed wedding
of Mr. uiu
and
------- ...o anniversary
...... w&gt;
tertained on Bunday. Mr and Mrs. away at the home of hte
his daughter. ; Mra. George Eddy.
Mrs. Jennie
.— Harding
----------------of
- —
Kalamazoo,
.-----------Thursday. July D. will be tho an­
Jack Farwell Mr. and Mrs. Emery —
Mnes and daughter. Iris and Mr. and was burled at Cressey. Tuesday nual trail hike and picnic of the
and Mrs. Pete Bumside and chil­
Miss Patricia Paul of Kalamazoo Delton inland Lakes Garden Club.
dren all of Kalamazoo.
spent the past week with
Mbs Mra. Blanche Eddy and Mrs. Mary I
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hill of Bat­ Gloria Francisco.
Moorhus are the committee In
tle Creek spent Bunday with Mr.
Richard Hall Is home for the sum­ charge. The transportation com­
and Mrs. Albert Ulrich.
mer.
mittee. Mesdames Whittemore atjd
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Anders motored' Rollins Hall Is working at La Belle Kern
will_____
have_____
some dutfbs lo per_________
to Kaiamaaoo Tuesday.
resort. Gull lake, for the summer.
form for this day.

YOU CAN BUY BOTH

REFRIGERATOR and RANGE
I OR WATER HEATER)

4

DELTON.

The Odtr Creek school picnic I
ill be at tho schoolhouse Baturiy, July ll. Bring your table serv-

Court News

YEARS
TO PAY

DELIVERS ROTH
Or Buy Any One on 3-Ycor Terms!
$3 down on Refrigerators; $2.50 down on Ranges.

ELECTRIC

WASHER
BARGAINS
Wash away those Monday chores
—the popular ABC and Universal
Washers with 1SJ6 improvements do
the best work you ever saw: And

"Tke fll’ctkd.a.ij

OF TIB RATIO!
laly 4, ins

WATER HEATERS

L
kW

"Eosy to Buy—Cheap to U»e”
special heater Is "cheaper thar^ dirt"
—rives you 24-hour Instant service
for only a few cents a day. Trade
in yoir old haater or waafeful fur­
nace coil m part payment.
The whole family will be grateful
for thia Hille helper.

)■
M
JH
Pt

lo bo corrected. But wo Amarirans
enjoy more freedom, more comforts
and luxuries than are granted to any
other people.
May this 160th birthday bo u In­
spiration to now unity and devotion
in working dut our common problems.

C DOWN

DELIVERS IT!

YEARS
TO PAY

3
MERS POWER CO

OR PHONE 2309

Wo celebrate the 160th armlvoraary of the birth ol our Nation.
"Government of the people,
by tho people, and for tho
people," is not perfect. Men and
women are not perfect. It is true,
that in a Republic founded upon
tho principle of human equality,

there are still grave inequalities
1 lo bo overcome, groat injustices

NO CHARGI
FOR INSTALLATION

All Kinds of Home Conveniences—

Watch her step." invites The
BraKKart. "Shen! do 70-80-90
11c Procecdl to prove it
Pride in one’s .ca»- is under­
standable but there is no excuse
for "putting it through its paces"
on the public highways. Such
recklessness invites disaster.
~~n a- Jd

DELIVER ONE THIS WEEK FOR
H DOWN—15-MONTH TERMS.
ABC and Ironrite Ironers com­
plete the perfect laundry. They're

Come In!—See our Cormvol of Values

i

N
K

OF HASTINGS
HUT

s

INGA MICHIGAN

Good drivers realise that a
car's speed and power is there
for their protection.

�riot Kaettkoe BAJorry, nroarosr,
Mary Gamphier, Cincinnati,' Ohio,
OUR1NE for my boy, and now ha
bean everything on the radio. Bafore he used OUR1NE, be could not
hear the radio." OURINE was cre­
ated by a Vienna car specialist for
people hard ol hearing, bothered by
head noises, earache, ringing and
buxzlng. Get relief today with .OUR­
INE. Costa only a few cents dally.
Money returned if not satisfied —
Carveth &lt;&amp; Stebbins, the Rexall
Bio*-'
------

&gt; —&gt;al,J
Msalnallca «

“tSHK.
».*.».
Stuart Clement. Jud

&gt;3
it,,-1 xu
th«U

MfHrJrjmUb. Betiatar ot Probate.

October.'
win bo
rd by said court
of OotoboT. A. P
hs forenoon,
lated. Jana 16. A. D. 1936.
Stuart Clomant. Judx. st Probato.

OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION,
of Mlshlrsn. tho Probata Ooui
OBDBB BOB PUBLICATION
irnican. mo 1

'■Mt.'s®
July, A. D. 1938. at ten n'clock In the
garvxi "KM'JS; ari.s

sated to William H. B.attlo or to
ctb.r aultabl. p.raoo.
'
irloc. In the
lPer prUUd

SlLS’l.i*. B«tUI«r of Probata.
MOTICB or MOBTOAGB RALE.

MOTICB OB MOBTGAGH BALE.
CORPORATION.

wlfo of tho City of Ha.llnra. Harry of Deeds for Barrv County. Mlchlran.
County. Mlchlran. to HOME OWNERS1 B Auruet 33nd. 1934. In Libor 97 oi
LOAN CORPORATION, a Corporation orortraree. on Pare 193. and aald martranlsad und.r lh. laws of th. unll.d
th. 1M4.
Pare B01

:t,"L

Hl"

for principal
iltht Hundred
3494 97) and

78/100

provided. NOTICE IB HEREBY

tho place of boldine Circuit Court In

rhlrh
aa follot

Caatleton.

the Cit

■crlbed aa:

Sated: April 32nd. 1936.
HOME OWNERS' LOAN COR­
PORATION. Mertraceo.

NOTICE TO OBBDTTOBB.
Dated: Anri) Mnd. 1936.
HOME OWNERS' LOAN COR-

Nolle, I.

Olean D. M.thrwi.

NOTICE or MORTGAQB BALE.

•vlf. Plnroneo P. Hnwsll. of ih* Vlllaro of
Ns.brill., n.rrv County. Mlchlran. to
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPORA-

»u

Y. M. C.

A. ITEMS

Miss Oretta lum of Alma and
Middleville will.lead nature lore and
will reveal the secrets of Insect world
to our girl campers July IB-23. MUs
lulzl La making up special summer
school work to be with us as leader.
Lynn Perry and Horace Angell of
Hastings left Saturday, June 27. for
the Oakland Co. Y. M- C. A. Camp,
which Is near Hale, to serve as lead­
ers and asslstanla.
The Barry-Eaton delegation to
the National Hl-Y Congress at Be­
rea last week, returned safe and
sound Thursday at 2 A- M.. having
the experience of their Uvea hi meet­
ing boys from 38 states and England.
Canada and Honolulu. Some state­
ments from a few of the speakers
will give a slight Idea of the tempo
ot the meeting.
“War la unthinkable by reasonable
folks.”—A soldier on submarine de­
stroyer.
"Quality of a man Is determined
not by what he possesses but by
what he can do without."
Branch Rickey, vice-president of
the cardinals, was speaker on three
of tbe four days and as president of
tbe Conference, he said: "Never as­
sume victory before it is won." "Do
not violate conventionalities without
deep thinking." "Be satisfied with
nothing but the best."
"Immoral pictures are those that
do not tell lhe truth." "Any person
who takes a reward that has not
been earned robs society.”—Dr.
Frank Slutz.

Clate Louden, who Is under the
doctor's care 13 some better at pres­
ent. Sunday visitors there were Mr.
and Mrs. George Sprague of Delton.
Mr. and Mrs. Bull of Bunnell dis­
trict and Mr. and Mrs. Kablll of
Richland. Mr. and Mrs. Will Lou­
den and daughter. Marvel Garbel
and little son of Gull lake were vlsltors on Friday evening. We al! hop?
We are sorry to hear that Mrs.
Clate will soon be better.
MOTICB TO GBBDITOBS.
Conklin is quite sick from compli­
Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. cations resulting from a severe cold.
Rex Walers visited Fred Kelley at
Don't forget to celebrate the
New Borgess hospital. Mr. Kelley Fourth al Fine lake.
A. Bun
had the misfortune to fall through
McQuai
Noth
the scaffold in his bam tearing sev­
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mrs. Jim Dibble spent a week reeral of his ribs loose. His many
friends hope for his speedy recovery. crntly In Peoria. Ill,, with Mr. and I
Mrs. Clara Gainder spent from Mrs. Robert Dibble and little
Thursday until Sunday with her sis­ daughter.
On Thursday Mrs. A. E. Benedict |
ter. Mabel and family near Gales­
burg.
and son Zane of Lansing, Mrs.,
Ed. and Jason Willison were In Grace Carpenter and Miss Mary ।
Ellen
Carpenter of near Detroit’
Allegan Monday on business.
Mrs. Pauline Boulter. Mrs. Bliss, were guests of Mrs. John Benedict.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen King of
Boulter and Mrs. Pauline Rupe and,
son, Charles, were in Kalamazoo on, Woodland visited Mr. and Mrs.
John Whilrlght and other friends,
Friday.
•
NOTICE or MORTGAGE SALE.
Mr. and Mrs. Ike Leinaar accom­ on Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Vanderbrookj
panied Earl Knowles and Mrs. Earl
Fritz to Battle Creek on Tuesday have come to live in their farm |
home here. We arc glad to welcome I
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. elate Louden. Mrs., them to our. community.
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPORA­ Rhlerson Louden and Miss Lydia
Mrs. Howard Booth and little
TION. a Corporation orreniird under lhe Dunn were in Hastings Tuesday on(-daughter of Lansing Is staying with :
Mrs. John Benedict while Mr. Bene- i
business.
Mr. and Mrs, von Dunn nnd son, diet is working in Lansing.
Miss Doris Hall came Saturday j
of Delton were dinner guests Sun­
uay of
ui Mr.
air, and
tuiu Mrs.
nars. Ike
ise Leinaar
LX.'iiiaar and
ana from
aiuui her work
wu&lt;» at Ann
aiu. Arbor
zuvu&gt; and
u,,u «&gt;
U&gt;
day
an Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs. visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs.t
George Leinaar and daughter. Jose- [ Ritchie Mullen.
phlne were visitors.
John Belson. Sr., and Bimle BelMr. nnd Mrs. Allen Griffen were' son and family attended a reunion,
dinner guests Sunday evening of j Sunday at the home of Charlie Bel­
their friends.
Perrv son's at Climax.
climax.
friends, Mr
Mr. and Mrs
Mrs. Percy
94/100 Doiiere (33.899.9*4)
Last Wednesday MYs. Fred Camp'
Vandyke in Kalamazoo.
Several from this neighborhood enjoyed meeting old friends at the i
enjoyed tiw? Ladles' Aid supper home of Mrs. Wm. McCann in Irv-:
Ing. Mrs. McCann was hostess to
which was held at Mrs. Ila Gay's.
Stea-art Waters and family were the Y. M. L. Club of which Mrs.
dinner guests on Sunday of Mr. Camp was a member 20-years ago.
Last week Mr. and Mrs. James
and Mrs. Gordie Durkee In Delton.
Ray Durkee and family of Delton Burdick of Portland were guests of
spent Sunday with her brother Ed. the Jim Dibble's at their cottage at
Barlow lake. Mrs. Dibble's brother
Willison.
Mrs. Bess Waters called recent­ was also a guest.
ly on Mrs. Ed. Newton of Hinds
PLEASANT RIDGE.
Comers, who is confined lo her bed.
Ray
of..Los
Mrs. m»Ei4c
Myrtle Leinaar
had uuiic
quite u
a . Mr., and_ Mrs.
mi».
ucuuiar uau
.
, -. Sprague
■ ”,
Flock Monday when she Tell from 1 Angele. Cal. called Sunday aftera load of hay bruhlng hermit quite
“ ChJJ. Toanaend a.
badly and receiving two Muck eyes. I “f- ““ ,Mrs- &lt;*•*
She reel, lucky that It waa no worw. Mildred tonne ol Battle Creek
Bhe and Ike were In Ha.Ungt Sat-1 •P'1.11 Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
urday to have her glasses repaired Le£ter
. ,
as a result of the fall.
Greydon Wood Is spending this
___________ t a d
| week with his grandparents near ■
aa follow*:
.HENDERSHOTT.
Carlton Center.
j
Mrs. John Brogan find the misMr. and Mrs. B. J. Holland and
fortune to fall breaking her right' children Teddy and Barbara. Mrs. ■
arm below the elbow and suffering Harold Smith and son Donald of •
other bad bruises.
| Ovid spent Saturday afternoon with ,
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Van Vranken | Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Richardson.

aosllne

hlahi

t&gt;oYS flR£ UK6 THAT. "

—------------ .----------------------------------------------- r
Gee,
i'm in A spot; i Bar cue More Plate to

iOTICB TO CXEDITOB1.
Mlchlsaa. tho Probata Court

MT

iclt i.

P^e

atod: Juno 101k 1936.
‘
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO­
RATION. Mortxarce.

...... .

------------------------------------------------ j ■
■
went to Alto Saturday to attend the
wedding of their granddaughter,
Hugh McLaughlin for many years
Eleanor Hayward U&gt; Jamps A. Green
a resident of the Powers neighbor­ Bellevue.
of Lowell.
hood has been spending several days
Mr. and Mra. Theron Mate, with Ln and around town.
and Mrs. Nellie Laks
Mrs. Laura Dell of Charlotte and
There will be a Gospel Service at
Mr. and Mrs. Lundberg of Lansing
called on Mrs. Ella Lahr at Albert the home of James Nagel Tuesday and Mrs William
eventtig.
July
7.
Everyone
invited.
Brill's, after attending the funeral,
of their aunt, Mrs. Celia Traver,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bchlffman of postponed until July lo.
last Tuesday.
Battle Creek visited their folks here
Ernest Matteson with Ed. Cassidy j Sunday.
of Battle Creek were in Kalamazoo,
Mrs. Lillie Sowerby and daugh­
Tuesday night lo call on Mrs. Mat- | ters. Mis* Lillian Sowerby and Mrs.
teson al Hie home of Mrs. Lena; Argyle Wlndes attended the gradua­
Lamphcre. Mrs. Matteson returned tion exercises at Greenville, when
Waddell's sister and husband
home on Wednesday.
the two older sens of Maurice
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Striker of Sowerby were graduated frtpn high Grand Rapids.
Athens were guests at the Ronald . school.
»
talned their children from Kalama­
Haynes home from Wednesday I
Lyle Wilcox arid family are zoo Sunday nnd on tbe previous
night to Thursday night. Sunday
camping at Gun lake and enjoying Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. jfciin Ten
evening callers al the Haynes' were
tbe baas Ashing.
Harkel of Grand Rapids visited Ute
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Schkntx ot
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wilcox were Perrys here.
Hastings.
The children's Bible school start­
ed this Monday morning and con­
tinues two weeks. Rev. Conklin
started meetings Sunday
night
which will continue each night ex­
cept Saturdays for the duration of
Ute Bible school. Come and bring
your friends.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Clark were in
Jackson Sunday to attend the Henry
family reunion. Mrs. Henry returned
home with them after visiting there
lhe past two weeks.
The Matteson. Christensen and
Garrison families with Mr. and
Mrs, Harry Whitworth from the
Week's district spent Sunday at
| Barlow lake.
The community Club will hold
their picnic at Fine lake on lhe
Fourth. This is the nicest and saf­
est place for lhe kiddles to play in ;
the water.
Ezra smith ot Chicago is visiting
his friend. Albert Brill, for a cou­
ple of weeks.
Friends and relatives of Mrs. Leo
Hendershott from Shultz gave her
a birthday surprise Saturday night.
Sunday callers at her home were
Mr. and Mrs. Don Parish and fam­
A LARGE VARIETY OF FICNIC AND
ily frdm Texas Corners near Kai-:

nnNa.

Deaf Boy Now Hears Radio

GET WTO THE COPBOARO, BUT EVEffT TIME I OPEN
THE DOO&amp;PTHE PEST OF THE DlSHES WANT TO
COME OUT/

ERYD,

HOLIDAY FOOD SPECIALS FOR A

GLORIOUS

TION.

4TH

JULY

CELEBRA­

IF YOU ARE ‘GOING OUT”

C.THOMAS

OR STAYING AT HOME YOU WILL
FIND YOUR FOOD

NEEDS

AT C.

THOMAS STORES AT PLEAS­
ANT SAVINGS!

SANDWICH SPREAD KS &lt;*27c
Libby's Potted Meat 2 Lit
SHRIMP ri»OTWIT,AOX
TUNA FISH LIGHT MEAT
DEVILED HAM MtdluioTu'
CAI LAOkl
QMLMVn

FINEST PINK
FANCY RED

Tall can 12c
Tall can XSc

CORNED BEEF PREMIUM C“

FANCY QUEENS St*’
STUFFED IffE,.
RIPE OLIVES

DILLS
SWEET

ohabt

17C
CAMPUU'S

PORK &amp;
MUSTARD

GoHm Brawn
416 02.
CANS

e.

QT. JAR

a u e r o r f,nest m,u&gt;
Lnttbc. sns,n

P’NUT BUTTERF.

lb jm

FANCY COOKIES
EDGEWATER SANDWICH ix 12c
ORANGE PUFFS o.u~.
u. 17c
SUGAR WAFERS
u. 15c
SUNSHINE NOBILITY
box 33c
5B ASSORTED COOKIES
ONS POUND

_____

SURE

SET

SODA CRACKERS
2 &amp;
SALAD DRESSING tOT ft
Pin.appl. TID BITS 2 »CAMPBBIX'R

TOMAfO JUICE

GRAPE JUICE

2 °pt. bottle

m

"JUNKET" ISdSL
REFRESH ADE R?R

GELATINE DESSERT
In eald oounty. on
of October, A. D.

OBDBB YOB PUBLICATION.

Pineapple. Cherry,
Strawberry. Lemon.

2*&gt;- 9c

MILK ’&amp;SSHS-'

CRISCO
CAKE FOUR

MARSHMALLOWS
FRESH, TENDER

and ^djuatof aald 4a■o'bJte jE

2m

:li““

MISSION
OO/a
INN
Vi Ib. 4-Ov
FINEST QUALITY

ss'-yu.

Mlarat

COCOMALT IKK" ro00
23c
ORANGE SLICE Candy Ib. 10c

Belt Johncock. deceaaed
No ties la hereby riven t

rial!
HOME OWNERS' IXiAN COBPO-

Olenn D. Math ewe.

•b*. Awill be
iha 12ik

1!
2

VANILLA ffi'AST*
BaUr". CHOCOLATE
PICNIC PLATES
m
DIXIE CUPS
LUNCHEON SETS fM
Sc CANDY BARS
WAX PAPER
•DRINKING STRAWR
WHITE SHINCNLAa

C. THOMAS
1U WIST STATE mtEKT

3

�south

raum

SOUTHWEBT CARLTON.

Mr. and'Nhs Alva- Kenyon and
Bobbie and BMml* of Bellevue spent
Mra. Mance. Sunday afternoon with, hi* steter.
Ml* Uster Bonneville and family.
MOM Uay Sullivan apent Friday
and Saturday in Kaiamaaoo.
Loma Sonnertlle apent the week
end with her alster, Lorraine, at her
^l*mday ^wWi^hto

Landon. Mra. O. N. Landon, Mn.
Anna Buck. Esther and Kendall,
Mr. and Mra. Frank Shriber and

and son.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Anson of
Lorraine, Ohio, spent the past week
with Mr. and Mra. Lafayette Os­
borne and Mi-, and Mrs. Henry Wil­
better at thia
liams.
Kendall Buck and friend called
spending two weeks at tbe Spauld­
op Mr. and Mra. Leland Mills and
ing cottage at Wall lake.
family of Kalamazoo, Sunday.
•f their eon. WlUiam. in Battle
Mr.
and Mrs. Ford Enx of North
Mra. Kate Patton of Kalamazoo
Woodland called on her mother,
pie of Che Moulton church are plan­ called on Mr. and Mra. Mila Ashby Mra. Anna Buck. Sunday afternoon.
Sunday afternoon.
mag a two-day*' service Saturday
Mr. and Mra. Wm. Osborne of
Mr. and Mra. O. E. Kenyon with
' end Sunday. July 4 and 5. Plan
Grand Rapids called on Mr. and
‘ to attend as many services as poe- their five gueeto attended the Brush
Ridge Cemetery Circle at the home Mra. Lafayette Osborne Saturday.
k atele.
Sunday school at 10 o'clock and of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Aldrich
HOLMES CHURCH NEWS.
l preaching at 11 at Wood school­ near Hastings. Thursday. They all
Mr. and Mrs Howey Melzer and
house. Come and bring some one spent Friday with Wesley Brock­
way of Galesburg and on their way family from Goshen. Ind.. Mr. and
with you
,
home they called on Mr. and Mrs. Mrs Ora Frye from Lake Odessa
home of his son Ralph in Grand Glen Kenyon of Delton to get ac­ spent Sunday with the Henry BroRapids, with little hopes of hte rc- quainted with their new nephew. vont's.
Arnol.
Forty-five attended the Higdon
reunion at Welby Crockfords Sun­
day.
The Standard Bearers met with
, June Crockford Monday evening.

You Can't Saa All the Way Through a
Ball of Twine—So Buy

FARM BUREAU
BINDER TWINE
It is made from lhe best fibers in a modern plant by
experienced

twine-making

management

under

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THE CROSSROADS.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Stodge at.
tended a gatbering of friend* at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mart Fal­
coner of welcome Corners Bunday
afternoon In honor of the farmers'
97th birthday.
John Wlllitt* and son Forest of
Ha*Ung* *pent the week end with
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest William*.
Homer Bate*. Mr. and Mrs. Ortey
Smith and Mtes Mary Green attend­
ed a family reunion at Thomapple
lake Bunday.
John and Theodore Cook and
famine* and Mr. Gilbert of N.
Broadway attended a family gathr
ering at the home of Date Cook near
Freeport.
Harold Williams and Forest Wlllilto vtelted the loiter'* steter. Mrs.
Mildred Rou*h. of Gun lake Bunday.
STATE ROAD.
Mra. Mae Sothard Hart spent two
weeks with her son. James Sothard.
and wife. Chester Norwood of Sheri...............
-----dan
wm a visitor
there
the past
..

Mrs. Swan Anderson entertained
her sister and children of Kansas a
week. They returned home last
week. Mrs. Anderson and daughter
going with her. They will drive by
way of Texas and visit the Cen­
tennial.
Miss Majesty Becker is spending
some of her school vacation with
I
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
I Miss Edna EHenbaas of Hastings her sister. Mrs Ruby Henney. In
1 and Arlte Calthrop colled on Mra. Hastings.
| Wm. Cramer. Jr.. Friday afternoon.
Archie Cunningham is driving a
Mrs. Morris Haines of the Center new Pontiac car.
Friends of Robert Martin are
road visited her sister, Mra. Fred­
erick Fuhr. Wednesday.
I sorry to hear of his serious illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Levi Mead of Has- Bobby lived on *our road many
ting* were Sunday guesto of Peter I years before hte marriage to Miss
Steel.
I Juna Perry nnd was well liked by all
Misses Donna and Henrietta Po- [ of us. Wc hope for his speedy re­
land of Middleville returned home i covery.
Friday night after spending the past | Mr. and Mrs. James Swaftson were
week with their sister. Mril Mary ‘ In Big Rapids with thrir son Harold
Cramer.
last week,
*" *■'
his wife being in the hosMr, and Mrs. B L. Houghtalln i pltal for an appendicitis operation.
Mrs Dora Coleman of Rutland
and sons ot Battle Creek spent from
Thursday until Sunday at their cot­ spent the week end with her sister,
tage here.
| Mrs. Janet Peltenglll.

MARTIN CORNERS.
IiltJlr school ended Sunday
r—wh MmniwMMi o aeration.
by the children. We all enjoyed
their hearty elnglng and quick re-

by tbe leaders, and the dieplay of
things made by children. Robert
Varney, Helen Naylor and Marjorie
Kuball received prises for the best
work in their respective classes.
Much credit Is &gt;due the Mtom
Fiances and Marguerite Conklin for
their excellent work with the chil­
dren.
1 Mr. and Mra. Frank Trsutvrein of
Altoona, Pa., are visiting tbe forat Alfred Fisher's.
Mra. H F. Munn and Mias Lena
Heideman of Lakeview were Bunday
afternoon callers at Mr. and Mra.
Orr Fisher's.
Miss Una Heideman of Lakeview.
Mrs. Carrie Fisher of the Blate
road. Miss Freda smith of Coats
Grove and Miss Margaret McPharlln of Hastings returned last week
from a 10 days' motor trip through
northern Mlohlgan.
They report
the copper country very beautiful
and a very enjoyable trip.
His many friends are all very
sorry lo hear of Che serious illness
of Robert Martin of Lakeview and
all are earnestly hoping for his
speedy and complete recovery.
Mrs. Millie Fisher and other
friends are looking forward with
. ............................
.
. ..
...
joyous expectations to a visit with

for home talent

on a trip tn the nori
the suite to visit' tho
chto
.
MYs. Frank HawWlla called on
lir. and Mn. Dew* JM*
iljftn NaShvlUtf, ffimdky.
Merle Hodman of Cleveland, Q,
la spending hit vacation
ma

Mr. and Mra. Howard Burchett
and family of near Nashville called
an Byron Guy* Bunday.
MIm Arliss Calthrop of Prairie­
ville vUlted at Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Btdelman's the past week. Sunday,
Mr. and Mra. Marshall Calthrop
■ came with Mrs. Saddler, who had
been visiting there and Aril** rt-

tumans^wnHThiin.

■

monlh of June.
i. drlto Fteher and

AMy It.
D. Pierce in Clur-

The DOWllng Thwnaend Club wiU
unite with tiw cluba from Hastings
Mid1 MbMivtDe and hold a joint pic­
nic at Thomapple lake Saturday,
JU1F4I With a Ipteker in attendance.
An Invitation to all.
Mr. and Mr*. Leallc Conklin ore
tha parents of a «on who was bom

Kalamaxod and

B.iuF»w&gt;r

POD UN*.

Mra. Boll Bchwucho has returned
rom Leslie where she spent revcral
ays with her daughters and their
xmllies whlta hrr home here waa
undergoing repairs.
Ttte-BdUer reunion will be held at
the Wsnk Herrtngton resort BaturdayJUly4.
__________

Mr. and Mra, Will Nash and fam­
ily of near Marshall spent Thurs­ July 4th at Pndrtevllte pazk, Gull
day evening- at Mr. and Mra. Berio lake. Pot luck dinner1. Bvwyone
b nham mbtbiot
Nash's.
taka tabla ttryiot.
.
At the 4 A. B&gt; social at Orson Mc­
Mr. and .Mto. Oody Laubaugh Intyre's Saturday evening, the Ice
SOUTH BOWNE.
■paft Sum,, MU, Imt pM, lir cream was all sold before tbe crowd
JV**1*.!?10" c"lPrJuln5tl an&lt;j Mrs. Kenny of Naghville.
had all been served: about twsntyy*th a ,
dJnner Bunday ta
Mr. and MYs. Ralph Brown apent nlne dollars was token In.
hnnnr
honor of
of h™
her hiuhind
husband and steter, Sttodty with Mr. Mid- Mn. Oliver
Mbs Beatrice Buxton was hostess
their old friend and neighbor. Mrs. Mrs. Jake Wolf, of Hastings. Other Hayward at Kalamazoo.
to' her Bunday Bible class at her
Mr. and MYs John Stamm have home Thursday evening.
I Alonzo Hilton and daughter Hazel guests were Mr. and Mrs. John
About
Mishler.
Mr
and
Mrs
Arthur
movyd
onto
ttrt
W.'
J.
WttXUU
Um:
' of Saugus, Mass. They expect to
thirty were present and spent an
8am
MY. and Mra. Uni’Smith of Kai­ enjoyable evening. Lunch was fol­
। start for Michigan July 4 and will Ingrraol of Grand Rapids,
vUit relatives in Kalamazoo before Oelgtr of Quimby, Mr. and »4ra. amaaoo vuite* hte- daughter. MYs lowed by a shower for Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Calms of- Irving, Mra. Warren Uubaugtf the' week • end.
coming here.
Norman Stanton (Doris oolei.'
Deeda Nagler of Freeport and Jake
Jim Gramaa, who ha* been caring
Mr. and Mrs. Royal Donovan and
Wolf of Hasting*.
for hte father in Battle Creek the sons started Monday on their sum­
ASSYRTA.
Harold Yoder and family attend­ past three months, has returned mer's travels with the rodeo with
Mrs. Floyd Urick of the Star dis­
ed the funeral of their aunt at Mid­ home, hi* father being better.
which they have worked far several
trict who has been in 111 health for
dleville Monday afternoon.
Mrs. Detphlxie Flnathsm to stay­
sometime, was taken to the Unimi BJ1U m
*'■
Andy Blough and ing with her parent*. Mr. add Mra.
Mr. and' Mrs. Claud Hoffman and
vcrslty haspital al Ann Arbor last.
' M1Iler and w
!. «
Chet Englehardt white her husband sons, Frank Hyde, and Mr. and Mrs.
week fdr observation and treat- , ron-d at Harold YrvfeFe- SiZha?
is in camp.
ment The four month* old baby te J
A. t: Harding attended the birthday
Mr. and Mra.~Rayaj'’‘King“’smd
Mra. Jennie Loehr has returned dinner at Naahville. Bunday, honor­
being caj-ed for al lhe home of Mrs. Mr. nnd Mra. Vernon King of Weld­
to her . home, after spending two in* Mrs. Louise Marshall.
Addiso^ Russell.
ing. Mra. Noah Shaffer of North weeks tn Jackson.
Maynard Tucker of Clarksville
;
Mr. and Mrs. George Stanford. Bowne and James Shaffer were
1 accompanied by the latter's father, Sunday guesto at Elmer Shaffer's.
.
RTRIMJL
Cheescman's, Bunday.
Borne of th* children In thia vi­
George Conklin and son John, took
Mrs. Lydia Karcher returned
in the interesting beauties al the W. from Indiana Sunday where she cinity are attending Dally Vacation
CLAY HILLS.
K. Kellogg bird sanctuary, recently. has been assisting in caring for a Bible school at Hendershott this
Haying is the order ot the day
Mr. and Mrs. Horry Cotton enter­ sick lady.
here.
tained at Sunday dinner honoring
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Merrill and
Mr. and Mra. Robert Naah of
Fem and June McNce attended
. their sister. Mrs. Frank Parmalee ffibum. Hl., were Friday
night Mr and Mrs peril Conklin of Bed­ a Bunday school picnic on Ute banks
nee Mac
’
-----cheeseman
and hus- guests of Jennie Pardee. They also ford were guesta of Mr. and Mrs. of the Thomapple river Thursday.
bond of Battle creek who were re- i attended the Naah reunion which Oriey Merrill Bunday.
Charlotte Tungatc and Maxine
cently married at Angola. Ind. Sev-1 wm held at Bowne Center SaturA1 goodly number of neighbors MCKlver of Parmalee called on
gathered at the home of. Mr. and friends here last week.
eral social fetes have been tendered day. returning home Monday.
That Make More Than a Flash and Bang
the bride in localities where she has
Leap Karcher of Freeport has Mrs. Ralph Btriker for a miscellan­
MY. and Mra. Ray McCaul en­
previously lived.
been doing carpenter work at lhe eous shower honoring Mn. Dale tertained relatives from-Ohio this
Bump of Hartings. Ti-.e guest of week. On Sunday they attended a
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley French and Abe Eash home.
daughter. Mrs. Sadie Brown, and
Marian Pardee and Jennie Par­ honor' was' the recipient of many family reunion at the home of Wil­
CORN FLAKES
APPLE BUTTER
lotely gifts.
husband were recent dinner guests dee were in Hastings Friday.
liam Hullet in Middleville.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry MoClurkin
at the Mr. and Mrs Emerson CortMra. Milton Murphy spent Fri­
Large size
4 /&gt;(
38 ounce
.4 g"c
Harold England and family of
and children of Middleville spent Lansing and Mr. and Mrs. Morris
right home. They also visited Mrs. day in Hastings.
Kelloggs’—
I v
can—
I 3
French's sister and husband. Mr.
Miss Marion Griffin vUlted in the we*k end with Mr. and Mrs. ira Lewis of Kalamazoo were guests of
and Mrs. Silas Gaskill. Other guests Hastings and Indiana last week, re­ Chaffee.
thelf parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leon
B. N. Cpwan of coals Grove spent I
were Mr and .Mrs. Vern Bivens turning home Friday evening.
Potts. Saturday night. They at­
from near Nashville.
MIm Retha SavacOol of Freeport Sunday with hte slater. Mrs. Harry tended the reunion at Julian Potto'
12 ox. can Libby's Corned Beef, 18c
The Misses Atabellc Bivens grad­ was a Monday night guest
of Roeho.
Bunday, guesto being present Irom
uate of the loss' Barry County Nor-- Gwendolyn Mishler.
MY.
aqd
MYs.
Ralph
Striker
and
.
Grand Rapids. Lensing, Marshall,
2—9 ox. cans French's Mustard___ 25c
mal class. Miss Elsie Conklin of the
Harry F. Miller and daughters. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bump ot Has- Kalamazoo, Plainwell and Bristol.
1036 class and sister. Miss Grace Jeon and Jerry, of Elkhart TM, ttftgi visited relatives in Lake Odes­
"
.
Conklin attended the class reunion called at the Jennie Pardee home sa Bunday.
2 cans Broadcast QQ&lt;
Campfire Marsh- 4 Qc
Marilyn and Junior England of
MTS. Elsie caateleln of Rockford Lansing art spending a week visit­
held at Gun lake on Sunday.
Sunday.
mallows, 1 Ib.—
I 3
Corned Beef Hash fcw
' Mrs. Mlnple Schroder of Assyria
The J. B. Wolf farm house was who ha* tiegn visiting in thia vicin­ ing their grand parents, Mr. and
Center is slaying at the Mr. and wired for electricity Thursday which ity. spent Sunday with Mr. apd-Mra. Mrs. Leon Pott*.
Lemons,
4 cans Campbell’s OCc
Mrs. Bernard Shepard home asslsl- the Richardson family greatly ap­ Gilbert Scott,
Pork and Beans— £3
MY- and MYs H. G. Barber of
ing in lhe care of the new daugh­ preciate.
PINE LAKE.
Hastings and Mrs. Harold Hepler
ter Carol Joyce
MIm Patricia Bellingham of De­
and children of Battle creek were troit is spending two weeks with her
HICKORY CORNERS.
Mrs. Charles Dolph of Bellevue
Fred Kelley, who te In Borgess guests Of Mr and Mrs. HaYry Rocho grandmother and other relatives.
1 quart can Dill Pickle,____________ 15c
substitute carrier on Route 3. Belle­
from several Saturday.
vue Is on duty while Miles Schrod­ hospital suffering
Mr. and Mrs. John Rogers and
MYs. Sarah Ickes and Mr. and I
broken ribs, te improving. Mra. Kel­
er is on vacation.
Marian Brown were in Kalamazoo
1 package Wheat Kritpies, lOVi ox., 10c
Mr and Mrs. clayton Case enter­ ley te staying in Kalamazoo white Mrs. Archie Herrington of Battle bn Monday.
he
is
at
the
hospital
and
Mrs.
Kate
Creek
visited
Mrs:
Ida
Wilkinson
of
tained on Father’s Day for their
W. C. Walker of Battle Creek
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson case. Burdick 1s helping with the house Maple Grove Sunday.
Picnic Hams, — Famous
spent Tuesday and Wednesday with
Sardines—Del Monte—
‘ Mr. and Mra. O. C. Hewitt were work in her absence.
his friend. Harry Killlck.
tomato or mustard sauce,
Brand — 5 lo 6 O4C
PLMABA^tT HILL
The annual Kinsley picnic was
dinner guests on Sunday at the
Carla Ann Nichols and Dorothy
large oval
Mr. and Mra. Roscoe Williams White of Kalamazoo are spending
lbs., hockless—■
home of their sister. Mrs. Vida Cary held Sunday at the schoolhouse
, and family ot the Poorman district. with between fifty and sixty pres­ and sons. Gordon and Robert, and lhe week with the formers grand­
, Other guests were Mr. Carey's moth­ ent from Battle Creek. Rtehtand. daughter, Emma, and Mis* Dotothy mother. Mrs. Clara Nichols.
Morgan Fruit
3 cam
Plainwell.
Bedford. LeRoy of Petoskey and Mra. Minnie
, er and stepfather. Mr. and Mrs. Kalamazoo.
Laura James is enjoying a week's
Mackerel—
Cole of South Battle Creek, who Grandville and other places. There Lake of Newberry spent Monday vacation from her duties at the Up­
were four former teachers present, afternoon and night at the R. J. john Co., tn Kalamazoo On Sunday
1 were recently married.
।
Miss Norma Cate of Lansing tbe oldest being Mrs. Marshall Bel­ and- C. A. Williams homes. Gordon Wte entertained Mr. and Mrs. Frank
3 cans Doggie Dinner
25c
spent the week end with her par- linger aged 90. who taught there id
Ashton, also MIm Grace Clark and
1867 and '66. Mra. Isabel Pancoast ot
enls, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Case.
Thomas Kaslead of Kalamazoo.
Hastings and her slater. Mrt. Milton and MIm Emmahad been attend­
1 package (reg. size) Pep
10c
Mr. and MYs. Btewart Alkcnhead
H1GKBANK.
Nobles of Orandvilte, also Mrs. Ada ing Michigan State at East Lan- and family of Cleveland spent flunRemember the Dorcas Society Douglas of Bedford were former **kLs iris Trivia of Grand Rapids 'day at their cottage on the south
will serve home-made ice cream teacher* present. John Malay of
shore' of pine lake.
and cake this Friday evening. July Plainwell wa* lhe oldest former realGINGER SNAPS
ORANGES
Gordon Champion spent the past
, third, at the home of Mr. and Mra. dent in attendance. He will be 91 in home of her uncle, Bert Palmer,
Med. size Sun- OEc I
1 lb. pkg.
4 Fc
| Lester Hawks. Mr. Hawks will fur­ November. Officers elected for next, and ’ family.
Old Style—
I3
kist, dozen—
I
The Sunshine Club al the home
nish ponies for all who wish to ride. year arc: President. Mra. Lena Mc­
| Everyone welcome.
Elwain; Secy, and Trees.. Mary
SOUTH THORNAPPLE.
Mr. and Mra. Myron sens!ba wlio
The neighbors attended the mis­ Cookston; program committee—Mrs.
cellaneous shower given for Mr. and Nellie Dayman, Mrs. Ethel Robin­ cooking' school at Middleville.
arc passing sometime at their cot­
Mra. Clifton Campbell and MYs. tage st Mud lake were callers reI Mrs. Emery Jones Friday evening. son. Mrs. Nelson Willison and Carl
|i Pot luck supper. They received Bellinger. The date to lhe second Clare Wllliama-atteiMted-the land­ .oeaUy of hte niece. Mr. and Mr..
scaping- tour FYlday.
(Robert Garrett.
many useful wedding gifts.
Sunday In July.
Mrs. John Corrigan returned ; Mrs. cha*. b. Johnson accom­
Mr. and Mra. Worth Green called
Mr.
and
Mra.
Alfred
Whldby
and
'
CLOSED SATURDAY. JULY 4TH
on Mr. and Mra. Clair Marshall ot children are in Rockford this week. home from St. Mary's hospital panied Mr. and Mra. Theodore
OPEN EVENINGS
HASTINGS
FREE DELIVERY
I Bellevue Saturday.
ripldly. Wierlnga and daughter. Anna May.
Mrs. Louis Hoffman and son Tuesday and te gaining
her of Middleville, and spent Sunday
: Mrs. Frank Hawblits called on Cljartes left Saturday for a two which te good new* to all
' her nephew. Dorr Manning, at the weeks' trip to Kingston. Ontario.
friends.
'With Mr. and Mrs. Mat Bedford and
The Pleasant H1U Livestock Club mother, Mrs. Mary Mills, at their
will meet this TUesdaj
pleasant home east of Middleville.
Paul Palmer. Blockl
. Mrs. Brie Jackson, nee Evie Coi­
add general fitUng-for.
ning smith of Penh., who has been
detnonstra ted andidiscussed.
visiting her daughter. Mrs. Opal
Mr. and MYs. clsre Williams and Kayner and family in Lansing Is
children were Sunday afternoon visiting relatives In Wayland at
callert of-Mr. and Mra. Harol* Har­ present. Many friends around Mldwood and daughter Judy neaY dlevQle, her former residence, hoj»
Ionia.
to see her soon.
&gt; Raymond Bunn, who has been
assisting Robert Garrett, went Sat­
The Ladles' Aid Society ahd the urday evening to help hte brother
Dowling Cemetery circle arc co-op­ near Green lake with haying.
erating tmd will serve home made
tee cream Friday afternoon ahd
■'Those who go to college and nev­
This company has paid more than Four and Three-quarter
evening. July 3. on the lawn at the er get out are called profeasora."—
Millions of Dollars in losses caused by Windstorm since it was
home ot Mr. and ips. Frank Segur, George Givot

U

5

.

BANGS!

FLASHES!

4th of July Specials

8-POUND SALL—CRISS-CROSS
COVER, 600 FT. PER POUND

29

Two 8-lb. balls of Farm Bureau
twine in twine can fpart ot can han

been rut away I

showing how the

criss-cross cover permits all twine
to run &lt;&gt;it of the ball without snarl*
ing or bunching.

Million* of pounds of this twine

have been used by our farmers.
It has given complete satis­

faction!
THE FOLLOWING DEALERS HANDLE OUR TWINE:
DELTON ELEVATOR COMPANY. DELTON
DOSTER FARM BUREAU. DOSTER
BERGY BROS., FREEPORT
LAKE ODESSA CO-OP.. LAKE ODESSA
MIDDLEVILLE CO-OP.. MIDDLEVILLE
NASHVILLE CO-OP., NASHVILLE

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc.
Hastings

"The Farmer Owned Store"

Woodland

10‘
17‘

25

WALLACE GROCERY

HALF-CENTURY OF EXPERIENCE

PROVES THIS COMPANY AN
ASSET TO MICHIGAN

organized over a half century ago. This experience haa proven
the great worth of this sound old insurance company to the
property owners of the State. These losses paid represent about
90,000 separate ones, and much of this property destroyed would
never have been replaced without the insurance protection
which the owners carried in this company. (Jet a Windstorm
Insurance policy with this company at once—-the cost is low.
See a local representative or write the home office.
poparty—100 foot bam. two siEdgar Thomas. Ray town-

RECORD OF SO YEARS AND MORE

Michigan Mutual Windstorm
Insurance Company
The biggest of its kind in Michigan. * Home Officet Hmting** Mtaht*

.'iff if 'IHii"l'iir&gt;RBW

NOW... BUILD
R^moJel! Repair!
See tisfor all kinds of
Building Materials

�i tt

15s sS

m miromi urn* wtombat,

Industry Will Use Farm Surpluses,
i
/ If Chemurgic Council Achieves Goal

zott

t itu

nserosT.

they will mare.

sXXt
my IU with

r.

Moulton

ot

1

?e°4

iti&amp; g

last Friday and vtalted relative*
there a couple of dkyi.
Week-end guest* of Rev. L. F.
Burkey and family were Mra. Burkofs brother. Hapy OottactaU.
wife and eon of Detroit, also their
daughter. Mrs. Frank Ricca
of
Hartford.
Mtes Helen Eash was
also a Bunday dinner guest.
Mra. Herbert C. Jones of Boston.
Mau., and Mra. Geo. H. Wills of
Grand Rapid* were dinner guests
of Mr. and Mra. Albert Well* last

S£

|H I

soakers In lhe Prwof U
find Floyd Bernard D
Mr. Loomis wm bitten, on lhe back
Bowne township. Julia
of lhe right hand by a eat white at
bower. It. CMlOjjMe/
the Powell farm near Smyrna In hte
tion of the time,
capacity M administrator ot tho
.
MIDDLEVILLE.
weak, but much te
pwwtli estate. A bad case of infec­
E. C. Bandefur
tion. not blood poisoning resulted,
Some of our fishermen came homo
early Thursday with thalr limit of
necessltatteg a dally trip to lhe doc­
fish; several fishing at Gun lake
tor for Ikndng. Rev. Loomis stated
Clair YetU
had splendid catches, other* did tM Hollas Johnson te wielding the rapersonally that he u “coming fine.”
sor during hU absence.
His many Freeport Friends are glad
for thte report.
Mrs Llbble Cornell. MU* Pearl u a whole lhe boys were well plott­
The Bible school - demonstration Reuter and Mte* Doris Reuter of ed with their success.
Mr. and Mn. F. M. Faulkner and
service al tbe M- E. church Bunday Grand Rapid* called on Mrs. Em­
■UugtiUr. Joume. ot Buff.to. N«w
evening was quite well attended, lhe ma Sisson and Mr. and Mrs. Vic­ eon James returned Thursday from !York were Bunday evening guest* Will!am Willetts of Batik
their western trip, having
seen
two churches uniting for lhe service tor Sisson Sunday afternoon.
many
old friends and many beautl- of
’ Mrs. Page's brother and wife. Mr. I Little Richard Loo rematoe
Mn.
R
om
Medendorf.
Mn.
B.
The program directed by Mra. H. 8. i
for a few day*
ful
sight*
In
the
slate*
visited.
They
‘
Wedel, leader of the school, was giv­ Stlmel. and Mra. A. Scott of Grand
Rev. crocket of Holin
en by the children who have been Rapid* and Mr. Z. Van Dam of feel well repaid for their vacation 1
at the jdw. Wallers home
in attendance during the two weeks. near Grandville were Sunday aft- trip by auto.
Dr. E. R. Johnson and father, R.
Bong*, memory wees, Bible and (ernoon guests at the C. B. Baxter
memory drills, and the dramatise- home. Mrs. Baxter, who had been M.. (Dick) and their little boy ar­
tion of “The Good Samaritan” and ' the guest of her mother and stater rived here Saturday by auto from
—••-------- —“
&amp;ince last Wednesday, returned to their Connecticut home, to visit
their many friends here, where they
program. Handwork done by the her home with them
R. D. Hyde of Grand Rapids and had spent so many happy years.
children was displayed. Plans are
already being made for a larger and son Marshall of Port Huron greet­ They were on their way to upper
upon
ed friends here Saturday evening. Michigan on business and
better Bible school next year.
Mrs. Irene Andrus of Massena. N. Marshall has a fine position at Port their return will spend several days
Y„ has been the guest of her moth­ Huron, is married and has two chil­ In the old home town. They are '
■ always welcome here and we were |
er. Mrs. Luella Draper the past two dren.
There are several new additions ' pleased to see them enjoying such,
Mra. Mary Lou Henney. who has to the list of measles patients this . good health.
been very 111 at her home here, is week, among them Dorothy Bunn, । The Pythian Staters Past Chiefs’,
the Clare Bassett and Joe Kauff­ l club met with Mra. C. A. Robert- .
better at this writing.
Harry Boughner left last week man children. Bobby Walton and son Friday and enjoyed a fish din- !
I ner. the fish being furnished by |
Tuesday for Howell where he Is Marguerite Rogers.
Mra. Pearl Smith has finished her Mra. B. C. Swift and Mrs. Max I
to act as relief operator for ten
Lynd. Fifteen members were pre*days.
and
expects
to
begin
work
at
Has
­
ent ahd a splendid time wm en­
The July meeting of the W. F. M.
Joyed.
8. te to be held this Friday after­ tings this week.
Mr. and Mra. Roll* Bowerman of j
Miss Ruth Wheeler leaves Sun­
noon at the home of Mra. John
day for Albion to be gone a week, Yankee Spring* township are very ।
Thaler.
Ralph Bage 1* giving his recent­ attending the Epworth League In­ happy over lhe arrival of twins, ,*|
\
boy snd a girl, at their home lhe
ly purchased home a coat of paint. stitute.
Mra. Vlvtan Anderson left early tatter part of the week. Grandpa I
Remodeling a shed for a garage was
Bowerman
Is especially
Wednesday tnomlng. in company James
also a recent improvement.
Mrs. Geo. H. Wills and daughter with Mr. and Mra. William Ander­ proud of thte addition to the family.
Supt. Leroy Bell, wife and son |
Joan of Grand Rapids were Bunday son and daughter Jean of Alto, for
and Monday guest* of Mr. and Mrs. an auto trip to Montana. They will left Bunday for Ann Arbor, where
Albert Welta. Monday forenoon ac­ visit relatives of Mrs. Wm. Ander­ Mr. Bell will attend summer school.
companied by Mr. and Mrs. Wells, son. and also plan to tour Yellow­ They will use their house trailer,
they visited in lake Odessa
stone National Park
and other which te well equipped for a home '
Miss vatenta Doyle has returned places and will be gone three weeks and for vacation trips.
Mr. and Mra. Leon Carr and aon
to Nazareth Academy near Kalama­ or a month.
Mtes Zona Smelker left Sunday of Logansport, Ind., were calling
zoo for the summer.
Due to the fact that lhe recent for Kaiamaaoo to attend summer here Saturday on old friends. Mr.
Carr's father ran a cooper *ho[i
fire left him without a place to do school.
business, Victor Bisson has disposed
Payment of another five per cent: here years ago while Leon attended
of his stock of groceries and most of dividend to depositors of the State school. The latter found several of
his fixtures. At present he has no Bank of Freeport has been made, hte old schoolmates who were very
definite plans for the future, reports the checks being given out Tuesday, pleased to see him and family aftThis brings the total paid lo de- 1 er all of these years
to the contrary notwithstanding.
*
Word■--------comes•*—
that
Chas. P. Mc­
The A. T. Eash home north of posltors up to forty-six and oneNaughton of Minneapolis te In a,
town has recently been grqally Im­ half per cent.
proved by Inclosing the large pleas­
The Methodist choir met at lhe critical condition with no hopes of | consecutive mile* over thi*
ant front porch. The house has also home of Mr. and Mrs. James Cool hta recovery. This comes as a shock , hot brick track. negwUatbeen given a new coat of paint and last week Tuesday evening and this to hta many friends here, and to
ini the dangrroua c nrAjo
makes a very attractive appearance. week practice ta at the Arthur hta wide circle of friends thraout
•M time* at the record the state. Mr. McNaughton was for
The L. P. Burkey home has been Moore home.
Improved with a coat of paint. A
Mtas Vernlee Benson left Friday many years a resident here, eon- i IM miles an hew, require*
new roof ha* also been added.
afternoon for Marquette to attend nected with hta father tn lhe hard-1
Fishing was the main diversion summer School.
ware business, later traveling out ot
the latter part of last week. Some
Mra. Harold Nagler of California Middleville for a Lansing firm. He
of our local Izaaks report catching arrived the latter part of last week Was afterward assigned to western
•'the limit" while for some others— for a short visit with her parents. territory and moved hi* family to
curves would likely mean
well,-that was the limit loo.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schwader and' Minnesota. They have spent their

CW

rfI wouldn’t risk my life
on any other tire”

A NEW farm group these days
Is giving attention to an old
form problem. The group Is the
Farm Chemurgic Council; nnd
lhe problem, of course. I* what
to do about the farm surplus.
Composed
of industrialists,
Journal tats, chemists, and farm
experts, the council visions de­
velopment of new Industrial uses
tor farm products a* agricul­
ture's salvation.
There la nothing new about
the Idea. Many men and many
organizations have talked about
It for many years. But this la
the first time that Investigation
of the possibility of increasing
the farm market by this means
has progressed lo any great ex­
tent
An idea ot lhe extent to which
Industry might absorb
farm
products Is provided by the fact
that if cotton were used lo rein­
force all asphaltic roads In the
United States, en annual market
for 400.000 bales of cotton would
be created. And, in experiments
conducted thus far. cotton sedms
to be ao ideal reinforcement for
these roads.
Maintenance cost is leas than
on ordinary bituminous pave­
ment The fabric prevents
cracking and water seepage; and
minimizes heaving when frost
comet out of the ground. Each
mile of asphalt requires from
eight to 10 bales of cotton. This
summer lhe U S. government is
laying nearly 1000 miles of such
road for demonstration purposes.

I A TEST Idea for cotton Is con­
version of the entire plant­
boll. pod.-leaves, and stem—into
cellulose.
More than 1200 representa­
tive* attended lhe second confer­
ence of lhe Farm Chemurglc
Council.
Heid In Dearborn,
Mich., the three-day session was
attended by, Henry Ford and
Heber J. Grant, president of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Lat­
ter-Day Saints. Mr. Grant said
he was there to learn. Mr. Ford
predicted that the "farm will
furnish the automobile body of
the future."

Says Louis Moyer—Only three times winner
of the Indianapolis Race ’28, *33, '36

Equip Your Car wi

ten
Cotten for
holds some
In lhe exhibit of a cross-section ol
reclly above shews lhe eoltea base being laid on
Rouge. La. Henry Ford, upper right, predict* the '‘farm will fur­
nish the automobile body of lhe future."

President of the council is
of regional Institutes, each of
Francis P. Garvan, who also
fvfalch shall devote itself to re­
heads lhe Chemical Foundation.
March on and development of e
~
t'.Z
’
»P^dfic fapn firolipL . ,
Oats
was another subject
dis*
cussed at the ’ meeting.
&lt;■ JWa
’ z? Inltieffot?
research seekgrain, the council Was
'
good for thp.human skin ai
help preserve foods.
3. Development of these out­
Emory R. Smith, ot California,
lets by establishment of pilot and
reminded the council that, while
demonstration plants to prove
lhe cork oak grows about twice
laboratory results and to Initiate
as fast in California as It does in
industrial application.
the Mediterranean region, the
4. Consideration
of
more
United Slates sUU Imports almost
effective means of distributing
such products, with particular
emphasis
on
returning
to
the
iwoaais SAYRE. vice preslproducer more of the processes
. * dent of Corn Products Re­
beyond production, thus shorten­
fining -Co., told the group that,
ing lhe route and lowering costs
■although com refining has been
lo the consumer.
an established Industry for more
8. Promotion of the use of
than SO years, the 1038 grind
these processed products through
was only SO per cent larger than
national co-ordination among
that of 1DO0.
agriculture. Industry, and *clCorn and cork will be among
the crops receiving attention of
the council. Other* Include soy
Secretary Henry A. Wallace
beans, wood, hemp and flax, the
has promised co-operation of the
tung I tree, chicory, tobacco, and
Department of Agriculture, but
artichokes.
points out that the program must
be long-range, unscrupulous ex*
The council's plan for “co-or­
dinating 'agriculture. Industry,
ploltaUon of producers on false
and science" has five points.
grpund* must be prevented, and
These are:
inter* commodity competition
1. Organization and expansion
Thust be considered.

«. affine

1 rd tho runenU ot lhe liner', rrxnd-j children. U crtndchlldren end 40
HOPE CENTER.
Mr*. Lettie Kahler is attending mother. Mra. dull, Braklne, In Un- 1 great pandcluldren end other relaschool In Northwestern University. shall, Saturday. She leaves ten Uvea.
Chicago.
Ml** Irene shellenbargcr has pur­
chased a new car.
Mra Mlns
■ ton attended
Sunday.
William Ashby. Earl Fteh and
MIm Viola McKibben, all of Kala­
mazoo. spent Wednesday evening at
Fred Ashby's.
Mr. and Mra. Clare Ashby attend-

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Finetune patented Gum-

MEAT, POTATOES
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Many

I

SMITH BROS.
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Hastings

Phene MS?

HIOH »H

a meal la built around these three stand-bys—

meat, potatoea and gravy. Invariably they are the first
dishes that come to your mind aa you plan your dinner.
But in spite of their hunger-satisfying and nourishing
qualities, this time-honored triumvirate can become
monotonous unless it is supplemented by other dishes.

However, it is often a problem to find these “side dish­
es" in your own head. Of course you can quit your
neighbor, or ask the members of your family whit they
would like. But even this source of information is often

The New

ftrtttoiM
STANDARD

lacking in ideas.

Milk

The thing to do is read the Banner advertisements I
Every week your local markets display their foodstuffs
on these printed pages. You’ll read of new vegetables
and fruits that have “just arrived.” Your appetite will
be aroused by the tasty creations of national food manu­

facturers. With pencil and paper you can make your
market list and menus before you step out of the house.
Speaking of monotony, consider this: There ere 11
different cuts of beef, 9 cuts of veal, 7 of lamb, 10 of pork;
there are at least 20 different breakfast cereals sold id
every shop, 16 different canned vegetables, 6 of canned
fruits, a dozen or more canned meats and fish, number­
less varieties of cakes and crackers. Why should there
ba monotony in meals with such a variety of foods
available at yotir store and so many of them advertised
each week in the Banner?

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CALF MEAL______ 95c

OF TBE

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ore

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HASTINGS, MICH.

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Flrralone patented eenstruettan featares ot Gasu-

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4. JO-31
0M»
9XM.19
9.»lf

�7?
visited Mr*. Cora Shopbell last vetk.
John Wagner, age 75. passed
Mr. and Mr*. Morris Qulgg of away at hla home In Woodland
Mason. Irvin Hoover and MUs townslUp Bunday. He was a Wood­
Helen Brambury of Battle Creek land pioneer, having lived here »U
and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rice and of his life. He I* survived by a sis­
family were Sunday guests of Mr ter. Mr*. Anna Eckhardt of East
and Mr*. Jaoob Hoover.
'
Woodland. He wa* never married.
Francis Coleman and family ot Tire funeral will be held at the home
icarr children have been killed
Hasting* and John McLeod of at 2:00 and at the Evangelical
church
at 2:30. Burial at Woodland
&gt;y Fourth of July firecracker*
Coined the Standard Bearers and Carlton called on Mr. and Mr*. Oil- cemetery. Rev. Klopfenstein will
during tbe test few veara. bpi
their mothers with a weenie roast bert McLeod Sunday.
Lbelr elders still gel out their
Mr*. Arlle Spindler Is assisting conduct th$ funeral service*.
! Monday afternoon.
Mrs Sarah Bmilh. age 67. passed
can and speed to their death*
Mrs. Ernest Shomo entertained with lhe care of Dr. Peabody's
on the "Glorious Fourth."
, with a birthday dinner Sunday in mother at Lake Odessa for the sum­
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Chas.
Seese
of
West
Once the holiday auto loll wa*
honor of Mr. Shomo's birthday at mer.
Woodland who have been caring
insignificant compared . to lhe
Mr*. Herald Classic and Miss Lu­
their cottage at Jordan lake. Mr
I and Mrs. Frank Nlethamer and cile Nicholson were Lansing shop­ for her tiw past year Blw leaves one
number of children seriously in­
sister. Mrs. May Metzgar of Coving­
jured or killed by fireworks.
family. Mrs. State Hilbert. Misses pers Monday.
ton. O. Her husband. Rev. John
&lt; Louise. Lorena and Ellen Hilbert.
Mr. and Mrs Lester Brumm at­
Figures,
however show
the
Smith preceded her in death over
change.
Mrs. Rena Culler and Birdsell Holly. tended Ute Kunz family reunion at
, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ruell and Morgan Park, Thornapple lake held Wednesday P. M. al 2:00 at
-Where fl re works claimed more
' family spent the week end with the Bunday.
than
100 live* each Fourth
Elwyn Dell left Monday to at­ at Woodland cemetery.
1 latter * parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ed.
around the turn of lhe century,
tend the summer school at Western
Covey of Gobles.
they have caused only 33 deaths
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McMillan State Teachers' College. Kalamazoo.
Id lhe last five years During
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harrison and
Mrs. Carl Krick and son spent.
i and two sons and little Conrad Mc­
this period, July 4 auto acci­
Millan. son of Mr. and Mrs. Keith family are expected to visit Mrs. from Wednesday until Friday night
dents killed 473 persons
j McMillan of Akron. Ohio, spent the Kitty Holmes and Mrs Glen Eng- with Mra. Chester Johncock of
land
Wednesday
for
the
rest
of
the
'
Shelbyville.
week end with the former s parents.
bum* on the Fourth
The list
Mra. pannle Jackson has returned
Mr. and Mrs Harvey McMillan. On week. They are taking their oldest
had shrunk to 4 by 1934. Last
। the trip here, the little son of Mr. son Roger to a boys' summer camp from a visit to Otsego.
.. - ----- -------- .----------------------- u.
II Mri Cokc ftnd m1m R&lt;na ulner ,
and Mrs. Keith McMillan had the at Muskegon for a few weeks.
Mounting public opinion
Mr. and Mr*. Raymond Faul and of Otsego were In town Thursday. '
I misfortune lo open lhe rear door of
against holiday nysterla and de­
| Their sedan and fall out. rolling. baby son of Chicago. Mr. and Mr*.
Allen Shelp and Ronald McKibvelopment of tetanus anti-toxin
। across the pavement. He was badly Jacob Hoover and Mrs. George Pau) bln. Scouts from here, went to De- |
were
about equally important In
I
from
Thursday
until
Monday.
Sat
­
, bruised but lhe X-ray showed no
trolt where they visited various
reducing lhe fireworks toll. A
broken bones, LaRue McMillan re­ urday they spent with Mr. and Mrs. places of Interest and witnessed the I
really “sane" Fourth Is observed
turned with them to Akron tor the Richard O'Brien of Lansing and Mr. ball game. They are Tiger fan*.
now—as far as fireworks are
I James Neal of Ovid.
i summer vacation.
George Hyde, a Scout. Is con­
concerned. *
Mr. and Mrs. T. W Thompson «..u
and ; Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Hilbert. Mrs. fined to hte bed with ah injured
sons were Sunday guests of their । Ella Bush of Los Angeles. B. 8. knee contracted While playing ball
daughter nnd husband. Mr. and Holly and Miss Anne Rosenthal
OUT thl* cannot be said of the
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Shelp had
Mrs. Dallas Parker of Lansing.
| visited the Grand Ledge Centennial for over week-end guest*. Mr. and
automobile. While th* auto
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wing and fam- Saturday.
Mrs. Milton Finkbetner and family
casually List Is gradually being
ily spent the week end with Mr. and . Mr. and Mrs. John Dell attended of Grand Rapids. Miss Ellen Shelp
reduced, progress in this regard
Mrs. Fay C. Wing.
1 the Fox reunion al Lansing Satur- accompanied them home for
a
lag* tar behind that made in the
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hynes and j day.
week's visit.
concerted drive that ended lhe
family attended the Guy family re- | An operation was performed on
Mra. Florence Mott accompanied
firework* menace.
union at the home of Mr. and Mrs. t Cgji Nlethamer at Pennock hospital her son Vaughn Mott lo his home
Car accident* were responsible
Klda Guy Sunday. Relatives were Monday by Dr. Chas. McIntyre ot at Hart for an Indefinite stay.
for 54 deaths Inst Fourth. Con­
present from Grand Haven. Grand । Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mra. John F. Brigham
trasted with 1931** all-time high
Rapids, Kalamazoo and Lansing
Mrs Emma Hullinger of Nashville. of Decatur spent the week end with
of 161, this record Is encourag­
Miss Louise Rice visited her aunt Miss Hazel Schrieber and Mr. and the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
ing. but few Americans, howj
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs
Morris'Mrs. Joe Crockford of Carlton were F. J. Hughes. Mrs, Hughes Is not
ERE is the 'July 4 fatality
ever, would term It satisfactory.
Qulgg of Mason last week.
• Sunday callers at the home of Mr. Improving in health as we would
Some Idea of the tragedy ush­
chart for the last eight
Miss Marda Faul left Bunday for' and Mrs. Wm. Warner.
wish for her to. '
years:
ered In annually may be had by
Camp Kltannlwa. clear lake where । On Thursday of last week. Mrs.
Mrs. Ruth Whiteman. Mtes MeachFire­
Drown- Other
comparing July 4 casualties with
she will slay for the first period, two Ernest Shorno entertained with a er of Augusta, and Mra. Bert Pat­
those of the American army in
Auloa
weeks.
I luncheon at her cottage at Eagle ton of Delton called on Mr. and
1935.. 6
54
52
102
the American Revolution.
Mr. and Mrs J. V. Hilbert ac- , Point. Out of town guests were Mra. M. A. Mills Thursday evening.
70
34
1934.. 4
89
companled by Mrs Ella Bush of I Mrs. Edward Pearce. Mrs. Al BrenStudy these table*:
Mte* Dawn Altha Mills of West
1933.. 7
62
40
Los Angeles and Dr. S. M Fowler of I ncr and Mrs. Edward Goble ot Lake te spending the weqk with her
Revolutionary War
Rilled and
1932. 10
117
so
Battle Creek visited the oil fields ' Grand Rapids, and Mrs Kate La- grandparents. Mr. and Mra. M. A.
Battlea
Wounded
near Six Lakes Sunday.
I Due and Mrs. George Jewltl of Al161
1931..
6
111
Lexington
.............
Mills.
57
Mrs. Kate LaDue of Allegan called leg an.
1930. 12
Bunker Hill...........
Dr. and Mra. Charles Mullen, Mrs.
on Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jordan Thurs-1 Mesdames Blake Rising. Perry Boyd Cortrlght of Otsego and Dick '
1929.. 7
Fort Moultrie ....
day.
,
Flory and Robert Born were Lan- Cortright of Detroit were Sunday
1928. ll
White Plain* ....
MLss Margaret Harrison of Detroit' sing visitors Monday
A total of 1806 11vo* were sac­
dinner guests of Mrs. Sarah Smith
Fort Washington .
rificed on thoM eight holiday*,
Monmouth.............
and daughters. Mrs. Mary Polley
several hundred* more than died
and Miss Myrtle Smith.
Cowpens ...............
Mra. David Deal returned from
in »even of the principal battle*
her visit to relatives In Grand Rap­
Totqi
of th* Revolutionary War.
Ids Saturday night.
Mrs. Floyd Wales of Doster called
Mr. and Mra Mark Norris. Mrs i Larlda Fritz and Iva Case took
on Mrs. Minnie Vanderbrook and
Lucy Norris. Mra. Mary Polley, Mis* part In the musical recital Wednesothers here Sunday.
Charlene Castle of Orangeville is Myrtle Smith and Jack Temple day evening at lhe Delton church
a guest of Mr and Mrs Cassius spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. ‘ which was given by Mtes Richards
Mark
Ritchie at Gun lake, the occa- and her pupils.
Hughes.
slon being the natal day of the two | Mra. Porter Knowles has received
The Ladies* Aid Society-will meet
with Mrs. Ruth Krick Wednesday. Marks. Thte te to be a yearly event. , word from Marshall that her brolh“ "
"'
* “­
Mrs. John
Youngs, (for
July 8 All day meeting. Pot luck We are wishing these cousin* happy er'’* wife.
returns of the day.
merly Mte* Etna Richards) had
dinner.
Mrs. 811a Dealer attended a birth­
The eighth annual school reunion
tion.
Funeral
and
burial
held
at
day
party
for
her
steter,
Mrs.
Fred
ot the Prairieville school will be
held at the Methodist church Sun-. Ehrrnan. at Grand Haven. Tuesday. Hickory Comers Wednesday.
Earl Pennock and family "i^ieftt
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Calthrop were
day. July 12. Cafeteria dinner; |
bring table service. Try and make dinner guest* of Mr. and Mra. Paul Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Harrington
of near Banfield.
' Claud u
—
this meeting a 100 per cent attend-1 Nagel of Gull lake. Sunday.
Fourteen friend* of Mr and Mra.
once. Be sure to come.
fair i akf
| Floyd Morford dropped in to surMr. and Mrs. Delos Hughes and
Prl5* them 8*torday evening, the
son Ronald Lee of Toledo. Ohio, re-1
The Kinsley Aid. which met with | occasion being their 28th wedding
; turned to their home Sunday aft- ' Mrs. Gay, was largely attended. | anniversary. ice cream and cake
emoon, Charlotte remaining with about 70 being present
were served and a fine time was
। her grandparente. Mr. and Mrs. W.
About 70 people attended
the had.
| R. Norris, for a longer visit.
I Jack Temple of Kalamazoo is a Kinsley school reunion held at the
An honored
QUIMBY.
guest of Mr and Mrs. Mark Norris schoolhouse Sunday
Everyone enjoyed thk fine talk
Mtes Beverly Brown of Hastings guest there, a school teacher of long
has been a guesl of relatives here ago. was Frank Bellinger. 00 years given by John c. Ketcham al the
old.
this last week.
church. Sunday.
Herbert Rorabeck had
Mesdames Maggie Lehman. Lucy
Norris. Ethel Stebbens and Flor­ operation Monday.
T. K- Reid’s oil staUon was a fine
Mra. Louis BartholomeV and success. They sold about 450 worth
ence Hughes attended the O. E. 8.
school of Instruction at
Hickory children of Battle Creek were call­ of Ice cream. Thanks to all who
Corners. Thursday.
ers Saturday at Lottie Coilteter'z.
helped so much.
The Birthday Aid will meet at the
Cutler home July 9th. Everybody
welcome.
We wish to express our sympathy
to the Moore family in the loss of
their little son.
Mrs. David Boniface of Orange­
ville came Sunday to spend some
time at the home of her daughter.
Mrs. Frank Bloom.
Several children from this place
are attending Vacation Bible school
at Hendershott schoolhouse, where
Miss Marguerite Conklin ol Lan­
sing is assisting.

;

•

TIME

BEER TIME!
Enjoy this cool, invigor­
ating, healthful drink—
made from barks and
berries with yeast vita­
mins. Hire’s Root Beer
makes an ideal beverage
for children and grown­
ups.

Special for Friday
and Saturday only
35c Sixe Hire's

ROOT BEER
EXTRACT

19c
Make* Five Gallons

WOODLAND. .

Mr. and Mra. H. A. Kitson and
Mary Jo have left for a two weeks’
camping trip In their house car.
They expect to visit Dearborn and
Detroit.
j Miss June Crockford, who is with
• her parent* al the. Crockford farm

Death’s

H

"hesc'iipfioH- Qirn/fyfi.
PHONE ZIIS

TT-i i 7 IM

WANT to BUY? TRY the WANT COLUMN

DUST/

HELLO TOURISTS

BE SMART
SAVE REPA/R BILLS
GET A BETTER CAR NOW

ORANGEVILLE.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Garrett and
son Jimmie called on relative* and
friends at this place Bunday.
Mr. and Mra. Ben Norman and
son Howard and wife spent Sunday
with their son Georgs and family

Tourists seek out dustless roads and
clean cities as carefully as they avoid
localities where dust takes the joy out
of living. Resort sections in increas­
ing numbers have turned to Calcium
Chloride dustproofing as a means of
attracting and holding transient busi­
ness. The clean, white Calcium
Chloride flakes, when spread on the
road surface, absorb moisture, make
roads dustless, firm and pleasant to
drive onH

Cleanest of all dustproofing agent*.
Calcium Chloride ^ odorless, never
•ticky. does not track into home* or
gum up car*. It come* in bag* in dry

form, is inexpensive and easy to apply
to highways or driveways.

make their communities attractive to
both paying visitor and resident.
j

One of the fine things about Cal­
cium Chloride is that it not only holds
down dust, but actually, saves the
road. A dusty road is a road in the
process of destruction. Calcium
Chloride, by holding dust, saves the
waste of valuable surface material,
makes maintenance easier and less
costly.

Special literature tell* how to dust- '
proof road* with Calcium Chloride
either by inexpensive surface treat­
ment or more permanent stabiliza­
tion. Write today for information
on "How to Du»tproof your Local
Road*."

While many states dustproof the
entire trunkline system of unpaved
roads and many counties do the same,
it is equally important that villages
and towns do likewise if they wish to

lOU WON’T need cash now. Bring in your old car,
and use it as the down-payment on a better one. We
are showing the make and model you want, with good
tires —a good battery —good finish, and a smooth­
running engine.
We'll give you a written 2-day, money back guarantee
on the -car you choose, and arrange the
balance to suit you. Let's get acquainted.

LOOK
1—1935 FORD Y-8 Fordor
Sedan,

*49500

1—1935 FORD V-8 Tudor
Sedan,
Only1—1934 FORD V-8 Fordor

CALCIUM CHLORIDE
ROAD

DUST

*39500

a holiday ride la tho wrecked
Only one
th* crash.

member

survived

The year 1910 with its 131
fireworks deaths, brought launch­
ing of th* flrat “San* Fourth"
campaign. By 1917 the deaths
from this cause had dropped to
5.
Figures (or the Intervening
years. 1911,57;1912, 41; 1813,
32; 1914. 40; 1915, 30; 1916, 30.
The auto menace la no more
invincible than was th* fire­
works bugaboo. American high­
ways can be made safe on In­
dependence Day.
The number of July 4 drown­
ing* h*« been about the tame for
many years. Reduction of these
casualties l* improbable as long
aa small boys continue to go
swimming
In
out-of-the-way
wafFrs, and
holiday crowds
overtax large beaches.
And while drownings are al­
most a* numerous as deaths
from auto accidents, there Is no
Injured list

MORGAN.
Mra. Emma Dole. Mra. Homer
Wade and daughter Pauline and
Paul Cole, all Of Battle Creek, spent
part of last week with Mra. Letha
Adkins. Pauline staying for a lung­
er visit.
John Van Sickle and family and
Catherine McAdams of Lansing vis­
ited Mr. and Mra. Wm. Van Sickle
Sunday. Mr. snd Mra. Jesse King
were afternoon callers.
Mr. and Mra. Jesse King and
daughter. Mary Lou. and Marguer­
ite Mills, all of Lansing, were Bun­
day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Harrington.
Mr. and Mra. Byron Clark of
Jackson spent Thursday and Friday
with Mra. Letha Adlklns.
Miss Esther Grey'of near Free­
port was a guest of Mr. and Mra.
Bordy Rowlader over the the week
end.
Miss June Gross returned home
Saturday after spending a
week
with her grandmother, Mra. Gross,
of near Leach lake.

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Harry Sandbrook had the mis­
fortune to fall through the hay
shute in hl* bam Wednesday, while
mowing away hay. He fell thirty
feet to the basement, fracturing his
shoulder blade and receiving a num­
ber of cute and bruises. At this writ­
ing he Is coming along fine.
Mrs. Sarah Smith is seriously ill
at the home of Mrs. Charlie 8ease
in Northwest woodland. Mr. and
Mrs. Torrence Townsend and Mrs.
Guy Kantner called on her Wednes­
day evening.
_
Mr and Mrs. William Strong and
daughter of-Jackson visited at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
Blocher last week.
Mrs. Ethel Hal) and Mrs. Jessie
Chase of coate Grove left Monday
afternoon tor a five weeks' trip tn
the western states and to the Pa­
cific coa*t.
Willi* and George Sandbrook uf
Blanchard spent Bunday with their
brother. Harry Sandbrook.
Jean and Marvin Kantner en­
joyed a picnic with Ruth and Rog­
er Flanigan at Wall lake Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Dell and
daughter of Lansing spent Wednes­
day night and Thursday with Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Wotrlng.
The Woodland United Brethren
Missionary Society met with Mrs.
Flqyd Dllienbeck and Mrs. Jegsle
Dlllenbeck last Wednesday. Fifteen
member* were present. We are all
glad to know that Mra. Jesale Dillenbeck te able to walk again.

1—1932 FORD V-8 Fordo*

Buy Only Genuine Part* for Your

*265°°

International Farm Equipment!

ST

1—1931 FORD MODEL A
Coupe,

*19500

1—1929 FORD MODEL A

Sir

J7500

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO.
Haiti.,,

Mtes Ruth Eva Nevins and broth­
er Hugh James spent Friday In De­
troit on a sight-seeing trip with.

works victim, but such acci­
dents are becoming fewer

OVER

Calcium Chloride Association

*450°°

CONTROL

THEM

Mr. and Mrs. Alf. Lewis of near
Caledonia were Sunday guest* of
his uncle. E. D. Lewis, and wife.
MIm Marie Beattie of Kalamazoo
spent the week end with her father.
W h Beattie of this place.
Mr. and Mrs. John Venema left
this Monday noon for Sault BteMarie and other northern place*i

to Auto
iFourth*

FORD DEALERS

'

Hm&gt;* 2121

We ere the eely dealer in Hastings who Mlle Genu­
ine International Harvester Parts for ell International
Machines. We also handle the Genuine McCormlckDaering Converses for binders which are one-third
stronger than substitutes. Don’t be fooled by sub­
stitutes.

A. C. GATES, Farm Implements
107 N Michigan Ave., Hastings ..
•
•

..Phone 2309
ts

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1936

22 PAGES

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

MICHIGlNBEliCO. Hastings Trade Days” Friday J||[ SUPERVISORS ""5«S.SSE;™ USING CHLORIDE
' PROVEN ECONOMY
TO HELP STITE And Saturday July 10 and 11 (DOPT IKW PUN ‘
Russell

Smelker

Has

Been ]

the Manager for

WILL

EXPEND

130,000,.

000 IN THZ YEAR
1036

MOST OF IT WILL BE

BELIEVE IT WILL RESULT

Big Trading Event Announced in This Issue
Next Friday and Saturday. July '
10 and II. will be outstanding 'n
the trade history of this city. They I

The merchants of this city extend

”K" *”*
“•*
various lakes of this county. They
are Invited to make Hastings their
shopping headquarters and special
courtesies will be extended to these
vacation guests of Barry county
This county Is fortunately situated'
In having sp many resort lakes
which are attracting each year year
increasing numbers who find health
; enjoyment and a real vacation at
our lakes. While they are here there
will be various Hems they will re­
quire
quire wmen
which can
can ne
be found
found in
in the
the
stores of this city and very reason­
__ __ .C....................
/__
ably priced, as the two page an­
nouncement will prove.

BETTER
COUNTY ROADS

IN

MUCH

SAVES MAINTENANCE

«.

Nine Year*
.— ~

STATISTICS OF THZ STATZ

TOOK POISON TAB­
LET FOR ASPIRIN
Mrs. P. J. Adcock’s Mistake
Oaused Some Flurry
Bunday

NO BOID ,
cown
STATE TAKES OX I

The usual Sabbath routine at the
I nlversary of lhe opening o' the
u» Ij HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT Rev. B. J. Adcock's home, on W. BURDEN OF ROAD
Mark’s store in Hastings. Opened
SHOW THIS
ING AND R1PAIB
Bunday when Mrs. Adcock, who was
I In 1926 the store has grown until I
suffering from a severe headache,
today it contains a complete line of
came down statrs about 8:30 to seek DIGEST OF STATE’S
i auto accessories, radios and motor COUNTY ROADS WOULD
replacement
parts.
Under
the I
relief by taking on aspirin tablet,
BE MUCH IMPROVED instead she took one containing
| management of Russel) Smelker |
LAWS THAT DO
1 for the past nine yt*ars. tne store
poison Intended to be added to a
of drinking water for McNitt Law Take* Load of.
has prospered until todav it is an And an Actual Saving of quantity
1
young chicks. She almost imine-1
outstanding member of• •«the Mark’-s
—
Highway Building From
Money to Barry
dlately sensed her mistake, a doc­
chain. Last spring the present loca-1
I tion was improved and several ad-1
tor was summoned who gendered
the Township*
County
first |iid that relieved her of the
&gt;»«
added &gt;«
Before the commercial club Tues­ danger, altho she did not recover
’ “Ccomtnodulc a larger stock. At this
ty owed about *400,000 of Coirart
I l*me ^°rd and Chevrolet replace- day noon Al Brown gave a very from th* shock for some time. And road bonds. The county had bam
inent
parts
,n
*r” m,r
” were Introduced to com­ interesting talk on roads one state­ there was certainly a very fright­
"3
plete their line. The Mark’s stor" ment that he made, and which U ened household of men for a time. &gt; several years to pay interest and
contributes Its share towatd making
.7771 a
i
*uch bonda. It also at
the result of years of experience, is ininmA
Hastings a popular shopping cen­
ter. We extend our best wishes for that good gravel roads that are not
its continued success.
। treated with chloride will go down
। an inch each year wind blows away 1
BEGINS DUTIES AS
| th, ..bu,a„.
„ du„

will be known as "Hastings Trade
COSTS, ALSO THE DUST
Days." The Hastings merciiants
Over 12,600,000 Will Be for will feature some exceptional bar­
Hope to Be Able to Black
gains. What they offer can be
Top
20 Mile** of Roads
State Taxes, Which Aid*
found on pages 4 and 5 second sec­
tion of this Issue, we arc sure every
the Public School*
Each Year
reader will be Interested.
Approximately *30.000.000 will be
1IIU iniu-»ununcr
The Barry county board ol superThis
mid-summer tracing
trading event
event
visors at their June session took a
•xpended by the Michigan Bell i comes at a very opportune lime for
forward step in road building, which
Telephone Company Utis year for | everybody. In lhe week following the
we believe every taxpayer will ap^r‘2!O2,.°r U
extfnil0M I Fourth of July holiday, there will be
blant' ,taxes' I need of lhe articles listed by Hasprove, because every cent ol ex­
„iu(fel«aand . . Purchase of sup- Ungs merchants In their special
penditure involved will coma from
piles
and
mater
al
euentinl
in
______
_
__________
_
g..
;
____
.
plies
material essential to the two-page announcement to be found
the state.
conduct of Its business, according in this issue.
In this issue we mention Michi­
to the company's present estimate
gan's highway laws that have lifted
for 1936.
the burden of road building and
Of the total expenditures, the CONCERNING GARBAGE AND
WPA RECREATION
maintenance from the shoulders of
REFUSE DISPOSAL
greater proportion will be paid out
taxpayers of all counties and town­
AIR LINE HOSTESS. loosenlng up lhe gravei and small
Covert road bonds were paid soma
PROGRAM ANNOUNCED ships. We elsewhere explain that
In Michigan, approximately *12.Complaints have been received
time ago.
stones that are often tossed aside
000.000 representing salaries and lately
loieiy by
oy the
me Barry County
county Health
the first amendment to the weight
HAVE A LARGE DOUBLE ty there were formerly two town­
by rapidly passing cars.
Reorganised for lax law gave to counties half the
wages to the company's 7.500 em­ I Department regarding the dumping Schedule
ployees. Of a total lax bill of over of rubbish and garbage in vacant
1 On a 20-foot wide gravel road it
weight tax, to be used for highway
ship highway taxes imposed each
Summer—Miss Waters
STORE AND A BIG
. takes 330 yards of gravel lo the
*4,000.000-federal state and miscel­ lots In the city. This nuisance oc­
construction and maintenance. Lat­
year—the highway tax and th*
| mile for an inch coating, lhe estllaneous local taxes, the company curs yearly and each time people
New Supervisor
WAREHOUSE
er there was passed what Is known
highway Improvement and repairs
will pay to the State of Michigan must be reminded about It. The
i mated cost of which Is 80c a yard,
tax. In addition township tax­
Miss Emily Wallers, who Is aupqg- 1 as the Horton law. That law gave
i or over *260 a mile. Thus a one-inch
•2.622.577.05. A check for part of debris and refuse which nor­ vising WPA recreation projects In to counties the remaining half of
payers paid formerly each year their
the state taxes was presented Tues- mally
coating of gravel applied one year, CROWD OF VISITORS
accumulates
around
the- Barry and Kalamazoo counties, has the weight tax. also the sum of *2,day iJune 30) to Auditor General average city home should be dls- arranged the following schedules 550.000 token from the gas tax.
will be blown away the next, un­
sed against the township at large
EXPECTED
AT
OPENING
John J. O’Hara. The balance Is to I posed of In a place designated by and wishes them announced for the This remaining half of the weight
less some binder like chloride be
ana agairtrt .special asaesamant CObe paid the slate before November1 the &lt;^ty.
Hastings makes ample convenience of those wishing to tux and the *2.550.000 taken from
applied.
1 vert road districts within such
In a hot. dry season like the pres­ Extend Cordial Invitation to । townships. To remind our rural
1. These taxes go to the primary and convenient provision for such , take p
„.k.
the gas tax were to be specifically
part:
school fund.
i disposals, and It Is the wish of the | ppr Hastings:
ent, dust on thc roads Is terrific and
All to Meet Their
------------------------------- --- ---- , —
, used by the counties, first in pay­
Large quantities of the supplies1 city officials that these be used I At
At the
the falrgi
every passing car exacts Us toll of
Local Staff
dlg up tor hl«hwV and highway
fairgrounds from 1 to 4:30 ment of outstanding covert road
iBQcat oiuu
i hnprovemcnt taxe,.
gi„ the fo*.
binder.
and building materials required by i rather than vacant lots adjoining P M. every day except Saturday bonds. Barry county has paid all
Il costs about (160 a mile to apply
The opening of the Montgomery ' lowing figures, for which we are in­
the company this year also will be! properly In the city. Collections of , ________
Leaders: j. R. Jordon and Vernon these bonds, it is now In line for
Ward
store
in
this
city,
announced
!
debted to our county clerk, alien o.
represented
by expenditures
1 garbage and rubbish--------------create - haz- , Karrar for boys and men; Mrs. Le- thc provisions of Ute law for such
chloride three or four times a year
— in
---------------------------------------on ordinary 20 foot roads and *200 in their five page adv. in thb issue. | Hyde, showing such highway uxea
Michigan.
These Items L&lt;n.iut*c
Include ardous
——— wcondition
—
In any woikiwiu
community;
.,, nure
nore aiiuctsuh
Anderson iar
for gxris
girls ana
and women
women, j counties
-*• as have completed p-;u&gt;a
paying
attract Ih.
the attention nt
of ---ourby
a mile where traffic is extraordi­ will attnet
furniture, oil. gasoline,
cleaning; It is hoped that the citizens at (
At the fairgrounds from 7 to8:301thelr Covert roadbonds.
That law
materials and equipment, paper.' Hastings will co-operate with thep y. every evening except Sattir- 8lve3 10 5Uch counUes theremaining
narily heavy. If the loss on a 20- readers in Barry and adjoining Twp. Highway tax ...1*27..* 72.11*
tons of printed matter, newspaper Barry County Health Department in , aay.
day. souoau
softball tor
for me
the men
men and
and spespe-1 “
half
the wetgni
weight tax,
tax. atso
also me
the
foot wide gravel road Is $260 a year, | counties. The new store will be Twp. Highway tax ...192*.. 79**7
““ ol unc
advertising space, electric light and , ridding the city of this nuisance.
' clal actteltto-tor
•— the ---------Ii.t
where chloride is not applied and ’ opened to the public next Saturday.
women.
special appropriation from lhe gas.:
Twp. Highway tax ...1929.. 8M3*
power, automobiles, trucks, batter- I
1
----- —
It costs but *160 to *200 a mile per July 11. and will attract people from Twp. Highway tax ...1930.. 66018
At the playground of the second
cacb &gt;e,r
After all Covert
les. tires, trailers, transportation., M
FMPH IQ ILAWYER
A WYFR
i year to apply chloride, it doesn't re- long distances, for it Is a real event. Twp. Highway tax ...1*31.. 35.0**
*»rd school building every after- road
are P»ld- the
divides
lodgings and meals for traveling MEMPHIS LAW
T tri
Montgomery Ward have leased the
i quire much arithmetic to figure out
r&gt;nr-A^ in ■■savi.eaa noon and Friday inornut*.. Leaders thls Horton money as follows. Onethat the county Is really losing double store of Mr». H. A. Adrounle
employees. ■ paint, brick, lumber,
GUEST IN HASTINGS Mrs. Amy Bower and Mytqn Bish-1 half
to be paid directly into thc
Total P210M
cement, stone, steel and other build-1
। money on every mile of gravel on Jefferson St. to accommodate
------------- । op.
county's general highway fund The I
»-------- *•------------j other half Is to be divided between
-A.-vv.,
I roads that are not treated with the ward business, a 50 feet addi­
Ing miuruh, plumbing
lutures J Larry
Oregon Wag —
Former For MiddlevilleIncorporated
I chloride. And that's not taking Into tion to the two stores has been con­ no township highway tax levied—
Under the leadership of William jlhe county and the incor
--------- J' I
and almost numberless oilier prod-1
Ace Pitcher for
ducts. Almost every business ond
each -------county.
account the great clouds of dust structed and Is occupied by Ward's
McConnell there will be supervised cltles and villages of each
- -industry In the state will benefit.
swimming In lhe Thomappie river ।,n proportion to population.
■
The I MIM Tteao
jTego &gt;ert
jeit Monday to bealn
oegin . u&gt;
-—
«‘ »»
-—
“«
- &gt;» don. ««»y,
------ -­ with. U&gt;« in addition they have leased lhe five years the average township
Vanderbilt
highway tax was *64.509 for each
.... as .hostess
.
..
........ I nf present asettle
.. 111rtnwn
The telephone plant needs of the'
every afternoon, playground activi- county s share of this latter portion , her work
on the
United
down nwr
over nplaK
fields vacant C. H. Osborn Co. building
.... year c^ll for the pur-'
,J'“ Iles at the high school In the morn- 1
company this
Horton money Is by law specifi- | Alr Llnw) out of Chicago. Miss Tre-' and permeate nearby homes. At for storage.
ol u ooo u-lepbone polo.,
Mernphl,. TOm . uro spend- Ing and
—j senior—
—. and
.... Junior
1 r*niiu! cally under
tsiM .vihtHii
nt of the board
. ,...
—..
. ..of Mr.. and
..
iMrs.
feast It's a proposition well worth
In their adv. Ward's list many of ship for the sixteen townships of
league
the control
R0 i_s the
daughter
000 erauunns. 5AOO 1«l ol duo( In
we, lc 1,1 HuUw. vlsluna Mr. league ball games Ln the evening,
their bargains and cordially Invite *4.03182. These figures do not in­
giving a lot of consideration.
;of supervisors, who can make such |
Trego. 110 East State Road,
clsy conduit. «0.«00 tret of strand *n,a “rs 0 w W«P&gt;n«r »t'a
Mr. Brown has available for his everybody to attend their opening clude what the townships paid di­
For Nashville:
1 use of it as they may please fori
.. ■
---------------rectly for covert roads nor payments
wire. ISO.OOO pounds ot bare copper i
“!“5athe
ti
—, Before doing so. read their advs.
use. statistics furnished by
Mahlon Strickland U the leoder i highway purposes.
| CLARKSVILLE GIRL WEDS
wlre. OdOOO.OOO conductor reel ot 'd ln Hillsdale the wedding ot Mrs and beginning July 14 there will be
A cordial Invitation is extended by
highway
department
of
this
state,
i
A resolution was introduced at ।
FREEPORT MAN.
vert road taxes, which would
wire In lesd-covered cable, and
Cr“ons cousin Evelyn Woodpi
playground activities Ln the after- Ithc recent June session of the su- I Miss Julia I. Hefflebower. daugh- Those statistics show that chloride the management to all our readers
added a large amount for ew
ur
p.
Mr
Creson.
who
Is
an
attorney
in
to
visit
the
new
ward
store
in
Has
­
000 handset telephones.
Procure'
™ - - ■ — -•
—
tv.. ball park
_ _ andI nervliBirs
bv Mavnrbyrwinard
with I
t
u.m.
noon at the
softball pendsors
Mayor Leonard,
with I u,r-—Ojf Mr. and
Mrs.
Lewis Heffle- treatment not only makes driving
Bnd
ment of the raw materials
a.iu Memphis ahd a member of the firm games for the men In the evening 1 approval of the supervisors' road bower of Clarksville, became the much more comfortable but is a tings. meet the local staff and their
Contrast that situation, for
wlI11 of Sibley, Evans and Evons, has had either at the ball park or at Thorn- and br,d«e committee, stipulating
manufacture of these Items will
money saving proposition. This in­ many clerks. Only two of the em­
bride
of
Mr.
Floyd
B.
Dukes,
son
of
provide labor and wages for thou­ an Interesting career In amateur apple lake.
that *15.000 of the Horton law Mr. and Mrs. William Dukes of formation conics from the state ployee-! are from outside—the rest the county and the townships.
and profeulonal baseball
While
The county recreation leaders1 money which is under the control Freeport at a marriage ceremony highway department itself, and is are local folks.
sands of men and women.
penny is raised by taxation in
Net additions to the Michigan attending Vanderbilt University at meet every Monday morning from ol the supervisors be this year used performed by Rev. Glass of Lowell. based on facts. The old method of
county nor in any township of
Bell Company’s plant this year will Nashville. Tenn., where he received 8 30 to 11:30 for a short training ln preparing the foundation for Friday evening. July 3rd at the putting chloride on roads twice a ENJOY REUNION TUES­
county. All the money for hl
amount to *3.930.000. compared with Ills law degree, he pitched on the course at the second ward school twenty miles of black-top county; home of the groom's sister and year has been abandoned. It is
DAY AT WALL LAKE. way purposes, township and cou
*1.446.000 In 1935. bringing the plant varsity team and twice, in 1926 and building In Hastings. The schedules ’ —
roads
completed
next’ brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph now spread four times a year, keeps
’1‘ which will 'be
------------'**“*----Mr.
and
Mrs.
Orville
Bayles.
Mr.
comes from the state of Michl;
Investment of the company up over 1927, opposed Tommy Bridges, the as announced are due to the nation­ year; that is. lhe foundation for Kyser of Lowell. The single ring the roads in much better condition,
and Mrs. E. A. Prandsen of Ionia,
We believe our readers will be
ace
who P“ch*d for
*175.000.000. Gross plant commie.
construcat a cost of a little less than *200
wide reorganization of WPA work­ such black topping will be made this service was used.
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Nichols. Mr.
tlon will total *10.000.000, compared Itb® University of Tennessee. Knoxyear. This appropriation provides
a
mile.
On
the
average
county
ing
hours,
which
became
effective
Tile bride was attractively dressed
and Mrs. Trevett C. Chase of Grand Michigan laws which have wrought
_g.u
— ....
------ current
•
. j vlUe.
wun —
wlth
&gt;6.B8T,ooo
*6.887,000
last year
lost
Current
'— where
7
„ he attended college. Mr
for at least twenty miles of founda­ in orange silk and carried a beau­ road, probably three chloride treat­
Rapids and Mr. and Mrs
Larry this change, and lifted such a bur­
maintenance of the telephone plant । CFeso’L wel1 "^embers one game July 1.
tion work this year.
tiful bouquet of American beauty ments would answer, which would Creson of Memphis enjoyed a buf­ den from the shoulders—or should
will cost *5.900.000. Nel additions to wllcn »°mmy alruck out 15 men on
We understand the board took rosc3. 8he wfts attended by her sis- reduce the yearly expense to about fet supper Tuesday evening at the
COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON.
plant will total *3.930.000 and will h“ team tll
« Vjew
of definitely
-Miss
—
----------- this action
with
a i&gt; .. _ (cr
June
Hefflebower
of• • 150 a mile. Comparing that cost Frandsen cottage at Wall lake. The ty and Its sixteen townships.
___ __ _________
.....
Tt
!o Mr Crrtzm
xf 11
Midsummer flowers In
It wax
was wh
while
Creson wax
was still
Include *136.000 for land and build­
"■ profusion
r*. starting a programi of black
black-topping
-toDDlmt1 Clarksville who was dressed In blue and less .scraping of the roads, with
When Michigan's road building
, ’hl
,a]
" t
women are friends of many years
ings. *1.515.000 for new central of­ In college and playing semi-pro­ were u«d lo decor.u the elubhoiue ,
silk. Alton L Rogers of Freeport as­ the cost of laying an inch of gravel ’ standing but tills is Uie first occasion program started, the money to carry
fice equipment. *1.950.000 for tele­ fessional ball in the summers that
on n twenty-foot road one can
sisted
as
best
man.
when their husbands were able to on such work came flrat from a
wp Wghwsys or Aileawn
phone equipment. *190.000 for ex­ he played against Gerald Walker, HUtUus country club, when SO,
see
lhe
economy.
Some
road
mate
­
A supper followed the ceremony.
bond Issue of *50.000.000. These
members
and guests were i;present.
_
.._&gt;.*j.
.hd'^
r’K™iSa'
;; c^. rial is lost where chloride is used, join their reunions.
change lines and *40.000 for long another Tiger player who is mak­ Sduu.
Calendulas and larkspur made an
ing good this year.
distance lines.
Sr h&lt;, gliS
M‘aa^- vlllr High school clu. ol IS .nd but It would be but a fraction of the
Later, when Mr. creson was play­ PMA.U Oh ure mncScun UM,.‘„d;r^ “ “p
MAKE PICNIC PLANS.
SIthe
-----------------------------------------------------------&gt; Gain of telephones, which in 1935
, .
----------------------- — .. —------groom Is a graduate of Freeport loss of such material on highways
ing
ball
for
Louisville.
Ky..
of
the
was 32.000. Is expected to reach 40.­
Members of the executive board
। road north to 16. will realize that, j High school class of 33
that are not chlorlded.
principal and pay tha accrued in­
•.it........... .....
: TheJr resldence u not definitely
000 this year. The first four months American association that he came
In other words, if Mr. Brown's of the Hastings Civic Players as­
terest due in that particular year.
h“
of the year gave the company a net In contact with Billy Rogell. Tiger «r Ul“ d.£la Jid b«?TbS.th p‘n“,
established al present and they are figures are correct, the logic is un­ sociation met last evening at the
As the state's improved road pro­
gain of 17.000 telephones, and up to shortstop. He played two seasons
home
of
the
general
chairman.
answerable
that
It
would
be
econ
­
living at the home of the groom's
gram developed, the purchase of au­
the first of May the company had with the Louisville team and has
omy for Barry county to chloride Mrs. Burr Van Houten, and per­
parents In Freeport.
tomobiles rapidly increased. Than
been
on
the
voluntary
retired
list
for
regained about one-third of the
|he 200 miles of main-traveled fected plans for the annual picnic
the
question naturally arose as to
five
years.
Mr.
Creson
has
a
great
was
a
low
net
event
and
lhe
congarrv
county
made
of
lhe
right
210.000 telephones lost during the
SCHOOL REUNION.
which will be held July 18. The pic­
county highways.
£C^le* I gSFJrSSrSlTSie JroSr tflSfinancing the building of additional
admiration for all these young men
early years of the depression.
Hope Center school reunion
nic this year Is a mystery one. even
roads and the maintaining of such
„ ...
U I neas, etc. In order to assist the Bowker Grove. Saturday. July
Under the Michigan law. tele­ and admires Tommy Bridges par­
the destination being unknown. The
JULY DINNER POSTPONED.
as were already constructed. Oat
phone. telegraph, express, railroad ticularly. He says he is a small,
«
counl&gt;- road commlulon in carrying Bring table service.—Adv.
The July dlnifer at the Hastings board also made plans for a num­ of this came the automobile weight
rcsolutlon- thc counlytroad
and car-loaning companies pay delicate looking chap and In civilian quests. Mrs. Sidney Shipman ot San oul
Country club planned for the eve­ ber of novel features and plenty of
taxes lo the stale In lieu of local clothes looks anything but a pro­ Franc^co. Mrs T. J. Potter and comm^jon wu authorized td sening of July 18 has been postponed unusual entertainment.
given to the state highway depart­
Mrs.
Edward
Lynton
of
Glendale.
fessional
baseball
player.
He
Is
taxes,
upon
property
generally
cure such engineering service as in
two weeks so as not to conflict with
ment for building and maintaining
used for conducting their businesses. quiet and unassuming In manner Cal.; Mrs. Orville Sayles had Mrs. their judgment
was advisable,
BASEBALL GAME.
the annual picnic of the Hastings
The Michigan Bell Company is the and popular with his fellow players. Larry Creson of Memphis. Tenn., which would naturally mean that
Dowling
vs.
Bellevue.
Bunday.
July
Civic
Players
Association.
It
is
trunk lines, and for paving them,
and Mrs. Trevelt C. Chase and Mrs. they would get someone to serve as
largest taxpayer of the utilities
planned
now
to
have
the
dinner
on
12.
Vickery's
landing,
Clear
lake.
—
TIIO8. BECK AT PENNOCK
John A. Nichols of Grand Rapids
called for a m
group. The tax money paid the
who
under­
Thursday. July 30.
Adv. 7-9.
AS RESULT OF BURNS. and Mrs. R. R. McPeek entertained highway engineer
than could be
state by those utilities is placed in
stands
the
up-to-date
methods
ot
While burning off paint Tuesday
ths primary school fund and from afternoon from his sister-in-law’s, Mrs. Boyle, Mrs. Vance and Mrs. black-topping.
Following the example of severe
there Is distributed among all pub­ Mrs, Eugene McMurray's house, on Cowan of charlotte.
There are about 200 miles of
At
the
monthly
business
meeting
well
known
Michigan
weeklies,
we
lic school districts in proportion to Michigan avenue. Thos. Beck. 430
county highways. If lhe plan of the
committee reports were given and
begin In tills issue a "May We In­
the number of children of school
W MUI. received bums on his face. | announcement made of the election supervisors shall be carried out. troduce" feature which will help to
age residing therein.
arms and neck when the blow pipe ' py the executive board of Mrs. Guy within lhe next ten years every acquaint Hastings people with re­
gallon.
The tax bill to be paid by the
he was using suddenly flared back , u Kelter M vlcc president in place mile of this will be black-topped, cent newcomers. Hastings has the
Michigan Bell company this year The house was full of company and
which
will
effect
a
great
saving
in
Mra j^es R. Mason, resigned.
reputation of being a particularly
represents *741
per
telephone,
Ben McMurray helped smother the । Mrs. K. 8. McIntyre was chair­ maintenance. Anyone who watches hospitable town, and these tabloid I
that while it was Important to have
based on the average number of
flames. which would soon have । man Of the committee in charge and the scrapers work on gravelled high­ introductions will aid. we believe, in
trunk lines It was almoat as im­
Mr. and Mr*. Fred L Jordan's Family
telephones operated by the com­
reached his clothing.
, was assisted by Mrs. Kellar Stem. ways will realize what a saving It keeping it so. and making contacts
portant to have other main-travel­
pany during. 1935..
Net earnings
He was taken to Pennock hos- Mrs. Charles 8- McIntyre. Mrs. A- A. will be to have Barry county roads easier with new residents. We will
and
Friends
Assist
At
Gala
Event
led roads in tha counties also Im­
from 170.000 telephones, or substan­
pital and will remain a better part! Anderson of Grand Rapids and Mrs. all black-topped. It will also make be glad to know of any recent ad­
proved and connected wljh the
tially one-third of
the average
them dustless highways. That will
of the week, as the bums are pain- E
Waring.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Jordan cel- [ one grandson. Rodney Carl, age one trunk line system. Tha first counditions to Hastings so as to add
number operated last year, will be
be
a
great
convenience
to
autoful altho not considered serious.
' Mrs. R. K. Hurd Is chairman of
ebrated their golden wedding an- [ month, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
required lo meet the company's tax
moblllsts and to people who live them to this column as opportunity
nlversary at their farm home one ’ Carl Jordan.
HONOR BUFFALO GUESTS.
|I the committee for next week and along such highways.
offers.
bill.
Thus by
I the golf event will be the combined
and a half miles south of WoodWood­
A delicious three-couree dinner knpwn as the ' Covert. road
Mr. and Mrs. E- H[. Waring.
black-topping county
roads,
a
Mr. and Mrs. James Page of । low score on two holes.
This required tha count* to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Waring —
and
- land. Friday
- and Saturday.
- - July
FRANK OLDING KILLED.
large saving will result in highway
Buffalo were honored Monday eve­
night and to 49 guests on Saturday
Mary
Louise । 3 and 4.
Frank A. Oldlng, 47, Elsmere. Ky., ning at a party at the home of Mr.
maintenance and a great Improve­ elghl-months-old
APPEARED ON PROGRAM.
Fred L. Jordan and Juna Kather- night. Golden tea roses and gold ships tn which the road was io
n salesman for a'Cincinnati shoe and Mrs. Smith Sherman. The 30.
ment made to the highways them­ came to Hastings recently from I
Mrs. Maunctte Engleharte LeMon. selves.
Lanslng. Mr. Waring Is the new gas man Jordan were married at Nash- cathedral candles graced the long ed another port, and Um msomc
firm, who was a frequent visitor in guests were members of the class
hcutlng engineer with Consumers I vUle July 3.
by R**- Haller. tables set thruout the house.
district or districts tributary to
Hastings, and often seen at the Cut of 1910 and the evening was spent theremln artist, appeared on Cecile
The trouble with black-topping
Improved rood to pay the bah
Rate Shoe store, was instantly recalling good times had together. Hodges Longworth's piano concert previously done In this county was Power. Following his graduation The couple then came to the JorMrs Jake C. Katherman, Bradford. The county generally paid 50
at
the
Art
institute
in
Detroit
on
killed Tuesday afternoon, shortly
that the drainage of the roadway from the university of Michigan, I dan farm home near Woodand.
Ohio;
Miss
Ethel
Foy.
Jaokaon;
Dr.
July
2.
Mrs.
LeMon
is
the
daughter
chemical
engineering
department.
I
where
they
have
always
lived.
Mr.
after leaving Hastings, when his
WIN TENNIS TITLE.
was not properly provided. In the
car left the road and somersaulted
Miss Helen Merson and Albert of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Engleharte, next place the black top coating class of "29. Mr. Waring went to [ Jordan's father, a pioneer, pur- and Mrs. F. T. Andrews. Omar
400 feel on M-14. near the U- 8.-16 Becker won the Hastings city mixed Hastings. Route 5. During the past was too thin. The plan authorized Argentlna. South America, later to 1 chased this farm before he left for Christian. Mr. and Mrs. Harold
intersection.
Oldlng
had been doubles title by defeating Miss Fem five years she has been in Detroit by the board will be watched with Chicago and Lansing. Mrs. Waring the Civil war.
to apply on building naw i
is a Chicago girl. Aside from his | Mrs. Jordan was bom June 8.
spending several days here, and had Wolfe and Armen Roth, 8-3, 6-4, where she has rapidly progressed much interest.
work Mr. Waring's hobbles are hunt-1 1869. at Webster. Ohio, and came Wallace Jordan and Miss Gladys roads, the legislature later
enjoyed a fishing trip Monday night Friday evening. The men's doubles in her music, pioneering with this
new ether-wave instrument. She
Ing. fishing and golf. The Warings , to Woodland. Michigan, with her Jordan of Chicago; Mra. Philip,
with friends. The supposition Is are being played this week.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
Schray
of
Emhurst,
HL;
Mrs.
Ola
is
one
of
the
very
few
players
and
are living at 317 W. Court. Just west parents. Mr. and Mra. 8. D. Kaththat he fell asleep and z lost con­
I hereby announce that I will be of the Adrounle residence.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT. I was the first to privately own a
erman, at the age of 10 years and Sears. Yuma, Arizona; Mr. and the counties
trol of the car.
—--------1 lived there until her marriage. The Mrs. Lincoln Cass. Charlotte; Mr.
I wish to announce that I am a theremln here In Michigan. Her se­ a candidate for the republican
He leaves a wife, six daughters
Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey L. Chase. Katherman farm home was Just and Mrs. John Katherman. Mr. and
candidate for county treasurer on lections for the program were nominatlpn for county treasurer at
and a son.
Mr. and Nj.rs. Chase also come । one mile and a half from the Jor- Mra. Howard Jordan, Mr. and Mrs.
the republican ticket at the Sep­ Bois.EpaU by Lully; Dedication by the September primary, and will
from Lansing. Mr. chase having re- । dan farm.
Boys of the Thomapple-Kellogg tember primary. Your support will Robert Franz; Etude by A. Scrla- appreciate your support.
Morris Jordan, Mrs. Jordan, Lan­
William C. Struln.
cently purchased the Beumer Jewel- | Mr. Jordan was bom January 6. a; Mr. and Mra. Homer Ingram
school at Mlddeville completed 18 be greatly appreciated. George A. blne; Berceuse by Oretchanlon. —Adv. 2 wks.
projects in the year ending June Clouse.—Adv. 1 wk.
ry slock. They have one daughter 1866. on the farm where he is now
sons. Miss Leila Jordan. Mr.
Twenty-five piano pupils, ranging
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENT.
Doris Elaine, 12. who enters the living, having spent his entire life and Mrs. Walter Barnum, Mr. and
&gt;0, the projects including dairy,
in age from throe to eighteen,
j- aui
. »-«•
there.
NOTICE CITY TAXPAYERS.
I am * candidate for the repub- t eighth —
grade
this
fall.
sheep, potato, beans and others.
played at the concert.
Total returns were *1,311.03; ex-1। I am now at my office each day In
Mr. and Mrs. Jordon are mem­ O. Finnie. Mr. and Mrs. Ofltert
Both Mrs. Longworth and Mrs. Lo llcan nomination for the office of I Mr. Chase Is a 32nd degree Mason
peases. *891A0, leaving a net profit the city council rooms prepared to Mon are teachers at the Gray Tower county treasurer at the September and is a member of the Episcopal bers of the Methodist church and Todd of Bastings;
.----- •— .I will -----..—appreciate
.' '
church. His original home town she is a member of tha Ladlee' Aid Theron Jordan. Mr
primaries.
greatly
of *489.53. Dairying accounted for receive city taxes.
School of Music, 315 W. Grand Blvd. —
Mrs. Jessie Loppcnthlen.
your vote.—Walter Fisher, Wood­ was Belding. They came to Lan­ and Missionary Societies.
more than half the profit, followed
City Treasurer.
—Adv.
land-Adv. 3 wks.
by potato growing and poultry.
GATES SCHOOL REUNION.
sing from Flint. Mrs. chase is a
The Jordans have three children
Pint Gatos school reunion July
member of the First Presbyterian---------------------.-----------------------------------living,
Wallace
and Gladys, twins.,
MIXED DANCES.
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
IP at schoolhouse, pot luck lunch
church.- ----------Lansing,
of,•-----------------------both of Chicago,
Carl of__
Wood­
DANCE AT THORNAFFLE.
------------ and -president
------------------—and
___ _______
EvuTy Saturday night at Clear
------ •- Association.
a—
Dalton. Bat, Kve, Eckler's Orch. at noon. Former teachers and pupils
Bat. night. Bud Wolfa's Prowlers, ...
its -Women's
They have land. One glrl
girl AgnM
Agnes, jessed
passed away
away Mra. Rolland Downs and Mrs. Ruby
lake, Frank Herrington.—Adv. tf.
-Adv. if.
| as yet been unable to locate a home. I at the age of 14 months. They have Downs, Sunfield.
invited.—Adv.

SPENT IN MICHIGAN

THIS

WARDS STORE WILL
OPEN SATURDAY

May We
Introduce

Woodland Couple Celebrate
Golden Wedding Anniversary

�I
THt HASTINGS BANNER, THIBhDAT JULY fl, :»l

Ml TWO

Organizations

'FOOD CENTER’S
Armour9s

CARLOAD

QUALITY FOOD

SALE/

Through the co-operation of Armour &amp; Co. and their
representative, Mr. John B. Koenig, Food Center is pre­
senting to the people of Barry County the most outstand­
ing food sale ever held in this community. Come! Save!

BEANS
\Ofecifieon O
\the(fiachu/t &amp;

t.ii
c«m

BALLOON
5

*&gt;Ec

Bananas

Ripe, Yellow Fruit

5^c

Ib.

aa 4t.hc...25c

Cigarettes S' 2... 23c
Rinso or Oxydol £ 19c

CAN~

BUTTER

&gt;34

CE

^•3, e^GS

i'hmour* STAR HAM

29”

ARMOUR’S

Economical Spread

PICNICS

27c

Armour's July Meal of the Month
STAR SAUSAGE
SUPPER
Featuring

EVIN ■RIQIB CAN MAKI

Mi

MB

ARMOUR'S

or Baking! Pound
4

Swiss Steak

CANNING SUPPLIES

23c

Mason Cans
BALL or KERR

u.
f

dggt

Cooked

29c

Lb 25c

Hamburger

* 22'
2 ** 29'

6ib. tinx.25

Summer SausageA'T*25c

Beef Kettle Roast * 14'

Kerr Lids

Bacon Tidbits

Boiled Ham
Dried Beef Amour'i
Armour'#

lb.

&gt;/a U&gt;-

28c
23c

Ib

Fresh Dressed Veal

OPEN EVENINGS until 9

SATURDAYS UNTIL IO

63c

Pkg

QC

Para wax
lOc
Fruit Pectin *bX' 18c
Pkg

For Bettar

V^GTtO

Veal Roast

Doz.

QUART SIZE

Jar Rubbers 3 °IOc

Pork Loin Roast
1

’LARD
2 25c

SHANKLESS
Fine for Boiling

Mane Gilford's H&lt; ,-ipe Foldi

Cold Meats

uorned

25c

TINDER Pll CRUST....

Silver Nut Oleo

rntt

BARS

HAMS

Tn Dill FURNITURE CUTOUTS la X CirtM

-

4 fl _

o

J

Big Ben Soap
0

Whol. or Half, lb.

W? 23'

Jam and Jelly

Ol

Bottle

JL

IC

25'

* 19'

' Tha Thomaftlo Garden club will
I meet at 41? 1-1 W oread Thurs­
day. July 8.

Members at lhe butintss women's
Hospital Guild will be entertained
MARRIED
Fim-TWO
Monday,
evening,
July 13.YEARS.
at the
I Gun
Thelake
best
wishesof Jutjge
or a and
boatMrs
of
collate
i Stuart
friends ailment.
go to Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Rising, at this elty. who today. July
8. are celebrating their Mnd wed­
ding anniversary at their home
at 312 W Madison.
For many years Mr. Rising was
one ot the moat prominent and prol greaalve farmers in Barry county.
I specialising in the growing of HolI stein cattle. In which undertaking
I he met with signal success
1 Several years ago Mr. and Mrs.
Rising moved to this city from their
splendid farm in Woodland town-4
ship. In which he still takes an
active interest. During their resi­
dence here they have always Iden­
tified themselves with worth-while
activities, and have made many
friends, who on this day unite in
hoping that Father Time may be
most lenient and permit them to
enjoy many more years of happi­
ness and contentment. Along with
many others lhe Banner extends
felicitations.

27c

ARMOUR’S HARD WATER
Scsn-E
3
14c

Carrots iz. lOc Lemons D°- 3Qc

CORNED
BEEF Iftc

2

Pound Box

LIGHTHOUSE
CLEANSER

39c

New Potatoes 10

। Kalamaaoo is lo be lhe speaker.

SOAP CHIPS ISM

A3

ARMOUR’S

"Tnx^11 \NnWAtTF

PRODUCTS

Townsend plan matting wednasSMStt
S

BREAD

Food Center

PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
I Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
I pease, Delton, a girl on July 1.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Gaskill. Hastings. R. 5. a girl on
July-^T
Bom to Mr. and Mra. Robert
McOlocklin. Rond street. Hastings,
a girl on July 3.
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Bow­
man. Hastings. R. 1, a girl on July

Bom to Mr. and Mrs George Otis
Replogle. Cloverdale, a boy on July
S.
Bom lo Mr. and Mrs. Henry
VahUing. 220 West State street.
Hastings, a boy on July 6.
FREEPORT.
The following item was handed in
too late for last week's copy. Our
letter must leave Tuesday morning:
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Austin was Hie scene of a very
pleasant gathering on Sunday when
a targe number of relatives gath­
ered for a reunion Those present
Included W H. Barrett of Detroit.
Mrs. Benia Kelley and son Law­
rence. Mr and Mrs Gleason Tabor
and family, Mr and Mrs William
Yule. Mr and Mrs Richard Jerrlta
and family, all of Grand Rapids.
Mr and Mrs Dorr Howell of Nash­
ville and Mrs. Delia Yule of Free­
port.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Merritt of Al­
bion spent the week end at the
H. M. Boughner home.
Mrs. Emma Sisson was n dinner
guest Bunday of Mrs. Clittle Roush
and son Ivan The occasion was the
80th birthday of Mrs Sisson; the
following day was Mrs. Roush's
birthday
Mr and Mrs Edgar Cheney Slid
daughter Donna ot Howell Wire
guests of Mrs Cheney's parents. Mr.
। and Mrs. H. w. Gosch from Friday
evening until Sunday afternoon.
Dr H S Wedel performed a ton­
silectomy at Pennock hospital Mon­
day morning.
Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Boughner
called on Mr. and Mrs. W. R.
Schiffman of North Irving Satur­
day. Mr. Schlffman has returned
from University hospital much Im­
proved in health.
Rev. Fem Wheeler and Ruth yiaited lhe former's brother and fam­
ily al Portland, Saturday.
The W. M. A. of lhe U. B. chiRch
are being entertained this Thdyaday at an all day meeting at the
home of Rev and Mrs. J. I. Batdorff.
Paul Burkey is spending lhe week
at Hartford lhe guest of his staler.
Mrs Frank Ricca and husband.
H. M Boughner relumed to How­
ell Sunday after spending the
Fourth at his home here.
Mrs. Mary Dodge ta having Aer
house painted this week. Allen Fish
doing the work.
Miss Ruth Wheeler, In company
with Rev. Leon Manning and others
from Lake Odessa left Sunday for
Albion to attend lhe Epworth
League Institute for a week.
Mertan J Loew of Seattle was an
over night guest ot hta uncle's. Rev.
J. I Batdorf a week ago Monday
He met his stater. Mary. here, re­
cently returned from Africa, not
having seen her since before she
sailed, over seven years ago
Mrs Jennie Miller of Portage.
Wls.. has been lhe guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Dan PosUna and other rela­
tives and friends the past two
Weeks.
.
Mrs. H. M, Boughner visited her
sister. Mra. Bessie Neil ot Saginaw
a part'of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Postma and
daughter Phyllta Ann and guest.
Mrs. Jennie Miller, were Hastings
visitors Friday.
Dick Moulton of Muskegon spent
several days here last weak the
guest of hta sister. Mra. Roy NagMr. and Mrs George Townsend
North Hastings called at the H
M Boughner home Sunday.
’
Supt. and Mrs 8. O. Voorhees
are spending a month's vacation
with his mother and brother at
Prescott.
Clayton Bunn was home from
near Gleen lake Bunday.
Ralph Moore wu an over the
Fourth guest df Miss Eleanor Mil­
ler al Valparaiso, Ihd.
Mr. and Mra. Victor Sisson and
d-bghter
Roberta
motored
to
tfuHvIlle and Charlotte
Bunday
pvwimg.
.smeIk" »M JM
friend of Kalamaaoo ware week­
end guest.-. Of her parent*. Mr. and
Mra Henry 8 me Iker
Zona Is at­
tending summer school.

LC

Rev. I
the pres
Townsen
Goodw
cream a'
ning, JU
One a
Yankee
reported
Health I
The B
parunen
aftemooi
July ant
Richai
er. who
Big Ra[
summer
Memb
rods Hot
Star an
held Sui
park ne
There
publics

are Issui
Miss j
Rapids :
cepted a
ty Parlo
B. A. L
Rapids.
Of th
proprtat
post of!
fourteen
to Mich
Ids, Ma
nearby
pie.
In m
for Has
Ray W&lt;
America
the yea
mitted
at Fran
street 1
Chari
visiting
Mrs. M
Hanove:
juries U
fell a bo
while p:
summoi
injuries
Ivan
the offl
trust c&lt;
wrote t
er on i
brought
same di
the cos
jail. As
cured b
Bill E
won a
Bowes'
to a m
Major
to Var
the un
musicla
and wll
and cot
Born
fee (H&lt;
Bullen
Ids. TT
boy. "I
comes
Is nam
grandfi
Nashvl
grandp
grandp
ents.
Just
the "
though
the 10
Eplscoj
McNuli
turned
mem be
boys' c
the dl£
Gounoi
Turn '
with h
uccom;

of

Tl

�THK HASTINGS BANNTB.THVHSDAT. Kl-T ». ISIS

ns

Ub will
Thun

omen'
rtalncd
&gt;d Mr*.
SA RS.
Elmer
July
wedhome

county,
if Holrtaklng

h their
town-1
ces an
r resii ideni-whllo
many
nite In
nay be
irm to
happlg with
xtends

Leslie

Charles
tirl on
Robert
is Ungs.

n July
n July

Henry

ded In
. Our
iming:
lharles
i very
1 when
gathiredenl
letrott.

T.bor
Glllim
Jerrlls
Lapids.
NashFree-

it thc

dinner
Roush
as the
i: the1
oush's

y

and

is. Mr.
Friday
OOJT.
a tonMon*

ighner
r. r
Satprurfied
h tmh yisfam-

hutch

Notice—McCallum school reunion
Twenty-eight members of the Gull
at schoolhouse. July IB. Bring table Lake Women's Club were guest* of
service.—Adv.
Mrs. M. J. Cross Thursday of terMra. Oeorge Hullngs is nicely noon.
Nearly M children were enrolled
Mill St. and will be pleased to have this morning (Tuesday) al the
be obtained at the Banner office.
her friend* call
Methodist Vacation Bible school.
Rev. Karl Koefcr has resigned
At Stewart lake the Y. M- C. A. The school will continue during next
the presidency ot lhe Watervliet camp for Barry and Eaton countie*
Townsend club.
la in session with a good enrollment.
The Michigan Investor in it* re­
Goodwill Ladies' Aid will serve ice Tiie Girls Camp will be held July cent Oolaen Jubilee edition had a
cream at tiielr church. Friday eve­
beautiful reproduction in natural
ning. July 10. AU invited —Adv.
Mr*. M. A. Lamble. who has been colors of Eurotas P. Hailing*. MlchOne case of scarlei fever, in a medical patient at Pennock hos­ gan's first banker, the man for
Yankee Spring* township, has been pital for ten days, has improved suf­
reported to lhe Barry county ficiently to permit her to go home •scrlbe* him as a man of medium
suture, and slender frame weighing
Health Unit.
next week.
Donald Goucher. Roy Finstrom about 130 pounds, very good look­
The Barry County Health De­
ing" as ill* picture bears witness. He
partment office will be closed every and Larry Wolfe, who have been
always dressed in black, was clean
afternoon at four o'clock during playing hi Paul Nielson'* orchestra
in Battle creek, are going with ttie shaven, and scholarly and prepos­
July and August.
sessing In appearance. He was born
orchestra
to
play
an
engagement
al
Richard Jacobs and Robert Fight­
in 1791 and died In IBM. a copy
er. who attended Ferris Institute in lhe La Belle Gardens Hotel at Gull of the original painting of him.
Big Rapids, are employed for lhe lake.
made by a celebrated artist of his
I Thru an enor that Inadvertently '
summer at Reed's drug store.
time, hangs in the Hastings library,
I appeared last week lhe Camp KI- •
Members of lite Barry county as;----------—
,------- —
but doesn't- convey Jiis real attrac­
rut glr
girl*'
foclatlon of the Order of Eastern tAiuilw* vunp ""
^ “group
T0Up WB*
w“ tiveness or personality as does the
I
credited
with
being
at
the
first
sumj
Star are planning a picnic to be
likeness In the Investor.
held Sunday July 12. at Pallaaburg mer health camp at Pine lake, which
Hastings had its usual quiet
is only for undernourished and un­
pork near Ubweli.
der-privileged children. The Has­ Fourth of July. Why doesn't Has­
There are about 36.000 notary
tings girls attending at Clear lake tings ever celebrate? 1* a question
publics commissioned In Michigan are all, with one or two exceptions, we often hear asked. Too many
every year. Appointments are made
lakes nearby perhaps, with cottages
members of local Camp Fire groups.
by the governor and commissions
owned by local people, or available
During July and August, lhe Rev. for renting, and automobile trips
are Usued by the secretary of state.
I J. A. McNulty. Rector of Emmanuel that offer pleasant diversions. Open
Miss Alice LyBarker went to Big
’ Episcopal church, will be In charge
Rapids Monday, where she has ac­ of the services at Grace church. stores, which a celebration calls for
cepted a position in the Ruth Beau­ I Ludington, and will be Ln residence entails a hardship on owners and
clerks who have altogether too few
ty Parlor. Her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
there. He wishes It understood that
B. A. LyBarker. drove her to Big he may be reached at any time. He holidays. Years ago a sad fatality
occurred here one Fourth when fire
Rapids
will be happy to respond and to care works got ablaze on a stand and a
Of lhe sixty million dollars ap­ for any Hastings ministrations1
rocket shot into a crowd that was
propriated in the deficiency bill for where he can be of help during that
standing on State street, killing a
post offices in thc United States time.
well known Hustings citizen, Oscar
fourteen buildings are apportioned
Mrs. Avis Tyler, branch manager ’ Hadley. It seemed to pul a quietus
to Michigan. Blissfield. Eaton Rap­ of the local auto license bureau,
on celebrations fur many years and
ids. Mason and Rockford being urges all motorists who have half somehow no one seems to get the
nearby towns to get a slice of thc year slickers" to replace them with
fever to again Inaugurate the cus­
pie.
their 1936 plates as soon as possible tom. Most street celebrations any­
In making lhe historical survey as an accommodation to themselves. way. are nearly 100 per cent bally­
for Hastings, a WPA project which By doing this motorists will avoid
hoo nowadays.
Ray Wolcott has in charge, an delay as II will be physically im­
American history published in 1835. possible to accommodate everyone
FREEPORT.
the year before Michigan was ad- । In one day. Motorists are also urged
What might have been a very se­
milted to statehood, was unearthed |
rious accident occurred Sunday aft­
to bring their registration cards.
at Frank Alien's on 8. Washington |
Mrs. Marie Roush and Mrs. Nor­ ernoon when the new Chevrolet se­
street Tuesday.
I ma Kunde, telephone operators at dan owned by Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Charles Buslck. who has been' Freeport, receive special mention in Gless and driven by their grandson.
visiting at the home of his sister, the July issue of the Michigan Bel) Farrell Anderson, left the
road
Mrs. Matilda McLravy of south magazine for staying al their posts south ot Hastings, turning over one
Hanover street, received painful In- 1 when fire was discovered In a build­ or more times, resulting In a badlyJuries last week Wednesday when he ing three doors away. Mrs. Roush, damaged car but only minor bruises
fell about 15 feet from a cherry tree who lived in the exchange building, to the driver and a group of friends.
while picking cherries, a doctor was first called the fire departments In
Mr. and Mrs. Don Richards and
summoned but did not consider his Hastings and Alto and then removed two children of Dearborn visited at
Injuries dangerous.
! her family and valuables from lhe the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Poslma and Mr. and Mrs. H. W.
Ivan Allerdlng was picked up by building.
the officers, July 2. on a breach of
trust complaint alleging that he
wrote the name ot iiis grandmoth­
er on a cream check. He was
brought before Justice Matthews the
same day and assessed *50 fine and
the costs In the case, or 60 days in
Jail, a* this Is written he has not se­
cured ball.
Bill Boadway of Lake Odessa, who
won a position on one of Major
Bowes' units, ha* been transferred
to a new unit to be known as the
144 E. Stole St.
Phone 2522
Major Bowes' Band unit. According
to Variety, a theatrical magazine,
the unit will be made up of 20
musicians and Bill, as "star soloist."
and will be prepared for both dance
and concert engagements.
Born to Mr. and Mrs Lentz Chaf­
fee (Helen Lamble) of Nashville, al
Butterworth hospital. Grand Rap­
ids. Thursday. July 2. a 7 1-2 lb
boy. "Mother and son doing fine"
comes the word. The little boy who
is named after his paternal great­
grandfather. Louis E. Lentz, of
Nashville, comes into lhe world well
grandparented possessing five great­
Children's Play Suits and
grandparents and four grandpar­
ents
Slacks____ 69c and $1.00
Just how voices might sound in
the "angelic
chorus"
was the
Ladies' Slacks, $1. $1.19, $1.98
thought of those In attendance at
the 10:30 service Sunday at lhe
Bathing Suits, all wool
Episcopal church when Kneeland
at_______ $1.98 and $2 98
McNulty, son of lhe rector, Just re­
turned from his second year as a |
Hosiery, 25c. 39c, 59c, 69c, 89c
member of lhe famous St. Thomas ।
boys' choir in New York City, sang |
Hats, whites and colors
the difficult and beautiful aria from I
Gounod's "Gallia"Jerusalem, oh! i
$1.00 and up
Turn Thee to the Lord thy God.”
with his mother. Mrs. J. A McNulty
accompanying on the pipe organ.
|

LOCAL NEWS

Oosch. also at Mrs. Bertha John­
TEAM STANDINGS.
Below are given the standings of
son's at Hastings Saturday and
the softball teams up to and includ­
Bunday.
। Lloyd Moore and friend.
Miss :ing July 7
Grace Smith, and Ralph Moore
HIrsch Bros.
Burton of Detroit were guests of the
Feldpausch
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. I.
700
E Moore, from Friday until Sun­
Nat l. Bank
63d
day evening.
Table Co. .
Mr. and Mrs. Gall Lightfoot and
Triangles ..
son Carl were Grand Rapids vis­
Consumers Power
itors Friday afternoon. The for­
Bliss Foundry ..
mer's brother. Millard, accompanied
Bliss Machine .
them home for a few days' visit.
Rogers Grocery .
Monday night guests at the home
Chain Store .
of Rev. and Mrs. J I Baldorf were
Piston Ring .
Mr and Mr*. Elmer Van Antwerp
of Sunfield. Kenneth Archer
ol .
SOFTBALL SCHEDULE.
Lake Odessa. Mr. and Mrs. Josie
Monday. July 13 —Hi-wuy vs. Bliss '
Roush of Charlotte and Mr. and Machine Shop; Chain Gung vs.
Hirsclt Bros.
Mrs. Floyd Gaskill of Hastings.
Tuesday. July T4 —Feldpausch vs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Postma and
daughter Phyllis Arm accompanied Bliss Foundry. Rogers Croc. v*.
by their guests. Mrs. Jennie Miller Piston Ring
Thursday. July 16—Bliss Machine
of Portage. Wls. Mr. and Mrs. Don
Richards and two children of Dear­ vs. Triangle; Bankers vs. Chain
.
born attended a family gathering Gang.
Friday. July 17 —Table Co. vs.
at lhe home of Mrs Bertha John­
Feldpausch; consumers Power vs.
son of Hastings last Saturday.
Hlrsch Bros
I J. Brumm and family of Lake
Odessa have moved into.the Bauma house near the school building
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY
Mr. Brumm is an electrician and
we understand will open an electric
shop at ills home.
; Miss Bernice Burkey and friend.
Ed Burma of Kalamazoo, were
. week-end guests of her parents.
I Rev. and Mrs. L. F Burkey.
I Raymond Bunn, who is working
। near Middleville, spent Monday
with his parents here and was also
I in Hastings on business.
| J. D. Knowles, who has been In
I poor health for some time, remains
very seriously 111 nt ills home here.
Miss Ruth Tabberer returned
. home from her school duller, at
Detroit on Monday of In-st week.
| She was accompanied by her friend.
। Fred Vosburg of Boston. Mass., who
! went on to West Brunch where he
। visited hl* parents, reluming Wcd। nesdny The following day he left
for Boston accompanied by Mls-cs
I Ruth and Dorothy Tabberer, who
I will be gone a month.
Rev and Mrs J I Batdorf spent
the Fourth al Stockbridge where
they attended a reunion of their
immediate family, all their chlldren being present and twenty of
the twenty-four grandchildren.
j
Betty and Buddy Richard., of

a

MEN'S PURE WOOL
TRUNKS
98c, ♦I.5O, ♦1.98
Built-in Supporters
Boy*' Pure Wool Trunks—79c

Shirts
and Washable Slacks

Keep Cool Wear Polo

Hundreds of Pairs to Choose From

SLACKS, 98c to $1.49

THATS BECAUSE
IV /C
l» BUY ONLY ARMOUR'S V j

BRANDED BEEF

FOR BOYS AND GIRLS

Armour’s Sale

Smarty” Overalls
Cool Seersuckers and PrintsSizes 3 to 8

BRANDED

Beef Roast

$1, $1.98, $2.98, $3.98

69c and 79c

BONED sod ROLLED

Camp Shorts at 49c and 69c

ib. 29c

For Boys, sizes 8 to 16 . . . Forest Green
Twill and Oxford Grey Coveralls

PORK LOIN ROAST

PORK

Loin Roast

Boys' Colorful Pajamai, 8 to 18—
2-piece styles—85c

SLICED
BACON

/2 lb. 19c

Dried Beef

23C

Colorful Shirt
Deep tones, checks, bright gay colors
are favored now. Plenty of plain
whites, too, in all sleeve lengths.
i Duke of Kent Collars . . . Flexton No
Wilt Collars .. . Shapely models

Picnics

$1.00 to $1.50

lb.

Boys' Deep Tone Shirts, Duke of
Kent Collars—79c

worth

22c

Summer Neckwear

Armour’s Ham*.°rrShr 29c

4

BUTTER CloTtrbfoom, Shults,
CARROTS
BANANAS
CANTALOUPE Ripe

MODERN
LIVING

. . . "The first step to modern living is to

consult with your lumber dealer.

Bright plaids, checks and stripes—
Wash Ties, Silk Ties, light weight
Wool Ties—just the thing to wear
with dark colored shirts

Ib. 34c
bunch 5c
4 lbs. 25c
10c

or Freeport

25c, 49c, 69c, $1

He Is

spent
the
N«-

qualified to give you advice on all build­

nsend

that go into the making of a modern

ing problems.

$1.89 and $2.49

POLO SHIRTS, 39c to 75c

PERFECT

npany
others

&gt; and
guest,
stings

Smart, colorful styles, the
newest designs.
NOW DOWN TO

Polo Shirts and Slacks for Boys, Too

MARY.YOUR ROAST
IS ALWAYS

g Aer
i Fish

d her
fihaw.

Ladies

Bathing Suits

POLO SHIRTS at 49c to 98c

slster.
nd.
Howlhe

r. and
rela­

SALE

SLACKS at 98c, $1.50, $1.98 to $2.98

Voiles, Laces, Eyelet
Embroidery and Sport
Dresses—

. not
e she

From Waters Clothes Shop

0

Dearborn are spending three weeks
1 with their uncle and aunt. Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Postma.

SUMMER DRESSES

as an
Rev
mday.

HE

Corned
p^SlBeef Hash

There ore many things

Going Fishing? We carry a full line
of every-day togs that give service
. . . and just the right color for
rough use.

home and your lumber dealer can answer
Irhee.i
Milan

b4d2Ca"’ 29c

the questions of materials, insulation,

type of foundation best suited. He can

from
the
Mll-

i and
tn
inday
flrl

Potted Meat OE/a
3 cans

AwU

answer the questions on remodeling, re­
pairing and reroofing.

Take this first

Deliveries:

8 A.M., 10 A.M. anil 3 P.M.

step .. . stop in today ond let the HOME

eldpausch

LUMBER COMPANY help you."

THE HOME LUMBER CO

HASTINGS,1
Phone 2276

F

■MARKET’

Phone 2272 We Deliver

Waters Clothes Sh
'Selling Quality Keeps Us Busy

E. STATE ST

Hastings

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THI COUNTY­

TRADE AT HOME

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

Editorials
and editor of the Watervliet
Record, has written the fol-

LONG. LONG TRAIL

■
■
Hj

held thc candidates iur president
and vice-president named by lhe

THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1930 &lt;

‘Round About Town Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday
fall where they may I

the development of the Yankee
Springs region by the federal gov­
ernment
The Democratic and Republican
national conventions have been

■

TWENTY YEARS AGO.

YEARS

years, business manager of lhe
Hastings Journal-Herald, died sud­
denly of neuralgia of lhe heart on

/a^ro^

■ two major parties, the platforms
i adopted, the keynote speeches made.
Hi [ the convention whoopee b over and
HI ! thc campaign Is on. There will be

..

W&gt;1^H

third and fourth party tickets and
up to nine or ten on the ballot

HI

next November

The race

Is

; tween preside r.t Rooseteli and Gov­
ernor Landon and all but a few
voters to each precinct will in ail
prohnbihly ca.-t :h&gt;-ir votes for onr

|^H

or thc riihrr of the major purty
'candidate' It ,■ f
diiumt.i:

Apparently the
sheriff's gun
doesn't work much better than the
one they used last time.

long

bc-

|
^■^H'

:
'

Thb

Quite a band concert last Thurs­
day night.

tn some states, but no political stu'denl all0W5 lhes* mlnor iroupe
'much cou-:drratlcm tn the balloting

V

;

YEARS

if lhe Lemke-Coughlin movement
column b written thb week ' wlU draw enough voting support in

tor on The Banner for thb week. | sue with lhe average voter b going

and not being overly ambitious we
are runnmg the same material
concurrently in our own newspaper.
The Watervliet Record. It is pos­
sible for us to do thb. because in
extending the invitation Editor Cook
gave u* considerable leeway in the
following words:

to be an economic one. and he will
----- --------------------------ask himself
if he b a* well or better

off and enjoying more of the mater­
ial comforts and blessings of life for
himself and his family than he was
when President Roosevelt took office
three and one-half year* ago. He
' will pay little attention to the &lt;
constitutional issue*. He knows that
&gt;
"I would like to have you com-1
his liberties have been in no way
I ment on Issues of the day from lhe
curtailed by the Democratic ad­
j Democratic standpoint, as you would
ministration. In fact he has more
J In jour own paper. In the three or
personal liberties than he had un­
• four issue* I hope to have filled by der previous Republican regimes.
• guest editors, there b an opportunHe is not so much concerned about
t Ity to give Banner readers somebalancing the government's budget
• thing new and different from the
as he b in balancing hb own bud­
• usual trend of material presented."
get. which he 1* again able to do
In writing lhe editorb) column under a Democratic administration.
• for The fanner this week, the wi*The big national conventions at
• er h deeply appreciative of lhe
which the candidates are namad
• privilege of having hb comments'
for presidetit and vice president ev­
• presented to a large group of readery four years, and party platforms
t era whom he ha* never before con- ;
I adopted, are entirely outside the
lac ted editorially. I am apprecia­
u"’ ' '
i constitution, and in fact are contive of the fact that r_
‘“’'Inwr, w lhe ld«. W thoee who
quaintancc with
Hastings
...u
wrote lhe constitution back in 1787.
Barry county makes it impossible i
The Idea ot the framers was to
for me to comment on any of your '
avoid the popular election of the
purely local problems, and what I
chief executive of ths new govemdo write must necessarily be of a
, ment. and the constitution as finally
general nature
1 ratified by the original states, pro-

.
:
.
'
:

r
;
•
j
|

•
■
■

-

-

About five measures late with lhe
big noise-thb time.

Prom my fan mall: "Wonder
what happened to all the bell*
made from the cellophane wrappers
on the packages of cigarettes?"
I'll tall you. my friend . . they
went the road of all jig saw puzzle*,
miniature golf courses, yo-yoe and
Austins . . .

for Uje Hastings Banner. On the any state to affect lhe result. There
Invitation of Editor Richard M. will be desertions to lhe opposition
Cook, who U away on a vacation from each of the major camps, but
trip, the writer accepted the re-' these will to a considerable extent
sponslbiHty of being the guest edl- ' balance each other. The real la-

•

That Cooata—Not It* Sin

Aug.

S£PT

LONG MONTHS
Philadelphia was probably larger so consideration: a commission ap­
the per capita expenditure may not pointed by Governor Fitzgerald Is
have been dbproportlonate.
now studying lhe welfare problem
with a view to the consolidation of
While the eyes and ears of the several agencies now functioning
voters are going to be turned more independently; the state orime com­
to the national aspects of thc ap­ mission is giving study to the proba­
proaching campaign, state issues in tion and parole system and will
Michigan are also important and doubtless make recommendations to
should
be given
consideration. the next legislature; commissions are
Michigan b in a transition period giving study lo changes in the stale
in government, state and local. The banking laws and the state elec­
long tenure of one party in power tion machinery. Il Is apparent that
mitigated against change* to meet lhe next legislature is going to have
changing conditions. Not until thc plenty to do and there is opportun­
depression, the breakdown of lhe ity for some constructive work.
general property tax system and the
threatened closing of educational' Beside* the election of candidate*
institutions, was there any serious | for office lhe voter* will be con-

- —

done

obstinately opposed what the federal
authorities have been trying to do.
Highway Commissioner Van Wag­
oner has had no trouble obtaining
liberal allotments from Washington
for highway Improvements in Michl*

AND VICINITY.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Rillstone and
daughter. Prances, of Detroit are
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kah­
ler thb week.
Wendell Vreeland and family of
Detroit spent thc week end at their
cottage here.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Fisher and
Jennie Honeysette of Kalamazoo
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
E. D. Reynolds.
Mr and Mrs. Clifford Kahler were
Hastings shoppers Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Vereah of Lansing
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mra.
Chas. Kahler. ..
Mra. Mina Aldrich and Seward
Walton spent Thursday afternoon
in Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Dickerson
and daughter. Virginia, visited rel­
atives Sunday in Breckenridge.
Mra. Clayton Matteson and chil­
dren from Jackson are spending
some time in the Vreeland cottage.
Mr. and Mrs Ed. Matueen of Kal­
amazoo entertained her sister and
fimily from Detroit at their cot­
tage here over the week end.
Mra Gertrude Sprague entertain­
ed relatives from Kalamazoo. De­
troit and Ionia lhe Fourth.
Mr and Mrs. Morton relumed
to their home In Dayton. Ohio.
Thursday after spending lhe past
week here.

wnile my personal acquaintance vldod’ and aUU P«&gt;»«d*«. 1°' lhe attempt made in thb slate to fronted with
several proposed
In Die Hasting* community b limit- election by the several states of | spread lhe burden w
of, government । amendments lo the state conslilurd. 1 have had lhe pleasure of form- presidential electors who elect the I more equitably by broadening; the lion at Ute November election. The
tag some one
fine uqulnuncei
acquaintances uuu
among |' president
pre.Ut.nl and vice president.
prealdenl. With-1
wnh- baM.,
legblalure has submitted two pro­
your citizenry.
•nry. Among
Ml lhe
Uie number oul a
“
"V
P amendment to
w lhe con■
posals. One would grant to coun­
that I recall off hand are: Hon. stitulion
........... - **
thb
”’ provision was
*
early
Il was Governor Comstock's ad- ties a larger measure of home rule
Jolm C. Ketcham. Hon. Len Feigh-. set aside and the presidential elec­ minbtralion and the Democratic tn changing the form of county
ner of Nashville. Justice William W. tors do not exercise any personal legislature of 1933 that met the government,
Agitation
for
thb
Potter of lhe state supreme court, judgment al all. but simply register critical situation; that abolished the amendment
*
'
comes largely from
former
Representative
Charless the will as expressed by a majority general property tax for state pur­ counties having Urge urban popu­
Parker. County Treasurer Lor­. of the voters of their respective poses; that enacted a sale* tax lations, particuUrly Waj-ne. The
enzo F. Maus. Mayor Charles Leon­. stales. In fact in Michigan the which puts the state government other amendment was sponsored by
ard. former Senator Henry Olasner. names of the presidential elector* and its institutions on a sound fi­ lhe state crime commission and
Representative E- E- Faulkner. Dr. do not even appear on thc ballot. nancial basb so that Governor provides that the unreasonable
Instead, the names of lhe candi­ Fitzgerald could meet the state's fi­ search and seizure clause of the
B O. Swift.
date* for president and vice presl- nancial obligations; that enacted constitution -shall not be con­
I have made frequent motor trips&gt; dent, a* nominated at the party banking legislation which saved strued to bar from evidence In any
through Barry county and have al­• conventions, are printed and the hundred* of state banks, making it court of criminal jurisdiction, or in
ways been delighted with the rug­. statute provides that by marking a possible for them to re-organtoe and any criminal proceeding before any
ged beauty of the district, in fact. cross in the party circle or in the re-open so that depositors' fund* magistrate or Justice of the trace,
lhe one scenic part of lhe drive be­ square of the bracket containing could be saved; that enacted the any firearm—or any other danger­
tween Battle Creek and Lansing, to। the names of the party nominees for public trust commission act to pro- ous weapon, seized by any police
HIND8 CORNERS.
my mind U the short stretch where president and vice president, the tecl as far as possible lhe Invent- &lt;officer outside lhe curtilage of any
Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore and
M-78 crosses a corner of the coun­ vote is considered to have been cast menu of five hundred mlllfnh dol- ।dwelling house in thb state" Un- daughter spent Sunday with Mr.
and
Mrs.
Glen Moore near Nash­
it_____________________
for the entire U*l of presidential lar* tn real estate mortgage bonds der the proposed amendment the
ville.
electors for that party.
that «ere in default. It was the ‘ citizen will retain the right to malnMra. Stella Bump of Hastings
Politically Barry county has long
======-=
been associated with Berrien be-1 In n0 othfr country of the world Democratlc administration that met' tain arm* in hb own home for hb spent last week with her daughter.
thc demands ol thc people lor lhe. own protection. However. If he is Mrs. Will Moore
Ing one ot the six counties in the j »* there anything like one of these
Mrs. C A. Robinson of Hastings
Fourth congressional district. While ' «rcal P*rty conventions. It b pe­ establishment ot state liquor control found in possession of dangcrou*
that would keep greedy private in- weapon* outside hb home the wca- xpent Wednesday afternoon with
the dbtrict ha* some substantial j cullarly an American institution
Mr* C. N Tobias
manufacturing industries and the 1 a”d ‘he spectacle b one well worth teresta out of retail liquor profit It pnn* may he presented In rmirt a*
Allen Bishup h working cm the
- be a mistake to turn |j evidence
-and- he will
- -- be
- required
- -.------- to
-- new
H schoolhouse n.
resort and tourbt business U 1m-' -*«&gt;ng. The meeting together of would surely
al LZUHUll.
Dutton.
the liquor business over entirely to, show that he was not violating lhe |
Ralph Skidmore is painting our
portant. lhe dbtrict b predomi- dclesaw* from «*ch one of the 48
private Interests. There should be 1 law by possessing them. The amend- schoolhouse.
nantly agricultural, and that goes atalM and •»&gt; of lh« American pos- more and stricter slate control in- ment would strengthen lhe arm of
ci!led on’ Prrt "Kelli s
for my own county of Berrien ln;&lt;*aatona- together with the thouOf less.
less It was a Democratic the
unpcpr. .....
____ 7 Sunday.
stead of
thc law in dealing with gangsters
near ui.i..„.
Hickory Comers.
which approximately half of the 'ands of the parly followers and
Mr and Mra. Lewb Abbott of
population reside within incorporate, spectators, the color and animation, administration that started state and other criminal*.
Battle Creek spent Friday after­
aid
for
the
public
schools
which
!
—
z.t
ed cities. At Lansing I have found the bands and the brilliant lighting
noon with her brother. W. o. To­
ihe representatives from the Fourth (effect* of the convention hall, all during lhe last fiscal year witnessed’ There will no doubt be other
.
the return lo lhe local communi-1 proposed amendment*, initiated by bias. and family.
Mr and Mr* Keet Tobins and
dbtrict in substantia) accord on' combine to produce a fascinating lies of over 820.000.000 from state J petition. One of these b to pro­
children and hb father. W O Tbi spectacle. Big wigs of the party or­
most legislative proposals.
Fred
revenues for the maintenance of the vide for thc exemption of foodstuffs bia*. visited Mr. and Mr*.
&gt; ganlzation rub shoulders with the
from the provisions of the sales Bush and family of BaUle Creek.
Approximately
1.700 acres of lesser lights, the small politician* public schooh; It was thb admlnbSunday.
tratlon that enacted delinquent tax lax. If this should be adopted 11
land unsuited for agriculture
Mbs
Thelma
Tobias
and
friend.
_
are and ward healers of the party
would lop at least SJO.OOOOOO from Everett Muir^f Kitlamwio^sS
being developed for two recreation ■ There are high officials of thc gov- legblation that saved thousands of
lhe sales
&lt;ate&lt; tax
IS* revenues.
r.vami.i
Tha anti­ Tuesday afternoon _.a.a_
..
the
The
with aher .father.
areas in Michigan. One of these eminent. United States senators homes, farms, and business property
saloon league will initiate some W. O. Tobias.
projects b near Yankee Springs in | and representatives, governors of from tax sale.
Mr. and Mrs George Comfort of
amendments affecting the sale of
Barry county. Several years ago the many states and other state ofKalamazoo and Mr. and MrS'Chas
ft is noteworthy that the succeed­ liquor, but this will be as proposed Vanranktn &lt;local&gt; were Sunday
writer drove from Hastings up into I ncials. Beautifully gowned women
ing legislature of 1935 nwde few amendments to lhe statutes and
the Hilb of thb Yankee Springs dis- share Use spotlight with the staleichanges in recovery enactments of will go first to thc legislature and Edd Newton's.
trlct and on down by Gun lake to men and other notables. The entire
lhe preceding administration. The then later on the ballot should the 1
Bradley. I was impressed then with nation b Ibtening in on one ot
MORGAN.
next legislature, however, must deal legblaturc fall lo enact thc pro­
Mr .nd Un o «. J««lrord ot
the wild and picturesque character! these gatherings. Money b lavishly
with the delinquent tax problem. posed amendments.
Bellevue spent Sunday with Mr. and
of thb area, equal to the scenic re- spent by many of the thousands
Mr*. Frank Wilcox and enjoyed a
Probably the wisest solution b for
gions of the west Surely the admin- who attend. Those attending the
Governor Fitzgerald says he will picnic dinner
the stale lo turn the matter of tax
Utraiion could have chosen no bel­ convention of the party in power
The Van Sickle reunion was held
collections and sale of property for ask the next legislature to appro­ at lhe home of Mr and Mra. Wm.
ter territory in which to establish naturally spend lhe most money. Il
delinquent taxes entirely over lo lhe priate 15.000.000 to finance a wider Van Sickle the Fourth
A bountia recreation area tn cooperation b (Mimaied that the visitors at the
-------------------K
.ful
dinner was served and a good
counties. The slate government will stale building program. There U no
with the National Park senice. It Republican convention - in. Cleve­
probably never revert to the general question but that Increased hospital I
has the advantage over western na­ land spent a million dollars in the
property tax for state purposes.
tional park* of being near great fej days that they were there and
are badly needed fhis could be an , enU. Mr. and Mrs Frank Wilcox
population center*. Hastings and llAl lhe armenu. .ptnl much
The braeiuu exempuon Irani
accomplished fact now through1 Sunday.
other Barry county lownY will de­ more then lta( durhM Urelr week &gt;1
w « ,
federal grants in part, had Rcpub- , Mr; and Mrr cl*tr VanSyekle of
rive profitable tourbt business from PhlUdelphU. The ellendwee M rhouM. end prob.sly
receive
Ucut H.drr.niB in Multon not «.[ rf

O Club marked the ninth anni­
versary of that organisation.
Ralph W. Rogers entertained at
Rogers cottage at Long lake on
Thursday evening. Messrs. Guy E.
Crook. Ford Hick* and A. E Mul­
holland. The party eaught 31 fish.
The Hastings Ufa Hmara defeat­
ed tha Colored Athletics of Grand
Rapid* in a double header Tuesday.
Mrs. Addison Spaulding, aged 83,
one of the few remaining early set­
tlers of lhe »outhern part of Barry
county passed away unexpectedly on
Monday.
Patrick Edgetie. of thb city, has
in his possession a sword and scab­
bard which belonged to hb ancestor.
Capt. Nathan Hale, the great pa­
triot of lhe American Revolution.
Fred Rehor and friend. Don
O'Connor, have gone to Ann Arbor
to attend summer school at lhe
University.

aa wall a* state record. Hastings
thus adds another champion to her
already large number.
The M. E. church was filled al­
most to tta limit Bunday evening
when Rev. Taylor of the Episcopal
church spoke on the ' Past. Present
and Future of Methodism, a con­
tribution to church Unity.” It was
one bf the broadest and. moat lib­
eral addresses ever made tn a pul­
pit here.
Mis* Blanche Barnr* left yester­
day for Lansing where she will
spend lhe summer with her grand­
mother.
Mi** Gladys Lombard of Colorado
la expected in the elty thb week
where she will make her home with
her uncle. J. T. Lombard, and fam­
ily.
Misses Flo Stinchcomb. Wild*
Blivln, and Rae Robinson left to­
day on their wheel? for Battle
Creek.

FIFTY YEARS AGOOvar 300.000 lbs. of wool were
marketed In thb city thb season
Carpenters and brickUycr* are
busily engaged on Parker's new ho­
tel.
Em Busby U adding two bath
rooms to hb barber shop. We be­
lieve thb will prove a paying in­
vestment.
The Catholic* of Huting* parish
have been granted a resident priest.
Rev. Fr. Panning, who will hold hb
first services in lhe church here.
THIRTY YEARS AGO
Sunday the 33th He will also have
It b proposed to open the new
fair around* charRe of the
at Nashville
dining hall on the tzt

What I'd like to know Is which
with an old folks social party Fri­
Charley signed that letter.
A. W. Bailey arrived home from
day evening. August 3.
lhe Ypsilanti mineral springs Fri­
Mrs. Geo. W- Williams, for many
Ail nicely typed, too! Can't even
day much improved in health.
years a resident of thb city, was
analyze lhe handwriting!
About^Sept. 1 Thomas Campbell
given a reception one day last week
goes to'Bay city to practice law in
Yea, Jane, you can rightfully be at lhe home of her grandson. Z. A. partnership with 8 P Flynn, a ris­
Williams. MS Stewart Ave.. Grand
called a columnist.
ing young lawyer of that city.
Rapids, tn honor of her 90lh birth­
There! That proves I read your day.
DISTRICT.
Mis* Mae Nevins of Grand Rap­ | Rev. BRANCH
stuff, now let's loe you prove you
E. F. Rhoades. Mrs Rhoades
ids spent Sunday with Miss Minnie
read mine!
। and family spent the Fourth with
DeVine and Mis* Agnes Supplec.
1 relatives tn Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. James Parmer and
What became of lhe rifle range
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nelson called
the Rod and Gun club were plan­ Mrs. Supplee chaperoned a crowd of on Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Shuler in
young people al Wall lake last week.
ning?
Kalamo Sunday afternoon.
Lota of fun and lots of fish
I The social at the Lester Hawks
L. J. Burgdorf, editor and pro­
That would be great indoor sport
home was very well attended.
prietor of the Murfreesboro. Tenn..
next winter.
About |31 was cleared.
Home Journal b visiting Emry and
Mr. and Mrs. Miles shroder and
Wonder why I don't seem to have John Busby and families.
children were Bunday guest* of Mr
any ideaa today?
and Mrs Lester Hawks and family
FORTY YEARS AGO
Some of our neighbors expect tn
Must be lhe heat.
Carl Weber of thb city and J. A attend the Townsend meeting at
More.** of Detroit lowered the tan­ Cleveland thb week
Wonder if It's any cooler up dem competition state record for a
Mr and Mrs c. O Mason. Rich­
there. Windy?
mile race at Grand Rapids. July 3_________
ard Mason. Mrs. El«ie Tartell and
lo 3 06. lowering the record from daughter
............„ evening
. .......... _
'
‘
were Sunday
Lucky bum! No wonder you look 2:07 1-2. Since the race It lias guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Neldown on us so complacently.
been discovered that 2 00 b a world son.

Saw Chet Hodges at Commercial
Club Tuesday with his coat on . .
Guess the old theory holds: "What
keeps out lhe cold will also keep out
the heat." eh. Chet?

Wish I were in lhe air condition­
ing business ... I sure could use
some around here.
Tommy's recipe for keeping cool:
Stand in Baldy's shadow!
I hear Les Lockwood took Tom­
my's advice. Came home with a
good-sized meal ... for a pussy call

Summer Cleaning
Summer garments made flawlessly clean

of all stains, grease spots, and. most im­

portant of all. unpleasant odors.
os to size and shape.

Meow!
Duff Laubaugh's doing his stuff
too . . . Landed a nice bass. over
four pounds.

A man offered to sell us one. loo,
but we thought the price too steep.

Light

summer fabrics treated with special care

EXPERTLY, PRESSED. TOO !

McCREERY’S • DRY CLEANERS
TtLEPHOHt lilt

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

Wonder if my boss'd let me start
a fish column. Call it Fish Tails.
Understand Loyal Lowell's been
entertaining lately . . . "Job's ComAnd this weather too!

Los Angeles sure profiled by Rose
DeFoe's visit recently.
Understand the masculine mem­
bers of the Health Unit staff got
kinds tired toting packages up
stairs.
— Well, my boss b eaming home m
slow but sure.

Understand he look time out to
do some mountain-climbing.

Ah. ha! So that explains those
dilatory little rambles he took
through the surrounding country a
while ago.
Hollywood's a swell place in my
boss's opinion 'Plenty of stars thete
to hitch one's wagon to.

Mowers to Bea Heamey . . . She
can still smile after she's fitted and
fined and fit!
This week's nomination for Has­
tings Hall of Eligible Bachelorettes.
Gerry Williams . . . that cute little
brunette tn Archie McDonald's of­
fice. Boy. has she got the beautiful

and Mra. Chas. Harrington the
Fourth
Mra. Ben Bostatter went to Has- \
llnga Bunday evening to spend a
day or ao with her abler. Mrs Eu­
nice Keller.
Mr. and Mra. Kershener and Mr.
and Mra. John Bailey and baby of
Lansing and Glenn Moore and fam­
ily of Eaton Rapids spent tha Fourth
with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Boqtoltar.
Mr. and Mra. B Rowlader were
guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Will Hart-1
Ing of Berryville Thursdsy evening i
in honor al Mr. Harding's birthday. j
Edward Rose of Barryville I*.
spending a couple of days with Erneat Gross
'
'
Mr. and Mra. Benner of Battle
Creek. Mr. and Mra. Harry Whit- I
more and Mr. and Mrs. Dorrance)
Shaffer were Bunday vbl toes at I
Nellie Wolfe's in lhe Oecil Hunton i

CLOSE-OUT

SPECIAL
-ON-

DIAMOND
BARN RED PAINT
We hove o stock of Gollom ond 5-Gal-

Ions—value $1.25 per gallon.

Close

Out Price/ 73c per gallon. Get yours

ot once os it will not lost long

&gt;

E

�TUI HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY *■ »M

SOCIAL EVENTS
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Fairchild spent
the week end In Bay city.
Miss Dora Gallup ol Beulah 1*
Visiting her aunt, Mrs. Fred Bower.
Mr. and Mn. James Langston
were visitor* in Battle Creek Mon-1
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Ryan spent
the week end in Detroit and Can­
ada.
Mr. and Mra. Elmer Andler spent!
ihe week end with friends gl Bay­
City and Saginaw.
Mrs. Kate Thoma* and daugh­
ter. Mis* Lulu Thoma*, who Lx a
teacher in lhe Lansing school*, vtal«M Mr*. Clarence arohe on Thurs4ay.

Allen Creweoa of Ann Arbor was
Wm Bhr
Shriber went
Albion and friend. Ml**
a week end guest at the P. W. Bteb- Monday lo
further treatment.
bln* cottage at Gun lake.
Tolles,
_______
_________________________
______________________
ha pwwu.
aa Mn.
Mra. Jack Snytter
visited
Mr. and Mn. Purrnt B- Lane and
family vulud irund. In snruuc dnuihur. Mr,
brl Ktrmeen at ialurtay and Sunday.
■nd
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Sweep* and
and Inna
Long rsks
Lake. Tonia
Ionia rmintv
county, an
on Caledonia last
laat weak.
July 4.
i Mr. and Mra. Keith Fox and Mr. daughter of near Bunfield were
Ur. and Mrs Bert Oarlock of ' and Mre. Ray Shroyer spent the jSy**14 of Mr^and Mr*, p. R. Ro*enot near Carlton
rand Ladle
the
ol ! week and In Kalamaaoo M
a* guest*
guests ot .... —
and family
»a
Grand
L«dg« called at U
m home ol
Center, on the Fourth.
Mr. and Mn. Herbert Freeland Bat- i Mr. and Mr*. Gon* Will*Mr. and Mra. Fred Bower *nd,
urday evening.
/ I rusmII Cleveland wa* in Culver,
Mr. and Mn. William Thoma* ' Ind., over the week end attending daughter* and the Mlsaea Margaret
spent the Fourth of July and Bun- । the reunion ot lhe class of 1923 ot Cooley and Dora Gallup spent lhe
Fourth of July tn Lake Ode**a aU
day tn Kenosha. Wl*.. visiting Mr. the oulver Military Academy.
Thoma*' mother.
| MT and Mn. Arthur Kress and tending lhe Bible Conference.
Ml** Julia Anne Templeton re-,
Mr. and Mrl. Miner Bensway ot I family end Donald Mead of Grand
Flint spent the Fourth of July and Rapids spent Sunday with her turned Monday from Silver lake,
north of Grand. Rapids, where she
Sunday at the home of Mr. and mother.1 Mr*. Nancy Diamond.
Mrs. Jack Snyder.*
i MT. and Mrs. Chester Hodges..Mr. spent several days a* the guost of
Mr. and Mrs. Trevctt Chase (Bet- and Mrs. Don Siegel and Mr. and Mr. and Mr*. Everett A. McAfee.
ty Lindsay) and Mra. Wilfred Mr*. Roman Feldpauach attended
MU* Lucille Willett*. MU* DorU
Lindsay of Grand Rapid* vUitcd' the furniture bell in Grand Rapid* Ryan. Clarke Walker and Melvin
Hastings friend* Bunday.
Wednesday night.
Gelow of Kalamazoo were guest*
Saturday and Sunday ot Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Hammond at Lansing.
Rev. and Mrs. R. L Boadway of
■ Lake Odessa were guests of Rev.
Hand Mrs. E. O. McSherry Sunday
' evening. Rev. Boadway preached the
I evening service at tha First United
.[ Brethren church.

VACATION 1ST-CAMPERS-Stock Up on I

CANNED

FOO

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swerdfeger
of Buffalo. N. Y.. and Charles
: Parker and Buster Whiting of Ann
Arbor were week end guest* of Mr.
'and Mrs. Roman Feldpausch at thc
' Oun lake cottage.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Thomas and
dlidren. Mrs. Clarence Orohc and
Us* Chrystal Thomas attended lhe
-homas family reunion, which was
held at the home of F. R Thomas
at Battle Creek on Saturday. July
Mr. and Mr*. Louis Karmes spent
Monday In Quincy at the home of
her sister and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Nathan Hastings, where they

NATURES
HEALTH AND,.

FRESHNESS

SEALED IN !

QUALITY CANNED FOODS FOR THOSE
GOING TO COTTAGES AND CAMPING.
ALSO HOME SUPPLY FOR UNEXPECTED
SUMMER VISITORS. LOW PRICES PRE­
VAIL NOW. DROUGHT CONDITIONS
WILL INCREASE CANNED FOOD PRICES.
DC AC
ILHV

EARLY JUNE
SWEET. TENDER

PADM
UUKIM

NO. 2 CANS

Id OZ.
CANS

OOUDEN BANTAM
CREAM STYLE

WAX OR C1REKN

D KT A HI C

DLHIw

NO 2
CANS

CUT STRINGLESS

C DI Al A A U
Or I H MU ll

HEALTHFUL, thor.
OUGHLY WASHED

TOMATOES
DCCTC
DEiEi I W

EVERGOOD

NO 2
CANS
NO. 2
CANS

NO. 2
CANS

FANCY CUT
• ?
ODESSA BRAND

PEARS

10c

APRICOTS

18c
4- 30c

Apple Sauce
FINE FLAVOR

PEACHES s2c.v 31c
PINEAPPLE x2- 15c
APPLE BUTTER-OI15c

°o^

SARDINES

Oval
Can

10c

MUSTARD OR TOMATO SAUCE

MACKEREL 3 cr 25c
CII QI 11 n Fancy Wel
w H 11 I In I
14c

COOKIES |Qc
Dutch Spice. Lemon *and
Chocolate Square* Cocoanut.
Butter Scotch. Dutch Cook Im,
Wedge-Woods. Vanilla—

U. S. No I

Pack—Can

KIPPERED SNACKS

6c

SALMON B -12c

NEW POTATOES 10
PET MILK

PILLSBURY'S FLOUR

WESSON OIL

COCOANUT K? Ib 20c

VINEGAR KMX,

MUFFETS
pkg. 10c
POST'S BRAN
' ' FLAKES, Ig. pkg. 15c
BORDEN'S
12c
PUSS. WHOUBOME

:».Aour.D 3 SS, 22c

Send to Pet Milk Co. f can label and receive Free
32 Page Cook Book. •

RICE .,JhK.
Ib 6c
NAVY BEANS 4 lbs. 15c

CHOICE HAND PICKED

k 39c

5 Ib bag 30c

'TJTS&amp;S4

qt. 45c

qt. bottle 10c

SUNSHINE CIGARETTES

pkg 10c

REDMAN Tobacco, 10c pkg.3 for 25c
f^EN-JEL
2 pkgs. 25c
WOODBURY'S SOAP

3 bars 25c

C. THOMAS STORES
IM WEST STATE STREET

.5, MICHIGAN

brating their 23rd wedding anni­
versary. at which twenty were pres­
ent.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. 8.
Baird Saturday and Sunday were
their daughter and her husband.
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Cleveland and
son. Tom, of Port Huron and their
son and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Baird and daughter, Johanna, of
Marshall.
j Mr. and Mrs. D. M- Strong of
Hannibal. Mo. are spending two
weeks here as the guests of their
daughter and husband. Mr. and
Mrs. Harold A- Phillips. Mrs. Phil­
lips’ brother. C. C- Strong, also of
Hannibal, was here for the Fourth
of July and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Wilcox,
Margaret. Betty and Warren*, and
Mr. and Mrs-. Basil Smith of Jackron spent the week end of the
Fourth with relatives here cele­
brating three of tiie former family’s
birthdays with a pot luck dinner
Sunday at Clear lake.
Guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest B.
Lane on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
William 8. Thompson. Sr.. Mn Wil­
liam S. Thompson, jr. of Water­
down. Ont.. Mrs. 8. A White and
daughter of Orangeville. Ont.. Dr.
and Mrs. J R Hay and Mr. and
Mrs. F. E Lane of Saranac.
Howard Allerdtng returned Sun­
day from a ten days’ trip to the
Great Lakes centennial at Cleve­
land. Mr. Allerding can give would
be visitors some good pointers, he
feels concerning a visit there. The
lighting scheme to him was one of
the marked features of the exposilion.
Mr. and Mrs. M S. Hodgson and
son. Albert Carveth. of charleston.
West Va.. spent Fourth of July and
Sunday with Mrs. Hodgson's par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Carveth.
Albert Carveth Hodgson remained
for a few days’ visit with his grand­
parents. Mr. and Mrs. carveth plan­
ning to take him to Charleston la-

Our entire stock must be reduced
prices slashed
profits
sacrificed. Room must be made for our New Ready-to-Wear
Department. Sale starts Friday and Saturday and continues all
next week. Come early as the “Cream of Bargains" will go first!

ALL SILK HOSE

All Our Dollar
Wash Dresses

FULL LENGTH,
SPECIAL—

C

JJ

3 Pairs for $1.00

REDUCED TO

69c

35c

Knee Hose, All Silk

Men's Socks, 15c and 19c at __10c

One Rack of $1.69
$4 .00
Dresses Reduced tjo—
I

FULL FASHIONED, All
Silk Admiration Hose at

Girls' Wash DRESSES
Sizes 6 to 14—Also

Women's Wash Dresses OQc
One tableful at—
VW

WWW

MEN’S LISLE and ALL 4 Q
SILK SOCKS at only—
IvC

DOMESTICS YARD GOODS

CU RTAINS

SPECIALS

A. C. A. FEATHERPROOF TICKING

OEr
faO

CURTAIN GOODS

RAYON PANTIES
and BLOOMERS ..

10 Ounce CANVAS
36 in. wide
few

OQc

SI , M Ryydy Mid. SHEETS,
■ firm, good sheet,
QQc
on sale at
0*3
HEMST1TCHED SI.
$1-39 SHEETS. 81x99,

HEMSTITCHED
CASES

HOPE BLEACHED MUSLIN
■nd FANCY SEER­
SUCKER at ----------

25

15'
19'

RAYON DRESS

BLEACHED

REDUCED
25* to 50*
Several Panels and Cur*
tain* Greatly Reduced!

WOMEN'S UNION
RAYON and LISLE
REDUCED TO.

18sum.

WOMEN'S WELL
MADE OOWN8 at
FANCY PLAID
CRASH TOWELS al

10*

PEQUOT SHEETS

■1

PART LINEN
TOWELING—
5 yd*, for -

&lt;3QC

Crctonnc 36 In.
4 Qt
light and dark, at I v

CANNON Unbleached
»-4 SHEETING ....

39

Good Quality PRINTS 4 (V
Dark and Light ....
I U

One Lot of Art Goods at

BOYS* WASH and
PLAY SUm al ....

QQa

39'

STEVENS' ALL
LINEN CRASH

HALF PRICE!

MEN'S and BOYS*
Tww-Fteea PAJAMAS

SA«

bleached Muslin for

Miss Mary Smith of Grand Rap­
ids. who during her high school
days here was a member of the
,Maurice Pierson household, spent
the Fourth with them. In company
with her sister. Miss Nor* Smith.
I a teacher at Royal Oak. she sails
[Saturday from Montreal for an
eight weeks’ trip to thc British Isles
। and European point*.
I Miss Margaret Gladstone, who
• ha* been visiting her mother. Mrs.
Lots Gladstone, returned Thursday
; to New York to resumb her work
i on the Brooklyn Eagle.
I Richard Cook, in company with
his sL’ter. Mrs. David French and
her three daughter* who have mo­
tored thru from Loa-Angele*, 1* ex| pected to reach Hastings this eve­
ning.

vw

I

4 Ec

AUTO BLANKETS. Mexican

99

I

OUR ENTIRE STOCK of

Cinderella
DRESSES
One-Fourth Off

SERVICE GUILD PICNIC.
The merrtbers of lhe Emily Dewey
Service Guild of thc Methodist
church met for a picnic at Thorn­
apple lake Monday evening. The
1 girls were especially pleased hy the
surprise attendance of Mrs. Leroy
Dewey of Grand Rapids who was
their founder and former sponsor.
After a swim and supper, an Im। presslve installation service wa*
held by firelight, symbolizing the
Christian fire. Mr*, w. Maylan
Jones, presiding, expressed the ap­
preciation of the guild to Mis*
Ethel Jones for new song sheet* and
to Miss Maude Wallace for her
faithful renriee as president for the
past year; also the pleasure of tHe
[group in welcoming a June bride,
1 Mrs. Charlotte Zuschnltt Heath n&lt;
as
the new president, other officers
installed were secretary. Miss Lucy
Bassett,
treasurer.
Mias
Ethel
Jones; and four department chair­
men, spiritual life. Miss Helen An­
gell; world service, Miss Maude
Wallace;
Christian
citizenship.
Miss Ellen Phllbrook; and social
and supply, Ml** Grace Will.

DEATH OF MRS.
WILLIS STREETER.
Mrs. Willis Streeter, age 47. wife
ot Former County Treasurer Willis
Streeter, passed away at her home
at Oun lake Tuesday afternoon.
Surviving are the huaband and two
daughters, Mr*. Donald Muir ot
Kalamazoo and Miss Norma Street­
er of Middleville. The body will lie
in state at the Bowen* Mills M. E.
church Thursday from 12 until 1 -.30
at which lime funeral services will
be held. Burial will be in Elwood
cemetery. Wayland, under the aus­
pice* of Middleville Chapter O. E
8. No. H.

Our entire stock of coats, suits and dresses must
be sold before moving into our new home at 138
West State Street. Every garment MUST GO!
$6.88 DRESSES, Now
ALL $4.88 DRESSES, Now
ALL $3.88 DRESSES, Now
ALL $2.88 DRESSES, Now

$5.16
$3.68
$2.91
$2.16

ALL SUMMER COATS HALF PRICE
Come early—Avoid the rurh—Valuer like there won’t hut

H ASTI NGS

Exclusive, Hut .Not Expensive

PHONi

i

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY t, 1KM
* from the county and the remaining Nltt law was enacted by the leglx-| Ux. All of thb is paid by autorno1-8 divided equally among Die lature ot 1831. It requires counties ; bile owners. Every dollar expended
eighty-throe counties.
When all to Uke over all township roads for highways in this county comes
such bonds are retired the county within the five years following its from lhe state Formerly townships
is permitted to use this Horton law enactment tn 1931. taking one-fifth , raised their funds for the construe money as follows: One-half of it of the township highway mileage lion and repair of township roads
must go into the general road fund each year. For the first year, when , and had to pay a considerable share
of the county. The other half of It the first 20 per cent of such high- for Covert roads. The county Itself
Is to be divided between the county ways was Uken over, the sum of 82.- used to raise large sums by Uxation,
and the cities and villages ot the 000.000 was taken from the gas tax but now Barry county and all the
began. many Michigan coun- county, according to population. and divided among the counties, not I townships are relieved of the highwere *o burdeneri with Covert The county's part of the money in proportion to their population, way Ux.
must be used for highway purposes, nor the number of automobiles payWe thought the readers would be
Ip In meeting them—more help broadly speaking. It has been ruled Ing weight ux. but upon the basis interested in this summary of the
jut could be obtained from taxing that a county can use Its part on of the township highway mileage sources of the road money that is
township highways.
within the comity For lhe second expended for highways in Barry
| levies to pay theta bonds while the
Later on another law was passed, year 20 per cent more of the lowfi- county. For lite present situation
, depression was most severe would
ship highways were Uken over by when Uxpayers are relieved of ux
amount to oonfiacallng a great deal taking $3530000 from lhe gas ux
and dividing It among the counties counties and 8500.000 additional burdens for construction and muitv
cash was Uken from the gas Ux tenance of highways they should
j lions the legislature passed what on the same basis as the weight tax
and given to the counties, to be dU- Dunk the state of Michigan. They
is
divided.
That
is.
7-8
to
be
divided
: was known as lhe •'Horton law."
trlbuted as mentioned for the pur- have been helped, loo. by the 15। Previously the counties had been among the counties according to pose of defraying the expense to" mill Ux limitation law Not only
given half the weight tax. to be the amount of weight tax paid in -the
counties of ....................
taking over,
con­ does the state help our highways,
------------“ —
used solely in maintaining or con- such counties, and lhe remaining
structing
and maintaining township providing the cash for them, but
among
the
( Struction of county highways. The one-eighth divided
highways.
the stale is giving large amounts
. Horton law gave to counties the re- eighty-three counties equally.
This year the final 20 per cent of for the support of the public schools
We consider what Is known as
malnlng half ot the weight Ux to
help them pay their Covert road the "McNilt law" one of the most township highways has been Uken of this and every Michigan county,
• —------- ---- • *
constructive measures ever passed over and the sum of $4,000,000 will
WEST HOPE.
remaining half of the a-elght tax on by a Michigan legislature This was be taken from the gas tax and dis­
Hear ye I Hear yet The McCallum
the same basis as lhe first half—7-8 the fourth forward step in Michi­ tributed among the counties in pro­
school
reunion will be held at tile
baaed on tha amount of weight Ux gan's highway building. The Mc- portion to their township highway
mileage for construction and main­ school grounds all day Saturday.
tenance of township roads. From July 18. and everyone who ever at­
this year on under the McNltt law tended school or taught here is
the sum of $4,000,000 annually will urged lo attend together with lhe
be taken from the gas Ux and dis­ family. Pot luck dinner at noon,
; trlbuted as before among the coun­ baseball in the forenoon and a good
. ties for lhe purpose of constructing program and sports In the after­
and mainUlnlng township roads
noon Bring Uble service. Pop and
’ Barry county is now receiving un­ Ice cream are sold at a stand to de­
der these laws its full share of fray expenses. The play "Pollshweight tux. that is all the weight liiR Henry" is a very humorous one.
i ux paid by automobile owners in Russell Lnubaugh is substituting
’ Barry county, less the expense“bf for Hubert McCallum as lhe bache­
collecting It Is returned to this lor uncle. Clara Morehouse Is lhe
county. Also Its share of the $2.­ old maid aunt and Lauris Anders
. 550.000 which is Uken from the gas and William McCallum are lhe
' ux as we have described. The newlyweds. There will be some good
■ method of dividing this money music and a rare treat In lhe form
' among the counties we have ex­ of readings if our plans work out.
plained. The weight Ux cash is Come and see your old schoolmates.
now all given to the counties, also
The Y. M. C A boys have left
the &gt;2.550.000 from the. rm tax and after a very enjoyable week at
divided as we have explained. Barry Camp Barry and the girls will be
county's share coming from the with us soon. A trip to camp Is
i weight ux and from thc gas tax worth your lime. The youngsters
( will be in excess of $100,000 this are very fortunate to be able lo en­
' year. The McNltt law will bring to joy the treats afforded them.
f Barry county this year and in sub­
Two carloads of merry makers
sequent years $55,000 all of which from here went to Ramona Park
1 must be expended on township to celebrate the 4th of July and
j highways.
enjoyed the trip very much.
! It will thus be seen that not a
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Leinaar and
DEPENDABLE JEWELER
' dollar Is raised by Uxes tn Barry’ children of Delton spent Sunday
county for the construction and with her mother. Mrs. Hallie An­
HASTINGS
MICHIGAN
maintenance of highways, except ders and family.
i what weight tax is paid tn the
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Osgood at­
county and a small part of the gas tended church and visited relatives
in Bowens Mills Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fay HofTenden and
son of Battle creek visited Miss
Glenna Osgood Sunday Mrs. Hoffpnden was formerly Miss Dorothy
Field of Brush Ridge
They have
K' used a nice house car and are
in it.
We have Just learned of the
marriage a month ago. of our pas­
tor's daughter. Miss Jean Gamble
and John Bowman ot Grand Rap­
Ids. Our best wishes for a happy
married life to both of them.
The Christian Endeavor contest
1 is getting started nicely. Jimmie and
Donn springer are leaders, sub-1
stlluting for Billie Newland and
I Russell LaubauRh as was previous­
ly stated
Young people, they’re
having fun as well as character
! trainin',’ down at the church Sun­
day nights. Belter come

'FOB
mom

July Clearance

39c
15c

• 25c Brown Sugar

Ib

4-x Sugar

Waldorf Tissue

2 -k- 15c Bokar Coffee
4
15c Whitehouse Coffee

Scot Tissue

4

Northern Tissue

4

SEE OUR WINDOWS

Sardines

5

C. B. HODGES

Fig Bars

3 «... 25c Beech-Nut Coffee
17c Morton's Salt

2

boxaa

Whitehouse Milk

4

25c Milk

4

Uli

Kitchen Klenzer

5

25c Rinso or Oxydol

lpk!’

27c Lux or Ivory Flakes
«£■ 3jc Swansdown

largo
pkg.

21c

pkg.

23c

DISCOUNTS UP TO 75'’

Friday and Saturday, July 10 and 11

ASSYRIV
The Briggs Ladies' Aid Society
will sjtonsor an ice cream social on
Thursday evening. July 16 al Lacey.
I Hot dogs, special music, home made
ice cream are features. Mrs Mlldred Jones, Mrs. Gladys Cortrighl
and Mrs Jay Cole are In charge.
Mr. and Mrs Hugh Case and Nor­
ma, Mr. and Mrs. Sperry Thomas t
and sons. Billy and Leon, of Bat­
tle Creek attended the annual re­
union of thc Mr. and Mrs Ferdi­
nand J. Thomas family held nt the
F R. Thomas home In Battle
Creek
On Sunday. June 28. the four sons
and families of Battle Creek of Mr
and Mrs. Tom Oodde of the Check­
ered district met at the parental
home honoring thc father's natal
day The sons are trll engaged in
the baking industry in Battle Creek. |
Bernard Godde recently opened a
Kewple sandwich shop in connec­
tion with the qther work
The members of Mr and Mrs Ru­
fus Stanton's family held their an­
nual reunion at Wabascon lake on
Sunday.
About eighty members of the But­
ler-Miller families held their an­
nual reunion at Johnstown Orange
hall on July 4th.
i Mr. and Mrs Hugh Case attended
the 15th annual Bible conference at
Lake Odessa on Sunday which was
founded by Dr. H- H- Newell. Dr.
Harold C Mason of Huntington
College, a very forceful speaker, gave
the message, also Virginia Queen.
. girl evangelist, pianist, harpist and
1 soloist.
Wm. Sarver Is the first to have
wheat in lhe shock. The wheat crop
is ripening rapidly.
Mrs. Nellie French spent the week
end with her daughter. Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson Cortright. the Cortrlghts
accompanying her home. Other
guests were Mr and Mrs Shirley
Rltzman and mother of Quimby.
Mrs. Gerald Doster, who has been
convalescing at the home of her
mother, Mrs. Pierce of Hastings has
returned to her home at Lacey.

।

Skylines and Playgrounds
—in ^j\ichigan !
Consider Michigan's

busy and beauti­
ful cities, and plan to spend at least a

opportunities for inexpensive entertain­

part of your vacation visiting them

is thc center of a region of lakes, rivers,

this summer.

hills and valleys that call to the lover

Visit mighty Detroit, with its tower­

ment and summer sports.

And each

of thc out-of-doors.

ing buildings, thc tunnel to Canada,

. Could you spend a more pleasant

and the Ambassador Bridge; sec thc

and interesting vacation anywhere than

campus of thc University of Michigan

in the great cities of your own State?

and that of Michigan State College;

Explain Michigan’s vacation advan­

view thc State Capitol; arrange a trip

tages to your friends who live beyond

through a great industrial plant.

our borders.

Thc products of Michigan’s cities

have made

them world-famous,

In the hope of promoting the inter-

for

csts of Michigan, this scries of ad­

their commodities are shipped to every

vertisements is being published in

quarter of the globe. They arc grow­

newspapers throughout the State by a

ing in interest and importance,

Michigan organization that can

in population and industry.

Each

19c

largo
can

3

JEWELRY...SILVERWARE
and GIFT ITEMS

aa

lb.

Baby Foods

SALE!

.

Jello3
17c*XSr2*- 15c Calumet
Colman's Mustard D”
25c Instant Postum
Kellogg's All-Bran
19c Grapenuts

offers, the vacationist

j

|

prosper only as thc citizens of
Michigan prosper,
--

MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Thc Cramer-Houghtalln reunion
! was held July 4th at lhe cottage of
B. L Houghtahn at East lake. 46
being present. Those from away
who attended were Mr. and Mrs.
! George T- Jensen and Joyce of Mt
Clemens and Mr. and Mrs. Merle ,
Callihan of Lansing. Mr. and Mrs.
B- L- Houghtahn of Battle Creek. I
and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur' Skidmore
of Milo.
j Mr. and Mrs. Frederick
Fuhr
spent July 4th at the home of Mr.
' and Mrs. Gilbert Todd on the Cen­
ter Road.
’
Mr. and Mra. George Poland of
i
Grand Rapids were July 4th guests
I of Mr. and Mrs. William Cramer,
I Jr.
i
Mra. Lewis Eaton, who has Just
come to the United States from
| Canada, spent Friday with Miss
। Ethel Eaton.

Crackers

c,’.±.

Soap Chips

»'-«-&gt;••«

Salada Tea

2

21c

lb.
carton

22c

25c Maxwell House Coffee

lb.
tin

25c

19c Hills Bros. Coffee
25c Del Monte Coffee

Ib.
tin

29c

Ib.
tin

25c

Ib.
Un

26c

c.p,.X

Fruit Jars

2

S." 55c

Rice Dinner

T.'*

Olive Oil

E-“™

Iona Peaches

Our Own Tea

3

Qr.'l'65c Certo
2
21c A-1 Sauce
25c Puffed Rice

Sandwich Spread
Ovaltine

Vienna Sausage

Heinx Pickles cJfxL.
Marshmallow Puffs eJu-

c^’*7. .

3

23c Pork and Beans
“■ 17c Nucoa
"wt“

2

Tins of 50, each 29c

Beef Ribs
Bologna

Al) Prices Plus 3% Sales Tax
Wo Cash WPA Checks

25c

boltla

21c

bottle

25c

pkg

10c
5c

bottle

23c

4-ox.

23c

Pkg.
of 80

10c

Iko’’

25c

lex.
bottle

10c

cana

15c
18c

CRISCO
OR

RBjnH
■
SflLRO :

1

Snowdrift

l™k^^/DRES5inG|
«&gt;• lOc
lb- 18c

Complete Line ofj]
Luncheon Meats
Lislan lo Kato Smith
at Coffee Tim.
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
WBBM, 8:30 P. M.

10c

24 ox.
bottle*

Shortening

Cigarettes
$815

29c

»int
bottle

Ib.

Popular Brands

carton

27c

40-ft.
roll

&amp; 20c Mushrooms
:r, 10c Paper Napkins
.Dal Monte
':.T 55c M
Raisins
s..di.M
- 10c Rajah Extracts

Bouillon Cubes

19c

£kT

89c Grape Juice
25c Yukon Club

2N:...'‘27c Wax Paper
K 27c Hires Extract

15c

29c

2 Lb.
Pkg.

Bulk Vinegar
19c Carton Lard
Henkel's Family Flour "V:,"’ 89c Bisquick

Lily White Flour
Hershey's Cocoa

15c

lb.
tin

Oranges

Spinach

55c
l-Ib. can 19c

New Valencias

2 dox.

Homa Grown

Lettuce
Leaf Lettuce

35c
it.

H..S

5c

|OC

�* Mr and Mrs. LAwrencc Towne of
" Mr .“San. Jakn BUor and Ur
Grand Rapids were week end guests
at lhe Oscar Palmer home.
Mra. Rose Trego returned Satur­
day from a month's visit with her the Wisconsin Delb country and
granddaughter. Mrs. Nell Fisch, at
lhe upper peninsula.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson reBangor.
Mr. and Mrs. Aben E. Johnson turned on Bunday from Atlantic
and son. Aben, spent lhe week end City, where Mr. Johnson attended
at Presque isle on Lake Huron north the Rotary International convenof Alpena.
tlon M . damt. tarn tb.
M14 Mamie Kerr of Greenville
spent the Fourth of July and week
Mr. and Mrs. E. P Johnston and
end with her brother. O. A. Kerr Mr. and Mrs. Robert Flynn and
children, suwtne and pwrlcU. ot
and family.
_
. _wiSTSMSilidwMlhi
..
. — .
...
Miss Gertrude Bentley and Mrs. OnM
**“u nap&gt;ua.
Moore of Kalamazoo were Sunday । home
of Mr. and Mrs. Finley Johncallers al the home of Mr. and gUjn

MMr arid Mrs. Frederick Parker of1

Arlington Arnold,

c*

Bloomington. Ill. spent the week
* ‘l&gt;'' borne of
with Mr. Parker s mother at her . *unt- Mr. ,nd. Mr* J°**Ph WaiGun take collage.
worth.-where he expects to re­
Mrs Richard Doyle of Lafayette J'1*111 during the summer. PortInd.. and Mrs. Herbert Karker of' l#nd Observer.
Battle Creek were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert O'Brien
Mrs D E Fuller.
(Dortoda Baker) and daughter
Mrs John Nobles, one of the Naney. of Grand Rapids, were week
counselors for lhe Barry County , end guests at the home of Mrs
Health Unit, is attending summer O'Brien's parents. Mr. and Mrs
school in Kalamazoo.
Clarence Baker.
County Clerk Allen Hyde spent
Archie D. McDonald. Jimmie Cole­
the forepart of the week In Gray- ' man. Wallace Osborn and son.
ling, attending the convention of palmer, spent the Fourth of July
Michigan county clerks.
week end with Mrs. McDonald and
Mrs. Mary Peterson spent Thurs- children, who are spending the
day to Battle creek with her daugh- summer on Lake Huron near Port
ter. Miss ingartha. who has a post- Huron.
tion there for the summer.
| Mrg Qeorge oasser and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Palmer. Bar- Jean an(j Edward, of Chicago, spent
bars Fox and Billie Towne of ,
with lhclr aunl MlM
Grand Rapids spent lhe 4th of July
crowell. Mr. Gasser comand
al •Little
ptne
u Bunday
.
-&gt;
&gt;•
n» take.
• *■•
| (ng for me week end. Mrs. Gasser
Mr. and Mrs
Frank p—
' b** been convalescing from a serispent Sunday In Hastings with
Mr. ous appendicitis operation.
“
and Mrs. Warren Roush, former
-11 residents—Lowed
T^weii TAdzer
Mabel Bisson, to company
Lowell
Ledger.ind I■ Miss
I U.nd
d^?7UF Barnett
M*** Elizabeth De Yoe. Miss
[r. and Mrs. L E Barnett and Hilda Mar
«hali an
d Miss
Marshall
and
MUs Ethel
Ethel
Miss Margret were week end guests
Rauh, all teachers in the Muskegon
of Mr. and -Mrs. S F- Nichols at
schools, is enjoying a month's motor
their summer home near Detroit.
trip
in
thc
east.
They
will
visit
to
Mr. and Mrs. L T- Knlskem and
their son. Culver, of Evanston. III., Lake George. Vermont. New Hamp­
shire. Boston and other points.
were guests of his mother. Mrs A.
John 8. Tyler will go to South
D- Knlskcrn. over the week end.
Thomas W
Stebbins went to Haven today. His son Arthur of
Grand Rapids Sunday and com­ Hastings will motor there to take
him.
where his daughter. Mrs. Robt
menced his work In the office of
Paine. Webber and company on Chadwick, will meet him and he
will spend some lime with Mr. and
Monday
MlM Blanche Springer returned Mrs, Chadwick in Missouri and
to Grand Rapids Monday after other trlpa are planned.—Vermont­
spending Saturday and
Sunday ville Echo.
with her mother.
Mrs. Addle
Miss Rose DeFoe, senior counselor
for Barry County Unit of the W K.
Springer
Mr and Mrs Earl Coleman and Kellogg foundation, returned last
Mr. and Mrs. James Radford with Friday morning from Los Angeles.
their families spent Fourth of July Cal., where she attended meetings
and Sunday al the Cool cottage at of the National organization of Pub­
lic Health Ntuses. the American
Oun take.
, Nursing association and lhe bienI niai meeting of the Nursing Educatlon organization. On Bunday Miss
! DeFoe left for New York City, where
I she will attend Columbia University I

SPECIAL
NOONDAY LUNCHES
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.

.I Mr. and Mrs Hubert D. Cook,
&lt; their sons. Leslie and David, and

DINNERS
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.

daughter Marlon, left this Thurs­
day morning on a four-weeks* trip
that will1, take them through the
northern part of this country, down
lhe Pacific coast, back through thc
Boulder Dam region lo Houston and
Dallas. Texas, and then home. Mr.
Cook and Leslie were called to the
Pacific coast on business and the
family concluded that they would
make It their vacation time.

SUNDAY DINNERS
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
6 to 7:30 P. M.

p’arker house

1 d^tX.^tid'aTtSTl,™a°51

o!

Miss Bernice Bowman of Eaton ■ ^h„Murs' Thomas

Harley Fox.
1 „
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Chase and 1 “
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hall attended P* ,
’ wh«e.

j

of

linUns

mt and
^tUe at thJir cot-

Rapids spent Monday erenina with ।
her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs

payjm.it take Mrs M F
d M
Thomas remained
RmXv visltore

WUUrd ।

White s mother, and Mrs. Eleanor ,
of H“lln&lt;*_
. A o .
----- .T--------------Mr. and Mrs. Frank A Schumann
O'w •" ’“•«» «'
““ •““» nf air anrf
«n&lt;l tt-.
Mli urbii,
W1U».~ I «| UM AMete*. urtvod Flid.y
returned tn whitn ning for a short visit with Mr. and
pl&lt;lni N y Wednesday after a 1 Mr&gt; D' c Bronson. Mr. Schumann

a brother of Mrs. Bronson. They
»lth Men* here Which is
u •
left Sunday afternoon for Grand
Rapids and Grayling visiting Mr.
course.
Ronald Stauffer Is spending a few Schumann's sister. Mrs. O. C- Kunze,
days in Allo as the guest of his in Grand Rapids and the O. Pgrandparents, mt and Mrs. Ray Schumann's in Grayling. Their visit
Lacey and his great grandmother. was necessarily short as Mr. Schu­
mann. who is plant and tool engi­
Mn. Emma KHpfer.
Mr and Mrs Robert Jessen and neer for the Chrysler Motor Cor~...
«uuku u,
son. Stephen, ireturned
to Uiuc.au
Chicago porallon al their Los Angeles
Bunday after spending the week, branch, has only a 30-day vacation,
end holiday with Mrs. Jesson’s par- They are going back in a new
enta, Mr. and Mrs. C- W. Crawford Chrysler which they purchased at
Leland Jones, who is attending lhe Detroit plant.
the summer session at Northwestern
Mr. and Mrs. John Cruo were
University, spent Bunday with rel-wguesu of Mrs. Crue's parents. Mr.
atives to Hastings. Mrs. Jones and ' and Mra. Frank Rawson, in Verbhby are spending the summer with montvllle over the week end. Her
relatives in New York.
sister and family from St. Joseph
Miss verda Euschnltt. who is at- . were also at home.

ahon

.A,XH^2 ,!Sp

Mn'’'

through the Alleghany mountain. ,
Mrs. Gay Jordan and two daughjohnstown. Pa.. New York. Niagara tors. Connie and Mary Caroline, of
Falls and Canada. Enroute home ‘ Sylvania. Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs.
they visited relatives in Jackson.
_....
Earl Wareham and daughters. Jan
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Daugherty and Sandra, of Detroit, are guests
and two daughters. Betty and at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kellar
Ermegene, of Yorktown. Ind., spent Stem,
from Sunday Uli Wednesday of last
Miss Ethel Ragla spent the week
week with Mrs. Daughter's par­
end as the guest of Mrs. Keith Bar­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. E O McSherry.
ber ot Vermontville. Other guests
Mr and Mrs. Harley Fox and son.
were Mr. and Mrs Fred Hubbard;
William and Miss Bettie Reickord
Miss Hazel Llkefell. and Edward
spent thc Fourth at Evans Lake,
Barber ot Plymouth and Ray An­
amongst the Irish Hills, with Mr
derson of Detroit.
and Mrs Ed. Darling. Bettie and ।
William remained for a week’s out-' Rev. and Mrs. T. H. Hoos and son.
tog.
;
; -----------------------------------------------------Robert, and Mr. and Mrs. John ...
AMr. and Mrs. James Heney and Hoos and son motored to Genoa
Friday -*•
afternoon
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Stauffer City. Wis..
”’**
---------- •lo
“
spent Saturday* In Grand Rapids, spend the week end with Mrs T H.
and attended the show al Reed’s; Hoos* relatives. Mrs. Hoos will re­
lake to celebrate Mr. and Mrs. , main for some time, convalescing
Heney s seventh wedding, anniver­ , from :her long illness.
sary.
| George Barry ot Coals Grove left
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W o'Halr Sunday morning for an extended
and sons. Kenneth and Donald, ar­ 'trip through the western states He
rived from Chicago Tuesday morn­ plans to visit the Dakotas. Yellow­
ing to spend a week with Mr. and stone Park. Washington. Oregon.
Mrs. c. W. Crawford. Mr O’Halr California. Arizona. Utah. Colorado,
and Mrs. Crawford are brother and and many
points
of
interest
sister.
»
throughout the west. He is traveling
Miss Ethel Jones spent the week by train and expects to be gone six
end in climax as the guest of her weeks or more.
sister, Mrs. Fred clemence. MTsi
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Cordes. Mr.
Jones* sister. Mrs. George Enos, and
children. Robert and Ruth, of Cto- and Mrs. Roy Cordes. Mrs. Phyllis
ctonattlK were also guests of Mrs. Reynolds arc at the Townsend cot­
Clemence.
tage. Wall lake for lhe month of
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Raymond July. Miss Margery Reynolds who
and four children left by bus last came from Bedford Hills. New York
week end for a two weeks* trip to I yesterday for a three weeks* vacaMrs
Minneapolis, to visit her retailers. I Uon.! will join them there
Mrs. Raymond is looking forward to ! Phyllis Diamond crysler of Detroit.
seeing her sister for the first time ,1 a niece of Mrs. Reynolds', is also a
| member of the party.

UN

Bj

-f H e rn

Social Events and Personal Mention

9.

Jahn Carrol, who haa bora til for
acme lima, U able to be out again.
Mrs Minnie Shrtoar antertataad
Sheffield • Plumley
Mr and Mra. R. E Groan aprat
ten friends very delightfully Bai- III
Sunday with fftenda to Kalamazoo.
urday. July 4. at a picnic dinner |
served at twelve o'clock at tier home I
Mr. and Mrs Don Curtis spent'
the Fourth with his folks at a take. I Before an Improvised altar bank­ an South Jefferson street.
Arthur Crothert went to Marlette, ed with palms and standards filled
The dinner table was appro-'ll
Mich., over tht week end to vlait hta with midsummer flowers Mtaz Ver- prtately decorated with red. white I
ntlce Vivian Plumley, daughter of and blue roeea and lhe place cards
relatlrea
Mlaa Cynthoal Reed ta ppendtog Mr. and Mrs. CMlvin R. Plumley were miniature flags. The afternoon
the week with retativea and friends and O Winston Sheffield spoke wa* spent playtag games and visit­
their vows at tha( home of lhe ing, the guests remaining for the
in. Kalamazoo.
Mtez Jacqueline Moore spent trom bride's parents. 220 South Brosdway evening ml Oueets from out at
Bunday to Thursday at Niagara Friday evening al eight o'clock. town included Mrs. Uta Bush of
Rev. G- E- Wright, pastor of lhe Loa Angeles and Mrs. Herbert Kark­
Falls and pointe to Canada.
Mr. and Mrs.-Arthur Haven were Ftrit Methodist church. Jackson, er and Miss Electa purnlu, both of
to Coldwater Sunday attending the officiating, the ring service being Battle Creek. The occasion was
,uaed.
funeral of Mr. Haven's cousin. ,
delightful and lhe feelings of the
Mr. and Mrs Max Britton and 1 The bride wks attractively gowned guests were charmingly told to a
daughter of Kalamazoo spent the ! to a suit of white mow crepe *Hh poem by one of the guests, the last'
1
white
turban
and
nose
veil.
week end with th* tatter's parent*,
verse of which follows:
। She carried a bouquet nf Johanna •Our welcome
Mr. and Mrs. Will Haywood.
was hearty, it j
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rakowsky and । Hill roses, snapdragons, sweet peas
couldn't be finer,
daughter. Joan of Mason, were 1 and gypsophlta. She was attended Oh. a gracious hostess is our Min­
guests at the home of Dr. and Mrs. | by Miss Ardyth Howe as maid of
nie Bhrlner .'■
honor who wore a pink and blue
K- 8- McIntyre Tuesday evening.
Miss Carrie Moyer. George Cheney ensemble and carried a bouquet of
| varicolored roses, snapdragons and
and Mr and Mrs. IxFloy Greenfield
Palten • Donley
and sons. Lawrence and Morris, sweet peas. Merwyn c. Plumley of
visited Vlagara Falls over the week Detroit, brother of the bride, was
best man. Mrs. Plumley chose for
end.
Emmanuel Episcopal church was
Dr. and MrtTU D. Walton attend-’
ed a national optometrists meeting carried Souvenir roses and sweet the setting for a pretty wedding
Thc bridegroom's mother Friday evening ot last week when
in Detroit this week and on the way peas.
home visited Mrs. Walton's sister in wore a white suit and her corsage Miss Betty jean Donley became Die
was of Better Time roses and sweet bride of carl Henry Patten Rev .
Saline.
peas.
J. A- McNulty, rector ot the church,
Mr and Mrs. Alonzo Trim accom­
panied relatives of Nashville to Big ; A reception for SO guests followed read the stogie ring service.
Preceding thc
ceremony. "O
Rapids Sunday where they visited, immediately after the ceremony.
Mrs Trim's uncle. Shirley Moore Mr. and Mrs Sheffield left that'eve- Promise Me" was played by the
ning on a short wedding trip church organist. Mrs. Sadie Mae
and family.
The Palmer, and Kncetand McNulty, a
Miss Isabel Sage accompanied Mr. through central Michigan.
and Mrs. L- T. Knlskern and son. bride's going away ensemble was of member of st. Thomas Choir Boys'
Culver, to Chicago on Sunday to ■ yellow crepe with white accessories. school at New York City, sang lhe
remain for a week as the guest of '■ Hie bride Ls a graduate of thc i hymn. *O Perfect Love." Lohen­
Ovid High school, lhe Acme Busi­ grin's Wedding march was played
Miss jean Kniskern.
Guests of Dr. and Mrs. Frederick ‘ ness college at Lansing and the for the processional and the Men­
H. Taylor Saturday and Bunday MarUiello School of Cosmetictans of delssohn's aos used for tiie reces­
sional.
were Mr. and Mrs. M G. Farleman, I Detroit.
The bride wore a white suit and
E S King and Mr. and Mrs. H. B.' The bridegroom graduated from
the local high school and lhe busi­ hat and carried Johanna Hill rases,
Huntley, all of Lansing
ness
administration
department
of
sweet peas and baby breath. She
Mrs. Carrie Ward of Battle Creek,
the
Battle
Creek
school
of
Business
was
attended by Miss Ruth A. Rob­
who has been visiting her daughter. |
Mrs. Florence 'Staiger for several He is employed now in the office inson and the best man was Vernon
days, left Thursday to visit her. of the Hastings Milk Products Co. A. Patten, brother of the groom.
brother in Alaska. Kent county.
| Guests from out of town at the The bride was given in marriage by
Dr. and Mrs. G L Lockwood and wedding included Mrs. Ida Wallace. her uncle. Victor Kleincrt
Mias Donley graduated from the
children, accortipanled by Mr. and ! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Baton. Mr. and
Mrs. Ray EUaman of Fort Wayne. I Mrs: Fred Buller and Miss Audrey local high school and for the past
made a trip to Manistee over the I Plumley of Detroit; B F Plumley year has been employed to the office
of
the Hastings Manufacturing
week end in their new house trailer, j of Pontiac; Mrs. Howard Clark of
Mr. and Mrs. A. Holtz. Mr. and I Birmingham; Ben Clark of Munis­ company. Mr. Patten is employed
Mrs. £. J. Elkins and daughter. Bet-1 ing. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Howe and at the Bliss plant, coming lo Has­
ty Ann. of Elkhart. Ind., were i daughter. Arlene, of Grand Ledge tings from Hudson. N. Y.
Following the ceremony, a recep­
week end guesta of Mr. and Mrs.: and Mr. and Mrs. A. N Sheffield
Bert Trau twine of East center road.' and son. Vernon, of Battle Creek. tion for 35 guests was held at the
Donley home. 1015 North Michigan
Wm Sponable spent the week end [
HONORED 75TH BIRTHDAY.
avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Patten left
with friends In Mt. Clemens and i
Detroit. While there he heard the i Thirty friends and relatives ot immediately afterwards on a short
Detroit Symphony at Belle Isle, and William Zusehnlll pleasantly sur­ wedding trip to northern Michigan.
participated to lhe coasl-to-coast1 prised him Sunday on his 15th
BIRTHDAY PARTY.
birthday when a pot luck dinner
sing.
Mrs. Elmer Andler was honored
Miss Helen Chidester, who Ls en­ was given in his honor. The after­
on her birthday on Wednesday
joying a vacation from her duties In ■ noon was spent playing games and evening, when a number of her
visiting.
Out
of
town
guests
were
the law firm of Keeney. Butter­
schoolmates brought a pot luck din­
field and Amberg. Grand Rapids. Is I from Clarksville. Otsego. Kalama­
ner to her home The evening was
spending lhe week with friends in zoo. Battle Creek. Ann Arbor and
Chicago. Mr. Zuschnltt Is to good spent playing cards and Mrs. And­
Detroit.
ler received many nice gifts.
Mr. and Mrs Ernest Erway and health and works about his farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Coburn spent
MtNZY REUNION.
DESSERT BRIDGE MONDAY.
the week end al Bear Lake, north
, The Mlnzy reunion was held July
of Manistee, as guejtJ of lhe ErMrs. Guy Keller entertained 16
4th al the beautiful State park at
way's daughter and husband. Mr. guests Monday at a one o'clock des­ Cadillac. Il was largely attended.
and Mrs. Forrest James. Mrs. James i sert bridge at her home on West One of the daughters Mrs. Mina
returning to Hastings with them for Green street. The door prize was Blank of Detroit furnished all the
won by Mrs. D. C- Bronson.
a two weeks' visit.
refreshments. Next year it will be
held at the grove to Mancelona.

■

TW HAlTTNOi BANNER. THURSDAY, JULY

Mr. and Mrs (Mart* Joan and
family of Pittsburg arrive today
i (Thursday) for t visit with Mra
। Qari SoctKnan re Delton. Bdwtn
Bootafltan, Who haa been visiting
Cha Jonas at Pittsburgh, will re­
turn with them.
Mrs.
Oscar
Palmar
and
daughter
.
Mrs.
Rose
Dore
of
Grand
Rapids
1
Mr- and Mrt. DeForest Walton
Mr and Mrt b A LyBarker ware
Barbara
have
returned
after
apendvisited
her
sister,
Mn.
8.
Valley,
for
1
spent
Sunday at the Walton cotGrand Rapids visitors on Monday.
tog two weeks with relatives and , ten days.
| tage. Gull take, with Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Alice Bates was in the city
Irknd, In arena B,pia«. FonlUc
Mr. ,na Mn Jamn M altoer «t- H““la ™“*l» “
«“““
Sunday an route to Lansing from «nd neanll.
unM . Xnujt nun" n inTalr-«*“
«•
Detroit.
Mn. Maude Bmllh. count! acliool' mount, Ind , onr tn« net and.
| !?“'■?*!'
Jfl' .SinS'at
Mrs Warren Roush visited rela­ eottunuakmar.
ntumad
trom
Mr. and Mn. E. o. McBhanr J*
art
VeJ
tives and friends to Lowell and
EX.?.
vicinity last week.

In WHITE

Nunn Bush Shoa to 1m
ported buck and pigskin. . .
These shoes are correct in
style—ankle fashioned for fit.
and made with quality mate­
rial and workmanship.

Edgertown Shoa,
Nunn Bush, are shore
for young men—snappOlib
bucks to wing tip stylo
toe pigskins for sport
and thc color is white.

SPECIALS
THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY

FIRST CLASS WATCH REPAIRING/
Prompt and Courteous Service
All work done in our own shop

The Big Little Store

BESSMERS JEWELRY

offers

PHONE 2634

HASTINGS

Fridoy, July 10

WHY

BE Otrr OF WORK?
LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE!
POBITIOMa.ABB WAITUO — ALL OkADUATBZ PLACID
MODERN UP-TO-DATE SCHOOL

Vader Stele BupervUien. Eeaipaeat of tha latest ty&gt;e sack m feand in
tha hotter elate of shoM ted ay. Madonta ire gtvoa personal attdnUoa
.
from a graap of ezparbnead and wsU kaawa taptractors.
8IX Morrra8
T° PAT!

COMPLETE COURSE
NOW
’-.........................
ONLY M STARTS YOU

■BID ATTACHED COVPOM FOB FBBB BOOKLET

NAME______________
ADDXBZZ

................ ........ ——

LdMAk

tOtV_______ ______

iiauty academy

lad ntet WM IM leak BML. Fkted *»I8.

BATTLB OMSK. M1CH.

Soturdoy, July 11

VACATION LAND COFFEE
Ib 15c
POST TOASTIES
large box 10c
OVALTINE. 50c size
35c
MAGIC WASHER
25c
GRAPENUT FLAKES
2 boxes 19c
TOILET TISSUE GAUZE
6 rolls 25c
NORTHERN TISSUE
8 rolls 49c
COFFEE—White House
Ib 25c
Hills Brothers COFFEE
3 lbs 99c
FLOUR—French's
5 Ib. bag 20c
'
24 Vi Ib. bag—89c
Golden Sheaf FLOUR, 24 '/2 lbs. 69c
LARD, Best Pure
3 lbs 39c
SUGAR, Fine Granulated
7 lbs. 39c
BUTTER, Middleville
Ib. 33c

HINMAN’S
’

Hastings

.

PHONI 2491

.

.

Michigan

Milk of Magnesia, pint—
Rubbing Alcohol, pint—
Aspirin Tablets, 100—
Hinkle's Pills, 100—
Glycerine Suppositories—
White Shoe Cleaner—
Dr. West Tooth Paste—

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

19c
Each

50c

Rubber Baby Pants9c
Crib Shaeting, 24x36 inch14c
40c Fletcher's Castoria .429c
75c Listerine________________ 59c
$1.00 Pepsodent Antiseptic ...79c
Condensed Jad Salts49c
60c Bromo Seltzer____________ 47c
60c Cadwell's Syrup Pepsin47c
Orlis Antiseptic, pint45c
Milk of Magnesia Tooth
Paste-------------- J--------------- 2 for 39c

• Orlis Tooth Paste2 for 33c
. • Ipana Tooth Paste39c
Visit Our Fountain for Complete Satis­
faction—ARCTIC ICE CREAM Served
.
■
EXCLUSIVELY

DEEh' C
KEEU

Walgreen System
DRUGSTORE

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

PHONE Z141

REALISTIC
Permanent Wave BelentUte have climaxed
yean of research and
thousands of chemical
testa to produce this
Charming Wave to mH
at a price every woman
and child can afford.
They are admired
by everyone.
Ebswpoo
nd Hrstr

at

■

Steam

v^re
!
I

|
-■
•

HOTOIL
Treatment!

OAB1II
LUM

53.50
MIUVEWWM
MATING
/
FACIAI— »

Not a SchoolUcmu^

Hollywood Boi
MAROARRT DAHLKI
IK Mflt tTAtl ST

�THE HASTINGS E-AKNER, THURSDAY, JULY », 1936
naaiue-A maw

INSURANCE
UFE .

WANTS

AUTO . FIRE

WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON E. MsELWAIN

.rw.iu.

i ■■

rood a* n.w, la Qaarn Aaa* cabin.: 1

ONR OHNT A WORD. NO ADVERTIBEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c.

i

—

the churches
church

axanaaa

from Friday until Bunday with Mr. Kennsth VanBlaroom of Varment*
and Mra. X I. Marentetu al their vllle, Mr. and Mra. Jacob Rdlslngtr
and Mr. and Mrs. Milan Trumbo of
troll.
Woodland.
Mrs. Coy Brumm. Mra. Dennis
Yarger. J.. and son and Mn. Den­ daughters of Grand Haven vtaitod
nis Yarger. 8r . spent Tuesday with _ ___________ ________ ____________
MLm Helen Brumm and MUs Mar- I Mr. and Mrs Arthur Allerdlng over
j garet Crites at St. Louis.
thf week end.
Mr. and Mrs Orville Flock. Mrs ' Mr. and Mra. Merritt Palmer of

B.’WHSlO^SUr.
Sunday Mhool al 10 •'aleak;
lain pl: Mod apeak. of I
■a*od Q
OaMTlMjilM." Dlrlao
Mi*a«d
1 IF o'sKb: Baal'a Ctmrer.ioa
rwoo •allocI. Ermine ir.r-tn

A. Miller.

Tin. HaiHnffl Banner
CTBREIBI^R Ptaawa

I Gall Lykins. Mrs. Frank Feighner . Allegan were Sunday guests of Mr.
! and Mrs. Waller Kahler of Ypal- j and Mra. Clyde Rusli and famly.

Our Service

trmoo topic:

Scripture

Mr. and Mra. Gail Lykins and
vln sons and Dr. 8.
8- M Fowler of
twin
Battle Creek enjoyed a trip to Muikfgon over the Fourth. On Sunday
they come back to St. Joseph where
Dr. Fowler took the boat to Chlcago where be will take a two weeks'
course at Northwestern given by the
Kellogg Foundation.
Herbert Menerey of Muskegon
has purchased the Nashville PharPliarmacy which lias been operated for
tome time by Mr.
Mr Vonderveen and
some
Mr. Slockford.

Wa Inane. Hea.ee. Hom. bold Ooodi
Private Oarage. a* LOW RATE*

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fira Insurance Co .

)-iS MARRIED MAN

Erangeli.Uc
of Mr and’

Heating*.

Tap

Wedi

■ Plant* of Hartford spent Bunday IX BARRY county. SIX MONTHS. so«.
I with Mr. and Mra. Homer Murphy
*• ‘a____
i BARRY COUNTY. THREE MONTHS.
‘ ot Williamston.
IN ADVANCE —I._a.------------------ Me
, Rev and Mra. Don Carrick and
and Uvtsidb harry county, one year
i daughter
E_!------ ’Barbara attended
, ...
_________
________________
_
lhe
| in advance
gt.se
1 English family reunion at Potter FORBiax bubbcriftioxb. oxkyEab
Park. Lansing, on lhe Fourth.
I 1X advaxck ..——M.ea
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Brumm were
‘ guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Weaver of Hastings. Sunday.
■ Mr. and Mra.
Mrs. Karl C. Pau)
Fnul and
b'uIom*
children visited the latter's sister » Um. in
and husband. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. . r.*“‘ £°
I Stang, of Battle Creek over the

Mra. Reader Hayes, her d

and

SHELDONS
ABSTRACT

QBITUARY.
Celia Crawley, daughter of James
and EUMbeth Crawley was bom in

OFFICE

ju.t I

CARDS of THANKS
»• *
.*tnday

fur Me lied

"AKRON" MODERN

MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY

TMn Saoolh Rubber Back Pad*

No Poib To Wear Clothing

C-OIU

NEW

jin

at Pickle Station.

HASTINGS PARISH.
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.

*

In­

T

Boot Plant Site.

quire of Joe DeRuiter

-

At Old Hastings Wool

r.Hir* fnr l.rtU.r .n.i lot r&gt;r ani.ll (arm
tVrllr ' Z" r.rr 11atu.tr.
7«

S iia

BRICK

FOR stl.i: H flat an.l A nirltrl (&gt;htt&lt;l
eornrl. n»w c«.t. in.lrnrtioo book.
ti:;&gt;9. Hrtoard Ho»w. Xiabville. 2
i-il*. ...nth B.rrvville
? »
l.OHT—Ilo.l-.n Hull trrrirr nrtr Clnr
trd.lt on Julr 4. 1 Call Mrrlr Clarke.
38079
rtlR SALE —Hi. u.el Urea. 5 02*19.
j cUap
Alw&gt; |O .mail fr-dlnr olr«.
|
Allan Mrlx.n.1.1 Phone 70*—F3. 7 •&gt;
ion HALE—T«u anw Ilia.. 10 «rek* rIJ
C l&gt; M...ber Route 1. Clo.erdole.
| Clorenlale uhont
79
. FOR HALE—Purebred Jener row three
rear, old au&gt;&lt; Yearling heifer. Ibarle.
MrDtrmoit. Ddton. Phonr 29—FIL
LOST—Oblnng Yellow gold
entrere.!
broorh iVedne.dar afl.ru.wn. Valued
«» keepaakr. Reward
Return lo oflire ..( ■uprriritrnd.iit r,f poor.
79
FOR HALF.—Larre Vlrtnr rletroH with
n.» rerorda
Aho good oiano cheap
Phone 2220
79
FOR HALE—Red ra.pberrlo*. Tam left
al Alronuuln .chool. attend hou*e
R»y Harwood.
79
NOTICE—All treat.*..»r. raucht In our
1 hurklebtrrY mar.h will t.e nro.ecuted
We want the hrrr.r. Meli..* Tinkler
Rar Etiujiun.,
79
FOR SALE Sow and lire t-ir.
Fir.t
Ixiil.e Wrat of It. an achoolhoii-e
Crorre Lrdv. Route 2.
7 0
FoR REST—A room
Mr. T J Sul
|_lnan 42H S Broadway
79
WAXTEIl TO lll'V -7 &lt;.r * r&lt;~m bmt.e
to go&lt;»l toeallon
M«*t 1.. ■ bargain
for ea-h
Phone 7O»—FI3
79
FOR SALE—Brautiful Collie popple..
Th..ruucld,rrd.
Kra..inab|r priced

GRANGE PROGRAMS iKl!.

. .

Gaaeaato*^ Trass

MICHIGAN

The waits was Introduced from
Germany Into France at the end of
the Eighteenth century and Into i , o f|OfM
England In 1312. Here lr was at first ing. * "o'clock
ridiculed but soon achieved unS|™»r
Morning aerrit
equaled popularity.

Fining

Farmers, Attention!

order Fob publication.
State of Michigan. the Probate Coot
the County of Barry.

MUFFLERS
FOR ALL CARS
RAYBESTOS Brake Lining

VICTOR GASKETS
NEW AND USED AUTO
PARTS

two of Grand Rapids. David

July 10
10.’
To this union were bom ten chil-1 Julv
—... Asa Traver. Robert Traver.. Mr-William Shupp. Mr.
dren;
ano
Jr. ud another child all now de“rs. OaU ujtsiua
Lykta. iuiu
and nuns,
«»u. oar.
Mr.
Ottle Lykins. Mrs. Emma
ceased. Seven remain. Mrs. Hatley I and
r’C.Mrs.
----- ---------Moore. Ira J. Treier. Mr.- Mary ! L&gt;’kliu. Mr. and Mr,. Harry ThoFUher. Mr, l»&gt;belle\Benham. Ku i
““ ‘i”"1 Th“"day al
Lillian wood. Mrs. Derail Tebo and Middle lake.
rfwuio.
AT.rar.
/
i Miss Ma^ulta Shupp Is spending
Edwin
8. Traver.
/
After the death of her husband ■
wll‘&gt; her sister near
she kept her farm and reared her Grand Ledge.
.....
nine ....unu
children w
to adulthood alone.' , Mrs- R«y Bird uid baby daupnShe lived a lang and uwlul Uie i •“ .'"u™Sd •*&gt;
,,ora' Sunday
filled will, lhe hard work so char-1 north ot
Ville- __________
acleristlc ot the early days. She was |
' c '
CARLTON
CENTER.
a member of the Hendershott M. E.
church and u.-™.
Ladles' Aid. w«
She leaves'I Th® Carlton L. A- 8. will give an
to mourn her loss her seven chti-. *ce cream social at thc Carlton
dren. 26
grandchildren,
several Grange hall. Thursday evening,
great-grandchildren, one brother. I July 16th. Home made Ice cream
Thomas Crawley and a host of rel- i। ana ci
cake will be served. All are In” !i vlted.
vlted.
atlves and friends.
Mrs. Thelma Johnson and friends
of
Grand
Rapids spent Saturday
OBITUARY.
.. 'I and Sunday with
her mother. Mrs.
Kenneth Lane Moore was lhe
*
ninth child of Mr. and Mrs Verne i1 Onlwy,
Ra'prh R'] n.
1 Mr. and Mrs. Wm. p. Hale and
Moore of Hastings. He wm bom om..”:"
Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Fuller and
Aug. 3. 1933. Kenneth had been all­
Ing for some lime and arrangements । daughter spent Thursday in Battle
Creek.
had been made for him to go to &lt;
Lawton Williams has been quite
i Ann Arbor for treatments qnd ob­
111 during the past week with pleurservation. but he departed this life
v
on June 28. before these plarts could
' but U much beUcr Bt lhU wr,t'

...

Ihe Prescription Drug Store
.. -

a

mend, m Dcliolt and FU&gt; Rock,
the age of 82 years. 11 months and ■ Ohio.
and
Lento are
11 days. Her death came after a “Mr.
----- : ~Mra. Frank _r_h
“
the

“ tafveT lo

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

BASTINGS

,nd fwnU&gt;’ *** enjoying

Phillips,
o'
which &gt;hc wu confinril lo ter bed I latter's nephew. Keith Bhm
"
Mrs. Traver was a life-long resident i PauUbo, Washington.
Mr. and Mra. Roe Tuttle and sons
come here by covered wagon with '
d1”,*.^1*
her parents when a mere child She _,g
parents here and relatives
lived on her farm In Baltimore I
a
* . ...
--------...—
township
sixty-six -------years. She was ,I, The many friends of Aunt Mary
united in marriage to Robert Tra^?rr&gt;
“iBr
ver In March 1RH9 Mr Traver nro I
her recent fall. She will celeScd
£.01^“,1&gt;" «“• “'“■“•y &lt;■»

•SUU.

■ — —————

family of Toledo spent the 1 Mr. and Mra. Homer Harrison and
week end at Nashville.
: family and Mrs. John Harrison dr

1
hi! departure I
....

v.wvo 1

HHmw
“To™ o*I

the home of Mr. and Mrs Wm.

awr. bridal Uie home « *« | ”T2&gt;
ty-flve relatives and friends were
Thomas on North Broadway Tues-,
there.
day attemoon. June 30, al two
vacation with her parents. Mr. and ' Wing June 14th at 8:00 o'clock with
o'clock. Rev. Adcock officiating BurWOODLAND.
Mrs. Dell Williams.
Rev. Wing officiating. Mr. and
lai In Rutland cemetery.
| My.
Mf. and
ana Mra.
fttrs. Merle
.merit: Wheeler
nunni of
v»
Bob
i&gt;uu Bush
tjusti of
ot Hastings
routings visited
visiica Mr. Mrs. r-cc
Lee Hansberger were the at-.
.&lt; Runflold
woro callers
rallrrn at uie
the home
NASHVILLE.
Sunfield were
Sunneid
noine : and Mrs. J. V- Hilbert a few days tendanu. They immediately left
ao and
’aretr'lr Run.
V
i. for
a wedding
wad
of D
Rev.
and Mrs. Win
Don rCarrick
Sun- I last
lost waa
week.
for a
Journey in northern
The Clover Leaf Club will be en­ 1 r*f
tertained Friday night at thc home day evening.
;
Mr. and Mra. Forest Parmalce Michigan after which they
will
Mra. E. O. Shorno visited her sis- and children of Battle Creek were make their home tn the
Harve
of Mrs. Jake Hollister with Mra.
ter. Mrs. Geo. Klrshmon of Kala- j guests of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. I Town home on North Main St. in
John Dull assisting.
MnnHcv
Grant
______________
Osgood, over tthe
________________________
Fourth. ' Woodland.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thomas and mazoo Monday.
. L.
. Smith enter- i1 Dtclc
and M
arBery remained
■
- - 4th,
— Rev.
Mr and Mra. J.
Dick and
Margery
remained for
for a : —
On the morning
of- July
two sons of Richmond. Ind. are
spending the week with Mr. and talned the following at their Sad- ' week's visit with their grandpar- I Fay C. Wing united in marriage
| Charles Kilmer and Ethel Fisher.
Mrs. Otle Lykins and other rela­ dlebag lake cottage on the Fourth: 1 ents.
Mr and Mra. Ward Plants and
Mr. and Mra. Robert Austin of । both of Hastings. They will make
tives.
Mr. and Mra. Charles Betts and daughters of Hartford. Mr. and Mrs. Lansing spent the Fourth withhis । their home In the Spragut house
family and H. C. Zuschnllt spent Wallace Merriam and Mr. and Mrs. mother. Mrs. Rhoda Austin, and I in Coats Grove.

Report of Condition of the National Bank of Hastings
A Utile FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

Dollar* Cta.

ASHF.TS

LOANS
sm&amp;9».ii

SEE

GEO. M. NEWTON

Registered OPTOMETRIST and
tition. ’
I I. further ordered, that public notice I
SEE BETTER!
the. rot be giren by publication of a cop.
139 W. STATE ST.
HASTINGS ot 1 hl. order, for three aurce.alre Week,
prerh.ua tn .aid day of bearing. In the
Halting. Baatwr. a newapaper printed ,
and rlrrnlated In aald enunly.
Stuart Clement. Judge ot Probata.
A true copy:
ON COMMISSION
Mildred Smith. Reel.ter of Probale.
1
I eife. Florence F Howell, ot the Village of
SHELDON &amp; SHELDON . WOMEN and GIRLS to lake Short
ORDER FDR PUBLICATION
! Ho’MK'^owN'^ns* "loanM CORPdlli"
tonne of Training in Practical fit.1It ol Michigan, the Probate Court for
AU KINDS OP INSURAXCB
TION, a Corporation organised under
lie County of Barer
। Noral ng. Good pay while learning.
BONDS
t a .e.eion of .aid court, held al the
NOTARY PUBLICS
Recommended by doctors.
bate office in the ehr nf Heating. In 1
1 countv. on the 2nd dar of Julr '
105 South Chuck
Phene 31S5 ,
Write 301 GASKINS BLDG..
A , D 1936
'reaent: Hon Stuart Clement. Judge ,
Fort Wayne. Indiana.
7-9
ol Probate.

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone M37

ON CARS and FURNITURE

Hastings

ANY ONE WITH A STEADY JOB
CAN GET MONEY FROM US AND
Repay in SMALL MONTHLY Payment*

WANTED!

Fidelity Corporation
OF MICHIGAN
ROOM 16—2ND FLOOR NATIONAL BANK BLDG.
HASTINGS — PHONE 3397

EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
Work Ooarantead and
Price. Reaasnable
Phone 3519.
Hastings
•
if

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

Here Saturday, July

11
mortgage

Dr. G. Allingham

(ci
Tout D»po«lt«
Acr*oa&gt;«nl* to reparehs
or oth.r .rearitlro cold

(Dr. Dennison)
DENTISTS
OF GRAND RAPIDS

NOW... BUILD

cu.tbmera and to tormah

WILL BE IN HASTINGS

Remodel! Repair!

SATURDAY. JULY 11
AT THE PARKER HOUSE
HE MAKES THIS SPECIAL

FOR

SALE

DENTAL OFFER

See us for all kinds of
Building Materials

HASTINGS MARKETS

udaxd
'cltg'r' appUacc
with D. 0. winding

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

PLATES $

WANTED

Vail of

the Mldd lv.KVl.len Uld Shh-UuS.
! ley Schray of Elmhural. Hl.. Jean 4er any clrcamilaace* MlM* Il bear
' England and MLm Leone Leonard wcitaFs .««• and pnat atica addm
I of‘ Hastings and Mrs. Smith Holmes
•
----------------------of Woodland were guest* of Mra.
Glen England and daughters over
the Fourth.
Mr. and Mra. Paul Smith and
daughter Marcia Ann of South
Woodland are moving Into the J. Mr. and Mrs. Herald Classic.
The annual W. C. T. U. picnic
V. Hilbert house thia week. Wood­
land welcome* this young couple will be held al lhe Smith cottage at
Saddlebag lake Friday afternoon.
into the community.
Dr. and Mra. T. H. Cobb enter­ Pot luck supper at 5:30. Bring your
tained 22 little boys and girls Mon­ own table service.
Mra. Philip Schray and Misses
day afternoon. July 6, In honor of
their son Jackie's fifth birthday Ivah. Vivien and Shirley Schray of
After games were played, a delici­ Elmhurst. Ill., are spending a few
ous two-course supper with a lovely weeks at the Schray home In Wood­
birthday cake with candles was land.
served by Mra. Cobb on their spa­
Mr. and Mrs. John Dell visited
cious lawn. Gordon Finnic of Has­ Mr. and Mra. Ezra Dell of Lansing
tings was an out of town guest.
over lhe Fourth.
Mrs. Smith Holmes relumed to
Miss Josephine Hoppe and Elmer
Detroit with her daughter. Mra. Ho­ Meyer of Chelsea were week-end
mer Harrison, for a week's visit.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Hauer.
Mr. and Mra. Clyde RuelL and
family and Miss Gertrude Jean I Mr. and Mrs. Raymond McLeod
Burkle spent the Fourth in Grand and children of Grand Rapids vislied relatives in Woodland over the
Rapids.
Misses Helen Reesor and Leona holiday. Nancy remained for a visit
Helse, members of the local A-H and Marvin who has been here for
Club ore in Lansing this week from , a few weeks, returned to Grand
Monday until Friday to attend the Rapids with Ills parents.
State 4-H Club week. Miss Reesor | Virginia and Greydon Paul of
5*s leader and Miss Helse was Grand Rapids spent the holidays
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
champion in sewing.
Mr. and Mra. Frank Kilpatrick Lawrence Paul, at their Saddlebag
and daughter Arlene and Arthur lake cottage.
Elwyn Dell, who Is attending sum­
Kilpatrick of Jackson enjoyed a
trip to Niagara Falls over the mer school at Western State Teach era' College. Kalamazoo, spent the
Fourth.
Mr. and Mra. Carl Jordan and week end with his parents. Mr. and
baby son were guests of her parents, Mrs. John Dell.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hauer and
Mr. and Mra. Gilbert Todd of Has­
tings. Sunday.
Dale Hauer spent the Fourth campMr. and Mra. Geo. Pinkerton of ing at Jordan lake with Mr. and
Owo&amp;so called on Mr and Mrs. J. ' Mra. George Hauer of Grand RapL. Smith Monday. Mr. Pinkerton । Ids.
and Mrs. Smith were members of | Ronald Lehman, son of Mr. and
the same Sunday school at Coving- Mra. Ora Lehman of Woodland, and
ton. Ohio.
| Margaret Kelsey, daughter of Mr.
Miss Mildred Williams, who is at- and Mra. Wamla Kelsey of Coals
tending summer school at Mt. Grove, were united In marriage at

AS LOW AS

...

s eu.gyo.oo

Phone 2515

Frank Sage

Hastings

Ooonty of Barry. Mtehlgaa.
Iloalarlr dearel bed aa:

Plates Repaired .. $1.00

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET. Phono 2616
FOOD CENTER 2609
H. Feldpausch ■ 3921

Highest Prices Md &lt;*. Dead Stock
Your Dud Animal* Are Worth DOLLARS

EXTRACTIONS by the CAc
MOST humane method vU

To ossuro yourself of getting the BEST PRICES, coll
gale This Outstanding
Dental Offer!

HOURS: • A. M. to 5 F.

W K. CARTER. Caahlar.

MR. FLOYD DENNY
Phone Hostings 2539—Wo poy the phone chorges!

lo

Ple

�THURSDAY. JULY 9,1936

I EXPLOSION CAUSED
VvT I
DAMAGE OF $700.00

PAUL STUTZ SEEKS
i
TO BE U. S. CITIZEN (

I HASTINGS INDEPENDENTS
। ADOPTS A HIGHWAY
I
south shultz.
DEFEAT CONOCO OILS.
RRinrt pDnrpAMBnd
HBrry M1*n‘r ot
DnIUut rKUuKAM Kalamazoo and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
I Tiie Hastings Independents InlI Hated their new suits at the falrI Anders of Rutland called on Mr.
' grounds July 4lh by defeating the Two Bridges Repaired This and Mrs. George Kenyon Sunday.
Conoco oils of Grand Rapids by
Year—Some to Be Re| Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson
I lhe score of 7 to 5. The Oils had on­
started for Missouri last week with
paired Each Year
, ly been defeated once previously
a tine house car to visit relatives.
.this season and that was by a pow­ I The board of supervisors and the I
Fred Hom attended Sunday serverful class A team from their own ■ county road commission, at the1, Ices at Gull lake.
city. Preston, pitching for lhe lo­ I June session, agreed on a bridge1 I
Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Kenyon, Mr.
cals, struck out 16 oppo&amp;lpg base-. program, especially for the more Im-■'; and Mrs Lee McFall and Joon and
I men. walked three and hit two. He portent bridges across the larger |
1 their guests, Mr. and Mrs. George
allowed ten hits but kept them well streams. For this year the bridge-,1 Brockway
of Adrian,
attended
scattered not allowing more than across the Thornapple west of the' 1| church at Cloverdale Bunday fore­
one hit In any frame until the village of Irving, and the ’ bridge' noon and at Midland Park al Gull
eighth Inning when the oilers got across that river north from Scott's
to him for three hits and as many Comers—the first bridge after the nlng they attended the missionary
runs.
Thornapple river leaves the' lake are pageant. “Around the World." at
1 The locals jumped on two visiting to be Unproved. The welding of ad­ Cloverdale. It was fine and enjoyed
pitchers, collecting four hits and ditional steel braces on the steel
two runs in the opening stanza foundation of the two bridges Is lo
The Shults Community Club met
and added three more runs In the be done, and the floors are to be re­ at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Adelsecond. In the third inning they laid. Highway engineers, who have bert Craven Thursday evening for
pushed across another and the final been consulted in this matter, be­ their regular monthly meeting. All
run was scored In the sixth. Grand lieve that by expending 14.000 on
enjoyed the many fine cakes and
Rapids scored once in the first and these two bridges, they can be put ice cream. It was voted to have a
sixth and three In lhe eighth.
in condition to last for the next picnic at Crooked lake the second
Next Sunday the Independents twenty-five ,
_______________
, long- Bunday In August. The club will
years
and possibly
meet Lyons in a return game on lhe er Each year hereafter, some bridge furnish lemonade and would like to
local field and a good fast game is or bridges will be repaired until all have all the old members return for
expected as Lyons. nosed out the lhe larger ones are made safe for a visit.
boys two weeks ago on their own traffic
Bert Cook and Lucy Sullivan of
diamond In lhe final liming.
Kalamazoo spent Bunday with Mr.
Conoco Olis 1 0000
1 030’ --------------------------GLASS CREEK.
and Mrs. Prank Horn.
Hastings
.2 3 1 0 0 1 1 0 *| ,rhe 1,^ed Olll fjjnHy hej£1 B re.
Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Kenyon at­
Batteries:
- ’ ~ union at Head lake July 4th. 45 be­ tended the funeral of little Kenneth
Conoco Oils:—Steponskl, Hartney I
Moore in Hastings Tuesday after­
and Hemle: Hastings; Preston and'' Ing present. Those present were noon.
the Louie Erways. Ray Oils'. Kala­
Varney. Moore.
Lorraine Sonncville of Kalamazoo
Hastings lost lo Dorr Merchants' mazoo: Bruce Slddells. Hillsdale;
Pete DeVries'. Lansing:
Rolland spent last week with her parents,
al Dorr last Sunday in a 10-innlng ■
Lletzkes, Detroit;
Harry Dunns: Mr. and Mrs. Lester Bonneville.
battle by lhe score of 13 lo 12. Free­
Ray Erways and Mr. and Mrs. Kel­
Mr. and Mrs. George Brockway
man was the losing pitcher and
of Adrian, who have been spending
ford. Eaton Rapids.
Kloska the winner:
| Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Burkland of the past five weeks with Mr. and
Mrs.
G. E. Kenyon, went*to Gales­
DOWLING.
j Ann Arbor spent the fore part of
burg to visit his brother a few days
The Community Birthday Club is
wllh
and
Fre&lt;!
before returning home.
’
being entertained this week Wed- , OU»
other relatives here.
nesday with Mrs. May Hammond
Ruth E Erway is spending a part
HENDERSHOTT.
as hostess.
I of th6 summer in Kalamazoo where
Lawrence Christensen and fam­
Mrs. Nettle Bowman and the baby **** has employment.
ily spent the week end at the Whit­
girl who arrived at Pennock hos- i Anita and David McGIocklln of worth cottage at Barlow lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. VanVninken,
pllal Sunday morning are being Hastings spent from Friday till
Mrs.
Court Strowbridge and Mrs.
cared for at lhe home of her par- Tuesday with their grandparents,
Hayward of Alto were In Kalama­
enta. Mr. and Mrs. William Stan- Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Havens.
ford' A good crowd spent last Satur- zoo Thursday to attend lhe funeral
Mrs. Ellen McCarty of Battle day at Gull lake at the Good Will ; of a cousin. Wm. McGregor, whose
Creek spent lhe Fourth with her •’ community picnic.
’ home was in Detroit.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Otis.
Mrs. Forrest Havens is in Hastings । The Fourth of July picnic dinner

school exhibit

W..U Form, Ou,

I. From
Served in U. 8. Army

ith&lt; »econd ward schoolhouse on I
Explodet Under Book­
Thursday night. There wUl be an I
in the World War
I exhibit.of handwork ai 7 o’clock and '
case Oo. Boiler
Paul Stutz, who was bora June a program at 7:45.
| An accident causing damage of
». 1887 In Alsohomorad. Austria-1 • The Junior Deoarlment went on 1600 or 1700 occurred in lhe boiler
Hungary, has filed necessary papers a - pilgrimage to the Eoiscotxil ^roo,n of the Bookcase factory Thur*leading up lo * declaration of In- church Friday - Ra* McNult/ve? d&lt;y' 11
lha‘ on Wednesday,
tentlon to become a citizen of the graciously guided the «rouo throuuh 1 lflcr the fire was drawn from unUnlted States He arrived in New .
f“xplXS th.^differneWinsUUed
boiler.

I

in

York November 18. 1905. He filed ' ent parts of lhe church and its serv- “me ‘“quer waste was thrown In.
similar paper* at Bad Axe. Michl- ice and closed with a short worshln There must have been some heat In
time lie intends to keep on until Nulty sang a solo accompanied bv ’gag w BenCTate from ^e lacquer
'iu»»,mi&gt; u «r„u&lt;r
■ "u
«*"/ j*
■« r”?* *«■»:-

Mr- Stutz was a soldier in the , Mrs. Maylon Jones gave the tern^ut dld aPouj 11 o clock TtiurtWorld war. serving in lhe American perance talk last week. The school
{°rcnoon. It let go with a
army. It seems as if that fact ought will close Friday July 10.
i ban,f' bl°w*n8
th* *°P of ,lhc
to entitle him to naturalization. He '
----------------setting of the boiler, without injurllves on route 3. Hastings, and has ACCIDENT FRIDAY EVENING. ,ng the boller its*if No one knows
nine children. Mrs. Stutz desired to
An accident occurred Friday eve- IJV1* *'b?t caU£cd the gas 1° **•
apply for citizenship at the same nlng about 9:30 west of Bowens । Plodcplant is equipped with
time as her husband, but unfar- Mills, in which Homer McKibben.'0 reserve boiler, so was able to retunately lhe county clerk did not proprietor of the Yankee Springs 18Ume operations with its reserve
l j have any of the necessary blanks grocery store, and John Duffy, who steain plant- No one was injured,
after using lhe one for her husband. Ilves near oun lake, received pain- ionc of the employees was in the
County Clerk Hyde applied for these, ful but not serious injuries. It apwben lJw gas. let g0
blanks some lime ago. but lhe us-! pears from the Investigation of
salt* that when the bricks came
ual Washington red tape has kept sheriff Blakney that a truck in down B,l*r lhe exP^n. he was
the blanks there.
At least the • charge of diaries Baughman of'far «nough away on the inside of
county clerk has received none.
| Bowens Mills was partly blocking the । tl'e factory so that no harm came
। road. Mr. Baughman was attempting |10 hll,‘ 11x6 dania8e will soon be
LARGER FURNITURE SALES. | to unload a tractor from his truck repaired.
The two furniture factories of at lhe roadside. McKibben and
thia city both report largely In- Duffy were starting on a fishing DISTRICT LEGION AND
AUXILIARY MEETING.
creased tales at the July market In ■ trip in Duffy s car. and were accomWill be held July 12. Coldwater,
Grand Rapids compared with a year ! panled by McKibben's ten-year-old
ago. According to Fred Hill of the son. when their car ran into the at Waterworks Park if weather per­
Table company, they booked enough Baughman truck. McKibben and mits. Elks Temple in cas$ of bad
orders so tiuil a busy fall seems as- Duffy both sustained scalp lacera- weather. Waterworks Park- is on
sured. The Grand Rapids Bookcase tlons and cuts about lhe head and Route 27 to the railroad, turn left
Company report that their July sales face. They were taken lo Pennock about one-fourth mile, then to the
are much better than a year ago. It hospital for treatment and later re­ right. Free coflee and lemonade
will be served al the picnic dinner
seems likely, when the salesmen go leased. The boy was not hurt,
scheduled for 1 o'clock. There is
out in August. September and Oc- ■
--an excellent place lo swim and a
tober. that they will book larger ar.- j
SURGERY GUILD PICNIC.
ders than in the same months in1
Members and guests, numbering number of tennis courts. Business
1035. Furniture prospects at pres- 35. ot the Surgery Guild of Pcn- meeting will be held at 3 o'clock,
ent look better than at any lime in nock hospital enjoyed a picnic junior baseball game al 2 o'clock.
thc last five years.
“••’*
Thursday of last week at the Wall Hillsdale vs. Kalamazoo.
Note: The District Junior Base­
i lake cottage of Miss Lillian MatCITY BUYS 2-TON TRUCK.
j thews of Grand Rapids. A pot luck ball Tournament will be held July
A special meeting of lhe city luncheon was served at one o'clock 10 and ID. Bally Park. Battle Creek.
council was held Monday evening to ; and bridge played during the after­ -rRussel Doney. Adjutant.
consider the purchase of a truck. noon. Mrs. Arthur Haven and Miss
INJURED IN ACCIDENT
The council had In mind a truck Minnie Matthews of Grand Rapids
Vem Troyer and Frank Thomas,
large enough and equipped for receiving the
prizes.
Mrs.
Lou
street grading and provided with Matthews. Mrs. Finley Johnston and both ot Hastings, received painful
Injuries
Sunday evening In an au­
equipment for snow removal from Mrs. Harry Baldwin were In charge
tomobile accident, when they missed
the streets in winter. At the spe­ of arrangements.
a turn on M-37 two miles west of
cial meeting, the council unani­
Middleville. Mr. Troyer, who was
uy n
ft two-ton
two-ton,
mously voted to buy
CHARGED WITH FORGERY.
id left the mat-,'
Studebaker truck and
Claude E Day of this city was thrown through the top of the car.
er with lhe city engineer to work! picked Up by the officers lost Wed- suffered a badly Injured leg and
out specifications for It.
' nesdny afternoon on a charge that Mr. Thomas a scalp cut. The other
I he forged a United States treasury passenger. Mr. Hawkins, was not
, check for »21 60 payable to Kermit injured. The men were treated at
doctors
office
and
re­
Langworthy. Il Is claimed that he a
wrote Langworthy's name on the lumed to their homes Monday
check. The case will come up in the morning.

Mr ,r.d Mra Arnold

circuit court as soon as II can be
FUNERAL HELD WEDNESDAY.
reached. Because of not furnishing
Funeral services
for Donald
ball, he is boarding with Sheriff Johnson, two year old son of Mr.
Blakncy.
and Mrs. Lyle Johnson of Battle
Creek, formerly of Hastings, who
JUNIOR DANCING PARTY.
died suddenly Monday In Battle
The second dancing parly of the Creek, were held Wednesday after­
season for Junior members of the noon at 3:30 at the Gospel Center.
Hastings Country club and their Battle Creek. Burial was in the
guests will .be given, this evening Dowling cemetery.
(Thursday) at the club house.
Dancing will commence at nine
"We have many ventriloquists In
o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Walldorf! our public life, in literature, in reli­
are chairmen ot the committee in gion, In politics. By ventriloquists. 1।
charge and will be assisted by Mr. mean people who talk In a deep. I
and Mrs. J. G. Bristol. Miss Barbara menacing tone from the emotional
Wilcox. Miss Frances Sage. Dlck^ entrails, rather than from the ra-|
Brower and Ian Ironside.
llonal skull ... In lhe months to
come, with political Issues para­
MISS ATKINS HONORED.
mount. we may expect lo hear the
A c|ub of twelve young women, deep stomach tones ot the profes­
employed in the office of lhe Michi­ sional
terrorlzer." — Christopher
gan Bell Telephone company, were Morley.
entertained al a six-thirty o'clock
dinner at the Stuart Clement cot­
"Experience teacheth that resolu­
tage Thursday evening. Miss Kilty tion Is a sole help in need."—
Atkins, who was transferred Mon­ Shakespeare.
day to lhe Grand Rapids office as
loll operator, was lhe guest of hon­
or. The enjoyable evening was spent
playing games.

§•§

BETTER FOODS
Cheaper Prices

POSTTOASTIES

10'

"There are plenty of acquaint­
ances in the world, but very few real
friends."—Chinese proverb.

RITZ CRACKERS

You Can Thank the

Never has any car been so popular as tha

OK Laundry Soap

25

23'*.,

Never has any automomile brought

so many good cars in exchange.

27c

here.

good as new.

COLLEGE INN

SWEETHEART

RICE DINNER

SOAP CHIPS

Cans

21

L',b29

OPEN EVENINGS

FREE DELIVERY

such

Not in many a

bargains.

But the

quicker you come, the finer choice you have.

LITTLE CASH IS REQUIRED. You can finance
the purchase of

any

of

these

cars on easy

monthly payments through Authorized Ford Fi­

nance Plans of Universal Credit Co.

USE IT AS PART PAYMENT ’

UNIVERSAL
COMPANY

FORD.DEALERS
PHONE 2121

SUNDAY end MONDAY. JULY 12 end 13
HAROLD BELL WRIGHTS

THE MINE WITH
THE IRON DOOR
CECILIA PARKER end HENRY B. WALTHALL
BARGAIN MATINEE BUNDAY al 1:

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. JULY 14
PUBLIC OPINION Puts the Finger mi Her!
MADELEINE CARROLL and GEORGE BRENT la

The Case Against Mrs. Ames”
WED., THURS. and FRI., JULY 15. 16 end 17
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

SAN FRANCISCO
With CLARK GABLE and JEANETTE McDONALD
Adults 25e

SATURDAY. JULY 18
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION — FEATURE NO. 1

“THREE ON THE TRAIL”
Onslow Stevens. Martel Evans and George Hayes

FEATURE NO. 2

JIMMIE ALLEN in

“THE SKY PARADE”
William Gargon. Katherine DeMlUe. Kent Taylor, Grant
NOTE — Episode No. 12 of “FLASH GORDON** will

Large Size PALMOLIVE
AAc
40c FLETCHER’S
SHAVE CREAM33
' CASTORIA

DRUG SPECIALS
50c MIDOL
TABLETS
4 os. VIBOPYRINE
For Periodic Pains

34
50

35 Cent
MUM ..

60c BROMO­
SELTZER

AfiC

60c CALDWELL'S
SYRUP PEPSIN

Full Pint AGAREX
Double Action Laxbtive

39c
7Q
C
1 *

Bottle of. 100 BAYER S
ASPIRIN• _.

49

50c DR. LYON'S
TOOTH POWDER _______

50c NOXEMA
CREAM
60c ITALIAN
BALM
16 Ounce
PABLUM _
STAG HAIR
OIL

$1.50 PINKHAM S
COMPOUND
60c SAL
HEPATICA _____

’AGAROL
L5°
*

REXALL ASTHMATIC
POWDER—6 oi.

25 Cant
FEENAMINT
60c ENO
SALTS

36'
39'
43'
39'
25'

Me
LU

REMEDY SPECIALS

$1.50 ANUSOL
SUPPOSITORIES _

IF YOU HAVE A CAR. YOU CAN

GARAGE

WALLACE GROCERY

Prices have been

made to move them quickly.
seen

-

ON PARADE

TOILETRIES

can must be sold.

day have you

RED SALMON, best grade
"_25c can
4 rolls FLY RIBBONS _._
--...10c
1 Bottle CERTO
21c
2 Ib. jar Cream Nut Peanut Butter __25c
BREAD-full 1 Ib. loaf-just like
Mother made6c loaf

They're all

Many 1934 ^&gt;nd 1935 models virtually

These

Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 ■

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, JULY 9,10,11

USED CARS

Ford V-8.

♦ fTRAND THEATRF

»nd 'V1"' '°rne* ■""'“‘•“Chirr

"Music should have its proper
place in the schools. We should have ।
Intelligent training
tn
it."—Olin
Downs

25'

2 cans Libby's Corn Beef Hash29c
24’/2 lbs. Pillsbury's Flour$1.05
2 cans Melting Sugar Peas, Fine Quality

----------------------------------------------------------------- —Or—«

JULY DRUG VALUES

TOMATOES
Cans

o’clock and desires the presence of
all members.
Mr and Mrs. Leo Hendershott at­
tended a family reunion of the lat­
ter’s people near Kalamazoo, on
Bunday.
Mr. and Mn. Floyd Garrison and clothe*, Mid thy
Mr. and Mra Maurice Ncaanove

Mr and Mn Walter Ormsbe en- *Pfnl
***£ al
Erway's | Sunday with theJ°^Jn Hoa^d’i^
tertalned Mr
and Mrs.
Harry *}lss EstherErway and Mr. and cioverdale^s5^da^v?n-n^J0lte^
Fincham and Mr and Mrs Henry Mrs Ward Erway of Hasting, spenu
L
Shultz of Toledo oyr the Fourth.
lh!tlPouyJh there.
| jLSsriie
'
Mrs May Johnson of Hastings
MLw Virginia Haven, returned
the Star dUand her stepson. Robert Johnson., Frlday ^om a trip to Niagara Falls. I .z
Mn..nr,M
visited at lhe WUl PhUlip. home
*Mr
Mrs. Lowe 1 Whittemore.
^BI^
Nownove
near Banfield Thursday.
Mr and
Ru«eU Whittemore !
qe*k’eUd 3ue,U “
Hazen Hook, who has been quite sP«nl ,Suund?* Bl Afferent pointe Ployd QarrU°ns.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Matteson ]
sick with bronchial pneumonia for 1 alotl8 Lake Michigan.
called on their aunt. Mrs. Myra
several days, is reported much Im* ’ '
—
"So quickly sometimes has the
proved.
,wheel of life turned round, that Preston, In Charlotte Sunday.
The pupils of the Bible school will I
Earl Gaskill, who teaches at Roy- ,many a man nas lived to enjoy the
al Oak, Is spending a part of his ।benefit of that charity which his demonstrate their work Friday night
vacation with his brother Uoyd (own piely projected."—Sterne.
The Ladles' Aid will serve
and family on the farm.
Ronald and Donald Conklin of
Banfleld and Louise- Conklin of
Lacey were week-end guests at lhe
home of Mr and Mrs. George Stan­
ford.
Ed. Benedict ol Ann Arbor, who
was here to attend lhe Morehouse '
reunion, visited at Harry Whit-,
worth's Sunday and called on sev- |
eral old friends in the community. I
Mr. and Mra. Orlle Fisher were I
Sunday gueste of Cloverdale friends. !

For These Unusual I allies in

at

TTTi'J

THE HASTINGS BANNER

U20-10cc
INSULIN

35c ALLEN'S
FOOT EASE
Full Pint LAMJON'S
MINERAL OIL
75c OVALTINE
FOOD DRINK

25c SCHOLL'S
CORN PLASTERS

98'
43'
98
50
17
40
81
23
.29'
49'
21

$1-25 ABSORB INE
JR.
3 os. Size SKEETIR
SKOOT

25*

50 Cwt
UNGUENT1NE

Vi os. SHELDON’S
MERCUOCHROME.

4 Ac

2%'

.. I U

35 Cent
QUEST .
60c NEET
DEPILATORY

43*

25c ANACIN
TABLETS
60c ALKASELTZER
BONATE5 COMPOUND

25 Cent
EX-LAX

Kord’s RUBBING ALCOHOL 4 Ac
Full Fl.,—SRKtaS, Mui
I

HOBART'S ASPIRIN
Each tablet caatalot

5

The above are only a few of the Drug and Toilet Goods Bargains on tills sole,
large Handbill for Full List of Items then SAVE w(th SAFETY at the Rexall

CARVETH &amp; STEBBI

HASTINGS, MICH

Goods Delivered

THE REXALL STORE
Hastings, Michigan
Si

49*
59*

�THI HAIT1H0S BANNK*. TOUMDAT, TOLT ». 1M&lt;

' ""

IOW MUCH ARE YOU GETTING FOR YOUR MONEY?
Wukk
PafieMsa

■ono* TC

AND YOU'LL KNOW*
Compare quality — value — price !

Extraordinary

value !

Make sure that your dollar buys 100 cents In

That’s the only way to get the most out of your money !

Buy where your

dollars bring the most in return !

Value!

a u» aald eourl
ot Oclobar. A.

Check oyer the values offered here!

Cotton
Frocks

Penney’s

INVITES your comparison!

Rayon Panties

Sanitary NATKIN*!

Big Heavy Double Loop

BATH TOWELS
More
ab sorbent!

Easy to Launder!

bloomers in reg­
ular and short

Hovelty tvepve

Summertime means cotton
frocks and you can’t have

too many I Especially when

quality!

PANELS

com fort I

Summer's Just
ahead ... so

While They Last
Go At

as

these.

I9c

a May mom. Piques, shan­

WASH CLOTS*
Peuet
too many I
soft 12" i
In plaid*

FROCKS

Size

Pattern No. 8720

Size

the patterns

.

Address
City

Julr. A. D

...

1936,

14 to 52.

Save At Penney’s On

ine c
to c
semi -tailored
I all*M U

Regular length bloomers, short
panties, and short!# bloomers,
for girls from 2 to 16 years.
Tailored of flesh colored rayon.

Novelty or plain
weave rayon
bloomer*, briefs.

A big variety of colors and pat­
terns. in cotton, mercerized or
rayon plaited. Sues 5 to 10.

Exceptional buys T. . we tried
our best to get more! Meshes,
crepes, really expensive fabrics.

Men's Fancy Shorts

' panties.
Trim­
med with lace
and applique.

White Broadcloth

BANDEAUX

1OC
Rayon Underwear

Men! Sensational Value

Hurry! ’

Anklets

For Big and Little Girls!

Gaqmoc/e

Thay’re Pre-Shrunk!

Of higff count
broadcloth in
• marl striped
patterns! Three
button
yoke
front, elastic
sides! Sturdy!

Made of sturdy
broadcloth that

full cut for com­
fort.
Strioad
patterns. They
are priced low I

69c
Nu-Craft non-wilt
.
- collar style! First class

Men’s Covert work
r u.. --------------- tingles*
a &lt; I k
hoae with silk
pieot top New
colors 8H-I0U

0

Men’s Athletic Shirts

workmanship in every re­
spect! Quality broadcloth’

Swiss ribbed cot­
ton shirts . . .
»*yon trimmed.
Full cut, perfect
fitting. They’ll

tough wear!

HANDUlCHUn

cotton.

Hemstitched!

PANTS
Sanft^ized . . won’t shrink!

98
Prize winning- value of the
year! Sturdy covert for long,
tough wear.
Strong pockets
reinforced at wearing points

Of quality comb­
ed cotton. Swiss

and details found in higher
priced shirts! Get a good
supply at this low price!

Boys’ Athletic Shirts

'

SHIRTS

35*
lined collar . .
heavy stitching!

Also Gray or Blue Co­
vert Cloth

Rayon trimmed!
Well made, perfec t
fitting!

Boys’ Work Shirts

Beys' OaUda Oreralls

OXMIDX OVERALL*

Name

Size

Pattern No. 8760

Name of this newspaper

Rayon Undie*

quality
2.20 denim. tri-

Big

me

Pattern No. 8710

lawns, batistes. Rondo and

Exceptional Value In

49«

ORDER TOR
Enclosed find....cents.
Please send
checked below, at 13 cents each:

tungs, flock dot organdies,

Malabar prints.

Unit Im lite Defil

FASHION BUREAU. 11-13 STERLING PLACE
BROOKLYN, N. Y.

Solid colon.

They’ll

launder like a handkerchief
and look crisp and fresh as I

OBDBB FOB

IALSIGNED tor sports wear, Pattern 8710 derives contrast ap­
peal through a clever Insert from neckline to side seams in waist.
Thc contrast Is also carried out in the belt. Sizes: 14 to 20 and
32 to 42. Size IB requires 3% yards ot 39-lnch fabric, with shorts
sleeves and % yard contrasting. With long sleeves, 4% yards.
The wrap-around feature ot Pattern 8760 affords unhampered
freedom of movement. The rnglan sleeves arc simple and com­
fortable. Sizes: 14, IB, 18, 20. 40, and 42. Size 16 requires 4 Vs
yards of 3S-lnch material, plus 3-H yards of life Inch bias bind­
ing.
This practical little drcss-and-pantles combination, Pattern
8729, should be made for Little Sister In dotted swiss, percale,
gingham, or pique. Sizes: Six months to four years. Size one
year requires life yards of 39-inch material.
_
To secure a PATTERN and STEP-BY-STEP SEWING IN­
STRUCTIONS. fill out the coupon below, being sure to MEN­
TION TIIE NAME OF THIS NEWSPAPER.

with these fine

Each

they are as smart and un­
usual

Blurt Cl«

pare them point for point and see for yourself how you save by shopping at Penney's!

Fast Colors!

98c

Com­

Straw Wark Hate

Boys’ N«la~ok Union!

©

Adjustable
Headsite
Shellacked peanlt . . . double
perforations for ventilation
. . . Leather sweat patch.

39c

UNION SUITS
ANKLE LENGTH

comfort — no
binding! SusCnder strap
ck for shoul­
der ease! Paja­
ma check.

Men's Union SUITS

49“

Men’s Short Sleeve

Finished detail*.

49c

Men's Work SOCKS

The quality yarn used in

OXHIDE OVERALL*

rotten yarns and
eut full for lota

PENNEY

69*

fiSdniu 't-M
denim bertackad
at points of
(train. Pull cut!
6 pockets, buckta

COMPANY

these

suite

generally

is

found only in higher price
ranges.

ish

Made like Dad'

Extra sturdy
cotton yarns for
•ervice!
Rein­
forced! Buys!

Fine detail of fin­

throughout

Full cut

for extra comfort! They’ll

Stand lota of hard wear!

Shop At PENNEY’S
And SAVE!

SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Gray of
Detroit spent thc week end with
home folks.
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Jarrard and
family. Miss Ita Dingman of the
Mayo district and Robert Johnson
of Dowling were al Lansing and
the Hardy dam on Bunday.
Misses Ena. L T. and Jessie B.
Jarrard spent Friday with Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Elliston In west Vermont­
ville.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hough of Bat­
tle Creek spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Cheese man.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Rich ac­
companied Mr. and Mrs. Otto Dahm
I to Battle Creek Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gray. Mrs.
Lulu Gray. Mr and Mrs. Harold
1 Gray and family of East Assyria
' and Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Gray ot
‘ Detroit attended the Gray-Hunt rc: union at Mrs. Maude Horsfall Fen­
wick's near Vicksburg Saturday.
I
Mr. and Mrs. G- C- Marshall spent
, Sunday In Grand Rapids with Mr.
I and Mrs. Chas. Fath. Mrs. Fath re­
' turned home with them for a short
; visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Checseman
and family. Mrs. Anna Cheeseman
and son. Earl. Mrs. Mildred Poff and
Joan attended the loth Cheeseman
; reunion at Clear take Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wing and
, Miss Myrtle Conklin of Traverse
City spent the week end with the
i Frank Norton family. Saturday
visitors were Mrs. L Snoke and
| daughter of North JCatamo and Alta
, Campbell of near Charlotte. Sun­
day Ray Conklin of Union City
1 spent the day with them.
|
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Preston spent
, Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pres­
. ton near Hastings.
1
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wing, Prank
Norton, Myrtle and cleota Conk­
; lin spent Saturday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Jay Hawkins al Vermont। vllle.
Mr. and Mrs Duff Eddy and fam| ily of Nashville and Mr. and Mrs.
■ Bob Elliston and son of West Ver­
montville spent Saturday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. L.- W. Jarrard.

of South Bend. Ind., spent a couple
of days fishing In Long lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Bort McCallum
spent Monday In Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy pennels and
family spent Sunday with their
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Pennels.
Mrs. Betty Leonard returned to
her home at Hastings after spend­
ing a few days with her daughter.
Mrs. Lester Monica, and family.
Mrs. Hammond and Mr. and Mrs.
Laurence Beadle spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Garrison.
ITank Barnard. Dan Moore and
Mr. Erwin motored through the
northern part of the state a couple
of days last week, incidentally stop­
ping at Maple HUI to call on Donald
Kring. Don Li getting along fine and
was gLe to sec someone from Clov­
erdale. sending best re;ards to all.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lewis of
Hastings spent Saturday with Mr.
and Mrs. W D. Brooks and Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Karmes of Hastings
spent Sunday with them.
Mr. and Mrs. Loehr and Mr. and
Mrs. Doxey of Wadsworth. Ohio,
spent a few days fishing on Long
lake staying with Mr. and Mr*.
Harry Pennels.

ORDER EOS

Julr. A. D. 1031

Btuart
* NUdredlnllh.

ORDER TC

PLEASANT VALLEY.
Visitors over lhe week end at Her­
bert Geiger's were
Miss Lillian
Leyrer of Lansing and Mr. and Mrs
Emery Benedict and Joanne o!
Ionia.
Mr. and Mrs. George Heintz of
Caledonia called on their niece.
Mrs. Emery Kime. Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Darby and
children of pinhook visited al Har­
ley Taylor's Sunday.
Thc Misses Frances 8colt and
Eldiene Preston of Grand Rapldi
spent the week end with their par­
ents.
Mr. and Mrs. Vcm Hawbllta o!
Nashville spent Tuesday with Mr
and Mrs. John E Brake.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Smith and
Thad Wigfield ot South Boston
spent Saturday afternoon at Elmei
Scott's.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Slater and
baby of Ionia spent Bunday with
his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Garfield
Stater.
Turn Bullivan of Grand Rapldi
spent Saturday evening with Clauds
Scott.
Little Shirley Hulllberger spent
lhe past week with her grandoarents. Mr. and Mrs. Owen Stauffer,
of Caledonia.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Stuart o!
Clarksville and Mr. and Mrs. Gar­
field Stater were Saturday evening
guests of Mr. and Mrs. EUner Scott
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. John F
Brake the Fourth were MIm Graca
Grimes and Duane Gray of Lak*
Odessa. Harold Smith, lhe John e.
Brakes and Don Slowlns' of South
Boston.
Elwood Brake. Jr., of lonta la vis­
iting hta grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. j. F. Brake, this week.
Mr. and Mrs. vem Hulllberger at­
tended the Fuller reunion al Laki
Odessa Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Preston at.
tended the Fusion reunion al
White Pigeon Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. clarence Kime,
Joyce and Mrs. jane Kime spent
the Fourth with Mr. and Mrs.. Leon
AUgst of Lake Odessa.

CLOVERDALE.
|
Mrs. Mary Cagney and grand[daughter. Miss Catherine M»at of
I Kalamazoo spent last week with
Miss Cagney and Henry Ryan.
। Mrs. A. W. Mercer of Detroit has
I been a guest of her cousins. Mrs. Ed.
। Titus and Mrs. Delos Flower, and
attended lhe Adams reunion which
। was held at the Flower home Bati urctay, July 4th.
i Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Loucks and
! baby girl of Midland spent the week
end with her mother. Mrs. Lou Anna
I Patton Mrs. Loucks plans to spend
I the week with her mother, Mr.
। Loucks returning home Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. OUs Replogle are
the, proud parents of a baby boy
bom to them Bunday. July 5
Mr. and Mrs. Davenport and fam­
ily spent Bunday at Gull lake with
the Ernest chalker family.
The Dibble family spent the week
end at their cottage here.
Miss Emma Johncock Is spending
her vacation with her parents, aft­
er teaching at Port Huron.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kellogg and
family of Kalamazoo spent Bunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Pierce.
. ’ M“l P5opl£ for«el lh&gt;l
naMr. and Mrs. Don Wagner U ttonal debt win not only be pajabM
Kalamtroc spent Bunday with Uie by
hv posterity
nAStarltv—
_ It
-_
n will
will &gt;1^
also t..
be —payable
Owens family.
to
posterity."—David
Cushman'
I Mr. and Mrs. Stevens and family Coyta.

or Probole.

Hou.

Stuart Clems
tree copy.
Mildred Smith

ORDER TO

PTonvos to saia
Hatliais Banne

Mllrtrod Smith

S0TI0B
SUle of Mlehlsa

In th* matt
Deas »!•&gt; 1:

1

Blurt Clsa

�TKy tAWlMQl BAHMIfc WOtefrAY. JITI.Y t, IBM

| LEGAL NOTICES
aloety days) la lheaaadUloos of a cev
u? ^^.nWeifr^ra
CMBty/ M,i’chiA“r to,nofiiaS^ntnff
LOAN CORPORATION, a Oorpbratlea —
naked wader the lavs ot ike Un
Blate* of America, dated Joly Bth. II
aad recorded tn the office of lhe Real

1ST.

j£-«

£a

ence Payne had the misfortune to 1 and son Homer Smith of Bl/mark, i
cut hli fool quite badly while fixing N D visited at tne bona of hl* 1

M0T1C1 OF MOBTOAOI 1ALB.

One Hnndred Twenty
(03.130.7ft and no in It

NOTICE TO CREDITOR*

ORDER TOR PUBLICATION.

el*. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Powell of
DELTON.
Richards and
Mrs. Mary Shedd entertained Hastings, Warren
Saturday MU* Viola Shedd of Ba- Ml** Effie Richard* of Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mn. Tom Harfleld of
lavU. N. Y.; Miss Lula M Shedd of
Blatuell) ot the Tewnshlp of Oraue- Fairport. N- Y. and Mrs. Mabie Constantine were guesu of Mr. and
•ille. Barry County. Miahican, to HOME Sliedd and daughter Laura of Mn. J. C- Horton Saturday and
owners- loam corporation. . c«r. Galesburg.
Sunday.
_
Mr. and Mn. Steven Brainey of
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hall and
children „.
of __________
Kalamazoo__spent Sat- South Bend were Saturday and Sun'e Racism of Deeds for I
1
urday
and
Sunday
with
Mr.
and
■
day guest* of Mr. and Mn. William
Mir hiran. on Joi. 16 th
Mn. Fred O. Hughe*.
Smith.
Mr. and Mn. Glenn William* and
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Leonard enMr. and Mn. Leslie Williams at- tertained Sunday Mr. and Mn. Ike
tended the ball games at Chicago J Ulnaar and Mr. and Mrs. E. H.
Saturday and Sunday.
• Bayer of Kalamazoo.
~.
Mesdames Thorpe. Doster. Nor­
Kenneth and Keith Williams
spent Saturday and Sunday with wood and Leonard attended the
Literary
Club
al
Hastings, which
their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
wa* entertained by Mrs M J- Cross
John Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Henry of at lhe Country Club.
Barbara and Betty Leonard have
Kalamazoo were
Saturday —
andJ
returned home after spending a
Sunday guests of Mr. and
NOW. THEREFORE, br rirlu
week in Chicago.
Peter Lelnaar.
Mr. and Mrs. John Harrington and
Mr*. Weller
entertained
daughter and husband. Mr. ___
and Marvin and Mr*. Charles Harring­
Mrs Hord of Detroit over the 4lh. ton attended the Fourth of July
Mr. and Mrs Russell Reynolds celebration in Kalamazoo Saturday
and family of Ohio were week end evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Leonard and
guests of their parents. Mr. and
Barbara and Grandpa Leonard visMrs. H. T Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. H F. Wertman en­ lied Mr. and Mrs. will Powers In
tertained Mr. and Mrs. William Grand Rapids Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Slaght of Lan­
Little of Grandville Sunday after­
noon. _They all visited the Kellogg sing were over the week end guests
of Mr. and Mrs. George Kent.
Bird Sanctuary.
Mr. and Mrs. John Biers of Bat­
Mr.,and Mrs. H. T. Reynolds are
entertaining their granddaughter, tle Creek were Saturday afternoon
guest* of the Kerns. Mr. and Mrs.
MLt* May Taylor of Oregon.
The Hope center school reunion J. W. Hamilton and Mr. and Mrs.
will be held Saturday. July 18 in IL- Lyon* of Scotts called Saturday
on their way north on a fishing trip.
the former Bowker Grove.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams and
HOPE CENTER.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Norwood
Mr*. Cora Bowker Rogers and
spent Sunday at East Leroy.
son Clare and wife of Los Angeles,

&gt;Im

eaaHnnod for mor
) la tba aoudltleaa of

vaaa.nar.
" •
uu&lt;w ywwn. ne lieu
TAMARAC.
inot ge«n hl* mother or hl* only
Mrs. Orvllla smith of Lake Odessa sister. Mrs. Hawi Robert*, of Lon-

SPECIAL
FURNITURE SALE
j
1

Cal., are expected here to attend the
tended the 50th wedding anniver­
Hope Center school reunion on
sary ot Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jordan
Saturday. July IB.
near Woodland Friday evening.
Mrs. B. A. Lyttle and Miss Allyne
Re’fc and Mrs. Ralph Bate* and
Hoyck of Battle Creek spent the
their brother Russell Bates and
week end at the C. B. McDermott's
bride returned from New York Fri­ home. Mrs. C- L. Teller and son
day nlghti
Vernon and Leon Dunning and
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO­
Miss Kathryn Wybalda Is attend­
family ate Ice cream there on July
RATION. Mortcacre.
ing a 4-H meeting In Lansing this
HOME OW’NERH' LOAM CORGLENN D. MATHEWS
l'i&gt;RATI&lt;&gt;N. lUrlraara
week as an honor representative of
William Ashby
of Kalamazoo
lhe 4-H Canning Club at Delton.
spent the week end with his par­
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Blanton and
ent*. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ashby.
daughter of Port Huron were week
Mrs. Melissa Ashby from Kala­
end guests of their parents. Mr. and
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Mildred Haith. Racial
mazoo la visiting her son Fred.
NOTICE OF
Mrs. Solomon Stanton.
Default
Mr. and Mrs. John Anders of
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Wilkinson en­
Kalamazoo spent Sunday at Mr. and
tertained for over the Fourth Jhelr
Mrs. Henry Wertman and also
son and wife. Mr. and Mrs.
*
Floyd‘
called on Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ashby.
Wilkinson of Cadillac and their
I Mr. and Mrs. clarence Payne and ,
granddaughter.
Miss
Charleen children visited relatives In Delton
CORPORATION.
Castle of Prairieville.
Sunday.
Mrs. Leon Doster and daughter
Leo Morgan and family from'
Elizabeth; Mrs. Bessie Hughes and
Coats Grove called on Clare Ashby
Charley Hughes of Prairieville left
Bunday.
Sunday night to spend two weeks
George Kahler had the misfor-,
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Holtt
tune to have a couple of ribs brok­
in Manchester, New Hampshire.
en while fixing a gate and ClnrMrs. Bertha Bush and Mrs. Bea­
Julv. A. D 19311
trice Dunning spent Wednesday iq
Qrand Rapids.
CHICAGO PHARMACIST
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gaskill and
Il !■ further ordered, that publie notlea
son Charles of Albion spent Satur­
CURBS DEAFNESS
day with Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Bush.
A Chicago pharmacist, who suf- |
Mr. and Mrs. Will Hayward at­
fered for years from earache, head i
newioaper printed
tended the
wedding of their
nol&amp;es and deafness, says YicJlnally
granddaughter. Miss Eleanor Hay­
solved his case through the prepaward of Alto to Mr. James A.
raUon of a Vienna specialist after ,
Mildred 8mllh. Real*
Green of Lowell at the home of the
provided Sol I. I I- lintfllT o I V F *•
countless otl|er preparations and,
bride's parents in Allo Saturday
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
device* failed to help him. OUR- 1
afternoon. June 27.
INE Is used and praised by thou- .
Before an Improvised altar in the I sands who were hard of hearing. I
lit culm
living room of the home of her par­
'rider.
bothered by head noises, earache, i
October, A. D. 1936. at tin o'clock Ir
ents,
MissMrs.
LUa oienn
Rector,Hector
daughter
of |
Mr. ano
oi m.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Rector of St.
Jated.’vJone 25. A. D 1938.
Joseph became the bride of Arnold ouRTNFP?^vhrLhisfmm Ju
Faulkner, son of Rep. and Mr*. El- 2™**
Faulkner, son ot Rep. and Mrs. ElIls E. Faulkner Tiie ceremony took
d‘hyC SjL? back •'
NOTICE OF M0BTGA0E BALE.
cents *
a “
day.
Money b,ck
back if dis-1
y- Monev
Default!
(and eneh place at 7 30 o’clock. Wednesday1 cenU
satisfied.—Carveth 6: Stebbins, the
rnndlllons of a certain evening. July 1st. In lhe presence of Rexall Store.—Adv.
the Immediate ‘families. Mr. and
rmhip of Mrs. Faulkner will be at home at
Oraneevllle. Barry
hlcao. to
it&gt;en*ea. ineludlnc an attor- HOME OWNERS
ORPORA- 459 Hubbard St. Battle Creek
Hearty congratulations are extend­
TION.
ed to the happy couple.
Mrs. Blanche Richards had as
Township of Caetleton.
la further ordered, that public nollea
guest* during the week end Mr. and
ition nt a eopv tlrulsrly
Mrs. Levi Jensen and family of
earinc. In the
Grand Ledge, Clair Richards ot
‘4 po.t.
paper printed
7S 1Z3
Kalamazoo. Ruth Richards of Stur-

Two-Piece Living Room Suite
for only $34.00
You will hove fo see this to fully appreciate the wonder
ful bargains we have in Overstuffed Suites ... others at
$49.00 up to $99.00 for a suite that would grace a king's
home.

A Handsome Walnut Finished, Well Made Bedroom
Suite, consisting of poster bed, chest of drawers and a
dresser for only— $29.95
You will know that this suite is worth more tha minute
you look at it.
*
Handsome, well made Lawn Choir for only 79c

Porch and Boat Pillows
Specially Priced......................

39c

Regular 79c Values ... in bright, colorful awning stripes
. . . extra well made ond cushioned.

MILLER FURNITURE CO
HASTINGS

PHONE 2226

NOTICE TO CBEDITOBR

Pftnltb. Reclsler of Probate.
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

Low Prices on Many Handsome and Useful Pieces of
Furniture will make our bargains more attractive during
the Week-End Sale. Now would be a good time to bright­
en Up your home ot a very nominal expense. See the
handsome and well made

Dated:
home owners' loan con­

gears shift!

NOTICE OF MORTGAGE BALE.
Default

Shift with both hands on the
wheel... with the Electric Hand
loranoon,
Dated. June 17. A. D. 1938.

ov. suns i ov. I nl.i'i-iCA . be.

Here s your

OME in for a “Discovery Drive” in a
Hudson or Terraplane with the Electric
Hand. See what it means to shift gears at a
finger flick . . . smoothly and surely . . . with
both hands on the wheel and both eyes on theroad.
Then let us show you FOUR MORE ways
in which the Electric Hand makes driving al­
most magically simpler, easier and safer.

C

No Levers to Stumble Over

BARGAIN
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.

50

provided. NOTICE IB HEREBY GIVEN

Hon. Stuart Clemen
■late of Daniel

To»»th»r with thv htrrdltomvnla and
anpurtanancra th-mnto balnniinr. and
all tha ealata. rlcht. title and Interval
whleh tha tnorlcaanra had Vi aald lands
and tenatnenta and averv pari (barest.
Dated: June 10th. 1036.
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO­
RATION. Mortcaces.
Oienn D. Mathew*
Attomay for Martcacee.
Builneu addreta: National Bank Annex.
Ionia. Mlehlcan.
Ou I 0-3

ordered. th»t rrablle notlea

aerihed a. folia
described at:

NOTICE TO CBBDITOBB.

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
State of Mlehlcan. tha Probata Court for
tha County of Barry.
At a aeaafon of aald court, held- al tha
prnhate oflee in tha eity of Haatlnn. In
aald eonnty. on the 32nd day ot Jone,
A. D. 1038
Present. Hnn. Hlusrt Clement. Judea
of Probate.

Buys $10.00 worth of

Tickets good between
all

points

on

entire

SHORT-WAY Lines

dollar*

from

Now you can enjoy a front seat ride with no
gear or brake lever in the way... with the floor
all clear. A front seat, at last, in which three
can stretch in comfort. That’s another Electric
Hand advantage.
At the wheel of a 1936 Hudson or Tcrraplane,
you’ll «oon find many other reasons why these
cars are growing $o fast in popularity.
You’ll discover more power, and smoother
power, than you find in cars priced hundreds of
dollars higher. More room, too... in the biggest
cars £ver priced so low. With the newest, most
advanced style of the year and many new comfort
and safety features found on no other 1936 cars.
Then let us show you what others have dis­
covered about the amazing economy and Ibng
life of Hudsons and Terraplancs. The proof is
waiting ... come and see.
,

ED. LAWRENCE
for yourself and family.

agent or driver.

HUDSON

Tin Eltctric HuJ,

$595

prim* L o.b. Detroit. tkaadard traap «f f

SAVE ... with the new HUDSON-C. L T.
Time Payment Han
low monthly payments

T

Visit our SPRING SHOWING of New Models and Now

Take Your "DISCOVERY DRIVE" Today
BUS DEPOT

TRIO CAFE

HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPOGLENN D. MATHEWS**”

HASTINGS PHONE 2137
Mi’ldred’imlik, Rwtstoc of Probate.

Goodyear Brothers Hardware
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

A

�WO BIG HAST!

FRIDAY and SATURI
COME TO HASTINGS AND SEE THESE VALUES THAT THE HASTINGS MERCHANTS OFFEI

HOT SPECIALS for HOT WEATHER

- I7^c

BACON SQUARES —t
Crackers

b!±*

2

p^-

Moosehead Flour

25c

Ball Mason Can Tops 19c

69c

4-Sewed Broom

29c

This would be a Real Value at 50c.

HURRY I A limited amount at this price.

MATCHES

Bo. 3C

A« Many As You Want

You Will Find Many More Bargains at the
MICHIGAN

WALLACE GROCERY

OnWe«°CSUlt St.

LOOK! LOOK!

Jewelry Specials

OUR SPECIALS

Sturdy, Dependable WRIST WATCH

Just the thing for fishing, golfing
or sports wear!

1,000 Yards Fine FANCY PERCALES
On Sale TWO DAYS
ONLY—per yard. TrC

REGULAR PRICE, $3.50 .

Extra Quality of Cannon Bath Towels

Fancy Colored Border,
Two Towels for

Special *279

*.

Sterling Silver Birthstone Rings—

Stevens' Best Quality Crash Toweling
18 in., reg. price 23c, ,Q g
Two Days Only, 5 yds. OOC

Variety of Styles. Special, 69c

C. B. HODGES

LARSENS

You Can Buy of Us
During Hastings
Trade Days!

UNIVERSAL ELECTRIC CASSEROLE

W. A. HALL
Invites you to take advantage of thc following Specials for Friday ond Saturday!

Artistic Pottery Teapots. .$ ,94 $ .73
.15
Paring Knives .25
1.59
27 in. x 48 in. Rugs_____ 2.14

Special

9x12 Axminster Rug ..$62.00 $42.00
8.79
Steel Beds 16.00
78.98
Bedroom Suites124.00

*3.95

UNIVERSAL ELECTRIC TOASTER

Reg. value—$2.95

NOW

REG.

NOW

REO

Reg. value—$6.50

Special

*1.95

A 7 ft. x 2 ft. Handsome HALL
RUNNER for only

FLOOR LAMPS, Approved I. E. S.

79c

Models—Reg. value—$14.50

You save time and money by making our store your first stop. Become ac­
quainted with our Splendid Values at Our Own Pleasing Prices!

Special

*8.95

GOOD SELECTION OF PATTERNS

Several other bargains to choose from

The Home of Good Values—205 South Jefferson Street

?

Welcomes You and Your Household Problems !
HARDWARE

FURNITURE

Hastings, Michigan

Steel Top Family Scales

House Broom

Capacity 25 lbs. by ounces. Steel top,

Beautifully finished metallic blue
hardwood handles. Selected quality,
5 scams. $1.00 value. Unusual valuc ot—

attractively finished in ivory or green

enameled. SPECIAL at

(Gf

Cold Pack Canner
For use with all standard fruit jars.
Ideal for year round cooking ond stor­
ing food. Made of Blue Enamel spray­
ed with white and enameled dome
cover. 7-Jar Capacity—

12 mesh black wire cloth—18x21 in.

POWER

COMPANY

Miiler Furniture Co

Men’s Fancy

Printed Sheer

SOCKS

WASH
FROCKS

Genuine Icy-Hot Bottles

Smart
New Stylet!

$1

Extension Window Screens
Seasoned lumber frame—fitted with

CONSUMERS

... call and look them over.

1 pint capacity with enameled case,
Keeps liquids cold for 72 hours. Hot
for 24 hours. Aluminum shoulder and
drinking cup—

bbm

F

K
w

1.

Pocket Watch

eave!

Two tone silver dial in a fine thin

and rayon. Big choice of

nickel plated case.

A real accurate

Made

of

cotton

BATISTE GOWNS
They're Porto Riem!
Sheer batiste in dainty floral prints.

$1

Goodyear Bros. Hardware

Dainty Handmade Printed

Hand appliquad and finished with
tiny tucks and saah belts.

Halting* Mioh.

Fast

or

Easy

colors!

launder!

to

Short sleeves

sleeveless

styles.

Trimmed with organdy

ruffles

and

contrasting

bindings. Sizes 14 to 44.

E. State St.

�Rl JAY, JULY IO and II
&gt; OFFEI you--DON’T MISS THESE HASTINGS TRADE DAYS- THEY MEAN SAVINGS FOR YOU!

cials
r WATCH

T. S. BAIRD’S

Clothing Specials
PAJAMAS

I, golfing

Shirts ond Shorts

$1.19 and $1.25 volue

19‘o.ch

89*

3.50

79*

STRAW HATS

Boys' SWEATERS

Special value

$1.95 value, $1.39

M.39

GES

T. S. BAIRD
Clothing and Shoes for Men and Boys
PHONE 2396

FRANDSEN'S STORE

CBIIB’S SHOE STOHE
LADIES' WHITE HAND BAGS
Regularly $1.00—
Trade Days Special—

Six-O-Clock

Fancy Pink

COFFEE

SALMON
2

25c

SH
CKS
art

25c

Phone 2650

GENUINE

Nesco Polished Steel Ovens
With heat indicator
(.Burner siso 13 &gt; 12 a 11%

Easy

to

The REXALL Store

WHITE SHOES
Men s Res- $3.00 to $5.00;
Trade Days Special—

.67

£ fa .37

$ I.98

$*&gt; -98

X

I

to

fo

X

LADIES' BEDROOM SLIPPERS
Regular up to $1.49—
Trade Days Special—

Kfii.

JOC

50c bottle Cara Nome Perfume,

25c box Cara Nome Powder
'

both for

25c
Only one to a customer

SHONI2I76

NKXJ.TO CITY BANK

$2.50 SHIRA FACE POWDER ....$139
Never sold at this price before!
Full Pint RUBBING ALCOHOL____ 13c

Discontinued colors of DEVOE | HALF
PAINTS and ENAMELS
f MICK
CEILINGS FREE with Sidewall ead Bor­
ders on All Papers 15c or over

Animal Comfort—$1.25 Fly Spray, 99c

Polar Cub Electric Fan

Men’s or Women’s Model Bicycle

Boys* Wagons—4 Colors

Auto Cook 2-Burner

’3.79
Streamline—2 headlights and horn.

4 Quart Wood Tub Freezer

tort sleevas

Gasoline Camp Stove

Ith organdy

♦3.25

Sturdy, well built, with heavily
tainer.

tinned

inside con­

’2.69

contrasting

us 14 to 44.

State St.

at CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

8 inch. 4 blade, adjustable fan—rubber cord with
rubber plug—quiet, powerful, efficient.

Balloon tires, chromium plated handle bars and
nms, double bar, handle cross bors. Red or Blue with
White Trim.

P

TRADE DAYS SPECIALS!

$I
■&lt;

♦24.75

itylei!

I

3-Minute Oats

129 E. State St.

I Sheer

OyC

THE HOME LUMBER CO

Reg. 25c—Will not rub off;
Trade Days Special—

F. &amp; IB. Wellfare

* Co.

19c

TURN TO OUR ADV. ON PACt 5

W m'a. Ref. $2.98 to $6.50
Trade Days Special—

loose from

Sale Price $/| .70

Table of Women's and
Misses' Panties, choice—

WHITE SHOE POLISH

15c
FERNS

50 Lb. Capacity—Formerly $8.50

SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCl SALE !

GROCERY
SPECIALS

le HALL

55c

Table Patterns — 54 x 54 inches

$1.45 value ..89c

HASTINGS

ings
s'

Full Fashioned HOSE—

69c quality OILCLOTH—

89‘

200 ICE CHESTS

$1.00 HOUSE. DRESSES—

BOYS'SHIRTS

$1.25 volue

al, 69c

For Friday and Saturday

All Silk. AH Slats ond C.lorsl

DRESS SHIRTS

i Rings—

Frandsen’s Specials

•, G. E. GOODYEAR-HARDWARE
142 East State

Hastings, Michigan

Telephone 2331

Lowest Prices in Barry County

Open Evenings Until 9 P.R '

FOOD CENTEB

3

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THVRSDAT, JVLY I, IBM
niASANT 1ITUTommy is a handsome fellow, but
we hope the enthusiasm for pictures doean't spread to the correspoMenu for that would be Just loo
much for the public:
Lightning siruex i*c 8. B Nlbba
house Saturday mdtnlng, knocking
off the chimney top and ripping off

for Thrifty Buyers.

hi'1.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Special Purchase
FACTORY MODELS—JUST 8

1935 Sparton
Extra Feature

Electric Refrigeration

for immediate disposal
At Sensational Brice Concessions

ACT NOW
A BIG 6.1
CUBIC FOOT

These Popular
Models Included

$224 50 SPARTON
7.4 Cu. Ft. Complete

are
HIGH QUALITY
FEEDS

Reasonably Priced
Feeds

Feeds That Give

$124.50

RESULTS

• SURPRISINGLY
EASY TERMS

$149.50

Special This Week!
STARTER and
Growing Mash__$1.95

WASHERS

RADIOS

16% DAIRY_____ $1.25

CALF MEAL_____ 95c

SMITH BROS.
VELTE &amp; CO.

G. E.
CLEANERS

59
WATER
HEATERS

a

RANGES

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON
•item Union Building

Hastings

Phone 2257

Hostings

79

Open Evenings by Appointment

The picture takes us into lhe
seething, mad excitement of the
Barbary coast.when it was a by­
word around the world. Clarke
Gable Is splendid as Blackle Norton,
owner of lhe most popular resort on
the coast. Jeanette MacDonald is
superb as the country girl who sUru
her singing career there.

Cefilla Parker. Richard Arlen In

Hopalong Catuddy In

••Three on the Trail" shows in
NORTHEAST IRVING.
gripping detail the early settling of
Miss Marguerite Segar has been lhe west, and the range warfare
j 111 the past week with the measles. that raged between the forces of law
Mis* Margaret Brown and Pauline
and order.
Moore are visiting relatives at Mld■ dlevllle this week.
DOL'D CORNERS.
Miss Evaline Wilcox of Logan.. Mr. and Mrs. Percy McMannls
spent lhe week end with Mr. and ' and Mary Lou of Rome. Ind., spent
| Mra Ru Wilcox.
' the Fourth with his parents. Mr.
. Mr. and Mrs. Joiin Kollar of Mid- and Mrs Robt McMannls. Callers
dlevllle were Sunday guests of Mr. , there the Fourth were Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. O R. Lightfoot, also Mr. , jess Henney of Cloverdale and Mr.
। and MH. Joe Sage of the Jones dis - ' and Mrs. Robt. Whipple of AuI lrtclgusta.
1 Mr and Mrs. Robert Cisler nt
Mra. Morris Bergman
Bertrman
Mr. and Mrs.
Clarksville were visitors Tuesday। of Battle Creek visited his parent*
at Arthur Moore's.
Sundae-Donna Betty staying to vis­
| Ralph Moore spent the week end it Grandma for a while.
I with friends in Indiana.
Miss Chrystal Thomas of Has­
tings and an uncle visited the for­
mer’s sister Thursday evening.

FEEDS

Special Low Price Now . .

The Strand Theater

Vere Carter Ln attending summer
«*Iinn 1 al KxliHmr/vi

REFRIGERATOR

$16450 SPARTON
5.6 Cu. Ft. Complete

Coming Attractions al

The story 1* based upon one of
the most romantic legends of the
■ early west and is both thrilling and
...... ... .........
1 humorous.
1
------------, Radio's Jimmie Allen
In *“Sky Parade.’*
The “Sky Parade" tells In a suc­
Sunday guests of Mr. ana Mrs.
Bert Palmer were Mr. and Mrs cession of thrilling incident* the
'Miner Palmer and family; Mr. and story of a man’* true conquest of
Mrs. Bert Mugridge. Harry Mug- the air. Woven Into lhe story is lhe
| ridge. .Earl VanSyckle. all local, and tender romance between a hardboiled flyer and Katherine DeMllle.
' Howard Harris of Chicago.

VITALITY

Regularly Sold at $194.50!

$89.50

would be nice If we could Just get
j the electricity to hook them up to.
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Van Hom.
Jr.. have returned from California
os the climate did not agree with
i Mrs. Van Hom. They expect to
make their home in Detroit or
। Grand Rapids.
I Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Kraft of Char­
lotte and daughter Bertha of ChiI cago spent Saturday night with Mr.
! and Mrs. Matt Bedford. Sunday.
they visited her brother. Ed. Bed­
ford. and Mrs. Hart and son Robert.
Miss Margaret Palmer is spend' ing the week in Detroit. Paul Is al
I East Lansing during 4-H Week..

Sparton
With Vegabin, Baikadoor, Automatic Dofroiting, Deluxe Unit with only
3 moving partj.

$139.50 SPARTON
4.6 Cu. Ft. Complete

a ________
few shingles.
_ ___ .Lucidly no other 1 reunion at Gull lake Saturday,
damage was
waa done,
done.
Mr.
Mm. Clifton Campbell
m
,. and Mra. Clare „
IiUlurei ««
ia ».
Mr
Williams
and |W
। and
son Aden accompanied Donald
Mrs.
in. R. J. Williams called
culled on
an Mr.
Mr ' Curry
Cuitv of
at Middleville «,
to White
and Mra Byron Rowiader at their Cloud and Big Rapids Tuesday oti
new
new home
home at
at Harris
Harris Creek
Creek 8aturSatur- ' business.
business.
। day afternoon.
"
:i several
Several ladies
ladles from
fronj th
this way at*
1 Mra. Catherine Hart and son Rob- tended the
cooking
schc~, at —
—
---------—- school
Mi
d­
j ert and Aden Campbell
dlevllle Tuesday
stoves etc.,
etc..
- attended a aicvuic
lueeuaj. Those
tiivot stoves,

SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Gorham of
Kalamazoo were Sunday guests ot
the former’s parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Gorham. Mr. and Mrs. Wil­
lard Bagley of Kalamazoo were also
i Sunday callers.

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson of
Hickory comers were Sunday visli tors at the home of the latter’s par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Havens.
I Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilcox, Mr.
।

i and Mrs. Lester Lord and Forest
1 Johnson spent, the Fourth at Rarnona Park. Grand Rapids.
j Remember the Otis school picnic
| the last of this month.
i Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Havens were
Sunday guests of their daughter.
• Mrs. Rankin Hart and family of
' Brush Ridge.

1

Mr. ana Mrs. Ray Mugridge and
children of Mondial! were guests
. Saturday and Sunday of Mr. and
I Mrs. Earl McKlbbin.
, Friends are pleased to learn Mrs.
' Byron McKlbbin is able to be up
and assist with her house work.
: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dunn attend­
ed a family gathering Saturday at
Head lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Oaks and two
children spent Sunday with their
son. Lcmuell. and family near Mid­
dleville.
Mr. and Mrs. Philo Otis of Lan­
sing visited from Saturday till
Monday with the former’s sister,
Mrs. Richard Laubnugh.
Master Richard Gorham of Kal­
amazoo is spending his vacation.
| with his grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. Francis Gorham.
Mr. and Mrs. carl Johnson enter­
tained relatives over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank schrler and
Ray Olis and son Harold of Kala­
mazoo were guests for lhe week end
I of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dunn.

Drink Highlands Dairy
GRADE A MILK
The Perfect Summer Drink
High in Cream Content

[

Raw or Paitevrized

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hastings

�.

■

THE HASTING I BANNER. TTBRBAY, JULY A Utt

tale enrolled.
Est. WU&gt; W- Sheffield Waiver of
notice filed, testimony of freehold­
filed,- ucanse
license to aell
sell ---------Issued,--------oath
wanwAv*
I •ers
” flled
PROBATE
COURT.
hefora
sate fifed
Eat. Daniel L. Water* Petition for1
-

Court News

license to aell filed, order for publl-1
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
cation
LloydOffley.
Moon.Hastings
Detroit 25
Bit. entered.
Alexander Cortrlght. Order 1 Thoa.
Alice June
22

confirming sale entered.
I cUude . Norton, Hastings »
filM^
Annual account . pore
hewk. Wooster.. 0
21■
B L.
L* w
aSawLK-A,
w—
Est. Amanda Hart. Petition for. Charles F. Kilmer. City..............
-Admr. filed, order appointing Admr. Ethel B Fisher. Hastings Twp.
entered.
three corners.
Est. Hiram J. Kenfield. Petition
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
for license to sell filed, order for
publication entered.
Floyd Sperrill'and daughter Joyce
Est. Reason Dunn. Bond of Admr. of Los Angeles. Mr. and Mra. John
filed, letters of administration Is­ Clark of Cascade. Mias Marguerite
sued. order limiting settlement en­ Yeiter of Grand Rapids. Harvey
tered. petition for hearing claims Kenney of Ben tan Harbor. Mr. and
filed, notice to creditors Issued.
Mrs. Lester Yeiter of Kalamazoo
Est. Hazel and Bessie Phillips. and Lloyd Moore of Detroit.
Bond of guardian flled. letters of
Mra. Arnold Malcolm. Norris and
guardianship Issued.
Charlotte called Monday at lhe Bla­
Est. John McLravy. Petition for zon home.
Admr. filed.
Rev. Crocker of Hastings spent
Eat. Luher Loehr. Waiver of nor Sunday with the Edw. Walters fam­
lice filed, order assigning residue
ily.
entered.
Mr. and Mra. Edgar Flfield and
Est. Martha Brown. Final account family spent the Fourth with the
filed.
former's sister and husband. Mr.
Est. Adolphus D. Hopkins. Final and Mrs. Nell Newton and family,
account filed.
near Freeport.
Est. Agnes C. Rockwell. Proof of
Mias Rose Marie Hammond, who
will flled, order admitting will en­
haa been the house guest of her un­
tered.
Est. William E- Johncock. Petition cle and aunt. Mr. and Mra. M. Paul
Monroe
for llconse to sell filed, order for Wing and Ruaaell of
at their cottage at Big Crooked
publication entered.
Est. Amanda Hart. Bond of lake sin® school closed, arrived
home
Saturday
to
spend
her
sum­
Admr filed, letters of administra­
tion Issued, order limiting settle­ mer vacation.
The Fourth of July celebration at
ment entered.
Est. Milo O. Barbour. Order ad­ the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edw.
mitting will entered.
Est. Agnes Briston. Petition for
Admr. filed, order for publication
entered.
Est. Myrlice D. Lewis. Order to
give deed entered.
Est. Earl Benttie. Inventory filed.
Est. John Beattie, inventory filed.
For Only
Est. Agnes C. Rockwell. Bond of
executrix filed, letters testamentary
issued, order limiting settlement
entered.
Est. Amanda Hart. Petition for Within 1* li
hearing claims filed, notice to credi­ slur liking Old
Chief Heth Uedltors Issued. Inventory filed.
Est. Sarah B- Smith. Petition for .
Admr. filed, order for publication it win ent* poi«“«ed.
Est. Betty Jean Donley. Nomina- kn««r vara thara.
tion of guardian filed, order np- • hould thofouthlj
»•»•»»
MIDICIMB
pointing guardian entered, bond of
guardian filed, letters of guardian- »"&gt;
»«»&gt;
liable to appaneidlli.
ship Issued,
rhitusatlam.
and o&lt;h«r
Est. Alda Downing Lewis. Order oischiaf u
to disjwse of securities entered.
|
J”
Est. Fred E. Gibson. Pellton for I sisciiiuo an&lt;
determination of heire filed, order |
D__w
for publication entered
Sh?a
Est. Ehoy Tobias. Final account'
DRUG
filed, order assigning residue enter- j PHONE 2241
HASTINGS

d

In
of

la

49

of
of

»f

RFED’S

re

Walters was well attended. 60 be-1 MIm Odetta Flfield is spending | Diana of Lansing. ------------------------- ! groom are on a wedding. trip to
Ing present for tha bountiful picnic two weeks. with
w.w. her uncle and
~ aunt.
—...
Floyd Walters of
o: Grand Rapids northern Michigan,
congralula- Congratulations.' ’
dinner. The services of the llnt Mr.
Ur and
*’w&lt; Mrs. Leonard
'*m,rd Walters
Waltars of | whose daughter. Marian, spent a - ubni.
Be tn Sunday School if poeetWe
day's program of the two-day an­
niversary and home coming bf the 1
I "71?. niamea by Rev. F. c. wing
Moulton church, which were to be mond attended a meeting cf the on hta parents Thursday evening.
p
i
nill
Livestock
Club
at
Paul
&lt;
**
•
Ml
tils
home
in
Woodland
on
the
The Birthday meeting vu held
held on their lawn were "rained off”
i
LENT CORNERS.
I
&lt;lh of July. They
which necessitated a change In Palmers Tuesday evening..
Mrs. Seth Cook of Lansnlg. TimMr. and Mrs. George Comfort.
^V*0^**1,
Chrerxmllh
plans, much to lhe regret of all as
Mr and Mrs. Walters are royal mle and Sally Smith spent a week j Jr.. Mr. Kercher and friend. Mtas |Gladys Ftaber. having charge of program. Mra.
with Mra. Cook's parents. Mr. and Carter; of Kalamazoo spent Rat-; *l»ter of the bride. We understand
Mn. Marcus
Marcus''__________________________________
urday with Mr and Mr,
Mrs. EHw
Edw. Walters
Walters.
Mr. and Mra. George Kelley were Mn
and
guests uie
the rvunn
Fourth oi
of ser.
Mr. ano
and Mra.
aara. .. Mr. “
““ Mm. Clair Yeiter were Hammond.
John Otner and Mr. and Mrs. Roy at Failasburg Park near Lowell the
Miss Opal Brear.y. wno nas been j
Berber of Rutland.
| Fourth In attendance al lhe Clark spending the summer with Miss
W. a. win. Mrs Shirley Mayo I
reunion.
Jean Hammond started for her
and daughter Jean of
Hastings!
Mr. and Mra. Leo C. Hammond
spent Tuesday with the former* | of Lansing were Sunday evening urday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Doster and
daughter. Mra. Clarence Sisson and I guests of their son, Dicky Lee. and
family.
I their parents. Mr. and Mra. Claude baby spent from Saturday until &gt;
Monday with her parents at Stock­
Mr. and Mra. Albert Steury of A Hanunona and family.
bridge.
Lansing were holiday week-end1 Mr. and~ Mrs. Elmer W*J^™'
Ritter spent the week end
guests of Mr. and Mra. John Mai- l Alyce and Donna of Ionia spent lhe | Hugh
-- - -----£olm.
| weak end with hta parents, Mr. and ' *l ^llte Pine island Lak*. Grand

N

The Bank'slaterest it
Community Prosperity

MIm M. Bernice Wing ol Ottrau *" M- WWW
niMtnfhar
Mr and Mra.
Ja
was a holiday week-end guest
of her
Mr.
Mrs. James
Page and
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and I Joan. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Slsso.i.
Mrs. Claude A. Hammond and fam- Betty and Paul were Bunday guests
Ily.
| of Mr. and Mrs. Forest Sisson and

Mr. and ----------------Mrs. Thurl- Cook of
Plainwell and Thelma Ball ol
Grand Rapids called on Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Hammond, Friday eve­
ning.

• The banker has tha same interest
in the welfare of tys community that
a fanner has in the proper fertilize*

COATS GROVECleon Smith is al Midland visit­
ing relatives.
Ruth Woodman was al Kalama­
zoo last Thursday and at Albion on
■ Friday lo bring her sister. Marian
I Woodman, home for the seek end.
j Freda Smith, who is attending

"I wouldn’t risk my life
on any other tire”
Says Louis M®yer---Only three times winner
of the Indianapolis Race '28, ’33, '36

Equip ¥our Car with

firestone

N

too, knows that the bank's growth and
profits are dependent in large measure

1 home for the week end.
Kendall Coats Is some better now j
from his recent illness.
Mr and Mrs Thompson were tak-'
en sick last Sunday evening. A.
Woodland doctor was called. They
were better on Monday.
Next Sunday morning Rev. F. C.;
Wing will preach at thc 11 o'clock
service and a group of singers who
were In the choir In Wayland whilej
- Rev. Wing was pastor there will.
furnish special music.
Margaret Keisey and Ronald
Lehman were married in Woodland
on Wednesday evening. June 24 at I
the home of Rev F. c. Wing, lhe lat- :
ter ‘performing the ceremony. They I
were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.1
Lee Hansberger. The bride and

GUM-DIPPED TIRE
lor Greater Safety

tion of his land.
The fanner's purpose Is to increase
the yield from his acres. The banker,

upon the prosperity of the community.
Therefore, by encouraging thrift,
by suggesting improved financial

rowers for productive purposes, the
bank is serving its own, as well as

N
K

community interests.

OF HASTINGS
H kST

INGS, MICHIGAN

---------------------NEW PERFECTED
HYDRAULIC BRAKES

uhy Louis Meyer won lhe 500-mile Indianapolis
race this year—and why he is the only man ever to win this gruelling
race three times. He always used Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires, and
never experienced Urc trouble of any kind.

I...

that will be always equaluad,
always dependable —and that

construction.

consecutive miles over this
hot brick track, negotiat­
ing the dangerous curve*

SOLID STEEL one-piece
TURRET TOP

of

id

You Can’t See All the Way Through a
Ball of Twine—So Buy

id

IP

FARM BUREAU
BINDER TWINE
Il is made from the best fibers in

ill

experienced

twine-making

management

modern plant by •
and

under

lhe

closest inspection.
in
id

Guarantcod Full Length and Full Strength

109 miles an hour, requires
Urea of super strength and
greatest blowout protec­
tion. as a blowout on any
one of thc dangerous
curve* would likely mean
Instant death.
By lhe
Firestone patented Gum­
Dipping proceaa every cord
In the Urea on LouL* Mey-

- &gt;...

dressing.

coaled with liquid rubber,
thereby preventing in­
ternal friction and heat.

When making your holi­
day trip this week end.

IMPROVED GLIDING
KNEE-ACTION RIDE*

THE

HIGH SPEtD TYPE
•pffcF
4.50- 21...
5.50- 17—
6.00-16...-. 15.25
64*3-17 HD
7430-17 HO

id
quicker.

with Firestone
ped Tire*, the
built It costs
protect Urea
much.

sm
I PRICE
7.50-17 hd|&gt;31.75

4.40-21

4-50-21
4.75-19
I5.25-1H
&amp;00-17R.R.
|
roe ntuoa

Designed and conatruet-

showing how thc

6.00-‘20__ I !•.'
quality tire built of high
grade materials by skilled
workmen, embodying the
Firestone patented con­
struction features of Gum­
Dipping and Two Extra
Layers of Gum - Dipped
Cords under the tread.
Its

exceptional

trucks and buses.

Millions of pounds of this twine

V

have been used by our fanners.

Drive in today and let
atone tire.

It has given complete saHs-

ma

SIZE

PSKI

4.50-21
4.7J-19
5.00-19
9.29*11

M.tf

4.40-21

•s.ae

4.50-21

5.60

4.79*19

»*9«
4*»

7.M

■rtMaMlLM

foction!

JOxjHa.

dubmm

THE FOLLOWING OtALEtS HANDLE OUR TWINE:
DELTON ELEVATOR COMPANY, DELTON
DOBTER FARM BUREAU, DOSTER
BERGY BROS.. FREEPORT
LAKE ODESSA CO-OP. LAKE ODESSA
MIDDLEVILLE CO.-OP.. MIDDLEVILLE
NASHVILLE CO-OP., NASHVILLE

Hastings

A

‘ The Farmer Owned Start"

Woodland

CHEVROLET
PCIUVHOUT

m ICONOMICAL TRAMIPORTATlOtl
•
•

Dhnna 79 4 R c*r- Je®,r*°n and Court
rllOn8ZZ4U 8te. Hasting*. Michigan

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc.

e Sunoco Owe and Oita.
• Valcantalug.

Greasing
Washing

BLUE

REGULAR
GAS PRILL

Q||MnrWfM|
Jj LI PI U
M

MOTOR
FUEL

mile-, end It. too, it esclusive to

SHOCKPROOF
STEERING*
also exclusive to this
priced car—to Shockp«
ini*. It diminsin Heerring wheel
vibration- -makes driviIng easier
and safer than ever befeore. VW(
your near&lt;&gt;&lt; Chevrolet ।
low-priced cat.

ANDRUS SERVICE •
Firestone Tires aad Tubes
Batteries, Wtadahlald Wipers

its

•oaaiER TYPE

szt

ENGINE

You’re right. And there’s a good reason,

vantages to sell at such a low price
UNTINEL TYPE

HIGH-COMPRESSION
VALVE-IN-HEAD

like Chevrolet's HtripCiweyril
•ion Vahre4n-He*dEngta». It’s

is the first motor car with all modern ad­

quality

the world'* most efficient

enjoying the biggest demand in its history.”

Everybody knows that this new Chevrolet

to run out of the ball without snarl­
ing or bunching.

“I understand that Chevrolet is now

ITAMDMDTYPt

neers for long mileage and

been cut away)

passenger Individually
ventilation . . . "scoo
. . . prevents ci
windshield. It's

STAxWDAKD

criss-cross cover permits all twine

You'll get a lot of comfort out of.

Gum-Dip­
safest tires
oe little to
worth co

Tiretfouc

Two 3-lb. balls of Farm Bureau
Iwine in Iwinc can (part of can has

GENUINE FISHER
NO DRAFT
VENTILATION

6.00-20— •18.S5
30x5 T.T.— X«.75
32x6 HD — 40»25

The Xew

COVER, 600 FT. PER POUND

rolet • Improved Gliding Knee*
Action Ride*. Millions of KnooAction users will tell you that this

MASTERPIECE

OF TIRE CONSTRUCTION^

id

8-FOUND BALL—CRISS-CROSS

Only Chevrolet ofcr*

You also want the renter comfort

extra strength and reserve
safety built into Firestone

Throughout Every Ball. "Invest in the Best’

I

piece Tuna Top. It give
pfete overhead protection

R. K. HURD
HASTINGS, MICH

PHONEIMO

R D.CADWALLADER.F
THE SERVICE GARA

ALL THBtt FEATUBB8 AT
CHEVROLET'S LOW HUT"

*495 ““

1

�rote », im

rut aurm, mm,

' Leslie Pease. Mrs. Pease Is at the I Richland spent Sunday with the Al- him. The end is not yet. as the in­
surance company will no doubt look
after it.
Some wrecks around here but so
far we heur no serious injuries over
the Fourth and Bunday, when
nearly everyone was going some

CEDAR CREEK.

A!1 come to the school picnic at home of her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. I ger cox's.
the schaalhouae Saturday. July11.1 Claude Hammondal Hinds Cor' Mr* Leo Monroe and son of
A program is being prepared and nera.
Kalamatoo spent acouple days
every thing will be done to have a, Mri. H&gt;uu wright Of Hickory with her parents last week.
good time, so don t miss it.
Comers is visiting her daughter,
M„, Ruoeil Tolle* and baby relat a daughter came
to. Mr*. Edith Campbell, and family.| turned to her home at- Hastings
the home of Mr. and Mrs. j
of ■ 8uniuy after spending thfc last two

UBILEE"VALUES
Here's your Golden Opportunity to furnish your home
with these finest of conveniences—modern, helpful, eco­
nomical-adding so much to better home life!
Celebrating our Golden Anniversary, here are the
greatest bargains we ever offered—attractive prices—
easy to buy, easy to pay for, cheap to use. Profit from
this sale—wait no longer. Trade in old equipment—
let the new help pay for itself with its savings.

weeks with her parents. Mr. and
Mrs Vernor Webster
Leslie Gould and family spent
the Fourth with friends at Athens.
। Merwui Campbell Is entertaining
1 a friend from Flint.
Ellis Hart a Bible student of
Illinois delivered the sermon Sun­
day morning at the Bunnell church.
Ellis is the son of Rev. and Mrs.
Fred Hart formerly of Hickory Cor­
ners. We all wish him success In
’
his life work.

|

SPECIAL

VACUUM PACKED COUNTRY CLUB COFFEE lb. r.s 25c

50

ft-ib. pkg.

SPECIAL BLEND

WESCO ICED TEA

25c

Lull

SUMMER CANDY

AlllETIM

CARTON LARD

LK

10c

2

25c

2

25c

col M HV CU B - BASCI 01 U.ITV

BANTAM CORN

Anniversary Special

GOLDEN

FRIGIDAIRE

WHEATIES

Buy it on proof of its many advantages. You need electric refriger­
ation.

Enjoy its healthful benefits—its perfect food protection.

Sixes for Every family—prices begin at $84.50. As little os $3 down

Liberal trade-in on old box.

—And Our Gr«ak«it Offer On Detroit Jewel and A-B

COlNTRY
SKAHOILICII f

MATCHES

23c

2

29c

6

25c

2

25c

10c

CATMORK BRASD

COUNTRY CLUB

MICHIGAN MAID

BREAD

BUTTER

TWIN OH SLICED

CHURNED FRESH

SANDWICH

DAILY

10c

lb.

luuf

Modern in every way—equipped with latest improvements—here's
a new day of better, easier cooking: freedom from old "pot watch­

See these models

2

CANVAS GLOVES

GAS RANGES
ing" tasks; many a delicious new recipe adventure

OR SHREDDED WHEAT

NUT OLEO

Let it poy for itself with its many savings.

installs one—3 years to pay.

CHOICE OF WHOM: KERNEL OR CREAM STALE

SIFTED PEAS

MILK CHOCOLl'FE

BETTY CROCKER

-* 25c

—you'll be pleased with so many new features.

The beauty shown here was $89.50—now special at $74.50 cash.

Installed complete, as little as $2.50 down—3-year terms.

WESTINGHOUSE
SUPER

» Th“r‘d“'

2

Russell Benton underwent an op­
eration for appendicitis Tuesday at
St. Mary's hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Rowlader of
Orand Rapids have purchased the
Joe Baker farm, taking possession
Friday.
John Thomas and family of Lan­
sing, Mr. and Mrs. Wall Thomas
and Jean Godfrey enjoyed a picnic
dinner under the Maples with Mr.
MIDDLEVILLE.
and Mrs. Merrill Karcher.
Mrs. T- I- Gillette who was taken
Mrs. Merrill Karcher and son and
ill Wednesday A. M- is much im­
Mrs. Watt Thomas were Lowell vis­
proved.
Mrs. Lake of Vermontville has itors Thursday.
Funeral services were held Friday
I been visiting tier sons here lhe post
at lhe home of Mrs. Clara Watts,
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Harper were who passed away Tuesday night
In the eastern part of the stele re­ She will be sadly missed by tiie
cently and had an experience that community.
Miss Helen Benton visited Aga­
might have been a real accident had
there not been shatter proof glass tha Thomas al Lansing from Tues­
in the car windows. When passing day until Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Thomas and
some children by lhe side of the
road, one of them threw a stone daughter of Detroit spent lhe week
that struck the window. The mother end at Ouy Smith’s.
The Boxne Ladies' Aid served a
would not divulge the name, of
WU..W.
course, but it —
was ________________
not hard to And । bountiful chicken dinner al the Aid
that out from neighbors. A four-1 hall July 4th. Proceeds over $120.
year old boy proved lo be the cul- I
* • •
'
pril; some age to get started wrong | Two tons of petals are required tJ
then have his mother cover up for [ produce an ounce of attar of roses.

MARK’S

29c

K1CI1T EXTOSl RL&gt; - MOST SIZES

Enjoy the comfort, economy and peace of mind
that goes with these '’Famous for quality” Tires.

HOLLYWOOD .SELECTED &gt;Tl Fl

$1.75

wesco.br and

5ENTRY 4-PLY

STANDARD 4-Ply

30 » 314 —-$3.95

440x21 ___$5.3O

—
"
IM s W

450 x 20 $5.70
450 x 21 15.95
475 x It $6.25

.$4.10
$4.35
.$4215
$4.80

Electric Refrigerotion PAYS FOR ITSELF!

$1.99

ECG MASH
DAIRY

FEED

TIRES MOUNTED FREE!

$1.29

1&amp;5 rHoTKin

5 TUBE

Combination Special

CAR

FLOUR

You Can Buy Both

85c

Counlry Club

YEARS
TO PAY

ORANGES

Camp Chair,
folding frame
with
OQc
back— VU

LEMONS

CUP CREASE 4 Oc
1 Ib. con
I fc

CALIFORNIA SU.NKLST - 252-288 SIZE

LET US GIVE YOU DETAILS!

CALIFORNIA SFNKIST

HONEY DEW MELONS &gt;m: «ir&gt;:sc»
CABBAGE

WASHER BARGAINS
Monday chores—the popular

ABC and Universal Washer* with 1936 improve-

i 9C

HOME GKO*

CELERY

away those

ALSO STOCK Phllco,
Zenith, RCA Car Radios

2-Burner. Instant Lighting

FLUl R

No need to wait and buy one appliance al a time—
here’* a special combination offer that bring* you
two desired appliances at most attractive terms.

Wash

*17”
Kamp Kook Camp Stove

(or Water Heater)

4

RADIO

$£•98

99c

S.

SOFTAS1LK CAKE FLOUR

REFRIGERATOR and RANGE

DOWN

!

vsapce^?sn

Brunswick TIRES

20c

..ti

OVAL SARDINES

SCRATCH FEED

Ing a fine catch of fish.
Mrs
Jt^e^’car’
2 Mn.

.... 10c

LU. Ill ill LUS

SUDS

FILMS

r Matthews’
Mrs Bertha
Bertha Matthews
Matthews attended
attended |I
Mrs.
“» Surgery
suneo Guild
ou»d picnic
picnic held
held at
« ’
lhe
the Matthews cottage at Wall lake.:
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Orley Miller and
daughter attended the Bible Con­
ference at Lake Odessa Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Barnes of Hastings
spent Sunday at Wm. Mishler’s.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ragla of
Hastings visited at Voight Newton's
Sunday.
i

10c

KROGER'S BIKING DAY-TED COOKIE." pi*. I5r •

The famous Frigidoire with the latest economy—the Meter Miser.

BOWNE CENTER.
BARBERS CORNERS.
Mr*. Ellen Seese of Freeport Is
Mrs. Jerry Foley entertained Mr.
visiting her daughter. Mrs. Aaahel
and Mrs. Roy Huver of Lansing and
Nay Bump and family ot Hastings Thompson and family.
Earl Fox’s children have been ill
[over the Fourth.
I Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hauer and with the measles.
Donald Miller of Cadillac spent
। daughter
Ma belle attended lhe
J Hauer family reunion at Lake Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Mer­
rill Karcher.
FamlnTun .... BuS., ,u..u .1 «

CHOICE OF

FRESH COOKIES

V

David Beneway of west Thomapple lost a horse recently. He had Just
driven into the bam with a load of
barley when lhe horse dropped
dead. Very accommodating u&gt; wait
until he had the last load in lhe
barn.
Mrs. Gladys Babcock Pry, of Chi­
cago. for many years a resident here,
has been visiting relative* for lhe
past few days. Monday Mr. Fry ar­
rived and they left for. a vacation
near Whitehall.

2

TOMATOES

15c

» 15c

FANCY - HOT IIOISE

WATERMELONS &lt; 59c
WATSON - LARGE SIZE - 2ft.ll.. AVERAGE

lUt a* low a* $54.50. LET US DELIVER ONE
THIS WEEK FOR S3 DOWN—15-.MONTH Term*.
ABC and Ironrite Ironers complete
laundry. They're on sale, too.

the perfect

1/£-melon

30c — %-iurlou

15c

B fLx* ft, heavy water proof material.
complete with poles

Polish Cloth
5 yds.
Chamois
13” x 16”

$4 4 95
* | ll —
“ ■

ELECTRIC FAN
ly/i in. quiet, powerful motor;
Keep Cool at
Qfic
Low Cost — --------------------vO

Valve Lifters
pressed steel

Micro Horn,
loud tone
Piston Rings,
compression

39'
15'
69'
Q&lt;
v

LEADER BOX
Aluminum _

15

ICE BOX
Well iniulated, all metal $0.69

with handles -----------------

“

GALVANIZED FAIL

ICE CREAM FREEZER

C. Q. BEEF - Only at Kroger's
Oalvantied

WATER HEATERS
Automatic hot water with our special heater is
“cheaper than dirt”—gives you 24-hour liulant

'"•old heater or wasteful furnace coil as part pay­
ment.

'

mu
**

The whole family will be grateful for this little
helper.

DOWN

AUTOMATIC
HOT WATER

YEARS
TO PAY

POT ROAST

lb.

' MEATY CUTS

Rib

Roast

“*

Chuck

25c

Roast

16c
it-

25c

19c

VERY CHOICE

HOLLl.ll

12 Qt Milk Pail

BOILING BEEF
Salmon

Steak

&gt;h-

23c

Pan

t 11c
2

Fish

in­

19c

WHITING

fancy RED

HADDOCK

—

2

FILLETS

Kroger's Triple Test Sausage

25c

Coupea

65*
98°

OE&lt;
CO

NO CHARGE FOR INSTALLATION

RING BOLOGNA

Come In—See Our Carnival of Bargains !
Or Phone 2305
...

CONSUMERS
POWER

COMPANY

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

CLUB FRANKS

HEHRl 1)8 - GRADE I

MUFFLER
Ford A com.

$4.48
1

HERRLD'S

LUNCHEON ROLL

GENERATOR CUT
OUTS—
OQc
Universal—'

BRONSON
Levelwind,
ISO yda—

Coache*
STANDARD ARISTOCRAT
Sedans and Coaches
REEL —
CEr

STEEL ROD, QQe
3-Piece—

DO

BLAZER
9QC Gat UUir. 10 y&lt;« 10c
SUk Line. 85 yd». SJc.
Spark Plugs— tw

KROGER STORES

25c

BEAT
COVERS

CAMP COT
Single
$4 .6
Telescope
I
CAMP STOOL
Folding—

.

.

Camp Jug fiQ
gal, sixe
Ov

...$1.48

SUN GOGGLEB, pr.

4 ftc
1 Uup

INSIDE
VISOR—

qftc

03

LUGGAGE RACK—
Flu rear
COC
bumper—

03

MARK'S STORES, «nc
HASTINGS. MICH.

-----------------PHONE UM

�THURSDAY, JULY 9,1936
MODEL EXHIBIT
COMES TO HASTINGS

|

Heroes of the Southwest.

GALLUP. N. M —Through

■
the dust of vanished yes­
terdays we've just traveled the
high ranges of the earlier pistoleers — Pat Garrett of the
itchy trigger finder; and John
(Wesley Hardin, the Texas
preacher's boy turned scorpion; and
Due
with his nervous
mannerism of
shooting people;
and that babyish
king of all the killera, little sawedoff Billy the Kid.
who smiled hta dif­
fident buck-tootned
smile oren as he
blasted out a life
for every one of
(ho twenty • one
Irvin 8. Cobb years of his life,
“not counting." as
he himself would say. "Mexicans
and Injuns."
I Wo viewed the historic bullet
pocks and their personal burying
grounds, and we discovered just
one survivor of those ancient twogun clans—a rancid octogenarian,
(Wearing the look about him of a
.venerable, shamefaced sheep wnere
he sat with a gingham apron drap­
ing the withered dunks which once
had supported his artillery, and he
shelling peas by the kitchen -l.tor
Of his present wife's boarding
bouse.

S THOUGH It weren't bad
enough already with a Presi­
dential campaign on thia year, grass­
hoppers have threatened growing
things In the Midwest.
True to their advance notices,
the 17-year locusts are popping out
along the eastern seaboard.. In On­
tario a plague of caterpillars cov­
ered the railroad tracks so thickly
trains could not run on schedule.
There Is no word yet from our
little southern friend, the boll wee- '
▼11, but news la expected.
Maybe
he's waiting for the cotton crops
that we used to plant for the ex­
port trade—when we had an ex­
port cotton trade.
The pine borer is reported on
the Job in the north woods. To
date, out here, we have only the
regular resident pests, Including
the white termite, the red ant and
the mother who can prove her child
Is another Shirley Temple, If some­
body would only listen. Of the lastnamed, we already have upwards
of 80,000 and more arriving every
day.
■ Still, we cannot hope to escape.
Presently the party who goes
around taking straw votes on the
election will start multiplying rap­
idly, and then professional Cali­
fornia spellbinders will be binding.

A

What Make* Nawa.
OME gentleman who most work
at the post office because, seem­
ingly, stamps don't meuu a thing
In the world to him, keeps taking

(

S

son why successful newspapers fea­
ture so-called sensations above
news of art and science and litera­
ture Is not through any desire tc
pander morbid or vulgar tastes, bul

J

Ing n smart merchandiser, puts
such witrea in his shop window,
which Is hl* front page, aa nrc cal­
culated to catch the aye and win
the trade of the genera) public.
My correspondent demands an
arvwer. All right, let's make it s
parable:
Suppose, mister, that tomorrow,
through the town where you live,
passes a train bearing a distin­
guished savant -who has made some
great discovery—nay, the cause and
cure of bolts—and on another train
there Is a a taffy-haired lady who,
after a spectacular murder trial,
has just been triumphantly acqult-tad or the grouad of self-defense
for shooting a gentleman friend
eight or nine times In the back.
Which one of these two travelers
will draw the biggtat crowd down
to the station? And. brother, which
train will you meet?

God hath not promised
Skies always blue.
Flower-strewn pathway*
Michigan Tuberculoai* Car AB our live* through.
God hath not promised
to Visit Hastings
Bun without rain,
joy without sorrow,
This Month
Peace without pain.
Tuberculosis coats the United
Slates a billion dollars a year, and But God hath promised,
causes more deaths in Michigan Strength for the day.
than are attributable to any other Rest for lhe laborer,
illness. A dUplay by lhe Michigan Light for the day.
Tuberculosis Association will be on Grace for th* tired.
exhibit Ln Hastings next week. Tills Help from above.
exhibit, which ta the largest travel­ Unfailing sympathy.
ling health exrtlblt in the world, Undying love.
constitute* one of the means by
which the Association carries on STATE 4-H CLUB
the fight against tuberculosis in the
WEEK AT LANSING
Stale ot Michigan; it will be set up
j at State St., Hastings, only July
Barry County Sends Twelve
; 17 and 18.
i The exhibit, which travels in a
Younf People and
toy,. of more
w
u
Three Leaders
- ----------- ------------------- -------------------- ihe
aUte
effon to educate
state ln
in an effort
educate neon
people
This ta 4-H Club week In Michi­
concerning means of combating the gan and lhe halls and campus at
disease. It Is entirely financed by Michigan State. East Lansing; are
the Christmas sale of -tuberculosis In possession of lhe six or seven
hundred girl* and boys who iiave
At the annual meeting of lhe come from different parts of the
American Public Health Association state as representatives of the dif­
last fail In Milwaukee the tuber­ ferent branches ot 4-H Club work.
culosis exhibit was voted highest
Those In attendance from Barry
honors after it had been shown to county are:
Ute delegates.
Girls'
Clothing Project—Leona
The first thing seen on entering Helse, Woodland; Lucile Endres,
the exhibit ta a huge map of Michi­ Freeport; Beatrice Ball. Dowling;
gan which shows, by means of tiny Betty Bagley, Doster; Jean Dick­
human figures, the number of peo­ erson, Dowling.
ple who died of tuberculosis in each
Handicraft—Hugh Nevins. Do*tcr;
county last year. To tiie right ta a Lyle Dunn, Bedford.
"wheel of fortune" on which are
4-H Conning — Betty Ketcham.
seven segment* representing seven Lacey; Kathryn Wibalda, Delton.
of the leading causes of death In
Dairy—Vernon Newton, Freeport;
the state. Every time that the wheel POul Palmer. Middleville.
ta spun tuberculosis comes up.
Sheep—Richard Green, Middle­
signifying that it ta the most dead­ ville.
ly of the seven. Lettering on the
Leader*—County Agent Foster;
base of the wheel reads: "This wheel Rex Maxson. Bellevue; Miss Mary
ta crooked, but so ta tuberculosis."
Roush. Hastings; Mtas Helen Recsor.
i _
Above
________
the__________
wheel are______
listed four of Woodland.
: the most Important facts about tuTiie Barry county representatives
berculosta, that It Is preventable went Ln a special bus that left Has­
curable, communicable, and that it tings. Monday at nine o'clock and
kills more people between 15 and 45 will return Friday afternoon.
years of age than any other disease.
The next panel describes the man­
ner in which one may get the dis­
ease. and telta of the germ which ta
so small that 850 million of them
can be placed on a postage stamp
How the germs may enter one's
body or be passed from person to
Hoping to remove the expensive
person ta shown in an adjoining
raw-meat item from tha food of
display.
Other parts of the exhibit include hatchery fish and still grow healthy
photographs, plaster
models of fingerlings, fisheries authorities of
parts of the body, statistics, a list Michigan are conducting extensive
of symptoms of the disease, and experiment* with food substitutes
at the Wolf Lake hatchery. Twen­
other informative material.
Figures with the exhibit show that ty lots of hatchery trout of approxi­
the total cost of tuberculosis in thc mately 1.000 fish each, are being
United States every year is 81.017.­ used for the experiments. Each lol
000,000, which amounts to 813.94 of fish will be fed different types of
for every person In the country over substitute food* over an extended
period of time, such as fresh ground
20 years old.
The Barrv County Health Depart­ fish, fish meal and "tankago," which
ment. using a special fund made constats of refuse from packing
available by the W. K. Kellogg plants. Cereals of various kinds al­
Foundation, ha* completed the first so will be tried.
phase of It* program against tuber­
What may prove to be the largest
culosis in this county; that ta, the
school children have been given a bluegill -plant" in the history of
skin test; the children showing Michigan Is now developing at state
hatcheries.
In the neighborhood of
evidence of old or current Infec­
tion have been X-rayed, the X-rays twenty-million bluegill fry are in
have been interpreted and are now the rearing ponds at the Wolf Lake
In the hands of the family physi­ hatchery and its substations, not­
ably the Hillsdale and Almena units,
cians.
i
Many old cases In adult* have and with only normal losses as a
l been unearthed and It Is these cases result ok disease. predators, etc..
that It ta hoped will appear for X- Michigan should have at least ten
rays at the Michigan Tuberculosis million healthy, young bluegills for
stocking the inland lakes of the
Society's exhibit.
slate this fall.
ORANGEVILLE.
A total of nearly four million
Mr. and Mrs. Lyman DeForent pounds of smelt were harvested by
and little son of Detroit were Sat­ commercial fishermen and sports­
urday evening guests of his stater, men during the winter and the brief
Mrs. Clyde Nichols.
spawning run of the fish last
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth House of spring—a catch exceeding in size,
Flint spent the week end with Mr. but not Ln value, the total yearand Mrs. Marclus Bagley. Their around take of lake trout In any of
little daughter Eleanor
returned the Great Lakes waters under
home with them after a two weeks' Michigan's jurisdiction. The value
stay at the Bagley home.
of the smelt catch has been in­
Mr. and Mrs. Tom McWhirter of creasing steadily each year. The
Detroit spent from Friday until value of smelt caught and sold in
Sunday with relatives here.
1935 wm estimated at 822.000 and in
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Townsend 1935 at 847.000. During the past
of Plainwell and Mr. and Mrs. Basil winter and spring the catch had an
Doster of Cooper were Bunday estimated value of 8JOO.OOO.
guests of Mr. and Mra. Homer Nor­
man.
The legend of a lost lumber camp,
Mr. and Mrt. J. W. Sheffield en­ waiting deep in Lake Superior State
tertained relatives Sunday from forest for the lumbermen to return,
Grand Rapids and Battle Creek.
lias intrigued enrollees of Comp
The eighth annual reunlop of the Lake Superior. Bernard McTlver,
Orangeville village school will be state forest superintendent, says the
held on the school grounds Sun­ lumbermen with their horses walked
day. July 19th. All former teach­ out of the camp one night 30 years
ers, pupils and patrons are invited ago Supposition ta that if the
to bo there. Pot luck dinner at camp ta located, it will be found
noon.
with tables set, bunks made and
George Norman of Kalamazoo equipment ready for use.
spent from Thursday until Sun­
Michigan's forest-fire loss this
day with hta parents. Mr. and Mrs. year to date is little more than half
Ben Norman.
that, for the same period of 1935.
The many friends of Mra. Nettie when the all-time low record of
Newark, are sorry to know she ta foreat-fire damage wa* recorded In
not so well at this writing.
this state.

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

PINE LAKE.
The Helping Hand Club met with
Mrs. Champion on Wednesday aft­
ernoon with a good attendance. Roll
call was answered by naming a fa­
vorite rose and telling something
about it. It was decided to have a
Favorlta 8on Keynoter.
pot luck supper with Pearl Bagley
ACK homo tbo folk* are an for the August meeting. Salad re­
puffed up with pride. Our own cipes were exchanged. A contest
K Albin W. Barkley keynoted forconducted
the
by the hostess wm won
Democratic convention until the by Clara Bcott.
rafters warped.
Emma Nevins and Mabie Minor
1 Besides being a grand person and have been 111 suffering with strep­
a hard-working senator, he'* one tococcus sora^jhroat, but are gaining

B

I

of the last of the real southern allver-tongued—the kind that can
make a song ot a syllable and turn
i
any reasonably long word Into an
anthem.
And doe* he come from ihe place
।
where the true faith prevails? The
majority stabilised just as soon as
we got a lot of old-timers to quit
voting for Jeff Darla. We weaned
them on W. J. Bryari. Opn ta prob­
ably the only congressional dlatrict in the Union that never has
gone ilepubllcan. although, when
|
Al Smith ran. It had a comparative
L dose call from gegng Baptist
It. _
IRVIN &gt;■ €©■■» j

THE HASTINGS BANNER
WHAT GOD'HATH PROMISED.

On the Fourth Mr. and Mrs.
Claude Champion entertained at
dinner relatives from Paw Paw.
Kalamazoo and St. Joaeph.
Mr. and Mrs. John Rogers had as
week /nd guest*. Mr. and Mn.
Frank Brown and three daughters
of Sparta.
Arlene Brouard was home for the
week end from Northwestern where
she Is stuylng during lhe summer
session.
Mr. and Mrs. Sepher Johnson and
Bruce of Quincy camped and fished
also visited her grandmother and
other relatives.

Barry Bypaths
By JANS CAMERON

OLDEST BANK
IN MICHIGAN

1866 One
Our poem this week was written
by u very small boy. Il is entitled.
In Its fine golden jubilee edition
"Buzzards."
The Michigan Investor failed to In­
They got no feathers on their-head clude tn it* list of "oldest banks­
They eat things that are awful dead. and their lineal descendants, the
New Nation*) Bonk of Hastings,
,
•
4
which had It* origin In 1856 when
Were wild about the new illus­ Wm- H. Skinner of Battle Creek
trator of babies. Mrs. Ruth Steed, of
Weston, Mas*. who illustrates "Sec­ after he sold it to H. A. Goodyear
ond Love" by Margaret Lee Runbeck who had John 8. Van Brunt as his;
In July McCaU's. Her babies look so assistant. Later George Goodyear, his
adorable yon want to hunt one up son, acted as his cashier. In ifiZT?
to hug.
•
Bud's fist 1s getting
get Into the pickle Jar,
the difficulty by using
long-handled pliers to
eats.

too large to
so he solved
a pair of
capture hta

A magazine article* that sets one

thinking, “Your Backyard: Cradle
of War" In tiie Household magazine.
Personally. 1 have always been op­
posed to buying toy Instruments of
war for children, and thta Writer
blames war between nations to
children of all races and creeds be­
ing allowed to posses* toy firearms
and play at war. gang killings, bank
holdups and such. She advise* the
P. T. A.'s or any similar organiza­
tion to combine and disarm the
hands, hearts and minds of It*
children, and substitute the love of
peace and the necessity and bless­
ing of arbitration. Especially does
she pul thta responsibility on wom­
en. "Mothers must be careful
judges of their boys' reading and
consistent In assuring them that men
used to fight and rob and pillage
for the same reason they used to
live in caves and eat raw meal and
fish; namely, because they were Ig­
norant. Mothers must be attentive
to the course of conversation Ln the
house, especially more when lhe talk
of war is on every tongue. Casual
comments have a way of shaping
an entire life attitude. Mothers must
do these things."

The more Jane thought about it,
the more disgusted she was to think
a little boy could write a poem and
she couldn't. 80 she got busy and
here's the result. Real home-grown
poetry, not quite as good as Long­
fellow. but he never chewed up any
more lead -pencils writing one.

Friend.
Hie old oak tree in the yard has
stood there a long time—
Giving shade in the summer and
protection from wind in the
winter
Seasons have come and gone. Its
acorns have lain there unheeded
Or its many squirrel families have
stored them UU needed.

Notes From Convention

Kh&lt;-n i started this

New National of Hastings
Our Hastings delegate,
Mrs.
Direct Descendant of
Honora Pratt, sends us this letter
from the recent convention at Phil­
adelphia which we pass on to Ban-

with Ufa. 1

'fish" dinner.

Greetings to all friends.
I have had a very exciting and
enjoyable experience and I want
to tell you about it before I forget.
TO A ROACH.
First it wm a revelation to me
lhe way women are taking hold of Scuttle, scuttle, little roach.
politics ana national and Interna­ How you run when I approach.
Ltructon and ■
tional problems. All of lhe women's Up above the pantry shelf.
country. The local
dubs of Philadelphia joined the All Hastening to secrete yourself.
lunate in having
Philadelphia committee to make Most adventurous of vermin,
it during the ab*&gt;
It pleasant and profitable for wom­ How I wish I could determine
en visitors. The whole roof garden How you spend your hours of &lt;
Sown* and F. N. Galloway. In 18701 of the Belleview-Stratford hotel wm —Perhaps reclining on the che
they erected the well known three- turned over to us with every com­ When we’re gone and all ta dark 1 of Wisconsin at Mi
storled Hastings National Bank fort and convenience you can think Then the kitchen ta your pork.
■ clinic ta held «ach
block organised as such in that■ of. Some ot tiie most Important Do you banquet in tea leaves, .
i der lhe direction 91
year, which, was replaced in 1925 by meetings were conducted by wom­ Or swing In webs lhe spider weaves? 1 Chicago Symphony
the modem structure that now en. They had a lovely reception for How delightful to suspect
1 members giving tn
' student* ittendlnc
houses the bank, the lineal descend­ us in the new Philadelphia museum AU the places you have trekked!
ant of the IBM one. This makes। which ta a wander in Itself. We
the Hastings bank along with the1 were taken all through the old man- Gentle tip across the biscuits?
termin* th*
'
1 players attar
Traverse City Slate bank lhe sixth slons in Fairmount Park. This trip Do you linger, little soul
country. It is an
oldest in Michigan, according to was a liberal education in early 1 Drowsing In our sugar bowl?
figures given in the Investor.
I that this year for
American history.
1 Or—abandonment most utter—
music clinic ta bait
I met many women In high post- 00 &gt;ou fox-trot on the butter?
। University of Michl
lions regardless of parly affUlalions' 00 Vou chBnt your simple tune*
■ der thc direction of
YMCA ITFMQ
working on peace and other world 1 Swimming in the baby's prunes?
a . ata.
zw. n
problems,
In
_________
in Michigan
Michigan this
this last
last Then
Then the
the dawn
dawn comes,
comes, do
do you
you sll
slink
year women have been most Im-1 Homeward down the kitchen
sink?-------------the clinic
UIU3L nil-- at Lhe unlveaity of
---- WteThe new log dining lodge at the' P°rtBnt- Mtaa Evelyn Merahon of Timid roach, why be so shy?
With Mr. Hine went tl
State Y. M. C. A. Camp on Torch . Saginaw has represented the No- We are brothers you and I.
girls who have signified
lake Is to be dedicated July 12. The tlonal committee since lhe death of ^°r
like yourself,
I explore the pantry shelf.
first section began there last week, Horatio Abbott,
with 125 boys.
Junes H. McDonald of YpMr. George Westerman, of the',UanU
acUn« chairman of
State Y. M. C. A., was in our are* i 0,0
Central Committee the
Monday and Tuesday, meeting with P*11 year. She was chosen to act
the Charlotte committee and Ln “ escorl 10 thc kenynote speaker.
to return about July 27lh. and
"aton Rapids with Mr. AngelL
u,c nr,t lLme -a------------woman---------ever* had
Eaton
Plenty time ujiu
and avuic
some ruviu
room icis
left ‘,thflt
distinction.
I ---consider that an
---- —
-------- for girls to
o enroU
enroll for Camp Barry.
Barry, I honor
h°nor for Michigan.
----She
_
ta _
a USED
------ TO
---------------------------------------h-«in»in«
with
SELL SAFETY PINS
I. Excellent leadership in charming woman.
i
WITH MILLIONAIRE POST,
beginning July TTttL
—... .us
-------.. __
------- I j have spent much time during I One Fourth of July a man from
T™ Pro«r*m for the cones
arts and crafts
well
as In swim।
my
life
in
Philadelphia
and
I
was
Battle
Creek
stopped
at
the
house.
T
h
,
ur
T*7
Ju
mlng. nature lore and games.
---------- ;------- •-------------- --- —&gt;■— ------- —-------- -------------— ---------Leadership for tent groups at1 afrald
afraid ‘its
u people were 100
too reserved He wm
was selling Yankee notions, col- ,'’
0 ~~
clock ~.
ta as ‘foliowi:
2Z"
Mr. G
Camp Barry thta week constate
of110
rcall
a lar --------buttons,
lead
VUIUUU Ol
1
------- y
• turn
— — —L and entertain
——- —
- ----------— pencils, safety . An,1“ conducting.
■■■
_ Carmichael
—___ ....and, —
, Riggle.
HI0
t said "Have you ___
BaaXCn—M*n Of
Wm.
Rev.
blg rAnv.nllnr.
convention, Hi,,
but lb*.,
they surely t! pins, etc. I
any. fire
man of Middleville. Dave Smythe, ■ opened UP their doors and their I crackers?" He chuckled and said.
Detroit, Rev. a. A. Haggal. Pennsyl- heart* and you would think you "They won't let me sell 'em any
vanla, Roger Backetl and George *Tre
out west." They took more," and then added, "Your face
Wotring
of
Nashville.
Robert
Wotring
of
Nashville.
Robert our “vlngs. cleaned us out. but t• looks familiar. Didn't you used to i
Walt*—When I Grow Too Old
.| uve
live in iw.ue
Battle crocxr
Creek?" Ana
And 1I sou,
said.
Roush. Hastings, Is In charge of they made us like it.
leather work and T. 8. K. Reid of i My stater and her husband. Mr.1 "Brother, I lived there when Chararchery. Boys are enrolled from Ea­ and Mn. A. P. Laughlin of Chicago, | He Post roasted hta own peanut*."
ton Rapids, charlotte. Grant, Del­ met,me here. They came from He said, “Post and I used to sell
ton. Dowling. Nashville. Middleville London on the test lap of their trip (safety pins on the streets of Bataround lhe world. I would liked to tie creek, and he died a mulll-mlland Hastings.
The Y. M. C. A. is very grateful have spent all the time talking to , llonalre and I'm still selling safety
to all the physicians who examined them but I had to “go democrat" pins." -Cheer up." I said. "It's betNEW ROTARY
the campers free of charge and to most of lhe time. (I loved It tho.)
—
wm- have UU.....U
v..v» time , Th'y hBVe Kone to Florida on busi- sheep." And the old man grinned Rotary dub filled their
all. who
donated their
and .money to get the boys to camp.:ncu before going home to Chicago. and said, -You hit the bull's eye ;
-------------- . &lt;.
. I I came down here with a party that time, old-timer, and I'm going
“The novel and lhe poem may be- of friends for a day but stayed over_____
_ _____
to tellz____________
you a secret.____
The_____
fellow
that
Carl
come extinct In 200 yearj. 100 years. ‘ to rest. Friday 1 am meeting Dr. Invented thc safety pin made more
or tn
in much.
much 1cm
less ifme.
time. Th:
The average Pratt
1______
_ than the man who built lhe
~
Ln ____________
Westchester_____________________
where we will money
W. R. Cook. secretary.
novel reader reads for entertain- visit relatives, then back to Phlla- , threshing machine?
Roy Hubbard, treasurer.
ment. and with a televtiion box in delphla where he will do some
,
-------------------—•
his home he will be able to get hta clinic work in the Osteopathic hos- I '"I have had every honor which
entertainment cheaper." — Booth pital and then to New York to a1j an
any man
could want."—Herbert
Tarkington.
1----------------1। —
| convention.
Hoover.

Riley Stories

People have come and gone, bgbles

In the old house it has sheltered
and shaded so long.
Through Its old branches squirrel
babies are tumbling and frolick­
ing
While on the grass below, real ba­
bies are rolling and rollicking.

Storms have come and torn its
great branches asunder
It stood there and sheltered us.
staunch and firm till they
passed.
When its time comes, the people
who know It will mourn
A tried and true friend to man
from first to last.

Won't the English students have
a big time when they read it? Bet
111 get some more fan mall, point­
ing out mistakes in meter, rhythm
and punctuation. Let 'em rave.
I bet they couldn't write a poem. I
know the first lines don't rhyme, but
I had trouble enough with the last
ones. It has a classy sound anyway
And the cake didn't scorch muci
while I was doing the fourth line. It
expect writers' families do suffer.
Well. Barry county got a poem any­
way, and what a poem.

DEATH OF FORMER
HASTINGS RESIDENT.
Mrs. Jessie Eycleshymer Davis, 69,
a member of a former well known
Barry county family, widow of Kirk
D. Davis, died Friday at her home
in Albion after a four-day illness.
Ths funeral was held there Tues­
day.
Mrs. Davis was bora Sept. 8 in
Vermont, coming to Michigan when
a small child with her parents. Aft­
er leaving Hastings the family re­
sided In Niles. Mrs. Davis had been
a resident of Albion since 1908. She
served on the Albion school board
about 15 years ago and was a past
president of the Twentieth Century
Upland gamebird
and rabbit club. She was a member of the First
hunters may legally begin to train Methodist church and the W. C. T.
their dogs in Michigan next month.
Surviving are a son, L. Ward
Under the law it will be legal for
hunters in the upper peninsula to Davis, of Albion; a sister, Mrs. Paul
train their dogs on rabbit*, ruffed Baker, of Niles, and two brothers,
grouse and prairie chickens begin­ Arthur and Fred B Eycleahymer, of
ning August 2 and those in the Niles. Dr. F. 8. Goodrich officiated
lower peninsula may begin training and burial wm at Riverside ceme­
their dogs on rabbits, pheasants, tery in Albion.
prairie chickens and ruffed grouse
WE'RE ALL -PUFFED UP."
August 15. Tiie legal training per­
Newspaper people generally are
iod continues to March 15.
rewarded with kicks Instead of com­
Training must be confined to the pliments, so we greatly appreciate
the following from Roma McPher­
hours between sunrise and sunset.
son of Battle Creek:—
"The general editorial tone of
A MARKED CONTRAST.
Tiie treasurer's report for the your paper Is truly wonderful. Some
state of Michigan is indeed a grati­ of those travel letters should be
fying one for all the taxpayers. It put in book form and would be
nhawn a balance of 83,000,000 cash worthy a place on the shelves of any
on hand in the general fund. A year library. I have often wanted to tell
ago that fund was Ln the red 88,800.­ you this and don't believe It does
000. Quite a contrast. This fine any harm when one is doing an
showing ta due to increased revenue especially good Job to tall them so!
to the state and decreased expenses
I have never seen an article with
of the state. Governor Fitzgerald a malicious twinge attached to it
has made good on hta promise to m one so often finds in the city
cut expenses and balance the state papers, and I would Just like to say
budget. The condition of the state that I think those people connected
fund* ta the best this year of any with editing the Banner know how
one of the last fifteen years.
to run a newspaper very well.

Our New Department—writing

BANK MONEY ORDERS
is Available to Everyone

k
BANK MONEY ORDER

»I. ..d
YOUR RECEIPT

taka advantage of tha safety and conv*nl«nc« of Bank Monoy
Orders. Our naw service Is open to all. We Invite you to try
this modem medium for paying bills and making remittances by
mail. There are no complicated applications to fill out sod you

payment Yet, with all their advantages Beak Money Ordem
cost very little—leu than you usually pay for similar service.

Hastings City Bai
TELEPHONE 2103 ♦ ♦ ♦ HASTINGS ■ MICHI

�THE HMTINC1

TMtlMDM,

IVLTt

j. IB,

.RDS OPENS NEW STORE SATURDAY
X3 CROWD FROM CHY AMD
SURROUNDING AREA EXPECTED

Radios Large and Small in Accessible Display

ITilBII
Continued Better
Business Conditions
'
Seen

Founder of Company
Used Present Slogan

Hastings oilers excellent promise
for lhe future think Montgomery
Ward officials, according to a re­
cent statement.
The opening of a retail stere in
Ki

man of action. Ideals and bi­
tty—lheae are not idle words
his case, but a true characteron
ot Montgomery Ward.
Ider of Montgomery Ward it

With a simple five word slogan
—"Saiiafacllon Or Your Money

his plans quick­
er than it took
him to smoke
one of his big
black cigars.
All this was
In
im.
Mr.
Ward, with his
partner, George
Thorne, had
managed to ac­
Montgomery
cumulate 12400,
Ward
had taken over
a 12 by 14-fool
room on the third floor of a build­
ing on North Clark street In Chi­
cago. had put out a one-page
catalog Hating article* of mer­
chandise and prices and then s*’.
back hopefully awaiting results.

Orders Pour In

Radios of all sizes and prices, designed by Wards, will be on display in the new retail store, arranged
so that all models may be easily inspected. In commenting on the display, the atore manager pointed
out that Wards are the world’s largest retailers of radios.
. records with his close friends.
■
More Important among outside
Interest than
hobbies, however,
was his dogged perseverance in
following a principle through lo lhe
finish when he was convinced it
was right, and this in the face of
limitless obstacles and criticism.
This was as definitely a part ot his
character as his apparent gruffness
on lhe one hand and Inherent gen­
erosity on the other. His fight to
preserve Chicago’s lake front was
such an Instance, and despite the
thunder of adverse criticism to
which he was subjected by the local
press and public alike, his tenacity
in proving a principle later won for
him the admiration of hb severest
critics.
As the “Watchdog of lhe Lake
Front" he will long be remem­
bered as the one whd
saved a
great city from cheap exploitation
when, as owner of thc Tower
Building on Michigan avenue, he
succeeded in obtaining a court in­
junction after months of litiga­
tion. restraining building and con­
struction which had been attempt­
ed along Lake Michigan and which
would have permanently marred a
beautiful skyline.

There was not long to wait,
however, for orders started com­
ing in with the return mall faster
than they could fill them. At this
point a long story could be told
about the sales mounting each
year, greater selections of mer­
chandise in the catalog and the
ealalog itself becoming magnified
in size until it
Provided for Future
became a good
sized book.
1
Those persons who visited A
But Dial story
i Century of progress in Chicago
during 1933 and 1934 and who
time. Dales and
enjoyed this spectacular exhibit
may thank Mr. Ward for making
come meaning­
the natural Kiting passible.
less when a col­
Some years later,
after
the
orful personal­
benefits of his action had finally
ity Is concerned.
come to be appreciated by all.
Facts become
when asked whether he was happy
drab besides a
nopr that everyone understood and
approved his motives. Mr Ward
character.
replied in his characteristically
It has often been said of Mr. gruff manner. 'Many people never
Ward that he was gruff and un­ understand. But you must do cer­
sociable. On the surface this may tain things whether they want
have been true. He did not seek them or not because you know
personal prestige, nor did he make they should have them. The fight
friends easily. But it is also true was costly, but I am satisfied that
that he was loved and admired by a good objective has been realized.”
the people who were fortunate
While the organization which
enough to break through his re- , .___
z bears
____ __
___ _
today
his______
name__has _grown
serve and learn to know him. Few ' in size, it still uses the original
people were aware of the fact slogan and gifes evidence of the
that he employed one person to do same progressive spirit which led
nothing but dispense charily to Mr Ward into new merchandising
the poor It was all done anonym-' fields
ously. without lhe flourish and
publicity which so often accom-

Had One Hobby
.

WARD BUDGET PLAN
IS FOUND POPULAR

Serious in business. Intense in '
his work. Ward found little lime j
for relaxation.
To one hobby,
however, he attached much inter­
Budget plan or time-payment
est and his business was never
able to completely overshadow it buying, which has become an
established practice in America, ijas
tin, ’horw. ’ Pl»u«riwu~or'’ilia
, to w»rd
t„orlt» iwrw. tounj . ptomBwnt
I!’', pur?*“
ptoam th« nu, ol tu&gt; onto
Lusiimu piobknu .ero n.rer
ur,em but u.l ho could (tad &gt;
m^enu to t.lk lo hl. Mlle

Store Will Have Latest Features
Say Company Officials

Smaller Articles
A prominent addition to Hostings' business and commer­
cial life will bo made Saturday whan Montgomery Ward opens

Redesigned
A new washer with

the

its new retail store on South Jefferson street.
clean.
opening will take place at 9:00 o'clock.

the continuation of better busl- i crater, an up-te-the-mlnute radio
ne&amp;s tn that town or city and in
* cabinet expressing modemlhe vicinity."
■1801 lo match Ils sixteen tube, fm"Business coitdlUoiu
In
any l,roved mechanism and its new,
community and in the surrounding , larSe dla* **ttl station call letters
area are. of course, carefully con-, ** wel* os lhe conventional numslderod before arrangements are bers—these and a host of smaller
made for the establishment or re- •rt‘cl«. designed by Wards, are
-openlng ot a retail - store - there.
” an expression of the latest trend
Merchandising
said one of the officials. "After in merchandise design.
The "utilitarian beauty" which
Experience Is
careful
consideration of condlthere articles express is distinctly
Varied }
modem
Articles are
designed
excellent opportunities for progres­ with dignity and simplicity, with
Wards local manager lakes over
sive business. We confidently ex­ their appearance In harmony with
a glance around the the task of managing one of Has­
pect development which will prove their use.
beneficial lo us and to other busi­ new store shows examples of ali tings prominent retail organizations
ness organizations as well as lo types of merchandise, from the well equipped for his job, and he is
small electric appliances and lamps
assisted
by
a
the community as a whole.”
to thc radio and the waaher. re­
—:---- ___ ------7] staff
of
well
designed to express this modem
trained men and
and efficient beauty.
flclals
of
the
Matched Set
company.
A number of the small electric
appliances have
been
grouped
Beatty has work­
into a matched Mt. making it pos­
ed in many dif­
sible for the housewife to add.
ferent capacities
from time to time, a percolator,
with Montgom­
an iron, a waffle Iron and other
ery Wards In
articles to match the ones she
Louisville. Ken­
purchases at. the
tne beginning.
oeginnmg.
tucky.
Terre
small ___a —
thing as a|
__ __ ________
Haute. Indiana,
it
for
the
table
ton
has
1
wooden chest
lop
' and Decatur. IlUnols. His experience
been redesigned with clear, smooth I in lhc.se large stores has acquainted
lines. Clocks have taken on a new him with every line of merchandise
face
and a
new appearance, being carried al Hastings. In Mr.
Fountain pens have also been af- , Beatty. Wards brings to Hastings,
feeted, and one of these has lines I one of their first beginners in the re
somewhat like a modem, stream-tail game. It is his desire to give
lined train, but it has been designed customers immediate serv.ee&gt; and to
especially to nt ...x,
the ........
hand and ••
It is carry out
—Wards
--------- rpolicy
-------, ot -----------satlsfacunusually light in weight. Kitchen tion.
utensils look cleaner, neater than I Assisting Mr. Beatty will be Mr.
earlier ones.
| Morrow, assistant manager, and
ana mt
Mr,,
Kitchen
furniture
has r.;
newer Haggard
J who will t.
be L.
in charge of
;*
—..— department,
—.------- .
lines. Cabinets, refrigerators, tables, the .furniture
stoves are all represented in the
new store by at least one example
, .
...
।
—
of the modern designing. Furniture
for the other rooms of thc modem
house show many modem trends
______________________,
Tables, ehairs, sofas, couches, furnlture throughout the house, are
|
represented by modem pieces.
:
Of course the older, long acI
cepted articles are still available
I
for those who prefer them and are
I
still very popular.
j

.nd
llul, 11
wtentat
too 10 ■“
Clothe,, ooto
tew
.n&gt;1hln, which the
rlh“"J ""
* pu'c&gt;’*“a

First Home of Montgomery

IFgrd|

A typical paint “college” as conducted by Montgomery Ward, where “students" learn thc best methods
of painting. “Good paint plus a thorough knowledge of how and where to apply it," said the manager
of the new score, "adds up to a good paint job. We are equipped in this 'college* to supply both.”

EASY LESSONS IN
PAINTING OFFERED
New Ward Store to
Have Paint "School”

Window Displays at New Store
Are Result of Carefid Planning
Wlndow displays with specially
prepared backgrounds
for
each
type of merchandise. al) of them
ihe result of careful study on the
1 part ot artists and experts In win­

this direction, thc store will not
only open with, but wiU continue
to show window displays of care­
fully considered arrangement."
Changes of season, changes In
the Interests of the public, popu­
larly Important events, holiday^
etc. are all factors which must
be considered by window designers
atlr'ac( inUresl^^ovlde pleasure

In commenting on this opening,
Russell Beatty, store manager, an­
nounced that an invitation Is ex­
tended to everyone in this vicinity
to attend. “Previous experience has
shown.’’ be aald. "that visitors will
come, not only from the city Itself,
but from as far as fifty and one
hundred miles away. We are mak­
ing every preparation to see that
all visitors have an opportunity to
enjoy themselves and to see every­
thing the new store has to offer.
Special attention-is being paid
to presenting all merchandise in
full view. The latest in fixtures and
modern retail store display* will
be seen. Tiie store and counter
space will be arranged according to
careful planning so that ample
space will be allowed both for
merchandise displays and tor lhe
customers who view them. Last
minute' preparations are noV being
made to handle a capacity crowd.

Officer! to Attend
The opening will bring to the
city several officers of ihe company,
who consider this a significant event
in the development of thc com­
pany's merchandising policies. Upon
the success of new features in Has­
tings will depend whether these
features will be adopted in other
stores throughout the state. The
regional manager and his assistant,
will attend, planning to check the
new features of lhe store.
..----- 4.is pit neWC8t
The store in Hastings

___________________
scattered
of Wards
500 retail stores
&amp;
throughout the country and has the
advantage of being designed, deco­
rated ano
ratea
and arrangea
arranged wivn
with tne
the results
of experiments tn the other steres,
ln
mt,,,!, 0( officials.

LARGEST PART OF
DOLLAR STAYS ‘HOME’
"By far the biggest part of
'very dollar that will be spent in
.he new Ward store will stay with•n the boundaries of Michigan."
Russell Beatty, manager of thc
store pointed out In discussing thc
opening of the new store here.
"In
addition
to
the
large
amounts spent for taxes, salaries,
repairs, rent, advertising, electric'
and other service bills, and addl- j
tlonal operating expenses. Wards
spend thousands of dollars each
year for the purchase of mer­
chandise and materials in Michi­
gan.” lhe store manager continued.
"A good part of this material is
sold outside of the state boundaries,
through bringing
Ward’s nation-wide
organizatlon.
outside money
In­

Even house t
____ ,___
is a fine art and a certain amount
of training is necessary In order opening of the new Ward store.
"Window decoration and dis­
that It be done for lhe best re­
sults. The paint department of play. like any other department
lhe Ward store, which opens here of merchandising, requires special
Saturday. Is. in a sense, a "school”
a
picture of what is to lhe pockets of
where the actual selling of paint study." the store managy- said.' an(j
duccrs."
is only a part of thc business at ”As a result of Wards efforts in Inside the store.
hand.
The salesmen in tills department
are also Instructors in the art
of good
painting.
They
have
been carefully instructed and they
arc careful in their Instruction of
customers
"Our new paint Mt-i
up." said one of them, "does prac-'
llcally everything but apply lhe
paint, so complete is the informa­
tion that goes with it."

Michigan

Merchandise Undergoes Severe Laboratory Tests

pro-

The young lady Is adding these spark plug boxes and the motor oil
container to the growing list of packages by Montgomery Ward
which have won first prizes. Simplicity and a pleasing harmony of
colors characterise the containers shown here which won first prizes
in the competition for the Irwin D. Wolf award in New York City.

face powder bottles, designed by
Wards, took first place. Wards mall
orda &gt; catalog was voted bast among
the booklets.
Last year Wards entered pack­
ages hr seven groups of the com­
petition for the Irwin D. Wolf
award In New York City and won
first prizes in four ot the classes.
Radio Battery
Earlier this year Wards repeated
Container Takes
in the same event with two more
winners, the spark plug box tak­
Grand Prize
ing first honors in the folding
carton class and a newly designed
Of course It’s what's inside a motor oil container In the metal
container division.
Kckage you purchase that counts,
t who wants to buy an unattrac­
Simple Lines
tive package. think officials of
Ward
designers
express
the
Montgomery Ward.
opinion
that
merchandise of good
The Ward retail store, opening
» Guide for Exteriors
Saturday, will show no drab and quality should be packaged so as
lifeless bundles of merchandise. to give an indication of that qual­
For exteriors the paint guide Is
And this is the result of an in­ ity. Packages are designed with
equally comprehensive.
It has a
tensive prograp of re-packaging simple lines and harmonious col­
center illustration of a house and
begun three years ago and bringing ors, planned not only to attract the
recommendations of what type of
many prizes during those three customer's eye but to convey to him
paints and materials are best used
(Left) A toy wagon does mors to provs Its strength thsn will tvtr be required of it in play. Thia
the idea of the quality within the
on different rection* of thc build­
wagon supported 675 pounds, suspended as shown here. (Right) Paints and other materials are given
Most recent of the Ward pack­ container and to make It possible
ing Flanking the main sketch are1
careful and studious inspection through the tpicroacooe. Defective materials are immediately discarded.
age winners was in the annual ex- for him to easily and quickly read
strips with pictures bf groups of
_
| hlbltion sponsored tn Chicago by the message which tha package, box,
houses, each demonstrating suggest­
upon by the hqur. The queerest i the Society of Typographical Art* can or carton sets forth.
ed color combinations in
'“■*
The prizes which the packages
tilings are done, but always with in this exhibit Wards not only
tones.
a
definite
purpose
in
mirid.
to
see
' won lhe grand prize but six first have won are considered Impor­
Thc actual results of various
tant by the company officials, but
that all merchandise will stand up prizes in lhe packaging division.
paints and varnishes In varying ,
IA
ItUh
.
_
.
.
.
necessarily second to the approval
to its job.
numbers of applied coats
are j
Grand Prise Awarded
of customers. They find this ap­
The laboratories are located in
shown elsewhere In tl.;
'L,—.
lhe display,
proval, evident in tha customers’
taddlen which I Batteries dropped from airplanes I dlse.
Chicago, and anyone visiting that
These are shown on paddles
hare been coated with the paints! and frozen In ice. milk cans dropAll articles offered for sale in city is Invited to inspect them. the container for lhe B. or C. radio acceptance of tha hew containers
gnd
Actual steps in
In uic
the •j peu
ped uwn
from nuir-avary
nine-story
buildings. w.c
guu varnishes. Actual
uuuuui**.
the new
utw retail
icwm store 4 have
nine gone Not only are spectacular tests con­ battery. In lhe metal con Ulnar for merchandise. ’This new pack­
aging policy, its acceptance, and
class
the
first
prixe
went
to
Wards
ducted
but
there
are
also
the
application are shown as well as toy wagons supporting hundreds through tests - of a nature suited
results of tests for the wearing and, of pound*, wrist watches ducked to their requirements and have wear-and-tear tests on fabrics, the auto body polish and cream separa­ the award of prises prove,” say
weatberproqj qualities.
• in glasses of water—ah these bcen found worthy. Rubber gloves sunlight tests on dyes, snd the tor oil containers. In the cardboard company officials, -that the Amer­
easterners are invited to taka■ things are regular routine pro­ an Jtrtteited unbelievably.
Hot palmtaking. hour by hour inspec­ box class. Ward golf ball boxes won ican public has an instinctive ap­
advantage of the laboratory re- • cedure in the Ufa of lhe man who aster bottles are used in a tug ol tion of materials through tiie first. Among tlx glass bottles, the preciation of what is artistically
almond lotion, cleansing cream and acceptable to Judges of art."
search conducted by Wards.
' test Montgomery Ward merchanRoller skates are skated microscope.

Aided
by paint
guides and
other displays, thc instructor-sales­
men will be ready to give cus­
tomers paint service as well as
just paint The pein: guide for
I interiors shows individual color
| illustrations for each room in an
I average
modern
home — living
। room, dining room, bedroom and
even a nursery, attic and basc! ment. Brief editorials with the
guide describe what type of paints,
enamels or kalsomines to use tor
walls, woodwork, celling and floor,
and. in addition, the display graph­
ically suggests a variety of color (
combinations.

Jtigui Tests for Each Type of
Merchandise Applied by Wards

I. * Company on North Clsrk
ill auaners that Mr. Ward and
iced their first catgloa—a on®
—«i&gt;d atpricd filling the'Hrsr
hat has since reached hXlton-

The formal

Prize Packages for Merchandise ,

Paint Guides Used

R. TJw

Washer, Radio and

WARD MANAGER HAS
EXTENSIVE RECORD

basis upon wltfch a great mercan­
tile business has developed until
It has become of national Import-

time the company first came into
existence, but since has been
adopted by every reputable re­
tailer In the country.
To Mr. Ward goes full credit for
first conceiving the idea of mail
order merchandising; credit also
for putting the idea into practical
form, transforming a dream into a
fact and watching it grow to heights
which he probably never had visualiaed. A dreamer. Ward, but no
Idle one. Action was his theme song,
and anything that couldn’t stand tiie
strain of action

943^2228

MODERNDESIGNING
WINS FIRST PRIZES

�---------- .—_
STEA

Watching
^verybodg ’•
. Walting

Waterproof 15" striped ।

flat—full size—sturdy—

IT’S HERE

A REGULAR 9tc WARD

W ST OH

Opens Saturda
JULY

ELEVENT

118-122 South Jefferso
Take Advantage of the Many Specials Offered for..
Wards 100% Pure

PENNSYLVANIA
Motor oil. Same top
quality that .ell. for
30c to 35caqt. at lead­
ing set vice .tationa
Sole priced at only

12®
Including Federal T*.
la «■' MR c.nUiaar

LET Words show you how to keep your boloncsl

It's os simple os

Just enroll on the list with thousands

of our customers who take advantage of Words Budget Plan.

*^e ,^n9| y°u neeqL buy ^em now and

Figure out

arrange to pay for them witljasel amount ol regular intervals.

(&lt;) Then, you see,

Llul

you'll know just how much

will come out of your pocketbook every month to cover your

Drastically Reduced!

WARDOLEUM YD. GDS.
Aojuhir/y 37o—now
at a aenaationally low

-mh
WH dA

talc price. 6 and 9 foot
width, in a wide maortment of pattern. I

GRAND OPENING
Early I Millions of thrifty people buy at
Ward's every year. Here are a few of the
reasons why:

Wards Budget Plan has two other great

• Wards buy for 500 stores. The tremendous savings are
Reflected on every Ward price tag.

advantages... it makes it possible for you to buy belter quality

• Wards policy is—quality merchandise at low prices.

an&lt;^ you camenjoy many comforts and

A Ward product costs as much to make but it costs Wards
‘TttFlo sell.

purchases.

merchandise, ~

conveniences while you ore paying for them.

Wards.
• Wards Bureau of Design is constantly creating n
modem, up-to-the-minute styles.

• Wards make it easy to buy the things you need.
Wards Budget Plan and pay out of your income.
•Wards has a 64-year reputation for good mcrchatl

low prices, and fair dealing,'*.i

LEARN WHAT MILLIONS HAVE LEARNED! Buy ot Wards and Pocket tha Diffei

M
J 'dy“‘

x

Hot Weather Special I

ELECTRIC FAN

Rijularly fl.191

SJo »/Wird~.
gjrss !lnt‘
aome and aturdyl

Tfau S’aw Twice, (m

18-Month Strvlct Gutrtntw

ROAD KING BATTERY
£• ft
* V &lt;&gt;(1

18-Me. Service Ouaran tee I 86 Amp. Hnpr

Buf 1936

a

WARDS ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR
_ 2]
SAVE

J?egutar/Z.J4.43.
Backed by Ward.

• Wards Bureau of Standards tests the quality of m
chandise before it is offered for sale. You save safely

Avlomalit Intnnor
Light in c.nt.r Compl.t. illumination

UP

SAVE

TO

40

WITH

G'/ii

AT

WARDS

TEST-PROVED

LOW

PRICE!

OPERATING

COMPARE

ECONOM .

Cu. Ft. Size at the Price of a 4!

39-Pt«l«

Capacity. Sale

Regular 29c Folding

CAMP STOOL
Strong hardwood
frame, braced and
riveted! Colaful «nuHoed canv„

——.

^SK/

/■ rtd

A Verified
Value!
You Save 9501
Canning Sptcitll

WARDS JAR RINGS

Then save again, every month, with Wards amazing

ardi! Ask your Ward Store for proofI Compare the
figures with those of any other refrigerator maker

of heavy, live red rubbed I
Bide Up I Save During
Ward. Grand Opening
Bale!

- 6W Ci.

operating economy—proved by actual teata in the
120-degree “hot room'* at Wards Bureau of Stand,

who publishes actual test results on current con*
sumption I Compare this big refrigerator (13 aq. ft.
shelf area) with any other selling near Wards low

price. Then nave twice by buying at Wards!

Montgomery Ward

118-122 So

Hasting* •

ifc

�ST PRICE IN WARD HI!
3 PIECE BEDROOM

] QUICK ACTION needed
DOWN goes the price

LIMITED TIME ONLY!

DOWN
ONLY &gt;5 MONTHLY—
Small Carrying Charge.

Wards Save You $4 During This Sole
It takes Wards to bring you mattress value like this I This innertpring is not only low priced
—it actually has MORE features than a famous nationally advertised make at $14,951 182
finest inncrcoils I Quilted sisal pads I 4 side ventilators! Cushiony felted cotton upholstering!
Lpng-wearing drill ticking! No wonder it's outstanding at this price—hurry, save NOW!

Sale
Special!

SAVE $3 —SALE OF 99 COIL PLATFORM SPRINGS
Wards Supreme quality —one of the finest platform springs you can buy!
double deck coils with interwoven top made especially for inneripnng
mattresses| Green or orchid finish! 10 days only at this price I

* Outfit includes

Bed, Chest, Choice
of Vanity or Dresser

Reduced!

Sale Priced! You Save R.'l!

WARD STUDIO COUCH

Regular $1.49- Value

Feather Pillows

3 PIECE BED OUTFIT
chip-proof enamel fin­
ished metal bed, 99 coil
spring, 45 lb. cotton mat­
tress-all st thia price!

Never before have Wards sold a modem, walnut veneered bedroom suite at n
price thia low! YOU SAVE OVER 113—that fact alone Is amaaing ... and it's
even more so when you consider that this suite is outstanding not only in quality
but Ln style as well. The pieces have been carefully, solidly constructed! The
vanity is extra large—6 drawers instead of the usual 41 Hurry to Wards—see
this suite—buy it—and pay only $4 down!

REAO THESE OUTSTANDING QUALITY FEATURES:
• 1. Tops and Fronts richly Walnut Veneered.
*2. Two-Tono
Venear Effects with Gold Line Trim. &gt;3. Plate Class Triple Vene­
tian Mirrors. #4. Bed, Chest and Vanity or Dresser, Vanity Bench
Priced at only $3.98.
-

sale! Pilled with fluffy
purified hen feathers!
tc in longfeaiher-proof

SAVE S2 on Wards 9x12 Super-Service

WARDOLEUM
Buy NOW—Price Goer Back
to $7.95 After This Sale!
SUPER-SERVICE is exactly what we
mean—this rug is 10 pounds heavier
than the average! The felt base is thicker I
The enamel surface is tougher! Think of
getting tile, modern, floral, and even
oriental patterns at this sale price I Easy
to keep spotlessly clean! No fastening.

9x12 (Room) Silt

A BIG SAVING ON
A BIG, GOOD QUALITY

$ x 9, $2.98 • 7% X 9, $3.89 • 9 X1014, $545

Reg. 49c Super-Service Yd. Gds. Reduced!
One of the longest wearing hard surface floor coverings
on the market today! Extra heavy felt base! 6' and 9'
widths in attractive patterns! Sq. Yd. only 9 99 P

V

The over-sise oven will bake
10 loaves of bread evenly at
one time! .. . The beat indi­
cator eliminates guessing. 5
wickless burners.
Visible
fuel supply keeps the range

Inal.------------- --------------

Formerly 85,951

WARDOLEUM
You can’t afford to miss this opportunity to save on
one of the longest wearing rugls on the market today!
Buy for any room tn your home! Choose from a wide
assortment of long-wearing patterns!
9xl»K,»M»
. 7'/il$, $2.79
.
6x9, $2.19
SALE! Wardoleum Yd. Gds. Regularly 37c! For seamless
kitchen or bathroom floors! 6 and 9 foot widths. Sq. yd.

Nearly $81

ORIENTALS

AXMINSTEBS

Mantkly. Smell
Carrying Charge

JS

One ot the luwe,t price, you'll find any­
where for ,uch beautifully highlighted ori ental Axnunrter patternil Colon woven
through to the back! Heavily fringed I

WardsGASOLINE RANGE Complete GAS RANGE
Choose from moderns, hooked, Persian
or Chinese patterns! Save at

WARDS!

FREE! $4.98 waffle surface, halrtop rug cushion with ovary Ward rug at $39.95 or higjtar I

A $15 saving! (We checked price in 41 leading stores!)
Concealed leak proof brasi tank is Juried “Class A” for
safety. Hot, Quick, cast-iron burners. Big, fast oven.
Huge cook-top. Broiler 250 cu. in. larger than most.

"" '
pletel Lamp, clock, measured-time
jars, full oven insulation, automatic
oven heat control, top-burner lighter, 2 big storage
chambers, hot round burners. (Features of $70 ranged)

�HAWTHORNE BIKES
Everybody’s riding bicyclea—for sheer fun, sport, and exer­
cise. Thia Ward
brinja you one of tha bitfeat
bicycle
you can jet for your money I Ward*
are one of the nation’s two largest bicycle retailers I
Wards contracted for the entire season’s production of a
famous maker in order to bring these $25.95 and $31.95
bikes to you at this low price I Buy and ride a Hawthorne
and own a smoother riding, easier pedaling, longer last­
ing bicycle—yet at saving* of $4 to $10!

3-Pc. Stool Tdtsss'iM

StMlTacU. Bax

MlkCMllniUn.

88* ’■"u' 1
Full-Sized Reinforced

Laval Winding Real

TENNIS RACKET

gad«Mf/V?g. Holds
100 yards; Bakelite end­
plate*; single
SWftA
steel pawl.
Oil®

proof stringing; B OPIP
। sturdy ash frame. JBL

Tennis Balls
Approved by U. S. Lawn
Tennis Assn.
ftgp

3 for Ho®

• Riverside Balloon Tires

•

Bonderized • against rust

Delta

Electric

Horn

•

Western Field
HFull Size Clip Repeater

Steel

Frame

•

Delta

heavy 3*-in. walnut
stock. Rifle only

Electric Zeppelin Headlight • Big

Troxel

Saddles

Folding Camp Cat

• Red Jewel Tail

Folding Camp Stool

Light • Handsomely Red Enameled I

dy

hardwood

ted.

1.39

Nogu/ar/r 79c; strong
hardwood frame;
an
canvas top.
^4®

Folding Camp Stove
Prentiss Waber*. 3-bumer; steel grates; holds

3.98

MS!

&lt;&gt;O
tlsllO

Pint Vacuum Battle
earthen’

tWplirlz.ZlSi &gt;**&lt;»• b&gt;

world famous mfr. O ftp
Strong glam flUw.

IT SAVES ME SO MANY STEPSI

SO LOW PRICED!

FIRST QUALITY

Bathroom Outfit
Complete 3 pieces with all
fittings. $5 DOWN, $5
Monthly. Small Carrying

.

NEW ST

&lt;&gt;&lt;•
/fl /fl •»&lt;&gt;
fl
fl~

Gleaming Porcelain Enamel!

Chorge.
Low priced, yes. but money can't buy better quality!
Thc round front lavatory and the leg style tub are both
made of sturdy cast Iron—covered with strictly First
Quality while porcelain enamel! The closet outfit is
First Quality stainless vitreous china. A complete out­
fit-all fittings Included! See thc low Ward (.TiceI

Buy Them Separately, If You Wish!
Tub. complete with fillings
lavatory, complete with fillings
Syphon Washdown Ciooel Outfit

I1L95
.115.10

Galvanized Inside and Outside—30-GALLON

Complete outfit 42-in. &gt;ixe.
$3 DOWN, $5 Monthly.
Small Carrying Charge.
Now you can wash. dry. and store away your pots and
pans without taking a single step!
Plenty of room
for these in the spacious compartments and drawer*.
Cast-iron sink is coated with First Quality enamel­
stays gleaming white I Chrome plated fixtures extra...

WATER HEATER

Tested to twice needed strength.
None finer made. Heavy gauge steel

Seamless copper coils allow rapid
circulation—quick heating I
Black
cast-iron Jacket and door. For 30­
gal. tanks.

30-gal..

Ward* regular low price cut! A full she. Ward
washer with exclusive triplo-cfainaMtf action; 1.
safer water action—double crowu agitator; 2?wRtl
board action—corrugated porcelain tub; 3. PreuMM c

• el Ito 14 Vimwbb* PMtou-t*

Shaving Water in 10 Minutes—CAS COIL

RANGE BOILER
Plate, electrically welded.
less fittings.

ONLY Si DOWN
ST .Wrak
on Monthly

CABINET SINK

• Lovell wringer with
pressers, 2-bch rolls

Rubber-mounted orator and tab

• Safety wringer foM loloqpa

Heavy dut« % h.o. mete*

• Msrhoaisai folly sealed hi

SPECIAL! 12-QT. PRESSURE COOKER
GRAND OPENING SALE

ELECTRIC

ELECTRIC STOVE

Save*17B ob cooking coatnl
By actuaJ teat we know that the average family
can save 1179 in one year by using a pressure
cooker! Foods pressure-cooked are tastier, more
healthful . . . with leu effort for you. And the

Rateforiy

|

25-qt. Prdiivra
Connar^S

U. S. Department of Agriculture recommends

Regularly $1.19

pressure canning as the only safe way to can.
Wards cooker at this low sale price is comp/eta —

canning rack and cooking pans all included.

Tht* handsome,
sturdy, little
fan is a sure cure
for hot weather!
8' blades. Black
crackle finish!

Jyst the thing for hot weather cooking,
camps, and cottages! Nickle-plated top;
high quality nichrome heating element;
on-off switch in plug! Save in thia sale!

Sahl t-BvrnerElochic Stoves, $1.79

Attltissal Cmisg AMs
MStocisI Messi
1.00
Ih qt. H

«d|l

Porcelain tub holds 21 gal. to top,
16 gal. to load line

7.Ja. Cdd Po«k Coiurar.-SMS
ItlMt. Conrad KmU. ..Na
Dl.k Po«.............. Me

Large 9-qt. Pail................ 3&gt;C

�-------------

-------------------

w

-■

JVLT t, im

KACTfGA

f

,

_

: DAY ONLYTEXTRA. BIG TRADE-IN I
LLLOWANC E THAT CUTS THE COST
OF FIRST QUALITY

"DURING WARDS
JUNE PARADE OF
VALUES WE'RE Of.
FIRING EXTRA L1BERAL TRADE-IN
ALLOWANCES.**

20% hxductim
ON WARDS VARNISH
VARNISH STAIN AND SHELLAC
&lt;

\

Super Spar Varnish

Certified Color Varnish

ftaflZ.
28% Titnv-fKI!
Tung "Oil I
Finest for inside
or out. Save
20% in sale I

Finest quality
combination
I®
■tain and var- 8 8 W y qt
nish. Now only

-M

JI «”-

Marproof Floor Varnish

Wards Linoleum Varnish

Our finest guar»
unteed interior Ufl
varnish. 20% 8 BaF &lt;»*orf during sale!

Brings out col­
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linoleums. Save ■
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Wards Linoleum Lacquer

k

Dries in 1 hour
to a tough, high
gloss. Guaran-S SS S qtteed I Save 20% I

Varnish

Orange or White Shellac
For floors that
arc to be vnr- / J
nished. Dry in
15 minutet.

WardsInteriorGlossPaint

Choice of over 200,000 paint -

Gives a bright, easily washed
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HF
A
JSC
&lt;

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Certified Flat Wall Paint

lift

Restful velvet finish—easy to
MF
apply—easy to wash! 1 coat S'* — hC
covers. Choice of many colors.

Coverall Floor Paint

Certified Flat Wall Paint

Backed by our Triple Paint

Dries smooth,hard,and tough
for long protection. Gal.
covers 600 sq. ft. Buy now I

MF
J-SC
a.

com covsrs.

Choice *f

Save Va to Va on

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WARDS WALLPAPER

Finest quality. Easy to ap- 4)44,1
ply. Enough for an entire
average sired room for only

CReeft C«r

Prien

EDF F I
3 Quarts

OIL

or

Wards

TURPENTINE

TO ME TOO. I'M GOING
TO BUY RIVERSIDES NOW."

Ward Battery
13-Plate With

12 MONTH

Old Battery

(*

2»»

5-Qt. Con, R«o- 95c, SALE.....................82c
t-Gol. Con, Raq. $1.35, SALE.............. 1.19
5-Gol. Con, Req. $3.25, SALE............ 2.89
Command*! Oil, R»q. 8’^c Qt.............
7CaL

plates. 77 Amp.
hour capacity.
Meets jp! SAE
standards.
Specially
I’r Iced I

M W

27c

89c

14c

Reg. 98c. Oil
filter cartridge.
12.000 miles.

Reg. 19c. Tube

Wards Supreme
Quality Plug.

Me.

,lbJr 0

«&gt;79
_

40

3

Commander Quality Covers Coupe 47c

Co/nmander Quality Covers Sedans 97c

I5c

15e

lOe

Fender brush.
Stiff fibers.

Spoke brush.
Tampico fiber.

sponge. Save!

1.30

23e

23c

59c

preme Quality

Reg. 29c.
Paste or liquid
type cleaner.

Reg. 79c. Full
skin chamois.
18i25-in.

Reg. 85c. Flat

AUTOMATIC
ELECTRIC WATER
PUMP

Why get along witnout the convenience of a mod­
ern electric water aystem when Ward* price on
this one is so astoundingly low! See it at Ward*
today . . . use Wards free engineering service I

Ml U DOWN

3.25

4.25

5.25

tical to a $60 set! 6 tubes. No engine
noise. Illuminated dial. Built rugged.

buretor. Ford
A-AA.B-BB.

Carburetor for
Chev, *29-31.

4.00

1.20

59c

Hyd.__.
bumper Jack.

Rear viewmir-

Reg. 65c. Ydfender

PRICES

SLASHED ON

Come In... See Thie Amazing IVew

EQUIPMENT! BUY

FARM

SEPARATOR
/ Qc

Rope
Vi-Inch size

"

FT.

$7 Monthly,

W

Imagine a bowl that deans with a rinse, that
can't rust, and that can't get exit of balance!
Wards separator has that bowl, and many other
features you'll be thankful for! And it's easy
to pay for on Wards Monthly Payment Plan.

Save I It costs you less when you buy at Wards—
and you buy less because it lasts longer! Wards
rope is pure manila and oil treated to pro­
tect it from friction, weather, and mildew! Its
strands are smooth, hard-twisted! All sues of
pure manila rope, priced to save you money.

314®

Get WARD’S
Iahv Prices on

MONTCOMIRY WARD

25®

Reg.$4-Ujj®5

Portable shower­
curtain and tubing!

MONTGOMERY WARD

49®
Adjustable needle
valve shower! Save!

MONTCOMikY WARD

NOW!

Sure up lo 25%!

Only $5 Down, $5 Monthly, Small Carrying Charge

Polished brass sink
faucet, plain spout 1

Reg. SI-S9.
Ratchet typa
bumper jack.

With Twin Speaker, $29.95. Iden­

Galloa

4G”5

White, calluloidcoated closet seat!

"t,

SINGLE SPEAKER

MODERNIZE YOUR PLUMBING NOW!

R^-*fc49c

59

s-p...,
sedans.

■

Print Include Federal Tex

Xagulsrly

Barf «lis Prieu on Qualltg

Grand Opening Special!

GUARANTEE

Wards Super
Guaranteed as firm as money tit
can buy. Gallon cover* 500
sq.ft.2 coats.Save at Wards!

PAYMENT PLAN APPEALS

Wards 9 mail order houses
ot hundred! ofretail stores.

■&lt; t ■■ ■ House Paint

1 Gallon LINSEED

AND YOUR MONTHLY

U.dw I.SoiUa
. fbaky brakes

&amp;

23&lt;&lt;
with purchase of 5 gallons

BET.

TER THAN I EXPECTED . ..

ALL WARD TIRES MOUNTED FREE

The very same top qua!ity sold for 3.'c tp 35c a
qt. at leading service sta-nona I SALE PRICE, in
your container--------------- -

Coverall House Paint

TH APS

-FRANKLY,

You are protected against
EVERYTHING—
WITHOUT LIMIT aa to
months or miles! Adjust-

w 9*-

A PAINTS?' 11 PRICES"'
Wards for safe savings!

‘“
WRITTEN GUARANTEE
afa/flitrvisnMINC tkatcan
kippen to a tin In Mrv/cef

Paymanlt May Ba Arfanyad

Conv.ni.nl

Coverall Spar Varnish

e

NO SAFER TIRE MADE . . . Latex dipped
cords . . . carcass, doubly insulated, minimises
internal heat and friction—most common blow­
out danger. Riversides* center traction safety
tread protects against skidding and swerving!

a y qt-

Waterproof in-

Save in sale I

At regular price* Riversides save you plenty!
NOW you
van’’ll
ll get
set EXTRA
EXTRA SAVINGSI
SAVINGS! And,
And you
van
NOW
save all the while you ride on Riversides. For
they give you up to 28% MORE MILEAGE
than ANY other first quality tire—proved in
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mile in every five you drive I

filter disks.

carton .of 100.
Fast .thorough I

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29®

.111

Hand spray

89®
Full 3-quart

98® Hi.
Protects animals—kills flies I

Sturdy! Save!

38®
MONTGOMERY WARD

MONTGOMERY WARD

MONTCOMISY WARD

BARB WIRE
Finest, full gauge barbed an­
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. sharp. Ost Wards low prlcas

MONTCOMIRY WARD

�</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="11787">
                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

14 PAGES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 16. 1936

SECTION ONE-PACES 1 to 8

WHXESOMEUWICE 1““^.

POPULAR PROGRAM
FOR CONCERT TONIGHT

PM SES BARKY'S igty Librarian Suggests Literary
LAKES, STREAMS Metho&lt;1 &lt;«r Conquering Hear ]|||) SIMULATING .Hastings

Band Plays Under
Guest Director—New
Holders Ordered

i

M.MIIKK|‘

BESTFAIR
HEIDI

Tommy McAuliffe Will Be
Star Attraction at An­
nual Eveht
- Icy Wandering* of Famoui Explorers
MISS ROBE DEFOE WRITES , Tile Hostings'city Band received FOR THESE DOG DAYS OR
A NATIONALLY KNOWN
GOOD nOQBMS bum
I
The
featured attraction at the
IMPRESSIONS OF NURS
word Monday that the new music .
ANY TIME OF THE
OUTDOOR WRITER IN
Help One to Forget Thermometer
MADE Ol PR1PABannual St. Rose Festival npxt Tues­
i holders ordered recently will be de- &gt;
v_ .
ING
CONVENTIONS
day.
Hie
21st.
will be "Tommy” Mc0HI0A00 TRIBUNE
; livered this week. These music hp^d- I
YEAR
ING FOB IT
Btefansson—The Friendly Arctic, i
i How the wind howls and the snow
Aullffe, who. strange as It may seem.
era are something new and unique
------------' filesf B-r-rf Our teeth are chatterStefansson—Hunters of lhe Great WESTERN TRIP COVERED ^d
| after losing both arms In a rall“X“SySUMMER HEATCAUSES
WRITES GLOWINGLY
- and our fingers are almost fros- North.
i Ing
Iway accident turned to caddying OUTSTANDING WILL BE
'
MUCH
OF
INTEREST
&gt;
h
*
ndlu
&gt;x
•&gt;
.brat
“
“
Or.
beournwLn
t-Huoco
Chapman
—
Across
Iceland.
anmiT tuic rnnuiTv en' 10 say nolhln« ol our n0“»
MULH_UI^INItntbl
|
B pI, caU).
I
SPEC
|AL HEART
SPECIAL
HEART STRA
STRAIN “diS?Su‘X“ ‘
“i
Davis—Uncle Sam's Attic.
■
;
...rarauie to p. hi .toaiu} iiiipvo- (
AdUU I I Hlb COUNTY ; Crazy! Oh. no. we are merely ctamTHE RACING CONTESTS
Wood—Incredible Siberia.
------- ;------ bering over glaciers with John Muir
Hollywood
Bowl iiugium
Program assortment
'W for “
10s »*&gt;
p out
&gt;(
*
Tommy
doesn
’
t
have
to
worry
KKVtoj
vvu
of
iltlr
even
if
tu^d
ilST,'
"TJe'ieS^ Ho »*«• * Liat of ■•Don't." .bout T'fet - .SS JU3Z Fair Book. Mow tdj tor
His Letter in Tribune Will &gt;n Alaska or fighting against the I Powell—Marches of lhe North.
Was Impressive and
|_______
_
„ k„._to«ra.to„
Rolhery—Sweden.
Grantlv------------------------------------- i smothering drift in
the White
.
.
m
. . « rrriH
1____
All that
HzmiS
—
_ -- I
JUP
That
Will v.Prolong
I nlavwra
players (In
do. All
that fltaa
fuss uabout
ureutly Benefit Barry s .J North with MacMillan, perhaps we
player.­
MacMillan—Four Years Ln the
Moving
°otr aa player
Free Distribution—
®
flexible wrists and the proper grip .
The band
band concert on Thursday
...
..
_
।
I I Thc
White North.
Resort*
are nailing in Jot’s ice-boat of which
Life
[is.th?_lCfUi_QLhls worries, l^e ha*
Get Yours
jennesa-rropie
™
■ night. July 16th, will again be un­
Jenness—People ot
of utc
Ute Twmgni.
Twilight. .
Ttal Barry county lake, .nd
AMom-n»-dln«-tr. J’cltotod

Angina pectoris is Increasing: Just ofie grlp-nol we won't tell
Wallace—Lure of the Labrador
such a short period between her dt.r lhe direction oj George Amos.
~u
J1*'dfv“
come
and see
7to S.lern
easter" o,ie’, director of band and orchestra among men in the fifties and six- you what
------- .7it ~is. -— ---out
-----------------doesn’t have to be fed.” We ”
rejoice
,nl~ Wild.
tMld’ 2EjST2^rt^’SrS;ll!.r.lL!‘ W^ro SUU
•"•■ .nd .inc. U U .l«.y? . d.n&lt;tord!°”"bij7;om”toul,m*^“
with the dear little dog. Stlckeen, tn*'XTtl',”'‘'‘
i^JTdi^. method*~of preven- i E*1”
j to carry out our intention of asking QQ)iese
when he follows John Muir over the
tion
should
be
well
understood,
ac-1
[
r0
™
a
"T"
1
3
£
: her to puss on to Banner readers
—
The program follows:
thin, perilous bridge of Ice to aafety
Marshall—Arctic Village.
cording to Dr R. B Harknes. of ^! O,°^O?P
March—Our Director.
Irwin—Alone Across the Top of her impressions of the west and
tod toe, toU-nud
deUnhl U»t
• some of the high lights of the great
lhe Kellogg Foundation. It Is Im- Sther^ick a«tan*,tHeP
Overture—Lutspiel.
h“ '““l»d drain, or we m.y be the World.
And If you ore thirsty and hungry nursing conventions she attended in I
Waltz—Silver Olade.
possible to predict 10 years in ad­
h°" 'r“lJ™"
; Los Angeles Ln her official capacity I
vance who will have this heart con- । whPn Tnmm J
Novelty—Hank and Lank.
out7 cof.U WU? dl*(toeeon. after your trip there are Cowles-------- -7^7:------------- - --- - —- -­
•1001 Sandwiches" and Stockbridge’s 03 a !*nlor coun*«l°r delegate from
1 diUon but there are a number of
£*£2
March—Fort Dayton.
ThU b » fine time o( the year to "WtinS. DrC.k” to give you
‘h*
«ea,lh On“
1
1 factors, such a* obe«ily. the exces- i
i?nd2 1M Li^here f^M
"I'1.1" “
Popular—Alice Blue Gown.
gesUon* in regard to refreshment.; K?[’nnrt'in1 t°iw nh.rtott» Re I
slve use of tobacco and local area*
under l00' W*™ from 86
March—National Emblem.
"]"• b * ““ °'
h,,U“
Jean Barnes. Librarian.
wen
Cliat2°tte
wlth wlUeh I011 ”-1 forBet lhe
ot infection, which in some cases I
. •
.
P 8—If the weather "breaks” Publican-Tribune, her fathers pa-.
Waltz—Missouri Waltz.
thermometer al present.
before we go to press, save this list J*r’ ‘J"* and
March—The Billboard.
Grenfell
Adrift on an tee.Pan
Ice-Pan.
D™feU—
-*drltl
ptto/olTl. toX . Cl£?
I
X"
■
for
future
reference
as
other
torpid
,roln
*hich
we
take
the
greater
1
Finale
—
America.
Young—Alaska Days With John
we Jotted down a number of little i
waves are sure to follow We know P*11’ ehmlnaUng only lhe references
I as the result of heart disease should
Jur ca^iX Utite LmmeriZi'VT
notes In a little blue book for notes Muir.
| be informed of It* cause by hU phy- .
n ^er‘Tto
Willoughby—Alaskans All
on fishing spots. We made several I
Michigan
—
Ed
L
friends
of
a
more
or
less
personal
Muir—Sllckeen.
' certain ItaM^and ^ften’a revision to Every oue Ulv“«d- 114 an aU
notations In our little book under a 1'
Micninn. CM.
Tnature. She says;
rih.M«J sx:
^h'*od
a
heading. "Must Fish As Soon As
—---------------------------------------------------------"We arrived in Chicago and
Pouible." Grand Rapids Is In Kent
|
SERIOUS FARM FIRE.
1 left on one of the four special trains
without the patient's knowledge of,lhe 8U
ParU^ »round»
county. This city ts about 2041 MUST BE EXAMINED
on Monday afternoon the barn U king four hundred nurses to the j
the necessity for the change.
miles from Chicago. After doing a
SATURDAY, JULY 18 i and other outbuildings on the Henry
L10’?', W® were with the New
Unaccustomed or violent exertion i
Utile--------scouting
In that 'county
here
------“■
—“•••/ ..Lu
whldbv farm five miles southwest England delegation and made some i
J
may bring on a heart attack in
dowi^Ln^the I?tllenbook ^iV.^rtnh1*' ^ll
Employee* Of County of Deltan. wre burned to the P»ea31ng and friendly contact* with IS COMPILING USEFUL IN- I’ those
susceptible to till* condition, j
aown in the little book, all pertain- i
r
.
7 , cround
The
loss
atUUlhat group.
Our
I «7
KIUU1IU.
AIIC
IU33Is 13estimated
COMIIIUICU
•and
-U'eown
. enlnved
. group rof eight .
| It is the most common cause of the I
Ing tO spots for fishing:
Welfare
to
Bo
Exam0O0
HOT
■*■a,ns
vprv
ennuenlnl
FORMATION
CONCERN
..
.w — - ——( J7 O0Q How much insurance he car- 'v“s veri' congenial and we enjoyed
[ desperate attacks which occur so,
••Thornapple River—Looks like a
ined in Battle Greek
. rled we have not learned.
• being together—we seemed to have
ING COUNTY
i frequently to men unused to exergreat bet for a canoe trip and fish­
.
j .a j
Tiw nelton Are truck was sum- no difficulty In making our own.
I tion. Exertion from changing a tire. I
Governor
Fitzgerald nas
has decided
uelw" nry wa# ’um7 fun Bnd amu—mant
1
Ing. Including bass. The river beuovemor ntzgcraia
aeciaea ।
• 1
-----administration
..---------------------- .of—relief
U.K II moned- A
A—
Slarndard
Oil truck
and 'lun “ ,
“nusement.
! carrying heavy bundle*, gunning DOO t iCRNRF FFP WnUf
longs both to Barry and Kent coun-1 that, „
as .1
the
---—- --IS TO SECURE
They 1 ‘'Fridav
Friday we slopped
stonoed over at L
Lamy
atov AIM
RrwcciTQ m CARMCDC or rowln« may * aunid'nl In B
AT ___ w
Iles. It comes up through Hastings H one of the mast important func- thref »u °"ob‘^sh
and
drove
by
auto
to
Banta
Fe.
saw
each
other
and Joins the Grand al Ada Hugh liens “
crashed
intointo
each
other
fro from the
BENEFITS TO FARMERS . recent *erle* of 100 cases a large
-INCREASED
-------------------------------------------100 PER
of* —
our ------state----------------------------government, comI crashed
S Sift
------------i
“•
j proportion were due to exertion Ln- .
Gray and Ed. have Just taken me j petent and qualified persons are : rear. Injuring four men. One of
CENT
। them. Kenneth Aldrich, suffered a
io to
r «hl- °“e Purpoie li to Obtain , cwim w or Mown, .
above Ada so we can get a look at I necessary to carry it on.
I
fractured
leg
and
his
hand
was
so
Unusual departure
departure from
from ordinary
ordinary
the river, a couple of small power j
Accordingly qualifying examina­
i., a
- temperature of 102 „.„.•
ra
Unusual
seeing in
was'
Lower Interest Rates
dams on the lower river, but they tions for all employees of county Injured that it became necessary to slightly distracting, however, we en-'
routine by tod.rly prapl.
1&gt; DELINQUENTS MUST
attended by some risk and 1* usually i
___..
arc easy portages. Beautiful water I emergency relief corpmissions in amputate a finger. He was taken Joyed every minute of our stay
on Mortgages
prmtiuM.
I
SETTLE VERY SOON
and a dandy stream for canoeing | Barry and other counties of this to Borgess hospital. Kalamazoo. The there. Our driver said he goes | One of the .projects
.
undertaken
A long Journey should be under- 1
------------nfid fishing. Most any length trip' dlslrlct will be held next Saturday. Hickory Comers fire truck also an­ • way down east" every summer to by the WPA h what Is termed "Surswered the call.
taken
with
reluctance
particularly
Otherwiie
Prosecutor Will
you want It's one of those rather July 18. at Battle Creek. Examina­
u»\ r
■*“*
tions
of
case
workers
and
other
ad
­
during
the
heat
of
the
summer
,
small Intimate rivers for both fly,
Be
Obliged
to Begin Pro­
This is1 since frequent overstrain occurs
and bait casting rods You can make ministrative employees will prob­ THIS HAS BEEN
Orend C.nyod uiux In .11 ot the I
&lt;*na
~
.» spon- I following overeating. Irregular hours '
a one. two. or three day trip or long­ ably be held on Che following Sat­
ceedings in Court
etc. The canyon Itself is so , “ nationwide research project,
HOT WEATHERI drives,
urday. Tile time limit for the ex­
er on this river.
vttst and overwhelming it seems! sored by the Bureau of Agricultural
Archie
D.
McDonald.
Arcnle
MctAonam. Prosecuting
Procuring
"Wabasls—Must try this take for' aminations will be about 1’4 to 3
difficult to describe. There was no Economics in the United States de- tha-e Sth anstaa^r^torL?“ Rnma Attorney, report* that 21M Indivldtarge mouth black bass Northeast of hours Most of the examinations New Records Made In Past apparent need for any of us to ex-' parintent of agriculture, cooperating
i2«
222! 11313 hare P*ld lhelr d&lt;* deense feet
Grand Rapids and due east of the will stress the short answer type of
press ourselves along this subject &gt; with the Farm Credit Adminlstra- m
11113 year and Lhat 11 kennel licenses
Week When Mercury
City of Rockford Good take for questions. State administrative re­
anyway as a few women on our bus Uon. It Is being cojidiiated In about or other contest* associated with haw hwn rrain matins i&gt;&gt;.
casting and they get 'em here. lief director. Dr. Haber, says that
Soared to 109
did all of the exclaiming for the . 1.000 counties, which" are selected emotltuul strra bra rautod rat tm- net payment to the County Treas­
Whole string of takes around Wa- identification of the writer of the
Lots of records broken during this entire group. I. of course, was very so as to be representative of dlf- favorable reaction; there was at urer 82472.10. after the deduction .of
basls, mostly small. Bostwick is an­ examination will be sealed sepa­
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
I rerent types of farm areas In each least one such death in a man lis­ collection fee*.
hot spell. Thermometers went the
tening by radio to a recent fight.
other for targe mouth bass and pan­ rately and the score received by
---------I state. The program Ln each state is
While Ulis is a strong indication
fish. Not so many buys as in Wa- each contestant will be figured be­ highest ever Known In Hastings.
Excess of food and drink and loss that the action of the Board of Su­
The official one al the city pumping HUBERT BRONSON,
bosls. but It’s u dandy bet for bass. fore tile names arc known.
of sleep constitute a strain on the
pervisors in the appointment of a
Any
Barry
county
person
inter
­
station
recorded
a
new
high
of
109
heart in elderly people.
Big Pine Island is another good one.
dog
warden and the establishment
ested
should
get
in
touch
with
the
degrees in the 24 hours between
If* Just a short distance due south
Ordinary precautions are appUc,
■
I IvgV. ail M1L111KU1 bit 13 IS uic ovaic
of a dog pound was a step In the
from Wabasb. The
northeastern
nblc particularly to the cases in
(III
IIU.Ulvw3lC.il office of the Burry
e county welfare Monday and Tuesday, and when |
of • college at East Lansing. The clerical question but they mav be followed right direction, yet the fact re­
I corner of the county has a number association In this city,
950 thousand gallons of water were 1 Has . General Supervision
r
I
u-nrlr
In
Lhi&gt;
iu&gt;li&gt;rtr&gt;r&lt;
cnttnlv
u&gt;atj&lt;
&lt;■
mains
approximately 600 people
| work in the selected county seats is
atnnlllakes
Inlr*.that will
.1.111produce
I,,—. ....
■
pumped during the same period, an­
ofrtfsmall
Just
,
~
*oat
* *
with advantage by all elderly peo­
Ali WPA Work in Barry
throughout the county listed by the
being performed by WPA workers,
other record, emergency cards were
ple. Moderation Is the price of a
about everything
from bass to CAR OUT OF CONTROL
Supervisors as owning dogs have
recruited through district WPA
and Eaton Counties
PAIIQCH
perch.
------------ AU APPinCMT 1 prlnted *nd delivered by messengers
comfortable old age.
failed to pay the license fee re­
officers. The national headquarters
LAUbEU
AN ACCIDENT i to every householder in the city
"Gun lake. Crooked take nnd oth-1
v
-----------------------------------------Regardless of how one may feel
It will be seen from this short quired by taw. Under the taw. after
forbidding the use of sprinkling about WPA it U a pleasure to know are In Chicago.
ers southwest of Hastings—Now we wnis-^
n
j
ILst of “dont's" that It is essential
The four states of Michigan. Ohio.
June 1st. the llcefise fee is doubled
are in Barry county which is closer William Schultz, Grand Rap- with the warning that any infringe­ that Hubert Bronson, a Hastings
to live and act moderately. The be­
Indiana
and
Illinois
are
under
the
and
the taw makes all dogs on which
ment vrould cause the supply to be young man and a capable engineer,
to Chicago. Hastings l* on route 43
ids. Painfully Hurt—
lief that patients cannot be hap­
the license fee has not been paid a
regional supervision of Willard O.
l turned off Immediately.
northcast of Kalamazoo. Dandy.
n„_
is In charge of all WPA work In
py unless doing whabthey like best
string of takes in aouthwest comer
Uar “ 1 “*m *ree
Saturday was lhe peak for the Barry and Eaton counties. He has Delzer. ot the Bureau of Agricul­ l« not an excuse. Satisfaction can nuisance and makes It mandatory
upon the taw enforcing officers to
Economics.
of Barry county. Gun take Is one I
An accident occurred about 7 ice cream places, plus a heavy three genera! supervision of all road tural
The Michigan State College desig- j be derived from Intellectual pur­ destroy such animals when running
that In worth remembering. Tills is1 o'clock Sunday
evening, about days following. Attendants worked work, sewers, drains, water main nated Dr. H. S- Patton, head of the jI suits or hobbles and ingenuity tn
at targe and authorizes the officers
------------------a take with---muskles in ...
it. Crooked .....................................
tl,rt‘r
north of «.«
the vto,.
city, u.
in unlU ‘hey were ready to drop try- construction, repair of schoolhouses, college department of economics, us JI devising such activities stimulates
to take action against the owners of
take is another one for bass. Has i which William Schultz of Grand '
to coo&gt; off a sweltering populace, and municipal projects, and from the stale supervisor, with Dr. R. J. j Interest.
such dogs.
lot* of shore line for casting Lots; Rapids was painfully Injured, suf-, * record being made for Ice cream his office Ln the City Hal) has his Burroughs, also of the department' With advancing years beyond the
It Is hoped that the failure of so
of bluegills have been pul In this f"l”8 a broken nose and facial lac- cones- hunkies. etc., sold. Mechan- finger on al) work In progress In
age
of
40
the
price
of
remaining
many to pay by June 1st., ha* been
of economics, as assistant stale su- j
lake. crooked creek has been stock-1 orations. V. L. Wolcott of Charlotte lcal refrigerators buzzed all day both counties.
u | healthy and comfortable Is the
pervlsor. Neither of these men L •
ed with brown trout .”
was also hurt, but not seriously.! 'onZ a,,d tar into the night, and the
Al the present time Barry county ,
willingness to give up occupations
----------------- « a &gt;
I Schultz was taken to Pennock hos-. old fashioned ice man got In his has two principal projects. One of; paid from WPA funds. The area su- or pleasure* which are a tax upon owners. The duties of Roy Everett,
.'ton u
ow; । ?
dog warden, require an Investiga­
one. Coffee and tobacco used tion of complaints where damage is
MAN DROWNED SUNDAY I”” ""n rlnnlngs. Hostings ice and Fuel Co.
put on two extra trucks which were
sometimes to excess In the young done by the dogs, the operation of
AT WARNER LAKE 7 Wolcott and Schultz are brothers-1 emptied almost as fast as filled, and
a^d not noticed particularly be­ the dog pound &gt;\nd other duties,
------------- I in-law. They drove from Charlotte the firm also had to help out Mid­
come a genuine menace to health In which necessarily keep him busy
the average person of advanced over a territory as large as Barry
Harold Heffner Dove Into 16 to thls
then to ®°mc ot thc dleville where the supply failed.—
age; alcoholic excess in simitar per- county. The collection of the dog
Pppf nf Wntnr--------------------------- returning to Hastings at Ghostly figures flitted about on
'
iiumics
13
St'c.uig
attuiutc
luavoricui
-,.,.111.,,
7......
—
Feet of Water in Prai| n%oul 7 o'clock, intending to go to porches and lawns till light broke
: data covering the county as a whole. I !^L!2uUtUtca * dangerous ex­ license fee is not a part of the dog
In the east —From nearly every
periment.
rieville Lake
10 Fr«port. where Mr. Wolcott had
At t m Hunrtnv
i previously lived. About three miles passing car dangled bathing suits.—
seen that such a task would require
1 Warner3kiknU|ndpr.irtl?tiinMM
?I north of lown on lhc Freeport Certain departments in the Book­
fBrro Und VB,ues- «»e turnover of
SPLENDID RECORD OF
his full time.
HeHneJ «e
d!
Wolcol»- loit control
his
case and Bliss plants shut down to
Naturally the Prosecuting Attor­
ormet iv hved it
hm ohry»ler Eight car. which crashed avoid heot prostrations.—The court U sundllig practle.lly .11 ol Ito
totoL*to
ney and Sheriff are anxious that
fnr
mnntho ?? t
' ?Ut!,nto *®rgc cIm tree al the roadside. house square had all the appearance expense. All llut IM City is died
Ilk
°
J
.57," ,Uy"“ i O"' "*&gt;•
uiOrr
these delinquent dog owners will
Barry
county
by
workers
occupying
on
to
tumlB.
1.
&gt;
IBUe
c.menl
tod
count
''
worl[m
orctrarto.
of a city park, day and night.—Ev­
Immediately
pay the dog tax. as an
III
First
Six
Months
of
1936
part
of
the
register
of
deeds
office.
hmi rat Ina
!«•«&gt;» u&gt;r
comllllon.. B. H. ery deafer carring inexpensive elec­ some brick for man holes and per­
The Farm credit Administration
action against delinquent owners
Th«
Loptonlblrn 0( Uto elly ,u len- tric fans was cleaned out; few of haps a few other incidentals.
There Were 48 Convic­
Is seeking to meet adequately the
will be necessary If the action of
hJ » u
,
I °“‘U Injured when hl, car tut out any price left.—Demand for bath­
Eaton county Is perhaps faring
credit needs of American farmers
the Board ot Supervisors, so wisely
tions and 1 Acquittal
. (rem Ito olrU' Btoui e.mp
! "' 'on,ro1
Wt ««• “■»' '&gt;™ ing suit* was welcomed by dealers a little better than Barry In that it
for whom the cool season had has five WPA project*. Another one without Impairing public funds, and
Prosecuting Attorney Archie Mc­
shore of the take, walking toward •
_________________________
promised a good sized stock to Will be started soon when 36 coun. is concerned with obtaining more Donald's report for the first six county and the law enforced fairly
the take. He wore only
bathing I COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON,
complete
Information
as
to
the
ex
­
against all dog owners.
carry over.—The welcome break try schools will be rehabilitated—
trunks. He walked out on a spring
The Intense heat of Tuesday enme late Tuesday.—In the years
perience of farmers and land own­ months of 1938 is very creditable,
painted, repaired, new foundations
board, from the end of which he 1 caused a decided drop in the num­ to come the oldtlmers will be sure
ers with mortgage loans in different ft shows a total of 48 convictions to LARGE CROWDS ATTEND
put In. and other work done. Over
dove Into waler 15 feet deep. He ; bcr attending the luncheon at the to hark back to that hot spell In
types of farming areas. This In­ one acquittal, three Nolle Pressed,
in Eaton county a big sewer Job is
formation will help the Credit Ad­ one discharged and settlement In
was seen to make the dive and i Hastings country club, only 17 be- Michigan In July. 1936
WARD STORE OPENING
under way. In which 48-lnch. 42fteyed under for some time. Some: ing present. Perennial sweet peas
ministration in its consideration of
inch. 36-lnch and 24-lnch tile were
of the Giri Scouts saw him disap-. were used for decorations on the
loan applications. Those who are
There were nine assault and bat­ In Spite of the Intense Heat
used. Contrary to lhe usual pro­
ALL EMPTY MILK
working on this part of the program tery cases. In which fines of 8218.45
pear and called for help. One of ’ tables and bouquets of the peas and
cedure, the tile was all made by the
Which Kept Many at
their leaders came to the place and Queen Anne's lace made the lounge
BOTTLES NEEDED NOW government right on the ground. in Barry county are housed in the were Imposed and costs of 83030.
tried to bring the body to the sur- 1 attractive. The golf event, combined
(Continued on page 3, Sec. 1)
Home Saturday
Two were given Jail sentences.
Each one of the 48-inch tiles
face but was unable to do so. A lit- 1 low score on two holes, was won by
There
were
nine
conservation
law
weighed
over
4700
pounds,
so
allSaturday
the new Hastings store
tie taler a man arrived who dove Mrs. David French of Los Angeles i Housewives Asked to Put
violations, a total of »70 In fines• of Montgomery Ward had 1U openr
around it waS some Job.
and brought the body to Ute shore.' and Mrs. Mallory Cassidy of Grand ALL ‘Empties’ Where Milk­
and
$48.15
In
costs
were
Imposed,
. ing as was announced in the Ban­
In addition to these the govern­
Efforts were made for nearly an Rapids won the contract prize,
and
two
were
given
jail
sentences.
ment Is making a survey of all tax­
ner last week. The terrific heat no
man Gan Get Them
hour to revive Heffner, but to no
Mrs. Paul Faulkner of Middleville
Eleven were arrested for drunken­ doubt kept many away who would
delinquent property In Barry coun­
avail. The body was taken to the had as her guests, Mrs. Clifford
In these hot days we must all be
ness. Seven of these were given otherwise have come to Hastings to
ty and reducing It to a card-index
funeral home at Delton, from which Gardner of Middleville and Mrs. thinking of and helping the other
Jail sentences; and fines of $45 andI see this new store with it*- many de­
system.
ptate II was forwarded to Goshen, Griswold of Detroit. Mrs. Cassidy of , fellow.
The
terrific
heat
has)
costs of $32 90 Were Imposed. One partment*, in each of which there
Uncle Sam Is also making a Farm
Ind., where Heffner s parents reside. Grand Rapids was with Mrs. Finnic brought a heavy demand for milk.
man Impersonated an officer. He• was some special sale announced for
Mortgage survey of the county, and
। It Is claimed that he was subject | and Mrs. French of Los Angeles Hastings milkmen find that the
Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Gwinn.
I paW wo fine and $50 coats for the opening. Throughout moat of
also a "historical survey”—what fori
to epileptic fits. Whether that had with Mrs. Robert w Cook.
emergency requires all the milk bot­ we do not know, unless It may be
Dr. and Mrs. Gwinn are new 1 whatever fun he had. Two were ar-■ the day and in fact well into the
anything to do with his drawning is I The committee in charge was tles which their patrons have taken
I to get rid of that five billion dollars. arrlvals from Detroit, the doctor rested for using Indecent language night, the double store* were
not known. Coroner Dr. Fisher of I composed of Mrs. R. K. Hurd, chair- home from stores, or have kept In
having recently acquired the office m the presence of others. Each paid thronged with jxiople anxious to
this city was called. No Inquest was ; mttn
E.. Goodyear
man.. and
ana Mrs.
Mrs. O.
o. e
uooayear asas- the house for containers of other
and records of the tale Dr. H. A. $io fine and $450 costs. Four were give the new store the "once over."
CAME NEAR DROWNING.
deemed necessary, as It seemed
s
articles.
I suuid by Mrs. Robert W. Cook.
Adrounle. Dr. Gwinn, whose home | brought Into court on simple tar­
Manager Russell Beatty stated
Nile Fancher, one of the night town was Pigeon. In the Thumb. Is ceny charges. One took a Jail sent ■
evidently a case of accidental
We are asked to request that ev­
Mrs. R. G. FinnloQs chairman of
that, under the circumstances, he
drowning.
/
ery housewife In Hastings who has employee* of the Bell Telephone a graduate of Albion college and' of ence; the others paid fines of $55
next week's Ipncheon.
• was more than pleased with the
empty milk bottles put all the emp­ office here, ayes his life to James Wayne University College of Medi- , and costs of $15. One case of grandI crowd and with their evident InterGATES SCHOOL REUNION.
NOTICE CITY TAXPAYERS.
ties on the porch where the milk­ Thomas, who rescued him from the cine. Detroit. He was assistant sur- larceny was Nolle Pressed because
est In what they saw. Most of them
First Oates school reunion July
I am now at my office each day In man can get them. They need them waters of Lake Al-Gon-Quln Fri­ geon there of St. Joseph Hospital the complaining witness was unable
day evening, after he had gone of Mercy and visiting surgeon of' to testify, the doctor having given■ expressed their surprise at the num­
10 at schoolhouse. Pot luck lunch at the city council rooms prepared to right now.
ber and variety of line* handled by
noon. Former teachers and pupils receive city taxes.
Grace
mo-­ Wards. Mr. Beatty said that the tourace and
",u Florence
riutcucc Crittenden
w»«mai hasnuo- that
mat order.
oraer. There
mere were eleven mo
the cXf wate^iith th. ™
P11*11 Durln&lt; lh® W°rld *‘r hc tOr veh,cle taw vlotatton*. Threj
invited. Bring own table service.—
Mrs. Jessie Loppenthlen.
DANCING AT GUN LAKE.
1 tai sales for the day were fully up
Mrs. Dan Martindale. Adv.
—Adv.
City Treasurer.
served In the navy.
took
loll
untmew
th.
oth.r«
r-id
Friday night—Howard Martin's
took Jail sentences, the other* paid
that he nearly drowned. It. Mr. OwiIin.. W
h0 •»■— -« &gt;150 fine and 843 cost*. The guilty to his expectations.
uho
Is a —
natlvtpof
orchestra. Saturday — Blackburn's suit
Ural
T'Hrwv.K* was
..
.
.
EDGER SCHOOL REUNION.
COBB SCHOOL REUNION.
was fortunate that
that Kr
Mr. ’Thomas
Indiana, U a graduate nurse of Bat- party In a statutory rape charge
SUFFERS BROUN ARM.
At the schoolhouse July. 19. Bring ।
At Podunk lake. Bun, July 10.— negro orchestra. The hottest and there to save him.
Mrs. William Barnas had th* mis­
swellest rhythm in western Michi­
tie Creek Sanitarium. The church was given six to twelve years at
table service.—Adv.
Adv.
affiliations of the Gwinn* are with • Jackson. A total of 8540 fines and fortune to fall In her kitchen Fri­
gan. Streeter's Resort, Gun lake. 50c
BASEBALL GAME.
couple.
Under*
new
management.
the
Methodist
denomination.
Dr.
&lt;244.75
In
cost*
was
Imposed.
day
morning and fracture h*r left
ICE CREAM SOCIAL.
DANCE AT THORNAPPLE.
Dowling vs, U. 8. Register Com­
Will be held at Barryvllle church. I Bat. night. Bud Wo'Ife'* Prowlers. Bernard Beneway, Mgr.—Out 7-18. pany, Battle Creak. Sunday, July 19. Gwinn Is a golf enthusiast but1 as compared with the number of arm severely. She stood on * tadFriday evening, July 17.—Adv.
i —Adv. tf.
Vickery's landing, clear lake.—Adv. acknowledges his score is nothing criminal cases brought into court a dor attempting to open * window
NOTICE.
of which to boast.
The Owinns few years ago the number this time
MIXED DANCES.
have three children. Charles. 6; ! Is surprisingly small, and th* ofI will not be responsible for debts
1 it U thought she may
OTIS SCHOOL REUNION.
DISCI AT CROOKED LAKE
Every Saturday night at Clear
slightly overcome by Um
Dcllon. Sal. Kw. EcUer'i Orcb. contracted by anyone but myself.
At school grounds. Pot luck din­ Evelyn, 4; Ralph. 2. They are resId- fenses charged are not nearly a*
lake, Frank Herrington.—Adv. tf. —Adv. U.
Ing at 321 S. Broadway.
| serious.
I
hast
Out 7-18.
Charles L. Oliver.
ner. Bat, July 23 —Adv.

.trratn. or. touulrto, . n.Uon.l
reputation Is .town by Ito fellow.
ing excerpt from a recent issue of
lhe Chicago Dally Tribune. It is part
ot a news letter, written by Bab
Deckel to the Tribune. As he ts ,
widely known u the Tribune , an-1
door wrller. wtot be ray, ebout
Berry county will not only be iperad
brpedra.l throughout the middle
writ, but will abo be ctoYlnomg to. I
eaum oi hb reputation a, a writer i
and aa a iporlaman.
।
• When we were cruising around In '
Kent county. Mlehlgto. a few day. !

ONE IM PRO JECT
INBARRVCOUNH

a_hastings boy

£

SOD DOG OWNERS
ARE DELINQUENT

LESSEE

to." ."U.'T.n .TKia’X! i*•

“•“»»*

prosecutor

May We
Introduce

McDonald

There has already been * targe
demand for the new fair book* an­
nouncing the program, giving the
formation concerning the Barry
county fair, which will be held Sep­
tember 8, 9, 10, 11 and 13.
A greeting from Maurice Fore­
man. secretary of the fair is the

contains so much information of
general value cohceming the fair
that we give it:
Creating*.
In presenting this 1098 Year Book
and Premium List, we Invite atten­
tion to the comprehensive list of
Agricultural and Household Prod­
ucts for which premiums are of­
fered. Keep in mind that thia is •
Barry County Fair open to Barry
County exhibitors only, and if you
unusual merit, the Fair wants it as
an exhibit

set a higher standard with the 1938
exposition. Emphasis will again be
placed upon the display of livestock,
agricultural products. 4-H Club,
Home Economics and School Ex­
hibits
There has been a slight re-ar­
rangement of the fair buildings to

hlblls and to provide greater com­
fort and service to the fair patrons.
The horse racing program hag
been made more Interesting by tha
addition of a pace and trot for three
year olds, and by Increased purse*.
The ever popular and thrilling
horse pulling contests will be con­
tinued.
Pour automobiles will be given
Thursday, Friday and Saturda:
The Gooding Amusement C
pany of Columbus, Ohio, will

Midway, and the reputation of
75-ygar-old amusement enter?
guarantees good, clean entert

The Gus Sun Booking Ae*MF
will again furnish the graiutatNM
entertainment, assuring ll&gt;e m**
high class entertainment which wa*
so popular last fear. There will tee
two Revues, together with outstand­
ing vaudeville act*, with two com­
plete changes of program.
Starting Wednesday night, there
night, and we have the asauranee
of even better displays than were

nn outstanding success last year
will be housed in a separate build­
ing and will continue all the week.

operation of all the people of Barry
county that It 1* powlbie to revive
the Old Barry County Fair, and
with the same response for the ISM
(Continued on page i. Sec. 1)

MERCHANTS’ SPECIALS
DREW LARGE TRADE
They Are Out After Larger
Volume of Trade for
Hastings
Hastings merchants selected last
Friday and Saturday for 'Tvo Big
Trading Days” for this city. Old Sol
end staged a record for high Ism-'
perature* that surpassed anythin*
ever known here before, and it ha*
only been exceeded by th* heal of
the first three days of th* present

Wlille Hastings
not anti
conduct

merchant*

were rewarded with

slve heat.

making
a largely I
ot

ne&amp;s. and are quoting prtoaa
as well as special, that will
plish that purpose. It will p
reader of the Banner to

nounco spacial saba ths
real bargain and tradin
When you deal, with then
assured In advance that

had

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY It, IBM

AMCD

LOCAL NEWS

Every Day at

FOOD CENTER
CERTO Fruit Pectin

17c
doz. 33c
pkg. 5c

M°rbott|Se

Jelly Glasses
Kool Ade

Bottle

19c

BREAD rxs. 10c
T
icciia
oyal Sheets
Alms
I luuuv
IddllU R
1000
■
lutMJ

FELS NAPTHA
H

P£G Soap

SUAr

each "TV
4C
10bars 29c

’s Cocoa Hard
10-»39c Soap Kirk
bL 14c
Water Castile

OXYDOLG n,Es»“ 53c
Salad Dressing
23c
Dressing Junket Cream Mix 3 ,or 25c
35c « Tomato Juice Size 39c

Miracle Whip Salad

PREMIER

DERBY
GINGER ALE
LIME RICKEY
ROOT BEER
ORANGE ADE

24 oz.
bottle

3

19c

Plus 2c bottle charge

New Potatoes
New Cabbage
Oranges

Lemons
doz.

55c

39c
ib. 5c
doz. 25c

io tbs.

Ralpn Ross was thrown from a
a motorcycle, about 8:30 Sunday
evening, when nearing the city. He
sustained a broken arm. the fracI lure being reduced at Pennock hos। pilal.
Roy Cordes and twenty of his
I newsboys went up to Reed's lake
Tuesday afternoon to enjoy the an­
' nual picnic given by lhe O. R.
1 Press, a sweltering Hine, but they all
'enjoyed it.

HA8N’FYEY le
TRUTH pays

best

Organizations

Howard Teusenk has arrived In concocted.
the city from Holland and will be
Arthur Fraker. who lot week had

I

MEATS
Fresh Ground

Hamburg

Compound
■Jewel
’cwei uuiiipu
Minced Ham

2°” 25c

2 «&gt;»• 25c
a. 19c
2
(&gt;» 25c
KingimtOleo
Picnics Armour's Star, Shankless Ib. 21c

BACON chunk - 23c
Iced Ginger Ale, Root Beer, Orange Ade
Large Bottle

each

gg

authorbed by the council Friday
evening to repair North Michigan
avenue bridge over the Thomapple.
County treasurer. Lorenzo F. Maus
attended the state county treas­
! urers' convention, which was held
at Port Huron Thursday rnd Prt-

Bert Tinkler fell" at his home
Monday afternoon end suffered a
fracture of his right hip. as he is
83 years of age and in feeble health
such a mishap is serious.
Mrs. Dennis Murray, who has been
confined to Pennock hospital for 12
weeks because of a broken hip. was
removed to her home on South Jef­
ferson street on Wednesday.
Phil A Barber, assistant cashier
of the Eaton County Savings Bank.
Charlotte, will succeed Ned B Alsoner as cashier of the bank when
the latter resigns about August 1.

Wheat made its initial appearance
in the local market Monday when
Wm. Moore of Hope.township drew
the first load to Farm Bureau Serv­
ices. The wheal tested 61. Dealers
eral days following a goitre operreport ail received so far is running
well.
critical condition, continue* to im­
! Elsewhere wc record the fact that prove and will soon be able to go
Paul Stutz, of Castleton, had filed I home.
the necessary papers before declar­
Mrs. Jennie E. Paul, for many
ing his intention to become an year* a resident of Johnstown, her
American cltlren. His wife. Mrs. home being on the shore of Fine
Mary Stulx. has this week done the lake, died Sunday night at her
same.
home tn Tacoma Park. Washington.
। We nominate for the hall of D- C-. after a lingering illness.
' oblivion the woman who kept her
The "Bee Michigan First" adver­
tising
campaign of the Michigan
i small children, Including a fretting
taby. parked in a car on Slate Bell Telephone Co. this year was
afreet Monday during the hottest one of the most interesting ones
part of the afternoon. Worse than ever put out by any corporation
cruelty to animals!
and was a fine boost for the state.
County Clerk Allan C. Hyde at­
Secy of Stale Orville E Atwood
has sent a letter U&gt; all law enforce­ tended the state meeting of coun­
ment officers In Michigan asking ty clerks, which was held al Gray­
Wednesday
and
them to take action against drivers ling Tuesday.
of cars bearing dirty unreadable Thursday of teat1 week. Mrs. Hyde
plates. The announcement pointed accompanied him, and they returned
• out the provision of the state's mo- on Friday.
Charles E. Stuart, receiver of the
lor vehicle taw which specifically
i provides that plates must be kept Battle Creek Sanitarium, filed pa­
clean so they may be seen and read pers in the county clerk's office
Thursday bringing suit against W.
I at all times.
W- Wilson for claimed balance of
While Rev. j. a. McNulty of the
' Episcopal church has been assigned 1200 plus interest. The attorney for
lhe plaintiff is Ira A. Beck.
I by Bishop McCormick
to
the
Lud.•i.v.nuiivK w MIC buuMr. and Mr*. W. N. Chidester are
ington parish for the months of now located for a few weeks at the
July and August because of the John Welssert home on W. Walnut
large influx of summer residents in street, phone 2647. They are ex­
that section. Rev McNulty is espe­ pecting July 25. their son Rev. w.
cially desirous of having all his
K. Chidester and family from Win­
Hastings parishioners aware that ter Park. Florida, for a five weeks'
they come first, and trusts no one stay.
will hesitate an instant to call him
Al the meeting of the Rotary club
back in case his services are needed Monday noon Jerry Johnson, man­

dent ot Hastings, a resident now gressman (George Foulkes) sees no
Ladies' Auxiliary of V. F- W. will
of Kalamazoo, Mr. Frakar left here difference from the social and po- hold a regular meeting at the O A
35 years ago. His father was Harry । lltlcal standpoint between serving R. hall Thursday, July 16. Battle
Fraker. who was a clgarmakcr with I ate months in a federal penitentiary Creek ladles will be there and rea
overGoodyear
Goods
- shop
-----------Broe. hard- and two years in Congress.
frcahmenU will be served.
ware store. U..
_______________
Mr. Fraker
has been | Possibly lhe greeting he received
K—his
M. exhibit and ui
upon hlJ, return to Hartford gave
six years gathering
Chariea Perry of Kalamazoo will
in that time has-not soon snow.
ji him ample evidence for so thinkIt you drive a Chrysler car. better II ing. and he would not need a great speak at the Townsend plan meet­
look out for that elm tree this aide deal At any rate lhe official family ing on South Jefferson street Wed­
of - the Leach farm, north of the ,of the Democratic party in Van nesday evening. July 22.
■
.
...
city. That's lhe tree lhat caused lhe Buren county, known as the county I
In U»
*!"
Injuries to Richard Loppenthien eommliu.. liid . lov.
some months ago. as he was driving
w
'»■«"«
his Chrysler. Bunday William Shultz &lt;1., .rente,, th. ,r.nd nn.le
of Grand Rapids, was driving his which was the acceptance speech of,
.
Chrysler by this same spot when It th,
the r»n»«irient
President heard over the radio.
left tiie rood and Jammed into this The next Monday Mr. Foulkes was GUILD MEETING
AT GUN LAKE.
same tree, causing some very pain­ reported as saying in Benton Har­
Twenty members of the business
ful injuries on hia face and head.
bor that. "Saturday night his home
Richard VanTUTlln. who has been town of Hartford gave him a cordial girls hospital guild were .entertained
Monday
evening
at lhe Bluart
in charge of the warehouse of the welcome when the Van Buren coun­
Lake Odessa Canning company for ty Democratic committee enter­ Clement cottage at Gun lake. A|

(1) —To oblal
seized values aX
sample farms
county. This, t
information obt
survey, will fur
trend of averag
1890 to 1935. U
tax delinquency
states to adjun
farm properly,
gathered will b
believed, to the
state in workir
table and sc ten
Uon.
(2) —The inf
farm mortgage
mortgage losse
constitute the
dens of agricu
present complex
total amount
cured by farm
up to the prest

lhe [&gt;aat three or four yean, has ac­ tained him and Mrs. Foulkes with
the hostess. Mrs. Clement said,
cepted a position as a traveling in­ a dinner at the Hartford House.”
spector for the Lawrence Ware­
Now comes the humor of lhe sit­ swimming was the order of business.
house company in Chicago and will uation.
Postmaster
Merritt of Mrs. Clement was assisted by the
take up hU new employment the South Haven took exceptions to the Mimes Florence and Arlene Camp­
bell and Mrs. Erma Gardner. Mrs.
first of lhe week. He expects to^_^..
z and wrote a ______
~
story
letter
to
make hia headquarters in Buffalo.' the Benton Harbor paper denying Ed. Smith and Miss Audra Dens­
and will be accompanied by Mrs. that the former congressman wm more were guests.
VanTlfflln. Their daughter, little j entertained as lie declared- In an
Rosemary, will remain here to keep •**«&lt;•♦
effort to be Hininmatizdiplomatic thn
the nnatpost­ BRUSH RIDGE SCHOOL
REUNION.
Orandpa and Grandma Shcllhorn master said:—"A surprise to evThe first Brush Ridge school re­
company for a while —Lake Odesta
Wave.
Mrs. George Foulkes whose return union was held Sunday. July 12. at
the
schoolhouse
There
were
about
to Hartford became known al lhe
eleventh hour and afforded an op­ ninety present Time was spent
SO-YEAR OLD WATER HOLE
visiting with old and new friends,
UNDER SUSPICION. portunity for a not unfriendly ges­
pitching horseshoes and lhe sing­
/
\
The swimming place In Thom­ ture."
ing of school songs. Everyone
apple river, west of town and nearly
(seemed to have a good time so it
DEAD LINE JULY 28.
opposite the end of Hanover street,
airy
wna dec*ded that The reunion would
Nominating petitions
for
has been in use for more than 50
candidate,’who "files wlUi the sec-'
continued.
years, many of the older men in
"died AT HOSPITAI
town treasuring it as one of their rclary of slate, county or city clerks.
cannot be accepted unless accomAl
hospital Mr*. Clayton
pleasant youthful experiences.
clty dl&lt;!d pn Monday
For a number of years the dis­ panied by an affidavit concerning | Bafl]er of
'j*™
any change in
In name of the candlcandi­ :The funera( wU,
charge of sewage into Thomapple anv
river above this swimming place has date. Orville E- Atwood, secretary of lhe Pilgrim Holiness church with
been a source of passible danger and state, points out. This law was burial In Riverside cemetery. She is,
a recent inspection by the local passed by lhe 1935 legislature. Many survived by her husband, a two-year
and state health departments has petitions have already been received old son and by her parents. Mr. and
shown this so clearly that a sign without this affidavit which results Mrs. O. E Kintz of Lake Odessa,
has been placed there, staling the only In delay until the form Is filled also a sister and two brothers.
out and filed with the petitions.
water is contaminated.

period covered
mortgages held
mortgagees. «u
Land Bank. 1
banks, indivii
themselves, it

I

f rCANC TliEATK|=

THESE THREE

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT, JULY 21
LORETTA YOUNG and FRANCHOT TONE in

“The Unguarded Hour
With Lewis Stone. Roland Young, Jessie Ralph. Dudley Digges

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, JULY 22 and 23

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

W. C. Fields in “POPPY
A Paramount Picture with Rochelle Hudson. Richard Cromwell,
Lynne Overman. Catharine Doncat, Rosalind Keith
Adolta Ue — Children 18c

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. JULY 24 and 25

I* The Leathernecks Have Landed’
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION — FEATURE NO. 1

With LEW AYRES and ISABEL JEWELL

FEATURE NO. 2

Food Center

supervisors' roc
agent's office in
tM informatioi
used tn each si
purpose of the*

Because there has been no evi­ July 28 is the dead line for the filing
IRVING.
dence lhat the situation is a dan­ of petitions.
July 9 Letter.
gerous one. the above warning is
The James Nagel family attend
OBITUARY.
lhe only action taken at this time.
Bible Conference at Gull lake when
Frank Brumbaugh was bom in they can get away from the farm
Miami county. Ohio. Sept. 6. 1861 duties a few days at a time.
MIDDLEVILLE'S SPIRITED
and
died jui,
July 7.
1936. bkcu
aged 75
mi u&lt;tu
i. two.
u He
mr. anti
wiuiam McCann
Mr.
and Mrs. William
SCHOOL ELECTION. ■
leaves
to mourn his widow, a son.! of East Lansing were Fourth of
The spirited contest between can­
• -------------------...
and Sunday guests
of home
didates for membership on the Harvey Brumbaugh and wife of July
Hastings, a brother, Roscoe of New folks.
ager of the Bell Telephone company board of cducaUon of ThornappleMr. and Mrs. Ben Nagel and
! Ludington at 410 W. Loomis St.. gave an Interesting account of his Kellogg school drew 258 voters, de­ I York, a sister. Mrs. Lizzie Kinney, of
Florida and other relatives and daughter went to Grant for tho
| telephone 613.
spite
a
temperature
of
108
degrees.
attendance at the international Ro­
friends. Funeral services were con­ Fourth.
Blake Boylan of Detroit was In tary convention which was held'
ducted nt the home of his sister-inMr. and Mrs. Foster Waddell en­
the city for a few days this week. test month in A tian tic. .city. New Flnkbelner won In lhe race for tew. Mrs. Sarah Stauffer. Greenville.
tertained on July 4th. her parents,
treasurer by 3 votes over Thomas
I Blake was In the list of the 245 jersey.
Ohio. July 20 with burial in lhe Mr. and Mrs Elmer James, of Lo­
Detroit victims overcome by the
After having their application in Gillett. Glenn Blake, treasurer, the 'Harris Creek cemetery.
well. their daughters. Miss Ruby and
. heat, but not among the 175 killed for a year to be married at the Ionia last 11 years, retired. Mrs. R. M.
Ml&amp;s Pearl James, another daugh­
by it
He was sent to a hospital, fair, it has Just been learned that Serljan, opposed by Clarence Long­
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
ter and family (sister of Mrs. Wad­
where he spent several days before the couple concluded to be married street for the three-year term as July 9 Letter.
dell) from Grand Rapids and Mr.
being released For five consecutive two weeks ago; now Secretary Chap­ board member, also won by three
Mrs Levi Kantner received word Waddell's brother. OrvlUe Waddell,
days the official temperature ran man Is scurrying around to secure votes, replacing Howard Smith, who [.Thursday noon of the death of her
of
Kalamazoo and John Nagel, io100 there and much higher in spots another couple before August days retired. It was voted to put in the | youngest brother. Sam Holsaple. of
PWA project for lhe manual arts ’ Bellevue Funeral services were held
Humphrey Rohns of Detroit was in i roll round.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Sowcrby
and
garage
building.
Mention
is
made
this
week
by
there
Sunday
afternoon.
Hastings at the G F. Chidester
and sons of Kent
county
were Sun
­
------ -----------------------------------from a distance who were called day visitors at Mrs. L Sowerby's.
home over Sunday. We thought it our Nashville correspondent of the
an exccMlvely hot day. but Mr death from heat prostration of VESPER COMMUNION SERVICE, here by his death were Mr. and Mr*
Mr and Mrs. Ray Perry and sons
The Sacrament of the Lord's 8up-1 Orton Holsaple of Portland. Ind., of Fowler spent the Fourth with
Rohnx a.viired us wc didn't know Leonard C. Davis. 87. at his home
be administered at a vesper 1 ......
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Holsaple
of
—will
________________________
_______________
,_____
anything about heat here. He real­ on the outskirts of Nashville. Dr. .pec
Mr. and Mrs. John Perry
ly felt inclined to put on a heavy Davis was the father of Dr. W. G. i service Sunday afternoon from 5 to Decatur. Ind., and Mr. and Mr*.
Mr and Mrs Frr.nk McNutt and
city, one of four sons 6 o'clock at the First Methodist Harrison Holsanle.of
Holsaple of Ohio.
Ohio,
Jacket when reaching Hastings. In Davis of this cltv.
children are spending the week at
church.
The
pastor
will
read
the
z
Z~.
who
survive.
Mr
and
Mrs.
Roscoe
Cassel
of
Detroit the thermometer had soared
the lake.
to 105 and over day after day. with
Belmont
Pinney of Hartford. ritualistic service and the choir will Middleville, formerly of this vicinity
un unprecedented number of heat Conn., nephew of H. H. Pinney. sing the musical responses. The' announce the arrival of 7 1-2 lb.
BANFIELD.
‘
'
Mr. and Mra. DeVon Putnam ot 1
Congratulations.
prostrations and deaths. Every time president of lhe Bliss company, is service prepared for lhe church in 'boy 'last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs Jake Katherman of Jackson, spent last week end with I
one steps onto a macadam pave­ bi Hastings for the summer. Mr. the new Methodist hymnal will be
Ohio are visiting their daughter. nis parents. Mr. and Mrs. Don Put- I
ment their heels cut gashes into Pinney, who -expects to be a sales­ followed.
। the hot sticky substance which puts man tor the company, has entered
Mrs. Owen Smith, and other rela­ nam.
j
Mrs. Jennie Lyons and son Albert. I
tives.
। feet -on the hummer” as well as the factory to obtain a practical
PICNIC AT THORNAPPLE.
heads.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Wolrlng of were week end guests of the Ted I
Mrs. Alonzo Hilton and daughter.
knowledge of the business.
Hasel, of East Saugus. Mass., are Nashville spent Sunday evening Tacks near Lawrence.
Geo. Wickwire and Henry were I
the guests of Mrs. Orr Ptsher of • with Mr and Mr*. Glenn Wolrlng.
Martin Comers and the other rel­ | Mr*. Guy Makley and children Sunday dinner guests of lhe Pul- I
atives and friends. Neighbors had ; spent the Fourth with Mrs. Homer nam’s.
The south Aid will meet with I
1
Hammond
near
Hastings.
a plenjc last week at Morgan park.
Thomapple lake, in their honor. I George Piper and mother are cn- Mrs. Mabie Bellinger west of Ban­
lertalning the latter's son and wife field. July 15.
Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 BL—
from Wisconsin.
Floyd Tungatc has traded his
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
I Chas. Far Ice and family were farm east of Banfield for a grocery
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac store In Battle Creek. Floyd had an
Dodge. Lake Odessa, a son. on July
। Williams near Dowling.
auction of hl* farm stock and tools
I Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith have last Wednesday.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. LaVcrn
' moved tn lhe Victor Hilbert house
SUNDAY ond MONDAY. JULY 19 and 20
Will Phillipa spent Sunday with
O'Connor. Lake Odessa, a daughter,
tn Woodland. Friday night the Unit­ his son Harold and family in Bat­
on July 14.
ed Brethren Christian Endeavor tle Creek. Mrs. Phillips is much bet­
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
business meeting will be held with ter after her recent illness.
ORANGEVILLE RESIDENT DIES. them.
•
Panner*
are threshing their
Mrs. Mary A. Jones, aged #2. died
wheat In this vicinity. The yield
Sunday at her home in Orangeville
"AU roads to South America I* fair and quality very good. The
township. The funeral is this after­ should lead to the city of Rio de oats will yield very poorly on ac­
With Miriam Hopkins, Meria Oberon, Joel McCrea
noon at 2 o'clock al the Prairieville Janeiro, because of its priceless count of the drouth. Early potatoes
I beauty.”—Edward Tomlinson.
church.
will also be a poor crop.
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY at 1:00 and 3:84 o'clock

Plus 2c Bottle Charge

COOKED CORNED BEEF *rm“s^,rib*Ys 23c

(Continued tr

Here is a touch of political hu- tage. Leach lake. Al! ladles are
urged to attend as there will be
his educational museum and tropl- ,good humor can ba relished at any speaker.

❖

Mixed Tea23c

MBII

Zx-Oonfretsman
Foulkea'
Baptist Ladles* Aid Society will
Voriion of Reception
a flns tribute to tbs late John bowels of the earth and hits the
hold their regular meeting, Wednaeb Different
spot better than any artificial drink i

pitel, is gaining steadily.

Bargain sale of used cars is an­
' nounced this week by the Universal
Garage —Read their adv.'
. The fire department was called on
Monday forenoon to put out a grass
fire on West Grant street. Mrs. John Usbome. wife of Su­
pervisor Usbome of Carlton Center.
‘ is a patient at Pennock hospital.
For the first lime this year Pall
Creek is completely dry. The same
thing happened a year ago. also two
years ago. Previous to 1834 the creek

btee. naming all the Ums'furnishes
a brand of water that seems to

‘BRIDES ARE LIKE THAT
With Hoss Alexander. Anita Ixiuite and Joseph Cawtbom

NOTE—Episode No. 13 of “F1^8H GORDON” (the tut) will be
o'clock Matinee Satarday Only.

DURFEE.
July 0 Letter.
Mrs. Gamble, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Beaumon and John Gamble, all of
Grand Rapids, spent lhe Fourth
and over Sunday with Rev. Gamble.
The ladles of this vicinity attend­
ed a miscellaneous ahower for Mrs.
Esther Bump at the home of her
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Strik­
er. Friday.
AU enjoyed a good
time. Many pretty and useful gift*
show the respect and esteem tn
which the bride Is held.
Grover Brooks of Lansing spent
the Fourth and over Sunday with
home folks.
Mrs. Harry Williams and children
returned to Charlotte Friday aft­
er spending a couple of weeks with
the former's
parents, Mr.
and
[ Mrs. Jack Moore.
I Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Lusk of Amt
Arbor were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Hoffman Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs Leon Stanton and
daughters of Battle Creek spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. William
Hoffman
Mrs. Pete Tletjeiu visited Mri.
George Guernsey near Freeport re­
cently.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoffmzn and
Mr. and Mrs William Hoffman at­
tended ths Hoffman reunion
at
Ionia Hu* Fourth.
'

He
a fool
afraid
men's

that hath truth on his side is
as well as a coward If he Li
to own it because of other
opinions."—Daniel Defoe.

"In my life I
had many
trouble*, most of which never hap-

whereby farme
at leas interest
The next efT&lt;
number of fi
made. These
only a limited
counties. The
of the survey
curate measur
ownership of
how the trans!
whether by it
sale, mortgagt
sale. The con
’ buyers affords
changes in far
be compared
value fur taxi
Mrs. Gertrut
who is the art
lhat the projei
employment iji
that it is the
visors to encoi
ployed on thes
ployment tn
rapidly as pos
idea of projec
employ the su
manner lhat
private Indus!
one which car
time without
all the work t

NORTHV
Mr. and M
entertaining
and daughter
Emerson B
Obispo. Calif.,
father. Lewis
Those
ntives.
Mrs. I-eonn
Claude Moore
anti Mrs. Leo
a miscelianeo
night at the
evening was
bridal couple
the many pac
There will
Good Will c

organization
trie Members
one Interest
cation is invl
Master Ca
spent last w
Hams home.
Mrs. John
shower Thurs
Linington's
niece. Miss
Little Bcm
the past we
ents, Mr. an
and Mrs. Da
guests in the

TOC

Let us
the

he

togetlu

ITarm

man d

Send

clea

McC

[Try
HAS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. JULY ,10, 19M

fINF WPA PRO IFPT
ns

America’s Ace Health Exhibit Here Fri. and Sat.

___

in BURRY COUNTY
(Continued from page 1, Sec. 1)

will

Baltic

meetWed-

*111
lUylng

.AKE.
sinew
Mined
Ituart
said,
iness.
y the
tampMrs.
Dens-

ilON.

about
spent
lends,
*Lngryone
vould

nylon
nday.
with
he Is

. and

ttend
when
farm

Jann
tome

and
tha

ents,
• and
ughVadMr.
Idell.
. loerby
3un-

sons
with

and

tuper visor*' room and the county'
agent's office Ui the court house. All [
the Information obtained will be
used pi each surveyed county. Tiie I
|)ur|x»e of these schedule* b a* fol- &lt;
(1)—To obtain lhe data on assensed value* and lux need* for fifty
sample farm* in each surveyed
county. This, when combined with
information obtained on a previous
survey, will furnish a record of the
trend of average tax per acre from
1890 to 1935. Undue spread of farm
tux delinquency tuu compelled most
states to adjust Uielr taxation on
farm projierty.
The information
gathered will be a great help. Il b
believed, to the leglslaUirc of each
state In working out d more equi­
table and scientific system of laxaUon.
*
&lt;2)—The information concerning
farm mortgages filed and released,
mortgage losses and taxes, which
constitute the two chief fixed bur­
dens of agriculture, b designed to
present complete information of lhe
tola) amount of Indebtedness se­
cured by farm real estate from 1917
up to the present time. Il will as­
certain lhe rate of interest in the
period covered and the amount of
mortgages held by different types of
mortgagees, such as lhe Federal
Land Bank. Insurance companies,
bank*, individuals and farmers
themselves. It is hoped by means
ot thb to be able to work out a plan
whereby farmers cun borrow funds
ut less interest cost to themselves.
The next effort is to ascertain the
number ot farm land transfers
made. These are being obtained In
only a limited number of selected
counties. The purpose of thb part
of Lhe survey h to obtain an ac­
curate measure of the changes In
ownership of farm properly, and
' how the transfer was accomplished,
whether by inheritance, voluntary
sale, mortgage foreclosure or tax
sale. The consideration given by
' buyer* affords a basis for measuring
change* in farm values, which may
be compared with the assessed
value fur taxation purposes.
Mrs. Gertrude Bishop, of Lansing,
who b the area supervisor stated
lhat the project workers are
...u finding
employment ip private Industry, and
that
that It
it is
IS the
the policy
policy of
Of the
the supersupervisors to encourage all persons employed on
on these
these .projects
projects to
to find
find ememployed
ployment in private industry as
rapidly as possible. The prevailing
idea of projects of this nature is to
employ lhe surplus labor in a useful
manner that will not conflict with
private industry or Initiative, also
one which can be terminacd'at any
time without losing the benefits of
al) the work that has been done.

[
|

'of Detroit spent the Fourth with

\ and Mrs. Fred J. Hughes.

Coming Attractionsi at
The Strand Theater
Theat

Arthur Nunemaker and son Rtutell went to Chicago Bunday morn­ and Mrs. Charles Miller and
Ing. the latter reluming Bunday Boyd Cortrlght of OtMgo.
. night, lhe former making a longer
Sunday Mrs. Jennie Norris. Mrs
. sUy with relative*.
Fields In "Poppy."
Smith suu
and Mr.
and i
I W
w. u.
ITtpte Link
LUU club
CIUD will
Win meet with
Wlin Mb* Myrtle ouu»u
SSI. «uu
C- ruius
Fields is
1* Ul
at nts
his oesi
best us
as a ; Triple
| patent-medicine and tent show ! Mrs. W. F. Smith at Crooked lake.; Mrs. Olin Munger enjoyed a pot,
guardian of an !8-year-old
. .. 18-year-old
girl { Julygirl
10.| All day meeting. Pot luck luck dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Mark
-----------------dinner.
Good
program.
—
*•
ul
Rochelle Hudson, who has never ;
known any utiicr . life.
falls Ln lave with the sun ofI a small . Chicago
....epent
------ - over
„— the wevk
Miss Doris Hoffman
week end
end jj Mrs. George Woods and Mb*
town mayor
Fields coneoeU a wtlli their brother, Mr »■'&lt;*
and Mrs.
Mr* ■ Elizabeth Woods of Gull lake were '. days last week with
scheme to have her identified us the Milo Lehman.
home Saturday and Sunday after- Leon Bunton at Rai
noon.
Mrs.~L7-72
Dav — 1
missing heiress to an unclaimed for­
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Japhet of II noon.
। R«v. and —
tune in the town. H works for a Benton Harbor and Mr and Mrs
Mr. and Mra. Caaslus Hughes. talned by Mr. and Mn.
; time and then b exposed. Rochelle. | James Japhet jnd family of chi- : were Bunday guesU of Mr. and Mra. man the wrak end.
I heiress for a day. faces a bad sit- ■ cago spent the week end with Mr. j Peter Castle.
jmtuchlng at the IpM*
I uatlon Then a sudden turn of Ute 1 and Mrs Ray Japhet.
Miss Mary Ellen Hanaknecht of church Sunday evening. He
plot brings a happy ending.
Mrs. Floyd Shelp and Mrs Har- Grand Rapid* I* visiting Mils Ellen I fine *ermon on "Waaiona.
, old Jones spent Thursday in Kala- ' Bhelp this week,
Mr and Mrs Maurice Hughes had 1
DANNER WANT ADV8 PAY
। Miratn Hopkins, .Merle Oberon and truizoo. While there they saw the
“
। The all uma is laid in a small
• gills' school run by two young col­
lege women, both of whom tali In
। love with Jas. Cftrln. Joel McCrea,
j Mary Tilford, lhe school's problent,
&gt; resenting punishment for wron&gt;(' doing, runs away, concocting a vl| clous lie involving the three adults
1 as her reason. The situation scents
i desperate until an unexpected turn
of events brings the truth to light
and the story ends happily.

picture 'The Ghost Goes West" and
•The Farmer in the Dell."
Report of the Condition of The Delton State Bank
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Couslno of I
Toledo. Oiilo. visited her parents.! at Dslton. MUMgaa. as ths dgse &gt;r kylnau Jana ae. MM. m «*1M fM
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jones, and
family over Ute week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hughes
and son. Fred J . of Logansport. |

neck* Have Landed.*'
Summed up in a few words. "The
Leathernecks Have Landed" is a
story of what happened to Woody
• Davis after he was kicked out of
the service as the result of the
| death of a buddy in a cafe brawl,
and the long hard- road he had to
I take to make a comeback aided by
• 'Brooklyn." the girl who "missed
* j too many boats "

In charge of the largest traveling
health exhibit in the country. Vir,,
,
,
...
.
gl! R. Hassler of the Michigan Tuberculosls Association, shows two
HOPE CENTER.

The second annual Adrlanson re­
. union was held Sunday. July 6. at
। Millham Park. Kthamazoo. There
: was an attendance of 81
Those
from here who attended were Mr.
and Mrs. George Aftrlanson and Lu­
cille. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Johnson
and Loraine. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice
Burchett. Robert
Burchett
and
1 Jake Adrlanson. Others were from
«... of
w. the
.... and entirely free to the public. The Kalamazoo. Neeley. Battle Creek,
interested onlookers of one
many items to be displayed while exhibit is brought here by tubercu-1 Plainwell. Dowagiac. Albion. Ollih.
hio
svhihit
■«
innastinos
Prnuy
Chrbtmas scat
seal tuna*.
funds. tt
It win
will vet.
vet. ucnon.
Delton. uunuiocs.
Comstock. Gas visy.
City.
me
the mg
big exnion
exhibit is
Is in
In Hastings
Ballings muyiosu
Friday j losU enrtstmas
and Saturday, July 17th and 18th. be housed at 130 State street Just. Ind.. and Los Angeles. Cal. A very
enjoyable time was spent.
Open dally from 8 A. M. to 0 P. M. west of the C. Thomas store.
Harvey Mills and Roy Anderson
I Lyle and Gordon Champion spent I meet July 23 for supper with Mrs. '

.i uoni
Don't lorgei
forget uie
the nope
Hope veneer
Center i many
Friday wmi
with mr.
Mr. nnu
and wirs.
Mrs. nuipii
Ralph viiuo.
Chas. ucvuieimivi
Lechleitncr
! avow
school
,. reunion
on
... Phamnlnn
Champion and family
at MaltaThe Pioneer ulcnlc
picnic will be held
held
.
-------... at the Utile grove
-------- w
—
famllv at
Mnttn- I Tile
;I the
wan.
thn Will
Will Monica
Mnnli-n farm
farm on
on Saturday.
Raiurdav '1 wan
| July 30 for dinner.
I jujy m,
1
Mr. and Mrs. John Woodman and •I L&gt;
Ben
.. Quick —
of 1Hickory Corners
vemoh Textcr
Textcr of
of Hastings
Hastings spent
spent family
family of
of Paw
Paw Paw
Paw were
were Bunday
Sunday | visited Earl Pennock and family
.I vemon
yie wccg end with his grandparents, j dinner guests of the Champion Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McDermott.
.family. Mi. Woodman is county
SOUTH BOWNEMrs. Minn Aldrich and Rev. Wai- agricultural agent of Van Buren
‘ton
am oHonrireri
attended rnmn
camp maatlno
meeting nt
at Clnn
Gun rnnnlv
county.
July 0 Letter.
l(ike Sunday.
Robert and Walter Warner were
Tile Will Mishler's and Harold
Albert Anders from North Hope in Hastings Saturday forenoon.
Yoder's were at Johnson park for
spent Friday and Saturday nt Fred
Louis House and Mrs. Grace Se­ the Fourth and also called at the
Ashby's
home. Mr. uno
and mra.
Mrs. oum
Bain bree ot Kalamazoo were guests of homes of Fred Roush and John
j Asnoy
a nome,
Ashby and Mr. and Mrs. Frank the James family on Thursday, and Hulzenga of Grandville.
j Scales from Hastings spent Sun- on Sunday they entertained Mrs.
Mrs. Mattle Mishler. Mr. and Mrs.
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
I1 day afternoon at the Fred Ashby Ella Russell and two of her friends,
.......... .
W. n
H.. Pardee and .......................
daughter, Marlon.
also from Kalamazoo, with a flsti Jennie Pardee and Mr. and Mrs L.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Matthews are home.
entertaining Mr. Matthews' sister I Mrs.
Beatrice
Dunning
and dinner.
। Andrus and Minnie Bouck attend­
and daughter from North Dakota daughter LeaUlce from Delton spent
' ed the funeral of Mrs. Clara WatLs
Emerson Bowlus of san Luis , Friday with Mr and Mrs. McDerFAIR LAKE.
•a
ali Bowr.e center Friday afternoon.
Mrs. carl Adams and Mrs. Nettie I! Mr.
Mr. nn
and
j jjrs
Mrs Millon Murphy enOblspo. Calif.. Is visiting his grand- moil.
—
Fisher of Richland spent Sunday tertatned company over the Fourth,
father. Lewis Edger, and other rel­
PINE LAKE.
at Porter Knowles
j Mrs. Ethel Nash and sun Edward
atives.
Guests on Sunday afternoon and
Miss Donna Lee Armour of Bat- 1 of crystal Falls and Ella Nash of
Mrs. Leona Bowman and Mrs.
Claude Moore invited friends of Mr. evening of Mr. and Mrs. John Rog­ tic creek has returned home after south Bowne called at Will Purd.-e'
and Mrs. Leo Tift iMyrtle Hulb to ers were his cousins, Mrs. Myrtle spending a week with Mr. and Mrs. | Sunday evening.
Pugh
of
Charlotte
and
Mrs.
Millie
H.
A. Armour.
Chari
a miscellaneous shower Wednesday
. -ainlon
Miss Maymle Van Horn of Jack'
night nt the community hall. The Knoch of Man
I A drowned
young int
tan
from Kalamazoo
bridaFcouple
wn busy
unwrapping
in Warner
lake Bun- j Mr. and &amp;«. Porter Knowles.
evening was spent
visiting
and the [

CHERRIES

FOR ( A.VMXt,
Well sprayed fruit without stems-Fomous Valley Fruit Market Product,
Leave orders with Maprice Ingram at
Auto Tag Inn, Distributor for Barry Co.
CUSTOMERS ARE INVITED to inspect the orchards
of Anderson and Cochran, one-half mile out of Alle­
gan at junction of M-40 and M-89.

unwrapping d#y Bflernoon so far m U known.
Mrs Earl Fritz and children hav.
* , .
tills Is the first drowning recorded returned from Altamont. HI.
There MU be « mretmg «l lhe •
u u uk
.
Bunncll LadleT Aid
Good Will church Friday evening. I1

PUlwlth

eery

tools

with
Bat­
bet-

heir
field
Tha

one Interested in farm electrin- i
cation Is Invited to attendMaster Carroll OtLs of Lansing '
spent last week at the Harry WilHams home.
Mrs. John Benedict attended a
shower Thursday night at Mrs. Fred
Linington's Ln Hastings for her
niece. Miss Beatrice Carpenter.
I
Little Bernice Anne Cronk spent1
the past week with her grandpar­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Camp. Mr.
and Mrs. David Ragla were Sunday
guests In the Camp home.

TOGETHER

loci

GET YdUR

Cooling foods
Have them Delivered
Call 2272 or 2616

eldpausch

F

•MARKET­

Phone 2772 U)e Deliver

Fresh Tomatoes

iirth
ible.

17c

Mr».
her

Cucumbers

rood
rifts

Head Lettuce

&gt;ent
irtth

Salad Dressing AG q.. 29c

Each

lOc

Crisp Headi

12c

Fresh, Crisp

Ann

and
&gt;ent
lam

Let us help you make
the

hours

you

spend

together pleasant

Warm

Weather

De-

mands Clean Clothes.
and

Cool

Tho Indian Knew How to Keep Cool . .

Iren

Jrtth
and

Send them

to -us

for

cleaning regularly.

McCREERY’S
(TRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

a
liuaa Direct and

iiooiss o»

intiMos silmm.u

PRAIRIEVILLE.
| July 9 Letter.

the

witn
Put-

S3

Corned Beef c“v'

Minced Ham

23c
Lb.

19c

Summer Sausage

25c

Steaks

25c

Round, Sirloin or Swiss, Ib.

Beef Kettle Roast
ARMOUR'S BRANDED BEEF

18c

Summertime he cammed on tho shores of the
lakes where he could get the full benefit of
every cool breeze, and winters he would be
inland, protected from severe cold.

Now You Can Have Year 'Round Comfort
Without Moving. ROCK-WOOL Insulation
placed in your home will help make your home more pleasant.
Rock-Wool is a soft, plant substance that will not burn. Forced
between the rafters of your house it forms a protecting woll
that keeps out both cold and heat. Once your home is insu­
lated you will be amply repaid in comfort and savings. An in­
sulated house is easier to keep
comfortable the year around.
Almost 50% of your life is lived
LUM BURR Says:
at home—make it a comfortable
“You are really getting
living place.
up in lhe world when you'
own j our own-honu."
Invest in year 'round comfort—
have the Home Lumber Com­
pany insulate your home with
Rock-Wool.

THE HOME LUMBER CO.

■ms

79*8*

iMTjis.aa

LIABILITIES

1 Common ITtock paid in

COMMERCIAL DEPOSITS.
iDeuoilti Subject to Check

Dtbir Public Fuodi
Sicuriliri pl»d&lt;ed under See. 8S
Public Fundi—No aiicu pledged
SAVINGS DEPOSITS.

lUT.IHH

it. orkBYNOLDB/CMUar.
S.lii H Doitir,

�r THE COUNT
U)E AT HOME

The Hastings Banner

THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1936

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Editorials

It's tho Spirit of a Community
That Count*-— Not IU Six

Chase 8. Osborn, you may recall.
Is against the Waterway on the
ground /that it Is not practical on |

'Round About Town

t| ‘The Public Forum |||

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Haw to the line, let the qulpe
Hew
qulpo
account of the long winter season
fall where they may I
Wayland. Mich.,
a lien on tha line m security. Tho
| Record, democratic leader in the and when built would be almost,
Muri H. DeFoe. editor of*
July 7. 1916. | members of each unit will pay a rate
wholly, at IcmI geographically, on (
lhe Charlotte
Republican­
, last state senate and probably a
HMtings Banner.
sufficient to meet all overhead ex­
Tribune. has written the fol­
1 candidate for renomination to his British soil. It is possible that the j
Dear Sirs:
; penses and pay 3 per cent interest
By Observing Tommy.
lowing comment for this laTlie officers of the Barry County on the borrowed money and will
-__
. ___
present post, is a fine type of prl- idea is being slowly abandoned. For ।
Electric Membership Association, a also pay each year a sufficient sum
"imVre'u a"lot to be’sald for Haf- VBte cltllen and public official He a time every congressman through-1
unit of the Michigan Rural Klee-1 so that the whole line will be paid
Ungs
At least Hastings never more Ulfln anyone else wks respon- out the northwest wm pledged to its ’
trificatlon Assn, are very much j for in 20 years.
pleased with the response of the 1 Your Barry County unit shall entecked for a proper and dignified ^ble
^e edltors^to hojd support.
farmors and the township bqards I deavor to get a franchise from the
j
their
recent
summer
outing
at
St.
note of approval
..
and
the real Interest shown In our I township boards (nearly one-half
The LouU-Schmellng fight pic­
: Joe. resulting in columns and col­
if Mrs. Russel R.
efforts
to secure Federal Mslstance I are already secured) of all the
tures have been quite the vogue over 1
; umns of quality publicity for his
In building rural electric lines out I townships during July and call a
the
country.
The
pictures
complete,
j corner of the state, a superlative
In the districts where the power I special election early in August to
Gertrude smith)
ly revoke lhe much prevalent talk ’
companies will not go.
ratify the action of the township
■ job in neighborhood propaganda.
happened to be
that the colored man—In certain I
The Federal government through i boards and
gel a list of all
A-1 clouler of the Hastings inde­
I Senator Case was endorsed at the
In the
party.
pendent Baseball team is Burt th^ Norris bill, hM become prima-1 farmers who desire to become
recent state democratic convention,
She is as sweet
O'Donnell. When it comes to swat­ nenUy Identified with a program to &gt; members of our Barry County
along with several others, m a can­
bring
the
blessing
of
electric
lights
Unit.
Thus,
we
will,
very early, place
ting
with
bats,
flats
or
otlierwlse.
and subtle In her
you might know an Irishman would and power to practically all rural ‘ ourselves in position for assistance
didate for Lieutenant Governor, but measured up to the highest traapproach
and
be at/ least somewhere near the areM. The government does not. from government engineers end get
ditlons in personal courage. He j
lhe
place
is
most
likely
to
go
to
comparisons
ot
front.
contemplate going into this business Ln line for an early application for
H. C. Olassner. formerly Nashville glorified hl* race, even in defeat.
other communibut simply loans 100 per cent of the our loan from the government.
postmaster and a three term state Perhaps just a sentence or two
putting angle worms in the ice cost of building the lines to each
F. D Butter. chairman.
lUe* with HM­
representative from Barry county. about Louis' luck in his promoters,
box to keep 'em cool deserves honor­ local unit (each county) and takes
P. O. Wayland. Mich.
tings, m a cham­
might
be
of
interest.
After
win,
able
mention
or
something
from
the
' now a resident of Charlotte, who
ber of Commerce Muri DeFoe.
ning tlie Free Press boxing tourney '
8. P. C. A.. Tommy believes.
has
already
filed
his
nominating
secretary. She delightfully com­
he wm taken tn charge by the Rpx- '
| Baldwin and hlr mother, arrived in
bines the soporific and Judicial to' petitions. L D Dickinson, who m
I never even suspected that Clyde
: New York Monday and will eoon bo
borough Bros.—Charles and John— :
was such an ardent humanitarian.
her propaganda tempo. Diplomacy "a state senator for several terms
of Detroit, who are almost respon- j
Mr. and Mr*. M W Stebbins re­
represented
Barry
county,
is
a
re
­
is a career work with the British.
slble for Louis' meteoric rise and his |
I
Some
of
the
local
"Grundy*".
say
turned Wednesday from a visit with
Newaygo friend
This is Mrs. McPeek's classification publican candidate for his old post
he was just trying to keep 'em kr.r rn.,
present satisfactory financial con- •
as
lieutenant
governor
and
many
••sweet"
for
a
fishing
trip.
But
when it comes to spreading the
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
.
Wednesday night George and
dition. sufficient for a life time if
then, people arc always belittling
The following officers and direc-! Clara Huffman gave a marshmallow
virtues of her old home town. When declare that these former Barry
anyway.
tors were elected at lhe annual roast to about a down friends, the
Clifford C. Ward, capable Hills-' «»unty legislative representatives he retired now. chM. Roxborough j
is a Detroit attorney, wm the mes­
meeting of lhe chamber of Com-1 party being &lt;n honor of Miss Hasel
may
be
opponents
on
the
Novem
­
dale newspaper man. bought an In­
Tommy will always believe that merce; president. W. W. Potter; I Chilson of Grand Rapids The lawn
senger in the executive office when I
the thought of these poor little first vice president. Arthur E. Mui-1 wm prettily decorated with lanterns
terest in the old charlouo-Tribune, ber ballot. Mr. Dickinson is pMt
Chase 8. Osborn wm governor, has I
creatures sweltering and suffocating holland; second vice president. D.land artistic coxy corners fitted up
and moved to charlotte, he brought seventy-five and there Is some com­
in
the hot loam of his green house C. Bronson; secretary. John J. Daw- ■ for lhe young folks who had a very
along a decided Hillsdale complex. ment by former friends that he is
played such an appealing lune on son and treMurer. Harry G. Hayes.; enjoyable timp,publican candidate in the first
Everything wm better in Hillsdale, too old for active public life again
the heart strings of Clyde's pity that
Mary Pickford drew crowded
Michigan congressional district but
and
should
be
willing
to
step
aside
until his friends in sheer self de­
with the limited means at hand, he houses at the Bijou Tuesday.
FORTY YEARS AGO.
went down in the Roosevelt sweep
decided to do what he could for
Tu»4.y IM, were U p,UenU .1
BmlW.
fense beat him to the obvious note for younger men.
Commenting on Louis' defeat the j
them.
lhe
hoaplul u&gt;d ihm muM hav,
Jam,;
of superiority and finally managed
b«n is u room could haro l«m proP™a»b Alihan and
It is always good manners when Guardian, leading colored paper of
to put Hillsdale in the background.
But
those
dumb
worms
—
such
lack
vlded.
HO.
did
ever
let
alon(
I
Bllu
and
moal
of
lhe
comroulonal
p । serving m guest editor to look Detroit makes no apology. Here is
Ward's was a bad case, but finally,
without it?
candidates and possibly Juliu* O.
of consideration! My! My!
d around for comparisons favorable to the Guardian's opening paragraph.
, ,
Ml« Mildred Keuham and Mlm '
*'!! !".
after many months, he was subdued
i the orea you are serving temporari­ lhe sense and sanity of which will ylCWS QllCl OplHlOHS',
Once revived in lhe Arctic atmos­ Ada Blawron look a Irlp In Haul.
Pre.byl.rlan. pfailrhed al
and Hillsdale became Just another
phere of lhe refrigerator, these in­ Creek Bunday on ihelr bloyele. re. Thomapple yuwrday lhe Bplroo.
ly. Picking up the latest copy of be quickly accepted by all fight
~
~
second class post office. But that isn't
grate little creatures squirmed out Ulmin, Monday. They made the' f*1 Sund,&gt;' “h“l "'a “» HapiUt
I the personnel records for the Ionia fans:
THERE is nothing the
all, lhe editorial daughter. Ros?
of their container and flopped down •X^VnS Saturday for
Jmn M.Lankhhn U at1 Reformatory, the writer was sur­
"Joe Louis today is just m big
body suffers that the
on top of Mrs. Ws. lovely tapioca
Maxine DeFtoe of the Barry county
prised to find that Barry county hM
as he wm of yore. Something
| pudding.
PLANNED ECONOMY.
sou! may not profit
staff of the W. K. Kellogg Founda­
, "Planned economy" is a phrase
only two Inmates in that institution
the summer school of Columbia B!,ttle Creek and Kalamazoo this
happened to him in New York
by.
—
Meredith.
tion started in for Hastings where
i that drops glibly from the lips of
Angle worms and tapioca. Il Li University.
j *“*•
compared to twenty-one from Eat­
that generally occurs to any hu­
Mrs. McPeck left off. It is Hastings
| agitated orators who insist, per­
safe to Msurne, do not make an ap-_
on county. Calling up our sheriff.
man who gets the applause of
haps not openly, that the American
this and HMtings that. There is
petizing mixture. Ask Clyde!
THIRTY YEARS AGO
FIFTY YEARS AGO
M. J. Krieg, for an explanation, he
the public as much as Joe has I form of government isn't such a
Former
probate
judge.
Charles
1 On lhe evening of July 3. about
no inferiority complex in her Has­
i good one.
stated that fifteen lads had been
In the past. Louis, in the eyes
Or better yet nsk Mrs. W. Clyde. W. Armstrong, died of heart failure' 200 people assembled al the reri­
tings build-up. Hers Is the work of
|
Soviet
Russia
has
"planned
econTommy understands, is strangely al 9 o'clock last night al his home . dcncc of Mr. and Mrs. j. H. Linningsent to Ionia from Eaton county since
of lhe public became a super­
a crusader. Hastings Is a compos­
■ omy," telling every man how much
reticent on the subject but Mrs. W. in Bowens Mills. Judge Armstrong ' ton to celebrate their thirtieth wedJanuary 1. The boys were from nineman, unbeatable, and in a class i he can raise, what he can sell it for,
ite of everything fine from Jericho
needs little encouragement to go in­ wm well known and very popular in ding anniversary
iu
uvovw Road. This Hastings
. tcen to
years ot age. an
by himself, and Joe himself got | what he may earn, how long he 1
to a world of detail.
to Tobacco
Barry county, and his many friend*:
James A. Sweesey has a bonanza
' may work, what he may eat. wear.
to thinking this way also to a
will mourn his death.
| this season in his large peach or»' undcr
.
and
do.
And
the
result?
Mrs. M.. I understand, wm al­
Monday Lee Cobb began surveying , chard. He inform* us that he will
certain
extent,
and
was
a
little
Llood nmm. wrulnly II u
* sl*'“!n£
The Saturday Review, published
most as hot as the sidewalk when to lay out a new plat of lots on the : have peaches on the market. Ln
lax in his training. He cannot be
mor, than Jiul tn ob^lon. Jiul
T™
p EO R G E WASHINGTON
in London, gives these figures on
she found out that the sidewalk shore of Wall lake. Messrs. Hany'about two weeks,
were Involved ..
in .a
totally blamed for his mental
helor, our Joy and pnd, moved over of
"r the
,l,“ fifteen
""
prevailing food prices In Russia:
wasn't hot enough to fry an egg. and Millan Waidorff concluded to ' Since
“
our last issue there have
bred America’s first mule
scries of night time thefts of live­
! Bread. 40 cents a loaf; butter, *2 a
attitude, being young, and be­
after all.
meet the demand for more collages i been five cases ot diphtheria, all of
from the original Jack given
io Hastings after two pleasant pro! pound; cigarettes. *1 a package of
stock
from
farms
in
the
vicinity
of
coming
a
sensation
over
night.
at Wail lake by platting additional , which are doing well however, the
him
by
Spain.
Uncle
Sam
tesslonal years in Middleville, she
120; cofiec. $4 a pound; sugar. 65
How's
it
feel
to
walk
into
some
­
ground
for
them
on
the
WaldDrfl
disease
assuming
a milder form. It
Eaton
Rapids.
Incidentally
one
of
would
now
get
a
kick
out
of
n
Is bound to affect the strongest
met Mrs. McPeck. who compliment- j
| cents a pound.
body else's room in a strange hotel. farm.
U thought the worst is over.
little Jack from hi* European
beings. It was Just one of those
, Nice. Isn't It?—Industrial Press.
The committee lb receive blcULfor I
ed her on her promotion and in the boy* is a son of a former three
Leonards?
Farmers arc becoming more and
debtors.
term
sheriff
of
Eaton
county,
and
things,
to
use
the
street
parlance
the building of the Masonic temple I more to appreciate the wagon sheds
closing the tete-a-tete wc heard the
VINE OR TREE?
Boy. oh boy. have you got an eye­ opened the bids Saturday evening. • constructed for them by Mr. Rora—he was caught napping, by a
Judge's wife say to Rose. "You'll' his present situation is a difficult
The rain which attended the
ful of that nut-brown tan my bos', but came to no definite conclusions.' beck of this city.
I saw HER on the street today.
fighter who wm not afraid with
G. O. P. and Democratic con-_ picked up . . . along with other postponing action for some little I
like HMtlnp," and let the records. thing to explain let alone under­
’ That old sweetheart of mine,
We Visited Middleville Monday
a great deal of experience, wait­
ventions might be blamed for
show that no old prophet gospel; stand. Three of the fifteen were
things ... on his trip?
Iwhom I once thot (poor callow
time.
and found more stir and life in our
any excess mud slinging.
ing for an opportunity to put
Supervisors Boyes. Abbey and slater village than wc remember of
hM ever come to pass in more abun­ Olivet college students, apparently
youth)
The
only
part
of
that
trip
he
talk^
1
top
notch
chaps
until
they
were
over a real punch."
i A sweet and "clinging vine."
Thorpe, the committee of the board seeing for
a number ot years.
dant spirit and truth. We salute
If the fad, ••handles." lasts
about tho' is driving through the authorized to pul in lhe ladies' rest French and Son arc building a fine
caught in a series of cheap lar- '
I thot that I would gladly be
Hastings. The gesture is worthy
until
Braddock
fights
Max
Dakotas with the car windows up! | room tn the court house basement 100 barren roller mill which they
The tree to which she'd cling.
- Personal mention: Mrs Arthur F.
cenics.
(
Schmeling. Braddock's backers
and whole-hearted and has become
are certainly looking after their calculate shall have no superior;
| Vickery, wldqw of a former HMtings But fate decreed another man
may be seen holding their
Saw Blake Boylan on the street duties tn a thorough manner. An Senator Cnrvcth Is erecting a fine
a pleasant Introduction to our ( Far be it from us to discourage, druggttt and clly treasurer. I beShould buy the wedding ring.
■ noses to stop smelling.
the other day. Hows lhe ol' home entrance to the north room hM been home that will take *3.000 to fin­
morning libation.
ar.yonc and especially Hastings j 114WC „ one of my neareal neighbors. I saw HIM on the street today.
town look, fella, after lhe big city? cut through the stone wall of the ish. also a spacious barn. The vil­
The man who took my place.
folks from going to church Sunday a lovely lady. She has a Job as And read the history of the years
Political parties In Europe
basement, a cement walk laid, new lagers generally are taking pains to
This week's nomination to the flooring put down and fixtures add- ‘ make their homes look tidy and inhave their colored shirts, but
morning. There is no better habit. ticket seller al our fine movie house,
So plainly in his face:
Hall of Eligible Bachelorettes . . .
est weekly paper published in But If there is an occasional hot
Americans will probably wear
vtting.
the Eaton. Mrs. Elva Sylvester TU certain now she wm no vine.
Bea Goggins!
union suits if the Union party
Miss Grace Greenfield of our city
Will Cook and Eddie Bailey will
Michigan. The special Montgomery* weather backslider who thinks "it
But that she wm the tree.
Granger is just back from Florida And secretly I thank my stars
who has been louring England and , attend the university this year.
*
wins the election.
Ward section was as interesting as' us too hot to go to church" tell him
Understand
one
of
the
town'.-.
1
via a two or three weeks' stay tn
Twm him instead of me.
it wm responsible in giving the to head the old family hack in the
prominent
medicos
is
quite
an
ex
­
The Democrats' claim. re­
New York with her son. Royal —W. H. Berkey. Cassopolis Vigilant.
pert
at
turning
back-flips
out
of
week's state record to the Banner. direction of Saugatuck or the Alle­
garding employment they pro­
kludge and family, who have a
Most weekly papers would be glad gan shore of Lake Michigan. The
vided in their administration porch swings.
We have seen and heard much in
beautiful home at Bronxville. West­ newspapers and over the radio late­
may be justified. Look what
for a J. C. Penney store, and now . Rev. Doctor E W. Bishop, pastor of
It appears that an armless golfer
chester county, the voting home of, ly questioning how the veterans are
tbrv did tor Tliree-Job Farley.
Montgomery Ward puts a store in ! the
is going to be in our town shortly.
Plymouth
congregational F. D. R. The only daughter of the going to spend their bonus. Why
Hastings. Some people liavc all church of Lansing, is holding serv­
all
the
concern?
We
don't
recall
Mudges graduated In June, the
Golfer or not . . my. boas' secre­
the advertising luck. The best and ices in the Lake Shore chapel there
that there wm much concern how
grandmother attending Hie cere­ the farmers were going to spend
tary prefers 'em with two arms.
most convincing proof of the ad-L
each Sunday morning at 10:43 dur­ monial. One of the swagger Conde- their com-hog checks or their wheat
vertlsing value of the community, ing July and August. Dr Bishop is
Nash publications recently "wrote
newspaper Is the sustoincd policy of. a graduate of Williams College ana
up" the Mudge estate and home
NEWS GLEANINGS.
the great chain* which, week tn and Hartford Theological Seminary, rewith several illustration* of tha
week out, use the columns of the: celved the degree of D. D. from
Jean Pierre Blanchard, a French
colonial style home. Mary Grant
. home newspaper.' Their consistent j
aeronaut residing in England, wm
Dartmouth College, and is one ot' Nadu u practically recovered from
the first balloonist *&gt; dare to cross
altitude would indicate advertising
the outstanding preachers to Michl,urglca| trf.tment at Ann checks. Either the veterans are enHe uho tar no money tn hit burn
the Channel; and he succeeded in
value and reader interest are sy-'
must have honey in hu mouth.
&gt; gun. The writer ha* attended serv- | Art)Qr
Mr Nadu is the proprietor i titled to what they are getting this,
the attempt. He took with him Dr
nonymous terms and the Banner, Ice at.both the Hasting* Melhodtet of one o{ thc u&gt;5l known ainl pop.: week or they are not. If they are not
Jefferies, an American who had
a* every space buyer knows, fully .nd rro.byter,.n church- .nd
graduated from Harvard in 1763.
lhe Ch.r" £“.“..‘’“’‘JU’’"™"
The caj of the balloon is preserved
meets every test in Barry county
wc Wire in town—as we are oc-|lotlc Cafc
Mra ,McpWk and the tamed it They will spend it. Most
at Calais.
The Grand Rapids Press in Has­
. casionally—we would do so again । JU(j5C arP
home from Williams- i veterans arc In their late thirties
tings. and the state (Lansing) Jour­
Prospective bridegrooms in Ger­
but.lf you want to go “some place' bur- Va thP o|d
be-, " eM|F forties. They need no
nal in Charlotte have large local
many may buy a gold wedding ring
more
you 11 find the Bishop suggestion a ln(.
Rockefeller oll mlJ. guardians—at least not any —
containing up to eight carats. A
" circulations, but they can not com­
than any other similar number ot
11—Gtrnun sub DiutuhUn*
happy one.
___________
lloni TJw ^peeks are using some Cltikens. Sure, some will squander It
government decree bans the selling j
pete—in fact do not pretend to—
of any ring with a larger gold con­
White Atonal party-platforms । °^
ldea» cn lhflr far,n home­ Some will get slicked - out of It.
with the home paper carrying andl
Others will save and still others In­
tent.
sympathetically
interpreting
the arc Largely a collection of hand p"1 at the cd«c °r lown on M'7B vest wisely—Just the same as-fartn'”aln highway to Lansing. All.................
...
_ _ or
mid*. Fhilsfelphl*. i»,&lt;Francis Bacon made the firm ex-!
local news, whether it- is the New picked words with -various and suners. business
men, ________
preachers
dry
meanings
it
is
still
difficult
to
tl,
cse
up
and
coming
Hasting
’
,
teachers.
Quit
trying
to
wet-nurse
pertinent in cold storage in 1620 by
York Times or the Middleville Sun’,
collecting snow to stuff a fowl in ।
(HQ Q I*—Grcsi *nd-dr«(t /&gt;»*» la
propet names mak* a newspaper understand why both republican and K'rls" are in excellent health and tttese men Nlnet*en J^a ago we
order to observe the effect of cold
N«W Yorti City. IM1
। I.,.
■ • '. h^tog
findine much
much of
interes* in
glad enough
to call
conventions
deliberately
of ^terest
in our
our i were
_fl|hUn&lt;
men T^y
are.hem
men men
now
There,u no substitute for frieridh-■ democratic
......
------- --------------------- ,
on the preservation of the flesh.
... ---.U- ptcx
c. .social
comntat
soc^l swirl.
. _or
n#ver wlU
—Schuyler
ness. which quality is just as dis- j dodged all reference
to--------------the St 1 c°«n
swirl.
~ .iii.I1 ’■ in
I., a
n good
weeAek weekly
mi ■ ■11 1 newspaper । Lawrence Waterway. We in V/1"
‘Marshall in St. Johns*Republican.
The earliest notice of electric light
ccmible
Michi■uMk.RhodtIsUnd.U17.
In a recent note from Dr. Phillip
appealed Ln lhe English Journal of
as it la'in your most dependable jan are supposed to be deeply con- A. Callahan, chief old Age /asist-1i "I for one believewthat gold is not
the Society of Art*, vol. 1, page 323.
/1ielghti&gt;r. No matter what you corned In this project and yet as
ance Bureau, state welfare depart- j the most precious thing to. the
in 1853.
think—or perhaps at times fcel— thc Michigan Manufacturer and Fi­ men*. was the following Interesting' world."—Carter Glass.
Battery type radio sets are still t
no agency has a greater concern in nancial Record points out:
observation about the extent of the
,,
.
i popular and necessary to somej
Despite
the
fact
that
one
of
(
the security, happiness and comfort i
Charlotte have about the same'
new law in Barry county:
;areas Approximately 360.000 ot this
of you and yours than your home | Michigan's - native sons" was
BRIO. OBaraVATXONS.
I H'P'
problem. Hastings people will be'
Since the new Old Age Assist­
interested in the following para -!
the outstanding rival of Gov­
town paper, in the first place it b
ance Law took effect on July
"One law for one and another for I Charleston. 8 C-. claims lhe first j
We'll Deliver! — Because prices will soon advance
just ordinary business srnse Sue- i ernor Landon for the Republic­
Irnrr. a
a
tottor from
fmn- QS. I L i another
"On,f UW aIOrsystem
OnS 11,(1that
*H0ther
fOT
graph from
Iptter
cannot
first and up to and Including
apartment house constructed in the ,
ce«' la contagious. Make a frjiJnd ' an nomination for President,
. . . because -von now bettor grades are hard to
Marshall, well known editor of the last, why do not lhe others trust United States, built In 1800.
June 30. 1936. the sum of 120.­
of your newspaper
and another •native son." fa­
Republican-News 1 us? when hM the German nation
83130 was expended in Barry . Clinton County
gat from the mines . . . because you may not be
vored by appointment to high
ana
ot the fll. John, ho,.
«•
wotd/’-ChuiWith an area one fifth of lhe i
county for old age assistance.
i rellor
celior Hitter
Hiller.
United States—Alaska from its east-,
Banner readers must have en­
office in lhe present Democrat­
able to get what you want later on, we advise you
pltal:
Two hundred seventy-nine peo­
| "Observations do not toll us em-most point to Ila western-most
joyed the personal reminiscence?, of
ic administration was one of
Our hospital Ls steadily build­
ple are on the old age assist­
to buy your winter'* coal now!
1 whether the motion of lhe nebulM point extends farther than from ।
O P. Schumann of Ute Grayling [ the outstanding figures at the
ing up a reserve fund. We have
ance roll and Ute payment for
New York to San Francisco.
is real or apparent, but theoretical
Avalanche and Al Weber of the I recent
Democratic
national
completely wiped out the *17.the month of June amounted to
i physicists suppose it is actual mo­
Cheboygan Observer, former Ban­
convention, the wishes of Michi- t
The earliest European record of
000 debt and now have about
tion; and'th this assumption they
•4.03950. The grants tn Barry
ner cub*, who have made good as', gsn representatives with regard
have developed the theory of the shampooing the head is contained in,
*6.000 In reserves. After we reach
county range from S10 to *20.
heads of their own newspaper J to the Insertion of a plank In
I expanding universe.' —Dr.
Edwin a wood-cut by. Jost Amman, an en-|
a certain point we intend to re­
I Hubble.
graver who was. bom tn Zurich In 1
DEALERS IN WOOL. GRAIN, FEED, FLOUR, SALT, LIME,
plants. Both gentlemen are excel­
the party platform calling for an
The Pennock hospital in Has­
flect these earnings m towered
1330. The picture represents a barlent exhibits of Oook Brothers' per-'
CEMENT AND COAL
tings. lhe Clinton Memorial hospi­
rate*—for the benefit of the pa- I "Only by international under­ ber'a shop. In front la seen the bar­
scnal and
professional
training.
rencc-Greai Lakes Waterway
standing
ean
wreach
national
ber's
chair,
while
in
the
background
PHONE 3257
tal in St. Joluu and the HayesHASTINGS, MICH.
Unit*—the real purpose of all
prosperity."—j. Ramsay MacDon- U shown another customer undergo- •
Leon D Ca« of Uie Watervliet
were ignored.
Green county Memtrial hospital in
hoepitals. •
ing the process ot hair-washing.
I

.
j sit
Backward Crlances;
Bits of Yesterday '

Umui.

W/iat

Others Say

A

Quotation

Way

SRVE

of Our World

MIL

NOW!

LrYUmbS of Wisdom

2257

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. JULY 19, 19M

Est. Faye Donley. Petition for
E*t. George J Dorter. Testimony
tition for probate filed, order for
of freeholder* filed. license to sell
puMteateoa antarad.
Admr. filed.
Est- Igaac Oold*n. order allowing
Est. John N Stuart Testimony of
freeholders filed, license to sell Isissued. ertate enrolled.
PROBATE COURT.
STONY POINT.
K»t. Ellen K Stuart. TMtimonv of
»t. Harry O Hayas
freeholder* Med. lleenae to *elf to- July 0 Lrtter.
Est. Charles A- Northrup. Inven­ inf account entered.
Tha Mead family reunion of
tory Hied.
..
Est Lee McDonald. Final account which many peopte In Chis locality
Est Charles Hamilton Northrup.
Est. Henry J. Too** order allow­
filed, order assigning residue en­
Discharge of Admr. issued, estate ing claims entered
enrolled.
tered. discharge of executor issued, park. Lansing Bunday.
Mr. and Mr*. Karl Phillipa of
Bat. Adolphus D. Hopkins Order estate enrolled.
Bat. Margaret Landis. Annual ac­ assigning residue
entered,
dlaEat. Anna Oetroth. Final account Kalamaaoo spent the week end with
count filed.
Mr. and Mr*. Ed Deakln*.
filad.
KU. George B Hu lings. Testimony rolled.
’
Mr* Ed. Deakin* and Mrs John
Est. Mason O Hake*. Bond of
filed, order determining heirs enterKat. MUo G Barbour. Bond of Admr filed, tetter* testamentary Coville entertained a brother from
Milwaukee a few day* last week.
Admr filed, tetter* testamentary U- Issued.
MU* Mary Deakin* had an ade­
Est John H. Hu ling*. Testimony »ued. order limiting settlement en­
E*t. Agnes C. Rockwell, inventory
noid and teniil operation at Pen­
filed, order determining hairs en­ tered
filed.
tered
Est. George J Doster. Petition for nock hospital last Friday.
Est. Oora E Sinclair. Order alWe
were very much interested
license to mH filed.
Eit. Jay Gould Stratton. Jr. PetI- &lt; lowing claims entered.
Est.
Ml. Milo
Mliu B DOIMUUI
Barbour rcviiwtl
Petition for and
—— it-- did
—— us
— a- heap
------ of
-- good
.to read
tion for Admr. filed, order appoint-1 &lt;rt. Jack Dontey
Petition for
ing Admr. entered.
guardian filed, order appointing hearing claim* Med. notice to eredl- last week s editorial written by our
tors Issued.
| old frtond. Al H Weber, ot cheboyEst. John Wagner. WlU filed, pe-1 guardian entered.

gxn. not because he chanced to
mention our name In a list of old
Mr. and Mr* John Martin spent
time ball players but because it did
us a lot ot good to know that such and Mr* Sterling Week* ot Leoni*
a man as Al H. Weber is still alive
and able to perform life's duties
Mrs. Ed Deaklns entertained a
in such a luccasful manner.
bunch of cousins from WiUiamstdti
During the last few years in which over Bunday.
.... ................... .
Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Mead lived in
Mr and Mrs
Bert Vanderjagt
this community they took it up­ spent the 4lh of July with relatives
on themaelves to make soma im­ at Cadillac.
provement In
lhe Stony Point
cemetery, with
and
...... the
.... cooperation -...1
NASHVILLE.
financial assistance of some who
M1„
rMnrrwi
ln’±«*J! ho™
from £ckmy Fr­

COURTHOUSE NEWS

:

ing spot. We are glad to see they
arc keeping, the good work up since
tbelr removal to Nashville
Bert Trautwtne is lhe Aral to cut
wheat in thia locality but frotn all
appearance many more pieces will

Golden Anniversary Sales
50

big values

for better home life

$&lt;J5O
Aa

WN

DOWN

dov
OWN

BRINGS YOU THE

INSTALLS THIS

And YOU HAVE THIS

FRIGIDAIRE

GAS RANGE

GAS WATER

DOWN
DELIVERS THIS

ELECTRIC

WASHER

HEATER

v
movement

far bettar

home

lifa! Novar before such value,
such completeness—and such

attractive
•Isa.

prices

for

avary

Enjoy parfact food pro­

taction this summer and for

Yours so easily now . .

In how many ways is hot water

A good washer is cheaper than

madam range with everything

used in your family? You need

dirt. Ind washday chores, end

its

improvements will bring

you in bettor cooking; bright,

of tha year—newest models or

thousands know: it pays for

lowest prices, easiest terms.

itself with its savings. Models
begin os low as $84.50—en­

joy it now, with 3 years to pay.

It

means a better way. every way

clean, cool kitchen: freedom

only

trade in on this now ABC. Now,

no

more

money

wasted

in

Your old equipment token os

$74.50—Liberal old stove al­

part payment. Walt no long­

lowance. No charge for instal­

a sixe heater for every home—

er—come in this wook.

lation. 3 year terms.

and 3.year terms to buy it.

Make year heme mere complete
with the appliances yea need, with-

Universal and ABC models be­

gin ot $54.50—$3 down, 15
month terms.

ing methods. Trade old equip-

ment on this purchase. There's

Combination Special

Get

time saved, work made easier.

furnace coil or other old heat-

spacial,

and fabrics last longer.

rid of your old equipment—

This beautiful 1936 model was

$89.50 — now

washday grays—be proud of
better washing—make clothes

for comfort and health,

from old ways. Hare's the sale

Prove what

yoars to coma.

automatic water heating.

IRONERS ON SALE
Complete the perfee/ laundry com­
bination by the pleasure and ease
of “automatic Ironing.' Attractive

Liberal Trade-in Plan!
Profit from this Jubilee of Values to get
tho home conveniences you want—and

lore*

special

oomMaation

offer*..

DOWN

put a cash value in your old equipment

by taking advantage of the special atsimilar camM-

nation for .
COMS IN-MAKE YOUR COMBINATION

RS
TO PAY

CONSUMERS POWER CO

wherc ahe h&gt;d ,penl *CTer»l
weekf.
Mr*. Mabie Elder is spending a few
days in Greenville.
Miss Pauline Dausc ha* returned
from northern Michigan where ahe '
was superintendent of several va- ■
cation Bible schoob
The Clover Leaf Club was delight­
fully entertained Friday night at
the home ot Mr* Jake Hollister as1 slated by Mr*. John Dull A short
business meeting was held after
which home made ice cream and
cake were served. The next meet- i
ing will be held August 7th. at Saubee lake tor lhe members and their j
families for a picnic Supper.
Funeral services for E. B. Smith.
RO. were held al the home on Fri­
day afternoon at 2:30 o’clock, con­
ducted by Rev. a. L Bingaman of
Grand Rapids. Mr. Smith was born
in Ohio and came to Michigan 53
vror* ago.
»»n For
Wnr 12 year*
veari he
hr operated
nnrratrd
years
the Commercial hotel. He a a* a life
member of the Knights of Pythias.
He leaves his wife, two daughter*. (
Mrs. Roy Brumm of near Nashville. |
Mr*. Charles Nesman of Vermont­
ville township, one son Merle of I
Belmont. Burial was In Lakeview
cemetery.
.
MTs. Anna Benson. 57. passed
away at the honie of her daughter.
Mr*. Hilda Fassett Saturday. Mrs.
Benson came to America in 1907
and spent most of the time on a
farm in Eaton county. She had been
in falling health for some time.
She leave* three *oni. Everett of
Lansing. Albert and Victor al home,
two daughter*. Mr* Burr Fasaetl
of Barryville and Agnes at home.
Funeral services were held Monday i
afternoon al the He** funeral home ■
at 2 o'clock, conducted by a minister j
from Lansing. Burial Ln Lakeview
cemetery.
Leonard C Davl*. 88. was the first
victim of the heal in this vicinity. I

ance of that former desolate look-:

lowances on the purchase of refriger­
ators, ranges,

washers,

water heaters

and ironers.

CONSUMERS POWER CO

2 o'clock Sunday afternoon. Mr. i
Davis wa» bom in Assyria town- '
ship, but spent many, yean in the .
west. He leaves his widow, who Sun­
day morning had to have medical
care on account of the heat, four
son-.. Dr. W O Davis of Halting*. I
A. O. Davis of Windom. Minn.. E. H. ,
Davit of 8an Du Sandean, WU,
and W H. Davis of Battle Creek. I
two brother*. Waller of Minneapolis
and Fred ot Battle Creek. Funeral1
services were held al lhe home
Tuesday afternoon conducted by ,
Rev. Rev j. j. WillitU of Barryville.
Burial In the Barryville cemetery.
I
The fire department was called ,
out Sunday to extinguish a fire'
started on the outside of lhe Van ■
de Venter store. Not much damage j
was done It was next to the Hl- 1
Speed oil station.
♦
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Kinne and
family and Mr and Mrs. Hemming­
way of Grand Ledge »pent Sunday 1
with the former'.* paienls. Mr. and ;
Mrs. Porter Kinne.
Mr. and Mrs. Hickman enter- i
talncd their daughter from Grand ,
Rapids over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Von W. FurnlM and j
daughters Pauline and Margaret left
Friday for Spokane. Washington, to ;
visit Mrs Furnls*' sisters. Alta and ,
Gail Johnson, who are teachers
there.
STRIKER.
July 9 Letter.
• Mr and Mr.*. Ralph Striker were
Sunday dinner guesU of Mr. and
Mrs Dale Bump of Hasting*.
Mr and Mrs Albert Mortiom of I
Battle creek called on Mr. and Mrs.1
Carl Snyder Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Qlcn Barber of De­
troll were guests of Mr. and Mrs
Harry Rocho over the Fourth
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Shurlcw
and family were called to Augusta!
Friday evening by the aeriou* tlinets of hte aged uncle. Chas. Shurlow.
Mr. and Mr*. James Burine had
the following guest* over the week
end; Mr and Mrs Dunn and chil­
dren of Grand Rapid*. Mr
and
Mrs. Coleman and daughter of Bat­
tle creek. MT. and Mrs. Andrew
Randall. Mr. and Mr*. White and
children of Ionia, and Miss Marjorie
owrood of Muir.
Mr. and Mr* l/o Reynold* spent ■
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Ware ot near Hopkins.
Mr. and Mt* Arthur Edmond* of
Battle Creek called on Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Scott Sunday
Some of the older resident* of
thL* community have informed u*
that there was a rtight mistake in I
the 'Banty-Cramer Incident" which I
appeared in last week's Banner, j
That U. Il occurred in the Striker I
schoolhouse instead of Quimby.
1
ASSYRIA.
This locality was represented by I
a delegation of about seventy who i
attended the picnic held at Pine |
lake Sunday honoring Mr. and Mr*
Irvin Miller, former re*idenu here.
The annual picnic of lhe Marks-1
teer* of the Battle Creek Parmer* |
Market will be held on Bunday. July
19. at Fine lake »everal of which
are from this surrounding territory
Table
service.
*andwiches.
two;
sweetened lemons and one other
dl*h will compose the menu.
Remember the ice cream social at
Lacey on Thursday night.
The hlgheit registration of Ute
excessive heat was 106 degree* on
Sunday at Ute Hugh Case home in
the Uta de.
Mia* Bertha Milter, who ha* been
at st. Lawrence hoapiuu at Lanetng
for an appendicitis operation cam*
home last week.
Wayne Da via and MU* Bernie*
Martin of NaahvUte were at Angola.
Ind., on Saturday where they were
married. They ar* at Uie groom**
parent* for the present.

Sellini
OUR ENTIRE S

&lt;IND

COATS
DRESSES!
ALL SUMMER COATS Vi PRICE
Our entire stock of coats and dresses must be
sold before moving into our new home at 138
West Stale Street. Every Garment Must Go!

ALL $6.88 DRESSES, Now

ALL $4,88 DRESSES, Now - ,.,$3,gg
ALL $3.88 DRESSES, Now . . .$2.91
ALL $2.88 DRESSES, Now -.. $2,16

PLENTY OF LARGE SIZES

CINDERELLA
DEPARTMENT

I

at

Frand^en'g Stor^
^Excliuive, But Not Expensive'*

HASTINGS, MICH.

PHONE 2!

Hot Weather Sports Wt

SPECIAL
Women’j Lawn,Voile Dr&lt;
Sixes 14 to 52. including heH sixes,
42 Vi to 52Vi—Out on Sale at_________

GIRLS’ DRESSE
Back. Cool Dresses, gjsag 7 to 14, at______
lu.sier Wash Dresses in sixes 12M: to 1&lt;Vi -,8I Of
Slocks for Boys end Girls, sixes 8 to 18, at ...UM
Boys' Sanforized Shorts, 6 to 16, at____ ___ _ __ 89*
Women's. Misses* Sleeks end Sheris, 75«, |l, $1.2!
Women's Rayon Fanties, e spaciel ot oely ...•It*
CO-LOTTE SKIRTS at_____________ ________ $1.00
POLO SHIRTS, white, blue ead gold,
smell, medium and large
1J&lt;

Sun

PAJAMAS &amp; GOWNS
Cool, fine Dimity Pajamas and Gowns, also Raya*
Pajamas in fine Jersey ribbed, ell sixes, at —81.00

ALL WOOL SWIM SUITS
Children's, 2 to 8, at ..

•4I.M

Women's and MIssas' 32 to 42, ot

BATH TOWELS, ETC
Heavy "Cannon’* Turkish Towels, 22143, white
Sheets, ready-made, sixes 81x99,

b

wan^aHtol

42 inch Pillow Tubing ot only

HOSIERY VALU
Women’s ell gift, full fashioned, full lewflli .
Man's Shortax Sox, fancy layon end gilt

Fra
HASTING!

�TUT BASTIWO, BAHNtH, THCMOAT, JCT.T 1|, l»M

GRAND RAFI DS LIONS CLUB

EXCURSION

PECIAL

TO

SUNDAY, JULY 26

Coaclien only

^2^*^

Hound Trip

Ixarr Hastlnz* (Eastern Time) 8:4* A. M.

’ a few days before from his year's
visit arouhd the world. He has
written many books and he In­
formed us that his health series
books for chlldien is being printed
in Chinese. He attenxled some very
interesting conferences on hbc trip
and we were sorry not to have time
(Continued from page 1, Bee. J).-, to hear all about them.
“Sunday we had one of our most
much impressed but I am Inclined
Interesting days. We visited the W.
to rebel when such places are com-1 K. Kellogg Ranch at Pomona which
merclallzed to such an extent thal1:has been given over to lhe Univer­
it detracts from the object ot one’s psity of California. The ranch was
visit. I drat mean to be cynical on ;founded to stimulate ' interest In
this matter. An example of what ।raising real Arabian horses. We saw
I mean—one of the girls wanted to ithe hone show that afternoon, it
take a plcture-of an Indian woman,I woo delightfully entertaining and
and her papoose but she said. “No.1 educational as well; we all learned
I not unless you give me fifty cents " a number of new facts about horses.
She was part of the atmosphere of' Mr. and Mrs. Reese, who live at
the place all right but it was so. the ranch were graciously cordial
, planned—If she d have used thq i and we will not forget their hosmoney to care for the other young- pitailty
-

05974532

Arrive Detn

Detroit Tiger* v». Boston Red Sox

via MICHIGAN CENTRAL
Wont to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

MIMIC

accord wIUj large national meetings
but It was little short of Inspiring
as each slate, one after another,
gave reports of the work they had
been carrying on, of their plans
and aspirations. I cherished a per-

“We spent one day in San Fran- I Deep Run Peggy. George W. Blaugh-1
cisco.

1 think the

Golden

Gate ter, YpallanU.

rnum
This may aound a little weird 1 XwAdamTutchfteld?

Sit of°E
parks
of its kind that I have ever Litchfield- Ruth

wen.

-

. , .ZT~

«■

o

V. Wynn.

Mrs

i

l£WU.T

-

Sporting
Items
I1
'
*

°

but we spent considerable time i» k Bullen Detroit- Ivan Guv i
there in the Aquarium. That aight | £ £ i5S£erT^bonFjoSS’ HA8T,NQ8 DEFEATS LYONS
TO SCORE OF 5 TO
Taylor, frotn my school, was presi­ Is worth traveling a considerable | pmnk Dude^lcz, Bagh^w; Jimmy
dent of the league. We had a ubut
I D“ prank Dudewlcz, Saginaw; Red
Hastings Independent* wrecked
splendidly satisfying talk the last k2L&gt;Hfui^a.he
eJn • Ormsb&gt;’' Johnson and Jarvis. Lake ! vengeance on the Lyras mdependday of the meeting. Pound Peter
Hollywood Forbes, o. E. jente but Bunday al the fairgrounds
and Clara Gross through Dean
•pecle4'
very i Moore; Owosso; Deep Run Truax. I under lhe sweltering heat by a score
Goodrich. You remember them. mieresimg.
Oeorre W Slaughter
Ypsilanti: i of 5 to 3.
l^dreaiddknoirtn?O^*ltt&lt;’8um,&gt;^itd OrBC* “cElmyn. E M. Stout. PonBert O’Donnell pitching for lhe
Um: ^•»»n Anna, Ed. Beklns. locals held the visitor* xoreleu unI 01 the wventh InnUig when they
“One meeting in particular, of Die o^ n^ln«^y^ M.H^l|drrt,,JJ. Co°Per,vUle-n g 0
1
There U *lw*y* the danger that. scored three run* on four hit* aftmany we attended, was unusually tk?r
inrt
1
I ““te *howi will get onto the Mid- " two men had been retired. After
stimulating and of value. Borne
YX w*y
county fairs that had bet- 1 iha^4&gt;e settled down and did not al­
times public health people become
ter be shut off. The reason forlhat | *°w another hit throughout the
over zealous because of their vital
lhe tBme thal fonnerly existed 8»me. Hastings collected ten hit*
concern In wanting to help people fu
vtr’ I w,lh &gt;novlnE picture shows. The and put four of them together in
so with that In mind a panel dis­ f**.*
001 Ior Vlc‘ l shows exhibited at county fair mid- | the third frame to account for three
cussion was fanned, consisting of a
are almost Invariably con- ■ runs and after Lyons had tied tho
health officer, social worker, mem­
' ttoUed by one or two companies, Kame up In the seventh they scored
ber of a family, private physician, mv omEuSr’-JK £^dtenWld are ‘jr*anlzed and Carried on. ‘wo more runs on three hit* to
public
health
nurse,
member
of
the
I M4,
! memorial vesper servee for PlorIof course, for the purpose of making Pul
game In lhe bag. Lyons also
I vanAtw?
»nhhi^nfil turoS ence Nightingale held in the Holly- board of health, community chest are a glory unto_themselves.
profit*. Il used to be that a movten hit* but could not bunch
yon. we were all happily surprised .
nout ». was „ beautiful eve- director, and
superintendent of
Ing picture show manager. If he them enough to count. Next Bunschpols. The topic for discussion
i signed up with a producer was com-.V1** the locaU «° to Middleville
was, “How Can the Community
hirt hu*
wh,le unttortns’was the background
pelled to Cake pictures thal he did ‘ where they meet lhe fast team from
j had Just arrived In San Francisco I of lhc
whUe lwo
Provide Adequate Public Health
‘ not want. That was also true of ‘hat town, who have only met one
■ groups of nurses In their sulking Service? - Needless to say, many
county fairs. But that situation has ■el-brak so far this season.
points
of
view
were
presented.
The
i
Hiutlntrv
---- ball
land colorful blue and red caps were
Hustings hat
has aa Fa«t
fast atarw-*
stepping
i been greatly improved with fairs as
seated on each side of the orchesUa superintendent of schools, A. R.
club clouting the ball at a 310 clip
ill has with movies.
In front and below the stage. Il was Cliffton, of the Los Angeles schools,
The fair management alms to re­ this season, two of the players are
an Impressive sight. Dean Good- staled that, “nothing was more im­
(Continued from page one)
move as far as possible all objec- hilling way over four hundred and
the
teaching of!
। rich gave a short talk on the Flor- portant than
better man
than inrw
three
lionsto
totne
the miaway
midwaytnu
thisyear.
year.Tney
They four others are ociicr
living tAr^hnni
1------------------------------------------------------------ I uon*
tn i/hnnl ,-HllrtrAn
| ence Nightingale Foundation which liAalfHflll 11 vine J?
W?hi falr we are 8Ure 11 wll! **
»wve therefore contracted with the hundred. Below are the average* to
Is International In its scope. I not even cnuructer cuucaura. me
*1 -vwa.tjJ*".a.. '"r'a^n, Visual OUUWl,
WHO
Show,. mt.,
Uc.-ho
_
haven't seen her to really talk to point that a nurse—health counsel-1 held •
Maurice Foreman, I wil) furnish all the rides and shows
B. O’Donnell ..
....470
ora in
In our case—should have a deep
daen
'
her since commencement and Just ors
Secretary. I at this year's Barry county fair.
L. Young ..........
...435
the sound of her voice brought an understanding and a sympathy
The Hastings fair management There will be new rides and differ-L J. Miller
...389
uncomfortable lump to my throat. based upon knowledge as an essen­ wisely connected with the Southern ent shows, and fair patrons will
D. Irwin .s........
...357
appreciate
something
new J W. James .....
Just as every person has an Ideal I tial requirement was stressed by all Michigan Pair and Race Circuit, of surely
’
'**"
“
“
...333
suppose she personifies, more than members of the panel. I am inade­ which ex-governor. Fred W. Green. and the better class of entertain­
W. Hackney ...
...300
any other Individual, all that I quate in trying to tell you lhe val­ Ionia, is the president. Harry B. ment. The Gooding Company an­
V. Covllle ..........
....290
ues gained from such a meeting,
might hope to be.
C. O'Donnell ...
...260
but many ideas, some old and aome Kelley of Hillsdale, secretary of the nounces that It Is their whole de- 1
“The movie "The While Angel." new, were discussed with a co-oper­ Hillsdale fair and director of the sire, to furnish clean, wholesome I S. Moore
the stiry of lhe life of Florence
V. Varney
Michigan state fair, is the secre­ amusement. They announce that'
.200
ative
Interest
representing
lhe
whole
CONSISTENT SAVINGS
Nightingale was released to cele­
P.
Freeman
...
there
will
be
no
objectionable
fea-1
..200
tary.
The
circuit
will
open
at
Itha
­
community. There must be a chaibrate the biennial meeting in Los
E. Hoevenalr ...
.185
ca this year, going from there to tures brought to the Barry county j
EVERY DAY IN THE
Angeles. At the close ot lhe vesper Ji lenge in all professions but It does Ionia. Marshall. Jackson. Hasl'ngs fair by that company. There will
R.
Preston
....
.000
! seem to me that ours .is the great­
I service Kay Francis, who lakes lhe
.310
Hartford. Centerville, Hillsdale and be the usual games, where mer- I Team average ..
YEAR FOR FAMILY
chandise Is offered, but they will be |
lead In
appeared u.
In .n.
lhe I
... the play .PP-™
Fowlerville.
•
8OFTBALL'SCHEDULE?
FOOD BUYERS!
plelely dependent upoh Die health
Hastings Is very fortunately situ­ carried on in a way that will give
Monday. July 20.—Bliss Foundry
the patrons a chance on their In- I
ated In this circuit and there will
vestment.
TOfuuoot. Naturally
nnnnux they
M.cx would
WUU.U not
nuv Ii *•Grocery; Hl-way vs.
pledge, it was very beautiful. I heslfata
aau Kaz.ai.va I, mlnh. Ka In !
All Ol tillS *11(1 I hBVen I mCIl- undoubtedly be a larger number of
.
dEthsYf’.hrtltolH S filii* t,oncd lhe clUnale or tt»e sunshine, race horses at Hastings this year conduct thal kind ot a business at, p~J®n .RlnK- .
! Tuesday. July 21.—Hlrsch Bro*, vs.
but / J JSi Si?
“ waa
01 cour“*»« than at any other of the fairs a loss
Taking
the
f.l,
a*
a
whole.
It
1*
|
Machlne ” N“
but 1 was more deeply moved by
fOr lhe unbelievably beau- In the circuit, not excepting lhe one
i thal Sunday evening vesper service 7^.,
f
unoenevamy jxau
at Ionia.
thel? MdiiblUon1 thl*°vear as ram*
Thursday. July 23—Triangles v«.
! wifHjJaw’the1 nrendthrraXvra*inhan'
”Our P*1 dlverslan 111 ‘he evening
The state of Michigan has taken
n« iwvlhe Orand Canyon In all and at dlnner (We
at cocoanut
steps to encourage the breeding of
llu 8*or&gt;’
Grove.
Brown
Derby,
different pacers and trotters tn this state,
I "The convention week began Mon- places) was watching for movie and will assist our fair with purses
?hlln
I day. some of the meetings seemed to i stars- queer the fascination that for that purpose. The purse for pwpl. .ho »re'well know, ud
htahlv esteemed In this enuntv nnt I cnUle V’’ Cnaln Oang'
'
I—
be ----more valuable
than -------others.•You
thing
for Mic
lhe iuiub
vlsltoh. iI "the
trot bi
and
the carry
Barry highly esteemed In this county, not ,
----- - — --------- - sort of M
imi* ihas
&gt;n iui
m«c mvv
&gt;u pace” at me
Team Standing*.
,. with an men who want to encourge any- j
see. this meeting was the combined one could gel
get varied Impressions of
of county fair will be 1300.
Below yare the
standings of lhe
meeting of the national organiza- Hollywood however, according to' additional stake of the entrance “
•«** that »
™ -----------thing
Is *&gt;ui
not iur
for uic
the p«n&gt;»c
public '
._d
- ------------------------lQ an{|
Uon
Health
what
one see*—I saw Ullt
one sign Klivas
across fees, and the state of Michigan will *&lt;»&lt;&gt;• Th* ralr will be better than ,
?.p
---- - of
.
-Public
--- -----------Nursing.
------... I nllu
, yut
pay one-half
one-half of
of the
amount pnld
paid ’I ever
ever Dil*
this year.
year.
.eluding Monday, July 14.
American Nurses Association; and the
he front of a beautiful building; pay
the amount
the National League of Nursing Ed-1 reading—"All or Any Parts of the by the society Itself, which will be i
Pct.
nnrior-r-■
ucatlon.
[Body Reduced”—"Written Guaran- *300. so that the pur*e will prob-I COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS , Hlrsch u
910
Feldpausch
9
750
“Ordinarily I am not entirely In ' tee."
ably pass the *500 mark, and will1
Hi-Way
9
750
draw some outstanding horses to
National Bank ... 7
036
this city.
Consumer* Power .. 7
583
The list of the colt* and their
Triangles 6
555
owners which will appear at the
Table Co 8
500
Barry county fair is as follows:
Bliss
Foundry
5
410
Pacers: Josedale Charm. J. H. Ad­
Bliss Machine .... 4
ams. Litchfield; Betty B.. L. K.
Chain Store
3
181
Bullen, Detroit; Miss Rose Guy. R.
Rogers Grocery ... 2 10
100
C. Dahllnger. Dearborn; Mary Rav­
Piston Ring
2
100
en. L. W. Dondlnean. Northville;:

BEST FIR EVER
07356702

ERYD

-IFYOU HAVE
HEARD THIS,BUT
C.THOMAS STORES
•EVERY DAY LOW
PRICES"SAVE
YOU MONEY

C.THOMASSTORES
‘IFPRK'

“"n&amp;S!

20c

MILK
FRANCO-AMERICAN

SPAGHETTIS 25c
PORK&amp;BEANS «=£ 23c
GRAPEFRUIT 2-25
Sauce

El
■h ■ Al ID BEST YET
■■■■■*

Hard Kan,a, wheat

LOW PRICE NOW

z72c

CHOP SUEY ( Vegetable )
FREE 10c Con CHOW MEIN
NOODLES — No. 2 ConCO

QOc

MUSHROOM CHOP SUEY 21?
FREE 10c Con CHOW MEIN
NOODLES — No. 2 CdnOO

OQc

1.5!,

17c

MISSION INN
HOLLYWOOD
TEA SIFTINGS

B?ud. 4 oz. can

CHERRIES kui«U&gt;,
FRUITS for SALAD
NUT MEATS Herve's
PINEAPPLE Mui Na.

July 21 - Tuesday all day!
DANCING (Martin’s Orchestra) GAMES

CHICKEN DINNER 5to8p.m

5c

WS. 12c

«

23c
Ib. 39c
Cans 1 6c

★ Don’t Miss These
DE AC », Early Jobs
• EAj * Sweat. Tea.

SUGAR WAFERS

«

CHILDREN

23c
25c
pkg 9c

Ib. I K

I **C

EDNA'S BEST
&amp; 23c
TRI POINT KS.“o,L
?i 27c
MIRACLE WHIP QusUty &amp; 37c

WESSON OIL
For Salad Making and Vegetable Cooking

QUART
A|-c
CAN ___ *»□

SPECIAL PRICES
This Week, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, July 16-17-18!
We have a Fine Stock of Used Cars that we must move
this week. Call and look over the following

spinach

SNOWDRIFT

1929 CHEVROLET COACH.

Tofaatoes

VEGETABLE SHORTENING

1928 CHEVROLET COUPE.

HUSKIES Wheat Flaky
PUFFED WHEAT
SHREDDEDWHEAT

FINE QUALITY

pkg.

pkg
pkg.

lie
10c
13c

LUX SOAP
3/BARS 20c
LUX FLAKES ™ 10c
SUNRAE BLEACH
FLY SWATTERS

14c
each 5c

itf... 22'

calnb'._.

58'

IT STATE STREET

1934 FORD V-8 DELUXE FORDOR

BOTTLE
22C
CERTO &amp;
SURE JELL
2 pkgs 25c
ENZ-THIRST
5c
LOZENGES WINTERGREEN “ 15c

KEN-L-RATION
’ QUALITY
DOG FOODS ....

O
O cons CO

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Prom all reports every one had a
wonderful time at the home coming ■
at the Moulton church over the week
end. On Saturday night Rev. Manker from Flint preached a very good ,
sermon to a large crowd of people. ।

LET ME SHOW YOU THE MOST
AMAZING PAINT IN THE WORLD
THIS NEW TWO-COAT SYSTEM

1935 FORD V-8 STD. COACH.

MAKES YOUR PAINT MONEY GO

1935 FORD V-8 FORDOR SEDAN.

TWICE AS FAR—I’LL PROVE IT!

1930 FORD MODEL A TUDOR.
1932’ FORD V-8 DELUXE FORDOR

1935 FORD V-8 COUPE.
1929 157" CHEVROLET TRUCK.

SEDAN.
1934 FORD V-8 STD. COACH.

1929 131" FORD STAKE TRUCK.

1934 FORD V-8 DELUXE COACH.

1932 157" FORD STAKE TRUCK.

These Cars and Trucks are all in Fine Condition, many
with low mileage. See us before you buy.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
PHONE 2121

automobile accident.
________________________
"I don’t see any sense in peopie wanting to see a radio broad­
cast. To me it Is like watching a
suit being made.’ —Lionel Barrymore.

SEDAN.

1928 PONTIAC COACH.
1929 PONTIAC FORDOR SEDAN.

C. THOMAS STORES
■MIR

33c

SOUTHWEST ’CARLTON.
July 9 Letter.
Mrs. Anna Buck. Esther and Ken­
. dall. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shriber
and Hazel and Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Barry and son attended lhe wed­
ding of Betty jean Donley to carl
Henry Patten of Hastings at Em­
manuel church Friday evening.
Visitors on Saturday al Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Culbert’s were Mrs. A.
M. Gates and daughter. Betty
Dawn, of Grand Rapids. Mr. and
Mrs. Sydney Gelb and Mrs. Freda
Klump of Caledonia.
,
Lawton Williams has been very 111
AM.
and Wri« with pleurisy the past week but Is
1a Httle better at tills writing.
ira at B OO
Mr. nn(1 Mrs. Edgar Cheney of
••nt. two.
Howell called on Mr. and Mrs.
Caryl Fuller Saturday.
17 wwa| Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shriber and
i children of Hastings and Robert
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Getman
of Battle Creek spent
SatJuly 9 Letter.
.j --------------------------------------------------------r —— —
*
Mr. and Mr*. Glen Biker of iwrla,,
urday vn.ttK
with Mr. and ,Mrs.
Frank
Jackson spent the 4th with her Shriber and family.
brother. Orville Bruce, and also enMrs. Arthur Yarger and children
Joyed a fishing trip.
| spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Fifield and Carl J^kson of near Clarksville,
their children and grandchildren ' o
An,‘a Buck and family .spent
had a family gathering al the home ?.un??y ,w 1 ’
and Mr,)- John
«
x.:-

SALAD DRESSING

PINT
pAc
CAN ... M

rAn.l &lt;KH.nl.aua
CORN

3Oc

Fairmeade Bettey, Charles Ellerbrook. Owosso; Hollyrood Thamas.
William
Hopkins.
Breckenridge:
I Hal Forbes. A. H. Rlnsel. Ithaca;
I Rudy Hollyrood. Fred 8. Park and
Doren, Kalamazoo; Single O.. Thur­
man Perry. Detroit: Brownie Spen­
cer. Ed. Randall. Litchfield; Jake
Mac Phee, Jack Richardson. Dear­
born; Billy Mac. Dr. R. W. Rich­
mond and Son. Fowlerville; Eddie
W.. Arthur
Sampson. Morenci;
Jody Signal. Armand R. Schiller.
Lansing; Miss Kilty Direct. Henry
Wittig. Wheeler; Pal C. Braden.
Leon Crampton. St. Johns; Peter
Todd, Ted O. Oosting, Muskegon; Srhadi

1/2 Ib

Ib.

'',dp*“'h "■ R0‘-

,SnX-

ST. ROSE FESTIVAL!

SUMMER VITALITY DRINK

FXESU. CRISP WATTLET8

PIMENTOS

25

ADULTS

ORIENTAL

SHOW-YOU SAUCE

up“‘U" h“hh

Hastings

FORD DEALERS

efore you buy any

B

paint... at any price ...
let me teii you about the new
Devoe House-Paint System
which is turning tradition up­
side down. Two coats do the
job of three.
Besides making your money
Ktwite as far, you get a much budget plan, too, that lets you
ter-looking job. The white proceed with necessary pant­
is actually whiter than snow.
ing without immediate cash...
Tint* are truer, more brilliant and with monthly payments as
than anything you’ve seen.
low as 85.75 for the average
I’ve got an interesting new house.

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Sood, Ddlwrad

Th. REXALL Stor.

Phon. 2131

�TtfB KA8WNG8 BANNER. THURSDAY, JULY 14. I4M

Social Events and Personal Mention

CIVIC PLAYERS TO
I
moon-rruck.
PICNIC THIS ARERNOON clue*'Bun^XtSSrSi,'1^

villa Sunday.

• Wa don't know where wa’rt go- at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
ing but we're on our way." This I Bruce of Nashville, when their Etta Thomas of Assyria called oa
familiar catch phrase will be on lhe I daughter. Emma Jane, became the Mr. and Mrs. Prank Hawbllt* Bun­
Ups al Hasting* Civic Players mem- I bride of Carroll Richard Moon, son day.
ben aa they (tart on their "Mystery of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Moon of BellePlcnlc” this afternoon at 4:30 vue. The single ring service was
o’clock, for. although definite plans read by the Rev. M. E. Hoyt of and Mrs WU1 Nash near Marshall.
tor this summer outing have been | Nashville in the presence of about
Earl Marshall of Marshall visit­
ready for some time, the place has. forty gueits.
ed his mother. Mrs. Freda Marshall
been kept secret and only Director i The couple were attended by Mtas Uro Fourth.
L. E Barnett and a few of his as- Wanda Bruce, sister of lhe bride,
Mr. and Mn. Floyd Seeley of
slstanta know the destination. Au- and Gerald Shoupe. The bride was Pittsburgh, pa , Mr. and'Mrs. Victor
tomobiles will pick up tiro trail on gowned in blue organza and wore a Jones of Nashville and Mn. Alan
M-43 near lhe Fish Hatchery and shoulder corsage of pink roees. Her Spinney apd children of Flint were
from there follow signs to the re-1 attendant wore pink organza.
guests Thursday evening of Mr.
sort ground. K will not be a long
The house was prettily decorated and Mrs. Frank Hawblitz
trip and will be over Improved road I with lilies, summer snowballs, red
all of lhe way, according to Mr. Bar- roses and asparagus fem.
WEST ORANGEVILLE
nett.
'
Out of town guests at the wedding
AND EAST OUN MARSH.
In keeping with the spirit of the . were: Mr. and Mrs. Ben Moon and
Mrs. 8. A. McCofferty and Mia
plane, a mystery program haa been son, Kenneth. .Mrs. Juanita Camp Helen Lowery have gone
s
to Mcarranged, details of which are be- , and Olen Smith of Bellevue; Chas. Guffy and Columbus
•-—*-..
Grove, O,
ing kept
Vumt secret. Director
nircptAr Barnett.
Womptt !. Templar
Tumnl*. of Detroit; Clifford Bab- for a two weeks
----- ■ ■’visit.
.1,
however, has admitted that it will cock, Mrs. June Woodward. Mrs.
Merritt Crane of Denver arrived
be staged by five visiting aquatic i Florence Welch. Ben Farnham; Mr. I Sunday for a week's visit with his
stars who will put on some enter- nnd Mrs. Clarence Moon and two. mother. Mary Crans. of Orangeville,
tainlng stunts.
I children. Mr
and Mrs. Harold
Mrs. Kate Rausboltom has been on
The motor caravan to the picnic Is I Kaufman and son. Mr. and Mrs. I the sick list the post week but ta
.f.rl a,
J-313 1 o,’clock
«.|M aal
Au.­.ar.Lyle
. . I Stroup, Mira
■ - Alice
——
scheduled to start
al 4:30
Tale, and—i some better.
though the trail will be marked so Mr. Wendell Brady, all of Battle
Br
George Bradshaw.
Sr., figured in
plainly that individual drivers start­ Creek. Mr and Mrs. Ray Lumbert an automobile accident dun to the
ing after tills hour should have no and children of Sunfield. Waitace heat but was not Injured seriously.
difficulty finding the way. Mr. Bar­ Scobey of Indiana and Mr. and Fortunately he was driving alone.
nett says.
■
Mrs. Donald Douglas of HMtings.
Mary Crans and son Merritt of
Mr. and Mrs. Moon will reside at Orangeville. Mr. and Mrs. Chariest
Grosenberg of Martin spent Bun­
ENJOYED HIS 82ND BIRTHDAY. Bellevue.
day with Mr. and Mrs. Will Crans
Wednesday of last week. Oscar
MISCYLI-ANEOUS SHOWER.
,and family at Caledonia.
Crook of this city passed hta 83nd
A delightful party and miscellan­
birthday. Hta son Don. of Vicks­
burg. and tha tatter's family were eous shower was given on Wednes­
SOUTH BOWNE.
guests for the day. The family en­ day evening, July 8 al the farm
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Richardson
and Mrs. Russell.
joyed a fine Ume together.
. home of Mr
and son Verc of Six Lakes visited
Mr. crook was appointed, by Presi­ Johncock of Cloverdale, in honor of | hta brother, Arthur Richardson, and
lhe recent marriage of their niece,
"'T
dent Arthur to a railway mail clerk­ Mrs.
James Green (Eleanor Hay-1 family Sunday ‘
,5?
1 million cubic f
ship. He served for 38 years on one
of the hardest routes in this coun­ wardi of Lowell. This was given by
lhe aunt* of Mrs. Green with Mrs i
try—from Chicago to Detroit, re­ johncock
a* hostess.
ond one U now
drl,ledtiring on hta sevenljeth birthday.
Bingo was played, after which
.................... * * *
He had Uie reputation of being one
tend Keith
Johncock
- ■
■ r-4- lt* ■
—J
of the most faithful and efficient Norman

MYs. Robert Sherwood and Miss
1„
....
. 4. Baird vert In
Mr. and .Mn.
T.
u a guest hta' aunt, Mrs. Nell Croy, Mary jean Chapman have returned Detroit on business Monday?
to their home In Hyde Park. III.,,.&gt; Albert H. Carveth was In Grand
G
of Angela. Ind.
‘---------------------Rapids
Wednesday on •business.
Mrs. A- J. Vedder and Mrs. Floyd after a visit with Mrs. Mina Scott. -------1-2 c chopped nut meats.
Mrs. Lena Havens has returnedi
Mtas Anna Johnson* left Friday
Gaskill were in Chicago from B«l*
1-2 c pitted dates.
urday HU Tuesday where they visit­ to her home in Hastings after' for St. Joseph, Mich., for a month’s
3 1-2 c graham cradur crumbs.
•
ed with tiielr stater. Mrs. Ed. Kropp. 1I spending several months tn Detroit. visit.
Cut marshmallows in quarters
I
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harry
pierce
left
Mr.
and
MYs.
Roy
Hubbard
left
of Ft. Smith. Arkansas, who wail
Sunday
on
a
western
trip
of
a
Tuesday for a few days' outing at
attending the furniture marl with
sweetened condensed milk, chopped
Mr. Kropp. On Monday the ladies I month’s duration. They will go di­ Grand take, near Alpena.
nut meats, chopped dates and ’
Mrs. Ed. Story pleasantly enter­
spent the day with relatives in Ra-1 reel to Vancouver. B. C-. and on lhe
cracker crumbs. Blend thoroughly.
return trip will stop at Seattle, tained the J. F. F. club at her Gun
cine, Wl*.
Form into a roll ar loaf about six
Portland. San Francisco, Los An­ take cottage last Wednesday.
Mrs. Charles James was called to geles, salt Lake City and Denver.
inches long and three Inches in di­
Mr. and Mrs. Nils olson of Has­
Southern Kansas Wednesday by the
ameter. Wrap in waxed paper. Chill
Sam Amer of Hostings, Dr. B. C. tings were recent visitors at the
serious Illness of her mother, Mrs. Swift and Tom Berry of Middleville
in refrigerator 12 hours or longer.
Moody Bible Institute. Chicago.
j. c. Gray.
|
Mrs.
Forrest
Woodin
and
daugh
­
attended last week Uro second an­
nlshed with whipped cream. (Loaf
Mrs. H. A. Adrounle and son. nual fish dinner al South Haven ter of Belmont are spending a few
will
keep moist for several days.)
Harry, and daughter. Zabelle. left sponsored by Pomona lodge. Knights days with her mother. Mrs. Newton
Serves 10.
Tuesday morning on a week’s busi­ of Pythias. Mr. Berry won first place Venner.
ness and pleasure trip to Chicago, tn the golf tournament played at
Mr. and Mrs. James w Radford
BREAD CRUMB PANCAKES.
Milwaukee and champaign. They the South Haven Country club.
,, spent the week end with friends orr
1 1-3 c flour.
were accompanied by Mrs. E. H.
Visitors at the home of 8. P. Shu-._____________
the Pere Marquette river near Lud1 c dried bread crumbs:5
Waring, who will visit her parents man 8u*day were Mrs. p. L. Cjro- ington.
in Chicago.
penter
and
daughter.
Mary
——*------ •*•••
“u'“ "
— Ellen, of
Otto Rambach, of Buffalo, ta
1 t sugar.
Mtas Frances Conklin ta In Bay Pigeon. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bene­ visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rehor
3 c sour milk.
View attending a summer school dict of Rutland. Mr. and Mrs. Hask­ and renewing old acquaintances in
ins. daughter and son and Mr. and the city.
session.
&gt;
,
j 1 T melted shortening.
Charles Finstrom and family re­
Mrs. Ida Ruth spent the past week Mrs. Wesley Benedict of Lansing
Heat milk and soak crumbs In It
with her granddaughter and hus­ and Mr. and Mrs. George Shermanflumed Sunday from a week’s trip
15 minutes before mixing. Mix and
band. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hughes at and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sherman of. visiting friends in Kansas City and
sift dry ingredients. Add milk and
Grand
Rapids.
Chicago.
Augusta.
bread crumb mixture slowly, then
Mrs. Phil M. Granger was host- ’
w. H. Schantz left Tuesday for
beaten egg. Beat until smooth
Mrs. J. 8 Petter of South Bend. ess Monday u&gt; a group of friends Cleveland, where he will represent
(about 1 minute). Add melted short­
Ind., came Friday for a visit with
from Hastings who drove over for Uro local Townsend club at the naening. beat 1 minute and cook.
her daughter,
Mrs. Arthur A. a Bohemian luncheon and a wel-: tlonal meeting
Makes 36 cakes.
Reasoner.
come to Mrs. Granger after her ■ Mtas Julia Rock returned Monday
Mira Martha Bennett of Evanston prolonged stay In Florida and New j from Jackson, where she attended
has been tiro guest of Mrs. R. A. York. Those present were Mes- I the wedding of her niece, Mtas Mary
FRUIT DROP BISCUITS.
Groos at her Gun take cottage for dames C- W- Ctarkc, W- R. Cook. G. Edger, on Sunday.
3 c flour.
several days.
F. Chidester, Roy Cordes, and W.
jack Lewis of Mansfield. Ohio, re­
Rev. and Mrs. C- M Conklin left
N. Chidester of Hastings. Mrs., turfted to his home Sunday after a
2 1-2 t double acUon
baking
Monday for Copemish on a vaca­ Phyllis Reynolds of Ann Arbor, and week’s vtalt with hta grandpanmts.
powder.
tion trip, returning to Hastings I Mrs. O. C. Wilson of Los Angclejj.' Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lewis.
2-3 c milk.
about August 1.
■ Cal.—Charlotte Republican-Tribute. I Mr. and. Mrs, B. J. McMurray and
4 T butter or other shortening.
Mr. and Mrs. O- C. Witaon of Los
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Fuller of I »on. Samuel, returned Friday to
1 c apple, pared, cored and finely
Angelas, who are visiting Mlu Jean Owosso spent the week end with their home In Toledo after a visit clerks In the service. He and his
chopped.
Bsmei, spent a few days In Chicago her parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. | with Mrs. Ellen McMurray.
son Guy enjoy their home together.
presented IVto their cousin. Eleanor.!
1 1-2 t grated orange rind.
with friends and relatives.
Houvener. Robert Fuller, who hoe |
Mrs. Charles Barnes and Mtas He takes a keen interest in what is
Guests u^re: Mr. and Mrs. James I
1-2 c raisins, finely chopped.
Miss Marta Neuschaefer. one of been spending a week with hta Doris Gamble spent the week end going on In the world. He hu the
VEGETABLES FOR
Sift flour once, measure, add
~ HEALTH.
'
lhe health counselors al lhe Barry grandparents, returned with them. , at Ludington the guests of Mrs. consolation of having rendered fine Green of Lowell. Mr. and Mrs. BaEat more vegetables, health ex- |baking powder, sugar and salt, and
County Health Unit, Is visiting rela­
all L. Hayward and Cleone of Alto.
service
to
hta
country
and
to
society
,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Wesptnter
and
1
names
’
brother.
Fred
Becker,
and
_____ _______
oy
।
again. Cut in shortening. Add
tives in Denver during lhe month Mr. and Mr. and ___________
by ni.
hta numy
many yc«.
years wv«
work N
u railway! IMr. and MIX Ruraell Boulter and pert* tall ua. ll'a difficult, some- sift
Mrs. Kim Sigler I family,
limes, to feed your family more ।milk all at once and stir carefully
of July.
Mrs. --------Nettle ~
Hyde
attended
were in Grand Haven Monday., -----•
- • the mall clerk. He has always been •!
Mrs. Ralph Hannan and son of where Mr. Wesplnter
Clarence cappon and children. Mr. vegetables, if Johnnie doesn't like ।until all flour Is dampened Add re­
tar and
school
Prairieville
Sunand Mr.
Mr. SigSig-I-------- - reunion al r
..*,,K,„K; „
u„- ' good citizen and a good neighbor.
A*tw Warner of Hastings. becta. Marie doesn't cal spinach and ।maining Ingredients and atlr vig­
Boston and Mrs. G. A. Zuldema of ler attended a president and secre- I day. Her son and wife. Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Lew
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Van Vranken of somebody else haa a grudge against ।orously until mixture forma a soft
Grand Rapids are here for a three tary’s meeting of the Rotary Cluba ; Rankin Hyde, vtaited her Friday
HOUVENER REUNION HELD
weeks' visit with their mother, Mrs. ,of the 35th district.
West Baltimore. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. carrot*.
।dough that clings to aides of bowl.
I night.
AT CROOKED LAKE. Hayward. Jr., and sons. Mr. and
There’s a way out. Lota of people ;Drop from teaspoon on ungreased
Agnes Fisher.
Rev. E. B. Griffen. D. D.. was in I Mrs. John Helrigel. Mrs. Frahk
About
65
persons
were
guests
of
Mr*. Will Hayward. Sr.. Will John- . dislike certain vegetables, but every- 1baking sheet. Bake tn a hot oven.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Fox
Charlotte Sunday to fly the pulpit I Slocum. Mrs. Cora Emerson and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Appledoorn. at cock. Myron johncock. Mr. and Mr*. I one likes vegetable soups which con(450 degrees F.) for 12 minutes.
nn Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Jesse of the United Brethren church of ; Mrs. John Houvener and son. Edgar,
Kenyon of Hickory comers and Mr. which denomination he ha* been | attended the funeral of a relative at their cottage Crooked take. Delton, Maurice Johncock and Mrs. James; tain a heterogenous assortment. ;Makes 18 biscuits.
for the annual Houvener reunion. Collins of Delton.
Use canned mixed vegetables which
nnd Mrs. Edward Holley and son presiding elder 2b years. He ta also I Bellaire Friday,
July 4th. Features of the day be­
————• &gt;■»
—
। blend delightfully the very best of EVAPORATED MILK
of Kalamazoo.
president of lhe board of trustee* ।
Mr. and Mrs Alonzo Trim enter-------------- ----------------------------many vegetables.
Mrs. James Radford. Mrs. A- E of the old ladies’ home in Charlotte, tained Lewis Schulde. Mr. and Mrs. sides bathing, boating and picnic CELEBRATED
BOTH BIRTHDAY.
MAYONNAISE.
dinner in the grov.-. were a song
Johnson. Mrs. l. E. Barnett. Mrs.
Mrs. Emma E. Bush celebrated
1-2 t mustard.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Sisson and | Earl Schulde and daughter, Normn. by Paddy Lou Houvener. and an
FROZEN FRUIT SUPREME.
Edward Goodyear and Mrs. W. M
I t salt.
daughter. Janet, of Kalamazoo were ( and son. Roam of NashvHle over interesting talk on Hawaii by Mrs. her 80th birthday |ast Friday. She
1-2 c pears.
Stebbins were luncheon guests of Sunday
-- ----------------- of Mrs Miranda QI.
wrck en()
enjoyed visits from her children,
1
t
powdered
sugar.
guests
Sis­
1-2 c peaches.
Isaac Houvener. Hastings, recently grandchildren and one great-grand­
Mrs. R. a. Groos at Gun take on son and Mrs. Ida Palmatler. Mrs.
Esther and Lucille Monica, ac­ returned from Honolulu. •
1-2 c preserved figs.
Friday.
son from Detroit and was pleas­
Sisson accompanied them home for
1-2 c shredded pineapple.
A short memorial service was held antly remembered with gifts, flow­
Mr. and Mrs. Mallory Cassidy of a few days. Andrew Houfstalter of com pan tad by their sister. Mrs.
ted milk.
1-4 c blanched and shredded al­
Grand Rapids have been making Rutland was also a Sunday visitor- Date Bassett ot Grand Rapids are for departed members. Mrs. John ers and cards.
/
on
a
camping
trip
to
Ottawa
Beach
monds.
Houvener
Augusta
was
re-elected
their headquarters at the C. W
Miss Allecn Iscnhath. who has and Holland park.
1 c whipping cream.
president
and
John
Houvener,
Has
­
Clarke home during these staling been visiting her aunt, Mrs. Wm.
INK.
2
T
lemon
Juice.
Miss
Virginia
Logan,
who
has
1 c mayonnaise.
tings, treasurer.
days, finding the air a bit cooler Canwcll. in Detroit, accepted a posi­
July 9 Letter.
Mix dry ingredients, add milk and
Drain fruit and cut in small
here. Mr. Cassidy drives down tion as stenographer with the Con- been visiting her brother and his
mix thoroughly. Add oil drop by
wife, Mr. nnd Mrs. Harold Logan,
Whip cream and blend with
-.Y .ii
nights.
MARRIED IN JACKSON.
Lester Hawks Friday evening was pieces.
ncctlcut General Life Insurance
mayonnaise. Combine all ingredlnii
Mr. nnd Mrs. C- W- Clarke and Company in the National Bunk for a week, returned Saturday to
A wedding of Interest to Hastings quite a success. About $36 was tak- l*nu *nd Iron. In nlnrnu. lr.y. I
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Huffman of building, Detroit, and is very happy her home in Nite*.
people occurred In Jackson Sunday
cut In Affur,. *na Km on boa of I”11*? "*' ”*»* *oa .««—*.
Mrs.
John
Dawson
left
Saturday,
Eslie
Adams
and
01,1
*
n
“
l
uare8
and
*
rve
on
°'l.na
Grand Rapids are enjoying a motor in her new work.
i morning at 10 o'clock, when Miss
i attended a re- leUuoe wlU1
Serves 10 and temon Jutce
for Wolf lake. Lake county, for a&lt;[Wary Edger, youngest daughter of
trip through the Georgian Bay dis­
Mrs Sarah Ostroth u&lt;. tcruucu a rc— .
-■
Mr. and Mrs. A. L Beramcr left
trict and expect to stop al Callan- last week on a trip to Niagara Falls ten-day vacation. She is accom-i। Mrs. Ernest Edger, was united In
viuuon.;
d.lUhUu, artdar. Ont., to sec lhe Dionne quin- and on up into Canada by way of panted by her stater, Mrs. Edna Fitz­ ! marriage to Wm. A. Cook of Jack­
gibbons of Grand Rapids.
Mr and Mrs Ed Grrrn ot Sun- '
'''murrr'Hdiflwrn^'^'rulU
luplcts.
son.
The
ceremony
was
"performed
Sault Sle. Marie, where they picked
Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Carveth by Rev. Griffith of the First Pres- ar1in''s1„“d.t‘r ,n‘1
SS ?u™
pXTo, SEl
Dr. and Mrs. Robert B Harkness up their daughter. Miss Charlotte,
left Tuesday for Milwaukee and who had been visiting friends there. and their grandson. Albert Carveth 1 byterian church in the presence of
Junior cuniUld and I boy Irtend ^d'ikS 'bX'naa'"^^^^^
Houghton. Mrs. Harkness to remain They were accompanied by Mr. and Hodgson, who has been visiting ! relatives and immediate friends.
them,
leave
this
morning
for
or
Bal'd.
crr«b
ar.
spendln,
lomaa^.rX^
in Houghton for a month as the Mrs. Ed. johncock.
■ Tile bride was attended by her stathe Hodgson home at Charleston. ! ter. Marceline of Albion, and the Ume with Ma frandparanu. Mr. and
? ill
guest of her stater. Dr. Harkness will
Jotjn Dooley of Kalamazoo was
'
also attend an American Legion calling on old friends in the city
■ best man was Clayton Smith of Mr*, rrrt Reid.
Mp Cora Emerson of Sturgis Is Jackson. The young people are enmay
ns “
desired.
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Bald', child- m
” be used “
“
meeting at Escanaba.
last week. Over 20 years ago he left
Mr and Mrs. w. L- Bhulters and Hastings to accept a position In Kal­ spending the week with her stater I Joying a short honeymoon in the dren and their families numbering
SPANISH SANDWICHES.
grandson. Gordon Clement, re­ amazoo with the standard OU Co. and mother. Mrs. John Houvener northern part of the state.
around 37. gathered at their home
1 small onion, chopped.
turned Sunday from a three weeks' The best evidence lhat he has made and Mrs. Frank Slocum. Robert and
the Fourth.
1 green pepper, chopped.
trip Uirough the Upper Peninsula. good ta lhe fact that he is still as­ Raymond Helrigel of Lake City are
Mr. and Mrs. Worth Green and
NIGHT HAWKS PICNIC.
1 c grated cheese.
also guests.
They visited all points of interest, sociated with the Company.
Mrs.
Freda
Marshall
were
visitors
•
Members
of
the
Night
Hawks
1
Sall.
Mr. and Mrs. A. W- Plumley of
including Copper Harbor, the most
r.,..».uu. were
.... called nwu
u,
....
1
Cl*
and
tuesta.
numberin,
30.
enEmerson. Lewis and Isaac Edger Plymouth
here by the |
9 ripe olives, chopped.
northern point in Michigan.
Barryville
Sunday.
and families, also Mr. and Mrs. Her- ।I Ilina** ol c. R Plumley Merwyn
their annual picnic al VlobI sour pickle, chopped.
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Hawblitz ac­
bert Blivtn and daughter. AgnesJ Plumley, who alio waa vunlni here. |
•, Undlnd. clear lake. July 13. A
Mayonnaise dressing
and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Tdgcr of returned to hl* home tn Detroit, P01 luck luncheon wa* served at 1 companied Mr. and Mrs. Amos
Combine onion, pepper, olives.
Battle Creek held, a picnic at Clear with them.
o clock A buslneia meellnk waa held
take Sunday honoring their guest.
Mr. and Mr* charle* woodruff. at 3 o'clock, seb* Hillman beln,
Emerson Bowlus, of San Lula, Obis­ Mr*. Ella inkram. Mr*. Olen In- :
anj Menarel
po. CaL who ta the son of Mn. Lu­ (tram and daushter, Martha, and Palmer, corretpondent tor the comNOONDAY LUNCHES
lu Edger Bowlus.
Mr* Grace Benham *penl Sunday , ln‘ 3»*r The remainder ol the alt11:30 A. M. »o 2 F. M.
Mr. and Mrs. Orllc Bishop of wlll. Mia* Beatrice Benham at the ’ '™“" »«* "P?nl ■" balhlnd. rowlni
Holland and Mr. and Mrs. Horace aanalorlum In Howell.
.
bln&lt;« Th' openin, party ot
DINNERS
1 the season will be held at Minnie
Bishop returned Monday night from
5:30 to 7:30 F. M.
j Meyers’ home In October.
Kittery Point. Maine, where they
have been visiting Mr. and Mrs.
HONORED MISS CARPENTER. ,
------------------ - ----------------------SUNDAY DINNERS
Clarence Woodward (Helen Bishop).
Mira Mary Ellen and Mtas Janet1
MISCELLANEOUS SIiO\VERMr. Woodward is stationed nt the Smith entertained al a mtacellan- ‘ **'~
12:30 to 2:30 F. M.
Miss Rexine Downing entertained
r-'.rr'.r'r
government naval yard there and
cous
shower
Thursday
evening
of
■
al
a
miscellaneous shower Thurs6 to 7:30 F. M.
the Bishop parly had lhe privilege• last week al tho homo of Fred Lin- i day afternoon of last week In honor
of attending the launching of one
.Dlngtnn In honor of Mtas Beatrice । of Mrs. RobertUnidy. Uegn.JDeof Undo Sam’s latest modet aub- . Carpenter of Sebcwing. who will be. Vries) of Kalamazoo, a recent bride.
FRIDAY, JULY 17
SATURDAY, JULY If
marines:
married soon to Muri Foreman.' The guests included besides Mrs.
Fifteen gufista were present. The । Brady, lhe Misses Frances and Isaevening was spent playing games । bel Sage. Leone and F.llcn Leonard,
after
which refreshments were Irene joncs, Irma Waters and Betserved.
। ty 8igi«r.

smart tailored wash

cords, small checks and
linens.

STRAWS

Helpful Sulgestwns

uw

Straw

hats an cool I

comfortable to wear, light

Nunn Bush while shew
add the touch of bettu
dressed as well aa shoe
fort and tasting quaiUy.

•5

T.S.B
Phono 2396

1

SPECIAL

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Telephone 2634 for Appointments

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BEND ATTACHED COUPON FOB FXEE BOOKLET

Correct Replacements for
broken glasses any time

La MAR BEAUTY ACADEMY

BESSMER
Jewelry Store
Optometrist

box 11 Vic

HASTINGS. MlomOAN

5gS„ S

COFFEE, Monarch Finer Foods Ib. 26c

. TEA RUSK

Far Complete Examination
and Satisfactory Fitting

bottle 17c

PORK AND BEANS £.‘cX“3 for 25c
WHEATIES

SALAD DRESSING, A. G.

OPTICAL DEPflRTmenT

WHY

2 doz. 7c

FRUIT PECTIN

2 for 19c

Light House CLEANSER

BIRD SEED, French's

6 cans 19c
2 for 23c

Meat Special*

REALISTIC
Permanent Wave Sci­
entists have climaxed
thousands of chemical
tests to produce this
Charming Wave to sell
at a price every woman
and child can afford.
They are admired
• by everyone.

50

GAtaiX-

BEEF ROASTS, Chicago Beef, Ib. 18c
BACON
&gt;/2 Ib. sliced 18c
LARD, BEST PURE
2 Ibi. 27c

HINMAN’S
PHONI 2491

Hastings

Michigan

RIJUVt- — —
NATINC
/
FACIAL— &gt; W

Hollywoo
MAxoAzrr
114 WI4T 4TAM W

not a

Naw

�=:
DURANCE

$

THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1B38

■I COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

. AUTO

ttru
JAMON R. McELWAIN

FAIR LARK.
July 9 Letter.

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

FIRE 11

NT A------------WORD. KO
Eh-------------—-ADVZR-1

l”'’ " ...li. t

Nell Welcber and wife of Battle
Creek and Med* Spaw and David
COOK BROS.. Editors.
of Locksharc farm spent July 4th
EIGHTY FIE8T TEAR
al Chas. Lechleiuwr'a.
Mrs Florence Van Hora and
daughter of Jackson spent the week
end with her parents. Mr. and Mra.
COUNCIL PROCBBDINOS
Porter Knowles.
Mn. Earl Prill and children left
Monday Tor a auto trip to AltaIN BARRY COUNTY. SIX MONTHS. «Oe.
। mont, Ill.
I Ned Lancaster and family of Has- IN HARRY COUNTY. THREE MONTHS.
IN ADVANCE
—lit
OUTSIDE HARRY COUNTY. ONE YEAH
IN ADVANCE -------------------------- 81.30
FOREIGN 8UHRCHIPT1ON8. ONE YEAR
at Fair
IN ADVANCE
c’lZk’p’ i**ke at a picnic dinner.
ADVERTISING
Guests July 4 al Chas. FUey'a
were Mrs. Lottie ColUsler. Iva and

presidios.
Pr...nt at roll call Aid. Haren Hooa

CHUBCH SERVICER

--------TIB EM ENT
FOR
OR LESS THAN 23c. —
—
EoiSir to rent
|t ruitar
for - aalr.
„
—
- -i

WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH.

Our Service
Adjust Fairly

I s

i Mil* Mat at Bart
I HOCHE FOR HEXT

.00 A

Pay Promptly

M

:/i

HsffWbawrr.

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

K

I 5.__________
HORSE FOR SALE ebrsp.
Phone 7X5—F15.

Sl«»»4

Mr. and Mn. Arthur CoUlster of eerUea.*
Battle Creek were visitors al their
brother's, Charles PUkptA.

7
A. C. Cli
7

~DUNHAM DISTRICT.

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

The Hastings Banner

A baby boy wm bom Wednes-

OFFICE

S.flO
105.07

BMHM I ft”

Mr. and Mrs. Orson McIntyre and
family attended the Hill reunion at

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHUBCH.
W. Maylaa Jones. Minister.
31 W. Walnut.
Phon.

•FUR HALE—A

FOR SALE—&lt;

CARDS of THANKS

IOS Bo. Church Be.

little Donald Rai

BRICK

Miss Beatrice Ball attended
ION I'KISTSU,
Club week al East Lensing last
week.
She was the sewing club
N_ Wa.hhurtnn Si. tram W. State to chainpion In third year work.
Mrs. Louise Marshall returned to
her home In Lansing Saturday, aft­
er visiting her niece, Mrs. Claud
and Mrs. Clem Kidder,. Mr. and Mrs.
Hoffman.
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Harding were Claud Hoffman and Mr. and Mrs.
H. Dibble 8&lt;
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pele Bert Harding.
Cummings.
Armede Kidder, who Ilves near
| Wednesday the following families
spent the day at I Ake Al-Oon-Quln, |Bellevue. Is visiting
- at the home ot
fishing: Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ball. Mr. . her uncle. Clem Kidder.

UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
IN CHBI8T.

OjiU
BalUmora Church.
supplies

Oaore* Gil.un

FOR SALE I
"Id. W. H.

CARD OF THANKS—I «|.b io thank

At Old Hastings Wool

Boot Plant Site.

Millar. Pierson" Rctek-

WALLACE GROCERY

In­

quire of Joo DeRuiter

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 2458
FREE DELIVERY
Highest Market Prices Paid for Cream. Poultry and Eggs

BAPTIST UHUBUH.
ADCOCK. Minister.

at Pickle Station

MEMQRIAM—Slsuff.r

In

"AKROH" MODERN
MECHANO-FOIM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR FLAY
Thia Smooth Rubber Back Pads

FOR SALE—1

GRANGE PROGRAMS

4 lbs.
NaVy Beans

2 pkgs.
Wheaties

19c

23c

Creamery
BUTTER

lk36c

__ No Ports To Wear Clothing____
GRANGE NOTICE.

24'/j lbs. LEADER FLOUR
TEA SIFTINGS, one pound for
3 cans Tall PORK AND BEANS
100 lbs. PURE CANE SUGAR

WASTED

OLD

COAT8 GROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST

__ P«rt
LOST

Brine oan table

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Padi
No Leg Straps

■ f FXufirill

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
if Micblren. th. Probit. Court fa
Count, of Birrv

The Prescription Drug Store
HASTINGS

.

■

■

.

.

MICIUOAN

Geeraateed Tran FlttJaf

Farmers, Attention!

PHONS 717—PJ.

EMMANUEL CHURCH IE
McNulty. B D.
Cantar 8t. T»L
sixth Sunday al
Ice 10:30 A M

whereas

2 cans
I

Resolution.

Siu. DSL
MONTE SlleM or
Crushed

BINDERS for Sale!
A. C. GATES
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST.
Cor. Church and Canter Sts.

1

W A Hch-d»-

n by nubllralin

GALE DOOLEY, Birmingham Iowa

VICTOR GASKETS
NEW AND USED AUTO
FARTS

FREE METHODIST CHURCH.
Colfax Strati

5 Ib. sack

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2637

Hostings

FAMOUS CURE

USE

PICNIC
HAM

Fruit Pectin

ROSEBUD Pastry

HIGHEST PRICES

FLOUR

Paid for Dead Stock
Your Dead Animals Are Worth
DOLLARS. To assure yourself
setting the BEST PRICES, call

Better Jell Bottle

SHANKLESS
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.

PILGRIM HOLINESS TANEBnAcLE. ' . „ Report
’
u. the
of
Re». T. n Hao.
at Hastings. Mlchtgaa. a
I the Commissioner af Ui
RESOURCES

MR. FLOYD DENNY.

Fruit Cans
1 QL Ball­
Mason, dot.Ow

FOR YOUR COOL DRINKS USE . . .
LEMON JUICE
15c
ORANGE JUICE, 15 ox. size
15c each
PINEAPPLE JUICE, IZ'/a ox. size
10c
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, No. 2 size can, 14c

I IMPLEMENT CO.

1,500 CHOICE
HEREFORD STEERS

69c
9c
25c
$5.25

1 Pt. Ball- E7»
Mason, dox. w I

SOW. THEREFORE

FOR ALL CARS

RAYBESTOS Brake Lining

3 pks. Can
RUBBERS

Pineapple

Phono fl2H6.

GOOD USED

tasted. In drouth at.rw,.

MUFFLERS

Hleh Nt.
E, m.h M

. Suuda
inn II.... n. „
illy Vacation Bible school

Condition of The Hastings City Bank

19e

23c Lb

Dollars CIS.

Phone Hastings 2539— We pay the

WB RUT AXD SELL REAL ESTATE

I7.uuo.no

phone charges!

CAR LOANS

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
BONDS
NOTARY PUBLICS

Electric Refrigeration
Air Conditioning

EMERSON ROYER

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
red lu Office
J Herurlllvs i

SALE

UTILITIES ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE

50.000 00

\

HASTINGS MARKETS

DRAIN—Notice by County Drain Cot
Bisaionsr o
termination.

LIABILITIES
I 75.000 00

H. E. Smith Hdwe.
COMMERCIAL DEPOSITS

NOW...BUILD
Remodel! Repair!

HI l o 1 | ,

• ITIF.s Foil MONEYSllOliltuWF.L
tad BUli Rediscounted .
A UtUe FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

THERE SA HOST

NONS
NONB

See us for all kinds of
Building Materials

STATE OF MICHIGAN. COUNTY OF BARRY. as.

GEO. M. NEWTON

ngs Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

Registered OPTOMETRIST and

SEE BETTER! '
119 W. STATE ST.
HASTINGS

Phone 2307

25.000 00
4.717.07
I 100 00

Phone 24S8 — Hastings

M VINUS

3921

Fidelity Corporation

Dollars ou.

WANTED

FOOD CENTER 2609

or phone and a representative will call

Room 10—2nd Floor, Hastings National Bank Bldg.

KELVINATOR

SEE

Drive away with the

If you cant come in, write

on you at your home.

35.0UO.OO

WE SERVICE ALL MAKES
DAY OR NIGHT

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
st FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET • Phons 2616

Loans are completed while you

Just bring your title : . . or, if your car is not

•^tnoney in your pocket.

SALES AND SERVICE

FOR

wail.

paid for, your payment book.

35.000.00

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

to drive to our door.
(630.330.13

A. D. 1936. .
to vreeent,

WAITI

The quickest way for a car owner to borrow money is

2HX.IOO.O3
(.450.00

willing to train

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

• Prices Rtaacnabla
Phone 3511
Haatings

YOU

WHILE

MEN WASTED. — Bsllable. fair
education. mechanically Inclined.

IN TODAYS ADS.

Halting.
Dlr scion

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1936

PO8TOFFICE PERSONNEL
&lt;
CHANGES. '
A number of changes have been J
made in the personnel of the Local ,
Br JANI CAMIRON
ThU Y««r Will Bring Grant ----- “*• Frederic
nytakClary
cur,hu
h. been
n___ _
. . Zn. &lt;,
appointed
substitute carrier and la i
■hi.iht.ujii —
___________________ __________
,T route, u j /«&lt;i**W«*B***&lt;«*«&gt;***«C&lt;&gt;
*" TniKVAVAWraWta
Improvements 1H
in Vfiat
That ------- 1 *now carrying Nay Bump's
Mr
Bump
hu
nor
tan
nU.
MorDM
ou Mura Ihu-Wom »0.Ward
new subsUtute
clerk
(vm. w
w WW0
300000
lamb,
from from
30.­
1I vol
andStamm
WLUardta a
Arnold
ta mvlng
u ™
.leer,
arcand
.hipped

FINE STREET WORK
FOR SECOND WARD

STATE’S COUNTY CLERKS
MAY MEET HERE IN 1938

Barry Bypaths

That Suggestion Was Made
at Recont Gathering
'»*■ * at Grayling
County Clerk Allan Hyde, who at­
tended lost week's gathering of

sMdf'bTrom^ted me j7“!““ltCutute &gt;aXr“‘,al^ ’ 000 W 60 000 ,UB" W •hlPPed from
temDorary substitute

carrier,

also .u.

SSJ °lmSJvidCO!fd m“Suc’IUcS i handUn' •~cUl deliveries The1 .ddlUoul wbeuwu. u.
be done in 1937 as will be done this;

I',,.

county clerks of Michigan at Gray­
-------Ukl&gt;w«n teed. Dr, randl- ling. was chosen"second vice-presi­

INDUSTRY PROVING
POPUUW ONE
HASTINGS MILK PROD.
UCT8 CO. OUTPUT
OROWS IN FAVOR

Iflaker where It Is broken Into fit:
‘particles and then passed throng

the country. Out of MOO pounds
of milk arc produced only 100
pounds of powder, a ratio of 11 to 1.
Ninety-one out of every hundred
pounds go up tn steam.
' Unlike most business enterprises,
, the problem of the Hutings Milk
Products company is not to find a
market for their product—there is
always a ready one—but to find a
targe enough source of supply. They
purchase raw milk from about 400

business men c
dent of that organization. There
year, every important street in t‘‘ '
interest tn the
I seemed to be a sentiment at the MILK POWDER FINDS
u- „
------------ ~~
through thia dl
ward will be paved', curbed and i
READY MARKET
tered.
■
_ __________
ready. Mr. Parmer.
cUy ln iW8
convention1
The council is able to make very ,•
both tickets j'ust put up. folks,
■Firm
Is
Paying
Out
From
reasonable
prices
and
terms.
If
tar
­
named their meeUng place for 1937
of lhe Thomapple river.
already are saying this is start­
Oh, yes. and white you're about aC Crystal Falls, tn the upper pen­
mac paving is desired the cost for a LARGE INCREASE
312,000 to 310,000
ing out to be a bitter campaign four-rod frontage is 812 for lhe tarBroadway in H
IN STATE TRAFFIC it. pack up the missus, kids and insula. Il will be fine if this city
Monthly
—the bitterest, perhaps, since m&amp;ckUig. and f 18 for the curb and
lunch and pul a little gas in the shall be chosen for this convention.
gerous crossing
gutter—930 in all. The payment Is 27,340 Out-state O&amp;ri Over old puddle-jumper and go to Farm­ Il’ would not be largely attended.
One ot Hastings' interesting and age 812.000 to 815.000 each month
away back in 1896.
spread over a period of three years,
ers'
at the
M. 8. college
cam- : The county a.clerks u
for
it.
During
what
liicy
term
the
--- Day —
---- ---------- --- ------and
,,u their wives
,
Important Industries about which
My guess is these prophets don't so that It will not be burdensome.
The Fourth—Extra Ferry
put grounds July 31. The big event who attended the gathering
••flush period" which is during May of vhat was a county
rhost people probably know very lit­ and June, they use an average of
realise the twentieth part of IL I’m When such work shall be done on
l is to celebrate Michigan's one mH- | Grayling
numbered
about 100.Has
! ­
which formerly extended
----- ___ ----------..-----------------------At Straits
tle is the Hastings Milk Products 35.000 pounds of milk a da&amp; They
reminded of what any street it will not only Improve
.
,
..lion
non acres ot
of &lt;uaua
alfalfa ui
in ivuo.
1936. me
the n
ng« ought to be able to ha
tings
handle
released
Krgest “«eage of any slate in me that .crowd easilyt and could give company on N. Broadway. In May tell us they pay the highest prices
MMMtoBHB happened when my me
the appearance
appearance u&gt;
of me
the street, uuc
but ;
the city to Middleville,
of
1935
diaries
A.
Vandergrift
and
will
also
save
lhe
dust
which
is
a
j
J?
ornrn
4
“
.£
ner
Union.
You
Wouldn't
think
to
look
old friend. CoL Bill
Union. You Wouldn't think to look them a line time.
for raw milk of any oilier milk buy­
Calvin R Plumley of Wayland came
Wagoner on lhe great volume of at a map that Michigan with Its
I
. J Hayward, sailed very dealrable feature.
er in this Immediate vicinity.
Communities now realise
traffic into Michigan over tho endless industries could still spare
I here and formed the company in
/
1 with hls negro regi­
PASSING OF J. D. KNOWLES. ' aasuciauon
wnn
sc.e.a.
w«u
mcu.
company
Was
Started
on
a
u not an advantage to h
association with several local men.
Fourth of July week end showed a 1.000.000 acres for alfalfa. I don't
P’ Knowles, 60, who hu been &lt;—
h npurchased
urchased the
old
scale, qui
nu
grown
ment for Franca LIVES IN PORTO RICO
They
thectoSdIftS-Stout
old Arctic
Arctic nlant
ptant »mau
bu‘
h‘!l,»?
T0!7
1 Hcwur
*&lt;
Z main business street mad
111 at hls home here for about a ^
clih^d^-n
»
nd
™P
ld
’
r
*&gt;
u
»
Vandergrift
blame
them
for
taking
a
day
off.
I
&gt;___
__ anrt mnlrflv
that Mr Vanderartft
P®*
during the war.
Statistics gathered by the high­
month, passed away about 5:30 tast |
yroro wd began operations «nd Mr Plumley feel confident thal if anybody proposes to visit
B
gfl The outfit em- WANTS TO VOTE SEPT. !5 way planning survey division of the see the eptomology department Wednesday
afternoon.
Funeral;
a
lhe Hutings Milk Products Oom­
(bugs to you) Is going to help cele­
|
barked
at night
Ungs, and drives hero frorr
with the aid ot WPA brate. too. Wonder Just what they services were conducted from the | _e carly U1 HePiemDer
win
B very successful
Dexter R. Smelker, Oidra, deportment
north or south on M-37. thi
■
.
Next morning, when
workers show that on July 6. 27,340 meant by that!
home at two o'clock Friday conduct-. The company s products are sweet bujlneij venture and perhaps one
the transport was
can bearings other than Michigan
Porto Bloo, Filet Request
rt b, K.v u. w Dun, ol loni,. ere«m &lt;u&gt;a roUor pocu. pmrterja. (
having the route of 37 throw,
license plates passed four stations
well out at sea a
Burial wu tn Fuller cemetery in Iskim milk, for both of which they _
.
.
interesting one to city on some other than a
for
Ballot
A
truck
went
by
with
"Farm
Carlton. Mr Knowles has served u And a ready market. At Present
p{)Ul decldediy
’m hot
-J*"
pop-eyed
trooper
on Important highways.
The.*
Patsy
County Clark Allan Hyde re­ constituted over 54 per cent of the Bureau" in large letters.
a
village
trustee
for
several
years.
:
most
of
the
sweet
cream
is
shipped
■
WCMth
er
because
we
can
assure
you
Irvin 8. Cobb
«*•
says. "We've got a bureau, too."
South stood staring ceived from one of lhe depart­ can counted. There were 15,004
poor health making It necessary for t0 Buffalo. There is a high demand
aU' 3J0 desreei Of heat dements at Washington a request can from Indiana and Illinois.
hlm to refuse the place at the tast for the milk powder, and the gend upon
immediately inside
at the endleaa watery expanse.
that the route la on the main
Was talking to a cute Ultle clerk election. He wu. however, elected eral consumption of it hu inthat a primary ballot be supplied
'
*
Traffic al the Straits of Mackinac
"BoyI" he exclaimed to a com­ to Dexter R. Smelker, whose resi­ exceeded that of last year by over who has been married a year. She
village assessor and also held the of- । creased from 300 to 500 per cent in I ‘
( .
panion. "dis tho* Is one blgoceanl" dence ta In Thornapple township, 79 per cent. An additional ferry, told me they have never had a quar­ fice of treuurer of the local school' the tast few years. It Is not a new- nEATH OF jnuN M. DOSTER, Induce them to atop tn
product,
but
new D^ll OF JOHN »L mwra“Mos' doubtless," stated the sec­ but who Is at the present time a Chief Wawatam. was put into ser*. rel. I said. "You don't belong in a district. He was known among his ly-dtacovered
John M- Doster of Prairieville vil
ond soldier, "but son. whut you's teacher In the public schools of ioe making the ferry fleet total up store. Where you belong Is in a friends and acquaintances as a loyal uses “re constantly being found for
Cidra. Porto Rico. The primary te io five boats. On the Fourth, 2,458 museum."
democrat, standing by hls party at I *L At present Its most popular uses lage, a highly esteemed and promi- line from using the buxinua stl
to be held September 15. The peti­ cars were transported, the second
all times. He was a lover of the out- । are for baking purposes, in ground nellt citizen of southwestern Barry |
......
,
layer.'
tion Is quite a formal document. high total in the history of the
Four half-wits sing a duet Ln of-doors. Fls&amp;lng,
trapping
and 1 meuta and sausages, as poultry feed
dled Saturday afternoon at &gt;
।
It is signed by two witnesses u well ferry service.
hunting were; his Joy. making hls ‘ and in the making of ice cream
h.d Ln in I
Charlie Chaplin's latest picture.
The Union Party
yearly
pilgrimage
Into
the
north
i
The
market
as
supplied
by
this
,
hta
farm
home.
He
had
been
in
1
the
new
37
on
lhe
south
aids
of
.
as by Mr. Smelker. and is notarized
T CLEVELAND there was har­ by a notary public. Some rather
woods after deer as long as hls! Hutings company ta a shifting one. falling health for a number of river? It is a matter of intwe&lt;
naiuufi
u&lt;uu&lt;&gt;«
------------- - ----------—
"
i
7 .ui----- i. 7., ——
A Women's club hu among
mony and a quiet interment for fut traveling will have to be made
——-------------u
------------------- ‘
--------------------------1 ““ neoo!* 01 t‘?1* c“y'“r;
concentrated
one week in a certain 'I roOaths
but had
been
confined
to hls
other things lhe alm to learn the health permitted. He leaves to I---------tha old Guard. At Philadelphia to get a primary ballot to Mr.
. w-lr
___ olv,n 1 suggestion to the Commercial
two section
section of
of the
lhe country
country and
and lhe
me fol101- [ . .
vwwmw;
fine art of living and consider that, mount hls passing, the widow, two
lovlns ««k In
entirely &lt;kirw.nl J* “S St! “'nSttTl, 5"!L52‘.
the proceedings moved along on Smelker, give him Ume to made
while the home ta the center of a sons. Onto of Angola. Ind.. ■ ar.l
reek. I one. Their average monthly output
unnieauw cause
.
take an lnterewt in lt, woski“
greased rollers. But for real ex­ it u he wlshu and then have It
woman's Interest. Il need not be the Woodrow. employed at Battle Creek.
------------------------.
----------....
^ten.
is
about
100
000
pound...
most
of
,
deah
’
the
«
returned
so
as
to
be
counted
bi
citement. wait until that new Union
circumference. This is their poem, four grandchildren, and five sisters.
Mrs. Frank Friend of Campbell, which is nearly always sold a month ' M»\ D“ter was the son of the &lt; the line, should be carrtod «
Thomapple township on September
A WOOL BOOT JOKER.
,
party holds its convention.
written
by Mary Carolyn Davies:
15. This application will no doubt
One Sunday I took a stroll up Make
,
me too brave to lie or be un­ Mrs. Roy Allerdlng. Mrs. John Us- in advance. Just the other day 420 ‘at®..Kr\lc
Then will be the signal to remove go to the township clerk of Thom­
borne and Mrs.
Mrs Frank
Prank Barry
Rarrv of 100-pound
100-Dound bags of It—nearly a car- settler* in Prairieville. He "her^he
was bora 1.
ANNUAL CHUMCH
Thomapple river to see my old
the women and children to a place apple township, who will have to tgtend. Happy George Roush, the . kind
Carlton and Mrs Charles Ou ben- load-were shipped to Cleveland.
had
m 1 Th*
church
of safety. Just consider who'll be see that Mr. Smelker Is supplied Iflddter. and on my way home I Make me too understanding, too, haven of Diamondale. beside a host' From Its small beginning the com- died. He was always interestea tn
picnic of tha First :
to mind
there:
with the ballot he requests. In or­ stopped in the engine room at the .Tlie little hurts companions give, of other relatives and friends— pony hu grown rapidly and to such
church will be held
The Inflationists who think that, der to make the trip in time, it will Wool Boot factory and John (Cow­
Freeport Corr.
[an extent that larger equipment ’ l*° terms as towtship trcasurcr.. rlnglon&lt;4 reaort Bl cJear ।
and friends
-----1 wu required to handle its business.. He is survived by hta widow, FauE* members of the dally vac
as long as we have government en­ no doubt have to be sent and re­ boy) Myers was tinkering up an old The
,
careless hurts lhat no one quite
with the result that a few weeks ago lne: by threedaughtm. Mrs. Heten ble school will attend the .
graving plants and printing presses, turned by air mall.
clock. I said, "John, how's tricks?"
Intends.
BURIAL IN COLDWATER.
lut
1 a new milk powder machine wu
_^IrA,Frleda,1Qu,
the closing episode ol UM
He said. "Not so good. Riley. I look Make
.
money should be plentiful. The
Mrs.
Sam
Arner.
who
died
1
—
me
too
thoughtful
to
hurt
INCREASE IN SOMEIch- installed, the largest of Its type J?ances DOsl5r' “ otA
c 14,. P01 luck supper will be onjf
the old clock apart and oiled It and '
group committed to the idea that,
Thursday at the University of Mich------------------ — ---------- — —
.
DECREASE IN OTHERS. put it together again, but I can't . others so.
rday I made. Into this arc
orc poured hun- There are two grandsons, one tween
twecn j
.jq and 7 o'clock. '&lt;■
igun
hospital,
was
buried
Saturday
6:30
if the farmer won't do something
Help me to know
Only 16 cases of smallpox were
brother.
Frank
Doster
of
Delton,
.
find
any
place
for
lhat
one
wheel."
;
are oiurca
asked 10
to unne
bring uunee,
dtahaa.
for himself, something should be reported In Michigan during the
The inmost hearts of those for in Coldwater. She had been in poor dreds of gallons ot ordinary milk­
ar sandwiches and one
lime and Had
had been purchased lor
for tne
Hie most part irom
from and two brothers-Ln-law. ctiarles !| ware,
health for some Ume
sanawwncs
ana-...‘iZ.
done for the farmer. Doctor Town­ put year for lhe lowest record In Jim Patterson, the engineer, gave
whom I care.
UJIIIIama
nf
Wlrlrriru
Homers
and
1
..
..
'
ta
__ ,__ I.
receiving
treatmenu
al
the
hospital,
farmers
in
Barry
county.
Tills
[
WlHtaina
of
Hickory
Comers
and
,
dlsh
Mr
Fleming
.
.dish. Mrs., Fleming
isis chain
secret wishes, all lhe. loads
send. with hls project to provide old history, according to Dr. C. C. me Hie wipk and I said. "Wind It Their
up, John, maybe II had too many
Mrs. Amer iiad resided In Hutings heated to a temperature bt 320 de- Marx Bugoy^oi Oregon^
iI »».
—
-------- «.&lt;
the
supper.
Chartea Paul haa
they bear.
age pensions for everybody over Slemoiu, stale commissioner of
wheels.” He said, "That don't sound Thai
.
I may odd my courage to their for nine years, coming here from grees to take out all liquid from the | The funeral wu held from his of transportation and War
sixty except Congressman McGoar- healUi. But Dr. Siemens says, "This
like sense to me. but I'll try it.” He
Howard City. She \ is survived by milk, and then drawn out between, late home at ten o'clock Tuesday
own.
ly. Father Coughlin, calling tor so­ record must not lull us into the wound It up and It ran O. K. John
Anyone
wishing
transport
huge
steel
rollers
In
great
white
conducted
by
Rev.
Bates
of
Delton,
cial Justice and better radio hook­ complacent atUtude where vacci­ looked kind of puzzled and said. "By May 1 make lonely folks feel leu her husband and three daughters. sheets like billows of cheesecloth.. The burial wu in Prairieville ceme- call either Mr. Paul or
Marcia of Hutings, Juanita of
ups. Huey Long's successor, who'd nation U taken for granted, how- heck, that's the first time I aver
Corlrlght.
And happy ones a little happier yet. Chicago and Martan of Coldwater. These sheets are then carried by tery.
share the wealth nnd make every
knew they threw in a spare tire when May I forget
that 2.376 Michigan people con­
man a king.
you bought a clock. I’ll have to ask What ought to be forgotten and re­
tracted smallpox. Vaccination must
Kep Silsbee about that.” So he took
be a continuing factor in the com­
call
the clock under his arm and we Unfailing, all
plete eradication of this disease."
Al Smith’s Strategy
started down the railroad track. Thai ought to be recalled, each
According to the official records
S AN old-time headliner ot po
John
lived
up
there
on
Pike's
Peak
kindly thing
litical vaudeville. AL Smitl of communicable diseases for 1933 in the first ward at that time. When
Forgetting what might sting.
which have Just been released,
should have known better than t&lt;
measles led the list of communi­ we started to cross the old C. K. it To all upon my way. day after day.
pull lhat ancient wheexe—shootin;
S- bridge, we met "Shamrock" Kel­ Let me be Joy. be hope. Let my life
cable diseases when 79.061 cases
at Philadelphia letter carriers on v were reported, a peak In the usual ley who was feeling a bit happy.
When he saw John with that clock
Sunday afternoon.
three year cycle of this disease.
under hls arm he said, "Holy
And besides, think of the desper There iwere 13.427 cases of whooping
Henriette Sayre Miller writes
thunder, John, buy a watch! It’s a
ate chance ha and hls supporting cough.! marking a new high Inci­
amusing stories In the Household
good^deal handler.”
quartet
of sharpshooters took: dence of this disease. Scarlet fever
magazine. a complete one In on is­
sue.
of a little curly-headed moron
coma between a mother panther cases totaled 11.B48, a 38 per cent
WPA PLAYGROUND NEWS.
and her cubs; coma between a decrease from the previous year
Second ward playground is starl­ who has the complete devotion of
husband.
Frenchman and hls fracas: come and pneumonia Increased from 6.­ ing handcraft for boys in the after­ her college professor
246 cases in 1934 to 6,641 in 1935.
noons down in the basement of the Somehow these frilly little lassies
between a radio announcer and hls
school. Shelf brackets, book-ends, often possess the fundamental qual­
elocution, but never, right on the
V. F. W. NEWS.
ities
most
necessary
to
wifehood
and
animals,
etc.,
will
be
made
from
or
­
eve of their national convention, try
The next meeting of the poet will
to come between a flock of office­ be July 23. Please remember we are ange crate wood, sawed out with motherhood which their intelligent
coping saws.—Supervised by Myron sisters have to acquire. Their helpr
holding Democrats and lhe pros­ holding our meetings on alternating
lesaness brings out the protective
Bishop.
pect of four more uninterrupted weeks. Tile next meeting after
Mrs. Amy Bower is supervising instincts of their men, where a selfJuly 23 will be on Aug. 6.
years of the same.
reliant soman can wait on herself.
The auxiliary will hold their handcraft, gomes and story-telling
for
girls.
meetings on July 18 and July 30.
Fairgrounds—Beginning Friday.
We women sure tumbled off our
Trouble of Traveler!
The post has decided to help the
UTSIDE the larger cities, when W. R. C. ladles by taking over the July 17th, ladder tournaments will pedestals with a bang when wo won
a hotel manager wishes to show total expense of the hall. We are be started In the following events; our equality, but who wants to park
Horseshoe pitching for men and on a pedestal anyway? Or do we!
a special guest special atten­ planning on repapering both rooms
boys. Croquet for men and boys, What do you think? Oh. well! Il’s
tion. he assigns him to tho bed­ and refinlshlng lhe floors.
The state V. F. W. picnic will be supervised by James Jordon and too hot to argue and we can| help
chamber of state which usually Is
Vernon Karrar. Horseshoe pitching
on the second floor. Invariably is held In Eaton Rapids on Bunday, for women and girls, Croquet for it now.
at the front of the house and nearly Aug. 2. Veterans from every post in women and girls, supervised by Le­
Michigan will be there to Inspect
My children think the proper
our national home and see what nora Anderson.
place for a mother Is on a baseball
trie sfgns4 twinkle merrily —tiH
Anyone
la eligible
to enter,
the little kiddles and their mothers
diamond or taking them swimming.
daylight In the poor sleepless are doing In the home that we of whether they have played before And me with a cellar full of empty
the v. F. W. are providing for them, or not. dames are to be played off fruit cans to be filled. (Not much of
And along toward 2 a. m. a party incidentally we plan on having a anytime during 1:00-4:00 and 8:30­ a treat in a swim suit, anyway.)
: 8:30 P. M. Monday. Tuesday. Wed­
named Dewey, standing in the grand and glorious time while we
nesday, Thursday or Fridays. Each
street below, will start telling a are there.
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS.
Our post picnic will be held at person entering plays Individually
The United States Civil Service
party named Pink, about sumpin
against all comers to determine the
mighty comical that's come up Rtreeter’a landing Sunday. Aug. 9. champion, everyone being required Commission has announced open
competitive examinations ac fol­
Sad'day night whereupon Pink will We hope every member of our post to play at least six games.
YOUR RECEIPT
and their family will be there. The
lows:
BANK MONEY ORDER
be moved to recall a few social
A new sand box. 6x10 feet. Is being
committee is planning on plenty of&gt;
Extension specialist In parent ed­
reminiscences of hls own.
.
built for youngsters under a tree
entertainment.
ucation. 84.600 a year, department
The post hu purchased a new, near the ball diamond.
of agriculture.
It is not necessary for you to haro an account here in order to
Conventlon Invocations
- flag of which It Is proud.
Junior home economics specialist,
playing hardball in the afternoon.
taka advantage of the safety and convenience ol Bank Money
ALTHOUGH a southerner—how­
various optional!. 82.000 a year, bur­
Anyone else of that age is welcome
eau of home economics, department
ever, not working at the trade HASTINGS WOMAN WON PRIZE. to Join them.
Orders. Our new service is open to all. We Invite you to try
'
The'third ot a series of limerick
of agriculture.
as steadily as some—I haVe to
this modem medium for paying bills and Making remittances by
contests sponsored by the makers of
Fire prevention officer. 83.200 a
snicker when a Democratic senator Kraft
COUNCIL DOINGS.
Dairy-Fresh
Caramels
year,
forest
service,
department
of
mail. There are no complicated applications to fill out and you
The
council
at
their
session
Fri
­
walks out on his own convention brought good luck to Mn. Chu.
because a colored preacher asks Leary of thia city. Her entry, one of day evening received a petition for agriculture.
get a definite receipt as a complete record and positive proof of
Legislative reference assistant. 82.­
the divine blessing on Its delibera­ thousands received from all ports of a street lamp at the corner of Oli­
payment Yet, with all their advantages Bank Monty Orders
300 a year. Social Security Board.
tions. Which reminds ma:
the country, wan awarded a gift ver and South Broadway streets. It In addition to specified education,
was
referred
to
the
council's
light
­
cost very little—less than you usually pay for similar service.
The first time that great Texan. package according to an announce­
applicants must have had certain
ing
committee
for
investigation
and
Jim Hogg, ran for the governorship ment from the Kraft headquarters
experience in reference work In con­
bls party splIL The bolters Joined in Chicago today. First prize was
The council received three peti­ nection with federal or state legis­
with lhe Republican outfit—most­ won by Mn. Ed. Lambert of Dassel, tions asking for curb and gutter and lative activities.
Minnesota.
Full Information may be obtained
ly black—to put up a fusion tickeL
Prizes ot the three Dairy-Fresh tarmac paving. Those living on
At this pinto convention, tho Rev. Caramel limerick contests totaled East Colfax street between North from H. C. Wunderlich, secretary
"Sin Killer" Griffin, a famous black 815.000 tn cash with 3,000 additional Hanover and North East street wish of the U. S. civil service board of
examiners, at the post office.
to
have
lhat
block
paved,
curbed
evangelist, delivered the invoca­ merchandise prizes.
.
and guttered. The same is true for
tion. In concluding, be threw an
CHAIN OF MISHAPS.
North Hanover, from East Mill
unexpected bombshell Into the pie­ DETAINED FOR QUESTIONING.
A peculiar chain of accidents hap­
Ebner Smith of Dowling, accord­ street to East Thom street. Another pened on South Hanover street last
bald ranks by earnestly''urging lhe
ing to the Battle Creek Moon-Jour­ petition asks for curb, gutter and week Friday.
It started with a
Lord to put Hogg in the governor's
nal of July 9. wu held there far tarmac paving on East Walnut collision on South Hanover between
chair.
questioning concerning a charge of street, from South East street to Madison and Clinton, near the
Terrific uproar ensued. Finally a possessing stolen goods. The police East State street.
Warner grocery store. Two automo­
dusky stalwart got the floor.
All
these
petitions
were
referred
claim he hu been identified as lhe
biles, one driven by a Mn. Guesel
"I moves." be bellowed, “dat dis man who sold two valuable paint to tire street committee for Investi­
of Battle Creek, the other by How­
yere traltoraome and on-Republik- brushes at a second hand store in gation and report. Probably this
ard McDonald of Hastings, mat in a
In prayer be expunged from de Battle Croek that had been stolen report will be made at lhe next head-on collision In front of the
.
from Sears, Roebuck A Company. meeting of the council.
record."
Tha council also passed a reso­ store. Carl Domeyer, Hutings town­
Smith admitted selling the brushes,
Majestically, "Sin Killer" erected
ship, stopped to survey the damage.
lution
to
put
paving,
curb
and
gut
­
but claimed they were given to him
Hls machine vu struck from behind
hlmselt
by another man, whose name he did ter on south Dibble from Bond to
by a car driven by Albert Eaton.
"I rises." he stated, "to a p'lnt not know, so the Moon asserts.
Madison street.
Domeyer's car wu shoved into the
ot order, it’s too late to expunge
Civility la a charm that attract! rear of McDonald's automobile. A
frum de record a prayer which alMARRIAGE LICENSE.
fourth car parked at the curb in
George L. James. Hastings ........... 1
better than to show too little.— front of jfte store wu only slightly
Isabelle Moreland. Dutton Kant
five minutes ago."
damaged.
Bishop Home.
county ............................................... 3

MONICA. CALIF.
SANTA
So soon aa thia, with

A

“ w J! Sv’kX’*1 -

1

‘J.TSSX’E

Riley Stories

A

Our New Department—writing

BANK MONEY ORDERS

O

is Available to Everyone

Hastings City
TELEPHONE 2103

IRVIN B. COBB.

HASTINGS • MIC

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. WUPAY, JULY It. 1IM

tended by many who came from

CEDAR CREEK.

iss the

DSUMMER
FESTIVAL

St’ued*1 *lU Probably be dlscon-

M£k75c Woodbury's
&lt;• !. $&lt; .49
bag
X

Iona Flour

BRUNSWICK
TIRES

19c
19c

55c

Instant Postum

25c Fels Naptha Soap
25c Kirk's Flake Soap

Salad Dressing

Peanut Butter
Peaches

25c Kitchen Klenzer
29c Scot Tissue

Chan Quick or

California Halve

10 b- ,41c

29c

10
5
4

rolls

15c Calumet Baking Powder

19c

Mixed Vegetables

10c Postum Cereal
23c Kaffee Hag or Sanka

Swansdown
8 o'Clock Coffee

15c Karo Syrup
1»c Heinz Soups

Red Circle Coffee
Vlgoroua
and Winey

Condor Coffee

Beech-Nut Coffee

Maxwell House
Whitehouse Coffee

37c

10c

Blue Label

Moat

2

25c

39c Dole Pineapple Juice
25c Campbell's Except Chicken 3
26c Tall Boy Soups
3

29c
25c
25c
10c

10c

' or Spaghetti
22c Macaroni
Ib. pkg. 21C
Whitehouse Milk

Ritz Crackers

13c

£ 25c Yukon Club
2 "" 25c Yukon Club
2
29c Cookies

Bisquick

25c
25c
25c
6

Yellow Label

Plain or

25c

2
° White
&amp; 10c 4X Sugar
2
39c Libby's Orange Juice

15c

PV&lt;

Ring Bologna
Potato Salad
Baked Beans
Smoked Picnics

Kamp Kook
Camp Stave
2 XUBNHR
Instant llaht-

COOL WEAVE BEAT COVERS

Coven entire seat.

Keep reel and

tox.
’2.95

COUPES___________ $2.95
Sedans and Coaches, $5.45

FOLDING CAMP COT
•tnrO.
Hardwood
frame rainforced.

$1.59
A quality oil at a
record
breaking
low price! — QI.

12/40

_

V

Camp Stool

Camp Jug

folding

Oallon’ au*

23'

HASTINGS, MICH.

89'
PHONE 2524

TOUGH GUY” ISO VIS' D
CAN TAKE IT!
KEEPS YOUR OIL LEVEL UP AND
YOUR OIL COST DOWN
Standard'! Premium Quality

Motor Oil loughs ot

long hauls

*weat out the qualities which nuke It
good—$7'* Itutk!
By a special process, sludge-forming
and carbon - forming Impurities have
been removed from ISO»VIS‘‘D"—itt*
all ail! The things that weaken other oil*
with wear are removed from ISO»VIS

BRANCH DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mrs. Orban Lents and
son of Battle Creek visited Mr. and
Mr*. Keith Norton Wednesday aft­
ernoon.
Mr. and Mr*. Rudolph Hall, Mr*.
Lee MBenar ot Battle Creek. Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Norton
and
Joyce of Marshall came Bunday to
remind their dad, Vincent Norton,
of hi* birthday. They served ice
cream.
It has been so very warm the
post week lhat men and team* have
suffered
greatly
while cutting
wheat.
Chas. Christman of Hastings
called on hls niece. Mrs. Ketth Hor­
ton, Thursday, whom he has not

Here's motor oil that doesn’t get Hired! why it full.
Neither the long grind of summer driv­
It lubricate* bettering nor frying engine temperature* can let*—spend lea*—with

Letter Hawfat haa a new V-8 car.

15c
10c

Iona Cocoa

25c Mason Jar Tops
Northern Tissue
19c Prunes
4
3
Cigarettes
29c '.’&lt;To” *1.15 Cooking Oil or Maiola
Muaatrd or TomaU

QOUPES
$1.69
Sedon* and Coaches, $3.48

son* who would not otherwise have
POWERS ECHOES.
been able to own a home. The
Mr. and Mr*. Howard Melllng and monthly payment plan for people
family of Glendale, West Virginia, who have steady employment ha*
who have been visiting at the home enabled them to keep up their pay­
| Of her brother, Arthur Bedford re- ment* so lhat they could purchase
| turned home Tuesday, mim Gladys I a home at about what It would cost
। will remain for an extended visit i for rent.
with her cousin. Artelle Bedford.
। The Association ha* been * good
MU* Daisy Frost of Owosso spent thing for It* stockholder* also, as it
a few days the past week with her ha* earned them a fair rate of In­
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frost. terest. and la a sound Investment.
I MBs Ethel Palmer returned Sat­
. urday from Detroit after a wek's
MILO.
visit there with her brother. Rlch- July a Letter.
ard. who accompanied her there to .--Malcolm Edward Palm^^er of
remain over Qie week en^e M
Kalamaxoo came last Thurway to
j Cftiaries Hauler of Detzois wo* spend several days with their
home over thi week end , J ’
grandmother, Mrs. chase, and Bede
I Mr. and Mrs. Will Yfoedemakrr and Nina Fenner, while their par­
, and daughter Marie of Grand ent* are spending the time In Chi­
. Rgpids were eallpr* at Arthur Bed­ cago.
ford's Sunday.. • ■ .z
। •.»j
Mr. and Mr*. Donald Curtis and
I Mr. and Mr*. Miner paltfier and Mrs. Mern Bixby of Kalamasoo were
J daughter Ethel accompanied
E. callers July 4th at the Fenner home.
Van Syckle lo the-homa Of his parTwenty-four member* of the H.
। ent* at Hart for a visit Sunday.
L. club and four visitors enjoyed the
hospitality of Mrs. M. J. Cross at
HENDERSHOTT.
the Hastings Club house last Thurs­
i Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Clark -went I day for a picnic dinner at 1 o'clock
। to Jackson last Thursday to attend I Games and a short program wen
pleasing features of lhe afternoon
: lhe funeral of a relative.
i MBs Clare ^Hendershott is at AU voiced a “perfect day" in a de­
lightful place.
• Jjorae &lt;jn her vacation.
. A ,
Mrs. Woolston and children speql
The Bible 'school derhonstraUon
last week with the former's mother,
Friday night was fine.
Mr*. Nellie Matthews of Hm- Mrs. Covllle. near Woodland. Ber­
net*
remaining for an indefinite
Ungs spent the week end with Mrs.
visit.
i Albert Brill.
A fishing partv composed of Mr.
■
Ezra Smith, who lias been visit­
: ing at the Brill home the past two and Mrs. G. Gilbert and Dick an4
' weeks, returned to his home In Chl- Mr. and Mrs. M. Bradfield and Jack
enjoyed Sunday at Wall lake al ths
, cago. Friday.
' The Ladles' Aid supper has been Spaulding cottage for a picnic din­
postponed on account of the hot ner. A fish supper was served In -ths
I weather. Announcement* later as evening at the Bradfield home.
Dr. Warren Bellinger spent from
to the date.
Tuesday till Friday evening with
friends in Chicago.
Mr. and»Mra. Arthur Skidmore
and LaVem attended a family re­
union July 4th al Bert Houghlalln'i
cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cramer ’
accompanied them home and re­
mained until Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. H. F. Flower and Bernies
went to Dowagiac Friday afternoon
and remained till Sunday evening.
With Mr. and Mrs. H. Kennedy and
Lee they spent the Fourth at Rocky
Olen. Lake Michigan.
The Home Literary will be enter­
tained thia week Thursday at Mr*.
Ever* for one o'clock luncheon. Mrs.
P. Brophy wlU be co-hoetes*.

bottha

3

29c Brown Sugar

Grape Juice

Sardines

19c

25c Puffed Rice
29c Post Toasties

Hills Bros. Coffee

Salt

Umbrella Tent

100% PURE
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Crackers

Corned Beef Hash

FREE

CAMPING NEEDS

STAND ABD

25c
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MOUNTED

QQc

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29c Waldorf Tissue

Carton Lard

Other Sixes Priced Equally Low.

440-50-78/21, 475-5OO-25/I0 ............................... QU

25c

Milk

Bokar Coffee

..$4.10 450 x 20 ..$5.70
..$4.35 450 x 21 .. &gt;5.95
—
..$4.55 475 x 19 .. &gt;6.25

INNER TUBES—450x75 IS.

39c

55c

Soap Chips

440 x 21
450 x 20
450 x 21

White

,IU 10c
Q;."" 65c A&amp;P Bread
Jello “.cX-2’‘« 15c G l’“ 3M7c Ovaltine
29c u''55c
Am.
Fam.
Soap
Dill Pickles
25c
10 l“" 49c |
Fruit Jars

SENTRY 4 PLY STANDARD

19c

H -lb $4 .05
Critco or Snowdrift
Gold Medal *' Pillrtury 24bag
X
Critco
or Snowdrift
Splendid Flour
,4£71c

3

3

19c
lb a.

25c

pint

23c

MORE MIDWEST DRIVERS

USE BO-VI* -O' THAN ANY

OTHER PREMIUM QUALITY OIL

25c
u 15c
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2

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Semi-Annual Report Shows
It la Making Good

Hammond retuHMd home
Progress
will
Mr*. Aroellut Campbell's alster from Aurora. 111.. Ust Saturday ’
At the recent annual meeting of
and family of Battle Creek came where he has besn vBltlng hl* sons
The annual BurvBor* (or Pioneer)
the Hastings Building it Loan As­
In Aurora and Battle Creek.
sociation the stockholder* re-elected
with them, tha little boy »taying for
Thursday In July, lhe 80th. Thia
all th* officer* as follow*:
CARLTON CENTER.
haa been an annual custom for
President—Ciutrlc* 8. Potts.
Muri Lammers of Kalamasoo vBPeople in thi* community were
ll*d horn* folk* over the week end.
Vice President—Fred W. Blebbins.
grieved to hear of the death of Jo­
Bocntary-tnaaunr — Albert H.
siah D. Knowles ot Freeport Mr. Carveth.
•
Knowles lived In Carlton for many
Recording secretary--Charles W.
Clarke.
here. The family have the s'neere
The appointive officer* of the As­
sympathy of the community. Mr*. sociation conalat of Kim Sigler, who
John Usbome, sister ot Mr. Know­ looks after the legal matter* con­
les. 1* still seriously Hl in Pennock
nected with It* business, and Mis*
hospital.
Eva A- Hecox wno will continue to
Lloyd Allerdlng is still very ill act a* assistant secretary-treasurer,
at hls son's, Orrin Allerdlng'*, near keeping the book* and records of
Clarksville.
the association.
AU remember the ice cream so­
During the six months which
cial sponsored by the L. A. 8. is this closed June 30 the Association did a
week Thursday at
the
Carlton little better than make It* seml-anGrange hall. Home made Ice cream nual dividend. It carried to the
arid cake.
&gt;
surplus for the six months a larger
Elmer Marlow came home Mon- sum than it has in any recent half
। day night from University hospital.
In two weeks' time he has to return
This Association haa done a fine
lo the hospital to have hls leg dress­ work for Hasting*, it haa been lhe
ed again. Hl* leg 1* in a cast and means of building several new
he
is
getting
along
as
wel!
as
can
30 x 3V4 ..$3.95 440 i 21 ..$5,30
home* in our city, and ha* financed
be ppected.
the purchase of many more by per­

VACATION SALE

15c

2
Palmolive »' c«m«y s»»p4

”E79c Oxydol or Rinso

Sunnyfield Flour

BUILDING MD LOAN
ASSN. PROSPERS

MARK’S STORES, ihc,

WHIRL .

OF FOOD VALUES AT ALL A6?P
FOOD STORES THIS WEEK!
Iona Flour

Cox got so badly hurt In an auto­
mobile wreck but ar* glad to learn
that he B getting better.
We are happy to report thal Mr*.

The Cedar creek school picnic
wa* held kt the school grounds la*t
Saturday. Owing to the lack of Int*re*t and tha small crowd attend-

Watermelons
49c
Cantaloupe
3 ,or 25c
Celery
2 bunches 15c
Oranges Sweet, Juicy
2
35c

And It’s only *
a Quarter a Quart!
jstaafaftrsssajaix.
Swing through your Summer'* driving
with MU ttanotKj, new rnging incitefiaea—ISOaVIS"D;'will riveyrouth—e.
the «ign of STANDARD

owe with

'1S“D”

E1.
All Priae* H«* 3* Saha Ta«
W* Cart WPA Check.
1,000 co

SSL nS?

i CHECK YOUR CAR TOR SAFE DRIVIN8 AMLAUIRiCATE EVERY 1J100 M1LESI

WEEKS CORNERS.
Mrs. EUle Preston spent the past
week with her uncle, Mr. and Mr*.
Ed. Benedict of Benton Harbor.
Mrs. Lillie Matteson and Mr. and
Mr*. Jake DeCrocker of Scott*
were north recently.
Mr*. Beach of Hastings has spent
the past two weeks with her daugh­
ter. Mrs. lYene Dickerson.
Mrs. Wm. Buckland of Litchfield
spent from Monday unUI Wednes­
day with her .sister, Mrs. Lyle Dick­
erson.
Mias jean Dickerson spent last
week In Lansing attending the 4-H
club week, twelve delegates attend­
ing from this county.
Mr. and Mr*. Wesley Webb and
children of Hastings spent Bunday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
Dickerson.
"There are many persons who look
on Bunday a* a sponge to wipe out
the sins of the week."—H. W
Beecher.

DEAF WOMAN NOW
HEARS ON TELEPHONE
• -I have been hard of hearing
for 8 years,” writes Mrs. Sturde­
vant, of Mayville, N- Y. "I could
not talk over the telephone. Last
year I obtained OURINE.
My
hearing has improved so thal I can
talk over the ’phone as well a* I
ever could.” OURINE was origin­
ated by a Vienna ear specialist,
for those who are hard at hearing,
bothered by head noises, earache,
ringing and bussing In ears, sick
with the dread of approaching
deafness
Get quick relief with
OURINE today, ji'a’ eacy to use—
cost* only a Tew rtnu dally. Money
bark tf not
..v .
Stebbins, nje Rsxall store.—Adv.

�THI WAITING* BANNTB. THUBSDAT, JULY 19, 1*35

IN
KPERS
i Shows
&gt;od

LEGAL NOTICES |
noticb

or

NOTION or MOBTOAOB BALM.
OHxulti kavtas b«a m«a («*4 t*

VOTI01 or XO1TOAU1 SALS.

mobtoaob salb.

Give Sendee to Users
Trailer Coaches for
Small Fee

Town«hl|» &gt;
UUNZRr\bAx‘7o^UH&lt;ATl

srav-.isn

re-elected

•otts.
. Stebbins.
Albert H.

SOW. THEREFORE. by vlrtat
»»r ot
ronlalnrd Ib Mid n

ui which
Uon did a
seml-an•cent hall

ne a fine
been lhe
tral new
i financed
e by per­
vise have
me. The
or people
nent has
heir pay­
purchase
rould cost

of II

iijmsa-i:

n a good
•bo, as II
ite of Insiment.

&gt;fUfT Of
irway to
th their
nnd Bede
heir par­
r in chi-

l Siad. ISIS.
OWNERS' LOAN COR­
PORATION. MorUMM
i«nu u. Mathova,
Attoraay for MortoaoM.
aalaoaa AtUrraa: National
Oas’l-Mi

r

HOME OWNERS' !X)AN CORPO­
RATION. Mortoocee.
0LF.NN D. MATHEWS.

MOTION OF MOBTOAOB SALS.

LtrtiB and
ORDER TOR PUBLICATION.
ter home.
t the H.
Joyed the
Cross at

RATION, a Ccrpcptloa ontaabod
tha Uva ot tho Ualtad Bum of
Amenca.
dated
Aunct
—5 .In
“'-J
."" oflit.tholb...
recorded
tha —
office
Boaiator
of Deed* tor Barry County. Mlchlxan.
on Auxnil S3nd. 19B4. In Libor tf of
Mortcateo. &gt;
raxee baric

1 o'clock
ftemoon
in a de-

THREE CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Malcolm of
Hastings were Bunday guests of the
former's parents. Mr. and Mrs. John
Malcolm.
Mr. and Mn. Edgar FiUeld and
family entertained the following
HOME OWNERS- LOAN COR®)RATrnN Martaara*
guests Sunday: Robert Walters of
Middleville, Mr. and Mn. Leonard
Walters and son of East Stale Road
Ionia. Mlablaas.
Out 10-llfl and their guest. Mbs Odelta Flfield,
who is spending another week with
0BDBB FOB FUBLX0AT10N
them.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Yeiter spent
Sunday with their son and wife.
Mr. and Mn. Lester Yelter of Kal­
amazoo, and enpoyed an outing and
picnic dinner at Gull lake.
□o Gene
O.W Kidder
Victor Hawkins and
Prld., dinner
dinner
of Hastings were Friday
..
.....................
I
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Edw. Wul-

en spent
i mother,
nd. Berndcflnlts
Mlidrad Bmlth. Raclater

Jick end
tnd Jack

:nlc dlntd in &lt;h«
ome.
mt from
ng with
Ikidmora
mlly reghtaltn's
Cramer •
and re.
noon.
Bernies
Itemoon
evening,
edy and
t Rocky

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

NOW, THEREFORE. by
&gt;war of tala contained in

Probata.
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.

County of Barry. Mlcblcen (that bains
the place ot holdins Circuit Court in Mid

■ aiu county
A. D. 103B.

July. A. I&gt;. 1930. at ten

e enter-

Mildred Smith. Reslater of Probata.
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.

n and
fiday to
Norton,
ved Ice

BARBER'S CORNERS.
Sunday dinner guests at Wm.
Mishler’s were Mr. and Mrs Miner
Seeley. Mr. and Mrs. Watkins, Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. Bacheller, Mrs. Pad­
elford. Mrs. Blough. Mrs. Grohe ot
Hastings and Mrs. Sherf of Chlca-

Mabclle Hauer is spending a few
days with Maurine Clum of Coats
Grove.
Mrs. Jerry Foley and daughter.
Alice, attended the Brush Ridge
school reunion Sunday. Miss Alice
was a former teacher there.
Mr. and/Mn. Chas. Albright and
son retunied to Chicago Monday
after spending three weeks al their
home herZ
Miss Alice Foley is spending a
few days In Lansing with Mrs. Roy
Huver.
Nay Bump and family of HasUW
taj” wnainc • I™
.1 Mn. KU jBump',
j
——kMr anrl
fra
a"dI.
.,!
,Ira’T^onrt
TL?*ftn.T ”unt
Flint and Misses Leila Jordan and
_ ___
' ,
,
j,
..
; Amelia
auiciia Walters
runners of
oi Hasting.!
nasiuig.i were
wci
Dorothv
Is snendlne
.
porolhy Robinson U
.ptmlta, ; o
Sund
„ ,„„u „ L j
iIn week
wAalr with her
hnr sister,
alntor liplha
' “
...
this
Heths,
at the Earl Boyes cottage at Wall
STATE ROAD.
lake.
Mrs. Janet Pettlngill' and Mrs.
Maury Moore's house and out­ Dora Coleman of Rutland spent
buildings have received a new coat Wednesday with their cousin. Mrs.
of paint making a fine improve­ Allie Kelley of Cedar Creek.
ment In their appearance.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack O’Connor were
Mrs. Prank Walfe of Detroit, Mrs. in Coral Friday night visiting Dr.
Carrie Olsen and Mrs.* Ethel Har­ and Mrs. Wynn Nobles. Tom and
ris of Grand Rapids called on Miss Ann O’Connor returned home with
Clara Sisson. Wednesday.
them after a week's visit with their
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Walters nnd grandparents,
Marian of Grand Rapids visited his '. BT
?P-P^2v(;r 0 y
Texas spent last
parents. Mr. and Mn. Edw. Wai- .week
ww&gt;k w
Lena Becker and
ten, Sunday.
I family.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. | Mr. Ashley of Battle Creek has
Claud A. Hammond were Mr. and , rented MBry
Mary w
O’Connor's house and
Mn. I«o C. Hammond of Lansing
running his father’s creamery.
andMr. aDd Mn Postof Hastmgs.
Mrs Swan Anderson returned
j
fagM
I hom&lt;* from Texas one week earlier
daughter, Joan, of Buffalo, N. Y.. than she Intended because of the
were lMt week end guests of Mrs.: heat-123 degrees the day she ar-

at the
More
NOW—for Hie FIRST SHOWING, NIV*1937 Modal

Ward’s AIRLINE RADIO

QO8

Mantel and Floor Models on display—

cmm

buying lor 500 stores.
' Word customers gel
benefit of oil our

yet you

SAVE

up to 40 X.

WEEK
SPECI
Chair

Chopper
Roa 69c Aland

Reg. 5c ToUot Tis­
sue, 3 rolls---------

les, lady!
40% at Wards I It corts Words that such

Ims to fill No axocbUani notional advertising.

par Wash Bailor
You gat 100c worth ol rairigaratioa for evary

Reg. 79c Wash
Tub. No. 2
ft shell area, 6 lhe. Ice, 84 cubeel Compare 1

6 1/3 Cubic Foot

QAHA

Clothes pint.

Also Available in All Porcelain

MONTGOMERY WARD
boards

Bag. 35c Dairy
Pails. 2 Ur ...

Rodund 4 Dayt Oniyl

98»

er la malty bavins
rover the debt at

UaHniahod Ki*chen Chairs

6-foot FlaxibU
Rule--------------Wards Quality
Hammer--------

Household
Seeks
Iba date of

aww#

FOR SAFETY’S SAKE INSIST ON

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

CONCRETE

inch rate i.:o'.r M4
I HEREBY ..I .

Fruit Jar .

for all streets

it last
he 4-H
itlend-

CovaraH Flat
Well PaM. tel-

acribod f foilova:

»b and
Junday
Leslie

Oranravllle.
larly deMribod as:

io look

KS*

IONE
Mildred Smith. Reslater of Probate.

N0TI0B TO CREDITORS.

■ louamraco ano ovary i
Doled: Joao 10th. 198S.
0MB OWNERS' LOAN COHPO
RATION. McrUaceo. /

I can
iriffinflallat,
laring^

doney
th &amp;

9x12 Felt Bom

MATTRESS

rille. Barry County. Mich lain to HOME
OWNERS LOAN CORPORATION, a Cor­

xhfleld
fednesl Dick-

rtche.
. alck
ichlng
with

Reg. 19c Cek

Ward STANDARD

MORE comfort features than a famous malts
at S14.95I 112 inner-coils I Siaal pads I
Felted cotton upholstery t Floral drill ticking I

he past
id Mrs.
rbor.
Ar. and
Scotts

earing
turdecould

Er.
know how Wards •
Wards have no
operating expenses
pay no profits to m

Nonas or mobtoaob bale.

las Ungs
th Nor-

thing
found

ii obviouslyiufi
to moke. The
It costs Words law

You Sara 55 on tkli INNERSPRING
Oransevlllo Barry'Ceanty. Michigan, to
HOME OWNXB8* LOAN CORPORA-

ik Annex,
out ns

Ionia. MlabUaa.

rm the
rts have
cutting

« spent
daugh-

KU: April Sind. 193d.

HOME OWNERS* LOAN COR­
PORATION. Mertaaaee.

ill. Mrs.

IRVING.
Mr. and Mrs. William Bchenkel
and Mrs Schenker* brothers and
families from Middleville were Sun­
day visitors at the home ot their
sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Will Hollister of Chelsea. Their
mother and tier husband of Ver­
montville went also bringing a
freezer of Ice coeam. other visitors
were Mrs. McCann's mother from
Detroit and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mc­
Cann of East Lansing.
Mrs. Isa Graham and son Ken­
neth and daughters of Grand Rap­
ids were Saturday evening guests
of Mrs. Lillie Bower by and daugh­
ter.
.
Poster and Dickie Waddell are
visiting their aunt. Mrs. John
* ’
Blocher, north of Freeport.
•••
Miss Norma Be Ison has been
visiting al the Scobey home near
Leach lake.
L. D. Hall has returned from a
visit in northern Indiana where
he attended a family reunion.
Sunday was Mrs McCann’s birth­
day and in the evening. Mr. and
Mrs. Matthew Bedford and Mrs.
Mary Mills came arid surprised
her.

rlvrd ,here
n h“ been 110 on
Mr.
L. Sisson.
M»,and
aii? Mrs Clarence
C
si?°n’ , i; your correspondent’s windmill.
M. E.
lu
M.
E. Moore
Moore and
and Mbs
Miss Clara
Clara J.
J.I,
it „
|S „ IttK
tlot our
our lurnlcra
farmers 4rc
are worK
work-.
RlBK/in called
AallAj on
nn Alice
Allaa and
anH Emo.y lng
.
... .]nn.tern ....
. .
_
Sisson
wmj
light nights
The
Lowe in Bourne, Friday afternoon.
horses cannot stand the daytime
Mr. and Mra. Loub Coleman. ilcat
Junior
Grand
- ’ - *vU
Lun &lt; and Virginia, oof
LOnu
£ RapJunlor
D
ln a™* R*PIHa vlaitaj a, tlhe
Ka EdW
n,' Wa U'r': .i Ids for treatment at the clinic last
home Friday.
■
ci nearinr. in tne
Norris Malcolm of Lake Odessa Is I
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Coleman
nevapaper printed
spending the week with David Rob- I; and Nets spent Sunday with Mr.
Inson.
I and Mrs. Carl Bryans of Carlton.
Sunday evening guests of Mr. and 1
------ -------I “i do not regret having braved
Mn.
Clar----------Yelter-----------------------were JJlsses—
Hart,
NOTICE or MOBTOAOB SALE.
Plasmon and Tueslnk from Has- '! public opinion, when I knew it was
tings, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Yeltcr wrong and was sure It would be
of Alto and Misses Harriet Comp- merciless '—Horace Greeley.

on. Mrs.

its and
Mr. and
lay afl-

Electricity and all' lhe conven­
iences it provides la following the
wayfarer and hia "covered wagon"
of today in Michigan.

raSsiSsruf.

,lw mw

ton and Marguerite Yetter of Grand
Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Walters and
Marian of Grand Rapids spent Sun-

of

quests of trailer-coach uaers for
electricity in the state parks during
the past two years, that parks au­
thorities have decided to Install
electrical servicing equipment in 30
of the state perks having the heav­
-V„s W.WMI
iest attendances. A nominal fee
Mwrt of 111* rcauli
will be charged for electric lighting
aad tmrouaat tc lhe
powor ot uli esatalaaj in ■
and power service, depending upon
the number of outlets in the coach
prorldrai NOTICE to AkbISy OIV»
to be served. Coaches having only
that on Friday. Joly 34th. ISIS al eleven
n.
Eaatem Standard
lights and radio equipment, for In­
of Barry. Mlekljran. (ibat L»inr lh» olata stance. will be assessed 35 cents for
of bald lay Clrrall Coorl ta aald County.) three days or a maximum charge ol
■aid racHnti Will ba forarloMd bv a 50 cents a week. Coaches having
more outlets than those merely for
radio, and lighting, will be charged
a maximum rate of 75 cents a week.
These fees will be assessed mere­
ly to cover the cost of Installing the
special electrical
equipment
for
servicing lhe coaches at the various
state parks. It Is not the Intention
of the Department of Conservation
to make a profit from, this service.
acrlbad as folio
Installation of the electrical equip­
■liuttod In the Oltv of HmiIicb. Graety
Miahlian. more par- ment necessary to service lhe mod­
of Barry. Mlchlcoa. more particularly doern "covered wagons." will be made
icrlbod aa:
as swiftly as possible this summer.
monxifa al

tiarles W.

Igler. who
iters conand Mbs
mtlnue to
•treasurer,
words of

TWENTY STATE PARKS
OFFER ELECTRICITY

TLTANY accidents on the streets are caused by pavements
1YL that are bumpy, raveled, slippery when wet, difficult to
clean, obscure at night. These accidents can be prevented
by paving with concrete which:
1. Reduces skidding in all weather
2. Has high visibility at night
5. Keeps a true and even surface, free from bumps
4. Drains and dries quickly; no pockets of standing
water or mud
5. Encourages traffic to use the full street width—pass­
ing is easier
Concrete costs less to build than any other pavement of
equal load carrying capacity—costs far less to maintain—
cuts motoring costs.
Don't be satisfied with less than clean, safe, enduring con­
crete on your streets.
For concrete pavement fans, write to

YOU CANT BUY

BETTER OIL/

Vorllbd 30t to 35c Voluol

IOON

PENN. OIL
Same top quality as Mils for 30c-

COMMAND!!

2012 Olds Tower Bldg., Lansing, Mich.

cobpo

WANT-ADS

A national orgMiiMion tf ratntttn n»d itiftim,
Wtriitg i* laboratory fdfitUfa
oxifd
■
tbo mtt tf concTota.

OIL

FREE CRANKCASK VEHVICK

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
,xu*

OLBNN^^tH^--’

PURE

MONTGO

HE

�TH* HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. JULY U. 1W

EDUCATIQljAL TESTS AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION SUPPLIES—
*
■
.....
Jil

OF EDUCATION ANNUAL REPORT
ru k«M la IU

9 fEfe3

G KN HR* h AND MI8CZLLANXOU8 SUPPLIES—
•

•mt::..

1JM.Y0

AUDITORIUM ACCOUNT—

XMT.aO

K

w, m. wtica ail. v
MllUa Br*41»r Oa. .

■■ms

Mkbiraa Ttaehert' R&gt;
Dr. w. D. HioGnot

9I*&gt;&lt;&gt;

Jssr. sstatt-AH 10It, 1010, toss

Li.M..,'^t‘X*saaT

GAB AND ELECTRICITY TELEPHONE. *ATM-

HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION

h;

RECEIPTS—GENERAL FUND

i.i-i no

list;
JULY I, 1939.

STATIONERY. POSTAGE. ETC.

Total R"Total Ditto

Uli

Wm. J. Fl.14

to
MANUAL ART8 SUPPLIE

...»

90.48

Uf.TDllY AND PIANO TUNING—

.90
98S4
KXFKXDITl Hr*
— , ____ —• 5.900 T?
A»minlttr»ll©a
........ . ... , ...........
. .........................
ia»0S99
..
.___ _______
1 .OTS 90
.........
• *09 T3
JUtifiKMi 1X««U«S --Z_ ___ ________________
____ ____________
. 35.390 •»
........ ...................................
3 439 1*
CvialT Norm*! K4nr*G»n ..
Coardliule A«I»I&lt;1»« —
' ___
.
............
| 033 &lt;W»
AaxIIUn' JpadM ------------.
.
.
T9S 04
MN Oama ——
.
. 14 09181
. .................. ,,r...................... - 3.539 4«
Nal(U»n&gt;nt« ot Float
r.piui oatur .........................
neMjfcrriaa
——-..........
144 99

•Hi

30.T9
' .50
1.09
. oirrraai uaraav
™.~
int.rn.tion.l B«&gt;l A Lock C*.
Haitian Public Schools Bookstore

14.83

TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS

MAINTENANCE Or PLANT.
PLAYGROUND AND UPKEEP OF RITES—

COMMERCIAL SUPPLIES—
7S.OO

&gt;l«ck. Inc

LAWRENCE SCUDDER A CO.
*4 53

Grind Rapids. M.chlrin •
SCIENCE. AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION SUPPLIES—

REPAIRS ON BUILDINGS—

TO.75.
39.49
11.00

1 week with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
PRAIRIEVILLE.
John M. Doster. 64. son ot the Tasker ot near Lake Odessa
late Michael and Mary Doster, pio­
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Barry and son
neers. died nt one o'clock Satur­ attended
the funeral
of Jww
day afternoon as hls farm home Knowles of Freeport on Friday aft­
here. He had been tn falling health ernoon.
for several months.- but had been
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Culbert and
H. K. Smith Hdye. —------- _.
confined co hls bed only a short son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
time. The Immediate cause
ot J. Roy Smith ot Caledonia.
------------death wu dropsy. Mr. Doster was i Orlln Yank
URmiv
„
and
mother. Mary
bom and always lived on the farm Yank. of East Woodland spent
where he died. He had always been Tuesday afternoon and evening
engaged in farming, but had taken ; with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shriber
part in community affairs, serving and family.
two years as township treasurer. He i
—
-----AVIllItm
Li survived by his widow. Pauline. I
SOUTH SHULTZ.
*N.
three daughters, Mrs. Helen Molt. ’ Misses Emma and Blanch OarM1m Frances Doster and
Mrs. i penter pleasantly entertained a few
Frieda Quick,
yuicx. all
an of
ot Prairieville,
Frairieviuc. guests Tuesday
luesaay evening honoring
two grandsons. RODert
Robert ana
and Micnsei
Michael ,; mcir
their moi
mother. Mrs. Ida Carpenter's
“—-*- Doster
------*', tL'.L?-y.
Quick, a brother. Frank
of
birthday. Ice cream and light re­
Delton, and two brotherz-ln-law, I freshments
'
'
were served. Tlimw!
REPAIRS ON PLUMBING
Charles Williams of Hickory Cor- | present were Mr. and Mra. Harry
91.35
nera and Mark Bugbee of Lebanon. Wood and Harry. Jr., of Hastings;
149.71
11J*
Oregon. Funeral services will be Mra. Pearl Bristol of Marshall. Mr.
15.90
held from lhe home at 10 o'clock and Mrs. Jim Burgdoff and Mr.
Tuesday In charge of the
Rev. and Mra. G. E Kenyon.
___ r..________------------Ralph
Bales of Delton.--------------------Burial will
Mrs. Pearl Bristol of Marshall
be in Prairieville cemetery. Sincere visited Mra Anna Robinson and
sympathy Is extended to hls loved : Mra. Mina Kenyon several days lait
ones. John or "Hans" as he was
REPAIRS ON HEATING PI.A NT
lovingly called by old associates,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hom attended
had a host of. friends who.FlH nVas church in Hastings Bunday and
him. He will be missed most in hls spent the afternoon with Mr nnd
home where he was lovingly cared Mrs. Byron Moody of South Maple
Grove.
for.
The remains of Willis PerIgo, for­
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Horn spent
Louis Allii Co.
merly ot this place, late of Kalnma- l Sunday in Allegan.
xoo, will be brought here Tuesday.
jday. ‘I G. E. Kenyon is very proud of
LIGHTING REPAIRS AND RKPLACKMENT8The funeral services will be k."
.. claves and their sixteen
held some twin
Jarman'a Klrtrir A/Tift Shop
al lhe Baptist church here at 2 P. I year old mother.
Roblrakl Klxtrle Shop .—
Coa.umtr. Power &lt;^o
M. Burial will be in our cemetery. I Our annual Shultz school picnic
9.00
Mr. Pcrigo passed the greater part | will be held the second Saturday In
ot hls life in Prairieville and near August, the 8th. Please remember
YPEWRITER EXCHANGE AND
vicinity. He is survived by his wife. the date
-----and
-*...............
come, fl will be heldHattie, and children. Mra. Ruth on the school grounds.
Sackctl and Waller PerIgo of Den­
Mr. and Mn. G. E. Kenyon at­
ver. oolo.. Mra. Ada Bogart of Has­ tended church at Cloverdale Sun­
tings. Mra. Rena Fllckensteln of day and spent die rest of the day
Lowell. Ross and Ariel of Kalama­ with their cousins. Mr. nnd Mn Lee
zoo. Sympathy is extended to the McFall of Monroe, who are spend­
tsinrrr Bsaini
Writarn Union
family. Mr. perigo had many friends ing three weeks at the Spaulding
here.
cottage at Wnll lake.
The Triple Link Club met with
Jimmie May of Battle Creek is
Mrs. W. F. Smith at their pleasant spending a week with his uncle.
home at Crooked lake. Friday. A Lester Bonneville and family.
delightful time was reported. Elec­
Mn. Kate Patton of Kalamaxoo.
tion of officers resulted in
*' ~ who has been spending two weeks
Mrs.
Fannie Jackson, president; Mn. at the Prang Maas cottage, return­
Stella Barber, vice-president; Mrs. ed home Sunday, and Mn. Patton
Maude Smith, secretary, and MUs and MIm Mildred Wright of Bat­
1.014.00
Dora Johnson, treasurer.
Next tle Creek spent a day with
Mn.
meeting will be with Mrs. Maggie Mina Kenyon.
Lehman.
I wish to correct a mistake I
The eighth reunion of our school made In my Items last week: Mr
is past. Not nearly as many in at­ nnd Mrs. George Thompson went
tendance but those who did get here |I to Missouri to visit friends, but ....
not
deserve a credit mark all around j In their house car.
IVillhm Smith
the biggest bam in Barry county, i
----------------- —♦ - --------------- -Carvtih A Ct.h
Was the weather hot? Whew! those '
COATS GROVE.
Renntll A Ba_
on the program either melted or; E 8. Thompson went to lhe Uni- r
Coun Eltctrlr Sappl; Co.
CharVa Buna ..................
were lolling In the shade on the • *&lt;‘ralty hospital last Wednesday. He
100*4?
front porch or at some lake. The , h
*s h
*&lt;1 f°
ur X-ray
nas
naa
lour
x-ray pictures taken
and
operations
president was game and gave us I• an
d has undergone two operations,
several readings in her pleasing , He w,,
willl need to stay
.stay there a month
way. Stuart Clement. Rockwell I yet- HU address is University hosDrummond. Howard Doolittle. Al-! P»*l. Ann Arbor. HU many friend".
Iron Blanchard. Clare Blackman. I hope for a 'Peed recovery.
Mark NorrU and others gave some . Callers on Mrs. Lenah Soase durinterestlng talks. Election of off!- ; ln« lh« PR*t *eek were Mra. Stella
KEYS. LOCKS—
cera: president. Mrs. Mabel Geer Ar- KeUcy and Mrs. Ronald Lahman.
ford. Benton Harbor;
vtoe-pnel- ' ®»rl Scaw. Mr. and Mra. Willard *
dent. Mrs. Myrtle Wilcox Bradley of Dtmond. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar CoopAugusta; secretary an dtreasurer.. er and son David
Mrs. Margaret Parker Johncock. , J31«»n Smith has been visiting in
Fatter Bta.ru. tfdwa. Co
Meeting opened with singing "Jim- Midland,
Mlu
Of th. at
»l.lhe Mr.
Mr*
h-,— have
Mr.
nndFrnnv
Mrs. Wllh.AFrank Kilmer
erica” with
with MI
m Flower
pi­ nnd
MIKCELLANKOU
ano and closed with “God Be With moved into the Kittle Sprague
t'arroffc A F
house.
You TUI we Meet Again.”
H. R. Iluntti
The Dally Vacation Bible school
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lancaster
and three sons, NeU Lancaster. Mr. will begin on Monday. July 21. and
Nell and Don Higgins.
Hastings, continue two weeks. AU difidrm
CAPITAL OUTLAY.
and Albert Higgins of C. C. C. camp arc invited to attend.
8T0KKRR PRINTING PRXNR. EVE TESTING MACHINE—
Felicia Thompson of Battle Creek
al Marietta, called on Mr. and Mrs.
Madera Coal Barn.r Ct............................................................... t
Guy Higgins. Sunday.
is visiting relatives here.
Lyle Billing accompanied Mr. and
The L. A. S will serve home made
Mrs. George Cowels on a ten-day ice cream and cake at the church
fishing trip In lhe northern penin­ on Friday evening. July 24.
Chai Dahlhoatar ....
is ’ i
sula.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox
Mr. and Mrs. Manley Billings, and baby spent the wee|t end with
Mrs. Hasel Billings and Leta were Mrs. E. 8. Thompson and daughter
i on
Virginia.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Tound of South Kala­
Ruth Woodman was at Crooked
lake part of last week
mazoo.
Miss Mary Ellen Hansknccht. who
Mrs. H. A. Woodman and daugh­
DEBT SERVICE.
lias been visiting Ellen Shelp. re­ ter Ruth were in Grand Rapids
BONDS AND INTEREST—
turned to her home in Grand Rap­ Monday afternoon.
Haitian City Bank ....
Ids. Sunday.
Mrs. Neil Smith of Midland spent
Miss Myrtle Smith and
Mlts a few days last week here and at
CONTINGENT FUND—
Laura Drummond have gone
to Crooked lake.
nre. wumi —
Rev. and Mrs. Clem Jordan ar*
Wall lake for a week's stay with Mr.
Haallac* C&lt;t, B«ek
and mia.
■Iiu
Mn. Lth'iit
David Artlip
nruip oi
of Wall
wail J3KC.
lake. spending their vacation at Michigan
ItMtfc)---Ronald MeKIbbin. George Hyde City.
Mrs.
Harley Sease has been quite
and
guest.
John
Woods,
returned
I. R KJ-.a Kl»
sick during the past week.
from Gun lake Sunday afternoon.
There were eight members of a
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Adrianson and
family of Gas City, Indiana. Mrs. former choir.,during the pastorate
Leon Leisure and son of Loe Ange- ”
of
• p.
• • C. Wing
•••**• ■*
at Wayland,
»««jiatiu, wno
who were
« «... o, no.
les, Calif.,' and Mlu Marian Blake, here.at church last Sunday and
Glean Bela
of Battle Creek, have been guests Bave muslo
music for
ior the
me church
cnurch service
Ihl.
__ j Mra. »
___
Iland
anrt |U
A sermon
- ........... was preached
. . .bv
this ......
week of Mr and
George
the
Brother Wing. They came from
Adriaii'on and Luclie.
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS
8137. US.91
Mra. Irene Oom of San Francisco. Grand Rapids. Wayland. Kalama­
Mrs.
Brown
Calif.. Lindsey Oom of Kalamazoo. xoo and Plainwell.
TBBASUBBR'B BBPOBT
called on lhe former’s sister. Mr. from the latter place sang “When
-I'.a'svi
They Ring the Golden Bells for You and Mrs F. J. Hwbti,
and
k-MIMMI T««4. JTiklv 1. 1913—
,
SOOTHWwf CAMPTON.
_. Me?'
...
In an item a few -weeks ago we
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Strodtbeck ' reported, aa
■&gt; it
It wm given
____ to tuTthat
.. .. .
called on Mr. and Mrs
Arthur Ralph Van Wie was married, but
Sttodtbeck and new son Saturday i Ralph san it is not so
mnln, on North BrSdw.r Hrt. jt.Xn hLpJ.!
“*«

•hi

iIG.'U

I.I 1CW.II1 '■ SUPPLIES*-

PRINTING —
12. *5
17.35
45.S3

50.00
19.59
33.R3
24.00
1.00
BOARD OP EDUCATION ANNUAL REPORT OF DISBURSEMENTS
FROM JULY 1. 193ft ta JUNE 30. I93t.

SUPPLEMENTARY AND INDIGENT BOOKS
Haatlnra Pnblb tkkoalu Huokatnrr
QlMMMBvrry ,,
------ ....
Hlllaetlw 8rbo«l Suppl; Cn.
..

30*00 .
■•no
so 60
so.on
D. D. Walton

.•

■ ■r.NERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS SUPPLIES—

Mich Iran 8&lt;
Hiitincs pr
Oaicc Siipi-lr Shot,

3

S3 io
IS 00
4 03
I’ 41
90

TRANSPORTATION nF PRINCIPAL AND AGRICULTURAL TEACHER—

COUNTY NORMAL EDUCATION.

TRANSPORTATION
9

1* 40
3.9*

BOOKS- MAGAZINES AND GENERAL SUPPLIES

ELEMENTARY EDUCATION

iM

l'*.*53 *4
318 13

MUSIC. ART. AND PRIMARY SUPPLIES

3
CO-ORDINATE ACTIVITIES.

Klil.trt
Mattias

... »

so.on
57 41

.....s

13.70

.....

2.80

..i.

38 00
-9.00
17.10

NURSES’ SUPPLIES —

HUFFLEMENTARV
Ran* MrN.II;
F.4war4 RlM-k
ilmhlan MHO
MaKnithl A V,
F. M Hair * &lt;
wAlIrr r.«7»1i.i;.rt r ,
Aw«rir»a H-w.h C*-w&gt;t&gt;ai
AarrtniM Edn—• -- •*
Milon Rra-U-

8
AUXILIARY AGENCIES.
SIGHT SCHOOL—GYM

9
73 00

9

i..son no
199.3035.00 •
FIXED CHARGES.
INSURANCE —FIRE. WIND SPRINKLER. BURGLAR—

-A .?&gt;
*2
GENERAL AND Mtsr ELL A NEGUS SUPPLIE

l.MPLOYERS

Hand MeNallx C

LIABILITY AND SURETY BONOS-

SPECIAL F.DUCATIOT
OPERATION OF PLANT.

”!!!

l:Si

is

INTERMEDIATE EDUCATION.

IY AND INDIGENT BOOKS?THrm
r «=?
Gla« * UgmiMnr .
Baraasss;
Albn A Baran ... .. .

a»2

....
-- . ........... »

44 11
13.49

l RuiUtrr HsiatMi

983.15

Hrt«l ahriMr

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put: ItMriui wSStaon rrMojmnhi’

�THE HASTINGS R4NNEH, EHURSDAY.JULY U. 1M4

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes
Wildemeu State park, 12 miles
west of Mackinaw city, is now open
for public um with a fine new tour­
ist camp ground.

A public campground with stone
fireplaces, drinking fountains, wa­
ter supply and sanitary facilities
are available to tourist campers for
lhe first time this summer at Wild­
erness State park. The campground
is near a bathing beach on the
Straits of. Mackinac, and not far
from a, picturesque artificial lake
which at .one time was the site of
a large beaver pond. An attraction
at this lake is a number of wild

One of the few doe deer with trip­
let fawns reported in the Newberry
Conservation district thU year was
observed by jack Teed of McMillan
near the Tahquamenon river, about
a mile north of thU place. Con­
servation game men at Lansing say
that In the first fawning season of
a doe. the offspring more than likely
will be a "single,” but that In sub­
sequent fawning seasons of that doc,
twins will be mare common than
singles or ulpleU.
While on hU vacation In Munuscong State park. Dr. Max M. Peet,
chief surgeon at University hospi­
tal. Ann Arbor, was called upon to
perform an operation that saved the
life of a deer fawn. The fawn ap- I
parently had been attacked by a
dog and was brought to lhe park by i
Conservation Officer Joseph Hill of
Pickford. Dr. Peet found lhat Its left
hind leg had been broken seriously,
the bone protruding through the
flesh. The surgeon went to the-cot­
tage and brought out hls surgical
kit. He cleaned and scraped the
bone, applied antiseptic, wrapped
lhe leg with absorbent cotton,
braced It with spllnU and then
taped it securely.
The fawn U coming along fine,
and lhe braces will be removed In
about six weeks.

Four male wolves were among lhe
140 predatory animats killed by
bounty hunters in Michigan during
June, lhe heaviest take of wolves
since January when bounty hunters
reported killing four wolves. The
June kill of predators by bounty
hunters cost the Department of
Conservation 81480.
The
catch
consisted of: Coyotes. 118; bobcats.
27. and wolves, four.
Voyageur* and Jesuit missionar­
ies sent out reports of, Indian cop­
per mines in the Lake Superior re­
gion as early as 1665.

The total value of catches ot
commercial Bsh made in the Michi­
gan waters of the Great Lakes av­
erages nearly 42.500,000 a year for
the past nve years. The record
catch for this period was made In
1031 when 31.624.687 pounds of fish
were taken. This catch had a total
value of 82S80.888.

.

ORANGEVILLE.
.
Mrs. J. W Sheffield spent Fri­
day and Saturday with relatives at
Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mr*. Ivan Edgell of
Hickory Comers were
Sunday
guesta of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Nichols.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clinton and
William Rupe of Pontiac were Sun­
day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marian
Rupe. Mrs. Rupe relumed home
with them where she will spend the

FISH AND GAME MEN
TO VISIT MICHIGAN.
The Joint convention of the In­
ternational Ass'll, of Game, Fish and
Conservation Commissioners and
the American Fisheries Society
which meets in Grand Rapids Aug.
31 to Sept. 4. promises to be a maetIng of unusual interest.
Elaborate preparations are being
made by conservation authorities
of Michigan and others of the stale
to receive the leading conservationUU from lhe nation and Canada al
the Joint convention. Chase 8. Os­
born. former governor of Michigan
and long known for hls active in­
terest in conservation affairs of this
state and ot the nation, will be one
of the featured speakers.
Special tours along scenic high­
ways, Including stops at state fish
hatcheries in western Michigan; a
cruise on the United States coast
guard cutter, "Escanaba,” and a visit
to the W K Kellogg Bird sanctu­
ary near Battle Creek are program
events.
ASSYRIA.
Stanley Durham, who has been
at Nichols hospital. Battle Creek,
for several weeks following an oper­
ation for appendicitis came home
on Tuesday for convalescence.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Beatty and
daughters and MIm Helen Gorham
all from near Detroit were enter­
tained at Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cot­
ton's home Bunday when they came
to see their brother, Thomas Gor:
ham. who lives at tha Cotton home
Bom to Mrs. Virginia Callahan
on Thursday morning at the home
of her mother. Mrs. Avis Babcock, a
daughter.
Silas Gates and housekeeper. Mrs.
Frankie Gleaner, have moved from
lhe former's farm home In the
Stevens district lo her son's home
in Battle Creek.
Miss Bertha Miller, who submit­
ted lo an appendicitis operation re­
cently at St. Lawrence hospital at
Lansing, is convalescing at the
home of her mother, Mn. Belle MilAnnouncements have been re­
ceived for Lhe annual M. S. H. as­
sociation picnic to be held on the
spacious hospital lawn at Kalama­
zoo on Saturday, July 25.
Passing neighbors discovered the
well house at lhe Hugh Case farm to
be on fire Friday afternoon. Pre­
sumably Il was caused by the ex­
haust from a rbs engine used to
pump water for a supply cistern,
and the extremely dry condition of
the shingles. A near supply of wa­
ter soon controlled it.
Merle Van Auken. who is em­
ployed in Battle Creek. U off duty
caused by the bones In one fool be­
ing crushed.
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Irv Mil­
ler. who recently moved from this
locality to Olivet, will gather at
Pine lake Sunday for a picnic and
social lime.
Rev. John W. Foy of near Belle­
vue. a former pastor, filled lhe pul­
pit at the Briggs church last Sun­
day.
Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Hewitt made
a business trip lo Hastings on Fri­
day. Marvin. Floyd and Russell Eu­
gene spent Uie afternoon with their
aunt. Mrs. Edna Case.
Master Gordon case observed hls
fourth birthday on Wednesday by a
birthday dinner. Hls aunt. Miss Ara­
bella Bivens of Crooked lake and
four irlends. who are attending
Western State Teachers College.

, middlkville.
I
o, “8T DSXTON
MORGAN.
urday night
I Our fonner townsman, Charles P. July 9 Utter.
Mrs. Millie Flury. who passed Lb* grandmother
McNaughton. who for year* had| Visitor* at elate Loudon's Bun­ winter in Otsego with her niece,
i resided in Minneapolis, Minn., with day wore Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Hou- Mrs. J. W. Shaffer returned to her
wiuw iw
uB.cK-u in
h. vlnor.
.u.s., ouiu
, Sunday somewhat
,
, improved
_ .
SUte Parks to Enforce One- ;iui&gt;
hU i*uiuy.
family, white
lie traveled
Band lake, tar.
Mr. ana
and tan.
Mn. u.
L. v.
D. home
tn
; western states passed away July 4th Houviner. Battle creek. MT. and health. Her sister, Mrs. Martha Del­
Week and Two-Week
4, and was laid to rest tn thal city. Mra. Harold
Hasel and daughters, ter will spend the week with her.
Aside from lhe widow, three daugh-Richland. Mr. and Mrs. Marlon
----- -Van -Byckle
-Permits
Mr. and
Mrs. -Robert
ters and other relatives, a ho*i of Rupe. Orangeville. Mr. and Mrs. „
iU lBnHiy
and
family O1
of nw
near wooauna
Woodland ana
and
Because of the increasing num­
Mr*. Gladys Hall,
friends are left to mourn hU early 1 Win Louden and grandson. Dennis Mr and Mrs
Kine and
ber of tourist campers in Michigan's
passing. The friends here extend to j Oaberl. Mrs. Ola Moon of Gull lake, daughter. Mary Lou of Unslng and Mrs. Darrell £
■tale parks, rigid enforcement of the bereaved ones their sympathy.
Mrs Mary Crookston end Leo (Ipent eunday with Mr and Mrs of Hastings spent Prlds
the one-week and two-week camp­
The extreme heat has caused two j Quick. Hastings and Mr. and Mrs.:
gyckle.
' with Mrs Edd. Newton
ing limitations will be necessary this
,
j
R
w-bb
summer, according lo Waller J. blowouts In the pavement on M-37, Ardy Louden
DOWLING.
c
in the village,
viltaae. one on the ewt
;
Mr and Mrs. Marion Rupe of Creek Saturday to care for an inKingscotl, superintendent of state here In
A Townsend mass meeting with ■
part, another Just west of ^C 'S^n'e’,Ue.’PT?1 ?Un.^y *?lh
VMUd
lady m an Indefinite
Indefinite Ume.
Ume.
•uu lauy
saket picnic will be'held on TuesrraMiva ana
in me
and wue.
wife. In
the ajiernoo,.
afternoon
Rev.
Hayter
1
"ln the state parka south of Bay schoolhouse. Road crew* soon re- Waters
Rev. Hayter and nephew. Earl
•y. July 28, at the Herrington rethey visited at Henry Houviner's.
City and Grand Haven, and . in­ paired the damage.
Furlong, and brother of Nashville
■nd Mrz. Mattle
This Is the Ume of the year when
Mr and Mr*. Wayne Frey and
cluding the parks of those names,
Nashville. Ernest Moore of Kala­
the permits for camping will allow picnics seem to be the fashion. The - daughter. Dorothy Jean, of Michl- Chas. Harrington Saturday.
mazoo and Joseph Warnock of
returned
city were callers Sunday eve­
no more than seven day* at one former employee* of lhe old Feath-1
•
Mr.
and
Mra.
HUI
of
Grand
Rap
­
Galesburg
will
be
the
speakers
of
Tte Ladtes' Aid »
■lie,” Kingscotl said. "North of Bay erbone factory here will gather at I nlng at Rex Waters.
ids spent tha week end with Mrs.
dinner al the churc
Mr. and Mrs. Dit Willison. Delton
City and Grand Haven qtmiUng Caledonia park on the 19th. All are
Nellie Wolf and family. Mlu Ona connection. This mean* an invita­
permits will allow no longer than Invited to bring their eats and table ' and Arthur Kern. Kalamazoo were Whitman returned home with them tion to all and don't forget to bring Thursday, with Mn.
kUl and Mn.
service and Join in.
I Bunday callers of Mr. and Mrs.
two-week occupations of one site.
for a two week*' visit.
table service.
charge.
Margaret and William Hacker Alj?h
,
"After the maximum periods have
Pearl Walt of the Pratt district
Robert Gaskill is having a ten
Mr and
Henr* Houviner en­
expired, the camper will be direct­ drove to Chicago early Wednesday
is
spending
two
weeks
with
Mr.
and
day
vacation
at
Camp
Barry
Stu
­
ROBINHUE PAUL
ed to move to another state park. A M w m to aasisTta the rare of' rertalned on Sunday their parents. Mrs. Bordy Rowlader.
art
lake.
liuah Hall and son The7made । Mr- “d Mrs P J Houviner. and
This plan is Intended to discourage Mr
"
wiS'tSS' sass's1*:s.yMr. and Mrs. Sandy Wortman
Mrs. Edith Bolinger of Battle
monopoly ot the best camping sites,
Creek visited Mr. and Mra. J. W. received a telegram Thursday, in­
&gt;toe*°wS?
------------------left
all
Mr
and
D
Houviner
of
Bat
­
----- __not
wm
so heavyThev
They
left
all
Mr
“
n&lt;1
14X5
L
D
Houviner
of
Batand prevent excessive wear on the Xta
ls good'. new. .to t&lt; tin
}■*&lt;*•*
«d Jglfr
taer and
f?rw»lr anrl
Tnv
.nd Howard and Mr. and Mrs. Will Ma­ forming them of lhe death of Mrs.
grounds.*’
ter of NMhvllle Sunday.
Wertman'K brother. George Hart­
!JS
d‘bXid
° h
k“*
n H“*n 1 “
---------------iricum
ucre. wh
wno
11‘
—"
vc xi.u
—n
•
Mrs. Prank Wilcox returned to man which occurred at his home in
.-----• 1 Mrs. Stewart Waters. Mrs. Bess
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
George Poland were Fred and
umeiu? and Waters. Mrs Rhlerson Louden, Mrs. her daughter's, Mrs. O. E- Paddle- Spencer. Ohio, Mr. Hartman was 70
Mlu Freda Makley and friend.
IBur] and Thomas I. Gillette
lord
of
Bellevue
after
spending
a
mer Ingram and fatnlUoa of 1
____________
__________
went
lo LeslieSunday
Sundayand 1 Florence Louden. Mrs. Gay HouPaul Desgranges and Edward EarlI I families
tings.
few days at their cottage here.
____ -__ ___________________________
of Lake Odessa were in a painful joined other relatives In visiting a [ vlPcr ftnd Mrs. Iva McBain atlendHomer
Shaffer
of
Otsego
is
hls
slater.
He
leaves
an
Invalid
Ray Wintermute and family
1 “bower at the home of Mrs.
but lucky automobile accident Sat­ sister. whom they had not seen for
ncMr Richland on spending a week with hte ulster, wife.
urday afternoon. They were en­ some time. They had a pleasant X“la.
Mrs. Horry Hammond at their cot­
Mrs. Cora Aspinall will entertain Mr. and Mrs. John Kollar.
route home from Lansing and took day and enjoyed a pot luck dinner : T^.rd*y,.,?/tcrnoontage at Thomapple lake.
in
the
shade
I
Ed.
Willison
spent
Friday
al
his
a crossroad from Sunfield to Wood­
Bible school started Monday A.1
*- Mr"- Charley. Becks, near
bury. The rood had a six-foot
HINDS CORNERS.
.
washout in It and ax the danger M. at the M. E. church. This has • o“Xb“r8, .
been an annual affair for some ।
Lelnaar. Clay Roebreck
Mrs. C. H. Brown of Alpena spent
sign hod fallen down they drove
Le‘n*" &lt;cre In Wayland last week with her parents. Mr. and
into it Miss Makley escaped with a year* and the UtUe folk* always H»d
Mrs. C. N. Tobias and her daughter.
number of severe bruises, but the look forward to it with pleasure.:
i Mr. and Mrs-Allen Griffen enter- ■ Mrs. Harold Camp in Hastings.
boys dldn‘t fare as well. Paul was Some splendid teachers devote their
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias and
tained on Sunday afternoon tb-lr |
thrown .through the windshield and time to this good work.
Mrs. Mell Hendershot and son
cousins.
Mrs.
Wes
Schaufer
of
Ot
­
received two severe cuts on hls,
Regular school election this Mon­
forehead and a number of bruises day evening to elect two members to sego and son Howard ano wife ot Bruce and hls friend Don Marks all
of Kalamazoo spent Thursday eve­
and cuts on the legs. Mr. Earl suf­ the board; there are four lo choose Kalamazoo
Mr. and Mrs.xBert Gainder and ning with their parents, Mr. and
fered a broken nose and severe cuts from.
LTCT-on the legs also. The young people
A few farmers have threshed. Wc Lucille were dinner guests on Sun­ Mrs. C. N. Tobias. Mrs. Hender­
were taken to Sunfield where they have heard ot some good yields but day of Mr. and\Mrs. Clifford Gain­ shott and the boys remaining for
der near Plainwell.
the rest of the week. Marian re­
received medical aid, then came on for the most part wheal is not so
turning with her parents.
Mr.
and
MB.
Ebble
Leinaar
of
Laming. Mich.
home. Except for a broken wind­ good.
Mrs. C. N. Tobias and grand­
shield and bent-bumper the car was
A few horses have been overcome Bunnell district. Mrs. Mary Crooks­
not damaged. Those near the acci­ by the heat. Il stands lhe driver hi ton and Leo Quick of Hastings were daughter Marian, and Mrs. C. H.
dent reported that they were driv­ hand to remember thal the horse visitors Sunday evening of Mr. and Brown of Alpena spent Thursday
in Hastings lhe guesta ot the latter's
ing only ten miles per hour which feels lhe heat as well as men. and Mrs. Ike Leinaar.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Erb of Delton daughter. Mrs. Harold camp.
EL AGUINALDO CUBAN HONEY eamea from beee e&lt; the WM
probably saved their lives
should be given plenty of rest dur­
Mrs. Allen Bishop and sons and'
and Mrs. Olive Pennock of Lowell
Maestra Mountains In Cuba
- -—
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Barnum and ing this extreme hot spell.
MIm Mary Bishop spent Monday
also
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harvey
Dings
of
sons John and Omar spent several
Supt. Bell and family were home
in
Battle
Creek.
Delton
spent
Sunday
evening
at
days with Gene Barnum at hls cot­ over the week end.
United Stales In cocrectlns
tage at Houghton lake lhe past
Some one who evidently likes Ciate Louden's. We are glad to re­ ■ Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Payne and .
Bronchitis, Chronic Cough*
beef, even in hot weather, helped port elate being on the gain al this son of Hastings and Mrs. Mary;
Hathaway spent Friday evening
users In the United 8 la tee r
Mrs Harry Sandbrook attended themselves to a quarter of beef, writing.
Mr. and Mrs. James Boulter and with Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Tobias and
an announcement tea In honor of thal was hanging in the slaughter
I family.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bliss
Boulter
were
her sister. Lottie. Saturday after­ house of A- Oeukes and son Fri­
Mrs. Robert Bechtel of Hasting*
noon at the home of Mrs. Bert day night. The Slate troopers were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and
i and her grandwn. Robert Gotts, of
Rogers in Lake Odessa:
investigating Saturday forenoon, but Mrs. Oltis Boulter at Cressey.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Collison were Mottsvllle visited Mrs. Burrell Phil. HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
The primary department of the didn't find the guilty parties.
I In Kalamazoo Thursday.
| lips and daughter. Gertrude. Thurs­
Brethren church and their teachers
HA8 SECURED THE AGENCY FOR THIS WONDf
Mason Newton and Mr. and Mrs. day. They all went to Gull lake for
•Simplicity and humaneness tire 1
enjoyed a picnic dinner at the Lake
NATURAL PRODUCT IN THIS COMMUNITY.
the basic attributes of greatness."—,I Allen Griffen were in Hastings on ■ the afternoon and evening.'
Odessa Park Sunday.
I Miss Margaret Moore spent Sat'Monday afternoon.
Channing pollock.
PODUNK.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brown and
daughter Juanita spent Sunday at
Lake Michigan.
Richard Gardner and family of
Kalamaxoo are moving into George
Ransoms tenant house.
The D. D. D.’s were royalty enter­
tained at the home of Mrs. Elma
Travis. A lovely lunch was served.
Gladys Laubaugh. who has been
staying at Battle Creek, is home
for a time.
The Ladles' Aid did well at their
ice cream social, taking hi over &gt;20,
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bush of Bat­
tle Creek were Sunday guests al
George Ransom'
CAMPING TIME

:

1 luirrr.

LIMITED NOW !

—.......

Stomach Sufferer Finds
New Effective Relief

LyBARKERS DRUG STO

You Can't Sae All the Way Through
Ball of Twine—So Buy

FARM BUREAU
BINDER TWINE
It is made from the best fibers in a modern plant by

experienced

Norma Case of Lansing spent the

Bottle

CKK8SBT.
July 0 Letter.
For Only
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hartman spent
the Fburth and week end with rel­
atives in the northern part of the
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cramer and state.
children of Kalamazoo and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Culp and Within It b&lt;wr.
daughter of Ohio are spending sev- *IUr taking old
Sunday afternoon guests of Mr. and , oral days with his brother. W. M.
Mrs. E. D. Lewi*.
&lt; Culp. They all motored to Holt.
Mr. and Mrs. clarence Haight and 1 Friday to visit their sister, who Is
son of Hastings were Sunday guests ■ very low.
of relaUves here.
I Wc all enjoyed the lovely mln.
Mrs. Kittle Warner of Kalamazoo
Mr. and Mn. Chas. McNulty atMEDICINE
called on friends Sunday.
I tended the wedding of a friend at
Mrs. Wayne Ransbottom. who Battle Creek on Sunday.
llabi*
lo •ppandleltll
lives west of the village is seriously | Lawrence Tobias Is spending some
•nd othar •Unrau
ill at this writing, her Illness being . Ume with" relative* at HasUngs.
Old ChUt U ■ praara irrttarat for nrarttb
Mina In .
LU.__a ■__
brought on by the extreme heat of
Mr. and Mra. Dick Haffenden of
the past week.
। Sliver Creek visited Mr. and Mra.
■ 11 - • *
,---------- ,
'Delbert Enxlan Sunday afternoon.
•The be« mennet ot erenjln. j Mr ml Mn. Oowrove .nd moU&gt;WALGREEN SYSTEM
ounelyu U by nol memblln, him | er .lunded . tunUy reunion u ■ttfcV O
DRUG STORE
who has injured us."—Jana Porter, j Milham Park Sunday.
PHONE 2241
HASTINGS

49°

Lwinc-making

closest inspection.

management

under

and

.

Household Helpers That Will
Make Life Worth Living.

SPEED QUEEN WASHER
Try one at your own convenience and be con­
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that they do better work, last longer and cost less per

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us prove it.

Priced at

$39.50 , $49.50 , $59.50
DeLuxe Machine

£ GAS STOVES
LAN LINE ... a wonderful value. Thia Baa haa
r very thing that can be expeelM

N

Double Security' FOB TOUB
DEPOSITS
Banking Safeguards
with Federal Deposit
Insurance Added
The management policies of this bank and ib
eound assets assure ample protection for you as
a depositor here. But we have provided double
protection for you by adding Federal Deposit
Insurance, which gives you 100% safety for your
money, as specified in the Banking Act of 1935;
Other investment values may
shrink with changing markets and
conditions, but you may depend upon
the solid security of the money you
keep on deposit in this bank;

OF HASTINGS
HUF

INGS. MICHIGAN

8-POUND BALL—CRISS-CROSS
COVER. 600 FT. PER POUND

♦59 to »89

Two 8-lb. balls of Farm Bureau

twine in twine can (pari of can has
been cut away), showing how,the
criss-cross cover permits all twine
tu run out of lhe ball without snarl­
ing or bunching.

ELECTRIC STOVES
Wc have chosen the Estate Electric line, made for years by the sa
people who manufacture the Estate Heatrola. It lias everything lhat

Millions of pounds of this twine

model housekeeper could ask for. PRICED REASONABLY AND W

hove been used by our farmers.

LAST A LIFETIME!

It has given complete satis­

$79.5°

faction!

$99.50

THE FOLLOWING DEALERS HANDLE OUR TWINE:
DELTON ELEVATOR COMPANY. DELTON
DOSTER FARM BUREAU. DOSTER
BEROY BROS.. FREEPORT
LAKE ODESSA CO-OP.. LAKE ODESSA
MIDDLEVILLE CO-OP.. MIDDLEVILLE
NASHVILLE CO-pPM NASHVILLE

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
“The Farmer Owned Store”

Woodland

JFc Do Not Try to Sell . til the Merchandise That is Made. IFe
furniture and Househld Equipmutl!

MILLER FURNIT
HASTINGS

�THI HASTINGS BANNER, THyR^ftAY JULY M, IMS

WOODLAND.

I Clear lake, where they visited Jo- I rushed to the

office

of Dr. H.

. .
--------- ....---------- 8 Wedel but was pronounced dead
calif., is visiting her sister and husMrs Clyde Ruell entertained the
™
bend. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Sheldon, member, of Ute bridge club Thurs- StenSSTwiX bX m
for several weeks
I day evening. Miss Ivah Schray of
**“’
J"
Wayland cemetery. W*
We «t&lt;«nd
extend heartfelt
TYte IBM camp session for boys I
Qt Belding and Oor- Elmhurst. Ill. was an out-of-town ' Und
_
___ _______
_ । ———
TX-r:------ ’
“ZHZ ' guest.
sympathy to Mr. and Mrs. Follls.
_____^'In
rry. and
Eaton counties
i!TTm7^ idan Finnic
Ftonle of
of Hastings
Hastings are
are visiting
visiting Ptasl.
i
“L
m0T* Mr. and Mra, J. V. HUbert several i . Thursday evening about 6:30. Mrs * “
tov7 fro^ in
I.-— .ui. week
V
lit.,IM.
Matilda M.V.W Wnnwn
toown .,
,l -aims
“Aunt ,*e11 thc
due to the ex­
vuitor* from as
^.t^l
I UUs I»*h Schray of Elmhurst.: T1U ' to her friends and neighbors. treme heat.
and^L f^m c^adT\rX uS? Ill
Hl- who is staying at tne
lhe nenray
Schray went
call w,
on ■
a •&lt;£&gt;*■••»&lt;•.
neighbor. mu*.
Mrs.
••««** to «•««
There wa* a splendid attendance
home
here
for
her
vacation
spent
E
J
Sheldon,
but
did
not
find
her
•
Hw
W.
M
A.
meeting
al the Rev.
“.T ' “
,
7?re. .1'
hrr
snetit1 E. J.
her
The campers enjoyed a treat of 60 Friday with Mrs Julia Hutchins Of
home. In turning from fhe door J I Ba Worf home lut Thursday.
Ptota of chocolate milk from the Unslng
v. , in some manner she f.n
fell nW
off nn
on th.
the Quite
Qull« a
“ number availed thomaalve*
themselves
Highlands Dairy and three gallons
cement walk, injuring her shoulder of the opportunity to enjoy the
Mra. Glenn England entertained and hip She wu taken lo Pennock noonday meal willi them.
Swimming Instruction was given by Wednesday afternoon with a tea in
hospital
where
it
wu
found
that
Mrs.
Helen
ClUlds
and
daughter,
George WotrlQg of Nashville and honor of Mlu Ivah Schray of Elm­
her hip wu not broken but that she I Mrs. James Hutchins ot
Grand
Roger Sachett ot Nashville directed hurst. Ill.
had crushed and splintered the Rapids called on relative* and
the games. Rev. F. M. Rlggelman of
Mra. Madeline Haynes of Hutings bone in her ahoulder. Aunt Til is 82 friends here Friday.
Middleville uught plaster of parts ta visiting Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jotyears old and she U suffering from
We are sorry to hear ot lhe seriart and fishing
William
Carshock but otherwise brave and ou* illness of Frank Friend of Pleasmichiigl directed the program and
Mrs. Claud Rolfe and children ot cheerful. She will stay at the hes- I ant Valley. We understand hta connature study, while Rev. a. A. Hag- Grand Rapids visited her grand­
pltal until it ta determined wiiether dltlon was such tast week that an
mother. Mrs Cora Shopbeil. Fri­ to put her shoulder In a cut or not. ■ oxygen lent was used. At this writmusic and worship.
day and Saturday.
Mra. J. V. Hilbert accompanied i ing he U reported to be steadily 1mMrs. Lawrence Hilbert and Mrs by her mother. Mra. Ella Bush of proving.
Bupt. ot the Charlotte Schools.
Jay Dykhouw came to camp on ^^m^ei^k'rni^^'Thu^v I Lo* AWte*
Sisson and
Angeles, *vlilted°retat7v«a
visited relatives In
In ‘the
the ' Mr.'and
Mr and Mrs.
Mrs. Victor
Victor SlMon
and
opening day with 10 Charlotte beys
mwn | ™
““th
‘h P“
rt °Ur.
r
county
Friday.and £
daughter
called on Rev F.
as. me ..uer. nome.
££
.„d
Don
kmr,
“»*; “Roberta
J
and assisted by Mr. Hamilton end
gueat* were Mrs. James Hutchins, [ R«v- »nd Mra. Don Carrick and
Mr. Smith, from the laundry, got Mrs.
Helen Childs, Grand Rapids. ‘ d-“«hter B-rtya vtalted relative* ^verta?™™ h^e^SJi £
the boys home. Many thanks to all. i wa. I1CHII vnuua, ui.ikM &gt;»H*k**' ;—~~----- , ~~
,-------------Brown
Stewart In Grand Rapids Sunday afternoon feCUonm dS
Dean Davenport of Woodland. Dr. | Mrs. Clyde Brown. Mrs. Stewart to Grand Rapids Sunday afternoon.

■ • Wl. k*. A. 11 EMS

Mrs. Lena Jordan. Lansing.
August F. Geiger, age 69, passed . poison U breaking out on both
Robert B. Harkness and Clyde Wil-1 Broa-n.
Mr. and Mrs Kenneth
Engluh. away Monday. July 13. at 9:00 A. E^s. Stas Gaytha is aUo 111 u
cox ot Hutings and Dr. Joe Davis
*.w n.
ot Charlotte with hls wife and sis- | Calvin
English and MI
Miss
.Ivin Bnali.h
m Bernice
Bernice■ ' M„
M, at
st hls
hta home
home two
two miles
miles west
west of
of present with hive*
and1* under a
ter and many parents of the camp­. Englisli of Grand Rapids called on Woodland after an illness of about doctor's care
Rev. and Mra. Don Carrick Monday (14 years, the last five year, of which
reccm actlon by lhe vlllage
ers have been our guests.
| he wu confined to hta bed. Funeral ^011. replacing lhe flve bouleThe girls' camp is now In session evening.
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Allerdlng
,c“ »U1 * ‘leldtiyredn5*1By al ’ *»rd IWhu on our Main *treet
with Mrs. Gerald Patton as pro­
' and sons and Mr. and Mrs. John V°°
Brethren i which have been dark »o long, Is
gram director, assisted In music by
Bulling,
spent
Sunday
at
Gun
lake.
church. Burial at Woodland cem- greatly appreciated. It surelv makes
two of lhe Kendall slaters from Est­
Harley Townsend wUl
busine^Sn look” lo^be“
Mr. and Mra. Claud Carpenter rnon Center. Swimming is in charge
,
tertalned
Mr.
and
Mra.
H.
A.
Kltofficiate. He leaves hta widow. MTs. ' ter at night
of Helen and Dorothy Van Hora of
son and Mary Jo at their cottage
a''^'
“r‘
R'v
Whiter U conUnuln,
Eaton Rapids and Mias Greta Nutzi
UVonn. Oelnr ol ahum her serin or nrmow on Blewordof Alma for nature lore with arts at Saddlebag lake. Sunday.
Mesdames J. V. Hilbert, E. O. !5!!t -b:oth!"’ Fr.v’b\, cIlppl! “p •• &gt;he »rrlee Sunday morning.
and crafts handled by an expert
from the class in occupational Shomo and F. E. Border are spend­ Creyk. Colo.. George. Woodland, and These messages are proving very In­
ing the latter port of the week as the Albert of San Diego. Cai., and five teresting.
theophy at Kalamazoo.
Leland Westerman of the Chi­ guests of Mrs. Geo Jewett of Alle­ sisters, Mrs. Carrie Ballaston, Bal­
Fire, supposedly caused by spon­
* laston. Teas; Mra. Bertha Evermont. taneous combustion, destroyed the
cago Y. who hu accepted the sec­ gan at her Pine lake cottage.
Ten members of the choir at the Denver. Colo.; Mrs. Lydia Blickensretaryship of the Grand Rapids
barn on the Mike McCalla farm,
Rev. derfer. Denver, Colo.; Mra. Nellie
Y. M. C- A., is a younger brother of church in Wayland where
northeast of town, last Sunday eve­
our well known friend. George Wing used to preach held a reunion Beck. Laramie. Wyo., and Mra. Ros­ ning. The farm is occupied by the
at his home here Sunday. First alie Ballsted. Cripple Creek, Colo.
Westerman.
Pete Griffen family, who had about
they attended the morning service*
Jean England. Joe Thompson and 35 ton of hay and some small tools
at the Church of Christ. Coats Farrell Anderson of Hastings and
WEST HOPE.
destroyed. Fortunately, due to the
Orow
and
Rev.
Wing
preached
the
Tom
Long
of
Woodland
spent
the
Don't forget the McCallum school
warm weather, all their stock was
reunion this Saturday at the school- sermon. Then they enjoyed a pic­ week end at the England cottage in pasture and was saved. However,
house. Pot luck dinner. Ladles nic dinner with Rev. and Mrs. Wing. at Saddlbag lake.
three horses belonging to a neigh­
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Merriam of
Mrs. Smith Holmes returned to bor. Mr. Clum. were in the bam.
bring hammers and rolling pins—
Now don't get us wrong. It isn't Vermontville. Mra. Jennie Williams her home after a week's visit with due to the fact that he had been
a matrimonial school; just a nail­ and daughter Elvira of Fostoria. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harrison and cutting grain for Mr. Griffen and
driving contest and a rolling pin Ohio. Mr. and Mra. Milan Trumbo. family of Detroit.
since the horses fought with those
contest. There's a running broad local, and Mr. and Mra. J. L. Smith
of Mrs. Griffen, they could not be
FREEPORT.
Jump for our sturdier men folks were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.
turned Into the pasture. These, with
The extreme heat of the put
Miss Chrystal Thomas of Hastings Reisinger for dinner. Sunday.
the harnesses, hay fork, hay rope,
Claude Wise of Ottawa. Ill., spent week has caused many adjustments
will entertain us with musical
and some small tools, also belong­
numbers and readings and those several days last week with hls twin in the lives of Freeporter*. Work ing lo Mr. Clum. were destroyed.
hu been abandoned in some cases.
who have heard her readings know brother. Clyde Wise and family.
j The local fire truck and nearly
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J.
Wing
of
Grand
U1(
°
lMr
'
rreepor, .no
.urrouno-'
everyone In Freeport
and surround
what is in store for us. Our play
„*le'1p„ln»h
I", country rwpondrt to the .1.™
is excellent and we also have some Rapids were guests of Rev and Mrs.
UP
lhe C°®lwt and fought valiantly to save the
more good music planned. Baseball Fay C. Wing. Friday for a birthday
dinner,
when
the
twin
brothers
cele’!."*!• •"? n*x&gt;."&gt; oulbuUdlnus
The liec &lt;h.l there
game in the forenoon. And the ice
nt\°,r o? J1, 14 II *,ncere’y : waa no wind mode these efforts
cream and pop stand will be a busy ,I brated their birthday.
I Mr. and Mra. Forrest Parmalee of
\ lJ]L4hOli?pel1 may ** successful Wf have not learned
place if this heat holds out.
...u ' whether there was insurance or
Mr. and Mrs. William McCallum I Battle Creek spent the week end brniv^^H
Raymond Bunn
returned to
‘
" Mid­ whether the barn will be rebuilt.
received news of lhe death of her with the latter's parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Morton of St. dleville Tuesday for a few days'
niece. Mrs. Dorgan Clark of Kala­
Much sympathy Is expressed to the
mazoo. lhe first of last week. The Johns were callers at the home of' work.
Griffen and Clum families in their
funeral was held Wednesday. We Mr. and Mrs. John Hauer Sunday I Owing to the extreme hot weath­ serious loss.
er and busy time on farms, the M.
sympathize with them
in their afternoon.
Mra. Geo, Paul Is in Lansing car- I E 8. 8. have postponed their an­
MARTIN CORNERS.
sorrow.
Rev. Conklin and wife leave
Miss Glenns Osgood spent part ing for her daughter. Mrs. Richard nual picnic until August.
I___ __________ _______________ _
Monday for a two weeks' vacation
of last week with her brother and O'Brien, who has been ill.
Robert
Born
had
the
misfortune
1
Owosso
with
Jane
and
Frederick
at
Copemish
their former home.
wife. Rev and Mrs Isaac Osgood.
to fall twenty feet from the hay were seen on our streets Saturday
Ltrs. Sadie Hilton and daughter.
ot Wacoshlnee.
Miss Hazel of Saugus. Mass., are
Tiie community meeting which maw to the bam flour, landing on (afternoon.
The Misses Edwardlne and Doro- visiting Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher
should have been this week is post­ hls feet. He was Immediately taken
poned until the 24th because of the to Pennock hospital by Dr. Cobb thy Olson went to Detroit last week and other friends and relatives at
Ulis place
school reunion. It will be with Mr. and lhe X-ray showed a bone brok- for a visit with relatives.
Mrs. Oscar Olson and daughter,
Mr.-- S..dlc Hllluii and daughter
and Mrs. Geoffrey Kelley and we en in hls heel. The bone lias been
hear there is goUig to be an excel­ set and he will be home in a few Mrs Roy Harris of Grand Rapids, Hazel. Mr. and Mrs! Orr Fisiier and
days.
However.
It
will
be
about
Mrs.
Loa
Wolfe
of
Blanchard
and
Miss Ruby Cogswell of Lakeview
lent program.
Everyone come
Mrs. Ed. Gamble, our pastor's eight weeks before hls foot will be Mrs. Emma Sisson were dinner were Grand Rapids visitors Friday
out bf the cast. We are all^sorry “ guests of Mrs Fred Tabberer on of last week.
wife. Is recovering nicely from a
for Bob to have this accident hap- Wednesday
•
- of last weekMr. and Mrs Frank Trautwetn of
recent operation.
... ...»
The U.
U. B
B Sunday
Sunday scL^:
school held Altoona. &lt;Pa.,
who have been VisitOne of lhe most unusual acci­ pen in the middle of a busy season. 1 The
Mr. and Mra. N. Hoilandsworth | their annual picnic Wednesday at, ing their mother. Mrs. Eva Trautdents of which we have heard and
of
Lansing
and
Chalmer
Herahberg:
Townsend
park.
wein
the past two weeks returned
which might have been serious oc­
er
ot
South
Woodland
were
guests
;
The
M.
E
choir
met
Tuesday
eve'
to
their
home
last Friday.
curred recently when Lester Lord
Mrs. H. Cogswell is spending a
was trucking a horse home from of MUs Virginia Paul and Greydon ning al the home of Mr. and Mrs.
few days at her son. William CogsMarlin for Ezra Morehouse The Paul at their cottage at Saddlebag M W King.
The six months old son of Mr. well's in Lakeview
horse suddenly decided to sit In the lake. Sunday.
Mrs. Arthur Giddings and Ruth, and Mra. Walker Follls. who live in j Several of the old friends and
cab with Lester and broke two ropes
and went over the mp. The hood Misses Anne and Johanna Rosen- ■ the Arthur Eckert farm near Fill-: neighbors of Mrs. Sadie Hilton and
thal accompanied Mrs. J. V. Hilbert[ more school, was taken suddenly 1111
wasn't good foooting and the roof
of the cab didn't hold him. so he last Thursday to Camp Kitannlwa. late Thursday evening. He was
rolled out on hls back beside the
road, still held by one rope. Lester
wasn't hurt although he was badly
upset, and the horse came on home
under hls own power. The cab was
badly damaged, a lucky accident.

daughter enjoyed a picnic dinner
at Morgan park lut Thursday
About 35 being present lo enjoy the
visit with them
Our church roof has received a
npw coat of aluminum paint the
put week which will add to its ap­
pearance and prolong its usefulness
Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher. Mrs.
Sadie Hilton and daughter Hazel,
Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Mutui and Miss
Lee Heldeman of Lake view were
Sunday dinner guesU of Mr. and
Mra. Lyle Fisher
Mra. Sarah Johnston of Waupun,
Wls. and daughter Lillian of Chi■ .
-----.. ...
cago. Mrs. Munn and Miss Heidemin of Lakeview visited at Ore
Fishers Monday.

MILO.
Mr. and Mrs Ed Lyons of San
Delgo. Calif., came July 2nd to
visit their cousins. Mr and Mra.
Ernest Quick and family. Monday,
the 6th. they, in company with Mra.
Quick, drove to Hart for a visit and
returned tiie following Thursday
Before they return to California
thev expect to visit their only son
In Washington. D. C.. and get ac­
quainted with their two weeks old
grandson, Edward James.
Twenty-seven members and three
guests were in attendance for the
Peace program of lhe H. L. Club at
the home of Mrs. Evers. July 9,
with Mra. Frank Brophy co-hostess
A delicious luncheon was served on
the lawn at one o'clock. After that
the following program was given:
Roll, answered by "Peace" items;
Mrs. Harrington's paper. "Peace in
This Changing World." was splen­
did; "Building for Peace" was well
given by Mra. Mary Doster. A dis­
cussion on "The “Price of Peace"
was led by Mrs. Bertha Humphrey
and the topic was generally dis­
cussed.
Altho the heat was ex­
treme, a gobd meeting wu enjoyed
at this Gull, lake home.

Sunday. Mr. and Mra. Ernest
Quick and 'their guests spent the
day with Mr. and Mrs. Ted Tack
and children near Eagle lake, where
they are spending their summer va­
cation.
loeta accompanied her
grandparents home for a week.
Callers at the Quick home Sunday evening were Mr. ^d Mrs

Callers at Glen Aspinalls last
Saturday wen- Mr and Mra. Orin
Dole. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Jones. Mrs
Cora Asplnall and Jeanie all of
near Dowling, and Mr and Mrs.
Vera Hammond of Bedford
Gustus Welcher of Jackson spent
Wednesday evening with hte sis­
ter. Mrs. Orin Haynes, and family.

JU1&gt;' j ‘“»

lives in Niles lut Thursday, her
mint Mr.
__ '
aunt.
Mrs. flivoln
Swain, accompanying k,
her
home. They with Mr. and Mrs N.'
H. Barber, will spend part ot this!
week on a trip north.
This community extends sympa­ I
thy to the family of John Doster |
who passed away at hls Prairieville i
home. Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Rowen attend- .
e&lt;l tiie wedding of their daughter. ।
Ruth C„ at 11 o'clock last Thurs­
day morning, to Milton C. Mazor, j
in the First Presbyterian church j
house. Kalamazoo. Rev. John D. j
Dunning officiated in the presence j
of 15 guests. A wedding luncheon

Drink Highlands Dairy
GRADE A MILK

PHONE 2137

A

....

\.

PRICt ~~

•7.45

6.OO-I7 |S14«3t

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hiulinj.

GUM-DIPPED CORD BODY — Eight extra

~

6.00-19

pounds of rubber are added to every
one hundred pounds of cotton cords
by the Firestone patented process of
Gum-Dipping. This not only provides
greater strength, but gives greatest blowout protection.
6.00-20

15.55

| TWO EXTRA LAYERS OF GUM-DIPPED CORDS UNDER THE TREAD —

1i Cushion road shocks. Afford extra protection against punctures
p
and bind the whole tire mtirone unit of great strength.

tho
lllv

with my Dodge
MM MISS GERRY DICK
U'aMn/lon, D. C.

IT COSTS LESS TO BUY—VOLUME PRODUCTION SAVES YOU MONEY—

Tiie new Firestone Standard Tire is the greatest tire value ever
offered car owners—volume production, efficient factories and
the most economical distribution system make it possible to sell
this new tire at these low prices.

For TRUCK and MS OWNERS
GIVES LONGER MILEAGE
AND MORE ECONOMICAL
SERVICE AT VOLUME
PRODUCTION PRICES!

,
(

A

Whether you operate one
truck or several, dependable service Ml
is your greatest asset. In hauling |S|
firoduce to market, operating fast S|
oca I deliveries, in heavy cross* qH
country hauling, operating school
'• I'm getting 22 miles to the gallon buies, or in any type of trucking service,
■ with my new Dodge...
you need a first-quality tire, built of first
grade materials to give you long, trouble*
free mileage. Now, for the first time, you
can get such a tire at prices you can
afford to pay. Come in today and let us
show you how the new Firestone
Standard Truck and Bus Tire will give
you better service and save you money.

rmc«

Mil
6.50-20
7.00-20
7.50-20
9-00-20
50i5 . .
52x6 ..

39. !•
35.20
•0.75
21.50
50.85

The Flreatone Sentinel
Tire—of good quality
and construction and
name end guarantee.
An oultundlni value
tn lt&gt; price class.

Firttfone
StHTIHtl
4.50-21
4.75-19
500-19

K
K

Firestone
STANDARD

LEADERS In the LOW PRICE FIELD

It handles so beautifully ...is so
luxuriously appointed...

■■ 4^

8 ozs. . . 29c

wider, flatter tread is scientifically
designed with more and tougher rubber
on the road for long, even wear, and
thousands of extra miles.

Pnllrsn
VJ ci II Uli

In
LU

TlrHtotu
COURIER

The Flreuone Courier
Tire—* good Meric*,
able de* for owners of
small cars who want
new tire Mfety st low
COSS.

•0.05
••40
*.•5
7-**

batteries

4-50-21
4-75-19

as.to
5*tl
4.55

SPARK PLUGS

Buy the Best
...sutd it haa sq many expensivocar features. Yet It costs only a
few dollars more than the lowestpriced carsand the small differi ence in price is mure than made
up in the end by the money I'm
saving on gas and oil.

DODGE
z^640«
NEW LOW FIRST COST

in Cream Content
[High
Row or Pasteurised

PboneMSl

16 ozs. . . 49c

LONGER N0N4KID MILEAGE -The

•.20

I Get 22 Miles

tion." Three Rivers, after which the
couple left on a two weeks' trip to
Cleveland. Philadelphia and New
New York City. The couple will I
make their home in Kalamazoo.
Mrs. Rowen expects to go to their i
Pine lake cottage Wednesday to'
spend the remainder of the week. |

TR. VANILLA COMP., N.F.

.

Every Standard Tire is backed by
Bn the Firestone name and guarantee
Kf —your assurance of safety,
V dependability and economy.

STANDARD

Get Yours at Once!

The Perfect Summer Drink

HASTINGS

V

[

BARN RED PAINT

THATS VALUE!
... And SHORT WAY'S
New Coapon Book, offer
Jul that—Think
RJ—

BUS DEPOT

^irr an”S m"
—------- ---------------- —.-■■■—, i

^"“^ne8*^*'
Miss Irene Skier visited rela-

DIAMOND

MOST SENSATIONAL

■■^'Firestone
STANDARD TIRE

i t*ng’ spent * Couple of day‘
Clu*
cago last week
।
Mr. and Mra. Fred Wallbridge
and children of Battle Creek and
। Mr. and Mrs Glen Kenyon ond
i children of Deltan visited their
toother, Mrs Nellie Given. Sunday.
I
kwISJiw--------------DELTON.
nn
mnw
| Will somebody please turn off tiie
Jack Bradfield is spending some
| heat? and would thal Al Brown de- i
time witii hls grandmother. Mrs.
i“k" ' "T h“ ■p"ch 10
hl‘" “”&gt;•
Wilcox, at nutamw
IHaaunp
---------. —
aM
Wall Uk. N. of rhe road, and Impnaa K
-Uh home made lee e£vn al““ 1^!”
“*

Of over 300 GALLOLS of
Barn Paint, we still have about 100 gallons left. Regular 81.25. Close-out price

TRIO CAFE

TIRE DEVELOPMENT

SPECIAL*!*,

Talk About
VALUE!

•r Driver

FIRESTONE’S NEWEST

and tk&lt;raQUAii'ii!C wJri^Do^Un^’
and Mrs. Atuln Ferris. Dowling.
Mr. and Mra. W. H. Flower, Kalamazoo. spent the week end with
their mother and sister. Mra Flower and Bernice.
Wayne and Bernice Flower attended the school reunion at Pralrlevllle church Sunday.

CLOSE-OUT

HICKORY CORNERS.
July 9 Letter.
Mrs Alvah Pennock, Sr., is en­
tertaining her brother from Kala-

Worth of, $7-50
I U Tickets for f

CLOVERDALE.
i road, rather than to run those
Add Burpw is quite sick al pnaWe neglected to mention the play scrapers forever, and have the dirt ,ent writing.
and very nice program pul on by J
du*1
our houses, yards and
Several from DMton attended tha
lhe Vacation Bible students of lhe . crops.
,
funeral of John Doater al Prairie­
Evangelical church a week
Mr. and Mrs Will Leinaar and ville Tuesday forenoon.
Sunday evening. Rev. Walton ably Mr and Mrs. rom Waters and son
Miss Ruth Richards of Sturgis
auiaiMi
snniam,. were callers ot Mr. and Mra Walter
assisted hv
by Miu
Mis* wiata
Elsie Applegate
spent Sunday with her mother. Mrs.
presented a very nice program. The Calkins at Hastings Sunday after­
Blanche Richards.
children have enjoyed going to Bi­ noon.
Mrs Doud U auUllng Mrs. Luble school and tiie work done with
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. WUllson visit­
Rev Walton and Mtas Applegate.
ed kfr and Mrs. Clarence Smelker 1cina Eddy with her housework and
helping to care for Arthur Eddy
Virgil Monica, while working on' and mother at Middleville Sunday.,
Rev Ralph Putea Is substituting
tiie new schoolhouse al Delton, had
New
mechanical
refrigerators
the misfortune to fall off the scat- । were Installed in lhe homes ot for Robert Bs-.nes on tiie mall
fold,• injuring his leg and arm. He Frank Doster. John Herrington and route for two weeks, while Robert U
work moat ot the William Smith hut week. They are taking his vacation, and improving
i w,“ * un •
summer.
the time by railing the roof on hU
doing their best to keep cool.
house, which will give the family
Mrs. H. Owens, who has been ]
three nice sleeping rooms upstairs.
staying ut the Gale Harper cottage era and George Leonard were on a
Rev. Bates announces as hl* ser­
at Long lake, recuperating, return- ij fishing trip in tiie Upper Penined home Sunday. We are all glad 'i tula from Friday until Monday. mon subject for next Sunday morn­
that ahe is getting along so well, Haven't heard their stories, so can ing. "The Thrill of Adventures.**
Preaching at Milo at 9:30 ahd Sun­
। not report their luck.
after her operation.
day school
10:15. At Prairieville,
Mr. and Mn. McNutt entertained i1 Mrs. Alice Stanton spent last
preaching al 10:15 Bunday school at
their uncle. John Durand of Alie-1 week visiting her son Dewey and
11:1ft. Delton Sunday school al
gan. lut week. He returned Mon­ family in Port Huron.
The Inland Lakes Garden Club 10:00 and preaching 11:15. These
day.
picnic last Thursday at Prairievilla churches extend a cordial wel­
-Miss Irene Hoahen and Robert
Public Park was attended.by 44 who come lo resorters who are vaca­
Gaskill of Hutings spent Sunday
enjoyed tiie sumptuous dinner and tioning here about lo make them
at the MacLeod home.
especially lhe lev cream and water­ their church home during their stay
Mr and Mra
Bert McCallum. melon.
here.
Mra. Martha Replogle, the Dibble
Lihue Cox is In Borges* hospital
Mr. and Mrs. Will Dunning and
and Graham families of Detroit at­
suffering from severe Injuries re­ Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dunning and
tended the school reunion at Brush
ceived tn an automobile spill one Lea trice spent Sunday with Mr. and
Ridge. Bunday.
.
night last week.
Mrs. James Verhee al Gul) lake.
Mr. and Mra. Louis Ferguson en­
tertained Mra. Ruth Snotfer of Port
Wayne. Ind.. Mrs. B. Hammond of
Kalamazoo and .Mr. and Mrs Har­
old Hayward of Galesburg, Sunday.
Mr*. Jess Haney is back from the
hospital at Hutings after having
her arms attended to. She
1*
mighty glad It is lhe test Ume; be­
ing laid up and not able to work is
hard on any one who la as industri­
ous os Doris is.
'
Mrs. Eva Davenport spent
the
week with her stater. Mra. Tlwralon al Battle Creek.
,
FIRST LINE QUALITY—The new
Mrs. Lloyd Mills and Garland
Chilson of South Bend spent the
Firestone Standard Tire has been
week end with Mr. and Mrs. Grant
I designed and constructed by
Dickeraon. We are glad to report
1
Firestone skilled tire engineers —
that Mtas Joan, daughter of Mr.
Q it is a first quality tire, built of high
knd Mra. Mills, is getting
along
a grade materials, embodying
nicely now and friends hope she ;
will soon be able to make lhe trip
exclusive Firestone patented
to Cloverdale u usual
to visit
MR construction features.
them.
Kf FIRESTONE NAME AND GUARANTEE—
I so^'sot
Mr. and
Mra. Frank Clancy and
anT^SaaToTHuTi retfont

It Costs Less!

ANDRUS SERVICE •
Phone 2240 si”' nL'imr.. *
BLUE

g«°pX

SUNOCO

Vuu”

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

01066736

16 PAGES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY. JULY 23, 1936

AN INVITATIONMJ®WF
| MWCLr—~ -■
I'

!

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

.CE^OEWO^STRATIOW

Consumer* Cooking School,
Thursday and Friday
|

IIHILOW.

Her Successor, Miss McDon­

To the dialrmen of Ute Barry I not to ballyhoo local candidates.
ald, Comes From Battle
County Republican and Democratic ! Naturally.
It it
Is is
our
iiooe.
too.
that
'
Naturally,
our
hope.
too.
that*
_______ -==x=.
I
Next Week
Creek Sanitarium
WOULD VEST ALL TAXING
THIS CITY AND IN00RP0- committees: Because of the fact, personalities wlU be avoided—but FAMOUS FIRST SACKER
Consumers Power never do things
Miss Mary Payne, who during the FOUR WILL AFPBAB
that a presidential election U ap-1
0F
NKW
Y0RK
YANKEES
POWER IN STATE
by halves and the cooking school j
RATED VILLAGES
past year has been on the staff of
BALLOT AT FALL
preaching with important state and j discretion of the county commit­
they are putting on.at Community
local elections as companion issues. I tees.
HERE MONDAY
jbe Barry County Health depart­
COMMISSION
ALSO AIDED
X LECTION
hall. Fuller building, next week
politics will tor at least should) soon I So, commencing next week, a I
ment as counselor in Thornapple.
Thursday and Friday. July 30 and
occupy the center of the American J maximum of two columns will be
Irving.
Yankee
Springs
and
Rutirvmg. Yanaee springs and Rut- ««i»- nnurieauo nmue
”■
RECALLS DAYS WITH
31. with Mrs. Dorothy Harris, na­ PEOPLE SHOULD KILL
CO. ROAD FUND HAO
land townships, has been appointed! ONE CONCERNS CRIME
stage. Therefore the Banner pro- j reserved for each parly. If either
tionally
known
Home-Economics
party takes exception to the Ban­
the staff at the Westchester
TUDCC TA ¥ ATI AM
&gt;75,23734 FOR 1935' &amp;
HASTINGS BALL TEAM i teacher. In charge, promises to be
THIS AMENDMENT to
County Health department. New!
—•IHnfcfc lAAAlILNI
ner's own editorial comment on any :
.
.
.
.
the best one yet held. Especial in­
V/wlr
„ .1 —. (11 leave to _______
I major parties for such discussion or topic, it is invited to state Us side »
jui* nuic aua
assume
_*
McNitt Law Will Bring Over comment as the respective county1 of the case either in these reserved "e Gained Good Experience, formation win be given concerning Sponsored by Real Estate her nev duties during the next few Voters Have Chance to Beg' the use of natural gas -Just intro-1
With Independents
1
-Speculators— It’s "Just !
chairmen see fit. No strings will be 1 columns or in the public forum de- ,
176,000 for Town­
ister Their Approval
duced here.
tied to these columns except that! partment on the editorial page.
। The Westchester County Health
' This fact coupled with the word
as a Boy
ship Roads
Another One
department Is one of the ranking
or Disapproval
they be used to discuss issues and]
THE HA8T1NGB BANNER
Another vicious example of the1 health departments In the eSt.
Over a quarter ot a century ago, I that each person attending will reDistribution has been made of
Tiiere will be submitted to Michleach summer used to see six boys celve a useful article as a door great harm that can be done by I This offer to MUa Payne is In keep- gan voters at the elation next No­
the cash received by the county
,
prize;
that
a
fine
new
gas
range
will
of a certain Grand Rapids family
amending our state constitution al Uig with the habit of widely dis- veraber four proposed
Hut tonal
treasurer for the year 1935 for Barry URGE KIM SIGLER FOR
located at Wall lake with their
an election, when the people who tributed health organizations of i amendments, for the approval
county's share of the 1935 weight
DISTRICT GOVERNOR
parents U» spend their vacation at ter heater; also several beautiful vote on it do not understand the looking to the organization of the I jectlon of the voters.
' tax and Ils proportion of the 82.­
tr LTallnoc
m___ *_ .
__ a_ __
their cottage on the Hastings side. lamps with indirect lighting and real purposes nor the effect of the W
W. K.
Kellogg Foundation for per­
550.000 taken each year from the
These boys were admired as perfect other prizes, to the lucky ticket proposed amendment, is shown in a sonnel material.
gas tax. Originally only half of Hastings Rotarians Unani­
ment, proposed by joint resolution
Utile gentlemen, but they were also holders will be sure to bring out a proposal to amend Section 3. Article
Miss Philena McDonald, who suc­ of the legislature, which would per­
the weight tax came to counties.
mously Ask His Selection
' 10. of the slate constitution, which ceeds Miss Payne, will assume her mit police to offer as court evidence
: "Uve wires" from the ground up.
After the fifteen-mill amendment
for That Position
avwp i nnn dvadtp otw To get rid of some of their surplus
duties with the Barry County
tax limitation was adopted. It be­
.Uv,
n™.
-----------(he
No
„
mb
„
eUcU0
„
o'clock.
Come
early.
Everyone
is
Health department on August 1 and dwelling house, regardless of wheth­
came evident to the legislature that
By unanimous action the Hastings OVER 1,000 PEOPLE SAW j energy these Pipp boys organized a sure to get new Ideas at a Consum­
i baseball
team, and
the youngsters
It would seem that the sponsors will be assigned to the four north­ er the seizure was authorteed by a
counties could not maintain their Rotary club is qrging the election of
TRAVELLING HEALTH
- --- ---------------------------were able;to fill six of the nine ers cooking school for that much of this proposed amendment must western townships In the county.
road-building program by taring Kim Bigler as District Governor of
warrant or made during a proper
EXHIBIT
I positions for it. Their father before mooted household question "What be a bunch of real estate spetula'property; that the state would have the 35th Rotary district. Mr. Sigler
| them had been a ball player of
to supply the needed cash. At that has been connected with the Rotary
by the Anti-Crime organisations
Schools will also be held in Nash­ torz, who desire to remove all prop- i Rill/ IITI H l/fill
|
note,
having
been
good
enough
to
time,, too. many Michigan counties club here for several years. He was HASTINGS TWENTIETH
erty from the tax roll. The amend-1 II/ fll HU P I
this state and ought to peas.
ville
isuo I well lie in
■ u 0|l B league team so it was XJ
UcJand Lake Odessa inext week ment would jumble the taxing JllHI lILLl
IUU
were heavily in debt tor Covert president of Lt for the terni which
TOWN IN THE TOUR natural his sons should take tojTl^d*/ *nd Wednesday.
powers of Michigan and of the varl-1
road bonds. So the legislature ap­ ended a year ago in July. During
ment ballot la another
'' ■
"V
barban. Wally
Wally from the start showshow-1; r- a (fnarnn Illi I I
। baseball.
OUS local taxing unite worse than
propriated the remaining half of that time he made a fine record as
any other proposition that has ever
the weight lax. which had before a presiding officer. Previous to his The Moving Pictures, Charts.
,or Wttta*
iu UIIIU1I uunill slrlct tijeir tax rate and their power
been submitted.
that lime been given to the state election to the presidency, as well as
Etc., Show Methods Used ' For a time, just before starling
Briefly (' 1s amendment proposes
highway department, and took 82.­ during his term and since, he has
to borrow and contract debts. Coun­
that, after December 31. 1937. no tax FAMILIARITY WITH RULES ties by referendum could adopt a
tn rihonV tu ' hls bi8 Iregue baseball career. Wally
550.000 from the gas tax. stipulat­ spoken at
many Rotary clubs
to unecK IB
played first base for the splendid
shall be assessed or levied by the
ing that any county which owed Co­ throughout the district, as well as'
charter. under'"whlch they could
VALUABLE AID IN
Independent
baseball
state or tor the benefit of any
vert road bonds must first apply other points in Michigan. In the I The Michigan Tuberculosis As- Hastings
pass laws and ordinances relating
,
county, township, school district,
EMERGENCY
what the county received from opinion of the Hastings dub he i soclallon travelling health exhibit; team ot that day and many of the 1
to all their municipal affairs. Tills
city, village, or any other political
these source*—that Is the second would make an ideal District Oov- j which was here last Friday and Sat-; -old timers" will recall not only his 1 DROUGHT CAUSES LIBPR
proposed amendment U described as
„h»nnm»n«i niavino
*'
‘
' I subdivision of the state, upon real
playing at
at «r«t
first base. ।।
half of the weight tax and Its share ernor. The club will do their utmost - urday drew a record crowd of at-1 phenomenal
a "County Home Rule" amend­
SIMPLE
INSTRUCTIONS
I
tendants,
according
to
V.
R.
Hassler.
ALIZING
OF
SOIL
CON
­
but
also
how
often
this
tall,
strong.
|
property,
or
upon
tangible
or
in
­
of the &gt;2.550.000 gas tax—to liqui­ to have him elected at the district
—--------------------- ------ - —
uiciii. we
wc think
tiunx there
mere wui
M Ut
ment
will be
little
tangible personal property, except
dating Covert road bonds. It also convention which will be held In :I who has been with It since its In­ gangling youth would smite the ball i
SERVATION
ANYONE CAN FOLLOW
» •“ ■»&lt;*•“»
ception in March. More than a way over the tops of the trees In |
for the payment of Interest upon
lust as wall
urt tha
provided that, after its Covert road May 1937.
just
well tZl
to 1st
the VMWMMvt
present situa­
thousand people, the largest num­
and the principal of obligations
bonds had been paid, half of this
tion of Michigan counties alone, in­
SK:.S2
d
«
ere
for
bonw
"
and
WILL
BE
PAID
IF
ber to date—passed in and out of
heretofore Incurred. The proposed' Oool Head Needed in Many stead of putting too much power in
extra money be thereafter paid to GROUP WAS HERE
the old Bessmer building during the
The unusual ability of our Has-;
SEEDING IS numuu
RUINED amendment provides that there i
counties and must be divided as fol­
Typea of Acci­
the hands of a county organization
shall not be any privilege, license. |
FROM ANN ARBOR two days. Mr. Hassler was especially tings "first sacker" attracted the at-'
lows: Of the second lialf the
to pass laws. ete.
dents
pleased
with
the
Interest
shown
and
or occupational taxing other than [
tent
ion
of
fellows
who
were
huntCounty
A«ent
Foster
Ex
­
county road commission should re­
The next on the ballot wlU be a
j
Each
year
many
persons
have
the
Intelligent
questions
asked
about
Ing
for
big
league
talent,
and
It
:
those
now
provided
by
law
here.
ceive 50 per cent and the remaining Impeded City and County
proposition to write into the con­
plains
Some
Changes
in
various features of the display.
[
been
snatched
from
the
threshold
of
-------------------------------wasn't long after that Wally pipp'
after assessed or levied upon the;
stitution of Michigan a prohibition
Work jtf. Local Health
ThU exhibit,
the largest In started out on his notable baseballownership, possession or use of real i death by drowning, asphyxiation or against the collection of any tax on
the county and the incorporated cit­
the Regulations
America, is on tour throughout the C*Airrwe recall
Unit
ies and villages of that county in
Wallv was first
Harold J. Foster. Barry County t'property or tangible or Intangible' electrocution because some cool­ the sate of bread, milk, dairy and
state and will visit sixty Michigan
personal property. It provides that: head In the crowd has known how cereal products, msat, lard, vege­
d”p
(h* aUM AnX"■
Iff""1,‘T’S’
proportion to their population. The
Eight members of a class in public
Incomes from real or personal prop-. to *PPly the simple Schaefer prone- table shortening, fish. eggs, sugar,
county's share must go into the health work at the University of cities. Hastings was the twentieth on
erty may be taxed uniformly with' pressure method of resuscitation,
the
route.
It
is
now
travelling
.
___
____
_________
___
__
___________
eu,
U.,u,
(cm
He
pUrrf
(here
county's general road fund, to be Michigan were guests of the Barry
salt, spices, vegetables and frulta,
through
tile
northern
part
of
the
।
a
part
of
a
season
and
then
went
I
incomes from other sources. Pro- j The following rules are offered by
used for building or maintaining County Health Unit Monday and
county nS»rT^hJn'.rel".lJS«1 ceeds from the taxes upon Incomes I the united States public health whether canned or fresh, also pre­
state
and
will
return
south
In
the
county highways.
pared meals. Thb third amendment
Tuesday. The group, which includ­
shall be distributed to the several | service and are reprinted with the was Initiated by petitions, largely
Barry county received In 1935 ed two physicians, two sanitary en­ early winter.
melned
(ar
mod
ot
Che
n
jeer.
Chet
,45
Tn
pr
°*
r
*
nf
,,
11
counties, townships, school districts, suggestion that all boys and girls j in Detroit. The state sates tax ac­
Two outstanding nieces of advice
from the weight tax and as its gineers and four nurses, is part of a
■lud&gt;’ “»
were given by the display: See your he epenc In pro(eulon.l buetau.
cities,
villages
and
other
political
I
attending
summer
camps
and
othshare of the 82A50.000 of the gas class of 60. which
W1MW1 „„
wl
,
countants say that the adoption oi
has been divided
subdivlsions of the state, as may1 ere frequenting bathing resorts this amendment would reduce the
tax the sum of &gt;97.40839 One-half ;n seven sections to visit the various family doctor! Make sure! Loss of
[ practice the method to a point revenue from the sales tax by ap­
of that amount, or &gt;48.704.19. was Kellogg Foundation units. This welsht. a cough that hangs on. too B^pc'^'srx. s r-M
x hereafter be provided by law!
easily
tired,
irritability
and
cough
­
It
can
be
seen
that
the
legbla“
----------------------------■
where
it
can
be
administered
almost
paid directly into the county's high- j inspection tour La made possible un­
proximately &gt; 12,000W) a year. T!
ture must provide for the distribu­ automatlcaUy in time of need.
way fund for the use of the county der the provisions of the social se- ing up blood are symptoms of tu­ A. &gt; ttnl buemen he wu Che peer
would seriously curtail the amoi
ThU ye^lT hu’lXn tion of tills money to the school dis­
berculosis, although not definite in­
1. Lay the patient face down, one
road commission, of the other half. CUrlty act
of any and as a batter he was al- De n*rvc-*t*u this year. Il has been tricts. villages, cities, townships, arm extended directly over the head,
OT MBJ04.20. there was first deduct- . On uondgy the camps in the dications that Hie disease is present.
its public schools, to old ago
rtd
“
u
“
.c eke up oTu&gt;.|lpermissible,
“rml“b" however,
“ ---------------to use cover
counties and cities. Home rule, so the other arm bent at the elbow
on page fl. see. 1)
■ county were visited and the group, Yet they are Nature's danger sig­
American league sluggers. This was or. nurse crops of grain on these far as financing local government with the face turned outward rest­
was entertained at dinner at the nals. and the family physician
before the days of the present "rab- ' fields to aid in securing the stand Is concerned, would be entirely abol­ ing on the hand or forearm so that compelled to appropriate money
should
be
consulted
so
that
any
I Parker house, when a number of
of legumes. This has been allowed
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
ished. It is "juzt another" of the the nose and mouth are free for
i local people Interested In public disease may be checked In Its early
with the understanding that the
I health and members of the local stages. Even though one mav "feel
nurse crop would be clipped and let many attempts made in these days breathing.
to take from the people control of
2. Kneel straddling the patient's of adequate money by
staff were invited to meet them and like a million," It is a good policy to GOVERNOR FITZGERALD
go back on the ground. Under the
their own affairs and vest all local thighs with your knees placed about support the schools, old i
discuss the various phases at the have a thorough physical exami­
midway between the patient's hip
nation once a year, because tu­
ENDORSES BARRY FAIR
berculosis
"sneaks
up"
and
may
have
crop
can
be
harvested
for
hay
and
I
On
Or
or
8
ftnUatlon
ftl
Laj1
’
and
knee bones. Place palms of the
। spent Inspecting the offices here.
State of Michigan, Executive Office.
hands on the small of the back with cerely wishes to have the pros
the field still count as a soil con-l5^?At the pine lake camp on Mon­ been contracted unawares.
Lansing.
DIAN DAVENPORT TOLD day the members of the class heard Moving pictures were shown of Prank D. Fitzgerald. Governor.
servlne field
’ Can &gt;ou thlnk of * richer po- fingers resting on the ribs, the lit­ aid to public schools continued
tle fingers just touching the lowest the present &gt;2.000,000 given by
how the disease mav spread In a
THE COMMERCIAL CLUB talks by Dr.lstuart Pritchard, gen­ large
To the Patrons of the Barry County
rib, the thumb and fingers tn a nat­ state for old age pensions ear
offlee^from an infected mem­
eral director of the Kellogg Foun­
ABOUT DROUGHTS
They demon­
ural position and the tips of the on, to vote against this
dation; Dr. Henry F. Vaughan, ber to the others.
No class of entertainment that Iui mis umc me prooi oi com-।
—uk
fingers just out of sight.
on
which
soil
building
pay®
commissioner of health of Detroit strated the value of the tuberculin has been available to the people of pltance,
|
3. With arms held straight, swing be given to a proposed amendmsnl
and Dr. Haven Emerson, professor skin test and the X-ray in uncover- Michigan, during the century of Its i
BIG SEQUOIAS PROVE
forward slowly so that the weight of which would eliminate all local
।
Ing
cases
from
very
early
to
ad
­
public health administration at
existence as a state, has been more '
MANY IN 3,000 YEARS of
your body is gradually brought to property taxes and substitute for
vanced stages, and the care and at­ productive of wholesome enjoyment istand of the legume at time com^iatelure?
Columbia University.
___ ...................................................
Tills measure would not reduce bear on the patient. The shoulder them a slate tax on incomes from
Following Is the list of those at­ tention given to patients in any of and of valuable educational Infiu- pllance
|
Is cheeked. In’ the fall. Due
Fresent One Not Local But tending; physicians. K. C- Becker. the many sanitariums tliroughout ences
the tax burden. It would simply should be directly over the heel of real
and
personal
property,
than that supplied by its to
i
the drought n^any seedings in
shift it from property to the owners the hand at the end of the for­ and from all other sources. The
World Wide—Ocean Main L. W. Switzer; nurses. Miss Esther the country.
Fairs.
igrains alone ‘ have burned out,
of property. It would help the ward swing. Do not bend the elbows. state
An outstanding feature of the ex­
legislature would,
if thia
Boyce. Miss Doria Wacker. Mrs.
One hundred years ago the com- and
i
the new ruling provides that
Source of Rains
shiftless
and
add
extra
burdens
up
­
Maintain
poritlon
for
about
two
hibit
was
a
small
replica
showing
amendment shall carry, determlno
Mary Gray. Mrs. Minnie Street;
building and soil conserving
blned annual export of the agricul- soil
i
seconds.
At the Commercial club meeting sanitary engineers. H. C. Van Wag­ the arrangement of a real sanitar­ tural and Industrial products of the payments
will be made where good on the thrifty. It would help no
|
one
except
real
estate
speculators.
4.
Immediately
swing
backawrd.
ium with all the equipment and the stale amounted to considerably less stands
Tuesday noon. Dean Davenport dis­ ner. H. P. Newkirk.
proposed income tax revenue back
i
are not in evidence this fall
We think every voter in Barry resting on your knees and complete­ to local municipalities, a majority
provisions made for the patients' than ten thousand dollars. At the If
cussed the drought. He said the
! the fanner can prove that seed­
county ought to oppose this prop­ ly removing all pressure from the vote at the general election would
well being and comfort as they seek present time the value of these prod- ings
slumps of the big sequoia trees In BETTY CAINE PLANS
l
were made In the spring In a
osition.
patient.
GANG PLANK PROGRAM. to regain their health.
California proved that there had
place this, az well os the three other
workmanlike
manner
and
a
seeding
ucu. finding sale tn practically ev- '
5. After two seconds, swing for­ amendments, in the constitution of
Friends of Mrs. Betty Osborn
Another Interesting yet appalling ery market of the world, reaches was
been severe droughts down through
obtained untU our drought per­
'
ward again. Repeat this double
Caine will feel special interest in display was the one giving the num­ Into the hundreds of millions. iod.
I
Proof of this fact wlU be sale
operation
from
12
to
15
times
a
WBBM's
“
Gang
Plank
Ooasiper''
ber
of
people
In
various
age
groups
tfcat the present drought is local.------------- -------------------------- ------------- Among the 48 states of the Union. slips of seed purchased, signed state­
minute, which will allow a com­ resubmUslon, which would be ex­
It is world-wide. It is acute tn radio program at 9:45 every Mon­ who die each year of tuberculosis. Michigan is easily numbered among ments by committeemen or neigh­
plete respiration every four or five pensive and would delay action for
and‘ Friday night The ten years between 20 and 30 the leaders in the combined value bors
Australia and the Argentine. He day, Wednesday
‘
I
that the seeding was made, and
Lewis Hine, director of band and seconds.
could recall the drought that began as she is directly responsible for yield the richest harvest to the grim of her agricultural products, and is other
a long time.
।
things that , might prove the
6. Continue artificial respiration
spectre of death whose chief hench- second to but one or two in the val- fact
orchestra
work
in
Hastings
High
In the late 60’s and reached its the Interviews.
Generally speaking, we think it is
:
without interruption until natural
On these days she rides over to
school,
will
be
back
in
Hastings
on
climax in the early 70's, when the
uc of her manufactures.
The third modification announced
breathing
is
restored.
If
necessary,
8t.
Joseph
on
the
new
steamer
The
exhibit
Is
financed
entirely
Monday.
July
27th.
and
will
hold
his
city of Chicago suffered Ila great
tinkering with the constitution by
All of this marvelous story of is as follows: Emergency forage
four
hours
or
longer
or
until
a
"The
Roosevelt."
On
the
return
trip
through the sale of tuberculosis progress has been graphically told. ■crops may be planted on land de­ music classes as usual next week
fire and when, for many weeks,
amendments submitted at general
the aua was darkened by the smoke she selects six to eight people for Christmas seals and Is doing a year after year, in the Fairs that voted to soil conserving u« where Returning with him will be the physician declares the patient is elections, whan ths people are not
of burning timber in Michigan, Interviews as they step off the gang great deal toward educating' the have been held throughout the this soil conserving crop has burned music students who have also been
informed as they should be with
7. As soon as artificial respiration regard to the effect which the
Wisconsin and Minnesota due to the plank at Chicago, a representative nubile about the disease most dead­ state, and not only this, but the out.
In other words If a farmer has attending the music clinic at the
1
Is started, an assistant should loosen amendments would have If adopt­
severe drought. The smoke was so of the studio being on hand with ly to young adults.
means and volume of production seeded alfalfa alone this spring and University of Wisconsin.
Undoubtedly, one of the reasons have been stimulated In the most the alfalfa is gone he may now
George Amoe, director of band any tight clothing about the pa- ed We have no doubt about U»
thick on certain days when the con­ a microphone to broadcast the talks
ditions were right that it was Im­ in which they have been coached to for the unusual Interest shown by valuable way through the Influence plant soybeans, sudan grass, etc, and orchestra work at Western
voters of
Michigan
being
wise
the patient warm but do not. under enough and sufficiently honrat
local people in thb exhibit was the of these exhibits.
possible to see across the road tn a certain extent by Mrs. Caine.
for an emergency hay crop for har­ State Teachers College, will direct
the last of the three concerts he has ■ any circumstances, administer li­ do the right thing if they know all
She writes the work is very in­ fine preliminary work with tuber­
the day time. Fortunately there
Reaching into the educational vest this year and still have the
teresting and offers a fine diversion culosis that has been done by the field, encouraging the youth of the field count as soil conserving.
handled for Ute Hastings City Band quids by mouth until the patient the facts pertaining to tt; but te
were no automobiles then.
on Thursday evening of this week. I has fully recovered consciousness.
The present drought, he said, be­ from her regular program of dra­ Barry County Health Department. state in cultural and manual pur­
The Soil Conserving program, due
8. Keep patient lying down, after four amendments as important m
gan in 1927. What makes It seri­ matic work with the Chicago studio. The tuberculin skin tests which they suits. promoting the liberal arte and to weather conditions, has changed The program for this week has a
gave to school children in the coun­ the science of home-making, as well materially from the way County number of old familiar marches on1 he revives, until the doctor arrives. these without a chance to Set ade­
ous is the fact that Ln the raising
EXPERIMENT
IN
If the physician is delayed, some quate information about them is
ty.
checking
up
on
positive
cases
far
of crops from 750 to 1,000 tons of
as the financially more Important Agent Foster announced it last it and should be enjoyable.
ROAD
BUILDING.
source of contagion and the X-ravs
Following is the program for stimulant such as one teaspoonful
water are required to raise an acre
Slate Highway
Commissioner taken served to make the people of our enterprises, the Fairs of spring. Mr. Foster states however Thursday evening:
of aromatic spirits of ammonia in
of crops. This water must be in the
Murray D. Van Wagoner is trying “T. B. conscious," so that they were Michigan have rendered a wonder­ most changes are to the advantage
I. The Victors March.
soil, soaked up through plant roots [out
EATON RAPIDS CAMP MET
ful service. Moreover, they provide of the farmers as weU as the con­
an experiment In road building anxious to learn more about It,
*2. Rippling Ruby overture.
and given out through their leaves.
The fifty-sixth annual
sumer.
an annual meeting place where the
Cover patient warmly.'
3.
Valso
MlUtalre
(Waltz).
An Inch of rainfall will bring bet­ near Cheboygan, which may revolu­
Rapids camp meeting will b
basic obligations of citizenship are
The county office Is now busy ad­
9.
Do
not
remove
patient,
during
the
4.
Hall.
Hall.
All
Around
ter than 1.000 tons of water to die tionize construction work on the MEMBERSAND FAMILIES
on the beautiful grounds al
moat effectively discussed and nur­ justing individual farm basis to
more
mportant
county
roads.
work
of
resuscitation,
from
the
acre; but comparatively little of It
meet requirements as laid down by World (Novelty).
Briefly, the project will Involve
WILL PICNIC AUGUST 4 tured.
scene of his Injury unless absolutely ing August 2. a wonderful
5. The Little Giant March.
soaks into the groundI commend the Barry county fair the State committee. An adjust­
necessary. In this case continue
8. The Man on the Flying
Dean Davenport is well acqualnt- mixing the soil with cement for a
most heartily to the patronage of ment of about 8 per cent downward
artificial respiration while moving.
•d with the so-called arid regions depth of six inches, then seal-coat­ Commercial Olub to Have our people.
on
the 1935 crops is required to peze (Novelty).
10. Watch patient closely after
7. The Prospector March.
of the prairie states. He made a ing the twenty feet wide stabilized
meet
the
1933-34
crop
acreage
which
Frank- D. Fitzgerald.
natural breathing has started and
Pionio at Trail’s End,
8.
Inspiration
Overture.
trip across that section In 1931. The roads with 1-4 inch thickness of bi­
13 the bAsls of the program.
Governor.
tuminous
surfacing.
In
one
other
0.
My
wild
Irish
Rose.
effects of the drought which began
Gun Lake
state.
South
Carolina,
a
similar
ex
­
resuscitation
Immediately.
10. On The Air—March.
in 1927 were then apparent In 1934
DRESS SHOP TO OPEN
Members of the commercial club
11. If necessary to change opera­ groups. Among others on
(Continued on page 3, Sec. 1)
I periment has been tried with prom­
I1. Finale—America the Beauti­
SATURDAY. AUG. 1.
lislng results, indications are that and their wives will have a picnic
tors. endeavor to maintain regular
ful.
The Cinderella shop to ba located
NOTICE TO FARMERS.
the cost of this type of roadway will at Trail's End, Gun lake, on Tues­ in the Lamble building will open for
rhythm and avoid all possible con­
The
Barry County Electrical be about 88.000 a mile, or about one­ day evening. August 4. The supper business qn Saturday. August 1. ac­
fusion.
SPRINKLING BAN
.—.—Association,
-------- ■-•*-- which/ «.
Membership
Is quarter of the cost of cement hlgh- will be at 6:30 o'clock. Directly fol­ cording to M. J. Wild, manager.
12. Make every effort to keep the
PARTLY LIFTED.
| way*.
lowing will be a most Interesting
a unit of the Michigan Rural Elec-1
patient worm.
The
ban
on
sprinkling
with
city
The interior of the building has
trification Association, will hold a*
program of sports and entertain­ been completely renovated with
water has been lifted partially. Now
CORRECTION
IN
FAIR
ment
that
will
make
the
evening
a
meeting at the Goodwill church in
HOME MADE ICE CREAM.
city water users are allowed to
PREMIUM LIST. delightful one for all concerned. cream- paint and black trim. The
Rutland on Friday evening. July 24
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Beatty, who sprinkle from seven to nine o'clock
Win be served by Quimby Ladles'
Mrs. C. D. Bauer. Superintendent There will be stunts for the chil­ hat cases and furniture are In the come to Hastings from Louisville,
al 2 o'clock. Ail interested are cor­
each evening. No automatic sprink­ Aid at Ted Reids service station
of Domestic Arts Department of the dren. The members are Invited to modern style. Four fitting rooms Ky.. thru Mr. Beatty's position as
dially Invited.
lers are allowed. Hand sprinkling Thursday p. M- and evening. July 20.
have
been
installed
and
the
store
me
oKiir
•
Barry county Fair wishes to call bring their families, for It will be will be edequelely equipped In every ""5"
'X’"" Monievmery only is permissible. A theatened wa­ This Is the night of prlae drawing.
attention to a typographical error an enjoyable time for all of them. Wky
ICE CREAM SALE.
1 Ward store. Both Mr. and Mrs. ter shortage led to prohibiting all Adv.
Home made ice cream and cake, in the Fair Premium List on page
Tho shop will carry a complete!
*re natives of Terre Haute, sprinkling, but now it Is allowed In
at Chats Grove church. Friday eve­ 81. In the Standard Cake Recipe GRAND CHAPTER IN OCTOBER. line of hate, dresses, suite, coau
Ind!*n&lt; a limited way. We understand the BALL GAME AT
there should be used only l-&gt; cup
ning. July 24.—Adv.
VICKERY'S LANDING,
The Grand Chapter of Michigan. and blouses. It is nart of a chain 1B1*14 Teachers' college there, where council are considering putting
of butter instead of 1 1-3 cups.
with stores in Btu^U and ikmton
dietetics.
Clear lake, Sunday afternoon al
Order of the Eastern Star, will Harbor
DANCE.
,
and anJtS to te opS Mr- Beatty choodng a biulnoteca- down another well at soma dis­
meet
again
this
ytTar
in
Grand
Rap
­
tance from the pumping station, 3 o'clock, Dowling vs. Hilltop Brew­
DANCE AT THORN APPLE.
Every Friday and Saturday night.
soon
in
Niles.
j
rccr
instead
of
becoming
a
pedaery,
Jackson.
—Any.
which
ought
to
help;
but
that
can
­
ids.
Oct.
13,
14
and
15.
All
sessions
Bat. night. Bud Wolfe's Prowlers.
Streeter's resort. Gun lake. Mgr. B.
will be in the Civic Auditorium
not be done naw.
PRIVATE RUMMAGE I
Have you regirterod? The taw reThe Biatty's (they pronounce
with headquarters at the Pan Hind
At
Cloverdale.
July 21,
,..
BARNEY
REUNION,
by the way,
with the MILLS
c
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
hotel. The Hastings chapter will be quires this to be done two weeks their name,
MIXED DANCES.
primary election
election, whleh
which oc- silent, ions
long a)
at have rented the Rot
Rob- i At the schoolhouse, Saturday. Aug. Household goods of every
Every Saturday night at Clear
Delton.- Bat, Ere, Better's Orch. represented by Mrs. Alma Flngleton, before nrlmarv
| ert Bessmer house, 730 8. Hanover.11. Howard Stanton, Secy.—Adv.
worthy matron, and other members. curs Sept. 15.
lake, Frank Harrington.—Adv. tf.

RECORD CROWD
VISIT OISPLIl

FARMERS WILL
GEL THE BENEFIT

SEVERE DROUGHT
NOT NEW IN U.S.

=?

:‘V‘£Fsh“‘’”

Band Concert Pro­
gram for Thursday

May We
Introduce--

�THK HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY U, 19*
court on
No tablas this week at th* hos­
verdict pf acquittal was rendered. pital l
Mrs. Emma Bush of West South
street has not been so well this
Two petrified potatoes have been
found on the farm of Mrs Anna
The parking stripes on Stale
on the Buck of Southwest Carlton. "Die street received a fresh coat of paint
abstract ground in which they wars found this week.
had not been planted to potatoes

LOCAL NEWS

Folks!
We are holding
food prices
down at

FOOD CENTER
BALLOON

SUGAR

Soap Chips

Pure Cane

10 *-52* 5 &amp;X 25 c
10c

Light House Cleanser

Block Salt* 35c

COFFEE
Vacation Land

lb.

15c

White House

lb.

22c

Maxwell House

lb.

25c

10c

Corn Flakes

Salad Dressing Beil, qt. 23c
■ta

INDIANA

»■

Peas N°-2s -4 ...25c
CIGARETTES
Tomatoes Mammy's 3 Cans 25c

OLD GOLDS. CHESTERFIELDS,
CAMELS, LUCKY STRIKES

Hominy Mammy's 3&amp;„’* 25c

2pkg’- 23c
---------- ■ / ■

Corn

3

25c

All 10c Tobacco J'.'25c
All 15cTobacco 2 » 25c

Mackerel c.*:P. 3

25c

Fly Ribbons

Qt. Cans

63c

3&lt;« 5c

Ball Maion

3

Jar Rubbers

Fly Swatters

Rex Fly Spray

10c

* 35c

Eaton county will vote
proposition of -a county
office at the fall etectlon.
During the recent hot spell as
and a boe-gssh are plainly discern­ mer. 827 N- Hanover, July 11. a girl.
high 93 50.000 people sometimes ible In tjie potgiocs. which are Doris Jean.
spent Die night al Belle Isle.
round and oblong In shape.
Mrs E. A. Burton, who lias been
; This dry weather played havoc
Miss Anna Johnson (Hope Dar­ 111 for several weeks past. Is gaining
■ with
huckleberries which
h*d ing) writes from St. Joseph that steadily now.
promised to be a bumner crop.
she Is pleasantly located at 50g
The Strand looks very clean and
I We notice by the Charlotte Re­ State street for a month or so. hop­ shiny again in Rs fresh coat of
publican-Tribune that Ralph Rog­ ing Lake Michigan air will help to black fuid white.
ers has joined the Fowler-Chevrolet raise her weight, and give her the
Taxes ere coming in a bit better
organization.
needed- ambition to finish a serial than last year according to City
I Mrs Mary Peterson left Friday,j for a children's magazine she has
Treasurer Jessie Loppenthlen.
for Battle Creek where she wlU promised by Sept. 1. The book now,
Miss Mary Janet Osborn, younger
• now reside being located at the occupying some of her leisure time | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace
! W. C- T. U. home there.
Is "Emily Dickinson, the Human Osborn, has a mild attack of scar­
I The Charlotte Republlcan-Trib- Background of her Poetry." by let fever.
। une makes the excellent suggestion jpsephlne PalUtt. which she recom­
Quite a delegation are planning
that the Hastings and Eaton Rap­ mends to all lovers of Emily.
to take advantage of the Michigan
ids bands exchange band concerts.
Many
people will
remember Central excursion Sunday to see
» Judge McPeek Is using some of "Skeet." the white fox terrier owned the Tiger-Red Sox game tn Detroit.
the Ideas he picked up on his re­ by Mrs. Nellie Matthews, and will
Miss Ethel Ragla and Miss Phil­
cent trek to Williamsburg, at his be sorry to hear ot his death last ena McDonald a! the Barry County
farm.—Charlotte RepubUcon-Trib- week at the Al Brill form. "Skeet" Health department have rented one
' une.
was 13 years old and was an of the apartments in the D. A. Van
i Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Van TH especially intelligent dog. When the
Buskirk house.
moved
...
..last
---------------------Thursday------------------------from Hanover family moved from the Jefferson
Rev. w. Kefih Chidester of Whi­
.■freet
.’treet tn
to Ttn-Wrst
702-West CSrptirt
Grand, th^
the hnuu&gt;
house street home to the farm, he dug up ter Park. Fta,. who Is visiting in the
formerly occupied by Mr. and Mrs. | al) his bones, treasures burled In the city, will be in charge of the early
Joseph DeRuiter.
j neighborhood, and put them In a service at the Emmanuel church
I Gerald B. Stanton of 414 West pile by the moving van door. A Sunday.
K,11I street hn.
&gt; 111 a — I , ■■ r\f
-— — Wl_
n . ­
Mill
has .-.&gt;.&lt;,,.,1
accepted aa position peculiarity
of&gt;-Ot.aa,a-.
"Skeeta"—was
his,fond
Wednesday was moving day for
as private secretary to Chief Clerk ness for tobacco smoke lapping It the Barry County Health Depart­
Edward Hallan of the Grand Trunk up at every opportunity.
ment. The staff te now located In
railway at Battle Creek.
Owing to the excessive heat last the ground floor of the Fuller build­
Senator Leon D. Case of Water­ week the Banner tried to have a ing on Michigan avenue.
vliet. who was guest editorial writ­ heart for Its linotype operators who
The picnic of the Methodist Sun­
er for the July o issue of the Ban­ had one of the most trying jobs in day school was held at Herrington's
ner. has announced his candidacy town silting at machines, casting resort. Clear lake. Friday afternoon
for lieutenant governor on the dem­ out hot strips of slugs all day. in of last week. There were about 150
ocratic ticket.
close proximity to metal pots kept present and al) ha&lt;J a good time
When officers raided the home of al boiling temperature. Our per­
A detailed account of an auto­
a Holly. Mich., woman for liquor, sonal column and several other mobile accident in which sev­
they found &gt;3.570 in currency in a features weren't followed up to any eral cars were Involved while rush­
glass jar In the basement. She had great extent. Some special articles ing to a flre at Hickory Corners can
been receiving federal welfare aid were carried over, among them the be found in the Delton items this
for four years.
write-up of the gorgeous furniture
The Coffee Shop has received a pageant tn Grand Rapids at House­
Al Brown's recent talk before the
coat of white paint improving Its man Field, which Was witnessed by Commercial Club concerning the
-appearance.
----------------- The
----- ----------------interior has
— also . a member of the Banner staff, and dust nuisance certainly struck a
been renovated, a pressed board which we print elsewhere this week, popular chord, judging by the ver­
finish being put on by the Miller । Hastings with Ils two fine furniture bal and written comments we have
Furniture company.------------------------------plants has a particular interest in received.
The fire truck was called out Fri- I everything pertaining to that IndusMr. and Mrs. Richard Keenan
dny night about nine o'clock by an- I try and you will enjoy reading the had a narrow escape from death
other outbreak in the city dump.' article which gives a first hand imor serious injury Monday afternoon
It would seem that there ought to 1 preaslon of the spectacle. It was unwhen their car turned over three
be some way of handling that dump j fortunate that just at this time times on a curve on M-37. The car
that would result in fewer fires.
Michigan was listed among the was demolished.
Says Mrs. Harold Green of Belle-1 states .suffering from the highest
The choice list of prizes and the
vue in sending in the money for temperatures in the Union, which unusual number to be given away at
her want ad—offering collie pup- prevented many local people, who Consumers cooking school
next
pies for sale—"I had very good re-' had hoped to attend, from being
week ought to give a lot of the la­
suits from my ad." You would be i present.
dies who claim they never drew
.surprised how- many people say the
Word comes from the Hubert anything, a luckier break.
same thing when they use our want Cooks that they have enjoyed their
Representatives of Toronto. Can.. ।
column.
I trip to the West Coast every mile Bearings and Parts co. here in Has­
Herold Perkins and Miss Elaine 1 of the way. Driving in relays of tings this week on a two-day inDenny on July 8 made a trip to In-' three hours each. Mr. Cook and his spectlon of the Hastings Mfg Co's
diana together, where they were son Leslie, were responsible for put- plant, were entertained at a dinner
qulctly mairlcd
Harold’s friends; tng up at North Platte, Nebraska, at the Parker House Tuesday
and relatives did not hear about it | a distance of 1020 miles from HasMrs. Roy Cordes entertained at
until a week after.the event. The | tings, their first day out
Their luncheon yesterday, al the Town-1
couple are receiving Uh- congratu- , route has fortunately avoided the
send cottage at Wall lake where
latlons of their many friends.
' extreme heat some parts of the the Cordes' are spending the month .
On complaint of a relative Olis । west have been suffering from. Hie of July, in honor of her sister. MU*!
Allerdlng. of Carlton township, was! visits to Yellowstone and Glacier Margery Reynolds, ot New York.
I
arrested on a disorderly charge. The j parks have proved of special Inter­
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice J. Pender1
case was tried In Justice Corlright's 1 cst.
have moved into the Charles Mixer
home on 8. Jefferson street which I
they recently purchased. The two
story office and laboratory in the
rear have been converted Into two
modern apartments.
Ivan Roush of Freeport, age 48.
was arrested by Sheriff Blakncy
Friday afternoon on complaint of
Mrs. Roush. The charge was as­
sault with Intent to do great bodily
harm less than the crime of mur­
der. He was brought before Jus­
tice Matthews Saturday afternoon
pleaded "not guilty" and will be
tried next Saturday. Mr. Roush Is
the chief operator of the Freeport
telephone exchange.
J. R. Wright of Petoskey is acting
—
as ........
relief agent at ...»
the Railway express this week while Harry Wood

Let the SPEED QUEEN
Twins Do Your Laundry
Work!

is taking advantage of his annual
week's vacation to spend some time
fishing at Gun lake and do a bit of
repair work on his house.

FREAK STORM SOUTH
OF CITY SATURDAY

As your representative tn Con­

Saturday's storm was not note­
worthy for the amount of rainfall
In this dty. South of Hastings ten
miles on M-37. and from there on
for about three or four miles south.
the storm took on the aspect of a
cloudburst and was accompanied by
high winds. It extended from north
of Assyria Center westward to
Hickory Comers. Good sized hall
—stones
,»r
—II In
I— ■the
V. a *three
*
n, 11 a
fell
or four mile
wide area touched by the storm.
It brought a good shower to this
city: but Just across the line In
Rutland there was a heavy down­
pour for a time, while at Gun lake
not a drop of waler fell. There was
no rain at Assyria Center, and very
little al Delton. At Fine lake there
was a good shower. The freak
storm tipped over silos, damaged
other outbuildings and uprooted
several good sized trees in Johnston
and Barry townships.

of your tax money and ths placim
of unlimited, arbitrary power in th/
hands of the President or one oi
two men to whom he. may choose u
delegate IL
Twenly-flve cwiU of avery dollai
you earn is taken from you #&gt;y w»)
I of taxation. Needless .office-holder/
I by the thousand have been added u
your lax burden. Before President
OAAI.V.II finishes with 0.1a
.vn—.1
Roosevelt
his expert
ments more billions of dollars wll
have been added to the nations
debt by him and his advisers. Fron
March 4. 1933.’ to June 30. 1930. h&lt;
added &gt;13,583.000.000 U&gt; tha debt
which someone must pay.
President Roosevelt told us. in
October of 1933. that there were 11.­
000,000 unable to find work. He and
those to whom he gave the monej
to spend have had HJ31.800.00*&gt;
given them to provide jobs for thes&gt;
unemployed. Notwithstanding thb
vast sum. we find that, tn March ol
DEATH OF NEWELL BARBER.
this year, according to the Ameri­
Newell Barber, age «6. a life-time can Federation of Labor report,
resident of Prairieville township, there were 13.184.000 unemployed, ot
died at his home on Monday after­ 1.184.000 more unemployed
than
noon. He had been ailing for about when
wl,c„ he UMHW
1U, aM4M:illen
made ,his
statement—this
two years. Mr. Barber was the son despite a partial return of prosperof one of the early pioneer resld-1 p-------------ity and hi* expenditures
of the .huga
dents of his township and county. sums which he said would cure un­
He was a man of strong convictions employment. In January of 1038,
and sterling qualities. He was super­ 19.000.000 were receiving relief, ac­
visor of his township for several cording to the report of Relief Ad­
years and a very useful member of ministrator Harry Hopkins, who
the board of supervisors. He also once told us we were "too damned
served his township as treasurer and dumb" to understand his methods.
The President and his advisers
kindly man. a fine citizen and a arc attempting to purchase your
good neighbor. He was a member of votes t3 establish themselves in
Prairieville lodge I. O. O- F. and power, to bring about a peaceful
Richland lodge No. 317 F. At A. M.
revolution and create a dlctatorahlj
Surviving him are the w'do*. through which they will control all
Mrs. Maude Barbdr. three daugh­ government. The truth of thh
ters. Mrs. Harold Meyers of Kala­ statement was shown by the enact­
mazoo. Mrs.
min. R.
r*. E.
c.. Hoggett of De­ ment oi
Dy other leg
of ine
the NRA ana
and by
leg'-­
troll and Miss Irene Barber of Cres- | islaUon. from the tyrannical effect!
sey. The funeral services were held I of which we were saved only by the
Wednesday from the residence con- I decisions of the Supreme Court
ducted by Rev. Bellis of Richland
The President has presumed ta
and Rev. Bates. The burial was in pick the Democratic candidate for
the Cressey cemetery.
| Governor of our state and has deOur Milo correspondent sends us elded that Murphy of Detroit who
the following details of Mr. Bar- plunged that city head over heels
ber's lost sickness:
Into debt, the holder of an &gt;18,000
On the morning of July 15 Mr. job In the Philippines, should be
and Mrs. Barber. Miss Irene and the next Governor of Michigan.
Mrs. Barber's sister. Mrs. Swain,
During the year ending June 30.
started on a trip north. After 1935. Federal tax collectors took out
reaching Petoskey Mr. Barber did of Michigan &gt;88.778.437 more than
not feel as well so they
decided
to
, . .
.
the state received from the Federal
return home, spending Thursday I government. So. when you look at
night at Houghton lake. The next । the expenditure of public money In
morning Mr Barber seemed much Michigan, remember It is your
worse and they hurriedly resumed | money and you arc only getting
their Journey homeward, arriving I back a portion of what you paid
al their Milo home about noon Fri- j in.
'
day. Mr. Barber grew steadily worse I There Is but one way al this time
to stop this attempt to establish a
o'clock. Another pioneer ot Prairie­ dictatorship and that is to elect a
ville township gone to his reward. Republican Congress and. when 1
Our hearts are filled with sorrow My Republican, I mean men who
at the passing of this friend and the are Republicans, men who regard a
entire community sympathizes with political promise as sacred, who be­
lieve In the principles of our govern­
supervisor of Prairieville township ment. who are not advocates of ev­
many years and was loved and re-1 ery passing ••ism" that happens to
spected by all.
promise votes.
The record shows where I stand.
RAISE EMPLOYEES' PAY.
If it meets with your approval and
The E. W BILm Company are at you arc against the New Deal and
present employing 330 men in their Its wasteful, extravagant expendi­
Hastings plant. TTiey have had a tures of your money, its government
tine demand for their power presses. by men instead of by law. I shall.
Last week they raised the pay of all a&lt; a Republican, appreciate your
employees who work by the hour. support at the September Primary.
This Increase went into effect Mon­
Respectfully yours.
day of this week The big output
Clare E Hoffman.
of automobiles and the changes in
Republican Candidate for
models have given thte company
Congress 4lh District of
« splendid business and the HasMichigan.
tings plant has had a fine year.
—Political Adv.
.

•
aT

New

♦

Cabbage

3 lbs

Hasting*, Michigan
A

SUNDAY and MONDAY. JULY 26 and 27

1 “DEVIL’S SQUADRON”

"&gt;-5c

19c

They arc perfectly reliable

The SIMPLEX
IRONER

and can hr depended upon

L« made by the Speed Queen

to last lor year* and give

people, and is equally as

perfect

BABY BEEF SALE!

satisfaction.

The prices arc the most rea­
sonable of any that we know

of for a strictly high grade

machine.

good

as the

washing

♦

Starring RICHARD RIX
With Karan Morley, Lloyd Nolan, Shirley Ross

▲

BARGAIN MATINEE BUNDAY at 1:00 and 3:00 o'clock
AH Other Performances—Adults Me; Children 10c

$39jo?595°

♦
.A
T
▼
T
▼
▼

ANN HARDING in

t “THE WITNESS CHAIR
V

With WALTER ABEL. DOUGLASS DUMBRILLE, FRANC
FRANCES

SAGE, MORONI OLSEN. MARGARET HAMILTON

The Wisher is—

We are indeed pr^ud of this

STEAK
Beef Kettle Roast

13c

Round, Swiss
or Sirloin lb.

$39io $4930
$593°

I

Lard

2

it.

25c

BABY BEEF

Rib Boiling Beef
Hamburger
Veal Roasts

10c

2 "&gt;■ 29c

»• 19c

Kingnut Oleo

2

and demonstrate them at all
times.

*

WED., THURS. and FRI.. JULY 29, 30 and 31
ADDED—LOUIS-SCHMELING FIGHT

Come and sec them

WILLIAM POWELL and JEAN ARTHUR in

o&gt; call for a demonstration.

“The Ex-Mrs. Bradford”
SPECIAL TO EVERY SPEED QUEEN USER

ATTENDED SOCIAL WELFARE
INSTITUTE AT LANSING.

With James Gleason. Eric Blare, Robert Armstrong. Lila Lee
Grant Mitchell

Adult. 15c — Children 10c

We arc going to giveaway ABSOLUTELY FREE, with no firings

.iitarhed. a $59.50 SIMPLEX IRONING MACHINE to some owner

Pork Chops
Cottosuet

25c

pair and are proud to show

lb.

2

22c
25c

&lt;•( a SPEED QI EEN WASHER—no matter whether they have had

SATURDAY. AUG. I

♦

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION — FEATURE Na 1

4

“Treachery Rides the Range”

their Speed Queen hr one year or ten—all they have to do is

1 rornc hi and register lheTf names and we will explain full perticuThis will apply Io all buyers of Speed Queens between now
’ and Sept. 12th, when ihis. Ironcr will be given away. If you have a

liars.

j Speed Queen, tuiiie in and register.

Food Center

T

Starring DICK FORAN, the Singing Cowboy, with
Paula Stone and Craig Reynolds

FEATURE
rXATUBK NO.
NO.t 1

ABSOLUTE QUIET"

MILLER FURNITURE CO
HASTINGS

PHONE 2226

With Lionel Alwin. Irene Hervey. Raymond Walbnrn, Stuart
Erwin. Ann Loring, Louis Hayward

NOTE—First Episode of a new serial—Buck Jones in "THE
PHANTOM RIDER" will be shown al 3:08 o'clock matinee

"RED ARROW” REUNION.
There were several In Barry county who served in the Red Arrow, or
33nd Division. In the World war.
They will be Interested to know
that the Red Arrow reunion will be
held in Milwaukee on September 5
j and 8. Headquarters have been
opened In Room 511. al 100 East
Wisconsin Avenue. Milwaukee, Wlsconsln. Veterans who are Interested are requested to write to headquarters for information.
The organization was formed in
1 Germany during the time the dl, virion was part of the Army of Oc' cupatlon and the reunions have
' been held ever since. An elaborate
(program is being arranged and ev| ery member Is urged to attend. .
HAD THE CASH READY.
The township school district of
Richland evidently La operated on a
good financial basis. We notice the
school board there will build a
&gt;30.000 addition to the schoolhouse
to relieve crowded conditions. The
nice thing about It Is that the dis­
trict has the &gt;30.000 cash on hand
with which to complete this project.
Evidently the people of Richland
appreciate the good work of their
school board, for they re-elected
two of the three members whose
terms had expired, and would have
re-elected the third but she de­
dined. The board had saved the
&gt;20.000 in anticipation of the need
of additional school room.

BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT. JULY 28

ma­

chine. and the price is only

Oar OongreagmAD
Btatei
Plainly How He Standi
op "Hew Deal"

High Winds, Hail and Cloud­ gress. r have consistently and with­
out cessing fought, and, If re-elect
burst Dp Damage to
ed, will continue to fight, the use
Property
less, senseless. wasteful expendlturi

&gt;?-♦

Bananas

HOFFMAN ANNOUNCES
HIS CANDIDACY

J.

f

The annual meeting at Social
Welfare Workers, which Includes all
the various branches of such work
was held last week at the Horticul­
tural
building,
Lansing, where
courses were given and prominent
speakers gave talks on the current
trends of social work.
Ttiose who attended from Barry
county were: George Leonard, ad­
ministrator; Russell D. Reveal, act­
ing case supervisor, and May C.
Trleb and Nonna Michael, case
wqrkers.

DINNER HONORS BIRTHDAYS&lt;
Mrs. R w cook entertained eight

guests Monday evening at dinner at
the Hubert Cook eottage at Wall
lake in honor of Mr. cook’s and
Mrs. Warren Carter's birthdays
Contract was played after dinner.
Mrs. James G. Bristol and Wurtn
K- Carter winning the prizes.

�nu hottnos
------------

mg

NOT NEW IN II. S.

(Continued from page one)
&gt;«•». auprorted by ,
"
,
.
toun.ii ^i»“[“ »« he made another journey through
*" *
j lhu area. whlch is furnishing the
I dust storms and other dry phenom­
' ena. The suffering in 1934 was more
acute. He said that the attempts
| of the so-called "bain trust" to eetabllsh a national forest Ln the arid
1 region from Canada to Mexico U
doomed to failure. Forests cannot
I grow in that region because of re­
j_ __ t.,.
O.— If
If Secre____I____droughts.
..
' ----------- —------- — currlng
Even
(Continued from page 1. Bee. 1)
Ury of Agriculture Wallace could
------------------------------------------------------ hire a man to set out each tree and
bit ball," which Is made especially , water It through the warmer
for "home-run" hitting. The ball months, and hire another one to
™ .‘“"JXpXlf ““““

WOT PIPP GUEST
POM MG_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Hi &gt;•&gt; t-

&lt;1

Ubvf

in. pruiiunrn «nouia ur aranira
THEREFORE. B« It Resolved: That but one year he led the American I
ll&gt;. ■•id improvement and parrm.nl ao
• •koi for alone the line of •aid street

' ?

JULY M, ItM
such a hit with the diminutive Ma­
jor. because looking straight into
the eyes of mountainous Loretta, he
said "I wouldn't marry you If you
Appointed One of the Oom- were twice as big."
RUey afterward sang comic songs
■ mittee to Investigate
in the concert and played the port
of an inexperienced Dutchman just
Panama Tolls
landing at Castle Garden. Stubbing
It will be pleasing to our readers
his toe and falling he would get up,
to kno- that an old Hastings boy
grab his- hip and exclaim, "Mein
has been signally honored by Presi­
dent Roosevelt. Rear Admiral Geo.
vetch." RUey says the best cornmeH. Rock, retired, has been selected dlans are those who can make ’em
as one of a committee of three to
laugh longest and loudest.
make a study of questions affecting
proper toils to be charged vessels
"No man had ever a point of pride
Using the Panama canal. and an
that was not injurious to him."—
invesUgatton of the rules for meas­
Burka.
urement of vessels using this great

REAR

COUNCIL-PROCEEDINGS

„

ADMIRAL
GEORGE H. ROCK

The other two tnembets of the
committee besides Rear Admiral

Simply Chic

fecundity.
negating

ROASTS I
RIB END

braaka and Dr. Emory R Johnson,
of the Wharton School of Finance
and Commerce.
.
It Is expected that at the next
session of Congress legislation will

•‘.lumn •• Rut th* difTrr*nr*
•ecounlrt r™ wholly S u&gt;o &lt;u“
tccnc. u. th. tall icd uxtay.
'
I
l„?tL"taLni1' o5U'th.*"$hvS i
mining ot hU IT ytar. ot protes-:

prinllix
Auto Hpi’K 8hou. •uupli-,
Vnlvert*)
Co.. rep
Ati4ru« Service. repair, ...

ir Hd»* . wiipnlie
□wre Co., licht
UiHMlrtar Urn, Hd«r.
. ,ut&gt;
Horne Lumber !'■&gt; •Uppliew ...
Cartelli &amp; HlrbMna. lanphe*

POUND

I

Spring Chickens Fancy, lb. 28c
Beef Kettle Roast '&gt;&gt; 16c
Ham Ends Armour’s Star lb. 20c
*

IT Fl'RTHER REROLVEP: Thtl
amount of wheat per unit of popu- tern of measurement which it Is
UUon r,Uea b&gt; u*' '“”'7 °r 'h“'
1“‘“ um.lUt.ccou"lr'' for home consumption, ■■»&gt;country
not- II tory.
withstanding the increase In the !
It is expected that the committee
The mow.
number °
of’ Chtah'tahCInhabitants. This
shows | will leave the latter part of this
thAt
ftrmtr d°” not n"d lodlt' month for the Panama Canal and
will be absent for several weeks.
sionsl baseball, Wally was the very Ing after by the government.
He said many thought that the
Interesting and entertaining speak­
clearing up of land had had a se- UNCLE RILEY’S REMIer before the Rotary Club al its
। rious effect on the amount of ralnNI8CEN8ES.
Monday noon luncheon
i
After I had served my lime as
According to his remarks base- £^^ ;h.8^"7t
In^fTert
ball today has developed into "big ** 1,16
hBVC an e“-----c.ct Printers "Devil" on the Utica Benbmlnwa*
n you hlw . winning °n
moisture
'the j tlnel. I got the wanderlust and
wanted to “see the world." So I got
team you'll have a good money­
maker. If you do not have one. you 1
thcr® ls B notion that the a job as -barker" for the Wheeler
stand to lose a good bundle of clearing up of swamps and cat holes Side Show. We had Punch and Judy
money. Teams that are backed by I *^I?hlH,e,huOh^i °Lcro^d 1 the acts, snake charmers, sword swal­
lowers. fire-eaters, etc. besides many
a lot of money are making it hard and t*iat,h«i ,dec"“ed
for those tiiat do not have strong a™ua’
ffr^n the freaks of nature. We had one of the
financial backing, for the reason Ilure
alr comes from lhe smallest men on earth, whom we
that they are buying the best lai-! ocean. As the ocean takes up three- advertised os Major Bonaparte. We
HE IT Fl'HTHKH HiXH.X KU
ent awaj from than, m a result Quarters of the surface of the earth, had "LAdy Loretta.” the Ohio fat
several teams in both the American'
Principal source of our girl, who weighed 666 pounds and .
and National leagues are having a rains. In the ^roP*04- °r&gt; ■ bot day. was still taking on weight. Then
rather hard Ume of it because they « ’"rage of three Inches of mols- there was "Zeno.” the Wild Man
■ have to sell their best players to
evaporated from the ocean, । from the Cannibal Islands, and ■
keep from going "In the red."
lhe maln 8O.,ot ou.r ralns- many others.
For the Detroit American. League ' To be s^. ^ sMd there Is some । One day ■ we were resting In the
I shade back of our tent, when Lor­
team he felt that a big mblake was
®n
made in dumping upon Mickey draining lands, swamps and cat etta the fat girl, and the Major had I
Cochrane the duties of catcher.! holes; but the effect on lhe yearly a "spat." Just for a joke I said I
manager and vice president ns amount of moisture 13 very slight, "Loretta, it's leap-year; why don't
that is too much to expect of any
wor’1 effect 14 lhat 11 exposes you propose to the Major?" Bhc
man. The loss of the services of ! ihe soil to eroalon by water and ; replied. "I wouldn't marry that litHank. Greenburg too Is a very dis- winds. Such draining
does not
tlnct one while his temporary sue- CttUse our droughts. There were । last white man on earth. Why. I'd
Zeno first."
cessor may field his poslUon as well.' droughts before the trees were cut ।marry
marryZeno
first.’ Still hoping to
ta“r “talnTJi .on or _W
dtatotaB
done..
effect
„_____
I effect.reconeltat
a reconciliation. I said, “Now
_ ,_______
was an
Fat Girl, you
W
hitting—Mid
-ttaf.
where! Il
" —
■” interesting and very In- | Little Napoleon and
‘
forming
talk,
as
the
Dean's
talks
'
both
better
come
off your high
Greenburg Is seriously missed.
Mr. Plpp's talk was most interest- J always are._________________________ I horses." Directing my words more
especially
to
fat
Loretta
I said.
llv p»...d Jul. 10. 1030.
Ing. and showed that he still retains :
t'UTHER RESOLVED: That
-Don't you realize that the best
MORGAN.
the keen Interest In baseball that
things are done up in small pack­
had its inception at Wall lake 25
Pearl Wait of the Pratt district ages.* This didn't seem to make
or 30 years ago. For a time he con-1 returned home Sunday after spend­
ducted a sports program over radio ing a couple of weeks' with her
that was very Interesting.
aunt. Mrs. B. Rowlader.
Since quitting baseball Mr. Pipp
Miss Genevieve McClintic and
has resided in Grand Rapids. HowI ever, he has many kind words for i friend. Miss Helena Munsch of Per­
evy Upon ••Id I
ry. are visiting the former’s aunt.
'
where —
he —
has
■•■■m.tft. the 1 Hastings.
“ . many
•' i
.t «f ••id im ; friends who are always glad to wel- Mrs. Chas. Harrington.
...
।
Mr. and Mrs Bordy Rowlader
-----■ —
called on his sister at Lake Odessa,
th. Cite of
BRANCH DISTRICT.
। Bjso on
parents. Mr. and Mrs.
net with th.
Couu.il of th.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklin of Monroe Rowlader of Woodland.
Allegan spent last Thursday with Sunday.
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. John i Mrs. Grace Clark of
Jackson

betwt

pounds annually.

Fancy Veal

Fresh Ground

ROAST

Hamburg

I9J

?29c

Fresh Carrots

3 bnchs. lOc

Bananas r™.
New Cabbage

A lbt- 25c

aeiigotiuiiy

tonal wardrobe of Ida i.upino.
film player. The eolor is a beaublouse u made doubly attractive

Deliver

rblcb outlines the nee Ulina and

BU.YBLAHKETS

'
]
1
'
Aid. Miu.r. •upportwJ b»

lay

way
plan

Darby.
- spent part of last week with her
Nearly all on this street threshed mother, Mrs. Letha Adkins.
their wheat last week. It was of j
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Shaffer of Otexcellent quality and averaged - Mg0 called on Mrs. Millie Flory,
from 21 to 25 bushels per acre.
j Sunday. Mrs. Flory returning home
Mrs. Martha Marshall is suffer- wjth them.
■
Ing from some kind of poisoning. ।
Mrs NeUle Wolf ird famUy wcre
8und#y
Mr. -..H
and Uta
Mrs. W-nn..h
Kenneth Norton
Norton
and Joyce of Marshall spent two
Mr. and Mrs. A- Noem and Marl­
daH
Uhjein the neighborhood
-----------helping
---- .----on of Chicago came to their cot­
with the threshing.
Rev. Rhoades was at Buchanan tage Sunday for an indefinite stay,
one day last week helping to build
Arthur and Opal Webb and Ralph
some cabins for the girls' camp, to Cramer of Battle Creek called on
be used for the coming camp meet- Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Harrington.
Bunday.

MEMORIALS

ALL WOOL PAIRS

Survival Is the Basis of Merit
Topnotch Values in
Warmth and Wear!

For 30 years we have served the people of Has­

tings and Barry County and we still merit the good­

These blankets are unquestionable leaders in quality
and value. Pure virgin wool. Lustrous sateen binding.
Clear, colored plaids. Double-bed size 70x80 inches.

will of our past and present patrons.

It Took Months of Planning
to Get This Value!
Beautifully blended wool, angora and silk with a tiny
bit of rayon for added luatre. Silk binding. Sixe 70x80.
Moth proofed. Solid colors. Also reveralbW

We are better prepared to sene you than ever be­
fore. We have a larger selection to choose from.

We are the Authorized Dealer for the Famous

ROCK OF AGES GRANITE . . . Beautiful and

4

This Memorial can be seen on HARRY JONES’ LOT. Prai­
rieville Cemetery.

Made of the best South Dakota Granite.

Everlasting—no better granite is quarried.
With each Memorial we issue a Rock of Ages Cor­

poration Certificate of Guarantee.
We have the best equipped plant which enables

us to save you money on your purchase.
Before you buy come in and check our prices . . .

no obligation
make

. and realize the SAVING you can

"l

Testimonial from Harry Jones. Hickory Comers,
Mich.
•

June 8. 1936.
Ironside Bros.,
Hastings, Mich.
Dear Sirs;—

We wish to express our appreciation of
the fine monument erected on our lot in the

Prairieville cemetery.
It is much nicer, even than we expected
iUo be, and we have received many comments
bn its beauty and its unusual style.
We will be glad to refer any one inter­
ested to your company.

Hastings Monument Works
IRONSIDE BROTHERS
PHONE 1191

HASTINGS, MICH.

THE ONLY BARRY COUNTY MONUMENT WORKS!

Respectfully yours,

HARRY JONES
and Daughters.

Part WOOL PAIRS
Such Fine Blankets are
Treat at This Price!
Big, soft wooly plaids with lustrous sateen binding.
Not less than 5% wool with cotton that is deep-napped
nd warm. Pastel shades. Extra sixe 72x84 inches.

Unusually Fine Quality
Part Wool Pairs
Handsome pastel plaids. Lustrous sateen binding,
less than 5 °fo wool. Closely woven for warmUl
long wear. Light and fluffy. Site 70x80 inches.

�The Hastings Banner

OMT nu COUNTY
TRAOC AT HOME

A.

INGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1936

PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.

Editorials

How to the Une. let the quips
fall where they may!

ment* of Banner reader* as well as! some secret court for trial without
our own when we thank Oscar I benefit of legal counsel or Jury. On-

By Observing Tommy.

Schuman. Al Weber, Leon Case and [ ly fate could tell what might hap•
ln&lt;r ! ru&gt;n
Muri
DeFoe for the Interesting
pen afti.r
after thst
that—
—nnuthlv
possibly aa tail
jail
guast editorials printed during the 1 sentence, possibly exile,
possibly
pe«t four issues. They were excel-' execution on the grounds of trea*Jent plus. We could Indulge in ex-1 on.
tended praise of them without being • Exaggerated! Not at all. That 1*
guilty of flattery or exaggeration, exactly what is happening every day
■a. ■
--------- --------- ——r,~
I m countries being governed by dieHOME AGAIN.
tators; this 1* the fate of people
w.ui Hur &gt; trip ,h0 h,„
up lh, rlgM u
wbia, wu .njoyahk »nd InlcresUn, „lc
Bu, ,t c.n't b»ptoplie bUiurtn,
Ihrouth th.
r»,oU&gt; which m,dc the worst wc .nnhhis hoi » dilhib. low-.plrlud
hwd wnmnd her. r«l cool by comWl n h„ h,ppcnrd 10
puhoiL We've tan drouth condl,n lulv ,„d RU„u 11U1.
Uon, here durlns lhe pct nee yecr. It&gt;ty „ h#1Mr
u „ lhu
and watched the shore lines of country, the people
- are intelligent
...
.
some of our lake* recede, but we've । and spirited, yet they have sucnever seen anything to compare ' cumbed to the rule of dictators.
with certain district* of the Dako­
It can happen to us; In fact It
tas and hope we never will. Otic lit­
will happen to us unless we are will­
tle drizzle thal merely wet the sur­
ing to fight for the right to rule
face of the dust Is all they have had
ourselves under a democratic form
since a year ago last Fourth of July.
iof government.
There is nothing left except grass- :
hopper*, clouds of U:em. and it 1*'
HOT WEATHER HINTS.
puzzling to figure out what even
they can find to eat. And it was in |। With one hot wave passed and
the center of this sunbaked, treeless others, in all probability, to follow.
region, on the hottest afternoon re­ a few hot weather health hints as I
corded (shade temperature 120 de- 1compiled by the medical clinics at
grees&gt;. about five miles from the 1lhe University of Michigan mlgh\

Bo lhe Health Department really
’ got moved at last! Congratulations!

I

Tommy hear* that Bill Kennedy
spent his vacation atop a rail tn Ute
Chicago stockyard*.

।

How do you like pork ?hops on
lhe hoof. Bill?

Was strolling through the town
Saturday night when lhe accordion1st started to play a hill-billy tune
। and you should have seen one old
I Uncle josh break Into a tap-dance.
Boy. lie sure could hoof ill

I

I But speaking of dancing . . The
I prise for elegance, grace, rhythm
•and what-have-you goes without
। dispute to those two hlmble expon1 ent* of the art—Abe and Frank.

Not the least outstanding—or outjutting—feature was the "lordhelp-,
us" backline of the brunet member
of lhe duet.

,
Wonder how the goats across the
street will fare now that the Health1
Department's a neighbor?

value to those who are anx­
nearest service station that we had provwof
I
our only puncture of the trip. It :ious to five with maximum com­
will be a long time before we forget fort.
1
Take tilings as easy as possible
how cool, beautiful
and green
Michigan looked as we came into iduring the hot days. Unaccustomed
the harbor at Muskegon. Whenever iand excessive exercise, particularly
we found ourselves fretting about when carried out undjr lhe blazing
the heat during Michigan's recent j sun, may cause sore’ joints and

I guess the public utilities are’
about to offer the public another
service . . Hear Jcn’j- Johnson, tele­
phones. and Ken Sanderson, elec­
tricity. took screen tests over ‘the
*“
week-end!

torrid spell we only had to think stomach upset*, in case of the mid­
about South Dakota and our tem­ dle-aged and overweight. Il may
perature went down several degrees. i contribute to serious heart trouble.
If unaccustomed exercise is planned
ONE HUNDRED YEARS OLD.
for summer vacations, it is well to
During this coming week. Hasting* break the body in gradually, to
will pass its 100th anniversary—not j avoid overloads on the circulatory
the 100th anniversary of the City
system.
of Hastings, perhaps, but at least
SHALL WE TAX FARMERS
The same rule applies to the pop­
the 100th anniversary of it* firs;
FOR FERTILIZING?
ular pastime of acquiring a coat of
commencement. For it was on July
We have heard much about contan. Excessive doses of the sun may servatlon of soli. Much has been I
26. 1836. that Eurota* P. Hastings
lead to fevers and serious bums, .said about unfertile and "marginal"
sold to a syndicate of men in Mar­
I land. Erosion which ha* washed the
neither of which are healthful.
shall the original plat of the City of
1 rich dirt into gulleys and into I
Hot weather diets should be streams is a subject bf much gov- I
Hastings. The purchasers Irrimcsomewhat
lighter
than
during
cold
|
ernmenlal
•
c.iuuu.u,!
concern. Government!
diately began organization of the
Hastings Village company and be-, seasons but need not be confined money is being spent to correct soli j
conditions and soil abuses.
gan the survey and platting of the largely to vegetables as some faddists
Fertility of the soil is a surplus I
land. But the depression of 1837' would nrgue. Unusual foods and stored up there. It is drawn upon to I
and lhe years following soon forced doubtful drinking water should be produce food. The farmer who keeps 1
his
land fertile—who put* back Into ।
avoided
all
possible,
both
being
the company Into receivership and
its affairs were wound up by the ' frequent causes of intestinal dls- the aoil'by rotation of crops, natural ■
fertilizers and commercial fertili­
Chancellor of Michigan through ' orders Drink plenty of water Plen- zers. is generally considered posses­
the OOurt of Chancery al Ann Ar- tv of
nre needed to make up sed of sound business Judgment and
bor. In fact, most of the deeds tn for increased evaporation from the foresight. No one has ever suggest­
ed. so far as we know, to levy a tax
the city of Hastings trace title skin.
on him because he keeps his lands
In fact salt water in moderate
back to the trustee of the Has­
fertile.
I
amounts
is
being
advocated
for
hot
tings Company Alter this halting
By the same token that mokes
weather days a* a drink to help re­ fertility of the soil a reserve against
start. Hastings began a slow, steady
development. It was incorporated place me chlorides lost by evapor­ starvation, likewise caah reserves in
business
concerns ore a safeguard ■
as a village by act of the legislature ation. Victims of the heat have been against lean years. W. J Cameron .
February 13. 1855 with Ahln W revived with success by rather con­ of the Ford Motor Company point­
sistent
and
heroic
doses
of
salt
wa
­
ed
out
that
while the United Blates
Bailey as the first president, Sixteen years later, on March 11. 1871, ter but for preventative purposes a government was spending about ten
billions of dollars for relief, indus­
It was Incorporated as a city with teaspoonful of ordinary teble salt try and business over lhe same per­
Henry A. Goodyear as the rtrst' tn a glass of water once a day. iod spent twenty-seven billions ot
mayor. So. although July 26 does preferably In the morning, is sugnot mark the 100th year which' Pcstcd.
Article* tppeariac
'• **Itetrd tor thrlr
Hastings has enjoyed a* a village or ' Taking babies on long automobile
a city, it does mark the lOOth anni­ trips during hot weather is just
versary of lhe date of the business about the hardest treatment that
transaction which gave our city its can be given them, doctors declare. Its reserves to keep wheels turning
Sunstroke and heat exhaustion and men working.
original start.
Several point* come to mind when I
are two serious summer ill, which
considering the relative worth of
FREEDOM OF SPEECH
almost everyone encounters some- government and private spending.
Hardly a day goes by but what, tune and which all should be able Industry spend.* its reserve* prosome friend or acquaintance drops to recognize Sunstroke usually af­ ducltvely. Government at the best
Into lhe office and expresses his fects persons below middle age who gets less for its dollar than docs in­
opinion more or less vigorously on Stave been working or exercising in dustry Politicians of lite highest
order are not as capable a.* indus­
some Issue of the day. That is one Ute direct rays of the run The trialists in this undertaking. Gov­
of the enjoyable features of Ameri­ symptoms are quick collapse, uncon­ ernment must gel its »pcnding
can life. We take It for granted that sciousness. a
body
temperatuic money from taxpayers. Every dol­
lar It takes is a dollar taken out of
this is our privilege.
markedly above normal and per­ the regular channel* of buslne*s.
Therefore it is difficult to realize hap* a blueness of the skin. The It i* a dollar taken away from Its
that the United States is one of the treatment i* to place the victim in citizens.
ITe recent proposal of the ad­
relatively few countries in the world the shade, coot him with water or
ministration to tax surpluses of in­
where freedom of expression is still ice.
d________________
give no drugs and send for a dustry and business L* another step
permitted. Supposing, for example, doctor a* soon as possible since the toward strangling independence, lib­
that the Banner was to continue situation is always serious.
erty and recovery. Already the
publication under a dictatorial reHeat exhaustion, on the other country is full of timid dollars—
glme such as that of Russia. Italy hand, usually affects persons beyond dollar* hoarded because of fear of
or Germany. The editor would middle age. who need not have been governmental tax raids. This last
proposal will aggravate thU fear,
necessarily have to be a spy of the tn direct ...........................
sunlight
The patient i* not alleviate the condition—-Cllngovernment. We would be permit- ptle wlth ^j. [emperature often ton County Republican-News
ted to publish only what the central1 below normal and he usually reTHE LIFE BEYOND.
government wi»hed published. The .
consciousness. Heart weakness,
Nearing the end of a long and
most tiorrible outrages might be (brought on by heat and working beautiful life, which had been en­
taking place and the most Inhuman' rondiuorK. Is the main cause The riched by experience and observacohditlons exist; but the editor victim should get immediate rest Uon. Ralph Waldo Emerson said:
"Of what Import this vacant sky.
coui(i tak,‘ notice of only those m a c00i piaCf until a doctor can
these puffing element*, these in­
things which the dictator selected, be called.
significant lives, full of selfish loves
H an acquaintance wa* so Indi*No
can weo what the Vari- and quarrels and ennui?" Then he
ereet a* to express a decided critiMichigan summer weather te answered his own question: "Every­
cism of the regime tn our presence. ,01nj5 to do next Thal u one rcM. thing is prospective, and man Is to
live hereafter. That lhe world Is for
we would be forced to report the' -on Why. even during the comfort his education is the only sane so- ,
nutter to the local secret, police— Of
enjoyable, balmy days.- one । lution of the enigma. All I have
»■ would be lorced lo dp U1U be- &lt;hould,n
„ hl„ ,t
tan leech-, me io uiul lhe Cre.mr
ewiue older tarct uenu mUhc wnle knowledee ot whel to to when
J"
it be which lhe great Providence
here edo herd the rental, end re-' onr dl
Wn&gt;ld
,MdeiUi re-1
prepares for us. it mu-t be some­
ported u* If we failed to report the, turn.
thing large and generous, and In
the great style of hU work*."—Wil­
incident, and then we would lo*e I
■
--------r T ;
oar own license to operate; possibly i Remote village Ln the- north of liam Cansfield. Livingston Remibllcan Pre**.
even more »«vere punishment than Scotland has just received its first
this might be dealt out to us.
automobile, and by the time you
• No community can be ’.rusted to
In all probability the friend whom read th!* there'll probably be filling promote social welfare which does
not have th- reU-rcspcc! and stam­
we reported would be trailed to his station* on all four comers.—Bor- ina to insist «tpon the enforcement
home. Then, nt tome convenient der Cities star.
of it* laws. "—Charles E. Hughe*.

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

i
:
!

i
'
:
j

i

L

From Our Scrap Boot

'Round About Town

THANKS.
| Ume. his home might be raided and j
We know we express the sentl-[he. himself, would be hauled intoj

I

It’s the Spirit of a Community
That Count*—-Not It* Sixe

Hollywood. here we come!

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

A Quotation
l.OI'E lights moie
fires llinn hale extin­

guishes.
—E. L. IF than.

ulONOCR if

looW*&gt;

"He who from fear does good, would
do ill if he dared."
JULY
Ints lxhi&lt;h vilUy. 1*89.

128— Indian*
1,003
white* at Montreal. 1U9.

TWENTY YEARS AGO
Miss Vera Ingerson will leave one,
week from Saturday for San Fran­
, cisco and rails from that city for
Sven Chun. Korea, where she will
I have charge of "In His Name" hosI pltal, which Is conducted by the
। Presbyterian board (of foreign misslons.
v \
I J. Mortimer Townsend, advents­
ing manager of the Banner, and I
j Laura A Breen of Grand Rapids
. were quietly married in lhe presence
of a few relatives and friend* Satj urday in Grand Rapids.
Work is progressing nicely on the
fine pew home of N. B. Waterman
on South Jefferson street.
On Sunday forenoon. July 16. at
about 9:30. 18 persons drove into
Charles Giner's yard and reminded
hhn that it was his 58th birthday
Charles Gardner ha* purchased
a new taxi and will discontinue his
hack line. This 1* an age of auto­
mobiles and the hosses" have been
found too slow and Mr. Gardner
continues to keep up to date.
Work of repainting the Hotel
Barry inside and outside will soon
be begun. Hot and cold water and
shower baths will be installed and a
cement and tile floor will be laid in
the office and lobby.

1

THIRTY’ YEARS AGO
The Thomapple Ga* and Electric
company is building a main up
MiclUgan Ave., having crossed the
river under lhe bridge on that
street. They already have a large
number of patron* in lhe first ward.
•
Rev. and Mrs. Arthur Trott are
spending a two weeks' vacation
I with Maple Grove friend.*
,1 Homer DePue has gone to Detroit
to clerk in the grocery store of Jos­
eph Van Arman in that city
1
a picture of the Maus family
’I was taken in this city last week
f'ERTRUDE STEIN'S new
showing four generation*. A pecullar fact is that 23 years intervene
play. "I Am I Because Aly
between each one.
Little Dog Knows Me." may
lead to extensive studies of lire
canine mind.FORTY YEARS AGO
W. W Pierce ot Moline was the
Jerome Dean was not seri­ t guest of c. E. Bidlao this week. Mr
ously injured when he was ‘ Pierce is the owner of the pacing
struck by a batted ball re­
marc. 'Dana." formerly owned by
cently, but he was "dizzy."
J. C. Cole and Dr. Fowler He re­
ports her as being in fine condition
"Heat Regulator Concern to
and doing splendid work this sum­
Pay Extra Dividend."
But
mer.
from all "outside" appearances
Henry Bailey has begun work on
they haven't been doing so
his new house on the Iron bridge
well.
hill.
A H Krilh Ita itavrd hl. Utay
Imo lhe -Jonervtlle' todlllon on
Several Connecticut cities
have made aerial surveys to
search tor land that wasn't be­
ing taxed. We hadn't thought
the dust storms had extended

Stephen C Foster, composer
oi the Landon campaign song.
"O Susanna.” was an ardent
Democrat. This fact must be
kept from the Kansas governor

Way of Our World
NEWB GLEANINGS.

Court street
Joe Brady, the hustling foreman
of the Wool Bool factory, had that
institution well decorated Saturday
in honor ot the McKinley rally.
Newton Whitlocks home near
Barryvllle wa* struck by lightning
Tuesday night and was burned to
the ground.
। The fourth number in the *umI mer normal lecture course will oc; cur next week Wednesday evening
It will be a debate on the currency
question. M. L Cook and W. W.
Potter appearing for sound cur­
rency and W. S Powers of Nash­
ville and F. W. Walker for free atl-

If the 1935 peartufc-crop had been
aually distributed among *11 Unit­
States Inhabitant* your share
would have been 10 pound*. w

The 30.000 beauty shop*. catering
to women in the United States hare
an annual business of $200,000,000.
_____
The *weet potato Is America's I
largest vegetable crop.

And then. Ben Gidley and his
fish pole aerial.

Don't gel seasick on the ether
waves. Ben.

VILLAGE TANKS OF CEYLON

Donald Otis of Lansing has been
guast for several days of his
cousin Russel) Laubaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. Callahan of Has­
tings were guests Saturday night
and Sunday of Mr. and Mr*. Dan
Douglas*.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Gorham and
children of Kalamacoo were Sun­
day gdest* of the former's parent*,
Mr and Mrs. Frances Gorham.
Bunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Dunn were MY. and Mr*
Peter Schrier and «on Frank of
Kalamazoo and Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Olis of alas* Creek.
A number from here attended the
MeCallum school picnic Saturday
and report a good time and a fine
program.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Haven* were
Bunday guests of their daughter.
Mr*. Rankin Hart, and family of
Brush Ridge.
Mrs. Zola Dunn was elected direc­
tor at the annual school meeting
Inst Monday evening at the OU*
school. Tills office has been held
tor the past 14 year* by W. H. Otis.
Sunday guests and callers at the
home of Mr. and Mrs Roy Oaks
were Mrs Frclda Lord and mother,
Maxine Lord of Battle creek. Mr.
and Mrs. Lemuel Oaks and baby of
Middleville and Mg. and Mrs Oley
Douglass and children of Bowens
Mills.
Remember the Otis school picnic
this Saturday. July XI. at lhe school­
house. Pot luck dinner at noon. Ev­
eryone welcome.

Th* niters of old thought In terms
of food supply grown by their own
people for their own need*. The
whole of society wa* organised on
that basis and lhe system of land­
tenure depended upon it. Hill
stream* were Upped and their wa­
ter guided Into th* giant storage­
tanks below, some of them four
thousand acre* In extent, and from
thoee. channel* ran on to other
large Unk* farther from the hill*,
and from them to other* still more
remote. And below each great lank
and each great channel were hun­
dreds of little tanks, each the nu­
cleus of a village; all. In lhe longrun. fed from the wet mountain
rone. Bo gradually the ancient
Singhalese conquered all or nearly
all Of the plains.
.
Village tank* are the Centres not
only of all human life In their vi­
cinity, but of many other kinds.
Cattle and dogs and buffaloes drink
from them. . . From tank* of hun­
dreds of acre* down to those that
cover only four or five, each 1* a
wonderful harbour of bird life, and
even the amallesl generally have a
water-forest of lotus where flowers
lUr the green as dal&amp;le* star our
lawn* In England; or maybe they
are the giant red lotus, like Immense
peonies, whose tangle of blue-green
leaves are the home of the Ulkatlve
Jacana. the lank pheasant who runs
on the tops of the floating plant*,
and of the galllnules. who live In
deeply coloured families like purple
poultry.
In the forest which covers the an­
clent kingdom, far from the sounds
of men. one comes upon the bunds
of tanks now utterly forgotten,
where the banks have given way.
and the bed* become like natural
glades for deer to graze in. Pig* find
mud holes and wallow there, and
wild buffaloes
wiifl
ounaioes spend me
the neat
heat oi
of
the day sunk in their pools with!
only the tips of their nose* showing;
and in the trees that ring them ।
round, monkeys love to linger, scattering the rinds of fruit upon the I
grass. In some parte, where aban-;
donment is not so far back in time,
no more than four or five centuries
®ld flelcto h***becom'

the greater beasts and of pea-fowl
The largest herd I ever saw of wild
elephants was browsing in one of
these park-like glades: there were
My! My! So they're going to take
only sixteen of them, and three of
a picture ot Hastings . - . from the
these were-babies, but thrlr bulk
teemed to fill the glade.—John Still.
in ’The Jungle Ude." (London.
Wonder if it wouldn't be belter to
Blackwood. Boston: Houghton. Mif­
wait till fall so they can see some­
flin.)
•
thin' of the town beside the court­
house steeple and trees.

Dotlie. Just what does "Imitute”
mean?

Crumbs of Wisdom

Tremendous
Trifles

fl
Fl
j | By ELMO SCOTT WATSON | |
A SHOT SPOILS A PLOT
[r
" n,’*° fo"r p,’,n.f‘
*'r
* 10 •n,a11 &lt;'nn,ion b ill*
which It tired lit the British sloop,
“Vulture." a* she lay nt anchor l&gt;elow West Point couldn't putalhly
have Injured her even If they hnd
hit her.
lint those *nnw cannon
)U1ua «ere destined tn expa*e the
treason pl.K of Benedict Arnold.

,ra,“
, r"2’*M."r, '**”
.
, rhe '' "Iture hnd come up the
Umlson. bringing ilnj. John Andre
, m establish eotitucl with Arnold,
Andre wns put nshore tn meet Arm&gt;ld and thu "Vulture" dropped
। nnch»r tn unit
A certain tYdnnej l.lving*tnn re-

'
[
j
I
j

ship as aaiinettihig of nn Insult. Ila
naked Vol. John Ijimh to lend him
a tntn and aoiue powder. I.ntnb rofused nt first.
But I.Utugaton pcntlsied indll ha
......
n’t
‘
•
"0 lhe ' &gt;'lturr
ment wna *&lt;&gt; annoying that lhe
sloop moved down the river.
when Andre win ready to return,
t|l(I (UlniiUi&lt;n Idred tn row Idin oitt
,tl0 |trmah ship were ton ln«y
.........
s.. rb,
..nr, &lt;hlra to .1.. ... to tarn w

This week's nomination for the’
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
Holl of Eligible Bachelorettes
.i
"The ------------American
mind is'"'X*?
m$re sultRuth t-mr.
pine, that uiiiuiiuiik
charming uiur
little■'
t*un&gt;
;;-----------waltrm in the American cafe .Had , «b,c than
“Sr’?"
£
Jecl of
object
tn hurry this, 'cause ti* said Ruth is propaganda political or otherwise
contemplating a trip to Detroit The conviction that nothing is ever I
Aoon.)
1 finished, that everything 1* chang-1
• • •
I mg. developing, increasing. Is on- I
D'jn ever watch Art Wheating [
which every American is deep- I
chuckle?
. Like watching a pot! ’Y Imbued. It opens his cars and,
or Blly qulm.
.
.ye, to wlutaer U &gt;ln&gt;w u hu
' ' '
~Or
T Hod or to roe thu totiehatatee S“™ Rto.rth.
Army affect*
when making ■'
------------i .
. *
.
.
.
...
"If we do go ahead and devalue 1
in n ne nnn.i. o. u.rea
speech.
I the dollar, and get an agreement on
" mimiairnn who turned
Howard Frost, they tell me. ap- 1 n stable ratio between lhe dollar and ! h.,n' "v*'r *'* " ' ‘'otlneninl nflieer.
prarvd at the factory one day last I Che pound, there is no reason why I
r,‘»nli Is history—the hetrn.ral
week wearing shoes of entirely dlf• 'r we shouldn't have a sound prosper- ’ "t Arnuhl'a treason plot and the
ferent -parentage.'1 Trying to set a Ity."—Gen. Robert E Wood.
new style in casual drew. Howard?
Sure is lucky that pants come all in
one piece.

Have Bob corkin'* shirts toned
down or are Tommy's eyes growing
dim?
This week's nomination for the
Hasting* Hall of Eligible Bachelors
—Curley haired Duff Laubaugh. one
of lhe town's well-known athletes.
Duff attracts 'em but always man­
ages to have 'em marry some one
else, what's your secret boy? What's
your secret?.

SAVE

A lot of the boys were talking
About the "good old days" of base-|
ball here after hearing Wally Pipp. 1

Wally still looks fit enough to
sock "one”*for extra bases.

FUEL
NOW!

Doc Walton seems to get a lot of
satisfaction out of the fact that
he Is -one-up" on Ray Branch.

Seems good to be able to raise a
• goose pimple" again.

An American. Mrs. Anne Royal. I
was not only the first woman Jour­
nalist. but the first of her sex to I
own and edit a newspaper. For sev- 1
eral years at the beginning of the ।
I nlnrtanth cjnlurp .hr tabllrted
on Capitol Hill a small ™
weekly
sheet
""
w,v ,b
"‘
called, at flat, the Washington;
Paul Fry. and later, the Huntress. I
. Hutton's Mathematical Diction-,
ary. published In 1795. mention* the
-fountain pen."

agent of the great Rock Island sys-,
tern ot railroads.
A* soon as the interior decorations 1
on the Newton house are completed.1
active work will be begun on the;
opera house, which will be one in
every sense worthy of the city and
its munificent builder
Barry Lodge. Knight* of Pythias.'
will give an excursion to Macatawa i
Bay on ot about August 12.
The vote on the Michigan avenue!
A stag party was held at the
sheriffs residence last evening to bridge question Monday wa* a light
celebfaf" the 23nd birthtfly of Will one. probably owing to the fact that
there wa* very little opposition to1
McKevitt. the sheriff s genial son.
the scheme.
Miss Louisa Shepherd, who ha*
FIFTY YEARS AGO
It Is with prjde and pleasure that been elected second assistant teach­
we chronicle the deterved promotion er In our high school. 1* a resident
of
* »*■««««
graduate of the
of E. A- Holbrook, formerly of this «« Vassar and •
city, to general llctet and passenger j 8UU Normal School at Ypsilanti, i

«

2257

We'll Deliver I — Because prices will soon advance

. . . because -wen naw better grades are hard to

got from the mines . . . because you may not be
able to get what you want later on, wo advise you
to buy your winter's coal now!

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.
DEALERS IN WOOL, GRAIN. FEED. FLOUR, SALT, LIMB,
CEMENT AND COAL
PHONE 1857

HASTINGS. MICH.

�tbs raittkgb bannkb, twubidat, jxtlt n, um

CIVIL SERVICE IN THE
STATE BANKING DEPT.
Gov. Fitiggntld Approves the
Movs to Eliminate Poli­
tics In Banking
A competitive examination for
positions as examiner* in the Stale
Banking Department, Aral of Its
kind ever hold by thal department,
was announced today by Howard C.
Lawrence, bonking commissioner.

r*f*t BMi«r

.'3T4K

to* wa* held at th* home ot John
Houghtalln. July 7. with seven

"We ore starting civil service of
our own volition In advance of Um
legislation." Lawrence said. "TN*
written examination will give u* ■
thorough knowtodge of Um U*Ucant's quallficaUens tor lhe Job.
ThD nXbofloHelocttan »U1 find

Questions art planned to discover
the applicant* specific
banking
knowledge. hi* general grasp of fi­
nancial and buslnew matter* re la t- i
Ing to banking, and what hi* Une
of action would be when confront­
for u* th* best men and will ellml- ed with situations arising during his
examination of banks. Il is a move
tn th* right direction.
The department now has 34 ex­
aminer* who. together with an office
»laff of 25. examine and supervise
MO state and industrial bonks and
। trust companies.

WATERS' CLOTHES SHOP

Special Prices To
Save You Money
Sanforized
WASH SLACKS
Checks, stripes, nubs .. a spe­
cial purchase of all sizes ... at

Boys’ Sizes 8 to 16, 31.10

Any STRAW HAT
In the Store
Regular Prices

Organizations Grandchild No. 44

Sr'keriar

with Um approval 1 Governor
Applicant* far the position* mutt
Prank D. F1t*&lt;«rald. who** elvil
obtain an application form from
eerdeo program U expected to be the banking department, fill II out.
•nd return It. They will be noUAed
when and where Um examination I*
loture. .

Mostly Sixes of

Ing will be held with Fem and
Frances Campbell. July 28. AU
friend* and parents are welcome.

The Hastings Lodge No. 58 I. O.I
O. F. will install officers Tuesday1
,
night. July 28th. Ice cream and
cake will be served.—Dewey Reed. I
Rec. Secy

h. ciir mu
A Townsend plan meeting will be :
T&gt;. lose. «*I4 (k*. । held at 8. Jeffer*on St. Wednesday '
"
J? ! evening. July 29. 1930. 8 P M.

For Diverting Farm Acreage
From Boil Depleting
Crop*

ovratat* will heard,
tie* at Ho.Uns. Mir

R

I

NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.
WIIIIMrMIII

Coats Grove L A

Juil Rgceived

Covert Pants
Sanforized Shrunk

$*| .19

SUMMER
NECKWEAR
New. bright coloro—just
unpacked . . . dozen* to

choose from.
A Real Value

POLO SHIRTS

69‘

Long and ahort sleeveo—•
new one* have arrived—
get ready for another hot
t»pvll—they will keep you
cool.

It's the ideal sock for
summer. We have them
in whiles and fancies.

49‘,.98c

15 ^25'

Ankltts for Mon

Waters Clothes Shop
"Selling Quality Keeps Us Busy”

Reports that arrival of a 34th
grandchild made a Los -Angeles
woman the champion grand­
mother of the United States
were contested by friends of
&gt; L. Kebrey ot Flint,
Mrs, —
Kebrey
is shown
Mich.............
—f --------------above holding little Barbara
Alcnc Stile*, her 44th grand­
child.

I home made ice cream and cake at !
the church Friday evening. July 24.;

NOTICE

' For every $8 poured into the Frd1 eral treasury by citizens of Michi­ ■ on. tn th* HOME GWXEWK
(iRI’oHATtON.
gan. only $1 was returned to the
state for relief, a fiscal report for
ii.i'd &gt;■ ifsiiinc. MirMcia. thr iTih
the year ending June 30 discloses.
hv
.-r the
C.mnHl
I During the year a total of $38.a. c
CW*Clerk
non
non was
for relief in Mlehl000.000
--------.went
„------------------------------------------- - ----------- -- —_______ __
gan. Of this num Michigan state I
riwl t notice or special A88B88MENT.
and local governments contributed 1
**
Iton.h.
| $16,500,000. The Federal governI ment received from Michigan IlgO.000.000 In Internal revenue taxes and
I returned but $20,000,000 for relief
‘ As far as Michigan is concerned, Iloilo
the report shows that If lhe Fed­
eral government, which continually •
NOW,
praises Itself for the lavish manner
in which it hiu handled the relief'
problem, paid lhe entire relief coats ,
of Michigan it would be returning
IK HEREUY GIVEN on Mundo
-«lk ini
only a fraction of lhe money it took
out of this state, and that Michi­
gan Is among lhe nation's leaders tn
bearing It* share of lhe relief bur­
den.
Many states, particularly those tn
irrlbod In
the'south, pay less than 8 per cent
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.
of their relief costs. Michigan paid
which m
45 per cent, a record equalled by
only, five other states.

"Commencint

ROCK-WOOL Insulation will
protect your home from heat
and cold, giving you a maxi­
mum amount of comfort dur­
ing summer . . . or winter.
Quickly and easily installed,
Rock-Wool forms a wall of
protection a t reasonable cost.
Call the Home Lumber Com­
pany for details. . . . Live in
an insulated house.

LUM BURR Swyv.
"Rock-Wool insulation
is a fine Investment and1
will pay you dividends in
comfort."
'
The Homo Lum­
ber Company
"Builds HemM**

HOME OWNF.RH- IX»AN CORTH
RATION. Mariner'.

Out OH. IS

their Uvea. But when they let go ot thia atm
snap back into shape. Of course, it may have a I
marks — no hosiery la bite-proof — but the
stretch ot every point in these naw ALtHm 1
successfully even Scotch terriara.

loveilncM In btMlary

Full Fcthlonad, All Sih ■&gt;

2-WAY STRETCH
CONTROL
for the average figure
by

85‘

’too

SUBSTANDARDS at

59‘ 69‘ 75‘
All Mk Service Weifhf
Knee Length hose :

I Mr. Tinkler Joined Hastings lodge
1 No. 52 F. A: A. M tn the fall of
1 1875. He was made a life member of
j the lodge in 1924. On September 1.
I 1870 he WttS Unltcd ln nwrrlr.Re to
। Miss Sarah Smith, who survives
him. They had no children. He
was a faithful husband, a good
I friend and a kind neighbor.

F o rm tit and Yanit

FOUNDAT1O
GARMENT

The funeral took place from hLs
home Monday at 2 o'clock. It was
conducted by Rev. W. Moylan
Jones, pastor of the Methodist
church. The burial was in River­
side cemetery and was in charge of
Masonic lodge. No. 54.
DEATH OF RALPH FREEMAN.
Funeral services were held Sun­
day at the Dowling cemetery for
Ralph A. Freeman, who died Fri­
day at Traverse City. He was born
in Hastings August 12. 1878 and 15
years aro with his parents, the laic
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Freeman, he
moved to Bentley in nay county.
He is survived by one sister. Mrs.
Willard Sherman of Pontiac, and
three brothers. Oscar a., of Bay
City and Orla H. and William J. of
Bentley.

ADMIRATION

TWO-WAY STRtT

Now wohllino enacts. Now
slreamlinod hip and thigh
lines. Now "uplifty" bustlines.
Remarkable disciplining con­
trol In both these creations .
a perfect Girdlelore and an
all two-way Mml&lt;tep(n girdle.

’2.50-*3.
Girdles at $1.00 le
Innerbelt CorMletteo

Heavter Boned

Bra$$lere$------- 25&lt; and

t'randxvii's
'Exclusive Hut Not Expensive1
HASTINGS

PHONE 230*

ENJOY A GOOD
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

NOTICS or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

Thnmo-

USED CAR

Mrfiiln

mon Connell Air* pa
ran.tntH enrh and

nibMr

nntllrd that th&lt;

1038. ■&lt; 7:30 o’riaek P M

'l.irh

NOTICE OP SPECIAL A8B8MMENT.

reanlullon to

NOTIOE OF 8PBCIAL A8BE»8MENT.
Tn Er»-I R lUIc John Ito'S".i- N'IH&lt;
Mrpharlin. Wall" Katon. Alh.rt Cral«
Arthur Brant. KSvarii Cimlaa. L&gt;r»r

ITth

r»»"tuiion tn

• Don't deny yourself the
pleasure of owning a car!
No matter what your in­
come is, we can show you
models that you con easily
afford. All cars ore com­
pletely guaranteed. Small
down payment. Easy terms
arranged to your
convenience.
Cars and Trucks Ara All in Fin* Condition, Many with

Low Milcage. See uo before you buy.

ruV*"* H*
Council Hu
on H. Market
W. BtM fc.
•r» fwTtnrr •(

ITiIrd at Haitian. Mlahlnn. th' tfih
ir of .inly. .A T». I»S*.
Hr Order n( tbe-Camntoa Cnnneil.

toa*. at

THE HOME LUMBER CO.

i
-‘

DEATH OF AUGUST GEIGEROn Wednesday of last week Aug-;
usl Oclger died al his home tn i
Woodland after a long Illness He i
was a respected citizen of that ’
township. He is' survived by his
widow, one daughter, two step-sons. I
five sisters and three brothers—one |
of them George Geiger of Wood­
land. The funeral services were'
held at the Brethren church with j
burial in the Woodland cemetery. |

Like An Umbrella Over Your House!
INSULATION
MAKES
YOUR
HOME
COOLER
IN
SUMMER
AND
WARMER
IN
WINTER

.

DEATH OF BERT TINKLER.
Bert Tinkler of this city, who had '
been in failing health for tome time
died Friday afternoon' at Pennock
hospital His death was undoubtedly
hastened by a fall he sustained in
hLs home the preceding Monday,
when he broke his right hip.
Mr. Tinkler was bom in Hastings'
’ July 12. 1854 and attended the pub। He schools of this city. He clerked
In the dry goods store ot Goodyear
| A- Barnes for some time, and later
1 established himself in the grocery
j business on South Jefferson street.
I He disposed of that and was for
several years a clerk In the Spring
Dry Goods company. Grand Rap­
Ids. For twenty-seven years, and
i until poor health obliged him to
| cease his work, he was a finisher in
I the Grand Rapids Bookcase Comnanv t.r-nri-

MICHIGAN PAYS U. S. $9
FOR EVERY $1 RELIEF
Gets Back in Relief Cash
Only Small Part It Pays
lo the Government

TWO-WAY STRETCH AT EVERY POINT

8. will ser.-e

ant* 7 1/2

I

^ws

*&lt; whtrh । mtxa it Bring your friends with
tt&gt;« »b-'.. you On AuguM 6lh we expect Mr. I
th* nth 8chanlx lo tell us about the Olevc- '
| land Townsend convention.

tn $2.50. Sailors

and Soft Straw*

■’

The Townsend club will hold a ;
; basket picnic, all day. Tuesday July i
128. at Clear lake. There wtU be three
| speaker* and two orchestras.

■ MICHIGAN AVERAGE
IS &gt;11.10 PER ACRE

The average rates of payments
that will be made to farmer* in
Barry county for diverting acreage
from the general soil-depleting
crops to soil-conserving crops or
I uses under the 1936 Agricultural
Conservation program will be gll.10
। per acre, according to a report re| cclved by Abner E. Lamed. Slate
Director of the National Emergency
j Council for Michigan. The rates
■ vary among
the counties,
Mr.
Larned stales, as within each counj ly lhe rate* for individual farms
will depend upon the productivity
J of these farm*. The rates to be paid
I are based upon county productlvlly
' indexes computed on the basis of
lhe yields of 13 principal soil-da­
; pie ting crop* harvested in the coun­
I ty during the 10-year period 1923­
1932 inclusive.
| The per acre payment which an
individual fanner may receive will
। depend upon how the productivity
of crop land on hLs farm compares
'with the county average productlvily. If his land on the farm 1*
! more productive than the average
' In the county, the rate of payment
for the farm will be above lhe coun-

American Legion Auxiliary will
meet Thursday. August 8 for first
nomination of officer*.—2 wks.

■otiob or aracuL aansnawr.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE
PHONE 2121

d bsi»d •• Baiftan&amp;'trubiRaa. th* iTi
1 the Cntamna Cnttnell.

6. C. Borm, Cllr Cltzk.

BANNER WANT ADA’S. PAY

Hastings

FOltD

�ti /.AUGUST SALES
rf^FOR THE HOME!
Featuring the Greatest Bargains in Years!

TIIE XEW

AIRLINE RADIOS
• THE FINEST WARDS EVER SOLDI
• RECORD BREAKING LOW PRICE!

5 TUBE A. C. DELUXE

ID®5
A big little superheterodyne
with automatic volume con­
trol. personal tone control,
and super dynamic speaker.
2 wave bands; gets dis­
tance, Europe, police calls.
Licensed by RCA, Hazel­
tine.

WARDS
Arc here in time to bring
to you the values of their
annual oalca for the home!

Many other items not advertined are in slock ami
priced to save you plenty!

LARGE STATE AIO
D//.+4A

I

(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)

I ed 85 500.18 to pay an installment on
the covert road bonds issued by lhe
I state of Michigan on lhe Covert

Welcome Io the
NEW WARDS!

.

........................ ......2TT
w.
.

STEWART LAKE CAMP
OFFERS FINE PROGRAM

'------

X&amp;rge Number Enroll for the
4-H Clubs Bummer
Projects
WINNING STRIDE

locals continue
shortly after sundown in the west;
riot so bright as Peltier's. The latter atjwesent js jxaveihig teward

Harold J. Poster. Barry County

-------------Agent, announces that
Defeat the Middleville Team Agricultural
llfl Barry County 4-H Club mem­
bers enrolled in lhe sulhnwr 4-H
Bunday by a Score
15 or
club projects will attend the county
!;
of 11 to 1
4-H club camp at Stewart lake

C.THOMAS STORES

/'Everyday low

Save Over'flB

i804
Modern Kitchen Cabinet! 40
Inch stainproof porcelain topi
5 pcs. glassware!

MUSTARD
SURE SET
GELATINE DESSERT
9 Fruit
Flavors
Cpkgs.w

p

Lounge CAok and Ottoman

Qc

Regularly
911 More!

PICKLES
1EC
1v

GREEN BEANS:14C

22”*
BIG, loungy, pillow
back style I Spring back
"fits" when you lean
a g a i n a t it 1 Knuckle
arms! Attractive fig­
ured tapestry cover!

■

SpOTtUl^
Sporting LtCWS
Items

Aug. 4. when it will be only
10 million miles distant.
---------,^'f The Hastings Independents con- । during lhe week of August 2nd.
INJURED IN AUTO ACCIDENT, unued their winning stride by I This is the first county 4-H Club
Donald Smith, the 16-ywtr-oid soundly trouncing the Middleville I camp to be held in Barry county.
son bf Mrs. John Dowler (Edith Merchants, at lhe fairgrounds Sun- Fifty-six
,
boys enrolled in the ....
iiveOlmstead), is in a Flint hospital day. by the tune of 11 to 1. Rose. lloCk and crops projects will attend
suflerlng from injuries received pitching for Hastings, set lhe vial- camp lhe first four days of the
when he was on his vacation at tors down with seven hits white-while GO girls enrolled in the
Bay city. With a group of boys who hte team mates were coUecting canning and food preparation clubs
were going swimming, he was rid- , thirteen from the offerings of two i wm attend camp the latter part of
Ing on the outside of the car and , visiting hurlers.
me week.
when the car went over a bump, the. Middleville's lone run was scored; These boys and girls come from
I water in the radiator boiled over, in the eighth inning when Moore me local 4-H club groups over lhe
burning him
III,,, so
aw that
HI*. he was
wwa unable
uuauit , threw
uusw the
.
ball .....
Into left field —at•
county. There are 30 local clubs
i| -------&gt;.■--------------&gt;------i-----------------— --to
------,-u the runner ..
—i. i1 organlzed mis year with members in
to retain
his grip
on..-----------the car.i. He
is 1 tempting
catch
stealsuffering from a fractured skull and mg third. Hastings counted In
--------------------I every township in----the
county.
These
\ bruises as well as the burns but his ery frame but two. scoring three I' ^ubs
enclubs have 312 boys and girls cncondition at the present time is runs In lhe first, one each in the | roiled,
favorable.
fourth
fourth and
and fifth
fifth^tnd
jand two
two each
each In
in, . j—
During
■ - lhe
-----------camping
■— —
period
*—■
the
the sixth, seventh and eighth.
make trips to leading
। Covllle opened the first Inning by Barry county farms to Judge live1 smacking the ball to the race track stock and study farming methods.
In right field for a home run after demonstrations al camp on filling,
he ran the count to three and two. showing, etc., will also be given the
Jake Miller duplicated this feat in , toys. Swimming, ball games, etc.,
tiie sixth inning, driving the ball nil w ;3rBu. part Of the time given to
nearly to the track in left field and recreation at the camp.
had circled lhe bases by the time । The girls' camp will feature can­
time the fielder had dug the ball n|:ig and clothing demonstrations,
out of the fence. Middleville had training of Judging teams in these
— IF YOU HAVE
only been beaten by one team be- studies and recreation?
HEARD THIS.BUT
fore coming to Hastings, losing to | Both camp periods will be under
C.THOMAS store
Caledonia after winning twelve me direction of H. J. Foster and
Saving on Your Food Bud­
straight games.
Frank Angell lhe County Y. M. C.
Next Bunday the local sluggers A director A life guard and swim­
get is a pleasant thrill, es­
. PRICES"SAVE
meet the fast teain from Dorr nt the mtng teacher will have charge of
pecially
when
it
is
not
nec
­
fairgrounds. Dorr defeated the io- swimming. With lhe support given
ON MY FOOD .
\
BUDGET j
cab on their own field several weeks the camp by the 4-H club members
essary to Sacrifice Quality
ago in a ten inning fracus and the and parents, it Is felt Barry Coun­
nor Quantity. Family Food
boys will be out gunning next Sun- ty s nrst annual 4-H club camp will
day to avenge the previous defeat
be a real success.
Buyers Enjoy this Feature
Summary:
at C. Thomas Stores.
...0 000000 I O''
SOUTH BOWNE.
Middleville
3001 1222*| Mr. and Mrs. Evart Ardis of
Hastings ..
Middleville—G
Wil- Grand Rapids visited Thursday at
Batteries: __________
....
Mlddlevllle-O. Wil
HaroJd Yoder&gt;M Bnd Mr and y,,.
Hams. M- Williams and Boyer. Has­
SALAD
Earl Ball of Byron Center on Wed­
tings: Rose and Moore.
nesday. ■
STYLE
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kauffman of
TEAM STANDINGS.
Pleasant Valley were In Eaton Rap­
Quart Jar
Below are the standings of _the
— ids Saturday afternoon.
softball teams up to and Including
Rev. Wynn and grandson of
July 21. 1936:
Woodland called al the home of
DAILEYS
Will Mishler Sunday afternoon.
LIBBY'S
Hirsch ....
Mrs. Bessie Tight of Valparaiso,
Hl-Way ...
Ind., who has been visiting her par­
POTTED MEAT
Feldpausch _____ _
ents the O. M Benedict's returned
GOOD
QUALITY
National
Bank
...
7
home Wednesday
*&gt;3xl*.Qc
Consumers Power 7
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Parker of
Picnic
X „
Sweet
Tables co................ 7
Landu.
C—
Battle Creek visited at the homes of
or Sour
Jar
Triangles .............. 6
Will Mishler and Jennie Pardee
Bliss Foundry .... fl
Friday.
Bliss Machine .... fl
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.
Chain Store
3
Edwin Nash of Clarksville who were
Kogers Grocery .. 2
married July 6 nt South Bend. Ind.
Piston Ring .......... 2
Mrs. Lydia Porrltl is assisting hi
the care ot her tteler. Mrs. Will Par­
TENNIS SEMI-FINALS REACHED. dee.
Play in the men's singles tennis
Robert Eaton of Hasting.-, has
tournament, in which there were 27 been putting asphalt roofing on for
ripoint
entries, has reached the semi-finals. Will Pardee and Jennie Pardee.
CAMFIELL'S
Third round results were: Crothers
Paul Nash and family of Elburn,
defeated Larson. 6-2; 6-0; Hodges Ill.. vLvIted at the Jennie Pardee
defeated Fox. 6-3; 7-5; Burroughs home Friday. They had Just re­
defeated Lyons of Middleville. 5-7; lumed from an eastern trip. Sunday
6-4; 6-3; Jake Miller and Loren visitors there were lhe Harry P. MilBoyes match still to be played, one lers:oi Elkhart, Ind. who were din­
ZESTY
Ft. 4 fc
Finest Quality 4
mulch bus been played in lhe semi­ ner guests; the Homer Dieienbakcrs,
2 cans—
I
FLAVOR Jar
I I
finals. Crothers defeating Hodges, Grand Rapids and Mr. and Mrs.
6-4; 7-5; 8-6. and Burroughs to play Will Co-sgrllf of Lowell.
the winner ot the Miller-Boyes
match.
"Pillory" in a Church
Failure to attend church was pun­
ishable In Englund by Imprisonment
Sharks ore afraid of mnn and
at one lime, and at the church
will not attack him unless cor­ of Ashby-de la-Zouch. l^lcestershlre,
nered. This Is Hie opinion of Dr.
there Is evidence that peoplo who
Clinton L. Baker, biology profes­
st tended had to behave thcmselvta.
sor nt Southwestern university.
In the gallery Is a linger "pillory."
BARTLETT
TRe
educator
said
man eating
9 Inch
Here naughty boys and girls, ns
■harks are a myth and pointed out
well as those who attempted to
Picnic Plates, dox. 10c
that like Ilona, they will inever at- leave before the sermon, won' de­
tack
wllhout
provocation.
Fine Grained Texture
tained until the end of the service
Dixie Cups, 15 for 10c

[STOP ME
MISTER

2185

Wardr— World'l Largeit Retailer ol Radiol

ed repairs on the Michigan avenue
bridge across the Thomapple, as
well as in paying the city's share ot
a lot of tarmac paving. curt? and
gutter, as will be noticed in the
council proceedings this week.
In addition to the $97,40830 re­
ceived by this county from the state
for 1935. which will exceed 8100.000
this year, this county will also re­
ceive from Uie state over 855.000 for
improving township roads under the
McNltt law. The McNltt money is
taken from the gas lax.

trragular square with its heed in lhe »
Milky Way. BY drawing a Une from
—
the upper right wing of Cassiopeia.
to the lower right comer star in
Cepheus, the comet can be located lL

road leading from M-14 in Maple
।, Grove eastward to a connection
with the Charlotte highway. This
U now a part of M-79. This left
■ $43204.02 to be divided between
Barry county and the incorporat­
ed cities and villages of this county
on the baste of population. Of this
HAVE YOU SEEN THE COMETt
sum. the county road fund received
$26533.74. The .city of Hastings
Hastings star gazers are looking
was paid $10,790.63. The village of ________________
, ....night
________
Into the heavens w
every
searchFreeport received $801.01; lhe vil-' Ing for Peltiers comet which can be
Inge of Woodland $840 32; the vil- seen now with the naked eye. allho
Inge of Middleville. $1,65950; lhe . a field glass helps.
, village of Nashville. $2578.42. The 1 II can be found in lhe northeast
Inw stipulates thal all the money | between the constellations Cepheus
I paid to cities and villages must be: and Cassiopeia. The latter can be
used for street improvement pur-' Identified as the group resembling a
| poses, such as paving, building of dished ”W. while Cepheus forms an

6-TUBE BATTERY
A handsome radio with
lighted dial, automatic
volume control, and 2
wave bands. Low bat­
tery drain. Licensed by
RCA and Haxeltine.

cross walks, curb and gutter, bridges,
etc. We presume the villages of
Barry county feel about this monef
the same as Hastings—that it comen
at a very opportune lime. By hav-

Reduced! Save $10!
ONLY $3
Q/«D t
DOWN
Modern Studio Divanl Ta­
pestry cover resists spots.
Opens to double or twin beds!

SPRY
NEW SHORTENING
OQc 3 Lb.
CC
Can DO

I Lb.
Can

Used for FINEST Recipes

T

SANDWICH
SPREAD

TOMATO
JUICE

CRACKERS b s. 15C
APPLE

SAUCE

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as 49®4
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gora mohair! Big 76 inch davenport!
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4 Styled

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Rig 94 Saving:

4»4

OCCASIONAL CHAIRI
Karra large sixe finished rich
walnut! Attractive covers I

Raspberry Delight
SANDWICH
4 Qc
COOKIE
lb. I C

Unpainted Chair

74”

EVENING TEA 4 ftc
BISCUIT
lb. I U
English Style Choco­
late Cookie

MORGAN
Fruit Pectin
FOR JAMS
AND
(ELLIES
8 oz. bottle

24“
Wardoleuni

17c
Jelly Glosses, dos. 38c

31C&amp;
MODERN! ROUNDED CORNERS!

8c

1 RICE KRISPY, 1 BRAN PEP

STALEY’S STARCH
CUBE GLOSS STARCH
No Guesswork
Package—

CREAM CORN
STARCH
Fine for Lemon
Qi
Pies. Pkg—
O

9‘

INDIANA

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SOLID HARDWOOD with
wide, roomy seat!

Kerosene
RANGE

WAX PAPER
76 roor sou.

KELLOGGS=30'
COOKIES

3»4

Big oven bakes 10
loaves at one*
•ren/y. Double ac­
tion cook-top heats
• holes for ths cost
of 31 5 fast dean
vrickless
burners!
Heavy steal body.

Superior No. 2 4 g"c
Flavor
Can
I V

2 LARGE PKGS. CORN FLAKES,

Modern lobled

USUAL
PRICE *7
You Save $3! Beautiful
diamond matched walnut
veneered tops on
SOLIDHARDWOOD!
Lamp, studio, coffee
and end table styles.
End table not pictured.

4Nc:„.230c

PEARS

TOMATOES

2 for 9c

BITE AND DELICIOUS

3 lbs. 19c

GOLDEN IDE TBUIT

lb. 10c

TANCT HOME OEOWN

2 lb. pkg. 12c

MACARONI, Elba

MUSHROOM SOUP, Campbell's

can 10c

KIRK'S HARDWATER CASTILE

bar 5c

AMMONIA, Arctic, full strength, qt. 17c

GOLD DUST POWDER
20c

large box 18c

RINSO 3

25c

Parowax, lb. pkg. 10c

SEMINOLE TISSUE

4

25c

Regularly 37cl 6 foot and 9
foot widths! Long-wearing I
Easy to clean! Ass'td patterns.

MONTGOMERY WARD C. THOMAS STORES
' 12* WEST STATE STREET

111*122 S. JEFFERSON, HASTINGS.

T9r''. _

PHONE 2691

ENERGY FOOD

2 medium bars 11c

IVORY SOAP

LIFEBUOY

... You need this

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

GRADE A MILK
HIGH IN CREAM CONTENT
RAW or PASTEURIZED, Qt.

Q?
O

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.

Hustings

�THl HA1TD&lt;OB BANWIB. THURSDAY, JULY U. 1|M

Social Events and Personal Mention

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Stanton and
children of Detroit are spapding
their vacation with her father. Orin

A. Davta.

NAYLOR—WAQNT*.
TO MEET IN LANSING
The marriage of Mtos Evelyn
AUG. 16, 17 AND 18 Wagnvr, daughter of Mr. and Mr*.

F»d Wagner.

MH g.

Michigan

Mrs. Maudle cook and son. Charl­ American Legion, AuxilUry,
ton. of Miami. Ma., and Mrs. Nellie
and Mrs. Reason Naylor. Hastings.
“40 and S'* and
Charlton of Kalamasoo are spend­
R. 1. both well known young people
Mr. and Mrs. jerry Johnson spent ing the week in Hastings.
her*, took place Sunday afternoon
MU* Janet Smith left Saturday
"8 and 40”
MU* Either Erway wa* al Grand
al Angola, Ind., with Mr. and Mr*.
the
week
end
al
Grand
Haven.
for a vacation in K*lama»oo.
T. N. Knopf. Hastings, is attend­
Three organizations beside the Willett Page of this city as attending sosslons on the campus at
Clarence W- Crawford left Tues­
Al McCall returned Saturday from
American Legion will have their
Michigan Blate College. East Lan­
day on a butlneu trip to Chicago Lansing on business Wednesday.
a few days' stay at Ann Arbor.
annual convention whan the Legion
Mr*. Naylor was gowned in an- at.
Miss Doris Smith relumed Bunday sing. of the 17th annual *ummer meets in Lansing, August IB, 17.
Miss Patty stem has as guest for and Peoria, Ill.
Mrs. Roger WUw«l) of Kalamazoo irorn • iwo wwss vacation m ron- session conference for teachers of and IB. They are the "40 and B."
CABBAGE AU GRATIN
vocational agriculture.
spent Sunday with her aunt. Mr*, tiac.
lhe -g and 40.** and the American ger-Up length coat being trimmed
of 8t. Louis. MO.
Mr. and Mrs. Levant Freeman oft^,.^.
f
w and og” with !*&lt;»■ Hat, shoes and other ac­
I Mia* Mary Roush spent last week
, Legion Auxiliary.
The -40
1 1-3 cups thin while aauoe.
Misto Mary*It Stickney of Adrian Emma Murdock.
MU* Norma Bldelman returned I in Chicago with her atoter. Mr*. Ed Los Angele* are guesu of Mr. and ! or more properly -La Soctete Dea 40 cessories were of purple. She wore a
is spending the month with her sis­
Mrs. Henry c. Cook this week. Mr. Homme* et 8 Chevaux" to the fun­
Balt and pepj
ter. Mtos Bartha Stickney.
Saturday from a two weeks' visit Kuhlman.
| shoulder bouquet of brides roses and
1-3 cup cruml_.
Mrs w O Comb, who has been In Grand Rapid*.
I Mrs. May sponable left thU week Freeman, who ha* been a manual I making unit of lhe Legion, named white gladioli with purple center*.
training teacher in lhe Los Angeles after the box car* on French rail­
Cook cabbage tn boiling salted
visiting at the Earl Coleman home,
Mr. and Mr*. Lowell Herbert of for Hudson, where she will make
Mrs. Page was gowned tn a navy
school
system
for
20
year*,
wa*
a
roads,
built
to
carry
40
men
and
8
returned to Detroit on Wednesday. Otsego were Sunday guests of Mr.' her home.
blue polks dot silk, with overdress water about 10 minute*. Drain.
former
resident
of
Hastings
and
this
hones.
Members
of
lhe
society
wear
Mr. and Mrs Keith Fox and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Herbert
• I Mr. and Mr* Fred palmer had a* is his flrst visit here in 30 year*.
blue wnocks. similar to thooe wom
and Mrs. Lyl* Rockhill spent Sun­
Mrs Emma Olnutaad of Flint is a guest the past week hto son. HarMr. and Mrs. Charles Morrie and I by French railroad worker*, and ccssortcs Her bouquet was of talis­ kle with cheese, and continue until
day at Whitehall In lhe quest of vUittng for several days with her 1 old Palmer of Battle creek.
man roses
Mr and Mrs Naylor will begin all to used. Cover with crumbs.
•liter. Mrs. A. J. Herbert.
j Mto* Hazel Henry to spending a daughter. Joyce, and Mr. and Mn. J horizon4)lue caps. Membership is
William Jones and twin* of De- j limited to those who have been ac- house keeping in the T. K. Reid Brown tn hot oven about IS minutes.
Mr*. Marguerite Parker has been
Mrs. Kellar Stem to enjoying a . couple of week* with friends al troll spent last week with their par-1 Uve in Legion affain.
spending a few days in Grand Rap­
house. 1104 N. Michigan avenue.
few
days'
visit
with
Mrs.
Chester
I
Lake
Orion.
Oakland
county.
MOLDED GRAPEFRUIT SALAD.
ents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Oscar
Jones.
I
The
"g
and
40"
is
composed
of
ids with her cousin. Mrs. Leon De­
in common with many friends the
Stem al Gun lake this week.
Mr,. CUrene, War,man aileadrt | "’'’"J’'"
Thrrt *re Banner extends congratulations.
1 1-3 tablespoons gelatin.
F. F. Gouah to spending the week
Lano.
1-4 cup cold water
Mrs. Victor Furnto* ot Naahvllle with his sister in Lansing and oth­ a luncheon Wednesday al Mary-1 a"°u^ 1®®
them in the state. The
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Carter of
1-3 cup boiling water.
wood academy.
Grand
Rapids. । !lul^Uafy ,wUI t?°*d lu meetings
Saginaw spent lhe week end with was the guest over lhe week end er relatives in Sandusky. Mich.
foreman—carpenter?"
1 apple, cut tn cubes.
In r
central
-ent,al t
Temple
*1”"1- House during the
his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Warren of Dr. and Mrs C 8 McIntyre
Mrs. Bert Fancher will attend lhe Other guests were graduate* of the ln
Miss Beatrice Carpenter. daugh1-3 cup pecan meats.
Mis* Harriet Pierson spent last
Holy Rosary academy at Bay City. convention, with headquarters only
2 cups grapefruit sections and
a few steps away at the Roosevelt of Pigeon, formerly of Hastings, and
Mrs c. H- Hoffman and son week in Battle Creek as the guest sing commencing Bunday. July 3d.
Sunday gueste of Mrs. Ella Wolfe
juice.
hotel.
Convention
headquarters
for
of
her
sister.
Mr*
Lewi*
Williams.
Jack, of Philadelphia, pa., are visit­
Miss Arda Be hler of Alma who were Mr. and Mr* J. Weldon and
Muryl Foreman, son of Mr. and
the
Legion
have
been
established
al
1-2 cup sugar.
Billy Crawford to spending the teaches at Pennville was a guest of
ing Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Bauer far
Mrs Rex Foreman of Heslinga, were
son. Jack, of Battle Creek and Mr.
the Olds hotel. Registrations and quietly married al their future home.
Soak gelatin in cold water
month of July In Chicago as the Miss Lois Roush over the week end.
and Mr*. Harry Klmerling and
Add boiling water and
Mrs. Frederick h. Taylor spent guest of hto *toter, Mr*. Robert Jes­
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice j. Pender daughter. Jani*, of Michigan City. reservations for hotel space now 331 West Court street. Friday eve­ minutes.
then
coming In indicate that a new rec­ ning. They were attended by Miss sugar. Stir unUl dissolved. ____
the flrst days of lhe week In East sen.
returned last week from a motor Ind.
ord for attendance at state conven­ Mary Ellen Carpenter, sister ot the add apple, cut In cubes, and grape­
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Atten and Mr*. trip to Canada, Niagara Falls and
Lansing visiting her father. Prof.
Mr. and Mrs. c. W Wesplnter tions will be made this year In the
fruit cut in small piece*, also nuta
Phoebe Mote enjoyed a camping Buffalo.
E S King.
bride, and Alfred Williams and the
spent Saturday in
Detroit with Capitol City.
broken
into
pieces.
Mix
thoroughly
।
trip
to
He**
lake
near
Newaygo
over
Mr. and Mrs. A J- Vedder and
Mr. and Mrs W O. Frey and their son and family, going to
Mrs. Nell Croy of Angola. Pa., are the week end.
daughters of Banfleld were Sunday
Maylan Jones, pastor of the Meth­ ajid put the mixture into individual
Richard and Hubert Fairchild of visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland by boat Saturday night
visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Bauer
Nunn Bush imported white
COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON.
odist church.
The bride wore a molds rinsed with cold water. Chill,
|
to
visit
the.
Great
Lakes
exposition
■
Detroit were home for the week end
al Muskegon.
Seventy members of the Hastings gown of blue velvet with silver slip- thoroughly. When ready to
buckskin,
ankle
fsahloned.
■on Sunday.
garnish with whipped cream &lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Mott and Mrs. visiting their parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs Oeorge Van Tlfflln and Mrs. (
Country club and their gueste atB^_..
correctly sized, and of the
Ing. Top with pecan meat.
Mr. and Mrs. Arlington Wood of tended th^, luncheon on Tuesday, it I of pink with white accessories.
Anna Sease of Lake Odessa were Fred Fairchild.
Richard Van Tifflin and daughter
Mr*. Warren Rou*h was called to of Lake Odessa were Hastings visi­ Six Lakes visited their sister. Mrs.; was the regular guest day. when
Bunday dinner guests of Mrs Mary
STRING BEAN SALAD.
H*zel Renkes.^ last- week. Glenn | members are urged to bring guests
Kalamazoo Monday by the illness of tors last Thursday.
Van Dugteren.
DINNER FLANB COMPLETED.
I No. 3 can wax beans.
I1J« VALUE
Mr. and Mr* Rodman Saunders Wtxxl ol U*l«vtew and■ Robert
Robert, and e
extra prises are provided for
Robert Tuttle returned to hto their son. Lloyd, who was operated
Tha committee tn charge of the
of Batesville. fnd. visited the
Six
Lakes
alsowrtui.
guests | them.
home in Chicago Tuesday after on for appendcitls.
mr forlur- I.,Wood ot
T- ~
— —
— were
’ ’ -----July dinner at the Hastings Country
1-3
cup mild vinegar.
i Perennial sweet peas, snap drag- club has completed lu plan* for the i
spending the week with hto cousin., Mr.
mt. and
ana Mr*.
wrs. Charles Gladstone mer's aunt. Mr*. James Silsbee. Hherc
1-2
teaspoon
paprika.
Marshall Cook.
and two children of Grand Rapids Wednesday and Thursday.
.( ------Rev. T.
.. ...
H. -------------------------------------------------------------------Hoos and son. Robert 0IW and white daisies
-------------------------were used------------------for dinner which will be the evening of
1-4 teaspoon salt
anrl Mrs.
Un J.
i A.
a u
,— and son spent
...... rlernratlnm
Dr and Mrs. Q. L. Lockwood and visited Mrs. Lois Gladstone and
Mrs. L. V. Bessmer left by auto- ' and
Hoos
decorations nn
on Ih*
the tahl*.*
tables •n.l
and «n
tn ‘ July 30. Dinner will be served at 7
1 tablespoon sugar.
children spent lhe week end with - Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmer on Sun- mobile Saturday for Montpelier and I two days recently with Mrs. T. H., bouquets around lhe lounge.
! o'clock, followed by a short program.
Drain the beans The liny yel­
Fort Wayne. Ind., where she will1 Hoos in Genoa City, where she 1^
The contract guest prize was won dancing and cards. The committee low beans make a delicious salad,
Mrs. Lockwood's mother. Mrs. John day.
Plain toe, white pigskin, in
Leininger at Columbia City. Ind.
j Guests of Mr. and Mrs James visit relatives for ten days.
visiting and rapidly gaining in
Mrs.
&lt;«■« Clifford)
vuuu.u, Brainerd
diouiuu of
vt Battle
twine to
u composed
compoaea of
oi Mr.
Mr. and
ana Mrs.
airs. M.
M. A.
a.
although the larger ones may be
Edgertowr. quality. Also black
Jack Bieskie of Toledo. Ohio, spent, Gilmer Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Sterling c. Rogers I health after her long illness.
I creek
’ -1- —
•— -went
—‘ —
—
----Creek and the'r
the,'dub
prize
lo •
I -----Lamble.
Dr. ------------and Mrs. D. —
D. —
Walton
used. Heat the vinegar, oil. pap­
and white shoes in Nunn
Friday with hto great grandparents, Bernard McConnell of Battle Creek and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smelker
mj. and
Rupcrt Morse and | Mrs. Roy Hubbard. The golf event j Mr. and Mrs. Olen Brower and Mr. rika. salt and sugar, and add beans.
Mr. and Mrs f. N. Reed. Anna and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Van Auker Wave Saturday for a week's trout daughter. Betty, of Kansas City was match play against par and and Mrs. Wm. M. Stebbins,
Remove from heat, and allow the.
...a winners -v.v
Reed returning home with him.
I of Belding.
were ou..
Mrs. Brainerd
Brainerd
»* &gt;
fishing north on the Pine river.
Werc gueste at the John Ketcham the
*6.50 and 15.M VALUES
beans to cool in the mixture. Drain. |
Dr. R. B. Harkness returned Mon- i Mr. and Mrs J«ck Snyder and
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Severance borne lhe past week. Mrs. Morse and and Mrs. Ray Branch.
LUNCHEON SATURDAY.
chill, and when ready to serve, j
day from a few days' visit in Hough- Mr. and
ana Mrs.
mr*. Jay
uny Snyder and two and
Sna son
i . Mn. Ketcham
Mrs. c. P Lathrop had as her
»°n oi
of Detroit arc
are spending a
were roommates
Mrs. Edgar Thomas entertained place in a bed of crisp lettuce, with 1
re-1
wncn
aU
cnain
ton and Escanaba, where he attend-1 ssons attended the Snyder family —
- weeks vacation with Mr. Severanceguest.
Mrs.
Lloyd
Bhafer
of
Peru.
Severances • when
attending
Drury
college*
twelve guests at a one o'clock lunch­ a tablespoonful of mayonnaise.
at Fisher's lake near Three parents. Mr. and Mrs. L. Severance. 1 Springfield Mo
ed an American Legion meeting, union
t
Ill.; Mrs Earl Coleman. Mrs. W. D. &lt;eon Saturday at the Pines. Out of
xxn
"vtd.v
| Mr
i Mrg
'
'
.... .. an&lt;
n.lu
m,«.. joMph DeRulter!;
Comb of Detroit; Mrs H O. Hayes. town guests were Mrs. Robert Hen­
Mrs. Alva Kirchner (Helen Echtl- Rivers «"
on Friday.
MAPLE PARFAIT.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Sackett of Mrs. Sidney Shipman of San Fran­
naw) returned to her home In1
Mr. and Mrs. clarence Texter and and daughter* have left for Lyon
dershott of Montreal and Mrs. । 1-3 cup maple syrup.
Grand Rapids after a two weeks' /on. Vernon, and Mrs. Carl Ricker Lake near Marshall for a three I Beatrice, Iowa, and two-year-old cisco; Mrs. T. D. French. Mrs. John Panter ot Midland.
4 egg yolks.
visit with friends and relatives here. ( and son. Kent, returned Monday months stay, moving into Marshall ' son. Dean Jr., were guests of Mr. Brainerd of Battle Creek; Mrs. Dil­
1 1-2 teaspoon vanilla extract.
Is ted shoes that are of very
। and Mrs. J. c. Ketcham Monday lon Wolverton of Middleville, Mrs.
MLss Doris Ryan. Joseph Thomp- , evening from Traverse City, where in the faU.
1 1-3 cups whipping cream.
good quality—a real bargain
| and Tuesday. Mrs Sackett will be
son and Melvin Gelow of Ktlama- 1 they attended the cherry Festival,
Mrs. Frank Schmidt (Evemla Ed~~~ Veronica Ford by Orlando. FIs.;
«“/ Mrs. C. O. Houghton of Caledonia. ’
zoo were gueste Bunday of MLss |
Mrs. Lloyd Shafer of Peru. Ill. .-.rd., oi Yum,. Art,, u ■p.ndmt "T"?"? “
Heat the maple syrup aver hot
T1*0 ““““ l" “““"P ***•&gt;’ Mlss Anne Prayne. Sarnia. Ont &lt;
IAN VALUE
Marian Murphy at South Bend. Ind. who is spending lhe month at Bat- U&gt;, aumm.r .Uh her pother. Mr..
water, until quite hot. Pour over
Mrs. K 8- McIntyre and her sis-1 tie Creek with her mother while Sanford Edwards, and sister. Mr*.I***™’ &gt;ws ,|ro
and Thelma Houghton of Caledonia;
’
well beaten egg yolks, and cook over
ter. Miss Janet Teaie of Kalamazoo. Mr. Shafer is at camp, was the
. Rev. and Mrs w M Mrs
Jone*M had
J Cross. Mr* Farwell. Mr*. । SOUR CREAM CHOCOhot water unUl the mixture coats
left Monday on n two weeks' auto-1 guest Tuesday of Mrs, C- P- LathLarry Wolfe spent the Aral of tiie as a Sunday guest. Mr*. G. C. Edward Lowry and Mrs. R. Henton
LATE COOKIES, lhe spoon. Cool, add salt, flavoring
week with hi* mother. Mr*. Elia Mathewson of Flint, who 1* attend- of Delton; Mrs. Roy Hubbard. Mrs.
•1-3
- cup fat.
• mobile trip to New York City and I rop.
and whipping cream. Pour into
West Point.
I MLss Tcsslc Beckham of Grand Wolfe. He t* now playing at the La ,n* the summer course for literary Marlin Van Dalscn of Grand Rap­
freezing tray and freese without
1 cup sugar
Mrs. W. U Shulters returned Rapids is the guest for a few days Belle hotel al Gul! lake in Paul ' roli“ at Olivet college. Monday Rev ids and Mrs. O- L Lockwood. Mrs.
stirring, about three hours. One
3 squares chocolate, melted.
irauuuBy
num
neiuu&gt;
v
.
warn
«nv.«
&lt;«**»•
**«=.«..
Nielson's
band.
|
and
Mr*.
Jone*
returned
to
Olivet
Monday from Belding, where sh? of Miss Helen Chidester, who is
Phyllis Reynolds of Ann Arbor and
half cup chopped pecan meats are
1-3 cup sour cream.
visited her daughter and husband? I spending a month'* vocation with
Mr. andMr*. Russell Kanlner
;w*th Mr*. Mathewson and in lhe MLm Margery Reynolds ot Bedford
delicious in maple parfall, or chop­
1 teaspoon vanilla.
Mr. and Mr* Gordon L Clement, her parents. Mr. and Mrs. O. F. .pent Sunday in Detroit, their1 evening heard CarlSandburg, the Hills. N Y
\
ped black walnut meats.
for a week.
1 Chidester.
[ daughter. Mr* c W Wesplnter. Jr.. I Chicago poet, in a program of readMrs. R O Finnic w** chairman
Mr. and Mr*. C. C- Busick. who; Miss Eileen Sullivan returned last [ and son. Carl, returning with them *”«* and songs.
FRUIT COCKTAIL.
of the committee and was assisted
3 1-3 cupa flour.
a week's
visit
| Miss
who by Mrs Joseph McKnlghl, Mrs.
have been visiting Mr* John Me-1 week from a two week*' auto trip *for
-------------i
*«— Julia
»..m. Anne----Templeton,
------- -----((Benes 8-8).
1 teaspoon soda.
Phone 2396
Mrs. Sadie Hilton and daughter. I has been visiting her uncle and Laurence Herrick.
Lravy and Mr* Mary Van Dug-1 to New York. Quebec. Montreal and
As an appetiser grapefruit to at Its
Mrs
C. B.
Cream fat and sugar. Add choco­
teren. returned to their home In De-1 tiie Adirondack
mountains.
She Hazel who have been visiting relMr and Mrs Fred W. Steb- Hodges. Mrs. Henry Davies and late ...
u cream. Beat well. Add rest best. Try this:
and
trolt Sunday.
| wm accompanied by two friend* alives and friends in the county, re- blns for three “
months,
"the, —
relumed Miss Betty Tredinnick. Mrs. Roy o( ingredientsi ar.d
3 grapefruit.
and ...li
mix lightly.
turned Saturday Lo thalr home In Tuesdiyf to her home In Aberdeen. Hubbard will be in charge of next j o^p portion* from Up of spoon on3 oranges.
Robert Hendershott of Montreal t from Kalamazoo.
She
was accompanied
1 cup banana balls.
spent the week end al Gun lake j Mto* Agnes Royer of Lansing. Mr*, Saugus. Mass. They made the trip Wash.
- -------------------------------t— by week's luncheon.
j [0 greased baking sheet and bake 12
with hi* family Mr and Mr*. John 1 Herman Nell and son of Detroit and here and back by bus and thorough­ Miss Marjorie Stebbins and they
3 tablespoons lemon juice.
*♦*
• minutes in moderate oven. Cool and
will visit enroute the San Diego ex­ FORMER HASTINGS
Panter of Midland were gueste there 1 Mr and Mr* Donald Murphy and ly enjoyed lhe experience.
6
tablaspoons powdered sugar.
I
frost
1 small bottle maraschino cher- 1
from Thursday till Sunday.
I two.son* of Kalamazoo were SunBobby Caine left Wednesday for position. San Francisco and Port­
TEACHER WEDS, i
Archie D.
McDonald returned | day guests of theirparent*. Mr and
Chicago, where he will spend a few land. Miss Marjorie will return in
SUCCOTASH.
NOONDAY LUNCHI
Friends in Hastings of Mtos Luella
Peel and segment grapefruit and
Saturday night from Topinab*. • Mrs. L E. Royer.
days with his mother. Mrs. Betty September by the northern route.
Oallmeyer of Grand Rapids read j 2 cups cooked lima bean.,.
oranges, combine ingredients and
near Mullet lake, where he attend- I Miss Virginia poll* returned Sun- Osborn Caine. Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
1 1-3 cups cooked com.
with Interest the notice of her mar- j
serve very cold.
cd the Michigan prosecutors con-1 day
from a week'* visit with Mr Osborn drove him to South Haven CIVIC FLAYERS,ANNUAL
1
teaspoon
chopped
green
pepper.
DINNIl*
PICNIC ENJOYED. riage to Arthur W. Krause the new ।
vention from Thursday to Saturday, and
Mrs.| Richard Potts al Ham- to take the boat. Bobby making lhe
Or in place of banana balls, use
1-3 teaspoon salt
5:30 H 7:30 V. M.
About 100 members of the Has­ superintendent of the Grand Rap-.
Mr and Mr*, c. D Bauer in com- mond. Ind. who had been spending trip across the lake alone.
grapes iseedcdi, strawberries, diced
1-3 teaspoon sugar.
ids schools which took place last
GuestV'of Mrs. Isabel Carrot hers tings Civic players association and Saturday morning at Park Congre-1
pear or cantaloupe, serve tn grape­
pany with Mr
and Mrs. Henry a few day* at lhe Pott* cottage.
1-4 teaspoon paprika.
SUNDAY DINNIM
Weaver, enjoyed a motor trip the Gun lake nn their way home from and daughter. Mrs. Anna MeGuffn. their guests enjoyed the annual pic­ gatlonal church in lhe presence of I 3 tablespoons butter.
fruit shells.
on Sunday were Carroll McGuffin nic last Thursday. The destination the immediate family. Rev. Edward 1 3 tablespoons cream.
In salads grapefruit combine* well
past week exploring northern Michl- a vacation in Boston.
gan and ate cherries Instead of fish**
Mr
“ —
and
** •*
Mrs
” J.
* **
c Mathes &lt;&lt;"».„.
iClelus of Lansing. Frank Carruthers. Miss was a secret and the members, A Thompson officiating
Mix ingredients and simmer 10 with other fruits—algo with fish,
which variation to not so well J
Fagan) of Midland were guests of Mary Daniels and Miss Audrey Car- when they picked up the "H. C ?.”
ing.
Mrs. Krause, who to a graduate minutes.
known. A recipe which we believe’
Miss Bertha Stickney returned Mr. and Mrs. Jason E. McElwain rothers of Grand Rapids. Miss Au­ signs at lhe Fish Hatchery, were led of the University of Michigan, was a
over a lovely route, through woods
ICEBOX ROLLS.
will “eeir you on thia idea is tha.
last week from a three weeks' visit Tuesday. Mrs. Mathes was a former drey remaining for the week.
popular member of Hastings High
and
fields,
until
they
eventually
ar1
cake
compressed
yeast.
Latin
teacher
tn
Hastings
High
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
SKetchum
following:
with relative* at Reed City. While
school faculty for two years and is
1-4 cup lukewarm water.
there she attended the annual re­ school and Mr. Mathes to connected of Chicago spent Sunday with Mrs.
pleasantly remembered by pupils
lake.
After
bathing
and
a
picnic
1-3 cup shortening.
union of the High school alumni as­ with the Dow Chemical Co., at Mid­ Ketehum'3 sisters. Mrs. L. H- Evarts
and
residents
as
well.
1-3 cup sugar.
and MLss Agnes 81m. They are supper was enjoyed, a fine exhibi­
sociation.
land.
Mrs. Maude Kurr. Mrs. Mabel spending two weeks at Wall lake tion of swirnnimg was given by
Mr. and Mr*. Joseph McKnlght
EVERETT—FATTEN.
I 1-3 teaspoons salt.
will leave next Wednesday for Hel­ Bennett. Mrs Flossie Walters. Mrs. and Mrs. Evarts and Miss Sim will -flve members of the Olympic
cupa scalded milk,
A preUy wedding occurred on
ena. Mont, where they will visit Ethel Leslie and Mrs. Ruby Knick­ join them Sunday for a week's stay. team." according to Director L. E.
Barnett, who eventually were iden­ Saturday at the Baptist parsonag*
cups sifted flour.
their son. William, and family. They erbocker visited the latter's daugh­
Patten,
I
tified
as
members
of
the
staff
at
the
wm
«*.
n
.
_ ____________
Soften ....
the ___
yeast
in the water *nd
when Miss Margaret W. F ‘—
will also visit Yellowstone Park and ter. Mrs. Cleo Evarts, a recent bride daughter. Donna, of Grand Rapids
Kellogg
camp
at
Pine
lake.
Tfyere
daughter of Mrs. Orley E Knicker- add about 1 teaspoon sugar. Cream
al her new home in Nashville. They spent the week end with Mr. and
other points of Interest.
Itow
onmnsn. uuiu.«
—re exhibitions of the various bock er, of Hastings was united In I the shortening. Add lhe sugar, the .
om Bldelman.
Donna iwumum
remain-- were
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Jone* and also presented her with a set of Mrs. R
Ing for lhe week with Norma Bidel- swimming strokes, under waler
rHer marriage to Cleo Everett of Nash- 1 beaten egg and cooled milk; then |
dishes.
daughter*. Irene. WUlo and Beverly.,---------..nia
a ville. son of Mrs. Arvilla Everett, the yeast. Stir in the sifted flour
left Wednesday morning for Pitts-1 Guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Fay Mar­ man and Mrs. Bideiman returning swimming, races with canoes an&lt;f
by The Rev. B- J. Adcock read the' and salt until the dough to stiff
for ail race, which was won ty
burg. where they will visit Mr. *■'*
*"
**~ to Grand Rapids with the Keech s free ....1
"Miss
America"
much
to
lhe
relief
for
a
short
visit.
'
wl
"
—
-*•
*single ring service In lhe presence of • enough to knead. Tuas on a floured |
Marble's
slater
and
her
husband.
Jones' brother. George Jone*, who
.... ...
- A. - ■ .relatives.
&lt; — • ■__ a,-.
1 -* — board
. — A .and
„ M knead
— ~ ,1 ffrom
mrva t 10
A lA
A tTt10
and
enthusiasm
of
the
youngsters.
to 1 IS
min—­ I
Mrs.
Gerald
Swerdfcgcr
and
Friday, July 24
Saturday, July
the
immediate
The 1bride
i* an official in the united States Mr» and Mrs. Lyman Chamberlain
and chllden. Beverley and Richard, daughter. Josephine, and her hus- । Games were planned for the chil­ wore a gown of navy blue silk net utes or until the dough Lt smooth
department of mines.
Rev. and Mrs. w. Keith Chidester of Charlotte and her parents. Mr. band's mother. Mrs. George Swerd- dren and some ot the "older boys" with white trim, her hat and other and elastic. Put the dough into a
and daughter*. Elizabeth and Har­ and Mr*- Richard Carlyon of Mus­ feger. of Buffalo, spent Tuesday at enjoyed a game of softball. Mr. and accessories being white. Her flowers greased bowl, grease the surface ot
MASON
JAR
TOPS
Mrs.
Herman --------Arold were
— ------------------ general
“
WCJC
were ■a M1UUIUCI
shoulder corsage ui
of uaiuuian
talisman lhe dough and keep In a warm
riet. arrive today (Thursday) from kegon Heights. Mrs. Chamberlain the home of Mr. and Mr*- Roman —
breath. The couple place until doubled in bulk. Turn
Winter Park. Fla., for a alx weeks' and children remained for the week Feldpausch. going on to Middleville chairman, assisted by Director Bar- r0M1
RINGS,Shurfincquclity,4dox.
of (hthe MtMttiUva
executive
rMlde Jn Naahville. where Mr. onio
onto me
the ««««.
board, --------knead-------and-•again
to spend two weeks with Mr. and nett and members nf
visit with the former s parents. Mr. to visit her husband's parents
board.
Everett
to
employed.
- grease lhe surface of the dough.
and
Mrs.
Henry
Chamberlain.
Mrs. Charles Parker.
and Mrs. W. N. Chidester.

Nunn Bush and
Edgertown Shoes

$3'75

Helpful Suggestions

T. S. BAI

SPECIA

PARKER HOUSE

J

The Big Little Store
OFFERS

25

.dos. 19c

visit

aun ?

OPTICAL DEPARTmERT
For Complete Exominotlon
ond Satisfactory Fitting

sAgwntR nuof
• BURN OINTMENTS and Lotion*

V OUR eyes deserve lhe bast attention
fl available, and our completely equip­
ped optical department to lhe place to find
III Under tha direction of a registered
optometrist, and employing only qualified
optical experts. Its service to completely
in harmony with tiie scientific equipment
of this fine laboratory.

Correct Replacements for
broken glas$e$ any time

Bessmer
Jewelry Store
Optometrist

HAKnKOB MicHIOtN

SHREDDED WHEAT
Choos* Your Neod* From Our Attractive

BERKSHIRE HOSIERY

SUNGLASSES

Gia** Jar filled with cookie*, each 25c
SOAP CHIPS51b. box 27c

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

Meat Specials

Spacial* for Friday and Saturday

July 24 and 25

BEEF ROASTS, Chicago Beef, lb. Ik
MINCED HAM .;.&lt;/* lb. liked 9c
PORK CHOPS, and cut* .. Jb. 21*
.14 lb. elkad
BOILED HAM

Men's White Oxfords $2.67 to $4.37

ARCTIC ICE CREAM

REEDS

29c

MACARONI ...4lb*.25«

SERVICE WEIGHTS, 79c - $1.00

Women'* White Shoes $1.98 to $2.48

SODAS and SUNDAES

box 12'/jc

SALT, Free Running or Iodised
4 boxes

CHIFFONS79c - 89c

• SUN TAN OILS

• FILMS
elude a complete examination
by our registered optometrist
and individually ground lens
in a varied aelecllon of new
mountings.

15c

MEN'S "SHINNEYS"25c

• BATHING CAPS

•

15c

COFFEE, Vacation Land .

MEN'S SOCKS25c and 35c

• PICNIC SUPPLIES

Telephone 2634 for Appointment$

JAR

HINMAN

10c

Walgreen System
DRUG STORE
PHONS 2241

SHOE STORE
PHONE 2176

NEXT TO CITY BANK

ZHOH* 24»1

Hastings

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURBDAY, JULY M, 1M4

WANTS

THE CHURCHES

ion sale

----------------------------- । m.

ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER­
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 33c

WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON E. MeELWAIN

1

FtlK RENT
HI-

LOK SALE

FOB s.H.I.
B**tu&lt;*.

-g.!-.-..-.

W.w.lhjpd

DENTIST

OFFICE

kh;

-Ait

OF GRAND RAPIDS

RAITXXOB. MICHIGAN

WILL BE IN HASTINGS
SATURDAY, JULY 25, AT
THE PARKER HOUSE f

|

Fron U* cartlm *&lt;u of otlwr*.
!*• W1M Bio corr«t&gt; hli own.
D«n*nd • Md«ta Abatrsct Iraforo
bum* or loan!** aon.y oa raal
a«Uta. PLAY 8AFE.

------------------ --

__________

Dr. DENNISON

SHELDON'S

105 Be. Ckarcb bl

■

Here Saturday, July 25

1

Piu»* UU

«

NEW FEATURE IN RADIO

--------------------------------------T-.,,

CLOVERDALE.

"^.,7 ,‘Sitt.

The Hasting* Bonnet

daughter. Mary Joyce, motored to It 1* requested thal tiie members —•
, riie Straits in the northern part of come at four for a busine** nwiI Michigan They enjoyed the trip im- Ing.

1

■

-

P«Mi*b*d ***n

Tuning Eye and Visible OaD
i
Letters Are On the
|meW’

M HoaUao*. MlAUaa.

he?‘
,**
COOK BROS.. BAlian.
CRESSEY.
I endured here, the evening* being
I
J-Jial
cool enough so one could real com­
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Enzlan. Mrs.
EIGHTY HMT YBAB
Conyer and Mr and Mr-t Willard
I Montgomery Ward now Introduces fortably.
A Mission Sunday school will be­ Houser spent Sunday with Mr. and
i an exclusive radio dial which promi*es to revolutionize lhe radio in­ gin July 20. at the Shultz church. Mr*. Leslie Enzlan at Bradley
Rev. Walton wlU have charge of thB
I dustry. according to an announceMr. and Mrs. Geo. Drew of Otsego
tfgMura b* । ment made today by Rusaell Beatty. services. Bunday School will be at and Mis* Pauline Brenner of Shel­
.8:30- Everyone welcome.
•:&gt;® | store manager.
byville spent the week end with Mr.
' ‘‘ i। Thl,
fnnmrallr-*
-'
—
■
This Innovation, called the •’movie 1 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Humeston and Mrs. Oney Roblyer.
I dial." because 11 operates in much 04111 friends from Jackson spent the
the same fashion as a motion pic- week end here al their cottage.
'
Mr’and’Mri’ wavM 1N’hARRY'coDlHX THRBB MOMTHi.
I lure projector, flashes lhe call kt- 1 Mr. und Mr*. Ames and Mr and &lt;??“**“*
ana Mr‘ w“yu*
IX adVaXCB
. ters ot-stations on a screen in large.' M?». Chas. Snyder sfient the week
a‘ ewioyvuie.
OUTBIDK bamry COUNTY. ONE year
i illuminated letter*.
end here at their cottage.
I Mr. and Mr*. Lee Reynolds and | :IN ADI ARCE»i.so
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
bi commenting on Ulis radically 1 Mr und Mrs. Ed. Behling of Chi- 1 Ruwell and Mr. and Mrs. Murle
IN CHRIST.
new step in radio Improvement.
and son attended
———
improvement. Mr.
Mr..c*E®
. cage 1*
is spending a two weeks'
weeks’ vaca- i Reynold* ~~
~ the i, .
Beatty laid. “As you no doubt know. Hon with their parent*. Mr. and ; Cairn* reunim at the home of Mr. I
ADVEBTIBING RATU:
Ward* wa* the first to introduce , Mr*. Arthur johncock.
I“
and
nd Mn
Mr* E. n
D. Reynold*.
nevnalda Wall lake i
on
Saturday.
•instant dialing' several year* ago.
Mr and Mr* Grover Davenport
Till* wa* the first time station call and daughter*. Miss Helen and Mrs.] Mr and Mr* Ferna Cairo* and
letters were used on an open faced jEva
E&gt;'» Davenport
Davenport spent
spent Sunday
Sunday with
withfon
spent oaiuruay
Saturday (
tuiloful Temperance
rempcroncc ipeut
dial to facilitate tuning. This new,. Mr
Mr and
andMrs.
Mrs.Guy
GuyGiddings
Giddingsof
ofHasHas-I n'iht
night with
with Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mr*. Lee
Lee ReyRey- (
tlnva
noldl.
•movie dial- carries that one step ,' rings.
|I nold*.
___
i
further by cleverly enlarging
and Mr. and Mrs.Clarence Applegate | Mr*. McNultyattended a post of। lighting the call letters so that youand Miss Elsie
are spending the Are convention al Grand,JRaplds 1
can stand away from the radio and week at Roann. Indiana.
I Friday andI Saturday.
,
tune it properly.-’
I Mrs. Eva Davenport relumed । Mr and Mr*. Clay Barber went to
The new Ward radios are also Wednesday after spending some Saginaw Saturday to attend the ,
piTl7.'"2286 equipped with a cathode ray -tun-. “me with her sister. Mrs
Emma wedding of their daughter RomIIm. ,
225 W. Cantar Bt
ing eye" which enables the listener । Thornton of Battle Creek. Mr and Mr*. OU* Boulter and i
to judge visibly the accuracy with
Mr. and Mrs. otto Lockstldt are 1 family entertained relatives from ,
Grand
Rapids
which a station is tuned in A varl-11'1 South Bend to attend lhe funeral ""
~”J "
' * Sunday.
““
able black line In the -’tuning eye" of Mr. Lockslidt's sister, Mrs. SwilzJOB PRINTINO.
tndicates. by its width, thia occurGypium. a white, rocklike min­
Mr. --------------and Mrs ----w. —
D. ----------Brooks—
left
acy—a hair line Indicating perfect- , —
ly accurate tuning, lhe new 1037 Tuesday for Ludington for the mall eral. on heating give* plaster of
Model Airline Radio* are now be-1 carriers convenUon.
parts, which I* easily converted back
into xysum by the addition of wa­
Ing displayed—Adv.
I Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Brooks and
FIRST METHODIST EFIBCOPAL
----------------- * * »
‘ Bobble and Vivian were guests of
CHURCH.
ter. Thia process make* possible the
ASSYRIA.
Win.
Titus
at
Long
lake
hotel
Sunmanufacture of relatively
thin
Phon* 2141.
Mrs. Bernard Shepard, who has da&gt;’...
_.
, .
sheets of gypsum ot gay site,
been so poorly recently was taken to
Ju a £,nc
C,cve'and
which, because of their lightness
the Pultzhospltnl at Nashville Ust; a««»dlng the’Townsend convention
and Insulating properties, are quite
Mr.
and ,-------------Mrs. Grant
Dickerson
week in a very serious CUnUHIUII.
condition, UUl
but' _2f.
r.; „
D1
.ckcJ^
----—
-----LT01!.
The baby L
b I,penl Sundn&gt;' afternoon al Fred useful for wsftbosrd* and roofing.
is much improved
TL:
irs. Luta
Ashby's at
on Mixed with suitable binding mate­
being cared for by Mrs
LqU JenJen-1~
"■ Hope Center calling —
rials. gypsum Is a competitor of con­
kins. Mr Shepard'* mother.
i Ul'1f1.auntr“fs-,lMeltoa As!*bf .,
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH.
....
A.
. .
,.i
Hilton DeOolla relumed to ills
crete for certain kinds of flooring.
Mrs. Mary givens Is in ill heal.h ( heme In Grand Rapids after spend•and b spe nding some time with her Ul two weclu wUhHhU wn. Mr.
mother. Mr*, tulle Jenkins of As- Mrs Bernard-DeOolla.
OH was discovered by prehistoric
syria Center.
I olln Brown antl daughters of
Mr and Mrs Robert Hartom re- plainwell spent Thursday afternoon man. There Is evidence that oil
cently returned from a trip visiting with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ar- and natural gn». seeping through
the ground, formed fuel for the
N'lagara Falls. Rochester. N Y. | thur Johncock.
Harrisburg. Pa. and Washington., Mr. and Mr*. Lawrence Beadle devotion primitive man paid to fire
fi
D. C. and on the return trip at- and Mrs. Hammond of Hastings as a sacred element.
tended the Great Lakes Exposition i spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
at Cleveland
I Mark Garrison.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Case and Nor-! Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Peck
------- of
Wood, fiber board, textllet are
ma spent Sunday afternoon at Mid- Battle Creek spent Sunday wilti
more or less poroua. The porealty
ST UNITED BRETHREN land
park. Gull lake via Delton and j **■"'
“ J
u‘
“
** "
their
daughter,
Mrs Forest
Smith.
CHURCH
varies from 23 per cent In ebony
When you call . ..
Mrs.
Martha
Replogle
and
Mr
Camp Kltanniwa home.
to 75 per cent Id balsam wood or
Mrs. Elsie Tusker and daughie;-. and Mrs. Hubert peltinglU of Hick­
fiber bnarrla
MeCreery’s to do your
Marjorie of Hastings, were guests on ory Corners.
Miss Emma Johncock entertained
Tuesday of the Pleasure birthday
Miss Hermlna Huis of Kalamazoo
cleaning you get AC­
organization.
’ over the week end.
The cwperjuve Thnohln, com„„
Mr. and „„
Mrs V1TO
Chas. Monica enterTION! . . . because they
pony oi ,1m El » common..! hove
Mr „,,d M„ wm
FOR A QUICK
tesun .be yeor s ll.rcyb nc at lhe, and
„t Dl.llo„. Mr Ru,»||
make every effort to give
feed Miller and A j. Miller larnu Monl„ 0[ Katamaroo. and Mr. and (
Several from Uris locality attend- | Mrs. Wellington Monica and daughcomplete satisfaction in
ed lhe-Farmers MffrkA" picnic held ter of Bedford on Sunday
.
.
MLss I
at Fine lake on Sunday
...
. .
.for a week's .
Maxine is remaining
in every detail .. . clean­
Mrs Katherine CoW was hostess vacation with her grandparents.
to the Pleasure birthday club at her
ing, pressing and deliv­
LENT CORNERS.
home on Tuesday with a pot luck
Mr and Mrs. Robert Steele. Mr. j
dinner at noon.
ery. Call 2140 and let us
church or the nazarene
and
Mrs.
Lee
Nottingham.
Mr
and
Mbs Nyla Miller of Olivet was the
1 Funut Lntldlu*. oppoilt* Hotel
guest of Lacey friends part of last Mrs. Lawrence Hammond and chil- ■
give you Action on your
dren and Mrs. Leland Hammond
Mbs Leola cortright was the and Stuart attended the Fuller pic­
Cleaning.
guest of Miss Nyla Miller of Olivet nic nt Ramona park. Long lake.
Saturday.
Mr. und Mrs. Frank Fox. Mr. and
MLss Betty Ketcham was the 4-H
l..= Lacey Mrs. Charles Conyer and Mr. and i
Club representative ..wui
from the
Canning group of which Mrs Grace ! Mrs. Ed Britton and their families |
D RY CLEANERS
Fidelity Corporation
Mack is the instructor, therefore of Kalamazoo were callers at the |
ROOM 10—2ND FLOOR
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
was privileged to attend the State • Clare Thomas home Sunday
HASTINGS NATIONAL BANK
4-H Club meet at Lansing recent-; Mrs. Jay Hail called on her
BUILDING — PHONE &lt;307
|y.
daughter. Mr and Mrs. Kirby Ma- 1
The oat crop is brought early to | son of Richland and her son RolBANNER WANT ADV8. PAY
the harvesting stage by the exces- I1115 Hall of La Belle resort. Gull j

r.sr-’i

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co

ABSTRACT

i

CHURCH BEBVICM

Our Service

Xacal SoraHBtaUn

|

WARDS INTRODUCE A

INSURANCE
LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

■

HE MAKES THIS SPECIAL

DENTAL OFFER

&lt;

~

Action

BRICK
At Old Hastings Wool

Boot Plant Site.

PLATES 050
1

In­

ror ■ ahorl lime
only he will make
PLATES aa low a*

’

■ __

\

1

Plates Repaired .. $1.00

quire of Joe DeRuitcr

PainlfM Extraction*

at Pickle Station.
j

50c

ALL WORK GUARANTEED

Il Will Pay You to Invest!gale Thi* Outstanding
Dental Offer!

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS

HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M.

FOR WORK OR PLAY
Tkl. Sm.oiIi Rubb.i back Rada
No Potts To Waar Clothing

FURNACES REPAIRED
Serviced mid Vacuum Cleaned

OLD

TAYLOR HEATING SERVICE

LOAN

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

ROLLER

.

.

.

.

.

SKATING

WEST GUN LAKE
LUTONE PARK

the Prescription Drug Store
HASTLSG*

UP TO *300

PARTIES 8Y APPOIN’MENT

MICHIGAN

Me €11 EE RY’S

GaaroateeJ Tnrn Fining

GOOD USED

Farmers, Attention!

BINDERS for Sale
A. C. GATES

BATTLE far cul it th* liaitlnta Block
Yard*. Skip EVERY TUESDAY
IAXX DaPBIESTER.

IMPLEMENT CO.

PHONE 717—F3

MUFFLERS

SMMAIUEL CHURCH

1,500 CHOICE
HEREFORD STEERS

.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

slvc heat wave, the wheat and oats
crop nearly meeting .each other.
Quite a number have threshed their
| wheal crop.
Y,
Mrs Miles Schroder who suffered
,ii a heart attack last week is quite
Hi* comfortable.

FOR ALL CARS

RAYBESTOS Brake Lining
VICTOR GASKETS
NEW AND USED AUTO
PARTS

HIGHEST PRICES

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

Paid for Dead Stock

Has tings

Tour Dead Animal* Are Worth
DOLLARS. To assure yourself of
getting lhe BEST PRICES, .all
MR. FLOYD DENNY.

ox commission

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
-------ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
BONDS
NOTARY PUBLICS

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

Phone Hastings 2539—We pay the
phone charge*!

Electric Refrigeration
Air Conditioning
EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

or fitrj in

MEN WANTED — Bailable. fait
•ducaUon, mechanically inclined.

Pricu BasMssbla
Phone 3510
Hastings

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

UTILITIES ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE
404 X. Wall* BL. Chlc«*o. XU.

KELVINATOR

FOR

SALE

HASTINGS MARKETS

SALES AND SERVICE

H. E. Smith Hdwe
Phnne JIKR — .Hastine

WANTED

y/

EACB

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCH’S

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

MARKET* Phone 2616

~ “

GEO. M. NEWTON

H. FoWpausch • 3921

Registered OPTOMETRIST and

SEE BETTER!
IM W. STATE ST.
HASTINGS

I

Victor Marlow and family of Mt
Clemens spent the week end with
•ml SalunUr
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Chas,
' Low wages are the most costly Marlow.
any employer can pay "—Henry
Mr and Mrs. Elwyn Hayward and
Ford.
son of Delton. Mr, and Mr». Geo.
Lydy and son* of Irving were BunORDER FOR PUBLICATION
day afternoon visitors at their parents'. Mr. and Mrs Scott Lydy's.
Millie Butolph is in quite poor
health
Mr and Mrs Scott Lydy In comp«ny with Mr and Mrs. Marion
Clem, went after cherries near the
lake shore. Priddy, and visited in
South Haven in the afternoon.
~—~T~
-------------7
=......................... ..........
GRANGE- PROGRAMS
______

JOHNSTOWN ORANGE.

SEE

FOOD CENTER 2609

I’ke Sunday.
Miss Jean Hammond of Kalafnazo° »P«»t ‘l»c
end with her
»•- Mr
—• and
•»— Mrs.
»•-—
••—Hamparents,
Marc
niond.
Donald and Robert Buller of
Battle Creek and Miss Dorothy But­
ler of
Kalamazoo visited . their
mother,
mother, Mrs. Melvin Crum. SunJa&gt;’There was a good attendance at
the Sunshine Club picnic held st
at
Prairieville township park.
Gull
lake. Thursday. The next meeting
ls 10 i* wi^i Mrs. Minnie Hall,

_MILO.
Mr and Mrs. Wayne Flower and
Miss Bernies Flower went to Toledo.
Ohio. Saturday morning and re-,
turned Sunday evening. Homer. Jr..
relumed with them alter spending
two weeks of his vacation with his
aunt and uncle. Mr and Mrs. Rob-1
MARTIN CORNERS.
ert Chofat. Marcia will remain nt |
coats obove church or chbiJt. the home of her aunt
in Toledo J A good time and fine supper at
L A. S at Mrs. Carrie Fisher's
during school vacation.
i..ic
'
' last Wednesday. Proceeds from supMr. and Mri. Merle Bradfield ;'
IODO. Flower offering was 58c.
spent last Thursday In Hastings 1 per
1
with their mother. Mrs. Emily Wil-T. Miss Jeanette Trautweln of near
cox jock returned home with them 11Morgan is spending a few days with
her
grandmother. Mrs. Eva Traulafter spending several days there, j
JjttllL_________________
Mrs Nina Boyle was a business ■
I Mrs. Jennie combs and son Forest
FIRST UNITED BRETHREN church v,*Mor ,n KR1a'liazo° Monday.
,
! Mead of Kalamazoo were dinner
r- n Mcbtrarrr. F**t*r
John Brandstetter has had a new ,'
r. Gt*ns nt Phon* 3&lt;s« shingle root jmt on his bam. Mr. ‘j!guests of Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher
Friday Mrs. Sadie Hilton and
Wil’on of Plainwell doing lhe work.
daughter Hazel accompanied them
Sunday Mr. and Mrs Bradfield
to Kalamazoo and on Saturday aft­
and Jack visited their uncle on the
ernoon took lhe bus to return to
Clap farm Galesburg.
their home in Saugus. Mass.
Remember the ice cream social
Mrs. Millie Fisher and Mrs. Sadie
at the schoolhouse next Saturday
Hilton and daughter Hazel spent
evening.
Thursday of last week with Mrs.
Luana
Towauend in Hastings.
NORTHEAST CARLTON.
Remember there will be 8. 8, next
Mr and Mrs. Geo. Keeler and Sunday at 10:30. Ail are cordially
family of Hastings visited the Ar­
| invited to attend.
thur Stairs, Sunday.
Mrs. Nellie Charlton of Kalama­
Alonzo Decker is not ve^y well at zoo. Mrs. Maudle Cook and son
FIRST CHURCH OT CHRIST
this writing.
SCIENTIST.
Charlton ot Miami. Fla., were FriCor. Chare a and Cantar Sta.
Louisa Lydy la home .tier . Ji, .'mini Siler.".i Mr.'.nd Mn.
•Mar
at II 00 A. JI
f
weeks May at Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Or' pa,,..
Lydy's of Maple Grove.
.
Orr
,tT__________

BAPTIST CHURCH,

GALE DOOLET. Birmingham, Iowa

।

n MbUeanaa

OH m*«l. (2 30
M.ddhno. *2.00.
Nildrtd Salih, R.&lt;i&lt;t«r of Probst*.

HENDERSHOTT.
It is to he regretted that all our
people were not at church Sunday
morning to hear the splendid sermon by Dr, P. J. Maveety of Battle
Creek. We sincerely hope he will
come again.
Dr. Glen Gunn and family of
Kalamazoo were Sunday guests at
a C- Clark’s.
Grace Brill was home from Kalxmazoo on Wednesday.
The Thompson family reunion
was held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Hendershott on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs Harvey Parmalee
and daughter June of Battle Creek
spent the week end at lhe home of!
Floyd Garrispp. June is Haying for j
1,
r.irrfinn l&lt; rnrVflned
ed by a fall over a stick.
The story that has been circulated
that Geo. Haynes lost five cowa
from their getting Into the wheat
was not true.
The Ladles' Aid supper will be
served at the schoolhouse Thursday
beginning at 5:30 and continuing

HEAR

FORMER

GOVERNOR

WILBER M. BRUCKER
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR U. S. SENATOR
RADIO—7:30 P. M —THURSDAY, JULY 30TH, ON

WXYZ AND THE MICHIGAN NETWORK

GRAND RAPIDS LIONS CLUB

SPECIAL

EXCURSION

SUNDAY. JULY 26

Coaches only $

Round Trip

See the Game — Detroit ligers vs. Boston Red Sox

via MICHIGAN CENTRAL

NOW...BUILD
Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co
WwaaMlS

Frank SM*

Huttag*

�lanner

it Hullut.

E MOMTH1.

ONE YEAR

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1936

[

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER

SEC

building ot beautiful furnishing* a
for the home. Ulynea convinced hl* £
wife Penelope that he wae indeed 1
her huiband by describing In detail I
the gorgeous couch he had hewn 1and lb« city
By JANE CAMERON
/Local Patrons Will Benefit
from a beautiful olive tree. The tthe Gay Ntaette*.
From Several Reduced
(
• Golden Age of Pericles provided the 1
■ I material for lhe next episode in iwith the progress of etyl
our liaIf-grown chicken* ' got a
Charges
I 'ROMANOS OF FURNITURE*1' which perictes discussed the merits 1nlture as It was wiUt a
real Uirlil yesterday. It began lo j
Michigan Bell Telephone'
MODERN LIFE CALLS FOR
Of a piece of furniture with the ’
rain. Every time •raindrop hit ,
{
AT HOUSEMAN FIELD
CHANGED METHODS
great architect, Ictinus and hl* as* 'wore on the beach and
they would, jump up in the air and
slstaut Callicrates.
1
BEAUTIFULLY DONE
holier "Yowpf Yowp! " They never I changes in rales. Reductions are anFOR-YOUTH
From lhe Golden Age of Greece, 1Stanley steamer that instated on
suw tuiy rain before.
: nounced which will benefit local
lhe pages of time were turned swift- 1stopping in the middle bf the main
. . •
I patrons. The order of tiie Michigan
HISTORY OF INDUSTRY
SUPERVISED
PLAY
ly to lhe days of good Queen Bea. *street calling forth cries at "Get a
Did you know that—The Delton Public Utilities Commission means
ANTA MONICA. CALIF. (
INTERESTING STORY Hi a scene resplendent with lhe
Creamery puU out Brookfield but- »«»
"*enue
ASSET TO COMMUNITY
—Had it not been a foreign ]
sumptuous grandeur of the time,
ter? You know, the kind with the °r a**&gt;ul 8L750.000. nns follows a
-------------dispatch, a fellow might have |
colored cartoons of “Brooksle and; reduction a year ago of 8700,000.
Grand Rapids Artisans and | lhe red-headed monarch flew into a Jack Weaver, tor forty-seven years
Offer. «•
high temper because a certain chest on employee of a Grand Rapids
Her Pals." Just another honor for
On rural line* the charge for the
thought it referred to one of our Vacation
Designers Play an Im­
she
had ordered made did not come furniture company, as the Master
(on
their
way
back
lo
Oklahoma.
Barry
county.
I
upright
or
desk
type
of
telephone
4*
Problems to Parents
own
investment
councillors,
up to her expectation*. Across the Craftsman welcomed the nations of
। reduced from 25c to 10c a month.
portant Part
specializing
in looking
_
ra
o after t |
and Officers
and -----------------will be eliminated
entirely
after :( One 0( lhe most impressive and Channel the sturdy Dutch artiana the world to the furniture city.
——
------------------We
always
Intended
to
read
widows' and orphans' funds.
The experience of other cities, beThe concluding ballet ot the perthe customer has had that type of. tavUh exhlbits of Its kind that were reacting to the spirit of the
Dante's "Inferno." During Lite heat
phone in service continuously fur ; Orand Rapldi nas seen for a long Renaissance which waa making it*
and having a neat line ot Euro- fore and after they had established
wave, wc decided It wouldn't be nec­
eighteen monUu.--------------------------------- । time was lhe Romance of Furniture influence felt in Europe aL that tlful of the entire pageant. Its
pean securities to dispose of. and 1 city playgrounds for boys and girls! __________________________________
essary.
*
______
_____________
time, and lhe next episode in a theme was the power and speed ot
The
charge
for
t
he
hand
Jete-1
p
agean
t
presented
at
Houseman
prominent in wei‘
■wnu,™ Pio,-.,; readers'*
Wc
, „„ wfrom MUs lr’'k.utandfy'de’S.rtmen®, Se team '■
deceived
“rom 2^
" Xed
‘
" ’ r2that city Wednesday. Dutch furniture shop wa* descrip­ tiie modem age. Miners labored
I that &gt;uch inountl. find .nd,
. k.iicr
iroal MUs
w ..... --- Thursday and Friday of last week. tive of the costumes and manners of
lift movements in
’Zg
&gt;
rna oI Lle huge „uWoor lhe period.
the earth. It was turned into fire
UW an urgent community need” '" 1 “
M““^LSVmJnlh^raratton*
“'1
SLc' turtwl' an •ui'c^rull, b. I Id ISc except on rural lines where
ing
hl* Home tommu
Zgl
The pageant came a little nearer which created steam, that all-im­
remain, al 3Sc. That chelae will .radlmn had been converted Into a
nlty — in short, a E
When the writer was a kid there lbe
MUa EhwaM.th DeYoe■. fhe’uu’iil^whJS'we^li* w*e Just eho be eliminated ■
,.ler.1Ite
?? cclly
“&gt; or
alur
&lt;* ,1 reproduction oi a Greek temple and home with the arrival of the Puri­ portant element which made pos­
typical specimen of BE
n°
’ ,Or
1 *nd l*° other frlen&lt;u wl",e n°l Im thenftoJlrSi the neighbors rural CUitoln&lt;r
r.,.,ha. had tha! IVO. | ln thu
concealed the three tans . . . one of the outstanding sible the powerful machinery and
girl arpund the average Hastings
for publication we think
huI[ lhem^P mice a month and 0 Eho,'e *n
'uhUnuousiy fur
sub • variety that
±
‘
s on which the action occur- episodes of the entire performance. towering steel structures ot today.
seemed lo sort of I
home. He had plenty of exercise at ; u«lr Inany ^ualnlance. will entXi
They nuy V n •‘ahleen •nontiu.
,
MUt„ M, n. ultBUUMM, MBe
Much of it. including the bal- Out of lhe blackness of the night Twenty-four girls, costumed as steel
petei out In the R
the home blse Everybody burned Joy hearing direct new. of their,
Y
, Reductions are also made Jn. leU Wld olher danCMi
placc real campfires suddenly glowed and robot* performed intricate mechan­
wood:
(Mid
II
was
up
to
the
boy
nr
joQmeying,
M
take
lhe
liberty
to
one
°
r
“
not
.charges
for
installing
and
moving
on
lhe
graas ln |ronl of me Um. an Indian encampment came into ical figures illustrating the precision
year* Immediately
v
. r01 tetephonea
For instance, the ple As a fltUng pre]ude. the Host- view. Squaws were erecting tepee*, and untiring ease of the motivating
following 1929. some
I boys in lhe family to split it, pile pubiUh lt
!it
and
rnrrv
n
in
ac
nnrdcH
fnr
p
.
Patsy
had
the
tape
measure.
Im
charge
f
or
installing
a
business
ol
th
_
Furniture
Festival
was
forces of today's industrial world.
i It and carry it In as needed for
quitting by request,
BOHOb. Wednod., m«hl.
lwem&gt;.,0„
„obnd my , pbo£. wWel. ... IIM 1. cut to I
U Ml" papooses played on the ground,
, kitchen consumption. Nearly ev- i
while the young braves and old Against lhe backdrop of towering
sum.
by
indict­
J“'y ,S
Itumb*. Wow-c-c.-.!- WM ll»iMoo. TO .
rraldonee phone. gSg,M
*n dX mtuTn “d| erybody had a chicken coop on lhe |
warriors rested by the fireside. The akyrcrapers and the chorus of min­
ment nnd some just
IrvIn j. Cobb I lot; not a few kept a pig or two for J 71113 afternoon Miss Marshall and
result
wlftre there u no bulrumcnt .1-, eom,a
tbe cU 0, O„„B K,pllb stolid chief looked on and occasion­ ers digging coal, coal burning into
vanishing into
I full slaughtering. Many possessed
&gt;d ji I* c»«ne
Cft|ne here
nere to see
sec the
me sight,
signu until
unui
. ready In place, it is cut lo 8150. It । Qri,t i.. flirnitin-p festivities Mlu ally grunted a word of approval or a team and steam generating power,
apace, taking with them Die clients' a cow for'the’’honie’“dalrT’ or"a Friday,when we go to meet Miss
..A.............
---------------father of ..
n -----------------large family
of girls --formerly was 83.50. There ha* been Mlch|gan and the other - sum of command, suddenly came a flam­ the ballet was a beautiful allegorical
remaining cash Msets. if any
, llorM
nal|j *^.^
------------------------------------*iaics us ing arrow and a runner announcing representation of modem civilisa­
hor.se. lur
for lanuiy
family use. ana
and tthat
DeYoe -------and MiM
Raue &lt;pronounceiL. „•!!«
u-lls me he believes he has spent I.a enj^iaerahu
considerable r-ductlen
reduction in lhe re „ 7
on silk
.ilk stockings
&gt;t«*lngs toto have
have charge
^rg7to7e5xa
’ilon'of
Bui this happened to be a cable- . --------,ncanl---chorcji
the . ..............
AUb.jluawi
hwJ Rowj atalPivtnouth
PlymouthRock.
Rock We
Wehav«*enough
have en°u«h on
-------- fo' .a.
for relocation
of Utelephones. ‘ i-h^u^out lhe performance serv- the arrival of a strange people on tion.
« &amp;
gram
,w&gt; elMler
grain from Geneva Haling
slating Hist,
that, l^.,^
good-sized amuc
gardens,
either un
on Ulcir
their1 had a very intcrtstlng trip every bought him a large farm. This is a These reductions are appreciated. ta
a thread uTbind it together their chore. The braves went into
When lhe Romance of Furniture
when Emperor
Frnrj-rnr Halle
Ifnilt- and Farewell Own l„.
ton nf
illtre Ilf
■■■-----i * lh,
narrator of the their snake dance, using live snakes.
lot or Mrne 1BIld ____
near,_________
tllc honie Bstep
ot tinthe wav
way since
ue left ItdlHas- shame Our summer styles are sen-1--------------- .- •»
ilble enough, anklet* or none, but HALF-YEAR AUTO PERMITS
j rw.,. *«. w.c . .............. .. was creat- *» tokcn
Sclassle hurriedly departed from ■ very few people bought potatoes, llnSs on July 3.
।
‘
heir
intention
of
re*l*tbeauty
and
romance
and the his­
why does father have to get gray
ILLEGAL AFTER JULY 31. 'l?7 !n lhe
w“ "“L
his I'nilital
capital,
he AO
*o thUfOUClllV
thoroughly ’ sweet
corn, garden
vegetables
or
Our
was Detroit keeping
till
tie
'll'.',4 rnrn
xrnrrlurl i'.urnl
nKljiu rtrOUT first
fifSt objective
OOJe
us in perishable hose Th'e
U« of au^iblte’jitlckera" or |
«£ voUe^re^ated' the'^ibiteS I XtendS^-rSn U^*curtItat?S* tory of a civilization hidden behind
&gt;ia In „j&gt; rl «h a hl- hntlt -Thl*
II&lt;U1 Of automobile ''SllCkCrj" Ot |
cleaned out the bank of Ethiopia | tirawberries.
Nearly every home where we crossed lhe Ambassador 1I
most expensive pair t ever had I half-year pern/l» will be illegal aft- •« »’’' re«nt
•&gt;•«! the little bend of Puritan, such prosaic things even as lhe ta­
Bridge
Into
Canada
going
on
lo
that all the invading Italians found had their own. One can see from
bles and chairs In an ordinary
nail during
lhe «...
first er
mid-night. Jul,
July &gt;1
31. .M
and owner.
owners ' ™were
________
_
Leamington for the night which we caught on a »&gt;U
dur,,., .he
er mld-nlgM
u.rdta, rron. U»!r XUp.
in lhe vaults wa* a large throb (this statement that
the ________
average boy
the « ,„I ver, eoehrn, .nd _ p.m.ulm.jr kitchen. Il was a gorgeous spectacle
P.'«r..n ancestors
.nee,.or. cf
c motor
mo.or vehicles
re^. in thl*
hb slate
.uu who
«&gt;.., ^g
&gt;». hraten and »'£ %
in Hastings then had to take the
»» &lt;»M hous«- formerly hour of wear Our Pilgrim
and one worthy ot the highest
bing vacuum.
must be laughing at u*
i expect to operate them alter that
»ro*ln»
*nd "“T
responsibility for real work. and. tavern. 100 years old. Then we went must oe la g
g
Unw must e^uip them with 1938 11- ported the .tery in rhythm. lhe leader of the group made the
How Mencken Can Write
I parents sow to it that he did It. to Niagara Falls on July 4 staying
War pictures are being shown • cense plates before then.
,
£re*n£n eJd woman to sign of peace to the red men and
'T'HIS campaign will liven right Almost every girl of tnat period fell j “I ll&gt;c General Brock hotel al the
convinced
the
old
chief
of
their
ARMY MANEUVERS
Orville E Atwood, secretary of
rlSm £ith n woman ‘ ,
T „ |?ZL Mo L .J ,h . 1 lhl,t ** n&gt;U« &gt;«nt to cook If she ■ Canadian Falls There was a huge with a definite purpose in mind
NEXT MONTH.
iralton calnL the day. of friendly intentions. He accepted
* up if Henry Mencken, lhe uf- d(d ijQt
lhg
mother crowd everywhere but all very or- •When you see the gory and not lhe stale, point, out that he I. permit-1
The Second Army maneuvers to
nor
Aft» C"**!on came tlse eta^y._of their offer of friendship and as the
flclal human gumboil ol the writ- )nsUtcd that she do
anyway No. I derly and well behaved, all enjoy­ glory side of war. you want peace ted no latitude, discretion
lights slowly dimmed, the audience
ing craft, takes peri in hand to dis- ] bod thought ot eating a meal at a ln8 the beauties of lhe falls which and want it badly.'
—------saw the little band of white people extensive ever held In the vicinity
lure
of
any
kind
other
than
the
authorisation ,of the .state
cuss lhe men and the issues. You j hoU!]
„UUrant and
illuminated
Cummings •In
a Delineator
article
num. or
ur riraiduiaiu
uitu,. Jf
11 there
mere was
was । were brilliantly .............
— - by huge vmuuuhp
•• “
— -------- express
— --------------------kneeling Ln prayer of thanksgiving of Chicago In peacetime in total
■ ■ t- have
‘
- agree with
- ■ - - Hen.
•■
Vrlll ' a f&lt;am
_____________
....
. . had
■ .
llohta
von 11 IO mat is worth reading in July's is- legislature—not now In session— skins of animals, which served alike
don
to
You
j|y Of any
the girls
Hshts nil
all fKn
the Irxlln
long x.
evening,
on the shore of their strange new number of troops involved and ter­
may quarrel with his premises and plenty Of housework to do.
The. (Sunday morning we went on to . sue. The movie Industry la organized , could delay or change this deadline, as furniture and clothing. But even home.
ritory
covered. Major
General
dispute
his
conclusions.
j housework as well as the
work I Wolcott. N. Y . staying at an old and Is out lo show war In all its1 On July 15 a total of 448.084 stick* then the more skilled of lhe tribe
tried their hand al carving a rude
History moved on and we were Charles 8. Kilbourne, commanding
But can he make the language | around the home was far more dif- I fashioned brick tourist home con-| hideousness and uselessness and ,ers had been sold by lhe depart­
altar out of stone . . . undoubtedly taken next to a ball In honor of general, announces. The training
pup like a bull-whip! When he gels ' ficult than now. There were noelec-1 ducted by two maiden.sisters. Then । nnd
that the public wants peace., ment of slate.
lhe first kind of furniture ever peorge and Martha Wa&amp;liington problem Involves the use of the
excited he throbs like a mashed trie or
motor-operated
wushhcl on 10 Oswego. N Y. to call on a and war shown up for what it is.
piimnqt Fit FD
made. In Babylonian times the alter where the guests performed the most modem weapons and facili­
friend of the other girls. We had a । jeS5e Lasky says. ""Conscientiously. ' ®JJLY.TW
TW?/*'***
®
v, Ea;,’
thi.mi,
r.n.i cuts
..... I...
r&lt;- were
thumb,
mid
loose like ....
mi machines
machines Th&lt;
There
were m.
no d.-rtrielectric friend of the Other girls. We had a । jeMe Lasky says, ■•conscientiously.
rm. irip
tnp mere
there Ihrooxh me
the large
Ur,e we
„ avoid
.l0,d propaganda
pro,panda oi
ol any
^Xl.hh
Si was further developed and marked stalely minuet. In colonial times ties available. Large numbers of
•rsno npph*
11,le
auiu. I।.&lt;£«
—------ avenging migcl. Expre; sing him- । irons, or toasters, or sweepers;
no
bakery
and fruit inrougn
orchards of west-1
Unconsciously,
our pictures
reflect
*rn sUn
an Important step in the develop- . appeared
_____ the flrst designer of real Illinois and ^isqpnsln troops will
«elL tie always picks words uf the K«s stoves. There was no bakery}. ern- New York. The cherry trees I current
. -----------------. Duncan be transported" across Lake Mlchiment of artistic furniture. The | American furniture
-------------....... ..........trends
ui.,-.. time
for filing Since
nominating
petitions
of thought.
‘lmet,for
nll“g
rljlu ,IW and u„- r.«hl
iln 1»&gt;™ There
no delivery or were loaded but the apple trees -All Quiet On The Western Front." j {or thosf w)?0 w,lsh l®
Ethiopians also were outstanding . Phyfe with his little shop on Fulton
I
groceries
nor
anything
etee
from
were
toaaca
out
uw
appie
trees
ah
Quiet
on
Tne
western
rroni.
_
...
Kroceries
nor boys
anything
else had
from
:
stores. The
and girls
to were not so full of fruit All Ute way first major picture to debunk •"di
Slmary As Sta te contributors to the art of furniture street in New York. This scene euvers Camp Custer will be lite
i ltorwr.
;
•'«««■ r..........................................
1 1 lhe
lhe ScDtember
September primary.
primary. A
As this 1* i making, and in a. scene of ancient I called into play an old-fashioned destination of some troops.
, 1 run errands, for there were no tele- Mong we have enjoyed the beauti- j de-glorlfy war the screen has folld written Monday forenoon there have splendor the craftsmen presented ! stage coach and beautiful costumes
ETS admit thal southerners Of phones.
. j ful elin trees that have beeni ful
olu,
&lt; thnt hnv&lt;&gt; Iw-pn n nart lowed
Inax/I the path*
iwithc of
nt literature
llfpr.it nrr and
nnd
a part
h ‘ been only two petitions filed, one their offerings lo the Egyptian king ' of the period.
the Cui. Curler of Cartersville
The boys and girls of today are | t»f the scenery at every placc we newspapers hi presenting war as ■itp for Honorable Ellis ? Faulkner for j Rameses II al his court.
| Coming even nearer home, the dropped as low as 80* below asro
type were mainly the far-fetched not rc*)&gt;onsible
for lhe changed
changed Ihave
have visited,
visited, in
in New
New York.
York. Vermont.
Vermont, 1*.
is,a calamitous horror. I believe the | representative in the state legteluGreece with her high level of cul-, pageant came lo Grand Rapids (P) tn Montana and risen as high
Ir elders
cidersI New
I New Hampshire,
Hampshire. Maine
Maine and
and Mass,
Mass. screen,
| screen, without
without deliberate
deliberate ^-propar- ,1 ture. the olher for Walter Fisher for I lure and civilization was a leader I with the first home of Louis Cam­ as 134* tn the shade in Death Valcreation* of overly-scnlimcnlnl Ac- conditions, nor would their
tiunists. Let's udinit the business Wlsh to go- buck lo the old ways I have also greatly enjoyed the love- ganda, will automatically serve as |' county treasurer.
| in encouraging the designing and pau on the banks of the Orand rlvot painting a largely imaginary when so much hard hand labor was iy old colonial home.—large, square. | one ot the greatest educational fac— ■-*—•mg
— •"
“ masses the
in u
bring
to '*•
the
aflah-dc-wah South was fur many required in and outside the home. pure white houses with green I •tors
What is a kid going to do with the blinds—sometimes blue and even red truths of war and peace. And the
world’s reigning statesman cannot
But why. in the revolt to de­ long summer vacation of three blinds for a variation.
To resume—from Oswego we went forever ignore a universal desire for
bunk this sugary romance, should months, and his Saturdays nnd the
on to Rome. N- Y, and east through permanent peace."
lhe land so generously spawn a I shorter school holidays? Everyone the Adirondack* and on to Lake
knows that a group of boys is apt
There are some people in Battle ’
George, where we stayed all night.
to become a "gang." not with any Gcuigc.
the rest of the world believe Uncriminal intent, simply because they The next day we drove along lhe । Creek named •Rainwater" and some
only party of lhe South worthy ot are boys. They do not set out de­ shore
-------- i_i« .x.to the more natnKj ••Rabbit." I can think
--- , -u_
of Lake Champlain
being written about is almost ex­ liberately to plan harm or mischief. ferry which crossed to Burlington. up a lot of headlines for them, espe-1
clusively peopled by loathsome Some olpe suggests it. nnd the gang Vt.. where we stayed all night. Lake clally the Rabbits.
degenerates of tiie "Tobacco Road" spirit gets them all interested. Then Georgy Is a beautiful body of water
Several years ago when A. K.
variety?
there Is business for the probate —nicer than Lake Champlain, we
court which deals with juvenile de­ all thought. That afternoon was Frandsen was selling out. I was In
quite warm but only for a few hours the basement of his store looking
coilectors wiU but look about him. linquents.
Other communities have founiL \Ve have not had the heat that has for bargains and my attention was
he'll (Inc southerners who might
that this delinquency could be nnd been so common in lhe midwest called to a middle-aged couple.1
make interesting copy and yet. ex
is greatly reduced by having play­ Just two days that we have had any evidently local farmers. Th« over-1
grounds
fur lhe boys nnd girls, with heat at all. to speak of. and even worked wife was trying on coals.
out ot the cum bread and the low­
then the nights were nice and cool. The one she had worn in the store
er case "t" out ot the language, proper supervision.
On Thursday of last week we went was the old-fashioned "pony skin"
The Banner hopes that Hastings
are pretty much like the run ol
may arrange something of this kind through the Green Mis. to Little­ such a* my mother wore when I
their fellow Americans elsewhere.
especially for lhe three summer ton. N. H . among the White Mts. was small and I knew she had worn
months. Unless that is done, much Friday to FTanconla. and saw tiie It many years. She was Jubilant over
Ga. Station Service
of the good work accomplished in •Great Stone Face." "Indian Head." finding a black coat which looked
N OPEN LETTER tu the gaso­ the school* may be undone, because the "Flume" and a lot of other in­ as If it had been made for her. It
line companiet:
there is a very potent personality teresting things. Then on to Port­ changed her poor dowdlnass Into
Dear gasses—Why must the cus­ who Is on the lookout to provide land. Maine and up lo Yarmouth for something like style and her delight
l*1
The
tomer have lhe windshield wiped something for idle hands to do. One over Sunday (Then on Monday to In it lighted her tired face.
—if he doesn't want the windshield of the wisest and sanest men who Fort Ticonderoga) no. that's not husband arrogantly began haggling
ever lived Mid this: 'Overcome evil right, but any way we stopped there and arguing over the price Mr.
wiped?
Maybe he's in a hurry. Maybe with good." There is no other way earlier, und had a good view of Prandscn had reduced it over half
things. We have visited Gloucester, and now cut it still more, being
he fears the youth with the squirt to do It.
Our city is fortunately situated in which Is a quaint old fishing vil­ anxious, with us. that she should
gun will only mesr up the wind­
lage or city and full of interesting have her coat. Soon we knew that
shield worse than ever. Maybe that It has In the fair grounds a
NOTE THE
sights. We hired a guide to drive us lhe husband was not buying coats. I
he's nervous and prefers a blurry place for volley ball, soft ball and around which we found a wise plan but rather torturing his wife and
RECEIPT
baseball as well a* other games.
outlook so he* can't see how many
heckling clerks. When she finally
There are parks and other vacant
close calls he's Ruing to have from places that could be secured at a
Our next stop was Lexington knew this, the sick look of disap­
being knocked cold by lady motor- nominal rental, .on which garnet where we saw the places of Interest, pointment she gave me wa* one I
and plays could be carried on. nnd then on to concord for a sight sec­ have never been able lo forget. It
Even so. Unless he fights like a directed by competent supervisors.
ing tour; out to Sudbury to visit comes back to me when we ore dis­
tiger, he must endure the wind­
If other communities can have Henry Ford's Wayside Inn made cussing the subject of men being
shield wiping. 1 commend the po­ supervised play for their boys and famous by Longfellow's poem, and head of the house entirely. Some ot
liteness of your attendants, though girls. Hording* can. Eaton Rapids on to Cambridge and Boston, where them, like that husband, "can't take
deploring their frequent habit of 1* doing a good Job of It for a per­ the others left us.
Today we also visited the homes
apparenUy going somewhere about iod. beginning June 15. when the
“Bring table service" Seems funny
a quarter of a mile back of the sta­ schools closed, and ending Septem­ of Louisa M. Alcott and Ralph
efficient; written for you by a
With every Bank Money Order,
tion to make change.
I admire ber 1. They secured Mr. Lyle Ben­ Waldo Emerson at Concord. Both almost any picnic or reunion group
houses arc well preserved and are has to make this request with their
your enterprise and your pumps arc nett. coach of the Hastings High
courteous toller for any amount up
you receive a definite receipt that
filled with the original furniture announcement each year. People
school,
to
supervise
this
work.
From
Indeed works of art.
Your high­
to $9500.00. The fee for this
iuiu personal uw.uu
belongings
BuiBu wa
of the
w..w wwoc- . who eat should know by this time
10 to 12 each forenoon, six days a and
gives
you
a
complete
record
of
the
way signs so fill the grateful eye
week, Eaton Rapids school chll4 cupants. We went through the home that you have to have something to
modern convenient service is
remittance and a positive proof of
thal we don't have to look at com­ drcn.up to 12 years of age have nf
In Amesbury.
Ameshurv M
om
&lt;a
nt nn
of Whlttlor
Whittier alcn
also in
Moss.,
eat
on nnd
and nat
cat with
with. .lane
Jane would
paratively dull things, such as their chance lo play on the play­ which was equally interesting.
very low—usually less than you
pass burdock leaves for plates to
payment. And, when the order i?,
scenery.
But my dear gasses, grounds of that city. From 2 to 5
All of this region Is so replete with these forgetful ones If she were do­
would pay for other forms of money
cashed,
it
is
returned
to
this
bank
there comes a time when too much hours are fixed for boys and girls interesting *and historical places ing It.
orders. They are accepted every­
where it is available for inspection.
service becomes a nuisance.
from 12 up to and through high that one cannot begin to tell about,
No poetry this week. After our
school age. From 7 to 9 in the eve­ so of necessity this Is rather sketchy.
where. Give them a trial.
Bank Money Orcters are safe and
’ Heroic First Aid Measures
ning city league games are played But 111 tell you more about it later. own one about the oak tree came
We ran Into two rains, one at out. we inadvertently heard a wom­
HEN those three gallant men by adults. A board of directors has
were
imprisoned
in
that general charge of the playgrounds, St. Johnabury and one at Glouces­ an whose opinion we value remark
the supervisor and look ter. but neither lasted very long. In that she thought "Jane Cameron of
Moose river mine cave-in upemploy
in
Canada, facing death in the dark­ after whatever Is necessary. They fact. New England has had more lhe Banner better stick lo prose."
. nets—one of them, you'll remem­ have nothing to do with direct su­ rain and- is not so dry as places Of course, we might burst loose with
___________
another
one. but well try to refrain
pervision of tiie plays; Mr. Bennett west. So we have not suffered.
ber. did die—and the rescuers flHope all is fine al the office and from doing so often. Well find a
docs that.
•
nally bored a slender shaft through
* week.
**
Isn't it wiser to pay money for that this hot weather has dealt good' one somewhere *for next
* to their living tomb, aknost lhe
playgrounds and supervised play kindly with all of you. Remember
CALHOUN CO.'FARM PICNIC.
first tiling sent down Crum above than to pay court expenses, deten­ me to every one In lhe office and to
was some hot coffee with a slug of tion home expenses. Jail or prison Mrs. Cook and Aunt Stelle.
The Calhoun County Farm bur­
eau officials have sent us lhe notice
brandy in it
Best wishes. Sincerely,
costs thal result from community
of their picnic July 30 at the Mar­
Now Uie Rev. A A. McLeod has failure to provide for the natural
Mabel.
shall Fair grounds. “ Everybody in
formally protested to lhe govern­ boy and girl craving for games that
the county, likewise the neighboring
BOOSTS
COUNTY
’
S
HIGHWAYS.
ment of Nova Scotia about putting build physical and moral fiber?
| From the state highway depart- . counties, te invited to come and
in the brandy.
ment comes the word that vouchers
115.000 DAMAGE TO ROADS.
So I've been sitting here all day
Damage to Michigan's trunkline covering lhe second quarter of the ; hard work for a day.
Lots of
trying to majpe up my mind, if
weight tax. amounting to &gt;2.810.008 sports are planned and two speak­
I'd been buried in Uiat freezing, highway system the last two weeks
and the first half payment of 81.­ ers from the Lansing Farm bureau
shmy pit. which I'd prefer—to have from lhe blistering heat wave was
estimated by State Highway Com­ 275.000 of gasoline taxes Is being will give short talks.
'em lend'along some spiked cof­
missioner Murray D. Van Wagoner sent to counties, to aid them in road
fee right away or keep the mix­
Inasmuch as the average automo­
at 815,000. An Inventory of the dam­ construction and maintenance. The
ture up on the surface and lower
age revealed a total of 440 pave­ counties receive the entire weight bile travels 12 miles on a gallon of
2 103
♦
ment “blow-ups” on trunkline pave­ tax and 82.550,000 yearly from the gasoline, and the average gasoline
pitcher of ice water.
ments throughout the state. The ex­ gasoline tax for that purpose. Barry tax Is 3 48 cents a gallon, the aver­
It's one of those things a fellow plosions were caused by the expan­ county’s check, according to the re-. age motorist pays approximately
really can't decide offhand.
sion of the pavement beyond the port of Mr. Van Wagoner, win be one-third cent per mile for the use
of America's highways.
capacity of the expansion Joints.
820,121.

©
PUYGRDIWBS FILL
T.i IMPOjmWT HOLE

Uhbnhd about :

S

OKLAHOMA BEAUTY QUEEN
A VISITOR IN FREEPORT.
Mr* Janet Fette. and W. MacKenzle of Freeport had as gueste Ute
past week their brother. J. C. MacKenxle and family of Carter. Okla­
homa. Mr. MacKcnzle te manager
• of- the First National bank Ln Car­
’ ter. He was a delegate to the DemoI cratlc national convention at Phlladelphla. Tiie family made quite an
; extensive trip, going through to
.Georgia and up the coast lo Phila&lt; delphla. Tiw daughter. Miss LuIcille was the beauty queen from
Oklahoma at the pageant there.
After tiie convention was over, they

Barry Bypaths

REDUCTIONS MADE IN
SOME PHONE CHARGES

PAGEANTPBDVED
COLORFUL ffllll

Letter r TOHl 1 lie Last

your
ACthey

• give
&gt;n in
:leanleliv-

let us

your

F’S
: RS

PAY

R

R
R

&gt;N

L

Qet a Receipt
when You Use

You

A

BANK
MONEY ORDERS

L

W

l

Hastings Citg Bank
TELEPHONE

HASTINGS • MICHIGAN

�THE HA8TIN01 BAMNML THURSDAY, JULY 13, KM
Marion
Strong
wasMonday
in Hastings that will be greatly appreciated by
*At°the*7heatr^ Strong
lost
a bon*
Friday.
—“*--------*-----to Hooper ot BatUa
Sididay aad Monday
break* up hla team.
parents, Mr. and Mr*.
Miss carol Cotton of Mulliken.
Richard Dix In "Deril* Squadron." . and Mu* Wilma Cotton of Orand
aunt and Mrs 8 O Voorhees
Dlx os Paul Redmond, won his Rapid* vUU*d lhaU grandparent*.
Sunday frwnavWt with
spurs as a flyer over war-torn
France, yet Fata caused him to be fe* fry
PM »—*•
.
and are *t present looking for a
dishonorably discharged from the
service. Ho Join* the ranks of the
FREEPORT.
Sunday gueals at the home of Mr.
lest pilots and meats Martha DawThe annual school meeting, held and Mrs Walter Lewis were: Mrs.
Monday Susie Whitney, son Lloyd
and
daughter Esther of Irving; Albert
nnsl of Lewis and family, Harry lewis and
patrons girl friend and Mias Beatrice Hoop-

10 uv. wralerr

We Have Serviced

Cars For Years
And during those years we’ve serv­
iced a good number of them. We've

learned a lot and we know exactly

what .to do and how to do it.
In addition we use only the best of

materials in all of our work.
Stop in ond let us give your CAR

o thorough check-up. Summer-time

is driving time

.

ond your cor

needs extra attention. Let us give

it that extra core

Deluxe Tudor Sedan Summer Favorite

nisho. j,™,

, TJ.CS «» ll&gt;. uru«o!muo heron &lt; J, WCOTd J E B*buu. »&gt;» !&gt;«■ Ray HeintxeIman of Orand Rapids.
It was recently announced that
Of American aviation.
held tJw onlce for niftny yeaM. D*n
Mr. and Mrs. Claude L. Walton had
purchased tha F. R. Everhart houaa;
late J. D Knowles, and Harold Yo­ al present occupied by Supt. and .
der was re-elected m a tnutee. Mrs. S. O. Voorhees, and would oc- ।
|
MLss Arthur appears as an ex­
Other member* of the board are cupy same os soon as vacated. On !
wife of Powell, a detective tale au­ Seminh Seesc and Arthur Moore.
Saturday the deal was
closed ;
thoress who gave him the Jitters al)
Raymond Bunn of Middleville and whereby Mr. and Mrs. Walton also
through marriage by looking at life Clayton Bunn of near Green lake
| as a continuous mystery thriller
were Sunday guests at their home Uss property adjoining.
j Bui it's murdermnd-mystery that here.
MLss Josephine Hedges of Wood- '
। breaks down Powells determination
Mr. and Mrs. peter Workman of ; land visited her sister. Mrs. Arthur |
I never to ruin hl* nerves by yielding
Kaiamaxoo were Sunday guest* of Sherman, the fore part of last week I
! to her charm again but of course he
their daughter and husband. Mr. and left on Wednesday for Sault
and Mrs. 8. G Voorheea.
Ste. Marte to spend the remainder
Mrs Susie Webster of West Palm of the summer with a- brother.
■
Ann Harding In "IVilne** Chair."
rOR MANY MOTORISTS, tha Ford V-8 deluxe
venient place for picnic supplies, sports equipment,
Sunday evening services at the , 1 Tudor sedan is the preferred body type. Roomy
1 Ann Harding ^.stirring new court Beach. Fla . wa* in town a while
Saturday
on
business.
or traveling bags when the great outdoors calls.
M. B. church have been diaconlln- !
room drama promises the public
Mrs
Mary
Deming
and
three
chil
­
and companionable, it has ample room for six. Both
The windshield opens, the cowl ventilator may be
ued during the months of July and
new experiences in screen suspense
dren
of
Grattan
Center
called
on
August
front seats tiit forward, making It easy for rear­
opened, and door fend rear side Windows turn down
as It Is full of the realism of a sen­
Mr und Mrs. Evart Ardis were ' scat passengers to enter or leave by either door. The
sational murder trial. The story her sister, Mrs Walter Lewi*. Mon­
to give maximum ventilation. In the deluxe model
L.
here one day last week with some
build* an exciting structure of sus­ day.
front seats are the comfortable bucket type. A
upholstery la optional in bedford cord, broadcloth
The Misses Pearl and Doris Reu­ furniture. They will occupy a part
pense. with wlUie&amp;sc* motivated to
large luggage space behind the rear scat is a conor mohair. There is a choice of five body colors.
I
He and conceal salient facts U&gt; keep ter of Grand Rapids called on Mrs. of the M. E. parsonage this year.
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.
.
1
' MLm Harding from freeing the man Emma Sbson Sunday afternoon.
Dr. and Mrs H. S. Wedel and Woodrow Knowles (Helen Thaler&gt;. cnLs
Ucr death occurred a weex
DOWLING.
The Misses Florence Wright. Mil­
she loves, who is defendant In the
Monday at Pennock hospital. | we heartily agree with the Del- dred Gaskill and Jean Depriealcr
trial for a murder she actually com­ daughters. Martha Jean and Patsy whose marriage took place on July
Ruth, visited friends in Lowell Sun­ 1 u&gt; Indian,. Mr. Knowla u
™UdcM to, .1- I,
„rr„.xindl„1 ,,w volcM lhMr are spending several days al Camp
mitted.
day evening.
Barry. Stuart lake.
'
Mr, and Mrs H. W Gooch spent
The round-by-round movies of
Mrs. Frances Hughes. Mrs. Mil­
•Mr,
R°b"' Hum" "" to ‘Sto'S?’'„7X,T hu’.b—nd &gt;1’“ ’»•
of,n°.to
and
the Louis-Schmcling fight will gr Sunday afternoon with Mr
dred Maurer. Mrs. Ann Phillip* of
an added feature on the program at Mrs. Floyd Geiger of near Alto.
tertalned her nephews. Edward and ,
8ur*{vln8 “c 1116 husband ,
con5Untly kcpt before the Kalamazoo and Mr ond Mrs. W. L.
’*fenU'
, public until some&gt;deflSlte acUon U
Mrs. Chas Bunn and daughter Stanley Lowe of near Houghton
the Strand theater next Thursday.
Pierce of charlotte were Sunday
Dorothy visited friends at Grand
toto ...d one .to
ISluy ton by .he county rood afternoon caljers at the Orlle Fisher
Friday and Saturday.
Rapids a few days the fore part of
Geo. Thompson
has
announce
a , cuuunuumQ.
&lt;-nmml**loner rur
For while
we all
r
■ ■— been
-—- under, Local
-------- Townsendites
--------------------- ........
—,— _
wnuc wc
an ap- home. Mrs. Orr Stanley and Mrs.
TAMARAC.
the week.
the doctor s care
relate the uood
cve the past week due meeting for Friday evening of this ' nr
predate
good aravellrd
gravelled mads
roads, Chas. Atkinson of Cheboygan coun­
July IV
16 laihi
Letter..
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Christman
»&gt;t|
1UWC1
pUtlUl
ikf Ul
*” Hit 10
*^ P®*
1 ot II wtf on
the Jonn Rick- 11 would seem only fair to the resl- ty were guests Wednesday of Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Berile smith had and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Oorehouse
■» the lawn
to&gt; at
.ICheJoontothe leg. the Injury having been re- ’
denU and tourists as well, if they Fisher.
as guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs Ar­ of Grand Rapids visited Mr. and
celved while he was doing some 1 ert home at which lime lhe ladles would go a step further and provide
Mrs. McCoy of Ohio was a week
thur Bructt and Infant daughter. Mrs. Victor Sisson Saturday eve­
will serve ice cream and cake. Milo
। work In Muskegon recently.
end guest of her daughter. Mr*.
Mr. and Mrs. Hahan and son of ning.
T. Norcutt of Clarksville is
the something each year which would Margaret Moon. Mr. and Mrs. Mil­
eliminate lhe increasing clouds of
Orand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Ber­
Dr H 8 Wto .U.nd.4 . dtor
speaker.
dust. y Thanks to Al Brown for his ton Lclnaar of Banflcid were Sun­
K^t^Ssttoo M^dsv d“y'
P-“po^
Dr. *nd Mrs. H. 8 Wed.l called on K
nard Smith, and Mrs. Bernice Senwelcome suggestions day guests there.
siba. of Warnervllle. Wednesday Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Oswald en­
nnd Mrs Manrler Forwhav »nrt Or 11
tertained Mr. and Mrs Asa Os­
.
«« iriaay at Townsend park.
,11BC
inursaay aitemoon.
j j0-Ann Is the name of the Utile
Work’Tik* broiin nn irrarfin® in* ' Much sympathy Is extended by I The annual reunion of lhe Thom- , miss who arrived nt the home of born Of Ottawa Lake and Mr. and
idenin/X
,rt*ntU 01 Ula Klnte Bas- ’ a. family &lt;7*^
was hel
held at Fallasbur, Mr and Mrs
Mason Tobias on Mrs Will Winklcmon and son Carl
Mr and Mrs Russell McLcnllhan I widening
’the...................................................................
road that*run*'*oulh E'lThl/b^reTv^
of Maumee, Ohio, over lhe week
of Middleville visited her sister Sun- i from lhe schoolhouse. This Is a ler 10 her **rcaved family and par- . park
—last
.... Sunday,
Tuesday. July 14.
end. day.
I much-needed piece of work and
I Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Olis and sons
spent Sunday at Clarksville with
| relatives, Murray remaining at lhe
flame of his aunt for a short vacalon.
Mr and Mrs. Orlle Jliher and
। Mr. and Mrs. Ed. TilukJof Clover­
dale attended the McCallum school
rciuilon Saturday.
Remember lhe Townsend picnic
Tuesday. July 28, al Herrington's
resort.

wpo*"

Batteries, Windshield Wipers

Vulcanizing.

BLUE

REGULAR
GASPRICE

C'litinr'H
dUFlUUU

W ashing

MOTOR
FUEL

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

mm b~ .*

~

SOITH SHULTZ.

Telephone Rates!
UN®1 ’

Effective on the dates shown below
By order of lhe Michigan Public Utilities Commission, dated
July 1, reductions arc made in certain telephone rates and charges

in the Hastings exchange.
On rural lines the charge for lhe upright or desk type telephone

is reduced from 25 cents a month lo 10 cents, and will be eliminated

(or

entirely after the customer has had that type of telephone in service

loud* o'
ixhc"

.he

me."?00 ,lhio«
a br'at

continuously for 18 months.

lcWbou&lt;&gt;

°‘ ouW w

The charge for the hand telephone is reduced from 25 cents a

cW»"

nioi’1

month to 15 cents, except on rural lines where it remains at 25 cents.

keep’

'“'dooy

road*‘

ktv&gt;*

do y°u

and will be eliminated entirely, as at present, after lhe customer has
W'5*'’

at'n»

had thal type of telephone in service continuously for 18 months.
’The above reductions will be effective in the case of present cus­

lhenV

they dra
the

fOW

tomers on August 6.

ft®*'

eoodit'O"

Reductions also are made in the charges for installing and mov­
that »uda"

ram

kno*

do y°u
u,»th

ing telephones, and for changing lhe type of telephone instrument.

rh\ohde

Ca^c'un'
in B
as
v.v'
. aS QU’,ek\y
C
bound
Itno^ 11
ftrtnvy
hourO00
mo"'0'0*
ih»' w,y

For instance, the charge for installing a business telephone, where

mem

there is no instrument already in place,-is $3.00; for a residence tele­
phone where there is no instrument already in place, it is $1.50.

b..K»n •«»&gt; "”

These rcduetiolis became effective Saturday. July 11

Du''
Chloride.

ma'ct
•
a down

Effective August 6, charges for rural multiparty service beyond

,h Calc""”
h'Rh*a&gt;

six miles from lhe base rale area arc reduced. Monthly rales for other

you*
Chloride du*l
Cah*'urP

residential and business service arc unchanged except that the four
party business service is discontinued, and two party business service

will be furnished al lhe former four party business rale.
Telephone service now represents greater value than ever be_

buK.11”

Cure. To place an order, or obtain further information, call, visit or

write the Telephone Business Office.

rdtuf'b'*

Installation will be made

promptly.

CALCIUM CHLORIDE
C O N 7

R o L

ROAD

DUST

MICHIGAN BELL®TELEPHONE CO

Mr and Mrs Frank Hom enter­
tained as guests Sunday. Mrs. Joint
' H Sullivan. Mrs. Connie Wilkerson,
i Mr. and Mr*. George Short a'nd
Bobbie and Lucy Sullivan of Kala­
mazoo.
Mrs. Clara Miller of Columbus.
Ohio, and her son. Lee Miller, of
Elmira. N Y. spent two days last
week with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Bacchier.
Ellen Modrack of Battle Creek
spent last, week with Mr. and Mrs.
J. W Tedrow.
Mrs. Lash Kenyon is spending
this week with her daughter. Mr.
and Mrs. Hayes Sponablc. of East
Hastings.
Mr and Mrs. Lester Sonnevilla
and daughters. Mr. and Mrs. H.
I Mlsener and Jean Rougher, of Kal­
amazoo. Elliott Eddy of Delton went
to Gun lake Sunday where they en­
joyed a fine birthday dinner with
plenty of Ice cream they brought
with them honoring the birthdays
| of Mi's Lorraine Bonneville and
Elliott Eddy which occur this week.
Rev Seward Walton will start a
mission Sunday School at the
I Shultz church July 26. We hope to
। see a good attendance as there have
' been no services there for some
; time. The services begin al 9:30.
. There will be a bee to clean up the
‘church and yard Wednesday. July
! 22nd. Il Iz hoped everyone intercst| ed In thu good work will turn out
and help.
| Mr. and Mrs. Lee McFall of
। Monroe, cousins of Mr. and Mrs. G.
| E Kenyon who have been spending
I some weeks at the Spaulding cot1 tagc Wall lake received i; message
Monday of the passing of Mrs. MeFall s mother. Mrs. Hendershott, at
Detroit. They left at once for that
place. Mrs. Hendershott has vis­
ited friend* here and much sym­
pathy is extended to the bereaved
family.
Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas, Jacquelln Connie and Donna Belle of
the McOmber district visited Mr.
and Mrs. G- E. Kenyon Sunday.
Callers there In the afternoon were
Mr and Mrs. jess Kenyon of Hick­
ory Comers. Mr. and Mrs. H. Mlsener. Ml** Jean Bougher of Kala­
mazoo and Mr. and Mr«. Frank Ander* of Hastings.

CLAY HILLS.
Leon polls and wife spent Thurs­
day in Kalamazoo with their daugh­
ter. Mrs. Morris Lewis and hus­
band.
Frank Harris and wife and Cha.*.
Skinner returned Wednesday from
their pleasure trip north.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haight and
Francis Haight and family of Orand
Rapids spent Saturday night al
Eugene Haights.
Norman Haight i* spending the
week In Grand Rapid* with rela­
tives.
Roy McCaul and wife were Sun­
day guests ax WlUism Hullet's in
Middleville.
Beatrice Colburn of Labarge I*
visiting her grandmother. Mrs,
Sarah McCaul.
Eugene Haight and wife and son.
Norma a and Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Potts also tiie Misses Pent and June
McNee attended the Featherbcmc
picnic at Caledonia Park Sunday.
"There are good books for every
hour and all time. Just as there are
bad book* for every iiour and tor all
time."—Ruakln.

�TH ■ASTTNOS MAMMY*. THUBSDAY. JULY M, ISM

| LEGAL NOTICES
MOTICB OF MOBTOAOB BALS.

Drrprsln*. Wl4*ain*.
• •1 Drain.

tiln mortcac* rnJi by Cl»d» W. Blavall
■nd llu«l M. BUv.lt, fail wile (aUo imIW
BUuv.lt 1 ot tha Townihlp ot Oyancotill*. Barry County. MlchXan. lo HOME
OWNERd' LOAN CORPORatI

a
Thomand F;
18/100 Dall

tore, all Dtrtona. mnalcIpalltiM
r»r offlciala iat«re*lf&lt;i io th*
iwptnloc. widrolnc. (nd ehan­
I iL* Jewel Drain ar* ma«at-

NOW. THEREFORE.

-5-

P Lara bee at Hastings and also 1 grandmother. Mn. Wfillam Seibel.' guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hart,
DELTON.
called on Mr. and Mrs. Allie Tolle*, i Mi. and Mr*. Chester Banghart1 Daniel Kam* 1* spending a faw
Our items last week Monday were
Mrs Irene Harrington and Mrs. have entertained during the part | day* with relative* at Turtta.
mailed a little too soon to give ah
account ot tiie accident which oc­ Beatrice DUnnlng attended a show- week Mr*. Fem Norwood of Kala- I
DOL’D CORNERS.
curred that Monday afternoon in er at Mr*. Herman Zerbel* al Ha*- mazoo. HcrJ&gt;ert Smith. Jr., of L*nsing. Mr*.
Mrs Maier,
Maier, _Mr*.
Mrs. Shanahan
onananan
Mr..and Mrs. Norris Bergman
j• sing.
the highway Just east of Art Col­ Ungs Friday afternoon.
' and daughter and Ernest Banghart. and family and Mr. and Mr*. McKee
lison's
naan
* nouse.
house, wncn
when ux
the wriu/u
Delton iuc
fire &gt; Frank J. Buckohr with hl* son
-- -------- “
of Allegan visited at Henry Berg- Bunday.
truck was going to the scene of a and two daughters from Barberton. au 01- P&lt;iroit.
fire on the Henry Whldby farm. Ohio, have been been camping in I
STRIKER.
At this place in the road the truck their trailer house car al ShadeHonccx-k of Grand Rapids, a
a
caught up with the county road land. Wall lake, for about a week.
Lou Hancock
scraper, turned out and passed it Friday night they were getting their former resident of this community,
without any difficulty, although the 1 supper tn Die Delton restaurant.
burled Ln tiie Striker cemetery
two pieces of machinery kicked up when the older Mr. Buckohr was Monday.
....^ a dust that the u_.
------ taken
Mr and Mrs. Clayton Shurlow,
such
drivers
of suddenly ill, and dropped from
*P«nt the week end with
cars following the truck could not his chair dead. He would have been »nd
MOTICB or MORTOAUB RALB.
see ahead. Chester Bangiuirt head­ 60 years cld Saturday. The body relatives near Blancliard.
Misz EuU Case, who has been osed the procession, followed by J. L. was taken cure of at the Henton
Danniels, with his oil truck, then funeral home and Saturday mom- «Uting Mr*. Sarah Ickes with her .
came Max Reynolds, then Russell Ing was taken back to Ohio. Mr. housework, has returned lo her
•
Mott driving their own cars, and Buckohr and his son were proprle- home near Battle Creek.
Nohrill*. Barry Const/. Mlfblcan to „
r.^ru up ...w
«. - lUi.
„ ,cOk.ulu..v ...
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Chaffee 2^
of
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPORA all piled up into each olher In a tor* of a restaurant in Bartxrton.
nothing caught
TION. a Corporation erraalied under heap.
heap Fortunately
I—
-------------------------*- Dr B E Farwell Delton, and Dr. •-Mason spent Sunday with Mr. and
Are. but all of the cars except the K. S. McIntyre. Hastings, coroner. Mrs Ira Chaffee.
Reynolds car were damaged beyond ■ pronounced
pronsur‘ J death due to a 'heart'
------- " v,r
Mr- ""
“nd
d xMrs
‘r° ' Tjw
Leon
'n M
Meyers
*“v*’’* •
are
r"
“-2^.
) the parents of a baby girl bom at
repair. Russell Mott received chest j attack.
TWIN OR
Mr. and Mrs William Lelnaar ,th' h&lt;”"*
Pr«mar, nf i
injuries and was taken lo Pennock ।
ed sandwich
hospital, where he was examined &gt;ndMr . 4Mt, ru™ w.lm ..re
” cu^m! .nd Mn ’o.Tr.re!1
and cared for and was able to re­
Pure strawberry
Strawberry
turn home Thursday. Kenneth Aid­ aitemoon
(n|ftn and folnlly of B^mey. Mrs.
rich. who was riding with Mott,
Mr. and Mrs L. N. Bush will Willard-Sherman of Pontiac nnd j
had a broken leg. a severed finger,
leave Thursday for a two weeks' Mr ,ulci Mrs Wftyne Wheeler of I
and badly bruised arm. besides olh­
slay at their collage at Eaton Rap- Uutt
le Creek
Battle
creek were guests at the
me Wilwn- I;
er bruises, and was taken lo Bor- ids to attend the camp meeting,
|I •lard■ Ickes
- ■
•
----- -------------------•------■ I
home
over—the
week
end.
STRICTLY FRESH
gess hospital where he is still con­
The Delton M E- Sunday school They gathered there to attend the I
fined. J. L. Danniels received in­
*•*• or aav p«rt Ihtrtof;
NOW. THEREFORE, by rlrlu* ot tbr juries to both legs, and is still con­ will picnic at Prairieville public­ luneral ot Ralph Freeman of Tra,1.
park.
Gull
lake,
on
Friday.
July
24
fined to lhe house, being cared for
■nd pun
Owned ire.h D.Uy 1. Mirk If..
at home. Chester Banghart was Rev. Ralph L. Bates is on for the Dowling cemetery Sunday.
EATNORE BRAND
Mr and Mrs. Leo Reynolds and
badly shaken up and received a bad s|xirU committee. Everyone Is In­
14th. 1030.
cut on his heel, but Is able to be . viled. and parents should go with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Fulton of Has-,
EMBASSY - EXTRA RICH. TRIPLE MIXED
tings visited Pied Roush's in Grand
about hLs daily work The boys can their children.
Mr. and Mrs. Roas Waters and Rapids Sunday.
be mighty thankful that they got
Mr nnd Mrs. Gene Freeman. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth motored to
Out of It as well as they did.
The past week seemed to be lhe i Hardy dam and White Cloud, Sun­ and Mrs. Geo. Baulch and family
COLXTBY C1AB
SILVER ROSE
nnd Miss Mary McElwain ot Has­
day
week for automobile wrecks around
tings
called on Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Dorothy and Helen Schlukeblr of
PRUNE BREAD
•-« 10c
LOAF CAKE
23c
here. Lost Sunday night Kenneth
Horton's car was badly wrecked in Kalamazoo spent last week with Mr. Fancher Sunday afternoon.
Bobby Ickes of Battle ,Creek and
COUNTRY CLUB FANCY HAWAIIAN
„ । Kalamazoo, and Kenneth had some and Mrs. M. B Norwood
»&gt; bad cuts on his forehead
Friday I Rev Bates' subject for next Sun- Richard Swanson of Big Rapids
, i afternoon William Mason's car col­ 1 day morning services is: "The Re- spent the past week with their I
ei 1 lided with another car in Clover- I ligion of the Second Mlle." Every­ grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Ickes.
dale, but fortunately no one was one welcome. x
Mrs Lawrence of Lake Odessa
hurt., Saturday afternoon. Mr. CosCOl NTHY CUB GRATED
pineappu
NORTH HOPE.
teleln's car was badly wrecked in has been spending a few days with
Mrs. Luclna ^ddy.
juice
PINEAPPLE
im- 15C
1 Miss Wilhelmina Pranshka spent
2
c
a collision near Wall lake.
Mr. and Mfs. Mason Norwood of Wednesday night and Thursday
Several from here attended lhe
Fl
|D
SINCERITY
shower at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kalamazoo spent Saturday night with her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
r
LU
V
K
MICHIGAN
MILLED
and
Sunday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dauls
Ferguson
of
Cloverdale.
Russell Johncox in honor of .Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. OU° Pranshka and
and Mrs. James Green, lhe newly­ Marshall Norwood. Sunday after­
KING'S FLAKE FLOUR 2 tyj lb. sack 79e -.941. uek .LIT
noon they all' visited Mrs. Nell family in company with Mr. and
weds.
Mrs. jack Farwell of Kalamazoo and
We are glad to know that Justice । Locher at Gun lake.
LABORATORY TESTED FIXJLR
Little Betty Leonard celebrated Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ferguson of
W. W. Potter Is able to be removed
Country Club
89c
Oval Sardinas 3 ™ 25c
to his home at Wall lake. We hope her seventh birthday Saturday by Cloverdale enjoyed a picnic dinner
his condition continues to improve. entertaining eleven little boys and at Head lake Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer McCallum of
Mrs. Oscar Meyers of Cincinnati, girls at her home. Jack and Joan
■COUNTRY
CLUB
FINEST
QUALITY
Ver
Vies
and
Dorothy
and
Helen
Muskegon
spent
the
week
end
with
Ohio, has been spending the past
two weeks with her mother, Mrs. Schlukeblr of Kalamazoo were her their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Donald
HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPO'
1 McCallum.
RATION. Morlct&lt;««.
Mattle Blackman. Mr. Meyers came guesU from away.
SPACHETTl
Dr. and Mrs. Ed Lowry and his 1 Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson of
up for over the week end and the
'brother
"-----------’
the j Hickory Corners. Mr. and Mrs^Robfrom----Missouri spent
. BAKING DAYTED
former returned home with him.
and son of Quimby
.I irt
...Vrooman
r— _ -------------------------------------Mr. and Mrs. Slbbersen will at­ week chd in camp at Mio.
LUX SOAP
25c
COOKIES
rend *_»r
Little Betty Hubbard of Kalama- and
Mr. nnrl
and Wrt
Mrs. William HlVFtlS
Havens
tend a family reunion at Pine lake
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
too has been visiting her great- of Southwest Rutland were Sunday
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Van Luster
entertained a company of friends
from Battle Creek Saturday eve­
ning. the occasion being In honor
EXCEPT CLAM CHOWDER OR CONSOMME
WAS ANEMIC, WEAK, RUN-DOWN
of Mr. Van Luster's seventy-fifth
iat» of Frrd E. I birthday.
NOW WELL AGAIN...
WESCO - SPECIAL BLEMO
JEWEL COFFEE ■&gt;17c
William Smith and Frank Dos­
ter attended the Cleveland expo­
ICED TEA V4 *- PUc
“I was suffering from Anemia and was in a weak and rundown
sition from Saturday until Tues­
condition and was very discouraged. I took three Jars ElAgulnalGOOD QUALITY - PEAS. CORN OR
day.
do Cuban Honey and now feel better than I have in years. I have
Mrs. Lula Wertman spent Thurs­
No. 2
gained steadily until my weight is nowk normal." writes Mrs. Hazel
day* with her cousin. MLss Ethelyn
Sebrill. 1015 Johnson Ave.. Lansing, xflch.
Snyder at Battle Creek.
Reports of wonderful relief such as that experienced by Mrs.
Mrs. Julia Doster and daughter
COLATRV CUB
Scbrell
are
heard
daily
from
users
of
EL
AGUINALDO
CUBAN
Eliza be Hi. Mrs. Bessie Hughes and
HONEY. It Ls safe, pleasant to taste and Is very beneficial in
KIDNEY BEANS 4— 25c
BLOCK SALT
35c
Charles Hughes returned from their
overcoming Stomach Ulcers. Stomach Distress, Bowel and Colon
eastern trip Sunday.
Troubles. Many severe cases of Asthma have also been reported
Miss Marlon Taylor of Oregon
LATONIA CLUB OR ROCKY RIVER
as
reLeved
and
corrected
through
the
use
of
this
wonderful,
natu
­
came Saturday to visit her grand­
ral product
parents. Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Rey­
nolds, and her sister May. who is '
LY BARKER DRUG STORE
(PLUS 2c PER BOTTI.E REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT)
]*
also visiting here.
NOTICE OF MOBTOAOE BALE.
Lyle Lclnaar left Saturday mom- I
Has secured the agency for this wonder­
Ing for Hillman where he will be j
employed at electrical wiring on a '
ful natural product in this community.
new schoolhouse being built there.
.
ASK US ABOUT IT—WE HAVE A FREE BOOKLET FOR YOU
Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Wertman were
SCRATCH FEED
HOME OWNKHS'
CORPORA- Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. 1
TION.
100 1b. bag
ECG MASH
STARTING AND

:

I OC PRESERVES

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

Mt.

Butter 2

33c

71c

SALAD

Nut ouo2*-25t

dressing

v 25c

PINEAPPLE ™

coiyni¥.cu-B

M.ldrrd Smith. R«*&lt;«l

25

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

HOME OWNEliB' LOAN CORPO

73c

) .. . 1-1:01.:.

at:-'-.

MACARONI

4

HEINZ SOUPS 2 - 25c

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

25

TOMATOES

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

25c

u_4

3^25$

BEVERAGES

ICE TO CREDITORS.

WESCO BALANCED FEEDS

••aa-M *109
S13S

CROWING MASH

S2.49

1001b. bag

16* PROTEIN

FARMERS!

NOTICE or MORTGAGE RALE.

dafaull.

ntVNERR LOAN CORPORATION

thereof:
NOW. THEREFORE.

“

ride l. NOTICE IH HEREBY GIVEN that

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

WE PAY HIGHEST
MARKET PRICES
FOR YOUR GRAIN

OYSTER SHELLS1^ 79c

$1.69

DAIRY FEED
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

FEED PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOT1CB

LARGE SIZE - RIPE

CANTALOUPES

2

15c

lb.

1214c

RED RIPE

TOMATOES

HOT HOUSE

KLRCITA »U STO.VU

COU.E.X R1FK

BANANAS

4

25c

WATERMELONS
14 MELON 30*

■ 10c

PEACHES

“THE BIC RIPE ONES" M&lt;ii
ON ICE

ORANGES

CALiFOB.Nl A SUNKBT
EXTRA FINE FLAVOR - MEDIUM SIZE

*- 29c

WHITE COBBLERS - U. S. No. 1

NEW POTATOES

49c

FINE FOR A1X PURPOSES

• WHEAT

©POT ROAST

RYE

OF BEEF

CQ

thrrrnf l&gt;r «l»*n hr uublle.tion nf
of pili order, for »r
.BMViou. to .Rid i
luallnKi Banner.
&gt;i

• CORN
• BARLEY

anonai -

BANKRUPTCY NOTICE.

HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPO­
RATION. Mort&lt;a*r*.

aa&gt;lnt(( addrrta: 1
Ionia. Mltblran.

See Us Before You Sell!
the Common Connell of tha
City of Hailinra. Michie.n. held In the

KuTm

lb.

P ’•••■____

The Farmer
"T/ie
Farmer

Owned Store'
Store"

CHOICE

1

BRISKET

COTTAGE CHEESE
FRYERS
iy. !•:

TRIPLE TEST SAUSAGE
SMALL FRANKS

iiemuou ciadk
swifts mam

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc.

hJiIma Michlcaa. Uta ITU

W?

CHUCK ROAST

LEONA SAUSAGE

HASTINGS
HOME nWNERR’ LOAN CORPO
GLENN D. MATHEWS****'

* 23&lt;

BOILING BEEF

MOTICB OT BPECIAL ASSESSMENT

Connri/"did

ROLLED RIB ROAST
CQ

AND ALL OTHER KINDS

Out 2 3

59c

14 MELON 13*

WOODLAND

KROGER

t a.
i

�THE HA1TTNQI MNNKB, THVRIDAY, JULY U, 1M4

OHIO MAN DIED FRIDAY
IN DELTON RESTAURANT

PROCEEDINGS
.'•111

u.
nntnaariux ■&gt;
»&lt;■'
•t Rmi Mill St., th*

r. J. Buckohr, BeUed With
Mr. and Mrs. Garfield
Slater
Heart Attack, Sudden­
spent Sunday wRh their daughter.
ly Ixpired
Mrs Vero HowloUe and family.

Haallnaa, ha an* tha Mt
ova4 and adooiad.
BE TT FURTHER RESOLVED:

::ywrw.‘1'Jist,u

i&lt;i m.i.vri.

^sw-ses* si
--------l. . 1P&lt;fui tuuuanl roll of mU
lament dlatnrt aatartnr

WhKHEAh. Il &gt;• U

HE IT FURTHER MKHOI.VED: That

HE IT FURTHER HF.M»LVKI»: Thai

HE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: Thai

vrarr

REMOLVKD: Thai the Cm Clerk c .

. IA3R
HE IT FURTHER RESOLVED

1

W A Hcha&lt;l&lt;

TRY THESE SPECIALS

■ h» Und* h "i**'*
anil that

HE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That

or

land

Spaghetti

4 pkgs. Can Rubbers, 15c

25'

4

Pavtni Reaalutlona.

24 Vz lbs. Moosehead
Flour 79c

10 lbs.

ual of laH
id Walnut and

10 lbs. New Potatoes, 35c

PURE CANE

HOME GROWN

SUGAR

WJIEHEAN. II ii

Con Tops1 doz. 19c

52
1 lol to customer

THeW.FORfI’ it"" h

Grape Fruiteach 15c
SHREDDED
Wheat
Biscuit

LIBBY’S No. t's She Can

OE&lt;
CQ

I QUART CAN

each 19c

Dill Pickles

Pork and Beans .each 10c

ORANGES
One
Dozen

THEREFOR!

LARGE SIZE CAN

Small Size. Juicy

OQC
fav

Pumpkin

__each 10c

WALLACE GROCERY

lit: IT FURTHER RESOLVED

THERr.FOHr

FREE DELIVERY — OPEN EVENINGS

HASTINGS, MICH.

HE IT FURTHER KKNni.VKD

PHONE 2158

BE A
nird ill th
HE IT FURTHER RESOLVED

sis Prices
and Trade-m
lllowaiice before you buy any Tires
They're Made to Our

PICKLE TIME

Own Rigid Specifications

By One of the World's

is Spice Time

Largest Tire Makers

Today!

your

OLD TIRES ARE

WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF SPICES IN

WORTH MORE AT

BULK. WHICH CIVE YOU A GREAT SAVING!

'

1 1
»

“IF""”"?"

As the four had not had any supper. Curtl8 and
' “*"• “r‘
they ,o
asked
to DelMr, and Mr*
re nee Kinv.
,« permission
wmrthbw to&lt;ogo«.&lt;
Mr . Joyc
“5 CU
S"XSJXto
Sumner prrrnUlM Uwm w do »o
Uke odes„
k SunS
saying he would remain at lhe lake---------------- - r.
y‘
until their return. While nt lhe res- |
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
taurant.
Mr.
Buckohr-------------suddenly
------------ --------------------, ex- •
Mr and Mrs. La Fayette Osborne
plrrd. Arrangements were made to and Mr*. Henry Williams attended
lake the body lo Ohio.--------------------- । the funeral of Ray Lee of Battle
* **
j Creek Monday afternoon.
EAST WAU. LAKE,
■ Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shriber and
AND VICINITY. rhlldrcn o&lt; Hastings spent part of
Fred Riibtone and Miss Alice **’' *?k.21“^
rr,nk
Hughes of Detroit spent from Fri-1
V „
„ u
day until Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
f NrT .X°rk "r*
Chas Kahler. Mrs. Rlllstone and
daughter Frances, returned lo Detrolt with them after spending the
past two weeks here.
Madison Couch is laid up at HLs
cottage here with a sprained ankle.
The Cairns family reunion met at
the summer cottage of E. D. Rey­
nolds Saturday, forty-six being
present.
Mrs Burmaslcr of Kalamazoo
•pent Sunday in the Malurcen cot­

H

.. 15c lb.

Coffee

Claude Beott, Howard Hershberg­
. p. J. Buckohr. r widower 80 years
er and Biwin Slater were in Grand
ton. Ohio, suddenly expired fn a Rapids Wednesday evening.
restaurant at Dellon Friday night
Clarabelle Hooper called at J. P.
at about nine o'clock. Il wa* a case Brake'* Thursday. She tn company
of heart failure.
with three other ladies are leaving
for
California Monday morning.
It seems that Mr Buckohr and
his daughter, age 39. another daugh­
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Preston visited
ter about 18 and a son 15 were Floyd Hogan's of Grandville, Sun­
camping at Wall lake tn Uieir trail­ day.
er at Leonard's landing. It is the
Mr and Mr*. Elwood Brake and
business of Coneervatlon Officer family of Ionia spent Saturday eve.
George Sumner lo inspect the nlng with Mr. and Mn. J. F. Brake.
catches of fish at Lhe various lakes Junior, who had spent the past two
a* he has opportunity. When Mr. week* with his grandparents, re­
Buckohr and his children came In turned home with them.
about eight o'clock Friday evening
Duane Gray of Lake Odessa took
Mr. Summer found that they had
about forty fUh. twenty-five of them Menno Brake. Jr., who had been
undersized. The officer asked to see visiting his uncle. John p. Brake,
the fishing licenses of the party for the past two months, to Rives
and found thal Mr. Buckohr had a Junction. Sunday. He will visit an
ten-day license, and that his older aunt there before reluming to Flor­
daughter had taken one a* if she; ida
—
were Buckohr * wife instead of
,or* •* th® Br*k® hotne 8un'
daughter—probably to save 50c in day w'ro
B Brake and family
license fee.
j and Don Stowln* and family of
When Mr. Sumner called Buckrhizw
ohrs attention to lhe 'undersized Luter
n.h .nd u» ,,„Brcp« I!.™.. U,.I
Ohio man said that he recognized ^plck C|ierr|M
thal he was in wrong and would acur&lt;

bUBIIahad i» ti..

Macaroni

PLEASANT VALLEY.
Franca* 800II of Grand Rapid*
«pan I Sunday and Monday forenoon
with her parent*, Mr. and Mn. »-

&gt; Continued on page 7. Sec 2».

i
I, lion with Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene
"
1 Nichols.
Visitors Sunday at Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Culbcrt's were Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Snyder and children and Mrs.
Helntzleman and daughter Mar­
garet of Orand Rapids.
Mrs Anna Buck and Erthcr and
Mr nnd Mrs Prank Shriber and
Mr nnd Mrs. Leo Barry and son
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
George Shriber of South Hastings.
Kendall Buck and friend. Mrs.
Mr. nnd Mrs Henry Dykehouse of Anna Buck nnd EsUicr, Mr. and
।
Kalamazoo who were married July [ Mrs Erank Shriber. Hazel and
If are spending their honeymoon at |। friend nnd Mr nnd Mrs Leo Barry
I nnd Norman attended a intscellanthe E- D Reynolds cottage.
Week end visitors at lhe Vrerland ArUt. E1Jklon for Mr, c„j
Br!gc' t'-n 'Betty Donley| of Hastings
n?.d
■1»Eslrr\ I8/”' end Sunday evening Light refreshments
Mrs Mi’’’*1* yr%la,\d Mr.
and were served
Thev received many
“/***■
VrM,Und »nd children uw(uI
lovcl
'
of Detroit are spending lhe week i
„
tar
here.
ORANGEVILLE.
Sunday visitors at E- D Reynolds'
Merritt Crans ot Colorado spent
were Mr. and Mr*. Delot Cairns. Mr several days the past week with his
nnd Mrs Ferna Cairns and son i mother. Mh. Mary Crans of this
Bobby of Temperence. Mich. Eve- j place
ning callers were Mrs
Bernice I
Mr and Mrs Homer Norman and
Shultz and children of Grand Rap- his mother spent Thursday afterids. Mrs. Bertha Tobias and chll- ------"*
-----noon“‘with
relatives at Allegan.
The Blnke school will hold their
tlrcn of Cressey and Mr and Mr.*..
■Harvey Ding*
reunion Aug 2nd. for all former
Rev. Walton spent two days visit­ teachers, pupils and patrons. A pot
ing his parents in Maple Grove the luck dinner at noon and each In
bring their own table service
A
past week.
Mr and Mrs. Boyd of Kalamazoo good time is being planned.
tpcnl Sunday here fishing.
Mr. and Mrs Gerald Rupe and
little daughter of Charlotte spent
HOPE CENTER.
! from Friday until Sunday with hi*
Mrs. V/- E Aldrich and Rev. Wai-1 parent* at thl* place.
ton attended church at Gull lake j The village school reunion which
Sunday afternoon and evening.
j wa* held Sunday wa* quite well atMrs B A Lyttle of Battle Creek tended, about one hundred being
«pent the week end with her par- j present to enjoy a visit with old
ent*. C- B McDermott and wife i friend*
All hope to meet again
Roy Preston and wife of Barryvillc next year lhe third Sunday in July
were aL*o Sunday guests.
A* usual. Arthur Crawford
wu
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Warner and | elected president, Mr* Flossie Ca*Wm A*hby of Kalamuoo spent i He seey.-trea*. for the next year.
Sunday at the Fred Ashby home
—---------------♦-•-*----------------The afternoon callers were Mr. and
NJOR37,.IFAST STBIRER.
Mrs. Grant Dickerson of Cloverdale.!
“*oyd Williamson
and
lady
Mr*. John McKibbin and daughter. I *rl,'nd of Detroit spent Baturday
I Viola, of West Hope
| «d Sunday with peter Steel.
Tiie school reunion was well atMr. and Mrs. Wm Cramer. Jr..
tended. Mrs. Melissa Ashby and ' «nd daughter. Sandra Burke. Marlin
I Martin Chandler were the oldest! Mead and Richard Kniffen and
one* presenttrrtend 'P*”1 Sunday in Grand
1
Cha* William* ha* returned from ' Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Cramer vl*1 Novi after visiting M. Hoyt who is' il®d *1 the home of Mr and Mr*.
vPrJ. |)|
, George and Mr. and Mrs. William
! _
.. to start a
- I| Urlllnrt
R*v. ...........................
Walton expects
Poland
mission Sunday School al Shulu
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Todd of lhe
next Sunday anti hopes to see * । Center road visited Mr and Mrs
large attendance.
I Fredarick Fuhr Tuesday evening*
Sorry to hear of lhe accident of | Mr and Mrs George T Jensen of
our mailman. Russell Mott, while Mt Clemen* who are visiting their
driving to the fire on H. Whldby s ' parents and relatives here spent
farm in Hickory corners.
| Saturday night with.Mr. and Mrs.
I Olis Harthy of Hasting...

Wardr
Whole Cloves

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r I ^RADE-in

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than original equipment tires.

Mustard Seed

Caraway Seed

Dill Seed

Tumeric Powder

Poprica

Hemp Seed

Nutmeg

Macc, whole

Ground Nutmeg

Ground Maco

Mustard Seed

White and Black Pep­

Powdered Mustard

per

,fs.,

Special Monthly
Payment Plan for Tires
and Auto Supplies I

. Wlwl, .•■■■''i”
ev&lt;«vthiho

THE HOMER
It’s lime to think about the
heating unit in your home.
Il’s time to install a Homer,
because a Homer Furnace
will insure comfort through
the winter months. Now
you may feel those months
arc far away, but you do
have to plan for them. See
the new line of Homers and
compare them.

Cinnamon Bark

Whole Black Pepper .

SAVE MONEY AT WARDS

Powdered Ginger

Powdered Cloves

Powd. Cinnamon

Star Anise

Mined Spices

Powdered Anise

Celery Seed

Capsicum Pods

Currcy Powder

Powd. Rod Pepper

Allspice, whole

Ginger Root

Powdered Allspice

Homer offers you a fine se­
lection of models at reason­
able prices.

LIMIT o» la

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MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO
118-122 SOUTH JEFFERSON. HASTINGS.

PHONE 2691

PHONE 2115

A. C. GATES

„S„s

The Personal Touch

One &lt;1/ the prineipat &lt;nfrootage• offered rider i ol
Short U nr huiet it the real
understanding oi euitomeri
Our Employ ret are alieayt
alert for ruggeitioni from
nulotntr*. and tri th thit
thought in mind ue ail. you
lo try a Short Fay ride.
Only in thii tear trill ton
Irarn ol the many little courteuet tee ofer.

PHONE 8137

For Fares and Schedules.

BUS DEPOT

TRIO CAFE
Hastings

Plrone 2309

HASTINGS PHONE 11 &gt;7

�Till HASTING fl BANNER. THURSDAY. JULY II. 19M

IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS
Softball Grows Up: Almost a Million Americans — Including Many Girls
Played in Leagues I-asI Year; Spectators Like it

A.'

_____________
.__ ____ -____ I be The Religion of the Second
LITTLE RED____
HCHOOLHOUtiE
TO BE SPIC AND SPAN, j Mile" Sunday st 11.1*. Midweek
The -little red schoolhouse- Is to j service at g P. M Everybody Invited rnjuoo and Un* Thompaon ol
be made as spic and span as when । to attend.
It first became a part of the AmariMr. and Mrs Grande De Priester Irway'*.
can rural scent a half-century and ■ entertained Bunday their son-inAlways behave aa If nothing
Camp B»rry. Y M. C- A. camp. July more ago Under a comprehensive 1 law. daughter and granddaughter,
1-14. Twenty-two girls are there program of painting, repair and | Mr and Mrs Arthur Baker and Fageneral rehabilitation, now being trlcia. the occasion being .Mn. Baknow from nine different points in ----------k.., Ik
—
ttma
—
pened"—Arnold Banzwtt.
our two counties with six choaan I wm.ta.ta
worked out
in the K.
Eighth
WPA tat.
dU-, er*■’s U,.«Uta_w
birthday .wwl
anniversary,
leaders besides the director. Mrs i trlct. rs many u 150 country schools |
----------------- -*&lt; »
—
•The man who threaten*
EAST DELTON.
jerry Palkin, of 8t. Claire.
ten southwestam Michigan counworld U always ridiculous; far
The GUI's
camp will —
be ------------followed-|--ttes will
likely
be restored
tor
—-poa-1
v... w--~
- ------------ -----------------------, Lyle Collison had the misfortune'
by 40 boys and girls from Eaton i slbly Improved over—their condition !0 havc h|, ntw ten-apiane smashed ‘
county 4-H Clubs, with special club । long ago when they were new struc- up tftcr iaantng u l0 william Rupe
leadership for these days.
i lures destined lo become the center । to g0 l0 Kalamazoo lo visit hi* girl
Baltic Creek ha*
organized a I of rural lite and education.
&lt; friend
Community Y M. C- A with J. P !
-------------------------------------------I our neighborhood seems to be the
Blaine as secretary
PRAIRIEVILLE. .
| scene of accidents of late, three
Earl M Duiger of Chicago has | TheBarry County Electric wso- (cars collided at tha footof Art Colbeen
se
ire
ted
to
succeed
Otto
Lar
­
■------ ----- ----»... elation, a unit of lhe Michigan Elec- Uson's hill on Monday afternoon
gent as Y M C- A Secretary at trlflcation a.&lt;*oclation met at the while on their way to the Are at i
Flint.
Town Hail Wednesday night to ex- the Henry Whidby farm
The Central Region Employed plain the federal program for rural
Mr and Mrs. Ike Leinaar accomOfficer s conference is on this week electrification and to gel a township ' p niled Mr and Mrs Floyd Moral Lake Geneva for four days with franchise
________ .. There
_____ ______
_______
was a_good
attend- ford and daughter Letha to Clair on
commission study reports and dis- ance and2 much interest‘ shown,
'
Bunday where they spent the day
cushions.
•
i “
Born .to Mr and- -Mrs. Richard
with the latter’s son Howard
Timrv /yiummu
j Johnson, formerly of this place, now
Mr and Mr*. Alvah Pennock enTHREE CORNERS.
i of Kalamazoo, an eight pound tertatned on Sunday Mrs Ira PenDorothy Robinson returned home , dau&lt;hler. Marjory Ann
nock and sons of Battle Creek and
(from Gun lake Friday morning.
Mr„ Wllllg prrlg0 of Kalamazoo Mr and Mrs DR Willison ot Del­
, haying spent a few days with her and Mrs Ruth gackett ot Denver, ton. Mrs Mae pennock of Battle
( sister. Reina, al lhe Earl Boyes Colo wfre ln lown Thursday.
Creek was a visitor on Thursday.
; COrnW
. . j
j
, . .
I Mr. and Mrs Vaughn Molt re- ।
Walter Willison and family ot
‘
,rlend* “nd neighbor* [ turned to their home at Pentwater near Plainwell spent Bunday with
I
r* rIeBlr,t
i
lh,t Mr' Vld I Thursday after being called here by hLs brother Ed.
, Mrs. John Malcolm arc moving
death of the latter's father. John
Mr and Mrs. Rex Waters were
: back to their own home nearer | M ^ter
in Plainwell Thursday evening
I
rYK
Ya1
.“Y?®
1
Al lhe scho°I meeting Monday
Mr stocking of crewey spent
, lo their friend* and neighbor* there
jakc Adrianson and Earl Saturday night and Bunday with
2-BURNER
. —our low u their gain.
I johncock were re-elected to the hl* daughter. Mrs. Chattie Collison
OIL STOVES
, Mr. »„d Mr,. UKUT Yeirrr of .
, Mr. »nd Mr». AUm Orincn enUr.
( Kalamazoo spent Sunday with the । Mr and NfT, Robert McKlbbln. tamed an aunt from California and
I i2rTerv .J*™114' Mr
w,d
I Mr and Mr* William McKlbbln al- relatives from Hasting* recently
I
, «.
J tended
- . a party ceiebtating
. .
lhf
Sunday callers at Cl*U Louden's
. A*r; and Mrs Louis Everdccn of । tenth wedding anniversary of •*Mr were Mr. and Mrs.
*.rnt u
WeC* ™d al.!hc a"* Mrs. Lyle McKlbbln at Otsego daughter ot Delton.
Mw WMUr. horn.
Mr., I
nir,r...................................

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

In-

baa

tha
tbs

SUMMER
HARDWARE

SPECIALS
OIL STOVES

BY PHILIP MAKTIN
COFTBALL rapidly Is losing Its
° swaddling clothes and taking
Its place among major American
sports. The public interest it has
aroused In less than three years
of organization has been nothing
ahort of amazing.
And the new regulations re­
cently put Into effect by the
rules committee of lhe American
Softball Association, the govern­
ing body of lhe game, are likely
to sharpen ball fans' already
keen appetite for the pastime,
for lhe rules speed up play ma­
terially.
A fast game always appeals to
the fans.
Introduction of lhe
rabbit ball into regular baseball
made it speedier and more thrill­
ing from the spectators* point of
view, and revived waning Inter­
est In the national game.

A MONO olher things, lhe new
** rules provide for a longer
distance between ths plats and
the pitcher's box. Increasing II
from 38 feet 815 inches to 40 feet
This Isn't a greatly added dis­
tance, but it gives the batter a
tremendous break, allowingVlim
an extra traction of a second to
view the hurler'a offerings and
get his bludgeon around in time
lo hit the sphere.
Up to now 15 or more ctrikeouts during a game have been
common, and this made rather
tedious watching for tana, the
majority of whom love to wit-

Softball has nnlvenal
peal. The fair batters pictured

Angele* league.

Yoh guessed

tended.
capable
nice to
Pecnick.

The girls are just as
players as they are
look aL “Wild Bill*
left, has hurled 31 no­

petition.

Georse SHI er. below.

thered *oftball In the middlegreateat developmenL

OVENS
SINGLE BURN
ER OVENS

$4.75 ::d

I tv.rd.en, Ujl.r, Mr. suruthton. I M„ ^,r Jonf, „ aled „ lhe
|
Mr. .nd Mr, ctorenr. L Sluon hom,
„„ d.udhrcr. Mr.. Amy
»nd lamlly enloyrd .n ouun, .1 Sllcoc&lt; T,„,.d&gt;). ,nwnoon »t nv.
1C .
Smrd.y
gur.r. or Mr i o doct Mr, Jo„„
h„
, and Mr*. Claude Fighter and fsm- birthday —
-----------------------------------quietly
Bunday with mem! Uy at their cottage.
I bers of her immediate family. The
( Mr. and Mrs James P. Hammond“, neat prostrated )her and was lhe
.nd NAUllt. Mr. and Mr., Uro O. cause ol „„
... Site was
__ ______
her desith.
born
Hammond and MU.* Spencer of' U1 ohl0 daughu
' of- -—.-itdr
Samuel• and•
Lansing and Mr*. Post of Hastings
- J------‘
- MBrv
y —
Woodman,
only daughter
were Sunday guests of Mr
s'
”
*
’
ant‘ I among eight children. She came to
Mr*. Claude A Hammond
Michigan with her parents at the
Mr and Mr* Edgar Fiheld and age of two years Surviving arc two
I family and lhe latter'* father, Rob- daughters. Mrs. Ida Nalley of Bal|.rt WJllor.
ol MMdlrvllk *h01 tie Creek »no
and Mr.
Mrs Amy
Amy oueoc.
Sllcock
1. .t. 3a.t“r&lt;’*y ”,,’ul&gt; .“"™
j with whom .he m.de her home. .U
in .llend.nce M u,e Edger school ■ gr.irdehlldren And elglu urealI reunion Sunday
‘grandchildren
Funeral services
• **^3 . Lto!e McO“rvr&gt;' “nd O""Id I were held in the Baptist church
Muchler of Grand
Rapid* are ■ Erlday Mllh lhc Rev Ralph Bates
‘ spending a few days with her broth- jn ehargc. burlal ln our ccmetery.
w.v" . W,k Mr and Mr8 Edw 1 sympathy B extended to the family

1

KM ..
I especially lo Mrs Sllcock who ha*
and Mr5 c?,r BaAM*u “"“i eared for her mother a long lime
i
Jrf*.FrrCp2n».
8u,??a?
D W van Horn in getting down
I guests of Mr. and Mr*. George Kel-1 (rom a c,,errJ. tr(.c Wednesday land-

GLASS CREEK
Don’t forget to come to the Otis
school reunion this week Saturday
at lhe school grounds.
Several from this Vicinity attend­
।ed the Edger school reunion Sun­
।day.
Mr and Mrs Clyde Warren and
Patty Ann visited relatives in Lan­
sing Sunday.
|
Rev. Kelford ot Eaton Rapids
spent the forepart of the week at
Fred OtLs Mrs. Wm
Havens of
Southwest Rutland spent Monday
afternoon there.
An electrical meeting will be held
at the Goodwill church tills week
Friday
•*Mrs.
Forrest Havens and ML**
Virginia Havens were at Podunk
lake Sunday for the Cobb school
reunion.
Emerson Bolus of California Is
visiting at Roy Erway s
Mrs. Roy Erway in company with
Mr. and Mr- Al Wolfe spent the
Utter part of the week at Grand
| ..
Haven.
Word was received that George
Shipman of Flint had his arm near-

1 ,c\»_.._a - ..
. ! cd on a sharp stone causing a painI s.M J r
?4C2’rVM&gt; and 5*rS &lt;?.arl lul mjurv to hl* ankle.
Mr. and Mr*. Mark Norrl*. Mrs
,Rapld* fallcd
heroes. One of these Is “Wild
COFTBALL is a game tor tha
j at the Eda. Walter a home Sunday. | Lucy Norru. Mr*. Sarah Smith, Mr*
Bill" Pecnick. a left-hander who
multitudes—Including women,
KOBINHUE* PARK
'
PolU&gt;' “n&lt;i
Temple
formerly played with the Ke­
who have taken to It whole­
, The Ingram family reunion was' J£nl ®tlu.rdny
"L *B.U i
nosha. Wis.. Ke-Nash-A's and is
heartedly. Figures show that
held at the home of Mr and Mrs I
* th
.a.nd Mr\ Da'Ld A51' I
now
with
the
Boone,
la.,
club.
approximately 62.000 teams,
George Poland Sunday the 15th
Myrl1'
']nd “J"
In six years of active service
comprising 936.370 players, are
। Thaw present were Henry Ingram I
Drummond. A pel luck dinhe has hurled 424 games, annex­
engaged in league competition
and chauffeur. Mr
Davis, from I
*a*
’
ing 381 victories of which 32
throughout lhe United States.
. Oklahoma and others from Flint. I «r%“nd
w O McKlbbln and t
The double windup, used to
were no-hitters. Also, he distin­
Last year they played to 62.000,­
nnd
Mrs
Floyd
shclp and
' Ionia. Grand Rapids, and Hastings Json.
on*llMr “
nd „
,rsj Flo&gt;
? Shclp
befuddle the batsman, has been
guished himself at the plate with
000 spectators.
All enjoyed a bountiful pot luck fad“y
Sunday at Saugatuck
banned. Also, a standard base­
a lifetime batting average of 373
u.
’ .
Mr spent
and Mrs.
Rav
Castle
Mr and
Mrs.and
Ray Castle and
George Slslcr, former star tint
line distance of 60 feet, when the
dinner
The ...
afternoon
was
in
Pecnick is but one of the many
|W1|
daughter. Mr. and Mrs Cassius
sacker of the St. Louis Browns,
visiting anti playing games
regulation 12-lnch ball Is used,
colorful stars of softball, and
nnrt ; Hughe* and
Mr.
James
was one of tha pioneers who
Mr. and Mrs Julian Poti*
Fotta a»u
. , —
,. and :Mrs. r
----has been agreed upon.
daughter
Betty.
Mr
anti
Mrs
Ralph
Jl
ev,n
i?
n
^
fan
!*
,y
uPCnl a.u,nd,y •J’
though
the
names
of
these
play
­
popularized the sport, and he
The base runners, too. come In
Finkbeiner were in Grand Rapids l^e Charles Hughes cottage al
ers are hardly household words
now is head of an organization
for a little consideration
They
Friday
Crooked lake.
right now, you can depend on II
similar to the A. S. AM although
now are being permitted to steal
Mr. AM Mr,. o«.rse Pound were 1 ,“«•
•»««• JJ111 We Mpe rbe
that within a few years these
somewhat smaller.
and to score on a balk or Illegal
----—
.
.
will M&gt;on be restored to good health.
men will be much better known
in —
Hasting*
Thursday
afternoon
Softball has Its “world series"
pitch. Under the old rules, a
We regret
to „
hear. of ,the serious.
I
Mr. and Mrs
Uindacre. south
7 „ „
to the upblic. Softball has a
each year, and these playoffs
man on third was not allowed to
ot
MltldkvUlo
won
Frld.y
evening
""
”
"*
"&gt;
N
H Barber ot Milo «nd
great future.
have produced some outstanding
score on a balk.
hope to
him’ »
as
improved In
in
___________ ______________________________________________________
, eAllen At the potand home
I1 "«»'
“ report Wn
’ towond
' the next Issue.
I Uta music At one or lhe hotels tor ; BAttle cfcek -ere SAturdsy jrmtn, KXd“VSb°.S nintan
NASHVILLE.
I H»C HIUMA.
VUC V* MAC IAMM1A0 AVI
w-ww*
, .........
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Horton enter­
Mr. nnd Mn. O«ll LrtUu .nd |»» ml ol lh« »ummcr
| junu of lheir pwnU. Mr. .nd
tained her father. Charles Hughes.
I Podunk lake Sunday.
- Coy
—— O.
« (
A very
attendance
..... m
„. Julian
rfUlulll Potts.
rmi3. Mr
Mt . and Mrs Ethel Stebbens at dinner
1 Mr . and
Mr*
*ons and• Mr. and...
Mrs.
..
.... —.—---------------- at the , ”r3Mr. and
Eber —
Hoffman
and
Mr—
» W
John
aUrnded inr
the Sunday
at -lower
Brumm were at the home of Mr. annual school meeting on Monday
k...
— Mrs
--------------— -­ of k
..k .K.
—... Kollar ..tinmen
- at their
------- cottage
------- -- —
-­
and Mrs Glen Stewart of Battle night. Dr. E. T. Morris and Frank Hastings *penl Saturday evening at Featherbone picnic al Caledonia Crooked lake.
Park Sunday.
^Lr. and Mrs. George Woods and
Creek Thursday evening.
; C. Lent* were re-elected director*.. Glenn Aapinall's.
a
! John *t»tt«l Junior Woods at Howell
The hot weather the flrst of last I The echool board vu authorized to .
Mr. and Mrs. B Campbell and
more mi
real ca»vc
estate im
for ovaiwa
school vxhuioi
children o|m,i.
spent Sunday with their
QUIMBY.
Sunday.
week was hard on baby chick*
chicks beoe- ' acquire uivac
Ing shipped. Out of 200 chick* purpose*.
I aUter. Mr. and Mr». Elwym McHThe L. A. 8. will serve home made I
Charles Hughe* and Mrs. Prank
atUpped from Ranwy. Ind..
on
Mr. and Mr*. Charles Kohler are
their cottage at Gull lake. ice cream at Reeds Oil station 1 Hughe*, who were accompanied by
' Mrs Leon Doster and daughter of
Tuesday to Nashville only 48 were getting settled In their home purMLsa Marcelene Campbell of Ha*- Thursday evening, July 30.
The Young People's class were ! Delton returned Sunday from a two .
alive; on Wednesday only 11 were , chased of George Campbell west ting* spent the week end with home
pleasantly entertained at the home' weeks' vi*tt with Mr. and Mrs
i ,0
folks.
•live «« of 100.
offo.rn.
1
^.„ .. .......................
____
I Glen Asplnall and family were ot Francena Cutler Saturday night. Maurice Hottt of Manchester. N. H.
Mr* Squire*
and baby daughter . Sunday LTpct^'HoffmanT^
IhPm^Ung^n1^'.^^ have'lef?Ke
NashviUe^neVarhoeMr*. Minnie Bldelman enter- i
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Johnson and
visitors of their parents,
Pearl Abbott and Dora. Mr. and Mr*. Lewis Johnson
Mrs.‘ PcU
Pete Hoffman °
ofr near talned- Mrs.
acted fax-orably upon the petition pital for their home in Battle Creek. Mr. and Mr,
U Bux
Sm,5h and &lt; Miss Dorothy Norton of Maple I Mr. an&lt;i Mrs. Neal Welcher ot daughter Gale of Detroit, also Mrs and Loraine were Sunday guests of
and Mr*. Neal Welcher of Emma Armour and. Miss Ava of I Mr and Mrs. Gilbert Greeman of
Howard Frost of Hastings to op- Grove underwent an operation for Battle
nattle Creek
Creek spent
scent Sunday
Sunday with
with Augusta recently.
&gt; | Battle Creek.
erate
apPendlcitU Tuesday
the iaw
hospithetr parent..
parents. ___
Mr.____
and_____
Mrs.______
Chas,
. the
. . dance
------- ■pavilion
------ at Thorn----»j&gt;|Ki&gt;a».AM»
tucmiay at mr
-jaa- 1 mcir
Misses Ruth and Joyce Hoffman
Mr* Clark Olmstead and two
annlr taxe
Iakf
i.
-i,. k-i«.
n-g ■....
appie
la) here,
she
being- retimed
lo t...
her .Lcchleltner.
of Battle Creek spent the week end daughter* of pavilion called on Mr.
A fire alarm wa* turned In about home Sunday. Mr*. Shepherd of । Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Shade and with home folks.
. «ua
and mi
Mrs.
*. D N. Honeywell. neighbor*
10:30 Tuesday night when Are was 1 -Bellevue
is a----patient
lhe —
hos- children of
of Lake Odessa were Sun---------------------------- ----at —
Ml** Valina Kellogg who 1* at- । of thirty
discovered ui lhe empty bouse at pital
—------- —------------------------------- | d*7 afternoon callar. of their par- tending Mahr Business college In |
Donald Duncan. Kalamazoo. is
the comer of Main and
Reed
Mr. and Mr*. Charles Betts and enu, Mr. and Mrs. O. Haynes.
making «a two weeks* visit with his.
Kalamazoo spent the week end al ~
street* Kerosene soaked rag* were family entertained Mr. and Mr*.
Mr. and Mr* Myron Simpson and her home here.
aunt. Mr. and Mrs. M W. Hughes.
found lo be on fire.
Laroa and daughter Catherine and utile daughter of Battle Creek were
Services at the Methodist Episco­
Dr. B F. Tomb* of La* Angeles,
Ml** Pauline Bowman of Lansing Mr. and Mr*. Raber of Flint. Sun- Sunday guest* of their parent*, Mr. cat, visited relatives here Thurs­ pal church Sunday at 10:15. Rev.
| and Mrs Harry Simpson.
Ralph L Bates pastor Subject will
day.
ha* been spending her vacation **“”
Mrs Grace Calkins and Chester
with her mother. Mr*. Della Bow­
spent a few days last week with Mr.'
man.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Warner and and Mrs. Carl McDann of Battle •
Creek.
Mrs. Mary Hope returned Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fisher and
from their vacation In northern
Patricia of near Ionia called on
Michigan.
friends here Saturday.
Mr.*. Ila Thrun spent Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hawthorne
afternoon in Hastings.
and family of Lacey spent Satur­
Mrs. Edith Stevens, living north­ day afternoon with the latter's par­
west of Hastings and Milo Osborn, ents. Mr. and Mrs, Porter Kliuie.
who works for her. were injured
Mrs. Marvel Eberly of Alma. Mar­
late Thursday afternoon In a head- garet Welch of St. Louis and Em­
on collision with . hoAvUy lo.ded „„„
lu ln
„ '
erson Eberly of Dowagiac ,^,
spent
the
gravel truck at the Curt McCart- WMk end at tb(. c^y Brumm home.1
ney comers. Mr*. Stevens was driv- 1
Nelson Brumm and
ing; she suffered a broken knee Annella called on relative* in Wood­
cap. a broken wrist and there is land Bunday afternoon.
fear of internal Injuries. Mr. OaAbout 1:30 o'clock. L. O. Cole, vil­
lage president, sounded lhe new Are
of the .truck **** unhurt.
Mr*. siren to see If It could be heard by
Stevens and Mr.
Osbom
all the firemen In the different
brought lo lhe Nashville general part* of town and how long It would
hMplul tor Irr.unenl Ana taler take
.... them to get „
to „„
the fire bam.
Mr,. Staven,
lUcn » pennoee In
n„
in, ™„
hospital for X-ray.
, were there and ready for duty.
Robert Bett*. Charles Higdon. | Mr. Gall Lykin, received a tetCharlea Hess and Wayne Ber^ left ur from her cousin. Mrs. CllnUm
Sunday for Camp Ben Johnson st &lt; smith of Iowa City. I... saying they
Sbfrman lake
with her mother. Mrs. Albert OsMis* oamet
daughter of troth, were moving to Chicago ths
Mr. *nd Mrs. Chartes Lynn and , Mth of July. Mr. Smith will b«
hi py weyne ana ware «*uiae. section b. camden township. Hillsdale county, and deetroyBen Shaffer of Battle Creek ware 1 connected with the Grant hospital
Jun” ’• im Th" |OM •niounlln* to IIAM.00. barn and personal. was promptly
nnllArt
In m,rrl,o,
.liilw *
,1 in
i- ,u.&lt;
united In
marriage n&gt;i
cut July
6 at
that city
by thia company.
r '
Angola. Ind., by Rev. j. A. Rose of .
MUs
Miss Louis
Louise Wolring of Lansing
lhe Presbyterian church. They were spent the week end with her moth­
attended by Miss Elsie Shaffer of er. Mrs. Maude Wolring.
■VERY YEAR A NUMBER OF PROPERTY OWNERS HAVE SEEN CAUGHT
leasing and Joseph Polgnr
of
Miss Elizabeth qibaon and friend
WITH HO WIHOiTORM INSURANCE.
THEIR PROPERTY HAS BEEN OEBellevue. They went to housekeep­ of Kalamasoo spent Sunday with
ing In their newly furnished apart­ the former'* parents. Mr. and Mn.
STROYEO ANO THEY HAVE SUFFERED HEAVY LOIS
ment in Battle Creek.
'
WlU Glbeon.
Rev. M. E. Hoyt and daughter.
Miss Margery Hoyt. left Thursday
HJCKOnV CORNERS.
for Petoskey, where Miss Hoyt and
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Borden of
two other young ladles will furnish Kalamazoo and Clayton Haynes of

3-BURNER
OIL STOVES

$7.50

75
Double Burner
OVENS, lined

’350 „ ’550

Coleman Initant Gas Ranges—
3-burner with oven _$59.50 and up
Pint Thermos Bottle:.79c

Ice Cream Freezers$1.29 and up

GOODYEAR BROS
HARDWARE CO
Hastings

Phon, 2101

THIS GARAGE
MECHANIC TOOK
HIS BUDGET
APART, TOO
• "Wasn't getting the right mileage out
of the old income. Using a lot of gaa
and not getting anywhere.
"Decided to take the old budget apart
and make a few adjustment*. Some job
it was, too. Tightened her up in • few
places where the money waa leaking out.
She ii aure running smoother now. Taka
look at thia bank book."
Thia garage mechanic is only one out
of thousands of workers who have made
financial adjustments to meet new Hying
conditions, and who as a result, are get­
ting ahead again, with money in their
savings accounts.
Why don't you do the same?

OF HASTINGS
H\ir

INGS, MICHIGAN

The Next Severe Windstorm
That Hits Michigan
May Visit You!
Had you thought of that? Since 1892 windaterma have swept
over Michigan annually, doing great damage—often several
storms in one year! The time to get Windstorm Insurance it
before the storm.
This 51-year-old company offer* you the service of its extensive
experience. Fair nnd equitable adjustment of claims and
prompt settlement of losses. The cost has been less than 7e
per $100 per year since 1885. Managed by insurance mCBO&lt;
wide business experience.
See a representative or write the home office.

Michigan Mutual Windst
Insurance Compel

The biggest of its kind in Michigan.

iiomoOfficet

�THE HASTING! BAXKTt THURSDAY, JULY M, 1&gt;M
live pheasants from the state game NORTH MICHIGAN CLOSED
farm near Mason. H. D Ruhl; In
TO CERTAIN USES OF FIRE. I
charge of lhe game division, be­
Governor Frank D. Fitzgerald's|
lit,,,
kA,"..,, 4.000 and W.VW
.
lieves' between
5.000 live
proclamation, closing all ot north- '
phe*»ante will be available for re- era Michigan to certain uses of fire
lease In various parts of the pheas­
------------------------------------ ---- ! ant territory this year.
lhe most serious forest-fire hazard
As soon as articles of agreement
•/■•••
are formulated and signed and ac-, Convinced that additional funds in Michigan during the past 11
tual purchase completed. Michigan are peeded to meet the growing de- yean. During the week in which lhe
wlll have the services of a special J mands of sportsmen for more trout, proclamation went into effect, ap­
airplane for the purpose of fighting j boss and bluegills to plant Ln the proximately 0.000 acres of wild land
। forest Are. The development of; streams and lakes, the slate conser- were burned over as a result of lhe
; high-frequency radio sets by which vatlon commission at its July meet­ drought and lhe carelessness of
, communication can be maintained; Ing went on record in favor of persons in lite open.
The proclamation
forbade
all
, between a radio-equipped airship j raising lhe resident rod license fee
and portable ground stations Is ex- i from 50 cents lo gl. "Only lhe legls- campfires except those at authorized
pected to make lhe plane highly ef-11*lure has lhe authority to increase
sc campgrounds; all pipe, cigar and
c-­ cig are t tex smoking except
fectlve against large forest fires as the fishing license fee." said -Direc
i'* ,I __________
habitation,_ __________
authorized.. Improved
well as other special state uses.
। tor Hoffmaster. "The commission'^
• • •
I actions..therefore, constitute merely campgrounds or in any automobile
Michigan will gain nearly 3,000 an expression ot sentiment." The or vehicle operating on state, coun­
ty.
township
or private highways
acres of land. net. In the recent ex- dollar fee, it was made plain, would
change of forest lands with lhe na- Include also legal fishing privileges and roods; the throwing or causing
Honal forest service,
for the wife of the resident licensee. to be thrown from any such vehicle
any matches, ashes, burning tobacco
The churning propeller of a mo' Fish surveys" of 60 of Michigan’s or other burning material; and all
torboat Isn't so injurious to spawn- inland lakes are lo be made this | burning of rubbish, slashing, brush
Ing fish as many persons believe. In ’summer
--------------*by
“ the institute for
*— —
— 1 pile
-----or
- slumps,
Fisher-1
foci, the institute for fisheries re­ les Research of the department of I
----------------- **-*----------------search of the department of con- conservation to obtain accurate inIRVING.
formation
on
these
lakes
for
future
I
Mr.
and Mrs. F- D. Johnson enter- ,
| servation. which has been making
careful studies, says it apporently planting programs. Accurate Infor- 1 tamed their daughter, her husband ,
has no detrimental effect whatever mation. It is felt, is needed on the ■ and children from Ionia Sunday.
1 on spawning fish.
important fishing lakes of Michigan
Mrs Mary HUI and daughter. Mrs. I
to cope successfully with the inten- ! Eiu Garllnger and daughter from
Two-year closing orders forbid­ slve sport fishing of the future. Due near Nashville were calling on Irv- |
ding al) hunting and trapping on six to the absence of dependable Infor- mg friends Sunday and attended
state refuge areas have been re­ mation on lakes, the fish-planting &gt; church here, also lhe Gales school
/X young woman driver and live others were Killed instantly when
newed by the state conservation program in Michigan has had to reunion
lhe car in which they were riding was crushed by a speeding
commission Tiie ureas are; Isle progress blindly In many cases.
I Mrs IMdora Wright and children I
train near Calumet, Ill. The driver had lost in her attempt to bent
Royale. Munuscong state park and
lhe train lo a grade crossing, which was almost at the entrance .
’ ' ‘ from near Butternut are visiting i
sys- | hcr father. Prank Winans, also her 1
the Molasses River. Lunden. Iosco ; The survey groups will
«... work
—
to the cemetery whither the party was bound with flowers for
and Gladwin refuges
tematlcally. collecting data on lake brothers and sister.
graves of relatives. Wreckage of the car Is shown above.
depths, type of Uke bottom, species
Mrs. Wm. McCann visited Mr» .
Harold Gwinn, who has been in of fish present and their relative Ermonl Newton ot the Chides­
HINDS CORNERS.
' thirty years, was laid to rest in the
charge of William Mitchell state abundance, species of minnow life ter neighborhood one day last week.
We had a fine rain Saturday Banfleld cemetery last week Tuespark near Cadillac, has been ap­ and other aquatic foods, prevalence
Mr. and Mr*. Clem Foster of
pointed superintendent of the new of predators, snapping turtles and Onondaga were Sunday visitors at which was much needed. The wind daYdid some damage, blew trees across
"
Mr. and 'Mrs. D. D. Putnam called
3.000-aerc Ludington state park.
such.
the home of Wm. McCann.
The children round here are en­ the road, lore a large elm up by the al the Ransom home In Rutland,
The department of conservation
The lower peninsula group of joying lhe vacation Bible
____
,__ al roots al Gus Kline's. It fell on his Friday.
school
com crib doing considerable dam- ■
Forest Christian of Woodland
has started the annual release ot lakes being surveyed this summer Middleville very much.
..... be ......
wm Schoike| „1(| age to It and his wagon and also called on friends at Banfield last
will
those ..
In .............
Waterloo project. I mi. uuu
wm. acneiixci auu ; .■
. . ,
, ,
----- -------- „
Jackson cdunty, July 1 to July 24; 1 children spent the week end in damsged his windmill.
»4r. Christian Is selling school
1 week.
lakes In Yankee springs project.;
i Mrs. Mary Hathaway attended supplies.
suppll ,
Mr.
Barry county. July 27 lo Aug. 19; . Mr. and Mrs. Richard Tompkins the Kline reunion at Jackson. Sunr and Mrs. Ted Darling were
my
at the Wickwire farm last week
Muskegon'lake. Muskegon county. Jack
glrl /rtend from day.
Mr. u&gt;d Mrs. M.ll H.nderrtoti “k‘n«
°' “• wh“‘
Aug. 19 to Sept- 5; Pleasant lake. Kniamazoo spent Sunday at J. M.
harvest.
Oakland county. Sept. 5 to Sept. 15. । perry’s.
and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias of
'
Kalamazoo were called home Wed­
For Only
Another black widow spider has
COATS GROVE.
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
nesday evening on account of the ' Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kilmer visit­
been received by the department of |
Please make the following cor­ Illness of their mother. Mrs. C. N.
conservation from Allegan county.'
rection. Mrs. Leo Tift is the former Tobias. Mrs. Hendershott remained ed relatives In Ohio last Sunday.
A number of other Allegan residents
------------------------------------| Because of illness. Rev. Clem Jor­
lhe rest of the week.
have reported finding black widow |
Within :« boar*
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Graines of dan will be absent from church du­
ties here until Sept. 1 Rev. F C.
pr.«.i nr«'. 3-d.; Uk*
Mrs. Wm. Moore and daughter
The L. A. S. will give an'Ice cream
do»- .1 Alien iwenlly. The buck 1
J
J
.
aurrouihs
Margaret accompanied Mrs. Ed Tu- social at lhe church this week Prldor of Hastings to Traverse City, day evening.
Se £ MlcXn
W
» “‘d
“ WN&gt;HERB
Torch lake and other northern
“
~ Wing filled'..................
F. C.
the pulpit....for E.
lively rare in Michigan.
Saturday and Sunday.
MEDICINK
should thoroughlr
points last week.
S. Thompson al West Sebcwa last
clsansa th«lr *&gt;*■
Mrs. Ernestine
Edger
attended
TAMARAC.
iI —
------—
—-----------—the
Mr. &lt;uia
nil.
and nua.
Mrs. Wm.
ttui. Mwit
Moore nuu
and Sunday. Mr. Thompson Is In the
Mr. and Mrs. N. McClelland and j Yankee Springs school reunion on daughter attended the Cobb school University hospital at Ann Arbor.
n&gt;l&gt; ff.itfi JOU lets liable to apprndlcttli
rhstimatlsn, nturllls and other sllmrnu
family visited hts mother near Ver- Saturday.
reunion at Podunk lake Sunday
Mrs. Harley Scare is still sick In
Old Chief 11 a pro»«n treatment for neurtlb montville Sunday.
Remember Friday. July 24th. is lhe
M. W. Skidmore and Miss Susie
bed. Callers there lost week were
Miss Elizabeth Scnsiba has re- da,e for thc meeting at Goodwill । Phillips accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Minerva^ Woodman. Ola Kimble,
-&gt;SHUp0 anil bisalln». tjpld it
turned from Lansing.
church
to learn lheplan whereby
Elmer Burke to Vicksburg Sunday Stella Kelsey. Jesse chase. Mr. and
Geo. Carl and/Ford Enz have j wc ITUJ&gt;' b® nble to Itetelectricity
in | nnd called on Mr. Skidmore's nephPPprilQ WALGREEN SYSTEM been
Mrs. Earl Sense. Mr. and Mrs. Os­
on the sick list the past week.1 our community. Surely farm worn- , ew Mr. and Mrs. Calms.
car Cooper. Bessie Woodman. Mr.
HtCU O DRUGSTORE
The new barnJ&gt;n the Buel Wise en ne«d the service electricity can
Mr and Mrs
Tobins of
and Mrs. Delbert Rich. Will Pat­
PHONE 2241
HASTINGS farm is nearly completed.
.
Kalamazoo spent Saturday and tengill and Mrs. Ellen Wisner of
। Sunday with home folks.
Battle Creek. Mrs. Geo. Goodell of
। Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bishop at­ west Woodland and Mrs. Rich as­
&gt; tended a birthday picnic dinner sisted wltn the work for several
। at Bull's Crossing in Irving in hon- days.
i or of her mother, Mrs. Theodore
A daughter was born last Wed­
Pranshka.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Kline and nesday to Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Joluuon&lt; nee Nina Beatrice Smith!
i daughter nnd Mrs. Prank Golden
at a Kalamazoo hospital.
Mrs.
and family attended the Kline re­
Johnson formerly lived here and
union In Jackson Sunday.
their home now is at Parchment.
BANFIELD.
Freda Smith was home from Kal­
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Putnam and amazoo for lhe week end.
son Robert and Miss Belva Sladel
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Kimble and
of Grand Ledge spent the week end family, Mrs. Mattle Kimble. Arthur
Todd and children attended the
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Putnam.
The wind storm and rain lost Rodebauch reunion at Thomapple
Saturday P. M. did considerable lake on Sunday.
। Mr. and Mrs. Chester Allerdtng
damage in this vicinity. Several
arc happy over tha birth of a
silos and trees were blown down.
Mrs. Christina Schumaker, agtd gninddnughter to their daughter.
87. a former resident of BanBeld. Clara and husband. Mr. and Mrs.
residing at Urbandale for the past Tuttle.

After Death Won Auto-Train Race

Conservation
and
_

Outdoor Note?

ienti. Baked
igh flavor in
A&amp;Pair condihoned ovens.

2-lb.
loaf

MASON JARS
Pinta, doz. 55c

65c

Jar Rubber*
Dill Pickle*
Iona Peaches

3 A*- 10c
25c
N*JH
2
27c
Karo Syrup
»'-• L-'»l
‘A? 10c
Northern Tissue Toilet Paper 4 nil. )9C

3 .... 25c
2 ji; 35c
3 &lt;■■• 25c
Jello Ice Cream Pow.A" FU™•2 Ar- 15c
Pott Toastie*
10c
Kellogg's Corn Flake*
it.'.: toe
Jello
Ad Fll.or,
i
Van Camp's Sardine*

SULTANA

Peanut Butter
a 25c
8 o’Clock Coffee

‘ 17c
3-lb. bag 49c

RAJAH

Salad Dressing

29c
Micironi or

Spighetti
Bulk

4 ,u 25c
WHITEHOUSE

MILK

3 - 20c
CRISCO
lb. can 19c

~ 55c
SALADA TEA
Blue Label

33c
Thuringer

Strawberry Preierve*
Campbell'* Soup*

White Corn
3
25c
Canned Pea*
"• ’
3 '•r 25c
Beet*
x°. &gt; c*n
2
15c
Spry Shortening ’Jt 22c
63c
Diamond Crystal Salt S.";
pi,. 5c
Lifebuoy or Lux Toilet Soap 4 s.„ 25c
Bulk Vinegar
19c
Bisquick
29c
Hershey's Cocoa
«•» 2
25c
A &amp; P Grape Juice
k’.'r.i. ioc
Sanka or Kaffee Hag
... 37c
Sauer Kraut
5c
Mushrooms
&lt;-«■ b.u...
... 23c
Tuna Fish
i3c
Scott Towel*
Co"5L'l';„''i'k
25c
Encore Olives
«9c
Nectar Tea
29c
Stokely's Tomato Juice
2.3.? 10c
Puffed Rice
Crab Meat
Cigarette*
Cigarettes
Felt Naptha Soap
Rinso or Oxydol
Fig Bars •’
Calumet Baking Powder
Waldorf Tissue
Swansdown Cake Flour
Fruit Pectin
Baby Food*
Orange Juice
Apple Butter
Encore Spaghetti
Wheaties
Yukon Club
,

pi,. |0c
!..'.b 25c
$1.15
29c
41c
19c
3 “»■ 25c
19c
4 '*"■ 15c

Big’ll
Bottle

49'

10

Pkg.

belli*
J

can*
ca.

1-lb.
Jar
Al 3 Ho*.
* th*
Pkg.

24*oa.
J bottloo

23c
19c
25c
10c
10c
15c
12c
25c

After fifteen years
of Research work and tests
on twenty-four hundred houses

FORD V-B GIVES MORE MILES PER DOLLAR

21c

NEW POTATOES

FORD V-8

GIVES

VOU^OF

IHESE

FEATURES

f..k 49c

WATERMELONS

49c

CUCUMBERS
PICKLED

PIG FEET

TOMATOES

ci 5c
2 Li. 25c

h.&lt; h«...

CARROTS

The other four are: Low
first coat. Low up-keep cost.
Low depreciation. Long life.

FORM ANCE
ECONOMY

2

3

SUPER SAFETY ME­
CHANICAL

Good gasoline and oil mile­
age is only one ol the five
vital factors responsible for
the easy-on-the-purse “dollar
mileage" which owners get
from the Ford V-8.

BRAKES

AROUNb at no ex

3 B.Kk 10c

And because the Ford V- 8
gives you, not just one or two
of these economy factors, but
all of them —it makes your
automobile dollars go farther!

Buy the car which gives
you the superior, modem per­
formance of a V- 8 engine. A

525 A MONTH,

2

25c

ORANGES

■ A ■?
4k ■/
1&gt;
V " li
&gt;7

1

pound

in ALL KINDS of CLIMATES

welded steel body—which
means a steel structure as
well as a steel surface. Safety
Glass in all windows of all
models at no* extra charge.
Direct-acting mechanical
brakes. Center-Poise Riding
comfort And a big, roomy in­
terior with the extra leg room
that comes from the short V- 8
engine and its forward posi­
tion in the chassis.

Drive a Ford V- 8 and leant
the facts first-hand. See the
nearest Ford dealer.
FORD DEALERS OF MICHIGAN

after usual down-payment, buys any model 1938

2 t&gt;... 35c

NOW OFFERS
THEiR NEW

T W O-C O A T
HOUSE PAINT
FOLLOWING ARE SOME OF THE AD­

VANTAGES OF THIS NEW PAINT!
1—Your money goes twice a&gt; far, as this paint will
lost twice as long.

2—Your house will be Whiter than ever before.
3—Your paint will
Brighter.

stay

Fresher,

Cleaner and

-Two coats will make a better job than three
ever did before.
5—Defies Checking, Cracking and Peeling.

New Universal Credit Company &gt;/i% per month Finance Plan*. *

BANANAS

3 u,.. 19c
RIDING COMI OH I

LISTEN TO COFFEE TIME WITH KATE SMITH BAND
W. Cash WPA Check.

FORD V-8

★ VISIT THE FORD DISPLAY AT
CLEVELAND’S GREAT LAKES EXPOSITION

DEVOE HAS A FINISH FOR EVERY FUR­
POSE — INSIDE OR OUTSIDE!

Carveth &amp; Stebbins
THE REXALL DRUGGISTS
HASTINGS

PHONE 2131

�TU HAJITDUM BANXBB. THURSDAY. JULY U, ItM

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
daaaribM

(Continued from pm* € See. 1)

i. Mto

'» dLrnbad

I Twenty Or Thirty FunUiei
to Be Located in Our
County

DK IT FURTHER REVOLVED: Tbsl
KUOLtSD: TV* I lk« Hupanlror ol
&gt; SuMt’liiv •&lt; tha Ul aad Sih ward*
Nl^efiSt UuTlaadt tbe gad aaS ltd vaed* al Ua City at
saat aad pavlaa dl«
ml district lit’
t &lt;h. Em*
i'1lau&gt;&gt; it. •

HMM

BARRY’S CENSUS TO
gg |UQRgj|gEQ

-d *.

■---- &lt;k. 41

k__ t_ V-

SCtE#

xn _

■mill aaaaaaiarat. bm thal Mid plat* Banner
and dluraiai a* k*«Hofor« prepared aad
tied in lhe atWa ai tha Ollr Clark In

from

Paul

May.

31M

trahf •t&gt;PM«od Md sdatRad.
. county baa been selected M one of
RE IT FURTHER RESOLVED; Tb*t Hie eleven Michigan counties to

HF. IT rt RTHKH RESOLVED: Tfcat

settlement Administration program.

4 » IS

The counties are: Calhoun. Ionia.

si» IB th. affica ar tka city ciwk «f be located near established rural
Cltr •( HMtiut. i&gt;» and tb&lt; *amr ta communities, so that tbe families
“ ।"»»'
ib' "~ni «,
Htcnxii
w. a. Hrkadrr. • enure hew stores and relational fa-

Between 20 and 30 families will be
A total of 213S0 acre*
chased, all ol which is now under
option, at an estimated coot ol M.
139.000.

n E *IT F u RTH KK REHOLT E t&gt;

IE IT FURTHER RE8OLVF.D: That

&gt;»«t
liahrS In
publi .1 . &lt;1 I:
h ’

HE IT rVKTIlHIl RX8ULVKD

UHEHEAs. a Orillia

HE IT FURTHER RKKOl.VF.D: Tint
WHEREAS..
THEREFORE

llV‘IT*" FURTHER RE8OLVEH

A 8eka&lt;i«

."Hl. V r II

TIUHIKFORE. H

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mr and Mrs. ouy Makley and
children were Sunday guests ot Mr.
and Mrs. Blake Makley In Char­
lotte.
Mr and Mrs. Isaac Williams and
grandchildren of Dowling spent
Sunday with Chas. Farlee and fam­
ily. In lhe afternoon Mr. and Mrs.
Williams and Mrs. Chas. Farlee
called on Mr. and Mrs. Adelbert
Slocum and Mr. and Mrs. Truman
Munlon in Woodland.
, The United Brethren Missionary
1 society will meet with Mrs. Ruth
Fisher this week Wednesday at their

H I

THEREFORE. II

Itt.l tc
Kr&lt;» ulv&lt;n &gt; t ti

I RTHKR RESOLVED: Ti

Htatiac
anlalian
I

. &gt;1.

board will use their influence to
maintain
little schoolhouse

MARKS STORES,

FURTHER REHOI
nubliahr.l in th

exhibited al Chicanos
merchandise mart.

YANKEE SFULNGR.
Church services Sunday School
al 3. preaching at l every Bunday.
Rev. R. a Houghton, pastor.
The Yankee Springs school No. 1
home coming last Saturday was
fine, about 50 present. All had *
good time reminiscing about things
that happened back In their school

Miss Freda Makley and Paul Des­
granges of Lake Odessa spent Sun­
day al Ramona Park
Grand
I Rapids.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Royston and
three children of charlotte were
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Kantncr
Sunday guesU of ‘ Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Sandbrook were Mr. and
Mrs Bert Rollers of Lake Odessa.
Mrs George Beliington of McBain.
Mr. and Mrs. George Sandbrook and
son of Mount pleasant, the Willis.
Wilfred. Thomas and Ralph Sand­
brook families.
Lyle Sandbrook
returned
to
Blanchard with Ralph Sandbrook
for a weeks visit.
Mrs. Jay Ditman of Detroit is
spending a week with her parents,

HE IT FURTHER RE8OLVKD:
S-'l" 00 t&gt;»r

• I)..!, .r.j

were

but Is improving.
Rollo Johnson and family spot
Saturday In Battle Creek, -w,.
Getting preUy dry in Yanin
Springs, we need a good shower. V
William Strong «nd Nancy Ann of one is thirsty yet as there's pienl
Jackson spent Friday there.
of good water.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Kantncr of
Yankee Springs and Hastings 1
Hastings and Mrs. Carl Wespintet. B. churches will unite and have
Jr., and son of Detroit called on Mr picnic next Saturday al Streetei
and Mrs Levi Kantner Sunday- landing. Gun lake.
evening.
POWRRS ECHOU.
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Carl Seager had the misfortui
The newly elected school director to lose a good horse which w
is Aubrey Swift. Mrs. Winnie Bux­ struck by lightning during Ratu
ton was elected as moderator‘td fill
k
the unexpired term caused by. the
resignation of Clem Kidder.
Detroit spent the week end wi
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert McGlocklln their parents.
spent Sunday al Horace Wagoner's
near Olivet.
Grand Rapids spent Mond
Saturday being Miss Thelma Tuesday at her brother's.
Bponseller's birthday. Enid cheese­ Palmer's.
man was her guest for the day.
The Irving Garden Club n
Vincent Walton of Ashland, Ohio. and. their families met al S
is visiting his brother. Clyde Wai- Landing. Gun lake, for a
* |
ton
i Sunday.
About M poopto
Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sponseller • present
and family spent Sunday with Mr :
Mr. and Mrs. Miner Palmer
and Mrs. Harve Furlong, north of | in Grand Rapids Friday on
NxahvlHe.
I neas.

UK IT FURTHER KF.8OI

WHERKAH

eaten. Miss Gerry Mitchell to
shown as she devoured a plat*
from which she had lust eaten

RESOLVED

VACATION SENSATIONS!
BRUNSWICK TIRES
THEREFORE

New Brwnswiclu!

SENTRY 4 PLY STANDARD
$395

'PPluHTHF.R RESOLVED:

MB mM urtitinn was ralrrrad

..I W. Ulin ton

I Hi(n nil
Min

Inrthrr. that th

30x3 Vi
440x21
450x20

$4.10
. $4.35

INNER

1501M

440x21
450x20
450x21

S5.ro
$5.15

89c

77c

Aid. Coleman.

.aid nit If on

• EAR.
opinion
the prHtinnr
THEREFORE

BUG SCREENS

Touch Up Black 4

9 os. can

1X

FENDER BRUSH rtAc
Short Handle

POLISH CLOTH

4 4

5 yards

Isl

DUCO CLEANER ArtC
AND POLISH
Xtof

SPARK PLUGS

Aft*

WIIKRKAX

« . A Srha l

WHERE AH

THEREFORE. n

CHAMOIS

13 tn. x 18 In. French
Tanned

HE IT FURTHER RF.SOI
mnr.i rinrnl

W. A

AAc
SJG

WW

SPOMCI

8rh..ier,

-rh&gt; apt-rot r.1 and xlnplad.
HF. IT FURTHER RF.HOLVED: Thai
WHEREAS

It it tha hot judam.nl

STANDARD ARISTOCRAT

COOL WEAVE Fl

•Nothing *• obstinately stands in
L’* (£?,p‘V
la nsraar &lt;
district anna vhirh tha
• Sjo'nl-jt u4 afcas tha
•”r« nlifc tha amaaal ot

*••«*&gt;«« at
I. and lb

*fi pride of opinion: while nothing Is
L O. H01"An auto traveling 45 miles an
hour Is extremely dangerous. Any-

HAVE A GOOD TIME AND
HASTINGS. MICH.

Amelia Earhart.

�Tnr HASTINGS BANNpt. TH^DAy..JULY M IBM
McCALLVM SCHOOL REUNION. ]
MIDDLEVILLE.
Est. Etta Mather. Order appoint-'
EAST GUN LAKE.
Admr. filed, order for publication
entered.
Ing Admr. entered.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Win. Crawford were
Our reunion was held Saturday i Mrt. Pauline Dally, aged 79 was
Est. Mary E. Larkin. Order. ap- Pleasantly surprised last Friday by and it was a gala day Indeed. Over 1 found dead In her room In Grand
Eat. Henry J. Fa til. Final account
filed, order assigning residue en­ pointing Admr. entered, bond of their nephew Merrit crans, of Den- two hundred people gathered from Rapid*. She was a resident In this
tered. discharge of Admr. issued, es­ Admr. filed, letters of Admr. Issued. ver- Colo., culling on them.
far and near to partake of lhe boon- । vicinity for some years, and was
r
PROBATE COURT.
This
sadorder llUUling
limiting KkUCUICIU
settlement entered.
Th
,s ----community
tate cruurreu.
enrolled.
, uiucr
ITllCICU,
--- —
------- -■&gt; was
“— -again
------ sad
“ ­ teous dinners for which this com- well known here.
.... . for
.
.
.
. .
.. . no- d‘',,ed hv .th*
(MMM (MUMU
i E4L John N. Stuart. Bond on sale
Est. Alvin Hathaway. Bond of petition
hearing
claims
filed,
Ul* J”1’’ nl k.in.kA. munlty b famed. The pop and Ice
Aifred whlle who dled recentl.. Bt
- Muhll.n, h*M
I filed, oath before sole filed.
fnend. Mrs
Mrs. Cora Hovl
Hoyt. flh
She
be cream stand was rushed all day, the lhe counly hotne WBS B resldent
executor filed, letters testamentary Uce to creditors issued.
,nend
* will »*•
•I tkr City Hall
». a. v. &lt;«*■ ■
Est. Ellen K. Stuart Bond on sale issued, order limiting settlement enEst./ Burdette Briggs. Order ap- greatly missed by all. Her kindness generous dishes and cones and ice jJcre wmt. yegy, BB0 when he lived
pati a rttaHlloa
in
the
school
will
never
be
forgot
­
filed, oath before sale filed
cold non
pop belns
being popular
twoular with all.
all. with a'slstcr.
tered.
pointing Admr entered, bond of
ten.
Our schoolhouse gleamed in Its
ISt. Martha E. Brown Waiver of
Est. Francls.J. Barry. Order al-1 Admr. filed, letters of Admr. Issued,
We learn by lhe Grand Rapids
Wm. Crowford. Mrs. James Null new wiilte paint and the well which
notice filed, order assigning residue lowing claims entered.
order limiting settlement -entered.
a’nd Virginia Von Hout were in Has- was driven after the last reunion papers of the death of Franklin
entered.
Est. John M. Doster, petition for petition for hearing claims filed.
Prlndlp qt Gladwin, where he had
tmgs on business Tuesday.
was a special delight to tiie toddlers
Est. Alvin Hathaway Proof of will Admr. filed, petition tor special notice to creditors Issued.
I Th&gt; school meeting was Meld who took turns pumping water on lived for many years; he had often
Admr. filed, order appointing special
Est. Earl Beattie. Order appointfiled, order admitting will entered.
Aumr. entered,
cu-rru. bond
uu..u of
u. special
.pec.a. 1 Ing
mg Admr
Aamr. entered,
enterea. bond
oonu of
or Admr.
Aomr.
J?!
each other. After thu multitude was ,visited relatives here. He was nearly
Admr.
Est- Viola Couch. Nomination of Admr.
filed, letters of special Admr. filed, letters of administration istta J will
hX Jul? m pecUl fed. Rev. Isaac Osgood called the I 90 years old. He recently attended
guardian filed, order appointing issued.
July m
30
sued, order limiting setliement en- "meeting
“•'Mr will be held Julv
business meeting. Twelve former,; the prlndlc family reunion and wu*
Qdn. entered, bond of Odn. filed,
Nita
Mae
Null
U
home
after
teachers were present. Mrs. Martha 1 taken 111 and was unable to return
Est. Mary N. Williams. Inventory tered. petition for hearing claims
letters ot guardianship Issued, in­
Rxp.o,l« «l cio«era»le. Mr.. M»ry . J““ !j"‘“
filed.
i filed, notice to creditors Issued, war- spending a week with friends in Replogle of Cloverdale. Mrs. Mary,
ventory filed.
Hire or Buibre Corner.. Wm. OU, o&lt;
iw°r*
Est. George w. Lawrence Order runt and inventory filed, final ac- Prairieville.
Est. Lucy S- Daniels. Final ac- nsslgning residue, entered, dis- count of special Admr. filed, order
Curl Schultze is suffering with a Glass creek. Lena Havens Hart of
‘
febunt filed.
Brush Ridge. Blanche McCallum
^v pru,dle
B niece, Mrs
charge of Admr. Issued, estate en- . allowing account entered, discharge broken leg. received from a bad fall.
h"e
&lt;&gt;“&gt;« «&gt;•
Mr. and Mrs. Mcrl Boysen and Holnies of Pontiac. Mayme Adams
Est. Ledlonls N. Durkee. Annual rolled.
1 of special Admr. issued.
sons
motored
to
Ohio
to
spend
the
Titus
of
Cloverdale.
Fvm
Osgood
11
”
■
■ecount filed.
Est. Perry M. Campbell. Order
Est. John J. Beattie. Order —
ap­
ourncs. local.
wv«.. Grace Chamberlain
L Rugg was in Detroit on
Barnes,
pointing Admr entered, bond of week end with relatives.
Est. John F. Kocker. Annual ac­ allowing account entered.
Clark of Kalamazoo. Mabel Wood- Friday of last week
Ert. Mary A. Burgess Inventory­ Admr. filed, letters o! administra­
count filed.
CARLTON CENTER.
Arthur Kenyon of Arlington street
tion issued, order limiting settle­
In Re Jewel Drain. Petition for Med.
The marriage of Mias Anna Beck man Keller of Hastings. Esther Osgood Johncock of Gun lake. Mary is building a cement block garage In
Board of determination filed, order I Est. Anna Benson. Petition for ment entered, petition for hearing
appointing board entered, notice to Admr. filed.
claims filed, notice to creditors is­ .. .he^repj. M
e‘
Est. Victor and Agnes Benson. sued. warrant and Inventory filed.
board issued.
-- ------------------ -- — -------- - ----------Threshing seems to be the order
I
I final account of special Admr filed. their pastor. Rev Fem Wheeler, of­ There were «nerel people prerent o, thc
„m u ,
■ . Eat. John McLravy. Waiver of no­ Petition for guardian filed.
„h»
rehool
ore, Jx- gooa „„
„a J
flee filed, order appointing Admr.
Eit. Annie E. Young Will filed, order allowing account entered, dis- ficiating
The young couple were who attended school here over alxpetition for probate filed.
------• '—
*------------J '
charge
of*special
Admr
Issued.
entered.
attended by the bride’s sister. MLss ty-five years ago. The officers re­ very good quality.
Est. Orson B Garrett, inventory
, Est. R. Sidney French. Petition
Est Will W. Sheffield. Bond on Phyllis Beck and David U*ary ot elected were: Pres.. Isaac Osgood;
E. F. Blake is enjoying a two
Secy. Lena Laubaugh; Treas.. Ger­ weeks' vacation from his Lansing
for widow's allowance filed, order. filed.
sale filed.
Hastings, Only tiie Immediate rel­
trude springer. Then the program position with the stale
Est. Omar R. Shaw Petition tor
(ranting widow's allowance entered, '
"How will you find good? It Is not atives of the bride and groom were chairman. Mrs. Maybelle Osgood
Est. Martha E Brown. Discharge ।determination of -heirs tiled, order
Ur. C- A. E. Lund is back from a
present. The bride has lived in
a thing of choice; 11 Is n river that
of Admr Issued, estate enrolled.
jfor
.
publication entered.
Carlton nearly ull of her life and took charge Welton Brooks gave three weeks' vacation.
Est. Anna Ostroth. Inheritance [
Est. Alvin Hathaway Petition —
for. flows from tiie foot of the invisible graduated from
Hustings
High two fine songs. Mrs. Pearl Newland
C. A. Gardner and family re­
hearing claims filed, notice to credi- Throne, and It flows by the path of
tax determined.
school in June, the groom also and Evelyn rendered a lovely piano turned Sunday evening from a
i obedience."—George Eliot.
Est. Celia H- Traver. Petition for tors issued.
i graduated from Hastings High and nnd violin duct. Our play. "Polish­ week's trip up through the upper
also attended M S C He has been ing Henry." was especially good and part of Michigan returning through
Laubaugh
distinguished Wisconsin and across Jhe lake to
employed in Carlton for the past Russell
six years. They will reside In Has­ himself as a character actor. Miss Ludington.
tings where Mr. Cairns has a posi­ Chrystal Thomas of Hastings gave
C. W. Bennett and family spent
several
of
her
celebrated
readings last week touring northern Michi­
tion with Consumers Power Co.
-'■UTICE UJ SPECIAL ASSESSMENT
t
Their many friends Join In wishing in which she used local names to gan.
The Strlcklen girls are visiting
them success and happiness In the delight of her audience who will
More than 200.000 square feet of
quote them for months to come. Her their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
^helr married life.
surface, inside and out. including
also
There
mere was a
u splendid
spienuia attendance
am-nuance whistling
.......'
” was
--— ---- appreciated.
---------- Mrs.
.
G D. Whitmore, and attending Bi­
Hilton.
lhe main plant, offices and ware­
at the ice cream social given by the । Osgood called for reminiscences but ble school, at the M. E. church.
Enameled 7-Qt.
Carerre c««k.r .nd
houses. were redecorated by the
Carlton L- A. S. Thursday night, i,nOst
th'“m
K&gt;8«led from beAlabastine
Co.
For
the
purpose
u
Anolher
one
is
being
planned
for
I
hlJld
hands
W
e
heard
frogs
PLEASANT HILL.
CANNERS
CANNER
the month of August
I teacher's desk;" X'latk in teachers
Michiana,
held
Ught-refiectlve cement coating was
Miss Elsie Rowlader has been as-)
With double well, rack
,,0,d“ H Quart*
Mr and Mrs. c Fisher of Has- j chair;" and outrages on the person slstlng her grandmother. Mrs. R. J.1
used for the exterior. At night the
and cover
$Q.OO
buildings are illuminated by flood­
Ungs and Mr. and Mrs. Al. Bellamy ot G,Ql richly ^appreciated martyr Williams, with her household duties
$*.)»
3
lights of 5.000 watts. This makes
the past week.
of Detroit were guests Sunday ot 1 "Teacher's Beau "
the plant one of the show places of
Mr and Mrs Fred Henney ana son.1 The sports committee furnished a
Mr and Mrs. Clyde Daniels and
Grund Rapids.
Wayne Nichols of Corning. N Y . full day. Izola Klmmey winning the son of North Carolina visited his
j
Lowell 3-Gal. Compressed
°nt Gall°"
Technicians of the company de­
also visited at the Henney home rolling pin contest .look out Stan­ sister and husband. Mr. and Mrs.
,,
.
.
1ley&gt;
—&lt;&gt;. mand
■'
K*
—IT I 1.1,1 •' I lhe
It* natl.
Nova
McKlbbln
nail
­
veloped lhe product for the exterior
Matt
Bedford, last week.
Sunday evening
AIR SPRAYER
Thermal Jugs
cement and brick work, according
The Irving Garden club and their
Mr and Mrs E J Beck und fam­ driving contest &lt;a little skull dug• III heard.
to John ‘C. Corcoran, treasurer and
ily visited relatives In Kalamazoo gery there). The boys gave us spikes families held their picnic at Street­
• tiao. Ml
general manager. Grand Rapids
and oak planks and of course It ers. Gun lake. Sunday, fifty-six
Bunday.
paint contractors had the Job.
was funny but remember we aren't being present.
Corcoran said that during the
professional carpenter*. A hard
At
the
aiuiua)
school
meeting
It
Deaf Man Hears Minister
' shower eliminated the tug-of-war was voted to close lhe school for the
Electric Sandwich
Universal Household
first six months of the company's
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.
First Time in Years and many olher events, but the boys following year and transport the r°
expanded operations sales of dry
TOASTER
SCALE
u- "’ilu,d- Fr».l H. Bellsne*
wail finish products and the new
After using OURINE, the prxpn- ; did some good work in the cracker pupils to the Thornapple-KeHogg
ration
of
u
Vienna
specialist,
only
|
oil paint line Increased about 50
relay and Lester Lord and Buryi school.
per cent and the pay rolls more
a short while, Joseph Meredith of Cook sure con send a baseball
Mr. and Mrs. Matt Bedford at­
than 135,000. A dozen men were
Ontario. Canada, reports that all places.
tended the Featherbone factory pic­
lhe head noise's have gone and ij Many thanks to all the committee nic nt Caledonia Pars Sunday.
added to the sales staff, the office
can hear people talking I heard j members who made this a real suc­
force was doubled, five technicians
Mr. and Mrs Bert Palmer and , „linril
Buy one can Albatpar Quick Drying Varnish—
«inl&gt;rr at th* &lt;‘llr Hail uu the
the minister read lhe scripture for ' cess. There Is much work and detail children attended the funeral of a । Hb &gt;!■ •i Jul* a t&gt; ms.
were added to lhe research depart­
any sixe—regular price, and get another
ment and factory employment was
the flrst time in two years." If you involved in a large affair of tills relative at Hastings Thursday
increased. It Is estimated that about
are tiard of heating, bothered by kind and the people are to be com­
Little Nancy Berends fell into a
can for JUST 1c
(50.000 was spent with Grand Rap­
head noises, earache, ringing and mended in working together so well containing two feet of water
ids concerns for equipment and
last Thursday. Luckily her elder
buzzing in ears, sick with the dread splendidly
supplies.
brother happened to be near and
of approaching deafness, get OUR"Don't
be surprised
if^lhe attend- Jumped in after her. she escaped
INE today. Easy to use. Relief is
----- ------------r------------------------------We are exclusive dealers for Alaquick Costs only a few cents a ance reaches a 20,000.000 mark.— with only a few bruises.
HASTINGS
PHONE 2331
baslinc products.
day. Money back if not satisfied— Karl A Crowley, solicitor general.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Charles Bennett vis­
Carveth &amp; Stebbins, the Rexall United States Post Office Depart­ ited his sister and family in Grund ,
j Rapids Sunday.
i Store.—Adv.
• ment.

RTHOUSE NEWS

Hot Weather Items

*3”

98'

$250

87'

She Turned New
Leaves for 1936

Alabastine Firm
Redecorates Plant

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE

Harriett? Blbblns. ot Imperial
Valley, CaflT7r*declded tb turn
over more than une new leaf fur

lettuce leaves, from which she
made herself this novel cos­
tume. She Is shown above In a
field near her home, where she
picked the hltuce from the naw
winter crop.
MOTICB OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

r
r» furtiit, „«
niun &lt; oiincll • ■II

COOKING SCHOOL
•

'

CONDUCTED

BY

DOROTHY K. HARRIS
NOTED

FREE!
$89.50 A. B. Table Top Gas Range

One Automatic Gas Water Heater
Two Beautiful, Indirect Floor Lamps

One Indirect Table Lamp--Also

HOME

ECONOMIST

The Gas Stove Used at This School will be
Auctioned to the Highest Sealed Bidder!

COMMUNITY HALL - HASTINGS
ON

NORTH

MICHIGAN

AVENUE,

JUST

NORTH

OF

STATE

Thursday and Friday, July 30-31 • 2:00 P.M.

Many Other Useful Prizes Given!

"for Economy Cook with Natural Gas”

EVERY LADY ATTENDING
RECEIVES A DOOR PRIZE!

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

14 PAGES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1936

SECTION ONEr—PAGES 1 to 8

BURHANS TO
9767
THIHTYWRACE
POLITICAL 'NOTES OUST III) MICE
, ’""SuXTS a. MARKETS MANY |'EARL
OPPOSE FRANK I
MILK PRODUCTS
.Tr.'.™'
FOH P HMAPlESj
REPUBLICAN
G
WORSE |
BEING
Corn-Hog the Largest Item !

|UI our country some tendency to-,
Amounting to Over
I
iIn our country some tendency to-;
ntruouvHH
wards restriction on this freedom
Representativee
NOMINATING
PETITIONS To the Editofa of the Hastings Under Che NRA there was a pos- SENTIMENT IN COUNTY I
ORZAMEBY
THREE MILES TO BB
Banner:
i slbillty of the restriction of free-,
According to word received by Dr.
FAVORS CHLORIDE
1 52634 in rental and benefit pay-!
ARE FILED WITH THE
HAS DAY AND NIGHT
The Bany County Republican dom of the press. Very recently
Prank Carrothers this morning,
TOPPING OF BIA
ments
in
the
three
years
since
the
'
SHIFT
Earl L. Burhans. former state rep­
Committee Is very much pleased, there has been an invasion of Use
COUNTY CLERK
COVERAGE
THIS MASON
creation of the Agricultural Adjust- 1
resentative from Van Buren county
with the announcement in your is- &gt; privacy
of correspondence
and
l ment Administration, according to
'
------------has responded to a call by Barry
;sue of Hie 22r.d. granting space to communications between
private
FEW OFFICES
REMAIN
information received by Abner E WOLVERINE BRAND
county republicans and win enter NO LOCAL TAXES
.
1 the committees of the two major Individuals. That sort of thing is COST IN MAINTENANCE
ii&lt;nlll rx nr- n-n..nnn Lamed. State Director. National
,
BLANK ON TICKETS
i*rll®a 10 dllcUM
Uaues of the strange In American life.
WOULD BE REDUCED 1 Emergency Council for Michigan. |
fPOPULAR BUTTER X™ m, ,Ub“X“‘“ .uSn"m
DLHiirx UPl l IUI\C
O |! }£
nipalgn
j Our committee hope from time to
REQUIRED FOR WORK
" I* w
campaign.
------------. i Rental and benefit payments In
------ - —
! reads u follows?
«
We **Ueve ,n fwdom of speech. time to take advantage of your
Five Candidates Seek th
vne । freedom of the press, and freedorp kind offer and to present some of Rural Folks on the Main Barr&gt;' county for the wheat program A Fine Sum Is Distributed
Carb
and Gutter Expense I*
mu
„ .. 'totalled $79.64130: corn-hpgs $100.u m
.u a
of the radio, and believe that these what we believe to be the Important
Office of County
Highways Suffer
I—
•
F.nnh
Each Mnnth
Month Amnnir
Among
I
**«• “ “u"
0154)9; ------------------sugar $3.268 55.
Made Light for Prop­
,
6
; “Ild aggressive campaign for state
are necessary for fiee Institutions in issues of the present campaign, and
I Rental and benefit payments in
Coroner
Its Patroni
I senator. I ask undivided allegtence
this we hope to do in a sane and
Most
I America.
erty Owners
The Banner has received many
M ‘fm X amountfd
10 M 790 7
- -----------------------The
Farmers'Co-operative ‘ becausein four years r shall plan
Tuesday afternoon at five ..7 M
—
The leaders of the Republican dignified manner, not dealing in
No doubt our readers noticed la
tnree-year period, creamery of Nashville report a very ^
to $lve
wa&gt; to
a candidate from
the zero hour was reached for filing party hove re|&gt;entedly called atten- personalities but setting forth some rrat„d..,0„.
...
‘“eoX.
T^remre'^.n'^
S
amount
was
uald
...
...
....
.
.
.
vnnr
ommrv
—
A
..
petltloiin for nomination at the tlon to the fact that ft has facte which should be given con­
| n*ht for Van Buren county you fight columns of council proceedings tn
fBeptembcr 15 primary. Thirty can-. been demonstrated by the "tragic sideration by the voters of Barry two weeks ago suggesting the use of' during the first five months of 1936. months of 1936.
chloride on the 200 miles of county!
states,
Since April 1, eleven cars of but-' tor Barrj’county. I shall co-operate I small type, which was probably not
didates seek the various offices.
| experience” of other nations that a county.
ter averaging 22.000 pounds each . and work harmoniously with Cover- read by
f
readers It
On the republican ticket ail pres- controlled press and controlled ra- Barry Co. Republican Committee
highways. People whose homes are
have been shipped. During May and nvor Flttgeralds administration tor
1
*.
,
[
B
ent Incumbents who are asking for (]j0 can deceive the most intelligent
No material received from Demo­ on such highways say that it is ai- '
June approximately 8.000 pounds ot th® R°°d ol lt*c district and all of.co “rned the black topping of certh ,5COnd Ur,n wU1 1x1 “''“PP05*1* jieople. There has been recently cratic committee.
most impossible to describe the dis- j
llquid skim milk were used dally in lu P*ople.“
I tain streets in Hastings. There were
with the exception of the Judge of
comfort
of
living
close
to
a
i
1
Probate where Laurence E Barnett
making casein.
|
Earl L. Burhans. 118 resolutions by the council, and u
TO LOCATE NEW WELLS
The creamerv Is equipped to sell • Republicans here, dissatisfied with I m»ny legal notices, published two
that has been graveled but
enters against stimrt clement
DR. YOUNG WITHDREW
-------- cream
chlorlded. It Is needless to add .....
--------- as
_ -------.
the
antl-admlnlstratlon
record
Three candidates, Walter Fisher.
FOR CITY WATER SUPPLY.
sweet
such ...
when advan‘
-------- -------------- --------— of weeks, notifying property owners
IN FAVOR OF BURHANS the driver of a car on such roads)
am-­ along the streets that are tn
tageotu or make it into butter— i Prank
F7rfln*c Mosier after camnalirn
campaign nr
prom
George Clouse. Wm. C- Strum seek i The city engineer was directed by
realizes not only the discomfort but'
Wolverine brand—when this Is not lses of whole hearted support, were paved, or paved, guttered and
the office of county trea—rer now the council at their session Friday
FEW CHANGES ARE MADE so; and it uses the skim milk either
responsible for drafting Mr. curbed. The city Is able to make
held by Lorenzo Maus, democrat evening to make the necessary tests And This Fine Spirited Act also the danger of such travel.'
where clouds of dust kicked up by,
for making casein or milk powder. Burhans into the primary.
running for his third term.
f0r ihc location of another well.
SINCE REPORT FILED
Should Name Burhans
on automobile ahead of him may •
property owners for such improve­
Two have filed petitions for the | wjth whlch to supply the water
A day and night shift Is necessary '
'’ “
IN JUNE
make it almost Impossible for him
office of register of deeds— Vemor wr»rks station with sufficient water
ment The price fixed for paving to
. to comply with the demand for
for Senator
jjo sec an approaching car. or how!
Webster and Maurice Waters. The to meet al) situations and emergenproperty owners is $12 for each fourpowdered skim milk and buttermilk ।
The Banner Is In receipt of the
near he is to u car that Is ahead of. FIVE TOWNSHIPS LEVY
rod frontage, and for curb and gut­
only office the republicans have left' Cle, if that can possibly be.done
' which has grown so rapidly that it ।
—-------- ------------ -------tering $18 for four-rod frontage, or
vacant is that of county surveyor and It can. Near the Bookcase fac- following letter from Dr. O. R. him and going in the same direction.!
Is
now
sold
by
the
truckload
Instead
'
NO TAX THIS YEAR of carload as formerly. Because of'
The figures which the Banner I
a total of $30. The city has provid­
The main contest on the demo- tory the same vein that supplies the Young, of Lawton. which we gladly
these various uses for their prod-1
ed that this nped not all be paid at
cratlc side Is for sheriff where Geo. city has been encountered at a rea- give place in this issue. He evidences presented two weeks ago are not our !
Assyria
Center,
Monroe
Dis
­
own.
They
were
given
by
Mr
A.
L.
j
Myers. John Van Der Kolk and sonabie depth The water-bearing a fine spirit and desire for harmony
ucts. and because It Is a co-opera­
...
...........
.
gravel
b
by
R
lh
|
ck
layer
Brown, maintenance superintendent;
Chas. A. Woodruff are candidates.
trict Granted Slight In­
| equal annual InstaUmenU of $10
tive concern, the prices of the |
In withdrawing as a primary can­ for the state trunkline highways of j
Two seek the office of representa- of clay, so that the waler should be
Nashville creamery compare favor- INDEPENDENTS ON 8COR. ' each without interest.
creases ih Allotments
tlve. Frank W Bennett and Chas. good. Undoubtedly it will be fully didate for state senator and urges Barry county, and no doubt came |
Up to this date the council has
ably with those of other plants.
'
------------------------------ING SPREE IN 18 TO 5
The Barry county tax commission
I authorized the paving, or pavement,
F. Parker The circuit court com­ tested before any well shall be locat­ the nomination and election of Hon. from the state highway department.
A recent comparison of the net.
Earl Burhans. of Paw Paw. for that According to those figures, about an completed their labors Thursday. returns to patrons per pound of but- I
missioner's office is not filled.
curb and gutter, for three miles at
VICTORY
ed. On the flats near the Broadway
14.1. year. That is about
___ A aa
Following is. the official list as bridge the same vein can be reach- place. We sincerely hope that Dr inch of material is thrown out of a They mode very little change in the terfat made among nine creameries |
streets this
Young's withdrawal in the interests mnln travelled highway every year allocations of taxes from that which in Michigan and Indiana who are i U|| I CO Q| AiiQ ill IT
filed with County clerk Allan Cmuch as can be handled In one sea­
ot uarty harmony may resuli in the by automoblllsts This would apply was reported by the Banner follow­ members of the Mid-West Producers |
ol-RMo UU I
Hyde:
son. There are about 39 miles of
»
Wif‘
°* Mr.
ing
their
June
meeting.
Only
these
Republican Ticket
to such roads as the one to Free­
In Hastings, of which about
Creameries. Inc . showed the Nash-1
TWO HOME RUNS streets
ber. We need a state senator at port, or Gun lake, or the State road. few changes were made:
Representative—Ellis E. Faulkner.
fourteen are already paved, leaving
vllle plant ranking second. During i
Lansing who will support the state Figuring the cost of gravel at 90c
Monroe --------school ---------------district in Johns- the last flush season about $29,000
Barry.
-----------Team Has High Batting Av­ twenty-five miles unpaved Probably
administration instead of opposing per yard, to recover a 20 foot high- town w“s Riven four mills,
Judge of Probate—Stuart Cle­ CONSUMERS PLANS
20 per cent of this, or five mllea,
was paid out each month, due to
program as did Senator Mosier. way to a depth of an inch costs
'The
m'* McKelvey school' •*'
district of the loyalty of Its patrons who ap­
ment. city; Laurence e
Barnett,
erage of .335—D’Donnell
would be streets on which there U
CELEBRATION HERE itsFollowing
Is Dr. Young’s letter:
I more than $200 a mile. Making Maple Grove did not have their preciate having their own plant to
very little travel which would not
city.
Leads With .500
July 27. 1930.
' three applications of chloride on budget at the June meeting and sell to and which provides them a
Prosecuting Attorney—Archie D.
require paving. Probably tiiere would
Employees
to
Be
Honored
at
Hastings
Banner,
were
then
granted
four
mills
for
The
Hastings
Independents
con। such a county roa| would cost subMcDonald, city.
not be more than twenty miles that
। very desirable market.
Hastings.
Michigan.
.
Unurt their «Umln, are« at the--------------- .------- -- ,
I Sheriff—Jay Blakney. Freeport.
stanllally $150 per mile, at present school district purposes. At the
Golden Anniversary
Gentlemen:
I prices of chloride The advantage of meeting of the commission last week
fair grounds last Sunday and if the council can duplicate Ite ree­
County clerk—Allan c Hyde. As­
Party
trounced the Dorr Merchants to the i ord of this year for the next six or
syria.
Some weeks ago when I an- ■ the
----------------------------------------------chloride would be that it-----------would the district was given 23 mills, as BUILDING NEW RURAL
tune of 18 to 5. The Hastings attack' seven years, all the principally
Hostings division employees
of nounced that I would be a candl- relieve the discomfort of traycl for they had presented their budget
' county Treasurer—Waller Fisher.
. .
SERVICE LINES HERE was lead by Jake Miller and Bill. streets of Hastings will have been
Woodland; Geo. A. Clouse. Hope; consumers Power company. with date for State Senator the press of automobihsLs os well as for people which made the lower amount suffi­
cient.
each getting four hits and , paved, curbed and guttered.
William c Slruin. Assyria.
their wives or husbands, are plan- Van Buren. Barry, and Allegan who live along the gravelled nighConsumers Power Company Hackney,
Algonquin Lake school district in
Jake's home run in the eighth InFortunately the city's part of th*
counties gave the fact publicity ways. It would alsu save In the cost
Register of Deeds—Vcrnor Web­
•
nlng
on
a
dinner
party
In
connecBegins Record Construc­ । nlng with the bags loaded account- I cost does not have to be raised by
Now with the dead line for filing pc- of maintenance, and would remove Rutland presented no budget al the
ster. Barry; Maurice Waters.
'
ed for four runs. He also clouted a' tax. About $16,000 has come to the
Commlssioner—' U°n with the
celebration tltloos set for July 2$. I wish to ad- an element tof danger to automobile , June session and was given four
Circuit
Court
. company's
------r—----------tion
Program
vise you that I am not filing? fhave traffic.
“ ’
mills. They presented their budget
four bagger in the sixth with Hoe- 1 city as we have explained thia you
Adalbert Cortrlght. city; Wm G. ot its golden anniversary.
tu it* part of the weight tax and the
When all these advantages are this time, which cailea for eight ' The Hastings Division of Consutn- venair on the runways.
Bauer, city.
i Tills meeting Is to be held at the found in my canvass of the district
rDrain Commissioner-Andrew A Parker hotel in Hastings on the eve- that there Is strong support for Earl considered it would seem as if it mills instead of four. The larger ers Power Company is facing the
Dorr scored four of their five $2550.000 of the gas tax for 1933 and
largest line construction program In runs in the fourth when O’Donnell so far In 1936. which the law nroBarrv county to I 6U® Tas granted.
Matthews, city.
nln8 of August 3rd. At this meeting Burhans of Paw Paw and petitions । would be wise for Barry
Its
history.
lost
hte
control
temporarily
allowfhg
vldes shall be divided between
515G
mlUfor
chloride
or.
iu
The
Assyria
Center
district
allotCounty, Coronor—C P Lathrop. “H employees who have been with in Barry county have been clrcu- spend
spend $150 a mile for chloride on its
Already more miles of rural serv- three hits and three walks, walking county and the incorporated clttea
tlie company for a
u period
j&gt;ertod of from latcd
—and
...» better mibu
mvuunu county roads.
roads, In
jn view of the fact I1 ment was increased from 3.5 mills to '
Cordon F. Fisher. Edwin J. Pratt., ji the
than a thousand
... .XT
■ , -_______
— colled
_______for 1Ce UneS ,'aVe bCen bUllt 111 1930 two runs in. The fifth run was and villages of each county. Thus it
j 5 to 15 years will be awarded service persons have signed requesting him | .....
tHat it. costs more than. M
that
to .Vre-. &lt;-5■ IBflls.
as thalr_____
budget
| than were built d’'rl,&gt;g 1935.
scored In the eighth when Kurdelskf can be seen that the taxpayers wttt
Representative—Frank W Ben­ ' pins in recognition of their years of to be their candidate drafted to store the irravei to the roads. Anoth- ithe larser amount.
er net
fact mat
that nns
has a
a Dearing
bearing on
on tnei
the' Fhe townships levied no town-1 --Tn ---------------Castleton. Woodland,
■
nett. Maple Grove; Chas F. Parker. I service with the company.
make the race. I wish to sec a unit- ar
----------------- -carlton doubled and scored on Blain's sin- not have to raise any part of
. fine
.. . dust
..
.
"ship
. .. lax .4.1
— year. t4.u
n. and
and Thornapple
Thnminnw tnwnahin^,
that
tills
They were as
townships. some
— g1*’
I Thornapple.
_
clty'» share of the coat of thee*
There are some 24 local employees ed front presented against Frank situation Ls that the
Moder iK-tause
because Ij uo
do not
consider ne
he ' “
Is rcmuvcu
removed by
the
traffic is
is inc
the bindfollows:
Baltimore.
Hastings ------town- twenty-five
miles of
rural lines —
have
In
Sunday -s ngame
the Hastlngltes
three mues
miles 01
of Street
street imne
ImprovwST 1
Judge of Probate—Theodore S K. i who qualify to attend this meeting Muucr
not
corwuaer
uy
mitraiiic
.......................
..
’
"
........
..
•
.
— —
—
J I inree
.......
. .faith
... with
... the
.
.
.togeth-i
..
.Um
Ru'ln
—4 Castleton and Un-v.
been
f'flntmpt
&lt;*&lt;1 fnr
hv
thformer.
has
kept
good
voters
er
which
holds
the
roadway
«hip.
Rutland.
Hope,
been
contracted
for
by
the
farmers.
•
set
the
terrific
batting
pace
of
335
Iso
the
entire
cost
to
the
a.id
receive
service
awards
Under
Reid. Hastings.
• • *
I
actual construction will start
, for a team
’Donnell I1 for
vB
lCam average.
avcrjiKe. Bert
Heri O
ouonneii
for a
a four-rod
four-rod frontage
fronUee rm mm*
। Prosecuting Attorney — Horace date of June 25th some five local os the press of the district and even I er. Of course, a road that has been |
before
leading the hitters, clouting the street —
where
curbing, guttering S
। employees attended a similar meet- his home county and city of Alle-I treated with chloride will lose some DRESS SHOP MOVES
before many
many weeks.
weeks. There
There are
are many
many, t,
l, leading the hitters, elnutlnir
k— _.u.i—
power.-., city.
Tn MCIA/
mOf P.r.^PCC,iVLUn“ thMl C0U S : P*U.Bl B 500 cUp Nexl Sund*y
P^ng will have to be done win bi
—
------- -- I nr
-- ATinM
। ShcrlfT—George H. Myers, city; I Ing in Grand Rapids at which time gon have openly and In my opinion of its fine dust, but it will be but a l
,
,---------....... &gt;
(will nave io oe aone win M
TU NEW LULAIIUN easily qualify, and the Company locals
will inr-nb
AnniunM
. r.but
—1$10
“. aZ---------w,u tf
meet Apex &gt;rv.r
Appliances
from
year
for tz
three years,
John Van Der Kolk. Thornapple. i service awards were passed out to honestly accused Mr. Mosier of dis- fraction of what would be lost if
gladly work with any farm group Grand Rapids at the fair grounds. I the curbing and guttering have
I the employees who had been with loyalty to the administration of the road were not treated.
Chas. A- Woodruff. Rutland.
Dresses Opens in nn effort to help thena secure
County clerk—Jack W O'Connor. the company 15 years or more. Govemdx Frank Fitzgerald. Edwy 1 We are sure we voice the sentl- Cinderella
Summary:
ready been done, it will cost but $4 a
Nom
nn
Woxf
.electric
service.
Lines
are
extended
(
These
employees
were:
F.
EBranch.
Hastings.
,
C. Reid of the-Allegan Gazette, the menus of Die people of Barry county
New Home on West
. wltboul financing where an average Dorr 0 00400010' VW for three years for the paving
County Treasurer—Lorenzo
F.
---------------- ----------Hastings Banner. Don Cochrane of, in expressing the hope that the
Hastings 5 10 113 2 5' alone.
State Street
’of five year-around customers can
Maus, city
' nest L Appelman. Nashville. 24 the Hartford Dav Springs, and H.; county road commission will give
Batteries: Dorr; Herp. Graczyk! One can “• fro™ these MateThe cindereUa dress shop form- be^cu5Td,!° lh*
. . ....
Register of Deeds—Earl R. Boyes, I vear's service; Frank W
Kelley, A. Wood of the Bangor Advance at | these matters their careful consldnrid Kurdelskl; Hastings
O’Don-1 mente that It will not be long before
city.
| Hastings. 23 year's service; Fred K. the very time Mosier started his eration and try chloride on some of erly . located to the Frandsen store | Th® Hastings Division U building nell and Varney.
------------------ --------1 every .4~-4
street in -Hastings
and
every
of miles of rural line to
Circuit Court Commissioner—Not Bechtel. 23 year's service; William hostile attitude toward Fitzgerald 1 the Important highways next year will open the doors of Its new home । ■
approach to the city will be put In
Batting Averages.
on
West
Stale
street
on
Saturday,
I
Caledonia,
Caines
and
Bowne
townnib (I
t)' Hubbell. 17 year’s service.
took him to task will) front page 1 to sec if the use of that chemical
fine condition for travel, and It win
B.
O'Donnell
_500
August
1.
Mrs.
Arlene
Perkins
wiU
shl
’
“
ln
K
,®
n
*
cou
"
‘
&gt;''
*"
Chester
।
Drain Commissioner—Floyd G.
U b expected that Mr. D. E. Karn. editorials and are to be congratu-1 would not only effect a saving, probe Inexpensive to taxpayers.
Hackney
Craig.
| vice-president and general man­ lated on their courageous exposure; duce far greater comfort in driving be manager of the new store which । and Carmel townships in Eaton
Among the projects this year Is a
Young
County coroner—Slewart Lof- “Rer of Consumers Power company of Mosier's failure to fully co-oper- [ and to people living along the conn­ wUl deal exclusively in ladies' ready- county, in Campbell township. Ionia
half mile on North Broadway, from
Miller
____________________
____ W4441
to-wear
with o IU1C
complete
of county,
Sebewa
dahl. Castleton.
Alexander
B I wiU" be at thh meeting on Monday ate with the party that elevated ty’s 200 miles of highways,
U X.UU1MICI®
UX _ line
,
~ . and in -------r . township in
and re- IU-WCUI
the county garage north to the dty
360
Hom. mlUtewy
numerou. petl- I
' duce IHn
—oa
/vIXavv** i.mu.
Gwinn, city.
| evening, to take part in the present­ hlm to Xlffice
the dano»r
danger nt
of ttraffic
accidents,
coats, dresses,
millinery and acces- “’**
limits,
which will be black-topped,
iort«. Thu
The Mrmur
lornur TximhlA
uunMe At/xrA
.lore h«l
hu Uon, ere beta« elreuleud by the| Coville
342
■
&lt;
A x-----------------.
' cnrlAe
County Surveyor—Clayton Green-1 Ing of the service awards. .'
I trust this letter from me with-----------------♦*-*
This will be an Improvement which
l undergone extemlve redecoretlnf.
thM&lt;
. i Irwin ..
field.
| Hastings Division Employees
not only citizens of Hastings but ev­
drawing from the contest will ,»• BIG COOKING
SCHOOL
----------------------------lend
with
lu
ivory
end
buck
fixture.
I
The
Kalamazoo
and
Battle
Creek
I
JBO
-------- &lt;«&gt;----------------Eligible For Service Pins. given as much publicity as my entry ।
ery one who travels over the North
C O’Donnell
and that the newspapers will con- I
PI AY nnUTFQT
T®"
Fifteen Year Group,
DEMONSTRATION ON a"11 orle“m
ul
eorerlM. Wiu . »«“”■., "• •!«&gt; conumplellnt
Broadway approach will appreciate.
uLmuiuma lull up
ol re(lne- tonrtntcUon ot numerous miles ot
Hoevenalr ...
r LH I LUN ICO I
1. Herman Anderson—P. *. T. tinue to speak their mind as to
^36
-------------The Hanover street approach, that
Moor*
235
ment and charm In kreplnj with
m the southern part ot the
on State street from the east, tha
DEADLINE SEPT. 12 ixpanmem
M2-5r.*houl&lt;iJ:0 T1?
Consumers Sponsoring Ono I the fine line ot merchandise they I county.________________________
Varney
,
, „
6
“
i- the
me Stale
btate Senate
senate or be retired to
cemetery
road and Green Str**$
Deadline for the Play Writing ment Substation Operator.
Freeman
200
Today and Tomor­
I ------private life. I shall support. ..
Mr. Earl_|1
«IU carry.--------- -------------------------JH|S
from the west, as well as Woodand
Team average
Contest sponsored by the Hastings
338
3. Ernie Crumback—P. &amp; T. De?­ 1L. Burhans actively and ask my
avenue from Broadwav east to the
row
Civic Players will be Sept. 12. ac­ partment Substation Operator.
me uuvrict
uune who
;-»&gt;
friends In the
district wu
and those
booth CAW TO
term
FOUNDATION WHATEVER SPLENDID FILM
city limits, have already been paved
cording to L. E Barnett, director.
Women of this city and surround­
4 Ben Gfdley—Appliance Depart- ' gave me encouragement to enter the
This may sound like a far-fetched ment Superintendent.
COMES TO STRAND.
race and who signed my petitions. ing territory are evincing much in­
or
In Charge of Van.
Manager Branch of the strand by the city North Broadway, which
date, he says, but actually those
o
r
terest in the de luxe cooking school
5. Harold
iPele) Haynes—Line- to do likewise.
[ U very much elated over being prac- will be fixed this year. Then there
Intending to enter manuscripts mB
n
which Consumers Power is stag­ charged by his wife with assault)
kee Springs Project Deinn.
Yours truly.
tlcally the first movie theater In!
should
delay too taw.
long. Tbe
The plw.
plays ’ a. ray
.houl.l not
noLdri..
Hummel - Relrlwratar
ing today and tomorrow at Com­ to do great bodily harm less than
■
Dr. C. R. Young.
nie» th» Report
submitted must take a minimum
n.L.L__ | gervjce.
Michigan to show “Let’s Sing
munity hall. Michigan avenue, with the crime ot murder, axs tried beof fifteen minutes and not more'
.w.»
____ _
A rumor came from some source ,, Again,
Again." inu
This icatures
features Boooy
Bobby Breen
._ . _rntf.u_.
kJ
Mrs Dorothy Harris in charge.
fore Justice Matthews yesterday
j 7 chet Tompkins—Electric Meter
RELICS
OF
“
QUINTS
”
morning
with
Prosecuting
Attorney
1
and
was
freely
circulated
here
Frlthe Utile boy with the lovely sing- .8UU
proviaea^oe oy uw cuy.
than forty-five minutes to give.
'
I
Mrs.
Harris
Is
known
thruout
mnmlnrr
with
PrrwdHnt
Intr
Allnmav
give, i Department Superintendent.
Each one will be Judged oni the
the basbas- '1 fl Ear] VandUn—Gas Distribution.
Michigan as an expert In Home McDonald representing the .plain- day that the government had defi- Ing voice who appears on the Eddie | . nf,.. UrnnuAUT Tn
NURSING
DAYS
is of dramatic appeal, construction
Economics and will have many new tiff. Kim Sigler the defendant. Mrs. nltely abandoned and had dismissed I Cantor radio program each week, , LULAL MtnUnAN I IU
Five To Ten Year Group.
and adaptability to the amateur j
MAURI C fil fi I IME*
ideas and new dishes to give out to Roush was the only witness placed all th® workers on the Yankee I Clarence Crawford who saw its Ini- I
,
1. Emery (Buster) Apsey—Meter
stage. A first prize of $20,00. a see-}
on the stand.
Springs park project. That seemed ti*l production in Chicago last week
riMflULE WL.U LINE.
May Be Seen in Rexall Con­ her audlenoes.
scc‘ I Reader.
The
after all
Mr. di
Branch
to u.u
bill it,
as |; ~
*,
ond prize of $10.00 and third and*
ine case
case was
was returned
returned to
co the
me dr-j
cir-j unbelievable,
uuucucr«uic, hki
nu the
uic work
wvi* ' was urging o».
*uui w
it. *o
,
.
2. Fred Barlow—Gas Distribution
Then everyone who attends will
vention Train Next
cult
court
for
trial
at
the
Septem'
and
money
so
far
expended
In
puthe
considered
it
as
fine
a
picture
asi
GE.
Goodyear
Appointed
fourth prizes of $5.00 each will be ■1 Foreman.
receive a useful gift as a door
ber
term,
Mr.
Roush's
bail
of
11,000
1
ting
it
across.
It
would
be
a
sorry
he
ever
saw.
and
was
pleased
to
Dealer
for Alabastine
awarded to the winners. Last year | 3. Evlson Beck—Gas Distribution
Week
prize and tickets for drawings will
Leslie Hawthorn* Orville Sayles, Service.
i blow to the Roosevelt admlnlstra- j find It would be here this coming
fine
new-----------gas range,
Among
the many
Interesting r be Issued
--------- on
--- a
- —
------------• being continued.
Junior Walton and Don Peru placed
—------------- —♦-*------------------I tlon In Barry county if that were Sunday and Monday.
Productl
&amp;as water heater, some beautiful
4. Dorr Caln—P. Ar T- Depart- 1 things to be seen on the million a
lamiu nM 01h„ „Ucl„.
In the first group while Mrs. Haw­ ment Substation operator.
VERMONTVILLE WILL
true, for It would be the best pos------------------ * ♦ *
The
The Alabaatlne
Alabastine Company,
company, manti
manu...
CELEBRATE. ' slble
CELEBRATE.
dhln evidence,
iwlrlnnro right
rlizht here
herp at
nt home.
linmn 1 MORE PARKING SPACE NEEDED.
_«
thorne. L. E. Barnett and Mrs.
The demonstration begins at two
5. Vaughn Fuller-Lineman.
! ®°* Br 12 car RexaU convention
village
of Vermontville will of Incompetence, and of waste of
The council ifl being made in­
Springer were authors of the sec­
Ap-I Ua,n
train,- which will be
6. Robert
(Bob)
Gorham—Ap_ In Grand o'clock and you hadThe
better
be on
' 1 Rapids Thursday. Aug. 8. are the Itlme- Natural gas for cooking In celebrate Its centennial, with a the people's money. We have no creaslngly aware of the urgent need of operation to Include all paint.
ond group presented. The winning pllance Salesman.
homecoming Wednesday. Thursday, means of knowing how much cash I of more parking space in this City. After several years of extensive re­
plays this year will again be given
7. Edgar
(Dutch)
mrrr‘- —
Ho.VM1.lr
toewm;.. nmnrr nur.lnn
Saturday August 5. 6. 7 has already been spent on the On Saturday nights especially, as
at a benefit performance for some Electric Distribution Service.
ervice
, ,
.
.
I changes in methods and house­ Friday and
search they placed their new
n
...&lt;11
— .
■
.
. . .but. w
—11 a«
tnm. days and nn
well
as nn
on some
on nthar
other
used by the Dionne quiniVes—
will-------------------------------be sure to obtain-----------useful and 8. There
local institution.
Last year pro­
will be A
a balloon ascen- ......
Yankee. Springs
development,
uct on the market last year. The
8. Keith James—Line Foreman.
■ nippies
,
.w
-------evenings than Saturday, the pres­
ceeds, were turned over to Pennock
sion every day. many sports, street t h must be a large sum.
9. Arthur (Art) Kecler-Cas Dis- tupleta. In a glass case heavily I information.
response the public has shown to
hospital.
tributlon Service.
guarded, these relics of the famous' A unique feature of the school attractions, ball games Thursday. i we called up Mr. Henry I. Davies. ent parking space Is taxed beyond this new paint is gratifying, al­
Its
limit.
The
double
parking,
which
।
Friday
and
Saturday
and
a
fleet
of
engineer
in
charge.
Friday
evening
10. Gladys Larkin—Billing De- I babies were loaned to the United &gt; will be the opening of sealed blds
I Drug company by tlie Canadian i f°r the fine ges range used for nlrnlai5A«
airplanes__
—nil
nil nt
of whirl*
which will
will mn.
con- I _...
an(j he Informed us .....
that there I*
Is ..»
no Is done by persons who are trading though not surprising as the Ala­
WAS FINE SUCCESS.
partment.
(Drug company by the Canadian i f°r the fine gps range used for j Iairplanes
—an
ox wmen
win con1 and he informed us that
there is no
, bastlne company has built a repu­
The annual st. Rose festival will
| government
— it,... which will be
k— award—
1 tribute to the pleasure
nleasure of the crowds,
crowds.' foundation
tn,&lt;reHn(&lt;zvre for
tnr such
aamib a
— report.
r There In the stores and who cannot find tation for itself In public confideoen.
11. Carl Ottosen—Lineman.
(government.
demonstrating,
net tiie parish $1200 according to
12.
Kenneth (Ken)
Sanderson-;; The
convention irun,
train, me
the purpose
1 &lt;--d the person making the highest Sec the announcement in this issue. ha* been, he said some recent talk parking room, cannot be prevented
—
----------------------------------------a
cuuvcnuuii
purpose
Father Dillon's latest figures. Those Cupcr!r.lender.’,
until the council shall provide addi­
&gt; of which is
Is to make the annual con- offer
of giving another
government
the buying public over a large
Superintendent
of
Accounting.
receiving prizes were 1st prize, Floyd
■h
n _ i._____
__'i...
__
...
...
.
■
.
—
. ** * .
।
’T» nt
agency dinftTA
charge nt
of flxal
that lt
type
of onv^
gov­ tional parking spaces. We are glad
13. Maude schomp—Cashier.
vention more accessible to local
Thomas, studio couch; 2nd Dorris
ernment work, but no idea, so far the street committee has been au­ da tlon.
This public eonM
vrppoii
Micnaei
m
»14 Joseph(Joe) Skinner—Electric agents rather than have them RECEIVES KENF1ELD BEQUEST.
Cappon. auuerglider; ara
3rd
Michael
Mathorized to look into this matter and
hac^Vermontvlile
mlx“
iS2S'"ui
D1****^
Engineer. travel to Boston. Is on a 22 000 mile
as
he
had
ever
heard
or
been
in
­
probably explains the splendid
A check for $458 has been received '
formed. ot abandoning the Yankee to make suggestions at ■ the next spome this product baa received
Henry Predum Middleville 62-niece ’
15' ^R®11®
(O®n®&gt;
Waring— trip and it 13 estimated that nearly by Pennock hospital, the net pro-1
council
meeting.
Springs park development.
tecakfast set7 5th GcoraeHous* Heating and Industrial Gas
2.000.000 people will visit the exhibit cecds of the $500 gift bequeathed to
Woodland chair- 6th Linus Maurer' i En«ln®®r
at lta stoPJ at
Th® tra,n the hospital by the late Hiram J.
NOTICE TO DELINANNOUNCEMENT.
SALE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
QUINT
Nashville $15- Leo Barry dty $7.50 )
10 Burl WIU—Gas House Heat-,is pulled by a 350-ton engine of the Kcnfleld.
I wish to announce my candidacy
Ear! Boyes, as guardian of Samnasnvme. &gt;13, x^o Barry, city, gvau (ng
burning type and was fitted out
The io per cent pa:
It’s been such gifts as this, some
1 uel Amer, will have a sale of the for nomination on the Republican Unquent taxes for 1
J. C. PENNEY FEATURES
I
------------------------------------------oy the New York Central railway. greater, some of lesser amounts, to- &gt;.' Mr. and Mrs. George M. Fuller j latter'3 household goods on the va- ticket for Prosecuting Attorney for
—
t
V,
A
In
I.
■
1
AM
*
SEMI-ANNUAL SALE. BENEFIT GAME
) The train Includes a replica of gether with the loyal co-operation who come to Hastings from HatnBarry county for a second term.
Customers of the Penney store!
FOR LYHU COX. the Rexall laboratory scaled to one of the General Board, the Women’s mond, md.. and have purchased-S.
the
During my present term I have en­
will be interested in their ad this | Vickery’s landing. Clear lake— twenty-fourth actual size, a model Board and Guilds, the doctors and old W. F. Hicks residence 714 W. Rust 1. There is a long list of use- deavored to fulfill my duties fairly
week. They are holding their semi- Sunday 3 p. M. Dowling vs. Delton.; dru$
displays of all klnds. dln- citizens In the city and county In Green street.
..
tnr fuI “rticles, as can be seen In the to all parties concerned and if nomi­
j Ing room
kitchen, -■.
aMr.
four-piece
annual clearance sale that features —Adv.
,no' r'v,m “"•*
general that have
made and
It possible
Fyller Is general Sur
agent“for
nated and elected will continue to
».
many Items at exceptional prices.1
National
insurance,
. orchestra furnishes music at all for Pennock hospital to steadily Im- J Washington
serve the people of Barry county to
prove its service and equipment, and much of his time Is necessarily |
; times.
.
Bee thelf advertisement in this Is-1
the best of my ability. Your supDANCE AT THORNAPPLE.
DANCE AT GUN T-AKR« Sat. night. Bud Wolfe's Prowlers. ,&lt; The train Is open to visitors and Few if any hospitals in Michigan spent away from Hastings. Mrs. Ful-1 ’
-----,, —Adv. if.
cards of admission may be obtained
weathered depression days any bet- ler was much Interested in Y. W.
Streeter's resort. ■Friday and Bat­
Archle D. McDonald.
MATTHEWS REUNION.
I-Aar “
from local Rexall firms
ter than our local hospital.
J C A. and Girl Bcout work In Chi- urday. MartlnX orchestra, Mgr. B.
Will be held at Lake Al-Gon-Quln
------------------ »**-----------------I Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Carveth and
HARVEST BALLOON DANCE.
Thq Kenfield legacy places one of cago.
I Benaway,—Adv. Out 7-SO.
Bunday. Aug. 2. Each family bring
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
jgr. and Mrs. W. M. Stebbins will the old, respected pioneer names of I The pullers have four children. I
Frank Herrington's, Clear lake.
—
---------lemons. Mrs. Arthur Moore. Secy.—
Delton, Bat., Eve, Eckler’s Orch. visit the train In Grand Rapids and Hastings on the list of benefactors Hubert. 14; Carroll Jean, n; Harold.) GARRISON FAMILY REUNION. Saturday evening, Aug. 1. Martine
Adv.
I—Adv. if.
{attend the convention meetings.
ot the institution.
9; Lawrence, 4.
I At Fair lake Aug. 2.—Adv.

RFPIIRI IRAN

TAX COMMISSION
?TS COMPLETES M

LOCALS WE
DORR MERCHANTS

15276773

May We
Introduce

Si

JL'XgJgSlT

�tub HAjrrntog kamto, -hwmday, jult », iw
The Hastings city schools will of Woodland
open Bept. 1Ths survey of Barry county re­
sorts in regard to milk supply, food
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Paul are
handling, sewage disposal, water
Ute pareou of a sen. David Chartea,
bom July 34.
Lowell's 18M Showboat this year
the parents of a
JUqhard Ivan.
will be a sMe wbaater and Mid*
Mr. and Mrs. Terrence Doy
. bom July 33 at Pennock hospital.
Barry County Health Unit and
Workmen have completed the Job from the crew will ba able to carry
Gerhard Burda of the state health (Margaret Barnum) are recelvu
of painting the dty haff buildtag 100 performers, and a M-whtette
department, Is half complete. It la congratulation* on the btrth of
expected about TO resort* will be daughter al Pennock hospital. July
making a great improvement tn its
gtJcn certificates of approval
8. 7. 8. next Thursday. Friday and
34. She Will be called Sheila Ann.
appearance.
Improvements on one block on East
Fifty-four ticketa were sold at Saturday.
. It may make some people feel SCHOOL DISTRICTS ANNUAL
Owners of the six months csr 11-1 South St.. Hanover to Grand, and
' the M. C. station Sunday for the
। a bit cooler during this heat:
REPORT BEING COMPILED.
Grand Rapids Lions dub baseball cense stickers are rapidly exchang­ two blocks on West Madison 81- breaking weather to read that the!
County
School
Commissioner
ing them for their plate*, according from Church St. to park St.
'excursion to Detroit. total cost of the snow-removal pro­ Maud E. Smith Is working now on
Petitions were presented to the
Calvin R Plumley, who under- to’ Mrs. AVIs Tyler, kcal manager
gram
nn
the
trunk
line
system
of
the
annual report of the county
। went a serious operation at Pennock Car owners are again urged to bring city council Friday evening request­
the
state
teat
winter
wm |1,14SA83- school*. The 101 district* each make
■ hospital three weeks ago. returned with them their car titles, registra­ ing that several blocks of sidewalk 80. Strange to say Van Buran coun­
a report to Mrs. Smith and the
tion cards and drivers' licenses.
be built, also a petition for a *ewer
. to hL, home on Monday.
Mrs. Richard Keenan hu re­ extension on South East St. The pe­ ty held the top record for Michigan compilation is made in her office.
Mlu Marjorie Hoyt, daughter of
counties at 831087. Most of tha
jRev. and Mrs. M E- Hoyt, te the signed her position on the office titions were referred to the proper other high-cost groups were tn up­
: violinist Jn the Instrumental trio nt staff of tha Barry county Health committees, with reports requested state counties, wfth Ionia, Kent. ment of public instruction by Septeruber 1. The district reporta aro
' Hotel Perry. Petoskey, thia sum- Unit, her place being filled by Mrs. at the next meeting of the council.
Allegan. Oakland and Wayne lead­ due July 13 and at this time 84 have
Eleanor Case of Battle Creek, who
j mer
Thomas Taffee of Hastings is the ing In lower Michigan.
I been tiled with 18 still outstanding.
Miss Jeannette Rltaman recently has served ao extra help several new pharmacist at the Behrens A
From
head«
™
from
National
Democratic
headThese
statements are on ths flnancompleted her course al the LaMar time# and Is familiar with the work. Rowe drug store replacing Claude ; quarters In Now York City, the Ban“» «ow
cny.
Ban-. ’dal condition of the district schools,
The cherry queen always receives Tlfhrrni who Ik I'nw n «*n«hl*r at th- i —
Beauty school In Battle Creek and
IL.xorK __
...
a
c ner rew’lv,‘fl th« following item of the number of pupils enrolled with
is now working in the Hollywood I| a surfeit of publicity. Some time
5
Ay 8 Ik M7- local interest. "Mr,. Honora M.1 their average attendance and other
we would like to sec a bit of It given J?.
shop.
*y lhc pharmacist Pratt, of Hastings. Michigan, visit-1 information pertinent to the bus|Local people driving to and from to the person who makes the plo ■t LyBarker s Drug store in Has- I d Democratic Natlonkl Headquar- ! new of running the county schools
Gun lake have observed an unusual the queen carries by airplane to Ute tkiKs.—Oharlotte Republican-Trlb-. ters today, and volunteered her
Mrs. Smith reporta that flvs
President.
And.
too.
we'd
like
to
amount of wild life on the road.
uncI services in the coming campaign to
townships arc 100 per cent In fillna
C S.-Potts has seen an opossum know If F. D. or Eleanor really
Seldom one ever sees a parasol Mrs. diaries w. Tillett. Jr., head their reports. This means that all
and fox and any number ot rabbits. samples It.
carried any moie. And they used to of the Speakers' Bureau.
Mrs. the school districts in the townshlu
be
• an .important accessory to every' Pratt
.. who attended the Democratic hMVe comp|le(j wlth
school taw.
female's costume, and a gift lots of I convention at Philadelphia as al- The five townships arc Orangi
***
***
fellows gave their best girls. Nowa- ; ternate la here with her husband, Prairieville. Rutland. Barry
day, suntan I* too popular and ed- j Dr. E. J. Pratt, for the sessions of Woodland.
ucallon concerning the benefit of the American Osteopathic Awoclaauiiraya too widespread to shut lion at the waldorff Astoria."
RUMORS UNFOUNDED.
them out.
I Work ot painting and repairing
...... ..
u*wuu■ for
There
is uu
no .wu..
foundation
Hastings, Michigan ■ Telephones
People who really fried eggs by ! county schoolhouses has not been | rumor that Lake Al-Oon-Qum ha
sun rays during the time the mer-' as extensively done in Barry coun- been condemned for swimming b:
ralch our Screen for changes without nolle*
cury ran up to iOS and n bit below.!
tfje WPA as in Eaton, ac-1 action of the Barry County Healtl
cording to Hubert Bronson, engineer Department The usual Inspection
Program for Week of August 2
more perfectly cooked eggs. The In charge. This Ls due to the fact' have shown no evidence of abnor
that Barry school, are being eon-1 mal contamination.
secret.
It
seems,
was
te
gel
your
fry
­
SUNDAY and MONDAY. AUGUST 2 and 3
ing pan properly heated first, which solidated or are consolidated to such j The Banner is glad to announo
was easy tn tin at that time by sun an extent that this aid is not need-. live above la official, coming utrec
heat. In California solar cooking is ed. Smaller Jobs of repairing can from Dr. Harkness, chicf-of-staff
be done by the National Youth Ad- j of the department.
quite generally practiced.
♦♦ »
Returning from Detroit Sunday ministration men under Richard • JOIN----------------KEI.LOGO AG. DISTRICT
Poley if the school districts so de­
evening. Mr. and Mrs. L- E. Bar­
Voters of Johnstown townahi]
sire. These men only work onenett. John and Margret and Miss
Henry Annetta. George Houston. Grant Wither*. Inca Courtney
third the lime the WPA workers do school district No. 8. voted at theii
Donna Myers narrowly escaped in­
annual meeting to be annexed t&lt;
and receive one-third the wages.
BARGAIN MATINEE BUNDAY—1:00 and 1:00
jury when a man driving at an
Lottie Cridler, Mnrtha Dietrich. the Kellogg-Ag. school district ir
excessive rate of speed bumped into
May French. Mrs. Zera Robcrston. Kalamaxoo county. By this move
a Chrysler ahead of Wiem and then
Mrs. Ida Skinner of Middleville; the school children arc taken to ant
BARGAIN NIGHT—TUESDAY. AUGUST 4
sideswiped their rar. The fender
Gladys Crockford and Agnes Leffler from school by the school bus.
and running board were badly
crushed and the hub cap ruined.
The state police were called and the
young man Is in jail charged with
reckless driving. It was also dis­
covered that his driver's license had
run out several days previously.
Six
teachers
from
Hasting,.
Michigan, and vicinity ar" enrolled
this summer at Northwestern Uni-i
veraity along with nearly 4.000 atu- !
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. AUGUST 5 and
dents, representing every state In J
the Union and eight foreign counNew Arrival of FALL DRESSES
trie, courses in more than 300 subJeets. taught by a faculty of 242. of
in Block. Blue. Wine and
whom 60 arc visiting professors, arc |
With Loretta Young, Robert Taylor. Patsy Kelly
Printed Crepe—
being offered. The local teachers!
ADULTS ISc — CHILDREN 10c
are Mbs Beatrice E Giddings. Mia, I
* HflDAy'ond~SATURDAY.'aUCUISVl"and7”
Jennie B. McBain. Miss Emilv JMcElwain. Mrs. Gertrude A Wilcox.
DOUBLE FEATURE
Mrs. Clara E Stanton. Orangeville
' and Miss
|
EUa E Herman. Wood&gt; land.
Of the twelve books listed by Wil­
liam Lyon phelp* a* -the best" of
With JACK O^KIE and SALLY EILERS
the year the Hasting.* library has
I— ALSO —
seven Life with Father, by Clar­
ence Day; North to the orient, by
PRICES!
A Anne Morrow Lindbergh; Seven
” League Boots, by Ridiard Halllburton Discovery, by Richard Byrd;
! Lucy Gayheart. by Wills Gather;
s
Vein of Iron, by Ellen Glasgow;,
"With FRANCES FARMER. JOHN HOWARD. ROS­
' It Can't Happen Here, by Sinclair
CHILDREN'S $1.00 DRESSES
Lewis. The remaining five—Mark
COE KARNS, ROBT. CUMMINGS
Twain. Wagcnknecht; Arctic Ad­
REDUCED TO 79c
ADULTS ISc — CHILDREN 10c
venture. Frcuchen; personal Pleas­
E pl-ode No. 2 "Phantom Rider-'—the serial chapter piny will
ures. Macau ley; The Last Puritan.
.
or
be mown
shown ai
at a.w
3:00 o
o'clock
cioca matinee
niaiince naioraay
Saturday omj.
only.
r
Santayana; Sparkenbroke. Morgan,
do not make as popular appeal
doubtless as the first lUt.
'

LOCAL NEWS

Day In and Day Out
You Save Money At

Food Center
Muller's

BREAD

French’s White Lily Flour M^b 79c
Pillsbury Best Flour 24*4 Ib. Sack *1.09
Corn 1st Call Golden Bantam No. 2 size 2 for 23c

Jello, Ice Cream Powder 3
Huskies The New Breakfast Food
2 pkgs.
Wheaties
2 pkgs.
Large pkg.
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes
4 bars
Lux Toilet Soap
pkgs.

4

Old Dutch Cleanser

for

10c
15c
23c
25c
25c

23c
23c

10c

25c
29c

BOBBY BREEN

i
*t

SUGAR
10 "••• 52c

0XYD0L
large pkg.

18c

Pork Shoulder Roast
Pork Steak
Beef Kettle Roast
Veal Roast
Hamburger Fresh Ground
Pure Lard
King-Nut Oieo

ib. 18c
ib. 20c

2
2
2

In

LET'S SING AGAIN

ROBERT MONTGOMERY

In

TROUBLE FOR TWO

DRESSES

PRIVATE NUMBER

FLORIDA SPECIAL

it

t

FLYING G-MEN

t!

I

of ।

Summer Hots, !/&lt; OFF
Blouses, !4 OFF

BORDER FLIGHT

♦"■#•♦&amp; ♦■:■♦ #♦-$-

Pure Cane

The late hot spell vu terribly
hard on concrete pavements. Every
state road engineer wm warned to
look out for possible breaks. The
only one occurring in Barry county,
according to Al Brown, happened
on -M-rr, Middleville, near the
western end of the town.
Interest In getting tarmac paving,
curb and gutter work done this year
continues. The city council Friday
evahlng received petitions for these

t

^flOc.

Tall Can
Libby's Orange Juice
Lb.
Vacation Land Coffee
Chase &amp; Sanborn's Coffee Dated lb.
Sardines Large Oval Tins
3 Cans

afternoon teat
grass Are on Al Brfll's farm In Baltlmore. and to burning rubbish In
the room over the Ducker beer par-

*?•♦•?* ♦+♦

F. L. Fairchild Co.

♦•&gt;-» i

144 E. State St.

Phono 2522

CHEAPER
TO 0WI1 STORED!
WOULD YOU LIKE TO GET YOUR
HANDS ON A HOUSE LIKE THIS?
• Listen! . . . Never again will it be so easy to own
a modern home of your..own. To those who have
thought of building, remodeling or repairing, we
aay . . . DO IT NOW!!! Values are increasing,
tests are increasing, rents ore increasing. See us,
we aro in a position to kelp you own a modern
homci regardless of your problem. Let us show
you how it is possible to improve living conditions
in your home.
• When you invest in a home you orc buying more
than o place in which to live, you arc buying se­
curity for your family.

YOU CAN FIND NO BETTER INVESTMENT
THAN IN A HOME-OF-YOUR-OWN!
The Home Lum­
ber Company
"Builds Homes"

20% Discount
-ON

COLEMAN
Instant Gas Ranges
e THE COLEMAN IS THE OLDEST
LINE OF GASOLINE STOVES PRO­
DUCED TODAY. PIONEERS IN
THIS FIELD, COLEMAN PRO­
DUCES THE FINEST GASO­
LINE RANGES.
• THE NEW 1936 MODELS ARE
ABSOLUTELY SAFE, LIGHT IN­
STANTANEOUSLY, NO WAIT­
ING. GET ONE OF THESE STOVES
TODAY. CONVENIENT TIME
PAYMENT PLAN IF DESIRED.

Open Evenings Until 9 p. hi

The Finest Gasoline Range-Built

We Give Free Tickets On

GOODYEAR BROS
HARDWARE CO

the 4 Automobiles To Be
Given Away at the Barry

County Fair.

THE HOME LUMBER CO.

HASTINGS

PHONE 2101

�m 1U1T1NO&gt; BMOtn, TttMOO KXT »,

PfiSKET’5 aiD Stf§J!£E

Starting FRIDAY, JULY 31 • STORE OPEN at 8:30 A.M.
Remember the Date . . . Remember the Time !

Don’t Miss These Extra Values . . . While They Last!

Summer
Chiffon or Service Weight

SILK HOSIERY

Coats

। teaiwtes julif f-eatuus .clearance
So Eqry to Launder!

Good Looking Rayon

Rayon Pantie*

Taffeta SLIPS

ZTailared!

,411 the Newest Styles!

Full-Fashioned!

Bias
Cm!

A lot of quality for your money!

oo

Picot tops, new colors, sizes 8&gt;A

CLEARANCE! SUMMER

.to. 10‘/x- All first quality too!

DRESSES
Not Every Style in Every Site!

9*9.M

fufy feaiuus

If V-I

(JY

\\

\

\ \
I
\

reirular
and extra sizes.
A bargain at
this low price.
Trimmed with
hand embroideryand applique.

White Waffle coats, Lora
Handmade. Printed

Knit Swagger coats and

Batiste Gowns

the balance of our stock

1

A grand opportunity to finish
the season with new frocks! Re­
priced
for
quick clearance!
Sports and street styles. ,12-44.

Porto Rican GOWNS

ln this group you will find

Porto

.

Thu season’s most outstand­
ing stylet. Put coloijil Easy
t~ launder! Short sleeve* or
rloeveleM, 14 to 44.

CLEARANCE

&gt;j|C

94

of spring coats and suits,
all in this group. Hurry,

A wnzatton at this low price!
Firn sheer balisU In dainty
floral print*. Hand appllqued
'and nicely finished.

they won't last.

; CLEARANCE

REMNANTS!

Silk &amp; Wash Dresses

but not all sixes in all

of better quality. In thia group
you will find Acetote Canton
Crcpo Drettei, Sheer Krinklstones and .Catton Shop Frocks,
oil in one lot, to make room for
fall dresses—go at

early shopper.

69C

sffi&amp;Ak

I

IgreMy'jH
IwHmKjSSIa

Tailored or fril­
ly one and two
piece styles for
sleeping
and
lounging. Gay
fast color prints
or polld colors.

Cotton crinkle in smart stripes
to
freshen
your
bedroom!
Washes well 80 by 105 inches.

WHILE THEY LAST—

CLEARANCE

PAJAMAS
Boys’ Summer

OXFORDS
One group to
close out. Several styles snd
colors.

£

9

OUOU

Grouped In One Lot—Ladles',
Misses' and Little Girl*'.

Child’s Sleepers
Just the thing
for these hot
nights. To close^E*^R
out—

Soap "u! Water Summer

nr

C

For Guls from 1 to 14!

ANKLETS

CLEARANCE
i

25C

Men’s
Polo Shirts
In White
Mai* or Blue.

LmL IRH

AU sizes, at—

jRWL

fiigrO

DUCKS!
Jy

J

—they’ll wash !

AtMM hj,
JS.Jtr Qvz
^w^snoa^w

Resilient construction1 That
means better
looking
knots!
Hand
tailored
in new patterns!
Priced low I

CLEARANCE
Bargains for Boys!

To close out thia
lot. Some slight­
ly soiled—but a
buy!

CLEARANCE

BOYS’ Ladle’* Novelty
SUITS Shoes
00
piece Suits, some with
knickers, some with longies. At a give-away price

5c yd
A new low price.for this
quality. Fine for mattress
covers and sheet*.
w
*Hurry—it'll sell fan.

CLEARANCE

500 SHEETS GLOVES
Cleansing Tissue

5c
One group assorted Kid, Fabric,

CLEARANCE

Lace and Silk Glove*.

All iom-

10? MEN’S

SUITS
00

Beys' Sturdy .

Balance of our stock

asc

of Spring and Summer

They'll Wear!
Better
hurry 1

Novelties in white, tana

Hot weather and
Boys'
Overall*

One group to close out of

men’s Spring Suite. Not
all sixes in all styles, but
a Real Bargain in a 3-

piece SUIT—

Boys' Straw Hats

SOCKS

Ben's and Boys' Sleeveless styles.
AU Wool—Out They Go CAc
at each
UU

One lot Fancy Straws—every
boy will want one
4 Ec
Hurry! ........— ■ **

Boys' Sport Shirts
Title they last—

25'

Men's Cotton Socks

WAGONS

For work—Sturdy cotton,
|?c
in plain colors.. A buy, pr.

FOB LITTLE FOLKS!
Efit
Yes, they are Red! ...........OU

w

made of sturdy cot*

J .

C .

PENNEY

COMPANY,

1

Tub fastI Man's

SHIR1

can't last long!

SWEATERS

Be Here Early

—they’ll wear!

buy for the early buyer.

Men’s Fancy

Printed Percale*
One Lot To Go At

To be sold
^^C
at exactly
J^W0box

OVERALLS

and greys to close out!

for clearance.

f-eaiuus

00
pair!

Here is a buy for early
fall and school. Boys* 3-

50?

All new summer styles! Prints,
plains, pastels, dark shades! 8ea

CLEARANCE

*n Three
Price Groups

i

Children’s
Shoes

Priced to

i

Odd Lots, Broken Size* in Sheers
and Silks. First Come First
Choice. They must go!

WASH SUITS

CLEARANCE
They WASH!

25c 49€

Children's and
MImm', ... of
printed broad-

W
H , MEN'S NECKWEAR
•• P,,r

Men's White Summer

FROCKS

P

SJ-40

Unbleached

REMNANTS!
57c

DRESSES

MUSLIN

BLOUSES

I CLEARANCE

SUMMER!

styles. Plenty of sixes for

sell!

CLEARANCE

bedspreads
Summer PAJAMAS

10c
One lot assorted styles,

BETTER BERRY!

V-top Tailored Styles— Qrtc
To sell at............................. 30

w

_

RAYON

34c PANTIES

It isn't often that you find
these good quality slips priced
*0 low. V or bodice top. Lace
trimmed or tailored. -34-44.

CLEARANCE'

CLEARANCE

PRICED TO
SELL FAST!

Panne Satin Slip

Brief panties and wide-leg
styles too, all of cool tailored
rayon. You save a lot at this
low price! Regular sites.

__

MEN'S SHIRTS

Men I Y&lt;
ost petti
shirts I A
rice to

�The Hastings Banner

KMT THE COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

MICHIGAN

Editorials

Hew to the Une» let the quips
fall when they may!

By Obacrvlng Tommy.

Understand that Mayor Leonards
page boy was pretty vociferous on
that excursion to Detroit Sunday.

One advantage, over a government which spends far
fact that after . beyond its ability to pay; which hiu i

The wrong person received the
blame for a crafty little "spoof"
perpetrated by. one of the younger
business leaders of this city, they
tell tne.

sloshing through the drab, cold piled up deficits which will still be 1
slushiness
of late winter, the a burden to our grandchildren and 1
warmth and color of springtime which has extended the army of'
federal bureaucrats without any re-1
seem extra marvelous by compari­
son and when the sun-baked days gnrd to a merit system of selection.'
of midsummer have done
their,
NO MUD YET
worst to thermometers, crops, dis­
Whatever cne may think of Gov­
position.’, business, etc. those mild­ ernor Landon's remarks to date, |
ly cool fall days seem invigorating
their freedom from anything re-1
beyond description Anyway when­
sembllng "mud" is mast certainly I
ever we get to grousing about the
! worthy of approval. Wc hope he
weather, well always remember
lias struck a note that will be fol­
that drouth stricken region in the
lowed by all leaders concerned.
Dakotas through which wc passed
The temporarily resigned Postmas­
and then almost anything will seem
ter General Farley predicted that
good by comparison.
thh would be n dirty campaign.
Well that remains to be seen. If
WE PAY THE BILLS
other members of the Republican
Are high salaried executives Inparty will follow the example of
creasing the cozt of production in
their presidential candidate, it ap­
Ulis country; receiving an unfair
pear* that no mud need be thrown
share of the fruits of industry? That
unless Mr. Farley desires It lo
is what many of the New Dealers
thrown.
Howevrr. an analy
panics in twenty-five leading In• dustrlos show that executive salar­
ies and bonuses ab*orb only three
percent of the payroll of American
industry while tax-.*. now consume
THIRTY-FOUR per cent
Tax&lt; ••
absorb eight per cent of sales; they
eat up $1.43 for every dollar pain
as dividends to stockholder* In the
oil Industry, taxes take $2,111 for

and

Average Citizen and family
RIGHT TO OPINIO?
the bad break which the prer* o
this rounlry has given the Nez

Won't my boss ever be able lo re­
member dates?
Ask Louie Kentlcld ' about
glass eye.

his

How's Uncle Monk, junior?
The peti’ions are now filed—let
the campaign begin! Yip-e-e-c-e!
Whoop-e-e-e-e-l and other expres­
sions of unrestrained enthusiasm!

THE KEY ELECTION
Why is it that so few people re­
tard the party primary election.- ai

concerned, the primary in Scptrm- i ,
ber B even mnre important than
the election proper in November
i

.

.

Views and Opinions,
II? 1.
— „ 0^...
'
wllu 1 Others Say

An, 1-rJ who
nk- tahta
containing the required number rt
signet me* is eligible tn enter Uic
primary rac-* under any rerogntoMl
total payroll-..
party label he may_ choose. Trom
Governments have nothing to. give iht* nf.-ortmciit ot entrlex voter.',
or distribute except the taxes they must select the candidates fnr the
levy. If government is ecnnomlcallv election proper If good material
managed, taxes arc low When the has been chosen by all partlc. con­
government ts wasteful, laso arc cerned during the primary, wc can
. —* •---------------------------------high When taxe-- arc high produc­ be assured of a good slate of of. ;
tion
in- high and the crest o' f^uis. no matter
-- which party is
manufactured
goods is
high-, vjcloriou.-.
On the other li.xml. i.’
I
Therefore. In the end. It 1*
' l'“n- poor selection-, have been mid:
i
sum«T who p.i) * for government
!
rent turn out on election day will'
not have the (earl effort on th-'
mmt doles and grant!

the pocketbook of Mr

THURSDAY. JULY 30. 1936

Round About Town

WKATHER'8 PLAYGROUND.
I Free speech Ls one constitutional
Variety, u the old saying goes. B right which to date has not even
the spice of life. But there are cer- been attacked, if people arc. against,
tain periods at the year in Michl- admlnBlrauon policies, they have'
gan whan .one can never be sure a right to say so Just ns those who
gan (when one can never be sure are for rhe New Deal have a right'
..
ing to bake or shiver) that variety. to support it.
If the New Deal has lost ground
anything but Joyful. Las: winter, in the past two years, unjust critl-;
as wc recall, a low temperature in cBm by the press has not been the 1
the neighborhood of thirty degrees cause. Rather it has lost ground be-1
below was recorded, this summer cause people in general. Including
the maximum was 109 degrees many editors, have become alarmed
above; all of which represents a al the attempted expansion of fedswing of 130 degrees—quite a range eral powers and sincerely concerned'
to say the least
however, is the

It's tha Spirit of a Conunuaity
That Counts—Not Its Size

Father Chas E Coughlin ha* lost
caste before the country A public
man who so far forgets his manners
as to cull the President a liar is not
entitled to much respect The office
of president is greater than any perronallly filling It. The inherent

King. Monarchs come and go but
t|)(, traditional respect for the high
office never diminishes The Coughl!n blunder makes him a second
rater. His remarks suggest a pool
room superiority Tn ’his connection
It I*. well for all of us to profit by
this incident When you xc a man
’
"
ju'i rerslihcr of officials entrusted to of- l.nr.iy in oisca-x'iiig poiiin
j member that he has reached the
I end of hB mental resources pro- ,
• fahlty has always indicated a limit­
m IlKvr a real opportunity to se­ &gt; cd vocabulary. Poise and dignity ere
lect the be**, qualified candidates Is’tll'Tucai .&lt;v*eu. in the successful
presentation of public qiic'-tior.s fnr Afiltr
rise primary In Scplcm-, M1|rl
ln charlotte Rcpublicb*'r is the election which really I .m-Trlbune.
deserves tiie biggest turn out of I
------- —------&lt;«&gt;
—

LOOK OUT AT NINETEEN!
voters.
Shudders chased one another up
COUGHI.JN'8 APOLOGY
I tiie spines of citizens of a large
president in th" history of Un-,
Father Coughlin should have i American city recently when they
country has ever reeciW more
m.d. » m'.rh mm unwUlta i "»d »'
&gt;?“’«
who
whole hearted ‘support from *the
.
, „
, . „
were alleged to have beguiled a doc­
in thrnKtal Rmwt lh»o ;
, „„„* „„ lhr„
newspapers than Pn*.-;den’. R-wr-evclt obtained during the ftr*l lw» he did. It never should be ncrc.varv ■ nHed him ns he jvslsted a robbery
■ n ml) anyone a liar The charge 1-.' that netted thcm'lS a piece one ot
. erioai one and should be bolls *7
ot aGC; three
Edttewr- „throughout the laud
sirred bv unquestionable facts. If,nre
,
leaned over back*ar&gt;b ro give mm -&gt;’h far’ - .ire aval'sble ihm alm&gt;"1 Thrlr muthfulneM B typical of a
s
"
'
'
, , growing crime dement everywhere
the benefit of the doubt
&gt;r&lt;"-’,utcrt 'n s|r;ik fir I Records jn *hc Federal Bureau of
nvnrpublicans did not have att
Th«* public w«* believe Investigation nt
Washington re­
theinselvc'
log bureau" Mich s« thveal that of all arrests tn the Unit­
is neither
ed States listed for 1B34. about 58
thc minute h«* assumed ofii;

LETTERS TO THE EpiTOR
Battle Creek. Mich. . the road commiuloners about putJuiy 23. 1038. . ting something on the road to keep
Hastings Banner:
J the dust down Is simply ignored.
On account of the Waeki school- The vegetables in our gardens arc
house being destroyed by fire some I so weighted down with dust that
lime ago. there hu been a question nothing can grow This road sure la
in the minds of some, in regard to a bad adv. tor Barry county and
the reunion being held this year.: Michigan.
People from other
Everything Is arranged for it to slates driving through here going to
be at the school grounds the same i Kellogg Camp. Pine lake, or lo
as usual. Although fire has de-1 Michigan resorts go home and tell
stroyed the building, it cannot take \ their neighbors about this nice
away the happy memories of our dusty road through Prairieville,
school days so let s all plan to at-1 There are thousands ot dollars spent
tend and make this reunion the for new school buildings but if there
largest and best yet.'
I Bnl something put on these roads
Cora Johnson, j to keep the dust down, so wc won't
16 piltee.. have to ne eating, breathing it all
Battle Creek. 1 the lime, there won't bo any need
for new school buildings.
Delton.' Mich,
Keep It up. Delton and Dowling.
July
. 25. 1036.
we are behind you; If we howl hard
Dear Blrs:
enough and long enough and all
I have been reading In the Ban-, howl together maybe some one will
ner about Dowling and Delton howl- &lt;n Up antl lake notlce that wc de­
Ing over the road dust
They i man&lt;| act|on for the sake of our
haven't anything on us here in | health and comfort.
Prairieville for we live on it. Wc,
If you folks there at the Banner
have It for our meals three times a . office will help us by printing the
day; we can feel the grit In our I mast necessary pai t of this letter
teeth when we eat. At the terrific ‘ maybe we can gel something done.
speed that some people drive how, I thank you.
they ever miss plunging Into the
A Reader. Prairieville village.
sides of our houses Is more than 11
8.—---------------I think It would
be a---------good
P.
know, for they are plastered .so
--------------------thick with road dust they are the' idea lo change the name of our
same color. Everything »e say to state from Michigan lo Dusllgan.

.
The
Noble.s-Walldorff
reunion spent Sunday with tha former's
Victory to the victorious—and
v ill be held al Crooked lake resort parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Wil­
may the lasers have enough left to
liams
Sunday. August 2nd.
pay their printing bills!
Mrs. Frances Norwood entertain­
Mrs. Nettie Kern. Mrs. Mnlinda
ed the Misses Jane Williams. Eliza­
Gooby Weber was carrying aroundI Seibel. Mrs. Irene Harrington. Mrs. 1 beth DtJstr? and Norma Quick' Fri­
' an interesting exhibit of bam in a, Bell Barnum and Mrs. Lula Wert­ day afternoon by taking them lo
box Mat week—a mamma and three. man attended the Bunnell L. A. S. Kalamazoo to the State theater
Mrs. I
little tones Well. Il's a lot better to, at the home of Mr. and
The Dunning reunion was held
have 'oin in a box than in the bel­. Charles Lechleitner Thursday att- I Saturday at the home of Mr and
ernoon.
fry at that, boy!
Those from
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kahler.' Mrs. Will Dunning
away were Laurence Dunning of
Our sheriff. I sec, ha; acquir'd a। with Mr and Mrs. Guyla Pease of j Pittsburgh. Pa ; Mrs Nellie Halen.
: pel squirrel to which, on occasion,. Cedar Creek attended the Thomas ; Mrs. c C Page and daughter .Janhr takes great pleasure tn feeding ai reunion at Riverside park in Beld­ rtt of Fostoria. Ohio. Mr and Mrs
nut or two.
ing. Sunday.
Fred Hick and Sidney Shook of
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Williams and Lansing.
I* that a new car you're drivin; children and Mr. and Mrs, John
around tn. Bus?
.
I Adams took an auto trip to South
MORGAN.
Haven. Saugatuck and
Holland
Mr and Mrs. Fred Youngs of Rat­
Ever notice what a blot nn an Sunday.
nnt
in
Rnrbnvirrl Cilntirrc'
I otherwise charming feminine en- |
Herman and Hans Sltzlrr of Hur- tle Creek.'Mr. and Mrs. Robert De­
Dat.Kli.UTa Kjiunccs,
pcmblc a pair of twisted stockings
Mend. Robert and Royce and Mr
| vcy. Ill. have been spending sev- and Mrs. Stanley Earl of Kalamo
i eral days with Mr and Mrs Wl- were guests of Olcnard Earl SunITF. OFTEN do more
l ba Ida.
2m| But perhaps Tommy shouldn’t
good l&gt;) our sympathy
j Sunday. Mr and Mrs Wibalda enMr and Mrs Clair Van Syckle
i even have mentioned such a seamy 1 tertained Mr. and Mrs Emil Falow
TWENTY
YEARS
AGO
than by our labor.’
and son. Otto, of Lansing spent
subject.
| and children. Henry Sltzlcr and
Mayor Horton has received word
Tuesday and Wednesday with Mr.
■—F. IT. Farrar.
, Mrs. Rase Kruger, all of Haivvy. and Mrs Win Van Syckle. O'-to re­
that the lamp posts for the boule- ' All right, Frank! All right!
I III
vard lighting system have been:
maining for n two weeks' visit
I
Mr and Mrs Robert Bnmcs were
| shipped to Hasting./
Marguerite Mills of Lansing vis­
Have you heard the "Parrott?'
delegates to the State R P D. con­
J
MBs Frances an^l MBs Thelma I
ited her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
'
vention
at
Ludington
from
Tuesday
Burch returned Tuesday from Dan- 1
Ask Melvin Jacobs about It.
Harrington. Sunday and attended
until
Thursday.
I ville. where Miss Thelma has ac­
church nt Nashville
Thi! annual meeting of the Del" ccptcd a position as teacher for the
And if vdli'rc looking fnr a 28 ,
Miss Ona Whitman returned Sat­
1 ton L A 8. will be held in the
•.coming school year.
Chew in crawl condition, maybe Mcl
urday- after spending two w&lt;?cks
; church basement on
Wednesday with her grandparents at Grand
. ; Misses Josephine Anderson. Doro- i ।can help you out.
evening, Aug. 5. A fried chicken Rapids
* thy Cook ar.d Aimer Rcnkr* are j
. spending the week with Miss Mary
One of the clerks in the new : supper will be served beginning at
Clayton Webb of Yankee Springs
Grant at the Freer cottage, Gun Montcy Wards store reminds me of 6 P M.. after which the business spent the week end with home folks,
। meeting and election of officers will
•/"INLY about one mau in - lake.
Mr and Mr*
Bordy Rowlader
Lindbergh . . . Don i know why.
'' 20.) is taller than six
| take place
The ladles will also helped Charlie Perkins celebrate his
Miss Elvira Barnaby, who b a i
I have on display and for sale a nice , birthday Wednesday evening.
; teacher of vocal music in the Las j
DELTON.
I line of home made embroidery work,
Al'.gclcs school*, gave a solo, which
Eva
Houghtalin.
long a resident
The greatest wonderment tn Delwas much appreciated at the Meth- .tonltes is if It is ever goihg to rain i Everyone Is cordially invited io at- of this community, passed away
| tend
1 odist church Sunday
Sunday morning after a short ill­
here, and If we arc ever going to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marshall
Norwood
Covert Freer's resort nt Gun lake '
According lo a nature Item,
our cast street fixed so the dust , spent Sunday with Mr. and Mra. ness. The funeral was held Tues­
seems to be constantly growing in get
'
day nt the F. M. church at Morgan
the "aye-aye" is oilc of the
won t fly so. It's perfectly terrible',• Vein Quick at Banficld.
I at two o'clock.
queerest monkeys in the world, i popularity. Over 70 people were
Mr and Mrs Charles Pixley ot
Barbara Leonard and Marjorie
,
a statement that should be re­ I there for dinner Sunday and over 20 Fair
lake and Mr. and Mrs Sanford Molt arc attending camp at Kilan- '
Tall buildings
•'stretch”
and
j turned away.
sented by any spirited yes man.
Willison were callers at Mr. and ; nlwa. Clear lake.
•shrink' Sixty wall tower. New
W 8 Benham and another gen- Mrs..
।
E. R. Willson s Wednesday Norma Quick of Banficld spent York City, is an inch shorter in the
Urman have purclu&lt;cd an immense 'afternoon and evennlg.
An old Greek superstition
last
week
with
her
cousin.
Eliza
­
winter.
If
the
building
were
not
hill of fine gravel three or four
holds that it is unlucky to ‘ mites from Kalamazoo and adja- ( MBs Beverly Givens of Battle beth Doster.
heated in the winter it would shrink
is spending a few weeks with
marry in May. A more mod­ ■ cent to the G- R. and 1. R. R. Creek
Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Williams about eight incites.
,
her
aunt,
Mrs.
Mary
Smith.
ern belief is that it is unwise
tracks.
Mr and Mrs H. T. Reynolds and
to pick a month which haa
ironside Bra*.,
the monument ।.granddaughter. MBs May Taylor,
more than two letters.
men. have begun work on the foun- ’
spent Sunday in Otsego
visiting
' dation of their new building cast of I.

A Quotation

Bits of Ycsterdayl““
.. ecsrr

.

"In one year. 1923. man flew 1 Hotel Barry.
The Sundav school picnic at Prai­
higher, faster, and farther than
rieville public park last Thursday
ever before in history." Who­
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
das well attended and everyone
ever he was. his sweetheart's I
I* not everyone in Hastings con- enjoyed the day.
dad must have been husky.
| vlnced that the only way in which
Rev Bates subject for next Bun­
; this city can make a satisfactory day morning services b: "A Half
An Ohio woman found a dol­ , growth Is by adding new factories Educated Man " He Invites every- I
lar bill inside some bread, tbu
employing many laborers? We be­ one to come nut to church and of '
didn't complain because there
lieve so
The only way fartoricK course everyone is welcome to Sun- •
I can be secured is by giving bonuses day school also.
was dough in the loaf.
I a* other ’own* do.
. C J Barnum is spending two |
Mrs. W. J Holloway gave a five I weeks taking a course at the State
o clock tc.i Thur’dny in honor of: Aurlcul'.ural College at East LanImrM by &lt;WW who a..mm.. *.:.•• croup-. irr-roasM rapidlv until 19 5
Mr- A‘ M Atkin*, th" dav bcms’smsr
came nm-tly from Dctnocra’i* cdiher 80th birthdav a number of her j Th" Delton fire department was '
fi-.ck nt one of the most dignified reached Nineteen is "lhc dangerous ,
41O5H.' I WISH,
lor»; the-.-o-called opposition pie
old lime friends were present
' railed to the Fred J Hughe* farm '
and humane of pro!—.-ion. in th**!**6" ,or &gt;DUth
।
i'O TrtOikjHT O’
was nirpruingl}* - moderate
Ans •
The Misses Ironsides entertained । west of Prairieville Saturday noon 1
Why should crime appeal to bova
THAT BtFVRE.'
12 of their vouiiR lady friends Fri-:Sundav they were called to Ed
thing that resembled ringing er!t|. world crates roughly on ones sen­ hardly old enough to shavi-? The
dav
at
a
tea
party
complimentary
|
Mlnar's at Doster: to date Patten- i
sibilities
answer is no secret Sanford Bates ;
cism war. very difficult tn hnd 1 lie
tn tiirir guest. MBs Gertrude Davey ; cell s and Jim Collins'
People '
gave it in gist when he satri "The
entire idea roemed to he give the
of Cirand Rapidi
should use all precaution lo prevent
A MATTER OF TASTE
craving for distinction and leaderprcMdent a
break" This u.i.
At the home of the groom's shier. I fires while it is so dry
•
retai people hive asked ’h" ship in our boys—common and nat- ' "Could everything be June ticic
everything would M done beito
Mr and Mr’ Prosser Mr James | Mr and Mrs J. C. Horton attend.. . .... *'ith ural to us ali—must be satisfied
Shea and Mbs Jennie Cook, both led the annual picnic of the past, and
JULY
press of the country has no.
r scenic states of the West Tha*. wniewhcrc else than in the purlieus
of
this
citv.
were
united
tn
marI
present
employees
of
the
Kalamaof crime and degeneracy and squai- i
a mmt difficult rricstUui to an"
1
I
rlace Thursday evening. Rev. Cran- | zoo State hospital on the hospital [
da!l officiating.
I grounds Saturday afternoon. Mr '
er, in fact, on" that o»ni:
Every reader of these lines ap- •
■--------- —
I and Mrs. Horton were employed ।
• anyweted satBfactortl.v at ali The proximately can a*k himself, wheth- I
FORTY YEARS AGO
| there previously and met many old j
long toward a government not un­ 1 far West with its high mountains, &lt; r those natural impulses of boys in
A cement walk B being laid in acquaintances whom they had not
like the dlrtauir&gt;4il|» and burra'i- canyons, mesas, etc . has a grandeur his own community are to find their I
.AUGUST
front ot the National Bank and the seen for many years.
cralic rule of Europe*. Editors a' Lar kmc entirely* in low rolling coun­
two store* owned by H A. Goodyear
The Walker Co has purchased
firs’, were inclined to excuse-the - try such as ours- There i. even
One of the feature* of the Ban-1 the pickle station here and
are
.per «„
k11| ba a . nialclllR W)|nc extensive Improve­
fnr several. months wit!
disturbing poltcws on tl-.q ground (■iwinntion about the open trcelr*
weekly leticr from Shirley W
... Smith. I ment* on the same.
that a Tugwell nr a Wallace wiv­ prairies and plains which yon dn not
son of Judge Clement Smith, who B I O N. Melvin of Vermontville has
ing off Mime rocinlHtic steam tn 1 ael in a heavily wooded country
now making a bicycle tour ot Eur- I purchased the Murphy meat maroutlet m crime and degeneracy and
bzrmleM amtuement of all con- . such u Michigan Wing to entn- squalor—or through employment or
1
------------------------1 ket
and is also--------------contemplating »~tputThb weeks issue of the Banner, ting in a small stock of groceries.
Boon.
crimed.
Boon,
however, editors pare Michigan with the wc.-t is like the Boy Scouts or Boys' Clubs or
c»w w Ih- cm.rlu.ta !»■&lt; rr poi..
’»
1 any of the score or more wholesome
UDI carries a note of the Banner Mr and Mrs. Melvin arc living In
r.n,^
u-.-_
.
th(
,
h
ousc
that
was
usrd
for
office and equipment being moved
orencles that arc ready to do their
Utility (or thr-r action, must lx' /rrrnl rojo) u9rI1)E t„i| the pct...
from the old National Bank build­ the home economics building during
work if adequately supported by
plxad on Uw ibotildcr. ol one nun
6l brtn: in toll, nlocr -r can man and dcllar-power—Rotarian
ing to the second floor of the pres­ the last school year.
ent location
nkme-rmltlcnl noomr.lt. hnru.lt,
thr Wr..,' Magazine.
Our new school building B pro­
gressing nicely. The roof B now
.
Omurqurntlr harlr.a tx-mmc ficin- ltkp [n ,onlP lu.n. to ...py sroci.
FIFTY YEARS AGO ■
being put on. The name: "Delton- ly conrlnccd th.l tho Hr. W-.oodlantts lo hear 111. mu.lr ol ’
Goodyear and Barnes will fur- W K. Kellogg Agricultural School"
trend l. Icod.na oa a«af (com th. d„r ,rml
„
n.&lt;h the carpeting for Hon. Daniel on the front makes It look pretty
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
Striker's new home
Jtnmlran mo.cpuon ol aorrnlmml.
I
nifty.
R K Grant is rigging out a sail
. .
..._
.
NEWS GLEANINGS.
»nd
lurtns
convinced that
„„ njwa)5
nl,a)J unucrsuinu
una„&gt;la„d wuy
why,...,,
!
—----_ tmcom.
...
wv can
rf,.,
.
the president, alone, is responsible ^.-,. !ov„
_ w..,tward ro thrill
nOt&gt; » l®rnilnt‘ t0 8C- al ,n bo,h Houses of Congress Re­ ooat for use on Wall lake. Dr. An­
drus has Just completed a "dandy" hired at Keith's livery stable. When
M.
tnrn-H
. I P^P*‘O’® «&gt; go awtward to thrill thing through. "-Capt J a Mo'.li- publicans
---------­
sit to the right of the mid­
for thia trend, many editor, who at lhc slghl of grcat n.ounta.n wn
row boat, the handiwork of Ed. near their deatlnation the evener
dle able, and Democrats sit to the
. Masters, for use on the same waters. broke, the horses ran away and
wppo.ua Mr. Btouv.ll ro.ir y™..
tln).oni „
Y„
left
“If nations want to right, let them
.
With the disappearance of whor- coming in contact with a tree one
»o or who utt.ln.a trom on.
rMnpi&gt;„ MlclUnn .nd th.
fight at cricket and football —Sir , Y w C. A s in the U S placed! tleberrics has gone that big snake. of the horses fell, the other horse
enitam ol hU oOntlnta.tta »: ■ w„,
,re „ ,unt.pnl
so frequently seen near Carter's ! jumping upon It in such a manner
OUver Lodge.
107.000 girls in jobs last year.
now opposed to his re-election. In
' ~~
Lake
The snake win report for as to break its leg.
our opinion there la nothing unfalr*i Things have come to a pretty pass
-Businesi
never as healthy ns
a
A man
man .6
&lt;6 fi.
ft. Uib
tails waikin.
walking around
around. duly next reason, howey.gr. If the
There are now no cases of dlphthcrla In the city and it Is hoped
or unpatriotic in this change o: if a fisherman can no longer call his when, like a chicken, it must do a the world at the equator finds hU berry crop is good ,
certain
amount
ol
scratching
for
*
—
J
------.......
..
head
travels
10
ft
farther
than
his
On
their
trip to Irvlqg Thursday That Ulla dread disease will not
opinion.
sole his own.—Detroit News.
, what ;t gets."—Henry Ford.
feel during the journey.
"
, the baseball nine want with a team again appear here.
.

Crumbs of Wisdom

Ill The Public Forum |j|

Way of Our World

SRVE
FUEL
NOW!

2257
We'll Deliver ! — Because prices will soon advance

. . . because •'van now better grades are hard to
get from the mines . . . because you may not be

able to get what you want later on. we advise you
to buy your winter’s coal now!

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co
DEALERS IN WOOL. GRAIN. FEED. FLOUR. SALT. LIME.
CEMENT AND COAL

PHONE St37

HASTINGS,' MIC|I.

�The Hastings Banner

ST THE COUNTY­
EASE AT HOME

—

Editorials

'Round About Town
Hew to the line, let the quips
fall where they may I

the neighborhood of thirty degrees cause. Rather it has lost ground be- j
below was recorded; this summer cause people tn general. Including
the maximum wa* 10B degree* many editors, have become alarmed
above; all of which represent* a at the attempted expansion of fed-1
awing of 139 degree*—quite a range eral powers and sincerely concerned |
to say the least. One advantage. over a government which spends far ’
however, b the fact that after , beyond in ability to pay; which ha* j
sloshing through the drab, cold piled
' ' up deficit* which will still be {
a burden to our grandchildren and ‘
which has extended the army of
federal bureaucrats without any re­
gard lo a merit system of selection.

extreme hot weather

lent funds hare to be taken cut of
the pocketbook of Mr. and Mr
Average Citizen and family.

RIGHT TO OPINION.
Many remarks arc current about ,
the bad break which tiie press of
this country has given the New

X

EXTREME DRY WEATHER

brrak.'

3nnc=)n'

1

Views and Opinions;

What Others Say
Fethcr Chas E Coughlin has lost ■
caste before the country, a public
man who so far forgets his manners |
ax to call the President a liar is not I
entitled to much respect. The office.
of president is greater than any per- !
ronallty filling it. The
«rcnath of Great Britain is its)
"X&lt;««• « “J,

cent turn out on rl-'clion day will ' tins Incident. When you sic a man
not have the least effect nn the!'how hr. temper or report tn pro-I
in dL*cu*sing politic*, just rc- j
caliber of official* entrusted to of- faulty
'
member that he has reached the !
end of in* mental resources. Pro-1
It ia In the primary that the vot- fanlty has always Indicated n limit- I
rrs have a real Opportunity to se­ cd vocabulary. Poise and dignity ere
lect thc best qualified candidates still great asset* in thc successful
,
~ .
presentation of public questions — i
fcr Affirc. The primary tn Scptem-, M,|rl i&gt;Fnc in Charlotte Republic­
ber is thc election which really nn-Tribune.
deserve* tiie biggest Lunt out of |
----------------- « a»
■ ~ ■
voters.
j
LOOK OUT AT NINETEEN!
j

1
[
]
1
i
1
|
i

A Quotation
WE OFTEN do more
good by our avnipalhy
than by our labor.
—F. IT. Farrar.

jxihcicj if pursued will .cad u* head- answejcd satisfactorily .&lt;1 all Thc . proximately can a.*k himself, whethlong toward a government not un- • {ar Wrst wlth
b.R1, mountain* rl those natural impuisc* of boy* in
like ti-.e dictatorship* and bureau-1 ca..yQn. ,n, ,u- PU-. luv a grandeur.hu Qwn conimunity are to find their

cratic ruk of Europe. Editor- ,t. ;
mtirelv in low rolling coun- ----------------------------------------------------------first were inclined to rxew-c thr:x»»,»ir»
i. «*u
dblurbing policies on the ground ■ fascination aiwut thc open treelc*.*. j
that a TUgwcll or a Wallace wa , prairie* and plum* which *ou do not |,
letting nff «on&gt;e wiaUstic steam tn ; xc. tn a heavily wooded country; nutlet in crime and degen-racy and!
tiie hgrmleu'amusement of all con- • tch a* Michigan Trying tn enm- 'squalor— or through employment or
eenied.
8aqn. however, editors ; pare Michigan with thc west ;.* like i «hc Boy Scout* or Boys' Club* or
1 .nJo
sny ofr lh&lt;,»w.
the score or mor.
more 'Mwm.
reholcsome ।
cpr ,- ,h- MRrtuUon Uu&gt; ,r pen...
,— agencies
that arcthat
ready
do their
albillly for these action* must be
' «ienck&gt;s
arctoreadv
to do their
frrent rotor Having had thc prtvi-1 wnrk (1 adequately supported by
placed on thc shoulders of one man ■ k-ge
, df being tn both place* wc can ! man and dollar-powcr —Rotarian '
•ton.-I'I’ Urn, Ranerell. lununir
"&lt; Mr W«« Mwaw.’

Crumbs of Wisdom

, the road commissioners about pul­
ling something on the road to keep
the dust down is simply ignored.
The vegetablM In our gardens are
Iso weighted down with dust that
) nothing can grow. This road sura Is
a bad adv. for Barry county and
| Michigan.
people from other
stales driving through here going to
; Kellogg Camp. Pine lake, or to
Michigan resorts go home and tell
. their neighbors about this nice
dusty road through Prairievilla.
। There are thousands of dollars spent
for new school building* but if there
isn't something put on these road*
j to keep the dust down, so wc won't
I have to oe eating, breathing it all
' the time, there won't be any need
for new school building*.
"
Delton. Mich.
Keep it up. Delton and Dowling,
July M. IBM.
we are behind you; If we howl hard
Dear Sirs:
enough and long enough and all
I have been reading in the Ban­ howl together maybe some one will
ner about Dowling and Delton howl­ sit up and lake notice that we de­
ing over the road dust. They I mand action for the sake of our
haven't anything on us here in I health and comfort.
Prairieville for wc live on it. Wc I If you folks there at thc Banner
have It for our meal* three times a
। office will help us by printini: the
day; we can feel the grit in our most necc.uary pail uf this letter
teeth when we eat. At the terrific maybe we can gel something done.
speed that some people drive how I I thank you.
they ever miss plunging into the
a Reader. Prairieville village.
sides of our house* L* more than I I
P. 3—I think it would be a good
know, for they are plastered so
thick with road dust they ore the ' idea lo change the name of our
same color. Everything we say to state from Michigan to Dustigan.

The
Noblcs-WalldorlT reunion i pent Sunday with th* former’s
Victory lo the victorious—and
will be held at Crooked lake resort juirents. Mr. and Mrs Leslie Wil­
may the losers have enough left to
liam*.
Sunday. August 2nd.
pay their printing bills I
Mrs. Frances Norwood entertain­
Mr*. Nettie Kern. Mr*. Malinda
ed the Misses jane Williams. Elisa­
i Oooby Weber was carrying around Seibel. Mrs. Irene Harrington. Mrs. beth Doster and Nijrma Quick' Fri­
' an Interesting exhibit of bau in a Bell Barnum and Mrs. Lula Werti box IxM week—a mamma and three man attended the Bunnell L. A S. day afternoon by taking them lo
Mrs. Kalamazoo to the State theater.
j little bnes. Well, it's a lol better to at the home of Mr. and
Thc Dunning reunion was held
। have 'em in. a box than in the bcl- Charles Lechleitner Thursday aft­ Saturday at the home of Mr and
ernoon.
i fry al that, boy!
Mrs. Will Dunning. Those from
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kahler, awny were Laurence Dunnlhg of
, Our sheriff. 1 sec. has acquired a with Mr. and Mr*. Guyla Pease of Pittsburgh. Pa.; Mrs Nellie Halen.
। pel squirrel to which, on occasion. Cedar Creek attended the Thomas Mrs. C C Page and daughter Jan&gt; ho takes great pleasure in feeding a reunion at Riverside park in Beld­
elt of Fostoria. Ohio; Mr. and Mr.*
' nut or two.
Ing. Sunday.
Fred Hick and Sidney Shook of
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn William* and Lansing.
I Is that a new car you're driving ; children and Mr. and Mrs. John
around in. Bus?
.
Adams took an auto trip to South
MORGAN.
Haven. Saugaturk and
Holland
'
‘
'
I Ever notice what a blot on an
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Young* nf Bat­
Sunday.
tle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Robert DeR/irfc'DinrJ
I otherwise charming fcmtntne enHerman and Han* Sitzler of Har­ Mond. Robert and Royce and Mr
scmblc a pair of twisted stockings
vey.-Hl. have been spending sev­ and Mrs. Stanley Earl of Kalamo
eral days with Mr and Mr*. Wl- were guests of Olenard Earl Sun­
■a-.- t
.
.
em—jV.r r.3M I But perhaps Tommy shouldn't balda.
day.
Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wlbalda en­
Mr and Mr* Clair Van’ Syckle
TWENTY YEARS AGO
!
tertained Mr and Mrs Emil Falow
and ton. Otto, of Lansing spent
and children. Henry Sitxler and
* Mayor Horton has received word
• • •
Tuesday and Wednesday with Mr.
Mr* Rose Kruger, all of Hatvty, and Mrs. Wm. Van Syckle'. Otto re­
tha: the lamp po*ts for th- boule- ' All right. Frank! All right!
HI
yard lighting system have been'
...
maining for a two weeks' visit.
Mr and Mrs Robert Hames were
shipped to Hastings.
/
! Havc yOU heard thc parrott?"
Marguerite Mill* of Lansing vis­
detegalcs to thc State R F D. con­
MUs Frances and MU* Thelma i
...
ited her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
vention
at
Ludington
from
Tuesday
Burch returned Tuesday froqi,pan- '
—-•------about
•—• it.
. •-*Ask Melvin •Jacobs
Harrington, Sunday and attended
until Thursday.
ville. where Miss Thelma has acchurch nt Nashville.
copied a position as teacher for the | And If y/i're looking for a as;
The annual meeting of the Del­
Ml** Ona Whitman returned Sat­
coming school year.
, chevy tn erfwi condition, maybe Mcl ton L. A 6. will be held In thc urday- after spending two week*
church basement on
Wednesday with her grandjwrenLs al Grand
Misses Josephine Anderson. Dorn-, can help you out.
cvcnutg, Aug.
A fried chicken Rapid.*.
thy Cook and Amice Renkes are j
...
spending the week with Miss Mary
one of thc clerks in the new | supper will be served beginning nt
Clayton Webb of Yankee SprtnM
Grant at the Freer cottage. Gun . Montcy Wards store remind* me of fl P. M, after which the 'bUMness spent the week end with home folks,
meeting and election of officers will
lake.
Lindbergh . . . Don't know why.
Mr. and Mr.*
Bordy Rowlader
take |dacc. The ladle.* will also helped Charlie Perkins celebrate hl*
Miss Elvira Barnaby, who is a
have on display and for sale a nice
teacher of vocal music in the Lns
birthday Wednesday evening.
line of home made embroidery work.
Angeles schools, gave a solo, which
Eva
Houghtalln.
long a resident
The greatest wonderment to Del- ।
wits much appreciated al the Meth­ ton Itea ts if tt la over going to rain Everyone l* cordially Invited io at­ of this community. paa*ed away
tend
odist church Sunday.
Sunday morning after a short ill­
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marshall
Norwood
Covert Freer's resort at Gun lake get our cast street fixed so the dust
ness. The funeral wa* held Tues­
wim to be constantly growing in won t fly so It's perfectly terrible! [ spent Sunday with Mr. and Mr*. day at the P. M. church at Morgan
Vcm Quick al Banficld.
popularity. Over 70 people were
at two o'clock.
Mr. and Mrs Charles Pixley of■
Barbara Leonard and Marjorie
there for dinner Sunday and over 20 Fair lake and Mr and Mr*. Sanford,
Mott are attending camp al KitanTall buildings
"stretch”
and
turned away.
Willison were callers at Mr. and
, "shrink." Sixty wall tower. New
W. S Bonham and another gen­ Mrs.. E R. Willson'* Wednesday j nlwa. Clear lake.
Norma Quick of Banficld spent York City, i* an inch shorter in the
tleman have purchated an immense afternoon and evennlg.
last
week
with
her
cousin.
Eliza
­
winter.
If
the
building
were
not
hill of fine gravel three or four
Miss Beverly Given* of Battle,
heated tn the winter it would shrink
miles from Kalamaroo and adja­ Creek is spending a few week* with beth Doster.
Mr. and Mr*. Roger
Williams about eight inches
cent to the G. R. and I. R. R. her aunt. Mrs. Mary Smith.
tracks.
Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Reynold* and
Ironside Bro*., the monument granddaughter. Miss May Taylor.. |
men. have begun work on the foun­ spent Sunday in Otsego
visiting ’ I
dation ot their new building cast of relatives
Hotel Barry.
The Sunday school picnic at Prai- ’
rleville public park last Thursday,
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
was well attended and everyone
Is not everyone in Hasting-, con­ enjoyed Uie’day.
vinced that the only way in which
Rev Bates’ subject fnr next Bun­
thi-. city can make a satisfactory day morning services ia: "A Half
growth is by adding new factories Educated Man." He invites every- •
laborers? We orbe- one to come out to enuren
■employing many muuir,,church and ni
of'
IteveTso
lirveiso.
The only way factories; course everyone I* welcome to Sun­
can be secured la by giving bonuses day school also.
a* other ’own* do
C. J. Barnum I* spending two;
Mrs. W. J Holloway gave a five I weeks taking a course at the Slate
o’clock tea Thursday In honor of Agricultural college at East LanMr^ A M Atkin*, the day Kciiis: sing.
her 80th birthday, a number of her . Th- Delton fire department wa*
। old time friends were present
I eall-d to thc Fred J Hughe* farm ‘
The Muues Irmuide* entertained | west of Prairieville Saturday noon 1
12 of their young lad' friends Fri-: Sunday they were called to Ed
day at a tea party, complimentary I Minor's at Doster: to Clate Patten- l
। to their gu6rt. Mbs Gertrude Davey ] gell s and Jim Collin.*'. People ■
। nf Grand Rapid*
should use all precaution to prevent
I At thc home of tiie groom's sl-tcr.! fire* while it I* so dry
i
I Mr and Mr* Prosser. Mr. James | Mr and Mrs J. C. Horton attendShea and Miss Jennie c&lt;?ok. both cd the annual picnic of the past and
i of thi* city, were united In mar- I present employee.* of the Kalamariace Thursday evening. Rev. Cran- I zoo Stale hospital on thc hospital
dall officiating
grounds Saturday afternoon.
Mr.'
------------I and Mrs. Horton were employed .
FORTY YEARS AGO.
! there previously and met many old ,
A cement walk l* being iakj tn I acquaintances whom they had not
1 front of the National Bank and the - seen for many years.
two store* owned by H A, Goodyear 1 The Walker Co ha* purchased
One of thc feature* of thc Ban-’i the pickle station here and
arc'
ncr for several months will be a making some extensive improvewrckly letter from Shirley w. Smith.; menu on thc same.
•on of Judge element Smith, who L* I ON. Melvin of Vermontville ha*
now making a bicycle tour of Eur- purchased thc Murphy meal mar0P,‘
' ket and is aL*o contemplating putThi* week* issue of the Banner, ting in a small stock of groceries.
JH'M carries a note of the Banner Mr and .Mr*. Melvin arc living in
office and equipment being moved the square house that was used for
from the old National Bank build- ; the home economics building during
in? to the second floor of the pre*- j the last school year,
We’ll Dclivor! — Bccouio prices will soon advance
ent location.
Our new school building b proi greasing nicely. The roof b now
. . . because **vcn now better grades are hard to
FIFTY YEARS AGO
! **ln&lt; Put on- Thp name: "Dclton------- . •
Goodyeor and Barnes will fur- w r■- —
-----.
...
.
.
....
get from the mines . . . because you may not be
Kellogg Agricultural School" '
n;«h the carpeting for Hon. Daniel on the front make* it look pretty
Striker * new home
able to get what you want later on, we advise you
nifty.
R K Grant Ls rigging out a sail
to buy your winter's coal now!
boat for use on Wall lake. Dr. An­
drus has Just completed a dandy" hired at Keith's livery stable. When
row
the ----------------handiwork of —
Ed. (near their destination the evener’
. .. boat,
... —
, Masters, for w on the same waters ' broke, the horsea ran away and
With the disappearance of whor- coming m contact with a tree one
tic berries has gone that big snake, of the horses fell, the other horse
so frequently seen near Carter's ‘ jumping upon It In such a manner
DEALERS IN WOOL. GRAIN, FEED, FLOUR, SALT. LIME,
Lake
The snake will report for ' as to break its leg.
CEMENT AND COAL
duty next &gt;ea*on. howeyer. if the I There are now no cases of dlphbrrry crop is jood..
, theria In the dty and it is hoped
PHONE 2S37
HASTINGS, MICH.
On their trip to Irving Thursday that this dread disease will not
the baseball nine went with a team again appear here.

DUCKIVUTU CllrinfW
VjiantCir,
Bits of Yesterday ’"'.

5.

“PYNLY about one man In
200 is taller than six
feet." And yet he always man­
age* to get the seat in front

According to a nature item,
the “aye-aye" is ortc of the
queerest monkeys in the world,
n statement that should be re­
sented by any spirited yes man.
An old Greek superstition
holds that it is unlucky to
marry in May. A more mod­
ern belief is that it is unwise
to pick a month which has
more than two letters.

“In one year, 1923, man flew
higher, faster, and farther than
ever before in history." Who­
ever he was, his sweetheart’s
dad must have been husky.
An Ohio woman found a dol­
lar bill inside some bread, but
didn't complain because there
was dough in the loaf.

to ST? &lt;^ZS* I®

'”'2L""
; uunnlj. »&gt;. r.lmitullij Ot Mt .go
JMI Ja
'
time, tiie
’s ranirllv
U J
3
1
1
■—
hurled by mv who
a.v.linu*s
the cretins
groups incrrsM
iperrases
rapidly until IQ
IB Is
frock of one of the most dignified reached. Nineteen is "the dangerous
aoSH.' i wish
and humane of professions In the I a«e” for youth.
i*t&gt;
thought
o
'
world grate* roughly on one. sen-'' Why
WThv should
,hft,,w crime
",nw appeal lo
,ft hov
boys
* ;'
THAT BEFORE.'
hardly old enough to shave? The j
abilities.
‘ .
»answer i* no secret Sanford Bate* ■
gave it in gist wltcn he Mid: 'The '
1 entving for dL*tlnctt»tt and IraHetil .peopp
.
have asked thi jhip tn our boys—common and nat- ! "Could everything be done tunc
everything would be done better
urjt(.r bow- Michigan compare* with ural lo us all—must be satisfied
JULY
fi!r M.rn|r j.,,.,.* of the West Tita’ M»mewhcrc else than in the purlieu*
u , |(^t rfimnilr
ln &lt;n. of crime and degeneracy and squal- j
in Umttd Suits is htld tt
Ssltm. I»l».
SUTr. In fart on„ llint Snnnt be
FrV„y rPfld&lt;.r of these lines ap-'

conwumu. h.rin,
linn- lft, „ rmlr
„ „lp).
I, ewrtncrd ,h«
Ne. !»•:
,,
m„,lc „,;
trend u Ir.d.ns u. ««., (tom tt»&lt;,„r Iron, «rr.n&gt;, or ra re.t &gt;t

LETTERS TO THE EpITOR

MARKS THE SPOT

mm ‘••■'"W TiLjww

exactly what lie received
n ih.’
press of the country has now largely veered the other way it ts because editors feel that .New De.il

hl*

How's Uncle Monk. Junior?

president in the history of thi.-.
country has ever received more
whole headed ’support from »the
Ih.n
newspapers than President Hwe- opotom- lo Emuiton.
vclt obtained during the first two i he did. It never should lie necessary) gmed him ns hejeststed n robbery
io call anyone a liar. The charge Is | that netted them $5 n piece One of
'ia jcrioHi one and rimuld be bol- j «h£
is 17 years of age; three
Editors
throughout the land
leaned over backwards to giv, him t stored by unquestionable fart*. If I Their youthfulnexs is typical of a
such
fnciN
arc
available,
they
alone
j growing crime element everywhere
the benefit of the doubt Th
should be presented 'n speak for Records tn the Federal Bureau of
publicans did not have any "f,
Uienwlvc* Tim public w» believe' investigation at Washington rcing bureau" such as th- onis neither sn dumb nor unfair as veal that of nil arrests tn the Unitmadr life mfcrrable for Hoover from
many a nr- brand nn.'nr —m. &lt;o!rt s,*'“ luwd
&lt;“•
M
the minute h- avumed office. any',n'‘' 1
r’"‘nt &gt;ccrn- to
w&gt;nt
J{| JTars| j.-rom u years

president

about

• The petition* are now filed—let
j the campaign begin! Ylp-e-e-e-e!
Whoop-e-e-e-e-l and other expres­
sions of unrestrained enthusiasm!

------•Shudders chased one another up
COUGHLIN'S APOLOGY’
| the spines of citizens of a large 1
Father Coughlin should have • American city recently when they ।
m.de . morn more unmr.linrd I W «’ &lt;°“r
Niro I

■CTRJflWT
1—i
came mostly'from Democratic edi­
tors, the .-o-ealkd opposition prew.s« ••■irprlUngly - nu'dcra’i’
Any­
thing that resembled nngm* crltlettm wa.s very dinicult tn find. The

Won't my boss ever be able to re­
member dates?
Ask Louie Kenficld
glass eye.

high When taxer, are high protlur- be assured
.......... of
..f a good slate of of- | (|,c traditional respect for tiie high !
tlon co’te are high and the cost of.1 ficUIs; no matter which party ia olticn never diminishes The Cough- I
manufactured
goods, is
high ; vjciarimi.-.. On the other hand. If Illn blunder makes him a second |
i,.va
His rttmkrks
a pool
Therefore. In the end. It 1. Ute con­ poor Mlectloni have been
mad? : rater. suprrlnrltv
p. suggest
,bu rnnn&lt;T
‘Urtn !
sumer who pay* for government during the primary, a hundred jvr u b wrll 10r
of U!, lo prc|M by'

ment doles and grant* arc not free

The wrong person received the
blame for a crafty little ’.spoof"
। perpetrated by„pne of the younger
business leaders of this city, they
tel! me.
,

NO MUD YET.
Whatever one may think of Gov­
posltlonr. buxine.**, etc., thou* mild­
ernor Landon's remarks lo date,
ly cool fall days seem invigorating
their freedom from anything re­
bej-ond description Anyway when-;
sembling "mud" is mast certainly
ever we get to grouping About the,
I worthy of approval. We hope he
weather, well always remember has struck a note that will be fol-j
that drouth stricken region tn th-' lowed by all leaders concerned, j
Dakotas through which wc passed '
The temporarily resigned Postmas- j
and then almost anything will seem ,ter General Farley predicted that I
good by comparison.
this would be n dirty campaign.,
Well that remains to be seen. If
WE PAY THE BILLS
other members of the Republican i
Are high salaried executives inparty will follow the example oF
creasing tiie cost of production in their providential candidate, it ap- '

this country; receiving an unfair pear* that no mud need be thrown |
share of the fruits of industry? That
.unless Mr. Farley desires
U what many of the New Dealer*
thrown.
would have u.* believe.
However, an analy.-is of 694 com­
THE KEY ELECTION
panies in twenty-five leading InWhy is it that so few. people, re­
diutxics show that executive salar- tard the party primary elections a'
io» and bonuses absorb only three
per'tent of the payroll of Amert-an xar as stale and local affairs are
industry while texes now ron-ainw "concerned, the primary In SeptemTHIRTY-FOUR per cent. Tax-brr is even marc Important than
absorb eight per cent of sales; they the election prop-r in November,
eat up SI .42 for every dollar paid
any perwn who can file petitionas dividend* to stockholder* In th- containing the required number of
oil industry, taxes take $2,111 far signatures Is eligible to enter the
every employee or 120 per cent of primary rac- under any rceognteed
total payroll',.
party label lie may'chon.*-. -Trom
Govcnmienu have nothing to give this as ortment ot cntrica voters
nr dUtrlbutc except tiie lax-- they inu-{ '..ejcc. ;hr candidate* fnr thc
levy, if government L* economically election proper. If good material1
managed. Uxrs are low. when the! has beep chosen by all parties con-!
u ,..,^0.
Cu,,„r. u„
„ r.„

III The Public Forum 11|

Battle Creek. Mich,
July 33, IBM.
Hastings Banner:
Oii
account
of the Week* school­
■By observing Tommy.
house being destroyed by fire some
time ago. there has been a question
In the minds of some, In regard to
the reunion being held this year.
Everything is arranged for It to
be at the school ground* lhc same
*s usual. Although fire has de­
stroyed the building, it cannot take
away the happy memories of our
school days so let'* all plan lo at­
tend and make thi* reunion the
Understand that Mayor Leonard's largest and best yet.'
Cora Johnson.
page boy was pretty vociferous on
16 Plttee..
that excursion to Detroit Sunday.
Battle Creek.

WEATHER'S PLAYGROUND.
] Free speech b one constitution*!
Variety, u the old saying goes, U right which to date has not even
ths spice of life. But there arc ccr- been
‘
attacked, —
if people arc. against, tain periods of thc year in Michi­ administration policies, they have I
gan when -one can never be jure a right to say so just as those who |
gan (when one can never be sure are for the New Deal have a right
,
Ing to bake ar shiver) that variety, to support it.
If the New Deal has lost ground
at least tn regard to the weather, b
anything but joyfuL Last winter, in the post two years, unjust crill- *
as wc recall, a low temperature in cum by' the press hx« not been the 1

slushiness
of late winter, the
warmth and color of springtime
seem extra marvelous by compari­
son and when the sun-baked days
ol midsummer have done
their j
worst to thermometers, crop*, dis- ’

THURSDAY. JULY 30. 1936

.

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

MICHIGAN

Ifa the Spirit of a Commuaity
That Count*——Not It* Sixe

.AUGUST
I—Wdlura Adim&gt;. lutho* ol

. Way of Our World

BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
Amerlrrn eo.tr.puon ol rrrrrnme.n,
JUI11
NEWS GLEANINGS.
.nd luvlns breomr ronnneed rhn-. „ „
und„ju,„a
............
M. nraudent. .tone, U ruponuble
&gt;n...
&lt;« th..n C d ’J n&lt;" dttermmr to .-r- « &gt; In both Houses of Congress Rr•rt,
- ,x-np.r lore lo ,o wr,.»*rd lo thrill thing through, -Opt J A Moni­
publicans sit to the right of the midtor IN, trrnd. n»nx Mllor. »ho „ lhc alahl
Irca[
m
..
...
. ..
"If nations want to fight let them
cant compare Michigan and the fight
cricket and football —Sir i
WoIwauu. tlaou ar* tr, &lt;UtY.&lt; runt FNlivor T
our opinion there is nothing unfair-; Things have conic to a pretty pass
“Busmcs: Ls never as healthy as
a man &lt;6 ft. tall? walking around
.or unpatriotic in this change o; if a fisherman can no longer call hi*- *n™; ,lk*’ “ chicken, it •must do a the world at the equator find* hu
opinion
sole his own—Detroit News
' 'L?. , j*"10?"1., ol ^ehlng for j head travels 19 ft. farther than his
s^imiin.
»uic ms own. uesron news.
wlja( jt gcU ,„Htnry Ford
(ee. durm&lt;
J(Jurne},

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.

�THI BAITINGS BANNER. TH CRAPAY, JULY M, ItM
DEATH QF MRS.

PETER TRUMFER.:

U/aiA AUGUST SALES FOR THE HOME
Featuring The Greatest Values in Years! From Coast To Const Millions Are
Saving Millions! Don’t Miss This Extraordinary bale! Shop Tomorrow!

Mrs. Augusts Trumpar, aged tt, i
for many yatra &lt; resident of thia ■
। city, died early Tuesday morning ot,
the home of her daughter, Mrs. El­
gin Mead, near Morgan. The funeral
&gt;111 be held frgm tpe Murgan church
today, Thuraday. and tha burial will.
be In the Valley Hume c»uiel«ry.
'near Quimby.
Mr». Trumpet was born tn Ohio
but cotpe to Michigan with her per- '
eiiU when but a small child. Her
family flr*l reilded In
Hillsdale
county. She wm united In mar­
riage lo peter /rruipper. 48 years
ago. He died in 1929. since hU de-.
.cease she made her home with her |
daughter. She was a flue type-of'
Chrblian womanhood, loved by her
family and many friends.
She is survived by her daughter. '
by three grandchildren and eight 1
• Teat-grandchildren.
AMERICAN LEGION
STATE CONVENTION.
! The annual parade. one of the
mo*t colorful events of the program
t it the state convention of the
American Legion. to be held at Lan­
sing on Aug IS. 17 and IB will be on
thc afternoon of the lath. The first
event on the juogratn will be the
■ official tainily dinner tor state offi­
cers of the Legion, which will be
. held Saturday evening, and will be
lulioued by a dance.
On Sunday there will be a me­
mo! lai service. which will be fol­
lowed by preliminaries in the drum'
and bugl*.- corp* conle.t and Mine
caucti.ses. In the evening the finals
in the drum and bugle corje. con­
; test will be held ■ The high spots in
Un- Tuesday program will be the
rlecUon of officers and addrexsea by
j distinguished guests.
GATES HEVNION.
The Gate? school retmTori
.v.&gt;.
held July 19 with tL5 in attendance.
Tiie aural ot . iwneft were easily
Mrs Murry A. Hills of Battle Creek
who is
years old who as MLv Sylvtuter taught the Gate* sciuxil tis
years ago. unti Mrs Ella Hilta GarIUieit o! Nashville .i teacher ot 35

A tine dinner was enjoyed Offie is elected were Lillian Martin­
Cult-. *trcluiy; Katherine Marlin,
treasurer.
. G line* and entertainment
in
cl.urge ot Dan Martindale and vUi’.lng over old limes passed the time
, pleasantly.

VERIFIED VALUE -$49,501

OBITUARY.
Samuel Edmonds. who died July

WARD

S5 DOWN, 15 Monthly
Small Carrying Charge

It hat a faster. double-crown
agitator! A ripple-action cor­
rugated porcelain tub! A famous
Lovell wringer! Mechaniim
sealed in oil! Compare!
With Caroline Engine .
$62.95

FORMER RESIDENT DIES.
William p Doelker. a former Hasi lings resitieni. died at his home on
I Pratt Blvd-. Rogcra park. Chicago,
, Sunday night. He worked for many
i year* for Bert Tinkler in the little
’ brick grocery and for Phln Smith in
, the bazaur store. Al one time he
' wm proprietor of a confectionery
, ..tore on East Stale street. He leave*
' one daughter. Elizabeth ol Kogers
: Park, a sister. Mr- William Ber, kel of Munising mid an aunt. Mrs.,
. Golllleben Wurst
of
Hastings.
■ Burial was In Rogen Park.

BUMPER STOPS

Cjet 'Wahdk P/iicu
HOOF
CO.VTINU

Liberal Trade-in

on

In 5-gal. lots

One coat seals cracks,
seams and holes In
worn leaky roofs.
Gal. corers 50-100 eq.
ft. Save at Wardal

Strong
Folding ’
Comp Cot

YOUR OLD TIRES ARE
WORTH MORE AT

WARDS I

Linen &amp; Lace Table
All Linen. 42 in. x 42 tn., Qt -_69&lt;
All Linen, 52 in. x 52 in., ol -_t9f
All Linen. 52 in. x 68 in., ot $1.19

'

All Linen Sets with nopkins, $|.9B

j

Locc Cloths. 54 x 54 $1.2$
I
Loce Cloths. 50 x 70 ---------- $1.69

1

BEDSPREADS—80 in. » 105 h-—
Colored Stripes91g
Foncy Rayon-------- $1.39 to $4.75
Botes Spreads
$1.75 lo $4.50

1'0 HM FIT

Luggage RACK

SPECIAL MONTHLY
PAYMENT PLAN
FOR TIRES

Regularly 93c

AND AUTO SUPPLIESI
Fits’most care. Sturdy,
strong, Blsck enam.

Montgomery Ward
IIS-122 SOUTH JEFFERSON. HASTINGS.

’

\

FOUNDATION ' ,^-M
GARMENTS '
t/uit Control the figure

f

Cortots, lace backs. $1.39
Step-in Girdles, side zipper
control, at $2.25

Inner Belt Corselottes.
$1.25. $2.25. $3.50

Two-way Stretch Girdles,
$1.00. $1.50. $3.00

Towel Special
A

heavy "Cannon” Turkish

pastel shadas or while,
colored border—* spl
value fur

25c
WASH CLOTHS to

Frandsen9.
'Exclusive Hut Not Expensive'
PHONE

HASTINGS

CORRECTION.

New sport type. Gold
filled frames. Color*.

I

?Loce Cloths. 72 x 90—
At$2 50. $3.98 end $4 25

2304

I home for stipiwr this week Friday
llh
a*rah Rtroni
Mr and Mrs. Forrest Haven. - *"' "Tf'
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mr#
u1
.‘ .
Kim*
N
Frank Tobias near NashyilD.
Kim.- and Beulah wata
Barbar., and Loratne Otis of Kai
u"
amaxoo me spending the week ini
Ute Ray Erway home.
■
WEEK*
Homer Erway wa# g Lansing viaThe Cedar
i:or Sunday.
a picnic at j
Week-end aiieata at Fred OlU' lake, on
The 25lh Otis school reunion wa&gt;
lurk
held on the school grounds last Sat­ net.- Roy Oils ant! Gordan Van।
urday with a Urge croud present. dervene of Kalamazoo.
nail ehureb
After the usual enjoyable dliinci
MARTIN CORNERS.
bring Ubk
.rltli Mi’s. Lulu Water* In charge
Club no. 4 will entetjain the I* A Uie change
.•41 gathered in the rrhnolhou.c for
the program. Mlu VirgUfld Haven* 6 at Mrs Velma Demond s Wcdncs- meeting. U
president and John Erway .♦.cert dav, Au. 17. tor rupper. NoU »h»l crowd.
Ury and treasurer conducted thc H will b* the second Wednesday in
business limiting In which the fol-, August Instead'of the third on aolowing officers were elected- Pres. count of the Ionia fair, school rtMrs. Clara Slantqn; vlre-prta. Roy union#. »tc.. which arv ao numer­
Douglas; secy
and trca.«.. Robt ous at lh!a time of the
OU*, the committees to be appoint­ member the date. Aug. I
ed later. Memorial services were sure and come.
John Whetstone Is vtry HI and his
conducted by Mrs. Eva Haven* and
condition does not own to improve,
Mrs. pearl Newland
Mis. Kate
□re had charge of the
pro-­
William Wrigler of Freeport R
Whittemore
lhc pro
A
play
given
by
Mra.
asaisUrw
with ihr farm work M
gram.
-/
.... jniui
Clara
Mki Laurls An- - Morehouse,
m'Vkci’uw'aM'R'jiu
S«.Wiietstont's.
®

Banner miirte an crroi List
In Its account of Dean Oaven1 port's Rotary talk about the drouth.
The wi-ipht of nn inch of rainfall
per acre is 113 tons, instead ot the
much larger amount stated In our
write-up.

Trade in your old tires
on “First Quality"
Riversides — the tire
that gives you up to
28% more mileage than
any tire sold as stand­
ard equipment on new
cars. Sava money at
Wards!

70‘
SO-yds. Japan
blatk silk —

Foil Dressas.

Doyle, .i girl. July 24
,
MI&lt; cathertnw Hart near Middle w,,n Mr an°
'
John vl.lt.
Biakc
Bom to Mr
and Mrs.. Jrhr.
Kianenbtrg. Elmdale, a* buy.
’ ’ July John Erway. Aipheas and Ken- ' .
; Mrs Vera Gelaer'i Thursday,
neth Dunn. Harold Olis and Norw
Bom l« Mr. and Mrs Henry gap­ man Er way loft Sunday tor a t»)p next meeting will be«.hwith
' d-en. 319 N Church street, a boy. In IM nonhnn pul el U« .l.u "S'"! ‘.'.1".,rd' *“? .I?;
li w Geiger and
I July 28
' Tiie Goodwill L. A. 8. will be
m. »«r
and ”S
(gitertamed m the Frank Wat- r. , £. '
Dy

TODAY!

SUN GLASSES

Regularly 1.70

18-Pound
Coiling Lino

First Quality'

RIVERSIDES
Jet black rubber. Metal
clips are molded in.

150
Sturdy hard­
wood frame;
canvas top.

. . . and Trade in Allowancebefore buying any Tires!

FENDER FLAPS

4fl’’

Ona Rack of Better Dream, values
from SI.69 to $1.95 . .. AU Mwtt

I 4NNVAL DIOCESAN ASSEMBLY, j
The annual diocesan assembly of
.............
। Daughters of the King of the dio­
cese of Western Michigan will be I ‘_______
■ - ,
held nt Emmanuel church next I
I
h-._
Thursday. Aug 8. which Is also th.- j enyoyable guitar selections. The re- |
&gt;d* ■” &lt;***
Feast Of the TranMlKuratlon lite mulndi-r of the afternoon was gpenl «ob«ri Mar tin of LMeMCw,
j assembly will open with Holy Corn- 1 &gt;n sports with u ball game In «*« “’*» *» Ul- “*“»• “»
""I
munlon nt 11 o'clock, the Rev. Keith charge ol Kenneth Dunn and Hur- I
Remember Hn.uk
Bunday
School
Chideder M celebrant. It Will be Old OlU
tt-memt-r
, Oaiw-l
and Bunday at 10:M. Be sure and
followed by lunclu*on and a busiThe Goodwill community
------------tc
at the '
----------------next meeting at which Mu* Georgia | school picnic will be ____________
held
nkixvT
vjuunr.
’ church •»-&lt;thia —
week
Ru-.m-U of Kalamazoo will preside
•- Saturday. Picnic
Esther Schwab ol Elmdale ac
________ __________
“"X
rnjowa
panted Mix. Emery Rime and
ACCEPT THE GIFT.
lite late MUs Ida Tinkler, a sis- trip into Indiana over the week -lake
Saturday.
lor of Bert Tinkler. who recently
Mr. and Mrs. William Hu!
, died, in her will gave $350 lu the
Little Anita McGlocklin of Has- lUI3|tded"th7’Huiiiberiw Taunton'
,
. tli.Kx returned luunc Sunday after । .. ..
Broi?k p*rt aundav
।-------.-.A
i . II Henna
Hrocg rant
uunoay. —jC
rnnnrnt endowment for the cate of; .-i|M*ndlng several
with Forluw
;
Mrweeks
^nd Mr?
I ... "ud _ Vau.«hn
O,l&lt;*r *•
the Tinkler family lol In Rlvers.de j grnndpar.nt&gt;. Mr. and ------Mr*.--------Fbr- 18lind^ ln
cemetery The council on Friday , rest Havens,
Mildred Hamblin entered F
evenlnv voted to accept this $350., Junior ami Kenneth Brown of
nock hmpllal Sunday evening
pEDVidetl the terms Pl the gift were. Hickory corners sp.nl lost week an a|&gt;pend!eilU operation on M
acceptable to Hie Riverside Cetnc- &gt;lth their gtuhcfparvnt#. Mr. and
', day.
tery Association.
------- Whittemore.
M&gt;* Cha*.
' Arthur Ptrston of Allegan ay
Mrs. Sura Erway- and Mrs. Clam Sunday with his brother. C*cil,
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
r *|N*nding the week
Robinson .,
ate
'
Born to Mr and Mr.Charlct , W|lh Mr lin(j Mr&gt;_ Frank Tobias,' family.
MnThvfiu
Faul • M*I&gt;. July 34
n-«...
n NnhviUe
I ! Mr- and Mrfc D°naW Gr‘nt
..
It’ MlM
Nu.»ti\iue.
il,,- of
nt r'lsrk.vfllc snant Hun
rs Terrence
vlnmu H4VC1W u vitlMng . Jabr

Wards Auto
Supplies at |
Reduced Prices

Cold soiled steel —
chromium-platedl Save!

Our One Dollar
Dreuti to go al oi

ihe -on of Pel.-r and Martha Ed­
mands In IH78 he was united in
marriagi- lo MLss Sarah Evelyn
Rickcl. who di.-r&lt; Feb. t# -10:m Hr
is survived by six cnUdren; J. J.
Edmunds and orphn M. Edmonds of
HaMJm-s b. L Edinomb nf Quim­
by. 7. B Edmunds oi Balth- Creek
and Lulu Grrndolcn of Lowrll.
Wyo ; a stater. Mrs Emogene Wil­
cox ol Morgan; u brother Lennell
Edmonds ot Nashville, and ten
grandchildren and seven great­
grandchildren.
' ,

WASHEII
34»5

Ward* Aibtitoi

HOW IS

PHONE ISTI

Laubiujh al tha MtCaUum tehtd dr',.9/,.ehl --.
reunion vii repealed sn&lt;! jnueh en- brother's, William
[ Joyed;‘ Robt. WUcoi gave several ( Ukevlaw.

co&lt;swell.

,
in I

�TTTt HA3TTNG8 BANNER, THURSDAY, JULY M IfM
WOODLAND.
I son. Walter, of Evart, Mr. and Mrs. I porch has been put in a cast. She
PLEASANT HILL.
Campbell spent Ute week end at
n Fisher,
and Mr.■ and ( le
u getting Mer-g
along nlealy
nicely for one of Jackson at the home of Myron
Mr. and Mrs. Bert palmer and
Mrs. Mary
risner, whose
wnosc 80th
num alen Bell of Lyons
x
Thompson. Paul Thompson, who
children spent Sunday with Mr. and birthday was Monday. July 37. was Mr* Reuben Preu of Bay City were
pleasantly surprised Sunday ^Ur- Sunday rmu of Mr. and Mra WalMr;
and
Mrs.
Richard
O'Brien
has been working at Forrest BehArthur Hydenberg and family
______
I I'Mrs.
and family of Lansing were week­ ler'a, returned home with them.
of Grandville. Margaret remained noon when her children held open ter Harger.
QUIMBY.
Mias Marlon Griffin spent the
house from three to five o'clock.' Marietta Paul of Hastings is vis- end guests of her mother. Mra.
GIRLS'
TOURNEY
COMPLETED.
oJt
Lo
Ypend
a
few
Mrs. I. D- Gaskill and daughter
entertaining
45
relatives
and King her grandmother. Mrs. George George Paul, and Mr. and Mrs. week end with Alice Nash and also
Bm’.
MQ «tn Wednesday evening. Au- of Chicago visited at Waller Bldel-1 TO. (lrlr unnU WDrmmral. In ”",“7
James Neal and son. Dick, of Ovid attended the celebration at Alto
friends. Mrs Fisher, who has re- Faul. for a few days this week.
which Un w.r. .nUrcd wu con.1
,
man's Saturday.
were Sunday
lay guests. Catherine and‘ &lt; Saturday evening.
sided
at
her
present
home,
two
miles
Rob
^
rltt
Uanker
of
8o
Ulh
Evelyn
Dudley EUUr ud dmhSamuel Edmonds, a pioneer of dudri U.1
George O'Brien,
• Brien, who spent lut
...,
Walter Shaffer and sister. Lois,
delefate to the Cleveland Town&gt;J* &lt;n«n "Mr cab-dona ep.nl south and nearly a mile east of woodland is visiting her aunt and
Barry county, passed away July po. KoepUnjer dele.led Bell, Mt) let
mTLester Brumm, week with their grandmother, re­ attended the big day at -Alto and
with lhe
the former's
sister. Woodland for flfty-slx year. stUl uncle
'(Tuesday
rn“,"lov w,th
former. .i.t-r
Funeral services at Baltimore U. the girls' novice title.
turned home with their parent!.
were Saturday night guests at the
takes an interest in community af- q-u
Mrs. Chas. Bennett.
give a &gt;0 minute report on the B. church. Interment in Dowling
Teddy
Burkel
la
spending
three
.nri
i*aay nurzei is spending tnree Harvey Blough home.
Mr. .nd Mra. R. J. WUlluu ®&gt;d I“J, &lt;.
“
l“,lth
Mr. and Mrs.. Herald classic and
t lh Kellogg camo at Pine
CROTHERS WINS TENNIS TITLE.
greatest convention that has ever cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Griffin enter­
family spent Sunday with Mr and ’™ av M,e
ramp
ru.c
Gordon Crolhers defeated Ralphi Mr. and Mrs. Clare Williams and
Mrs. Myrtle Casteleln lias been
been held. TownsenditM. don't miss
tained company from Grund Ru;&gt;Mlss Dorothy Hynes, who 1
thia report. Bring your friends with suffering from Ivy poison. She is Burroughs 6-2; 10-8; 6-4 in the fi­ children saw the circus at Battle
'
Mr* Je“le ,UtUai “ ’prndln’ ids. Sunday.
tending
summer
school
at
nal! ot the tennis tournament to। creek Thursday.
i
C
il,ro WW!1U
hcr home in Woodsome better now.
Harry T. Miller and family of ElkRalph Leffler are attending Farm- land. ™
«. .her
— a
------.
win the men s singles title. Jake
For Ripley s -Believe it or not"—
Thia ----week
daughter
and i hart. T
Ind.,
H Par­
—* visited at W. H.
The regular meeting of thc Irv­ Eaton Rapids and E J. Kellogg vis- Miller defeated Loren Boyes to meet Clare Williams frosted two of. his end.
era' Week in East Lansing.
! husband. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rewind-1.dee's
------- Friday
-------- 7 and
—- Saturday.
Z-'—Z.;. They
ing FVUowshlp item held Friday lied al Glen Kellogg's Sunday.
Burroughs in the semi-finals.
Mr. and Mra. Reo McMillen and. er
5rand Rapids, are staying al1 are spending their vacation at their
Mr. and Mrs. Vere Miller and
fingers Sunday while freezing ice
night. July 29. a good program is
daughter. Marilyn, and Mrs. Leone
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Van Eck and
■ cream.
Hilbert cottage at Saddlebag Gun lake cottage.
being planned. Refreshmenu will be family of Detroit are spending lhe
1 lake.
TEAM STANDINGS.
Wilhelm of Chicago. Mrs. Hubert Mrs. Delmond Culler.
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Griffin spent
served. Everyone Invited.—K. Eggle- week at Mr. and Mrs. Dirk Hoff­
Below are standings of the teams
Mr. and Mrs. KArl C. Faul ac­
Peggy Ruth Niethamer entertain­ the week end al Bellevue visiting
up to and including Tuesday. Juty I In," and badly IruMmeO ih. reel “O
man’s.
Doreen Ctor o&lt; Haaunn companied her sister and husband. ed 18 young people or# her birthday, relatives.
,
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Slang of Battle July 18 Her Sunday school teach­
28.
, or (lie nock. This la die second lune
01
'
Mesdnmes Mattle Mlsher. Mime
857
Hirsch Bros. .
12 '
recently the .me doo have been PW; Unhr and attended lhe Pel Creek, to Detroit Sunday and saw er, Mrs. Reuben Wolcott, and Jun­ Bouch. Polly Eash and Helen
Hl-Way ............. _
785
alter the .beep but they hare been ■
’n11 J(““" KUr •’ Wood‘ the Tigers lose to Boston.
ior church teacher. Mrs. Carl Helse, Knowles vhited at the Joy Memo­
Feldpausch ........... 10
thr’nuXrt.mr’ucrc 8UMU PeWY f°und her pres­ rial Home in Grand Rapids, Thurs­
.able lo pel away with It so Ur.
j*and 1,1 lhe altemoon.
no
Nat l Bank ............ 9
। ,»ii.
n. xxiuuu
------Mrs Mc&amp;rnald. houaekeeper lari,
JJfc,ai&gt;a
“nd MU ii.
11 A
KIUon aial­ ■'
*nts on lhe ,Mwn at lhc end 0( * day.
Tabje Co.................... 7
538
tended lhe Vocational conference at
granary
-- - ^na
«"
string
Lovely refreshments were
ine Peter brother,, hu returned I’
•' day- lhelr barn - and
Mrs. Lydia Porritt. June Pardee.
Con. Power co. ... 8
533
Larnw,
.nd U&gt;U w«l ' “««nU
I.nw, U&gt; l,« all | served including a hlg birthday
from u tuo weeks' visit with her sori
Mrs. Pete Griffin and daughter,
61M
Bliss Mach.............. 8
■
’
the
farm
buildings
but
the
house,
’i."
(Mr., Kluon and Mar, Jo are en-'
,hcake.
•&gt;and daughter and their families in
Marlon, and Mrs. Lucy Cl urn were
Bliss Foundry........ 7
4C6
; The live stock was saved. On
....
I Joying a vacation at Crystal Lake.
Marda
Faul returned Saturday in Hastings Saturday.
Grand
Rapids.
Triangles ............... 6
421
I The Jordan family held their re- Thursday Mr. Lehman had threshed after a week's visit with her grand­
230
Chain Store ...........3
10
Harold Yoder and Elarl Ball of
LEST COKXEKS.
'
«“&gt; ( his grain which was stored In the mother. Mrs. C. B. Benham ot Has­
153
Rogers Gro.............. ’2
barn. The threshers had left straw tings.
Byron Center mode a business trip
Mrs. Nettie Hyde and son Paul of i
__
ui
iznmwi nuc
to South Dakota'this week end
Piston Ring .......... 2
in me
the roua
road ana
and n«r.
Mr. Lehman
had
The annual Junior Free Fair was
Hartlngx and grandson. George
"r *nd Mrs _RMph Rise and Mr. raked it up and was burning It lumMr. and Mrs. John Huizinga of
Hyde, of Prairieville, called at the “d
’"Brd
eP,oyed “ . self, thinking some passing - - . held on the baseball grounds Friday Grandville visited Thursday after­
SOFTBALL SCHEDULE.
c*r , and Saturday of last week with iu
,n northern Michigan from Fri- :
- -- 1-—7.
-■-r-•I Monday. Aug. 3.r—Hi-Way vs. Marc Hammond home Sunday. Mr.,
mimne ^it
|U n*1*1 ° “rid u*ual good crowds and success. At noon at Harold Yoder's. .
nnd
Mrs
David
Shepard.
Prairiei
day
un
t'.l
Sunday.
______________
__________
__________
I Chain Gang; Bliss Machine vs.
217 “.*"? the Pel Parade Pride, anernMn.
villc were guests there Monday.
j Miss Elsie Shomo. Mrs. Ray Lew- i। raced to
and straw
। Hindi Bros.
tn the bam
ham ana
alrnw slack
xtack »,|irai..n Miller of Chlcasn was
CARLTON CENTER.
Miss
‘d;
”d K
ftlnwl such
In such
| Tuesday. Aug. 4—Table Co. vs.
Miss Virginia
Virginia von
Von Hout
Hout of
of PrairiePrairie-''. r
“ v “ld„f!C,I,’l-^!
r,ca
- o®nd
Ia
and
gained
such headway
headway In
such a
a awarded flrat prize and Pemrv and
Armour's Star
Mrs. Clayton Valentine accom­
Shultz or Freeport
villc is
is iiMisiiiig
assisting Sirs.
Mrs. Clare
Clare Thomas
A*
n “
‘‘E* °?
at the
Natl. Bank; Triangles vs. Rogers Viiic
Tiiotnus H*'*0
^“*«S
6X7^
called
cn Mr
Mr.,and
and ;ahort
short tlme
lima th
that
th® fire
Sri departmenu
u®&gt;Xirt&gt;u®&lt;&lt;is shJley HaraerP second for the best
panied by her son. Nelson, went
.. .h her
her housework.
Mrs
with
Mrs. £
E. O
O. Shomo
Shomo Sunday
Sunday after-inf
after-iof Nashv.lle
Nashville and
and Wnndl.nd
Woodland rnnid
could “7X ui?mwTSSicffSf XSl
Oroc.
Friday to spend several days with
j Thursday. Aug. 6—Chain Gang
Mr nnA Mr&lt; I t-inn/i unmmrmri 1n00n■
I do Utile more than save the house, prize went to Joyce Eckardt and relatives in Indiana.
vs Feldpausch; Hi-Way vs. Bliss entertained "five little friends of1 Relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Charles I Mrs. J. V. Hilbert. Mrs. E. O.
second to Billy Brodbecl and his
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hale enter­
j Foundry.
their son Stuart's Sunday m honor i Paul °r Hostings received the an- Shomo and Mrs. E. F. Border and pet cow. At the Amateur House
tained relatives from Battle Creek
| Friday. Aug. 7 —Consumers Power jI of his eighth blrthdav
’
nouncement of the birth of a son. the latter's sister, Mrs. Julia Brown. Saturday
evening,
prizes
were Sunday.
Ulu Tninr wiinnpn Vni.n,, I David Charles, on July 24
con- of Iowa enjoyed,* motor trio to
vs. Rogers Groc.; Bliss Machine vs.;
awarded
to
Johnny
Monasmith
and
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Miss Tolne
Mallonen
of KalamaI Mackinac Island and the Soo from
(Piston Ring
*—*•= m
—
«...=- । gmtulations.
Peggy Niethamer. '
Brechelsen Sunday were. Mr. and
Monday. Aug. 10—Hl-Vtoy vs. zoo »P«ni tbe week end with Miss
Mrs. Glenn England and daugh- Tuesday until Friday. Mr* Brown,
Mrs. C- D. Jones and family of
Hirsch Bros. Bliss Machine vs.
Hammond at her home here. ters leave Tuesday for their cot- j who has been visiting her daughter
Kalamazoo. Mbs Verda Zuschnltt
Rogers Groc
Mr ftnd Mrs George comfort, Jr., tage. Sleepy Hollow. Saddlebag lake, | at Cape Cod. Mass., is now visiting
COATS GROVE.
j Tuesday: Aug. 11—Bliss Foundry of Kalamazoo spent Sunday at lhe for a vacation.
A fine crowd was present at the of Ann Arbor. Mr. and Mrs. Win.
Mr. and
J -Mrs.
-------------Border.
*“
vs. Triangles; Piston Ring vs. Nat l s«me home.
ice cream social last Friday eve­ Zujcttnltl of west Hastings. Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence-------------Hilbert —
is spendMr. nnd Mrs. John Hauer and
-----------------------____
Mrs. Adelbert Heath ot Hastings
ning.
Twenty
dollars
was
taken
I Bank.
' Mr. and Mrs. Robert Steele spent Dale Hsiucr attended lhe state con- Ing ten days with Mrs. D. E. Din­
in. The L. A. S. thank all for their and Mr. and Mrs. Millard Brech­
Thursday. Aug. 13 —Chain Gang Sunday with his parents, Mr und vent loir of Rural Letter Carriers at widdle at Bay View.
elsen and son and Mr and Mrs.
vs. Table Co.; Triangles vs. Feld-; Mrs. Clyde Steele of Plainwell,
Ludington. Wednesday and ThunMr. and Mrs. Raymond Faul and attendance and help.
Willard Demand and son. Lloyd, Fred Henney and son of this vi­
pausch.
«
।
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Francisco at- day of last week.
baby son visited relatives here from
.
were In Battle Creek on business cinity.
Friday. Aug. 14 —Consumers Pow- tended the funeral of Mr. Phlerson
Mrs. S. B. Beck (Nellie Geiger) Thursday until Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. a. J Todd and fam­
er vs piston Ring; Hi-Way vs.-of Kalamazoo Saturday.
of Laramie. Wyoming, left Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Nlram Harris and last Monday morning.
A number from here attended the ily visited relatives in Lake Odessa
Nat'l. Bank.
jI Little Daryl Muuo.csiccu
Doublesteen ui
of uiOt- lor
for her nome
home utter
after visiting relatives
relatives son
»on,, James.
James, George sneldon
Sheldon and
Sunday.
circus
in
Battle
Creek
last
Thur*I
"npavrti'Airtwict—
I VK0 5pcnJ 3aturda&gt;' wlth Stuart. and friends. She came here to at- ' son. N. o. Sheldon, of Greenville
Extra Quality Ib.
Guests of Mrs. Grace Cole Sun­
-Th. nnn-oc iSwietv nf North Ma- H‘™mondIlend the funeral of her brother, were dinner guests of Mr and Mrs. day evening.
The Dorcas Society of North Ma
MrsSeymour Lynes remains August Geiger.
E. j. Sheldon. Friday. Mr.
and
Mrs. Pearl Demond was sick part day were Mr. and Mrs. E. Sibert of
I Greenville. Mr. ahd Mrs. Cyril
hnJ? nJabout the same. Mrs. Mary Brouard ] Mrs. T H. Cobb and son. Jack. Mrs. E. J. Sheldon accompanied by of last week.
Extra Quality Ib.
I cream
“
"and cake at the home ot Mr. । ts still caring for her.
I left Monday for a two weeks’ stay his brother and her sister. Mrs. LuCarlton Coats had hb tonsils re­ Wilkes of Augusta and Mrs. Col.
I and Mrs. George Marshall Friday
Yarger of this vicinity.
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Thomas and I with her mother.Mrs.James
Mun- ella Earle of Sacramento. Calif., left moved last Saturday.
| evening, Aug. 7.
,t lumuj
C. M. Keene of Wayland will
family mirnucu
attended uic
the ru*
Fox ccuiuuii
reunion ul
at ।I dorff of Alpena.
Saturday for Eaton Rapids where
i Vincent Norton accompanied Lew MUhnm Pftrki Kalamazoo
Sunday.
I
preach
here next Sunday In lhe ab­
v.i.x..
a.. i_.. i ^fr antj ^jra German Pretz and they have a cottage lo spend a
Pratt Wednesday on a trip lo Ha.-t.
’ I
---------------------------------------------------------- — week at the camp meeting.
On sence of the pastor.
after cherries.
Shankless Star
Miss Grace Dawson of Hastings ■
SWISS
------------------- ——"■ 1
"
------------- ------------------------------ ------- ■
• Sunday Mrs. Earle was taken ill and
Thc young people of the neigh­
visited in the H. Woodman home '
hod to be brought here. She Is in
borhood gathered nt the home of
Pennock hospital for a few days for last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Maurer.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Woodman and
treatment.
Wednesday evening, in honor of
daughter. Ruth, and Mrs. Mertie
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnson and Smith of Kalamazoo visited Mr. and .
their son. Bernard, who returned to
family of Hattie Creek. Dr. and Mrs Mrs. James Smith in Albion on Sat- j
his work near Houghton lake on
■ Leland Holly of Muskegon. Mr and urday. Marian Woodman from lite
Thursday. The evening was spent
Mrs. Bill Zledema of Grand Rapids. Starr
in games and visiting. Ice cream
Commonwealth
returned i
Mrs. Ralph Hanan (Frances Fish­ home with them tor the week end.
and cake were the refreshments. ,
er) and baby of Cambridge. Mass.. Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Woodman
Mr. and Mrs. Orban Lentz and
Mrs. Agnes Fisher and sons, Don called on Miss Sarah Ketcham, for­
son of Battle Creek spent Saturday
and Dwight, of Hastings were Sun­ merly of Kalamazoo, but now at lhe
night and Sunday at the home of
day guests of Mrs. B. S. Holly.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Norton.
Lane Memorial Home in Charlotte.
1 Miss Arlene Kilpatrick left Sun­
1 Mrs. Vincent Norton and Mar-,
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Smith of Mid- ,
day for Camp Kltannlwa,
Clear land spent the week end here.
I gery attended tiie burial services of
।
lake, where she will stay for the
j George D. Pearce al the
Wilcox
Tile Daily Vacation Bible school
Valu,
’
30.00
[ cemetery Wednesday afternoon. Mr.
i third period.
began Monday to continue two
j Pearce was an old Maple Grove res­
Seventy-five relatives attended weeks.
’ the Warner reunion held.at the Su­
ident.
Mr. and Mis. Arch Graves of
Your choice of any straw
per school grounds Sunday. Rela­ Stony Point and M1m Grace Wood I
Miss Bernice Rhoades is hnme
hat in the store—
! after working at the Haden Nye
tives were present from Detroit. of Nashville visited at Willard De- 1
Lansing. Grand Rapids. Grand mond's Sunday. It was Lloyd's I
| home for a few weeks.
Ledge. Battle Creek and Hasting.-.. birthday.
They hold the next reunion nt
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Haight and
I Grand Ledge.
Wilma Jean went lo Pine lake near |
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ruell and Delton, on Sunday, to visit Edwin, ■
family are enjoying a two weeks’ who is at thc camp there.
vacation visiting relatives In tiie
Values to $2.50
southern part of the state.
SOUTH BOWNE.
1 Mrs. Wesley Meyers was brought
Mr. and Mrs. Will Graham and
] from Pennock hospital last week son. Gordon, and Grandpa Murphy
MIDDLEVILLE, MICHIGAN
and her nieces. Jennie and Carrie of Grand Rapids were dinner
P Kilpatrick, are caring for her guests of Jennie Pardee. Tuesday.
i
Mr. and Mrs Will Mishler and 1
j In their home. Her shoulder which
। she splintered by/ falling from a daughter and Eleanor Thayler of
Including all 50c num­

Sporting Items!

supper at the home of Mrs. Prank
Waters Friday night. July 31. Every-

mannans

FRENCH’S WHITE LILY

FLOUR

24% Lb. Sack

.

.

.

.

7Q
■

BUTTER

LARD

366

2- 29‘

a. iQc

Minced Ham
Frankfurters Sm*"
Veal Chops
Veal Steak

STEAK

“25

F

"&gt;• 22c
25c
35c

PICNICS

Waters Clothes Shop

FREE!

Last Call for

9H BASKETS OF Ort
£U GROCERIES LU

STRAW

FREE! FREE!

‘23

eldpausch
■MARKET'

Come In and Get Your Tickets

Phone 2272 We Deliver

69c

To Be Given August 8th at

VANDERVEEN’S

down to the sidewalL;
Greallfi «»rrf
Ipmn fikidding
meant*
increased lirr-IM”

MEMORIALS

heller

Modern high-speed cars require
tires designed to inccl the demands
which those cars make upon tires.
braking
nece*«ar».
Itcmrmbcr,
lhe
brakes stop lhe uheel from revolving but

wm designed to give more end better
road-eontael.

rral Equal Tension Cord construction.
Cable Bead, proemed lough slock. More
miles, more comfortable riding, leas cost

pleasure car and rommcrcial vehicle. And
lhc priey* arc right!

4.50

21

...$8.60

4.75

19

...$9.10

5.25

18

. $10.85

5.50 x 17

$11.90

6.00

$13.25

16

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
PHONE 2121

Hostings

bers, now—

FORD DEALERS

Lomlicd Cotton

ROCK OF AGES GRANITE

AthleticShirb

• We are the exclusive agents for this
nationally known product in Hastings
ond Barry County. Rock of Ages Gran­
ite is produced and guaranteed by one
of the largest corporations in the Unit­
ed States. With each memorial mode of
Rock of Ages Granite, a Certificate of
Guarantee is issued; this is your positive
protection. There is no better granite
quarried.
• We also carry Other well known lines
. . . St. Cloud Red Granite, quarried in
South Dakota; Ruby Red, quarried in
Wisconsin, and other monument stock.
All of our work is fully guaranteed. For,
satisfaction see us.
• We have produced monuments for
more thon 30 years . . . many of them
can be seen in the cemeteries of Borry
County. .

19c
34 to 46

75 SummerTiei
Reduced from 69c

• This memoriol to Mr. Chas. Turner was bought
from us by Mrs. Turner ond placed on their lot in
Prairieville Cemetery
Made of "EVERLASTING
ROCK OF AGES"Granite, this memorial will stand
forever.
• This, monument is one of the finest ever pro­
duced. The carving is unique in that the decora­
tions are in actual colors. The design, a daffodil,
is in yellow, and the leaves are in the natural
green. The lettering is sand blasted. . . . resulting
in one of the most beautiful monuments ever
produced.
• To those interested in memorials we say . . . See
this beautiful example of a true "craftsman’s”
work.

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
HASTINGS

The ONLY Borry County Monument Works.

PHONE 2497

2 for' 75c

Another shipment of

San forized
SLACKS!

$l.39
Other# from SI.50
lo 12.25

WATERS
Clothes Shop
Selling Quality Keeps Ui Burr

�TKK HAHtNCH KANNIB. THVBSDAT, m,T M. 1IH
[

M1U Beatrice carroth*ri returned I" COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON.

I PARTlEfi FOR MBS. KdrrMAN?f some Ume 'Bunday or'Bunday 1

Monday from a two weekr motor
The Hastings Country Club TueaMn. C. D. Bauer entertained I it belonged to a young Mn
{trip to Galt, Brantford. St. Thomas t day luncheons are again proving ' twelve guests at a one o'clock lunch- i enjoys booling very nwh He
and London. Canada.
popular for members and guest*. 711 eon Friday al tha WaUdorft cottage a truck waa backed down V
I Mr. and Mrs. OlonMoyer and I b®1*B present on Tuesday. Lavender at Wall lake tn honor of her sister, river and the boat loaded a
daughter, Carrie, and Mr. and Mrs. Phl0*- dories and honeysuckle ber-. Mrs c.
w.H.
•&gt;.Hoffman of Upper
i_&gt;w** Darby, cording
uurumgto
totrack*
iroca* plainly
piauuy aaen
seen l
Roy
nA.. calUhan and daughter. Ahce( Ties
rleaWere
*ereUlrrt
UMtlin
,n large bouquets and Pa
—- —nerve,
___ — ell right.
Pa., tvh/i
who has
has Kaan
been her house maaf
guest. cSoma
__
. _
" .
O(ukM jQgj several
Mrs. Lawrence Bird and Eleanor drova to Monroe Sunday to visit |1X1 arrangement of summer flowers
•
..------ '
waji
used
nn
the
teram
tabla
wm used on the large table, lhe Cross winning high honors and Mrs.
_
Jean were in Grand Rapids Mon­ Mr. Moyer’s brothers.
day
MIm Beatrice cobum. employed glass baskets on the luncheon table-, Hoffman received a guest prise, ary over to sea what vu tha trouwere filled with phlox and daisies. Mrs. C. D-Mohler entertained Wed- ble. They found nothing but „
WI
the
MLu Mabel Bisson returned yes­ In the Barry county agricultural of­
Mrs. A. L Brown won high hon­ nesday afternoon for Mrs. Hoffman heat to blame. They killed several I
terday from her four weeks’ motor fice. Is taking her vacation in in­
head that showed temperatures
stallments
and Is in Detroit this ors at the bridge game and the al her home on m-2T
trip east.
prise
for
Lhe
golf
event,
low
gross.
week visiting her sister.
--------- ■
ie «■
above normal and they were sent
U'.l'l In Mr.
Hr. J.
1 G
z-l Brutol. ”~'
w^k'.i’ro
i ' H^7n~jrtM.‘maT4er of the ™
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER.
to the rendering works. We bear
rt“Um andfr,fnda ln; Thomas store,
returned Bunda&gt; : Mrr Guy c Keller had as her
Mrs. Fred Atten entertained fif-that Mr. Solomon ha*
also loot '
Sl.- J°«Ph.
hi
jcuenn.
(evening from a week’s trip in the i «UMla- Mrs. Robert Laurenson and teen guest* last Thursday evening some, evidently from
lhe same
** and
J Mrs.
‘
Mr.
Fred Myers returned eaat. Clyde Peeper, a former man- Mrs. Forrest Baldwin of PHUPitts-;, ________________
at her home on West Green street cause.
Tuesday from a shortmotor trip to I ager. substituted during his absence. hurgh; Mrs. a. E. Goodyear, her at amiscellaneous shower
in honor
Niagara Falls.
I MU*cs Barbara Trego, jean Arndt,
mother. Mrs.
C- E Thomas of De- of -Mrs. Howard -Naylor&lt;Evelyn
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mr. and Mrs. j. o. Bristol and'Barbara Wilcox. Lucille Willitt*.'0,011: Mrs. Brown, her mother. Mrs. । wngneri.
Wagner). a recent nriae.
bride. Monopoly j
and Mr* Edward Thompson
1.; | --------was played
son. Btephcn. will spend the week Doris Ryan, jean Brower and Lu-'8- C- Weaver of coal Center. Pa.;'
'
-* and prizes were won by' “nd children of Bunfield were BunMT»
unosier Stem,
oicm. Mrs.
«ra. E.
e. M.
m Bren
nren- Mrs. William Dunlap. Mrs. Willett j day guest* at Lawrence Lucas*,
end
” Chester
ena in
in Bangor.
Bangor.
t clle
cue Karmes
Karmes leave
leave Bunday
sunaay for
ior a
a M
e, »
• _
..
1__ ______ ...__ ■■______ ________ non nf nan
m tnul,ui
’ w
of
st.
Louis;
Mrs.
W
K.
Cook.
‘
Page.
Mrs.
Leona
Cleveland
and
I
Mr
“nd Mr*. Harry Sandbrook
C. D. Garn of Grand Rapids was week's outing at the Chilson cot­
Mrs Keith Chidester of Winter • Mrs. Willard White.
1 and children attended •*-the —
wedding
~—
a Sunday guest of Mias Lettie Garn | tage. Gun lake.
------------------ *-*♦
I of her (later. MIm Lottie Roger and
and Frank Garn.
। Mr. and Mrs E- U Severance and Park. Fla., and Mrs. phyliU Rey- !
MIDDLEVILLE.
iI Morley Hough of Lake Odessa, al
Harold E. Pelham of New York; Mr and Mrs
Lemuel Severance nolds of Ann Arbor and Mrs. RichCity is spending two weeks with: were Grand Rapids and Grand “rd Oroos. Miss ElLse Oroos .and I. ivennej^iav s urano Ran'os Her- —— ""'r—~

Social Events and Personal Mention

Hiram Ruas wu home from Caro
Mr. and Mrs. Alonso Trim vUlted
over Sunday.
relatives in Nashville Sunday.
Mr. and Mn. Mayrleo Fender
Mrs. Marjorie Quldet and MIm
were In Jackson Sunday.
Chrystal Thomae spent the week end
MIm Hazel Henry returned Mon­ tn Detroit.
day from a visit at Lake Orlon.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Goodman
Saginaw spent the week end with
Mrs. James Silsbee and Mrs. Sa- of
-- —
die Mae Palmer apent Saturday in Mra' u,n* 80011
Miss
Constance cook comes MonGrand Rapids.
Rev. and Mrs. W K Chidester day from Ryder college. Trenton. N.
and Mrs. w. N. Chidester were in J^ for a rponth’s vacation.
Grand Rapids Monday.
,,1i
City Clerk Sterling w
Rogers
left
Mr.• wnu
and *ua.
Mrs. Miurwan
Laurence rv/Rii
Ryan via’ia- Saturday -12:
with tic
hia fccci!;family on
ca a two
4*r1 her
hnr aunt,
aunt Mrs.
Lira Arthur
irihii. Kross, , weeks’ vacation at Gun lake.
_
Ited
tn Grand Rapids Sunday.
Mrs. Ruth Baine returned Bunday
Mr. and Mrs. P. a. Bonnett of from a two weeks’ vacation spent
Rockford are spending the week in visiting in Chicago and in Indiana.
Hastings visiting relative*.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton BrandstelMr. and Mrs. Earl Boyes had as a
guest lul week his niece. MUs Har­ ter and daughters are spending two
weeks at the Locher cottage at Gun
riet Kelley, of Kalamuoo.
Mrs. Pelham and son. Geoffrey.
i Haven visitors Tuesday and on
KM,
nrBla'^plds'
of’—
Hrnr/BlOTTS^who
^. ■
atneUvIr
_thlTe. °.'clocfc.- ____
'
— |-------------noon atnothr»«
Mrs. Helen Brennan of St. Louis lake.
Dr. R. B Harkness is in Detroit i Wednesday spent thc day with rel- Oroos of San Antonio.
Henry Trim and Mrs. Alonzo today attending a welfare commit-1 ntlves tn St. Johns.
Paul Brodbeck and family atis spending several days with Mra.
Roy Hubbard
was chairman
of Mrs.
the day'and
was assisted
by Mrs. y"ar^He"n?onc'unw ran^shop tendfd a family region al the
______
Trim
visited
his
granddaughter.
Mrs.
Cheater Stem at Gun lake
lee meeting of the American Legion.
Mr. and Mrs. Orley E KnlckcrMr. nnd Mrs. Lyle Scud.dcr, rc- Henry Vahlslng. al Long lake lost
Branch. Mrs. Guy Bauer. Mrs. „nd poolroom here In thc Ferguson Bcrtha Brock part at lonla Bunday.
Rev. and Mrs. L Severance were I bocker and family spent Sunday Ray
Frederick H- Taylor. Mr*. C. W buUd^
Brides the wldS^T
Mr *nd Mra
Kantner and
turned Saturday from a 1.700 mile (week.
nt the home of Wayne G. Frey. Fine I afternoon visiting Mr. and Mrs Cieo
motor trip in lhe upper peninsula. 1 Rankin Hyde and family of Pral- lake Sunday where a.family dinner Everett of Nashville. Other guests erawfoid and Mrs. David Boyes.; lcaVM tw0 Mns John at home and chlldren wcre 8unday »ue*ta with
Mrs Charles H. Leonard will be Sfl“rd £ H^l^T
I Mrs. Richard Mullis at Middleville,
Mr and Mrs. Fred Atten and Mr. ‘ rleville visited Mrs. Nellie Hyde on was held.
j present were Mr. and Mrs
Ray
Alvah Johnson, aged 73 years. Uv°“y M«Uey entertained a
and Mrs. William Dunlap attended Saturday. George staying over until
Mr. and Mrs. h e. Carrick spent1 Walters and son and Mrs. Mary E. chairman of the commlitee next
lhe ball game In Detroit Sunday.
. Sunday.
( ing for many years in Yankre
Sunday at Saugatuck with their Smith of Baltic creek and.Mr. and Tuesday
Springs township and well and fav-, welrXjdLsrJT' U
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Kline and j Clayton Hinckley was home for daughter. Kay. who is spending the Mrs. Prod D. Smith and children of
George Huffman of Detroit visited 1 the week end and he and Mrs. summer there.
। Augusta.
to™ bm. dM -.n «jdMrs. Roy Cordes entertained lo, &lt;jrnly and was laid to rest on Fri- i
tli#O. F. Chidester's oyer the week Hinckley spent Bunday with friends
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Canfield and 1 Mrs. Glen Densmore, in company
.
’
-in Saugatuck.
।___________
son. Forest, _________
called on Mr. and Mrs. with Miss Jean Mayo and Mr. and
' . ..
.
..
.
.
* Kim Sigler nnd W; R Cook at- j Mrs. Elmira Sheffield and grand- L. Severance on their way home to Mrs. Archie Herrington of Battle plcnir liinnhnnn fnr Hrr aixinr
Mtoay B.ynold.. orjwKord Hllu. SXd rtSdto’S’liJ
S' “ S!“ CT"'"
tended Rotary in Benton Harbor ; daughter, ixils. went to Assyria Sat- ( Niles Monday.
j creek, leaves Saturday on n ten Margery Reynolds of Bedford Hills. g^ 'n^n”n^id neighbor~Hu‘’many 1
.. he hTOW’?h!nr«
..
.. W
...“n
.. i friends
(rtt ub extend to the widow their
ht, blrlhdl,
Bt
r
--------- .
Mn
Dr ajul Mrs o
Lockwood and day trip through the cast. They will ?«ite
Monday wiicre .uthe former
was guest&gt; , urday to visit the .former's
speaker.
I Glenn Sheffield.
.......
..............
..
take.
.her.
Ite
conic,
«pend;
w
,
np
,
thy
.
I
-------- v r V SFWl------children left yesterday with their , go to Atlantic City and New York
•—
■
...
v. r. w.
nawo.
Mrs. Vlnnle Ream While of AtMr. and Mrs
Fred Lewis and trailer tn remain over the werk end byway of Canada and return i im? the month of July. The lunch-1
Arthur
Geukes.
wife
and
daugh- On
on Thursday.
July
23. Vern
Thursday,
23.
Vern D.
D.
lanta. Oa.. Is making her annual children ot Eaton Rapids spent at Interlochen
(through Washington,. D. C. and 'ron
cooked over an open fire ter. who had been on a wuthem andSinclair became July
a member of our
Mr and Mrs. Frank Spensley and . Cleveland.
',nnd swimming and visiting were envisit with relatives and friends in Friday of last week with their coiiswestern trip, returned
home Wed- post. This brings our membership
Hastings.
j in. Mrs. Mina Scott.
daughter Carolyn of Downer Grove. I
Mr. and Mrs. Omar Barker and i l°'’cri during the afternoon. Out of nesday
n»H.v
hnvm.
.1.. c]r)&gt;e to th(, haU hundj.cd m„k W(.
having ■' traveled
nearly
Robert Brush and Al Raila of;
Mr and Mrs. Edward F. Botlum 1 Hl., spent the week end with her i daughter. Pauline, are leaving Sat- 11°*” guests included Mrs Jay c. 8.000 miles. They report a splendid
I urday for their vacation which Ketchum of Detroit. Mrs. Sidney time and no accidents; Just three arc getting stronger and better all
Chicago arc spending the week at left Tuesday for a week's visit with mother. Mrs. c E. Barnes. *
lhe time.
Mr. and Mrs. H. E Smith attend- I takes them to Chicago where they I Shipman of San Francisco. Mrs. E
the Nelson Burroughs cottage. Ack-. Mrs
Bottom’s brother. Charles
punctures the entire trip. While
Next Sunday. August 3. is the
er’a Point.
I Wardell, nt Rice Lake. W13.
cd a dinner at the Old* hotel Thurs- will be guests of her brother. Dr. i A Frandsen of Ionia and Mrs. T. D. they saw many fine sights they re­
state picnic al Eaton Rapid*. Il u
James Ransom and daughter. Mrs. I Mrs. Mary Van Dugtercn. Mrs. day night given by thc Kelvinator Wm Kangas. After spending a day ' French/ of Middleville,
lumed home well pleased that they hoped as many members as can will
Maude schomp. spent thc week end 1 Tillie McLravy and Mrs. Phoebe and American-Bosch companies.
I in Milwaukee visiting thc Harley- i
*----------------are residents of Michigan
«
make the trip as we are promised
a
Maurice Waters, who ha* been Davidson factory they will head
) TROUT DINNER.
In Jnckson with Mr. and Mrs. Ver- 1 Mote attended Hie Mote family re—a time.
.&gt;—! Don't fforget
orget our
William Gacker of West Thom- i good
our Po3t
Post
working on the federal soil conscr-1 north fpr Hancock and Houghton
Mr. ^nd Mrs W. H. Olney spent
non Wellman.
I union at Lake Odessa Saturday.
apple was in Hasllngi on Friday on picnic at Streeter s landing on SunMrs. A. M Johnson. William Van j P A. Carr, route agent for the vation program for two weeks gel- where they will be house guests of Sunday with his brother and wife
। probate court business.
day. August 9 We will meet at tiie '
the new wheat
contracts, nn*
ha* ('Dr. and Mrs. A M- Kangas
( of Rutland. A 15-lb. trout caught in]
Letuter and Donna
and mi
Mrs.
Cart spent ting
isviiiin Dahuinga
MHiiiiuigu of
ui Railway
nnuwny express n&lt;iu
.i varr
'.uig me
wnim contracts.
Mr. and Mrs Bert Benton of Cal- . hall at eight-thirty and traa-.por------- ot. ..
.
Mr nnd Mrs Orl(e c wlbon of Grand Traverse Bay by Cleo RIsCressey were In Hastings on bust- Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Harry returned -to ....
the office
the ngriifomia are spending a time visiting , tation will be furnished members
Thursday.
! Wood
at their
Oun oun
lake iaxe
cottage.
agent. agent.
.new
jni mursoay.
; wooa
at tneir
cottage.cultural
------------ cultural
!/&gt; . Angeles, who have been vLMting bridger and son Earl of Kalamazoo their old home town, after an ab- who do not have cars.
Miss Dona Stuart. Mrs
Marjorie । Mrs. Vernlc Gaskill and daughter. Mrs Emery Apwy. 8r. with Mr., friends and relative.', in Hastings , furnished a fine meal with all other
sencc of nearly 30 years. Bert was The Post is considering the idea
Guldet. and Miss Louise Kenyon of | Connie, of Chicago and Mrs. Aliceand Mrs. Elmer Apsey attended the since thc early part of May. left this
trimmings. No bones were broken a barber here for some years before of incorporating. Details have not'
lhe Windstorm force are
enjoying Moon and son of Fine lake visited U. S W V. picnic at Willard park.' morning by automobile for home.
and none swallowed,
--- where
— .u_
.-------but lh(,.
going west,
the climate
ceri­ befn worked out M
two
— ••
---------*-------------•••- Battle
----------------- — -»— 1.-------------------------------- • - •
1
------------------ —-----------------vo weeks’ vacations.
, •Mrs
H "
6. Gaskill ••
the
past- —
week.
I Goguac—
lake.
creek.
Sunday
tainly agrees with them both, as committee Is getting ready to re­
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Smith have ! HONORED NEW YORK GUEST. ’ ENTERTAINED BRIDGE CLUB,
Little Harriet ‘Lognn came from 1 Mr and Mrs. Keith Daniels spent
they are both looking fine.
port.
-------at. thc glindBy Bl Ann Arbor visiting Bill been entertaining the latter's moth-1
Mrs I’nwTence Bird entertained;
Mrs. Edward F. Bottum enterAnn Arbor Saturday to stay
C. M. McCullough of Flint, who
Several of our
members are
Henry home until the summer term Schultz of Grand Rapid,., who is cr. Mrs. Arthur Otl. and sister, Mrs. al a 0®Ughtful luncheon last week tained thc 13 members of her bridge is connected with the school sys­
-slightly under thc weather.” Il 1*
at Ann Arbor is finished.
confined to the University hospital. Al Tonn of Portland, Oregon, for at ,ier home on Colfax street in , club Thursday afternoon al a des- tem there, was in town calling on
hoped they will all be jxel! soon.
honor of her guest. Mix Mary Edith sect bridge al her home. 320 E.
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Haven and
Mr and Mrs. s. C- Weaver arrived the past ten days.
friends on Monday, last week. He
The ladies of tha Auxiliary meet
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Gardner. Miller of Rushford. N. Y. Miss Mil-1 walnut street. Mrs. Bottum has
Mrs Erma Gardner attended a re- Sunday
----------- ------from —
Cole center. Pa., —
to
was at one lime superintendent here this Thursday night. July 30 and
union ot the Ryan family at Pleas- spend two weeks with their daugh- Helen Skopec and Edgar Killian of ,er *" a teacher of mathematics and been spending most of her time in
and his many friends were pleased the Post meets next Thursday night,
ant lake near Jackson Sunday.
ter and husband. Mr. and Mrs. A. East Lansing were week end guests 1 science in the New York publie ( Grand Rapid*, coming home to en- to see him.
August 0. AU members are asked to
of Mrs. Gardner's parents. Mr. and schools and was a classmate ot Mrs I tertain her club.
Mrs E D. Bennett and MIm Bess. L Brown.
Will Sweet, our section foreman, attend.these meetings as a lot of
Bennett had as guests Sunday thc I Mrr Fay Allerding and three Mrs. William Mhke.
i Blrrt " al Spring Arbor seminary
------------------ ——-------| SURPRISED ON BIRTHDAY.
has been suffering with a carbuncle important business is coming up in
former's niece and husband. Mr.' children of Lake Odessa. Richard
Wm. Hitchcock. Jr., spent Sunday I and Junior College e
James Silsbee was pleasa.nl- on Jits cheek for some days, very which every member is interested.
table
was attractive, I Mrs
1
'The
n”‘ luncheon -----------------------------and Mrs. J. L- Dickinson, of De- • Atten of Battle creek and Mrs. at Indian Grove. Thornapple rivnr.
painful
for him, but much improved There are only four more meetings
ly surprised Monday evening by the
iroit.
। Phoebe Mole are spending thc week Billie still has a longing for the the color scheme being aquamarine ■j !y
until lhe annual election of past
members
of the
Club, inc
the now.
and wniic
white witrr
wltlr -a ecnterpiecc
centerpiece o.
o' mcmoera
r‘
oi
1119 New
new Idea
scca viuo.
MIm Ellse Oroos and two nieces, nt Gun lake.
-Old Swimming Hole." where he ana
Miss Hallie and Miss EllAe Oroos. I Mrs Emma Murdock was called used to spend his happy boyhood talisman rows, snap dragons nnd occasion being7her birthday. A pic- 1 Mr and Mrs o. O Griffith1 spent officers. Several pf the present offi­
baby's breath in a silver bowl. Fol- nlc supper we\ enjoyed at Lake . a P0*110’1 ot msl week nt Ludington cers arc not up for re-eiectlon. so
arrived Saturday from San Antonio to Kalamazoo Monday evening by days swimming and fishing and
lowing the luncheon, a swimming, Algonquin.
n »rCr»hJLW?S a ^^ritate to the we had better get our thinking caps
to spend two weeks with Mr and tiie illness of her niece. Mrs. Roger still knows the spot where the old
trip to Thornapplc lake was en-------------- « • e* — •■■■—
,
F. D. boys convention. They re­ on.
Mrs. R a Oroos.
Wiswell. who underwent an nppen- diving log has sunk and been for- joyed
'P
'
ENTERTAINED CLUB.
| P°ri a nfc? rain there during thc
Roy Bush as chairman of the fair
MLv. Jannet Michael and MLss dlcitls operation on Bunday.
j gotten.
The guests Included Mrs DoniliU Mr&gt; Robert Mills entertained the weeY
...
.
V I*
committee ■reports
plans me
are pruproBarbara Johnson, who arc attend- [ Dr. G
W. Sheffield returned
bum Margery
ma*avry Reynolds
rw/uums returned
iruunni
ML*s
A boat was stolen from the river I greasing nicely on thc fair program, i I
M. L- club
ing summer school at the Unlver-1 Monday from a three weeks' visit Saturday to Bedford Hills. N- Y. Mead and Miss clarabeile Marta ofji members of the Y
Nashville; Miss clyta Wise and Miss
»t a P°l *’*&lt;* luncheon at
city of Michigan,.weg» .home-from, with his son. Harold in Detroit, after spending her three weeks’ vaAnn Arbor for the Week end.
’While
•*-'*----------~’ *a *•
—- -*
“-------with
*•’- *Mr.
— —
• •*-away*--------hr suffered
heart
nt- —
cation
and
Mrs. Roy Cor- Either Watrous of Woodland and, ilu,r CQtta5r al Gun lake,
IuIfr
IT,. —
Mlss Emily McElwain. Ml-M Jen­ tack but ha* completely recovered,
des. Miss Reynolds has a number Mr- Simon Hughes. Mrs. Donald,
nie McBam and Mrs. Gertrude WilMiss Agnes Smith, who is a nurse of duties nt thc reformatory, where Robinson. Mis* Margaret Mead and
cox were home from Evanston over at thc University of Michigan hot- she is employed Including editor of Miss Vinita Klnne of Hasting*
thc week end. Thev are attending' pltal at Ann Arbor, is spending a the institutional paper, recreational
LEAVE ON BUYING TRIP.
-----------summer
school
—i—. Bl northwestern two weeks' vacation with her par- director and piano and bridge teachA K Frandsen and Mrs Mamie
NOONDAY LUNCHES
University.
। ents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith, er to 250 inmates.
Dr. and Mrs. G. L Lockwood’
Mr. and Mrs. Alta Blanchard nf
Dr. nnd Mrs. K- J Pratt returned Manee of the Frandsen store leave
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
were tn Battle creek Saturday aft­ Kalamazoo spent Sunday with their Sunday from their four weeks' trip next week for thc city markets to
buy
stock
for
lhe
new
ready
to
DINNERS
ernoon attending the funeral of Dr.r. daughter. Mrs. Craig Sheffield and in the cast. At Philadelphia Dr.
their mhumhci
daughter., &lt;-■&gt;;•■**,
Phyllis, rc- ,pralt w**
did post uisuusm
graduate: »•«•»
work a&lt;*u
and wear department in tiie store. Mr
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.
L. B. Clemens, head of the Dental1 family, **•&gt;■..
Laboratory there, who died sudden-; turning to Kalamazoo witli them for Mrs. Pratt attended the democratic Frandsen will go to Cleveland nnd i
iv. Dr. Lockwood acted as a pall- a visit.
(convention. In New York they at- New York and Mrs. Mance to Chi- j
SUNDAY DINNERS
cago They will buy a complete'
bearcr.
; Mr. and Mrs c D. Bauer and tended the sessions of the National
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
Blake Boylan has returned to I&gt;- | Mrs. Bauer's xlst&gt;r. Mrs. c. H Hofi- osteopathy convention and had a line of coats, suit* and dresses and
troll where he is employed by an air man and son. Jack, of Upp^r Darby.1 short vacation at Atlantic City. On the shop will be open a* soon as
6 to 7:30 P. M.
necessary alterations are made I
conditioning concern. Blake, who Pa., near Philadelphia, are spending their return trip they visited Mrs
Mrs. Frandsen will also be. in j
has completely recovered from his a week at the Walldorf! cottage at A D. McDonald at Port Huron,
Chicago
attending
a
school
of
in-1
haat prostration. Ls making good in Wall lake.
1 -----*- ------- —’* of
** —
Mix ------Frank
Trethrlc
Battle
his new work and expect* soon to be , Mrs. Helen ....
Lantz has .relumed to
... Creek called on Mrs Nettle Hyde strut Lion in corset filling.

!*£

t™1

Ell“ .M SSrt Li

«"J“&gt;

Cool ond ComferfaWo

Quality Material
OVERALLS that are full
cut and made for wear. Win­
ner Brand, stripe* and plain;
230 weight denims, triple
teamed, large |&gt;ockels and
cut to fit.

COVERT WORK TROU­
SERS and Shirt*—dark grey.
Sanforized shrunk, a good­
wearing suit of wort clothes;
also many other trousers to
choose from.

WORK STRAWS - 1
straw and bamboo; wide
vizor and light weight; m
styles in sun helmets.

25- jr
WORK ROCKS U 1KM ■
heavy welghU; soft and ha
finished yams; good wvarl

10' 15" 20*
Phone 2396

Hastings'1 Most Beautiful Shop
THE NEW HOME OF

PARKER HOUSE

a saieman.
I her
“ home
‘
In this city after a long
‘
Sunday
___________
Last__________
Thursday...
Mrs. Hyde
Miss Tillie Tyden and Mr and and serious illness at the home of took Birdie Mcrlau to Reed City to
Mrs. Edward Bartling and daughter, her daughter. Mrs. Ravi West In visit
------ her
’ — cousin.
------ ------------*J- Collier
Mrs. Ada
Betty Jane of Glen Ellen. III., who Grand Rapids Mrs. Lantz is con- Munson, who is vacationing at the
(old
have been visiting Mrs. Bartllng's , valesclng gradually.
,.
... John collier home. Mrs. Hyde
....
M(m H,.|rn Newtnn- accompnnled spent part of the day there and
father. John
Tydcn. -for a week,
left
Saturday for the Tydcn farm at by her mother. Mrs. cole Newton. then went
-&lt;z.: tc
to “
Elm
.v. Hz"
Hall ~
to risl:
visit
Orecne. Iowa.
.
went to Kalamazoo for the week her friend. Mrs. Winnie Rush and
Mr. and Mrs. o A- Ironside. Mr. end tn visit her sister. Mrs. Fred daughter. Irma Hamlin. On
Cz Satand Mrs. T D. French of Middle­ Mahoney, and on Monday went to: urday Mrs. Hyde visited Mrs. Belle
j Brophy at Kalamazoo and also saw
ville and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Al­ (Chicago a few days’ visit
len nf Flint spent Sunday al High­ | Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Bronson Belle Arbour of California.
land Park with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. and Mrs. Belle Brock were in Jack-1
Kurtz of Grand Rapids, who are son to attend the fifth wedding an- (
spending the summer there.
| ntversary of Mr. nnd Mrs. Basil
Mrs. Erma Gardner was in Onon­ Bmllli on Sunday. Mrs Smith wna
daga over lhe week end where she formerly Miss Dorothy Bronson.
Mr. and Mrs. Levant Freeman of
went to auUt in breaking up the
family home brought about by the Lok Angeles left Monday by bus for
death of her mother. Her father, a visit In Norwalk. Ohio, by way of
Nelson Haven, will now make his Toledo, and will then return tn
Lansing. Greenville. Grand Rapids
home with a daughter In Leslie.
Elmer White attended the Boston- and back lo Hastings before leaving
Detroit game in Detroit Sunday. He for the west.
had a scat high in the grandstand
Carl w. Wespinter. Jr . arrived
and enjoyed the view almost as Saturday from Detroit to spend a
much as the game Elmer had n week’s vacation. He will be at MUI
jin? tune and wishes to express his lake with the Russell Kautner's for j
appreciation to all who made the the first of tiie week and the re-1
malnlng time with his parents. Mr.
trip possible.
Postmaster and Mrs. W. J Field and Mrs C- W. Wesplntler.
Mr. and Mrs. F. I&gt; Bauer. George
and son. Robert, are spending a
month with their daughter and her and Mrs. Charles Bauer went to
husband. Mr. and Mrs. Cranston South Haven Sunday, where Mr.
Wilcox, who occupy the Downs cot­ Bauer inspected the experiment of
tage al Gun lake. Mr. Field, who cultivating huckleberries being car­
has not been well. Is enjoying a ried on al the experimental station
of the Michigan Slate College.
I
So vital a factor in the
well-earned rest.

Control

gome* of Golf . . . also

ploys an important part
in good cleaning. Con­
trol of every detail Tn our

plant insurer QUALITY

Repairing
Estimates FREE!

BESSMER
Jewelers end Opticians

CLEANING ot POPU­

LAR PRICES.

138 WEST STATE STREET

The Big Little Store
Friday, July 31

Saturday, Aug. 1

MILK, tall cans

3 for 23c

OLD DUTCH CLEANSER . 4 cans 29c
LUX SOAP

4 bars 25c

WILL OPEN for BUSINESS
SATURDAY, AUGUST 1st
with a line of beautiful fall dresiet and
millinery at their regular, popular prices
COME IN AND SEE ONE OF the MOST BEAUTIFUL
WOMEN'S READY-TO-WEAR SHOPS IN MICHIGAN!

WHITE HOUSE COFFEE..Ib. 25c
SUGAR, fine granulated7 lbs. 39c

PAROWAX2 packages 19c

New Fall Dresses

New Fall Millinery

MAGIC WASHER, Ig. pkg.
and one 10c size, BOTH for

RUSK

2 packages 19c

BEEF STEAK-Chicago BcefSirloin or Swiss Ib. 23Vic

BACON-Fancy QualityNot Sliced
OLEO ... •_

Ib. 29c

New merchandise will be received weekly
from New York’s leading manufacturers,
assuring you the very latest in fashions!

2 lbs. 27c

CRACKERS

2 1b. box 17c

Call 2140 for Qualify

Cleaning

HINMAN’S
SHONE 2491

McCRKEBVS
D RY CLEANERS

Hastings

Michigan

Aow in their New Home

138 H eft Stale Street

ROOM FORMERLY OCCUPIED BY LAM HE * DOYL

UNDER MANAGEMENT OR MRS.-ARLENE MRKI

HASTINSS. MICHIGAN

eeee.

�TBE HASTINGS RAXNRR, THURSDAY, JULY tt. ItM

URANCE

WANTS

AUTO . FIRE

Phoue 721 —F*J2

OMR CENT A WORD. NO ADVKR

jason k.

McElwain

Our Service

rE'eS-h

Ml
FOR

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

OFFICE

um BALE

FOR BALE—Th

HASTINGS MICHIGAN

Route 2. Phone 1

FOB HAU
105 *4. Church st
I

Middl

-I
12“

BRICK

CARDS of THANKS

The Hastings Banner

i: It
Hcrintnrr witli her parents. Mr and Mrs. w.
*..4 , ..... .i..ii u w Boughner and family
no

FOB BALM

’r*r.”
........‘*i........
. Yi*’’.? Grand
n™ao Rapid*
“2 u
1UH.I and tirirurr .lr John Miller »tW
45
t 0UM 1X.UI. • Ann of Plymoyt
..OUdHi-TA.n.XACtoA )

At Old Hotting* Wool
Boot Plant Site.

' here with tlieir mother, Mr*. Luella ; second time. Thia time it I* caused
SOUTH MAPUC GROVR.
r rir jn/'ff r&gt;r&gt; Draper.
! by "Robert Frank" Monica, who vu
Mr. and Mix Clarence Bump and
CHURCHES I Next
Next Sunday
Bunday at
al “-The
Ledge*? |; bora
July 25th.
25th. Central- family of Hasting* (pent Bunday
The Ledge*.
bom Saturday.
Saturday. July
* near Grand Ledge
t
will occur lhe
Ih, I ulation*.
.iI.iim,. Dale
n.i. and Virgil.
Vi-aif
rv.nliu with
witH Mrs.
btr. Anna
Anna Cheese
r’heeie-­
evening
will
man.
.
.umuai reunion of the classes of I Mr. and Mrs. Grant Dickerson alMr*. Jo*ephlne Cheewman acUNITED BRETHREN church
1928. Tt. and ’38 of Freeport High [tended tha Aahby reunion at Gull
ike. Sunday.
componied her mother. Mra Bam
i school.
lake. Sunday.
'
i! Quite a number from here were In
in j। Mr. and Mr*
John
Poolman
of
'
Buxton
to
Centerville
Wednesday.
Mi
mighty first ybar
Uo.o attendance at the homecoming at I Kalamazoo were entertained at the
Mr. and Mr*. O. C- Marshall *p«nl
“■«■;1 Alto kit Thuraday. Friday and Harry Pennels home Bunday.
I Bunday with Mrs. cha*. Cobb and
; Saturday.
1 Mr and Mr*. Ira M Slawson and family in Battle creek. ,
j
Frank
and elects
called
.
। Mrs. Anna Geiger Is much wor*e Roy Johnson of Flint were guest*
p-—*- Norton
— ---•
—— —
*
______
______’* alater, «...
«.,-3
8. b-rt »■!•«• b, Mail. pMiMU:
"------- -•
Pr»v&lt;r
at :hi* writing.
|of
Mr slawson
Mr* Add*
: on Mr. and Mr*. Jay Haw kin* ini
I Vermontville Saturday.
। IN Barry cqunty. onb ybab. «i oe.
' j- ”i' , Supt and Mr* B G Voorhees are Pierce. Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Lizzie Pcnnel* and son Paul' Mr “d Mrs Ca*ey Jarrard of I &lt;« wu tn Mvbbn &gt; •
■nbiMi. moving into the Milboume house in
: the southeast part of town. Tiie and Miss Stlmpaon of Kalamazoo the Mayo District sprat Sunday . IX UARRT COUXTICaiX MONTHS. «o«.
Bob!.!------------------------home has been wired and redeco- •prat Saturday evening wlln Mr. j afternooni with
witn Mr.
asr. and
ana Mr*.
mt*, bod IJf BAIt-T covxty. three month*.
FIRST METHODIST BPI1C0PAL
and
Mrs. narry
Hany rciuicia.
Pennels.
Gray.
l rated the past week.
_
iiu aara.
]«•»*.
■ IN ADVANCE ...............
,.*5«
CHURCH.
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Walbridge and 1 Mr. and Mr*. Palmer
(Mae iouTRfDE BARRY county. ONE year
Miss Helena Braendie spent last
vlsltad • her grandIN advance :*i.so
’ week in Lakeview, lhe guest of her children of Battle Creek spent the Cheeseman)
■ Uu.ic uncle. Frank Braendle. and family, week end with their mother, Mrs. , daughter and great-granddaughter, FOREION sUBbcriptioNB. OMRYRaR
Mr*. Mildred Poff and Joan at lhe I IN *»**»&lt;»............................... «» oo
ciiura.' Adam Ditmar of Grand Rapids Nellie Given.
*
was a supper guest at the Victor ‘ Esther and Maxine Kingsbury I FYpd HUI home Friday aftaraoon. I
r ’vrw Sisson home last Thursday evening. and Charles Monica attended ’he I Mr- *nd Mr*. E- E. Gray. Dunham । Mr. and Mr*. A. Kimball of
clrcu*
at
Battle
Creek
Thursday
I
dUlrict *pent Sunday evening with Jackson cousin* of Mr. and Mn.
i.u fur
Dr and Mrs. H. S. Wedel and
Mr*
Geortte
George Hoffman were at
al the
lhe latter'*
latter's
Mr*. i.ulii
Lulu Or»v
Gray. .
। daughter* motored to Lake City _i&gt;h
with Mn Arthur Johncock.
, Mr*. Lester Preston. Mr*. Grace
coat, o.ovc onxn.o.&lt; or cBMrr. I
J
ASSYRIA.
' Broke and Helene Plasma spent and Mrs George Hoffman and Vel­
Royal Myer* of Hasting* wa* in '
*2^’
Mrs. Aaron Treece of near Alle­
-rvlc « ■*.
I ““
SrS
to. gan spent a few days al ber daugh­
I*»h» 1 m“ «r church are ^tor'dWon.m:
belne dtscontin-i
... ‘“o^t,"&lt;^to
... [ii^retornto,
'id* returning witli them for a few
ter’s. Mrs. Byron Ouy. Visitor* there
ued during the month of August. at Hasting* from September 8 lo 12 [day's vtolt.
1 The Junior church Ls also meeting
. vls Rah&lt;nCh u at the Mr ■ Mr and Mri Leater Preston. Mrs. Bunday were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mil- '
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH.
with the regular morning service
’
na.wui hnnu.
' Orace
MU* Pl“ma and Mr.
during this month.
",d “I and Mrs Roy PrelU)n attended the neat Skidmore of the Branch dis­
Mr. and Mrs Adam Dltmar and
*"
1 funCTB1 ot Mr Preston * uncle, John trict.
■ Inc and ann'dil bu.lneaa
daughter Althea. Mr. and Mrs. Wiland Graydon Jay Gaskill., pj-^on Bt Grand Rapid* Wedne*.
Mr. and Mrs. Milo Keck of Bed­
Lard Dltmar of Grand Rapid* were
««»
on Monday. July day
ford and Mr. and Mrs. Berle Nash
were Sunday guests at Mr. and Mr*.
Sunday guests ot Mr. and Mrs. Vicmr RlMon
The early sprlnB fr04t Bnd dry
HIGHBANK.
; Fred Reid a.
Tiie Moore school reunion will be ——————————
at ____________________________
the Moore schoolhouse on '
St
Mr. |
■“«»» »&gt; U» '-tot .nd H toheld
_______
KOTICB OF ARAM DOM MEMT OP
HIGHWAY.
Saturday. Aug. 8lh. AU the old
Banter accompanied htr home rad . u
annual reunion of the Facie' schoolmate*
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN, that al
arhnnlniiiIra and
and teacher*
teachera try
trv and
and
Inr Visited her *Uter and ,nother' Mrs.
district ha* been scneduled ' COfne “nd mee^ old frlcndl »«Bln• Rose Miedradorf until Saturday 1
a^uST 8
S the Thcre
P°l luck
“d B
M„. mtotet taou,bt &gt;•«
tor I t .nd
""
home.
,
ernoon.
FIRST FKEBI.TTEBIAN CHURCH.
- ---------------------Miss Helen Boughner relumed to ,
wUJ
an Ice cream social
Phot. 22*5 cllicago Sunday, where she is em- ’
‘
th^ort^t the Mr' at the ho,nc ot MrUn G™*'
"w-'idW, W jSSJSi 'ek“ho«’"kB.Utoo^blM«'^*&gt;' Fr'tto, .ronin,. Au,. Ito.
~r . r.
THE

In­

*•’ T “■ Ueo*-

quire of Joe DeRuitor

ot Pickle Station.

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO*FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thin Smooth Rubber Back Pads
No Ports To Wear Clothing

Mi4.l&gt;&gt; ill.
FOR RALE—Bed
rook .lot* tn
machine. All in rood condition

GRANGE PROGRAMS
POMONA ORANGE

BAPTIST CHURCH.
B. J ADCOCK. Mlr.litar.

FOR RENT

&gt;*'£■ new Cold

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponga Rubbar Pads
No Leg Strap*

Die Prescription Drug Store
B. A LT BARKER. Fropr.
HASTINGS ..... MICHIGAN

G««r*M«ed Frew

Fitting

Farmers, Attention!
I WIU pay Hi HI GUEST MARKET
PRICE for VEAL. LAMBS. II008 and
CATTLE for cui at the HatUng* Stock
Yar4*. Ship EVERY TUESDAY
and BUY EVEBY DAY.
IAKE DbPBIESTEB. PHONB 111—PS.
If.

WRECKING
FOR PARTS
• IKS Model A Ford Track
• 1S29 PLYMOUTH Coupe
• FORDSON TRACTOR
AUTO GLASS INSTALLED

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2837

Hosting*

ON COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
BOND*
NOTARY PUBLICS

EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

“

ostroth
“aa*e «troim

Ehret Skidmore of Augusta and j
Mr. and Mrs. WiU Ouy of Nashville
X. “5 “b.^
id
Od, tot, I
BIIU MIO. nevtue IVUlg. Ul OBIL1C
35.
Creek, who spent last week with his ««*•
**“'
,
,
.
■
--------------------- ... ....—
... .
several relative* came Thursday
iTto^h^’rJt^Jd home0’*
.... r.tun.rd homo
evntou to eon. Onw
I
Holme, hu
Mr. .nd Mrs. Kile cuteteto and.0" &gt;"s
WU&gt;dW brlnylnj ee
BARRY COUNTY ROAD
mother and brother, chsrle, were ““m “d “*• “■&gt;
bhn
COMMIHH1ON
recent Sunday guest* of Mr. and; “any returns of the day.
Mrs. Clyde Holmes and famUy.
-------------------------Master Gordon Case, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold case, ia spending
some time al the home of hi* grand­
parents. Mr. and Mrs Wilson Case,
North avenue road.
fc*r- and MT*. Hugh Caae were in
KaUnmoo on Sjd urday to Wtoml
Being Guardian of Samuel Amer, I wlD offer bls House­
the Alumni pirate and entertainhold Goods for sale on VACANT LOT WEST OF HAROLD
•&lt; U» M 8. H. association.
SMITH'S HARDWARE STORE on
Terpenlng had lhe
the mis
mis-­
, Mrs. Roy Terpcnln,
&lt;ortu“!« Wednesday to break the
S".'u»'d 'by ^eeftoX
uuim

Si

1 Miner and daughter have Just re-1
turned from a trip through Calgary.
Vnncouvrr. Own and aMornto
where they visited relative* and
saw many places of intereit.
Percy Rosser spent Sunday at Al­
legan the guest of his son. Wesley.
. and family.
Miss Ruth Wheeler attended
; Eaton Rapids camp meeting several
' days last week returning Monday.
Keith Tabbercr of Kingsley was a
f guest at the home of her uncle.
M. tore Horn Friday U»U1 Mon.
|
Mrs. Lydta Karohrr or south |
, Bowne called on Mrs. Hlen Soese
! lost Wednesday and Mrs. Jennie
I S“eXrPOrM'' W“ '

Notice of Sale of Goods

SATURDAY NIGHT, AUGUST 1

Or’i.Vd Uff XVE.X. \
BHU irorroan
to
EMMANUEL CHURCH (Bp!scep&gt;l).
POWERS ECHOES.
Rev J. A. McNulty, B D.. Rector.
Mr. and Mrs. Carleton Smith and
325 W. Center St. Tel. 268*.
1 Mrs Ellen Yargcr Saturday
.ope™tTJ0.1? recent,y r°r removal
little daughter of Rocky River. Ohio.
iclith Suti.hk after Trinit..
Keith Price, son of Forrest Price. | °‘ *'er t°PaHsMr. and Mrs. Virgil Andrews and
K",'" suffered a fracture of both bones of । c afe^,FTn.ch M“Uled Jm"4on
I FOR RALE—&lt;I*r .tend.rd ll«» .|wk daugh(er of Augusta and George
.rale, 5'irr.l tiuiblinr. to br wreck­
“ ,h*. the right arm when he fell from a ' c",r‘«h„l.w7k,ln ™k,n“ hay’
ed Call rrwnlnca. Mr. Lillie Miller. Bedford were Saturday guests at
1
tree
last Thursday Following an Xaf,d Mrs. A. J. Miller occomMoodbarr Mleh
7-Sn the home of Arthur Bedford.
IFPenK hosplul. S bone* P«^d Mr. and Mr*. Will Davis on
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
"ANTED—Man I.t month nn farm. t&gt;Mr. and Mrs. Miner Palmer and
SCIENTIST.
Sere set by Dr Wedel and Keith is i “ *‘P »» northern Michigan leavtioire nl Uocrin'a &lt;ill station. 7 10
family spent Sunday with other rel­
WANTED—llnu.ekeet.er »n farm «llh
C »
1»»»» Monday morning.
Sun&lt;l&gt;
nn nther tide In ehtrre
Mld.lt., ac'4 atives at the home of Mr. and Mr*.
Mr nnd Mrs Harry Merritt of Al-! ^.r't^RnndT**
V”*
brefefred. Permineni im.ltinu it »al Arthur Heydenberg and family at
I ?'’, bion calk'd i«t the home of Mr. and ।
‘jR.
n,^.
Irtaeiorr. t’.ll 7U»—P4 or write Mr. Grandville, the event being Mrs.
Canimn. Boole i.
7 JO
”
--■
----a-and brother-in-laws. Mr. and Mr*.
r»p;rrh buiidinc nvm WeBnndag Mrs. ii. M. Boughner Sunday.
Heydenberg'* birthday.
"ANTED—fllrl for ceneral hoii.rwnrk
I
Mr.
ano
M
ra.
to.
vo»i*
^
‘
Hmore.
Their
| Mr. and Mrs. Ed. coats and Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bedford and
In family of three
Please &lt;l«e ref
iI and Mrs. Wm
Blough returned
-------------- • '
erenera. Adder.. ••JI" rare of
(
family and Mis* Melting spent Sun­ CHURCH SERVICER
AT BOWENS MILLS. | Monday from Gun lake where they |
*c"
day at Grand Rapids making the
FOR HALE—6 year old Jeraer and acquaintance of thc little nephew, in^’l^
^d n*hed since last;
them lo their home
Rro.n «wi.. ,ow e.|f br ,)de. Dewer
Wednesday.
»■
(___________
.to.tied.
’
,t Wednesday.
«■ iwn*".
Lee Schassberger, who arrived at itonieJ.
Herd ri!8 Ea.t Clinton St.
7.30
&gt;«H NAI.lt—Licht h&lt;.r.e Lx.r veara old the hon^e of Mr. and Mrs. Freder­
-----I
Mrs. Orpha Sherman of Capac.
p..vtvD
---------------- '*,?*
FREEPORT.
land her daughter. Mrs. McMahan;
“OPE CENTER.
oorkinc heme., nr .addle. Would take ick Schoksberger July 4th.
rounc eatllr in trade On- rille .mithMl's Clarabelle Hooper aceom- | and husband of Goshen. Ind., were j Mr. and Mra. Clarence Payne and
ea.l of the HIi.b on M 70
(ha.
panted by M;
Jean Beathen and | guests of their parents and grand- children spent Sunday with Mr and
Cairna.
7.30
HASTINGS MARKETS
Mirt Esther Whitney left the first parents. Mr. and Mrs E. H. Adams I Mra. Wesley Newton near Pralrieof las’, week by auto for a tour ot | frOm Monday until Thursday of last j ville.
the Western states, planning a stay; week. Mr. McMahan is captain of
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walton ot
of some length In California.
i u,e Salvation Army at Goshen and Maple Grove visited at Mrs. Mina
Mrs. Laura Nagicr. who has been i Wlth Mra. McMahan attended a Aldrich's Sunday. In the atierErr. 14c pnnnd
visiting her j&gt;arents. Mr. and Mrs. j meeting al Holland on Tuesday noon with Rev. Walton they all atbutt. r. 34c |&gt;ound.
Fred Schwader and other relatives | evening.
' tended lhe meeting at OuU lake,
Meat* and
and friends left Sunday evening lor! rcv pcrn wheeler attended Ea- Rev. Walton reluming home with
PETTIT-COOPER HATCHERY &lt; -1W. Her weight 4e
Heit. . arid .teera. 4 1
the return trip to her home at Ber- (
R^pid* camp meeting Sunday his
“-----------parents.
*Phone 2372
Veal cairta. alite, ec
keicy. Cal.
!
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Froman and
7-30 Veal calrea. dre.ard.
The local fire truck was called: More ^an 75 were present at the Utile son visited the former’* broth­
to
help
extinguish
a
grass
fire
north
u.
B
.
8
unday
School
pirate
at
er.
Roland
Froman, near Battle
STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
of Bowne Center la*t Wednesday Tounsend park Friday. Games, vi*- Creek Sunday.
RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call
aftemoon. It is reported that a Jtlnf Bnd B blg dinner was the proFred Ashby and family. Melissa
carelessly tossed cigarette started
for the day and all report a Ashby. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Oates
on farmers in N. Barry County. No
the flre.
t good time.
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sayles of
experience or capital needed. Write
We Join the many friends of Sfr
Mr ftnd Mr, E n Adams. Mrs Hastings. Mrs. Jennie Searles of
today. McNE8S CO., Dept. B. Free­
nnd Mrs Edwin Nash of Clarksville Ruby
Bn(j daughters. Ell&amp;*a I Hickory Corners attended the Ash­
port. Illinois.
7.30
hi extending best wbhes Mrs Nash nnd Helen and MK, AnnB Stowe by-Chamberlain reunion at OuU;
was formerly Marion Pardee, young- spent Saturday and Sunday a week lake.
est daughter of Mr. ami Mrs. Wil- • a-0 Bt Diamond Springs, the guests
Lyle and Maurice Ashby attend­
bur Pardee of South Bowne. and of Mr and Mrs Lampham They ed lhe big circus in Battle Creek
ROLLER SKATING
thrtr marriage occurred al south attended the service Sunday mom- Thursday.
Bend. Ind., on July 6
| ln„ at the Diamond Springs WesleyMr and Mrs. Prank Sayles and
WEST CUN LAKE
Middling.
Mrs Berale Butler and daughter 1 ftn* church
Mrs. Jennie Searles of Hastings
LUTONE PARK
Monell and brother. Guy Draper of [ RuMelI Rovbkey was arrested spent Saturday evening al Fred
Detroit are spending a few week* 6unday by Deputy Sheriff Nell Ashby's.
PARTUS RY APPOINTMENT
■ Karcher on a statutory charge and
BANKRUPTCY NOTICE
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
latrlct Court or
But
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
is th.
at United
present
confined tn the counorn Dletrlrt ot Michigan. Boutb.ru DIMarguerite Kidder la staying with
.tv
A ____________
Mrs. Bert Elliott nights while Mr.
erobate &lt;
CLOVERDALE.
Elliott is working in Hastings.
Star Bakery
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johncock
Mr. and Mr*. Clyde Ulrich and
No. *040 i
and MIm Emma. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Mrs. Lasley ot Petoskey came to see
BeiiHng of Chicago. Mrs.
Alice their sister. Mrs. Laura Vananan
Your Dead Animals Are Worth
Casey
and
children
of
Rutland
and
of
Hastings who is very sick with
OHDEKED
UY
Till
DOLLARS. To assure yourself of
ii.inc tiled in
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle' Kingsbury and little hopes of recovery.
getting lhe BEST PRICES, caU
family were entertained at the
Rev. Gross and famUy were Sun­
MR. FLOYD DENNY.
home of Mr. and Mrs. Russell John­ day dinner guests ot Mr. and Mrs.
cock. Sunday.
t
Arthur Kidder.
Phone Hastings 2539—We pay the) the Harting. H.
Mrs. Emnta Dickerson accomiMr*.
Demona ana
Mrs. Leo Demond
and Mrs. bod
Bob
phone charge*!
I rreditor.
«i&gt;4 panled by Delton friends gpent
it Scobey of Hastings spent Thursday
14
, Thursday tn Kalamazoo with Mrs.
' with their mother. Mrs. Rose Engle.
rtJvred. that while »«tir» 1 Lucy Leonard and Miss Crystal
Come to Sunday school and
biie»ti..B »f a run. shearer.
church next Bunday. Rev. Grou 1*
FURTHER ORDEIlFn RY .f thia
of*hc4rint’ in al ■
Irene Hosken. who has been preaching a series of sermon* on the
t&gt;rw«r»n.r prinud spending the post week with her book of Romans. Very interesting.
SALES AND SERVICE
aunt. Mrs Myrtle MacLeod, re­ We Invite you to attend these serv­
, turned to Hastings Saturday night. ice*. Prayer meeting Wednesday.
Oral and Iris MacLeod spent a Aug. 5 at the schoolhouse, Henry
Phone 2IRK — .Hatting*
order for publication.
' couple of days at Long lake with Kidder leader.
MAKE
of Michican. ib. Probata Coan tor Mary Owen* at the Harper cottage.
DRKIE J ST.I ITER
Mr. and Mrs. Bert McCallum left ONCE DEAF— NOW

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

AT SEVEN O'CLOCK
WiU offer tha following:—Good piano and bench, large
office de»k and chair, several antique chests of drawers, com­
mode. good oak buffet, good oak dining table, library table.

stands, bookcase. several books, pillows and bedding, table lln-

quantity of dishes and many other article* too numerous lo

mention.
TERMS OF SALE ARE CASH DAY OF SALE.

EARL BOYES

WHITE LEGHORNS
and BARRED ROCK
PULLETS FOR SALE

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock

Ilxittnp

Everyone welcome lo come.
Mr&gt; Howd Kelb, of

GUARDIAN

COME TO

VERMONTVILLE
AUGUST 5, 6, 7, 8

BIG CENTENNIAL
And HOMECOMING
SPECIAL RELIGIOUS SERVICES Aug. 1, AU Cbarchca

FREE BALLOON ASCENSION EVERY DAY!
BIG DISPLAY OF RELICS AND ANTIQUES!
FREE STREET ACTS Afternoon and Evening!
Merry Co Round • Ferris Wheel • Shows
RIDES AND OTHER ATTRACTIONS!
FLEET OF AIRPLANES!
BALL GAMES Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Sports of All Kinds from Horseshoes to Racing!
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING SPACE FOR CARS!
DANCE EVERY NIGHT—METRO ORCHESTRA!
UNDER THE AUSPICES OF
THE MERCHANTS AND PEOPLE OF VERMONTVILLE

KELVINATOR

luvestigatc the New Proven

Automatic Cleaner
That dusti, sweep*
$0.95
and mop*, only—
P. 0. BOX 142, HASTINGS

H. E. Smith Hdwc

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

* FELDPAUSCH S

payments are too large, or
A LI tile FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mein VISION TOMORROW—

MARKET • Phone 2616

SEE

FOOD CENTER 2609

GEO. M. NEWTON

isch • 3921
.. ........... u-

Registered OPTOMETRIST and

SEE BETTER!
U9 W. STATE ST.
HAS TIMG1

Fidelity Corporation
OF MICH.
ROOM 10—IND FLOOR
HASTINGS NATIONAL BANK
BUILDING — PHONE MOT

...

and famUy, on a trip north thu i
HELPS OTHERS TO HEAR
week.
Miss Oinajean Garrison, who has 1 The prescription of a Vienna ear
been attending the music clinic at specialist ha* been brought to thi*
the university of Wisconsin return- I country by Charles Fuucek. a weUed home Sunday.
known Chicago druggist, who wa*
MU* Jenney of Orangeville spent j once deaf but who cleared up hl*
the week end with Lydia Rodgers ' condition • through this prescripat Francis Kingsbury's.
lion. Through him thousand* of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Gibson. Mis* other sufferers have tried this
Ruth Hom and Mr. and Mr*. Lester ■ formula and secured amaalng re­
Monica and *ons spent Sunday in lief from head noises, ringing and
-Ml-. Saugatuck.
| buzzing in ears, earache, and are
Mrs. H. Pennels spent a couple of I now able to hear more distinctly.
called Ourine.
days with her sister. Mrs. Llxxle This "prescription

Pennels. at Kalamaxoo.
Grandpa Heller is again wearing
the smUe that won’t come off. for rath
l*n't he a proud grandpa for the

NOW...BUILD
Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co
Phon. 2S15

at stabbin*. The Rexall »tore.

Frank Saga

Ha,ting.

�|

THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1936

Impreuioiu of
New York City

THE HASTINGS BANNER
■HEALTH UNIT OFFICES
MOST
COMFORTABLE
MOS
T COMF
ORTABLE :

: Increase in Work of Kellogg
Made Change
Ohans?e
our Barry oo. Health Unit senior ' Foundation Mads
counselor. Miss Rom DeFoe, write* I
Neceaiarv

Barry Bypaths

, I Maybe you think modem children
! don't have tummy ache from green
; | apples. But you're wrong. Ask Bus-

not
o
.
Riley Stories
•'

»r JAM CAMMON

‘CHICAGO DOCTOR KEEN
।.
ON THOKNAFFLE FISHING. I
u«. .&gt;»«................................................................................................ss

A TERRIBLE THREAT!
One Christmas when Ute chil­
this week m th. Charlotte ReputeA . .. .
•_
dren were small i went out to Car­
—
’ mis wi 4 nuriispyic river wii u
Mean-Tribune ah interesting latter
,
S
y
^L
,or
the
four
E
orner
*
°
r
?!
I
home
In
Chicago
last
week,
ter lake and cut a Christmas tree
of her college work, and her re-!°*
County Health Unit
free „afternoon
—
buy a copy Neilson
iders Thornapple
actions to New York City life which I *hows them to be comfortably and jmii Dm „„
Neilson cons
consider*
Tlionuipple river for our home. Many children from
in Itself is educational. to aay the!iullably
oa
floor ot JWt American inagsxtne and lhe best small mouth bas* stream in our neighborhood came to see it and
sit down to enjoy some ot th* mo*l the state. He took many view* they built a couple of snow fort* in
glad to read her comments con- building at
lie
N. Michigan unusual yarn* you have ever read. along thi* stream from Tliornapple the front yard and had a snow ball
cemlng It all:
I avenue. They occupy the south half Walter Duranty. one of the world's lake to Middleville and will send battle. Soon a stray mow ball
greatest newspaper reporters and them to some outdoor magazine came crashing through the window,
"You know how I Lave always felt 1of *:he
an acute antipathy 'or any large
waiting room and informs- William Seabrook, another ace re­ One view shows a baker's dozen of and a neighbor woman said. "Riley,
u. ““SXu i
" I •“»y.,1"
porter and war correspondent were bas* on the front of his tent which you'd better make those kid* quit
“
1!
SS-EriiMuTMSiMii
ii
-■
going to spend a few day* together he said he caught before breakfast. snow balling or they'll break every
tually learned to like New York.
Ju
Perhapsa
conriderable degree
degrre of.!
of •
1)1 «- » Harkness office so they were sent a cameraman and He used mostly worms and sand window in the house." My wife
Perhaps
a considerable
D
i7&lt;.
.?• immediately back. The counselor* a stenographer. by the editor, and
said, “You've picked out the wrong
this change in attitude can be st- immediately
crabs for bait.
th* result 1* something I am going
one. Riley wouldn't harm a potato
trlbuted to my keen and eager de- •, ____ _ their office the next adjolni ing room, large enough for the five to read over Innumerable times. ORA LEHMAN'S BARN
bug. It's a wonder he isn't out there
light with lhe University.
It Is entitled "Your* Telling Me!"
desks
and
other
equipment.
Then
with the kids." I said, “I ll show you
“Within my experience. Teacher*
One tell*
"the most pathetic
come*
the
office
of
the
sanitary
ehBURNED SATURDAY A. M, who's the the 'bull of the woods."'
i College at Columbia is unique. On
thing"
he
ever
saw
which
took
place
and went out on the front porch
the campus are many long tables[ glheef with a small kitchenette in
during the Russian famine and Ute
shouted. “Kids, if I catch you
and benches dike picnic tables)
Origin Unknown—Destroyed and
On the north side of the building other will come back with a scene &gt;
snow balling here next Fourth
used for discussion groups. Large
in the barbed wire entanglements
Nearly All His Crops—
of July. I'll spank every one of your
Classes divide themselves into groups under th* stairway going upstair*.
in front of Verdun. Then they
I*
*
room
that
Dr.
Harkness
hopes
of 10 or 15 and decide upon a time
Partly Insured
switch to "the funniest. thing"
to have discussion* of question* to make of good use to the citizens
Late _Friday
afternoon ________
threshers HUGE SUMTAID
they've ever seen' one at the Front | _
___ _________
raised in class. The chairman of 1 of Barry county. This 1* lo be the
each group reports to tha whole health library where literature of when the sergeant learned his gor- finished their work at the home of
IN MICHIGAN
class; in such a plan every student all kinds will be available to those
ha* the opportunity to express hl* who have research work to do or imd the oiher replte* wKb 7 tele! WarnerviUe store in Woodland. The Insurance Payments One and
view* and opinions. The tree* on wish information on health topics.
about an African savage's exper- 1 next forenoon Mr. Lehman noticed
Three-Quarter Times
the campus play a part in this ed­ Tiie Health Unit also has available lences with his first lump of ice. So
. - in
. lhe
.. roadway
.
•
some chaff
near -hi*
ucational set up also. Each state the basement for storage uses.
The rooms have been renovated the stories go on—the cruellest, the barn. Thinking some careless cig­
has a tree so designated by a large I
noblest, the strangest, the most
and
new
floor
covering
put
on.
VeLife
insurance paymenu to pol­
board on the tree, a note book
beautiful, and ending on a personal arette smoker driving by on M-14 icyholder* and
beneficiaries
in
on the board has the signatures netlan blind* at lhe window* add
note, as tn their globe-trotting they might throw a burning match or r.
of all of the students from that par­ an attractive note and are practical
lighted cigarette into this inflam- Michigan totaled »06.500.00Q in 1935.
experienced their most discouraging
ticular state. I Ideated Margaret as well to keep out lhe sun that unoment. ineir nappiesi. ineir unUt&lt;r *nd
n" w *?!* or 5284.300 day. according to a spe­
moment, their happiest, their unPartlow by looking in th* book un­ pour* on the large expanse of happiest and their most satisfying ; buildings, he raked^ up ail he could,
cial compilation by lhe National
der the Michigan tree. Il is a great southern exposure, a majority of achievement
II has a Par East1
sever&gt;l palls of water handy so
i* iim ■ rar
.
cou&lt;d contro] »he blaze and set Underwriter, weekly Insurance news­
convenience to say, "111 meet you the furniture is nflw—mahogany and ocnievemcui.
note of romance and Is charged with I
at the Michigan tree," and then you good-looking. An’ air conditioning lhe power that comes from knowl- j &lt;*“'«•»*« oa
.uJ*11 paper.
This huge sum represenu an in­
know exactly what that means. It system has also been inilalled.
edge expressed in simple language. 1 *ind a} burned, then poured waThe new location is much larger txnr
it Xii. n mJ1*? 00 lbe asho* and surrounding crease of 1900.000. or 1 per cent
all goes to make a very stimulating
For some reason It. recall* to me
£
*
atmosphere and personally I'm quite, than the other and because of the
n,rr Ri».r-I dr&gt;' Krais and v,as sure he had com- more than the 1934 total of 895.­
In love with the place in spite of ever-increasing scope of the work of Lok. "Behind That Curtain." Eve Iur'firKres’dtecowred'in’the 600.000. Michigan ranked 8th in life
the Kellogg foundation the addi­ Durum uc.p.1 from Mr murdtrer I
payments among all states, while It
the heat the past week.
is 7th in size of population.
"It so happens that I am taking tional space was necessary. The
husband and accompanies an ex-'I barn, not far from lhe road and
The life Insurance paymenu are
course* that ar* given by instructors people of the county will be glad
near his house. How it originated
plorer
away
from
peshawar,
India
who radiate a contagious interest In to see the officials of the unit so
no one could tell. The flames had about one and three quarter limes
beyond the celebrated Khyber Pas*.
their respective fields. This so called comfortably situated in view of the
made considerable progress when the WPA expenditures of 154.714.000
fine work they ar* doing and have Eve describes it thus: "The moil
radiation seems to react on all of
discovered. The Are departments at in the slate last year.
wonderful adventure a woman ever
The three largest individual pay­
the students because as we get to­ done In the county.
Nashville and Woodland were sum­
had. Eight month* through that wild
gether In groups we all feel the
moned. They succeeded In saving ments were 1590.000 on the life of
cqurt Items.
country on a samel—the star* at
an auto distributor of Detroit; 8360.­
same strnest enthusiasm. We have
Russell Service of this city was night, the dust storms, the desert the house, but the bam was com­
such lengthy discussion* about all arrested Thursday on a statutory stretching empty but mysterious as pletely destroyed with nearly all its 000 on Robert C. Rueschaw of Lan­
sorts of "Isms", etc, that at time* charge. He wg« brought before Jus­
contents consisting of hay, straw, sing and 8105,000 on John F. Burle­
far as the eye could see. Outside
I feel a complete mental fatigue tice cortright on Saturday and was
grain. Some grain however, was son of Grand Rapids.
Teheran, i left the caravan and
(not that these attack* are Infre­ bound over to circuit court for the
saved from the doomed building.
FINE PROGRAM ASSURED.
quent. Just that I recognize them sum of 8500. He wa* unable to give went to Baker and from there to
Italy." Seabrook and Duranty'* ar­
once In awhile).
partly covered by insurance in tiie
• Education for Democracy" will
the bond so he Is in Jal).
ticles have Illustrations of the two
be the keynote of the convention of
"You know, depending upon one's
Otto Deeds of Nashville and Rus­ at their task of weaving these won­ Woodland Mutual.
mood, some of the various the- sell Hinckley of Freeport were
lhe American county Life Assn.,
derful stories and It is altogether
oreticol questions become very amus­ gathered in by lhe sheriff Saturday
lo be held al Western Stale Teachtiie most entertaining article I
ing at times. A brilliant presenta­ night on warrants charging them
have read In a long time.
the home of Mrs. Herman Zerble for Wilson assistant secretary of Ag­
tion In the parent education class with statutory offenses. Both were
a business meeting.
the other morning produced evi­ bound over to the circuit court and
riculture is one of the speaker* and
And these caravan teles make me
A pot luck picnic was arranged many other* prominent in agricul­
dence that we (teacher*, social at thia writing neither had been
think of our own adventurer* here to be held Aug. 21 at Clear lake. tural and educational work. At lhe
workers, public health nurses) are able to furnish bond.
to —
be a'- -r-r
county
picnic.
in America, the “covered wagon
“social parents." There, of course.
.This
----------is- ~
-- -j
—-■ annual dinner Wednesday evening.
Bernard Helse), 35 year* of age. brigade." You know we have dust There
will be music led by Mrs. I. Mabel camey. Teacher* College.
who was sentenced from IhU coun­
biologic parents but beyond a doubt. ty in 1984 to serve ten to twenty storms loo. and if it doesn't rain J. Smith and a speaker from away. Columbia will be the speaker. Rural
pretty soon, we'll have a desert. We Everybody welcome. Watch lhe pa-1 Erfliri&gt;unn is the topic for the
"social parents.” I think it
I Thursday meeting
II important that I tell you thia be­ charge walked away from lite Jack­ can go romancing right out in the per for further announcement.
cause by the time I get home I may son farm on Monday. The warden meadow and save carfare. What I
have changed considerably. After announced that this "trusty" will started to say was that twenty
all. you couldn't be quite the same have to serve the full twenty years Michigan state park* have electrical
servicing equipment and you can
after you become a social parent in­
when he is eaught.
drive in with your house car and
side of a comparatively short lime.
Why Helsel should ever have been
In lhe afternoon I "listen in" on put as a trusty cannot be under­ hook up the Juice, have your lights,
radio, grill and heat. And at a rea­
different classes beside* those I am
stood here. He escaped Jail after
registered in. and although this Is his conviction in Barry county and sonable price, too. Quite a step from
not an accepted procedure here, it was given an increased sentence on when the family went west in tiie
Their light was
seem* a crime not to hear some of that account. It would seem as if frontier days.
the well'.known instructors In var­ that ought to have been known at moonlight and sunlight; heat was
summer and Indian torture; radio
ious fields when one has the op­ Jackson^
was Indian war-whoops, and the
portunty.
Jack Emery of Nashville escaped
'•We have been taking what are from the Eaton county jail Sun­ cooking equipment was a campfire.
Then the older people talk about the
known as Reconciliation trips. Can't
day night. He wu held for a viola­ "good old days.” We think "Oh
take lime to tell you about them
tion of his probation. He was found yeah?" in big letters.
now but going through Harlem and in a wheat field near Nashville
seeing Father Divine was fascinat­
Monday afternoon, when he es­
ing and somewhat depressing to me.
A writer thinks "All productive­
caped he stole a pistol from the Jail
One all night trip to the marketing
and threw It away ai the officers ness is masculine." The comeback in I
centers, dairy, produce piers, etc,
•The American" is wishing on him
approached and offered no resist­
was extremely
interesting—there ance.
a "diet of bull's milk and rooater's
were hundreds of men sleeping
eggi." We add a heartfelt "Amen."
along the streets, along the piers, a WILL REPEAT FATHER
and assure him that when men start
terribly pathetic realization. One
MARQUETTE PAGEANT. having babie*. we'll be there cheer­
evening we listened to the soap box
A pageant depleting the life of ing in lhe front row. He can’t even
speeches down on
Washington Father Jacques Marquette from the produce authentic writing. *ay noth­
Square. I can't quite explain why time he left the Jesuit seminary in ing of a human belnfc or food for it.
I'm learning to like New York.
Laon. France, until his death in
"Food may have something to do
How sensible our young mothers
with this attitude (I'm*gaining highlight of the Marquette Memorial are In the selection of clothing Tor
weight by the way—the way of all observance that will be held here their babes in the hot weather.
flesh). We have been to a Japanese August 14. 15. and 1® *1 Ludington. Have seen more sun suits on tod­
garden cafe, a Russian restaurant. The production including 400 In its dlers and even babes in arms this
cast, will have Bishop Nelson Spen­ summer than ever before, which
■The Barn," in Greenwich Village cer, of Kansas City. Mo, bishop of means less cold* and rickets, ye*,
and a German Hofbrau. Inciden­ the West Missouri diocese of the and cod-liver oil next winter. Womtally. we had some good American Protestant Episcopal church as lhe
narrator, as the colorful prologue menu, and now if the men will only
neglected food for thc soul, even and ten brilliantly costumed scenes strike on collars. vesU and coats in
though it might appear that we con­ are presented. Bishop Spencer, who hot weather, we'll be a sensible race
centrated upon thc gastronomical is recognised as one of the great ot people.
phenomena exclusively. To prove my orators of his church, will tell of the
point, we heard tha Philharmonic life and work of the fumed mlsslonWe mothers who cut down the
Symphony orchestra and "11 TTogrown«up coats for our youngsters
vatore" in the Lewlsohn (open air)
The three-day observance will
stadium. Anna Roselte sang Leo­ have as Its highlight lhe presenta­ have to plan differently now. Ski
nora in a superb performance. We tion of the plot of ground upon suits are the thing for winter and
went to "The Little Church Around which Pere Marquette died, to Mar­ so comfortable and warm. You can
With every Bank Money Order,
the Comer" this morning. Heard quette university of Milwaukee, Wis­ fall In a snowbank and not have to
Harry Emerson Fosdkk at Riverside consin. On this alt* will be erected dig snow out of all your underwear.
you receive a definite receipt that
It will take one coat for the panU
Church last Bunday.
a monument to this great American
giyoj you a complete record of the
'There are still many things I pioneer. The pageant, which will be part and a different colored coat
for tiie top, but what is left will
want to tell you about, but in view presented thlz year, while again de­
remittance and a positive proof of
of the fact that you are probably a* picting the life of Father Mar­ make one for a smaller child or
payment And, when the order is
tired reading this as I am writing, quette, has been entirely rewritten make some little boys' suits or girls'
dresses.
If
they
are
lined
with
out
­
It would perhaps be tactful to close. and restaged.
cashed, it is returned to this bank
ing flannel, they can be made from
And having recently learned that
where it is available for inspection.
woo) dresses or skirts.
tact Indicates the amount of one's LOWELL SHOWBOAT
Bank Money Orcfers are safe and
social intelligence I had better close
A GREAT PAGEANT.
We're going to try some mint Jel­
before I get a minus rating in this
Th*'fifth annual production of
so-called
social
Intelligence—and the Lowell Showboat will be pre­ ly and if It Is as good as It sounds,
well
publish
the
recipe.
It
would
go
that would never do for a social sented on Plat River in ta heart
parent, now would it?"
of the village of Lowell on the eve­ nicely with that dead army mule,
I should think.
ning* of Thursday. Friday and Sat­
ACCEPTS NEW POSITION.
urday, Aug. fl. 7 and I.
The boys want lo know why the
Friend* of Mn. Richard L. Doyle
Visitor* come from great dis­
will be pleased to hear she has ac­ tances to this river pageant. The Raleigh man doesn't give away gum
cepted the position of home demon­ Showboat carries a band of 30 any more. Wonder if all the book
and magazine agents really are go­
stration agent for Jackson county
with headquarter* at Jackson. She volqe*, upwards of 20 minstrel per­ ing to college this fall? Are the
will begin on thi* new work the lat­ former* and is an ideal represen­ Democrats really to blame for this
ter part of August For some time tation of the old-time southern drought or is that campaign talk?
showboat. The Showboat Itself Ls Oov. Landon will have to carry ar­
of the new better homes’ depart­ a double-decked side wheeler, pro­ tificial sunflower* if it doesn't rain
What's President
ment at Purdue University, Lafay­ pelled by its own twin engines and pretty soon.
Rooarvelt'g flower going to be?
ette, Ind, where ah* answered ques­ u lighted from stem to stem.
tions in regard to home manage­
Guess i'll put In a sweet bun re­
ment and similar problems and pre­
"To attend a meeting of the
vious to that was connected with League of Nations cannot help but cipe and call it a column: One pint
the home economics department of impress you with what it 1* doing to of bread dough whan ready to put
the university.
bring to oven’the very smallest of tn Uns, 1-3 cup sugar, 1-2 cup
nation*: help and a new civillaa- shortening, 1 Cup cold water, add
flour and knead Into a loaf. Let rise.
Uon."—Ruth Cranston.
Knead down and roll to Inch thick­
"Whatever we do. let It remain ness. cut with biscuit cutter and let
within the framework of a democ- rise on floured Cooky pans until
her head In the sand, and still keep
doubted Bake In hot oven. And are
they goodi

1 ssj?

War Debt Hangovers'

ANTA MONICA, CALIF.
—In summarizing govern­
mental finance for the fiscal
year, Secretary Morgenthau
doesn't even list the thirteen
thousand millions of dollars
owed to us. by defaulting for­
eign nations.

S

But Americans st large won't
____ forget. If you doubt
I this, wait Ull one of
I these debtor coun­
I trie* gets in a fresh
I Jam and turn* to
I Uncle Sam for sueI cor—and,
brother,
you can *P«U &lt;h«t
n
-_________ last Wvrd thc other
■j
way and still be
right
We didn't know
IrvtaS. Cobb Un« tau&gt; when wt
stuck around too
long after the fighting ended in
1911 Makes m. think of a col­
ored labor batallion who went on
tha loose at Brest on Armistice
d.r
A hard-boiled top sergeant round-

‘Get to work on dem freight
pOes." he commanded.
"But de mess all done over." de­
clared a spokesman. "And us boys
only enlisted fur de duration of de

••Uaaen.”

barked the sergeant.

cifie*, but fur slch ez you de dura­
tion ain't hardly started."
Woes ot French Hotels
F, OVER the woe* of th* French
retort hotels, anybody catches
me shedding a tear, it'll come out
of an eyedropper and no* from
the heart. I'm thinking particular­
ly of the romantic and soulful Riv­
iera, which, under the surface, is
just a* romantic a* an adding ma­
chine and soulful as a cash regis-

I

There, where E. Phillips Oppen­
heim once delighted to "op" and
lhe Yankee suckers rushed in.
ready for their skinning—and never
disappointed—is the original home
of the deft short-caangc and the
xnastodonic overcharge. There I’ve
seen many a mistake made in the
bill and never yet one in favor ol
the customer.

Influenza Complication*
INCE the last bedside bulletin,
so many souls have Inquired,
that I am offering a supplemental
■ report on the work of thc wrecking

S

First I cracked an car drum.
(Cries of "Whose?")
Then this
clinging California influenza moved
slightly south by west within your
lallen into the hands of a throat
specialist.
A tine fellow—but easily satisfied
In lhe matter of entertainment His
idea of a sprightly conversation is
to hold down my tongue with a
spoon and have me say "ah." What
I claim is, when you've heard one
"Ah." you've heard 'em all. But
he fairly hangs on my words.
There's a gleam in his eye I don't
like. He's beginning to crave my
tonsils.
Taktag Political Sid*
*Y'ODAY lome entirely fair-minded
* patriot who is snuggled up close
to the throne or hopes soon to be.
proclaims: "Landon is a* synthet­
ic a* a rubber duck. Roosevelt ia
th* only hope of an imperiled peo­
ple. What price a constitution when
we can have frankfurters?"
Tomorrow another gentleman,
who likewise is as unbiased a* a
spite-fence, burets forth with some
thing like this:
"Re-elect Roosevelt and your
country forever is wrecked. Lan­
don alone'can save our threatened
institutions. A real statesman. He
eats in the kitchen and hates to

Meanwhile, Mr. Roosevelt re­
mains calm and seemingly confi­
dent
Governor Landon remains
calm and seemingly hopeful.

/"kN THE Republican side there
temporarily ia a lull Incredi­
ble though it sounds. Cot Theodore
Roosevelt Jr., is not getting ready
to run for anything. Later reports
may change this.
Organizing the speaking bureau
fcr the Democrats, Chairman Ray­
burn does not list among the chos­
en orators the name of hi* most
distinguished fellow - Texan.
In
vaudeville It breeds a laugh when
th* second half of the sketch makes
the wrong answers, but politics is
something else again. Can It be
that Uncl* Jack Garner has become
th* Gracia Allen of his sex? Only
they do let Grad* talk I
A writer who isn't taking sides
wonders at length whether 'the
homespun suspender-wearing quali­
ties of Gov. Landon can overbalance
the melodious and limpid I'ne* of
President Roosevelt Far thia prob­
lem the appropriate musical ac-

"Poet and Peasant"
L
IRVIN «. COBB.

CONTEST WILL OFEM
FARMERS' DAY.
rABI
8p*c^ ea lures for
la lament
Inmen t and education
educe tic of fanners
t*
attending thc annual Partners' Day
1 program on lhe campus at-Mlchlgan
State College at East Lansing. Fri­
day. July 31. will open at 9 A. M.
with an alfalfa hay cocking contest
open to any fanner in Michigan.
Judges will be R. E. Decker. Mlchlgan State College. E. M Moore,

I
I

t

°~ Uhman •utue “ulh or

You need this
ENERGY FOOD

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

GRADE A MILK
HIGH IN CREAM CONTENT
RAW or PASTEURIZED, Qi.

HIGHLANDS DAIR’
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

wu sn

You (jet a Receipt

when You Use

NOTE THE
RECEIPT

BANK
efficient; written far you by a
courteous teller for any amount up
to $9500.00. The fee for this
modern convenient service is
very low—usually less than you
would pay for other forms of money
orders. They are accepted every­
where. Give them a trial.

Hastings Citg Bank
TELEPHONE 2103

*

HASTINGS • MICHIGA

Hatta

�THI BUTIKOl BAHXga, TWCTUPAT, 1VLT M. im
tuuuu acrrLiia—

."S41.S“,71
'""•ST?.
"k ““
lanuva i nr rural
vttih. rst.ar'” •

WUUKAS. Ikm wm

Mko 4»bi

,

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

Icia T sa4 4 at tka goMlsI twilta st

.wvMssai irtssiM
irtiettlarly raUllas lo Ika oroUbl*
noaal vkltk nlskl b« eolloclM fr««
eh uvoo Iarta4 uh bt aiuiUMi wv-

SPECIAL SESSION

■ urlgr la ika eJty •! Ha.
ttaraaa nf Bamrdar. May

If northern Michigan evw passes
through another heat wave with no
greater forest fire damage than
that of the current month, the
state may well consider iteelf for­
tunate. Tha 6 .000 or so acm
burned over by forest lire during
tiie heat wave is far below that of
ahy
previous period In which
weather and fire-hasard conditions
were comparable in this state.

int e.-llerlinn ataln.l aaM 4af«a4*ata.
WB. THBMKFORX. SUBMIT, la »1
reamalaary*. tkat a rmalaUaa
atklt )&lt;oa(Va»l« Roar* ar
ar ao mad. bv Ike 4afrn&lt;l

b-OH
BSH
i
4
alias lfc&lt; mkiiar ol

al. aa4 to 4tt«raain
thi. HMM M

w?n ?

352

• II HabiUtr

' !«••&gt; TFoa.aS I fl II•

—ll-ee.I In plaintiff

llablllll

STANDARD TIRE

WSAVE

Mlity

IIK IT FURTHER RF.MOI.VF.D

IV11

Nine new wildlife sanctuaries
have been crested by the state con­
servation commission and each
closed to hunting and trapping for a
period of five yean. The new sanc­
tuaries are located in nine coun­
ties.

MOW YOB UVE MONEY —Firestone

high grade material*—man u factor
Ing* in large volume in the mod
efficient factories in the world — and
delivering to you by the quickest and most
economical distribution system. The»e

Firestone
STANDARD
4.50- 20
4.50- 21

THE FIRESTORE NAME ANO GUARANTEE —

6x0-17 |N14.3O
6.00-20
“
“■
15.55
6.00-21

7.75

5.00-19
HIAVY duty

Every Fire.(one Standard Tire bran lhe
Firestone name, your guarantee of greater
safety, dependability and economy.
MM-DIPPED
ID ROOT
MM-DIFKD CO
CORD
BODY—Every cotton fibre In every cord in
*v*4 y ply is soaked in liquid rubber. This is the only process
known that prevent* internal friction and hear, providing
greater strength, blowout protection and longer life.
TWO EITNA LAYEH OF BUM-OIFPED CORDS UNDER THE TREAD —

Thi, patented Fire,(one feature bind, the whole tire into one
unit of greater atrenjth, cuthion. road .hock,, give, extra
protection against puncture*.
LONDER NON-SKID MILEAGE—The I new *cientifically designed
nonskid tread is wider, flatter, wifh more and tougher rubber
on the ro*d, giving long even wear and thousands ofextra miles.

* FUST QIALITT HICK TIRE AT
A PRICE THAT SAVES TOR MONET
The

Frettone

STANDARD

6.50- 20
7X0-20
7.50- 20
9X0-20
50x5 ..

new

Michigan's new game law digest
for lhe season of 1936-19371* now in
the hands of the state printer, but
is not expected to be ready for dis­
tribution before lhe latter part of
August. Il will incorporate ail re­
cent changes In game-law regula­
tions.

TlicF

JtBT UME QUALITY —The new Firenone
Standard Tire is a first quality tire, built
of high grade material*, by skilled
workmen, embodying Firestone patented
construction features—used in no other

Firestone

Standard

Truck and Bu* Tire is built in
volume production, resulting in
big saving* which are passed on
to truck and bu* owner*. Thia
newtire is fir»t line quality,built
of high grade materials, and ia
the moit dependable tire
obtainable at theae low price*.

To GRAND RAPIDS

8:45
1:20
5:45
10:25

A.
P.
P.
P.

To BATTLE CREEK

LEAIERS IN THE LOW PRICE FIELB

■aaMatlaa

8:45 A. M.
•11:35 A. M.
1:50 P. M.
6:35 P. M.
+9:40 P. M.

TRAVEL THE SHORT
WAV AND SAVE!

BUS DEPOT

TRIO CAFE
PHONE 2137

CANNING
Canning and Pickling Time
Is Here Again!
WE HAVE A NEW STOCK OF FRESH SPICES FOR
MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN THE TASTE.

JlrtMone
gnnd aerviceabte

Freatona
couaita

■Rier
4.35

BATTERIES

SPARK PLUGS

«

■ Honesty of thought and speech
and written word Is a jewel, and
they who curb prejudice and seek
----------------------------- and speak the
honorably
to know
truth are the only builders of a
better life."—John Galsworthy.

All indications are that Michigan
will have a million or more hard­
wood and shrub seedlings from Ils
new hardwood forest nursery near
Wolverine for planting thia fall.
Several species of seedlings suitable
as food sources and cover for game
birds and animals may have suffi­
cient growth for planting tn ref­
uges and states forests this year.
Relics of a vanished lumber
town, which was swallowed by lhe
wilderness . many years ago. have
been found by CCC men who are
grading for a road into the new
Lake Superior state forest camp­
ground north of here. Old timers
say that the campground into which
the road Is being built is located on
the site of the onee thriving settle­
ment. which 50 re*rs or so ago had
a population of around 1000 per­
son-’- The campground is on Mus, callonge Lake.

ATHLKT1C BCPPLI

a*s
».**

s
*

• •*

*

.IS

BUPPLIBB AND KXFKXSK OF BOARD OF EDUCATION

15

THIS CANNING TIME . . . GOOD. FRESH SPICES

oulaunding valoc in iu

SSNT1NEL
~wzt
4.50-21 54.05
4.75-19
0.40
5X0-19
0.05

s

T»t»1 Tran.roYiali-n
*123.SO

The Fireatone Sentinel
conacruciion and hacked
by tha Fire*ton« name

nr.RT RMRVICE—

CAPITAL OUTLAY—

pour deer fawns, trained to cal
when a bell rings, are attracting
hundreds of tourists at Munuscong
State park south of Sauli Ste
Marie. The fawns arc the particu­
lar pride of Tom F. Demarest,
keeper of the park, who has taught
them to report for their meals when
he rings a bell. Demarest feeds them
ueverai times a day from a bottle.
The young deer are only a few
weeks old and still in the spotted

* Doily Except Sundoy
t Sundoy Only

HASTINGS

HI

Telephones in trailer coaches?
They've already appeared Ln Michi­
gan's state parks and conservation
authorities are wondering what
next. The first telephone lo be In­
stalled in a trailer coach Is owned
by A lot cederstrom of Cadillac and
has been in use at William Mitchell
State park near Cadillac. Trailer
coaches with all their nea- spe­
cialized conveniences have been in­
creasing steadily In number at
Michigan's state parks, running as
much as 50 per cent of all tourist
camps.

M.
M.
M.
M.

Whatever your trucking or
transportation problems, the new
Firestone Standard Truck and Bus
Tire will give you long, trouble-free
mileage, and will save you money.
Come'in today and let us show you 1
this new tire. To see it is to buy it— 1
not just one tire, but a complete set.1

rested for violating the conservation
laws in Michigan during lhe Aral
half of lhe current year The Feb­
ruary total of arrest*. 44, was low
during thia period; the June total
of 346 high. All but 37 of the ar­
rests made by conservation officers
during June were for Illegal fishing
and again the charge of fishing
without a license stood out as the
most frequent.

rant

Mlrhlcan Moral

HIT. »

J.

Every county in Michigan north
of a line drawn from Muskegon to
Saginaw
bay—except
Leelanau
county—will be open lo legal deer
hunting next fall. Seeing no emer­
io*. 47—Albert TaaRata. SO
gency which would warrant an of­
»*—H. W. AMrtek. lair^oaa .
ficial order lo continue the cIomxI
19*. 3R1—C. L i^akatl lupviiaa
season in Lake. Newaygo. Manistee.
140. 2*2—Dalton I.amh.r an4 Coa
ISA—Clara Tlnmli. • car4a at wa
Mason, Missaukee. Clare and Wex­
ford counties, which have been
closed during the past five years by
legislative act, the commission de­
cided to let legal deer shooting come
Into effect Automatically this fall i HKAUTH UM IT
in those counties
ROOKS AMD DESK COPIES—
99—W. F. Qwai
The four winners of the state­ SCHOO!. LIBRARY—
wide
conservation
poster-slogan
contest sponsored by the Federated
Garden Clubs ot Michigan and the
department ot conservation
last
winter have left to make a tour of
Isle Royale. The lour is their award
for submitting prize-winning poster­
slogans.
RKPAIRH ON RUILDIMOS AND OROUND

I’.-ll.tlff i

TTrestonOz

1 ioijTi. mFfflriio. IM. 114. M. M. »4. &gt;1. T. •••—«.

BRAKE LINING

Miehixaa

Mrs. Price's Conning Compound.
Saccharin Powder.
Cloves, both whole and ground.
Cinnamon, both stick and ground
Cassia Buds.
Allspice, both whole and ground
Mustard Seed, white and black.
Mace, both whole ond ground.
Ginger Root, bleached.
Ginger, powdered, both African and Jo
maica.
Tumeric Powder and Curry Powder.
Paraffin for sealing jelly and jams.

Carveth &amp; Stebbins
THE REXALL STORE

BLUE

SONOCD m

Goods Delivered

Hostinai

ANNUAL MEETING OF THE DELTON RURAL AGRICUL­
TURAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, JULY 13, 1936

1S*—r«atrartor FubllaM
p—Datrail MaaghgrinN XMklH Calk. afflrkl
'*•—£• 1 Batwam. w,,f'»vrv!&gt;o. aiiiaata. UI

•• kald

2*5—Haallara Ju*»ar. ai
2*4—An*«MS B«*eMa. let
'-'T?—C**lra«tar Pakltabl*

j

•H»tMia

FINANCIAL REPORT OF TXX DBLTOn'bUBAL AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL.
T«UI CXk» BaHIisa

HOM

ilrt

ts.a,.r&amp;4..

Phone 2131
R4at .T*Ul npaipu. La&lt;H4iM balaaet Jaae BO. 1**1

i ALDRICH. BMTWtarr.

�Tltt HAITTNQa BANNIB.

motick

or

TWUMDaT. JULT W. IgM

- - - V-

r• a

v, ---------------

Montana people

| LEGAL NOTICES
mortgagr jau

suffered from tha drought this year,
vtilUng and games lor lhe '
80CTHWMT MUTLANt).
as they did in 1234. Mr. Jolmson
Mr. and Mn. J. D. Hoarg and
SHOW FINE SPIRIT •ays they have not given up living MIm Barbara chamberlain spent Mrs
Edw. Carter and son cf South
tiwre and do not propose to do so last week with her aUter. Mrs. Grace Haven were Sunday guests of their
daughter and outer, Mrs. Geo. Ha­
"Dick" Johhion Tells of a They do not like to have their coun­ Clark and family of Kalamaioo.
try pictured as holding out Ms
Little MIm Beverly Lord of Rut­ vens. and family.
Recant Visit to That
hands to the government, begging land ia spending the week with
About 40 friends •pleasantly sur­
Gloria Springer.
for food and a place Co stay.
State
prised Kenneth Dunn last Thurs­
While that kind of talk was
Will Plant of Hastings roofed our
day evening and helped him cele­
Richard M. Johnson, many years
made by old time residents In that church last week. The pale metai
ago a prominent resident and busi­ locality, it happened Chat while Mr. &gt;lnnu Ibrouth IM inn uid u . brate his birthday. Games and rcness man of Middleville and for Johnson wa* in Blsmark, the head
the “brain trust” Mr. Rex
many years postmaster there but of
■
came there tn an airpUne. ■pol .nd with lhe &gt;ud UndKwpW I W«* end FHWU u&gt;d Bund., call,
how a resident of Hartford. Con- Tugwell,
‘
we would h,re &gt; Udht l« lowUU- J? to„u“ bora, or Mr. ind Mn.
necticut, paid
----------a visit
--cd theHe
Banner
alighted, called a meeting of
lUrold Bpnndee Malted thre.hln, Wra. Hweeru Included Oraw OUa
editors
Friday
week. —
Mr. •I certain persons, and handed out a
MHort on Fri
J-------of
* •last
—*-------“«•
!““?“■
Johnson I* now H years of age.1 bundle of government check* to be ten week. The pein u peeu, iooi |
| Oruid Bopid,. Mn. Bukh Srwkj.
H« hkd Ju*t ’t*turned here from I distributed, evidently on the llieory coiulderhid Uw drouth.
we...
. part. i nlau
MI
m Qlenna Osgood. spent
G’*4* eVMMlrt
Creek.' W
W- u
H- OU*, InMI
local, Mr*,
an automobile trip to Montana, I that the people there were doomed
O*11- Detroit, Mr. and Mr*.
where he went to look after a busl- to starvation unless the government of last week with her cousin. Mrs.
Harold
*W'M Harmon and daughter. Gull
““now. THERE PORK, by virloe
nets matter.
On his return he , aided them. Mr. Johnson stales that Dorothy pettengUl of Hickory Cor- “
lake and Mr. and Mrs Fred Barlow
•topped tor a little time at Bls- i there 1* a strong feeling of reaenl- ner*.
:«&gt;»” at **!• contained in laid bm
mark. South Dakota. He said that I ment by many Dakota people
Mr. and Mr*. Lyle Lelnaar and of Hastings.
he talked with many people in that' against this action by the govem- children of Delton ate Sunday din­
Those from here who attended the
locallty who deprecated the idea ment.
ner with her mother. Mrs. Hallie community meeting at Geoffrey
. Anders.
i Kellers Friday evening report an
that that part of our country;
should be abandoned. They resent- j
1 Mr. and Mrs. Ira Osgood and son enjoyable time. Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
MILO.*
ed
their locality
ea the
me Idea
taea of
or having
naving ineir
tocauiy '
good crowd was at the social at1 Stephen and Glenna Osgood spent. McCallum will entertain lhe Aurepresented as being in desperate the schoolhouse Saturday evening ' Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lynden! gu»t meeting.
.,ii
circumstance*. While they have when Uie p. T A served Ice cream Johncock at Gun lake.
I The Otis school picnic was held
... netted something over *12.00
- - ‘1
________
«
-------------- which
-------- _ _ with
’ • *-----------------Saturday with a large crowd presK----------------- Mrs Schultz returned from a visit
DOWLING.----------------------- ent and a good time by all Word*
ouy be Baaeeaarv U pay th* aetraat 4*e
Co.ti_tra
m
Chicago
last
Thursday.
!
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lloyd
Gaskill
and
faU
the enjoyment and
ci
M.cnicon.
i
L’W/SXWfiS?!
it SrtS %

it

flhrlber.
aon attended the
school reunion

St

Lfl
M 2«7.'m4
»Ib« Sleeted ao4*r th*
**** io 4e&lt;I*&gt;« i*e *»•

Wlaelpel tad lalereal lhe earn of Two
Tbouaand Hve BaaM il.wulv-on* and
18/100 Della** (S3.ill.18) ao4 n* salt

NOW. THEREFORE, by alrtra of th*
powar ot aala coatalaad la said mortxu*
aud nur*u*at to th* Blatutn of ibo Blate
Ud*d.&lt;hlI?OTICE*UeiH &lt;HEREBY ‘oiVF.N
that on Tuaaday. Ootebor Olb. 1810. at
tan o'doak foraaodn. Kallam Htandard
Tivte at. tha North frost door of tho
I'ourt Hraa* ia tho City of Hutla**. &gt;

he^datSS

st’-’tL’gyjL-.u ats-.'a;
raid by th* oadaraixaad. with lotafa.i
thercev. per*a*nt to law *»d lo th*
term* *f aald ■ertea**. aid all lee*)

'ST,
aaae on cold
J Tr the

K

aerinaa at louawa:

HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPO­
RATION. Mort*****.
GLENN D MATHEWS.
Ionia. Mlcbbran.
Oat

ORDRR FOB PUBLICATION.
State ot Mlchlran- lb* Probate Court for
th* County of Barry.
At a aeatlet
probate offtre
a KaF

ORDER FOB FURLICATIOX.
of Mlehljan,
i Crantv of H
aald county
A. H. 1836

-pent their vuition In Wuhlndten.
lo u!4 erart for asaateattoa aa4 adjuel
ta«al and that all rredllore at eaid da
craned ate tea aired to precoat lhel
Uma t« uld erart. at tbd vrebata offlc*
‘U,bsm
D. 183* and that ufd claim* will b-

Ml.LI... ___ _ ___

’« •» needed unproeemenu we

meat. Judea of Probate.
NOTICE Or MORTGAGE 8AXJL

tne city oi liatiinrc. i
Wore the 17ih d&gt;

cilia. Barry County. MIthUan, to HOME
OWNERB LOAN CORPORATION, a Cor­
poration orranliad under th* law* of tha
United Blate* at Anu-rica. dated AvS‘

■orUaae to d&lt;
end aceread Ia
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
Hui* of M!chl&lt;«n tha Probata Ora
tha County of Barry.
At a laaalon of laid i

as iris.'?.

a raid cour
. D. 1838

FARMERS!
WE PAY HIGHEST
MARKET PRICES
FOR YOUR GRAIN

NOW. THEREFORE, by vtrtee at lh«

• WHEAT

court hit tialltl
provided.
ELr.

County al Barty. Mleblraa, (that
lhe olara at koUle* Ctrralt Oc

Mildred Smith. Real.ter of Probate.

. RYE
• OATS

• CORN
• BARLEY

ncmin. ana an otner
nadeninad. with lalaraal

SUs?'.

ORDER TtyE PUBLICATION.

icribed *■ follow*:

AND ALL OTHER KINDS

vr -mm* wi
axe of Nuhrllle. Cow
*an, mcra MHicaUrly

thl’vii-

'See Us Before You Sell!

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
• LOAM COMMO.

O..,M,*'BT'SIi
Reciste* at Prabala.

HASTINGS

"The Farmer Owned Store

school

reunion

STOCK

'u“ HUhL’d fibkih

itti Miau we aiiouiu at least menuon &gt; —
------ ------------------------- -—•—
them. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Schwlcho I
have had their home completely re- . ¥r‘
Stanley Klmmey and
modcllrt; Albert woodmmuc. Mr,. S,t&gt;' o VenUe Aprlru- &gt;« BubCore Aipluell. Milton Tr.iTord end I
“■
&gt;““• “
P“Mrs. Susie corkins have greatly Ienu&gt; Mr- and M”- AdrUn Johnaon.
Mprt^d tS “Lr£J or^ei d
«•
Improved lhe exterior of their

■ MUdrad’amlth. Reclater at Frobate

NOTICE TO OREDITOBB.

tended tha Bagla
Sunday.

wEh^ooSpKi

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Quick enter­
tained the Ferris family reunion
Sunday with 82 in attendance, a co­
operative dinner was served,
Mrs. Captain steams went to Bordaughter, Mrs. Albert Nash, and
Dan
geM hospital this Monday morning places, and Charlie Moon has done family of Hastings.
...... she will undergo an „p,r..
1,1, WlUl
where
opera- {. • -Plo-lIM &gt;«• X
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilcox and son.
Uon lor r«lur Mn. Slnnu hu! u“ «'“» «&lt;&gt; ll» mjta comer by
XOTIOB Or MORTGAGE BALI.
been wry poorly tor
Ums, we I
“»
buUdlnn on hu Robert, attended the Wlkox family
tru.1 ,he may return home much 1 Pr&lt;m‘~-. which were my wuUht- reunion on Sunday at the home of
olnaty 4*ya) la tha coadllleaa of a eartlin Improved
‘ ly and otvlno
giving Hla
his wlr-rm
store tutlMfnw
building aa lhe former’s sister, Mr*. Glenna
mon**** ead* by Rantoa C. Howall *n4
Prlndle. of Plainwell.
»&lt;f«i *J*»«&gt;*» F- HowalL of th* Villa** of
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Gilbert are coat of paint. Now as soon as
Mrs. Bert Newland left Sunday
^"•-O^Ke^aX “%'fKjRlt entertaining a sister-in-law. Mrs. E. the community In general can raise
the
purport
»P*nd the week.
purpose of paint-1 for
Harrison, and a friend, Mrs. A. the funds for a.lhe
we feel that a great1 ,
,nd Mr*. Cecil Wald of Rock­
Krahn and two sons. Bob and Dick, acai nas seen accomplished In the'ford w B week &lt;nd «u“t ot
P*renU- Mr “d
from Joliet. HI. a visit to the Bird appca^c^? orn• initevStge thte
Sanctuary, Gull lake. Is scheduled
ntem Edward
FHwvrH rtem
nf Middleville
MIAHtevilte
Clem.
clem of
year.
was also there.
.— u.
Mr «od Mr. Hud«i. son and
Mrs. Nellie Beck of Laramie.
Miss Evelyn Newland spent a few
«U»» thf retie* principal an 4 *«r**d la- daughter
of Detroit wiiu
who were caiieu
called Wyoming, Is a guest muo
-a. vi
this ween
week ui
of days at Camp on Stewart lake.
IMMI
tbaraoa
4aa.
wblth
alaetlow
It
4»**
famt tb*r*eu &lt;«*. which »l*etlra
dee* y—
...
. ..
ajFtfx
1: Jlttwlu here by lhe illness of the latter’s Mrs. Etta Stanton. Mrs. Beck was
Mr. and Mrs. Roy oaks and chllMOTIOB OP 8PRCIAL AIUSIMRNT.
father. N. H. Barber, will return to formerly MUs Nellie Geiger, teacher dren were dinner guests Sunday of
, Dswioa. DaWItt C- Broais*. ■ortnc* al Ua gate af thia voile* for their home Monday.
*In
“ “
•* Weeks
*" —
•-------the
school•--------several
years their daughter, Mrs. Oley Douglass
Irina Brooten. Haatliea Utt. veivalMl a»4 Ivtaraat tha avn of Nina
ago
and
made
her
home
at
that
Miss
Irene
Barber
and
aunt,
Mrs.
Hva&lt;ira4 Tvabfrtwv **4 4»/lOoT&gt;all*ra
and family ot Bowens Mills. In the
(**32.40) aU««tiit or oroateUlaKa at Florence Swain, spent Thursday in time with Mr. annd Mrs. Wall Nor­ afternoon they called on their son,
law *r la ra*ltr batls* bora leatltvtag Niles.
ton.
Lemuel and family near Mid
la rraraar th* gabt taraud by u!4 martMr. and Mrs. Bradflekl took Jack----Mr.----------------and Mra---------------Victor Sproul
---------------and dlevllle.
to the hospital this Monday for a family of Detroit are occupying the
tonsil and adenoid operation.
t Stanton cottage at clear lake and
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox and visiting relatives here this week,
Miss Audrey Densmore of Hos­
'her'eIiy ‘given’ children of Battle Creek
are I Mrs. Belle Hoffman was at Has- tings spent part ot last weak with
spendlng their vacation in the W. ’ Ungs last week at the home of her Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Fuller and
A. Spaulding home while he and I sister-in-law. Mrs. picket, while re­ daughter.
Mrs. Wilcox are at wall lake.
covering from the effects of a tonMrs. Prank Shriber. Hazel. Mrs.
Barry. Mlchl**n, (that bain* th* place
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest. Bradflcld sil
" operation.
"
Leo Barry and Norman called on
- holdla* Circuit Court In aald County.)
Hated at Heallnra. Michigan, the i?lh uld Bort**** will ba foraclotad by a and father of South Bend, stopped
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Wilcox and Mrs. Arthur 8trodtbeck and son
r of Jolr. A. t&gt;. 1836.
aala at irabll* auction to th* hlchaat bld at the home of Merle Bradfield, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Trafford at­ Monday afternoon.
mortraae. * r ’’oT’Stneh ihirlat aa ma,“b« i Sunday on their vacation trip to tended the Bible conference al Gull
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Herrick and
8. C. Rocera. City Clerk.
lake Sunday evening.
daughters of Battle Creek spent tiie
Mrs. John Kitsoh of Webberville week end with Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Mrs. Flower and Bernice called
XOTIOB TO CREDITORS.
I on Mr. and Mrs. Mills. Hastings is a house guest this week at the Williams.
home of her nephew and wife. Mr.
Mrs. Alexander and nephew and
Norma Jean Quick. Ban Held. vlsllHubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo took
1 ed her grandparents here Saturday companled by her son and wife. Sundoy dinner with Mr. and Mrs.
and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Kitson, who were LaFayette Usborne.
Mrs. H. Bellinger and son were Sunday guests there.
dinner guests Bunday of Mrs. Ida
Mrs. G- W. Fry spent several days
Smith. Plainwell.
last week at the home of her daugh­
Rev. R. Bates gave us a very help­ ter. Mrs. prank Cox. In Johnstown.
ful sermon Sunday on "The Religion
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Belson and
of the Second Mlle." His theme next Robert of Leonidas and Mr. and
Sunday, Aug. 2. will be "The Half Mrs. Orv. Dunn of Fine lake were
Educated Man." come and enjoy the guests of their . parents. Mr. and
good messages brought each Sun­ Mrs. 8. A. Wertman Bunday.
day morning .at 0:30.
Norton Slocum, who U employed
by the Consumers Power Co. at TaWEST HOPE.
wos City spent Sunday with his
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
There will be an ice cream social family.
at Harold Springer’s on the lawn on
HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPO­
Wednesday evening, Aug. 5, spon­
"The teacher who is attempting to
RATION. Mort*****.
Slana D. Malhawa,
sored by the L. A. 8. Everyone is teach without inspiring the pupil
Attoraay for Mortcacao.
cordially invited to come and enjoy with a desire to leam ia hammer­
Bniisaaa *44r**a: National Bank Ana*
our ice cream and cake and an eve- ing on cold iron."—H. Mann.

lerinc ftrauj,

«aunty oi Harry. MIC
tlcularly described as:

JWe^nV.!

M. Gates and daughter Betty Dawn
of Grand Rapids.

WOODLAND

$100
XGal.
WITH YOUR CONTAINER

Thou who hova uxd if will tell you it

is thc best they have *var used.

Try it at our risk

use soma and if

you are not satisfied that it is tho bast

you have ever used raturn what

you

have left and get your money back.
GUARANTEED FLY SPRAY

�CITY TAKES STEPS
TO ENO A NUISANCE

Mr em hh. Aiwt umeh. nwy
were called hete by the serious flj.
new of their sUter. Mrs
Vanaman of Hastings who

Oily's Public Damp WiU Boon
Have Personal Super­
vision
Rutland.

MILD-/
Ml HOW

rJu,“.’,‘riw

ii

Bisquick

ti 19c Swansdown
29c Cigarettes

Black Pepper

A

Grape Juice * *p tr"i

J.'".

3

Yukon Club

c*‘"n—

25c Am. Family Flakes
33c Lux or Ivory Flakes
...k |5C Rinso or Oxydol

Salada Tea
Electric Bulbs

Fly Ribbons

2 '•r 5c Kitchen Klenzer
Root Beer Extract T-dT bottle | Qc Climalene
Lux or Lifebuoy Soap
4 ..k.. 25c Laundry Starch * *r
Jelly Glasses
- 35c Morton's Salt

3

Jar Rubbers

Tex Wax
F"
Morgan's Fruit Pectin

Fb,.

b...,.

Drano •“ 19c Windex
Cond. Milk

10c Fig Bars
9C Pink Salmon
|9C Brown Sugar

25c

2

tail
can*

23c

5

Ib*.

25c

3-lb,

55c

bottle

15c Calumet Baking Pdr.
10c Rajah Salad Dressing

2

pkg.

15c

large
Pkg.

39c

Pkg.

19c

pkg.

25c

Ib.

19c

quart

29c

2-lb.

15c

Ib.

25c

Pkg.

9c

gal.

19c

14 lb.
Pkg.

29c

Ib.
Pkg.

19c

roll
15c
Ipc Wax PaperCu'5c 123-ft.

— 15c Pabst-ett Cheese Spread
... (2c Sanka or Kaffee Hag
2

Baker's Cocoa

2
55c

,!A.

"J.""

For

b,ui.

3

■■■' ■&gt;—
21c Heinz
25c Northern Tissue

65c

Short Ribs of Boel 2
Chunk Bacon

lb&gt;-

Lb.

3
4

Grandmother’*
White Sliced

DFC &lt;1 a

21c Iona Peaches

2

25c Heinz Pickles

Luncheon Meat s'u I5c
IOc
Skinless Franks

a

Ib*.

2 .... 27c Nectar Tea
|.b.. (7c
Marshmallows

College Inn Soups

\

3

15c

XX

r*.,°4

17c

25c

r^d*o'i"k

Mason Jars

18c

3-lb.

re Hi

Hershey'* Chocolate
Shrimp

large
c»n

4

’.‘A' 23c Iona Cocoa
Pineapple Juice D,u 3 "J..* 25c Hershey's Cocoa
Tomato Juice
10c Baker's Cocoanut
.b,
|2C Vinegar
Wheaties
•*»

CoCOnOg

25c

15c

wm”.u"

Jello ^7..'2’'15c

19c

can*

5c Scot Tissue
29C Grapenuts

V..’

v.’SS.

2fc

large
Pkg.

roll*

Vegetables Mi*«d

Heinx Soups

19c

large
Pkg.

4

Pork and Beans *',•“&gt; 2
Cooking Oil

15c

A&lt;.

pkg*.

19c Instant Postum
' 3 .... 25c Postum Cereal
uuu JQg
Colman's Mustard Dr7

Shinola

41c

cakat

2

’A

Baby Foods

Sardines

5

bar*

2 .... 25c Waldorf Tissue

Lea and Perrin's Sauce

Ccrto

*

.'A 19c

Crisco

bottle

Gr*ndmotbcr'»

Prunes

23c
“.&gt;..*1.15
pkg

19c Fels Naptha Soap 10
10c Woodbury's Soap 2

PeaclieS

PearS

California Bartlett*
White Thompson

25c
21c

Oranges

Ib.

37c

25c

roll*

19c

2-Ib.
loaf

10c

No. 2!

27c

S..41...

Fcncy Hot House

j™*"

4

25c

2
25c
2 a* 25c
2

35c

I’ FOOD STORES

irixahy. Mrs. Mary
a. Mra. Dora Will

PRAIRIEVILLE.
The Blake school reunion will be
held on the sfnool ground. August
2. Pot luck dinner, good program.
Mrs. Orville Knauss and Mrs.
Elisabeth Bechtel of Chicago were
callers in town Sunday.
The Methodist Sunday school pic­
nic will be held at Prairieville
park. Gull lake, August 8. Pol luck
Everybody invited.
Mrs. Hasel Billings and family,
Mrs. Manley Billings and MIm Dora
Johnson attended the young people's
Bible conference at Midland park.
Guli lake. Sunday night, lhe former
with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Farr and
Robert Conway.
Nelson Warner of charlotte wa* a
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Staf­
ford over the week end.
Rev. Ralph L. Bates will have
for his subject Sunday "A Half Ed­
ucated Man." Come and hear his
sermon. Time of meeting is 10:18.
Do not forget lhe mid-week service.
1 Mr. and Mrs. W R, Norris went
j to Toledo. Ohio. Frtday to visit Mr.
I and Mrs. Delos Hughes and family
j and relumed Monday.
i Mrs. E. A. Parker and Mrs. Mar­
I Jory Ostroth of Hastings visited Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Johncock Thursday.
I Roland McKibbln went lo Detrolt Sunday a guest of the Moon­
Journal publishers.
I Mr. and Mrs W. G McKibbln and
| son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
, Rush Saunders of Delton.
| Mr. and MY* Robert McKibbln
had for Sunday guest*. Mr. and
Mrs. Lyle McKibbln and family of I
Otsego.
Those from here attending the |
I Ritchie reunion Sunday at Sheip's ।
| landing. Pine lake, were Mr. and I
Mrs. Mark NorrLs. Mrs. Lucy Norris. |
I Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johncock and j
i family and Will Mullen.
I
Mrs. William Blohm and chtl- ■
dren spent the week end with relatlves at Grand Junction.
:
Mrs. Irene japhet was appointed ।
trustees on the school board to fill •
the vacancy caused by the resigna। tioh ot Jake Adrtanson.
I Mr. and Mrs. Harold Temple and
i son of Kansas City, Missouri, called
on friends here Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bila* Doster attend­
ed the school reunion at Spring
Brook Bunday.
George Hyde spent the week end
with Mrs. Nettle Hyde and Paul of
Hasting*.
Mr. and Mrs Karl Krick and son

in Council ,l.d

HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO
RATION. Mortaaaae.

mon Connell of tha

nona Ann.-,
Out Oct. IS

NOTICE OP SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

nliHM trial (t • rnrrli
mon Connell e( th
Ichlstn. Mid In th
. .tte Cht fUHretk

B
NOTICE Or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT. I •» E. Hl#lr

NOTICE or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT
To HaaJloia Hulldli

NOTICE or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT
Rirkvr. Berth*
Merrlek. Klaer

I

”
„ “'(ai
mon cmineii
Jii";
imer»vrmeni*
H
jj, ordnoi

citr cirrk.
OBDEE POE PUBLICATION.

NOTICE or

ra i». n^i

Ralph
and Mr*. Chester Johncock-*
„hclbyvHlc
Shelbyville.---------------------- .--------------- J
Several from here attended the 1 p„, „*
Ringling. Barnum Bailey show at &lt;'«»*vat
Battle Creek Thursday.
1 ,7,h *'*’

NORTH HOPE.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Welch and
friend of Gobles spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mr*. Jay Anders and moth-

NOTICE or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.
» &lt;.or,uo J.aao*. M. H. Hathaway Mr

NOTICE or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

O.rar Pal
Ro&gt; ar. K

Mrs. Orville Bruce of Irving. Mr. ,
and Mrs. Havey Hill of Battle •
I creek spent Friday evening adlh

notice

or

special assessment.

Doctor Praises El

23c

4 ». 23c

MS*JT2

gel rid of thls^unslghtly place.

18c

tmall

24-ox.
Jar

Alberta, Freestone

Urrapes
TofTia£oeS

Pkg-

IKE.

Mr. and Mn. Albert Ulrich spent
that it haa not been managed in a some time with . his slater, . Mrs.
satisfactory way. It has become a Laura Vanaman, Saturday evening.
discredit to our city. It Lv located • Mrs. Rankin Hart and daughter
on one of the principal approaches in company With her slater. Mra
to Hastings. Tha unsightly rubbish Howard Johnson of Hickory Cor­
say mr? tbartef*
1
and the unsavory smells do not ners attended the OU* school re­
NOW. TtllKRBPORR. by rtrtxa st Us
make a good advertisement for union Saturday.
psvsr st »al« coatalatd la ult awnos* MnMult lo th* Alitalia *f U«
Hastings to the traveler coming
near It. Fire* have originated In
TUB CROSSROADS.
this dump that have caused loss and
Mr. and Mra. George Johnson of
lai o'elork fareaeoa.
expense to the city. When a blase i
ai Ik* North h
does occur, it la difficult to get to it, | Farr of Battle creek spent Thurs­ Tin*
Oort Haoaa ia tha C
'f Hutlnct
because of the marrow roadway. The day afternoon and evening with Mr.
(that b.ina
dumping haa been gone In a very and Mrs. Orley E. Smith.
promiscuous manner. The evident
Mr. and Mrs. George Townsend
purpose ot the people who carry spent Bunday afternoon with Mr.
stuff there L* to get rid of it in the and Mrs. John H. Young of the Star
easiest possible manner. There have neighborhood.
been several alarms of .Are, that
Kenneth Pratt, who has employ­
have called out the department, ment in Battle Creek Is spending
traceable to thi* dump and the this week with bls parent*. Mr. and
careless use that haa been made Mrs. Victor Pratt.
John Cook and family attended
It Is not remarkable, therefore, the Ashley reunion which wa* held
that the council ha* decided that at Oun lake.Bunday.
something must be done to end this
Mr. and Mra Ernest Williams and
nuisance, to make the dump a leas Harold and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wil­
unsightly place and to put an end liams spent Saturday evening with
to the numerous fires that have Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Taleferro of
been caused by it. The council on Battle Creek.
Friday voted that there should be
Lynn Sledge returned Bunday
built near the dump a small cottage, from a visit at Big Rapids.
lhe rent of which would be donated
Harold Alien Smith ia spending
to someone who would look after two week* at camp Ben Johnston.
and be responsible for lhe place Sherman lake.
and put It in more presentable con­
dition. There will be some expense
NOTICE or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.
for labor but It will be worth It to

viGoaous
m^WINEY

RKH-J

Cwhi

Flour

23*

21*

17*

While there were perfectly valid
Floyd Randle with two
and families spent from Ft
on which the city dump ha* been UI Sunday with Mr. and Mi
located, and while It is dealrable to

Aguinaldo Cuban Honey
'
I
'
i
j
I

"I have used with unusual success
the honey of the bees "El Aguinaldo" in the treatment of multiple or­
ganlc processes sueh as nervous fatlgue with upsetting of lhe dlgeslivo
tract; tn anemia and chlorosis of
varying degree* and especially a* a

.sstt

C Ros.r., City Cl*rk

NOTICB or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT

i tonic food for the general physical
, power* of the adult and lhe aged."
I Signed:
Octavio Manallch y Canton.
Doctor of Surgery,
38 Palrha Road.
&gt;H«vana. Cuba.
i
(Signature of Doctor Canton I*
I certified by Sanitary Department,
Havana. Cuba.)

EL AGUINALDO CUBAN HONEY
is a pare natural prodact, safe and

sch Ulcer*, Stomach DiatrcM. Rewel
and Colon TrottHea. also Asthma
and Bronchitis.

NOTICE Or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

TIC..." H.lV,W:,K'b",-.:
NOTICE Or SPECIAL ASSESSMENT.

lr». Hoti.
« »r« krrtbT
ibai at * ttxe|«l
la* «f lh* Cnnaao* Counrll •( ik«

mfrllne M 0
Pfty of Haiti

_________
nib Sir •’ Jaly. A. If. ISIS. &gt;*14 04m ■ "•« Oavaril di4 mu a r*&gt;*tuil*n I*
mon Council 4(4 om * roolntio* Is I ««Utrntl Mtb 4a&lt; Hil&lt;’ Hl Unu&lt;
e«Mirar| *art **4 rau«r »a4 tatwae 1 Malta w E. Tkarn from N. H*a««*r i«
M«&lt;n* ep 8. M*rfc«t El. Nob V. Br*a4 •••• BwertT Ila* af 1*1 4. black i. Bai-

7-*l

Al 3tifh
IM a^art

LY BARKER DRUG STORK
:Hs* Secured the Agency for This
I Wonderful Natural Product In this

Community

Tnn art htraby aatlMB that «t,

tekisaa. th* nth

Council

K Ci£" Clark.

�TH, BJUTimil ****** TWtmiMT. XTLT ». IWi

ENJOYING LIFE
AT PINE LAKE

inMinn1

i bl

APRIL SESSION

Ben MR: i* m. »»r« ■««•:
«^v»|ln«.

Hollow tarrtoS.

mnltt*. to kava
F*»d Hu
liW«U4«rg a Koa ...
js-Wm Pnbllikiw C«

Tk« r*novt&gt;t MtMii m»»«W
roll toll to SuporrUMi tr«a iholr
iPMliro lovasklM SB* WWW:—

foUowlaf

COURT HOUSg News

Fine Program for Children—
FKOBATE COURT.
Buddy Check Every
Est. Henry Collison. Inventory
filed.
Five Minutes

man It it Ian from orrojol
b.uriti of lotwmiori *d

THREE CORNERS.
American politics present a crazy­
quilt pattern unprecedented in the
country’* history. A -Whispering
Campaign” is already in progress—
“thc real victim* of which are the
credulous who allow their Judgment
lo be clouded by vague and often­
times malicious report* without
questioning their accuracy or ori­
gin.” Tis well to weigh each report
carefully and to sift the chaff from
the wheat before accepting it. ds
we are facing a grave crisis the out­
come of which—for weal or woe—ia
unpredictable. It is this uncertain­
ty which makes this campaign so
epochal—it may mean a change
in government and society or very
little change In present conditions
no man can tell which it will be.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Walters and
daughter. Marian, of Grand Rap­
ids were Sunday guests of
Mrs.
Walters father. M. E. Moore, and
aunt. Miss Clara J. Sisson.
Mr. and Mra. Forest Sisson and
daughter. Dians, motored over from
Lansing Sunday to spend the day
wllh the former’s brother and slsr-to-law. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Sisson.
Robert Hammond rode his newly
acquired bicycle—awarded him as
first prize in the Sheaffer Skrip
selling contest, recently conducted
fnr five weeks by the Prescription
drug store—home Wednesday after­
noon To say that he was delighted
with his success in winning it is
putting it mildly.
.
With their infant soft. Gordon.

The w. K Kellogg Foundation
camp at Pine lake is now providing
vacations
YBBSBBWBMU for Ito DCLUilU
second group UI
of IM
campers, half of them boy* and half
girls. There are thirty-nine counsalon. moat of whom are teacher*.
The University of Michigan has two
instructor* at the camp, giving to
counselors campus credit in two
child education courses.
A free swim is held In lhe after­
noon. Twelve life guards are on duty
at that time. There is a buddy
check each five minutes, and every
child in camp may be called to a
central area and checked within
two minutes. Three
swimming
classes are held in the morning.
Other
activities include nature
study, handicraft, campcraft. art*,
hiking, fishing, boating and campThe children live tn log cabins
where they are taught to do their
share in making beds, sweeping and
caring for their personal belongings.
There are sixteen children here
from Barry county.
Among lhe visitors here from
Hastings Sunday were Mr. and Mrs,
H. P. Tuttle. Mrs. Arlene Perkins.
A. O. McCall. Mrs Mary McCall.
Wilma Haight. Agnes Haight. Frank
Haight. Florence Dunnigan,
Dunnigan and Lucille Shults

Eat. Lottie Wisner, petition far
Admr. filed, order for publication
entered.
.
, pt- Thomas E- Cheeaebrough. PeUtlon for
*-------authority
-------to continue —
op­
eration of Mctory and extend time
of contract re »ale of product* filed,
order granting authority to continue
operation of factory and extend
time of contract re *ale of product*
entered.
,
E*t. August F. Geiger. Petition for
Admr. filed.
Esl Reginald Sidney French. Pe­
tition filed, order for sale of asset*
entered.
Est. Angie J. DCWolf. Order to
give deed entered.
Est. Victor and Agnes Benson.
Nomination of guardian filed, order
appointing guardian entered.
Est. Milo G. Barbour. Inventory
filed.
.
Est Bert R. Tinkler. Will filed,
petition for probate filed, proof of
will filed, order admitting will en­
tered.
Est. George Doster. Orders con­
firming tale entered.
Eat. k/ary E. Trego. Final account
filed.
Est. Victor and Agnes Benson.

Hlllono !• Coun-

EouilUoUon — Wllroi

'L.S.cf&lt;

publication entered.

tlce filed, order appointing Admr.
entered.
hied, letters of guardianship issued.
Est. Faye Donley. Waiver of no­
tice filed, order appointing Admr.
entered.
Eat. Mary E. Trego. Order allow­ children
ing account entered, discharge of Frederick Fuhr Monday.
Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Amanda Melson. Petition to
John Hotel
Assyria Bunday.

Est. Flora M- Taylor. Petition to
sell Consumers Power Co. stock filed,
order to sell Consmera Power Co.
stock entered.
Est. Faye Donley. Bond of Admr.
filed, letters of administration is­
sued. order limiting settlement en­
tered.
Est. Agnes Bristol. Order appoint­
ing Admr. entered.

KA8T UY1NO.

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

Our girl’s camp this year was big­
ger and better. Rev. L. M. Rlglemnn gave the girls aid in plastic
eaques and spoke to them al their
st supper meal. Rey. Ingram of
Olivet spoke al Vespers on Sunday
night. Thc leadership proved their
worth. No girl left c/mp unable to
swim, thanks to Dorothy Horning |
and Becky Ingram.
Forty boys and girls of Eaton
County 4-H clubs moved in Friday
morning for four days of fun and
fellowship and instruction. On Au­
Leach lake spent Bunday with Mr gust 2. the Barry County 4-H club
and Mrs. Edgar 8. Flfield and fam­ will havtf 53 boys al camp and on
ily.
August 5. 60 girls will take their
Mr. and Mrs. Seth Cook
&lt;nee place. Harold Foster and Mr. Haas
)r,j | Gladys Walters: of Lansing were will direct the program. Rev. A. A.
iir« &lt; over week end guests of her par- Haggal and George Wotrlng will
L"b --------I ents.-----------------------Mr and Mrs.--------Edw. Waiters.
----------| assist secretary Angell and daugh1 Mr. and Mrs. Edgar 8. Flfield and i ter. Lois, who does the cooking with
I family attended lhe Olis school re- i the help of Evelyn Newland
union In Rutland Saturday.
The rnrui
food help aivm
given hv
by the rrramcream­
Norris Malcolm of Lake Odessa, eries and elevators In Barry county
who Is visiting his grandparents Is greatly appreciated In lhe rise of
Mr. and Mrs John Malcolm near food cost since lhe camp fees were
Freeport, was the guest of David announced.
Robinson, Robert and Paul Ham­
Robert Roush is helping at camp
mond. oaiuraay.
Saturday. .
mono,
with leather work lor
for tnetr
their later
j Mrs. Colcinan. Jqnlor and Vir- | periods.
/
। ginla. Mra. Muchler and Doreen of .
------------------ 1—
fitruin Grand Rapids visited their uncle I HUGE ANNUAL SLAUGHTER
’ and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Edw. WaiOF ANIMALS BY CARS,
ters. last Wednesday. Gerald Much- | If the slx-month tally kept by
ler. who had been a house guest ’ Loda Haines, who lives near Cassof the Edw. Walter’s, returned home । opolls. is any indication, the annual
with them.
1 slaughter of birds, animals, and
At a ceremony which took place ! reptiles by automobiles In Michigan
at lhe home of her parents. Miss reaches proportions that far surMarguerite Yelter. daughter of Mr pass popular estimates. Haines beand Mrs. Clair Yelter. became the 1 gan on Jan. 1 to tally the dead birds
bride of Harvey Kenney of Lansing, and animals he saw each day on his
trips
to and
town where the
Saturday. Rev. Wynn reading the —
“ --------J ’from
------ ‘------------marriage
service.
Their
many children attend school. In the six
friends wish for them a. long and months ending June 30. he had
counted
276
birds,
animals, and
happy life together. The newly*
j weds and Mr. and Mrs. Clair Yelter reptiles along lhe three and one। were in attendance at lhe Yelter half mile stretch, an average of
reunion held at Fallasburg park nearly 80 per mite. If this average
could be applied fairly to the
bo ae- near Lowell. Bunday.
thousands of mites of state highway,
♦•n.ra
HICKORY CORNERS.
county roads and private drives
»f' ike
Mr. and Mr*. John Hawn are throughout the state, game men
follow- . spenaing
spending a few
days in Indiana.
icw aaya
uiuiauia. say that thc total number of wild
I where they were called by the death creatures kilted by automobiles for
1 of his brother.
the slx-month period would be far
Ii Mr. and
ana Mra.
Mrs I.
i. O.
u. Brady
»raay and
ana . Into the millions.
baby and Marvel Campbell of South
NORTHEAST IRVING.
. Bend. Ind., were Friday afternoon i
i.,1 Mr and Mrs. John Kollar of Mid*
caller* at the home of their parents.
■ । Mr.
dlevlllc and Mr. and Mr*.
Mr. uio
and mra.
Mrs. o.
B. vampucu.
Campbell.
Mr. and Mra. Lyle Holmer and Kunde spent Sunday with Mr. and
TTTH children of Kalamazoo spent Thurs- Mrs. O. R. Lightfoot.
line'day with their mother. Mra. Don 1
Miss Marguerite Segar of Lake
-------- Johnston, who has been ill for some Ode.va spent the week end with her
—.
; parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Segar.
a re ..
time.
Robert
Hill
spent
a
couple
of
days
!
Miss Edna CUter of Lansing spent
io.Rot..;:::::zt —7^
• - week with
——- his
■■ uncle. —
—•—n ithe week end with her sister. Mrs.
J
last
Clayton
’
I Arthur Moore.
11 no Haynes,
Haynes, in
in Battle
Battle Creek.
Creek.
Mr. and
and Mra.
Pete Koffntan
Hoffman and
and ii
Ralph
Moore
and
Pauline
0 '0
Mr.
Mra. Pete
•— —
-------- —
r -—j ~ . Moore
,
"S’; Victor of near Kalamo were Sun-: spent Sunday with friends in Ino’ao day afternoon visitors at Glenn dlana.
««»o Aaplnair*: Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Mrs. Ree Wilcox spent Thursday
12 *n Marshall were also callers there. I at Grand Rapids.

tenaanlritlooi

filed.
E*. MlUia Haynre Ordw aitowtag claim* tntarad.
Eat. LM Baltoy. Inventory fited.
Eat. atta Matter. Bond •( AdW.
filed, totter* ot administration In­
road. order limiting mUImmrI «Ctered. petition for hearing claim*
filed, notice to creditors latuad.

WHEN

FRIGIDAIR
MOVES IN
Your Refrigeration Problems Move Out
Frigldoire bring* you perfect food protection with oil it moon* to hoolth—

improvements. There’s • si«e for ovary family. Buy on PROOF*
proof that it will pay for itself!

GRANTING
I.

1937. without furthai

With an
Eye to the
Future

■am mono n)
»•.’ airu/n that thl«

£redit

Anniversary Sale

Jubilee of Values !

0QDOWN

QYEARS

Delivers It

TO PAY;

Trade Old Equipment As Part Payment
We are looking for good
commercial loan*. Mod­
em equipment and meth­

od* in your business that
reach ahead a few yean, appeal to u«.

MEET THE

GET PROOF OF ALL
STANDARDS Bafora

METER-MISER"

YOU DO IN ■

We are glad to cooperate with re­

Tttihy
Stinplirt
HCinHh a NlrMiln*

liable, faraeeing individual* or organ­

Th* simple*? refrigerating mechanism

izations, geared to meet the problems

aver built

of a new age of industry, finance and

CUTS CURRINT COST TO THE BONI I

4— MOK* VBA
5— nVB-TBAK
FKKilDtlM BAUU

transportation.
A frank discussion of your credit

The Meter-Miser to hidden awxy. where it cannel

It givaa

requirements will be welcomed.

lit u

N
K

engineering, with anly three moving parts, IN­
CLUDING tha Wter!
Permanently MM
completely sealed against moisture and dirt.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

CONSUMERS,

�THI HASTINGS KA.NNKR THUB1 DAT, JULT ta, 1»M

--------- --

.
HL. vUlttog thair slater. Ariaha.

JUNTY
DRAWS S2O.137

kZ..NASHVILLE.
'their picnic Friday August 7th at
Last Thursday Mra. Bemica Shaw Mr- and Mr* nanlt Harn
ary fcdition. the Grand Ledge Inde-1
NfUon Bnunnj and aaub&lt;&lt;. Uk, A
iuck 4Upper W1U enUrUlned ro/ Mr*. Julia Bench
Laura Hallock of Doud Corners
ItolUMd .Ur, w«h ran, 4,“ h,„ A,ul[U,. wnl tl„ ,.„t Be
, wd Wr&gt; of to. DW,o. CUI.. Mrj |
to/-to endI »IU. to uncle.

Fund Benefits by State
other InteresUng features brief end with thc
Wclfht and Oai
tabloid sketches of their well known Greenville.

Backus family at
"
business and professional men. BanM end Mrs John Handel Louis
ner readers In the southwestern H^deHmd t« S LouU Jr.^nd
------ --- fh. totont, wlil feel special
^Zd ^Shter Dorothy of

visiting his pandparehU ahd other
Umrn.. .nd rtUuvM gl Paw £aw.
The Pine Lake Helping Hand
Club wiU ma*t With Myrtle Rogers
E. Kenyon Sunday for an afternoon meeting on August
5th.
Instead of With Pearl Baglay
aftamoon.
as had been planned.
our Sunday School at Shulls WM
Karie Boulter has gone to HaaBunday
^“.‘d Mrr ApSenU^nd
m

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Brown of. Rwetta Mead of East Lansing and | Wifi Hadtoek. and family.
j
Grand Rapids spent Sunday here, the birthday of Mrs. Clyde Wilcox ;
M1*'r .
Mrs. Brown planned lo stay this : of Baitings. A lovely pot luck din- .
°“*»•*&lt;[•'j
week »nd help care for her father, ner was senmd at noon, the after- Shultz;ot Ball). Creek spent the
Clyde Brown, who has been sick noon being spent to vtaitmg. Thou week end with Mr. and Mr. J. W

. ton r™» u» ।
Of that amount. H y. Byington w.»v

niM.,
state for 130.137.

»»»&gt; . 'at Morgan Park Mrs^ Handel is away Sunday night.
pHt
mJ^WHI ^vde Mr1 Hastings.
Gladys chamberlain and PatUe of
nUo visiting her parents. Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betts and
m?1 EbL*?ucker of I
Mr^Ada Ashby spent Saturday Hastings. Mrs. Mina Aldrich of
----------------—
“
daughter DorU and Mr
H. C.
“*?A. w
afternoonwIto Mrs Kau Patton of Hope Center were here. RM. WaiJUrry Bounty. The remaining U - 3*^. township ot Barry county. I M
Heclter'
Zuzclmltl attended toe bail game 5*7*v‘n':
• “*ntllT? Kalamazoo
ton gave a short urmon all anjoyed
HIM
share ot, I&lt; nu.ua
Auiuj,t IV.
i0 igjg
He oivcuutu
attended niiu
and
Miss Prelda Betu of Detroit at Detroit Friday. Mr Zusclmltt reMr and Mr. Albert Warner and 1 “We hope to tee toort new fata*,
Jt F K was
.. . Barry
" county's
10,0. **c
STAm
the
armual'-Jl^.^
.lZlr
We hope to see toor. h
th* ?rt!. «1« months of
01 lh
.e “
nnlu‘11 graduated-’from
the Richland uX
High spent the week end with her brotiimatoed to spend ihc mxt two wweks
aiiernun Lyklna Mr. and Mn Harold Schulster. Bet- Let's all help to make a ...............
distribution of 12.550.000 of tha gas uhool. He then completed his edu- ; er. Charles Belts, and family.
Mr. and Mrs; A. I. Marentette.
Monday with the Handel's ) tie and Bobble of Parchment spent the Bunday School.
Ux That part of the gas tax ap- ctUon.i work at Albion college The 1 The Lentz Table factory began with
Miss Agnes Dutue of Lansing
lne MBnae'1,8unday with Mra. Sarah Kenyon,
portioned among the counties was next four years were spent with 1 working again after being shut, -------•—7—-------- r*
spent Sunday
nr^
Furnlss nnd I Mr. and Mr». Harry Mhener and
Sunday evening at
At home
home.
PINK LAKE.
given them by the legislature to | Marshall Field &amp; Co. in Chicago, down for summer vacation and re- j
___ _
_______ -L
- consumer.- power
~
~ 'held
' a
I ”
The
Co.
Grand Rapids spent Sunday [Lorraine Bonneville of Kalamazoo
Muriel Lindsey and Dorothy Brouhelp them with their road programs. | yr Byington came to Grand Ledge । -----or in lhe Daymenl of Covert road
1804 and went into business with 1 The fire department was called, cooking school Tuesday afternoon wlth the fornwr's parents. Mr and spent Sunday with the Lester Bon- ard are on a camping trip tiim
out
to
Ons
Lehman's
Saturday
to
nt
the
’
community
house.
&lt;■«- «Z1
r»m
Ijihman-,
Hnlurrfnv
nt thn ZVimmimltv hniMA
| Mrs J C FUrtllsS Their MW1. Bud- • neVllle'S.
northern Michigan this week.
bonds, if the county owed such * former college chum F. T. Cop- ' .—
- In prcd
. .=.—
_-—
.. ---,
.. j ------.-------....
E1£jcr of Orcenvlne WBS at
bonds.
I pens. This partnership lasted four help with a fire that destroyed the
dy. returned home with tnem after ' Mr.. Sarah Kenyon will .pend
Mr. and Mn. Dewey Doster and
A&gt; we have explained before, the J^ars when Mr Byington bought barn nnd contents, chicken coop, home here Sunday.
jpendtae to wto with UU tond- I
u her home here. MIm family also Mr. and Mn. ttuascll
original law gave counties half out his partner, and coiftlnued alone
■n,d •&lt;**»' 8Ulck
, „
Mr and Mrs. cluir Brooks and parents
■ Loris Anders of Rutland will stay Minor and Reeia returned on Sun­
the weight tax. When so many | another four years when he sold a I M1M Pbylis Brumm of Grand family of Detroit have moved here. I The D. 8. Sunday school class had ; *'*th her.
day from a week's fishing in the
counties were burdened with Covert । half Interest to Forrest Spencer.
I R“Plda ’Pent Wednesday slight with He is working In the Bera store
;u
their
&gt;cir mevung
meeting rnuuy
Friday at
al me
the uoiuc
home '' •Maribel
— — • Hallock had her
. —
toisils
•--— lakes in upper Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs Charles Dalhauser 1 of Mra H w walralh. honoring removed Friday and at this writing
Velma and DoroUu-u Hrouard
road bands, especially during the
-The new partnership has lasted her parenu.
— *
.—
- ■- l» *&gt;th Mr.. Datay -rh~nnuM&gt;
-•jenl the week end in Bvanstotl.
depression when so mueh properly । twenty-two years without anything
Mr and Mrs Hickman enlcr- and family arc at Saddlebag lake. I.Mn
Millie Roe's
birthday.. ■A toort
Thompson
.pent
Mr. and Mrs. William Hecker and program was given. Mrs Gail Ly- '
was returned for delinquent taxes,1 disagreeable ever coming up between ‘abied the following members of
Ute legislature decided to help coun- these two men which is Indeed quite tI,clr
Sunday. Mr. usjd Mrs two children spent the week end at kins was asked to sing "Zion Hill."
ties bv elylng them the remaining
record In August 1934. Mr. Bylng- Charles Boylan. Mrs M. J Carpen­ Salina. Ohio, attending a family re- ! which was dedicated to Mrs. Roe.
half ot lhe weight tax. and also by 1 tOh w]d his interest to Forrest
and Mr Lew Tilman of Grand Uldcn.
.
_ one
ui me
She nwo
also suuk
sang "In
the kjurucn.
Garden." A
dividing among them annually &lt;2.- ; spencer who is now sole owner of RaP'ds. F. M. Hickman of MuskcMr.- M«F Flop* 1» atundlm aeUtMU
|uek
„,vtd
550.000 of the gas tax.
| th&lt; 4hoe business.
: ?on and Dr and Mrs John K Hlck- camp meeting at Eaton Rapids.
------------------ -—Of Ute 130.137, according to the j -in March. 1904. he was married “»»&gt; ol Dowaulac
Mrs Theressa Hess is visiting her
SOUTH SHULTZ.
state law. one-half must be placed 110 yiaJ Alice Ford of Battle Creek.
Mrs Maude Wot ring of Nashville, children al lhe home ol Miss Amy
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Horn attend­
in the county's road fund, or »l0.-1«ho passed away in 1923. One son. Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Wotrlng and Hartwell.
ed a party at Bedford Sunday cele­
Q68A0. Of the remaining 110.068 50,1 Ford. Was born to this union who Is family
New York. George WotMr. and Mrs. Speer and family brating the birthdays of. Mr. and
there will be a division between the now ’wftn General Motors tn Oak- rln&lt;- Mr. and Mrs. Ford and daugh- of Ypsilanti spent the week end Mrs. Loren Oordnler. Mr. and Mrs.
countv and the Incorporated cities ! iand, California. In 1924. Mr. By- tcr of Kalamazoo and Miss Louise with Mr. and Mrs. Orville Flcok Will Oates were also guests there.
and villages of the county, based on |nBU;n mftrrled Lhe widow of his
population. Roughlv speaking a first partner. Mrs. Caroline Coppens. |
little more than 86.000 will go into
•Tn 1933 Mr. Byington was a&gt;the road fund of the county, and pointed administrator of the relief I
the remaining 40 oer cent will be di­ commission
of tills county from
vided between this city and the vil­ which he resigned April 1st. 1935 to I
lages of Nashville.
Middleville. become acting postmaster. In Au- ]
Woodland and Freeoort. About 82.­ gust of that same year he re-!.
500 of it will be paid to this city, the celved his commission as postmas-I
remaining 81300 being divided be- ter. He lias been aiderman. city I
ween lhe four villages according to treasurer, and mayor of our dty. Mr.
population.

farm where he will be missed, as
he wU a «y reliable and depend­
able young man. AU wish hlmtoccats in his haw petition.
DURFKE.
Mr. and Mrr Elmer Lusk of Ann
Arbor were week end gueau of Mr.
ahd Mfa. Tom Hoffman.
Tuesday Mrs. Holcomb vu 89.
Il was also Leon Stanton'. birthday.
Mrs. Philip. and daughter. Mrs. Leo
Hendershott. Olann Braces, and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Stan­
ton and daughters came to help
celebrate. Mrs. Holcomb received
forty cards and other gifts.
Mr. and Mn. George Guernsey
and Martin Goodenough spent
Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Peter Tie­
Mens.

SALAD
DRESSING

L-A-D+E-S

FRESH. CREAMY

AND

?aT 23c

GENTLEMAN
YOU CAN

SAVE MONEY

BUYING THE
C.THOMASWAY

FAIR LAKE.
A party of friends dropped In
Wednesday evening to surprise Mrs.
Jason Willison on her birthday. Re­
freshments were served and a fine
time was had
MUs Donna Hastings of Jackson
Fw Only
is spending the week with Iva and
Mary Case.
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Willison and
Edward Lechleitner are motoring
to Bridgeport. Conn., lo visit rela­
tives and frtendg.
Harley Stadel and wife of Lake
Odessa and Mn. Albert Knowles of
Hickory Comers were callers
at
Lottie Collister's Sunday.
.
The Kinsley Aid picnic was at­
HEDICIHE
tended by about 18 people and a
fine Ume enjoyed.
Russell Mott Is getting about
again after his automobile accident,
tor nturttl.
which his
Ito, friends
11 Ito. to, are tutu
glad to Ihear. 014 CkMt
I- ,U • prona tn&gt;tm*at
K.
Charles Pixley Is entertaining his c„a W( &lt;iZ«»iu hi-p
sister. Mn. Arthur Collins of Battle Manilas
Creek.
WALGREEN SYSTEM
Ronald Pixley was home from
DRUG STORE
Bellevue and all* joined Ln a birth­
*
HASTINGS
day dinner for their son. Clarence^PHQNJi 22*1

Big$l5
Bottle

FRUIT FLAVORS

3 - 17c

DIRECT STATEMENTS OFTEN CALL FOR CONVINCING

PROOF. . . . THOUSANDS OF CUSTOMERS BUYING ON

49*

THE C. THOMAS STORES

“EVERY DAY LOW PRICE

PLAN" JUSTIFY THIS STATEMENT . .. YOU, TOO, CAN
SAVE ON YOUR FOOD PURCHASES.

BAKERS BREAKFAST

jCTHOMASSTORESl
‘

LB. CAN

9C

«

1

LB. CAN

14c

REED’S

THE NEW LEONARD

REFRIGERATOR

MACARONI S3.17e
TOMATOES®- 3 25c
10c
BEEF STEW s 15c
PINEAPPLE =
18c
Fancy, Sweet Golden Bantam

DUCO
POLISH
AND CLEANER,

KEI

40%

391

GENERATRS

CHAMOIS

Ford A.. Chev.,
10-33.
30.15
Ex ch.
O

Small full skin.
*9e
nne
value— 03

LESS CIIIEIT!
SPERWEAR
MOTOR OIL

15c

OF SPORT GOODS!

A DAY

buys a Leonard

It possesses everything that o good house­
keeper could ask for, plus cheap operating
cost and efficiency.
It will cool foods so easily that you will scarce­
ly be aware that it is doing the work.

GOLF BALLS
Scottie I w

4 Q&lt;

BASEBALLS
League _•

39

TENNIS ....
RACKETS

49

Fielder's Glove
$1.98 value

98

CAMP
AXE

39

HOOSIER
SPINNERS ...

4'

PLAYGROUND
BALLS

15

FISH LINE _
84 ft. hank _

9

22 SHORTS
Box of 50

15

BRONSON
REEL

65

PLUG BAIT

19

FLOATS
Bamboo

11

The door can be opened by a touch of the
foot.

PAD-Y-WAX

It is made upon honor by a firm that has been
making refrigerators for over forty years.
You take no chances when you buy a new
Leonard, os they have been given a more se­
vere test than you will ever give them.
Thousands of housekeepers hove chosen the
New Leonard because they possess every­
thing they hoped to obtain in any electric
refrigerator.

See them at our store—we have a full assort­
ment in stock. Be convinced that they..are all
we claim for them.
We want the names of all SPEED QUEEN
WASHER users, so please come to our store
ond get full particulars on how you can get a
fine $59.00 ELECTRIC IRONER FREE!

MILLER FURNITURE CO.
’’INGS

PHONE 2226

Furnl-

JIFFY STYLE
Coupes 89c
Sedans and Coaches, $1.89

STANDARD ARISTOCRAT
Coupes--------------------- $1.69
Sedans and Coaches, $3. 48
COOL WEAVE
Coupes$2,95
Sedans and Coaches, $5.45

WRENCH SET

$17«

30 DAYS FREE TRIAL!
GRASS SPONGE, large size 9c

PEACHES
25c
DRY ONIONS vX 4 ■- 10c
LIMA BEANS

35225c

U A P 1/ E DC I GOOD FLAVOR
IVIAVrVtntL Rich in Vitamin.

3c£25c

GOLD MEDAL MILK Coadaased 2 C&lt;M 25c

SUNSHINE MILK
DILL PICKLES
KARO SYRUP

RicKCreamy

3

Cans

20c

Firm, Tasty

QT. JAR

15c

BLUE LASEL

IKILCu

Up

HUSKIES
n. 11c
SHREDDED WHEAT -13c
POST TOASTIES
11c

29

The "Corona" Superhet.
j. Suppressorless:
Control
‘ xv&amp;^^lkHObs on front of cabinet
—no cables; dust proof
dynamic speaker. Loud
clear tone and wonderful
selectivity.
~
$25 value—

HASTINGS

SEAT
W COVERS

Box &amp; open

AUTO RADIO SPECIAL

No. 2
CAN

CAN

143

Special—

19

Odeaaa Brand

No. 2

Guaranteed
2.0
miles: bulk; per 4.

As little ns ‘I

Cream Style

GALVANIZED PAIL,10-qt.
handy household
4 Qc

PEN-JEL

STEP LADDER. 5-ft spruce
—steel reinforced
“
stepsL

P &amp; G SOAP SSL 727c
FELS CHIPS — 22c
SWEETHEART

98

CANNISTER SET.
Salt, Flour and taa;
enameled
KITCHEN SCALE
24 Ib. capacity

Sugar,

59
..79*

TOUCH-UP, 9 ox. ...12c
PHONE 2324

FOR JAMS AND JELLIES

2 M*. 25c

P'NUT BUTTER
FIRST PRIZE
FINEST QUALITY

2 If. 25c
COFFEE
THOMAS SFICIAL
Fresh. Full

CLAPPS
BABY FOODS
IC VAHISTIIS

3 cans 25c
CANDY
CHOCOLATE
STARS
LB.

4 £c
I

MARSHMAL- 4 Ac
LOWS
LB. 14

C. THOMAS STORES
1» WEST STATE STREET

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1936

20 PACES

^Hastings Trade
RAILROADS SEE
TRAFFIC INCREASEar,d
REDUCTION

OF

RATES

FINDS FAVOR WITH

Days” Friday ^|[]

Event Announced In This Issue

THE PUBLIC

Merchant* here have named Fri­
day and Saturday, Aug. 7 and 8. as
“Hastings Trade Days” and will cel­
MANY HAVE NEVER
RIDDEN ON TRAINS ebrate the event by offering a great
_______
list of fine bargains. Each merchant
PnaiAtiiT.. WHMr.*, fl.i* .* Jototog in till* event ho* selected
Passenger Tickets Sold at । anywhere from three to- six item*

OF ffOCITIES

7 and 8

Bargains Featuring This Big Trade

specials. Among the regular adver­
tisements, too. many real buys are

I Iv I wIiL

AN ARMENIAN TILLS OF
..

1

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1

DEALERS RAISE MILK
CU[D|[['C CfiDPE
I CAMPAIGN TO GET
PRICES IN HASTINGS JliUllFi U UflUL
RID OF RA
PR
RAGWEED

I 'CuU-rX HeroV.’

■I GETS TOO FORGERS

Than in Nearby Cities

The milk dealers of this city have
rnuK aeaiers oi inis city nave

CONFESS

TO

,

DPPRATm

1'

Commercial Club
Co-operating With Tour­

Hastings

ist Association
Hastings is joining in the general

DOBS

__ _____
—..-J__
.__ to tiie
..." pro__ '&gt; -ING
TWfl TWENTY
'TTXrW’WV HARDWAJ
TTA1STVVXV inv
MASSACRE OF HIS PEO- ; been
compelled,
owing
campaign to rid the state of rag­
weed. which brings so much trou---------------DEALERS IN STATE
PLE IN 1895 ’ longed drouth and consequent inmu. In Iba roU ot trod,. U&gt; relu,
m
: ble to asthma and hay fever suffer-

NOT

FOB

; their milk price* one cent a quart,
Jers- The following communlcaSPEAKER NOW SECY.
|tion U self-explanatory:
COST MUCH
which covers the added cost* to TENDERED BOGUS
Have that the "Hastings Trade
CHECKS IN PAYMENT jN*u“ T’
tta CMr.
Days" bring to Barry county shop­
ALLEGAN ROTARY CLUB considerably below that In Grand
CONVE
per* bargains in high class, stand­
.
- L ,
« , .
^“Pto-v Battle Creek. Kalamazoo. Pair Failed When Clerk in a
The West Michigan Tourist and
ard merchandise that is not excel­
Steadfast Religious Faith, Lansing and lonla. where much
Resort Assn, of Grand Rapid*. Voters Have
led anywhere to the state.
I
Michigan,
is
conducting
a
contest
to
Middleville Store Made
~
for Information
Reaped for Parent!, Ar­ | larger Increases have previously
Local Station Triple
•* his particular special*; conaeA special invitation is extended to
been made. In Kalamazoo a second
; rid tiie county of ragweed. Any
iwi.... nt v-w
quently more of a variety in the the many tourist* and summer realIdentification
the Candida*
menian Oharaoteriatioa
I increase was mode last week.
I child fifteen years old or under may
Tfiose Of Jane 30
I bargain item* ha* been secured than dent* who are living at tiie Barry
On Saturday the sheriff's 'force enter tiie contest. A prize of |2Jto
Hastings has had very little trouThe primary election
Jack Nachickan. secretary of the ,i
On the first of June much against would be possible if the merchant county lakes. Many of these vis­
had aea.v:.a
been will
be paid vv
to the
and girl
------- forgers
---- ------ who ..-V
- .a. -a
vaav boy
wy U&gt;U
(U1 m
ItVIU IWW HUM*
। ble with the milk supplied by the nabbed two
their will the railroads of this coun­ failed to co-operate
itor* may find It both convenient Allegan Rotary cluU was the speak-'
operating in southern Michigan for • bringing in ths most ragweeds which 'It again draws attention to tbs
।
regular
dealers:
This
shows
that
the
try were compelled to adopt a pas­
Shoppers
anywhere can
well _____
af- and profitable to drive here and er at the Hastings Rotary meeting
,—------------_____
________
board ot health has had the pub­ some time—Lovay cossaen of Colon. • ire or she ha* pulled. Contest end* . penslversess and unsatisfactory
'ord to
tn read
road the two
tun page spread
inroad in
In j' Lake advantage of the "Hasting*
senger rate of 2c per mile instead of ford
on Monday. He is an Armenian, in­ lic's interests In mind in this as in Michigan, and Jack Saylor of .Mar- on August 10. The weed is' to be * ture of the primary system. In
3dc which had been the rate for a this issue announcing the bargain Trade Days" bargains.
number of years, our readers will
telligent. cultured, a fine type of all tiielr other responsibilities. It Jot. Ind. They are in Jal! here. | brought lo tha city property Just county there are 17 republican &lt;
also show* that the dealers have Their procedure was lo go lo a - north of the Michigan Central dldates and 14 democratic ca
naturally be interested to know how
man and citizen. At present he is in
tried to furnish a good, wholesome hardware
- - — - store in a town, buy a tracks, on North Michigan avenue. | dates for county ofltoa. TTwt
■Band Concert Pro­
HASTINGS WOMAN IS
the experiment is working out.
charge of government rural reset­ product to the people of this city. ■ fi**»lng ^license. *then give a check ■ on Monday. August 10. between 1 [ be added to thl* lUt
Locally and nationally the rail­
tlement work In this part of Michlgram
for
Thursday
\
GRANDMOTHER
OF
51
unexamined premises on un Eas! St. Louis. Illinois, bank । and 6 P. M The city marshal will various parties for
roads are receiving Increased re­
and untested1 herds should"
should not be hi payment. The check would be be on hand to check each lol that Is tenant-governor,
turns on passenger traffic from the
The speaker gave a thrilling ac­ allowed lo be sold In Hastings.
! many times larger than the cost ot brought in. Have your plant* count- senator,
Following 1* the program for the Mrg John Schaffer is Conreduced rates, m conversation With band concert thl* Thursday evening ; “
ocuuoor
vuu
count of the Turkish massacre tn
a fishing license, usually being from ed before
----------- bring“them
“ *“
u..-.-you
in.
district and state senator from
one who is in a position to kfiow, on the court yard square:
the Armenian town where he lived,
tender for the Barry
815 to 125. They pocketed the dlfHastings Commercial Club. I district. This will make a fa
the writer learned that since the
Karpul. in the Euphrates valley. In
March—Colossuii of Columbia—1
। ference and hastily decamped.
-------- * • *
dable looking ballot and will p
,
county Title
, iM3. One could underjtand why
first of Jana three times the number Alexander.
| The Michigan Hardware Associa­
|
There
wu
a
picture
In
the
Julit
he
should
feel
as
he
does,
that
"It
|
of passenger tickets have been sold
Overture—Three Merry Night*.
I ------------ --------------- ------------------ — —-*■
tion had learned that several hard­
at the Hastings station compared
w'Mrs.
13 impossible
for him to forgive the
Novelty—Listen to tiie Mocking « Banner showing
A. Kebrey.
ware stores in the western part of
with a year ago: and the traffic Bird—Yoder.
of Filxt,
Flint, hehUffC
holding ~
her -44th
grand- Turks for their atrocities against
|,—
— crxxi
, the state had been victimized in
seems to be Increasing. Naturally, at
Selection—^Jems of Stephen Fos- child, her friends claiming her as the Armenians.”
, this manner. The Association sent
voters to determine what
the reduced rates, revenue does not ter—TobanL
Speaking of Armenia he said it
; a rival lo the Los Angeles woman
i out cards warning hardware deaiIncrease in proportion to the num­
Saxophone Solo—Piggly Wiggly— wh°se 34th grandchild had given was once a great country, the first EXHIBITORS LIMITED TO ers to be’r°rc of these crooks and. If
ber of passengers; but the number Barroll.
to accept Christianity. Its people
' her national publicity.
possible, cause their arrest.
FORMED. KNOW THE IMUU
of tickets sold is so far Ln excess of
March—Queen City—Boom.
| But it seems, right here in Has- have been loyal to the Master. Oft­
RESIDENTS OF BARRY
Saturday forenoon two men went
COUNTY 18
PRESENTED STAKE AND THE CANDIDA"!
the number for the corresponding
Novelty—Reeds and Brass—Yoder, ttogs, we can produce a grandmolh- en their Turkish conquerors would
*
• to the Bedford hardware store In
COUNTY
FROM WHOM THEY AM
months of June and July last year |
WITH OXYGEN THERA­
March—Colonel Bogey—Alford.
er who can discount them both os confront them with the alternative I
Middleville. They wanted a fishing
that.
returns'
— In actual
---------- dollars,
— ------ -toe
—
-----------Novelty—Drummer’s Delight—Ed- to number of grandchildren—Mrs. of agreeing to give up their religion I
license, which Gerald Bedford made 1
PY MACHINE
have been much larger than they wards.
i John Schaffer, formerly Mra. Prank and embrace Mohammedanism or' SELECT FRIDAY AS
lout
for
them,
and
they
tendered)
they chose
rniUMI Mi
were last
last year.
veor. We
We notice
notice that
that thethe I werirue
over true—
—rtarmonuma
Harmonlana—
—oaiusxa.
Galtuka. u»uup,
Oallup, wire
who uves
lives at
117 a.
E. voun
Court die. Almost invariably mmq
were
ai »n
uui™ ■
East St. Louis •
chance to know anything about
CHILDREN’S DAY 1। him a u.check on the xoung
'^
PURPOSE PRIMARILY
New York Central company pa**enWaltz—My Wild Irish Rose—Ol- street. Just off Jefferson.
death.
ueaiora
qualifications or principles of
ger earning statement
for
the COtt.
1 Mra Schaffer, a sturdy, well-pre-i Ho said at tho time of th* ma*-।
■
I remembered
—* .
—....
hi.Ti
r&gt;
a u ■ ’ i—r&gt;
i, .
«
remembered readlna
reading the hnMr.r.l
hardware
.a n»
,
--------u ...
March—The Steel Klng-Sl. Clair, served
woman.
Is
only
61
years
old,
,
In
1895
his
father
was
month
of June
showed
a 11 -----------per centTO AID CHILDREN The candidates elected
ocrycu wuumi. u omy ui yesra oia.------- —
D“al‘ Every School Pupil in Coun- association's card. The two stranincrease in June of 1936 with the 2c | America
the Beautiful.
1^^&lt;X
*“■* “ •*--------- **b“
— ‘
— 11
- -------------------- ---------------------------------------'r^d.
Ch^
^
I, Can Znter Fair Free
.
bound by any platform of f
ty Gan Enter Fair Free
rate a* compared with June 1935 at
Equipment Valuable in Treat­ to which they can be held
the 3.6c rate per mile. Thus it would
MM?. »»
on ’
That
-At Day
seem that in spite of themselves
ment
of
Pneumonia,
Res
­
The Barry county fair association | wcre crooks. They promptly left his
a discredit to our form at
the railroads are getting a good
NEW HASTINGS VENTURE dren. the famine* ranging in size I city and slaughtered the Armenians. directors and officers ore busy with i 8tf)r5’ but he telephoned Sheriff
piratory Infections
ment.
return from cheaper fare*.
-------------- : from two to twelve, including four I He *ald that not all Turk* are bad I
preparations
The W. K. Kellogg Foundation
I folks.
Karput who for the next exhibition “lakney at Hastings telling him
Oh their part the railroads seem Mrs. Mamie Mance, A. K. 1 sets of twin*.
1
—
—There
*- v was one In which
will be for the five days be-' *1 ,iad happened, and that In hb
it would not be so did
to bo awake to the Importance of dlI The children are: Mrs. Jess Lan- waa vorY friendly to his family and ginning September 8.
' Jud8ment the fellows were leaving announced last week that they had ers because, generally
Frandsen
Open
Ready
to
­
verting traffic to their lines. AU the
fear, formerly Mrs. Fred Waters, secreted them for a time UltlmalcInstalled
oxygen
The Association is particularly to ! for Freeport. Bedford followed them purchased and
passenger coaches on this branch
I mother
discovered anq
in be congratulated on the wonderful to another car. but his broke down therapy machines *for use in each
Wear Department
--------- of nine; George Gallup. ** they
,were
---------------------------, rput
— —
...
tn be Iled
azI
or Introrat
U&gt; tier
h« many
m.n, trtrod,
r.U»r «of
twelve: at
Ar--।I ■&gt;&gt;fall
“—
L .Yrwtlnj
expecUn( .v.rv
every d.y ~
to
kfjehtoan Central are airinterest to
friends 1'
*»u»cr
m, iwcirc;
premium list offered this year—over bc‘orc be got to Freeport. He ob- of the sevqn counties in which the didates.
f,Ona'X"
Turk,
B.l0ro
.... .. . ... rhiir riallun n»nr»nie&gt; whra ;
hoi out and shot&lt;*&gt;0,
bv by
the U&gt;,
Turks.
Before
This 13 in
J7500 being hung up In premiums.
another and arrived Just a Foundation operates.
Is really a pleasure
There Is the
f M
Mamie Monee has en: Oacar Oallup. Kalamazoo, sev- | that happened, however. England The nice thing about It Is that every IIU!p
little fif,Pr
after ,h
the
* two swindlers
— “
Mad
"4 furtherance of their health work. desirable
atoence of smoke and dirt and the
k ?randsen ”ewe“ «&gt;: Mra
Martz. Hubbell St.. “nd Ru**la had demanded that the
They were installed in some county
arrested.
prewnce of a good, healthful at™™“1 city, geven; Flovd Gallup. Coif.* Turktoh government cease |U atroc- uuiuu «n w wiu *o io Dairy county I
involves. If nominations i
moaphere. quit, in contrast with
*2e« 8t •
three: Mr* Warren Holmre. I Ute*. « they would proceed against people. The Association realizes1 ®hert® Blarney, when he received hospitals In this as well as in the by conventions It would
that the people of Barry county ap-1
call from Middleville, tele­ other counties. They are available the people of a county a
^tate^
Pf«t‘tl^.roS;^
Phon^DepuTy
Neil Kocher at
by PhylclaXs atjay time
department In the Frandsen store Caro- four: ®ryan Oallup. Walnut them
the massacre stopped and ___
A..
. . nnonen
nentitv’ w«al
the September primary thi
railroad coaches. It is really re­ which wlU be caUed the ”M A: P 8t • cUY- two
I he “nd. h^ mother were saved.
offered and
to----be-----on the lookout .u.
for
n£T&lt;,e^’ ‘nd "“X **
ln
alLU paid
pa.U will
W*u be
VV paid
pum solely Fjeeport
C
---markable that people would and
, Of this number 37 are living. I 1113 *“ther had been stripped ofj 'Jl.tiCU
to residents of this county. To hang , *be two crooks and he was. He nw
whether the patient can
Ing place in townships
YtTV.ll
— ..
n-U-tv_-a____..
could endure the polluted air in Style Shoppe."
While
Mrs. Schaffer
doesn't claim. to nenrlv nil Yll&lt; nrntwrfv hart aa*anart
afford the treatment or not.
plunger coaches
passenger
coacnes os they
tncy did
mu until n Lincs
, „ “such as •’Frinlx Bldermon"
‘
Tiie machines weigh
approxi­ Ur must orovtdo tta 1
th. xc"
o.w "method,
ton
.ppuro. SWSltJfftSSM know the date of birth of each^f
the
* **-"•*- vh.v.
-~— u
~ — ippllrt!.
mately 100 pounds each and Mfe- be
Now if the railroads will only add
—u-------- .7* these 51 grandchildren, she ran off
dloMtuto them, whkh
gUbly Just how many should be ap­ managed to get to France where I Friday September 11 will be Chi!P^krttog the dif- transported to different places in
Itoer
r^rne' J thte1 dren’s
at
,alr AH *chool “""‘V
We" ab0Ut 10 le*Ve cases of an emergency. The equip­ psnslw propoAUfin
portioned to each son and daughter, thS took
and what's more knows each by country0 ThevOTlmT an^Toureclate i cWldren ot
«un‘X
* «&gt;• wh? ’?reher arTflU&gt;d lhem. He ment is designed for use tn pneu­
name, a feat which calls for an ex­
monia.
shock,
respiratory
infections
’ ,’d
J
mltted free
on that davn “
All«
shown
them
thethem
cash totoHraOl- ofeh kind,,
snocx,rod wltbpoUent. tot­
*
" X,
£3 rnftde
rod
thenreturn
tourt,
SX
«• &lt;•»
- -5S ceptionally good memory. We have them here
’
i0,1(1 nacs
c’ccp1 one
WU1 00Th.
01 tonan I “ffi
seen many a grandmother with le.ss
______
______________
children
M
.
«to»'l»h«
The _p.Uml le
He said that his
former
country 13' orlce
Prlc* lo children
that dky.
day The rea
­
than five who has to run thru the ___ son that Pririav
Friday u-a*
was urlected
selected wm
was hebeWhen they were searched at the placed under a tent and artificial
__ ~
.
snn
toCTT rorotao .1U be noted lo- {
h,„,v
This seems like a very happy whole list of names, at times, be­ now a province of Soviet Russia. cause all the schools of the county I
here
ahcr,ff found they had respiration is forced If natural
Relatives still living there say the will be closed on that day on ac- 1 about twenty-five checks all on an means of breathing have failed or
fore *he strikes the right one.
combination
of
partnership,
as
Mrs.
According to information given us I
Xfrs. Schaffer tells us they all get Armenian Inhabitants are treated count of a training school for p15} 8t; Louis bank. They purported ore in danger of falling.
the number of ticket* sold from | Monee find Mr. Frandsen have each
Information, cannot do a
together about once a year, but I Jlndlr .nd .r. m^ln, pro«ro» un- leacnera
The purpose
the Foundation
teachers to
conducted by
the to
io be
oe conoucieu
oy me
— — 5*8ned by William E. Brown,
------ —of—
— --—- —in of Judging because they
Hasting* to Detroit for the past two i had wide experience in this branch with » ure, . number ol (rand [
.tovle »»«™»»»t. Atout Kellogg Foundation at their Clear ccashier
*iWfr of the
«* bank.
^k. The party
to, f *tog thejqulpmenl is primarily to
torgc ■ iiuinbcr of grana :
—
months is five times as large as for | of the dry goods business, Mrs. With Sv
---------------------- ---------- ...
600,000 Armenians live In the-Unlt- lake camp.
. There
_ _ . . will
..... thus
.....be no&gt;
. whom
wIlAm wth
Av to
arA-n
tn ld
Ka*ks left । a,d children to these areas, parere
•* Po
the corresponding months of last J Monee as a saleslady in different children some are always missing.
stores has built up a strong local
It would make quite an Interest- ed states.
reaaon why every boy and girl in I blank to most of them, although j ticutorly those whose parent* canyear, 'rttus it would appear that,
He gave examples of cooperation the county who attends school can- Benerally they put in tire name of not afford to pay for exoentive
tog picture to have Mrs Schaffer
in spite of themselves, the railroads clientele who will be glad to know photographed with all her 37 living I among Armenians tn their form n£ p to the fair thlt (to? H L! • Wehards." which one of
them i medical treatment. This gift te in
are going to be compelled to earn she Is now “going on her own."
I work; of their helpfulness to each already Yasured tkai the exhibits ] cUlmed
hl* own name.
“Milton to a large amount of other
grandchildren,
one
the
Banner
more money by carrying passengers and wish her all success.
other. He especially stressed the thl* year will be interesting. The I One of the pair admitted to the | hospital and clinical equipment al- purpoaa at cbQMtaf
would like to publish.
at reduced fares. Anyone who ob­
respect
paid
by
Armenian
children
Among the grandchildren is the
racing orogram for every dav will I ^eriff that they had been
carry- ' ready in use. such as X-ray s ma­
served the number of passengers on BRUCKER TO SPEAK
oldest daughter of Oscar GaUup. to their parents. Even today, he said, be worth whtie and for Friday will I tog on their swindling operations in ' chines and similar technical equip- MAKES NOTEWL.
trains passing through Hastings
IN HASTINGS AUG. 13 whose mother wm the late Marie on visits to his father in Detroit, be opecully (Obd. The ibclely.1
p*rtJ0'“” “*“■
! m"1'
GAIN PURI
previous to June, could not have
Water*, youngest sister of Mrs. Lu­ when his father appears in the through its secretary Maurice Fore- i had P^«d about twenty of the bo----------------- *-*-*——
failed to be Impressed with the Former Governor to Be Hon­ ther Burbank, who adopted her room where he is. the son always man has been ver/careful lo conchecks and h‘d ««toered in M00 , FOURTH DISTRICT RURAL
Woodland Mutual
cost of this passenger service in
rises and stands until requested to tract only with rides, shows and orJj500niece
when
a
few
week*
old.
at
the
I
CARRIERS ASS*N. PICNIC,
or Guest at Luncheon
proportion to the number qf pas­
be seated by his father He believes
suranoo
time of the mother's death.
other nuuway
midway BIUIKHUIIO
attractions wiutu
which will1 "They
probably —
be -brought
beannualmccuiig
meetinga»u
andptcruc
picnicotof
uMiur
- - will------------------------i [ inc uuiuci
senger* carried. It was not unusual
in Parker House
The paper* have evidently start­ that more respect for parents is be worthy of patronage. If any tore Judge McPeek next Monday or ! the
uic Rura
num) carrier*
vamcr* Anto.
Am. and
ana the
me
to see a coach come through Has­
Tuesday.
Former-Governor Wilber Brucker ed something along this line for to needed in this country.
game or show falls to come up to Tucada
'--------—
..
—
. ..
tings on one of the fast trains wfthLadles
Auxiliary
of
the
Fourth
It would be Impossible to picture
now candidate for nomination for the Sunday Detroit Free Preu we
ANNOVNCiMKNT.
I «”«•
»“
“■&gt;
the mark aet by the society and is
out a passenger in it. It was unus­
United States senotor from Michi­ noticed a picture of a Detroit wom­ the horrors he witnessed as a young unfair to It* treatment of fair pa­
I am &gt; candidal, lor sheriff on !«“&gt;•“
R“T Clemena picnic surance
ual to see more than half a dozen
gan on the Republican ticket, will an who claim* 71 grandchildren, but lad and the suffering he went tron*. it will be promptly compelled Ibe Democrat ticket. I am strong 'ro“"^w,7“e' ®'“h- “ ““
tn one of the big coaches.
through,
so
we
will
not
attempt
It.
?O
5
ar
“
We
know
Mr*.
Schaffer
to leave tiie grounds.
lake.
Pot luck
It will take a little lime to ac­ apeak here Thursday afternoon,
and ruined and romi enouihw south side of Gravel “
* "*
h‘"
holds the honors in Barry county.
A change tn the regulations gov- । handle the duties of this, at times, dinner will’ be served. Reports of the total
custom people again to railroad Aug. 13. at 1:00 o'clock, according to
the local Brucker-for-Senator Com­
COMPLETE WORK
emlng the premium* in the women's most strenuous office in a very sat­ tha state convention will be given, the Insurance
traffic, but if the railroads will con­
,
mittee, Arrangements have been
A
PERSONAL
WORD.
division
Ln
the
Home
Economics
de
­
and
plans
made
for
the
national
con
­ though this company
tinue to Improve their service, even
AT WESTERN STATE portment will be pleasing to exhibi­ isfactory manner.
I have nearly completed one term
vention. It is hoped and expected
at the lower rates, they will in­ made to have Mr. Brucker speak as Judge of Probate. It has always
—Adv.
George H. Myer*.
from
tiie
south
steps
ot
the
court
tors as well a* to patrons. There are
every town and city tn the District counties, it ranks as
crease their earnings and accom­
house In case the weather U dear, been the party custom in Barry Two Hundred Seven to Grad­ some people who have had hand__________
u„
will bo represented. Gravel lake ia
modate the public by giving them
DOWLING„SCHOOL
REUNION.
county to give at least a second
made articles that were made a long
Wednesday.
Aug.
.. at
_________
cheaper fare*.
There are many or to the circuit court room in case term in this office, so I am a can-1
uate at Close of Sum­
'
‘
* f. 12
school- located six miles north and west of
time ago. which have been exhibited ; house. Pot luck dinner. Mrs. Lora Marcellus.
young people whp have grown up in of bad weather.
mer Session
Preceding the talk. Mr. Brucker di date for renomination. I served
for year* at the fair. Because the | wilcox. Secy.—Adv.
■
the tost IB or 20 years who do not
will be the honor guest at a lunch­ seven year* a* probate register un­
BASEBALL GAMEThe summer session of the West­
know what it is like to ride on a
eon to be held In the Parker House der Judge JXgleston, one of the ern state Teachers College at Kal­ der the rules of the organization
Dowling vs. Michigan Carton. Bat­
DANCE AT THORNAPPLE.
passenger train. They have heard
most efficient probate Judges this amazoo closes this week Friday, they were entitled to premiums. The
Sat. night. Bud Wolfe'* Prowler*. tle Creek. Bunday, Aug. 8. Vickery's
their elders speak of riding on such
county ever had. have completed when a class of 207 will graduate. directors and officers of the &lt;alr —Adv. tf.
landing. Clear lake.—Adv.
trains, particularly in the summer
nearly four year* a* probate judge,
'
Among those from Barry county thl* year have decided that all prod- .
time, as being almost unendurable;
retarv and George W,
and am familiar with the duties of
are the following: Hastlnga-Mlss ucts entered in the Home Economics
but with
air-conditioned
cars,
treasurer.
this office, i have always been a Re­
Margaret Merrick, bachelor of arts
cheaper fares and better tervlce
publican.
degree;
Miss
Ruth
Stuta,
bachelor
SUSPECT
there Is no reason why young peo­
I was bom in Prairieville town­ of science;
that
the
articles
exhibited
will
be
I
O
.
Miss Gladys Pearl
ple of today shall not have the ad­
ship. have lived all my life in Barry
Calms, rural elementary life; Paul new and therefore more interesting I
vantage of the money-saving trans­
county,
graduated
from
the
Has
­
Word from LAnsing Wednesday
L. Conklin, senior high life. Middle­ to all patrons.
portation with the modem de­
tings High school and served for a
and others that
velopment of railroad passenger afternoon announces that our fel­ lime as teacher in Barry county ville—Miss Revs Mae Bell, bache­
lor of science; Miss Velma R. 8tee- NOTICE TO DELIN­
low townsman. Insurance Commis­
service.
sioner Ketcham, has been honored schools, i am particularly Interested by, later elementary life.
QUENT TAXPAYERS.
Monday Sheriff
March of Time Thru Barry County
In county affairs not only because I
by the governing body of the Mich.
The 10 per cent payments on de­
WARDS FEATURE
sing, requesting that
For Past Century To Be The Theme
League of Republican Clubs. He has am a life-long resident, but also STELLAR ATTRACTION
linquent taxes for 1932 and prior
because I own my own home here.
SPECIAL BARGAINS
years are due and payable at the of­
I have given my best efforts and
Al Becker, dramatic and public
Time limit—All Mas. must be
clubs of the state, and hasi
COMES
TO
STRAND
fice
of the Barry county treasurer
The Montgomery Ward ad in this
much thought and study to the
on or before September 1. 1936.
speaking coach at Hasting* High turned tn to MT. Becker by Friday, cations that the
issue will prove interesting to read­ accepted. No better selection could duties of this office, and have had in
Sept. 4.
Lorenzo F. Maus,
ers of the Banner. Special arrange­
mind always the best interests of Irene Dunne—Paul Robeson
school, was in the office Saturday
Eligibility:. Any student enrolled
ments have been made to give cus­ gratulates the organisation and it* the persons directly concerned in
—Adv. Out Aug. 27. County Treat.
SCHOOL
—Cast of 3,500 in
to ask us to give publicity to the in Hastings High school, and taktomers a wide selection of merchan­ new president.
any business with the probate court
Interesting plan which has been
Show Boat
dise at special prices. Thia sale will
and
especially
the
interests
of.
and
BETTER TAX COLLECTIONS.
Prtte. offend: 1st, IS.; 2nd, S3.;
outlined for Hastings High's 13th
include merchandise for the home,
my
duty
to.
the
people
of
Barry
That spectacular picture "Show
In conversation with Mrs. Jessie
annual Spotlight production, spon­ 3rd, 82. to be awarded the night of
the car and farm, also bicycles and Loppenthlen.
city treasurer, we county. The good of all concerned Boat" with its all-star cast comes
sored by the Faculty-Student Coun­ the performance.
carts for the children. Mr. Beatty, learn that up to Saturday the re­ has been my constant alm.
to the Strand Sunday and Monday.
Source of material: Hastings li­
, ell which coma* early in the school
store manager says, "This )s one of ceipts of city taxes had been 50
I will be glad to have my official
It presents a cast of 3.500 people,
year. For the Spotlight each class brary—reserve shelf and clippings;
the greatest sales Wards Have ever per cent larger than for the same acts as well as my business and per­ with Irene Dunne in the leading
and the faculty always furnish an interviews with Miss Barnes. Has­
put on.” A special Invitation is ex­ time in 1935. Tills indicates that sonal record inqulrea into by any role playing opposite Alton Jones.
act. It's the big event of the tings Banner, old time residents at
tended to the people of this trading times are certainly better and money one Interested in learning whether I Paul Robeson the great negro bari­
year In High school circle* and playa Hastings and Barry county.
area to stop in and look at this cosier than a year ago.
am qualified for the office.
tone who alone would be worth
"Truth is stranger than fiction"
Mr. and Mrs. W. Robert Shannon, i to a Backed house.
merchandise.
I sollplt and will appreciate the hearing is in the cast, also Helen
With the thought In mind of right here tn Barry county. Mr.
who came to Hastings from Hudsupport of voter* of Barry county at Morgan.
honoring the Barry-Hastings Cen- Becker suggests that for the com­
MIXED DANCES.
SCHOOL REUNION. the September 15th Primary Elec­
A chorus of 200 singers will be
ing
month students can put tn their
tennlal year the plan tn connection
At Cole's landing. Thornappte tion. If nominated and elected. I will beard in typical negro songs. It's a
Every Saturday night at Clear
Co. He fills the responsible position with tho 1936 Spotlight is to have a
lake, Frank Herrington.—Adv. tf.
endeavor to perform the duties of film all the family will enjoy and
here of factory foreman with the
the office faithfully, fairly and Just-. ha* been met with packed house*
Bliss Company. The Shannons,------- ------ —-------------------------------- ----- leal incident*
CRAWLEY REUNION.
IN­
everywhere.
came originally from Watervliet, N. I time thru the past 100 yean tn past and prtec
August 8. Morgan park. Thorn­ Bec.-Trea*.—Adv.
SlncereJy yours,
consult parent*, grandparent*
Y. They have one daughter, Bar- , Barry county.
apple lake.—Adv.
Stuart Clement.
8MALLKB
THIS
YEAR.
bare,
12 yean old. Mr. and Mn., Aa usual five main acts or epl- Old Mttiare. U«e the Bbrary
DANCE.
*
ICE CREAM
According to Information from Bhannon are affiliated with the sodas will be required, with necesGun lake, Friday and Saturday
mmru scsool bxunion.
nights. Martin's orchastra. b. Bena­
DurfM eohool (rounds floturday. Lansing the' first payment on the PnMbytorhuJ denomination and he la sary continuity such as music, an­
on Friday eve.. August 14.—Adv, way. Mtr.—Adv.
primary school mane? this veer will a member of the Masonic lodge, nouncemente etc. This should tnbe at the rata ot|TTO par pereon of Tho family are all toven of the; dude dialogue, Beltings and atego
Adv.
WORM FORILM.
school ago within each school dti- out-of-doors and are enjoying the directions for each act.
Cool white or brown ties at 50c at
White leather sandals, lies, pumps,
opportunity Hastings and the nu-1 Manuscript must bo typed ar
mbtb
oxform.
Hastings cut Rate Shoe Store.—
holce tljOO. Hastings Out Rate
For only 41J50 at Hastings Cut a year ago. Later another payment merciy Barry county lakes afford in 1 written in ink on one aide of paA«v.
thls respect.
1 per; name of writer on each page.
Rate Bboa Rtawr-Adv.'
; Win be made.

FUR PREMIUMS
IMOUNFIOW

GENEROUS G FT
FROM F0IJN01T0N

Commr. Ketcham
Highly Honored

Proffram-writingContestFeatures
Annual High School Spotlight

I

May We
Introduce

i

warn

�wgnt down with

•Untan rsunton. Crooked
•wlwdgy. Au«. I—Adv.

YOU DON’T Need A
Spy Glass to Find Bargains at

FOOD CENTER
Lotvest Prices in Barry County!

Salad Dressing * 23

FANCY PINK

Shredded Wheat

25c

Vinegar

19C

Fruit Pectin

SALMON A
Tall Can a

Each

IOC

17c

Morfu’s

Kellogg’s

Wise Buy Canned
Goods Now! Get Our
Prices by Case or Do;
Be

PURE CANE

Q

IO ■*- 5Oc

2 ““ 25c

Monte
VOril Whole Kernel

Pan A
I CaS

2 «• it-33c

Del Monte
Earl, Cardo.

■

Del Monte

P*

Grape rruit 2*■ 2— 25c
Post Toasties

Rinse

10c

l«’I'

pk«.

18c

Peas c«"’gL, n.. 2J1.50
ZY
Del Monte
VOfn Golden Bafftam

ZY

0

CaapbeB’s—AH

□oups gSiE“‘p' o
Cigarettes

2

25c

Old Gwlds, Camels, Lucky Strikes, Chesterfield's

Carrots

3

T*

-’1.40

•• Libby**

Grape Fruit j^ned

TomatoesN*2 “*3 - 25c
23c

fS
lit Call
LOmColdao Butin

10c

”■ d-m 3 •* 10c

LEE

OVERALLS

3 Hu 19c

HAMBURG £

Cabbage F™H“di

2

MONDAY. AUGUST 9 and 10

SUNDAY

GUARANTEED
NOT to Shrink!
Starring IRENE DUNNE and ALLEN JONES

The

Bananas

rrCAME THEATCS=

Sanforised
Shrunk!

FRESH GROUND

Lemons

to the lUt Of books
euggeeted as suitable
torrid summer days,
could think of nothini
Maurer, TO-years of age
a than walking aggynA 0Q the
i home ot his son Lau­
depths of the ocean floor while
We said w«U «tovw oomplaln
rence of Maple Grove Friday Doom­
again even U boom pimples stood
ing. Funeral services were conduct­
out all ovtr ua. That IW degree
ed from the st. Rose church h®w M Improving.
temperature H sUU fresh enough tel
nine o'clock Monday mgnUag.
■4d4 to keep us in Um.
United States postofftee depearttaken suddmiy Ul fl
will be held u
ot fine, flavor.
with a return attack
Oeuntr Dor Warden Kverett hat
swarded 10 exhibitors This will no
killed M Mp store he teflok his
doubt stimulate much interest tn ing grounds around the local peMofftoe, where the government has Tuesday m usual. a|
work in AprU. Wg'd be bettor ott if
the prajeat.
the number had been 708.
twice
gone
to
a
lot
of
expense
to
get
Large flood lights now illuminate
A postcard greeting from Mrs.
a flrat class lawn, and lo replace
The flhultq school reunion will be
U» new Chevrolet used car
lot
Beatrice Munton Knapp, wtto la at­
shrubbery
managed by Ralph Rogers;
Mr.
tending the summer seastoa at Yp­
Rogers was on crutches a couple of * After spending part of a day at silanti. say* she to' grraUy mjgytng day. Aturust tth. Picnic dinner.■
bum
Carpenter, Secy—Adv.
a
boys'
amp
where
M
lads
were
days due to a foot difficulty —Char­
enjoying the routine al work and her wert. study, play and frtends
Al! our fine 11M street dress*
lotte Republican-Tribune.
play and seeing the orderliness and there, especially her course in word
study
under
Mtoa
Clara
AU
toon.
tng contests could be started in happiness of the whole program.
Mrs. Oershum Severance of Mid­ of ailk dreasea and costa. Ong rack
Hastings and Barry eounty. Thai ‘Mrs Editor." In her interesting
would be a fine WPA or Boy Scout column in the Northville Record dleville, who has been a patten I at at W cents.—Adv.
project for the Commercial Club or 8hUoeophlaea—'•Wouldn't it be fine pennock hospital, was taken to ths
a ‘family
could work out a plan University hospital at Ann Arbor
Tourist Bureau to promote
11 •
■mi
PRAIRIflVILLE.
such a system of regularity, on Tuesday for treatment Her hus­
Il looks very much with Barry I for «»h
MT and MT*. George Adrteeaon
and Van Buren solidly behind Bur- sharing
*h*rtn- of responsibility, happy co­ band is ill at the home of his moth­
hans and with some division in Al­ operation aa these boys tn camp?" er. Mrs. Mary Severance, in this and Lucille. Mr. and Mnf.' ttwls
city.
.
legan county aa tho Mr. Burhsms
Johnson and Loraine and" their
naw oenatoe Annur vandentorg i
.
'
A mongrel tramp dog appeared guests, Mr. and Mrs. Qeprgd Haren,
has a mighty fine chance to be the on Monroe avenue the other after- I
republican nominee next November. noon In Grand Rapids, looking wall Mon&lt;4*y afternoon at the home o&lt;
of Mealey, Mr. and Mrs. F. 3. ‘Bar­
groomed and fit. with his widely! H*rT&gt;’ Bwan in Maple Grave. The
—Wayland Globe.
rett and son of Piltobttfgb. Fa.. spent
Teasel, the wild flower having pictured straw hat atop hla head. f do&lt; “t Mr. Swan's ten-yrar old son Bunday afternoon at MTDljafn park,
blue bloasonu enclosed
In stiff cigar in mouth. A handsome dis- 'on lhe *houldeT- tMck- *nr» lnd
where they heard the Kalamaxoo
hooked bracts, quite common in tlnguished-looking man to the sena- (eet- the Injuries being severe and
symphony orchestra.
He was making slow progress P»inful.
The dog has been dlsthis section, uted to be dried and tor
was ased to raise the hap on cloth­ going the half block from the Mor- I P0"*1 of
It luis grown popular of late yeara ton to a nearby bank. Everyone was | Paul Robeson, ths famous Negro
for use in winter bouquets with the holding him up tor a hand shake or i baritone, who appears in Show Boat,
(ops colored.
a "Hello Van." Must seem good oe- 11* one of the greatest of preeenlWhen John Tow had to taka IM caslreially to get away from the day
d»y singers. Hla
His concerto bring
•“*— top
*—
acres of the poorest land in Crystal "shouUng and lhe tumult—the cap- prices slong
■u— “
,,u ------------with
Lawrence Tlbbetl.
township, Montcalm eounty. on a tains and the kings." and come beck Rosa Ponselle, Lilly Pops and star*
* •JT" I
*4.000 mortgage, people called him to Ids friendly home town where of that class. He to an equal fav­
the world's greeted sucker. He to as a lad he used to sell newspapers orite also In Europe.
now rated an oil king, and recently on that urns street, and where peo­
The republican state convention
received M.OOo on fire mcoths' ray- ple drop the formal "Senator*' and has been called to meet In Grand
altlra on the otl this barren stretch call him by his first name.
Rapids Tuesday. Sept, jtth next, at
produced.
The Cassopolis Vigilant otoervea: 11 A- M. to nominate candidates for
A strange thing has happened tn stale offices including Secretary of
the realm ot liquor law enforce- ---------------- -- ---.
Stole. -------State Treasurer.
Auditor
ment.
Under prohibition, from General. Attorney General, and one
2,000 to 2,500 men were engaged in Justice ot the Supreme court to fill
Watrra CJothcs Shot
attempting to enforce the prohibL , vacancy.
Uon laws, and complaints long and 1 We nominate as one of lhe loveloud were made because of the ex- Ileal film stories the screen has ever
pense and because of alleged Ina- 1 given ua. "Let's sing Atain." starGENUINE
blllty to secure proper enforcement. ring ~
--- ------- • child
- -Bobbie
Breen, “
the perfect
Now we have legal liquor, and a star, who Is making the world a bit
federal force of
men are makly voice and appealing personality.
now seems that If so great an effort We all hope Bobby will sing again—
had been made to enforce the pro­ and often.
hibition law as is now being made
Mrs. E. C. Hinkley makes this
to enforce the liquor law. the result raspberry Jam which is delicious and
might have been far different. The very easy to make. Two quarto of
records show that half of
Caju raapberrtw. Pour boiling water aver
county's - erejrt cases are directly and let stand 3 minutes. Drain and
due to liquor, which U another ex­
pense of the traffic. Wonder If we sugar end cook 3 minutes. Add three
will ever leam that when we legal- more cups sugar and cook 5 minutes.
ire an evU thing, we must pay the Set aside until next day and pour
penalty for II.
i into glasses.—Northville Record.
Yewiree! Fashion U a fiekle
It's another girl I Reader* of the
dame. We no sooner get out oar Banner, particularly of the Durfee
Complete NEW
mid-summer umj titan the papers district in Baltimore township, may
and fashion books begin showing be interested to know that a baby
FALL STOCK
us what's what tn new fur cost*. girl, weighing seven and one-half
And right now tn the vary midst
of 'dog day*" one may see smartly
UNPACKED
dr eased women wearing heavy vel­ pllal Bunday night. 'Hite little miss
vet hats. One assume* that they will answer to the name ol Maxine
lare heavy for any velvet looks, and Janet Both the mother and baby
is hot. in the present torrid weath­ are doing very nleely. They will be
er. Just as we were scared stiff brought to lhetr home, south of
The ONLY Overall
for fear Deme Fashion was going Hickory Corners. Tueaday afternoon
Beside mu teltew. Primo. Car­
or Wednesday forenoon. x X x.
made from Jelt Den­
rera would took almost Uny.
Leon KeSchaU is this giant who
im .. . heavier and
cornea to the United Stou-i
seeking pugllisiic glory. Uauhlonger wearing.
til, standing 7 (gat 1U inches
Xweighing 2*0 pounds, ia a
e of Poland and boasto 17
straight knockouts tn turovean
Hastings, Michigan ■ Telephones 2244*255?
bouts flame idee of
altitude may be gainet
paruoo with Jackie fc
Usn lightweight tx»

The Are alarm Thursday noon

Another Goliath
of Pugilism

10"

SUGAR

lake,

25c

BEST

and

Most Perfect Fit­

BARGAIN NIGHT. TUESDAY, AUGUST II

ting Overall

“BIG BROWN EYES”

Made!

* 5c

With CARY GRANT end JOAN I ENN ITT

Outside city
WEDNESDAY end THURSDAY. AUGUST 12 eM 1J
KAY FRANCIS, portraying the great Flerenca
Nightingale in

stores get up to

Beef Kettle Roast ,b 13c
NEW U. S. No. I

POTATOES

Steak

Round, Swm or Strloil, Lb.

D--.L l'°*B Roasts
rOTK
EHkerEW

20c

u 20c

$1.98 a pair'. .

Our every-day

“THE WHITE ANGEL”

price Is

With Denald Weadb and ten Hunter
ADULT! Me — CHILDREN Me

$159

FRIDAY

SATURDAY. AUGUSY 14 .nA 15

a Kaap In Map. with

DOUIU FIATUtl

th, crowd . .•• land us

SPEED 99

PAIR!

your oarments and wo
wilt keep thorn looking

Jarno Mewart Wendy Kerrie. Una Market Weldon Bryboru.

Oleo
Open Evenings
f'ntil 9 p. m.

Food Center

Jpr cleaning will presgfua the ' liffl fgtiric and you can de- .

RICHARD DIX l&gt;

SPECIAL INVESTIGATOR't

WATERS

With Margaret CellohM. flrflt MgM. Owon Davis. Jr
ABUUTfl Uc - CHILDREN i»e

.

CLRTRU JIOP
Selling Quality
Keeps Vs Busy

pend on our delivery
service to have your
cleaning back on

♦

Miar**j. Only

■Ifht

2 &gt;1"
w

WiaWm. AS«Waa -irtioul tkb CaapaaaM T
Ult Ciipm So, MaaSa, al|kl.
T

b« 15«-

♦

■L1

&lt; vV a

w '3^

a ~4* a 'Jk a

time!
“* v.'

Mb C l
BS

'

�Sporty. Isn’t It?

Pedal 970 Miles to See Landon

CONFERENCE AND
CAMP MEETING

Sporting, Items

Annual Gathering of Woi&lt;
SOFT BALL TEAM

leyan Church Opens

elbow.
STANDINGS TO DATBTho Cooperative threshing Mk
Standing of teams up to and in­ pony of the Ellis district has com­
cluding August 4;—
pleted the year's threshing. Wheat
averaged about twenty bushels per
Hlrseh Bros
Mi-Way
O. D Hewitt and family who live
Feldpausch
near ths stone quarry pork al Bat­
Natl. Bank
tle Creek were recent visitors at the
Consumers Power
home of his twin brother, O. C.
Table Co.
Hewitt.
Bliss Foundry ..
A new brooder house and double
BUm Mach.
■ ' e Cyrus Buxton farm
Triangle*
completed.
Chain Store
Piston Ring
Norris and Mrs. Term Buxton were
Rogers Groc ....
In Hastings an Tuesday.
The cutting of the second clip of
alfalfa was in progress last week.
Miss Orra Strickland of Lansing
field last week but will play a re­
was the week end guest of her par­
turn game on lhe Thornapple dia­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Strickland.
mond. Bunday. Aug. 9.
The Shultx Community Club with
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Case were in
Hastings on Wednesday and called their families ere having a Home
on county Clerk A. C Hyde and Coming picnic at crooked lake Bun­
day. August 9. All who
belonged
Miss Sarah Gillespie from near are Invited lo be present with their
Hastings has been engaged to leach families—Secy. of Shultx Com.
tennis players sponsored by lhe
lhe
Bievens
school
Grand Rapids press made an excel­
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Conklin. Mr.
lent showing.
Al tho Gordon Crolhers. contender and Mrs David Conklin. Mr. and
for Hastings, was defeated In the Mrs. Lester Conklin. Mrs. Hannah
first round, the paper spoke of his Stamm. Mr. and Mrs. George Stand­
excellent playing. He drew a par­ ford. Mrs. Lena oonklln and families j
were Included in a party of twenty­
ticularly skilled opponent.
MUs Evelyn Koepllriger. who had eight to motor lo Moline recently
where they met Mrs. Albert Conk­
won her right to appear In a hard
lin's mother, Mrs. Louisa Stevenson,
fought battle on tire local courts
and others to spend the day visiting
and for picnic dinner.
Mr and Mrs. Ernest Rulhrufi.
Pritchardvllle, are staying at the
Both MUs Koeplinger and Gordon Emerson Cortright home at present.
The house in which they were liv­
received a handsome trophy from
ing burned Bunday night. The fire
started near the roof and cause una black plaque.

Next Tuesday
The annual conference at
Wesleyan
Methodist
_ ___________
______ church of
stete will open at their camp
grounds south of Hastings on Tues­
day evening. August 11. The regu­
lar camp meeting convenes August
15 to » inclusive. The Rev. E. W.
Tokley. Toronto. Ont. and the Rev.
J. M. Holmes, Greet. 8. O . art the
special evangelists, with N. B. Vandall of Akron. O. as song leader.
In addition. Miss Ivons Wright.
Waldron, Mich., Is orchestra con­
ductor. the Rev R. L. Klaasen, New
York City. Is young people's worker.
Mrs. Flossie Krentel. Lansing, chllRathbun. Lansing. chalk talk artist.
The dally schedule begins at six

Produce Department. Inc., is a
new organization West Michigan
grocers an forming on the co-oper­
ative plan with headquarters in
Grand Rapids, which will alm to
act In the same capacity for pro­
duce that the West Michigan Gro­
cers' Ass'n. does for the grocery
business. They will buy and sell at
wholesale or retail and act as mer­
chandising brokers with reference
to green stuffs and citrus fruits.
Among the Incorporators, wc notice,
is Roman Feldpausch of this city
ThU natty outfit worn by Do­
lores Costello Barrymore in-*
cludae a skirt of beige kasha,
buttoned straight up the front,
with buttons covered In tho
brown and white check which
Is used tor her casual tuck-ln
blouse. Another piece or brown
and white check Uta ebout her
head, A dark brown belt and
shoes of beige and brown com‘ piste the costume.

i(c in Gray $

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bells. Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Higdon, arid their
families. J. Robert Smith and
daughter Jean spent Sunday at
Pleasant lake near Jackson.
Dr. 8. M. Fowler of Battle Creek.
Mrs Bernard Bertsch of Ban Diego.
Cal.. Mr. and Mrs. Gall Lykins and
sons enjoyed a trip to the oil wells
near Crystal and to Ox Bow Dam

Fla., lhe home of his mother. Mrs.
C. W. Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Warner have tnoved
Into the Waldron house vacated by
Fred Fisher and family.
Levi Everetts. 71. was found dead
In bed In his room tn the old hotel
building on South Main street Sat­
urday morning. He had been in 111
health for several days. Funeral
services were held Monday after-

Bunday.

—— — — --------- ---

-—------

H. 0. ZuKimlU ™tura«l Monday ,
by Rev.
... .
_ ... .
.
... . ■ XX V llnvf nnrln
tdilryviy-nz
nlght from Detroit where he spent
the post week.
• cemetery.
The
two
children
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mrs. J. Robert Smith Is visiting
Roger Warner had tonsil operations
relatives In Buffalo. New York.
Tuesday morning at lhe Nashville
Bruce Brumm and Jack Smith hospital.
spent Bunday at Marlette.
Mrs. Frank Galey spent Die week
The Nashville Garden Club met end with mt. and Mrs. Howard Caley
Tuesday at lhe Dalhauser cottage and family at Kalamazoo
at Saddlebag lake for a pot luck
Mrs. John Hemingway and Mrs.
dinner and lhe lesson was "Cosy
Harley Klnne and son ot Grand
Ledge called at lhe Porter Klnne
On Thursday night lhe following
home Monday.
enjoyed a pot luck supper at Mor­
The Clover Leaf club picnic will
gan Park. Mr. and Mrs John Han­
del. Louise Handel and three chil­ be held Friday afternoon at Baubee
dren of Cincinnati. Ohio. Mrs. Clyde II lake. A pot luck supper will be
8 torrer
and
two sons,
Jerry
Those receiving gifts at lhe Con­
Hecker of Fayette. Ohio, Mr. and
Mrs. Eldon Hecker. Mr. and Mrs. sumers Cooking school were; gat
Merle Hecker and daughter. Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Endsley of Has­ floor lamp. Mrs Bert Foster; table
tings. Mr. and Mrs. Verne Hecker lamp. MUs Natalie Meers of Wil­
of Maple Grove, Mr. and Mrs Will mette, Hl.
The fire department was called
Hecker» Mrs. Frank Hecker. Frelda
Hecker. Mr. and Mrs. Gall Lykins of out Thursday night to the Vande­
jNgshville. Mr- and Mrs. Carson venter store on. Main street Con-'
Ames of south Vermontville, and slderable damage was done lo thfi
i building.
their respective families.
Miss Esther Dull is expected home
Mr and Mrs Verne Kahler and
daughter of Salem were Thursday from Florida the latter part of lhe
night guests of Mr and Mrs Orville
Rev. Dorotha Hayter left Monday
for Indian lake to attend the Naxarene assembly and camp meeting.

Th. Ufa of •&gt; Eyelash
The life span of an eyelash Is be­
tween four and Ove months.—Life
Magazine.

Sparton Voice." published by the
Bparks-Wlthlngton Co. of Jackson,
special mention was made of the
exhibit by John Bulling ds Son of
this city at the Merchants* Pair held
In March. A splendid picture of the
booth appeared also. It was a fine
recognition of lite local firm which
they so wen deserve. If. you are
looking for a new radio, refrigerator

A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Bandeen, 319 N. Church BL,
on July 28.
On July 29. a son was bom to Mr.
and Mrs. Leon Tyler of Woodland.
A daughter was born lo Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Falconer, Route 2. on
Aug. 1.
Republican women, representing
each township In the county and
the city of Hastings are gathering
at the Parker Hotel today for lunch-

portance concerning their work in
the face of the fall campaign. Res­

Alvin L. Huver. city
Virginia L Crakes. Grand
Rapids .................

Miss Leola Cortright Is visiting
friends al Pennfield. Her brother.
Angelo Spirts was Ute first win­ Eugene, is visiting al the home of
ner last Saturday night tn lhe Sult his uncle. Adelbert Cortright tn
Club drawing held al McCall's Tail­ Hastings.
or shop. Mr. Spirts being the first
winner, was awarded a 830.00 over­
coat for 82.75—needless lo say, he's
Some of the Orb-Weavers of the
delighted.
spider family live In their webs,
baagloc bead downward, usually
Mr. and Mrs. Will Davis and Mr. near the center of the net; others
and Mrs. A- J- Miller have returned have a *etreat near the edge of the
from a trip in northern Michigan. neL where they bang with their
They visited the cherry orchards backa downwards. While reetlng In
while gons.
these webs they keep bold of some
of the lines leading from the Mt.
family left Monday morning for New so that they can instantly detect
... ...
W1U
vlaJt
the presence of an enemy. The Orb
their sister. Mrs. Arietta Fuller, and
Weavers are usually plump spiders,
family.
The Briggs L A- 8 will hold an with a large abdomen, and often
...
....
on Thursday eve­ nearly spherical In some aperies
of thia family the male la much
ning. Aug. 13. at the home of Mr
smaller than the female.
and Mrs. W- R- Jones of LAcey.
Mr and Mrs. Wing of Shelby were •
week end guests of lhe latter's sU­
W—.1 and Jk.ak Valuabto
ter. Mrs. Lot lie Jones, and family J
A weasel kills a minimum of 600
Virginia Jones submitted lo a field mice a year and many rat*.
tonsllec-.omy at Pennock hospital The skunk feeds largely on field
on Wednesday.
mice and Injurious Insects.
This Is the first year a 4-H Club
camp Is being held al lhe county
Y. M C A- camp at Stuart lake In
Orangeville. Due lo the (xeavy reg-*
Istration of both boys and girts *014
the organization it will necessitate
two group periods instead of one. as
; previously scheduled Dorothy Mack.
, Enid Cheescman and Thelma Lee
I will go from the Lacey 4-H Club.
Russell Eugene the six-months'

Frankfurt a'Haln. Gai .
rles ago. They take
from that city. They h
alUm. Id the Middle 1
an frequently calletf
Philadelphians call tb
smokes" aMd to any ball
an "nd hots." They an i
"Coney Islands" In the Ml

HAND-SEWN GLOVES

IF YOU'RE

in Japan the beauty of dancing
la In the poses, not the movements.

[HUNTING

.
Wallace Graham Is al the Bcedle
Store in st. Charles
Carl Tuttle was called to Orlando.

Men!...Here’s the Call to Action!
little. Keyier "Leet*,

erette” ia that grand
fabric that look. like
A symphony In gray: is thia in­
tricately tailored suit worn by
Madeleine Carroll, film player.
The jacket is ot troy won ted.
while the skirt is made from
mannish serge in a darker
'shade of gray, with a pin-strip
of white. A lighter shade of
■ine same coior u cnoocn
•her crope blouse and bag of
patent leather.

WARNING/

Penney") and Tofflight Present Smart Pattern)! ।

Buy Canned Goods NOW!
Get Our Price by Case or Dozen Lots

The New
HOSIERY

Topflight heads the style!

trend with fast, true shade* {
and up-to-the-minute do-*
signs! Excellent tailoring;
.. . eut right for proper fit:

Gas? No, Water

SENSATION

and comfort. . . built right
for extra months of fierv-j

SUtUo. with two-way atratoh

ice. With features you ex-:
pect to find only in a more’

at all points, fit evary lag mock
batter and waar far longer.

expensive shirt 1^

bneha.

New Potatoes

Pack

Choose front Four
Styles of Men’s

Palamas
COMPOUND
Shultz or

Fast color fabrics in
patterns!

Froeport

ARMOUR’S
BRANDED DEEP
We feature

Bo proclou* Is water.th equatorial
Africa that It is told, as shown
•bora, much M. gasoline is sold tn
America. Near the Sahara desert
water is one of the moet expensive
commodities, and many natives
earn their living selling IL The
dealer above Is shown "fillin' her

Wild G~*., Water Birds
Heavier than ducks, wild geese
are, like them, water bird* They
bars longer lags than ducks and
■roalt but ooce a* year. Halt and
female are similar as to plumage,
and both attend the neat* nd the
■earing of the goallnga.

Men I

Slip into a pair of

these full cut, cool pajamas
and get real sleeping com­
fort I Slipover — regular,
notch collar slipover, notch j
collar button front models.
Plaids, checks, stripes, flor­

Steaks

Round

als, novelty patterns. Dur­
able fabrics that will stand
long wear. Get yours now.

ARCTIC

Fran

ELDPAUSCH
■MARKET­
Phone 2272 Ule Deliver

SUBSTANDARDS

RFFD’Q Wdgraea SyMe.
HCXM O DRUG STORE

�lACEOT

1
|
i
I
I
i

Britain has been reduced to about
14 per cent of insured workers. The
number holding Jobs actually ex­
ceeds Ute 1929 figure. Expenditures
urday and Sunday there were on behalf of the unemployed in tho
nlnety-aeven deaths In the United last fiscal year Were three hundred
States caused by automobile acci­ and fifty million against TWO BILdent. Fifteen Of these deaths happmM in our own state which gives LION for emergency relief in the
Michigan » rather high percentage ! United Stales. British unemploy­
among lhe states ot the Union.
1 ment costs in 1935 were 9 per cent
Careless drivers take more lives! of lhe total budget and amounted
during a year than all of lhe gang- j to 19 00 per capita of the total pop•ter* and public enemies combined. ulatlon while comparable caste 1n
Y&amp; till* aMughter Is accepted thb country were nearly one-third
&gt;urse. High- of all Federal Government expendlw*y commission* have marked road-1 tures and came to •18 00 per capita,
ways plainly; even al night there U
DO longer any excuse for running
Fire Chief Guy Giddings had a
afoul sharp turns, coming unexpect­
1 very unpleasant and aggravating exedly to steep hilb where It might be
• perfence while driving to the Are
eaiy to lose control of the car or
i near Prltchardvtlle early Monday
cratifing at bad crossing*—all of
| morning. A* is his custom, he was
these and other ordinary dangers

In POM-Olnn 1 &gt; ramldonbte Un lh,
«. M
x
। west of the Alleghanies—Kentucky, conflict ffwlftiy dn every ntoeUnderstand that Fred Hale U Tennessee, and a part of Ohio. The tegnth century frontier the ertiffigetting pretty expert on the bicycle.! P**»lng ol the first thlnl of the [ ties of the wilderness faded before
’
...
nineteenth century found in &gt;«*• ; thb advance of civilisation. Yet the
. ­ irentte dtohodrM mMm W
| Helping to straighten out credit aourl and lows the frontier estab
tangles must be rather of a head­ lished on the grasslands west tff the attitudes with him aa to took Ms
ache but nerer-the-leu. they tell me MlMteslppl, with settlemenu dotting place among the main body of the
that the efficient and musical Miss the Old Southwest and other art­ self-governing people of the nation.
liemenu pushing northward against Democracy bgcame a nattohal cherthe foresu of Wisconsin and Michl - acteristic. aa ideal. Opttmi*m. tarn
of Ute swift profreM which true forFrom first to last earth hunger ew obfiterattn* frtator ccodltton*.
and the desire for profit were the I stimulated the nation to dream of
two chief force* which caused men ! future greatneaa.-ftalph H. Gabriel,
to detach themselves from civilized I h1,”* Foreword to 'The Pageant of
communities and to risk the uneer- ' America." &lt;New Haven: Yale Unllalnties of the wlldernea*. There versify Press.)
•

driving his own car and hurrying
are plainly marked. Still accidents i
continue at an alarming rale. To|' to the scene of the alarm, going
sa've a few moments'
*1„r. «.m -Ulin,.

time

hu. u» a-e. or ««&gt;«. br «™*m.'w

"«

h' u“

ch‘"’ “

Frisky Foreman Is much on the order which might become a model
go these days which indicates that for all the world led Robert Owen to
fair time is drawing near.
found New Harmony on the Indiana
frontier. An Interest in Indian cul­
ture and a compelling desire to
pierce the mystery which lay be­ Would we not better listen? who
hind the nice was perhaps »s Im­
can say
portant as lhe quest for gain in
Maybe Tommy'll have to go persuading James Adair In the What grace notes woke the cricket/
liny strings.
/
down there and do a little relief eighteenth century to continue to
What music lured lhe dusty rriblh
pitching yet.
live among his friends, the chickaaway?
,
At least the regular staff would to bring Christianity and clvfllzalook good by comparison.
I Hon to the red man took Marcus
Whitman in the nineteenth century
■ to Oregon.

even the most elemental rules of
safe and sane driving. It Is our guess
that thb traffic toll will continue as
driver of the other car speeded up
long a* the public U willing to ac- j
and in order to avoid a smash-up.
cepl it as a necessary evil.
Mr. Giddings had to slow up and
The highway can never be p»- [
stay behind However, he took the
trolled with sufficient thoroughness ;
license plate number and has re- |
to catch all violaton. Each motorist;
must be compelled to feel a sense of ' ported the matter to the proper au­
thorities. Mr. Giddings stales that
individual responsibility tn driving [
«fay and the one force which can ; he asked a group at the Are which

bring thb about b aroused public1
[ownership.

ANOTHER LINDBERGH FEAT

Ool. Charles Lindbergh, enroute
through Europe, delivered a speech
at an aviation banquet in Berlin
recently over which government
leaders of the world might well
pander. It was a presentation of the
dangers and responsibility of mod­
ern aviation in relation to peace, so
clearly .worded tfeat the pointe made
should be *eqnaliy comprehensible to
retool boys, and statesmen, alike. He

The

owner

doubtless

realised by that time that he had
been decidedly In the wrong.

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say
The American young woman who
cars carrying lhe firemen The city
charter is also very definite on the lost her place on the Olympic squad
of. athletes sent across to Germany
subject of wilful hindrance of an
to compete In the Olympic games.
officer or fireman
Just why any I deserved the censure imposed upon
one should lake the altitude this I her by the American Olympic com certain driver did In not allowing ImlttSc.
The reinstatement she
.nolhu e.r u&gt; 1»„ V, un.xpUW. Ib’ ""J"*™

able, for only a -smart alecattempt such an action. i
drawing the world closer together in
peace, we have stripped the armor
should be permissible. It woulc
from every nation In war
seem, as they constitute a real men“It is no longer passible to shield
lhe heart of a country with U*'
“ ,h* pub“e Automobile own-

we call general warfare. It has
timed defense into attack.
“We no longer can protect our
families with an army. Our libraries,

A Quotation
} OCR sole contribu­
tion lo lhe sum of
things is xourself.
—t'inni Cran?

winning of more consequence than
morals, decency and obedience to
established rules and practices was
withheld and denied. Il may have
seelned ruthless ai)d uncalled for In

to look upon liquor imbibing and
Its attending vices as necessary to
themselves with the provisions of the having a big time, and lhe way to
become a big shot, but the commit­
state law relating to the .speeding tee happened lo be still Imbued
with some old fashioned Ideas that
prevailed and because of their de­
termined stand for decency and law
observance athletics as conducted
by the powers that be has been ma­
Pungent Paragraphs terially benefltted and dignified — '
Al Weber In Cheboygan Observer
Denver icemen will hereafter be

We were charged, at a recent
our museums and every one of the white uniforms with brass buttons. meeting Of out state newspaper men.
tasUtutlons we value most are laid I and will put a mat In front of the with being too critical or something
.ibout the part liquor plays In highbare to btobardments
j ice box when they chip the cake to ।
•'Aviation has brought revolution- ' fit the box We can at least give
shows the liquor Item la responsible
ary changes to a world already stag- thanks that they did not call them- for only about 4 per cent of the
traffic mishap*. To ask anyone, es­
geitng with changes It b our re- 'selves "Iceticlans."—Life.
pecially an active newspaper man to
sporafbillty to make sure tn so doing |
------------we don't destroy the very thing' '

'T'HE Hitler influence must be
much greater than we had
thought. Japan has now taken
to exporting sauerkraut.

“John Ringling granted di­
vorce." .Marriage must have
proved lo be more than a
threc-rifig circus.

climbing if Europe insists on
sending over men like Carncra

Backward Glances;
here until i began counting the
number of cars you see on a clear
■ vcnlng pulled up on secluded road­
speaking campaign for the congres- ’’“*7 **’. t.ha'occupants can
slonal nomination at Centerville, st • Pur!,yc thelr hobbles without InterJo«eph county
\
, ruption
...
Owing to the fact thii the Intense
heal made it impossible for
Hall of Eligible Bachelorettes .
a slender
work, all of the city's laborers were Marceline Campbell
laid off in lhe forenoon. Thirty men red-head with an Interesting dis­
position. And ’tis said Marcelinc
and ten teams stopped work.
Cement curb and gutters for the has her weather eye out!

THIRTY YEARS AGO
The Thornapple Knitting Mills
'1th paid up capital of 8125.000 has
and water- rights at Middleville and
will soon be ready for business This
is a very welcome addition to lhe

! 80th

kept returning to an almost primi­
tive struggle for existence where
elemental virtues and .the vices of
the wilderness developed BldeJ'by’
For an expert on cooking rice
and beans page Sandy Rogers. Hear side. The artificialities of old com­
PestUzcntenabetm la the name of
hr became quite fond of Mid vlttles munities disappeared in lhe lodge a town on the outskirts ot Budaof the fur trader and the cabin of
while Mom and pop were away
the pioneer farmer.
During lhe
century which elapsed between that
The Hudson Terminal of the
lime when lhe frontier lay In lhe Pennsylvania Railroad In New York
City covers more territory than any
Mountains and when It finally db- other building ever constructed st
• ppeared. the people of ths United one time In the world. The Tuileries.
States made great advances In the Vatican, the Winter Palace tn Rus­
development of their civilization. sia. etc., are larger buildings, but
Yet always on the frontier during they were for centuries under conthis century social organization wa.

A COMPARISON
Interesting, though not eomUry. to contrart employment
Ans Ut this country to t hoic
(land. Employment in Great

Mrs

return
we* te
of In
Mrs
Cttve

and

rop.
inf a
Mr

Mr
turne
Ptym

In warm weather will cling lo
an area for days; in cold
weather, ft may stay weeks.
Tho difference is that the gas

Noticed Earl Haos— that blonde
boy in Harold Paster's office—am­
bulating with a cane the other day.
Wonder if he slipped while looking
for the comet or something? . . .
Watch your step, my boy. watch

the
John
Dor
from

Ame
turn

Chicago lor a few days visit this
week and a McKinley button adorns

oi science and the destructive uses
to which we put them, it might be
pardonable to conclude that we are
not civilised people it all but mere

to K
lllnea
er. »1

Ray Branch's right hand man Is
going back to golf In earnest
.
Well. well, didn't think you had It
in you. Snappy!

—« security which re*t* in intelli­
A device Is now on the market
gence not In farts. And tn the fact
which, when fitted to u light, will
that tatellUence must be combined
put It out at a certain time. There'd
be a big demand for them if only
Urey could be attached to guesU —

which must be bound to knowledge
la less dangerous to civilisation than
that which is barbaric. Il is the resporulbtUty of aviation to further
the combination of strength and

of De
Jacks

12 of their young lady friends Fri­
day a*, a tea party, complimentary
to their gue»t Miss Gertrude Davey,
of Grand Rapids.

ntere I hrrt- m
«-e mu.- »h«n It take* a bushel Of com to uiHonui.au- .icum naa oeen aru.K
place. I begin to rea-tee we mu»
Thnek. ln« bePr •«*&gt;r&lt;Mn« to the officer.kqk for a Dew type of security. * ' bu’r four PO»Uge rtamps.-Topeka
-- security which U dynamic not rtatlr | CaP*t»'-

from igporance. I find some cause
for tope te the belief that the power

Americans to the frontier lhe pio­
neers were all molded by certain
| common experiences. In the border
। sane on the edge of the wilderness
I lhe busy hum of civilised life was These things before the Bumrn
stilled. The market place, the col­
turns to go.
lege. and lhe seats of government
'
Leslie Nelson Jennings.
(.were far away. Frontier life was
| isolated; lhe frontiersman enjoyed
UP THE MOUNTAIN-8TOE.
but the slightest contact with Ute Through Alpine meadows soft-sufthought-life of his race. Yet Iso lalion did not of necessity bring
• mental stagnation. The mind ot
, the pioneer was concentrated on the
1 difficult task of adjusting himself
to on untamed environment. The re­

Ing re
left &lt;
coal

birthday

At least one of my creditors isn't'

him the unemployment problem is
which we wish to protect.
j going to get paid . . . said he would a myth In any event, we were car­
“As J travel over Europe I am wait for hi* money until lhe farm- !
more than ever Impressed with the er» were all satisfied.—El Paso
seriousness of the situation which [ World News.

et civilised institutions. Our respon­
sibility tn creating a great force for
destruction may be somewhat re1 lieved by knowing that we have al­
lied this thought with intelligence
and education and that we have

lait v
ware
D. 8m

George Lockwood U back on lhe
job again, i see. after "house trailerlng" for a week in the northern
part of the state.

many
«“

We v«w glad to f«
week's Banner that Hl
thinking of improving tl
irar.Ce to the city Vta the
bacauae from the efty Hi
tarmac Just west of the

would serve no good purpose and m
•ome ca.se.-&gt; would bring back un­
trap, he gets 40 letters a day from
pleasant circumstances and mem­
people who think he doesn't have to ories. Four per cent mas be correct
pay for stamp*.—Los Angeles Times. in some parts of the western plains
but hen- In staid old pastoral Eat­
We don't know exactly why the on county the record is 4D0 per
recent protest of a group of teach­ cqnt or higher — Muri DeFoe. char­
lotte RcpUbllcan-Tribune,
ers of English against the growing
um of slang should can to mind
Crumbs of Wisdom
dear Mrs. Primly, who always refer observation*.
red to lhe neighborhood fat boy as
"It. seems a shame that lhe small
Burster."—Boston Herald.
people have lo come into the mar­
More than half the diamonds pro­ ket again and again and have their
duced annually are used in industry, money taken away. What business
has fliJ little fellow In the present
but none can be used more indus­
market?"—Secretary Wallace.
triously than those flashed by girls
■'If lhe International injustices
in their first engagement rings —Arstrewn about Europe calling for
treaty revision are te be righted by
Way of Our World
force, new and probably greater In­
Household allowance: Ute sum a justice win result.—Ernest RemNEWS GLEANINGS.
wife receives to pay home expenses
The American flags on lhe Capitol
and provide her husband with
in Washington. D. C. fly 24 houxs a
•yrhe .success or (allure of lhl»
con^CTcntee kill mean the success or.
failure of statesmanship pvervwbere,
The neutrino, a portion of the
WMT.
mxlSL,*
h” atom, weighs the mllllon-mlllior.milllonth part of a gram.
t nobody's btuinew. but what's! tary.’'-CorteU Hfll. ..
■
government
business*
G
erei
skventh man's buslriCM. anyway.
Arkansas Gaxette.

nnar

WHITES
MUST CO
$2.95. $5-95

Up

$4.45, $4.95 on!
can t go free sliver on us and be­
longs to a big club on the sbuth
side composed of fellows In just

Call and see Dr. Lathrop at hb
From Our Scrap Book
new drug store
• No more ball playing in the
courthouse square" is the placard
that brings grief to the heart of AMERICA PUSHES
the little and big boys of Hastings
BACK ITS FRONTIER
R M Bates is reading law at
In the more than two centuries
Smith &amp; Colgrove's office
and a half in which the while man
M. L. cook is chasing the wild faced the wilderness within the
buffalo or doing something else west
of Chicago.
। States, the fringe of settlement, like
Ralph Wooton b studying medi­ an advancing army, moved forward
cine with Dr Lowry
| fropi position to position. The first
Mbs Minnie Morse well known In | frontier waa the seventeen th-eenihb city was lately'married to Mark | tury chain of villages along the AtCopley of Decatur and they are now | lantlc coast. In their day a portion
residents of Kansas
City.
------of the periphery of the European
D. R. Cook and wife attended Ute culture area. By the middle of lhe
wedding of Chas. Doyle of Irving eighteen I h century
the
outpost
and Mis* Nettle Marshall of Barry cabins of the “back country" stood
at the residence of lhe bride's par- ' within lhe eastern shadow of tiie
enu. Wednesday lilt.
j Appalachian Mountains. Progress
.Mrs. A. D. Knlskern will return ' arras* the
nlain and

YOU*
otroLTuNITY to SAVt

F

ta

50%

on

Him* Qutfity ShoMl

$5 95 VALUES—

nea
tend
Q
May
Bun
Gal

old
bho
at t

DON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY!
MIN —

CHILDREN
9fc to $195

SOLID LEATHER

SHOES

SI.45,

44 *5

ALL LMTMS
WHlTIS (aiM

TAYLOR SHOE STORE
HAsrnvu

homi

w all tianjpi swots

�Wi BMHWW HtelHIW. ngWAE, ABOTOT 0, MW

■earn

Detroit

wm
visited Hasting* friend* on Thur*-

Social Events and Personal Mention

Mtea Eleanor Miller

^rSfantsrsjsaj*- -wssnrw.

Dr. Winifred McLravy of Grand
Rapids visited Mrs. John HOrary
nn ThilrMlao

IWd LaWtotbe wwk other gueate ••****&lt;* •

Berfcatey

streat. Kaiamaaoo. wm
at 10 Monday morning.

Social Feature la J. Haan.

Knjoyed by Large
toned princess style, with -thl* ahe

One of the most delightful month­ ried fellow and whit* raaes. Mlu
ly dinner* yet given at lhe Hasting*
Irene J. fVan Den Berg, brida*Country Club wu that of Thursday
night with Mr. and Mrs. W. M.
Stebbins. Mrs. Mrs. otenn Brower
Her bouquet wm of pink rose* and
and Mr and Mr*. M A. Lambic in
blue delphinium.
Bart Mepyana.
on Saturday charge, nearly 150 being served.
The weather had changed Just in . lug a trip through northern MichiMr*. Maurice Edmands and chU- time to make lhe dancing which.
' gan. they will be at home at 135
followed the dinner, a much enjoyed East Burr Oak *Ueet. Centerville.
part of the program. Card tables For traveling, lhe bride wore a white
were *et on the west porch.
suit and white accessories.
Mrs. Gar
"Dribble
(Barbara
J. C Ketcham, in the unavoidable ।I Mrs. Meyer wa* graduated from
crook) la spending lhe week in absence of Rsy Branch, president
Hasting* high school and also
Indianapolis. Ind.
ot lhe club, presided for a brief ■
।
from Bronson Methodist hospital
MIm Ruth Prine went to Detroit business session when the interest­ nurses'
training school. Mr. Meyer
Sunday for an extended visit with ing news was given of lhe fine fi­
to a graduate of Kalamazoo Cen­
relative* and friend*.
nancial standing of the club at
tral high school. Western State
present, also that 18 new member- .Teacher*' College, and now 1* prin­
Kaiamaaoo were guest* Saturday of ships had been taken out so far this ,
cipal of the Centerville high school.
Mr. and MT*. Wilbur L*nc.
season.
—Kalamazoo Gazette.
Thoma* Miller of Jackson came
Top score* at bridge were won by.
yesterday, Wednsaday. for a visit Mr*. Ralph Hess, Nashville and
JUNIOR DANCE ENJOYED
Clyde Wilcox.
Mr. and Mra. Dari ooleman and
Guests from away were Harold
AT COUNTRY CLUB
sons hav* b**n (pending a few day* Pelham. New York City, with Mrs.
at lApeer. Almont and Detroit
P T. Colgrovc; Rev and Mr*. W K.
...
_
.
Mr. and Mr*. Frank Denner of Chidester, winter Park. Fla., with Middleville Member! Were in
Mr. and Mrs. w R. Cook; Mr. and
Charge—Prises Given
Mrs. Robert Burrell. Detroit, with
for Dancing
Mr. and Mr*. Gary Crook were in Mn and Mrs. A H Carveth; Mrs
Benton Harbor on Tuesday to see C.
_. E. Thomas. Phil Van
_____________
ZUe. De- 1 The mid-summer dance at the
her brother, Merton EllWtoa. who 1* troll with Mr and Mr*. O E. Good- Country Club for Junior member*,
veiy I1L
yeaf; Mr. and Mrs. Einar Frandwn, Tuesday night wm largely attended.
¥r. and Mr*. Verne Prentice and | Ionia, Mrs. Sidney Shipman. Ban It was "Middleville night." the sen­
Mra. Jennie Wibert attended the' Francisco, with Mrs H O Hayes; ior committee tn charge being Mr.
Ca*« family reunion near East Le- MJRantl Mra 8. C. Weaver. Coal and Mr*. Dillon Wolverton and Mr.
Roy Saturday.
CeWter. Pa . with Mr. and Mr*. A. and Mrs. Paul Faulkner; Mias Betty
Mr*. Sumner Bponable has re- L Brown; Mr. and Mra Ralph Hes*. Swift, also of Middleville, served an
turned from Cleveland where she i Nashville
Naahv^le with Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde the junior committee with Miss Vir­
visited her son and wife. Mr. and | **
Wilcox;
MI—■- Mr. —
and
■ •Mr*.
— *Nathan
—— War­ ginia Pott*. Wellesley Ironside and
Mr*. Linden Sponablc.
I] ...„.
ing. .Pontiac, with Mr and Mrs Bob Field Bright decorations made
Mi** Nancy Steiger returned to J E H. Waring;
Mia* -----the loungeKatherine
attractive, —
and Martin's
her home In Lansing on Thursday I Louise Clay of saline v rllh Dr and , 6-piece orchestra from Clear lake
after a three weeks' visit with Mr I Mrs. D. D. Walton,
। added to the gayety of lhe occasion,
and Mr*, y. ®. Adair.
as did the balloons, whistle* and
Mrs. Ida Wallace returned on
MOON—OFFLEY.
other favors.
Tuesday to ber iwme in Detroit
An interesting feature wa* the
Al the home of the bride’s parprizes offered to the beat dancer*
atetor. Mn. CaTvln plum^
cntv Mr *nd Mn Charles H. Offwhich honor fell to Ml** Betty
Richard Pott* and Wilbur Thom** | ley- the marriage of their daughter,
Relckord and Bob Corkin. while
of Hammond, Ind., spent Sunday i Miss Alice Offley, to Lloyd Moon, Ml** Betty Blough received the
with Richard’* parents, Mr. and
—1I —
son ot• Mr. and- -Mrs. -William Moon award for keeping the beat time.
Mr*. C. 8 Potto, at Gun lake.
i of Ironwood, was solemnized on
Around thirty couples were pres­
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jessen of' Thursday, July 16. at seven-thirty in ent. including quite a number of
Chicago accompanied Billy Craw­ the forenoon
Only lhe immediate Middleville young people.
ford home on Saturday. Billy has relative* witnessed the ceremony,
been spending several weeks there
the Rev. W Maylan Jones reading
COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON.
Kenneth O'Hair of Chicago has the single ring service.
The
weeklyClub
Tuesday
luncheon at
come to spend the balance of the
The bride's sister. Mrs Fred Lind- lhc
Countrv
was*well
summer vacation with Mr and Mr*., holm of Minneapolis Minn. wa* Lith

be«* vtaUirw har ateter, Mr*. A. J.
Hetteri. ha* ratonwd to Mr home
.
•
«*»’ **» U ta
Mr. and Ms*. Lorraine laonhath

(VW * «ujH »* Uw rute Houu u»
i

North

lan Reformed church by the Rev. G.

Monthly

Mr Kn

Number

. Mecosta.' *
Mrs. Ruth Baine returned last Truk ot WkWw. oaurw.
week from Chicago where she spent
her vacation with rriatlvea.
pan led
MU* Halen Wooten of Detroit

•TBBt anas
a am iw

Th. .MjTUy

DINNER DANCE HELD
AT COUNTRY CLUB
visited

Mie* Katharina Clay of
,-h*a been the guaat of Mra.
1 "*»*»*— Una rw&gt;t---- ‘

MIM TOBUU AHO

vtolting Tobias.

CBmrlm Young
ha*
urnedULfrom
» SlMk
i£U
tg ret
JMtK.

I KI a c »&gt;«■

rwrity JMgpftal tn AM Arbor tar

1*

Ml** Margaret Wyward of Kala-

Dor*
0X1
Mr. and Mrs Maurioo Will of Medina and many place* of interest
Battle Creek visited his parents, Mr. 3®Lf%-£5*J•’J1 .T*;: Mr. and Mr*. O- B- Hodge* ar* In
and Mrs. Smith win. Friday night.
Chicago thl* week on a business
MUs Ada dtahMl ot Detroit spent the Mary Jamison home.
the week end with her sisters,
Miss Arabella Bivens and Miss
MU. Beatrice Giddings was home
Mtoee* Nonna and Helen Michael.
Freda Smith entertained at the Ut­ from Evanston. Hl, over the week
ter's cottage at crooked lake, Mias end.
brother, Lemuel Brown, on
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. McMillen will
and Wednesday of last
Mrs. Carrie Hsher Of East Mate •pend Bunday tn Ann Arbor with
Mrs. Mtrtle smith of Kata- her Sister, Miss Altne Mohler who I*
MIm Ruth Farr left on Saturday Hoad.
masoo. Mrt.
mazoo.
Mrs. NeH
Nell Smith of Midland taking nurses'
nurses' training
training oourw
course there
there.
for her vacation which she will and MIm Marguerite McPharlin of । taking
Mr* »rl Tuwnsen'^f Orlando
epend in Detroit and Cleveland with
yWrt * «■»
*■“«
Mr,, o-w WunorlKh
friends.
Wednesday evening.
Of Kalamazoo were guest* of Mr*.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Lahr returned
A number of perrons Including May Townsend, on Saturday.
last week from Bay view where they
Mr*. ------Laurence
- --------- -Barnett
---------and
were the guest* of Mr. and Mr*. D. Mr*. H. W. Gregory. |lg B. Marshall - ---------tMra. Wm. Kellar. 318 W. Oo&lt;- daughter
------------- Margret. .left _
Thursday by
D. SmithD. auto for a visit with the former’s
g. F. Bto*on. who has been visit­ —, «n NeUte Chariton, HOl B.
ing relatives here and tn Kalamazoo, Jaffasaon and Mn. May How*. Ill I parent* at Iron Mountain.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Percival and
left on Wednesday for hi* home in 8. Michigan, are attending the annua! camp moating ol the Pilgrim । Mr. and Mn. Willtoon o£ Battle
Coal Center. Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Dahlstrom Holiness Church of Michigan at: Cr«k were Sunday guest* of Mr.
Owoww.
Rev.
Hooa
will
atoo
attend
1
and
Mrs. Quy Giddings.
of Detroit and Arthur Dahlstrom of
Jackson visited Mt. and Mr*. Fay the camp and the annual assembly I Mix* Margaret Merrick was home
held Aug. 17, 18 and 10 at the same i from Kalamazoo over the week end.
। She was
accompanied by Miss
Mr. aad Mrs. Floyd Thomas. In place.
Mr*. Helen Hogie of Texas arid i Louise Hollingsworth of Honor.
company with Mr. and Mrs. Casper
ot
Ferndale I Mr and Mrs. Cyril Huff and Mr.
Thoma* of Kalamaioo. spent Wed-1 Mrs. Miss
Mina HSlmes
Holme*
were
guest*
of
Hasting*
friend*
on
•
*
nd
Mp.
Harold
Rsdford of Grand I
neaday In Detroit.
“ ‘‘ ** ** **
Mrs. Lizzie Laubaugh was called Sunday. This wa* their flr»l vtoll to i R*pMb »ere guest* of Mr and Mrs.!
to Kalamaioo Wednesday by the Hasting* in *everal years. Mr*. Robert Burch on Saturday.
lllne** of her brother. Prank Ush­ Hogle will be remembered a* the'} MT- «*» Mra. George Stebbtns
wife of Kdgar teogle for many years (Bernice Bennett) of Louisrille. Ky..
er. 311 Richardson St.
Mrs. J. A. McNulty and Mary a lending merchant of this city. Mrs. are spending a few days In Hastings
Elisabeth and Miss Sara 8c h trier Holmes was the daughter of Lo. and at Leech lake.
Mrs. Kenneth Leins and children
are guest* of MT*. R. A. Smith at renzo Mudge, a pioneer resident of
Castleton, and Mrs. Hogle wa* also a of Battle Creek are spending the
Goguac lake for a few day*.
Mr. and Mrs. D- A. VanBuskirk dkughter of Mr. Mudge. Mr. and month of August at the Bennett cot­
tage at Leach lake.
returned on Saturday from their
Ouesta of Mr and Mrs. Calvin
wcetern trip, visiting many places brought Mrs. Hogie and Mrs. Holmes
of interest on the Pacific coast.
' to Hastings. Mrs. Bates being the Plumley on Sunday were his brother
and wife. Mr. and Mrs. a W. Plum­
Mrs- Prank Nolan and son of latter'* daughter.
ley.
of Plymouth.
Cleveland and Mr*. George Potter
On Wednesday. July 38. Mrs. C.
Miss Rose Marie Durkee of Way­
of Lansing were the guest* of Dr. B- ....
Whitaker, of East High St . and
and MN- D. D. Walton last week. Mr. and Mr*. O. E Yerty, of East land has been spending a few days
Mr*. A. A. Wlllmont. who has I State Road entertained the foltow- here with her grandmother, Mrs.
been staying in Delton with Mr. ing: Mr. and Mr*. George M. Whit- ■ Rose Seeber.
«er. and
ano two
swy, daughters
aaugnser. of
o. ua*ue
d"U«‘l‘rr'
and Mr*. F. O- Hughe*, came TH- I aker,
Castle 1 J^J**T™*
Clarence Crawford and son. Billy, matron of honor and Wayne Offley i their guests nreseht mm rivrte wn
day for
with Hastings Point. N. Y-; Mr. and Mr*. P. J.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack NfWrn and two nf Woodland, a brother acted as cox
.,tx3nsible for
Harpham and tww children of Pleasth Mr
d Mr* Ouy
friends.
cox was
WM r&lt;
responsible
for the
the invaiv
lovely
daughters. Louisa and Shirley of groomsman.
Giddings.
Laurence Power of Detroit was at
flower arrangement—two bouquet*,
8L. Loui*. Missouri, are spending | Following the ceremony, a wed- ,
c anc
ulc ccn
^r ftna
. on
Mr.
and
Mrs.
A.
C.
Gates
and
son.
Wall lake for the week end with Lynns. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Lyons,
a „„
large
one m
in the
center
and on
one
on
Jim. spent several day* last week two week* with Mrs. Harold Phillipa.' ding breakfast was served. Mr. and the big table—of asters and roues
Mrs. Power and their two sons. Bill
J
4
"?
CT
*
,d
’
”
ar
’
Mc&gt;on
lswr
leBvln
«
for
*
wcd
’
tinted
In
various
shades,
with
bab?&gt;
and David. Hext week end ha re­ Nellie Jones, all of Carson City. with the former’s brother in Wis­
consin.
old and Ilene Rogers left yesterday, ding
. hreatb Thr
.tanri.fd, luuiKina Uie
turns for a two weeks' vacation.
Mich.; Mrs. D. E. Karcher. Mrs. 8.
.- trip.
■
.
Alter avKituKru*
...
Bunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wednesday, for a visit with reta- t Mrs umn n-aduat*o
tn-^uated from
from tha
the , —
entrance were filled. with
foliage
Miss Olive Lathrop returned to O Truxell. of Lansing and Mr. and
Mra. Harold Yerty hnd daughter of Arthur Haven were her parents. Mr. lives In Michigan city, Ind., for a Hastings High school, later taking , plant and baby’s breath
nurse s training at Blodgett hos- i Mrs Charles Potts _nn in,
Woodland. The occasion was tho and Mrs. Jay French of Onondaga,
t»ul h&gt; or»nd rupll. ,Uo
,nd
ln “ , Ioi;
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Ed
Bart
ling
re
­
and
her
sister.
Mrs.
Alvin
Johnson,
rop. She came to Hasting* follow­ brief visit of Mrs. Whitaker's son,
turned on Wednesday to their home
ing an airplane trip to California. _
_________________________
George
M. Whitaker, who_____
stopped and children of Jackson.
—
aubb,,a „,d M„
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner of In Glen Ellyn. JU., after a visit with University of u.™
Minnesota.
For ....
lhe wml w Mrl
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Logan have here enroute from his former home
gone on a motor trip through Can- at caatte Point, N. Y-, to his new Lansing visited his mother. Mrs. her father. J. g, Tyden. and aunt. past three years she has been at j Clyde Wilcox.
Harper hospital in Detroit. Mr
ads and the east. They atoo expect (location at Los Angeles, California, Erma Gardner, lhe first of the week, Mtas TUlie Tjdcn.
There were a large number of outGuest* of Mr and Mrs. F E, Moon is also employed at Harper
to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs.; Mr. Whitaker is an officer In the going Wednesday to Harbor Springs
Johnston are his brother. George hospital in the X-ray division. They of-town guest* this week. Mra. Wil­
Owen Eastman, of Worcester. Maas. 1 veteran*' Administration depart- to visit her parents.
bur Lane brought Mra. Harry M.
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Newton Johnston, and the latter's daugh­ are making-their home in that city. Bowser of Ft. Wayne; Mra. Jaek
Mrs. curtto Butt and son re- moot H* left Friday morning with
cape home on Saturday after a ter. Mrs. Grocott. and son. Tommy, Best wishes are extended.
turned tost week to their home in I Ms family for their new home.
Nolen of 8t. Louts. Mo., wa* with Mra.
Plymouth after visiting her moth- I \Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ickes of week's vacation which they spent ol Beaver Fall*. Pa.
Harold Phillipa; Mrs. Sidney Ship­
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Casper &lt; Fran­
HAYWOOD REUNION.
er. Mra. Gertrude Houvener. Bar- | Baltlmort TWp-. and Elaine and Jo- with their daughter. MUs Wards at
man of San Francisco with Miss
ces Carrothers) of Walla Walla,
The Haywood family reunion was Sadie Glasgow; Mrs. R. E. Plnnte of
bara Butt remained for a longer : arms Icke* of Battle Creek accom- Kenosha. Wts.
MUs Ethel Reeves of Beverly Hills. Wash- are expected Monday for a held Sunday at Morgan
visit
panled Mr. and Mra. Walter Rockpert:.
park. Loularilte. Ky.. with Mr*. Ray Finvisit
with
Dr.
and
Mrs
Frank
CarCal.,
came
Tuesday
for
a
two
weeks'
Mtos Gertrude Bentley ot Kala- 1 hili to Hlg Rapids on Bunday where
Thornapple lake. Over one *-•
hun
“ ­ nto; Misses Ellse and Hallie Qroos,
-maxoo
-----------------w end -uv.
an&lt;j Mrs^ visit with Mr. and Mrs. Weldon rothers and other relatives
spent .wthe —
week
wRh thcy werc |ucaU oj
dred attended, many coming from Ban Antonio, Texas, and Mra. Jas.
Miss Phyllis Hinman has re­ Fort Wayne. Ind. Frcesoil. Luding­
friends here. She had Just relumed Harold Swanson. Robert Ickes, who Bronson. Other guests are Mrs,
Oleson. Aurora, Ill., with Mrs. Rich­
from a vacation trip through had been visiting his cousin. Rich­ Basil Smith of Jackson and Mrs. Ot­ turned from a visit of five weeks ton. Detroit. Grand Rapid*. Wood­ ard Orooa; Mrs. Phy lite Reynold* of
to Paul* of Grand RajBds. with her grandmother. Mrs. C. C. land and Hastings. Everyone en­ Ann Arbor with Mrs. Orville Sayles;
northern Michigan and the Dells of ard Swanson, returned with them.
Shields, of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Joyed the fine dinner and reported • Misa Janet Teale of Kaiamaaoo
Wisconsin.
Mr. and Mr*. Bert McCollum. Mrs.
Cha*. Htnman met their daughter a very pleasant time.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. T. Shively and Matic McCollum and Miss Hazel
| with Mra. KenKh McIntyre; Mrs.
Bm-lker of Fenton were Bunday Mrs. Albert Craig and daughter.
Doris, visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sayles have
returned
from
a
vacation
trip
to
ent*. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shively, Miss Louise Will of Battle Creek, Lein* and family in south Haven
lhe Boo. They came home via Mid­
relumed to their home In La- wbo had'been visiting relatives here, on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Heath of land where Mix* Ethel Sayles re­
Orange, HL Sunday.
rathfned Jo Fenton with them. Miss
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kemp and wni. Who to a Student nurse at South Bend, Ind, were week end mained with Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Mr. and Mrs. lawrence Smith of Nichols hospital, will-atoo visit rel­ guesU of Mr. and Mrs. George Perry far a week's visit.
Mrs. Harry Bowser ot Ft. Wayne,
Battle Creek were Sunday guests of atives in Ithaca and Grand Rapids Orean. Mrs. Heath had just re­
lumed from Bremlngton, Wash Ing - Ind, is a guest at the Wilbur Lane
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Finstrom. Mias during bar vacation.
home. MTS. Bowser. Mrs. "lane and
Gertrude Finstrom
accompanied
Mtoa Marianne Murphy of South Mis. Chas. Potts were Ln Kalamazoo
them home for a week’s vigil.
Westerville. Ohio, and Dr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Fred Johnson and family go Raymond SwhUher were guests ofi Bend was In Hasting* Bunday al yesterday aa guests of Mrs. Robert'
to Reed City on Saturday to attend Mr- and Mrs. A. B- Shively on Wed- the Parker House. MUs Murphy, a Walton at the Country club.
,
niece
of Mrs. Green s, wa* very
Mta* Ethel LaMore of Mt. PicasFriday, Aug. 7
the Johnson family reunion. Mr.
Saturday, Aug.
Johnson Joining them there. Mira Mr. Shively. Dr. and Mrs. King: popular with guort* of the hotel
Dorothy Johnson U expected homo were formerly missionaries to Afri- during her stay there. Owing to the Prandscn cottage, wall lake. MUs
LaMore Is attending th# summer i
filnes*
of
her
father
it
became
neces
­
from Detroit for the week end.
sesaton al M. 8. O.. East Lansing
sary for her to return home.
Miss Beulah Bussell of WgahingMr*. H. a. Adrounie left Sunday and taking an intensive courao in
ton. D. C. called on Mtu Mabel Ohio. Dr. Swhlsher is the Congress ’
for Chicago far a short stay. Zabelle. oerpum.
Bisson on Saturday. MU* Bussell, tlonal minister at Whiting, Iowa.
All Flavors
pk9*’
Mr. and Mr*. B. R. Reed and fam­
who has been visiting relative* in
who to an area director of the
Milwaukee, win Join her there and ily returned laat week from their vaAmerican Red Cross, has fust re­
return home.
cation which they spent in north­
turned from a six months' stay tn
ern
Michigan.
At
Traverse
City
they
Mr. and Mra. H. H. Peirce re­
the southern states.
turned an Monday from a trip were the guest* of Mr. and Mrs. R.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lewis attended (
through the wpst, visiting many J. MoCreery. who are liking their
lhe Lewis family reunion at Ldta■ N90N0AV LUNCHU
places of intcrosl on tho Pacific new homo but arc glad to greet
•Ide park at Caledonia on Bunday.
| coast — Vancouver. Seattle, San their Hastings friends.
On their return they called on the'
Francisco. Lm Angeles and other
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mr*.
farmer * aunt. Mrs. Roxie l/nrl*. of
OINNtaS
'
'elite*.
Alonzo Trim
were Mr*. Cora
near Alto, who wa* unable to at­
PINTS
Ji&gt;0
M
M.
Regular 10c Boxci
Mr. and Mrs. peter Castle and Schulze of Lansing. Mra. Otto j
tend the reunion because of nines*.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Castle and Char­ Schulze and daughter. Mrs. Rich-1
Quest* of the. Rev. and Mrs. W.
SUH*AY MNNIU
lene of Prairieville. Bud Van Bem- art Grean. of Nashville, who were '
Maylan Jones on Saturday and
Wm .and him Katherine McPharlin dinner guests Wednesday. Mr. and |
QUARTS
Sunday wen Mr. and Mrs. Harold*
1*&gt;M H 2iM r. M.
of Grand Hgven were dinner guests Mrs. Ebcn Pennock and daughter of
Doxen
OO
Gallle and two children of Ludlng-1
One 10c Box FRU!
• t&gt; 700 r. M.
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Mc- Ann Arbor called on Bunday.
ton. On Sunday Mr., and Mrs. Har-;
Phariin
ahd
family.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Chester
Wilson
of
old Bates of Elsie, also former par*
Mr. and Mr*. Omar Barker and Detroit are guest* of her parent*.
Uhoners of Rev. Jones, were guests I
Paxiiine tell Saturday for Chicago MT. and Mrs. Michael Humphrey.
at the Jones home.
।
‘ Wbteo they Will ristt Mrs. Barker’s
Oscar Kuempel and family and
brother,. Dr. William Kangas. They the Kenyon* ot Kitchener. Ont.,
spent Sunday evening with Mr. and
FRUIT PECTIN boHI. )7c
। mil bo the. guests of Dr. and Mn. Clyde Kuempel at Barbera
I A- M- Kangas
Corners
JAR TOPS.2 do*. 35c
Mr. and Mrs.. Oscar Kuempel en­
1- and MN. O. V. Chidester were
day guests of Mr. and Mm. 8am tertained hia cousins, Mr. and Mrs.
HILLS BROTHERS COFFEE—
M OfOwJoite in contrast to Franklin A. Kenyon, and daughter.
brtnvu. parched lawns in Has- Leona, of Kitehener, ont.. over the
Coffee Supreme3 lb». 99c
liters found there wm
strtelton* in cttartotle
Clean Quick Soap Chip* 2’/* IF. box ) 7c
were lovely and green.
. Densmore and Miss er and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Houatoun
Mayo. In company with Waring of Littleton. Colorado, also
BUTTER—Middlevillelb. 3gc
hi* father, George Waring, of
fat a Grand Rapids.
YEAST FOAM2 package* 15c
Mr. and Mra. Morse E. Nevin*
went to their Wall lake oettage on

Specials
Are Offering on
Page 4-5 Sec, 2

E B. More of Marshall with Mrs. D.
W. Walldoefl.
The committee tn charge for the
uel Glasgow. Mrs. D. G. Houghton
of Caledonia. Mtoa Betty Sigler as­
sisted with the serving ot the lunch-

RETURN FROM 8,600
MILE MOTOR TRIP
Mias Long and Mias Anton
Visit Interesting Places
in Western States
companled by Miss Thelma Anton
of Grand Rapids, returned last
through the western state*, cover­
ing a distance of nearly 8.600 mllee,
Their first objective wa* the Black
Hills from which place they vrnit
lo Yellowstone Park where th*}
National bank at
spent a couple of days. They went
on to the Grand Canyon. Loa An- &gt;
*ti«h
gate*, san Pranriroo. tip the
SdS^Se Jlwal^S]

nsdlan Rockies. Lake Loulae and
Banff. Al lake Louise they stayed' station KROV in
at Deer Lodge and enjoyed a hiking
Agnes and back to the Lodge.
groom unite
Ktpecially enjoyable, says Mtos
Long, was the drive on tiie new beat wtotMA.
Jasper
Park
highway.
which
though still
under ccnstructloo.
passes through some beautiful scen­
ery with many mountain* and gla­
ciers in view. The highway follow*

through that am the ciutme heal
had caused damage, even melting and two children
the glaclsra considerably which
taka tn Meeorta co.
looked black with dirt.
Nothing but a f^w flat tires
and Mias Anton.

BRIDGE—LUNCH KON.

Mrs. victor Hilbert entertained -greateit
-------------------of Um gnat
at a charming luncheon at hgr H. G. WeUa.

BARGAINS

INDERELLA DRESSES takes thia

C

at the Big, Little Store!

3

were delighted with our effort* ta give
Hastings an

I7C

Y

how happy we were to have received your

good wiahe*.

/ADR effort* will be lo give you |1m

PARKIR HOUSE

Repairing
Estimates FREE!

BESSMER

’

Jowalar* and .Optician* .

kanaai, Praia** and Glaaaa* Fitted

UMton and other
ted., art' txproted Saturday for -a

two week** vlKlL
-Miea Marguerite McPharlin spent
his mother. Thursday with
Mn.
Oarenro
Scheldt, of Kalam8*00.
Mr. and Mra oedrgc sleight of
m^n hotng were MM. Frank Cooper
of Carlton and Mrs. Bert Arm­ *
its of Mra.
strong of Hastings,

HINMAN’S
Hastings

shoni zwi

response wa* greater than our

expectation* atid we want to tell you

2 f„ 19‘

Watch and J awe try

exclusive Womeu’» Reedy*

io-Wear Shop.

Fruit Jars

55

—
thank lhe -u
many
cm-

toiners who rani* lo our New Home and

SPECIAL
IM r.

___ .. .1_____________ V

oppottunity to

8

•JELL^)

taco. Tex**, 'fte oeremony wm
formed in Donna. Texas, by the

greatest value* and best stylo* pos­

sible—therefore we again say

Thanks A Mi
Coats

Suite

Michigan

ih

w. n*n n.

-

�TO HASTINGS
FOR BAI

WANTS

■

■

THE CHURCHES Navy Crej

Frock

for 1

■' aafuralihad

-So. t Blrdaall clover fculkr, . IM

Washington, D. C-. where he will URQ^ PLANNING
make his home with hts sister and
husband. Mr. knd Mra. Graham
IN JREE PLANTING
Lambeth. Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. De­
me England while he attends ForesUr at M. 8. 0. Thinks
Mbooi.
■
.
Dare and Selection More
Vivian and Shirley Schray are
visiting relatives in Detroit thb
Important Than Volume
I

The Heating* Banner

OOOE BRO*. l4Ho»*.

With the approach of the fall tree ( _

.

.

HQHTY FIMT YEAR
___ _

_

. - o

punting season for farmers seeking
V* *JX»m
“
improved
windbreaks.
woodiote.&lt;"uttw

Our Service

FOR HEXTTOtt PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.

for rale —or ir*d.

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Insurance Co .
rux^AAi.E-hc

824
ria. I
Middleville.

H ELDON
ABST1ACT

S

OFFICE

HASTING8. MICHIGAN

0HUEC1I SKEVICEB

Evrrykodj cardlall*

I run NA
In.Alt

rak
12.

ph*"

:

p

R®»
„ oT

BRETHREN CHURCH.

SALE—T-

FOft

*
HvO
iihla t
• | Cryak.
&gt;1 FOR SA

&lt;

Buntlai Mkuol

FOR BALE—Wiablnc m»ehlb.
Good
ectdltion. *13 A Las. Pbcn. 722

toWA-&gt;?«!?«?■

BAPTIST CHURCH.
J. ADCOCK. MiniAter.

run KALE- Piano Id 'rood condition
Clyil* Leonard Dalton Dalle

loir.in&lt; doo.7

FOR MALE—O&amp;od purebred Jrrrer bull

roh' RAL1

.t -MiddieviU.

105 Sa. Chare*

Hrhl
tftuilb

BRICK

tiirhl. Drat.
It lhe ebure
...er Band to
ehurrh at 2 30

FOR SALE—30 fl

COATS GROVE OHUICH OF CHRIST.

At Old Hasting* Wool
Boot Plant Site.

In­

quire of Joe DeRuiter
WOMAN DRIVING to PHladalPbla Ao*
21 or 22 w.nl* eonptniua
Sb*r.
.xp.nt. Phonr -•••
•'
FOR REXT— Fin

at Pickle Station.

&gt;F rale—Go&lt;&gt;&lt;!
*4 ricbl IV.irhl .round 3100.
0 and 12.
Ru««.ll Boohrr.

"AKRON" MODERN
■ICHANO-FOIM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR FLAY

WANTED—2 or 3 rcom&lt; for th, uKo«l
r»»r laitibh for II*
I* or B»»r D*ltoa. Ct
Clorrrtlalr
FOR SALE —&gt;'r&lt;llrr**d
pupt. 4 wrrk, old. CL
K»hl»

FOR RALE—Ta
Choir* ala doll
MUdlaalll

OLD

the Prescription Drug Store
BLASTING*

FOR SALE—Fori

FOR SALE

MONEY
We can REFINANCE your
present contract if your

Fidality Corporation

WRECKING
FOR PARTS

OF MICH.
ROO^I 10—tND FLOOR
HASTINGS NATIONAL BANK
BUILDING — PHONS *307

• FORD8ON TRACTOR
AUTO GLASS INSTALLED

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 2637

HuUnp

OB COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

Electrical Work
DONE BY A
LICENSED
ELECTRICIAN
Work GUARANTEED!

No. Broadway

Hastings

JOE MIX
Natbvilk. Mkh.

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock

Muting*

gelling lhe BEST PRICES, call
MR. FLOYD DENNY.

JERRY ANDRUS

Wortblp.
120 H

WOODLAND.
Misses Stella and Florence Par­
rott and Vem Hynes visited relatives
in Three Rivers last week
Mrs. Josie Watrous and Miss
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH.
Esther Watrous and Mr and Mrs
Ralph Rise and family were guests
of Mr and Mrs. Ward Green at
their cottage on Jordan lake Sun­
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kilpatrick
spent Sunday with lhe latter* sis­
ter. Mr. and Mrs Hazen Mitchell of
Grand Haven. Her mother, Mr*.
Elizabeth Mahler, who has been 111
for a few months, is being cared for
by Mrs. Mitchell.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Mr and Mrs. John Dell attended
SCIENTIST.
the Dell reunion at the home of Mr
Hundar ,ervli
11.00 A M
Bub- and Mrs. Walter Tasker of West
ffbirit ’ ’
Odessa Sunday.
Read Inc „Mr»I^0Ila.A^Un,Vl?lted(Mrte*nd
Mrs. Robert Austin of Lansing from
Saturday until Monday
B 8 Holly and Mrs. Rena Culler
accompanied Elmer Warren and
KI,,
f *«na Warren
Warr-n 1to
a Eaton
Fatnn Rnnkh
Miss Lena
Rapids
Bunday where they attended camp
meeting
JOHNSTOWN ORANGE
Rev T W. Thompson was tn
charge of the church services at
the Methodist church Sunday while
the regular pastor. Rev. Wynn was
in Eaton Rapids
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Leon Tyler
Friday. July 31 al Pennock hospital
Hastings, a son. named Gordon
George Congratulations.
IRVING GRANGE.
Mrs. Luella Earle of Sacramento.
Cal., who has been a patient at Pen­
nock hospital last week is being

'lee Ruh

GRANGE PROGRAMS

Phon* Hasting* 2539— We pay

OBITUARY.
Peter A- Maurer, son of Peter
and Rase Maurer, was bcm March
S. 1865 and died after a short illness
at his home In Maple Grove on July
31. 1830 He was married to Roaella
Blatt of Jackson on August 26. 1890.
To this union were bom three chil­
dren, Lawrence of Maple Orove.
Mrs Bertha Smith of Hastings and
Mrs. Hilda Keller of Kalamazoo who
with one brother. Jacob Maurer, lhe
b.ii«i । grandchildren and a host of friends
| survive.
who | Funeral services were held on
r durin* tb. alekan* | Monday at 0 o'clock from Bl. Rose
। church, with Rev. John V. Dillon
officiating. Interment was In Mt.
Calvary cemetery.

record that they did. William Penn |
in 1688 tells of sue as in growing &lt;
English grass ired clover) and that |
Robert Turner, a wealthy merchant.
planter sowed ’'great and small
clover."
Benjamin Franklin, about 1750.
wrote that he had "seeded 30 acres |
to red clover in Philadelphia on tiie,
23&lt;1 of August.'' Nearly 25 years la- ।
ter his -Poor Richard's Almanac",
I told of "An experienced method of:
’
sowing clover on barley."
George Washington in 17M wrote ,
&gt;«, -was
-----------that seed oi
of rwu
red ck
clover
obtain- ।
, abJp ,.on eMy terms" in Virginia. It
,
lhcse years—the reconstruc; t)Qn
afUr
Revolution—,
lhal extensive cultivation of clover

DR. R. A. DENISON,

at the NEW PARKER HOUSE
GUARANTEED Plate* $"9.50
a* low a*-------------- :------ ■
EXTRACTIONS__________ 50c
NO NEEDLE DISTRESS
Filling* a* low as

began.

There is a tea called Lung-Soo
which the Chinese use tn making
tea. and the leaves of which they

DENTIST

Will Be Here EVERY SATURDAY

50c

Plate* Repaired, $1

REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION.
GRAND BAPIDS. SEPT 20TH. 1*3*
Th. Itepublu
h.ld l.r th/ t

NOTICE TO CREDITOR*.

ai. ’
STATS OF MICHIGAN.
CIRCUIT COURT TOR THE COUNTY
Or BARRY. IN CHANCERY

Fatigued f

HOWARD C. LAWRENCE.

JAMES 0. FREY.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

Mean VISION TOMORROW—

SEE

FOOD CENTER 2609

GEO. M. NEWTON

FM*M»ch • 3921

GRADE A MILK

*a Sjrh Board of I&gt;,t,r*i&gt;-,ii

MARKET. Phon. 2616

Bogtstared OPTOMETRIST and

HASTINGS

High in Cream Content. Raw |
rPa*te«rixed. Pt. Sc, Qt. lUj

tsrsiwraLfwsrTexas was named in 1727
the territory was settled with vagualy-defined Unite aa a province and
named Tejah. or Texas, after Um
tribe of the confederacy of Tejaa
Indians.

Barler. VOe bu

MlddliM*. M.oo
RcraUb faad. *t.
Larios «a*K *2.00—*2 to.
Cralktd etna. 8*.10.

The Hasting
loped Apex f
Rapids 20 to
fair ground, tc
nlng streak. 1
inf for the lo
eating out of
them only foui
mates were i
count for twe:

and third and
the fifth on fa
nell hit a ho:
frame with Y
count tor two
Grand Rapt
the seventh o
the only time
when Frecma
one hit in a
second tally *
man in the e
walked four t
across the pla
I tors were re
out route, wh
local boys wh!
Next Sunda
play at Calcdi
Summary:
Apex Applian
Hastings
..
Batteries: .
and Bolan
Yofing and M
BELIEVES C

Fiard Crate.
Oaaa'F Drain CoaalaaleaM of U
Coaaiy of Barry.

call came fr
Landon, just
ter. where
a fence row.
the truck sti
tings, wher
hastily sumr

binder. Th a
and would h
for the quit
and lhe use i

LMksn fowl*.
Yooaa Chicken

M FELDPAUSCH’S

Indepenc
From (

GRAND RAPIDH OX TUESDAY
SEp+ 2» 103*. COMMENCING

You need this

UtUe FORESIGHT TODAY May

of finance, al
welfare in an
tion— in (get, ।

TWO ALAS

ENERGY FOOD

CATTU, HOGS, VEAL

have a Job ah&lt;
the other 830.C
wealth is not
state but i* wh
the voluntary
friends In this
Barry county
has two boys al
so all should be
In the work
there aa It die
people.
At the prese
moat a capacit
boys now recei
borne-like ins
parents think
lima with one I
do with ninety
feed, clothe an

about six o'
neaday even
another fron
alarm for t!

E Smith Hdwc.

WANTED

This year lhe
met wlUi a gn
school building
stroyed by are.
boys ind-DUier
hard to gather
rebuild. The r
about 160.000. a
*30.000 Insurant

University o
had traced Lt
perature bad
time, for a |
centuries,
downward. E
higher temp*
birth rate.

HASTINGS MARKETS

SALES AND SERVICE

H

On Saturday,
tentative* of t
wealth will be L

Il would be
people bellev&lt;
Michigan Is I
would be tru
■tales That
Cincinnati au
He has anno
the heat belt
gradually shi
man. Dr. cla

IT WILL PAY YOU TO INVESTIGATE

"Some people would rather argue
about religion than demonstrate it."
Roy L Smith.

K E LVINATO R

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call

PILGRIM HOLINESS TABEBNACLB.

MAPLE LEAP GRANGE

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY

M
M

Hero is a type of frock fashion
leaders predict will be very
popular this fall. It is of navy
crepe and the one-piece dress
underneath Is simple and se­
vere in Uno. The neckline is
high and bound in white poau
d'ange.
White pearl buttons
provide an ideal accent for tho
jacket, which follows a tunlo
silhouette. The sleeves of the
frock and jacket are twins
blending into one sleeve which
pushes UP above tho elbow.
Frances Drake, movie actress,
models the frock.

Starr (
In Has

**’_

landscaping, cellulose production or |
g*b.&lt;n»ti.»* k* M*u. r«fMu
daughter* were Sunday gueau or .
abater for game, Profs*- I of BARRY cotnrw. ONB YBAM. *i oe.
the latter* oarer ts Mr and Mr*. ** P- A- Harbert of lhe forestry de- I (MmU la *4t*am &gt;
ifllah ■JYUmbO
'
inartment
Mtehtean state
■***« college
rv&gt;IUa»4’ nr barby
BARRY county
COUNTY, six
BIX month
MONTHS
Site.
______
I PBrtmeni at Michigan
*, so
*.
Mr. and Mn. CUud carpenur and ■'“l** «I““r "1 “
01 n&lt; iaKV ooum mn uoxrka.
aranddauahur Baur ol Lal« Odea-1
and matl&gt;od or pUnuna
|
“lL,,.
sa attended the camp meeting at
“ore than a milhon trees a year , ouTSJDa baRKY COUNTY. ONE tram
Eaten Rapids Sunday
I
betaf distributed from the tvro I IB AbVAjfVB------------ ------ ------- *i.so
Mr. and Mr. Clyde Buell u.d ; nuraertd, openud by uu colk&lt;e , roer.io» aoaacau-rloxa o»l Taaj
family returned Bunday from their , »t Lansing and al East Lansing and
*" ad&gt; axcb......................... -••••8’
yunatinn
81 tbe Dunbar forestry experiment I
a.-.^.
Mr and Mrs. Karl C. Faul and’ateUon From Inspection, of plant-I
ADvraTIMNy BATE*:
children o.uuuvu
attended the
Benham .fam-! Inga
drawn
W1AUHI
WBG D«aa&lt;»a»
- - Professor
----------- Herbert
,
.. has
.
T
----- -aL Dl.oUy *4v*rtteiaa rate* m tpeltow
&lt;1. reunion .a
i.ba Thur*- i, tentative conclusion that volume of 10
Uy
at Swain's take
dxy
planting te far teas Important than
Tuesday evening Mr* Arthur Gid- ’ proper selection and planting.
dings te entertaining with two table*! He urges farmers te consult with
of bridge at the home of her moUier.; county agricultural agent* who can
Mrs. John Velte. in honor of her obtain advice for them through Abe
house guest*. Mrs. George Leslie (Michigan state College extension
and Mr*. John Campbell of Tawas ■ service As an example of the need
City.
tot advice and planning, he find*
aq»
‘ that In field* that slope down te
OBITUARY.
| swale*, the difference in elevation
Knm
in
•
John W. Wnetstene was corn tn and Mill even in clotely adjacent
mi,
Cambridgeshire. England. July 25., P*™1 }nf’Ju‘"s
“®L
1853 and departedUite life. July 30.'
pecU for U hl,h
JOB PRINTING
1836. aged 83 years and 5 days. [
nUnMl.M
Whefi N years of age he came from
i.JJ
T&gt; i wnwv
j
. wither
weather condition*
con
England with hte parents and *i*.
or tack of prop­
d I
|"
er planting.
ter Mary and settled in Bedford.
“rnte te
Calhoun Co. where they lived for m,de. ’5th P l?°
T*1*. u
a lions have made no changes.
ata:
„«•“s; Charred com from the Mound
Builders of the Ohio Valley re­
years. In
In 1882
1883 they
they bought
bought lhe
the Jrl.th the
w ,ly|*
years.
being set out along highways where sembles corn grown by Indians in
home in Castleton township where
the Middle West"
he has resided continuously for the trees are to be used instead of the
The nearest relative to Indian
past 54 years. June 20. 1885 he wm customary snow fences.
com known to botanists b tho grass
united In marriage with Miss Mar­
generally known by Its Aztec name
garet Fisher and they lived happily CORN NEEDS MAN JUST AS
of teoslnte. But If com developed
MUCH AS MAN NEEDS CORN. from teoslnte, Mr. Kempten says,
together until her death In 1912. To
this union two children were bom.
Students of genetics In tho Uhlt- the manner of - development can
Miss Alice Whetstone and Melvin ed States Department of Agricul­ only be surmised. Il Is believed, how­
J. Whetstone, who survive him. Mr.
ever. that the. advance of genetic
Whetstone was a believer In Ood ture call maize, or Indian com. knowledge may unravel the mystery.'
and in his earlier years was a mem­ "the most completely domesticated I of maize.
ber of the Marlin church. He was a grain, quite Incapable of maintain­
ing
itself
without
man."
None
of
good husband and a devoted father
te his children and his help and the Old World cereal* such aa
Mortars were faahtooed original.
counsel will be greatly missed In Ills wheat barley, or rice has reached ly of stone or wood and some still
home. Besides the children he Is this high degree of dependence on are made of agate and other bard
survived by several cousins and a human care, says J. H. Kempten of stones. During the Middle Age*
wide circle of friends and acquaint­ the Bureau of Plant Industry.
"How. when, and where com was almost all ot them were made of
ances. Tiie funeral, wm held at lhe
Martin church on Saturday at two domesticated are three question/ brass, bronze, bell metal and Iron.
o'clock with the Rev. C. M. Conklin often asked but never answered." he Since about 1600 the favored mortar
officiating. Interment In Fuller says "Though there is com of material has been Wedgewood, a
primitive people, there Is no such hard porcelain ware which does not
cemetery.
thing as primitive eom. The oldest
react to ctrong adds and alkalis.
ears known are as highly developed
FAMOUS AMERICANS URGED
botanically and as completely di­
PLANTING OF RED CLOVERvorced
from
wild
plants
aa
lhe
best
Use of Metal-Clad Wanltlp*
Just who brought the first red
The first naval battle lo which
clover to the New World lx* still a of our commercial varieties.
•The most ancient com known metal-clad ship* were used on both
question, but records In the United
,States Department of Agriculture re­ is that of lhe pre-lncas of Peru. aides took place la 1007 between
port that many men faxnoti&amp;Jn co­ Well preserved ears Hi the graves
। of these people duplicate tiie valonial history urged Its growth.
The opposing admirals were Chris­
As early as 1633. Lord Baltimore • rietles grown in lhe same region tians, and they killed one another.
asked his settlers to bring good today. A thousand or more gener-

Carlyle Burkle left Saturday

foriiT resuca

EMERSON ROYER

CARD OF THANKS

Zenos Colvin

ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
BONDS

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

CARDS of THANKS

GET YOUR

• 198* Mode! A Ford Truck
• 1*29 PLYMOUTH Coupe

Qnlml-7—HIM, *,hool. 11:64 A
Wtlcoai*—Pr«»ehlBr, 10:00 A
9lbl, rehool. 11:00 A. U.

‘ Mlchlou IV..I
"*ra a —t hour *1 Mr. klu
.
r 1 *1.1*r
Tbur.d.
1
a«nlra
li.Dtla,
2 30 P
announ„d.

MICHIGAN

Farmers, Attention!

Goodwill—Bibli
Hesdrnhotr—Bible ubool. 10 00 A
Marlin—Bible erhool. • |O:S0 A

M Id Jia ,11*

FOR KALE—Good nl*a.&gt;

ADJUSTABLE CENTER

HASTINGS PARISH
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
R»t. 0. M Oonklln. Partar.
Pkao* Na. 3704.

THURSD

'".Vi.KtT'J.rB«r
ClrrvW J"4«

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2€51

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Halting*

BUILDI1
The const)
miles of ru
traded by f
Castleton. C
townships w
Consumers I
near future,
the Hasting
pony is bui
township. Ic
Caledonia t
and in Cha
ships in Ea
other town*

fire in y/
Fire of un
acrons about
Springs par

cations that

of Baker la
of the prop

burned over
put out the

�|

THURSDAY, AUGUST 6,1936

|

Starr Commonwealth Tag Dayj , „ T/lralre (
In Hastings Saturday, Aug. 8
......—,,.jt

a changes,
he Mound
Valley rrXndlans in
lo Indian
Ls the grass
At tec name
n developed
npton says,
pment can
lleved. howof genetic
the mystery/
Martan
•d originalI spme (tin
other herd
Iddle Ages
e made ot
I and iron.
&gt;red mortar
Igewood. a
rh does not
I alkalis.

Manhip.
e io which
sod on both
iOT between
Win navies,
were Chrisrhe another.

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER
EXHIBITION BY THE
FAMOUS ZOUAVES

The Hobbyin

NEXT CENSUS WILL
SETTLE THE MATTER

One of Colorful Event! at the

Magaxine Comments on the

Stale Safety Council
Urges Safe Driving

Carnival For Girls
At Camp Kitanniwa

SECTIO

POLITICAL N

It has always seemed a good Idea I Close Race Between Has­
REPUBLICAN
w
American Lejion
for everybody to have a hobby—lo
Kay Francis Stars
tings and Charlotte
If our political spendthrifts real- Washington who with to
Convention
keep them Interested and interest­
In
“
While
Angel."
Ninety Boyi Receiving Training
1 The close race between Hastings ly want to learn how to balance | country their -guinea ptg"
One
ot
lhe
most
colorful
events
ing. Bo we looked around to see
What Is heralded iu one of the
— out
—- •■bright"
--------—
Ing
naw tlworta
i and Charlotte in lhe matter of their budgets let them turn to
At This Home-Like Institution
outstanding
productions of the of the American Legion convention I What people were doing these day* 1
average American housewife.
Innovations, the housewife
screen. "The While Angel," a pic­ to be held in Lansing August IS. 17 | In lhe way of hobbles. And one that Ipopulation Is beginning to attract
turn around and ask a rubber i
On Saturday, August 8. repre­ of your own home by ninety and i ।ture portraying the life .lory of the and 18. will be a public exhibition Ito be a favorite Is scrap j’wide attention as lhe following ar­
She has lo be. Unlike the newer
sentative! of the Starr Common­ you'll have some conception of the ,Immortal nurse. Florence Nightin­ I drill by the world-famous American | book*
i jtide taken from a daily paper would
economists In public office, she can­
wealth will be In Hastings for their task Mr. Starr has set for himself .gale. with Kay Francis In the stelindicate:
Legion Zouaves of Jackson Under!
the uses to which a
and those who work with him The '
annual Tag Day.
| "The next federal census figures not spend two dollars for every
the command of Capt WiUtam , &lt;»ok may be put are varied They । are being eagerly awaited by lhe dollar she takes In. and blandly
This year lhe commonwealth ha* boys get wonderful training al this
The picture paints In fiery drama Sparks, tlw Zouaves corps has been | may be for filing away famous say- I;
I staffs ol tiie Charlotte Republican­ load the difference on the public. every night the Federal
met with a great Lois, their large home where they are taught lhe Lhe fight of Florence Nightingale
prominent men
or for , ,Tribune and tiie Hastings Banner. She has to cut her expenditures to
school building having been de­ value and dignity of honest toll, the ,a wealthy English society girl lo m existence for a great many yean. L*1#4
and ha* given exhibitions of drills collecting snapshou taken at var- L
I reports the Editor and Publisher, fll whatever Income a pay envelope
stroyed by flre. Consequently the principles ot good citizenship and ,remedy conditions in army field
in si) the major capitals of Europe . was and sundry tunes anCI places |,
collected by taxes. Deflcits &gt;re so
* newspaper magazine
may afford.
boys and 'Oilier workers are trying how lo live honorably with their fel­ hospitals and the neglect ot dying
Th.se exhibition were staged while You can keep notes on birds or ,| "Says lhe magazine: "The story
hard to gather lb enough funds to lows
nut's why those "Indirect" taxes large that few people can compre­
soldier.
the organization was in Pari, at- beer bug* or flowers One very de- I' goes bock lo 1820. and the fact that
rebuild. The new school will cost
Have you ever noticed lhe cour- '
which boost the family food bill, the hend the enormous sums repreeenttending lhe national convention of I voted young couple whom we know In that census Hostings was shown family rent bill, lhe family bills for ed or visualise the generaatlosis of
about 560,000. and as they had but tesy ot Ute boy* who have come to ■
the American Legion held In the keep a record of sU their dales in to hove a population of 5.132. Just clothing and tor everything else people who will have to work to pay
530.000 insurance on the old build­ Hastings on their various Tag Days?
French capital several year* ago
:•
dime-store scrap book. Of six larger than Charlotte, neighbor­ she buys, mean so much to her. No the bill. How Jong would an aver­
ing. it can readily be seen tiial they Several times the writer has seen
While
Tiie picture U happily tilled It
age household hang together If the
While touring
touring Europe
Europe the
the corps
corps ' cour*e. If you re in the public eye ing seat of Eaton county
have a Job ahead of them to get them perform some act of kindness
reflect-' the pace of the mechanical was invited, by special request of &gt; at all. you 11 keep a book of the
husband
"For 10 glorious years the editor ■
the otiter $30,000. The Common­ for other*—helping blind or aged
VBITBWT1
IOC "
~~------ “and
----- ” wife
, spent
------ 1nearly
------- ‘ two
age
and
nt
the
same
time,
humanPremier
Mussolini,
to
give
an
exhlthings,
complimentary and other- ,1 of the Banner twitted the small cost. U&gt;e bill is finally paid oat ol dollars for each dollar they earned?
wealth Is not supported by Ute person* across lhe street, carrying ’
lze» the scene In any typical Amer- billon drill at the Military Univer- «!*«• thal arc “,d »bout you. Or country town on our east.' But In her thin puree.
Even if tne spending spree on
state but u wholly dependent upon a heavy basket for an elderly worn- ~— . , , , , । '.
,
v
a story ,ity of Rome Another feature of you might collect pictures from
the voluntary conlrlbuUutts of iu an .nd many other deed, that re- “
&gt;930 the federal census gave Char­
How tepl, do
Millon.
whloli Uw Roown.ll uLoUnlKnUon
of automobile manufacturing and their foreign lour was a drill staged I rotogravure section* of your favorite i Lotte's population as 5307. or Just BO
friends In this and other b^bIca.
fleeted credit upon their careful '
dr red by office-holders during re- । «mberked were brought to a OOM
of dare-devil tests on dangerous ui lhe invaildies in Parjs at lhe re- (newspapers
In excess of Hastings. The stall of cent years eut Into the average tomorrow, the children of our grand­
Barry comity ut the present time training at lhe Commonwealth. |
curves, with a colorful love uffwir Ui quest of the French government. All ’ Themaking of a
scrap book the Republican-Tribune did not miss housewife's operating fund*?
ha* two boy* at lhe Commonwealth Some of lhe lads may have had *uch ,
; children would still be helping to
the
famous
formation*
ot
the
ZouI
should
te
divided
Into
four
parts,
so all should be especially Interested discipline- in their own homes but 1 &gt;’ro»rvsl
the bet. What the situation will be
Well, research workers have estl- squandering.
uves will be seen while the organ!- j First, the collection of the items 1UU
, years from now Is on the lap
four
in the work being accomplished A large number have never known
mated that the majority of taxes
zution is attending the convention. | which are going tocompose the
Of tfoe gods."
Almost a third of the rent money
there as it directly concerns local the comforts and Influence of a real Richard Dlx In
"Special Investigator."
collected by government are passed collected goes to pay taxes; fifty--------------- « &gt; »------------------- , book Secondly, lhe pasting In of
people
home until they were assigned to i
One of gangland s cleverest ways ------------------------------------------------------ — the items ThU step consumes con- |
on to the public In lhe form of In- three different kinds of taxes are
At lhe present time there b al­ Floyd Starr's care, where they have ,
ot circulating “hot" stolen gold bul­
slderable time and effort to sec thal
mixed with the dough in every loaf
most a capacity enrollment, ninety bo many opportunities and pnvllion is used as the foundation tor
gulsed. they consume one dollar
each Item or picture is In iu cor- ,
of bread; the milk you drink Is
boyi now receiving care at this leges.
romantic drama Ln thb picture
out of every live which finds its
reel place, chronologically. artUUJiome-llke institution
Oftentimes
On Saturday you will have an
| taxed; you pay 27 different taxes
Dlx appears as a man who turned
way Into the family pocketbook.
। cally and logically After this step
' on your automobile and 117 mors on
parents yyak they have a hard opportunity to assist with this splcn- i
special agent to avenge lhe death ot
Actually,
then,
tire
average
houseIs completed, tiie book Is put aside
time with one boy—what would they did work as you make your Tag Day |
Whatever you may { lib brother
I for
lui a
IB time,
LUIIV. and perhaps another
------ of
-­
do with ninety boys to look after, contribution.
The ,lrh .( c»mp KlunMw. had (lril u, eonweve th. conl.au M Ute
Io
The Michigan Stale Safely Coun- |
different nature started. A lew
feed, clothe juid educate as &gt;* done give will be wisely expended in
. ,r„&gt;a Um, Mlu.d.j ...nto, ,t
pUr„ ,„d. -cond. to d«- “5!L"
TOWNSEND PICNIC.
cjl advises that observance by all! weeks or months later one returns their carnival which had altrac-1 n)MUj that politicians cease the' dHI.,re
at the Commonwealth? Many per­ meeting the everyday needs or will |
00
drU**
d” in, “ |
The Townsend picnic sponsored motorists of the following eleven to the first »—
book
•» and «starts
“■*• i~»kine
looking uon. .UMUt to th. Beery County (
plexing prodagis are presented daily be applied on the school building
Th. -B.U.V. It or Not ' booth. 1 0,
”h,ch „b J,,
fUll »7 .uMM ol Un
At by lhe Dowling club ui Herrington's safe driving rules will make life and through ll. Several Items seem not IMlr
to Mr Starr—problems of discipline, fund as necessity demands
- — — . .... ------- - ---- ------, U1
1 w liCk V, MIC
resort
was
attended
by
a
large
crowd
in
the
right
plac?.
If
one
lias
be
­
of finance, of leadership, of child least, you can feel you have a part
properly safer on Michigan hlgh, the fun house, games and sideshows nu of hcr ^cr I flees and economies,
come engaged, perhaps some items helped to furnish a lot of amuse- I ‘‘T
In helping
some lad to become a 1 of enthusiastic Townsendltcs. the
welfare In *11 its piuises. of educa- 1 ...
.
* —...rwhelmtnr
*
UltuU*ln
A «AU-In w-U.
...
. ..
. I All M ,whldr
ulortly
M
iUU,ut«l
lo
Frnldntt
grounds swarming with the Jolly
or pictures may have lo be censored.
tlon— In fget, multiply lhe problems belter citizen
1 Set speed according to condi­ One begins checking through the ment Twelve grand prizes were giv- Aroerlcn I.nUUn .b. hn neend.
D Roonyelt-TUn u
bunch
ed in b.Uneta, be. own budnL
d w
M
The dinner was enjoyed, after tions ot traffic highway surface and book, tearing out those Items no
...
I Now she is insisting that the pollti- Iabors "
FIREMEN HAVE
which a fine program was listened of lhe motor vehicle itself
longer wanted. Then
the others are FINE PROGRAMS AT
-U... enperwu b, luntln, to MU- j Ytl u, ,p,„
to In the pavilion Beautiful num­
2 Keep to extreme right hand , very carefully, tenderly, with much
CAMP INTERLOCHEN.
NUMEROUS CALLS bers were given by Honolulu Con- Ude of --highways
going
facla
lorn from their
- -------... when
_
. over ._
v.—j gesticulating,
------------ ------------------------nee
theirs.
lances
and
promises
by
Mr.
R
oom
­
Musicians attending the National
servatory students of Hastings un- j hills
original pages. This step U accoth- Music camp at Interlochen are pre- I
Adding To The Burden.
veR that taxes would be reduced
Three Blaxes in Rural Di». der leadership
Dewey
Roush. . a3 w
I..ttri»r*hin of rw-wev
Kotuli
Overtake
and pass
only when, .panled by great ripping sounds, de- paring for one of the most out-1 The
.
,v.
,
rne problems
prooicms of
oi lhe
tne household
nousenoia; and
ana the
uie budget
auagci balanced,
osiaacca. taxes
vun
J
.
.
__
__
___
_
___
_____
1
_
V...
I
t.A.A-lt.
haw.
WIU.VUW doubt.
uwuvw. It
;;is
— safe
-- -3for volume on the size of
standing two-weeks series of con-' budgeteer are not made easier by' have multiplied and deficits have
I
tricts and One in Oity
Mrs Babcock of Dowling gave a without
to do pending
so
I solo accompanied by Frank West, 1 4 Keep as far as u rea_sonable to the Piece being torn off. and the certs ever attempted In the camp's the numerous direct and concealed reached an appalling total,
The Hastings Independents walOver Week End
and numbers were rendered by the the right of lane -no
-------j loped Apex Appliances of Grand
eight-year history.
' —— ------------------------------------------------- ‘
and centerline -------------------'
and Martin orchestra bpceches J™
markings on three and sized Job following each session with ., Tiie American Bandmasters' asRapids 20 to 2 on Sunday, at the
Sunday and Sunday night were II Rose
Sunday. Aug 10. Dr Walter Dam- 4.000.000 pounds of smell
IMto.nl »y Frank
M
,X
I U»
T&gt;„n
th. 1
fair ground, to continue their win­ busy times for lhe city firemen as
soclatlon are convening there this rosch of New York will conduct the caught.
-------*“ A
‘ good price
--------i- ~
was
paid for
| ville Joseph Warnock of Galesburg
u
fourth .lep-lhe entire rearrange.
ning streak. Lefty Freeman pitch­
। week. Aug 6-9, and will Include a National High School Orchestra and them as they are fine eating.
.
they ware kept occupied. and
answering
E J Moore of Paw Paw
|
Readily give way to the right ment
a new
book
those Items Inumber
number of
of leading
leading American
American and
and lhe Michigan High School Chorus
ing- for out
the of
locals,
the visitors I fir'' .alarms
-------- In
---------------------- of ...
eating*
his had
hand"allowing
in Hastings and vicinity
A musical program preceded the ■ al sound of horns uf overtaking ve- ’
which
h,ch h
have
*ve *urvlved
survived the elimination
elimination Canadian band directors
during Uie regular weekly broadcast FOURTEEN ENROLLED AT
them only four hits, while hLs team-- nine-thirty
•
You see. Ulis could be a perpetual,
z, thv L'iUir.-l
U. OF M. SUMMER SESSION.
....
About
A M. lhe rural. address of the evening which was
National over lhe NBC network. Although Dr.
Band concert^ by
hits | truck was called to Mrs Hub Casey's. given by Hon Dr Racettc of Paw i, hides.
mate* were making sixteen Ml.
o Slow
ouw uv.u
hobby, one
of those -vicious circle' Hlgh
Band, which Includes Damrosch has previously directed
The following persons from Ha»' 6
down for ‘
intersections
count for twenty runs. The locals
•
'
five miles out on lhe campground Paw, Townsend candidate for Cun- I 7 Slow down when approaching things whlchha vr ni0 ending Let 200 crack
musicians-­from all parts lhe National Hlgn School Orchestra, । Ungs are enrolled In the University
scored In every Inning but the first road, where lhe
....barn
--...was consumed
.......... grew from lhe Fourth district
It hill tons
Ithe aecon4 book stand, then ellml- of the country, will play each eve- this will be his first visit to Inter­ of Michigan summer session:
and third and scored seven runs in
The building
8 Slow down whenapproaching 1 nate other
items and perhaps add j nlng at 8 o'clock during lhe con- lochen.
V A. Zuschnitl. Edwin Taylor.
by was
Are full of was a great treat to all
I| noor
new An,.,
ones, and naxte
paste nvrr
over in
In M
a third venlion. Two nights. Aug. ll and I
- of‘ course .burned. like ■, Everyone felt lhe day had been
the fifth on four hits Clark O'Don­ hay which
Herbert Reinhardt (Kellogg camp).
pedestrians.
nell hit a home run In this same .........
wu
Waller Perkins, William Jones.
tinder. By &lt;uuu
hard work,
the house well spent, we also gut several new
ADDS TO FOOD SUPPLY.
9 Make right and left turns care­ ] book. Let that dry out and eliml- 12. camp members will stage the |
Richard Bauer. Marjorie Kenyon,
frame with Young on base la ac- and other buildingss were stfved. members—Mrs Otis Altman Has­ fully and be sure your signals can 1natc and so on and on through the opera "Faust" under
...
the direction That the smelt will make an 1mcount for two of the runs.
| The loss Is about 51.400. lhe Banner tings R 4—President Dowling Town­ be seen u hundred feel from the j!years.
of Robert Korst, voice teacher and portanl addition lo the food supply■ Barbara Johnson. Grace Edmands.
Grand Rapids' first run came in Is Informed. Valuable aid wo* given send Club
Yes Indeed, making scrap books opera producer for the Cincinnati ( of thia state is Indicated by lhe fact, Mabel Clark. Maxine Wunderlich,
! turn
r
Jannct Michael, Bernice Springer,
the seventh on two successive hits, by neighbors, who brought waler In
Conservatory
of
Music.
The
entire
that,
during
the
winter
and
their
&gt;0 Observe traffic lights and stop .!Is a good pastime Good for what?
the only lime In the entire game I milk cans, which with the contents
libretto will be sung in English.
| brief spring spawning time, aboutt Bernice Henry.
We don't know
signs
when Freeman allowed more than of the booster tank, aided materialH Park only al a distance from,
one hit in a frame The visitors' i ly In keeping lhe flames from
the traveled portion of tiie highway
second tally was a gift from Free- spreading,
Approximately 75 per cent of the I
man in lhe eighth Inning when he i a fire In the dump near the Car
motor vehicle
venicic collisions on Michigan
walked four men to force one run I Seal factory called the department
Judge McPeek held court Jiri
------1 hlghwovs re.ull from disregard of
across lhe plate Sixteen of the vis- j about one o'clock, no damage be- Monday and disposed of several
these rules
Itors were retired via lhe strike- Ing done
civil cases Otto Deeds. Nashville,

Independents Win
From Grand Rapids

Court News

fist

lY

d. »1

out route, while only three of the
About four o'clock In the after­ charged with taking Indecent Uber- 1
INTERESTING EXPOSITION.
local boys whiffed the air
I noon a cal) came from lhe Will lies with u female child, admitted his
ins rernanoTne Michigan Oil and Gf. ExNext Sunday lhe Independents ' Gurd farm, one-halt mile east and guilt to the judge and was
remand­
sheriff position al Mt pleasant opens the
play al Caledonia
I half mile south of lhe Doud school­ ed to the custody of the
the sheriff
....
.1
nine
Summary
I house, ids bam being ablaze
It
without ball and is awaiting sen­ rvaning of August 11 and runs thru |
to the night of Aug 16 Barry coun- ।
Apex Appliance . 0 0 0 0 0 0 I I 0 I was filled with hay which was al) tence
Hastings
0 30 4 7
| burned as were four hog.s The loss
Russell Hinckley of Freeport and ty people will doubtless have a par- &gt;
Batteries ApexPierce.
' was estimated al 52.200 which Is -••
Russel) ~
H
- •••■of this city I llcular interest in visiting the ex- I
position as u Is generally believed
and Bolan
Hastings
Freeman, partially cbvered by insurance
I asilr.;:
against whom
statutory
charges
Yotag and Moore, Hocvenalr
The house on the Norton farm were made
•? were
—- - brought
a--------------before the ' lhe prospects for oil are good in
this vicinity Visitors will be able I
.
---- -------------------------------------1 at Prichardvllle, occupied by Lewis Judge Their cases were both re­
BELIEVES CLIMATE------------------------ j Ruthruff and family , waa discovered I mandcd to justice court for exumlindustry is being developed In
t.
&gt;8 CHANGING. (o be afire early Monday morning. : nation.
Il would be difficult to make some . about one o'clock, ll was thought i ....................................
The Judge will hold court next Michigan now one of the best oil­
mate of U
it may
m«v have -,•
people believe thot
that the cl
climate
caught from a spark Monday and Tuesday when several producing states In the Union.
Plenty ot entertainment Is prom­
Michigan is not changing, and that from the chimney as there had been criminal cases will be brought be­
ised aside from the oil exhibits.
would be true of other northern a nre In the wood stove. Mr Ruth­
fore him.
states That Idea Is endorsed by a run succeeded In getting his live
Cincinnati authority on the weather children out safely for which he was
He has announced lhe theory that grateful The loss Is partly covered
the heat belt of the United Slates is by Insurance.
gradually shifting northward. This
mln. Dr. Clarence a. Milla profes­
V. F. W. NEWS.
sor of experimental medicine at the
A crowd estimated at 4.500 attend­
University of Cincinnati, said he cu
„ annual picnic of the Veterans
ed U1
the
b*41 t"0*!
l*rlod of *»**»«
of Foreign
*'
----------- 1 War's
Wars” held"
held orT't£
on the
perature back to 1850. Before that grounds ot the national home In
lime for
far ■
nerind nt
—.
...
.
time,
a period
of twn
two nr
or tUror
three e.-.
Eaton Rapids. After a picnic din­
centuries.
temperatures
tended ner. there were several Interesting
downward. Dr. Mills claims the and Instructive speakers Races and
higher temperatures mean a lower contests were engaged In by many
birth rale.
and furnished most of the after­
24’/2 lbs. LEADER FLOUR wm.?1’ ---73c
noon's entertainment
The kiddles
TWO ALARMS AT SAME TIME.
enjoyed a huge Ferris wheel.
2414 lbs. MOOSEHEAD FLOUR
_83c
One
ot
the
most
interesting
about six o'clock last week Wed­
nesday evening—one for the city, events was the inspection of lhe
24V2 lbs. GOLD MEDAL or PILLS­
another from the outside.
The hospital and dwelling which com­
BURY'S FLOUR$115
alarm for tho city was due to a । prise the national home. Two of
grass fire on East Mill street, which these are maintained by lhe Veter­
was soon extinguished. The country ans of Michigan, and others are
supported
by
fourteen
other
states.
call camo from the farm of Cleon
DEL MONTE
SHREDDED
Landon. Just north of Carlton Cen­ It is a great pleasure to see the
ter. where there was a grass firo In youngsters here and know they are
WHEAT BISCUIT
PEACHES ia fence row. This was put out. and being well-cared for Music was fur­
the truck started to return to Has­ nished at frequent intervals during
No. 2 Vi Can»
tings. when
the firemen were lhe day by the state champion drum
For
and
bugle
corps
of
Monroe,
thd
hastily summoned to a nearby lot.
Heavy Syrup —
where Mr. Landon was using his band al lhe Slate Industrial school
Morgan
binder. That machine was ablaze of Lansing, and other corps from
Pectin .
and would have been ruined except various parts of lhe stale.

* The THRIFTY BUYER
Will Take Advantage of
the Following BARGAINS

led?

this
&gt;OD
AIRY

JLK
loj

IRY
Hastings

2

25'

17

17

for the quick return of the truck
and_the
use of its_________
chemical______
outAl.
___
_________----____ u a «______________ • day.
BUILDING RURAL
BUBAL LINES.
LINESThe construction work on several
miles
mlles of rural service lines con'r.\c&lt;.- i by farmers in Woodland.
Castleton. Carlton and Thomapple
townships will be started by the
Consumers Power Company in the
near future. At the present time
the Hastings Division of the com­
pany is building lines in Bowne
township, Ionia county, in Gaines,
Caledonia townships, Kent county
and in Chester and Carmel town­
ships In Eaton county, also In two
other townships in Ionia county.

Our county picnic Is next Sun­
August 9 Meet at the hall at
B:30 and have a full day at Gun
[ lake. Transportation will be furj nlshed those needing it Be sure to
be there.

The Ladles' Auxiliary closed Ils
charter last week with a quota of
twenty members. The next meet­
ing will be Thursday. August 13. at

The next meeting of the Post, aft­
er tonight, will be Thursday. Au­
gust 20. There has been a good turn
out for the meetings, so come lo lhe
next meeting and keep lhe attend­
FIRE IN YANKEE
SPRINGS PARK. ance up to the peak.
Fire of undetermined origin swept
HAVE HIS NUMBER.
across about 40 acres of the Yankee
Springs park project late Tuesday
Fred A. Smith had four sheep
of last week. There were some indi­ killed and five more badly Injured
cations that the fire was purposely by a car. going at high speed past
set. II started in the grass south his premises when the sheep were
of Baker lake. In the northern end being driven homeward along the
of the proposed park. Many small highway. The number of the car is
known; and complaints of fast driv­
burned over, volunteer Are fighters ing by this person have been made
eout the blaze, but not until It before. If It should be repeated, he
done a considerable damaga.
will probably he hailed into court.

Mason Fruit Jars—Pts., 55c;
2 Cans White Cross Dog Food

VEGETABLES
Kalamaxoo Celery 4
4 stalks in bunch I U
HEAD LETTUCE
Large,' Criip -------

4 Q&lt;
IV

Carroto and Beet!
Bunch------------------- »

£&lt;
W

Qts.

65c
15c

ROLLED OATS
5 Lbs.

23

CORN MEAL
5 Lb»

23

PASTRY FLOUR
04
5 Lbi__________ &lt;- I
Mother’c COCOA 4
2 lb. Can If

20c lb

BACON SQUARES

WALLACE GROCERY
FREE DELIVERY - OPEN EVENINGS
HASTINGS, MICH.

PHONE 2451

REXALL I?"" SALE!
AND NATION-WIDE

CONTEST OFFERING

• SEE large hand bill for the particulars of
this contest and the large list of drug and toilet

goods items offered at lhe greatly reduced, fac­

tory to you sale prices.

Limited space allows

us to list only a few of the many bargain items

792 PRIZES!
Sale Starts Thursday, August 6
in this sale.

49c Ml 31 SOL. and 50c REXALL
ORDERLIES—BOTH FOR

100 PURE TEST ASPIRIN and ONE
PINT MILK OF MAGNESIA—flOTH FOR

25c WHITE SHOE CLEANER
and POLISH
50c KLENZO COCOANUT OIL
SHAMPOO
5 YARDS OF ONE-INCH ADHESIVE
PLASTER----------------------- --------------------------

25c GAUZETS SANITARY
NAPKINS

25c PURE TEST
IODINE—1 OZ.

59'

50c SODIUM PHOSPHATE—
EFFERVESCING

39'

59

79c PURE TEST MINERAL
OIL

59'

17

25c MILK OF MAGNESIA
TOOTH PASTE

19

33

I 0*. ZINC OXIDE
OINTMENT

15

19'

25c DR. HINKLE CASCARA
COMP. TABLETS------------------

19

50c EYE-LO WITH CUP—
8 ol.

39

25c—2 Do«. PURE TEST ASPIRIN

17

19'

19

TABLETS-

23

$1.25 OLD COLONY ALARM
CLOCKS —------------------------------------- --

35c 5TAC SHAVING CREAM
and 25c LOTION—BOTH

39'

$1.25 HOT WATER
BOTTLE ------------------

$1.00 AGAREX. THE FAMOUS
LAXATIVE

69

$1.25 FOUNTAIN
SYRINGE

29'

50c JONTELL CLEANSING CREAM
and 200 FACIAL TISSUES

40c CASCADE WRITING
PORTFOLIO

50c REX SALVINE
FOR BURNS

,

89*
69'
69'
SO-

YOU CAN SAVE WITH SAFETY AT THE REXALL STORE!

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
GOODS DELIVERED

HASTINGS

PHONI2UI

�THU MAITING* BANNPL TMCTUPAT, AUOUBT t, IBM

profits

ly Cheeseman,
tr. and Mn.
if Johnstown:
---------- ----- ice Bump. Mr.
and MT* L; R- Wolcott enterand Mn. ocorss Maurer of Has­
tings with thejr fajnillea making
ernon Wolcott, Mr. Mid Mn Paul
tuin of Qhartotts, ^nd Mr. and
itean hogs, about &gt;&amp; la the party.
, ,,
—------ ------ --------- bIbcm of Mr. and Mra Danny Duffy have
ting Mr*. V machinery also burned. Bpontan,birthday,
,, ,, r
| ecu* combustion avidantly wa* the the piece where the house burned
woipoU'4
MU1 Gertrude
Gertrude Stowell
SL
MUs
and moth- “u*®
M Harold Yoeder
We arc gUd io report that Mr.
er »f Detroit called al the home of living north ot Freeport saw It
Oravea. our supervisor is on lhe
Mr. and MY*. L. R. Wolcott Sun- | UUrally blow up into flames.
day,
,
| Paul Palmer and Harry Williams gain after being very IU the past

Copper U«w chut and bordeaux i Barry county jail, after BUapu&gt;Un&lt; |
■tew.
»» •U'-Urt »wU«-I» |»M •
on Ur. Olwn U&gt; IM

Importaot Owh Drop Proves
Value of Spen&lt;i*&lt; time ’
la Ftrhtiiif Peeta
White Michigan potato growers• Michigan," available by writing
continue to seek better cash mar- to lhe Bulletin Department. Mfchlgan State CCnagd. Bast Lansing.
qmiltf aDteiMa. mimuUoq workers1
Field tests Indicate that the Uat Mtehigan Stole college continue quid spray, using bordeaux, is su, per lor to dusting with copper lime.
Bordeaux sprayed plot* outylelded
I dusted plot* by 1S T bushel* for Rusobtaining quality.
For after field preparation, seed acr« for Irish Oobbters.
selection, planting and fertilising, 1 Spraying with tho bordegux was
there need* to be protection against cheaper than dusting by W.lfl per
field diseases and peat*. Specifical­ acre, soma saving In duaUng with
ly. there are —
early —
and——
latecopper
blight lime can be realized by home
diseases and Insects Including leaf- mixing, the two men find, aa then
hoppen, aphid*, flea beetles, Colo- was a saving of 11.41 per acn with
rado potato beetles and other In- home mixed dust as compared to
factory mixed
POTATO SPRAYS PAY BACK PROFIT

PLRAfiANT HILL,
Th, Jo. qonUah Ion'll, U, IM

■ ■ »«»----------------are attending 4-H camp at Stewart
SOUTH THORNAPP1.B.
Mr Kerman of Mlddtevllle also' *»r. Stephen carter attended a
the Bender boys were In this vicin- j
ln Or,nd H»P*d* Baturdaj

W‘UUm’ ” TU“-

^^plXr^n^tn^l

caring for her brother's restaurant ehark&gt;rite*nthteMweek
’IU'
°"i
“a™

Kr*H
'■ .pend-

°

Mr. and Mrs James Oliver and
*‘th M1m
family accompanied by Mrs. Cha* Palmer.
Mr* Bert Palmer is visiting relB Johnson also Mr and Mr*. Fran­ ' atlves
In Detroit this week.
cis Oliver of Hastings spent Sunday 1
Mr and Mrs. Arthur Heydenbrrg
at Grand Ledge park where Mrs
held ' of Otwndvllle were Sunday evening
Oliver's family the Welch's held
callers al the Bert Palmer home.
their reunion,
I
Little
Jack Heydcnberg who hnd
MT and MT* Philip Nichols of '
Irving visited their parent*. Mr I
■ mi Mrs,
and
wii- Glen
uirn Nichols
Hicnois Sunday
Dunoa;
, turned home with them.
We enjoy "Tommy" and "Jane"
| Mr and Mr* Harry Kaynor (Opal'
immensely,
also commend your
'Smithi of Lansing called on old;
I friend* here Friday on their way fight for dust control on the roads
Dust
is so bad it causes lots of dis­
। home from Wayland
comfort
In
breathing.
Mrs Evie Jackspn and Mrs Chas. ,

B. Johnson accompanied Mr. and
Mrs Theodore Wirrlnga and Anna
Born to Mr and Mrs. Archie
May to Grand Rapids Tuesday re­
Burd nee Esther Green, a 7 pound
luming by way of Wayland where
boy July 6. In Ann Arbor Mrs.
Burd is at the home of her parents
aunt. Mrs Lina Rynn
«nd te gaining nicely
The voting
PLEASANT R1I»GE
upland
h"™
4
1 ° r 8undaj
non*e■

।

at

Mr' A,b"‘» Tripp has gone to
her home after having scarlet lever at the home of her parents.

August la the school reunion. Make
. your plana early.
. Mr. and Mrs Warnle Kelsey and
I Kenneth saw the bail game at DeI trolt on Monday.
1
Mr and Mrs. Chas. Townsend
j Evelyn. Donald and Harold enjoypj1 a picnic dinner at Gun lake
‘
| on 8u
'on Bunday.

candy was served
| Al Chickering. manager
Percy Rosser spent Sunday in Freeport elevator and Miss Cieo
----j —
... visiting relatives
Hayen of Saranac were united In
Reed
City
.- — ’
mnrriage nt South Bend. Ind . July
friends. He ateo attended ths Home
coming celebration *' ~
Barryton
--------— 26 Congratulations and best wishes
Mr and Mrs. Ree Wilcox did pa­
Monday.
A good many from here attended per hanging for Rev. and Mr,s. Wil­
tho annual ox-ronst held nt Clarks­ kins Sa turds v
Plans are being made for a Home­
ville last Thursday
Announcement is made of Hie coming celebration to be held here
marriage of Ml*-' Marguerite Ycltcr lhe 2fllh of Aug AU the details have
of this city, daughter of Mr and not been completed. Keep the date
Mrs Clair Yolter of Hastings and in mind and plan to attend.
Percy Rosser now drives « n
Haney A Kenney of Lansing, win
of Mrs Alex Kenney of Pierson,
Roy Nagler was called to
the ceremony taking place at , 3
o'clock Saturday at the home ot twr Muskegon last week on account ot
Crents Rev A F. Wynn of Wood- the illnes.' of her father Mr. Moqlid officiated Maurice Hendrick­ ton At last report he was aomeson of this city sang, "At Dawning." whal improved.
Mr and Mrs
Earl Wallace of
and • 1 Love You Truly " Tn the
•redding party were Miss Harriet Carlton visited Sunday at the home
Compton of Grand Rapids and
Donald Roder ot Lansing After a Reuseii
Oeo Van Overen of Grand Rap­
short wedding trip in northern
Michigan the bridal couple will be ids. formerly of Clarksville, has tak- r
j
at home tn Lansing Mrs Kenney en over the building and fixtures
Ls a graduate nurse al City General
hospital herr Mr Kenney te In the rd two young men who had been ; 3
engineering department nt Lamslng dcr the name ol George s Tavern." , H
Mrr Ann Walton entertained Mr
G R Pres' July 29 Congratula­
and Mrs Rnrl Ulrich of Lansing over
tions.
Mrs. Vivian Anderson ha* re­
Consldcrabte
excitement
was
turned to the Dr Wedel home after
a month's abacncc While gone she created in town Saturday afternoon
enjoyed an au:o trip through the when Deputy Neal Karvhrr arrest­
ed I wo young men who had been
and Mrs William Anderson and
th'
daughter of Alto. They spent .wme turned over to AUtlwrltles

15c
10c

Root Beer Extract
EARLY JUNE

PEAS
SWEET. TENDER
CORN 5S2 SU­
BSETS FANCY CUT
TUNA FISH

JELLO

WJA”

3 4L2* 25c
St.' 10c
3

25c

3 c-

13c

FAX CT UOHT

ICE CREAM POWDER

MUFFETS. Wheat Biscuit
WHtATIIS. Wheat Flakes

SHREDDED RALSTON

PILLSBURY'S FARINA
TAPIOCA STAR PEARL

CM

3

Pk«&gt;

15c

25c

■

■

1■

pkg. 25c
10c

pkg. 7c

SALE!

To Make Room For
NEW FALL SHOES

All Whites Sacrificed Irrespective
r of Original Price
Children's Play Sandals

_.79c

Women'i Whites $1.69
Man's Whites$2,28

€rue9s Shoe Store
NEXT TO CITY BANK

PHONE 2176

$69

-RISE AND
HEER AMERICA

MILLER FURNITURE CO

EVERY NIGHT

PHONE 2226

HASTINGS

FOODS/
future use—oiloteonsistent 'Every Doy Low Prices'

I &gt; I V" r*
1 |C I Li
I

Lb

CXA/IET’C CHEESE
OVVIrl PREMIUM

TOMATOES

IOc

SPREADS AM£piMtNTOllCK 2 V4-lb. pkgs.
CAN
CORNED BEEF
EVERGOOD

SUNKIST lemohs

ORANGES

Medium Sixt, Sweet Juicy

FREE!

IRIS RHIZOMES
ONE WITH EACH 25c PURCHASE

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY!
LOVELY HYBRID BEARDLESS SPECIES THAT BLOOM
IN A VARIETY OF COLORS. NOW IS THE TIME TO

PREPARE YOUR IRIS BEDS FOR A FANFARE OF COL­
OR NEXT SPRING PLANTED ALONG PATHS. DRIVE­
WAYS AND IN ROCK GARDENS THEY ADD A DECO­

RATIVE NOTE OF COLOR

VELTMAN'S OVEN FRESH
DUTCH SPICE. CHOCOLATE AND LEMON SQUARES
LB
BUTTERSCOTCH, COCOANUT TAFFY RARS. BUTTER COOKIES

No. 2l/g CANS

pkg. 10c
2 pkgs. 25c
pkg

Cl®

c®

Sola and Either Chair/ only

TOMATO SOUPSZS 2 “»s 15c

•‘HIS"

WHITE

Picture this Suite in YOUR Living Room!

OI ID “BEST YET” HARD KANSAS WHEAT 24ilb- Ba&amp; 77c
IOc El
rLvJUK GOLD MEDAL or PILLSBURY’S 24} lb. Bag $1.09

PORK &amp; BEANS
LARGE 30 OZ. CAN

SARDINES

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Rouse of
Battle Cteek spent Sunday at the
Green home. Mr. and Mra. Claude
Mayo of Maple Orove. Mr. and
Mrs. Manson Stanton and children
ot Assyria and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Qreen spent the evening there mak­
ing a total of 50 callers there Bun­
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkin* and
son Ray have been spending a few
days visiting In the northern part
of Michigan
l Mr. and Mrs Harry Latta, for­
merly of this place, are the parents
of a baby girl bom July fl.
Thera were no items here the past
I month as the correspondent was
quarantined for scarlet fever Little
Joyce Lapham and Lots Tripp were
the victims.

A truly royal present for the home ! This fine living room suite is very
ell and strongly made, and is so nicely upholstered in a range of beautiful
coverings. Note the richly carved wood frames on each piece !

Foods for August Appetites ond Pontry Stock for

CIDER VINEGAR

Doretha and Marguerite Scott of
Battle Creek are visiting al the
homo of their grandparents. Mr.
and Mrs. George Scott.

AUOUST

MID-SUMMER
iC.THOMAS STORES;

1 adeiphla, Mo, when they plan on
I vfgiling Mr. Mid Mn. Ohaz. Cramer
and other relatives
Miss Helen
' Skidmore will accompany them.

Myrtle Castelain, who is very ill.
Mrs. Emma Cole of Battle Creek
and Mrs. Elsie Casteleln are also

YANKXE BFB1NGS. ,
Church services every Bunday
Sunday School at 2. preaching at 3.
Rev. R. a. Houghton, pastor.
The sick In our community are
some belter. Mr* M. E Maze get­
ting better slowly; A- L. Groves is
improving; Rollo Johnson is out
after having the (lu.
The Sager baby boy a new comer
in our community te doing nicely.
Mrs Georgia Gardner from Kal­
amazoo ha* been earing for her
mother. Mr* M. E- Maze, for a few
days.
Getting pretty dusty In Yankee
Springs
The road.- need some­
thing to lay the dual, so people can
drive in safety
Last Sunday a nice chicken dinncr at Mr*. Hummel s in honor of ,
QUIMBY
Rev R a Houghton. It being hte
I The StxUter and Quimby schools birthday a good time reported.
t picnic will be held at Thomapplc ।
j lake Thursday. Aug. 13 with a pic- j
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
, nlc dinner
The Slrlker-Qulmby school pic­
i Mrs Clyde Holme* and son and nic will be held August 13th at
Mrs. Gaylord Holmes of Assyria , Thnmapple lake For further par­
! were guceU of Mrs. Myrtle Caate- ticulars call George Scott, prcslleln Wednesday,
dent
.
। Mr, and Mrs, Glenn Kellogg and
Mrs. Arthur Houghtailn Is caring j
।1 daughter?
“ for her daughter. Mrs. Henry San- I
daughter* attended'
attended the
the ’Kellogg"re
Kellocs re, union al Millan Park. Kalamazoo, rtecn of Hastings, who has a little .
| Sunday.
son. bom last Tuesday
Leota Lapham of Maple Grove is I
assisting her with her house work I

Mr. and Mrs Frances Haight and
children of Grand Rapids and Alice
Bowerman of Hastings spent Sun­
day with James Bowerman and son
Jim
Mrs James Slorkan entertained
FREEPORT.
time with relatives In Montana
company from Grand Rapids and
and Mrs.:
Mrs. [They
report “
a very enjoyable «■»»
trip
The farm home of Mr ana
»**c* •'!»"
Hastings Sunday
John DeWcerd wa* completely de- *nd cooler weather and more rain | Mrs. Ed Gass and daughter Marv
Work te progressing nicely on the
ac had here
Elinor of Flint were lhe week end Yankee Springs park Several men
stxoyed by fire of unknown origin. than ~
Friday afternoon, possibly caused by
Mr and Mrs. Victor Sisson and CUesU of Mr and Mrs Albert Klnne are at work fishing on the lakes in
sparks cm the roof from a cook daughter. Roberta, were in Grand , Laverne returned with them on the park now They are finding dif­
stove No telephone was available, Rapid.- on business Tuesday. Mrs. &gt; Tuesday for a visit.
ferent kinds of fish Tao sword fish
them ।j Mr.
and
a passerby rushed lo Freeport to Emma Sisson accompanied
.
— —
— Mrs. Clark
•• Oversmith
son -have moved- to Carlton
call the fire department, but It was and
and xnent
spent the
the dav
day with
with her
her son,
Center
too laic to save lhe building. A very Winfield and family.
i Mr and Mrs George Rag Is &amp;lhThe Cheewmsn family had a re­
few content* were saved. Mrs. DeMartha Jean and Patsy Ruth We- er and Dave Rag La spent part of union and picnic dinner at Street­
Weerd was in Hastings and Mr del were guests of Marietta Camp- ’last
*"* week
------• • near crystal
with Mr. and ers landing Sunday
TYiey also
DcWecrd and *on were in the held bell at Hastings Saturday forenoon. Mrs Ed. Whitney.
drove around Gun lake and Mud
digging potatoes.
They have the, M1M Agalh« Loomis of Saranac
The Vacation Bible M*hool Is go­ lake on their way
home they
sincere sympathy of their neigha Sunday guest of Gerry and ing fine with sixty enrolled Next called on ....
Mr
....
and Mrs
bors and friends
Ruby Newton.
Sunday evening. Aug. I. there will Green
Those In the party were, ’
Martha Jean and Palsy Ruth----Mr -------and -----Mrs. Victor
.
Sisson and be a program following the two , Mrs. John Cheeseman and son ,
Wedel entertained a group of girls daughter.
2' ' . 7.
Roberta
'
left Thursday weeks' school.
। &amp;rl. Mr and Mr*
John
morning
at their home last Wednesday aft- :::
—‘~z for Fairmount, Ind., - to
ernoon tn honor of Roberta Ste- &lt;p*nd several weeks with Mrs. Siseon's second birthday. Ten girls l son'* parent-, Mr and Mrs R. B
were present Ganics were played Carter Mr
Sisson ‘
Typical dualIng outfit for protec ting one of Michigan's major cash
crops. Experiments show' thia to be effective but that liquid pressure
apraying gives greater protection at less cost.

Mr and Mn. Clarence Hammond
Mr. and Mn. Jamas CoUlaon of
Cloverdale and Mr. and Mn. Dale of Hastings called on Mr. IM Mra
Hostetler of Kalamazoo visited at B. L. Houghtailn Bunday before
Robert Vrooman's Wednesday.
leaving later In the week for PhilMT. and Mrs. CMteleln moved
their furniture home Saturday and

doran

2Qc

dozen

^5 C

15c
17c

IOc

Alice Brand Ki1’■ _5e
Irradiated
3 tall cans 22c

TOMATO JUICE,
PET MILK,

bar 5c
bars 9c
NO-RUB SHOE WHITE, large bottle 19c
SUNBRITE CLEANSER
2 cans 9c
CAMAY SOAP

GUEST IVORY SOAP

2

C. THOMAS STORES
I2A WEST STATE STREET

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANNER THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1»|8
THREE CORNERS.

CARLTON CENTER.
Mr. and Mra. Elmer Walters. Don­
The hour for church servicer at
na and A1IM of Battle Creek called the local Methodist church has
been changed from morning until
Walters. Sunday evening.
evening during the month of Au­
Friday afternoon guests st the gust. Preaching will be held at eight
o'clock each Bunday evening, Bun-

BOOST BRUCKER

|

HINDS CORNERS.
Phen la Wilkinson ot Kala-

lllng friends In tills neighborhood.
The bam on the late Hub Ctisey
farm burned with all IU contents
Bunday morning
Marian Tobias
Is
spending a
week In Kalamazoo with her father.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias.
Mra Mell Hendershott and son
of Kalamazoo spent from Thursday
Uli Sunday with her parents. Mr.
and Mra. C. N. Tobias. Her moth­
er accompanied her home for a

Mra. Mary Hathaway spent Bun­
day afternoon In Hastings with her
children.
The Cedar Creek Cemetery Cir­
cle will have a picnic at Pair lake
at lhe Bunnell resort. August 15thBunnell church basement. Hope to
see al) the members out. Come with
well filled baskets and table service
for your family and have a good
time.

OBITUARY.
Florence August* Tindall, daugh­
ter of Win. and Roslna Tindall, was
bom near Tiffin. Ohio. Aug. 25. 1859.
and died at the home ot her daugh­
ter, Mrs. Elgin Mead, of Morgan,
July 28. 1938. At an early age. she
' came with her parents to Hillsdale
county. Michigan and In 1817 she
married Peter E. Trumpet. To this
union four children were bom: Mrs.
W. R. Craig. Paul E-. and Mary who
preceded her tn death leaving the
eldest, Mrs. Elgin Mead, with whom
she has made her home of late. The
husband passed lo the Great Be­
yond seven ye*« ago. In 1891 they
moved to Hastings and In this vi­
cinity has spent the remainder of
her life. In 1884 she was truly con­
verted and remained true to her
God till the end. She was the last
charter member of the Hastings U.
B. church. Besides the daughter
she leaves nine grandchildren, and
eight
great-grandchildren.
and
numerous friends. Truly, all who
really knew her will say she kept
in touch with liar Redeemer and
was an Influence for the right The
funeral was held Thursday. July
30. at the church in Morgan, the
Rev. E. O. McSherry officiating.
Burial In lhe Valley Home cemetery.

big three weeks with relatives in
Tustin, relumed home Thursday.
Don't forget lhe Brush Ridge com­
munity efub at Head lake Bunday.
Everyone cordially invited.

FOR SENATOR. I Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sabin. Mrs.
Several republicans of this city. I connte Olson of Kalamazoo. George
who favor Wilber M- Brucker tor' Wayne of Plainwell ’In company
United State senator, met In the ; wRh Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ferguson
supervisors' room at the court house j Of cloverdale and Mr. and Mrs.
Monday evening and perfected a Otto Pranshka enjoyed a picnic
temporary
organization.
They dinner at Head lake Sunday.
named Adelbert cortright chairman
Clinton Hom of South Shultz
and Allan C- Hyde secretary. A com­ spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
mittee was named to visit the dif­
William Anders.
ferent townships this week. Next
Mr. and Mrs Louts Ferguson of
week Monday a meeting will be held
hi the American Legion hall to com­ Cloverdale called Friday evening at
plete a county organization and to the home of Mr and Mrs. Otto
arrange for a big Brucker mass Pranshka.
meeting lo be held here later

Hammond of Leming end their each Sunday morning.
You are
house guest. Mlu Meng ot Hint cordially Invited to attend these
end Mn. Post of Hertings.
services.
Friends of Mrs. John Usborne are
family visited their daughter. Mar­ glad to know site la gaining and It
gery. at Quimby Sunday.
Is expected Dial she will soon be
Sunday callers at the Clair Yelt- able to come home from the iwaer’s—Mr. and
Mrs.
Emmanuel pltal.
Yeiter and grandsons. David and
Mr and Mrs. Sherman Oler of
Richard Jacobs of Ada and Mr. and Grand Rapids spent Sunday with
Mrs. Harvey Kenney of Pierson
the latter's sister. Mrs. Elmer Mar­
POWERS ECHOES.
Floyd Walters and daughter. low.
Little Florence Ferguson of De­
Marian, of Grand Rapids called at
The ladles of the Methodist troit Is visiting at the home of tiw i
the Edw. Walters home Bunday eve­ church entertained with a miscel­
Misses Almira and Nel) Reed.
ning.
,
laneous
-4,cvu. shower
»&lt;mwer in
U. honor
nunur of
oi Mrs
mn
Palmcr ana aeonte Bed- 1
David Robinson entertained the
°l foW are attending the 4-H Club
leader. Clare Williams and mem­ the home of Mrs Fred Henney. cjun ot stewart lake
bers of the pleasant HUI 4-H Live­ Thursday
afternoon The afteroltd
Ml.|Ilng of Glendale '
was pleasantly spent In visit- w “a l“o h«
v^UnTai
stock Club. Tuesday evening. After noon
.Ina and. In llalj-tllna -------- W VU.
WI1U. .UlAi UVtil
VIAJIUIK
Ilk
in Quinol
h— uuflfiil Ii .
.
.
. Mnt
*
the business meeting, games were In,
and In Uaunln, to
o, h„
enjoyed followed by refreshments of Pluto mlo. by Mr. Jonk Loomu M, „.a M„ A„lm,
Ice cream and cookies.
or Buonoc
Tbr brldr received [ht
monU,
n,dB&gt;. „com.
Mr. and Mrs James Hammond many lovely and useful gifts DaUi- . ponying her aunt. Mr*
Carlton I
were---------served
and Natalie of Lansing and Mr. and ty
•“ refreshments
------------------------------*
1 Smith, ond family to their home ।
The carlton L A. 8- will hold an'*­ | in Cleveland, traveling from there
Mrs. Leo Fisher of Hastings were
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. other ice cream social at Carlton
in 1 by bus to her home
Claude A Hammond. Little Natalie Center. Thursday evening, auk
Mr*. Miner Palmer is visiting her
remained lo visit her grandparents 13th. Home made Ice cream and ions. Richard and Russvll, in Deand family.
P,bo™' f
"n‘11 ‘’ar. Arthur Heydenliers .nd ehllMr*, male McGarvey, who has
o! Ot„dvdlt
„v„.l
been visiting her brottier and wife. under lhe doctor’, core with oeu- \
...
„
■ ™ .
. 1 days at the home of tier uncle. MinMr. arid Mr*. Edw. wallers, re­
Mr. and Mrs. Garcia Tbcher of ,
___
' "
turned to her home in Grand Rap­
Lansing were week end guests of
Ids. Wednesday evening
their son. Mr and Mrs. Gerald |
PODINK.
Clair Yeiter and Andrew Slut were Tlscher, and family. Sunday the two , Mr and Mrs Frank Waters and
in Lansing Friday on business.
families attended the Henney re- ! daughter.
Mary have
from
aaugnirr. muij
nave returned
rciuineu num
Mr. and Mr*. Maurice McGarvey. union at Pallasburg park.
their trip thru northern Michigan.
Hazel Muchler. Gerald and Doreen
Mr and Mrs Floyd Todd and Mr
Mr and Mrs Theron Cain are
of
Grand
Rapids
visited
at
the
home
—
--------------------------- ---------------- and Mrs. John Shupp visited Mrs
making a visit in New York and
of Mr. and Mfe. Edw. Walters Wed- I Jessie Shupp In Galesburg Sunday will attend the wedding of their son .
nesday afternoon.
Bernard.
GLASS CREEK.
Mrs. Marthn Brown and daugh- I
Mr and Mrs Roy Erway. Mr and ter Janette will entertain the D p 1
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Mrs. Ward Erway and Miss Esther D’s. Thursday for dinner
► I
We had a very good service at
Erway
spent
Sunday
with
Mr
and
Mr and Mrs
Amll Bauchman 1
lhe Wood schoolhouse Sunday. Ood
Mrs. Geo. Shipman al Flint
visited friends in the northern part I
seemed not far far away Those who
Mr
and
Mrs.
Fred
Oils
accom
­
of lhe state last week and report It[
do not attend miss something. 8 8.
panied Chas Erway to White Cloud drier there than here
where they spent the week end with
Mr and Mrs R B Gardner and 1
Invited to come. Prayer meeting
Mr and Mrs Edwin Buckland
Mrs Geo Ransom spent Monday tn
Wednesday. Aug. 12 at the school­
Mrs. Sara Erway, Mrs Clara Rob­ Grund Rapids
house. Mra. Sidney FUleld. leader
inson. Maurice. Homer and Junior
Mr and Mrs Fred Smith and Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kidder. Mr Erway visited Rankin Hart and
and Mrs. Melvin Smith have re­
and Mrs. Wellington Kidder of thb family near Head lake Sunday
turned from a 10-day trip thru lhe
street and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jor­
Louis Havens of Battle Creek west
dan of Hastings attended lhe Kid­ spent the week end with his par­
der reunion at Clear lake Bunday.
ents.
FAIR LAKE.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Demond and
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Whittemore
Chas Pixley and family attended
little daughter were dinner guests of near Delton spent Sunday al the Pixley reunion Sunday near
Sunday of her parents. Mr
and Chas Whittemore's
Bedford
Gordon Havens spent Sunday at
Mrs. Ear) Engle.
Arthur Knowles ot Michigan Cen­
Vernon Engie goes some lime this lhe Great Lakes Exposition at ter visited relatives and friends here
week to lake up his duties as assist­ Cleveland. Ohio.
A number from this vicinity at­
ant -pro" at lhe Blylhfleld Country
Blanche Ooldsworthy and Arthur
tended the Goodwill school reunion Longbrake of Battle Creek and Mr
club al Grand Rapids
Saturday.
and Mrs John Hustings of Jackson
Mrs. Bessie Bruce received the
Miss Virginia Warren returned to were Sunday callers at Lottie Colusd news of the death ot her aunt
Lansing Saturday after spending a lister's
Mrs. Hannah cartide, of Traverse
week with her parents. Mr
and
Chas Pixley and family went
City one day last week.
Mrs Clyde Warren.
north Monday to the cherry district
Mrs. Laura Van a man of Hastings
Mr. and Mrs Merritt Gates of
Mr and Mrs. Floyd Armour of I
known lo many here Is still very । tansing were Sunday visitors al
Hustings were guests Sunday ut
sick.
Clyde Warren's.
Hammle Armour's
Arlene Smith and Betty Kiblingcr
MARTIN CORNERS.
|
WEEKS CORNERS.
of
near Bonfield
were guests
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Traulweln and
Don't forget lhe Weeks school Tuesday of Iva and Mary Case
dxlldrtn of Morgan were Sunday I picnic at the school grounds Aug.
callers at Alfred Fisher's.
..
John Whetstone an old and reMr. and Mrs. Leslie Dickerson and
spected resident of thb place died Shirley and Mrs. Ella Dickerson vb--------- ,............
at hb home Thursday morning of
Mr and Mr* Dee Pierce of a mao who minded his owo l.nalness ao
closely that ho
he e.&gt;t
got t»
to Ih? a
test week, after an illness of several Central lake from Tuesday until
"«•“ ei„«.ir
weeks, aged 83 years and 6 day? • Saturday Mrs Ella Dickerson rehermit and didn’t hnve any bus
He b survived by a son and daugh- . nialned for a visit
I
ter. Melvin and Alice Whetstone. ।
Mr. and Mrs Fay Whitworth of
Funeral services were held from lhe the
Culver^n!
dblrlcl
Mrs Lillie
Ms'ttSin
r’itand
,U Thursday
at | “STOMACH PAINS SO BAD
Martin church Saturday afternoon
■«
»
■&lt;&gt; a
I Barlow lake.
’“■*
I COULD HARDLY WORK^
conducted by Rev. Conklin with in­
MUs Virgthne Wood of Lansing is
terment In the Fuller cemetery
Says C S Gross “After taking
8- 8 and preaching service next spending this week with Miss Jean
Bunday morning beginning at 10:30. Dickenson and her aunt. Mrs Irene Dr Emil’s Adla Tablets the pains
_
_________
I arevgone and I eat anything." Try |
Dickerson.
You are cordially Invited lo attend.
Don't forget lhe Cedar Creek C j Adla treatment on our money back ।
at •Fair
lake.
Bunnell i guarantee —Reed's Drug Store and
at Mra. Velma Demond’s for supper. C. picnic
&gt;r----- - ~~
— . —
;■ ~
7.
B. A- LyBarkcr, Druggist.—Adv.
Wednesday. Plan to be there
landing. Saturday. Aug 15th.
Remember lhe Martin. Wellman I
and Lakeview schools will picnic at
Morgan landing Thornapple lake
Tuesday. Aug. 11. Bring table serv­
ice and sandwiches and whatever
else you please. A cordial Invitation
is extended to all.
Mrs

NORTH HOPE.

BE SMART
SAVE REPAIR BILLS

DOUD CORNERS.
Don’t forget the cedar Creek L.
A. 8. supper at Larabee lake Thurs­
day. Aug. 0 Bring table service.
Mr. and Mrs. Norrb Bergman
and children and Mrs Neal of Bat­
tle Creek visited at H. Bergman*
Sunday. Bobble remaining for a
time.

^4

Dan Kam*, who has been spend- fOur hour*

KROGER STORES
|

BUTTER

-Stu

Your Money Back “

" Complete Satisfaction

MICHIGAn'mAID

OLD STOVE

38c

lb. roll

2 lb. roll 75c

CHEESE
CRACKERS

21c

DDE A
cotvrRY tj.LB
DKCAAU run &lt;&gt;r swDwicii

IOc

FRESH (.REAM

ANGEL FOOD

- 39&lt;

SWEET ROLLS

10c

•/j GALLON JARS doz. 89c

25c

Lvllle 21c

CERTO
19c

CORNED BEEF 3

OLD
WATER HEATER

65c

H »• pH-

VINEGAR

EQUIPMENT
,vrn

OR KERR JARS

49c

AND
FURNACE COIL

19c

JAR CAPS

3 .-*•

RUBBERS

OLD

EQUIPMENT j

MASON JARS

JEWEL COFFEE “■ &gt;.
Siaoulli, Ifegranl - 3 lb.

ICED TEA

OLD
REFRIGERATING f

2-5c

2.

NUT OLEO

10c

AHMOIH- FIM. Vl

3 Xs 25c

PEAS
BEANS

GREEN

BEANS

LIMA

3

27c

3

29c

3X25c

LATONIA

ALSO HOIK'I RIVER BIX l-H V&lt; -1-S (Plus 2c refundable

COOKIES

»i&lt;»

10c

WESCO FEEDS
Scratch

Egg

$2.1 5

Mash

$245

PEAS

2

25c

21c

SALMON

The famuli.- Frigidaire comes in sizes fur ever}’ family need,
start at $84.50. Liberal allowances fur old equipment. Installed fur as little as $3.00 down, 3-year terms.

Chick Grains "blj1. $259
RINSO

Dairy ph'.^in

$1 69

$3°°
-J DOWN

’«»• pH- 19c

SUNBRITE

3

13c

SEMIMOLE

4

25c

Tl1, $2 49

Starting

&amp;.B

3

BANANAS
A FOOD CHILDREN NEED! AN ENERGY* BUILDER!

4

25c

ORANGES

YEAR
TERMS

This, beautiful 1936 model, with latest feature#, special at
$74.50—was $89.50. Installed---------complete
r..te, as little as $2.50
down and 3-year terms. Trade in your old stove.

BIC HI SKY FELLOWS! MELLOW RIPE! COLDEN YELLOW!

GET A BETTER CAR NOW

YOUR

|

DOWN

°Urfam

19c

CALIFORNIA SL’NKIST

SWEET AND JL1CY

CELERY
WON’T need cash now. Bring in your old car,'
and use it as the down-payment on a better one. We

are showing the make and model you want, with good

tires —a

good battery —good

finish, and a

smooth­

running engine.

■* 7c

CH1SP. TENDER STALKS

HOME GROWN

ONIONS

FIRM. SOLID AND DRY

3 “*•

10c

DUCHESS APPLES

19c

HOME GROWN - F&lt;&gt;

We’ll give you a written 2-day, money back guarantee

on the car you choose, and arrange the

balance to suit you. Let’s get acquainted;

LOOK

THEM

OVER

U. S. No. I - WHITE COBBLERS

45c

POTATOES new

CHICKENS
MEDIUM FOWL

1935 Ford V-8 FORDOR—
Like New. only
$&gt;|QC
12,000 miles—
**33
1935 CHEVROLET COACH
Fine Con$ J Of?
dilion—
‘IfcO
1934 FORD V-8 COACH—
Fin« Con$QQC
diHoh—
»
033

1932 FORD V-8

DELUXE

FORDOR—
ONLY-

’250

FRESH DRESSED
3 lo I lb. average

» 23c

0

Trade in Your Old Heating Equipment

YEAR
TERMS

DOWN
The P»PU

lar

6

ABC

CONTROLLED QUALITY BEEF

1930 FORD Model
Fine Condilion—

’

1929 FORD Modal
COyPE—

A Coupe
$4
I 03

A $Qf?
33

BEEF CHUCK ROAST
CIIUICK CITS

BOILINC

BEEF

1214c

- 23c

ROLLED RIB ROAST
PICKLED

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
Telephone 2121

The newest Automatic Gas Waler Heater comes in sizes for
all homes. Built like a thermos bottle, holds heal for hours
without using gas. Prices start at only $34.75. Installed for
$2.50 down, 3-year terms.

Hastings

PIG

MEAT LOAF
BACON

FEET

10c

19c

1IHIRID S - SLICED

SQUARES

“■

19c

-'FILLETS of HADDOCK 2 - 27c

Featuring the famous Universal and
ABC Washers. As low as $49.50—
S3 down and 15 months to pay. ABC
and Ironrite I roner8 as low as $54.50.
Same easy terms. Ask about the al­
lowance for old equipment.

CHEAP
ELECTRICITY

Consumers Powe

�nip ITAOTTlj
BIG HaLv i Ipt
Y and SATURDQ

CHECK THESE VALUE GIVING ITEMS AND COME TO HASTINGS FOR Hl!
PINK
pink

SUGAR SALMON
Sheeting

Pillows
Silk Covered.
While they last.
Be here early if
you want one.

81 in. wide.
Just the right
width for sheets
Unbleached. A
real buy.
Yard

Each

10 lbs

Muslin

Pillow
Size 42x36
A Trade Day
Feature.

Unbleached. An­
other fcatureyou
have been wait­
ing for.
Only 400 yds. at
this price while
it lasts.

Children’s Play Sandals

50° 10c
Rinso ■■18c
HAMBURG
2ibs- 25c

Each

Men’s Sox

FFomen’a

Value* to 95.00

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Full Pint Mi 31 ANTISEPTIC SOLUTION

Original chocolate flavored

Thousands prefer thia ant­
acid-laxative for IU smooth­
ness and flavor.

Big Tube Mi 31
Shaving Cream

Favorite nib-down of athlete*
for refreshing tired, lame
muscle*. Free from irritat■“ Impurities.

IU bubbly lather Mittens the
toughest beard and smooths
the way to a perfect shave.
Men like It.
•

&lt;Rl'E*N SHOE STORE
Pliouc 2176

Next To City Bank

4 Big Values!

PORK &amp; BEANS

F. &amp; B. Wellfare
COFFEE KAMCll
129 E. State St.

.

Hastings

Hob-Nail
Glassware

Milk of
Magnesia

Streamlined

All Silk HOSE

SWEATERS

House and

TO,W ELS

Street DRESSES

"Cannon" Towels, she
tt tn. x 45 in. Pastel
shades or white with
colored border.
Limit
3 to A customer.

Plates, Cups,
JB
Saucers,
/■ v
Sherberts
SaL
price each-

™p15&lt;
Pint

Ll

Hot Water
Bottle

* ** *

Aspirin

Tablets

Fountain Syringe,

Strain,
Bottle

!***&gt;QC
Gonranteed
WV

of 100

M

**

|
X

A

I9c

Frandnen-8 Store

LlCt

REED’S

Walgreen System

DRUG STORE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

PHONE 2241

EAST STATE

TELEPHONE

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

2331

22 SHORT CARTRIDGES -gc
High Speed or Standard
2 Box** of 60 for

ELECTRIC SANDWICH
TOASTERS Special price—

TOOTH POWDER

Both for
____ _____

Color-

Tall Cans

Rexall Milk of Magnesia

Contains the equivalent of
Ito" milk of magnesia Neu­
tralises acids, polishes teeth.
flavored.
*Pteasanlly iinvujcu.

Guarai

Sweaters-Hose-Dresses-Towels

142

&amp; STEBBINS hMP
HASTINGS,
GS, MICHIGAN

Ll

CL’

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE

AND YOUR CHOICE OF ANY ONE OF THESE 6 ITEMS
Mi 31 Solution, the double-strength onfiseptic. kills germa, when used full strength*, half
strength. It is still an effective mouth wash. Frequent gargling with this solution tends to
reduce chances of catching colds and other infections that enter through the
mouth, nose and throat. TRY IT HOW !

Pint Purctest
Rubbing Alcohol

’2.28 &lt;« ’3.98

35c

FOOD

48.48

Men’s White Oxfords

89c

Finer aspirin than Purrtest
can't be made. Famous for
It* speedy action In relieving headaches and other palm.

I1^
■ IU

*1.69 ■" ’2.38

Fall Weight—JI to 40.

Pint, Rexall
Milk of Magnesia

n
i
O,Ju«

Q
O

VAN CAMP'S

Sandals, Pumps, Straps, Ties

Open Evenings Until 9 P- m-

REXALL
ORDERLIES-60's

4Qp

Last Call On Whites

CENTER

fwtive.

.... 24c

Value* lo SOc

Lowest Prices In Barry County

100 Puretcst
ASPIRIN

CERTIFIED
BRAND

79c

Children’s White Sandals ’1.19

Yard

laxative tablet^. Gentle, ef

.

Knee lengths and full
lengths. Dark or light
shade*—(Substandard*. &gt;

Better Hurry.

VANILLA

Tall Cans, each

FRESH GROUND

Belle Isle

TRADE DAYS
SPECIALS!

Electric TOASTER
Electric GRILL • *

89®
69°

DOUBLE LAUNDRY DRAIN $^95
TUBS WITH FRAME Special

COASTER
WAGON
Siting—

49

oeri

�TW» HAlTIhaS BANKtX. TUUMDAY. AUflLST A ISM

rc TPADF
DAI
JL IVniZJLf
Y, AUGUST 7 and
. SAVE DURING HASTINGS TRADE DAYS

ORHIS GREAT EVENT. SHOP

W. A. HALL

EXTRA SPECIAL!
48x48 PLAID

43c

LUNCH
CLOTHS
Guaranteed Fast

AT

Ba ird’s Clothing Store

Our Entire Stock of GOLD SEAL
CONCOLEUM and ARMSTRONG

Color—

TRADE DAYS
SPECIALS!
Dress Shirts 89c

QUAKER FELT, consisting of 1935
and 1935 Patterns, will be sold on

Popular colors and excellent mate­

Shopping Days—

rials, formerly sold for SI.50
and $1.65

43®

RAYON PLAID LUNCH CLOTHS

re

52x52 size—Guaranteed
fast colors
Each

Sweaters

*1.19

Pullover styles with cteW or

TWO DAYS ONLY

CROQUET SETS

V-necks

Home of Good Valuer
itings

20 Summer Suits

205 So. Jeff. St.. Hastings

Dixit: weaves. Palm Beach Cloth

and light height Worsteds

SPECIAL VALUE No. 1
High Grode Alarm Clock .
Several

Styles,

with

.

regular

prices up to $1 95—CHOICE

89c
SPECIAL VALUE No. 2

DINNERWARE, All Open Stock
Regular $7.95 Set$4.95

Bargain Day
SPECIALS
Soda Crackers 2 lbB°« 15c

Only a Few Sets Available at These Prices

22c

2

A Limit ad Amount

P &amp; G Soap

Regular $6.50 Set$4.39

«g95

«J295

IO tT 39c

Wheat Crispies

p^-

9c

SI* Mallets and
Bolls_____________

nA
C.03

FLASHLIGHTS
Winchester. 2 Cell.
With Batteries

jQc

s14r&gt;
THERMOS BOtTLES
I Ft.. Icy-Hot—Built "Flic
for life-time serviceI V

TIES

HANSON SCALES

A w ide range of colors, designs and pat­

Oleo

Qt. ICE CREAM
FREEZER, wood tub

terns in the smartest combinations

29c gets a 50-cent Tie

49c gets a 75-cent Tie
69c gets a $1.00 Tie
Slock up on ties now!

The Hanson All Purpose Fam­
ily Scale—Capacity
gjftc

25 Pounds___________ 03

HANDSAW
26 in. Money-Saver,
f&gt;"Fc
Warranted___________ v ■

At these prices

your pocketbook won’t even need a local

SPECIAL VALUE No. 3
A FINE EVINS OR THORENS $1.50
flQx
LIGHTER AT A REAL PRICE ................... WU

lam
RE
1241

C. B. HODGES
DEHNDAILE JEWELER

HASTINGS. MICH.

A

Homa Owned Store Full of Food Bargains

WALLACE GROCERY
WEST STATE ST.

PHONE 24M

inn rolls oi
IVV ROOFING
Slate!

anesthetic for the operation.

t.

s. nAiitn

Clothing and Shoos fdr Men end Boys
Plltrti: 2396

ASTINCS

GOODYEAR BROS.
HARDWARE CO.
HASTINGS

-PHONE 2101

SOFT, EASY AND SANITARY BEDDING
Bargain Day

will be Special Beddlnr Sale
Do

With Nails and Cement included!
BARGAIN DAY SPECIAL
BED, SPRINGS AND
HQ jjlj
MATTRESS—ONLY..........................
Iv.cfw
ll U a Simmons bed:

hat laree 31-knch

posts; good looking and wlU tail a IKc-iimr.

Roll!

n. new. sanitary (ell, with beantlfally stltchrd roll vd;«*. vary **fl and

The Home Lumber Co.
Retail lumber

building materials

of

all kinds

Hastings, mich.

Hprlnn art lhe soft cell kind with (all ha|lcal lies—Jnst the kind

ibal will enable job u&gt; have PERFECT'rwl and comfort.

MILLER FURNITURE CO

iummii

�TH1 HASTING 1 nwn THUBSDlY, AUGUST f,

ir.-T. -r

cilnatlon of trust filed, order ad-•

MOBAn COURT.

**&gt; »• W-

t*L H**el Phillip*. tt qL Inven­■
tory filed.
Ext. Edith Benham. Order allow­.
ing claims entered.
RsL Christina j. Brynttotetter. PetUten filed.
Est. Reason punn. Invgntpry filed.
’
BsL Jay U Ware.
f?c li­
cense to sell filed, order for publlMllnn
'

Eat. Anna Osttoth.
vldon of assets filed,
assets entered, order
IM. HmU H Baiter. Will rued. due entered..
Est. Louise Hyde.
filed.

Petition for diorder to divide
assigning resi­
Final account

|

H A*P Bread contains only
■ the finest ingredients.
H properly balanced. No
■ wonder its ..mericas
H Most Popular (Bread.*
B Try a loaf today.

1
|
j

B

1

LARGE WHITE a 10c
CRACKER
JACK

3

10c

Campfire
Sparkle
Preserves
Cigarettes

Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
Mr. and Mrs. Emast Farr wgz*
MORGAN.
•
Est. Trgva E. and Twila Y. Klnt- Sunday dinner guests of Rev. and
low. Petition for Gdn. filed, order Mrs. T. W. Thompson of Woodland.
appointing Gdn entered.
&gt;
'
Ladies' Aid will meet with Mn.
Est. Alda Downing Lewis. Petition Mabe) Johncock, August 13. All day
the home of her daughter. Mx» Bi­
for authority to assign assets filed, meeting, pot luck dinner, flection
gin Mead. Tuesday morning. We
order authorizing assignment of as­ of officers and to meet your sun­
sets entered.
shine friends.
Est. William L. Perrin. Reports
Of sale filed.
COATS GROVE.
encouraging word Idr evaryons.
Est. Martha E Varney. Discharge
The Birthday meeting was held
The relatives have our sympathy.
of Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
with Mrs. Edward Thompson last
The funeral was held at the F. M.
Est. Newell H. Barber. Band of Wednesday afternoon. Nettle Coop­
church at Morgan. Among thoae
Admr. filed, letter* testamentary Is­ er and Bessie Woodman
had
sued. order limiting settlement en­ charge of the program. Refresh­
tered.
ments were served by .Agnes Haight
Crock. Mr. and Mr*. Robert Ander.
Est. Fred E Gibson. Testimony &lt; and Dorothy Barnum.
son of Newaygo.
filed, order determining heir* enP. C. tying will preach next Bun­
Miss Genevieve McKUntlc and
lered.
day in lhe absence of lhe pastor.
Helena Munich of Perry, who via*
Est. Charley Collin*, petition for Clem Jordan.
Ited at the home of Mr. and Mra.
determination of heir* filed, order
E. 8. Thompson came home from
Cha*. Harrington, returned tp (hair
for publication entered.
the hospital in Ann Arbor last Fri­
home Sunday.
Est. John Wagner. Proof of will day much Improved in health.
The Mudge. Blanch, Morgan and
filed, order admitting will entered,
Mi*s Betty Gray of Union City
McKelvey school reunion will be
bond of executor filed, letters testa­ and Marian woodman of Albion
held at Thomapple lake Thiuafiay.
mentary Issued, order limiting set­ spent the week end at H. Wood­
These lovely Ladies will entertain lhe spectators ol me night show August 13. Everyone come.
tlement entered, petition for hear­ man's.
at the 1KJ8 Ionia Free Fair. August 17 to 22. Their songs will be heard
Mr. and Mr*. J.'W. Howard at­
ing of claims notice to creditors is-1 Mr. and Mrs. Claude Back attend­ during the “East" number of the gigantic production. “Rise and Cheer tended the funeral of Clyde Brown
sued
ed church here Sunday and spent' America.'' each evening of lhe Fair al 7:45 o'clock.
of North Castleton Wednesday.
ir..
tv™
i Est Wm E johncock. Bond on me day with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. '
' ......................
"" '
Mr. and Mr* Dorrance Shaffer
' sale filed, oath before sale filed.
| Brooks.
SORTHWFRT THORNAPPLE
01
Cr**k
1 E*t Sarah B. Smith. Order upThe Daily Vacation Bible school ited her aunt. Mra. Clifton Bawdy
NOKTHWLHT THORN APPLE.
. W(jlf oyeJ.
week pnd
‘ pointing Admr. entered.
will give a program next Sunday I of East Woodland, u few days thl*
Picnics are the order of the day.
Mr. and Mr*. Bordy Rowladgr gnd
1 Est Faye Donley. Inventory filed. I evening at 8 o'clock
—*"
The Brown school picnic wo* lield June spent Sunday afternoon and
I Est Florence A. Truinper. Willi Dori* coats fell and sprained her
Fred Koss of Lansing, Mrs. Ber- in Adams grove last Saturday with I evening with Mr. and Mra. Henry
| filed, petition for probate filed, or- I wrist*
last Saturday.
-------------------------nice Senslba and daughter Belly. a fine attendance. Next Saturday, Martin and family of Dimondal*.
1 der for publication entered
I Mrs.
“ is veiling Mr and Mra. Bertie Smith were
Mr*, Edith
Edith Rlchardi
Richardson
August 8th. will be the Parmelee
Olenard Earl and Bob Knight
I Est Treva E Kinslow. et *1. Bond । at her
son Arthur *.
‘
dinner guest* ot Mr. and Mrs Ar­
, school picnic in lhe Methodist base- | spent Sunday evening with Mr. gprf
ot Gdn filed, letters of guardian- . sixty
------, were
------ enrolled
------------ ---Ln lhe
— Vaca—
thur Bruetl of Grand Rapid*. Sun­ ■ ment. Everyone 1* looking forward , Mra. Stanley Earl of Kalama
1 ship issued.
1; -*
— Bible —
■—• •—
•-----«- Ruth day.
lion
school
last
week.
. lo meeting old schoolmate* and
Mr. and Mr*. Paul BlUln of Bat­
Woodman u. In charge with F. C. ■
——■
&lt; a ------------------friends.
tie Creek spent Thursday evening
PRAIRIEVILLE.
Wing, crystal Bragdon and Mr*.! EAST WALL LAKE
'
Alton Finkbelner. Mrs.
Loren with Olenard Earl.
The article from our town in re­ Frank Kilmer as teachers; Mar- I
awn vicikitv Tungate. Charlotte, spent the week
Amber Van Syckle and Marguerite
garet Coat*
andmusic.
BessieThe
Wood
in j
.
. „
., 7 * end with Mr*. George Cook at I MUI* are spending a few dayf at
gard to the dust, was read and charge
of the
attendafter pondering a while concluded
""--------- We were sorry to ■ home.
1M&lt; Bunday *1 Sunday School I&gt;*?*!
if we will have patience; everything
learn of
of Mrs.
Mrs. CCook's poor health. 1
•• *
' mozoo. Mr. and Mrs. Collins of St. learn
will be satisfactorily adjusted in was. 74 ’ _
IRVING.
. . '1 TzmHk Mr *anrt
Mr* - Oarner
n«rn.r HampUamrr■Mr. ___
*•_ Pitcher entertained
C. M- Keene of-.............
Wayland preached
nd Mrl
and■ Mra
lime. In the meantime we arc eat­
Miss Lillian Sowerby has been
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey from Grand
ing the proverbial peck of dirt so here last Sunday morning and will, lon 01 Hasting*.
confined
to
her
home with a sore
Rapids
over
the
week
end.
be
here
again
August
Ifl.
Mrs.
R.
M.
Sprague
was
taken
Shat in the future, having eaten our
ankle which Is not a very pleasant
Some from here attended lhe fu-1 quite *lck the pa*t week with
share, we will be exempt from a
Mra. Helen Miller will entertain
way to spend a vacation.
Miss
dust diet. Lets smile even If It neral of John Whetstone at Mar- pleurisy but is better al this writ- the
uit Home Economics
economics class Thuraniun- Or'
tln Corners Iasi Saturday after- Lng.
day at her home in Leighton, in
Lj r * r in bite
hurts a wee bit.
‘I'1? ,A
A large attendance at lhe Blake noon.
,
। Mr. Boerxma and family of Grand honor of the last year s leaders. Mrs.
TTX"
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Kimble and , Rapids spent the past week al their OM, Ad.™ and Mr. Rohl. Toto '
school reunion Sunday and a de­
family and a cousin from Wash-, cottage here.
lightful time is the report
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Morgan and Tlitr conference year is drawing to
valentine Buckham
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Norris. Mrs. ington attended the Kimble reunion | Mr and
Lois attended the Finkbelner re- a close and there should be » good
| Of Kalamazoo enjoyed a fish sup­ I union at Green lake Saturday.
Mary Polley. Miss Myrtle Smith and ■l Lake Odessa. ___________
| attendance
Mrs Lucy Norris spent Thursday
* •*
per at Clifford Kahler's Tuesday
The Johnson and Gibbs reunion j Mra Wm. Schenkel and Mra. Lou
in Kalamazoo; the first four called
TAMARAC.
t night.
was held at Caledonia park Sunday. N&gt;gei entertained al the home of
on Mrs Katie Norris; the lost had
Mr. and
Mr, Mr and Mr* McIver attended.
Mr. and Mrs Dorr Everett and 1
„,u Mrs. Chas. Kahler. M
Mra. John Perry for Mr*. Richard
business to attend to.
sons of Vermontville and their1
Mrs cllfford Kahler and son*
Mr and Mra. Dudley Johnson and Tompkins of Kalamazoo. Ladles
Sunday Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Garold brothers and sisters enjoyed fizhlng BUended Farmers' Day at Lansing, Orio Bechtel and friend from Leigh- were there from Hosting*. Middle­
Shepard. Mrs Lulu Shepard and and B plcnlc dinner Bl the Bert , Friday. Saturday Clifford Kahler ton spent Sunday at Gull lake.
villa. Rutland. Thornapple gnd IrvMarcella
,he
”d Smith landing on Jordan lake Bun- attended the Farmers' Union picSeveral ladles from this communi- ' lng. An had a ver/ enjoyable lime,
(union at Mr. and Mra. Leland j.y
! nlc al Grandville.
ty attended the cooking demonstra- | Mrs William Dailey (Pauling)
|
I —
—*y
“d
R L. Hibbard. Jen-. tlon at Hastings Friday afternoon. . who used to live southwest of lhe
„r. and Mrs. Ned Wilkins. Mrs. an |10Ur
Bl
station Satura
‘ are going
*“ to ’*pul
‘ on ' village
and later at Middleville died
I Will
Will Von Hom and Dwight Van | day evening on account of a wheel nle Honeysette and Mr. and Mrs. | Consumers
cooking demonstration at lhe Meth­ in Grand Rapids during the reegnt
Hom were Ln attendance at lhe , coming off. Fortunately they were Art Thomas of Kalamazoo spent odist church basement in the near
the week end with Mr. and Mrs. E. I
heat wave.
: Van Horn reunion Sunday at the traveling at a low rale of speed
The Nagels are in attendance at
D. Reynolds. Sunday visitors there I future. Watch for lhe dale, proceeds
। home of Mr and Mrs Davtd ArlMr. and Mrs. Russell McLenllhan
camp meeting at Gull lake.
were Mr. and Mrs. Boyd from Kai-1 go for the Ladles' Aid.
Up of Wall lake.
and daughter of Middleville were
The Misses Eva and Bleu Gra­
| Marjory Neil of Detroit is a guest Sunday visitors of tiie latter's sis­ amazoo. Mr. and Mrs Otto Boulter.'
BRANCH
DISTRICT.
ham
of Grand Rapids were week
Mr. and Mrs. Muri Reynolds of
'of her grandparents. Mr. and-Mrs. ter. Mrs N. McClelland.
Peter Maurer, an old resident of end guests of their grandmother,
Cressey.
i Harry Stafford.
Callers for the week end and Bun__________
this neighborhood, who has been Mra. IJllle Sowerby.
I The Rev Bates' theme for hU day at the home of Bertie Smith |
amvrs* nnwvs
in poor health for some time, died
Mrs. Leona Burger entertained
bOLTH BOWNk.
sermon Sunday will be “A Chal­ were Fred Koos. Lansing. Mr. and,
Mrs. Forest Hougton. Lenard E. I Miss Eleanor Miller, who has been at the home of his son. Lawrence. some nephews from Indianapolis
lenge" Every one welcome.
I Mra. George Woods is spending a Lott, real estate dealer of Elmdale: i attending school at Valparaiso. Ind.. Friday. July 31. Funeral service* over night recently.
The Irving people arc sorry to
wore held Monday at lhe Hasting*
rol
Mr „
and
1U Mrs Bemani L. O
Smith
,„4M1 of ...
returned to the home of her grandfew days al home
Catholic church at 0 o'clock with hear of Alton Warner's long drawn
I Mr. and Mrs Karl Krick relumed I wamerville; Arthur Eastman and parents Monday evening,
,,
.
..
' interment tn Mt? Calvary cemetery. cut illness at the home of his moth­
from a two week's stay at Chester I brother
Nelson of Grand Ledge
" and "Mrs. “Prank
'
'
-----------------------------------------------Mr.
Martin
and We e)tU.nd sympathy to lhe be- er in Vandalia.
. johncock'i Saturday. Sunday they
The community was grieved to daughter. Mr. and Mra. Kenneth . rcaved family
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bessmer and
I entertainedJ at dinner Mr and Mrs. hear of
death of
John Faulkner
Faulkner nf
of Grand Ranlri.
Rapids, vlrited
visited
nf the
thrt Jau.
nf Mrs
Jnhn
Mlu Margery Norton, who spent Mrs. Schenkel were week end visi­
Jay Hal)
------ ar
and son Richard
Winney. a resident here for many , Sunday afternoon at Will Mishler's.
J; last week with her sister* in Battle tors at Wm. 8chenkel's.
Mrs. Sarah Count and son of Has- ] ycarSi bul fOr the past year living Mr. and Mrs. Mishler and Mr and' Creek, returned Sunday.
Mra. Ada Shaw entertained one
tings called on Mr and Mra. Rob- wlth hL, daughter. Mrs Klun of , Mra J. Roush of Charlotte were
The Dorcas Society serve* home day recently a Mrs. Mtocner, who
ert McfKlbbin Sunday
Grand Rapids. She has been very ' in Grand Rapids Thursday after­
made ice cream and cake at the | was a resident of Irving forty
. . years
Hugh James Nevin is at Stewart | Sjcg fOr three months, passing away I noon.
lake with the 4-H club
. Friday Burial was at Lake Odessa.
Visitor* at Jennie Pardee's the home of Mr and Mrs George Mar- ago.
shall Friday evening of tills week, j----------------- « • *
"
U V■isltlng
‘allU‘g f,1ends
friends ln
in . She
g^e was
wa3 beloved by ail
all who knew .। pust
ust week have been Mrs. John
Aug. 7
;
HIG1IBANK.
„ wa* in
... Chicago
«... he.r|w..
i
...
Krebs and daughter
D. N Honeywell
ugh ter Erma. North
Mr. and Mr*. Vincent Norton and
Remember the Moore school re­
Miss Margery Wise, sister of Buel Bowne. on Tuesday; Miss Elizabeth daughters. Mra. Lee Mlsenar and union is this Saturday. Aug. ». on
Sunday and witnessed the ball1 Wise, called at his home Friday. Porrltt. S W. Bowne, for the week
Margery, called on Mrs. Norton's the school grounds.
Co-operative
game
She is a nurse in Chicago.
er.d; Mr. and Mra
end;
Mrs. Lorenzo
Uraniv Nash
h'„l. brother. Chief Justice Wm. W. Pot­
dinner al noon and program and
Miss Frances Doster entertained
The Enz brothers. Ford and Carl, and son Edward. Crystal Falls. Sun- ter. at his home at Wall lake.
sports in the afternoon.
al dinner Thursday. Mrs. Edwin are driving new Chevrolets.
-----------•
—
day; Mra. Hannah Lott and Francis
Crops, especially com and pota­
The
Dorcas
Society
will serve
। Johncock. Mrs Albert Bessmer and
Mra Orpha Enz and mother at­ Porrltl Wednesday afternoon.
toes are suffering for lack of rain. home made ice cream and cake Fri­
| her
Mrs. —
Bertha
McKlb- Miuucu
... . daughter,
----- „-----......
----- ---------tended UIC
the imvauij
cooking demonstration [ Mrs. Lydia Karcher was u SunMr. and Mrs Wayne Conklin of
bln of Hastings and Mrs George at Hastings, Friday.
I day guest al tiie L Scase home at Allegan were Sunday, guests of her day evening. Aug. 7. at Mr. and Mrs.
George Marshall’s. Everyone wel­
I McKlbbln of Yankee Springs.
Little
Little Oreta
Oreta Mae
Mae xMcClelland vis- North Bowne.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Darby. come.
Mr. and Mrs. Car) Mills of Indi­
ana called on Mr. and Mrs. Worth
Green Thursday.
Leo Corwin and friend of Lan­
sing called at lhe H. Bidelraan
home Saturday evening.
Visitors recently at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Hawblit*: Mr.
and Mrs. Merle Hecker and daugh­
ter Joan Patricia of Hastings: Mr.
and Mra. Lyle Jones, Mr. and Mra.
Victor Jones of Nashville; Junior
and Virginia Koffman of Battle
Creek; Mr. and Mra. Floyd Sealy of
Pittsburgh. Pa. and Mr. and Mrs.
Neal Pearson and two children of
Flint.
Mr. and Mra. Berle Nash were
guests at Mr. and Mrs- Bheltenbarger's. Barbera Comers, Bunday.
Mra Freda Marshall and Mrs.
Worth Green were callers in Ver­
montville Friday.

Est. William E Jolincock. License
to sell issued.
Kat. Agnes Bristol. Bond of Admr.
filed, letters of administration is­
sued, order limiting settlement en­
tered. petition for hearing claims
filed, notice to creditors issued.
Es|. Perry Campbell Qrdgr as­
signing residue entered.
pst. Adalbert Rice. PsUllon fpr
determination of heirs filed. Wder
for publication entered.
Est. Mason Cline. Annual account
filed.
Est. Orson B. Garrett. Discharge
of Admr. issued.
Est. Francis J. Barry. Pinal ac­
count of Admr. filed, order asslgn-;
mg residue entered, discharge of

sTi.'

||-WHfRi tCOUOMY

19c
19c
19c
*.7“ *1.15’

Corned Beef Hash
15c
Deviled Ham
— 10c
Bisquick
29c
Ajax Soap
10 'JI!.' 37c
Kirks Flake Soap 10 u™1 29c
Swansdown
23c
YUKON
Beverages Wyandotte Cleanser 2 *- 15c
55c QZ'." 65c
3--25c Mason Jars
Jelly Glasses ,/s- sl“ *»■ 35c
Mason Jar Tops
’k' 19c
SALADA
Jar Rubbers
3
10c
TEA
Tex
Wax
9c
Blue Label
Certo
UuU 21c
Sardines
3
25c
8 o'Clock Coffee
u
17c
NUT
Red Circle Coffee
£; 21c
MEATS
Walnut or Pecan
Bokar Coffee
It 23c
Baby Foods “‘‘“jJ?"”' 3 ■*" 25c
Karo Syrup
10c
Pink Salmon
2 .72, 23c
CORN or
PEAS
Cooking Oil WJE.V
23c
Knox Gelatine
19c
Fillet of Haddock 2 ,u- 29c
Gisco
19c
. t?. 55c
RAJAH
SALAD
DRESSING
Lemons L*»9»ju'cy
perjoim 3Qc

CORNED
BEEF

-- 18c

33c

- 25c

The Eight Nordic Nightingales

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YOUR CHOICE WILL BE

SPARTON

WHEN YOU COMPARE AND SEE
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BANFIELD.

3 -- 25c

t~"29c

Pears ffi?5
4^ 25c
^JFapeS
2
^^C
^3orn
25c
Apples
IO k 29c
Fresh Peas S±"“ 3 25c
Thompson Seedht*

SUCSD

Luncheon
Meat:
&gt; 15c

Full Kameled Esr*

HOST OF OTHER
NEW FEATURES

ANDRUS SERVICE IS COMPLETE SERVICEI

All st eel cabinet... flat, usabU

• xlr&gt; attention. Il gets that attention at this station . .
possibly It is only a minor adjustment ... or a little extra

top ... Balsam wood insula­
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H’s. |

par dozen

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lUuJmith B«»d
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IN KNOWING YOUR CAR IS

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DON'T FAIL TO SEE

THE NEW SPARTON

We use only high quality materials, sell only high teat gas,

Iteve lhe Satisfaction of KNOWING that year ear to
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TODAY’S BEST REFRIGERATOR BUY
Modern in every detail.

ANDRUS SERVICE •
Phnna99in
mullCtZnU Ste,

Hastings,

Batteries, Windshield Wiper*

WE CASH WPA CHECKS
PRICES PLUS S% SALES TAX

Washing

Q I I au
r*
MUrllJLU

value obtainable in a refrigerator.

Priced from 884.50 to 8289.50

Michigan

BLUE
REGULAR
GASPRICE

Beautiful in design.

The new Sparton represents the greatest plus,

MOTOR
FUEL

John Bulling &amp; Son
W—torn Union Bldg.

Hastings

AS COLD AND SILENT) AS A WINTER NIGHT!

Most of the farmers Ln this vi­
cinity have finished threshing their
grain. Wheat averaged about 33
bushels per acre and oato M bu. The
drouth Is ruining the corn crop.
Mr. and Mrs. jamas Boas spent
Bunday at Union city.
The Bonfield cemetery Circle will
picnic at Clear lake Wednesday of
this week.
Chas. Shumaker of Urbandale,
who has been quite ill. te being
cared for al the home ot
Daisy Edmonds Boas.
Rev. and Mrs. Ramond Swisher of
Whiting. Iowa, and Dr. and Mrs.
John King of Westerville. Ohio,
spent a portion of last week with
their cousins. Mr. and Mrs. Don
Putnam.
Mrs. Ernest Crandal recently fell
and fractured a bone In her wrist
MUs Lila Cornell is staying with
friends near Hastings and assisting
with the house work.

EAST GUN LAKE.
Lawson Warner and son Ira of
Cleveland, also relatives from Ot­
sego called at the James Null homo
Wednesday evening.
Gporge Wren of Oden called on
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harper Bunday.
Mrs. Helen Russell of Grand
Rapids called at the Jamas Null
home Friday evening.
Mra. Florence Bates and children,
also a friend from Grant} Rapids
called at the James Null home Bun­
day evening.
Walter Derdeyn ana R. Hanis of
Pittsburgh are spending a few days
at the former's summer homo to
be joined later by tho family.
Mrt. Mario Kufaco onlarulnod
her sister and family from Ohio tilt
past weak.

�TW WTOfW MWIfr TWVWP4T. AHQC8T L 13M

| LEGAL NOTICES |

xrsres!

X^uTTi:

voamaa «aul

Bunday.

Th« granddaughter

will (several day* hit week touring the I Thursday evartlhg

DELTON.
. WB 1 «tay there for a few days1 vialt then । northern country.
W«U DovUm and PrelrisvUk,

wfUi “relilfVer BflWeT "HT ’ahd 'Hrir. ” W." ’1

Pretty hot and near Band lake.
Flower and Homer, a co-operatl
v* P*lcM° fo* a_ttme *?d I dry &gt;hoWright Clifford and family spent
apprBclate tho fact that there are
_
return
to har home
’
*"
* In Oregon In
" ! Mrs. Clyde Sidnam and mother, Thursday evening with MT. and
others who are dissatisfied with tho
r. and Mrs. Frank Olibart and
'Ums to begin her school year.
j Mrs Simmon* of Battle Creek, Mn. Harry Mendenhall of Okieway our road jobs are being car­
Richard attended camp mwtThe Pennock reunion will be held spent Thursday with Mra.
Lula donla.
.
ried on. as veil as we are, but there
ing at Crystal springs Sunday.
„
.
.
)
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Poland.
Mrs.
at the home of Mr. and Mra. Leon'
11,in.— B
**“u ***“■ uvura®
»*r*. Hlchttd remained for revaiaj day*'
Dunning In Delton on Saturday,
r* «-WU?ur a°,omon len Bunday for Elsie Wintemute of Detroit and *1*/
August IS.
Detroit where he will attend the &gt; John Kollar spent Sunday with Mr.' The topic Rev. Bataa will ure for
ncnonl of
nf Engineering
1enalnw»r4TC« at
a. Detroit
TVwtmH and
. — a Mra. George Poland
— a —of
e rr^^^a
- ■ — —next
* —Sunday
a-. la u"A Chai­
Grand t I Llhl* sermon
Elmer Kelley ot Grand Rapids U_ School
i rtanlH*
— »Ww
—A— w4«4t_
•• W*
■ . encouraging
.
. —1—
Rapids and *tn
the .If
afternoon
visit- I. lenge."
It . I_
is —
moat
to
spending the week with hla brother. College.
Hope we can tell you next week , ed Mr*. John Kollar at Blodgett1 have a good attendance at church
dtuerent, don’t you
Homer and family.
that
we
have
our
road
fixed.
We have had a promise that our
hospital.
and
Bunday
school
each Sund»y co Pontiac
Mrs. Mary Gibson and Doreen
Mr and Mr*. John D. McMartln. 1
road leading east out of Delton will Cappon of Cloverdale were guest*
I but there are others we hope to
,
t
be tarmacked this summer if we of Mrs
HICKORY CORNERS.
j hare come; 8:M each Sabbath.
Mrs Lena Waters Thursday and David and Lot* of Glenn. Oal.. who
Ventnu
residents here in Delton will all j Friday,
Lr'u''?b!12'
“4,"OM,, Ur .nd W,. Brr,l AlWruon.
help pay for It. But when are they
«
— •Bates announces for his sub­
Rev.
iooms
going to fulfill that promise? We ject next Bunday morning: 'A
fka*r th I^r
H ftbove Vere' Williams* atore. have
helped pay for all the nice paved challenge.’
SrM^tm
rrn y
mov*d *° °*»«* Lawrence', hoore.
and tarmacked roads In lhe state I Mr. wou
and mia.
I5”?rlln *“ f0™"ly
J“}*1 f Mr. and Mrs I. O. Brady and
Mn mi
Mn.
*, ovaiuij
Ebeling ouaaia
Bosnia h
------------M"‘—
McMart
in oaoy
baby ox
of uoutn
South eena.
Bend. tna..
Ind., ana
and mt
Mr..
&gt;’. TUKRtrogZ, br »lrt«. *1 th. too; some that we never travel on. and Cleo Pennock of Kalamazoo
. cr
TL' ----- ---------------- —
ot Ml* co»t.laid In ,»ld moru.c* but still we have to live and smoth­ were callers at Mr. and Mra. John ,ef' l^niy-three
/-three veara
tn niako
/
years atm
ago to
make । and
Mrs C1jff «....
contrell and little
| * home In lhe west and thia is their [ daughter of Detroit were week-end
er In dust, eat it too. and we do Adams' Bunday afternoon.
get mighty Klcjc of 11Mra. Helen Pennock spent Thum- fl,r4t vl4lt 10 Michigan
during----------that ,, gue.vs
gllMu ot
of meir
their parents,
parents. air.
Mr. ano
and
— ---------OV and
■Mrs. B. Campbell.
Mr. and Mra. Chester BuUer and day
and Wrtdav
Friday with
with bar
her mnthwv
mother at time
Mra.
- Mr- Rnd Mrs Arnold Faulkner
Mr
amnon James. Air. and Mra. Grover Galesburg.
Mr. and
and Mra
Mra. Orin
Orin Cole
Cole and
and ffamMr and Mr*. Willard Hall and ,nd Ed«»rd Fas* of Battle Creek lly of
Dowling were Bunday
Upton and Richard and Helen, of
„C v-1________
____ _____
Mr anrf
7 .
..
.
...s.
7
Mr
r were
.k-£wrek-rnri
dJUMU nf
o( Mr
and । evening
callers
at. Glenn AsplnaU
Sandusky. Ohio, were Bunday guests children of Kalamazoo
were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dunning.
In the Fred O. Hughes home Sun­ I
Mr. N n. .r'» U ..
' Mr- and
w»yne 81l*d« and
Mra. Nellie Cross of Hastings was children of Lake Odessa spent SunMr. and Mra. Claude Kelley of day.
Mra. Blanche Richard*
mu. and
ar.u sons. ' “Uln« 00 friend» 10 Delton- Sun- day wlth thelr perer.u. Mr.
and I
Hasting*
entertained
eighteen
Une^ndiHonaliy guaranteed
also Miss Effie । aa,y,
।I Mra. O Haynes. Clayton ot
of Battle I
guests Sunday, the occasion being Clair and Paul.
aazoo. □pvui
snent auir
Sun-­ 1
C.
are Creek
end
at.
spent
Sun
In honor of the 32nd wedding an- Richards
ft*0*
• of Kalamazoo,
Iluasw.
- J- Barnum
----------- -----vrcc* also spent the week w.
— w
■•trnrimtr
n couple
erMitile of
nf weeks in ..home
. ..
Lake
Michigan,
going
by
*l*ndlng
a
day
al
Lake
Michigan,
going
by
ts
--SENTRY 4 PLY
niversary of Mr and Mrs. Homer
Standard 4 M.Y
,^a&lt;ro
haroiu
Hiles and taking
taklne Miss Ruth ■ Clc'cland andDCh
Chicago
I
Harold /v
Aaplnall has been liaving
Kelley. Delton.
It was also Ho- way
w“” of Nllea
30
x -r
3'4.
( M*"
Faulkner in company thc mUmps
-- {. $3.95
.....
440 &gt; 21, u se
mer's Mth birthday
Whew! Kel­ Richards with them
Rev and Mrs Bates nnd Mr. and '*d,h hcr
Mra. Goldie Kopf [
440 &gt; 21, *4.10
450 &gt; 20. S5.7C
ley! the years are rolling by.
MILO.
"* x 20,
....................
1
450 I 21. »S.M.
Oeqrge Mumford of Fremont wa* Mrs. Harvey Dings went to Eaton of Middleville spent the week-end
450
$4.35
Mr* Robert Faulkner ।I Twenty-two nfcmbers and one
a guest of the Kelleys Bunday and Rapids Sunday afternoon to attend , *',u’ “r
OTHER SIZES ALSO AT LOW PRICMl
camp meeting during the afternoon :
attended the party with them.
1
guest
enjoyed
the
H
L
Club
last
I
The Newton family, also the No­
LIBERAL ALLOWANCE an your eld Urea!
TYie Billman reunion wa* held at and evening.
Thursday al Bunbury inn. Gull
na. and
-a. mr&gt;
^.r.nc. Williams
wuuama I ‘’’e^WaJ,&lt;!.0'?Tu re“n,On’ Werr he,d
Mr
Mr* Clarenc*
Milham Park. Kalamazoo, last Bun­
lake, where a luncheon was served
were In Battle Creek Wednesday a‘ C ?°?cd ,ake 6und*&gt;' Ab°ut 5°
day
at 1:30,
The meeting was then
to
have
Dr
Sleight
operate
on
Mr.
al
^
nded
*«ch
one.
Mr and Mrs. H. T Reynolds and
Mr. and Mrs
Mrs. Pr
Fred Ticdgen
of‘ railed to order by the president
William*’ eye.
!I Mr
'
granddaughter went to Three Oaks
Mrs. Prouty and roll answered by a
al the ’NoCOIL POINTS
I Mr and Mra Leslie Williams en- • RoyalmOak
.tt were guests
— -•
PISTON RINGS
• poem of the month." After the
tertalned guests Sunday for a fam- I ble’‘Wal,d?r“ fcunkm. Sunday
NOTICE or MOHTOAUE SALE.
। Uy reunion in honor of the birth- 1
Mr* Bert
R*rl Patton
PaHnr' entertained 1her 1 business meeting the following proMra
। gram was given on early American
daughter. Ruth Lawrence of Battle
i crafts: "Pottery." Mrs ■ Humphrey:
Creek, over lhe week end.
1 Mrs. NewMrk- presented "Story of
ttnamc.
BRAKE SHOES
4 ■■(
CLUTCH H«tM
?H*’,Ffo»oa"r,Fk Hoi.yof^h^vluas**!
Tw° bad fire* occured again Sunlhe Willow-ware China” and Mrs.
...a... lhe WM)I1
ROBIMIUE PARK.
Chev. 25-32—
QV
brlvndne
Nsohviila. Barry Couuiv. uichican to day w.
lo which
Delton nre
fire oc
de-. | w
Ford A lines exch.
Xw
Boyce "Glassware."
The
next
partment was
was called.
called. The
The first
first was
was I। Wr
"rc ~V*°Vy
M”* meeting will be held at lhe home of
ti&lt;W‘ °''/SE lB‘ L,,AS
partment
”* *"'
’ w r‘,porl thRt mt
at VV.II n..~4&gt;a ™,i,
_1„
.a-_
taken
••«»
lh, _____
,„„m.!i. John
/»&gt;■■" Kollar
k°iu, was
— Rapids
u».n m
u, Blodgett
modm,
lng The
The bam ~Ith
with7IU
Its* contcntTof
Grand Ranirfe
Wednesday Mr*. Kraus with Mrs. Turner as­
4.Ud Jun* SUth. 1934. .nd r,cord»d In | lng
u7 : ho‘P,lAl «raM&lt;1
VALVE CORES
sistant hostess. The Galesburg M. I.
NttDU NOSS
g gOo
HOME OWNERS* LOAN COItPO
tb« offlc* of th&lt;I Hmiur of Dart* for hay. grain
grain, straw and thro*
three hnaca
hog* I ni
nlght
8hl anrt
and ul
underwent
)dC
an operation.
-r _____
fLIEkS—
XU
RATION. Morts****.
res"’ i,°L.ti’ 97 m
I-T.«. «*re burned, the horses were Ukrn 1 P‘ur,l,a&gt; w-h,ch waa unsuccessful. club will be entertained and fur­
Box of 5—
m*ii
nish the program for Reciprocity
35S. and *ai&lt; morictaaa h.,inc aiacM । out. The second wm on the Hulbert I S!ie underwent a more serious one Day A co-opcratlvc dinner will be
■
'
’•“4.3 l.-J
tono. where ,he l»n&gt; and
,L*US1
“
served.
22 SHORTS
TRAILER HITCH AAc
ition ii
The
lftt— L* ------do,n•*8 nicely.
u*. which .Uctioa
ii dm-*
do.* contents
contents also
also burned
burned
inc houses
nouses i
11-----Dr. Warren Bellinger was a guest
tmriuant «o wh.rh ibcr. nnd olher outbuilding* at
both 1 Mr* EWe W'ntermute of Detroit for dinner Saturday evening of
Malleable, ball and XM
MOTIOB TO 0BEDIT0B8
Box of 50—
: d".“*
“11 W-"« »«r»
-1U&gt; con.lder.blr I!' W™«»t • &lt;'« "■&gt;' •&gt; Ure Koh
socket JointVW
, friends on lhe island at Gull lake.
of M|&lt;hi&lt;l
.lere.t U&gt;« -am ol Nina difficulty
Several grass fires of
A trip around lhe lake was enMr
and
Mrs
Dan
Youngblood
of
•*-"»«« i“&gt;&lt; »&gt;
;joyed.
Steering Wheel
g Qc
FENDER GUIDES
Caledonia
called
on
Mr
and
Mrs
t h*»in« b«,n imihui.j carelessness of people with their ... .
,
।, John d
Bradfield
&gt;&gt;uuou »
is ..vw
now ■,
at his =v..
son
CHflord
Tuesday evening
bT
"wrv I matchM »n&lt;l
cigarette*
People I WriRht C
llf[ord piesdfty
Merle's after spending last week al
Control
Chrome &amp; catolin WW *
EFORE. I; virtue of lb, ' xho,,ld
nwpcctful and thoughtful |
Evrld Jackson Is sc—- --------*• Wal1 1"kf Hc ls much lmProved "»
with relative*
relatives at
st Oax
Oak Grove
Grove
muined in ,«id
enough of other folks' property to i *
health
health. Mr
Mr. and Mrs
Mrs Ernest
Ernest Bradtb. auintc. ,.f ,b. But. guard against destruction
Arthur■ Smith
YOU SAVE
50%
-,
. 4-H
— . member
„ r b field returned to their home in ,
•urn e*4. mtdt and era.
| fpendittR 0 few day*
d.y» at
al Hl-Y
Hl-Y C3
tamp mulh
sunday
I
ld»d. NOTICE IB REREUY GIVEN’
Mr and Mrs Elwood Eddy were -Pfndinis «
On 1W% Pure (Parafin Bare!
. , A good meeting of lhe ladies* Aid
39 PLATE, 6 VOLT
business visitors in Battle Creek at Stuart inker
Howard
Smith
and
family
spent
wo
held
at
the
hom
„
of
Mr
,
Saturday night.
Guaranteed
' last Wednesday—Mrsdame* BelllngMIm Carolinek Solomon mm
and W||.
wii. -----------------------of Ha.tinn County
ONE YEAR
bur were in
IL ‘
I er and Turner provided a very good
Kalamazoo
Friday ------ -------- -----------------;
They also called —...t. ,
i program. There were 16 tn attendIN FACTORY
edjm Kenpelh Aid25
I public auction to
Ml bld rich at Borges* hospital.
SEALED Can,.
George Mosier and family of Kai- I
Next meeting. Aug. 19. at lhe home
NOTION TO CBBDTTOB8
2 Gai.
amazno were callers tn the F"
ExcK
a which ma , homes Saturday evening.
Mrs Schultz entertained com­
Others up
pany from Chicago last week.
on ।
V. Smith, a practical!
For Only
In honor of Mr and Mrs Clyde
...id nurse of Maple Grove Center, is I
by th. uudrr.irnrd. with iniere.t thr-r. now working in the Mrs. Luclna 1
Moreau of Chicago. Mrs
Flower
INSTALLED FREE!
on par...., to U- .oS to th.
hofne H„r
.
and Bernice entertained—Mr. and ,
I delayed several weeks by an illness
Mrs C. F Moreau. Augusta; Boyd I
Hastings, Mich.
Phono
| The annual meeting of the Inland 'I Wiuua Ji
74 boor*
b—
Moreau. Battle Creek; E. M Cad. Lakes Garden Club will be held iH.Vb*
wallader, Dr. Warren
ThUirdaV
Atioii.t it
Thursday Afternoon
afternoon. August
13( nt 1
the home of Mra Beatrice Dunning Ilk. . no
it win dm
Roll call answered by giving a
OLD CHIEF
"House plant rd like" Program
prepared by Mra Lavera Erb. Elec­
SERB
tion of officers and members pay •bout* thorou«bb
MEDICINB
dues al this meeting
MIm Kathryn Horton will go Wrdto a ppm dldtii
■ OTICB TO CXEDITOBa
rb.um.Uim, nzur'.tU
Stewart lake. MU* Leatrlce Dunn­ Old Cbttf U * prsttn
. lng will go Friday and lhe two girls
will give before the camp a demon­ SlfttiDa anfl tlaAUn* Sold *l
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO
stration of correct and incorrect
J?*!10.1*- MwUaate.
WALGREEN SYSTEM
dlrrfn D. Ualktwi,
table etiquette
DRUG STORE
'
....
Mrs. Llda Harrington, tn como»t io " is P«ny with the Dunn family, spent PHONE 2241
HASTINGS

MARK'S STORES, I

EXTRA VACATION VAL

BRUNSWICK TIRE!

TIRES MOUNTED FREE (

,rv

HOMK OWNEIIH' IXJAN CORPO
RATION. Mortoio.
oi.ENN d. Mathews,
Attorney for Mnrtraar,
Ionia. Mirhlsin.

BANKRUPT CT NOTIOB.
litrlct Canrt ot lb* Unlud ataUu
4tn Dbtrict of Michigan. Southern DI­

» r..din&gt; th, u.tlllnn by ..Id Hank
iPl. for dtii-h.ro, II I.
ORPKRED BY *THF. COURT th.t

15c

INVADER BATTERY

Motor Oil

dialrirl. 11 in
'.&lt;! In

tf
AMI IT-IB FURTHER ORDERER RY

Big’l

$2—

‘^Bottle

79c

49'

ORDER TOR PUBLICATION.

Take a peek at this.

REED’S

THE
NOTICE TO OBBDITOBB

MOTIOB or MOBTOAQB BAU

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.

..Id n&gt;«l«u» .1 &lt;k« dm &lt;
for rrinrlr.l .nd lnt«r*al Ik
■ m at Ob. Thooiaad Om Huadrad BarHr two and 99/100 Dollar. (11.173.98)

Fii"" lo th

NOW. THEREFORE. br
*f lb.
&gt;w.r ol ».l. «oal.|».d ta .aid mort
— —
ot Ik*

kJBkS

OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION.

:I r

FARMERS!
WE PAY HIGHEST
MARKET PRICES
FOR YOUR GRAIN

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
tflirS’kiU. Hatiltar ot Probata.

BUILDS

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

See Us Before You Sell!

"The Farmer Owned Store

CO

TELEPHONE 2176

AND ALL OTHER KINDS

HASTINGS

LUMBER

HOMES

• WHEAT
RYE
• OATS
• CORN
• BARLEY

. r 1;

HOME

WOODLAND

�Tftg HASTINGS B.iNNtB,

New Glass Stretches, Rolls Up
A

aaw' safaty

preaeat

famib

proof variety

stretched like

• rolled up like si
Here to

It underwent In
a recent New
stratlon.

After

with his family Friday evening He
has some more time in school nt
Ann Arbor He says It's pretty het
to study, but Is enjoying his work
there
i No boulevard lights Wednesday
; evening, Just when we needed them
• as all the stores were open for busiI ness nnd aka had « street pohtica)
I meeting. We are wondering why we
' are not entitled to n man here to
look after their lights as we had

plastic called
vinyl
between

person thrown
against it will

.

Free Your Animals from Flies
Give your animals the protection they deserve.
Dr. Hess Fly Spray is fully guaranteed to give
instant and lasting relief. Simple to apply—

one application will give protection for as
much as 24 hours; in rainy weather. 12 hours.
All flies coming in contact with Dr. Hess Fly
Spray are instantly killed, eliminating

the

possibility of their reviving. Try a gallon and
if you are not entirely satisfied we will
refund your money.

Priced ot$1.00o gallon, in your container
• SAFE

• SURE . .. » RELIEF!

Diff's Loose Lcof Simplified Bookkeeping System, $3.50
Suitable for all business and fart{i bookkeeping

nec/’AescMp&amp;oH,
PHONE ZIIS

AUGUST &lt;, 1»M

I BARRY COUNTY REPUBLICAN
MIDDLEVILLE.
, SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
CONVENTION.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Cassel and
The remains of Mrs. Harriett;
Brainbridge of Lake Odessa, aged 1 At court room. Hasting*. Tucaday. sons of Middleville were Sunday
75 years, were brought here for Sept. 22nd, al 11 o'clock A. M , East­ dinner guests af Mr. and Mrs. Ployd
Van Wie.
burial Tuesday last, burial being ern Standard Tima.
The Republican county Conven-'
Fhoebe Oaks of Hastings;
on the Gates lot. Mrs. Brainbridge
on ...
for the purpose
Electing. »I sJ*nt S^iday wlUi her sister. Mrs.,
lived sou tli of town many years tlon
___ of
_________
elegates and alternate delegates to ®tto Townsend.
ago and will be remembered by the delegates
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Wotrlng.
olderz residents around here.
the Republican State convention
Howard and Mrs. Getty, who for- 'and to transact such other business Laird and Betty spent Sunday aft­
merly lived here and moved to thal may legally come before it. will ernoon with Mrs. Maud Wotrlng in
Nashville.
be
held
at
the
court
room
al
Has
­
Rockford, have relumed here and
r. ocut. O..U av ill- Mn Russell Kantner of Hastings
are located in Mrs Matlie Lynd's tings on Tuesday. Sept. 22nd. at 11
Eastern Standard
Mr’- c*rl Wwplnter Jr., and
house on Arlington street Welcome 'Time* A M
qwmmumu■. ar.,,
u nf
cad4
Zd on Uv-a Q
Uy
11^,4
fliiu
back to you both!
Mrs. W. D Hawkins left by bin i The State convention will be held
and
Mth
r
^
d
n
R
o
,
el^k
0
m
7
the
’
taw^
&gt;t
'
Mrs
Gardu
'
er
of
Battle
Creek
spent
for Chicago on Wednesday to visit
a daughter there for a "few days.
29th. at 11 o clock In the forenoon. । q..ndav evenkna with Mr and Mrs
for the purpose of nominating can: g^toL ttXr
Mrs. John Kollar was taken to
Blodgett hospital. Grand Rapids.
ol
Btati
State,looJc
Rmlth to Bat­
Wednesday evening to undergo an cis, secretary
operation. Her many friends hope Treasurer. Auditor General. Atlor- tlc Crceg gunday morning en route
ney General and one Justice of the I
Cain Mack_ 7lnd wherc tlw W|U
for a quick recovery
Supreme Court to nil vacancy, and | s
ite mt o? the
Supt LeRoy Bell returned home

for
the transaction of such other
:
business as may properly come be1rotc u
Delegates to the County Convenlion shall be elected nt the Septeinber primary, and shall be one for
every seventy-five votes cast for the
Secretary of State al the last electier, and shall be apportioned as
follows.

famU 3pent lhe day ,t OuU Uke
Mr an^ M„ Jwph 8mJlh and
daughter. Mr and Mrs Sherman
Smith and grandsons of Hastings,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Van Wie and
MIm Phoebe Oaks called at the
Chas. Farlee's Sunday evening.
Miss' Jean and‘ “
Elnora
Kantner
*"*
*
""
left for camp Sebewa near Sunfield
Monday afternoon where they will
spend a week.
.

jane Arlene, congratulations.
Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Kenyon spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John
Thomas of Ute McOmber district.
Mr. and Mrs. William Bonneville.
Susanne and Billie ot Battle Creek
and Gordon Kenyon of Hastings vis­
ited the Lester Sonnevllle’s Sun­
day.
Mrs. Ada Ashby attended a mis­
cellaneous shower at Mrs. H. H.
pumpe’s at Wall lake cottage Wed­
nesday given In honor of MUs
Wilhelmina Bush of Kalamazoo
whose marriage will lake place this
month. Fourteen guests were pres­
ent and all had a delightful time.
All remember lhe dale. Aug. 6
the Shultx community picnic
Crooked lake.

0BDER FOB pmtOAno*.
•T Mkhlna. th.
r.._jtU o»lc« la th.

rU»,

B

NOW. THEREFORE,
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mr. and Mra. Joe Matthews en­ r&gt;C* and par.tunt ta I
8t*lf of lilt bleu la saMi &lt;•&gt;» mad* aad
tertained a company of old friends BrwviJtd. NOTICE IN HEREBY GIVEN
Thursday evening In honor of Mr.
Matthews' sister. Mrs. Mattie Rodes,
and daughter. Ethel, of Dawson.
North Dakota. Mrs. Rodes left Burry county about 50 years ago and
enjoyed
—‘—-* :meeting
----- “— old friends,
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Vanderbrook
and lhe Laubaugh children have
been enjoying a week of fishing at
Podunk lake.
Gus Whltrlght of Charlotte Is vis­
iting his brothers. Ed. and John
Whltrlght.
Mr.. Grace McCann of Irving
spent Friday with Mra.
”
’
Camp
.

CLOVERDALE.
There will be a Townsend meet­
ing held at the Cloverdale town hall.
Friday evening. Aug nth. Principal
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
speakers will be Felix A. Racetie of
Paw Paw and E. J. Moore of Kala­
mazoo
Little Ruth Christenson of Rut­
land spent s few days last week
•
i with her uncle. Frank Barnard.
Dr Frank Carrothers.
Dona Marie Penncls entertained 'fc*1
Chrmn Barry county
Miss Margaret and Miss Rosemary
Republican Committee
u
Kellogg of Kalamazoo last week.
C W Clarke.
Miss Frances Kingsbury 13 work­
Secy. Barry County
big at the Virgil Monica home
Republican committee.
Ralph Rogers of Grand Rapids.
July 29th. 1936.
Mrs. Melissa A^hby and Mr and
Mrs Fred Ashby &gt;nd son were Sun­
'
PINE LAKE.
day guests of Mrs. Martha Cham­
Mr and Mrs
Harry Freeman' ber lain.
'
spent the week end in Webberville I
Mrs. Wm Buller and friends of
ORDEB FOR PUBLICATION.
with their son. Basil.
Kalamazoo were Saturday evening Stair
Mary Brouard and Dorothy are' visitors of Mrs. Grant Dickerson
spending the week at Lake Michigan I and Mrs. Murtha chamberlain
prvbalj
the guests of Mrs Hawks and Will- I Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ferguson ac­
etta of Lansing
companied by Mr. and Mrs Sav- "
Mr nnd Mrs Earle Stone and Ings and Mrs. Connie Olin of Kai- pr»b*i
Kenneth of Ashland. Ohio, are amkzoo and friends of Plainwell at­
spending their vacation
cation with her &gt;, tended a picnic ai Head lake Sun­
grandmother. Mrs Clara
f— Nichols.
day.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Roy Penncls of Au­
Robert Feather of
I Berrien Springs
was a dinner guest of Robert War- ' gusta and Dick Pennets of Plain­
ner on Saturday
well spent Sunday with Mr. and
On Friday Mr
and Mrs ' Ell Mrs. Ed. pannels.
Lindsay will leave
.......
New York
_.. _.on Mr.
a
and Mrs Pulton of Kalamatnp around the United States to zoo spent Sunday evenbvg with Mr.
—
. .
--------- . .home
------nd MrJ Harry pennels.
the -----west coast,
returning
Mrs Pine left for Kalamazoo Sat­
across country. vldllng tile Grand
Canyon. Yellowstone Ni.'lonal Park urday to continue her work at the
and other places ot beauty and In- Wilber home after a few weeks' vucation.
Henry Mosier attended the Ha­
Mr and Mrs Enoch Johnson and
three sons
of Shelbyville
were vens reunion at Miltuim park. Kala­
x.
guests in the Warner home on Sun­ mazoo Sunday.
ORDER 1'OR I-UlH.ir \7: &gt;.
The Monica reunion was held at
day
i
Mr and Mrs Leon Wood. Lottie Mllhatn park Sunday
Mrs. Lxju Anna Paluin enter­
northeast" IRVING.
-------------------I nnd Bobble were Sunday
dinner
Mr and Mrs. Albert;Prost of Mil- Bursts of Mr and Mrs John Rogers tained Mrs Edith Norton and son
___________
lett spent Saturday evening with
Farmers' Day
at M. s C. on Frl-... William and friend of Ann Arbor
! day was attended by a good many last week.
Mr and Mrs O L Lightfoot.
I
----------------- ------------------------| Miss Margaret Brown b the new ' people from this community
SOUTH SHULTZ­
' clerk at Brunner's .store at Freeport i
CASH' BARRY I B SEWS.
... Dipt attended
Much sympathy is extended Mrs.
Mr and Mrs Wil)
uimcra* Day at Lansing. Friday.
1 Fifty- ix 4-H boys moved into H Ctsey in the Iom of her burn by
Mr
and
Mrs
Harlow
Segar
atCamp
Barry
for
a
swim
mid
supper
:
fire
Sunday
morning.
---..............
n &lt;» * “ .
. ...
Sunday afternoon
Rev
L
M 1 We were glad lo see some new
1 tended lhe ox. roast at Clarksville,
i Thuraday
Rigelmnn of Middleville spoke to attendants al Sunday school Suni Mr and Mrs. Dan Kerr of Has­ the group at Vesper services and day morning and hope to see many
tings spent Sunday with Mr and the Kendall sisters. Bernice. Elinor more Do not forget the hour 9:30.
and Vivian sung two numbers. 'Die
Mr and Mrs Ronald Kenyon and
, Mrs Vajcntlne Kerr
I
Mrs James O Lnuglln of Smith quartette band from Base Line club Arthur Main and friend of Hickory
Bend Is visiting her sister. Mra rendered two numbers
(Comers called on Mr and Mrs O.
Charles Moore.
Monday morning every boy went E. Kenyon Sunday afternoon.
I Mr and Mrs. Arthur Moore. Mr. to Lockshon- farm for stock Judging.
ZZ:.
Mr. 7Tand Mrs. *'
Kenneth
------- “u '***'
Babcock
—
'and Mrs C J Moore. Alva Moon‘ pr&lt;
roud parents of a baby girl
Tuesday morning they Judged are the
and their families attended
lhe milch cow:, on lhe Highlands Dairy born July' 31. She has been named
Matthews reunion at Lake Al-Gon- farm
I Quin
Sunday.
Everyone
had a
,.
Rev w A Hnggal ot Pennsyl•n? a
- wonderful
------- ■
j.—
good time and
dinner
vama was billed to speak to the
About 115 were present.
I picnic group last night
give near the business for the com1 pany. Think It over
Consumers
before you have your bill dUcounted
: for lack of service
The fire whistle blew early Satur­
day morning The-barn of joe Cor­
rigan In East Irving township was
burned with heavy loss of grain,
tools and stock The fire truck
could do nothing but help save the
dwellbig
Two men tried lo cash a check
at one of our stores Saturday The
proprietor did not like the looks of
things and followed them to Free­
port where they tried the same
। stunt. They were picked up by the
| deputy sheriff
We see by Monday's papers that they are wanted
in other places.
I We wish that everyone in th!&gt;
i state would read the editorial pub| lished bi last week's Banner regartling the statement of the Detroit
radio priest regarding our President
No matter whether we agree with
j him or not he is our President and
. such statements show lack of taste
। to say the least.
Regards to Nfr DeFoe. we are
sorry he had to make news recent­
ly and hope he is fully recovered
' from his injuries.
MUs Shirley Granger went to Detrolt Sunday for a few days to visit
। friends and relatives.
Cukes are coming m very slow
. A real rain would start them off
| with a bang
I Milo Shaw and Howard M Smith
are each preparing a bunch of stock
to take lhe round of fairs this fall.
They will Mart at the Ionia free fair
this menth. then to Marshall the
following week.

NOTICE or MOBTOAOB BALS.

OBDEB roil rUaUCATION.

OIDII FOR FUBLIGATION.

trie
met
pit
him

Irrl

ratio
Pen
and
fill
the
mar

HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO
UKitiun Dri«&gt;n« to
Out Oct. IS

NOTICE OF BALE OF BEAL ESTATE.

had
said
hea
form

O

his
doe
cor

isld court, taad
A. D. 1938. I

NOTICE OF ABANDONMENT OF
HIGHWAY.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. tb.t at
&gt; I 27th° j

public that 1

• s
lng
Old

like
did
Th

sho
tim
lhe
ORDER APPOINTING TIME FOR
HEARING CLAIMS. '

poi

elis
Oliv

(hi
BARKY COUNTY ROAIJ
COMMIHHION
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.

•’»
—i
m

O

co
th
me
ho

an

eig
go
be
kn

st
ly
th
flg

MEMORIALS
ROCK OF AGES GRANITE

• We are the exclusive agents for this
nationally known product in Hastings
and Barry County. Rock of Ages Gran­
ite is produced and guaranteed by one
of the largest corporations in the Unit­
ed States. With each memorial made of
Rock of Ages Granite, a Certificate of
Guarantee is issued; thisisyour positive
protection. There is no better granite
quarried.
• We also carry other well known lines
. . . St. Cloud Red Granite, quarried in
South Dakota; Ruby Red, quarried in
Wisconsin, and other monument stock.
All of our work is fully guaranteed. For
satisfaction see us.

• We have produced monuments for
more than 30 years . . . many of them
can be seen in the cemeteries of Barry
County.

TURNER

What about Automatic
NATURAL GAS

CUIUS R
l»3t
658

IDA E

Heating for Our
Home?

WANT-ADS

ESTIMATE and I understand from
the boys in the office it doesn’t cost

from us by Mrs Turner and placed on their lot in

8:45 A. M

forever.

1:20 P. M

• This monument is one of the finest ever pro­

Hundreds of Homes Now Installing

The carving is unique in that the decora­

tions ore in actual colors

is in yellow, and
green

w
la

To GRAND RAPIDS

ROCK OF ACES"Granite. this memorial will Stand

duced

c

Bus Ti

any more than good coal.

Mode of “EVERLASTING

Prairieville'Cemetery

leaves

the

ore»in the natural

The lettering is sand blasted. .

in one of the
produced.

most

NATURAL GAS

The design, o daffodil,

beautiful

HEATING

. resulting

Dial 2305 for

monuments ever

FREE ESTIMATE

.

• To those interested in memorials we say . . . See

this beautiful example of a

true ■'craftsman's"

work.

ABOUT
OUK
FREE
PLAN

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
HASTINGS

w
c
c
a

Yes I must call today for my FRFF

• This memorial to Mr. Chas. Turner was bought

The ONLY Barry County Monument Works.

PHONE 2497

do
yo
ou

CONSUMERS
POWER COMPANY

U
id

5:45 P. M
10:25 P. M
To BATTLE CREEK

•11:35 A. M

1:50 P. M.
6:35 P. M.
f9:40 P. M.

* Daily Except Sunday
t Sunday Only
TRAVEL THE SHORT
WAY AND SAVE!

O

L
b

f
b

T
b
l
t
t
t

BUS DIPOT

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 1137

p
t
t
i

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, AUGUST 6,1936

I&gt;1.

f*.......................

REGISTER’S OFFICE
,I
YIELDING A PROFIT |

COOKING SCHOOL
JTTEIOfD
---------

Barry Bypaths

| NEW CODE WILL
BENEFIT TEACHING Conservation and
„

i Are Paid to County S
and Exceed His
J

I

By JANf C A MIRON

State Board of Education to
Require Higher Quali­
|
Jane was Just Joking whwi she
fication*

.

,.

Outdoor Notes

The official opening will ba Aag. I*
J1

JUMPED THE TRAC*.
That Michigan soon will have i
"Salary
g&amp;ssers of lOOXXXl.OOO cubic feet in
ter Earl Boyes' semi-annual1 iald
wo K0'ng to
Tiie new code for the certification ,
production seems a mere' w.
.
which has Just been filed. I insects to the fair. But in looking ot teachers recently adopted by the initial
'eventuality, geologists here be-1 car onto the Bookcase Company
.ua
_
_
_j_
nvor
th*
nretnlum
hnnlr
w*
flitrt
thkt
shows that during the first six over the premium book we find that Stale Board of Education of Michl(months of this year there were 1071 Mrs. Smith offers 75c for twenty gan gives assurance that children of' Ueve. The state's newest big gaarer 1 aiding- When it reached lhe sharp
'new chattel mortgages filed. The Insects in the school exhibits. That’s Michigan will receive lhe benefit of; is Just short of that mark with an I curve between the two main build­
k An Immortal Oration
i LUCKY ONES DRAW
l filing fees amounted to ‘8268.98. In higher yet than pork. We don’t go better teaching as time goes on. it i initial production of 83.000.000 cubic | Ings of tiie factory, * rail broke and
This exceeds the production
EVERLY HILLS,CALIF. I
Tills
tiroductinn of ule engine and car ran off the track. THREE TIMES Al
. SOME CHOICE PRIZES addition he received 82130 for mak­ to school any more, but the boys was stated this week by Dr. Eugene feet.
—The future has a rotten
ing abstracts of chattel mortgages, can pick the insects and win a prize B. Elliott, superintendent of public i many acknowledged large gassers in It was tmpoasibte with local ap­
—MUCH BETTE
। the big Texas and California fields pliances to get them back onto the
for the school.
instruction. "The code of certlfitrick of mussing up the judg­ Mn. Harris, a Skilled Cook _pr total receipts from that source of
and
may
be
ranked
with
the largest
j 8288-26. During lhe first six months
cation," he said, "is not designed to ,-‘in the country. The new well is in track. Accordingly word was tele­ Barry County Km
ments of the present. What a ,
phoned lo headquarters at Jack­
I the toted fees received by (he RegisThere’s also a prize for the *esl oust from teaching any person who |
—Natural Gas Supply
Croud Sdsytod
pity it is that we can’t wear our
Iter from all sources were 81347*6. weeds. Our weeds aren't doing so is not qualified. The provisions in |' lhe Tri-Township field. Montcalm son. When the wrecking outfit
.
Meets Demand
county area.
reached Hastings about 9 o’clock,
I or at the rate of about 82500 a year. well this year. In-fact, we’re quite
*n fjon7
1I When
When a
a woman
woman has to prepare ; All this Is paid to the county. Ks discouraged about them They orc the code make it possible for any
that night. It soon lifted lhe engine
present teacher to continue to i
___ ynen 1 read where some 1,095 meals a year./she welcomes the Register's salary is 83.000. this only three limes as big as the vege­
and
car
and
put
them
onto
the
Radio.
Michigan's
latest
weapon
teach, although those who *possess
ponderous performing paenyderm
pachyderm । enthusiastically lhe'chance
lhe chance to get shows t.
that
office is being
oper- tables when they should be ten. the lower certificates may find it against fire hazards, has already switch track. The accident occurred
ponaeroua
____the
________________
_ __
at the literary elephant quadrille new Ideas and pointers on how to l a ted at a profit forthe county. The Maybe we can baby along some necessary to take additional pro-1 proved itself Indispensable. On a about 3 o'clock in • the afternoon.
aays. ‘IThte story wiU live forever.” ' make a routine task pleasant. Mra. second half of lhe year isusually
big fire near Newberry and on many Fortunately this accident happened
favorites and waler liiem al night fesslonal training."
I get to thinking about a time-yel- Dorothy K. Harris, nationally- larger than lhe first
and gel a prize to compensate for
According to Dr. ElUoU. lhe new other large fires radio -saved the on lhe aiding, io it did not delay
lowed copy of a ' known home economist, who, as- 1 Register Boyes says there are the hay fever.
, code of certification has two out- i day." in one case five miles ot tele­ the regular trains.
tics, which Will grow
phone line were burned down and in
metropolitan news- slsted
“ Mrs.
Robert
• •*
Wilson,
’■*
held booui
about 3.000
standing features:
------ *by
-—~ *•-*
.......
...........................
a.wu chattel
cnaiici mortgages
inormuKU filed
nieu
three times the stea
paper
that
was “ cooking school sponsored by the i eac
h yCBr
many,.
1. Each young teacher must serve another a line was broken In five
paper
that
eacn
year,. ana about
aooui that
il_ ____
A much-needed invention—a re­ 1
nary blueberry. The ci
prtaud on Hovem- Outwit.
BMrr....................................
-- which should
” -------------------------------------------“' ""’ 1-----------orc paid,
be dis- volving table something like a ,a probationary period of three years places by a heavy power shovel,
*
— .Kllllftr
Fulier hnllrifnir
building ’ last 'TVimHjv
Thursday end
and | charged on his records. Because of sleeve-ironing board lo attach un­ before a permanent certificate to throwing fire towers out of com­
munication.
Radio
picked
up
this
It devoted great
had many suggestions to &gt; the carelessness of the persons who der tho presser foot of a sewing ma­ Kich is granted. The teacher must
The Michigan. Slate Oaitevt ex­
gobs of praise and I B ve her audl“ce
demonstrating 1 giVe the mortgages as well as of chine so that a leg or sleeve could
monstrate lhe ablUty to teach suc­ communication and carried on the.
tension department hu bean at
nine solid columns
™nBC co°bl:jg. Over eight hun- (be persons who hold them only
cessfully before receiving a perma­ fire Intelligence work. Plans are
ral MUd t^th! deed women thronged the building &gt; about 500 discharges are actually be flat-felled or a patch put on a nent certificate.
now being made to develop an in­
A FROGGY WICKHAM STORY.
knee or elbow. If you don't believe
gallon of lancer type
very solid—to the in the two days of tiie school, and ■ recorded by him in a year. As these
3. Teachers are required to have ter-district radio netvrork In the
it Just ask any dressmaker. It should
One day as I passed tiie Hastings
?)&lt;X’U^.Ce
“*• On thc flr?1 day n,any were turncd undischarged mortgages are still on
special training in the subject or conservation region with headquar­ House. John Dennis, lhe printer,
Hon. Edward Ever- । away for lack of room.
record they stand against the per- done and what a boon to busy moth­ grades which they propose to teach. ters at Gaylord.
hailed me and said. "Come in the considerable acreages already de­
ett of Msssochu- I Those who attended were amply I ,on who gives them and hurt his ers with mountainous stacks of
•*I am hopeful of lasting and
hotel. Riley. I want you to shake
setts, who, on the , repaid for the time they spent I credit. Whenever a chattel mort- patching.
beneficial results from tiie code.”
Although lhe deer-hunllng sea­ hands with Wm. Jennings Byrah. veloped of the larger cultivated
day before, after I there.
dav
there. Mrs.
Mrs. Harris
Harris not
not only
onlv knows
knows 1 naon
said Dr. Elliott. "The value of a son is more than three months He's going to speak at tiie Chatau- blueberries; but the demand for
gage is nnM
paid itit should be at once au.
dis­
them is so large that
months of prepa- how
u
‘to cook, but she knows how to charged on the register's records.
flexible system of standards as set
qua this afternoon." So I had the get onto the
Mrs. smith didn't say whether the
--------ration-----------had, on .
a battlefield uvwu
down ui
in । hold ftn audience of restless women
Insects should be alive or dead. up in lhe code will become more ap­ number deer-license tags have been honor of shaking hands with the
In several
Pennsylvania, spoken two hours I 071 8 hot *ft®rnoon We talked to
* Wouldn't it be funny to take some parent as time goes on. The code received by lhe Department of Con­ -Great commoner.” As i stepped
servation.
•
Most
of
the/numbers
.nd turned loo,, enough oratory to “f h«u«e»«e who had been tortuout of the hotel door, it started to
live ones? The female population does not discriminate against any
Y. M. C. A. ITEMS
JU about nto. ... balloon.. But ot »*? ™"!«L“rJ''tJ! Si
riuw WK1UIBIII
Wickham tlunc
came
would sound like the Chicago slock individual teacher, but It does offer from one to 20 have bwn reserved rain and "Froggy"
and sat there for two and one-half
a paj] Of frogs
the subsequent and incidental re­
yards. I guess it's Just as well the a distinct reward for continued by special request, the number "13' up tjlc steps
aoinv to
______ ■ &gt;_
___
solid hours and came back the sec­
professional study.”
*
going
lo n
C. Wav
Hay of charlotte
Charlotte. Uiu
Miss .Sa
and ___
wasadressed
in his frog-hunting
marks of another man. an awk­
Rev. W. M. Jones of Hastings boys have to gather them. It will
ond day for more. And she was not
Marian J. Weyant of Lansing has regalia. He had on two pair of come
ward. shy mon from Illinois, who the only one to do that.
folks
spoke at Camp Vespers to the 4-H save me a lot of squealing.
asked
that
-18"
be
reserved
for
her.
pants with the outside ones twisted
BETTER PROSPECTS
had spoken Just two minutes,. it,- ' Mrs. Harris believes that since a Club campers. July 28, and T. 8. K
Miss Weyant has been deer hunting around so the patches would par­ and better than the wild
said. "The President was also housewife must prepare almost 1100 Reid spoke to them at their last
Take the cost of the World war
huckleberries that there .
FOR ONION GROWERS
tially cover the holes in lhe under
heard briefly. The applause was meals a year, she might as 4rell campfire the same evening. Rev. for all the countries involved, plus
will observe her 18lh birthday annl- ones. Fred Parker began to laugh
L111
formal and scattering.”
make up her mind to get some fun L M Rlgeltnan. Middleville, gave the recovery from the resultant de­ Shortage in Onion Orops Re­
and
Froggy
said.
"Speedy.
If
I
knew
1
Barry county has several an
pression.
and
you
have
the
pay
for
out of it and become a real artist a helpful talk on "Making Friends."
ll wu join, u&gt; r^n. rd hove pul on lo,
juluhta tar jnxBK
ported in Other Pro­
lhe fiddler tor our 1914-1918 dance.
In the culinary field. The dishes Friday at the supper program.
The Thompson stale fish hatchery mv
elothea.” as
as he
ho sat down
dn«m In
___ ____ &gt; a__ &gt;___ ,
•» _
Prejudices of Critics
my
old
clothes."
Swimming was a big feature and Was it worth it. Kaiser Bill? I ex- ,
ducing States
near Manistique, the largest trout one of the chain. Mrs. Nelson Park­
/—\FTEN, 'twould seem, the pro- which she demonstrated were not
many of the 36 campers learned to pect the munitions manufacturers
elaborate,
difficult
ones,
requiring
hatchery
in
Michigan
is
being
com
­
Last year was a very poor onion
er came out on lhe veranda and
fesslonal reviewer makes up
uo
hours of careful planning and con­ swim and others who already could did make a big thing out of it. but year in this locality. There were pletely renovated.
said. "I wish some good-looking man
his mind beforehand that he
centration; they were Just ordinary swim, learned the art of diving and think-of living with their con­ plenty of onions, but prices were
would give me his chair." and Frog­ Collegc and ascertain if it
doesn't like you and behaves ac­ food done up in slightly different advanced swimming. George Wot- sciences. If they have any.
Hatchery
men report
that the
so juw
su
low uiMk
that the vjvu
crop was
waa unprofitutipiuiiv, .------- -----t------------ gy got up and offered her his.
cordingly.
forms.
For instance she broiled rtng, of Nashville, directed the wa­
able/
ahlA z Thte
*TTile year,
v.sr according
ai-mrrUnff to
t/i rer*. Jul* h&lt;8t wave produced conditions
Speaking of Froggy makes me
A friend sent me a clipping from some fillets of haddock to a golden ter program.
I offered tiie boys a tomato worm ports, the onion crop will be poor at ***•, hatcheries which were lhe think. One time I was cleaning my
a small city—it dealt with the open­ brown and saved herself work by - Miss Dorothy Homing, Eaton for the Fair, but Sonny who Is an in New York. Ohio Indiana. Wte- Iwor#l ln 8 decade «»nd refuted all
cistern at home, and when a fellow
ing of the picture. "Everybody^ not turning them once. She said Rapids, will leach swimming for ardent student of biology says Un consln and Mlnneaota. which are Ithelr noUoIU about the entrance
cleans his cistern he doesn’t put on
EXPLOSION AND
Old Man." The writer was quite that turning fish when broiling is the girls' 4-H camp. August 2 to 5. •insect is an animal with six legs. large producers of onions. Portu- 1 ot fingerling trout They expected his Sunday-go-to-meeting clothes.
A mysterious explosion
severe in his analysis. He didn't bod. because ll makes it fall to Assisted by Hugh Kelley. Robert Now I suppose we'll have.lo count nately Michigan wU) have a fairly tremendous losses under sOstalned When I got done, i went into the Thursday night in the
like the film. Passionately, he pieces She cooked it on a piece of Roush will show the campers how their feet.'
good crop, although not aa large as l»a‘CT temperatures of 70 degrees; house and my wife hid company.
brown paper, cut the edges with to make articles out of leather. Rev
In bumper years; but the prospects | but temperatures of 80 degrees or She said. "Why look! There comes
didn't care for me.
... .....
.......
.
blether ti'-r.
a» ,.v.ro) nf th.
Caroline O'Day, congresswoman are
The Joke was that the theater scissors to prevent them from curl­ W. A. Haggal will lead in the music.
that far better prices will more higher were noted al several of lhe Froggy Wickham." and I said.
ing up and salted it Just a Utile. 100 boys and girls are expected at from New York, assures us that than compensate for the shortage trout rearing stations, persisting for "Wife, that's quite a compliment. by the fire which followed.
where lhe picture was to have been
Regarding salt. Mrs Harris said it these two periods. County Agent "the last session of Congress was | u
of, uw
the crop. Onion rBUU
raising u
is a haz- several days. The fish survived When I first came to Hastings Frog­ Nashville fire department bi
shown burned down Just about lhe
Foster and District leader. Mr Haas, definitely peace-minded.' She lists artjoul business; but 'those who these conditions remarkably.
is
difficult,
and
practically
impos
­
gy had a gold-headed cane, wore
time lhe paper went to press, and
sible, to salt food to suit everyone's will direct in the program.
eight -peace-minded" bills intro- 1Uck by u
dooe weU
fore getting tltem under co
the picture wasn't ever shown in
The Scouts of Middleville have duced and lays particular emphasis 101iSCS ln
years.&gt;
taste. Some like a lot. some a lit­
The new Ludington park is open sidered the Beau Brummcl of Barry The slock in the van Daratter
thal town.
tle and any man will salt his food had a verLsuccessful camp at Har­ on the Neutrality bill. “We women.” j
____ _____________________
this summer for tiie first lime. It county."
wu badly damaged.
The next best Illustration of the before he even touches it.
wood lake this past week. R«v. she states, "believe there is no! "A blush is a sign that nature contains approximately 3.000 acres
point I'm making dates back years
While we were listening very at­ Rigelman and wm. Carmichael as­ problem affecting humanity that i hangs out to show where chastity of some of the finest sand dunee in
"Truth 13 the highest thing that
ago. I was discussing various nov-; tentively. an alarm clock suddenly sisted Mr. Beeler
cannot be settled without recourse —
- 'honor
-------- ■*—
’’“ —
—
and
dwell."
Gotthold.
I Michigan, a stand of virgin Norway man can keep."—Chaucer,
There is room left in lhe state to war. The cost of peace will be
elists with that gentle wit, the late
went off, and Mrs. Harris Informed
Oliver Herford.
us that the bread was done. &lt;We Hi-Y camp at Torch lake. August great but it will not compare with
"Ollie.” I said, “what do you had come in late and didn't even 31-39. Every high school in our the cost of war."
should be represented.
think of So-and So's books?” "My know she was making bread.) That counties
Charlotte. Middleville and Hostings
Why don't we send more women
dear Cobb." he softly murmured, little timer in the new gas ranges
somcuung Ii once
once wrote
wrote about
noout him
nim i ^ni?IHvery
U are already enroljed. The delegates to congress? One from Michigan,
"something
■in a critical wav-so oreiudiced I ould 5. ' 0,01 thcrc should be no must be from the upper grades in for instance.
in a critical way-so prejudiced excuge
excuse for
for burned
burned nles
pies or
or cakes
cakes with
with high school. Get in touch with C. F.
me against the man 1 could never it on the Job.
Angell at oiice If Interested.
If Governor Landon really wants ,
bear to read any of his books."
Sme artificial sunflowers. Jane will
Eugene Waring of Consumers
make him three dozen. Only we
Power .gave a short talk about natu­
ral gal in Michigan He said that
wish he’d picked roses. They're
Self-Anointed Dukes.
easier to make. And he'd better
OUT here we'ro vwaiting
—
for Ujat there is a large enough supply here
hurry up about ll, loo. as we've got
Spanish baron and that ucuui
French I to meet ail consumer demands for
to help the kids pickle or stuff in­
lhe
next
ten
years.
Well
owners
count back in New York to form
Jack A. Emery of Nashville, picked
the mother branch of their Noble­ are permitted to sell only 17 per up by Eaton county officers for vio­ sects far the fair.'
men's club for tho protection of cent of the open flow from their lation of his parole, has been re­
For High school girls comes a
holders of genuine titles in Amer­ wells tn on effort to conserve the turned to Ionia where he will have
natural supply, in some slates where to serve from one to two years. He message from an expert giving as
ica and. presumably, os a guar­
there has been no regulation of lhe may also be picked u pon his release the keynote of their wardrobe sim­
antee to our own home-grown heir­
sale of the product, the natural gas If the officers so desire for three plicity, neatness and cleanliness.
esses thal. when they marry for­ has been entirely used up in two
She stresses smart, low-heeled ox­
eign princelings or what nbt, the or three years. The greatest use other offenses resulting from his fords as first on the list; washable
goods will be as described. There's of natural gas today Is in private jail break. When he walked out of dresses for hot weather. Silks have
the
Charlotte
Jail
he
carried
a
been a lot of title-legging, you homes, but it is also used in Indus­
a time and place, but neither of
weapon stolen from the sheriff's
know.
try. The Chevrolet Motor Company desk. Ho can be arrested for that them te in the classroom. Piques,
As soon as the organization gets in Saginaw uses 3.000.000 cubic feet as well as carrying a weapon with­ linens and ginghams are good and
started we're going to open the Hol­ of gas a day when operating at full out a license and for carrying a a tweed skirt and sweater for cold
days. She emphasizes the three-inlywood division. Since only the au­ time.
concealed weapon.
.
one wool dress for winter. A pique
Several blds were received for one
thentic nobility may qualify, it's
Russell Hinckley of Freeport and
figured that the active rosier will of the beautiful A-B gas ranges William Service of this city who collar for the classroom, a perky
dress collar for a date at theifootbe confined to a very limited group. used by Mrs. Harris in her demon­ were recently arrested on a statu­
strations. and it was taken by Mrs. tory charge have furnished the ball ball game, and an interesting neck­
Harry James of 823 North East necessary for their release until lace and flower for lunch and the
The State of lhe Nation.
movies downtown. Of course, these
street. Mrs. Frank Sanders. R. F.
AR be It-from me to turn alarm­ D., was the lucky winner of the their case shall be brought up in the accessories are in perfect harmony
NOTE THE
ist right on the heels of tho hot grand prize, an A-B range. An au­ circuit court. It is expected that will with the color and lines of the dress
RECEIPT
be done this week.
and tiie personality of lhe wearer.
wave, but 1 feel It my duty to warntomatic water heater was drawn by
And clean finger nails, not too many
my tellow-Americans that this frag­ Mrs. Ed. Monica. 335 East High
HOW THE MALE DEER
curls, and no nail polish—eave per­
ile and crumbling republic is street, and as she had Just pur­
GETS HIS ANTLERS haps for a glamorous evening.
doomed. That is, it’s dootned If chased one a few days before, she
Bank Money Orders provide a new, easy way to pay
Jewelry is taboo. Powder, but not
you can believe what comes out of received her bill .receipted in full.
bills and jpake remittances, safely, by rru.il. They are
our sainted political leaders In the Wasn't she in luck? Four lovely in­ Quite a Process Involved in too much rouge.-A clean mind, a
clean body, clean underwear, clean
direct lighting lamps were won by
way of predictions.
Acquiring Thia “Crown­
used in the same way as Postal or Express Money
hose, freshly.laundered or neatly
South
Hark to the quavering chorus Mrs. Verna Blough, 1339
pressed dresses, clean collars, pol­
ing
Glory"
Hanover.
Mra.
Frances
DeHarak.
Orders, but are more conveniently obtained; issued for
which already has started up: A
ished shoes and here’s for good
Route 3. Mrs. Rose Thompson. 331
The antlers of the buck deer at
crisis exists. Every professional
grades
and
good
times
to
our
fine
West Court street and Mra. Voight
any Amount and accepted everywhere, and their cost
crisis-breeder in the land openly Newton. Route 2. The tempting this time of the year are nt or near­ young girls.
admits.IL I can’t remember when dishes which had been cooked dur­ ing the completion of their develop­
is very low. Another advantage Is that you get a definite
a crisis wasn't existing. But they ing the demonstration were drawn ment although still tn the "velvet.”
Mrs. Smith doesn't state age or
Until the last two or three weeks of
receipt—a complete record of the transaction and
come larger in campaign years. Wo by Mra. Edith Smith, 116 East
sex in the insects. Would ten mamthh development stage the velveted
are facing a dread emergency street, Mra. R. Lesli?, Mrs. Royal antlers are filled with nerves and
positive proof of payment.
which has had no parallel since the Hayes. 338 8. Jefferson. Mra. I. W. blood vessels and are extremely a family group—one mamma, one
last occasion when we facod a Hewitt, 8. Dibble street. Mrs- Milo sensitive. While the antlers are de­ papa an&lt;j eighteen little Insects?
dread emergency. This very hour Horry. East Mill street. Mra. Pom­ veloping accidents and injuries to Or maybe she meant 30 all differ­
the nation totters on the brink of eroy. Mra Charles Lawrence and them are likely to effect their shape ent varieties? We could supply any
an abyss. It has been tottering ever
and often "produce freak "racks.” amount, any variety, any color, any
age, anything in the insect line ex­
Next week we will publish some of
since George Washington was PresThe "crowning glory" of tens of
tlent—tottering worse at times, but the interesting recipes and timely thousands of male deer te attaining cept angleworms. We’re all obt of
hints
Mrs.
Harris
gave
the
ladies
its-complete development in Michi­ angleworms.
Iways on lhe tot
during the two days’ demonstration. gan thte month and by mld-6eptember the bucks will be trodding the BUTTER PRICES SURE
Miracles and Misdemeanors.
paul Foley won award.
north woods tn lhe proud possession
TO BE INCREASED
NCE upon an early time there
Paul Foley may not be as old In
was a man so holy that even years dx some farmers but he sure of hardened, shiny new antlers.
When the development is complet­ The Prolonged Drouth Has
the wild creatures would-not harm,
knows how to cock alfalfa hay. Over
ed the deer begin to rub them free
bjm. He drew a thom from the at the Agricultural College the oth­
Reduced the Production
of the velvet. When that operation
er day Paul was awarded second te finished the ‘bucks are ready to
of Butter
ful beast followed after him. So he prize for his work in this line. Plen­ enter competition in favor of the,
ty of competition was there too,
Usually at this time of year but­
became a saint * '
doe deer in their areas, and after
Only the other day In a court in farmers being present from all over tho mating season, the bucks begin ter accumulates rapidly at the big
Tanganyka. which Is in Africa, a the state and taking part in the to shed their antlers only to start storage, plants in the large cities.
No
black man—a savage by our defi­ contest. Good work. Paul. Serves again th produce a new set for the That is not true this year.
doubt the dry weather lias caused
nitions—was on trial It seemed you right.
following year.
Borne wildlife observers have said the shortage. Very little butter has
the lions were raiding the stock, so
"Happirwsa—where can It I And?
gone into storage this summer. This
the native authorities set traps for A friend told me. 'It te a state of that it requires as much energy for
the buck dee; to produce a pair of will probably mean that there will
them. The accused found a lion in mind.’ "—Major Bowes.
antlers os for a doe deer to produce be a good price for butter—not as
one of these traps and made a lad­
large as it would be IX U had a large
“The power to bequeath Jobe is a pair of fawns.
der and went down and helped the
tariff on H. As it Is, butter can be
the rivet that legislators believe will
great brute to escape.
,
The present Buckingham Palace imported, and is being shipped Into
Being arrested, he explained sim­ keep them In office "—Kenneth occupies the site of the old Mul­ this country from Denjnark, Hol­
Coolbaugh.
ply that lhe lion was his friend. So
berry Gardens, which were planted land and Russia The present tar­
they fined him 81150. In the olden
"In the long run, labor-saving de­ by James I to encourage the growth iff Is not high enough to give the
times it was a miracle. Nowadays
ices create more employment than of silk in England. The enterprise American dairynian the advantage
it’s a misdemeanor.
*
was a failure and the gardens be­ In his home market to which he Is
entitled.
.
■
t 7* ■ ■ 8. COBB
came a public recreation ground.

WORSEN THRONG 00N8UM

ERS DEMONSTRATION
OF GAS RANGES

B

Riley Stories

Court News

Bank Money Orders

Safe—Convenient
COST LESS

P

TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS, MICH

O

HASTINGS CITY BANK

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, AUGUST ». 1M&lt;

DUNHAM DISTRICT.

TH*

July 30 Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Orson McIntyre and
daughter. Katheryn and Mr and
Mrs Herbert Me Glock!tn visited
Clarence Smith al the Marshall
eounty hospital Sunday.

MOVIE STAR - MOVIE DIAL

with her during the summer were
Sunday guests of the former's
daughter, Mrs Cyrus Buxton and
family.
Miu Katheryn Malntyr* Mid
cousin, Ella jean McInnis, of Bat­
tle creek arc spending the week
with Katheryn* sister. Mrs. Edith
Van Dougan at Grand Haven
The 4-H Club, "Jolly Cannes*,"
met with their leader. Mrs Grace
Mack Tuesday afternoon. MUs Mary
Bullis Lhe county club leader was al-

' and Mrs. Will Olthoute.
Mr*. Ellen Sec.se has sold her
farm to Mr. and Mrs Luther Stcr, ■lek
i Mr and Mra. Merrill Karcher
were Orand Rapid* visitors Tues. day.

TAMARAC.

July 30 Letter
Utile Qreta aqd Norma McClel­
land re turned home Saturday from
Vermontville where they had been
visiting their grandmother. Mrs O.
McClelland.
Helen Benton is assisting Mis.
Mias Clara Lyon* of Detroit, who
ta visiting her stater, Mrs. Charlie Russell Benton ot Orand Rapids
Colton at Mulliken, accompanied with her household duties this week.
Mr and Mrs Lorenxo Nash and
Mr. and Mrs. Colton Sunday lo lhe
home of their parenU. Mr.
and son are living in the Charlie Porrllt
home for a few weeks
Marlan Griffin spent Saturday
We were *orry tfial the big bam
belonging to Mr. and Mra Lehman, night with Alice Nash.
Sunday visitors at Watt Thomas
lhe latter lhe daughter of Boaton
were Mr*. Addle Benton. Mr. and
Mra Merrill Karcher and son, Rusunlay with it* contend
sell Benton and family
BOWNE CENTER.
Mra. Luther Bterrick and two
July X Letter.
daughters and Theresa and Roger
Mr. and Mrs. Asahel Thompson Rollins of Merriman district called
aad Ardilh spent Sunday with Mr on Mrs. Merrill Karcher Thursday.

NOW...BUILD
Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Phone 2515

Frank Sage

Hastings

SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
W H Oti* accompanied Mr* Ha­
rd Otis and children of Hickory
Corners lo Bullington on Sunday
and spent the day with Mr and Mrs.
Rolla Williams
Mr and Mrs Dan Douglass spent
last Tuesday In Hastings with lhe
former's brother. Oley
They- re­
port him as being rather poorly
Mr. and Mrs Francis Gorham and
grandson Richard spent Sunday at
Oun lake with relatives from Kala­
mazoo. Battle Creek. Hastings and
Niles.
Russell Laubaugh has been enI gaged to teach the Ryan school near
Irving this coming year.
i Mr and Mrs. Wm Havens, and
Mr and Mrs. Oeo Havens were
Sunday guests of the former's
daughter. Mrs Howard Johnson and
husband of Hickory Comers.
Mr and Mrs Harry Clem and son
Raymond spent last Wednesday and
Thursday with Ihelr daughter. Mrs
Cecil Waict and husband bf Rock­
ford.
On
Sunday
they --------------attended
——* —
Blake school reunion.
। Alpheous Dunn is spending a few
d*&gt;'«
lhf 4-H club camp al SteI *“rt ,*kr
f Mr. and Mrs H T Lord of Batbeing Introduced by Montgotnsry Ward. The dial of thia radio oporaloa
। tlc Creek were Sunday callers at
In much tha sama manner •* a motion picture projector, flashing stations
, lt&gt;e Roy Oakes' home
from a small film, through mirrors and filters, onto a glass «oroon In
' Mrs. Jim Wilcox and son Robert
large, Illuminated letter*. Thle photo wae taken In Mlaa Oberon’* Santa
,Pfn‘ Thursday nnd Friday with
____ .« *t
relative*
at Reed city
City
। Erwin Havens is visiting relative*
'tn Grand Rapids this wft-R
■of Mra. Hendershott's and the ladies ' »tng are spending a few day* with
Callers last week In the Dan had not seen each other for year* . Mrs Jerry Foley.
Douglas.’ home included Mr. and t This part of the country wa* hard
Mrs Etta Bump, Nora and Minnie
Mrs Roy Douginas of Halting* and I hit Sunday by Arc*. Two barns and Matthews and Mr and Mrs. L J
Mesdames Clyde Warren. Roy and I two houses burned from four In' the Matthew* attended
the
annual
Ray Erway of Glass Creek.
morning to midnight Sunday night. Matthews reunion at Al-Oon-Quin
Mr, and Mrs. Jim Wilcox and
Mrs France* Hendershott was lake Sunday.
Robert and BcnJ Jenkin* attended made happy by a visit from her sis- ,
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hauer and
the Blake school reunion Sunday ter. Mrs Vennle Mcnncl and the' daughter.
Ma belle,
accompanied
afternoon
latter * daughter Mrs Erma Wise. I Mr* Jerry Foley and son Paul to
Kenneth Dunn returneq Sunday both of LaGrange. Ohio The ladies । Lansing Friday and all attended
from a camping trip to northern stayed from Saturday night till! Farmers' Day Paul Foley particlMichigan One of the events of the Sunday afternoon.
- 1 patecy In the alfalfa cocking contest
trip was crossing the Straits.
Mr and Mrs a C Clark and' and carried off second prize There
। Mrs clarn Wilder of Battle Creek children spent the latter part of the I were ten contestants
Mrs Della Decker and granddaugh­
week with Calvin Clark and family '
Mr and Mrs. Roy Pre.’tpn and
ter of Niles are spending a few
near Dufand
son Donald. Manfred Sigler Mrs
days with the formers daughter.
Mr and Mrs Mel Hendershott of Grace Brake and Vent DejMoil spent
Mrs Francis Gorham
Kalamazoo and Mr and Mrs. Clyde Bunday al Tunnel Park an Lake
Hendershott called on their mother. t Michigan.
sing visitor last FridayMrs Frances Hendershott Sunday ;
Eva Robinson of Grand Rapid.*
Miss Irene shellenbarger of Clov­
Floyd Garrison and family attend­
erdale and Orville Babcock of the ed lhe Garrison family reunion at I and Helene Plasma spent Tue-'day
Barney Mill-' district called on their Hunnels landing on Fair lake on ; and Wednesday at Roy Preston *.
‘ friend. Russell Laubaugh. Sunday Sunday Mias Margaret returned I
Mr and Mrs. Franklin Kenyon
afternoon
with her .’liter. Mr*. Harvey Par- i and daughter. Leona of Kltchenef.
male* to Baltic Creek to slay until । Ontario, Canada, were over Sunday
HENDERSHOTT.
guests of Mr. and Mr*. Clyde Ruem­
Thursday
Mr and Mrs Frm Merrit nnd
pel
daughter of Albion visited Mr ...
and
BARBERS CORNERS.
I
Donald Preston spent a few days
Mr*. Cha*
Hendershott Sunday
Mr and Mrs
Floyd Clum nt 1 the past week with Richard Mat­
Mrs. Merrit was an old school friend
Coats Grove were Sunday visitors; thews of Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Preston and
at Herman Hauers
Mr and Mrs. Roy Huver of Lan­ family of Lowell were callers at
------------------------------------------------------------ I Roy Preston's Sunday.

Stomach Gas
On* d-M nt ADLKRIK* Quick'* ru-

7^

ADLERIKA

UST a year afco your state and

county officials were engaged
in a great drive to encourage
the property-owncrs.of Michigan

to clear their tax records.
It is estimated that over half a
million tax-piyerstonk advantage

Now the second part, again 'ten
per cent, is due.

You must now make this sec­
ond payment, with a 4% interest

charge, in order to ketp the advan-

Paints Gloonly
Farm Picture

Thia old gray mare was rescued from a rather serious predicament
at tho bottom of a clMcm only after a derrick was brought to tho
scene. Strapped securely, she wa* lifted out of her concrete prison
none the worse for several days' captivity. Queen, tho unfortunate
marc, had stumbled Into the 13-foot cistern on tha farm of her
owner. R. T. Bradshaw, Wyandotte county, Kan.

j
I
|

;
i
&gt;

'
‘

DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray OlUaspie and
Mr and Mrs. George Ball were at
Flint Wedneaday attending the
rodeo with which the Royal Dono­
van's are traveling.
Mr and Mr*. Claud Hoffman and
Clarence, Lester Halstead, Mr. and
Mrs. Wm. Hoffman and Mr. and
Mrs. Ward Cheeseman and Enid
were at Lower Guernsey lake, near
Cloverdale. Friday fishing.
Friday evening the Young Peopie's Sunday school class and other*
of the community had a unarshmallow roast at Middle lake. Titere
were about thirty present.
Mis* LaVora Gillaspie is visiting
relatives in Lansing.
Early Monday morning. Mr and
Mrs. Claud Hoffman and son*.
Prank Hyde and Mr. and Mr*. Harve
Marshall left for a week's vacation
at Bass lake in Montcalm county
Mr and Mrs A E Harding also
accompanied them intending to
stay there about two days then go­
ing on to Petoskey to visit friends
with whom they became acquainted
in Florida.
'.
, —
Mr and Mr*. Clyde wallon'altended tha Barney Mill* -rhqgl re­
union Saturday.
Claud and Jay Fisher arc living
tn the Wm cheeseman house. Just
south of clem Kidder's
Mr and Mr*. Orson McIntyre and
Howard spent the week end with
their daughter. Mrs
Edith Van
Dougan in Grand Haven. Katheryn
McIntyre and Ella Jean McInnis

who spent last week there returned
with them.
STONY POINT.
Thus far we have escaped any
serious damage from rain.
Mr. Brown from Lansing L*
spendbig a few days with Mr. and
Mr*. Claude Demond.
i
Mr Deakin of Mecosta is al the
home of his son Edwin for a few
weeks,
Floyd Barnum attended Farmers’
Day at East Lansing Friday. '

Wm. VanderJagt and twn little
boys visited relatives bi Pewamo
part of lhe week
MRry and jean Deakin spent last
week with their sister. Mrs, Phlillpo,
al Long lake, south of Kalamazoo
Cornelia and Joan VanderJagt
spent lhe week with relatives In
Grand Rapids.
We think that the correspondent
from Prairieville who wrote the
article in the "open forum" column
last week concerning the dust, is
Altogether too particular. Now as
long as they get their three meal* of
"dust" rations dally and survive on
it. why kick? You know there L* an
old saying—"We've got to eat a peck
of dirt before we die." Out here
we've already had our entire por­
tion this summer and started on a
second batch, and still we are nnt
complainlng. Cheer up my good
friend and if you need a change of
diet move over into Castleton town­
ship. The soil is a little heavier
over here.

Serious Stomach Condition Corrected
Writes Prominent Lansing Man!

adjustment
administrator,
is
shown arriving at New York
on hi* return from Europe,
where ho spent six weeks look­
ing for possible U. S. grain
market*.
“There is not the
slightest hope we can regain
for some important commodi­
ties the great market* here we
once enjoyed." Davis told re­
porters In London.

"I had X-ray* taken which showed Ulcers of the Stomach
Later Ute Ulcer perforated lhe lining of my stomach and I
wa* operated upon, but lhe trouble never left me. My diet con­
sisted of soft food* and milk, but my condition did not im­
prove I have taken eight Jar* of EL AOUINALDO CUBAN
HONEY and now feel a* well aa I have in my life!** writes
Wm. E Ha maker. 1522 Nellera Court. Lansing. Mich.
EL AGUINALDC to which Mr Hamakcr gives so much
praise 1* a native Cuban Honey from the Maeslra Mountains
on that tropical island Pure and unadulterated, it has been
used very effectively tn overcoming Stomach Ulcer*. Stomach.
Bowel and Colon Trouble* Many cases ot Asthma are ateo
reported relieved quickly and pleasantly.

LY BARKER S DRUG STORE
HAS SECURED THE AGENCY FOR THIS WONDER­
FUL NATURAL PRODUCT IN THIS COMMUNITY
IKK. BOOKLET UPON BtOLTHT.

lagc you won by coming under
lhe len-year plan.

\ otc

THAT IS

// '.*&gt;« Zrr/r not -\ft ful your back

A

SERVIOE TO YOU

IS SEVER A BOTHER TO US

taxc&lt; for /9J? ami prior \fart nn

*****

were made for their benefit.
Back taxes for 1932 and prior

CEDAR CREEK.
The children and grandchildren
came with well filled baskets and
helped Henry Wertman celebrate
his birthday Sunday. Mr and Mra.
Oerald and family from Ypsilanti.
Mr and Mr*. Wallle Campbell and
family of Hastings. Mr. and Mra.
Russel) Benton from Orand Rap­
Ids. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Wertman
and family of Battle Creek were all
present and report a good time
The Pioneer picnic last Thursday
was well attended. There were peo­
ple there from
Lansing.
Battle
Creek. Kalamazoo. Orand Rapid*,
who helped everyone enjoy the day.
The program was fine. It was de| elded to have the reunions herei after at Bunnell's landing al Fair
lake, which will be much handier
This neighborhood was aroused
Sunday morning by the fire which
destroyed the large bam on the Will
Gurd farm about three o'clock. By
the aid of the fire trucks and neigh­
bors the house and contents were
saved.
It certainly 1* a mystery
how the bam caught fire
Mr. and Mra. John Ourd accom­
panied by Mr and Mra Clarence
I Campbell attended Farmer* Day at
East Lansing last Friday
Marjory Lammers relumed 8un­
day from a visit with friends and
1 relative* in Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mr* Ike Mason of 811ver Creek visited at Myron Mason *
1 Sunday.

"The United States Is planning to
spend next year 11.003.000,000 for
defense. This is more than Great
Britain and Japan together are
I spending on their armies and nav|les—and both are close to area* of
possible war. as we are not.' —Lucia
, Ames Mead.

of the special concessions that

years were put on a ten-year plan.
■ nd the first tenth-part was paid

Mary Barry of Southeast Carlton
spent Tuesday afternoon with Mom!
Bhftber. .
Mr. and Mrs Eugene Nichols. Mr.
and Mra. Frank Shriber. Mr. and
Mra. Leo Barry and sou and Haael
.Shriber attended Farmers' Day in
East Lansing on Friday
Mra. Anna Buck entertained the
Dorcas Society Thursday afternoon
Mr, and Mra. Wm. Uabome of
Orand Rapids and Mr* Amy Usbome of Ipswich. South Dakota,
called on Mr. and Mra Lafayette
Uabome Saturday afternoon
Mr. and Mr*. Arthur Slrodtbeck
and son of North Broadway and
Mr and Mr*. J J Strodtbeck called
on the latter'* niece at Lowell on
Sunday.
Hubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo is
spending hl* vacation with Mr. and
Mra Lafayette Uabome.
Mr and Mrs Albert Barry and
children. Mra. Nina Barry of South­
east Carlton and Mr and Mrs. Wm.
Shriber and children of Hastings
spent Sunday evening with Mr. and
Mr*. Leo Barry and Norman The
occasion
was Norman's
fourth
birthday Ice cream and cake was
served

1

Your 2nd Payment
on 10-Year Plan
is Due Sept 1st

J

lOOTUWUT COLTON.
We are glad to hear that Mra.
falter CulSert Is recovering rapld' from bar recent opera tinn
Mra. Harald BlUott and dat&lt;hter

/*»»• 1 8W to do Hi.

OHLY VfHEH YOU BEMEFiT.
F. for any reason, you failed lo

I

OAH WE BENEFIT

pu» your faxes for 1932 and
prior years on the 10-year plan
last year, you can still do so by
making the first two payments,
with interest at 47,-wblus a small
additional charge on the payment
you missed last year.

*

*

Wr'II Deliver! — Became price* wHl mor advance
. . . because "«ven now better grades are hard to

fit/ Order of Augmented
ffdministralivc Jioard
of State of ^Michigan

get from the mines . . . because you may net be

able to get what you wont later art, va advise you
to buy your winter's coal now!

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.
DEALERS IN WOOL. GRAIN. FEED, FLOUR, SALT, LI ME,

CEMENT AND COAL
PHONE tU7

i

- MASTINOR MICH.

OF HASTINGS .
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�The New Wards bi
purchased through

ANNUAL FU

Wards Great

Regularly 910!
August Sth

Regularly 08!
Aufuit Ssk

£•94

tri"

UEEN ANNE CHAIR:
arved arms! Roomy coil
spring scat! Figured tapestry
covered! Sensational valuel.

§

/194
Z'M

EXTRA LARGE occasional
chair! Choice of moquettc back
and velour seat or allover florid
tapestry! Save during the sale!

We are here in time to let you I
Wards Greatest selling events

2 BIG PIECES
in Allover Angora Mohair

orily v» down
2 Pc Mohair Frieze London Loungel

» Monthly . Small
Carrying Charge .

USUALLY*10G!
AUGUST SALE FEATURE VALUE!

lAugust
Sale
Price

Without a doubt the BEST value in years on a suite like this!

You not only, save 825—you get EXTRA LARGE

pieces PLUS the newest mohair living room style bn the market today!

The NEWEST London Lounge stylo yet de­
signed and Wards August Sale price actually
saves you |26 on what you’d ordinarily pay!
Blended mohair-frieze cover! Big, expensive Tcushiona! Extra long spring base! Carved base
on three sides!

inches over-all—nearly 7 feel long!

$90

Now Mohair Suita—2 Pea.$44.94

English club style block feet in a fine

walnut finish! Broad, high backs give added comfort! See this suite—imagine it in your own living room—BUY

it in Wards August Sale.

$80 Modo»n Tapostry Suite—2 Pa. • . $59.94

Cori'/’nB

Think of it—the roomy davenport is 80

Expensive mohair covered arm panels!

AUGUST SALE SPECIAL

usniil 0495 innerspring
AUGUST SALE SPECIAL!

You
Actually
Save
W.rdi
XufUlt

Furnlturt
Ml

Modtrn Sulttl

u&lt;w i. rMt iiuaanua. miffn—at
thia quality aro rntdt
takas

Price Cut *20!

Wards to get the price so sensationally
LOW! 182 finest tempered Premier wire
innercoils! Quilted sisal pads! Fluffy layers
of all, new felted cotton! Long-wearing

S.niol/ona/

Solti 2

Pc.

August

Pillow Back
e
Lounge Chair and Ottoman

Salt Prkt

When we say SENSATIONAL that’s ex­
actly what we mean I Here’s the NEWEST
MODERN SUITE on the market todayvet we’ve cut $20 off our regular low price I
Full size 77" davenport I Modern carved
molded base I Combination tapestry cover.
MOHAIR SUITE ..........49.94

MOHAIR FRIEZE74.94

floral drill ticking! Rush to Wards-SAVE I

SAVE $6! PLATFORM SPRINS

Th* BIGGEST lounge chair
value of the season! Spring
back “fits" when you lean
against it! Carved knuckle
arms! Soft pillow topi Fig­
ured tapestry upholstered I

«3 DOWN
ONLY $4 MONTHLY
Sbo/I Carrying Okarps

MO NT G OMERY

WA '

�Thi*
1 Sate PHa!
SALE!

Regular *49° Quality

Even $75 would be LOW for a dining
room fuitg of this Tine quality! Extra
large pieces! Beautifully veneered in
striped wflnyt and butt walnut!
Heavy, built-up turned legs! Exten­
sion tabic yith 12-inch- folding leaf
included! Large buffet, five side chain
and one arm chair! Sale special!
Ching cfblnst extra, $20.00

9 x 12 WARDOLEUM
Wardf regular $4.98 price is low fpr these!. Sale priced
at $5.39 they're sensational valye^l Patterns for
any ropm in your home—moderns, florals, hooked rug
designs, even oriental*!' And remember. YOU NEVER
HAVE TO SCRUB WARDOLEUM—a light mopping
keeps its bright enamel colors fresh and clean! No fasten­
ing or lining of any kind is necegggry I It lies flat to the floor!

$2.79 . 9,1014... $4.19

FULL

REG. 37c WARDOLEUM YARD GOODS

O x 12

714,9

BUG

&lt; end 9 foot width* in a wide assortment of oatterns! Cover small floors aaamfoas/y from w«U to
•
walll Sensationally sale priced at. sq. yd. nLJF-B-

0x12 Axminsters
Mede to sell for J32.9SI Woven of fine, blended, imported wools

Knuckle Arm
Studio Divan

A big, handsoene London Lounge style up­
holstered in ■ choice of plaid or self figured
tapestry! Carycdknuckle arms! Opens to
ful!-eisc double bed! Hurry! Buy now!

Ututlly Priced $6 Higher!

just like true orientals I That means you get beautiful colors that
won't wear out and a deep, thick, all wool pile that gives EXTRA

years of service I It takes Wards to bring you value like this! Choose

from Chinese, Persign, modem, floral, and hooked rug designs I

AMERICAN ORIENTAL
eiiPER-St^'c^

SAVEM2! AXMINSTERS

Auguit
S.h
Price

9x11 SIZE! You wry oryr
111 Patterns woven clear
through to the back! AU-wool
pilei Heavily fringed!

SALE QF CHENILLE HUGS

SALE OF SCATTER RL'QS

SI.79 vulus' 37 1 SO rise! Reversible! Colorful
patterns! Marvelous bargains at only———

Ail the features of expensive floor lamps!
SIX degrees of light insure healthy sight!
Complete with beautiful silk top shade
and IOO-20D-300 watt bulb! Base In Ivory
aod"gQW* or Old English finishes with
Mexican onyx trim!

(•Meets 54 Tecfcaleri Speiifitstieei ef Weas/aatiay faylaesrlny Society)

to« tr:

CERTAINLY GOT A FINE RANGE FOR MY
MONEY/ WITH AN OVERSIZE OVEN TOO:

DaiuaiMMiH
3 Big Pitctsl Oritnul
W&gt;od V.n..,.dl

IlotStry
Fieri rhi

44«4
STOVES!

47”
August sale special! . True
rotary action! Automatic
tension. built-ln-Ughi. at­
tach menu; walnut console

you! veneered on fronts, tops and
sides in beautiful oriental wood!
Dustproof top and bottom drawers!
Bed, chest, and vanity or dresser.

BENCH, 8B.D4

niff
Oversize Tub

’10 OFF USUAL PRICE!
534.95 Modern Stream­
line Studio Divan I

with Other Ranges Up to $35

Kerosene Range
The big oven is only on« of
lhe features that make thia
range an-exceptional value! J
lull-.ua wickleu burnersRsme hotter than city gas!
Spacious double action cook-

top! Another gr»«t Ward
v&gt;laeI Compare! .

2|”«

WARDS LOW PRICE
. .
-

ft4

•*
OUf

WH* St/ea-ftae CuriJeafI

PORTABLE OVEN

««c

Wards newest studio divfn gensationally sale priced I B-auUful
figured tapestry upholstery is
"Ev-RDri” processed to resut spots, stains,Ynoisturf I Two
big 11x3 7 " Air-Flo” pillows!
Opens to double or twin bqds!

W1IN WHt*
M DOWN!

M MpMTHI-Y

Swell Cerryin*
eeVferdi
MoutMr Peywent Pion

39*’

Auguit eeJt ipetiall A earl*

fied IH.SO vita*! Compart.
Famous LovaU wringer! Adjuatabls roll pressure! Big tub
holds 20^ pwfs clothes’‘

M no I gomes* v Wai'll

1184g; SOVTH JEFFERSON
HASTINGS, MICH. PHONE 2691

�"

........... .. .............. --------------------------------------------------------------------- *

-----------------------------

WARDS AUGUST SALES for lhe HUME SET NEW RECORDS t
Wwrrfa “MOV|K VIAL*

Airline Radios

CAST IRON FU
Only $5 down puts this remarkable furnace in your home—a
heating capacity far greater than the average, one that will give you years
of trouble-free service, one that thousands of satisfied cuetoown enthu­
siastically claim:
.. the finest made!" Corm in and tee it fer yourself...
look at other furnaces . . . compare I Convince yourself
that at Wards low price you get a real beating plant!
W

than any Retailer

S5 Down, $5 Monthly, Small Carrying Chargo

*****

Il-Tube Consoler

95

IRON

Automatic two-apetd tuning i makes tha
MOVIE DIAL a plaaaura to use- Tha
cathode-ray eye lata you SEE whan you're
perfectly tuned I World range, all wave! Auto­
matic bzu tone booetsr and volume control!
MetH tubes! Adjustable high fidelity!

OfttW*6

PWce

Rtductd! Inrttll Now I

Bathroom Omtfit
6-TUIE SET
All-wave A.C. man­
tel. Automatte vol-

tuning

CLOSET MAT

SA LEI SINK

1.98

4.15

FIXTURES
98«

Treat yourself to a new bathroom
at Wards low price—you pay only
&gt;4 down! Both lavatory gndS-fttub are First Quality porcelain
enamel over cast ironicloeet is Firn
Quality Steinkes vitreous dries I

Aegu/ar $&lt;■■»/

lO-Tobft Raltorv

Sale! Aluminium^

Finest Battery Console Wards ever ar id I
ILLUMINATED MOVIE DIALI AU three
wave bands! Automatic volume conuoL Great
new alloy dynamic speaker. Built-in voltaxe
regulator; low battery drain. High fidelity.

Reduced! 12-Qt.

Pressure Cooker
95
7-Tube BATTERY

Tastier foods . . . more easily, more
economically cooked I Wards cooker
is extra heavy, highly poUthed cast
aluminum — see it, try it, buy itl

Lighted dial. All 1-

Your
CAo/ce

S-ot tesketde • 9-cvp percolator • *1 \4-qL dooblo
bollsr • 6-qt ceversdketds • 10-qt dhk
NMMMtnj.Uldd

Compare the low sale price on thia hard, qual­
ity aluminum I See these features: wide bottoms
to trap heat* high doaw covers; cool wood knobs;
strong, steel handles;handsome modem design I

Wards Introduce an
MLIIHtUITlM.

COLD PACK CANNKR

55c

.U

89c

IM*. WATER PAH.

i’79"

Ea.yAo-etaaa gvey

2-ia-l facusiagl

1-qt. rise. Complete
with line lid, rubber!

Fast.. Easy
Economical

SALE! riAMMOKT

With batteries! hhl

BIKE! SALE PRICED!
Tfarfels/

SALE PRICE
BOLT ACTION

^RW**** REPEATING
22-eal. Rifle

GUARANTEED

with 4-Pawer ’Seepe Sight!
IW
SM V.ht

FLAT WAtl. PAINT
• A sensational new casein paste paint.
• Goes much farther ... looks better ... lasts
longer than the best of oil typo flat paints!
• Costs less ... yet is much sagjer to use!

• Gallon of paste makes iy, gals, ai paint.
• Ono gallon covers 600 to 100 square feet,
• One coat completely hides old surfaces!
• Convenient to use ... dries in 40 minutes!
• Absolutely no disagreeable "painty” odorl
• Use anywhere inside ... on plaster, wood,
metal, wallboard, brick, or canvas surfaces.
• No priming eogt of gay kind necessary!
• Can be washed with soap and water!

Pull-sued Western Field rifle. tubular
magaainr, 34-in. barrel; walnut finish
■tack, grooved fogcarm; 41 If-in. long.
The 'scope is built like $20 models,
haa 5 lens optical system, clear defini­
tion. Gives a 17-ft. field M 100 yards.
ISM inchet long: Buy in thb sale 18avet

lifto, without 'Scope

109

Gallon

CROWE OF
COLORS

Jte»8c
TP rgfo **

PATSJOOWN
■Df/TAWAW

�m iusttnim xwmi nrgMjAt, acgxjst

MAKE YOUR CAR REPAIRS NOW • GET THESE REDUCED PRICES

Wards August Sale of
Tires and Auto Supplies!

OW OLD)

on “First Quality
RIVERSIDES a

KE MODEL!

Biggest Trade-In
Montgomery Wards Have Ever Offered
on Electric Refrigerators!
A Deluxe Model with Every Worth-while Convenience Feature!

WARDS 6% CUBIC FT. DE LUXE

BACKED IN WRITING BY
TIRE PRICES ARE GOING UP!
Material and labor costa are sky-rocketing I But
at Wards, prices are still low. Change to
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ADVANCE! Get Wards liberal cash allowance
for your old tires. That means additional sav­
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consider that actual tes throve that Riversides
are America's longest wearing first quality tire I

GET WARDS
PRICES
Rotors You Buy
Any 11r*i

WARDS UNLIMITED GL.JANTEE!
HERTS YOUR

• Cuts

• Faulty brakes

• Brulies

• Under Inflation

• Blowouts
• Wheels out ol line

CHANCE TO
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You are protected agalnit everything that can happen
to a tire in service—without limit a* to the nwnbBr of
month* or miles you drivel
_________ Monthly Pfymeeti May is Arranged

A $210 value! Compare! A beautiful big refrigerator that provides 5

kinds of cold at once and gives amazing operating economy al up

to 120 degrees by test! 14 sq. Ii. shelf area, 90 cubes, 8 lbs. of ice!

wards Regular low price

Drru-l'y YonrCor!

'

SALE! SEATCOVERS

FOR THE 6'/i CU. FT. DELUXE i

9154.05

farfhatUi" 20.00

Spark Plug

Bumpw JkI

Floor Mats

ft27«

^1»»

ft20«

Ratchet type.
Save* temper,

Mg CA*r»«

Backed by Wards 5-Year Protection Plan!

Oil Filter

Radiator

fc 89®

12,000-mlle
replacement
cartridge!

Commander Buttery!

Every Worthwhile Feature in these
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GUARANTEED 1 YEAR!
Tiro Pump

Auto Hom

Light Bulbs

Fender Guide

J*’09c

ft&gt;70«

ft'44®

Patch KK

ft He

las "^nap

SMALL SPACES—BIG AVINGS!
Sale! lOffi Pure

•ST 9169.95

ThAdt is

204)0

In your container
Verified 30c-35c

,^14995
ON

FARM

YOU

MONEY

EQUIPMENT!

Rebuilt

Lined BnbDs&amp;hooi

Tillotson Carburetors
ferMA Q 11?
Rag. S3J9 OalO
FwOw'. S.Rm. 14. M . 84.M

Generators

Shock Absorber Links

19 Piece Wrench Set
ft1,

Ke^ularly 31a! Complete
with 2 buihingi. Stop
rattle* and aquealul

Complete socket ret. IS
(ocketi, 2 "L" handle*,
ratchet wrench.

1.79

5-qt. Can. Regular 95c ...................... Sale, 80c
2-gaL Can, Regular 81.35------------ Sale, 81.11
Refined from Bradford Allegheny Crude!
Add 1c qt. Fed. tax to above prices.

Only J5 Down! Small Carrying Charge

WARDS SAVE

King Bolt Sets
Feeder.
c
Rag. 69c *•&lt;&gt;

PENNSYLVANIA OIL

Tack.
Eack.
la M Ala. it.ee. 8L4S m.

Leek a&gt;4 W.rk Like N.wl

^^/j^/BUY NOW AT THIS SALE PRICE!

Ward* Master

SEPARATOR

7995
See there feature*: ttainie** rteel
bowl—clean* with a rinre. can't
.sure, can't get out of balance; S. K.
F. Ball Bearing* packed in greare
and reatod in a «teel care; adjureeble cream pail shelf; anti*spla*h,
tinned steel supply tank I Skim* 500
lb*, of milk per hour! See it I

SS DOWN, SS MONTHLY,
SMALL-CARRYING CHARGE

MADE IN U. S. A.
2Se
handy; sturdy I

AND
SIZES
Lowed price in years I Wards are FIRST in nail

value—anytime. Now—during this sale only—

you can buy 8 Penny nails and all larger sizes

tfana ddatoe/,
SCREW DRIVER! BALI!

‘

at the astounding price of ,3’/jc per pound! All

«»&lt;•

are first quality, made in U. S. A.

3-qt. Reduced
from $1,001

• You « wise to stock up at this price!

RECEPTACLE PLATE

TOGGLE WALL SWITCH

SWITCH

PLATE

JStWS.‘T:8«

■teg. 19c Hammer
High Carboa Steell Regularly 49c
and an exceptional value at
that price! No* you buy in
thereto at only---------------

A

HAND GRINDER, tharpen* &gt;&lt;K«*
■mall tool*, specially priced. "P&lt;FV
BOYS' JACK KNIFE, fine *&gt;(r_

ateel blade*, red handle, only ZilC

MONTGOMERY

WARD

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 13,1936

14 PAGES

Barry County Flower Show Is f[JES 2.00D MILES
BAHRY COUNTY
ON WEEKLY RUN
SHOULD GET IN One of the Features of the Fair
COUNTY HAS GREAT POS­
SIBILITIES FOR THIS
NEW FRUIT

Exhibitt To Be Placed In

Newly Decorated Floral Hall

'RAGWEED CAMPAIGNI
,
CLOSED ON MONDAY

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to

DEMOCRAT RALLY
ON AUGUST

Largeit Number Brought in
. t a 2%
19iOeoWoo°kx
by Barry County Boy
Trout
Wai 8,700
IE HELD
D
L*k'
GROUND JOBS HAVE LOST
COMMANDS A STI
WILL BE
HELD ON
ON THE
THE
„
~“
\ ‘P ~
Well, anyway, there U teas ragI George H. Myers
CHARM FOR MISS
SITS ON oham:
FAIR GROUNDS
1 red tn Barry county today than
YVONNE TREOO
।
hundred
miles
into
Northern
Mich
­
AND LAKE GEORGE
HERE

confusion
all
containers
"There is more honor- in exhibit­ avoid
igan to get big trout. We have them
-­
1 losed on Monday and several folks
ing well in a strongly contested aiiould be labeled underneath with .
■
£^oX’.»T5rX,SS'0BJECTIVE OF MANY
owner’s name. This may be done ASSIGNED TO CHICAGO*
&lt; emonstxated that they h»d been on PROGRAM PREPAREDCULTIVATED BLUE­
class and losing than In winning a
with
adhesive
tape
OMAHA
DIVISION
t
&gt;t
job.
The
campaign
to
gel
rid
of
Outstanding feature* of this show
UMHnH uIVIOIVU
DR. SWIFT TO PRESIDE
ST
MILITARY EXPEOffl
BERRIES DEVELOPING prize with weak products in a class
t tis noxious weed was sponsored by
In which there Is little or no oppo­ will be table* set by lhe women's Haitingt Girl Find« Work a« I te West Michigan Tourist and Re___ .'
.
1 1mem.
them. sxiore
Before tney
they were
were leaving
leaving me
the
.
club* and commercial exhibits by
«rt Association, the local Com­ Mrs. Virginia Baird, General • lake, when n was twilight. George : Iroquob
Will Yield Fine Profile to sition."
Indian!, RngUah,
florists
In
Barry
county,
also
shadow
Air
Stewardess
Fas
­
The annual Barry County Flower
mercial Club cooperating.
Obairman—Speeches by SXe’’V!£M.’E’MjSd’
Crwef
Those Who Start in the
'Show will be held during the entire boxes.
Those bringing in the greatest
cinating
week of the Barry county fair. Sep­
A few pointers for exhibitor* to
number of plants were: Charles
''
Near Future
Noted
State
Men
Itah
were
jumping
up
after
food
at
I
Fight
for
Supremacy
Jutoto
J... pmtouu,tember 8. 9. 10. 11 and 12. in Floral keep In mind are: Flower* should
Hastings. Aug. 13 —Speeches by i lh»t time. He- got a good stiff yank | if yOU are planning an eastern
It lx not because cultivated blue­
first Hastings
girl 87qq. Mason p Thomas, aged 10
hall, just east of the grand stand be cut al such lime as will enable mentioned,
,---------- the -------------- ------ ---•
men of state repute, sports, singing. 00
“nd, ,toe»
had a i vacation trip, might we suggttt that
berries are a hobby with the Banner Ute fair management has secured them to reach their height of per- 10 become “ member of the newest I
a picnic supper and concessions will lroul- 11 10012
a tlme to u,;d you include a vUK to Fort Tlaindartor, ^awn-lh^l at air an
&gt;|(K ontn.
orrrJi 2.M&gt;: Robert
nuur^ niancr
that we mention them again, butthe
____services
_________
of___
experienced
________ ________
decora- feetton al lhe Uine they are Judged.
Kldrter,
him on the
icatuic lhe Barry
duty county
vuuiixy Democratucinucrai.- ,, «»:
: . • • and
—— to
—bold
------ ---------- ..stnMl
. . ! oga. at Ticonderoga. N. Y.. in yaw
*teworde*s of modern transport, cltRoutc j 2,400; Charles Blough, feature
because we want to see Burry county i tors to decorate the interior of this Read rules and flower schedule
in be blur
lc Band Wagon rally -.1.1-1.
which —
will
blue a(ll
gfll hook
hook was
was no
no small
small lob.
job. Itlnrrnrv?
itinerary? Thl.
This U
Is aa nlaaa
ptace nt
of whiafe
which
2 000- Russell Iget in "on the ground floor" in the | building ta provide a suitable back- carefully before making entries. Be ' Ptane* speeding over airways— is ; 4,0„Clinton 8t..
ijm Yvonne Trevo.
8p Ch°rch 1JK4 x'uaac“ held under the auspices of the state, but be did it. It was a beautiful we hear little in thb section of th*
Mui
Trego, who Is
is now flv
fly*­ •
big development that is certaltj to. ground for slaglhg a flower show, sure you have the right amount of M
"central committee in each county brook trout. 20H inches long and country, despite
.... 1U
. contrlbutidh
..
ta
ing
regularly
on
the
Chicago-Otnaronie
The Tliartinnnle
flnrrten Club in
tn mcome In
in the vrowinu
growing of cultivated Tlie
Thornapple Garden
co­ flowers called for in class schedule.
'Still there are hundreds of these In the slate on the same date, when i weighed 2% pounds.
the
development
ct
these
United
lia
division
of
United
Air
Lines
’
;
blueberries.
operation with the County Federa­ A bud allowing color counts as a
plants left to cause annoyance to each county group Is -to "Climb on ,
————————
Slates.
coost-to-cast airway.
Over near South Haven, al the tion ot Women’s Clubs sponsor this flower.
sufferers from hay fever and asUiThis week we have received a very ma.
i the Band Wagon" and get solidly
experiment station of the Michigan flower show.
In an arrangement a general rule
.
Lake Champlain on a high eleva.'
behind the democratic candidates |
State College, over 2.000 seedling
It Is the alm of l)ie committee in as to height is one and one-half charming picture of Miss Yvonne
lion, the rtrt is ideally situated to
I for county, state and national ofljees
plants are wearing identification charge to make this show a source times height of container. If it u tent by the News Bureau of United
| Dr. Birge c. Swift, of Middleville. I
tags, placed upon them by the hor­ of pleasure and satisfaction to all an upright one: or if a low broad Air Lines, 221 N. LaSalle St.. Chi­
candidate for the democratic noml-1
...... is
to. u..e
ticultural experts who are planning who attend, whether garden-mind­ one, height
one and one-half 'ago. which shows her just ready
nation for the office of congressman I
st,p frem lh,e oval d00L,of °*?e °r
ta revolutionize the growing of the ed or otherwise, In order* to accom- 1 times
times the
the breadth
breadth of
of container.
c ' ‘
. from the fourth district, will be mas-1
.
--------------------------------- ——r
blueberry or huckleberry in Michi­ pilsh this the committee must have Masses of colors are. as a rule, bet- the trunsP°rl planes on which she is
ter of ceremonies for the program !
tary expeditions by the French and
gan.
the co-operation and support of all ter than spotty ones. Twigs *.or
। Immediately following the supper' STATE
AND
NATIONAL ' English colonists. It wag feA TWRIw
Barry county lias hundreds, pos­ Barry county flower growers. On . stems crossing in line of vision are ।
.
..
..
...
--------------------------i
ra0HWAY
OFFICERS
Regular spacing of |
sibly thousands, of acres where the account of weather conditions flow­ undesirable.
i routes—one leading southward to
cultivated blueberry can be grown ers' may not reach the height of 1 flowers of quite uniform size, one ;
IT S H10H TIME HASTINGS
L”|
COOPERATE
profitably. They are many times perfection this season, but all are . above the other should be avoidoeorge amt.inc outer oy way cs
, games of short duration, horse shoe I
------------HAD A TOURIST
larger
and much finer In flavor thanj urged to bring their best to compete j cd. Over-grading—only the small­
—
- ---------------------------------------------------I Lake Champlain. In the seventeenth
the wild fruit. Is there any reason with their neighbors’ best. Ample est amount of material necessary
iS’SW.ru'Sf.ISerawlROAD SYSTEM ADAPTED land eighteenth centuries massy
CAMP
why Barry county should not get in space U assured, so that each and I to give the desired effect should be
placed in the grove on the grounds. I
“
TO
TRAFFIC *"
IS THE AIM events of Importance to the future
among the first In the development I every entry may be exhibited to the । used.
CITY AMONG LAKES”
l£sh family is to bring all its own ,
I The term Shadow box as used in i
of the blueberry? It will be among , best advantage.
conderoga. Ita history read* like
the first to reap rich profits If It
a flower show should be educa- flower shows
SURELY NEEDS ONE S
*H W" of Problem. In.
means a
recessed
shall do so. With the larger size, tlona). It should have, as its one space, with artificial lighting. In,
------------------on the grounds. No admission will,
volved Are Included in
and the better flavor of the cultl- j definite purpose, the raising ot the which is exhibited a floral compo- ;
quota Indians engaged in a conflict
Center of Tourist Region b® charged and all persona interestvoted berry, there U certain td be a standard of horticulture and floral sltlon. with or without accessories. I
the Survey
with Samuel de Champlain and a
1
. . — . .
.
ed are invited to attend.
greatly increased demand for it. । beauty in the community. This re- In these classes the proportion of |
Ought Not to Delay Pro­ : ojxAiAu,
Speakers .u.
for MW
ther occasion w...
will in- .[ There is now being conducted Ip group of Frenchmen on the shore
Oood prices will be paid to Uiose i quires the greatest accuracy
In the arrangement and accessorlei. if 1
1 dude a representative of the state 1 Michigan under the direction of of Lake Champlain less than a mile
viding One
who start early In Barry county in classifying and naming of plants any. to the size of the space is of I
central committee and a man from , State Highway Commissioner Van
the development of this fruit.
I and flowers. Exhibitors are asked greatest Importance. No composl- I
It seems incredible that the city of the stale highway department at Wagoner, a highway planning surAmong the varletius being cultl-1 to have all entries correctly labeled, lion should be so small as to look
Hastings, surrounded as it is by one , Lansing. AU county candidates for | vey. The national and state gov- tested but they-were, filled will
voted at South Haven arc some that' Uniform cards may be obtained lost In the spaces nor to large that
of the finest resort-lake regions In the democratic nomination will be! emmenta are co-operating in this. undying hatred of the French, w
-&lt;
h
a
—
...
.1
—
---------.
k
.i
fro|n
..
Infonnaltoll
Degjfln
floral
will begin ripening earlier than the I
it touches the recess or fills it too [
; this or any other state, should be Introduced.
Community singing I County road commissions as well as resulted in horror and bloods
wild blueberry Other varieties will hall for this purpose.
much. Colors should harmonize and '
wlU 06
be 01
of popular
popular ana
and oia
old' ume
time : county
county omeuns
officials win
will oe
be reucncu
reached uy
by 1 Warfare up and down Lake Ch
i
wu
carry lhe season through sixteen | Those
...w who luive ,.v
,c.
never
partlci- the whole be exquisitely done. Mrs. j
_
.. wllh
,.
_ ..°C I .1-1
— survey, .as
— —well
a—I, ..
'
scuiga
word4 wrllten...
for. V.lhc
1 thU
as studies made , plain continued for wventy
weeks. Instead of the six for the I pated in a flower show and fear Milo DeVries of Hastings has charge
it H a positlie disgrace for a clt) । caslon. a small orchestra «&gt;I11
1 a
nf wiionial
aarnsoldiers can
A group szitatera
of colonial
will t....
fur- , of ...^
each county’s road system.
blueberry we get in lhe swamps.
competition from experienced ex- of the boxes. Owing to the limited |
that advertise* itself as "the
{
highway J
department
in 1881 to Ticonderoga, erecting
.,“'5 .77 ' nish music for the event.
' The state "•-**
We believe It will be worth while hlbltors are Invited to exhibit In number, reservations must be made
. among takes.” indicating that It is :
--- --------Mrs Virginia Baird, who
is ....
gen- .realizes that Michigan reads are,small stone fort on this ry
. for owners of lowlands suitable for -Novice Class. Division R, Class 18., before September first by either i
[ the center for tourists, from which eral
chairman for the occasion, has | faced with cVer-increaslng traffic; | promontory which proved RM
the growing of blueberries to get In m Premium list." Having several calling or writing Mrs DeVries. Mrs, |
toi^,°i» appointedtne
therouowing
followingcommittee
committeeh mat
f thatmere
thereanouia
aiiouldoebea arrasoname
reasonablei strategic military location.
touch with the state experiment, semi-professional growers of gladl- 1 C. D. Bauer, Supt., or Miss Sadie .
/ ^to..nUU5- t0 (
chairmen
.L.,------- which
—
include one
----- senior
—i—। j
effort .made
------•- to ascertain the prob- 'French
: wrench in
tn 1755
1755 came from Cal
stalion. It would be worth-their, ou ttIKj dahlias In Barry county ; Glasgow, chairman.
1°nBMnL?)?l«??,,Li
1 democrat and one junior democrat lems to be faced, not alone on trunk and Crown Point, and sfltr *..
while to make a trip to South Haven provision has also been made for
Scale of points tor Shadow Boxes |
'for eBCh P&lt;»Won
Program. Dr. I line highways, but throughout the i struggle, took command. The ]
and mc what is actually being ac- amateur growers in these two flow- usea
used in judging:
Judging: scale
SCALE:: size
Size or
of i
Birge c Swift of Middleville, and।entire highway system, which in- ; was then called Fort Carilkm
complkhed The.*- cultivated blue- era. "Division R. classes 6 and 7. in arrangement, flowers and foliage 1
had
uauuca Uttt v.wv liilua va
, —--------- — ------ ----------- berry bushes are hardy. They sur- Premium U*t."
{accessories
{accessories &lt;if
Ilf any),
any), and
and relation
relation
lines and over 80.000 miles of coun- by the French and they
vlved last winter’s severe cold. They
AU exhibits must be in place by of all to space and to each other. |
the
hearts
ty and township highways. Traffic in “
“ u
““’” of “the
“ ■"Colonist
produce far larger berries. Some of, njnc o-clo(iJt Wctlnesday morning, at DE8IGN: -------------------------------------Line, mass, balance cm- |
1
„
' McConnell of Middleville; Registra- counts will be made. The alm of Sept. 1755. an. army of FreucJi
the new ones bear fruit that Is —
------...
«
—
which time judging will begin. Ex­ phasls, originality, as well as rela-1
Miss Yvonne Trego.
’
A
to bi ’ Uon and Attendance. Dr. John the survey will be to determine the nadlans and Indians o&amp;sembU
slightly tart, while others yield de­ hibitors arc requested to replace lion of flowers to container and ac- '
^*taNSd^r^iWooU&gt;n and Mrr d,rk 2^?.nnori character and the volume of traf- Lake Champlain, attacklngaOi
licious sweet berries. Ail of them arc wilted exhibits Thursday morning, cessorieti &lt;if any). COLOR. CON­ s te wardess which
we re nrnditcc I,
----------- . -------Concessions. Mrs. E. J. Prate, and Oc over the different highways.
of the high bush type, so that gather­ or committee will remove same. To DITION.
i above. MUs Trego 13 wearing the garded as a necessity.
The plan Involves a survey of coning the crop will not be the difficult
very natty, finely tailored uniform
We are sure the people ot Has- •1 Pete Fedewa; Traffic and Safety. A.
(Continued on page *. Sac. 1)
• task it is in the ordinary huckleberry ,
, of green with which all stewardesses ! tings, the Commercial club and the I' Lynn Brown and Richard Rose and rtruction methods used In making
Community Singing. Mrs. Lorenzo the road*, in order to learn whether
inarsh. The new plants will cost WINNERS IN A USED
. of United Air Lines are outfitted.
{ council of this city, must realize the
are adapted for the present or
good money right now; but by car-I
l During a brief slop at Chicago on awkward situation in which our city F. Maus and Lewis Hine and pub­ they
the prospective traffic over them.
CAR CAMPAIGN
licity,
Winn Green.
ing for them, following the dlrec-1
.
pJaced by advertising itself ai j
___________
'Ti
i
her
run ....
Mtas Trego Is quoted,.jtnan j
Another problem will be to ascer­
lions which the experts will give.1
as saying:
! Interview
"AlUiough
I have been flying as I no tourL‘“ro“
*u&lt;1
““1W. J. FIELD MAKING A
tain how to give reasonable high­
there is no reason why Barry coun- Local
sal Chevrolet Firm Guests
'
r a month I am very enthusiastic L^toSfLST^'^1 remarkable recovery way service to sparsely settled re­
ty should not have several hundred
L i .... ....
(v.
u .....v &gt; ^scarcely u aay xues uy wiuiuu.
M I- M n W ■ fl KI r- Khl llwbKY gions of Michigan. These are pre­
of Company as Reward
acres of cultivated blueberries that j
I D^e to the remodeling being done over a month I am very enthusiastic from one to several Inquiries being
numMnrxKPuu iiuvutLii 1
will be yielding a fine profit to their i
for Their Efforts
j In the church there will be no Sun-; about my duties. I find flying very, n&gt;ade of the sheriff or the cty mar-;
m„Ia, liminary steps far a rational state
R. K. Hurd. Raymond Shroyer day services at all In the United . enjoyifble. but even more Important. । shal. asking where lourlsta can put Underwent a serious Major highway program. .
We have seen a picture of a bushland Albert"Klnn^had’^he^honor Brethren church this week, accord- the Interesting people I meet keep; their cars for the night, or where
The survey win consider not only ON M-37 FROM 7:30 SUN­
Operationat University
federal-aid and trunk line high-1
DAY P. M. AND 10
of one cultivated variety produced lltld pleasure of attending a gather- Ing to Rev. E. O. McSherry. pastor. my job from becoming monotonous, they can camp out here if they wish1,
„
.. . „ - . .
ways, but also county and township j
u&gt; stay
stay for
for a
a week
week or
or two
two to
to enjoy
enjoy 1,
Hospital Friday
___
_
al the state experiment station near lug ln Detroit recently as guest* of Monday evening. Aug. 17. the fourth iI wouldn't
wouldn’t think of trading it for a
u to
roads. The federal ?7'
government
is;
' ' meeting
---------------" on the ground.
'”
n’™i,ro
“■
--- ---------------,
of this
south Haven. The individual berries thC Chevrolet Motor Co. This hon- and'■last' quarterly
Job
fishing and the lake trips. That i| ■"»!»« «in«.d.or
average a little larger than most or came as the result of a Used Car conference year will be held at the
Requirements for a position as air could easily be done if this city had 1
FORTUNATELY
NO
ONE
other ^titivated kinds. The fruit ta I campaign sponsored by the Chevro- church.
stewardess on United Air. Lines, the a tqurlst camp, and it would bene-1 ..... -— ..... from the Univer- ’’
sllghtly tart in flavor and forms in , )ct co., the local flrm being among
article States Include that the can­ fit the city and add to its tourist
- ----------------.
..
nmr &lt;
SERIOUSLY INJURED
clusters as big as a man's clenched. (he winners in the contest, having
didate be a graduate registered patronage.
.had made a decided Improvement
n .
I
FOUR FIRE ALARMS
first. One of the parents of this | sold the largest percentage of used
nurse. Miss Trego explains that this
Isn’t it tlnw for Hastings to stop, following his operation, which was
.
high bush crossing w a plant । car*. They were entertained at
SOUNDED SUNDAY qualification is imposed, not because talking about this subject and do performed the preceding Friday.
The operation was a most difficult I
d 1
roads
d
1
found in northeastern Michigan six ; breakfast and lunch followed by atIt Is necessary to attend to ill pos- something and do it right awayT
years ago in a contest sponsored by । tendance at the ball game at Navin. Three Were Grass Flre«{ and delicate one. consisting of the c
.I
How to meet the mechanical
One Trunk Line
the M. 8. Horticultural Society. By. fl,|d. m th* *v*nlng a banquet wa*
sengers are susceptible to air sick­
; removal of a tumor from the left |
Four Alarms onPreced'-’
problems
involved
in
a
stale
high-Reports
of four automobile acch
crossbreeding and cultivation a won- heId to which the Tigers were also .
ness. She explained the discipline TO SELL NINE
• side of his brain. Two nationally j
derful new variety has been pro- invited. Seven of them accepted—
in the training of a registered nurse
Ing Sunday
known specialists In brain trouble. way system is very important; of dents were made to the sheriff Bunand
their
ability
to
deal
with
al)
I
SCHOOLHOUSES
almost
equal
Importance
are
the
flday
evening
and Monday forenoon,
duced—and there are several others schoolboy Rowe. Goose ooslln, Ger- {
&gt; 1UIU UKU auuuy lu ucai wim iui i
I Dra. Peet and Kahn of Ann Arbor,
Between
10:35
A.
M.
and
5:35
nandal
problems.
These
will
all
[
Fortunately
no serious injury reeillt- •
whleh have been recently developed. I; „
ld walker,
ma
waiKcr. Jake
jaxe Wade.
waae. Marvin !1
nrot people are respons^jle for
A fine opportunity will be offered [ did the operating and they seem
। Owen. Jack Bums and Lefty Parker, M- Sunda? there were four nre nursC3 being employed.
1 to have met with marked success. be considered In the survey, which cd for any of the occupants of the
.
to
farmers
who
may
need
extra
,
ought to result tn a wiser and bet- cars involved.
each of whom was presented with a alarms to which the city truck re- j Miss Trego Is flying approximately
SHOULD PAY BEFORE
l buildings for any purpose in the, 1j It was feared that Mr. Field might
’ on Bunday evening about 1.30
CTDTriiDCD i inoc chrvrolet &lt;»r. “« would have been , sponded The first was a grass Are ,2.000 miles a week in regular duty, sale announced in the Banner thlsj, I suffer paralysis of his left arm or his ter program for Michigan.
btrl tMDtn I, 1500 the other fifteen had they accepted | on
011 East Colfax
onuax wnicn had
Iina n good
B«xi
-* 150
-- other »t*w*r&lt;»e««s on week by the Delton school board.;' left limb, or both. Fortunately he is &gt;?,r Ward KeUy hiV5 chnr^ of James Hinckley was driving John
on tuisL Lonax, which
wnicn nan a
u guou There
which
this survey In Barry county. Mr. Armbruster’s truck northward OO
------------- I the invitation The banquet program BUrt nnd
n
'
ear
wmo
home*
and
I
United
Air
Line*,
lhe
first
of
which
atari ano was near some nunica aim
- - —
■
r.^ia..„ They have nine district school-,. able to move both with apparent Kelly is at preaent living at Leach
toward town. Lawton WfPHrtil
Property Owners Should Pay I, included
a
three
hour
floor
Show.
I
•
■■
—
'wn.
.mnlnv»d
nn
th»
nhlenon-Rnn
mciuaea
iiirrc nour noor snow. threatened to make trouble. It was *B3 employed on the Chlcago-8au houses to sell. The districts havc, i:freedom.
was—thought
too that
-----------r It-----,
---------------1 iaxe
.
^B»ctsco division of lhe company’. Joined toe Delton dUtrtet. end to j toe
of &gt;ki
Uiis
in tk.
the —seat
with
_
. . _ _
_
II U.*lnn»r«
Winners tn
in tt&gt;&lt;&gt;
the ITuit
Used nar
cor &lt;-nnla&gt;»
contest S?out without wustai any loss
opereUon.mUhl Impeir 1&gt;U e,e- lnke-'----------------- -----------------------I»
U
&gt;U city
ell, was to
lhe
jtoj Mto
Second 10 Per Cent on
At 5:25 P M. Another
flre I coa*t-to^o**t route in May. 1930
Will not use these buildlnas The
but that has not proven to be । D
j
.tv
i
As lhe? rounded the turn naa^l
were presented with leather bill folds, which were autographed by
Delinquent Taxes
oJ toe iSSei IsTen to, ^5“
’,U1
" F* Bd"d COHCeH
was
discovered
near
Judge
Stuart
D
*DT
GC
HIID
TIME
I the Tiger players present. The Has­ Clement’* home on W. Grand St. “An I Ur UUn I INIt
The State Administrative Board
tounwSJ to?2er.uS to ”, ^^nUxe-nto,
gram
LS
is calling on those taxpayers ot tings men were delighted with the The blaze was quickly extinguished.
to. / X
BELONGS TO bUR CITY S'to1 ^.^.^.toeveUtoWlto^
whole affair.
LAJJUJC bllC OAAC. WUU.U WI.4 W
----- ---- _---------- —' ’
JIRUMUJ) CVeillUg
Michigan, who look advantage of ,
on Friday. August 21. Terms arei^W that was not necessary. He । tendance at the concert given by
was discovered on Jason McElwain's
the taw passed in 1033. allowing
MORE ROADSIDE TABLES.
I
hurt.
.
Hastings City Band has been
them to take ten year* to pay their |
farm on M-37 this side of the ceme­ That Was Theme of Judge cash; no property will be removed |waa ab,e Sunday to take nourish- [
Nothing the state highway de- tery. That too was put out without
until settled for. Clyde Leonard wlU i menl &gt;n lhe “ual
and2?“ 1 excellent and aU have seemed to ' Mr. and Mrs Floyd Miller, Wil*
taxes due in 1932 and previous t
Hughes in Addressing
years, paying ten per cent each I
"rai£? lhd^?
be the auctioneer and Homer W. » Kood appetite. Everything about enjoy the programs. The band is drlvlnr north on M-17 wlU
damaging any property.
driving
M-37, with M
Aldrich the clerk.
the case so far seems to indicate he • pr0gr„3ing iplendldly under lhe 1 dr
?£' north on T
year for the ten-year period. The | ^d.ld.
Rotarians
At 7:30 another alarm came in. j
I inlj«
III
second payment must be made be- | jjjj Mtehl?an^Ser? ta
complete success or me operation
This one was from Earl Boyes' ■
Hastings Rotarians were well eit\
1 and his recovery in a comparatively
Following ta the program for this o'clock Monday morning About
fore September 1 next so those
Michigan. Here in Barty home at 421 W. State St. Mrs. Boyes । tertalned by Judge Sam Street
. '.j
J, .
,,
.
,. countv.
mile north of Dowling the car '
county, a
a eountv
county of
of takes,
lakes, the
the num.
numshort
time,
and
that
he
will
soon
be
Thursday
evening:
who owe the second installment on ।1 ber this year has been increased to had lighted the gas stove and put Hughes, municipal Judge of Lanback performing hl* official duties at
March—Captain Goodridge, by
over some meat to cook. Her mind I sing, al their Monday noon lunchthese buck taxes on the ten-year
way. making a complete so
eighteen, according to Al Brown.
the post office. This news ta most' midreth
plan, should take advantage of the Ii state road engineer. He tells us was on her husband, who was very i eon. His theme was the performsault. Fortunately no one was
gratifying to all his friends, who apoverture—Empyrean. Vy Hayea.
opportuntles to pay the second ten ।
111 at Pennock hospital following . ance ot one’s civic responsibilities.
Joseph Frumken of Toledo. &lt;
1 sometime, alongside certain tables * m»°r W»a«&gt;. •»« toe Ionol iTbe Judge inslrted met, our duw 1*
predate hl.
his Ar,One spirit .
and
nrf th«
the ...
ex­
Humoreake—Dvorak.
per cent and save their properly
and his wife were In an Oldsm
“
XXX X
1 ,h” h,a «urM
■"« hM tometoto, more then Juel to get .
cellent work he has done as post-: Rag—Little Rastm. by Bennett.
from being sold at a tax sale.
headed for Hast tags with
w.Zj’nn.uTl
Bonc to »’neighbor's Brooke poured ! living. We are obligated to do toit :
master and his honorable career os I Overture—Idealistic, by Brooks.
Frumken driving. Near the R
rorou to
.. «"• 01
*'M°" •“&gt;
ta Ce toould aboleel Ita pert ol
a business man. All hope for his
WINDSTORM CO.
Novelty—Plggly Wigglcy. by Bar­
H" demeg.
our lime, work
uu.
-M.K end
«... drought
u«u«,.v belong
uc.u11M|i Mr. and Mr^ E G. Stebbins and speedy recovery.
. lull.
MADE BIG GAIN. Jtoi^« to toe (X. o' iurto bu“
county truck No. 27. whkikWM
looking to the future of course, but
' March—The Richmond
to the community where we live for j ***■- ar}d Mr’B- .OftrdlI?r. w^°1
' - The Windstorm Insurance com­
cept what was caused by smoke.
veiling wwt. Mr Frumken was
nvc or six are already being tried
Halt.
The previous Sunday, August 2, its betterment. He urged the Ro- come from Ionia and are living In
TWO WEEKS' VACATION.
------pany agents, notwithstanding the out in the state. It's a service that
ly brubed but not seriously hu»
double house owned by E. P.
The official board of the Metho- ] WalU-Allce Blue Gown, by Tterrevere drouth and the fact that would help to place Michigan on there were also four alarms. Fire tartans to lake special Interest in I
At about ten o’clock &gt;
.
July Is a busy month on the farm, the map for tourists as few things truck driver, Everett Swegles feels young folk* who are growing up.- B0?,Uun'F' °reeP strcetdlst church voted, at Its meetingne?- ,
forenoon Ben Cram, of Eart
Stebbins and Mr Gardner last week, to give the pastor, the' Novelty-Oetlln The Breaks, by
gathered In nearly 44.000.000 of new would, and be a benefit to residents that such Sundays are not days of They are not different from young I
Calhoun county, was drtvtr
insurance during that month. The i u icll Michigan^ roadsidTtablM rest for him. as after each alarm people of other eras; but they do *’• purchased the Edmonds oil Rev. W. Maytan Jones? a vacation YMer.
face
trying
situation*
in
which
they
««Uon
on
E.
Green,
near
the
C.
K.
of
two
weeks.
He
has
announced
i
March
—
Cheerio,
by
Goldman,
he
has
to
go
over
tiie
truck
care
­
5U"’ .IT, W M9
“ "*;h i have attracted nationwide comment,
small children. They war*
and are d^‘™tor?,toT, to.t to. TUi. X. L. Dewe, oj Qrtod. Novelty—Style, by Yoder.
fully and pul it in condition to re­ need the kindly interest and help
a record as that can be made in:
ot
their
elder*.
।
Shell
products
In
practically
all
of
March — Remembrance of Col­
spond to another call.
such a hot. dry month, svlth pros-'
Rapids, district superintendent, will
SAME OLD PLEA.
It was an eloquent, forceful talk
and
of !onla
The worst feature about Sunday
pectlve patrons busy wyh their own
preach on Bunday. Aug. 23- Rev. onel Miner, by Rosenkrans.
. ofMr. and Mrs. Stebbins have one
.
umk*. »
uunp: nnu
Star spangled Banner—by Smith.
affairs,
it maow
indicates iwo
two things:
First. .I A "ia«“lnc solicitor 13 traveling alarms is the number of cars that «...
that ------went---straight ..
to ...
the .hearts
Dewey served this church for seven
| son. Leslie, a boy of 14.
rush out and get as near its possible ids hearers.
that lhe agents must be efficient;
years and his many friends will be
Corners In Johnstown
I BoUi men are members of the
and second, that Uw company for I !!lc tamU1®r Pte* ,l!iat, he needs to the location of the flee, making
ANNOUNCEMENT.
glad to welcome him again. The
to turn to Um left ।
which they work has a state-wide. ,w
to aa*Ut hln?
««
col- It almost impossible for the truck NOTICE TO DELIN{ Moose lodge, Mr. Gordner is a soft supply pastor for Sunday. Aug. 30.
I am a candidate for sheriff on
rep'itation for square dealing and &gt; e8c’ This party gave his address in to lay a line of hose If that should
QUEST TAXPAYERS 1enthusiast, having played for will be named later.
the Democrat ticket I am strong
in
r.nt
«r. ^.&amp;eVeral Vear* 111 1,10 l0nla sofl
soundness
&lt; Hastings as 427 W State St The be neecessary. That could not have
Tne 10 per cent payments on deand rugged and young enough to
'
,a sheriff, however, learned that there been done at the Boyes' residence,
llnquent taxes for 1932 and prior1 *oa»uc
SECRETARY'S OFFICE OPEN.
handle the duties of this, at times,
MIXED DANCES.
|
n° 8Uch house number as 427. because of the interference of the 75 year* are due and payable at the of-1 M
On and after Monday. Aug. 17. the most strenuous Bffice In a very *atlsEvery Saturday night at Clear lake. At 437 no such party was known nor or 100 can, all Jammed Into two
fleo of the Barry county treasurer1; formerly of Three Rivera, who live Secretary's office at the flir ground? factory manner. George H. Myara.—
Martin’s orchestra- Frank Herringhe known anywhere in the blocks where the hydrants were lo­
on
or
before
September
1.
1036.
will
be
open.
The
telephone
numAdv.
’ ton.—Adv. tf.' ‘ '
. block. Unless such solicitors are per- cated.
at”'2O9 E. Grand street. Mr. Moran
Lorenzo P. Maus, 1 came to Hastings to become assist- ber is 2502. This will be a con ven** *
-• ■■ ■
1 sonally known by the people whom
—Adv. Out Aug. 27. County Treas. I ant at Taylor's shoe store
A?WUAL PICNIC,
BASEBALL GAME'
LAKEVIEW. WELLSIAN AND
_t well
™ not to
Mrs. tcnco to exhibitors tn making their
|I they rtrit
visit it would be
Dowling va. Hastings Independ­
5L5RTIN SCHOOL REUNION, give them any encouragement.
Past and prewnt supervisors and
Moran u
is al
at present employed at entries early, and to others having
DANCE AT THORNAPPLE.
Morlln
Morgan landing Thornapple lake.
----------------- * o ents. Sunday. Aug. 15. Vickery’*,
officials of Barry county will have
Sat. night. Btfll Wolfe's Prowlers ' Montgomery Wards. They are mem­ business to transact —Adv.
-Adv. tf
’
.bers of the Lutheran church. Paw
O. n
O. ”
F. —
COUNTY
Tuesday. Aug. 18-Adv.
’I. n
their annual picnic at Herrington's.
--------I
ASSOCIATION PICNIC, Clear lake, Thursdly, Aug. 20. Pot­
ICE CREAM SOCIAL.
•
। Paw is their homo town.
. DANCE AT GUN LAKE.--------------- Streeter's landing. Gun lake, Bun- luck dinner. Bring table service.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
By
Dowling
Ladtea
’
Aid.
Lloyd
I
Mr.
Moran
’
s
recreation
after
bust-1
ICE CREAM AND CAKE.
Friday night, Martin's Orch. Mgr. day, Aug. 16. Pot luck dinner. Drinks Drinks furnished, E- A- Parker, Secy.
14.1 ness hours Is the softball league, be-. Gaskill
uasxm -■ farm,
num, quarter mite
mne east
At Goodwin church. Aug.
Bernard Benaway.—Adv.
[ and Ice cream fumlshcd.-Adv1 ing a member of the Triangles.
| Dowling, August 14.—Adv. 8-13.
Start serving at 5:00.—Adv.

STOPTALKING!
DO SOMETHING!!

•“Eh oX“ ’STi&amp;aJpS?.

MAKING A STATE
HIGHWAY SURVEY,

°'er

No Services At
I! 15.
n r-t
Ihe U.
Church

FOUR SM1SH-UPS
337445

PrOfor Thursday

May We
Introduce

Bee.

�■upp^wed-

h QUEER REUNION OF
FATHER AND DAUGHTER

1 ■'

*

ON
FOODS

tejrt;

SUGARS 10

52c
...... BROOM
4 Sewed

POST
TOASTIES

KELLOGG'S
CORN FLAKES

29‘i.&lt;i,

L,X,. 101
"tfAKER'S

Muller's
BREAD

CIGARETTES
&lt; Popular Brands

Z Lb. Lo«f

2

2 *.&lt;26*

23c

10‘

COFFEE White House
Salad Dressing

1 Lofje Site

1 5kch

9k

23k

Campbell's
SOUPS

Maxwell House
COFFEE

NAPKINS
Embested

8h|.

SUPER SUDS

TEA
SIFTINGS

Edna’s Beit

19c

Lb.

3C„. 25‘

25k

i

,

CANDY

Del Monte
COFFEE

SEMINOLE
TISSUE

Grocer*’ Mixed

2

25k

4 *oii&gt; 25c

Except Chicken

Lb.

15‘

«i%)

Organizations

Fresh
and Cool

MeCREERVS

♦+♦

■vfc*

POTATOES Lsi
FRESH
TOMATOeS

ORANGES
288's
25‘d..

p«k

43c

HEAD
LETTUCE

9ls

Each

BUYCAWNEp G00PS NOW!
A Word To lhe Wise Is Sufficient

LARD Armour's Star

Lb.

13c

Sunday and'Monj&lt;lay, Aug. 16 and 17

| JOE E. BROWN

Earthworm Tractors
TUESDAY, AUGUST 18

*
i

Gloria Stuart and Robert Kent in

The Crime of Dr. Forbes
Aik for Coupon

Smoked
- -

20k
i

Veal
ROASTS

t5k

Pork Loin
* ROASTS
KITUES txn
r

2ov.
Beef Kettle
ROASTS

13‘Lb

-

for

Next Tueidoy Show

2 Ll. 25‘

*

t

OLEO
MAGNOLIA

WED. and THURS., AUG. 19 and 20

Edward G. Robinson

COTTAGE
CHEESE

"Bullets or Ballots"

2 u. 19

Friday and Saturday, Aug. 21 and 22

♦

DOUBLE, FEATUM

♦

Food Center

tra Tuwday. Mrs. T. V- Koykka. a
young authoraaa from Cleveland. O..
bar mother. Mre. Britton and an
aunt from Kalamaioo. sister of Mr.

Romantic Affair Revealed
jrew looking for
Lake terete everywhere continue
under the direction
When They Game to Aid
rtf Mvergl number*
Georga Wotrlng led lh» entire group
RelaUFtftf
FIRST VRXTUR1 Of KIND in a sohg tended to avoke the two
Blackman. Delton, regret
A queer situation has developed
who figures as Taddte" in ths
natural achoaa from the opposite
OOM A0B088 IN A
shore of lhe take. Ho succeeded in regard to Lavoy Ooasaert and
rari way
very well, afid it wm rather a»«-in­ Jack Baylor, who were gathered tn
Act IB1. Public Aeta of 1WT. was
Born to Mr and Mr* George Aulat
Freeport
by
the
iherifTa
officers
spiring to hear one unearthly vtdee
tin &lt;Tere$* Peterson) at Ann Arbor. passed “to regulate the carrying on
send back the caff ar)d atfout twenty for passing spurious checks, as we July 23. * daughter, Mary Ttreetf. of business under an assumed or
STUART LAKE OUTING
fictitious nAme* goch name* must
seconds later hear It come from the mentioned lakt week. It involves Congratulations.
\
.
rvcnuau the
me gtory
awry of
ox a man
mnii who
win, left
icrx hia
imb
• WAS PROFITABLE ONE other end of the lake. TheI Kendall
A graas fire near the BHm factory tM buiineaa U carried a
— J
i
slstera’ contribution* to tlu program
f---------- family more than thirty years ago
i. Kteabeth
audience
------- and way taat week reunited with called out thp department at four Vendor Velde of Delton
Picnic Dinner and Oamp F|re were to welcome that the aut
pctoek Saturday afternoon. The fire
wo* reluctant to let them go Rrr. them. Hla name is Charles P. Sa­
which «he propewes to xuparvtee Rnd
. Enjoyed by 260
.
Haggai gave a brief description of ger. Of Robinson. Ill. Hla daughter did no damage.
the Mia of which will ba undar her
his life in Damavus and the diffi­ Ltlltan U the wife of Jack Saylor.
Visitors
culties he was forced to go through She and her father came to Has­ velvety lawn of Pennock hcapital, direction. She wflfbad to carry on
14*1 Wednesday night marked tA.gain freedom in America. •
ting* to employ coun»el for her has- pride of all our hearts, look aa It under the titte "Izarn and Play
the end of the boy*' parted of th*
does thia summer.
"
To the MohammedAn*. the ruling
Gatnaa." Her application wa* filed
first 4-H Club camp held at Stuart ejemeht tn Damascus during hi* Ion ft appears that Sagar left hla
The fire alarm Tuesday afternoon with the county clerk on Thursday.
lake and lhe beginning of the girls'. boyhood, a Christian was tower home in April 1906. For the lari
The lake formed at Aitegan by
Over 2M were present during the than a dog. and was treated accoid- thirty years he had neither heard Sponablc slaughter house east of lhe the hew city power dam covere Ijoo
; evening with many parents and ingly. But eventually outride pres­ (mm nor seen tils children. In city ft caused no damage.
acre*, hold* six billion gallon* ot
I friend* of lhe campers coming for sure wm brought to bear upon the April 1911'a man was killed by a
water and haa an average depth of
I a picnic supper and program. •
■Turk* and equal status proclaimed train at Litchfield.
Michigan
In Omaha
- -- ----- --------—----I
vvwp.c
couple while ...they
7
were
1 !• XMt. The converted land coct the
The eamp enrollment for -the for
;
Christians. Jews, catholics and
------ -•
•-- camp. »ity 1125.600' The- total outlay rep­
! week wks' much larger than Jia&lt;t ‘ Mohanimcdaru. However their new the name &lt;___ .________ _________
resents an Investment of »6M.&lt;)00
[been anticipated. Fifty-seven boy* social and civic equality imposed me.- friend identified the body as
A daughter was born Tuesday lhe lake te 12 miles tong and a mile
signed up for the first four -4ay I upon them compulsory
military
and a half wide. The government
| and nearly a* many girls for tot service. The period of enlistment' over to the Univcralty of Michigan, morning to Mr. and Mr*. Harold lias a mile frontage on the lake
J latter half of the week. "Dad"' pni 0• was theoretically three years but ns none of the relative* claimed it. Haynes aL Pennock hospital The
bnljy-weighed six pound* and three Which It hat-Wien developing a*.a
i-cv ~ ----------- —i . „ ~
j.-once In the Turkish anny a Cbrte- Hte children had since believed him -otinrea.
recregUohal area, but the project
| able staff composed of Rev. wl Aptian was scarcely ever known to dead. ThcTonnff wiIe~hnd Temar-^
lja«''becn dropped for the preaent.
। Haggai. George Wotring and Hugh , leBVC u m the Mijotte-&lt;1 time. To viedIt is expected to become the most
lKel!.y
^Ur“.'LM'x“
Dll* Rev Hanoi and his two
-------------... wa*
------------ -- -----------While
Sager
working
in Mtn- ner of 8 Washington and W. Wal­ popular resort tn Allegan county, aa
'conducted by Countfr Agent Harold older brothers and two friends at- | nesota and Iowa, hta share of the
it will be the largest one of its 187
‘J. Poster and District Club Agent; tempted to leave the country for property nt hl» father had been dl- nut streets adjoining his present lakes.
residence.
F
Earl Haas.
.AmericauuiBut
Turkish
governI vlded
among
children.vme
One
■ TV.
7— Entertainment
™.......... . was
I America
incthe
luraun
govern• »iuco
auioog
niahis
enuaren.
or of
&lt;.-•«
nt
was well
well rmrrwntrrt
represented
at
’T?
‘ -- ^*2?
'
ihmil
hou‘ lb.
th* *
T?.
a*It hv
by 1 .h«nt.____
WM aware
_ ______
Of ..
it and they
_ were
1.1. hl* daughters
__ _____ ...
married- Jack
— - Saylor .hHastings
’VlL’i] Showbit
Iwtwrek AU
the Kendall jrtNtera.throaminiater । taught Mui returned home Awe- and the other la the mother of
™ uZ th.
daughters
Chatfotte,
wlt|J
onin
d n.wpi;
attempt ni
lueeeatful;. ____
that _Is., Lavoy Ccmaert. As the daughters 'T?
,hnTter menuter and
'
., ■.fromF | mi
_ __________
voices
a reunion
!? .n.H . ”,tn
orr
voice.* that
that do
do things
thing* to
to ones
one a apinl
spine’’ ln
ln getting tti-m
them onto
onto the
the boat
boat and
and were
were nrenarins
preparing for
for n
reunion with
with ' &gt;PBr
j" '' ZLiri*ed
ev'erv wa.7 '
and make youi feel all limp inside. (out of their Own country. But there ------ --------------------- -------- 1"“^!
n, rw-en* Earl novea ununBwimmtag. baseball. Pins Pppk- were dlfflculaes to be encountered hi* former home, wprd was brought' xerwfnt .n operation al Pennock
Townrend plan meeting E- Jeffer­
hortoahne.
and vqtlry ball&gt;**re ln entering America. These
announcing the
the arrest
arrest of
of Baylor
Saylor hospital on Saturday for JTPThese were,
were announcing
lhe re­ son St . Wednesday evening. Aug.
among the .*portg enjoyed byf,the overcome and ws boy* were at last *nd Covaert and that they were
youngster.’ and a campfire program
ln
unKed States. Condi- 'in Jail in this city, so the father and moval of hl* left kidney. He Is doing IB. al 7:30. Rev. Francl* Hearn* te to
be the speaker of the evening. Mr.
closed each day on a quiet note.
lions are, greatly*-,improved in Da- daughter* came here to be of what­ ns well as possible for which all are
Moore awures u» that Rev. Reams
glad
.
. masciu today, but time has not been 1 ever sasistance they could,
With so many crop* falling, to be will tjtwith us.
enough to 'erase completely from, Cossaert has admitted passing anywhere near up to standard It’s
; Rev. Haggat's mlpd the honors of I checks on the United Trust Coin­ cheering to learn that Just now the
Methodist L A- 8 Circle No 3
I hi* early ytfare there.
| l«T--'’ of E**1 81 Lout in several
jjTO’pccte for harvesting the be«t will be entertained by Mrs Albert
. The campfire program closed with Places, and also of attempting to
onion crop of any state in the Union Hemey. 620 E Oreen 81. Friday
[the singing of "America" apd , P"f3 them In Middleville and FTerafternoon
at two o'clock Please
are in Michigan
"Tap,-.." the guests returned hortlerl*’rt. He waived examination when
Hayes Body, of which A A. An- bring your dues a* this is the last
' and quietnesx and peace settled | taken before Justice Adelbert Cort­
derron is president, will begin next meeting before conference.
’ ( down
UU-II over
VOCS The
HIC camp high on the' ritfht last week. Hi* bond wns fixed
’ beside
l_u- .ti. denied jthat
____month making a line of touring car
at nt81500nnn Savior has
। hill
the lake.
trailers of safely steel automobile
THORNAFP1.F. GARDEN CLUB.
o-dv type construction al their
Several Interesting and instruc­
chcek-passing previous to the Sat­
Grand Rapids plant.
tive meeting* of the Tlmrnapplr,
urday when lhe two were arrested.
Frank BarkrufT of this city wa- Garden Chib have been licld thb
At this writing Saylor had not been
at rested on the charge of atatuton iummer.,
arraigned.
i nock ^capital:
rape and brought before Ju’tlcr
The Mav meeting was held in the
I A .boy tn Mr. and Mrs. Walter DEATH OF MRS.’ *
i Matthew* Monday. He demanded an
examination. The justice fixed Au­ E. Weldon of the Michigan Stale
Johncock. Hastings. Route 3. on
the date for It.
' Aug. 3.
Mrs
Della E Severance died -gust 13 as --------------------. Htf fur- College gave a very interesting talk
| A,girl to Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Nell. iThurulav niaht about derrn o.'clock ”h&gt;hed ball In the sum of 92,000.
on "Culture and Display ot Flower*
. '
Orchids from the «*•«•&gt;-'
Banner •«
to the for Show Purposes." ne also gave
nt the university iMuptial. Ann Ar। Hastings. Route I. on Aug, 7
tn two fine ' old-young' ladies from valuable pointers on how to plan
I A glr) to Mr. and Mrs. Harold br»r. She was taken seilouslv ill
r
.
M
|
Prairieville
—
Mrs
Lucy
Norrl*
W
md stage a flower show,
Benedict. Vermontville. Route 1. bn some time ago. and her trouble was' 1 vear* old and Mr*. Fannie Jackson
diagnosed as a tiimor on the brain.
, Aux. 9.
The June meeting of the Club was
..................................
of whom celebrated their
Wm token to.....
Ann Aruor
Arbor wnn
with M
i A girl to Mr and Mrs. Clifford
iff ord Siu•specially enjoyable, being a pot luck
the
hope
she nuani
might be
gotten —
hirthdays within the present
Ana “
'*■ "
vtn .that
«■«
oc
gmten
—r week
Clouse. Hastings. Route 5. on /
...
....
.
..
.^ontnllv
aUrt
nnrt
k
HII
r-n
nvimlife
...............
AUg mto condition for an operation She mentally alert and still enjoying life
'arm
home of Mrs. J. P. Mohler. At
A nrl to Mt .nrt Mr, H-roirt ’ P**^ on before that was done.’ The
Dr. and Mrs. Guy Reiter are reHaynre f^ittoL
A^l 10
,unrfal *“ hrM “ *h* Method.* - &lt;*»*•"« ronkratulatlons over thead- the regular business meeting which
iiaynea. Hasting, on Aug. 10.
church in Middleville on Monday I v‘nl of their first grandchild, a wax held at three o'clock Mr* Jeas’e
afternoon nt two o'clock, rnntiucted " &lt;ii,u“ht&lt;’r' 8“^“™ Louise, bom Au- Beumer told about her very inter- ■
The picture above tell* Its
7lh 10 Mr And M” Clarence •sting visit to the Fort Wayne Gar­
Mr and Mrs Art CoUteon re-' by the Rev,„j. a McNulty, pastor I
ten Club and also gave a little his| of JDnnuinuei' BpiscopaJ ehurch of j Weiss ‘Mae Keller) Memphis. Tenn
turned Saturday after spending the ilifi cilh of which she woa a mem-1 Grandmother Kellrr Is anticipating •ory of Johnny- Applerecd. A Mr
wearing clothe* freshly
1 pest week with the latter’* brother.’
and Mrs Wilson from California
ber.
। a trip down to the southland In Um
cleaned and pressed you
in Chicago and MJlvni^re
’
told
about flowers and tree* in their
Sh# wa-. united In marriage a( 1 near future
can enjoy yourself far
Mr and Mr*. Rex Waters are en­
Kilnnuizoo to Genhuiu severance. ’I7w old fipangmacher house, date. Mis* Jeon Barnes presented
tertaining Rex'* ronMrfi Mrs Bertha
rach member with n list of Garden
more Have us do your
on February 25. 1911 Mn-.t of thejri tong a landmark on W. Green
■ Danville, of r-opcmt’.h
Books to be found in the library,
cleaning regularly
. we
. Mr end Mrs. Floyd coilLvm ex­ married life v«. „penl in Roval I -treet. and moved many years ago which should prove very useful.
Onk. Michigan, where Mr Tteveranre i to the rear of th- tot which faces
will keep you looking fresh
pect to start Wednevtay (nr th* Soo
At the July meeting which
conducted a very prosperous ftiml-1 w Walnut, has been anld to Arthur
and cool. Our prpcew of
• and other northern Michigan point’.
Mire tnisineA* until the deprerunp Keeler, who is wrecking it. and will was held In the cleverly planned
■ Floyd Collison has bought, the They moved tn Mldritevillr several I use Hie material In connection with little garden
cleaning adds life to your
of Mliyi
Angle
! Underhill farm which adjoins hi.-.
Bates
on Grand fit., an Informal
clothes.
■ears aro where they had a fine an addition to his property on 8.
discussion of varlou* garden topics
...........
The Gordie Durkee* of T&gt;lton home at the west end of the pave-1 Washington street
Dr. B C. Swift nt Middleville, wa* enjoyed, a ahort article on
■ nd the Walter Willison* of piain- rnent. They, were planning tn spend
'heir declining vearZln comfort and I 8i*rry county, was calling nn Hart­ •■Cuttings" was read by the Pres.
in doing things (or oilier*, in which f°rri friend.’ yesterday. Dr swift te Mr*. Mohler, and further plana and
(Walers'.
both were interested.
» candidate for lhe Democratic suggestions for the Flower Hhow
Mr*. Severance wa* a business I nomination for congress in thte dl*- to be held In connection with th*
"Conditions of life have changed ■voman; wax vice-president of the i trict. a post to which he aspired in Barry County Fair, were made. Re­
DRY CLEANERS i1 more
In the last &amp;o year* than in
Hastings. Mich.
Fhnne 21tt J' IMXJOOJOG at the prchialorlo years" Severance Furniture Compenv at 1
but tort ln the primary to Ex­ freshments of ice cold punch and
Royal Oak for sixteen years and had 1 Cnngrwman George Foulkes of
very much enjoyed by the members,
taken n keen interest in the buM- Hartford —Hartford Day Spring.
ne.v She war. a member of the I It’* "Stuart" lake, not "Stewart." who braved one of our hottest numBusiness and Profc.islonal Women s , often erroneously written on copy
club In Royal Oak and one of its *nt in to us. The name come* from ing.
officers for some time She belonged the Stuart family, pioneer settlen in
The next meeting of the club is tn
to one of the oldest D A. R chap- Orangeville. who*e son. Judge Wil­ be held Thursday. Aug. 13. at two
ier.' in Detroit, wm a member of the - llain J Stuart, became one of West o'clock at the home of Mr*. C. R
Eastern star chapter at Middleville. Michigan's best krtnwn lawyer* and
J Rogers. All members are urged to be
ol which .’he.wa* chaplain, also an Jurists Probate Judge Stuart J. present, ns thia I* the last meeting
honored member of the Women's Clement is a nephew and namesake before the Flower Show in Sept,
also those desiring rov bowl*, tnav
Chib at Middleville. She was a fine of his.
July was one of the hottest purchase them al this meeting.type pf Christian woman, n faith­
ful wife a kind, helpful friend, fill*' months on record In Mlchigart. tem­ Alice DeVries. Bee.
perature being five degrees above
HELPS BOTH.
Nclllr willboogh of Kalamazoo, and
by a brother. Richard Taylor, of sunshine, a record exceeded only by
One of the state’* large growers
July. 1916. Il was also the fourth of rabbits declares that the wild
driest month on record with 070 carrot makes an excellent food for
NOTICE.
Inches of precipitation. Other dry them, that they eat It readily and
After this date. Aug. 6. 1030. I month* have been July 1034. with thrive on it. This ought to be good
will pay no bill.’ unless I personally 0.49 inches rainfall; July 1030. 056; news to the rabbit raiser* as well m
contract them. Mn. Newell Barber July 1019. 0 66
tn farmers whose land Is Ipfcstcd
—Adv.
Mrs. p. Marvin Sage I tad as call- with the wild carrot.

. .........

FOOD CENTER

LOCAL NEWS

i “THE

HALF ANGEL" §

* "The Girl

the Oxarks" f

Ml

TRACTOR
FOR SALE
If you arc looking far a tractor it will
pay to investigate this buy!
JOHN DEERE MODEL "GP" TRAC­
TOR (used). Complete overhaul job
including rebore of block; new pis­
tons and rings, and all worn parts re­
placed. Repainted. Tractor complete
with extension rims and lugs . . .

GUARANTEED I

Goodyear Bros.Hdw.Co
HASTINGS

PHONE 2101

�_________________________________________________________ THE HASTING! BANNY*, THURSDAY AUOUBT 13, UM

Simply Formal

PLEASANT VALLEY.
I few days In Detroit.
1 noon and pot tuck dlanet at noon.
Mr and Mrs H. W Geiger and
*"&lt;* plor“ Hooper of Cale- j Everyone invited to tnegt old classtwo small sons attended the Strong donla spent Sunday afternoon at mates and friends.
-- - - -- al- Edgar
— ■ - Strong's
— ------- of- —
— : Elmer Scott's.
1
* e » . —. - reunion
East
Barbara and Jacqueline Brake of!
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Campbell Saturday.
Mrs. Wayne Hershberger
Leona and Bruce Mesecar re­ with their grandparents. Mr. and 1| Mr! Land
oSiTmoT®^ part oClast
turned home from Hart Friday. rJf»n P. »al». Mr and Mra
XotJer Waller
Mr. ana Mrs. Fred cool enter­
F. Cousins of Hartford spent i Hershberger’s On Wednesday, Mr.
tained lhe Gray reunion Saturday. John
from Wednesday until Saturday al I
w-and Mrs. Waller Hershberger ac­
Mr. end Mrs. Earl Curtiss zand
the Brake home.
companied them to Detroit to spend
children of Hastings spent Sunday,
with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Chas.!1 Mr. and Mrs. John F. Brake, Mr. a few days with Ralph Hershberger.
and
attended
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fisher were
Hamblin.
—
• Mrs. John
—- —E.
- Brake
- —
—■—
word
u&gt;d Itmll, ol jweta- .
•'
JU- Sunday guests al the Chas. Cook
«r u&gt;d Lou Cobb ol n «.rr. ™“'r&gt; Bilurd., ,u.r c.u- borne in Belding.
Ind., spent from Saturday until । ao«to.
Ctuu. Farloe and family
were
Monday at Clayton Mote’s.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Battles of Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs.
uMrs.
----- --------.... «...
-------Hastings spent the week end at
Isaac Williams near Dowling.
.Mr. —
and
Gordon
Ritter
and
Mrs. Anna CiirUtlan returned to
baby of Clarksville spent Bunday Cecil Preston's.
Mrs. Myrtle btote of, Lansing spent her home In Kalamazoo Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Will Hullibergthe week end with het son, Clayton, after spending a month with her
sister, Mrs. Mary Fisher.
Mr.-and Mrs H. W. Geiger spent and farnUy.
Russell Taylor and family of Ber-----Ralph
-----------and--------Dale----------------Townsend
---------who
Tuesday in Ionia.
Vaughn Geiger accompanied Vere Un spent Friday evening with his. have been attending summer school
College, IndlIndi­
Howlette of Clarksville to Kalama­ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Harley Tay- at North Manchester Collate.
ana. arrived home Friday evening.
zoo Saturday.
lor.
The Pleasant Valley school re­
Mr. and Mrs. George Piper and
Mr. and Mrs. John Sullivan of
Ionia spent Saturday evening at El­ union will be held at Pleasant Val- children left Thursday evening for
mer Scott's.
, ley Saturday. Aug. 15. 1936. A good
Vem Huillberger Is spending a I program will be held In tlie after- enLs. Mr and Mrs. John Eppers. and

aUo two of her brothers and fami­
ne* at WUhee. WU. MraPMwrbas,

tr ot Texas, spentwith Mka. Mary
Mr. and Mrs Harry Sandbroolc
and children spent port of last
week in Northport with relatives.

DELTON.
Sunday. August 16th. The serv­
ices at the churches In Delton.
Prairieville and Milo on Sunday wlU
be In charge of Captain Parker,
chaplain of lhe United States Army
stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas. Also
It may be possible that Chief Chap­
lain Dasher of the U. B. Army may
be present and speak. All are invlt-

"Work on, renew your courage
dolly. The only failure Is to admit
failure."—Elbert Hubbard.

"Content U lhe philosopher's!
stone Chat turns all It touches Into
gold."—Old proverb.

ASSYRIA.
About fifty members of the Eagle
jchool reunion were present on Sat- |
frday. After lhe pot luck repast I
lhe business session was held. In •
the absence of the president. Edwin
Bennett, of Battle creek, who is In
Pella hospital from injuries sus­
tained In a fall from a ladder. Mrs.
Pearl Holmes presided. Mr. Bennett
was reelected president. Mabie Hytnd. secy.; Qeo. Bennett, vice­
president.
Mrs. Helen cheeseman. who has
lecn al lhe Ben Conklin home dur- ‘
M lhe absence of Mrs. Sylvia Blv-'
|iu, went to Delton oh Monday
s-here she has employment.
Graydon Jay. liny infant of Mr.
jnd Mrs. Clayton Gaskill, passed
I way at Leila hospital recently.
Mrs. Freda Moore of Shultz a cous­
in. has spent some time with the
bereaved family.
Mrs. Bernard Shepard, who has
been very 111 at lhe Pultz hospital
pt Nashville, is much Improved and
able to bo around.
Regardless of lhe arid condition
the farmer still keeps* faith and
Is turning his attention to plowing j
for the future crop?, where at all
possible.
Miss Beatrice serven was taken to
lhe hospital where she submitted
to an operation for appendicitis.
The Michigan-Ohio annual re­
union of the August and Catherlnfe
Rltzman family has been scheduled
for Sunday, August 16. at lhe beau­
tiful Ella Sharp park at Jackson,
Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Ketcham and
daughters. Betty and Ruth left Fri­
day on a trip to Pennsylvania to
visit relatives. On the return trip
they will meet the Earl Bristol
family, who are In New York, and I
come via the Canada route.
I
Mrs. Jennie Moon and children
spent Bunday with her mother. Mrs.
Olive Tobias and brother, Lyman
Tompkins, who Is In 111 health. Doris
and Edna Moon remained for a
longer visit.
Mrs. Rachel Callahan Is staying
at the home of her daughter. Mrs.
Jennie Holmes.
Miss Arabelle Bivens has returned
from her school work at W. 8. T. C
Kalamazoo. She returns to Bur­
roughs school. Painting and redeco­
rating the schoolhouse will be a
great Improvement.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Stanford and
family. Mr. and Mrs. George Stan­
ford and mother, Mrs. Lena Conk­
lin and Mrs. Hannah Stamm attend­
ed services on Sunday al the Moody
Bible conference at Gull lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Conklin, who
were married on Saturday night,
are at the home of his father. Ben
Conklin, of the Bristol district.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Warner of
Detroit were dinner guests Sunday
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller. Mrs.
Warner Is staying for a longer visit.
Mrs. Evangle Miller and Leona
attended the annual Moore school
reunion on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Oole and Mr.
and Mrs. Orren Durham left Tues­
day on a trip to northern Mlchl-

HOPE CENTER.
Threshing seems to be the order
of the day. Theodore Pranshka and
crew are on the job.
Sunday guests at the Fred Aahby‘s
home were Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Warner. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ashby
of Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mrs. Clare
Ashby, Mr. and Mrs. 8am Ashby of
Hastings, the occasion being Mr.
Ashby's slxty-secpfid birthday.
Mrs. Lucy Izofiard from Kalama­
zoo Is visiting al her son Clyde’s.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Textcr and
Joltn Textcr ot Hastings visited
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McDermott
Bunday. Vernon Tetter returned
home with them after spending the
week end with his grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Trine and Mrs.
Dorothy Vond and two sons of
Marshall were visitors at Mr. and
Mrs. Clare Ashby's Bunday.
Miss Viola McKibbln of Yankee
Springs spent from Thursday until
Monday with Mrs. Rosa Ashby.
John Lifihart. who has been
working for Clarence Payne, has
returned to his home in Fulton.

STARTING FRIDAY, 8 A. M

Only 125

2 for 1»« '

C«4 In M at, SPECIAL PHI

CA^T IRON

Furnace

SATURDAY ONLY!—Exira Aa(omoblle Ticket—2 tickets with each

LIMIT DAYS
The Limit In
Value for the
Early Birds

Porch and Lawn Chain

with any Living surata wChsaed Saturday at Wards Aaguat
Funilture gale!

PENNEY’S
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---------------

�The Hastings Banner
A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

ICAN

Editorials

TH UMS DAY, AUGUST 13. IW

THOSI FELLOWS WHO 00HT IELIIVI IN SIGNS

Hew to the line, let the quip*
fen where they may I

By Observing Tammy.

/ SLOW/

to help nring about the defeat of the i is hitting al Individual liberty. ItNew Deal.
«lf. .
In our opinion the tsaua al stake
We Intend to be fair tn our effort*
il not Democrat vg Republican but j and to keep perwnallUo* out all
federal bureaucracy vs. democracy, j possible We hare offered both the
The New Deal would destroy lhe 1 Democratic and Republican parties

slump

balance of power which exist* be- space in tht* paper to expreas their i
—
list I vr and
vlrn and
tween the executive, legislative
and jviewa
and In
in addlllon
addition columns
columns on
on
judicial branches of the federal ’ this page are open to those who disgovernment and between the federal
government and the stales, substi­
THE FINE ART OF WALKING.
tuting an empower Lil central gov­
ernment with authority concentrat­ ; Walking and hiking used to be
ed in the executive and legbULlVe more popular pastimes than they
are at present. A recent issue of
' "The Michigan BeJT contained the
cutive branch.
Preaident Roosevelt, himself, has following excellent article on 'The ,
demonstrated how eqmpletely an I Fine Art of Walking" which‘will be

Understand that some Qommercial club picnickers who reached
. the lake Tuesday evening didn't gel
I home until Thursday morning.
,

Tommy Is sure going to are if he

I Event* like that in our little city
j are few and far between.
Understand lhat young Dave cook
likes nothing better than a little ex­
ercise before breakfast.

enjoyed by ail who love thc out-of। doors:

' Have you ever learned how to
' walk? Probably- riot, because the art

Have you registered yet? Tommy

has been well nigh lost—like the art
resentative form of government can of conversation.
be changed into a technically legal
If you are spending your vaca­
dictatorship. We are absolutely tion in the country this year and I
against this trend of the New Deal t are looking for a way to pass ths
and believe sincerely that the tfine. take up walking. You will be
greatest good to the greatest num­ , well repaid
ber can be achieved by maintaining
But before you start. ?ou ought
a proper balance of power between to read up on the literature of walk­
the wious branches of the federal ing. Oh yea. there is a literature of
government as well os Uttween lhe walking and a very charming liter­
federal government and the states. ature It is. Have you read, for in­
In other words wg believe that
stance. William Hazlltt’s delightful
the 'federal government always essay "On Going a Journey?" Rob-1

0^7
- z,- .
■•1

&amp;

ri

Itl

'Round About Town

tfi

A STATEMENT.
| tlanal administration acta deliberag L'te balance of lhe presl- ately tn violation of the constitution ’
campaign, thia newspaper U R I* not merely attempting to tear

executive with an engaging person­
ality and a vigorous hand can turn
congress into a mere assemblage of
puppat*— thereby showing bow eas-

Thai Couau—Nat Ila Sto*

Music Goes Around and Around?*

Doc Fisher. they tell me. is quite
. an amateur astronomer.

i Rome Feldpaascii was sure sqme; body had left out an important part
' of liis new outboard motor the other
। day

I

The Public Forum |||

’

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

hU Tammany Idea* are allowing In
th* r.rvinfl (r-r.
cernlng Wilber M nrucker arid will
The Tammany boas does not even
appreciate it If you will print them believe in letting Michigan damoAomewhere In your paper.
crata pick their own candidate for
the open a* governor—Evidently he feel* that
a Republican candidate1 „
for United
—the resident* of a Typical prairie
Blates------------------------------senator from- Michigan.
Michigan. If state" can't be trusted with thU re­
Mr. Bruckcr ta cuccaaaful in getting sponsibUity. So he has stepped tn
the nomination, there is no question and is trying to force Frank Murphy
about where he will stand. He wlU down the throat* ot the state Dembe found supporting the principle* ocracy. Mn Murphy 1* drawing a
and platform of lhe .Republican salary of 110 000 u governor general
party.---------------------------------------------------- of the Philippines and apparently
Senator couzens' course in coming wasn't any too enthused about the
out for lhe New Deal has not been idea himself. But Jim spoke and
satisfactory to Republicans ot this Frank Jumped a» mayor of Detroit
state and 1 don’t believe he la *o Murphy ran that city into debt with
satisfactory to Democrats either. I a thud and Just about ruined its
always believe In a candidate for of- credit standing — you can’t help but
flee being: ashes he pretends to be. wonder what he would do If he was
Here we have couzens running un- given bigger and greener pastures In
der the Republican label and at the which to roam.
siime time supporting lhe New Deal.
According lo newspaper reports,
Couzens’ opinions are hi* own but Farley attempted to force Highway
If he wants lo be elected as a New Commissioner Van Wagoner onto
Dealer why doesn't he change par- lhe Murphy bandwagon by threat­
ties like George Welch did?
enlng lo deprive this state of FedPculmaater General Farley (tern- eral highway grant*. Such tactics a*
porarlly resigned 1. who Is head of this are what make people afraid
the Democratic committee. Is show- of what might happen if Farley were
ing what this country would be returned to power under the New
headed for if he and those whom he Deal That is why. too. that a lot of
represent* gain lhe mastery of this us would like to see a real Republic­
country. Mr. Farley Is a member of arf like Brucker nominated for senathe Txmmany organization In New tor Instead of someone who 1* mereYork City. •* autocratic an organl- ly wearing a party label
ution as Mussolini’s and naturally
A Reader.
Mr. editor:

Searching for a Wife." intermedi­
ate: tonga and Bible drill. Juniors;
play. ’'Moses. an Adopted Son? in­
ter med la Us; salutes to American
and Christian flags, led by primary
croup. Certificates were presented I

Tremendous
H Trifles 0

| By ELMO SCOTT WATSM | |
Thee
He wm right—He’d forgotten the
push
C M. Keene of Wayland will
preach next Sunday morning in lhe
Com
POLKA DOT
I Have you noticed that twinkle in absence of the jxutor. Rev. Clem
■ Dre Keller’* eye lately? That's cause Jordan.
,nrrt“n
Smith spent
the
। he’s a brand-new grandpa, but he! Freda and Cleon
---------------- -----------erl Louts Stevenson, who wa* no J
—not lhe slate* Ute servant ol the ; mean walker himself and who wrote
wouldn’t act excited for anything!
end in Chicago.
( J. O Crawford, Jr., and Portia
federal government.
' "Walking Tours." declared there [
[ I hear Dick Hurd attended a Davidson of Kalamazoo spent SunWo are against the practices of should be a tax levied on all who
| day afternoon visiting at E O.
Homecoming last week.
men. line of them wiia n llungnUte New Deal ev«ft|h(WUU*w»
l"
have not read Hazlltt And while
D’Ja notice that couple Jcrambling ! Smith's.
elan dancing mutter and the other
aymjAthy with tome of ' ite prin­
nbcul and clutching madly al the
you're at It. look up Holliday's
ciples. From an 1-lcaiiilW enterprise
cross
and
pavement
and
curb
on
our
DRINKING WATER
Walking Slick Papers." Brooks’ .
In JR-Us tlml danring inarter—his­
Main street the other day?
which aroused a tidal wave of pro­ • Journeys to Bagdad." Trevelysfas
AIDS BODY HEALTH tory hue not preserved lite nanu—
found emotion, it has degenerated
tins on a walking tnur In I’olund.
■ Walking." Vachel Lindsay ’s -Handy
Just a travelling salesman bent
Drinking water can serve as a
Inta a grqpdy political machine al­
a |wmaHE'S armed without
nn a fishing spree who nearly last body thermostat in maintaining a In a »innll village hr
Guide for Beggars" and Christopher
ready possessed of great powers an.1
rlilrh
constant temperature Members of
tlmi's innocent within.
Morley's "The Art of walking."
with an insatiable appetite fpr more.
the home economics extension start
tVtenty years ago
AND SO WE JAIL THE SICK
Hazlltt and Stevenson belonged to
—I'oftr in “Entitle
' Ho! Hum! This Michigan heat Is at Michigan State College describe Tolka" for the land nf Its origin.
We are against the lack of balMichigan has much to.be ashamed
tho "lane walker&gt;«dioo) If you take
One.”
getting
me
down
•
the
functions
of
water
in
the
body
Fourteen years Inter over I
Mclntyrc. who is now a resident ul I
mc
.
up walking you aid soon decide of as well as many things of which
to indicate the importance of drink­
Seattle. Wash is another young
Tommy nev„
. feUow who
treme you hare the highly theor­
be
proud.
ing sufficient waler during hot irjlnz In iioinlnale a ennilhtah
&lt; either to string along with them and to
’
’
”
'One of the thing*
man Bo:a Haxtliiw who has made ( k d
proion8cd drouth anyway
etical experiments of the academic.
walk alone or to follow In the foot­ | which has been noticeable for a
. an cxh-llent record in the business •**"»'
...
Wallace and lhe socialistic Tugwell
According to medical authorities,
; world Mr Mcjni^e who hw. been j Q
of the
arr u,at
" step* of that other great pedestrian number of years is lhe deplorable
anth* suggestion of adding a pinch of
(who are using the entire economic‘ William Wordsworth, and Join the ^conditions existing in regard to
। chief clerk to the general freight I.....
salt to a glassful ot water at inter­
j agent ol ihc Chicago. Milwaukee. St 1
system o! this country ax their lab­
u-r v«&gt;x&gt;r"&gt;&gt;r
vals
In
extremely
hot
weather
is
val
­
, .anas
ranks u*
ol »»*«--»
those w«»v
who like
company caring for those whose mental ill*
&gt; Pm:I end Puget Sound railroad ha-;
oratory! and at the other, the Tam-'when
'
.‘&lt;' Wouldn’t it be nice to stroll uable This helps maintain proper
they walk II is really a mo-1 have decreed that they ahould be
[ been npjw»inted traffic mnn»K*
. about m a steady^ warm rain and health bv replacing chlorides lost tn
many politics of Farley and his
mentou* derision to mak*. whether' separated from lhe rest of society
। the West cosit Lumber Men's
1 feel the water slashing tn your । perspiration.
•
cul career. Tills started a Siainpede
henchmen. We have had promises
’ soclatinn.
to b» a lone walker nr to share your for their own good and our protec-,
, I hoc,—-nd getting In ynur hair—’nd I • Water is an Important part of tihlch resulted In the tlrat selection
of drastic economy followed by un­ ramble* Ll’ten to Hazll.t!.
i Henry Qzrpenter. aged 93 &gt;
lion.
the boy. Most adult* need from six nt a ’'dark hurae" In convcnilnn his­
CIX Detroit baseball players
who iin* resided on ih&lt;\ ’h&lt;u
.
precedented spending sprees; we
। nd running down your back!
I to eight glasses a day." the home tory.
were given automobiles for
-On. n, &gt;h. pW-mrn. .b.nx. »
■
Wall
take
fil
years,
was
highly
cl
ti
­
have had promise* ot civil service
| economics workers find. "For those
It just
During the cniopnlgn. the llungaed over httjrt.v, automobile ride
the world is going a Journey; but I .
WBS M cluttered up with unnec-. attending a banquet
Or am 1 all wet nn the •subject!
| who cannot,remember to drink
reform followed by technically legal
rocs lo show how far on after­
like to go by mv.’clf I can enjoy so-1 essnry things that- it was turned
i waler between meals, a good sug- Flint dancing toil Iler's new dance
•dodge*” which have made the civil ciety in n room; but out of door*. |down by lhe people. Feeble attempts; dinner speaker will go to assure
The Chpisuqin opened Monday I
COATS GROVE.
( (.
P.nnn |5
|or
lnPm
y,
MKr
a
XMa
,.
gr.'tlon
Is
for
them
U&gt;
take
a
glasshimself an audience.
afternoon "and M now well under; V.Mtor* recently in the Har c&gt; (uJ dur)nif lhe d-v pach Ome lh(? the similarity &lt;&gt;f Its name to tli.it
service system almost useless; we nature Is company enough for m*. I j■ have been made from time to time
• to improve conditions, but they have
Can
Sense home were Mr and Mrs Joe ( clw.k 5tr|k&lt;.a the hour Thc drinking of the Democratic nominee, It be­
have had promises to curtail Ute
am then never less alone than when ।' (grown steadily wor.se.
Uitest reports from Spain
&lt; Work is procreating on the Ortffin. Mrr. Sol Baker. Mr. and . of two giaM4.a ol wau,r upon arisMor
came the official campaign amuse­
growth of federal bureaus followed aloi^e.
I foundation nf Ir(in*ide Bros new Mrs. D Townsend. Mr. ana Mrs
litue
it
that
the
bulls,
given
Die|
an MCJ.|)ent a|d ;n promoting ment. Articles of various kinds were
| Today in Michigan there are hunby tremendous federal expansion In
respite
by
the
revolution,
are
John Woodman. Mr. and
Mrs K00d rnmjnation.
.
I cannot see the. irlt of walking dretLs of iusam and feeble minded,
iiimied for It and for him . . . and
fact, tt la oar sincere opinion that!
'
appointment*
for
handling
their
enjoying
lhe
goings-on
to
the
.
James Rogers of Freeport
Water tn moderate
amount tlmi's why wa wear polkn dot de­
and talking at the sar.se time When who require treatment or confine­
; large and g tow in; monument budfullest
the professed alms and actual acThe Birthday meeting will be .«hOuld be a part of every meal, but
I am in the country. 1 wish to vege­ ment in public institutions. These
■ new.
.
.
UJ*d M , ,ubs«tute signs today.
I -.1*
field -.,K
with Mr.
Mrs. Orttrin
Orifftn thU
this week ghou|d
complishmehta of the New Deal
sick people, when they become vlo-1
tate like th* country. I am not for lent or dangerous are often sent to'
Those Wilkes Barre, Pa., par- '
Friday afternoon.
for thorough mastication As a pure
have been one continuous and un­
THIRTY YEARS AGO
ents who criticized the school
| E 8 Thompson spent last week liquid il Is a part of all the diges­ boots or heavy leggings therefore
criticizing hedge rows and black Jail simply because of the crowded
lha
• j He arttved Saturday ntaht Hli 1 in Kalamazoo
--------------------------------------fortunate contradiction
visiting
his
daughter.
board
because
their
children
-j
conditions
in
the
institutions
and
tive
fluids
and
aids in the absorp­ are an efficient safeguard against
cattie. I go out of town tn order to
until
were not whipped it school evi- j name Is Richard Graham Mulliol- , M„ Kenneth Wilcox
We are against the New Deal pol­ forget lhe town and all that 1* in it." hospitals for their care. Is this fair
tion of food Water carries food ma­ most attempts of snakes to ‘bite,
dcntly take great stock in -I4 land. And when hl’ proud father , Qulu. a number from here attend- terials to Lhe tissues and a**bts Waixt-hlgh rubber wading boots
treatment for those who arc ill and
icy of crop daatmetion and believe
_
But there are other question* you would we like to be treated that; “spare lha board and spoil tho Isaw him and what a comely voung , „d 8hnnboat in Lowell last week
Mr
greatly In removing waste products.” with inserted canvas shank gives
4 fellow he wa-. lie immediately reMr aild Mrs Lawrence arc at
Prat I
—
. win want I-- .'.kin II /vu wwiw n way if we should be so unfortunate
child."
good protection in swamp* and low­
fllnqubhcd his drug business and ev. I Torfh lak(? l0 5pend a wcck
Eato
m
h.ra thrausn U» »~M»4wl«l&gt;t!' "nr U. Mull you e.rry . as to fall into that class?'
POWERS ECHOES.
lands.
dlslr
1 ervthHut.elw to th.- newcomer
. Ruth Woodman .nd Mrs. E. S
IM ot our poMtlon if.
p„,„„a.n.nr. ot opu&gt;.
Mr and Mrs. Arthur Lynn of
And Jim Reed’s disgruntled
in this county Probate Judge Date
Reed's Opera House which has 1 T11&lt;)niI)fiOn w*re at Caledonia and
Democrats “take a walk" to De­
lr.M Lhal II -111 l..- &gt;..r. to non- i
WIDE WIND PITS FOLLOW
|Ve«n areally changed uno improv V K»lamazAo Saturday
Jui
the home of'Mr. and Mrs. Henry
troit Perhaps they belieVe the
t, lhe U».- Here M home ,hl. &lt; b,„ „n, y,,, „
pie who are awaiting treatment at
OVERGRAZING OF RANGE.
urda
was
formally
opened
Monday
eveCoats
Grove
school
reunion
Frost.
hitch-hiking will be better in a
state hospitals for insane and there
policy ol deetrucuon h.. euun lord
,h&gt;n
bn,„sh,
&gt; nlng under the management of' w
be held Aug. 29
her
Huge pits covering as much as 6
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Seger and baby
city where a big share of the
area half a dozen or more feeble
jG.-nr,:.Effwarda
with
the
thrilling
1
n
v
B
s
plcnic
waa
hfUt
Row!
acres
and
reaching
a
depth
of
15
price. ChroMh Mural, wllhoul
„ like lo -I~1 . minded who should be confined Bay
fe------ ----------- ----- --- -- --- — -- '
inc LZ.
«». -J.
world's automobiles are manu­
il*.tav
n Rivera
O:i-er«" with
Mtu RriiMr
rnlay ■ tLena
with MiM
Ben- ln |Jb, g
on Bow
the dam
Lloydsouth
Fisher
feet In some places, supply vivid
„mve ri
of Morley. Saturproportional UUnuUUon ol &gt;M
prbl,r |m8tb City and Saginaw have a waiting
factured.
•
Battl
Pah Poynter in !lic title role. Mr. It tnrm
fartn hl
,t yyidny
evidence of Lhe dlsaAlrous effect* of
last
Friday with
with 12
12 carload*
carload* day.
kener.l price l.vel, *»
; „,a „p,e
cUpM0, on &lt;hr l&gt;..T&lt; hat ot about 23 more insane patients
Edwards has made » great addition
from l)Prt, nnd gn ln c"
attend-1
h H
“- |
Week-end and Sunday guest* at wind erosion on grazing lands of
Il
Just
happens
that
those
here
are
ing coafa: have incrcAsed while ....
.. ..
.
Ute
’ ance
A line dinner wa* enjoyed.1 the home ot the Mlasc.s Almira and the west. In one demonstration area
of daisies and buttercups, and now
;rn or morn fme new settings hav- | with ice cream furnished by the Nell Reed were Charles Hauser, of Soil Conservation Service, in
day.
wage*, aalariea and income* hxve and then letting go with a resound? not. violent at the moment but tt is
regarded as important that they re­
I inn been purchased which add Fishers.
BUI «
Frost.
Fred Hauaer.“ 3r..**Mr. I norlh central Utah, the wind has
The children enjoyed'""*
—•
lagged far behind.
ceive treatment at once
greatly to th- staKUig of playa.
„ „atww
. creek and- ---------------wvenil of these yawning land
I playing
the
spring and and Mm. Kenneth Dick. Mra. Bob
We are against lhe tendency ot i Anovncr
A recent letter to Judge LaGoe
1.- . . w wenl a.
Another important promrm
problem _conconI fine Schantz bss. completed ar- Abou
to flnl.'. undlng .1
at , Brown, all of Detroit; Mrs. Harold ’ eaten.
rsngement . with the C K A- H | -p^^ppie Uke for B &gt;wlm later Harrison and children of Seattle; ■ Before the demonstration was
New Deal leaders to foster a spirit fzrns thinking, but till* one ought to
whereby they agree to run a special
afWmoon.
Mtaa Busle Reed of Kokomo. Ind.; &gt;terted. none of the land in lhe
of claaa consciousness in this coun- &lt;0^
according to your nature resident reads in part a« follow.
Yesterday I happened tn be m
train 4&gt;vcr their road on Thursday I Mrk Qco coap,
been sick and MIm Marian Pierce of Has- Utals project area had been fenced
try. to represent itself a* the cham- The question t* whether tn plod the office of the superintendent of
f evening of the fair
I but is better now
tings. Little Florence Ferguson. or pk&gt;wed and there had been tttpion of owe particular group A d-m-' slone engnwvd in thoughts
and
...
thc Tiavcrz- City State Hospital
Monday momir,-: wl:l.* ■.win.ming
Mrs
chase returned home who has been vUlttng at lhe Rccd 1 lle or no control over grazing. As n
’Wfcrti nufiuiry-fr*’ 0,11 ^‘e
oeratlc government should do ail in dreams or -to leave the mind re- wh™
probate judge of a nearby
-iout from Dr Anrlru* co’tme at Wall
frnm a visit with relatives residence for two weeks, aocom-!resu,t- overgrazing practically killed
lake —
Mite ;Florence
Diamond
bet„ vauioriiia
Cal|fornla niiu
Bnd Washington ui
She
Ila power to discourage a sense of
them
■----.
.------,
. 1 in
.v panled —
n... back to her .home
auulv in oul the native grasses and browse
bui Ibe.irnwu- p.«'
I dlalc admittance for a woman vio­
AUGUST
i plants which formerly grew In this
' ’ came exnaCsted and sank to the . ,penl considerable time In com- Detroit.
class consciousness; should be the ;ng landscape
lently insane I don't need to debottom
A twelve-year
old lad pany wlth MrJS gthej Hall in sight- ' Bill Frost of Detroit wa* home ' section and held lhe soli In place.
sympathetic
conciliator
of
”
Then there is lhe matter of sing- scribe to you the ensuing couvcrsanamed Pipp swam out. caught tier ( scclll8 at Grand Canyon. Yoecmltr for a few days the past week. Wind erosion may occur any place
groups. the confederate of none. It1 ing Have you ever tramped alone on ' tion. This* woman became just anwhere overgrazing, overcuttlng ot
• a* she *"•
rose
to --------------------the surface ----andand
andthe
lheColumbia
. Columbiariver
riversection.
section.She
She ।
------------ -----------------------^e-»----------------— —----------------•— belief -•that
■ —the
-- ------brought her safely to ahallow water ‘ rrIurn&lt;,d ,rom Denver on
thc -•’NAIUW CANNOT STRIKE
timber, or some other form ot land
is •ojtr
New —
Deal• * country' road with no audience I other name on the long waiting list
You are probably as familiar
Prof. J F Thoma*, superintendent • streamlined special trtln
AR FAR AS OWN LENGTH.. abuse ha* left the soil unprotected
trend is away from this ideal rather' favf the birds and fields and an oc­
Uv. MU.
nrt cb&gt;„ tna (rtmd ,„m Mul. : How r.r eu&gt; poUotwM
i from the ripping action of the wind.
I with thc almost unbellevcable ait- I
than toward it
cartons 1 cow. and bellowed a m*rcn, five years was unanimously chosen jI w *nd tkm.ia
from llu-1««“&gt; one-lull u&gt; Um». Already dust "bUuard*" have done
uation arising from lhe overcrowded
superintendent of the city schools I &lt;UU. —r. ho™ Bundwr.
We do not believe that any gov­ ] mg song, the crunch of your boots condition of our stale hospital* as 1
. tounh. thelr Un«U;. ur. th. VBH- great damage tn the Southwest and
Wlll.rd Oenwnd «nd Hmllr ot- 'a 6“'“
Blo|o«le»l Bur- Ln thc Dakotas.
•by llu- school board at their meet-j
ernment that spends two dollars for In the dirt keeping time »ith th*] anyone. I know that urgent need ,
*hig Monday night.
’
Tn combating wind erosion In the
tended Che itmerel &lt;4 M.». Alice ve». Th, pooler dlHonce U r.rely
every dollar received is a healthy cadence ot th* song? if not. you for additional buildings and beds nt
Howler Hou th Potter»ltlo.Mond„, """I"1
durtn, time. « ex. Utah demonstration area, in Salt
th* Traverse city hospital is only
one any more than we believe that
« glwlouik wn'c ol typical oB the extreme need tn thc i
FORTY YEARS AGOI afternoon.
I
excitement, and the longer■ Lake and Tooele counties. sr*W
freedom that you can get nowhere several institutions for the insane " 1
1 Spencer Patton - team ran away
The following fine program wa*
have little accuracy. It 1* has been restricted and a good start
the ever mounting deficit B’i^tritet-rhn
j
Losyn. Of course, you will find
Tuesday starting in front of Conk I pill On last Sunday evontng by the
ft
‘“'F ktrtke ha* been made toward starting new
judge LaGoc says: our situation ;
cook &lt; siotcugrocery Thc
buggy over-1। Many
Dally Vacation
Bible *c»uv&gt;.
school: uivup»
Group*
distance*.
worthy one. For a limited lime, per-1(walkers who claim lltat nature here is moat trying at times as our j
plant .m.ih
growth „n
on ththe tend
land. Th.
The Soil
। Ar coo*
■
mumk?
vacauon sxmmc
-r"**‘fn«,h "
-----------... Ii ni-ni
.
turned
thrown
.
O
f
and
.
n,
I
st
.
”£ct “ •n*k* Conservation Service Is introducing
prisoners
and
insane
cases
arc
tak|
..turned
and
Mr
Patton
wa*
thrown
,
0
(
songs,
kindergarten,
primary
and
'
hap*, we can clill shove off onto the should be approached in *ilent awe
out but not hurt - Friday evening mtermediate departments:
Bible * n’P,E
Uie
rcveral varieties ot grass. including
en to lhe Bay City Jail. Surely some- .
future, burdens, which we. ourselves,
crested wheat grass, in an attempt
thing should be done by thc state :
Hale Kenyon's horse ran away. ।Tories kindergarten; play. "Isaac
y ,,
ahould help to shoulder joday—but. those people could not endure the to alleviate this grave 'situation. 1
Istarting m front of L F. Stauffer *
When coiled it uncoils about half of to keep the soil out of the air and
Ltore Hl* son who was In th* buggy
I ‘he front pyt of it* body and hurlsi make the country suitable once
Fortunately for me at present. 1 j
the fact remains, that the govern­ sound of tlieir own voices.
rwis thrown ouu. lhe horse nearly ■ southeast of town met with a simi- thgl part forward from a loopedl again for grazing and agriculture.
ment can only spend a* it collects;
After you have served your time have but two insane person* on the,
jumping through Phtn Smith's store ! lar fate, J. E Barrell s bam In this. gofition. Snakes can strike short
waiting list and they happen to be
that It ba* nothing of Its own to as a novice, you will naturally wish
and
the buggy
was smashed
ot not *0 vioUnt nature but never­
The
oldest
investment
on earthA1*short city was stru
jive; that the so callecLbeneJlt* and to take up the more advanced forms theless they are one* that are in ex­
time before John Harper's team ran to any great extent. This is the first Hie western dlamondback rattie- lhe real-estate mortgage. In an­
gift* received sooner'or Ister will of the ar’, such as walking In the treme need of hospital care."
xwar
time in many year* that » many make, when excited, frequently cient Babylon in thc reign of King
■
’
16
teacher*
enrolled
in
the
Barry
havfe
suffered
loss
from
lightning
,
raiges
It*
head
10
to
15
inches
above
With
the
millions
flowing
into
the
Khanunurga*
12100
years
B. C.)
be token from us in the form of rain and walking tn town. Those
NEWS GLEANINGS.
♦County Teaehrrv mxtittrte The । and no one feel* safe.
the ground. From this position tt money wa* lent on mortgage; while
taxes both direct or concealed.
-are subjects for another time, how1- remark-1 Fr Kennedy returned Friday from . »lHKe* sideways
downward.
Washington. D C. originally wasj .^iceni*ge of attendance is remarkever collected by any administra­
lhe greatand
Babylonian
banking house
We are against the New Deal ad-1 ever.
named
Georgetown,
but
when
'
able
conductor
Prof.
Oh*-'
McKcn-1
Duluth
and
a
trip
around
the
take*.
1
Prisonous
snakes
often
misjudge
amed Georgetown, but when so- ’ -ble conductor Prof. Ohas. McKcntion In all history—it would seem
of thc Egibi family, founded about
&gt;rt3&gt;rl tn
in 1790
I Ton as the federali capital.ii ncy has
.
.
__ ... captivated
___ ....
completely
the' A A Anderaon of Fort Benton, dtatince in striking at object*, aoo B. C.. invested large sum* In
mlnlatraUon because It violated itsi We venture to predict.that if you that an adequate building program lected
their fangs, mortgage* recorded on brick*. Which
pledge to uphold Ute constitution of (take up walking seriously this aum- could be started and continued an­ il was renamed Washington in hon-»t*hO!* of the targe body of listen-1 Montana, ha* been the guest of Miss । Venqm flying from
or of tne first President
fX.
i Grace Messer the pest week.
wheA they strike at objects beyond were preserved in the contemporary
the United Blates. The Constitution | mer. you will be so enchanted that. nually until the need Ls met. We
Not content 'wtih playing -havoc • The past ten day* have been most; their.reach, account** for stories of safe-depoalt vault*—great earthen­
Is a document which aets forth the-' like Hazlltt, you would "like well eannot erase the blot on the good
name of Michigan until we do at
Venice covers more titan 72 Islets,yi Uh things in general Sunday night I unmercifully hot one*, every new Amerfcan snakes spitting poison. An ware Jara buried in thc earth.
right* of the individual irj {elationertbugh lo spend the whole of my least this much. It is a disgrace- to or rather mud-banka, its founda-^il Bother electrical atorm was ex-; day seemingly trying to outdo the. Africa^ species really does this.
Erienced in thia vicinity Tuesday I previous one. We have no recoUec-1 Reports of persons bitten by
Lithium six—a new metal, ta
to his government; it Is a document, life travelling abroad. If I could jail the ^ick It is also unfair to ' lions being piles and stones.
T)
rrniiur a barn bdlm-iunt to Chax I lions of so many days of torrid venomofta snakes indicate that in lighter than solidified gas. and 10
which guarantees certain Individ-1 anywhere borrow another life to other citizens to leave them at
rack in DtrolMtwas struck and weather ^teeing hashed up to u» all 1 njest case* the victim* were bitten per cent llgl.ter than any other inetlarge.—Phil Rich. Midland Republ/&gt;uis XIV passed on tn 1715 aft “burned
■ ’ ual llbertic* Therefore when a na- spend afterward* at home."
The Striker schooUtouw jat once with ho tqtonnluion.
on the legs or feel. High topped
an unparalleled xe^r^of 73 year*..

s

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

A Quotation

IS&amp;I1

Y?CF

2®“

Way of Our World

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

�Typical Scenes in Bloody, Revolt-Torn Spain

heatre

At the

. Frame* pee in -Ralf AngeL­
Half Angst" lhe thrilling story
of a 'sorrow girl" who seemingly
jlnxM the lives of iH who lovr her.
stars Prances Dee. Lot* of-thrills
and romance In this film.

.one man in the workbig organisa­
tion, who carrie* out Uwir orders
snd delivers Uw proceed* of their
i ill gotten gains.

B*LSON MXUN1OW.
The twsnty-flrtl Bel-on reunion
wts held st Vlckary's landtag, clear|
I lake. Aug. 8. There were aetanly-lwe
While in tba Upper Pent*- relatives present including Mr. and
Mr. Raymond Belnon and daugh­
aula With » Party
ter of Merna Nebraska and several
Friopda
visitor* Tti« IMJ secretary's report
Friends of Roas Cadwalladar. . was read in rhythm.
Hickory corners, were shorted to | on lhe eleventh at August 1835
leant tt his sudden death from a
- '. Several families of lhe Be bon*
heart attack Monday night at ■ cot‘ ­ Proved quite alive.
tag* near Escanaba Saturday Mr , At Vickery * landing they *U arrived
and Mrs. George ElhoU. Mr. and With basket* filled plum to the brim
Mrs. Alvin Hock of Detroit. Mr. and All dressed In their beat.
Mrs. Morey Aldrich of Gull lake and And all looked quite trim.
Mr. and Mrs. cadwallader. formed a
happy party that left for Ute Upper
peninsula for a few days’ recreation. Harry Btison and wife
But the anticipated pleasure of the Tttey never would mln* tt.
ogling was rudely broken, when-it In spite of thele Ills
wis discovered Chat Mr. CodwalU- They earns from Ohio, lhe Buckeye
der had died sometime Monday night

SUDDEN DEATH OF
ROSS CADWALLADER

•t

plenty.
Die iW5

reunion

just

AUGUST
36 in. Priisti. tfert t light
27 in. Whit* Outing ------ j
Cotton Twilled Toweling
36 in. UnMee«bad MuaHn .

Turkish Towels. 22 x 40|
Ready Mode Shoafs, 81 x 99 |l.
Bedspreads, 80 in. x 109 in.---------- 98c and &gt;1.
Soarauchar aad Maxican Prints, 36 hu wMa __1

makes

lur was recognized as a splendid
athlete, and won more than a cotuitywlde reputation as a baseball
player, being a member ot Ute Has­
tings tram when il wa* recognised
an one ol the strong Independent

Amoskeag Feather Ticking __
All Silk Km« Heee
All Wool Bathing Suits Reduced

likeable fellow, of gmeroiu impulse*,
and made frtendn easily wherever he
went. For many years he operated a
garage and repair shop at Hickory
Corner-. He wu» u member of lhe
Muonic lodge.
In December 18*1 he wa* unites!
In marriage to Josephine Bellinger
of Banhrld, who survives him. to­
gether with a sister. Mr*. Grace
Johnson ol Kalamaaoo. The body
was expected lo reach Hickory Cor­
ners yesterday, and at this writing
funeral arrangement* had not been

Reduced to

Fall Silk Dre sjes

CIRCUIT COURT DOINGS

S-plembcr Jtd. IWJ. and puc^-rtl
jwuy al Pennock hospital. August 6.
iV3d. at the age of 13 years. Il
months and three days. Hr attended
the Public school* of Hu'ttngs and
would have entered higli .school thia
months lo fourteen years at Ionia. foil. Fur ih« puat two year* he has
His father and mother se|xtraWd been a cuddy M-tfee Country Club
some time ago so that he has not wl-.rie he made many I r lend* Ken­
had the care that a boy ought U&gt; neth wiu a true mid loyal kon and
have. Thc Judge look ihut into
ngr IS. wa* sentenced by Judge MePeek Monday afternoon for thc
crime of forgery, which he had ad-

These picture* are characteristic of scenes In almost any Spanish town or city na Fascist revolutionaries
pushed their, drive lo overthrow Spain's leftist Popular Front government. The lop photo sl-.owa work­
ers. aimed by lhe government. Itavlng Madrid in truck* lo meet the advancing rebel*. Ia»w.«r left.
Communists give their salute lifter dung a church which they claimed hid rebel snipers.- Lower right
a young American refugee and Ids daughter disembark nt Bayonne. France, after fleeing the fury thn
reigns over all Si»'n

Secret Maneuvers for U. S. Navy

tence. He gave a very kindly, help­
ful talk to young Gay.
LeVoy Cawwert was brought be­
fore Judge McPeek ott Monday and
admitted the charge of uttering and
publishing a forged check The ca*e
will be disponed of later.
Grand Rapids and Mrs. Arthur
Bennett of New York City were
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs C.

the I
-threrc
who
any
I
more happy birthdays
Maryann Edison returned to her
home tn Grand Rapids with her
parents Sunday after having made

The oulk of Uncle Sam’s sea
Canal region for participation
More than 150 ships, of which
Diego and San Pedro. Calif., to

power is stationed In the Panama
in six weeks of secret maneuvers.
several are shown above, left San
take part in thi annual demonstra-

Of him we may say:
-Loving and kind in all hit ways.
Upright and ju*t to lhe end of his

SWEATERS
Streamline Sweaters
High Neck i . .
Short Sleeves—
Silk ond Rayon
Sweaters—

pleaded guilty when brought before
following Sunday*. Aug. 16 and 23 Judge McPeek Monday. He will re­
so that all who can may attend the ceive hl» sentence probably next
camp meeting at Hasting* camp week ft Is reported to us that this

th.- Irving Orange hull are all very
happy to have the road graded and
partly graveled, far which we have IKuaing worthless check*.\ He &lt;lrhoped so long and the men did a
, an examination. which wu*
line job. We nre very greatful. Per­
Tuesday. August 18. before
imp* this time next year we can
er furnish the JI.OuO bull denmndt-d.
-hidge McPeek ordered lhe diMolotion of ttw Delton Co-operative
Shipping Company Monday. The

ern part ot th’to Battle creek.

Richard Arthur Tolles. City
Ladora Marie KUine. city

tended cantp meeting at Sunfield at
lhe Barnaby memorial ground. St'ti-

friend*. Thc funeral wa* held on
Suturday at the Wesleyan Metho&lt;ji»l church. Rev. crocket otUclallng

Frands&amp;n’ii
‘ExitiuKv Hut Vol Etrpiituni^’,-. f e
PHONE

the Prairieville and Delton item.'
hi regard* to lhe dust They' are not
tho only one* who eat it three times
a day. We do the same uud bleat he
aud inhai.- it alter we go to bed un­
til the wee hour* of morning after
all ttuCUe ha* gone to rest. We luive
about three hour- out of the twen­
ty-tour in which we get some pure

.'urn I lure in the hou-*. On Monday
bist as our washing i* on the line
the road scraper is sure to go past.
With the dry wcajiicr. we can’t ere
what parUcukir (food the *crai&gt;-r
doe*. Put Utal money in to some­ ate Bothard spent1 Thuradi
thing to twite care ol the duu and. Mrs. Ns Ute Casey of south
• " •
Jg
we won't ooniplain.
, I Ungs.
— aud Mr*. James SoIha rd spent
Mr. and Mia. Ashby and «
that one can write on every piece of Sunday with Mr. and Mr*. Clyde Bunday in Battle creek. •

must perish together."—R. Tagore.

and Mrs. Chas. Harrington

Mrs J W Howard and Mrs. LeIha Adkins spent from Thursday
until Saturday In Jackson with Mrs

Eatotl and family of the Striker
district visited Sunday evening wiln

Marlon. Temple and Diton visiting
Mr. Harringtons father, who is very
poorly. They also visited hU broth­

Mri John Kolhr In Blodgett hos­
pital. Grand Rapids, last week were

Mrs Millie Flury opened her col­
lage for Ute rest of August.
Clayton Webb of Yankee Springs

uiday afternoon and evening with
her parents. Mr and Mrs. Bordy

•The spark of liberty In the
Mr. and Mrs Harry Whitman of and spirit of man cannot be
Battle Creek and Mr and Mrs. Lew­ cxtinguUlwd; It will break
Is Hill of Grand Rapid.' visited at dames that will destroy every
the home of Mrs. Olen Wolf. Sun-

DON'T SLEEP ON LEFT
SIOE-AFFECTS HEART
If stomach OA8 prevents sleeping
on right side try Adlrrtka. One dose
brings out poisons and relieve* ga*
pre*.-.tug on heart so you sleep
soundly all night.—B. A LyBarker.
I Druggist.—Adv.

FREE PEANUTS
to Celebrate our

CARNIVAL SALE
Exit all the peanuts you with —
throw the shucks on the floor.
LAMB SHOULDER.

PORK LOIN

ROASTS

ROASTS

ib. 22c

ib. 2Oc

Branded Beef
Butcher Fresh Creamery

k.hi. r»..l

Friday. Ausuat 21
FARMERS' and LEGION DAY
D-urti. Bugle Contest
Hamess R:

it.

18c

Ib.

FANCY SPRINt*

FRESH GROUND

Chickens

Hamburg

ib. 25c

2 - 29'

NAME —
ADDRESS.
CITY--------

AiL o
FREE

A Special Handbill will reach you Thursday
Auto Races.
Golden Wedding
sc and Cheer America.*" Gigantic Night
§how. Slagetl Each Evening at 7:46

TTELDPAUSCH
r-MARKE I* JkL/
Os Phon* 77&gt;z Wet).]; :

i JO*

“The Easy Way io Pam
G.E.GOODYEAR HA
141 Esit State St.

Hutingi, Michigi

STA1

�re ayrmo. worn.
During an this Ume th* Colonie*
were becoming mare disgusted with
lb* English rule and lire Revolu­
tionary war resulted. A force of
Britisher* under General John Burgoyne Invaded the Champlain val­
ley and seised Fort Ticonderoga In
1777. From that time until 1711.
when it was abandoned, th* Fort
warfaro MBttMMd for yean and was occupied by military' units, with
lhe
soldiers tilling their lands grant­
years, with first the French then
ed by the Bnglish government.
The Fort has been restored and
contains a museum of rare and in­
teresting collections of Indian,
French. Colonial and Revolutionary
French but were defeated by Oen- relics, uniforms and Mr material*,
maps, books, manuscripts, paintings,
cannon, fire arm*, etc.. all pertain­
ing to the early history of our counBnglUh officer. and hl* 11000 men
of
the struggle for supremacy be­
finally aebsd lhe FUrt in 1750 and
hi 1?«3 a treaty of peace between tween the Indians and the French,
and the French and English, the
English and the Colonist*.
Ticonderoga, the city, has a pop­
The British held undisputed posses­
sion until May *. 1775. when Ethan ulation of about 5300 and is known
Allen and hla company of Green as a summer and winter sport*
MounUln Boy* seized it "In the paradise—golfing, sailing, hunting,
34am* of th* Greet Jehovah and skiing, fishing, etc., proving attrac­
I
tive to thousands of visitors.
the continental Congre**."

061

One of th* place* th* writer visit­
ed that proved of especial Interest
wa* Ute New York Slate Historical
Association headquarter* located at
Ticonderoga
In this building are
valuable relic*. manuscript*. book*,
furniture, clothing, picture*, paint­
ings. article* used In the early
homes. In agriculture and in war­
fare. Tills collection is considered
one ot the best in America.
Throughout lhe city and on Dir
road leading to Ftort Ticonderoga
are monuments, marker*, broute
tablet* and metal plaque* in com­
memoration of a Rattle. a hero .or
a valiant deed. There is the Carillon
Bridge Tablet honoring Michel de
Chartier de Lotbiniere. who bridged
the stream and harnessed th* wa­
ter power for the first time. An­
other monument was erected to the ,
memory of George Augustus Lord
Viscount Howe, a British officer |
serving under General Abercrombie
On Uie walls of Fort Ticonderoga 1
and the gates into the Port are
markers of various descriptions tell­
ing of lhe valor and bravery of lin­
early soldiers and officers.
Should you visit this interesting
and historic city and Fort, we pre-

GOOD COFFEES
ONE POUND NET

THOMAS SPECIAL

175
MISSION INN
205
GOLDEN SUN
25c
(NEW) FAMILY CUP
155
POPULAR BRAND—Fast Selling
Always Freih—Mora Cup* par Lb,

FINEST BLEND and QUALITY

COFFEE

LB.
TIN
'

AN OLD FAVORITE BLEND
In VACUUM RACKED TIN

c-TjjaiwsraiESit
t
IBitss

A Sweet Drinking Sonto* Coffee

k

j I I

| &gt;

EVAPORATED
SUNSHINE BRAND
RICH, CREAMY

3 st 2Oc
Im
1 O
| X
SALMON
COCONUT ~2OC
|kJ| I I
■▼I I

K
I&gt;

FINEST

TALL.

ALASKA

C

CAN

PINK

CAKE FLOUR fluff £
CHOCOLATE "aEjaiUM

EXTRACTS teUoa FUvoro—« a*.
KOSTO FREEZE

15c

15c
5c

SALAD DRESSINGS:Tic
PINEAPPLE HAXJ^aUCXB Cxa * 16c | PEARS SJUmJtTTS

CANNED VEGETABLES
RED KIDNEY BEANS, DICED CARROTS,

&amp;*H 20c

MUSTARD
CREAM
SALAD
STYLE

LIMA BEANS, MIXED VEGETABLES,
SPAGHETTI, TOMATO JUICE

stnn-tlon of life and property, or will
people live in peace and content­
ment. happy with their opportuni­
ties and privileges, availing them­
selves of the best, progressing slow­
ly but surely to a higher plane ot
living? only Um* will tell.

FOUR SMASH-UPS
N FOURTEEN HOURS
(Continued from page 1. See. 1)

'A
A Selection of Choice Blend* for vour
your reauirement*
requirement*

*

diet that you will better understand
the severe trial*, the physical hard­
ships and the difficulties encoun­
tered by Ute colonist* in their strug­
gle for liberty, and freedom from th*
opprvMlon of lhe English and the
stuck* of the invading armies as
well as the Indian* nearer at hand.
Many ot lhe place* visited In the
east by pur party, were bolding their
Tercentenary celebrations, while In
Michigan, our Centennial L* being
observed. Two hundred year* for
civilization to move from the east
to Miciiiganf What will the next
two hundred year* bring? will there

lOc

i to a stop on the east side of the
! crossing and was headed west, while
Mr. Stone's car was on the west
side of the crossing facing east Mr
Cram suffered painful scalp wounds.
The little baby he was carrying on
his lap was severely cut about the
face and head. Neither Stone nor
any of lhe others In the Cram car
were seriously hurt, although conslderably bruised.
That was quite a chapter of accli dents on one highway, all occurring
within fourteen hours.
NORTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mrs Ernestine Edger and Miss
। Marian Edger attended a shower
: at Wayland one day recently for a
niece of Mr*. Edger.
! Mr and Mrs John Benedict visit­
ed the latter's brother. Merton Elli­
son. of Benton Harbor Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Tift are nicely
’ located In their new home cor. S.
Jefferson and Grand Sts.. Hastings.
i
Mr. and Mrs. Marley Burroughs of
j Three Rivers and Mr. and Mr*. Ed
Dodge of Lansing spent the week
। end with their parents. On Bunday
I the Dodges took Mr. and Mr*.
Whitright for a trip vLsitlng Inter। esttng points In Kent. Ionia, Mecosta
and Montcalm counlle*.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Williams were
| guests of the Jim Dibble's at their
, Barlow lake cottage over the week
' end.
1 The Misses Marian Edger. Donna
and Beatrice Mead are spending the
, week In the Dibble cottage at Bar-

Mr. and Mrs. Claude- Carpenter of
t Detroit visited his aunt and hus­
band lhe John Benedict*, on Fri­
day.

DVRFEE.
Mrs. Effie Norris and son of Bat­
' tie Creek arc spending this week
with Mr. and Mrs. William Hoffman.
We'll be seeing you Saturday. Au-

Atn^ u.

Integrity—Industry, Thrift, Frugality
Bring Prosperity And Happiness
This appeal is made to those
Democrat*, u* well a* to Republic­
ans. who believe In lhe American
form of government, who know that
the benefits enjoyed In litis country
by the common man ar* b*yond
comparison greater thsui those ob­
tainable by any other people on
earth; who know that those benefit*,
those privilege*, opportunities, and
prosperity are due to lhe principles
followed by our forefathers, no mat­
ter how disparagingly and sneeringly lhe New Dealer* may refer to
them.
The truth of lhe statement writ­
ten centuries ago. -For wide la the
gate and broad is the way that, leadeth to destruction,” stand* today a*
then, and il Is as futile, as foolbh.
to attempt to spend ourselves into
prosperity, to waste our money in
foolish experiment*, to spend re­
gardless of our Income or lhe future,
to try to get something for nothing,
to follow the easy way of spending
the money of others, a* It was then.
The truth of this was recognised
by the greatest spender In the world.
President Roosevelt, when he said:
"Revenues must cover expen­
ditures. Any government, like
any family, can for a year spend .
a little more than It earns, but
you and I know that a contin­
uation of that habit mean* the

preaching their doctrine of scarcity, ■
the destruction of food, destroyed. I
In lhe fall of 1B33. SJ00.000 pig*. 1
itaughtered
220.000
prospective.
mother sowa look out of productloii. under the AAA. approximately 1
3fl.O00O0D acres of corn, wheat, col­
ton. and tobacco, or one-tenth of

TOMATO,

VEGETABLE,

BALL OR KERR

Your Choice, No. 1 can

MASON JARS

f

Kaep a Handy Supply in your

C

Cupboard

Dutchess APPLES SS ffv’cx 5
ORANGES—Fancy Sunkist
LEMONS—full of juice

DRY ONIONS USS’

CEc
UV

Quarts
Boxen—

03

JAR CAPS, Mason, dox. 18c
JAR RUBBERS
dox. 4c

TOMATOES
RED, RIPE
SOLID PACK
3 £2 25c
RADISHES—Fresh. Crisp.

PINTS
Deien—

CERTO
bottle 22c
SURE JELL 2 m. 25c
Jelly Glasses, doz. 38c

12c

bunch 1c
dozen 25c

dozen 29c

3 Lk* 10c

IVORY SOAP 2 medium bars 11c
P and G SOAP
6 Giant Bars 27c
BAB-O, cleans porcelain
can 12c
CLIMALENE
$• 0. S. PADS jxirMnnn, 4 pad box 13c

war rr*T&lt; street

wr.Tn.vr ...ATT*

FRIDAY NIGHT
---

* “™hl,'xL,“ta^'

„

On Sunday afternoon at 3:30
I o'clock a double header soft ball
game will be played et the fair

TEAMS SELECTED
FOR FINAL PLAYOFFS! i-u wu,

iIS

Sale of Nine
School Buildings
and Equipment
The Board of Education of the Delton Rural Agricul
ural School District will offer for sale the following de­
scribed property on/

Friday, August 21
AT THE FOLLOWING PLACES AND HOURS
9 o'clock A. M.—THE LENT SCHOOL, Section 30, Prairieville township;
Section

24,

MARK’S STORES, INC
MID-SUMMER SPECIALS

BRUNSWICK TIRES
Don't take chances on old worn out tire*.
Play Safe with Brunswick*.
4-PLY

SENTRY

440 x 21 ...$4.10
450x20$4.35
475x 19____$4.80

STANDARD

$5.30
$5.70
$6.25

Orangeville

o'clock A. M.—THE HOPE CENTER SCHOOL, end the lot on which It
stand*, Section 27, Hope township;

TIRES MOUNTED FREE!
USE OUR BUDGET PLAN
LIBERAL ALLOWANCE on Your Old Tires'

o'clock F. M.—THE LEARN SCHOOL. S.cfioo 4. torry lownchlp

2 o'clockF. M.—THE DUNN SCHOOL, SocHoo 1Z. lorry townihlp;
3 o'clock P. M.—THE KINGSLEY SCHOOL, Sac lion 24, Barry township;

4 o'clock P. M.—THE TOLLES SCHOOL, Soction 22, Barry township;

ORIENTAL
VEGETABLE
CHOP SUEY—BOTH
SHOW YOU SAUCE
6 ounce bottle

R1NSO BiSrtal-U

QQc
£3

17
25c

5 o'clock P. M.—THE POLLEY SCHOOL, Section 19, Barry township.

Saturday, Aug. 22
1 o'clock P. M.—AT DELTON, the smoll schoolhouse, formerly known a*
THE CARPENTER SCHOOL, and one lot on the north side of the
school yard, 4 rod* by 8 rod*.

AUTO MIST
SPRAY GUN
0FERATS*

BIKE
CEMENT

Locking Door

HANDLES
EST
CQc
sis: t&gt;5&gt;

Flashlights
cell, lea* OOC
wtterica

Xx V

Speedometer GAS YANK
CABLES
CAPS
Ford &amp;
Chev.

9 AC

Universal

।

LUX SOAP 3 — 20c
HOLLYWOOD SPBCIAI,

. THOMAS STORES

in

LITTLE WORLD'S
SOFT BALL SERIES

t----------| This team la said to be on* of
high, fanner* have nothing to sell, Championship Games Start ' the fastest teams in Grand Rapid*
the rest of the population lack* the
Monday
X,.
at
Diamond
money u&gt; purchase, and the foreign
No. 1 at Fair Ground
nesaed in Hastings will be played.
producer Is Die only one to profit.
The regular schedui* of games of T,xe grounds will be put In good
Did lhe drought come a* a pun­
ishment because of our destruction the Hastings Soft Ball Association condition and it b hoped that a
of food? Are we. like the children ot will be completed an Uie night of «°°d crowd will be in evidence.
Israel of old. being reminded of our August 14. Thl* schedule complete*
------------sins?
Ute playing of 12 soft ball teams.
Lakevbw lost to Sunfield Sunday.
My
these
—
* suggestion Is beware of
------r--. The association has played over one Laiievtew Dlavs at Lake Odessa
men
who
talk
against
priyilroe.
but
hundred
|ame
*
on
th*
diamond*
ooewa,
w--- —
ww- nunnrwi oanic* on me uiamonas
.
whn are
.rr themselves fh
— rbllrtr-n
____ _ SundfiV.
18. Aug. 18
who
the
children nf
of ■__ ... __
on the fair ground*.
The AUK.
Sunday.
privilege;
who Inherited
their | gamM
created a great deal of
----------------- -----------------------wealth, who never earned a dollar. I intereat and announcement will be
SOUTH BOWNE
1,0
by
m,de nexl weck of lhe wlnncr* m ! Mri Anna Thayler of Campbell
sweat of their bodies. They promise. [,
series.
•and
*•—Mr*. Woodrow
jw•—
-• Knowles of
but they do not perforin. They'
1 Al “ tn*«‘lna of
Soft Ball As- Freeport vblted, FrldAy afternoon,
would establish a dictatorship wlUi bqci^Uou held at th* National bank , with Mra. WUl Mlahler.
themselves in nnw~
power.
thMnaaivM
building last Friday, committees j Roy
Sees*
and
family
Roy Bce*e and family and
and Mr.
Mr.
Notwithstanding this statement,
During the short time you have were appointed to take charge of and Mrs. Lew Seese of North Bowne
this country, under his administra­ honored me by permitting me lo the annua) soft ball dinner to be were Bunday guests of Uie Elmer
tion. is going into debt at the rale of represent you. I have fought and held some time In September. At Shaffers.
$420,000 an hour, each hour of lhe voted against all of the harmful .u.
.
.
WB4
or&lt;nci Rapid*
this. _..
meeting also
a plan
was pro­
twenty-four in a day. every day of tilings they advocate and. if re-elect­ posed to finish up our soft ball sea- ;Friday.
_____
Die year except Sunday.
ed. will continue to make that fight. son by putting tn the field two of । The
Elmer
Shaffers, Harry
Clare E- Hoffman.
the best teams possible to get In Bldugh and sons of North Bowne
avoid suffering, he must produce and Republican Candidate for Congress Hastings, these teams to be selected attended the shower on Vernon
in times of plenty save for a rainy 4th District of Michigan.
by a committee appointed by the : King near Belding last Thursday
day. but a Tugwell and a Wallace. —Political Adv.
soft ball association. The ones night.
chosen to make up these teams
Mrs. John Hulzenga. Mrs. Fred
are to be selected from the names Kortjnd Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kort
gust 15th at the reunion al the Dur­
Mr. and Mr*. John Hunsicker and of 00 of the players deemed lo be oCtSrahdvllle visited Monday evafee schoolhouse.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hunsicker of
the most valuable players on the nlng at Harold Yoder's. Mr and
Those from this vicinity who at­ Wadsworth. Ohio, and Mrs. Mary teams as determined by the cap- Mrs. Clare Williams of Irving were
tended eamp meeting Bunday were McNaughton of Mulligan were call­ tains or managers of the 13 teams there Thursday night.
Rev. and Mrs. Gamble. Miss Mary ers at Mr. and Mrs. Grover Brook's who have been playing thU sumMr. and Mrs. L. Andrews spent
Baulch. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Teltjens, Saturday.
mcr.
. lhe week end In Grand Ledge vUAnna Moore. Doreen Clemens. Ernie
These two teams will start a, , it Ing friends.
FAIR LAKE.
Bateman and John Gamble.
schedule of play-off* beginning next‘ i Mr. and Mrs. Pete Griffin enterMr. and Mr*. Sam couch returned
Howard Morford of Clair spent Monday, August 17th. The games tabled the Griffin reunion Sunday,
Sunday after spending a week at the Sunday at lhe home of his parents. will start at 0:45 P. M.. and will be
Walter Fuller. Mr*. Maude Van
camp meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Morford.
played on No. 1 diamond at lhe fair Hulsen and daughter Charlene of
Eddie Gamble and John Wesley
Mrs. Spiller b 111 at the home of grounds Three gatnes will be played . Grand Rapids and Millie King of
Moore will return from camp Wed­ her son. Ray pierce.
Monday, Aug. 17. Tuesday. Aug. IS. I Alto called on Mrs. Stella Rosier
nesday.
Lucille Armour of Battle Creek and Thursday, Aug. 30.
j Sunday,
•
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoffman are 'and Willow Hampton of Hastings
With th* Interest that has been
Quite a number from thl* nelghspending the week in the northern are spending the week with their dlsplayed in soft ball this summer borhood attended Showboat tn Lowpart of the state. Mrs. Leon Stanton grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. H- O It is thought that a great number ell.
is caring for the home during their Armour.
of people will try to see these All
Mrs.
Mr*. Will Pardee has
ha* been spendabsence.
Blanche Goldsworthy and Arthur Stara play off this series. As each Ing the past week at Gun lake with
Several from this district attend­ Longbrake. Mr. and Mrs. George man has been chosen because of , her daughter and family.
ed the Weeks school reunion Satur­ Dowd of Battle Creek were Sunday his ability to play a certain position
-----------------------------------------day.
callers at LotUe coUbters.
there should be no question but
LAKEVIEW.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Bateman at­
Mrs. Gertrude Fisher of Macey. that the games will be very wel)
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Bolter of Kaltended the Bateman reunion at Ma­ Ind, is spending a week with her played and should be most inter- । amazo
were Bunday visitors at the
son Saturday.
mother. Mrs. Hammie Armour.
esting
to
Uie
generaf
public.
esttn* ta the venaral n»Mb.
, Bo|^r home.
Mrs. Fred Frey. Mr*. George
Master Kingsley Baulch spent
No iidmluHin wlU be chcrM lo
Mn. Adah Sigler of Hastings
last week with with Mr. and Mrs. Winters of Bedford and Mr*. John see these games, but In order to spent
Sunday with her parents, Mr.
Ernie BatemanJ
Maurer of Clarksville were visitors take care of some expenses Uiat and Mrs. Chas. Asplnall
Miss Lorene Lewis of Battle Creek Wednesday of Lottie coillster.
have accrued during the playinn . ' The Wm. and Frank Cogswell
Andrew Hopkins of Lansing *eMon. a free wUl collection will be I families attended the Leslie reunion
Is spending the week at the Chas
rMrs.
--------------------------------------------------Hammond home.
| was a caller In this vicinity Monday taken up during the game.
' at- -Morgan
park Sunday.
Doris and Kenlth Gillespie enter­
ALL-STAR TEAMS
tained lhe young people Wednesday
evening. AU had a very enjoyable
CHOSEN FOR SERIES evening.
Lyle Gillespie spent part of last
"Americans” and "Nation­ week at 4-H club camp al Stuart
lake.
als” to Play Tourney—
Wayne Hill spent the past two
Double Header Sunday
weeks with his brother. Clayton, at
The following players have been Duck lake.
chosen from the names of the play­
Mr. and Mrs. John HUI spent Sun­
ers submitted by the captains of day at Mr. and Mr*. Clayton Hill's
the various soft ball teams, and will at Eaton Rapids.
compose the all-star teams who will
The young people's class will hold
Cut on a series of games beginning an Ice cream social al lhe Marlin
tonday. August 17th. In choosing church Thursday evening. Aug. 13.
these teams players have been se- Everyone come.

10 o'clock A. M —THE JOHNCOCK SCHOOL.
township;

FOR JAMS AND JELLIES

lected from each Him that iia*
been playing In regular game* thb

American League:—Roy Hubbard,
manager; Hawthorn*. Brown. Wil­
liam*. Irwtn. McKeogh. Campbell.
Broaak, Ransom. J. Hewitt. L Sny­
der. Boy»r. M. Reynolds, Fisher.
Ro**. Paige. Btrlmbeck.
National League:—Orville Sayles,
manager; Kennedy, Beckwith. Wot• ring. BUhop. Hoevenalr. Boyes. C.
-tzuonneu
uacn.
। O’Donnell.
Bachelor. Miller. Bar*
..ZUULAk
W. j
James,
MiOULAB BUHEDUUE
80HXDULI WILL :i num. W,
™. Sanderson, Mannl.

BI 00MPLZTID THIS
And then came the drought, a* kt
comes always, and this country now
find* itself for Uie first time In It*
history where it neither has In stor­
age nor can It produce for our Im­
mediate needs the food our people

CHOICE CANNED SOUPS
MOCK TURTLE, TOMATO PUREE

Sporting Items

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Equipment in those building* consist* of school seating, desk*, foun­
tains, hooting stoves, oil stoves, fixtures, etc.

TERMS:—CASH. No property removed until settled for.

Clyde Leonard, Auctioneer.

Homer W. Aldrich, Clerk.

Flashlight
CELLS

FAN BELTS
HEADLIGHT

BULBS

�.

J

r*.

•IT"'

.

...........................................................

T"a

1

11/

j.

*

Social Events and Personal Mention
................

,

,

iMM BUrtday
noma
sunaay from
rrom cuaingran io jcnme wibert. they went to petoa- &gt; . •
■.
T
.
officteWaj tho funeral of am of hi* key Where they vteited the family AtnCTlCCLn LeCLlOll

, an Monday.

Auxiliary am
Activities

I to Hastings Tuesday.

tie Creek public schools, Ths |
is also,a graduate of Western
Teachers College and a UMd

nff.
COt'NTRY
CLVfl LUMCmtON.
At the meeting
masting of the
tha American
B. •
y. miaiMi
HickM, MM
Mrs. rraaat
Ernest Oft.
Mias Aliaen laenhsth of Datrott
Mr. and Mn. Rom Johnson were Mr*. n
Btihop Kuhn vlsttad in flturgb
Auvlllxito
•— on Thursday -----Ste
'
arance of the Le«lon Auxiliary
held
lay and Mn. M- O HUI ware in
The attractive
spent the week and at borne.
in DMrolt on Saturday
and Ann Arbor last week.
Country Club *ver&gt;lng. officers were nominated as National Park. For traveling
Stepjien Johnson 1* spending ‘he
^f’ere l» the gueat of south Band. tnd . on Monday at- btoin at theTui
Mr and Mn. A. A Reasoner epent
follow*:
M. 1W w««
bride
wore .a coral knitted drone
tending
the
funeral
of
a
couiln.
luncheon
gave
nc
re. .
last week tn Toledo with hla par- week IhDayum, Ohio, with kb unPrsa—Mrs Lydja Rogers, Mrs.!
1 blue
CMtoRKto
d.n. ..in.no. .Iron, to dromh
N" accessories.
„
I
•
ele Edgar TluJiisa*
,n/*
Cterenee Texter CDwMMM
I Mr. and Mr* Weldon Wolfe and Gladioli, rtnnbm. large and small., OT£r
Mr*, Ida Water*. | Mr. yd Mra. Qaitag. wWbe* I1
Mr
M Curites and
son jack of Battle Creek and Mr. edreopab. wild carrot and
I 'Jj'Jannte Manni home at
Mr*, ctera Brown has returned son
of Owosso ware Bunday caller*
B*m Amer M
of south Haven has
frdrn a two weeks’ vacation at Bay
and
Mr»Hervey
Kimerling
and
summer
flower*
vert
artfatically
and-Mrr
Myrtle
Lewis.
I
Out
of
town
averts
preaent
i
b«en spending a few days here.
at Mr.* Ella Wolfe »
*£Litt5‘mLHWrtot'
liv»i?WMMdiSnif^LSttJr
View.
H. Maurice Murphy of Howell was daughter Janet of Michigan Oity. ~ contained and placed.
Mr. and Mrs Carl Bailey of Bat­
Mr
, M j. Cro.,
the dava U^_“d
.bUm . ..
^’..A”C*“P'
Mrs. H 8 Gaskill is spending tbte tle Creek were Bunday gueat* of In the city on Tuesday on business Ind.
Ind, were
were gurats
guests of
of Mri
Mra Ella
Ella WoWe
WoMe
mz* M J. Cray* headed the day *
Trea*.
—
Mr*
Ida
Waters
and
Mrs
Battle
Creek
Grand
Rapid*
and!
week In Jackson, Jonesville and Mrs. Ella Wolfe and Robert.
Kellar Stem and Jack Stem were and son Robert on Sunday.
I commlllre, with Mrs. Cheater Stem. Georgia Jarman.
Scotland. Ontario, Canada.
■ '*; I
Hillsdale.
Sunday visitor* of Mr. and Mr* Mr* C. W. Clarke, Mrs. J C. KetchMr. and Mr*. Rrr.eal Erway spent tn Grand Rapids on Monday on
Chaplain—Mrs. Ethel Foreman. Prenuptial entertaining for Mrs I
Mrs. Jeiui Helrlgie is spending the week end with Mr. and Mrs. business
D. X- Boyt* wefe Mr and Mr* am. Mra. E. H Wartng and Mra. and Mr*. Gertrude Craig
Carter included a roun4 of parties I
Max Mead of Detroit was a guest Harry Kelley and Harriett ot Kai- Qrvill* Sayica. Mix* Virginia Fotta.
several wevks with her *on. Arthur, Forrest James at Hoaghton.
Sgt at Arm*—Mr*. Anna John*- ■ given bjr Battle Credk
Trtend*.,
al
the
Wayne
Merrick
home
over
in Holland.
amazoo^Mr. and Mrs carl Buyev of ■ MIm Jocelvn Ironalde. Mrs ■ Mai ton.
Wm. Nichols ol Detroit came
a luncheon bF Mr*. -Burton NteHickory oomers and Mr. and Mr* CaMldy and Mr* Paul paulkngr ta­
Mrs. Frank Ulrich of Lake Odessa Monday for a visit with Mr. and
Historian—Mrs. Georgia Jarman, i meyler. Mlax Milled Schantz, Mrt.
Mr. and Mr* N. B Beer* of vern Morehouaa of Grand Rapidt.
slated tn rervlng.
was the guest of Mrs. Dora Fedewa Mra. A- J- Larsen thb week.
Mr* Ethel Foreman and Mrs Dun- Gratae 0 gnyder and Mr*. Geofge
Mrs. George van Tifflin of lake Richland called on friend* in the
on Munday.
Mr. and Mra Frederick Parker of, Mrs. Lawls Garman won the golf na Harrington.
Oulnler of Caledonia, at the beau- 1
Rev. and Mr*. W K Chidester. Odessa spent Saturday and part of city on Saturday.
Bloomington. Ill., were guests of hl* event low groat; Mr*. Thoa. 8ulllThe date for thc annual election I* ■ Ufnl farm home of the latter near
George Hyde of pralrledlle spent
Sunday-----------with Mrs. —
Earl—Boyes.
Bl i*a be th and Harriet visited friends-----------mother. Mr*
Mr*. Cora Parker, over the van the highest
——
bridge score. Over Thursday evening, sept. 3.
Green lake. A shower wa* al*0 given
in Bt. Johns last week.
i Ml** M*ry DeVries is spending the the week end here with Mr* Nettle week end. On Wednesday the three itt ftre registered, a large number
Mrs. Florence wood and Mr*., by Mrs. Frederic Luncke tit Grand ,
Mr*. Fannie Draper of Toledo week In Kalamazoo m the guest of Hyde and paul Hyde.
went to Albion to attend the wed- of.&lt;iit-of-town guexta being praoent. Lydia Roger* were elected delegates Rapids.
.
.
i I
Mr and Mr*. Clayton Brandatet- ding of Mrs. Frederick Parker's sisspent the past week with Mr*. FrsJik her sister. Mr*. Robert Brady.
whom
- Mrs Juck *•------- 4 ----were
No­ to the Department
convention |
----------------- -—‘
Slocurp. 100) 8. Dibble St.
। Mr. and tyr*. Henry Gordon of ler and children have been spend­ ter. Miss Virginia Sheldon.
*len.
— St.
— ’louis.
- •
Mo. with Mrs. Har- which is to be held at Lansing. Aug.,
ing
two
weeks
at
Gun
lake.
Mr. and Mr* A J Vedder visited Detroit wbre gUests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Ua
to.~.
_ Hayes --------------------------returned Wednes- oW Phillips; Mr*. Saunders. Gun 18. 17 and 18 Other* who plan tol
Mr. and Mrs Edwin Smith were
hl* mother. Mrs. George Binalley. of Henry Smith over the week end.
day from a visit in Pontiac„with
David Boyes;
Mr*, attend are Mr* Foreman and Mrs.’
.. her... lake,
-------with
-----Mrs.
---------------------------------------Gtand Rapid* on Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Trim attend- thc gueMs of Mr. and Mrs. Eben daughter. Mrs F. B
Drouiilard. । Harry Bowser. Ft. Wayne, with Mr* Harrington.
.
1
Mrs. Earl Keeler left Tuesday by ed the Moore family reunion st Smith of Toledo last week:
While there they motored to Gar- I Wilbur Lane: Mra. Betty DeVries.
------------------- - ——------------ ।
Miss Gertrude Bentley of Kala- reltsvllle. Ohio, to visit Mrs. Hayes’ j Grand Rapids, with Mra. Roy Hubbus for a two weeks’ vacation with Pine lake west ot Olivet Bunday,
WATERS REUNION.
I
HUNGARIAN GPt laKNH.
relatives at Belleville. Ohio.
! Mrs. Maude Ro*en returned to her
sister. Mr*. A D- Hoskin*, making . bard; Mrs. Bruce Casper. Walls
The eighth Waters reunion was’ Hungarian goulash Is a very sjfeMrs. Jay Ware returned to Ann ' home In Lansing Sunday after vislt- Holloway over lhe week end.
300-mile drive back to Hastings Walla. Wa*h . with Mrs. Frank Car- held a: Halls resort. Long lake., dal kind of «tew. and any cut gultMiss Frances Cowles has returned the
Arbor on Wednesday after spending Ing Hastings relatives and friends,
in a day. •
I ©others; Mr*. Albert Johannsen. Ionia Co . on Sunday. Aug. 9 About1 able for Stew can be used
some time here on business.
1 Mr and Mrs. Raymond Winde- from Kalamasoo where she attended
O. W. Struble and son Willis leave j Chicago, with Mrs
Cuy
*" were
----------------------------------—
~2 pounds beef.
Guy Mzllzr;
Keller; W
present
from Bellevue. Bat-1
Mr* Bartha Kuhn is home from ’ knecht and children of Owosso are summer school al W. 8 T. C
ioyd. Atlanta. • tie Creek. Kalamazoo. Blanchard.' Flour for dredging
Friday to attend a reunion of the ( Mr*. Vinnle Ream Boyd.
Mrs. Harry Waters. Mimes Erma Struble family at Lima. Ohio. Mr. I with Mrs Cha* Pott*: Mra MarW 8. T. C. Kalamazoo where she occupying the Van Dairen cottage
.
•'
■'
Lansing. Mt. pleasant. Alma. Oraudi Lard (or browning.
Waters and France* Base were in
at Gun lake this week.
enrolled for the summer term ’
Struble will visit hi* sister. Mr* 8 shall Woodward. Mr* Leslie Wood- Rapid*. Tustin and Hasting*. Mr*.
2 cups tomatoes.
Flint
and
coninnn
on
Thursday.
Robert Sm^oVFAU^taSwi* 15 8tok. Vho Uvea it the ild farm ■ wTrd. Mr* I^ie
Henry Trim and Arthur Crother*
Mr. and Mr* T N Knopf and
Ruth Denxlow of Mt Pleasant wsxl c potatoes,
attended the Knlkaska picnic at children attended the Knopf family withTiSSlIf MfandME1 Jl'J homeatead near Findlay. Ohio.: with Mr* David Goodyear. Jr; chosen president; Mn. Maurice! 4 onions.
Stem fr&lt;2n Monday tin TTunttay
I whlch &gt;“» bc*n ln ,he 8uubte
; Mrs’ W,n Harrington. Lafayette. Roush of Hasting*, vice-president. | 1 green pejgxtr
reunion at Duck lake near MurkeOougac lake. Battle ________________
Crrek Bunday.
Mr* Rai Pickrel of St
MO lly ,or * ""“W’
'Ind •
Mr»- Clifford Dolan; Mr*. Mrs. Edna Chaffee of Alma secre- ‘ Salt wnd pepp«
*nd Mr* Harry Ritchie. Mr*, gon on Bunday.
Mr and
Clayton H Gilmer Krlth Chidester. Winter Park. Fte . tary and treasurer.
Hazel Hinkley and Richard arc
Mias Charlotte Hubbard came
-------- I* the guest of Mri rhe,J?Rrern
, ( Hawo beet «ut
spending the week in the north
home Friday from Kalamazoo where Ct n lakTfo? a fi^v diw Uite wiek l'of &lt;«« Mountain are spending lheJr w|lh Mte* Sadie Glasgow Mrs. Ray
I Dredge these with’ flouf
Mr. and Mr*. Leo Hammond and she attended summer school at W.
Mr and Mr* nohrrt ntirrzfr
‘wo »©ekx' vacation with hte par- (Finnic entertained a group complihot lard
T’rotufrr ao
1 — —.
ELECT LAY nEl.EGATE.
jI in not
lara Transire
James Hammond of Lansing visited
todav for Charleston W V*
to enU- Mr and ^ra’ Jam'** Gilmer mentarr to Dr
Flnnle's mother,
At the Methodist church on Sun-, third of it to a heavy kettle at
Hastings relatives over the week
Mrs. Annes Fisher returned' on visit Mr and Mr* Marion Hotlasr.n The former I* a member of the State ! Mr* R E. Finnic of Louisville. Ky. day lhe member* voted on the elec- baking dish. Season wiHi salt and 1
i Monday from Woodland where she • Mr’ and Mr* Joe Bnringer and ^‘ce. Sunday guests of Mr and 1 stnong ihom were Mra. Richard.tldn
end.
— -ot a lay —
•-»— to represent pepper Slice w.
delegate
over .«
it -a layer of x-poMr*. Forrest Johnson. Janet and . has been staying with her father. fainlly attended the Broadbent re-1 Mrs Ja-’ oUmer were Mr “nd Mrs A,len. Hint; Mrs A. A. Anderson, the church at the lay conference inttatocs and then one of onicsx* and
Judy left Tuesday for n visit with B 8 Holly
union at Gamoau lake on Bundav 1
Van Auk,’r of Belding.
[ Grand Rapids; Mrs. Chester Stem, connection with lhe annual confer-!thinly siloed grr-n ptppcr Contihua
Mrs. Johnson’s parents al Hardy­
Mr and Mr* A P Harrington of
Mr and Mra Dan Lewi* were ini Mr and MrsDowns and Mr. New Albany. Ind., and Mrs J.** ence which meet* In Battle Creek.fun’ll an Ingredient* are utad. Add
; Louisville. Ky, are guest* of his Caledonia Saturday nn bu-lne** and w&gt;d Mrr Tom
Dam.
»U1 leave 'Oleson. Jr.. Aurora. Ill
starling Sept 8. Mr* Guy C. Kel-1 iho tomatoes and euoyUi water to
Mrs Carrie nelson and Mr* Fore­ , brother and wife. Mr. and Mrs called on Mr and Mr* nv«r Atone rwxt week for Saratoga Spring*.1 Nert week'* chairman tx Mr* ter received IF.almost vote* with | cover. Cover'.and l&lt;t .•imme? skMgly
I
York. .to.-Mr Oto. ±
| Jto* etn^----------------------- ---------------- ------------- --- ---------- -------------------------------------- - —
—
man of KalsinMioo were In the city , Verc Harrington.
rr»n» varroiners The sport com- . Charles Bac'iellor as alternate The or bake tr| a slow oven until dane.“
on Friday *islling friend* and rt-l- . Guest* of Mr and Mr* Roy Hub­
tend the national convention of • tnltte© call attention to the fact Rev. W. Maylan Jones plans to leave | *bonl two hount TO serve, thicken
! bard are Mr*. George DeVries and tertalntng their cousins. Mr and Cponteh War Veteran* a* a delegate, that all women qualifying for the. ‘or conference on Tuesday. Sept. 8. the liquid with flour,
alive*.
Mr.’. Eugene French, of Hartford, '
Mr* W H Tliwaltes, Murray and daughter. Betty and Alice Mae Krcjjcforc thc convention meet* they club championship mu;.t hand in 1
------- i------------------------------------------- . Conn.
Florence Thwaites of Grand Rap­ 1 pel of Grand Rapids
wore* by Monday night
I FOR MRS- SIDNEY SHIPMAN. I
---------------NEVER FAIL *ICINGi ’
wr
. H",J^4.rlnSLr°m J?1
I will make an automobile trip to
id* visited Mfs. Dennis Murray Sat­
Mr ano
and mr*
Mr* yon
Don rorrm*n
Foreman anu
and
--------------------------------I Mr. and Mr*. W R. Cook entet-1
Springfield. Mas* , to vUIt reteltvca
L 1-2 cup* gtnyiUted sugar.
daughter* expect tn spend part of*he"he ht-’employurday.
ENTERTAINED
FOR
'talned
Ullmmally
st
lunch
Sunday
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Noble
Cain
and
2
egg
whites,
unbeaten
their vacation al Niagara Fall* and n,ftnt
men! durinir
during lhc
the hal&lt;ncr
balance "
ol hU
hla va'
­ 1
Mr and Mr* Floyd H Gaskell left
daughters of Cldcago Visited Mr.
FOUR RECENT BRIDES, night complimontary to Mra. Sidney
7 tablespoons cold water. .
cation.
on Monday for a meat ion trip lo varlou* ntece* In Canada
The - North Michigan Avenue Shipman of Son Francisco Guest*
1 teaxponri bskthr pbwder.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Woodin and and Mr*. Robert Burch test week.
Wellington. D. C. and other points
V©m Regers nf Detroit former
Mr. Caln returned Thursday. Mrs. Birthday Club had a b*ppv meet- ,rnrn awa&gt;' *rre R®* ’nd Mrs w. K
- 1 • teaspoon
----------- —
■"* “
-------*
vanilla
flavoring,
of Interest
teacher and athletic coach of the daughter of Belmont were flimday Cain relumed Saturday and Har­ Ing Wednesday evening of tart Chidester.
&gt;. Winter
»-&gt; unci Park,
ram. Fla.,
rii, biiu
and [ fl
o muiiiniauuxa.
marshmallows, cut up
up.
Newton
Mrs. Noll Croy, who ha* been the Hastings High school, visited old gueeta of Mr. and Mr*
Mr* 'Euua
Einar Fr
Frandren.
riet and Charlotte remained for a week at the home of Mrs. Homer [Mf- and bua
’
'Ionia, | Place all the mgrrdlrote except
B'-nncr.
guest of Mr and Mr- A J Vedder. friends in Uie city nver Sunday.
week's visit, lhe other glrh return­ Smith,
onuin. when
wncn they
tney entertained for {। Knccland
iviwciand McNulty was present th© marshmailairs IrfY dflubu1 boll- ।
Mr
and
Mrs.
CJtrroll
McGuffin
and
reltimcd teat week to her home in
Mr and Mr*. Kenneth Buehler.
ing with their mother. The family four recent brides along the avenue ant&gt; cccompariiad by hi* mothepi er and onbk exactly .13 minutes.
daughter
of
Lansing
were
guests
of
Angola. Ind.
Mi** Alice
LyBarkrr and Ed.
Carolyn
FVhrr° _
Bellamy
of. ' .Mrs.
J. A. McNulty, —
sang
hl- beaUng constantly with a rotary
.. .
.......................
—
j.u-,..
expects to return here thl* week and —Mrs.
- ----- -------... _______________________________________
. a dells
IXal—. ■ Mrs „
.....
. of
. . tLd
&gt;&lt; .....
...I secular
.1.— beater. Remove from heat, beat un­
Mrs. Fred Stcmm and daughter. Bchmidckc of Grand Rapid* were hi* mother. Mr*. Anna McOuflin. on occupy their cottage south of the I1 Detroit,
Grace •..
Ryan
Mead
program of church —
and
Jessie Adete .of Chicago, were guest* Sunday guests at the b a LyBar- Sunday.
til partially cooled, add marshmal­
, Jack Lobdell of Bayport and Mrs. city Mr. Caln participated in the Battle Creek. Mrs Betty Donley number*.
of lhe c. W. Wcspinter* a couple of ker home.
Chicago Music Festival last Thurs- [ Patten and Mrs Evelyn Wagner t
---------------- ***----------------low.* and spread between and on lop
Mary Clark of Battle Creek were
tiny* the past week
day evening.
Naylor of this city
Beano was;
CABTKR
-------------- -------------------—PICKETT.
.
.Mr. and Mr*. Burr Cochrane and in Kalamaxio Monday night to aee Sunday gue.su ot Mr. and Mrs. B
Mr and Mr* Warren Carter vis- played following the pot luck sup-. Mis* Bern let L Plcketl, daughter 1
ton* Bobby and Mickey of Coldwa­ their non. Lloyd Rourh. who I* A. O’Donnell.
Mr. and Mr* W L Hinman vialt- lied in Bay City and Saginaw over per. the prizes'being given to the of Mr and Mra Geo, O Pickett 0! PLNEArFLE FRITTER
ter spent Saturday with Mr. and slowly recovering from hl* recent j
brides. Each ’pas also presented ’ Caledonia, become thc bride of Vere j
•
DESSERT RECITES..
cd their daughter. Mrs. M. C. the week end
Mr*. George Newton.
। operation.
R. J. McCre©ry of Traverse City 1 with a gift )r«m the club. Fifteen E- Carter, son of Mr. and Mr*
Usc c&gt;nned pineapple for thU
1 Muxolf. of Tawa* city over the week
Mr* etuis. James ha.-, returned
Mr and Mr* Sanford Weaver re’J.”-------------- wa* In the city on Thursday and Mr."
mcmoer*
1^” a
and
”dw.^UM,
guext.*
•' KeTe
were Prwwnt
present [Stephen
srepnen J.
j. Carter
carter of
oi Middleville,
Minaievuie. the
tne :plneapp|e fritters dMicrt. Drain,
°n.,P^T', v
from Kmuas where she was called turned to their home in Coal Cm-.
Friday
on
business.
Mr.i
Henry
Weaver
aukstod
the
t
ceremony
having
taken
plaoc
at
»(
b
U
juice from
the cam
sprlnkte *Uth ^klng*
sb----'
-­ 1
“*!
by her mother * Illness. She leave* ter. Pa. Raturdny night after »
Ml.* Johanna Rosenthal of Carl­ hostess.
[eight o’clock Wednesday evening at
illh cooking *hrrl?,r*nd
fortnight’s visit with Mr and Mr*.
Cr°!Jk.«Of
the tetter much belter.
--------------I the XxWtv
Caledonia Methodist church, let stand art ho«r. Thenton Kt
la epvimuiR
spending M
lhe week with
......
—- »- ------- -----—
- -- -r
1.,,,,;
Grand Rapid* visited Mr. and Mrs. .Ml,
Mrs. Maude Schomp and MKt a i rrnwn
frienrto Irt
this
city
TAKING A I.ONG TRIP.
|I Thc Rev
Rev. Msuricc D. McKean of cloth. Dip th© sbers «ne[
focnf
“* —
--------M’
Mr, U.U.-T «*««»;»*
Vadu Bchwader of Detroit enjoyed
Urf end Mri’ Iterlry 'ftnUler &lt;?n
pf,Epworthl
mriwum
apiacopai.
MethodLvt
Episcopal.
“nd and "UlWn n~r Sn. M. nw, East Grand Rapid* were- Sunday TTairrevine. left. Friday fora several. Grand Rapids, officiated in a sel- In fritter baiter and fry r
an outing the pa- t week at the Mort nf Beyrjrn Springs and Mr
Yownrend cottage. Wall lake.
oiirklk
Mrx Hcrt
wrekx
wrekx'tripwhich
trip, which will take them on lino
ting nf
of txhltn
white candatebrum, frra*
fems
guests nf
of Mr*
Bert Tinkler,
Tinkler.
ds
were
aL*o
guest*
there
with a hot jhl&lt;*»ned aaupg made
.. , Mr.
,_rbara
who hasWright
been vlxand ButL
Mr*. Harold
re­ rwberl ol Elklurl. tnd. were gun.is
Mr. and Mr*. Howard Barne.* en­ a voyage through the Panama Ca- and baskets of white ■ and ptak from the juice in the can. ’
turnedher
to luuising
MondayMr*
afterGeren­ u,
Ung
grandmother.
A"™""
”'T I M'
tertained Mr. and M*« Freeman n*l to th© Fkciiir court. They will gladioli. The wedding music waa
Batter.
joying Houvener.
a two week.*
’ vacation
tnidr
returned
to with
her
Warner of Grand Rapids on sun­ visit Sail Franekco. Loa Angele* and furiUflicd by Mbs Harriet Estell©
One egg; one half cup milk; three
Charles H Aldrich and xon Darwa^rs’^narenu
tier parent*.
Mr and
Mrs. .Loub
hbpic
tn Plymouth
on Saturday,
her
return
In the jcrora.
plankt. n,»u
and pna.
Mrs Earl Devin© fourths cup sifted flour; one tea­
on their
un/.
--- — trip take
---- - ...
, v.uua, pmtii..,.
day.
. _
dA
t w! uL
Karmc* curtte Butt, coming /
.- father,
for her. rcll of south Hasting.; left Bunday
Mr and Mrs John Ironside. Ian Grand
onnyon of the Colorado agid iI sang “1 Love Youtoiiu
Truly." .n
on™
s;
।
ss;
’
.
! ipoon baking powder; one lampoon
Mr. *
and
Mrs.
Kellogg
ot Harnd Mr
‘ A
* L.
’ K
*no" nf
Charles
Stringham
fj*wt* morning for a week’s motar trip Mr
&gt;. Mn*.
Frank
Twogood ,&lt;nfl
and dauohand Welleatey. *p©nt th© week end
— •«- —— •—
•
■
Godfrey
for arrived
Three titrough the Upper Peninsula and j delta,
ter Dianaleft
of yesterdgy
Kansas City
2^rt’SxMrt
Mtehlgan. Ohio]nag© by her father, wore a gown of I ■ jj^'t l)te
a&lt;,d the milk wnd
Mrs. Ethelyn Hall and Mrs. AMcc wRh the Alec Ironside.* at South
Mlle lake near
Paw
where
tliey ta visit two of Mr. Aldrich’* broth­
, Wednesday
for Paw
a visit
with
relativaa
and PennaylvanlM farmers Those whita satin fashioned on princess ,Tar«.iartv .ii. .n n-r find? «lfiM
.
Chare ot near Coat* Grove returned Bend.
willand
spend
remainder
of their
• in
aboutthe
Hasting*
making
their erg who live near Manl.uique.
Bert Dimond of pellevu- came
Friday
from
a
six
week*
’
trip
to
lhe
vacation.
„....
...
,riea , ,how„
0[ W|,„,
ume Wo„
&gt;i headquarters at the F G. Stowell
Mr* O. R. Dieknff and daughter
Tuesday evening for ii visit with where tofr trip orw
i. home.
Mr« Ray Finnic. Mr.* .terne* Rad- narbara. and Mte* Charlotte Lake
ATTENOEO ’m.OWBOAT
। L"T..
« Al “W
.
»
Mr. and Mr* Albert Reed and other
.
Mr* and?Mra,,M ,T'i^Shte hart iniec“’''Ml’M M,lf!rc&lt;1 Schantz, who using.
ford.
Kcnith
McIntyre
*nd who have bren attending school at Canyon
Mr Mr*
and Mrs.
Robert
Cook and
Wayne Snyder left on Sunday for relatives.
Mr*
David
were
at Gullfor
lake
a* dinner mwsta1 Saturda^’ntaht11 wnrc 4 mBlM Utflcta gown and car;..
family
left French
ycsteHtey
morning
a Ypsilanti came Tuesday for a few
Mr.
»nd
Mr|.
Forrest
Lan©.
DeUy
club Thur.-day
an aft- days’ stay with Mr. and Mr*. W. M Elyria. Ohio, where he Will work in and Kenneth are pending their va­ Dhii 1
’i m1* 'rled a bouquet of Johanna Hill roses. . To - Uie syrup drained from &lt;ms
.country
short motor
trip to for
Interlochen
(the shoe department of lha J. O.
tiJnaf’ Hrttte r°rek anrt
! *n&lt;1 Ml“ L,',ucUc Bcl’iu,lx
i ।can of sliced pineapple, add one
•
where they
will hear .,the musical 1 Stebbins on their way home to Iron
^3U»oon
of golf.
Sp sugar, aftgr the Juioe 1&gt; Beated
(Penney store managed by M E. cation on a motor .trtp through
f production
Mu. W D
Campbell.
FlorMountain
of Faust
and Ml**
laWr Y
”
northern Michigan.
ur
W
a «M&gt;® 8reen taffeta »n&lt;1 carried a
the boiling point. 1n-sn trtamelRos*.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Hicklot.
!
fence
and Mis* Arlen© Campbell and
Mr. and Mrs Theron C«ln re­ i Whitman.
the Boo.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jewell. Jr. atamaroo and Mr and Mrs. F. W. °L EX
’
| Mr. and Mr*. Jame* Lanpton.
led
sauorpan Bift in one tabicspoo^
Miss. &gt;an Barne* are enjoying a turned Saturday from Schrnectndv.
j.,._
•
.Schroder, a* flower girl, wore a
M. Stuart,llrd
and
Mlsx Dona of Long Beach. Cal. arrived Tues­
fortnight * outing nl the Townsend *n. V where they attended the Caln- Mra. D.r,ttIBa
„ ZiSiVe^
u«y
day man*
night »u«
for •
a v».»
visit vtith &lt;&gt;u.
hi* airtt
.
.
‘peach taffeta dress. Ralph Schantz.|
cottage. Wall lake
Newark weddHUf. They also took a l?‘d£t £*un17* Salurda»
fro*«
and uncle. Mr. and Mr*. Lee Geb-.
fAJn
nephew of tha bride. Hreraed in a
returned to*.
Ml** Emma DeVries and Mte* motor trip up Lak* George to Fort1 Ludington. Mr Langxton re4.tm.rt
.
.
j-**"1"1
Stortol
Utoll
,u|1 c,rr,ea ing ,mi nn ,
Maurino Kool ot Kalamazoo are . Ticonderoga and visited many other north on Tuesday.
Mrs. John Dawson has her sister.1
SUTTON REUNION.
(
‘ow- William Streeter, cousin of the I
Mr and Mrs Gary Crook and
guest* of the former’s brother and pteee* of interest
Mr*. Edna Fitzgibbon, a* ^cru*
iur ouwm
,aHUIy reunion
rt-umon was
w*» »•---■•■ »
-“
—bcat
------ . m*n Rnber‘ Carter i
The
Sutton family
I Mr and Mrs. Bert DeVries, for :
Mr and Mr* James Gower. Mr Garfield Tribble spent Sunday In guest this week and tomorrow they 11)rl{j nt WaI1 Uke at u&gt;,n
i.v.
.. and Rnhrrt
th„ coltai;e
of
Robert Hsrt
Hart, al*n
also nf
of Mindleville
Middleville, '
aalance
the
and Mr*
Mr and aince
Mrs. the Indianapolis. Ind.. Mr*. Tribble re­ plan to drive lo Pontiac for a visit Mr and M„ P|ynn MaUhew(,
,
were ushers. Mr. and Mra Harry [
•w York, of
and
Mrweek.
and Mr* Gorand wnrd
Mrs. Erway.
Harry Obom
turning with Uiem after a week's
«.
Bernie
Pnlmatier
was
th©
Edward
Smith.
Mrs.
Marjorie
GU1Bennett of Battl" Creek vLilted latter part of June, returned home visit with relatives.
witli friend*
ty-two guests were present from Dr- «1U of Lensing were master and
; Clarence
of Mr .and
Mrs.
Karl
Palmadet
and
Mr
and
Mr*.
A.
J.
Vedder
Mr*. Ctrrte Cook and My LcVant trpll 3,^ Crfet
r*^,. 1 mist re.*.* of cc^manies.
Grohc Saturday
Saturday. Mrs. Osborn, who under­
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Garrison of
»f
Katerhazoo
port of teat&lt;8adtr
week will
Sunday
at Spring
Lake
, and
Mrs. Whittemore
went*re&gt;nd
a revere
operation
for goiter
Freeman of Log Angele*. Aho 1* her jddaa:uizoo and Hasting* Till* wa-. - T,’c Mde’s mother wore a printed
attended
the archery
In -■■■
- was
—
—
■«--■
with Mr
and
Mr*
Chas.
Miller,
the( B*’tie creek and Mrs. apace Bauer, gue«t. went to Kalamazoo Thursday | tjfflr flr*l family gathering in a chiffon gown and a xhouMer rnr&gt;.
enzle)
of Grand
Rapidsmeet
visited
white
Mr*.
Orme
here,
te now
who ha* been visiting In Kalamazoo,
h
herMra.
aori participated.
tetterlonn
of Mrs Gower
and
Dell Sutton Sunday able
benun!
out again
to spend the day with Mr*. Lterte । nuTOb©r of year*.
। *acc and the mother oFt1i«rgroom.'
were
guest*
of
Mr
and
Mrs.
B
C
** Grace Pratt
of Appletbn.
of Yonkers. ...
N.
Infl'MrtTBant
Walbcttof
Grand ( Mrs. Mary Orme_____________
j (Cook) Wunderlin.
I
----------------- »
j Mrs. carter, wore orchid crepe with
York! Mr. and Mr* Hyde, al-^o' y. who ha* been a tniret of Mr. Edmond* on Saturday.
,_ |* R°Mt*.
and her
ran • DINNER
AND SLUMBER
PARTY.| : a Ashoulder
ter*r&gt;Ielen’^retun^’today^to^thcir
naIrt Emerson
testStauffer
week with
rAUdn»*Denxmnre.
Marcia Ironside.
weddingcorsage.
reception In tha church'
lr 1 Ronald spent test week with her • Addra Densmore. Marcia Ironside. | a wedding reception In tha church .
home in Kan**.* city Mo after a P*"nta. Mr. and Mr* Ray Lacey Isabel Sage. Dorothy Rou*h. Betty . parlor* followed immediately after
vtelt with Mr. and Mrs J. L Maus ,&gt;nd Rtandmothcr. Mr*. Emma Klip-. McMillan and Leon© Leonard en-1 thc ceremony, and was attended by
and Mr and Mrs L- F Maus
I,er- of near A,l°
i
a dinner al th© Densmore ninety guexU The table* were dec­
Mr. and Mfs Guy Giddings, in
MUs Harriet jean Pierson epent honie Wednesday night, which end-1 orated with the bride * cake, white
company with Mr. and Mrs. Loren ,he
cn&lt;1 1,1 A?n Arbor **‘h;cd with a slumber party at thc taper* and crystal baskets of peJohnson and non Harold of MiddleBarbara Johnson. Mr. and MU Reakonar'a.'
I tunla*.
vllle. were Sunday guext* of Mr and Abcn Johnson- AWW’ tU1(* Aben. Jr..1,
Mr*. Grover Davenport of Clover- “**“ 'P™1 8l!?dny
dale
I Mra. Geo. Huling te visiting with
■ Mr*. Wayne Merrick. Mr* Ben ' lTr?rot,hrrJ™Merrick and Mte* Ruth Handy acOo’wplL and other relatives In.
NOONDAY LUNCHES
companlcd Mr*. Lcvnnche Merrick Cortland and Dryden. N Y. She ex-1
lo Grand Rapid* Monday. The lat - i*fJ* to return next wrejc.
.
DINNERS
ter L* recovering nicely from her . Mr. Mid Mrs. Robert Kelley and
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.
recent operation for cataract*.
-|daughUu. Gloria, spent the »ee&gt;t
• Ml** Margaret Merrick accom- ®nd with Mr and Mr*. Siewart Kel- .
panted Mixa Louise Hollingsworth to:‘e&gt;- The fonner family left MonSUNDAY DINNERS
her home tn Honor on Btlnday Ml** &lt;SaY &lt;&lt;* Lexington.. Ky, where the .
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
Merrick is staying at the Crystal 3*“ Cheater orchestra is playing
6 to 7:30 K M.
•Down* Country olub near Frank-1 a four week* engagement.
1
•fbrt during1 the'balance of her va-1 Mr and Mrs. Houston Waring of
cation
Littleton. Colorado, and George H.
Waring. Grand D
Rapids
Mr. and Mrs. A J Lerxen find.
*nM* jislted Mr
John have returned from a motor 1and Mrs. Eugene Waring of this city
trip to Cleveland wliere they visited 1the past week. Mr. and Mr* Waring
a newspaper at Littleton.
the Great Lakes' Exposition. al*o conduct
1
and paid a fraternal visit
relattvM in West Virginia returning Colorado,
1
by way. of Washington and Union- 1(o the Banner ofltoe.
Mr*. Donald Kelley and son Jdlin
town. Pa.
Mr* a. R. Pogue and daughter. 1of Detroit were in lhe city last week
Pauline, who have been spending 1as guests of thc Stewart Kelley* "nicy
the summer in Ontario. Canada, are 'were on lh»ir way lo Portland. Ckt.
guest* of Mr*. Mary Evart* and 1to spend IM remainder of lhe va­
I Mis* Agnes Sim for a few day* be- 'cation. Mr. Kelley. Who has jnst
his wprk a* athletic in­
I fore returning to their home in completed
'
structor at Island Lake camp, will
. Greeley. Colo.
Mr*. Jack Snyder visited her .Join them later.
Charles Waters of Bellevue, neph­
{daughter. Mra. Earl Kermeen. of
1 Caledonia from Friday till Sunday. 'ew of “Uncle Riley" Waters, was in
18h^ al*o attended lhe Parmelee ।town visiting relative* apd disking
. school picnic. Mr. and Mn. Ker- Ihands with old friends. He say* he
I meen spent Bunday evening with 'enjoys reading the Riley Stories tn
thc -Bonner. He informs us that
I Mr. and Mrs. Border
Mr. and Mr* Ralph. Eggleston. John Evans, former Governor of one
Mrs. Ethelyn Buholta and Jack. 'of the Island* in lhe Philippine
'Mbs Eva A. Hccox and Philip and 1group, and Riley Waters were
I Patricia and Mr. and Mr* Henry cousin*.
Mr. and Mrs. VernekPrentice re­
Eggleston and family attended Ute
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
PHONt 2241
Mills family reunion at the home ot turned from Kalamazoo Friday,
Elmer and Mbs Lena Warren tn. where they attended summer school
Sunfield Twp , on Saturday

Zippw
and
sweaters for
$1.50’— «’.9FVirfw«4

Helpful Suggestions

Bwidoth Sbirts
m and patterm;
prothrunk. some
i-wilt co Ha

Summer Neckwear 1
Smart now paMema, in
cenory. whits. P
many new linen

$1.00 Tie*
75c Tie*
50c Tim
.
,

T. S. BAI
.

*&gt;■
Phone 1X6
it *
»

Add the juice of half a J«BN
tatoterpoon 'at codkiftc cm
taste.
GRAPEFBC1T. PKAg AJffi

(thdivUoai Servkai.
A bit unoraal and most
Uve eombinatJcD with ear

The BIG LITTLE STORE
Offers for Friday and i

PEANUT
BUTTER

SPEt l A I.

BIG "Check Your
Needs” SALE!

PARKER HOUSE

.Thurs., Fri. and Sat

Specials in All Drug and Sundry De­

partments. Visit our store during

Watch and Jewe I
Repairing

these days and SAVE money I

Don't forget Our Complete Fouri-

Estimates FREE!

BESSMER
Jewelen and Optician*

tain Service when you want Cold

.

2!?25

SEMINOLE TISSUE
TOILET. TISSUE"^
LIFE BUOY SOAP
LUX SOAP
RINSO Ige. box 18c
OVALTINE

Walgreen Syetem
DRUGSTORE

4 roll*

3 ban
•mall 2 for
SOc riio

MEAT SPECIOUS

BEEF ROASTS, Br.nd.d Beef, I
PORK CHOPS, Loon End
PORK ROASTS, Shoulder

Drinks or Ice Cream

nr r FN&gt;c
KttU 3

GRAND
COf fir

HIN
Hastings -

23&lt;s

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THVRSDAY, ACQUIT U, ItM
RoAs

AUTO . FIRE

Inventor ‘Delivers’ Sunlight

The Hastings Banner

With this apparatus. Jacques Arthuys. aoove. t rench inventor, de­
liver* sunlight right lo the windows of New York skyscraper apart­
ments from which natural light is blocked by building walls. The
mirror lo which Mr. Arthuys points catches lhe sun's rhys and de­
flects them down to other mirrors, which, in turn, divert them where

Ethel Mae Kinne of Grand Ledge
ti visiting her grandparent*, Mr and

out the day. The inventor terms hla device Arthol. i
posed of thc first three letters of his name, and of

was home over Sunday.
Mri D. D Myers of Hammond.
Ind. is visiting her mother. Mrs.
Frank McDerby.

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

Our Service
Ta PROTECT Yr* Constantly
A4wt Fairly
Pay Promptly

CARDS of THANKS

mZENS MUTUAL
'ire Insurance Co .

SHELDON'
ABSTRACT

OFFICE

1 lull N.U.T.— 4 .tr
»t al.xul »
I
...
1 ,-k.r.l &lt; n»
-•

BRICK
GET VOUR COPY
At Old Hastings Wool
Boot Plant Site.

In­

TODAY
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

quire of Joe DeRulter

at Fickle Station.

11,1

-a.

~

GRANGF PROGRAMS

"AKRON" MODERN
•KtfANO-FOIM TRUSS

will have the September meetings.
The annual Garlinger reunion was day and Wednesday of last week.
We regret our mistake In last
held Sunday at Lake Odessa.
week's Items regarding the Martin,
Charles E Betts and family attend­ Wellman and Lakeview school rs-

Read it Before You Buy
Your Refrigerator

ed Uie Zuschnitt reunion at Gun
Tuesday. Aug. 18. instead of this
lake Sunday.
week Tuesday, us we said. Please
Mrs Dora Lass and son Otto have remember the date and plan to atbeen entertaining company from

H.E.SMITH HDWE.
Mrs. C- Wash and son
spent Thursday in Lansing
—... —
.... apent
I from Thursday until Saturday in
Jackson with Mr. Yarger
Miss Helen Brumm of
is visiting heg,parents. Mr
Coy G- Brumm.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reynard entrrtained the latter's parents. Mr
Bn‘* Mrs Smith of Winchester. Ind
Mr “and
Gid ’L- nGage left
•”* Mra. '"■*
Tuesday morning for a trip through
northern Michigan.
Funeral services for Mrs. Rhoda
Baxter, 81. were held Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home of Alspent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. fred Baxter, conducted by Rev.
Aitric Lykins. On Sunday they all Pritchard. Mrs. Gall Lykins sang.
left on a camping trip to northern Mrs Baxter had been in poor health
Michigan.
M&gt;ns. George of Mulliken. Alfred of
a
Nashua. Lyman or NaahMlte
H------- ’
-----and one daughter. Mrs. Claud Perry
of Nashville, twelve grandchildren.
Furlong, a nine pound son.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Decker Burial was in Kalamo cemetery.
Week end guests of Mr. and Mrs.
ore camping in northern Michigan.
Vidor . Brumm were. Miss Ardis

DR. R. A. DENISON

NEW

OLD

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads

No Lag Strop*

The Prescription Drug Store

crocheting and knitting rui
P°l luck "upper
served.

GET YOUR

Electrical Work
DONE BY A
LICENSED
ELECTRICIAN

been staying with her grandmother,

|

her home near Morgan Saturday
The Young People's class will
:sponsor an tee cream social at lhe
church this week Thursday eve­
.ning. Aug. 13. Home made ice
.
.

[
&lt;ed the reunion ot Use Leslie family
।at Morgan Park. Thornapple Jake.
Sunday. They report a fine yme.
with 4b present.
Remember. Bunday school next
Sunday at 10:30. Be sure and at।

--------------- — ------ —
antl ,n:ul haUi but today

Work GUARANTEED!

Farmers, Attention!

daughter. Helen, of Lansing.

Zenos Colvin

GLADIOLUS BLOOMS
FOR SALE v

FAIR TIME
WRECKING
"" FOR PARTS

"No people is so insecure as one
that is heavily armed"—Nicholas
Murray Butler.

jason
"'lllahover

McElwain

Grand Rapids spent part of the
week with the latter's parents, Mr.

• 1W8 Model A Ford Track
0 1828 PLYMOUTH Coupe

0FORDSON TRACTOR
AUTO GLASS INSTALLED

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone ZC37

Hastings

SHELDON A SHELDON

EMERSON eoyer

JOE MIX

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock

Fatigued
JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE

KELVINATOR

FOB SALE
38 acres good land; 7 room house,
large basement bam. silo Mlle from
city on good road. Must be sold to

SALES AND SERVICE

H. E. Smith Hdwc.

HASTINGS MARKETS

You need this

&lt;08, City Bank Bldg

ENERGY FOOD
HIGHLANDS DAIRY

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
M FELDPAUSCHS
MARKET-Phon* 2616
FOOD CENTER 2609
H.F.Idp.u«h -.3921

GRADE A MILK
High in Cream Content. Raw
or Pasteurized. Pt. 5c; Qt.

A UtlU FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW-

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hutinn

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, AUGUST 13,1936

"Ar^Trnp^OLITICAL NOTES;5S^

GOLD IN MICHIGAN

Ao Account of Their Long
Journey to Appear in
the Banner
Hubert Gcok and family rettfrned
last waek Wednesday from » 19400
mile trip that took them on th*
northern route to the Pacific cogst.
which they reached at Seattle, then
through Oregon and California to
ohemian grove Loa Angeles, returning through the
route by the Grand Can­
CALIF.—Up here in tU southern
yon of the Colorado end through
Bohemian club’s grove where,
Dalia*. Texas.
The family agreed that the most
during the surnfnrt- encampntfnt, no .womerf are allowed Interesting place they visited was
th* Carlsbad Cavern near the city
either at large or on the leash, of Carlsbad. New Mexico. This Is
I’ve been thinking about their the largest cave in the world. It has
been explored for many mite* but
little peculiarities.
*
the end of It ha* nev4r been
readied. There are lateral caves
a desert Island with Just each othei
branching from the main one ih
for company, and
many directions. It te a place of
wonderful beauty. There are huge
or fifteen years, th* stalactites and stalagmites forming
rescue steamer ar­ all *orU of fantastic figures and an
rived. they’c both infinite number and variety of
smaller ones that are beautiful be­
gangplanl.
befort yond deacrlntion.
On their return Journey from
either remembered
the really impor­ Dallas, after they reached Okla­
tant things she'd homa, they traveled in almost con­
been Intending all tinuous rain storm* until they near­
ly reached the borders of Michigan.
companion; and nc This state eeeffii to have suffered
as severely a* any.
matter If the Ude
Mr. Cook te preparing a descrip­
were falling and the wind rising, tion of hte trip for the benefit of
they’d stop right there In lheli the younger children in the years
tracks and thresh it all out
to come. He has promised that the
U you dpubt this, see what hap Banner shall have the privilege of
pens whaa a pair of them ar* printing this travelog. He has not
swapping good-bys. after an alt only descriptive powers, but a droil
day conversation, on finishing a way of putting things that will
long chatty motor trip together. U make hte account of the trip espe­
they can find a narrow doorway cially interesting to our readers.
where they'll block traffle, that's
where they’ll halt always.

,

B

take it. But we men keep on taking
It and liking it I don't know wheth
er we're dumb—or numb. Musi
be one or the other.

Barry Bypaths
•y JANE CAMERON

A suggestion—Young barbers who
are undecided as to where to locate,
Chip Off the Old Block.
ELEBRATING his fifth birthday try Russia, If you could persuade
them to part with their foliage. And
lha other day. my small grand you could run a mattress factory as
son and namesake met anothera by-product. That sounds goofy
gentleman of like age who bragged now rve written It down, but It
that his nurse brought bim to the seemed like a bright Idea when I
party In a car.
first thought of it.
"Can your mama drive a car?”
tVc wander where Observing Tom­
inquired the guest.
my ever got such a large pipe.
"No," answered my descendant,
"but I'm going to teach her. AU
We agree with the "locals'* about
you do is start off and keep going the cherry pie business. Have al­
till you have to stop, and then you ways wondered who made them and
say, 'Damn those red lights.' **
who ate them. Would be willing to
It would appear that Cobby has wager that Mrs. Roosevelt sews that
been listening to ol* grandfather they are Aten where they are ap­
preciated, If not on her own table.

C

'

Praising King Edward.
F HE was a Communist, of a
breed who are usually half­
' baked mentalities, It was only
bo expected that hte effort to mur­
der King Edward should be—thank

I

If he was a lunatic, then he's the
kind of lunatic who should spend
I the rest pf his days behind high
walls. If he was a deliberate as­
sassin-well. at least he gave a
gallant monarch a chance to show
Cw gallantly monarchs can ha­
ve in tlie face of danger.
Any man, given the royal back­
ground and an open path to the
throne, can be a king, but not ev;

world rejoices at the outcome.

Neatest and most fitting .name for
would be glad to own one of any
name.
to
Before we take any squash bugs
to the Fair/ we ll have to do some­
thing aboui their halitosis.

No fruit as "Just right" as harvest
apples.

An example of self-control—get­
ting by Mr. Larsen's dress prints
without buying at least one dress
length. I have an old one on now
which I like so well I*m patching
It here and there until It looks like a
crazy quilt.
Here's a recipe for some of the
best vegetable soup you ever ate.
Cook a beef soup bane wiih plenty
of meat and some* fat until nearly
done, then throw In a handful of
rice and season. In thirty minutes
or so add whole potatoes, carrot*,
several onions, a cabbage and any
other
and vegetables you have on hand.
A turnip cut up te good. And some
macaroni or spaghetti. Season and
when nearly done throw In lots of
tomatoes. A little fresh corn (or
canned) Improves IL As soon as the
tomatoes are cooked through, serve.
It should be thick with the whole
vegetables and only a small amount

E MAY have our own trou­
bles.
including
so
many
mounting taxes over the land
so much mountain music ovex the
radio, but what with Spain rent
by Internal war. add France hav­
ing strikes which almost approxi­
mate war, and Poland threaten­
ing revolt against Nazi control ot
what, laughably, is called the
"Free" City of Danzig, and the
reel at tffcm pretty generally stew­ milk and a dessert and here's your
ing in thelt respective political caa- entire meal. It is really one type of
boiled dinner, ■ but the tomatoes
In tact I can think at but one make It a delightful change from
the standard typos. This makes a
cooker nearly full.
which we could use, but. alai. will

W

Guest (to hostess): "My dear,
where did your wonderful string of
pearl* come from? You don't mind
my asking, do you?"
Hostess: "Certainly not. They
NDER the rattle of the machine
guna and lhe shriek* at lha coma from oysters."
victims as civil war flames across
Here's an appealing poem by Pa­
_ Spain, that faint creeping sound tience Eden who must know little
which you hear, sounding some­
thing like a mouse in the wainscotAdvlee te Little Boys.
Find your star and smell your clover.
ing Its customary prompt steps to Run your hearts out on the hill.
Swing your bodies up . . . and over
other distracted countries whatso- Every wall and window sill
Hldlpg gardens, hiding flowers.
Hiding people you would know.

■

____________ _______________

DEMOCRAT

REPUBLICAN

my dandruff.
,

IRVIN A COBB.

REMANDED TO CIRCUIT COURT.•
Russell
Service
and
RusssU
Hinckley were brought Into Justice
Matthews court on Friday. They

ter tonnage as net or register toosage which remains after deducting them. The justice remanded them
gross tonnage the spaces eases will
by the propelling machin­ McPeek.
ery (Including allowance for fuel),

ought to be brought in.

I

The Lotcell Showboat

Rocks Similar to Rich On­
tario Formation* Are
Found Here

with CM
About the only unpleasant feature
of attending a large production like
lhe Lowell Showboat u waiting for could sing as he proved with
It to begin. People climb over and Bon Buddy chocolate Drop,
propria te
around you in a frantic search tar
handled h
their seat* until you feel in immi­
and easily
nent danger pf being crushed to dancer.
death. But Thursday night that in­
There was singing
terim was most entertainingly filled
by the music and dances of the sentiment* and all
Michigan lumberjacks. One blueshirted old fellow, seventy years
young, showed how old-timers real­ Thomas Choir School in New York
sang, we forgot everything ajd
Negaunee and Ishpeming. They are ly clogged. And he could show many everybody around us and Jolt
making a detailed study pf rock a youngster a step or two!
listened. Jt was like hearing an Miller post
Soon gaily lighted from stem to
formations beginning at the bld
angel sing, clarence, by the way, wa*
Ropes gold mine threw miles north­ stern, whistles blowing and bell* Kneeland McNulty* roommate at
east of Ishpeming to ascertain clanging, the Showboat rounded the the choir schoel. and Kneeland la
whether the gold-bearing strata At bend of the river and docked with1 Hosting*' child with a golden voice. from
the Ropes mine and the nearby pomp and ceremony. The show was
There were many other act*— Lowell. Nashville
Michigan gold mine extend to other
ballet and . acrobatic dancing, a old DePrtester. c
It would be difficult. to give * de- clown dance and a very realistic- 5®, Battle Creel
parte of the district. Between the
time of discovery in 1880 and the
looking frog who croaked out a aong. II chaplain of lhe s
time of closing in 1897 lhe Ropes
and of course lhe Endmen. We'd,
mine produced more than a hatfheard eome of their quip* before,
‘Su.rs*
nflllion dollars in gross value of gold notes, but there were a few high- but they put them over In their own I
[lights that we couldn't possibly for- Individual style so we didn't mind a I
bullion.
agricultural products should andj?®1
‘h.u .&gt;dnTnUu^UJ
Old miners and engineers ore get.
Mt For
Pnr Instance,
Instance the Morlok quadouad- ।bit; we laughed at hard as though
could have been produced on
speculating as to whether Fortune ruplete. Four adorable, blonde bits ,we'd never heard them before. The
American farm*. The money eenl bread lines and soup kitchen* in­
will lead the expedition to the place of humanity. Their poise and un- ।
annuai picnic.
abroad for them should have gone stalled under the Old Regime, and
gave him a chance to be self-sup­ where nearly 100 yean ago a state self-consciousness on the stage, was a ,and we thtnk the interlocutor, Mr.
to American farmers. Instead of
geologist—Dr. Douglass Doughton— fine example for their elder*. And (C- H. Runciman had as great a
these essential benefits to America, porting once more.
&lt;rue . . . some will forget. But discovered gold in this region. The we were very, very glad they didn't ,share in putting it across In such
lhe record of .farm marketing In
official reports *ay he found enough sing Shirley Temple songs, but Just ,fine style as did Ute actors. He fair­
1935 shows we have sent many mil­ moat of our people are not of that
gold to fill an eagle's quill and that a few little numbers that mads ily radiated good cheer and made his
lion* of dollars after the billions we fibre. America can never forget the
man who saved her from pauperism. It was obtained "from the bed of a them distinct personalities and not 'audience feel os happy as he himself
already have oversea* in unpaid war
Washington freed us from Great little stream of water." Dr. Hough­ Just quadruple Imitations of another looked.
loan*.
ton drowned in aatorm off Ke­ famous child.
Britain.
.
Experience has taught us that
Lincoln freed the black people Ln weenaw point before he had dis­
near future.
If there's anything we like belter ti. Y. C. BAILROAD
when we send money ov»r*ea*. we these United States from slavery.
closed the secret bf where he had than a cat, It's two cate, add we had
ENGINEER DIES.
might a* well throw It Into the sea.
But It took Franklin Delano obtained this gold.
’em Thursday night. And we were
Roy Wood, aged 63. ot Toledo. O.
The American consumer te thus cut Roosevelt to lead lhe American peo­
There have been recurrent waves happy to near surprised exclama­
In two ways by thl* broad*word of ple out of economic bondage.
of Interest in gold prospecting in the tions on all sides of "Why I didn't died suddenly Friday morning at the
.
New Deal meddling.
These United Stale* were closer upper ptnlnsula since Houghton's think cate had that much sense I" home of a cousin. Hayes Bponable, him wearing It tn lb*
In the first place, the money paid.'to communistic Influences before discovery, but lhe discoven' and ar "I though! cate were too dumb in Hastings Twp. He was bom in
to farmers for cutting production Roosevelt's inauguration than at any­ mining of iron ore, state geologists to be trained like that I" But those Genoa, Ohio. Feb. 24. 1874. For sev­
was taken out ot lhe pocketbook* of time Ln our history. Mobs milled believe, so diverted the interest and two kittles that put on their own eral j-ears ha lived at Loon Lake,
American taxpayers. Including the through the streets In our metro­ attention of miners llial little time version of the Max Bchmellng-Joe Ill. but had made his home in To­
farmers, themselves. When the con- poUtan cities,.surging and crying out and money have been expended In Louis boxing match were trained to ledo for cite past thirty-two years.
sumer reached into his pocket again against their helplessness —- search for and study of the gola- the nth degree. Max was white and Surviving are lhe widow, two daugh­
, money
------- - - for food for V,
I— table, I&gt;he
■:
a .V- - ■ , J l-.JJu.
for
hte
regime that had trodden them down bearlng rock! and other prospecting joe a tawny fellow, and they sat ters and three sons; his mother, a
had ’to buy foreign product* sub­ lower than lhe slaves Lincoln sent
Jimmie Clark gave an ini
quietly on their stools until given sister, a brother and a half-brother.
State geologists declare that the the signal. Then they began sparr­
stituted for what our own farmers । us into Civil W*f to free!
had been paid, with tax money, not
The negroes were far happier with rocks and formations in which gold ing, but if they didn’t show enough Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi­
their families singing and strum­
enthusiasm their trainer pulled neers and the Brotherhood of Loco­
Mr. Roosevelt once promised that ming on those old plantations than tills region are apparently not dls- their talk and they went
work motive Firemen, also the Moose matron* and
he would try one thing and If It did were our people with no roofs over similar in general character to those tn good earnest. Max knew all the lodge of Toledo. He was an engineer
not work would try something else, their heads ... no food . . . fam­ in the Porcupine district of Ontario rules of the game, and when Joe on the New York Central railroad
HASTINGS
where
some
of
the
largest
and
rich
­
This promise, like many others, has ilies broken and despair in their
came over and started punching be­ serving on the Toledo-Collingwood
not been fulfilled. No nation can af­ souls. They had no heart to sing! est gold mines in the world art now fore he was off his stool, he simply division. The remains were taken to
ford to have ite production strangled
But Franklin Delano Roosevelt operating. Thc current expedition refused to defend himself. Joe went Toledo where Lhe funeral was held
—too many other nations are wall­ gave the people ot these United will prospect for oilier minerals as "out" completely to take the count on Monday at two o'clock at the in Nashville Jul
\
ing overjoyed for such an opening lo Slates new hope. He restored their well as gold.
730 Lodge Ave. Interment She La survived
when Max got in his final good sock. residence.
It. Tnltota
*
turn such self enforced scarcity lo tom and shattered _morale. He re­
He Just curled around the ropes and tn Toledo.
NIGHT BLOOMING CEREUS.
their own advantage.
kindled the fire of patriotism in
Mrs. DcVcre Hook of Dowling has; hung there while the crowd ac­
Mrs. Gladys Craig
MARRIAGE
LICENSES.
Foreign producers have been quick men's hearts. America became, once
a night-blooming cereus which blos­. knowledged the winner amid roars
grandchildren and
to take advantage of us.
more, the land of equal opportunity
Dale Conklin. Dowling ...
somed for lhe first time last week,। of laughter.
child, also a brother
While we have been culling pro­
I
The four Brown Bombers from Bernice Rhoades. Nashville
growing
ten
beautiful
flowers
about
duction. other nation* have in­
It te either bad judgment or
' lonla caused the audience lo hold Joel Hummel. Nashville .
ten
inches
across
when,
fully
creased their*. India. Egypt and sheer unadulterated ignorance lo
Clara
BeUe
Lewis.
Freeport
its
breath
at
times
with
their
fastBrazil, for example, have stepped I say that the housewife pays through opened.
up cotton production to as high as, -Indirect" taxes for what the gov­
ernment has been spending to hold
218 per cant.
Last year we exported only 177.­ the body and soul of America to­
000 bushels of com and bought 43.­ gether.
242.000 bushels. Back in 1931 before
In the first
place
national
crop destruction was started we ex- taxes affect luxuries and not
ported more than two million necessities. Tobacco, liquor, thea­
bushels and only Imported *ix hun­ S prize flghte, income taxes
dred thousand bushels. These are
importations
pay
nearly
typical examples, not exceptions! air of the national Income. It te the
ones. An extreme case Is that ot state and local tax that takes the
hogs. Import* have been steadily in­ pennies out of the housewives'
creasing from 151.000 In 1991 to 3.­ purses. And even these taxes give
us so many things we all want. They
414400 in 1935!
With millions on relief and with spread the tremendous burden over
millions of -others going underfed. the whole population and not on
Mr. Wallace has never been able to the home owner and the farmer
explain successfully Just why he alone. And It would be too, too emthought he could usher in a Utopia barrasslng to point out what our
by destroying crops, killing livestock
and paying farmers to cut produc­ that Michigan's budget has been
tion.
balanced.
It Is one thing to make out a
Foreign producers are now reap­
ing a golden harvest tn the big budget for your family and keep
American market that should have within It during ordinary conditions.
been reaped by our own farmers— But it te quite another thing to ac­
and would be except for lite New complish the same satisfying equa­
Deal's policy of -planned scarcity." tion when you have dependents relyi
Combined with this program of ing upon you for their very life.
Would you turn human beings
planned scarcity te a favorable trade
with Canada which has hiked im­ out to starve?
•
ports from our neighbor country
Of course not!
enormously. No one begrudges CanAnd that te why you and you and
you will vote for the man who saw
siderabie ot that trade represent* hte responsibility and lived up to It.
NOTE THE
The measure-of hte courage Is
RECEIPT
volume of hte criticism today.
high time to taka account of the
The democrat* of Barry county
damage that has been done.
Herewith te a table showing tire wish to express their appreciation
Bank Money-Orders provide a new, easy way to pay
Increased volume of food import* for the space allotted by the
ner for discussion of political li
from Canada since 1935:
bills and make remittances, safdy, by mail They arc
during the present campaign.
Product
Import*

Fair fil»y demands clear thinking
Although the New Deal lias rep­
resented itself a* being friendly to and MU dlreeled activity, public
agriculture. U has under the direc­ affairs would seem to warrant the
tion of Mr. Wallace and with the same fair sportsmanship. And when
full
lull approval
appruTM of
w President
nmwviii Roosevelt. the "paUtictans
——- ” —to
~ turn —to —the
—
­ American housewife they will find
____ lit.J Itself to ±
committed
* aallaa
policy nf
of An
deliberate crop destruction which has that millions of these thrifty women
... —. “Yr.. _
been ttlinklng about govwnhit agriculture a telling blow.
W* have lest our foreign
- ,
• t...
and because of the fact that Mr ' The womrn pf America have an
Wallace failed to guess correctly, we unshakable belief that a "thin
have not even been raising enough 1 purse" wiih seowthlng ta It to buy
food stuffs to fe*d [ourselves and so' things the family need* is a decidhave been forced to buy from edly better situation than a "thin
abroad.
\
purse" with nelhtag ta It but air
True, lhe drpulh conditions (n the ' (be u ,MH or cold’'
&lt;_.&lt;
west itelp to' upaet calculations, buf Group* . . . masses of people . . .
fact* show th*t *n ew increaslhg are made up of Individuals, each
Itream of foreign foodstuff* has with » disposition to recognize hte
been moving Into thl* country ever opportunities and appreciate hte
*tnc* the policy of food destruction good fortune; or having a nature
was begun.
that turns deaf ears and blind eyes
•W1». wta bun IU loodtum, | W-&gt;•’"*“"«
l-n to.

Prospecting for gold on a larger
scale than ever before conducted in
this state is nor under way inland
from the shore of Lake Superior
west of Marquette, once again focus­
ing lhe attention of Michigan upon
the gold possibilities of the upper
peninsula.
Fifteen geologist* and their asatetante. beaded by Dr. W- A. Kelly,
professor of economic geology and
paleontology at Michigan state col­
lege, are conducting exploration

Bank money .Orders

Safe—Convenient
COST LESS

Fresh'Pork
Cattle ........

Jan.
1935
.« 4488
. 54.483

used in the same way as Postal or Express Money

~—
Jan.
I 78,010
457483

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

Cheese ....

98400
15415
_ ___ 118,757
3,414
27453
9487
3844*
4.CO7
23.713
Bacon and Hanu. .. 8433
------21.623
Wool .......................... 7,110
15*4*8
7450
Poultry ......................
890
In fact. In all of the so-called
reciprocity agreements which are
being negotiated, the American pro­
ducers are getting the wont of the
bargain. Those who have closely
analysed the Canadian pact declare
that 834 per cent of the tariff con­
ber when, once upon a bygone
cession* we made to Canad* are on
Scratch your legs among the thistles agricultural commodities. On the
persistent disease called wart a Ride forbidden birches down. \
- other hand. 78 per cent of the con­
final war which forevermore would Peel a hundred willow whistles.
cessions granted to us under this
restore true democratic principles
agreement are on manufactured
and motherly love to rival nations Fish tha brooks, and wade the products. Under our moet-favoredand embittered peoples? To date
ditches
’
natlon policy, the concessions we
the result makes one almost de­
made to Canada must* be extended

U

.

’•

The last period at "Camp Barry"
filled with demonstrations and
contest* for the 4-H Club boys and
girls. The boys visited ^different
farms each day and the glrte had
various educational features at the
Camp. Each period lasted 3 days, with
Miss Mary Bullis directing and Mr.
Foster and Mr. Haas as chief assist­
ants. The recreational and special
features of th* programs, afternoons
and evenings, were directed by the
Camp Staff, with Rev. W. 4. Haggal and thtf Kendall sister* giving
generously of their musical leader­
ship.
«
201 regular camper* have attend­
ed. -Camp Barry" this year with 28
leaders helping with the directing,
their services making the entire
camping experience a worthwhile
vacation for the 201 boys and girls,
and to them
owe many thank*.
The annual Hi-Y training camp
with tha single exception of Oer- on Torch lake opens August 21 and
continues to the 29th with excellent
agriculture are not safeguarded un- leadership for the program and In
each cabin. Any boy who can attend
this camp te Indeed fortunate.
Sunday. Au&lt;ust I, the wonderful
In tamnerattend the on Old Torch. Memorial services
T. U. pot luck were held tn honor of ths late U E.
BusU. who established th* camp

Turnips ....
Potatoes ....
Milk Powder

Hastings Udlu will
drink*.

wm

Orders, but are more conveniently obtained; issued for
any amount and accepted everywhere, and thoir cost
is very low. Another advantage Is that you get a definite
receipt—a complete record of the transaction and a

positive proof of payment.

TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS, MICH

HASTINGS CITY BANK

�TMVBgBAV. AVOIST U, IW
litUe

Cool Off
with
ba received by tbs bridal party un­
der ths grape arbpr in ths gardes,
Mrs. Newkirk, whom gown wiU be
of powder blue lace with a het to
match with a corse** of Talisman
roses, and Mrs. uain, of Hastings.
Michigan, wfloee Jown will be of
flowered chiffon and a corsage of

COFFEE
Fob Naptha

"Mrs. Philip Caldwell will play the
wedding march and give a recital
while the guest* are being seated.
Her selection* will include "Du blest
die Ruh." Schubert; “NRnneUed.-*
Brahms and "Andante," Brahms.
During the ceremony Hephtlbah
James Clark will sing "Jean,” Rog­
ers, and "Like Unto a Flower," Rub­
enstein. and Herbert Hausser will
sing "Still Wle die Nschl” and
•Passing By." Purcell.
The bride who will be given In
marriage by her father, will wear
her mother’s 1910 period wedding
gown of ivory satin, with a tightfitting bodice and a Duchess lace
bertha. The full skirt has a short
train with pannier* ol Ducheas lace
and pearl* and chiffon. Her rose­
point lace veil. which was also worn
by her mother, will hang from a
Ught-flUlng cap. caught at each side
of the head with orange blossom*.
She will carry roses and lille* of the
vaDv.
"The bridesmaids will be in ralnbow colors of pastel shade*. Mte*
Mortal Newkirk, the maid of honor
for her sister, will wear a flame-

Red Circle Coffee

SOAP

Cigarettes
Chipso or Rinso

BREAD

Soap Chips

Kitchen Klenzer
Kellogg's All Bren

Fig Borw—Ginger Snape

COOKIES

Grape-Nuts

Instant Postum
CRACKERS

horsehair picture hat will be trim­
med wiih organdie flowers to match
the gown. She will carry white glad­
iolus and blue delphinium tied with

Swansdown
Woodbury's

Augusta Alger. end Miss Elisabeth
White. They will wear gown* of
pastel organdie In gold, green, pink,
blue, peach and lavender, made like |

SALMON

"The bride attended Wellesley Col­
lege for.two years and is a graduate
ot Syracuse University in the class
of 1939. She Is a member of PhLBeta
pl sorority.
"Mr. Caln Is the son of Mr. and
Michigan, and a graduate of the
University of Michigan where he re­
ceived hl* M. B. degree in the claw
ot 1930. He Is a member of Tau Beta
Pt. Phi Kappa Pi. and Kappa Delta
Rho fraternities. He is in the motor
engineering department of the Gen­
eral Electric Company in Lynn.
••Mr. and Mrs. Caln, after a wed­
ding trip, will tnake their home at
1012 Paradise Road. Swampscott,

Mrs; Alfred Tunis of
N. J.; Mr. and Mr*. A-----------------------of Providence. R. L: Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Beeton of Medina. N. Y, and
Mr. and Mrs. Denniston Ver Planck
of Philadelphia.”

CLOVERDALE.
The Townsend meeting will be
held at the town hall Friday eve­
ning, Aug. 14.
Rev. Be wart Walton. Mary Owens,
Esther Kingsbury, Oral and Irta
M»cLeod are attending tho Evan­
gelical church camp at Buchanan
tor a couple of week*.
Tho Young People's claw will pul
on an ics cream social on lhe ten­
nis court. Friday evening. Aug. 14.
Evelyn Monica had her tonsils
removed Tuesday at Hasting*. She
ta getting along'fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Mell vain enter­
tained relatives from Grand Rap­
ids and Muskegon Sunday.
Mra Ed. Pennate te staying with
Mr. and Mrs. George Stafford and
taking X-ray treatments at Kala-

gandle flowers lo match the gowns.
They will all carry bouquet* of
flame gladiolus tied with variegated

SUGAR

Mason Jars tt 55c

65c

Jar Rubbers

visited th*
Owm
on their rohuu from the HE.*
convention at Cleveland, The farmer scholars of' ** ***
Sprague school gathered -4.
al Grover
oavwporVr —-x—
‘». to hanMr. and Mrs. Elmer Matthew* ot
or Mri U~~
. nee Kate
Venflllion. of Middleville. . _____ Woodland spent Sunday wish Mrmate of those bygone day*. A fine and Mrs. Wflk QrocMvd.
Mn John Usbome returned hone
Cit luck dinner was served on tha Tuesday
from the hospital M&lt; U
wn. It waa voted to meet next

MILO.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Q. Schultz enter­
tained several friends from Chicago
recently, among them Mr. Schulte*
mother and an uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Schulte and son Billie. Twelve
were entertained for dinner Bun­
day, AUg. 2.
Mrs Harland Scobey was In Kal­
amazoo Thursday on business.
Warren Bellinger wa* a guest of
Plainwell friend* for dinner Thurs­
day evening.
Thl* community wm again sad­
dened when il became known that
Mr*. Frank Housh had been called
home early last Friday morning.
Mrs. Roush, who was 45, has been a
great sufferer the past few years
but always patient and cheerful.
She had been confined to her bed
for several weeks. She leave* her
husband, two daughters.and a son
to mourn a loving wife and mother.

Carlton Grange hall. Home made
Ice cream and oake wUl be served
by the Carlton L. A. 0.
■
Mias Mayoma Valentine spent
last week with Mr. and Mra. Caryl
Fuller. Monday. In company with
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hate, they went

Mr. and Wa. Fred OU* spent
Bunday In Xalamaaoo with Mr. and
Mrs. Lyl* Otis and got actyialnted
with th* new
MU* ingn
Arbor Is tha
OU* at lha
parent*.
Ml** Joan Erway Is spending th*
week, with relative* tn Kalamakno.
Mr. and Mrs. Cha*. Whittemore
spent the week end with the for­
mer's mother in Delton, .
Mr. and Mrs. Ja*. jaekson and

The K. J. Beck and F. A. Hanney
families entertained the young peo­
ple of the Freeport and Carlton
Center churches at choir practice guests at the Clyde Wprran's.
Tuesday evening at tha Hrnney
Maurice Erway of Grand Rapid*
home. About thirty-five ware tn spent Sunday wfth fate patent* beife.
attendance. After rehearsal lea
cream and cake were served.
HOBTO teOHL
All remember the time fog the
Misses Anna. TUlie and Martin
church service* at the Methodist Getet end three nephews of Routh
church during the month ot August Bend, spent Bunday afternoon wiih
has been changed. Bunday school Mr. and Mrs. Jsy Anders and molhta at 10 A. M. and preaching at 0
P. M. You are cordially Invited
Mr. and Mr*. Earl pekke of Hai­
to attend these serviced.
ling* spent s&amp;turdaf night and
Some of lhe young people of theSunday
_________________________________
with Qu* and Dori* F*ake.
community attended a picnic sup- Ii Mr. and L7..
Mrs. nwiaM
Donald McCallum
church at 2 P. M. Bunday. Aug. 9. per Saturday with the Freeport ’, In company with Mr. and Mra Bert
young
folks
at
Morrison
lake
in
j
McCallum
of Cloverdale attended
The entire community extends sym­
honor of Miss Ruth Wheeler whose , thc McCallum reunion on Saturday
pathy to the family in their sorrow.
Mrs. Hattie Bellinger and son. Dr.
Barnes at Climax.
Warren Bellinger, started on their
Mrs. Robert Vrooman and son of
homeward journey lo South Pasa­
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Quimby spent Thursday with her
dena. Oak Saturday morning after
Mrs. Clara Robinson ot Grand parents, Mr. and Mre. Rankin Hart.
spending 10 weeks at their farms
Rapids and Mn. Sarah &amp;way ot Maty returned home with and
Glass Creek visited several days last steyed until Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. jack Farwell and
week with their brother, W. H. Oils,
-------------- Mrs. Wm. Havens.
Mr, and Mrs. Emery MUes of Kalaand sister,
Mr and Mrs. Ernest Gorham and i maaoo called Saturday afternoon an
,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Skidmore two daughters of Kalamazoo spent I Mr. and Mt*. Otto pranshka,
Saturday with lhe former's parJ
- —*—*entertained the latter-* mother. Mr*.
ent*. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Qgthatn..'!
Merrill, the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Quick had as Their son Richard returned home J
IMACH
with them after a two weeks’, Vigil
With his grandparent*.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Haven*, their
children, grandchildren and great­
grandchildren motored to the Alle­
gan county park on Lake Michigan
Sunday and spent the day. Mr. and
Mn. Rankin Hart and daughter.

This Iduse talk abnut RED CROWN
started hi| pixilated people

BUY A GOOD
USED TRUCK

CRISCO

Make Money Handing.
Fruit Cocktail

’OT^NDARD Red Crown gives 150
milei a gallon and not a fraction
more!” continued Mrs. Popyew,affec­

Lowest Prices In Town
LEMONS

Large and Juicy

tionately called "Pixie" by her hoac of
fricndi in Tall Story circles.

Swen

29C

CUCUMBERS Long Green SUcen
CABBAGE Solid Green Heads

She added: "To stop this loose talk
I put my foot down. Unfortunately,
it wu on the accelerator and the car

1932 FORD B

1929 CMvroUt

131 in. wheelbase;
Chassis and Cab;
Dual Wheels; 10-ply
\ Tires—Only

157 in.'wheelbase;
Chassis and Cab;Single Wheels—
NOW ONLY 5

*235-

*1455®

1920 FORD AA

1930 FORD A
FICK-UP

leaped clear into the next precinct.

Red Crown is responsive.”

ORANGES Sire 200
..
FRESH PEAS California Sweet

that "Pixio" is indulging in slightly
"looso folk" honoff. Sfpndcrd Rod
Crown doos gin as long mileage as
any gasoline — possibly mon — but

SMOKED PICNICS

definitely not 150 miles per gallon I

CHUNK BACON

thousands of motonda are now /earn­

As a matter of fait; hundreds of

131 in. Wheelbase;
With Stake Body;
Single Wheels:
NOW ONLY

*15059

NEW
RECONDITIONED
MOTOR

*150®

ing, fast hand, lhe bodrock truth about

MEAT LOAF

gasoline milpoge in the World's Great­
est Rood Toil, and oven though you

BOILING BEEF

\

1

A

may not bo airwing one ef the Re­

search Tod Cdn,lt wfff pay you to...

LEMS THE TRUTH

1

•.
Wt CASH WFA CHECKS
rucu plus s% saus tax

UNIVERSAL
GARAGE COMPANY
FORD NAURS

*MU1

GASOLINE MILEAGE

RHONI JU&gt;

HASTIHQ, MICH.

�tw ■Mrmoi

MOMpyu urttnurs
FOUND INSPIRATION
ON INCOME
W KELLOGG CAMP Nine mart income tgi

BrMW^I UpUrt O*IM by a
■

Vtalt, Ban XRUar
o.ro.

TAKES.
returns
war* filed in Hastings last year than
in
the
mr
preceding.
according
to a
aOwia

The number of Hastings returns
last year was
as compared to; 111
during the year ot ISM. In Barry

Comparison between the tax' re­
turns fifed in 1«M with Umse filed

•V around eunp'kMtob in last year in Nashville showed that
i'SSmSTm turn »«&gt; om that parted of Ums there was a
decrease fr«n 11 returns fifed in IBM
to 3 returns filed in 1B35. For the
'
entire state of Michigan, tha hhundred turns- last war numbered 1UM3, a
130,131.
■
‘

lltevue.

SET

Iday eveivena and
lalamazoo

* n»p t
t Mr. and
c quointed

r |rand-

iding tha
unatoo.
uff tenure

Bunday

i Martin
of South
oon with
id mothi or Hasjhl and
ta Peake.
(cOallum

attended
Saturday

n. Frank
■Uh her
tin Hart.
Uh and

well and
of Kalamoon on

to bring
Homocb,
। enidlty,
-Reeds
^Barker,

!

BRANCH DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lathrop of
Pralrtevtlto vlrited rtlaUvts in the
neighborhood last week.
Helen Sddmore accompanied an
aunt to Missouri for a visit.
Date Conklin of Dowling and Miss
Bernice Rhoades were united In
marriage at her home last Saturday
evening. Her father. Rev. E. F.
at fixed locations on the Rhoades performed the ceremony in

the

i. There is complete «these “cheeks” which tion*.
1 seem almost infallible.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Plummer and
children of Battle Creek were Sat­
'buddy’ pton and it mokae tor urday evening callers of Mr. and
Mlded social buildup as w«U as posi­ Mrs. Keith Norton'
tive safety. One of the counselors,
Sylvia Whitmore of Battle Creek
aboul seventy, spent lhe week end with her par­
equally divided between man and ents, Mr. and Mr* QU* Whitmore.
The social । at the home of Mr.
' women, remarked ”what a thrill
«U0h g happy scene would give Mr. and Mrs. George Marshall was well
Kellogg’ whose generosity makes all attended. About thirty-three dollars
thto ^&gt;0b)e, Thrfll only portly describeg wttot a| best, so far as Mr.
The young people from North
Kxltott to OQHeerned. would be a Maple Grove go to camp meeting
scuse }f service.
this inspiring gt Buchanan Wednesday of this
panorama of yelling, care-free and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Fossett and
PTOtMUonally supervised children
spreads out in front of you, the baby of Grand Ledge visited his
mom of thrill gives way to a satis­ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Fossett,
faction U^t touches the spiritual last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roberts and
makeup of the outsider who is prlvtknd to trltnMs the happy spectacle. three children of Chicago visited his
Children have a language that la parents. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Roberts
•alter to understand than words. It and attended church at North Ma­
is-this “gotten'’ vocabulary of hap­ ple Grove.
piness that indeUbly registers down
Mrs. Fred Nelson and grandson.
deep inside of you where worth Richard Mason, are painting their
while emotions art filed away. Wb house.
yd te toytfy goodness. As EUa
Mr. and Mrs. Don Karcher of
Lake Odessa visited his sister. MY*.
Frsd Nelson and Mr. Nelson Friday.
So many tods, so taony creeds80 many paths that wind and wind
QUIMBY.
While Just the act of being kind
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Callihan and
Is pH thk ead world needs.
sons of Lansing visited at the home
of elms: Callihan Thursday and
IRVINO.
Friday.
Mrs. Poster Waddell and sons
Mr. and Mn. Floyd Gaskin have
been attending camp meeting at
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer James Bebewa several days.
near Lowen. Those who attended the mission­
The Ladies’ Aid Society had a ary meeting at R$y. Conklin’s Wed­
very enjoyable picnic on the Com­ nesday report a fine time.
munity ball grounds Friday- Out of
The L. A. 8. entertained by Elsie
town guests were Mrs. Bowerby’s Reed and Pearl Rltzman at Uie
daughter, Mrs. Isa Graham, and
former’s home was well attended.
daughter, Lois, from Gflmd Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Almon Callihan of
Mr. and Mrs. Dell Wilcox spent a
Hastings visited at Chas. Callihan's
day vUltlng friends in Wayland and
Friday.
attended a gathering at the Metho­
The many friends of Mrs. Pearl
dist church. Rev. H. H. Harris, a
Bldelmim Roush were sorry to hear
M her death last Thursday. Mrs.
Roush wm bora and raised here
Mod tha day very mtich.
and wm loved and respected by all
Mrs. John Pvrry has been con­
who knew her. we extend sympathy
fined to her home by illness. Her
to the bereaved family.
daughter from Kalamazoo spent
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Rltzman of Mil­
last w««k with her.
waukee. Wis.. are vlsrting relaUves
MT.And Mrs. joe Norton of Grand
Rapids were calling on relatives
Mrs. David Boniface, who has
Itoward Wilcox. - oldest son . of been quite ill at the home of her
Lefis Wilcox, had tha misfortune td daughter, Mrs. Prank Btoon. is
some better at this writing.
\
hUtt his ■ hand. quite ' badly, while
The ypung people's 8- 8. class will
working axxMU\d a.gasoline engine.
iiold their next party at the home
Jfr. and-Mrs. Frod pferce and Mr.
of Freda Scott Saturday night.
and Mra- Bernard . Lennon from
near Bellevue have been recent
bowne ckhrm
' vbitors of lhe Lyte Wilcox family
■ A good crowd attended the Lowe
at Qun lake where they are camp- school reunion Bunday.
Mr*. Addle Benton. Mr*. Merrill
• Bd. Look, section -, foreman here Karcher and son and Mra. Watt
ai been enjoying a-two weeks’, va- Thomas were Grand Rapids visitors
.
1
Use'graduates from W. S. last week- '
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Baker spont
T/C.M Kalamaxoo were Mrs.Mar-, the week end In the northern port
girdt WUcox of Grand. Rapids and of the slate. Vendee Benson, who
a of Hastings, both has been attending summer scisool.
of the village school returned home with them.
Arthur Porrilt spent the past
week with relaUves In Detroit
Howard McDaniel and family at
Mulliken spent Sunday with John
cpliectloo of Nash and family.
Mr. and- Mrs. Lloyd Curtis of
Woodland called on Mr. and Mn.
Merrill Karcher Friday afternoon.

nunutviuA
|
cousins, Bettie, Uoyd of Gatesfrurg, Ilk (pent Sunday x^h
Mr. and Alni Ike DeBack and L
, r
Urn Norma
Norma --------Oaade------------------------attended U»|
Mrs Dockus pf Chicago, who ho*
Visitors at G.KI
oooUng Miss
,
- family
-—..--------niotl atu the,
B
bron Spending two weeks in the were Mr. and Mr
.u.------- McCaBuin
reunion
Consumers.
lirnfie
of
Mr.
and
Mrc-Frank
BamM
,
huh* Mr.amfkt.------------ .------home, returned Friat Climax Bunday.
BMntr.
Mrs. Fannie' Jackspn went to OtMra. Florence Hughes. Mrs. Bell Coram; Mr. and.mm.
Mullen and Jane ana MU* Frances
Doster were in Kalamazoo Tuesday.
We have tried the smothered steak
Mrs. Multon called on MU* Madelon
Mulliner of Gatoaburg. 111., spent
recipe; U s fine. The browned flour U
Norman at Bronson hospital.
Saturday and Sunday night with
ter, Mn. Nor* Doyle. The occaalon
Mr. and Mn. Grande DePriester
1* her Mth birthday anniversary.
went to Kalamazoo Friday where
W« wiih for thia optimistic lady they called at the Arthur Baker
many mare natal days.
home. They found the granddaugh­ I son, Aug. 4th, a son. Duan* C*r|.
Mr. and Mrs. George Thotnu (
Mrs. Lucy NorrU expecu to enter­ ter. Patricia, recovering from a ton0* rpund *to*ktain acme relative* and friend* ail operation and doing finely. Mrs. Middleville, called on Mr. and MT
Tuesday in honor of her mother. Wilbur Polley and MUs Myrtle; George Kenyon Ba^gday. '
Mr*. NorrU’ Mth natal day. A* If U- Smith accompanied VIiVO1
w
re
­
them to PlainBrown flour.
open house every day in their home
wherc they called on Mr. and
1 medium can of cream of mush- It will be no different on this day. k,.. Alexander Murray and Mr 1
Her facuitle* are M keen and alert and Mr*. Crotpen.
1
1 tablespoon any good meat sauce. u a young person’*. In fact her
Altho there were several reunions
memorv°U&gt;betterSthan the majority
M”’ Pauline
PauUne Do*^
hom&lt;
Mrs.
Doster wiu home
0 serving potatoes.
and picnics Bunday there was quite
Out steak into servings, sprinkle
a crowd out to Bunday school. Let’s
2,.
.
with salt and pepper and dip Ln■ that happened In Che yesteryear but •
fill those empty seats. You will all
flour. Pry in skillet with several she keeps posted on dally occur-1 Mrs. Ethel Stebbens spent thc. be glad you came.
tablespoons of fat cm full flame un- rence*. May she be with u* * tong I
.wUh *fr
‘. Ur, and Mrs. L Bishop of Battle
and •*
Mrs.
। ford Higgins and Mr. and
— i' Creek visited jhetr mother. Mrs.
time to come.
| Winslow Martin of Kalamazoo.
';
sauce and pared potatoes. Cover
nazoo.
'Sarah
Kenyan Bunday.
Mrs. Jennie Baumgrau. who has
tightly and simmer about 1 hour or
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Johnson's until steak is tender and potatoes been in Grand Rapids since Feb­ Bunday guests were Mr. and Mrs 1 ' Goveramente. ruicrx, dictator*done. If oven is being used this can ruary returned here lhe forepart of Richard Johnson and daughter pf and profiteers make wars. People do
5 1 not make wan; they only fight and
be placed In greased baking dish the week. Glad Jo have ber with us Kalamazoo.
Don Duncan ot Kalamazoo is vU- die m them.”-^J. Ray Murphy.
which has a cover, and cooked 1
Mr. and Mrs. James Nevins called King Mr. and Mra. M- W. Hughes.
I
- —
on Mrs. Irene Letts at University
Karl Smith, who has spent sev- |
____________________
hospital. Ann Arbor. Wednesday.
______ __________________ _ __________
The Hughes family reunion was Mrs. Mason Miner, returned home
Place flour Ln *halloJ pan and put
held at the Charles Hughes cot-' Saturday.
Into a slow oven until flour is well tage. Crooked lake. Sunday. Forty-, Miss Doris Hartman spent the
browned. Btlr once or twice so flour three were present and a delightful week end with her parents. Mr. and
will be of a uniform color through­ time was reported.
| Mrs. Albert Hartman of Hickory
out. store in a tightly covered jar.
Mrs. W. P. Smith. Rex. Mary Jean ' Corners. Sunday they with several
and Janet Smith attended the Har- friends went to Lake Michigan near
Veal Collopa.
vey family reunion held at River-1 Saugatuck and saw the soldiers’ and
1 Ib. thin veal steak.
'
. Gamp Sunday.
.
। uhe Red crojs camps at Fennville.
. Lumber
Jack
1 egg. slightly beaten.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Milo Lehman. Mr.: Callers at Guy Higgins Sunday
3-4 cup cracker meal. .
Mr. —
and
Mrs.
and Mn. Ray Castle and daughter. were
—
- —
■­ Dick Lancaster.
Salt and pepper.
Charlene, spent Bunday at Milham ' D°n »lld Rosemae Higgins of Has2 tablesnoons water.
park, Kalamazoo, where the thirty- . i1”^Cut the veal Into pieces the size sixth annual reunion of the Wilk-1 Mr-, ttnd Mrs. John Oliphant Uvof an oyster, dip In the beaten egg inson family wa* held. A good al-I *ng north of Prairieville had as
to which the water has been added, tendance and an enjoyable lime was
Bunday Mrs. Fannie Gage,
then add in the crumbs. Fry in deep reported
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Heckleman and
The Odd Fellow* Installed the fol- j daughter* June and Arlene. Miss
lowing officers Tuesday night. Past Mildred and MU* Evangeline Gage
grand. William McKibbln; noble , of Sturgis; Mrs. Lillie Mandigo, her
3 tablespoons fat.
grand. Gordon Morehus; vice grand.. brother. Henry Richardson and MUs
। 1-2 cup raw rice.
Ray Japhel; recording secretary.1 Janette Gorbutt of White Pigeon.
2 cups boiling water.
Clinton Castle; financial secretary,
•• •
1-2 teaspoon salt
SOUTH SHULTZ.
Maurice Garrett; treasurer, David
Melt the fat in a large skillet. Add Honeywell. George Wood 1*.District
Our Shultz school reunion was
the rips and stir until ths rice is a Deputy Grand Master. Lewis John­ quite well attended Saturday, fifty­
nice brown. Add U» boiling water son was appointed representative to seven being
ueui® present trum
from miuqk
Middle-- 11
carefully, for much steam will arise. Grand lodge and WlllUm McKibbln. I vllle. Coopersville, pelton, Nashville, j
Add sail, cover tightly and let sim­ alternate. The Initiatory degree was. Wayland and Hastings. After a fine i
mer about 25 minutes or until the conferred on Edward McGee. Prank picnic dinner Judge Stuart Clement
rioe has absorbed all the water and Rittenhouse and William Johncox. gave us a good talk which all en­
U dry and flaky. Serves 0.
Ice cream and cake were served at joyed; Lois Clouse sang; Robert
Hart gave two fine songs with gui­
Monday Noon Cake.
• Mr. and Mrs Karl Krick and sou tar accompaniment. This was fol­
1 cup brown sugar (packed).
are vUltlng retetives at Fort Wayne. lowed by stunts for all The officers
2 cups pastry flour.
were reelected for another year. Il
Ind.
■
.
1 cup milk.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert McKibbln. was a very happy day for everyone
2 tablespoons butter.
Mr. and Mrs. John McKibbln were
2 teaspoons baking powder.
In
Greenbush
(Lake
Huron)
Wed
­
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Horn are en­
Put sugar into mixing bowl, add
sifted flour and baking powder. Stir nesday to see Mrs. John McKlbbin’s joying a visit with their children.
Rev. and Mrs. John Horn and Lois
In thc milk, add melted butter and mother who is ill.
Edward Bromley of Sturgis lias ----and---Mlsa-Emma
—------------ --Eisentrout
--------------- -----------of Eck­
mix well. Pour Into a well greased
hart Maryland;
Maryland- Rev. and Mrs.
Mrs I
shallow baking pan. sprinkle with fiurchased of Edward Cowels the! hart,
brown sugar, cinnamon and dot with arm known as the Water’s farm and Lewis Hom. Carol and Marshall;
with hla family has taken posses-1 of lunia. Rev. Dwight Hom of
butter. Bake 30 to 40 minutes at 375
1 Galesburg. Ill.. Mabel Hom of Bat- I
degrees. Serve warm. 'I'hls la very slon.
Mrs. George Woods accompanied tie Creek. Mr. and Mrs. W. MuUlner 11
good split and toasted.
Mrs. N. H. Barber to Vicksburg |. ,
I
Wednesday where they attended the 1
LENT CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Francisco and A. W. club of which they are mem- I
son of Richland spent Bunday with bers. The meeting was held on the I
tourUt park grounds. They meet at
Mr. and Mrs. Lyte Francisco.
Ed. cowels attended the Cowels different places annually.
Mrs. Lewis Joitnson and Loraine ,
picnic at Pine lake Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Ham­ and MUs Lucile Adrianson are
mond and children spent Sunday guests of reUtlves in Pittsburg, Pa. ,
Rev. Harold Honeywell and some
with Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Bennett of
friends from Jonesville called on
Kaluzmzoo.
Mrs. Eliza Heffner and Dorothea Mr. and Mrs. D. N. Honeywell Bun- 1
V.
Prolo spent Thursday and Friday day.
Mr. and Mrs. Rollo Bowerman and ;
in Otsego.
Robert Hammond U spending a family of Middleville were guests of
few days with his granOmother, Mrs. Mr. and Mn. Robert McKibbln Sun- ;
day. The six weeks’ old twins were
Mary Mellon of Kalamazoo.
&gt;
Much
sympathy
U extended quite an attraction.
Frank Roush and children in the
Mr. and Mrs. William McKibbln
loss of the wife and mother. She and son attended the McKibbln re­
union
at
Hammond
’
s
resort.
Fine
passed away Friday, after a1 lingerlake Sunday. Ronald is entertaining

CON11MIM ktflKl.

N
K

CONTEST OFFERING

792 PRIZES!

tp cam money—farmer,
factpry worker, clerkj^etc.,—enjoys
the thrill of “pay day.
But, what
happens when you get your “pay”?
Do you pay a bill here, and a bill
there —aad find your money gone?

Others pet something to show for
your labpr. What do you get?

B
-*"

The only way to prove to yourself
that you are getting anythingt is to
dtposit iffuUfdiatay in a tuoinrs
account, some definite, reasonable
l amount, BEFORE you let anyone
1 else get one cent. ’

'

It can be done. It must be done if you
are ever to make any real progress.

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

SAVE

50c SODIUM PHOSPHATf—
EFFERVESCING------------------------------79c PURE TEST MINERAL
OIL------------------------------------------- —

50c KLENZO COCOANUT OIL
SHAMPOO

5 YARDS OF ONE-INCH ADHESIVE
PLASTER -------------------------

25c GAUZETS SANITARY
NAPKINS--------

40c CASCADE WRITING
PORTFOLIO

35c STAG SHAVING CREAM
and 25c LOTION—BOTH-------$1.00 AGAREX, THE FAMOUS
LAXATIVE

2257
• casvith » rrnsiHJ, Hastings
• B. A. LYBABKIB, HASTINGS

We'll Deliver I — Because prices will soon advance

• SUDS DRUG STOBt. HASTINGS

. . . because "wen now better grades are herd to
became you

• VON W. FUBNISS, NASHVILLE

• NASHVILLE EHABMACY. NASHVILLE
• CLASSIC'S DRUG STORE, V&amp;OPLAND

Smith Bros., Velte &amp; Co.
DEALERS IN WOOL, GRAIN, FEED, FLOUR. SALT. LIME.
CEMENT AND COAL
raoNRtan . -

bastings, mich.

in this sale.

59'

25c PURE TEST
IODINE—1 OZ.

NOW AT THE

• SEE large hand hill for the particulars of
this contest and the large list of drug and toilet
goods items offered at the greatly reduced factory-to-you sale prices. Limited space allows
us to list only a few of the many bargain items

100 PURE TEST ASPIRIN and ONE
«?Qc
PINT MILK OF MAGNESIA—BOTH FOR □□

49c Ml 31 SOL. and 50c REXALL
ORDERLIES—BOTH FOR - -------------

25c WHITE SHOE CLEANER
and POLISH---------------- --------------- I ■

JUEL
sNOUI!

SALE!

SALE NOW ON!

w । u ii.. u mi...

FOLLOWING PLACES

a

Save BEFORE
You Spend Every person who labors

OF HASTINGS

AND NATION-WIDE

Special Prices!

• FAULKNERS DRUG STORE. DELTON

haitwgi, MICK

REXALL

Are Now On Sale at

• MULSH**'* DRUG STORE, MIDDLEVILLE

WALLACE GROCI

N

FAIR TICKETS

• ROMNBURGT DRUG STORE, FSUSOST

Watch Our Ads
Further Announce

TIE SECIET OF SMIII MOIET

N

BARRYCOUNTY

BUY

We

50c REX SALVINI
FOR BURNS

4 7c

33'
19
19'
19'
23'
39
69'
29*

25c MILK OF MAGNESIA
TOOTH PASTE .......................................
1 Om. ZINC OXIDE
OINTMENT________ ________ .

50c EYE-LO WITH CUF—
• OZ--------- ---------------------------------------

25c—2 Dss. PURE TEST ASPIRIN
TABLETS —--------------------- --------------

11.25 OLD COLONY ALARM
CLOCKS-—
$1.25 HOT WATER
BOTTLE.....................................
SI-25 FOUNTAIN
SYRINGE----------------------------------------

50c jONTELL CLEANSING CREAM
ond 200 FACIAL TISSUES

YOl CAN SAVE WITH SAFETY AT THE REXALL

CARVETH &amp; STE
GOODS DELIVERED

ir

25c DR. HINKLE CASCARA
COMF. TABLETS

HASTINGS

£

&gt;

�tWt lUMlffOS WO’rtrtR, YWVMOAY, XVUVH Yi. iWd

■At wort roort. kft

tdn

«u»*
cm Standard Time

jp.&gt;N»0 OU*.-

rtbllTION &lt;&gt;f VAtllt*

*1/HIS ta an Exposition for thc howKwivca—an

Conservation and
Outdoor b/otes

lion for the purpose d eKtii)g 11
delrgste* *nd alternate defecates to
the Republican State convenUon
end to transact such other mjstnee* moving from the boot The fish
that may fegafly come before ft, srtn should be taken off car*fully while
I~
---------■—«•»
. &gt;
be held al the court rtort « B*»- the hand la wet and eaaud info the
T!&gt; FQR fc|frou|.
water, not thrown. Every uudtrsised
O^ck"A. M.
fl*h will be q ~kaeper
eoow day. I A conservation officer passe* on
Time
and will survive being hooked If , this Information for the benefit of
all ftahermen w|jp fish fflg btaMdUs.
The State convention will be hejd handled carefully and property
"Betoct a black-gnal fly. prefer­
tn Grand Rapids on Tuesday. Bept.
A six-foot fence Is toothing to a ably onl on i No. 10 hook, and
rtth. kt It o'clock in the forautasn.
weigh It with a lead shot or small
(or the purpose ot nomtnaja&gt;( cansinker," he *ay*. "Then collect a
1 dictates for the following etktb da­
supply of the small white grub*
ces. Secretary of State. State
whlci) can be obtained easily ta any
Treasurer. Auditor General. Attor­ falling on incredulous ear &gt; around
ipparenUy affected
by । pa*ture around here. Fasten one of
•**-•'-* »~
ney Gerferal dnd one Justice Of the Gayldrd. Apps.-*--'".
_bout
75
rainbow*
leaped
these
grub* on th* sharp point of
Supreme Court to All vacancy, and the beat, about
for the transaction of »uch other a barrier UU U i man and straight. your hook and you're ready to start
business as may properly come be­ ' up and down to 'enter one of the I Ashing."
raceway* of the Sturgeon River trout i The Ashing technique Is lo ma.­
fore It.
; rearing station.
Attendant* Who nlpofato lhe rod so that the fly and
Delegates to the County Conven­ ' saw some of the trout make the ,
nw&gt;*« UP 41111 down ta lhe wation shall be elected at the Septem­ | Jump Fere amaxed at the sight and !«■. attracting the fish. "Thl* com­
ber primary, and shall be one for I on investigation
lnvesugauon found
round mem
in a i Mnstlcm »»»•
them tn
ha* boen *»«-■
producing limit
ever)- seventy-flve rotescast tar the . 1&gt;crtrBy containing small fingerling
finger Ung 1' catehea of bluegill*
bluegQta near
near here while
Secretary of State at the ta^ elec- I trout.
trout They had
ied out I k--.
...
i-had to gbe ^veined
other*
using
different method*
lion and shall be apportioned as ..
cntlrely to prevent
prevent them
them niaktnx
inaktax a I haven’t seemed to have much luck.”
foilova:
meal off the smaller fish.
] the officer says.
Tk«r«*nil-' —' . । Michigan sand dunes dlffe. from
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
M। *•&lt;■&gt;** .....
riaca . 3 I the well-known sand dunes of Eur- , Ml** Nora Moody of Battle Creek
YtSkae Wlrrla
Cits .H&lt;m»“
U »«•— ope In that they were formed an a spent, last w*k. at the home of her
.coast that fluctuated during the grandmother. Mn. Mabie Moody.
Emest Gray accompanied Mr. and
Frwlari. 3 । yarlous stages of the glacial lakes.
Pmtnri i Thf dunes along the eastern shore Mrs. Henry Gray of Ban fleld and
j,4 WaM
.3 of the Baltic in Denmark. Holland Mrs. Lulu Gray to West Branch
where
they spent the week at lhe
—
and France are on a seacoast Which
home of their brother.
. Is relatively stable.
lA*t Wednesday afternoon, Mrs.
To accommodate visitors who will Lillie Chcucman and Mra. Grace
Dr. Frank Canothera.
be seeking relief tn northern Michi­ Mack took three members of the
Chrmn Barry County
gan during the hay fever season. latter's canning dub,'Dorothy Mack.
Republican committee.
Walter J KIng»cott. superintendent Thelma
Thelma Lee and Enid Cheeseman.
- u&gt;
p»M. announced today .....
of umc
state parka,
that U
to 2te
the 4-H Club camp at Stuart
Secy Barry County
several of the larger parks will be . lake in Orangeville, where they re­
Republican committee.
kept open tagaln this year until the malned until Saturday. Gordon Lee
July »th. 1MB
। end of hay fever season.
went after them Saturday' afterA
• • •
noon. .
lucaiaa* nan*
; A t0-*l 0( )3,&lt;7o camps were e*-1 Mr. and Mra. John Hom and
In Yucatan II ta common to are । tablished In state park* during the । daughter who have lately returned
well* with broad stone lops trenched | flrat half of lhe season, the num- ’ from Africa and are visiting at Fred
through the middle xnd carrying a ’
Including trailer coaches Wai- | Horn's near Cloverdale, called to
moat of water
This device I* to i ,cr J- Hayes state park In Jackson, see their grandmother. Mrs. Mabie
keep cm the ants which are caoable Lenawee and Washtenaw counties.1 Moody, last Tueaday.
of m.,ebln ^r«&gt;nly down Into the registered the target number. 1.037
Mra.Vera_Ora, «P«nl lot week

WHBttfe W rttars that Will tarpon any rpeeisl
kcUvIty we have ever had

Nationally known cqalpmcnt that yoa ran bahk
on are fealareh In this great errnt, and you can
&gt;Ay for throe kppn'anm a* you use then*. Th tadet
kfiora the raring* you make from their use will
faore than equal the monthly payraenta.

we wish te rail your attenUon lo the fart thht with the Elec­
tric ratra now in effect making II possible foe yoa to use more
'ideerielly and pay lex* Ver kilowatt hoiir. we Lnow yH wiA fie

* Golden Anniversary
* Golden Opportunity
Celebrating our 50th Anniversary, We etc giv­

ing our customers thc grcatol sale we ever

held—mid it’s yours to profit by. Come in—

sec these value sensation*—picture them in

NOW... BUILD

your home—make them yours—thcy’fc . . .
"EASY YO BL’Y ... CHEAP TO tit'

Remodel! Repair!
LIMITED

1

Electric Refrigeration pays for itself—-And

See us for all kinds of
Building Materials

time

OFFER

never before were models to l»e had .»o com­
plete, so beautiful, so useful. Thc famous

Frigidairr comes in sites for every family
need. Prices start al &gt;81.30. Liberal allow­

SPECIAL
COMBINATIONS

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

ances for old ecpiipmcnt.

with term* up to

Phone 2515

oowh;3^y

Frank Safe

Hlltintl

4 YEARS

Th® Island of Madeira la a (wmssession of Portugal Funchal, the
capital and port, date* from 1118,
when the Island was captured by tha
Portuguese under Gonsalves Zarjo.
Columbui visited It In I &lt;73.

automatic time and temperature controLs large oven, porcelain fin­

ish, attractive colors. Popular Detroit Jewel and A-B Ranges all on
sale. Biggest bargain we ever offered:—A-B, Regular $89.50, Spe­

Q YEARS
to PAY

O

WATER HEATERS
Gks Water Heating is one of lhe cheapest mo.»t useful home necessi­
ties. Special low Ga&gt; Rule means automatic 21-hour hot water serv­

NLY A FEW DAYS remain rave interest on future install­
in which you can make the ments ranging from 8% tb 36%.
See your county treasurer Im­
second payment on your
mediately. Avoid last minatb
taxes on the 10-year plan without
crowds. Pay now and save.
penalty.

ice is your* for a few cents a day. Your whole fumilv will enjoy

O

this with day and night personal and household needs for REAL

hot Water.

Keep your tax record clear.

Q YEARS
O TO PAY

Al) over the Mate of Michigan
alert tax-payers are meeting this
important obligation. Having
placed their taxes for 1932 and
prior years on this convenient
plkn they will take no charice on
losing the fullest benefits accru­
ing to them under it.

WASHERS find 1ROXERS
Here's wash-day freedom—and Irdnihg-day leisure. We bring you

।

improved models such as were never dreamed of. Featuring the fa-

(1

menu Universal and ABC washers. As low a* &gt;19.50. ABC and
Ironrilc 1toners as low as &gt;51.50. Ask about the allowance for old

V

&gt;

।j
ji
I

.

$4
ft
*3 -DOWN 11 5

BBiiimerii

*lh W *

i""
Ev. Lknstng
vtafted
har auMy.
partnta. Mr.
&gt;e&gt;ca.fr
vSur.

Ji,

and ' “ Grand Rapid* Tflsaday xnd Wight
Mr and Mr*. Eme.t Shorno.and rt^^^gtlbon rnd eVtntng With W.

Mohler of £u^_£00&lt;”*'‘d' d uin
£1?"J! ~S," Tiu»;

Mr. and Mrs. ctetr YWIter were at

*hU hw?^iAdnC

Beth Cook. Mr. and

*^2 «« St

ROBINHVE PARK.
ML'S UlHan Jackson of Oak Orove
spent the week end with Mr. xnd
Mrj. Evrld Jackson. Mr. Jackson re­
turned to hla home here after
spending a week with relatives at
Kowen.
' '
John Craven, who has been mak­
ing hl* home wfth Mr. and Mrs.
Jackson had the misfortune to cut
his knee Thursday. At . present
Is In Pennock hoepltai Hastings.
John Kollar spent Sunday with
Mrs Kollar tn Blodgett hospital and

"mt and Mra? Howard Smith spent
-unday with the Lewis
Skinners of
a®*aywith
----Leighton.
_
_ __

1
Ids and Mr. and Mrs. Karl Johnaon
of Battle Crwk
Mrs Karl Faub and children are
spending a week at the La’Tence
FAUl cottage al
F.iul
at Baddiebag
Obquicw&gt;« take.
«»*«. w
MT.
and Mrs
Mra. H J.
J Stang
BUng of Battle Creek
■&gt;n&lt;« Mrs. Oand
n B.
R. Benham
Renham ot Hastings
w—r Attndsv cuests.
■
Mia&gt; Louise Rise ta attending the
U B craTat Barnaby Mentortai

M °“n
CLAY tnixs.
Melvin ----Haight has ewplbymcnt
In.
—
- Grand Rapids.
.
The Francis and Flbyd
Mbyd Hhtght*
Haights of
Grand Rapids
Rapid* were week
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
heldHaight.
"tWe’lr an'The Busy Bee club held trreir an
nual picnic at Oun take Sunday.
forty-flve
being
in
attendance,

MONTH
TERMS

IJ

Cd

Don't fall behind. Make your
■ecbrld 'payment promptly. Or,
better Mill, piy up the entire
unpaid portion of these t^xes and

Wet

Landis

and

Mrs_ &lt;W’McNee

and

children

daughter of West Wilton. O. called were tn Hastings Friday

If your back taxes
are on 10-year plan
you must make 2nd
payment by Sept-1

cial at &gt;71.50. Liberal allowance on old stove.

equipment.

, , .
Sl"'i

R'arden Mfrtd- tan

l'Mr'and Mrs

7^

1936 models with latest improvements—high-speed, insulated ovens,

$*&gt;50
Z DOWN

qilur “.L

park.
(Games and vtalttng were the teaMr and Mrs. Lawrence Bird and tunes of the day.
family are attending the Free; ^orrta
ofgul^kw wiu a
Methodist camp meeting at Manton caller at Leon Fotta Friday after

RANGES

DOWN

nlng given by
Woiring df Na
John and nls’l

family
*take cottage Friday night.
family are
are camping
camping at
at Clear
Clear lake.
lake. I
Mr and Mrs Clyde Cheeseman and ■ J* “ h“JL Sgtend of Chicago
family and Mr and Mrs. Sidney I “’** ™'
“£• tw0 wrtu' vaca9X“u,^',y
i some time mere
. ~
' uu.
Miss Helene nraatnw
Bros»w of
of Chicago
Chicago
Mr and Mrs Ray Ostrofh and
.pent lhe week end with her there.
Mr and Mrs Claud Dunkglberger Bunday night pipper guests were
and son of Lacey are spending the Mr. and Mrs. Gerald England of
week at Podunk lake.
Grand Rapids.
i
Sunday guests at Ernest Gray's
Rev. and Mrs Don Carrick are at­
were Mr and Mrs Oliver Lewis of tending conference and catpp meet­
Flint.
ing at Sebewa thia week.
Rev Seward Walton of Cloverdale
B B- Holly entertained lhe followspent several days with his parents
here, last week, and attended lhe
Moore school reunion, there being
I a good crowd present.
_______
Walpole. Downers OW' Chicago.
in, Mr. and Mrs. DuviUe Holly of

catKprofll from this!

la

Detroit
nd Mr*.
Friday
until Monday.

houte occupied by
Charles Anderson and Mra.
roof put OnhU
---------------------------.
Mr. and Mra. Paul S.vTii
Smith.uu Washu k | Loub Eserdeen of tanging Tfatted al
Donald Clark of f
“Tu
the *&gt;»• W*1*-*
Trtday.
ay for nlshoine
even|ng ,pnihg lhe past week.
inglon. left Monday
•­
after a two weeks' Wsit with his Mr. and Mra. James r Hammond al
aunt. Mra. Cha*. Fyrthing
I Lansing, enroute to Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mr*. J. L. Crockfard re­ visited Natatle and their parent/,
turned Sunday from a week's visit Mr. and Mra Claude A. Hammced
1 with their daughter. Mr and Mrs. R. and fsmlly.
'
E Owen*, and family of Grand,
Clair Yelter. Frank Myites- and
Haven.
Dan PoaUna ot Freeport Were In
Palsy, lhe bcautlfU) red setter ,1 Benton Harbor on btulneka. Tues­
owned now by Victor HUberl l* the
day.
proud mother of 11 lltUe red PQP*
Saturday morning Rev. and Mrs.
pie* all alflte. born Thursday. August' Manker and Ftotaie feft for Charles
°f»’be i*’1! k”11 ,lropJ’lnz '
A lull In lhe clamming Industry of j stater. Mra Cora Hayes
6
This
is
lhe
dog
which
wa*
former
­
City. Iowa, where th»y will hold a
into the water, simply bee*use there । Mulhem Michigan may have the ef- I Mr. and Mra. Ward Cheeseman
ly owned by Dr. Flnnie.
.
Young
Peoples convention and
is nothing to stop tbetn.
;
Of helping some of the streams । attended the Centennial at VerMra. Glenn England and daugh- camp meeting.
montvllle.
m
Mr* and Friday.
Mnv^Chas. Stanton end |
M W’Ba'd-!

■tore than plekaed with thU 'modern and economical equipment

FRIGIDAIRE

Ciart and family

Note:

\

There u Still Time to put Taxef
for 1932 and Prior Yearr oh 10-Year

Plan!
ANY tax-payer can come unh er thb
provisions of the 10-year plan by
mskirtg the drat two payments togather with interest of q%, rad a
email extra charge on the first install­
ment. Your county treasurer will be
gl«d to explain how you can keep
your tkx record ctrtr. 8»e him im­
mediately.

School Time
Is At Hand!
We hove e FULL LINE of
SCHOOL SUPPLIES ... We
' hove the Most Cothplete
Une to be seen anywhere.

AH items Ore &lt;?n diSplay.
Ask us about how to get the

Shirley Timple bill,.. each

purchase of any goods helps
to get the dell. Come in
and get ypu'r cord.

&lt;% Order t&gt;f fAtigritented
^tdminishrdtm faoard
of State of SMichigaH
------ UMMMtOdMfim

/ndhonrrRfffir*

l

�fM tarnrai BAMNn. twvmday, august is. ism

I LEGAL NOTICES jl

| Streeter', Besort In
The Day, Of OM

Mr dtetrtet sprat the week sstd with I
h»r daughMr. Mrs arargs H*yn«i
Oh Bunday
they visits Mn.1
Haynes* uncle, claytan Coleman, at

j

Mn. Unur Wyatt of BarUenUls. atmtar roon ,l oud lake fa
Okla , u visiting her brother. A. C. good many year* until recently.
Clark, and family.

4•• Mili

lake from Wednesday until at July celebrations some thirty-odd Hasting*. Kaiamaaoo. Grand RapUfe
years ago All tl&gt;e people al Has­
y night.
Point and hu^mj
hundreds °fother
at other : aWBy from
*** *nrf *4rs. Enxrt Metteatm end tings rotot
where they are
Beatrice with Mr. and Mr*. Floyd
quite likely lo run into folk* from
Bt1£eSa Garrison of Ann Arbor

-m

gtswrasg
gs%*£gal

VraaaloM. anil all olhor nN
i ondarrlraad. with iatoroat
mail U lav a ad te tho
ho aaeoMory te Mt lha aaavaul duo an
&gt;ld worMwo. 0*4 all told
o* aad omaooa. lacladlnt
•a aitaraey'af**. whkh t&gt;ri
trrlhrd &gt;• fillooi:
“S t-. “t".
w:
Th«&lt; rrrUlo nloro or F
■ IlMlod la tho Taonthlp a
ihtrteo. par*kl
f«u»ly of Barrr. Ml(hl**a.
•t ■ oete mooli
larlj 4**niba4 •*:

jus'.rs

tklrty «»• fad.

&lt;(!!• «e«ar4l*i
ftra£V;

HOinCjOWNKHH' LOAN CORPO-

OLINN D. MATHEWg.

fan la. fflSUn......... Out » »
■TATI OP MICHIGAN.
CIRCUIT COUBT FOB THB COUNTY
OP BARMY. IN OKANCRRY.
3eM
• eaadli

^^'ixT.TMSWlnS.

*arall»a rrroiltad aa4*r th* loot nf tha
I'nltod •taiaa of Aaiarte*. 4*1*4 Aa

.Mans i!
»u»d On* Hal

ran aid panaoat ta lha Blatal** of tho
ionc'i:1,1|a,lliflt|iVH'r'*itvE’N
tut on Tandar. Ortobar 4th. 1*10. ot
iwIm.

“ *** wlth a »ood deal * ml£

“ ""rt te vteiuna her eouslnA. Floyd Garrl*’ re*?
stable owner* would let you take one
M at ib« son and Chaa. Hendenhoit, and reminiscences of the
old
time
Juu
U|1'
farnilis
rumoersnm;.
u 8tre-Ur
Streeter s* tn hu
hte “ .,
“Ob&gt;enr|lUona
ObaervaUons"
.. of .tfaetr
lbe,r. driving
drl'df« horse* and with
Mr and Mra Wilbur Sch.nte and
«^ntly and we are goinga beautiful body of water a.
4. i Gun lake in such near proximity to

art I They had a fine time but report
report the
the j&gt; . "Many of our older readers of this j
ta lhu ^uon tor Bboul the on.
Itinmo lit,
' same dry weather conditions
up. column will remember the old days t opportunity they had during the
I when
Streeters
to celebrate
‘"S
1 there as we are having.
• *hen
Streeters
usedused
to celebrate
the the
y , **
rTT.
twr&gt; or
nr three-day
thr** Hav • lov 10
IrWn
nOn,e *did
na
'• I Speaking ot fire bugs we think Fourth and have a two
hem-.lve. an
d mu
I ,n&gt;°y .themselves,
and
this toev
they did
'*?. I that Old Sol's burning rays along Farmers Picnic later in the sum- . .t. utmost advantaae"
uunow
b* ’ with men * carelessness te the cau« mcr. Hundreds of folks would plan 10
"i
C«OOM» LAKI
the celebration and what a crowd
, _
.
.
,
would attend.
I Mr» Pe,rl Ro“*h of Milo poued
"The big barns and sheds would: away Friday morning. August 7. attwomen refrained from long hoi fires
! In kitchen ranges there would be be filled up early In the morning I er a lingering Illness. Funeral was
I leu Area. No man should start I with horses and lhe yard filled with held Sunday afternoon at tho Milo
i
"S'.
5““%,"?? “
'|'»ch
« “»
। He not only endangers hte own day. The late coiners had to find a ,
,
| property but that of hte neighbors.
' place in lhe woods or fields to Ue I «ry. Thou from away who
I A certain Kaiamaxoo lady visit- : their horses when barn room waa:'d lhC funeral were: Mr. and Mrs.
i ing the cemetery here had a large not te be had. In the north end ol I ?,cor,*1 Jew,JE
! bottle for waler tn her car through the dance hall building was a small-! ™rs Elm$r Thom. Floyd and Marfra &lt;•»&gt; at tho Hardradarf Additlaa which lhe sun s rays shone hot er room where there was a check1
J??0™. and
vlr““
lo tho Vlllary of Naoh'llla. Nlekl«u. enough u&gt; scorch some papers In the j room for harnesses, blankets, whips. I
r'
F****”1'.
car. So you see what old Sol can do etc. Ail of the visitors to the Picnic J&lt;raBJde^a?1 a^l *on ant*
i in moat unexpected places.
1 did not drive directly to Streeter s :
8U! JnanUfva
— -------------, but would go to the old Otis landlnx Ile,d," K*!*™**00, George Roush.
SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
| on the west side of West Gun lake. Baltimore; Mr. and Mrs
OUrrr
I Mra. Gray relumed home with her stable their driving horse and crou
“J; an° VHc
। broUier for an indefinite atay. with lhe lake with Warren Lapham on 1
her
U»- O.Kc
.nd ' hU p^dd..
“dLX
’
HOME OWNERS' LOAN COBPOaimarSX^”^
. Arthur.
"Sports and,faces were lhe feature
rvwk
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gray of Ban- Of lhe celebration, with the old
..
. ...
.. an old
Mr.
Oy
Mr and Mrs.
Mr* Bert
Bcrt Stinger
Slinger were
field. r
E. r
E Gray nt
of tn*
the mmham
Dunham rtH.
dis- i; Merry-go-rourid drawn h
by
when .
trict and Mrs. Lulu Gray spent last iiilhiuFS^
faithful horsy. 1
1 r-~—
- ; Sunday e.U.r..t Jo. SUMOT'..
humn ol «7ud. who pUnncd to I,
Cor. aouah ot Loew apm.l
i
week
end
at
West
Branch
visiting
NOTICE TO OUDITORS.
make a nlfh-. ot U and IweomU., ;
The
Harvc
cheesemans
.l«py erawlM Into ih. M.rry-«o-!
round to get a few winks ot sleep
Y
and get away from the mosquitoes. d,X night and Monday wld&gt; Mtet
A. n. iwe.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Preston and Everything went along Cne until i June Rouitl
*a,»d
Rrnndclaughter. Ellen Robinson were Willis Streeter capie out in Lie wee
.....................................................
ija,tm*at
1 at Townsend's park near Cannons- small hours of lhe morning and i
.
d*eoa.*4 aro burg to attend a reunion Bunday.
woke us up and got us to help move
* "’lie dt» I Saturday night supper guests of the old ojyan that furnished the
'«a ..r b*fjr, the Prestons were Mr. and Mrs. musle, into the hotel.
b h* 1* k ' ®am 8lllt ancl *°n Percy ot Holton
"Many folks in the old days brnt
‘
'
&gt;• a»d d«&gt; J , and Dorothy Sheffield ot Grand
their picnic lunches with them as
,o o'rlark in 1 Rapids.
they do now, but a great many stood
Glen Howe and son Allen of De­
in line holding tickets to gel one • —
troit and Duane Gray of Charlotte
of Mrs Ida Streeter’s big dinners' p.._
lk
spent a few days thc past week with that she served on those occasions DUS I
the former's skier. Mra. Lulu Gray. The dining room was on the cnclos- I
Mr. and Mrs. John Nortan of the
ed porch that ran along the entire'
Moore district spent Sunday with
south aide of the hotel.
To GRAND RAPIDS
their mother. Mrs. Anna cheeseman.
Tl&gt;e dance hall was a flourishing '
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith of Bat­
lie Creek spent Sunday afternoon affair. It was run orymuch the same
plan as lhe present park plan of
1:20 P. M.
with the L. W Jarrard family.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Downing spent dances only most of the dances were
5:45 P. M.
■ Sunday
ouktuuy with
"
Mr. and Mrs. Grover quadrilles or square dances and as
soon at tlx seis were filled lhe floor
10:25 P. Mt
Marshall.
managers, usually Will Mason and
Will Miller, would lake up the tick­
To BATTLI CREEK
ets and thc dance would go on. Tha
Vreeland and Mauchmar bands were
great favorites tn those days and|the
•11:35 A. M.
crowds, instead of. breaking up

MUdrrd’smith. Rraiatar ot Prohoto.

I went * *ar&gt; b*(»r* th* d,l» karri
■rib»d for hi. ann-aranr*.
RUSSELL B. MrPEKK.
Cirm it Jo dr
&lt;1. Haaer. At Iorio* for FlaliUff.

OBDEB FOR PUBLICATION.
Ay ot Barry.
lien of oald court, hold at lha

around midnight, would continue to
dance all of the afternoon and eve­
ning of the three days and when
the crowd was unusually good they
would sometimes run the dance in
lhe forenoon of Saturday, lhe big
day of the picnic.
■
"Willis Streeter and hte brother­
in-law. John Lewis, built a large
motor boat, the MariUa. that was
used to carry passengers on a sight­
seeing trip around the lake. The
Martlla, along with lhe old steam- I
boat, has long since passed into thc
dtecard.
"But now things are changed, the
young folks Jump In lhe family carand start out to have'a good time.
There are not enough of them left

An act that H certain to cause many a gaap In fear fer she m|B
some of thc members during 1U performaace. te the Sewn DaSteoOM,
cent importation from Europe lo be seen twice dally as the Ionia
Pair, August 17 to n.
Not longer than three yean ago there were It te said, not mon lha:
curacy. While thsi stunt is extremely difficult. It La the speed and
the Danwllla put into tt that wins the approval o&lt; the spectaton.

teofr

..........................................................

Want to Buy or Sell?

Try Our Want Column

YOU NEVER SAW
SO MUCH TIRE
FOR YOUR MONEY;
C&amp;iuf THE HE A

'Firestone
STANDARD
Fl MT BBADE QB DUTY—The new
Fircftone Standard Tire if built of
tint

grade

workmen.

materials
In

by

skilled

the

efficient factories.

BUM-DIPPED QUID BODY

.
_
fibre in every cord in every ply it aoaked

in liquid rubber, preventinginttrnal friction

and heat, which provides greater strength
and blowout protection.

TWO EXTRA LAYERS OF BDM-DiPPID CORDS
UNDER THE TREAD—This patented Firestone
feature cushions road shocks,

against

punctures and

protects

notice

or mobtqaob

LONGER NON-SKID MILEAGE—The

non-skid
tread is wider, flatter, with more and

wear and thousands of extra miles.
LOW PBICKS —Volume production makes these low
possible.

1:50 F. M.

THEF1IUT0RE KAMI AMD GIABANni—Every FiroscosM&amp;s

6:35 P. M.
f9:40 P. M.

Tire bears the Firestone name, your guarantee of |

* Daily Except Sunday
t Sunday Only
TRAVEL THE SHORT
WAY AND SAVE!

BUS DEPOT

safety, dependability and economy.

FOR TRUCKS AND BU
F1HT MAPI MITIIIAU MP tlPUT
WOAKMANIMF— Into thU new Firewone
Standard Truck Tire i* built Inng non­
aid mileage — blowouS pootactiM —
•nd dependable service.

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 1137
TWO EXTU lATUA PF «m.p**nPPtM
•PPKR TMK TttAP-Prevean tread

TWH BUDS UITN MN HttFMM —

"W.SrBA^L*"

mortnao ol lha data ot
l&gt;r&gt;nripol and. laUrrot th*
—“ «• — ...nu.aod Fifty ,«4 04/180
Italian (fl.OSO.04) and aa aall *r pro­

Twin bead, give dr« Arm IMI tm rim.
The bead■ are tied into lha cord body by
&lt;hc Ipecial FiroMona methood of oned

irtinrd'

MlMrrS lln.lih NrcUl-r •( Frokatt

niSSTORI NAME MP MAIATHI

OKDBB FOB PUSUOATION.

100 Lbs. Koi

Wt

publlcalloa it a ropy
Iron -ooroomlro vaoha

MHdroe’imllh. R.«1&gt;tor of Probate.

NOTiaa or

sale

or seal estate

MERMASH
16%

GIVE YOUR HENS
AREAL START...

Tima a, tht North ' front door .«

sa.’s-LJiTa'E.i*
—... - ,

.v.

FASH BUREAU UllURS CO. lea.

START THEM
ON MERMASH

'Firettotte
BUD DBM

M'iTdrteVmUh. R aaiitar of Probate.

It is now time to start your hens for early fall pro­

IB FOB FURLIOATIQN
Irhteaa. U&gt;o Prob.te c«lrt.l,r
a'.’s.'K.-vsi ..... ............. ............
•rotate ati'c te tka rite •&lt; Haoll"**. te
osM coaetr. oa 1ko Silk 4*r of Jal».

W

duction. Feed them Farm Bureau Mermash
for Best Quality Eggs and Highest Production.

MERMASH CONTAINS BEST
ORDER AFFOXJtYtMQ TIME FOR

' k?aH&lt;itfot‘motion. Mkkina, «kl* lr&lt;
Ssr of Aaron. l»sT
1

Mdna TO CMPTTOM

w

a?.’;

Ground yellow com, pure wheel bran, our middi.
meal and bone scraps, alfalfa leaf meal and Mer-

■mi

» ANDRUS

ftss»22«K

•JttSuiMgMN cosro-

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc.
day of Auvuai. 19J«
ih (rw

oi ta

laarfiatOMOtMotcaM.,.!

"liA-

It Coiu Ltu

(Manamar formula! to supply essential mineral

elements in food form.

Mermash has whof it takes for High Production.

tom

Buy the Bert

moker, which is Pacific ocean kelp and fish meal

TV**»ssI:
Ml*Msaa'

BANNER WANT ADVfi! PAY

trae r&lt;n&gt;r: ‘
MUdrad BialU. ProUlo Radiator.

"The Fanner Owned Store*
HASTINGS

6M-\r
6JM-2O

tougher rubber on the road, giving longer

sale.

•hip of Oranrriillrj Barrr Coaaly, Mirkiron. I" th* HOUK OVVNKRH' LOAN
CORPORATION. * Corporation *r*»u*4
aado* th* lava nf tho UaHod Iftal*a of
Aw»Hr« dated Jun* StHk. IM4. and r*;cir'fc^’yX^aBBpr .1
Jnly ITth l»»4. la Lib** M ol Mnrt

&gt;AO*1R

gives longer life.

separation. Spacially compounded

4rd pl*l
rir*d &lt;bl

4JO-J l ।
WMI'

WOODLAND

a Firwitoae Ttm Md TUm
• Batteries, WtaOsfrisM WfeW

••
0 v

�TO tumw, SAXHO

*YoqT..n.J!g.
DELTON.

if freeholders filed.1 tlohal purposes entered.
,
Mrs. Fanni* praM ot TqMo. Ohio
usd.
i esl Philo H. ffsfur. Order allow-

|

SINCERITY HiOUGAN MILLED

FLOUR

&lt;£
! filed. Report of sfae filed.
Retry. Petition WI
John McLrivy. Bond of Admr
MsttgtaU &amp;jfpom&gt; fitod. letters of admtalstration is­
e fuhtte tOt eddea- jued. order limittag settlement cn.
■ ■ , ■
i tered. petition for hearing claims
_ filed, notice to creditors issued.
Est. Louise Hyde. Waiver of notice
filed, order assigning residue en­
tered. discharge of Adnurx. Issued,
estate enrolled.
Est. August P. Gelgef. Bond of
Admr. filed, tetters of administration
Issued, order limiting settlement en­
tered.
.
Est. TUlle E. Llchty. Final account
filed.
Est. Ransom Wolcott. Citation is­
sued.
Est. Annie Wolcott, Citation Is­
sued.
Est. Anna Oslroth. Discharge of
Admrx. issued, estate enrolled.
Est. MeUua A. Hotchkiss. Testi­
mony of freeholders filed, license te

*5.49

71c

77c tt *5.99

KING'S FLAKE
FLOL'l

87c tt *679

COUNTRY CLUB
FLOCU

*1.09 tt. »» «

COLD MEDAL
FLOUR

*8.59

*1.09

PILLSBURY'S
■EST FLOCK

ULY WHITE ’&amp;“• 95c

5

PASTSY

noi«

SPAGHETTI OR NOODLES
CUt'NTRT CU R

MACARONI

COLNTRY CUB
CORN FLAKES
MAN FLAKIS covNTar cui
MANUT BUTTER
Kb’^d'

25c

NUT OLEO
KRAFTS RACKACI CHHSI
OLD E5GIJSII AND SWIM 3 ■ Vi ik.

19c
25c

2

2

35c

&gt;7r

SUGAR CMWS0 10Ek 53c
2 73c
BU I I ER
MICHICANM.UD

COl'STRV CLl'B

BREAD 1

^SA.NDu1cHCED
pkg.

2

HAMBURG OR WEINER BUNS

BREAKFAST ROLLS

10c

t

10c

h.

Anorle* VaricliN

ASHOllTED
23c SIZE - SPECIAL

LAYER CAKES

1Oc

* 19c

JEWEL COFFEE

- WESCO SPECIAL BLEND ICED TEA ^ib. pl| -23«

DON DOC

FOOD

OXYUOL OB
AHEKICA5 CAMUr rl_.AU

CHIPSO

^°e Package of Avalon Jar Ring* wilb (be
purchase p( 2 packages of Iler Grace Fruit
Peetin at regular price.

E E I
f JR E E •
°
m

ALL THREE FOR ONLY 1 7c

MASON OR KERR

Wesco Feeds

Jars55c
QUARTS
65c

Scratch Feed'u^1 $2.19
(

% GALLONS rt* 89c
KERR OR MASON

Egg Math

$2.49

Chick Food

$2.59

Wide Mouth 'ST 69c
□DiR OR WHITE

Vinegar

1 9c

**»'«

STARTING AND GROWING

Mwh

JAJL- - QI'ARTS. 4-x. 79c

Jar Caps

19c

3

$1.69

Oyster Shells

•&lt;

79c

25c

coticrai cub Michigan pace
Pork &amp; Beans «.•' «• 9c

2k

Kidney Beans 4 — 25c

15c

Green Beans

COV.XTRY CLl'B MICHIGAN PACK

AVONDALE MED1LM

Red Salmon

$2.49

30ft Dtlr; Feed I00-U&gt;. b&lt;» 1IJ1

MASON OK KERR

Baby Foods

‘^Jk

1B&gt; PROTEIN
Dairy Feed

GOOD QV4UTY

Pickling Spices

25c

3

29c

REU RIPE

Tomatoes

NEW POTATOES: 45c
U. S. No. I WHITE COBBLERS

4 - 25c

BANANAS
GOLDEN YELLOW FRUIT

- io&lt;
- 19c

CRAPES
ORANGES
Fresh Peas

12%c

TENDER. SWEET.

Watermelons

43c

10c

Tomatoes

6

Apples

EVEKY MELOS Cl’AMAhTEED

FLXE POM COOKING

BONELESS

Mr. jtad MH- Harold Rosenberg­
er and Marvin axe how niecly lo-

father

and Mrs. Claire Bassett moved Into Flail. Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Cool of Cirand
the Prank Kenyon house vacated
by Uie Rosenbergers which Mr. Bas­ Rapids visited Mr. and Mrs. James
sett has recently purchased.
MUs Fem Wheeler entertained and Ch»*. Geiger were Sunday din­
her brother’s wife and. daughter, ner guMU of Mr. and Mra Herman
Mra. Frank Wheeler and Martha,
Oi»ch. Mr and Mrs. Clyde Brown
from Philadelphia, several days last
of Lansing were evening callers
week. All went to PorUand to cal)
on their brother, Leon Wheeler, and ■ there.
i The Chester Sancool family have
family Friday afternoon.
moved to Middleville.
About twenty-five members of lhe
Mra. Margaret Parr of Muskegon
Methodist church choir held a pic­
nic at Morrison take Saturday., the called at lhe home of her slstef,
occasion being a surprise on Mid Mra. Roy Nagler and family, Sun­
day. Mte* Kathryn Skeoch returned
Ruth Wheeler.
Mrs. Maudge Rogers and daugh­ notne with hw for a few weeks’
ter Marguerite. Alton Roger* and visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kunde and
mother motored to Augusta Weddaughter Kolleen are upending
um. MU, Ita. Ku»d«'. uuefi
aunt. Mra. Rebecca Bird.
•
»
Mr. and Mrs Eugene Kidder and n ”
?
Rfl.. Mttckey visited
family of Hasting* visited at the
™

- 21c

Here Is the

SOME LINE of

to your

ESTATE ELECTRIC STOVES

We also have a NICE LINE of Cas Stoves

BUILDING
PROBLEMS

PICKLED

Haddock /2

27c

Pig Feet
Slab Bacon

Leona Sausage

*. 15c

ANY MU PIECE

C ROLLED RIB

-23c

■OAST OF BEEF

Beef

10c

California
v«u«nu. te.
art visiting &lt;rte,te
friends »
in
Barry county and spent a couple _ U
anT
j”1 Dunn spent
of days test week with her cousin, ®un&lt;tey with the tetters sister and
Mix Mabie Town
cousin. fu(nlly Mr Hnd Urt All^ Anson

Make YOUR Kitchen
the BEST Room
In the House

will last a life time . . . priced so that yoa can

VEAL ROAST

turning Bunday night.
I Mrs Will Brown of Katamaso
Mr*. Ella Rogers has returned visited friend* in Delton test week.
from her vialttaChicago
Mr. andfara. Leon Dorter attend
..
..
“
।'ed the Hughes
Huahen reunion Sunday ast

Come in and let us show you the NEW LEONARD
ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR. You will ba surprised
at tha differanca.

If you have a SPEED QUEEN WASHER be sure and

NOT

Easy

hlmse
tetcre
book
so th
the p
held

the I
you c
ing U

Re
city
to do

tered
whet
voter
ship
telep

Stat

peaf
Jorll;
. addr
laics

beln
the
Sh
the

the
ably
dcpo
Adel
potn
estat
held
Clerr
tltloi
eenU
lie c

Yan!
proJi

bulk
site

Mr. end Mrs. Charlie Be Ison and
Robert of Leonidas were here Sun­
day to attend lhe Belson family re­
union which was held at Clear lake.

tataod her mother. Mrs. Wilson of
Battle Creek last week.
The next Townsend meeting will
be held at the Herrington pavilion
on Tuesday evening, August 18 with
a speaker promised.

OBITUARY.
f
Wm. P. Doelker, son of Frederick
and Katherine Doelker. waa born in

nori
begi

thlrtecen children and came with hla
parents to Woodland. Mich, as a
email child. Hla parents afterward

company glth headquarter* tn ChlC*Hb was married in Quincy. HL. to

yuv caoicfc

- 12%c

EIG

ed public school. He was travelling

Chuck Roast

ROAST

her stetor. Mrs. Wm. Hacker, to pig
Rapids 1*51 wwk and vtelud Utelr
broUisr. lhe Rev Robert HaU. pas­
tor of lite Baptist ChUt-eh Uwre.
Th* Gardner building on Main
street will soon ba reroofed with a
gravyl combination roofing.
Fire at the Burdette Wadd fam.
west on M-n deetroyed the tool
died and some tools Thursday eve­
ning Tita fire department and lhe
nelgiibors were succestiul in keep­
ing in.' fire froto deeIroy ta&lt; Uie
ocher nearby building*. It
for­
tunate that Ute large barn did not
get afire for U wa* filled with hay
and gfata.
, Friday Uie word come of Uie
death of Mrt. Genhutn Severance

Mn. Bertha
Sanyille of
Mra
Bertiia Danville
ol Cope
Cope-­
Mr and Mra. Ellsworth Barrett
5Shh
!l been
“J? spending aIS?
Ur,. K.U S,ow,&gt; «
mish
lig*
week with
her cousin, Mr*. Gertrude Chandler. Kalamazoo Sunday.
Mra. Estella Noble* of Climax and | mlu Beil Arbour of Los Angeles
■M Kau BUTdKk of Htakory On-1 wn, .
W U nuT&lt;rtU&gt;
__ friends
ners spent XXZMCnMrlau
Wednesday with
with Mrs .Delton
Lula Wertman
, ' ', I Mr . and Mn. Leon Dunning drove
Mrs.
Oscar Myers
of CinclnnaU
Mra. Oscar
Myers of
Cincinnati I to
to Jackson
Jackson Sunday
Bunday afternoon
afternoon to
to
wa* called here Monday evening by I uKe their uncle and aunt, who are short Illness. It wm
S' ‘SUH‘
“ h"
WilUM
Iran (te Xu. W
Mr*. Mattle Blackman, who suffered , relaUves there
know of her litotes. Mr. Severance
“a sei
*“—
ere paralytic stroke, «- —- m,. Mld Mrt Clifford Oatader
tie Tungate has been i
I of Plainwell were caller* at Uie sympathy Is expressed for him and
------------ . . .
I Dunnings’ Sunday A- M. Thurrday other relatives.
Mr*. Harry Wertman entertained I evening Mr and Mra^Chartes McEst. Cora E- Sinclair. Final ac­
twenty-four guests Thursday eve- Dermott of Hope Crater iM Mr. dltlon of Mra. John Kollar was Uut
count filed.
In h/mnr
. ''im-l..
_ ___________
! Wm
*"« ««
o™“ ntntr
nlng in
honor nt
of ber SnuKanrl'c
husband's nn.
na­ and Mrs. noEst. Sarah B Smith. Bond of Wm USS’
Clair
TeXter
of
she wa* doing fine; good new* to
““ jn-pla, ipoil lhe WM .ra with tal day.
Admr. filed, tellers of administra­
were visitors there.
her many friends.
A fire which threatened the de­
tion Issued.
WM BlUeto “ '•™2
W ““
We saw by the papers of the fire
Est. Reva I. Mott, et al. Petition
struction of Herman Pump’s hen lake Is spending a few
Chas.
Austin.
•
and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Hotchkiss of
In the Beach Mfr. Co.’s plant al
and nominations of Gdn. filed, or­
house
at
Wall
lake,
called
out
the
Percy Rosser spent Sunday with
with her grandparents.
Charlotte. The Beach brother* are
South Boston called at the home
der appointing Gdn. entered.
hte son Wesley and family at Alle­ fire department twice Saturday.
of Mra. Maude Roger* Sunday. •
well
known here, where they were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wertman, Mr
Est. Henry J. Toom. Petition for
BARRTV1LLE.
The M. E. Sunday school will hold gan.
raised and later engaged ta busi­
license to sell filed.
Bob Kenyon and daughter Jeanne and Mn. Earl Burdick. Pine lake,
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley WlUllta of ness. They are frequent vteltors
Est. Anna Benson. Bond, of Admr. their picnic at Gun take this week of Kalamazoo and,Mr. and Mrs. Mra. Kate Burdick, Hickory Cor­ Arizona
came Saturday for a licre and we extend our sympathy
Friday. Meet at the church
at
filed, tetters of administration Is­
Vernon Wolcott. Mr. and MTs. Paul ners, and Mr. and Mra. William month’s visit with their parent*.
8:30. bring your own table service.
over their loss
,
sued. order limiting settlement en­
Beadle. Augusta, were dinner guest*
There will be transportation for ev­ Miller of Charlotte were callers at Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Bea­ Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Wlllltl*. Stanley
The boys of Uie Starr Common­
tered.
te somewhat Improved by hte resi­
eryone. and tracks to take the chil­ the L. R. Wolcott home Bunday aftdle at Augusta. This occasion hon­ dence in Arizona but not as much wealth were with us Saturday ask­
Est. Hiram J. Kenfleld. Discharge
emoon.
dren. Everyone te welcome to at­
ored the birthdays of Mr. Wertman. as hte friends would wish. Arehle ing us to assist them to replace
of special Admr. issued.
tend.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Mrs. Kate Burdick and little Jim­ Newton and children of Dowling their burned building. A most wor­
Mr. and Mrs. Evart Ardis
arc
thy cause. Mr. Starr and assistant*
FREEPORT.
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Strodtbeck and mie Beadle.
spent lhe afternoon there also.
moving into the lower part of Rev.
are doing a fine work..
If James MacDopald. formerly of
Mr. and Mra. Gordon Usbome Fem Wheelers' house. She will oc­ son Arthur were in Allegan Tues­
Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Mead Visit­
Cloverdale, but now of Battle Creek, ed Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jones of
A. Vermeulen of the I. O. O. F.
day on business.
left Monday morning for a week cupy the second floor.
reads our nestings Banner and Grandville Sunday.
home Is visiting relaUves here ta
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Caryl
Fuller
and
or ten days’ trip thru lhe nbrlhem
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Nagler spent
spent Monday in Battle Delton Items, we want him to know
part of Michigan.
Mrs. Julia Lathrop Bertech and his old home town. His many
Sunday at Gun take the guests of daughter
__
that we congratulate him on his son Walter ot San Diego. 0*1, who friend* are pleased to see him.
Dr.
and
Mra.
Wedel.
I
Cl
^
k
Dr. and Mrs. Fred Shepard of
A good many from here attended
Shriber spent part of lhe 96th birthday which he te celebrat­ have been visiting at-Will Hyde’s
Remus were dinner guests at the
Showboat at Lowell last week and
wlth
Barry of East ing thte week at the home of hte the past three weeks, went to Has­
daughter. Mra. Iva French In Bat­ tings Tuesday.
the bank.
. ,/
say
It was the best ever---given.
CMlton.?
cott. Sunday.
।—
.-------------------------------------Mr. faid Mrs. Arthur Yarger. Mr. tle Creek, according to an account
Guest* of Mr. and Mr*. Will Hyde
G. D. and Mra. Whitmore spent
Mr. and Mrs. Jake
oaac DePriester
ucrrieaici i| Mrs.
mrs. Roy
ivjj Deming
czcinm* of
or Detroit
uciiuti spent
tpciti
—
—-----------------—..
Its at
at their
their daughdaugh- several
several days
days last
last week
week visittag
visiting rtl_
reta- ‘nd fa"- ,^° Barry and son and which we read In the Sunday issue
lhe week end with their son, E. B,
were Sunday guest*
_ .
.............
.
Maeel
Hazelfihrlhar
Shribernttanrfod
attendedth*theRhnw.
Show- of lhe Battle Creek Moan-Journal. Mrs. Clarence Shaw and Mr. and and family ta Hastings, also called
tex’s, Mra. Chas. Price.
| Uves and old friends ta Freeport.
Mr. and Mra. Ellis E Faulkner Mn. Earl Rothaar of Nashville;
on their daughter. Edna Storrs and
Leda Moore of Grand Rapids and
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Baker moMrs. Anna Buck. Esther. Kendall spent Thursday and Friday in Wednesday. Mn. Mina Holme* of family, Sunday.
| Mr. and Mrs. Dell Godfrey were tored thru the north to Marquette
I dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and and spent several days camping. «nd lady friend spent the week end Grand Rapids.
Femdale; Mn. Helen Hogte of
Xt to not a good time to play
The Pennock reunion will be held Texas and Miss Minnie Baltay of
Mrs. Leo Hooper of Campbell.
I Miss Vernice Benson, who has been |
Hammond. Ind-, with Mr. and
pranks upon a fellow when he is
; Miss Grace Rosenberger, who has 1 attending summer school there, re- MrsJ-Ruslne. Miss Achsah Buck at the home of Mrs. Leon Dunning Nashville; Friday. Ohas. Hutton of spraying lite lawn, like getting up
Saturday, August 15.
..
" .
,
_____ . .. ...
____ _
.. '___
returned home with them
them.
Detroit, who has been taking a behind him and tickling hl* neck
been caring for Mra. Jake Geiger turned with them as far *s InterMr.
and
Mra.
Merle
Harrington
Mr. and Mr*. J. J. Strodtbeck at­
course In Choir music in Indiana, with a straw and he thinking K a
for tiw last several montlu. has 1 loehen where she will spend a few
of Kalamazoo spent Sunday with
returned to her home. Mra. Geiger i days with Mra. Chas. Ayera of tended a Sunday school picnic ta their parents. Mr. and Mra Charles came to stay until Sunday when his fly, trying hard to brush It off when
wife accompanied him home. Sun­ when he discovers what It te will
having been taken to lhe home of j Grand Rapids who te camping Ionia county Brock park on Thurs- Harrington.
Mrs. Ruby Lewis.
। there.
day evening Mr. and Mn. Chas. Mc- make It very Interesting for you. If
-Mr. and Mra. Otto Telti and fam- Cov of Grand Rapids were guests.
Edith Grinnell of Grand Ledge
you doubt it ask E. F Blake; he
Miss Margaret Hayward of Kala- ■ Rev. Fem Wheeler and
Ruth
lly and George Abbey of Hastings
spent
the
week
end
wlUi
Mr.
and
Saturday evening the young peo­ knows from experience.
mazoo spent Friday with Mr. and , spent one day last week at Gun
were —
Sunday —
visitors of
Mra. ple of two Sunday school classes
Mrs.
Arthur
Yarger.
।
--Mrs. Dell Godfrey1 lake the guests of Mrs. H. Wedel
The threatened storm Sunday
Blanche
Richards.
Mayoma Valentine of Carlton I B
^£»:he Richard*.
were entertained at a party by their
Mra. Roy Nagler returned from and family.
Thc
conference of the teacher. Mr. Hyde. The fun consist­ evening did not amount to much
Center spent part cf Uie week with
T
*’-' quarterly "
Muskegon Thursday evening where
Mr. and Mra. Claude Warner of
Delton.
Prairieville
and
Milo ed of a treasure hunt and most of here; wind, dust and a sprinkle of
she has been caring for her father. I Grandville called at Hie home of Elaine Fuller.
rata.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shriber and churches will be held at Prairieville lhe families were called upon to help
who te somewhat Improved.
i Chas. Overholt Saturday evening to
Mra. Amy Headley,
mother of
Friday evening. August 14.
furnish the treasures but each cap­ Mrs. Begcratrom, at whose home she
Mra. Leon Howk visited al Uie I visit their daughter. Mrs. Lewis children. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Patten
Mte* Ruth Richards returned to tain and group were a hundred per
and Jack Donley of HasUngs an&lt;*
home of Mrs. Frank Slocum of I Overholt.
her work at Niles Bunday evening cent successful, even to getting lhe has been ill for some time, is not
Hastings Friday.
I Mr. and Mra. Howard Caraton Lester Warner of Woodland spent
so
well
of
late.
Mra.
Bell
Allen to
days
home. crabs, false teeth, stand up collars
Sunday
Mr*.
ouiiunj with
Willi far.
pai . and nw
». Frank after spending a few ~
‘ at ■•vuiv.
assisting ta her care.
Mr. and Mra. Harry Lane and ! and little daughter. Virginia Rea. Shriber
and family.
cuir Richards has gone to Jack- and so forth. About thirty were
Mr. and Mra. Jack Agldar motored of Johnstown, Pa, are spending the
Mr. and Mrsr Carl Jackson of near j 300 10 do some preparatory work present. Ice cream and cake were
DOWLING.
previous to hte teaching school served.
Home made Ice cream end cake
the Detroit Tigers and Cleveland ' lake. Mrs Carsten will be remcm- Clarksville called on Mr. and Mrs. there this year
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Dutmer of
Indians play a good game of base- I bcred as Frances Cool, daughter of Arthur Yarger Sunday.
Mary’s Merry Maids (Uie 4-H Grand Rapids were dinner guests
S- an Uw lawn at lhe home of Mr.
ball.
। Leon Cool of Kalkaska, who also
Food Chib glrtel will have a picnic Sunday of Mr. and Mra. Heber Pos­
STONY POINT.
Mrs. Roy Deming of Detroit and j spent the week end with them al
and Mrs- Lloyd Oasklll on Friday
We hope everybody will attend at Pleasant lake Wednesday of thl* ter and family. Mlu Dora Foster re­ evening. August 14. the proceeds to
the Marttn. Lakeview and Wellman
turning with them after sending
Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Barrett
school reunion at Morgan park.
painting the church. People are re­
Thornapple lake Tuesday. Aug. 18 and Mrs. Danville were visitors of ’ Kenneth Sage, who has been In sponding splendidly In contributing
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Deaklns and Mrs. Birdie Merlau and Mr. and
their bit and It Is hoped that the
family attended the home coming Mrs. George Morehouse at Pine lake lough the past week but went lo lhe necessary amount may soon be
at Williamston Saturday, it being one day last week.
hospital instead with ptomaine poi­ raised, come out and enjoy the eve­
Mrs. Mildred Fuhrman and chll- soning.
their former home.
ning.
। dren of --------------------Kalamazoo spent
Sunday
Harry Hinkley ta building a new.
r
Mr. and Mrs. 8. E Powers, Nash­
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall pierce
with her parent*.
narenlc Mr.
i.f,
and Mn
house at hte farm home near I! w»h
ville and Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Wilcox spent Sunday with relaUves In De­
Mud creek. He is putting his1 George Sprague.
attended the Showboat in Lowell troit and attended lhe ball games
••bonus" to a good use as he was j far. and Mra. George Whittemore Thursday evening. Mr. and Mra.
between Detroit and St- Louis on
very much ta need of a new house. |
Ida Knestrick visited Mr. Ralph DeVine and Dale DeVine also
Saturday.
Mrs. Hullng te spending two week* and Mrs- George Norris at Doud's attended.
Mrs. Leland Jones and daughter
with relative* ta Ohio.
Corners Sunday evening
Mr. and Mrs. Vera Tlawblllz of Nereita returned recently from *
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Demond and I Mr- “nd Mra, Gordie Durkee were High bank were Sunday
dinner visit with relaUves in New York and
children are spending a few days I Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mra. guests of H. J. Wilcox. _
were guests last week of Mrs. John
at Bay View.
j Stewart Waters.
Mr. and Mrs. Heber Poster Were Ketcham at Hastings.
We con help you do this at a very nominal expense.
Geo. Miller of Flint, an old time I Mr- and Mra. Will Whittemore called to Premont, Ohio, by lhe
Mis* Jean Wallace of Hasting*
We have on our floor a splendid line of Electric and
resident of thl* community, with his :
Mr*. Suale Francisco attended death of an aunt. Wednesday.
who spent last week with Miss Mil­
two daughter* and one of their hus- ' t,le Brininstool reunion at Eaton
Cas Appliances that would go far toward making
The true alm'o? everyone who as- dred Oasklll returned home Sunday
band* was calling on relaUves and 1 Rapids Saturday, then went on to
evening. Her parent*. Mr. and Mrs.
your kitchen a place that you would love to spend
a few old friends ta this place last, Morestown to get Mra. Clara Mosier, plres to be a teacher should be. not
Walter Wallace, were guest* of the
week. They have been spending the i who returned home with them,
to impart his own opinions, but to Gaskills, Bunday.
a lot of time in.
week at Thornapple take.
Mr. and Mra. Ike Lelnaar, Mr. kindle minds."—F. W. Robertson.
Mr. and Mrs. Orlle Fisher. 6. A.
Wertman. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Van
Byckle and Mrs. Mattie King at­
tended the school reunion in tho
Weeks district Saturday. A nice
crowd was ta attendance and al­
though the school building burned
before the close of school il will
ftion be replaced by the Bunnell
school building which has been pur­
chased. Preparation* are well under
way and it Is hoped to have every­
thing in readiness when school time
arrives this fall I. j. Oswald and
Junior Oswald helped out on Uie
program, by furnishing several
musical numbers.
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Garrett enter­
tained with a family dinner at their
home Sunday, honoring Mr*. Gar­
rett’s brother and wife. Mr. and Mra.
Vance Warren of Flint, who spent
the week end here. Sixteen guest*
were present to enjoy- tha day to­
gether.
Mr. and Mra. Jerry Steele and son
of Bristol Comers were Bunday
visitors at Mrs. Ella Smith’s.
Harry Lenz has returned from
Ann Arbor where he went for an
examination. He Is confined to hte
home, at present and not In very
We would like to show you our HAND­

HOME GROWN' - RED RIPE

PUDS

land Mra. Von Dunn aid Uf. aM

Dr. and Mra. M. Lowry hare traen ' Mra Chartea Harrington sp«it SatSH1*.
ike near Grawn. Mich. Mr. and

MILLER FURNITURE CO.
HASTINGS

RHONE 2226

THE HOME LUMBER CO
HASTINGS

"The Borne Lumber Co. Buildt Hornet"

PHONE 2276

daughter, Elisabeth, to a kindergar­
ten teacher ta Chicago. Mr. Doolktr
WM a Knight Tempter. Burial tert

Adv

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY. AUGUST 20,1936

16 PACES

Barry Co. Republicans Honor
GAN YOU VOTE
Ex-Governor W. M. Brucker
SEPTEMBER 15TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGIS
TERED THAT IS IM.

. Dinner Given In Hit Honor At Parker House
Senatorial Candidate Made Convincing Address

POSSIBLE

ENLARGE
EXHIBTSPACE
EARLY
LIVESTOCK
EN
TRIES INDICATE AN EX­
CELLENT SHOWING

COUNCIL BUYS LOTS TO
BE USED FOR PARKING
Aasurci Better Access to
Many Stores and Better
Fire Protection
The council has decided to ....
Improve tlie automobile parking ski- ,
uatlon in this city. They voted Fri­
day evening to give the city prop­
erty committee -power to act" In the
purchase of the Dawson-Beckwith

SECTION ONE—PACES 1 to 8

0||V Vfil D Ci ID
Dill IUUtl ifllU

-

Ito resurface the
|

JEFFERSON ST. PAVING

TICKETS EM

Council Voted Friday Wight
to Contract for That

. SEASON.

MEMBERSHIPS \

-,ra

Improvement

„

ooNnwroB or

The council voted Friday night to
' have the cemeni paving on south
LZYAN MITH0DI1-.
i Jefferson street resurfaced from
CLO1BD BATUKDAY
Center street to Clinton street. It
I will include the old paving,
laid the old paving, laid
nclude
’ many jyean
-------------— “----------*■&lt; of; FOUR YOUNG MEN
AT LOWEST
ago----before
the art
cement P*vln“ *** mastered 14 was;
DGceim r- i r.iri c,Bwnl
POSSIBLE LEVEL very rough and get4ing worse. The
QROAINCG C
ORDAINED
SUND

AVAILABLE AT DRUG
STORES

that he did not Intend to mike an
address then, but would briefly
------------comment on some phases of the TESTING OF CATTLE
PRICES
contest for the senatorship, which
- —------------------------AND
HOGS REQUIRED
he did In a very pleasing and ac­
ceptable manner. Next Earl Bur- - .
ssightly
’8,'(
frame buildings, which are
hans, of Paw Paw. was Introduced as ?al* Association to Arrange LLo
ali0 a fire menace, will be torn
Rates to Be Increaaed After
.of_°mnd Campmoctlng Bervioes El.
candidate for the republican non.*.-for These Tests If the
down, the space leveled and put in
Rapids. It will be covered with an
Fair Opens on Sep­
nation for state senator from this
’ good condition for parking It te
Morning, Afternoon and
I asphalt preparation, such as that
Exhibitors
_______________________________
district. Mr. Burhans said he did not
I believed that this
space willWish
park
. company te using so successfully on
tember 8
Evening Thia Week
Early entries Indicate that there' from sixty to eighty cars. The
feel it would be fair for him to take
Grand Rapids streets in cohering old
An m‘*,r‘anl
*blch ev- There Was ample evidence that the any time to make a response, except -----------Membership tickets for the Barry pavements and making new and
di) be a--------------------------------------------fine showing of livestock at- . growth of retail business here makes
At the dosing
-TV
ery voter In
in TUrrv
Barry county .hn.tld
should..b
ask repubUcani of tUU countr
county fair are on sale until Sep­ . belter roadways. They will start the
। to Indicate hte hearty support of Mr the Barry
county
fair - again
thismore parking space a necessity.
’
■■■"
’
■
himself is this Am I properly reg­ with him In hte primary campaign. Brucker for United States senator
year. Cattle entries are coming In- I Another advantage Is that owning tember 8. at reduced prices, at all work this week and finish It in a'
istered on the official registration i। Adelbcrt Cortrlght. chairman, and
At Die conclusion ot the program to County Agent Foster's office at a 1 this property makes :t possible to drug stores in Bary county. The comparatively short lime. It will be !
,
book of the township or city clerk. j Allan. C Hyde, secretary-treasurer at the hotel all repaired to the south rate that would Indicate an extra have an alley in the rear of the membership ticket entitles the hold­ a black top surface and very easy 1 P*rtorol appointments were read
m that I have the right to vote at of the temporary committee of the side of the court house, where seats tent will be needed to house the stores fronting on State St., be­ er to membership in
the Barry to drive over. The contract calls for j
the primary election which will be Brucker-for-Scnator
organization had been provided Owing to the exhibit County Agent Foster has tween Jefferson and Michigan It County Agricultural Society and to , the grade not to vary more than 1*
“
held on Tuesday September 13 next? | in this county, had charge of the ar­ busy lime with fanners and the fact notified purebred cattle breeders of
admittance to fair grounds fore­ inch in ten feet.
—Wm. Gearhart; Berlin—D.
If one s name Is not on that record ! rungements which were carried out that this meeting was scheduled for the county that entries had to be in '
noon, afternoon and evening each
। Backa; Bird Lake-Supplied by
he cannot vote; he must register be-1 m a very orderly manner, reflecting one o'clock, when II would be out of the fair office this week to- Insure j
day of the fair. The price of the
tween this time and the primary credit upon them and those who as- |I the question for many people to al- exhibit space at the fair
membership tickets te SIXX). These
election day
tickets are not transferrable and a&lt;
Before,cattle can be brought on to
listed them. After the fine meal was tend, there were not as many presIf a qualified voter shall have ’i served. thOM- present settled down!I ent as would have been If the meet- the fair grounds they must have had
different colored ticket is used for
moved, since he last voted, into an­ &gt; to making a permanent organlza- i ing had been held at an hour when a negative reaction lo the aborthe men and women.
I ids-E. H. Llndstey; Grand Rapid!
other township or county or ward, lion. C H Osborn. L W Felghner. It would be possible for a crowd to Hon test within 90 days previous lo
There ure also on sale until Sep­
, -A. R. Merrill; Hastings—t fc,
or from another state Into this state, Nashville and Frank Kilpatrick,., assemble. There were perhaps 200 Hie fair The fair association will
tember 8. four general admission
Crocker; Hickory corners—C. &lt;
he must re-register
tickets for »1.00. The price of these
_______
[Rennells; Holland—C. W. Mereditku
Woodland, were made a committee I present. They guve the closest st- make this test without cost to catIf a qualified voter shall have to suggest permanent officers. The ten L Jon to Mr Brucker and so heart- H* exhibitors If entries are made
tickets after September 8 will be
PETITIONS PRESENTED TO
failed to vote at the two preceding committee retired and later report - lly applauded him that he cqzild Hite week
35
cents
each.
The fair association FIGURES SHOW GAIN OF
COUNCIL
AT
FRIDAY'S
"
state elections, as required under ed that. In their judgment, the best jI not fail to know that he has nuuiy needs some lime lo arrange with
head;
North Parma and MLnardfe
Children between the ages of 8
the new registration law. his name Interests of the morenumt In this ’ warm friends In this county. He was veterinarians to administer the test. I
ELEVEN DURING THE
to 14 may purchase a season ticket
: Robert Klaasen; Ottawa Lake—P.
MEETING
will have been officially dropped by county would be furthered by num- ' Introduced by Dr Frank Carrothers.
for 50 cents Admission to the grand
Hogs must be vaccinated agauist
, C. Bonney; Owosso and Shia wassa*—
PAST
YEAR
the township or city clerk, because Ing the temporary officers ns per- ■i chairman of the republican county hog cholera before they can be
stand either afternoon or evening te 1
| H. V. Dekker; Pittsford—E. W. Zuthe law so requires In other words, manent ones They also named a committee. The speaker paid a fine brought on to the fair grounds,
25 cents.
। ber; Rlvts junction—Alvin Barker;
MATTER REFERRED TO
I The fair management, recognizing I
you cannot have the privilege of vot­ member of the county Brucker-fcr-: compliment to Barry county, 11* This is a state livestock health reg- VALUATION OF 102
I Romulus and Martinsville—P. D.
ing If you fail to exercise that right Senator organization In each town­ clllzcnshlp and Its high reputation ulatlon This will also be taken care
the demand of many patrons who ।
STREET
COMMinEE
DISTRICTS $17,895,965 desire to be assured of a comfortable
shin and ward The vote was hearty I In the stale. He said he wished to ot by the fair association If hog
r-,
-------- .
! Unlon City—James Chrfapeil; IMS
shall become of age before the pri­ and unanimous In favor ot Adelbert' talk about our government. He said entries arc made now It b thought
reserved seat, have set aside ap-1 City Hopes to Get Curb and dron—In the hands of the president.
mary election September 15. your Cortrlght for chairman and Allan I he had never trimmed, but had met lha*. the hog exhibit will not be Consolidation and Lack of proximately 300 seats which will
Gutter Done This Year and
name will surely not be on the of­ Hyde, secretary-treasurer and the ' every Issue squarely, and would do so overly large County breeders with
sell for 50 cents. These tickets may
Population Cause Several
ficial records, and you must regia- representatives named by the com- j now He declared that. In his judg- fine herds of hogs are urged to enbe purchased after September 8 for
Roads Ready to Pave
Schools to Close
any performance during the week
mlttee for each of the townships, menl. we ore face to face with the ter them now
The council acted in petitions |
Registering is not difficult In Die and wards
choice of adopting European Ideate
Entries in ail divisions of the fair
County
School
Commissioner The 400 seats In the bleachers west Friday night for twenty-two addlcity of Hastings all that Is necessary
Dr Harkness, an old friend of j of government, represented In the ! *1H be accepted al this time. Early- Maude Smith has just sent hi to of the grand stand will sell for 15 tlonal blocks of tarmac paving. The of Plu?ford* ^.5'
Y/
to do is to call m the council room Mr. Brucker. Introduced him In very New Deal, or the ideals adopted by entries Insure exhibit space In sheep,
Lansing her annual statistical and cents each, afternoon or evening. petitions were referred to the street
in the city hall and become regis­ fitting words. Mr. Brucker stated1
I poultry, crops, etc
Early entries
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
—
financial report of Barry county Tlie management feel that they committee to Investigate and report, r1v?. “n.^.'inn ' n,^
tered.
If one does not know
help the fair association plan their rural, city and village schools, with have the prices on al) udmlsslons.at later. All of them called for not only '
whether he is on the official list of
building arrangement for your ex­ the exception of st. Rose parochial the lowest possible level and urge tnrinucklng. but curb and gutter. It i
*55"
P^ma were ordained
voters or not. he can visit the town­ LETTER ARRIVES
hibit.
thev Sunday
afternoon service.
school, and the Seven Day Adventist the patrons to buy their membership may be possible to get the curb and i „,
„
ship or illy clerk al his office, or
As entries In this division are schools in Hastings and Carlton tickets early.
Rev.
Visser nof
Coldwater pre
___________________
gutter work done this year, and poa- I
.R’ a.
/rXIt?n
C«r^M^
IN
RECORD
TIME
telephone and find out
•
limited to Barry county exhibitors, Center which have a total enroll­
RfiTADI
A
DC
UC
A
on
___________
vlbly
to
pul
the
streets
In
condition
j
camn
«...
These are things that every voter
every farmer should take a special
ment
of
89.
Mrs.
Smith
finds
It
ROTARIANS
HEARD
so
that
tarmacklng
can
be
comTf.°^
“*d
®IU
should be considering al this time. Mailed in Honolulu, H. I., on
interest In the livestock entered at especially worthy of comment that
DISTRICT GOVERNOR J?.?1
The bl“" “,md 1 at the camp grounds aboor1
the fair
Monday—Delivered
a report was turned In from every ------------ ------------- - One block Li W South street mllc5 *°Ulh oX Ujwn- Th# numta
NAMES GENERAL
school board in the county, not one Frank C. Barnes of Manistee
Here Wednesday
RECENT CHANGES IN
being missing
from
Jefferson
to CSUmh
Church
TOURIST TELLS WHAT
•om South
south JeS
W »
ADMINISTRATOR
With the more general use ot
the
Met Members of the
The total school census for the
street.
TEACHING STAFF
commercial airplane on land and
HE THINKS OF OUR
On. block on Thorn unM. from
•»,«*
year ending May 31. 1936 was 5 Local Club
State Is Settling Idle Ac­ sea. distances have been seemingly
North Broadway to North Church.
tar^d/i^at^
‘t967. a gain of eleven over 1935 when
Three
Teachers
Resign
—
CITY
shortened and the earth smaller In'
Five blocks on
East Marshal)!
District Governor Frank S Barnes,
the census showed1, 5.956 of this
counts in Two Closed
County Normal to Be
size than formerly, just whnt this
of Manistee,
who heads the
number 4.663 werK' registered In fifth
Rotary dlstalci^M
toe’thirtyh^m .
8°U‘“
10 *»“* | There
e«h M
Banka in County
school. Number received from all nrth Rotary district, was the honor;
.
' means to our own people was clearly ' “CITY AMONG LAKES”
Closed
- "I .?ne
South Dibble, from
On another page of the Banner Illustrated last week here in Has-.
TnilDlCT nsssn
sources was 381; number lost from BUC5‘ of Hastings
Rotary
club biockon
on
..................(Mood.,, nm durrut
-------------will be found a legal notice that Unj^ „
|
HAS NO TOURIST CAMP , Three resignations in the teaching
I ,staff— of the
Dr. Harold Houvener
should prove of Interest to the per­
........ a
u dentist in
------, .city' schools
----- have
------ been
------- Her
tirr report
report shows
snows the
me valuation
valuation;
pc^nainy^
pe.Ruiiuuiy. It [ Qone
ne block
block on
onSouth
Sou Hayes, from Toronto. Ont, Rev. J. H HazDM
Honolulu.
H.
I
wrote
his
mother.
I
This
Tourist
Had
to
Park
His
J
1
rk°^
d
ml
»
upt
,?..
A
.K
Va
^.
BUS
'
1
ot
Uie
»«
Barry
county
school
disu
e
“
&gt;'
‘
o
«ee
why
he
was
selected
!
cllnton
to Madison
sons namad, who are called "dlsapCMtflJAKto..Hniiii-1'iirr. oLJWsJ.
u,
alsO ‘hc .ne,,,s U1B‘ ‘he Barry Uriels to be &gt;17893965 total reeeipH.m the new governor.
! Two blocks an N
Akron, Ohio, bringing
peured^JIMWtei.'' although the ma- ■
TwoEast
blocks
on North Hanover,
city a letter on Sunday night? Aug '
Oar to Road OtltBimr - County NormM wU be discontinued from all
hj7.324.0I; total
»e 8av® an interesting talk about from
statekiad
jorlty of them are living and their
from East. state road
to East Colfax.
instead ot
of functioning
funetkming f.ir
fur nn&lt;*
one tnnn*
more;- ”^nd7t
2; ~
n which
ml.I/.), he
i.a mailed
...niii.'i Monday
lim.zi... morn­
a# n■ *—- t J~.it. । t
। Instead
....Ur^7e
...
-p^235
—
...t-n, I.
.
addre-v.es available The notice re­ 9.
of City Limits! I
av- Rotnrlanlsm. what It means and
One and .1-2 blocks on Montgom­
rear os nreetauol.
। year
previously .JannM
planned
what It should do for a community. ery street, from State street to COUNTY HEALTH UNIT
lates to those doposita which have ing. Aug. 10. so It was taken on tile
unma Clipper
cupper u»
»an Francisco.
rrancisco. It
it . „ Tl“'. Bannf£ h“ RUHt‘d that H*S- I This change in policy has doubt­
to San
He especially stressed that a Rotary Grand.
been Idle for at least seven years China
lai membership in all grades
club ought never to undertake a
In the .Freeporl and Nashville was then brought cast by airplane tln*-5 te sacrificing Its own Interests, less been Influenced by the reslgna-; close ot year. 4.495.
One block on East Walnut street,
ISSUES BULLED
j tion of Mrs. Mabel Clark, for 17
banks. The banks are closed but no and was delivered to Mrs. Houvener j Bnd subJectlng Itself to merited
, Al) but three rural districts in community project which Is within from South Hanover to the C. K. A:
years
head
of
the
Barry
County
on
Wednesday.
Aug
12
—
about
two
criticism
because
It
has
no
tourist
the scope of its commercial club or S. tracks.
one has claimed the payments that
Barry county had nine months
Concerning Remedy for Fi
days
&lt;from
the
time
It
was
mailed
.
Tht
absurdity
of
advertising
Norma),
who
has
accepted
the
poslhave been ordered, so this action Is
school The exceptions were Eagle. any other organization of its busi­
31x blocks on East street, from
in
Hoholulu.
which
is
quite
a
record.
'
lhc
clt
&gt;'
B,nnn
^
lalce
»
"
।
lion
of
principal
at
the
Evart.
venting Infantile
being taken by the slate to clear up
Goodwill and 'Fanner which hold ness and professional men; but a Hubble to Grand.
fifty cents for' wh
rhlqh
''*h Implies an Invitation to «flsh‘' । Mich.. High school
the Idle accounts
'The .ifcstage
.. was but ___
eight There are at present 102 Rotary club and Rotarians individ­
One and 1-2 blocks on East
Paralyiig ।
onourn the
me accounts
accounts remain
remain ime.
«■« rapid «••»««:
H^'^g’ ‘heir headThe other resignations are that school districts In Barry county ually ought to cooperate will) all ef­
Should
idle, this
service nuu
and .t
It was c«cer- i
street, from Green to State.
the money will revert to the state talnly worth it From Honolulu to' tJU*'r"&lt;r ■ nn“ nt ",0 s*me Un,e not of Miss Esther Halnon. English where formerly there were 140; forts. no matter by whom sponsored,
Following reports in the preu
One block on North Boltwood
escheats fund and eventually get In- «hc Almeda airport in San Fran- •’’?'’lde “ 5amP ‘°r tourists is ap- teacher tn Junior High the past consolidation and lack of school that will benefit the community.
the
country
concerning the uae
street, from East State road to East
to the primary school fund, at least, cisco, where the Chlr.n
China Cllnner ' •pftrcn1,
’nrcnt- u;d
*’;d •’15 huml-Mtine
humiliating to
to ererv
every year, who has been spending the |x&gt;pulatlon are responsible for the
sprays as a preventive of poll
Blair.
summer abroad. She has been of­ change. Mrs. Smith’s report shows
most of it, So If your name appears lands, the distance te 2084 miles and J . right-thinking citizen.
litis (infantile paralysis), a n
mcisco here
nere It
n Is
is about
aoout,,, J“’t *hal 11,15 «lWaUon te doing fered a position In the Kalamazoo
of
Inquiries
have
been receii
In this list, go to your bank and get from San Francisco
the county had 156 women and 44
SCHOOLS OPEN SEPT. 1.
for , for Hastings te evident from the fol­ leaching system, her home town.
the amount due you. which prob- 2500 miles, a total
total of
of 45*4
40^; miles,
taiko, tar
the Barry county Health H-,
men teachers. There are 84 pianos.
— j
....’. And
.— 'lowing communication, which we
The Hastings
system
Miss Edith Heald, who taught &gt; 32 phonographs. 2 radios. 3 motion
—
---- school
-------- -j
—... will
inc value or ।
ably will not be the total of your the letter to -travel« in .two
day.
cllo
from
last
week
’
s
Charlotte
Re
­
chemistry and typing In High1 picture projectors and three stere­
open Tuesday, Sept. 1. according to procedure. In certain locaUtlea
deposit, but a percentage of It. a person could have made the Jour- :1 &gt;
Tonight. Thursday, the Hastings announcement by Supt. of Schools. I porta on the use of thia aoluf
S&lt;C.Omr
Adelbert Cortrlght Ims been ap- ney In the same length of time The i publican. We hope every citizen of »Mh~l
: optlcon projectors
projectors in
in use
use in
in tthe City Band directed by Lewis Hine, Fl A VanWi.vhtrlr *T\&gt;.«K1
Hastings win read It. We sincerely Borgess hospital. Kalamazoo. To fill schools, according to this report
D. A. VanBuskirk. Teachers’ meet­ have shown encouraging results, r
pointed general administrator of the world Isn't so large after all.
will give a "Pop" concert on the ing will be held, ns usual, the day
trust that It will lead to active steps her place Supt. VanBuskirk has en- - -estates named, the hearing being
----------------- •*•'* '
In response to the above InquirtM
court house lawn, starting at eight previous. Monday. Aug. 31.
to end this disgraceful situation. gaged Dana Burgess of Petoskey.;
the following information Issued
held before Probate Judge Stuart FOURTH QUARTERLY
The communication taken from our' who comes from W. 8- T- C. and will |
o'clock, with the following program:
All schools vjrill close Labor Day. the United States Public Health
Clement on Monday. Aug. 17.Tlie pe-f
rnNFFRPMrr AIIP 9A Charlotte contemporary te as fol-1 teach typing, the chemistry classes
’ Hie Victors—March—Elbe).
Monday.
Bept.
7.
also
on
Friday.
tltlon for an administrator was preLUi'irtntlilUt AUll. Z4
Service is tendered far the Inform^
lows:
Saskatchewan — Overture­
Sept. 11. for Children's Day at the lion of the people of the county: .
assigned to Miss Heald, being ab- :
rented by Buell A. Doelle. state pubHolmes.
August 5. 1938
sorbed by Ass't. Prin. F. S. Jones.1
Barry county fair. This Is the same
District Supt. L. L. Dewey
He administrator
"Recent experimental work bp
Vocal Solo — Missouri Woltz— day that
Dear Editor:
um Barry county teachers
icacners meet Drs. Charles Armstrong and Wallet
head
ead of thc
the science department.
,
to
Preside
at
Business
On
August
4.
1936
my
wife
and
11
Mire
Georgian
Rawllson.
o^
Kai1
111
1
OtlllCO
Knight. Sung by Lola Ashalter.
at Pine lake for their annual edu- T. Harrison of the National InstU
WORK SPEEDED UP.
| stopped in our neighboring city of; Amazon, also a Western State grad- |
; CoIomus of Columbia—March- rational program provided by KeiAccording to reporta from the
Session
, tute of Health. Washington, D. O,
Alexander.
.’ log.; Foundation WUCU
with our house trailer to. uate will take Ml.v Halnon's posiwhen U
It u
U atso
also . in ■ preventing poliomyelitis to monYankee
park(. The fourth quarterly conference Hastings
xaiiKcc Springs
springs government hB
pars
Miss
'X or ‘he krst MeU.Xt^huroh^n' ™ it a J. stationwhere the tour- I lion.
1 Who
hMPhllena
breA tn Woods McDonald. ' Lustspiel—Overture — Keler-Bcla. customary to dismiss schools for the
I the First Methodist church enn. “ al B
- on
___________ . ___________
| wno nas Dcen 10 Hastings since Aug.
Drummer’s Delteht — Noveltv— I dav
U”‘* venM on Monday evening. Aug. 24. tel camp was. They looked at each | I FVOY rn&lt;i&lt;5AFRT IQ
excited so much interect and qmcu.
1 Tllh 1116
County Health Edwards.
I
----------------- ______________
1
5 .M“d, uk.P fB!np
‘h’’ church parlors, preceded by a other and said: "Do you know where
lation that tlie United States PuUlJfl
SENTENCED TO IONIA
iX^StLa°'°1 A GOVERNMENT “G MAN” Health Service deems It dedrabte tg
SJ!5.” .,hat E!?&gt;-'cSt .,'Xork k being . pot luck supper at seven o’clock. the tourist camp te?" one said. "I I
guess
on
the
fair
grounds
’
So
we
j
T!'e t?Ull£2n®J Y’l tn" Th,s 'ncellng Is open te all mem*
* —--- aV— 1 rllevllle
lor Uw Mid-1 N.Uo„| “ Emblem-MorTO OPEN BROTHERHOOD Issue the following statement;
“.EE? .ni11
■dTn?,tra; '
and constituents of the church. drove In on the fair grounds and
The evidence
regarding th*
I
b
Given
From
Nine
Months
'
(lle,
f*
lle
I
ley
’
”
*"'
y.
hL.?'.,alSO dlnlnK hall and please bring your table service. prepared to park for the night. Soon
method Is as yet baaed entirely o
| She te a Kansas City. Mo, girl
Grma
Gems w
of Stephen Foster—Medley H. H. Reinecke, Head of “G animal experimentation and ti
a man came and said. "Get going,
kitchen, bathhouses, etc it will be sandwiches and food,
to 14 Years on Forgery
'and a graduate of Kansas State —Tobanl
we don’t allow tourists here." I
made available for the use of boys'!। District■
proposed
spray
is
not
at preMnt
Superintendent
L. L.
Normal
college.
She
taught
in
'
Charge ' INorm.1 toll.,.
She t.u«ht In |
c.u you
Men” in Detroit Area, Will be regarded as of proved value
asked where it would be possible to
and girls' clubs.
I Dewey of Grand Rapids will preAter In'J.IdS'n
a nrfvata
Levo,
37. urn home I. **'
^'SeleM
*m
______ ....
find a place, and he told me some­
the prevention of poliomyelitla
Speak October 19
। side at the business meeting, when
where up the river. On my way to In Colon. Michigan, was sentenced school for delinquent children in
Stepping
Out
—
Novelty
—
Yoder
—
,
reports are io
to oe
be given oi
of me
the acv c~
The members of the Hastngs man. Perhaps it would be advlsab
that place, I stopped to see the Monday by Judge McPeek to from Kansas City, afterward in the Girls' ’ ”
Field Artillery—March—
County Home school at Indepcnd- soUsa
Of the various departments
Brotherhood are assured of an In­
of the church, the pastor, the Rev. mayor. I didn't find him. so I saw nine months to fourteen years at ence, Mo. Her interest in this
teresting program for the next before giving the method gener
the officer on duty and asked him Ionia on a forgery charge. He had
Star
Spangled Banner.
Jones,
also.....
giving
MRS. CHAS. B. JOHNSON.
|W Maytan J
---------------— his about this camp on the river. He
branch
of
educational
work
made
_________
,
,
___________
Brotherhood
year. An outstanding application. If It Is desired to u
previously admitted hte guilt.
Mrs. Charles B. Johnson has de-1 yc^b' report.
man is secured for the first meeting, the solution it should bo sprayad to
said. “That's where the hobos camp.
Jack Saylor who are arrested with fr'-m'S1 25 ffXued-'.^. AMATEURI CIRCUS AT
to the nostrils three or four time* fl
elded te sell her personal property
On the Preceding Sunday. Aug. 23. We have that place for them.” Then
the third Monday tn October. For
him for the same offense has dcand will have an auction sale on her *7
W.U1 ?re«h a‘ ,h.' len the officer, who was very obliging,
tie Creek college receiving her de2ND WARD PLAYGROUND Dial meeting one of the government alternate days, and thereafter weak.
VM i^nngree
'Sthere
On- HU
l,Ud:
m June.
________
farm two miles south of Middleville i 0 cloclt service In the absence of Rev.
In June.
I
—---------"G-Men" has been booked. He is
took
his
car
and
drove
miles
look
­
litis.
The spray tip should be p
Il wui’be remembered that both’। ruiuv
Aj,lde num
trOm iici
hcr work MUs meMe-(, Children Plan to Put on , H. H. Reinecke, “special agent In
vr
Joncn. who
te havinc
two weeks'
Jones,
who Is ahaving
a two weeks’
N. C- Thomas „..n
will be ....
the ___
auctioneer
ing for a private place for us to
win um rtmemoerea tnat oom »
upward and backward at an
i Donald s particular hobby te gene-1
and Charles Parker, clerk. She offers vacation, before leaving for con­ park
i charge of the federal bureau ef tnT In
V.-;
----------------------to «“'»'«“« •m'. •cordlnul^"
Stunt. Wednesday,
in. LAl last
despair
he took us1"'"
■
Bnd fBmUy
Thls nBl-'
of about 45 degrees, and Um
a good list of property—a matched ference Ln Battle creek on Sept. 9.
vc.stlgaUon of the United States Deout to the city limits and found a . to reports, kattempted
to
pass
a
i
B
!???
v
oa
The keenness
kin Jess ^f the
thJ Undiy
nkS u
up
w,lh the
°»e early
eBr,y hteh“- ।
place by t|je side of the road. The forged check.
„ yof,“our
nks
? with
August 26
. of
- Justice."
—
team of mares, bay gelding, eight
[—
partment
with bead- ing should be thorough enoi
x. The
me Keenness ot
of the l tory
country
wblch
reach the pharynx as well, a
Detroit.
cows, a heifer, thirty-three sheep. OTTO DEEDS SENT TO
officer said:-I have just such things । clerk In the Middleville hardware
cou^try U1 which she te
The Second Ward playground te'। &lt;quarters
’ua£t?r? aat
5 P
etrolt?
” ------have■—
been
responsible
200 chickens, fifteen or twenty acres
as this
day." n
Il seems
to me
ma saved
the store
store irorn
from oeinz
being victimvictim- I admirably versed.
on uu
an amateur
amateur circus
circus ,, "G-Men
bBVe
N
JACKSON FOR LIFE Ih.l
vnu every uaj.
scran io
saves me
..
.■
. I putting vm
.—
"
------------- appllcaUonx at least should be
tla.tlrs.
1.1
.....
.
__
I
^-1
_
_
__
_____
.
_____
.7,.
.
1
Mln
UnTV.n.lj
wml..
.
n
&gt;
----that Hastings should pul a sign on I ized, The two men hurried across |
! Wednesday afternoon. Aug. 26th at
of corn In field and a long list ot
icote and other articles. The adver­
^,hc
1 the sccond ward school as a closing Nearly all of these bandit gang ministered by a phyitetan. The
It Was His Fourth Oonvic- each entrance to the town. "Tourists country to Freeport, ‘■where they I
keep away. Not wanted here." or ' were successful In getting money on ^2, aLlhf H„a ln, onJcf' ” °”e : for U»elr summer’s program. All: members are eIther dead or in state perimentai work on anlmab is
tisement on another page gives all
being pursued. Therefore, tf *'
tion of Felony—Judge
something of that nature.
a forged check. In the meantime |
DOA;. VanBusxlrk apart- children Interested are Invited at at-,01
1 prisons for hie. O-Men
the details. She will rent her entire
tive procedure Is sublet
farm or by fields on a 50-50 basis.
I. D Townsend.
word had come to Sheriff Blakney mcnt* on S Hanover.
tcnd
participate.
work to thorough. They are now

About 80 prominent republicans
from all parts of the county attend­
ed tlie luncheon at the Parker
House Thursday noon In honor of
YOUR NAME ON LIST I former governor Wilber M. Brucker.
now a candidate for the republican
Easy lo Ascertain From City nomination for United .States sena_
, ,
II "Jr
lor ‘from
Iftn this
nit’ auiic.
state. ZI
If Mr.
air crucicr
Brucker
or Township Clerk If You
had any doubts as to the feeling of
Are Mguiwsa
Registered
l h(m
Porythcounly
toward
|
mult republicans
have be&lt;n dUpclkd

NOT DIFFICULT TO GET

ASK TWENTY-TWO
BLOCKS TARMAC

BARRY CO. SCHOOL
CENSUS IS 5.967

^LSX^TS^L^

DO HUSTINGS
rm i/n 111/
OLKS LIKE THIS?

Band Concert Pro­
gram for Thursday

May We

1 WO Auction Sales

Had No Option

901 N. Main.
Main,
Otto Deeds of Nashville was
MRS. CORA ALLERDING.
Charlotte. Michigan.
Because of ill health. Mrs. Cora brought before Judge McPeek on
Monday
for -------------sentence. —
He -----had preAlierdlng te obliged to discontinue---------, —
farming, so will have an auction sale | vlously confessed his guilt of taking DUCK SEASON OPENS OCT. 10.
The duck season for this fall has
at her farm, located a half mile. Indecent liberties with a slx-year old i
west and one and one-half miles i Ktrl. The records proved that this been fixed from October 10 to No­
north of Carlton Center. The sale
hte fourth conviction of felony, vember 8. The restrictions for shoot­
begins at one o’clock with Dewey j He had previously served terms at ing ducks will be as rigid as last
Reed as auctioneer. Included In the Ionia. Jackson and In the Colorado year. 14 will be wise for those who
list arc 3 horses. 3 cows. bull. 50 jstntc prison. Under the Michigan plan duck hunting to get acquaint­
chickens, lot of farm tools and
Judge McPeek had no option ed with the requirements of the
household goods, besides 8 tons Of । but to give Deeds a life sentence. He federal law.
clover and alfalfa hay. See the adv. accordingly was sent to Jackson for
A report on progress in the Dionne
on another page for full particulars., tha rest ot his natural life. He is
nursery says the girls are acquiring
------' unfit to live tn a civilized communBOOK STORE NOTICE.
j| ity. Ui
illy U
but it
it XCJLS
seems i
a pily
to Ui
tax ~~
the Judgment of their own. Look out any
The Hastings
Public Schools' j people to support him for the rest day for a three-to-two decision.—
■
^Bookstore will be open every day j ot his days. He should be comjfelled Portland Oregonian.
except Saturdays for the next two &gt; to work and earn his keep,
weeks beginning Monday. August 24.
ee »
BASEBALL GAME.
from 8 to 12 A- M . and from 1 to 5
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKEDowling vs. Stanley Comers Bun­
P. M Store closed on Labor. Day.—
Delton. Bat, Eve, Eckler's Orch day, Vickery’s landing. Clear lake.
Ad».
I-Adv. tf.

about
. ,, ~~
Z
.
. 1 The
The children
children have constructed an 1 devoting their efforts to bankrobabout their
their Middleville
Middleville performance.
performance, I ».
Mr. and Mrs. Roy E&amp;senburg. who
and he had telephoned Deputy Sher­ j reside at 721 W Walnut street. Mr. ostrich, elephant, giraffe, boa-con.- bers. It is expected that they will be
robbers as
stricter, cages, etc., and have put. as- successful
------- with
— bank
——----------------iff K tire her at Freeport. The latter
: Essen burg, who has grown up In on two parades and are planning lh7, ^'re,.been wt,lh kWnB.pp75.
nabbed the pair as they were leavins the'preerinft
d th® furniture Industry, comes from some further stunts. Animals to be
G-Men are retenUeas in their
num sulfate dissolved in
WMIcjmb
or3.nb.uon in given away as prizes.
pursuit of criminals. They do “gat
he first compelled them to restore,
ralt solution.
Grand Rapids to fill the position of
During the summer several hikes thelf ®an-"
11,15 &lt;acl ,thBt,hV
the money to the proprietor.
"While nred
| finishing foreman, at the Hastings have
1M„V been taken
MUkra, and many articles ;-------made them such a terror te crlml__________
___ Handcraft
.4__ a__ &gt;. I. ITIa ' .
IMPORTANT TO
TO VOTERS.
VOTERS.
i Table company. He was .E
r-----’ly , have Ibe
rev,-lo??
«n n&gt;*de ■_
In the
_____
IMPORTANT
The last day for registration of | wlth the Luce fwtery. Al
Reinecke Tv."
te a -TTS7
good speaker.
Ml-------------ot Mrs. classes. A Vacation Reading Club 1 Mr. ~'T7
any voter who has not already reg- i Essenburg's brothers are
B likewise has been organized and to date 75 I anrt W1U “P^ ‘h® work
will
tetered will be Saturday. September ' connected with furniture.
function In promyelitis
­
books have been read and reported "G-Man" and their funcUa
5 next. This applies to tha primary । Mr and M” Ewenburg have five on.
tecting society from criminals. It this summer.
election which will ba held Tuesday daughters ranging In age from Miss
This la all a part of the WPA will be a most Interesting address.
September 18. No voter can vote at Ada- lh® elde5‘ at thc group, to County Recreation program.
the primary election unless he Is Marian. 15. who enters High school
registered. September 8 te tha very thU /B,L Mr' E^nburg pnjoys fish­
AXNOUNOUaNT.
last day for registration
I lnS *0*1 &gt;* pleased to find that Has-1 . am a candidate for sheriff on.
---------------------- 2---------tings te surrounded with so many the Democrat ticket i am strong
CARLTON CENTER--------------------------- well stocked lakes.
and rugged and young enough to
SCHOOL REUNION., In Grand Rapjtte
Rapids the Essenburg's jI handle tha
the duties of this,
this. .at times.
Thurs.. Aug. 27. at school grounds were affiliated with Calvary Unde- most strenuous office In a w
Pot luck dinner. Bring table service, nominations church. Rev. m R De- [ factory manner. George H.
—Adv.
Hahn minister.
'Adv.

�the

iTiNoa

bannek. iectmut, acoott m, im

LOCAL NEWS

Rinso
18c
Large Pkg.

SUGAR
IO lb- 52c
Libby** Red

Armour**

Vacation Land

Salmon

CORNED
BEEF

COFFEE

Tall Cans, Each

I Lb. Con, Each

23c

17c

- 17c
49c

3 Lba.

Bread 2 lb-Lo,t

,,ch 10c

Block Salt
each 35c
Pillsbury or Gold Medal Flour ,^k *1.09
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes

10c

2 »«• 9c

Sun Brite Cleanser

Scouring Pads
-o-"**
Soap Chips ci.anqu&gt;ck

5

Soda Crackers

2 »• b« 15c

Liberty mi

Candy Bars
3 b*ri lOc

Van Camp's

PORK &amp;

BEANS

GUM
3
lOc

3 t^.25c

•* 5c
5 u». 27c

SUPER
SUDS
Giant Bexai, Each

I6c

Ulchtevi Bao*r Hock nnulwpM I
OWuwr la
»n h Ul. WWl naw-oooa lallar. nl^l&gt; tt»ia »» «Pf»nd
For Reni—Larta home auluMa f-nnoek hoapttal on w
lor throa aporunanu. u»l«n4W lockMikl MklkWUC UaUBl
tion on pared itreet; oak floor*, fire th* 8lat« Normal. Ypi

hav* you
ce instead

lyiteD. tiled baths: win do soma re- * and Mrs. McPeek for several days. borrowed by

DIES AS RESULT OF
ACCIDENT TUESDAY
Slohird *napao&lt;h Shot Socldaatally Whan
Fall

With a SUIs
fiweet com of pie super variety
other neighbor and aometim** a
tract office. Hasting*- Michigan —
The annual reunion of lh« formsr third. It *brne* back w«m on*, lack­
scarce oa the soarkal thia year.
pupita of th* Freeport school will be ing in pages ar taw lata for my we*.- resulting tn th* death of a young
Mrs. John Rogen Is still confined Adv.
Mrs Ethan K!dd«r underwent a held an Thursday. Aug. TT at th* Don't blame her for getting pe*vad, man. Richard Anapaugh. ag»d 18. of
serious operation at Criape hospital home of Mr. and Mrs Frank Yarg- do you* And It coeU a fraction laa* near Woodland.
ness.
In Plainwell last w**k and is making er northeaat of Freeport. A pl*nl« than two cants a week to hav* th*
A* related to the Banner reporter.
apartment Ln her home lo Mr. and a good recovery Her daughter. Miss dinner will be aerved.—Adv.
Banner delivered right in your mall Richard had a 23 rifle with which he
Juanita Kidder. I* a nurse al Crlspe
Mrs. Roy Gamer.
The county clerk will hold a
Mr*. Monroe Leach I* recovering hospital and is assisting with her sciwol of instruction for election
nicely from a recent operation at
officers some day th* last of thia ' Our nomination for Harting*' the gun discharged accidentally, the
Fennock hospital.
Aaron Lindley, of crown Point, month or early in September He worst public nuisance—lhe neigh­ shot hitting him under the chin and
Labor Day falls on 8«p&lt; 7. this Ind., wa* a Hasting* visitor Monday, will send out notice* to election of- bor* radio that la turned on early
in the morning and allowed to blare rushed lo Pennock hospital where
year. Tnurbi travel begins to de­ Crown point achieved *om«thing of ficer* previous to that time,
full blast UU after midnight Dtd
an unenviable reputation » !cw
|e of
cline steadily after that date.
Rev w
w. H
H Jopp
Jopple
of BunUpa&lt;
Burn Ips. for
for-.
City fire truck driver. Everett years ago when th* bandit. Dillinger. merly
oI
Radical U B
made id* escape from prison by ctiuich here, has been chosen di*- othera might tire of lhe noise and Anspauah.
' vacation by th* council at th*lr mean, supposed to be quertionabU
aupcrln'Un(ltnt of
PU^im
had been
&gt; meeting Friday night
Up to Saturday night City Engl- l&lt;ollne- A**ociatlon and will have might like to hav* tha pleasure ot funeral krrangements
। selecting their own radio prognun mad*.
I Register of Deeds Earl Boyes 1* nrer apark* had. with hl* crew.
headquarter* al Owoaao
I without having to listen to *heir
making a splendid recovery from hi*
j recent operation at Pennock bos- Em He expert to Tuild three I H1«h
Harting, foe a 1 folk, who hav* to work th* n*xt STATE'S RECEIPTS FAR
pit al. which 1* good news to all.
mile* of bUck*top paving thLs year; ,ew ^Tt last week. Maurice U now day would appreciate a few hour*
i Harry Wslldorff Ls up from Wall
EXCEED ITS EXPENSES
i lake on the Job at the Walldorf! but that 1* conditional upon lhe 4 special field representative of a of quiet before midnight Think it
l*nre sewing machine company oyer.
j store for a few days during the abThr Mirhtnn Htat* Digest names
..‘57lA?r?Jnc,udln* moa‘ °* I The new* of Mr*. Mabel Ctarkt Paid AU Expensea for Fiscal
| sence of Dan Walldorff In Ohio.
The Michigan Blate Digest names [he Unlud 8uJ^
•
"
Year and Had |B,BOO,I Seventy-five young
pheasant* judge R. R McPeek a* on* of three
resignation from our city school
rho graduated system 1* a cause of general regret.
have been planted In Barry county ouUlate men most likely to be conwT
000 Over
this season, also 100 breeder, These sldered in lhe event of another *u,*****; ■Cho°1 tr. the Mrs Clark came here 17 year* ago
Some time ago Governor FHzgerother two
J!3?:■
come from the slate farm near Ma­ preme
prenie court
court vacancy
vacancy The
sne omer
two
- J?.
— at
—.lhe
---- —
~
■—■***,
8h* possessed the
th* for- ald •
th&gt;l- (or lh* **** ending
son
mentioned
were John Dunham, f1"
minutes Saturday and ty
Normal.
She
“------------------- —
I July i. i*jg. th* State of Michigan
------------------' Tlie council Friday evening grant- leading Grand Rapids attorney, and squired after old friends hare, tunate characteristics of heart and
only been able to pay all tu
1
' ed * beer license to Glenn Perkins, former judge c E White of Nile*. Ujree 4 no,,r ,n lhe hisurance bual- mind, coupled with a charming per- i| had not
sonaniy. that
mat made
maae her
ner Die
me ideal
iaeai one
one ,' runn
running expense*, but there has
ss.. ,,
nr.r. n.rrimn nesa in Kalamazoo
sonality.
। who conduct* a restaurant tn th*
Friends
of Mr.
Mrs °r?"
Grace Garrison
. eointrj
__________nolnd
__ .... . ....
...
KM ot
““T"
A
th. ...
tol- ...
for the position
and...
*he ha* .been ,I
received *5,5*4.044 more than
former Shamrock location on Jeffer­
ot Ann Arbor »IU &gt;« ple.»a |o,.,
, lQr---- — b. largely responxlble for the Normal'* ।the
__
*'•
expenses
fiscal
------e
.
x
p&lt;nae
?J“ for the
J11"
1
son Stto learn that she Is resuming her - Krjber t - - A few day* later State Treas­
*ar 4
The fire alarm Thursday afler- residence in Hastings after an ab- ‘ w tMlle rho had stopped his paper fine standing and continued success. vyear.
a "
nearby
and ™»
had
noon wa* due to a gras* fire near
“
c‘uu’ Udaily
*UJ ,uu
“ ■ She ha* become such a part of the urer Theodore I. Fry. a democrat,
* the BJIk* factory. That Friday aft^2 sln&lt;* r«&lt;* hbl neighbors weekly: big Institution on lhe hill that disputed thia claim and said that
of Mrs. 1710*. Sullivanto
on I ' p,&lt;,45e Prln‘ the enclosed obituary
. noon was a gra-u fire on North apartment
“*^,^.,&lt;2-./
something will seem lacking for a the state was about *433.000 poorer
a Rrnariwav
8
Broadway and will move
more her ol
BHnl. aa,a aena me a iew cop­
I Broadway
long time without her presence.
Bond, twre »l&gt;»ut the middle ot
OT1 „ TOJ, „Jlhlng w h.,.e\ Mrs Clark has left an impress on Naturally this brought the governI Kellar Stem of this city ha* been
I notice in that I have some nice the many young men and women nor and state treasurer into an un­
named a* one of the grand jurors September
We beg leave lo call the attention puppies for sale?"
i in lhe federal district court, which
who have trained for teaching un­ pleasant situation which could only
a publication of interest to the oil der her that, with few exceptions. be settled by having the books of
! will convene In Grand Rapids in of our esteemed contemporary to
; the fact that we have yet to see and gas Industry of Michigan Is , has sent them out splendidly equlp- the staja carefully audited. The gov­
j September
that
charming
young
woman's
name
now
ready
for
distribution
by
the
ped and with higher ideal* and ernor demanded such an audit.
The Bullis and Little Brick schools
columns.
Department wa
of vvi
Conservation.
character ssrenguicnea
strengthened to
to pas*
pas* oa
oa That was made and while It revealed
‘are the first of lhe rural school* to. spelled correctly in -their
—•»—
—*
- ................
.mm.umu, The
lltc 1ciuuacwr
" -d rh
- - to their
___________
____ of till*
-. . same
that the cash balance in the hands
open. They start next Monday, the We are sure lh*
she 0-111
will back &lt;1*
us In
tn tav.
say- I1 Geology nf
of .hr
the Crystal Oil —and
Oa*
pupils some
of the state treasurer was less tlian
1 24th. AU other rural school* will be- ing her name is already too long Field." The bulletin was written by teaching. Evart High school is for1 gin Aug 31
। without adding that extra "t" or Gerald E. Eddy, petroleum geolo- (tunate In having aecured Mr*.
‘ Elmer While,
enterprising
«ny other
gist of the Geology Division. Depart- Clark as principal. Happy days in had claimed, yet the slate had paid
lhe
.. letter.
press salesman. Ls one of the most , Our Southwest Carlton * corres- ment of Conservation, and Is avail- , her new position ia the wish of her expenses accrued In former year*,
loyal booster* of the Barry rountv pondent mention* this week lhe di*- “blc •’ * charge of 35 cents per • many friends and pupils here, and such as principal and intcrerton lhe
state's bonds, which were not ex­
1 fair and has purchased membership covery by two men In their neigh- fopy to help defray costs of publl- may she return often to *eo ual
penses Incurred during the fiscal
borhood. of • seven-point set of elk cation and mailing
ticket number one
We noticed recently In th* Mid­ year, so that the governor's claim
, Frederick Rehor eu at Indian horns with a 7 or 7 1-2 foot sprrad. ' People th the southwestern part
land
Republican
that
a
Mr*.
Guy
was fully vindicated that the alate
I Orove. Thomapple river Monday In­ They were engaged In cleaning out of the county and those near lhe
Zimmerman,
of
Sac
City.
la..
had not only paid Ils expenses for
structing Junior In the manly art ot a ditch near the river when they un- Allegan county line have been hav। -World's champion honeahoe pltch- the year, but had received *5,500,000
of thrills with the battle
‘ angling. Fritz. it seems, still remem­ rovered them. It would seem a rare ‘mg lots *'
! bers his favorite haunts along th’ find, as elk had left Michigan long maneuvers and showing of Uncle ' er." was billed to give an exhibi­ more than Ha expenses.
Mr. Pry was very manly about It.
Sam's fighting land forces In Alie- tion match at their city. Mr*. ZtmThomapple
oefore tlie day of the white man.
■ Ran county. Bombing planes, num­ &gt; merman must be sailing under, false When the auditor produced the cor­
&lt;1 over
over Prairieville
rrameviue coto” ,or lh*
champion rect figures he promptly signed a
, bering 70. pawed
reek ~
to .
a .wdc..;
resident horsehoe pitcher- U Esther James statement, that lhe governor vm
1 one night last wt-k.
’
rea,aem|&lt;Mr*. Cha*.) who Uv» m Harting*
correct, and that the state's budget
; report*. Dust and heat have pre­
vented a lot of people from around and who won that right to the title was not only balanced for the year
here taking In the sight* of the big in open competition
_r-at th* nation­ ending July 1. 1038. but that Its re­
--------Moline.
JU..
Sep*.
3,
last
encampment
i “ m**‘ *l Mo1*"*•
ceipts were over *5.500.000 greater
J L Maus
came in
the in
office
££
in---- the
J U Mmu
came
uwTUe*omce 1luesLT
~~ mcwl than the cost of the state govern­
day to assure u* that the long looked- 1 “"*“*•** preliminary rounds ever ment for lhe year.
for -ateady rain" of thc morning
national meet when
wax nothing more or less than ' T*. *??£?**. ?** po*,Ua*B,Iut * P°*' GOOD PROSPECTS FOR
a celebration
slble
of 300.
hb natal
threw day
86 ringers
Just *'
—hU
14 con
™ ­ -------- ---- -- -------- ------------ GROWERS.
ONION
B0 odd years before. It* been lhe secutive double one*—all of which
Harvesting lias begun with some
vwimm
.. U.
custom
of J
j. U.S
L'* ism.o
family io
to PS5.
pax* out
out Tade worW recortj’ for women. Mr*, of the earlier varieties of onion-.
m their 7Plh year, and he believed
atn» acquiring the title, has Thia county will not have a bumper
his time had come last spring when ,rt&lt;1rd ?..fu.lur® contender for the crop but It will be a good one. with
he was dangerously ill for several j men
mer s’ title to the household,
hou*ehold. in the far better prices than were realized
■_ ____
.... .
.
. nerson of little P*rrv l.n.u
—
last year, which was a hard one on
that tradition he feels sure he l» sturdy four month* old baby, who onion growers. They had a good crop
nlong with four-year-old Evelyn, in Michigan but there were large
X headed for the centenary mark
a
Brainard Richards, son of the late may make a pair of champions in crops in other onion raising states,
New Mylex, new colnra
\ Ralzey B Richards, called at the the year* to come. Mrs James Is such a* New York. Ohio. Indiana.*
X Banner Saturday afternoon. This practicing daily now for the state Wisconsin. Minnesota and Califor­
nn«i keen low prices . . .
C was his first visit to the old home meet at Marquette next month, un- nia. The result was that the market
Bn u,
\ | tu.u
town since &gt;«.he c«»&gt;r
came ■«
n ,&lt;■•&lt;»
years »
ago
to *r tutelage of her husband, and is was flooded and the selling price
X bring
brlnr his father's
father'* body
hrdv here
h.r, Mr
for *o,n« stron«•" r-centty pitching did not cover the cost of production.
e burial In company with hl* wife 93 ringers out of a possible 100.
This year that will be different.
and four children he was on hi, 1--------- ------------------------------Michigan will have a fair crop, com­
»» way to the Richards family reunion,
"Mankind needs to hear the voice paratively speaking, while the yield
'J Sunday, near Cloverdale Bernard of God calling *11 nation* to turn in New York. Ohio. Indiana. Wis­
has three girls, two of whom are away from strife and pursue the consin and Minnesota will be wery
twin*, and * boy Their home is at I path of co-operation." -O. Lan*- । small. 80 there Ls every prospect of a
Duncan Fall*. Ohio, near Zanesville. । bury.
fair price for Michigan onions.

Waters Clothes Shop

FIRST SHOWING

FALL SWEATERS

$|79 *
I
to

PORTIS HATS
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
Thr popular Feather-

Bananas

17c

3

Firm Ripe

Sweet Potatoes

IF eights to wear now!

6 "&gt;»• 25c
2 '«r 15c

Head Lettuce
Oranges

2

BEAUTIFUL MEMORIALS
AT REASONABLE

Shower-proofed styles—

35c

to $

a

Others from 11.30 up

Meats At Low Cost

•

Round, Sirloin or Swiss Steak

Kingnut Oleo
Strictly Fresh Eggs
Chickens Fancy Springers
Pork Loin Roast
Vinegar Pure Cider

ii

&gt;» 20c

■ _

Rib End

lb.
geilen

. _

Pure wools pleated

2 »»• 25c
» 18c
lb. 25c

.

...

fronts,

extension

band'- . . . ehecks

waist

and

plaid.-, medium and dark
colors.

In the selection of o suitable Memorial the design is

of first importance. We have had years of experience in
designing which enable us to create for you on original
design thot will have lasting satisfaction.

a

We hove also had many years of successful experience

in producing fine Monuments . . . have built up a wide
reputation for excellent service, ond invite your consid­
eration with confidence in our ability to fully please you.
Wl SOLICIT YOUA FATAONAGI

21c
19c

Food Center

J IB._________________________

SLACKS

Only the finest materials and workmanship will go

into it.

a

SCHOOL

» 20c
*• 10c

No matter how large or small the Memorial you select

may be, we will make it truly Beautiful.

a

Corned Beef
Rib Boiling Beef

PRICES

te

WATERS
CLOTHES SHOP
SELLING QUALITY KEEPS US BUSY

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
ESTABLISHID 1907

HASTINGS. MICH.

• Wa ere thc only authorized dealer for this couaty for the ROCK OF AGIS

CHAN IT! . . . TRADl MARK CUT o« ALL MONUMINTS aM MAR KI KJ!

�TOT HATING* BANOTfc, TITORfDAY ACQUIT 36 Utt
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.

Hastings Defeated
Dowling Sunday}

and Mrs. Edwin U Taylor, 712 S
Jtflerson 8k
Orville Mater. Nashville. on Aug- 18.!

Thc Hastings Independents de­ Howard BLngman, Naahvlllc. Route 1
feated Dowling al Vickery’s landing. 3 on Aug. 19.
Clear lake Bunday, by the lune of
DEATH OF SAM PALMER.
16 to 9. Bert O’Donnell started
Sam Palmer died on Tuesday aft­
on tlie mound for Hastings and held
the lake boys pretty well in check ernoon at hi* home at Morgan. He
until the sixth Inning when tOUT
he \1 May£
;,7 LTJ.””. H
tuhlU and as many Tuns. Fr^n re- •
™
placed him at this point and retired
“
n
within* I
the side without any further dam­
age and held the Dowling aggrega- Urment ln Rlve«ld6 cemetery.

tion to three hits and one run In
the last three frames
Summary:

Hastings ..

&lt;J. B. PASTORS NAMED.
I
At the Michigan conference of'

the United Brethren church held at
- - - ----------- Sunfield
the following pastoral as- j

Dowling . .
Batteries:
Hastings:
O'Donnell. Freeman
and Moore. Dowling; Bnsndt. Stan­
ton and Keller. Matteson
Batting averages to date
B O'Donnell
464
Miller
431
Young
425
Co vtlk
370
James
333
Rose
....................
357
Hoevemdr
320
C. O’Donnell
....292
Moore ..
.
. 290
Hackney
...
.350
Varney
.211
Freeman
166
Smith.........................
. .000
Team average 335

signmenu of interest to Banner
reader* were announced Monday
night: Baltimore. Edward Gamble;
Cascora. Kennard Schalbly; Conw«y, paul Olmstead; Charlotte. F P.
and Mabel Nagel; Dutton. H. R.
Pfeiffer; Freeport. J. I. Batdorfl;
Hastings. Roy Houghton;
Lake
Odessa. R. A. Hoffman: Salem. F.
W. Moxon; Woodbury. E Wheeler.
Woodland. E B and A. A. Griffin,
' Rev. D H. Garrick of Woodland was
elected presiding elder.

|
,
,
j
.
i
I
j

Starting Friday, Aug. 21st
New/ Girls’ Tub

OBITUARY.
Nettie Cross was born April SO. ’
I860. In Ohio, daughter of Lev) and
Rachel Cross She came to Mlchlgsn i
I when 12 years of age. She was unit- |
■ ed In marriage to Edmond Lewis.:
Oct. 12. 1886 One daughter was:
THEY WILL REMEMBER
.,
■ bom to this union,
Nellie E Foote. |
SATURDAY.; wfo0 passed away Nov. 12. 1913. She
The Nashville fire department will leaves to mourn her-toM. the hus- 1
long ”remember 1-..
last *&gt;aiurday.
Saturday. They pand; one granddaughter. Mrs John
were called out before daylight that I venemti; two sisters. Mrs
W O. |
morning to fight a blaze
teon
on theTru-lp
the Tru-;Plcr
lcrfe
ce and Mrs. Ida Momd
Morrel of,
ol ,
man J. Navue farm, a mile south of | puinwell; one brother Geo. Cross 1
ri.. village.
the
«hi
The barn —
was
- struck
.to«u.k by
u.. 1, Ceresco, a number of nieces and
lightning and was a total loss. Thc nephews and a host of friends. Fu- :
building and contents were valued at neral services were held Thursday 1
83.000. A straw stack on lhe Mar- ,nt 2 P. M- In the Orangeville church.,
shall farm in Maple Grove was also the Rev Harold Hamilton officiating
hit by lightning. This smouldered .with interment In Oak Hill cetnefor several hours, so the firemen
had lo watch carefully lo keep it
from spreading. Altogether they put
In sixteen hours on Saturday, and
succeeding In saving much property.

HATS for GIRLS
For first school days! Vat,
dyed percales in prints and
in popular, plain colors.
Short and long sleeves. Buy
several styles—they're the
ones girls love! Sizes 1-14.

98'

Sunny
Tuckertl

Good Looking
Rayon

New faits In Bretons, off-theface styles, chin straps and
other models. Fall colors.

Loose-Leaf BINDER

- lasting
y weight
a i II u c r i n a i
holds n generous number of

n ;

J

r/

prints and plains. 1 to 16 yrs.

Townsend plan mass meeting on |
1the Hastings fair grounds on Sun­
1day August 23. 10 A M to 10 P M '
:Many speakers Basket dinner at
1noon.

GIRLS’ HOSE
Sturdy, Long
Wearing

Ml

The regular meeting of the Pe,
lunla Circle will be held Thursday
(
afternoon
at the home of Mrs.
1
Druls on East Madison street.

Brush Ridge Cemetery Circle will
,meet with Mrs Pearl Hull Yhurs- ।
(
day.
Aug 27 Picnic dinner Every­
(one welcome.
"The stock market should be and ,
1
can
be run as honestly as a vegc- :
1table market
Henry Ford

dark tan. black.
Sizes 5-0*.*.

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HIP SKIRTS

98

Flannels,

and

tweeds

plaids'

SLIPOVERS

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STREAMLINED

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Minty
popular

colon

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J. C. P.
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Of

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colors. !
to 10’4.

stitching. Steel
buttons. Cut full
for comfort I

r
toys' Oxhide

Well made of durable, )&lt;a&gt;gwearing broadcloth. Three but­
ton yoke front. Elastic sides.

OVERALLS

79«

• GIFT

Also Complete Stock of Fancy Gift
Our famous Penco Brand can-,'
»as ihoes Odorless insole AirJ
cooled uptiers
" '

Wrappings, Paper, Seals, Ribbons

Halting!

DRUG STORE

Phone 2241

'Michigan

49c

Full cut. 2.20 blue denim. Tri­
ple stitched and bar-tack»d.
Parva buckles. They'll wear I

BOYS’ CAPS
Unbreakable
Vitors

Durable, practical, and packed
full of style I Side buckle straps,
wide cun bottoms! 7 to 16

Boys’ FALL TIES

Sportclad*
Knock-out value! Neat slipover*
for school wear. Slide fastener.
Sturdy ribbed stitch. 1 to It.

LONGIE SLACKS

Patterns

They

knot the

them. Fall pat­
tern* and colors
school wear.

For

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for School!

KNICKERS

98®
Oak Ridge fabrics .
looking as they aro
Fully lined. Knitted

School Wear Boyf Like “True Blue”

Dress Shirts
The New Gaucho Style!

SWEATERS
4-button collar with slide fast­
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Fast
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Fabrics that stand
Smart

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and Wear!
Sturdy socks —...
garter. New patterns. 7-10H.

1

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frfc

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A low price for this quality
black side leather. Durable com­
position sole. heel. Streamlined
stitching on vamp and quarter.

• SYMPATHY

Newett Stylet for Fall!

BLOUSES

Boys’ Shorts

SLACKS

• CONVALESCENT

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What a value! Black or brown
sida leather with matching pat­
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• BIRTHDAY

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High count percales,
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to

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nCEh’C
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PANTIES

Organizations

MRS. BERT TINKLER
IN HOSPITAL.
Mrs. Sarah Tinkler, widow of the
late Bert Tinkler, met with a painful accident early Saturday morning she was -visiting at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Tinkler of
East Grand Rapids. She fell down a
stairway, breaking a couple of ribs.
also a piece from her collar bone
and was badly bruised about her
chest and shoulders, she was taken
to Blodgett hospital where she now
is and. notwithstanding the fact
that she Is past 80. the doctor belleves she will make a good recovery
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Tinkler are
seeing lo It that she has every posslble attention and the best of care

Wash-fast. 36'

BOYS’

�The Hastings Banner

THE COUNTY
ME AT HOME

THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1936

A PAGE OF. EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

GS. MICHIGAN

’Round About Town
Hew to the line, let the quips
DISGRACE!

We

are reproducing .herewith a
which was written to Muri De­
adlier of the charlotte Re pub-Tribune, and is also mentioned

has the reputation of being the Ar­
kansas "cotton king." 8475.287.00
This company is charged with hav­
ing thrown hundreds of tenant fam­
ilies on relief.

August 4. 1935. my wife and I
Exactly 234 individual sugar con­
ed In our neighboring city of tracts in Louisiana brought the
with our benne trailer to owners a total of 83.023.823 00. or an
gas station where the tour- average of more than 810.000 each.
Mr. Wallace was not required to re-1
OUjer and said "Do you know where quired to report contracts smaller
th^ tourist camp is?" One said. "I than this.
guAu on the fair grounds." So we
In Hawaii. 28 sugar companies re­
Mrs in on lhe fair grounds and ceived a total of 812.376.775 00. or nn
prepared to park for the night. Soon, average of 8442.028 00 each. Other I

a man came and said. "Get going, contracts in Hawaii paid the holders

we don't allow tourists here." I asked from 8148.018 00 on down. A similar

aaiR that Is where the hobos camp.
We|have that place for them. Then

officer, who was very obliging
his car and drove miles looktn&lt; for a private place for us to

ou( to the dty limits and found a
place by the side of the road. Thc
ofifcer said. “1 have just such things
as ihis every day." It seems to me

situation exists in Porto Rico where;
Secretary of Agriculture Wallace
paid out tremendous sums to sugar
firms under the AAA.
Mr. Wallace was very reluctant to
release these statistics and one can :
readily understand why.
Who Is it that pays these big cor­
porations and growers for not pro­
ducing; for cutting production to
such an extent that, tn more than '
one
Instance, tenants were thrown
।
on
the welfare? The government?
&lt;
No. not lhe government at all. It is
the consumer who pays for this
wastefulness: who contributes to the
coffers of these firms and who help*
to support the tenants they threw

that Hastings should put a sign on
Don't think for a minute that the
sadh entrance to the town, "tourlad keep away, not wanted here, or government can give anything It i
can distribute bounties only as R
. .
something of that nature ”
collect* and when It comes to makI. D Townsend.
in, station, w. .11 pay «llh.r dl-What Others S.1V
rectly or indirectly—but the point l*
Ir/lul lyi/lLfh OU)
Charlotte. Michigan.

VicWS 0)10 Opinions',

Mr. ID Townsend was very lol•raiit. we believe, net to expre-*

WE DO PAY There is no myth or
'.upposlUon about that.
,
MICHIGAN SCHOOLS
Wrate h™ mu-y Urmcr. I.-, ,.
Barry county received such a break llMj
llOt K, t an education, eithar
a* these cotton and sugar growers? In school or out. .Its laigcly your own
That British Company down In Ml.*- [•»«»». for Michigan offers unusual

Huge pointed remarks about the
bo*llallty of this city than lie did.
Ceftainly It 1* a slip tn the face for
* tourist to be ordered on like an
ordinary tramp. Such an incident sisrippL for example, probablv resnd 9- are
gives such visitor* a wrong impres- eelred about three times as much pri(VPil hleh
alon of our community and the from th* AAA a* all Barry county agricultural schools; and in addition
j to these there are six colleges and
friendly people here; Incidentally, farmers combined.
. two universities that arc publicly
loo, it Is the worst possible advert!’supported, and 23 colleges that arc
CIVIL SERVICE
[ not publicly supported. Most of the
Ing we could get. I! this city delib­
Seventy-five thousand new agon- latter group are supported by
erately set about discouraging th-.- I tics have been added by the federal :| churches,
which have always been
toirtst business here, it couldn't do
government aince IB33 and of the.*c 1 »&gt; th«- forefront of educational
•nothing more effective than to‘. only twenty nave been dueominurd •
“n
,hMii,24S public
duplicate the treatment of Mr.
.
,
.
libraries and *&gt;x county l.branu. to—several xs the result of supreme ([-dher with a state library that can
Townsend.
roust decisions. There are now 824 -1 fumlsh you books on any subject
There are plenty of attractive.
259 persons on thc civilian -payroll: yoD*,wtsh to study. With all these
toufUt camp sites Inside the city »l the smrnment. net IneM.r J
limits and it should not be beyond .
”,
,
.
.
। should all be fairly well educated —
thc several thousand employed tn I w H 3^,-. caMopolis Vlgttan'..
lhe. means of this city to provide
the judicial and legislative branches I
-----------Thi* U the highest pence time pay- ; HONOR ENOUGH FOR
The officer in question, we believe,
roll on record and has been exceed ?.'
TWO GOVERNORS
deserves plenty of credit for making
In lMJ llw sUtc ot Mlchican was
the best of a disagreeable situation only by thc war time oeak of 317.670 in 1918 These new bureau* have in lhe red" to the tunc of six milHls courteous action
evidently
filled al) of lhe regular office build-1 Hons of dollars The other day in his
helped, in part, to make up (or the
coo! treatment (or worse) which Mr
such quarter*. ■« theaters, hotel* | the
now hx, a balance of four
Townsend received
Incidentally, too. tt might be well and private residences to house lhe i millions and that the big deficit had
overflow Nearly half of these new all been paid
for the city to have some one avail­
Two
governor* should share *tn
agencies have been set up on a per- 1 T
*° 8wrern
able al the fair grounds who can tell
the glory of this really splendid
.
,
- achievement, the present governor
tourists tn a courteous manner that mar.ent teuls.
During
the
period
from
1015
«’. and former governor. Wm A Comcamping U not allowed there To tht
-tock. And Governor Fitzgerald was
best of our knowledge there are no 1930 which covered the World war
frank and sincere enough to
signs prominently displayed telling । and the expansion and collapse
that the fair ground.* are not avail­ which resulted, .only 33 new perable for camping Visitors cant be
exjwted u&gt; guc*« the right answer New Deal hav just about equalled
and they have a right to expect this'record tn 3 1-3 years.
In 1»33 about 80 per rer.i
more jcivtl language than that which
U customarily used on tramps.

HELPING WHAT FARMER’
Who have been lhe big ben*ficigriea from the AAA? New Dealers patronage and th* poU
would have you believe that the avyears .under thc
When this question was investigated regime at the e
Unofilmi
by * committee of congressmen. partisan civil t
Wailace at- computation to date tn 1935 :nrftcates that civil service appointment
ret. ff one member of the commit • have dropped further to only •'&gt;:

Credit forepat tng otT the bur debt
and for having a fine balance on
hand now should go to gov Fttrpromised to co on a pay a* you co"
plan end he has been honest enough
,ind courageous enough go keep tits
promise With money coming in

&gt;y a« :t has be. n spent in other
places, but out governor "made a lot
of enemies by navuig the trrit and
the sheer bravery, to turn down the
tee had not been Senator Arthur 11.
hundreds
jf clamoring requests tor
Civil
service
really
commenced
in
Vandenberg, he might have suc­
monev H"&gt;w many are there who
ceeded
r- ally think that the kindly, oraHerewith are a few of th* farmh.ai1
s'ia««tRitcd bv * rti&lt;m'1 who have profited in a bounti- •PP‘&lt;!nted office
-ocH-r Uniter
our next governor, would have sat
lul manner from the AAA
President Chester Arthur
a■ cn the treasury lid as faithfully and
•'rruly is ha* Governor. Frank D
Hawaiian Commercial and Sugar ouUet
existence of the com- Fitzgerald’ - Schuyler
Marshall.
mlssion. 10 per cent of thc civilian
Co . 81.022.037 00
; Clinton County Republican-News.
Penitentiary federal office* were filled by comLouhlan*
State
•144.1244)0 for not growing sugar P^Uve exammation; under Theo- of 57 per cent.
cane.
;dore Roosevelt 51 per c*nt; under
Recently It i* true, the admint’Arkansas Board of Penal Ins'.i- Woodrow Wiboq. 57 per cent, unde:
Uition*. 833.520 00 for not growing President Coolidge- "1 per cent: un­ putting more jobs under the civil
cotton.
der President Hoover. 80 per cent service classification. Whether cr
Miuisrippt State
Penitenttan. Thb civil service trend ha* thus not this t» merely a pre-election
b»en steadily upward until thc gesture to help q-:l
•155.054 00 for not growing cotton
~
“
administration
Texas stole prison. 857J34D0 for Roosevelt
adminiMra'.wn gained
gained mains
mains io
to L-c
be *e-n
-c-n. The manner of
hot growing cotton.
jcontrol in 1932.
^handling thc po--t:r.i-.?er appoint-1
Prudential Life Insurance Com-1
pany. B23J67U0 (or not growing cot■

Dolta ptna and Land Co, a BRITH-OWNED company operating tn

UriMlppl. 8318JB7M. for restrict| Mttcn production.
Lae Wilson it Company, which

The drouth of IBM in thia stats
will probably outdo that of UM. It
i western counties tn lower Michigan
pasture conditions, which serve as
an indicator of relative dryness,
dropped from 53 per cant on July 1,

U. 8. Sugar Corporation of Flori­
da. 8783.038.00.
The South Coast Col 8372.646 00
of this community who are
Um impression that tourist for restricting sugar production.
means something to Hastings.
Realty Operators, fnc.. 8298.577 00
letter follows:
for sugar restriction.
August 5. 1936
Oodchaux Sugar company. 8219.­
Editor:
633 00.

hiii where It would be possible to
find a place and he told me aopiewhere up the river. On my way to
th* place I stopped to see the
pug-or. Like our president, he was in
pursuit of the finny tribe, so I saw
tM officer on duty and asked him
abiut this camp on the river, he

I CROP CONDITIONS
ABOUT LIKE UM.

nTriflM n
11 h EUBB ton WRTWI 11
POCKETFUL OF DESTINY

gust 1. This compare! with 28 per
cent on the corresponding dale tn
1834 But tha first 14 days of Au­ Tory. Hr. Hunt, in Traun
gust this year, no doubt reduced th* Cnl. Johann Guttllaf Kali and hit
percentage to very cloaa to, If not HenI in officer! ware celebrating
below that in 1B34. What may hap­
pen hereafter will depend upon the
knocking
the door. On the Pennrainfall from now on
The wheal crop this year I* equal
Understand that if Zip Thompaon to lhe ten year average and better Washington's “rebel antiy" launch­
ever start! sleuthing about again ' than it was In 1B34.
.
ing boats in tha leo-ehokad river.
for an angle worm or so he is going !
*
* '
*
Denied admittance hy nail's ne­
to look In his own garage FIRST!
jured by heat and drouth but yields gro slave., the Tory haailly scrib­
reported so far are better than a bled a nute of warning. The blearyIs that a dirty chuckle I hear
eyed cnlnne) glanced at the scrap
Tlie com crop is very spotted. of i»aper and saw tt wan Written
from the sidelines. George!
Some fields made a good start in the
A "penny” for your thought*, fel- spring and have withstood the
drouth remarkably well, some areas
of lhe state have been favored with ■luffed II Inm hl* wniatcnat pock'» nomination for the rain, but as a whole It has been
Hastings Hall of Eligible Bachelors hurt severely. The August 1 conThree hour* later Washington
—Mel Jacobs, efficient young clerk
at the Peldpausch Market who will compared with 82 per cent a year and his Continentals stormed Into
be gobbled up one of these days If ago and 57 per cent on the cor­ Trenton. The sleepy llquor-ltefiidresponding date Ln 1934
he Isn't careful.
dled Kall tried to rally his Hes­
The state's field bean crop con­
sians to stem the onslaught. Rut
ditions declined during July IB
Understand that "they” had Earl points and was 54 per cent on Au- tt was In vain. Hl- want down with
Coleman dropping dead lu his reark* gust 1.
two Imlleta In Ms body. They earone forenoon last week.
Potatoes showed a marked decline rl8d him Intn a ehurcb to die.
Out of Ms pocket fell a scrap
in condition during lhe month of
But Earl appeared al a noun July. Michigan seems to have the of paper. As he listened to what
luncheon to deny the rumor.
poorest outlook for potatoes of any was written nn It. he groaned, “If
of the potato growing stales, which 1 hnd.-Wad that at Mr. Hunt’a. I'd
; He said if it had been during that are Maine. Idaho. North Dakota. not be here.
He had held the
1 "hot spell" a few weeks ago. he Wisconsin, and New York.
destiny nf a nation In his |*»eket
Sugar beets have been hurt by
might have been willing to com­
and didn't know II F«r Washlngthe drouth, but favorable weather
ply.
conditions during the balance of the
and helped
How do things like that gel start­ season may make them produce a waning Pa I riot
higher yield titan the estimate of 7 them tn carry nn tn Anal success.
ed. 1 wonder?
tons per acre.
Tommy'll stack our "spreaders
First cuttings of hay were genernroundera” here against all comers. | ally good In quantity and quality.
HINDR CORNERS.
• , *
: The second cuttings were light and
M. w. Skidmore and son Ralph
attended the Skidmore reunion at
Wonder wh, X, mu&gt;s r«t.women; limited lo alfalfa.
A fair supply of all fall and win­ Oougtac lake south ot Battle Creek.
; insist on wearing pants?—Pardon
us! Is our face red—we mean* of ter fruits is Indicated. The quantity
Miss Susie Phillipa entertained a
will be leas than normal
I courae. trousers.
cousin. Mrs castle, of Elmira. O..
one day last week.
HOME LIGHTING
Mbs Margaret Moore accom­
, Even on bkmd and brunette and
CAN BE SCIENCE. panied the Misses McPharltn on a
Prevalence of much eyestrain and northern trip last week,
tlie need for wearing glasses is proof
Mrs. c. N. Tobias came home
of the Importance of lhe slogan Saturday night after spending two
THERE is a erraiive
• But lhe sight of them on the "Better Light for Better Bight." weeks with her son and daughter in
overly plump (there, that wa* dell­ suggests Miss Helen Noyes, exten­ Kalamaaoo.
reading as well as cre­
; calely put&gt; make* Tommy'* esthetic sion specialist In home economics
TWKNTY YEARS AGO
ative w riling.
Miss Susie Phillipa and Mrs. Vida
its on tne roan ' ’0111 *rltfw and
Ilk* a MW* at Michigan State College
Phillips nf Hastings vbkdd the
—Emerion.
between Hastings Wnd Freeport debacon ln “n over*y hot
When you buy a lamp lock for the latu-r's sister. Mrs John Houvener
। clarea that on a rdeent Sunday 476. &gt;ins pnn'
...
.....
..
tag which says -Compliance with I. of Augusta Sunday.
। motor cats paueTFon lhe highway
Th
. . .
, „,..h IE 8 Specifications.' The letters
Mrs Vlnnie Ream Boyd of Atlan­
: Miss Olga Beamer has resumed trlI^ , *
J. wLr iUnd for Illuminating Engineering ta. Ga.. spent Monday with Miss
| her former position a* manager of
” ‘{J}*
’“P1* Fre Ki r; society, which make* a careful test Susie Phillipa.
'the local Bril Telephone exchange n' Kltu on ‘hilaren* daj.
I of buJbt tnd shttdea
determine
Mrs. Dick Lancaster entertained
| during the absence of Miss Elric'
* * ’
1 which give beat results in amount of a sister from Prairieville last week.
; Steinke who is taking a fortnight'.* I But rven * P®rt hair ribbon ; light and ease for the eyes,
Mi*s Gertrude Phillips spent part
i vacation.
j couldn't, convince the gate attend-; -a coat of white paint on the in- of last week with cousins In Kala­
| A complete surprise was given anti ride of a dark lamp will do wonders mazoo.
l Mr.. A. Darling Saturday evening by '
* * *
•' for the eyes and incidentally save
Mr and Mrs. Floyd Tobias and
0LA
i her children, grandchildren, neigh-1 They tell me Lxirctta even tried you money by giving more light for daughter of Kalamazoo spent the
bor* and friends in honor of her । ha by talk.
'
t the electric energy burned. A shade
week end with hi* parents. Mr. and
[ birthday.
.
* * ’
I must give 75 per cent of lhe light Mr*. C. N. Tobla*. Marian remain­
MUacs Marguerite Hall and Mil-1 s*w a nonchalant old farmer I from the bulb through the shade ing to help her grandmother.
' dred Matioan were hostesses at a padding down the main street bare- before tt merits the 1. E. 8 tag " [ Relatives and friends of Mrs
I "The reflection of light is best1 Thelma Tobias Meyer, had a mis­
I party Tuesday evening tn honor of footed Tuesday.
n
ill of all. and ufl their guest. Miss Iva Beach, of
1 from light clored wall* and ceilings. cellaneous shower for her at the
Il of her*
Lucky Stiff! Tommy always did' By lhe use of bulbs of 100 to 150, home of her father. W. O. Tobias
I Charlotte.
like gnlng barefoot in the rain, but 1 watt* and a reflecting bowl, the' last Friday night. They presented
dignity forbid*
| lamp with a light shade give* maxi-. her with several beautiful gifts, and
THIRTY YEARS AGO
• • •
mum light In a room that has light | enjoyed a very pleasant evening.
। Jahn Dawson is employed in the
Hear Bob corkin* trips the light J wait' and ceiling. Sufficient light. They will reside in Centerville where
' Red Cross drug store as clerk
fantastic very well and wins prizes' with no bulb# In right is the recom- Mr. Meyer b a teacher in the High
, R. I Hendershott has let the and things, well! Well!
I school.
1 mendation of the I. E. 8."
fest British supUn*. IJ IS.
ccmtract lo E J Manning of KnlaFrank not only sells piston ring*' ‘‘Who hear* music, feels hi* toll-1
| mazoo to build his new double store
Keep your temper, the best re­
| on our main street
via advertising copy but radio.) and 1 lud® peopled at once.'—Browning. , venge Is Love—Anonymous.
! The Hastings LO O F. will give
i thc first dance in the new opera washers in person.
| house on Thursday evening. Aug
Nothing like versatility for an I
| 16. It will gtsT all lovers of the dance
! a ciuince to try the new floor.
advertising man. is there. Frankie? |

A Quotation

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

• • •

FORTY YEARS AGO
One ot thc members of the Health
j
A couple of woodland fanner.-. Unit is taking a pleasant vacation
; were arrested and fined last week I tt»i* week, they tell me. Conirciula. for allowing Canada thistles to 1 tions and smooth sailing. Army.
'
I grow on their farms.
farms
•• •• ••
I The Broadway sewer is being exBurr VanHouten.
vanwouicn. iney
Burr
they ten
tell m
me, 1*
tended to the schoolhouse ThLs 1* an expert deep sea fisherman.
I -omething that should have been 1
...
' done long ago.
He likes nothing better than to
The Sault ste Marie New* last take a big rod and reel and heavy
| week fairly bristled with the enter- line and give battle lo the husky
। prlsj of its able editor, the Hon lake trout off Northport Point.
Chase 8 oborn tn getting out an
। extra fine 14-page edition in honor
Ask him about the big one he
'T’HOSE two Saginaw. Mich., 'of
' of the comolctlon
completion of th* new anvgov-. hauled tn last week
i.nled for
~ men who were jailed
ernment lock at St. Marys falls
• • •
trying tn kiss women In thc . ship canal.
Even Ripley might not belter* it.
neighboring city of Alma may
Cash Vandcrlip of Woodland was
merely have been saluting their
bitten on the hand, by a spotted
Understand that Pete Bachelor
Alma maters.
' sdder last week, but prompt medl- and Bobbie Herrington; and Alf
| cat attention averted serious consc- William* and Jeanette Gardner
। quence-s.
slipped away to Indiana Bunday and
Mrs. Prank Hurd living near. gpt themselves married
radio stations. Well. Iha.t's one
way of taking care ot those I Freeport brought to our office Mon­
day a young turkey bom with four
If this thing keep.* up on such a
announcers.
.
legs, three eye* and two bfekbon-* wholesale scale. Tommy won't have
A curious thing about it was that any candidates left for hl* Hastings
It seems to us that the para­
chute jumper who landed on l two feel would carry itlin one direc-'. Hall. of Eligible , tBachelors — or
lion and lhe other two tn an op-1 Bachelorettes either,
an outdoor dance floor near
posite one.
|
• • •
Pittsburgh might have crashed
; I sec that Rose DeFoe
the .gate 'with a little more
I
FIFTY YEARS AGO
■ turned to our little city.
I Lost Thursday lhe worst fire ever
. • ••
Tom‘and Ray tell me that
Tlie African cheetah can run I known in Hastings *wept lhe town
great part of
bust- boy* are going in for lot* of color
103 feet a second. They don't •
1 destroying
------- .” ~amanufacturing
~~ It*
district. | this fall
nerd nuiie
1 ne*» and manufacturing
disti
th. u’s
as
■'.&gt;■••■•*■-0 .tn N...on

WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Any TWO Article! of This Famous
Toiletry for the price'of ONE !
Be wise and get your complete, line of Toilet
Articles, all beautiful new packages. Make love­
ly bridge prizes . . . something anyone would
be pleased to receive.
has

FACE POWDER
CLEANSING CREAM
VANISHING CREAM

BUTTERMILK CREAM
ROUGE

policemen “have big feet.’

If opportunity is responsible
for the new "knock knock” Lid.
we'd just as soon stay where

TOILET SALE

LIFSTICK
ALMOND LOTION
PERFUME
ASTRINGENT LO­
TION
TOILET WATER

EACH SILLS FOR 55c . ■ . ON

55c

nine golfer clad In shorts on the io-,
THIS
SALE ANY TWO FOR—
cal course, they tell glne
me. caused
manyF. H- Barlow
Works and
At Co.'s
Elevator. A call tor help had been of the dirot diggers to slice Into the
sent to Grand Rapids and Char­ rough.
. lotte and thetr trucks arrived tn
NEWS GLEANINGS.
flmllty of the Coffee shop, i see. Is .
' time to save the remainder of tht
The first two omnibuses ever seen business district. Men and women out nulling up a collection of,
in England were Introduced July 4 worked frantically removing good.-. trophy cups for the annual Beagle
Haste to meet an emergency can- ment at West Point r &gt; .;* not , 1829 They were built to carry 23 from other buildings In the vicinity Trials.
not be given as an excuse for shelv- reassuring, it is to be hoped, how- ] persons, all inside, and each bus was of the fire The loss ran into thouGood luck boy!
civil service For during lhe ad-' ever, that rock bottom has be*n 1 drawn by three bay horses.
- sands of dollars, some only partly
FRISCRIPTION DRUG STORE
------------- 'covered by insurance
ministration
of
Woodrov
Wilaon
?
reached
in
&lt;he
matter
of
&gt;ide.*ien.
ministration of Woodrov Wilson reached in the matter of sidc-step- '
Tommy thinks that Beagles art
A New York firm that makes
FbaU:er weight bustles only 2Sc al
when the number of federal employ- ping civil service and that from now
RHONE
2115
HASTINGS. MICH.
•well
little
animals,
too
■ business of compiling mailing Morse E. Nevtns'.
ee* reached an all time high, the,on mere and more appointments to lots. wUl for example rend you the
About 8550 has been raised for
Wish lhau ail people were as denames of 634 pickle rmaken for 83 the building of a parsonage by the
number of jobs Wild by civil w- ffldm! tet* maj &gt;_•midi cn the
?r a lut of 2046 Chine* laundries Catholic scctetj. Weik will be It gun irtndabE and fritndlj a« a good
ice was raised to a new high lev el buu of merit.
Beagle.
for 830.
; on It soon.

Way of Our World

flames spread to the iron and En-

DON'T MISS Thii OPPORTUNITY

LyBARKEIlS

�m ■Anwot BAXMDL TMUB1OAT, ACflPBT M, MM

SOCIAL EVENTS
WOOD—BOYER.
Royar. *28

nin,. August 14. the marriage of
their daughter. Mary Kathryn.. U&gt;

GETS SCHOLARSHIP
AT HEIDELBERG, GER

Bunday guasta of Mr. and Mn. Ro­
land Barry.

Where Landon Launches Fight for Presidency

School

Ohu-la. Varalli U Ban
TlWl Medloil Training
tl SoU4 Cilnrait,
Hastings friends «f charts* Farlanded. Proceed* from supper were

Clarence Wood. «n of Mr. and Mrs. lhe good fortune 'that ha. oosne to
40f
»“ ! him. He recently received • scholar.olemmxed Ths slmrte ring sarvice i *nip entitling him to a year of study
•a* read by the Rev. Harley V. tn medicine at lhe University of
Townsend of Woodland at eighty- Heidelberg and on Bunday. Aug. g,
-thirty
o'clock.
Attending
ths I he sailed on ths Europa for Gerbridal couple were Mtas Mary Jean many. -- H
1* acholsrshJp
Hla
scholarship Included
Included
Nla&lt;en of Charlotte as bridesmaid two summer school* and be wiU
and Ciao Holcomb of Bellevue as

The bride wore a lovely ankle
length gown of white sUk net with
a taffeta evening Jacket while MLxi
Hkaen's drew was an ankle length
blue flowered atlk net. Each car­
ried a lovely bouquet ot garden

He graduated from the Hastings
High school with lhe class of IMS.
then took prs-medlc work al Battle
Creek College, later going to lhe
University of Michigan where he
received hla bachelors degree in

After the ceremony dainty re­
freshment were served to thirtyfive guests.
.
Mr. Wood I* a graduate of the
Bellevye High school and ha* also
Attended the
General
Motors
School of Technology al Flint where
he was a member of Gamma Mu
Tau fraternity. At present be 1*
employed at the Fisher Body plant
In Lansing. Mrs Wood Is a grad­
uate of Hastings High school and 1*
a member of Beta Blgma Phi soror­
ity. For three years she has been tn
the employ of the J. c. Penney
•tore.
Those from a distance who at­
tended lhe wedding were Mr. and
Mn. Fred Van Vlernh and daugh­
ter. Miss Beatrice Wood, and Cleo
Holcomb of Bellevue; Mrs. Ada
Blanchard and daughter. Mr* Anna
Johnson, and son. Melvin, of
Klinger lake; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Newton of Garfield lake; Mis* Mary
Jean Nissen of charlotte; Mr. and
Mr* Donald Murphy and son* of
Kalamasoo; Mia* Agnes Royer ot
Lansing; Arden Foster ot Rive*
Junction and the Rev. and Mrs.
Harley V. Townsend of Woodland.
Other relative* and
immediate
friend* from Halting* and vicinity

the closing events of ths Olympic
games at Berlin enroute. An Intensive
study of lhe German language will
engage his time until the University
opens on Nov. 1. Uupon hla return
he will complete his medical course
at Ann Arbor, thereby fulfilling a
lifelong ambition He has the best
wishes of his friends for a success­
ful future.
SOCIAL AFFAIRS HONOR
SOUTHERN GUESTS.
Mrs. R E Finnie of Louisville,
Ky.. who with Mr. Finnic. U a guest
at lhe home of their son and daugh­
ter-tn-law. or. and Mrs. Ray Finnla.
has been the guest-of-honor at
several very pleasant social affairs
since her arrival.

Remember. Sunday school and
preaching nest Bunday beginning

HIGHBANK.
The neighborhood and Sunday
school classes of lhe North and
South
Evangelical
and
Wilcox
churches will have their picnic at
Morgan park on Wednesday ths
Mth day of August. Everyone Invtt-

Fall Sweaters—the finest line of all wool sweaters we have
ever shown. Slipqyer* and buttoned frooL Prices

children of Chicago spent last week

UNDERWEAR OF ALL KINDS
Mr. and Mrs Frank Hawbills at­
tended the Mayo school reunion
Saturday. Mn. HawbUtt went home

near Marshall,
evening. '

Just one mile from the house In which he was born, lower left, Gov. Alf M. Landon will open his
campaign for president of the United States, whrn eastern Republicans gather on the fairways
of ths Tam o' Shan ter golf course near Sharon. Pj, to hear him Are his first political volley since
accepting nomination. The*-lop photo shows the clubhouse on the Tam o’ Shanter links. The
white frame house of Landon's birth is now lhe West Middlesex, Pa., Methodist parsonage. Mrs.
Mary Reed. Baird, lower right, who waa ths nurse at the birth of Landon, still lives in West Mid­
dlesex. Mrs. Baird, now 85 years old. will help greet Governor Landon.

returning Sunday

Mrs Mary Flock of Naahvllle and
airier, Mrs. Emma Kahler of Ypsi­
lanti were guests Wednesday
st
Mrs. Leslie Adams' and Mrs Sarah
Oslrolh'a

Court News

At the Theatre

LOOK SNAPPY!

Me CH EERY'S

»a*a

#a*

♦ (TUAND THEATK|=
Program for Week of August 23rd

Deliveries
Daily

8 and IO

Sunday and Monday, Aug. 23 and 24

RUBBER RAIN CAPES
SCHOOL HOSE. Knee Cuff. Vs length, dark
with fancy top.-------- _____---

SMART WASH DRESSES in fall styles, for Miss­
es 12 to 20—os pretty as you ever sow
of
------------ .Rl.n and $1.00

A Cloie-Out of Miuet' and Women's

SUMMER DRESSES
They arc sleeveless and only good for
lhe house or warm days, but you can
um- them—they are $1.00 dresses.
We
close them onl al—

Fall
Fashion
Leader
TUNICS
FOR
Don't say you
tunics until you've
these I Black. Brown.
and Green
They
from the waist and
your tupa.

seem
Rust
flare
slim

*398^8989
M (r F

STYLE SHOP

FRANDSEN’S STORE

WAY

3 p. m

ETCH

Phone 2272 or 2616

Irene Dunne and Robert Taylor

COME TO THE

BARRY COUNTY
FAIR W

DAY AND
NIGHT

Van Camp'i

Shultz or Freeport

Magnificent Obsession

Pork &amp; Beans

BUTTER

Tuesday, August 25

3 tall cans 25c

is. 37c

Margaret Sullavan and Henry Fonda
—

in

—

"The Moon’s Our Home”

Bigger and Better

Smoked Ham Ends

*. I9c

Veal Roasts

Sept. 8, 9,10,11,12
HASTINGS,{MICHIGAN

Wednesday, Thursday and Friday,
August 26, 27 and 28

a. 22c

Beef Kettle Roast

Pork Roasts

Jean Harlow, Franchqt Tone, Gory
Grant and Lewis Stone

«&gt; 18c

Braadtd

W 25c

u*....

£3

FRESH PEAS

Fireworks Four Nights
Good Races

Head Lettuce

Attractive Midway

Two Musical Revues on Platform
in Front of Grandstand

High Class Vaudeville Acts
Horse Pulling Contests

♦ |69

oo

the Hoffman cottage at Clear lake

I

I

Boys’ and Girls' Sweaters

Velma Hoffman. Winona Telman
of Battle Creak and Betty Cavan-

Group at the country Club Tuesday
luncheon last week; on Thursday
Mrs David French Invited a num­
ber ot Hastings and Grand Rapids
guests at a luncheon, with bridge
following at the women's city Club.
STATE ROAD
I and son Robert of South Bend Ind..
Grand Rapids for Mrs. Finnie; Fri­
Frank Barkoff charged with a
pOOWMSSSSMIlQtlH
day Mrs A. A. Anderson had a de­
We had another auto accident »t*n‘ Saturday with Mr and Mrs. statutory offense had hla exami­
lightful all day party al her Gun
Monday afternoon on the croas way James Southard.
nation before Justice Matthews on
__ *
. ___ ...
ir— ---------- ------------------ — Monday and wa* bound over to the;
lake cottage; this Thursday night
----------- -- -------Dt. and Mrs. Finnie are entertain­
Ford Coupe was going west down Hickory corners spent 8unn*y wtm I September term of court
ing several couples at the monthly
the Baine hlU. driven by Mia* Fish-, hu brother. James O'Connor, and
------------Country club dinner for both Mr,
er a nurse of Nashville, who was' fwnily.
James Hitchcock of Middleville
Mr. and Mrs. Wood have gone for and Mrs. Finnie.
taking a lady to Pennock hospital.
Lillie Andrew and Helen Kennedy w&gt;« brought In by the officers Tues■ two weeks' wedding trip after
A story of two Internationally Lucklly she was not driving fast, or vtrited their aunt. Mr*. Hubert | day on a statutory change. He was
which they will be at home with
। taken before Justice Matthews and
NOONAN—DeRIAR.
famous persons who leam to hate it would have been more serious A Beadle in Lansing last week.
lhe bride's parent* for lhe present.
••*
-----1 demanded an examination
Bond
Mr. and Mr*. Floyd E DeRlar an­ each other by reputation, but fall rear tire went flat Disking her lose
Beat wishes are extended.
MARTIN CORNERS.
| WMJ1 fixed at 11.000 which wa* furnounce lhe marriage of their daugh­ desperately in love when they meet control of the car. It made a com- j
under
assumed
names.
There
are
plete
somersault
and
landed
on
list
Mia*
Bhirley
Bwnhardt
of
Grand
intshed. August 34 l&gt; the date of ths
ter.
Dorta.
to
Raymond
Noonan,
on
PARTY HONORED
side facing east Mrs sothard waa Rapids visited her cousin. Miss Vlr- . examination.
Saturday
evening,
Auguri
I.
at
the
i
many
amusing
situation*.
MISS MARY ROYER. Hope Lutheran church In Grand!
In her yard st the lime and saw it gtna Barry, a few days the past
------------Harry Carey, Heat Gibson In
MIm Loretta DeVault entertained
al). She called her husband and they; week.
' Judge R
R. McPrek
recently
Rapid*, the Rev. E. L- Schwan of­
several members of the Bela Sigma ficiating. The wedding wa* quietly
ran to aid them. They lifted them '
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Raxli and . granted a divorce decree to Ella
The Last Outlaw" portrays the
Phi aorortty and friends at
her
out through the door on top. Nelth- little daughter of Hasting* were .Wolfe from James W Wolfe
solemnized at eight o'clock with
XvtXZnT " » **
only shaken up A car
home on W Grand street Friday Mr*. Margaret DeRlar Hitchcock at­
1 dri*in*,ntfl !own took the iadie-' °n
evening. Aug. 7. in compliment to tending the bride and Nelli* Boiler ™ m^hFutiel?&lt;Xu
son tn tne tine role is in a sense * ,
,, . ........
MLv Mary Royer, whose marriage to
■Mm Rlp.l.mou, dc.p.r.a» ot
Clarence Wood of Lan-Ung wax an
I of pink fiat crepe with white ae- Urn old ™i —ho ta«« eoM.« wild 11*?’” “r _”p
*°p
' cessories and her sister wore violet the world tn prtoon. He walks out and side. It was very lucky no one ,
played and high Score made by Miss
waa
hurt.
This
croaaway
has been .
; flat crepe with while accessories.
Uito a bewildering mate of abtomo- !
Geraldine williams The luncheon
the
scene
of
nine
accidents
in
the
Mn. Noonan'is employed at the biles, radio* and airplane*
• CLE&gt;N CLOTHES will odd
table was charmingly decorated
Nyhuis Beauty Shop and Mr. Noon­
with white candle* and ■ large cen­
a great deal to your enjoyment.
an is connected with the Stegman- Robert Taytor, Irene Danne Starred
Mr. and Mrs
James Sothard &gt;
ter bouquet of yellow gladiolus and
in “Magnificent Obocasion." &gt; spent Sunday with Mr. and Mr*.
Olsee Co. tn Grand Rapids. The best
But
more than that. CLEAN
orchid butterfly bush Thoae pres­
Tragedy stalks the lives of two Clyde Casey of South Hastings.
i wtahe*. of their Hastings friends far
;
ent were lhe Misses Theoline Rog- ।
lovers in..............
"Magnificent„™.
Obsession."
clothes ore actually COOLER
». .....
M«- ■»» Coleman ol RulUnd |
,-,-y wedded life go ............
tn. Grace Relckord. Geraldine Wil-', founded on the famous novel of that
, with them to their new home.
during
the Surnmer when
name. The locale ot lhe drama la In. «!»"&gt; Krldn, and Sunday with her i
Hams. Ethel Rag la. Mary Rover.
, -,
both lhe United sure, and Part.. «“1"- Mrs. Janet PeUenBlll.
|
Helen Butioph. Norma Evans and twq COUP1.ES WED
clothes get soiled quickly . . .
Miss DeVault.
—
-Theodore Helsel of carlton called,
IN ANGOLA.
IND. The cast includes Charlee Butterbe sure to send them to the
At Angola. Ind. on Saturday two worth. Betty Fumes*. Henry Ar- on his sister. Mrs. Lucy Coleman.1
HASTINGS GIRLS
marriages of interest to Hasting* melta. Arthur Treacher and many Saturday.
cleaner often.
other*. Il I* considered one ot the I Mr. and Mr*. Vern Cot'on re- [
AT CAMP KITANNIWA. people were snlemnlxed
Among the girl* registered at. The contracting parties were outstanding film* of the year.
i turned home last week from a trip
Coll 2140 far EFFICIENT,
Gamp Kitanniwa. Clear lake, for the'
Gardner, son of Mr and
------------------------------------In northern Michigan.
THOROUGH
CLEANING!
fourth period are lhe following from M„ charle« Gardner, who was wed
MULLIKEN RESIDENT DIES, i Willi* Baine of Middleville spent
Mrs. O. J. McNaughton, formerly । Sunday with his children, Mr, and '
Hastings: Sally Lou Arold. Ruth- to
Dorothy Kelley, daughter of
mary Bliss. Dorothy Conrad. Thel- Ml Inct M„ Howard Kelley, and Mary Hun*iker of Woodland, died Mrs. Richard Slocum,
ma Cox. Mary French. MaryeBen A|freJ williams, son of Mr. and at her home in Mulliken last Sun- j Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bryans. Mr.
Hale. June Leary. Ruth Palmatter, I M„ pred Williams. N. Michigan day night of heart trouble. The fu- • and Mr*. Clifton Becker. Mr. and j
DRY CLEANERS
JoAnn Arold. Catherine Davie* and ] Are
Ave,, and
ana Mis*
mw Jennett
jennew Gardner.
uwraner. neral was held on Wednesday aft- Mr*. Andrew Kennedy and Homer j
KuUnn, Mich.
rtene 1140
Luelta Palmatler.
| daughter of Mr
Mr. and
and Mra.
Mrs. Charles ernoon at two P. M. Mrs. Me- and Majesty Becker attended the,
Gardner. They were accompanied by Naughton had many friends in Ionia fair Tuesday. We h«ne »h»«
Woodland and Hastings who were*enjoyed the nice rain we had that
..
KOTH—FORD.
' Mr Bntj Mr8 Royaj Gardner.
Mr and Mr*. William Ford &lt;?f ।
&gt;1Junt coupte* are well saddened by her pawing. Mr. and1 day. The farmer* weie happy over j
Dearborn announce the marriage of knnwn here. whfrr they will make Mr*. W. T. Grigsby attended the fu- it.
their daughter. Edith Margaret, tn'
hom„ -y^ey have lhe
neraL
’ Mr. and Mr*. William plodowski I
A. Armin
of , wuuies
WLshe* ui
of uiru
their iiicous
friend*..
...............Roth, sanitary engineer —
the Barry County Heslth Depart» »»
ment on Monday. August 17. Mr. and
DINNEB AND CONTRACT.
Mr*. Roth left on a short wedding
Covers were laid for eight at a six
trip and will be al home in Has- o'ektek dinner given by Mr and
Ungs after September 1.
ti—
-- —T-—N —Knopf
• —
—■
Mrs
on—
Friday evening
1 honoring Mr and Mrs. Raymond
t’l.TBA Cl.l'B
I Windeknecht of Owosso At conHeslinga, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 ■—

tertalned the Ultra club on Mon-1
MrK R. o. Hubbard. Mr. and
day evening, twenty-two enjoying
wmdekneeht spent their vathe pot luck supper and bridge cation at Gun lake.
which followed Top scores were !
__________ «ie &gt;
- ■
won by Mra. Forrest Potter and
“Individuality is everywhere to be
Harold Newton and low scores by spared and respected as the root of
Mr. and Mr*. Burdette Button.
| everything good.-'—Richter.

Girls’ School
Dark washable print* in the Laical Fall

Melvin Whetstone has been quite
111 the post, week with sciatica, being
confined to his bed most of the time.
Mias Alma Hilton has been spend­
ing lhe past week with her aunt.

Saturday Only-August 29
Harry Carsy and Hoot Gibson in

Sweet Potatoes

The Last Outlaw

Phone 727? Wb

a^

lOc

You'll lovo tlie Miner boeuty in these
mtirv.Tlous Sixtier which defy runs
tuid can he Inunderrd many, many
tlmea without losing thrdr fiaiah. mys­
tic khoerneaa and intriguing clearn***.

POPULAR PRICES

59c, 69c, 75c, $1

6

ELDPAUSCH
■MARKET­

t/.o "Palm Sprin

*a^

Large Firm, ea.

Slxttee are distinctly dif­
ferent hosiery creations.
Completely balanced
elnsticity throughout tha
ENTIRE stocking, which
s-t-r-e^t-c-h-e-s .without
effort to fit medium legs,
long or thin legs, short or
stout legs- yet snaps back
Into shape tha instant
tension is released.

Fran
HASTINGS

“

.

�TUB HATINOe BANNKt THUlIDAY. AOOyff 8J. 1|M

W. C. Brucker

he declared that !U alm U evidently
'
;

:

The New Deal seeks concentration
of power and the ordering of Indi­
vidual os well as economic life. The
stand of the republican party in
this campaign is for the American i

Ideal of local self-government. So
the ciiolce U home rule or remote
control.
The speaker quoted Thomas Jef­
ferson. father of the democratic
parly, who declared: "When you
wall for Washington to tell you

people will go hungry." We now have
a government at Washington that Is
alining to do what Jefferson warned
against.
The speaker indicted lhe Tfew
Deal for trying to spend the United
States into prosperity. He condemned the wasteful extravagance!

of Ito expenditures. During the 3 1-2' fund what this administration had and *-ork had been started on dig­ quoddy juice would cost more than
years of Mr. Roosevelt's admlnlstro- wantonly wasted, we would have ging the canal across Florida, it electricity developed from cc.il I
We were promised by President
then occurred to somebody to find
out If lhe owners of the vessels that Rooseyelt. in his Inaugural, that he
eminent." He gave many samples of were Interested In commerce along would reduce the number of govern­
must be paid by the taxpayers ano
the so-called -public works pro­ the aulf of Mexico or the Carib­ ment commissions and boards, of
every dollar of it will require 83 from
which he had complained In his
the people—SI for Interest and SI gram" now being carried on and told bean sea would use this canal. Tliey
what they cost and that little or found oul they would not. because It campaign speeches. Instead of re­
far the principal of the debt.
would Siu
ever ix
be rnuuca
realised ironi
from would add to their expenses instead ducing them, their number hat
„„
...
... ,
. , nothing *uu&gt;u
When republicans criticise this the Investment. Take, for butane". of saving them money. The Passa- been doubled, instead of reducing
huge expenditure, they are asked by i the Florida canal, for which a huge — ...r jcheme of utilising the
lll[u
wouiu i appropriation waa
their (wuucai
political upjxiucliu
opponents: -Would
was uaca
asked ny
by in"
the Udes to develop electricity, cm which rolls, as he had pledged himself to
you let our own people starve when President and granted by his rubber millions of dollars have been spent, i do. there are at this minute* 300.000
we can raise or borrow tlie money to 1 -•
--------------------stamp
congress. After lhe ---------money has been shown to be utterly worth- । more government amployees than
feed them?” Mr. Brucker declared had
-----------r---------------—after engl- less. It has been proven that, in de- I when he took office. They were not
been—
appropriated,
that -If we could have'in the relief neers had formulated their plans veloplng electricity, the Panama- | selected on the basis of merit but

■ ■“‘•"ar .K.SSXlJi

Si J

HASTINGS HIGH SCHOOL
Tuition for Non-Resiflents Paid By the State
Every Boy and Girl In Barry County Who Has Passed
the Eighth Grade, Is Cordially Invited to Attend the
HASTINGS HIGH SCHOOL for the Next Four Years
Four courses are offered: College Preparatory,

The Hostings High School is known throughout

Commercial, Agricultural and General. Special ad­

the State for its wholesome influence over the stu­

vantages are offered students to participate in dra­

dents. It is the only high school in Barry county that

matics, debating, athletics, orchestra, band and glee

is a membet of the North Central Association of

club. Numerous school societies provide valuable
training.

Schools and Colleges. This means that graduates

Few high schools con offer more to students
than can Hastings High School.

Here there is a

may be admitted without examination to all the
leading colleges in the North Central section of the

United States.

friendly, helpful atmosphere, thoroughly trained
teachers, complete courses of study, supervised out­
side activities,-athletic opportunities, unequalled
musical opportunities, a full year of school and no
tuition beyond that paid by the State. The High
School curriculum hos been revised so os to conform
with the new, more liberal college entrance require­
ments,..a nd to provide for individual differences.
Much wider opportunities are offered in both instru­
mental and vocal music and shop work than formerly.

•olely for political reasons, and
therefore are not as competent as

OBITUARY.
Mrs Ida Bidelmfn and the lata

The New Deal's excuse for foisting
all these needless expenses upon the
American people was: -You’won't

their efforts to -soak the rich” have
been pitiful failures; and even if they school and then entered
did it, the rich have a way of pass­ High school.
ing on these extra taxes to others
so that Ln the end the people pay Roush December 13. 1916. To
union were born five childrth. I
them.
Mr. Brucker called attention to of whom are living; June II. J
the failure of Ute agricultural 11. and Prank Jr.. 8.
Besides her husband and chll
remedies adopted by lhe Nejw Deal.
leaves
Mrs.
Thev have bien wronu In
I »she
he U
*VM her mother. Mrs
way that made their cost excessive.
i
What to the result? in the year 1932 .
SauVSwk’uri^Bidri
we Imparted 6.000 bushels of wheat
Bldelman nf
of Ponds
Pontiac,
into the United States; 'In 1935 we I and
”rf Harry nirfelman
other relatives and friends.
imported 28.500.000 bushels In other '
words the New Deal has lost, our I
church on Sunday. August 9th at
foreign markets and opened our
• home markets to foreigners. Last j
officiating. The burial was at
year we Imported over 43.000.000
sey cemetery.
bushels of corn. Now that we are i
faced with drouth conditions and a 1 "Nobody hopes anything
; real scarcity, we recall that last year : politics ”—Henry Ford.
many millions of acres of land that,
were planned lo raise com. wheat, j
OHOOBE
I rye. cotton were, with the encour- j
agement of the administration and .
I by paying lhe farmer for doing Children and Your Grandchlldrra! so. actually plowed under, and Whelher You and They Will Hav
6.000.000 little pigs were butchered.
Instead of letting Nature take care
of the question of scare Uy, this ad­
ministration created IL Now we are , Through Regimentation.
reaping the results.
No longer is there excuse for In*
The speaker said we are headed hi' decision or doubt as to the iMUM
lhe wrong direction. It is a question Dally papers of August 13 carried
I of stopping now or being stopped by
, some disaster.
; Kcosevelt." and contained Lite slate
' Speaking of his opponent. Senator i ment:
Couzens. he stated that up to two
“A bulletin Issued by the com­
I weeks ago he had declined to say • munist international headquar। whether he was a republican and
going to work for the election I
। would run as a Republican or nol.
I Two weeks ago he decided to seek
of Roosevelt because we wish to I
■ the senatorship on the republican
strengthen our Influence among
I ticket. It
well understood that,
America's many radical groups. I
because of his support of New Deal
We all have a common alm. It I
policies. Postmaster Jim Farley and ,,4a to defeat London.'"
,
others wished to have Michigan
Patriotic Democrats and Republic]
I democrats nominate Mr. Couzens if
; the republicans did nol. and not llnue with the New Dealers. th]
name a candidate against him If re- radical groups, those who advocad
I publicans nominated him. us he had
Impossibilities In order to obtain
been a useful factor In putting
power, and far sooner than yos
across the New Deal's legislative. think you will And yourselves help]
program.
less under executive orders, ruled
During the past four years Michi­ and regulations from Washington. |
gan has had one republican sena­
Already some have forgotten th]
tor. Vandenberg, at Washington NRA. the arbitrary, unreasonable
voting consistently for American rules which sent men to Jail fol
. ideals of government, while Senator selling bread below a certain pried
Couzens was found often on thc side , for operating their businesses coni
of the New Deal.
trary to the whim of a govern]
I Mr. Brucker stated that he has,
ment official. Some have forgottai
publicly asked Mr. couzens to come the decision of the Supreme Cour]
;out in the open and‘state whether which freed us from oppression- |
he will vote for Landon or RoosePerhaps you have forgotten thl
I velt. but he declines to make any
destruction of pigs, the orders whies
statement. He had also publicly
reduced the production of cotters
asked him to slate whether he is In com. wheat and pork; but, beliavl
sympathy with thc republican plat- i me. when you tighten your bcltl
form adopted at Cleveland, or the next winter and discover that fool
democratic platform adopted at Ls short, that foreign farmers havI
' Philadelphia. Up to date he has not the American farmers' market, yo]1
i answered either question. He Is ask­ will remember; but then It may bl
Ing Michigan
republicans, who i
too late.
know his record of supporting New
Tlie man who prevents the pro
Deal policies, to elect him without 1 duclion
of thc tilings we eat an]
; knowing what he will stand for or I
Is hot only foolish; he Is alni
what he will do In case he shall be wear
ful. Neither a Tugwell nor a Wall
' returned and Roosevelt be success­ lace controls the heat, the rain, nol
ful.
the productiveness of. the ear ill
Mr. Brucker did not hesitate to To Tuxwell. Wallace, and Hopkins I
state where he ttood on the political
say. "Go lo the ant. thou sluggard]
issues of the day. He said he stood
. squarely upon the republican na-1
Consistently I have opposed
I tlonal platform. He was not egotIsI tlcal enough, he said, to assert that New Deal, with Ito doctrine ot M
he could go to Washington and I city, extravagance, and waste. I
f make an outstanding record as a | Ueve in work, in thrift. In econoi
| statesman, but he would pledge that, In paying os we go. in tlie eUtnl
I on all public questions he would ( tion of waste. My record ahi
where I stand on these things. V
| support republican principles and
experiment with men of uncert
। American ideals of government.
and vascillatlng views?
। There can be no qucstlori that Mr.
Brucker made a very favorable Jmbelieve In America and Ila futun
I presslon on all who heard him.
your support will be appreciated.
Respectfully,
Spectators stoned a matador at
Puebla. Mexico, in protest against
CLARE E. HOFFMAN.
the type of bull employed. A word to Republican Candidate for Congres
our campaign spellbinders should be
Fourth District of Michigan.
sufficient.—Tacoma Ledger.
(Political Adv.)

IT’SIVAN BUREN’S TURN!
I enter the race for State Senator to restore to Van Buren
County an office that belongs to her. Under the agreement
this office goes to each of die three counties in our Senatorial

Earl L Burhans

District in its turn. Alle­
gan was entitled to the

Senatorship and held it
from 1923 to 1927. Ito
four year? then expired

With on attendance of over 500 students and a

and it became either
Barry or Van Buren's

faculty of 22 high school teachers, opportunities are

turn, but Allegan has
continued to hold it 10

offered which are not possible in a smaller high

years beyond its time and
now Senator Mosier,
against the judgment and
advice of Allegan County
Republicans by again be­
ing a candidate,' seeks
the office for 12 straight
vears after Allegan’s time
has expired. Allegan has
had the State Scnatorship
continuouslv for fourteen
veara. LETS HAVE A’
• CHANGE. I am a candi­
date to secure this office
now for Van Buren which
under the agreement will
let Barry came forward
with ito candidate in four
years. Thia statement on my part is founded on the facto.
It will establish friendship and loyalty among Republicans
in all three counties by again enforcing the agreement where­
by each county shall have the opportunity every four years
to submit a candidate in ito turn. If this open declaration on
my part meets your approval, I will appreciate your active
support.
EARL L BURHANS.

school. Each non-resident boy or girl receives indi­
vidual attention and is welcomed by both students
and teachers. We have a full time physical director

for boys and one for girls. We also have a Dean of

Girls to look offer the social welfare of girls while

they are attending school here.

School Opens On Tuesday, September 1

Enrollment
Will Be Wednesday, August 26 and Thursday, August 27.

liries to D. A. VAN BUSKIRK, Superintendent

Or E. L. TAYLOR, Principal

for STATE SENATOR _ _ _ _ _ _ _

�TP HATTKOI XAXXXX. TUCTIDAT, ACOCIT M, 1W
Mias LIlite chrialte came home 1
Mr. and Mrs. Will Fighter of
Grand Ledge are spending several from Grand Rapids on Saturday.
days hwe with relative*.
Mra. Wilbur Lane is thc guest ot

CLUB “QUEST DAY”

PROVES ENJOYABLE
Roy Finstrom w*a home from La­
of Mra. H. M. Bowter of Fort Wayne. Belle. Gull lake, on Monday.
Ind.
. .
.
Attend
the
Mrs. Olive Doyle and Mtes Norma Seventy-Five
Mtes Florence ooolbaugh has re­ Doyle have been visiting friends
Tuesday Luncheon—Golf I
turned from her cottage at Bay
Events Postponed
Mr. and Un Floyd Rice vteited; Miss Katherine Humphrey visited
Mr. and Mn Will Roeklnett, son
Ed- Bower is visiting relatives in
jorepl) and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
in Bannister over tlie week end.
। in Grand Rapids over lhe week end.
Ionia.
Seventy-five enjoyed "Guest Day"
Ited his mother. Mrs. Wm.'White, Halabaugh of Alliance. Ohio, were at the Hastings country Club lunch­
George Dasher of Russellville. । Mr*. J. L. Merriam visited relal . Mr and Mrs. Elwyn Daniels have
of Ovid on Bunday.
guests ot Mra. Edith Edger and eon on Tuesday. Glass baskets con­
[.gone to Pocatello. Idaho.
Kentucky, waa In thte city Monday. । Urea and friend* In Charlotte last
Mrs. J a pies sltebee and Mrs. Fred­ Phylite Sunday.
,T
!_______
tatnlng zlnnigold*
centered „„
the .
Rodney Mulder ot Grand Rapids treek.
M tears Hazel and Elizabeth Henry
erick Palmer, accompanied by Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Levant Freeman left I luncheon table*
tables and large
'
‘baskets
* * of*
te visiting his cousin. Jimmy Mui»•*
— Mabel1 —
— -•
—Miss
Dekker
of Holland
; vteited in Fllht on Sunday.
Matilda Smith &lt;jf Delton, enjoyed a for their home in bo* Angeles Sat- I red znuHas. asters and gladioli were
motor trip in northern Michigan unlay after an extended visit with I effectively arranged in tha lounge. |
Mr*. R. M. Walker of Los Angeles man. on Bunday.
"returned to lanta for fair week.
friend* and relatives in lhe east' Mr*. Verne Johnson of Lansing ’
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Patlcngill of and in Michigan.
' Mtes Lois Severance and two girl
I won the guest prize at bridge and :
turn on Monday from a visit in
Clarke.
Grand Rapids were Sunday guests
Mr and Mrs. Robert McGlocklffi Mrs. Edw. Van Popering lhe club 1
. friends are in northern Michigan.
Genoa City. Wis.
of Mr. and Mrs. Dell Sutton, tn- spent the week of Aug. B at Woll prize. The golf events were post- i
roule home from Niagara Falls lake. Mr. anj Mrs. John Foreman poned because of thc rain.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Freeman of
“visiting friends and relatives here. trolt to visit Mr. and Mrs. T. M
where they spent their vacation.
Kalamazoo vteited Mr. and Mrs.
and family of Kalamazoo and Max &gt; Among the guests were Mtes Mar- j
Mias Norma Tolies te home from Paulsen.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Swegles vis­ Miller of Nashville were guests.
Mrs. J. 1. Baransy of Ada. Ohio, □ten Bera last week.
I goret Kirkland. Hannibal. Mo.,
"j^lblon for her vacation with her
ited hla sister. Mrs. Don Swtkert, o!
This week Saturday, waller Wai- ’ with Mr*. Harold Phillips; Mrs
Mrs. w. R. Cook Is leaving thte
. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allison Tolles. te the guest of her steter, Mn. NelDimondale on Bunday, hte mother. lacc. Mr*. Homer Reynolds and Miss । Bruce Casper, Walla Walla. Wash..
w—.
i week for Petoskey to remain during
Ian Ironside returns thte week,
Mrs.
Wm.
Swegles
returning
with
Mrs.
H.
H.
Peirce
left
Tuesday
for
the
hay
fever
season.
Sopha
Wallace
are
accompanying
i with Mrs. Frank Carrothers; Mrs.
from a two weeks' visit In South
them after a visit with Mrs. Swl- Mr*. Wallace lo Asheville. N. C .! M. E- Whitman, Elyria. Ohio, with
Chicago Height# where ahe will vtelt
John
*■*“ Sheffield -of Orangeville
•­
Bend. Ind.
kert.
called on hte brother. Dr. F. O.
where she will enter the Helen Ran- ■ Mrs. C, P. Lathrop; Mra. J. I.
Miss Ada Gallup of Grand Rapids her son. Joe.
'
Sheffield,
on
Monday.
dall
Sanitarium
for
treatment.
Her
: Barans/. Ada. Ohio, with Mrs. NelMrs Ruth Baine had as guests
Jack and Charles Bowman of Bay
has been in Hastings the last two
Stylepark new haU for fall
Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank War­ friend* hope *he may be greatly I he Cross; Mrs. Verne Johnson,
City were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Allison Tolles. Mrs. Keith
weeks visiting relatives.
1 Fox and Mias Norma Tolle* spent
rant of Plainwell, Mrs. James Mc­ benefltted and that her recovery l Lansing, with ML** Sadie Glasgow;
Mrs. C. F. Finstrom.
Mr. and Mrs. MUo DeVries and last week In Cleveland.
. Mrs. Robert Burrell. Detroit and
guest of Mrs. Victor Hilbert of
blue Hamburg, stylish. snap
week end of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Es- Laughlin (Emma Lou Stark* of may be permanent.
Kalamazoo and Mtes Beth Hart of
Rev.
Mtes*• Mrs. Marton
Mary are spending their vacation '1 Mrs. Edith Edger visited her senburg. on W. Walnut street.
»«v. Harold
naroia Ernsberger
KmsoerRcr and
ana him
Marion Hodgson. Charleston.
- Woodland on Thursday.
brims and University style;
cousin, Mrs. Amy Youngs, of Mid­
Sadie Ernsberger of Cleveland. Mrs.. w ?Vn.. with Mrs. A. H. Carveth;
."Mtes Ruth Farr returned Sunday at Wildwood. Gull lake.
Mrs. Betty Kibler Ralph of New­ Hillsdale.
Rev. t. H- Hoos. Mrs. Nellie Charl­ Charles Osborne of Toledo and Mrs । Mrs. R. M. Walker. Los Angeles.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Allvator of dleville last Wednesday.
.from her vacation which ahe spent
ark. Ohio, a Wellesley college friend
young man.
ton and Mrs. Mac Howe returned Bert Eby of Mansfield. Ohio, .spent1 cal.. Mrs. E- J- Huffman. Mrs. John
Maple Rapids were Sunday visitors
Francis R. Thomas of Battle
i.sat Detroit and Cleveland.
Creek visited hte sister. Mrs. Clar­ end guest at lhe W. R. Cook home. Tuesday night from tlie conference Monday at lhe home of Mr and1 Nichols and Mrs. Mai Cassidy.
■ •'Mr. and Mr*. Otto Tietz were in of Mr. and Mrs. James Mills.
Other styles and models In
Mr.-and Mrs. Newton Benner at­ ence Grohe, on Thursday.
Grand Haven over the week end at­
Misses Jean Fennell and Norma nt Owosso. Mr. and Mrs. John A Mrs. Charles Lawrence on their way Grand Rapids, with Mr*. C. W.
dark
and light shades, in all
Hoc*
attended
lhe
conference
on
home from the Emsberger reunion clarke; Mrs. R E Finnic of Louistended thc Benner family reunion al; Mrs. N. B. Waterman of Burling­ Holdeman of Detroit were guests of
tending the funeral of his sister.
Potter park. Lansing, on Sunday.
ton. Wh, was a guest of Mr. and lhe former's sister and husband. Sunday also.
Mr. and Mrs Darrell Jones and villc. Ky.. Mrs. Ella Bush. Los An■ Coach Lyle Bennett returned last
Henry Sheldon and son Philo left famlly and Mr. and Mrs. Harold geles and Mrs. Victor Hilberk
Mrs. White Griggs of Toledo. Ohio, Mrs. E- A. Burton Tuesday.
, O$ek from Eaton Rapids where'he
Mr. and Mrs. T- N. Knopf, over
Tuesday for Sault 8te. Marie. Can­ Jones nnd daughter of Hastings. I woodland with Mrs. Jos. McKnlght;
is the guest of her niece and bus- . Mr. and Mrs. Franz Dahl and the week erid.
...Wtd charge of playground work.
three daughters of Montague were
Misses Grace Edmonds. Lena Lei­ ada. to attend a stale meeting of the Mr. and Mrs, Clare Jones and fam- • Mrs. Betty Ralph. Newark, O. with
ii.. of Kalamazoo
----------------- —and
.j Mr. and ....
Mr. and Mra. Charles Lawrence Sunday guests of Mrs. Mildred ter and Jannet Michael complete the Michigan Title Association, which lly
Mrs, Mrj( H o Flnnte. Mrs vinnle
. jret Barnett return today from a
[ Leland Jones nnd Ream
daughter
of
visit with relatives at iron Moun­ and Lucille attended the Emsberger Honey.
Boyd. Atlanta,
Ga, with Mr*.
eight weeks' summer session at Ann meets there this week. They expect
return---------------Saturday.
| City
Marshal. Harry z Thompson.
reunion at Lake Odessa
Saturday.
......^_... Arbor on Friday, coming to Hastings to
- --------(Dowling enjoyed a reunion nt Pral- Chas. Potts; Mrs. Albert Johanntain.
A1
McCall
and
hte
mother.
Mrs
j
rievllle
park.
Gull
lake,
on
Sunday
sen, Chicago, with Mrs. G. L LockMrs.
Gertrude
Wilcox
and
Miss
Mrs.
Thompson
and
family
ore
, Mrs. Venus Johnson of Lansing
Friday evening.
Mary
McCall,
were
Detroit
visitors
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ford
McBain
and
wood;
Mrs.
Robert
Jessen.
Chicago
..
....
home
In
I
Jennie
McBain
returned
Friday
t
spending
this
week
in
northern
returned on Tuesday to her
in
Mrs. Robert jesaen and son Ste­
Lansing after visiting here since I from summer school at Evanston,' Michigan.
*— --o
piicii
phen ui
of Chicago MILare guests VI
of Mr. Sunday. A former school friend of, daughter of Dillon. Mont., were I and Mrs. Grace Dodds. Kansas City.
Itrursday?*~ "
******* ill.
~
’j Miss
Mrs.^McCall's
Injreland.
Mrs. Robof ni»
hte sister,
sister. miss
Mtes jean
Jean sicMe-1.with
with Mrs.
Mrs, Kellar stein.
Stem.
oitv.ua ui
4JCUHIU. mta.
ikju- I guests
guc*u* oi
Miss chrystal
Chrystal Thomas
Thomas is
Is takl.._
taking „
a and Mrs. c. W. crawford. Mr Je*- «i».
«... through.u southern
...
। n colnc^i
latter part of the ert
—. Pringle, returned
... —. ....
.... ._ ...
.
Mrs.
with —
them as । Bain, and cousin.
Mlu Lillie Chris-1
Mr*. Frank Carrothers
carrothers was
wa* chair' Miss Leona Lanfear. In company I Mrs. Marton Hodgson and son. two weeks' lour
with three friends, is on n motor Carveth. of charleston. W. Va.. are states with friends from Grandvlfle week for a vacation.
thelr guest for a time.
. tie. yesterday and today. Friday , man for the afternoon and her asMrs. J. A. McNulty. Kneeland and they go to Ypsilanti and on Sunday stetants were Mrs. A 1.. Brown,
trip to Kentucky and other pointe i guests
juriu of
ui Mr.
Ml. and
&lt;uiu Mrs.
airs. A.
a. H.
n. Car-jand
var-J
zicvianu.
Zeeland.
I Mr. and Mrs. Meredith Buckley
i veth.
Mrs. Lt!"'C-.»
Lucy Creglow
and---Mrs.
Edith- ’ and daughter of Muskegon were Mary Elizabeth went to Ludington go to Montreal. Con., and on to thc ML** Sara Schadcr. Mrs. K. P. LabOf Interest.
I Mr:.
----------------------nnd Sunday ' Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dud­ on Saturday/ to spend two week* ! Gaspe Peninsula. ML** McBain will i erteaux. Mr*. C- W. Wespinter and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Groos and '■ Cranston Wilcox and Robert Field :’ Bonnell spent Saturday and
ThC ReV.
nou J.
t A.
a. tnuiwk/
McNulty I-te’ vuuuuuvconduct --; go with them as far as Montreal, i Mrs. w. M- Stebbins. Mrs. Paul
eon Dick leave tomorrow for n [ spent Sunday in Ann Arbor with' at Cassopolis as the guests of Mrs. ley Kennedy and granddaughter of mho
ing services )at
... n
Grace
__
Episcopal.' Mrs oUben pt,rcy and M,s on., paiijjtncj Of Middleville is chalr-ink's slay at lhe Tyden farm, ‘ Mr. and Mt-s.'Wna J- Field and Mrs. Henry Mllhont.
sept 1.
Greene. Iowa.
' Wilcox.
-------------------.------ i Orville Henry of Youngstown.
O.,
---------------..
; bert Hays of Kalamazoo, enter-1 man for next week.
Miss Florence Bump is enjoying church then/untll
Mrs.
ME
1
-------- —— Whitman and daugh- j mined members of thc Proce and |
------ * • &gt;
Hubert Fairchild jas home from ls spending hte two weeks' vacation a vacation trip this week in com­
rwtrnit spending lit
returned to their home in Detroit Detroit
lhe week end with with *•'*
his ****
sisters.
— Misses
----- Hazel and' pany with Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Slo­ ter. Mary June, of Elyria. O.. are poetry Club of Kalamazoo ThunBIDDLE—DER VANCE.
Elizabeth Henry.
after visiting her parents. Dr. and ■ hLn parents, Mr. and
- J
'
Miss Eileen DerVance, 7125 N.
cum of Grand Rapids. Tney are guests of Dr. nnd Mrs. C- P- Lathrop 1 day at thc former's cottage at
Mra F. E- WiUteon.
( Fairchild.
Mr. and Mrs. Geotge Crakes. Miss motoring up lhe eastern side of thte week. Mrs Lathrop and guest* Leach lake, a pot luck luncheon wa* I Paulina Ave.. Chicago. Ilk and Gor­
were in Grand Rapid* on Monday. I served and the afternoon *[&gt;enl In­ don Biddle, son of Mrs. Effie Ben­
-Mrs.
Earl Chamberlain
and) Mr. nnd Mrs. Jos. Shultz expect Marjory Nevins and Mlv Frances Michigan.
: daughter vteited In Grand Rapids | to spend this week end with Sutton spent Sunday at Big Pine
Mrs charlotte Brumm Wilkie of Mr. Whitman comes Friday for the ' formally. Thc Prose and Poetry Club 1 ner of Hasting.*, were united in
| which is entirely a literary society marriage Wednesday evening. Au­
part of last week. Mr. Chamberlain friends in South Haven, their for- Island with friends.
Pocatello. Idaho, has been thc guest week end.
Mrs. C. J. Stuart. Mr. and Mr*. 1 has recently become affiliated with gust 12. at' the home of Mr. and
joinlng them for Sunday.
, mcr home.
Mtes charlotte Lake of Lansing of Miss Gertrude Hampton and
'Mrs. Bernard Bertsch nnd son.1 Mr. and Mrs. Stuart White and was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. other friends lhe past week. She left Philip Plttenger and Mrs. J .H. Pit-j the Federated Women’s Club.
' Mrs.
.
„
____ ....
Stripes and checks, button
Howard Pennington.
1212 Wiltengi-r
of
Grand
Rapid.*
were
guest*
| Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Johnston and ! lard St. San Francisco. Cal. They
L. Christian and
Mr. and--Mrs. Wal- Wednesday for Kalamazoo on her
-Walter, of san Diego. Cni., who have baby of near Lennon were guests of ---------------------— -----------down and truben collars; colof Mr*. D- M. Stuart on Sunday. - Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Down* left to-1 were attended by Mr. and Mrs.
been visiting here are guests of rel- Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Watkins over, ter Lake over the week end.
l attves in Detroit this week.
(the week end.
| Mrs. Elizabeth Schwankoff of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Linington were Mrs. J. M. Langston returned with 1 day for a trip through thc east, i Johnny Fife, also of San Francisco,
lhe C. J • Canada and Niagara Falls. They
Mr. and Mrs. Biddle are at home
is Mr*. Lorenro Maus returns today,' Mr. and Mrs. Harry Waters and । Chicago te visiting her granddaugh- in Benton Harbor on Sunday to see them for a week’s visit at the
rThursday, from Ann Arbor where I family and Mr. and Mrs. Henry ter and husband. Mr. and Mrs. Ro- her brother. Merton Ellison, who Is Stuart home.
1 wm visit Mrs. Johnston
Johnston's
’s sister at I al 234 "
South
—,u Ninth “
8t..
• °
San
— Jo*e,
•—
shades—Wilson Brothers and
| she has been for a week at Univer- I Mulder and family spent Sunday at zell Stanton, for .-everal weeks.
Mr. and* Mrs. chan. Bassett of । Manchester. N H . and relatives In Cal-, where he has a position. Hasvery ill. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Crook
slty hospital under observation.
Ottawa Beach.
I Rev. and Mrs W. K. Chidester are In Benton Harbor assisting with Kalamazoo vteited Mrs Gertrude | Goffstown. N- H. and Springfield.' ting- friends extend best wishes.
I Mrs. Guy Keller left Saturday for I Mr. and Mrs. James Bristol, and daughters relumed yesterday Mr. Ellison's care.
Houvener Sunday, the laucr return- | Mars. •
— ------------------Mr.
Downs will —
go •to ------Burn -1■
----------------- -----------------------.Memphis. Tenn., for an indefinite: Stephen Bristol and Ray Seigler' from a several days' vtelt with
Mrs. Nettle Van Auken of Cato. ing with them for a day * visit. Mrs. toga Springs. N. Y.. to attend the •
MONTHLY DINNER,
Houvener has rented thc upstairs thirty-eighth
national
encamp- I" Thte Thursday evening te the time
'stay with Mr. andMrs. Clarence I were in Bangor Sunday nnd In Paw Jrlends In st. Johns and Owosso.
Weis* and tlie newgranddaughter | Paw on Monday.
.
| Mr and Mrs.
Frederick Palmer Cooper at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Pender apartment on S. Jefferson ment of the Spanish war veterans.1 far '.he monthly dinner at thc Coun-,
| Dr. and Mis. Q. L. Lockwood and ( Miss Emily McElwain returned and Mr*. James Sitebee went to H. J. Freeland. Mr. and Mrs. Clay­ St., taking possession this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Wj|rr«m Moore and try club with the following commit-;
Thc Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Bird Mr. and Mrs. Mike Alterdlng re-! tec in charge: Dr. and Mrs, C. P..
; children went toColumbia City.1 on Saturday from Evanston. Ill..' Batesville, md..
Tuesday to vtelt ton Van Auken accompanied his
Manton I turned test week from a week of j Lathrop. Mr and Mrs. A. H. Car-'
a last
jasi week
wees /from
, ir&lt;
•Ind.. Wednesday Lo vtelt relatives, where she attended summer school Mr. and Mrs. Rodman Saunders,
mother to Hastings, going on to returned
cihe children remaining for a r"
week.
‘: '
I al Northwestern.
‘—
1j Mr. and Mrs. George Crakes and‘ Indianapolis to attend the rural j where
attended
v
tthey
*'
— ...
"
1 tlte
F'~
' , sight seeing ...
Free
in the Upper Peninsula veth and Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Potts.
bit--------camp
'tnoJtln
mall wim*
carriers wm
convention.
Methodist
camp
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Mess
■ss of
of', -----Mrs.-----------------------------------------------C. H. Hinman and Charles,family
_________________________
and Miss Frances Sutton &gt;■■&lt;&gt;»
.cuwvm.
।I -----------—
--------ting. They&gt;' are
nd Canada.
»»v,
.«.«
....
are ' aand
Canada.
They
raw
the, ( A line program has been planned
n... and Mrs. Maurice Grigs. | undecided
• tflmhur.vi. HL. were guests of Mrs. 1 went to East Chicago Thursday for have returned from a tnree weeks' | The Rev.
undecided ahnnt
about their plans for the Tahquamcr.on Falls, pictured Rocks and it is expected that Mrs. vinnle
Ella Hammond last week. Mrs. i a ten days' visit with her mother, stay at the Nevins cottage at Wall I by of Detroit and Mr*. E- C. Potter coming year. Tlie pastor for thc and the beautiful Kitch-iti-Klppl Ream Boyd of Atlanta. Ga.. will
Phone 2396
and Edward of Oswego. Kansas, vis- Hastings church was nol named but spring at Indian lake. Manistique give readings, cards will also be
Hanunond returned with them for a . Mrs. C- C. Shields.
। lake.
Mr. —
and «*
Mrs.
— Will —
Grigsby
•»—# and
•• , will t&gt;e
1,6 auPPHct*
supplied later.
&gt;i 3nd also -*
drove
------ -----------into Northern
----- -------------Cnn- played.
yteil..
Miss Ada Michael of Detroit
County
school
Commissioner ited «...
. Mr. Xpd Mrs. Fred Rchor and ' spent the week end with her sisters. Maude w. Smith was in Mt. Pleas­ other
Jser friends over ths
|! ***“ Helen wade
a* far a* Batehawana Bay. covthe week end.
* was In the city
Mr. aha Mr*.
James
Oleson and
flaw York
Shildren and Mrs. Ricker of Canton. MLsscs Nonna and Helen Michael ant last week where she attended M^^ho^ave
’becn
vteiUnFat
The |on
! CityMonday
to her enroute
homo infrom
Traverse
City ceing l.6(R) Inlie* of beautiful roads
m e/hn hav«
vixitimr nt the I City to her home in Traverse Citv. and scenery.
Ohio, came Saturday for a visit of I nnd MY*. J. A- Wooton
the Michigan school Commissioners
Mcrwyn
Plumley
returned
Bun­ Association.
Jen days with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob*I **~
—““ **
L—
-------J "
J. E- Tyden home, went to Whitehall Mtes V/ade and Miss Helen Furntes
Tuesday to visit his parents before j have been attending summer school
PARENTS OF SON.
■dehor.
iday
day to
to ms
his work
work m
in Detroit
Detroit after
after al
a
Allison Tolles. MlM Margaret week's visit with hte parents, Mr.1 children have been spending their | returning to their home in Aurora. I st Interlaken. Lakeville, conn., and
Principal and Mrs. Edwin Taylor
&gt;
nt Columbia University, the former are the parent* of a son. born at,
-Tolle* and Lynden Snyder went to ■ nnd Mrs. Calvin Plumley.
vacation in northern Michigan.. —
III.
i penncck hospital on Thursday. Aug.
•Chicago Sunday and saw the Tigers ■ Floyd Wood. Angelo Splrte, Frank , They called on Mr. and Mrs. R. J. 1
Miss Geraldine payne returns to­ being one division of Columbia.
Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Johnston. Mr. 13. He has been named Nell Archl­
take a double header from the Haight and Cha*. Townsend at- i McCreerv of Traverse City also.
I day to her home in Wellston after
.White sox.
| tended the American Legion con-1
Mra. Glen Densmore and Mtes visiting Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cook and Mrs. Edw. Downs and Mr. and, bald. Mother and son pre doing
. Mrs. Sidney Shipman returned on venllod in Lansing on Monday.
( Wilma Jean Mayo returned Satur­ and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cook. Miss Mrs. Albert Craig and Dorh* of thte ’ splendidly.
.Monday to her home tn San Fran- &gt; Craig Sheffield spent Sunday in day from their motor trip to West Madeline cook accompanied 4MIs* city. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Leins and
gisco after vtelling her mother. Mrs., Kalamazoo. Mr*. Sheffield and two1 Collingswood, n. J.. Atlantic City. Payne to Wellston for a vtelt.
family of South Haven and Mr
H. G- Hhyes. and other relatives daughter*, who have been vtelting I New York City, and other points of
Miss Jennie McBain and Miss and Mrs. James Timmerman of
Jierc for several weeks.
there for ten days, returned with I interest. They accompanied Mr. Lillie Christie were in Battle
—- ----------Creek Jackson were here for the week end
, Wellesley Ironside went lo Phlla-ihlm.
and Mrs. Archie Herrington of Bat- j Wednesday to attend the wedding and were dinner guests on Sunday
telphltt on Wednesday to spend hL* ‘ ML« Florence Watkins returned tie Creek.
Qf the former's nephew, Donald Mc- of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Leins at
vacation with Lloyd Lohmeyer. They . Sunday from New Yorx City where j Melvln Jacobs. ML** Alice LyBark- Bain, and Mtes Elizabeth Cook. Mr. Leach lake. This family gathering
jason
c lwain
will drive back to Hastings in time she attended the summer sesstoh at er and Everett Jacoba, accompanied! and Mrs. McBain will reside tn Kal- was held before Mr. and Mrs.
411 WEST CENTER STREET
Johnston and Mr. and Mrs. Downs
for the opening of school.
1 Columbia and received her Master's by George Fitzgerald of Kalamazoo, atnazoo.
Mrs. Jas. W- Long, accompanied; degree.
spent lhe week end in Detroit and [ Clarence Radford and Mr. and left for the east today.
by her stetcr. Mrs. Emma Wolfe of
Maj. Roy Parker, head Chaplain Cleveland leaving Detroit by boat lo • Mrs. Jos. Shultz were Sunday guests
Battle creek, left Saturday for a ' of thc U- S- Army, whose home U attend the closing searion and rally I of Mr. and Mr*. Earl Tripp of Jackvisit with another sister. Mrs. Bar- ! in Junction City in thc typical of the National Union for Social • son. Marion Radford, who had been
■ftkra Burklc. of Lincoln. Ncbr.
( Prairie state of Kansas, was tn the Justice convention—to hear thc Rev. visiting Betty and Virginia Custer
Mr. and Mrs. W. B- Herron and city Monday.
Charles e. Coughlin and Rep. Wm. in Jackson for a week, returned with
Mr. and Mrs. John Herron and
Mr. and Mrs. E- D. Hoover of De­ Lemke address an enthusiastic au­ them.
daughter Joan of champaign. 111., troit vteited Mr. and Mrs. Cecil dience of over 40,000 assembled In
Mrs. E. J. Pratt and Mrs. William
were guests of Mrs Stella Bump Munton Saturday night and Sun­ Cleveland's lakefront stadium. They Lauder attended the Democratic
over the week end and vteited for­ day. Mrs. Wm. Fox returned with also attended the Great Lakes Ex­ slate committee meeting at Flint
mer friends and neighbors thru the them for a vtelt.
position. returning home on Mon­ last Thursday. Mrs. Lauder wm ap­
Mr. and Mrs. Warren carter vteit­ day. Melvin remained in Detroit, pointed state chairman of publicity
county.
(
FRIDAY, AUG. 21
SATURDAY. AUG. 22
Mr. and Mrs. F J. LaMastcr. ed in Brussels. Ont., over the week where he will attend the art acad­ for lhe Democratic women's organ!Donald and Beulah Severance and end. Misses Agnes and Margaret emy for two weeks.
Johanna Dahn of Detroit came Sat­ Fulton of Brussels came home with
urday to spend the week end with them for a week's vtelt.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Casper of;
Frey and Dorothy
arc returning Marshall are guests of Dr. and Mrs. i
Frank carrothers today. Mr. and;
(with them;
Mr and Mrs. Dan C- Walldorf! Mrs. Bruce Casper will return to
Primary Campaigns for County Officers are clean and good naland Helen in company with Mrs. El­ Marshall with hte parents.
tured. It te all a family affair among friends and neighbors It
wood Barnum and son Roger and
resembles a game of checkers but has some amusing angles. One
। Mrs. Homer Pox are in Dayton.
candidate makes a move and then his opponent makes an an­
Ohio, thte week to visit Elwood
swering one. Two weeks ago my opponent published an article
Barnum who te In the Veterans' hoson the front page of the Banner telling why you ahould vote for
pltal there.
him. and now here 1 am telling you why you ahould vote for me.
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Gallup spent.
NOONDAY LUNCHIS
At any other time you'll find that both Stuart and I are quiet,
Sunday at South Boardman. guests
modest persons who wouldn't think of patting ourselves on lhe
of Mr*. Gallup's father. Miss Gladys
Vftuiscy-relumed with them to as-1
DINNERS
I wasn't bom in Barry county. I was bom In Marquette county,
atet with thc children. Mr. and Mrs. |
5:30 to 7:30 F. M.
Fred Foot accompanied them to
which te tn Michigan, also. But where I was bom can't make
GROUP NO. 1
GROUP NO. 2
CROUP NO. 1
m? a good Probate Judge antf I don't ask you to vote on that
South Boardman.
SUNDAY DINNERS
Mrs. Wayne O- Frey and daughground. I brought my wife and kiddles to Barry county by
12:30 to 2:30 F. M.
ger Dorothy of pine lake went to
choice and It seems to me a fellow must love a community and Its
Detroit on the train Thursday tak­
people just as much to chooae it for a home as to happen to be
iam
6 to 7:30 P. M.
ing Barbara and Norma Van Dyke
bom there. I don't own my home, but If I did it wouldn't make
to their home after spending three
me a bftter Probate Judge. For eleven or twelve years my op­
weeks with their grandparents. Mr. i
ponent has faithfully filled public office and with hte savings has
and Mrs L. severance.
I
Formerly $3.88
purchased a home. If you’ll employ me for tweh-e years Hl buy
Formerly $4.88
a home, too. although I can't assure you It will make me a better
Probate Judge.
When I ran for Prosecutor the second time I asked you to elect
me if my record deserved it and beat me if It didn't. I was elected.
A second .term shouldn't depend on "custom,''—should It? My
opponent and I arc both good Republicans and we wouldn't jive
two cents for that ''custom" idea if Mr- Roosevelt’s backers were
Wise shoppers will toke odvontogo
urging it.
of this sale and buy several
tt
I am 49 years old. I have actively practiced law. for 24 years.
I believe I understand Juvenile Problems which occupy an Im­
We wish tp thank our many friends and potrohs for
for next spring.
portant division of the Probate Court. My twins, John and Mar­
lhe business that we have received from you during
garet. are 19 I think I understand elderly people. My Grand­
mother was 99 when she died. My Mother and Father were 10
our ten years in Hastings and it shall be our aim to
and.U. My friend# My a mature family-man and a trained law­
please and serve you better in the years to come.
yer should be Probate Judge. Detroit, Grand Rapids and other
large communities will not elect a man unless he Is a lawyer. I
think our problems are equally Important.
I am not printing this on the front page because lhe rates are
much lower here. 1 believe in economy personally and In public

Social Events and Personal Mention

Mtn Ada Eeaenburg joined her
parents here Friday after a two
months' stay in Chicago.
Mn, Hazel Hinkley and son Rich­
ard visited Mr. and Mrs, Raymond
Black of Battle Creek recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Addle Parker were
over Sunday gueits of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Parker of Grand Raplda
Mr. and Mrs. clarence Neubaum
of Battle Ccpek spent the week end
with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Durkee of
Woodland Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Reid and fam­
ily of the 8tar district were Bunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Raid,
who live near Quimby.
Mrs. Erma Gardner left Saturday
for Huntingdon. W. V*-. where ahe
will visit relatives, expecting to re­
turn Friday of thte week.
Mrs. Rozcll Blanton has returned
from Evanston, Ill- where she at­
tended the summer acsslon al
Northwestern University.
Mr. and Mrs. H. G Michael of

*2“ 'J5* '5

Fall SHIRTS

T. S. BAIRD

Cinderella Dresses
Now Showing the Newest

Gladiolus Blooms
M E

At the Big Little Store

SPECIAL

BLISS COFFEE .lb. 21c
VACATION LAND COFFEE r._lb. 17c
Argo Corn or Gloss Starch, 2 pkgs. 17c
LUX FLAKES------------- largo box 22c
SUPER SUDS____ _____ box 7c
Arm b Hammer Baking Soda, lb. bx. 6c
GOLD DUSTlarge box 15c
Lighthouse Scouring Powder, 3 bxs. 10c
RINSO--------------------- 2 10c boxes 15c

MEAT SPECIALS

PORK CHOPS
»»» cow |b. 19c
BEEF ROASTS cmc.oo .Esr
lb. 18c
LARD, Bait Pure4 lbs. 49c
OLEOMARGARINE2 Ibi. 25c
MINCED HAM. J. '/2 lb. diced 9c

PARKER HOUSE

Watch and Jewelry
Repairing

BOLOGNA rawov QUALITY

Dashing Creations and Reproduc­
tions of High Price Importations

Fall Dresses

*3“ **6“

Fall Millinery

♦288

Closing Out Our Entire Stock of
Summer Dreiies in 3 Groups

”2 M3 *4

Better Cotton Dresses

2 lbs. 29c

Estimates FREE!

/I /I
B ••
JB.

Come and See These Values at
the New Home of

BESSMER
Jawalars and Opticians

New Fall DRESSES
and HATS
The Most Outstanding Values at
Popular Prices

IO“

AN IMPERSONAL WORD

Creations In

,

RapecWulty,

LAURINCE I. BARNETT.
One ef lhe Candidates far Nomination on the Republican Ticket
for Probate Judge, at Primary Election. Beplember 15th, IMS.

HINMAN’S
Hastings

PHONE 2491

Michigan

Cinderella

128 W. STATI ST.. H
Room Formerly Occupied by

�TH1 HATTNGg BANXfrf, TBUtSPAt, AUGUST U IfM

JRANCE

WANTS

AUTO . FIRE

LENT CORNERS.
I Mth Valz of Salina visited friends
WOODLAND.
Clark Haner and Mrs
Clara j
neighborhood and Nashville
TUF TUIIDrUCC
Newt was racaivad Saturday by
a nEt \^ii UK UnEfJ Mrs. R. J. Sheldon of the death of Phillips and daughter Betty Jean.1 Sunday.
of KahuXo spentsawrday eveH.nry Bldclnian want to ase a

TOR 9.U.EAlau

Our Service
CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co
MAUS

H&lt;&gt;1 SI KI El’EK widt.,1

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

OFFICE

H 'Ed

HAITIXOR MICHIGAN

101 So Charct St

FOR BALE
FUH KAI.!

BRICK

un;

Fok

.’u

■UMM |..r»|l..n

At Old Hastings Wool
Boot Flant Site.

In­

quire of Joe DeRuiter
wiSTKh—

at Pickle Station.

Mania Tlukl

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
For RkSiT -

l1s (I j

Mil: HI

BEAl'TIFtt. HOMK

FOR MALE—Sr.
-‘.15 Mr* Mi,
Fl'lt.XtHliEI) .
ADJUSTABLE CENTER

FORD—1VS0 eoa

MICHIGAN

Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

Hie Prescription Drug Store
Fqr tractor or car deliv­
ered from tank truck. 50
gdlluitb ur mule. 9’sc plus
tax. Special price for serv­
ice stations. Equal saving
on kerosene

HASTINGSMICHIGAN

GaaraataeW Trea Flttlag

Farmer!, Attention!

FAIR TIME

WRECKING
FOR PARTS

Fidelity Corporation
OF Mien.

&lt; ‘The whole of chivalry and
neralrtrvisI* inin courtes
wmrf
' heraldry
y. ••_
| NOTICE or TAKING TOWNSHIP
ROADS INTO COUNTY ROAD SYSTEM

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

ROOM 10—IND FLOOR
HASTINGS NATIONAL BANK
BUILDING — PHONE 3301

Hastings

OR
COMMISSION
ON COMMISSION

I

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
BONDS
NOTABY PUBLIC*

I fl Y?

ii.iui f..r Phil
U,m
*i th. church
h. .i«Uun Ot

JOHNSTOWN ORANGE.

X V V

J U D&gt; MIA
Phone 79

EMERSON ROYER

irar« H
W tor
it-;.'.

BTATE OF MICHIGAN
THE PROBATE COURT FOE TUB
..
.
m Hl!.on I

Nashville. Mich.

Paid for Dead Stock
boor Dead Animals Are Worth
DOLLARS. To assure yourself of
getting the BEST PRICES, call
MR. FLOYD DENNY.

JERRY ANDRUS

Neel

.. theaee X.

Phone Hastings 253te-We pay the
tt.
phone charges!

5HE. V7-RONG

. fa

that can be successfully operated with
a 5-H.P. electric motor. Come in &gt;td
let us explain the many power and
labor saving features of lhe Papec.

CARDS of THANKS

XaUoaai Bask Bldg.—Pkena Zill

Charlie WlUlasu.

1/CI V 1 kJ A T A D

KtLVINAI UK
SALES AND SERVICE

DR. R. A. DENISON
DENTIST
WTh Be Her* m Uim! on Setura*r. al vba Parker Haute.
lieu* S0«.

HASTINGS MARKETS

H. E. Smith Hdwe.
1

Wl

Phone URN — ,H**ting«
SERVICE Hl 'UMS

kUBiti

PUtee Repaired. 11.OS

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

•E FELDPAUSCH'S

A Utile FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW

MARKET. Phone 2616

SEE

FOOD CENTER 2609

GEO. M. NEWTON

H.FaUpausch . 3921

Registered OPTOMETRIST and
1» W. STATE 8T.

HASTINGS

Cneked ears. IJ.SO.

Each year more farmers buy Papec
Enulnge Cutters than any other make.
cutter for your money. You get a big­
ger, heavier, easier-running machine

E rornt
,IIe * ' ’

There just isn't any excuse for
the Wrung Lane Turner!
He’s the motorist who doesn't
make up his mind that he's'going
to turn until after he's reached
the intersection—and then sud­
denly attempts to cross in front
of other moving cars. No warn­
ing signal—no brains!
Good driven prepare for a
turn in advance by getting in the ‘
left-lane of traffic for a left turn
and in the right lane for a right
turn. Simple un't itf Yet many
accidents happen because motoruli “forget.

HOW ABOUT
Your Ensilage
Cutter Needs?

Am in position to dem­
onstrate machine at
your farm.

PUBLIC LNLMIL5

m"c

1

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

ROBINHUE PARK.
Mrs. Eva Manker and two daughters. Mrs. Nora Smith, of Oregon.
I and Mrs Omer Ward, and son and
I ‘laughter. Mrs. Charles Reed and
■ two sons of Grand Rapids spent
I Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. George
Poland.
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Potts and
daughter Betty spent from Thursi day unUl Sunday with their daughI ter and husband. Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Plnkbelner who are spending
I their vacation at pickerel lake. ’
. Wright Clifford. Jr. Is at Ionia
fair this week assisting Howard |
Smith with his cattle.
Wedding belLs rang tn our neigh­
borhood Saturday, when Miss Ger­
trude Clagett of Freeport, became
the bride of Randall Kirkpatrick.
Tlie marriage was solemnized at
the Baptist parsonage in Hastings.
। Congratulations.
j Mrs. John Kollar is expected home
I from Blodgett hospital Wednesday
, or Thursday.

Pennock hoaptta! tor ten days was
taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs
Elenbaa* Sunday.
Sherman Clifford was among the
seventeen “future farmers" who left
Monday A. M with Donald Curry
for a week's vacation at Long lake.
Mr. and Mrs. George Poland were
in Lowell Friday.

HIGHEST PRICES
।

PAPEC

CUTTERS

REPAY MONTHLY

• FORDSON TRACTOR
AUTO GLASS INSTALLED

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
Work GuraatMd an*
Prtea* BaaaaaaNt
Phone 2220
Hastings
tf

PREFER

poetry is me music of thought
conveyed to us in tlie music of lan­
guage."—Canfield.

Without Caah la ilka a elreiu

• m» Model A Ford Troek
&gt; 1929 PLYMOUTH Coupe

Phone 2637

of Sunfield.
&gt;-*
10:00 Mn. Ella Bush of Los Angeles. Cal.. I urday after a week * visit with his
Mr “
and
- ----------- ------ - ■
—
were guests of Dr. and Mrs P. E grandmother. Mn. Mary Mellon, of
v,r
"** Mrs. Jasper
’•*~r Jordan
»«•**" are
1
attending Ionia fair this week
I
Willison of Hastings for dinner Sun- i Kalamazoo.
Mr “and
Mr*. Bertie cuu*ws
Smith and , If Fire Goea Down Boy
day.
i Billy West and Junior Pralo ।j Ml
““ a*'"The Slandaid Bearers are prepor- spent Friday in Otsego
. daughter.
'
Bernice
‘ Sensiba.
of KateCai|er |, Not Wanted
mg a pageant “O Zion Haste" which ' Mias Velma Brouard assisted masoo were Hastings shoppeis SatMuch of the p|eu*nrr of n bollwill be given Sunday evening. Au- Mn. John Oswald last week in car- ' urday.
&lt;|*y in Holland I* derived from the
FIBBT METHODIST EPISCOPAL
gust
30
in
tlie
Methodist
church.
i
ing
for
Mr*.
Lyneq.
wimnvr
CHURCH.
. quaint cuxtonis ami old talea which
-------------------------------------.....
, and Mrs. Earl Car pen Ut mot TH^SEtOND
Frank Jordan
and Mr. and
Mrs | [ M
Mr.
1 are met everywhere. There I* a
Glen Hazel and family of north ' tored to Selkirk lake Sunday, to see
winner of a 130 00 suit on Al Me- | proverb here. "There are only two
do«k: । woodland are in Levering visiting [ the army camp.
। Call's suit club. Pete says. "It «as , thinga a girl chooaea beraelf—ber
relatives.
Carl Caldwell ha* been very sick
a shock u&gt; learn that I won, but a
- h«u ' Mr. *nd Mra. D. B- Green were , the past two weeks and is not im­
potatoes and her lover."
very pleasant one " Mr Maus gels
pel lack &gt;ap 1 dinner (guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Gten proving a* fast as we all wish he
his suit for only M25
:
I Leedy at Battle creek Sunday.
&gt; might.
! the world, note* a corre»jx&gt;nd«nt
FIRST CHUP.CII OF CHRIST.
। Mlss'Jmcphlne Hoppe of Chelsea *
SCIENTIST.
and Kirs Dorsy Hoppe of Seattle. (
BRANCH DISTRICT.
,
Caves for the storage of winter a Kerntl* or a glimpse on tin* street,
! wash., spent lhe week end with Mr.
Ernest Skidmore is buildUig a new '
food are common equipment of and the young man puts on hl* beet
and
Mrs. John Hauer.
,
----- ----'stone
porch an their house
corn belt communities.
j suit, and go*-* to tlie home of the
Miss Phyllis England of Chicago' Mrs. Samuel Norton of Lakeland,
girl. He I* quietly received by the
and Miss Pollyanna England visited fu., and her mother. Mrs Meachparents, smiled at by the girl and
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harrison of am. of Assyria, spent Sunday after­
Detroit Saturday and Sunday.
noon as the guests of Mr. and Mra. j
Just about the time when Vikings i her slstere, who probably budge
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
1
a-aa-h other.
other. ------Nothing
Is said about
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Dell.
Mbs
DorVincent
Norton
and
family,
may
have
been
exploring
Labrador.
'
each
-- .....
IN CHRIST.
othy Dell and Elwyn Dell were
Ellas Saddler of Ann Arbor and Xova Ncotta and the con»t of Maine, the reason for his coming, though^
guests of Mr and Mrs H. I FYatch- son. Clark Saddter. of Dearborn, there lived In lla'iatcs. un bland every one guesses right. In the late
er and other relatives of Detroit were guests of the former's niece,
Hunjtr ecbool at 10:30 A i!
the
brothers and steten, •
of what I* now the Friendly Group. evening
'
------Merle* II 30 o'clock. 1
over Die week end.
•
— ---------• '--------—•
Mrs.
Henry—Bldelman.
and
Mr
rriaay.
i ■ t’oljneslan navigator called Kupe. even the partnla, go to bed and
Mr. and Mrs. James Mills of Has­ Biaeiman
Bldelman Friday.
Mrs. saddler, who ha* been stay- ' He wa* known for bl* Intrepidity In leave the two principal* alone. No,
tings spent Thursday with Mr. and
MeCaDaa CUarc*.
। Mrs. D. B. Green.
Ing with her daughter.’ has left to a eummunlty where the virtue was he doe* not fnll on his knee*. They
। Lyle Hynes. Elmer Matthews and stay with her granddaughter at common. Kupe paid a visit to ita- talk of everything but love.
.10 A. M
‘T'lo
i Merle Ralrigh saw lhe ball game in PrairlevlUe. She attended thc Sad- n.tonge. 50) miles from his home,
.*
' Chicago Sunday.
dler reunion at Kalamazoo Sunday. Bllll |heri. .ledded to see what lay the lad inuat take It a* a sign that
| Mr. and Mrs. Herald Classic are
The North Maple Grove Sunday, to the Houth. There are no details he 1* not wanted and he goes out
EMMANUEL UHUBCH
‘fovlni into the Carrie Grozlnger school will have their picnic Wed­
' 252*"'
house this week. This house was for- nesday. Aug. 26. at Morgan park, I ofethnt voyage of discovery. All Into the night never to return.. If
। that is known Is that on a Novem­ she choose* him. the build* up the
ut
io so । «wriy occupied by Mr.
and Mrs Thomapple lake. come.
k-« K'.ith Lawrence Bird: Mr. and Mrs Edison
There will be no sbnice* at the ber mumlng Kupe'* wife saw the fire, and that becomes the end of
i tbr earir i Baas are moving
into lhe house va- 1 North Evangelical church sunday clouds over the land to the north a perfect day.
----- -------------------------------of Auckland, and from that came
.Classics
cated by the .classics.
as pastor and part of the congregaMr. and Mrs. w. C. Hubbell ot tion expect to attend camp meeting
‘ Keep an open mind and profit by
PILGRIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE. Detroit and Keith Guy of Lansing at Buchanan.
Aotea-Hpa (the long, white cloud). critlctem."—George F. Hoffman.
were Sunday dinner guests of Mr.1 Mr. and Mrs. George Marshall and
and Mrs. Delmond Culler.
three daughters, who had gone to |
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Brumm at-1 Monroe for a visit, were called home
tended tht Brumm reunion at Mor-1 Saturday as lightning struck a straw
nan park. Thomapple lake Sunday. 1 stack early that morning. Neighbors
' Mx.». cilenn England and daugh- and thc fire department fropi Nashlets PuUyauna and Mai jut y and, * ill*? were fighting to au.e iliv Lam
, Miss Phyllis England of Chicago and other stacks.
spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. j A miscellaneous shower was given
,: ijukc
Luke Murey
Marcy of
oi Crystal.
uryatai.
• .Mr
Mr. and
ana Mrs. Dale
ueie Conklin
conaiin ut
ui the
| Robert Austin of Lansing U! home ot Rev. and Mrs. E.
BAPTIST CHURCH.
Tuesday evening.
spending the week with his mother. Rhoades.
“*■* J
-------------B. J. ADCOCK. Minister
Mrs. Rhoda Austin, and Mr. and
Miss Margaret Sage and Ken- j
Mrs. Herald Classic.

MOST FARMERS

F. A. COl'LT, Distributor.
R.k, Hotmg. Phone 7*6-F5

Tarda. Skip EVERY TUESDAY
and BUY EVERY DAY.
LAKE DePBtRBTER. PHONE TIT—I

The Halting! Banner

brother. Almon Farr of Prai*
I rievllle. Mr. and Mn. E J. Sheldon
chubqk. land daughter. Mn. p. W. Eagelkroudt, of Detroit attended lhe funeral Tuesday P. M.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hewitt ate

nlng
with
Mr
and Mrs
Frank । &lt;*o«or Monday for an eye that has
—
w w»n
—,
nuil.
atr. ana Mrs. rrana
hlm , tot of uoubl«.
wsaunrax mbthodibt
Phillip*.
• COOK BROS. KJIWf*.
Mr. and
•' Mr*. Lee King of Com­
QUIMBY.
stock spent Friday night and Sat-'
The Qulmby-Strikar picnic was
urday with Mr. and Mrs Lawrence
quite
well
attended.
Those
from
HRouMnd.
,„ —-------------- -------Mr. and Mrs. Carl McMannls of away were Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Eaton Kat«r*4 *i tk* mi
*t Haiti***.
park. Lansing. Saturday.
_
____ _Colby
___ _________
___________
Orville
of Northport
is visit-Kalamazoo called at the home of of Flint: Lewis Eaton of Alberta, MWktexa. M »&lt;»** &lt;Ux.
ing his aizter. Mn. T. H. Cobb, and j Mr. and Mn. Robert Steele Suu- . Canada; Chas Brakefield of Salt
"
'
family for a few days.
! day.
Lake City. Utah; Fred Blake of j
b’^r’y county onr yrar
M
Meads met Clara Rising. Rana
Mr. and Mn. Clare Thomas en- Helena. Ohio; and Mr. and Mn. Ed-1
t,
j
T€AM’ ” **
CHURCH SXBVlUU
Culler. Cristina Crotinger. Bertha Joyed a fishing trip Friday and | ward Rltzman of Milwaukee. Wl*. I l3t BjkRRT county. BIX M0XTHH. aoo.
Flory. Mattle Schray and Wm. War- । Saturday to the home of her sister. Ralph Striker wa* elected preaident
—
u.j .u.
------- a
*•— Mr jjjjj Uri prm* Chilson, of for tlie ensuing year.
IN BARRY COUNTY. THREE MONTHS.
IN ADVANCE ..._^SS«
Mr and Mrs. Gerald Nash and
Mary McNaughton (Mary Hunsetk- Cloverdale,
BARMY COUNTY. ONE TEAM
erl
of Mulliken Saturday.
'
»•-*.«
Mahion
— •Burkett and Betty and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ware of Hop- OUTBIDS
miT URITXD BBBTHBEN CHURCH
IN ADVANCE ------------------------- SIAM
Oordon
of
Kalamazoo
called
at
lhe
'
blns
visited
home
folk*
Friday.
Rev. Fay C- Whig attended EmFOREIGN SUBSCRIPTIONS. ONE TEAM
1 Mr. and Mrs Chas. Eaton of DeDe*
batmen' school at Cadillac Monday Leland Hammond home Sunday.
IN ADVAXCM .........
...SZ.Oa
vteited his brother. Fred, over
The Anson reunion wo* held Sun- . troll visited
------------and Tuesday of this week.
.
I
ADYKRTIBIXG RATkB:
Mrs. Earl Stocker of Bradford. O, day al the home of Mr. and'Mrs. the week end.
Mrs. Fred Bldelman of Detroit I DiapUr aSvortUiaa nt** m
called on Mrs. J. L Smith Friday Victor Anson of pine lake.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Mr. and Mr*. Marc Hammond visited at Walter BRlalman's the. n«a.
afternoon.
picnic dinner--------al MIlham
| h“,“»%i*7mV*«^3**"peVllaa!- ,0&lt;
Don Shorno was in Ann Arbor enjoyed
—...-------a.------------------------------ - past week.
.
. over the week end and the Misses park. Kalamazoo Sunday, with their
Kalamazoo
levin*. H.rmon tunic:
:: "Wh*i ! Louise and Lorena Hilbert came daughter.
■*
*■**■ Jean,
’— of **
’’-----------'j visited at B- L Edmonds' home Sun- lorttu*. No *4» for
l&gt;&gt;. for Hunun.tr C ■ H
Almon Farr, a life long resident day.
| ^"/.""or*Th*ak*
borne with him for a vacation.
Mr« Vrank
Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Lovell attend- R&gt;uiut,un&gt;. i« * »«
Mrs
Frank Ntathamar
Nlethamer and riauffh.
daugh­ of thia community, passed away at
He ed the Cleveland ftcpoellion last I
•* blrth*
ter Peggy visited Mr. and Mrs. Er­ his home Saturday night.
wiatoe no*
now:
nest Tucker Thursday and Friday leave* a son Clancey and a grand- Thursday and Friday
----------* -----------and on Friday they oil called on Mr son Richard. Hl* wife passed away
TAMARAC.
and Mrs H. H. Jordan of Grand about seven yean ago.
HASTINGS PARISH.
Miss Pauline chandler qf HasTh* UtUe daughters of N McRapids
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
Mr and Mn. Grant Osgood and | tlngz spent lhe past week with her Clellwid have been vaccinated for
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Lehman spent . aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mr* Marc diphtheria and small pox.
Sunday in Chicago and the men at- Hammond. Their daughter. Mrs.
Callers at Bertie Smiths Sunday
JOB PBlNTtXO.
lensed tb« Tiger-Cub* b
— -11 I George -----------* Jr.,
- of -----------------nH Mrs. John
,nh" wu,nn
baseball
Comfort.
Kalamazoo ----, wcrc Mr
Mr. "
and
Wilson. Mr
Mr 1I
came uunaay
Bunday lor
for aa lew
few aays
days' vun.
visit. »nd Mrs. carl Jennie of Lansing and
game.
came
17" ’r'l."
’.'"
Mr. and Mn. J. V. Hilbert
Loren
Holton
g*.
”i"sTT,
rfIT'
uiku*
Lui tsunlaa
__ . and I Robert
__■ Hammond
.._______ ■returned
_ a.__ o..a Sat'Mr Mr
nnd and
Un MnI nmn
Wnltnn
and and
Snr. ton
i
-------------

Be sure lo see me
about terms and prices
before buying new or
used Silo Filler, Hay
Chopper or Feed Mill.
ORTON R. ENDSLEY

�aimer

| THURSDAY, AUGUST 20,1936

T YE AB

BOOKS RECENTLY ADDI
U. OF M. FOOTFALL
SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED.
ED TO THE LIBRARY.
Fiction.
I
Football fans will be Interested to
Uie 1836 season schedule for thc
McDonald. W. c.—Bullet* for
i University of Michigan” which fol­
JANE CAMERON
Buckaroos.
lows:
Watson, Virginia—Th* Featherly*. L
Oct. 3—Michigan State College at
Ik,??*.
REPUBLICAN
I
DEMOCRAT
Queen. Ellery—Halfway House.
JOKE ON VALXNTD
Al a recent reunion of lhe
Ann Arbor.
Bassett.
Sara
Were — Eternal
OK
dDOUl. j Another O. O. McIntyre column:* w
privilege of a free peo“Bless mother and daddy. And—
Oct. 10—Indiana university at Powers school an interesting letter Deep*.
I Valentin* Fty. th*
j
Up
•
betimes
and
a
romp
in
»the
'
pje
to
idolize
and
admire
whom
'
please
—
God.
help
my
daddy
to
find
I
PreaidrnU.i Rtr.w v»tM
i UP • belime* and a romp to Hhe I
Ann
Arbor.
was
read
from
Miss
Lizzie
A.
Hen
­
. o.rd-n
k..„.
B
Hrd'n -Oh
,Rfl
bu4‘ «...—I they ch00ae Bul when Brdenl New i. job so we can be warm and have
Bower. B M —Shadow Mountain, sells fruit* and vegetable* to raaorta
Oct. 17—University of Minnesota dershott. «^ho was at Camp Geyahl.
OHL MIAN GROVE, j hundred bit lhe dust anyway. We’ve
Mltdieli. Margaret—Gone With at Wall, Gull and Gun lok-.w, Mom
Dealers attempt lo place Roosevelt ’ Momethlng good lo eat."
j at MtnneapoUa
'
CALIF.—Every baby, as'used calcium cyanide. Black Leaf on an equal footing with Washing-' Tlie frail figure shivered under Its
the Wind.
I on* day at the WaU take eottM* (
24—coiunibia University
I've ,lway» heard. i&gt; born with '*''d p«n*
•»• ’ ton and Lincoln, one can br'justified ' scant covers.
i. Her empty stomach I Ann ^bor.
Brand. Max—Tlie King Bird; Mrs. vinnle Ream Whit* Boyd
ter she brings greetings from herself
going strong. Wc can see where j for making a vigorous proteit.
.
Atlanta, Oa., the famous *kxn
hurt her. 8he
closed tlred.ayes and
Ocl 3i_’unlveralty of iu»»
Illinois „ and her sisters. Florence Hender­ Ride*.
«
eto-.
• ,ofr ipot in ill head, and once „
M,t
lhrm
Wodehouse, p. G —Young
shott Henning. Blanche and Pearl
_ Men In tlonist and author and inquired
-Washington." they ray. "freed us tried to go to sleep.
g I Aim
• — Arbor.
- -&gt;—
-r».p.
in a while there’s one who The vines are slowly dying from II from Great Britain. Lincoln freed, XLiTtc ™
.
X-——t
~‘-- i NOv. 7—University of Penn, at Hendershott She says: We would Spats..
never gel, over it. but grow, 1 *outh iM when dead, the hu,. .ut ; the black people In lhe United , dream about having a real dUiner‘ । _Philadelphia.
very much like to be with you at tlie
Cameron.
Caddo—Rangers
Is said, "What kind have you and U
, ■ .
..
I leave. .While in thc garden. deUber- ; States from slavery. But it took with potatoes and meat and every- ' ” ,Nov. 14—Northwestern University reunion but cannot give ourselves Powerful Hart} to Kill.
good?" -I have the best there 1
up and, in presidential J ears, , atfly gurrej Up the
:i Franklin Delano Roosevelt to lead thing good Maybe the big clouds of |gl
that pleasure. * * * 1 can imagine' Rosman. Alice G-—Mother of the Oot the seed from Luther Burbank
ih
-l A”0 Arbor.
goes around taking straw votes it* incomparable fragrance
your saying to one another. "Dp Bride.
‘the American people out of eco- heavy,
smoke
pour
out 21—Ohio State University at
And Mrs. White who when Vlnn
-—/■ black
-----------. ,kPwould
^U" .iii.
I Nov.
on railrpad trains in order |
...
staciu on their
their mills
mills ] (CojUmbUs.
you remember?" as you think of
Car.'rar. Elizabeth—Bridal March,
I nomlc bondage"
of the huge stacks
Freedom from economic bondage? and factories and daddy would be!
some Incident stamped upon your i Coolidge. Dane—Snake Bit Jones, bank’s wife and sisters over to th*
definitely to find out which. For a detUbUul halt hour read
Season football tickets for all of
Non-Hetion.
....
....
. ; .
। "Merry England' by Sarah Adding-1 I Are the fifteen billion dollars add- 1 going off to work, whistling with ).the home games (Michigan Stale memory, for we all have many I
first ward. Just to get a rise out of
ticket will be elected.
i l0Il
llie Auguit McCuU’*. Aside; J ed to the deficit under the Roosevelt his lunch bucket under his arm!
. College. Indiana. Columbia. Illinois happy memories clustering about j Stratton, Geo. M — International Valentine said. "Luther Burbank?
He Is a kindred ipirit to the other frOni
lesson tn international administration leading u* out from j Who raid "It couldn’t happen and Northwestern) may be pur­ this spot, memories of lhe good Delusions.
Who is he?" and Valentine said,
times
we
had
working
and
playing
i
Link.
Henry
C.
—
The
Return
to
fellow, who, to settle th* whole Is- friendship, it is entirely free of the "economic bondage?” Some people here?"
•Good heavens, woman! Don’t you
I chased for $10.00. Purchasers of
together. Just now pictures are1 Religion.
sue right now and
1-------- —------------• —
----- • -- -a may be kidding themselves that it is 1 It did happen here!
read? Luther Burbank, the Cali­
everlasting
"infernal
triangle."
season tickets will be allotted the
floating
through
my
mind
aa.
if
j
Young
&amp;
Gardner
—
Games
and
—
but
what
of
our
children
and
our
|
That's
what
we
had
under
lhe
ovoid crowding at
fornia wizard, thc world's greatest
। theme which modem story writers
shown
on
a
screen.
'
Stunts
for
all
Occasions.
producer of origins) fruits and
seem unable to resist.
grandchildren—perhaps even our OLD REGIME!
the polls in Novem­
tickets will be-sold after October 3rd.
Just now I can see the place 1
Jean Barnes. Librarian,
great, great grandchildren — on I The children of America trudged &lt;The railroad
vegetables. His name is known in
ber. offer* to bet
companies
have where we used to play "Foxland
........ - ■« a»
-.........
every country on the globe I" When
you a cool thousand I
; Local animated cartoon: Little whom a major share of this tremen-1 wearily. Wan. lean face* lifted lo a agreed to grant reduced rales from
FAVORS MACKINAC BRIDGE.
that his man beats- Bk IwdRLX I Buster Willi three bumble bees in dous debt load will fall? What will hopeless future. And all the while. . .Ann Arbor and Detroit to all of Ute Geese." even the track In the snow.
Another shows some of us riding
Highway Commissioner Van Wag-1
j hot pursuit. We know he broke a they have to say about it? A strange | lhe big noises that make the OLD' out-of-town game*!.
your mtn, and then,
sort of freedom from "economic ORDER go boom-boom were ready
down hill on the big. Beamer
sled.
.' K°ncr nas joinea lhe
Uvortog
I
speed
record
from
the
hen
coop
lo
Ail
orders
for
ticket*
should
be
7
.
,7J
.
me
group
isvoruig
—-j
7—-—-w
before leaving, trie*
come -------those falrly-llke
fairiv-Uke ice
ire
---------------------... Bridge project, Judge Potter said. "That 1 a lady
to "take off" in their palatial accompanied by remittance made Then
---------------Mac
kln*c straits
the horse lank, bui there wasn’t bondage" this!
to borrow five dol­ |
Has the New Deal policy of crop ‘ yachts—if the going got too tough! I payable to Fielding H. Yost. FVrry pictures formed under lhe ice when Kcar(jing to lhe charlotte Republic-1from the sunny south." Valentine
* an&gt;’ **Dr 10 prow it.
lar* from somebody
"A very fint pert-looking young
___ us
—
That's lhe stuff that breeds com- Field. Ann Arbor. Those received be­ the water went down to the creek | an-Tribune. The state highway chief
and livestock destruction freed
r*-"I
Houdini Isn’t dead. Or at least his ever so slightly from 'economic munlsm and that was all done un­
its course
straightened
lhe ini Mcuiurix
Memoriai luiuni
Highway
but *wful Ignorant.”
------- ----------was ----- ------- - - wiu Mtc
tween Aug. 20 and Aug. 31 will be before
Ur powers
On**r«*----------th-n In
..
...
.
—
----------------- ml
laundry out of hock.
» .Kl
’ ’ der "the good old days" when Re­ drawn by lot and seals filled accord­ in
m Mr.
field-then
to «nrtnr
spring conytnUon
at...
lu concluding
rasston
' •wu
spirit II...
lives on
and irlM
writes ^"enuujl
advertising bondM.’- Th. Vniud SUU. would
Having met both
1 copy for
row lhe Certo
rw_r,„ company. th
. be starving
a bridge MINNIE EVANS KEYES HOLDS
starving today
today If
if Europe. Asia publicans ruled our destinies!
ingly. People who wish adjacent the Jacks-ln-lhe-pulplt. the trll- al gBUU 8U Uarle
The
That’s lhe unbearable human, seats should enclose orders in one Hum and the violets and other flow- acrQM lh
&lt;4 Macktnac u
types within the ten Irvins. Cobb i advertisement states that you put in and South America hadn’t rushed in
INFLUENTIAL POSITION.
days before coming . . .. . .... 3 ul
u, mBV&lt;:luua
,,c with extra crop* and produce to save misery that makes men turn toward envelope with request; not more era and vines and the gooseberries necessary and probably will be built
or ,
4 uup
cups, ot
materials and lu
have
here and being fearful that both 1 7 or 8 giaMM Of jcd a;
finish, u*.' Is this dependence on foreign a dictator—turn lo anything that than 20 will be allotted to one group. Another picture shows the creek wUhln nve yea„ Van Wa&lt;oner ttld of the official Masonic papers ray*
specie* Is going to multiply rapid-1 But Jane can’t get out any more countries, this stimulation of •for­ may help them find a way out of A fee of ten cents should be en­ where we wad*^- the J 11 e abrlclge’1 he was amazed at the traffic across in a recent issue:
eign agriculture at the expense of their bondage!
Minnie Evans Keyes, Bellevue,
ly during the ensuing three months, j than she put* to.
closed with orders to cover insur­ the minnows, the crabs *ntI frogs lhe atralu now handled by four
Roosevelt could have been dicta­ ance and postage.
.nd polywogi. Do you remember the crowded car
our own fanners helping to free us
car ferrl&lt;a
ferries. Hf
He p^cted
predicted Mich., girl who made good in a big
I’m thinking seriously of taking the ।
• • •
tor! But he is first, last and always
000 vehicle*
fer- way. b«Hpg elected as lhe Right
200.000
vehicles would
would be
be ferTickets are mailed about one week pretty stones we gathered, some of that 200
veil until after lhe campaign ends. ; Personal nomination for the two from "economic bondage?"
—a true American! The people of previous to', the day of game. All whlch we pounded and broke then, rled
thu iummer
-- -------- ------------ -----------------------.
Is
the
fact
that
there
are
still
Politic* certainly docs breed its | b«st advertisement*: The Absorbtoe.
UcX,.
Jr. one* of the bare" fool prints about more than twelve million people on America would have followed him home gamcA start at 2 o'clock E. 8. carried them home in our pocket* | whlch strengthen* the argument for1 General Grand Chapter of th* Orbecause
they sparkled *0. we the 8lralu bridge
1 dcr of Eastern Star, send* u* word
, lhe house spreading athlete’s fool, relief &lt;or more than there were anywhere and In anything he chose
thought they might be valuable? । We foUu ln
end of the gtate | that*the O. G. C. will meet In Inand the Lysol ones of the beautiful when Roosevelt assumed office) an to do. He led them back lo Ameri­
Tlie Little Red School House.
• • • I could keep on and on but. sj10Uid not overlook thc fact that dlana poll* on Sept. 24 and keep gosleeping bnby girl with files crawling indication that we have been freed can Ideals and the Constitution—
GOES TO HEIDELBERG.
ES, in my early days we also
from "economic bondage?"—This in
Charles O. Furals*. son of Mr. though lhe pictures keep coming, ^.i stepa hav, been taken In the' tog for at least • week.
had thc little red schoolhouse.
There may be thousands who be­ and Mrs. Hugh Fumlss now of I’ll give the rest of you a chance to proposed port Huron-Sarnia bridge i Because Indianapolis isn’t ao far
spite of the billions of dollars the
remembering • • ■ It is good | whJch
8arnla gateway away,
many
folk*
Maybe the reason we liked it then
wiuuia wiu
w**» make
------- ------—« Michigan
-------- «
------- will
- —a v
For the Look Worse Thon They government has been pouring into lieve that America is still as seedy :Woodland but formerly of this city, do the
and the
.. shortest
... motor
.
...to Chicago
■__ _ pl*n
h
for ii.
us. rI VltlnV
think. w,
»o .Inn
stop nnw
now and
was that it got its red tone from Did 15 Years Ago Club: Janie her­ hastily conceived and poorly execut­ as the sunflower and as slow as the .called Sunday for Heidelberg Uni­ (nr
route
lo attend.
ox-drawn
covered wagon. But there ■' versity. Germany. He received a then and. if we cannot talk to­ from cither Toronto or Buffalo. The 1 The General Grand Chapter now
ed
relief
measures.
thc paint on the outside and not self.
are
million,
who
know
that
■
A«neri-1
oacne|or
,
oegree
lrom
Ulc
ulurw
.
Is
the
fact
that
there
are
thou
­
gether
face
to
face,
to
at
least
go
Port Huron-Sarnia bridge when has a home of its own to Washingfrom tlie teaching staff on the in­
bachelor's degree from the Universide.
We’ve used enough poison on tlie sands Of bureaucrats and political ca has the best future she has ever I jlly Qf Mlchlgan ln June. afMr he over in memory our childhood completed will be the sole means of j ton. D. C- The home is the old Delcrossing at this point m the ferry mont palace. Il occupies an entire
known!
completed his pre-medic course. He days. • • •
Likewise, in those unprogressive cabbages to kill the whole family, appointees living on comfortable knownI
^Hiinns know who led Ilearned g
offered to
salaries while thousands of others
And those millions
line is to be absorbed and dlscon- city block and ta one of the show
times, we thought Uie youth of the but the worms and lice are thriv­ who really need assistance are exist­ them out of that economic wilder­
GOVERNMENT FUNDS
tinned.
Thc Port Huron-Sarnia places of the District of Columbia,
land should be taught to cherish ing. My sakes, they have the most ing on near starvation levels an In­ ness toward new hop* and self-re­ American students to study at
AID IN FIGHTING FIRES. bridge will be owned eventually by It cost over a million and a half
Heidelberg University, which will
»
the American flag for something marvelous physiques!
dication that this country has been sped!
Michigan has received ,&lt;106340 the State, of Michigan and therefore dollars to construct It and the Star
not
open
until
November
3.
He
will
besides private hissing purposes.
Our
children
grow
happy
and
freed
from
"economic
bondage?"
there
will
be no taxes on it and the got it for about $300,000.00.
.
from
the
federal
government
under
spend Ute intervening time in study­
Six outstanding women In the
Hopelessly old fashioned, eh, what?
is the fact that the Roosevelt poli­ strong. Their faces smile and their ing the German language.
the Clarke-McNary act as a contri­ approaches and right* of way on ; When you are In Washington 1OMC
world, named at the Congress of the
button
bution tQ.ine
tp.the expense undertaken in &gt; both the Michigan and Ontario sides 1 it over and if you are u Mlchlganaar
International Business and Profes­ cies of reckless spending, crop de­ eyes are bright and laughing!
struction
and
unfriendliness
toward
Do
we
want
to
return
to
that
this stale in the prevention and 1 are acquired and financed by their I you’ll be proud of our Minnie Evone
The Dictator Business.
NEED MORE HOUSES.
sional Women recently held In Paris
T LOOKS as though, when the were as follows: Secy, of Labor private enterprise, have raised the pauperism that held millions to
There is a scarcity of good homes suppression of forest fire. This respective highway departmenu. I Keyes, because we understand Utoy I
I u&gt; rent in this city. Every week there [ amount is made available tor the | leaving only the main span to be she guided the deal to purchase thw ■
* battle dust lifts from that dlsdis- ! Prances Perkins; Mme. Alexandra cost of living sharply with scarcely squalor and despair?
any effect on wages an indication
Will we a.'low ourselves to be 1 arp enqU|rtea al the Banner office current fiscal year which ends June I covered by a bond issue which will j home.
traded country. Spain will have a Kollontay. Russian Minister to Swe^bh 30. 1937. and is the second largest, be paid off in tolls.
1
1■r
—■
\
------dlctator, dictators being fashions-j den; Mme Irene Joliot-Curle. French that we are being freed from "eco­ trodden under by those over-lords j b p,.rjoni who wlsh
-..a amount
—-------—
' JI
the nonwho did nothing to save our great |m
or nwXjeraU.jy.siied ---------homes with
amount appropriatea
appropriated to
lo me
lhe states
states j|
-----------— -------------- —
' scientist;
Mrs.
Amy.......
Molllson.
Brit­ nomic bondage?"
blc.
‘
.. ..............
.................
very dif- ________________
tinder the act. California
stands first,. A columnist is a person who has lime m another war than UWMOn
Just what do the New Deal en­ nation from the threat of com-1i modem conveniences, it •is
--------____
It seems to be comparatively ish flier; Selma Lagerlof. Swedish thusiasts mean by "economic bond­ munlsm?
I
ncult
ficult
to
find
find
such
sueh
places
Diaces
In
HasHas,
receiving
receiving
$150370.
Tlie
The
total
o.
of
..
to
---------turn
out
so
much
copy
he
doexn
t
combat^t.
&gt;
IT
’
encn
propo*»g
easy to make a success of it. too. novelist; and Mrs. Franklin Roose­ age." It is a phrase of imposing , Or will we rise like a mighty unes v/e hope the time will come moneys appropriated this year is $1.i . 1 have
have U
time to think.—St. Louis Star There are machines now tnat p*w
velt. Jane would like lo add Mamma
| potatoes.—El Paso World News.
I
Just follow a formula:
sound and vague meaning.
I horde and poll our support for the . when lhal wlU nol
case
j 755.007.
Time*.
Dionne.
1_______
Make it a blasphemous violation
In fact all of this talk about man who led us to victory over every । ___________________________________________________________
of thc first commandment for any­
1
One word description of every­ "economic bondage” is futile until danger that had set upon us—»he ----- -—
one to assign you second place.
thing around here—dusty. If It gets thc term la defined clearly. To be
Bo sure all sentences personally much thicker, we’re going to slice sure the phrase has a studious tatorshlp!
When a great national convention
uttered begin with die capital let­ oft a hunk and send it to Bob Rip­ sound; but It doesn’t tell us at all
from what bonds we have been sponsoring lhe "good old days" uses |
ter "I" and end with Uic pronoun ley
freed. Stalin claims that the Soviets for 1U symbol on ox-drawn covered '
have freed Russia from "economic wagon, we’d better look well to our i
We’d have some "Thoughts While bondage" (although I imagine that
Convince yourself that. In order
responsibilities!
ever to behold nny human being Strolling." but it’s too dirty and the thousands of Kulaks who have
, :
What _________________________
about our factories and inagio is your equal in moral and dusty to stroll, we’ll put that off Uli had properties confiscated for a life dustries that have made us the au- 1
spring. Maybe there’ll be a rain
mental stature, you must carry
of dreary imprisonment or worse in lomotivc leaders of lhe world? [
then.
Siberia might not agree); Mussolini where will they be if these propon- ■
about with you a full-length mir­
claims that he is freeing the Italian ents of ox-carts have their way!
ror.
AC last the boys are getting their
people from
irom "economic
'economic bondage
uoi&gt;oa*c ’’— | Let
tet them have their slow mov
‘— ■
moving
Never permit yourself to be pho­ fill of airplanes, and now they pedple
tographed in your nightshirt, but want us to take them to Shelbyville but it is doubtful that the citizens of out-moded transportation.
Let them bask to the shade of lhe :
always in full uniform.
to see thc troops and tanks. I told Fascist Italy enjoy a fraction of the
personal freedom or scale of living sunflower I Their stature Is small
On arising, lock lhe jaws and them It was awful to spend all that
that people do right here in the
clench the fists and leave 'em that money on taking Uves. and they United States; the same thing holds enough lo find shelter there.
But real Americans want the
quickly answered we had to show
true of Germany where Hitler is mighty tree to give Its shade and
our
power,
then
we
would
be
let
And—this Is very Importantleading his people to a new freedom strength that comes from lhe very
■
*
have a dependable police force and alone.
from "economic bondage." In fact roots in our good earth.
somebody to pick on. preferably
there has been a lol of theoretical
America connotr—and will nol—
Personal piffle: Large front teeth
"freeing from economic bondage" turn back!
somebody without nny friends.
fascinate me. Ar Intrigued by the
going on In this world of late which
America will progress with ever
name Runlcman. the owner being
won
’
t
stand
any
too
close
inspection.
newer
and better modes of transpor­
Political Claim-Alls.
the Lowell miller and a backer of
According lo lhe ordinary con- tation and shelter.
HRINKING
JEEMS FARLEY the "Showboat." I like to see plump
(Continued on page 2. Sec. 2)
, Is there a man with soul so dead
announces the Democrats will women knead bread or any dough.
he can forget those long lines of
carry ever}’ division of the Union, ’’Silver Moon" is In my opinion the
hopeless figures stooped and shud­
although privately he is said to be most romantic popular song turned
dering tn the cold winter drizzle?
a little bit doubtful of two very out in years. Nothing more slckish
Is there a man with soul tso'dead |
backward counties in Vermont on a hot day than the smell of
he
can forget those mobs ’surging
While generously conceding lhe muskmelons.
through our city streets and clamor-i
central part of Mississippi and the
Ing
for a decent chance to live? |
The army planes rooming over
western end of Kentucky to the our heads nowadays recall war
September 1st is the deadline for Heat scorched their drawn, desper-1
enemy, diffident John Hamilton is limes. Do you remember lhe week the payment of the second annual ale faces. The hot suffocating heat |
sure lhe Republicans will sweep wc could only have one pound of Installment of taxes Under the of summer! But they trudged on. i
Michigan ten-ye ar
plan. Many
What was good about those days?
everything else.
sugar to a family of five and that
One thing—and one. only! The
Congressman Lemke, most mod­ pound cost sixty cents? We thought property owners have already met
est of Die ciaimers, Is certain he'll we were seeing awful privation and their obligations and protected their good sense those people still had.
rights.
Officials
ot
the
state
in
con
­
The
great spirit that is the heritage
win in 40 stales. Really, he doesn't hardship, but lhe food we were eat­
ducting this year's educational cam­ of every American—FAITH.
need that many, but 40’s a nice ing would have been luxury to the
paign are endeavoring to bring home
Our people turned their faces to­
even number. If the shy Dr. Town­ boys in the trenches.
to tlie property owners that to carry ward God.
send also should run, he counts on
out the terms of their agreement
He heard our prayers. He heard
I told Sonny and Bud they could
20,000,000 votes in this country, be­
they must be sure and make this the prayers of our children. And he
sides clean-cut majorities in Swe­ go up in a plane if there is one at second payment by September 1st.
gave us Franklin Delano Roosevelt
den, New South Wales and lhe Is­ .the fair this fall. Bud said. "We In­ They are also hopeful that those —a man who believes in the infinite
tend to anyway."
land of Yap.
who did not come under this legis­ power of God to make things rightl
lative act in 1935 will do so this
Roosevelt gave Americans a re­
Another name for our unusual year. Provision 1s made for till* ac­
Oxen Versus Onions.
newed faith in the goodness of
name list: Mr. Thund&gt;.
tion and it may be taken al very things. He brought us back to men­
XIHIH no aim to set up as a
small interest cost.
» » ipcciallst in human behavior.
tal stability and moral equilibrium.
Mr. Thunder and Mr. Rainwater
Incidentally returns indicate that
He will save America from com­
I think I’ve stumbled on a signifi­ ought to gel acquainted. But I can’t
cant, timely discovery. I found to nnd anybody to go with the Rabbit a considerable number of property munism. America will be truly
owners are paying up Uielr entire
a scientific work thia statement:
family. Might put a want ad In the back tax assessment, thereby sav­ American so long as we have a God­
fearing
leader .to defy dictatorship
"Each living growth has to begin BAnncr. But It will keep. Well keep
ing considerable money in future and to stifle the stuff that breeds ill
in a single microscopic celt More­ looking though.
interest charges.
Roosevelt is that num!
over. every future thing of either
There is no more pressing govern­
Speaklng of names, keep in mind mental problem today than the FEMALE SMOKER MORE
animal or vegetable kingdom con­
tains in that first cell a fixed num­ Gertrude Emerson, a dauntless ex­ question of past due taxes. Both the
DEADLY THAN THE MALE.
ber of even more infinitesimal bod­ plorer w^io has visited innumerable property owner and the various de­
Fire prevention authorities in
corners
of the globe where white partments ot the state are vitally northern Michigan where Urge
ies called chromosomes. In the ox,
people
are
in
the
gravest
dangeracreages
have been under a smokethe guinea pig. the man and the
affected. Ths state needs the reve-------------------------------------------------------then writes her findings for colleges. nue to operate in the interest of its 1 haze for weeks, are beginning to fix
onion, the number is the same in­
An Interpreter of the East of whom citizens and the property ownera
--------------very critical
-------------------eye on---lhe
----------probable
U-K’*
variably.”
we will hear plenty In the future.
wants to save his landed posses- causes of forest fires—among them
1 contend this natural kinship in
the woman with the cigaret. A num­
classification may explain why, in
INDICATES GHJOD PRICES.
ber
of
conservation
officers
and
fire
While
other
states
were
flounder
­
campaign years, some of us are
No doubt there will be less butter
wardens have expressed the belief
bellowing oxen, some are. docile and eggs produced In Barry county, ing around with the problem
that the woman smoker is becom­
guinea pigs and most at the rtst ot owing to the drouth conditions, than Michigan officials went ahead and
ing a serious fire hazard, that ahe
would have been true in a normal worked out an equitable solution.
us are just plain onions.
year. The Indications are that there It had whole hearted support last is more careless and reckless tn dis­
IRVIN 8. COBB.
will be high prices for them. Re­ year and it Is receiving It again in posing of burning tobacco and
lighted matches than the men:
1938.
State
officials
ar*
to
be
com
­
porta from the big market centers
Thc hazard conditions faced and
mended for working out this tax
The banana gives more food per show there is a far less quantity of plan and giving it educational pub- the number of fires combated in the
(ere than any other plant, more butter in storage than in any re­ Udty.
upper peninsula have been among
calories per pound than any other cent year; and that the quantity of
the
worst in years. The excessive
Don’t forget to do your part. Pay
eggs in storage is also smaller than
fresh fruit and. in some large spe­
Bir second installment of taxes heat, lhe low humidities and the ex­
cie*, produces more food per single
ore September 1st. If you have ceedingly dry condition of the
This Indicates good prices.
fruit than any other member of the
! come under the plan. If you haven’t country have set the stage for ma­
i Joined up, do so now. Also, if you jor catastrophlas in Michigan for­
vegetable kingdom, says Collier's
Weekly. Huge bananas grown in be effective la to be concealed. No। can afford to pay all your back est lands.
East Africa and Cochin-China are artist can assault the emotions by a. laxe* at this time do It. You will
"I believe that both England and
two feel long, as thick as a man's direct frontal attack. That Is the of­ save materially to Interest charges
America can be proud of their
arm and contain sufficient food to fice of logic and reason."—T. fl. and you will have one less economic press.”—Winston Churchill.
worry on your mind.
make an adequate meal for three Stribling

LITICAL NOTES'

I

Ji

MONTHS.

)XK YEAB

$0*

ihlrin. an*
I book aa*

iVanted

f a bollfrom lhe
Im w hich
only two
•elf—her

*&gt;&gt;P&lt;im!ent
[lance at
i hl* best

•d by the
girl and
ly nudge
lid about
t bough
1 the late'
bed and
tea, Thay

go down,
sign that
goes out
cturn.. If
e end ot

I profit by
Iman.

UT
&gt;ge
ds?
lentat

me
ices’
i or
Hay
fill.
,EY

sr

THE HASTINGS BANNER
Write* Letter To
Former Schoolmate*

Rih

Y

I

S

Don't Neglect Your
Tax Payment

PUT YOURSELF in OUR PLACE
Take the chair on the other side of the desk and

put yourself in the Banker’s place, weigh his

problems, judge for yourself—would you make
loans to certain individuals you know? Would

you consider yourself a good risk? It’s pretty
hard isn’t it? These are important ques­

tions that your Banker must consider. Decisions
must be made quickly and accurately ,.. . to do
this your Banker must know his customers. That
is why friendliness and courtesy are considered
so important in this Bank. Officers, clerks and
tellers extend to depositors and customers every
consideration. This is the reason many of our
customers refer to us as “a friendly bank.”

We offer a complete banking service, friendly
and considerate .. . avail yourself of it. Stop in.

e HASTINGS CITY B
TELEPHONE 2103

♦

♦

♦

HASTINGS, I

�THE RATINGS BANNKB, THURSDAY, AUGUST M, 18M
religion who do get any joy out of of a fire on the Hinchman farm,
seeing their fellow men *uffer.
; About twenty-tv® acre* was burned

NOTES

.

pege 1. dec.

. fconflou®^

jam.
6—iu erratic potUlaa have cauied
apprehensive of the morrow and
1—It Is piling up a mountainous thin hesitant about making eommllmonU which rue Into the future.
rilcH to burden the future,
destroyed agricultural
lhe huge government expent
and.mountainous deficit* by
-but would you have people
and go without shelter V

f^umucraU Urtng

In

nol Do you?"
There are very few people In this
comparative world regardless at rare, polity or

KNOCK! KNOCK! Knock What?
Tha High Cozt of Living By Trading
at th* W*ll*c* Grocery
CORN FLAKES, large size pkg------ 10c
3 Ibz. BANANAS -19c
21b. loaf TWIN BREAD _10c
1 lb. loot -5«
GLOSS STARCH™
VACATION LAND COFFEE .. _17c
_25c
2 Ibz. GINGER SNAPS
2 pkgs. Martino Butter Crackers, 25c
10 lbs. SUGAR, pure cane52c
RINSO, large size-----------------------18c
24'/* lbs. LEADER FLOUR75c
Get Our Prices on Canned Goods in
dozen or cose lots before you buy!
..15c dozen

FRIED CAKES ..

WLW COFFEE ...

19c lb.

Fresh Ground to Sull

WALLACE GROCERY
OPEN EVENINGS

PHONE 8458

FREE DELIVERY

.

....

.

—

*1

CLOVERDALE.

4L.

temDt* to relieve misery 1ml rather ctme 001 ,n&lt;’ Put out ““ flre *hlch !at the u”rn hal1 Mr Bennett will
to j-our almost inconceivably ex- threatened farm buildings and oot- i be the .ranker ni th® evening.
■
j —a.
tare® near Clear lake.
There will be election of officer*.
The Cloverdale L. A. 8. held a
the money which should be u»ed Ur Hinchman of Hastings called on
day. about thirty being present. All
for relieving poverty te being divert-. friends at Banfield last Saturday.
ed into the pocket* ot bureeueraU
Mr and
D D. pmnam are had a lovely afternoon. Mrs. Dori*
and lhe financing of too many ab- moving into their residence south Haney will entertain the next meet­
surd and ridiculous project*.
, of Banfi®ld. They recently had It ing at the home of Mrs. Monica,
Thursday. Sept IT.
•
• Republicans certainly do nol In-: wired for electricity.
Mrs. Lou Anna Patton spent the
tend to let people starve. But they
gam Buxton and family camped week end at the home of her daugh­
do believe that relief can be admin - 'al Bristol lake last week.
ter. Mra Maurice Loucks of Mid­
tetered more intelligently and with i
■
•
Mr and Mra. Bob Arnold of Mid­ land.
greater economy through state, lo­
The Young People's class will put
cal and private agencies than it can dleville called on George. Wickwireon another Ice cream social Friday
Friday
Mra. Mario Putnam. Detroit, Mr. evening, Aug. 31, on the tennu
ant red-tape, bureauratlc army, re­
court.
Cote control etc. Republican* also and Mrs. Jesse Putnam and Belva
Mr. and Mra. R. E. Pierce enter­
lleve that with local and private Swteher of Grand Ledge spent last
tained the following families at
agencies on the job there Is les* week end at the D D. Putnam
their cottage last week: Mr. and
*
tendency for politics rand even re­ home.
Mra. Lyle Sage and son Russell of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Orrin
Smclkcr
and
ligion) to be a factor in the admin­
daughter Marian of Bowne called Battle Greek. Mr. and Mra. Ira
istration of funds."
Slawsan and children of Flint and
Never before has any political on Banfield friends Sunday.
Mra. Clifford Kahllo and children
party attempted to “get by” with
I of Orangeville.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
the appeal that It had a monopoly
Mrs. Bertha Day and Gail Harper
&lt;m all the "milk of human kind­
Mrs. Mildred Hammond of Has­
ness.” A* a matter of fact tndepend- tings and Mrs. Liza Hvne* accom­ motored to Saginaw to visit. Mra.
ent-mlnded sufferer* who still In­ panied Mra. Guy Maklcy to Battle Day's sister. Mra. Bert Hiles
Mr. and Mra. Walter Lewis of
sist that misfortune ahould not de­ Creek Saturday, where they spent
prive them of the right of frer thc day with Mr. and Mra. Greydon'i Hastings have moved into tlie
Brook* place recently vacated by
expression both political and other­ Hynes
Mr.
and Mrs. Jess Haney.
wise can tell you that thte "milk"
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Smith enter­
Mr. and Mrs. Bert McCallum and
has a habit of turning "sour” very tained Mr. and Mra. Ezra Dell and
grandson, Ralph McCallum, accom­
quickly.
daughter of Lansing over the week panied by Mr. and Mra. Bert Mason
It te utter, absurd nonsense for end.
of Richland, attended a picnic at
any political party to say that it
Mra. Levi Kantner received word
alone is interested in humanity; Wednesday night of the death of Milham Park. Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Otte Replogle have
interested in creating a more per-. her brother. John Hoteaple. at hte
feet society; Interested In bringing , home in Portland. Ind.. Due to the moved on the George Morehouse
an end to mL«ery. From their very 111 health of Mr. Kantner she was farm near Prairieville.
Mrs. Emma Dickerson and Mrs
nature ALL political parlies have to' unable to attend the funeral but
■be Interested in these problem* spent the week end In Hastings Geo Whitmore of Delton attended
a picnic at Milham'Park, Bunday.
from practical considerations if | with Mra Willi* Kantner. while
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Walbridge and
nothing else. It te pure demagoguery i Mr. and Mra. Guy Kantner. Willis
children arc spending a few days
Kantner and Mr and Mra. Russell
It is very probable that Rerrn which Kantner attended the funeral on with Mr* Nellie Glvin this week.
Mr and Mrs. Monica and non
create* the milk of human kind­ Friday.
Charles and Mra. Emma Dickerson
ness” was Implanted tn mankind
Mr and Mrs. Isaac Williams and were in ^alamazoo Wednesday.
long before Democrats or Repub­ Dori* of Dowling were dinner guests
licans came into being; In fact long of Chas Farlee and family Sunday.
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
before people even thought of divid­ Evening caller* there were Chester
Willard Kidder is attending camp
ing themselves into political parties. Cox and family. Mr. and Mra. Jo­
meeting thte week in company with
seph Smith and daughter. Mrs. 100 other young people of the con­
BANFIZLD.
Sherman Smith and grandsons, all ference m invited guest* of the asThe grandson of Mr. and Mr*. I of Hastings.
rociallon and we are sure he will
Andrew Adams was laid to rest In
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Grant and enjoy it.
lhe Banfield cemetery last Thurs­ daughter* of Battle Creek and Earl
Mra. Effie Raymond and children
day. He was drowned in Goguac Denner attended thc Benner re­ from north of Hastings spent Fri­
lake. Battle Creek.
union at Potter Park in Lansing. day with Mrs. Josie Couch.
Olenn Aaplnall and family are Sunday.
Mr. and Mra. Earl Engle and Wilmoving onto the Putnam farm,
lard Kidder attended the mlaalon“If you see a tennis player who nrv nddresa by Rev. E. P. McCarty
north of Benfield. They occupied
the Barnes farm near Hickory Cor- looks a* If he is working very hard, Bt the camp ground Friday night
then that means he isn't very good "
Keep Ln mind our annual ail day
A Are alarm Sunday informed us —Helen Will* Moody.
public meeting in the schoolhouse
about the middle of September. The
exact date lias not been settled yet.
We expect to have a full day with
music and singing and several
speeches. Keep watch for date.
Mr. and Mr*.zOrville Bruce called
at tlie home oft her brother. Harold
Norton, of neat Coats Grove one
day last week.
Rev. Gearhart, former past r of
the Wesleyan church, u 111 at his
home in Allendale, having been In
an accident with a car. We hope
he will soon be well again. We all
miss him and hL* good wife al camp
ground.

FRIGIDA1RE

"’-‘METER-MISER’
I

MEETS ALL

FIVE

standards for

'TNe&amp;i-Tftiiei
1/mmm •

Trtublt-frM

Elite of Cempeu lake Friday after­
noon. i
Mr. and Mn. Harvey Blough and
Leia Starboard ot Welcome Comers
visited Bunday afternoon with Stel­
la Roler and her mother.
.

Come in and lot u* demonstrate
FRIGIDAIRE'S work-zaving and
monay-zaving Importance to you

fined to hl® bed only two week®
Surviving are the ion Otencey Farr
and grandson. Richard Fare, of
Plainwell, several cousin* and many

neral services were held Ln lhe
Methodist Episcopal church htre
Tuesday at two o'clock. Rev. Ralph
Bates in charge. Burial Ln Prairie­
ville cemetery. Sympathy te extend­
ed to the family.
Tuesday the following persons
were present to celebrate the 83rd
birthday anniversary of Mr*. Jen-

*1. LOWER OPERATING COST

“FtaHy NiiuiM" Oym
TIM Iuem taut M

Mined their daughter Thelma and
husband of Harbor Beach over the and Mr*. Mark Norris, Mr. and Mrs
william Norrie, Mn. Lucy Norris.
C. M. Benedict vu In Alto on Mrs. Sarah Smith (a sister 83). Mte*
business Saturday.
Myrtle Smith, Mn. Mary Polley,
Mr*. Will Richardson from near
Clarksville has purchased the Mike Mn. Maurice ostrottK MU® EUxaGrant house and moved Ln the past beth Parker. Halting*; jack Tempi®
ot Kalamazoo ahd charlotte Hughe*
Mr*. Elmer Shaffer cared for Paul. (■ great granddaughter) of Toledo,
Kauffman's children while Mr. Ohio. A sumptuous dinner was
Kauffman waa in Eaton Rapids served. T. H. Ketchum of Marlin
Thursday.
and Mr*. Grand DePrioster were
Mra. Nellie Todd and daughter afternoon guests. Numerous gift®,
Madora of Elgin, Ill., Mra. Della greetings and congratulation* were
Scott of Geneva. Ill., called Friday received. Mrs. Norris was born in
forenoon on Jennie Pardee. Mra. Caledonia. New York August 11,
Scott *tayed tmtil Saturday noon.
1843; came with her parent*. Wil­
liam and. Margaret Ritchie (nee
PRAIRIEVILLE.
Carruthers) to Yankee Springs, in
trolatown
Herald,
popular
izine of th® Air," te bac£ for
Only three from Prairieville at­ 1862; in IBM she was married lo
tended the I. O. O. P. and Rebekah Mark Norris at the home of her
rd big year. Starting August
picnic at Streeter's landing Sun­ parents. Rev. Aaron Blake of Or­ 8th—«JO to 8^0 P. M., Eaitem
day; family reunions, entertaining angeville officiating. In February Standard Time—it will be heard
visitors from away prevented and 1882 they moved to Prairieville every Thursday evening at the
some knew nothing about it. Hope where she ha* since resided. Mr. asme hour, over station* WLW and
next year Prairieville will have a Norris passing away August 11. 1018. WGN.
100 per cent attendance. The three. Mrs.
-- Norris
..orris Is the mother of six
Tha Heatrotetown Herald, sponMis* Clara Scott. Mrs. Ethel Honey­ children,
CuImmh*. three of whom are living.
living, sored by Th® Estat® Stove Company,
well and Mrs. Lucy Norris report a Mark. William and Lucy. She ha®1 ha® for two year® been on® of the
good time.
been a member of the Methodist i outstanding broadcaste originating
------ vl church here 40 year*. She from powerful station WLW. Th®
Mr. and Mrs. Ned Wilkins, Mr. Episcopal
and Mrs. Bert Wilkin*. Mr. and Mrs. is a charter member of our local program te "different," novel, unique,
rr general ..cun
Harry Wilkins. Mrs. Lulu Shepard Rebekah lodge, tier
health « !•»!• through” a complete air
tmory
te excellent magazine, page after pare. Lteand Marcella were at Milham park. Is good and her mer
------ '---------I of ,7?
Ions nVw°.
irao —
tonera will again hear their favorite
Kalamazoo. Sunday for the cobb- current
not only events
of events
^h7
“but
g J
First Night®
cummlngs reunion.
current events. She gets news by feature*—Musical Cover,
Today,
Tune®
^*
Mr*. Wilbur Polley 1* a guest of radio each morning. She te tenderly SL’T'JjV.,a“
__&lt;1 T
mli
—y
( ' Wn Do
Dr. and Mr*. Charles Mullen and eared
by her
daughter
as- | “d^Mg n«
slated for
by lhe
real
of theLucy
fimlly
.J addition
Mrs Ada Cortrlght of Otsego.
to many
sparkling naw
new icstu
feature®.
whenever
needed.
Her
many
friends
y
aparaung
Miss Irene Holbrook of Kalama­
—
I
William 8toe«a, who ha* directed
zoo is spending this week with his wish her more pleasant birthdays.!
aunt. Mrs. Harry Wilkins.
^»P rf
Mrs. Turner of Gull lake visited wu™ Wl» or B.UI. Crrrt St
Mrs.
Stebbins ----nnd Charles
Hughes
— ------------spent Bunday night and Monday |
nrovidia* the murieal
. Sunday.
with her parent*. Mr and Mrs. Ned content® of the new Magasine of th*
Mrs Philip OTooie and Patsy of Wilkins. Their other guests were 1 Air. In addition, a cast of elnging
Battle Creek are visiting Mr. and Mr. and Mra. Stanley Philips and ■ and dramatic otar®—all in all, 28
1 Mra. D. N Honeywell. Mr. Honey­ son Joseph of Detroit. Miss Mary hoadlintre—will be heard on each
' well spent Bunday In Chicago.
ha* gone
trnne tn
(nr a broadcast.
broadcut.
Wilkin* has
to Detroit lor
I Mrs. Helen Horton and Charles week's visit with relatives.
Hughes went to Northville WednrsNORTH HOPE.
Mra Oscar Palme? of Hasting*
,
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Wilhelmina Pranshka left Sunday
spent a few dll'* la*t week with her
' Freydl for a few days.
afternoon to spend a week with Mr.
Mrs.
of Detroit
**
“ Elizabeth Stewart
‘ -*
' “ mother. Mr*. David Deal.
The Doster family reunion was and Mra. Chas. Welch in the Strik­
vteited Mrs. Sam DeBack lhe last ot
er1 district
held at Shelp* resort. Pine lake;'
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Boniface and Sunday. There were etghty-five I Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Whittemore
family. Messrs and Mesdames Or­ present and a very pleasant time . of Delton spent Sunday with their
son Boniface. Orville Boniface, Ray­ reported. Such reunion* must be parent*. Mr. and Mra. Theodore
! Pranshka.
mond Boniface. Floyd Shelp. James enjoyable affairs.
Mr. and Mrs. Tho*. Oliphant and j EUa Wurm of Hastings spent the
Boulter, and Clinton Castle and
families attended Ute Boulter re­ children. Mrs. Fred Wallzer and week end with Mr. and Mr*. Oscar
union at MUham park Sunday.
daughter Josephine returned to' Wurm.
Almon B. Farr. 73. son of Homer (heir home in mnellle. til. Mond.y | Mr. ,„d M„ niIWOTth b«,U ,nd
and Fannie Farr, early pioneers of
■’i’i w,u;‘r«iiil» nt rum ««nl SuiMiy .Illi
Mr. ^Oliphants brother. John and Qus and Doris Peake.
Z1_I-I.U4&lt;«. Frt-1.j
Mr. W|[1Uln Hj|rl an|j
family, north of Prairieville.
day all were guest* of Mr. and Mra.
son nf Hastings spent Sunday with
Martin Reeder at South Haven
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rankin Hart
Mr and Mrs Leon Felder were
guest® Bunday nt Mr. and Mrs. Bur­
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
ton Felder at Kalamazoo.
Mr and Mra James Surlne are
FAIR LAKE.
spending this week at the Ionia
Mr and Mrs. Frank Woodruff and fair and are camping there.
sons of Pittsburgh. Mr. and Mra.
E. H. Geer and his mother of
Sam Nay of Battle Creek. Mr. and Flint spent the past week with
Mrs. Chas. Moreau of Auguste and Peter Steel.
Mis* Ruth Valiha of Bridgeport.
Mr and Mrs. Merle Callhan and
Conn., were Sunday visitors at ,sons of Lansing visited their parents
Charles Lechlei tn er*.
over the week end.
ML%* Iva case is spending the
Lyle Bldelman wa* home from
week in Jackson.
Pontiac over the week end.
Mrs. Earl Fritz ha* gone to
Mrs. Charles Cappon and Jlnunlo
spend a few days with her sister. Joe Randall visited Charles Welch
Mrs Helen Yoder, Ln Detroit.
Tuesday.

Everything you need in the school room
at Special Prices!

*2. SAFER FOOD PROTECTION

•
•
•
•
•
•

rrigidairc h*« a Food-Safety Indicator built right into
ture i&gt; miimiiced.

*3. FASTER FREEZING —MORE ICE
The Thermo-Gauge shows Frigidaire'a ability to free®*
targe quaaunti of ice with aitouithiog speed.

*4. MORE USABILITY
Wider, roomier, hindier to use. Automatic Reset De­
froster. Full-Width Sliding Shelves. Portable Utility
Shelf. Double-Range Cold Control. Save* steps, Save*

Pens
Ink
Tablets
Paste
Pencils
Compasses

•
•
•
•
•
•

HARDWARE

Rulon
Eroztrs
Scissor*
Crayons
Note Booki
Binders

Now, Uzcd and Rebound School Bookz
Bought and Sold

*5. Five-VIA* PROTECTION FLAN

MAMK
MCHLt ALATKD AND
eentTHucrto hop
SSPVICE'ADJUSTABLE
spent TO H INCH BLAOS
HANOLS IS PISTOL SKIP

10INCH^t94

Paper Towels, Chalk, Blackboard Slat*
ing, Erasers and Officers' Blank Books

Frigidaire's »e*led-in mechanical unit it protected for
Five Year* againtf aervice ezpeose for only Fira Dollar*
included in the purchase price.

pffered by the New Frigidtire. 11
lard* _
for Refrigerator Buying btmttu Ail fire Stzndzrdz
cause of maoy revolutionary advancemenu.

Chief among these is the Meter-Miser cold-

To Teochers and School Directors:

yet mainuini talc low temper ature i even in

N,w*rfc,&gt;ailm&gt;

*8450

durt prat you ihuviziblz

NO MONEY DOWN!

We are giving Special ' Prices on
School Supplies, such as Roll and Folded
Paper Towels, White Crayons in gross
boxes, Paste in pints and quarts. See us
before buying your supplies.

14 H/CN
HfOHtST
AT THE LDWCSr
PRICE POSSIBLE

COMPOf/T/OW COMDcere. WITH 81.ADC.

SCREEN DOOR
QAc
grilles_____ •„ 33

COLEMAN Gai- $K.95
©lino LanternW
REMINGTON
$£.25
22-Cal. RIFLE ..

50c BASS
FLIESCO

Q£c

25* DISCOUNT
BASEBALL GLOVIS
BATS AND BALLS

Consumers Power Co
Phone 2305

KEATI6LAT0WN HERALD
IETDRHJ TO AIR OVER
STATIONS WLW ANO WEN

J-* NEEDS.

The electric meter reveals how little current th® New
Frigidaire with lhe Meter-Miser uses.

Then there's the radically new style cabinet.'
Wider, roomier, with much more shelf space
«/re«F, Port*Me Utility Shelf, Tull-Width Slid­
ing Shelves. Double-Range Cold Control and
score* of additional convenience*. Come in and

Prairieville township, died at hl*
home Saturday night at 8 JO o'clock.
He wa* born on lhe farm where he

Special SALE of

The New Frigidaire's spectacular cold­
making unit gives more cold for less
with only three moving part*
manentlv oiled, preci lion built.

REFRIGERATOR BUYING

SOUTH BOWNE.
Mr. and Mrs John Mtehler, Mn.
Frank Martin and daughter' of
Grand Rapids and Mr* Deeda Nag- .
ler of Freeport were dinner gue*ls
Sunday at Will Mtehler*.
Mr. and Mn. P®te Grinin and
daughter Marlon and Mn. Ralph
Pringle of Jackson visited Monday
evening at Jennie Pardee * .

Hastings. Mich

THE NEW 1937
Aladdin Kerosene
MANTLE LAMP
The World's Finest
Modem White Light
Moy bo
Your. |f
You Hurry
For Only

Shade and Tripod Eytra

Carveth &amp; Stebbins
THE REXALL STORE

Goods Delivered

Phone 2131

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE
HASTINGS

142 EAST STATE

RHONE 2111

�THT HATING | BANNER. THTXDAT, APOtJgT

t»

UM

BTATk OF MICHIGAN
|
HENDERSHOTT.
ADVICE FROM M. S. C.
TH« circuit court FOB TH1
Tlte Hendershott family reunion
OOUNTT OF MUY, IN CHAXCgRY. wm be held Ulis week Thursday at
ON BEAN STACKING
la tha aasttar of tbe dteaoisties
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo H«1,
Co
I der&gt;hol‘
Frances Hender- Curing and Proper Care Will
af "dlractera tberaef
ShOtl.
Beduo.
on

notion or momtoaom taut.

HOnIT'o^XeSZ' ” WAX “cORPORA*
TION. • Corj.ur.il.B areiaUaS aadw tea TION. a Carpanlla.

New York City on business.
Mr and Mra. Ray Crawferd ra-

U&gt;„

'SS

to Cheboygan, where Ray found
Culls
work and expects to leave with hte
A. C Clarks. Their sister, Mrs
Growers of beans in Michigan re- , f*®Uy the first of September.
ceive
nothing
fur
cull
beans
and
in
1
Saturday callers at the Jamee
Wyatt, of Okla., who has spent the
past two weeks here relumed to fact are docked fur the labor charge Null home were Mr. and Mra Lyle
Durand with them.
in hand picking Because many cull McKlbbin rad daughters of OteeMr. and Mrs Leo Hendershott al* bcans arc the result of conditions U°- a^*° Mr. and Mra. Bryon Mctended
prevailing aunng
during tne
the nrsi
first two weexs
weeks . Klbbln “
and daughters from near
~ a birthday pparty
—-y •Friday prevamng
__ —
&lt;
■beans
____ are
___. bar- Uiitlnn
night given in honor ot her brother, ...
m September
when
' Hastings.
Gordon Tompson, al his home near । vested and tn the stack for curing,
------NASHVILLE.
Bhultz
H. R. Pettlgrove. assistant prdfesMr». Prances
~ Hendershott spent . Um
wr U1
to jatul
farm ccupa
crops a
att Michigan
assmgau olow
State ।| ,from here attending lhe
ta.f week
—--.K in VCUI.I
leirtlt^ vtatlinu
&gt;•
•ho
- compiled
... a ...
—&gt; «lrU- boy* and young people s camp
last
Middleville
vlsllUig eelrel- . college
new •bulletin
atives.
"Pleld
Stacking
for
Michigan
Buchanan »rt. Carl Baba. Ira
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Murray and hte Beans." Special Bulletin No. 276. Bnd Junior Strickland. Jack and Friday, following
sisters, Mr*. Roy Deinmlng of De- available within a few days by writ- I BUUe Hess. Leon. Elgin and Anna appendicitis. He
troit and Mrs. Martin ot Grand y,. thr Bulletin Room. Michigan Margaret Pritchard, the Misses PaulRapids were Wednesday callers at gtate College East tan,inc
' ’ ine Bowman Pauline and Mildred
Albert Brill's.
| -pn*
e term
| D*use.
Rev.
and Ralph at 3 o'clock al the
&gt;i »
—
riva u
1* lh
mw
iviiii used by
vr bean
—------- - Pritchard
----- art
—-■ IK.., n
—..111 with T-V...
. .
tt*sa
r&gt; wart—a w
Uiiara. yrt Uxra
Albert
Brill
John Ormsby growers and...
shippers .in ...
thte state
Hess rnztlr
took them Uf
Wednesday.
Battle Creek.
Xrdad
Jai cred I wenl w
10 Wayland
to ace
see to
to designate
designate cuU
cuU beans."
beans.” says
Petti- , Mrs J. Robert Bmiu
Smith&gt; ha* reU. .ff
tfr4.4’.ay
waytano Thursday
rnursoay to
says Pettioae, U eie kte ruim 1 the Jersey show. Clinton Brill s „ove The term includes foreign turned from her three weeks visit
E Ob nwiian .f Ki« , jersey sire took
second in 1U class material and all diseased, discolored wllh relaUves in Buffalo.
Brunun.
ADJUteiED 7.4 de’ ««Mn thte year.
ud damped beans. The average „Mr ?"d ,Mrt 007 °
rtriter be tai k« b
Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Hendershott pirv on Michigan beans from 1014 Mri- Dennis Yarger. Jr., rad son H. D. Wooing.
1m
Brumm^pent
____________
:? ctTXn"rX‘&gt; called on Mr, and Mr*; Archie Sin- w 1B34 was 8 16 per cent. Obviously i &lt;nd Mtes
Helen Fn,™
«nani w«i. Wed­
Grand Rapids.
,
■ clalr In Battle Creek last Wednei- .)lck
an important factor In bean ’nesday
&gt;raday in Grand
-----‘ *7 "
“ .bean
.
_ ....
Mr
Mr. and am.
Mrs Chartes
Charles E.
E- Ttette
Betts and
It it farther ORDERED. ADJUDGED day night.
prices
and
profits. "A... typical
'' ’trom'tete’dlte V £4
u 1 A Pr»&gt;’er meeting will be held this transaction shows why’a reduction daughter were in Grand Rapids
Ittuiuy aw p*** wauau.
‘r»bj allowed cred Hora of aaid Delton 1 Thursday night at Rhe home of Mr. in pick te worthwhile to a grower. Wednesday where lhe necessary ar­
Mr. and Mrs. Fred AckMl I
□ op Mhippins Co. if any there bo 10 . and Mrs. Ronald Haynes AU are in- Take a price of 13 per hundred­ rangements were made for Doris to
family. Mrs. Charles Ackctl rad h
lo th.ir clalaa with the receiver,
| yited.
weight for choice hand picked beans. enter Ute Davenport Business InsU- Della Bowman spent Sunday oft
h’w further ordered. ADJUDGED I Mrs. Robt Garrison and Robt. Fur eight pounds of culls there tute on September 14th.
Clyde Thrasher.
who taught noon with relatives and friends
&gt;d decreed that all creditor, if •&gt;'».. Glasgow were nominated Sunday by would be a deduction of three cents
Battle creek.
5." “L'.,',''.'.V.'.'.
?“&lt; our church lor helejale. U&gt; lhe । per pound because of loss in net
weight, or a loss of 34 cents. There Thursday. He will teach tn Holt this family
coining
year.
i.r;
e-rwiKFR.
Irould be a cull picking charge of
Laurel Chapter No. 1S1. O E- 8.
' Mr and Mrs Gllixrt Scott and nvc ccnU
P°und ,or Ubor' "
te I mJ?
Bmnford radI ehEEn atol
«?_U' 8ub’ met Tuesday night at the Masonic
Temple for its regular meeting.
!0' I tended the Hynes family reunion at trading 64 cents from the S3 quotaMr and Mrs. Dorr Webb and son
, tion, lhe grower actually would reRobert have returned from their
1 ctive but 1336 for the
...
““ hundred
hund"d
visit with relatives in California.
| children of Welcome comers called ***«*“•
nn. mih.
Mra. Ransom Howell is helping
... ar.,1 str,
cinfriow I Weather
conditions
are not
to Adrian Saturday for Mn. 1
“ ‘■ 2?..^;.
Sl&gt;urlo».
uhunun
m„,gIroent
but sun
h.,.
Saturday.
striker were v,at PracUcM
“&gt;’» PetU«rov« 111. Mrs. Elmer Cross, a daughter Hamilton.
Mrs. Llbbte Marshall ot 1.
1
rii^r
Tf *Mr and Tho method used in the harvest can from Kalamazoo spent the week end
Creek is spending a few days al
m 4Ltin^
muc* to overcome the dteadvan- there.
Mrs Porter Klnne spent Monday
..
Dale Bump
w ol unt.vor»He weather. A Ml
Mr. and Mra. Goll Lykina
rj Illustrations in­ with her daughter. Mn. Ray Mor­
gan thaler, who is sick.
! at the home of Mrs. Sarah Ickes cludes details of using the Mc­
Mrs. Frank McDerby and daugh­
l»r | Saturday evening. They had just, Naughton system of stacking, which ter. Mn. D. D. Myers of Hammond.
.
15 °ue of the means which Pettiurt relumed from an eastern trip and |
Ind., spent Thursday evening with
Mrs Clarence Shaw.
Mr. and Mrs. voyle Varney and
StMl M.rta. Ohio, on suurdv auouu
Mr. and Mrs Coy Brumm left Mon­
laurnt uia raai —.
Vonda Felghner of Battle &lt;
Mr. and Mrs. «*»
------- —**!
.— —
day on a trip through northern
formerly ot NaahvUto was rail
*
' Springport were guests at lhe home 1
Michigan.
emceU aid i?1 of ibelr parents. Mr. and Mrs. Carl I
Funeral services for John Thomp­ marriage to Carl Johnson on
urine aald poll- i Snyder on Sunday.
son. 74. were held Monday afternoon rnh. After Mrs. Johnson grad
.1 nnhUe nulla, i Mr *nd MrSB4?yn0,ds “"d !
from the Nashville High scbM
rtilM of o«pJ 1 Marjorie called on Mr. and Mrs.
son. Milford. In Maple Orove. Mr. entered Argubright's BiMtllMg
work.1 waller Blake near Nashville Sun*
Thompson had been in poor health
■apapar printed &gt; d*/sons and two daughters. Rev. M. E.
GLASS CREEK.
Hoyt conducted lhe service. Mrs
The Louie Erways and Mr. and
Gall Lykins sang. Burial al DowMrs. Harry Meach of Kalamazoo
Felghner.
Ung.
spent Sunday at Fred Olis'.
Mr. and Mrs. O. O- squires of
Miss Esther Dull of Daytona
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Havens also
Beach. Fla., spent a few days with
Louis. Gordon and Virginia spent
her parents. She left Tuesday on the
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Vert
Mn. Zalda Wolf* and MM.
return trip driving a new Pontiac
Robinson at Shultz.
back. M1M Mildred Cole accompan­
Miss Ruth Ez Erway returned
visiting bar fatbar. R. V.
ied her.
from Kalamazoo last Thursday. She
expects to te|ch\home economics in
the Brighton schools next year.
GRAND RAPIDS ON TUESDAY.
Homer Erway visited friends in
SEPT. =». IBS#. COMMENCING
Lansing Sunday.
The ice cream social at the OoodI will church last Friday evenyg was
quite well attended.
Miss Dorothy North of Hart spent
from Thursday Uli Saturday in lhe
Ray Erway home.

lOlte

Blacvalt) ol tha Tawathlp at Ora a.
yIUc. Barry ComIt. Nlablaaa. la HOI
OWNERS' IXIAN ddarORATlOX. a C
MTSUsa oresausa sagor tha la«e a( i

Saer

NOW. THEREFOR!,
&gt;w«r ot iala eealal.ed

Bam. SilcMs.a (that Mai

t katelac Circuit Coart la laid

l.clsJI.c

foi
J* Julbut
r. A.
r cred Il r, 1

Sull paadlai
&gt;• Caaalr of
villa. Barry Cvualy. Mlcklna, to
OWNERS LOAN CORPORATION.

Halt of Adclberj
"tolly

COUNTY COMMITTEE
ORGANIZES/^ BURHANS*

State ot Mlrblcan In cuth ea.o made and
provided, NOTICE IH HEREBY GIVEN
lhal on Tueaday. October Sth. 1»3«. Ot
clovaa o'clock fore.ooo, Eaatcrn Bland
ard lima al the North front door of the
Court Houts -In thc Ctir ot Hoatlnn.

Ml

NOTICE TO CEHDTrOB*

In the ma
n. ffinilb. d&lt;

EAST GUN LAKE.
Wm. Crawford Is on the sick list. ’
rrodllora I" suffering from lumbago.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Abery of
Pittsburgh axe spending a few days |
with the former's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. Derdeyn.
Mrs. Florence Bates and children.,
Chas. Hufford. Lyle Keeney all of ।
Grand Rapids were Friday evening i
callers at the James Null home, lit‘ tie William Null returning with!

Plata or portal ot 1
ill.se of Nachvllle. Co

Sono tor.

of oil Republicans for

EARL L. BURHANS

contended that Van
Buren is entitled to tha

office and that the Dis­
trict ahould have a rec­
ognised Republican at
Lansing sympalhetic lo
lhe policies and pro­
gram of Gov. Frank D.
Fittgerald. A COMMIT­
TEE OF VAN BUREN

| foroaooa. al aald probal
- la haraby appsialad for
Ulloa.
It la furlhor ordarod, I

COUNTY

CITIZENS

puts forward al its own
expense lhe Burhana

candidacy in a way that

100 Lbs. Nel
old; married, two chib

MERMASH
16%

GIVE YOUR HENS
AREAL START...

laleolm. doraaaml.
Kdvanl Waller. bavins Sled

START THEM
ON MERMASH
It ii now time to gtort your hen» for eorly foil pro­
duction. Feed them Form Bureau Mermash 16$b

FOR STATE SENATOR

.. Cu, Tr-m.
er and City Attorney.
Established fine record as Aset. Prosecutor rad M Prose­
cuting Attorney of Van Buren County. Represented VaB

Buren County in Legislature for four yean, serving on fan­
portent House Committees. As Assistant Attorney General
he was recognized as a man of experience rad ability. He
is a member of the Baptist Church and belongs to thia Ma­

for Best Quality Eggs and Highest Production.

sonic end Odd Fellow fraternities and is an active Ma­
ber of tlie Grange. Van Buren is united on Burhana for

MERMASH CONTAINS BEST

State Senator and we are furnishing him lo tha Dbttiot
as lhe man on whom we have agreed. The office beloogg

Ground yellow com, pura wheat bran, our midds,

to our county and we have drawn up all Republican fame
behind one man. That man is Earl L Burhans.

meat and bone scraps, alfalfa leaf meal and Mer-

maker, which is Pacific ocean kelp and fish meal
North ’ of

elements in food form.

vance the candidacy of Earl L Burhans.

"The Farmer Owned Store”
HASTINGS
L"drodB»mlib. Basiitar el Probate.

COUNTY COMMITTM

A committee has also been formed in Barry County

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc.

BANNER WANT ADVS. PAT

VAN BURIN

(Manamar formula) to supply essential mineral

Mermash has what it takes for High Production.

clock la the foreaooa.

d
a
•
a

WOODLAND

TO BARRY COUNTY VOTEiwt—n
publican County Committee of Barry I
of citisens generally shows Mr. Burba
ion lhe unanimous choice of Barry

for State Senator.

BARRY CO. BURHANS TOR

�THE RATINGS BANNIR, TRTTBHDAT, AV0T8T M, ISM

—

j; AUGUST SALES
Jt^FOR THE HOME!

/Z

uturing thc Greatest Bargains in Years!

Mr. and Mrs. Yarn Quick
and
BARRYVILLE.
son Adron. Mr. and Mr*. David Mc­ went to Grand Rapids Saturday to
Mr and Mr*. Ernest Ruthruff,
Mrs. Heber Foster 1* now report­ Clelland and granddaughter Betty carry a massage from a young man children were Sunday visitors of
ing for Berryville and would appre­ visited their brother tn Kalamazoo in Arizona to hl* parent* in Orand their parent*, Mr. and Mra B. who burned out while living in the
Rapids. Mr and Mr* Wilson WU- Quick.
ciate those in the community send­ Ttiur'day
Wallace Norton house at FitchardMl** Irene Barber spent Monday viUe. have bought the Emerson
Mtes Edna Good of Battle Creek IttU and Mra Clara Day accom­
ing In their Item*.
with friends tn Battle Creek She Cortrlght farm and will toon move
The young folks of the Berryville visited her aunt. Mr*. Albert Mc­ panied them.
Mr*. Burr Fossett spent several
there
church will leave Monday morning Clelland and family. Sunday after­
day* last week in Bettie Creek at
Mr and Mr* OU* Ketchum and
for Ou!) lake. Midland Park, for
the Ray ---------------------Fasaett home
Mr. and Mr* H. J. Wilcox were —
their Leadership Training tn the
School of Method* offered by the Sunday guest* of his brother. Vern ' Quite a territory was represented burg apent Saturday night and Bun- illee have returned from their trip
conference They raised money for Wilcox and family of Dowling | at the school picnic at Thomapple day with relatives at the Bradfield ‘ to Pennsylvania and New York,
: having had an enjoyable time.
lhe rent of a cottage by an ice Mtosea Virginia and Charlotte Wil- lake Thursday when the Barryvllic home
Mr and Mn
Marie Bradfield' The Brigg* church school will
cream social. Mtesea Donna Me-1 cox returned with them for thc : 'Mudge). McKelvey. Branch. Mor‘ gnn. Quimby and Striker school* spent Monday tn Kalamazoo.
have a picnic on Tueaday. Aug. 25.
Keown and Myrtle Wilson will weak.
Mr and Mr* Harold WUUtto and held their annual picnic. allTningMr*. Flower and Bernice wire AU are welcome Sweetened lemon
chaperon them Mr. and Mr* Will
Hyde will attend assembly and con­ son of Flint visited at Rev J. J. , ling in a big. friendly group Ralph guests for dinner Sunday of Mra. Juice and one article of food I* *uf। WillltU' home Sunday.
.
| striker was elected president and M. J Cross. Hastings Mrs Cross' ncient.
ference there also
•
..................
Mr. and Mr*. A. McClelland and ! Mr. and Mr*. Stanley Wlllitt* Mrs Ina Mayo, necretary-treasurer Alster of Ada. Ohio, and Mra. Isaac
Mr* Besale Strickland
to at the
Houvener---------------------------were also guests.
I of the Slrlker-Qulmby schools. Of-------------------- —
____ _____
Irving
Brandt
home„...
caring for Mra.
th* other group of schools. Chester I Captain Parker, chaplain ot tlw Clyde Brandt and lhe baby bom
Smith was elected president. Mr* ’U’ “
6 —
army.
— Fort Rilay. ”
Kansas,
---------“■1 —
to them
----------------recently.
Cheater Smith, vice-president. Mrs gave a splendid talk Bunday un I Mr* Sylvia Blvcn* ha* returned
James Rowden, secretary. Ja» Row­ "The Live* We Live." Rev. Bale*' lo the Ben Conklin home. Mtes
den. treasurer
About a hundred topic for Sunday. Aug 23. will be I Ara be 11c Bivens to with her atoler.
ate dinner and other* came for lhe "Two Churches " Rev Bata* alway* | Mr*. Harold Ca*e.
,,afternoon
---------------Oring* a message worth Ualentng Edward Oumaey. a former resident
Mr. and Mr* Ray Fassett and ' to. Come and get a spiritual uplift. I here, wno has been stationed in
son* of Battle Creek were Sunday
Mr. and Mr*. Frank Gilbert went Alabama for aeveral year*, to mak~ Compiota Satisfaction or Your Mono^^acir"!
gucste of Mr and Mrs Harry Gre*n.1 early Monday morning with a lead ing an extended visit here. He Is
, Mr. and Mr*. Higclmlre, children of lamt* to Chlcago.,^The&gt; expect.al lhe Curtis Russell home at pra*and mother of Eaton Rapids. Mar- I to spend several days’ also visiting' ent
gnret Sage and Kenneth and Ralph,' relative* tn Joliet.
i
Withlhe Ionia free fair scheduled
COUNTRY CLUB ENERGY
Bowan of Saline and Harold Ora-'
New* of the death of Almon Farr. 1 for the week of lhe 17th, the Case
ham were Sunday callers at the another
pioneer of
Prairieville reunion the 19th and the Briggs
Foster home
I township, has just been received. I school reunion lhe 20th, complete*
Mr and Mrs Samuel Geiger, Mr. Our sympathy to extended lo the a full week.
and Mr* Heber Foster. Betty and family. We also extend sympathy
Dale Conklin, son of Ben Conklin,
Bobby attended the Geiger reunion , to our dear friends. Mr*. Rom Cad- and Beatrice Rhoade*. daughter of
at Ooguac lake Wednesday.
' walladrr and Mrs Grace Johnson Rev
°"v and *•
— Rhoade* -»
—■­
Mrs
of ••
Maple
Twin or Sliced Sandwich
in their sad bereavement which Grove, of the Evangelical pastorate,
____
, came so suddenly.
MILO.
were married on Saturday night at
Mr and Mrs Oscar Runney and 1
the bride * home in the presence of
BARBER'H CORNERS.
the immediate family. They were
daughter* of Battle Creek. Mr and
LOAF
... of Battle
Alice Foley and Mrs Roy attended by Siu* Arabellr Bivens
Mrs. Adolph Spaulding
Cr«k
Leon
Creek ‘an&lt;rMr.Tnd
and Mr. and "Mrs
Mr*
I ’ Huver of Lansing are taking a trip as bridesmaid and Ford Rhoade*.
Songster of Detroit spent Wedncs- «nru the eastern and northern part brother of the bride, a* groomsman
day evening with Mr. and Mr*. Por-1
Michigan
ter
. . Tooze
—
*i Mr all*
nnd Mr«
Mr8
Bragdon andi
BARRY COUNTY REPUBLICAN
l.»m.r n.h.r rrtumrt IM Wed- J
“
CONVENTION.
nrsta# from » .Teki vM&lt; MU&gt; irt- ’ ^"k BrMa“' *
C"'M’ s“"'
At court room. Hasting*. Tuesday,
"SHOW ME" ORCHARD CAKE •• 25c
M.™ .t W.MM “&gt;ch
. Dr Bn]m|n n|,a w,(e w v
Sept. 22nd. at 11 o'clock A. M, EastD»l«hl Hom and 1- Lautaiikh ;4r(| wrrc gun(|.y gUcsU «L John cnt&gt;B4aDdard Time.
called at lhe Tooze home last Tuet- Weaver'*
Thc Republican County Con ven day on their way lo Rllnois wl.rr;
Mr and M„ ChM Hoana&gt; of
they are engaged In evang.lir.il Belding were caller* al John Wcav- non fur live purpose of electing 11
delegate* and alternate delegate* to
iVTHILTI.i EKIMi
*'orlt
1 er'* Friday.
lhe Republican Slate convention
Thc Albert Chase farm has been i Mr* Bruce Matthews and family
and lo transact such other business
told to parties from Ohio, who will and Ml** Lillian Matthew* of Wall
that may legally come before it. wUl
move nnd take possession soon Mi lake spent Thursday with Mr*. Etta
be held al the court room at Has­
and Mrs Tooze have moved the; Bump
------- -»
--------u„i..-----Mf nntJ Mj.n W|n Herron and ting* on Tueaday. Sept. 22nd. al It
remainder
of their *.household
good*
o'clock A. M. Eastern Standard
to their present home.
Mr. and Mr*. John Herron and Time.
daughter Joan of Champaign*. 111.,
Thc Stale convention will be held
nice returned Saturday evening were caller* nt James Bragdon's
EATNORE 1IH tMJ
from their trip in the northern part Sunday
Hie Herron* were resi­ in Orand Rapids on Tuesday. Sept.
GOIATR1 CUB
of lower Michigan
dent* of thte neighborhood twenty 29th. at 11 o'clock in the forenoon,
for
lhe purpose of nominating canMrs Florence Swain, who hiu years ago
Macaroni
p1*
MASON OR KERR
I &lt;11 date*
spent several weeks with her sister.
Mr and Mr*. L. J. Matthew*. Mrs.
|------ for the following alate offiSPAGHETTI OK AOOIILM
Mrs N H Barber and .Mix* Irene, Etta Bump and the Mtese* Evelyn 1 ees. Secretary ot state. State
xinnny TrM
Treasurer. Auditor General. Aitorreturned to her home in Niles l.ut nnd Minnie Matthews were Sunday
Battle ney General and one Justice ot the
Saturday.
Apple Buller
15c
। guests of Mr*. Martin In Supreme Court to fill vacancy, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Scobey and Creek
_
| for the transaction of such other
QUARTS
&lt;•«65c
EMU L*5Y
baby vteited lhe former s brother.
buxine**
as may
properly come beASSYRIA.
....
______
__ ________________
Harlan and wife, over lhe week
Peanut Buller 2
25c
Vi GALLONS d.«. 89c
Tlie Medkiff lake property and T°r* itKraft's
a'
Lirm formerly owned by- Babe
Delegates
17c
Delegate* to
to the
the County
County ConvcnConvenB.
rn^. n°T U\.UW »&gt;OMe"lon non shall lie elected at the ScplcmWide Mouth
69c
Of
Ra.lev brother*,
hrnlher.
«,». t.
of
pnmAry ,nd
one f(Jr
of th* Bailey
son*
j his _ ill bn-. &lt;t»&gt;. ;*e
John Bailey
Initial step* are tw
"■­ every seventy-five votes cast for the
in;’ taken tor extensive Improve- SecrcUry of Stale at the last elec­
cun tt olt ailin’.
Cherries
2
29c
menu Several local workmen have tion and shall be apportioned a*
Vinegar
fc«,k 19c
employment there and began work follow*
FREE !
Wednesday, among them Gordon
Lee. Gerald and Milford VanAukcn
and Morris Brandt.
19c
Jar Caps
Mrs Nelli* Stanton will be hosi­
er* at thc August session ot the
Pleasure Birthday, organization.
says LEONID RFMISOFF
Leon Moon of Dowling substitute
Wayne. Illmoil
carrier on route one. carried thc
mail during Mr
Ketchum's ab­
Hr,.. l*rg*
sence on a trip to Peniuylvania
1 Mrs Leona Earl attended to thc dutie* at the store.
Dr. Frank Carrother*.
Mr and Mr* Emerson Cortrighl
Chrmn Barry County
Republican Committee.
parents, Mr
and Mrs
Wesley
French near Bellevue, helping them
C W Clarke.
. thresh.
Secy Barry Coun'y
Mr and Mrs. Clyde Holme* and
Republican Committee
family were al Pine lake Thursday
July 29th. 1930.
to
attend
the
Battle
Creek
Farm
2
—
23c
Babo
Rip Van Winkle slept for ’0 year...
Bureau picnic.
Mtes Norma Case of Lansing te but. of course, hte neighbor* didn".
Scolt Tissue 4 »-•«» 25c
spending her vacation with her par- have a radio.-Atlanta Constitution.

KROGER STORES

fjnpainted Chair

74°

FULL 2 lb

In Wards
History ”

3 Piece Bed Outfit
Save Over KO
!«»•
godern Kitchen Cabinctl «
inch stainproof porcelain topi

125 should be the price for an
outfit like thi* but Ward* have
disregarded? price to give you
August Sale VALUE! Modern
metal bed! 90 coil spring! 45
lb. felted cotton mattreisl

13»4
Small Carring
. ^Charge

WARDS FOR CLEANING NEEDS'

J

9

REGULAR He

AT WARDS

Same quality as one of Ute fin­
est nationally advertised chip*!
Easy on hands; suds!
THIS WEEK ! PRICES

wlH&gt;
5 gals.

WHITE

SUPER
HOUSE PAINT

SCOURING

Guaranteed I Gal.
covers 500 »q. It. 2
coat*. Save with
wards amazing
FREE OFFER!

VULCANIZING KIT

Set include*
3 heat patch­
es. clamp, in-

54 inch width,
double text­
ure'
Value*

LINED BRAKE SHOES

WARDS OIL FILTER

*7 Cc

For Ford.A-AA

Exch.

For Chev.-30-32

I3

yg

SOAP
4Q
•w

POWDER

No grit, no odor! Scour*. Cc
polishes'
2 for w
THIS WEEK'S PB1CES

I' in Wards Auto Supply Dfcpt
AUTO Tor MATERIAL

NAPTHA

Whitens clothes! Cuts
dish grca.sc
10 for
this week's raicEa

2-sn

13.000 mile
placement
ridge It'*
value!

»»■

BUTTER

73c

SALAD DRESSING

29c

PET MILK

29c

NUT OLEO

25c

Jars55c

I
I*
Ji-&lt;-W

22-oz. pkg.

I Gal. LINSEED OIL
3 Qin. TURPENTINE

10c

WARDS FAMOUS

Red Arrow
SPECIALS

“You Can’t
Beat Dodge
for Economy”

3

SUNBRiTE

3

RINSO

Wesco Feeds

Scratch Feed '^k$2.39

Lifebuoy !M,U 4 «•»»•

Egg Mash

$2.59

Chick Feed

$2.59

Mash

, S2.55

JISTIIMHIl

w..

RIDLM.

2C

$1.95

Step on lever, top
opens*
Handy;
Sturdy!
WW

Study Bdleea Tire*
Fomom Coaster Broke

1.2B

Jewel Coffee *■

CU.IFORNIL SI &gt;KLST

HEAD LETTUCE Wffi

... 10c

CRAPES

»• 10c

Lunch Kit
Reg »l 29
Black
enameled box with
genuine American
Maid, vacuum bot­
tle.

Walermelons

*«,h

To say that 1 am proud ot my 1936
D&lt;xlg» Is undsrsuting h. It hss
everything one could svtr want'in
■ motor car. And in addition...

10c

FRESH PEAS
35c

■ v 45c

,

Potatoes

WHITE COflBLIB&lt;-r. #.

*&gt;V

Honey Rocks «,h 12!’C
Mir.HtdlN ’

Sweet Potatoes 6 *-■ 29c

9 g
A

m

August Sale of CQ Beef. Ask for it by Name.
Quality Assured.

Reg 45c. Well pad­

.... —- 39

BEEF POT roast w12i/2c

ing!

Radio Tube*

QEC

Reg
49c
Soper
quality Airline—
^9^9

BOILING BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
ROLLED RIB ROAST

»m&gt; met

VEAL CHOPS

Montgomery Ward
118-122 SOUTH JEFFERSON STREET

HASTINGS, MICH.

ft

CHOICE

tkmiei

CHOICE

TELEPHONE 2691*

2 Ml
(

Relish Spread :*-

Reg I1.S0! Velvet­
like finish for living
and dining room.-

Hone Sweat Pads

: • Delta ElecHc Light

,k b"lk

Flat Wall Paint

Reg 91.29. Famous
Riverside
Tread
Guaranteed!

School student* want a strong, de­
pendable, durable yet easy to'pedal
bicycle. Thi* i* It! Double bat *teel
frame. Vichrome enamclcda and
Bonderized against rust wil last
for yean! Boy*' and Girls' rAdete.

m»Y FBKSH

Cookies
nt'.n ripe
Tomatoes

ORANGES 2

Reg. 39c pt
Prevent* cracking, and
gives a rich lustre

• D*Ha Electric Hom

79c

"Stop-On" Garbage Pail

Auto Body Poli«h

21”

I'.VMIMI Hi: ll'll '.’I • T «r
WlMinNI HV? MHI* 2 b*c

BIG K U3CIOL9

Dairy Feed
Oyster Shells

BICYCLE

13c

19c

Reg. 9c qt In your
container. Depend­
able yet low priced
Federal lax included

Regular 3c.
overlook thia buy—
Dozen

ic*mi

25c

APPLE SAUCE

Commander Motor Oil

Clothe* Pins

. 33c

2

PEACHES

FILLET OF HADDOCK
SWIFTS
LEONA SAUSAGE
PICKLED PIG FEET
BACON SQUARES
SICAS CLRKD

10c
16c
23c

- 25c
“

13^C
»• 15c
lb- 10c
ft. J9c

COOKING?
BAKING?

Can't beat Dodge lor eccoocnjr!

DODGE
&amp;64O

Better Results. Use
Highlands Grade A Milk
For

NEW LOW FIRST COST

High in Cream Content. Raw
or Pasteurised. Pt. 5c; Qt.

-------------DODSK-------------

Oriw— ef CazyMer Coigemt—

FORRE5T L. JOHNSON
IM E. Riat* Street

liastings ■ I

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.

Hastings

�THE BAHNOI BANKMt. TBUB8BAY. AUGUST M. IMS
ruff.
the

trd-

•nd
trip

will
mon
suf-

the

born
med

dent
In
lak-

.tiled

rlssi
Irle*

kiln.

,’aplc
rale.
were
vens
idex,
nan.

IAN
iday,

ven-

&gt;tlon
in cm
will
third
held
Sept.
toon.

offlRale

I the
•nd
ither

venlem­
! for
r the
elec-

FREEPORT.

FUh Saturday after attending the
north Fish school reunion
Mr. and Mrs. Uhl P Utter and
daughter Joan of Detroit suent the
Zik end with thru f.-her Prink

Mr*. J. W Rlgterink. son Hilite
and daughter Helen of Grand Rapw* WCT* 41qner guest* of the tor.rn,T'* parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dell
Godfrey last Thursday
D- Brayton.
.
Mr. and Mrs. James Cool altendMTs. Baker of Ada U at the home ed the north Ftvh school reunion
of her broUxer, p. A. Thomas caring lost Saturday where Mr. Cool want
for Mrs. Thomas who Is hi quite ----- u----------------------------- *—
poor health at present.
There will be another Townsend
Ml** Esther Herrington, a former meeting held here Friday evening. I
Freeport girl ha* been visiting her
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wells left
member of the faculty. He la a pro­ aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Friday for a week's camping trip at
feasor of ntelory at the University of Andrrwa. also calltax on old friends Orand Haven.
■. "’A'
here thte week. She te health direc­
Mrs. Jake DePrlestcr of Hastings 1
' Donna Jean Bacheldui I* cun- tor in an upper peninsula school spent several days last week al Lha *
j valaxcinr after liaving her lonsih near Ironwood.
Dorothy Tabberer spent lhe week
and m
Mr*.
Moulton anu
andvaon
: Mr. Ilia
». aauuiiou
sun end
—- in Grand Haven.
, "
. „ , , turned Sunday evening from their
Jahn of Muskegon are vteltlngl at t John Baker of Grand Rapid* northern trip. They were at Sauli I
the home of Mr. and Mr;. Roy Nag-1
&lt;&gt;” hu uncte- P- * Thomas. St. Marie, also camped near Carp ,
I j.r
also hte mother Sunday.
■ Jackie V-n Duwn of Caledonia is 1 Mra. Deed* Nagler te at the home terrst. On their way home Uwy
| spending a week with nte grar.dparMr and Mn. Roy Nuglrr for a
Knowles near Scottville.
cnu. Mr. and Mra. John Llckta. ami i ,e*_“»y’
of Lansing euiieu
wiled
Mr. and Mra. Leon Howk.
, Mr. *ntl Mrs. otto Kunde vteited
Birney Kenyon or
I Tlie Bowne center school reunion al ,he h01’'*- of Mr. and Mr*. Bill on hte father. J. P Hale Kenyon al
will be held next Saturday. AUg. J2 * Jame* of Hasting* Friday evening, the home of L- R- Wolcott Sunday.
lx-on cool of Kaikaku spent Sat­
Mr. and Mra. Ray Neeb of BitesMr »nd Mrs John Rickert enterI field visited the former * purrnl*.! ‘M“«&gt; u‘elr children. Mr. and Mr*. urday night with hl* purent*. Mr.
Mr. and Mr*. LewE Neeb over the I &lt;*r&gt; R'ckert nnd Mr*. Kenneth •nd Mr*. Junie* Cool
week
end.
Eaton
Bunday.
Mr. and Mr*. Geo. Hooper are
i, wit
* rnu
--------- of
-- Pontiac
- ------ to
-- dinner
-.....
—
............ ■
Mte* Alice Gardner te reported . Mr*. Eaton returned to Orand Rap- leaving for northern Michigan thi*
I quite III
&gt;IJ’ *Uh h&lt;r brother and wife for u week during tlie huy fever season.
Rev. and Mrs, Calvin Holstein and
i Raymond Bowen ot Ludington , *»x*1 vUI‘ bcIorr returning to her
family of Huntington. Wc*t Va.. re­
vteited hte mother. Mrs. Seymour ;• home.
b
,
Mrs.
Wesley Blough
entertained turned lo their home after spending,
Osborn several day* last week.
M'
'
two weeks with their parent*. Mr
Quite
a
few
from
henattended
‘
he
Mtestonary
Aftcr compuling damage of the July drouth, the Department of
! the
the annual
annual chicken
e.h.rken supper
wiinnor held
iieirl nt
nt '' Brethren
Brethren church
church one day last week- nnd Mrs. Fred Jabberer.
Agriculture predicted thc smallest corn crop in 55 years for lhe
Tiie village of Freeport Is laying a
Parnell Catholic church Thursday
Ch** M°°rr “n&lt;1 A,va Moore and
United States Thc crop reporting board forecast a 1936 corn yield
evening.
'thelr families spent a fea- day* at
of 1.430,135.000 bushels, icllccting a loss of more than 800,000,000
»lde of Main
Uil* being
Patty Hoyt wn* a guest of Mur-I^un lake lhe pest week.
-----— street.
------------ . made ,
bushels since tlie July 10 estimate
The board also predicted a
tha Jean Wedel al Gun lake one
Mrs A"" Walton L* visiting Mr , possible by the PWA project.
wheat crop barely large enough lo meet domestic needs. The
day last week
r,nrt Mr* E*"1 °u*lck ,n Lansing
Freeport
L« making extended
Mr* Vivian Anderson attended
werkJ
l,laa' ,or “»•’*£ hom«oming celr- |
withered midwestem corn fields. Thc picture was taken in one ot
' the Olea* picnic held at Gun lake ; Mr and Mr* J°hn Rickert. Mr. bration to be held here next week
lhe country’s Ik-*1 corn-raising sections, near Fairfield. 111.
i Sunday.
an&lt;l Mr*. Cnrl Rickert of Grand j Friday and Saturday. Aug. 28. 29.
,
Mr* L. B Lester vteited her *1*- R*P‘d* •'»&lt;’ Mr*. Maude Eaton of
The peasant women of Ru**te
testamentary Issued.
ter. Mr*. R. A. Brown and faintly Pontiac called on the Walu-r Wulhave been ordered lo work »&gt;x day*
Esl. Elmer E. Gregory. Order al- at Greenville Saturday evening ant
1,1 Ha',,*,’K* Sunday
‘ A
A ““
good
many ,rom
from h
here
anplanlowing claim* entered.
, Sunday
“A manv
*re “
r- n
’“"- i□ year on the road*, if they do well
t It Stalin let* them have a few
E&gt;t. Agne* C. Rockwell. Ftntf! ac- ' Mis* Wilma Wieland is visiting rUng to attend thc Townsend picnic nt'
days every summer to rent up In a
|
PROBATE COURT.
count filed, order assigning residue her friend. Mtes Kathryn Skcoch. al at Hasting* Sunday.
Mrs. Nellie Todd and daughter &lt;coal-mine.—Nel York Sun.
. Muskegon.
E»t Clement H. Winchester. Final entered.
Est. Abel M. Gardner. Discharge
Roy Nagler Ls now employed by Madora ot Elgin, III., and Mrs Dell .
account filed, order allowing account
the Shell Gas Co. after faithfully Scott of Aurora. Ill., called at the
entered, discharge of Admr. Ivsued. of Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
Est. John Wagner. Warrant and serving thc Standard OH Co., for 15 homes of Mr. and Mrs. John Rick­
estate enrolled.
I years. He accompanied Claude Wai- ert ateo on their niece. Mr*. Dan
Est Melissa a Hotchkiss. Bond on inventory filed.
E*t. Hiram J. Kcnfleld. Warrant ton to Detroit last week and brought postma last Thursday.
sale filed, oath before sale* filed.
Mrs. Samantha Peckham of Lake
and Inventory filed.
back a new Chevrolet truck for hl*
E*l Donald D. Heaa. Annual ac­
Odessa te spending a few days at
Est. Mary E. Lnrkin. Inventory gas lank.
count filed, order for publication en­
filed.
I -1*. B. Leklcr te al Cadillac for a the H C- Peckham home
tered.
Mr and Mrs Dorr Kenyon and
Est Bert W. Tinkler Petition for few days attending lecture* given
Est. Frank Price. Annual account *hearing
claims
filed, —
notice
credi
*— *•**
—
**“ to
-------“ ­ for undertakers on embalming and Mr*. Baker of Hastings called on ;
Mr. and Mra. Del) Godfrey Monday. |
filed.
B. A. I.YBARKER. Draggtel.
tors Issued.
! durmi-surgery.
Eat. Sarah Ayres. Petition for li­
Mr and Mr*. Fred Tabberer and
Est William L. Perrin. Order con­
cense to sell filed, order for publi­ daughters Ruth and Doiothv mo­
firming sale entered.
cation
entered.
tored
to
Kingsley.
Tuesday
to
attend
Est. Cicoretla Blanch Vander
Ent. Luther Loehr. Discharge of the wedding of the former’* niece.
Vccn. Wil! filed, petition for probate
I Mtes Ada Tabberer and Harold De- ■
filed, waiver of notice filed, proof of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Frank Walters. Order ap­ Boer of Orand Rapids which was
will filed, order admitting will en­
pointing Admr. entered.
‘ held Wednesday at high noon In the
tered.
Est.---------Lottie- wuner. Order appoint- BaptLst church. Mtes Dorothy TabEit. Georje Alvan Oaks. Nomina----i beirr played the wedding march
tion ol Odn filed, order appointing ,n&lt; Admr. entered
.
n,,d Rulh assisted with the decoOdn. entered
MARHIAGE LICENSES.
| rat|orHEst George j. Doster, inventory ' (
Cllntrm L CaA^dy. City............... 24
Mrs cor&lt;l Carr and Ann Cnrr are
filed, final .account filed, waiver of
Mary E Green, City30 : spending the week at the former’s
notice filed, order allowing account
entered, di-'charge of special Adnirx. Frank Keech. Rutland 54 cottage nt Long Like.
Alice B. Casey. Rutland 38
Mrs. Chester A. Baxicr te visiting
Issued, estate enrolled.
34 her mother in Orand Rapid* thte
Est. Sarah B. Smith. Petition for George T. Gardner. City
hearing claim* filed, notice to credl- Dorothy Kelley. City....................... 20 , week
I tors issued.
William R. Kirkpatrick. Middle1
Thoinaa of Pinhook called
ville-&gt;8 ld* brother and wife. Mr. and
Est. John M Smith Petition to
»*• A- Thoma* Saturday .fterpresent claim filed, order for publl- Gertrude I. Clagett. living .... il8
cation filed.
1
■ every employed
•
- person ’Is
Mr. and-Mra. Ray Mickey and
•Nearly
Est. Charles Hook. Petition and
family attended the Honolulu gui­
taking
care
of ------some -------unemployed
order to employ counsel filed
—
——
— —
■ -—
Est. peter A Maurer Waiver ot relative, and If Use income of many tar club picnic at Gun lake Sunday.!
Max Is a member
notice filed, order appointing Admr. of these workers Is Increased, the. Their
... . »on .................
.... of the
Phone 2515
Frank Sage
Hastings
entered.
j need for public charity might be club.
Est. Cleorclta Blanch
Vander diminished considerably.” — Philp &lt; Geo. Wmans of Remus stayed
Veen. Bond of &lt; gecutor filed, letters K Wrigley.
I over night with Mr. and Mrs. John

U. S. Corn Crop Lowest Since 1881

I

Mrs. Wedel and daughters. Mar­
tha Jean and Patay Ruth returned
from Oun lake Sunday after spending two weeks there They had as
' guests white there tlie Mtewa Ed ina. Ruth and Henrietta Wedel of
Milwaukee. WU.. and Dr. and Mra
Oswald Wsdel ot Tuscon. Arte. The
i latten' were returning to thalr horn &gt;
l.gflcr spending tha summer at Penn.

—

।

■*

!*'

COURTHOUSE NEWS

Constipation

•14

1U.
PKG.

Boltar Coffee

Sunnyfield Flour
Splendid Flour

27c

See us for all kinds of
Building Materials

,

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

10

AJAX

SOAP

Rajah Sahd Drtiiinf

33c

Single Wheels—
NOW ONLY

*235-

*145-

HORSES.
Good (notched team of

CHICKENS.
mares,

good

About 200 old hem.

workers, wt. about 2700.

Red cow. 6 yrs., due Oct. 10.

131 in. Wheelbase:
With Stake Body;
Single Wheels;

7

1930 FORD A
PICK-UP
NEW
RECONDITIONED

NOW ONLY

MOTOR

*150-

*150-

A

UNIVERSAL
GARAGE COMPANY

FARM TOOLS.
Alfalfa seeder.

Trailer.

Gale riding plow.
White cow, 5 yrs., due Dec. 1.

Holstein cow. 5 yrs., due Mar. 17.
Holstein cow, 7 yrs., due in Feb.

er attachment.

Wagon and rack.

John Deere hay loader.

HEIFERS.
Jersey Ijclfer. due Mar. 25.
Jersey heifer, brod.

Jersey heifai

Rude manure spreader.

Land roller.

Doering binder, 7 ft. cut.

Spring tooth drag.
5-tooth cultivator.

Riding cultivator.
Bean puller.

Feed grinder. 2 lets work harnaee.
Other article! not mentioned.

cs

35c

Corn Flakes

HASTINGS. MICH.

SODA or GRAHAM

4

Tomato Juice

3 Ar 25c

Sunbrite Cleanser

5 “*• 25c

Crisco

- 15c

10c

H. C. Thomas, Auctioneer.

95c

Bulk Macaroni

~ 55c

19c
4

Sparkle
_ Vinegar

Tomatoes Homa Grown lb. 5c
Apples DuUheti 10 s. 25c

Head Lettuce £1
Celery

Round or Sirloin Steak
Choice Beef Roast

19c
ui 19c

Charles Parker, Clerk.

-Be
~TZ~

II

Short Beef Ribs
Fresh Ground Beef

TERMS:—CASH. No property removed till settled for. I
will rent the form entire or by fields on o 50-50 basis.

Mrs. Charles B. Johnson, Propr,
PHQNE 2121

10

1 15c

Walking plow.

Horse-drawn corn plantar with fertilis­
Sleigh.

X. 39c

McCormick mawer, 6 ft.

SHEEP.
ie

Our Own Tea

CRACKERS

About twenty acres of corn in field.

COWS.

10c

Fruit Cocktail

GRAIN

Bay gelding, wt. 1350.

"”uw

Karo Syrup
P&amp;G SOAP

157 in. wheelbase:
Chassis and Cab;

Tires—Only

1929 FORD AA

Pickling Spice

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28
Commencing at 1 o'clock P. M., and will offer the following
property:—

w*u*

Bread

10 -■ 41c

«

131 in. wheelbase:
. Chassis and Cab;
Dual Wheels; 10-ply

1929 Ch«vrolet

Fly Ribbons

a

1932 FORD B

Mason Jar Tops

ot

Wc Hove Some Bargains on Our Lot!

10c

3
t j

Hoving decided to sell my personal property, I will have,
an auction sole on my form, two miles south of Middleville, on

£2 5.Sc

Mason Jars
Jar Rubbers

Soap

Make Money Hauling!

H.09 I

27c I
Softaailk
««»« 'ii 19c I
Borden** Chateau Ch
l&gt;X.4“k“19c 1
Palmolive Soap-&lt;^
v 19c I
Bulk Coccaniit
4 -•‘I’ 19c |
Northern Tissue
2 .L 25c I
OOCOB BaUr’a •» HarsUy's

CHIPS

Remodel! Repair

* X* 79c I
Me I
,4u.'fc 75c I

Gold Medal Flour

SOAP

NOW... BUILD

UCTION SALE

X tic I
_ t 23c I

Iona Flour

2&gt;k‘ 21c

Li’144*l£13

BUY A GOOD
USED TRUCK

UU’LO

Red Circle Coffee

WHEATIES

Pels Naptha

idn’

17c

This h Your Last Oppor­
tunity to Buy at This
Low Price—STOCK UP
NOW!

A * P FOOD S I
Lw, iuMdsr sad J’j*™}** •'"&gt; C- M.
A?

�THI RATINGS RANNFR. THURSDAY, ADOOCT M, 1»M

PROCEEDINGS

WESS'rs&amp;naMs
M* ft ib» ikMtlan •&lt; 2*lr to.
ad J*to It. IMS. war* t«sd **4

«T

£

V. i. Ku. w«u&lt;&lt; —
Jabaatoa. Ub.r —

sea oo

tt

i

• &lt;iir p’wwm com , Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Nichol* are
with ia.
a yacition uip through the
/•«■&gt; r«tu&gt; it tbe _„,K
r
•■■••a **40.&lt;x&gt; i north.
|
•a.
Miner ' Mr. and Mr*. Arthur Yargtr and
children apent Bunday with Mr. and I
..J"'
V. ■ Mn
Altnft at
Mr*. -IM«
Jeu Altofl
of Hastlne*
Hastings.
Mrs. Tale Buck and children of
Bailie Creek called on Mrs Anna
Buck Bunday afternoon.
■pportaaltv.
Mr. and Mra Oscar Hall of Lan­
sing have returned to their home
In Hastings for a few weeks. Wed­
and spent
"* nesday
nesaay they
mcy took
ux&gt;z supper ano
apcni
Ji' Che eveninc with Mr “nd Mr* Leo

,;Sf

1.9!
51.26
M-

Mr. and Mr*. Wilbur Wood of:
Orand Rapid* called in th* neigh­
borhood Sunday In Die Interest of
the Carlton Center uchool reunion.
Everyone remember the day. August
27th.
Prank Shriber and Leo Barry dug
out a pair of seven point Elk horns,
which would make a »even MWor **ven
— * —■
'
! “nd • half ,oot «pre*d while cleanSthaSar: ib- ing out a ditch on the flats near the

UUr

W! r It.

SOUTHWEST CARLTON.

IH«U„ 4o«a«.*U la M&gt;
■•Id ••ttiam.ai tad aaU aua

Sts

? 00

'N

u‘r. Maw. labor —

gz

l"iorao
-SO* 40

11 M

&lt;»&lt;&gt;. Bmr. labor —

i a. siZiiaM. kbw .

'
i this week on Thursday Aug. 20 at
1 the church with election of oflkers
' following lhe dinner, so if you deI sire an office, try to be present, and

I2S 00
Uli.

It takes a well trained service-man to know all the
points of a car that need attention . . . Andrus Serv­
ice-men know these points. Drive in today and let
us give your car a complete check-up. Your cor,

like any other piece of machinery, needs certain
minor adjustments to keep it at the height of

operating efficiency. Especially does it need proper
lubrication . . . our method and lubricants assure
you of complete protection.

ANDRUS SERVICE f

£

a Pfiune2240 -°-

8U.

Batteries, Windshield Wipers

REGULAR
GASPRICE

HaaUaga.

Volcaalaiag.

BLUE

SUNOCO

Michigan

Washing

MOTOR
FUEL

El

Augu.
Freni

dtevH

F/

t

Coleman. Honaan. Mill*

Fli
■
I
i
1

.414 Pltraoo.
11 :«&lt;• u'cln&lt;k

Anniversary Specials!

ICHIGAN has made real
And rmsmber: if you failed to
progress in cleaning up
place these taxes on the 10-year
. its back tax problem.
plan heretofore, you still may do
During last year's drive fifty-five
so by paying
firat two parts,
millions of dollars in taxes for
together with 4% interest, and a
1932 and prior years were put on
a 10-year plan, by payment of the
small extra charge on the first
first part.
payment. ———

M

Now the second payment be­
comes due.
You must meet this payment
promptly ia order to retain the
fullest benehts you secured by
putting your back taxes on the
10-year plan.

I

See your county treasurer im­
mediately. Make your second
payment, with interest of 4%.
Your property should be a cber«.
ished possession. Protect it by
keeping your tax record clear.

BRUNSWICK TIRES
BU^ BRUNSWICK DOUBLE GUARANTEED
TIKES AT THESE LOW
--PRICES.

4-PLY

SENTRY

STANDARD

440 x 21___ $4.10
450x21....$4.55
475 x 19___ $4.80

$5.30
$5.95
$6.25

Use Our Budget Plan!

' Tires Mounted FREE!

TOUCH-UP Point
Sprayer

STANDARD ARISTOCRAT

SEAT COVERS

Selected

fabrire. fast

B,

rip HOSE who ar* in a financial post-'
x tion to do so ar* urged to pay up
th* remaining portion of their back

'[o“e‘%

installment. Pay not

Jiy Order of Augmented
Jldministratioe Jioard
of State of ^Michigan

EXHAUST
EXTENSION
x««p« num OAc
■Bll tr».
yu
bump«T.
MB V

COUPES______ .T$L49
Sedans &amp; Coaches, $2.98
SUN GOGGLES, Pr —

Qc
O

Flashlight
Holder—

Q&lt;

W

Gas Gauge
Fluid-

O

HEADLIGHT
INDICATOR

1 &lt;v
1“

HeadUght
Bnlbs—I

A&lt;

Tall Light
Bulbs—

fc
QC

Tire Cat
Filler—

O

NORTHEAST IRVING.
Miss Marguerite Begar of Lake
Odessa spent the week end with her
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Harlow SeMr. and Mra. Goo* are moving
onto Mrs. CUtUe Roush's farm east
of Freeport.
Mr. and Semlah Seese are enter­
taining relatives from Pennsylvania.
Mrs. Erma Brown nnd family
spent Sunday at Gun lake.
Mr. and Mrs Gail Lightfoot of
Freeport were callers at O. L Light­
foot's Sunday.
Mr and Mrs Arthur Moore and
Pauline and Virginia and Mr*. Id*
Moore attended the Methodist Bun­
day school picnic at Gun lake Fri­
day.

CtemJjn $1“
PER

FLASHLIGHT

You really should come in to the stere to appreciate the beautiful
color* and patterns in the new Chromalin. You'll know how
they will wear when we tell you that the colors in the patterns
Eo down through thc entire wearing surface. Chromalin is made
y a new process. It is possible to make any type of pattern by
this new process and in every pattern the color goes down
through the entire depth of a single, tough layer of long wearing
floor covering that is united with a waterproof felt base. Come
in and see for yourself thc latest in floor coverings with beauty,
durability and econotnv

MILLER FURNITURE CO.
HASTINGS

PHONI 2221

BATTERIES

CALL ME WHEN BREAKFAST IS READY - YOU
PROMISED TO PREPARE IT. YOU KNOW
OKAY HON. BREAKFAST IS READY
TO SERVE’- WE RE HAVING DELICIOUS, i
TEMPTING JfiMNvi CINNAMON ROLLSTOUR CHOICE ...rPLAIN OR TOASTED.

FULL
SIZE
FRCSM
STOCK

BLOW OUT
PATCHES

3

INVADER BATTERIES

Cinnamon Rolla with
serve. They supply abundant nourish*
ment. No mid-morning fatigue, no let-

with thia delicious morning treat.
Cinnamon Rolla with fruit

huy,

regardless

of

SHOES

7»
INSTALLED FREE!

YARD

! Vj'fu

tra thkk and durable.

Note.
If Yon can pay now in full You
will Save 8% to 36% in Future t
Imereit Payment/.

Nortl

Resuch
Barrwtth
by U

22c

101
lai)
to
boy
cot

|6ut

Mr
Werfi

Duar
- Thur

Mary

Lyle
tendi
Croo

rli:
JI.-I

Inez
old

In

Ind
by

pro
|on&lt;
lant

.th/
th!

)»•

gran
Kellc
and
apen
their
Mt
UMl
spen
Mi
Corr
Wltf.

tend
ham

thrli

K“l&gt;
llvee
Itatli
Ben
■ iron
and

johi
Myr
Larr
Mr

8&lt;ib
hn

ho

willlast
Mic

Har

Bi

Fi

Tms
Fru­
it
Mm
Hur
M
enU

d&gt;y

ten

&lt;^&amp;WEAr/

MARK’S STORES, INC

Michigan Real Estate
is Worth Protecting........ y
'Make your 2nd payment j
on the 10-Year Plan
«*
before September 1, 1936?'

dent
Ohlc*

MUl.r,

Car.l.l

'K

V

will a
mlchi
ing U
Icadc
pcrvl.

in th
man.

OF

Scene* »uch a* this—huge gun* thundering their salvo* during maneuver* of student soldiers at Fort
Bullis. Tex.—will be common during the next few weeks as thousands of national guardsmen and reg­
The ice cream social whleh was
ular troops Uke part in giant war games. The great maneuvers, in which almost the entire midwest
held on the Gaskill lawn Friday (
is divided Into four waning “nations," are part of a program projected by lhe War Department to
evening wa* a real success, both In
keen it* reduced fighting personnel keyed for an emergency.
attendance and proceed*, netting lhe I
L. A. 8. about 827 00 Thanks to all ।
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
SOUTH SHULTZ.
Sunday. The reunion was well at­
Miss Delllla Oaks spent a few who helped out in different ways. . Lowell and Mrs Nellie Edwards of
The Misses Virginia and Char­ Battle creek.
Mr and Mr*. Frank Horn enter- tended. around seventy being pres­
days last week with her brother.
All:
t'.rri.J
Lemuel Oaks and family near Mid­ lotte Wilcox were guests last week
Mr. and Mr*. Ivan Slater and son talned
lhe.Jllowlng
fol* * gueats- Sunday:
.
_________
ent.
of friends at Battle Creek.
dleville.
of Ionia spent Bunday afternoon "
Mr. and' "
Mrs. Archie Naugle* and
Slewart Walers and family have
Jacqueline Babcock spent lhe with Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Slater. children. Mr. and Mrs. George
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Oorham ac­
All:
companied their daughter. Mrs. Wil­ week with Mrs. Lucille Howard at
Frances Scott of Grand Rapids Short and Babble and Mrs. Cunnle moved on the Herb Barnes farm,
lard Bagley and family of Kalama­ Kalamaxoo and Miss Marjorie Reed spent the week end with her par­ Wilkinson, all of Kalamasoo. and north of llickory Comers
Millian
of
Hastings
was
a
guest
of
MUs
■ rb sod
zoo to Cadillac and other points
MUs Lucy Sullivan of Kalamatoo
ents. Mr. and Mri. Elmer Scott.
We were sorry to hear of tlie sud­
last Wednesday on a sight seeing Mildred Gaskill over tlie week end.
den death of Rom Cadwallader last
Mrs. Melinda Lite of Hastings la spent lhe week end with them.
The next Town*end meeting will
trip.
Mra. Ada Ashby and Mrs. Alta week.
Carried.
Forrest Johnson and Byrl McKib- be held on Tuesday evening. Aug. spending a few days with her sister. Mosher and MU* Irene Shellenirlekord. anpMrlrd bv bln made a busineu trip to Orant 25 at the Herrington pavilion with Mr*. Cecil Preston.
Willard Bailey and family of Pul­
lh» urtitinn
fl.h
barger attended the Cedar Creek
d last Wednesday.
weonesoay.
R«' . Green, a colored man as *peakMr. and Mr*. J. F. Brake accom-1| Cemetery Circle picnic at Fine lake ton spent Saturday evening at Rex
Witefs1.
•* i
Mrs. Fred Barlow and son Eu-IcrClara Showerman Is the panled by Mr*. Jetuile Tasker ot |
Saturday.
5 gene of Hastings. Mrs. Haxel Olis speaker) for this week.
Lake Odessa called on their broth­
Mr. and Mn. Bert Galnder were
and children of Hickory Corners'
Mrs,
?' er-in-law. Isaac Amon of Caledonia
Clinton Hom. who has been going dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and
All:
Z were Sunday visitors of W. H. Otis । W. Pry and Mr*. Lllkh Babcock at­ Sunday. He is very 111 at hl* home with the threshing machine for Mrs. Charlie Kahler in lhe Leam
some time, has returned home.
;
Kenneth Dunn spent Monday In I ‘ended lhe Durfee school reuntou there.
district.
4 Kent county on a stock Judging trip Saturday and report a splendid
Loma Bonneville visited her sister
Duane Gray of Lake Odessa took
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Louden en? with Co. Agent Harold Foster.
gathering of old friend* with a plc­ dinner with his father. Bert Gray. Lorraine of Kalamaxoo from Wed­ tcntalned cousins and an uncle from
i Mr. and Mr*. Oley Douglass and nic dinner and a good program.
nesday until Saturday. Friday night Indiana over Saturday night
1 irrlrj
Sunday.
» children. Mr. and Mrs. Elam SpringMr- “nd Mrs. Howard Stanton en­
tn company with Mr. and Mrs. Har­
a
■ —
..... ..
... I ...
lart.ixad i.v.rTl frl —nn* al tnalr
Mrs. Jane Kime accompanied Mr. ry Mtsener they visited the soldiers'
home -------Friday
Mr. and and Mrs Will Kauffman and son encampment at Allegan.
m
*i aid* mi
of iniiMif
OibLi. airw.i
atrMt iron*
from r.K uraeu
Orate 1 rwy
Roy LAiujiAii
Douglass vi
of naoKii.ga
Hastings "tir
were uu.1Sun- ----------.
* evening
-------- — for
_ --•«»•*! 10 Wataal •ir..t ba »af»rr»d «□ day callers In the Dan Douglass Mrs. Jack Arnold and family who Clare of Bowne Center on a two,| G Martin of Kalamaxoo called
Smoking la a custom of ancient
I__________________
_______
wnt*l?™*lkcIXiSlt’*' T",: A : ,b home.
are leaving for Lansing where Mr. weeks' trip to Pennsylvania.
on Mr. and Mr* G__E. Kenyon
Sat-(
origin. The earliest explorers of
... ••
...
_ ■ ____ Dunn
—___
____
aennlrl Has
nrrtav evening.
pwnlhtr Mrs. Lenna BLshop America found the natives using to­
►d b»I' Mr. and
Mrs. Harry
were Arnold
has amnlAvment
employment.
Mrs. Earl Zahms and baby of1 1 urday
| Battle Creek visitors Saturday and, Leland Jones who I* attending Flint spent Monday with Mrs. H W. of Battle Creek called there Sun- bacco leaves for smoking and chew­
| day.
■lit**, spent the night and Sunday with the summer schoo 1 in Chicago' wa* al Geiger.
ing. and tobacco pipes have been
I former'* brother. Spencer, and fam- home with his family over the week
Mr and Mrs. Leon Aug*t and Mr. । The many friends of Mrs. Josie
K,ubr Uy at Bedford.
I end. Mr. Jones will teach lhe Dow- and Mr*. Gerald Augst of Lake ■ Chamberlain are sorry to hear she found In prehistoric mounds; often
trillion
13 verv
very ,n
111.
raaira
Mr. and Mr*. Adrian Johnson and. Mng schoo) the coming year.
Odessa spent Sunday with Mr. and ,s
Smoking was carried to England by
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Haven* and two
A b»d 8rass nres burned oyer Mrs. clarence Kime.
,
EAST DELTON.
Sir Waller ■ Ilnlelgb and spread
•7" i children drove lo Selkirk lake near “bout « “res or more on lhe BUiMr. and Mrs. H W Geiger snent
Miss Lucille Galnder is visiting throughout the countries. In tha
'1 Shelbyville Sunday -afternoon and , ler farm Sunday afternoon and also Bunday evening with Mr and Mrs.
some of her old schoolmates at Ce­
rr. .ap.mri.-t br vU1U(1 lhe „„„ camp
| got started in the woods belonging Herman Buche of East Campbell.
:»bu«t“°n
' During the storm early Saturday &gt; Claud Le*ter but with lhe help
dar Springs.
has been tn existence for many cen­
Don't forget the W M A. Thurs­
About forty-five attended lhe turies.
..t ihai th. rltv I morning lightning struck Die house ।
the Hastings fire department and day. August 27th at Mrs. Charles
Louden reunion al Crooked lake
1 »nd tt
Ur«‘e Uee
10
lhe
ard «
lhe Bedford
department
lhe
u&gt;___________
me &gt;
joru
■■. lhe
me
■--------- , It
-and
---------■airman. Iloonan. i . nuu
. . .u uu«c
. " .urr
___
__ nnt.hhnrhrvwl In—e.nrrnl
wa-l Hamblin's. Evervone invited.
Miller. rint.it Keirkord and ' Rcfeada ‘ Benj. Jenkins home, Fortunately no neighborhood dn general It was ij
Several
from
this
wav
attended
very serious uornMs ««s don. Md Hn«&gt;» sulxW which K«ln should
the Brown school reunion Sunday
i no onc hurt
1 remind careless people of the dls- near carlton center.
BIRD’S remarkable new floor covering
'■•MleUM:
..........
I Mr. and Mrs Frank Schrler Of “‘er which usually follows thoughtJust received the new* of lhe
It R*&gt;ai&gt;»4: That th* eltr of H*i । Kalamazoo spent Sunday at the le“ “d®
return of our pastor and wife. Rev.
rut;
””i.
its 11”™ 01 ""
«r and Mr., ]
----------------------and Mrs. Batdorf. Hoping to see
PLEASANT VALLEY.
m*nt Of lb* b^tu»«t from th* *.i.t* of ■ Harry Dunn.
many more at church each Sunday
14* Tinkler 4»eea&lt;e4 fur berman-nt m- ( Mr and Mrs. Roy Oaks were callMiss Lillian
_
_
Leyrer
.
of Lansing
_ is to hear the good message* he brings.
Cen.7ery.
* ,,ml“ ,0' ,n
' ers ust Thursday aft4irnoon at the • visiting at tlie H. W. Geiger home
Conditional nt-on. that «aid (vmatery home of their son Lemuel near for a few days.
SOUTH THORNAPPLE.
A„oelatiu&gt;. .re.ptinr •aid .um tor .urij! Riddleville and their daughter.! Mr. and Mrs. Emery Kime In comMilo Shaw has gone Jo the fair
ooroo.r .hall irn* .ii .itora.r t„. .nd Mrs ojey
of Bowena Mllb ! pany wuh their coualiu. Mr. and
at Ionia with his show cattle
Mr. and Mrs “Jock" Eaton of Fred Kaechele of Byron Center
Mr. Kermeen of Middtoville l«
Marshall were Sunday callers al thc spent Sunday with Mr. and Mr*, I threshing this Monday for Ben
home of the latter'* sUter. Mr*. Earl f Clayton Clemens of Prescott Evelyn
McKlbbln and husband.
Clemens came home with them for Parks.
Leo Grlffeth ha« been assisting
- a*----------------' a few days' visit.
"In the last resort nothing is ri- | Sunday afternoon caller* of Mr. Robt. Garrett build a bridge across
dlculoua except the fear of being so." I and Mrs. H. W. Geiger were. Mr*. the creek on hta place.
Theodore Wlcrlnca and son Theo­
—Henri Fauconnier.
Alice Strong. Mrs. Lulu Graham of
dore Jr., moved the James Oliver
family from the Chas. B. Joh.i*on
farm.
Mr. and Mrs Theodore Wlerlnga
fa
DURATION
and family of Middleville were *unner guests Sundav of their mother.
Mra Chas. B. Johnson.
George Thomas has moved his
blacksmith tool* to Hickory Cornera where he ha* rented a shop
and has plenty of work.

P&gt;«rtet.
Aid. 811

Complete Service

y

DOWLING.
The Ladles' Aid Society will meet

Aid

L R Ol»r««, ta« roll

Guns Roar Throughout Nation in Great War Games

th/

m

day

can

�s
THI RATINGS BANNER, TOTMDAT, AUGUST M, IBM
BOWNE CENTER
I ment. An European war teams in-1
WALL LAKE AMD VICINITY.
WEST HOPE.
--------- ----------------jt Batu
Batuev ; evitable as other countries may find '
My. and Mra. H. H. Bowser of Mra. Addie
Benton
spent
* •
Mr.'tl neces.-ary to aid the Rightists In I Il rained I On Friday night I Peo­
Ovid an spending their vacation afternoon with Mr*. Ed. Lacey,
S’
Our *eb.M
apd
Mra
and
in their cottage here
i—
-* **
— ’Jerry
— Blough —
• Mra. 'orrtar 10 avcrt • Communist die- ple ran out Ln their nightie*. they
lllng his daughter. Mrs. Egra FrooEd. Yoder of Illinois were also VU- tatorahip at lhe door of the Medl- couldn’t believe it. It liltf th# dual pu,u&gt;W«li
Mr. and Mn. Loon Boyd, Mr. and
itor*
there
----------------------------------------I
terranean
—
a
strong
and
strategic
Mr* Clyde Fl*her. Mr* Jennie HonThe Community club will meet1 found that
Frad Ashby spent from Thurs­ •yaette of Kalamaaoo and Ernest ।
day until Sunday with Mr. and Sampson of Crasaey were Sunday | •iwndetflh. W.rtdUl, Ol UMlr COWwith Mr. and Mr*. Wm. McCallum I pleasant to
.1
b-'h...
•_ in
.u.
1 and it la a .
Mr*. Clyde Ashby in Kalamazoo.
thla Friday
night. Everyone
the
m. wuiard.
wui^ son of
m Mr.
m, and
.on Mn
m„
in.
MLm Martha Oollin* and Mr. Fox rialton at E. D. Reynolds'.
community cordially welcome.
1
Lloyd L«ubaugh ot Onarga, Ill.,' Chari* Fra. at Lansing. Saturday
of Cincinnati and Mr*. Burroughs
Mr and' Mrs' Gordon”Unbornc of 'R
If™1**1 concern. Chrisnoroia
Harold oprmpr
Springer nni
finished
’nru tnrw*nthresh- WMhtagB.
Fr“ nort c«ll?d on Mr Tdto *
lrr5«V&lt;?lfM °f c,lurch
Ing Monday, the 10th. Last year, due
Mis* Harriet Bebaoffw M Ml
MeTrKarcher B^kdVv fXntx^
aU&lt;MV ’h0Uld ,land lhouldcr «® to Lhe delay caused by incesaant Ind . 1* vltittng MU* Otam CM
'
B. McDermott* Thursday after­ with home folks.
Mr. and Mra. Chas. Kahler and
David EsSh e!iSSl?Jdhte^i. •,h0llIlkr
their-common rain fall, they finished on BeptemOur Bunday xhooi wm
noon. Mn B. A. Lyttle of Battle
brotlu^
± enemy-Alhetam-for
what
ha* ber 17th.
Mr. end Mn. Clifford Kahler and te
cd by ten member* al O. B.
happened in RumU and Spain can
Mr. and Mn. Cha*. McDermott children motored to Allegan Friday. frL)bAm^vh^ni. L
Two loads of poplar bolts went *tn meeting al the camp ground*
i
Leon Benedict had thc misfortune from Pennsylvania at the Ouy nannen in the u s
attended the Pennock reunion at
Smith home lhe forepart of lhe I n’7*n *n
J/’ “’
(Orand Rapids from the old V/lao Sunfield Bunday. OWnna Ot
Dolton Saturday.
,
and Virginia Hayward apent
Keck
’
Cecil Plank and daughter. I
Chancey Townsend 'I* confined to Carl Hooteman lost one of his beat
Mr. and Mra. Howard Houghton l,’*rle; ,nJ
B«Mrtce Moore of ceelxlor factory.
hi* bed with Mine**.
I"?’' Jf*”1 Uie
cnd &gt; Everett McCallums have been,
Ml** Bertha Boyd and girl friend of Detroit and Mr. and Mra. Merrill Karcher enjoyed a fishing trip : *,th *’r*
parents. Mr. and »busy enlarging their cellar so that it
of Kalamazoo returned to their 1 *.u* •&gt;*•**&lt;&gt;»
MIDDLEVILLE.
Wednesday.
j
Walters.
home Bunday after spending the ' Wednesday.
Thomas I. OlUatte and family past week with Mr. and Mrs. Rey­
Frank Barnhart has been quite 1U 1 Mr* Marian Cobb and daughter
left for a visit to Marquette aarly nold*. H«r brother. Robert, came with quinsy.
■
of Jackson called on Mrs Claude
Wednesday A- M. They wljl go up Bunday to apend a week or ao hare
Marie Nash has been entertain- ‘A. Hammond and Rom Marie Weding her two cousin* from Mulliken nesday afternoon.
No. 131 and when they return will
Bunday rial tor* at Cha*. Kahler*
follow No. 31 down the coast They were Mr. and Mn. Bert Oainder.
this week
Mr. and Mr* Clair Yelter motored 1
will vtelt Mr. and Mra. Ed. Bette In
Neil Karcher and Leon Howk are to Lansing Thursday to visit their ,
Mr. and Mrs. Dayton of Kalama­
Mr. —
and
Marquette, former residents here. zoo returned to their home In Kal­ painting the Lowe *choo|hou*e this son-in-law and daughter. «.
a '
I Another of our bachelors has amazoo Saturday after spending the week.
Mrs. Harvey Kenney.
changed his ways. Wednesday eve­ past week in E. D. Reynolds’ cotMr*. Lorenzo Nath and son Ed­
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Walters find
ning occurred lhe marriage of Vem
ward ate Sunday dinner with Mr. Marion of Orand Rapids were Sun­
Carter lo Miss Bernice Pickett of
and Mrs. Ward Boulard and family. day dinner guest* of M E. Moore j
Caledonia at the Caledonia Metho­
PLEASANT HILL.
and Miss Clara J Sisson.
CLAY HILLS.
dist church. After a trip wait the
Mr. and Mrs.. Will Thoma* and
Mr and Mrs. William Fifield and
The Misses Fern and Jane McNea family of Rutland spent Sunday
W«dnrM&gt;, rmlll FrlJ.y .Ith Mr, .
happy couple will be at home at his daughter, Mr* Paul Patterson of
Drune Harrlnuurn In K-l.in.ra,; cln. E4rl, Mid Arthur l«l ThurM., place ea*t of town. Vern has al-' Detroit, were Sunday guests of their attended a Sunday school picnic al evening with his brother and auterThurrtUy th. two l«.1ic, rihiixl Mr, .Whin, Mn. Bay Jnhnwm ot Yorfc- way* believed in preparednes* and daughter and sister. Mrs. Howard a Orand Rapids park one day lust in-law. Mr and Mrs. Edgar 3. Fl­
M.ry Brawn .1 Thra, Rlras.
I
»•&gt; • alto th.r. Mond.y.
has owned his home for some time. Lewis, at the Herb Cook home.
field and family.
The William. Peter. Harry and 1
•^X.te'*
Mr. nnd Mra. Joe Dresch of Grand i -Hrs ..?t°ugh,on’. M.r ।and Mn
The many friends extend their con­
Mr and Mrs. John Collins of near
Edw Walters and their
Urcir children
t^nd .deUth^
“'rSSi^ ^t1 Kfnnelh Horton began work in gratulations and wish for a long Eaton Rapid* spent last Sunday Rapids were week-end vUltora at . —
with hl* sister. Mr*. Addle Lewi*.
,
were tn
in attendant
attendance at
si ramp
eamp meeting
like flSndav
. th* Rt«tc hospital al Kalamazoo and happy life.
.
Mr. and Mrs Norris Lewis of in Pennock grove. Sundnv
Nell Howard of Northwest Thorn­
Sunday guest* of M&gt;. and Mr*
Crooked lake. Sunday.
.
morning.
Kalamazoo spent Tuesday evening , Mr. and Mrs. Louis Clark of Alto
apple.
who
makes
the
fair*
each
Clare
William*
and
children
wtxe
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Kcllry and
MrK j c Horton enfcrtalned her
““
with
their
parents.
Mr.
and
Mra
were
Sunday
guests
of
Mr. and Ates
granddaughter.
Marjorie.
Elmer brother. Walter Wcsscll. of Marcel- year w?h 1. "men stand, left bat- Mr. and Mra. N. C. Kraft of Char­
—
Clair »-*•
Yelter.
urday tor the lor.la fair. He took lotte. Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Jor­ Leon Potu.
Kellcy. Mr ami Mrs. Ebon Kelley 1 |tM |aAt week.
The Francis Haight* of Hom?
.Floy&lt;1_ Wallers „.,
u
and
Marion O1
of
and Mr. and Mra. Claude Kelley , Mlo Naomi pennock and Mi*s his helper* from here and expects dan of Middleville, Glen Aro.*trong
Acres spent the week end at Eu- Grand Rapids were Sunday evening
spent Saturday and Sunday with Kathryn Horton will go to Lansing to make the rounds of fairs for sev­ of Fowlerville and Ed. Bedford, lo­
gene Haights’.
. callers at thc Edw Walters
Walters'’ home. ’ .
cal.
their stepsister al Fre-mont.
i next Monday and Tuesday to act eral months.
Mr. and Mrs. Ouy McNee nnd John ■ ~Sunday
Skunks arc numerous tn this vi­
A storm struck here early Satur­
Sunday guests
guests ofof Mr.
Mr. and
mid Mrs
Mrs
Mr and Mr* cliarlc* Harrington j a* clothing judge* from Barry Co.
on Mra. Kollar in Claude A Hammond were Mr and ।
day A. M.. giving us some rain and cinity Both type* tn fact. Those Kollgr called
and Mr. and Mr.*. Wsynr Waite at thc g-H club clothing contest,
a deal of noL*e; lightning strucs of the two legged type took 27 hens Blodgett hospital Saturday after-' Mrs. Glenn C Wing of Bellevue.!
spent Sunday at cedar lake
i
...
; and thelr Ruests from Portland and
the bam of c. O. Kenyon, west and from Mr. and Mr*. Chas. Bennett nT.l3
Mr* Jessie Robinson of Hickory I
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
M/.
and
Mra.
Chas. Gibbs spent Mr. and Mrs. James F. Hammond
south of town, burning not only the one night this week. The four leg­
Corners
_______ spent one day
, last
Theweek
L. A.! 8- will serve ice cream
Sunday at Steve Miller * near Free- of Lansing.
with her sister. Mra. Leda Marring- and cake Saturday evening. August building but a quantity of feed* and ged type are digging out much eom port.
'
’
&gt;----------------- -- ----------------In aearch of grub*.
ton
’ 32 at the home of Mr. nnd Mrs. tool*. The com burned tn the crib
DOUD CORNERS.
Vance Sharp and family of Mid­
Mra. Addle Lewis entertained a
J.raffic on hujy streets is measured in millions ot car*
Mr. and Mrs. George Kern at-[Clyde Chceseman. Mrs. Chceseman will be hardest to replace. We hear
dleville called on Leon Potts and ' Mr. and Mrs Norris Bergman
tended the Sadler reunion al MH-’ and Mrs. Grace Stanton are the he had a normal amount of insur­ cousin from Lansing last week.
Mrs. Lydia Neal of Battle Creek and
miles annually—and millions of car ttopi. Can you make
Alice and Arlene Williams spent wife Thursday evening.
ance.
ham park. Sunday.
1 hostesses
. The Harold Englands of Lansing Mr. McKee of Allegan visited nt i
the
past
week
with
Mr.
and
Mr*.
'
Mr.
and
Mr*
Fred
Granger
went
these stops swiftly, surely, with least possible skidding?
The jjnrnums have returned from
Edward Lee and Beverley Zemke
and the Glen Dean* of Middleville Henry Bergman's Bunday.
their two weeks’ trip through N V 'of Vermontville were guest* last to Detroit Saturday. Mrs. Bonhl" H. C. Kraft of Charlotte.
Mr. and Mrs. Robt. McMannis vi ;-1
.
Mi* Catherine Hart and *on were supper guests Monday night
Chase went as far m
Jackson,
..
. -----... Henry Larabre of i week of their aunt. Mr:- Ward
You can if your streets arc concrete. Concrete's gritty sur­
Ited at Bob Whipple’s at Augusta
- _
Kaikn.'ika
hn’.
hrn.i vl:
vlritino
rein-! Clrecrcman while their parents where she visited her son Lavem Robert spent Sunday with friend: nt Leon Potts. the England family i Sunday
_____________
bee.i
Itlng rrlaface grips and holds tires, offers maximum traction in any
remaining
over
for
a
vacation
near
Shultz.
-■
■in —
nnd family. They brought back
tlve*
Barry Co Friday « family were north fishing.
Demerest and
Mrs. Harry Larabee of Kalkaska
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Demcrest
R. J William*. Mr. and Mrs. Clare
weather. Its uniform riding surface gives you driving con­
Mr mid Mrs. Geo Bali and Mr. their daughter Shirley, who had
gathering wn« held nt Mr. nnd Mra.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Floyd
Haight
of
Orand
'Lilted
relatives
in
the
vlcinitv
the
been visiting relatives nnd friends Williams and Mary and
Harry
Ben Stanton s at East Leroy. Those and Mr* Clem Kidder and son
fidence—a further safety aid. And at night, concrete's light­
Rapids, also Russel! McNee and Bob
returning home Btoday.
■from here whp attended, were Mr. camped al Big Guernsey lake near in Detroit for the past two weeks. called nn friends al Rockford Tues­ Weaver of Battle Creek were viagray. highly visible color makes your streets safer for
and Mra Solomon Stanton. Mr. nnd Cloverdale last week from Wcrt- O. O. Btricklcn nf Grand Rapid* day afternoon.
Mias Grace Hart ha* been spend­ itors at Eugene Haight's Sunday.
Mr* William Stubrl. Mr and Mr*. nesday until Saturday. Saturday aft­ went a* far a* Ann Arbor, where he
SMOKING AND DRINKING?
motorist and pedestrian alike.
John Campbell. Mr
and Mrs. ernoon Mr and Mrs. Sidney Stan­ visited a brother and family over ing a none too pleasant vacation
THREE CORNERS.
with
her
mother
by
being
111
nearly
the
week
end.
WATCH
YOUR
STOMACH!
For economy, for good appearance—and for ijjtty—insist
Myron Mason. Mr. nnd Mrs. Harry ton and Mr and Mrs. Roy Bouman.
Tlie Spanish civil war will decide
Arrangement* have been made to a!) thc time. Doctor* are puzzled whether Spain will be Communist
LaraliCC. Mr* Sylvia Lnrabee and former residents of thL* community,
— _ --------------- „
For quick relief from indigestion
on concrete.
.
then staying untn
until Bunday
Sunday have Congrtwtman Clare Hoffman over her case and Wednesday she or -Christian
Mr nnd Mn, Henry Larnbec
, went mere
'
’himself
.J.....'” pre- , and upset stomach due to rxccMlve
Lenin
of Allegan give an address here the went to Ann Arbor for X-ray.
Mr*. L*onn Pierce of Fort Wayne [ evening.
.--------..-------------------dieted that Spain
would
be lhe next unking 8n(j drinking try Dr. Emil’s
Aden and Emmett Campbell and country to go Bolshevik - the reds Adla Tablets Sold on money back
is visiting her mother. Mr*. Mr.iine.a । Mr nnd Mrs w. H Cheewman evening of Aug. 2f»th. As our con­
Seibel
.
land daughter attended thc Brumm i. gre**man. he should have * message Clare williams are exhibiting sheep used the pjess. movies, sports and guarantee —Reed s Drug Store, and
2012 Old* Tower Bldg.. Lansing, Mich.
nt Ionia fair this week.
Mis. Matilda Smith in company ■reunion at Morgan park. Sunday. II for all of us.
radio to undermine lhe govern- B- A. LyBarker. Druggist —Adv.
Vere Carter and MLm Jtemlce
««,..&lt; Buxton. Thelma J Mr. nnd Mra Vurr Adams and son
with Mrs. Sadie Palmer ai-d nntli-1। Friday. o.
Beatrice
’ er. Mr&gt; Silsbee ot
of iinriiu::
Hi&gt;*IJn:t«. spiml
.|wiit ■ and
*nd Mildred Sponscller.
Bnonseller. Thelma
Thelma:: returned from their northern trip Pickett of Caledonia, who were
united in marriage Wcdne*day
eve-­
la-1 week sight seeing in norlltern Ball. Enid Chceseman. LaVcra Oil- , Sunday evening, having been in thc unuca
Wednesday eve
-Michigan
• Inspkiaspie and
and Dorethy
Dorothy Mark
Mark with
with revacv- ■ upper peninsula. They camped out, ning at the home of the bride’s parMrs. Bertha Adam* and Mr, Leda' eral other girls spent thc day at and enjoyed a fine time, saw many ent*, have left on a trip to Ycllowright* and hope te go again. That stone Park. They will reside in their
Harrington were Baltic creek shop­ Vickery’.* landing, clear lake.
Mr. and Mrs Herbert McGlocklln part ot tlie slate ha* enjoyed some home south of Pleasant HUI schoolpers Friday
Several from Delton attended the - were Sunday guest* al Rennie Mc- fine rains of late, which made the । house which has recently been ex­
Townsend meeting at Cloverdale Olocklin’s In the Barney MUI* trip more enjoyable. They saw ( tenzlvrly improved,
where many fires had damaged a
Mrs Bert Palmer returned Sun­
dun let.
Friday night.
lot of timber at weU a* destroying day from a two weeks’ visit with
Rev and Mr* Ralph Bat*.* and
HOPE CENTER.
many game preserves. Tliey ran relative* in Detroit
son spent Saturday and Sunday in
Charlie
Williams
lo*t
his
bam
aeroM
some
friend*
from
hpma
In
i
----------------- w-e----------------Burr oak
economists who Hunk comMr and Mr* Harry Wolverton and all its contents by tire Tuesday their travels. This drive Into the
entertained the Kalamazoo stove evening. Cause of tire la unknown. upper part of Michigan b becoming petition a bad thing never tried to get
very
popular
for
Michigan
people,
service
from a man who had no
Lucy Leonard from Kalamazoo is
work* employee* and their famlllc-*
who can get away for a week or two i competition.—Detroit Free Press.
al their cottage ot Wall lake Sun- j vUiiing her son Clyde and wife.
day.
V
Mr and Mr* peter Adriaiunn on - |
trrtalncd the latter’.* brother and
wife from Comstock Sunday
|
MlMca Elizabeth Meyer* and,
Martha Collins of Cincinnati. Ohio.;
have been spending a few day* in,
the Blackman home
Mrs Mattie Blackman Is a little
better at thL* writing so that her i
daughter has returned home for a 1

al lhe PennocM reunion Saturday.
which was entertained by Mr. and
Mr*. Leon Dunning m ths church
basement. The Martin bond furBruc* Cook. Max Sterling and Al- nlshed a musical program for the
bert Doud. Eaton Rapids, will at- afternoon which vu greatly en­
tend the State Hl-Y training camp. Joyed.
/
August 21 to 39 on Torch lake.- Dorothy and Florence Wlbalda
Franklin Townsend, Woodland. El- spent the past week in Harvey, mi­
lts Croe* and Robert Carter. Mid- nol*. visiting their cousin. Eleanor
dtevtlle. Alpheus Dunn. Hasting* Below,
and likely two boy* front Charlotte [ For Sunday dinner last week. Mr.
will al*o be there; William Car- and Mr*. Wlbalda entertained the
mlchael and Mr. Angell accompany- .following bum Lt: Mr. and Mr*. W.
ing lhe boy* Mr. Carmichael will be J-- Sitzicr and Lhe latter’* mother,
leader in nature lore and cabin su-; Mrs Ida Boyer of South Chicago,
pervlslon
I Ill ; Mr. and Mra. August Wolke of
Many tn our counties will delight New York City; Mr. and Mrs. Emil
tn the knowledge that H. 0. Coff- Below and children of Harvey. XUman. who used to be a state, county
Mrs. Ethel M. Lawrence of Lake
Y man. has been chosen *« preei- Odessa li back with Mr*. Eddy and
dent of the Y. M- C. A. College In son Arthur, alter an absence of over
Chicago, service* to begin September three month* caused by an illness
1. Dr. Coffman had been teaching at. following a neglected case of the flu.
Northwestern University for several
The Mosier families of Kalamaaoo
year*
i were callers at the Eddy homes
Rev w. A. Haggal. who rendered Sunday evening. Mis* Virginia Eddy
such valuable leerierahlp at Camp returned with them to spend a few
Barry till* season, *pent last week; day*.
with hl* family enjoying the camp1 Mrs. Ed. Newton and children,
by themselves.
I Alice and Henry Newton of Rose­
----------------- »»»■ । - —
land. III., were visitors at tlie Wl.'■'DF.LTON.
balda home last week.
Mr, 1.0' w.ur. &gt;p-ni trail' Mr- M.ry 8mll.-r B.nn.tr .na Krn
M f

A

rmsa

Y« M* C. A. ITELMS

El

ri
*

OF
Ph

I ni

at Fort
sd regildwcet
nent to

lot

a well atHng pre*-

to
[Joy
COl

nlly have
net farm,

|em

Olli

1 the audlader last

una

ly of Ful-

tra

Ider were
Mr. and

mden enncle from
light.

it ancient
ilorore of

i using to-

net
..1.1

inn
|frq
I011'
Inm

.W
Ito
ida; often
I cuvtom.
ngland by
d spread
, In the
narghile
many ceo-

!&gt;'•&gt;

amaxoo visited at the Fred Ashby
home Sunday-

i a

O STOP-GO
II

3

driving needs

■*-CONCRETE

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION

Ini

;r.i
ho

|B,

AUCTION SALE I

RD
iiutiful
w how
atterru
s made
tern by
down
'earing
. Come
beauty.

Mrs. Leda Harrington spent one
day last week with her friend. Mrs. ■
Lrroy Tucker, of Kalamazoo, who is
cam pl hr al Wall lake.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 25
Sale to begin at one o'clock P. M.

HORSES.
Boy more, weight 1200 lb&gt;.
Boy more, weight 1100 lb*.

126

SHORT WAY

BUSES

offer every modern

comfort featuring—
Radios

• No-Draft Ventila­
tion

Doop Cushioned
Seats
• Courteous Drivers
• Cool, Quiet Rides

lay

Qua I ify

I offer the following
Like thc pendulum of a clock every buying decision swings back

fe! I«H
^-^iWAYj^

ith

On account of poor health, Mr,. Cora Allerding will have
an auction sale at her farm located 5 miles north of Hastings,
1 1-2 miles east and 1 1-2 miles north, or 1-2 mile west and
1 1-2 miles north of Carlton Center, on

You’ll enjoy every mile
you ride with us because
of these unusual feature*
... all offered by Hbort

lhe lowest fares in bu* his­
tory.

BUS DEPOT

TRIO CAFE
HASTINGS PHONE 2137

CATTLE.
Block cow, 7 year* old, due
Dec. 23.
Jersey cow, 6 years old, duo
Nov. 16.
Red cow, 5 yrs., due May 15.
Guernsey bull, 3 mos. old, eli­
gible to register. .
CHICKENS.
40 White Leghorn pullets.
10 yearling hens.

FARM TOOLS.
Double harness.
Oliver 99 plow. Banner plow.

jOI
H

Spring tooth drag. Shoe drill.
Mowing machine.
Dump rake. Land roller.
Lumber wagon and rack.
Riding cultivator.
2 single cultivator*.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
3 beds. Bookcase. 2 stands.
2 dressers. Dining table and 6 chairs.
2 rocking chain. Rug. Cabinet.
Victrola and records. Couch.
Dishes. Cupboard. Sideboard.
Home Comfort range, good as new.
Round Oak heating stove, 1.8-in.
Heating stove.
Meat jen.

to QUALITY. Price often ploys on important part in buying, but in-

variably the deciding factor is QUALITY. There can be no substitute.

Thc Home Lumber Company has built a reputation on Quality Motorials and Workmanship and will continue to operate on this basis,

giving to thc customer thc best for thc least amount of money. You
can get lower prices but you cannot get better materials than we offer
you. . . . Whatever you may need in the building line it will pay you to
invest in Quality Materials. Call, stop in, or write and wc wilLbo glad

to help you.

Lum Buy Seys:
, mg problems aolvctf.

BUILD, REMODEL. REROOF or REPAIR NOW!

Th® Pendulum
tion

li Swinging Towards Cold Weather.

MISCELLANEOUS.
Sap pan. Viking cream separator.
8 tons clover and alfalfa hay.
Other articles too numerous to men*
tion.

TERMS:—CASH. No goods removed until
tettled for.

Mrs. Cora Allerding
Proprietress
DEWEY REED, Auctioneer.
HAROLD SMITH, Clerk.

THE HO
LUMBER
"Builds 1
HASTINGS

�TOT HATING 6 BANNER THTRgDAT AtQCJT ». HM

and
Outdoor Notes
Michigan fisherman who lias
_.l a strange specie* ot "trout"
rummer U asked to notify thc

tarn—that being on the Pigeon
The grayling is protected and
be returned to the stream un-

•Jfje best kill of coyotes this year
gu made by bounty hunters during
Mb when 1M coyote pelu were certtfjpd far bounty paymenu.
3 Nearly * half-million persons vUtMichigan's slate parks on Sunjuiy 13. for a new high one-day
■d. A total of 418,628 persons visthe parks dn that day and 177.m July 11. This is a week-end
ot W4.133.

Nearly, eleven
million brooks, I Michigan’s high record in forest I
MORGAN.
browns and rainbows—are waiting '-n" da
«e wa
Le^0-7
’.!^lW
*V
d *.n P26 ‘ MlM BeUy Jane McClelland of
—®
rc“-------—
In state hatcheries and rearing sta­ । when there were 3.852 forest fires Nashville Is the guest of her &gt;
*"£ V *«’?•“ "
«"• “&gt; Bikndparenu. Mr. and Mn. Dao I
tions for planting in the streams of wild land dtvuuled. Th. lann j McClelland Accompanied to Mr.:
the state this fall.
eerew burned on l.le Royale dur. । ,„d M„ Albt„ McClelland end wni
in, pie peel .eoral week. U nol Adam ol Barryjllle Hie .pein Thura. &gt;
The 1938 trout fishing season, Included in lhe record of Ihu oa- ide, at KaUmaaoo will, Barnuel Mrson s fire damage, since fire pre- oiund
JUNE SESSION
•Well com« W • do« W 7. L.- vention and suppression on Isle' Orm MClelland of Forest Ohio 1
bor day. has
one years.
of lhe Ilmost
i»*n
aw&gt;r nv th» ' ,pent
—~
.---------------— "72—Z" —t' I
succwaful
in been
recent
U n.tmn.i^r^rvirt
lhe
**5^ e?d
agreed by alate fisheries authoriUea. natlonal Palk
A. McClelland, aho visited Al­
'
*
1 bert McClelland of Berryville and
LAKEVIEW.
'other relatives.
»•••&gt; -—&gt; All possibility of establishing a
Mr. and Mrs Harley Gravel and '( Mrs. Chas.
Chaa. Harrington returned
fS“'! k““’
coveted low forest fire record in
'
home Saturday from Indian lake
Michigan is now definitely past, but Mra. Myrna Babcock of Battle Creek |i ..ome
spending
part
spent Saturday with Mr. and Mr». after
“ ’
“
*tlie
“ greater
‘
“ *of1
i the week there os delegate for the
still on lhe calendar the fire force Clarence Graves.
I Naxarene church.
'
.'
Is concentrating on keeping fires
Dorothy and Marjorie Cogswell
Mr. and Mrs. Bordy Rowlader and I
down and preventing a new high are spending a few da^s with Mrs.
family spent Sunday at Morgan1
record. Tlie total number ot forest Wm. Schantz hear Vermontville.
Park in honor of the birthdays of 1 ...
fires reported up to mld-August waa
Ernest
Golden and June Groas. A1 e»ih««o
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Elmer
Gillespie
and
1.917 and the acreage burned was
picnic dinner wa* served.
30.547, almost twice a* much as that ftimily attended the Bates reunion
for 1935. when lhe lowest forest-fire at Morgan park Sunday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Leon Mead and tie Creek.
damage in the history of the state
Mr. and Mrs. McKeough of Has- !
was recorded. Forest fire officials family and Mrs. Henry Mead of tings. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Eaton of I ■)..
believe that with, continued public Hastings spent Sunday with the
the Striker district spent Sunday . pl«
co-operation in the use of fire in Prank Cogswell s.
evening at tlie home of Bordy Row- I
the woods and average good weather
___________________
Mr. and Mrs. Often Moore
____________
attend- lader,
bi 1
luck they can keep this year's dam- ed the Moore reunion south of Bat­
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Shaffer of j ;"}J*
age below 75.000 acres.
tie creek Sunday.
Otsego called on Millie Flury Sun­
day. who is not as well at this writ- '
ing.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Graves of,
Lansing visited Mr. and Mrs. Chas.:
Harrington Sunday.
I Irma Nickerson.
Mrs.
Ralph ' drrk
1 Smith and daughter of Idnia. Mrs. •
'•*» propfr
Foley. Emma and Carlton Jaggart. । AnnouncetJ
l and Louis Oarvle of Marshall were । xioaiiitiion -ill meet in
। guests of Glenard Earl and Bob!oiric*
I Knight
| “notion tn»&gt;!• bv Wilcox
I Mr. and Mrs. Chester Winans and !, r Lipk»»- ib»t the Board t«k«
little daughters of East Lansing who
! were guests of
oi her
ncr parents. Mr.
Air. and
ana I
Mrs. Dave McClelland also visited
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd McClelland of
. Nashville. Her sister. Hazel Norris
| of Lacey accompanied them.

RrtltUr st ProU
Prc«Mulia« Alta

SUPERVSOHS
PROCEEDINGS

I’M FROM
MISSOURI

ohomasstoreI]

WHEN IT COMES
TO FOOD

VALUES

:.ooo.oo

.. SOO.QO'

rsssss

333338333333333333

mimuHUinn

200 00
X&lt;t.val IVtaaiiatlooi
X&lt;ko*l C»ia*iaalac

ISO 00
: ooo.oo
i.tooioo

1.300 00

1 aoo.w
soo 00
&gt;1 »*00 wt TM

DEMONSTRATE TO THOUSANDS OF CUSTOM­
ERS THE ECONOMICAL WAY OF BUYING
FOOD . . . SEEING IS BELIEVING!

TOMATOES f3-25c
10c
FIG BARS EL
2 25c
P’NUT BUTTER 125
n r i n sweet, tender
r r A X EARLY JUNE
I L n U EVERGOOD Blind

No. 2

CAN

c

nI rn
b II
ULLU

puR|Ty brand

FOR COOKING

OR TABLE USE

M0ADCAST

con 15c
CORNED BEEF HASH
can 14c
LIBBY'S VEAL LOAF
TUNA FISH T»»CT UOHT MIAT - can 15c
POTATOES

I

CEDAR CREEK.
The Cemetery Circle picnic Salurday at Bunnell's landing. Fair
i lake, wa* quite well attended, every­
one having a good lime.
I Mr. and Mrs. Willard Kreps and
■ Mr. and Mrs. Henry Larabee of Kal1 kaska arc visiting relatives at this
j place.
. Those from here who attended the
। 4-H club at Stuart lake recently
I were Richard and Boyd Lelnaar.
। Dale Lammers. Fern and Frances
| Campbell and Joyce Lammers. All
I reported a nice time.
Mr. and Mrs Leslie Pease and
1 daughter attended the Letnaar re| union at Crooked lake Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Gould In
I company with Mr. and Mrs. I. L.
I Campbell of paw Paw are motoring
through the west They expect to
be gone two. —
—
weeks.
The Oould
children are staying with their
grandmother. Mrs.
Harrison, of
■ Fulton.
Miss Ima Boylen is visiting her
sinter. Mrs. Luther Day.- of Battle
Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. clarence Campbell
in company with their son Melvin
of Quimby are spending n few days
with friends at Aurora. Ill.
Miss Wood of Cressey visited
Miss Josephine Lelnaar a few days
the past week.
1
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Gelman of
। Battle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Herman'
| Getmnn of South Haven. Mr. and
I Mrs. John Gurd ana their families
I spent Sunday with tholr parents.
I Mr. and Mrs. Will Gurd.
Mrs. Leo Monroe nnd Maynard of
Kalamazoo are visiting her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ardy Owen.
Severn! from here attended the
Stanton reunion at Pine Creek Sat­
urday.
Mrs. Helen Knldan and two chil­
dren and Miss Evelyn McCready of
Flint spent a couple days last week
with Mr. and Mrs. L. Campbell.
Elmer Kelley of Grand Rapids
visited with Mr and Mrs. Levitt a
few days last week.

Nicotine, science gaya. Increases
the sugar content of the blood.

KREMEL Pudding Dessert

. callrj

jaara ot 1037
13.000.00

Old fort*. treea that nerved aa
glbbeti and other apots Identified
with the pirate hiatory of the Span­
ish Main are such a mngnrt to vid­
ton that It la Mt I mated the plrntea
have brought more money to the
West Tndlea than ever they took
from It.

TO BARRY COUNTY VOTERS

adjourn until

.‘•late Senator Frank R. Moeier
ha* been forced to clarify a numbn of rrfpnrsm* imprr&lt;*ion». He
lia&lt;l lioprsi that there would be nu
ntud elinaing and rnaliciou* mi«rr|&gt;.
rewrite I ion by befogging the i*Miee
of tlii« campaign. Which ahould lie
(or the betterment of the eighth
district and not for individual gain.

VFntrlr.r. Chairman.

To Whom It May Concern:
llaraua and

Forty-one eo-called "Admfniatralive- Rille" were introduced in lire
Senate in the. 1935, aeaaion of the
Irgielalure. Every "Nay" vute on
the final postage on lhe third read­
ing in the Senate was a Democratic
sole; nol one Republican voted
againat any of the Lilia.
Forty-one so-called administrative ......
—.. introduced.
bill# were
Fivr.uf these so-called bills remained in the Senate Committee*.
Thirty-»ix oh these bill* were passed by lhe Senate and »ent lu lhe
House.
Twenty-seven of these 36 bill* died in lhe House.
Eight of these bills pasaed ImiiIi House* and were enacted intn law.
passing both Houses.
Initial Slate Journal.

$

FRED I. CHASE.
Secretary oi the Senate.

pkg. 5c

2 cans 15c

PINEAPPLE TIDBITS
PINEAPPLE JUICE

St 2141

According to the American Soci­
ety for the Prevention of Atphyxlal
Death, nearly SO.OflO deaths occur
annually In the United States from
asphyxia.
Various forms of as­
phyxia include drowning, electric
shock, carbon monoxide poisoning,
gas Inhalation, overdoses of anes­
thesia. asphyxia of still born chil­
dren and similar cases.

milted tin lol

Sweet Potatoes, 3 lbs. 13c, 6 lbs. 25c
BANANAS 00LDEX BtPE TBUIT
3 lbs. 1 9c
LEAF LETTUCE HiZBH. CBISP
lb. 5c
JELLO, All Fruit Flavors, 3 pkgs. 17c

On* of Oldest Known Glands
The pineal gland, a tiny endrocrlne body located in the head, is
one of lhe oldest known glands.

Uotlnn tn sit
Bonltr
mil 2:00

43c

V. B. X#. 1—IS Ik. Peck

No. 1 con 10c

TURN TO TEA TODAY
Vp H
I [fl
■ ■■*■

THOMAS SPECIAL
MISSION INN K

HOLLYWOOC

TheLifeofHomeTrade

’/l lb. 13c

Vi
’/»

LIMA BEANS CdJonHa
No. 2
VEGETABLE SOUP CAMPBELL'S

lb. 23c
lb. 25c

Can

IS IN YOUR HANDS

10c
] Q(

HUSKIES, Wheat Flakes
pkg.11c
PUFFED WHEAT
pkg. 10c
CREAM OF WHEAT
Ig. pkg. 23c

FAIRY SOAP
5 bars 19c
TRILBY SOAP
2 bars 15c
TAR SOAP, Grandpa's
bar 5c
SHINOLA, M*.*- Tm. i.m .
can 9c
SILVER DUST c—irf.u&lt;u 2 pkgs. 27c

.i*15

C. THOMAS STORES
taa WUT STATE STREET

aoo.oo
I '.'Oil 00

Chairman \\ olrlur

I

C. THOMAS STORES "EVERY DAY LOW PRICES"

1.000.00
1 500 00
:.uo&lt;&gt; 00
&gt; UOO 00

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

N
K

If you and others who live
in this community should slop
buying in local stores, sqon
there would be no stores—no
business district at all.
On lhe other hand, when
you buy of local merchants,
business booms, money circu­
lates, employment is steadier—
prosperity arrives.
You have a real responsi­
bility in this respect. Do your
part Patronize local merchants.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

16 PAGES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1936

WAYS OE INN S
lHa8tin«8 Brotherhood Officers
at i nriiin nnm Plan a-r* 17nil rant Pienwisa in
STLL!EKrapl“n an E’Ece.ll!n!Prog'“m
FAMED HOSTELRY WAS
RECENTLY RESTORED
BY HENRY FORD

M. H. Reinecke, a G-Man, Speaks at
First Meeting on Monday, October 26

[XPERT
GVESIEflSONS

n i rn.nrif

OATES NAMED FOR
BEAGLE FIELD TRIALS

secutive Year

!republicanmwe?^oay S0BFIK

INTEREST BARRY

Hastings Again Chosen for.
Meet for Third Con­

STATE COLLEGE AUTHOR

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

ounmmen:-^^Grand Rapids Woman

MRS.

0.

D.

BAUER

TO

Gave Address

TDSTiTE
___

’W

MEMBERS or «-H 0101

Dates for the annual Wolverine
Members of the Women's Repub­
1 1TY WM or BENEFITS Beagle field trials have been an-1 MAKE DOMESTIC ARTS
lican organization In Barry county
nounecd as October 5 to 10 and will; .
DEPT. APPEALING
OTHER COUNTIM
OF COUNTY FAIRS
gathered Monday noon at the Park­
The program for the next Broth
­ investigation of-----the United States,
be held again in this city, for tiie
erhood year,
which will
on the
Department
of Justice
atbegin
Detroit
1
er House for luncheon and to hear
third year. The Parker House will
fourth Monday evening in October. Mr. Reinecke is one of the ”O Men." HFAD OF ANIMAI MIR.
an interesting talk by Mrs. Charles BARRY CO. SENDS ITS
be headquarters for the show and EXPERTS WILL GIVE
ORIGINALLY OWNED
1 has been completed and promisos who have done such wonderful work I r,tRU ur ANIMAL ttUbthe kennels are to be at the (air-.
TALKS TO THE WOMEN r
°™ld
»&gt;“
BY HOWE FAMILY,10 I* unusually interesting. Tiie in wiping out the kidnapping gangs'
। came in place of a speaker prevlLARGEST DELEGATION
BANDRY DEPT. SPEAKS grounds.
------------- | members of the organization can
of thia country, and who are now
The officers of the club arc: Practical Subjects Are to Be °’“,5r scheduled and who had been
Plarn ana
nnrl Events
F.vAnta Were
Im- g00d
congratulate
on g their
President. W. E. Behicn of Mus­
Preienled That Will Bo
j
b™db“*n"’ Ten Winners Awarded Trip
Mace
were imrortune themselves
gelUng guch
opportnnlty
kegon; vice president. J. T- Ken-1
to tbe International and
change Information and
mortalized by Henry Long- igratn. aCthe very small cost which first meeting. Everybody is bitcrestVery Helpful
Mrs John c- Ketcham prejlded
nedy'of Detroit; secretary-treasurer.
Beryl Bishop of Lansing, and assist­
fellow's
provides.
11 U th. aim 01 Mr. c. D B.urr. S?b’‘,’*’!“,''P7"d,n‘bK
.
iohow s PoemB
roems the- Brotherhood
1 |j(j othej. plan coijJd
&gt;gvenIngood pro_ ed in the ”G Men" and their mar­
Dallas Dairy Shows
.
to Compare Results
velous work. Mr. Reinecke knows all
ant secretary. Charles Boomer of
I
No doubt many Banner renders | grams be furnished and seven good about it. for he is one of them, and
Thirty-one Barry county 4-H
Once in a while you will hear Lansing.
rnMle *ru Dormrmrnl or th. '
I? &amp;
iliave heard or read of Henry Ford’s "feecte" at the low price of 8250. It will tell an- Interesting story, to someone say: "What is the good of
Club members attended the stateto'."',"iyroFr:U'wTht!!’‘.nSC!!h7'“d “ JtormlSr
1 -Wayside Inn" which has received a l» not alone the entertainment fea- which all will be glad to listen.
4-H
Club
elimination
contest
at
a county fair anyway?” The opin­
1™.
i„
tures, but there are social values In
For Monday evening. November ion of the writer might not be of
Michigan State College on Monday
K“JSJ"IS B..™ Crlrnr.
i
16. which is Father and Son night, more value than that of a critic;
S'sut"
“LT,1“™; r",’cd
“Whuut. k • OnUhM oroop wu arenmoankd b, Harald
landmark—a very delightful place Ii men once a month for seven the speaker will be Judd Hyamesi the but on general principles we believe
gon
State coUrae.
college, Io
to &lt;lr.
give a rloU.ln.
clothing jpeaVr
'
,.n stale
ewtenM, ,j ,^.Ur
otrKoluM
popular coach of the Western Slate In supporting home organizations
to visit, a K|xil that lakes one back'- months.
demonstration
on
Wednesday.
Sep'
Ttie program as arranged by the Teachers College of Kalamazoo. He and home institutions, and we h'ave
■ to pioneer days when people en­
' tember 9th. at 1:30 in the after- ‘drew comparisons of the political ' agent. The bon were member* of
committee is as follows:
is a good speaker and a favorite witii always believed a county fair was
situation
In
various
countries.
She
[
Barry
county
dairy
and
livestock
Joyed sitting before the fireplace re, noon. Miss Cramer will have a dLs- ,
For Monday evening. October 26. young people.
worth wuuc.
while.
play of new fall materials and will
s^y .and PersUtcnt work 4-H club Judging teams. The girls
1 counting their experiences and the
MR ANn MRq w n nnnv l’lay or 1&gt;t'w fan materials
ana
wiu
the speaker Is H. H. Reinecke, who
Monday evening December 21 the
The following news Item, from the MR.
-- .,--------------------AND MRS. H. D. COOK lecture on the subject:
"Which
Fall in the campaign and her remarks represented Barry county In cloth­
art of conversation had not gone
has charge of the Federal Bureau of
ing
and
canning
Judging
and
can­
(Continued
on
page
3.
Sec.
1)
state
College
al
East
Lansing,
gives
Fabrics
T
ot
’
y
’
o
u
?"'"
’
i
wcre
weU
receded
by
those
pre
sent
out of fashion.
AND FAMILY TRAVEL
I“
ning and food preparation demon­
, the view point of Professor George
■ Also on Thursday. Friday and
’ * *
Die Wayside Inn Is located about
stration teams.
-------9514 MILES
A. Brown, head of the animal hus­
1 Saturday, in the Domestic Arts i
.fight miles from Sudbury. Mas*., and POSTMASTER FIELD AT HOME. BAD ELECTRIC STORM
M\ five teams wen tn competition
bandry department al that college.
Postmaster W. J. Field returned
------------' building, an expert will give instruc- I
about thirty miles from Boston. For
against 4-H club teams from other
ON THURSDAY NIGHT . concerning the value of a county EXCITING EXPERIENCES i lions on crocheting and knitting, ]
many years it was the recognized home last week from Ann Arbor,
counties tn the state. The ten high
.fair. He writes as follows;
—-------------------------------- Wl&lt;1 wl|j als0 exmmt suitable yarns, i
stopping place for travellers en­ where he underwent a serious oper­
teams in each division will be
route to the larger centers os all ation for removal of a tumor on the Struck John Hewitt’s House * "In e'?ry community and in ev­
awarded an expense paid trip to
.
| cry profession or occupation there
[ travelling was on horseback or by brain at the University hospital. His
t
—Hit Consumers Trans- | are men who excel thetr neighbors." Go From High Temperature
------- r-------------- for a zseries
of informal lectures by |
w-wi.w*.
friends will be
glad to know that he
stagecoach and frequent stops were !------------------------------------------------------necessary. In fact, several of the &gt; is recovering very rapidly and is
former Also
*“ya
Brown. "As a rule,
Here Into Snowstorm on
| Alice Goodrich Rowe, of south Ha- apppadR twtr ttmv aa tlon for trips to the National Dairy
m-.u. j
, . ..
.
.
. ' the men who excel are those who
nnntinnninl Tl^lTd ven. Michigan, a very talented and AFPEAKB
THIS“ very
TIME
AB shim ---------- ---------------------------------------------old stagecoaches are still jireaerved ■ enjoying visit* from hte friends. His
veil. auiciUK""ivkidcu
Thursday night s storm at about, tiaVe been closer student* of naShow in Dallas. Texas, and the In­
uonttneptal Divide
wll known student of Japanese life
in the barns at Wayside Inn.
rapid recovery is a surprise to hte
I well
DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE
ternational Livestock show tn Chi­
. History records that the Red-' doctors and a satisfaction to his mldnight was one of the most se- , ture and who have superior powers
As Mr. and Mrs. Hubert D. Cook, and customs. Mrs. Rowe taught for
nnwcwnn
cago.
Hor.'c Inn al Sudbury, as It was first j friends. Mr. Field hopes to be back vere electrical visitations in Has- of observation and deduction. To Leslie. David and Marlon have Just'seven years in a missionary school |
tub.
Canning Judging was represented
i mlled. was built about 1686. and one 1 at the post office by the first of lings in recent years. There was a 1 «lvc the entire community or coun- returned from a western automobile in Tokyo. All of her lectures are il-,
m------------by Ruth West. Assyria. Betty Beel­
contlnual play of lightning and a1 ty *n opportunity to learn and trip, covering about 9500 miles, the; hulrated by art treasures, garments. | CHIEF OPPONENT
' jBDfStil) see the hostelry sign puteide | September.
er. Middleville; Uene VanNockar
i phowing the now well known "Fly-1
----------------- • • *
. . ...
constant roar of thunder. Lightning ' profit by the results which these Banner has asked the privilege of utensils, photographs, dolls, toys,
........
—
■
.........................
IS
MAYOR
MURPHY
and
Thelma Lee of Johnstown
struck
the
home
of
John
Hewitt
at
;
more
fortunate
neighbors
achieve
is
Horse.” An English family | UNANIMOUSLY ASK
printing the account of the trip j antiques, block prints, etc. she will
ing Red Horse."
Twp. The clothing Judging team
about midnight, coming in on the the function of the county fair.
which they have been compiling' give special lectures of interest to'
by the name of Howe owned the
RETURN OF REV. JONES radio aerial, it went into a hall and "The individual who remains at since their return. We ore sure I children on Friday.
In Last Campaign Grand consisted of Kathryn Horton and
tavern which “
was ....................
handed down
Naomi
Pennock of Delton; Mary
through the celling of a bedroom in home is often satisfied with medi­ Banner readers will enjoy this ser-' Mrs. Rowe will Be located In the 1
!|from generation to generation for
Rapids Man Posed as
Walvogel of Assyria and Marjorie
(one hundred and seventy-five years! Largely Attended Meeting which his daughter -Marian was ocrity because he b unaware of pos­ les of articles which are written in Flower Show building, on Thursday, i
Reesor of Woodland. The county
a Republican
'and
nt.rf more.
rrrnre* Then
T(u&gt;n a
11 f&lt;-w
f»w years
vrnrn ago.
nun
° J
" sleeping. The bolt then went out of sibilities. In many cases, a par­ a very interesting and distinctly I Friday and Saturday.
prci»ralion
demonstration
Makes That Request for
[ For many years George Welsh of food
[’Henry Ford acquired jnuesMon of
the house, tearing aJiole in the roof ticular animal or sample of grain characteristic style. The first In- j
----------------- *■*■*■
a farm
looks nearly
of
an------------------automobile,----------------------parked outside the produced
-----...
------ in
_
_
------------------------, stallment appears herewith:
I Grand Rapids was quite a promi- team was Beatrice Dunning and
the properly and nt once wt about
i LUUIM
LUCKY huuiuliii
ACCIDENT
Another Year
Martin
Martln rtrAier
Craig hmna*
home n*vt
next rlrvrr
door. The perfect to the owner. Placed in
as I start to write thte the flrat
klCAD CFMPTPRY nenl character In republican ranks Kathryn Wlbalda of Delton, white
to restore it In the original fashion.
The fourth quarterly conference lights were put out by the bolt. The 1 competition with a large number of morning after we reached home, our
NEAR CEMETERY
fiCAn
btwlu I Ci» I —prominent perhaps because he
||Thls be ifas done and had secured
of the Methodist church was held fire department was summoned by i animate or grain samples, many im- whole trip seems like a very pleas-! —
nrr
v.
wns most always after some office;
jithe entire furnishings, except three
uarinn who. with
wm, her i—
brother
&lt;i— Leroy,
------- perfections probably are
ore found."
found.'
| ant dream, principally because I still' Car KUHS UH Highway ana j,a(1 a rat)icr pUnxing voice and not
1 nieces, so our guide said, before the in its social rooms Monday night Marion
with upwards of sixty present. Mem­ were alone in the house at the time. | In addition —
to this opportunity to am In more or less of a daze from I
Turns
at all backward about letting peo- Jean Schad of Middleville acted aa
: inn wm Opened. Since then he has
Turns Over
Over—
—No
No One
One
”
j pie
exchange Information,
information, professor
professorj iour
ourlast
lastspell
spellofofcontinuous
continuousdriving,
driving.i
Plc know how well he was qualified the girls’ leader.
' purchased two and knows where the bers ot the church and congregation Tlw deportment responded and exchange
The county dairy Judging team
Mro*m believes the county" fair | iU40
J40 miles from
from Ardmore. Okla- ji
injured
injurea
I fOr tiie
j)e various positions he sought,
third article is but hasn't succeeded were Invited to attend If they waited for a time, but there was no Brown
wished, whether members of the of- evidence that the lightning had set I should be a place where those who homa. about 120 miles .north of
o( Dal-' Sunday night a Grand Rapids car | He wasn't slow about berating dem­
In gaining the ownership as yet.
nclal board or not. District superln- fire to the house. Mr. Hewitt works |the best seeds and animals 1 las,
I,, Texas, to Hastings, _____
■__ 1 ' .......
-1-T T..
. I__ ....
stopping
was being driven west on ir
M-37.
In । ocratlc policies and pointing
out ton and Milton Buehler from the
. Henry W.
w. Longfellow,
ixmaicnow. the
inc beloved
nrio»ru .
. . ’
. . "
. „
.
®r'
L‘ P*wey ot .°!?nd on the night shift at the Bliss I ma&gt;' dispose of them at an advan- j only for meals and gas..
I Neu England ixx&gt;t. lias Immortalized '
! some manner it got out of control their fallacies with biting sarcasm. Freeport club; Ralph Palmer, Ar­
thur Smith and George Bedford
------------------------i
T&gt;,„
. uruu
ln ordcr
was out tBKC
Thc
purchaser as well^.11
can
Sb. mi. by mT-Mk or .
Dewey and their Foundry and Mrs Hewitt
ui
mnilhat
you you
wilt,wll|
not, not
gel gcl
U1C Ujc when lt liad nearly passed River- Only four years ago he was a reFm,KrMta
»,..l .
a num- ™ ,«JW Wt. prarant AlWr a of town at lite time. Both children benefit in this, as there is need at impression from the averts that fol­ side cemetery. The tracks of the publican candidate for governor of from the Middleville club: Paul
Inn.- Hera um.Mlo.' and
L or hU friend, on™ mol white
,
suffered from shock.
*U times fpr wider distribution of low that this expedition was simply car showed that tiie wheels on one this slate, but he didn't get so very Palmer from the Pleasant Hill club
—
----------------------business
which
brought
them
toi travelling from Baton to Albany or - - •------------ -—
-------- —
Lightning also struck a transfer- the b*41 breeding in animals and in a pleasure trip. I wish to state that side travelled in the soft sand for far. At any rate It was about that and Lyle Dunn and Duane Fat
the Monroe club
mer on Jefferson street and hit crops.
to New York and spent many happy
primarily it was a business trip to a distance, then whipped over to lime that, as a republican, he spoke from
The county livestock judging team
1.hours
../.u,
—...room
„r .».»
Reports
wcre given from the
Consumers’ wires at other pointe In | There also is inspiration In exhibin u™i....
the living
of i.«_
the ho;
the other side of the road. For to a small crowd on the court
I Sunday school, the two missionary lown. Fortunately it did no serious ,ts of handicraft and needlework, Seattle. Los Angeles, and Dallas for
i
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 2.)
myself and Leslie, a scientific expe- some reason It could not get back house lawn. It was a good repub• societies, the Brotherhood, the La­ damage.
Professor Brown points out. In dition to collect bugs and butterflies- antn
of course he Huntington and Rowm Sheffield
onto the payment
pavement. About thirty llcan
lican speech too. and ot
I dies’ Aid. the Epworth League, the
« a »--------------this chance for Inspiration he In­ for David, while Maude and Marion “
rods
* west
* of the cemetery the car I didn't fall to mention his qualifies
■— BARRY REPUBLICANS
j financial secretary and the church COUNTY CANDIDATES
eludes livestockwhoexhibits
of work
4-H I were the official chroniclers and bal­ weht over a sleep bank on the north . Hons for governor. Though he was
ON PRIMARY RAI I HTQ lc,ub
•h0» the,r
CMnriDQtl DllRUANQ treasurer. They were nil interesting
last. Leslie was assistant pilot and side of the highway. Fortunately | quite nifty about that, evidently the
tl’lUUnot DUnriRHO । nn(j shqwcd that progress had been
UH rnimMni uRLLUIo Iwith the enthusiasm and determl- neao
camera
man;
out
we
don't
n
im
a
ircc
ui
iu&gt;
uocem,
aim
wm
;
people
or
Barry
county
aiani
tree in its descent, and was
of
didn't iaxe
take Berryville club; Kenneth Dunn dr
head camera man; but we don’t It hit
------------ -I nuide.
.
, ...............
__ .___... __
____
Rutland Twp. and Richard Waited*
• nation typifying youth. Too many know yet whether any of the hun-1 held there in such a
manner that । him .......
very seriously,
as a__
he corralled
Fifteen Supervisors Among, of special interest wxs the report! County's Voters Should Be Persons
of the Monroe club.
livillir on the land fnil
_ ...» pictures he ,took
__l —
.... ,1 th*
nnH n-nmnn
l.. a
.. few
f.M. hundred votes,
persons living
fail tn
to dred or more,
with
the m«n
mon and
woman whn
who wcre In.
in-.; nn
only
Harold Kenneen and Georgs
m._rtknnn-n
i °f the treasurer who reported that i
a vacation. The fair, he hte new camera are good or not, as j aide could open a side door and get, But after his long republican ca­
Those Favoring unange
ntn. n
*.! Able to Make Their Choices manage
j the Am.i.njinoutstanding &gt;.
notes
ofr the church
believes, should be looked forward they are not developed yet and out- They were bruised but not reer. il was somewhat surprising Moan of Middlevine represented
। had been reduced by a nice sum. i .
From This List
in State Senator
to as a Atting vacation time and "believe it or not" wc had rain dur-1 acrlously hurt. Their names were ■ Saturday when Mr. Welsh’s broad­ Barry county 4-H handicraft ciuba
and that In floating indebtedness
Our readers may be Interested In for the exchange of ideas and ad­ ing the greater part of the trip, even I no1 learned, and they were taken ; casting and radio outfit anchored at the state wood identification a»। Republicans from nil Sections of! which hack featured annual reports
a list of the candidates whase names vancement.
[the co'intv and including all of th"
in sunny California and across the ■ t0 Grand Rapids a little later in along the east side of the court
Mojave desert.
1 another car.
I house, almost on the identical spot
■Republican .sunervirora have formed . for the lost five years would all be will appear on the two ballots for
Thte is the largest delegation
wiped out when this year’s pledges the primary to be held on Tuesday.. IS YOUR NAME PROP­
We spent the most of our spare I r.Dcn .T n'u’ini/rsi
I where George Poulkes used to hold
1 a committee tn Indorse the candlare
paid.
jdaev of Earl B'irhnns for state »en- i
September 15. Following Is the list
time during the two weeks previous: rlntU A I LrllUKLN
; forth and tell the dear people what
ERLY
REGISTERED?
The
budget
for
the
next
confer
­
of candidates:
to starting, in planning the trip.
THIFVF^ &lt;\AT MIGHT •'heck of a ftltow he was. Instead
jntor and to help assist his nomlnaence year was unanimously adopted.
We listed all the towns we expected ;
1 niU¥&lt;-J
1 • 1,1 un • , of coming under the usual republic- ty. County Agent Foster report* *
Republican Ticket.
[tlon.
If There Is Any Doubt in
fine increase in summer club en­
An effort will be made to take a
Judge of Probate—Stuart Clement.
1 Many Republicans throughout the (
to
“ so
»» through. u»lr
Utete duunce
dteunce .pun. I Chas.
ohas Lechleitner
Lochleltner Think. Ho
He “ 7l",'Lr •
rollments and invite* the public to
Your Mind See the City
count* have exnressed onen dtesat- [considerable slice from the note In­ Hastings; Laurence E. Barnett. Has­
Mr. Welsh as a candidate for gov­
distance from Hastings and the j
visit the 4-H club exhibit* at tbe
debtedness. which Is really very tings.
Hit
One
—
Dropped
highway
number
leading
out
of
each
j
ernor on the Democratic ticket—a
[tefaetlon with Mr. Mo«ler for hte
or Township Clerk
Barry county fair.
County Treasurer—Walter Fisher,
[.tendency to He In with groups small compared with other churches
complete
"flop"
after
y«*a'ra
of
re
­
town, so we wouldn't have to stop
Their Plunder
of equal size. Rev. Jones has hud it Woodland; Geo. A. Clouse. Hope;
Every
voter
in
Barry
county
whose
and ask questions. We even- checked |
publican spell-binding, years by the
! which were heckling and cm- ,
in mind to wipe it out as rapidly as William c. Struin. Assyria.
name is not now on the list of vot­ MW
WWW
wiwjc
W
C
CAPCCWU
mi
»»y
I
Charles
Lechleitner.
who
lives
two
way. that hadn't been any too well “THE WORLD BEATER
the towns where we expected to stay ।
(barrasslng the governor — appar­ possible during his pastorate.
ers.
which
is
kept
by
the
township
each night and listed the tourist or*‘»*ree miles northwest of Hickory rewarded with the honors of office,
Register of Deeds—Veroor Web- '
ently for pttrooses of prtronnre. ReREVUE’’—FEATURE
By unanimous vote of all present. stcr. Barry; Maurice Waters, Has- 'or city clerk, must register his name courts in these towns as well as 1 Corners in Barry township, had on though perhaps not through lack of
«j»libllcnnr. were well nlcascd with
District superintendent Dewey was tings.
' on or before Saturday. September 6, those in towns a hundred miles on ' experience with chicken thieves effort on hte part. A lot more could Great Out-Door Production
Gov Fitzgerald’s policies and exinvited to do his best to secure the
or he cannot vote at the
primary both sides of them. Of course we । ear*y Saturday morning. He had re- be written along this line, but
Democrat Ticket.
pectnd tn be represented In the state
return of Rev. Jones for another
dldn't follow this schedule exactly.,
and
*°un&lt;1, “»eep- but what's the use? A man surely has —Two Evenings at Barry
Representative —Frank W. Ben- 'election, Tuesday September 15.
ornate by a man who would help
year.
nett. Maple Grove; Chas. F. Parker. , If a person, since he last voted, as we spent the Aral night out be- j a^°ut 1 ?cloc,&gt;' • neighbor called a right to change his politics if he
put them into effect. Mr. Master
County Fair
has moved from one ward or town­ yond the place where we expected to ' hlm o"111' telephone, saying that a want* to. However, we believe it
Thomapple.
rvneatedlv asserted that he was 100
Tiie World Beater Revue, a giant
or —
county
in this state to art spend the second night. w
e
bad
cnr
h
«d
stopped
near Lechleitner's Isn't generally customary for a fel­
CHANGE IN STOCK
Sheriff—George H. Myers. Has- |। 1ship
—
■—
■
—
----------------------------We
_.i
&lt;• _.
te__ hlm lQ
out-door production, with a cast ot
lings; John Van Der Kolk. Thorn- °ther-,l wlll »* necessary for him
figured the trip would be around- |[ home, had turned the lights off. and low to run for governor on a re­ more than forty vaudeville and clristraneth of this hr received the
JUDGING PROGRAM apple; Chas. A- Woodruff. Rutland.1 re-««*»ter.
..
.
, .
.
8.400 miles and to make it in four that hi had heard the chickens in publican ticket one year, and then
I rather slender mn'oritv of "67 In
Many other petitions were filed on I uVw*
‘
"*
*'
“J” ' »cclt5 we would nced t0 average 300 Lechleitner’s coop giving every evi­ four years later to come out for
jib's county while Mr. Fitrerrald was Cattle, Hogs and Sheep to Be
ate and diversified entertainment*
both tickets but as there was but ■ ci*rk* books but has failed to vote; miles a jay. so every day we could dence of being disturbed.
governor on the democratic ticket.
jplllne no n maiority of 2.400.
Mr. Lechleitner and his two sons That's crowding the idea of public ever staged, comes to Hastings aa a
Judged Wednesday and
one name for each office it was not at the last two general elections.;—
put -----------------------In on extra 300---miles --------meant an
i. Rut Mr. Mosier’s sunoort of the
necessary, according to the primary his name would be stricken from the ' extra day we could spend sight see­ prepared to Investigate. He armed service Just a little too hard, don't grandstand feature of the Barry
jadmlnlstratlnn nroved to b* fickle.
Horses Thursday
County Fair, on Friday and Baturlaw. for these names to appear on registry list of the township or city ing. In reality the trip was 9.514 himself with a shot gun. the boys
(Continued on page 8, Bee. 1)
He repeatedly- lolncd In with blocs
There will be a slight change In the ballot*.
clerk. In that event it would be
with flashlight*. The chickens were
(Continued on page 6. sec. 1)
jhostlle tn th" governor but contin­
Almoat every type of entertain­
j necessary to register again before
the live stock Judging program at
quite evidently disturbed. Mr. Lech­
ued to assert that he was 100 tvr
ment conceivable Ls Included in thia
I Saturday, September 5, in order to EASTERN S. T. FOR RAIIJtOADS. leitner shot Into the coop. A man PEDDLER GYPPED TWO
the Barry county fair this year, to RURAL TEACHERS
-e*nl for the eovrmor when those better accommodate the wishes of
vote at the primary.
&gt;
JOHNSTOWN WOMEN elaborate production, which is re­
The Interstate commerce com­ yelled lustily and ran for dear life
who supported him asked for explete
with music, ballets, circus
MEET
TOMORROW
। If the voter is in doubt as to mission lias decreed that in the toward the parked car. leaving a bag
the public interested in live stock,
iptenntlnn of his erratic action.
Was Captured by Sheriff's thrillers, European sensations and
j Dissatisfaction came to a head according to Harold J. Foster, di­ Certification Code and New whether he is registered or not. he state of Michigan eastern standard In the coop with several stolen
novelties, vaudeville attractions and
can settle that doubt by visiting the time will govern the railroads. The chickens in it. Charlie fired again at
jwhen he lolncd the Democrats and rector of the fair association
Force and Refunded
musical comedy stars.
township or city clerk who would city of Chicago petitioned to have the retreating figure, and the man
Judging in all departments, ex­
Guide Are Topics for
the Read bloc In voting down Ute cept horses, will start Wednesday
The spectacular flair of color la
the Money
determine that matter from his rec­ the same decision applied to th* „
yelled
much more
loudly
os If —
he
----------------------— - ------, —
j. all-imDortnnt financial reoraanlzapresent in the lavish ballet donee
Discussion
morning as usual. Judging of
ord book.
railroads centering there; but the hod been hit. However he was not so
Thursday forenoon Mrs. O. F.
fitfon bill which was one of the key horses will take place Thursday,
commission declined to do so. It; badly injured but that he could get Thorpe of Johnstown, called Sheriff numbers, executed by the sixteen
AU rural teachers of the county
measure* tn the
pro- ,starting
wun&lt; at 6:30 A
A.m
M. llu&gt;
ThistIuulgc
change wiU assemble at the court room Fri-, CANDIDATE FOR REPUBLICAN
will be fine to have one standard to his car. which drove rapidly away, Blakney and reported that two men beautiful girls in Madame Eity" pr0Rram
wh,ch h"d ^on is made to allow many people to day. Aug. 28. for their opening in­ NOMINATION FOR
time in Michigan Instead of two. j Lechleitner and his sons followed in had left her place a short time be­ lenne's dancing chorus, who appear
for the governor
an outstanding vlc cMUle shceo ftnd ho_ JudBlnir
COUNTY TREASURER.
♦
'
-----another car. but the thieves outdis­ fore. They were driving a panel car
Vote of confidence at the polls.
I on Wpdne5dBy and relum for horsc stitute when they will receive their
tanced their pursuers. The Lechleit- and were selling linoleum, which glorious displays Interpolating th*
LPE
Uwo‘',h-1 Judging on Thuraday. People inter­ supplies and instructions for the
ners returned to their home and they claimed consisted of remnants dances of many countries aa well a*
year. The morning session begins at
cut the district decided it was time Mled ln MWral klndl of llve gtock
called Sheriff Blakney. The officer from new high priced linoleum that beautiful ballet toe work.
ten o'clock. The new Certification
iIto
In nominate
nnmlnoto a
n man
mnn whose political1
.
.
.. . .
One of the moat affective display*
went to the premises. He could trace had been put into a big Detroit ho­
could only view a. limited amount Code and instructional Guide will
kactlons were as ttood a« hte politi­ of the Judging with all Judging oc­
the thieves by means of one of the tel. Consequently, they said, they is the Spanish presentation, whan
be discussed by various teachers and
cal word. Since It was Barry coun- curring Wednesday.
tires on their car for a considerable
Arthur Kaechelc. commissioner of
j tv’s tum to xtroplv a candidate, Aldistance; but other cars had in the
The light weight horse pulling Mlegan county, will be present to exjjlepan and Van Buren awaited the conteat will also be held on Thurs­
■ travelled
over --the K--------------road
Jfain parts of the Guide.
----iaefion of Barrv Republicans. Sev­ day.
During the afternoon very
‘
01 lhe wanU?d I it. When she measured it after the costuming and lighting of the
At 12:00 o'clock, a luncheon will
eral pedons wcre xuuvrstcd but fine harness races are scheduled an
be served at the Presbyterian church
obliterated.
men had gone, she found that she produce a beautiful result.
on East center street. Mr. doss is , While not
none felt financially able to neg- the track. With these three feaThe musical part of the progt
successful tn getting his 1 hnd only
A utUe Jater Mra
for
the
pleasure
of
the
teachers
at
llect their affairs here and enter | tures, horse Judging in A. M, horse
the watch maker and repair man at mBn unBru„ vnuiM Ulal Ulc Ull,
is handled by two musical organl
JoSjon «&lt; u&gt;. -m.
which
time
Principal
E.
L.
Taylor
hurii a race.
tlona under the capable diradtac
the Bessmcr jewelry store and he wln .... ., difficult to sit
1 pulling contest in A. M„ and har- wUl be the guest speaker and talk
.« down
..... for
M, a.
r.porud » TUM tram U» mate
and Mrs Doss came to Hastings whlle
white. Thteute Utesecond
«eond IWteL^h.
Lech- “'f
I UtetiIhS hid
I ness races in P. M, Thursday, will about the "Relation* Between the
from Flat River. Mo. Mr. and Mrs. , •
— U *»' S'
"
J: l»
gram of the production will
Jm. •
n ~1
rAftl &lt;l.y
rlav lor
trw prople InlZruiri Seventh and Eighth Grades of the
tv If Earl Burhans would consent 11Il horae*
DOU
chUdren. :u u,
Rural Schools and the Ninth Grode
C1
!“? ..Mv
".’“i 1 «»r Whllnry. • purrtrM ho™ in High Schools."
: down the number of tiie llcenae on
ent* In Flgt River; Ila jean. 7; Peg- [hev" missed out'
Eh™..
‘21’
br"d" o' Onoo4«i. will luC
! the car they drove, which had a new
The second session will resume at
gy Maurine. 4. and Billy James. 2.
y
Q
YOUNG DEMOCRATS
wMS',
7.*” ,
d™K ho™. On wednentty. Fred one-thirty and continue until 3:30.
vekx ruruLAo.
‘ Pennlt ^ed in July. With this tnWM. C- STR U IN.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Doss enjoy pic- j
VERY
POPULAR”* ""f E Ml*r or c.irtoni», m )ud« The bulletins issued by the State
■uuimiis miiu inulin
mm omij
Gas heating for homes seems to: !°A?la.Von ,u}e ah*rtff
,n touch
“ irproenl.
cm. On lh« umo dor. Don Department on Alcohol and Narco- , I am a life-long resident of Barry nicking and Ashing and find Barry'
F*1”
lh* ***10 oonou.
Bhepord or charlolu will Judy. tics and Safety Education will be county. Have served as Justice of
■ the'surrounding ’territory. Eugene
I ’
ANNOUNCEMENT
I shcep. beef cattle and swine. Roy given some consideration some time ,the Peace. Township Treasurer and1
Waring of Consumers Power re- ™n*h‘chn^hv^-.r Rnun^ peeled that i
I I am FtJJdldate for^Theriff on I
C. O Card of mS
am now serving my 6th consecutive
during the day's program. A good term as supervisor of Assyria town-Ij Mr. and Mrs. Don Potter, who ports that so far he has installed ‘ ?
’ i^y
candidate* for
khe democratic ticket I am 48 years
®UU°oUT wU’
attendance is desired tor these two ship. As to my character and quali-'■ came to Hastings. from Nashville
primary will
21? gas heating plant*, 160 of them
nien
bf w and have always lived in
*«d poultry. Arthur P. Edll2nrh
notions, an Investigation will be two weeks ago. Mr. and Mrs. Potter right here in Hastings and the oth- .
Barry county. Your support will be! ii0"'
,Or^d ?Up"
live in the Pender apartments, bet­ era in Nashville and Lake Odessa
welcome.
Appreciated-Geo H. Myers.-Adv. |
Jud&lt;e
horticultural ex- NOTICE TO DELIN- „ ,
^^?2r ^ir
In my campaign for nomination ter known as the Mixer place, on He has ju*t received the contract
QUENT TAXPAYERS.
j Mrs. Margaret Reed of. Lake
for County Treasure: I will appre­ South Jefferson street and Mr. Pot­
Install a similar system in the
ICR CREAM SOCIAL ’
■■—
The 10 per cent payments on de­ ciate your support and. if successful, ter Is employed as field manager for to
new theater to be opened next to
mlnev
At Reld's.oil station, in connection Odessa and Mra. Cortland McKay linquent taxes for 1932 and prior wllluerve you to the best of my I the Hastings Milk Products com­ is* rizwitetetea.
the Goodyear hardware some iim.
time repaid th* two women meir money
1th drawing. Thursday. Aug. 27.1
Saranac will Judge the home eco- years are due and payable at the of­ ability.—Political Adv.
pany. Mr. Potter is a graduate of next month.
also for thetr telephone calls to th*
lUlmby church —Adv.
I nomics exhibit on Wednesday. fice of the Barry county treasurer
Sheriff and were allowed to d
the Hastings High school though hte
----------------. .
These two days at the Barry county on or before September 1, IBM.
with the injunction from the
MIXED DANCES.
home is in Nashville and Mrs. Pot- I
BASEBALL GAME,
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.*_______________________
fair will be of immense interest to Please bring old tax receipt.
Every Saturday night at Clear lake ter's home was tn Olivet. They
Sunday afternoon at fair grounds, iff that they bad better not be
Delton. Bat, Eve, Eckler's Orch. farm folks according to County
Lorenzo F. Maus. ' Martin's orchestra. Frank Herring­ have one son, Alton Lee, seven Hastings Independent* v*. Dowling.
-Adv. tf.
Agent Foster.
—Adv. out Aug. 27. County Trees.
ton.—Adv. tf.
agreed that they would

3856

EBUSINESS
WITHPLEASURE

.£, T**®

n SPEECH
BICEOBCEIfiSfl
ixUV£&amp;nuxt

May We
Introduce

k4 dh",

*£“

�THB ■AWriWOS BAMNBK, THUMPAY. AllOUfiT W, IM&gt;
Don't Um home grown melons
Have you thought of a
taste good?
"Knock. Knock" this week?
Have you seen the attractive
Have you noticed that shorts have
gone into hibernation?
Cooler colorful Fiesta dishes at Hot
weather means more clothes.
A welcome
change — greener
On Sunday the Townsend dubs
of the Fourth district held a rally
Wont it sound good to hear the
at Pennock hospital snd
school bell again?
present.
,I
The fair premium books are very
Corners. after convalescing for aw
popular right now.
eral days with Mrs. R. C. Leach, t
Grand canning tomatoes in the
Center St.
he landed two beautiful bass . gt
markets Qieee days.
Hastings U to bare another the
Torch lake, one weighing five
These cooler nights are grand for
tar soon. It wlU be located next
pounds
and
the
other
five
and
a
sleeping, aren't
they?
Morning
the Goodyear hardware and w
quarter.
probably be named Strand Theati
A
homing
pigeon
arrived
this
Nature b geetlng rid of the sum­
Inc
Mr. Branch expects to ha
mer's accumulation of electricity, it week on W. R. Craig’s place on It ready for business sometime
seems, judging from the numerous East Mill street A tag fastened to
its foot bore the number LV888,
thunder storms.
Were the consumers Power Co. Aug. 36. It would be interesting to and Mrs. William Lauder of Dell
employees busy following the elec­ know where the pigeon comes from. ton have been appointed to publlct-l
Dr. j. W- Davis, Eaton county
trical storms tbe past week? Just
health officer, is ons of the Un ty jot* by the state central demo!
ask them about it.
committee. Mrs Stebbins
Mr. and Mrs Earl Palmsllcr are Michigan physicians to be awarded cralic
scholarships
for the public health has been named radio chairman and
ths parents of a son. Phillip Earl,
training courses at the university her duty U to notify organisation* ol
bom Bunday morning. Congratula­
radio speeches and programs sd
of
Michigan
and
John
Hopkins
Uni
­
tions are extended.
versity. The scholarships arc made that listening groups may bo or I
Partitions have been removed tn
available under provisions of the ganlxed. Mrs. Lauder is publicity
the quarters of the Michigan Ball
chalrmah of the state women's orl
I there la altogether too much *tre&amp;s
A
obi^aUon which rests up- Telephone company which consid­ social security act.
upon training for a professional life on
o upon evcry
School children of Hastings and gsn tea tlon.
erably enlarge the business office
Barry county will be intereated In
in our school system and far- loo j clUien u to Kt a worthy example and the switch room.
the contest sponsored by Carvelh At
' before the youth of the land and
SURPRISED MAN
not tel one's scltteh pleasures lead purchased the Haywood house in Stebbins. On Saturday following the
STEALING WHfELI
him or her Into doing whatever Middleville on the comer of Main opening of school ten ballons bear­
they would dislike to see the boys and Grand Rapids streets and will ing the numbers of one to Un will be
Auto
Thief Frustrated in ai
released
In
front
of
the
store
and
the
and girl* about them do when they occupy it after Sept. 1.
youngster catching one of the bal­
grow up.
Attempt to Take
loons will
receive the______________
prize marked
Did you see the black clouds In ____
______________
It was a thoughtful presentation
the northwest Tuesday morning with the corresponding number. The
of a worth while subject.
□urmg the
me storm?
storm r Mort
More wort
wora for
tor prises
,
during
are displayed Ln the east winSheriff Blakney was called u
the Windstorm Co_ as a high wind idow of the store.
Trail's End at Gun lake about ted
ANOTHER STATE TURNS
accompanied the rain. The streets
This Is the way the Girl Scouts o'clock Saturday night, because o
THUMBS DOWN ON PLAN here in the city were dark as night. ।prepare rice for their outdoor meals. an attempted robbery. It appear!
Printing and wrapping primary 'Try It on your family for a picnic that two men and their wived
Wash a cupful of rice in cold whose homes are in Flint, had diivl
:
Towii8end Plan Candidate Is ballot* and marking packages have meal.
occupied the attention of Banner water and cook It in a double boiler en to the hotel for the night. The!
Beaten Three to One
employees for several days. All the with three cup* of boiling water and left their cars parked in the placl
ballots will be in the office ot Coun­ three tablespoons of bacon fat. provided by Mr. Ctncebeaux. On!
in That State
The advocates of the Townsend ty clerk Allan C. Hyde before you •orbed add two cupful* of boiling
men min
and aa w
worn]
, .
. .
■-----------i wu_ men
plan must see the handwriting on read this item.
later in
in a
a Ford
Ford V-l
Miss Geraldine Williams, who is ;hot canned tomatoes and a quarter on came up later
i the wall from the primary votes
pound of diced chew. Continue drove by the place and then
that,'1 have so far been taken in employed at Prosecutor McDonald's cooking tn
in the double bolter
boiler until
rv,. JI
___ ___ • m
unLU '
oT’&gt;u_
lhe ^en^ot
states where the Townsend issue office, has returned from her vaca...
, 1 near the parking place, while
tlon. Her place was taken by Miss
was placed before the voters.
Archdeacon Vercoe. of the EpU- c.r drOve by a llule distance. TW
The latest primary to be held Constance Cook, who is a student copal diocese of western Mtehigan, man who left the car Immediate!^
1 where this was the Issue was in the at Ryder College, Trenton. N. J.,
whose duties have often called him began taking off the wheels of ltd
I slate of Wyoming. An attempt was and is home on a month's vacation.
to Hastings, where he te well liked. Ford V-8 belonging to one of tS
, made by the advocates of the Town­
'?°ae^U’ JJ.°UyT°Od,I C*U UJe'Fllnt
He had removed th J
Hastings friends have received an­
/ always send my dollies
send plan to defeat the republican nouncements of the birth on Thurs­ last of September. He plana to do ; of the wheels and was about to stad
to McCreery’s. Not only
candidate for United Blates senator. day. Aug. 20. of a son weighing sev­ writing there, and act as a supply on the last one when the owner d
, They put a candidate In the field en and one-half pounds to Mr. and
Mr. Vercoe was bom In the Plymouth happened to thhd
that, I’ve found that my 1 for that purpose. Al the Wyoming Mrs Emmilt Payne (Marion Weyer- clergyman.
England and with two other young of sometMng he wiSited in hU
last week, the Townsend man&gt; of Kalamaxoo. Mother and men came to America In 1887. be-1 car and started for the parking
semi-annual houseclean­ . primary
--■-------- —
■ V—.
OWM
advocate was a poor second. The son are doing splendidly. Congratu­ coming a rancher in
i*oe. When he iarrived he took il
Ln the Black hills
hill* Jt p
place.
regular republican nominee led by lations.
ing is made a lot easier
nf
— situation and
that the tilifi
of HzMitH
South rvaVnt*
Dakota. r.lw
Later he went to 1■ II.
the
a vole of more than three to one.
Nancy Harkness Loye (Mrs Rob­ 81. Louis. Mo., and was ordained
As in Idaho and Arkansas the ber! H. Lovet ot Boston, daughter of there In 1902.
if I let them dean my
off the parked Ford car. had threl
week before, the successful senator­ Dr. and Mrs. R. B Harkness, Is
off and was nicely started on thl
curtains, drapes and cov­
ial candidates had announced that mentioned in this month's issue of The typographical error is a slip­
pery thing and sly,
fourth when interrupted. The thld
they were In favor of a liberal, fair Time as one of the three original
ers, too!
1 old-age pension plan, but were op­ pilots employed by the aeronautics You can hunt till you are dlny. flew his kite tn great haste, teavinl
but
it
somehow
will
get
by,
the tools with which he had oped
posed to the Townsend scheme be­ division to develop the airway and
a ted, Tiie two Flint men took aflel
Till
the
forma
are
off
the
presses
cause they believed it never could airport program of the WPA.
PHONE 2140
it is strange how still It keeps: the thieves in the Plymouth, bJ
work, and gave their reasons for
The national motorcycle hill It shrinks down Into a corner and were unable to catch up with them
. rejecting It/ They were victorious
However, they did get the Ohio 11
it never stirs or peeps.
i over thelrf Townsend opponents climbing contests were held Ln
। Senator Jlorah received three votes Muskegon Sunday, riders from all That typographical error, too small cense number of the car which tW
__
for_______
human eyes.
thieves were using. The sheriff tel
to his TownSend opponent's one and over the country taking part. Among
those
who
attended
from
Hastings
Till
the
Ink
Is
on
the
paper,
when
ephoned that number to the slat
Senator Robinson. Democrat, of Ar­
were Mr. and Mrs. Omer Barker,
ft grows to mountain sire.
police headquarters at East Lan
. kansas. was a four to one winner.
Mr. and Mra. Gilbert Tale, Jesse The boas he stares with horror. sing. Within ten minutes he wa
given the name of the Cleveland
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
Rayner.
Gerald
Smelker.
Mr.
and
then
he
grabs
his
hair
and
"In these times we fight for Ideas,
groans;
owner of the thieves' car. Whelhe
and newspapers are our fortresses.*' Mrs. Fred Atten. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Thomas and Mrs. Phoebe Mote.
The copy reader drops his head up­ It was driven by Its owner. wa|
on his hands and moans—
stolen, or borrowed of course coub
The remainder of the issue may be not be determined. The Flint own
er ot the Ford V-8 considered him!
clean as clean can be.
But that typographical error is the self fortunate.
only thing you see—Exchange.
MILO.
Ted Cusack, son ot Mrs. Elisabeth
Sunday evening as Peter Vande
Cusack, is expected home from lick and father-in-law. Mr Beers 0
BlodgeU hospital. Grand Rapids.1
Richland were making the cornei
thia
.
_
__
.
this week, after 16 weeks treatment
south at Milo thetr car teR. the roai
for burns. Last March 16. Mr. Cu­ and went into the ditch tumlni
sack suffered third' degree burns
completely up side down. The oc
from his waist to his ankles, when cupanta escaped unhurt and the ca
Republicans of Barry county have felt for some time that we have not had
a can of gasoline became Ignited was not damaged not even brokei
the proper representation in the state 'ecnaTc. Although Mr. Mosier was elect­
from matches in his trousers pocket. glass. Neighbors helped right th
Two weeks ago a severe case of ery­ car and the men were soon on lhei
ed with the understanding that he would support the administration, he aligned
sipelas developed but that, too. is way thankful for their fortunat
himself with the Munshaw group and Democratic senators in an attempt to em­
cured and attending physicians con­
sider him well enough tn return
barrass Governor Fitzgerald and the pro gram which had been given such an
home.—Ionia County News. Mr. Cu­
"Only the actions of the Jt
overwhelming vole of confidence by the citizens of Michigan.
sack is the brother of Mrs. C. B. smell sweet and blossom in t
Hodges.
dust."—Shirley.

little on training boys and girls for
their actual work In Ufa. Only a
small pereentaga of the growing boys
and girl* can be lawyers, doctors,
school teacher* or writer*
The
groat majority of us aU must gal In­
Superintendent Ned Killixn of the to our places and do the every day
tasks of llfe-and these are almost
Allegan city schools gave a fine talk Ignored In our schools. The second
at the Rotary club luncheon Mon­ responsibility, therefore, of Rotar­
day noon His theme was "Rotary's ians. Is to endflavor to have this
responsibilities to youth.** As a condition so changed that the
schools at the country will give the
school man as wall aa an individual boy* and girls the training they
and a Rotarian, he Is vitally Inter­ need for their work In the world. At
ested in that topic
the present time it 1* largely chance
He said first that boys and girls that decides what Job a boy or girl
should have a happy, enjoyable life is to do in life. We are spending
during thetr youth. He commended millions and million* of dollars in
the wonderful work of the W. K. thte country to train for professional
Kellogg FoundaUon in helping to work, white ninety per ceht of the
provide that kind of a life for the youth of the land receive no voca­
youth of the counties tn which the tional training. There ought to be a
Foundation la operating. He urged plan worked out whereby part-time
every Rotarian in the six counties to work can be given to boys In fac­
give hte best efforts to aid the Foun­ tories or business places, so they can
dation tn carrying on its beneficent team the technique of the Job. They
w°rk.
...
snouia
­
should ue
be given
given crcun
credit tor
for sucn
such w
voIt was the contenUon of the caUonal
u a part ot their
speaker that al the present time !
•{ralnlng.

AUegan Rotarian
Talka on Youth

Serve

EVEIll WEEK AT

Yourself

FOOD CENTER

and
Save!

rni f irn
!
I

I

CANDY
BARS

I
I

3-..

I

CIGARETTES
4 Popular Brands

POTATOES
U. S. No. 1

43Pk

Quart Jar

10'

Ball Mason
Quart Cans

KELLOGG'S
CORN FLAKES

CHIPSO

63k„

10

Large Package

19

PILLSBURY'S
FLOUR

SWEET
POTATOES

Kirk's Hard
Water Castile

29'

LIBBY'S
Pineapple Juice \
OU

6

4 ..,19
PUFFED WHEAT

9

10 lbl 25'

pkg.

OHIO MATCHES

23k

6 b.... 20

BREAD
Muller's 2 lb. loaf

P &amp; G SOAP

CAMPBELL'S
SOUPS

3

25'

17k
ORANGES

10,.. 35

32

Champion
Salad Dressing

BUTTER

ph:

Shults or Freeport

15'

I ♦ II * II
|

OLEO

■

:

KINCNUT

I

|

10’^.b

I

Vacation Land
COFFEE

Large Ban

Q1. 21

Except Chicken

19

DUCHESS
APPLES

WHITE HOUSE
COFFEE

10..

■

SODA

5k.

MUSTARD

3«„ 55

dberty bell

“

CABBAGE

9k.

CRISCO

No. 5
Can

I

TEA
SIFTINGS

2^.23'

Lt

■ |
I I

CANE
SUGAR

%GRADE A

BOLOGNA

| 2 lh, 25c

■ 1
■

||

37'„

*i

PURE CIDER

VINEGAR I

15',., |i

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS

To Barry Co, Republicans

. Then, too, Allegan county has had the state senatorship for fourteen years.
Although the three counties had an understanding that this office should be
rotated, Barry yielded its claim liecause of the fact that former congressman,
John C. Ketcham, was from our county. Barry Republicans did not feel that
they should insist on furnishing the candidate for state senator, as well, so long
as this, shumion existed.

Now that the congressman is from Allegan county. Barry Republicans do not
feel that they should continue to yield their claims in regard to the state sena­
torship.
'

BEEF HEARTS

X

Sunday and Monday, Aug. 30 and 31

*

Michael Whalen, Jean Muir and
Slim Summerville

Therefore the honor of the Republican party in Barry county is at stake.
We hope you will work and urge your friends to help elect a man whom it would
l&gt;c a privilege to have as our rcprsentalive in the stale senate.

|

.

Beef Kettle Roasts

13k

1 1 ' lb.
VEAL ROASTS

20 k

HAMBURGER

2 &gt;b. 29

Food Center

Bort Brown—Supervisor

Orangeville

Otis Boulter—Supervisor

Prairieville

TwpM. W. Stuts—Supervisor of Rutland

Bernard DeGolia—Supervisor of Hope

William McCann—Supervisor Irving

Ferd Steveni—Supervisor
Twp.

Tuesday, September 1

Johnstown

John Martens—Supervisor of Maple
Grove Twp.

"HEARTS DIVIDED”

Albert L. Graves—Supervisor Yankee
Springs Twp.

Castle-

CHUNK BACON

23k

"WHITE FANG

BURHANS BARRY COUNTY COMMITTEE.

William C. Strain—Supervisor Assyria

John Lipkey—Supervisor of Hastings

18 k

Week of Aufflul 30

Several Barry Republicans were urged to enter the race this year but none
fell able to accept. Therefore, a move was started to draft Earl Burhans of
Van Runmi county. A petition containing more than 300 signatures was pre­
sented Io him. Because of the insistence of Barry Republicans, he has, al con­
siderable ]KTsonal sacrifice, consented to enter the race.

Ernest G. Smith—Supervisor

FRANKFORTERS

LOCAL NEWS

&lt;
f

Marion Daviei, Dick Powell and

Chat. Ruggles
Wednesday and Thursday, Sept. 2-3

"GREEN PASTURES”

Glen Wotring—Supervisor Woodland

Clyde Wilcox—Supervisor
City.

With a cait of 800

Hastings

Wm. A. Scheder, Fres. Hastings City
Council.

The above list includes every Republican Supervisor in Bar­
ry county, each, of whom, believes sincerely that the party
should name a new candidate to run for the office of State
Senator and that this man should bo EARL BURHANS!

t

Friday and Saturday, Sept. 4 and 5

.Charlie Rugglei and Mary Boland
— IN —

.

t
1

w
AUo

"Heart of the West”

William Bayd and Jimmy Elliton

�TBE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, AUG0ST &gt;7. 1&gt;M

SEPTEMBER 8,9,10,11,12-FIVE DA
2 MUSICAL REVUES

2 HORSE PULLING CONTESTS

HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE ACTS

4 STUPENDOUS

HORSE RACING
(MEMBER SO. MICH. FAIR AND RACING CIRCUIT)

FIREWORKS

DISPLAYS

LARGEST STOCK DISPLAY

FREE! FREE!

LICHT WEIGHT. THURSDAY. 9:30 A. M.
HEAVY WEIGHT. SATURDAY. 1:30 I. M

CHILDREN'S DAY FRIDAY
FREE ADMISION—1/2 Price on All Ridas and Shows
Except One, Up to 6:00 P. M.

4-H CLUB AND SCHOOL EXHIBITS

IN THE HISTORY OF THE FAIR

4 Automobiles
Will Be Given
Away FREE

CLEAN, ATTRACTIVE MIDWAY
«
8 RIDES — 6 SHOWS
BARRY COUNTY FLOWER SHOW
AN ENTIRE BUILDING DEVOTED TO FLOWERS

LARGE MIDWAY OF INDUSTRIAL
EXHIBITS
MANY OTHER FEATURES

79th ANNUAL BARRY COUNTY FAIR 11151-1936

ARRY COUNTY
Interested In the Brotherhood and the result that it was destroyed.
WILLIAM H. ANDREWS
the good work It haa done In Has­ But Jake did not mind that. He was
tings to gel their tickets early. This thinking of the house, and mighty
SEEKS CITIZENSHIP
is the only organization here in glad that with the help of hte wife
which men from the city and the and daughter lie could save it. He
He Served in tbe American
surrounding territory meet in an in­ also saved the Insurance company a
(Continued from page 1. See. 1)
Army During the World
formal way. eat together and enjoy snug sum.
the program, with such a program
When it was all over and the fire
War
tddress will be given by E. B. Root, there ought to be no doubt about on had been subdued, the members of
William
H. Andrews of this city
superintendent of schools of Paw unusually large sale of season llck- the family were almost completely
exhausted; but they
,,
had the proud has made application to be restored
Paw. Aside from his work as a
satisfaction of having done a mighty ' u&gt; American citizenship. It is hoped
prominent school man. Mr. Root
good piece of work.
i that that can be done at the coming
owns and operates several farms In DEPRIESTER FAMILY
*•*
September term of circuit court. Mr.
Van Buren coupjy. He will discuss
DEATH OF MRS. FOX.
Andrews was bom In Lowell, but
SAVED
THEIR
HOME
“Farm Problems." Hit rural mem­
Mrs. Jennie Fox. aged 72. who had | moved u, this city when comparaber* of the Brotherhood will be
Was Struck by Lightning been a former resident of this j tively young. He then emigrated to
especially Interested and all others It
■ county was buried Tuesday morning calgary. Canada. where he became a
will have a far belter understanding
Early Saturday
_____
1 from
the Walldorfi funeral home । naturalized Canadian citizen. He
of rural problems by what he will
Morninff
I with burial in n Grand Rapids later came back to Michigan. He
have to say.
, . '
„
.
cemetery. Mrs. FDx had been bi .enlisted in the American army dur­
Jake DePriester and family, who jX)or health for several years and ing the World war and served in
Monday evening January 18 the
speaker will be Dean Anthony of the live on the Hastings Center road, | whlk&gt; sx.n(llI1g Mnie t|me wllh her France. He returned to Hastings
Michigan State College at East Lan­ had an experience early Saturday , „„ R Q. Brackney at Temperance, September 24. 1919. and has lived
sing. The writer has never heard morning which they will not soon , Mlch.. she grew -worse and she was
Dean Anthony, but County Agent forget and would certainly not wish \ takeil t0 u hospital at Toledo. Ohio, service and the special law which
where she died.
Harold Foster vouches for him as a to have repealed
Congress has enacted to cover such
At about three o clock Saturday
M„ j.^x u hUrvived by her son. cases aa his. it Is believed that he
very Interesting speaker.
For the meeting of February 15. morning a sharp stroke of lightning R o Bracknev of Temperance, a can be naturalized thLs tall so he
KI
.H.
.V.
„
...
nu hter mrs.
rv ixeiui ruiur. ui .,can
Hl
up
the
sky.
It
was
succeeded
alRev. Charles W. McKinsey, of
; ,u.iugnier.
__ vole in November. Without
__ __ his
Mount Pleasant, will give the ad­ most instantly by a crash of thun­ Bellernvc. Long Island. N. Y.. who
service, he would have to wall
dress. Rev. Jones Is weU acquainted der. As Jake had lightning rods bn with Mr. Fuller and family, was some time before he could be rewith him and says lie Is a pleasing his barn and house, he did not feel herc for the funeral, a brother.1 sU&gt;rWj to citizenship.
and forceful speaker, who will haiip alarmed, soon his daughter rushed (Charles Crouse of Hastings, u I
&lt; » .----------------■
a message that every member of the into his room saying that the hob$e brother.
Dexter Crouse of Nashville. | -We must learn to respect work
was on fire. That proved to be a four granddaughters and one grand- and right living—not power."—
Brotherhood will appreciate.
,
Monday evening March 15 the fact. The Juice came in over the son.
j James P. Warburg.
speaker will be Charles p. O'Hara ot telephone.
Juke cannot tell yet Just how It
Detroit, deputy attorney genera).
Mr. O'Hara has been very success­ was done, but with his wife and
ful in cleaning up crooked political 1daughter Maxine operating the
and criminal gangs in Detroit. He puinp. they kept him supplied with
Is an interesting speaker. What he water so that he was able to put out
will have to say about the necessity the fire, although It seemed as If
and value of law enforcement will be the whole in&amp;lde of the house was
In flames. The telephone was out of
well worth while.
The closing meeting of the Broth­ commission so he could not call the
erhood year will be Monday evening. neighbors or the fire truck. It was
April 10. For this occasion a differ­ up to them to do whatever fighting
ent but very enjoyable program has they could, and they did a good Job
been prepared. Mr. Jacob Klndel- 1of il. Mrs. DePriester Is not in good
berger, who recently returned from health, but she and Maxine, un­
a trip through South America and 1der the stress of saving their
South Africa, will tel) some of the home, kept the water flowing from
things he learned from his extensive the pump, one of them handing,
travels in those continents. Mr. palls to Jake, who was inside the j
Klndelberger Is the head of the building. He would dash It against
Kalamazoo Vegetable Parchment the flames. He had been a fireman
Company. Is a very successful busi­ when he lived In this city, so he
ness man and a good speaker. He will !knew-how to go at the work of put- ’
trlng with him the Parchment male Ung out a fire. He kept at it until
quartet, made up of members of his he saved the home and the other
office force and other employees, buildings too. The only thing that
who will give several vocal numbers. was destroyed was the gasoline en­
This will be a fitting close for the igine near the well house. The light­
ning evidently hit the gasoline tank
Brotherhood year.
It will be well for those who are ion the engine and set it afire, with

Brotherhood Plans
Excellent Program

.u (| &lt;

M

KeUh PuHjt of

COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON.
Uli
CHANGED HIS FLEA.
OBITUARY.
---------------------------------------bodge uE
and f&lt;
Mahlon W. Skidmore, son of Bill- ■ of the Masonic I*d«»
Jack Saylor, charged with forgery,
Fifty-six members and guests en­
when first brought before Justice joyed the Tuesday luncheon at the Ings and Jane Skidmore, was bom (number of yean was a fol
member of the Brotherhood of
Cortrlght denied his guilt and de­ Hastings Country club, when a com­ in Calhoun co.. March 9. 1887. When
manded an examination, which was mittee composed of Middleville Just a child his parents moved to
fixed for Saturday. When he ap­ members was in charge of the Waukeshma, Kalamazoo Co., where
peared before the Justice Saturday luncheon. Gladioli and asters were he grew to manhood. In Nov. 1878 he
he hod changed his mind, for he combined Ln large bouquets for the was united in marriage to Elizabeth friend and neighbor.
Miller, coming to their farm tn Hope
entered a
plea of
guilty. The—
case
.........
. „„
.. ________
a'*“
•u brought before Judge McFeeb luncheon ubW .ere n led W1U. township where they resided until the Phillipa home Saturday i i
her death in April 1922. except eight
Monday.
tsmall zinnias and marigolds.
When Saylor confronted Judge I Rain again interfered with the years spent in Saginaw.
He always loved the woods, never Conklin officiating.
McPeek and admitted hLs guilt, the j golf contest in the morning and
Judge refused to accept the plea be- Mrs. David S Goodyear. Jr., won the tiring of telling of hLs experiences.
—
—
MIDDLEVILLE.
cause he claimed ne was not actual- . honors al contract which was played After the death of his wife he came
ly wiUixCotaaert. his nephew, when' at nine tables.
. .
. _.
_ •________ . ___ ■______ Mr, n F Ct
'
’
dent here, visited Mn Anna VW
Xi t^? d d no?Xbe an? of the guest Mrs. Donald Van Zile of De- and was loved as one of the family, and daughter. Mn. Paul Frort
money TheJudge'asked Mm why he troll; Mrs. W. R. Cook. Mrs. John A. One son Ralph D came to bleu the In Washington for ten days. 7
admitted his gSllt and he said. "I Boyd of Atlanta; Mlu Barbara home of Mr. and Mrs. Skidmore, aLw called on other MlddtevtUt |
thought that was the best way out Johnson. Miss Elizabeth Bolton of who has done all one could to
of It" The Judge could not accept, Charlotte. N. C.; Mrs. Harold a. brighten the declining years of a
a plea of guiU when qualified is Phillipa. Miss Margaret Kirkland., kind and loving father.
|na McNaughton.
Saylor had done In this case, so he | Hannibal, mo., and Mrs. R. G. Fin- | __------asked him to think it over and. If nit. Mrs. R. E. Finnic, of Louisville ;
he could not make a plea that the I and Mrs. W. Keith Chidester of;X
Judge could accept, he ought to I Winter Park. Fla.
g
Stand trial
Mrs- P°dl Faulkner was chairman g
'of the committee and was assisted \
by Mrs. Clayton Bennett. Mrs. Ches- g
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
ter Geukes. Mrs. Herbert Beneway. X
William E. Ashby. Hope 21J
Mrs. Tom Barry. Mrs. B. C. Swift. 5
Viola J. McKIbbln. Yanket
I Mrs. Robert Rugg and Mrs. D. D. \
Springs 18 ।
Wolverton. Mrs. David Z. Boyes X
will be in charge of the luncheon | v
Paul.E. Bump, city22
Luella O- Whittaker. Marshall ...21 next week.
*-

The things

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LUNCH BOXES
Ample size—in colon

65c
25c
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* MODERN

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Here you will find a complete stock of

BACK-TO-SCHOOL TOGS

FOR BOYS
. . at prices you can afford to pay,

and qualities that we are proud to sell

BOYS! HERE IS REAL NEWS!

COMET" Aeroplone Models
FREE ! Hove Mother or Dad pur­

chase $1.00 or more of togs for

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SOLUTELY FREE! . . . This offer
is good until Saturday night,
September 5th.

are advertised every week in the

HASTINGS BANNER

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE
HASTINGS

HOME
SWEET
HOME!

you and we will give you one AB­

Stream Line WAGON
With horn and lights—

141 B. STATE ST.

W

e Extend A Cordial Invitotion To All Parents In Barry
County To Visit This Complete
Men’s and Boys’ Store.

* COMFORTABLE

LUNCH KITS
With Vacuum Bottle—

Large Ivory and Green
WASTE BASKETS—

Waters Clothes Shop

S2745

light and Toil Light: Hom—

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clothe;
SELLING QUALITY I

�, 1■

The Hastings Banner

OST TH* COUNTY­
maps At HOME

MICHIGAN

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

THURSDAY. AUGUST 27, 1936

Editorials
ONE DEMOCRAT TO ANOTHIB I
3—Throughout the nsllon. op­
To U» Honorable Franklin D portunity wu limited by monop­
RttMvalt. Preaident of the Unit­ oly. and individual initiative was
ed Blates.
crushed.
Thte means that the
"economic royalist*" hold and ex­
Dear MF. President:
In your
Philadelphia
address, ercise a monopoly control over tiie
ywu compare the organtealion you business of the whole country.

Itemands Some Names.
are hading to the American revoluUonUt* of 1778. According to
your claim you are leading a sec­
ond American revolution against i royaltete.** who arc crushlag the
the tyranny of a small group of weak In every field of business,
economic
royaltete.
who
have robbing the farmers of that which
“carved a new dynasty" In thte belongs to them,
and robbing
country and built a new kingdom defenseless workers of ihelr earn­
upon the concentration and con­ ings at will. If we could recognize
trol over material things. In de­ these highwaymen wc might be able
scribing thte tyranny over Ameri­ to hide some of our small earn I ng*
can business when you came into under a rock on their approach.
power you make the following state­
I* Henry Ford the leader of the
ments:
gang? He has done much injury to
"Through new uses of the cor­ thd country. He has turned over
poration • • • the structure of mod­ enough money to the Federal Gov­
ern life was impressed into the ernment in taxes to build a con­
royal service. They (the royaltete— 'crete highway from the Atlantic to
theAmerican business leaders) created the Pacific, and anoUicr from —
* new despotism and wrapped it in.
to H&gt;e gulf. He has given emrobes of legal sanction. In ite-serv- J Payment to hundreds of thousands
lee new mercenaries sought to regl- of »orkers al high wages, and pqi
ment the people, their labor andi* hlgh-claw automobile within the

reach of the |xx&gt;r man. But he te
public enemy number one. and
"There was do place among this
(»
royalty for our mw,
small business &gt;en and merchant*' VOU CALL UPON AMERICAN
ike a worthy use of CITIZENS TO FALL IN BEHIND j
who sought to 1
ratem of initiative. THE GREAT UNSELFISH PA
~ ­
the American
JIM
FARLEY.
and profit The were no more free , TRIOT.
THS
or
farmer. | GEORGE
WASHINGTON
than
worki
—7- the
.
- the
—----------OF
-------- vnim
_
Those who tilled the soli no .longer
1 YOUR REVOLUTION. TO CRUSH

their property.

reaped the rewards which were their I FORD AND THE OTHER ENEright. The small measure of their ^lES OF OUR INDUSTRIAL
gains was decreed by men In dis- j LIFE.
tant elite*. Throughout the nation i The new Washington -has -had- a I
opportunity was limited by mon- «H*&lt;in«ui.hed career in great unopoly. Individual
initiative was ' *e*fl»h service io the American peo-

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

I

'Round About Town Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

TWENTY YEARS AGO.
.uWo$ U now
nicely on
the Michigan Aw. paving.
Charles Lum. the Innocent looking
Chinaman, whom several citizen* I
declared waa a jap, has disappeared i
leaving no address and no clue as
to hte whereabouts.

the happy parents of a son, Edward
Parker, bom August 17.
In St. James-the-Lau Episcopal
church of Philadelphia al high
noon on Wednesday. Aug. 16. Mtea
Ruth Fredericka Weteaert of this
city was united In marriage to Lloyd'
O. Lohmeyer ot Philadelphia by
[Father Oorga*.
i The salary ot the superintendent I
1 of water works has been advanced
| from 81400 to 81400 annually.
1 W. R. Kuenzel of thte dty went to
the MulUken ox-roast on Wednes­
day with the Clarksville band of
which he te leader.
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
Prof. A. W. Chamberlin departed
for hte new field of work. Waukesha.
Wisconsin, last week.
Dwight Goodyear
came from
Lima. O-. last week and te looking
after the Goodyear 00. store while
hte brother, L. J. te up north to
escape hay fever.
Several months ago Archie Mc­
Coy purchased the lol west ot
Chidester &amp; Burton's store now oc­
cupied by p. C- Brooks' tin shop.
Geo. Newton, jewelry and T. Phil­
lips. sewing machine dealer. Mr.
McCoy let the contract Monday for
building hte new store which will be
devoted to hte furniture business.
Prof. J. F. Thomas. n«w superin­
tendent of schools arrived last week
and te busy with plans for the next
school year.

DICTATORS OF TODAY
AND TOMORROW.
Dictators do not test, -a success­
ful dictator teste only HU ho has
•ervad his historical purpose," says
John Gunther, authority on Eurcuxan politic*. tn June CownopoUCiting Mussolini with hte ambllion to expand Italy into a new
Mediterranean empire. Mr. Gunther
says:
Hehl HehfHoh! You bet Tommy
"If a dictator crashes before hte
job is done, history calls him an
upstart and a failure. Sooner or
Anyone who heard that band con­ later, dictator* are caught in a vic­
cert Thursday could tell that Chief ious circle, because people-over a
Gunner Howard Prost was getting Jong pffrifkl Cian no more be stop­
the artillery under control
ped from thinking than they can bo
stopped from breathing."
No nervous or sporadic firing as of
The successful dictator of the fu­
yore.
ture, he predicts, will be a democrat,
and work for the mass of hte subStill. Tommy 11 have to admit that I Jecte.
if he had a shooting iron in hte; 'This—each in hte different way
hands while they played a tune like i —is what Hitler. Mussolini and
that, he'd probably be making the
•— •- *— •
demmed thing go "bang!" "bang!" day of lonely potentates te over.
as long as the blanks held out.
The modem dictator te a man ot
the masses, and a product of nuui
She was a right, rousing, rip­ forces.
snorting old lune.
"The Intelligent dictator of the
future will seek not to impose hte
Understand that one of the hand­ will on the masses, but to adjust
some young clerk* at the Feld- hte conduct to what the masses
pausch Market te aUll trying to de­ want. He must make himself powtermine who it was that got left.
arful-and-popular in hte own state.
He must combine national prestige
Seems that he went to the train' with considerations of Internationa)
to meet the girl friend.
peace. A dictator of the people 1:
not beyond the bounds of possibili­
But she. apparently was enjoying' ty. There te no reason to assumi
the ride so much that she forgot to that dictatorship te an evil in itself.
get off al our little city.
It all depends on the dictator."—
* *
■ George n»v,u&lt;,
Averill. ou
Birmingham EcccnSo she was carried on to Nashville ' trie,
from whence she was later rescued I
by the hero of. our little story.
j LANDON SPEECH

FORTY YEARS AGO.
Tiie farmers' picnic al Gun lake
Who look the flowers at the coun-1
RESTORES FAini
Friday and Saturday was a brilliant |
Governor Landon's speech ac। success in every particular ao il te try club? Thte question is arousing
reported, and tiie largest crowd of the Interest of several amateur cepUng the Republican nominaUoq
sleuths
of
thte
community
—
and
not
*
u
made
up
neither
of wisecrack.^
people ever at the lake was present
a few of the feminine tempers.
i nor appeal* to class prejudice. It
on both days.
• • •
I was as far removed from a rabbit
The friends of Hon. P. T- Colgrove
Tennis isn't the game II used to rousing, demagog call to war a&gt;
have been anxiously waiting news
from Cleveland in regard to hte con­ be—Tommy hasn't seen Chet Hodges'; ll&gt;e average citizen 1s removed from
I test for Supreme chancellor. Just old blue sweater In action for weeks Jlhe man on the flying trapeze. Here
weeks.
। vas a speech without vague gesas wc were going to press a tele* and weeks.
• • ' tures and with Utile reference to
gram was received from S Greusel
Almost Ume for the school bell to any rendezvous with destiny. It wu
saying that Mr. Colgrove was nomi­
start.
substantial, constructive and Uns
nated by acclamation. This will
for line was packed with common
place Mr. colgrove at the head of
Tommy's only criticism ot vaca­ sense.
an organization of 500.000 men. Hte
election te an honor to Barry lodge, tions U that they always have to
end.
Thte
*Plrlng ' z^L-T —• — w_
to Hastings and Michigan.

In giving publicity to the facts small, and with reference to rise.;
Condition of Farmer.
you have in hand to support your are of the same general type of the
...
In 1930. 2411.644 farms were
position. I will ask you to give
give1 factories that were. In operation owned wholly by those who operconsideration to the following
facto 1j before the Civil War.
Three small [ ated these farms. There was no
ing fact*
with reference to general business I factories have more than a million . sort of mortgage on 1.765.907 of
conditions before you came into and a half employees, and are a big j these farms. /
office. These facts arc taken from I factor In the industrial life of thte |
j Total value of all farms wholly
governmental reports.
! country.
j owned by operators 121.123,468.000.
ta ,..r
YOUr (“«»“«
"• " *"
You say in your addresx, "There, Small factories. It would seem.;
•ddreu -III be lulled In .11 l.nd. I'"1"
““h * rool"U"u *■ rod
Total mortgage Indebtedness or.
was
no
place
among
this
royally
were
increasing
rapidly
between
I these-----farms ri^.no.wu.
81.080.176.000.
by rodtods u the iuonie.1 evl- ,,re
- --------------------for our many thousands of mcr- ' 1925 and 1930. There
There wa*
wa* an
an inin-[1 Value
Value of
of these
these farms
farms over
over mart
mort.­
Cites Roosevelt's Holding*.
dence that American industrialI
chants who sought to make a ' crease in the total number of fac-. eages 817.043.292.000.
freedom has been a miserable fsilTiie General Electric co. te one,
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
worthy
use
of
the
American
systories
in
the
country
of
32461.
beValue
of
all
wholly
owned
farms
| of the great corporations in thte J
Miss Hattie St. John of Milford
tern of Initiative and profit."
I tween 1925 and 1929. The average [ operated by owners in 1900 89,139.A* an American cillaen. I think | country, and has been doing an
te with her sister. Mrs. C. H. Cole,
In
1929.
1443.158
retell
stores
were
number
of
employee*
In
all
factor318400.
with
whom
she expects to spend the
I am within my right* in asking cnormou* bilsinras in selling cqulpies fell
fell from
from **
44 and aa CeaatGu.
fraction &lt;In
■ operation in- this country. mi
____ 1M
! ' O.ln
— ...I...
These
Gain In
In C.a
farm
value Iin 1930 -------over winter.
you to make public the specific • ’nfnt for electric power dcvclop- in
N. T. Parker will build a com­
1935 to 41 and a fraction tn 1939.
:I 1900 87413474.000.
facts on which you make your: nwnL Thl* company, nt course, te stores were classified as follows:
modious blacksmith shop on hte
Total number chain
Nearly 300.000 employees work int' Jasl why th* -economic royaltete inis opposite J L Reed's wagon!
most serious charges against the prominent among the economic
shops for the latter who has de- j could be a Uump speaker to ha- I Momenta!
experimentation,
stores (Royalists&gt;...
leaders of American business. 1 ' foyallsts. One of the leading news144498 factories that have from one to five in distant cities" permilted the val- I elded in go into business here again.
elded to go into business here acain gangue the multitudes and set em come again Into his own In
Total
number
single
employees.
More
employees
work
in
would remind you that Jefferson Papers In thii country published
Our former townsman. A
J
in submitting the Declaration ol Ilhe name* of stockholders in this v store independents
factories that work from one to 10
Bowne and Major Watson of Grand
I (Little Fellow*) ....
Rapids say they will furnish half
Independence for approval, gave ruy»ii»t corporalion some time ago.
1430.300 employee* than the total number of
tiie means necessary to complete
35 specific grounds on which ‘Tie |and ?00 a”1* Fear family were I Total number two and
mechanical workers in all the auto-1 plained.
Ever notice how it te that candi­
As to savings, you say. "The sav­ the railroad from Kalamazoo to thte
mobile factories, all the garages ano I
based hte conclusion. 1 would also , recorded a» among the largest slock - I three store inde­
city if the two cities interested will dates begin to notice you're around
call your Judicial nottee to the } bolder*. Is it possible that you are
pendents
Concerning Couzcns.
।
an the
inc automobile
auioi ...
repair shops ...
in ings of the average family were furnish the other half
64483 , ah
as election Ume nears.
tools
which
the
new
economic
roy
­
thte country.
Mias Shepherd of Vassar. Mich,
fact that one of the chief ground* 1 °”e of the royalists against whom
Senator James couzcns has at lost
_ __ - __ .
—
1
. I■_ __________ -.1 Total number inde­
alty used to dig Itself in."
the second assistant of our high
Some of 'em even dip their words publically admitted a fact which
rhich he urged war on George
Although you say In your ad­
in honey and sprinkle powdered su­ many have suspected for some time
In 1930, 62.729.000 persons had school, arrived thte week.
pendent stores
office-holders and pulmonary pa1491.883 dress: ' Throughout the Nation op­
gar on the topi
—Namely that he te tied in with the
saving deposits of the value of 828.­
Total number employ­
“HE HAB ERECTED A MULTI­ Mate?
portunity was limited by monopoly." ।
New Deal administration.
479400.000.
ee* in chain stores..
Your declaration that the busi­
Every campaign should have a.
836.167
TUDE OF NEW OFFICES. AND
In 1931. 381.088 corporations gavej
referee
to
call
lime
and
caution
'
In
1930.
12436.754
members
in
acreage
we
harvested
more
। Thte being tEc case, one can b.'
BENT HITHER SWARMS OF OF­ ness of this country is controlled by Total number employ­
Income tax returns. Total assets j
Building and Loan Associations had than half of the world's foodstuffs. against blows aimed below the bell excused for wondering why he didn't
ees in independent
FICERS TO HARASS OUR PEO­ powerful monopolies that crush ,
of these corporations were as folline.
assets of the value of 88.824.IIO.060
run tor renominatlon on tiie Demo­
4—We have half of the world's
stores
3.370.165 lows:
PLE AND EAT OUT OUR SUB- every one that gets in their way
. is I
cratic rather than the Republican
In
1930.
52.729.000
persons
had
in
­
communicating facilities.
STANCE ' If Jefferson had looked difficult to understand. There are Net sales chain stores.8 9.445.137400
Wonder Just how long the crowd ticket. Il does not seem consistent
183.447 had total assets ot less dustrial Insurance policies which
In on the Fhlladelphte ronvention I very rigid Federal laws against Net sates independ­
5—We have nearly half the could have kept on singing. "Let Me with the supposed fearleuneM of
than 850400.
Call You sweetheart?" test Thurs­
and beheld the
of office- monopolies, and you are the Chief
ent store*
35.761.713.000
Couzens that he mtereprexcnl him­
61.144 had total a**et*^of 850.000 were in effect in thte country, hav- world's railway and electric energy. day.
1 ing a face value of over 810.000.000. ­
self to the voting public in thte
holder* In charge, his rommente Executive. Why don't you give the Average number em­
to 8100.000.
1000. In 1931. the assets of these In­ world's automobiles.
manner. If he te a Republican. lie
would have been interesting. It was j facts to the Attorney General in­
ployees in independ­
No. no. my friends, the Banner ' cannot be with the New Deal; if to
63.428 had total assets ot 8100400 surance companies had a value of
7—We have 22.0M4M automobiles doesn't keep cows tn Its printing te for the Roosevelt admlntelrstion.
ent stores
25
reported that 64 per cent of the 2.000 'lead of broadcasting llivm to a
shop. Those heartfelt moos are just he cannot be a Republican and he
820.159.040.000.
There wa* one Ungle Independent tO *a'00°0
delegates In that convention were political convention on the eve ot
a potential Major Bowes amateur has no right to use the parly label
-swarm" «n election?
retail stort for every IM of the
This means that 387.«I9 of the
doing hte stuff In the small town.
to help him achieve hte ambition—
ou have been In office nearly 122.000’,004 population In the coun- total number ot corporation.* were
another term in the United Slates
world's population enjoyed stan­
Bert DeVries's got it down so good senate. To Mr. couzens' credit, how­
try. The independent store had *malL Fractirally one-half ot the I 1900 to 820.159.940.000 in 1931.
Vast Army of Stockholders.
dards of living which enabled them | even another cow couldn't tell the ever. te the fact Uial lu* came out
more Ihap three lime* as many , whole number had less than 550,000 I
I difference.
In 1929 there were approximately to consume:
with hte declaration before instead
thte te the ronvention of the F. O. I* The inevitable conclusion from your
ot after the primary.
25.000.000 stockholders in the fewer
—The Federal Office-Holders Party." altitude Is that cither you have no I their net *alrv were practically four
The best fi*h story thia week . , ..
Cites Raise In Standard.
than
3.000
listed
corporations.
There
(b)
Half
the
world's
rubber.
those two 6 and 5 1-4 pound bass
time* larger than those of the chain
In that F- o. P. address you say:
A still greater mark would have
arc over a half million small cor­
(c) Three-fourth*
the world's Gene Waring caught at Torch lake I been chalked to hte credit if he had
A fair interpretation ot your o,k-' or ,o“ &lt;,on‘‘ wanl 10 *ee them stores.
• The hours men and women worked
porations largely owned by people silk.
come out openly for the New Deal
description of what has taken *ndkled.
and the wages they received were
Hurrayl We re gonna have anoth­ before he filed hte peUUon.
ot
small
means.
place in this country under conMonopoly mean* conxpiring to
id) One-third tbe world's coat
er theater In thte Utile old town of
The number of retail stores. It imposed by this new industrial dic­
If we add the assets of 52,000,000
&lt;e) Two-thirds the world's crude ours I Thanks. Ray.
•Ututlonal industrial freedom te as'I,mlt thc supply ot commodities in
Republicans now should consider
would seem, was greatly on the in­ tatorship."
savings depositors and the 112400.­
follows;
order to raise the prices of these
that they have only one candidate
In 1849. 41.000 persons per million 000 holders of insurance policies,
crease between 1920 and &gt;930. In
Yessir!
They really exist . . . for nomination for senator—Wilber
’System That Must Go.*
1— The control of the whole ot । commodities to consumers. Any
Those scarlet coat* around town a
1920 there were recorded 1428475 population were employed in fac­ and the 12.000.000 members of build­
American businesa-rmanutacluring. ,,,ch artl6cial monopolistic control]
THIS IS THE SYSTEM THAT few days ago were actually mem­ Brucker.
retailers of every type. In 1930 the tories. In 1939. 76.000 per million ing and loan associations, wo have
transportation, trade, agriculture.— |of P
rlCM ha5
YOU AND MR JIM FARLEY OF ber* of the Canadian Royal Mount­
prices
has been condemned by
Many Republicans forgave Mr.
number had -increased to 1.703.522.. population were employed in fac­ S57.465.069.000.
«
ed Police.
,
everything, has passed into the Anglo-Saxon civilization for cenNEW YORK SAY MUST GO!
Couzens for hte Independence—in
This was an increase, of 375447 re­ tories. Almost twice as many work­
Then If we add to thte the clear
Radical* and Ignorant reforkners'
turies.
hands of a small group of very rich "*
’*“
fact, admired him for it—but can no
tailers in 10 years. Many small re­ ers In proportion to population were value of the practically three millonger
follow him when he sub­
uk
inrcc
muare broadcasting to the people that
Your experience in plowing up
men. Thte group you describe as 'an
toilers do npt have stores.
in m.nula.-lunns ..
' Uo„ Urnu oper,w
scribes to ideas of government
N*WB GLEANINaa.
I millions of acres of cotton, .prohibitthe wealth of thte country te In
economic dynasty of royalists.
employed in
in vnannfnniu.lnn
manufacturing i"
tn the . er*, we .have 87008451,000.
And yet you say. "There was no Rmnlnvrrt
which are just about as odious u&gt;
the
hands
of
a
few
rich
men.
That
2— This economic dynasty rule*
•ra*n production, and in having place among thte royalty for our good old days before machinery dis­
Ona ot the coldest spots on the them as those of Hiller. Mussolini
This is almost as much as the 90 per cent of the wealth te owned earth in tiie winter lime te at the or Btalln.
with an iron hand ui every field of morr lh*n five million pig*, weigh-1
many thousands of small business placed labor.
value ot all the wealth in thte by a small group of rich royalists town ot Verkhoyansk, in northeast­
business activity. These royaltete ,n« “P “ 60
“ 7
— —
pounds each, —
killed
andmen."
ern
Siberia. Temperature* have
How can a man who attacked the
country
of
all
kinds
in
1900.
The
and so on.
have crushed individual initiative converted into soap -grease and ferdropped to 90 degree* below zero Detroit bankers ao brutally for dbSmall Factories Increase.
&lt;ctived by factory employees were as' total value of all wealth in 1900
in tbe cogs of .tiie great machine , u,lxer *" order that you might make
The figures here given mean to ar.) tn thte region.
h?ne*ty (and who couldn't establish
In 1929 there were 210459 fac- follows:
888.517.307.000. If we were to
those who have the brains to In­
that they havsf created tor their 1,00d *nd clothing scarce and force
any of hia charges before the grand
torles of all types in operation in 1849
8 237 00 the value of small home* and the terpret them, the moat marvelous
Cellophane sails were-exhibited at jury, subscribe to an administration
own aelfish purposes
| ,*’r millions of consumer* to pay
this country.
1859
288 001 value of Block and the value of a distribution of wealth to the mass-' New York City's recent annual whose fortunes are guided by a
They have denied any place in; hl&lt;h Pc*cea for the necreailie* of
show—also a silent out­ Tammany politician like James
Seven thousand four hundred and 1869
American business anywhere for ,,fe' ^uaHBe* you a2 a great chammillion and a quarter of independ­ es of the people. It te believed, that ■ motorboat
«»ru
[ twenty-six of these factories had no
board 1motor, with II* silence guar- Farley? Well, as John Nance Garner
1879
347.0ff! ent stores to the above, it would has ever been known In any country. । anteed.
fhe many thousand* of small bus- P*00
monopoly principle.
say*. "poUtlca is funny." employees. The owners ’ did the 1889
44540, doubtless go far beyond the total under any form of government, at ‘
Ines* men and merchants who[
Cites Double) Penally.
work.
Needy children profit by.the drive
1909
51840 wealth ot the country In 1900.
Some observers hint that Coiuen*
•ought to make a worthy use of' Not only did you (raise the prices
any time tn human history.
Ninety-five thousand iwVen hun- I
against slot machines in Kenyon. has been promised a cabinet post In
1929
1414.60^
What Europeans Found.
the American
American system
system o
c0fuumcrs dred and fifty-seven of tiicsc facThe figures here given. Mr. Presi­ Ohio. AU funds confiscated from ths
M1, New
_ow Deal
.
..uriu.fl to
the
otf tnlua.lv*
initiative ol Iood Bnd riothlI^
event the
is rt
returned
The average factory employee.
A commission of Europeans came dent. indicate that the rendition* machine* go to aid the youngster*. [ power; other* say hte action is
•nd profit.
by the exercise of monopoly power, lories had from one to fb| cpiploy- ।
perhaps, worked a third more hours
According to ths United Stelu IJ"* “,Bl **/J*1;
ywa described in year Philadelphia
These "economic royaltete' who but in addition thfough the pro­ ecs.
1
■
BUTMU or *1, cpmmrrc. U&gt;&gt; UKI&gt;I1 £1,?'
study condition*here. The findretide |n "distant clUes" have rob­ cessing tax you raided a huge sum
Plfly-three thousand
hun- worked In 1829. This marvelous In­
service of an airplane te from five
What the real reason U.
bed the six million farmers In this from the consumed to reward the i C ed and twenty-four
to ten ware
I whI’
‘hould attempt to gain
of these
as fallows:
ConstituUon in this country
Tbs
7
'
। renomlnall9n under one parly label
Country of the right to produce and producers of food anc
id clothing for i f ttorfes had from six
the
old
ConsUlulton.
j
I-Seven
per
cent
of
ike
people
u&gt; 20 emconditions you portrayed exist only I Officially there nerer was an or* I ’Wle professing to believe in the
obtain
for
their
commodlAe*
on
the
l&gt;ply
and
mak'
j:
.
_ _ . ,--------- „ .-.^JAUtUng down the sup^.,___ _
As to the farmers, you say.' in the whole world living in the
gsnizaUon
known
as
the
Roughl"**
4
ot
the
other,
he. himself, will
yn market* what belongs to them : ing the coniumer pa^ more for these'I TTwenty-fivo thousand
skid twen* •Those who tilted the.noil no longer . United States under the American
Riders. To the War Department it i have to say.
ipoly policy I1 j-two &lt;jf those factories had from
was the First U. 8. Volunteer Cav-1
&lt; • .
reaped the rewards which were plan had more purchasing power
I
Our
reaction
to
Mr.
Couzens' an­
they recalwd W brbiuarily forced consumers
airy.
21' to So employees.
their right. The small .tieasure of than all of Europe.
d for them by ' thl, royaltete , 1*1 and build the
industrial life.
------------QQuncemcnt
nouncement 1a;
la: "GOOD
'GOOD LULLUCK TO
.«
\ ’This means that 181.719 of the
----------------------------MAV
Btesl now in im tn the u. 6. te you wilber
bruckEb
may
their gain* was decreed by men in
2—This 11 Ute group has crested
Yours sincerely.
219,959 factories in thte country are distant ciUas."
1 and wwvd more than half tha
estimated at 964.000400 ton* or 17,-' YOUR MAJORITY BE AN OVEROUB W. D
008 pound* par person.
IWHOMIHG ONE I"

chine. The field open for free busl-1 *“ New York City politic*, and final­
peas was more and more restricted." ' *F achieved the great distinction of
No intelligent Socialist nor Com- ' prire fight commluloner. It Is dif­
I flcult to estimate how much the ex­
tnuntet. perhaps ever made a more
... _______ of Ameri. - p,‘“ r,n* commiwloncr ha* con- |
■weeping condemnation
Ibk’n ,rtb“1&lt;d '■&gt; ,hl- '““"‘T

E

This and That I

Way of Our World

�TW1 ■ABTIWGg BANNER, THURSDAY, AUGU8T YT,1*N
Mr and Mrr, 0 r. Reed and [span
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. VanBuskkk
attended a funeral In Katamasoo on Robert and Cynlhsal spent the week i day
Monday.
t ~y~r~
Frank Rogers. Jr, relumed
t-i i
i -ne । responsible position with MonlgonaWednesday from a visit with
Dr. Charles McIntyre ot Kalama- erY W«rd company.
lives in Chicago.
boo was in the city on Monday.
Mra. O. B Stahl and daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. 8*1
Norina and Tommy Birdsall are
of Grand Rapid* and Mr.
Charlotte.
.
lolte ware in tbe d
visiting
In Middleville
visiting relative*
relative* in
Middleville thb
thb Halen McBrien and daughter. Jean.
Mrs. Ethan Kidder relumed on calling on friends.
.
ot Cleveland have been guests of Tuesday from the Wm. Crbpe hos­
Mr. and Mrs. a. J. Clark oTJackfriend, al
pital in Plainwell and b making *
Mr. and Mrs. A. B Oldley and son
Bim for several days.
fine recovery from her recent serious Dell Button from Saturday- till
were In Lapeer and Owosso over the
Bunday guests of Mr. and Mn. operation.
Mr. and Mn. Keith Fuller and
week end.
Monday.
Herbert Bishop were Mr. and Mn.
three children of Bellcraae, Long
Mr. and Mra. Walter Baton have
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Folghner vlsMr*. Alonzo Trim returned Tues­
Orlie Bunop
Bishop ana
and aaugnters
daughters or
of hoi
Hol-Ti.f— A. r-orlie
Island, N. Y, are guests of Mr. , and
Thurad^v
°
Und- Mr *nd Urt Loul* Blllh0P returned from their vacation part of day from a few days' vbll with her Mrs. R. C. Fuller and other relatives,
parent*. Mr. and Mrs otto Schulze,
uiur»u»y.
.
. and son of Detroit and Mrs. Sterhaving been called here by ll)c
j ^ri', Bu®cno Waring and baby
^nd children of Kalama- Hing in bansing and attenduig tbe of Nashville.
death of Mrs. Fuller's mother, Mrs.
Ionia fair.
J
suxhler are »nendln«
daughter
spending three week*
weeks ‘oq*
Miss Ines Adam*, who is a teach­
Mra. W. L. Thompson and daugh­ er in the Northville schools, is the Jennie Fox They expect to return o'clock Sunday, cuml
at Torch lake.
m.. ...u aua.
wrlt' Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sheffield and ter. MUs Evelyn, of Detroit were
Mr. and Mra. Dan Lewis were
guest thb week of Mrs. Sarah
Mr. and Mrs. Delos Smith and
Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mr*. Earl daughter. Jane, of Detroit are
Brandstatter.
Jone* at Lowell
gu*st* of Dr. p. O- Sheffield. They Fcmic Carpenter last Wednesday
Mr. and Mr*. Charles Davb and family of Battle Creek and Mr. and blown off.
Haig Elision. Jr. of Chicago b »«re accompanied by Mr*. 3h*t- and Thursday.
Mrs. Will Rice and grandwn of Bat­ Mra. Fred Smith and children of
The Rev. and Mrs. Maurice Grigs­ tle Creek vbited Mr. and Mrs. Alon­ Auguila visited at Orley Knicker­ Vcm
spending two week* with hb cousin, fle,d* lr0,htr
F»rT'ai&gt;1- ot
Mr*. H. A- Adrounle.
Buffalo. N Y. and St- Petersburg. by have been spending several days —
sos Trim
nun on Friday.
rima,.
• bocker's Sunday- Later in the day
Mr*. A. J. White and children of ■ p*awith Mr and Mra. WIU Grigsby. On
Mr. and Mra. Will Fighter have 'i J**? all.
•*' with Mr. and Mrs. Knicker- burned Satui
and
—
- family
------ • went
----- to Nashville by lightning.
Norfolk. Va.. were Saturday guest* j Mr. and Mra. Gary crook and Mr. Wednesday the four went to East returned to their home in Grand I
--------of Mr*. Wayne Merrick.
' and Mrs. Fred Linington attended jordan for a visit.
Ix-dge after spending their vacation ,
110
?*„“
onZT. —
and".‘Cleo Everett
। and M
Mra.
Busan
Wlckwlre.
Mra. L- L- Holloway and daughter. here with relative*.
” """
n W
"“rw
Mr. and Mr*. Floyd Felghner vb-1 the funeral of Merum Ell bon in
their aupper guest* Me
itad hb mother, Mr*. Ell* Felghner.' Benton Harbor on Saturday. Mr Maude of Adrian have been guests
Mbs Ellen Leonard and Roy
Mrs. Gordon Clement , arrived
of NAshville on Sunday.
and Mra. Frank Carpenter were of Mra. W. J. Holloway. Miss Hollo­ Wednesday from Belding to spend While. Miss Leone Uonard and Ohio; Mrs- Howard Arehart of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Black of I also in attendance and v bi ted here way attended the summer session two or three days with her parents. | Jean England, Mb* Irene Jone* and Mansfield. Ohio; Mrs. Misrit RgfiMR
। friend. Francis Hamilton ot Kala­ of North Robison, Ohio, and Mr*.
Sunfield were Sunday guests of hh , enroute lo their home in Sebewaing, al Ypsilanti Normal.
Mr. and Mrs. w. L- Shuller*.
Mrs. Bernard
Bertsch
(Julia
mazoo, and Miss . Margaret Dcn*- Samantha Peckham of Laka Odessa.
mother, Mrs. J. F. Black.
Mr. and Mrs. J, M. Townsend enMr. and Mrs. Williard perry and tertained their pot luck club on Lathrop) and son have returned Mount Vernon, N. Y. have been I more and Edward'storkan of MldMr. and Mr*. Wm. Shultz ot
from
a
visit
in
Detroit,
While
there
son of Midland spent the week end Sunday with the following guests:
guests the past week of his sister l dlevllle. chaperoned by Mr. and Grand Rapid* called on Mr- and
with Dr. and
end Mr*. B. A. Perry.
Dr. and Mrs. Harry Imus
Imu* and she purchased a new car which, she and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Mrs. Forrest Johnson, enjoyed a Mr*. L. R. Wolcott last Thursday.
Tllr
Brv unrl
l&lt;r« tu
_ u.
__ _____
'*
motor trip to st- Joseph bh flffnday.
Tiie Rev.
and Mrs.
w. Maylan daughter's.
Celestine
and, Billy of. will drive to her home in San Diego, Andler.
The sad news of the death of
Jones and family arc spending sev-, jonia. another daughter and her
Henry a. Sheldon and son Philo,
Mra. wm. Fox. formerly of Freeport,
Mr. and Mrs. Noble Caln and returned Sunday from the Canadian Roosevelt to Booth Haven and re-; wasi received Monday. She had been
eral day* with relative, at Lake City, husband. Mr. and Mr*. Lewis Miller
Mr. and Mr*, joe Springer and of Fremont: Mr. and Mra. R. G. daughters have returned to their Soo. where they attended the ses­ turn, then to Benton Harbor where
family and hia mother vblled rela- Jeffrie* and Harold of Lowell and home In Chicago. Miss Marlon Caln sions of the Michigan Title Asso­ they vUited the HOuse of David. Re-1 Ohio, for some time.
turning they‘visited the Crystal
live* at Chippewa Lake on Sunday. I Mr. and Mr*. Reuben Lee and Dick remaining for n longer vhit with ciation.
•Die Freeport school reunion will
her grandparents. Mr. and Mr*.
Mr. and Mra. H- E- HaU of 81. j Lee of South Boston.
be held al the home of Mr and Mra.
MUs Lida porter of Hastings left Palace on Paw Paw lake.
Petersburg. Fla, were guest* of Mr.' —------- --------- -------- -- ... - Robert Burch.
Sunday with her nephew and wife.
Frank Yarger this week Thursday.
FREEPORT.
Mra Cora Bigg* of Rutland
Mr. and Mra. Ralph Landen. of
Final Arrangement* have been
staying with her sister, Mrs. J.
South Bend. Ind., to visit there for
Mr. and Mn. Lawrence Hawkins
completed for the Homecoming cele­ and daughter. Patsy, of Grand Rap­
Edmonds, while Mr. Edmonds Is in
Mbs Stella Heath and Miss Vivian bration thb week. Aug. 25-29. There ids and Mr. and Mn. John Usbcrn*
nesdav^’ J‘ •“’ ™ lKnd 00 Wcd' PalmaUer of Hasting*. Mr. and Mrs. the hospital In Ann Arbor. He
recovering) nicely and expects
Reynolds In company with MUs will be band music, contests, jports. and family of Carlton called on Mr.
—
| Albert Reesor and Mr*. Miranda
come home next week.
Mr*. D. L. Chrbtlan and Mrs.
Mildred Funk and Miss Erma Funk ball games, pet parade, horrible and Mrs? Gordon usbome Sunday
’• &gt;1 Sizson. Woodland, and Mr. and Mra.
parade, prizes for best baby and Bfumoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jones and
Arnold Malcolm. Lake Odessa. They Willo. Mr/and Mrs. A. C. Hyde and of Bangor are enjoying a motor trip
in the south.
Joyce. Mt. and Mrs. W. L. Hinman
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert FrUby, Mr.
day. Mrs. Smallwood Is employed by and Mr. and Mrs, Ros* Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rogers of
and Mrs. Rex Frisby and Mrs. Wil­
Grand Rapids are here caring for the government and has been for spent Sunday at tlw Allegan Coun­ liam Allerdlng spent the week end
ty Park on Lake Michigan.
with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Burd at
Mrs. C- H. Hinman and son Pleasant lake near Ann Arbor.
Mra. Levnnch
went
to
D
’
k
'
*
ben
glrto
'
Charles returned last week from a
went to j
Mr. and Mrs. w. N. Chidester and
Delton Tuesday
eww days'
days'' 1 Mr and Mra- Rufu» Weaver ore vbll in North Chicago. They were the Rev. and Mrs. W Keith Chides­
visit with Mr.
r*.i. Chas.
accompanied home by her sister. ter and daughters of Winter Park.
Chas., ।•'P
' cndln« lwo we**" at Ludington.
Lechleitner.
Mary Ellen Mulder Ls visiting her Miss Beryl Shields, andtym. Math- Fin, were Bunday guests of Mr. and
Miss Ethel Sayles lx the guest of Srando’othcr in Grand Rapids this las Tiie four are spending the week Mrs. Herold c. Hunt in Kalamazoo.
Mbs Irene Redman of Grand Rap-' wce.k'
Mr. and Mra. Adalbert Heath were
Mr. and Mra. Robert Hampford of
Id* this week.
Mrs Eleanor Stricklcn entertained Sunday guest* of Dr. and Mrs. WalMrs
Mr. and Mrs. w. J. Watkins and Detroit are gue*t* ot Mr. and Mra. over the week end. Mr. and Mr*, ter Lampman of Marion.
Wlllb J. Smith ot Gibsonburg. Ohio. George B. Heath, who h|td been
Miss Florence Watkins visited Mr. John Engle.
Mr. and Mra. Will Reynolds of Mr. and Mrs. Will Gillingham of visiting there, came home with her
and Mrs. j. a. Vander Ven of Hol­
Homer were Sunday guest* of Mr. Battle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. son and wife.
land on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs w. L Shultcrs and and Mrs. E. C. Edmonds
Callihan and son Jesse of Quimby
Miss Helen Wade of Traverse City
Roy Hazeldine of Spring Arbor and Mr. and Mr*. Roy Callihan of was In. the city Tuesday night, leavMrs Clara Hale visited the former's
mother. Mrs. George Shultcrs. of St. called on his mother. .Mrs Susie Hastlngs.
ing Wednesday for Kokomo. Ind,
Hazeldine. Saturday evening.
Johns on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs R. B. Walker of to spend the week with Miss ElizaMr. and Mrs. R. H. Randall of Irving, Mbs Wilma Garn of Grand u
--*
—*-------•
-to
Mra. Judy Rogers visited Mr. and
beth
pinch.
They will return
Mrs. Edwin Sayles last week. They Grand Rapids were guests at Mr. Rapicb. Mr. and Mr*. Chester Sto­ Hastings Bunday.
Mrs.- Robert Burch on Friday. well and Robert of Kalamazoo and
accompanied her to her home in Iand Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. George Heath and
Detroit on Sunday
| Mr- and Mrs. will Mohler accom- .Miss Donna WilliU* of south Has­ Mbs Stella Heath, in company with
Dr and Mr*. R. p. Webb and Mr. I Panled bY their daughter and hut- ting* spent Sunday at Benton Har­
and Mrs. Charles H. Lillie of Grand 5and of Grand Rapids spent Sun­ bor and St. Joe and visited the Mildred Funk of Bangor, have re­
Rapids were Sunday guests of Dr. dny ln Dctrolt.
House of David.
lumed from a motor trip to Niagara
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Edwin Smith, in
bi
and Mra. c. P. Lathrop.
I Mr
Mrs. H. A. Ardounle returned last Falb and Cleveland.
Mr. and Mrs- Charle* Sisson and com
company
P®hy with Mr. and Mrs. Eben week from Chicago where she had
Mra. Orley Knickerbocker and
Of Toledo,
Toledo Ohio,
nhlo spent
trw.nl last
la.I been attending a knitting school, children and Mr*. Cleo Everett vbllMrs. Kenneth Sisson and Judith 'smith
Smith ot
Anne of Marcellus visited Hastings I wc„e.k
the 500
which granted her a diploma. She ed relatives in Battle Creek Monday.
Fost Color, Washable, Sizes
relatives over the week end.
Mrs M. M. Crookston. Mrs. W. M. expect* to open her shop here in Mrs.
Knickerbocker's
nephew.
Mr. and Mra, Roger Merrick. Mbs 1 Stebbins. Billy and Helen Stebbins September. Mlxx Zabclle Adrounle. Richard Walters, relumed . with
6 to 14 and 1014 to 16’4
Jean Merrick and James Huggins of ■ and JoAnne Finnic were In Grand who had been visiting in Milwaukee them to spend
few days here.
Detroit vbited Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rapid-’ Saturday.
and Chicago, returned with b
her
“"1| Miss Elizabeth Bolton of Char­
Merrick over the week end.
Clarence W. Crawford and xon- mother.
lotte. N. C, who was a class mate
Mrs. Robert Burch and Mrs.. in-law, Robert Jessen, of Chicago.
Judge Chas. F. Raddock and of Miss Barbara Johnson, when they
Henry Hubert and Joe were In ‘ nre enjoying a few days' fishing cn daughter*. Margaret and Betty, and were student* at the Mary Baldwin
Grand Rapids on Wednesday and1 th0 A« Sable river.
Thomas J. Gleason of Boise. Idaho, college at Raleigh, Va.. b spending
attended the loni* fair on Thursday. I Mrs. cole Newton and Mbs Helen visited Mr. and Mra. Albert Herney the week at the Johnson home.
Mr. and Mr*. Donald Smelkcr. Mr Newton were Sunday guest* of Mr. part of last week. The Raddocks
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Bronson
and Mrs. Harry Walers and family and Mrs. Glessncr Dage and son and Mr. Gleason wcre on their way had as guests over the week
‘
and Russell Zerbel spent the week I Richard of Kalamazoo.
home after having taken an exten­
end. Mr. and
Youldon
Mrs.
Slipovers and Buttoned $4 .00
end at the Pine river and in Har- • Mr. and Mrs. William Madison sive trip through the southern । Howell and Miss jean Wright of
fronts, sizes 5 to 16. at— I
rleUa.
i a«d daughter. Betty Lou. and Mr states, up the east coast through Pasadena, cal. Mr. and Mrs. Howell
Gordon Clement. Jr, and sbter. and Mrs. Ray Cooling of Jackson Pennsylvania and into Michigan.
are enroute from New York, where
Shirley Jean, leave thb week tor 1 vl-'it«d Mr. and Mrs. Albert Herney
Among those who attended the they have spent the summer al Coom
c
c
their home in Belding after spend-. Sunday.
formal dance at the Civic auditor­ 1 iumbia University, both having
Ing some lime with Mr. and Mrs.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. N. ium
in Grand Rapids
Thursday
----------------------------------------------, eve- - (finished a course in art and obtained
W. L. Shultcrs.
| Knopf Thursday and Friday of lajt nlng when Glen Gray and his Casa | their master's degree. Both are emMr. and Mrs. Ward Rector and , week were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Becker Loma orchestra played, were: Jean ployed in the public schools of Pasason. William, of charlotte and Mr. I and three sons and Earl Strong of, Amdt. Tom Stebbins. Dorb Ryan, dena a* teachers of art. Mrs.
and Mrs. Carl Tuttle of Nashville j Toronto,
oronto.
j Melvin Gelow, Barbara Trego. Ste- Howell la a daughter at Mr. and
were Bunday
Mr
Standard Regulation, half sleeve
Sunday guest*
guests of
of Mr. and!। sir.
Mr. ana
and Mrs. Howard Hastetier,
Hostetler. ■ phen Johnson. Jean Brower.
... Ells- Mrs. Frank A. Schumann and a
nd children,
rhllrirftn sally
Oallv and Dick, of I worth
__ .....
___ .
..I__ --of--Mrs
___ —Bronson.
_____ _
------ -- “nd
Newton. Margret
Barnett. J niece
□nd bloomer leg,
$4 .69
Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln, Nebr, are guest* of Mr. and Richard Poley, Mary Lou Burroughs
Mrs. Clara'Wilder of Battle Creek.
10 to 16, at— I
Leon WiUsey were Mr and Mrs. I Mrs. F, C. Edmonds and Mbs Grace' Fred Hau*cher. Cleone Woodman . Mbs Donna Bagley of Kalamazoo
Albert Stabler. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Edmonds.
. and Stephen Brhtol.
and Mrs. Floyd Buskirk of Hastings
Wlibey and Mr. and Mrs. Mux Em-1
___________ J
cry of Llgionier. Ind.
Mrs. Ed. Dalman and Mrs. Lee
Huxtable of Zeeland were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Dal­
"CAST**" and “NAZASHH" UNDUWSAR
man. They also visited Mr. and
Mrs. Richard SchiUeman.
AT POPULAR PRICKS
Miss Jean Everhart of Lake
Worth. Fi*. b the guest of Has­
tings friends this week. She expects
to return to her home next week,
having spent the summer in Michl-

Study of Unemployment In SOCIAL
State of Michigan Being Made
Greatest Percentage Found in Groups Under

25 Years of Age and From 60 to 64 Years
Lansing. Aug. 1936. Unemploy-1 and in the group 60 year* old or
ment becomes an ever increaalng over approximately a third ot ail
threat lo the older worker after the WOrkcr« were without employment.

ft!: «•

I

I

i
'

'
|
j
'
;

■

,
i
;
I
I

■

I

■ •*»

employment Census reveal, in the workers, particularly those betweep
age group from 35 to 39 year* of age । 25 and 40 year* of age. were les*
only 133 |icr can ot all employable I affected by unemployment than in
pertona were unemployed in Jan- 1 any other type of community. Lera
uary. 1935. but for each succeMive | than 12 per cent were without work
nve-yrar group up tn 65 years of. in this group: Il b apparent from
age there wa* an Increase In the | these figure* that in the industrial
percentage ot unemployment, reach- cltle*. older worker* were being re­
Ing * peak of 274 per cent among' otxnrbed in industry more slowly
worker* 60-64 year* ot age.
| than their younger competitor*.
The Increase wa* true for both | The very young workers in these
men and women worker* within ' elite*, on the other hand, were more
.....
• —
severely affected than in the other
t)w*c
age limits,
but more markedly
so for men. The Intensity ot unem­ communities of the stale.
Unemployment In the metropoli­
ployment among the employable
male* Increased from 14D per cent tan township* adjacent to the larg­
in the 35-39 age group lo 29.1 per er cities followed a similar pattern,
cent In the 60-64 group. Among with the exception that the 15-19
women in the same age claxsiflca- year old group wa* somewhat better
tlon*. the increase was from
per off and the 40-55 year old group
more subject to unemployment.
cent lo 16.0 per cent.
The Amnller cities, with popula­
The greatest relative severity of
unemployment occurred among the tions from 3.000 to &lt;0.000. did not
youngest persons, those between 15 vary |o any appreciable extent from
and 19 years of age. with 34.3 per the state average In the age group­
cent out of work. These figure* in­ ing* between 25 and 50. However,
elude both experienced and inex- there wax an increasing intensity
ixrlcnced workers, however, and a of unemployment In the classes
large jiurl of the unemployed above 40 year* of age and a relative
younger persons were handicapped heavy degree of unemployment bein obtaining work by reason of lack
of previom work experience. Over the case in the large cities.
Unemployment in towns and til­
50 per cent of the unemployed under
20 years of age had no previous lages of less than 3.000 Inhabitants
work experience.
Thb condition was higher In every age group than
does not hold for the older workers, in the date as a whole. Even In the
whore unemployment may be due most favorable age-range—between
to a large extent lo the very fact of 25 and 45—about 20 per cent of all
Ihtlr age. and despite their work employable workers were without.
Jobs. The Increase in unemployment
experience.
■
Those who were in their best In Die age groups over 45 was more
working years at tiie time of the gradual than In the ciUes. however,
censwi (between 25 and 45 years old) though the actual percentage of un­
were the least aflcctcd by unemploy­ employment was higher.
In the rural townships the rela­
ment. Between 13.0 and 15.1 per cent
were unemployed. The age group tionship between age and unemploy­
between 30 and 35 years of age had ment was entirely different from
any other type of community. Un­
the lowest ratio of unemployment.
In general, women workers were employment
--------was ----------mod ----frequent
------ less gerloiuly affected by unemploy- । among worker* under 40 years of
incut than men. Although thb was age. while the older groups wcre
true in each age group, the differ- ! actually less seriously affected than
encc war. less pronounced in the | the young. Unemployment percentyounger ages. In the 15-19 year old ! ages higher than the state average
group, the dlllerencc was very slight.' were found In the age groups bewith 35-3 per cent of the males and ‘tween
---------25
"* and
—J 40. which
- --------------------*■
were•*the
most
325 per cent of the females uncm- favored groups In the urban centers.
This situation U closely related to
ployed.
In the 14 eUiex of the stale with the fact that most of the older
&lt;0.000 or more population the in- workers In rural areas are self-em­
croared intensity of unemployment ployed farm proprietors, who are
In the older a-ie bracket* was more recorded as "gainfully employed"
outstanding than in any other type even when operating at a loss. Farm
of community. In each age group laborers and other wage-earners,
over 55 the ratio of unemployment who are more likely u&gt; be unem­
wiu well above the state average ployed, are usually younger men.

REV. DR. WHEELER WILL
EUROPEAN TRIP TO
FOLLOW MARRIAGE
PREACH HERE SUNDAY
Miss Margaret Gladstone to Will Occupy Rev. Jones' Pul­
Wed Carl Ernest Bick
pit—Latter Away on
His Vacation

on September 22
Announcement has been made of
i the approaching marriage of Mbs
Margaret Lois Gladstone, daughter
of Mrs. Lois Gladstone. to Carl Er­
nest Bick of Indianapolis, the cere­
mony tn be performed at four
o'clock on Tuesday. Sept. 22 al the
Little church Around the Comer in
New York City.
Mbs Gladstone has chosen her
sister. Mr.-.. J. F. Hollister. Jr, of
Bloomfield Hills as matron of honor,
and George Giles ot Reading. Pa .
will attend the groom.
Following the service a reception
for friends and relatives will be held
on the S. S. Bremen on which the
young people will sail that night for
n two months* trip abroad. Upon
their return they will reside in In- ;
diana polls.
After her graduation from the ।
Hastings High school. Mb* GUdstone served as reporter for one of
the Battle Creek papers later at­
tending the Tvagin School of Drainatlc Art in New York City. Al I
present she is employed In the ad- .
vertbing department of the Brook- 1
lyn Eagle. She is a resident member
of the Three Arts Club.
Mr. Bick, who la the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Bick nf Reading.
Pa, graduated from Lehigh Uni­
versity and Ls now employed as a
chemist with a well known hosiery
company. He Is a resident member
ot the Indianapolis Athletic Club.
Hastings friends unite in extend­
ing best wishes.

Though the pastor. Rev. W. MayIan I Jones is enjoying a two weeks'
vacation. the regular service* of the
Methodist Episcopal church will go
on ns usual next Sunday. Former
district superintendent. Rev. Dr.
Wheeler of Grand Rapids, will
preach al the ten o'clock service
next Sunday
morning. Sunday
school will be al the usual hour of
11:05 and will close by noon.
Rev. Wheeler 1* now connected
with the work of the Clark Old
People's Home to Grand Rapids. He
has been pastor of some of the larg­
est churches in the Michigan con­
ference. Tiie members of the
church and congregation will enjoy
hearing him next Sunday. Rev.
Jones will nil the pulpit the follow­
ing Sunday. September 6.

"People who listen to radio do
not. as a rule, concentrate on it.
They switch on the set and carry on
whatever they are doing. Ideas can­
not be apprehended so casually. But
we sit down and read a newspaper.
Wc concentrate on it. Bo the ideas
which we find on the printed page
reach out to us. We think them
over.'—Winston Churchill

EVENTS
' adrounle
adrounle.
r

SCHOOL

Wearing Apparel
Dresses, Sweater!, Ho»e, Gym

Suit!, Rain Cape!, Parauth,
Underwear, Etc.

Fall School Dresses

ALL WOOL SWEATERS

School H

ROCK OF AGES GRANITE

SIX O’CLOCK DINNERMr. and Mr*. Bert John*6n enter-:
talned Mr. and Mr*. Earl . Buskirk
and daughters. P&lt;’te Powell of Dow­
ling. Arber Bachelder and Mr. and!
Mr*. Floyd Buskirk al*-aix o'clock
dinner Thursday evening.
-A noble dead U

a

God."—J. Q. Holland.

Itep toward

For the High School Girls. 12 to
20. washable, and smart in style,
made frbm Celoncse Prints—

We are the authorized agents for the
AGES GRANITE. With this Granite is given a
GOLD BOND Certificate guaranteeing to every

purchaser an everlasting guarantee.

The Memorial that you erect inflribute and hom­

age to the memory of a life passed on, will record
its page of your family history for untold genera­
WHY BS OUT OF WOBKT

■

Dark Print

School Dresses

,

Mr* R. G
Finnic entertained)
eight guests Tuesday ar -he weekly j
luncheon at the Hastings Country i
...sb played at
at her
her
club, contract wa*
home In the afternoon. Mr*. M. J.
Oros* and Mrs. W- N- Chidester Win­
ning the honors:

Rain Capas, 4 to 8, at
Rain Capei, 10 to 16, at

V

DESSERT—BRIDGE­
Mr*. Burr Van Houten was ho»tcm Tuesday evening to eight guerU
। at a dcjucrl bridge. Mr*. Roy Cor­
des winning the high score. Out of
town guest* Included Mrs. Kuilli
Chidcstar of winter park, Fla.. Mb*
Inez Adams of Northvljie and Mr*.
i Phyili* Reynold* of Ann Arbor.
I
BRIDGE FArTy AT HOME.

UABM BBAITTV CLTTVBBI

• FOSIYIOWa AM WAITIXO — ALL OkADUATl* TUCID
MODERN UF-TO-DATE SCHOOL

Prices;

—

Smart Frocks
In Silk and the new
Murmuring Pine" Silk
SImi

Uh&gt;20 — 40t*44

Half Sio&gt;. UW t* levy

*38?

«9«s

tions.

Prices;

Why not see us now and make a suitable selec­

All carefully selected and flu«r-

to

tion for FALL Setting . . . Prices very reasonable.

trots * (reap of eiveriueed sad «

COMPLETE COURSE
NOW —«■-

HIX MONTHS

TO FAY!

WE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE

ONLY 12 STARTS YOU
•n th* r*a4 U ■««" Invest a*w la * MetMitra I
mAH

.....

I, -

, 19 , 25

GYM SUITS

Iff fl I

MET WITH MRS. SMITH.
The past Noble Grands of the Re­
bekah lodge met Tuesday evening
al the home of Mrs. Ed. Smith with
fifteen members present. Following
the business meeting, buneo was
played with Mra. Myrtle Brown reI ceiving high score and Mrs. Lula
Cole low. Refreshments were served
j by the hosteavs. Mbs Emma CarKler. Mrs. Viola Hync* and Mr*.
lie smith.

X 21“*?.

Ur De
ne Young
Youna holds
holds a
Mr.

IV., maAh .,.VI. —.

BIND ATTAOBffD OOVfOM FOB FUSE IOOKLST

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS

ADDMM

Lo MAR BEAUTY ACADEMY

ESTABLISHED 1S07

HASTING*, MICH

I'rundu
Eidusiee But Not A

50c
«9*

�■ntt n*»Two« BAxxnt, twcbidat, AtaciT n,

IRINF RII^INFW
jSToi?t^ Organizations
WITH MORE rsS.™?—™
:I‘S
UUufllLUU
iiM-rii m

mountain climbs, where you ore
coM^ntly twisting and turning and

Surgery Guild No. 19 will hold
their September meeting at the
ahead
---- —----------------------------------- ancau • oi
you. ofas you.
you as
uuiyou
kucan
wy teU by j home of Mrs. Harold Smith
— on N.
fromr—
page
Bee.--1) waicamg
1w
.,rhlngitu
wheneV
eryvu
you
valrhlncr
itwitcucicr
whenever
von are about
about 1' Broadway on Thursday afternoon
-(Continued
------------ --------- 1.-----......................
- ' .to meet- another
__ .1__ ____
I__ J.
—'.cm
' Sept.Q 3.Aaaitllnir
AssistingMTi
Mrs.Smith
smithwill
willbebe
*■“
r- • -'
. ..
car 1___
coming
down/
miles, and we averaged 340 miles a or lf B tum u unusunljy ,harp. We Mrs. Howard Birdsall and Mrs. Jas
day for the 28 days, or an average followed a truck In, this manner
va vwc, II Uiireu .VI VVVII iivvi ——— — -.— a
-- ------- The Rutland cemetery circle will,
w wire rae Iran, Hiuuwi. You
°r
meet al the cemetery on WedneaWOUM uum. rreua Udi Ure.
muii
V"
nhrht and'day’^bul*to CrealUv°U^e 10 Bet 4011,0 Photo«r^lls of lh,&gt; day afternoon. Sept. 2. All are wel­
come.
night and day. but to reality we
,o
stontx'd and vou can
imagine the peculiar feelings that
flrat
first niaht
night out and the last nlahl
night in.
Ln. fan up
our #plne5 whcn Barry County Rod and pun Club
•nd «■ W &gt;»» oU-r oee»aoiu &lt;114 we found out that we had been try- next Monday evening. Aug. 31 at
7 30 at the office ot the Barry
in Use evening, and that was in mountain
.... ... road to .keep
----- within
...-&lt;- «»&gt;..
fifty County Road commission mainte­
nance garage.

S* 52r^K,l!lw.S' S! 'J'iL'10;!

&gt;»«““ &gt;«

”11"»'h"1

daytime; both of these nights we
Townsend plan meeting on S
holed up abound
Tn ten o'clock.
“ Rood Ions start before we proce^d- JefTer*on St . Wednesday evening.
Tills ought art^JTwU
to M
f— ~ fd UP the Canyon to-the Shoshone Sept. 2. 8 o'clock. Fine speaker 1*
h^aii^i
liminary remarks,
so I will begin at
nt I3am whfch. up to the completion of being arranged for.
irks, ao
the beginning
refresh my, —
mem---- -- and
—
—• ,,
Boulder Dam. was about the’
ory frequently from Maude's notelheDworW. Jt b bulll of
The Goodwill L. A. S. will serve
supper at the home of Mrs. Fred
w&lt;Un.v&lt;Or n,t„ o .-...A.. I reinforced concrete In the narrowest
Center st,
St.. rTiaay.
Friday.
Wednesday. July 8. 1936-Lealle ;
r J nnwttr-d
: Smith. 115 W. center
P*rt
ol
the canyon
and appeared
to 'Aug- 28 Thcre wUI ** e&gt;«tlon of
and
I
knocked
off
work
at
noon
to
:
1
?.
“
LH...
hundred
P
feet
hlah
nd I knocked off work at noon to । r i,.„.
h(„v. •
pack up and get the car ready to
°' ^.mXStoet wide It
*nd aU
«“

INTEREST IN HORSE
I Th' n™
PULLING
---- — -—CONTESTS
---------- — ■ ~ Harnesses as

“ •»an

aoaiiionai

ixiac.

Attractive Prive. Hat. Been T“J*“ “ ‘""T

TnllAwInir manner:
m*nnAr* After
Afl^r the
tHa win
win ­—
following
ners have been determined in both
the lightweight and heavyweight
Much Interest is being manifested contests, the lightweight teain will
pulled
in' ’
winthroughout tne county In the horse pul)
?“**the
“?* same ,toad
°\dn ?
u
“*
pulllng contests to be conducted at J °U}8, t*. 00 ^.u'
t^wii
the Barry county Fair. Several en- *e|Aht ***m wl11 be.»*^lr*d,10 *”}!}
UM h.« alre.d, ten. recMred .„a Pl'1'
1'1'
more are expected. Only horses be awarded to the team pulling
owned by bona (Ide residents of i their respective toad the greater dl»tance.
Barry county may compete.
The prizes have been considerably
OBITUARY.
increased this year, a total of 9230.
being offered. The prizes are divided
Mrs. Annie E. Humphrey, daugh­
as follows: 1st—99000. 2nd—83000. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Williams.
3rd—825 00 and 4th—820 00. This ap-1! pioneer residents 6f Barry county
plies to both the lightweight and ,
heavyweight contests.
I| near Milo, was bom Jan. 1, 1888.

Offered—Several En­
tries Already

Get AH 3 at

WARDS

THE BIGGEST
RADIO SCOOP IN
WARDS HISTORY!

The lightweight contest will take She was married to Frank Hum­
place Thursday at 9:30 A. M. and phrey June 3. 1886. Surviving are a
the heavyweight contest Saturday son. Dale, at home, five grandchllat 1:30 in the afternoon. Between I dren, a sister. Mrs. Florence Slater,
the heats of the Saturday afternoon | of Kalamazoo, and a nephew. Louis
contest there will be attractions on i slater. Funeral services were held at
the platform. All contests will be the home at Wildwood al two P. M
on the track in front of the grand- on Tuesday with burial in the
stand.
Richland cemetery.

$20

VALUEI

5-TUBE

Re«acedX Save &lt;10!
«“&lt;JoS 13o ot

Z&gt;Tma*nSr u Si tach w.th

24»*

Co«u Oro.. K»00l reunion S*l-

,,ld ■■’"•‘‘J ol“

«”**■
'‘bl*
“ - W1 tl»l-Ad'-

wm. Clare. Seo.

It started raining as we left the
------------waif un.morning
tm_
to wait
as It was so hot, । dam and. _continued
nn.lnu.d lhe
c
the rMl
rest of
of th
the
The regular meeting of the Auxil-1
as we could drive a hundred miles day. We passed one place where the I sary
lary ui
of lcu
Leo n.
A. muici
Miller Post
be J,
ruai will
win uc
or so in the cool of the evening and rain
_
* I. — » that
it.I — —this
1'1. &gt; &lt; - -Thursday
-I &gt; ai.rentvm
.1 nlrrlt.
1
evening
al eight
'
started a small landslide
■lay all night, and thus get an early partially blocked the road. We were o'clock at O. A. R. hall. Ella H. Bush.!
start. The cool of the evening how­
thankful that none occurred while Secy.
ever didn't materialize, so we kept
we were passing as you quite often
going. We stopped at ten o'clock
The Missionary society of the M.
see boulders the size of freight cars
south of Gary, at the Junction of
that have rolled down the steep E. church will meet Wednesday aft­
U. 8. 30. 166 miles from home,
ernoon, September 2. with Mrs
(temperature 96 degrees!, for gaso­ mountain sides.
Gary
Crook. Every Methodist ibmWe entered the Yellowstone Park
line. sandwiches and when ready
about 1 P. M. Saturday. As we an is urged to attend as an Interest­
to proceed our naturalist spied a crossed the divide, at an elevation ing program has been arranged by
s
“«। «&lt;
“«■■»
of •*»"«'■
8.560 feet, the rain had &gt;turned
to Mrs. Florence Fleming.
course we had to wait until it was
car registered 50 degrees. ThLs tem­
captured, chloroformed and proper­
perature at the hottest port of the
ly mounted before proceeding. It
day was quite a contrast to 104 de­
was my turn to drive then. How I
grees at seven o'clock In the cool of
envied the rest of the family as they
the evening, when we were leaving
slept peacefully through the worst
Michigan Just 60 hours before. Just
detour of our whole trip. I did not
to make sure that the thermometer
rouse them until we were about to
was not fooling us and that our eyes
cross the Mississippi at 2:25 A. M..
were not deceiving us. we got out
360 miles from home.
Thursday. July 9th—Breakfast in and threw a few snowballs.
Boone. Iowa, 538 miles out, lunch
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
at North Bend. Nebraska 765 miles
Seven babies and their mothers
out and dinner at North Platte, Ne­
are registered at the hospital this
braska. 1.022 miles from home.
Nothing of particular interest Wednesday morning.
Births during the past week were:
happened during this time except
David was hoping we would have a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Elbert
tire or engine trouble so we would [ Eaton. Route 4. on Aug. 25; a son
have lo stop long enough for him to : to Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Woodmansee,
really collect some butterflies. We I Dowling, on Aug. 26: a daughter to
did stop occasionally to drink water Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Dnlmati. 319 E.
from the thermos jug. By the time I State St., on Aug. 24: a son to Mr.
wt would all drink and get the jug I and Mr*. Charles Potter. Vermontclosed up again Dave would be way I vllle. on Aug. 23: a son to Mr. and
off in the fields somewhere; and by 1 Mrs. Earl Palmatlcr. 309 N. Broadthe time we could get him collected way. on Aug. 23; a son to Mr. and
he would have gathered several new. Mrs. Eber Hollman. Route 4. on
specimens. Stopped ovgrnight at a | Aug. 21; a son to Mr. and Mrs.
beautiful, brand-new tourist court Howard Dingman. Nashville. Route
Shower baths revived us and. having ( 3. on Aug. 19.
a nice cool breeze, we had a won.
• • •----------------derful night's rest on more com- j "I have learned that war Is a
fortable bed* than we have at home, profit-making business, and that
or at least they seemed that way! there are men In the world who stir
after our long grind.
j up war for profit. It is a terrible
Friday. July 10th—Had breakfast j thing to think of. War Is a man-

9»8

• Superheterodyne! lighted
dial! • Gets distance, some
police calls! • Imooth, pow­

Favored for Winter—Misses’ Black or Brown

erful dynamic speaker! • Good

SUEDE OXFORDS

Circle No. 1 of the Methodist L. A.
S. will meet at the home of Mrs.
Murdock on Center Street, Thurs­
day P. M- at 2:00 o'clock, Sept. 3.
Members please attend. Guests are
invited.

6 TUBE BATTERY
MANTEL $32.95

• Approved by lire Under­

CHENILLE RUG

writers! • licented by RCA

CONSOLE $34.95
perfect "ttcond radio’ 1 • A

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION
ABOUT ELECTION LAWS

11.59 to S1.79 Values I Made ot
'
' t chenille and cotton yi
tevcrsiblel 27 x 50
sire I

County Clerk and Members
of Precinct Election Boards
Meet Tomorrow
Michigan laws require that, before
a general election such as the com­
ing primary, in thls-state. the coun­
ty clerk shall call together two or
more of the members of each town­
ship or precinct election board for
a "school of Instruction." as it is i
defined In the law. The object is to
have all the members of the elec- I
tlon board obtain a full understand­
Ing of tbe election laws as they ap­
ply to a coming general election.
There is usually some change made |
by each legislature In tiie election i
laws. AU legislation applying to the!
coming primary will be discussed by ;
tiie county, clerk and the assembled
members of the township and pre­
cinct boards. The meeting wiU be
held in the supervisors’ room at thc
court house tomorrow, Friday at two
o'clock P. M.
.

Black or brown suede—flntobei
leather with smooth trimming
to match. A flattering stitch-

Sale!

WARDS SUB MORI RADIOS 1HAN ANY RITAIllR IN TH! WORLD

Smooth Surface

Penney’&gt; Famous Alt Leather Construction!

STITCHDOWNS

■s»5e
Sale!

All leather when leather ought
to be. Black patent leather with
gunmetal underlays on the
vamp. Markless soles.,

3 Big Pieces

Light weight, low cost,
good quality roofing.
Smooth talc surface.
Wards sale price I

880 Bedroom

•14)01down
Ot-F
50% MORE la------Cu'd
usually
payl
lid hardwood with wal­
nut and maple effect over­
lays!
Bed. cheat, and
vanity. Bench |2.94.

Slate Surface

ROOFING

M» 910

Fine Values! Girls’ Well-Balanced Oxfords!

STITCHDOWNS

wherel Choice of beau­
tiful colors. Save I

Circulating Heater
Words
Born Point

Better Foods

HI RXS OIL
37»5

1.10
Regularly 81.49
Durable quali­
ty I Gal. cov-

Bieck aide leather
all-bladk
or medium brown with darker
brown trimming. All leather

Cost Less
— at

value only Words could otter*

ROOFING

■ There is one road that none may
crossed the Wyoming border about never settle*
anything.' —Henry
noon and had lunch In Casper. I Ford.
travel, but thou only."—R. H. Cox.
which Is a great oil town near the
famous “Teapot Dome" field. As the ------ ------------------------------------------------- —
crow files we were considerably over
half way to Seattle in the first day
and a half of travel, but unfortu­
nately the roads from here on are
more like a bat's flight, as far as
direction Is concerned, and like an
eagle's flight in altitude, so we were
really only about one third of the
came to “Hell's Half Acre." This
place is pretty well named except
for its size. It consists of a hole in
the ground about a mile In diameter
and a quarter of a mile deep in
spots. In an otherwise practically
level plateau, and is full ot weird
rock formations, of deep caverns,
crevices, pits, towers, spires, but­
tresses. and other architectural ef­
fects in slate, pink, yellow and white
colors. Not a single sign of life of
any kind, and you could not see any
possible way of getting down into «

A.C.
MANTEL

Modern Studio Dlvsn! Ta­
pestry cover resists spots.
Opens to double or twin beds I

Flat Top
Lunch Kits

Help Little Feet Grow Straight and Strong!

Sjjfc Feldpausch
E
Market

!»!»(■

Little.Teacher Shoes
Sires

didn’t, it reminded us a grea; deal
of the bad lands of South Dakota.

Heats 2 to 3 rooms. Burnt
low-priced No. 1 furnace oiL
distillate (38-40), or kerosene.
Giant orange-flame burners
ere most efficient made. Clean,
odorless, silent.
Needs no
watching. Approved by Under
writers Laboratories Inc.
Only $4.00 down

2 coats.

98®

Regularly 91.19

Includes

*4-

bottle. Value I

Designed to give tiny tots ecr^

lible. we roc quite a kick out of the

4109

Leslie's photographing it so I could
enter it In the Grand Rapids Her­
ald's “unusual road itc. contest"
Il read as follows: “Hell’s Half
Acre, built by the Klwar-ls Club of
Casper ”

Serviceable

Sweet Potatoes
bridges and down into Thermopolis'

Saturday. July 11 th—Thermopolis,

Wyantog. 1M3 miles out of Has- i
world famous hot springs, one of ,
which flows over eighteen million .
gallons of hot. healing, vile smelling

HIGH SHOE&lt;

6 «&gt;•■

country, being blasted for fourteen

..ch

lOc
25c

CABBAGE

hMUnc waters. We saw a great
many crippled men, women and,
children there, and I was tempted
to remain myself and see if it would
not help mv left shoulder, which
up. I decided I would rather

Um trail again at 7:30 and.
■tog through Greybull uit

VEAL CHOPS
BEEF KETTLE ROASTS b^.a
HAMBURGER r...i o—u
CITY CHICKEN LEGS
FANCY CHICKENS

eldpausch

F

•MARKET­

Phone 2772 UJe Deliver

98”
■arktoooj

. wiu
Nation w

5 mart Conservative Towncraft Shoes for Men!

State

Chief Washakie, of the Shoshone
Indians with the stipulation that
one fourth of Die water should al­
ways be free to the public, and that

4 Day SALEI On
Anerica'i Finest
Low Priced Tlrel

LUNCH KIT-BOTTLE

109

Regularly 11.29. Holds enough far two;

WARDS

doz.

Head Lettuce
Cooking Apples IO

forActive Boys^and^Girls!*

lb- 25c
lb- I Be
2 lb.. 29c
lb. 25c

Kirrrtide

RAMBLERS
Priced at littla more
than retreads I Guarani
teed without limit aa to
time or mileage I

SPEEDSTER SKATES i
Usually 91.85.

Theae have ball bear-

I49

3-KNIFE CHOPPER

99®
5 LBS. KALSOm NE
29®
FURNITURE POLISH '
17®
Montgomery Ward
SOI

SALI

4.40-11
4.50-10
430-11
4.75-19
545-1 a

94.10

mZHMME MSI

Worth 11.19 regular

1U-122
----------------------------------------------------------SOUTH JEFFERSON STREET

---------------------------HASTINGS, MICM.

�TW1 HATHWOS BAWMCT. THURSDAY. AUGVBT OT, IM

Taffe - Valero

Social Events and Personal Mention

PALMER—VAN SICKLE.
Miss Ethal Palmer, daughter ot
Mr. and Mrs. Miner Palmer of Mid­

COUNTRY CLUB DINNER

I

ENJOYED BY MEMBERS

dleville, was united in marriage to
Earl Van Sickle Saturday morning
Virnie Beam Boyd Gave a
A lovaly wedding occurred Tues­ at ten o'clock at the parsonage of
Program Followed by
day morning at 0:30 o'clock at the the Middleville Methodist church.
The
ceremony
was
performed
by
the
Miss Benia th Noble and LeonardI Mra. Winnie Bennett Rickman of St. Rose church, when Miss Mar­
Hubart cook left Monday on a
Bridfe
McKerchcr of Milan war*. Bunday Kalamazoo and Mrs. Ella M Greusel guerite Waler*, daughter of Mr. and Rev L M Rigelman.
business trip to Toronto. Canada.
The August dinner al the Has­
Ml**
Betty
Blough
of
Hastings
at
­
A. E- Johnson Is on a three weeks* guests of Mr. and Mrs. Richard of Milwaukee, Wl*. were in Uu* Mr*. Ray Waters was united hr mar­ tended the bride and the best man tings country club last Thursday
city on Saturday callbig on relative* riage lo Thomas Taffee. son of Mr.
business trip in the eastern states. Jacoba.
and Mrs. Loo Taffee. The nuptial was Richard Palmer of Detroit, evening again proved that the mem-1
Rev. and Mrs. Btensel of Kalama­ and friends.
Roy Puller, Jr., of Lnwell has been
brother of the bride. The bride wore
Judge and Mn. Donald Van Ziia mass was read by Hte Rev. Fr. John a traveling dres* of green silk crepe benhip of the club appreciates the!
visiting Hastings relatives the past zoo visited Mrs. Nellie Hopkins and
social program planned tor this year !
Mr. and Mra. Clyde Kuempel on came Saturday from Detroit to visit V. Dillon.
The bride wore a floor length with silver trimming, small black
Mr*.
V*n
Zile
’
a
mother.
Mr*.
John
Mrs. Hugh Case and Mlu Norma Sunday.
hat and black accessories. Her as 110 member* and their guest*
gown
of
white
silk
lace
over
satin
Case a/ Assyria visited Mrs. Clarence
L. D Pierce. Don Pierce and MUs F. Goodyear, the Judge reluming
shoulder corsage was ot white glad- wcre present to enjoy the dinner.,
made
on
princess
lines
and
small
Grohe Thursday.
Marte Foote attended thc Motor­ home on Bunday.
close-fitting white hat. Her bouquet oli and baby's breath. Mlu Blough the entertainment provided by Mra.
Mra. M. O. Hill and Mrs. T- N. cycle HUI Climb at Muskegon on
MIm Anne Burton, who nas been
was of bride's roses. Mr. and Mrs. also wore green crepe with green John A- Boyd iVlnnle Reami of At- f
Knopf spent-from Saturday to Tues­ Bunday.
attending Northwestern"| at Evans­
Don Taffee were thc attendants. accessories and her corsage was of lanta and the bridge game that fol-1
day at South Haven.
ton.
HI.,
during
the
summer,
spent
salmon pink gladioli and baby's lowed.
Mrs. Frank L. Fkx&gt;te and children
Dick and Patty Johnson of Baltic returned Wednesday from Kalama­ lite week end hete with Mr*. G. A. Mrs. Taffee wearing a floor length breath.
•
gown of pale pink organdy, a pink
The clubhouse was attractively j
Creek are visiting their grandmothBurges*
and
other
friends.
Following the ceremony a wedding decorated with summer flowers, in-1
zoo. where they visited for a week
hat and a corsage of pink roaes.
Ml**
Mary
Oowdy
of
Grand
Rap
­
dinner was served at the home of eluding zinnia*, phlox, gladioli and |
with Mrs. Foote's mother.
Following
the
ceremony
a
wedding
Wllllam Richardson of Grand
ids. Catherine Wingrove of Detroit
the bride's parents. Large bouquet* wild baby's breath.
Betty
Kidder
of
Hastings
has
been
breakfast
was
served
at
the
home
of
Rapids is spending the week with
and Miss Ruth Farr were guests
Mrs. Boyd, who is well known toj
spending several days with her sis­ Sunday of Mr. and Mr*. Stuart Cle­ the bride's parent* on south Han­ of old-fashioned garden flowers
his brother. Bobble Richardson.
over street. 50 guests being present. decorated the house and a wedding Hastings people, gave a* the first
Mrs. Dale Bassett of Grand Rap­ ter. Juanita, a nurse al Crispe hos­ ment at their Gun lake cottage.
cake centered the dining lable.
ids te visiting her parents. Mr. and pital.—Plainwell Enterprise.
part of the program the one act
Mrs. Archie McDonald and two Mr. and Mrs. Taflee left Immediate­
Mr
and
Mra.
Van
Sickle
are
on
a
Glenn Monica. Lewis Thiede, Clif­ children. Frederick and Anne, have ly afterwards for a week's trip to two weeks' trip in northern Michi­ play. "The Portrait." which deals
Mrs. Ed. Monica, for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Groos and ford Anderson ajid Ralph Jones returned from Port Huron, where Sauli Bte. Marie and Canada, the gan and will be al home after Sept with the character* of thc eigh­
son. Dick, are spending the week al of Chicago were guests ot Mr. and they spent nine weeks at Mrs. Mc­ | bride wearing a dark blue suit with 7 at Middleville where Mr. van teenth century, and concluded with
। blue accessories. They will be al
the Tyden farm al Greene, Iowa.
Mrs. Ed Monica last week.
Donald* parents' summer home.
Sickle is a teacher in thc Thomap- a group of her own original sketches'
As usual. Mrs. Boyd gave a finished
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Manning of j home on their return in Charlotte, plc-Kellogg high school.
return next Monday from Houghton, nurd of Kalamazoo were guests of Baltic Creek wcre in the city on where Mr. Taffee is employed as
performance of her play, giving a
where they have been visiting rcin- Mr. and Mrs. Vqrnor Blough and Thursday calling on friends. They 1 pharmacist at the Behrens and LARGE FAMILY IS
sympathetic interpretation in a »lmRowe
drug
store.
|
pie but effective manner. The orlgMrs. Etta Blough* last week.
arc leaving soon for California
WIDELY SCATTERED.
i
Both
Mr.
and
Mra.
Taffee
ore
Mr. and Mrs. Peter ilybcl of Kal­
Mr. and Mrs. Russ Shumway of where they expect to iptfnd the whi­
George Geiger, son of a Woodland i Inal sketches, which Mrs. Boyd gave,
graduates
of
the
Hastings
High
amazoo were Saturday and Bunday Wyoming Park and Mr. and Mrs ter months.
she has used in the southern state*,
pioneer,
and
brother
of
August
Gei
­
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bert De- George Konkle wcre Sunday guests
Richard Fairchild, who Is em­ school. Mrs, Taffee was employed ger a well known farmer who died where she enjoys a fine reputation
I in the office of tiie Hastings ManuVries,__________________ _ of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Weaver.
ployed as a public accountant by
recently, was in Hasting* visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Rittman and White. Bower and provost at De­ j factoring company for three years. relatives and friends the past week. pleasure for Hastings people to hear
son of Milwaukee. Wte., and Mrs. troit. is spending his two weeks' va­ Mr. Taffee is also a graduate of Older resident* here will remember Mra. Boyd and she Ls never disap- !
Anna Rittman of Quimby visited cation with bis parents, Mr. and | Perris Institute, completing his his sister. Lydia, who clerked for pointing.
' course tn June.
Mrs. Clarence Grohe Thursday.
Mrs. Fred pairchild.
Bridge was played at ten tables j
many years tor L. E. Stauffer and
Mr. and Mrs. Mcrl Clark and son
Mrs. Florence Edc and Mrs Nellie 1 Out of town guest* at the wedding Bertha who clerked for O. D. following the program, high scores
NOONDAY LUNCHES
Robert and Misses Esther and Lu­ Smallwood returned to Detroit included Mr. and Mrs. Walter Taf-] Spaulding, pioneer merchants of being turned In by Mra. M. J. Cross,
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
cille Monica attended Die Ionia fair Tuesday after spending the week fee. Mrs. Lillian Osborne. Mias Cor- : Hastings. Both of these sisters live Mrs. A. H. Carveth. Orville Sayles
nella
Osborne.
Mr.
and
Mra.
Joe
Le-I
Saturday afternoon and evening.
end with Mr. and Mrs. Louis
in Denver. Colorado. Another steter. and Charles w. Clarke.
DINNERS
Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Fuller and Karmcs. Mrs. Marie May of JJayton Blond and Bernard and Angela of i Caroline. Ilves In Texas, and Nellie,
Among those who entertained out
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Erway spent was a Bunday guest of the Karmes. Battle Creek; Mr. and Mra. Ben who taught many years in Wood­
of town guests wcre Mr. and Mra.
Taffee and daughter. Marian, of I
Saturday and Sunday in Detroit
Mra.
Kenneth
Bhrccve
and
Miss
land. is a teacher in the Laramie. Frank Carrothers whose guests were
SUNDAY DINNERS
going into Canada for a sight-seeing Florence Smith of Michigan City are Kalamazoo; Miss Elizabeth Brod-1 Wyoming, high school. Another sis­ Mr. and Mra. Bruce Casper of Walla
trip.
guests thte week of Mr. and Mrs. shaw of Detroit and Mra. Leslie I ter. Rosalie. Ilves in Salt Lake City. Walia. Wash., and Mr. and Mrs. C.
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
The Rev. and Mrs. W- Maylan George Green at the Parker House. Wright and son, Robert, of Jackson. I Utah. HJs brother Frank Ilves in
6 to 7:30 P. M.
Jones and family spent Saturday at {Mr. Bhrccve and Arthur B. Stone
Colorado Springs. Colorado, while Colgrove. Rev. and Mrs. W. Keith
Greenfield Village at Dearborn and will come Bunday to drive them MARRIED IN GRAND RAPIDS. Albert Who has been in the U. 8. Chidester of Winter Park. Fla.; Mr
. Announcement has been made of
wcre guests of friends in Flint over home.
Navy over 40 years, is chief Surgeon and Mrs. w. R. Cook. Mrs. Phyllis
Sunday.
Rev. and Mrs. L. L. Dewey of ' the marriage of Alvin Huver. son of In a military hospital on the Pa­ Reynolds of Ann Arbor; Mr. and
__________________________________ . Grand Rapids spent the first ot thc । Mr. and Mrs. peter Huver. to Mi** cific coast.
Mra. A. H. Carveth. Mrs. M. S
। , week with Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Baird. , Virginia Crakes of Grand Rapids,
Hodgson, of Charleston. West Va.;
Rev. Dewey, who is district superin­ which occurred August 12 at St. GETS COMMISSION AS
Dr. and Mra. R. o. Finnic. Mr. and
tendent, attended the quarterly con­ Andrews Cathedral in Grand RapFIRST LIEUTENANT. Mrs. R. E. Finnic of Louisville. Dr.
ference al the Methodist church | ids. They were attended by Mrs.
Hastings friends will be Interest­ and Mra. C. W. Brainard of Battle
I James Hammond and Lloyd Huver.
i Monday night.
ed lo know that Francis Townsend Creek and Mr. and Mrs. A. A. An­
| Mrs. Marlon Whitman returned to | brother of Hie groom. Thc bride is of Buffalo, son of Mr. and Mra. J.
derson of Grand Rapids; Dr. and
I her home in Elyria, Ohio, Friday !n beauty parlor operator and will M. Townsend, of this city, has re­ Mrs. C. P- Lathrop. Mrs. Marlon
continue
her
work
for
a
Ume.
The
after Attending several days with
ceived his commission as a First Whitman of Elyria. Ohio; Dr. and
friends here. Mr. Whitman, with groom U employed by the Hastings Lieutenant in the Reserve Officers Mrs. D. D. Walton. Mra. George
four other managers of Penney ; Table company.
Corps and is now at camp Dlx. N. Potter of Lansing; Mr. and Mrs. K.
----------------- «♦»------stores hi Ohio, spent thc week fish­
J., where he is stationed with the p. LAberteaux, Mrs. M. Labertcaux
BRIDGE—LUNCHEON.
ing in Canada. .
infantry. He began his military and Mbs Dorlene Labertcaux of
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Crookston and I Mrs. R. G. Finnic entertained | training in the R. O- T. C. al Ann Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Mr. and Mrs. William Schenkei and I eight guests at a one o'clock lunch­ 1 Arbor when a student at the Uni­ Phillips, Miss Margaret Kirkland of
Billy Bob were Sunday guests of ; con Friday. Bridge honors were won versity and has continued with Hannibal. Mo., and Mr. and Mrs.
I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bcssmcr of by Mrs. Herman Arold. Mra. Orville splendid success, congratulations.
D. 8. Goodyear. Miss Maude Hollo­
Owosso. Mrs. Schenkei and chil­ i Sayles and Mrs. James Radford,
way of Adrian.
I dren arc spendbig the week with her ' Mrs. R. E. Finnic of Louisville was
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT.
The committee in charge of the
an out of town guest.
i mother In Vermontville.
Mr. and Mrs. J. p. Evans of Grand dinner was composed ot Mr. and
Berdena Kirchner left Friday for
Rapids, annourice tiie engagement Mrs. Charles 8- Potts, Dr. and Mra.
ENTERTAINED AT DINNER.
her home in Lansing after spending
of
their
daughter.
Norma
L.
to
Mr. and Mrs. C W. Wesplntcr en­
C. P. LAthrop and Mr. and Mrs.
| a week with her cousin. Marjorie
Frank Earl Haas. Jr., of Hastings.
i Hill, and grandfather, Henry Hill. tertained twelve guests Monday eve­ I Mlu Evans is tiie secretary at the A. H. Carveth.
ning at a dinner at their home on
I jack Crump of Albion, was tbe guest
South Pork street. Mr. and Mrs i Banner office, coming to Hastings
HOPE DARING REUNION.
of Morris Hill for a -week, bls par- A. A.- Anderson of Grand Rapid* j the flrat of this year. Mr. Haas is the
Aug. 20th was thc date set for
ento. Mr. find Kirs. Joe crump. comson of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Hats of
were out of town guests.
। ing for him on Wednesday.
Muskegon Heights and is district this year's Hope Daring club's re­
4-H club agent for Barry. Allegan, union. Place. Kalamazoo. Hostess.
Ottawa and Kent counties. The Mrs. Chas. Weissert. formerly Elaine
wedding will take place next winter. Bauer of this city.
Both the day and the occasion
were Ideal. This year there was
BIRTHDAY LUNCHEON.
new—two
"mother
|
Mrs. John F. Goodyear was something
guests."
one was Mrs. Grace Bauer.
I pleasantly surprised on her birth­
day when a group of nine fi lends Mrs. Weisserl's mother, thc other
Mrs.
Ella
Bush
of
Lzis
Angeles.
Cal..
enjoyed a pot luck luncheon with
her at her home on South Washing­ mother of Mrs. Victor Hilbert.
Thc members of the club Joined
ton street, she was also prewnted
their hastcas at thc Y. W. C. A. |
with a shower of lovely ' handker­ building. They were thirteen strong. [
chiefs. Mrs. Donald Van Zlle was
present from Detroit and Mrs. R. F. with no thought of fatality or bad ;
luck. Besides the guest* and the;
T. Dodds of Kansas City.
hostess and Miss Anna Johnson
&lt;Hopc Daring* who was the Sunday
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER.
School
teacher ot these "girls' —
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Haywood en| tertained
with a
miscellaneous well, ages ago, the following wcre
shower Monday night in honor of present: Mra. D. L- Christian (Aurilc
their son and bride. Mr and Mrs. Lake). Mrs. J. V. Hilbert (Bess
Cleo Haywood (Marion Nelson) who Bush). Mr*. C. G. Hinckley (Hazel
were recently married. They were Mosier). Mrs C. Huff (Edith Lake).
presented with several beautiful Mra. R. Bldclman (Elizabeth Web­
gifts. The young people will reside er), Doctor Winifred McLrnvy. Mrs.
Matilda McLaughlin (Tillie Broin Hastings.
vont). Mrs. F. O. Richie (Penelope
Abbott) and Mrs. F. L- Olmstead
CLEVELAND RESIDENTS
ON VACATION HERE. (Florence Otte).
A fine lunch was served, on a
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burroughs
and daughter, Katherine, of Cleve- beautifully decorated table, at thc
J land are spending their vacation in Old colonial Tea Room. After the
meal all went to the charming home
|
this
vicinity
and
at
Thornapple
lake.
NOTICE—We are pleased to an­
They have been coming lo the lake of the Welsserta al 1810 Grand Ave .
nounce that JEANETTE RITZMAN
each summer since 1909 which is W where the guests lingered for n
Is now connected with us and die
positive proof that they enjoy their long time, taking pictures, reading
letters, "remlnlscening" as one of
Invite* all her friend* to visit her
stay here.
the girls called it. Miss Johnson had
here.
a recent letter from Vera Ward
DESSERT BRIDGE.
Eight guests were entertained Fairchild of Washington. D. C. This
Monday evening al a dc.wrt bridge told of thc recent graduation of
their only daughter, jean, from thc
by
Mrs.
Roy
Cordes.
Mrs.
Burr
Van
BACK-TO-SCHOOL
Houten and Mrs. T- D. French win­ American University. She has a
SPECIAL!
ning high scores.
Out of town position as assistant librarian in the
city
library. The oldest of the
guuts Included Mrs. Keith Chides­
ter ot Winter Park. Fla., and Mrs. three son* te a student (Is it a mid­
shipman?) at the United States Mili­
Phyllis Reynolds of Ann Arbor.
tary Academy at Annapolis. The
second enters George Washington
POT LUCK DINNER.
The younger Mis* appreci­
Nearly forty members of the Ban­ University this tall, and thc young­
ates the careful attention
ner class of the Methodist Sunday- est te still in high school. Mrs. Eben
Only Hollywood gives these values.
MACHINELESS $
.
she's accorded here, and
School and lheir guests enjoyed a Kelley, who was not present, was
her Mother likes II too!
pot luck dinner in the church par­ honored by being named "the first
PERMANENTS, New Ray. Never before! Perhaps Nev­
Try our Special this week!
lors on Sunday honoring the Rev. grandmother of the crowd.” Flor­
er Again! Hurry! Only a Limited Number ot This Price!
GENUINE OIL PUSH-UP
and Mrs. L. L Dewey and George ence Olmstead told with pride of
WAVES
Dewey of Grand Rapids. Thc oc­ her son Arthur who Is. as a mem­
Complete. No Extras! Regular $6.50 Value!
ber of an orchestra, making the:
casion was a very happy one.
CROQUIGNOLE, SPIRAL
voyage to England and return on .
OR COMBINATION
DESSERT—BRIDGE.
an ocean liner. Besides those already
NOTE THESE FEATURES
Every wave is given ac­
Mrs. A. C. Hyde entertained al a mentioned Mrs. Hinckley. Mra.
cording to your individual
dessert-bridge on Friday compli­ Wetesert. Mrs. Gelston (not present)
t. No M.cHa*.
hair texture and styled to
mentary to her . mother. Mrs. and Mra. Chester Stem (not pres­
your personality by our
2. No
No Electricity.
Buchanan, of Niles, two tables being ent) have sons in college.
JtiocWeir
experts. Also a wave' at
In play. Mrs. Buchanan received
Mra. Wetesert served afternoon
3.
No Strong Chemical*.
this price for adults—
first prize as well as a guest gift and tea. and. at a late hour the club
Only Pure Oil Used.
Mrs. Fred Jones had low score.
disbanded with promises of next
’
5.
Beautiful Result*.
year's meeting.
OBSERVES BIRTHDAY.
Miss Frances Button celebrated PARTIES HONOR
her birthday on Saturday by enter­
MRS. WHITMAN.
taining eight girls that afternoon
Mra. Marlon Whitman of Elyria.
Shampoo and Crtc
New Steam and HOT OIL Treatment____ $1.00
Rejuvenating
7RC
and on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Dell
Finger Wave— w”
Uiing the New Vapor Steam Anttoeplic Oil Treatment!
Facial—
• *•
Button entertained with a dinner Ohio, who was the house guest of
honoring Miss Frances, covers being Dr. and Mr*. C. P. Lathrop last

SPECIAL
For School
Check thc Prices on Thii Ust
Good Quality School Speciale .

BOYS* KNICKERS

BOYS’ LONGIES
$1.50, $1.95 VoIum

BOYS’ SHIRTS
79c, 89c Values

SPECIAL

*

SPECIALS
ON
POLO SHIRTS

SHIRTS end
SHORTS
(»&lt; Md.

Estimates FREE!

BESSM E R
Jewelers and Opticians

Lenses, Frames and Glasses Fitted

Open Every Evening

CHILDREN'S ’

FIRST TIME AT THIS PRICE!

We have been fortunafe in
acquiring theie fine supplies
for only one hundred permonenfs, to sell at this
low price I

" ’

4.

PERMANENTS

“r

*1.50

laid for eight.

NOT A SCHOOL—ALL EXPERT LICENSED OPERATORS

HOLLYWOOD BKAI TY SERVICE
MARGARET DAHLKE and JEANETTE RITZ MAN
114 WEST STATE ST.

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

PHONE 2525

Y. M. L. CLUB.
Mrs. James Panner, is entertaining
the members of the Y. M. L. Club
today with the usual cooperative
luncheon followed by a social time.

number of *ocla| affairs. On Sun­
day Mr. and Mr*. John true enter­
tained at dinner and Thursday Mrs.
Ray Branch was hostess to eight
guests at a bridge luncheon Ln
honor of Mrs. Whitman. Honors at
bridge were won by MIm Eleanor
Miller and Mrs. A- H. Carveth. Mrs.
M. 8. Hodgson ot Charleston. West
Va. was an out of town guest. On
Thursday aftemoqn former neigh­
bors of Mrs. Whitman'* were guest*

ALTAR SOCIETY.
St. Rose Altar Society held Its
regular meeting on Tuesday evening
at the school, with Mrs. B. A.
O’Donnell's group In charge. Dessert
was followed with cards.
at a tea given by Mr*. M. O. H1U.

75'

35'

PARKER HOUSE

Watch and Jewelry
Repairing

IOYF
OVERALLS

One Lot of Men’s Trousers 1
or *1.69 -es

One Lot of Men’s Trousers 1
er- $2.69
|
MEN’S
SHORT SOCKS

25‘ 35'
50'

WHITE
CAPS
ir ।

Men’* and Bey*'

SWEATERS
S1J4, *135 Valaea

*1.19

Every day new Fall merchandise is coming In—
New Hats from Stylepark. New Clothing from Cur-

' ।
'

Edgertown and Nunn Bush . . . come in and see
the new colors and styles for Foil wear.

T. S. BAIRD
Clothing and Shoes for Men and Boys

Hasting*

phMt 2395

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want

The Big Little Store
Friday, Aug. 28

Saturday, Aug. 29

SCHOOL
SUPPLIES
TABLETS, wide or narrow

2 for Sc

PEN TABLETS
PENCILS

2 r*g. 5c far Sc
regular 5c pcncif* 4 for 10c

COFFEE, Vacation Land 2 lb*. 33c

Stokeley's Tomato Soup 4 cam 25c

SEMINOLE TISSUE

4 rolls 25c

ROYAL ARMS TISSUE 4 roll* 17c

Salmon, Libby'* tall cam 2 can* 45c

WATCH FOR OUR SCHOOL T&lt;
ADV NIXT WEEK I

hinma
Hastings

'

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, TWVRSDAY, AUGUST 27, W

&gt; PROTECT You Conataatly

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance &lt;Co .
(«l Kalsasa®® «ul. lull
A Hmm 0®*Mar Oriasl.ad

MAUS

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

OFFICE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

BRICK
At Old Haitingi Wool
Boot Plant Site.

In­

quire of Joe DeRuiter

at Pickle Station.

"AKRON" MODERN
■ECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Rads

HASTINGSMJ CHI0AB

GmtmWmW Tran Flttlaf

I Will pay It. HIGHEST MARKET
PRICE far VEAL LAMBS HOGS and
Skip EVERY TUESDAY

PEACHES

WRECKING
FOR PARTS

iLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Mm tm
HasUnn

WB BUT AND IBEX. RBAL ESTATE
ON COMMISSION
ALL KINDS OP INSURANCE
BONDS
NOTART PUBLICS
106 Boat* Ckarcb
Pb«na tits
.
tf

EMERSON ROYER

ROCHESTERS
GOLD DROPS
KALAMAZOOS

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

SOUTH HAVENS
ELBERTAS
PROLIFICS

$30,000 To Loan On Autos

REFINANCING PAYMENTS REDUCED

FIDELITY COHPOIIATION u'.'Z.,,

Paid for Dead Stock

JERRY ANDRUS

MOST FARMERS

NnUocal Bulk Bld* — Phona 2619

PREFER PAPEC
CUTTERS

y.■

DR. R. A. DENISON

1

HOW ABOUT
Your Ensilage
Cutter Need:?

that ii guaranteed to cut more

at FELOPAUSCH’S

Mean VISION TOMORROW—

MARKET • Phon. 2616

SEE

FaUoautch ■ 3921

PEACHES FOR CANNING

HIGHEST PRICES

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
W*ik OurantMd and
PrteM RoMOMbl®
Phone 2226
Harting!

FOOD CENTER 2609

CARDS of THANKS

JOE MIX

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

ANOTHER SPEECH

Peach Ridge Peaches

• IMS PLYMOUTH Coupe

• FORDSON TRACTOR
AUTO GLASS INSTALLED

WANTED

THE CHURCHES

SHERIFF

Farmer!, Attention!

DENTIST
*WU1 B® Haro u Uiual an Sater­
.
Any. rt tea Packet H®u«.
nuiaja S0c, PIMM 47.60. RnracUou S0&lt;. Flair! Basalt rd. 41.00

-HL.

John Van Der Kolk

Fhe Prescription Drug Store

■PBSHtar.SlK.-,,."

LIGHTNING HITS
BIG_TRANSFORMER

Mia PhyllU England left Sunday'
The Hasting! Banner
for Chicago after spending a two|
weeks' vacation with her mother.!
Mn. Glenn England, and sisters.
• I HaaUnco. Mlcklxia.
All Electrical Eixlureg at Pollyanna and Marjory.
OMR ORNT A WORD. NO ADVERPILORIM HOLDTBSB TABBRNACLR. I
Roy Bush Home Put Out
Ed Farr of Hickory Comers and •
COOK BROS. Rdliar®.
daughter. Helen Parr, of Detroit'
of uonmillion
Oommisiiou
W
I were Sunday afternoon caller* at
(Continued from page 1, Sec. D
KIUUTT riRBT TEAR
i i-. e jo p. m pjab.} Lightning played havoc with the I tf”1 home of Mr. and Mrs. E. J.
‘ MUMe
'etectric fixture* at the home of Roy .Sheldon.
‘ you think? We believe it tends to
Bush on E- Mill st. During the
The Fellowship Class of the
create an impresaion that political
severe storm Thursday night the : Methodist Sunday school enjoyed a
\nd'xmF
lightning came down' the radiogenic al cryMai lake and a drive
oXhetalnl pSi
rather ofth ar. overwhelming
paaaion
aerial wire,I part
down......
the, through the oil field* north of ST
te the
a. rial going
wire, part
■ k&gt;r rai.e—i»;e f..n t«.i
rituacw 8EBvices
1 u«htn,n« arrerftcr and part into the Crystal Sunday.
E. LaFever of jpuJ' hadn’l ^n entirely 'ignored. IN BARRY COUNTY. MIX MONTHS. »0e.
|
v;-.'
Mr. and Mrs.
at bowers MILL*. ccl!*r grounding on the water pipe,
•&gt;!
D
|
Hl* remarks Saturday were quite !'•• T.'t.'"..T.""** *
1 f’*rd *D®wUne'"
■t ip n a. M : prracb | Thl* bolt put both the radio and Greenville spent Hundav evenlns
with Mr. and Mrs Leon Tyler
I largely confined te general stateg.
cordi&gt;ii&gt;
telephone out of order.
1 FOR BAt.K- HH&lt; . Ur».' _ I Ir® &lt;•«.! Ui_ 1
Rev. Don Carrick, who lias been
»»-*‘H'’B «P Breat big ter- 0UTillt&gt;l! BARRY county. ONE YEAH
________
' I Th!»
----Tiie fnllAwinv
following niffh*
night ththe large
IN advance
------------------- si.so
PHIS FOR HALF
EMMAWUEL CHURCH (HnUcopa)).
I »r. Al~&gt; O 1 &lt;• .I'kK
transformer in front of the house paiter of the U. B- church here for I rlfying targets, which he proceeded
Shroi
’
,
| II.., W..UI.I tlkr to r.r
B D. K- i.,r.
was struck and burned out. render- the past two years, has be&lt;m elected to knock down with explosive vocal • fokekin HUBucRipnoNB. ONE yeah
ram. Ilrrl^rt WllFua. Ni&gt;4&gt;&gt;ll® t**®®' '
te the office of the Presiding Elder : effort*.
Dt advance-------------------------- si.oo
1 57 -rii
I
ln
*
useless
the
remaining
fixtures
In
.
..
.
.. I.
I
.
'
■
16:3(1
for
the coming
year. The Carrlcks
Whether Mr. Welsh's flop
Is ..In.
going!
—.
pon HALFTh.
K.r.
Keith
&lt;
the
Bu.il
&gt;
home.
A
bolted
cast-iron
U
ANTEDHrb.o.1
Xlrl
to
«
430.
.1
will reside in Sunfield. Rev. E. B 10 d0 hlni “'V ‘ Bood. of course I
yw- Tiie Coy Brumm family
. arid to.ar.l Ibquirr 12?
till...,- 3
n»««
u,e house vacated by
into the air and came down in three Griffin of Hasting* pill occupy the remain* te be seen. His chief oppan-1
FOR SALE H. o-..| Oak f:art. a.- Al.it
pulpit
for
the
next
year.
«•&gt;«
is
former
Mayor
Murphy,
of]
u
‘
c
R«*ds
FOB HALE
I pieces.
w. Mtk» Al- '
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH. , Mr. Bush says the general opinion
Bob Bailey, son of Mrs. Alice Detroit, and 8M.000-a-year Cover-] Charles Belts. Doris Bette and
i Irrdme. I'honr 703—F(5
Hoche For RENT—tnqeiir® ut Nelun i
'is that these electrical attachments Bailey who was kicked by a horse nor of tiie Philippines. Mr. Welsh Ann Mayo were in Grand Rapids
Hurrourh.
y । attracted the lightning which might over a week ago te slowly improving evidently forgets that things are Monday.
; FOR MAI.K— Frw bn.hrl. .wl rnrn. ISr ,
rhk 1 otherwise have struck thc house or Hla friends are all hoping for a now quite generally being run from) Mrs. W. L. Oib»on spent a few
&lt;lu®rn. »ftrr four «&gt; rlnck. Jack &gt;u&gt;
iXFHT—FrISsr. brown too*® roalalnlne
speedy recovery.
। Washington. Michigan democrats । day* the first of the week with reli(®r. r|»p croul.d rood
a 27
1 .mall tmr.® mirror and .r»*ral prHrd
-----perhaps are not regat&amp;d as being I atlve* at Prairieville.
1 kmlat plrtur®. Tbink on M IT o‘Uth. FOR HALE—* txrro walnut »»nror din
mentally competent to' make their
The last general Ladies' Aid
Dorio. William.. Dowlinr. R-ut® 1
Inc room .nit®. 619 Fl. Bond Hl
‘i’ JUMPS THRU WINDOW—
, own selection for governor of this' meeting of the Methodist church
V, F. W. Netcn
| FOfc SALE — 33 »wra and Umb.; alto * FUR HALF.—Mad-nna l.lr balbo. "•&lt;&gt; rl.
state. It is claimed that Mr. Mur-1 was held Wednesday afternoon at
MAKES HIS GET-AWAY
1 litirk
(“bran. Namorl HrffirtKiwrr.
doirn. Al... cl*d&lt;t&gt;lu&gt; *bl&lt;wm&gt;. Mr.
phy
is
the
favorite,
preferred,
hand
hand­
,
the
home of Mrs. H. D. Wotring. As!(■•» Fullrr I'bonr :ttO
• 37
W.... Hand
- -'7
rilrlrrd
Kelecte.l candidate ■(■tins
picked. carpfllllv
carefully selected
sisling were UecJ.ma.
Mesdames rvxra
Cora Po.lr.
Parks,
IFolt HALE—5 .but. ».-l«bl about »&lt;&gt; WANTFID-—-Information from a dialMrr
। wA'irr'un'raJ.!!*1!
Flees From Williams
Five more joined our ranks Thurs­ of the present national admlnlstra- May Dean. Minnie cortrlghl. Maude
| row. PbM&gt;» 734—Tl 1 Laiir.n.r II-*
day night, making the total well tlon for governor of Michigan and Wotring and Gertrude Martens.
Home Near Gull Lake
| &lt;11®
* 27
over
the
fifty
mark.
Our
goal
is
sevBAPTIST CHURCH.
has the "O K." of Jim Farley. Post­
George Wotring was in Detroit on
Early Monday
H&lt;R SAl.E I'r.lirra-.i t-r*»t- bound
enty-flve member* by Oct. 1. Wc ore master General and chairman of business last week.
B J, ADCOCK. MlnllUr
a .trad. ttirom® front II.
Writ®
ton.. • wrok. aid. IS rwrb Call (&gt;&lt;-..«•■C».k” roro Hanner
" 37
About 1:30 Monday momlng. Mr*. expecting five more to join next thc Democratic National committee.
Mrs. Llbble Marshal! lias returned
R. B. Williams, who with her hus­ Thursday night.
FOR HALE—Wall Irt.l &lt;»«, l.tt 1.‘ ft tt A STEIF— &lt; ..nitwtri.t maul f.-r hou.® 1
' His O- K. means something. Nor lo her home after spending the past
hold
«rr»lr«
tn
c&lt;~&gt;d
born®
In
Haiti®1 H W G..rb, Frr-l-rt
" 37
band lives on a place just west of
should Mr Welsh be oblivious of two years in Battle Creek.
Inc.. Not eenSnioc. (ii*&gt;.-‘rrf.rror®., i
| U ANTED—C*.h l.urrr f-r D®lr., Ilrhl
| the Butterfield farm on the shore
Two of our members had unfor­ recent press reports that in and
Rev. and Mrs Earl Culp and lion
inc plant in coo«l rondition. or would
Will. Mr. It. A. Sull.tan. Balti® 1
of Gull lake. In Barry township, tel- tunate experiences recently. Com- | around Detroit there are about two visited the latter's parents, Mr. and
trad® tor cmni loti nr ®w*«. S, W.
&lt; rrrk
. -j?
BrnW.lUh.d a naw barn all dozen Murphys w
„„ ...
Nmith. Woodland. Phon® 0®—F3 N 37
eplioned the sherifl that a burglar
who
are candidates Mra. Chancy Hicks. They have gone
tt®ns had broken into their home but had ramptelrt ne.pt u» ™°’
ont, ,,
,rt wu«r. the to their new appointment at Shulls­
came
m. and bla.
blew It
it d««n.
down. ComCom­ ; ,rU„ „„
qU|&lt;« aU. burg.
,lur; fled. It appears that Mrs Williams wind „
r .i was aroused when she heard a noise rade vern Yarger lost his two barns flcult for one lone Scotchman.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis puml&amp;s of
__
(•bib upstair*. She switched on a light by fire when they 'were struck by I Our politics
are surely getting~into Grand Rapids stopped at the home
a u^7ju^M Ui^‘dida'about"uie of his parents Saturday to gel their
i and the marauder made a hasty lightning.
mr® trip down the stairs, followed won
1 time we had that depression of son Tommy who visited here while
| after by Mr. Williams. The burgIt won't be long before fair time,1 1892-96. Dut why worry? Scientists they were In Detroit.
first united brethren CHURCH.' lar.Jumped through the window he and we hope te see all our friends say that in I0Q years from now
E. o. Meba.rrT rwtor
| had raLwld and fled. He got noth- and comraaes there. We will have a we
^liX BE TRIED FRIDAY.
we'll have a .uuerwr
superior race
race on
on urn
this
Rt.ldanc
“
lnl “nt! 2^1 no clu?
UOOd Sland' "al,y 10 BreH ""J™* old earth. To th* present day reslClayton Basler. 2d. of Ulis city,
I.
r.’,.,,drrn:
°n thy same night at Gilmore s
•* •* •*
I। rum
dent it
it wm.
seems ..
as tiJai.h
though it
it win
will h.v®
have whose wife recently died leaving
0
"tMtol
*«e- tJull-----------lake, a ~
man ,evidently
&gt;■«.&gt; I। colt
------------------------------ - । Our next meeting will be Thurs- t0 be a blankety-blank superior one him with a small child, was arrested
:3o intending te commit burglary, was day. Sept. 3. We expect as many as if h pays oil the debts we are run- on Tuesday on a misdemeanor
i found by the watchman on the possibly can te turn out. as all our ni
nB u
.&gt; for 'em.
.....
up
«...
charge—that of leaving the child
r
I
------ »Th&lt;
—
*. *B
—
^hman
--------------fired^al. meetings now
,.wware important^and
.... wc
_»
pUm
— -------come -----again. George! Maybe i without proper food or care. He was
FIBST FBESBTTCBIAN CHURCH.
him twice but failed to make a hit. need every member. Last Thursday four years from now there'll be-' brought before Justice Matthews on
Bar John Kite
so the
the fellow
fellnw got
or.t away.
nwov-----------------(( aboul thirty were
......A present, this time wme
. .........other
.
_ party
___... that may
__ _ look
,_ Url^av
o.u(and entered a
&lt;* plea ot
nf not
not
so
Whether It
Friday
225 W Center 81
u ¥ was the same man who was at the let's make it nfty. If enough' turn cven more promising.
. tmiltv
guilty. Tiie
The bond was fixed at
nt S100.
8100.
He was unable to furnish the bond
Hirh Williams house a short lime before out we might persuade the ladles of
- -&gt;&gt; is not known.
s the Auxiliary to give us another of
NASHVILLE.
I and his trial will take place in the
Mrs. There&amp;sa Dause has returned Justice court today. August 27.
their good suppers.
i home after spending two weeks I
TRAINING GROUP
) helping care for Mrs. Mary Ann |
THE TRUTH.
AT HEALTH UNIT
Deller.
Politicians, experienced and sue-. Mr. and Mrs. Speer of Ypsilanti
method'ist^epibcopal-cnxmcn. ' Foundation
Trains People ecssfu). have told me repeatedly to
, spent the week end with Mr and |
avoid
U&gt; llw Town- .i Mrs. Orville Flook. Mrs. Emma
a Kali- ,I
!
for Positions in Health
!S*; '
r«unltd hoow wUh Uiem aR.-r
ers believe, if they wished,
that I spending thc post two months with I
Work
“
'! The Kellogg Foundation last win­ was in favor of that plan, and so । relatives.
ter Inaugurated a training course obtain their votes.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dalhauser |
If the garnering of votes and re-1 and family spent the week end at ।
!«:]»« A. M., In public health work for people
11:110 A. M.; who are Interested in becoming election were the sole purpose, and Bills lake.
lOKXi a M I employees of the Foundation. On the end could be held to justify the ;
Di 8 M Fowler of Battle Creek '
I Monday mornini a group of 20 of means, such advice would be good called ut Hie Gall Lykins home Sun- j
riBST METHODIST EPI8COPAX.
If a candidate is to be frank and
j these people was) in Hastings in­
I day.
CHURCH.
specting the local Barry County fair he should neither seek votes nor 1। Mr. and Mrs. Highland and son ot
Health Unit and receiving instruc- by silence deceive voters ns to his ‘ Harbor Brach spent a few days with 1
tlon in the practical side of the position. I realize that 1 have in­ the latter's mother. Mrs Fred Elder. ।
curred the opposition of many sin­
• work.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Hickman and I
Besides a rourid table discussion cere, honest, respectable voters be­ two granddaughters have moved in
al the office a practical demonstra- cause I would not |&gt;romi&amp;e to vote with Clark Tttinarsh. Dr. Pultz and'
s„;, । Hon in dentLstry was given at Dr. G. for a |200 per month pension.
family will move into tiie I louse vaBeing past sixty myself, iiavtng rated by the Hickman's and Harry
L. Lxxkwood's office and Dr. Frank
FOR DEMOCRATIC
. j,,,,™.,
;Carrolhers presented the educa- mu&gt;y (rlmd. who l»w
Johnsons into tiie former Kent Nel- , CANDIDATE
'
FOR SALE OR TRADE
M(n hnnu*
nOHW, Th: Will U.rlpnc
M.rten, have
havi.
; tlonal side of the dental program. pwased that age. being M mpaUieue । inn
NOMINATION
...a
.b.
I
bou(||it
Ui&gt;
i
. With tha exception of two mem- and desirous of retaining tiie good-;
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
j bers of the group. Lyman Chamber­ will and support of the people of । The firemen and their families
lain, sanitary engineer al Eaton this district, were it possible te ad- ' will liave a chicken supper on Wed- I PRIMARY, SEPTEMBER 15TII
Baltimore Chare k.
। county and John Scarlet, who holds vocale the Townsend plan. I would nesday evening. Sppt 2d° “'
... , ...
Mr.
Pr»T»r the same position In Allegan and
’diice tn Hattinzt.
Mr ana
and Mrs.
Mrs Arue
Arlie Reed
Reed are
are movmov- || Your Support Will Be Greatly
BUI. in common .(th, 1 bellcw. (
w su„(„ldi wtare he wUl u„„|
'V.'ljwho
have been employed by the
\ SHELDON A SHELDON
Appreciated
ninety nrr
per cent of the neonle
people of thLs
this ।
&gt; .hi i Foundation for some time, the mem- nlni-tv
Hasting*
Real Estate
Hastings
±21
J
«:0Obers of...
......
.
.
district.
I
know
that
a
pension
of
thc group will nil be placed
In some unit Ijy the first of Sep tem­ 8200 per month is neither feasible
nor just and that such a plan can I
not at the present time be enacted |
Into law.
WOODLAND.
SOUTH HAVEN PEACHES
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Giddings and
When so many, many honest,
OBITUARY.
daughter. Ruth, visited Mr. and Mrs. hard-working men and women reTREE RIPENED — NOW READY!
Lemuel Brown, son of Mr. and Olin Adams of Dearborn Friday and
HIGHLAND PEACH FARM
Mrs Chas. S. Brown, both deceased, Saturday.
back-breaking, mind-wrecking toll,
Cloverdale. Mich. Dan Payne. Mgr.
was born Jan 4. 1881. and died. Aug
Mrs Smith Holmes left Sunday lo why. except to gain a few votes..
21. 1936 age 55 year.i. 7 months and spend the winter months with her should I promise an impossibility?
1
17 days He was bom and resided in daughter and husband. Mr. and
The candidate who promises you i
Hastings until a few years ago when Mrs. Wm. Hansen (Ruth Holmes&gt; something which you know he can ;
We are now picking Rochester and
he moved to Milwaukee. Wls. Then of Los Angeles, Cal.
/
not deliver is not serving your in­
South Havens. Exceptionally fine
recently returned to Hastings, where
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Parker of terest*; he Is seeking hl* own self­
quality in bushels or truck load lots.
he
In hLs
earlier .
resi- Lansing were
... passed away.............
— ........
were gucau
guests oi
of ncr
ner parents.
parents, advancement and put* that above j
AUTO TAG INN
South on M-37
Maurice Ingram
dence here he was a member of the. Rev. and Mra. T- W. Thompson, over truth.
Station. Sparta. Michigan.
Uothrollct church.
rhllrrh
.
___ l.___■
Methodist
There are more unemployed, by a 1
Offered by the PEACH RIDGE
He leaves to mourn hi
Mr. and Mrs ward Plants of1 million people, than when the New I
two .children In California. ------------- .*,«««»
Hartford spent several w-,.,
days this I Deal took over. Nineteen million I
and Mabie Brown, three grandchll- wk wlth her parents. Mr. and Mrs. people arc now on relief. The cost
drejt. one son. Roger Brown, of Has- Mlj*n Trumbo. who accompanied of living is high and it is going 1
tings, one sister. Mrs. Philip S. Hol- them on a trip to Chicago on Frl- higher. I can not. in order to ob­
comb. and one brother. Chas. H I qay. They expect to return Sunday. tain votes, promise to vote for an
Brown, both of Chicago. Funeral
Mrs. Lawrence Hilbert and daugh­ additional federal transaction lax
services were held at the Walldorf! ters. Misses LouLsc. Lorena and El­ of two per cent, which, as Dr.
BY THE OLD RELIABLE FINANCE COMPANY . . . NOW YOU
Privet® Vto'.ln 1 Export Plana
j
funeral home Monday afternoon len. are staying al their Saddlebag Townsend said, will fall principally
Inotmctlon &lt; 1 Tunlnc. Work
j
CAN BORROW UP TO t3M ON YOUR CAR AND PAYMENTS
In Year Homa 1
Guaranteed
Aug 24. Burial in Riverside ceme­ lake
---------------cottage
—
for _
a —
few weeks.
--------- ----On- upon the laborer and the farmer
tery. Rev. c M. Conklin officiating. Sunday they entertained Mr. and I and which mean*, as he said, a pyr.tnn or thanks
WILL BE ARRANGED TO SUIT YOUR CONVENIENCE.
Mrs. E. O. shomo. Mrs. Rena Culler i amlded sale* tax which will add
•
obituarV.
Mrs. Erlo Puller, aged 44, ot Has­ and Don Shomo.--------------------------------- from ten to thirty per cent, to every
On Sunday evening al 8:00 at the article you use. eat. or wear, when
tings passed away at the home of
I Methodist church a program will be i know that the result will be dlsher mother. Mrs. Julia E. Kuhl. 439
glven. The Standard Bearers will appointing,
Stelpe st.. 8 W. Grand Rapids. Aug give a pageant "O Zion Haste." i i believe in adequate relief, in
19. 1936.
She Is survived by her husband. Mrs. Arthur Giddings, a piano solo, adequate security for the unfortuand carl Helse a violin solo.
| nate os well as for the aged, adRoom 10—2nd Floor
Phone 2307
Your Dead Animals Are Worth
Erlo Puller, two daughters. Mrs.
.
Hie annual election of officers of ministered by local authorities, honThe
DOLLARS. To assure yourself of
"In some strange place they used . Harry Crandells of south
South Bend.
Bend, the Ladies' Aid and Missionary So­
HASTINGS NATIONAL BANK BUILDING
Lrd!“* .*Jtf
estly and fairly, free from waste,
to run races each with a lighted Ind.. Mrs. Yvonne Nance and a son,' rtetw
getting the BEST PRICES, call
lw&gt; held
heM with a not
luck , extravagance, and political manipclety will be
ppt luck
___
__
■
l . .
...
___
MR. FLOYD DENNY.
' candle, and the art was to keep the Hobart ot Hastings, by her mother, supper at the v.
home of Mrs. Harold ulatlon. and for that I will work.
candle burning. Well. now. I though: . Mrs. Julia E Kuhl, three brothers.
Warner in Dike Odessa Tuesday
Chicanery. fnlsWadlng statements,
Phone Hasting! 2539—We pa/ the that was like life, a man's good can- Warren. Fem and Russell of Grand ,
I evening.
।_______________
promises impossible ot performance
science is the flame he gets te Rapids and one sister. Mr*. Prank
phone charges!
tf. carry, and if he comes to thc win- I W Haneshutter of Lansing. The fu—lo these I will not resort.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
If you wish honest, conscientious,
nlng-pcBt with that still burning.' neral was held at Hastings Saturand faithful service, your support u
why. take it how you will, tiie man's । day. Aug. 22. 1936. from the First
solicited.
a hero."—R. L- Stevenson.
i Baptist church. Rev. B J. Adcock
Respectfully.
K E LV 1 NATO R
• • »----------------I officiating. Interment in Woodland
Clare E- Hoffman.
IP3B. hat
SALES AND SERVICE
HASTINGS MARKETS
. temetery. •
Republican Candidate for congress
Fourth District of Michigan.
HINDS CORNERS.
«
H. E. Smith Hdwc.
—Political Adv.
Mrs Sarah Newton of Hastings rM,r4
,„1Oir^ u, or«,nt
Phon® 24X8 — .Ilaalinga
called on Mr*. Ed. Newton Thura- »Hi»w t® sai4 eyyrt. ®i
ar»b«t«
u... ..*n
e'*r ®f HbaiIbx!. io ,*i&lt;l t
P1NE LAKE.
HF SERVICE ALL MAKES
day afternoon.
, ®n ®r iwforr ih» 2«th &lt;i», ®f d«
The Helping Hand Club will meet
Am in position to dem­
DAY OR NIGHT
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Robinson of a n joss, and ihn &gt;a&gt;a ri.im® «
Hull*
with Lura Klelndctnst on Wed..
Hastings spent Tuesday afternoon
u&lt;,ul4.N.‘h,
onstrate machine at
Sept
2.
The
program subject will
with Mr. and Mr*. C. N. Tobias.
।
be
-The
Black
Widow
Spider."
1
______
Ma»n Newton of Delton called
it.t^i. au..i as. a. I). 1»S«.
your farm.
The Bellingham family reunion
on Mr; and Mrs. Ed. Newton Friday I
S1,*fl cie—u Jnd«a ®f Proi
£
will be held al Milham park. Sun­
afternoon.
I
botice to ckbditobb.
Be sure lo see me
day. August 30.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Thompson 8(a«a ®f Miehiraa. Ua Probata c®.
Mr. and Mrs Sidney Sleeman.
and son of Chicago visited her unft*
about terms and prices
Tliclma and Philip were guests tn
cle. Mr. and Mra. C. N. Tobias., w,.n.r derea.-d
the Warner home on Sunday.
Thursday.
| Natk® la ktr*A&gt;, clv®a that f®ar i
before buying new or
Mrs. Grace Sebree of Kalamazoo
Thl* neighborhood lost a good
‘'kaH®L^l
was
a
week
end
guest
In
the
James
used Silo Filler, Hay
A Little FORESIGHT T0DAY May
friend and neighbor in the passing pr®a«at tktir claiaa anla.t aa!4 d.

WANTS

Our Service

.mat!
WANTED—T" b T \\or,, • —rantFatw
urar Xulinri

day evening. Funeral senlccs wcre
held Saturday at 2 P M.. at the
home of A. E. Phillips, with burial
in Cedar Creek cemetery.

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and

(Hl

L®,i»C maak. S3 60—I
HASTINGS Cracked Mra, S3.S0.

"It is doing some service to hu­
manity, to amuse innocently.**—H.
More.

&lt;„„d ,rt rrqutr.d
praaaat
dai»i i® .aid ro«rt. at (M probata
£ '^'7 ,V. "tV.b’JJ,
r&gt;V.ml
n m*. *.d Uut aaU ciaiaa ■

The Bellingham and Warner fam­
ilies with Grace Earle and Loyal
Mason of Kalamazoo enjoyed a pic­
nic supper at Milham park on Wed­
nesday evening.
Mr*. Perry Johnson of Elk Rapids
I* spending some time with her
daughter. Mrs. Clancy Farr.

Chopper or Feed Mill.
ORTON R. ENDSLEY

�I THURSDAY, AUGUST 27,1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER

Barry Bypaths! PLJLIiTirAi
I ICAL

kii
^tc
Q'C0NSERVATI0N
NLJ
I CO
!N QRANDmeet

I

COPIES OF REPORT
RECEIVED HERE

infecting
. stables and
Kalamazoo Schools
AreallDebums.
­
buildings where livestock and poul­
scribed by Herold Hunt,
try will be exhibited. Tills precau­
UNCI4 RILKY'g
tion
together
with
the
testing
of
all
Head of System
Patsy's pet chicken disappeared
GOOD GOVERNMENT depends
T
„ cattle and swine should be effective
iw,w
'Bless mother and daddy. And—
I one w-j
day ...u
and lhe us**
next morning ap- I
Copies of the Interesting report
: LeadlnS conservationists from all in preventing the spread of conta­
pcared outside our bedroom window , PLEASE—God. help my daddy to upon YOU!
of the condition and progress ot
North America and *ome gious diseases in livestock.
1812 I think it was, an
crowing loudly if not expertly. Bus- 8*1 appointed to some nice govem- - THINK about our current prob-'
the Kalamazoo sclwoli made by
I ter toys. -The reason be went away nicnt Job so mummy, and Buddy, lems. READ both *lde* of every I part* of the "old country" will come
Herold C. Hunt, superintendent,
to practice was *o the other chickens “nd Jimmy and I won't have to live question. Then draw your own con-. to Michigan tills month to report SEPTEMBER 5TH IS
have been received In lhe city. It
on
welfare
wages
any
longer."
।
couldn't
laugh
at
him."
nn
»
,1
'
M
"
nv
"
elusion*.
।
and
dlacuss
bU
lhe
new
pUna
_
new
Debunking War's Romance
in book form of 32 pages and con­
THE VERY LAST DAY 1*.
The frail figure shivered under Ito I To have an adequate foundation discoveries and new practices of the
tains by word and picture a com­ Hastings by soma magaata*
plete analysis of the school system.
You ought lo hear Jerry'* opinion scant covers. Her under-bouriohed for firm convictions—what are some past yeor jn the field of wildlife
If One Is Not Already Regis­ Tiie Kalamazoo budget runs in an
—Mrs. Bud Lighten, one ।of wornrn and politics. All because I Hille body lacked lhe vigor of of the things we need to know?
| management.
of the smartest women on this : became so interested In a revealing healthy childhood. She closed tired
excess of a mill loo dollars and it
No doubt you have recognized and &gt; The occasion. Ls the 30th anfiual
tered, Should See to It
is pleasing to Mr. Hunt's friends
or .ny
juried P?1!,11'*1 due»»lon wllh one or me eyes and tried to sleep.
, respect the non-partisan character convention of the International AsV.
...j other eoa.r, h» ----------Before Sept. 5
7. .
.
r । Kellogg nurses that I let lhe dinner
Maybe she could dream, a nice of Harper's Magazine. Suppose, sociation of Game. Fish and Con.
a symposium of suggestions fnr
for j bufn
Tiie Ixst opportunity to regLster enviable record as head of a large daughter married a very f*
dream about a happy, unworried then, we consider a few of the ques- .nervation commissioners and tiie
thc promotion of national san- ‘
school
system. Mr. Hunt this sum­ man. Luther Burbank, a g
before
the
September
15
primary
will
to Ito readers—in a 66th annual meeting of the Amerldaddy coming home from lhe biglion*
------- —put
—up
---------------------------' can Fisheries society which will be । be on Saturday. September 6. Any­ mer has attended the University of
ity the next time diplomats or
A good way lo cook.beans—navies. factory which hummed busily again thoroughly impartial way.
, held ...
'l mean r-nnk
until
rtnm*
thedone
favnrlto
in Grand Rapids from Aug. 31 one who falls to register before or Chicago, taking work to obtain his
cook
until
the favorite and paid him enough so they could1 Q—1: WHO hates Roosevelt?
politicians, profiteers or profes
­ I mean,
on that day. who is not already reg- doctor's degree.
A.— : "They Hate Roosevelt." by
sept. 4. inclusive,
way, then add two or three onions live comfortably and be independent
sional sword rattlers, or all of cup up and four or five ripe toma­ like other families. But she knew, in Marquis W. Childs (May 19M&gt; re-1 The question: “What should be Litercd, cannot vote at thc primary.
To open his report yMr. Hunt
If one is not regLstered he or she quotes the following from “Recent
these types combined, try to toes. salt tomatoes before adding. her wise little way, In spile of all veals some very important facta: done to advance conservation in
the things being said about em-l&lt;l&gt; that the "upper" classes hate North America?" will be the key­ should get in touch with tiie town­ School Trends." which seems a con­
Cook
until
onions
are
done.
rush a country into futile and
ship clerk in the townships, and cise and to-the-polnt view of mod­ trade, a farmer by occupation
ployment and prosperity and recov- Roosevelt
’* with an
‘ Intense personal' note of the meeting.
uncalled for war—which classi­
hatred; (2) that these people have,
An idea of the scope of research with the city clerk in Hastings, in em education: "The changes in in­
Newest Invention: A WPA ahovel ery.-that the number of people on
to a large extent, had their incomes Investigations, by which natural order to register his name. If there dustrial. economic and social con­
fication covers most wars.
with a shoulder rest, a seal and back relief never seemed to decrease and
Her peace formula includes these rekt. The inventor expects to net a that the only thing to which men on restored and their bank balances history students try to leam every­ is any doubt in the mind of any ditions which have taken place in
welfare, like her daddy, had to look replenished since the low point of thing that can be learned about voter as to whether he or she is recent years, create a demand for
ideas:
cool million.
—
wcu&gt;«r.
March. 1933: &lt;3) that they have fish and game. Is afforded in the properly registered, he or she should a kind of education radically dif­
forward w«r
was—
more welfare.
Now. Mr. Water*, we would like
No brass bands whatsoever. No
So. being a practical Uttle soul.' no «*»“»lon whatever of the pres- list of papers to be presented. Some get in touch with the city clerk or ferent from that which was regard­
she prayed for a government Job cnLpl!ghl,ot H‘e w&lt;&gt;rid.
of the principal subjects of lhe township clerk and have the matter ed as adequate In earlier periods
orators. No recruit­
Oh. this morning the meadows are •nd hoped tervuuly mat lhe Divine
Obvlou.ly. there must
mu,: tc
Obviously,
be ===
some meeting of the International Asso­ settled by the records in lhe clerk's when the social order was compara­
ing except by men
singing a song—
tively static. Members of a chang­
One might U.UO lo her pie.. Bur ot
,or
• "“““'“'"ft h"r'd ciation of Game. Fish and Conser­ office.
HereLs the rain, ruin, rain again
who have
IhcmSince one last voted if he or she ing society must be prepared to re­ Burbank and planted
upper vation commissioners, follow: Need­
eourm. drfdy had no pollUe.1 pull: 1 which permeates the whole unner
after so long!
telves enlisted for
his moved from one township or —
adjust
,—__________
thetr id*** and habits of
so things looked hopeless. Still, it stratum of American society and in ed wildlife legislation, providing for
ward into another township or ward. life. They not only must be poo- a couple
No
active service. *"
spite
of
lhe
vastly
increased
profits
rare
species
of
wildlife,
providing
There's a soft little clapping of did no iiarm to pray!
to big bu*ine*a and tiie rich; a for state and national planning or from one county to another, it । sessed of certain types of knowlbrass Duttons, No
She had seen so many men on haired that crops out dally in the
hands
in
the
trees
will
be
necessary
to
register
again.
.
edge
and
skill which were common Rosa. California. Soon I received a
shiny buckles, no
projects, the three-way chair of
As the leaves toss their silver-lined such Job* and they seemed to be news; a hatred that has been high­ conservation set-up. propagation of
If one failed to yote at the last I at the lime they went to school,
regalia. Respect for
well paid, contented and
happy ly financed by expensive publicity
skirts to the breeze.
quail and ruffed grouse in captivi­ two general elections the law com- ■ but they must be trained in such
the flag and. if nte­
Just like her daddy used to fag.—and specialists. In order that you and
ty. and federal control of wildlife. pels the clerk to strike lhe name of a way as to make them adaptable to
rnary. all proper
And the farm's weary face, for they didn't have to do all the dirty, you and you may be made to be­
The American Fisheries society such a voter from the list. In that new condition*."
defense for IL but
unpleasant Jobs that he did either. lieve all lhe propaganda of these
weeks heat-marred and dry '
——————
program, will list speakers of na­ case he or she will not be registered. I
1
PARTIES FOB MR
no cheap waving of
Who said, “It couldn't happen "Big Wigs!"
TWO BARNS BURNED
Is moist, wreathed and smiling be­
tional refute on conservation mat­
here?"
it beforehand. No
neath the grey sky.
Before Roo*evell took office these ters. covering almost every known RARN WAS nF^TROYED
Mrs. John A. Boyd (Vlnnie Ream)
SATURDAY
blatant emotional
Anil WAS Utd IflUILU
।of AtUnU. wh0 u visiting,relatives
IT DID HAPPEN HERE! IT IS people were losing not only money, field of fisheries research. Papers
displays being
Oh. this morning the meadows are happening here!
, but also public confidence and on many other subjects will be pre­
—LOSS EXCEEDS $2,000 •and friends, has been the guest of Lightning Bet One Afire and
singing a song—
turned off or on like a hydrant
-----------1 honor at a number of delightful oc-1
sented to afford a round-table dis­
The children of America trudge power.
Reason to be Invoked rattier than Here's the rain, rain, rain again wearily. Wan. lean faces lifted to a
Today they are regaining their cussion ot everything new and Thursday Night Lightning'1 coslons. Mr*. Harold Pelham enter- :■
Blaze Reached Other—
■ after so long!
। talned a group of ■ Mrs. Boyd's
mob-sterla.
hopeless future. And all lhe while money, but they are NOT REGAIN- worth while in game and fisheries
Loss Is |3,000
Set Fire to Barn on Mrs.
■I friends al an Informal supper and
tbe well fed. prosperous looking big INO THEIR POWER! And they management practices.
i j Saturday night about • o'clock a
And now an old guy Is predicting noises that make the NEW ORDER certainly have not regained any
Red Baltera* Field Day
Allie Bates’ Farm
a group at Gun lake. On last Fri- lightning bolt struck one of Vem
GENTLEMAN In Iowa, who floods. It seems he predicted about go: "Rail! Rah! Rah! for US and measure of public confidence, cither. MERCHANTS’ MIDWAY
A little after midnight, during day a number of Mrs. Boyd's friends i Yaeger's two barns, on what ta
WHY?
presumably inquired Into the every calamity that ever happened God!" travel about luxuriously in
WILLJE A FEATURE the fierce electrical storm Thursday were entertained by Mrs. Aben E.1 known as the old Burd farm I
Because the depression debunked,
matter, asserts that in this country and wasn't disappointed many times, lhe private yachts of wealthy Wall |
night, lightning struck a bam on Johnson at the "Shack" on the 1 the Rogers schoolhouse in Carl
so now he's al It again. You've got SUeel friends, ride about tiie coun­ devastatingly, the old myths! No
are upwards of 4.000,000 aliens who
Many
More
Exhibits
Than
the
farm of Mrs. Allie Bates, Just Thomapple river and on Monday a plames quickly communicated
to expect plenty of wind in presi­
longer are the “American people"
entered illegally and that the vast dential campaign ypnrs, but why try in private trains or figure out subservient
outside the east city limits. As a midday dinner was given by Mrs. another barn near by. The
to
the
assumed
Last Year—Will Interest
new boondoggling enterprises for
majority of these—over 90 per floods?
DVillIIr^ nt
Kilt Cftlllzt
result lhe bam was completely de­ Owen Phillipa
at Hnn
her nnimtrv
country Tinvnn
home wna
pouring millions of dollars Into use- omniscience of the big business man.
cent, arc on relief. While we're
Farmers Especially
stroyed. causing a loss of over 12,­ at Oul) lake.
.
rave either bam. confining their
Itss enterprises in doubtful political No longer is there any Illusion about
flghtlng corn borers and tobacco
forts to preventing the fire f
The Merchants’ Midway at the 000. Fortunately she carried insur­
A lady had a terrible time with territory so that their comfortable, the superior wisdom of lite upper­
worms and boll weevil* with gov­ tier Utile boy about hLs shirt. The bureaucratic existence may not be most class.
Barry County Fair this year will be ance. but not enough to cover the PASTURE CONDITION
- .... attraction.
loss. Another bolt during the same
ernment funds, wouldn't it be a lower purl was always hanging out. threatened.
AUGUST 1. IBM. stack near one of the bams. The
"Thc tycoons of industry" have a.real
The available space has been ■',torm struck another bam on the
The drouth of IBM has been much is estimated at 13,000 and is
grand Idea to turn a lot ot G-men So one day site sewed some lace on
That's the sort of stuff that Indeed been laid low and. for the
end more severe (han any drouth on rec­ partly covered by insurance.
loose to round up these smuggled- It. Now his shirt Is tucked in neatly breed* discontent and &gt;ends us first time in our history, the Gov­ practically used up and there are I •ame farm- tore off the
already
many
more
exhibits
than
of
but
fortunately
did
not
set
it
ord.
except
that
of
1934. In compari­ Yarger's hay and grain crops
in human parasites and ship them at all limes.
nearer and nearer to lhe meshes of ernment has effected-the economic
son with 1934. only Michigan. Mis­
communism. That's the sort of stuff rescue of these United States with­
back where they came from?
Everything new In farm machin-j
souri and Kansas have better pasLocally speaking. I'm told that
At night when the sky Is full of that breaks down lhe self-respect out the BIG WIGS!
A famous millionaire mentions ' lure conditions than they had two j "Broadway has boootn
RECOVERY did not come back— cry and electrical equipment will be
the average foreign-bom agitator, stars and the army fliers are oul and and spirit of people and makes them not a sign of it—until after the on
Patrons
Interested in
In i uiai
that inuiiey
money uuci
does not
not muc
make iui
for iu&gt;phap- iyear*
I years u*u.
ago. The
In ---the—
land
where
.... display.
...
___ mn* inirmu-n
iuv pasture conditions place
■ —
—------~
ostensibly seeking to organize thc flying high enough so you can't see
l..w-.i. »c.m ..
tr&gt; .hA. that ail
all writer can with consist
consistent
powerful political machine, loaded to "Old Order" receded and ..Roosevelt buying will have the opportunity of | plnesa. still, it does enable a man to I map also serves to show
casual workers of this state, is their colored lights, the oilier ones
comparing all the different lines. | be miserable in comfort.—Punch.
crops have been suffering.
speak his mind. —John K. H
established
public
confidence
in
the
the
limit
with
its
army
of
bureaureally a red agent spreading com­ look exactly like the stars. They
Government.
munistic doctrinqa under cover of even twinkle.
That’s where the shoe pinches!
dictatorship!
his seeming activities in thc indus­
But these people know who It is Instead of the privileged few get­
Two. Battle Creek dietitians have that saved them from being flat- . —
trial field. In other words, his real
ting --------------------all the credit —
(m■ -----they ---------mancubeen
sent
lo
Callander
by
Dr.
Kel
­
alm is nut to unionize labor but to
tened by an oppressive government vered to do in all previous depreslogg to direct thc making of soy llke the citizens of Russia. Germany I sionsi our Government has mandisunionlze America.
acidophilus for the Dionne quins.
Wnlson, the fly-swatter and the I suppose the new baby has pota­ and Italy have been—THE 8U- “8ed t0 »el lhc country on its feel
PREME COURT OF THE UNITED without groveling to the BIG
insect poison—quick!
toes, meat and vegetable soup for STATES!
WIGS!
j "
nna'
his diet. If the soy stuff tastes like
And what had Roosevelt to do
Tiie nine venerable, courageous
The League's Big Moment
It sounds. I'm glad I'm not a quin­
and honest men nf this court were with all this?
T LAST here's a chance for the tuplet.
"He
their ■precious
goldall that remained to block thc path
—jettisoned
-----------------------------------------League of Nations to function.
toward dictatorship. They said in standard. He buttressed the banks
For thc poor thing It has been an
The Country Gentleman for July
ence:
’
, with the deposit insurance the preuphill pull.to slide down hill so oh page 63 shows a new overall
•Stop!
'Stop! Hold on a
a minute! The v,0Ua administration had scorned,
steadily, with each descending step patch which is so easy to put on a
ssldent
is not the government v&gt;
of -------------------------------------------------He stabilized the stock market--with
sident Is
measure nf
hnne't regulation."
remilntlnn “
toward thc bottom marked by dis­ child could do it. Bo we didn't both­
se United States! The people are!। u
u measure
of honest
appointment and failure. It had al­ er lo practice on an old pair, but and they have a constitution which I "Psychology accounts clearly for
most as tough sledding cs a took Jerry's favorites and went to guarantees them certain righto and'1,16 resultant wells of hatred In the
work.
You
just
ought
to
see
'em.
privileges
to
live
their
own
lives
as
!
hearts
of
our
dethroned
economic
smooth-faced, bearded lady would
have trying to get a job in a Boy! wail till Jerry views my re­ free men and not as minions of lhe aristocrats. They have been res­
sults. I'd better And something ur­ Federal government.
cued, yes! But only at the loss of
museum.
"In fact our ancestors fought for their dignity and pomposity. Mere
But now, the league can punish gent on the other end of the back
at least one small nation for per­ forty about that time. Maybe they'd the right to govern themselves: money, mere recovery cannot com­
sistently breaking the otherwise have come out better If I'd meas­ fought to free themselves from ty­ pensate them for that!
ured. One side went on all right. ranny. They were so determined
"The fact that they begged for
solid front presented by nearly all
Why didn't the other? And it runs
their rescue just three years ago
lhe important European powers. the whole length of the leg. so I that those who followed them
only makes their humiliation more
Surely, era long, it will hang soma can’t make him a sun suit of what should never taste the bitterness of ■ complete—their fury implacable—
sort of penalty on little, simple- was above. Maybe I can sell them governmental oppression, that they their rage more blind."
set forth their rights in a docu­
minded Finland for regularly pay­ to Charlie Chaplin. He wears funny
Mr. Childs draws an interesting
ment which definitely limited the
ing installments on her debt to us. pants.
right of their Federal government to parallel between our President and
This disruptive thing cannot pos­
Turgot. You remember how Turgot
reach out and grab for power.
sibly be permitted to go on forever
The newest thing—nose appeal.
•This docament is called the Cqn- tried to war Louis XVI. You know
when the sacred principles of dis­ Perfumed hosiery and paints—also sUtaUoa ot the United States.
what happened. The Vlch and
honor. ingratitude and repudiation starch. And scented inks bi a va­
"You, os administrators of the powerful were outraged tiren. Just as
are all at stake!
riety of delicate shades. And now. people may do anything you wish they are today. Arguments used
pine-scented coal which “gives your so long as you stay within lhe against Turgot are today hurled at
home a pleasant and healthful limits of power specified In this our President. Turgot was removed.
Paging the Black Legion
T IS passing strange that the odor and also acts as a cold pre­ document. You may go no further. Unless you see your responsibility
propose
fundamental and do it. Roosevelt may be re­
Black Legion is so slow about ventative." This recalls the very If you
offering Herr Hitler honorary mem­ pleasantest of all pleasant exper­ changes in this document, well and moved by the next election. Turgot's
Take the chair on the other side of the desk and
iences at the World's Pair. In the good; the document. Itself, makes reforms were swept into the waste
bership in the mother-lodge up
Horticultural Exhibit building were provisions for such changes; makes basket. The ideals for which Roose­
In Michigan. Both parties seem fountains of pine incense and the
put yourself in the Banker’s place, weigh hii
velt has labored may go the same
provision
for
submitting
all
ques
­
to feel alike on the subject of per­ odor was indescribably lovely. Al­
tions of lids sort to lhe prime au­
sons of color.
most anything that would perfume thority In this country—public responsibillly to vote.
problems, judge for yourself—would you make
Meanwhile Just so long as they coal would be an improvement on opinion as expressed through the
They turned their backs on Tur­
didn't try to stop him from shaking the sooty smell soft coal
gives. ballot box. The people may alter this got. And the streets of Paris ran
loans to certain individuals you know? Would
those nimble feet our brown­ Maybe they could put some cod document to suit themselves. You with blood!
skinned flying squirrel, Jesse liver In It and prevent rickets while yourself, may never change it! This
you consider yourself a good risk? It’s pretty
Owens, should worry because a dic­
Now let's turn our attention to a
13 something that the people reserve
thoughtful study of economic de­
tator refuses to shake his hand.
for their decision alone."
hard isn’t it?
These are important ques­
velopment
In
the
United
States.
With Metcalfe and other dark
Of course New Dealers hate the
David Cushman Coyle's “The
colleagues helping him pile up so
Constitution; hate the Supreme
by Viola perry wanger.
tions that your Banker must consider. Decisions
commanding a lead for the Ameri­ We are the songs that were never Cburt—because these are the only Capital Goods Fallacy," which ap­
forces that stood resolute to block peared in Harper's magazine De­
can team in tiie Olympic games,
sung.
must be made quickly and accurately ... to do
cember. 1934, Is a really informative
their dreams of a dictatorship!
it's almost time for the band to. , Pictures that never will be.
America must not turn backward analysis ot the situation.
play "All Gawd's Chilian Got We are thc ghosts of the stately
this your Banker must know his customers. That
It points out the significance of
on
the
road
towards
tyranny.
Chock
wings."
ships.
the college adclallsts and parlor the “business cycle" or "lalssetfaire"
is why friendliness and courtesy are considered
That never will sail the aea.
In past recoveries which were
Synthetic Spanish Hldaigoes
We are the wraiths of a million pinks aside and let's continue to gov- marked by: 41) a revival of long­
so important in this Bank. Officers, clerks and
babes.
AND the famous Santa Barbara
Is there a man with soul so dead term investments; and, (2) by a re­
That wili never, never be bom.
fiesta Besting on every side and
vival
of
the
capital
goods
Industries
that he can forget the long lines
tellers extend to depositors and customers every
yours truly looking as much like a And we are lhe shadowy whispering on relief while the army of well-fed (steel, cement, lumber, building and
rows
Spanish hidalgo as anybody bom
government bureaucrats and a hos­ machinery).
consideration. This is the reasbn many of our
Of unplanted fields of com.
In McCracken county, Ky., could be
tile
administration
have
placed
We are lhe thousand glorious things
expected to look.
tlon" in that OLD ORDER? ?
customers refer to us as “a friendly bank,” '
That LIVING hands would have such a handicap on business and
A—1: A "sound position"
Plenty of other disturbing occur­
agriculture that the United States
rences. too. Heat wave still hang­
But we perished there on the battle is even lagging far behind Great
(1)
—
many
small
investors
had
ing on in spots. Fresh European
Britain in recovery?
We offer a complete banking service, friemUy
field
been cleaned out.
complications on account of the
Is there a man with soul so dead
(2) —equities were in "strong
Spanish mess.
/
he can forget those long lines of
and considerate ... avail yourself of it. Slop in. j
hands.”
Down at his home on the range. DEATH OF MRS. ERLO FULLER. men and women trudging hopelessly
(3) —bonk loans were small and
• where seldom is heard a discourag­
Mrs. Arloa
Puller, aged
44. -through our city streets In search of
could be easily Inflated.
ing word—except from Washington, of this city died on Wednesday eve­ honest jobs—jobs which might exist
(4) —Industry had been relieved
D. Q—we behold Uncle Jack Gar­ ning at the home of her mother, if our dictatorial government had
of Its weaker members by bank­
. nert with bl*, head over the corral Mrs. Julia Kuhl of Grand Rapids, not placed so many impediments in
ruptcy.
' bars, beginning* to moo plaintively. following an Illness of four yean. the path ot normal recovery—and
And now, on top of all that. It Besides her mother, she is survived then they turn hopelessly, and with
new enterprise, new machinery,
seems we must start worrying by her husband, Erlo Fuller; a son, bitterness in their hearts—te the sonew building*. new debt*.
about Tommy Manville's next wife Hobart kt home, and two daughters,
Prosperity would come for a few
or wives, ns'the case may be—and Mrs. Yvonne Nance of this city and communism.
What Is good about these NEW years. And then another depression !
Mrs. Violet Crandall of Kalamazoo.
TELEPHONE 2103
♦
♦
♦
probably will.
Depression WHEN the volume of
DEAL DAYS?
The
funeral
was
held
at
the
Baptist
1 do wish Tommy could see his
People thought they were being unpayable debts and Inflated values
way dear to bold off till fall, if church at ten o'clock Saturday led by a new Moses to a Utopia of became large enough to break the
morning, the Rev. B J. Adcock of­
memory serves me aright, the fall
market
and
ecl-off
another
downficiating. Burial was In Riverside "sunshine and dew."
always was his favorite marrying
(Contlnued on page 5. S*c. 2.)
(Continued on page S. Sec. 2.)
cemetery.
season, anyhow.

By JANff CAMERON

’ Game,

REPUBLICAN

bl.

DEMOCRAT

|

■

Fish

Oommissionors

Study New Methods
of Work

SAN3A ".,0‘';.!'iA',5AL'F r~~.1.tu*i^,*J^,-.&lt;^B„

ON

NIGHT

A

A

C

PUT YOURSELF in OUR PLACE

I

HASTINGS CITY

©

_----------------------HYfif 8. COBB. u

HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, AUGUST M.
.

~

. TESTING OF
59 CARILLON BELLS

be vary gradual and steady. Any at­ as the sandblaster can work at a
tempt to hasten lhe cooling would stretch.

endless financial loss.
One of the most interesting pro­
cesses tn bell making is the tuning
of the bells. The heavier the bell
the deeper and more resonant Is its
Final testing of the 53 bells cast note, and when it te remembefed
at the historic bell foundry of John that every bell has five separate and
Taylor &amp; Co. at Loughborough, distinct notes, it will be realised
England, tor the University of what a delicate operation this Is.
Michigan carillon required the The five notes are the hum note, an
building of a temporary test tower octave below the strike note; the
duplicating the position* in which nominal note, an octave above; the
the bells will be hung in Ann Arbor. tierce, the third note; the quint
When thte was completed expert which te the fifth note; and finally
earillonnieurs played and skilled tbe strike note. These must all symtuners listened in. Every time the phonlte.
The 24,000-pound bell for Ann Ar­
foundry completes a set of bells,
Loughborough is treated to a con­ bor is more than six feet in diame­
cert. The Ann Arbor carillon will ter, with sufficient room inside it for
quite a number of men to stand up­
be the third largest in the world.
The 53 bells, together with their right. The bell Is held tn an enorframework and equipment, will mous grip while thc metal te reamed
-T'h- ■■Ihr.llnr,
rim
out. The
vibrations nf
of the
the Inwer
lower rim
weigh approximately 200.000 pounds. „,,r
The weight of the largest bell te of the bell are always the greater,
graduating downwards the nearer
slightly over 24.000 pounds.
.you
approach
the
top
In
the
pro
­
Bellmaking te an art with centu­
ries of traditions behind it, and It te cess of accurate tuning a simple
an art, moreover, toward the attain­ tuning fork playa a vital part but
ment of which there 1s no short cut. the tuner also has delicate vibra­
In the case of all targe and heavy tional test Instruments to aid him in
bells such as. for instance, a number his work. When lhe bell Is declared
of those In the Ann Arbor carillon, perfect by the tuner, it Is passed on
to ~~
the ----------------sandblaster-—
who,
garbed
they are cast in moulds fixed in the .«
--—
-- - in a
sandpits where they afterwards re-,sheet metal suit, applies sand under
week* before any
anyJ1 terrific air nressure
pressure until the bell is
Is
main buried for weeks
attempt Is made to uncover them, burnished and stands forth a thing
Tl.~
t of beauty. Fifteen minutes is as long
This Is because their cooling must

Doe at Ann Arbor the Third
Largest in the
World

Special SALE of

IN8ECT MYSTERY: WHERE
DOES VETCH FEST HIDE?

Mystery surrounding the winter
whereabouts of a tiny beetle—the
vetch bruchld—has made It im­
possible ao far to work out effective
measures for controlling thte Insect
that now threatens lo destroy the
vetch seed industry in the Atlantic
Coast states. Each spring since 1931
adult beetles have appeared out of
the unknown, multiplied, and spread
until they are now established in
New Jersey. Delaware. Pennsylvania,
Maryland. Virginia. North Carolina,
South Carolina, and lhe District of
Columbia.
,
From spring, when the eggs that
start the life cycle are first laid in
young vetch pods, until fall, when
the new generation adults return to
ak.l.
I.u. the k.n
their aecret hiding .places,
bruchld'a life la an open book to entomologtete of the United States
Department of Agriculture, accord­
ing to Dr. P. N. Annand of the
Bureau of Entomology and Plant
Quarantine. The beetle te destruc­
tive only In its larval stage. Hatch­
ing from the eggs, the larvae bore
through the pods and feed on the
seeds.
The full-grown
larvae
change into pupae, from which
emerge the adults—extremely small,
round, dark-brown beetles that look
something like pea or bean weevils.
The riddle te: where do these
I adults go from there? Every con- j
celvable place of concealment. In-,
:eluding the tops of telegraph poles]
and tall pine trees, has been,
searched without yielding any sign :
of a hibernating bruchld. ^ut the
hunt te still on.

SUPERVSORS’
PROCEEDINGS

Hawmiot
rrvolailaaa t
lewis*:

(1 ••11*01 rn

S3==SS?53S3381J

,2!|hhhhhhh|h
« s • ••ca'-aavaezaaili'a”

f28S|25S?ns^gg2S

igSSSSSSSSSSSnSS!
&gt; r- " ■" — a — * r- c r«
n

JUNE SESSION—ConUnueJ.

Ihr Hoard nt Sotwrvitn

Everything you need in the school room
at Special Prices!
•
•
•
•
•
•

Pens
Ink
Tablets
Paste
Pencils
Compasses

• Rulers
• Erasers
• Scissors
• Crayons
• Note Books
• Binders

lo Board of Ruiwrrli

129 00 &gt;29 no
22«S 21 IS
25h,oo zss.nn
ss.oo -•
i.on

3.00
a no

New, Used and Rebound School Books
Bought and Sold

.1

■'1 ■"

--------- -•■■■ ■

1

VVELL-ORGAklZED and well­

” armed midwestern formers
are chasing baek to cover gang­
sters who plied their rackets
with amazing succeaa tn rural
areas the last few years.
Residents of the farm belt are
fighting mad over depredaUons
ot bkndits who have taken ad­
vantage of unlocked ehlcken
houses, unprotected loads of cat­
tle, and unsuspecting check re­
cipients.
■
Modem anti-theft devices are
seen on many farms. Animals
and equipment wear Identifica­
tion marks. Shotguns rest In
handy places. And they’re loaded
guns. too. for the fanner is dead­
ly earnest In his drive to rid
himself, his family, and his
neighbors of this new menace.
Farmers of Illinois were first •
to organize. They banded to­
gether after a survey showed
that the thieves had reaped a
harvest of 14,000,000 In Illinois
alone last year, while bank rob­
bers and kidnapers got slightly
more than $1,000,000 in the en­
tire United States.
, .
The Illinois farmers took tfielr
case to Gov. Henry Homer, who
pledged state co-operation, and
called in Ross C. Saunders to act
as Inspector of rural crime pre­
vention.

These were headed by a captain
and four lieutenants. The or­
ganization was stepped down to
the school districts/
These organized'farmers have
been dubbed “F-men." They nnd
their families .nave forgotten
their trusting - ways. They've
locked up the old farm. Sus­
picious cars nnd suspicious char­
acters are reported to authori­
ties.
And these authorities, once In­
clined to dismiss loss of chickens
nnd livestock as petty thievery,
are quiejf to go into action, for
the farm vote elects in farm sec­
tions. Farmers have let it be
knowp that they want punish­
ment for persons who steal from
thenL
And police officers couldn’t
very well term the loss of 1,500,ueo chickens, 20,000 head of cat­
tle, and much valuable farm ma­
chinery in one year "petty thiev­
ery." These figures were for
Illinois.

Sisi;

1

II
Organized Opposition Chases Farm
Racketeers to Cover in Midwest

CAUNDBRS organised th,
° farmers by township units.

■ o' —

. .................. "

'THE Illinois totals were typical
A of those in a dozen or more

of foiling lhe rural racketeer—
marking poultry on the wings
for Identification In case of theft
Ross C. Saunders, right, directs
Illinois farmers* campaign
against the outlaws.
states of lhe middlewest These
states are following the lead ot
Illinois and the night prowlers
are finding it increasingly diffi­
cult to “put the snatch” on hens
and hogs throughout this region.
Many types of bandits victim­
ized the fanners when the rural
rackets were at their height
Among their modem ideas were
the livestock rustlers who
worked with trucks Insteed of
cow ponies; the “buyer," who
paid with bogus checks; the
"renter" who never returned
what he "rented."
More clever grafters posed as
government agents, offering the
farmers good draft horses In ex­
change for other livestock. The
farmers who traded with these
"agents" never saw the horses,
of course.

But while some of these rack­
eteers still operate on a -re­
stricted basis, it is correct to
speak of them in the put tense.
They have been pretty well
licked.

The American farmer is used
to battling with really tough
guys—drouth, for instance.

st:

Paper Towels, Chalk, Blackboard Slat­
ing, Erasers and Officers' Blank Books
M w Ntnti.
I. R. Iilnt"r
Bernard IleOolia

SPECIAL!

67 William Nrbader

ToTeochersand School Directors:

We are giving Special Prices on
School Supplies, such as Roll and Folded
Paper Towels, White Crayons in gross
boxes, Paste in pintsand quarts. See us
before buying your supplies.

l lrda Wllr'nr

" III K I

public Aeu. Ari

Hord Pill
l.uthrr l&gt;i
। A Pella" M

ThERKFOHE.

Carveth &amp; Stebbins
THE REXALL STORE

Goods Delivered

Phone 2131

WHKHKAR

Suppose There Had Been No
Insurance On This Property?
The Loss—SI.715.75—would have fallen on the owners. Very few
people can afford to stand such a loss as this.
IT WAS SOUND BUSINESS JUDGMENT THAT PROMPTED
THESE OWNERS TO CARRY WINDSTORM INSURANCE IN
THIS FIFTY-YEAR-OLD INSURANCE COMPANY.

The Cost for This Protection Is So Low No Owner Can Afford to
lake the Risk of Being Without Plenty of Windstorm Insurance in
The Michigan Mutual of Hastings!

III r.ldf.u.rl,
II FrldMU.eh
lirrubri'i

irr unm BSpOl
St teS

See one ol our representatives or write the home office.

Michigan Mutual Windstorm

A violent storm struck Mkhl
C?bU dt’Twi' tSTSfer

brought the total tea te »1.715.75.

Needy $5,000,000 Paid in Claims
Over $390,000,000 Insurance in Force

ils il

Insurance Company
Home Office: Hastings, Michigan
The Largest Company of Its Kind in Michigan

in

________ _____ ____

.„

BURNING, GNAWING MINS
STOMACH
RELIEVED
IN 51
_____________

Soo
Neutralise irritating acids with
4 it Dr tail's Adi. Tablets Prevent a
1,1 sore, inflamed stomach, yet eat
1
so
wh,t
j
. you
juu want.
•«!&gt;, Adla
naia gives relief
ro" money back. Raed'S Druw

ssgeswew

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, AC0V8T W, 1999
NOTICE or MORTOAOB BALS.

NOTICE Of MORTOAOB BALI.

Mr "dCM",‘TM&gt;c°.!l”'Son.nJ!

| LEGAL NOTICES

Mrs Harry Simpson.
Miss Marcelene Campbel] of Has- ।

NOTICE or MORTOAOB BALE.

England and Back
By Airplane

Mr. and Mn D. Louden of Gull

SS CTi

Clayton Haynes, wno nas em­
ployment at Battle Creek, te apendeofa.
Mr. and Mra Gust us Welcher of

of hte abler. Mra. O. Haynes
Mr. and Mra. Nell Welcher have
now. therefore.
returned to Battle ' Creek after
no r.ar.uani &lt;o in. niaiatr.
” - -- - ---- --r MhSivan in ».t&gt; '••• mad. ant i&gt;ro. । tlielr parents. Mr. and Mra. Cha*
■ NDTIl'K IH HEREBY olyrN. Lechner.

,OW. THi

anriard

Mr. and Mrs

Stewart
»

MuiK'uJws
J"
IOlcnt&gt; Aspinall.

NOW. THEREFORE,
power ot aal. rontalne^
and puriuanl lo the HU
odid1' hNOTI&lt;V"lH 'hereby *oi

Waters

“«* Mrs

I "Lord bless you. sir. there’s good
J and bad in every one. Even in a
rotten apple, the pips te all right."—
’ । Herbert Jellkins.
BTATE OF MICHIGAN.
THE CIRCUIT COURT FOB THB

llardrndr.rt Addition

PRKHl X I

North o

mnn nwwns' uux &lt;■&lt;&gt;;•&lt;&gt;

BARRYVTLLE.
i
H1GHBANX.
The young people who have been
Mr. and Mra. Leslie /
spending the week at the Gull lake Mrs.
-- - — spent I
Sarah
Ostrolh
school of methods, returned to their afternoon at Mr. and Mra. i_
homes Sunday. They report a pleasFlnkbeiner’s near Woodland.
I ant and profitable time.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Retd
! spend tbe week st Gull lake.
family spent Sunday with Mr. i_
I There was a family gathering at Mra. Robert Ackers. Level Park.
I
Jesae Fossett's' home Bunday, their
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawbllta. and to ।
jam. perry and wife from Moran
and Floyd and family of charlotte. Earl Held. Mr. and Mra. Berle Noah ,■ that may
, Mr and Mra O- D. Fthsett and sons.
.on, yr. and Mra. Vem Haw- I
J Ray and family of Balti? Creek and. bliu and family and Cleon Mead
Burr and family being present.
attended the Ionia fair Thursday. 1
i Several wild ducks hare been
yr. Bnd Mra. Clair Marshall of
making themselves at home in the ne.ur Beilegue spent Bunday with , The State con..
In Grand
Rapids
pond at the fool of mic
lhe n.u.
hill.
—
Mr. and Mra. Vem Hawbllta. Cleon
—~~ ,"-r777.
.I ..... w
— ---------al *’
Mrs.
Cora
Dellar.formerly
formerlyofi this Mrtd. who made lite home Vlth
1 place but now living at Gull lake, th}, Hawbliu family for the past
J"11!?* ol
fell and broke her hip and is In year, returned home with them and I didates lor me io
Leila Itospltal. Battle creek. She had wm atu-nd high school al Bellevue |2?*'. S*'crcTr*,._o&lt;
I broken lhe oilier hip a few years , the coming year.
I Treasurer, Auditor ।
ago.
Mr and Mrs Wil] Ekerberker and i
General aiid ono &lt;.
Mr and Mrs John Higdon spent family of Level Park spent Sunday . Supreme Court to OU .
from Friday until Sunday with their afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Fred i
.Ule u»n**cUon
son. Alfred, nnd family at Kalama- Reid.
| bllJdnesa as may property .
zoo While there they vtelted the I Mr. and Mrs. Byron Guy and/ore ,u
Wolfe llsh iiatehery which b a very . son. Stewart, attended Mahlon Skid- ] Delegates to the County
' interesting place with Its hundreu. more's funeral Saturday In Balli- tlon shall be elected at the
and sixty acres of ponds.
more.
y
' ber primary, and ahall ba
I Mtaa&gt; Helm WlllHU has returned j Mrs Aaron Treese of-near Alle- every seventy-five votes ate
[ from
Northwestern
University, gan te spending a few days thte Secretary of State at tha
where she hu been taking a- sum- wn-k with her daughter, Mra. Bryon tlon and ahall be------- ‘
i Guy.
foUdtn:
I mer course.
। Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Mills. Mr. and
Marcell Marshal! and cousin. Bet- I A..,ri»_____
RaltanA
i Mrs. Allan Hale of Lynn. Ind., spent ty Cavanaugh of Chicago, are I tuiuoMrv----over night with Mr. and Mrs. Harry spending thte week with Mr. and 1
“
। areen and family ax they were re- I Mrs. Dewey Jones in Nashville.
I
~
turning to their home in Indiana I
Merlyn Marshall accompanied
' after a trip to the Straits.
। Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bell and family to
j Rev. and Mrs. j. J. WllUUa. Mr. Ionia last week for a few days* visit. I &gt;!.&gt;»
nnd Mrs. Wilson Wiilltta and Helen
---------------- «*»
1 Imaa— im
i and Mr. and Mra. Wm. Whitlock at-1
"You can t scare a man from day
tended sei vices at Midland Park. Jo day when he sees his business is
Gull lake Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. El- better You might if It is bad. but
' mer Gillett. Mr. and Mrs. Heber . not when he sees a noticeable im- «rswtovllla
Dr. Prank can-others.
I Foster were there also and brought provement In hte affairs."-H. V.
Chrmn. Barry County
’some of the young people home.
jKaltenbom.
Republican committee.
: Mr. and Mrs. Chester Willitts and
,
__ .u..
, _&lt;i.. of
Z Unking were R„„d
...
A woman
writer mentions
thatThte
fox 1
C. W. Clarke,
family
Sunday
absolutely
waterproof.
Secy. Barry County
July 29th. me.

HOME OWNERS* LOAN CORPO

HOME OWNERS' LOAN COItl'ORATION. MwUura.

OLBNN D. MATHKWH.

REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION.
OBAND RAPIDS. SEPT. 20TH. i»34.
The Rerabll
held for I
didateu fo

STATE or MICHIGAN.

M.T
OF BARRY. IN CHANCERY.
Dorothy Rhupp. Plaintiff.
court

NOTICE or MOBTOAOE BALE.

fob the co

&gt;tn&lt; contlnuad (o’

GRAND HA I’IDS ON TUESDAY.

Villa. Harry Cuuatr Mlrhlaan to
liWNKRS LOAN CORPORATION

Before taking off on their round
trip fiigto London. Harry
Richman/entertainer, top photo,
stuffed pingpong balls into the
wings of his plane, and Dick
Merrill, his pilot, lower photo,
posed by Richman’s $100,000
■&lt; AM IBM
ship. Thc celluloid table tennis
balls were to make the plane
&gt;.&gt; ORDERED. ADJUDGED and
mote buoyant in case of forced
landing on the ocean. Richman
ld&gt;« A. II and C of lhe orleinal said their schedule called for
&gt;f dlaavlutlon
further ORDERED. ADJUDGED breakfast in New York, supper
! in London, and breakfast thc
। following day in Washington.
Hhiuniuc

IIOWAKII
ORDERED ADJUDGED

JAMES O. FHF.Y

1 Inqulr T »ald 1
irul willSin thr
.aid dr!iradant
. „t M

Tirestom
STANDARD

HI.UUH

'Otlk

NOTICE TO OUDZTOM
WM. E. ROBB

iHin th* Plaln&gt;

SC95

21 YEARS
AUGUST 27,1936
STATE OF MICHIGAN
THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE
BOUNTY OF BARRY. IN CHANCEBY. ■ o'rtork In th.

This Company
Established
$10,000,000
Paid in Claims

Defriulantt.

Citizens' Mutual Insur­
ance
Company,
Howell,
Michigan, started business
at the right lime in 1915 to
get lhe first pick of automo­
bile owners, and since that
time has built up a state­
wide organization to give
service to policyholders.

NOTICE or MOBTOAOE BALE.

HOME oW,'

HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO­
RATION. Morteaeee.
OI.ENN D. MATHEWS.

While the rest of the continent
swelters. Hollywood proclaims
that the lime has come for fall
costumes. Here te Gertrude
Michael, film player, with one
of lhe outfits she has selected
for her fall wardrobe—a dark
green jersey suit trimmed with
black Persian lamb and high­
lighted with black braid frags.
Her bit u a Cossack turban ot
black Persian lamb, matching
the suit trimming.

Kim Rider. Atlnrn

NOTICE TO CRBDITORB.

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION.
tHaatlna, la

NOW. THEREFORE

Ka.t.rn Hlanilard
BntUinitur-M tn» H. K.
. Maple OrMre Twp..

E

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Blate ot Mlrhltan. tbe Probate Court fur

Tinkler, tire eared

prenoat in
uaallnca H

ORDER

MUS Mublean

BOMB OWNEBB' LOAN CORPO
RATION Morttaeea.

BANNER WANT ADVA FAY

TOK

PUBLICATION.

4.50- 20. S7.45 5J5-18. •9-75
4.50- 21. 7-75 5.50-17. 10.70
4.75-19. 8.20 ||5.50-19. 11.20

INCE the Btarfl
announcement of
new tire sensation. Hr-'
Factories have been
day and night in an e
turn out sufficient ti
the big demand.

S

When you buy the
Firestone Standard, you
five ways — better
materials, buying al tt
ot supply, more cftii
manufacturing, vol
production and more economical* distribution.
"
but ion. All of iI
Livings are passed on to you in the greatest tire value you L
FOB TRUCKS AND IUSU

a.25-20. 49-38
9X0-20. 60.75
35.20 9.75-20. 79-35
OiS,. S.1,1 P.kad Scopel□•&lt;&gt;&gt;.I, Low

21.95

29.10

8

NOTICE OF TAKING TOWNSHIP
I ROADS INTO COUNTY ROAD SYSTEM.

_

O 4-U41

38

10. A. D. 1038.

Plaintiff.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

THE NEW

,

_

:

te of hit

r*4%. N&lt;»Wn^l'k"iru?n“H'r*G’v,,EN

Hollywood Says
It’s Fall

lRDERF.fr. ADJUDGED

NOTICE OF HALE OF BEAL ESTATE

Pi.iniiff. it i&gt;

ie drbl eerured hr »*I4 morUtaei ol
■r pari thereof;
NOW. THEREFORE, by virtue' of th.

her grandparents. Rev. J. J. Wil­
li Ils'. Mrs. Wilson Willitts returned
to her home in Adrian Monday.
Clayton Willitts of Detroit was
home Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox and
Donna of Kalamazoo wen- Sunday
guests of hte parents. Mr. and Mrs.
H. J. Wilcox.
And last but not least we are all
thankful for the wonderful rains
and that no storm damage has been
done here.

BOWNE CENTER.
Earl Fox purchased a horse
Ionia last week.
Mr and Mrs. Merrill Karcher and
son were Grand Rapids visitors
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernor Benton of
Grand Rapids were Sunday dinner
guests of Wayne Benton and fam­
ily. Mrs. Doris Lass and Marlene
returned home with them for a
week's visit.
A large crowd attended the Bowne
Center school reunion.
Alice Nash entertained her friend.
Josephine Hoekstra, of Grand RapVisitors at Wayne Benton’s lhe
past week were Mrs. Ella Nash.
Marie and Alice. Josephine Hoek­
stra. Mr. and Mra. Roy Deming. Mr.
and Mra. Byran Depute and daugh­
ter of Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mra Merrill Karcher and
Gerald were Bunday dinner guests
of Mr. and Mra. Watt Thomas In
the afternoon they all called on
Lewis Skinner and family of Cale­
donia.

•'Today, we of America are also
wandering In the desert, even
though It te a social and not a
physical desert."—Secretary Ickes.

•■No future Alexander In the realm
of business need cry for lack of
worlds to conquer, for radio te atlU
unfolding."—David fiamoff.

I ever known.
'
Never before have you seen so much tire for the money at
-very lire carries the Firestone name and guarantee, which
your assunnee of greater non-skid efficiency, greater bkM
protection and longer mileage. It is almost unbelievable
you could buy so much tire for so little money!
Don’t delay. Get your new set of Firestone Standard 1
now — a fresh supply just received. Once you sec this net
you will agree that it is the greatest tire value ever offei

today’s low prices.

The company lias sent
oul checks for more than
175,000 claims — paying
oul about $10,000,000.
During the- past three
years, its assets and business
have enjoyed a remarkable
growth.
George J. Burke of Ann
Arbor is President of thc
company and experienced
men are on the Board of Di­
rectors. Trained Claim Ad­
justers and Agents in all
parts of thc stale will give
‘service.

’ggiit tit
4.50-21...........
4.75-19..........
5.00-19..........
roi !»•«»• *»

6.00-20 H. D.
30x5 H. D...
0rw&gt;
f.uaa

MJ
■IMi
•14.9*

Deeigned and built of good materials
and made by skilled workmen In
volume production.’making possible
exceptional quality at low prices.

Ixxtk In your telephone book

WM. E. ROBB, Secretary,

SPARK PLUet
58eJj^

BATTERIES

CITIZENS’

Buy ths
It Com Im

Mutual Automobile
-

INSURANCE
COMPANY

ANDRUS S

HOWELL, MICHIGAN

Phone 2240 S;
BAtUriM, WinAUOaW Wlpan

REGUL
GAS I

i.

�THK HAgTINOM MMMB, THUMPAT, ADC PIT W,
them, besides ridging up the rows. The best Urns to apply the mulch te SENATOR FRANK R- IfOSIKR.
COUNCIL
LV MRU
.
The potatoes are dug as soon s RIroezing—to keep the soil
nd permit root growtli as
PARER REVIEW they art large enough for the ski
lulble. And tho mulch
to slip and yields of these fair]
&gt;e left on too late In the
tubers were runnln
The Beat Mom From tho small-steed
t winter two rows ot Dunabout 400 boxes weighing 40 pound
weU covered with* snow
this last spring. Gross income thl
Best Farm Papon by
le winter, came through
Willard Bolto
$400 per acre—which showed a pro! .without damage—and next to them
The packing houses in Cleveland. fit of about $150. Thc two previous several rows of thc same variety
years showed a loss.
■ •were killed by sinqtliering because
lhe mulch was not removed until
University of Illinois states that lhe first week in May.—Wisconsin
thc fact that cattle tuberculosis has the strawberry bed should be re­ ■Agriculturist.
all but been eliminated In the »er- newed as soon as possible after pick­ J Cull oul every hen that molls be­
rtlory Irom which Cleveland draws ing is-finished—and the sooner thc fore the middle of July—and rend
its hogs. The source of this trouble better. The surplus plants should be tier to market or the pot. These,
Is poultry tuberculosis— a disease taken out as soon as the weeds have early molters will not start to lay
which spreads from chickens to been cleaned out—and it Is an excel­ again until late fall or winter and I
kifn ......................
them von will have to I
I~tohip or amhog*. In testing farm flocks for lent plan w
..............
- if mu ......
to spread well-rotted
mahatcheries In northern Ohio last.1 nure between the rows and work II If you keep them you will have to “teir Mosier during the last legtelasewton was due partially to the
year, one of the Federal velcri-jimo ulc soil around thc plants.— feed them for as much as four I
months
at
a
total
loss
—
Prairie
«»ny
Important
committees upon
naris ns found that 11 per cent of all i Amcrlcan Fruit Grower.
FarIncr
| which he served. A large part of lhe
the hens—and only 2 per cent of thc I
------------legislation work te accomplished in
laying pull?to—reacted to the test. I The Latham red raspberry consliHere
is
an
idea
for
cutting
short
!
f!ie
committees.
The disease spreads from
thc old ' tutes {jy great bulk of thc commcrSenator Mosier was a member of
hens to the younger fowls on the i clai plantings In Wisconsin and grain wllh a binder. A correspondfarm and the germs live tn the soil whcn (]lr {u|) pick begins to hit lhe ent of Hoard’s Dairyman had trou- ■ the following Important committees:
and lhe litter. Symptoms are a rav- &lt; market thc price usually declines ble with thc short straw clogging, 1. Horticulture—chairman.
•nous appetite, emaciation, thin wllh sickening rapidity. For this sickle and canvas—and he corrected ' 2. Apportionment.
breast bone, often lameness, pale | rcason the University of Wisconsin it by tacking 4-inch strips of can-; 3. Counties and Townships,
comb and wattles, and diarrhea, i js urging growers lo plant earlier vas across thc entire length of each 4- Drainage.
Postmortem shows liver and spleen I varieties so as to hit tiie price peak, reel slat. Try il the next time you
5. Finance and Appropriations,
with yellowish spots, liver enlarged.: jn n scries of production race* run have to pul the binder into a short Vice-Chairman.
and intestines often covered with ■ between Latham, Ontario. June and -------I This committee te considered espe­
tCopyright 1936—Library Guild)
cially Important by the prominent
lesions, if a flock is found to be tn-' chief, the University got the followI lenders in the legislature. The bud­
feclod. all birds should be marketed &gt; lng results: When thc last three
get lor each institution of the state
al once, the buildings cleaned and Were ready fdr picking on July 9th.
PRAIRIEVILLE.
disinfected, the yards plowed—and Latham was pot ready until July
Mrs. Anna Van Tyne. Robert Van . ant*1116 state departments and other
young slock should _,be raised on I 32nd. B&gt; that Ume 50 per cent of the Tyne. Mrs. Lucy Norris. Misses Jean ; ‘““Jor expenditures in thc state reclean ground.—Ohio -partner.
• June crop was marketed—48 per and Joan Roger*. Helen Nunemaker . &lt;elved the sanction of this com ml t------------- cent of the Ontario—and 24 per cent
nnd Russell Nunemaker vteited thc
Governor Fitagerald
rarely
Potato growers would be interest-; Of tlM. chief. Total average produc­ Ionia fair last week.
changed these appropriations during
ed In an article In Pennsylvania j tlon (Or the entire season was.,
Mn.. J»hn r n.«h.m .nd MIm '"f
Farmer concerning ilotato growing Latham. 101 pintsoiTtartaM
per acre; pZ;
June I - Griffcth
----------- of- n,c Frl? IMucMton.
EuU
Decatur „
.......
...
in. San Diego county, California., 122 ptnts jw.r arr(.; Ontario. M pinta;
• 7. Labor.
.tawin'. .hr
Thte California grower it operating | C|,lr.fi 82 plnu. On. tm.
U1ts showing,
the ‘I"? and s;ient thc week end with'i 8. Michigan Slate College.
a sandy farm that U valued—on a june raspberry made by far the best tiie former’s parents. Mr. nnd Mrs. । Senator Mosier was also chosen by
w
1
California climate basis—at a thou- showing, a* it had lhe highest yield F. J. Hughes.
' the Fitzgerald administration to act
Mrs Wilbur Polley relumed Fri­ i upon thc State Augmented Ad­
xand dollars tm acre. The land comes and reached thc high-priced mar­
day from, a visit with Dr. and Mrs. ministrative Board. This board is
into potatoes evertf. third ....
year. k(?l_wiscon5[n Agriculturist.
Charles Mullen and Mrs. Boyd comprised of the Governor, heads
Planting Li done in succession'from
October 15 to Januaiy 15— using a
White corn—Hie corn that goes Cortright of Otsego.
of the stale departments, two reac­
round, while, early ‘variety called into breakfast food and hominy and
Prairieville school will open Au­ tors and two representatives. All
the British Queen. Tbe crop is irri­ brewers grits—Li now selling nt a gust 31st. with Mrs. Doris Hyde and vital Issues facing lhe state are al­
■ Itb
gated 14 times, applying about an premium of 5c to 9c over yellow Mrs. Hazel McKibbln as teachers. ways acted upon by this board when
inch of water each tAnc with an corn, according to an article in Ohio
William Mullen accompanied Mr. 1 thc legislature is not in session
overhead whirling jJAwn-sprlnklcr Fanner. Tiie normal premium for
and Mrs. Lawrence Osborne to Es­
type to get more evtm distribution thc past two years has ranged from
canaba where they attended thc
and avoid washbig the soil. Blight 2c to 4c over yellow. In spite of this
fair, returning Monday morning.
Cancellation and School Aid.
is controlled by dusting with, 20 premium, hftwever. il is doubtful
Mr. and Mrs. Hyder and family
per cent copper dust, diluted with no whether the while coni grower get*
Senator Frank R. MoMcr of Fenn­
per rent lime or talc TJriginally Uic any more cash per acre--because of of Plainwell visited Mr. and Mrs ville. eighth senatorial district which
Floyd
Shelp
and
family
Sunday.
dusting was done wiBi an airplane, Hie smaller number of bushels of
but thte has been abftidoncd in fa-: white
--- ------------------.... ------corn-- per
acre. The
white vaArthur Neer, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis comprises Allegan. Van Buren and
vor of a txactor-drawp 15-row du*t- rtctlc* arc lc*s valuable lor stock Brown and son Wesley and Miss Barry counties, was a militant lead­
er which covers 65 jicres |&gt;er day.; feed-because of their |pck of Vita- Mary Johnson of Madison. Mo., er in readjusting thc tax system of
Iberc ore no potato bugs or flea i min A—and little effort has been called on Mrs. Merritt Wood and Michigan. It was through Senator
beetlra. Fertilizing colisists of a ton 1 made to develop f;tgh-pro&lt;luciiig George Wednesday.
Mosier's effort* tliat thc tax can­
ol 10-15-10 fertilizer 'dosting $15 per, ..trains for that reason. R might be
Scctna to be an epidemic of atom- , cellation bill was defeated. Thb, bill
acre—hall going in ab planting tiipc ; a profitable Klea for growers in the nch trouble going about.
proposed to cancel nil delinquent
and the r?$4’In lwo^&gt;|de dresMnpa.I white corn territory to do a little
Janette Johncock returned Sun­ taxes prior to 1932. The MosierA traelotfeinUvawr mtch cultivates , experimenting wllh hybridizing iti day
from a visit with her grnndpar- | Baldwin Bill adjusted this tax prob­
SO acres per day and no hand hoeing order to get their acre yield up
1st necessary, as the'sandy soil is [ where tiie premium is al) extra pro­ ent*. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Parker of | lem so that millions of dollars wcre
Hastings.
received by the state ns taxes and
thrown ovxr the weedf and smothers. nt over yellow corn.
Mrs. Ethel Honeywell is visiting once more placed thc tax problem
i In mulching strawberries, thc her son, Rev. and Mrs. Honeywell, on sound legislation basis.
kind of mulch and thc time of re­ at Jonesville.
Senator Mosier also gained promi­
moval in thc spring arc both very
Burdette
Norris
of
Yankee nence throughout the state as a
। important. Wisconsin University re- Springs spent Sunday of lemon member of the committee of five.
I pork, that wheat straw, strawy ma­ with his aunt. Mrs. Jennie Norris.
After a three day dead lock in cau­
nure. .marsh hay that is cut before
Mr. and Mrs. Silas Dealer called cusing among lhe Republican sena­
weeds ripen, and shredded coni nn his brother. John Doster,
at tors. thc committee of five was ap­
। stalks are all satisfactory—hut oat Coopersville. Sunday and found him pointed for devising a coni|&gt;romisc
straw contains too many weed seeds quite ill.
on the Thatcher-Sauer Bill. The
senator was asked by the laic Dr.
Maurice Keyworth to compromise
this bill. Thc compromise on the
Thatcher-Sauer State
Aid
for
Schools Bill provided $22,400,000
dollars for 1936 and $22,600,000 for
1837: ThLs Dill'has" reduced the lax
burden upon thc local units ap­
proximately one third in cities, ur­
ban and rural areas.
x

lhe death of their cousin. Mrs.
lie Humphrey at Gull lake, re­
cently.
Mr. and Mrs Milton Warner of
Kalamasoo spent Bunday afternoon
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Ashby.
Mrs. Blrdena Lyttle of Bettie
Creek spent the week end with Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. McDermott.
_Our schoolhouse was sold to H.
Hie of Hope Center

PROCEEDINGS

t

NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Mra. John Hoffman and ton.
Dwight. Un Kenneth Reynolds and
Shirley and Mra. Wesley Edmonds
of near Dowling spent last Wcdnes■ day in Battle Creek.
I Mr. and Mra. Delbert Reynolds,
SifIiwPS
P«Uil«a
ol Tj»,»h
Joan&gt;b I Mr. *nd Mra Wm Cramer. Sr.. Mr.

■M

f*

n. if.

Hi

sen of Mt. Clemens, Mr. and Mrs.
Merle Callhan of Lansing. Burke
Cramer. Martin Mead and Morris
Hamilton of Nashville, Vesta Arteta
and Cheater Cramer were all at the
Ionia fair during the post week.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Todd of
Center road called on Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick Fuhr Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. William Cramer. Jr.,
and daughter. Sandra, and Miss El­
sie Poland, accompanied by Mrs.
Edith Edger of Hastings, visited Mr.
and Mrs. John Kollar of Middleville
Sunday and found her much im­
proved in health. They also called
on Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Poland also
of Middleville.
Don’t forget that school starts
next Mondav morning, auuiul 31.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Crittenden of
near FrFcport called on Mr. and
Mrs.- Wm. Crittenden Sunday.

£ te .i£
II W.ldroo I.Ko

EA8T DELTON.
After many months of sutlerIng
Mrs. Rose Hallock passed away on
Saturday Much sympathy is felt
for the Husband and children in
the loss ot a loving wife and motii-

If"

t.ibrarv loni no

SJ no

K.I.U.VI KlreiHr Sbot.
a r a.bf. auftotf

3 SO

io

k.

Hlair »ir«'l

Il 30
I?

Mi

“I Get 22 Miles
to the gallon
with my II ’ ;e "

Coonlv Hrallh i;nli

Mr. and Mrs Bert Galndcr and
Lucille with their friends, Mr. and
Mrs. Wolfe and family of Cedar
Springs, had a picnic dinner at
Gun lake on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Von Dunn and son
of Delton were dinner guests on
Wednesday of Mr. and Mrs. Ike
Mr. and Mrs. Ike Lclnaar in com­
pany with Mr. and Mrs.
Gordie
Durkee and son of Delton went on a
motor trip Sunday and enjoyed a
picnic dinner near Grand Rapid*
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Harrington
of Banflcld were dinner guests Sun­
day at Ute Stewart Waters home.
Mr. and Mrs. George Lclnaar and
Josephine of Hickory Corners spent
Sunday evening al Hie Rex Walers
home.
Miss Lorrine Collison Is send­
ing a two weeks’ vacation with her
parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Clale Louden wcre
called to Leila hospital at Battle
Creek on Monday because of the ill­
ness of their daughter. Mrs. Vesta
Hasel.

Martin corners.

The Marlin .school begin* Mondav.
August 31. with Mte* Ruby Cogswell
at the helm for another year.
Miss Alice Whetstone and Mr*.
Millie Fisher attended thc quarterly
conference al lhe Goodwill church
HOPE CENTER
Sunday evening. They report a good
-----,_______
_ ___
Mrs.—
Lucy
Leonard
was very hap- meeting.
plly surprhed Sunday when all of
Sunday school next Sunday at the
her children and grandchildren i usual hour 10:30 o’clock. Be sure
walked into her home at Clyde and come. One week from Sunday.
Leonard's with well filled baskets to September 6. will be our iiaslor's
remind her it was her sixty-ninth , last Sunday with us. Come and hear
birthday. A delicious pot luck din- a good sermon. Rev. Conklin has
ner was served under the trees on I been with us nve years and hr and
lhe lawn and at a lati hour they hte family have endeared themselves
nil departed, wishing their mother to us all and all feel worry to have
and grandmother many more happy them leave us. But we wish them
birthdays.
Rood success and God’s blessing in
Charlie Williams and Mrs. Chas. whatever field of labor they arc sent
McDermott received the sad news

IVe Have an Immense Slock of

Floor Coverings
Our stock of Rugs and Carpeting is
large, new and well assorted . . .
and thc prices arc as low as you
can find anywhere.

9x12 AXMINSTER RUGS
Good Grade, Beautiful Patterns
I’m getting 22 miles to the gallon
with my new Dodge...

For Only

424.95
Small THROW RUGS for

as little a

39c
It handles ao beautifully...is so
luxuriously appointed...

This stock includes thousands of yords of linoleums.
consisting of some of thc

most beautiful patterns wa
have ever had thc pleasure

of showing and priced from
the felt base goods at 39c

MBl

par yard to $1.79 for thc
best inlaid.

HE

1 .05
9x12

expensive-

car features. Yet iBt
few dollars more thaJi
priced cars...and ttje

Felt Base
Rugs

lowestdl differin made
up in the end by thc money I'm
saving on gas and oil.

DODGE

$5.95

nkw low rmsr cost

Wc eorpestly invilp. you to coll at our space during
the Barry County Fair, where we will be showing
ntany|ar&lt;icles that will help make d perfect home.

MILLER FURNITURE CO
HAsAnGS
Haauaga

________________

Keep your tax record clear
make second payment
on the 10-YEAR PLAN
by September 1st 1936
AX PAYERSof Michigan
last year set a notable
example for the people of
America by paying or reviving
their taxes on hundreds of thou­
sands of pieces of property.

Many thousands of tax-payers
cleaned up their back taxes in
full. Other hundreds of thou­
sands put them on a ten-year plan
by paying one-tenth of their total
indebtedness for 1932 and prior
years.

Wc arc fea­

turing some inlaid patterns

AT ONLY
PtR YARD-

I

FHONI 2224

Now the second payment is due.
It amounts to only one-tenth of
the amount involved, and to it
must be added a carrying charge
of 4%.

Don't miss making this pay­
ment.

And remember: if you failed to
put your taxes on the ten-year
plan last year you can still do so
by making the first two payments,
plus 4%, and a small extra charge
on the first part.

Note.
By paying up your taxes now on
the 10-Year Plan you save
to
36c/c on future payments.
RAICHIGAN'S 10-ycar plan, as «nacted by th« legislature, pro­
vides that on unpaid balances thc tax­
payer is to add interest at thc rata of
4% per annum from September 1,
193S. In other words, on thi
installment the interest cherg

COOKING?

BAKING?

vancing costs you can now anticipats
all payments by adding only 4%.

For Better Results, Use
Highlands Grade A Milk

X&gt;U Order of Augmented
Administrative ,Roard
of State of ^Michigan

Hi$h in Cream Content. Raw
or Pasteurised. Pt. 5c; Qt.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2451

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Heuinp

�THE HAETINGE BANNER. THUREDAY, AlJGL'ET W, IW
| Calls for luncheon were heard and
NORTHEAST CARLTONArthur Stairs' horse yas struck
lour guide said that lodgers were
Joyce and Phyllis Endsley and by lightning in Friday nlghVs
। still kept al the inn and meals were
brother of Fowlerville arc staying storm.
Republican—
I served regularly to tourists and
with their grandparents. Mr- and
roomers. Had we known thia, we
F^IR LAKEMn. Alonzo Decker, while their
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 2) |
would not have eaten our lunch
AL'S TQYlNG TO CONVINCE
Mrs. Florence Van Horn of Jack­
parent* are on their vacaUon'
In Concord shortly before going to
Mr. and Mrs. HaroW Blliott and son spent lhe week «id with her
Kwuac num
Instead Wicjr
they awoke
from b
a piciupleas-- —- —■—-— ---------------- ——----.! Sudbury. Tbe new dining room is
hOoR MAN THAT TWEQe
parents,
Mr.
and Mr*.
Porter
ant deluilon to find thcmwlvc* fol-1 fCoottaoad from paga 1, Boc.
—
--------------------—
--------son
of
Flint
hart
b«*
n
visiting
directly below tho new ball room.
SHOULD
ATM OH BQkJKS
Knowles.
.1I After
------asbQrt
friends and relatives here.
laving an administration governed . . .
. ,,
,
abort w&gt;Jjt
walk down an avc
ave-.
NOW.THEQK A MAN FOR YOU,
Mr. and Mr*. Allen Bulmer and
.1
Rwrn«»
In l)lM&lt;
Longfellow often nue of wide *preading tree*, we
Mr. and Mn Herbert McGiocklUi
by the spirit of Tammany, leading apeak* pf the landlord. "Squire. came to toe Utile red schoolhou&amp;e
family of Lansing visited Mr. and
AL'NAYS FGuRlNG Up SOME
Mr*. Chas. Brisbin Bunday.
Uns of Hartings, Mason Forshey and
them headlong toward the same Howe;" “grave in hi* aspwt and at- where “Mary and her lamb'' went to
TH**&gt; HUT WOHT AFFECT
Last week's visitors at lhe home fAmlly of Pine lake were Bunday died
type of dictatorial government tire; a man of ancient pedigree, a ! *chooi. Mr. Ford has repaired the
him^EL-P 1H ANY YdAY//
of Mr. and Mrs. John Abbott were: guests at the Earl McOiocklln home.
against which their forefather* Justice of toe Peace wu he, known building and school 1* held there
Will Moore an(l mother. Mr. and
Mr. and Mrr Hammic Armour at- wn
fought.
i In al) Sudbury a* "The Squire. • • •: regularly.
Mrs. Glen Moore of Cass City. Mr. tended lhe Armour reunion at Lake Groat and
Good patriots In both
parties And In tbe parlor, full In view, hi*
in concord we had a novel exand Mr*. John Moore and daughter. Odessa Saturday.
home of R
quickly came to their sense*. Re- cnat of arms, well framed and | pcrlence near the site of lhe phi
Alice, of Muskegon. Mr. and Mrs.
gardlax of party or creed,
«uch a glazed, upon the wall tn color* | concord bridge where the fambu*
Bunday callers at Lottie collUter's day.
Leonard Moore and daughters of were Mr. and Mrs. Porter Knowles. :
——'
thing must nol continue!
blazed." At the present time thl* ■battle wu fought. Here we met a
Grand Rapids. Carlyle Height and , Mrs. Clay Rorabeck and sons of near' "The greatest
Looking
...............................
about for someone to
-----------------coat...of arm* Is hanging in the! inan who uld he wu 84 year* ot
family of Detroit. Arley Height and t Hickory Corners and Mrs. Henrietta in that we don't
lead them, they espied Alfred M. i*rlor or living room a* in former
.
tbe Fred Height family of West Farrah and children of
j*an be .fundamentally
Landon, thc governor of a TYPICAL tears. Among th* friend* of squire bridge. He informed us that he was
Odessa
Floyd Armour
us."—DaeUI Raahury.
PRAIRIE STATE—a quiet spoken Howe and Longfellow, who 1* men- a grandson of one of the Minute
man of grim courage.
•
i tloncd by thc latter, was Ole Bull. Men who fought In the historic
TIiL-l Alfred Landon had led hl* । a noted Norwegian violinist, who battle at the bridge, lie said he had
state out of debt through exercising was described a* "fair-haired, biue- lived his entire life in that com­
a Utile common sense; had reduced ; eyed, hl* aspect blithe, his figure munity making his living by draw­
taxation without rldertepplng a 1 tall and straight and lithe, and ev- ing sketches (though wc did not sec
single obligation which a good gov- - ery feature of hl* face, revealing hl* them) ot the bridge, the double '
ernment owe* its people—Thl* he Norwegian race, a radiance stream- rows of elms on each side of thc *
did at a time when state and Fed- [ ing from within, around hi* eyes road, the monuments, etc., which he
cral governments were going on a 1 and forehead beamed, the Angel sold to visitors and to dally pajier* I
"hog wild" spending spree; piling ’ wllh thc violin, painted by Raphael. ...
in Boston .and other cities. He was ,
anH
up deficits forfuture generations to , he seemed.............. The insteument on i rorrvino
carrying ua rvnluhnirH
pasteboard hriv
box and
pay
| which he playod, was
in Cremona's looked as if he needed a friend to
Thi* Alfred Mndon knows lhe 1 workshop* made, by a great ma*tcr 1 care for him in his declining year*
problem* of the people; know* lhe of thc past, ere yet was lost the art instead of walking four miles each
taste of poverty—because hehas ] divine. • • • and In itshollow chain-1 morning and evening to and from
risen upward
through hl* owti ; ber. thus, lhe makerfrom whose. hl* work. During the conversation
ability. No sllyer spoon wa* placed hands il came, had written hl* un- he xald trial he wa* the owner of
in Ail Landon's mouth al birth. He ' rivalled nkme—"Antonius Skradl-1 the
uir original
oiigumi picture
picture of
or "Mary
Mary and
ana
know* farm problems because he Ls;variua."
!----. .. and ..
. ..
Her. Lamb."
that. ..
though
Henry
a .farmer—No playboy country
others, whose stories are recorded1 Ford's representatives had often
I ■»
•&gt; • W.M0. .n»U» made generous offers for thc pic­
ture. he would not sell, saying.!
court* in place of wheat fields and Spanluh Jew. Israel Edrehl. a dealer "Henry, Ford likes to deal in un­
potato patches!
1,1 oriental good* in Boston; the
numbers, but I deal in rountK
Thl* Alf Landon by h!s very ca- ; P&lt;»‘. T. W. Parson*, the translator; even
numbers, so I won't sell until htrf
reer is a living symbol of lhe free- of Dante; the Sicilian, Luigi Monti, meets my terms." we enjoyed our'
dom of opportunity which this ■ political exile who made hl* re*italk with him as he was a real ।
country has always given lo those j donee tn America and at one time character, proud of his ancestry.!
who will make good use of their j served as consul to Palermo; the
proud of his Job. humble though it
.ability.
theologian. Professor Daniel Tread,L“‘ Platan- W«yne "—er and lhe
Thl* Alf Landon will lead Amer-1 wc»- » theological genius; and the !^,“S
President, was
guest. The Home
that he lived in concord rather than
. .
lea back to n *anr government ju*t student, Henry Ware Wale*, a; in Lexington.
reports of the secretary, Lois Flow- Literary Club (served a lovely din- i
ner on the lawn al 1 o'clock- The
as be led Kansas. Hi* steadying scholar of promise who died early
jer account
of ’ er. and thc treasurer, Louis Dunn. meeting was called lo order by lhe
This Is but a meagc
____
influence will save our country from leaving his valuable library to HarI the Wayside Inn. out If you want were read. Election of officers fol- president. Mrs. Prouly. who wclcommuni*m. from socialism, from v*’’d College, where he had a pro­
dictatorship or worw.
• fcs-orxhlp
Parsons.
Monti and Ij more complete Information just read lowed. Louis Blower was elected corned our guests and turned lhe '
their1 lAmgfoUow'a "Tales of a Wayside president: Genevieve Flower, secre- meeting over to Mrs. Smith, presi-,
Mndon is an American for Amer- Treadwell frequently spent
। Inn." and you will want to Include tary and Mrs Grace Flower, treas- dent of-the M. I. Club, who pro-'
I summer
months
at the Inn.
lean*!
........
...........................
I this place on your next vacation ------- ----- -----------urer. Thc ---afternoon
was spent vided lhe program—three trave- ‘
Visitor* to the Wayside Inn will,.,."
| quietly in visiting. Several of the logucs. one Ln the Yellowstone
| see the old harpsichord; the large ; ,u,ltr,ry'
•
-- Democrat—
cousins and Mrs. J. K. Flower went park, Grand Canyon, and one. Den- j
I desk; lhe portrait of Fair Princess I
“
|
to
thc
cottage
Saturday
evening ver. Colorado Springs. Pike's Peak,
swing of the "bu.-.lnc*s cycle: that Mary; the coal ot arms; the tall
MILO.
i clock in the corner and thc pane | Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert relumed nnd had a steak supper, also a the other, a trip east to Washing­
(D new Lvucx nf wcuriUcv had1 from lhe window on which lhe great from lhelr nihiois trip last Thuns- Venetian night program and a ton. These talks were all well giv­
------ ----------- । , weiiier
welner ruiuv
roast ui
at eleven
eleven ouoo,
o'clock. n
A en and much enjoyed; also were
Ixvn well distributed nt high Major William Molincaux wrote thc । ------- ------ ------- day.------------------------------------------------------ number remained over night.
prices lo small investors.
i following verse, probably about June
'
Illustrated by pictures. So closed
Shirley Lemmons of Knlamazno ' Mrs. Wilcox was al the Bradfield another enjoyable day of the H. L.
&lt;2)—lands had been »dl xubdl- '
Mr. Club. Thc next meeting will be with
spent from Tuesday until Saturday home Sunday
K.mH.w and accompanied u.
What
do
you
think?
vidcd nnd sold to the ultimate
and Mrs. Bradfield to Pine lake lo Mexdarne* Brandslctler and Boyle.
Here
is
good
drink.
. sucker.
with Mrs. Harlan Scobey.
visit Jack.
Sept. 10.
Then came the moment for the I PcrhuiM you may not know il;
Jack Schultz and son Bobbie and n
Mn. Woolslon's mother, Mrs Co-1
Billie Schultz is spending some
II nol In haste.
“Wise ones" to retreat into liquid I
brother-in-law from Chicago spent ville, from near Woodland, visited
Do stop and taste!
fund* and let the Http- frlluw-, lose I
the week end with the former's her over lhe week end. She re­ time in Indianapolis on business.
You
merry folk
will show
it. . parents. Mr mill
their .I...
Investment
That
tlw'
LIII.U
&gt;&gt;&lt;!&gt;&gt;
1ILL.V aa* l.ll
...
..
.
nnd IMrs. W C. Schultz, turned heme Monday.
DUNIIAM DISTRICT.
iBeaidc*
these there arc dozens of 1^ Hills farm.
“good old xyzlem!"
system!"
|
There will be a social meeting of
Miss Enid Checsemgn spent part
And what was thc cflcct of this I oUvr
interesting
and
valuable
v with wextreme
I,h
F. ‘
1
------------3 .—
V. ------;■ I reft
xadne*.* we
system?
...................
. durln« ' chtoiude thc a„,lh 0, Mra A„n„ thc P. T. A. at lhe schoolhouse Fri­ of last week in Vcrniontville. with
,1c. lhal ..............
were orlslmLlI,
ured
day evening.
Sandwiches
nnd «*•
cot- her aunt. Mrs. ErbieTtemke.
thc
Howe
regime.
One
room
downHumnhrev
who
mussed
awav
earlv
m
i.
*'
O4,
‘
,u
*"
a
'
C3
nna
THINK 'mis OVER! It encour­ '.UI.. U U»
wh„. .LI ,'li,Ln ..Lend.,,.The L- A. 8- Ice cream social, held
aged thrift among consumers. *o
•( WMwwa. Dull tate.. Ann* WU-!
Saturday night at Clyde Cheese- :
that periodically their
savings -------- a* wnawooo. wuu laxc. annie wu-, .i the L A s n
man's, was attended by a large i
could lx- transferred lo the holders; ®VCJ} 10
old woodbox filled wiU) jiams wa* born near Milo seventy piOwrr for tiie
fin7iv
M&gt;iirw'wd"'foZ'thr~kitch7n
"
rar
Flower
for
thc
annual
meeting.
of large capital funds'
n«*riyorsplit
wood for
the kitchen
.-=r.
cr .,or U1After
F.
Inre
to Ste
the btaze
to t£»! on. J
””. Wu”’ L‘n't'd ln ■ J-i°7
Wcdnewlay
the buslnei crowd. Over twenty-five dollars was
taken in.
By l!il* mean* ownership of in­
uxe nrcplaoe
marriage lo Frank Humphrey over mMtlng Me.sdames Osborne and
.Frank Savage, who lives at thc I
dustry was coneentrated in a few I As one enters thc front door he n/ty ?Tari*
Bn&lt;?
,,ome Germain presented a very good
Lu^X 'he'room ihicL w^ toe
fa?m Toth
£7?he^ prOfnT The following officer* home of Mr. and Mrs. Orson Me- '
hands-strong hand.-,!
Intyre, is seriously ill.
Mr. Coyle goes further, and show.-. • hJ•“room
- - in- -fnrmrr
------ -vr»r.
--------Th.
—
ithplr **"" “l G""
" ‘ thM4! were elected: Mrs. Mary Doster,
Thelma and Neva Ball spent part
how two progrcsidvc changer, in our
room 1,1 former years. The origi- ycars
—t .KhCu*a'' 'I'!. c^U:lc2i
president; Mrs. Barber, vice-presi- of last week with their sister. Mrs
American economic *y.lcm have nal ba,r &gt;* st}H
wlde cou.n--II
fc-------Edith Dunkelbcrger, In lhe Weeks
tended to break down this cyclic |tcr “bovr which hangs a movalMc WJU
R
U-, adoption of
... Imml- «ate which, according to tradition.I meetings,
did no. JLJJ „««!
XfJXXuX district.
procc-A: ...
&lt;i&gt; the
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walton ac­
gralion laws, and &lt;3&gt; tbe full in II w
"s wai
,Pl down
on
Sunday* when
Uic
bar
c*”cd
n Adjoining
toti* was
,or “mr “m.e .and hc.r. w?‘- 1 meeting. Mr*. J. Hall and daughcompanied Mr. and Mrs. Dale Conk­
I u.c upLom where Die LWuor .urck1
JtSSt.1" “/.'.“I"
the birth rate
.
------ -----. luj.v ri hiiholu. inunuca MIC lin to Riverside park. Saturday, to
In lhe past buxinca* wa* based
yws.
She
w
connncd
Lo
p
r08ram
.
Recelpu
Lor
.
upper.
IS.6S.
and a large spot on thc her bed only n lew day, before Lhe ' Thimd.y. Au«. M. Reelproelly attend camp meeting services. They
upon growth of the market for wa*„ kept
,
returned Monday.
showed wiiei
where lhe bottle opener
goods. Today, business must be wall riiowcd
. .
1 fcluck lnU} lh0 eum.non. ennw. She leave, one m. i Dn o| lhe Home Literary club
based upon increased consuming, had often been —_— — Dale, and nve urnndehlldnm and „„ held al Lhe lovely home ol Mr.,
power of smaller income*
woodwork
when the man was olher rel.hve. and a hou ol triend. H. J. Kr.ua, Cull lake There were “All experience is an arch wherethro'
You will enjoy hi.-, explanation of through with lhe pick. In the first lo mourn her solns We can only lweMy.nve member, wllh «ven□learns that untravell'd world whose
how mechanical productivity and ro°in also were many articles of ln- *ay. -Thy will be done.
I tKn Buc,u ol [hc M. I. Club. Oaleamargin fades
the power-age have affected our j
“n'on« thc,n bclnk ,n old .,Mr . “'Id ,yrs' Martln JonM ot burg, prommi. and aeveral outer
For
ever and for ever as I move."
economic .situation. It Ls a keen *“P buckel Uul h,ul becn ,ucd on Grand Rapids wcre guests Sunday ---------... — .
’
—Tennyson.
analysis that goes straight to lhe the Coolidge farm in an early day. of Mr. and Mrs Harlan Scobey. guesls. -Mrs. M. J. Cross, Dial
heart of the matter!
I on ^e bottom. It had been auto- These four friend* participated in
The people who elected Rooncvclt Rtaphcd by Calvin Coolidge. John a double wedding ceremony a few
asked for a return to "sound cco- I Coolidge. Thoma* Edison. Henry years since.
nomic" principles. Some of them
«nd Harvey Firestone. Thc
Jack Bradfield spent the past two
haven't realized even now lluit the I old fireplace, the mantel. Ute chairs, weeks in the Kellogg camp. Pine
old' established laws of economies *•* decoration.* etc., were mute lake, and wax delighted with hU
won't function today-lbal they evidences of early Ute In Sudbury stay there. Mr and Mr*. Bradfield
micht be wrong!
and vicinity.
visited him a couple of times during
You must recognize thc fallacy of I. Beyond thc tap room was the hLs stay. He will remain until Fri­
recovery investment *s Mr. Coyle | *arsc kitchen which is still used in day when lhe camp breaks up.
explain* it. It is
concrete and "inter, so our guide told u*. The
The annual reunion of the Flower
clrar
long, narrow table; thc pewter- family was held at thc cottage of
Thcn you will M-c that lhe appear-1
cutlery; old pewter, Louis Flower. Guernsey lake. Sun­
ancr of Mussolini or Hitkr replicas
*nd copper bowl*; the huge day. with thirty-five in attendance.
tor even Stalin reproductions, are
After a good chicken dinner lhe
Die Dutch oven; the spit where meeting wa* called lo order by lhe
meals were roasted; and. in fact,
One more thing.
Much ha* been said and more in-1 all ot lhe equipment of a kitchen in
sinuated about thL, Administration's a pioneer home claimed our interest.
I Upstairs the rooms were equally
"spending spree."
I interesting as each had been oc. True, billion* have been .spent.;
BVT it was to save humanity
Humanity not to : cupled by well known people—one
BIT!'
slaughter il! What about the bil-1 wftJt &lt;»••«* Uie Lafayette room, one
lion*
spent
in
thc
World
war?
named—
for--------Henry
Longfellions
tiie
--------------. -W.
----------------What about the private loans by thc ,ow- another for Thomas Edison, etc.
BIG WIGS?
j Tne bcds wcrc *our po’-Krs with the
Could il be they're disgruntled h,«h canopies and lhe bed spreads
that money spent lo save human wllh d“P valances. The furniture
beings from despair doesn't find its I was well preserved and beautifully
way back to Ihrir pocket*?
polished—a Joy to any woman's
No Fuel or A&gt;he« to Carry
Could it be they are more *ym- heart. The guide called our spepalhcUc to war with profit* for cial attention to thc waU paper
themselves than they arc to "Peace which, she said, was an exact reNo Soot or Dutt to Ruin Rugs or Curtains
With a bit of lhe good thing* in this 1 production of the original. When
the Inn was being renovated for oc­
world for our people?"
No Parts to Wear or Bum Out
cupancy after a lapse of yean,
KLINGENSMITH.
some of lhe first paper was found
You Pay for Fuel as You Use it
OFFERING:
Calvin Hill of Traverse City is on the walls and Henry Ford, with
spending a few days visiting old his characterlsUc attention to detail,
Jrjcnd* and relatives in this com- had an exact reproduction made ot
INSTANT HEAT—A. Littl. u You Like.
SflMiy.
lhe quaint old design. Judging from
Everyone would like to own a
Millicent and Teddy LeBaron of the looks of the stalnleps and lhe
Detroit are visiting their aunt, Mrs. thresholds, the Inn must have been
LJ.OQO car—but don't worry if you
Beautiful, modernistic design—a fine piece of furniture that enhances
Albert Orcen. this week.
well patronized as the treads are
haven't one. You can get the
Mrs. James Slorkan is spending a worn deeply, the thresholds are
the beauty of any home.
same comfort and safely in
few weeks with her sons In Cleve­ thin and the floors uneven.
SHORT WAY'S radio equipped,
land.
On the second floor was also the
Mrs. Margaret Willson and little ballroom where guests enjoyed th*
luxury cruisers.
son arc spendinc two weekszwilh her old fashioned dances, lhe quadrlUe.
And of course—SHORT WAY'S
sister. Mrs. Clair peeling, in Detroit. the dos-a'-dos, lhe acholtlsche, the
Little Shirley Ann Peterson was minuet, the polka, etc. This Is still
courteous and careful drivers will
taken to Grand Rapids and had In uzc by lhe young people of lhe
bring added comfort to yoty trip,
her foot put in a cast again.
neighborhood who gather for par­
Alice Roso Latta 1* spending her ties every week. After Mr. Ford
Try a SHORT WAY ride tat
vacation al the home of her par­ became lhe owner, he built on a
real enjoyment.
ent* after attending school in Bat- larger ball room .which Is a real
Frequent Schedules!
community
center, available to
For a FREE ESTIMATE for Your Homa
Watermelon stands were running young and old.
on our street last week. Not near as
Viaig Our Duplay Room
You cm b^t your hen)* wiU to
many melons this year but they
hav. a very *wt«t taste
DUNK WATER WITH MEALS
Circulating Haalw for to him coat m • I
“I do not behave the referee]
GOOD FOR STOMACH

POLITICAL NOTES

WMEIUIIS
STILL BEING USED

1936
•UN

20

27

ft9s Time To

BUILD
REMODEL
REPAIR
RE-ROOF
your home cornea first

THE HOME LUMBER COi
HASTINGS

"The Home LumberjCo. Huilds Homes” PHONE 2276

Enjoy All the Comforts of a

Natural Gas Heated Home!

“Moore’s”

I

$3,000.00

Xuxury Cruisers1

Gas-Fired Circulating Heater

To Replace That Old Stove

or Room Heater

Miles of COMFORT

PHONE

2305 or 2526

------- ECONOMICAL TO

should from time to time pick up
lhe ball and run with it himself. Nor
do I believe that the referee should
from time to time change the rules
nf I be earn/ unless a majority of the
players have first agreed to the proposed change."—James P. Warburg.

Water with meal* help* stomach
Juices, aids digestion
If bloated
with gas add a spoonful of Adlarlka.
One dose cleans out poisons and
I washes BOTH upper and lower
bowel*. B. A. LyBarker, Dmgain —
I Adv.
J

Consumers Power Co
■US DEPOT...TRIO CAFE
PHONK J1J7

HARTINGS

You Can Buy Thu Heater on—Long—Eaay—Monthly—Teruu

of coal or coke. INVESTIQA’™

�TWt HASTINOS ilANNEB. THURSDAY, AUOOCT YT. iHt
when he made hU first vteit to town 1 where they visited last week at the
COATS GROVEBROWNIE THE CLOWN COP.
I many from here attended after a serious Illness. A L. has I home of Mr. and Mrs. Otte Fisher,
been supervisor ot Yankee Springs
Mr. and Mra. Clinton Burpee are
for
some
years
and
as
yet
is
nol
the
parents
of
twin
boys.
Elton
A.
' At the birthday meeting held wllh
Mra. Mildred Griffin recently the sure where he will locate when the and Welton B, bom Saturday. Aufollowing officers were elected: govemment takes over hte place, j gust 33. al their home.
Dr. and Mr*. K. B. Rees and fam­
Pres. Mrs Alma Boulter; Vlce- We all hope he will locate nearby
Pres . Mrs Marxaret Coats; Secy, es he has made many friend* In the lly attended the Rees family picnic
.Mrs Dorothy Bar num; Treas.. Mra community since Ums family came i at Beadle lake Saturday and Mra
here from Chicago some years ag&lt;x Rees and Robert attended Um* PhilJennie Coats.
Rock Lynd of'Detroit, visited his lipa family picnic near Battle Creek
Mr and Mra. Jesse Chase. Eugene
mother and brother. Max. over the on Bunday
Davenport and Mra. Ethel
Hall week end. Rock was formerly in
spent a few days recently at Torch business here and always enjoys
CIA)VERDALElake in northern Michigan.
getting back to the old town.
Ed Pennels went to Kalamazoo
Doris Coats spent last week In
The storm Saturday night did to spend Sunday with hte wife, who
Grand Rapids
much damage In and around here. te taking X-ray treatments. Friend*
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Cooper and
will be glad to hear Mra. Pennete te
son. David, visited at
Harley electric service that evening and doing nicely and will soon be home.
Sense's on Bunday. Afternoon vla- until late Sunday. Many buildings
Mr. and Mrs. Archie McNutt en­
were damaged by the wind, espe­ tertained the following relatives and
fin and Wendall and Donna Todd. cially north of here, and we are told friend* during ths weej:: Mr. and
Mr and Mra. Ray Coats. Mr. and that at Caledonia It did a . deal of Mra. Myron McNutt and Mr. and
Mra. Ollie Elvay of Grand Rapids damage right In town; the French Mra. Ed Brown of Otsego; Mr. and
and Miss Grace Hart of Middleville coal silo bore the brunt ot thc dam- Mrs. Harold Wills of Kent. Ohio;
visited at Geo. Coats’ last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs Fred Cave of Kala­
Charles F. Parker’s home north mazoo. and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. He&amp;i
Miss Marian Woodman of Albion
spent Sunday at home, returning of town was struck early Bunday of Everett. Washington.
by lightning. Fortunately Charlo,
Monday morning.
Mr and Mra. Harry Fennels en­
Charles Ruggles is a sleep-walk­
The L. A. 8. will meet next week heard It and got up and was able tertained Mr and Mra. James Bul­
ing bridegroom, suspected ot being Thursday. Sept. 3. with Mr. and to put out lhe fire before it had lock of Cleveland* Ohio, over lhe
a somnambulistic Tiger Man." in Mra. F C. Wing in Woodland. Din­ burned much.
week end.
his latest farce with Mary Boland, ner will be served by Club No. 3.
Our
. . school
_ _ will
. start
... the second
Mr. and Mra. Roy Pennete enter“Early to Bed." The film’s plot In­ Pearl Dcmond and Mattle Kimble week in September We are looking j talned lhe following guests Sunday:
for a larger attendance than ever Mr. and Mrs Henry Jone* of Kalacludes a heroic effort to sell a mil­ will have the program In charge
lion glass eyes, in which Charles
mazoo. Mr. and Mra. Thomas PowMr. and Mrs. E. o. Smith spent De,ore
Is hampered by an untimely murder several days visiting and glghl-see------- ---------- - ----------------------। ell of Climax, and Mr. and Mra.
mystery.
Ing in Canada.
DOWLING.---------- -Lawrence Mead and Mr. and Mra.
The Coats Grove annual school
The Community Birthday club William Mills and Mra. A. Chap­
Marion Davie*. Dlek Powell
reunion will be held thte week Sat­ will meet Friday evening. Aug. 28 man of
nt Kalamazoo.
starred in “Hearts Divided." urday. August 29. Pol luck dinner wllh
------ -...
...u&gt;ur
Hcnr&gt;’ Mosier was pleasantly surMr. and «...
Mrs. Walter w
Ormsbe
In the role of Jerome Bonaparte, at lhe church basement. Bring ta­ wlth an invitation to the men folks l’»’i*ed when the Sons and DaughPowell comes to America to nego­ ble service. Mr* E. O. Smith and to attend. Ice cream and cake will lers of Veterans dropped In with
tiate the sale of the territory of Mrs. Geo. Ragla are the program be served.
picnic baskets Sunday and IncidentLouisiana to the colonies In behalf committee
Mr. md Mr. Uu o.llrr
l.m- i1!1!,"'?!™1 “*
"»d
The sports committee
“Brownie The clown Cop
of Napoleon. Assuming an incognito te composed of Miss Gertrude Stow­ 11,. Mrs. Ella Smith. Mr. .nd Mrs. while there.
again furnish clean fun and amuse­
when he tires of Washington's so­ ell. Cleon Smith and Paul Wood­ n.™.u wtwnum
sun,. Mr.
Mr. and
.nd ..™* °”*“
W"* s“»&lt;l“y
Harold Stanton and sons.
cial obligations, he attends a race man. All former residents, schol­ Mrs. Howard sunlon and Bort
•* tal« ment all the week at Die Bavj
near Baltimore, where he meets ars. teachers and their friends are
lake.
. County Fair. Last year this friend­
Stanton attended lhe Stanton famBetsy Patterson, played by MIm cordially Invited.
Mra. Mary Wolf and Miss Haxel ly clown endeared himself to younj
lly reunion, which was held at CaleDavies. He falls In love with her.
Hosken left for Renville. Minn, to
The many friends of Mr. and donla Sunday.
। and old with his tunny Cricks am
obtains the position of music and Mra. Ttiurlow Anspaugh extend
visit relatives. Thursday.
nntln
Mrs. Nettie Bowman and daugh­
antics. lip
He is rnntid-rw!
considered hv
by m,nv
many ■n
French tutor to Betsy. In this ca­ their sympathy to them In their
pacity he has a splendid opportunity sorrow In the death of their 15- ter. Barbara, visited at the Ben
superior to Billy Lorrette lhe Worl
DURFEE.
Bowman
home
in
Irving
Township
to use the voice that has thrilled year-old son. Richard, who was
The Durfee school district has 'Faif'ou-' Clown Cop.
millions of theater goers Included In killed; last Tuesday by an accident- ,
voted to pay transportation for the
the cast are Edward Everett Ho.’- ally discharged gun
Carol Isham will teach the Parker pupils past the 8th grade, who at­
ASSYRIA.
ton, Arthur Treacher and Charles
Mr. and Mra. H. A. Woodman ^hool thte year which will soon be tend the Hastings high school.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stewart o
Ruggles.
spent a week visiting relatives in 'ln «esslon. Ulis will be Carol’s first
Mrs. Gamble and son. John, of Coldwater were guests al lhe hom
Greenville. Dayton, Pittsburg, Ohio, experience In thte line of work and
Grand Rapids spent the week end of her brother, Curtte Russell am
best
of -----------success.
and Indiana, reluming last Mon- we
“ wish him lhe ’—
* "*
family and attended the Ionia fal
Donald Heath ot Hastings spent with Rev. Gamble
Tiie story, representing a darkey's day. E. 8. Thompson accompanied
We are pleased to say that the on Thursday.
primitive conception of the Bible them to Union City, Ind., to vteit several days last week with Nell Rev. E. Gamble attended confer­
Waynard Belson had the mlsfor
Isham. The boys met while al camp
and Its characters. Is filled with de­ old friends there.
tune
to break hte ankle recent!;
ence
last
week
and
was
returned
to
Marian and Paul Woodman went and have had an enjayabie week to- Baltimore district.
lightful humor, although presented
while at work on the Bailey broth
wllh a tender reverence. There Is a on Aug. 15 to Greenville, Ohio, and gelher.
er*
’ project at Medkiff lake, whei
School begins Monday. Aug. 31.
Mr -------------and Mrs.-------Edd.-------------Titus of—
Clov.i —
■
tremendous cast with 111 speaking returned Aug. 16.
Miss Veta Rice spent from Wed­ he stepped on a slippery board. H
erdalp were Sunday
Rntidav guests
aiiaata nt
X&lt;r
Mra. Bessie. Woodman attended erdale
of Mr.
parts and nearly 1.000 other players.
nesday until Saturday with Miss was taken to Leila hospital for X
Rex Ingram, who has the leading the county W. C. T. U. picnic at And Mrs. Orlie Fisher.
ray and a cast was put on.
Mr*.
Robert Marjorie Reed of Hastings.
**"* Cora Asplnall.
*“*—” **
“
role, takes the place of Richard Clear lake near Dowling, last Fri- . Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Smith, wh
Mrs. Perry HUnslcker and Mr
Jones
and
Mrs.
Lois
Altman
spent
Berry Harrison, who died after day afternoon.
Harold Hunsicker of have been located al liu* luxne ol
------------------Thursday in Battle creek with Mrs. and Mrs
playing the part five years on the
MIDDLEVILLE.
! Lynn Wilcox and Mrs. Beulah Leh- Cleveland are visiting Elroy Hough- the latter's parents. Mr nnd Mra
talin.
Wesley
French, have rented thi
Mra. H. P. Dumke has gone to man.
and
Mrs. James lines and Alex Cortrlght residence and wll
Petoskey to avoid the hay fever.
’ The following officers were elected 1 Mr.
'T.'’ ~
’7 ^7,'
TAMARAC.
soon locate nt Lacey.
Tiie T. I. Gillettes arrived home Thursday at the Ladles’ Aid Society. ™otI’
“nd’.Mr- and Mra.
Mr. and Mra. Bertie Smith visited
______
Mr and Mrs. Hugh Cose and Nor­
Brooks
of’ —
Lansing
spent
Sunfrom uicw
their iiuruicni
northern trip,
president. Mrs.
Mrs. ueriruoe
Gertrude uasKlli;
Gaskill; I M
ranaltw
«™*m
«.mrneir
war- Tuesday
juenuay num
irip. prrsiuem.
j E nrooks
7. , «
7
their son. ncmara
Bernard onuin.
Smith, at WarGrover ma were dinner guette on Sundaj
nerville Saturday. They also vte- 1 They
Thev visited
vlxlted Ed.
Ed Betts
Ret Lx and family
familr vice-president.
vira.nrexldent Mrs.
*rr» Lottie Ormsbe; '' ,ay *,U1 Mr
ited their daughter, Mra. Arthur. in Marquette
and
-------------’ ; nroolts
rout,.,,:... h
»u had
uud *a -vwy
en- I--------------secretary.. —
Mrs. "
Hammond;
,........................ j at lhe home of their brother. Floy&lt;
May "
Hammond
Joyable vacation.
vacation.
treasurer. Mrs.
Nina
Stanford;
bfrsGrover liroobsl. vlslUnn rel- Thomas at Hasting*.
Bruett at Grand Rapids Saturday joyable
Nina Stanford;
Mr. and Mra. Emerson Cortrlght
Veen LlctKa
LlclXa went
went lo
u&gt; Eaton
Eaton RapRap.1 nuwer
Bower tunmi.,
comm.. mrs.
Mrs ayivia
Sylvia ruuier;
FUlrer; I ,,
J* ytnslnu
tills■ seek.
Mrs ’
evening.
Vern
----- j’”..----"ZC" "T'"
Friday to vteit
visit Morris
Morels FreshFresh-, entertainment
enteminmenl comm,
comm.. Mrs. Mate
&lt;«* '1 7?
*na,, Brooka
nl,&lt;1
nmwM ayc
ae. earing nnd family were Sunday guests al
Mrs. Ona Cotton, formerly of | ids on Fridaj
r,
s "?
a Benn,e
their brother. Adelberl Cortrighl’i
Tamarac now of Portland, has been ney for a few days.
I| Oswald, and chaplain. Mrs,
Mr*. Exner. |,
&lt;*Hr
!!f,r *^scnM'cottage
nt Gun lake.
visiting Mra. Boston Cotton the past j O. L. Whitmore had a very pleas-1
week”with Mr* and'Mrs Will
plea.*- I Thc Misses Norma and Irene Ii
Doris and Edna Moon of char­
I ant visit with A. L. Graves recently ■ Hook have returned from Comstock.
1 Hoffman.
lotte. who spent lost week will
their grandmother. Mra. Olive To­
bias. and uncle. Lyman Tompkins
have returned home.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Harry Cotton. Mr
and Mrs. Ed. Keyes. Mr. and Mra
Curtis Russell. Mr. nnd Mrs Hugt
Case. Norma Case. Lucy and Wes­
ley Buller were nt the Ionia fail
on Thursday
Mra. Bessie Norton of Lakeland
Fla, who L* spending lhe summei
with her mother. Mrs. Meachlm ol
Assyria Center, was called home bj
lhe Illness Of Mr. Norton.
Recent real estate change* hen
include the removal from our mid*)
of Emerson Cortrlght and family
who have purchased the Wesle)
French farm of tire Section Hill
district, east of Bellevue. Mr. and
Mrs. Cortrlght iiave beep active In
civic affairs of the Briggs cominunlty and life long residents here.
I Mr French, the father, will reside
with them.
I The six months old son. Russel
Eugene, of Mr. and Mra. O. O. Hew­
itt, who fell from a col three weeks
ago and broke hi* arm. was taken
I to Nichol* hospital last Tuesday to
| have tire bone rebroken and reset
1 a* the bone was not straight. It
[ was then put in a cast.
Mr. and Mra. Wilson Case of
CAkkED UPON FfiOMEPr IN 2l .QountiES
North Avenue road entertained at
a family gathering on Saturday at
their home, honoring their son. Rev.
Lester Case and family of Kinde.
Rev Ca&gt;&lt; has held thc pastorate
there since he entered the ministry.
A miscellaneous shower was sched­
uled for Tuesday evening at tire
Ben Conklin home honoring Mr.
and Mra Dale Conklin, who were
recently married. Another shower
was given them recently at the
home of the bride's parents. Rev.
and Mr* Rhoades, at Maple Grove.
Leona Cortrlght and Dorothy
Mack were members of a 4-H Club
canning team who went to Lansing
A* regular equipment. Co-op Tractor* are
Oar Chrysler Hli Industrial Motor unit Is
Monday
to.demonstrate their work.
equipped with these features:
They were the only team In Barry
SELF-STARTER
county to compete.
ELECTRIC HEADLIGHTS
BATTERY and GENERATOR
consumption.
GLA88 CREEK.
'
IGNITION
Mra. Clara Robinson and Mra.
FOOT and HAND BRAKES
TRUCK TYPE STEERING
wlth lhe Louie Erwsy family in
GEARS
Kalamazoo.
Sunday vUilora at Forrest Hav­
ens' were John and Gordon Havens,
the Robt. McOiocklln family. MUs
Well adapted to highway hauling. Will do U
verts lo 16 different widths
Eloise Storer and Mlu Grace Will
clal lug arrangement. Axle always enclosed;
of Hastings and Louise Havens of
Battle Creek.
truck. Fuel and oil consumption no greater.
never projects beyond wheel
MUs Ruth E
Erway returned
Sunday from a week's visit at South
Bend. Ind
No effort hot been spared to moke the Co-op Tractor the best that
The Goodwill L. A. 8. will be en­
tertained at the Fred Smith home
modem engineering can produce. Ceara, axles and bearings are of
at lift West Center street in Has­
the latest design and have adequate factors of safety to insure long
tings for supper this week Friday.
This will be the final meeting •of the
life under severe duty.. Tractor operates quietly. Be sure to see

week-end guests of relatives and Mary Smith. Mr. and Un. timer I pQaaooooaQOO^oaooaoaaq
friends m
bi De
Detroit .
Smith.
and | X
friends
daughter.Mrs.
Helen,Ralph
all of Smith
Detroit and
J A f flip ^Thp/ltYP
Mrs. Sarah Bickel and son. Dale,’• Mra. Sherman Smith and grandsons 8
-iriCULfC
daughter and a boy friend of Sid­
ney, Ohio, were guests of Mr. and of Portland. Ind, also her daugh­ of Hastings called on Chas, parlee
Mra. Glenn Wotring Tuesday and ter. Mrs. Leia Milthaler, and son. and family Thursday evening and
Bobby, of Dayton. Ohio, were week also on Sunday afternoon and eve­
end guests of the Levi and Ouy ning.
A beautiful girl from “outside"
Kantuer families.
Tiie Kantr.fr families and their pits her love against the pitiless
Mr. and Mra. Alton Smith. Mra.
Otte Flanigan and family were
guests spent Sunday with Mr. and code of the wild in Jack London’s
Mrs. Levi Kanlner to assist the for­ “White Fang" with Michael Whalen
mer
In celebrating his seventy-sixth
------------------------------------------,------- | and Jean Muir In thc leading roles.
. birthday.
.-------------------------------- ; •while Fang* is a sequel to LonMra. Otto Townsend and son,. don’s "Call of lha Wild.”
Ralph, spent last week in Indiana, I
—---------i where Ralph went lo school and the , Hopalong Ca**ldy’»
rnvmskF
vslsllvw. Ilrw^
"Heart ot the Weal"
former vlwll^sl
visited relatives
there. -TSielr
Their
aunt
came
home
with
them
for
a
“Heart of the West." newest HopeLbs.
visit and Joan and Barbara Hersh­ long Cassidy picture, puta William
berger of Indiana also
returned Boyd and Jimmy Ellison In the cen­
with them for a week’s visit with ter of an old western fence war
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. raging between an easterner new lo
Harrison Blocher.
ranching and a seemingly respectMr. and Mrs. Royal Frants and
children from Vermontville were tie rustling.
Sunday evening guests of Mr. and
Mra. Ouy Kantner.

•OUTHWEST

woodland.

SPECIAL

Sweet Potatoes 8

25c

2 tall cans 23c
PINK SALMON
PEACHES FOR CANNING—ASK US!
5 ban AMERICAN FAMILY SOAP 23c
CREAMERY BUTTER__________ 36c
10 Ibs. SUGAR---------- ,------...52c
24'/z Ibs. LEADER FLOUR______ 73c
DEL MONTE COFFEE .......29c lb.
3 Ibs. BANANAS
.............
19c
DEL MONTE PEACHES—In
heavy syrup—18c can

2

Blue Ribbon Oleo

ibs.

25c

TOMATOES, No. 2 cans ................. 10c
Bia Double Loaf of BREAD_____ 10c
1 lb. Loaf—6c
2 SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUITS .25c
3 Large oval cans SARDINES___ 25c

WALLACE GROCERY
OPEN EVENINGS

PHONE 2458

FREE DELIVERY

SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Mrs. Amy Usbome of Ipswich. S.
Dak, spent lhe past week with Mr.
and Mra. Lafayette Usbome.
Mrs. Anna Buck. Esther and
'Achsah. spent the past week in
Grand Ledge attending the 8. D. A.
camp meeting.
Mrs. Henry Williams and daugh­
ter. Geraldine, spent part of the
week at Gun lake.
Henry Williams spent part of the
week in norUiem Michigan.
Mr. and Mra. Caryl Fuller and
daughter. Robert Culbert. Mr. and
Mra. J. J. Strodlbeck. Mr and Mrs.
Prank Shriber and Hazel. Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Barry and son and Ken­
dall Buck attended the Ionia fair
during the week
.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald 'Hscher and
children of Carlton Center and Mr.
end Mra. Harold Elliott and daugh­
ter of Flint spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Yarger and chil­
dren.
Orville Parks and friends of Lan­
sing called on Mr. and Mra. Frank
Shriber and family Sunday evening.

2 3 05
lur tytkrnnatccnL-

CO-OP TRACTOR
Has Features YOU WANT!

Now the Salarday bath

ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

When you heal the water

MAKE AN AUTOMATIC

GAS WATER HEATER
OUT OF YOUR OLD TANK

• EASILY CONVERTED

We will install the famous

• ALL PURPOSE Machine

MIRKO-SHELL
little as

EASY TERMS—$1.80 per mo.

TRADE
Old Equipment at part payment

• EXTRA VALUES

• POWER

.

When Anne most rinse
her lovely hair.
Consumer* hot water is

AUTOMATIC HOT WATER IS "CHEAPER THAN DIRT
YOUR FAMILY DESERVES IT NOW!

CONSUMERS POWER CO

and try this Tractor. We invite a demonstration.

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
HASTINGS

'The Former Owned Store

WOODLAND

Mra Russell Whittemore spent
last Saturday in Grand Ledge.
Mias Helen Will of Hastings spent
lhe week end with MUs Maxine
Erway. ,.
»•
Mr. and Mra. Chas. Whittemore
spent the week end at Delton help­
ing care for the former's mother.
Gordon Vanderwheel of Kalama­
zoo u spending lhe week at Fred
Otis'.
MIm Vlrgina Havens was a Grand
Rapids visitor TuesdaV.

�TW1 HAITINGI BAXNK*. TWUMDAT. AUG08T OT, UM

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

I game protection fund of lhe state
' and will help to finance operation
of state hatchcries and oilier con-

high record. exceeding that ot last

are planning trips into new and
strange country this fall, lhe land*
division of the department of con­
servation has available maps of
many northern counties showing
the road*, streams and lakes. These
maps will be aenl on request al a
fee covering part of the cost of pub­
lication and mailing
The maps
will meet a demand that has been
recurrent each fall, particularly
from dear hunters from the south­
ern metropolitan centers of the
state.

j

.

I
j

A new type of lure known as the
"club sandwich" has been proving
very effective against large bluegills
in lhe Inland takes tn the vicinity ot
Traverse City For the benefit of
flshermen. Mark Craw, conservation
officer, describes how H's made:
"Fishermen who have been using il
take any bld snelled fly. the more
ragged the better, and on thia they
string a cricket, a grasshopper and
a worm. Thia bait is a deep water
killer and obviously takes lhe larger
bluegills. Do the fish go for HI'* A
black-gnat fly on which a small
Steelhead trout, lhe fresh-water white grub Is fixed, weighed down
"tarpon" of. Michigan waters, will with a lead shot, recently was found
effective
In the lakes near Baldwin.
provide fishermen wllh three months
of high quality sport this fall dur­
ing lhe special open-season on this
WEST HOPE.
species In certain designated Inland
The family of Hatlie Anders Bliss
lakes and streams of the northern of Coopersville was shocked lo heir
part ot the state. The season. In of her death Thursday morning )n
effect. Is an extension ot trout a Grand Rapids hospital. She was
fishing in certain designated waters coming nicely after the second'of
and continues open throughout two recent operations when she
September. October and November. suddenly passed on She was a fine
Anglers troll for the steelheads wllh woman and many friends gathered
heavy spoons and lines and within at lhe Brush Ridge cemetery at 1
lhe past several years the sport has o'clock Saturday for the burial rites,
come to have a high ranking among the funeral services having been nt
the fall outdoor pastimes of the 10 o'clock In Coopersville. The fam­
stale.
ily has the sympathy of a large
number of friends.
The Christian Endeavor contest
Nearly a quartermillion hardwood
closed
Sunday with Donn Springer's
tree seedlings and shrubs will be
ready for planting on state lands side in the lead. Church activities
this fall from the new state hard­ have begun again and next Sunday,
wood nursery near Wolverine Black morning Rev. Gamble will be here
locust and honey-locust will be used C. E In lhe evening with Jennie
particularly for erosion control Springer as leader.
Mr. and Mra. Evert Holmes of
projects; the other seedlings will be
used for game cover and food plant­ Lansing spent Sunday with his
Mra.
ings on stale forests and game brother and wife, Mr. and
Russell Holmes.
refuges primarily.
Mr. and Mra. L. D. Woodman,
Heavy fines featured conservation Harry Jenkins and Mr. and Mrs
law enforcement during July when James Jenkins of Kalamazoo vis­
204 persons were arrested in Michi­ ited the Muskegon oil wells Sunday
Mr and Mra. Ray Barnes and
gan for breaking the conservation
laws. Justices ot thc pence assessed Teddy and Tommy Haywood spent
8100 fines in four cases and 850 Thursday in Climax with his broth­
er
and wife. Mr. and Mra. Frank
fine* in seven cases. Thirty-two
violators were given fines of 825 Barnes, and in the afternoon all
Thc 8100 fines were levied for Illegal enjoyed the Camp Custer sights.
Nearly
everyone around here vis­
poKsessicm of gillnct, dynamiting
fish and attempting to dynamite ited some nart of the army maneu­
fish. Illegal |XMsesslon of n glllnel. vers at Shelbyville, Allegan or Camp
shooting a benr. killing deer and Custer.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Clark and
setting a deep trapnet in more than
80 feet of water brought lhe 850 daughter. Patty, and Richard Clark
fines. As In June thc majority of of Kalamazoo spent Saturday at
Will
McCallum's.
arrests involved charges of violating
Mr. and Mra. Reuben Boulter and
the fishing laws. Twelve were ar­
rested for selling fires without a daughter of PlalarrU spent Sunday
afternoon at Ray Barnes'. .
permit.
Mr. and Mra. Chet Jackson of
A small herd of deer fawns is br­ Holl and Mr. and Mrs James An­
spent
ing collected at the cusino. State ders and Charles Wallace
afternoon
at
Harold
game refuge cast of Munising to be Sunday
used this fall and winter for deer Springer’s.
food studies by game men of the de­
"Beauty Ls God's handwriting: a
partrnent of conservation. Orphan wayside sacra ment welcome It In
fawns and fawns rescued from for­
est fires and sent lo lhe various fair flower, and drink it in aln.ply
■talc game refuges are being ship- and earnestly with all your eyes; it
ped to the Cuslno unit where they
are being reared on milk until old is a charmed draft, a cup of bless­
ing/'—diaries Kingsley.
enough to lake natural browse.
"Since war produces nothing with
Nearly 1,000 commercial minnow which to pay its bills, it would be
dealers' licenses have been Lvucd by In accord with sound principles of
thc
department
of conservation mi u'lm
.... ...
&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&lt;... v,
both rtuiKiuiim
economies and numaniiy
humanity io
lo put
far this summer. Thc S3 license fee | It completely on a pay-as-you-go
to date has brought 12.775 into Ute basis '—Prof. Arnold J. Lien.

USED CAR
Clean-Up

LOANS IN BARRY
COUNTY TOTAL 641

Federal Land Bank Loaned
•668.000 During Fait
/
Throe Team
Barry county farmers have ob­
tained Ml loans from tiie Federal
Land Bank of St Paul and the land
bank commissioner in the period
from May IBM to July 1 this year.
It was announced In a statement
from lhe land bank.
Land bank loans on first mort­
gages amounted lo 101 for a total
of
8883,500
and commlMioner’s
loans on first and second mortgages
amounted to 340. aggregating 8466.­
500
A large part of these funds
here as elsewhere was used to refi­
nance already existing debts al low­
er Interest rates.
During the early part of the peri­
od practically all funds were used
for refinancing existing Indebted­
ness or to redeem farms in fore­
closure.
Following the amendments to the
farm credit act made in 1935 an In­
creasing proportion of these loans
has been used for lhe purchase of
farms, particularly by young men
and renters, who have found this a
favorable method of acquiring
farm*. Experience, equipment anu
h reasonable down-payment arc re­
quired.
Since the farm credit act was
passed early in 1933 there have been
34.593 land bank and commission­
er's loans closed In this state for
a total of 382,558.000.
HENDERSHOTT.
The main subject of converagfion
Is rain and thunder and lightning
O well, we are enjoying it. We
wonder if everybody has thanked
the Lord for the great blessing
There's more than one way of doing

Emeal Haynes with Mr. and Mrs
George Haynes and Mra. Fisher
went to St. Johns Sunday to take
the letter's Utile grandson. Billy
Fisher, home after a three weeks'
slay wllh his grandmother.
June Haynes went to lhe Ionin
fair Thursday with her aunt. Mra.
Mabel Bennett.
Mr. and Mra. Ernest Matteson
were called home from their vaca­
tion last Thursday by lhe serious
Illness of their daughter, Mra Lawto lhe Leila hospital in Battle Creek
on Saturday for an examination
and to the Pennock hospital tn Has­
tings on Sunday for treatment.
Grace Brill was home from Kala­
mazoo Sunday evening.
Clinton Brill stayed with Norman
Hall In Hastings Wednesday night
and they went to the Ionia fair on
Thursday.
The church will serve a pot luck
supper at the schoolhouse Friday
night of this week. The ladies all
should lake advantage of this be­
cause the men arc to do the serv­
ing.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Garrison re-

turned from thetr vacation at*Pea­
CARLTON CENTER.
I sett and Mr arid Mrs. Burr Faasett
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Brecheisen I Mr. and Mrs."Lester Hawks, Mr.
cock. Mich, on Thursday.
A fair cool day favored the gath­ and son entertained relatives from 1 and Mrs. Samuel Os troth. Mr. and
| Mrs. John Darby attended the camp
ering al the Henoersholt reunion Ohio over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs jay Wing of Grand meeting at Buchanan Bunday.
last Thursday to help make lhe oc­
Rapids recently purchased
the j Mlsa Helen Skidmore returned
casion a vary enjoyable one.
Carlton center store of Jay Carpen- frotn her lrlp to Miwourt last week.
... w. ...... ,„ .... «, n.™,. i Ur&gt; WB
prank

NOW...BU

Leo Hendershott on Wednesday
of Cressey visited the former's sis­
night of this week Instead of Thurs­ lived here for yeara and him many ter. Mrs. Henry Bidelman and Mr.
day. The date was changed be­ friends. We extend our best wishes . Bidelman Bunday.
him in whatever
venture
he may
j
cause -the Little Light Bearers are to
uz.uc.vasc,
wc
»w..
u vu.
umvI
«r»
Siterm an ;
to meet on Thursday afternoon at undertake; we also extend our best
the home of Bobble and
Joyce wuhu to Mr. and Un wins xml “d Mlu Bin. Ellonboo. or llo■
.
..
imgs
welcome
them
lo our community.
tln8’ spent
«I»nt Bunday
Sunday as guests al the
tbe |
Clark.
Ridelman home.
Henry Williams. Guy Nash and I Bidelman
home.
Remember the Communion serv­
John Robinson accompanied Roy
Mrs. Cbirice Hall of Battle Creek
ice at our church next Bunday.
Puller on a fishing trip to the north- called Sunday on her parents. Mr.
ern part of the stale for a few days । and Mra. Vincent Norton.
irving.
last week.
| Mr. nnd Mrs. Henry Bidelman I
Mr. and Mrs. E D. Johnson en­
Carlton Center school begins Mqn- i and Forrest attended Ionia fair. , j
tertained their children, grandchil­
day. August 31 Miss Hazel Cairns | Oscar Archer, aged l;2, father of
dren and great-grandchildren at a
will be the teacher again.
Mrs. OUs Whitmore, died Tuesday
family reunion on Bunday.
« e »----------------evening at lhe Kalamazoo hospital.
Bion Benham ot Kalamazoo made
BRANCH DISTRICT.
Funeral services were held at the
Irving a flying visit Thursday.
Guests at the home of Mr. and Wilcox church Friday at 2 P. M,
Miss Lillian Bowerby lias friends Mra. Jcase Fassett Bunday were Mr with burial in lhe Wilcox cemetery
from East Chicago slaying at Bar­ Bill.
and Mra. rriry
Perry Passett ..u...
from M
the
•_ Sympathy U extended to lhe bc.c ... .... ..perl of the state. Mr. and
I mvrrl
familv
low lake, who spent the afternoon northern
| reaved
family.
with her last week.
Mrs Ray Fnraett apd two children
——
Mr. and Mrs. William McCann of Battle Creek. Mr. and Mra Floyd 1 "As usual, if you give up what
you
arc
looking for, you find It."—
and their son and his wife from Fassett and daughter of Grand
Lansing have returned from a trip Ledge. Mr and Mrs. Harry Green Ruth Cranston.
lo the upper peninsula. Wisconsin and family. Mr. and Mrs. Burr Fasand Chicago. They also stopped at
Vandalia to see Alton Warner, who
is very 111 at his mother's home.
Mrs. John Perry, who has been al
Pennock
hospital. Hastings. Is
home again. All hope for her com­
plete recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Kennedy
from east of Hastings were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dell Wilcox
Mr. and Mrs. William Schenkei
and children were Sunday guests of
his family al Owosso and on their
return trip they slopped at Ver­
montville. Mra. Schenkei and chil­
dren remaining for a visit with her
folks.
Miss Ethel Palmer was united In
marriage to Mr Van Sycklc. teacher
tn lhe Middleville school Saturday.
Congratulations.

Amazing New Ward Bike
Gives Buoyant “Floatingfhrough-Air’ 13027469

See

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

-st » hunurt m&gt;l« ’ 4_„ c

C. THOMAS STORES MAINTAIN AT ALL TIMES THE
LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES CONSISTENT WITH FAIR

BUSINESS POLICIES.

OUR "EVERY DAY LOW PRICE

ON YOUR FOOD PURCHASES.

SALMONS
KT I fl I I D

LBS.

'28c
ot 23c
3 St 25c
3
a. 15c
3

creamy

•

SPICES

FOR
CANNING

MUSTARD SEED—3 o&gt;.
CELERY SEED—1 ox.
ALLSPICY—Wholo—3 ».

PICKLING SPICE—3 M.

SARDINES

£.“• 25c
JUST looking at Axel Advene, you know
that he constantly crusades for truth. No
one is going to pull the wool over bu eyes
when it comes to claiming gasoline mileage.

Swansdown
__
Sno-Sheen Pkg.
Sofia Silk

6AS0LINE MILEAGE

_

fa

KEN-L-RATION
QUALITY DOG FOOD

3 c*- 25c

World's Greatest Mead Test, instituted by
Standard Oil. Even though you may not
be driving one of the Keiearth Test Cara,
It will pay you to .. .

LEARN THE TRUTH

Tumeric. Whole Clone. SHck ClnnomM. pk|. 5c

FRUIT JAR RUBBERS
MASON JAR COVERS
PRESTO CLOSURES

doz. 4c
doz. 18c
doz. 23c

GLASS TOPS FOR MASON JARS

CAKE FLOUR

Anslout to ba fair about the whole thing,
we'll go a big step beyond Axel's conten­
tion and concede that no one gets "a huneri
miles a gallon" with Standard Red Crown.
But wa do have every reason to believe
that this excellent motor fuel gives as many
miles per gallon as any gasoline you can
buy—quite possibly more.
In any event, thousands of midwest mofor} Ists are getting the truth, first hand, in the

ABOUT
HASTINGS. MICH

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LB.

12'
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77'
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1934 FORD V-8 COACH

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CLAPP’S BABY FOODS
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C.THOMAS

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PURE CIDER

Call and Look Ovar the Following

1929 CHEVROLET 157 in. chassii
and cab

TRY BUYIN
THE
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MACARONI ~ 3

SPECIAL PRICES

1930 FORD MODEL A Runabout
1930 FORD MODEL A PICKUP
1932 FORD BB TRUCK, new motor

HmSbci

Frank Sue

Phone 2515

—

This Week Thursday, Friday and Sat
urday, Auguit 27, 28 and 29

1930 FORD MODEL A TUDOR

us for all kinds of
Building Materials

&lt;OH,JOHN
HOW CAN
WEEVER.
REEPOUR.
FOODBUD
&lt;27 GET EVEN

©©

POWERS ECHOES.
The severe wind accompanying |
the storm early Bunday morning
did considerable damage in our
neighborhood. The large doors ol
a barn cm George Bedford's farm
were blown off and several fruit
trees wcre ruined. Henry Frost's
silo was badly twisted and moved I
from its base, and a lovely tree j1
clone to the house was blown down.
Montgomery Warth 1937
Another, over five feet in diameter,
was uprooted.
Hawthorne "AirFlow”
Mr. and Mra. C. J. Schaaberger
Duralium on Display!
and baby of Grand Rapids spent
the past week with his sister. Mrs. A revolutionary development in blArthur Bedford Artelle Bedford ac­ rycllng construction is on display for
companied them to Grand Rapids you to sec! Tho full floating spring
frame
and
to visit with relatives for a week.
„.„
1B absorbs shocks and bumps
-------Charles Hauser and sister. Mra. jivea a new easy, comfortable riding
Bob Brown, and son. little Bobble. I iensation. A closer pitched sprocket
of Detroit and Miss Marion Pierce ' and chain makes for easier enortless
of Hastings were Sunday guests at pedaling, too! This amazing bicycle
the home of the Misses Almira and also boasts a 'buj)t-in speedometer,
Nell Reed.
lafety headlock, electric headlight.
Ralph Palmer. George Bedford, tall light and horn. It la made of
Paul Palmer and Arthur Smith are Duralium the new aluminum alloy,
attending the 4-H Club cattle Judg- lighter and ■Iron*". '-h“n,|
ing elimination contest al Lansing whose bright
finiah will never
this week
‘ wear off or rust, chip or corrode! •

Remodel! Repai

Sunbrite Cleanser
2 cant 9c
SWEETHEART SOAP
bar 5c
PALMER MATCHES 6 bx». 25c
JTANOAID DtAllU QHU VALUABU BOOK OF MIUAUI TIM— HH3I

3 doz. 25c
KERR LIDS regular size
PAROWAX
1 lb. box 10c
MASON-KERR JARS K. 55c fit 65c
POTATOES, U. S. No. 1 u u. is&lt;41c
CANTALOUPE STtSS*
each 5c
PEACHES Laactoas Homa Grown 3 Ibs. 13c !
3 Ibs. 10c
YELLOW ONIONS

MUFFETS, Wheat Flakes
GRAPENUT FLAKES
SHREDDED RALSTON
ROLLED OATS, bulk

C.THOMAS S
IU WBT ST ATI STREIT

pkfl

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THUUDAT, AUGUST tl. 1»M

ur

AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR BREAD

4 / ,

AaPBraad
contains only tha
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•rly balanced. No wonder
it’s "Amencs’s Most Popular
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Braad-io delicious and
•conomicsl Try # loal

WHITE SLICED

ter 29c
25c
te 39c
10 tte1 29c
te* 17c
’XL” ^5c

Bisquick
Yukon dub

3

Bmnj!

Our Own Tea
Kirk's Flake Soap

Super Suds
Mason Jars
55c
Jar Rubbers
^^grto
B,U,r Joll,,,
A-1 Sauce
Sardines
v“ c“’’’
Corned Beef
Baby Foods
H’
College Inn Soups
Red or Kidney Beans
Iona Pork and Beans
Tomatoes
Apricots .
Tomato Juice
Campbell's Soups
&lt;5X11

Jelly
B o'Clock Coffee

10

3 pk,‘ fOc
bottle
f
25c

bon)*

25c
■te 18c
3
25c
2 “"’.. 2fc
5
25c
5 *±' 25c
3
25c
’ I7c
3 te: 25c
3 —• 25c
"te 10c
1-lb. bag |9c
3

.c

hX’.j

Red Circle Coffee
Bokar Coffee

1-n.b..

•

21c
23e

^ --koui™1./sweethearts

ON pARADE

revue

AT FAIR

week end.
Kenneth. Dunn was In Lansing
Monday and Tuesday on a stock
judging trip.
PROBATE COURT.
School will open next Monday
; Est. Charles Hook. Entry of apthe 31st in the Olb school with
pcarance filed.
Est. Celia M. Traver. Order ap- Evelyn Newland as teacher.
Sunday callers In thc Dan Doug­
1 pointing Adrnr. entered, appearance
lass home were Mrs. Nellie Foreof attorney filed.
i ui rwucr a. Maurer nona or i,nan' K**""**®0: Mr’ Sarah 00111,1
1 Adrnr. ncd. letters of administration •
i luuid. older limiting settlement en-' Oley Douglass and children. Bowens
' tered. petition tor hearing claim*’ Mllb; and Mrs. Mildred Bagley and
girb of Kalamazoo
' tiled, notice to creditors Issued.
,
Alpheous Dunn U attending Hl-Y
Est. Cora E. Sinchdj Waiver of• camp at Torch lake thb week as a
notice filed, order assigning residue' delegate from the Hastings Hl-Y.
entered, discharge of Adrnr..issued,
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Edger of
estate enrolled.
lhe Edger district and Geo. New­
Est. jack Donley. Inventory filed. land of Olivet were callers Sunday
Petition filed, order entered.
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Car!
Est. Betty Jean Donley. Inventory Johnson.
tiled, petition Hied, order entered.
Mr. and Mrs. Francb Gdrham and
E-&gt;t. Charles Newland. Annual ac­ their daughter. Mrs. Willard Bag­
count filed,
ley of Kalamazoo visited Mrs. Clara
Est. Etta Mather. Warrant and Wilder of Battle Creek last Wednesinventory filed.
! day. They also visited the Kellogg
Est. Clyde D. Brown Petition for airport and Mr. Gorham and
The grandstand feature for Wed­
general and special Adrnr, filed, or­ granddaughters. Donna and Leona
of program. Including girb. scenery,
der appointing .special Adrnr. en­ enjoyed a ride in a travel and nesday and Thursday evenings of
wardrobe, acta and si&gt;eciailles. for
the Barry County Fair will be lhe Parblenne BalietA The costumes for , me
tered; bond of special Adrnr. filed, transport plane.
the muay
Friday an
and Saturday evening
production of the Revue
"Sweet- thb dance display were adapted performances,
letters of special Adrnr. issued. in­
SOUTH SHULTZ.
hearts On Parade."
from lhe lavbh patterns of the Re- I **--•-* •*-ventory filed, petition filed, order
Each of
these productions require
Thb production features 'bril­ vucs seen in the theaters of'Parb. ...
for publication entered.
Mr. and Mrs. G E. Kenyon and
more than a carload of scenic e&lt;Est. Seth Belle Shields, et al. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Bonneville at­ liant dancing spectacles, musical Music tor thb spectacle b supplied feels and with the special lighting
Escheated estates, petition for Adrnr tended the funeral of Mrs. Frank presentations, novelties and sensa­ by an All Ladies Band under the equipment a colorful etlect b pro­
a.. duced whle() u relnarkable and wly
filed, order appointing Adrnr. en- Hallock, a sister-in-law. near Milo tions. The program b also replete direction of Betty Bryden.
I There will be an entire change I be enjoyed by all who see It.
with vaudeville comedy stars.
Monday afternoon.
Eit. Ammn Sisson, et al. Escheat­
Mr. ond Mrs. Harry Misener of
ed estates. peUtion for Adrnr. filed. Kalamazoo. Mrs. Alva Kenyon and tended the burial al Brush Ridge ' Dorothy and her husband of NewayThe nine schoolhouses from the
। order appointing Adrnr. entered
sons of Bellevue and Gordon Ken­ cemetery. She had many friends go al John Ball Park last week to several consolidated distrleu were
Bit. Charles Hook. Order for ad­ yon of Hastings visited Mr. and here who regret her passing and I celebrate tiie birthday of tiie twins, sold last week at public auction, to­
journment entered.
Mrs. Lester SonneviUe Sunday. Mr. extend sympathy to the bereaved ' Dorothy and Donald.
gether with the equipment. Edwin
Est. Lottie Wisner. Bond of Adrnr. and Mrs. J. May and Mrs. Edith ones.
| Mrs Donald Mead and son. Harry. Johncox bought the Kinsley for JfiB;
filed, letters of admlnbtration is­ Bonneville of Battle Creek spent
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hom and are visiting Mrs. Mead’s parents in John VanDer Bhuur the Polley for
sued.
Saturday with them.
Evelyn spent Sunday with Mr. and Ravenna.
•53; Chrb Merlau the Lent tor *05;
Lorraine Sonneville had a tonsil Mrs. Byron Moody of South Maple
Est. Revo I. Mott, et al. Bond of
Sam Palmer, a resident of thb Mason Newton the Learn for SIM;
Gdn. filed, letters of guardionship operation at Borgess hospital in Grove.
community for many years, passed George Eddy Ute Hope Center for
issued.
Kalamazoo Wednesday morning.
This community was saddened to | away last Tuesday morning. The fii- •89; Art Johncox the Johncox for
many
friends hope
she may
Est. Blanche Molt. PeUtion for Her---------,----------------r----------------, . to hear of the passing of Mrs. Rose neral was - held at the Morgan •83; Will Rockwell lhe Tolles for
Adrnr. filed, order appointing Adrnr,' soon be well again.
Hallock of Milo Saturday. She hud church Friday afternoon at 2 •100; Russell Dudley the Dunn for
entered, bond of Adrnr. filed, letters I Mrs. Ethel Hom attended a ahow- been confined to her bed mast of o'clock, with burial at Die Striker •62. and C. J. Barnum the small
of admlnbtration Issued.
| er for Mrs. Virginia Armstrong in the time for the past three years, cemetery.
school house and lot in Delton for
Est. Lottie Wisner. Petition for Kalamazoo Friday afternoon.
but was always cheerful and had a
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Moore and
d.glftt. The total amount of the aalca
hearing of claims filed, notice to1 LUcy Sullivan ot Kalamazoo spent____
___ ______
smile_____
and ____
pleasant
word________
for all. family of Eaton Rapids and Mr.
r. Including the equipment «u •!.creditors issued.
I the keek end with Mr. and Mrs.. she
arid
"*"* will be
i—greatly
------&lt;—j mi&amp;wd.
---* Wl(
j Mrs. Loyle English and friend
Est. Etta Mather. Petition for 11-1 Fra/ik Horn.
I heart feltsympathy b extended to' of Lansing spent the week end with
cense to sell filed, order for publl- 1 The Delton fire department was | thebereaved family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Boslater.
*
THREE CORNERS.
I cation entered.
| called to J. W- Tedrow’* Saturday j
-----Mr. and Mrs. Clair Yelter were
to help
help put
put oul
oul aa large
large gross
grass fire,
fire, j j
STATE ROAD.
Est. Lottie Wisner. Inventory filed.'U&gt;
DELTON.
Ionia fair visitors Wednesday.
E»« August
aiimiit F.
v Geiger. Petition
tx..
Mrs. Kate
Kate Patton
Patton of
of Kalamazoo
Kalamazoo bi
b' Mrs Lucinda Jordan of Hastings
Est.
for ,| Mrs
Several of our local people now
Misses Ruth and Retha Robinson
--w*nrflno Iwn
hearing claims filed,
....
notice t„ ' spending
two weeks nt
at thUte Maus . VBlto&gt; M„. j„„t P1,lu„1.1U i„t
have a faint idea of wliat war b like of Hastings were week end guests
creditors issued.
i collage.
Thursday.
after vblling the war manuevers at of their parents. Mr. and Mrs H. J.
Est. Annie E Young. Proof of will
Mrs. Clara Gates has a birthday
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Scobey and „„
Allegan and Camp Custer.
Robinson. David and Dorothy.
| filed, order admitting will, entered | thb week, and to remind her of it
MSttJJ’tS’LS1
Lealrlce Dunning and Kathryn Wil Est. Russ D. Cadwallader. petition the following guests went to her
1 for Adrnr. filed, waiver of notice I home wllh pot luck dinner Sunday: northern Mlrhtan'
taU“ •™‘ “
,h“ w”k “ night guest of Mbs Clara J. Sisson
to Friday, on Saturday site moved her
।| filed, order ------. .
appointing
Adrnr.
en­ , Mr Rnd jjj., yern welcher and 11 Mr and Mrs Jarnes Halliard siwnt tt demonstration team chosen
8u
nd.;"w
”
h'X'S
1
SS
household goods to her residence in
tered.
Donald Floyd; Belly Ketchum of
Woodland and is ajiendlng a few
Bit. Tillie E Lichty. Order allow­ Lacey; Mr. and Mrs Loren Gardiner Miller at Uaeh lake.
J ’« 01ub ellmlaattol contest.
days wllh her daughter and hus­
; ing account entered.
and Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Mon­
Archie cunningham and family
Mr. and Mrs. John McMartln of band. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Reesor.
ica of Bedford; Lucy Sullivan of are tenting out al Lake AI-Gon- California are visiting friends and
and family before returning lo the
Kalamazoo; local, Mrs. Vera Crav­ Quin for a couple of weeks.
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
relatives here, and Friday night Mr home ot her sister. Mrs. Ida Pal ma­
I Mrs. Willard Bagley and daugh- en. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Belson. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. James O’Connor and antl Mrs. Leon Dunning entertained
। tors of Kulammivo were Sunday and Mrs. Frank Horn and Glen Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Coleman took “ f‘**’ K'lc-'w 111 thrlr1 ho,,or, “«• iler in Hastings.
Mbs Margery Fifleld suffered an
I guests ot lu-r parents. Mr. and Mrs. Gales and children. They all re­ in Ionia fair Saturday.
McMartln was formerly Mbs Isabel attack ot appendlcilb Thursday and
। Francis Gorham
. ______
port a good time ___
and______________
hope she may
Mrs. Janet PeltengiH visited her . Galnder.
J Mr. and Mrs. Richard Laubnugh! enjoy many more happy birthdays. sister. Mrs. Dora Coleman of Rut- I Rev. and Mrs. S. W. Hayes and h not recovering as rapidly as her
friends
wish she might.
। and son were Buttle Creek and' Mrs. Ella Greusel of Milwaukee. land Monday.
I daughter Freed* of Lakeview arc
Mrs. Agnes Kelley relumed Wed­
Camp Custer visitors last Wednes-1 Wls.. visited her cousin, Mrs. Ada
Mrs. Nettie Casey of South Has- sending the week camping in the
dav and Thursday.
j Asli by, front Monday until Thurs- tings will spend this week with Mrs. Brown cottage at Beechwood, Wall nesday from a ten days’ visit with
friends in Grand Rapids.
| Mr. and Mrs. Myron Bishop day. Other-1 visitors at the Ashby
Eble Solhard.
lake. Rev. Hayes was a former posMrs. James p. Hammond of Lan­
iMary Douclassi ore the proud par- home were Mr. and Mrs. Bert Pat­
■
»
I tor here and hb old friends are all sing was a Thursday lo Saturday
ents of a 7 1-2 lb. daughter bom ton of Delton, clarence Feltzer of
MORGAN.
glad to see him again.
evening vbitor In the home of Mr.
Wednesday thc 19th. She has been | Freeport and Frank patton and hb
and
Mrs. Claude A. Hammond. Lit­
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Henry
Martin.
Hen,
Mrs.
Vida
Morford
attended
the
named Joan and all concerned are bride from Harbor Springs.
doing fine.
Miss Rosa Hallock and Mr. and ry. Jr., and Jclla ot Dimondale Webster reunion at John McGlock- tle Natalie, who had been a guest of
her grandparents for three weeks
Mr and Mrs. H T Lord of Bat- ! Mrs. Tracy Hallock ot Battle Creek spent Tuesday and Wednesday with Un’s near Climax..Thursday.
accompanied
her mother to Hastings
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bordy
Rowladcr
Mrs
Lula
Wertman
spent
Thurstie creek were Sunday gucsu of attended the Ionia fair Thursday.
Mrs. Nellie Wolf and family visit- j day afternoon wllh Mrs. Eulalia to vbll Mr. and Mrs. Leo Fisher and
Mr. and Mrs. Roy oaks.
1 Mr. and Mrs. Ebon Smith of Toother relatives.
Mr. W. H Oth visited Mr. and ledo. Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Smith ed over lhe week end al Grand Ri*p- Litts of Northeast Barry.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jones of
Mrs. Wm Linnbigton al Podunk of Hastings and Walter Vickers of ids with Mrs Wolf’s abler. Mrs.1 Next Sunday thc morning church
• service will be conducted by Major Clare spent Sunday with the latter's
lake Friday,
Nashville visited the G. E- Kenyons Clara Finkbciner
June Gross, who has been cm- ! Parker, chaplain of the U. 3. Army. brother and wife. Mr. and Mrs. H.
Mrs. Faust and daughter of Chi- Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs.
J.
Robinson.
i
ployed
in
Hastings
during
the
sumwho
b
stationed
at
Port
Riley.
Kan,
cago wcre guests last week of their Frank Patton of Harbor Springs
mer. has returned lo go to school.1 There will be an official board
Mrs. Floyd Wallers and Marion of
daughter
and abler. Mrs. Carl and Tracy Hallock of Battle Creek
Arthur Barkly of Columbians, meeting of the Delton M- E Sun- Grand Rapids were house guests lhe
Johnson.
| also called Friday.
past
week of the former’s father. M.
ML-s Mary Dunn was a guest last
Miss Irene Shellenborgcr. AltaL Ohio, a chalk talk evangelbt. visit- day school at the church on Friday
and tnb
family
lastat night
thb week
7:30
o'clock.
E. mim
Mooreviara
and a.
aunt. Mbs Clara J.
w,night
week
i:30 ociocx.
ui-at EMoore
anuOfaunt,
week of her aunt. Mrs. Louie Erway Mosher. Ada Ashby and Mr*. G. E.‘ cd Chas. Harrington
fleers for the coming year will be: Sisson. Floyd drove down to spend
nnd family of Kalamazoo
Kenyon attended a meeting at Pen- week.
Alfred Noem of Chicago is «)&gt;end- , elected.
the week end.
Mrs. cUra Wilder ot Battle Creek nock Grove Thursday afternoon.
ing a few days wllh hb family here I Mr. and Mrs. Clair Reynolds and
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar _B. Fifleld,
came Sunday for a few days’ vbll ' Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Monro-? Rowlader of children of Chicago spent Saturday odctla. Dora and Edgar. Jr., attendwith her daughter. Mrs. Francb and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon ThompGorham.
son attended lhe funeral of Mrs. Woodland and Mr. nnd Mrs. Georgr and Sundaywith Mr. and Mrs. H. | ed the Ionia fair Wednesday.
Sunday callers at Claude A.
Mrs. Oley Douglass and daughters i Hattie Bliss at Coopersville Satur- Rowlader and family of Lansing . T Reynolds,going on to northern
wcre
callers at the home of Bordy ■ Michigan on a fbhlng trip for lhe Hammond’s were Mr. and Mrs. Leo
of Bowens Milb vbited her parents. । day and several from thb place alRowlader.
week.
MIm Joyce Reynolds ha* c. Hammond and Mbs Mnureea
Clayton Webb of Yankee Springs.' been spending the jxist week with WHletta of Lansing and Mbs LuArthur and Ruby ot
of Battle Creek Ii her grandparents.
elite Willitts Dicky Lee. who has
and Opal of Gull lake spent Sunday I Thc Women's Foreign Missionary been vblling hl» grandparent* here,
with Mr. and Mrs. chos. Harrington. | Society will meet with Mrs. Lucy returned lo Lansing with the lalter*&gt;
parent*. Monday morning.
The Meads from thb way met j Dings .Friday afternoon.

COURT HOUSE NEWS

Forty Stage and Circus Stan In Big Cast

PROMPT
FRIENDLY
SERVICE

Appreciated more than ever
Peaches

4 Ibs. 23c

Special Bushel Price

Sweet Potatoes 6 Ibs. 19c

Celery

Fancy Quality

bch. 7c

Pickling Supplies
Cauliflower, Pickling Onions,
Dill, Green Peppers,
‘ Red Peppers
FRESH SUPPLIES DAILY

Short Rib of Beef
Choice Beef Roast
Fresh Ground Beef
Large Franks
Sliced Luncheon Meat

ib.

ib.

2

lb«. for

2

Ibi. for

lOc
|6C
29c

29c
lb. |7c

A « P FOOD STORES
Listen to “Coffee Timo” with Kate Smith Band

Station WBBM

WE CASH WPA CHECfcS
PRICES PLUS 3% SALES TAX

In period* when persona! financial
matters run more or less smoothly
of their own account, people give
less thought, as a rule, to the quality
of a bank’s service.
But, when as is the case today,
problems and perplexities increase,
the little extra attention given, and
the effort made by officers and em­
ployees, is noticed.
Customers tell us that they have
never appreciated more than they
do today the prompt, friendly serv­
ice received from this bank.
We welcome every opportunity to
be of service to you

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY'FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3,1936

20 PAGES

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

Fine Fair Marks Centennial Yea:

Revues, Fire Works, Bat-Wing Stunts, Races, Exhibits, Among
HASTINGS ENJOYS 100 YEARS
OF SUBSTANTIAL DEVELOPMENT
BECOMES A PROSPEROUS
TRADING, COMMERCIAL
CENTER

FINE SCHOOLS A
FEATURE OF CITY

REQUESTS OF TOURISTS
MORE NUMEROUS

SEPTEM
V

J

Error In Notice
About Registration
Ing last week: "If one failed to vote
at the last two general elections,
the law compels the clerk to strike

SEVEN CRIMINAL OASES
LISTED—MORE THAN
USUAL NUMBER

THIRTY-THREE COU­

PLES SEEK DIVORCE
Pioneers Fascinated by Un­ the name of such voter from the
list.’’ That provision of the law, so
usual Beauty, Variety
Many Petitions for Morato­
we are informed, applies to cities
of This Region
only; so while It would be true In
rium on Mortgage Fore­
Only 100 years ago Hastings was Hastings. It is not true in the
closure on Calendar
but an idea outlined on a map in townships of the county. But If you
possession of a syndicate of men In
Marshall. For years it had been a
happy hnntlng ground for Indian
tribes who lived a comparatively
easy and peaceful life In the tran­
quil. Isolated valley of the Tliomrvpple river. But pioneers were
pushing through from the east. New
communities were formed rapidly.
The uncut forests and agricultural
plains of the midwest were being
used to absorb the surplus popula­
tion of the over crowded cost.
To Slocum Bunker goes the credit
for building the first residence in
Hastings; a low. one-story log
structure located kitty-corner across
from the present Feldpausch Food
Center on a site now marked by
a bronze plaque. Here. In 1839, the
first school in Hostings was held
with a Miss McArthur os teacher.
Two years later the first school
building here was made ready. So­
phia Spaulding, daughter of C- W.
Spaulding of Prairieville, was the
teacher.
It U difficult to conceive, today,
how Isolated these pioneer com­
munities were. Their roads were at
the best muddy, swampy, bumpy
trails which could only be traversed
at great discomfort. News filtered
In and out slowly. But somehow
these pioneers overcame their sur­
roundings and prospered.
Although transient traders prob­
ably passed through here soon after
the first settlers came, the first reg­
ularly established merchant was
Henry A. Goodyear who came here
in 1840. He was followed within the
next few years by Alvin W. Bailey,
William Upjohn. William Goodyear
and Vesplan Young.
From then on as the community
developed, merchant* came and
went substantially in the same man­
ner as they have in other cities and
villages of similar size in this state.
Hastings is located in the center
of a varied agricultural district. Al­
most every type of terrain in this
section of the midwest can be found
in Barry county, in addition, sev­
eral thriving industries have been
developed here which manufacture
products that are known In the four
comers of the earth. Consequently
it is probable that few communities
of this size are fortunate enough to
have a* great a variety in both in­
dustry and agriculture.
A history of the business firms in
a community reflect an Important
part of It* life. Following herewith
are brief sketches of leading firms
in this community which have
helped to make Hastings the pros­
perous. well-governed little city that
it is today:
(Continued on page 5. Sec.
2 and page 2. Sec. 3)

AWARDS MADE FOR
CIVICS WORKBOOKS
Four Rural Pupils Given
Cash Prizes for Their
Splendid Efforts
During last school year, pupil* in
the rural schools made civics work­
books, which were completed in
May. The Judges found It difficult
to decide which were the four best
ones but the following were fianlly
selected: 1st, Bernice Ferris, King
school. Pauline Bellinger, teacher;
2nd. Shirley Frederickson. Rogers
school. Marie Cole.'teacher; 3rd,
Velma Smith, Burroughs school.
Arabelle
Bivens,
teacher;
4lh.
Johanna Rosenthal, Friend school.
Ruth Oarllngw. toaohor.
Cash prizes of 81.00, 75c. 50c and
25c were given the four winners.
School
Commissioner
Maude
Smith report* that the pupils did
excellent work on their notebooks
and many were worthy of mention.
FALL OPENING OF F. AND M.
STYLE SHOP THIS WEEK.
Tlie fall opening of the F. and M.
Style Shop in Frandsen’s store has
been scheduled for Friday. Septem­
ber 4. A new line of/ "Printaess"
coats and popular priced dresses will
be featured. The whole store will
share In the opening and ha* been
put tn condition for the event. Dec­
orating ha* been done, new cabinet*
installed for the dresses and new
linoleum put on the floor. Mrs.
Marne Mance is associated with
Mr. Frahdsen in the style shop and
the stock is completely new, both

The September term of circuit
are tn doubt about your registra­
tion. It would be well for you to see court opens on Monday. Sept. 14. at
your township clerk before Satur­ nlpe o'clock with the following
cases
listed on the calendar: day. Sept. 5.
Criminal Causes.
The People vs. William Wisner,
breaking and entering.
Tile People vs. Russell H. Service,
statutory rape.
। The People vs. Ivan Roush, as­
sault and battery.
I The people vs, Russell Hinkley,
statutory rape.
1 The people vs. jack Saylor, utter­
ENROLLMENT IS LARGEST
ing and publishing a forged paper.
EVER RECORDED
The People vs. James Hitchcock,
statutory rape.
HERE
The People vs. Frank Barkruff,
statutory rape.
Jury Civil Causes.
TOTAL TO DATE FIVE

NEW RECORD AT
STNGSHIGH

HUNDRED FIFTY-SIX I

HOLBROOK FAMILY September 8-12 to be filled witi
EARLY RESIDENTS entertaining, worth-while events
TO SPEND S18.MJ
Two Freight Cara
Held Up Traffic
ON CITY’S SWETS GRAND STAND SHOWS

More request* for tourist accom­ PIONEER LAWYER CAME
modations and information have ' TO HASTINGS FROM NEW
been received at the office of the
vnew TW 1 o*o
Hastings commercial club this year
YUKK IN 1084
than in a number of years, accord-1
.
Ing to Miss Eva A. Hecojc, secretary.; ni f) PIANO STILL
The season usually is considered UL,U riHI,u OIILL
closed after Labor Day but request* |
IN GOOD o
CONDITION
Two cari on an CMl bound
unui nun frelght jumped the .track near Mldare still coming in (or September. |
Tknt
«„ I dlevllle on Thursday forenoon and
Just this week Miss Hecox placed a | Ax^ixroi
family at Gun lake for the month of Arrival of That Instrument in , held up traffic over this branch of
Early Day Created
lhe Michigan central from ten
September.
.
o'clock
o'clock in the forenoon until ahnnt
about
The increase in the number of
Much Excitement
three in the afternoon. The east
tourists In Hastings and Barry
Mrs.
Frank
Marvin
Sage
(Agnes
bound
passenger was held at Cale­
county has been noticeable this
CHolbrook)
lias
written
a
very
in
­
donia
for
over
two
hours,
and
the
summer, cars whose licenses show
them from other states being con­ teresting history of the Holbrook west bound passenger, due here at
stantly seen on the streets. With family, early residents of this city,
the increase in popularity of the which we are publishing herewith. four hours. A wrecking crew, came
house trailers the need for a tourist The Banner Is grateful to Mrs. Sage up from Jackson, put the derailed
camp near Hastings becomes more for this excellent contribution to our cars on the track and cleared the
edition. The article
pronounced. It is to be hoped a Centennial
modern tourist camp will be in run­ follows: \
! Isaac AJHolbrook. pioneer lawyer
ning order by another year.
of Hastings, was bom the 7lh of I
November, a. D. 1816 at Gouvemeur.
St. Lawrence county. New York.
About the year 1837 or "38 the large
family of Henry Benson Holbrook.
I Isaac's father, were greatly con­
I cerned, as he. one of the elder sons.
| had decided to leave home for the ALL JUDGES APPOINTED
| far west to procure a wider educa- ]
FOR LIFE OR DURING
YELLOWSTONE PARK IS don. and to make his way in the
world. The family were soon busy!
GOOD BEHAVIOR
.
ABOUT SIXTY MILES
getting him ready. He started out
SQUARE
in a suit of "sheep's grey.” made at
home, for Ann Arbor, to study taw. j THEREFORE ARE FREE
' which he did. working his way. and
i CENTRAL PORTION A
FROM POLITICS
uni nAMir DI ATCAII stud}rlng ln Jud’e H*wklna and|
------------VOLCANIC PLATEAU Judge Lawrence's offices.
_ -----------.
.
j Naturally hearing people were Attorney Kim Sigler divee
— ,
... ...
—
Three Geyaer Basins Are. coming to Hastings he followed.

WHY ENGLISH HAVE
RESPECT FOR LAW

STORY OF WESTERN
TRIP CONTINUED

FOUR AUTOMOBILM
BE GIVEN AWAY
FREE

TWICE EACH DAY
RESURFACED JEFFERSON
AND REPAIRED MIOHMore Entries Being Received
GAN AVE. BRIDGE
Than Ever—Good Time*
Planned for AH

THREE MILES TARMAC
TO BE LAID THIS YEAR

Over Two Miles of Curb and last year. Only one thing that can
Gutter Have Been Con­
reasons for making this statement
structed Also
which we will give below.

City Engineer Sparks reports that
The livestock exhibits already 11stthere have been built since the first
of July upwards of 22.000 lineal feet
of curb and gutter. This would two hundred head of cattle and over
mean a little over two miles, for Che two hundred sheep entered.
। curb and gutter is on both sides of
The exhibit at the 4-H clubs will
| the street. Most of the petitions
for tarmac paring this year were for
| streets that had previously been colt*. The girls’ clubs will exhibit
curbed
and "guttered,
so —
that
----------------------—- —
- much tiielr work in canning. Ln handicraft
of this year’s work wlU be prellml- and in the making of sarmenta
nary to tarmac paving next year. I The flower show will be far
About three miles of tarmac will be interesting and appealing to
laid this year.------------------------------------- i visitors than last year The I
In addition to the above, seven 1 rains have brought out th. fi
blocks have been coated with as- M there will be a wonderful el
phalt on Jefferson street, at an ex- which will be open not tar

Michigan corporation vs. Mrs. Cha*.
'Baughman, trespass on the case.
Almond Shears vs. Henrietta Van­
rferMoien.
Non Jury Civil Causes.
. Michigan avenue bridge have been i out the entire fair
'
National Merchandising System
The enrollment of the Hastings' vs. C. T. Hess i Son. dssumpalt.
;*&gt;»”»
«houi »U«&gt;
The exhlbiu in me
। The city has received this year . and horticultural department*
*Ugh
Francllle Miller vs. E- A. Rogers.
Hlgh school this year, on the open-1
open­
Splendid Address Befrom the state a* Its share of the be larger. Already more orod
ing day, Monday was the largest assumpsit.
Famous Because’of Size,
About 1842 or ’43 he settled here.
Lottie Stauffer vs. Arthur Kotesky
fore Rotarians
d0£ ta lwe; 01 Uie*e ProductB
appita
. .. . .
»nd began the practice of law. A
Power and Variety
few lawyers had come before him.)
which broke all previous records and Homer Kotcsky, tres|&gt;OM on
We didn’t go far before we had to , but they went awi
*
- — .
for the first day. This year the to­
Hoekstra
ice
cream
co.,
a
Michi
­
stop and wait for an old Mother' brook was the nisi
first perniaxicm
permanent uwtaw- lnast infOrmlng talks ever given be- I
t
X " tmnXmenL
1 ,5*" 80,1001 "hlbltf *U1
1
tal is 558. It is expected that from
tastings, was
was his
his home
home for
for II। ,
in.
; ”
V,------ .
” a-...
u. Bmounl
The«
tucac improvements
iu&gt;|iruvcnicuu ,we
wc than
man a year ago
atto and larger,
lirttr for
fa
fifteen to twenty more will be added gan Corporation vs. Fred Elders, ct bcar and her two cubs take their: yer. and Hastings,
al. replevin.
own sweet time in getting out of the ! years. He was w chancery lawyer,
within the next two weeks.
In the matter of the estate of road and a little further on wc served for four years a* circuit
The enrollment by classes is as
on the
lf lherc b no chxnge made m the
The buBding’tor' th* axh
follows. In the ninth grade this Caleb Rtabridger. deceased, appeal watched a herd of elk Just ahead of court commissioner, appointment
shows
us. We soon crossed the Yellow- being made as the document
‘ "*
year. 166 compared with 144 last from Probate court.
Mae Barnhart vs. John Cappon stone River, swung around the end by the governor of Michigan. There ss*.
year. Tn the tenth grade. 123 com­
™&gt; ■«» ™
&lt;•&lt;■■&gt;^u»
.
The city may then have to do the I vision at the premium list
pared with 155 last year. Tn the and Board of county Road Com­ of the take and arrived at Lake being no railroad here he drove ment in this country. Mr. Bigler gave
missioners
of
Barry
county,
trespass
through
the
country
with
a
team, the reasons for it. They could be same type of work on 13 blocks of . sured the bringing tn of a"
eleventh grade 146 compared with
Lodge, which was to be our home
Green
street
that
wo*
done
on
JeffUrger
variety
and
many
new
on
the
case.
117 last year. In the twelfth grade
for the night and seemed like home sometimes having to be gone many grouped under four heads: The
erson street—recoating with asphalt Besides that as we have «n
Henrietta Vander Molen vs. wil­ to us. as we stayed there for two days. He will be remembered as a Judiciary and Rs place in the Eng­ __
103 this year and 106 last year. Poet
Hilf it I.
it.™ —it—
...
. y.p
graduate students this year number liam Chalker, replevin.
days and nights on our previous trip large man. very genial and cheery, lish system; the lawyers, how they
tarmac paving may be completed
Alfred Myers vs. Amy Garbutt, to Yellowstone two years ago.
with such a hearty laugh that It
18 compared with five lost year.
lively Interest to them.
The number of foreign students will appeal from Justice court.
After lunch we got back in the car was contagious, and a way of mak- and their place in the English legal
The Barry county health &lt;
Hany o. Mohrmann. Recr.. vs. and
B41U look the
M1C circle
vmv&gt;c drive
un«c «u
bj miles
uum
be larger possibly by thirty than
of 93
system; third, the attitude of"the the state would repair them, leaving
and that made by the Censer
Joseph C- Hurd, assumpsit.
I around the lower or southern end of
at this time a year ngo.
people toward law and the courts;
department of this state will
George Dye. Rec r. vs. Arthur I tue park but before describing anyOn the 1st day of November, 1846 fourth the prompt trial of criminal
In the grades no figures are avail­
Hathaway
et
al.
assumpsit.
I
thing
thfl
t.
we
saw
1
would
like
to
he was Joined in marriage with
able. but the Indications are that
....... .........- and Nina J.
X l_.
2 B mtle ldea of what yel. Mary Delia Kenfield. who came here
compared with its fori
rrncr condition
John Brandstctter
gjve you
the1 enrollment will be practically
In England all Judges are appoint­ shows
de
—— what can be done
in chang­
(Continued on page 2. Sec. 2)
lowstone Park consist* of:—
(Continued on page 4. Sec. 2)
the same as last year. Actual fig­
lowstone
ed for life or during good behavior, i ing a dilapidated pavement into a
ures for the grades and foreign stu­
It is the largest and probably the
They are. therefore, free from think­ good roadway. Buch an improve­
dent* will be available for next SNEAK THIEF AGAIN
best known of our National Porks,
ing of the effect of their decisions ment is needed on Green street.
I Man will Jump from
week's Issue.
VISITS UASTIMCS •PProx‘mBt«|y
mllez «iu*re.
upon their own political fortunes;
Viol Io MAollNuo over six times as large as Barry
Some changes have been made-in
so their alm Is to decide in harmony
feet and make a parachute ,
•
------------j county, and lies In the northwest
the high school curriculum. Three
with the law as it exists, without CITIZENS PAYING
Thia is a most thrilling sight.
new courses have been added In the Seven Homes Entered Over, corner of Wyoming, and encroaches
This Thursday evening the Has­ reference to what any individual
THEIR CITY TAXES
manual arts department for ad­
fhn WnnV Fn&lt;4
Tntnl I “ tew nU,“ 1,110 bolh MonUn* •“&lt;*
tings City Band directed by Lewis may think of their decisions.
hundred trotters and pacers ;
the week End—Total
| Idaho. It* central portion is a Hine, is giving another of its splen­
vanced students. Tills has been
made possible by the enlargement of
Of |16.75 Taken
! broad, elevated volcanic plateau. 7.­ did concerts on the court yard a year or two of study in a law of­ About 85 Per Cent of |33,- already made entrance to taka
the room that Is given for such
*
V
K—n hiixv i 000 10 8-500
above se* level and square. The program will be com­ fice would admit a person to prac000 Levy Paid Before
hTiw h^ino fn7' nearly surrounded with mountain
work. There will be general shop
posed of numbers that have proved
in Hastings, seven house* being en- (
'
1(
grandstand are being furnished
work, wood shop and a
metal
September 1
popular during the summer months. changed. It is still possible, however,
tered over the week end. Entrance
course.
for a person with a high school
City treasurer, Mrs. Jessie Loppenwas gained in practically the same ,
One new course in applied sci­ way tn all lnstance*-by punching
&lt;Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
vocal soloist. Miss Lola Ashalter. education to be admitted to the bar thlen, reports that there has been
ence has been added to the science
after three yean of study in a law collected about 128,000 of the »33,Following is the program:
hole* in screen doom and walking! niini ip nnurCDT
department and will be taught by Into the unlocked houses.
March—Music Maker, by Talbott. school. Lawyers do not have de­ 000 city tax levy. In other wards
' rUDLIlz LUflUun I
Fred Jones.
partments at universities or colleges nearly 85 per cent has been paid.
Waltz-OldUmers. by Lake.
A total of 818 75 was taken from;
BY
JUNIORtBAND
In the music department a be- clothing
which was either left In .
P» JVHIun&gt;DHlw
Twostep—Georgia Girl, by* King. tn which they can study for their which leaves a balance of 15 per
At 5 octock tathe Mtemoa
I ginnera* band and beginners* string­
Bong—When I Orow Too Old To profession in England. There are
to b. oolUcud bur. The nl. I
■n.md.,. ma.,
Program on -----Fri­ Dream, by Romberg. Sung by Lola only four places called "Inns of ™i
ed instrument section will be offered the homes or found around the Presenting
lections so far Uils year are about Saturday,
neighborhood.
Saturday, ar.
ar. automobile
automobile will
will be
be giv­
for the first semester, and a begin­
Court"
In
London.
The
lawyer
Ashalter.
day Evening at the
On Saturday night 83.00 was tak­
en nn'nv Thin will ha nV Intaeaat !n
ners’ orchestra during the second
does
not
win
the
right
to
practice,
Novelty —Teddy Trombone, by
year up to and including Monday of
en. from Herman Feldpausch's
semester.
Auditorium
Fillmore. Featuring the Trombone I
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1)
this week. This shows that the peo­ horse-pulling contests.
home on South Hanover street. 810
In the social science department
Friday evening Sept. 4. the Junior section.
ple of Hastings respect their obliga­
from Paul Bryant’s on West Madlthe entire year will be devoted to;' son
Sacred Selection—Joy To The
and 75 cents from Frank Gard­ Band, directed by Lewis Hine, is
tions. even when that demands sac- Ing contests.
BICYCLE RIDERS
American history. The first semes­
i rpresenting
a concert in---Central
ner on East Green street.
— ------ •------------------—— -­au- World, by Bamhouse.
ter will also take up American gov­
Sunday night the thief was not I dltorlum, starting at eight o dock.
TAKE MANY RISKS
March — The Little Giant, by
decided improvement over last
ernment and the second semester so successful as he was frightened' The following is the program:
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
.
economics.
away from the Charles James home '
March—Genduso—The Band.
Novelty—Steppin Out, by Yoder.
Have No Lights on Their
Hastings. Mich.. Sept. 1. 1838.
Three courses In speech will be on North Brood.., .od
Thom-1
Bolo-OM Rrtrrtn-M.rjorl,
Waltz — Rock-A-Bye-Moon. by
Citizens of Barry County:
Wheels
and
Ride
Very
offered the first semester and will in­ as Beck home at 420 West Mill Norton.
Lang.
Four years ago you honored me than could be obtained a year i
clude a new one on dramatics. For street. But he did take 83 from a | Clarinet Trio-Old Black JoeMarch—Cheerio, by Goldman.
Carelessly
Il will be possible, until MM
with the Probate Judgeship of this
the first semester the dramatics pair of trousers belonging to Floyd J°hn Lockwood. John Coleman and
Song—Long. Long Trail.
Unless bicycle riders are more county, since which time I have inight, to buy season tickets al
class will be open only to seniors. Platt, 525 Apple street
i Bernard Whitmore.
March—Our Director, by Bigelow. careful, there is apt to be a bad ac- | diligently tried to faithfully and I 81 price. Beginning Tuesday
The second semester two courses In
A fairly accurate description of' Waltz—Bella—The Band.
America.
cident
In
Hastings,
so
many
are
honestly
administer
the
office.
It
is
I
dramatics will be offered. This ar­ the prowler has been obtained from • Clarinet Solo—Carry Me Back To
now riding bicycles that auto driv­ an important office and requires |
rangement will permit the offering the victims and Sheriff Joy Blakney Old Virginia—Bernard Whitmore,
ers have to be mighty careful not close attention and I do not feel I,
of the senior play in the firtt se­ and Chief of Police Harry Thomp-1 Comet Solo—The Mill — John TOWNSENDITES MADE GOOD
SHOWING IN CALIFORNIA. to hit them, just before this item that I can take the time to run '
mester and the Junior play in the son hope to have him In custody ; Shultz.
around the county shaking hands,
We
have
referred
to
the
fact
that
second.
Novelty
—
Drumsticks
—
Hie
Band.
soon.
Novelty—Drumsticks—Hie Band.
in four recent state primaries the pie riding down the middle of the with people with the hope that they 1
The pride which the citizens of
Townsendltes did nqt make much of Church St. pavement, going back will vote for me, when I should be , charging a straight admlselon
Hastings have, and always have
Geoffrey Pelham.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
j 5Oc to the grounds and 60c
and forth across the road. A car in the office.
a
showing;
but
in
California
they
had. in their schools Is well found­
Flute Solo—Black Hawk Waltz­
I am a candidate on the Republic­
As your Probate Judge, it ha* ! grandstand The msnagsmap
seem to have done better. They have
ed. for they are doing a fine piece
an ticket for the office of county Sybil Woodmansee.
.quickly to avoid hitting Ute wheels seemed to me that I was obligated Larry county pair has win
Cornet Solo—Sextette From Lucia eleven congressional candidates in and the riders.
treasurer. I am a graduate of a busi­
to
be
courteous,
e
fficien
t,
and.
above
I elded to keep the price at a 1
the running there through their
ness college and have had exper­ —Stanley Jones.
everything else, ATTEND TO BUS- i ure. which people can afford
MERCHANTS WILL TRY
Trombone Solo — Lightly Row— organization in the 20 congressional tention that the state law requires INESS, honestly and impartially.
ience as an accountant, was town­
-------- --- **“ “------districts of that state. Of course,
TO RELIEVE CONGESTION. ship treasurer, two years. Have al­ Harry Wood.
I am pleased to invite you to ir.- ।
the primary does not settle the elec­ lights on bicycles after dark. Here
In an effort to relieve traffic and ways supported sound, progressive
Clarinet Duet—Auld Lang Syne—
spect my record. The duties of thia ’;
parking congestion of Main street politics. Your vote at the primary .Thelma Weyerman and Gertrude tion in any of these states. It prob­ in Hastings It seems that few wheels
office demand protection of Ahc i
are
so
equipped,
making
it
doubly
ably
will
be
true
that
the
voters
win
on Saturdays and special sale days, September 15 will be appreciated.— Dlmond.
rights of the widow, the orphan and
determine who will represent them dangerous for auto drivers.
the merchants of Hastings have de­ Walter Fisher. Woodland Twp.—Adv.
Trombone Solo—My Bonnie—Vem
If young people wish to ride bikes others interested in matters that is a strong statement.
in a different manner than antici­
cided not to park their own cars on
McMillan.
up and down the pavements, sing­ come before the court.
pated. At least it is up to them.
Main street. This action was taken
Clarinet Duet—How Can I Leave
So if you don’t happen to see me
ly or in groups, they ought to be
to make it possible for the rural
ANNOUNCEMENT.
Thee—Louis Hinckley and David
more careful and comply with the chasing about the county trying to
traders to park near the business
I am a candidate for sheriff on Settles.
section.
the democratic ticket. I am 48 years
Waltz—Rosebud—The Band.
of near accidents on our city streets on the Job looking after the business
It has also been decided that all of age and have always lived in
where bicycle riders were entirely of the office, and I will appreciate
stores, with the exception of some Barry county. Your support will be
('HANOI or LOCATION.
political
to blame. One girl, whose name we your support at the Primaries on
food and the drug stores, will close appreciated.—Geo. H- Myers.—Adv.
The office of the Charlotte Pro­
could mention, causes one’s heart September 15th.
Thursday afternoon of fair week.
duction Credit Association has been
Sincere ly yours,
to
Jump as she seems to have a
moved from . the Hastings credit
-Adv.
Stuart
Cleme
nt.
SPECIAL SERVICES.
-*&lt; BASEBALL GAMES.
Bureau office in the Stebbins Bldg,
front of approaching cars, literally
At the church of the Nazarene
Bunday—Dowling vs. Sliver Foam. to Adelbert cortright's in the Hen­
ANNOUNOKMKNT.
defying death by lier actions. Should
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Reveal.
from Sept. 2 to Ji; with the Rev. Monday—Labor Day—Dowling vs. dershott Bldg. Anyone having busi­
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Reveal, who she meet with an accident, no doubt candidate on the Republic*,
and Mrs. L- E. Sparks from Toronto. Vermontville,
Vickery’s
landing. ness with this Association should
Canada; as evangelists. Don’t fall
bear this change of location in reside at 102 East State road, came the autoist would be charged with for nomination for Regi
to Hastings from Kalamazoo. Mrs. the blame, but would that be right Deeds. Your support at the
to hear them play, sing and preach.
mind.
MIXED DANCES.
Every evening at 7:3Q. You are wel­
Reveal is head of the mall order de­ or honest? Think it over.
—--------

Grade Attendance About tne
Same as Last Year—Several Courses Added

s:

•*“

•“

srxs'u’Xfx."

Band Concert Pro­
gram for Thursday

May We
Introduce--"

Ing made trips to the markets in
Cleveland and Chicago to purchase
the stock.
come.

POLITICAL ANNOUNCDONT.
Republican Voters—At the Pri-

Tourist Camp Necessary Due
to Popularity of House
Trailer

FRIENDLY SUPPER.

church Friday evening, sept. 4 from
Clouse, candidate for county treas- 6 till g. Price 25c. This invitation is
for YOU. Come and bring a friend.

Every Saturday night at Clear lake.
Martin's orchestra. Frank Herring­
ton.—Adv. tf.

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
I am a candidate for sheriff on
the Democratic ticket at the Sep­
tember primary. Your support will
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
be appreciated.
Delton. Bat, Eve, Eckler’s Orch.
Charles A. Woodruff.
—Political Adv.

partment at the Montgomery Ward
BANNER WANT ADS PAY.
store and Mr. Reveal is supervisor
of case work of the Barry County
Relief organization. They enjoy ford of Dowling advertised a Ford
the resort facilities of Hastings and
Mr. Reveal U a devotee of the tenford says printer’s ink paysl

DANCE.
Johnstown orchestra

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER K UN

PAGE TWO

LOCAL NEWS

Everybody’s Going To

Mrs. Eugene Bush was'taken very
Hl with pleurisy on Monday and
buffers considerably.
The Are alarm on Monday alter.

FOOD CENTERS
PRE-FAIR

partment answered the call at once
but could find no blaze.
Bo far there have been, nine re­
quests received by the city clerk for
ballote for absent voters for the
primary election to be held Tuesday
September 15.
Mrs. Christina Grozlngtr, who has
been connected with the Woodland
postoffice for fifteen years, retired
on Tuesday. L. O. C. Tinefrock is
the new postmaster.
The Woodland school does not
open until Monday, Sept. 14. A
commercial department is being
added this year. H. A. Kitson is
superintendent and Don E. Ouger.
principal.
y
All women are cordially invited
to attend the reception to be given

SALE!

AND

CENTENNIAL

Thursday, Friday and Saturday, September 3rd, 4th, 5th

SUGAR®50’ RINSO-161
I

Liberty Bell

1

CRACKERS

12 lb.

[box

Balloon

COFFEE

SODA

- 23c
«*• 25c
- 27c
31c

WHITE HOUSE
DEL MONTE
MAXWELL HOUSE
HILLS BROS.

1 EC
13

Vacation Land

Muller's Milk

BREAD

Lb.

J "J

PEAS “
[■

Post Toasties u-’•••

10c

Shredded Wheat 2

25c

SALMON

19
A Wc

can

2 Ca"S 25C

Mackerel v“cu‘”

c„ 9c

Pork &amp; Beans ™

10c

Campbells SoupE

a-25c

17c

P&amp;G Soap

23c

Oxydol

21c

2 f°r 19c

Ivory Soap

Fly Tox

22c

TISSUE

Rex Fly Spray

59c

4r

Rex Fly Spray

35c

25c

Wax Paper

CANDY BARS or
CRACKER JACK

2- 15c

3

10c

Cigarettes

All 10c Tobacco

3 •- 25c

Old Gold, Lucky Strike

All 15c Tobacco

2 - 25c

Chesterfield, Camel

Sir Walter R.wleifh

Salad Dressing ' •»«15c

3

Kitchen Kleanser5c
SEMINOLE

dyGoody

RED

25c

10c

Marshmallows '.‘X...
19c
!_______ .__________________

Del Monte or Libby's

5 Ib. Box

Corn Flakes £££■„

2 Lb. Loaf

10c

Soap Chips

Lux Toilet Soap

2»23c

Ohio Matches

20c

6

Soo Our School Supply Tabla, Notabookr,
Tablet., Fillar., Pencil., Ink, Rulers, Etc.

Coal dealers were busy Saturday!
delivering small orders of coal.
|
Robert Martin of Castlelon Twp,|
is still seriously 111. aH wish for his
speedy recovery.
Hastings was well represented at
the homecoming at Freeport on
Friday and Saturday.
I
Pall garments shown In the store!
windows make us realise the days of I
coal and snow shovels will soon bel
upon us.
|

The dark clouds on Saturday aft­
ernoon looked like snow clouds. One!
woman said. "We have winter, all
but the snow.”
I
Work la commencing this week onl
the new library building tn Rockford]
donated to tlia city by Miss Doro-]
thru Krause and O. A. Krause.
Miss Helen Bogart. 224 East Bondi
street, who has been seriously ill fori
four weeks, is convalescing but wild
time.
Reading
And that
Michigan
struck by

the exchange papers we
all sections of lower
lost homes and barns
lightning tn the recent

Most of the rural schools of Bsrry
Wright hall, Alma College, az part county began on Monday but will be
of the Knox Rally and Homecoming closed on Friday. Sept, n as the
to be held In Alma, Sept. 7th, Labor teachers will attend the Encamp­
Day.
ment at Clear lake and too. Friday
Makers of aalads will be Interested is the free day for children at the
in an article on that subject in the Barry County Fair.
current tasue of Die Saturday Eve­
Some nice catches of fish from
ning Post by George Rector, the Middle. Gun, Bullhead. Wall. Pofamous reztaurantcur. The sim­ dunk and other nearby lakes have
plicity of his recipes will interest been reported recently. Bluegills
the average housekeeper.
walleyes and perch have been biting
Eight years old Carl Elliott of । unusually well. And bullheads alFlint, who was visiting his grand­
parents. Mr. and Mrs Mina Elliott
Those lovely orange gladioli tn
of Carlton. fell from a gate on Sun-' the Banner office last week were
day fracturing both bones In his grown by George Sumner, and were
right arm. The fractures were re­ of the LaPaloma variety. They were
certainly beautiful and we thpnk
duced at Pennock hospital.
A petition was subml tied to the Mr. Sumner for his kind rememcouncil Friday evening for the in­ branc&lt;“lf we have a hobby, it surestallation of a street lamp at the in­
Charles CJurnincr was brought tc
tersection of the Center road with
East street, near the city limits. the jail Friday morning by Night­
That is a dangerous crossing and watchman. Shultz and Marshal
there is good reason for the request. Thompson. He was picked up on the
Pair Week Specials—Week begin- railroad tracks near the county
nlng Tuesday. Sept 8th Frandsen’s | garage. He had quite evidently
Store offers some timely bargains In I "looked upop the flowing bowl." His
Fall Coats. Blankets, sweaters. Hose. home, he said. Is in Grand Ledge.
Sleeping
Garments.
Foundation
Rev. Karl H- Keefer, pastor of the
Garments, etc. Store will open al I Watervliet. Coloma and Riverside
7:30 mornings to accommodate rural. Methodist churches, who is com­
shoppers. Wc close Thursday after- 1 pleling his second year tn this
—
charge, has been given an Invitation
Rockford's new 170.000 post office to return for another year, and his
will be erected on the site of the salary has been increased. He form­
erly was pastor of the Potterville
old Betts Hotel.
The Southwestern Michigan Har­ and West Benton churches.—Char­
vest Festival, in which nine counties lotte Republican-Tribune.
Michigan communities are already
will Join, has been set for the week
___ ­ planning "color tours" so that tourof September 14 to 19. Il Is spon
allled .tsts
may
Michigan's
big
sored by the bakers and clllcd
----------, enjoy west
----------------„-----------tradesmen of the district and will I fall event. "The Flaming Forests.'1
Include a festival queen contest. Newaygo. Frankfort, Cadillac. Mustravellng caravan, parade and pag- kegon. Manistee and Traverse dly
eant at Kalamazoo. Barry county I arc among the communities rnafkdealers arc Included among the . Ing the scenic routes as many , of
sponsor..
,u
--------* beautiful
.........* sights —
- *peo
A- ­
the
most
take
Mrs. Ward Rector and sister. Mrs. iple from the beaten track.
Fannie Merriam, of Hastings enter­
NO
ONE
SERIOUSLY
HURT.
tained twenty ladles at a surprise
Richard Brower and Frank Gard­
personal shower for Mrs Edna Lohr
Smith Tuesday evening. The house ner were driving tbclr cars, one on
was very tastily decorated in pink Hanover the other on Green, about
and white with many beautiful bou­ 1:30 Tuesday. They met at the
quets. Mrs. Smith had been invited corner. Damage was done to both
as a dinner guest in the home when 'cars but neither of them was hurl
much to her surprise the ladies beyond a few bruises.
Tuesday night about 9 o'clock a
walked into the home and showered
her with many dainty and beautiful car driven by Mrs. Grace Mills :*nd
gifts. At the close of the evening another by Greeley Fox collidelbat
the
comer of park and Band
pink ice cream and cake were
served.—Charlotte Republican-Trib­ streets The cars were both damiged
but neither of the drivers was bfwlly
une. '
One day last week a dog belonging , hurt.

to Andy carpenter, of Hope town-; JUNIOR DANCE FRIDAY
;, ,
ship, was bitten by a rattle snake.'
AT COUNTRY CLVB.
Mr. Carpenter has had several dogs'
One of th- series of Junior dincand sheep bitton by rattlers, and ing parties,will be given Friday eve­
says that In every instance he has ning at the Hastings Country Chib.
effected ,a cure by soaking the ( Mr. and Mrs. Richard Croon And
wound thoroughly with kerosene.' Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ironside Are
Ordinarily this is apt to take the ‘ in charge and will be assisted ..'by
hair pff of any animal where the 11-1 Jocelyn Ironside, Belly Bigler. Harry
quid is applied, but he said that It Adrounic and Stephen Johnson
had never had that effect with any
animals of his that had been bitten ;
HATURDAY LAST DAY. ?
by thc.se poisonous snakes. Wc
Up to Saturday morning 267 nrrthought perhaps other Banner read­ sons had registered In this qty.
ers would 'be pleased to learn of bringing the total number on the
Mr. Carpenter's method of curing list to over 2.000 There Is still time
animals bitten by these poisonous left until Saturday for any &gt;ho
reptiles.
have not registered to do so.

TO THE MANY FRIENDS OF

LAURENCE E. BARNETT
ThLs little poem reprinted from
“The Presbyterian Survey" of
Richmond. Virginia, m aptly deacribcs the quiet dignity and

Pure LARD| Hamburger

A

o I lAIy

GROUND

2 u»- 29c

Sliced Bacon ™ BK.

u.. 26c

Bacon “--1-

“&gt; 23c

4
“ IUC

Round Steak or Sirloin
Lb.

POTATOES

I

U. S. No.
Pock

£
45c

New Cabbage

5c

Sweet Potatoes 6

Dry Onions

19c

3c

PEACHES By the Bushel at Lowest Possible Price
BEEF KETTLE ROAST
RIB BOILING BEEF
BOLOGNA

ib. 13c
is. 9c
2 lb., 25c

Open Evenings Until 9p.cn., Lowest Prices In Barry County

FOOD CENTER

CLOSED ALL DAY LABOR DAY

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

sympathetic understanding which
naturally is associated with the
office of Probate Judge that we
reprint it here. We believe Mr.
Barnett has the mature Judg­
ment and kindly nature which
is described.

BARNETT FOR PROBATE
JUDGE COMMITTEE

JUDGE "JIM"
Among my early mcm'ries I see a kindly face,—
Our Probate Judge. "Jim” Woodman of simply courtly grace.
And all thd people loved him. a lawyer, judge and friend.
His smile was ever gentle, his patience knew no end.

I still can sec him walking down the country road,
A tall, grey-headed figure. bound for some small abode—
Where death or other sorrow had wrought its havoc grim.
For burdens seemed to lighten whene're you talked to "Jim."

The orphan and the widow, the wayward girl and boy.
Gave him their confidence and "Jim" would seem to find a
Joy­
In making problems fade away.—in righting youthful slips.
No nlfhl too cold, no storm too bad to halt hl* "mercy tripe."
I s'posc a Judge who tries a case of crime or legal wrong
Must ait in dignity; be stem; his censure sometimes strong;
But Probate Court is not the same, and those who MUST at­
tend.
Bereaved or HI. need WISE advice, they truly NEED A
FRIEND!
(Mr. Barnett is a Republican Candidate for Nomination as
pracllced law 14 years and tai a mature “famUy-man."
support U respectfully solicited.)

�BARRY COUNTY
HUMAN BAT to FLY
Through the Air with the
greatest of ease, at the
Barry County Fair

Brownie, the Clown Cop
"Brownie, the Clown Cop," will
again furnish elean fun and amuse­

ment all the week at

A veteran of 24 seasons of riding

the

Barry

parachutes will make BAT-WING
jumps from an aeroplane each day.

County Fair. Last year this friend­

Coleman leaves the plane al a
height of 10,000 feet and glides

and old with his funny tricks and

down on his bat wings to 2,500 or
2,000 feet liefore opening his chute.

as superior to Billy Lorrclle, the

ly clown endeared himself to young

antica. He is considered by many

World Famous Clown Cop.

The Bat-Wing Man promises a
real thrill for all patrons of the
Fair.

------------------ TUESDAY---------------ENTRY DAY—Receiving and arranging Exhib­
its. All entries close at 6:00 P. M.
CLEAN, ATTRACTIVE MIDWAY —Open all
afternoon and evening.

9:30—Lightweight Horse Pulling Contest on
track. Grandstand admission Free.
Visit the Midway—14 Shows and Rides.
Visit the Exhibition Buildings.
See the Barry County Flower Show.
12:30—BAT WING JUMP from Plane at height
of 10,000 feet.
1:30—2:18 Pace. 2:20Trot. 2:15 Pace.
High Class Vaudeville Attractions.
5:00—Plymouth Coach Given Away.
7: 30—Gus Sun's Production of SWEETHEARTS
ON PARADE REVUE and Vaudeville
Acts on platform in front of grandstand.
10:00—Stupendous Display of Fireworks.
Visit the Midway—14 Shows and Rides.

-------------- WEDNESDAY-------------7: 30—Gates Open.
8: 00—Opening of Exhibition Buildings.
9: 00—Judging of Exhibits.
See the Industrial Exhibits.
Visit the Midway—14 Rides and Shows.
12:30—BAT WING JUMP from Plane at height
of 10,000 feet.
1:30—Trot—3-yrs.-old. Pace—3-yrs.-old.
I Three coll races hare been a sensation at every fair held to dale In the
Southern Michigan Fair and Racing Circuit. Barry County Fair has a
larger entry ii»t than any of the other fairs, and the entry fee added will
make the purse at least MM.OO for each race. DON'T MISS THEM!)

High Class Vaudeville Acts.
5:00—Terraplane Coach Given Away.
7:30—Gus Sun's Production of SWEETHEARTS
ON PARADE REVUE and Vaudeville
Acts on platform in front of grandstand.
10:00—Stupendous Display of Fireworks.
Visit the Midway—14 Shows and Rides.

—FRIDAY—Children’s Day—

---------------- THURSDAY---------------7: 30—Gates Open.
8: 00—Opening of Exhibition Buildings.

7: 30—Gates Open.
8: 00—Opening of Exhibition Buildings.
10:00—Supervised Sports and Games for chil­
dren between the ages of 4 to 15 years.
Visit Home Economics, County Exten­
sion, School, Conservation, Health and
4-H Club Exhibits.

9:00—Judging Horses.

Visit the Flower Show.
Visit the Midway—14 Shows and Rides.
12:30—BAT WING JUMP from Plane at height
of 10,000 feet.
1:00—Livestock Parade—prize winners on re­
view.
.
1:30—2:25 Trot. 2:22 Pace. Free-for-AII Trot
or Pace. High Class Vaudeville Acts.
5:00—Ford Coach Given Away.
7:30—Gus Sun's Production of THE WORLD
BEATERS REVUE. High Class Vaudeville
Acts. Practically an entire change of
program from Wednesday - Thursday.
10:00—Stupendous Display of Fireworks.
Visit the Midway—14 Shows and Rides.

---------------- S ATU R DAY-------------- -7: 30—Gates Open.
8: 00—Opening of Exhibition Buildings.
Visit the Midway—14 Rides and Shows.
12:30—BAT WING JUMP from Plane at height
of 10,000 feet.
1:30—Heavyweight Horse Pulling Contest on
track. Pony Race, One One-Half Mile
heat, open to county ponies only.
High Class Vaudeville Acts.
5:00—Chevrolet Coach Given Away.
7:30—Gus Sun's Production of THE WORLD
BEATER REVUE.
Vaudeville Attractions.
10:00—Stupendous Display of Fireworks.
Visit the Midway—14 Shows and Rides.

ADMISSION PRICES

CRAND STAND and PARKING PRICES

Membanhip Tickets (until Sept. 8)--------------------------- $1.00
Four General Admission Tickets--------------------------------- $1.00
Children's Season Tickets (until Sept. 8)------------------ __50c
General Admission___ ——___ 35c
Children’s Admission Tickets____________ _ ___________ 15c

Grand Stand------------------------------- :____________________ 25c
Grand Stand—Reserved Seats---------- - -------- ----------- ------- 50c
Bleachers West of Grand Stand______ ___ ____ ________ 15c
Parking on Grounds-------------------------------------------------------- 25c
Parking on lot west of grounds--------------------------------------- 15c

MEMBERSHIP TICKETS on Sale Unfit Sept. 8th at $1.00
’

At All Drug Stores in the County

BELLMONT BROS.

MARIE CORRELI &amp; CO.

ZELLER &amp; WILBURN

STUART SISTERS

LEROY &amp; LEROY

SUNNY" JIM VALDARE

LYDELL&amp;GALLAGHER

MARGIE RICHMOND

JIMMY LEAMY&amp;DAD

FOUR ALGERIANS

Mu cad veaaa. *aa doing u eld Wha character, oom
very dao cad oat-o(-th»-erdiaary dsaetag.

la a rsel-eupplaa At sb novelty,
bliag aad wfctrtviad resUaa*.

AUTOMOBILES

TO

BE

�The Hastings^ Banner -

BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, I

Editorials
Uie -reaction of Michigan voters to Jton ,
the proposed civil service bill which
would do away with patronage by
substituting a merit system for.sekcUng stale employees in place uf
the present political spoils system.
The public reaction to this bill is
going to be all important because
without slrbng public support it
probably stands little charice of geting through the legislature un­
scathed by alterations which would
make It nothing but a pretense. If
Michigan citizens are disgusted with
the spbUs system of selecting state
employees. If they believe that the
state should select arid promote it*
employees strictly according to
merit, if they believe that stale Jobs
are important enough to be made
career Jobs independent of fluctuating political trend*, then it is within
their power to Insure the passage of
an adequate bill through the pres­

CLARE HOFFMAN.

Even the most bitter critics of
Representative Clare HolBnun will
have to admit that he ha* had the
courage to stale openly his views on
questions which most politicians arc
trying to dodge.
Those who try to represent him
as an enemy of elderly people be­
cause he has opposed a blanket peri*ion of 1200 per month, overlook the
fact that he ha* conskriently advorated an adequate pension for aged
dependents—a pension which, in hi*
opinion, stands a reasonable chance
of being written Into the statute
bookr. Il is hi* idea that it i» much
better to do something real and
definite for those in need than 11 is
to pursue an unattainable dteam.

Mr. Hoffman lui been one of the

Hew to the line, let the quips
fall where they may I

itourhl 1“®C- &lt;*■«««» to property.
Jte QP-lton
~»lul

STATE CIVIL SERVICE.
p«pl.
.PKPUUM,

sure of public opinion. However. If
live public exhibit* only slight inter­
est in a merit system, it is likely
that the civil service measure will
have some severe storms to weather
durin; its Journey through the legis­
lature; storm* wlvkh will strip it of
all or most of it* power. The ques­
tion of civil service and Uie bill to
be presented at the next session of
the state legislature deserve intelli­
gent consideration by all citizens of
Michigan.

‘Round About Town

’ .

■

By Observing Tommy.

THE NEWS GETS AROUND.
News travels fast- A citizen of
Charlotte. Justifiably irked at the
treatment he received here while
searching for a tourist camp, wrote
a letter to ills local paper, and in
keeping with his policy of maintain­
ing an open
EdUor De Foe published I he com­
munication.
Tile Charlotte Rcpublican-Tribuno has an exchange list which includfa BimoJt every section of tin,taU.. On thls |Ul u lht. Herald
ttt onlonagon which offered the loilowing:
■ j jU,t n.ad
dlc charlotte Re­
publican-Tribunc that the city of.
Hastings. Mich.. Is without a tour­
bt ranjp n
tlje
clty of any.
5jW dta&gt; j jiavr cvcr |IPard of which i
wa, ln SU(j, „ plight, and it seem

queer that a city of S.227 |ieople. n '
city which does not owe a dime and '
, which has money in two saving* '
banks, for emergency, should iu»v«"
neglected to provide for tourist*. |
Ha.wings is situated right down;
among the lakes. It advertises Itself |

as *'lhe city among the lakes" and ,
then leaves the tourist to his own 1

fate. They should have a tourist |
park."
The editor at Ontonagon was very '
considerate, we think, for refraining ;
from some very ;&gt;olnte&lt;l and caustic
remarks. What the editor al Ontonngon wrote dozens ol other edi­
tors arc doubtless thinking. On­
tonagon U situated in an Important
resort region of the state and it
Isn’t at all plea-ant to think nf the
’
number of tourl ts who read in the ■
Herald that HasUtig* is the only Vieit’S Qlld ODUlioHS;
city of any size in the ;.tate which j
doesn’t provide a tourist camp for

visitor‘.
Hastings should have a tourl.
camp, a good one. not a mere make
shift on any old vacant lot that'
Arc ilv&gt;.' c.tit of •ver- 10 lii'.tt &gt; in
happen* to be available. Even win:' Norths ii! tmn niial kilici'.’
such a camp available, it will talc I .L
some time to counteract the iml.iaT tlu- Vo:'i j of4Mun '.I'ui

(lillii-ttllii**.
—Helen Keller.

J^RITISH women ypend 50 per
cent less for shoes than do
American women. It seems a
trllle unfair to figure Gai Im's
footwear outlay hito Uie Amcr-

General .Metaxas has (old
Gt i. !; political clubs that liny
might ns well disband, since he
already, had barred political
parties—clambakes or othcr-

For shapely arms a bcautv

are scrubbing clothes

end imagine lu-r aims already
arc pretty, z'
j

itdiculc at Hcr^'rt Hoover for In- ! ,^‘",.1 k,‘

People may disagree with Mr.
HotTman’* view* but they cannot say
that he U a -jts" man. afraid to
ttatc opinion - frankly and m no us:certaui language. Judguig from the
amdunt of duplicity which xxi&gt;u ui

-----------------------------to
overflowing wen during tha. early
days of iu admliibir:,th,n.

politic*, this iv a trait which should
be appreciated by all fair-mtnBcd
people.

Pungent Paragraphs

DUST!

TWENTY YEARS AGO.
Tl-.c 'Halting* Bird Club was or­

1.

few republicans in the House of " suitable camp I* made iivttibbi■ -Ica.ii.: do-*:•; and four &lt;!.•;:• ‘ :!iRepresentatives who has taken an to
to tmltists
loffllst* here.
here. The
The sooner
sooner Ithis can ’»• a!ul &lt;’n&lt;i*n«.rr, 1 Human lire
in Th,'
active, fighting part in combating be accomplished, the better.
a .'■p.’cJ
the extravagant measures ford' 1
liirough congress by the whip-crack­
ing New Deal administration. Two
winild be considered a pretty fair
years ago he protnlTd to do every­
sired land owner here in Barry
thing in hl* power to help curb reck­
county. Yet this number of acres
y nmrniii
less government spending. The rec­
represent* the INCREASE in office
ord of hl* vote* and speeches in
:,m down tow:
congress indicate that he has done
during the pas' two yearS; &lt;m in- • *•* 'u
hi* best to keep tlie.se promises.
crra&gt;c of 392 acr&lt; ■ since the Neu ------------This seem* to be a year when Deal assumed power in 1933. Prob­
candidates, regardless of previous ably a more graphic idea of this tre- : ■ ■.' ' •'
political affiliation* arc picktig mendous ex|nn»lon of federal bt:rwhatever party lajjcl seems to be eau* can be gained from the fact j j“ ., ,.,r. "
most advantageous to further their that this increase since 1934 ha* j
.
own pct amoitions. The race for Re­ been equivalent to seventeen build-' elilven l&gt;
publican nombiatinn fur repres.-n- mgs the size of
Ciiry-l. r Build- ’
■
lativc h no exception. Althou th ing or seven the size of the giant'
three men arc running on the Re­ Empire Stat? Building. This isn’t a j on the ur
publican ticket. Mr Hoffman ij the bad record for an adminlstrxlian .‘'Ur ptronly one who Is Republican.
whjch at one time poked no end of '.y1'1 ll "

Barry count) like many oth.r
rural communities In Hie slate is
faced with the problem of gettingitself - out of inc du t. one • off
staid highways and pavement., a
driver has to cat a pretty hefty diet

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

vurablc publicity that has been go- Rogci' . trie:.' iliiiiu. "j'.-t &lt;&gt;.A
ing the round*.
[hour i.mt people w.rc vr.it. hr J at
We understand Dial efTurts arclUt*' ’''
'rr "*&lt;&gt; of
now being made by the city council L”rvi-.;tlit-*law’bv'
&gt;*•■ ?iijM.th no-ir.rd :•

folly in permitting con true:ton of , ,j,
the new Commerce Building—a th-' h!&lt;' 1

0OY-

’

Japan, although facing a huge
deficit, has adapted the largest
budget in the history of tin nation
So here’s anothir country that hat
become thoroufldy u eitemized.Judge.

EDITOR
LETTERS. TOTHH
-------------------------PralrltviUe. Aug. 31. IMS
Dear Editor:
A correction to the item in the
local* of Aug. 13 Banner about the
name of Stewart lake.
Mr. James Slewart came here In
an early day alid took up List (arm
from the government In Orangeville
township and his heirs. Mr*. Stew­
art Mullen and daughter. Jane Mul-

len, are in pOMesslon of the far
and part of lake today.
Mr. Alex Bluart’s, father of Jud,
Stuart of Grind Rapid*, farm is
Yankee Springs township. The bei
are Mrs. Belle Stuart Clement ai
•Isler* Mr. Alex Stuart and M
James Slewart were no relation,
it is Stewart lake, not Stuart lai
—One who knew both familial .

for New Lathrop On Monday she QCyc MJQ TROUBLE
will begin her duties a* grade teach1 *
u
er in ShlawasaA county.
OVER STOLEN SHEE
Supt. and Mrs. c. J. Barnum of I
„ . —— — ,
Well. Tommy is going to take his
Delton
called
on
Mr.
and
Mrs.
F.
E
Alva
Boice
of Maple GfOl
vacation this week.
Border Bunday afternoon.
j
Pleads Guilty to the
Arthur Kilpatrick
of Jackaon
civ-uuo
' So. somebody else can collect the
spent the week end with his parent*.!
Charge
dirt and scatter it around.
Mr. and Mrs. F- C. Kilpatrick.
| Alva Boice. 17. ktaple Grove, w
The King'* Heralds will meet at brought in Thursday afternoon
I suppose a lot of people will lake
the home of their leader. Mr% H. A. Deputy Sheriff Caley of NashvU
advantage of Tommy’s absence.
Kitson. Tuesday afternoon al 5:30 He wa* charged with having itol
But anyway, that means there will for a pot luck supper and treasure * *heep on Wednesday from I
be lots of raw material wi|h which hunt. This will be the closing meet- peid Of Walter Clark, who live* ne
to work when f get back on the Job. ing of the year and the mite boxes Maple Grove Center. He took I
will be opened.
| sheep in a car to Battle Cra
MU* Dorothy Hynes returned to where he sold It. *0 it 1* clalnu
Yes. I'll admit, that was kind of a
her school work al Mason thi* week, receiving 53-30. When arrested.
dirty pun!
The Third Degree in M**onry wa* ' had spent the money. When ft
■ Maybe I’ll go up to Northport and conferred upon Ira Stowell of San: picked up he strongly denied havl
catch big fish hkr Burr Van Houten Antonio, Texas. Friday evening by done the deed, but after furtt
the local lodge.
| questioning by the sheriff he adm
, and Doc Lockwood.
R Crossfleld of Kalamazoo called ted that he took the sheep.
Boice had hi* hearing before Ji
Tommy .can tn Ik Just a* big a mess on Mr. and Mrs. E J Sheldon and
Mrs.
Louella
Earle
Sunday
evening
1 lice Cort rig hl on Friday and a
of fish as the best of 'em.
Mr. and Mr*. Lawrence Bird pf-*cntenced to 20 days in the coui
Hasting* are moving to Spring Bar- jail. He also ha* to repay the S3
bor, near Jackson tor the coming and pay coat* of SI 15 or. tn defat
War wHnm i,r.
...111
-t
-_____ —■
■ . ....
. .... —1
If I only had the time. I might go year where Mrs. Bird will attend of payment, spend ten addition
east to the Bean Country like Har­ Bible school. Mr. Bird expect* to days tn Jail.
keep hi* printing office here a* us­
old Logan did.
ual.
•
The Woodland Township school
Tommy loves beans.
will open September 14 with a new
commercial
department
added to
in fact, during one period of his
the curriculum. The faculty for the
life he had to.
school year will be a* follows: Josie
But dear me. this Is begiiuiing to Watrous, first grade; Elsa Herman,
second, third grade; Hilda Baa*,
sound like n success story.
(Continued from page |. See. 11
third, fourth grade; Arlle Sprindict.
I Or even a politician out trying to
grade; Gerald Clute, com-;
■•rnn.
wring votes of sympathy from the sevenin
merctal; Albert Treatrail. hBtary
u
nni’v m,
p-e-e-puU.
and music; Ororgc Parson*, agricul-1 F.n M|ffi^(i,bu^a£2lo?n,hL
Hire and chemistry; France* Ring.4°.
Boy! Those Democrat* and Re­
character and type to practice In
publicans arc having some swell lit­ quest. English and Latin; Helena In this country a lawyer accept*
tle cat-fights in their respective col­ Schuler. Home Economics; ~
D ,,“
E , case, looks up all the evidence^ ai
Gager. Principal,
manual
umns.
' himself pleads the case before I
~
court. K is Hui done ihat way
Zatae 1 m-un*
,w.a
But mv bosa lias warned me! Poli- Physics and Mathematics, sin
t En«land There arc two classes
I^igan. school nurw and Gilbert
jiiocrt |Mwycr!l. .solicitors and barrister*.
McLeod, school custodian
blcssed events.
who nas
has a case goes to a a
•7?..
,
man wno
Mu* Betty Noble of Kalamazoo luiinr
»&lt;■&lt;
v
In Tommy’s opinion, however.
I malU'r lhBl U 10
Tl
। there is really no connection bc- PhylHs aiLd irerh' Kuril
। tween the two.
inhn
. Heitor get* the testimony of 1
^f'dA '’llhe mtne-e.. states in full hl* vie&lt;
of hls cllcnl as lo the h.
But perliaps my mind is loo slm- wvnnB l U «r»ndfather. Rev. A. E. 1 and
1 pic to grasp the real fact* of life.
Jjr..
HUb... .nuvumw Mn.
n.!"L,UX, IS’.t

WHY ENGLISH HAVE

w«/ •
. z v. 1
, o
V'V fl Cl t vJlHCFS Ol/J’

and the Commercial club to see lha-. pf,-rely; t. h

||| The Public Forum |

J

ganized in this city on Monday with
the following oITicits: Pres. Rich­
ard M. Bntc.s; vice president. Win.

Waterman.
Mrs. Fred Thomas, wife of Prof.
J. F Thoma* of Detroit, who has
w n PinnL
w-11*’, Ky, P,oy* a
to present tiie leal
Well, guess *„
I’d ^»«r,
better titrow a tew
txen spending the summer nt Wai: dud_. in the old valise and get going,
’ ‘"W “,ld U‘C !«W WPUCaMC tO tl
lake, wa* given a surprise recently |
...
l,mrhM^lw!dn*W|&gt;lh In CaM' lO U,C COUrl H U mUch mu
in honor of her birthday. It was 1 Want to be back ir. time far the
I
dimcuU for a man to become
pfanned
bv
Me«limes Shirley fair.
Of
an^iJT^r’ Mr* E B BUSh barrUler
England than It I* to
Smith and W. W. Potter. After
C™’
, . 1 B solicitor. Two of the "Inn*
bridge .in the afternoon tlic limit- I Frisky
... __________
Court ’ are for mUcUot* and two f
says she’s going to be a atTthr
at the meeting of the Missionary . barrbt&lt;T'
&lt; 5 and Mrs. Potter delighted the 1 whizz—and Frisky know*.
?vc««vMr.Ej 'v“mlblrt! i ’n"’
ihlns u Uw Bn
other guest* by swimming across I
...
rf..Dr.(.» r„r ia...
(
th1 lake to'Beechwood. , -cnrfl*d by
Hope .«ome of the wise boys don't mcaoay. pre*.. Mr* j. v Hilbert. ’
vlcc-prea.. Mr*. Clauda Wolcott; ' the dignity o® romll He realii
.•even boat*, carrying fir»t aid out- j get rooked at some of Die gaming
fits. However, both women per- booth* before Tommy get* back to ^v ’
mhnnHauernarai tre^ ,hal U lS UlC C0Urt lhat P™toCU hi
umL8""1 “nd UeM ’ :,nd hu liberties, to a degree th
formed the feat easily.
protect ’em.
D. C. Waters iias disposed of his I
...
•Mrs’ 8tata Hllt&gt;crtthe average citizen doe* not in U
livery stock and bu*ine» to Elh- ' so—Here’* to Uie land of lakes
~u.nt.-v
country. When a crime i* comm!
vl&amp;SS?y«5S .n" toUSS!"" “■
’■i'™-.»«
worth Eldred of Allegan who h and fishing streams.
now conducting It.
I
-----. thing like the “sob sister" inlert
Surchaslng power on the part of the ' in the criminal often shown in th
WOODLAND.
Master George Bauer entertained
armer will be reflected almost im-i country. The attitude of the En
Mr. and Mrs. V- R Wotring re­
.sixteen little boy* Monday after­
noon in honor of hi* seventh turned last Saturday from their mediately in all branches of busi­ IBh people is that they want such
.-&lt;:ght-' seeing trip In the upper pen- I ness."—Senator Capper.
birthday.
man to have his rights, but if he
in ula. Some of the more interest- |
guilty, they want him punished, i
THIRTY
AGO.
ill lit IX YEARS
itrtito AUU.
Ing places they visited were Sauli ’ &gt;■
1 matter who hr Is. They work wl
Thursday evening at the^beautl- Sfc Marie. Taiiquamcnon Falls. |
the government In securing the pu:
iul home of .Mr. and Mrs. J. T I Picture Rock-, at Munising. Mar-1
ishmenl of the guilty.
PUBLIC
ENEMIES
Lombard In the presence of immc- queue and Manistique. The Land j
They do not have prosecuting a
dlatc relatives, their daughter An- Of Hiawatha is of particular inter! torneys In England. When a crime
he Rives
'The
znletta was united in marriage to p»- to Mr. Wotring as; b- ««
—'j
committed the government steps
Clmton J. Lahr, Rev Arthur Trott 1 Song Of Hiawatha’’ t.
and appoints a barrister to try t
officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Lahr are :ln crayon interpretation,
case. Usually the crown employs U
best talent that can be obtained, at
now al home in their beautiful new , Mrs Mabie Eaglekroudt and son.
hOU -. &lt;23 Broadway.
, Paul Edgar, returned Sunday to
insist* on * speedy trial of the a
cused. Tn this country th- offlcc
Fred Stebbins has purchased tlxe i t,M’*r home in Detroit after spending
prosecuting attorney is politic;
inure-1 of his iwrtncr Morris Lam- | a month with Mr. and Mrs Leon
, ’ Frequently a man becomes prosecu
bii- in the well-known cigar store Tytar ami family and other relatives.
Ing attorney, with no other ld&lt;
। next to the postofTicc.
Frank Fox and daughter. Miss
’I than to give him a chance to sia
Mr Jacob Rehor entertained for : Ethel Fox. of Detroit spent the week
I the practice of law. And delays
Mu* Mary Keller of Grand Rap- I end with Mr. and Mrs. John Dell,
I the trial of criminals arc Die usu
ids with a miscellaneous shower at
A. W- Long had me misiortunc to'
I tiling.
her,home on Thursday evening.
| break hts leg while playing baseball ।
• Judges are held In the highest r
The National Magazine for Sep- । -«t Freeport Saturday. He was taken
l sped in England, where they ser
tvmber has a fine write-up of the 110 Pennock hospital where Dr. Fin- i
। for life. They are not elected f
ILi: ting. Table Co.* line of tables I nlr M’1 u,e fracture. He is now home
terms Aas in this country, but a
and the Tydcn pedestal table lock. , wlth hl* parents, Mr. and Mrs. |
chosen to serve for a lifetime
Wayne Long.
they behave as they should. Th
FORTY YEARS AGO.
| Mr.
Mr ana
and Mrs. orant
Grant Osgood acac-1
lends to promote respect for la
rompauled‘ by Mr. and
Mrs“ Roscoe ' .—Seems - nstur.il to sec -Lady"
‘
and the court*. The fact that tl
i3 [Hynes visited Mr Osgood’s mother.
I
Baldwin In the box again. .HL,crown selects the barristers
Osgood
his sister. |
\
ninny friends hope that hi* arm 3Mrs. -E- -F —
-----and
---------------------try cases against criminals, and th
C. E
E. Skinner, of Grand RapRan. ।Z*r
may recover Us old-time cunning Mrs. c
the prosecution is not done by lai
and l.F may regain the position h« 11*1'- Sunday,
yers chosen for short terms at ele
ml
the jbest pitcher tn thej Mrs. Phillip Schray and grand- ;
tions—these conditions account fi
league.
1 daughters. Misses Vivien and Shir- !
the great superiority tn law enforo
Gerd attractions arc being «e- lr&gt; SfhrW- "‘umed Friday to their
ment in Great Britain O0IPM1
with this country.
fair this year. F S. Giddings of (IfK the summ« in their home here.
Kalamazoo
cxiwrt bicycle
Mrs Win Warner
the
•J
.an eSJnta
’o! rider
SS'OW
.nd 8attended
h»re. «h«.l
THE EAGLE.
The eagle 1* a monarch.
riding each day. The Hastings city ”fUnton *l Lake Ode*«a Park Thur»- ,
The ruler of the sky.
band nill furnish the music; two i
...
i
He
file*
to
west, he files to cast.
ba-et HI mimes’ an exhibition bv' Mr and Mr’ Ralph Lcnler are 1
th- runnmg Sam of theHasting ! &lt;n‘«‘«hung Uie Hutchimon family
In search of lambs on which to fear
A dot against the sky
Mr. dep.run.nt: nn. program M, E“““ «
1’™'
•“&gt; :
, He flies to north, he flie* to soul
In search of food for the hungi
mouth
d. .
tin
™ Mors.n. ul nncd u, thrlr home
in hla mountain home so high.
Mr&gt;. ’errie juller Wcltertord oi1
5»“&gt;« “»
’
Thb vain ruler of the sky.
AUrta via rprnk on .plrllpaUrm at! ?th r'1*u''1 111 HMUard and Pan (.

i

-&lt;2C

Our World

H’dy o/
HEWS GLEAN'D.'GJ.

"Politic*’i*“ H corn.: in thl
country, and -politk-* are ’B corrccl
in -EiiSDi’.a- But what weYc TuiikIHj
early iqo iKKimL
krcnT the only ones troubled either! ...
forward
r_._to
... ....
is the time
W1ICU
when
. |WI4
"poll,
Think of the people living along Uti u not” will be correct. • Arkan
The a-.cr.ue ‘ /
these roads; who haw to go through sas Gazette,
miniature dust stoftiu. every day!
Pastel shade* for men’s trtiire. arc
These dust cloud', loo. according to
highway engineers, represent the”"*® be*T»put.ir for spring wear, wei
best part of the road surface—the read W1‘lr,&gt; P’1-' »&lt;» in the.mod-!
binder arid filler material which again.
*"*" ” the
” beneficent
'
sunlight of the ;n
make the surface smooth and hard. past few years having faded some
Dust can be overcome in two ways; of our a’.tlrc to a delicate P**tel placed .n
either by p*vihg or surfacing with a green— Arkansas Gazette.
tarmac material or by laying the
O-.e man In New York cast 160 chmb t. «&gt;r Mom
durt wHh oil or catetum chloride ballot., in the Igsf election, and yet;?1^
-I
Calcium chloride is generally consid­ people complain that rm-n do not
X.7:hv
ered to be Use most economical
ma- take citizenship seriously.—Albany ‘
--------------- -------’
torhxl for dust treatment on a large Knickerbocker Press
I There: :
•calc. The effect from it 1* not per। idUon t;..
inaiwnl. One trralnient lasu many
A radl° &lt;»«nic asks suggestion* tar' het’dihiiiu p.. ,e
week*, however, and Uie chloride is a name f°r his 15-minute period 3°T

’fjfnnr

tl.e

Reed’s hall. Sunday afternoon and
-evening.
, .

intrepid

l«o-mlla-an-.
weljih only 11

Crumbs of Wisdom
a woman tram

BRIEF OBSERVATIONS,

■ “A home and the home owner are
the best credit ’ risk*.’’—Herbert
comparatively inexpensive. Even so. of «««s »‘nd funny Uorle*. How
fn &lt;i&lt; t&lt; :m.■ t|w fineness of a Hoover.
dust treatment on all road* in the .ab&lt;iul "AuW Long Sync"?—Detroit P^gou- n.&lt; ?
carats I* conrid• Youth li knocking at the doors
county would probably' coat a re-;Newi*
"-red th&lt; standard &lt;&gt;: y&gt;uriiy.
and claiming po»lt|pn- of leadership
' j in political life' tn all countries of
spcctablc sum. But would thia cost
H’ . The Japm.. &lt;_•
cotton
textile j the world.”—Benito Mussolini.
be great when compared to the ^ga arc *n inielli^mt^ M,,,n” worM‘'r
•»« average dally.
- ------- — •
an average daily
---------— •'
damage done by dust—the extra
j*8
e
intelligent IndnMuaUv *’»■« ol about n
1 "Mu*Jc is clow to science, n t»
,.nd
J,
.
,nd » dumb;coUccUvely.—St. Louis
—*------■
muthetnattr.- and architecture It u
wear ana leer on the roads, lou ip Star-Timci.
‘
. .,Ttlcr&lt; arr pi&lt;XW jx&gt;licqjpr-n |n the'an equal blending of iriullect and
1U. 5. prottcuieg Ulc and property. 1 emotion.
Albert Exnt:ein.

No bird doe* dare attack him,
Mrs. R. o Flnnle.____
of Hastings cn- _
tcrtxlr.ed three tables of bridge last
e
d**l»ut» his power.
Thursday evening In honor of her
lhe air.
FIFTY YEARS ACKX
mothcr-tn-law. Mrs R. E. Finnic, of i^^jL
!! •P*’ ‘J*!7 l!.kp him an*wl*,'e'
Prospect* arc fair for the reKy. Those. present from
J11,' \h&lt;J^BrL.
I tniUdjjjg of the crtxiuct works In Louisville,
*■------------- ------------------““ 5^ land llM hU hom
ffii*. city'. Mr -Drown ha*.*ignltled'■Woodland
Woodland were
WTrc Metdame*
Me*d*me« T.
t.
I U® ,0Ve* 0 W m0'uiialni »IW 1
, hU bilUngnes* to rebuild provided Cobb, carl Jordan. Ralph Leffler./
, „.roani’
' the citizens of this place wilb take H- A. Kitson, Clyde Ruel). Robert,
Frank Kilpatrick. Karl c. I
The Curve Passer is an optibroad,
?&gt;’•
a certain amount of stock. The re­ Born.
?"! i v
2"? ,Q1'T
1 n&gt;i»t-alb«it a very foolhb irc. I ™’
n nSv
quired amount has already been
tad. Mr,.
Hc Wievw 1|ul
u J
i
---------- -H.roMQ.RbAr.
taken except for about 11500
,
ou
' Cadet Oco. Rock rtuumed home
•“ another
out °
01.J?
town
gum. itravMino
1_.v
*r°ut
wn Ralph
in hlJ
hi&lt; directlUQ
.Ur~-,;..n and,
»„,i «&gt;
&lt;0
"There are certain *trengthento
Tucsdav for hl* vacqMon. George U Honor* were won
by ‘Mr*.
I *rAy«,!n8 ,n
wSu.---------- iMtfSJ.-tle” biKT
taller titan ever.
, ixsffler and Mrs. C*rl Jordan.
, ivim„i.«i., »«v.a
1!?22
SJSISL left far
vbarxe. by joinj arounC ollrer I Kalrh '-Dr. williamBwreU nol
------------------------------------. .2!.'
Mr. AUf.
*nd Mr*.
Ira Slowtll
■
'
I hope wages rf*e tliroughoul tpc their home in Ban Antonia. Taxa*. 1
_ .day MMr MHUn( &gt;&gt;»torawr'. “g “‘I ’ .™“d a)rvn'
.
*«*•
...
whole automobU* Industry It will Monday after ruitlni the former'*
some ------parent*.
and
(j009 ••‘•verj nfter fair other I
u
£ure
at least enable employees of some
- •Mr.
— —
* Mr*.T'Dorr
— *Stowell.
——• I
; can oa
road unlns tf^y art
a leader-make something peop
shops to buy iome of the cars they two week*.
1
Miss
Evelyn
Hynes
left
Sunday
j
tun
that
it
can
be
done
jo
/r/y.
j
want.
”
—
Henry
Ford.
make. —Henry Ford.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER J. IBM
LIST OF PETIT JURORS.
Baughman. Charles W —Thornapjple.

EIBHIY-HREE
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
HCHERSfflESEIT

ho i

of Jud
ent
md
stlon.
Hie* .

&gt;HE
Gro
he
ove,
noon
ashvil
g stol
om t

ook t

sled.
icn fl
I havt
: adm

ore J
md
• coui
defa
1(111101

VE

.

IMPROVEMENT IN
CITY WATER SUPPLY

hundred

Organizations

Oppormnitte'
At St, Rose School

: Mwic

IINATOBMQWKSL
ON WEtTIRN STAJI
ANO THE

ment uMd will
M that now »
It will no doubt require a HUI*
Many of the former pupils, along •xpcrlmentlng to determine Just
how
many days of the week U fiffl vlU&lt;.
HEARD DISCUSSIONS Qf
Because of the aaln* during lije for the coming year are to be elect­ with others who wish to study music
Leone—Hastings I end month of August lhe condition of
Van Burtn coun­
Rose this year, will snroll the
ed. Preceding the bullness session, । at.St- p-..
NEW CERTIFICATION
«.
w..v °Pen The PlM1 now 1« to run a
figure during Cha
the city water supply ha* improved there will be a pot luck supper al , early part of September Pupils who
desire preferable time will please en*nd Saturday showing end session of th* legislature tn the Investi­
Cogswell, william H—Oaatleton. greatly, we learned from a visit to
CODE IN MICHIGAN
six o'clock. Please bring your table roll early. Lewon* will be given on
&lt;« Bunday and Monday. Later gation to dispense with two of the Teach­
Eaton, Wallace—Hastings 3 and 3. the water work* plant on MUI street.
service, sandwiches and dish of food. piano, violin and wind inatmmenl*.
"I*!
prove
advisable
to
run
a
ers'
Colleges
in
the
state
Senator
Mosier
Gatnder, Alfred—Barry.
The restriction* placed upon lhe.
,
.. .
INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE
All pupil, are welcome and every I Wednesday and Thursday eomblna- was forced to accept, against his Own
uteri ot w«ur teirln,
. a,onlh 1H la quite Uteteaary Uial the .upper
, Curd, John—Hope.
wishes, the chairmanship of the inveettWilliam P-—Carlton.
WAS ALSO EXPLAINED
weeks helped materially to Improve 1 »taxt on time a* at nine o'clock, the consideratlon and opportunity will I
be
given
them.
Further
announceMBn
7
ol
the
outstanding
picture*
।. Hammond. Marcus—Prairieville.
I
sting
committee
after
the
senate
could
thi* condition and now'a* the neces- j Auxiliary i* serving a dinner for a
ment* In regard to new pupil* will r«cendy run at the Strand will be not agree on tn* number of normal colHammond, William—Johnstown. rity of using city water to aave the (group of men.
New Courae of Study In­
I returned
returned for
for thMr
their wwvmrl
second .hrtwln.
showing i leges to retain. .
Hppp.r later
r *
Hanes. Fred—Maple Grove.
gardens and lawns has passed, city
------------- '
U?e new theater-such
as
The far-reaching and thorough invastlcludes Teaching Evils of
Hayward. Abe—Orangeville.
Regular lesson* will begin on or '
official* are not a* worried over the
Because of the fair next week it
“Naughty Marietta.” “Mutiny on gatlon of this committee received pubHewitt. John—Hastings 3 and |. fire haxard as they were a few weeks was thought wise to postpone the after Sept. 9.
Alcohol and Narcotics
1
" -Ro*' Marie." “San liclty in the newspaper* of the state UnGeorge Humphrey—Irving.
ago.
1 first met ting of the Banner class of
THEATER
Francisco. ‘Mln end Bill." and oth- usual Interest wa* manifested by the many
Elihty-three of the elghty-elght
Laubaugh. Richard—Hope.
| I There are three pump* at the , the Methodist Sunday School for ANDTUFR
IntAltn
era of this calibre. But since the civic organisations and dubs Airing that
rural teachers of Barry county were I Linington. Fred—Hastings 1 and 4.'■ plant that are electrically
n- driven.'
— onf month Reserve Uie date of HNUintn
present at their annual meeting
McKeown, Clayton—Hasting*.
1 »wv
TO BE OPENED HERE number P^rea Of a* high quail- entire period. Senator Mosier received
two m
of. which pump «ov
350 gallon* .
a Tuesday evening, Oct. 12 and plan
wi u-iiuw iiLnL ly t* rather limited. It may not be . commendation* for hl* tuuai Judlclou*
FRANK
Mead, Charles—Rutland.
•held on Friday, .under the direction
minute and the other 350 gallons
gallon- to be present at this opening meet. —
. ..
..
I P«“lble to maintain this high
I and aggreaalve
maflper In Which he con’
of School Commissioner Maude W.
Moore. Wesley—Baltimore.
„
,
,
_
aggressive
man
Only two of those pump* work at a 1 ing. Mrs. Fred Johnson will be the Management Explains Policy Standard ~throughout the entire ।I *nq
ducted
this
.... ..
.
— ... .u.1
u
u ..
. .Inmtii
irtrtfgauon.
. in finding a Joker In a HU
Smith.
Myer*, Alfred—Yankee Spring*.
time, in case of emergency and the hostess.
The general theme of the galh- ‘ Olmstead. Dan—Assyria.
—To Be Beady for Open- i
u
I Thu rcP°rt »*ven
-« «««-.. ing Uie Horton Law. Thi*
electric current falls, there is a
----------------- 4 • »
«
al
. a
. oa
ycar w U ** fcn ouLstand(n« | committee wa* later unanimously ment proposed to take
Palmer. Minor—Irving.
pump operated by a.gasoUne engine
HAPPY BIRTHDAY PARTY.
ing ADOUt oept. JO
i one In the production of high quail- j adopted by the state senate This
ognixe that the welfare of the child
Pierson. Bird—Yankee Spring*,
HiU pump, m pulton. » minute I Mr&gt;
Snyder of Soutn It.uUUi,.
is the principal obligation of his j Stamm. F W—Assyria
Aceordln, lo Uie terms ol lheir 2.
Breneh i&gt;». B i reuined WeMem Bute Tnubenand In rut or rue. another eke-1 waa honor aue.t at a dellBhtlul oontrecu
illh mouon tenure ora '
b' “"PltedMeJor one Uieeter | Collen at IU praenl loeeUon. B Michigan and place it in Um
profeMlon."
Williamson. Clair—Barry.
trlcally driven pump U turned on JnhSi/.Jty 0„ wedtLday « UM
ducere. the Strand theaterP la
^lVe.,th0 p^ lc the adrantaee win continue lo tenw not only Uie em counties far snow
At ten in the forenoon. Mr*. Opal'
c5?oc!ty 15 J,'000 d*11011’ ’ 1 weep. Covers were laid tor nine at obuard to charp^mato edmlulon defter
IS'
i “nU"
Van Buren and courae these three
Houghton, teacher In the Yankee ACCEPTS POSITION
flted by this IMOAH
minute. Nineteen well, are m u« at [dinner. Mr. Snyder helne preram I
«■&gt; would otherwbe bi
Springs school, explained, the new ।
IN GRAND RAPIDS. the pretent time .nd the eound led with mme lovely s'.'U
Htr prices to eontorm to Uwe tn tenter;
.PeroPC.,ll&lt;^1
", “
I
Miss Katherine Humphrey, who hte planned that e.lra well, win |
ferred to the north.
, M„ g,,, K,nn„„.
cities. Like everything else
»
«wt
or
motion
picture.
U
...
।
P'*
.
■»«.
lh« SUU Bo.rd ,1 BducUon on | ,or
yn„ „„ educed ■ be driven next spring.
---------I pic w
luay &lt;»
uc uouren
I the latter, daughter-in-law. Mr. day*, the cost of motion picture* I*
The motion picture industry has that the primary and secondary
May 2. IWG clianitw In lhe cer- branch of the Berger School of
There an. three employee, at the | cr„ul K„meen. ol Caledonia were increasing.
made rapid progress In the past schools of Michigan will continue
lincatlon plan Include the tollov- I M,u,c her, p*. accepted a Bne po- plant who wort In .hllu ol eight
But the management of the two yem. anj Mr. Branch is mak- i u&gt; be supplied with quailflrf
lne: The ntteen tornier klntle o[1 ,lu„„ „ HerpoUhehner'a .tore In hpur* each. John Baum. Sylvester
, t,
southern and
Strand feels that a great share of
ing every endeavor to give patrons teacher*
MleBInn teacher.' e-rtlhcau. mil ; a„„d [uplde. She will be • pl- Lone and Henry Crawford. Mr.
PARTY FOR MISS WATROUS.
their revenue iri-breught in at the
the highest class of entertainment
senator Mosier also received comhe repUced b« Pvo-Uie Hemenury
i„lrucl„r
[b, musie depari- Baum ha* been employed there for1 ...
,,
...
.
lower admission prices. Therefore.
eL_
L ' mrtidatlon during the session of the
PravUlonal—Pcnrunenl certificate: mI„ti whtth 15 „ |nno„uon al Ilia :« ye.r. and tn nun .hen thr prig-1“V» iS1 ““Sf*'"“I’ SSSS'
tectlng the joker.
the Secondary Pro«elonal-Pmna-1
sht ,U| commence her new inal pumping station was bum he i la|11e(t et8M gueaw Monday eve-Political Adv.
nrnt. Certificate;
1
„
....the
- Junior
,.m.. College
.
on September 14.
Miss
workod there lor a year. Byl.r.ter ning at dinner tn honor
h"~» of M,
“ oulres them
eh«rii. htah^1 Jh’ ab,y open about lhe twcnluth of ---- ------------------------------ ------—-------------- Certificate: the State Limited Cerz
Miss Humphrey plans to spend Lane has worked there fob'll years1 Esther Watrous, who leaves Mon­ mterion
sL
ro
MtWy
th?
te™
T
&lt;
^
m
^
CT
,
h
The
10
**/?!*.
eral
monU
“
’
,Une
“
Surviving
are
II (lente and Renewal and the Coun- j Saturdays in Hastings as stye has and John crawford for 2 months,1 day for New York where she will
»f .heir
ih.ir
lowed by the new house and its nvr .1,.,.. -nu
tv Limited Certificate and Renewal I a class of students for that day. taking t|ie place of Gilbert Timm, study
music
at
the Houghton or
of their agreements -..U
with .Kthe —
pro­ name wU1 aUo * announced UUr five sister* and two brother*. Mr* home on Monday afternoon at
School. The evening was spent
Blanket certification is eliminated Mtea Humphrey is the daughter of who ha* returned to his farm.
ducer* and at the same time retain Notices of unexpected change® in J"m“ Caldwell of Hesperia, Mich., thirty o'clock, thr Rev. Ralph
and certificates will be granted to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Humphrey
The plant is kept in good condi­ playing games and dancing.
their lower admission price,
the
teachers for elementary grades. *ec- of North Michigan avenue.
Strang will shortly open a second the Strand program can be followed Mr*. H. G. Seeley of Biwabik. Minn.. ton of Okemos offlclaUng. Burial
tion and the pumps and Other ma­
by reading their ads in the Banner. Mlu Ada Michael of Detroit and In Riverside cemetery.
■MINS HOLLOWAY ENGAGED.
ondary grades or Junior College*, j
chinery are all shining with good
theater, formerly known as the
Lite certificate* will not be granted
The news of Uie engagement of "Family next to the Goodyear
’••
; MU* Nonna Michael and Mrs. John
THIRD WINNER.
care. The city of Hastings is for­
after June 3. 1939. and the old time
Roy Hubbard was the third lucky tunate in having its "vn water MLv. Maud Holloway of Adrian, Bros Hardware on the north aide PASSING OF MISS
A- Wooton of Hastings and W. J.
Only 13 stale*
first, second and third grade Cert!fl- man tn get a suit in McCall's Suit plant run so capably and economic­ daughter of Mrs. L. L Holloway, to of State street.
।
HELEN MICHAEL FRIDAY. - Michael of Lansing and Dr. Lout* presidents for the
cates will not be granted hereafter. ' Club. He gets * MO suit for * 13.33.
Il U being remodeled by Hastings ‘ Mlu Helen Michael, a member of G. Michael of Belgrade. Yugoslavia. Virginia. Mass, South
ally and also in haring such a won­ Henry L. Wilson of Defiance, Ohio,
However no present -profeMional
derful supply of fine drinking water will be of Interest to Miss Holloway'* workmen, and as much of the new I the firm of Ironside and Michael, and two niece*. Mi** Helen Wooton North Carolina. Penn.. New
teacher will be penalised because
friends here. The date for the wed­ equipment as passible has been pur­ died al her ^7±:,
home. IX
118 North —
park
i of —
Detroit
and MU* Jannet
Michael thin. Vermont, New York,
from lhe artesian wells
*-•-*
•—- —
------------------of these recent chango* in the code.
ding has not been set.
chased in Hastings. The new thea- St., on Friday,
tiday, August 38,
28, after aev- J of Hartings. also several nephew*. I J. Kentucky and Ohio. '
"Goals of Education in Michigan" 1
CIVIC PLAYERS TO
wa* discussed by Mi*.* Mvrlle Wil­
son. teacher at Barryville.
Nine
GIVE CHILDREN’S PLAY
PUMPKIN CHIFFON PIE.
objective* were presented In a very
1 envelope granulated gelatin.
comprehensive manner by
Miss |
Extra Matinees Planned for
1-4 c cold water.
Wilson. These "Goals" are signlfl“The Sleeping Beauty,”
1 1-4 c canned pumpkin.
cant suggestions to the elementary &gt;
1-3 c milk.
school They -are found in the "In- |
Oct. 19, 20 and 21
1-3 t ginger.
structlonal Guide" for elementary
Rehearsal*
for "The Sleeping "V
1-3 I nutmeg.
schools, issued recently. Bupt. D.’
Beauty" which the Hastings Civic ♦
1-2 t cinnamon.
A. VanBuskirk was a member of
Player* will present to the children j.
Uie committee which arranged the
of Barry county upon October 19,, T
1 c sugar.
curriculum given in the Guide.
;
20 and 21. at Central school audi­
ML*.* Marguerite McPharlin. teach- '
To slightly beaten egg yolks add torium. will start immediately after i
er of the Tanner r-chool. stroke on
Barry county fair.
one-half
cup
sugar,
puninkin.
milk,
"Effective Teaching." using the sub- ।
This year. Director Barnett is
Ject* of school environment, selection salt and spices, cook until thick In
drawing largely upon the exper- 1
and use of Miblecl matter, method* double boiler. Pour cold water 1»
lenced talent of 8t Row Parish 1
and teaching technique. Individual bowl and sprinkle gelatin on top of
differences in pupil* anti other cor­ water. Add lo hot pumpkin mixture. Young Peopli's club. Miss Beatrice j
inorouanlv and cool. When it Goggins. Miss Florence O'Donnell.
related topics as the basts for her '
begins to thicken, add remaining Mis* Kathryn Humphrey and Mr.
talk.
and fold in stiffly beaten egg ’ Will TafTec have all been assigned
A Daily Schedule for the rural
Pour-------intor-------------previously
school* was presented by Commr. white*.
---------- --------. baked to prominent parts although the
Maude W Smith that should prove i pie shell. Chill in refrigerator. Flo entire cast has not been selected. A i
helpful to teachers, especially be- may be garnished with whipped completed list will be printed in
ginners
' cream Just before serving. Delicious the Banner as rehearsals start.
Changes have been made in ad­
"Appraisal of IntrucUon" was the served in gingersnap crust (make
topic assigned to Mr*. Clara Stan- I same as graham cracker crust, but mission prices- and seating arrange­
thor­ ments. The annual children's play
ton who teaches in Orangeville. She use
—* a
* little less sugar).
‘ Chill *»•"*raid that two major purposes are oughly and pour In pumpkin mix­ has become so popular that constant
readjustments are necessary, ac­
served by the systematic appraisal ture.
cording to the report of the Execu­
of instruction, namely, to determine
whether the objectives of instruc­ ICOOOANl'T ORANGE COOKIES. tive committee
.
At "Cinderella." in the fall of
1 3-4 c rifted cake.
s
tion have been attained and to de­
1934. it was necessary to seat the
3 1-21 baking powder.
termine the amount and kind of
children two in a seat. The Civic
rc-tcachlng necessary.
Players added an additional matinee
I t cinnamon.
A very Interesting talk was given
the next year when "Jack and the
1 c rolled oats.
by Arthur A. Kaechele. commission­
Beanstalk" was presented. Still
1-3 c butter or other shortening.
er of Allegan county schools. He
there were not sufficient seats to ac­
talked rm "Use of Large Units of
1 c sugar.
commodate almost three thousand
2 eggs, well beaten.
Instruction," citing examples of
youngsters.
1
t
vanilla.
such instruction.
•The Sleeping Beauty" will be pre­
In the new Instructional Guide.
1-2 can moist cocoanut.
sented on three afternoons and one
“Legal Provisions Affecting Teach­
4 T orange Juice.
evening, this season, with an extra
ers' is the title of one of the chap­
Grated rind 1 orange.
ter*. telling the duties of a teach­
Sift flour once, measure, add bak­ matinee also added if the advance
er. instruction concerning the state ing powder, sslt and cinnamon and sale of tickets warrants it.
The committee reports that indi­
and United States Constitutions, sift again. Add rolled oats. Cream
instruction about prevention of dis­ butter; add sugar gradually and viduals outside of Barry county have
ease. alcohol and narcotics instruc­ cream together until light and fluf­ manifested Interest in this annual
tion. teaching kindness to animals. fy. Add eggs, vanilla, cocoanut, affair and that Its scope may be
YOLK price
ab-.cn ancc of special days. etc.
orange Juice and rind. Add flour widened to Include children from
Luncheon was served at noon in mixture. Drop ..w...
from teaspoon UU|
on surrounding communities.
At the recent meeting of the^
STYLE DCTAUi
. F*ol Coilon. C
the Presbyterian church parlors to slightly greased cookie sheet. Bake
about fifty, who also listened to a tn moderately hot oven. (400 de- county and vlllagr school teachers
splendid talk by Principal Edwin L grees) about 10 minute*. Makes five complete written instructions were
delivered to each one and interest is
Taylor.
doaen cookies.
keener than ever beore. The Civic
At the afternoon session John C..
Hoekje of the W 8 T. C. at Kala- '
Player* have adopted the ambitious
SPANISH CORN.
slogan
"Let Every Child In Barry
masoo presented “Plans for Exten- |
1 T butter.
County Sec The sleeping Beauty."
sion Courses" Twenty-three teach1 green pepper, minced.
cr« signed up for a course In Eng- !
To avoid confusion due lo ex­
1 medium onion, chopped.
changing of pre-purchased ticket*
lish with Dr George Sprau of W.
8 T C. The classes will meet j
1-4 t black pepper.
Tuesday evenings, starting Oct. 6.'
I unreserved at the matinees and
1 No. 1 can whole kemal com.
usher* will seat the children as they
at the High school, the same as last . 3 1-3 c tomatoes.
arrive in groupr until the auditor­
Wheat biscuits or cracker*.
All teachers were urged to attend ' Melt butter in frying pan and ium is Ailed. Only enough tickets
the -Teacher*'
Encampment"
to be &lt; saute pepper and onion until tender will be sold to fill the seat*. It Is
.
hoped
that this plan will prevent
held at Clear lake next week end. but not brown. Add other tngredMi.vs Rose DeFoe. senior health lent* except biscuits, and simmer the turning away of patrons at the
counselor for the Barry County until Juice ha* partly condensed. door.
The new admission price which
Health Unit, told of the program serve hot on buttered shredded
that has been prepared. Sanitary wheat biscuit*, toast or cracker*.
j| has been set at ten cent* to everyI one. adults and children, alike, at '
Engineer A. A. Roth next spoke of
I every matinee. This will make It
PORCUPINE MEAT BALLS.
some “Tentative Plans for Rural
1 1-3 pounds ground beef.
possible for parents to attend with
Schools" being considered by the
1-3 cup uncooked rice.
their children. The evening perforW. K. Kellogg Foundation.
1 mance admission 15c for children,
1 teaspoon salt
____
Xtrs. Cante FUhcr. teacher in th*
1-8 teaspoon pepper.
| and 25c for adult*.
Alloft school, discussed the “Syl­
labus by Grade*." or the course of
1 tablespoon grated onion.
1 can tomato soup.
study outlined by the Department
REAR ADMIRAL
1-3 can waler.
of Public Instruction, a topic of
GEORGE H. ROCK
chopped
interest to all teachers.
ji 3 tablespoons
.
...green .pep. ,1
Closing the program wa* the talk per.
by Dr. Gordon O. Fisher, whose subMix meat, rice and Masoning*., Will Frfislde Uver
Ject was "Safety and Alcohol and Shape into small ball* and drop Into
tional Meeting of 1
GIRLS' CAPES__50c
MISSIS'._85c__
NarcoUcn." For many years the tomato *oup, to which water, onion,
At Popular Pricaa, Saving You
Constructors
teaching of the evils of Intemper- and areen
green nenner*
pepper* have been added
added.
LADIES'-------------------- $1.00 ond $1.39
$3.00 to $5.00 oa City Pricas
ance in our public school* wa* dis­ Cook slowly for 40 minute* Serve on
An International meeting of Nav- '
SALE ON UMBRELLAS
continued. but evidently*lhe com­ hot plates with tomato sauce over al Architects and Marine Engineers
will be held in the Waldorf! Aa- 1
mittee who compiled this new them.
$1.89 UMBRELLAS of----------------- $1.39
tcria hotel in New York City, Sept
course o! study realixed the great
$5.00 SILK UMBRELLAS at$3.98
need for such training in Michigan FISH AND ALMOND TIMBALES. 14 to 19. the Invitation being ex- '
1 c raw fish.
tended by the Society of Naval I
school*. So again our children will
1-4 c blanched almond*, chopped. Architects and Marine Engineer*, of
lean) of the harmful results—men­
1
t
tall.
tally. physically, morally and fi­
which Rear Admiral George H
1-3 I finely minced onion.
Rock, a former Hastings boy. t* *
nancially—of the um of alcoholic
Few grains cayenne. .
beverages and narcotics.
president.
To Match Your Ensemble
1 c cream, whipped.
*
Distribulicn of ‘school supplies
Thia will be the first international
3 egg whites.
wa* made by Mr*. Smith at thi*
meeting ever hejd. and delegate*
1 T .lemon JuJce.
meeting.
will be present from many different
BAGS. All Color*. $1.00, $1.95. $2.95
Chop or grind fi»h v^ry-----fine. punlrlfs, including France. Ger­
Measure, add salt, onion, cayenne many. Great Britain. Japan, Italy,
CLOVERDALE.
GLOVES50c. Sic, $1.00
Mr. and Mrs. Keith -Fuller and and lemon Juice. Fold in whipped Spain and Sweden.
children of Long Island. New York cream, finely chopped almonds and
Included In the program will be
spent Friday evening at John Lech- stiffly beaten egg white*. Turn into a reception and official- welcome by
lellner's farm home near Cloverdale. individual mold* which have been Rear Admiral Rock at the Webb
buttered and lined on bottom with institute of Naval Architecture, of
-Teaching may be defined as the waxed paper. Set maids In pan of which Institution he I* in charge
awakening of another's mind, and hot water, bake In moderate oven
Till* will .be one of the most
the training of IU faculties to a (35d to 375 degrees F.) until firm in Important naval meeting* ever held
normal self-activity.'—George Her­ center or about K minute* Serve and Will Attract fane of the gTeatbert Palmer.
with Hollandaise or tomato sauce. fa naval constructor* of the world.
PHONS ax
HASTINGS
EXCLUSIVE, BUT NOT EXPENSIVE

,

Beiultn Showed Wisdom of
Member* of the American Legion |
i
BeBtrictioni on
Auxiliary are urged to remember
that this Thursday evening officer* ,
Sprinkling

Helpful Suggestions

sssc*
■iters.

of t

the li

h mi
□me

:nn*
&gt;e En
nd 1

PRINTZESS COATS

ud
IC pu
ins
rime
lens

39oo

M. &amp; F. STYLE SHOPPE

FRANDSEN’S STORE

’54-

K to SEE OUR SPORT COATS
"MARY LANE" ALL WOOL, SMARTLY TAILORED

non
mu

*1O°° W 91275

RAIN CAPES and UMBRELLAS

Exclusive High Grade Dresses

$3 ”

ure.

horn

High Class Bags and Gloves

FBANDSEN’

r“"fa

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER LUN

.... ,

never be satlsfied'to try my luck in ' ored hot springs, mud volcanoes, Ils moving to this city after lhe her studies at the Junior college and he has a position tn Flint where lie
Michigan again.
1 boiling paint pots with a variety of Michigan Conference which meets Eleanor Jean will enter the primary Is employed In the office of Uie Du­
Prnre, M.harman'a Wridra
’ cok« boiling up In Ute same bMln. tn Battle creek next week. She will department of the school. Their Pont Oo.
From Fisherman s Bridge, which MoU Qf
hot aprln&lt;a ut hl&lt;hly be located in the Fred Smith house. good work at Hastings the past year,
where several hare been added to TEACHES BIOLOGY IN
Is always lined with fistiermen. we charged with minerals which thay
BAYAMON. PUERTO RICO.
followed north'down the river four-. deposit as the water cools, and the
the church and many improvements
Dexter R. Bmelker. formerly of
teen miles lo Canyon Junction, al depoJ1ts form great terraces in ail William Clagetl family and Mr. and made to lhe church property, give
the head of the Yellowstone Falls. I colors. The colors. rangUig from red. Mrs. O. A. Davis spent Bunday in evidence that he Is a young man of Barry' county, who has been teaching
and from there west eleven miles to plnk
brown and bluish gray. Grand Rapids, the guests of Mr. vision and a natural leader. His English In Cidra. Puerto Rico, dur­
(Continued From page 1, Sec. 1)
A X1W DECLARATION OF
Norris Junction. We did not stop ! .iOw brilliantly and Instead of being and Mrs A. A- Kirchner. Mr. and many friends in Hastings and else­ ing 1935-36, will teach biology tn the
ber stamp Congress will be called than the general level of the en­ at the falls this afternoon as we ex- CBUied by lhe minerals are really I MM- Henry Billings of Lansing were where feel confident that he will go high school at Bayamon. Puerto
INDBPBNDENOE
upon to pass "must" legislation closed tableland.
pec ted to spend some time there the I caused by microscopic plants living also guests of the Kirchners.
far in the future. The best wishes Rico, during the ensuing school
which, in its operation, will destroy |
year which started Aug. 24 In tlial
next
morning; but from Norris.water, lhe variety of colors
Mta&gt; Frances Cowles went to of all will go with them.
Its geysers are celebrated Uie
Fight for Tour Liberty, Your the freedom of lhe press, the free­
city. This summer he attended the
. world over, because for size, power junction on south tor 30 miles we | ^^g due entirely to the tempera- Kalamazoo Bunday and on Monday
dom
of
speech,
the
liberty
of
the
University of Puerto Rico al Rio
went
through
the
three
principal
lurM
of
tbe
water,
a
different
color
Freedom From Of­
entered lhe Maher's Business ColCol। WEDDING
__________________
PLANS
i and variety of action, as well as
citizen, the right to transact busi­
geyser basins of Yellowstone.
or klnd of phmt living in water ot a lege 'where she wUl specialize in
In I
ARE ANNOUNCED, Pledras. where he look a courae Ln
ficial Tyranny
ness, to own and hold property free number, the region has no competi­
It is almost Impossible to describe different temperature. These ter- business administration.
on. Mr.
Mr and I Barry county friends will be Inter­ Spanish also a course In "Teaching
tor. New Zealand whjch ranks sec­
from
excessive
taxation,
and
the
English in- Puerto. Rico.” His friends
Hysteria? By no means. Read
ond and Iceland, where lhe word these geyser areas, lhe roar of es- races are deposited quite rapidly Mrs Roy Chandler and Mr. and I ested in the announcement of the
again the Declaration of Independ­ much talked of “common man" will "geyser" originated, possess the only raping steam, the smell of brim-' and engulf large trees and every Mrs B. F. Cowles accompanied her approaching marriage of Louis M. here are glad to Irani of his pro­
motion.
ence and compare the wrongs there find that he has placed himself, his other geyser basins of prominence, stone and Uie underground rum- oUier living thing that gets in their to Kalamazoo.
.
Brown, son of Mr and Mrs. Bert
complained of. the conditions then children, and his grandchildren In but both together do not begin to blings make you wish you had led a ' way.
Mrs L. H Evarts and Miss Agnes I Brown, of Doster, to Miss Marie E
ENTERTAINED AT LUNCHEON.
existing, with the situation of to- the hands of the tax collecter.
offer what the visitor may see in the better life while on earth. You can-1 There is one whole lake covering Sim leave the first of October for Weatherwax, daughter of Mr and
Mn Herman Arold and Mrs Rob­
As the President said:
not
help
but
be
strongly
impressed
|
,
creral
acres
lhat
u
boiling
and
Greeley, near Grand Junction. Colo. Mrs. Guy D- Weatherwax of Jack- ert O'Connor entertained the light
“Remember well that attitude J three principal geyser basins of
Of King George, It said:
| Yellowstone.
.
and awed by a sense of nearness to seething conUnuously. There must to spend a month with friends and eon. The ceremony will be aolem- members of their bridge club Thurs­
and method—the way we do | For a long time the chief public one of nature's secret laboratories. | be millions of gallons of boiling wa- Uien will go to Pasadena. Cal, for | nlzed al four o'clock on Saturday, day at a one o'clock luncheon al
"He has obstructed the adminis­
things, not Just the way wc I interest in Yellowstone centered
There are over 3.000 geysers and ter running into the Flrehole river, the remainder of the winter. Mr. October 24. at the First Presbyterian lhe home of Mrs. Arold on West
tration of justice say things. Is nrorly always the f around its spouting geysers and hot springs In Uie park and most of; yet it does not seem to warm up the and Mrs a. A. Roth will occupy church tn Jackson.
Green street, contract honors were
"•He has erected a multitude of
measure of our sincerity."
I,.,,,,,.,
.... Uiem are located along these 30 water in lhe river, as we could see their home on West State street.
MI“,WMtherw”? * 6r«duate of won by Mrs. Leslie Hawthorne and
I similar uncanny wonders of .a dying
new offices and sent hither swarms
Every act. notwithstanding lhe 'JS“reiion' Now 7ha7 its “good miles of road. The geysers exhibit a fishermen catching trout within a
Mrs. Lawrence Herrick.
□f officers to harass our people and
or. wilell
Mr.Turedny
curow.
E JOllel.
Hy..l nd
children
lor
111. i
J!
fair
words.
Indicates
a
studied
purroa
ds
and
trails
have
made
this
large
variety
tn
character
and
ac;
few
feet
of
spouting
geysers
and
hot
eat out their substance.”
'
nuitinn
t v tM
member of the Kappa Chapter ol BRIDGE FOR MRS. REYNOLDS.
pose here in America to place in lhe greai wilderness easily accessible, its Uon—no two of them being any- springs,
"He has combined with other- to
ra^auJa. hJL Mr 1 Beta Sigma Phi in Flint. Mr. Brown
Mrs. C. W. Clarke Is hostess today
hands of the President and his ad-, beautiful virgin forests, trout-filled where near alike. Some, like Old,
Hubert D. Cook.
SvM^l dlts
ihZv h.ere^t graduated from the Hastings High
subject us to a Jurisdiction foreign
at a dessert bridge In honor of Mrs.
vlsers unlimited, arbitrary power.
likes and streams, canyons and wa- Faithful. Daisy, and Riverside, spout J
to our Constitution—
Lhe van Dalsen collage al Gun lake. ------------*ch0?1 -------^nd.------from. Antubrigiit's
.....——----— Phyllis Reynolds of Ann Arbor,
in
As you Jove your country, as you infalls, and Its wild animal popu- at quite regular Intervals; others are .
"For cutting off our trade with all hope for opportunity for your chll- utton attract as many visitors as its irregular, with intervale of from a
been at.
at. the
lhe j
Creek. At the present time &lt; Twelve guests will be entertained,
Dr. Hyatt, who has been
parts of the world:
dren, study the Issues and give us volcanic wonders,
fraction of a minute for some of lhe!
head of a CCC camp lr. Or.UdU.
in Ontario.------------------------------------------"For Imposing taxes on us without in the White House, not "a super­
_ ____ —____leave, his i
The park has four principal en- smaller ones to several years for
man," “a master mind." but one of
our consent;
some
of
lhe
extremely
large
ones.
time
expiring
on
Monday.
While
trances—North. South. East, and
"For depriving us in many cases "the common people." Alf M. Lan­ West—each connecting by a few lo If you are like me you could not en­
Fred C. Spitzer of Battle Creek hero he received word that he had
don.
of trial by jury,"
a hundred fifty miles with principal joy a geyser unUl you knew how It was in the city Monday.
been advanced to lhe rank of Cap­
Conditions indicate that our Pres­ western railways,
"He has excited domestic Insur­
where
motor worked, so I will try and describe it:
Q. A. Ironside was In Akron on tain In the Reserve Officers Corps.
ident and some of his advisers be­ coaches meet all trains to take vis­
rections among us."
As stated before this is a volcanic business the latter part of last week.
lieve
in
a
dictatorship.
The
dicta
­
Such was the tyranny under King
itors to and through the park and region and the rocks close to lhe
he has been in CCC work and Is now
Mrs.
L.
Severance
and
Lois
spent
George In 1776. Read now of the tors of Europe today are filling the 1 return them to a later train. These surface are still plenty hot. Water
from Tuesday until Friday In Pon­ locating In Joliet, where he will
tyranny attempted by the New world with rumors of war. Arbi­ entrances are also connected by fine from the surface or water from sub­
practice his profession of osteop-.
trary power in the hands of a Presi­ paved roads to the main transcon- terranean veins trickles through tiac and Detroit.
a thy.
Mrs Hugh case and Miss Norma
The administration, by NRA. "ob­ dent may bring us war. Never by ! linen tai higha-ays. The scenic drive cracks in lhe rock/ down into the
structed the administration of jus­ my vote will war be declared, ex­ in the park is shaped llkqLa figure plumbing of the geyser, and into lhe Case of Assyria visited Mrs. Clar­
FAREWELL PARTY.
tice." It sent citizens to Jail for the cept in defense of our own land | eight, about one hundred eighty region of great heat. The water be­ ence Grohe Wednesday.
On Thursday evening. August 27.1
Mrs. Nancy Dlmond is visiting rel­
violation of rules and regulations when it is Invaded. We had one , miles long and crosses lhe contlnen- comes intensely heated in these low­
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Van Luke and I
promulgated not by the authority Democratic President who prom-' tai divide several times. At each en­ er regions and forms ftteam. which atives jin Kalamazoo and Grand daughter Erma entertained thirty
Lsed
“
to
keep
us
out
of
war."
In
Rapids
during
her
vacation.
of Congress, the lawmaking power,
trance to lhe park is a Ranger Sta- expands and forces upward the cool­
UOT~whero"yw
“stoped'w“he"n er water lying above IL As this wa­
Miss'. Beulah severance is in the guests as a farewell for Mr. and Mrs.
but by executive- officers doing the
John McMartln and two children,
Xou flrit enUr fcnd
W 00 (or a ter on U&gt;e surface begins to bubble hospitg) at Pontiac recovering from
will of the President. The baker nort'hlm^
David and Lots, of Glenn. Cal. They
who sold bread, the tailor who
P“rk 11cense. which is attached to and overflow at the mouth of the an operation for appendicitis.
Miss Emma smith of Grand Rap­ have been visiting relatives in I
geyser, it is a sign that the geyser
pressed pants, the battery man who
The Primary is September 15. to operate a vehicle as long as you is about to play or spout.
ids is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Monte Michigan since July 23d. It was also
performed work for his neighbors,
Smith and other relatives, tor ten in honor of Mr. McMartin's birth­
at prices less than those fixed by Election is November 3.
like and enter the park as many
The tube or plumbing of the gey­
day. Mrs. McMartln was formerly |
Respectfully.
an executive officer, were convicted,
times as you please during the year. ser. being more or less crooked or days.
CLARE E. HOFFMAN.
Miss Jeanette Billings of Lansing Isabel! Galnder of this vicinity and :
all without authority of law.
It is also your fishing license and constricted, prevents the easy cir­
Mr. Martin was a resident of Plain-1
Republican
Candidate
for
Congress,
•
You were taxed without repre­
permits all members of your party culation and escape of the water, spent last week with her cousins, well.
Fourth
District
of
Michigan.
Elaine.
Maxine
and
Eleanor
Jarman
sentation. Money was taken from
to fish throughout the season.
and lhe steam and water below be­
Mr. and Mrs. McMartln have not
and Melva clagelt.
the consumer; It was taken from -Political Adv.
All types of accommodations are come superheated and as soon as, Mrs. Belle Putttlson has been been in
Michigan
since they
the producer, to pay "a multitude
provided in the park—camp, sites if part of the water on top has been j visiting friends In Kalamazoo. Miss were married and went to make
COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON.
of new offices"—Federal appointees
you bring your lent, trailer parks pushed out. relieving part of the' Margaret Brooks bringing her home their home at Glenn, twenty-three.
Attendance continues to be large
—"swarms of officers to harass our
with electrical connections, etc, for pressure due to weight, the water
people and eat out their substance." at lhe weekly luncheons al the Has­ housetrailers, housekeeping cabins, in the bottom of the tube suddenly j the first of the week. Anarus ana years ago.
andm Mrs.
Andrus were
and
Those present at the party were ,
“ford
“^e]Roy
of ilnslng
Hundreds of thousands of political tings Country Club, sixty members overnight cabins, as well as fine turns Into steam and. with explosive , clMr.
Mr. and Mrs Alfred Galnder and
officeholders were scattered over the and guests being present this week hotels. These are spaced in groups force, the entire mw. of hundreds
family and Miss Doris McIntyre
country to do political work, using on_ Tuesday.
park
near the
principal
Mlchael
. .
...
. about the
MIV pni
a ireni
mbc p,
ux.p-i of tons of water is pushed out of lhe ,
and Mr. and Mrs. Will Dunning of
money given the President to feed
Petunias and zinnias were used
of interest and are all pro- tube, sometimes from two to three i
and
D F Haggard had
“ prlday of list week Delton; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fetterhoff
the hungry, to aid the unfortunate, for
fnr decorations with marigolds
marieold. on vjded
n^ng water, sanitary hundred feet into the air Thte re-,
but used by the administration's the luncheon tables. Large bouquets provisions, cafeterias, dining lodges, lleves the pressure.-and waler again |
R j Y Hamilton and and Mr, and Mrs. Ray Gussenbar of
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Earroll
henchmen to build up a political of mixed fall flowers filled the wick­ stores, museums, etc. At each of runs into the geyser tube and lhe
chUdren of Cincinnati.
and family. Mr. and Mrs. David Mc­
machine.
er flower standards.
these points a program is put on process Is repeated indefinitely.
.
phoebe Mote returned Mon­ Martln and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Literally millions of dollars in
The golf event in the morning each night by" the Pirk Rangers and
In the case of old Faithful, the । day from Winona Lake, near War­ Galnder of Plainwell; Mr. and Mrs.
taxes, decreed by the Supreme was for the largest number of one- consists of an illustrated nature or
Interval
Ls
slightly
over
an
hour.
saw.
md..
where
she
visited
relatives
Jacob Barton and daughter of Ot­
Court to be unlawful, were collect­ pull greens and was won by Mrs. geological talk on
... that
-..... particular
,—
---- ', and
aiiu lhe
nit timing
kuiuuK is av
luiik , Mld friend^ for two weeks.
so ickuuu
regular that
ed from us. not by our tax-impos­ T. D. French. Mrs. Robert O'Con- ;; part of the Park. A roll call of lhe you can about set
... your
...... watch
——u by
»... IL
..
gnd
c D Bauer and Mr sego and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Galnder
and daughter of Delton.
ing body. Congress, but by members nor was the contract winner.
nnrt countries
pmill f
rpnr&gt;*.
It.... ....
. .........
different states and
repre.... there
MIS
r
The
reason
are
so
few
geyser
and
Mrs.
George
Hooper
of
Pleasof the President's brain trust acting
The evening was spent In play­
A number of out-of-town guesta sen ted in the audience is usually basins in the
'.h? world is principally | »nt Valleya enjoyed
motor trip to
through his administrative officers. were present. Mr- c. P. Lathrop iTiaiie
ing games and visiting. Refresh­
__ _______
... last week,
made, community slndnc
singing and muslmusi­ &gt;4,1*
due to lhe rock ......
formation ...k.
which the Upper
Peninsula
Men were deprived of "trial by
cal
or
other
additional
entertain
­
entertaining a group composed of
must be exceedingly hard to with-1 un. Nellie Matthews leaves this ments of ice cream, cake and wafers
Jury." forced to appear before an
were
served.
ment is furnished voluntarily bystand
-------- ----------------------------., lot
WI1C1C alic
the terrific force-----------of lhe ex- 1 WCT
week
for Battle creek where
she exexecutive officer, sentenced and pun­ Mrs. Elva Grainger. Mrs. Sam Nadu
Mr. and Mrs. McMartln and chil­
and Mrs. R. R. McPeek of Char­ some ot the guests. The one we at- plosions. You can sometimes hear peels to spend the winter with Mrs.
ishment imposed, all in violation of
dren left for their homo in Cali­
lotte. Mrs. E. J Huffman and Mrs. tended was held out of doors In a the rumble and feel the ground quake clara Wilder at 135 E Kingman
Marion Longman of Newburgh. N. fornia by train early .Saturday
Clarence DePlanta of Grand Rap­ natural amphitheater, with a big ; frotn an eruption a half mile or
By executive order more than
ids, and Mrs. Phyllis Reynolds of camp fire in the middle, the seals i more away. In Yellowstone this rock &lt; y._ former superintendent of the morning.
thirty million acres of land were
almost pure glass. In any softer Hastings City schools, was in the
Ann Arbor. Prizes for Mrs. La­ being stripped pine logs. Practically
taken out of cultivation. The Gov­
REV. BIRD HONORED.
every state In the Union was repre- r0C)t the first eruption would be the i city Monday renewing old acqualntthrop's
group
were
won
by
Mrs.
ernment's own report states that,
Rev. Lawrence H. Bird, pastor of
sented aswell as many foreign
inst. as the explosion would wreck 1 ances.
Grainger and Mrs. DePlanta.
because of IL In one Industry, more
j the plumbing. Tire action of the I Miss Ethel Jones and MUs Helen the P. M. church al Hastings the
Other out-of-town guests includ­ countries.
than a million men were deprived
past
year
together with his wife
Outside of the small clearings [ geysers, with few exceptions, is con- , Newton, also Russell Mott of Delton
ed Mrs. George Rickman ot Kala­
^lescsi/pfam ‘Zhf/i/ftcrie
of employment.
where lhe camps and hotels are lo- ! stonily changing, due to changes In and Lowell Teeter of Caledonia were were guests of honor at a social
By illegal executive order more mazoo with Mrs. C. W. Clarke; Mrs. cated and that part occupied by the rOck formation, cooling of the rocks, i |n Jackson on Sunday, going to see gathering held at lhe home of Mr
Walton of Kalamazoo with. caU* «nd
port occuo ed
than six million pigs. 443,627.348 Robert
and Mrs. Royal Barnum of Castle­
Mr, Clyde
Clvde Wilcox:
Miss
Elizabeth4 scenic
,cenlc drive
arl*e and trails,
Ua U- the whole
*h0,e and amount of rainfail, some drying the cascades in the evening,
Mrs.
Wilcox:
MUs
EHrebelh
pounds, were killed. Only 97.064.­
PHONE 2 115
WAS* yyi_~ ii
park 13 in Its natural, virgin state. up and some ceasing lo flow alto-1 Mrs. L. Severance and daughter ton on Friday evening of last week.
159 pounds were saved for food The Bolton of Charlotte. N. C-, with
n.tkn, while new ones break out in Lois ___
_ ..Mrs.
___ Noble, of East A pleasant time was spent in visit­
the same as when first discovered gether.
and&gt; sister.
rest went Into grease or fertilizer. Miss Barbara Johnson; Mrs. Fred
about a hundred years ago.
unexpected places. Excelsior Geyser, Lansing were In Harrisville over ing and music after which light re­
The doctrine of scarcity of food was West and Miss Elizabeth West of
freshments were served. Rev. Bird is
We
will
now
resume
our
drive
:
the
largest
on
record,
cegsed
to
play
the week end. There was a reunion
Inaugurated.
American farmers Grand Rapids and Mrs. O. D. Jor­
around lhe lower loop of the figure m 1890 in 1888. the year I was bom. of four sisters, two brothers and moving his family lo Spring Arbor.
were prevented from producing dan of Sylvania. O, with Mrs. Kel­
Mich., where Mrs. Bird will continue
eight. Starting from Lake Lodge, this geyser displayed its greatest ac- other relatives.
food. Their market was invaded lar Stem and Mrs. Byron E. Farwell
which overlooks beautiful Yellow- tivity. although it has not yet been
Orville Henry returned Bunday to
by foreign products The American of Delton and Mrs. R. E Flnnle of
consumer was forced to buy mil­ Louisville, Ky.. with Mrs. R. O. Ftn- stone Lake, we follow the lake shore definitely proved these two phe- Youngstown. Ohio, after spending
;o Fisherman’s Bridge, which cross- nomena were in any way related. In his vacation here with his sisters.
lions of dollars worth of food from nle.
farmers of foreign lands.
Mrs. David Z. Boyes was chairman es the Yellowstone river Just as it | that year this geyser played at in­ Miss Bernice Henry accompanied
leaves lhe lake. Yellowstone lake Is-------------tervals -•
of from --one •to —
two •hours,
him to Akron where she will teach
The Supreme Court has saved us of the committee and was assisted
a
mile and a half above sea level. throwing a column of water 200 feet the ensuing year.
temporarily from a continuation of by Mrs. Earl Coleman. Mrs. G. L.
With a surface of 138 mites and a in diameter, sometimes as high as
O. T. Morrow, assistant maxager
this tyranny, from lhe operation of Lockwood. Mrs. E. J. Pratt and Miss
depth of 300 feet it is lite largest 300 feet Ln the air. Wall lake, even of the Montgomery Ward store, is
these unjust laws. Nine of the Charlotte Hubbard.
lake in North America at such a when it had waler in it. would not enjoying a two weeks' vacation and
There will be no luncheon next
In company with Mrs. Morrow and
said, because "an emergency exist­ week because of the Labor Day hol­ high altitude. It Ls teeming with supply enough for one eruption.
bothL trout
trout
fishermen,
of the earth daughter, jean, is visiting relatives
.u and
.
.
“
•'nrrnY:"' and
To give some idea of
ed." to create a "more abundant iday and the Barry county fair.
life." but In reality used to foster Mrs. Harold Phillips will be In unlike the trout streams or lakes of I temperatures in this Aglon. they In South Carolina.
Michigan, all of the fishermen trled w drtve a wll a( 5Id Faithful
Mr. and Mrs. Casper Thomas of
monopoly. Inaugurate oppression. charge on Tuesday, September 15.
catch trout, and they are all big | Lodge for drinking water. Instead Kalamazoo spent Sunday afternoon
trout. I saw a boy about ten years Of water they got superheated steam with Mrs. Clarence Orohe. In ths
Kent's “economic royalists," were
HONORED MRS. Fl NN IE.
of
age
who
caught
thirteen
in
about
at
,e
WrBl
hundred
pounds
pressure
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
declared unconstitutional.
Mrs. R. G. Flnnle entertained an hour, and these thirteen were all at a comparatively shallow depth
Thomas they called on Mrs. Anna
But you know, and Uie purpose
twenty women last Thursday eve­ targer than the thirteen biggest I
are numerous other hot- Rllzman of Quimby.
although concealed is evident, that,
ning at a dessert bridge in honor of V”1 ever caught in my life. I Just I water phenomena in this part of
Mrs. Mary Showerman. who has
Mrs. R. E. Finnic of Louisville, Ky. didn t dare go fishing, or I would . uie park, suah as marvelously col- been making her home in Waldron,

n SLEEP

02276102

if the New Deal can win the coming
election, the membership of that
Court, because of death and the
rower of appointment, will be
Ranged to further and declare vald New Deal policies. The last safe­
guard of liberty, the Supreme Court.

STDnrOF WESTERN
19634562

SOCIAL EVENTS

Teachers!
JFe invite you to look
over our butline of

SUPPLIES

We carry a complete line of CAR

FERRY NOTEBOOKS in all sixei.
PAINTS, CRAYOLAS, RULERS,

ERASERS, PASTE, CONSTRUC
TION PAPER

In fact everything to help make
this your best school year.

Come in and visit our department

BARGAINS
During Fair Week in

While at the Fair Next Week
You Are Cordially Invited to Call at Our Space,
where we will be more than glad to welcome you.
WE WILL ALSO BE SHOWING A FINE LINE OF

ESTATE IIEATROLAS
We can prove by your neighbor who has one, that they are

When you have a limited

budget that you can spend
on clothes you have to make

them last.

I've found that

McCreerys cleaning keeps

my

clothes

looking

new

longer!

'UMkillllL
are such that we firmly belleye that there Is no other method
or heater used that will give as much heat for the money.

#50.50

to

Hl Of1.00

The New SPEED QITEEA’ Washers
hundreds of your neighbors and acquaintances are more than
glad that they have one. Free from repair trouble, they will

030.50

to

850.50

No Wubrr Mode Will Wuh Cleaner or FaaUr!

PHONE 2140

McCREERYS
DRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

NEW and USED CARS
• Don't fail to visit our Garage during Fair Week and
look over our stock of New and Used Cars. We are mak­
ing SPECIAL PRICES on our complete stock beginning
Thursday, Sept. 3rd.

• If you are interested in a New or Used Car or Truck
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY by giving us a call or ring. .

UNIVERSAL

GARAGE COMPANY
FORD PRODUCTS

• BUY FURNITURE NOW AND SAVE THE ADVANCE IN PRICES!

MILLER FURNITURE CO
HASTINGS

PHONE 2226

PHONE 2121

HASTINGS, MICH

�THI BASTINGS BANNIB, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER J, ISM

Mr. and Mrs Alonso Trim’ visited
Over Sunday guests of Mr. and
Ray Waters was in Chicago on
friends and relatives in Nashville Mrs. Willard Ickea were Mr*. Harold business Monday.
Swanson of Big Rapid* and Mrs
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hiler of
Ionia were Sunday guesU ot Mr.;
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Ludwig ot Wayne Wheeler of Battle Creak.
Mr. and Mra. Dan Matthew* re­ and Mr*. T. 8- Baird.
Ada were Bunday guests of Mr. and
turned
home
Friday
after
spending
Mrs. Dan Lewis. “
Mrs. Grace Messer of Grand Rap­
Mrs. John Ironside and son. Ian, a week In Jackson as guests of their ids spent the week end with Mr.!
Mrs. Mae Shaw of Battle Creek x Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Hart oLJVat- were in Detroit and Ann Arbor for daughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs. and Mr*. Eugene Freeman.
Mr. and Mra. Kenneth LaberUaux
Lee Herds.
wa* a guest on Tuesday of Mrs 1 son Corners. Allegan county, were several days last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Logan havei
spent the week eqd In Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Springer and
and Mrs. Harry Sunday guests of Mrs Ida Palmareturned from a visit with
Mr. and Mrs. J. M Townsend and
Mra. John Lake of Bad Axe Ls James Parmei
I tier. Andrew Houfstatter of Rutvisiting at the home of her broth­ Baldwin.
•a
—
.1—. land vu a xuMt also
their Wall lake cottage.
er. O. R. Plumley.
Mr*. Emerson Stauffer and Ron­
Mils Cecil Huff of Grand Rapids and Peter Fedewa were at West- j MIm Belva Riley Is vtaltlng Mr.
was the guest of Miss Grace Ed­ phatta on Sunday attending a fam-' and Mrs. Leon DeLano of Grand ald and Mrs. Jamei Heney were in
Uy gathering.
' Rapids thia week. She leave* Mon­ Kalamazoo on Saturday.
j Mrs. Carrie Schenkel of Owosso i ”,uur.^Uof‘X?r nnd
monds'over* the week end.
MU* Jean Barne* and Mlu Lucy lpfnl Bunday and Monday here.
J ,5"“
‘
k
*
Mr. Grace Merriman and Miss d,y £or ”“H"* wbere •&gt;*
Mr. and Mrs. David Erickson of Marie Merriman of Jackson were teach "B,ln
coming year
Bauett occupied the J. M. Town- Mr*. schenkel being the guest ot'
r-XSlnnr urr
Chicago were guests of Hastings
tend
cottage
at
Wall
take
lut
week
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rehor.
n?!&gt;trolt idr-ta SaJdon acom
I Saturday and Sunday guests ot Mr.1 Mrs. Fred Bailey of Brude'1 Cros*friends over the week end.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
AL.
Houvener
and
Mrs
.
R
M
jjau-j
returned
Satur-1
‘
"'
’
J*
?&lt;'
LX
and Mrs. A. J. Vedder.
'
&gt; ing. Ontonagon Co., and her daughMr. and Mrs. Albert Cummings
from Fjul Lansing, where Mie
nt““,d ’ £
“EJI P o&lt;
Mr and Mr*. Donald Bmelker J*r. MU. U&gt;uUe Bailey of Wall­ daughter. Mra.. Clare Fuller ot
of Detroit were Sunday guesU at
Owosso, spent Friday In Kalamazoo. Bpenl M-veral days with her daugh- w* ',™.?
i„%
hfr7
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Foreman
the C. R. Plumley home.
Mrs. Forrest Woodin and daught„. ajjcc. who U connected with lhe ^“nt^ Mr wd Mr
j Mat (»n
St.,
wore in Chicago Sunday and saw Mrs. Edw.
” Smith, HO 8. East
*
ter of Belmont were Sunday guest*
extension department of Michigan
“c’ire ^Rrtcr of
Mrs. James Stanlake of Lansing
the Cuba play basebaU.
of her mother, Mr*. Newton Benner. I atate college.
Mr' and Mr
C”re Cttrter
spent the week end with her par­
Mra. Harry Waters accompanied
Mist Ada Michael and Mis* Helen
ents. Dr. and Mrs. B. A. Perry.
Woolen of Detroit were called here her daughter. Mias Erma Waters, to
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Burton and Friday by the death of the former's Owosso Monday, the latter having
Mbs Ruth Handy were Sunday stater, Miss Helen Michael.
a teaching position near that city.
guests of Miss Ethel Burton of UrnBunday guesU of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Waters also visited her abler
ling.
,
In Flint enroute.
tislt with relative* Ln southern Illi­
Mias Maxine Wunderlich went lo Henry Mulder were her mother
Mrs. Harry Baldwin tn company
.
Belding Sunday
Sunday where
where line
she
will I, and sister, Mr*. A. E. Simpson' and with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Supplee and |। after vtaiUng her sbter. Mbs Bertha 1 R.v nnd Mrs w KeHh Chldcstcr । nois.
Belding
win
tench in the High school the comDorta Simpson of Grand Rap­ Mrs- Thomas of Lansing enjoyed 1Stickney.
and daughters. Elizabeth and Hur-I| Miss Beatrice carrothers return?
Friday to Detroit, where she Is home
Ids.
ing year.
"
Clare Beach returned to his work. । rjet, wlll return Monday to their
n
four
days'
auto
trip
lo
the
Straits,
| economics teacher in the Detroit
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Post and *
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Glasgow and
St. Ignace and Mackinac bland in Detroit on Sunday after visiting home In Winter Park. Fla., after I
MUs Sadie Glasgow relumed on Mr. and Mrs. Rens TerVeen of; over tiie week end.
hit mother. Mrs. Mary Beach, for spending six weeks with his parents | 'md MrClarence Wood
Monday from a motor trip to Wash­ Grand Rapids were guests of Mr. ’ Mr. and Mrs. Gary Crook and
1
week..._ ___ . ........................ . M„. w. H. OiMUUr
and
Mrs.
Henry
Mulder
on
Satur
­
Hie Rev. and Mrs. W. Maylan
ington. D. C.. Gettysburg. Pa., Park­
Ourau 01 Mr. »„d Mr. Henry ,
’
',h
h Wlreo„&gt;h, alld
Mr. and Mrs. Oarflcld Tribble at­
:
Jones and family visited In Lud- j Weaver from Thursday to Tuesday , lht. „
ersburg. W. Va.. and many other day.
1 penlnsul»
Miss Mildred Angell leaves Sun­ tended a family reunion al the tngton over the week end, return-1 were hU brother ...d «Ue Mr end, Ml“‘»Tek,i MePhelron let; Tur.
poinU of Interest.
day for Constantine where she has 1home of Mr. and Mrs. John Vleie Ing on Monday.
Mr. D»ee We.ver ol Johb.lown d
hwpmU. KeU.n.v
a teaching position in lite sixth of
' Vermontville on Sunday, twentyMr. and Mrs. Frank Dlllbahner pa. ,.j,is Utber.
father. Mom- We..er
Weaver of | &gt;o„ whrt,
,U|.
three
being
present.
i grade. Her school starts on Tues- (1
। John M. Fisher left Tuesday for and daughter Jane of Chicago were ‘ Davidsville. Pa . and his aunt. Mrs. j nurse's training course.
■ day.
•.
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J.
EMcElLlzzlr
Kaufman,
of
Goshen.
Ind.
Guests of Dr. and Mrs Frederick
I Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert 1his home In Chicago after spending wain on Sunday.
, Lloyd and Jack Lohmeyer re­ Tartar Iual n-wk witb lict fallirr
I Bishop over the week end were her ]a few days with his brother and
Mr*. Rose Trego had as dinner . turned Friday from Philadelphia i A
niTd\btrr Mr
NOONDAY LUNCHES
I brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. .wife. Dr. and Mjs. O. C. Fisher. Mr. guesU
,-I1m&gt;v Tronsirt*.
K
'11
guests on
on Sunday
Sunday Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. L
L. J.
J. with
with w
Wellesley
Ironside. who
who had
had I1
11:30 A. M. to 2 F. M.
I Charles Geiger, and family of De- II ;Fisher Ls the financial reporter for
......
.
.
_
r hi ■cyiiinii. ui
snoune.
.
Matthew*. Miss Minnie Matthews rtUtrt them for wo wrolo. TOey
j me
tlie umcago
Chicago Tribune.
M, and
„„ Mrs.
M„ Thomas Taffee
Ta„„. reMr.
I
trolt.
DINNERS
Mr. and Mrs. Leon DeLarfo and and_ Mrs. Paul Bump. ,
«.ll rrfun. homo In . «rok Uo&gt;&lt;l
Slmllw Irom
„.,.d,,1;.
I Frank Edmonds relumed Monday son of Grand Rapids were Sunday i MLsses
and* Fern Will 'of not ptann.1IK. .Hend whool h.-ro.:,np
**' " June
’
ho.„ „
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.
1 from Ann Arbor where he has been 1
Ithaca came Saturday for a week's &gt;. hU mndr.Uuj. John Wrlsn-rt Ho'ratlo
gue.sls
of
Mr
and
Mrs.
Hugh
Riley.
’I at
University
hospital
for
trealnL
hosnital
treat- 11
visit with their grandparents. Mr. nlB remdln In Bhlladdphln ,1 len«
Mr lul(1
H p. buttle ar.il Mr
Mrs.
E.
J.
Pratt
was
In
Grand
SUNDAY DINNERS
HATS WERE "TOPS” in 18^0^.. You could use a
' ment. He Is greatly Improved in
„.,
M. Christmas.
_____ _
until
I___ ....
...—
,u_
Ledge on Tuesday evening wncre and Mrs. Smith Will.
। health.
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
Tennis KolU of Los Angeles. Cal., j OuesUJof Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sny- and Mrs. Fred pri nt ice spent the
hat for a flower pot—Beaver Hats gave the lads
I Mlu Stella Heath goes to Bangu' she spoke at a democratic rally. I
- -*- -- - ------------------------- week end with Mr. and Mrs..
a—
— -•
ana Mrs. Wayne
wayne Merrick
MerncK is lhe guest
a«“v of his aunt. Mrs. Alcid der oj pouui
tta-Mings
aunng •«-inc Thotnaa Hynn at Jackson.
Mr. and
auth
Hastings
during
the
6 to 7:30 P. M.
that "mon and beast" appearance. The only per­
. today
where
she
will
be
the
guest
or Mur Miiareo runs neiore incy ,efl thta morning for Boyne City. Stauffer, and f»mlly and Mr. and .
week were Mr,_ Edjth Snyd»r
I of
MI
m Mildred Funk before they
■
.
»»
Mluio
X 5“
”
------------------ ------------- -elly
-------------------son it fooled was the dog catcher. . . . Our new
Mrs. Emerson
Stauffer.
and
wrnlvan
ol thi,
on Tu.n-,
o, arand tlapld.. were visitor;.,
I where 'thef wnT be joined 'by "m1m
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wyckoff of
I
Thur«l.y
erennu
at
th.
home
or.
Stylepark
Hals for Foil will even fool him.
are teachers.
Margaret Merrick. The latter leaves St. Johns were Sunday guMt* of Mr. Weller or Delton on WednenDy; .
„„ ch„p., f,u,
I
and Mrs. W. N. Chidester and Rev.
Monday for her teaching position —'***”
Mr. and Mrs. auy Willard. De-. How„() Hrrrlek left Sunday tor
and Mrs. Keith Chidester.
Wayne Pew. and Marwret and
o „„„
at Royal Oak.
Dr. M- Alice Heney. Mrs. James ronlo.
w&gt; hreU,„
,AmUj
Louise ««r,v
Horry of U..Hn..
Hastings and Mr
Mr. ,.ayJ
Mrs. Frank Rogers and Miss
Thcollne Rogers, who live south of Heney and Mrs. Emerson Stauflcr and Mrs. Harry Nichols and a ' Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Herrick.
Hastings, were called to Chicago and Ronald attended the Hubbard neighbor from Delton on Sunday. i
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kinne of'
OUR NEW OVERCOATS with o yoke oil Ground,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Chamberlain Huttings and Mrs. Claude Gild:-'
the lust of lhe week by the sudden .whool reunion in Charlotte on
have had as guests for a week Mr. । sleeve of Jackson were guests of Mr
death of a friend. Mra. Stanley Sunday.
for the mon who works like an ox—some yoke!
Mrs. Mary Abbey of Nashville and Mrs. R. G- Macomber and son. | and Mrs. Eugene Freeman on FrlSmith, who had numerous friends
NEW SUITS of cheerio stripes, side vents, and sport
in this city. They returned Sun­ spent the week end in Hastings call- Russell, Mrs. Hinton Stewart and ; day
uaZ night.
&gt;■&gt;■■■!..
■ liiK on old fronds. She was the children. Nancy and Norma, of
day
Mr. and Mrs. David Z/Ttoyes a ill;
backs. The kind lhat lhe oldsters used to bet on
Mrs. J. A. McNulty returned with guest of Mrs. John McLravy Friday Jacksonville, Fin. and Mr. and Mrs.. be the guests ot her brother and
Kneeland and Mary Elisabeth Sun- and Friday night. On September 3 Robert Shirellng and son, Bobby, of I wife. Mr. and Mrs. Alttn Hubbard. 1
whether the gravy would land on the dark or light
day evening from a two weeks' visit she went to Kalamazoo to visit a Grand Rapids.
at Detroit over Sunday and Labor ।
stripe.
In Ludington. Father McNulty re-i sister and husband, from there to
Ann’SSZmem’S £££”« the ।
malned lo preach his final sermon Goshen and South Bend. Ind., for
1 there next Sunday. He will resume an indefinite stay with two other
marriage Saturday at Angola. Ind. | ?av ”?r “•achim: du: es »« » caun' regular church services here Sep- sisters and families.
pf Miss Helena Scramlln of Baltic ,ry «hool near Lansing. She 1. a ,
• ternber. 13.
Yesterday. Wednesday, seven Has-m McCall, son of k-ra&lt;iuate of the Barry County Nor- !
I Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kemp &lt;LoLs tings boys. John and Hollis Isen-'Creek to Willifm McCall.
arsholl Purrow.
Furrow. Carroll
Carroll i] Mrs.
Mrs. Mary
Mary McCall
Me
I n.nihi
Heath) .nd
and iwA
two fhitrtmn
children, whn
who iiav«
have hath. Marshall
of
n Has
Ha’“n”.
Ur »-&lt; Mr. Wou.rrt IWAtnnfrV
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Tredinnick
Gerald
one time M&gt;..-McCall was a-social-I
!UCC
.. visiting ml
.......
Stamm,
' * Curtis, HowardI|--------------------been
Mr.. m.u
and ~...
Mrs. Ray- —
in business
ousiness with
witn his
nis brother.
brother. Al
Al j J}nd c.h!lt!rv.1? ond ,, and
I mond Gilbert of Muskegon, came Arnold and Elton McGhan. went to edu in
HATTER : CLOTHIER : HABERDASHER
I. here.
Im Mr.
MV. —
&gt;M
MTO. McCall
McColl will
wUI J“rp» Tx .llonirk hove been . xv-.OI Tuesday for a visit with Mr. and ' St. Joe where they took lhe "Roose- G-.
id Mrs.
... ----------- ------------ing two weeks hi Connecticut and
PHONE 21M
! Mrs. George B. Heath for a few velt" for Chicago, as guesU of one live in Battle Creek, where they
HASTINGS
New
York.
for . vhave
days before returning to their home of thr. Battle Creek dallies f*-'”“ rented an apartment on West, Mr. &lt;uid Mrs. Herman Arold and - j
in Barrington. Hl., where he has a which they ore carriers. About! Main street and where Mr. McCall daughters go to Detroit for Sunday H
is employed In the Bertwhlstle Dry
J teaching position.
; fifty tad* were in the party.
land Labor Day to visit Mrs. Arold's ;l
_____ cleaning company.
______________ rislcr and husband, Mr. and Mrs. !
! Ing them the necessary expt
LUNCHEON FOR MRS BOYD. , M Rafelwn
TWO YOUNG MEN
Mrs. Ward clarke of Battle Creek ' Mrs. Fred Fowler of Springport j
TAKING CANOE TRIP. for this long trip.
was hostess at luncheon Friday at
of her
...•was
— the guest
------------—- mother.
------------ Mrs.
------- 1(
Julian Townsend, in company
Wouldn't you like to be a
the Kellogg Inn in Battle Creek ।j Corn
Cora Biggs, and sLster. Mrs. Am:i
Audi; wlUl Harold Jeffries of Lowell, went
in honor of Mrs. John F *Bovd &lt;Vin-1 Bachman, of Rutland part of last ;o G.ayllng Saturday nljht and on .nan mid lave such an sdve
nieRcamt of Atlanta. Oa. Tiiose al-1 FEck. returning Friday.
I Sunday the two left on a camping The writer would.
tending from Hastings were Mrs 1
Mr
* ,unh
'' Patrick nt
Mrs.
Isaitc
of nmAtu-n
Brooklyn an(j --------canoc.--------------------------trip, going from Oscoda
POST NUPTIAL gBOWjj
Abcn Johnson. Mrs. M. J. Pierson and Mrs. L H DcWyk of Ansonia. (Joun the Au Sable to Lake Huron.
Conn., were guests nt the home of They expec. It will take two weclw. ■ Honoring Mr.t. Alfred
and Mrs. Arthur Crothers.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Patrick from I There
—■----- —will
•• be — J
------------------ ­ the former Jennette OardM
five
dams
,to port
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER.
Saturday lo Wednesday.
! age. the first one being at Mio. sisters. Mrs. R. W. Bolton. Ml
Mrs. Harold Brockway entertained
Dr. and Mrs. R. B. Harkness re- Tin
lilv1 young men have their watcr- E- Whittum and Miss Edna Oai
Wednesday evening at n mlsceltan- turned Sunday from HcUghtcoi. Dr. proof dufflebags. sleeping bags and entertained with a shower ai
rouUUbaiUioivro IB honor MMn Harkness
-----------------------------------------won away ten __
days
and enough fo&lt;!d in uatcrpruof bags lo honle of. their parents. Mr. CM
Richard Tolles. (Ladora Kinne). a , Mr. . Harkness has been the guest of 1 jas» th- entire trip they think Each Charles Gardner, on Thursday
recent bride. Hie parly was given at relatives since the middle of July,
;.n&lt; hLs own camping outfit, w they nlng. The honor guest ns
Mrs. Tolles' home on West Center,
Mrs. Guy C- Keller returned Sat- nrp anticipating u grand time. Pre­ sonic lovely glfu. Another i
streel. fifteen guests being present. I urday from Memphis. Tenn., where | vlcusiy they have had one trip on a Mrs. Robert Sttrine. of chartoll
ni-carnT*nmnr.i' she* was lhe guest of Mr. and Mrs. , taj&lt; and two short canoc trips, givpn-&lt;nt from away.
ttt«
DESSERT BRIDGE.
Clarence Wclsa and made th
ac- ____________________________
Mrs. Marguerite Hall I arker en- | qualntancv of lhe new graxiddaugh- :
tertained Tuesday evening al a des- ।, (rr
&gt;' tebrlrtse in honor ol Mm. Phjllh | ’Mr,_ j j 51pI„ ol cx.trol, was the If
Reynolds of Ann Arbor and Mrs-1 guest last week of her daughter and
»«
!5,c
Idester of Winter Park.. husband. Mr and Mrs. Dorrance
guests were present and । Trctjiric. Dick Trvthric. who visited
lln. Chldr.ier won the hlkh mr | ln Dc„„|t ,„r tht„ wccts, „lurnid

Social Events and Personal Mention

It May Have I
but weren’t It Pre

rite Newest Shapes and
Fashions for Fall-Winter

PARKER HOUSE

53’50

s2’50

55°°

Watch and Jewelry
Repai ring

Estimate* FREE!

5135°.o ’3250

BESSMER

t.

Jewelers and Opticians

I

Open Every Evening
NOTICE—We are pleased to an­
nounce that JEANETTE RITZMAN
I* now connected with os and she
Invites all her friends to visit her

BACK-TO-SCHOOL
SPECIAL!

FIRST TIME AT THIS PRICE!
Only Hollywood give* those value*. MACHINELESS $
PERMANENTS. New Ray. Nover before! Perhaps Nev­
er Again! Hurry! Only a Limited Number at Thi* Price! •
Complete. No Extra*! Regular $6.50 Value!

W* hov* been fortunate in
acquiring these fine supplies
for only one hundred perma­
nents, to sell at this
, low price I
Shampoo and

ringar wave—
...........

sne

NOTE THESE FEATURES

2.
5.

No Machine.
No Electricity.
No Strong Chemical*.
Only Pure Oil U*«d.
Beautiful Result*.

CHILDREN’S
PERMANENTS

We Have It

argus

Tlie younger Mbs appreci­
ates lhe careful attention
she's accorded here, and
her Mother likes It too!
Try our Special thia v-rek!
GENUINE OIL PUSH-UP
WAVES
CROQUIGNOLE. SPIRAL
OK COMBINATION
Every wave is given ac­
cording to your individual
hair texture and styled to
your personality by our
experts. Also a wave at
this pricx! for adults—

Now Steam and HOT OIL Treatment -___ $1.00

CA*&lt;

81.50
Rejuvenating

Using the New Vapor steam Antiseptic Oil Treatment!

75'

■■-■■J.
NOT A SCHOOL—ALL EXPERT LICENSED OPERATORS

HOLLYWOOD BEATTY SERYILE
MARGARET DAHLKE and JEANETTE RITZMAN
I M WIST STATS ST.

Above Hotting* Cut Rate Shoe Store

HONORED Ot’KSTs”
»“[&gt;,
,
Mr. .nd Mr., w. L. Hinman on- , , Ml" Antox CTrpenu-r. who hw.
uruined &gt;t dlnn.r oo Tue..d..v Ju»t rr,nmr&lt;1 rom . »MI&gt; tn,,
evenln, honorln, MLu Beryl Shlrkl. m Mr.leo. vW rd Mr, I UCrr.oj
.nd Wm. M»thl.» ol North Chlr.ko,
Mm. Pemle c.roenler over the
who me the kurnu ol Mr. .nd Mr,. J“f. c,“1“ h“
to
C H Hlnmui
VpMlan.l.
“‘P"*"1- , , ,
,
Mr. .nd Mr,. Wilbur Une re­
DINNER HONORS GUEST.
' turned on Saturday from a motor
Miss Jocelyn Ironside entertained ' trip to Sault ate Marie. Canada, and
eight guests al dinner Friday eve-! points in northern Michigan in
nlng at Gun take In honor of Wil- company with Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Ham Hutten of Hammond. Ind., who -Bow-er of Fort Wayne, ind.
is the guest of Ian Ironside.
1 Mr. and Mr.'. Lawrence Herrick
and Janet leave today for Syracuse.
N. Y . for a ten days' visit with
: relatives. They will be accompanied
| lo Fulton. N. Y.. by Mrs. John En1 gel. who has relatives there.
Dinner pile ts of Mr. and Mr*.
George Green of the Parker House
Saturday night were Mrs Olive
Kars and two daughters of Newark.
N. J- and Mra. W. H. Bat liman an-J
Mrs, car) Dewey ot Lansing.
.! Mln Loretta .DcVaulL. ,wha._ha'.
. been employed this summer at the
Kist store, leaves Sunday for North
Manchester. Ind., where she will be- i
gin her Junior year in elementary
; education at Manchester Col!c«i-.
' Sunday guests at the hotr.e of Mrs.;
Nellie Smith were Mrs. Alice Cappy, j
Mr. and Mrs. clarence Cappy and
family of qoopcr. ville. also Mr-.
I Mamie Huff of Vicksburg, who ba-s
Shutt.r 1-256 1-200 Sec. ’
been spending a few days with Mrs.
Sts* 5 in. long, 2
in. wide
। Smith and. family.
। Vtnnle Ream Boyd returned SunFilm - 36 Exposure
1 day to her home In Atlanta. Gh.,
(after visiting relatives and friend:
here for three weeks On September
1 10 she.will open her Studio ef thSpoken Word. Mrs. Boyd studied
■ again this year at Martha's Vinc' yard. Mass., and also gave recital* i
In the New England states.
Mr. and Mis. Bernard Landon of i
BUILT LIKE A MOTION
I Dayton. Kan., are guests of tlie
PICTURE CAMERA
'Chas. Gardner family
' Dr. and Mrs. G. L- Lockwood and 1 Mr. and Mrs. Burr Van Houten are j
' enjoying a fishing trip today on the
I Pine River near Luther.
DEPENDABLE JEWELER
, Mr. and Mrs. T. D. French and!
Dr. and Mrs. R. O. Flnnle will spend
HASTINGS, MICH.
I the week ,«nd and LaQor Day with
PHONE 2120
। Dr. and Mr*. L- E- Holly a: Mia-.
ikegon,

PHONS 2525

Price

^12—

C. B. HODGES

s.

bmtn

The BIG LITTLE
STORE OFFERS
Saturday, Sept. 5

Friday, Sept. 4

Peanut Butter

2 S. 19c
CRACKER JACK3 box** 10*
LUX TOILET SOAP3 ban 17*
DILL PICKLES ................ .quart* 17c
PEAS, fin* quality---------- 2 coni 25c
CAMPFIRE Marshmallows Ib. bx.
BUTTER, Middleville
..lb,
OLEO, Best Quality .
2 lbs.
LARD, B..t Pur*
3 lb*.
BEEF ROASTS

HI.XM
Hostings

FHONI 24*1

a

�THt BASTINGS BANNtR, THURSDAY, ttPTIMBU I,

INSURANCE

j

WANTED— Route and lot. reaaoeabla for 1
rath Wrtto XYZ eare Baim-r SB;
WANTED—Wa.hinea. Will roll far and !
deliver. Mra. Claade Lankkrd. W. Oil- i
ver St. riry.
SS
W ANTI.IS— 111r.J man with famllr to |
work a month. Another aummer ran.
work plare on third intaroat. Hood 1
hou.r to live In. B. Lueaa. Woodland.
K.mte 2
»1!
FOR SALK—J rowa, new ml|rh and won
to hr John Weaver. Haitinea. Route ।
fl Phoor TIS—F3».
S3
’’iFrller? r&lt;ln1 Kite SmlthT farm^ea.l^of
[towline
l-arey phone 3—d. 9'3 J
Eiill MALE Dual wheel Dodee tractor: |
Olivet 10 inch tractor plow . Phone '
[ rr,,—rt c—F3, Ou, Moore. B 3 '
WANTED To rent fumithed houte or J

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE
ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER­
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c.

Our Service

_ WANTED—To bur for aaaK .mall aero
, ■ ae. oitb hwm. tvrar &lt;w la Havltnet.
■ Ulile
II. rare &lt;1 Itann.r
M IO
; FOR SALE—&lt;&gt;.un»eV hull. t» m&lt;-. •!*
' from aerredlfed b-rd. r.eut.rrd _ II

j

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

KEUISTBRElt tit LIlNtLY male fur aalr.
old en rich ^L r em-viee. ^Hutwiab

THE CHURCHES

Indian Midas Will The Hasting* Banner
Hold Giant Fete

No Moss on These Two Stones

1 PF.At'HES FOR SALE at m» farm, -even
mil., ■uuihu.it ..f llradlrt. Elmer
tiood location.
Krvpontiblo part Im. ‘
1 &lt;i—re
v 3
Write "T" rar. Hanner
»3 ।
WANTED- To t.ur or rent tmall farm FOR SALK -50 Kneb.h White hrclmrn
; near lla-tlnra. Writ. "Farm" ear­
vrarbne bra*, now lavlne. MrU Frrd 1
I banner
“»
Jordan, Naabville tdvunr 81—F3[. S 3 I

SHELDON'
ABSTRACT OFFICE
next month will mark the silver
jubilee of one ot the world's
richest men. the Nizam of Hy­
derabad. above. India's premier

variously st from t2.6QO.OO0 to
tsu.000.000 a year, and also poenesscs
1250.000,000
in
gold.

WE HAVE A FINE

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
on farmers in N. Barry county. No
experience or capital needed Write
today. McNESS CO., Dept. B. Free­
port Illinois.
9-3

Sporting Items

Assortment of USED

ICE BOXES

' Pon WALE 3.1 Huff Lech-irn
hen.. 1 vear old. flOr a piece.
Woodland Tout. 2

1

PLANS FOR BANQUET
ARE BEING MADE

old Price «1" Frank Uou.h, I
lu-.it. I Prairieville teieplmne
»3
YOI’NG MAN need. work. flieh ebool

Hirsch Bros. Team Wins the
Title for the Third
Time

1 ferred
Phone 3*03
i F"f&lt; HALE— Hay to»M mllrh
| wood or ro«l rant. Half mil. no r.h of
R.nfl.ld at Putnam farm Phon. Han
Arid to—3
Glenn Aaplnall.
FOUND—Pair .ho.a and narkaer eft In
rar hr m|al«kr Salitr.lav er

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY

Plans are being formulated for the
banquet that will conclude the local

rood, at Pierer*. repair abop. Hatine. and ravine for adv.
■&gt; 1

members of the teams will be guesU.
The series between the two all
star squads of 17 men each was won
by lhe Nationals under the manage­
ment of Orville Sayles. Roy Hub­
bard was the manager ot lhe Amer-

DEWEY REED
NEW

OLD

championship of the city. The
games were enjoyed by the teams as
well as the spectators, who gathered
in large numbers to witness the

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

the Prescription Drug Store

INDEPENDENTS WIN
FROM DOWLING NINE
Playing Double Header With
Apex Appliance on
Labor Day

NOTICE!
Farmer*, Attention!

TO BONDHOLDERS

The Hastings Independents de­
feated Dowling Sunday, at the local
fairgrounds, by a score ot 8 to 5.
The locals started the scoring by
tallying twice Ln the opening frame
and the visitors scored one run in
the second. Hastings scored two
in the third to take a four to one
lead which was shortlived, as the
boys from Clear lake scored three
times in the fourth to tie up the
game. Hastings went In the lead

WRECKING
FOR PARTS

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

FOR SALE OR TRADE CARDS of THANKS
HASTINGS MARKETS

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

Hastings

EMERSON ROYER

' count their final tally. With the
■game knotted up the locals broke
loose Ln one of their hitting splurges

last of the seventh and scored their
final pair of runs In the eighth to
win the game. Dowling threatened
In the ninth but a fast double play
wiped out their chances. Hastings
has taken two of tlie three games
scheduled and the third game of the
series will be played at Clear lake
after Labor day. The locals will
try to make a clean sweep of the
series by winning the final game.
Next Sunday Hastings meeU Free­
port at lhe local field and will play
a double header with Apex Appli­
ance of Grand Rapids at the fair
I grounds Labor day. the first game
। starting at one-thirty o'clock. No
admission will be charged on either
day but a free will collection will
i be taken to help cover the expenses.
The boys have won eleven games
this season while losing only five
and they appreciate your support.
The bat Ung overages to date are:

Young

Covllle ......................
. 333
Hackney .................... _____ 320
C. O'Donnell............ ........... 320
Rose .......................... ............ 300
James........................ ............... 375
Moore __ ........
.
238
Varney ------------------- ................ 178
Freeman --------------- ................153
Smith -...................... ............... .000

the crop profitable. The County
Agent's office has Information on
wheat fertilisers, treating of wheat
for smut and general InfomiaUon
on growing of wheat. This informa­
tion Is- free to those desiring the
help.

FLY FREE DATES
FOR WHEAT SEEDING
Conniderable Damage From proceedings. He died last week at
his home in Battle creek, aged 89,
Heaaian Fly Should Make
He slatted to practice law in Nash­
ville. Later he moved to Charlotte,
Farmers Cautious
County AKent Harold J. poster where he was very successful and
announces the fly free dates for was at one time mayor of that city.
seeding wheat In Barry county as In 1902 he moved to Battle Creek
September 18 to 28. The damage and practiced law there until his
from Hessian fly was decidedly se­ letlrement a few years ago. He was
vere this past year In fields that widely known throughout tills sec­
were seeded in early September last tion of the state as a trial lawyer.
year and In many cases did not har- ’ He Ls survived by two sons who live
vest over three or four bushels to | In Battle Creek, and by a brother,
the acre this year. It seems that, If i Daniel J. of Bedford township. The
such a simple a thing as time for i funeral was held Thursday, with
seeding wheal can control this Ln- I
sect, every farmer should do It. |
Some years when the Insect Isn't
bad no great loss Ls noticed from I
A limerick fs a nonsense rhyme
early seeding but no one Ls able to , of fire anspesllc lines, of which one.
determine Just what years will be
bad fly years.
Due to Uie loss of .seedings th?
Indications are that there will be
a large acreage of wheat plantings
In Barry county and Southern
Michigan this year. Farmers will
need to cut every corner to make

PEACHES FOR CANNING
ROCHESTERS
GOLD DROPS
KALAMAZOOS

SOUTH HAVENS
ELBERTAS
PROLIFICS

strument with orchestra accompani­
ment. A symphony Is (especially
since 1780) s work for an orchestra

Tbs Shephard Dog
The shepherd dog Is noted for
his beautiful head, with Its erect,
NOTICE MORTGAGE SALE
Drfaulla bavins ton made (and .tick medium sized ears. He has a wedge,
d.faalta havlae continued tor mon than shaped, long muzzle that gives an
Impression of strength; the almond­
shaped, dark brown eyes being set
in a bit obliquely and having the
expression of loveliness and fire.
The dog stands about 21 Inches,
measuring from the top of the shoul­
der blade to the ground. Tlie coat
Is smooth, although there are wire| haired and long-coated types, but
they are rare, and of any color rangonr »na । lnK from solid black. The tall Is
dsis ot I bushy, reaching to the lower Joint

DR. R. A. DENISON, DENTIST
Will Be Her. EVERY SATURDAY
at the NEW PARKER HOUSE
GUARANTEED Plates $•
as low as____________
EXTRACTIONS________ •
NO NEEDLE DISTRESS

Plates Repaired
IT WILL PAY YOU TO INVESTIGATE

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock

JERRY ANDRUS
OEHCRAL 1HSERANCE

KELVINATOR

GRANGE PROGRAMS

SALES AND SERVICE

DR. R. A. DENISON

H. E. Smith Hdwc.

growing need /or a money credit-service for Barry County people.
Mais production has made the cost oj automobiles cheaper. The chance lo pay

YOUR

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
.t FELDPAUSCHS

A UU1, FORESIGHT TODAY M.J
M»n VISION TOMORROW—

MARKET ■ Phan. 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609
H-F.Up.uAch ■ 3921

HASTINGS NATIONAL BANK BUILDING

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and
HASTINGS

ROOM 10—2ND FLOOR

PHONE 2307

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, SEPT. 3,1936

FOUND PEOPLE
K NDIX CORDIAL

POLITICAL NOTES
REPUBLICAN

DEMOCRAT

just on* old-fashioned easy-go­
ing American visitor—the kind
‘that was too c|re-frec fo check

। up the weekly bill
Private Olympic Games.
RIGINALLY these Olympian
games were based upon the
ideal of strengthen­
ing
inter ■ racial
friendships through
competitive sport
Bul when, in dis­
patches from Ber­
lin, a . fellow reads
of disputed deci­
sions, questioned re­
versals, alleged dis­
criminations against
some winni.ig con­
testants on account
of color, and the un- Irvin s. Cobb
necessarily
brutal
publicity, or so it apcared at long
distance, that was given to the dis­
ciplining of an indiscreet woman
athlete, and then the threatened
withdrawals of aggrieved teams
from certain Latin countries, he
gets to thinking, the reader docs,
that maybe it would be better if
each national group held its own
little private Olympian show on the
home grounds and barred out the
foreigners.

O

bi the house, no idea how many,
and Uiey were evidently all filled.
Our second night found us at Uie
General Brock hotel in Niagara
Falls. Canada, which we greatly en­
joyed. As U was July 4 and a double
holiday. Uiere were thousands of
people viewing lhe Fulls with parkmg space at a premium. Our lodging
on Sunday night was at a tourist
home ut Wolrotl. N- Y.. conducted
by two sisters, who lived in a large
red brick house on lhe main high­
way out of Rochester. The home had
the name of Annette Lodge Bul It
seemed that Uie procession of cars,
to and from Rochester would never
end. but we enjoyed our rest Uiere
and wished afterward that we could
have taken our good, clean beds
along with us. And Uie breakfast
the next morning at a home next
door was one of the bright spots of
our whole trip. We d like to recom­
mend these two places to our friends
or to any travellers in northern
New York.
Along in the afternoon on Mon­
Uncle Sam's Allen Burden*
day. July 6. we came to Oneida
O MATTER which party controls hike, a beautiful body of water
1 ’ congress, watch at Die next about thirty miles long, and decided
to slay in a tourist cottage at
term for this: A campaign for legis­ ! Sylvan
Beach. The sunset was lovely
tion opening the doors to millions of
I and lhe night was nice and cool, but
alien, now tarred ml under rhe i there were oln
„ „
uns, to M
other
things
be dequota lawz, whlcn also would legal- 1 s)rwj too
ire the presence here of a great | our route took us through the
mass of tiic foreign-born, some of . central Adlrondacks which were
them criminals, sonic misfits and I beautifully green with various kinds
malcontents, some avowed enemies of trees and other vegetation. In
of our government, some paupers scores of places the ground was
on Federal relief, who already are covered with pine needles and the
biding amongst us through whole­ fragrance was delightful. At lunch
calc smuggling-in, through fraudu­ time we were at Old Forge where
lent immigration papers, through we ate at "The Ferns" another out­
carelessness—to use a gcnUe term standing place—clean and cool and
—on the part of public servants the food was Just right. Arriving at
Lake George about six o'clock, we
charged with Uie duty of guarding first found a place lo stay all night'
'
at Bun Air. a private home that
In the years before us. it will be a had been opened to tourists. Again
sufficiently heavy burden to care we had chosen a place on the main
for such of our cwn worthy hume- highway Just where the trucks and
folks, whether native or naturalized, other cars had to step on the gas to
make Uie
slight grade 'ahead.
as otherwise would go destitute.
But that had ceased to bother the
writer. who slept blissfully through
Cleverness ot the Chinese
It all. We also found, nearer town,
NCE, long ago, 1, being a re­ a group of tourist houses named
porter. was detailed to accom­ “Bisson couri." so I tried to scrape
up an acquaintance but the owner
pany to police headquarters in New
York a Chinese prince who'd com* and manager, a brother and sister,
over to study our police methods. were not In. If you ever have a
cliance
to go to Lake George be
We were in the Bertlllon bureau,
presided over by the famous in­ sure to avail yourself of the oppor­
tunity as it is a lovely place. The
spector FauroL
town and Lake George are hemmed
"Ah, yes," said Uie courUy visi­ in by mountsdns making the whole
tor in faultless English, "this same setting ideal. Here we ate at the
system has been in vogue in my "Dutch Mill." a small well patron­
land since time Immemorial, ex­ ized tea room. For the pleasure of
cept that we use fingerprinting in its residents and visitors. Lake
addition to legal signatures and of­ George has an outdoor theater on
ficial seals, for further validating the lake shore where local and visit­
ing artists—singers, dancers, radio
important documenta.1'
artists, etc—give nightly programs.
There were hundreds present lhe
ing habitual criminals?"
night we were there.
"1 do not think so.”
But the next morning we had
••Weil, then.” asked Faurot, "bow
to leave tills delightful spot, driv­
do you identify them?"
ing along lhe shores of Lake
"Very simple," said the prince
George through
the mountains
and smiled a gentle smile. "When
until we came to Fort Ticon­
we catch a chronic offender wc im­ deroga about which an article has
mediately cut off bls head, and then previously been written. The late
anyone may recognize him at a afternoon was quite warm as we
glance."
waited for the ferry al Port Kent
and the 45 minute ride across Lake
The Spanish Extravaganza.
Champlain to Burlington. Vt, wasi
FELLOW picks up the paper very acceptable as a cool breeze1
and reads in the news dis- was blowing up lhe lake.
Night found us at a lovely tourist
.patches from Spain that the Loyal­
home on the outskirts of Burlington,ists licked the Royalists, or vice­
not far from the beautiful campus1
vena; and the Leftists tied into
of the University of Vertnont. "The’
the Nationalists again—or maybe Hedgemeer" was our stopping place
1
they’re both the same.
and it was a good one—practically'
Whereas the insurgents walloped a new home with every convenience
1
the radicals, but elsewhere tlie gov­ for one's comfort and enjoyment.
ernment forces drove back the reb­ Burlington was one place I'd like'
els; and meanwhile the Reds or the to revisit for a longer acquaintance.■
Centrists or somebody did some­ Now we had left the Adlrondacks1
thing unpleasant to the Republican and were in lhe Green mountains&gt;
outfit, as opposed to the mooar- but we could see no real difference■
chisl group; and at all points south in them. During the night there was'
and west the anti-clericals and the a thunderstorm and at St. Johnschurch, lhe Agrarian party, the bury, VL, we were again greeted by’
rain, so spent some time in their'
Fascists and the Communists, tlie
museum, until the storm subsided1
besiegers end the defenders, the
about four o'clock when we went on
Sasants and the townspeople, the to Littleton, N. H.. In the while1
1
boring classes and th* aristocrats,
Mis. Now that sounds like a longI
the land-owners and the tenants, trip, but one must remember that
■
etc., etc., etc., wire snarled into the distances are very short in the
'
various hard knots. So what?
east, not miles upon miles from one1
place to the other as tn the west.main sides engaged — only I At Littleton our selection was a‘
wouldn't know about that—tlie cor­ tourist home which was near the'
respondents could confer a great downtown section but quieter andI
boon by Just naming one set the very comfortable. The hard rain Ini
Hatfields and the other set the Mc­ the evening we feared would spoilI
Coys. Or would you prefer calling our next day's trip through the1
them lhe Callahans and the Mur­ White Mis, but before noon all wasi
clear and sunny for our visit to'
phys?
(Continued on page 4. Sec. 3)
J______ _- .JIRVIN K CCRB |

O

A

Note* on Weather Kept by
Observer at the Water
Work* Plant

1 BOOKS CLOSED ON

TEACHERS'MEET ।
AT CLEAR LAKE ।

I

THE TABOR FORTUNE

Mfl-

li

w

I 1 ■1

I •1

Uli

GOVERNMENT
THE SHEEP WHO LEADS
SPONSORED BY HEALTH
____
DEP01IT0R1 ASK «
A total of 4M inches of rain fell
DEFENDS ON YOU!
THE WOLF PACK.
UNIT SEPTEMBEB
INVESTIGATION OF T
in Hastings during lhe month of
Think about our current problems. | Synopsis of Editorial In
। Tabor opera house and the Tabor
t
10 TO 12
NEW ENGLAND
FUNDS M MADS
STUDY both sides of every queaUon |
Thc
York PobL August, according to Sylvester Lane,
| mansion. Along about that time
who is employed at the city water
conclusions.
Then draw your own. conclui
—.... I Landon's six fellow Governors wiio works plant and who is also official UUCi I vunuju CDEAVEDC
^H^hlng that he touched seemed
LOVELY HOMES ARE
Let your intelligence, not your emo­ commented over the air on the can­ observer for lhe weather bureau of WELL-KNOWN SPEAKERS
to turn to gold, and he carved a BILL OF COMPLAINT
didate's accei&gt;tance speech delivered lhe department of agriculture. This
be your guide.
SECURED FOR COURSE ^p^tacX£'r^a*khU‘
OPENED TO LODGERS tions.
PRESENTED TO COURT
Ttw strategy of the New Deal Uie most devastaUng criticism pos-' U quite a contrast to lire month of
campaign is lo arouse class haired; sible—by not attacking Landon with July when only 138 inches of rain ur
w
' Bul reverM» «*« on the way at
in iwt. on
Wayside Cabin* Also Offer to make you believe that they are any show of bitterness.
fell. The heaviest fall of rain was W. K. Kellogg: Foundation lhe Uine &amp; hu
Atty. Kim Sigler Petltioa* W
Here 1* a man who says to lhe on August 21 when it rained from
while armored knights riding up and
Will Have Other Group*
■ hia deathbed his injunction to his
Sleeping Accommodation*
Prevent a Proposed Set­
down the land fighting some sort of American public: "I am better than 10 o'clock in lhe evening until sev­
nt Pin« T alrn wife was “Doni give up the Match­
for Traveller*
at Fine LaKe I lets ' (a supposedly very valuable
bogey that would crush the "peo- Franklin D. Roosevelt. I am wiser. en in the morning, a total of 130
tlement of Claim*
. ~Judged aby
... their actions rather My policies are superior. Fire indies falling. An interesting Item
Teachers of Hastings and Barry । mine)
Several have asked Uie writer to Die."
i than
their words they present
preset -------Just Roosevelt and give me his Job."
tell Uirough Uie Banner columns
r-----------------------------------------------is Uial of the 31 days in August, county have been invited by the : True to his last words his faith­ before the bankin* holiday was th*
Bul Landon's letter of recommen­ ten of them were marked by sc- officials of the Barry County Health ful wife sought to guard "
something about Uie tourist accom- ' as silly a spectacle as
us Don Quixote
C
modatlotM found on our recent auto ' fighting
..
dation is a blank sheet of paper We vere thunder and lightning storms. department to the annual teachers' urea
"Matchless"
..gnung the
mv windmill.
wiiiuiiiui.
... of
, the
....
and about
trip through lhe New England
-----• • —
-•-• -------------------Yes I—They
would
save••the
people! Hllll don't know what Landon stands Tlie warmest day of August was on encampment at Clear lake. Dowling.' a year and' a •half
— ago was found
bank was dosed, as were all others
Therefore they heap a debt bur- for. His six fellow Governors de­ Sunday the 15th. when lhe ther- on Sentozabey 10 to 12. Every effort frozen lo death tn its shafthouse.
stales.
in lhe country, when the bankin*
stroyed
him.
not
with
venom,
bul
Naturally. Uiere are tourist places d^n on our shoulder* that will take
has tw^n- made to make the meet­ Prom the time of his death unUl
with simple doubts,
simply ex­ gust 29 marked the coolest. 60 de­ ing one of interest and value to lhe her frozen body was found she had moratorium was Issued. It never
and tourist places—good, bud and
indifferent—thc same as Uiere are
"Down with the 'big-wigs' and pressed.
teachers.
lived in dire poverty, always hop­ for thia Institution, which was a
grees.
.
Governor Green of Rhode Island:
various kinds of folks, houses, cab­ ■tycoons'I"
Mr. Lane has become greatly inThe
----------------encampment
-------------opens
r-------------------Thursday
1 ing and expecting that the "Match­ slate bank having large reaouroaa.
Therefore they liberate this coun­ ■'He was a question mark when he teresled in. following the weather | afternoon. September 10. with regls- less" would restore the great wealth
ins and housekeepers.
The nrat night out we were al try by killing livestock, ploughing began to speak. He was even larger condltlons and has made notes of trallon at 5 o'clock and concludes
of that city. TWs receiver later re­
l^-anilr.gton, Ont . and stayed at a under fertile field* of crop* and question mark when lie finished the unusual things that tiave hap-1 Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock. In- AH the little remnants of the once signed and the present receiver.
tourist home, which, lhe owner told rretricUng farmers in the use ot •peaking."
pened. We do not think of Michl- eluded with Uie serious part of lhe, vast fortune were recently sold at Charles H Schults, wss selected In
nt us deHow. asks Governor Green,
oreen. does
aoes gan
j
us. had formerly been an Inn and their own land thus making
as a state visited by earth-1 program will be social activities, i auction and lhe
the bookj
books were closed.
de­
quakes
bul
in
Uie
past
100
years
swimming
and
recreation
of
various
I
Y««.
"fortune
is
fickle'
countries
Landon
proposeto
make
the
social
...
__
...
was over one hundred years old. The pendent for food on c—..U—
walls were thick, lhe ceilings in the abroad!
security act workable? He calls It 1 Uiere have been 10 distinct temblors kinds. There will also be a discus­ have found lhe past few yean.
fled with Die prospects of repay­
#tale. the last occurring sion of lhe Health Department pro­
old part were beamed, the wide
"Down with the Federal bureauc­ "unworkable " How can any candi- t gejt |n
ment of their deposits, because of
floor board-., the small paned win­ racy." they said (four years ago, date make a change like that wiU»- on November 1. last year. A note gram for lhe coming year, a series GREAT IMPROVEMENT
dow.'. and lhe large lieuvy door evi­ that is) I
out giving a bill of particulars? The ‘ has also been nfade of the fact that of 10 or 15 minute descriptions of in­
regularities in lhe
dencing Uie age of lhe building.
Therefore they expand federal de- men who backed Landon are the 1 spring came in 1936 earlier than in teresting projects carried out last
TO JEFFERSON STREET institution,
made a
Tliere were bedrooms and bedrooms,
men who fought most bitterly several years, meaning by that that year by teacher! of Barry county

TOURISTS HAVE MANY IN­ GOOD
' TERESTING TIMES IN
IN
Woes of French Hotelkeepers.
SANTA MONICA, CALIF.
—As he gazes forth on a
boulevard full of rampaging
Reds and thinks about his empty
bedrooms, 1*11 bet there isn't a
hotel keeper in Paris who
wouldn't trade a great gross of
assorted French communists,
including all the standardized
grades, such as the compara­
tively rare slick type, the partly
'haired-over hybrid and the comjmon fur-bearing variety, for

FOUR INCHES OF RAIN
FEU. IN AUGUST

every phase ot our life; they &lt;
flow all available office buildhii
Washington and lease acres

•'Down with government extrava­
gance I” they shout.
Therefore they spend a* much
money a* all the administrations in
the history of this roan try com­
bined!
THE
THREE CHEERS
FOR
GREAT LIBERATORS!
Our children’s children will still
be feeling tlie crushing load of this
extravagance.
Q—Who hales Roosevelt?
A—No one hates Roosevelt. Prob­
ably a few of the REAL Democrat,
who feel that he hits betrayed their
party feel so much resentment that
it is akin to hatred. But if there is
any real hatred in this campaign, it
Is all on lhe New Deal side.
This Is not strange In view of the
fact that the New Deal Ls doing ev­
erything possible to make various
groups of people in this country hate
one another. There Is method in thli
policy.
As Abraham Lincoln said; "A
house divided against Itself .cannot
stand.” Therefore if lhe New Deal
is successful in carrying through its
"class war" policy, it will divide the
opposition and leave lhe country
torn so badly against Itself that it
will have a better cliance to realize
its secret ambition of a dictatorship
similar to those of Europe.
One can draw au interesting par­
allel betareen Turgot and opponents
of the New Deal. You remember how
Turgot tried to »-ar on Louis
XVI—Louis XVI. the Grand Mon­
arch. the dictatorial ruler who
said. “I am
lhe state"—Ixiuls
XVI who believed that hl* sub­
jects only had the right to do
-what he told them to do? Well
Louis XVI and his pack ot "yea men"
(today we call them political office
holders; back in the time of Louis,
they called 'em nobles) were out­
raged. They sputtered and fumed
and hurled at Turgots head the
same sort of arguments that New
Dealers are hurling against their
opponents. Turgot was removed but
the people who followed him revolt­
ed and his Democratic Ideas were
finally put Into effect. The Turgots
of today are also being ridiculed;
being accused of treason, of Ignoble
motives—but eventually they will
win and will live to see a true rep­
resentative government restored at
Washington.
Q—What was a "sound position"
in the OLD ORDER?
A—A sound position was where:
1— There were many small In­
vestors holding securities in the
basic Industries of lhe land.
2— Equities were divided among
substantial small Investors thus
removing them from the field of
speculation.
3—Bank loans were ample and
of a nan-speculative variety.
4— Industry was spill Into a
large number of small, thriving
units rather than a few large ones.
5— Where there was a sound
currency independent of govern­
mental order
What has the New Deal done to
Improve this situation?
I—It has discouraged investment by spreading anti-business
propaganda.
3—It attempted to force through
the NRA which would have
Drought small business under
domination of the larger units.
3—It has created a situation
where banks have plenty of mon­
ey (paper money) to lend but no
one wants to borrow money be­
cause of lack of confidence in ad­
mlnistrative policies.
4—If the NRA had survived. It
would have resulted In the survival of a few large monopolies
only which would have had the
whip hand over all Industry. For
years Republican and Democrat­
1c administrations have been
fighting (with little success, it is
true) to keep monopolies under
control. ■ But the NRA gave monopolles the "full speed ahead"
sign.
. 5—It has destroyed the sound­
neas of American currency..
No country can squander the way
the New Deal has been doing for
the past three years without creating a tlow of false prosperity—Just
as the World war spending did two
decades a&lt;o. But the very fact that
unemployment figures
have increased rather than decreased during the past four years indicates
that our so-called "recovery" is not
(Continued on page 2, Sec. 2) *

against any kind ot social security the sun crossed the equator on
laws.
• March 20. earlier by several mlnGovernor Earle of Pennsylvania: 1 utes than in previous yean.
•Governor Landon's nearest ap—---------------*-*—-----------------prooch to a declaraUon of policy,,
on any issue is his acceptance of thr
company union. Uie most powerful
weapon against the rights of labor i___________________________________
or Illinois: inn. I

)V. F. W. Newt

So? b.U.'X» ^TX'uuntei?

F°:

l«,n d«Ur«l .n.on.UUU.n.l^b, |

SpK,ul ln[trol „

“
|n

I the nomination and eiecUon ot Post
Landon realize what he confesses
officers. Nominations will be placed
when he charges that sponsorship of
at the next meeting. September 17.
laws later declared unconstitutional
EiecUon in October.
means usurpation?
Governor Herring of Iowa: "This
THREE YEAR CONTRACT.
•(Utile' farm program of which Gov­
The question of street lighting was
ernor Landon speaks has helped to ' brought up at lhe council Friday
raise Iowa cash farm Income from ;' evening due to lhe near expiration
*277.388.000 In 1933 to 8486 849.000 of lhe city’s contract with the Con­
In 1935. What would Landon subsll- - sumers Power company. After dis­
lute?" Nobody knows, but Landon's cussion of the matter the mayor
Republican backers are the men I and city clerjt were authorized to
who killed every farm relief meas- sign a contract with the Consumers
urc that made sense during the pn*"fo
UireeXvea
‘ r of
" X^u
ears for lighting Ute
twelve years.they tan the country.; slrwU
-tity.
Governor Cochran of Nebraska: ।
■'Nebraska'* budget Is even better ।
MARRIAGE LICENSE.
balanced than that of its sister Arthur C- Todd, woodland
state. Kansas But with taxes on Lucille French. Ionia co.
real‘property in Kansas running to
824 00 per 81.000 as against 819.00 per
81.000 In Nebraska, where Is Lan­
don's merit os administrator?"
But it Li Governor Martin of Ore­
gon who hits the nail on the head:
"We have naturally come to be
suspicious of a lamb leading the wolf
packs—we know the lamb in inno­
cent enough, but what do lhe wolves
intend to do?"
Landon is either a reactionary, in
which case lhe country doesn't want
him or else he really stands behind
his faintly New Deal pledges. But in
that case, if he wins, we shall have
a Landon New Deal, administered by
Hearst and the duPonts. a "New
Deal administered by its enemies."
The sheep who leads the wolf pack
becomes smaller and smaller as we
see more plainly the red tongues,
the white teeth of those behind him.
Rooeevelt Raining lhe Country?
If the screams of the president's
critics are true, then business in the
country has Indeed gone to the bot­
tomless pit. They insist that the
sole aim of the New Deal is to ruin
business. Let's look at some of the
dreadful things the Ne^Deal is do­
ing to business. Let's go over the
Financial Page of the New York
Times, in one recent issue of lhe
paper we pick the following head­
lines at random.
.
-Savings Bank Top Ten Million
Mark. Deposits within 810.000.000 of
Record July 1—Accounts at New
Peak In Number. Assets at Highest
Point. Reach IU3.89J353M. with
surplus account alm largest in His­
tory."
"Financing Concern shows Record
Net. Commercial Investment Trust
for lhe half year earns *3.16 a com­
mon shore Business also at a peak.
Total assets on June 30 at 8409.587 591. compared with 8297.183*89 on
December 31."
"General Motors Increases in­
come. 888.108*72 net for quarter of
June 30 is highest for period since
1929. Half-year, total also up. 12
months' profits 8224.069*18. Bringthare^nln,f3 °n Commop 10 ,5 01 1

and reports of summer courses at­ Besurfacing. Seven Block*
tended on scliolarshlps al North­
Has Eliminated AH
western University. Evanston.
The W. K. Kellogg Foundation
the Jolt*
has secured a number of well known
Tlie seven blocks of pavement on
speakers for lhe encampment. Their
names and lhe subjects of their ad- Jefferson street which have been re­
surfaced have made a marked im­
provement. which will be very sat­
rothen. director. Bureau of Co­
operation with Educational institu­ isfactory to the citizens of Hastings.
The cast of the seven blocks has
tions. University of Michigan. "Re­
organization ot High School Cur­ been 83*00. or around 8500 a block.
No doubt the same work should be
ricula to Meet lhe Needs of a
Changing School Population"; Dr. done on Green street, from IU in­
tersection with East Bute street
Gerald S. Craig, associate professor
across tile city to Uie west line of
of Natural sciences. Columbia Univenlty. "The Teaching of Science in Kellar Stem's home. That would be
thirteen blocks. Six of these will
the Elementary School with Special
probably be Improved by the sUte,
Emphasis upon Uie Health Educa­
as they are part of a trunkline high­
tion Aspects of Science Teaching";
way. The other seven would have
Dr. Mary Dabney Davis, senior spe­
to be done by lhe city, but the ex­
cialist, United States Department of
pense would not be heavy as th*
the Interior. "The Activities of the
Jefferson street recasting proves.
(Continued from page 4. Sec. 2)
PERFECT ORGANIZATION.
At Uie meeting of the Barry
MORE TARMACKISC DESIRED.
At the council meeting Friday County Young Democratic club held
night petitions were received for one on Thursday evening officers were
block of curb and gutter and tar­ elected as follows: Harold Parker,
mac on South Michigan Avenue, chairman; Mrs Virginia Baird, hon­
from Grand street to Bond, also for orary chairman; Robert Vandertarrnacking East Marshall street Veen. Middleville, vice chairman;
one block west from south Hanover.
Both petitions were referred to the Harold E. Smith, treasurer. The
street committee to investigate and next meeting will be in Nashville
at lhe Masonic temple.
report later.

the depositors' commitlee to **■

city.

For some time he has been

Bank of Kalamaxoo, charging

In look!ng after the Interests of

time and given a great deal
thought tn his tni( st1 rations
bill as filed, if It can be —‘

the Wesleyan Methodist
following a short lUnaea.
Hastings for many years,
survived by her husband, I
of Hastings; a daughter *
Hastings; a sister, Mrs. Kim*
of Sunfield and a brottM
dieeland of Kansas OU*.

We dedicate this space this week to

AMERICAN LABOR
Labor Day is Mr. and Mrs. America’s day

when we honor the thousands of men and
women who make the foundation of this

great nation. We take special pride in this

tribute because of our close relationship
with labor

working with it and serving

it day by day through our banking facilities.

"New York Utility Votes 50c Divi­
dend. Directors of the consolidated
Edison company of New York at a
meeting held recently declared a
dividend of 50c a share on the com­
mon stock, against 25c a share paid
in the five preceding quarters."
"Youngstown steel Rato al 80 per
cent.... the best July from an oper­
ating standpoint since 1929."
"STERLING
SECURITIES
GAINS- Net assets were 819.486*50
at close of first half of the year."
So It should be plain to lhe dull­
est that the New Deal is ruining the
country and tending IU people bock
to tlie days of chaoi and despair
such as we experienced before the
Advent of the Roosevelt Administra­
tion.

NASHVILLE PIONEER DIES.
Frank J. Purchlss. 84. a pioneer
resident of NaahvUle. died at his
Purchlu celebrated their sixtieth
wedding anniversary on New Year's
day. For many yean he had operat­
ed a barber shop and two of his
sons learned the trade from him.
Surviving are the widow. Ida. two
daughters and three sons.

HASTINGS CITY BANK
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Established in 1886—Fifty Years of Continuous Service

�THE HA8T1NG8 BANNEK, THURSDAY, ■EFTEMBEK &gt;, 1&gt;M

TWO

Deeds, bill lo annul marriage. '
' P. Jonas and Lydia E Jones.
of Health va. lhe village ot Nash­
specific performance of contract
Hastings Building &amp; Loan vs. I Henrietta oappon v*. John Cap- ville. bill for mandatory in function.
entered.
Arthur Crothars, mortgage fore- I pan, bill for divorce.
EU. H. A. Adrounle. Order allow­
0. Carl McCully et al vs. WillUm
ing claims filed.
closure.
j Robert C- Bowes vs. Nellis I. P 8tree ter, bill of complaint to va­
Est. Mahlon W Skidmore. Inven­
cate decree.
Elsie C Furols* vs Delbert Deller Bowes, bill for divorce.
FJDBATE COURT
tory filed.
et
al.
mortgage
foreclosure.
;
Margaret
Flngleton
vs.
George
Kat. Kata E- Oook Annual account
EH. Thomas W. Ronan. Final ac­
Brail, mortgage foreclosure.
----------------------------- —--------------, Harry O. Mohnnann. Rec'r. vs. Ftngteton. bill for divorce.
count filed, petition to assign reslEdward Babcock et al. mortgage
OUo c Wood vs. Grace Wood, bill
Harry O. Mohrmann. Rec'r. vs.
/(Continued from page 1. Bee. D
E. Walter*. Report of । due filed, order for publication en­
foreclosure.
, for divorce.
Richard O- Tuke et al. mortgage
tered.
jtkc De Pries ter et al vs. Hugh K.
Jennie Kalkofen v*. Sebastian foreclosure.
Est. Sarah E- Walters. Final ac- . Boyte. survivor of Glenn Boyle vs.
. August p. Geiger. Petition and
i Albert 17 ’tn. (sometimes known as 1 Johnson, et al. moratorium.
Kalkofen, bill for divorce.
to give shall*) mortgage. filed- count filed.
I| Bert Bion.
». assumpait.
I Edward D. Barber vs. Martin
’•Mw’r, “vs.
• Bernie w
*ih.­ H. Cline et al, bill to foreclose sec­
Mary u
Waldron
Wald
Blom*,
assumpsit.
ron. bill for divorce.
I Chas. H. Dalhouser vs. Verne Mc- Goodenough, et al clear title.
ond mortgage.
LAKEVIEW.
avowing account entered, discharge
John W. McLeod and Lillian Mc. Peck, et aL appeal from Justice
Oeo. Dye. Rec'r. vs. Earl E. Engle
Togan-Btite*. Inc., va. John B
Aug.' 27 Letter.
of Odn. issued, estate enrolled
....
Leod
vs.
Laura
B
Edger,
slay
fore
­ Bresson, moratorium relief
I Court
and wife, mortgage foreclosure.
IM. Rom D Cadwallader. Bond of
M and Mrs. Henry Rcnck
m
.
u
.»vc
w™
—
------Chaz. F. Monica and wife vs. closure.
। Maurice West vs. Gordon Havens.
Kato Hate v*. Fred Hale. Uli for
Admr. filed, tetters ot Administra­ Or
1 Rapid* were Bunday eve- j treipaM on the case
। Lucy J. SUdel vs. William Stadel.
divorce.
tion Issued, order limiting settlement -•
I bill for divorce.
fliers at Chas. Asptnall's.
| Claude Hollman. Admr . for Uicb Junction.
Lewis J. Matthews et al. vs. Jasper
Madeline Norman vs. Harley Nor­
•nd Mra. George Murton and estate ot James cheeseman, de­Hazel D- McConnell vs. Wm. T.
G
DeKoning. bill for temporary In­
Ext. Geneva Alice and Rex Otto
man.--------------------------bill for divorce.
af St. Johns spent Sunday -----------ceased,- vs.
— Mavilla Whitney and J.
S. McConnell, bill for divorce.
]------fi
junction.
Leslie. Annual siuount of Gdn filed ,
..Ir, and Mrs. John Hill.
1IB.
“ —
-—- trespass
----------------Babcock,
on-------------the case.
’ Harry o. Mohrmann vs. Gordon
Hazel O. Renke* vs. John o.
Kate King v*. William H. King,
&amp;t. William Elliott. Discharge of j
Orlo
W
Judkins,
Admr.
va.
Earl
Edmonds
and
wife,
mortgage
foreRenke*.
bill
tor
divorce.
Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
-rt«l Mrs. Bert Trautwine ncbill for divorce.
closure.
, Margaret T. Mann vs. Ora L
Itot Mahlon W. Skidmore. Pell-1 oompanled by Mr. and Mrs Solo- | Coleman, trespass on the case,
Edward E- Purdy. Cora Purdy vs.
Betty J. Greiner vs. Alfred Grein- Mann, blU-for divorce.
Um l« Ater nkd. orffr .ppolot-! UHHI
“»» YU.UCY U.
«&gt;
•“‘f.'1 1 Harry O. Mohrmann. Rec'r. vs.
Otto G Llnsley. Elzora Llnaley. land
Mra.
in ’V
Elkhart.
H- Cook, assumpsit.
cr. bill for divorce
I Oeorge Milter and Nora Dawson contract moratorium.
■
. . . ....... ■ •__ .
...
Kfn Trautwlne's sister In
1V h u rt
Ing Admr. entered, bond of Admr Ind over the week end
I Clark Robinson, surviving partner : Kathryn Hart vs. Delton Blate v*. Eliza Wood et aL bill to quiet
Lewis M Rlshel vs. Harry Epstein,
filed, letters of administration fr­
Mr and Mr* Casper Thomas of I
Robinson &amp; Wolf v» Mose IX- Bank, moratorium.
title.
moratorium
itted, order limiting settlement en­ Kalamazoo were Sunday visitors at Cant- »««innpsiL
’—'
Harry Leonard and Clara Leonard
Mabel Mugridge vs. Raymond
tered. petition for hearing of claims the Bolter home
' Minnie Van Wle v*. Fidelity I vs. wm. F. Cook et al. rescind con- Mugridge, bill for divorce.
MARTIN CORNERS.
filed, notice to creditors tented
mpait. I tracts.
| Viola ’ Degen vs. Cecil Dagen. bill
Frank Cogsweli and family spent »f“&gt;th * Accident Co . azsump.it
UacU.
I V—*
~'
Lloyd Cogswell of Lakeview, who
E*L william R. Wing. Nomination
Frank "
H ru,,,w
Gould v
vs
Sarah
Blanche
Eddy v«. Wm. DeOolia el ,or divorce.
Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Will
* Mrs. c
“”" ' nu
"
has been attending a summer
of Odn. filed, order appointing Gdn.
Foreman, attachment.
.
| al., mortgage foreclosure.
1 Rulh C. Myers vs. Harvey W. school in forestry at Sault Ste.
White
near
Eaton
Rapids.
entered, bond of Gdn. filed, letters
Warren G. SUdel vs. Wm. Lyons I Chester Peck vs. Henry Barnaby. Myers, bill for divorce.
Marie the past ten weeks, visited
Miss Lillian Mack entertained 11
of guardianship issued.
and R. G. Lyons, trespass on lhe mortgage foreclosure.'
| Louis U&gt;rd vs. Stella Lord, bill Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher Sunday.
E*t. Anna Benson. Petition for young people ot the neighborhood
case.
George Norris et al. vs. W- H. for divorce.
Other callers that day were Mrs
hearing claims filed, notice to credi­ at a weiner roast and dancing
C. H. Osborn. Gdn. of Morris Cur- Whitmore et al, mortgage inorator-1 Myrtle M. Brown vs. Earl Brown, Luana Townsend of Hastings and
party at Happy Hill on Monday
tors issued. Inventory filed.
tl*. a minor, vs. Richard Van Tlf- , ium.
bill for divorce.
Mr and Mrs Thomas Gammngc of
Est. Peter A. Maurer. Inventory evening. All had a very enjoyable flin. trespass on the case
Bartha Weaver vs. LaVem Wcav-1 Goldy
Mac Roberts vs. Arthur J. Grand Rapids.
evening.
filed
Jennie Todd v*. Peter DeCook, et | er. bill for divorce.
Robert*, bill for divorce.
Remember Sunday school and
School begins al Lakeview on
BsL Bert R. Tinkler. Inventory
Harry O. Mohrmann vs. Joseph C. I Marie McKay vs. Alvin R. McKay. preaching next Bunday morning.
Monday. Aug. 31 with Miss Freda aL trespass on tlie case.
filed.
Chas. H. Osborn. Admr. ot David Hurd, mortgage foreclosure.
, bill for divorce.
Plan to attend both these services.
Est. Harold Elliston et al. Petition Smith as teacher. Miss Annabelle Morlhland
Est. vs. Ethel Minnard | Phyllis Perdun vs. Kenneth perTreraa Freeman vs. George DonArthur Barry of St. Petersburg.
Cogswell'
will
resume
her
teaching
and order lo use funds filed
: dun. bill for divorce.
aid Freeman, bill for divorce.
Fla. arrived Sunday to visit his
at —
Maple Grove
Center.
Est. lautiia Cuniungim,*a. Order duties
--------- —
------------------ Laird.
Ernest Appleman vs. Charles Dal- i Anna Goodin vs. Harry Goodin.! Susanna Hazcldlne vs. Donald P. brothers. Roland and Milo Barry
confirming sale entered.
I Barah Gillespie al lhe Stevens and
houser.
appeal
from
Justice
Court.
1
bill
for
divorce.
Weeks
and
Ceclla
AWeeks,
bill
for
Est. Amanda Nelson. Order for | Ruby Cogswell at Martin Corners.
and other relatives here.
Oren A. Fleming va. Wm McKibIn tlw matter of thc dissolution of foreclosure.
There will be a supper at the
bin. trespass on the case.
I the Delton Co-op Shipping Co.;
church Friday evening of this week.
Jessie Smith vs. George Granger. | upon petition of the Board of Di­
Settle Granger, trespass on file rectors thereof, dissolution.
.
The ladles plan to have a good sup­
Sarah J. Page vs. Wm. R. Page. I Tlie Industrial Co. vs. Leon D. per and will start serving al 6
Clare Wijlian\son vs. Lee Burdick, bill for divorce.
Cool and Andrew Dooley, assumpsit. o'clock.
et al . assumpsit.
John A- Jennings vs. J. E. Jacobs
Madison Fhrniture co. vs. Mike
Mr and Mrs. Willard Hilton have
OJuklck. asstkmpBlt.
Clark Robinson, surviving partner and H. W. Coulter et al.
disposed of their place here and
Lenora Anderson vs. clarence W
Mactej an&lt;^ Mary Wielgosz vs. moved to Hastings. We wish them
of Robinson &lt;fc Wolfe vs. L&gt;le R
Beadle, assumpsit.
Anderson, bill for divorce.
Michael anc) Helena Zawackl, as- good luck in their new home.
Joseph
DeRuiter
vs.
Hirsch1 Sadie L. Harwood vs. Mary B. sumpsll.
Brothers A: Co., inc., assumpsit.
Stephens et al. bill to correct error.
Alfred Mocrdyk vs. Orma Glynn
LENT CORNERS.
Harry o. Mohrmann. Rec'r. vs.
Herbert D. Wotrlng. ex. vs. Lewis ct at trespass on the case.
Irving Doster Is In Bronson hos­
Arthur L. Hill, assumpait.
M. "
Hanson
H- Cook, determination of interest' Arnett Auto Co. vs. B- **
pital. Kalamazoo suffering from an
I Ethel Elite vs. Fred Livingston. in real estate.
el al. assumpsit.
infected ear. Howard Thomas is do­
I Emma Livingston, assumpsit.
While Brothers vs. L. H. Cook, as­ ing his chores during his absence.
Gerald L. Adams vs. Louise E. ’
| Harvey w Tinkler ex. vs. Hamll- Adams, bill for divorce.
sumpsit.
Mr and Mrs. Thurl Cook and sons
i ton a. Nichols, assumpsit
Ernest Vermulen et al. vs. Phoebe of Plainwell and Mr. and Mrs. How­
Chester Whitman vs. Bernice J.
I Charles Stewart vs. Millard Willl- Whitman, bill for divorce.
Manker. trespass on tlie case.
ard Bryant and children of Otsego
i son. assumpsit.
Wm. H. Rich and Anna Dickenson
Gilbert Verberg vs. Oren DavU. were supper guests Thursday eve­
vs. Charles H- Leonard, bill for ac- trespass on thc case.
ning of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Ham­
I Woodland Exchange Bank vs.
Thc village of Nashville vs. Nora mond. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Felder
s. counting.
James E. and Daisy B- Guy. morlI- j George Dye. Rec'r. vs. Claude Dawson, sole and only heir of John and children of Prairieville spent
I gage foreclosure moratorium.
1 Mead and
ant wife, mortgage foreclos- Dawson, assumpsit.
Sunday afternoon al the .same home.
I Henry Hitt et al. vs. Henry j ure.
Ada McKay va clayton C PetllnMra. Lena Graham started her
j Schalblcy. injunction to conserve es- J Dorothy Guyney vs. Richard Guy- giil. assumpsit.
school at Vicksburg this Monday
late.
’ ney. bill for divorce.
Roy Blough vs. C- A- Curtiss &amp; .™™i„.
morning. Her mother. Mrs. --------Emma
| Wm. Wisner and Etta Wisner vs.! Dorothy Shupp vs. Lynne Shupp. Sons, assumpsit.
Anson, expects lo stay with Mr and
i George Wilson, bill to set aside deed, bill for divorce.
•
Fred Mackey vs. William E- Sett­ Mra. Floyd Anson this winter.
THE HEW
. Jolin VanderKolk ct al. vs. FarmMarie N Roush vs. Ivan L. Roush, ler. trespass on the case.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Francisco and
era State Bank of Middleville, as- . bill for divorce.
Fred Mackey vs. Mrs. Ed. Selller. children motored to thc Lake Share
[ signee chas. and Adda Sylvester. I Ansel J. Kinne and wife vs. "Appeal from Justice court.
Wednesday, looking for peaches.
moratorium.
| Claude Spelman. bill to correct
' '
dc-Dolly J. Lee va. Robert Chadwick.
Miss jean Hammond of Kala­
trespass on lhe casc\
Kalamazoo Improvement co. vs. scriptions.
mazoo spent the week end with her
Margaret clialker et al. bill to quiet' Etta I. Boise vs. Harry L. Boise, bill
Jay Norton vs. 'ben Kelsey, appeal parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marc Hamtitle.
! for divorce.
from Justice court.
mond.
Geo. Dye. Rec'r. vs. Richard Lop-1 Elmore B- Hathaway vs. Mary
Chancery Causes.
Robert Hammond returned home
penthlcn and wife, mortgage fore- Hathaway, bill for divorce.
Will Tobias vs. Mabel Tobias, bill i Sunday after spending the past
you* Tftotuuf
closure.
--------!. The
.— City
,__________________
National Bank forand
divorce.
j week with his grandfather. Clarence
Verle L. Deeds va Marvel M Trust Co. of Battle creek vs. John
Clyde C- Blemons, State commr. Hammond and wife of Hastings.

SEPTEMBER TERM
OF CIRCUT COURT

,

_____

See our Dislay at the Fair

Special Demonstration of Tractor Tires

firestone
STANDARD

INCE the startling
announcement of this
new tire sensation, Firestone
Factories have been busy
day and night in an effort to
turh out sufficient tires for '
the vig demand.
t

¥g95
430-21.
4.75-19

7*75
“ ““

S

530-17. 10.70
---------5.50-19. •* ““

IQt TBUCKI AMO BIMEE

When you buy the new ■
Firestone Standard, you save
five way* — better raw
materials, buying at source
7-5020. S5.X0
75.35
of supply, more efficient
■
manufacturing, volume
production and more economical di»tribution. Ail of these
savings arc passed on lo you in the greatest tire value you have
8.25-2C
9.00-20
9.75-20.

ever known.
Never before have you seen so much tire for the money and

every

tire carries thc Firestone narr- and guarantee, which is
Hciency, greater blowout
‘ '
your assurance of greater non-skiJ
zlmost unbelievable that i
pgotcction and longer mileage. 1:
■noney!
you could buy so much tire for so I

-estone Standard Tire*
Don't delay. Get your new sc
now — a fresh aupply just receivi '. ( ■
y.»n see this new tire
you will agree that it is the greatest tire value ever offered at
today’s low price*.

COAL

KUO BJWK
■6 WES

POLITICAL NOTES
—Republican—
&lt;Oontlnu*d from page 1, Bee. 2)

sound, if government had adopted
policies to encourage business and
agriculture instead of adopting a
hmtlU
_ ­
hostile aHI'iid.
attitude and destroying —pro
In court, certainly shows
some ductton. the unemployed would have
-high financing" that ought not to
have been allowed. These claims they still havs to depend on govern­
ment doles.
will all be considered by the court
Wheri wiU this situation end?l
and It will be there decided wheth­
Just as soon as we get an adminiser they *re well founded or not. trallon at Washington that will live
We will not, therefore, comment on up ip its promises of economy and
them, except in a general way to good management
say that if they can be substantiat­
Prom actual record in office. ALP
ed. they will warrant the deposi­ LANDON, the typical governor and
tors' committee in going -lnl? court citizen of a TYPICAL PRAIRIE
to find out what was done with a STATE, is the one to lead us back.
substantial part of the bank's mon­
HE KEEPS HIS PROMISES'
ey. all of which belonged to lhe de­
positors and thc stockholders.
VOTE ON GRANTING
After reciting the alleged facts,
ELECTRIC FRANCHISE.
the bill of complaint asks that the
F. D. Cutler, chairman of thc
defendants and each of them, be
required to appear In court and an­ Barry County R. E. A., reports that
swer to the allegations In the bill of the townships of Thoniapplc. Yan­
complaint. Mr. Bigler, in the bill kee Springs. Orangeville, Prairie­
asks the court to prevent a pro­ ville. Rutland. Hope. Barry. Carl­
posed compromise which would per­ ton. Hastings. Baltimore, Johns­
mit the directors to settle for U50.- town. Maple Grove, and Assyria
000 claims set up in tne bill will vote to confirm the franchises
amounting to 11,260.000. which the given by their township boards to
depositors' committee believe
the the Barry Co. R. E. A. for the pur­
directors and officers of the failed pose of fumtehing electricity to
bank should pay to tlie receiver. He their members. The special election
asks a temporary injunction, which will be held on prfinary day, Sept.
was granted, and that that Injunc­ 15, 1838.
(Continued from page I. Sac. 2)

tion be made permanent. He asks
that lhe court order six suite, here­
tofore brought by the receiver which
had been dismissed, to be reinstated
The members of the depositors*
committee are Charles B. Hays.
LeRoy Comtei and William H. John­
son
This is a very Important law suit,
involving many questions concern­
ing lhe liability of officers and di­
rectors of banks, and will be watch­
ed with interest throughout the
stale.

PiXAMANT RIDGE.
School commences this Monday
morning with Mra. Fios.dc A Herding
ot Hastings aa teacher.

tended and a fine pot luck dinner

Mr. and Mra. Cecil Ronk of Bat­
tle Creek spent Bunday with Mr.
and Mra_Leater Kinne.
Mr. and Mrs Herman Neil of De­
troit called Sunday afternoon al Ar­
thur Teeter's home.
Mrs. Claude Glldersleevc of Jack­
son spent last week with Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Kinne.
Mrs. Laverne Kinne and her
mother. Mrs Claude Glideraleeve,
were in Grand Rapids on Thursday.
Arthur Teeter attended the dis­
trict conference of the. church of
Brethren al Brethren. Mrs. Arthur
Teeter. Mary and Mildred vlzllcd
in Scottville last week.

PENNOCK HOSPITAL
During the past week the follow­
ing babies have been born at Ute
hospital: On Aug. 31. a daughter
to Mr and Mrs
Howard Getty.
Middleville; on Aug. 30. a son to
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Meyers. 438 E.
Grand St.: Aug. 27. a daughter was
bom to Mr. and Mrs. Aby Gun­
trip. Nashville. R. 1.. but she lived
only two hours: a son was bom to
BARBERS CORNERS.
Mr. and Mra. Lewis Otis of Dow­
Paul Foley is visiting In Detroit
ling on Aug. 27; a daughter to Mr
and Mra. Ward Weiler. «,,,
CHy. «««
Route and Cincinnati. Ohio.
. 3. on Sept 2 a son' lo Mr and
MUv Mabelle Nollen of Grass
M;.|Lowell Whittemore. Delton. Lake is visiting her sister. Mrs. Her­
man Hauer.
Route 3, on Aug 28.
Mrs. Fred Anders of Brush Ridge
WEST ORANGEVILLE AND
spent Thursday with Miss Alice
EAST GUN MARSH. Foley.
Aug. 27 Leiter.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hauer and
Mrs McCafferty has as her house daughter, Mabelle. and MU&lt; Mabelle
guests for a couple of weeks a sis­ Nollen were callers al Glenn
ter and niece. Mrs. Nancy Wray, Cl urn's house in Hastings Sunday
and Mary Rom of McGuffy. Ohio.
Week end visitors at Roy Preston's
Mr. and Mra. Frank Otto of Lan­ were Mr. and Mrs. Garlough and
sing are visiting Mr. and Mra. C. Harry Preston of Fremont.
VanEtt this week.
Mr and Mrs Roy Huver of Lan­
Mr and Mrs. C E. VanEtt and sing are visiting Mrs. Jerry Foley
son LaVcrn have returned from a for a few days.
week's visit in the northern part of
the state. They visited Scottville,
NORTH HOPE.
Ludington. Reed City. Gladwin and
Mra. Otto Pranshka and family
Cadillac.
and Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Pransh­
Ellas Saddler and son Clark were ka and son spent from Tuesday un­
week end guests of a sister. Mary til Thursday in the northern part
Crans. and other relatives in and of the state.
around Orangeville.
Mr. and Mra. Glen Watson, who
Little Marguerite Morehouse had
have been spending a few days with
her tonsils removed at Crispe hos­
Gus and Doris Peake, have returned
pital Monday.
to their home in Detroit.
Our sclwol began this Monday
morning with Miss Margaret Jolin------H,—7 VKCII
day. One of them, a tall date palm cox at Uie helm.
Jimmie Dandle of Hastings spent
in Palksahl, India, bends to the
Saturday wiUi hl* grandparents,
ground once every 24 honrs-the Mr. and Mra. Janies Murphy.
“descent'’ testing from 2 a. m. to
Albert Hampton of Bunnell dis­
noon and the "accent" taking from
trict spent Tuesday with Mr. and
2 p.m. to midnight
Mr?. Morse Murphy.

-

^**5

Tt1CAICp j
■ Telephones 2244-2557 W

Good Old Coal
The SAFE Fuel

-

1

PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF SEPT «

SUNDAY and MONDAY. SEPT. 6 and 7

CHINA CLIPPER”t

Gth Pot O'Brien. Beverly Roberts. Ross Alexander ’T'
With Pat O'Brien. Beverly Robert*, Roes Alexander
Ttrestone

pre stone

&lt;352

430-21
4.75-19
3OZ3HCL

5-00-19

DezigneJ and built for owners

Designed and built of good material.

volume production, making po*»ible
exceptional quality at low price*.
Hrcttooe name and guarantee.

'BATTERIES

«4 dependable and economical

BAAOAIN MATINS£ SUNDAY 1:00 ud 3:00 •'deck for A*«1U.
I «&lt;k«r MtforaucM »t U
AdaU* 15c; CklMrca 10c.

Burn COAL
it’s the BEST, too!
You don't have to start the winter in
doubt with coal you KNOW...and
it heats for LESS! Buy it now! Be
prepared for those cool nights

BARGAIN NIGHT—TUESDAY SEPT. 8
BETTE DAVIS. Warren William. Arthur Treacher and
Alison SkJpwerlh in

"SATAN MET A LADY” I
Tk« rraalzi ■&lt;!&lt;• f«r z^uJU en Tattday will be gftc Mt by the i»« of
Coapen ztluked U UM week'* premia Mi lea eeali yea ■&lt;«&lt; Sttetu

WED., THURS. and FRIDAY. SEPT. 9. 10 and II
MATINEE WEDNESDAY, 3:00 O'CLOCK

ipabk plugs
Buy the Beat
It Costs Less

Call today!

A
y

».00 r. M. aa Monday.

SHIRLEY TEMPLE in

Phone 2370

"The Poor Little Rich Girl”
With Alice Faye. Gloria Stuart. Jaek Haley, Michael Whalen
Adults 25c; Children 10c

FORREST JOHNSON

SATURDAY ONLY—S|FT. U
DOUBLE FEATURE

|
A

Bia.,

Hastings,

EAST

Michigan

Sunoco Gas and Oil*.
Vulcanizing.

STREET

HASTINGS

With Johnny Dawns, Shirley Deane. Dixie Dunbar
and Marjorie Gateeon

Aka GEORGE O BRIEN in
Greasing
Washing

"Border Patrolman
lulls l&amp;c; CkU4iu 10c.

BLUE

Sunoco

STATE

"THE FIRST BABY” 1

motor

te • «i£RiQ^JM.Sg»iar2y.’o!

£

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1938

I Hastings; Burroughs. Arabel Bivens; |
BOWNE CENTER.
describably beautiful amidst - the tie Creek from Thursday until Sat­ Melissa, of near Ypsilanti. called on
&gt;&gt;
* rrrtsa
I Parker, carol Idiam al Dowling; j School began in-the Lowe district greens, whites and dull rose of oth­ urday night.
Mr. and Mrs. coral Cookson of
Mra. Emma Otte of Wayland Is family Wednesday afternoon.
. M. C. A. 11 rJVlo
i Bristol, Izona Moon of Dowling and Monday
-— Mrs. Francis Curley
.
with
as er wildlings thruout the country­
side.
visiting her sister. Mrs. Ida Car­
HSBES=EaE£===ESS£-5^M Culver, Mr*. Leah Dull of Quimby. teacher.
Mrs. Caryl Puller and daughter home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rocho
penter.
spent Friday with Mr. and Mra. on Sunday.
Mrs.
Jennie
Miller
of
Portage.
A short ztory of Uie Slate V. M. ’
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
SOUTH SHULTZ.
Please remember thc Sunday Hollis Barber of tire Center Road.
Wlz . visited friends in this neigh­
Mr. and Mra. Colton of Hastings
Between flfly and sixty relatives
C. A. camp on old Torch lake—Tho . Mr. and Mr». Sidney Flflcld al­ borhood thc past week.
Mr. and Mra. Leo Barry and son were Sunday dinner guesU al Lhe a.-. teacher
special effort to attend.
lot* Wm. H. Gay. L. E. Buell, who t™ded the Hopkins cainp meeting
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thompson
Monday evening with Mr. and home of Mr. and Mrs. James surino.
Laura and Daisy Hallock of the I■ spent
lags
Sunday
honoring
O.
E.
Ken
­
Mrs. Albert Barry and family cf Mr. and Mra. Wirt Burlne and Em­
were.guests of lhe latter's sister and
pasted away lost March, with C. W,' BuniJ“y.
husband, Mr. end Mrs. Floyd Wal­ yon's seventy-ninth birthday. The Doud district visited their aunt, : Bouthekst Carlton, the occasion be- mett Burine of Nashville were callRosa Hallock. Thursday.
Near ZlonrUM,
W«-r or Am. Arbor. commO ...,o
ters of Grund Rapids Thursday
| ing Mary Margaret’s third birthday,
came Jrora Detroit. Battle Creek.
one rainy night 33 years ago and u,e Bporu at the home coming.
night.
t Ice creurn and cake were served.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bump. MUs
CARLTON CENTER.
decided that thia war. tlw best place
M... o-luh NOrton uf
Mrs* Walt Thomas and . Wayne Kalamazoo. HasUngs. Hickory Cor­
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Strodtbeck Florence Rump and Mrs. Mattle (is. Crawnib. used 1
for Michigan koyx to camp down ।
jupiX called * cm Orville Benton were in Lowell Munday.
ners and Delton. The cottage was'
Rev. and Mra. W. A. Exner of spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. Striker, all of Hastings, called on
through the year* Becaiue of- their ,
^d^reported Lora
A number from here attended the tastefully decorated for lhe occa­ Banfield attended Ute services al and Mra. Carl Weycrman ot Has­ Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Striker Sunday.
.uod
iudament more
nm hnv.
nmeh mi£Xl
good Judgment,
more than
than 4
4.000
boys JXn «
Mrs. Sarah Ickes te ill at the
funeral services for Mrs. Jennie Fox sion. All enjoyed the fine dinner the local M. E church Sunday eve­ tings.
have enjoyed and benefited on this
tn Hastings
in
Hasting* Tuesday morning. Bur- and birthday, cakes. The day was
“ ning. Rev. and Mra. Exner for­
Mrs. Arthur Yarger and family home of her daughter, Mra. Archie
Getties the
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Jordan ol ini was in n Grand Rapids cemetery. I pleasantly spent with music and merly served this charge and they spent Sunday wiUi her parents, Mr. Harrington. Ln Battle Creek.
camp site. Hie state Y. M. C. A.
Huntings
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
1 listens reapectfally.
«&gt;&gt;...
।
.........
rri.K.t.
visiting.
are
always
welcome
visitors.
owns 450 acres in thia camp site with
Mrs. Cora Fulton of Union city is
She had many friends here wiio
and Mrs. Cleon Landon of North
Lester Bonneville received word
Rev. .and Mra. Bedlence of Grand Carlton.
1 1-2 miles of shore line on old Kelly were caller* ul WclllngUm greatly regret her pawing.
visiting at the home of tier niece,
Kidder's
Bunday.
of the musing of an uncle. Rapids were guesU Sunday of Mr.
Torch. A boy from Flint camped
Hazel Shriber is working for Mr. Mrs. Bert Fancher.
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Draper of Sunday
..
..
...... .
I,.,, urino
olu&gt; ot.
School opened Monday morn­ Martin were visitors al Watt Thom­ Duve
' here many years ago and when for­
Gibson of ’Harbor Springs. and Mra. Jay Wing and also at­ and Mra. Smith Sherman ot West
Mrs. Leo Reynolds and Marjorie
fust place.
tune smiled on him. he remembered ing with Wlliard Kidder as teach­ as' Saturday afternoon.
He was a former resident here and tended church services with Mr. and1 Hastings.
spent Saturday in Battle Creek.
what tills camp had meant to him. er. Wc all wish him the best of
John Thomas and family of Lan­ lias many friends here who extend Mra. Whig.
Guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
and as an attempt to repay, built a aii&lt;?ecs» for hiti first year.
sing spent Saturday night ul Guy sympathy to the bereaved family.
Wc had visitors Sunday at Sun­
beautiful 820.000 club house and lhe
Rev. Lewis Horn of Ionia spent Millard Brecheisen and son were
Smith's.
new Chinese Ainbus-sudor lo Amcri- day school and church frpni Middle­
Miss Agatha Thomas of Lansing several days Iasi week with his par- the latter's mother. Mra. Heidenville and Alto and wc invite you to
shleld of Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Clair
is visiting friends and relatives here enU. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Horn.and
Jones and family of Kalamazoo.
in IMJ1
iiripeu io
----- worahlp with
----- - us.
, -Salur"
1907 unu
and helped
to ijuiiu
build me
Hie come
this week.
cement dock. Tills year a new log :
Sept 19. there will be an all
Miss Helen Benton spent lhe week Kalamazoo relumed from their va­ Miss Verda Zuschnltt of Ann Arbor.
dining lodge luu been built which 1* '
meeting. Wc are planning a end with her English teacher. Mrs.,
Mr. and Mrs. Adalbert Heath of
cation
trip
Sunday
In
lime
to
spend
a great benefit to lhe campers, in
&lt;l*y and eveiilng. good music Ryno of Grand Rapids.
thc evening with their parents. Mr. Hustings and Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
comfort as well a thing of beuuty. «"&lt;»
»lnging and speakers.
and Mrs. G. E. Kenyon. Gordon Zuschnltt of west of Hastings.
CUB Drum has been camp director w‘l,h
d‘',“Pr, “L000"
a .
John Usbome had one sheep
•
THREE CORNERS.
Kenyon
of
Hastings
spent
Sunday
Prayer
Wednesday. Sept,
Sept.
for Ux years and this summer 154 „ ’’
ra*" meeting Wednesday
killed and others Injured by dogs
Mrs. H. J. Robinson and MLss night with Uiem.
campers have been here, 80 of them ’•
t,K‘ &gt;»on»«s of Mr. and Mrs.
durixtg Uie past week.
Lnuris Anders, who- has been
for the Whole Mx weeks The lute U&lt;-rt KUioU, with Mra. Ida Cairns Rettia motored over to Shiawassee
county a week ago Tuesday on bus­ spending lhe past five weeks with
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
L- E. Buell was lhe first camp dljvc- । 08 *ent,er.■
iness pertaining to thr school which Mrs. Sarah Kenyon, returned home
Mrs. Anna Buck. Esther and
tor. followed by Frank Hurst, who
- . — ' Ljwnv
lhe latter will teach the coining Sunday night to go to school in Acitsah spent most of the week in
passed away in 1905. J. A. Van DIm.
SOLI II BOWNE.
year.
MUs
Retha
left
Monday
1
Grand
Ledge attending the 8. D. A.
Hastings.
F. P. Knapp and Walter Gasplll. A I Mrs. John Mishler. Mrs. Frank
'Die MLucs Lorraine and Loma camp meeting.
feature of great importance is the' Martin and daughter, Mr:.. Kenneth morning for Corunna to assume
Mrs. Fred Warner and daughter.
Bonneville visited relatives in Bal40 or 50 ucres of forest growing into Faulkner of Grand Rapids were her teaching duties.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Plank and
big trees lor boys to roam in 10 or j dinner guesU of Will Mishler Wed20 years from now. these trees are a j nesday and with Mrs. Mishler nl- daughter. Marie, and Cllflord Wal­
llvlng testimony lo Uie vision of L.! tended the shower for Mrs. Helen lers of Ligonier. Ind., spent the
E. Buell.
| Knowles at the home of her par- week end with Mr and Mrs. Edw.
Hayo-Went-Ha camp Ls 170 miles : enU. Mr. and Mrs. John Thaler of Walters. Mr. and Mrs. Plank ex­
pect to move lo Cleveland. Ohio,
north of Grand Rapids, good roads j Carlton Wednesday afternoon,
*
and on one of lhe largest lakes,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Declalre of next week.
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Hammond
beautiful Torch lake.
j South Boston visited Jennie Pardee
Dr. W. Hamilton Aulenbach. ot Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Will Cosgrifl and Natalie of Lansing drove over
Cranbrook church at Bloomfield t of Lowell railed Saturday and Sun­ in their new Ford V-8 to visit his
Hills. wills Dr. W. C. Elelmar of Al- day and attended the home cuming parents. Mr. and Mrs. Claude A.
Hammond and family. Sunday.
bion College. Ray Joints and Cliff nt Ffeeport.
A CHOICE SELECTION OF PICNIC AND HOLIDAY
Mr. and Mra. A. Hobbs of Chica­
Pete Griffin and daughter Marlon
Druary formed Uie camp ConfcrFOODS FOR YOUR LABOR DAY CELEBRATION
and Mrs. Lucy cium were in Ionia go and Mr., and Mrs. Ernest Flflcld
enct Faculty.
of Rutland spent Friday evening
On
business
Saturday.
Paul Conklin. Hastings and Win.
AWAIT YOU AT C. THOMAS STORES
Mzs. John Watts entertained al with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar S. FlCarmichael. Middleville, were cabin
fleld
and
family.
leaders last week al the Hl-Y camp her home with a miscellaneous
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Yciter anil
section c. F- Angell and 10 boys shower In honor of Mrs. Edwin Nash
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Luikens
of
Kalamazoo
from the Barry-Eaton area aUo at­ of Clarksville Wednesday afternoon.
MIm Eleanor Miller spent the past were Sunday guesU of Mr. and Mrs.
tended Uils secllai.
.
E E Horner spent one day* at week with her parents of Carlton. Clair Yeitcr.
MUs Retha Robinson spent from
Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Oyer of
camp lust week visiting the Eaton
Fisher. Illinois, visited Harold Yoder Tiiursday UH Sunday evening with
county boys.
over tlie week end. They returned her |&gt;arenU. Mr. and Mrs. H. J.
SWIFT'S, OLIVE. PIMENTO. AMERICAN
Robinson
and David and Dorothy.
home Monday morning.
WirY BE OUT OF WORK? LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE!
Davy Zook and family ot Clarks- Miss Ruth and Lester Larabee of
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Crookston
POSITIONS ARE WAITING — ALL GRADUATES PLACED
( .1 ville also visited the Harold Yoders Hostings were Sunday guests Ui
of Hustings were Sunday guesU of
lhe
Robinson
home.
■ Sunday.
MODERN UP-TO-DATE SCHOOL
Mrs. Jennis Lyon-s anil Albert.
Mrs. Stoughton, who has been
Mrs. Lizzie Donaldson. who has j
quite Ul with the flu. is convalescing
been the guest o( Geo. Wickwire Uie
T,,E CROSSROADS,
which will be pleasant news to her
past week, left for Battle Cfcck | Clinton Casslday and MLss Mary
friends.
Bunday, where she has employment.I Green were quietly married TuesMr. and Mrs. Harvey Kenney
B|X MONTHS
COMPLETE COURSE
Mr.
anti
Mrs -DeVon
of' day ,evening
Aug.—25
of uuiisiug
Lansing
; —
..............
....... .Putnam
.....................
.. . " ------. ut
.. the . home
— of. '• Marguerite Yeiterl
icner&gt; &lt;n
TO PAY1
Jackson will spend the week, end . the bride
and । drove
rtr0Vp over
over io
to van
vlslt iier
,lpr uurciiu,
narcnU ouiSat.
NOW ----......................
,, . s ’parents in Hastings
.
.
With his parents ut Twin Codurs. '1 hn'n'jiUa
IminccuaU-ly
’ely we!!
went’ !«
lo ho!i«*!
housekeeping
’*ep!!!!'' nr(•jny
ONLY $2 STARTS YOU
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cornell en- I in
the Beckwith hoiuc In the Little I
£ ,"r
A&lt;ieo« of nMinW
.
tertained two of their nephews Brick district.
Qt. J«r
Sunday guest of Miss Margery Fl- !
from Battle Creek over the week
IA.rr.-l WU1IIU of Ibr.Umn &gt;nil rwd.
quit,
end.
Ml . V..4.1 joluwo ..I s..™n»c a„ ,ttock ol w,»ndlcn„
ment will
Geo. Wickwire and H«nry visited sjx-nt tlie week end with Mr. and now to be convalescent.
Qt. JAR
hU sister. Mrs. Clara Ransom, ot ' Mrs. Ernest Williams.
BEND ATTACHED COUPON FOR FREE BOOKLET
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Teller visited '
Good Will lost Saturday.
| Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Ryan and ’ ht'r brother and wife. Mr. end Mrs. j
NAME
The VoslMTg home has been' little daughter of Hustings called : Louis Clark at McCords. Sunday. |
3'Aex.J.r
greatly improved by a complete' on Mrs. Jane Tuttle Sunday after- I School
’y morning
CITY____
Rnhnnl opened'*Monda
Monthly
rnnrnine '।
ADDRESS
covering of fancy asbestos shingles. ‘ noon.
ji wlth
with WIHnr
Willard
ri Kidder na
an teacher.
teacher. !|
Orin Cole and family of near
Orley Smith and family spent lost Seems good to hear school bells I
Ijicey were Sunday guests ot Mr. • week ul&gt; thc JohlMdn cottage al Gun ringing again.
2nd Hoot WM End Bink Bldg.. Phon* #232- BATTLE CREEK. MICH.
and Mrs. Glen Asplnajl.
, hike.
In spite of Its menace to hay
Mrs. carl Bowtnnn will lie the | Little Mh5® Wilma Lou Roush of fever sufferers lhe goldenrod w In-1
hostess of the South Bonfield L. A Gun lake Ls spending some time
B. on Thursday ot this week.
I with Mrs. Ernest William...
Farmers in IhLs vicinity arc nearly r Thh Ryan school started this
all ready to .row wheat. Tlie recent Monday morning with Mr. Laugh­
rains nave been a great help to the baugli ns teacher.
farmers.
*
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Burwell and
Sweet, Tender
Most of thc schools In this vlcln- sons of Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Wagity will ojicn next week with the cr.s .ual Mr. and Mrs. Wiseman and
Early June
following teachers: Bonfield. Elslfc son of Lansing were Sunday guests
NO. 2 CAN—
Conklin; King. Ethel Prentls of | of Kenneth Hurless and family.

Y

CHEESE

STORE CLOSED

CHEESE SPREADS 2 '/4-lb. pkgs 15c
MILD COLBY CHEESE
Ib. 23c

Fancy Sliced Dills Q*-J" I

PICKLES
HI Ilf EC
ULI V CO

La MAR BEAUTY ACADEMY

PEAS

SUPER VALUE SALE

Brunswick
SAFETY

HOT
WATER BOTTLE

Tire Values
ECONOMY
SENTRY 4 FLY

410 x 21
450 x 21)
450 x 21

mum for quailtv’
BBUNHWICK8 a

S4.U
84.55
84.Ml

TIRES
Mounted FREE

With Brunswick
Standard Tir

RADIATOR CAPS
Blu« Centir

27c

UNIVERSAL
All Cars -----

SEAT COVERS

*1.29
*2.69

SB

PLATE.

GENERATORS

FUrahlight
£A&lt;
5 cell .'............... O®»

For, U4 MJ
Cher,—Ex. w

TIMER
Ford T...........t-C

60c Bromo Seltzer

49c

Milk of Magnesia, pt.

29c

60c California Syrup of Figs .40c
Analgesic Balm, large tube _.39c

LB. JAR

25c

NO ADVANCE IN PRICE

COFFEE
Good Coffee Completes the Holiday Dinner

THOMAS SPECIAL
MISSION INN
GOLDEN SUN
Ib.
FAMILY CUP

Ib. 17c
Ib 20c

tin 25c
Ib. 15c

Feenamint Gum, 25c size _^-19c

Coscoro Quinine

$1.00 Pepiodent Antiseptic .79c

Bxch.

35c Grove's Bromo Quinine . -24c

’2.39

25c Lyon's Tooth Powder

.18c

Imported Olive Oil, pt.......... 59c

’4.95

75c Fitch's Shampoo

SINGLE
8 4 JQ
TELESCOPE— I &gt;‘♦3

49c

RUBBER

Bayer's Aspirin, bot. of 100 _59c

BABY PANTS

60c Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin .41c

7c

CAMP COT

■&gt;

ItTiljlP
LARGEST ACCESSORIES STOCK IN BARRY COUNTY
WE ARE NEVER UNDERSOLD

15c

POTATOE
U. S. No. I
15 LB. PECK

41

CORNED BEEF£-££rc-17i
MUSTARD ™
UBRY'S POTTED MEAT 2 ci 1

Chocolate Malted Milk, 2 lbs. 59c
40c Fletcher's Costorio

24c

50c Ipano Tooth Paste

31c

3 pkgs 17c

PICNIC SUPPLIE
PICNIC PLATES, 9 inch** in diam«t«r
DIXIE CUPS, Hot or Cold Liquids

SURE SET 2 pkgs. 9c

GELATINS DEBBEKT

9 &amp; ITa/green System Drug Store
HASTINGS. MICH, t i : PHONE 2241

dox. 1O«

WAX PAPER, 75 foot Roll Cuttsr Box
15 for 10«

NAPKINS

DRINKING STRAWS

Junket Mix pkg. 10c
18c
PINEAPPLE, sliced
SANDWICH SPREAD qt 27c
SALAD DRESSING
qt 23c

CAKE FLOUR Jig;
SNOWDRIFT
3
MARSHMALLOWS

CORN FLAKES w XT lie
POST'S BRAN FLAKES ST 15c

WHITE SHINO
NO-RUB Shoa

CAMP JUG
GALLON
OA
SIZE........ ........... O“t

I
1 “

50c Vick's Nose Drops____ 37c

CAMP STOOL ..l»c

MUFFLER
Ford A ....

f

SUGAR WAFERS —* - -

HILL'S

HEAD LIGHT
IjULBH .............

Guaranteed

RASPBERRY DELIGHT
a dfe J
COCOANUT CROWNS Lb. | "JU

Citro Carbonate, 4 oz._____ 67c

TAIL LIGHT
Q
BULBS .......... O

BIKE
"J Ac
TIRES.......... I*&gt;

1ST PRIZE

FANCY COOKIES

2

SATURDAY!

Aspirin Tablets, bot. of 100__29c

QFc

INVADER BATTERIES

SAVE UP TO «»r-Washable
fabrics.
COUPES

10c

- 15

AND

SPECIALS

WATER PUMP
COMPLETE
Model A FORD

35

SOCIETY SANDWICH
EDGEWATER SANDWICH

47c

Tail Licht L.m

FANCY QUEENS
FANCY STUFFED

PEANUT BUTTER

Here Are Just a few of Our

79C

25

THURSDAY, FRIDAY

Guaranteed

$1.00
DRENE SHAMPOO

Sweet and Mixed

TUNA FISH e

HERB'S DRUG STORE

MARK’S WEEK SPECIALS

LABOR DAY

MONDAY, SEPT

C. THOMAS S
111 WIST STATE STFtIT

�XGOROUL
Lake. the old Man ot the

H- Earlier in the day we had seen
acme wayride places named Streeter
Cabins. To me that sounded like
Ttoe cabin was a double one light­
ed by dactricity and with running
waler. The setting was picturesque,
at lhe foot of Mt. Lafayette, and
across lhe road was a small rippling

toy our going to Iron Mine tavern in
FYsnconla, a hotel that U kept open

tourists and in winter for those
coming by train-loads from the eli­
te* to enjoy Uie winter sports—
skiing, toboganning. etc. We so en­
joyed our dinner that we returned
for breakfast then on to thc Willey
House near Ml- Washington, lhe
highest peak in New Hampshire,
over 6000 feet. Thc fog had settled
on lhe mountain tops making a
lovely sight as Uie sun peeped
through no* and then and the wind
blew thc fog clouds hither and
thither. Willey House was an inter­
esting place, lhe outgrowth of a
former Willey home which was de­
stroyed years ago by a sudden
. Again we left Uic mountains, en­
route to Portland. Me.. slopping at
Bridgton. Me . where we had lunch
at “The TeakctUe " About four
o'clock we reached Portland and dc-

f ul on the winding roads to the Mrs. Hayford were the instructors.
mountains. All of Uie highway* were
About the time Mr. Meoamer and tel Holbrook, who was associated
with Scribners' Publishing Go. And
either black top or cement so wc
Mr. Marsh were pastor* at the Pres­
driving on gravv! until my return byterian church, the organ was of "LRtie women* arrived, it was
from Muskegon when we came to to played by "Ell*** Holbrook. Uie choir
After returning home. Graham
Middleville from Grand Rapids. It made up of Mrs. Westfall. Julia and
was a delightful vacation and made Hattie Holbrook. Mr. Hariow. Philo Townsend married Fannie Griswold
(OonUnued from page 1. Sec. si
us ail want to do it all over again, Dunning, and pews were occupied ot Vermontville, living to Kalamaby
many
old
setUera
—
the
Hayes.
even more leisurely, as there were
numerous place* we wanted to stay Nevins. Roberta. Kenflelda. Hotch­ the editor* of the "Kalamasoo Tele­ United Btotes Office of Education";
and
"Basic Principle* underlying
kiss. Van Brunts. Holbrooks and graph." later going to Washington.
others. There were Uie usual social D. C-. being employed there tn the lhe Activity Curriculum." and Dr
—Mabel Bisson.
events of lhe church—not forget­ pension department.
Their son. Walter F. Dearborn, director ot the
Physco-EducaUonal Clinic. Harvard
ting donations for the minister held Ciiarlr*. lives to lhe veal.
University. “Training teacher* lo
at lhe parionage. a younger daugh­
ter. Anna Lee Holbrook, after school brook was a lawyer in Hastings, be­ Teach lhe Whole Child."
Tlie executive tcaclwra' committee
days, lived to Muskegon, later ing with Harvey Wright; bul not
for the encampment consists of
marrying Rev. Robert a Carnahan
whose first jiastorate was to Has­ was to the R. R. business, living in Mias Mary Roush of Delton. Mrs.
tings. They are remembered by Rochester. N. Y.. later being with Velma Wolf ot Cloverdale and Miss
many at the present Umc.
the Rock Island road to Chicago, Marie Rowe of Hastings
(Continued from page I. Sec. 1&gt;
The teacher* of Allegan. Hills­
Mrs. Holbrook’s sisters, with their and then going to California a* gen­
dale. Branch and Van Buren coun­
families, would come to visit oc­
from Auburn. N- Y-. with her broUi- casionally. Julia and daughter. Glu­ eral superintendent on the Pacific ties will also meet at various inter­
roast for lhe Northwestern R. R.
er. Hiram Johnson Ken field. The ts Krum Clark, from Kalamazoo. living in san Francisco and Oak­ vals either at lhe Pine lake or Clear
marriage was at William Lee Ken- Jennie from Prairieville, with the land prank D. Hamilton, a brother­ lake camp* rhe Kellogg Foundation
has units in these countie* and
field's. her father's home, known to children. Kittle Bowne Olney, and in-law. was associated *|£h him in sponsors the encampments.
Charlie and Will. Ellen Tuttle and
the old settlers as the "red house" sons. Frank and Charlie, from Chl- thc freight department-lie and his
family living in Ban Francisco.
to Rutland township. Just west of cago. and Lida Holbrook with Jen­
Frank Holbrook kept books fur NAZARENE8 EIXCT
what Ls now known as Lake Al-Gon- nie and Will. Then there were the lhe R. R. in Grand Rapid*, later
CHURCH OFFICERS.
Quin. The young man went for his near neighbors 'to help make a being sent to Muskegon, and for
The following officers have been
best girl in a stage coach, accom­ pleasant life—Ute Barlows. Good­ years had ciiarxc of lhe docks, being elected by the church of the Nazpanied by lhe minister. Zera L years. Dr. Upjohn and family. At- .ixwcisted
with
Ute
Goodrich arene: Bible School Supl, Mrs. Nel­
Hoyt, and Dr. John Roberts as best■ kins. Barnes. Parkers, Grandma Transportation Oo. of Chicago. After lie Leaver; Treas. Mrs Ada Heffleman. The
happy
couple
to1 Youngs and Captain Geer's family, lhe lumbering days, he and a bower;
----------- —
r... —
r-- went
- Secy..
Clayton
Joppic;
housekeeping to what is now known Tlie lea parlies loo. must not be bruther-to-law. W. R. McLaughlin, church Treas.
Charles Leaver;
as the McCoy home, then consisting forgotten- when it was a treat to with other pioneer*, got manufac­ Trustees. Floyd Hefflebowcr and
of tha upright set on post;, and a have the gold band china brought turing plants to locate there, and Stanley Minert; W. M- 8 Pres.. Mrs.
out. The sleigh rides too—going to established 'The Heights'* helping
lota Just east were purchased, a Uncle John Holbrook's, who had a to make Muskegon the city It is to­ Alice Bawdy.
home built on thc corner, thc other Urge daisy' farm in Woodland,
The Rev. Martin Jopple has been
day.
Jot used as a garden. This for years where they made Uie fine cheese—
There were the coming of daugh­ returned to the Nazarene church for
was thc happy home of a large thc same as In their old home al ters-in-law. marriages of lhe daugh­ Uic coining year.
family—nine children, seven grow­ Gouvcrneur.
ter*. and fiytog to new nests, bul
ing up. two dying to infancy. It was
About this time. Chhrles G. Hol­ often fiytog back to see mother,
PODUNK.
also lhe home of a much loved brook. another lawyer, arrived, bel­ their old friends and home. These
Mrs. Anna Laubaugh entertained
nephew, Graham Townsend. Uic ter remembered by a later genera­
people have all passed on.
The several of her relatives at a family
brave little lad "Teddic" who came tion.
dinner
Sunday.
urandchildren living are Louise Hol­
alone with his dog. through thc
In thc spring when thc silting brook of Chicago, and Edward F.
Visitors at George Ransom's 8atwilderness .from DeWitt. Clinton room carpel was up for houseclean­
McLaughlin and wife. Ester, of tirdsy .were Mr. and Mrs. Don Put­
county, to live with them. Names of ing. Uie young people had parties, Muskegon, and Eva. a foster daugh­ nam and Geo. Wickwire and son
the children were: Edward Austin and when an Italian, little -'Camille" ter of Prank H. Holbrook. Mrs. Geo Henry, of Banfield.
Holbrook. Frank Henry Holbrook. as they called him. a street musician Rodgers of Muskegon. Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B Gardner en­
Mary Ellen Holbrook Hamilton. with a harp was to town, Uie boys
Isaac A Holbrook died to 1875. 58 tertained lost week her brother and
Julia Rebecca Holbrook McLaughlin. would bring him home lo help fur­
years old. Mrs. Holbrook died in wife. Mr. and Mf». Edd. Hewett of
Harriet Louisa Holbrook Cole. Anna nish music tor lhe dancing. The 1911. *4 year* old. Sonic years later Detroit. Leroy Gardner of Kala­
Lee Holbrook Carnahan. Agnes parents enjoyed thLs too. Then- were lite homestead was sold to tlie mazoo. Mrs. Marie Sutton Marty
Cleveland Holbrook Sage. Isaac Ar­ also many musical evenings when
Michigan Mutual Windstorm Insur­ of Reed City and two cousins from
thur Holbrook and William Henry___
r_____
r_of____
i young
people
thc______
town_______
would ance Co.. Hastings, and a beautiful Jonesville.
Holbrook.
| drop in and sing and play. Julia building erected in Ils place.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Laubaugh have
These children received their edu-1 singing the "Brook." and Frank
In Mrs. Holbrook's later life it was moved from the Skidmore house to
cation In the old schoolhouse on thc | wlth his guitar. This al) went to interesting to hear her relate to her their farm home.
hill, later the older ones going to I make a happy home, tn the days
Gladys Laubaugh has returned to
grandchildren and their friends—
college—Ann Arbor, Olivet, and ' without moving pictures, radios and
the youngster* in lhe neighborhood Battle Creek after .-.pending the
paynesdale. Ohio.
। automobiles.
—her experiences with the Indians, week end with her motlier.
Thc family took part anti were
t)1C interesting pioneer meetings
Mrs. Jennie Loehr has returned
and names they gave the old set­
interested in the affairs of thc vll- were attended at Union hsdl. and tlers. As Mr. Henry Goodyear had to Jackson after spending some
lage. and had decided musical tai- tIlc fair - first ones being held to black hair and "yes. they called him j time at her home here.
away from a main highway where ent Mr. and Mrs. Holbrook, when . tfir old Court house square- later, ■Chimneytoe."
meaning.
"black
there is little noise and less traffic. east, ordered an instrument made ■ on Uic grounds where everyone, and bear." and Hiram Kenfield being on
WEEKS CORNERS,
Travelling, as wc did. Is a real like a friend's, n piano. It must be j every thing in the house, seemingly, the sandy order.
"WapaMeesic." j, On account of the Barry county
pleasure with no danger involved, remembered piano* were scarce ar- ' WCnt. Uml the ladles might serve which to them was -Red Pox."—-The
T*-'■*"
’*"
**"
"* week
" in ScptRlr *being
the second
and we would say that it wa* an tides those days. It was thc first ] meals—proceeds for the church. So white man. ''Cltamocaman.'' t...u
-nrt ternber thc Cedar Creek Cemetery
_
—* will.
. .
Ideal way to spend a vacation. We one in Hostings, coming by frciglit )n these early times Uiere was quite whiskey was "Bklttlevabo." flour
Circle ..Ul
will ...a.
meet
with lit.
Mrs
Ada
travelled 3.278 miles with no car as far as Battle Cryck and. as Uiere „ bit to enjoy.
Ashby the third Wednesday in Sept
"nappance"
and
they
would
walk
trouble except the starter locking was no railroad here, was brought | when the call for more troops to right In. as their custom was. and for an afternoon meeting.
the Union came to 1864. it
twice but we were not delayed by thc rest of the .wajt by an ox-team, i
Mr.
and
Mrs
Fred
Ritchie
of
demand a panful. Then thc story of
these two mishaps, several limes we over
----- .a bad road.—' The piano Ls , lhrrw B 5ha(j0w on Ute family, same
hearing the panther scream down Kalamasoo were Bunday dinner
passed cars that
..— were
- ---------overturned
-------------- square. made of rosewood, with iVl on many. They had to let go two the river, when she and her sisters, guesU of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Dlrkcrand saw where some had burned carvings, has a Swlsswood sounding nephews. Grahum Townsend and
with Oran Ingram driving, were son and Jean. Mr and Mrs W W.
and were
burning
and saw -------------one near!
----------------------------------------.
.-----------------"'board
and mother---of pearl
keys^It william Kenfield.
coining from the "Red House" to a Buckland and daughter of Litch­
.... _a pretty
—“
■instrument.
• • This • Heading matter was not ao plenti­
accident, but never were wc to any .is still
field were Sunday afternoon callers
danger. We did not drive fast and , piano was a delight to thc children !,ful
UI in liiese
uirat. days,
UB,». so it
n was
WB&gt; a
B great
#irBk party in town. They were rlcUug al the Dickerson home.
'
after an ox-team, and as on£ would
Miss DeYoe was exceptionally care-1 and their friend.* Ellen Hawley and pleasure when a package would arMiss Irene Springer ot Hastings
imagine, stayed in town nt brother
Hiram's all nlghb—his home then visited at Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Dick­
erson's
lite
past
week.
located on the present site of Harry
Mr and Mrs. Wallace Pre ,ton and
WalldortT's home And so. I might
I keep on and on. In returning from children spent last week al Barlow
these days of old. the writer realizes lake.
more fully than ever, we are living
QUIMBY.
in a changing world, but let us al)
Aug. 27 Letter.
learn to say as st- Paul the Apostle
Miss Donna McKoeln attended
did. "In whatsoever state I am.
lhe M. P. camp meeting at Gull
therewith to be content."
lake the past week.
In memory of my family, the
Tlie Birthday Aid and election of
Holbrooks, to Hastings and Barry
officers will be held at the church
county, in this the centennial year.
Wednesday. September 2.
1836 A. D.. I send greetings.
Mr. and Mrs Fay Hummel arc
Sincerely.
moving to Hastings. Wc are sorry
Mrs. Frank Marvin Sage.
to lose them from the neighbor­
hood.
EXTENSION GROUP MEETS.
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Croford of
The prairie Extension group held Orangcvville visited their mother,
its first meeting of the year 1936 who has been ill at Uie Iwmc ot
Frank
Bloom.
and 1937 with Mrs Minnie Johnson
in Middleville, Refreshments were
at Reed's Oil Station Thursday
served by Mrs, Johnson and Mr*. evening, Aug. 27.
Lottie Cridler. After a social hour a
business meeting was called with
BARBERS CORNERS.
Large Size Pkg.
Mra. Johnson acting as chairman. Aug. 27 Letter.
Mrs Blanch Cridler was elected rec­
A happy home coming was iield
reation
leader.
Mrs.
Mercedes at the R V. Wilson's home Sun­
b
c
French, chairman and Mrs. Florence day. August 23. in honor of Truman
Kaechele, secretary.
Wilson's birthday, their son front
The object of this meeting was to Marian. N. Y. The children, grand­
complete last year's work, plan our children and great-grandchildren,
fair exhibit and to discuss work for about 50 tn number, met for a pot
the coming year.
luck dinner after which ice cream
Recognition was made of Mrs. B and cake were served. Relatives
Cridler and Mrs. M. French for came from Hattie Creek. Kalamatheir interest In completion of last aoo, Jackson. Lansing and Lake
year's project.
An invitation was received and
Truman Wilson and daughter.
accepted to meet with Mra. Lottie Eva. from Marion. N. Y.. are
Cridler this week Wed. P. M — Flor­ spending a week to Michigan visit­
ence Kaechele.
ing relatives and friends.

ward, our route taking u* to PitUelded to go on lo Yarmouth. This
was on Saturday. July 11. ao we Lexington we encountered our first fieid, Maae, Albany. N. T, and on
to flkaneatela*. N. Y.. where we had
wanted to get to a quiet place for
Bunday. A sign on the main road hour*. but lhe night at Rose Tuck- dinner that night at Kreb*. a grand
place to eat and one well patronized
by summer residanU al Bkaneatelas
about a mlje distant and away from
lake and vicinity. Thi* day's drive
the noUc and traffic This appealed
brought us into lhe well known Fin­
ous famous places and monuments
ger Lake region in New York state,
found a large farm house on a point at Lexington we went on to Con­ our destination proving to be Auof land which extended out into cord for lunch, the Wayside Inn al
Casco Bay. Qn either side Of the Sudbury, then on to Cambridge and a tourist home, leaving about eight­
point of land was a river emptying Boston. Here our party divided. thirty in the morning for Watkins
into the Bay at lhe fool of the Mias DeYoe and Miss Raue going Glen. N. Y, and on to Salamanca,
point. Another rainy evening and so on lo Plymouth and Miss Marshall N. Y-. where wc spent the night at
cool that a fire was blazing in the and I staying ui Boston till Friday. thc Hotel Dudley. We asked for a
fireplace as w* went in to dinner. The Statler was our home during quiet room, but found to our dismay
Tlie owners. Mr. and Mrs. O- H. our Boston visit where we took the that lhe railroad yards were too
Blake, were kindly, hospitable peo­ usual sight seeing trips, visited lhe near at hand to enable the ocher
ple who made us feel welcome and library, the stores. ew.. and left by three of lhe party to sleep very
who did all they could to make our train Friday morning to meet the much. According to Ute stories told
stay pleasant—one touch of real others at Plymouth. While there lhe next day. all of lhe trains to
Miss DeYoe and Miss Raue took a
Yarmouth hospitality.
long drive on Cape cod. which the western New York met. passed and
some even stayed tn Salamanca all
boro. Me- was our Sunday night
night one lesson learned from this
outh
was delightful, lhe meals at
destination—a small cottage at the
experience was the various kinds of
rear ot a large colonial home where the Polly Darling lea room were de­ noises, hisses, puffs, snorts and rat­
forty tourists could be accommo­ licious, and the charming gift tles a switching train can make.
dated wlUi lodging. As we had this shop* in Plymouth afforded a Late that afternoon we drove
two room cottage to ourselves we chance to spend considerable money through Cleveland and on to Fre­
had a good night's rest and were before we departed for Providence. mont, Ohio, for the night al a fine
ready for our Journey on Monday R. I. on through Providence in a tourist home along the main high­
which took us to Amesbury. Haver­ heavy traffic Jam. into Connecticut way. Here the toterurbans clanged
its long
hills ___
and ____
beautiful
hill and on to Gloucester. Mass.with
_________
________
and banged all night and traffic was
That night our rooming place was a scenery to Brooklyn, conn, where
heavy. But—I slept through it all.
lovely home on Uie outskirts of we stayed al "The Old Homestead'
Wednesday night. July 23. found
Gloucester at Gardner Coleman's, which was all its name implira— an three of us in Muskegon, having left
Mr. and Mrs. Coleman were delight- old colonial home given over to
MU* Marshall at her home to Bat­
ful people to meet and showed us tourists. Our route the next day
tle Creek.
every i&gt;ossible courtesy. As for an took us to Hartford and bn to
Did you ask about tourist places?
eating place in Gloucester we can Manchester. Conn, then to AmAs we said at thc beginning—they
recommend "The White Gull.", herst, Maas, where we were guests are of all kinds—good, bad and in­
where one can gel al) kinds of shore • of Mr. and Mrs Curry Hicks, friends different. But at every place we
dinners, well cooked and splendidly of Miss DeYoe and Miss Raue. from
went or stayed, we were greeted
served.
Saturday till Monday. On Sunday
Tuesday. July 14. to me was one ’ we enjoyed a day Uirough lhe Berk- cordially, shown every courtesy and
hospitality and the people were
of the "red-letter" days of our whole shires and visiting many other in­
kindly and friendly. The rates var­
trip—th* day spent at Gloucester. | leresUng spots. All enjoyed a plenlc
ied from M cents to 1125 per person,
the quaint old Ashing town. This dinner on a high mountain away
which did not seem exorbitant. At
place of itself merits a whole ar-] from traffic and sightseers
tide, co will say no more about it j Monday found us headed home- all lhe tourist home* there were
modern conveniences which we ap­
preciated after a day ot riding and
sight-seeing. Moat of thc beds were
excellent, thc homes were clean and
well cared for. and. al) to all. we
were very fortunate in our choices
of lodgings as far as cleanliness and
comfort were concerned. Still we
did not find our ideal cabin on lhe
lakeside— one thoroughly modem,
clean, large, roomy and cool—we ll
save that for our next trip. It you
want a few hints about keeping
tourists' hotrte*. let us give you some
—have plenty of hot water, towels,
and soap; have a wastebasket in lhe
room; have plenty ot coat hangers;
give your guests good cold drinking

FAIR VISITORS! SHOP AT THE

NEW WARDS!
DURING THE BARRY COUNTY FAIR, SEPT 8 to 12

HEDK ED PHUE!

Big Capacitff, Hearg Weight, at Warth
Coal and Wood

Circulating Heater

44»s
it in y°ur horn*

$5 DOWN

• HEATS 2 TO 3 ROOMS

• ALL SOLID CAST IRON
• BEAUTIFULMN DISION
Specially reduced for this sale! Com­
pare its size, weight and features with

healers priced $20 to $35 higher. The
rugged cast iron heating unit holds
heat, saves fuel.
tight; no leaks.

All joints are air
Th* large cabinet,!

with cast iron top, front and base, per-'
mit more air to be heated! Beautifully .

grained walnut porcelain enamel fin-'

ish, with ebony porcelain trim.

Sec Thi*

Heater in Wards Display at th* Fair

THIS WEEK ON IT !^»

. j

. „ ,1

TE lERS'MEET
IT MB LIKE

HUNK FAMILY
E1H RESIDENTS

Mother is Reading About

FELDPAUSCH MARKET
PRE-FAIR AND CENTENNIAL

Thursday, Friday and Saturday

LUX TOILET SOAP

3

bars

17c

Oxydol

P &amp; G Soap

lb. jar

Get our price by
the bushel

29c

HEAD LETTUCE

SALE OF SKATES .
Extra Hearn

Firm
Crisp
Heads

Choice VEAL ROASTS

Usually 81.65 al Wards! Have Dread­
naught steel wheels. Pair—

22c

SALE! MOTOR OIL

M DOWN.

200 extra lb*,

of cast iron strength', yet

beautifully rounded and
'modern. Hot blast top

saves fuel!

32-qt. reser­

lOc

LAR(pE
OF
SIZE, DOZ. WWC

Beef Kettle Roast

it.

15c

Rib Boiling Beef
Picnics

COMB. PLIERS

ib.

12c

23c

Smoked, Shankless

Ib.

Usually 10c at Wards Cadmium plated
forged steel. Pair only—

Shultz or
Freeport

BUTTER

voir, huge 20' oven. Full

Porcelain finish. Choice

of

two

color

combina­

tion*: green and ivory, or
smHan and ivory.

Three Deliveries Daily—8, 10 A. M., and 3 P. M.

AUTO TIRE PUMP

CLOSED ALL DAY LABOR DAY

ELDPAUSCH

Regularly |!M.
"Snap-on'
tton. Buy. quick • pumping.

ntgomery Ward
tttl

118-122 SOUTH JEFFERSON STREET

HASTINGS, MICH.

•MARKET­

Phone 2/72 UJe Deliver

NEW ARRIVALS
IN DRESSES
SILK DRESSES—
$2.98, $3.98, $4.98, $6,75

YOUNG, TENDER IEEF

Usually 11.10. Smart brown enamel
ware, dent, chip resisting —

Fairchild’s

ORANGES

Regularly 15c quart, in your contain­
er. Plus 1c Ped. Tax, qt.

5-QT. TEAKETTLE

6 .:.‘23

Peaches!

CREAM NUT

PEANUT BUTTER

2

21c

37!

COTTON DRESSES—
$1.00, $1.98, $2.98
HATS—
$1.00, $1.98, $2.25, $2.75

KNIT DRESSES—
$3.98, $5.95, $9.75
CHILDREN'S DRESSES—
69c aad $1.00

BLOUSES $|.00 aed $1.98
COME AND LOOK OUR LINE OVER
PHONE 2521
144 1. State St.

Hosting*

�HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 1. ISM

Lau’oaugh and son and W. H. Otte
were In Lansing last Thursday at­
Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Wellman were tending the OHs reunion.
Mrs. Bert Newland and daughter
in Olivet Monday.
accompanied Mrs. Chas. Robertson
Mr. and Mra. John Will made a and son ot Middleville to Lansing
trip to their former home near Saturday.
Traverse city during thc past week. ।i Sunday
y callers at the Dan DougSeveral from this locality have Jaw. home Included.*Mr^ond Mra.
visited Payne's peach orchard near Roy Douglass and Mr. and Mra.
Cloverdale the past week.
McCann of Hastings. Mr. and Mrs.
Mra. R. G. Keys of Jackson has Alton Bishop of Hinds Corners and
been spending the week with her Mcsdamea Robert Lord, Rutland,
parents. Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Well- ou,y Douglas*. Bowens Mills. Leinman.
. ueff Oaks. Middleville, and Frelda
Mr. and Mrs. Bert VandcrJugt Lord and niece of Battle Creek,
Mr. and Mrs Harry Nagels and entertained friend* from near Lo- j The Lord reunion wa* held SunMrs. Geo. Rockwell spent Bunday wel) Sunday.
’ day Bt the home or Mr. and Mrs.
evening at Jack Snyder's near Has­
Mrs. John Ruling ha* relumed Roy Oaks. Twenty-nine guest* were
tings.
from a visit with relatives In Ohio. ! present, coming from Battle Crock,
Last Thursday evening the home and now brother Sam ha* gone for Middleville. Bowens Mills. Hastings.
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Van Luke of a visit at the same place.
Orangeville and Central Hutland.
The Free Methodist church peo­
ant occasion, in the form of a fare­ ple gave a farewell party for thetr
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
well party lo Mr. and Mrs. J. D. pastor. Rev. Bird at lhe home nf Mr.
Mrs. Allcen Ritxman and Mrs.
McMartln and two children ot and Mrs. Royal Barnum Friday Edit!) Cramer attended a party at
Glenn. Cal., also to honor the birth­ evening.
lhe home of Mrs. Alice Miller of
days of Mr. McMartln and Mra. 8.
Wedding bells, cow bells, dinner Hastings Thursday In honor of
A. Galnder.
Games and visiting horns, shot guns and anything else Mra. Ida Williams of Tamarac.
the corner of Jefferson and Court as a second hand car display fol. made lhe evening pare pleasantly. that would make a noise was Used
Mrs. Manley Sherman. Miss Edna
The
guests
included
the
parents
of
al
the home of Jim Varney one Etlenbaas of Hastings and Mrs.
street*. He then erected a fully wash room, paint shop and general
Mr. McMartln and Ute families of night last week. The cause of it
equipped Super-Service station and storage.
Allen Cross of Grand Rapids were
thc brothers and sisters of both. Mr. all was the marriage of thrlr son
moved his business lo this new loca­
Thursday afternoon guests of Mrs.
tion In February of Ural year, and FOBttESTJOHNSON—COAL AND end Mrs. McMartln from Plainwell. Merle to Miss Peggy Staffer of Mary Cramer.
AUTOMOBILE DEALER. Otsego, Jackson. Delton and Hlck- Lake Odessa. Friday evening n mlshas continued there until lhe pres­
Sunday guesU of Ethel Eaton
ory. The McMarUn's left Saturday ceffaneous shower was given at tlie
ent Ume.
Mr. U.
Johnson first started
in buslI,™
m. &lt;KtuXl
lh'lr l»™
Mcp'«' in llwlr honor. .bout 7S were her sister. Mrs. B Bidlccomb.
Mr. Ahdru* render* a speclajlxcd
and family of Kalamazoo.
service which Include* tire*, gasoline,
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
!"d,
“ * W‘ ,or U” l“&gt;W
c““,lr As*
oil. lubrication service, washing, «, Nonb. uihiin SSln, ™.i
Randall has been very sick.
brother of Mrs. Alfred Galnder.
Refreshments of Ice cream and cake
Refreshmenls
electrical service, batteries and ac- exclusively. tn
In inn
1933 be tirHtW
decided tn
lo bother
Frank Roush and children of Milo
were served and a Jolly time was spent Sunday with George Roush
expand hU business to Include au­
MILO.
enjoyed by all
tomobiles. Securing Ute agency for
and family.
Mrs. Nina Boyle is having the
Mr. and Mrs. b J Wellman were
CLYDE WILCOX. FLORIST.
the Dodge and Plymouth cars he
at Clear lake Sunday attending a
house on her farm painted.
IRVING.
In 1909 Clyde Wilcox and William moved tn Uic building now occupied
Mrs. Osborne is staying at the
..._ family reunion with friends from
Chase purchased a plot ot ground on on East Stale street. Since that lime
Junior Wndcll is visiting his
home of her daughter. Mrs. Jansen, Ionia. Lansing and Hastings being 1
he
has
also
secured
the
Packard
and
East High street and erected a,
grandparent* near Lowell until
present.
Richland,
supervising
thc
building
greenhouse, starting this venture OliUmobllc agencies, which give thc
.school begins.
,
prospective Buyer a gooa selection . °f *,er ,lc»' house on thc Jansen lot.
with thc intention of growing vege­ prospective buyer a good selection .
Dr. D. I. Butler from Detroit and
Prof, and Mrs C. M. Jansky of
tables, producing them In a green­ from which to choose. Assisting Mrw
his son. Walter, from Ann Arbor,
Johnson are George Cheney. Robert Madison. Wto, alayed over night
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Havens and were In Irving Thursday.
house to force them to grow faster
Don Mosher. Dwight Fisher. Fr“lay with thc tatters sister. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Fred OUs of Olasa
and at all seasons.
They soon Andar*.
Mr. and Mra. John Ten Harkel
.
-. —
.. .....
..
IT
I Vtrkurwr
H. J.
Flower. Qali.eMnw
Saturday n.nra.lww
morning Creek attended the Not ten family
from Grand Rapids and their son
changed their minds about thc Dan McDonald and Al Dyer.
they left for a cabin near Kalkaska reunion at Jntk-son on Saturday.
vegetables, however, as the demand
and wife from Michigan City were
to spend three weeks, where Mrs. • Miss Verna) Bagley and girl
BRANCH
DISTRICT.
recent
visitors of Mrs. Perry, who is
seemed to be for flowers, so to meet
hopes
lo .......................
obtain relief from
Mra.
mra. n.cii.11
Keith nuiwii
Norton uiu
and aaiuuni
Barbara -Jansky
----- - -. , friend of Kaloinazoo were guests a Improved in health.
this demand they devoted more and
are visiting relative! in Battle Creek hay fever. Mrs Flower accompanied few day* last'week ot the former's
Mr. and Mra. A. G. Hathhaway
more of Uie greenhouse to cultivat­
for a few day*.
Ithem ,or a
grandparent*. Mr. and Mrs. Fran­ have returned from a visit at Lodi.
ing them until Uie entire space was
Hastings High school
student*' j0'”L Bradfield went to South cis Gorham.
Ohio.
used.
from this district are Dorr Darby 1 Bend Tuesday returning homo SunMr. and Mrs. Harry Clem were
In 1938 Mr. Wilcox purchased the
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bevcrwyk and
called to Detroit Friday by thc family of Hastings attended church
Interest ot Mr. chase and continued George Skidmore. Lynn Marshall 1 day.
“d Mra
WoolMen spent death of Mrs. Clem's sister.
. nere aul
,u.. before starting on .a
Sunday
lo operate alone. The business con­ and Paul Rhoades It is expected a
the Martin bus wiU be the means Sunday in Hastings the guest* of
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Hoard of trip to New York.
tinued to grow until today he fur­
of transportation.
, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Marble.
Flint were callers Sunday at the
The Sowerby family attended a
nishes flowers to customers tn all
Tlie Branch school began Mon- 1 Mr. and Mrs. Merle Bradfield went home of the former's sister. Mra. I family reunion at Townsend Park
parts of the county. Mr. Wilcox Is
day with Mis* Edna Flory as teach- . °ri4;ri
UBt Friday, who has Oeo. Havens. Dean Hull and Mur- north ot Lowell Sunday.
recognized as one of the leading
er for the fourth year.
I
»«ks at Kellogg shall Winans' of Irving also railed, i Henry Nagel of Byron Center Ls
I
„&gt;*•»• Saturday
through experiment*, found a sue- .. Mr.
Mr. and
and Mra.
Mrs. Ridgeway
Ridgeway of
of Ohio
Ohto.™P««“ura*r Jack
Jia
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilcox and | visiting his brother. James Nagel,
...
....
.
...
WATlt
Izi
Wall
1alrr&gt;
■ rs—
na few
Eaw
ccMful way to grow flower* out of vtalted their daughter. Mrs. E. P
“&gt;
^e tn
to spend
son Robert attended a party Thurs- | Lawrence Burchett from Richday evening nt lhe home of thr )an&lt;| Ls working here on lhe M. C.
season For instance, chrysanlhe- I
&lt;nd Rev. Rhoades a few ,
mums formerly only obtainable in days last week.
| “^ a"“^-H"“m»oi&gt;ey vBlt- formers daughter, Mrs. Lester Lord. r. r. section and is staying with his
the tatter part of October, can now ! The recent rains have been a ed the formers mother al HasUngs near Orangeville. The event was In grandmother. Mrs. Benham.
be had the last part of August This wonderful help to farmer, who are Bunoay.
nratln.id
honor of the birthdays of Robert I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bessmer and
is only one of lhe variety of flowers . b1^ preparing their wheat ground.
«rMsrte Bradfteld vto- Wilcox and Wlnllrhi Lord.
Mrs. Caroline Schenkel of Owosso
«&gt;..
obtalnablr out of reason. He
Norton school reunion wfll
“A.
Mr. and. Ml,.'Mrs. Howard UU.UIGUI,
Johnson ul
of V(.re wcek cn(j gUeSLj ot william
HC is
IS con- 1' . ™e
*
WM, be;
, -' - - -- - . *«...............
with the
Saturday. Sept. 5. al thc school George cook at Galesburg Sunday. Hickory Comers called at the home Schenkers.
stonily experimenting
w,„,
.------grounds. Bring own table service ' Mr- su‘&lt;1 Mrs. Wavne Flower and . Of her |&gt;arents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. I
There was no Fellowship meeting
growing of flower* and florist* from 81
__
, for pot luck dinner.
i Homer. Jr., arc slaying al the Flow- Ravens. Sunday evening.
on Use regular night, lhe last Fri­
other state* coine here to study his
nro'vcn’ —
so 1'
Mr- •U1‘* Mra- Jo,in Darby, Rich- er J"nn, *lth Bernice while their . Melvin Oaks and /enneth Dunn day In the month, due lo the Sun­
methods, which have ---------I ard and Dorr attended thc family । mother Is tn northern Michigan.
attended thc party a\ Lester Lord's day School picnic at Green Lake
successful.
;
------------------- ------------ — -------- * ।
'
SuLud.y.
| Loul* Dunn of Galesburg spent ■ u.,t Thursday cvehmd and report a which was combined with FellowThc greenhouse office is equipped reunion Saturday,
Mr. nnd
and Mrs
Mrs. 1Marsh
. Bunday at thc Flower home.
nne time.
with a cooling system that enables
Mr
------ — Caltiirop
———
ship meeting. It was a much en----- . f
..r8- Ar,Us *«»
-----d---Marv
--------“i* "*
1 Billie Newland left Tuesday for I Joyed function of lhe two organfzahim to carry a full line of cut flow- »'».j
d ‘laU8hl
_
_
w
____
..
~
j Lanslne where he has employment I lions.
era at all time*.
i oI Prairieville were Sunday guest*
. of
rtf Mr.
XI r and
anH Mrs.
Xfr. Henryr Tltrlnlmim
BidoUnan.' School began Monday with Paul I and will attend M. 8. C. thc coining
J______
UNIVERSAL GARAGE COMPANY. They bfouxht Mra. Saddle
ler. who ha* Smith as teacher.
I vear.
A strict rule ban.s animal pets
I Mr. and Mrs. Karl Phillips of KaiMra. Wm. Havens. Mrs. Richard from American paaw-nger planes.
Tlie Stebbins
Auto
company. I bccn visiting them,
which was organized by P. W. Steb- ---------------------blns, started selling Ford cars in
Hastings and Barry county in 1011.
At that lime there were only about
five or six Model T cars in the coun­
ty. This flrm continued -until the
spring of 1917 when c. W. Wcxpinter
Joined F. W. Stebbins In a partner-'
ship, known as the Universal oarage
Company. They erected lhe present
building located at thc comer of
Court and Church street* and have
continued the business up to the1
present time. In 1920 they purchased I
what wa* known a* the Prank Hoos
properly located Just cast of the |
garage building which is now used ■
U1CBOBY CORH1BB.
*
Coral-Lunstrum of near vennontvllle is spending a few 4*y* with his
grandparent*. Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Robinson.
.
Howard Atonal! of Bonfield is
working at Prank Messinger's
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Chapin and
daughter. Gloria, spent Friday eve­
ning with his sister, Mrs. B Camp­
bell and family. Gloria remained for
a longer visit.
Clayton Haynes has returned to
his work at Battle Creek after a

FELDPAUSCH’S FOOD CENTER

Brief Sketches of leading
IlastingB BiihIiichh Firms
(Continued from page 1. Sec. Il
C. THOMAS STORE.
The 0. Thomas Store at Hastings
a modem food store selling grocer­
ies and fresh produce, with a slogan
"Everyday low prices." H- F. Jones
and Allen Prentice, the two young
men running the store, are active
|n community affairs and are alert
to give customers complete satisfac­
tion in their food buying. .William
Taflee and John . Barnett arc thc
two clerks assisting.

CARVETH A STEBBINS.
Tlie store building now occupied
by Carveth de Stebbins has been
used as a drug store for a period of

rlely store run by a Mr. Fitzsim­
mons and after a Arc Fred L. Heath
moved his drug store there from his
location next to lhe city Bank. Aft­
er A. H. Carveth returned from lhe
Spanish American war in 1899. he
was employed by Mr. Heath and
shortly became a partner, the flrm
name being Fred L. Heath and Car­
veth. in 1908 w. M- Stebbins pur­
chased a half interest and for 30
McCALL’S.
McCall’s Tailor Shop and Dry
Cleaning establishment located at
215 S. Jefferson, is owned and oper­
ated by "Al" G. McCall. The own­
er's father, the late James A. Mc­
Call. came to Hastings in 1919 as a
successor lo Chas. Lunn in practical
custom tailoring, and enjoyed a very
successful business until ill health
compelled him to retire in 1929.
The present flrm originated as a
partnership between Uie present
owner and his brother. Wm. McCall.
In Aug. 1928. they, at that Ume, pur­
chasing thc business of Philip Gold­
stein at 226 8. Jefferson. In January
1933 "Al" G. McCall bought his
brother's half interest and has con­
tinued as sole owner since.
Mr. McCall says "Thc name ‘Mc­
Call’ lias been symbolical ot fine
tailoring and dry cleaning in Has­
tings for 17 years, and It will con­
tinue as such."
ANDRI'S SERVICE STATION.
Frank Andrus, owner and operator
of this supcr-ServIce station, started
in business In 1933. at 218 East
Stale street in the old Freer build­
ing. dealing in batteries and elec­
trical work exclusively until 1925
when he added tires and a repair
department. He continued business
under this arrangement until 1932
when he purchased thc ground on

^ * aoiu7tX&gt;£S«rSK

•-

MU. 1»H.

memory of the one who has passed on.
We iiivite you to visit our display in our
We

The New Dresses

♦3.88 to *6.88

Picture, a “Talkie,” “Surviving THE

In Romance Blue, Black, Brown,
Rust and Green.

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
ESTABLISHED 1907

Beautiful hard wearing worsteds,*in single and double

breasted models . . . new novelty weaves as well as
quiet patterns.

Plenty of stubs for short men.

Wc Offer a Complete

suit all pocketbooks!
Here They Are Men!

YOUNG MEN'S

Use our popular Lay­
Away Plan.
No Extra Charge I

Such an array as we never
have had before . . . checks,
stripes and the new Glen
Plaids. Fine quality, pleat*
ed fronts, at—

SLACKS
FOR SCHOOL
Dress Coats and Suits
Lavishly trimmed with luxurious
furs. Of course, you'll sense these
"High Spot" values in one of the
finest collections shown

♦10.88 to *39-88

New Sport Coats

Th« Naw Hats
. . . Exhiloratina new collection
of fall millinery that was select*
ed in New York from leading
stylists. When you sfi6‘ therrt
you'll be inspired to choose one.

We predicted months ago that
sport coats will be “big" this season and wo were right. Our se­
lection is perfect. Made of man­
nish -fabrics in plaid backs that
will keep you comfy and warm.

♦1.88 to *2.88

♦9.88 to *17.88

HASTINGS. MICH.

CINDERELLA
ONLY MONUMENT WOSKS IN SASSY COUNTY

I

J '•J'J

•■■■ OBVM

From the leoding New York
Fashion Creators. Made of
the newest Materials and
Shades for the Fall and Win­
ter Seasonof 1936and 1937.

. . . Something different! The
Princess silhouette. The new
tunics are the big fashion for fall.

Don’t fail to see and lo hear our Motion

dents should see this picture ... very ed-

fit. . . . These Fine Suits
are here ready to put on.

A range of prices to

have the finest selection to be found anywhere.

ucational.

J

newest style and proper

• Complete Range of Colors and Sixes hi

that is required in executing and erecting

Fairgrounds.' School teachers and stu­

__

£

Cinderella Dresses

a lasting and satisfactory tribute to lhe

TEST OF TIME,” at our Booth al the

Styled for men who oppredate fine materials,

50^*3 50

sary knowledge of materials and the skill

ing SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES.

Department

sponsored by

Memorial Craft has given us the neces­

During the week of tlie Fair we arc offer­

Engl wl| tniun

for Men

COATS, SUITS
DRESSES and
MILLINERY

Our many years of experience in the

Showroom at 221 E. State street.

Announcing Our New

M.», nk. «uu ....

Announcing the New Fall
Fashions

MEMORIALS

WATERS CLSTMEX

I3« W. STATE ST.

DRESSES

Room Formerly Occupied by Lambie 6- Doyle

HASTINGS

Size from 26 waist and up

lie Sure lo -Ulend lhe Barry County fair
and I'uit ihu Complete Men’t
and Boyf’ Store I _

CLOTHES
SELLING QUALITY KM

�Center and Mr. and Mrs. George between Irving and here. A car visit before their schools start tn
Tyler and baby of Kalamazoo spent loaded with coal jumped Uie track Muskegon, where they will both
Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Grover and tore up many rods of track be­ teach lhe coming year. They at­
fore it was slopped. Thc wrecker tended summer school at Marquette
Harry Preston of Premont spent had to come from Jackson to clear
the week end with his parents. Mr. lhe rails, so our mall was several
and Mra. L. Preston. Sunday vls; itors were Mra. Grace Brake of Has­ 1 Hon. Clare Hollman of Allegan
tings, Helene Plasma of Zeeland gave an. address to a large crowd
and Wayne Robinson of Nashville, i on our s'treet Saturday evening.
held Bunday at lhe Maple Grove spent - Sunday with Uie former's । Hie mhln street crossing of the
M. C. R. R. was given a much need­
Orangd hall. About seventy attend- brother. Clayton, near Dowling.
Ellen Robinson returned lo Grand ed repairing by new planks on Wed­
Rapids Sunday after spending the nesday by two crews of section men.
Lightning struck A- H. Parker's
summer with her grandparents, Mr.
house recently. running jn on a
wire. Some shears hanging on a
casing
were thrown about tile room.
Mr. and Mra. Prevost of Beedle' at Jay Hawkins’ al Vermontville,
No one was injured.
ike are spending a few days with j Saturday.
tr. and Mra. Herve Checseman.
I Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Leonard and - Our train service was badly dis­
Mr. and Mra. Hone Clieeseman I mother. Mra. Lucy Leonard, of Hope rupted Thursday by a freight wreck

Sunday morning Mrs. MatUe
Llctka was awakened by the smell
of smoke. On investigation It was
discovered that Lynn Lepper’s car
was on fire. The local fire depart­
ment extinguished the blase but a
great deal of damage was done. It
was fortunate that the car was left

.^JZ7Z7ZJ7J7:/AJZ7n7:.
follow the 1wi/k toVtuMFU

way attended the Otis reunion In
Lansing Thursday.
Mra. Chas. Whittemore relumed
from Delton Sunday after spending
tht past week helping care for Mra.
Amy Whittemore.
Mr. and Mra. Forrest
Havens
spent Sunday with'Ute Robt. McGlocklln family in Hastings in hon­
or of Anita's foupth birthday.
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs
Lowell Whittemore on thc birth of
We are pleased to report that a son. He has been named Rodger
Mrs. John Kollar Is doing u well Lee.
as possible since her operation and
Roy Erway and family attended
enjoys seeing her friends.
the Otis reunion in Lansing Thurs­
day.
‘
Miss Virginia Havens began her
school at Shultx Monday.
Mias Katie Whittemore L» spend­
ing a few days al Delton helping
care for her grandmother.
Mr. and Mra. Fred Otis. Forrest
Havens and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hav­
ens attended lhe Notten reunion
at Jackson Saturday.
Mra. Clyde Warren entertained
her parents and grandmother from
Eaton Rapids Bunday.
FAIR LAKE. '
The Kinsley Aid met for the Au­
gust meeting with Mra. Florence
Smith. Mra. Doris Trick and Mra.
Edna Rorabeck entertained with
her for supper, 87 being present.
Mra. Earl Fritz and Mrs. Lottie
Colllster and children are spending
the week with relatives in Napole­
on. Ohio, and Jackson. Mich.
Henry Houvenir and family, Mr.
and Mra. Allen Griffen. Mr. and Mra.
Ike Lelnaar and Mrs. Earl Fritz and
family motored to Leonidas Sunday
and participated in a picnic dinner
as thc guests of Mra. Houvenlr's
parents, Mr. and Mra. Willis Smith
Rennie McGIocklln and family of
nacey spent Bunday at Earl MeOlocklln's.
Bert Litts and family and Floyd
Morford and family visited John
Ball park in Grand Rapids. Bunday.
Mra. Levanche Merrick of Hos­
tings visited last week with Mra.
Chas. Lechleltner.
■ Henry Houvenir visited his slsier in Burlington Tuesday.
HOPE CENTER.
William Ashby and Miss Viola
McKlbbln of Yankee Springs were
married Saturday evening by Rev.
Conklin In Hastings. Congratula­
tions.
Mr. and Mra. Albert Monica of
Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gales.
Saturday evening visitors at thc
Fred Ashby home were Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Ashby
Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Sayles of Hastings and Mr.
and Mra. Burdette Lyttle of Battle
Creek. Mr. and Mra. Lyttle spent
Sunday with their parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Chas. McDermott.
Our schoolhouse Ls being, torn
down by Geo. Eddy and son of Del­
ton who have bought thc building.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Warner, Mr.
and Mra. Clyde Ashby of Kalamazoo,
John McKlbbln and two daughters
of Yankee Springs. Mr. and Mra.
Clare Ashby and children were Sun­
day dinner guesU at the Fred Ashby
home.

Big Values for Misses'^

SLIPOVERS

PANTIES
Reinforced!
Durable!

BROADCLOTH

FANCY SOCKS
For Dress
or School.

rondo percales

gw g
pr.

MORGAN.
Mr. and Mra. Clair Van Sickle.
: Otto and Utile Jackie, and Mr. Mar­
tin of Lansing were guests of Mr.
and Mra. Wm. Van Sickle Satur­
day.
Arthur Barkley of Columblanr.a,
Ohio, the guest of Chas. Harrington
and family, went to Landing Satur­
day for a ten day evangelistic tour.
He then goes to Pennsylvania.
Mra. J. P. Klegg of Athens and
Clarence Nesbit and son of Cleve­
land. Ohio, called on Mra. Millie
Flury Sunday afternoon.
Mrs Homer Waze and Mrs. Cale
and son. Paul, of Battle Creek were
callers at thc home of J. W. How­
ard Saturday.
Mr. and Mra. Alfred Noem and
daughter. Marian, of Chicago, who
spent their vacation al their cottage
here, returned to their home Sun­
day.
Mr. and Mra. Ben Bostater will go
to Eaton Rapids next week to care
for the home, while Glenn Moore
and family are away on a visit.
Mra. Fred Latham and Margue­
rite Miller are on the aitk list.
Bordy Rowlader and family vis­
ited Mr. and Mra Monroe Rowlader
of Woodland Bunday.
Zella Martin of Eaton Rapids is
spending* a week with June Gross.
Harry Whitman and family and
Mr. and Mra. Benard of Battle
Creek were guesU of Mrs. Nellie
Wolf Sunday.
Mr. and Mra. Stanley Earl of Bat­
tle Creek were Sunday
dinner
guesU of Glcnard Earl.
The Morgan school started Mon­
day Morning with Miss Osborn as
teacher and about a dozen scholars
enrolled.

HINDS CORNERS.
Mr“ and Mrs. Clark Robinson of
Hartings spent Sunday afternoon
with Mr. and Mra. Edd Newton and
Mrs. Mary Hathaway.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bishop and
»ons called on Mr. and Mrs. Lowell
Whitmore near Delton and Mr. and
Mra. Myron Bishop in Rutland Bun­
day afternoon to get acquainted
with lhe new babies.
Mr. and Mra. Charley Gaskill of
South Hastings are moving Into
part of Susie Phillips' house this
week.
s
Mra. C. N. Tobias returned home
Sunday. She had spent lhe past
week with her son and daughter in
Kalamazoo. Marian came
home
with her for another week before
her school begins.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tobias of
Nashville and Mr. and Mra. Harry
| Gates and son Harry. Jr_ of Jack­
son were Sunday afternoon callers
at C. N. Tobias'.
Miss Susie Phillips visited Mrs.
Will Bellinger In Lansing Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Snyder and son,
Linden, and his friend and Miss
Vida Phillipa, all of Hastings, and
Mr. and Mrs. Burrell "Phillips, son
and daughter, spent Sunday with
Miss Susie Phillips.
Thc students from this district to
start in High school Tuesday momare
Margrelle Moore. Gertrude
Phillips, Junior Weyerman and Rex
| Casey.

to

Fight forest
FIRES FROM AIR

Radio-Equipped Plane to Pa­
trol Fire Hazard
Areas
Michigan's forest lire organization
will take to the air if necessary this
fall to defend the slate's forest
areas against fire.
•
A new radio-equipped, five-pas­
senger airplane will be available lo
the fire organization for aerial pa­
trol of lhe fire hazard areas and
will be used If conditions warrant.
It was purchased jointly by the
Michigan department of public
safely, the slate highway depart­
ment and the conservation detri­
ment and Is equipped with a short­
wave sending and receiving ut for
communication with conservation cr
state police radio units.
Aerial recuinaissance of serious
forest fires is considered an indis­
pensable aid in directing the*oper­
ations of ground crews by means of
radio. A plane supplied by the
state board of aeronautics was used
by conservation authorities during
the seven fire hazard period th Li
summer lo check the advance of
large fires in the upper peninsula
and proved effective.
Usually lhe months of September,
arid October present serious hazards
In the northern forest areas, par| tlcularly the usually dry period of
October, when the upland hunting
season is in progress.

.
DURFEE.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rice and
daughter. Vela, spent Friday wlllt
Rev. and Mra. Fred King and fam­
ily near Lake Odessa and Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Kellar of
Hickory Comers.
School began Monday with Miss
Gladys'cairns as teacher.
Mr. and Mra. Sam Couch spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Llchty of Hickory corners.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clemens and
Claud spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Bert While at Ionia.
Mr. and Mrs. William Hoffman
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mra.
Leon Stanton of Battle creek. Lllah
and Mary came for a visit with the
grandparents.
Sunday callers at Jock Moore's
were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Moorehouse
of Battle Creek and Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Gaskill of Quimby.
Margaret and Bernard Williams
returned to their home tn Char­
lotte after spending sometime with
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Moore.
TAMARAC.
Mrs. Morl Alhem
and
son.
Wayne, and friend of Sparta were
callera at Boston Cotton's Sunday.
Ira Cotton of Woodland and Dell
Colton of Rutland visited Boston's
Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bruetl were
callera at the home of their parents,
Mr. add Mrs. Bertie Smith Satur­
day.

Boys' rayon plaited ho*e. As­
sorted patterns and colors.

Scamlers Silk Chifjt

For Girll! Serviceable Black or Brown

EE HOSIERY

SCHOOL OXFORDS

You

Black or brown calf-finlahad
leather with patent leather lac­
ings to drees It up. A Goodyear
welt shoe with real style.

TO VISIT OUR TENT AT

You ll Marvel at These Stitchdown Values!
Brushed or Unbrushed

SLIPOVERS

SCHOOL OXFORDS

Dress Shirts

Sturdily

•SA
?!5il

trimmed. Black side leather with
rough
black grain
leather.
Markka* composition soles

made

.

.

THE BARRY COUNTY FAIR

We Will Have On Display Modern

Sturdilj

.

Dk

Are Invited...

•;

prettily

• GAS AND ELECTRIC RANGES

• GAS AND ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS

Boys’ Always Need

Brushed or Unbrushed

SLACKS

Slipover
SWEATERS

• FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS
• ELECTRIC WASHERS AND IRONERS

• GAS HOME HEATING UNITS
Oak Ridge fabrics'.-.-,
they’re durable, wearable,
and packed full of style!
Side buckle straps, separ­
ate waistband, wide cuff
bottoms! Sizes 7 to 16.

Heavyweight sweaters for
boys. Popular baby ahaker
stitch. Wool wonted plait­
ed over cotton for strength
and service. Sixes 8 to 16.

• LATEST MODELS OF I. E. S. APPROVED FLOOR and
TABLE LAMPS

FD t tl
F* K E E !

THREE MODERN TABLE LAMPS will
be GIVEN AWAY DURING the FAIR

Dress Shirts

CONSUMERS POWER CO

|

�j

THURSDAY, SEPT. 3,1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER

R

Barry Bypaths |
»v JANS CAMERON

■ My. Isn't It great to shine up the
furniture and have It stay dusted?

:ie

cr

From Freyling Foster’s column in
lhe Collier's we find that the govI eminent pamphlet "Infant Care"
is the most popular of the 50.000-odd
books and booklets published by the
United States government. Its sale
has passed the 1.500.000 mark. My
well-worn copy was written by Mrs.
Max West, a mother of twelve, all
living, which I think gives her the
privilege of writing lhe booklet. I
I never read or bother with child care
lectures or books by unmarried
women or childless ones.

of
tie
ed

"A Clinic For Clothes" is the
name of an Interesting article by
Ruth Wyeth Spears In the Septem­
ber Houseixtld magazine, she gives
some really helpful Ideas on remod­
eling the wardrobe. For the looshort dress, make a smock or tunic
of it and raise the neckline, add a
new collar and wear over a skirt cut
from a too-short coat, old dresses of
chiffon or sheer materials may be
made into blouses and silk scarfs.
Short jacket* are made of velvet or
woolen dresses. For tlie too-full
dress, lake out the surplus fullness,
freshen with a new collar, cuff and
belt set. Or a slip and some briefs
can be made if the material Is any­
thing like wash silk. A dress that
has broken out at the armhole
would make a good Jumper. Several
fashionable pattern houses are
showing lovely Jumpers now.

of

Ui

nt

id

ih

Spring coals may be made Into
winter dresses. and Ls it fun to sellect Just the right pattern and ac­
cessories? The best thing to do with
a long tight coat Is either a skirt of
the bottom or a hip-length jacket
of the lop with few changes, except
possibly lhe collar.
I

he

th

If you have to piece, don't hide IL
■Make the set-in section part of the
[design. This ts especially neat in a
[sleeve piecing. In a blouse or skirt
la lengthwise piecing becomes a
[panel and a crosswise one, a yoke. In
[ripping nicely tailored garments, no­
tice how they are made; you will get
[lots of good ideas from them.

Turning the fabric U»e other side
aut will often make It new to you.
And dyeing is an art. Send a sample
af the material in to the company
md they will advise you If you are
In doubt. Don't forget "white dye"
remove* unwanted colors. Materials
Lhat won't lux con be cleaned in
white gasoline, or belter yet, dry
lieaned with regular fluid.
Send the mister to his work with
h smile, pack school lunches with
[vitamins from A to Z. scrub UUle
laces, comb hair, oversee tee tit­
washings, and clothes from head to
loot, hunt up caps, books and equip­
ment. send them all to schodl. do up
the work and baking and whatever
fruit there is.to do that day. and
then get out Uie clothing and plan
for your private "Clinic" and good
luck to you.

CAN S0UPS N0W

FOR EASY MEALS

। Shelves Stocked Now Solve
Cooking Problems for
Coming Winter
Recommendation that housewives
with extra garden produce will find
It worthwhile to can soup mixtures
for use when fresh vegetables are
not easily available is made by lhe
home economics extension depart­
ment al Michigan State College. It
is often a convenience to pul up
soup mixtures when other canning
Is being done. Good soup vegetables
Include tomatoes, corn, lima beans,
okra, carrots, tumlpa, celery, onions,
pimientas and red and green pep­
pers. one of the combinations that
are popular can include equal por­
tions of lima beans, com and toma­
toes. Processing under pressure has
become Die recommened practica
for canned soup made In home
kitchens, studies also hjive been
made so lhat the process can result
In the best possible flavor In the
products.
For putting up vegetable-soup
mixtures the home economics staff
suggests the following procedure:
Wash and trim the vegetables. They
should be cut Into small pieces or
cubes to get the flavor Into the soup
and permit better processing. Bring
the soup to the boiling point and
pack the vegetables hot with sufflcent liquid to cover and prevent
too dense a pack. A steam pressure
cooker should be operated al 10
pounds pressure or 240 degrees
Fahrenheit through theitlme recom­
mended. For pl.1t glass Jarr. 60
minutes of processing is necessary.
Quart jars need 70 minutes; No. 2
cans require 50 minutes and No. 3
cons 85 minutes, according to the
bureau of home economics of the
United States Department of Ag­
riculture.

At the Theatre
Shirley Temple In “Poor
Little Rich Giri."
"Poor Little Rich Girl" is Shirley
Temple's greatest hit. While waiting
for thc train lhat Ls to take her to
boarding school. Shirley wanders
away from Sara Haden, the nurse
whom her Immensely wealthy fath­
er. Michael Whalen, has provided to
look after her.
Tlie thronged sidewalks of New
York present an entrancing vista to
Shirley. Tlie nurse meets with an
accident while searching for her and
lhe little girl's absence is unnoticed
during the following days, she final­
ly Is "adopted'' by Alice Faye and
Jack Haley, a pair of out-of-work
vaudeville performers who are seek­
ing a radio audition. Gloria Stuart,
secretary to Michael
Whalen's
strongest business rival, persuades
her employer that he should go on
the air and advertise his goods. The
team of Shirley. Haley and Miss
Faye wins the audition. Shirley's
father, listening in. Ls amazed to
recognize his daughter's voice. An
anuuing series of adventures fol-

Weekly Farm Review

GATHEDRASTSA%ENNT^CTHER

The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers

-------

By WILLARD BOLTE

Want to know how to get rid of to government engineers. For 1250
&lt;n ingO
.
ant* in the hou*e? The little red'*you can Install n pump that will
r.l» U0 wllon, ol -.«• 10 Io.ll Tl" Bmllh—ilaii tatllullon u
kill them I* to rub a little tartar . from an open staeam. In farm. Irri-1 Washington wm established for
emetic into a bacon rind and place gallon, the preparation of lhe land i scientific purposes, and to gather
it where they can find ll.*The big is of greatest importance. The fields : daU and exhiblu thal W1U
ln
n
black anta like sweet*—and they can to be Irrigated must be leveled and
I the “
solution
h““” gCttfentific sujtocta.
be destroyed by mixing one part of i moolhrt-.no Ih. noor, ol Ih. 1
the same poison with twenty |&gt;krt* ditches must be at least as high os । The wcatMer times under Lhe
of honey. Tartar emetic acta slowly, 1 lhe land, hence the dltche* must be scope of the investigations carried
hence the anta that find it have time , made by building up the aide walls on by the Institution. Dr. Charles
to carry II back to the nest and feed instead of by digging.—Missouri IB- Abbot, the secretary, has been
making a prolonged study of Uie
it lo the queen and the young anta. Rurallst.
weather. He has concluded that
Great care should be taken to keep
I his bait away from children and
Starting first In the east, the idea what is now the drouth area in this
pels as* It is very poisonous.— of remodeling barn* Into poultry country is near to the bottom of
Pennsylvania Parmer.
quarters Is rapidly spreading lo all what appears to be a 48 year precip­
parts of the country. There are itation cycle. These cycles, he says,
Some farmers object to lhe com­ thousands of these "poultry bams" are associated with variations in the
bine because It docs not leave Uie In Massachusetts, and as a result of radiation output of the sun. He de­
straw In one spot. However, it h plenty of experience and study the clares that the InvestigaUons he has
thoroughly practical to gather the Massachusetts State College offers made give no support to pessimists
straw from the windrows with a hay | the following vital rules. (!) celling* who predict lhe drouth area will be
loader or by bunching with a rake. should be al least 7 feel high and converted into a permanent desert.
He says there is every reason to
and baling in the field. If Uie straw insulated. (2) Ground floor should
Ls left In the field It usually 1* not be concrete and upper floors of believe that lhe departure of present
heavy enough In any one place to double board* with insulation be- drouth will be succeeded within a
harm the clover stand—and It fre- tween. (3) Allow 3 square feet of few years by high peaks of preclplquently acta as a valuable protcc-1 floor space for Leghorn* and 4 taUon. If lhe cycle continues true
lion in very hot weather. The rate square feel for heavy hens. (4) to form, he says, the low point in
of harvesUng with a combine varies.1 Square pens are best—with not more moisture should pe reached some­
but a fair overage for a ten-foot than 300 hens to a pen. (5) Insulate where between 1938 and 1940. and
machine is twenty to twenty-five the walls—and protect Uie insula­ will be followed by a rapid up­
acres per day.—Wallace's Farmer, i tion against picking by boarding in- swing. Dr. Abbot explain* that the
~~ — j side up lo 30 inches
up with
w AV cheap lumWilli CI1VHU IUII1- cycle theory Is not a basis for exact
ILflenlann
___ I composition
_______ ._________
■
predictions, because there are other
Michigan tver
beef fnpd-r.
feeders are sold An
on I ber or thin. &lt;hard,
board,
the use of baking soda, to prevent &lt;fl&gt; The best partition* ore mode interfering causes which may have
steers from dying of shipping fever ' wild, bul the front one-third may a slowing or an accelerating effect
They administer about 1-4 pound oF be wire. c7&gt; Allow one square foot for a year or two.
Under the Abbot theory, tempera­
sod. to each animal a* soon os it of widow
— for
•----------•each ------------15 to 20 square
arrives on the farm—mixing It with feet of floor space. Use a glass or ture and precipitation variations al
a quart of water and drenching glass substitute that will permit en­ any particular । place have a tend­
ency
to repeat themselves every 23
with, a long-necked quart bottle. trance of ultra-violet rays. Cover
Many feeders think It would be even outside with 1-lnch wire mesh to year*, and thfl extreme variations
better to dose pie steers before they keep sparrows out. (8) Provide one repeat at 48 yeAr intervals.
"Most encodraging." said Dr. Ab­
leave the stockyards.—Prairie Farm- foot of hopper space for each 5 hens
। —and one five-gallon fountain for bot. -is the hope held out by the
each 100 hens. (9) Provide one nest cycle pattern lhat there will not be
After 210 days of feeding. Purdue for each 5 hens. The article quoted another major drouth after this one
University recently released figures says nothing about lhe all-import­ until somewhere around IMO."
on lhe comparative results of feed­ ant question of an adequate venti­
BOY SCOUTS IN 73 LANDS.
ing whole soybeans, whole soybeans lating system, and my readers can
plus ground limestone, soybean oil­ secure
The sun never sets on the Boy
exact
specifications
for
meal. and cottonseed meal—to 105 building a ventilating system for a Scout uniform. Tlie Boy Scout
young steers that went on feed last poultry bam by writing to Cornell movement, constantly growing since
November. Average daily gain for University, Ithaca. N. Y—Poultry It was first established in England
whole soybeans, both with and with-1 Tribune,
in 1908 by Lord (then Sir) Robert
out limestone, was
about 1 3-4
Baden-Powell, is now firmly estab­
pounds. The soybean ollmea) steers
Studies mode at the Iowa Experi­ lished in over 73 countries in all
gained 1.95 pounds daily and thc ment Station indicate that most parts of the world. There arc 49
cottonseed meal steers just a shade farmers cut their small grain too Scout organizations; thc British Boy
more. There was no difference in early to secure maximum value from Scouts Association Includes all the
quality of finish—whole beans with­ the crop, some varieties Jn this different countries in the British
out limestone made lhe mast profit test showed os much os 10 per cent Empire.
—soybean olimeal made 17c less- more bushels of grain to the acre
whole beans plus limestone made 2c
Almost half of the United States
when they were cut as much as ten
less than soybean olimeal—and cot­ days later than normal—which fact has been completely mapped lo
tonseed meal made $1.18 less than Is decidedly in favor of the growing show elevation and slopes.
Untas that*thiartin&gt;’f nF’ i°' K?,K use
uac of
°‘ combines.
comD,n”- Similar
similar studies
studies
Hie royal tennis coiirt at Hamp­
In pronu
IoUowUli ,„r &lt;ud not
was due to the difference in cost I show usuch decided gains in yield— ton Court Palace Ls Lhe oldest ten­
of the supplement* and that they probably due to intermittent storms nis court In England.
appeared to be Interchangeable. that shattered some of the grain—
Purdue ha* found no advantage In, bul Ut both 1927 and 1928 grain
cooking soybeans or in feeding lime-I yields were heavier each day for as
stone In
three trials.—Indiana much as ten days after the regular
Farmer's Guide.
time for binding.—Wallace's Farmer.

Almost any farmer with a good
supply of water Mil make irrigation 1
pay—and pay irt normal years as
well as In dry years—If he has an i
efficient pumping outfit, of the varlous standard types of irrigation j
pumps, the centrifugal type Ls now I
Pat O’Brien in "China Clipper."
accepted a* lhe best, a pump that
"China Clipper" is a Lhrllllngly will supply 1.000 gallons of waler per I
dramatic picture of trans-oceanic minute will pul two inches of water1
air service with a glamorous ro­ over an acre each hour—and a |
mance. Besides O'Brien Uie cast in­ pump that will raise that amount of
clude* Beverly Roberta. Rom Alex­ water 20 feet from it* source can be ।
ander. Humphrey Bogart. Marie installed for about 8350—according 1
Wilson and Henry B. Walthall.

It aays In the Banner that you
can't take your exhibits to the Pair
(rear after year. Thai's all right. We
only Intended to take our custard
pie one year anyway. And the kids
itaged loo many Olympic games
with their bugs and completely
Johnny Downs and Shirley
wrecked them all.
Deane star In "The First Baby.”
A bllUie comedy of a boy and girl
The philosophy In this little poem
i "tops." even if the poem Itself who married, had to scrap their
on't rank with Edna 81. Vincent way out of "in-law" trouble, and
fiUay. This has always been my found happiness in a little bundle
from heaven, included in the cast
are Dixie Dunbar. Jane Darwell and
le shall not know i wept today
Gene Lockhart.
iecausc my cookie., burned;
because I lost an hour of rest
had so dearly earned.
ie shall not know about the bruise,
ibout the stain or spill;
Jut he shall hear about the bird
Jpon thc window aill.
Vhen he comes weary home tonight
i song shall greet his ears;
School began Tuesday, Sept. 8 at
shall not disappoint my man;
।
8:35. During the forenoon classes
shall forget my tears.
were organized, books secured, and
other preliminary work done. There
IED FOR FIRST
was no school In lhe afternoon which
given over to faculty meetings,
PLACE IN CONTEST wa*
preliminary enrollment reports, re­
quisitions and adjustment*.

Probably most dairymen have no­
ticed that when they finish feeding
their second cutting of alfalfa hay—
and get down into lhe first cutting
—their cows demonstrate the lower
value of lhe first cutting by reduc­
ing the milk flow. A writer in Michi­
gan Farmer states that this doe* not
occur when lhe hay is chopped—
provided it is taken from the face of
the mow and the two cuttings are
mixed together each day in feeding.
(Copyright 1936—Library Guild)

Consumers Power Tourist Camp

Barry County 4-H Club livestock
lodging team tied with lhe Eaton
bounty team for first place at the
itate Judging contest held at Michi­
gan state College August 24 and 25.
Mr. Foster, county agricultural
went, received a report on the conlast Monday morning stating that
ho team consisting of Albert Bell
bf Nashville. Aden Campbell of
Middleville and Kenneth Dunn of
Hastings, made a total score of 1.­
127 out of a possible 1.800. Thia
wore tied for first place in the
|tate with an Eaton county team.
These three boys and a leader
ire awarded a trip to the State
Pair at Detroit. At the State Fair
the boys will Judge horses, beef
tattle, sheep and hog* tn an at­
tempt to win a trip to the.fnterlational Livestock Show In Chi:ago where they will be In national
:om petition.
Mr. Foster states this U the best
iny Barry county 4-H Livestock

oys are ta be complimented on
lelr standing.
The Dairy Judging teams conalstig of younger boys, placed alx?enth out ot 27 teams competing
rotn the entire state. This placing
i not high enough to be awarded
ie state Fair trip but the boys did
ave valuable experience in the
laic contest. This team was made
p of Paul palmer. Ralph Palmer
nd Arthur Smith all of Middleville.

Extra curricular activities spon­
sored by lhe school are band, or­
chestra, glee clubs, school news. HiY. Boy scout*, athletics, assemblies,
school fair, F. F. A^ Home Econom­
ics Club, 4-H Club, physical educa­
tion. Science club, piano lessons,
and library service.
Public Library.
The public library books have all
been moved Into lhe new quarters
Ln the southeast corner of tlie school
building, it is equipped with mod­
em stacks, modem lighting, a read­
ing table and chairs. To reach the
library. It Is suggested that patrons
use the outside door to the library
which is on tne east side where it is
possible to drive or park cars near

'■

8ECTI0?

............

Ul general. Is not Injurious to rum-

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

Riley

raised by many sportsmen, who have
expressed themselves as being of the
opinion that Ice fishing by means of
hook and line and the spear Is an
unjustified and serious drain on the
"Fire bugs" were leas evident In fish population of lhe lake and so
lhe forest-fire areas of northern reduces the supply of fish as to in­
Michigan this summer than tn jure summer fishing.
.
years, says H. R. Sayre, chief of field
administration for the department
of conservatipn. Sayre says fewer rests are ready. Distribution of the
fires wery attributed to incendiarism. digests, together with new watarfdwl regulations, small-game ah&lt;H
summer liavebeen the worst in .his deer hunting licenses and tags has
experience. Sayre' declared. "There been started by the department of
were times when we .had as many as conservation. Supplies are being
100 forest fires burning simultaneous­ mailed to nearly 2.000 license deal­ a temperance debate up in
ly. with many of them of dangerous ers in Michigan and nearby stales Ribbon Hall betwasn Mrs.
Hastings and a Mr. Clark.:
proportion."
and It Is expected the distribution
will be completed well before the
The native minnows, chuba, dace opening of lhe upland hunting sea- Hall and it turned out to ba owe a
saloon, a quartette sang a few
and shiners of Michigan number
no fewer than 34 species, none of
which attain a length of 12 Inches
COATS GROVE.
and few of which exceed six
Touch Liquor shall Never Touch
Inches.
Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Mine" and "Bare-fooled Charlie'*
Wing In Woodland.
sang,
"Michigan's Forests.'* a new threeA daughter was bom to Mr. and
reel conservation movie, will be Mrs. Clem Jordan at a hospital in "Although the wolf dally looks la
available for loan to schools and or­ Michigan city. Ind., last Thursday.
Although hungry, footsore and in,
ganizations of the state Sept. 15, it
Kendall Coat* has not been ao I can still look the whole world in
Ls announced by the department of well for several days.
conservation. The movie .was filmed
The school reunion was held on And ssy I’m a gentleman still."
by Waller E. Hastings, staff photo­ Saturday. About 73 people enjoyed
grapher of the department, and a fine dinner and at the meeting the
shows reforestation work, technical following officers were elected for
forestry practices, fire prevention the coming year: Pres, James
Land
and suppression.
Smith. Albion; vlce-pres.. Floyd
Kimble, and sec.-lreas.. Mrs. War­
The huckleberry crop, like many ren coolbaugh. Mr*. E. G. Smith
farm crops, was hard hit by Uie had charge ot the following proheat and drouth ot July and has i gram: Bong by all former and pres- know you came here Umlght
proved one of the smallest In eev- ent scholars of lhe CoaU Grove
eral seasons. Berry pickers, however, school. “O. come, come Away;" the
found some compensation for the mixed quartette sang "O. Hand me
scarcity of berries in the price, Down;" Dorothy Sease recited a
which was higher than last year.
poem; Nane Coolbaugh gave two
readings; Will Chase sang. "Home saloon, now dear friends, I will
Acquisition of a total of more on the Range" and Stuart Clement,
talk over a saloon, I will talk under
than 1.000 acres of land in lhe Mo- ____
probate Judge, gave a fine talk. The
lasses River unit northwest of Bay | reunion closed by singing. "God be
City, the Escanaba River tract and with you till me meet again."
the North Manistee river area, has
Rev. Aldrich of Stroh, md.. will
been approved by the state conser­ preach here next Sunday morning been told that my opponent doe*
vation commission. Each tract has and the Sunday school is planning most of his talking in a saloon.**
desirable game cover and after ac­ for a pot luck dinner and an after­
Irving. "My hearing, my eyesight to
quisition will be managed and de­ noon service.
falling. My appetite u falling. Now
veloped for the best interests of its
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Woodman and all I am good for is to tell my life
forest growth and wildlife.
daughter. Clara, of Dayton. Ohio, stories."
visited over the week end with
Five new wildlife sanctuaries were Harve and John Woodman and their TOURIST AND RESORT
'
created by the stale conservation families. Ruth Woodman returned
MEETING OCTOMB
commission at Its August meeting at home with them from a trip through
Escanaba and each was closed to Ohio, Missouri. Tennessee. Ken­ Michigan Tourist and Resort aaaov
hunting and trapping for a period tucky. Georgia. Alabama and she elation lias been set for October 8 al
of five year*. Included were 210 also visited thc Great Lakes Exposi­ Grand Rapids.
The meeting to
acres owned by Irving D. Charlton. tion at Cleveland.
Hastings township.
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith of Al­
bion attended the school reunion,
After an intensive study of near- spent Saturday night at H. A. Wood­ campaign held this cummer and
ly 30 inland lakes in thc northern 1 man'man's and attended the Smith re- plans for Its continuance in coorti
and southern part* of the state to- &gt; union at Fred Smith's at Crooked
gethcr with other data, lhe LnsUlute. lake on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. G.
for fisheries research of the depart- , Smith. Mrs. H. Woodman and the protection of the tourist and
ment of conservaUon ha* reached i daughter, Marian, also attended the resort public will also be discussed,
the conclusion that winter fishing. Smith reunion.
A banquet will conclude the issafcWL

forSchool

at the Rexall Drug Store
We are all ready with all the new and used books that are to be
used in the Barry County&lt;schools.

Thomapplc* Kellogg
School Notes

Livestock
Judging
Team
Wins 1627 Points Out of
I
Possible 1800

Prediction That Next Major
Drouth Will Be

|

r\OACHMO
oio i

SPECIAL PRICES on all school supplies during this sale, including
tablets, note books, loose leaf fillers, inks, paste, rulers, fountain
pens, mechanical pencils, crayons, chalk, paper towels (rolled or
folded), and pencil sharpeners. Ask for large hand bill for complete
list of items.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER

5

10 Valuable Prizes to be Given Away
Picturesque acreage along Au Sable river to be converted into model
Tourist Camp, free to all who desire to use It.

CONSUMERS TO OPEN
BIG FREE TOURIST PARK

river. It extends along the highway
approximately 7500 feet, the east
portion of which averages about 250
ft. Ln width, extending to the beach
Picturesque Ground Along of Foote pond. The west half aver­
ages some 400 ft. in width and also
Au Sable Biver to Be­
runs from the highway to the river
come Model Oamp
edge.
Anxious to provide ample campEntrance to lhe park, which isjnit
Magazlnes are on the shelves, and 1 lng faciUttos for Michigan's vaca- a few miles from the famous Lum­
whlle they may not be removed from I Honlsta as weU as for the million* berman's Monument, Is through a
i
of
out-of-state
tourist*
who
choose
picturesque
rustic gate. A few yards
the library, It is hoped that the
- --------people will avail themselves of lhe lhe Wolverine playground for tnelr from the open gate Is the caretak­
opportunity to read from these per­ recreation. Consumers Power Com- er's lodge where ordinary supplies
iodicals during library hours. The pony today announced lhe broaden­ can be purchased, such as baked
library commission has ordered a Ing of its Golden Anniversary celc- goods, and staple articles, gasoline
quantity of new books which will be bratlon to include the opening of and oils. Many large tables, stoves,
—rwells
________
and rpiles
_________________
of dry fire wood
___
catalogued and made available to, one of the largest completely equip- deep
ped tourist park* Ln thc state in ita are Imjxjrtant supplementary feaproperty hi northern Michigan.
‘tures
---------of
-* "
---------*- From ••
------•­
lhe
park.
lhe
picnic
Located
on
the
scenic
au
Sable
grounds
the
camp
continues
several
nounced next week through this col­
umn and to Uie pupils of the school. river and having an area of more hundred feet by way of a wooded
than two million square feet, the trail along the shore to a sandy
The Lost property Office of the travelers* haven of picturesque na­ point ot land accessible for water
London Passenger Transport Board tive beauty wllL.be known as the Old sports. Nearby Ls a dock, complete
reported a record total of 1558 lost Orchard tourist camp.
with boats for use of fishermen.
umbrellas turned In for one day.
Old Orchard is located on the
Further figures revealed that 90 per county highway running between
When political parties arq not
cent of the umbrella* forgotten in Hale and Oacoda. about one mile throwing hats in tho ring, they're
Ixmdon’s public vehicles belonged to west of consumers’ Foote hydraulic passing them around.—Jacksonville
generating plant on the Au Sable journal.

DON'T MISS THE BIG BALLOON ASCENSION SATURDAY
MORNING, SEPT. 5—We will release 10 Balloons each carrying a
card reading 1st Prize, 2nd Prize, 3rd Prize and so on up to 10
Prizes. If you can capture one of these balloons, just bring in the
card attached to it and we will give you the prize written on the
card absolutely FREE 1
OUR BIG HAND BILL tells all about this prize balloon ascension.

Carveth &amp; Stebbins
THE REXALL STORE
GOODS DELIVERED

HASTINGS

PHONE 2131

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER »■ 1W

--------------------------

Brief Sketches of Leading
Hastings Business Firms

pairing old. hater he decided to
purchase some second-hand furnl-

able as

Following the death of Dan "W.

The Personnel of Food Center

successful that Ln a short Ume lhe
lhe owners of the Electric company | telephone subscribers had reached a ed as cashier, serving unUl 1919 amah building was not large enough
and the new company was known as total of six. The first firm to sub- when he associated with the Hayes- to contain his stock and Lewis Har­
the Thornapple Gas and Electric I scribe to the "new fangled" service lonlg co., of Grand Rapids, of which
in 1911 from Eaton Rapids, where
Company, which company was In
*
- (Continued from page 1. sec. 1)
he had previously been tn burinexs
The line to Grand Rapids was a Treasurer.
moved to lhe building at the corner
for several yean, and opened a store existence until sold to the Consum­ grounded circuit, requiring the rep­
of Court and Jefferson streets then
in the Stebbins building, on State ers Power Company late in 1922.
etition, by the operator, of most cashier September 38. 1919 and baa
During
the
year
1901
the
owners
street, carrying a complete line of
messages sent over It.
ot
the
Electric
company
erected
a
served
continuously
since
that
lime.
Tltere these two piled their trade,
nUrahild bought the stock of goods dry good* and ladles ready-to-wear
A second line from Grand Rap­
dam
on
the
Thomapple
river
about
continuing
to buy and sell second
garments. The store operated suc| cessfully for twenty years, when Mr. three mile* north and exit of the id* to Hasting* was constructed in years previously. The bank has had hand furniture and later adding
1898
by
the
cttlxens
Telephone
Com
­
a successful career, has weathered new furniture to supply the demand.
Uon for the past 80 years. being Frandsen closed out his stock and village of Caledonia. This plant was
known as the LaBarge hydraulic pany, and a local exchange, under three severe panics and paid 100 A year later they moved into lhe
known as lhe F. F. Fairchild Cora- moved to Benton Harbor. After
plant and was of about 400 kllowaU the guidance of J. E. McElwain, was cents on lhe dollar to every deposi­ large frame building now occupied
capacity. At the same time that opened. The local list of subscribers tor on demand. It now holds the by D. Sharpe-* garage, giving their
have Increased their stock again returned to Hastings and
the hydraulic plant was constructed, rapidly grew to a total of one hun­ oldest existing state bank charter, entire time to selling new furniture
and now have a full and complete
ed at the present time. Mrs. Mamie a m non volt transmission was ex­ dred-fifty. The turn of the century being state bank No. 11. The first and dlamnt in nod cabinet making.
tended from tlie plant through the saw a continued growth of telephone ten have dropped out for oiie reason After several year* Mr. Harri* left
dren's wear, hosiery, lingerie, foun­ Manee will be associated Ln equal village of Middleville and tied in service In Hastings, in 1907. all or another, mostly suspensions dur­
for Grand Rapids and Mr. Miller
dation garments and notions. They partnership with Mr. Frandaen In with the steam plant at Hastings,
ing the recent depression.
conducted lhe business alone.
FRLDFAUSCH.
art always pleased to see their old lhe new ready-to-wear department which had a capacity of approxi­ ttie down town business section and
At this time the firm moved to lhe
This picture shows the group that
now being Installed In the store.
friends and glad to make new ones
mately 200 kilowatts. This transmis­ under ground cable Installed. Ten WALLACE GROCERY
present location buying out the old serve* the people In one ot Barry
sion line was extended on lo serve years later, automatic telephone
AND FEED STORE. Archie McCoy stand then occupied county's leading grocery stores.
G. K- GOODYEAR HARDWARE. STORY OF GAS AND ELEC­
Walter Wallace, feed and grocery by Btebblna and Glasgow, where Peldpausch's Food Center of Has­
TRIC SERVICE IN HASTINGS. Nashville and Lake Odessa at about equipment was Introduced, replac­
the same Ume.
ing the manual equipment which merchant, first moved to Hastings they have continued in business for tings. Reading from left to right,
O. E. Goodyear, proprietor, was
During tho year of 1891 the Has­
lutd served for so many years.
trained from youth tn the hardware
In 3919, at which Ume he and Earl
in the top row ' we find: Hasel
and plumbing business by his fath­ tings city council granted to Lewis
&lt; With the purchase of the Citizens Bumford purchased the East Bide in the furniture business for over Routh, checker, Earl Bumford,
er. John F. Goodyear, who. for many B. Bentley and his aaeoelates. a don la from the LaBarge hydraulic Telephone Company by the Michi­ Grocery from Jay Mead. In 1928 he 35 years and i* now selling furniture store manager Julian Townsend,
yean, was the leading hardware franchise to supply the City of Has­ station and about. 1918 the 22.000 gan Bell Telephone Company in sold his interest back to Mr. Mead to lhe children of his first customer* checker. Herm Feldpausch. meat
tings with electric light and power •volt lines were extended to lhe vil­ 1923, Hastings telephone exchange and purchased the feed and seed
merchant of this county.
who tell u» they are receiving the clerk. O. F. Feldpausch and Roman
In April of this year. Mr. Good­ for the first time. During the year lages of Woodland and Vermont­ became a part of the nation wide stare owned by John McLravy. He same satisfactory merchandise and Feldpausch. owners and general
year purchased Welssert
Bros 1905 the Hastings city council grant­ ville.
Bell System. Oontinued improve­ conUnued to operate tills store unUl service their parents received.
managers, and Harold Parker, book­
ed
to
Fred
W.
Freese.
John
M.
OU.
Hardware, a business of sixty years
In 1911 thc company had approxi­ menu have followed from that time 1933, at which time be decided to
keeper. in lhe bottom row: Francis
reputable standing. He ha* partly and Seymour Y. HUI. a franchise to mately 1350 electric customers and down to the present. Today, almost expand the business and to accom­
CRUra SHOE STORE.
Ulrich, produce clerk. Edward Fish­
a -ga* •plant and render gas
remoueicu
uuuuiiig ruiu
___
remodeled uic
the building
r-nd uuuuru
Installed construct
about 650 gas customers. At the 1.000 Hastings customers enjoy the plish this he moved the store to the'
Located next door to the Hastings er, bulk goods, Dan Shay, produce
comolete new merchandise, Includ- service nere.
present time they are serving over convenience and protection of local Bert Wlthey store building and add­ City bank, tills store succeeded the manager, BUI Thomas, itock. clerk,
Ing some very attractive and up-to- I
' 5.000 electric customers and 1.500 and long distance telephone service. ed a line at groceries. This end of Ironside Shoe company, which was and Earl Tate, meat clerk. Missing
date household ware, general hard- by a company ^own m the Has- gas customers. The system demand
the business Increased to such an established here Ln Hastings, about from the picture are Kenneth Gog­
ware. electrical appliances and tings Electric Light and Power Com- is greatly In excess of the full ca­
extent that in
THE NATIONAL BANK.
In March of tills year be
gins, meat manager and Bishop
Alabastine nalnt The salesmen, too, P*11? and the gas company was pacity of the old Thornapple Gas
The National Bank of Hastings
^^r^n^he
this store as a partner of Harold Kuhn, baked goods and candles.
haveliad
f of experience In known
».,jwn as
as the
the Hasting.
Hastings Gw
Oas Oom
Com­­ and Electric Company generating
was organized and Incorporated unhe formeriv ^cunied hr moved Smith in 1929 and tn 193S the part­
Feldpausch’* opened their first
hardware and can be depended up­ pany. The electric plant was started equipment.
nership was dissolved. Mr. Crue con­ store In Hastings, twenty-five years
i!"
banking M. or u» OMUd
‘
on to render promp' and efficient
the feed and seed business to this tinuing alone, at which time lhe ago when Gory Feldpausch and
Tlie average rate per kilowattStates of America December 4. 1933,
occupied by the north end of lhe
service.
store and has operated both stores name was changed to Crue's Shoe Gard Bennett purchased the meat
hour for electric service Ls less than
county garages. The gas plant was half of what it was Ln 1920 but the and opened for business December since that time. Mr. Wallace em­
Store and a complete new stock pur­ business of Woodmansee and Sny­
9, 1933.
started where it Is now located.
FRANDSEN'S STOREployes five men in lhe two stores.
average consumption Is tlfree or four
chased.
der. located at 148 E. State street,
At the Ume Uie bank was organ­
Very Utile Information is avallA. K. Frandaen came to Hastings
times what it was during lhe same ized It purchased the Class A assets
When this stole re-opened Uiere in a few months. Mr. Bennett sold
year. Many Improvements in con­ of the Hastings National Bank, then
WATERS CLOTHES SHOP.
was not a pair of shoes carried over hl* interest to Michael Fedewa. The
Thc Walers Clothes Shop origi­ from lhe old stock. Al the present
struction and service routines have being operated by a conservator un­
followed through the year until at
nated in 1920. on September 28th. as lime Crue's carry Rohn Numatlc
der the dlrecUon of the Comptroller
ton's interest and continued to run
the present Ume Hastings enjoys of the Currency. These assets were a partnership between Thos. E. Wa­
ters/and his son Ray. The firm Brown and Brownblit shoes for chil­ the store unUl 1937. At lhat time, in
very reasonable rales and very re­
segregated and classified under flic
liable service, both gas and electric. direction of Uie Comptroller of the
dren. BrownbllLs and other good defiance of all superstition. It was
the
13th of,
This partnership continued for 12 makes for
ivr women.
wuiiicu. Since
oincc opening
ouriiuig purchased
-------.----- , on Friday,
„-------- ....
-----------Currency, Washington. D. C.. and
years until the death of Thos. E. Mr. Crue has also Installed a shoe I May' by 016 flrm of HUer and
REED’S DRUG STORE.
as time has proven, his Judgment
This store was established In 1917 was very sound, as the assets have Waters In 1932. On October 22nd. shining parlor, operated by Sanford Baird. Mr. Baird moved to Hastings
from Ionia and managed the store
by Mr. Mulholland, who operated Even to be of the very best any 1032 the Waters Clothes Shop was Rover*
’
_______
for three and a half yean. He then
re-opened in the same location by
the store for some time. Tt then
k. could own. Thc bank has had
bought Mr. Hiler*&gt; Interest in the
changed hand* several times before a phenomenal growth; starting as a Ray Waters.
HODGES JEWELRY STOKE.
Mr. Walers has been connected
Uie present owner Bernard R. Reed
One of the comparatively new business and has been owner and
operator
of Uic store since 1931. To­
with
the
retail
clothing
business
In
purchased In 1932 from H. B. sets to 8834.792.03 m disclosed by
stores Ln Hastings Li thc Hodges
Cowdrey. Since that time he has
Hastings for the past 27 years, work­ Jewelry Store. Five years ago this day the store is one of the most
Ils statement a* at the close of busi­
its .kind,
handling
men's
continued to operate the store and
ing previously for lhe Godfrey uiuuui
month Mr . nuuKca
Hodges purchased
uurciuucu uie
Ute complete of~ —
. . '----.
—
..
ness June 30. 1938. It Is a member
furnishings of nationally
today It is a well established and
Clothing Store. LoppenIhlen's and fixture* of lhe Pancoast and Nobles a,ld
of the Federal Reserve System and
Jewelry store and opened a new store known manufacturers.
progressive concern, carrying a
Prandsen's.
of the Federal Deposit Insurance
complete line of drugs, wall paper
in
the
same
location.j
.....
Corporation, its membership In this
and paint. The store also boasU a
Mr. Hodges came to Hastings'
”' A- HALL.
JOHN BULLING AND SON.
corporation Insures each depositor
modern soda fountain and "Ice against loss up to 83.000.
This firm was organized by John from Ionia, where for twelve years 1 W. A. Hall purchased his first
Cream Bar." which has proven pop­
Bulling in 1903, selling organs, he had worked for Van Recncns business, a hardware store, in IBM
The present officers of the bank
pianos and phonographs, at Wood­ Jewelry as watchmaker and repair- ' from Ira Van Valkenburg, then Io­
ular with Uie people of this com­
are: John C. Ketcham, president;
munity.
land. in company with his wife, It nian. He gained a very thorough 1 cated on the corner of Court and
Charles S. Potts, vice-president;
Mr. Reed came to this city from Warren E. Carter, cashier, and Or­ was Mr. Bulling'* custom to take his knowledge of the entire jewelry Jefferson slreeU. Mr. Hall had rePriced from &gt;20 lo 1600
horse and wagon, load on a piano or biKinras there, which served lo help 1 eelved ids early training In the
Kalamazoo, where he owned and ville A. Boyles, assistant cashier.
operated a drug store for several
organ and go through the country him In his new venture In Hastings. । hardware and farm Implement buslDirectors: J. c. Ketcham. Chas. 8.
years. Mr. Reed's store Is known as
canvassing until the instrument was Hodges Jewelry is a modern up-to- nc“ w*th W. F. Powers, then later
Potts. Burton A. Perry. Chas. I.
sold. Wljen \ commercial radio sets date Jewelry store and gift shop 1 wlth lhe well-known firm of Good­
a store of "friendly service.”
Hendershott. Kim Sigler.
were first manufactured Bulling'* carrying a wide range of nationally year Bros. In 1913 he built his presHASTINGS' FIRST
pioneered in this field, being the advcrtlsed merchandise Inclurilng: ent building on Jefferson street and
Show Room in Long
HASTTNGS CITY BANK.
TELEPHONE SERVICE.
first exclusive radio dealer In Barry Elgin watches, Fostoria glassware from 1913 to 1918 the store Included
Believing that another bank was county. Several hundred battery sets and Parker pens.
Fifty-two years ago—in 1884—the
,a complete line of farm machinery
&amp; Moore Store
tinkle of the telephone bell was first needed in Hastings, thirty-five busi­ were sold within a few years.
In addition to the hardware and fur­
heard Ln Hastings. At lhat time ness and professional men of this
In 1928 his son Rolfe opened a HINMAN'S THE BIG
niture. Because of ill health In 1918.
,----------------------------------------------------------service was supplied over a toll line city perfected the organization of display of radios in Hastings and
LITTLE STORE. 11 became necessary to close out the
the Hastings City bank October 28. up to the present time the firm has
Located at 829 North Michigan r&lt;rm Implement line.
1886. with a capital of 850.000. The added many electrical appliances. avenue this store was purchased.
Several of Hastings' prominent
new bank entered actively into thc For twelve years they have handled August 15. 1928. by William I, and business men received their early
movemenu and enterprises designed Sparton products and have sold Chas. H. Hinman, tether and son. training under Mr. Hall In this store.
to promote the growth of this city nearly 1.500 radio sets. Last year This co-partnership has operated In After working
for him
they
and county.
fourteen truck loads of Bparton the same location for 10 year*. This branched out into places of business
In July 1890. thc firm of Messer Electric refrigerators were brought year marks the 47lh anniversary In of tiielr own.
Bros. Ai Reynolds, consisting of into Hastings.
the grocery business for W L. Hin- । Tb* w A. Hall store prides Itself
Chester Messer. Richard B. Messer
Servicing Is In charge of John man. who started in 1889 at Thomp- especially on IU fine window disand Don w. Reynolds, purchased Bulling, Jr., the younger son. The sons Station, a small lumber camp
ot which they have always
the controling interest in the stock new line of Sparton radios is to be town, which is now known as South made a feature.
of the City Bank, and Dan W. Rey­ announced soon and will include Branch tn Ogemaw county. Mr.
Ur Hldl now ho,ds the position of
nolds was elected cashier. Chester several new developments in re-t
----------------------------- ..
being the oldest merchant in point
Messer succeeded judge David O. ceptlon, tone expansion and circuits.
business develop from the old days of personal ownership In Hastings.
Robinson as president, serving in
of tiie "cracker barrel" to the pres­ The store stresses the motto: "The
that capacity beginning July 24.
MILLER FURNITURE STORE.
ent modern days of "electric refrig­ Home ot True Values—where every
1889 until he died, when he was suc­
Over 30 years ago. George Miller
customer U a friend.”
ceeded by his brother Richard, and started a small cabinet shop on eration" and "quick delivery serv­
The present location of the
the latter by M- L. Cook. F. W. Steb­ South Jefferson St-, in the building ice."
store and Ila complete line of gro-1
KROGER'S STORE.
bins succeeded Mr. Cook as vice­ now occupied by lhe Erls O. Jar­ cerles and meau make an ideal1 One ot u,e •xnrtu country units
president. The capital stock was in­ man tin shop and was kept very trading place tor al) north aide paby lhe Grand Rapids
creased to 875.000 In 1911 and on busy making new furniture and re- trons and with their modem de- branch of the Kroger Grocery A;
livery system of four deliveries dally Baking Company 1* located in lhe
HINMAN'S serve customers in ev- cltF 01 Hasting*, at 110 Slate St.
ery part of the city. It really live* up Approximately three years ago this
to IU name of being a "big little new ■tore
opened to replace lhe
store."
Uore located at 114 8. Jefferson. The
_______
i new store Li absolutely modem
T. 8. BAIRD CLOTHING STORE, throughout, having electrical refrigEslablished by R. Kirk Grant in erallon. latest type produce racks
the early eighties, this store has and display equipment.
continued tn business for more than
The grocery department is in
fifty years as a store for men and charge of Herman Arold. who has
CAkkED UPON FMMEXP IN Zl QoUNTiEf
boys.
'-been
--- —
“ “
with
the company -for more
G. F. Chidester and E. A. Burton | than ten years Mr. Arold has had
purchased lhe store in 1894 and op- i wide experience In the grocery busi­
erated It together for some years. I ness and is familiar with every de­
Mr. Chidester ister bought Mr Bur­ tail of the operalion of Kroger

R
will
ow
r.r
i.'i.

K

Jlj±.

«.•'I

firm of Feldpausch and Fedewa con­
ducted a meal market until 191g,
when they entered the grocery field.
They conducted a very brisk buslMarket.
In 1938, Roman
Feldpausch
bought out the Interest of Michael
Fedewa end the store became known
as Feldpausch'* Market. It wu
completely remodeled in 1939.
In 1933 following lhe trend of the
new demands made an their type of
merchandising they opened a ware­
house store at 206 E. State Bt, now
known as Feldpausch Food Center.
At the time ot opening, they occu­
pied 900 square reel of floor *pace.
employed two clerks during the week
and a third on Saturdays. Today the
store has been enlarged to where tt
has 3400 square feet of selling floor
space with an additional 3,800 square
feel of back room and storage space.
Besides the thirteen people em­
ployed at Food center, lhe firm em­
ploys six clerk* at Feldpausch mar­
ket making a total of nineteen em­
ployees.

See The New

stores. Both Mr. and Mr? Arold arc
acUve in community and civic af­
fairs. The meat department is oper­
ated by Henry vohlalng. who has
been connected with lhe company

10.37

(Continued on page 4. Sec. 3)

PHILCO
RADIOS

The United States Military acad­
emy la located oo lhe right bank
of tba Hudson river, In Orange
counly. New York, about 60 miles
north ot New York city.

at the

FAIR

6

7

HEIL

SAVE
Mtrvw

CO-OP TRACTOR
• POWER

FUEL
-7, NOUI!

• EXTRA VALUES
minimum of fuel and oil

• EASILY CONVERTED

A* regular equipment. Co-op Tractors are
equipped with these features:
o SELF-STARTER
• ELECTRIC HEADLIGHTS
O BATTERY’ and QI .ERATOR
IGNITIOK
O FOOT and HAND BRAKES
O TRUCK TYPE STEERING
GEARS

From regular tread to cultin.

• ALLPURPOSE Machine

dal lug arrangement Ask .

Well adapted lo highway hauling. Will do 23
to 40 miles per hour. Steers a* easily as
Luck. Fuel and oil consumption no greater.

GL

IS

■hl

th.

tu

l&gt;l Wart .
2nd Wart.

Or.nx.vUte
4lb Wart
Prairtevllla ...—S
2nd J*ra«iacl.
Dr. Frank Cxrrothers.
Chrmn. Barry County
Republican Committee.

Secy. Barry County
Republican Committee.
July 29th, 1938.

GE

e.

NATION'S WORKERS
★ Of all the Nation's power resources,

N
We'll Deliver! — Became price* will loan advance

gel from the mine* . . . because you may not be

the greatest Is lb man-power. From
the axe oi the pioneer to the manifold
tools of modern industry, we are In­
debted to the skill and brains of our
workers. Upon their sturdy shoulders
this Nation has been carried to Lndustrial greatness.
Labor Day '.a dedicated to the

security la the future.
varied ladUtta^ la a •'tool” for the
worker who eeake to achieve ftasmcUl
buooom and independence.

to buy your winter's coal now!

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.

HASTINGS

DEALERS IN'WOOU GRAIN. FEED. FLOUR, SALT, LIME,
CEMENT AND COAL

''The Farmer Owned Store" . WOODLAND

tUi

Delegates to the Counly Conven­
tion shall be elected at the Septem­
ber primary, and shall be one for
every seventy-five votes cast for the
Secretary of Stale a^ thc last eicction and shall vbe apportioned as
follows:

able to get what you want later on, wa adviie you

SEE US AT THE FAIR

Cr

ow
BARRY COUNTY REPUBLICAN
CONVENTION.
Al court room. Hastings, Tuesday.
Sept. 32nd. at 11 o'clock A. M , East­
ern Standard Time.
Thr Re|Mibllean County Conven­
tion for the purpose of electing 11
delegates and alternate delegates to
the Republican State convenUon
and to transact such other business
that may legally come before it. will
be held al thc court room at Has­
tings on Tuesday, sept. 22nd. at 11
o'clock A. M. Eastern Standard
Time.
The State convention will be held
In Grand Rapids on Tuesday, Sept.
29th. at 11 o'clock tn lhe forenoon,
far the purpose of nominating can­
didates for the following slate offi­
ces. Secretary of Slate. Slate
Treasurer. Auditor General. Attor­
ney General and one Justice of the
Supreme Court to fill vacancy, and
for the transaction of such other
business as may properly come be­
fore it.

N

2257
N» effort hat been spared to make the Co-op Tractor the best that
modern engineering can produce. Gears, axles and bearings are of
the latest design and have adequate factors of safety to insure long
life under severe duty. Tractor operates quietly. Bo sure to sec
and try this Tractor. We invito a demonstration.

e

• zwwtsa

Has Features YOU WAXT!
Our Chrysler Six Industrial .Motor unit is

K

PHONE 2237

HASTINGS, MICH.

K

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

E

�THE HASTINGS BAXKEB, THTBSDAY. SEPTEMBER &gt;, 1WS

I

legal notices
NOTICE OF MOBTQAOB BALL

NOTICE or MORTOAOE BALE.
Default* hiring been nut (and ratk
4rit.Ha having «*nilau*4 fur mor. than
nlnatr Bart) la th* r*ndill»na ef a certain
mortgage mad* br Rickard Boardo and
wife. Erne Haarda. of tk. Toarcakia ot
OraaeavUlo. Barrr County Mlrkiaan. lo
home ow-.rio.loan
&lt; oiii'om
TION. a Corporation orraaliod undar tka
lava ot tbo L'allod btalaa of Aaaarka.
dalod May llith 1*34 and rarerdod In
tba oSlaa U tko R.alal.r ot Dreda tor
Darry (oualy. Nkhlraa. &gt;« June HIM.
i 1W14. ia Libor »? ot Morlaarw. on I'aeo
1233. and raid aort«a*M barin* alrrtod
andar tba loraia of taid n..xt*a«a lo do1 rlaro th. onllra ttriaelpal and a.rrurd la1 loroal Iboraoa duo. Whlrk olWlion It dooa
; kareby BkaroUa. parasaal lu whlrk lharo
la elalnod lo bo duo and unpaid na aald
taorlcaco al tho data nt tbla notiro for
prlaripal and iatoraal Iko ram of Thro.
Thou.and El*bl Ifandrod Xlnoly alaa node
SV 100 Dollar* (IS.nSVHI) and no oull
nr proroodln* al law or la ovally hariuz
boon InaUtulod to rotoror th. Job! ae
rurod by aald morlxtao or aay part
Ihtroof:
NOW. THEREFOHE_ br rlriao of Iko

1

NOTICB or MOMTOAUE SA LX.
Defaalla basin* bee. mad. (and aitah
defaults fcarinc continued far mars than
ninety days) In lhe runJitl.n** of a certain

Where Grant Lived

«if». Florrace F. Howell, ot lhe Villa** ot
Naakvlll*. Barry Ceuaty. Mlehiran. to
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPORATION. a (’•rporallon orcanlaed under
the lawa sf the t'nitml Hlalra of America,
dated Jun* 3Blk. 1*34. and recorded In ,
th* office of tho Hecisler ut Deeds fer ,
Barrr Counly. Mkblran. on July 7tb.
1*34. In Liber
of Mnrlsarea. *u Pare
2'15. and raid naarlsram bavin* el*--'rd
oader th* trema of aald m-*rl*a*. lo de
clare the entire prloripal and accrued In­
terrat thereon duo, which electioaa It does ,
kerri.v eaerriae pursuant la w*lrh there 1
la claimed to ho due sad uhMld .a aald
morl(M« at tho dale uf thia notice fur
nrlnrlpal and laterool the a.m ot Nina '
Hundresl Twenty two aud 4*/IO9 Duller*
(lu-3 49) aud no sort or pr..ee*4lo»a al
This is the house in which
taw or In enulty harin* been laalituted
io recover th* drill secured 4&gt;r said morl’resident U. S. Grant lived when
“s'l’.V l"l'l 1 'nV:V*'IcV"v.rtue ot ll.r
le was an obscure army lieutenThe
power ot sale contained i* said morwace | mt stationed in Detroit.
and^iurauaril^o tbe^Rtalute. uf .bo Rial*
louse was recently moved from
tided. NtlTICF. IH VrrUEBV ‘(Hv'eN^ ■ Fort street to Uie Detroit Fair
that on Wednesday. Orlobur I4lh, 1*30. . Jrouna. rtm It will b. open
al ten o'clock Drrnoon. Eastern Htaudard
Time al lhe North front door of the Court
o visitor, lo U&gt;. Michigan Slate
Houv* In lhe City ,f Haatlnca County
Pair. Sept. 4 to 13.
Workmen
of Barry. Michl***, (that Irela* the ploc.
of holdln* Circuit Court In aald County.) , ire shown restoring the,house to
laid morlra** will be forerloaed by a 1 ts condition when Grant lived
sal* al publie auction to the hlrir-*t bld
dor of lhe premise* described in aald
n it. The house will be stocked
mort«**e. **r *o much lhere.it aa tnav i-e
with Grant relics.
neeeaaarv tn liar the amount duo aa afore
_________________________________
said, and anr sum nr auma which mar
be (said by the underalcned at or before - notice or taking townbiiip
aald sale for tavr* ami/or Inauranre on
aald- tiremiaea aud all other auma paid । 0AD8 INTO COUNTY ROAD system,
bv the underslrned. u Ith - interest there- .
M. purauanl to law su.l In the term* of
said mort«a«e. and all le»*| mats, rharc*-* *
and opensea. Includln* an attorney'* »
fee. which premise* are described aa
follow*:
;&gt;
Thai certain piece or parcel of land ■'
■ltuate.1 In the Villa** ot Nashville, County of Barry, Mlri&gt;l**o. mor. par , 1
llcularlv de.rrit.ej aa:
|
"Mia Ninety four &lt;941 and Ninety- 6
Are f*5) of the Hardeodarf Ad.lillon .
lo the Villas* of Naakvlll*. Mtcliiran. '
aeenrdlnc to the recorded plat there
of. In Town 3 North of Hance 7 Weal. r
Barry County Michlcan "
1
Ti«ether with th* hereditaments and
appurtenances thereunto brionclnc. and '
ail lhe r.tale. rixht. title- and Interest ■'
which lhe tnorteaxora had In aald lands .
and lenementa and everr pari ttereof.
,
Dated: July nth 1934
*
'
HOME OWNERH' LOAN CORPO- I '
RATION. Mortcacee.
. .
Olenn B. Mathews.
| 1
Attorney for Mortracre.
- .
Bualnesa address: National Bank Anne*. , 1
fonla. Mlchlsan.
(ml 10 1-30

and Mirauanl lo Ibo Hlatutra of tho Nltta
ut Mlrblaan In aarh raao mado and proridod. NOTICP. IN HKBEBY &lt;11 VEN ibal
on Tutelar. Roptombor 15lh. 1S3S. al
Ion o'clock foronoon. Eaalorn Htandard
Timo, at tba North front door of tho
Cmm Koa*o tn tba Citr of Haalla**
County of Barry. MMnrao. (that brln*
tho plaro of boldine Circuit Court tn
aald County.) aald mortrao will b. tor.
I rloaod hr a aalo at public auctloa lo lha
hlchoat blddar of tho promlao. dr.rrlbod
In aald morteaca, or a. much thoroof at
may bo noroaaary tn I'ar tho amount dua
aa aforaaal.1 and any turn or aunt* which
mar bo paid by tho uhdoratrnod at or
brioro aald aalo for taro* and/or inauranro oa aald pronalaoa. and all otbor auma
twald by thr Uhdoralcnod. with Intrroal
thoroon. puratiant lo law and lo the
lorwu of aald mort«a*o. and all load
CMla. charro* and oaponara Inrludln*
an attorney', t—. which promtira ar. doacribad aa follow.:
That rortaln jilora or Parral of land
■ Itualod In tho Tow nah it. of Oranrov.llo,
County of Barry. Mich lean, auro partlru
larly doacribod aa:
.
"Commenrln* thirty ala rod* north
of tho ooulh w»a| rornor of fto«t|..n
Twenty Town Two North. Rance Ten
Weal, for berinnin*; tbenre North on
aectlMi lino nineteen rode; thane. Ka&lt;t
Bftr aeren rod a to th. center of tho
a»(lin* hlchway: theatre Houlherly
alone th. renter of anilln* hlrbwar
thirty two rode and fen foot; lhenre
We.t thirty rod* and ala feet to the
aeetlon lino and plaro of be«lnnin«"
Tofoiltar with Ibo heredllaaneota' and
appurtenance, thereunto beluncln*. and
all the eetate. rl*ht. title and IntecoM
which th. tnorlracora had In aald lands
and tenement* and erorr part thereof
Dal-d: Jnna 10th. 18.14,
HOME OWNEIIR' LOAN COliFOREPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION.
RATION. Mort*.*-*.
IfOMB OWNERS' LOAN CORPO­
GRAND RAFIDB. SEPT. CTTH. 1«3B.
RATION. Mortgage.
Tbe.Rctniblican State Contention lo be ;
Olonn D. Mathew*.
lulil for the txiriHiae of niitniaaiinc ran
Attorney for Mortcacee
OLF.NN D. MATHKWH.
Hu.in..a addroaa: National Bank Anner
rrtary of.Hlate. Blate Treasurer.-Auditor ‘
Ionia. Michigan
Out 3 3
General. Alturnev General and one Jua- 3
tir* of Hu nr erne Court to All vacancy, and
STATE OF MICHI (IAN.
Ont • 34
transaction ot anr ..(her bualnraa thai 3
THE CIRCUIT COURT FOB THE
COUNTY OF BAHRY. IN CHANCERY. may legally cum* before It. will be held i
CflANn RAPIDH ON Tt'EHDAY.
‘
In the matter &lt;&gt;f the dia.olutlo.
NOTICE or KORTOAOE BALE.
HEPT 29. I9l*i COMMENCING
'
Co., upon petition of th. board
AT II A. M.
3
ot dlrwtnr. thereof.
Barry County will be entitled to 11 ,
At a aeaalon of eaid rmtrt held delemte* tn aaid ei.r.v.nlibn, belt.* one 1
at the rmirt houae In the rltr of driecate for r»rh 419 voles or major
Haatloca in aald county, on tho frarlli-n thereof. r«*l for th* republican
loth day of Au&lt;u&lt;l. A. D. IS3tl. candidate for Heeretarv i.f titale at the «
PRESENT:
The Hunnrabla November el.rllun nf 1911.
HtlWAHJt C. LAWRENCE
1
R.taarii R. MePeek.- Circuit J«d(o,
The p.tition of Han It. Erb. reeelrer Chairman Republican Htat* Central Com- |
mitlce.
|f
of the Delton Co op Hhlppin* Comi&gt;anv.
JAMES O. FREY.
t-rarinx the iaauaned of an order rollerHeeretary Itepuhhran rstat* Central Com 1
mlttee.
t
A. Il and C «f th. .ricinal doeroe of die
a«.|&lt;ili.iu, and ulao lira tin* direelton aa
to nolire |&lt;&gt; croditur.. canto on for h»»r NOTICE or BALE OF REAL ESTATE. in*, and t&gt;r«H.f« ba.it** been aubnilttr.1 in Htale of &gt;|)rhl(nn ll.e Probate Court fur ,
open eourt in aub*tantiatlun of tlie alle
ration* . r.iiitaiu.d in *ai.l petition, and
In the mailer of the estate ot William
Ilia rmtrt liens fully ad»i-e,l it. the prim h. *Juhnr&lt;-vk, d*cea»r.|
| 1

SOW. THEREFORE. hr

sage and pursuant lu I
Stela ot Michigan In at
provides. NOTICE IH

tiifV/./'bijd

appears to the ruurt that the aald r- of an order nf aai.| court. m*.|- on ll.e 1
eeirer ehottld be reliear.l fr.-m rotnt.il L'tth day ..f July. A. D 19.19, I shall -e-l|
anee with t*arair*t&gt;h* A II and &lt;! of said at (sul.llr nnrti.iai on Hie 1 ttth .lav of Hep- | 3
ortlinal deeree nt diaaolntion.
leqrber. A. D. I'lltt. at 3:&lt;Hi o'clock in,.
the afternoon at th* House on |h«* nrvni j that no rrodit-.r. are known tn the re ise* In *ald c.-untr, the Interest of said
rail er. and Ij.at while it ia iuaprohahle estate In the followint described real re-. 1
that there m*r l.e creditor* yet there
mar lie a poaail.llitr of anrh. and ll.at an
North one half of Northwest ***• nuaropportunity elonihl be affoy.lrd any cred­ Dr Hertiou S4. Town 2 Ntirtli. Rauce 10 - •
itor ahooM there be ote lo file 1,1* rluitn
NiiW-THEUKPilltE. &lt;&gt;n mutton ..f Kira
North one half ./f H*mthi-a*t r*n*r ntter- , ।
Mi&lt;t. r. atlorrie. f. r - . 1 r- ■
Dr. Hevlrnii 84, Town 8 North. Kar&gt;*e !&lt;&gt;' ._
hereby ollDEIIED. A1 '11'IN 1E1» and DE
Eari rate half rd West one half of *
(111'1'1. that aal.l rerri.er be and be h
tu.r.*ra|.ha A. H and C of lhe urlcinal
deeree of diaauluHon.
It 1* fi.rlher OHIiHKKO. AIUUIMIED
ami DECREED that &lt;t»nri of forty
dafr* frotri thia date be. ami the aamo i«
h^.-l.y allowed rreditora of amid Delton
&lt;*mv|., Klilppln* C&lt;» , It anr there be to
Blr their rlaiuia with lhe rrceirer. Dan
B Erl.
It i* further ORDERED. ADJI'DGED
and DECREED that all ere.ltlorm it ai r

time, ehali be fnretrr barred from fllin*
said claim*.
It i. further ORDERED. AIUITDOED
and DECREED thai a ropy ..f il.ia order
shall be ptiblished it* th.* llaatinffa Han­
ner. a ne.ap.per printed. l.uMlahed and
circulated in aald rom.tr of llarr». In
lip i.suea of Auru.t 13 and Aucuat 80.
1030.
*;
RJ SRI I.I. R MrPF.EK.
Circuit Judce.
Allan C Hrde. Clerk.
A true ropy Allan ('. Hade.

BOMB OWNEBH' LOAN CORPOOLENN D. MATHEWS.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE.
Driaults harln* been mad* (and Buck
driaulfa bavin* continued for tnor. than
ninety days) in the ronditiona of a rerlain mortcare made by Harold A. Heffner
and wife, l.aiira A. Heffner, of lhe Tmrnship of Oratiirsille llarrv Countr. Mirb
lean to the HOME OWNERN' LOAN
CORPORATION, a ('..rimrallon orcenired
ueder the lawa nt the I'nited Hlatea of
Amerira. date,I Juno jatb 1934. and re
corded In the Afflre r&gt;f the HerUler of
Deed* for Barry County. Mlehiran on
July I7lh 1934 in Liber «7 of Mort
rases &lt;m Pare 37.1. and aald mortcareharln* rieeted under the terms of said
auortcace io declare the entire prineiuat
and aerrurd Interest thereon du*, which
election It doea herehr eaerriae. purauant
to ahieh there la claimed lo he duo and
unpaid on raid morlcaie al the date of
thia notice for Principal and Intereot the
sum of Ono Thousand Fifty and 04/1(10
Dollar* (Bl.OSO.lVIeand no *»lt or prneeedln* at law or In enullr bavin* been
Inatltnled t* recover lhe debt aeetirod by
void mortsaxe or anr p«rt thereof:
NOW, THEREFORE, br virtue of the
ppwer of sale contained in aald mort*a(* and narauant to the Statute* of the
Blate of MirMvan In aueh ease made and
prnvided, NOTICE. Iff HEREBY OIVEN
lhat on Mondor. October 30th. 1S3B. at
ten o'clock forenoon. Eaalorn Htandard
Time at the North front door nf the
Court Hou** in the City ot Haatlnca.
County nt Berrr. Mlrhtran (that beln*
tho place ot holdln* Circuit Court In sold
County) aald mortca*. will be foreo|n*ed
br a sale al tiublle auction to the hi*he*l
H.ldu
Ik* nremisM ■Useelimd la aaU
mnrtcare, or *o much thereof aa miv ha
necetaarv tn par lhe amount due aa afore
said, and anr anm or auma which mar Ira
paid by the underalrned et or before aald
sale for tare* and/or Inaaraare on aald
Premise*, and all other sum* paid bv lhe
underslrned. with interest thereon, puranant lo law and lo the terms of aald
mortsace. and all local Mat*, rharrea and
evtsenaea. Inrludlnr an allarnev'a fee.
which premia** ar. described aa follow*;
That certain niece nr parrel nf land
elluatej In lhe Townahlp of Orancevllle.
Countr of Barrr, Michlcan. more fartlrw
larly dearrlbed aa;
"Comnaenelnc at Norlhwrat romer
fN. W com) Nee Twenty &lt;301:
(hence East Thirty rirbt rods IK SB
B): Month Ten rod* (S 10 It);
Ihenee F.aat El«ht rod* (E. B R):
Rotilh Ten rods (R. 10 R.); Weal
FoetvHla rod* (W 4A R): thaw*.
North Twenty rod* fN. ?0 R ) to bo«.
In Town Two North nf Rance Ten
Weel fT 3 W. wf R. 30 Weal). Barry
County. Mlrklcan."
T"«ether with tba hereditaments and anrurtenanaea thereunto boloocinr. sad all
th. eatalat rirtt. title and Interest which
lha morlcaiora had in eald land* and
tenement* and every nart thereof.
Dated: July 33. 1914.
HQME OWNERS'.LOAN CORPO
RATION. Mortsaca*.
Olean D. Mathavr*.
Attorney for Moricace*.
Barinova ad drera: National Rank Anna*.
Taala, Mlehteaa.
Oul Oct. IS

BANNER WANT ADVS. YAY .

J North. iLtrsre In Mr.t
JOTO.*
' “ 1,1 *“ “
■*' **■
RnreU I*. Hunton.

Out, Hept 10

•TO i

*

STATE OF MICHIGAN.
«
XTHE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE
COUNTY OF BARRY. IN CHANCERY. '
II.Stine I'.tv Hank a Mkliiran
irlo-llne fl*o
bankinr mrt-iration.

For...... . 'Haren* ami Era A. Hav

Defendant*.
NOTICE OF HALE.
0
In pursuance of * decree of th* Cir- _
cuit I curl for lb* CouiHv ot Harrs, io
Clianrerv. made and entered on the 3rd
dav of Aucu.t. A. D 1934. in the above
et.tiilvd cau.e. 1. the' .iil.*rrtUr. a Cir­
cuit t'wurl 1 ontniisslooer nf the Countr
of Harry, ahall *ell at public auction or
ryndue to lhe hlrhr.t 1.1.Ider at the East
front door of the C-urt Hraoe in the City
of Hyalines In *airl Cmintr *&gt;f llarrv. on
the 3Slh dav nf HrnUtri**r. A. It 1936.
*1 len o'rlnrk in the f.,r&gt; mmn of that
dav. ell that rerlain uiere nr parcel .if
lan.l aitualr nod heir* in Ih* Township
of Rutland. Barry &lt; ini*. Mi.l.i*.n. and
more partirularlv deacribe.1 a* follow*.

DELTON.
We are all very thankful for the
nlcc'tains we have had of late. Bul
die sudden change of temperature
Saturday came uAexpacledly.
: Mrs. Ellis E Faulkner entertained
the Barry Counly Republican Wom‘en's club Wednesday afternoon.
Mrs John C Ketcham of Hastings

| naar were Sunday dinner guests of
their parents, Mr and Mrs. Peter
Leinaar.
Mr. and Mre. Von Dunn and Mr.
and Mrs Charles Harrington visited
the peach country around Fenvllle
Sunday and brought home some
peaches.
Leslie Williams and family with
Mr. and Mre. Paul Ray of Plainwell
spent Sunday in
Chicago.
Kwiuv^u.
Sunday was uiMra.
Mary Doster s

were aerved by Uie hostess.
A large crowd gallwred Sunday to
near .Major
hear
Major rarxrr.
Parker, cnapiam
chaplain oi
of me
the --------- .."t
—
U. B »nw. live hi. ..Idrru which
«nim*ln«l th.loUo.ln, ,U«.U*
.a well worth luunlna lo
I« • co-otwr.Ur, dinner: Mr. ml
—
----- ..............
--1 Mrs. Leon Doster and Elizabeth,
dtj mwitaf at the home of Mra. l Mrs. Laver* Quick and Lawrence
Mildred Fuhrman in Kalamazoo on and Nbrma Quick of Banfield. Mr.
and Mra. Peter Schlubler and two
Thursday of this week.
I Mr. and Mrs. Jay Wilkinson will children of Kalamazoo, Mr. and
entertain Uie Delton L. A. S. for Mis. Roger Williams and Dean and
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Norwood.
dl™u"r Wednesday.
•
The next regular Garden Club
Mr. and Mr&gt;
Mrs. Harvey Dln
Dings
at-­
Mr
“ at
tended Ute funeral of John Adam- meeting has been postponed unUl
„ „„
aon of Bedford, at the Hubbel Fu- lhe third Thursday in September
i
aun. &lt;the 17) on account of lhe Barry
County Fair, when it will be held at
&lt;iay afternoop.
Leon Solomon of Detroit has been the home of Mrs. Margaret Garrett.
Mr. and Mrs M. B Norwood spent
spending a few days with hla father and sister here. Wilbur Solomon Saturday afternoon and evening in
Hastings.
'
I returned home with his fattier Sun­
The
annual meeting and eiecUon
da&gt;'
■ ,
a"d **”• l*°“ Dunning: are of officers of lhe Delton Community
staying in Hastings this week at the Club will be held Ln the Community
iuall on Monday evening. September
i ter while the Testers are away on a
will be In charge of Mesdames Elsie
vacation.
Mrs. cheeseman. who Is taking Horton. Vina Durkee, beds Harring­
care of Mrs. Blackman, spent Sun­ ton and Lula Wertman. Tlie pro­
gram will be in charge of Mesdames
day at her home at Dowling.
Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Bush, Miss Beatrice Dunning, and Frances Nor­
Carolyn Solomon and Mrs. Irene wood. Everyone plan to come and
Harrington attended camp meeting start In this year's meetings with
good attendance.
al Hopkins on Wednesday.
H. T Reynolds. Max Reynolds and
Edward Lowry spent Saturday night
NASHVILLE.
and Sunday at Cadillac.
A birthday party was held Wed
Mr. and Mrs. J. c. Horton and
daughter. Kathryn, spent from Sat­ nesday night at the home of Mr.
urday until Tuesday with Mr. and and Mra. Dell White in honor of
Mrs George Judson near Traversa Mr. White's and Yvonne Appelman'*
birthdays. A pot luck supper was
Mr. and Mrs. will Sheldon of Kal­ enjoyed. Thane attending were Ar­
I amazoo \wcrc Sunday guests of Mr. thur Appelman and two daughters,
■ and Mra) Leon Leonard and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Appelman. Mr.
I Mrs. Kellie Givens of Cloverdale and Mrs. Prank Kellogg, George
■ has been spending a few days with and Honor Kellogg.
। iter daughter, Mrs. Mary Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Coy O. Brumm are
I A very happy gathering was held moving into thc house on Tteed
i in the church basement last Wed- street vacated by Mr. and Mra. Ar। nesday night when the members of Ile Reed.
Dr. 8. M Fowler of Battle Creek
the church choir of 10 years ago,
families met
met for
terr a co
co.­ called on the Gall Lykins family
with their families,
operative supper In honor of Rev. Sunday.
and Mrs. 8. W. Hayes now of Lake­
The John Appelmans have retired
view, who was the pastor here at from lhe grocery business after ?8
that time. Tlie choir consisted of a years. For a good many years they
double male quartette, and a chorus had their store where the present
of mixed voices. Tlie members Hi-Speed gas station it; the last
of the male quartette were Harvey few years they have had the front
Dings and 8
"
w. Hayes,
"---first part of the Buxton block.
tenor;
”
____________
Myers and Halvanon of Middle­
H.
T.
Reynolds
and
Albert Hauer, second tenor; John ville have bought the J. B. Kraft
Adams and
Dr.
M. J. Cross, property. They make violins, do
first bass; Dr. C- E. Morford and repairing and make strings.
Mr. and Mra. Von W. Fumlss and
Robert Barnes, second bass. All were
present at this gathering except Dr. daughters. Pauline and Margaret,
Cross who is deceased. After lhe relumed Saturday from their west­
supper had be?n served, a short ern trip.
Mrs. Harry Johnson and children
program was qarrled out. which
consisted oCsaveral songs by the returned Tuesday to their home in
chorus of voices, a few stunts pro­ Knightstown, Ind.
vided by Mrs. Bush and Mra.
Mrs. Leland Weeks returned Sat­
Barnes, then a group of old songs urday from the hospital at Ann Ar­
by the Male quartett, some reminis­ bor where she had been for ob­
cences of old times and a nice talk servation.
Thc firemen and their families
by Rev. Hayes, also one by Mr. A. J.
Hauer of Woodland who was the had a chicken supper Wednesday
principal of the Delton school at night at the Masonic Temple.
that time. There were some more
Mrs. R. A. Saunders has returned
songs by the quartette. It was an home from a visit with a niece in
evening much enjoyed by everyone Carthage. Ma
Funeral services for Frank J.
of the twenty six that were present.
All missed the presence of Dr. Cross, Purchls. age 83. were held Wednes­
but did not fall to sing once more day afternoon at 3 o'clock, con­
his favorite song. -Counted In."
ducted by Rev. M. E. Hoyt, with
Gail and Frank Spangler and burial in Lakeview cemetery. Mr.
wives of Indianapolis are occupying Purchls spent most of his life
the Wertman cottage at Wall lake around here. About 80 years ago he
this week.
was married to Ida Adell Squires.
Mrs. Nina Ware is the new clerk He leaves his widow, five children,
Mrs. Fem Cross of Kalamazoo,
in the Delton Bakery.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Leinaar and John Purchls of Nashville, Dr. Max
family and Mr. and Mra. Ebbie Lei- Purchls of Detroit, Prank A. Pur-

Johnson of CedareUte in lhe upper dinner guests
peninsula.
The Ladies' Aid of the Evangelical
church met Wednesday afternoon

Mrs. Prichard, Mrs. Amos Wenger.
Mesdames Nina. Elia and Margaret
Garlinger.
Mr. and Mrs Prank Diibahner
and daughter ot Chicago called on
relatives and friends here this
and children spent
.__ ,
Mr. and Mra. J. Robert Smith amaxoo with Mr. and Mr
Duffy.
Mr. and Mre. Robert HUI

Van De Venter at Fennville.
Gall Lykins and twin sons were
in laming Tuesday on business.
a couple ot day* U*t‘ week.

tertained Friday night by Mre. Min­
nie Diggs and Mrs Cora Warner.

reputation, but never better than
hU principles.”—lAtena.

Glenn Wotring and at SM&gt;
lake.
Mr. and Mre. Ward Grant

Aler
land* Dairy

High in Cream Content. Raw
or Pasteurixed. Pt. 5c; Qt.

HIGHLANDS
Phone 2651

Gas-Fired Circulating Heater

STATE OF MICHIGAN.
CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY
OF BARRY. IN CHANCERY.
Dorothy Shupp. Plaintiff,

To Replace That Old Stove
or Room Heater
No Fuel or Ashes to Carry
Nr. Soot or Dust to Ruin Rugs or Curtains

No Parts to Wear or Bum Out
You Pay for Fuel as You Use it.

INSTANT HEAT—A» Little u You Like.

Beautiful, modernistic design—a fine piece of furniture that enhances
the beauty of any home.

phone

2305 or 2526

For a FREE ESTIMATE for Your Homo

_____ECONOMICAL

Visit Our Display Room

Consumers Power Co

DAIR

ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.

“Moore’s”

Adalbert CortrlikL
Circuit f'oairi t'.immlaaloner, llarrv
Countr Mirliican

Haatinca Mirhlcan
Dated:• llaalin**. Michicem Aucuat 12.
A. D. 1936.
i
* Out 9 21

«f

and daughter, June, called on Mrs.
Joseph Grant and children at the
farm Monday enroute home.

Natural Gas Heated Home!

The East Half of ilt* X*rtbni*t ^auar-

and that lhe same enuld not ba aerved
on raid Defendant because after diligent
aearth and Inuuirv aald Defendant could
not b« found within tb* ttlate of Mirkiaaa. 1U*1 —M. .1-*---Jf &gt;1 1* af
aald Htfle of Mirhlian. and that eald
thane* rr summons ha* been returned
and tiled herein hr lhe Hberiff ot B4rrr
County with hi* eertifleat* lhat after
diligent search and inquiry he was unable
to flnd the aaid Defendant within the
Hlate of Michigan on or before th* return
dav nf aald aummona.
On motion of Wra. T) Bauer, attor­
ney for the Plaintiff, it ia ordered that
lhe said Defendant. "Lynne Hhnpp. uua*
bis appearanr*- to* be entered In thia
cause within threw month* after lha data
of thia order, and In eeae ot Hie appear­
anr* lhat he rente hi* answer to th*
Plaintiff's Bill of Complaint to b* Bled,
and a ropy thereof aerved upon the Plain
tiff's attorney within twenty dan after
tervle* on him of a eopy nf aald Bill
and nallra of thia order, and that in de
fault thereof said Hill bo taken aa con­
fessed by aaid Defendant.
It ia further ordered that within forty
days after the dal* hereof, th* Plaintiff
835 l.tlihil.is; «£# F.S!:
tM|M&gt;r printed, published aud circulating
In eald County of Barry, and that such
imhllralloa bo enntlaued al leaal one* In
each weak for all eueeoaalv* week*, or
that he rauae a eopr ot this order to bo
personally served upon aald Defendant al
leaal twenty dare before th* limo above
prescribe* for hl* appearance.
It la further ordered that tba aaid
Plaintiff eana* * e*py of thia ardor to b*
mailed lo aaid Defendant al hla last
known pnat office nddreta. by registered
mall, and • ratara receipt demanded, at
least twenty days Were lha data herein
prescribed tor hie appearance.
BUSSELL R MePEEK.
Circuit Jude*.
Wm. O Bauer, Atlpracr tor Plaintiff.
Haallnga. Wick.
7 wk*.

MM the
will return
Monday.
Mra. Esther Manhall has returned to wither
her homedaughter
here afterMra
a month
s
^ton

Enjoy All the Comforts of a

quarter of th* Northwest uuarlec of
melion 3.1. Town :1 North of Rae.Ce
9 "17**1, ri-iitslnlu* 120 acre* mor* or

Lynn* Hhunp. Defendant.
Huit pending In tba Circuit Court for
the Countr of Barry, in Chancery, on
lhe 3rd dav ot August. A. D 1936.
Il aatlsfartorilv appearing to thia
Court by affidavit on 61* that a ehancerv
anmmuna has been dulv Issued out of
and under tbe_ eegl of raid Court, for th*

with relatives tn
hauser and Dicky

rfoMloroofe. INVESTIGATE

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, TIHTtWAY, 8 EFT EMB ER 3. 1D0

The Windstorm Co. Ls the largest Mr. B. A- LyBarker. who has con­
patron of the Hastlngg postoffioe Unued to do busli^ss since lhat
Ume.--The -store
U.- --primarily
~
-- ------------- a Drug
Buaiuews Firms Prairieville. Barry, Johnstown and It Is largely due lo this company ------Assyria, and over into Eaton coun­ that we have In Hastings a post- store, but lhe stock also Includes a
ly. doing iuravy damage to property. □fflee of tha first class Instead of line of trusses and a complete line
(Continued from page 1 Sec. 2)
At tliat Ume there was no provision the second class. The company em­ of palnU. Mr. LyBarker employes
four men in lhe store. Floyd Miller.
In Michigan law permitting the or­ ployes
ganisation of a mutual company to ILS office and there are several field pharmacist, snd clerks, jean Eng­
men. Tlie company has an enviable land. Farrell Anderson and Norval
Insure against wlndjlorm*
The late Selah W. Mapes of Oh- record for the prompt payment of Stamm.
every loss as soon as it is adjusted
Ware Qo. are the three remaining
Under the present management it
MARK’S STORE.
firms in lhe business section lo
lata D. w. Rogers of this city, was
Located on West Bute street this
lain their original Identities
secretary of the Barry and Eaton has wisely established the plan ot
Mutual Jirc Insurance Company. having a sufficient reserve on hand---------- — ______ ..._____ __ — r..
with which to pay IU yearly losses j 1927 Russell smelker was appointed
firm 35 years with the exception of The destruction wrought by these
to that It lias not for many years 1 manager. Under hU management
year spent at Ferris Institute two cyclones led Mr Rogers lo set
here he received his training to about organizing a mutual company borrowed a dollar. IU business is the store haa conUnued lo grow un­
*cotne a registered pharmacist and to insure against loss by cyclones, capably managed and It has a fine Ul today Mark's carries one of lhe
largest stocks of auto accessories
six months in the army during the tornadoes, and windstorms In the reputation throughout the state.
and parts in Barry county. They al­
war. Maurice M. Crookston has been i fall of 1884 his brother, lhe late
so carry a complete line of radios
with the company for 10 years.
I jerry M Rogers, of Carlton, was
and sporting goods.
lhe
p' sU&gt;rc ,n
The store
store is
is generally
generally known
known as
as f! elected
elected to
lo me
lhe legislature
legislature which
which.. i Thc
the
Rexall
the 1 l&lt;ar0*lv
largely thmntrh
through hi*
hU nffnrtx
efforts. enacted *'** ,°*xnetL ,n.lhe,
of J®38 aJ
■ _ -*&lt; etare^
■ —. having been ....
R. K. HURD-CHEV­
Rexall agency for 30 year* They « l*w permitting the organization ' 1“ We&gt;l
«teeet. In 3ul&gt;'
ROLET DEALER.
a compleu11™ot other of mutual windstorm companies.1&gt;to« *as operjed al ill
Mr. Hurd, owner and operator of
offioe supplies Devoe A Rey- 'This was passed early in the 1885 South Jefferson street. These two
i
stores continued to operate until 1933. this agency, started in Uie automo­
' when the two stores were combined bile business in 1924 with the Chev­
______ ,---- _ ___ _______ _ On April 7. 1885 a charter was
| and moved lo the present location, rolet Motor company. After several
■SoommodaUng to the public and granted the Michigan Mutual Tor- corner of SUte and Jefferson. This years with the company as district
fair in all their dealings.___________ nado. Cyclone, and Windstorm In­
I store h8s been under the' manage­ manager of lhe northwestern part
-------------_ surance company. Among the in-;
ment of Mr. W. H Murphy since of the state of Michigan, he came
GOODYEAR BROS.-------------------------- corporators were the late Judge'
lhat Ume. Assisting Mr. Murphy are to Hastings tn November of 1928 and
HARDWARE CO., clement Smith. J
M. Rbgera.
Mr. Claude Sabin, manager of the opened a garage Ln the budding Urey
This firm is one of the oldest in Charles H- Bauer. 8. J. Bldelnusn.
now occupy on E. State' street near
—ino Mfahllkhwl
HuUw. &gt;Klw
MIHM in
m lorn
IMO W.
w. W.
w. Cole.
&lt;a e. D.
n W.
W. Rogers. Hiram
Hlnun . w
d Tewank. produce mroKw Henry
Nvnrv Aa
rinndvear when he Coleman. &lt;the grandfather
craiidlathcr of Earl
'
.....__ ’
...
by
Goodyear,
fore moving into this building it was
started it as a general store. He con-1 Coleman&gt; A. C- Towne. G. K. Beam- ager. Wilbur Watson and Peter completely remodeled and redecorat­
Fedewa. clerks.
tinued the business unUl 1882 when i er. and M. L. Cook Of these, only
ed. Since opening here the agency
Ute name was changed to H. A. j Uie Ib-"1 named Ls living. There were
has sold close to three thousand new
J. C. PENNEY COMPANY.
Goodyear and Sons. David 8 and 60 members nearly all of whom were
The J. C- Penney store was opened and used cars.
John P. becoming associated with members of the Barry and Eaton tn Hastings in Uie fad of 1831 un­
Mr. Hurd tells us lhat this fine
company
when
Ils
charter
was
their father. In 1882 Mr. Goodyear
der the management of Mr. Marion showing would have been impossible
retired and the business was con­ granted. It was renewed April 7. Whitman who operated Uie store without the aid of his competent
Unued under the name of Goodyear 1918 for another thirty years.
until October of 1935- Mr. George E. staff, which Includes Mrs. Gladys
Bros. unUl 1916 when David, son of
How the company grew from a Carpenter Uien took over Ute man­ Foreman, as accountant. Raymond
David 8. and Edward, son of John few hundred thousand dollars to a agement being transferred tare Shroyer, parts and accessories. Floyd
F„ became associated in the busi­ four hundred million dollar com­ from Pennsylvania. Mr. Whitman Huver. service manager. Erlo Ful­
ness. The firm name was changed pany Ls an Interesting story too long was transferred lo lhe Penney store ler. washing and greasing. Jack C
then to Goodyear Bros Hardware for comment here.
। Horton and the late Rom D. Cadin Elyria. Ohio.
company, remaining that until thc
Selah W. Mapes was made thc
The local store occupies thc main wallader. sales representatives, all
present Ume. Early this year Ed­ first president and D- W Rogers the floor of the SUbblns building on of whom have been with the firm
ward retired from the firm. The mercury. Mr. Rogers served in that East Stale street, carrying a full since lhe time of opening. Donald
■tore has had a continuous growth capacity for 33 years. He was suc­ line of men. women and children's Smelker. Albert Kinne and Carl
during this Ume until It is a fine, ceeded by Mlles Andrus, later by E. clothing, infant's wear, dry goods Neilhamer have been added to lhe
modem, up-to-date hardware store A. Parker, the present secretary­ and notions.
sales force and have been with thc
with many side lines such aa farm treasurer of the company. L W.
Assisting in the store are. Ferris company several years. Cecil Cap-'
Implements, automobiles, heating Sunday Ls the president and he has Lathrop. Katherine Loftus. Mary pon. Theodore Mix and John Tag­
| served for almost 13 years.
and electrical appliances.
Wood. Lewis Kenfield. U»Ls String­ gart have been added to Uie service
This company p thc largest wind- ham. Hasel Hinkley and Lillian department.
MICH1GAN MUTl'AI. WINDstorm insurance company in Michi- Taffce.
The spirit of co-operation and
STORM INSURANCE CO.1 gan and Lhe second largest In the
service seems lo reign here as the
In October I860, a severe cyclone world. Its first building was on B. A. UBARKER—PRE­
firm has won several state contests
■wept across the townships of Barry. | Jefferson St. now thc U. B Mission
SCRIPTION DRUG STORE. conducted by thc Chevrolet people
Johnstown and Assyria, and over The present building was erected
W. J. and L. L- Holloway pur­
into Eaton counly II was a real about 13 years ago and was made chased this store In 1897 from Rus­ HASTINGS CUT RATE
twister. It was reckoned that it did necessary by the great increase of sell Bros, and operated It until 1918.
SHOE STORE.
H W. Brockway first started this
hundred
thousand
dollars the company's business.
al which lime they sold the stock to

Sketches of Leading

damage tn lhe two counties.

CTAn
O I Ur
THE
NEW

1937

S

In the

AT OUR tent
AT THE FAIR!
A
Display

JOHN DEERE
TRACTORS and
IMPLEMENTS
CUTAWAY TRACTOR SHOWING
ALL THE WORKING PARTS

I
D

AUTOMATIC
WASHING
MACHINES

R

ST. ROMBERG
CARLTON RADIOS

K
R

GOODYEAR
BR0S.HDWE.
HASTINGS

PHONE 2101

uf

u
D R

s
O

■lore on West State street Ln 1923
in ths building now occupied by
Wallace Grocery. The business was
continued there until 1931 when it
was removed to IU present location.
West State street. Featuring shoes

Sixty Years Development of the Telephone

for lha entire family. The stock inseveral nationally known

Assisting Mr. BrockwayJn lhe store
are Harold Smith. Chas. Sanford.
Vivian Gladstone and Margaret
Tolles.

THE HASTINGS MANU­
FACTURING CO.
The
Hastings
Manufacturing
Company was Incorporated a liUle
over eleven years ago. A fine site
was selected, fronting on East Mill
street and along the C. K. St 8.
tracks, and a beauUful plant was
built. It is very conveniently ar­
ranged for the business and well
equipped with all Uie machinery
necessary for lhe manufacture of
piston rings. The corporation suc­
ceeded a partnership The men re­
sponsible for the company and the
success It has won are Emil Tyden
and Aben E. Johnson. Mr Johnson
Is always at It. keeps in touch with
the men Ln the held and the work
in the plant. He is a wide-awake,
alert man. His genius for salesman­
ship is winning for the company a
constantly increasing volume of
business. It never had better pros­
pects than right now. This year lhe
company brought out a new steel
ring which has proven a trade get­
ter. While this new ring was invent­
lo any extent until 1938 II has prov­
en very popular. The business of thc
company shows a marked increase
over a year ago.
This company puts on a wonderful
advertising campaign, and keeps in
close touch \wlth not only the Job­
bers but with the garage owners.
This work and thc superior merits
of Ils product have resulted in n |
notable increase in its business in
1930 when compared with any pre-1
vious year. Under Mr. Johnson's di­
rection the company will not rest on
its laurels, bul will keep pushing Its
business. Il employs about 150 peo­
ple.

Little
West Six

flrat to e.

&lt;an Stat
brought 1
Fair Gro
enter hl
given gr
Fair Gro
granted,
taking ■
Mias Viz

Here are shown represen LaUve models of Uie hundreds of types of telephone instrumente lhat have been
developed and used since Alexander Graham Bell's first experiments in the early ■seventies. Many of these
types of telephones have been used in Michigan. At the top. left, is Bell’s original telephone, produced by
him in 1875. and next Is the Instrument he displayed at the Philadelphia Centennial in 1878. In thc center,
lop row. is the first telephone brought to Michigan. 1877. And to the development conUnued. down to thc
modem types of instruments Illustrated by the four pictures to the right Ln the bottom row. Hastings
incidentally, was one of the first dial telephone exchanges in the state and country.

and thc Dutch East Indies. They
are exported to every continent. Be­
cause of their simplicity, because
they solve thc problem of sealing
railroad cars so satisfactorily, they
have grown in favor. Tlie company
has wisely made a relatively low
INTERNATIONAL SEAL
A LOCK CO. price on its product, it has never
The International Seal &amp; Lock Co. taken advantage of the fact that
was organized in this city in 1898 there is no competing self-locking
We have explained heretofore that car seal on the market. That is
Mr. Emil Tyden not only invented why thc company so successfully
the seal, which Is a self-locking de­ holds its business. Clarence Craw­
vice. bul also worked out the plans ford. vice president of lhe Company.
for the intricate machines used in Ls the sales manager and docs a
its manufacture. Anyone who will real Job.
visit the Seal plant and sec what
In addition to manufacturing car
these special machines accomplish seals, the intemational seal A- Lock
will almost feel that they must be Co. maintains a complete machine
human, because of/the difficult and shop of Its own. in which It has
very accurate operations they per- ....
___ ______ _____
_ spe. manufactured
most__of Its __
own
form, which result-in the manufac- clal machines as well as special ma­
ture of 400.000 seals in an eight-hourI chines for lhe Hastings Manufacday.
| luring Company and lo produce*
One can readily Imagine lhat it the many special devices of the
took Ume to develop these auloma-I Viking CorporaUon. All the devices
tic machines as well as almost in-| sold by thc Viking Corporation arc
finite patience and real inventive manufactured by the Seal company,
talent.
I in its two plants about 175 persons
Railroads are proverbially slow 1 ale employed. The Tyden Sea) comaboul adopting new devices. It took ' pany. as it Is known locally, is an
lime for lhe Tyden car seal to win, outstanding Industry, with not only
Ils way into their favor: but it has a nation-wide buL a world-wide
done so. At the present lime, the reputation for its products.
Tyden seal is used on 95 per cent of I
-------- —♦
the railroad mileage of the United
THE VIKING CORPORATION.
States, also on the railroad systems
Hastings owes thc locaUon here
of Canada. Mexico. South America.1 of the Viking Corporation, manu-

facturers of automatic sprinkling ] which came Into immense favor aldevicea for the prevenUon of fires. I most from the start.
lo Emil Tyden. Il was his invenUve I m the years immediately followgenlus which worked out a superior 1 ln&lt; the World war
company
llro.
line nt
of -.1^..
valves .roX
and ro.W
other devices re-।. coul&lt;j liafdly |llakc etiOUgh gOOdS lO
for this
manu-quired
-------------— purpose. The
—
------- meet the demand and often worked
farliirtne of
nt this
thia line
lln* is
ia done
rinn* by
hv the
tha overtime in attempting to do so.
factoring
Car Seal Co., but lhe myketlng Is, n
^n that lhe big additions
done through licensees, located in u, lhe plant were made. Tlie first
lhe------------------------large centers nt
of nnn.au,
population
ot I| aia,
one
.K.
tnn nt
projected when Mr. Tyden
Uils country, who lake the contracts worked out his pedestal table lock,
for Installing complete sprinkler sys­ which brought a greatly increased
tems in manufacturing plants, ho­ volume.
tels. business places of all kinds and
The company did a fiourbhlng
public buildings. The value of these
business; but Mr. Tyden's health be­
devices is not alone lhat they re­
gan to be Impaired, so he felt that
duce to the lowest passible limit the
he could no longer give the atten­
danger of loss from fire. which is in
tion which he had given to lhe busi­
itself a big item; but they also re­
duce tremendously lhe Insurance ness of lhe company. As a ctffUequence II was sold to some gentle­
rates on buildings which are soj
men who then owned thc Wlddicomb company of Grand Rapids. At
Uie present lime thc plant Ls well
employed and enjoys a splendid
‘ business and is steadily operated. Il
HASTINGS TABLE CO.
employs about 90 men.
The Hastings Table company was
organised in this city in 1890. It had |
THE E. W. BLISS CO.
a hard Ume getting started. After
The E. W. Bliss Co. plant in this
Emil Tyden Invented Uic pedestal
locking device for pedestal tables, city was formerly known as tlie
which were at that Ume very pop­ Consolidated Press A too) Company
ular. lhe business steadily In­ factory. It originally started Ln
creased. Later Mr. Tyden was Chicago, where Mr. Emil Tyden or­
able to bring Fred E. Hill to this ganised It for lhe purpose of making
city lo undertake the manufacture automatic machines for the Inter­
ot a new line of not only dining national Seal Ac Lock Co. It devel­
tables, but of occasional tables. oped a considerable demand for its
stamping presses This Increased lo
such an extent that it became lhe
principal business of tlie company.
It was moved to Hastings about 1910
and. for a Ume. was carried on in
lhe brick building directly west of
the Table Go 's plant. This was en­
larged to meet lhe growing demand
for Uie company's products, a UtUc
time before the World war began
Mr. H B- Sherman, of Battle Creek,
bought the entire capital slock of
the Consolidated Press A Tool Co.,
which was held in a very few hands.
He had Intended lo move 11 to Bat­
tle Creek, but was induced to con­
tinue lhe business In Hastings. He
built the present beautiful porcelain
brick factory, one of Uie finest
manufacturing plants in lhe coun-

DEPENDABLE

This is what our customers say about us
and this is what they mean...they know

we will do exactly as we
promise
we use only the best grades
of materials
we will give the best for the
least possible cost
we do all our work as though
we were doing it for our
selves
we do all our work so it will
guarantee satisfaction
You too will find the Home Lumber Co. DEPENDABLE

THE HOME LUMBER CO.
HASTINGS "The Home Lumber Co. Build. Home." PHONE 2276

11

Indus

Joh nstowr
man of a
former's ■
Friday afl
Mrs
P
spent her
her parem
colt.
The Ho
very well
Saturday,
weather,
were here
lo talk ov
used to hi

daughters
ot Grand
the Dan I

quite III I
improved.
Mr and
Grand Ra
Mr. and
Rosser he
John at
Umore. 1
friends h&lt;
Mr. anr
well Spen
daughter,
family.

brother.
she accon
City whei

returned
stayed fo

called on
Uctka. 8;
Mrs. C
lhe week

(L

Following lhe war Mr. Sherman
sold the plant and business to lhe
E W BUM Co. who have operated
it ever since.
This plant is one of the most ac­
tive. tf not the most active, of the
four plants owned and operated by
lhe BIIm Co., and its presses arc
nationally known for efficiency and
the local plant han been very busy.
At the present Ume it is employing
over 350 men. part of them working
at night.
GRAND RAPIDS BOOK­
CASE A CHAIR CO.
In 1900 the Grand Rapids Book­
case and chair Co. came to Hastings
under peculiar circumstances. Kel­
lar Stem had organized thc com­
' pany. which at first operated in
Grand Rapids. Fire destroyed their
plant then*, it happened that there
was a vacant furniture plant here,
that had once been operated by the
Hastings Furniture company, which
plant was then owned by the Has­
tings City Bank. Mr. Stem and ids
company were able to buy it for a
fraction of Ils original cost, and
juried the manufacture of book­
cases here Tlie business grew from
the very start The company added
lo IU caplUl from its earnings, un­
til the capitalization reached 8400.­
000. At the present Ume as In the
past. Mr. Stem is the president and
guiding spirit of the InsUtullon. He
has a loyal and capable co-worker
in the person of Charles 8. Potts,
secretary-treasurer of the instituUon. who has been connected with
it for nearly all the time It has
been in Hastings. Hie company
msdt.es a fine grade of dining room
furniture as well as desk*, office
tables and other special places. It
suffered as other furniture compan­
ies did through lhe depression that
began Ln 1929. *Ite business is now
rapidly increasing. It was able to
wftather tlie depression because its
management had been wise enough
to build up its capful structure dur­
ing proa-------- a- .—l— —of the ■
industries and
employs

G. I

148 E

�THI HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER J, ISM
Bert Fletcher of Battle Creek, a
former Bowne Center boy. called on
friends here Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rickert of
Grand Rapids were over Sunday
guesU of their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Rickert.
Hiram Karcher of Remus spent
sevsra! days with his brother. Henry,
and family.
A. W. Long of Woodland had the
misfortune to break his leg while
playing ball here Saturday. Ha was
taken to the Hastings hospital.
There will be a dance in the Odd
Fellow hall Saturday evening for
his benefit.
Mrs. Addie Benton met with a
painful accident Saturday. Some
youngsters accidently ran against
her and knocked her to the pave­
ment. cutting her face quite badly.
She was taken to tlie office of Dr.
Wedel, where she was treated.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Deming of Re­
mus were among the many here to
help celebrate the Homecoming.
Walter Wlngier of Lowell is work­
ing al the Runciman Elevator,
where he is installing a new feed
grinder.
School began Monday with lhe
following teachers: 8upt. 8. Grant
Little Walter Rix, 7, of 1143 Voorhees. Principal Evart Ardis.
West Six Mlle Rd., Detroit, is the Mrs. Robert Hunter. Vere Carter,
Mrs. Bruce Walters and Mrs. Gor­
flrat lo enter a pet in the Michl- don Usborne.
gan State Fair pct show. He
PLEASANT VALLEY.
brought hie pony, Ginger, to the
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Geiger and
Fair Grounds and said he would two small sons accompanied by Mrs.
Sarah
Strong
of East Campbell
enter his pct if Ginger were
given grazing privileges on the spent Saturday and Sunday in Mar­
ine City, the guesU of Mrs. Strong's
Fair Grounds. The request was son. Loren, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Neeb and chil­
granted. Ginger is here shown
taking a lump of sugar from dren and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Osborn
of Pinhook were Lansing callers,
Miss Virginia Lyon. The Fair Friday.
,
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Geiger were
will be held this year Sept. 4 to
in Ionia Friday.
13 Inclusive.
Miss Gladys Hamblin apenl last
week with her sister. Mrs. Earl Cur­
FREEPORT.
tiss. of Hastings.
Mose Weaver and son. David, of
Emery Kime attended the Weaver
Johnstown. Penn. and Mra. Kauff­ reunion at Elton church's in Logan.
man of Goshen. Ind. rilled on thc Saturday.
former's niece. Mrs. Leon Howk,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hooper and
Friday afternoon.
Loren Gray spent Sunday with Mr.
Mrs. Paul Miller of Charlotte and Mrs. Wesley Kime of West
spent her vacation last week with Campbell.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wol­
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Mesccar spent
cott.
Sunday with Mrs. Mesccar's sister of
Thc Homecoming celebration was Muskegon. Martha Mesecar relumed
very well attended last Friday and home with her parenU after having
Saturday, despite the cool and rainy spent the past week with her aunt.
Bruce Mesecar is employed at the
weather. A good many from away
were here to greet old friends and canning factory al Lake Odessa.
Quite a good crowd attended the
to talk over the good old times they
W. M. A. at Mn. Chas. Hamblkfs
used lo have.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill O'Harrow and last Thursday. The next regular
daughters. Barbara Jean and Patay meeting will be with Mra. Emery
ot Grand Rairids, visited Sunday al Kime Thursday. September 10. All
are welcome and urged to attend.
thc Dan Post ma home.
Miss Beulah Kime spent Sunday
Mrs. Roy Nagler. who has been
quite ill Hie past week. Is somewhat with Nadia Hines of Pinhook.
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Benedict and
improved.
Joan
of Ionia stayed at the Geiger
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pcnoycr of
Grand Rapids were supper guests of1 home during their visit al Marine
Mr. and Mrs. Ix-on Howk at the City.
School began August 21st. with
Rosser home Friday.
John and Dorothy Slcfeft of Bal­ Mrs. Bcmlcc James of Hastings at
timore. Maryland,
arc
visiting Uic helm.
friends here,
DOUD CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ycitcr of Lo­
Helen and Dickie Carl of Has­
well Spent Ilin week end with their
daughter. Mrs. Ralph Stuart, and tings spent lhe
week end at
family.
Grandpa’s and Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Mrs Mantel Munn of Geneva. N. Carl come Sunday to celebrate
Y.. Mine Saturday lo visit her Helen's eleventh birthday, the chil­
brother. Percy Rowr. on Sunday dren reluming home with them.
Our school started this Monday
she accompanied him to Traverse
City where they visited their broth­ morning with Miss Mary Bishop as
er. Al Rosser, and wife. Mr. Rosser teacher.
returned Monday while Mrs. Munn
Harold lauch and daughter of
Charlotte visited al Uic H. Berg­
stayed for a longer visit.
Mrs. Emily Sullivan of Hastings man’s.
Mr. and Mrs. Percy McMannis
called on her sister. Mrs. John
Lictka. Saturday.
and Mary Lou of Waynetown spent
Mrs. casaiday of Hartings spent the week end at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Norris Bergman of
lhe week end with her daughter.
Mrs. Maud Rogers, and Marguerite. Battle Creek spent Sunday al home.

I

Pony Entrant

DUNHAM DISTRICT.
School began Monday morning
with Maynard Tucker of Clarksville
a* teacher. Thi* 1* hl* second year
here.
MIm Mildred Mack went to her
tchool near Owosso. Monday mom-,
|ng. while Doris Healy teaches near
Union City. This 1* the first year for
both girls.
Mr. and Mr*. Galen Fisher of
Castleton attended Bunday school ■
hare Sunday and were guests the
remainder of the day of Mr. and I
Mr*. Cyrus Buxton.
Lui week Monday and Tuesday,
Dorothy Mack and Leola Cortrlght
of Lacey were at East Lansing with
other 4-H Club members of lhe
counly. They gave a peach canning

Mr. and Mr*. vem Greenfield and
m from near Charlotte spent Sun-

The Young People’s Sunday school
class was entertained Thursday eve­
ning by Mr. and Mrs. Norman Stan­
ton of lhe Briggs district. A feature
of the evening was a miscellaneous
siwwer for Mr. and Mrs. Dale ConkMiss Dorothy Norton -of Battle
reek’is lhe guest this week of Vlotta and Wane la. Julian and Enid

ASSYRIA.
Albert Jones and members of the
election board were tn Hastings Fri­
day attending the school of Instruc­
tion given by Counly clerk A. C.
The first two absent voters' ballots
t Assyria were given MIm Anna
/ilea and Miss Norma Case.
Ed. Stanton of Flint has been
Lalling relative* here.
Mr*. Nellie Stanton entcrti^ned
le Pleasure Birthday organization
t her farm home on Tuesday. Mrs.
feta Hyde of-Hastings was an honr guest.
Mrs. Gladys Cortrlght has re­
amed home after a lon.silectomy al
ellevue private hospital.
Miss Bertha Miller, teacher In a
anslng school, has been ill the put

dren and Mrs. Olive Card Of Kulamazoo were Sunday afternoon call­
an at Norton Slocum's.
The Dowling Townsend Club will,
meet at the church on Tuesday;
evening. Sept. 15. instead of Sept. ।
8, with L. B. Putney as thc speaker, i
Leon Moon. Or lie Fisher and L.'
Bert and Julius Maksym ot Bel­
J. Oswald attended the school of!
mont visited friends in the neigh­ instruction Friday afternoon at the 1
borhood Saturday.
court house which was conducted
by Allan Hyde In preparation for
DOWLING.
the coming election.
The school bells are ringing this
week and the colorful dinner pails
EAST WALL LAKE.
and tablet coven are very much in
Allee Laubaugh of Grand Rapids
evidence as the beginning of an­
spent a few day* the past week with
other long siege of study for the
little folk*. The seventh and eighth home folks and attended lhe camp
meeting at Hopkins.
grade pupil* will be transferred to
Wendell Vreeland and family
Hartings by thc school bus this
year. Leland Jones is the Dowling came Saturday from Detroit and
expect to Stay the next three weeks
at
their cottage here.
Bristol and Mrs. ElIrabe th Martin
al lhe Monroe.
Mr. mid Mrs. H. H. Bowser re­
Mrs. prank VanSyckle, who has turned lo their home in Ovid after
been aerlously ill with heart trou­ a two weeks’ vacation here.
ble the past week. Ls somewhat im­
Mr. and Mrs. O. Alien and chllproved.
--------- ----------------------------Mrs. Mattle King,
----------------who had dren of Kalamazoo are spending
been visiting relatives at Kalamzoo, i the week in E. D. Reynolds* cottage
wu called home on account of Mrs.
Mr. mid Mrs. Elmer Staples' of
VanByckle's illness.-------------------------------Flint were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Etta Sunton and father, I Cha*. Kahler Tuesday and WednesWall Norton, and Mr. nnd Mrs. Nor- j day of last week.
ton Slocum and children spent SunMrs. R. M. Sprague expects to
day with Mr. and Mrs. Irving Fish- I leave Monday for her home bi Toer near Vermontville.
I ledo. Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wright and
Mr. nnd Mrs. ClUTord Kahler and
family were In camp at Fine lake | children were in Battle Creek Fiilo.it week and Mrs. Glenn Hoffman day and enjoyed a trip through the
nnd family and Mrs. Belle Hoffman W. K. Kellogg factory.
were at Bristol lake several days I
Anna Kahler and son. Dan, of
” j Woodland.
Edith Blocher and sister
catching lhe big ones.
'........................................
1,!. of Hastings were callers at Chas.
Mra. Lewis Otis and son. Jerrold.
arrived home from Pennock hos- Kahler's Sunday.
piUl Saturday. Mrs. Hattie Rive is
assisting with the work and the care
of the new baby. Mrs. Ralph Wood­
mansee and son have returned
home also.
Elwin Ormsby met with a very
unfortunate accident while trying to
throw &lt;4halter on a horse Which
war In the field al the home of Mrs.
Ella Smith Saturday. Thc result
wu a broken arm and two broken
B. A. LYBARKER. Druggist.

Stomach Gas
ADLERIKA

Miss ffarma Case has returned to
er work In Lansing.
Schoolhouses and premises arc In
ndlness for the .opening of school.
The Briggs school opened Monday
ith Mra. Lillian Lclnuar as teachr. the Stevens with Miss Sarah
dllesplc of Hastings township, thc

/97Z £&lt;/'•&lt; NnT/pe

Aladdin

ASP Broad contains only the
finest ingredient*, properly
balanced. No wonder its
‘ ‘America’s Most Popular
Bread” Get acquainted
with the many varieties ol
A&amp;P Broad-bo delicious and
economical Try a ba! today.

Campfire
Economy

MARSHMALLOWS

Everyone would like to own a 83.000 car—but don't worry if you
haven’t one. You can get the same comfort and safety in SHORT
WAY’S radio equipped luxury cruisers.

And of course—SHORT WAY’S courteous and .Careful drivers
will bring added comfort to your trip.

Try a SHORT WAY ride for real enjoyment,
quent Schedule*!

BUS DEPOT

07c
10c

3

03c
10c

battle

Yukon
Beverage*

3 "x-25
Nut Meat*

Olives

09c

Our Own Tea

Soap Lum er Liftbuoy

4

Whitehouse Milk

3

25c
—•’1.15

Triangle. Salt*
Daily Dog Food

Potted Meat

5c

Corned Beef

18*

College Inn Soups

uti
cam

21c

2-lb.
Pkg-

5c

a..

5c
9c

M’t

2

Sardines
v“c“”
3
Campbell's Soup* Sa-, 3

&lt;*■

10c

cana

21c

COM

25c

can*

25c

Ann Page Preserves

Lib.

19c

Baby Food*

Corn Flakes

pS*

9c

Heinz—Clapp’s
Gerber’s

Knox Gelatine

Pkg-

19c

3-lfc.
tan

63c

TRIO CAFE

PHONE 2117

HASTINGS

3 - 25

Every Resident of Michigan

Should Attend the State’s
100 Birthday Celebration i

Pineapple Juice

3 ".1 25
—you'll have the
time of your life!
ESftSS&amp;j. Agricultural

SSkM;

Sparkit
Gelatine Dessert

Exhibits!

4-19*
Largest Midway
if Any Carniialz feqtej

Mantle Lamp

Candy Bars

Deviled Ham u-4-—**

Offering: Miles of Comfort

More
5
Stupendous
Than Ever
Before!

c"" 2

Marshmallows

17*

‘Luxury Cruisers’

WEST HOPE.
Congratulations from this neigh­
borhood to Mr. and Mrs. Myron
Bishop on the arrival ol a baby girl,
and to Mr. and Mrs. Earl Palmaller
of Hastings on lhe arrival of a liaby
boy. Mrs. Bishop has lived here
all of her life and Mr. and Mrs. i
Palmaller are cottagers at Stuart
lake during the summer.
|
Bert wishes to Mias Viola Me-'
Klbbin and William Ashby, who ’
were married Saturday night. Mrs. ।
Ashby was o scholar In our school.'
School Is opening this Monday |
morning with Mrs. Lena Laubaugh

101

WHITE SLICED

25*

irnaoi

$3,000

Bigger!
Better!
THIS AMAZING NEW

PcyiuVal ft

Walnut or Pecan

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller and Mr.
nd Mrs. Byron Guy were Sunday
uerts of Mr. arid Mrs. Julius Paul
f East^jatUe Creek.
x , ■ ■■

I

as teacher. and seven scholars arc
enrolled al present. The school­
house has new windows and new
adjustable seats are being installed.
Tho Christian Endeavor contest
closed with a party given by lhe
losers to the winners at Harald
Springer's Friday evening. Thc
winners furnished the program and

MAY BK YOURS
LIVESTOCK

Spry Shortening
Spaghetti

2

hSXi

A-Penn Oil ’«»• rJzT««
French's Mustard
**'*

Vienna Rolls

Hamburg Buns
8 o'Clock Coffee

Red Circle Coffee

IW-oa.
tin*

15c

99c
•ja*

9c

pkg.
•f a

10c

pkg.

8c
19c

k.

21c

Bokar Coffee

23c

Potato Chips

Ib.

29c

&lt;411^

EXHIBIT

Thrillicg! hrii|!

BCT1A

RODEO
CONTESTS

*i.wi.T«kuu»A

FREE! FREE!

/Thrtlrolod **o»a

«•» »4B

Artii. Luy.
■ IrukX ■ Aw

Ito.
T.M. ■

1937

tlinr Trictir, Fin tfiintil
ul Ciinilit Tuck!

AH Aladdin La mpaHaia

Exquisite Ntw Shades
Whlp-o-llta or Glass

G.E.GOODYEAR HARDWARE
IM E. State St.

Kuttas*

PkCMUM

Admission 35'
Children IS*

15 000 FREE PRIZES!
05.000 PREMIUMS!

Something Doing
Every Minute of
Every Day &amp; Nite!

POTATOES
Home Grown
pock *2c
YELLOW ONIONS, Bulk IO lb«.2Oc, IO Ib. bag 19c
CAULIFLOWER
Fancy Whitt Hoad
tach 12c
6 Ib*. 25c
WEALTHY APPLES
do*. 29c
ORANGES
Large and Juicy

Beef Roast
Beef Ribs
Fresh Ground Beef
Sliced Luncheon Meat
L A

i’ food &gt;ii

Ual.n to “Cotto. Tim." with Kat. Smith

Station WBBM

1..S

■M

12c

�rm
HTGHBANK
ma Hoffman at the Hoffman cot. and Mrs. Leslie Adams and
Rarah Ostroth visited Mrs.
Ur. and Mrs. George Green visit­
ed al Carlton Sumners in Detroit
i VMal near Woodland Bunday.
Mr.
and Mrs. Vem HawbllU and
r
Visitors Friday of Mr. and Mrs.
Will HawbllU and Susan HawbllU family attended a reunion north of
were Mrs. Emma Bpanseller and Hastings Saturday.
Doyle Marshall of Marshall called
Blair HawbllU of Bloomville. Ohio,
-ww
iw» pearl Carmon v*
and MH
of Fostoria. on Mr. and Mrs. Laurel Marsliall
Ohio, and Mrs. Minerva RoUiaar
Oido.
.....-of ■ Sunday.
I Mr. and Mrs. Frank HawbllU
of Nashville.
Nashville.
MUs Helen Hilard of Jackson j spent Sunday evening at Mr. and
fjw.nl the week end with MUs Vel-iMra. Howard Kelly's near Hastings. j

* ■“.....................

HASTINGS jANNEB,

The Moore school began Monday Brumm. Nashville, are attendingt
morning with Miss Helen Willltts as the leadership training camp spon­thc teacher.
sored by the Farm Bureau at Wal­
den Woods. Hartman.
BARRVVILLE.
Mra. Mary Neal spent the week
There will be services as usual end at the home of her daughter,
next Sunday morning and evening. Mra. E. D. Olmstead. Naahviue.
Dinner guesU at the Wilcox home
There was a small attendance at
Sabbath school Sunday as some Sunday were Mt. and Mra. Vem
were still at conference at Gull lake. HawbllU of Highbank and Frank
Little Annella May Brumm Is Wilcox. Kalamo. - Evening callers
staying with her grandparents, Mr. were Mr. and Mra. Vem Wilcox.
and Mra. Ralph DeVine.' while her Dowling. Mr. and Mrs. 8. E. Pow­
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson ers of Nashville were Thursday eve-

W. A. HALL

ning dinner guesu.
Archie Newton and children of
Dowling visited Rev. J. J. WH111U
Sunday. Monday Miss Helen WJ1IHU started teaching at the Moore
school. Mr. and Mra. Stanley Wlllltu liave left for Arizona and Wil­
son Wlllltu has gone to Detroit to

Kenneth Sage, wno has Deen in
training for the navy at Newport.
Rhode Island, spent lhe week end
likes It Just fine and tells many in­
teresting things about Uie life there.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert McClelland
attended the funeral of Richard
Anspaugh in Woodland last week
Friday.

and Mrs. L. A. Day attended a fam­
ily gathering at Crystal lake a week
Mr. and Mrs Howard Rice are
living Ln the former home of Clay­
ton McKeown Ln the Branch dis­
trict.
PRAIRIEVILLE.
Tlie william smith family reunion

Smith's cottage at Crooked lake
Sunday. There were 38 present. One
brother from Detroit was unable to
attend. An enjoyable time was re­
ported.
Mr. and Mrs. veme Calthrop’s
Sunday guesU were Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Freeman of Plainwell. Mrs.
George Freeman and granddaughter
of Kalamazoo, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Clark and daughter. Joyce, of Dos­
ter, and Lamar Erb of Delton Ls
spending the week with them.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Palmer of Has­
tings the last of the week.
Mr. and Mrs. David Honeywell
announce the marriage of their
daughter. Opal, to Willis Babcock,
son of Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Babcock
of 113 onelta street. Battle Creek at
a single ring service Sunday after­
noon al five o'clock by Dr. Henry
N. Jordon at the Sanitarium. The
bride Is a graduate of the Plainwell

High school, had one year of college
and two years training al Nichols
‘ hospital. They will make their home
at West Van Buren street.
•MUs Janet
*---------Smith
—--- -------------Is spending
— this
week with her uncle and aiint, Mr.
and Mrs. Harvey Wordman of
Woodland.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Rowen have
gone to the Stralu and other places
of interest.
Mr. and Mrs. HalUwill are mov­
ing to Vermontville this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay'Houvener and
family of Hickory Comers have
moved Into Mrs. Young's tenant
house.
Mr. and Mrs. James Van Hout and
family are moving to Battle creek
this week.
Ladles' Aid Society will meet for
an all day meeting with Mrs. Leh­
man September g. pot luck dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Norris. Mr.
and Mrs. w. R. Norris and Char­
lotte Hughes visited Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Temple and Mrs. Katie Norris
Sunday. Howard TVmple of Fair­
mont hospital accompanied them
home for a short visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Norris received
word of the death of the latter's'
uncle. David Gibson, of Harbor
Springs. The funeral will be Tues­
day afternoon and they expect to
attend. Mr. Gibson used to live in
this vicinity many years ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ketchum of
Kalamazoo called on their grand­
mother. Mrs. Jennie Norris, and
Lucy Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Woods.
Elizabeth and John went to Howell
Sunday after George Woods. ~
who has been at Howell for tlie
summer going May 30.

CLOVERDALE.
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Pierce and
___
daughter Mary Joyce, were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kellogg of
Kalamazoo Wednesday evening for
dinner.
Junior slawson nnd Verdon Vin­
cent of Flint are visiting the R. E.
Pierce family.

&gt;iUute&lt;2 25
Mads absolutely cinight
and will hold tire Irota

NOW...BUILD
Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials

Hou**Usy4ng.

"Home of Good Values

205 South Jefferson St,

Phone 2515

Frank Saga

Mattings

PASTURE CONDITION
son with 1934. only Michigan. Mis­
AUGUST 1, 1916. souri and Kansas have better pas­
ture conditions than they had two
The drouth of 1936 has been much years ago. The pasture conditions
more severe than any drouth on rec­ map also serves to show that all
ord. except that of 1934^1n comparl- crops have been suffering.
Mrs. Lizzie Pennels and son. Paul,
and friend, Miss Stlmpaon of Kal­
amazoo spent the week end with
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pennels.
Miss Mildred Hoskin and Ivan
Gaskill of Hastings were callers at
the MacLeod home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Barnard of
BaUle Creek visited their brother.
Frank. Wednesday.
There will be an Important meet­
ing of the Townsend Club Friday
evenbig al the town hall.
Mary Joyce Pierce was lhe guest
of Sally Kellogg of Kalamazoo last

We neglected lo mention lost week
the return of the Riverside Camp­
ers. Oral and Iris MacLeod. Esther
Kingsbury and Mary Owens. They
had a wonderful time. Each one
gave a report In church Bunday
which gave all present an Idea of
their camp life and things they were
taught while there. They appreciat­
ed the help of the Bunday school.
Ladles' Aid and personal donations
which made It possible for them to
go to camp.
Mrs. Margaret Owens spent a cou­
pie of days last week with Mrs. Anna
ple
. Howsel of -Kalamazoo.
The Cloverdale L. A- 8. will hold a
bake sale at the town hall Saturday.
i Sept. 3.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johncock and
। Miss Emma Johncock left Saturday
। on a trip to Niagara Falls.
' Miss Lydia Rodgers and Francis
Kingsbury spent Friday In Battle
1 creek.
I Mr. and Mrs. Lester Monica and
sons and Mrs. Charles Monica and
daughter. Evelyn, spent Friday In
Kalamazoo.

PLEASANT HILL.
George Bridge of Joliet. III., spent
a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Bert
palmer and Paul.
i Miss Margaret Palmer assisted
j her aunt. Mrs. Lloyd Shroyer, of
Marsliall while the latter was on the
: sjck list tlie past week.

■

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

.Pasture Condition, August 1,1936*

Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Williams, Mr.
and Mrs. Clare Williams and chil­
dren. Mrs. George
Konzen and
children of South Bend and Mrs.
Arthur clarke and children of
South Haven spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Byron Rowlader of Harris
Creek.
a
Mrs. Carrie Syanders. children
and grandchildren of Hoboken. N.
J„ are visiting her parenu, Mr. and
Mrs. Sim Nlbbz.
Mrs. Bert Palmer accompanied
her parenU, Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus
Shroyer to LaGrange and Elkhart.
Ind , Wednesday to visit friends and
relatives. They returned Friday
evening.
Friends of Mrs. Eva Davison (Eva
Guestp will be glad lo know she Is
convalescing from her recent severe
illness at a sanitarium near her
home.1*
Paul Palmer and Aden Campbell
were In East Lansing last Monday
and Tuesday taking part In the 4-H
Judging contest.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stevens and
two daughters of Grand Rapids were
Thursday guesU of Mrs. Addie
Lewis.
Sunday guesU of Mr. and Mra. R.
J. Williams were Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
Komen. Dale and Ruth of South
Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Rowlader
and children of near Alto and Mr.
and Mrs. Clare Williams and fam­
ily. Dale and Ruth remained to
spend the week with their cousins,
Harry and Mary Ellen Williams.

“SHARP STOMACH PAINS
UPSET MY WHOLE SYSTEM”
Says E. Hentgea: "I tried a 11 bottie, (3 weeks' treatment) of Dr
Emil's Adla Tableu under your
guarantee. Now lhe pains are gons
and I eat anything.'* Reed's Drug
Store and B. A. LyBarker. DrugglsU.—Adv.

Barry County’s Centennial and Fair Special!

*1 BUYS A NEW ELECTRIC WASHER!
You Should Read Every Word of This Sensational Offer!
• By special arrangement with the fac- '
tory we are offering to anyone buying a
New Sparton Refrigerator, Model S-746,
a New Electric Washer for Only $1.00. A
Two-for-One Sale that Saves you many
dollars. We reserve the right to withdraw
this offer at any time. Only a limited
number can be sold. You can be sure this
offer can not be repeated. This is your
chance to own a Beautiful Refrigerator
and Washer for the price of a refrigerator.

Rural Customers Attention!
If you are unable to call at our store or at
our display at the Fair, fill out and mail this
coupon ... we will call at your home or re­
serve this offer for you.
Name

Address

Phone

IF YOU OWN A WASHER THIS OFFER WILL APPLY ON AN IRONER OR RADIO

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON
HASTINGS

WESTERN UNION BUILDING

MICHIGAN

SPARTON MODEL S-746
Food ctoraxe. 7.4 cubic feet Shelf area. 143 square
teei. Height M 37/12 inches. Depth 26 11/16 Inches.
Width t» 7/16 Inches. Ice capacity, five trays,
70 Urge ice cubes.

Visit, our tent at the Fair---Largest display of New 1937 Radios
•.. with the Nervous System... Photochromatie Dial! See them!

$59.50 value, costs you $1

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10,1936

16 PACES

SHOlUMnf'f" jExhibite Al Barry County Fair;S|jpE[||||S[|] pm
--------------------------------------------------- Years
Outnumber Previous

ON THIS PROPOSAL

IF AM1NDM1NT GARRIES
IT WILL HARM OUR
PUBLIC SCHOOLS
STOP STATE AID TO
"RELIEF" IN COUNTIES

Provent Needed Addition! to
State Hoapitals for Men­
tal Patients
Everyone Is interested In having
the schools of this state carried on.
That cannot be done without the
state'a help because of the 15 mill
tax limit. All friends of the schools
should oppose the proposed amend­
ment to the constitution of this
state, to be submitted at the coming
November election, which would re­
move the sales tax on all food prod­
ucts. That Is an appealing sug­
gestion; but if the people of this
state know when they are well off
they will vote It down overwhelm­
ingly.
By reason of the sales tax during
the post year the slate government
has been able to grant several mil­
lions of dollars to aid our public
schools. That would have been Im­
possible without such a tax. LlkeHon dollars from the sales tax to
aid counties In providing relief to
the needy. That would have been
. Impossible without that tax.
By means of the sales tax tile
budget of the slate has been bal­
anced. Instead of a deficit al the
end of tlie last fiscal year, ending
July 1. 1936. there was a surplus of
cash on hand, which is what no
need and should ala-ays have. This
was accomplished by reductions in
appropriations, which were Insisted
on by the governor.
Tlie Slate Hospital for the Insane
at Kalamazoo, also those at Pontiac.
Traverse City and Newberry, all
need additional room to accommo­
date those who need treatment for
mental disorders. As there will be
no deficit to make up this year, tlie
state will be able next year to fi­
nance the needed buildings for (ill
four of these state hospitals, with­
out levying any tax. These build­
ings. as well as another one for the
feeble-minded at Lapeer, are ur­
gently needed. Insane patlente are
being kept In Jails and In other un­
desirable places because of lack of
room in state hoapitals.
If we will tel the sales tax alone,
the state government will be able
to continue ite appropriations for
the public schools It will be able
to continue relief assistance to tlie
counties. It will be able to build
the needed buildings at the four
Mate hospitals and at the home for
the feeble minded without levying
any other taxes.
There Is no more reason for ex­
empting food products from the
sales tax than for exempting other.
products. The people have paid It
and gotten along. The fine thing
about It Is that, with the Miles tax.
everybody Is contributing something
for the support of the state gov­
ernment
Every property owner and every­
one Interested In good scnools and
in proper care for the unfortunates
•nd the mental patlente should vote
•gainst this amendment to exempt
food products from the sales tax

Notice
Next month this bank will cele­
brate ils fiftieth anniversary. We are
planning /or each depositor of the
bonk «n attractive and useful gift.
It la of the utmost Importance to us
In carrying out this plan that we
have the correct name and post of-

wheUMr in the savings, the Christ­
mas savings, certificate of deposit or
commercial departments. Will you
please if you arc a depositor in this
bank call at the bank and give us
your correct address, or If unable to
call will you kindly give us this In­
formation on a poet card before
September. 20? We will greatly ap­
preciate your early attention to this
notice.
Hastings City Bank.

VANBUSKIRK TO ATTEND
MEETING OF SCHOOL MEN.
David A» VanButklrk, superin­
tendent of the Hastings schools and
presklenL of the Michigan Education
Association. will go to Holland on
September 18 to altond a two days'
session of the city superintendents'
division of the Michigan Educational
Association. The main subject to
be discussed will be the advisability
of taking the office of the state
superintendent of schools out of
politics. The teacher's retirement
fund and teacher tenure will also
be considered. Eugene B. Elliott, su­
perintendent of public Instruction,

gram.

One Auction Sale

Advance Sale Of Season Tickets

Third Larger Than In 1935

GENERAL COMMITTEE DE­
LIGHTED WITH WHOLE
PROJECT

BARRY COUNTY DID
THE PIONEERING

Supreme Court Approves the
Procedure First Applied
in This County
Barry county pioneered In ti»e
matter of determining and main­
taining the level of inland laker.
All Interested in this matter will be
glad to know that, on Thursday,
the Stale Supreme Court upheld
the power of circuit courts to de­
termine the level of inland lakes.
Il will be remembered that many
years ago. during a very dry sum­
mer. the level of Gun lake dropped

Attracted by a premium list of animals are sleek looking, well cared
87500. the largest ever offered by tar and allow the results of lessons
the future farmers receive in 4-H STARTED AS SORT
the Fair association, the exhibits
work.
OF AN EXPERIMENT
this week at the Barry County Pair
are more numerous than ever before. on Wednesday as the Judging was
A trip over the grounds showed that done on that morning and most Already Making Plans for
all stalls for horses and cows, pens of the entries came in early that
Next Year—Kind Words
for pigs and sheep and cages for day. There were flowers of all va­
for Lyle Bennett
poultry were filled to capacity.
rieties In ah kinds of arrangements
most impossible to use It as a resort
Tlie Banner Is still greatly Inter- lake. The stench from the refuse
An example of the Increase in and the hall was a riot of color. Two
exhibits Is In the education build­ commercial displays—one a wedding l csted. as we know many of our city that rolled on the beaches made re­
ing. where 33 rural schools and five and the other a sunken garden—are readers are. and many more should sorting at that lake anything but
: be. in tills city providing some form
graded schools occupy a third more beautifully done.
The poultry bam is a noisy place I of playgrounds and supervised play sort owners was formed. They em­
space than a year ago. Examples of
various school projects cover the with all coops filled. The cackling’ for the children of this city during ployed the late P. T. Colgrove. who
and crowing seem In a dozen differ- 1 the 'long
------------------"—
summer-------vacation.
walls.
worked out a court procedure that
During the last summer vacation resulted in the maintaining of a
The home economics building Is ent tones.
filled to overflowing with exhibits of
The merchants of Hastings and I Mr. Lyle Bennett, athletic di­ dam at the outlet ’ of Gun lake,
quilts, bed spreads, rugs, canned the county add their displays to rector for boys in our city schools, which has held It to a proper level.
goods and. baking entries and em­ complete a well-balanced and at­ was employed by a committee of Tills procedure has been used in
Eaton Rapids citizens Interested in many other parte of Michigan, but
broidered articles of all descriptions tractive commercial midway.
and the extension groups of the
The shows are clean looking, the keeping school children of that city had not been tested until recently
county each have individual exhibits riding devices are different ' and off the streets during the long sum­ tn the Supreme Court.
substantial and the concessions ap­ mer vacation, and in having them
of tne work done last year.
The Barry county Rod and Gun pear to be as clean and fair as the derive the benefits of supervised
club, working with the slate de­ usual &lt;run. a number of eating play. That the Eaton Rapids projpartment of conservation, has one places and the usual weighing
of the outstanding exhibits on the 1 stunts, pop com and taffy stands the following letters, which we re­
grounds. The various fish found in i 'complete a good looking and busy ceived from the executive committee
the county are displayed In tanks' amusement midway.
of the Eaton Rapids genera) com­
with fresh running water and i The larger attendance anticipated mittee. which provided the funds for
stuffed animals and birds of all | by the Fair association is surely this protect. To each of these men
kinds are arranged attractively . true os the grounds are well filled at we addressed a letter as follows:
RESTRICTIONS
DRASTIC
through the exhibit. Boughs of ever-1 all limes and crowded when the car Dear Sir:
AS THOSE IN EFFECT
I am very much interested tn hav­
green and spruce give the space the । drawings are held at 5 P. M. in
appearance of the great outdoors, front of the grandstand. The ad­ ing the city of Hastings do what
LAST YEAR
in the same building the Barry' vance sale of season tickets was the city of Eaton Rapids did during
County Health Unit exhibit dis- &lt; more than a third larger than last the long summer vacation—that Is.
Biys a complete layette for the I year and attendance records are have supervised play for the school THREE SPECIES OF
by. pictures of the various W. K. jexpected
...to exceed
■ -- those - of past! vacation. I have been quite inter­
DUCKS PROTECTED
| ested In this for a long time, and
Kellogg camps and much advice on years.
the care of children and adults.
The racing program is expected | my reading shows that it Is not an
In spite of the dry season the to be better than in recent years ■ expense but an Investment. I would Possession of Federal Duck
agricultural display is good—there Is On Tuesday 48 horses were on the j be glad If you will please write me Stamp Required of Water­
corn ten feet high, sunflowers fif­ grounds and tents have been erected a letter giving your Impressions of
Fowl Hunters
teen Inches in diameter and good for the additional horses expected j the effect of the work which Mr.
I Bennett and others have done In
looking fruits and vegetables of all during the week.
We think our readers will be glad
kinds.
AH in all. the 1938 Barry County, providing supervised play for the to have the summary of the shoot­
Tlie 4-H clubs of the county have Fair is an outstanding one—a credit; children of your city.
ing season regulations, so we present
two exhibits—one of canned goods, to the community—and the officials | I win appreciate an early reply.
them as follows:
clothing, furniture and embroidery of the Fair association deserve credit
Sincerely yours.
The shooting season for ducks,
made by the members, and the sec­ for the nne work they have done in
geese, jacksnipe and coot will open
ond their entries of live stock. The planning such an event.
And the following are the replies in Michigan October 10 and con­
thereto:
tinue to November 8. according to an
announcement made/by the U. 8.
Gentlemen:
McNITT LAW CASH IS
-------We are pleased to acknowledge re­ Department of Agriculture.
Hunters will haye \ 30 days of
BEING SENT BY STATE \
ceipt of your letter of August 24.
hunting under restrictions as rigid
Our Eaton Rapids outdoor recrea-;
County’s Share Thia Time
tlon program as supervised and di- and as drastic as those in force last
rccted by Mr. Bennett was Indeed a | season.
Will Be |27,589.81— j------------------------------------------------------------ genuine success from the very be- ■■ Three important species of water­
Pnr Vnnr
1 7 0 fl2
I Congress Clare E. Hoffman of the ginning. Many oi u. nere regr« tnat'
l,“ AtUnUcJ’?".! ?d
Many of us here regret that
ror Year &gt;00,1 ftf.oJ
’Fourth District, comprising Alle- ginning.
such an endeavor was not Instituted ' [lettd “nd canvasback dfU?kn
The state highway commissioner gon. Barry. Berrien. Cass, St. Jo- v„r_ non
*been Placed onthu
the list of fully prohas apportioned the McNitt money seph and Van Buren counties, an- yeara ago.
This program was more or less of | lJtKt
)atlon5 D
&gt; -­
for the first six montits of this year,. nounces that the boys in his district
Last year’s rcgu
regulations
prohibiting
p
and Barry county's share amounts “
*■ are *interested
“*
who
in taking the pre­ an experiment which was sponsored baiting or the use of five
decoys
for West by a small group of men who had and sink boxes or batteries have
to 827.589.81. There will be another liminary examination
check for a like amount which will Point and Annapolis should write the interest of the younger folks in been strengthened and continued.
town at heart, but who felt that a
make the total for the year 855.­ at once to his office at Allegan.
Waterfowl and coot may be huntprogram, If properly supervised,
179.62.
could be made interesting and bene­ standard time.
The money derived from the Mc­ CAMP FACILITIES FOR
ficial to not duly the youngsters but • The three-shell limit on repealing
Nitt law| must be used, all of it. in
to
some folks In the older brackets. shotguns tn effect last year Is con­
„ UNDER PRIVILEGED
the Improvement of township high­
It never occurred to us that the tinued this season. Hunters may use
ways taken over by counties. The
mileage of such highways in this Commendable Feature of the whole hearted spirit and enthusiasm shotguns not larger than No. 10
which has developed could be hoped gauge.
county, amounting io approximately
Recreation Area in
for when this little project was first
870 miles, has been taken over. By
The 100-foot regulation for the lo­
discussed. We are safe in saying that cation of blinds has been ellminatthe end of tills year about 75 or 80
Yankee Springs
every individual in town is well
per cent will have been Improved
In a special dispatch published pleased with each phase of the ac­
but not all graveled. This county in the Grand Rapids Press of Sat­
Regulations on bag and possession
will receive regularly from the state, urday. from its own Washington tivities for all ages. The writer has limits, continued from last season,
under the operation of this law. its correspondent, it was stated that not heard one dissenting comment place the dally bag limit on ducks at
share of the 84.000.000 gas tax organized camp facilities for the or criticising remark, but on the 10 in the aggregate of all kinds, and
money apportioned by that law. The under-privileged will be built at the contrary those folks who have had make the possession limit conform
apportionment la based on town­ Yankee Springs recreational area any suggestions to make have made to the dally bag.
ship mileage taken over by coun­ In Michigan, to the full extent of them through their desire to assist
Bag and possession limits on geese
ties. This county's share will here­ funds available for that purpose. in the movement constructively.
and brant of the kinds hunted and
Mr. Bennett did a lot of hard allowed to kill remain at four In
after be regularly 855.179.62.
This announcement came from A.
the aggregate of all kinds. Limits on
E. Demaray. associate director of
any such effort a success. HU other species affected by the regulathe National Park Service.
ENROLLMENT IN
knowledge of the work and hU
(Continued on page 8, Sec. 1)
It Is explained that this “organ- unique, Instinctive ability to under­
___ SCHOOLS IS 1282
stand and get along with not only
service, means a few clusters of
Number of Rural Pupils Is cabins sufficient to accommodate the youngsters but other ages, was
the largest contributing factor In
about 100 persons, which will be making the recreation program a
298, Exceeding All Pre­
rented to some civic or charitable success. He no doubt will have com­
vious Records
I organization which will charge
bined data on attendance registered
The total enrollment for the small fees to campers. Fees are not and the various types of activities
schools of this city is 1282 which is Intended to yield a profit, but sole­ indulged In.
some Increase over that of a year ly to provide for upkeep.
We here are already making plans
ago. The high school total Is 532.
At Waterloo.
Waterloo, In
in the eastern part for continuation of this next year
leaving 700 for the Junior high and of the state, such a camp Is main­ and years to come, and' highly
the grades. The enrollment for the tained. At that place the cabino
recommend this sort of thing for any
different schools Is ns follows:
had been built and were leased for
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
High school-582.
the summer to the Detroit Board of
Central school—363.
Education. This camp accommo­
Junior high—189.
dated ninety to one hundred school
TO THE PUBLIC
First ward—89.
children, who otherwise would have To Whom It May concern:
Second ward—79.
had no outing.
It has been rumored around Has­
The number of rural students at­
Camps for under-privileged adults tings that the Townsend club has
tending the schools of this city is will also be constructed.
officially indorsed I&gt; E. Barnett for
298 which represents a considerable
Probate Judge. This is absolutely
increase over previous years.
NOTICE TO PATRONS.
false as the Townsend Club has not
Notice to Patrons of the Char­ and will not at any time mix In lo­
CANDIDATE FOR REPUBLICAN lotte Production Credit Association cal politics. Our members are al­
—Adelbert cortrlght has been duly ways free.to vote for anyone they
NOMINATION FOR
appointed application taker for the please.
COUNTY TREASURER.
Charlotte Production credit Asso­
This story has evidently been
ciation and will be pleased to meet spread around by one man who has
present stockholders os well as acted without any authority whatso­
prospective members at his office In j
tiie Hendershott block In the city of | ever.
I will say officially that the Town­
Hastings.
send club will not endorse any local
candidate at any time.
POLITICAL NOTICE.
I Thomas E. Beck. President of the
Four years ago the people of i
Hastings Townsend Club.
Barry county honored me with the j
------------------, . .
probate Judgeship. Since then I have KARL WECKER TO
attempted to conduct the office In a j
anni
manner worthy of the confidence j „ , m
H
placed in me. ThU year I am run-1 ^KarJ
director of the
nlng for renomlnaUon on the Re- Gr*nd Rapids Symphony orchestra,
publican
ticket
andpolls
will on
appreciate
beenof
«»u«d
to address
theWed
first­
your
support
at the
’Kpt. 15.!I &gt;hfls
n^g
th. Centre!
P T. A-

SHOOTING SEASON
OPENS OCTOBER 10

Write Cong. Clare
Hoffman If Interested

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8
ALLEGED SMOKE, ODOR
YELLOWSTONE PIRK
CAUSE LAW SUIT JUDGE
Daniel Lewis and Neighbors
SURPASSES OTHERS File Suit Againit Milk

THAT WAB JUDGMENT OF
HUBERT D. COOK AND
FAMILY
FALLS ARE TWICE
AS HIGH AS NIAGARA

Wild Geese, Ducks, Swans
and Pelicans Seen Along
Shores of Lake
Whole books have been written
about Yellowstone’s geysers and hot
springs and If I don't stop preUy
quick we will have another one. We
continued our drive from Old Faith­
ful to West Thumb, at the west end
of Yellowstone lake, a distance of
nineteen miles, over a one way road,
through beautiful virgin forests
abounding In wild animal life. Tire
car is constantly climbing or de­
scending as this stretch of road
twice crosses the continental Divide.
West Thumb, on the shore of the
lake, is a more or less extinct gey­
ser basin, there being a- number of
steaming springs right on the shore
of the lake, and It Is at this point
where you axe supposed to catch
your trout and cook them before
taking them off the hook. I have
no doubt but what this would easily
be possible, but boiled trout, espe­
cially if they are boiled in sulphur
water, have no particular culinary
appeal.
The road from here on around to
Lake Lodge follows for 21 miles
along the shore of Yellowstone Lake.
We saw many wild geese, ducks,
swans, and pelicans with their young
along the lake as this is one of the
greatest nesting places in Ute world
for wild fowl. It having about the
same summer temperature as the
Arctic Circle. Numerous bear. deer,
and one cow moose were seen along
the road and in the bordering forest.
After dinner at the Lodge, we
drove across Fisherman's bridge and
went through the museum to see the
displays of animal, bird and. Insect
life of the park, and afterwards at­
tended the outdoor entertainment In
the amphitheater and then to bed.
Yellowstone Park Sunday. July
12—Raining again, a bear was
prowling around the cabin while we
were dressing but when we came
out to go to the Lodge for breakfast
he did not seem half as scared of us
as we were of him. After breakfast
David played with a woodchuck,
several of which live underneath the
Lodgs porch. None of the animals
in the park seem to have the least
tetr of either people or automobiles.

Company

ATTORNEY

Th.

or u,u co. will b.

Verdler of Grand Rapids. who pre^’"M^’or’S

brought out in the court when the
circuit. The trial vu
Ulftl u hcId
__________
' ofiened on Friday. As thia trial will
----------------deal with the liabilities of officers
and directors of a bank, there U
GOLF SEASON IS

NEARING THE END
day devoted nearly two columns to

And We'll Soon Know Who
Will Be Crowned as
“Champion"
The golf season Is gradually draw­
ing to a close and contests that have
attracted the interest of all golfers
will soon be settled.
'
The Championship flight has set­
tled down to a contest between Dr.
Ken McIntyre and David Goodyear,
and will doubtless attract something
of a gallery. If both players are
going good, it should be a very In­
teresting match.
Tom Baird and Dr. Houghton ol
Caledonia, will have to fight it out
for the championship of the “firs',
flight.*' ThU also will be an Inter­
esting match.
All around, this has been a very
satisfactory year at the Country
Club. Many new members have been
secured and as a result there has
been more playing. Visiting golfers
have been unstinting In their praise
of the greens, the natural beauty of
all the surroundings, and the great
variety of shots required. Go where
you will. It will be quite difficult to
find a mure beautiful, attractive
course than we have right here In
the city limits ol Hastings.

Slate Bank In which Mr. Monroe

Such dismissals had the approval

and after it was recommended by
the assistant attorney general who
represented the department In tho
that an injunction be issued to a
vent the board of directors in
settling their alleged liabilities
11.250.000 by the payment of SIS

considered.

asked that the Injunction bo

' bank's six suits against Mr. M
and the Plainwall State bank.■

—Pot Adv.

X am a life-long resident of Barry
L. C. SNYDER.
county. Have served as Justice of
As he has decided to quit farm­ the Peace. Township Treasurer and
ing. L. C. Snyder will have an auc­ am now serving my 6th consecutive
tion sale at his place, six miles term as supervisor of Assyria town­
north of Lacey, or three miles south ship. As to my character and qual­
of Reid's oil station, with Henry ifications. an Investigation will be
Flannery as auctioneer and E. K. welcome.
Gray, clerk. He offers a horse. 3
In my campaign for nomination
for County Treasurer. I will appre­
hay. com and farm tools. Bee the ciate your support and, If successadv. for full information about this
ability—Political Adv.

Stuart Clement,

Members of the Barry County
Judge Verdler on Saturday
Burhans for State Senator Com­
mittee request voters to read their
ad in the Banner this week which these requests of the attorney*

Barry county Burhans for
State Senator Committee.
the park except in the hands of the
rangers, and of course they kill
nothing but wolves, coyotes, and1
POLITICAL NOTICE.
mountain Hons for the protection qL,-*«,yoters interested In the affairs of
the other animals. "
Barry county are respectfully asked
We again packed our four sult- to read the advertisement of the
(Contlnued on page 8. Sec. 1)
. Clement For Probate Judge Com­
mittee published in this section on
HAD A PROFITABLE YEAR.
page 2. Clement For Probate Judge
The Nashville Co-operative Se- Committee.—Political Adv.
vator Association Is evidently do­
ing a fine business. At their recent
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
annual meeting the association
Republican Voters—At the Pri­
officers reported a profit for the mary. Sept. 15. vote for George A,
preceding year sufficient to pay a Clouse, candidate for county treas­
9% dividend to the stockholders and urer.—Adv. no.
add (1.000 to the surplus which has
NOTICE!
now reached 815.000.
Don't overlook the Fair Specials
The officers elected for the en­
suing year are Freeland Garllngcr, featured by Penney's. See their ad
in
the
second
section of tills paper.
president; E. E. Grgy. vlce-preaident; Amos Wenger, secretary; Earl —Adv.
.
D. Olmstead was re-elected mana­
Friday is free day for Barry coun­
ger, a place which he has filled suc­
ty school children at the fair.
cessfully for the last eight years.

quest for an Injunction to
liabilities of 81JMJXX) by Um

meat of 815O/X».

promise with Mr. Monroe was
for his liability as a
the other for his liability f

bank Immediately preceding
ure. The judge holds that

made with Mr.
with the understanding

banking department and
ton. He held that the
settlement of 81.250.000 a
billties of the directon by the parment of 1150.000 could not be made

injunction is not naceaeery.
anta* motion to dismiss the casM

claiming that such
celver with the approval
When thU suit la finally dM
It will give bank directors and

Ing department can go tn the
the settlement shall first

be interested.

POLTHCAL
Republican nomination
my name will not.
publican Primary

candidate for

BAPTISMAL SKKVICI

i nemiay evening. Sept. 23. in Centrel auditorium. Members are urged

|I to attend and any others interested
LIBRARY HOURS.
15 the »
11- • ure cordially Invited, as this promBeginning September U

brary will be open from 7 till 9 ises to be an interesting lecture. Mr.
Michigan has gained a wide repu­
Tuesday and Saturday evenings. “ Wecker will bring some of his
musicians with him to assist on the tation as a grower of onions. In fact,
Jean .Barnes, Librarian.
program.
the Gun Marsh district in Barry
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
and Allegan counties Is one of the
I will appreciate your vote for the
ATTENTION DUCK HUNTERS.
most famous regions of its kind in
Republican nomination for Register
Anyone who has duck hunting the United States. The crop this
of Deeds. Maurice Waters.—Adv.
year
has-------been
an ______
unusually __
fine
stamps for years 1934 and 1935 can .,
— ----- —
get 25c apiece for them by calling' one and producers are well pleased,
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
at the Banner office. The stamps) This spring. Mr. E. A- Parker of
Delton. Bat, Eve, Eckler's Groh. must not be torn and prefer them 1 the Michigan Mutual Windstorm inon the licenses.—H. D. Cook.
| surance Company, had ten acres of

hankjng department upon the

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.

HARVESTING A BUMPER CROP

WM. C. 8TRUIN.

KIM

Through their attorney Kim Sig­
ler. Daniel J. Lewis has brought suit ACTING FOB OOMJ
for himself and a considerable num­
OF BT00KH0LD1B1
ber of others who live in the vicinity
of the Hastings Milk Products Com­
pany plant, asking the court to re­ KALAMAZOO BANK
quire that company to eliminate
CASE IS INTERESTING
what they claim la a nuisance,
namely: offensive odors which they
assert come from the plant In the Deali With Reapomibilittas
manufacture of Its product^. They
and Liabilities of the Of­
also ask the court to require that
ficers and Directors
company to eliminate what they
claim is a serious nuisance, namely,
the volume of smoke that cornea
miltee
against Stephen B. Monroe
from the plant when the boilers
are fired. The claim is made that,
with stokers, this nuisance could be Kalamazoo, which we mentioned
eliminated. They ask that the com­ last week, was brought for trial at
pany be required to properly fire
the boilers.
_______________

his farm near Prairieville seeded of onions; the others are
with onions and from it secured Williams, Mabel Wilkins, d
7.843 crates, an exceptionally fine kins, Hattie Anders, Bhlrtoi
yield.
The above photograph taken on near Prairieville.
Mr. Parker’s farm during the onion
Although Mr. Parker's yield boonharvest, shows a group typical cl sidarably batter than averaga. Um
that which can be found tn almost Michigan crop which survived Um
any onion marsh while harvesting
is tn progress. Miss June flllcock la
the young woman holding ths bunch

for

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER It. 1W

TWO

Aren't the flies pestiferous these
GAVE FINK PROGRAM.
The airplane was busy on Sun­
days?
An tn teres led audience of parent*
day taking people riding.
and friends enjoyed the splendid
Thanksgiving falls on November
Paul Taplln. eleven-year old son
program given by the Junior Band
of Mr. and Mr*. John Taplin, Mid­
Parents Should Exercise on Friday evening at the Centra!
Next Tuesday. Sept. IS. U pri- dleville, fell from the top of a wal­
Circuit court convened yesterday.
Auditorium. Lewis Hine Is doing
nut tree one day last week and
Care in Putting Medicine
The September term of circuit
excellent work with these children,
broke the bones of both forearms.
White shoes are getting their last
who showed careful training. He court opens on Monday, Sept. 14.
Beyond Beach
wear of the season at'the fair thia
expects to organise a Junior orchesTotal registrations at the city
the fractures were reduced at Pen­
I The recent death of a little child,
nock hospital here.
who ale cascara tablets, again cmDon't overlook the Fair Specials
Saturday. Sept. S. were 314.
The Grand Ledge common council
phaslzes the necessity far extreme
featured by Penney*. See their ad
at a recent meeting decided to
care on the part of parents and
I adults in putting such things out of
have moved from 121 West Clinton , —Adv.
name the new ball park by the
street to 421 South Washington.
'
bridge, "Fitzgerald Field." in honor
j the reach of children. Many home
Everyone seems to be politically of Gov. Fitzgerald. Tlie christen ' remedies, cosmetics, hair dyes, batjiHave you sampled the "alum" at
minded these day* — even the ing service will be on the afternoon
Ing alcohol, corn cures, cuticle re­
the American Legion eating place
youngsters have signs on their bi­ of Sept. 17, during the Firemen'*
mover. eta., have some kinds of
st the fair? It has proven very pop­ cycle*.
Field Day celebration. .
poison in them that might prove
Bunday. Bppt. 37. Iiu been desig­ ular in the past.
Russell Kimmel of the Banner
fatal to a small child who knows no nated a* Gold Star Mothers' Day
Lester Larabee was driving south
A hint that deer hunting season force underwent an operation at
belter than to eat or drink what­ by President Rooaeveit. Hi* procla­ is near is given in the window of the
Pennock hospital yesterday. W«l- on Hanover Monday forenoon. He
ever he finds, inhaling talcum and mation follows:
- O. E. Goodyear Hardware store. Ian' nesday. and is doing a* well a* pos­ was about to make a left hand turn
face powder may cause pneumonia
onto
Grand atreet when Phillip
"Now. therefore. I. Franklin D. it a good-oioking buck?
sible.
and ultimate death, as it did in this Roosevelt, president of the United
Tumca. Jr., who was driving tn I ha
The new merchant at Carlton
Earl R. Stein, plant *perlntendent
city not so long ago
same direction, hit the Lara bee cai
State* of America, under and by Center. Mr, Jay c. Wing, has an an­
But in case your child should get virtue of the authority vested in nouncement on page 8 in this issue of the Dow Chemical Company at In the rear. Both car* were damaged
hold of any of these article*, call a me by the aforesaid public resolu­ which will Interest our farmer read- Midland ha* been named mayor of but the occupant* escaped serious
Midland to take the place of James
physician at once as delay may tion. do by this proclamation desig­
injury.
W. Driver, who resigned.
mean death. Strychnine, belladonna I nate Sunday. Sept. 27. 1936, a* Gold
Among the thrills of fair weekWilson Ouidet, who lives neat
Will those who put "blind ad vs"
and other - drugs are often found Star Mothers' day and direct gov­ old fashioned taffy and cracker
in the Banner Want columb. please Dowling, wn* arrested last week in
in medicine and. taken in quan­ ernment officials to display the Jack, hot peanuts and popcorn, ice
call for their replies? There are a Battle Creek on the charge of driv­
tities, will cause convulsions and United States flag on all govern­ cream sandwiches, hot dogs and lot of them to date, showing that I ing his automobile for some tlm«
death, which might be prevented if ment buildings, and do. call upon hamburgers.
people really do read and answer with only one license plate, which
a doctor gives Immediate attention the people of the United State* to
he found. He pleaded guilty in q
Officers of the Grand Lodge of Want Adv*.
to the case.
display the flag and to hold appro­ Michigan L o O- F. will confer
Most of the city's business places Justice court at Battle Creek last
priate meetings at their homes, the initiatory degree upon John were closed on Labor Day much to week Wednesday, and was sen­
PASSING OF .MK8.
churches, or other suitable places Barnett of Hastings and Karl Keef­ the disgust of several would-be tenced to pay a fine or aerve 21
DAVID R. MILLER. on that day as a public expression er. Jr., of Watervliet on Saturday
customers. Some tried the doors, day* at the county Jail at Marshall
Mrs. David R. Miller, mother of of the love, honor and reverence of night. Sept. 19,
then looked in the windows hoping He paid tlie fine.
Frank Rogers, died on Saturday in the people of the United States for f। Al) voters interested in the gorxl
someone would let them in—but to
We learn from reliable source!
Detroit. She had been in poor the American Gold Star mothers." government of Barry county arc re­ no avail.
that Einar Frandsen of Ionia, for­
health for the past ten nr twelve
spectfully asked to read tlie adver­
Officials of the Ypsilanti Furniture merly of Hasting*, has made an en­
years. The funeral was held on Mon­
STILL ANOTHER.
tisement of the clement For Pro­ company at Ionia have signed a viable record a* agent for the Masday in Detroit with burial in White
Richard Keenan got into another bate Judge committee published in contract with the Union City Body sachusetl* Life Insurance Company
Chapel Memorial cemetery. Surviv­ accident at about 1:30 Monday aft­
this ’ectlan on page 2. This Is an im­ company of the Ford Motor for 13.­ During July lie wrote Uikurauce to­
ing arc the husband, the son. Frank ernoon. west of the city on M-37. portant matter which should receive
000 seats for 500 new buses for ti»e talling 439,000. Another agent, Dil­
Rogers.; two granddaughters. Mrs. He was starting to ascend the hill
careful consideration.—Political adv. city of Detroit. Il will provide work lon Wolverton of Middleville, also
Cecil Robert* of Baton Rouge. La., near Bull Head lake. He was on the
Friends of Mrs. Waller Wallace al tlie factory for at least three lias produced a suiMtantial volume
and Miss Theollne Rogers of Has­ north aide of the highway when he will be glad to hear that she is nice­
months.
of business. having written in July
tings; a sister. Mrs. Chancey Stev- veered over to the wrong side of
ly located at Crystal Springs Manor,
Al the final session of the Seventh 421.000 worth of new business.
. ens of Battle Creek and nephews the road, smashed into a highway
Hendersonville. N. C. where she is Day AdventLsts conference at their
The "Clemmers" who have been
I and nieces. Mrs. Miller was a memfence taking out several posts. His receiving treatment. Should you camping
ground
near
Grand camping al Indian Grove and gath­
I ber of Tracy Chapter. O. E. 8.. of own car performed a complete som­
wish to write her. the address Ls as Ledge, nearly $3,000 wa* subscribed ering ahoHr frorn Thomapple river,
| Chicago and was active in lite Has­ ersault and wis a sorry-looktng rig.
above, care of Dr. Helen Randall. toward the cost of a new auditorium, [jacked their tent and belonging* in
tings Presbyterian church during Keenan was fished out and taken
All hope to hear good reports from work on which has already been their Utile canoe and drifted down­
her. residence here. Sympathy is ex­ to the hospital. An examination of her.
started. Over 3.000 people attended stream Friday al twilight as ths
tended to the bereaved ones.
his injuries did not indicate that
Mrs. Emma Bush Is reported as the meeting.
shadow* were falling dark on Okl
they were serious. He complained a little better. The following rela­
Mr. and Mrs. Brurc Casper of Man River.
.
WILKINSON REUNION.
of severe internal pains, and it may tives called to see her on Labor Day: Walla Walla. Wash., who are visit­
The David Wilkinson family re­
May the cares tlzat infest the &lt;fliy
be that that may prove serious. Fred L. Bush and son Fredric and ing relatives in Hastings, were
union was held at Morgan Park.
Fold their tent* like the CMmKeenan
had
ordered
a
new
car
to
Mrs. Lilliam Silken of Battle Creek; luncheon guests of Mrs. F. L. ShepThornapple lake on Labor day.
replace the one that was smashed Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Bush and ' herd Tuesday noon, and dinner
There were 52 members in attend­
And as silently steal away.
ance and three visitors. After n up In a wreck not long ago. Tlie children of Royal Oak: Mr. and cuesta of Dr. and Mrs. B. P. Brown.
Art Bryans parked his. car over
car he was driving was a borrowed Mrs. Ernest Jubelt and son of Fem­ Tuesday evening.—Charlotte Repubbountiful dinner, a fine program
' near the Sheriff's garage Monday.
one.
dale and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Tllk-1। lican-Trlbune.
was enjoyed and the following offi­
The
auto is a good, trusty one and
I Mr. and Mrs W. N. Chidester,
ins of Campau lake.
cers were elected for the coming
ADMITTED 1118 GUILT.
Do you recall the time when Has- ’' who have been living in the John invariably responds promptly. When
year: Pres.. Merl Callihan. Lansing;
Louis Parquettc, age 18. who lives1 tings school teachers were paid, Welxsert house on East Walnut Art got ready to go home he cranked
Vice-President,
Arthur
Callihan.
it up as usual, but he'd forgotten all
Battle Creek; Secy, and Treas., Mrs. southwest of Middleville, was picked with scrip? You probably also re- ., street, will be located next week at about the fact that he had left it in
crc™
Eleanor Strickland. Hastings. Re­ up Sunday for the alleged offense of call that It was redeemed 100 cents '1 tiic home of Mr. and Mrs. G. F. ,reverse
t gear. Promptly, according to
union to be held at same place next shooting Homer Todd s cow. He has on the dollar. How different in ' Chidester on West Green Mr. and n|| pfta
"-st traditions, the car started—
admitted his guilt in Justice court Portland. Oregon. A Portland jx»«i Mr*. Chidester expect to leave about backing
yeW;__________
__________
vAing up at a good lively clip, de­
before justice Cortright Sentence Is per says the scrip Issued by that !
spite
his
vociferous pleading for it
If you want to put the world being delayed until it is known what city and county was paid off nt ;
right, start with yourself-.—Anony­ happens to the cow; at the present about 10 cents on the dollar. Some I CiHdc^lerOnd fWnl,,r’ ReV‘ W- Kc‘U’ i have &lt;‘J,M and cl«led in and out bctime she is alive.
mous.
checks were for but 25 cents.
। cniaester.
| twcpn
othcr
iwcni omrr carj
cars, pnriten arounrt
around the
, court yard. But when it smashed in­
to a maple tree it was Just too much
। to expect that it would continue its
1 headlong career, it stopped. and so
I did Art's worries, and he vows that
the next time he parks ills car he is
going to be mighty sure that it's
.not left in gear.

POISONS FOUND
IN SOME REMEDIES

LOOK!

Pure Granulated

SUGAR 10=49*
10 POUND LIMIT

SALMON
FANCY

„„ IO

6 Boxes
Oh io Match es
2 U&gt;. Lo«(
B rea (J Fine Quality Priced Low
u&gt;.
Brown Sugar
Wheaties Popular Breakfast Food 2 Pka«.
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes Large pkg.
Large pkg.
Post Toasties

Crackers

HEKMAN'S
Liberty 8.11
SODAS

Rowena
Pancake Flour
Rolled Oats Good Quality

2
5

LB.

BOX

2Oc
lOc
5c
23c
lOc
iOc

15c

25c
23c
Largo Bars
IO k' 35c
Dinner Rolls Fresh! Delicious! Dox. 6c
Vacation Land Coffee
17c
White House Coffee
23c

BANANAS
FIRM, YELLOW FRUIT!

lb. eack

lb. sack

CIGARETTES

23

HAMBURG
FRESH GROUND

lbs.

27c

are Ribs

ib.

19c

2 LBS% 29c
Roasts

GALLON

b..!k.hi.,it.

13c

FER |

VINEGAR
Pure Cider

STUART CLEMENT
AS PROBATE JUDGE!
Let's not experiment

2 *«• 35c
Firm, Crisp Heads
Head Lettuce
IOc
Sweet Potatoes
6 "&gt;•• 19c
Table Qu&lt;

2

LETS RETURN

This office is one of the most important in the county

Sweet and Juicy

PURE LARD

Names Gold Star
Mothers’ Day

OLD GOLD, CAMELS, CHESTERFIELD.
LUCKIES, SIR WAITER RALEIGHS

2

SHULTZ

LOCAL NEWS

37c]

Food Center

in dealing with wills and estates, the probate office requires a man of integrity; one who
has a well-developed sense of business responsibility; one on whom you can depend to
meet obligations; one whose word is good; one whom you can trust without question.
In dealing with juvenile delinquent cases, the probate office requires a person who
understands young people; a person who can deal with them intelligently rather than
harshly.
Stuart Clenpent meets these requirements for thefbllowing reasons:

Training and Experience.
Judge Clement hat been probate judge for four years.
Prior to this he was probate register for seven years.
During all this time ho has of necessity specialized in tho
study and practical application of probate law which is
a highly specialized branch of the legal field not studied
with thoroughness during ordinary law training.

— Integrity.
Judgo Clement in both private and public affairs has
proven that his word is good, that he-edh be depended
on to meet obligatiorji.-ttreLjie^h'os a well developed
sense of responsibility!
v

3 — Faithfulness to Duty.
Judge Clement has proven his ability to tend to busi­
. ness. Even during tho primary campaign to date, ho has
not let the problem of electioneering interfere in any
way with the duties-of his office. Win or lose, he believes
that the business of tho probate offico comes first.

— Impartiality and Fairness.
Judge Clement has administered the probate office
with general satisfaction to all. It is impossible to please
everyone. Frequently a judge who aominisfers the law
impartially must take the blame for peculiar provisions
of the law which are difficult or impossible for the layman
to grasp. Stuart Clement has impressed people with his
fairness, thoroughness and impartiality.

5 — Merit
Judge Clement has given tho county so satisfactory a
first term that he deserves another. It is the custom in
this county regardless of party to reward good service
with at least a second term. Barry county is recognized
as being consistently Republican — yet in purely local

PENNOCK HOSPITAlL
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
McDonald, route 5. a son. September

I route 3. a girl. September 3; to Mr.
, and Mrs. Vem Sinclair, route 4. a
boy. September 4; and to Mr, and
! Mrs. Proton Kauffman. Clarksville.
| a son. September 6.

SUFFERS INJURY.
' Wilber Morscau. who had been
I working tn the Oun Marsh onion
fields, was reported to the officers
here as having been badly injured in
a fight he had with his brother-lnI law. Richard Lewis. Morneau's face
is badly swollen. He slated that It
I was caused by a stone hitting him.
■ He claims there was a difference of
opinion between him and his wife
! over money that he had received
from lopping onions and that his
brother-in-law and the letter's wife
Interfered and gave him the worst
of it. All four are on the welfare in
Cass county. What will be done with
the case the officers had not decided.

'______

and county questions, voters have been sufficiently approdative and fair minded to reward merit regardless of
party label.

CHICKEN THIEVES AGAIN.
Thursday night chicken thieves
stole thirty nice chickens from Pete
Miller's premises south of Freeport.
So far there have been found no
! dues to the thieves.

I

6 — Understanding of Juvenile
problems.
Judge Clement is to be congratulated for his manner
of dealing with juvenile cases. He is sufficiently mature
to have level-headed judgment yet not so advanced in
years as to have grown out of touch with tho problems
and outlook of the youngster. In this respect we believe
that ho was very fortunate to receive training under
Judge Eggleston who through years of experience in deal­
ing with juvenile cases acquired an intimate knowledge of
the peculiar problems of Barry county which no person
can gain throuah the study of law books. His fine char­
acter and excellent personal habits are, in themselves, an
example for the wards of his court.

Mothers Pensions.
Judge Clement at probate judge has edminiriorod
mothers pensions courteously end fairly. Ho has stead­
fastly refused to play politics with this important powor.
Ho has not made any promises or commitments which he
will bo unable to keep.

8 — Administration of Estates.
Judgo Clement has a splendid record in the ad__
istration of estates. A prooete judge occupies on office
whore he can be instrumental in avoiding unnecessary and
expensive litigation in estates and can frequently save
considerable trouble and ill feeling in the diplomatic and
proper handling of tho estates of deceased persona. The
conscientious and personal attention given such matters
by Judge Clemifnt is a record which speaks eloquently

Why experiment with this important office when we have a man of proven ability
available! Let's return Stuart Clement to office.

Clement For Probate Judge Committee
(Noto this ad has boon inserted and paid for by friends of Stuart Clement)

"Tm constantly meeting
people and my appear­
ance has to be beyond re­
proach. Thai's why I use
McCREERY’S Service to
keep my suits cleaned
and smartly pressed........
They are reasonable,
loo.

PHONE 2140

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�THE HA8TTNO8 BANNER, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER M, 1»M

VOTE FOR

CLARE E. HOFFMAN
for
Clttfc

Republicans of the Fourth congressional district will nominate a
candidate for Congress at Tuesday’s primary election.

Whoever that nominee is, the probabilities are that he will be elect­
ed in November, for the Fourth district is normally Republican—and
this year, especially, Republicans for the most part are supporting
their ticket, headed by Gov. Alf Landon.

Clare E. Hoffman of Allegan is the district’s present Republican
congressman. He has served one term and is seeking re-election.
Congressman Hoffman is a tried-and-true Republican. He has al­
ways supported the Republican ticket because he'believes in Repub­
lican principles. And this vital campaign year—in particular—he is
talking Republicanism and Landon.

Congressman Hoffman is the Landon type of man hi public life.
Like Landon, he gays what he thinks that men may know for what he
stands.
Hoffman won’t pussyfoot; he always keeps his word, as instance
his campaign election promise of two years ago when he said he
would vote for the soldier bonus and faithfully did so when the bo­
nus came up for vote in the House. (By the way, veterans, Hoffman
even voted for the bonus over President Roosevelt’s veto, which you
must admit is keeping his word.)
Republicans this year want Gov. Landon elected to the Presi­
dency. They want a man in the White House who will stop reckless
spending and extravagance; who will speed business recovery, not
retard it, by encouraging business and not eternally threatening it;
who will take definite steps to balance the budget* and put the na­
tional Treasury on a sound and solvent basis. In short, Republicans
want a national administration of common sense, one that will pro­
duce more jobs for the workingmen and less experiments at the ex­
pense of the tax-ridden people.

Sending Alf Landon to the White House will be of little avail un­
less at the same time the voters send men to Congress who believe as
Alf Landon believes. Without a House and Senate to help him carry

CONGRESS
out his program, Alf Landon, as President, will almost be powerless
to drive the braintrusters and the hordes of Farleyites out of Wash*
ington.
,
I
r

Landon men of the Hoffman type in Congress—and especially in
the House of Representatives—will make Landon’s program of com­
mon sense possible. But wishy-washy, rubber stamp congressmen
who are all things to all voters will be of no help to a Republican
President Indeed, they will defeat his program and defeat the votes
that elected him.
Primary Election Day is the day for the Republicans of this dis­
trict to pick the right man for Congress. Clare Hoffman is that man.
He has proved it in the two years he has been in Washington. He is a
thorough-going Republican; he hasn’t stultified himself or his par­
ty in the votes he has cast in Congress or the principles he has advo­
cated in his campaigning. He has been straightforward and honest
in the discharge of his duties. He has faithfully attended to the in­
terests of his district; he has consistently opposed raids on the
Treasury, but at the same time he has openly advocated old age pen­
sions based on sound economics and the capacity of the government
to provide such economic security; he believes in relief—honest re­
lief, not political relief; be believes in constitutional government be­
cause he knows—as all men must know—that the poor man as well
as the rich man can only be protected in those guarantees of life, lib­
erty and the pursuit of happiness if constitutional government lives.

For three long years the American people have beheld a Congress
that rubber-stamped the New Deal’s boondoggling nonsense without
question and without argument The cry everywhere has been, “Oh, if
we could only get THINKING men in Congress.”
Clare Hoffman’s candidacy offers this chance and this opportuni­
ty. A vote for him is a vote against boondoggling, against the hatand-rabbit performance of the New Deal, a vote for Alf Landon and
the sound principles of sane government

If you vote for Clare E. Hoffman at Tuesday’s primary election,
Republicans, you woi)’t be taking a chance on the type of man you’re
sending to Washington to legislate for you next winter.
'

To land with Landon lot your primary vote support Clare £. Hoi
(Thia advertisement paid for bp local friends and supporters of. Clare K. MR

�T

The Hastings Banner

------

BOOST THE COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1936

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

■ACK T6 tOLLtcfivW.

Editorials
I were put forward in very simple.
HIGH HANDED ACTION.
Republicans of Michigan would .I ‘almost elementary terms, but they
I showed a aound grasp of the probwelcome an inquiry into the matter -,
j lent, and they ^Hacked the Rooseof political expenditures provided
veil ndmiiiLstraUbn at admittedly iLi
some of the New Deal manipulations
weakest point.
in tills stale could be exposed at tin-.
"Governor Landon cannot be acsame time. This u just another ex-1
■ cuscd of ignoring the dimensions of |
ample of the high-handed Federal
! his problem. "We have huge re-I
interference we may expect if the | cponaiblllUes," he concedes, -'that we
New Deal is returned to power. it j must continue to meet." For that j
reminds one somewhat of the tactics reason he refuses to promise that |
Mussolini employed in bringing the he will balance the budget overnight. I
people of Italy under his power.
i But he is convinced that a» long as '

bills in the 1936 session of Congress.
Only Mr. couzens knows the reason
for his erratic action and he has
not seen fit to give the public a con­
vincing answer, speculation for this
action as given in the press of HiLs
state is not very complimentary to

•

&amp;' 6YE-,

st

na-1

Tills opinion of the 'lines • Li
sl|nlficant and indicates without a I
। doubt that Landon has made a very
favorable impression throughout the
cast.

I

BIG VOTE EXPECTED.
Judging by
new regist rations
there will be a record vote nt Hi?
primary election on Sept. 15.
Tills is as it should be. The pri­
mary is more important, if any­
thing. than the election, itself, and
people are beginning to appreciate
this fact. Then. too. a number nf lo­
cal contests arc helping to create in­

THE COUNTY FAIR.
Fair Week Ls here Igaln.
Judging by advance indications,
the event should be a very succesg,ful one. Agricultural, livestock, and
handicraft displays will be cxcep- j
ttonally large—as will the flower j

—nnncz=zjnnczz3n
innczna
[

A Quotation

LET

|

us lal&gt;

that little spark of ce­
lestial fire called Con-

show—in spite of the summer ‘
drouth.
A county fair always provides an ]
terest.
' Every person eligible should vote Intert sling contrast. First, there Is
nt both the primary nnd the elec­ the serious side ax represented by i
Um exhibits, a prize hoc nr cow,, or'
tion. Too often this Job Is left to n
minority of the electorate—ami here Mime extra fine vegetables ijr grain. I
we have the reason for machine- for example, represent care.' alien- ,
‘4I3U1.L Cop's Horse From
,
, .
nnt* applied knowledge which
controlled
politics. If voters
will
&gt;MM eowij.'mtan ’
Li!.'.’!,."''!’'?,'""' '
*■
Manhole by the Tall.”
to the qualifications of the candi- The
’ 'fair
“,r supplies a practical exhibit , Some might say that was
stretching a talc too far.
of what farmers in this county can J
dates in question and vote accord­ 1 do.
That Woodland. Calif., man
ingly. no so-called machine can get ।
' Then, at the other ,cnd of the ' who has worn the same hat for
by with crooked politics for long.
rcale. arc tlie amuM-n^nts and.con-: 35 years must have his wife
. This country is still a democracy
entirely
under control.
! cessions—Gaudy boo Up and doubt­
—thanks to the Constitution and
' ful games of chance designed to ex- |
"One thousand bars of soap
the Supreme Court—and public
tract as much currency as possible ■ stolen from wholesale grocery
opinion as expressed through the
from the pocket books of patron-.. warehouse." Tlie thieves really
ballot is still the mo;n potent gov­
innd side shows based on Barnum's ! should make a clean breast of
erning force;
. Iprofitable premise that "the public
Whether thLs force represents the________________
loves to be fooled." Money melts.
Sfonc money Is used In the
minority or the majority depends i ttWfty on lhe nij&lt;lwny without murlr
Caroline Islands of the South
upon the attention that the Individ- being given in return. Yet Barnum ' Pacific, some of the coins mensual voter gives to public questions, wax right, people love, to be fooled.; tiring 12 feet in diameter. Truly
because these concassions carrv : a stable medium of exchange.
WALLACE SAVES THE DAY!
MW&gt;y &gt;ub5Untlal
Sntilies
of I
Morc than 32,000 women
Out in Kamas they are making mWey from this county in spite of
work in India's mines. Amer­
farmers burn a percentage of good aW Wiirnilll.s and ,mtfeasant &lt;and '
ica's gold diggers arc all sur­
oat crons in order to comply wltii unprofitable) pm experiences.
face workers.
terms of the sell cwucnatlon proQf • suck«n
I

S™1
' caught each season-and yet a new
ThLs. despite the fact that feed of batch always seems to* be on hand |
all kinds Ls needed badly throughout eager to swallow lhe halt.
the drouth (tricked region.
, Of course there arc different

AN CXTKA O»«

----- --------------------------------------- -—,--------।------------- - —..............
i
Ding to give their surplus to less tor- very closely on tlie skin-game elnssl- I
lunate neighbors.
j flcation; others provide, .some renllv ;

But no! Tho ruling was that ihc 1,"|’1'-lng good fun, n is necesoary to '
oats must be burned to comply wiln Wi4&lt;'h one's step.

[

Pungent Paragraphs

So. many bushels of good feed
were cut and raked into windrow.and burned—all this in a regiorj
A proposal to add 15 letters to the
where livestock is bring killed or present 26 finds many • dissenting.
sold at panic prices to prevent To-begtn with, the alphabet'noodle
I plants would be obliged to jmt, on
death by starvation.
Tills is a practical, working exam­ night shifts.—Milwaukee Joi^rnjl.
ple of New Deal "farm relief." Il 1
An experienced newspaper editor
the type of red-tape blundering that is a fellow who drops the juupayou can expect when a federal bur­ ganda stuff into the waxtcba Xel beeaucracy ftttcmiiu to metkile with foti oj)cnii&amp; the envelojx- iijead ol
(aft|rward. — Memphis
Commercial
local affair*.
...
Purely local situauons in Michi-’ Api4.il.

I
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Grand Officer to Be Oueit—
FREEPORT WINS
Ritualistic Work a Part
of the Program
FROM INDEPENDENTS

'The Public Forum |||
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Delton. Aug. 30. IBM. I them, who well know they can and
Dear Editor:—
I will accomplish nothing if elected.
I hive Just been reading a week I It is no longer even an Old Ago
or two old copy of the Has tings I Pension movement, for at Cleveland
PHI.
: The annual meeting of the Barry Baiuier which Jacks up the people ' on August 26lh.
Townsend from
j Local Team Lost to Grand County Association of the Order of of Barry county because they have the witness stand said tho Old Ago
Revolving Pensions was "an organ!Eastern Star will be held this year no tourist camp near iftutlngs.
Rapids and Rain Spoils I at
Nashville with the Nashville
Would not It be better to protect ration founded to spend money and
Ono Game
i chapter os hosts. There will be the tourists thal already come here | bring about the return of prosperity"
The Hastings Independents drop­ ' morning and afternoon sessions and from lhe motor boat nuisance? Tlie and, continuing. "My purpose has
ped a fa.st game to Frec|K&gt;rt Sun­ j Grand Worthy Matron Flora J. people allow them-to run and be as i not a* its basic intent doing anyday at the fairgrounds by the score [ Sutlierland of Benton Harbor will much a nuisance to the fishermen as i thing for the old people but, to In­
is posalble. They can find a place to I troduce a philosophy of government
of 4 to 2. The locals look the lend ! be n guest.
At the busmess meeting the pres­ camp easier than they can fish with 1 to help lhe young and the old and
I in tiie third inning by counting their
| only pair of runs of the game. Co­ ident, Mrs. Cora Gebbhart. will pre­ such a nuisance permitted. Il is al-1 to eradicate poverty from thia rich
ville got on the bases on an error, side and the election of off ice n for most impossible to catch fish while land." So this candidate. Dr. Felix
a. Racelte. who says from the poHocveiuiir walked and Clark O'Don­ ■ the coming year will be the main one of those boats is running.
Tho non-realdenl^eomea here and lltical stump, that he Ls engaged In
nell scored them both on a texos order of business. The memorial
leaguer to center field. From then | will be given by members of Pru- pays his license and spends ills an attempt to secure a pension for
money
here
and
should
have
iirotec।
drnce
Nobles
chapter
of
Hickory
—
**
--4
u
—
•
•
—
the
aged,
is merely advocating an­
on Preston, pitching for Freeport.1
held tlie locals to only one hit dur­ j Comers with the flag presentation tlon while here; at least while fish­ other national economic cure-all.
which he should know you will not
ing the last six innings and struck | by the Hastings chapter. Rltual- ing.
The tourists are complaining have lhe opportunity of even trying.
out seventeen of tlie Independents Lstic work will be put on in the
aflerntfon by selected of!leers dram about their treatment when motor
All of which brings to mind thal
during the game.
Freeport scored one run in the the various chapters of the coun­ boats arc. permitted to run on lakes while he was making Democratic
thal are supposed to be fishing lakes. speeches in 1032. he was also offer­
'
fourth and pushed across the win­ ty.
l*hls should be looked into al once ing for sale "Ceilona." of which he
Another feature will be a history
ning runs in tlie eighth when
O'Donnell weakened momentarily of the traveling gavel, which has or there will be no need of a tour­ said "one-third teaspoonful four
nnd allowed three hits and walked been presented to each chapter of ist camp anywhere. For fishing is limes dally supplies tiie syxtem with
ns tunny. Tlje locals played error- tlie county during the post year. wiiat brings the tourists—most of all Ute mineral requirements of the
bone and sinew, nerves and brain."
le:--. ball nnd Freejxirt made only Tills talk will be given by Mrs. Geb­ them anyway.
Dad Wilson.
and "Acld-caz” which was good for
; one error, which allowed Hastings hart. who Innovated tile traveling
Wall lake. Delton. Mich.
stomach trouble.
! to score their two runs in the third gavel idea,
Someone sent a sample to the
: ittning;
Twa fast games were played nt CRIPPLED CHILDREN’S
Three Rivers. Mich..
state analyst, who found that the
September 3. 1W0.
remedy contained 813 per coni com­
the fairgrounds Labor Day when
MEET IN OCTOBER Dear sir:
mon table salt and on the bottom of
; Hastings met the Michigan Oases,
I hope dial every voter In this his report made a notation "Recom­
j Grand Rapids city champions. The
*
; first game went to Grand Rapids by Jackson Rotary Club to Bo district will support Congressman mend prosecution."
Clare E- Hoffman for re-election, as
Of late, so far as we know, the
j the score of 9 to 7. Again tlie locals
Hosts to State Society
lie is competent, humane and con- Dpctar has not been offering this
■ took Uie lead early in the game by
October 15 to 17
.
I scoring two runs in tlie first Inning
rcmMy for sale. He Ims entered an­
lie Introduced a bill tn Congress to other nnd larger field. H&lt;- now has a
after /lie visitors had scored once
The nnuual meeting of the Michi­
for surgical
and umpiwu
hospital Universal
.iuijilai aiiu
uuivcisni remedy
n'lncoy for
ior all
an economic
, in their half of the opening frame, gan Society for Crippled Children repay me iui
i Grand Rapids tallied twice in' tlie will be held nt Jackson October 15 bills which I paid personally in or-1 and national Ills. He has been lelta
_____________.____.__J
fourth however to take a lead that io 17 with the Jackson Rotary Club der to obtain relief from a direct-, Ing us that by a 2 |&gt;er cent irait^r-Ki-*, Ir re
—­. lloll Ux the national debt can ejtdly
war-connecteC.injury which
_—-----------------------------—------------! wx.s not overcome. They pushed as the hosts.
► he |»ld. prosperity restored, security
across two more In Uie fifth, three
While the program Is not defi­ ceived In Frant®.
This bill was passed unanimously for tlie aged established, am; a
nR/.z-Lfl.i/ivzJ
iln t,u' ‘''shlh and one in the ninth. nitely complete, of special interest
while the local In.ls scored one more will be the panel discussion of by both the House and the Senate. sion of |200 a month given to nil
i
It
was
sent
to
the
President
nnd
he
of a certain class who are over 60
"Safeguarding Services to Crippled
years of age.. ...
He _____
would —
create „
a
eighth, and their Huai run in tlie Children.” It Ls hoped to have rep- ‘vetoed it. although he had billions .........
ninth.
resenlatlves of nil agencies In the ! of dollars given to him to spend and "revolving fund" which will inniieThe second game ended in a state concerned with the crippled he has spent billions of dollars in ' dlatcly wipe out all our national
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
scoreless tie when rain, washed out child take part in the discussion. | promoting the various New Deal J difficulty; He does not tell ux where
Gir.i Jt-t.r.c'.t It:;-, purchased the lhe game during the seventh In­ Another feature planned on Ls an alphabetical branches and rxperl-1 lhe money to pay this taxation Lx to
Hastings Buick garage of Abell ning. Rose, pitching for Hastings, address by Raymond J. Knocppel, menu and all sorts of boondoggling come from nor who is to do the
I work and we have been wondering
Johnson and taken possession.
had allowed only one hit during the president of die New-York Society : prelect*.
, it is Just too bad that a Veteran's! whether this latest panarea of his.
At iiotci
Hotel starry,
Barry. vol
Col.. ucxiy
Cody uno
and a.
J. , game, und When the rain came down for Crippled Children nnd a speaker
H Dennu of thLs citv met for tiie 1 th* Iwal- were in a good scoring from the Federal Children's Bureau, Just claim should be denied tn order ! tills "cure-all," even though it may
time . inc - Immediately after ' l»oMtlun with a man on second and who will discuss the social security that some politician might be given j not consist largely of salt, should
I the taxpayers' money.
| not be taken with something more
tiie war. Mr. Dennis wax a member j nobody out.
act and its effect on Michigan.
of one of the Michigan Cavalry regt-1 . T1"' O'’-4 '
bark to Hastings
Tlie main object of the meeting Ls I I hope thal the Congressman will than 8i3 per cent salt.
J. Hchry Myers. Law ion, Mich,
mrnts who served under Custer in : s,'l’t- 20 for two ll,or'' Hatnex. The to work out a model organization I be re-elected and thal he will con-.j
tinue
to
serve
Lhe
people
in
the
fu| P. 8 Years ngo when I was a
program
for
crippled
children's
oix-iiitmg ngumst the Wyoming in “rs;
will start at one o'clock
d)ni)?(.
। And the locals ex|x*cl to take both work in .Michigan and arrive nt a Hire ns he has in the past. Certainly | small boy, tlie town wag told mo I
every
Veteran
should
support
him.
I
could
catch birds by putting salt
definite procedure from the nation­
Buffalo Bill, whose lutmc Is n
Leon Frederick Ruggles, I on their tails Brother Rncetlc a|ial. state nnd local point of view
charm for every American Iwy. wa.
World War Veteran.
parently Mill has faith
patently
fullh hi
in the chlldchild­
which will promote and safeguard
greeted by a large attendance,
hood method.
BALI. SCIIEIH I.E FOR 1936. the interest of the crippled child.
Thur.Miay afternoon mid evening.
[
A candidate for congre.-w who al­
Sept. 19—Grand Ledge, there,
The support of everyone u needed
Delbert F. Brown, the new science I Sept. 25—Lansing central.' there. lest standards are lowered, laws full ways lias a remedy—All National
teacher in lhe Hastings schools. wa&lt;.
INJURED IN ACCIDENT.
might game),
Into disuse and work for these chil­ ills cured by one dose.
awarded both tlie scientific honor; Oct. 2—Allegan, here.
The candidate from • my home
Mrs. John Morgan. Castleton
dren fall Into the legarthy of bu­
and senior high honor of hl* class at j Oct. 10—East Grand
county. Van Buren, now using the _______
township,
... _______
sustained
_
_____
severe____
cuts
—
Rapids, reaucratic management.
Townsend
organization
.
to
obtain
a
i
about
the face and scalp in an auto­
Olivet college lust June.
there.
nomination on the Republican tick-1 mobile accident at about „ eight
RAILROADS' BET­
Oct. 17—Charlotte, there.
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
•t.
two
years
ago
was
a
candidate
on
I
o'clock
Saturday
at
the
Intersection
TER EARNINGS.
The imstors of the city and pco-|
It Is no longer doubtful that the the Republican ticket in the Pri- of East State Road and the drlvfcOct 31—Ionia, tnere.
pie present at the union services in,
railronds of this country are getting mary. when he wax defeated, after way to h^r home, which is eight
Nov 7—&lt;Jreenvllh . here.
the BaptJ.-t church Sunday evening I Nov. 14—Belding, here.
In better condition. A tabulation he had promised to support the win- inll*'-s east of Hastings.
paid a graceful compliment to Rev.!
for all the railroads of the coun­ ner, bolted that ticket and ran on 1 Mn Morgan wax riding In an auS’* wart B Crandall, who preached
try for the first seven months of the People’s Progressive
ticket,, tomoblle driven by Charles Hilton,
hi* last :cr:non in Hastings.
thia year shows that they named where he received 361 votes out of I which was struck by another air
i Just after turning onto the Slate
2
3': on tlictr valuation. Tills Ik a total of more than 77.000.
in
Hammond,
Ind.,
nnd
sjM-nds
her
Mr-.
J.
L.
Maus
and
her
daughter
.
As
he
well
knows,
the
Townsend
[ road from Uic Morgan driveway.
net.
after
all
expenses
have
been
summers
at
Gun
lake,
is
again
Mrs, Florence Dooley visited friends
woman's golf champion of the Has­ met. In the same period in 1935 movement as a National movement Nene of the other occupants of the
, in Grand Rapid- last week
‘ Miss Mabel Spaulding returned to tings Country Club. Mrs. Garman their net earnings were l.flS'.r. It has lost its force and the elderly, two cars was injured. Mrs. Morgan
Chicago ihursday to resume her defeated Mrs. Robert O'Connor. 7-6. Is quite evident that cheaper jxls- । people who believe in it arc now be-. sufiered considerable low of blood,
studies in the Chicago School of I Tuesday morning to win the title. senger fares have not hurt the rall- । Ing used by candidates who have. but her condition was not conr.UlI nothing substantial to recommend । rted serious.
Mudc. where she won a scholarship Matches in the consolation flight
by her fine work last year.
| are now being played. Mrs. K. 8.
| Mr- Jacob Rehor and Mr: Albert , McIntyre defeating Mrs. Roy HubBr , liter went to Grand Rapids this bard. 3-2.
: morninj to attend the Keller-Briggs
--------------- * • -----------------I wedding.
ADDED $4,024,430.00

f

tSaCRWara Lrlances,
Vcetcrdav n‘“ ln thc
DUSRife
(J/ I nf
LSlL/miy

Dt.

FORTY YEARS AGO
FOR MONTH
Shirley Smith returned from hl...
European trip last evening.
i The Windstorm

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‘&gt;‘l!

OF AUGUST
- -------- ,

Co. s Agents
Madc pine Record for

home of John G. Reuter in Irving I
*Hot Months
’’ S'.inda) / Among iho.-c present"were
, George A Reuter*01 F&lt;i'. Recovery.’ Hot weather did not stop the good ;
;Ohio; c work
R. Mo'.Ur
of Cleveland;
8..! Wind- .
of the
agenLs of tlie
S TritiT of Lowell; Adam Gackler; storm , Insurance company of tfitx*
iuinf.rather u rvtt
• &lt;&gt;i Campbell; Isaac Moore and S'-'city in th? month of August; und •
n j p.i:ny r. -&gt; link ’
mlah Sccse of Freeport; Jacob Ret;- the rains Ute latter port of lhe'
SEITCMBt R
|t&lt;r of McCords and Mrs. Umrik-r. । month did not dampen their enSr. of Freeport and their fnmih?.. jthusiasni. The total new insurance'
Mr. and Mrs. Champion William ■ written for the company during Au.Hid daughter. Helen, of Oakland. | gust aggregated $4 024 430. Th!'
11—EdwanlEvtrcti Hslepub- ' Cal. are visiting Mr. and Mr s Nath- ■ added to lhe splendid total previous- '
‘
B*1110*- ^’rK Wdfiams was for-, ly written this war is sure to put
the Windstorm company well across ,
tlie coveted $400,000,000 mark, rep- •
Ftrrv VEAltS AHO.
resenting the amount of insurance ,
• J. M Bauer has completed Hit| school census and find. that tlie earned at the end of 1936.
Nothing coultl better testify to the
number of persons in the city be- fine record of the company l/i the
past und the confidence of the pro- 1
1 Thi- indicates 2.B00 population—i pic of this state in Its future than ’
I healthy increase over last year.
such u volume of new insurance as
| The work of rebuilding the Newhas been booked so far In 1936.
i

Im.: pu.-hed with vigor A for.-e &lt;&gt;! tup pRFQinCMTQ
| workmen l* now engaged tn rcmov- 1 nc
1 Y.
gon. Kamos. Nebraska or any other
------------I mg the debris from the site.
WERf VICTORIOUS
.l.U tel be h.n.ll-,1
1 T’&gt;p »»'&gt;■
nt him. :: I
A meeting of the directors of th' I
— - —
for the doing of big tEings is by ’
from an office dr.-k Ip WatllilUtaU.
। HttsHnub and Kalamazoo jailroad J Monday in Golf Contest With
practicma tfic ddihg o|HHI6 tliing.f
• r to lx- held nt Grand Rapids t i- [
—■
- - *-----Everj- bushel of grain thus de­
Vicc-Presidenta, Win­
■ morrow. An cHorl Ls being made to 1
well.—Pastime Scrapbook.
stroyed in the United States mean;
I build the road by Grand Rapids.;
ning 9 to 3
that a corresponding bushel will
A businessman is of the opinion i
nz
.
‘
Kalamazoo and Hastings capitalists i The annual contest at the Has­
Saturday next the Knights of La­ tings Country Club between the
have to be purchased from abroad that a girl who is tn love is a nut- j
»r
bor and the Carpenter's Union o. ■ President's and Vice President's
Thus the New Deal-relief" program *anre in an office. We understand j
NEWS GLEANINGS.
this city are to have a labor demon- | teams is always an interesting event1
.
. .
.; To an American it's a cane, but
b destructive to ,local agriculture ,h*1 Mnce hLs typbl
got engaged.
straUon in the court house square. । and looked forward to by those more
the v
X on the. office typewriter
but a benefit U&gt; farmers abroad.
..
. 1has i10 l*lc Englishman it’s a walking
• ornrless interested.
.
' ' " .... ,
Interested.This
Thiacontest
contestis la
• ’n practically worn away.-Hui- !st,ck'
_______ ;
It's a "relief program, alrighL- bw
[invariably accompanied by more or
1 Ytain fojls about once in &lt;u years
but a relief to the wrong country! imortsL
.
MIfF muiravATinNB
i!c - boasting. denunciation of op­
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
, p,fff,.nu ability. and solemn warning
in tlie jnirched mountains oi west-'I "Americans do not take happiness .
’• • jiXwsl.Then, tqo; an opllnilst is tlie fol-'em Peru
■•Americans do not take happiness ar,
Is
UXDOH IMFitnSES EAST.
11™ who.
o( ......afe
I,ern Peru.
_______
.ntoudy «»»u8h."-Ben™nJ nuo- as to what is going to hnpix-n. But
the score always tells the final story.
- in spite of me fact that Cover-, winUfr Ul norltla ls laUsfini wh„n I ™c Leaning Tower of Pua has | sell.
This contest was held al Ute
nor L-ndon is no mowmau. hh re- U1C wuld co,,.,.., from thal dlrvcUon &lt;•»«*“'*»-“ U ^^'‘led al
^-57^ Ule world
Country Chib .Monday forenoon. The
Vice Presidents tried to throw a
marks and views are commanding -st Louts Post Dispatch
,
'
' • _______
j ccpl lhe United States and Russia
Karo into the rapju. of the Presifavorable
attention.
Even
the I - ~
— -^^s=r - * More than
6j»-»it' are memben of the League of Ngr.
Democratic New York Times fell inA “lucaUM points out that 2A00 .ln America's 65.000 bcatr.y athops in • tlon* and so closely bound by agree- work at all. The poor Vice Presi­
dined to come forth with cautioui
to*buiw **»n', X”4'
--------- ^ite.^that’ i?d f neutrality In a
dents went down by the score of 9
j to 3 and later will have to provide
words of praise after his address at I ,n*’M of topur.l. which the dub
One square meter of the ;-urt's mr- large-scale war is ajnroxt impossible.
Buffalo. The Times said:
a niblick will, please bear in facc radiates enough heat to gener- | war today involve* blockade and a free dinner to their gloating opponchu. the dale tor which has not
"Governor Landon's address at mlpd.—Portland Oregonian.’
alc nSarIy 100,000 H P.
I the commerce of the neutral b as

ay 0/ OllT World

Crumbs Ol Wisdom

“"“k/
■
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
Cornelius J. Born, cloverdale ....21
MU f-Ammonta
,h.
10 a Boston inquirer who axles as a matter of fact it was made Of
----------- *campaign. Hl« comments on the
prrju. tf gtatuex ol'men wearing graphite such ax is in use today.,It1 "No individual ha* the right to Elorenca e KnUs, Parchment.
^Michigan ... .................................. ib
Ptderal ^Government s
financial dcrby hats existed m thii country - w“ not
^rd determine
JIUL unUI
UUM1 ,li60
inou u,at
Uiac «4
SO cal
CaiKU
UCWiUUUG whal
WIIUV law
UA" »hall be obeyed- and
law shall not be enforced."' .’’Donald v. ghorno. Woodland
.22
pMUam were quiet In tone; they Ran Francisco Chronciie.
-. , lead pencils ■were
' used 'in the
" Untied
'
' what
‘ *"
'States.
।—Herbert Hoover.
'LouUe K. Hilbert, woodland

MmMisn

Ill

BARRY CO. EASTERN STAR !|
MEET AT NASHVILLE I

I

Tbr.es admit-s that this governor of a
TYPICAL PRAIRIE STATE has a I
thorough, intelligent grasp df
Donal problems. -

' . Sporting Items

HEX CUT IT OUT/lULL. Yfl f ITlP
eao ENOUGH TO HHFTA GO TO SCHOOL.,
turrHOUT HSvWG YOU ACTING TWU’
WRY------ YOU CAN'T GO RLON&amp;.SO

i the Government continues to pay |
REASON UNKNOWN.
,.|iaH o
! "half of its bilLs with borrowed '
Senator Couzens' swllch to the : m
Jney ... we are living in a fools |
-try
nnal
u-railrl
havebeen
beenmore
more
New Deal
would
have
1 1Mt1radi.M‘. - What he docs promise Is |
impressive if he had not, almost ' adherence to principles that might I
concurrently with hU announce­ rapidly make a balanced budget
ment. circulated throughout the possible."
state pamphlets stating what a!■ Perhaps the country is tired o!
staunch Republiciui he had always J
oratory and display; tired of senutbeen; what a consistent opponent
tionalLsm and showmanship; per­
of New Deal extravagance. In fagt haps people arc in a receptive mood
the booklet boosted that Senator for quiet, well-measured wortLs s|X&gt;kCouzens had led the fight against cn with sincerity nnd conviction.
Roosevelt's gigantic relief nnd tax
At least the Democratic New York I

the government program.

W. tu Spirit af a Community

BARGAINS in

NEW«™ USED CARS
Thurs., Fri., SaL, Sept 10, 11, 12
Don't fail to visit our garage this week and get our.prices
on New and USED CARS ...

You Can Save Money
Also visit our tent at the Fair Grounds, just north of the
Grand Stand, and look over the

LINCOLN ZEPHYR
The Most Modern and Complete Automobile manufac­
tured today.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
PHONE 2121

Ford Products

HASTINGS, MICH

�THE HARTINGS BANNER, THUMDAT. SEPTEMBER 19, 1999

l".i. .L,,.',1" 1" 11'.-« I HAH ENLISTED IN NAVY FOR

■1

ACTIONS SPEAK
LOUDER than WORDS!
.

At the conclusion of every legislative session It I* the custom
of lhe governor to send mil routine letters of thanks to all
members of the house and senate REGARDLESS OF PARTY
OR REGARDLESS OP LOYAI/TY OF SUPPORT. As an en­
dorsement. these letters mean little and are not Intended by
lhe governor to be used as such.
.

Republicans of Barry county became increasingly disgusted
with the conduct of Senator Frank Mosier for hta sniping
tactics al the FlUgcrald administration. This d(Mention came
to a head when Mr. Mosier voted AGAINST lhe governor on
the nil important reorganisation bill—an action which not only
brought a storm of protest bearing down on Mr. Mosier, but
on other members of the bloc a* well.

At that time the Barry County Republican Committee sent
tlu- following letter to Mr. Mosier:—

COPY OF LETTER MAILED TO FRANK MOSIER.
April. 1938.
Honorable Frank Mosier.
.
State Senator from lhe Eighth District of Michigan.
Michigan State Senate,
Lansing. Michigan.
Dear Sir:

.

|L

Tlie Barry County Republican Committee, together with
other Republican organization* and officers In the counfy
unite in condemning your-vote against the program of Gov­
ernor Frank D. Fitzgerald. We believe your action is absolutely
contrary to your campaign promises to us. that it is In de­
fiance of the wishes of the four thousand five hundred Barry
eounty citizens who honored you wllli votes of confidence and
that it Is at extreme variance with jterboua) assurance* that you
have given to tu. A rabid Democrat could not have bucked the
governor any worse limn you have done. You have supported
him In minor matters of legislation. Il is true, but when the
important lest comes you see fit to line up with the Demo­
cratic opixMllton and with lhe Republican bloc led by Earl
Miinehaw. We here in Barry county are back of Governor
Fitzgerald ONE HUNDRED PER CENT, and wc believe we
are within our right* in demanding thal our representatives
should exprem our wishes. At n large meeting of Republicans
hastily assembled this morning after knowledge of your action
became known. It was unanimously decided to send you a
ptainly-wordcd expression of our sentiments. If Republicans
tn the house and senate insist on letting matters of patronage
and personal ambition stand in lhe way of putting across a
major share of Governor Pi tag era id's fine program, liven our
party will fail Just as miserably as live Democrats failed. We
can assure you thal your actions and alignment* from now on
will be wntchrd with close attention. The next .campaign is
rtill many monliu away but folks in Barry county have good
memories.
Mr. Mosier did
rlighlest effort to
decided that the
quirt and let the

not renly to this letter: he did not nuke the
explain why he bucked this bill—he evidently
nnly thing hr could do would be to remain
storm blow over.

But the storm ha* not blown over. Barry County Republi­
cans did not forget how they had been "let down." They want
minlslral on; a man who will not Join with rebel Mors and the
opposition for the purpose of sniping at the governor.
Barry County Republican* are for Frank Fitzgerald; they
believe In 111* sincere attempts to give Mlrhlgan an economical
administration; (hey waul a man at Lansing on whose polill-

THAT IS TIIE REASON WHY THEY HAVE DRAZ-TED
EARL BURHANS INTO THE SENATORIAL RACE!

Barry County Burhans for Senator
Committee.

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SOCIAL EVENTS.

‘

wait«^oT^TE

1 and Mr*. Walter Caukln. who has
enlisted in the Navy for a four year

1

FORMER HASTINGS GIRL
WED IN GRAND RAPIDS « &lt;xum.
/

w»iu,. »t» pm-h aS
tlnee examination* with an "A"

-------------

Butt Mkh.1. Beoomv, BrM. j ‘“SX„X“ti X
"
of Cleveland Man Last
| any preference because of lhe fine
Saturday
i showing he made in his examine,

SS

| At the ‘Theatre I

DISCUSSED COAST

QlJARD service

ato 11 ui &amp;cprea|nta a Combination of
Lift Saving and Revenue

Pal O'Brien in "I
1
MarriM a D~4er.” .
UA
ful and realLUc drama of

?“'fe

/ OaUer Worfc

which ha* saved commerce across
lhe Atlantic from many difficulties

other duly is the protection of IM
herds of seals on the Prlbiloff is-

1"-tfctumnuoommut*, Olson of I
small | a,, government coast guard service,

Now ships and hydroplane* co-

humonJ“ with headquarter* at Grand Haven,
*aTplfd&lt; fr°m&lt; a
■WM tha speaker at the Rotary
- 8|f,ckluncheon Tuesday noon. He gave an

W-toto. ertUUd in U» Uto Hu'uiSSTuJ-JS

ulT.wTuS "

lings and one
Hartings; on*
thy M. of Q

"

Ol lnkro.1 U&gt; poopU in Hullnk.
dl,ul„„ ol u„ N.„, H.Hm. Alvunder. Ou, Klbto u&gt;d
“J 0 ,
saving service on the Great Lake* Edna Bean, «
Ill be
be the
the news
news of
of the
the marriage
marriage on
on graduated from
Hasting* High Louise Fazenda.
। ;ce
P
,
with about flfly stations. It 1* mostly | brother. Omer
will
u&gt;t Saturday
Saturday of
of Mias
Mias Ruth
Ruth Miriam
Miriam whool but June and 1* Just 18 year* I
He flrat explained that the coart shore line service. Much has been . »*» Ct‘r. »*wurl
last
„ ,
„ ,,,
__
zic «r*s cxpismeu mai me coast
. .
...
...
nf aaa
.Charles
Collin*.
Kteffl
Dana
_
___
■
_____________
_____
.
। CharlM CoUlna, bUfli Dana
guard represented a combination of done by them to save ships and relative* and friends. Pumral
Nichols, daughter of Mr. and Mr*.
I
Sl?rrlnni ,n. ..Da.n^ nf „ r,!c’ lhc revenue cutter service, which ----- ... jL—&gt; ices were held at the Was
M. C. Nichols of Grand Rapids,
Methodist church at Heatings
-□.ncln, Plr.U i4eUrl.Uy hj. w„ „Ubluh«l «x»&gt; .IU-r tbe led- a* well as their crew*.
formerly of Hastings, to Edward
«i uniami pM. a..lln, wuy u»
oon.muuon &gt;u .dopud, .nd
Savage Paulsen of Cleveland. The
MrniM
ol u uulxuc u&gt;d
.ih.
ill.
n.in,
mvl«,
-hlch ww servlce is directed by lhe treasury meat in Fuller osmslevy.
ceremony was performed at one
Udlou. ymn, feMa who CMU!
b&gt;
,cl
In department, in case of war It Im­
o'clock at Country House in Grand
m love. &gt;M lunu » Ite worm to ' 1B0 yn, tw0
.m.ij.^trd In mediately liecomcs a part of the
Rapids by the Rev. Leroy T. RobMlf.i Mac Spradling of Madison, teeome ■ bold, dublnt eonouvror I „ls „a thm.ru, known » "the United Blate* navy. All members of
inson of Trinity Methodist church. Wlu. end Gardner Chidester also of ple.Ua. renegradM and th. heart
^r,(ce ■■
the coast guard are trained tor duty Which never can be filled.
The service wa* read before lhe | of Madison, the son of Mr. and Mrs at . auud.li beauty tn old Call-1 Iu ,uUnun&gt;. M„, „
in the navy, a* well a* for llieir God in hi* wisdom lias recalled
flreplace between large baskets of; O. F. Chidester of Hastings, were rornl. euni Dun. a. the love In- pmucUon or the government reve- particular work as coast guard*.
The boon hU Jove hath given.
----- ‘
varl-colored
gtadoll. a selected• —
pro- united in marriage al 9:30 o'clock Urest tllaye oppoalU Chirk. Col- nu, „ m
And though the body slumber* here.
p^,,. „„ lhI „v|n|
■ gram of wedding music being Friday morning in Milwaukee. The
OBITUARY.
Una| of ships in distress. That particular
played by Carl Bennema. The bride ceremony was performed by the
Minnie Elnora Gilleland, daugh­
, .
' 7 ~
| service is quite different from that
wa* given in marriage by her fa­ groom's cousin, the Rev. W. Keith Dick
BUFFERS INJURY.
Foran. Paul* stone
of former years, because the radio ter of Alex and Rebecca Gilliland,
ther.
i Chidester of Winter Park. Fla.. In
„ .
*n
ha* ended the necessity for cruis- was born in Castleton township.
Harry Wood. Br , had lhe misfor­
The bride’* gown wax a VanOogh the cha|&gt;el of St. Paul's Episcopal
Dick Foran has the stellar role In lng a^ut the danger points of navi- Barry county. August 23. 1878 and tune to step backward* off the steps
print in tones of cream, yellow and church.
"Trallln west, a thrilling mr o- gallon ln
-----------in
order
to
possibly
discover
departed
this
life
August
30.
1938.
brown with a slight train and short.। me
The Rev.
Jtev. and
ana Mrs. Chidester.
umacster. Mr. drama of the weal during lhe Civhurting himself quite badly. It wa*
fitted Jacket. Her wide hat was of and Mrs G. F. Chidester and Miss 11 war period when guerillas were a ship that might be in trouble. Now
Moat of her early life wa* spent found thal tiie ligaments were
brown moire and tlie wore brown , Helen Chidester of Grand Rapids undermining lhe government and such a ship is equipped with radio,
in Lenawee county, on February 18.
sandals. She carried an arm bou- . drove to Milwaukee on Thursday re- spies were on lhe watch to catch and send* out its "8. O. 8." calls for
1895 she was united in marriage to ful injury. Mr*. Wood and Roy
assistance.
quet of Talisman roses.
turning Friday evening.
| them. Jncluded in the cast arc
Ell O- Bronson of Carlton, and to Douglass are looking after the wort
Miss Virginia Pott* of Hastings ' Miss Amy Gesnner of
“ 1
imnanled tiie bride and the best die Shubert and Rin.r*
lne ‘nwnawonm ujcuctk i»uul thi* union were bom four children.
wax the maid of honor and she wore ! companlcd
Stuart Holmes.
a flowered crepe grown in shades of man wa* Dr. Kennedy al*o of Madililac and purple, fashioned with a son. who had been Mr. Chidester's
"Educating Father.**
cape. Her wide brimmed hat was roommate for seven years. A wedLove's young dream la a night­
brown and she carried pale lilac 1 ding breakfast tor 14 guests was mare to dad and a hilarious riot to
gladioli.
served al the Shorecrest hotel and lhe audiences in "Educating Fa­
Miss Margaret Nichols, the bride's Mr nn(j Mrn chldcster ieft-imme- ther.” new film featuring the Jones
younger sister, attended her as dlatcly on a four weeks' trip to lhe Family. Jed Prouty. Shirley Deane,
bridesmaid and her gown was*a Black Hills and Yellowstone Park.
__ Spring Bvington
______
Dixie _
Dunbar,
and
floor length yellow organza trimmed
Mr. Chidester for the past several । K^etlTHovreTriive
Kenneth Howell have tiic'featured
tnc featured
with fluted rufflM. Hhc carried blue years has been employed as a chem- rolM ln lhut happy comedy of life
bachelor buttons
with
a xcmi- 1*1 for the Forest Products Labora-j ln
BVerafee American family,
wrealh of Uw same Howers in her lories in Madison and tlie bride is a
\------------botanist employed
the same
firm. I Barbara Stanwyck. Robert Tay­
hair.
___________
_______ by
________
________
Bruce Hunter of Detroit was the Mr. and Mrs. Chidester will make
lor in1 "His Brother** Wife.”
best man and the master and mis- their -------—
home--in Madison.
"HU Brother’* Wife" tells of a
tress of ceremonies were Mr. and
young scientist about to embark on
Mrs. Clarence Carlson. Mrs. Carl­
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER.
his first scientific expedition. The
son wearing a princess model of
Mrs. Ertnonl Newton. Mrs. Bur­ story lias been placed in two ex- i
brown moire taffeta with gold or­ dette Button and Mrs. Harold New- tremeiy Interesting yet contrasting
naments and a corsage of tea roses. Ion entertained twenty-four guests settings—the gay. happy night life
Following the ceremony there wax last Wednesday evening at the home of New York and the sordid and
a Reception and wedding breakfast of Mrs. Newton nt a miscellaneous suffocating heat of a dense South
for thirty guests. After a short shower In honor of Mrs. Tom Taf- American jungle.
wedding trip in the cast Mr. and fee
(Marguerite
Waters). Tiie
Mrs. Paulsen will make their home guests included the girls of the UlDAMAGED BOTH CARS.
in Cleveland, where Mr. Paulsen Is Ira
.. and Y. M. L. clubs and other
Sunday at about 11:30 A. M. Carl
connected with an advertising firm, friends of the bride.
DU
..vw was Seldlcr crossed the Broadway bridge
'
Bunco
For her golng-away gown the bride played during the evening, the prlz- Intending to take M-37 to return I
chose an ensemble .of navy rhrer • es being won by Mrs. Harry Baldwin home. He drove northward on M-43
with short Jacket and grey acces- nnd Mrs. Tom Waters, who prcscnlsorlc*.
* their —
••- •---------- -•
-------- for several rods past the turn when I
I—
ed
gifts
to lhe
guest
of »honor.
he noticed his mistake. He stopped I
Mrs. Paulsen spent her girlhood .
-----his car. intending to back up to lhe •
in Hastings, graduating from the PARTY FOR MISS
‘
comer and follow M-37. Before he .
Hastings High school She is also!
MILDHEI) WOODMANSEE,
could do that, something happened. ।
a graduate of the University of , Miss Hazel Caukln entertained , 'Earl Latty of Battle Creek, with a I
Michigan, completing her course [ sixteen guests Friday evening al her [। new Pontiac, wa* driving north on I
this June.
1 home in honor of MIm Mildred
•
■
going
about
Out-of-town guests
guesU at
nt the
the wedwed- Woodmnnrcc
w^dmnnw"whe/tefl*
Sunday Tor
fart* nearly
Out-of-town
who left Sunday
for 1 as'SiuS aiThouk*
dlna included Mr. and Mrs. Charles Detroit to take a nurse's training !
wUK'flSdler^he^ the 1
Pott* and H. A. Nichols of Hastings; course. An enjoyable evening wm | utu? stoSn^d La«v ils uSablc to
MIm Dorothy Statelier of Detroit., tpcnl playing card*, game* and
Ute accident:
a college roommate of lhe bride; dancing aftc? which refreshments
into lhere«
Mr. and Mrs. Guilford Beck. Mr. were served.
occurred. He crashed into the rear ,
of Soldier's car. Fortunately neither 1
and Mrs. Edward Benson and H. P. i
---------- - - -■&lt; » --------------driver wu hurt but both cars were I
Brown of Chicago and Mr. and Mr*, j
MIMCKLLANKOUK SHOWER.
L. S. Well* of Kalamazoo.
, A miscellaneous shower was given badly damaged.
I for Mr. and Mrs. Glenn, Bachelder
HONORED NEWLYWEDS.
______________________________
। ol
the home of his parents, Mr. and METHODIST PROTEST­
ANT PASTORS.
The office staff of t,he Barry Coun- Mrs. W. H. Bachelder. on Thursday
The Methodist Protestant denomi­
ly Health Unit, with their husbands | evening. About thirty guests al­
and wives as guests. enjoyed a pot tended and many lovely gifts were nation recently held it* annual con­
i luck supper and social time on Wed-1 presented lhe young couple. Ice ference for the state. Preachers were
nesday evening as a "hou.se warm-' cream and cake were served,
assigned to their various stations.
Those named for Barry county
ing" in their fine new library. It I
- • *■----------------was also in honor of Mr. and Mrs. I Having never been willing to make churches were as follows:
A. A&gt;Roth. who were recently mar-. a pe*ce treaty, the Seminole Indians
Assyria: Henry Campbell.
ried. It jvas • very delightful oc- are still legally al war with the
BarryviUe: D. A. Van Doren.
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Hillings

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FRANDSEN’S

�THI BASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13. 1333

SUPERVISED PUY
08195890
(Continued from page 1, Bee. 1)
town lhe size of Bastings or Eaton
Rapids.
Hoping
above expresses
Jnu
volthe
rVrTdeJou
77tbe the
ns
polnta you were desirous ol being
Yours very truly.
K. A. Maupin.
Mr. Maupin Ls the head of lhe
Maupin Woolen Mills of Eaton Rap-

The City of Eaton Rapids has un­
dertaken no project within the last

tious. diligent worker, and you are tb
be congratulated in having a man
of hi* caliber connected with your
schools.
With kind'regards, I am.
Sincerely yours.
supervised plav for school children,
. .
R. O. Toncray.
but it was likewise a plan which ihMr. Toncray Is lhe president of
cluded adults a* well. There were 18 lhe Homer Bros. Woolen Mills.
regular softball men’s teams/and 3
women's teams, so you can see that
Mr. Bennptt did a very excellent
this alone accounted for well over
200 &lt;rown-UPs who wrrc P«nlclP*t- piece of work. It Ls the best I have
had anything to do with. It Is not
only
an "Investment" but a very
Rather than go Into Ute finer de­
tails of the program, feel sure that wise one. Il 13 something we must do
Mr. Bennett can give you a first­ more of as chQrthrs. and not leavehand picture of the activities, which all the amusements fon our young
people to those who do it for profit.
will be more effective.
Those in Eaton Rapids who had Our people are very enthusiastic
any contact with Mr. Bennett dur­ over lhe summer program I think
ing this past summer are unanimous lhe young people should have a
in their feeling that he Is a very larger part In planning lhe program
high grade young man. consclen- —directed planning. This is not
spent and as much good accom­
plished as in the case of the recent
recreational program of the post

Organizations

:rio

op

SAVINGS HERE
ON SCHOOL
DAY FOODS
PURE. WHOLESOME FOODS FOR
HEALTHY YOUNG APPETITES.
NOURISHING. EASILY DIGESTED
FOODS FOR HURRIED SCHOOL­

TIME MEALS
CEREALS. FRUIT JUICES. COCOA.
SOUPS. VEGETABLES OF FINEST
QUALITY AT C. THOMAS STORES*
• EVERY DAY LOW PRICES."

ICTHOMASSfOREg

finding fault with Mr. Bennett. It I benefit of supervised play. If such'
is something learned out of the ex­ a project can be put across In Eat- ।
perience. By all means push such on Rapids. It certainly can be and
good work ip Hastings. It has char­ should be done Ln Hastings.
acter building possibilities in it. Il
must have right leadership. • • •
Townsend plan meeting Monday
Too many who are leading our
night. Sept. 14. This la a special
young people are not Christian, or
meeting and all members are ur­
Christian in name only. Much of
what is wrong today with our young
' gently requested to be present. Call
people L* due to our determination
; at Townsend headquarter* at tlie
to give them certain kinds of
। fair to learn the place of meeting.
amusement because It is the method
KWtodtrn.Wt. Wil
Th. tohUr"^, ot th. «...
of least resistance, and does not re­
quire any study or planning. Just
Uo».
.r.
u
follows:
lulls
o.d
g.lll«"J» i?hJP1"
1
^ot th.
turn them loose and make It right
coon, u in i
by supervising IL We do not study bbl.. ...„w „„
lb'*‘1 15' “
““’“I
lhe results. I wish you every suc­ th. .ggrrg.U ol .11 kinds; sorw »;
officers and -------members
r“™ Tlie """"
----- ---of
cess and If I have not given you the root. IS; wooduwk. lour Itostolon room.
Information you wanted, write me of a federal duck stamp Is required Red Cedar Chapter al East Lansing
will be guests that ‘eveplng- and
again and I will try to do better.
Please pardon haste.
fowl hunter more than 16 year* of their worthy matron. Miss Ruth
Ingelhart, will have with her a col­
Sincerely yours,
lection of letters and gifts from vari­
the postoffice.
M. A. Braund.
ous foreign chapters, which should
The regulations were recommend­
Rev. Braund Is plstor of tlie Eat­
prove an interesting program for tlie
ed by lhe biological survey approved evening. Light refreshments will be
on Rapids Methodist church.
In d proclamation by President served.
Eaton Rapids, a* we all know. Ls
Roosevelt. The drouth. Il has been
a city about 3-5 the size of Has­
pointed out. has seriously affected
Hospital Guild No. 18 will post­
tings. There were 365 boys and girls
the duck crop in the United States. ,pone
___ ___
its September meeting bethe playground books throughout
emphasizing the need of continued • cause of Uie fair,
whoso names were enrolled on restrictions
on waterfowl hunting, j
------tiiat part of the vacation when the
----------------- -----------------------The Southeast Rutland W. C. T
supervised play was in progress. The
OBITUARY.----------- U. will meet with Mrs Russell
average age was 11 years. Several
Henry Leonard Scheib. only son I Hathaway Wednesday. Sept. 16.
boys and girls missed less than 3 of Henry and Roxie Scheib. was • There will be a volunteer program.
days on the grounds..
The w. o. T?o7S11 be enterTlie total cost of the program was SXi’.SJ'TSSJJ-'SJCS
$3g5. of which 3168 was expense for hept 4. IffM Med two yeer,. eleven l*1’^
Y'T’smnh'el her home
.•supervision, and 3112 was spent for month, end eighteen &lt;1.,. A friend-1
1 J
r
permanent equipment, which can be ly. loving Util? boy he was loved by
°’r
e Cham'
Program leader.
used for another season and so all who knew him. He leave* to.1*11*11*
should not be counted In as an ex­ mourn hU loss, his parents, two sb-1 Are you well informed? Well, let's
pense. However, considering it all ters. Magdallne and Margery, two lieBr you name ten members of lhe
us expense. It cost the. Eaton Rapids
grandfathers und one great-grand- lower House of Congress -Asheville
Playground Association only 5 1-2 father, and many friends and rela-1 nil ben
cents a day per child to give him tlie lives. The funeral wa* held on |
'
advantages of the playground, pay Sunday at three P. M.. al lhe Wall-1 "I don't want to have anything to
for the supervisor and buy lhe need­ dorff funeral home, the Rev. E. L. do with poUtics and I don’t want
ed equipment.
Crocker officiating. Burial was In politic* to have anything to do with
Thirty-eight persons tn Eaton Rlver»i(}e.
m*."—Henry Ford.
Rapids took an active part in put­
ting on the playground program in
cooperation with Mr. Bennett dur­
ing the season. The services of one
WPA worker were donated to as­
sist the playground activUles.
The program Included adult boys
and girls as well as older persons. A
city softball league was organized
with 12 teams. 15 persons on a team,
and a schedule of 10 games for. each
team was arranged, and 100 of the
scheduled games were played. Three
teams were also organized for girls
and young women, a total of 4.800
spectators witnessed the games.
Such results as these show the

i
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5 Ib. bag 22c

HUSKIES, New Wheat Flakes, pkg.
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GRAPENUT FLAKES
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TOMATO JUICE I
3 tall cans

ORANGE JUICE, Libby's,

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I Ward* 12 month guaranteel

Flat top size; metal cases and
thoroughly rustproof; with
'i pt. vacuum bottle.

Wards HARDWARE

gKUN* SMOKE

WARDS.
J FAIR 1

■0

long Ufa I 24gauge. Save I

Wards HARDWARE Fair

C«m«nt

TOc
2-lb. canl
Plastic, fire­
proof — for
iron or steal I

OIL

88c
60c

27c

1144 gat Ca­
pacity. Gal­
vanized.

Full weight,
good broom
corn! Value!

Dependable
lubrication
lowest cost I All grade*.

Ward* HARDWARE Fair

Flat Wall Paint

1.00

Regular 11.49 value! De­

pendable Coverall grad* I ■

Ward, HARDWARE F.lr

Wash
Boiler

80e
13-gaJ. capac­
ity.
Galva­
nized Boiler.

lite
10-qt. galva-**
nixed
pail I
Bail handle.

69c
Tube
horn. Chrome
Face Plate.

patch

of rubber.

Wards HARDWARE Fair

CLOSET
SEAT

1.80
WHITE

finish!

Snow Suits

Are you Electrifying?
Wards Ara Haadquartara for Kvarythlnt Meatrlcal
Whether you want a dollar's worth or a 1500 eltctriacation job. Wards will furnish what you need at a
g saving. Come in for an estimate.

2.19
t-pt H',4-80. cottie IO-«od*

Barbell Wire
Heavily galvanized,
tauge wire I
Long,
orbs made of round
w Barbs spaced 5 ina.

full
sharp
wire.
span!

for Boys and Girls.
Want. HARDWARE Fair

3-23c
M
a to
O Cans

You are welcome,
whether you buy
or not.

■W Wf

|&gt;rvi

15II

WATER
HEATER

i.25
Attached, to

C. THOMAS STORES
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

WATERS
Clothes Shop
Stiling Quality Kt epi Ui Buiy

STANDARD TUBE

75c k00 2-7»'£&gt; IOc
No. 14 Safecote.
Slick,
clean finish.

BX cable.
Biae
14-2.
Und. listed.

IOc

First quality Toggle
cable outlet switch,
box. Clamps. All Bakelite.

Gay Jord
Sylvania.
Earl War
Detroit.
,v. Miss D
;-Trego am
nnd Meh
spent th&lt;
yr here tin
(ho galhe
Miss b
Who is U
R. R- N

guest of
Elizabeth

WARDS

Bulk price

Heavily gal-

friend* in
City and a
crse City
The Re&gt;
the Rev. C

ponlcrenct
Church in
The Res
on Tue-xlu
in LudlnRt
charge of
at Groce
Dr. and

EXTRA

wheels.

outside steam

IM WUT ITATI murr

‘Mr. and
and son. C
end guest"
WeKpintcr
jOintner.
Dr. and
Dr. nnd h
erand Raj
rklay lac

Word. HARDWARE Fair

steel

Mrs Grai
on Friday U
after a visit
Mrs. Fern
l* spending
cousin. Mrs
family.
Max Leact
hay fever *e
position will
Cadillac.
Mr. and M
Joyed a wet
trip to fndls
Louisville.
Mias Haze
Detroit to n
er spending
home here.
Mrs. Fred
Renkes rcti
after tpendl
farm home.
Harold K
Yale Ulis !
with his
Knapp, ant
Mrs. Stui
Thomas, of
parents. Mi
over Sundn
Mr. and
Kansas CH*
Day gueste
Mr and Mi
Mr and
and Patty, i
home in N
spending it

company w
Hobington
tended the

29c

for
Deer Hunters

V

lion, but the total receipts for the b^j
lwo raen squeezing each
three months ending Sept 1 la otb„.g hBnd,
Of g
considerably larger than for the
.
. , .
u~.ki»
same months in IMS.
i «“**• °r doth—ColUer • Weekly.

37c

Dreadnaught

Franco-American

SPAGHETTI

b’ “

Fised Value of Good.
Among at 'east inree
three quar
quarter*
----------of
the people of the world, good*
b.,,,,,.,
„.h, „Wom
.
__
.
................
...
value. The price paid Is determined
only after negotiations between buy­
er and seller.
When the parties
wish to keep the price a secret between themielre*. the negollatlon*
are carried on In a linger code tinder cover. Price* for rug* In Per-

SKATES

■

Soo Wools
J

In ■«&gt;. ; «&gt;•

bring . .nil gr.aLr

Longeit
Wearing

tumace

No. 2 Can, Red, Ripe

4 £c

Mr. and M
Ann Arbor 'I
wedding of &gt;

senger receipts for the railroads if |
the new rate shall be continued as!
It no doubt will be.
;
Some of the best business talent
ol lhe counlry mentgra lhe r»U.
roads
No
doubt
th.v
reallv
antlelroods.
they really antici­
pated n sharp reduction in passen­
ger earnings but the proof Is abund­
ant that they were wrong and that
__ _ groundless.
their fears were
In this city, the"saitTof tickets
at lhe two-cent rate has not only
largely Increased the number of

USUALLY 26.95

While You’re
Attending the
Barry County
Fair . . .

NO. 2 CAN CUT STRINGLESS

GREEN BEANS

tlie First Methodist church hen
Her pastor, the Rev. W. Maylai
Jone*, officiated at the funera
which was held al lhe daughter*
home on Monday at two P. M. Bur
Lal was made in the Dowling cerne
tery.
.

fined a* one whose knowledge It
based on "experience and practice.’
Yet tn-e number of Hate* today
say* Harry (Jreenspon. New Tort
mile haa yielded from 15 to 25 per city. In Collier'* Weekly, a phy*l
cent increase In passenger receipts i r|an who ba* practiced only ou
for tiie railroads! n^l Is they have I y(,,r aniJ w|l0 hm never perform^
received more money at the low Bn OI&gt;erntlon l* allowed to teatlfy
fare than they did at the high rate. (
()f gnn;lcal malprnetlce ant

24««

EVAPORATED

10c

Robert Ke
Landing for
Marjorie E

Delta electric light and
horn, balloon tire*, lugsagc carT’er: boys’ and
TpB girl*' models.

TgfiySyj &lt;1*
■ vjwili'/-

4 p\bg 30‘

20c

health for some lime. Mr*. Week
had resided in Barry county abou
eighty years and in thi* city to

Wl.

?!

SEEDLESS RAISINS

11c

It Is now three months since the
order of tiie Interstate Commerce
Comission wa* issued requiring rail­
roads to reduce their passenger
fares-to two cents per mile. The
managers expressed grave fears as
to lhe result of that order. Their
belief was that It would cut pas­
senger receipts and reduce railroad
revenues. One cart Imagine their
surprise and chagrin over lhe re­
sults. For the entire country the
reduction in passenger rates from

HAWTHORNE BIKE

PURE STRAINED

large pkg. 23c

RALSTON CEREAL

daughter. Mrs. John Lechlellncr. 32

WARDS FAIR

SODAS
2 Ib. box

21b. can 15c

The Lower Passenger Rates
Have Increased Earnings
of the Railroads

SEPTEMBER 11 th bo IQth

ONE WEEK

GRAHAMS
2 Ib. box

COCOA,-AmbrosiaJ3 rand,

DEATH OF MRS. WEEKS.
Mrs. Adella H. Week*, aged K

fcOME

FRESH CRACKERS
TTRE

FACTS PROVE R. R. MAN­
AGERS WERE WRONG

60e
Other sizes of
tube* and tires
duced price*.

Montgomery Ward

�THI 11A1T1WGI BAHNIZ, THl'»»n*T. gEFTCMBtB W. IIU

Social Events and Personal Mention

Mbs Aileen Isenhalh waa home] Miss Agnes Burroughs, who is tlie
from Detroit over the week end. 1 cashier at the Penney store at
Mr and Mra. Ja». Ollmer vtslled
Ohio.' spent Sunday and
™uu«. m B.U1M ««
"“I” S"—
Mr*. Nelson Burroughs. '

with the groom's parents, N
Mrs. Fred Ashby, later gb|
Greenbush In the nortliern |
Michigan.

Mrs. Bernard J. Bertsch and son
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wiltoy visited
Walter, who have been vbltlng Mr.
and Mrs. J. E McElwain this sum­
G. E. Goodyear returned Saturday . Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Brooks were In end.
Robert Kenyon Is home
from
mer.
leave
this
week
by
automobile
from Cleveland where he attended Kalamazoo Sunday visiting friends,
Lansing for his vacation.
Miss Erma Waters, who teaches tor their home In San Diego, Cal.
j Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Larsen and
Marjorie Hill spent the week end a hardware dealers' convention.
Guest* of Mr. and Mr*. A. R. Van
On Thursday evening the Xxnerl-!
Mrs. A. K. Frandscn U spending John were Lansing visitors Monday home.
at Long lake with Maurine Haavind.
TU on Thursday were their cousins.
the week in Pittsburgh as the guest afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Jones visit­ Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Smith, and Mrs. can Legion Auxiliary held Its Annual ,
Ann Arbor Halurday to attend the of her daughters, Mrs. Robert | Mrs. John J. Dawson was the ed her parents In Big Rapids on Smith's father. Ju. tolkus, and elcctiqn of officers as follows &lt; Presi- I
Laurensop
and
Mrs.
Forest
Baldwin,
guest
of
her
sister
at
Lincoln
Lake
dent.
Mrs. Lydia Rogers; IstlVlce— [
Sunday and Monday.
wedding of Mrs. Brown's cousin.
daughter Nellie of chandler. Minn.
Mrs. Myrtle Lewis; 2nd Vic|—Mrs.
Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Neil. Jr., on
“ Labor
----------------L E Severance and nephew Don­
Mrs Grant Hitchcock relumed
Misses Marion and Marda Mead
and son, Jimjnie, of Detroit are
Mbs Ruth Farr spent from Sat­ ald spent Monday and Tuesday with of Traverse city visited their grand­ Jennie Mannl; Secy.. Mrs. Pauline
on Friday to* her home In Jackson spending the week with Mrs. Neil's
Bliss; Tress. Mrs. Thelma Hubert; I
urday to Monday In Grand Rapids
after a visit with Mrs. John Nobles.
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mead, Chaplain. Mrs. Ethel Foreman His- I
visiting relatives.
X.
Mrs Richard Green of Nashville , __
_______
______________
Mrs. pern Benedict of Paw Paw
also Dorr ...
Meads
al_ Kalamazoo
and torlan. Mrs. Donna Herrington;
Mrs. Avis Tyler and Howard ^r- was Uie guest of her Bister, Mrs. ।
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swerdfeger
Is spending two weeks with her
relatives and
| Battle Creek rcl......
----- relumed Sgt. at Arms. Mrs. Hazel Hinkley;
of
Buffalo
were
guest*
of
her
lis
­
way were in Chicago over the week Alonzo Trim, on Tuesday.
----------------J—
cousin. Mrs. Irene Rayner, and
| -home
Saturday.
Executive Comm. Mrs. Florence
ter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Ro­ end visiting friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Quayle of 'I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ttoher Of
family.
Wood. Mrs. Ida Walers and Mrs.
Max Leach has gone north for the man Feldpausch. over the week end.
a 1I Urbana. Ohio, were week end guests Georgia. Jarman. A pot luck supper
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Petlengill of Kalamazoo were guests of Mr. and
Driving a car Is the toughest
Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Carrolhers Grand Rapids were Monday guests Mrs. Wayne Merrick on Labor Day.
hay fever seasoti. He has a clerking
'• I. of Mrs. Phoebe Mote and Mr. and preceded the businc'* session.
treatment we know of on a suit
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent McPharlln Mrs. Fred Alton. On Monday they
position with the A. &amp; P. store in and daughter, Audrey, of Grand of Mrs. Marne Manee.
Newly-elected officers for the Le­
Rapids wv.v
were ni&lt;n&gt;u»
Monday
guests
of. «&gt;a.
Mrs.
of clothes. The fabric that can
uaamac.
, itapius
y H
i»7OW. u
Mr
Mr8 Alonzo Trim attend- of Grand Rapids were guests of I all attended the TUcher family re­ gion are: Commander. Adelbcrt
Cadillac.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Hoonan en- Isabel Carrolhers and Mr*. Anna ed Uie funeral of Mrs. Fred Noban Hastings relatives Sunday and Mon-1 union at Potter's Park. Lansing.
stand thill"punishment Is 'Triple
Cortright; 1st Vice—Leon Leonard
joyed a week end and Labor Day McGuffln.
j at Nashville on Thursday.
day.
Mrs. Robert Love &lt; Nancy Hark- at Delton: 2nd Vice—Floyd Wood;
Test Worsted"—in Chalk Stripes.
Miss Fvm Kermeen of Battle' ness) of Waltham. Mu'. 1* expected j Finance Officer, Harry Larsen Adtrip to Indianapolis. Cincinnati and I Mr. and Mrs. John Crue and Mr.1 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nixon enDistrict Checks. and Homespuns.
&gt;uuv wihj
Loubvillc.
and Mrs. T. N. Knopf went to El- lertalned Mr. and Mrs. Harold Co- Creek visited her grandparents. Mr. thb wccB
week jor
for B
a visit
with jwi
her par-i Jutant, William Parker; Publicity
Colors of^Oxfocd, Dust Blue and
and Mrs. Jack Snyder, over Labor j rnU Dr ftnd Mrt Robm B Hark. Officer. Harry Wood; Chaplain;
MIm Hazel Henry has returned to | yrja; Ohio, Saturday to spend Sun-. veil of Battle creek on Monday.
Detroit to resume her teaching aft- j day and Monday with Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Weaver were D**1. .
, „
. ncss. She is coming by airplane from Cornelius Mannt; Sgt. at Arms.
Deeptone Browns.
Mrs.
Carrie Ward. of
Creek miuunill
chfomta where she attended the Forrest Smith: Historian. Edwin ’
er spending her vacation at her 1 m. E. Whitman.
' week end
"-.“J guests of
v&gt; Mr
.... an&lt;£
ai.u Mrs.
------ ----------— Battle
---- _----'Is, visiting her daiiolitar
home here.
j
and Mrs Guy C Keller re- ■ VWilliam Harrison at Grand Rapids.
.
daughter, Kirs
Mrs. flrcircc
George alr races
Sayles; Executive Board. Dr. Robert
Mrs. Fred Renkes and Mias Nora | tun)pd onMonday7 evening fromMr.Mr.
andand
Mrs.Mrs.
Keith
Keith
FoxFox
were
were
SunSun'Staiger,
Staiger, this
this week
week and
and attending
attending the
Uie || Mp. Hazel Hinkley. Mbs Dorothy B. Harkness. Dr. Birge Swift of
Renkes
oluuonburg. Pa
and
Lathrop and Ferris
tothrop rc- Middleville and Bernard Reed.
tzcimva returned
itiuiircu lo
w Detroit *Friday
&gt;■&gt;■••7 1 ;,Johnsonburg
Pa . where
where they
theywere
wereday
o»yand Monday
Mondayguest*
guestsofofMr.
Mr.
and . »«&gt;•■fabafter .nenrtinir
nftar
spending the summer at
al their
their
b
dealh
.....
of hu
- Mrs. Nick
wj-u Webber
Webber In
In Grand
Grand Rapids.
Rapids. I1Kenneth
Kenneth
Mead
Mead
and
and
friend
friend
of of
KaiKai- , lurncd Friday from a trip to Detroit
The date for Installation of the
farm home.
1 M
KcIlc,
’ |, Mr. and Mrs. a. J. Vedder
Vedder visited j amazoo
amazoo visited
visited his
his grandparents.
grand parents. and NlaRara Falls.
They spent Post and Unit officers will be an- ,
Harold Knapp, who Is working In I
’
। ur
mnih.r un
Mr. Vedder's mother.
Mrs. George Mr. and Mrs
Mrs. Jaseuh
Joseph Mead. Labor 1.। Thursday in Elyria. Ohio, as guests nounced later.
Yale thb year, spent Labor Day I Questa of Miss Ethel Copenhaver Smalley, in Grand Rapids Saturday. Day.
, Of Mr, and Mrs. M. E. Whitman nnd
nnd
mother.
Mrs.
Jexsle
Rlsbrldger,
HASTINGS
PHONE 2396
Mr. and Mrs. L B- Lockwood of • Miss Eleanor McCarthy of Grand | Mr and Mrs Harold Carroll.
with his mother, Mrs. Beatrice
The average 12 book, sold at lull
on Sunday at their podunk lake col-'
, Detroit have been guests of their Rapids is a guest this week at Uie । Mlss P]orcnce Watkins returned
Knapp, and his sister.
tage were Harry Ramsdell and sis­ Ison. Dr. G. L. tockwood. and fam- home of Mr. and Mrs. Freeman on Saturday to her school teaching price, profits lhe bookseller about BO
Mrs. Stuart Cleveland and son. ter.
cents.
Miss Ruth, of Kalamazoo.
I
1 *,u.
I Furrow.
I duties in the Wyandotte schools.
Thomas, of Port Huron visited licr &gt;
Dr. and Mrs. FTank Carrothers |
Mnnw Mance was in Detroit: Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mulder and
“ i। Last week
Week miss
Miss wauuns
Watkins ana
and ncr
her
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Baird,
were called to St. -Thomas.
nnd
Cleveland uwn
last wits
week"on
on ua uuy-1
buv-1 children attended a family reunion. । ntollier Mr:1 w j waUcinn, vLUted
over Sunday and Monday.
———■ Ont., by nn
a utcvcamti
jC „
Mr. und Mrs. Guy Robertson of &gt;».„
lhe death of ur.
Mrs. Oarrolhers ....
sis-|I.lng trip jor ..
lllc
P and M 8lylc at Milham park j.".
In Kalamazoo CH
on Mr5. Ed. wortlngcr in Constantine.
Kansas City were Sunday and Labor &lt; ter. Mrs. Agnes Campbell.
Thcy
:H
j,
n
„
iRundav.
Sunday.
Wortinger
Tm'y.Shop. .
Ii Sunday.
I| Mrs. Watkins and Mrs. Wortlnger
I Mrfl james Gower. Mrs. Earlz.
- Dr. Clark 3.
S. Wheeler was In thc
the . art. Day guesta of Mrs. Grace Dodds and ।| returned
relumed Wednesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. C- W Wesplntcr.
Mrs. A. J. Woodmansee and
----- —
Bum
--------ford.--------Mrs.--pred
.— Ogden nnd Mrs. *city on Tuesday enroute from Grand
--j I Mr wjd Mra Prink Rogers were
nain
Mr and Mrs. Chester Stem, Dick ' riniiuhter
daughter, Mildred, left Sunday for Ward Erway were in Baltic Crock .Rapids
to th,.
lhe Methndlst
Methodist conference
Conference cn|ied to Detroit last Wednesday by
and Patty, returned Tuesday to theh Detroit, where Mildred will enter Saturday.
in Battle Creek.
I the illnes* of l&gt;b mother, Mrs. Dahome In New Albany. Ind . after the St. Joseph School of Nursing for
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Rltehle of
Mbs Marlon Caln relumed on I vld R Miller. l^Lss Theoline Rogers
spending lhe summer at Gun lake, ji three year course. Mrs. Woodman- Howell were guests of hb parents. Thursday 'to Chicago after a visit ] wvnl l0 Detroit Friday because of !
Mr. and Mrs. jack Snyder In I see will return the latter part of the Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ritchie. Sunday with her grandparents. Mr. and her BrandmothA"s illness. Mrs. Milcompany with Mr nnd Mrs. Will i week.
and Monday.
' Mra. Robert Burch.
। R.r passing away on Saturday.
Hoisington
of Hickory corner*
Mr. and Mrs. Don Moore &lt;&gt;■of wvDe- 1 Miss
Jeanne
Brower and Miss
. ,111.
Mr UI1U
nndMl.'.
Mr5 U.
R HK HurdBUM
and"MH.
son. I
.... ..... n —■■ ...........................
....................at-| | Mr. —and Mrs. W-JV. Cushing of
— —
.........
letided the cliartoltc fair on-Thurs-I Alma are sjiendlng the week here as I troll spent
apenl thc week
wcrk end nt
nl Wall
wall I Jean Arndt went to Grand Rapids phtiup,
P11||Up leave
ieaVe Sunday
on a trip
~
'
All America is talking about the remarkable 4-WAY ACTION of BISMA-REX.
•^ay................................................................ ! the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Ukc nR guests of Mr. and Mr.v Monday where they will attend thc tliroUKh thc west. They will go first
Hundreds of thousands of indigestion suf ferers are now enjoying the 3-MINUTE
■Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wespinler. Jr. Hoonan and Mr. and Mrs. Adelbert Pjynn Matthews.
i Davenport-McLachhin Institute.
lo Denver, then' on to Vancouver, i
--------------------------- ......
— and arc attending thMr ftnd Mrg F D
nl
Mr nnd Mrs. L. severance with down Uw weU coaU w California
and son. Carl, of Detroit
were week
Wilcox
the ts.ir
Fair
COMFORT brought by this pleasant, mint-Havorcd ANTACID
- --- POWDER.
end guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. | where Mr. Cushing is starling judge troll spent Sunday and Monday ten of their family enjoyed a family nnd &gt;Wmc through Texas, where
Wesplntcr and Mr. and Mrs. Russell j of the horse races.
with Mr. Lambie's parents. Mr. and 1 dinner at thc home of Mrs. Melvin thpy wm yj^it the Texas Centennial. •
Rantncr.
| Frank F. Gosch left Monday for Mrs. R. m. Lambic.
| Severance al St. Johns Sunday. 62
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. |
Dr und Mrs. C. P Lathrop nnd 1 Detroit to attend thc Michigan
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spensley ; being present.
I Hinman over the week end were hir |
Have you ever noticed a gnawing, burning
Dr. and Mrs. Roland Webb of State Fair and visit relatives and (Dorethy Barnes) and daughter. I Mrs. Ida McCoy returned on । brother and wife. Mr. and Mr». A. R.
The gnawing of acid and llw pressure of gas
feeling In your stomach several hours after eat­
Grand Rapids spent Thursday nnd friends. From there he will go to Caroline, of Downer's Grove, chi- Thursday from an eastern trip Mrs. Harvey, of Bay City. On Saturday
Irritate tne tender stomach tissues. BUma-Rex
ing? That's caused by loo much acid. Blsina• Friday tot week at the Soo and Sulllgan. Ala., to visit friends and cago, arc spending the week with Emma Evans, who accompanied her, j they entcrulned Mr. and Mrs. L '
soothes that irritation by lining the stomach
Rx-x
quickly
neutralizes
thal
excess
acid
.
.
.
Mackinac island.
I will travel through Mime of the
her mother. Mrs. c. R Bames.
| remained in Dundee. N- Y . for n Harvey and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
restore* your stomach to normal.
■
walls with a comforting protective him.
Mr nnd Mrs. Robert Mills spent 1 southern states sight seeing.
Cong. Clare E Hoffman of Alic- visit with cousins.
1---------- *
—-*
—J •*— * '
the week end visiting relatives and |
Mr. and Mrs James Ironside and gan and Insurance commr. John C-! Mrs. Clare Hager of Saugatuck Is . L. Harvey of Grand Rapids.
friends in Kingsley and Traverse son. Bobby, arrived Friday from Ketcham of Lansing attended a spending lhe week with her parents.
ashby—McKibben.
|
City and attended thc fair at Trnv- San Diego. Cal., to spend several meeting of Republicans al lhe Park- j Mr. and Mrs. R, L Winslow, and at -1
Belching, heartburn and flatulence.arc caused
Ma-.t disagreeable stomach symptoms are
The marriage of Miss Viola Me- :
weeks with relatives and friends. er House on Monday evening.
crse City on Friday.
lending the fair. Mr. Hager was
by gas in the stomach. Within a few seconds
„ C. r
_
.w. , spent the | here for Sunday also.
| Klbbcn. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
The Rev. W. Maylan Jones and ; They expect to be in the city until
W.
Paulin
of Chicago
'
caused by fermentation. Bbma-Rex, taken
after drinking Bisma-Rcx dissolved in water,
thc Rev. c. M- Conklin are alleinl- ' the first of December and have rent- week end al the home of Herbert
Wayne Snyder, who Is in charge John McKibben to William Ashby.
soon after eating, prevents fermentation; speeds
you'll
notice
the
difference.
Tlie
gas
la
absorb
­
twg Hie sessions of Die Michigan cd an apartment tn the Adrounie Calkins. Mrs Paulin and son. Rich- of thc shoe department of thc son of Mr and Mrs. Free! Ashby of;
digestion of troublesome foods.
ed and the pressure removed.
ard. returned with him to Chicago. I Elyria, Ohio. Penney store, visited . Hope center, ha;; been announced
Conference at the First Methodist. home.
Ills ceremony
iriCllllHQ was
WUO fx-rformt-d
IUI &gt;■11-11 (II
church In Battle creek.
I
Among those who heard Mrs. after an extended slay with her |«r-1 his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Sny-1 The
in
I
M.** »»...
-"H
I| UaatlnoK
Altvilat. ip hv
Hastings nn
on August
by ().&lt;•
the tjnv
Rev.'
The Rev. J. A. McNulty returned ' Ruth Bryan Owen Rohde at Bat­
Conklin. They w&gt;roJ attended by |
Mr. and Mrs. C. A- Kerr spent lhe
on Tuesday from a two monllu' stay ' tic Creek were Mrs. E. J. Pratt,
Ml&amp;s Charlotte Bcssmcr. wl— —. ...
...
in Ludington where he has been In 1 Mrs. Fred Stebbins. Mrs. Harold taking a nurse's training course nt week end and Labor Day In Chicago &gt;I Mr. and Mrs. Millon Warner of
charge of lhe services and activities J smith. Mrs. Thos. Baird. Jr.. Mrs. tlie University hospital al Ann Ar- ' and Whiling, Ind. Mrs. Kerr re­ I Kalamazoo. Mrs. Warner is a sister
Ilualinga, Phone 2191
nl Grace Eplscojinl church.
W. A. Hall, Mrs. Jack O'Connor, bor. spent the week end at home. I malned for a longer lime going on ! of the groom. The bride attended
THE REXAI.1. STORE
Good* Delivered
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Taylor Mrs. Tho*. Sullivan. Mrs. L. R. She will complete her course in Oc- to Eagle River. Wis. with her sb- Hastings High school. For the pres­
went to East Lansing Saturday j Glasgow. Mrs. Sadie Glxsgow and tober.
ter and son. Of course. "Pop" naw ent Mr. and Mrs. Ashby will live
Mr. and Mrs. Vic Hcnnay and Mr. the Tiger-Sox games on Monday. I
jvhere they spent the week end with MMa EUeeh Sullivan.
|
relative!. This week*they arc al
Mr and Mr? Otto Kreuger of and Mrs. Ernest Erway spent the I
Higgins Inke for a vacation.
Chicago are visiting Mr. and Mrs. week end anil Labor Day al Hough-1
M and Mrs Frederick J. Parker Jacob Renor und other old friends1 ton lake as guests of the Erway's I
have returned to their home in • in thc city. Mr. Kreuger was one daughter and husband,'Mr. and Mrs.
Bloomington. III., after spending sev- ' of the original employees of the old Forrest James.
gral days al Gun lake as thc guests Consolidated Press Co., now thc E.
Miss Barbara Wilcox was the
NOONDAY LUNCHES
of his mother. Mrs. Cora Parker.
I W. BILm Co., who came lo Hastings guest last week of Mr. nnd Mrs.
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
Guests at the Kellar Stem home | when the Consolidated plant was Harold Wright of Lansing. Mr. and
last week end were Mr. and Mrs. I moved nere from Chicago. He Is Mrs. Wright are here this week to
DINNERS
Gay Jordan. Connie and Carol of an expert mechanic and had charge visit hX parents. Mr. and Mrs. touts
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.
Sylvania. Ohio, nnd Mr. and Mrs.) of thc milling machine department1 Karmes. and lo attend thc Fair.
Earl Wareham. Jan and Sandra of for many years. Among other fclMrs. Florence Schneider, of Dal­
SUNDAY DINNERS
Dctroit.
j lows who came here at that time as : ton. New York, came Monday to
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
Mbs Doris Ryan. Miss Barbara 1 foremen were Otto JRambach of spend a short time with her sister.
:&lt;rcgo and Gerald Ryan of this city I Bufialo. N. Y.. Hcrm SUcckard.
6 to 7:30 P. M.
and Melvin Gclow of Kalamazoo . Andrew Heltzman. Joe Engel man, Road. She will return with her par­
sjienl thc week end in Chicago Joe Zuppy. Gus Shultz and Axel ents. Mr. and Mrs. W. H- Bennett, of
Where they attended an amateur ra- • Swanson. These men were ail good Swain. N. Y.. who have been visit-.
dlo gathering.
| fellows and commanded high wages,
Ing here since early in August.
Miss Marguurllc Helmansj&gt;crger. but it was a question at first whelhWho is the guest of Judge and Mrs. er they would be contented In a
R. R. McPeck of Charlotte until small town like Hastings But they
school starts in Ypsilanti, was the all fitted In nicely, made many
guest of Misses Helen Wade and friends, and look forward to a visit
Elizabeth Finch on Saturday.
here as "coming back home."

Legion Post And «
Unit Elect Officers

you do
nave just the sulf
' for you .. •

®rut

Sfaratrha

*18.50™ *32.50

T. S. IIAI HD

"Clothing and Shoes for Men and Boys”

BISMA-REX
THE 4-WAY RELIEF!

1. Neutralizes Acidity

3. Soothes Stomach

2. Removes the Gas

4. Assists Digestion

Carveth

&lt;Sr

SPECIAL

PARKER HOUSE

The BIG LITTLE
STORE OFFERS'

Open Every Evening
nownce that JEANETTK RITZMAN

"Don’t
Neglect
Their

BARGAINS for
FAIR WEEK^&gt;

CHILDREN'S ’

Friday, Sept. 11

SUGAR
They’re Back In School,
Have Their Eyes Examined !

BACK-TO-SCHOOL
SPECIAL!

Saturday, Sept. 12

Granulated

IO "-49c

JACK FROST Powd. Sugar 2 Ib. bx».,17e
P &amp; G SOAP, Giant Size
10 bars 38c

PERMANENTS

FIRST TIME AT THIS PRICE!
Only Hollywood givci these values.

MACHINELESS A

PERMANENTS. New Roy. Never before! Perhaps Nev­
er Again*! Hurry! Only a Limited Number at This Price!

Complete.

No Extras! Regular $6.50 Value!

Children do not have tho understanding or experience
to tell what's wrong with them, so it's up to you to

sec that it's NOT their eyesight.

Poor eyesight can

ruin a child's chances of being bright in school . . .
IS YOUR CHILD HANDICAPPED?

Bring them in

COFFEE, Vocation Land
ROYAL M
GRAND, Dated

Ib. 17c
Ib.21c
Ib.25c

for a complete eye examination.

DR. ALVA RUFF, Optometrist

BESSMER’S
Jewelers and Opticians
HASTINGS

PHONE 2694

Needy % of a Century of Continuous Service

BUTTER Middleville
37c
CRACKERS
21b. box 19c
MILLER'S 40* Bran Flakes 3 boxes 25c
PORK AND BEANS
4 cans 25c

HINMAN’S
Hastings

rHONt 24»1

Michigan

We have been fortunate in
acquiring these fine supplies
for only one hundred perma­
nents, to sell at this
low price 1
Shampoo and

Eft'

Finger Wave—

NOTE THESE FEATURES

1.
2.
3.
4.

No Machine.
No Electricity.
No Strong Chemicals.
Only Pure Oil Used.

5.

Beautiful Results.

*
;
,
’

Tiie younger Mias appreci­
ates lhe careful attention
she's accorded here, and
her Mother likes It tool
Try ozr Special this week I
GENUINE OIL PUSH-UP
WAVES
CRbQUIGNOLE. SPIRAL
OR COMBINATION
Everv wave is given ac­
cording to your Individual
hair texture and styled t©
your personality by otiexperU. Also a wave at
this price for adult*— .

S1.6O
Ralu.mrtae
Faciol—

New Steam and HOT OIL TreatnMist —1_$1.00
Using the New Vapor Steam Antiseptic OU Treatment!

(TOM

HOLLYWOOD BI’AI TY SEB^
MARGARET DAHLKE and JEANETTE R^TZMAN
”
~
114 WEST
STATE ST.

Above Haitingi Cut Rate Shoe Store

'

!
; *£•
•O

�THE IfASTTNOS BANNER, THURSDAY, fitFTnaO 1&gt;. 1&gt;M

INSURANCE

’the"churches lYELLOWSTOiyEPARK

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

afani for
ONE CENT A WORD. NO ADVER­ * months old733-F33
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c.

WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON E. McELWAIN

period, a* It takes

' SURPASSES OTHERS

CHVSCH SERVICES

The Hastings Banner

least ten active volcanic period* In

thousand*

of

COOK BROS.. Editor*.
Spring* near the north entrance to

NOTICE!
Carlton

JAY C. WING

rOK SAUK—boll

Our Service
To PROTECT You Coutawtly
A«Uast Fairly
Pay Promptly

CITIZENS MUTUA L
Fire Insurance Co .

FOR

CARDS of THANKS
SHELDON'S
OFFICE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

buytn* or loantnr

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY |

Mr. and Mr 1 "lentrr Hcheih.
M.rdaline.
Marcrrv.

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call I wanteoon farmers In N. Barry county. No I JXkTd
experience or capital needed. Write
m
today. McNESS CO.. Dept. B, Free- Foil Ntl.K
port, Illinois.
9-10 |
,o'

"AKRON" MODERN
MKIIANO-FORM TRUSS I
FOR WORK,OR PLAY

SPIRELLA
Foundation Garments
Corsets, girdles, brassieres de­
signed exclusively for you.

Mrs. H. T. Young

No P&lt;uh Ya Waor Cloihlnq

Hastings Phone.

MICHIGAN
COON HUNTERS'

ASSOCIATION

ADJUSTABLE CENTER

I

Are holding a Field Trial for
Coon Doga, Sunday, Sept. 13,

Sponge Rubbar Pads
No Lag Strap*

between Otsego and

Die Prescription Drug Store
HASTING*

.

. . . . .

FOI.LOW THE ARROWS

MICHIGAN

CoartBt—J Truu Fining

Farmers, Attention! I

MONEY FOR FALL!

I will pay ths HIGHEST MARKET
PRICE for VEAL. LAMBS HOGS and
Tarda

Ship EVERY TUESDAY

fAXS DePMIESTEM.

PHONE 717—PS.

Fidelity Corporation

WRECKING
FOR PARTS

OF MICHIGAN

Room 10—2nd Floor, Phone 2307
Halting* National Bank Building

• 1929 Model A Ford Track
• 1919 PLYMOUTH Coape

• FORDSON TRACTOR
AUTO GLASS INSTALLED

WE HAVE A FINE

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

Assortment

Hastings

of

USED

ICE BOXES
Also a good used electric

OX COMMISSION

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

refrigerator.

ALL KIND* OF IN8URANCB
BOND*
NOTARY PUBLICS

MONTGOMERY WARD

118 S. Jefferson. Hastings

CARD or THANKS—V

the herd fenced In so visitors may
see them. There are over a thou­
sand buffalo roaming wild In lhe
park, but through the summer they
1 appreelAth
wander Into the Interior and are,
seldom seen.
Bears are seen every few minutes ।
'
as you drive Around. If you stop the ,}
car they will come right up to beg, &lt;l s
COATS DROVE CHURCH OT CHRIST. food and If rt&gt;u don't close the win­
dows, they cUmb right on Uie run­
ning board and try to reach Ln and
11:15 A. M.. praachhelp themselves. They act so much
like dogs and puppies that It Ls hard I Jy f
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
to realize that they are really wild | t. ’ «
Stat* «f Mirblran, th* Probat* Court for
and that It Is extremely dangerous J- }!
th* County at Barry.
to feed them from your hand or try । j &lt;•'
In thr matter at th* ratair of Celia
M Trarer. decra.rd.
to pel them. Leslie got out to photo- " L
Notlre |&gt; hereby ci*»n thal four month*
graph one about 50.feet away but' J; ||
fr-nt lhe Mh .!&gt;&gt; „t Nel-t.inber A. I&gt;.
before he got It taken the bear was
it
193l&gt;. ha'r l,rrn allowed fur rredlliira to
prraenl thair rlalma acainat aaid decraard
within ten or fifteen feet of him and 1- "
to aaid eourt for riamination and adjual- II
when the picture was developed the y
tnrnt and that all creditor* of said drreared ar* required to vre«ent their
bear was considerably out of focus, k
Most of the bears you see are black. Jibrown or cinnamon, as the grizzlies
keep out of sight more or less, ex­
cept at dusk around lhe garbage
dumps back of the hotel.
5. A. D. !93fl.
At Tower Junction the road cross­
es Tower Creek which drops over,
the side of the cliff Into the Yellow-'
ORDER TOR PUBLICATION
stone Canyon. To see the falls al.
their best. It Is necessary to climb
down a long trail to lhe river bed.
but as It was raining and we had
had plenty of walking already,
Maude and I remained in the car.
and will enjoy our views of the falls
722 South Jefferson, is
from the photographs which Leslie
took. When Leslie. David and Mar­
the new agent for The
lon
returned in about a half /hour
II,
Battle Creek ENQUIRER
all out of breath and their fkces
blood red. we were glad we stayed
and NEWS in Hastings.
In lhe car. In these high altitudes
Mrs.
Herrington is the
It makes you pant to walk briskly on
the level. It is a real effort lo climb
widow of a mail clerk,

Mrs. Donna
Herrington

The skull of Gen. George Cus­
ter's dog 1* gathering dust tn a
cabinet In the museum or. the Uni­
versity of Minneapolis csrnpua Left
behind by the famous Indian fighter
when he tpok. his troops into the
fata) battle of the T.lttle Big Hora,
ordei: i o&gt;: Ton..:',
.
the dog diet) of old age lo Minne­
apolis. The skin .was stuffed and
presented to the zoology depart­
ment. and now only the skull re­
main*. Friends of General Custer
Insisted the skull be preserved and.
hesitating to appear ungrateful of
«T»ri"t"n‘&gt;i&gt;raYin‘ ■ ,he &lt;Mwral’8 deeda, the department
set atdde a place for the relle
among the bones of dinosaurs and
other prehistoric mammals.

Paid for Dead Stock
Your Dead Animals Are Worth
DOLLARS. To assure yourself of
getting the BEST PRICES, call
MR. FLOYD DENNY.

HlUbip

JERRY ANDRUS

It la further ordered, that public nolle*
Phone Hastings 2539—We pay the thereof
be ai»rn by publication of a copy
phone charges'.
tf. r-f tfc(* order for three aueceaair* «*eka
&lt;w**u&gt;ua lo aaU. day at. kaarlna. in tha
Haalinca Banner, a newapaper prlul*d
and rirrulatnl in aaid eounty.
Stuart Clamant. Jude* of Probat*.
* true eopy.
Mildred Smith. R*ri&gt;ter of Probat*.

CENEKAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

K ELV1NATO R
SALES AND SERVICE

DR. R. A. DENISON

H. E. Smith Hdwc.

DENTIST

Phone JIM* —,lla«Ung»
Wt SERVK'I 411. MAKES
DAY OK SIGHT

|

.

WANTED
CATTLE, HOSS, VEAL
at FELDPAUSCH'S
MARKET-Phon. 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609

H. F.Up.»Kh . 3921

A little beyond Tower Junction we
turned up a side road to one of lhe
petrified forest*. This forest Is dif­
ferent from most petriAed forests
as the trees are still standing. We
examined one tree over ten feet In
diameter, with fifty feet or so of the
trunk still standing. These trees are
petrlAed as the result of the volcan­
ic uh which covered them. At one
point In the park there are ten such
petrlAed forests, one on top of the

|

who died recently. She
has six daughters. Prompt
Delivery of The Enquirer
and News can be obtain-ed by calling Mrs. Her­
ington.

'
,
I

THE TELEPHONE
NUMBER IS 2357

HIGHESLPRICES^B

EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

BANKRUPTCY NOTICE.
Itlatrirl Court of the United Slatra. We*t
cm Ili.lriet of Miehican. Southern I&gt;itlaiun.
In the mailer of Cleett W. Landon
Hauhnipt
No. IUSU1 in Itankruptry.
t&gt;n thi* 4th day of September. A. D.
1930. on readinc the petition by aaid
Bankrupt for diaeharee. it i*
OKIiEKKn RY THB COURT, that a
l.eario&lt; be had upon tb* umr on th*
Sth day of October. A. D. 193S. befor.
the aaid Court, al Grand Rabid*, la Mid
dt.tr.et. at 10 o'clock la th* forenoon.
• r.d that notie* thereof be nbllahed in
the Haulnra Benner. • aewapapar print**
in aaid diatrlet. and that all known cred­
itor* and other penoa* la lntere«t mar
antwar at th-. aante tlo** *nd &gt;U«a and
»h„w raua*. if any they her*, why th*
prayer of »ald petitioner ahould not be
■ranted. •

Not Whit,
snow has been known to
fall over part* of Silesia and. tip'
frewt la of' th* Mime color. Bd- ‘
•ntlat* helteve Lt to be duo to de*'!
ert sand which ha* whirled up Into 1
high altitude* and been carrtod
thouMud* of miles.

Corroctad Wednetday. Sept 9. 1*3*.
Produce hither, but Hille chance in
Fradaeo.
ISe pound
Hutter. 35c pound.
Maata ud HMea.
Cow*. He* weliht de lo 4Ke.
Heifer* ^and *le*r*. i4c to 6a.

r.tf.

of thia nyder. addreated lo them al their
Place* of reaidenr* aa *UUd
" ITNESH. th* Honorable Fred M
Raymond. Judye of the Mid Court, end
the *eel thereof, al Grand Rapid*, ia Mid
dialriel on the 4th day of September.
R«gtetertd OPTOMETRIST and A D. 1»S«.
Atteet:
ORRIE J. 8LU1TER.
SEE BETTER!
(Seal)
Clerk. Scratch !*ed. 93.1*.
By Howard T. ZieL Deputy Clark I-arin* maah. 93.00—93 *0.
1» W. STATE ST.
HASTINGS
9 1? Cra«k*d torn. (3.50.

S E E

GEO. M. NEWTON

modeled and enlarged our (tore. You are invited to

stop in and take advantage of

OUR FAIR SPECIALS
NBC SODA CRACKERS, 2 Ib. box 15c

19c

TABLE QUEEN SQUASH
JELLO (any flavor)

-.5c

CAN RUBBERS ...

__3 pkgs. 10c

CANDY BARS, this week only, 3 for 10c

Veal ealeea. dreeaed. 14e.
l!«t all**. »Hc. .
Hart, dreated. 13Ke.
Beef hide*. &gt;e.
Fowl*. 1*«—l?e.

A UUle FORESIGHT TODAY May
ANI&gt; IT IS FURTHER ORDERED BY
THE COURT, that th* Clerk ahall read
Mean VISION TOMORROW­
hr aujtl.-to all known creditor*, eopie*

To better accommodate our customeri we have re­

3 lbs. BANANAS

HASTINGS MARKETS

2 cans WHITE CROSS DOG FOOD, 15c
5 lbs. ROLLED QATS

&gt;
!

ABSTRACT

WLWCOFFEE___

23c

Ib. 19c

°CTl!VM8L?-"'r,T■°l'» Wd
ADVERTISING RATES:
Dlantay

JOB PRINTING.

err r.mr'(£
: Aid . Haren,
Ketal ■&gt;rd &gt;nJ

Both male and female reindeer
have long equally branched antlera.
Their hoof* are admirably adapted

wild, reindeer migrate from one tun­
dra feedlog ground to anothag,
where they subsist on grasses and
northern cladonla, a lichen usually
railed reindeer mon*.

FOR SALE OR TRADE for free

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON
REALTORS.

---------------------------------------- U&amp;
iPpLJTIf^L ANNOUNCEMENT)

GOVERNOR FITZGERALD'S STATE­
MENT ABOUT SENATOR MOSIER
STATE OF MICHIGAN
Executive Office
Lansing

FRANK D. FITZGERALD
Governor
Sept. 4. 1936.
Mr. V. Egelkraut. Manager,
Fennville Farm Bureau.
Fennville, Michigan.
Dear Mr. Egelkraut:

Answering your letter of Sept. 3. In
which you inquire as to the attitude
of Senator Frank R. Mosier toward
administration measures in the Leg­
islature of 1935. At lhe outset I want
lo say. that I have no complaint against lhe actions of the Sen­
ate during lhe past session.
Had the House of Representatives given the same consideration
to administration measures as the Senate, these measures would
now be laws of Michigan.
Il Is true that there were some differences of opinion among
Senate members; there were some misunderstandings and there
were time* when it wa* claimed that an anti-bloc existed. I hold
no grievance against any Senate member who did not see fit to go
along with the administration because of an honest difference
of opinion from mine.
I have always held Senator Mosier in high regard aa a man of
honest, independent convictions.
In regard to the present primary campaign, j think the Re­
publicans of your Senatorial district are fortunate In the two
men they have as candidates to select from. I can only say the
administration has adopted and is following a strict hands-off
policy in connection with legislative candidates. No member of
thi* Administration, to my knowledge. Is opposing or sponsoring
any Individual.
Very sincerely yours.
FRANK D. FITZGERALD.

FRANK K. MOSIER

INCONSISTENCY OF SENATOR MOSIER'S OEEONENT.
It was rather surprising that a gentleman who has to cleverly
maneuvered In Uie past to keep the Slate Senatorship in Allegan
County should .suddenly decry it* turn.
In 1934. Buriians encouraged. Senator Moeler and held confer­
ences with the senator In giving him strong support against Van
Buren's candidate. He told the present state senator that he sup­
ported Senator Laland th* last two terms.-------------------------------- -----According to the gentleman's agreement to which Burhans so
gloriously refers, Allegan county's turn is from 1935—1939. The
cycle of Interchange for state senatorship's agreement among the
three counties was as follows:—Allegan County. 1923—1927;
Van Buren County. 1927—1931; Barry County. 1931—1935; Alle­
gan County. 1935—1939; Van Buren County, 1939—1943. Yet
Burhans pleads It is Van Buren's turn! Why?

LOYALTY TO STATE AND TO DISTRICT
ISSUES OF CAMPAIGN.
Senator Mosier ha* confidence in the voters of today for their
Interest in good government. The old fashioned tactics of mud­
slinging and misrepresentation he considers vicious.
The senator doe* not believe in using force nor threat* In forc­
ing groups or organisations to sponsor his candidacy. He is not
seeking the endorsement of any groups for advertisements in
Not one charge has been made concerning the senator's ability
or action. He 1S not advertising In the pgpera u a "Yes” man
ns hb opponent has done. The senator shall continue lo use the
same consistent and Judicious attitude in the legislature a* he ha*

In the put.

WALLACE GROCERY

ft'

at

Bi

Merchant

K

New

up through limestone and. a* thc
water cool*. Uie limestone again Is
cases,, two grips and four handbags deposited forming a number Of great
and stowed them away in tlie trunk terraces, the Jupiter Terrace being
and were off again. As we previous­ the largest In the world and. as a
ly have slated, this was really a rough guess, I would say It wa* lhe
business trip and not a pleasure trip, sire' of several city blocks and Is
and I had to be In Seattle by Friday buUt up terrace upon terrace to a
at the latest. However, we did spend height of several hundred feet.
the rest of lhe forenoon in the park, These terraces are of all colors with
stopping several times along lhe yellow and white predomlnaUng
canyon rim to photograph tlie end. from a distance, resemble great
falls and canyon. The canyon of layers of Ice set tn the green back­
course doe* not compare with the ground of the surrounding forest.
Grand Canyon of the Colorado; but
For a while there, I was afraid we
on account of the coloring of the never would gel out of Yellowstone,
rocks with the falls in the back­ and believe It or not I have Just
ground and the silvery stream wind­ touched the high spots. Il would
ing along tlie bottom, it ia much take volumes to record wliat one
more beautiful. The canyon is prob­ may see in a two day trip. We visit­
ably a halt mile wide at tiie top ed nine other national parks on our
and a quarter of a mile or more trip, but for variety of unuspal
deep, cut through tlie volcanic ash sights none of them begins to com­
rock, the colors of which range from pare with Yellowstone.
almost pure white, to yellow, orange
After lunch at lhe cafeteria we
and pink, the yellow predominating, started north, crossed the Wyoming
and giving the region Its name. The —Montana line, which is exactly
falls arc twice as high as Niagara halfway from thc equator to Uie
and as the stream is about twice pole, and entered Oardiner. Mon­
the size of the Grand river they do tana. which Is the North Entrance.
make a beautiful sight a* they seem We filled up with gas and continued
to drop right out of the green for­ on through Livingston. Bozemant
est into the yellow canyon.
and Helena to Great Falls. Just out
In the woods along the roadside is '। of Gardiner we were- stopped at a
an immense boulder showing thal: port of entry, given a map of thc
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH.
there has been at least one glacial । state, a temporary visitors' state II­
period'since the volcanic formatlonl1 cense was posted on our windshield
of the park. From Canyon Junction ।! and a postcard, for us to All out,
v&gt;y»&gt;»biiy on north to Tower Falls the road ।'after leaving Montana, telling what
i&gt;u
of crosses the divide al an elevation of we thought of the scenery in the
j nearly.9,000 feet, along the side of, state, how we liked the roads, etc.
i&gt;'r» Hun- i Mt. Washburn, one of the highest We were on one road Uie next day.
h. B«ni» peaks) in lhe park. There u a one;. which was under construction, and
oad up to lhe top of the I would dislike to write what I
|ain but as it was raining really thought of It when we settled
.. we were, and probably snow­ down to the running boards In a
ing dn top. we were afraid that the ' fresh All. Al Helena we tried to lo­
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
visibility from Uie top would be too cate Bill McKnlghl but as It was
IN OHIIIT.
poor to Justify the climb.
Bunday and the post office was
A little further on where the road closed we were out of luck.
overlook* the river, we spied a large
H. D. Cook.
bull moose feeding in lhe river, and
we stopped and watched him for
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
some lime. He was feeding of! the
bottom and would keep his head un­
McCaBtun Charch.
der water several minutes at a time
and when he did come up for air he
paid no attention to us or to the
FIRST UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH. pelicans which were feeding all
around him. Just beyond is the buf-

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
SOUIMTIBT.

' APPLES—Wealth*.

h!

The

XIGHTY-FIRST VeaR

(Continued from page 1, Sec. 1)

OPEN EVENINGS
’

PHONE 24M

FREE DELIVERY

**

The senator 1* the first man from SmUs Western Michigan
Board. His other legislative work ha* likewise been outstanding.
Oov. Fitzgerald's letter should clear the misleading statement*
advertised by his opponent,

�SECTION

THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, SEPT. 10,1936

l[--------------- ------ --- -------- - THE ATTRACTIVE (?)
WAGES PAID IN RUSSIA

Are Warned
t*' • APOLITICAL NOTES!1 Farmer!
Against Racketeers

1 Jjrtyl'V’thinkl J

hJAXSCAAU.ON

I
-----------------------------------------

_________ .about:
about:

Nlne years ago millions of peo­
ple thrilled to radio and newspaper
_
ANTA ___
MONICA,
CALIF. accounts of a shy. fair-hatred boy’s
with
Roosevelt n,lng ftlone 'over * ml«hty ocean.
______ What
—What ..with . Roosevelt
e u-_________
A
I He ha* since worked quietly to pro­
taking over the anciefit Ham- , mote aviation and make flying safe;
L------- of• centralized
---------------------- hB#
organic alr unes&gt; laid
iltonian .theory
routes, explored and tested new
authority and Landon promis­ opt
devices. And recently, with Dr.
ing to restore the Jeffersonian Alexia Carre], he perfected an arilprinciple of state sovereignty the ficlai heart and circulatory system,
campaign Is In "high."
thereby opening new vistas to
What with Farley undertaking to science. Several weeks ago in Ber­
organise the Negro-voters of the lin he made what Ls considered one
north for Roosevelt and pie other of lhe greatest short speeches ever
Concerning
the relationside ciaiminK
claiming io
to uc
be nopc.ui
hopeful of car- delivered.
viuc
,
, ,------ —- ------------------ryln, florid. with I*. .14 of w*ll. ' •“» «f
•«
“ »"
vole,; .h.t •Uh Andy J.ok.on | he said,
“"*■ “
""
If another w
war
" breaks “
out■
all armies and navies will be com­
turning over In his grave and James i
pletely useless because they can be
G. Blaine stirring fretfully under wiped out by planes dropping bombs
Ute sod. It seems the most appro­ of ’liquid fire’. We can no longer
priate campaign selecUona would protect our families or armies. Our
be for the Democratic otchestra to libraries, museums and every Insti­
render “John Brown’s Body” and tution we value most are laid bare
the Republican quartet to sing to bombardments." He warned that
"Bonny Blue Flag," with special civilization would be destroyed un­
emphasis upon the stirring line, less common sense, tolerance nnd
"Hurrah,
Hurrah, for Southern self-denial were brought to bear on
lhe nroblem. One editor says. “If
Rights, Hurrah!”
Lindbergh can help bring home to
war-blind Europe the dreadful truth,
Doping tho Geegeee.
he will have accomplished the finest
ESPITE revelations that some ol achievement of his brilliant career."
America’s most prized race
hones have repeatedly been doped,
TO our unusual name list we have
one of the atate racing boards rein­ Hunters to go with the Rabbits, and
stated a trainer found guilty of this Thunders, Sprinkle.) and Floods to go
foul and crooked
with lhe Rainwaters. If we could
cruel practice. So
only find some Beet Pickles, we
our
commissioner
would be happy. We already have
plain Pickles.
to the Interna •
Uonal antinarcotic
State gasoline taxes collected In
lhe United Slates last year amount­
nevn is disgusted.
ed to over t5B5.000.000.
Maybe because

S

D

If you get tired of buying fruit
old • fashioned,
pectins for jelly making, add a few
still prefer that
white grapes to your fruit. Il will
horse should
not
change lhe color or flavor very
trained on lhe turf
snuch-and wilt furnish lhe needed
and not at a drug Irving.Cobb
"sour.” I believe rhubarb or pored
store. Nowadays the
apples would do the trick, too. Or­
fellow who prowls the paddock just ange. lemon and pineapple jells are
before a race is liable either to go delicious. Use Certo with them, for
to sleep suddenly or go to bucking. you make the juices go a little
It depends on whether lhe geegee farther, color with cake coloring if
he sniffs has been drugged to lose necessary. I leave the pineapple
crystal white, it Ls best made of raw
or drugged to win.
pineapple juice but canned can be
used.
Hollywood Dog Days.
OURISTS to the Hollywood secReceived a fine letter from Barry
x&gt;r come during a dullish inter­ county’s foremost newspaper woman
lude. Tlie diary of Miss Astor has
including a bit of praise. How heart­
been closed, and the next chapter warming a word of sincere encour­
in the love-life of John Barrymore agement can be and more effective
than a volume of criticism. When
has not been opened.
It might be said for Miss Astor's this comas out In print. I’d better
output, before the court shut it off. cut it out and frame it lo help me
that it was well-written and caused in dealing with the children.

T

the public eagerly to await further
disclosures. Certain parties may
have gone out of town, but they
ail left word where the paper was
to be sent Hereafter, for a series
of such purely personal confessions,
ft might be well to begin each in­
stallment like this:
•'May it please your honor and
my precious pettyklns.** .
-

If your cabbage aren't beading as
they should, sprinkle a teaspoon of
salt over the top. This is a method
widely used by truck gardeners. If
anyone going by wants to know if
you're making your sauer kraut In
the garden. Just Ignore them. Neigh­
bors will have their little Jokes.

Run your orange rinds through
the food chopper and put in oatmeal
or fruit cookies along with your
Praising John Hamilton.
HEARD John Hamilton speak to raisins, and other fruits. You'll be
a selected group of his own folks, amazed at the resulting flavor.
nnd please don't laugh when 1 say They're scrumptious.
that the Individual he moat reminds
Take A Vacation.
tne of—In engaging personality, Ln Cease to think depressing thoughts;
sound sense—is tlie rival national Worry always comes to naught.
'
chairman, Jim Farley.
Take a vacation!
Without comparing these two as
•o past records or future prospects, Give your mind a needed rest;
I figure they’re temperamentally Free 1’. from all thought depressed
alike In various wsys—notably In
Give it a vacation I
not jetting unduly excited or nastily
The shortcomings of the race.
vindicative.
You
will never have to face.
In his talk Hamilton did not de­
Take a vacation!
clare the American flag was in din­
ger, did not Implore anyone to save
the American home. He didn't cal! You will “come back" with a bound
the Republicans saints; didn't call Feeling extra fit and sound
From your mental vacation!
the Democrats knaves or Idiots. He
-didn’t claim for his side a monopoly
MA AND ME.
of patriotism. Quite calmly he told I’ll not any more beg a ride or pay.
his hearers what points he thought For this Ls the dawn of a bright­
er day.
should be stressed by his party in
this campaign—and poked fun at The reason for this you’ll plainly
see,
'
’
himself while poking fun at the
For Ma and I liave a Model T.
other cro-vd.

I

IU« about as hard for me to walk.
GAINST my better judgment.
I'm trying to be cheered by the
announcement of the present ma­
jority leaden in congress that, look­
ing forward to lhe next session,
they behold no new taxes ahead.
But, after election, when the lads
look closer, they’ll probably be able
to behold quite a few.
That's why a balanced budget is

A

So the only thing there was for me
Was to get a good old Model T.
So inserted an adv that many read.
And they saw what I wanted, and
Instead.
Of some other make, that used to

I wanted a good old Model T.
When answers came from cast and

thing everybody talks about, but

Riley Sto

The United States Is Still the ■
Best Country to Live
।caslon being her sixty-ninth birth­
day. In honor of the event, E. H. WHEN JUMBO CAMB
and Work In
Adams of Freeport wrote and read

REPUBLICAN
DEMOCRAT
Through the 30 posts, Michigan
Have you ever played Boon Dog­
COUZENS AND LANDON.
IState Police have sent a warning
The rosy reports that are some- ithe following verses:
,gie?
The announcement of Senator 1lo farmers to check carefully on ail limes given in this country as to|
One night I read in the
Aunt Sarah's Birthday.
James Couzens that he intends to ■strangers who come lo their farms the condition of lhe working man ■The people came from near and far. that lhe Barnum and Bailey
No?
support President Roosevelt for re- 1to negotiate purchase of poultry or and the farmer in Russia might lead ■They came without a guiding star. with Jumbo as the chief a
Well that's not surprising!
slock.
The
game
is.
the
troopers
election
was
almost
unprecedented
1
. It is no game for children; ordnhave learned, for thieves to call in one to think that laborers and And folks and boskets filled each
| nocenta; or everyday citizens trying for 1U display of political courage daylight on a pretext of buying. The farmers are much belter off over
to earn an honest living. In fact, if I and candor.
For it was Aunt Sarah's birthday.
visit gives the opportunity to look there. Facts dispute such a con­
you have anything which resembles
I bought a tie ticket and
Senator Couzens is now a can di­
clusion.
a conscience or a sense of duty, the 1 date for renomination lo the senate, ’over poultry and slock, see how it Is
Por instance. Russia has taken The crowd was composed of'young
,chances are that you could never be I
। kept and generally gel ’’the lay of
and old.
। where he has served continuously
away from the peasant class prac­
very good at Boon Doggie anyway. i since 1B22. He is running in lhe Re­ lhe land " They then return under tically all their land. Most of them They were dressed for warmth, for
Then, too, you have [a have money publican primaries against an op- 'cover of night and help themselves. are now hired men working, at very
In all cases where there is a call
to play it—lots of money—OODLES
And the fun they had cannot be Barry county. Everybody and his
,OP MONEY! Not your own money, position candidate who has Uie full to negotiate a purchase, farmers are low wages on government-owned
told.
weight of the party machine behind
cousin was there. John Baum, tho
being urged to make a note of the farms.
necessarily—anybody's money will, him.
On Aunt Borah’s birthday.
pilot on the Thomapple lake
The wages for common labor In
car
license
numbers
and
observe)
do. As a matter of fact, the game U
steamer had a busy day. As we were
Although Senator Couzens Ls ex­
Russian factories per week amount
so expensive that even a Henry tremely popular with the voters of the callers closely. Then, in event of to 1135 figured In our money. They were farmers and were-farm|
a
night
raid,
they
would
have
Infor
Ford, a Pierpont Morgan, or a Vin­ Michigan it is always difficult for ।
exclaimed, “Oh. dlvtll They said it
Building
laborers
get
6137.
Motor
cent Astor couldn't last long.
an Independent in politics, as he Is,1l mation which their sheriff or their engineers on medium work gel Had lived on a farm the moat of was a jumbo I It's only an ele­
their lives
Therefore, unless you have un­ to defeat tlie parly organization in I state police could use effectively In 62 60 a week. Motor engineers on
phant I"
recovering the stolen property.
limited funds available, you had a primary.
heavy work get 63.77 a week. Brick And they could cut cake with any
old knives
better not take up Boon Doggie at
in view of the circumstances, had
layers seem to be lhe best paid, get­
CONTRIBUTED BY MRS.
And
they
did
at
Sarah's
birthday.
all.
STRAW
VOTE
POINTS
Senator Couzens wished lo “pussy­
ting 6437 a week. These wages will
CLAUDE KELLEY.
How to get lhe money?
foot" or lo consider only his own ponot purchase in Russia the equiva­
folks had real heavy hair
TO LANDON VICTORY lent of the same amounts in United Some
lillcal fortunes, the wise thing for
Some folks' head was almost bare
Within this simply ditty;
him lo do would have been to say
States money when spent tn this But everyone woa glad they were
To try and boost In some small way
nothing unUl after Uie primary on Literary Digest's Poll Indi­ country.
there
Our good old Hastings City.
'
Dealers did. That
will furnish September 15. Even if some Demo­
These figures show what a para­
To celebrate her birthday.
cates Election of
enough for u few good rounds and crats might be tempted lo support
dise (?) Russia is. Nothing would
when thal is gone of course you can him for his declaration in favor
Landon
the few American communists They talked of Work done on the
cure tne
I
farm,
always add new taxes or mortgage of Mr. Roosevelt, it is apparent that
Our readers all know that the Lit­
the future just as Roojcvelt has they can’t do it before the general
Russia and work at lhe wages [—_ — — ,, _,n,,u
Of beauty beyond measure.
erary Digest previous to each elec­ to
w. have
N« «U U rW 11 ‘fZjS*
1“”
done. After all, you won't be here election.
We have grand schools.
_brou,l,l A um
to face the music when. Uie next
But Senator couzens pul patriot­ tion since 1020 has conducted a •11* th. n SA but U 1a l*« hXi
There on Auntie's birthday.
Our churches too
nation-wide poll of voters, the re­ country on earth.
generation, and the one after, and ism ahead of caution. He said:
And
factories, large and many.
thc one after are cursing you for ► "Believing as I do that lhe most sults at which have Indicated with _
------------------. At eleven o'clock lhe people went
And ugly spots of ill repute
loading such a debt on their unsus­ important matter confronting the I great accuracy the actual results of
"Today, I am proud lo say, 34 per of their own accord, they were not j I'm
sure you won’t find any.
pecting shouldersFjNo! SOME ONE nation is lhe re-election of Presi­ the following November election.
cent of American foreign commerce
sent.
Previous to etch poll the Digest Is carried in American bottoms. We But I fear that some of their tum- I Il's hard to finish all this line
ELSE CAN TAKE THAT RE­ dent Roosevelt, I intend to support
has what it terms "a preliminary ahall not be satisfied until al least!
SPONSIBILITY!
I ___________
And have ft___
not_______
too witty.
him.
mles were bent
_
Where did this unique pastime
"The outcome of my candi­ poll" which covets only a small per­ half of our goods are transported in i For they were full of Ice cream &gt; So I think I'd better mention now
centage
of the voters covered by lhe our own ships."—Senator Royal 6.
originate?
dacy for lhe senate Is neither Imand take.
I That Charles H- Leonard, Esq
No one knows for sure.
larger
poll,
but
1
which
Indicates,
or
Copeland.
|
—E. H. Adams. | Is mayor of our city.
’
porlant to the nation nor to me, but
Probably the first case al al! par­ I believe It is important that my
allel on record is that of Esau who many loyal supporters in Michigan past quite accurately, what will be
sold his birthright for a mess of be advLved in advance of the pri­ the result of the larger poll which is
usually conducted In September or
pottage. To Esau's eternal credit. mary. September 15.”
The people of the country will early in October.
The Digest has never published
his own mess of pottage he sold—not applaud Senator Couzens’ political
thc results----of --this
preliminary
that belonging to some one else.
.luppv, KU
iiuuiy
- ----«--- - ---------poll.
• .----courage. He has supported
many
But the New Deal version of Boon Roosevelt measures Ln the senate,! T*1'*
tor lhe ““ *nd
Doggie is a little different; they just a* Gov. Landon supported virof,lh* mM*ilne itself. The
never believe In playing with their tuslly lhe entire New Deal before re»u&gt;U °C such polls have been
own chips as long as they can get be became a Presidential candidate.: «“,rded carefully in the past, still.
their hands on somebody rise's.
Couzens is frank enough to stand j
ol
many who have to
What Ls Boon Doggie and what -n
ln cwnpiling them. It was
on hl*
hl* support
support of
of Roosevelt
Roosevelt measmeas­ take
impossible to keep them a secret.
are the rules?
ures.
Well, strictly speaking, there arc
Gov. Landon finds It expedient to The Digest, this year, has tried
no rules. It is a sort of catch-as- attack lhe very measure which he harder than ever to keep from the
Kbllc any information as to Its precatch-can with the Federal treas­ formerly endorsed.
tfnary poll, which is not yet com­
ury and the tax payer's pocket book
During his campaign for re-elec­
serving as goats.
tion Ln 1934. the Kansas governor plete. but for the reason stated—
You see, you can’t walk right out spoke night after night on Die bene­ so many are Interested who compile
fits brought to Kansas by New Deal the returns—It was Impossible this
himself, hesitates at that. But there measures and how he had given year to safeguard them/ Reliable in­
them his full support. When the fed­ formation shows that. With the Di­
This leads directly to Boon Dog­ eral work relief policy was under at­ gest’s poll Ln the eastern and mldgie I
westem states, the
tack. Gov. Landon said:
.. percentages of
lhe
for lhe three presidential
"Well, if the Democrats won’t lh
* vole ,or
Suppose that conditions down in
stand up for the relief program and ^dldstes are as follows:
Florida look a bit shaky.
AU right, says Harry Hopkins, its administration, I will do it for’ *-“nrfnn’ “
Roosevelt: 37 per cent.
Roosevelt's Boon Doggie expert— them.
Lemke; 7 per cent.
Let's build ’em a ship canal across
"I say. that considering the prob­
These Digest polls substantiate
lhe state, that'll be a swell way to lems they have met. they have done
spend a few million; maybe. If we're u good Job. and I am glad to have polls that have already been taken
by a few newspapers. All show a de­
lucky, we can run 'er up to quarter cooperated with them."
cided
drift of sentiment toward Mr.
of a billion or so. That opght to take
Now Gov. Landon is saying over
care of Florida in pretty good shajie! the radio that the country lias been Landon.
Such “master minding.'' chuckle "shocked" by three years of waste
MICHIGAN
CONFERENCE OF
the New Dealers! We'll relieve suf­ in the relief program—Ln spite of his
U. B. CHURCH SEPT. 16-20.
fering humanity—of a few billion own remark in the 1934 campaign
The seventy-fllh session of the
dollars (note: this lost Is a sort of that the program was well adminis­
Michigan conference. Church of the
Strange Interludean aside) |
tered.
United Brethren in Christ, will be
Tlie record shows that In 1934,
difference that shipping companies when he was candidate for re-elec- held at the First United Brethren
church beginning Wednesday Sepit if It were constructed; It doesn't after telegram lo Washington asking
matter that engineers and geologists for more federal funds. Now hei day. Bishop H. H. Pout, D. D., of
proclaim that such a canal would accuses the^Admlnislrallon of wast­ Indianapolis presiding.
While the sessions throughout the
drain one of the most fertile regions ing money.
day will be given to conference
A few months ago. Gov. Landon
thereby reducing It to a semi-desert. startled lhe country by boldly an­ business, there will be many fine ad­
No I That doesn't matter I No good nouncing that "There Is no sub­ dresses given by different speakers.
Boon Doggier would consider such j stitute for courage.” We want our The evening services are for the
public with a different speaker, each
trifles as these.
readers to decide whether Senator
The Idea is to spend money; to! Couzens or Gov. Landon has acted night. On Thursday night ■ Rev.
Edna Beougher Hughs, well known
spend It fast; to salve over doubtful upon that principle.
evan
gelist, will bring the message.
districts with government money;
to create an IMPRESSION of pros­
THE “COCKEYED" TAX LAW.
PASSING OF MRS.
perity that is just about as perma­
Gov. Landon calls lhe new corpora­
LAURA VAN AMAN.
nent as a dose of novocalne. No good tion tax law “cockeyed.” He
Mrs. Laura van Aman. M. died on
Boon Doggier cares about lhe future well call It "cockeyed" for that
Bunday in BOrgess hospital in Kal­
—Let those who follow do the worry­ Jaw proceeds to extract from
amazoo after a ten weeks' Illness.
ing.
rich and powerful corporations their She Ls survived by her husband.
Al) lhe Boon Doggier has to worry just share of lhe federal tax instead Cloyd Van Aman; three daughters.
about Is spending money lo gel of hanging it on to the mine run of Mrs. Jessie Kosbar and Mrs. Lila
votes.
us through a sales lax.
’
Hewitt of Hastings and Mrs. Mary
Gov. Landon rushes to lhe defense Kidder of Freeport; four sons. Cloyd
of the rich and the powerful who jr„ at home. Harry of Chicago and
John Public and family, the suck* nominated him. He says the new Carl and Arthur of Battle creek.
tax Jaw which compels corporations
Funeral services were held at the
Of course the Florida Boon Doggie to either shell out their huge sur­ Wesleyan Methodist church on
didn't turn out so well. A fellow by pluses to their stockholders'or pay Wednesday afternoon at one o'clock.
the name of Arthur Vandenberg ex­ taxes on this money, is a detriment
posed the affair with such devastat­
(Continued on page 6, Sec. 2)
interment tn a cemetery near Ionia.
ing clarity that even the New Deal
yes men in congress backed down.
Then suppose that conditions in
Maine looked a wee bit shaky.
Maine is a good state to have in
tow. You know the old saying: “As
Maine goes, so goes the nation.” Of
course it Isn't a true saying; but
still there Is considerable comfort
in having Maine on the bandwagon
to talk about.
Sol Maine looks doubtful does It?
Weill Well! Something will have
to be done about this
Aha! says an administration Boon
Doggie expert. I have IL Let's build

HARVEST TIME

SCHOOL TIME

IS VITAMIN TIME

I got tho one that I liked beat;
cepting when a campaign is on and If you want to see me stepping high
.-the voters are sort of ainc'ilng their Just look this way as you go by.
galled backs under the load, a fa­
vorite pastime of legislators, wher­ Now I'm going to drive this car to 'Of course, there's no particular reachurch.
ever found, la thinking up more
and of course "Quoddy" is
taxes to go along with lhe taxes And you’ll see It standing near the '
porch;
the've already thunk up.
Well be In the shade of that maple '
They resist the craving for just
tree
'
, so long, and then they notice some Ma and me with our Model T.
previously overlooked dollars hiding
So when you hear the sound of thel1
behind the baseboard, and thenknow what will. Boid on a minute!
well. you might hire a henhawk to
bell
Why not build ’em a mess of model
guard your henhouse, but could you This Is something you’ll know full 1
will.
dough Into a thing like that. What
That In the line you’ll surely see
1
IRVIN 8. COBB
Ma and me with our Model T.

ONLY TWO WEEKS DELAY.

Actual school work-will begin in
the fine new consolidated school at
Delton one week from Monday. It
has taken a little more time than
anticipated to complete the build­
ing and to equip It with the neces­
sary furnishings for school work.
Delton now has a fine school plant,
far better than is usually found in
a village of its sige. While it has
taken longer than fexpected to com­
plete thc Delton school, we'll say It
was worth rr't'nijftr.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY PARTY.
Thirty-five relatives and friends
surprised Mrs. Borah Oetroch. widow

Thi, Store I, Heoclqiiorton for All Type, of VITAMIN

PRODUCTS ... Cod Liver Oil ond Hollvor Oil . . . in
liquid, copiuln or fobloh ... All LEADING Irond,:

• PARKE-DAVIS
• SQUIBB
• UPJOHN
• WALGREEN

The reword of labor—whether farmer, working man, profes­
sional man or business man—Harvest Time comes for one
and all. With each yearly harvest make pions for a "greater
one." The time when one reaches the Harvest Time of Life,
a well deserved, hard earned reward—strive to make it a boun­
tiful one. Let your Banker hel p you. He can aid you with
your financial problems, consu It with him. He is on expert on
these matters and can advise you how to produce a sound
financial harvest for your "Fall Time of Life."

Established

in 1886

Sorne folks would pay a larger price
For»they want a car that looks real
nice

AT NEW LOW PRICES

They want a Packard or a Hudson,
What’s this!

a

district

in

the,

But we thank the Lord for a Model Good Old Souttf looks a bit shaky I
My! My I This can’t be permitted to
continue. Let’s build ’em a bridge.
And so the plans for a bridge
“I don’t believe the farm prob­ gradually became untangled from
lem can be settled by any nation. It the snarl of government red tape.
is a worldwide problem.''—H. V. What did It mrJter to the experts at
Kaiten born.
(Continued on page B. Sec. 3)

E. H. Adams.

DEE r\ ’ C
KEEL/ 3
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Wolareen System
DRUGSTORE
PHONI 2241

HASTINGS CITY
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS,

�TOE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1134
ty young men from as many
•nt counties of Michigan will
. a the pigeon river state forest
. . . .orter' northeast of Gaylord.
B«pt 15 fat a foor-day course in
conservation sponsored by Michigan
State college in co-operation With
the department of conservation. The
vision. Department of Conservation, meeting will be the first of its kind
baa boon appointed chairman of conducted in this stale and looks toSlila. Junior
.Tnninr Chamber
Hhamber ' ward the Ume when conservation
lhe TTnlt*&gt;e
United Btotos
of coremaro* committee on corner- | will be a regular port of 4-H club
vatlon of natural resources. Rogers ■ high school work, personnel of thc
received word of his appointment camp will be selected from young
from waiter E. Holman of Portland.. men. ranging In age from 15 to 19
l of lhe Junior Cham- years, who have carried game nanagement and forestry projects tn

'

Construction and
Outdoor Notes

J&gt;« fELlX A.
’ 778 5E«
foo amSRiC* w
•.T0UK5eN&gt; RECUsiW
- MOCM MEANS 6u!*«&lt;5 RECOd/
‘
ClRCUUkiiO*! Of' NVHCf - JOBS
ClM soumG ROfU
JU
A.4O &lt;AAQILSECURIN Wl Ail A6E5 - fc”0
t»*W5ACnO4 TAX

V1HAT HE STANK FOR —

m Past rccobd is we of
- AS MAJOR
koftMHwe
iMtRottMLNfi AHO LU4ER TAKES
'HE IS A FIGHTER FOR V4HAI HE
Th»4ks is right - and this is ww
Vffl'LL bo Ml 1OU tN WASHINGTON-

■ Paw he Fou6iH

FELIX A.RACETTE.LOS
PEOPLES

daughter of Detroit were week end
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mr. and Mn Beeman of Water­ guests of Mr. and Mra. Oscar Flanlloo and Chas. Velta and daughter
Mr. and Mn. Levi Kantner enter­
were callers last Friday in lhe Wm.
tained their children, grandchildren
Mr. and Mn. Myron Bishop called and great-grandchild for dinner
on Oky Douglass of Hastings and Bunday. Those present were Mr
other relatives al Hinds corners and and Mn. Russell Kantner. Mr. and
Mn. Willis Kantner and daughter
Delton Sunday
Alpheous Dunn has been sick and of Hastings. Mr. and Mn. Claude
under lhe doctor's care for several Kantner and sons of Louisiana. Mr.
and MY». Guv Kantner and children
days.
Harold. Clem of Benton Harbor and MT- and Mrs. Carl Wfspinter.
and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Ward of Jr.. and son of Detroit.
Charles Townsend left for North
Rockford were over Sunday guests
of their parents, Mr. and Mn. Harry Manchester. Ind., last Friday, where
he will attend college this year.
Clem
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Havens spent
Doll spent from Wednesday till Fri­
A fire-fighting plow that will turn the week end with her parents. Mr.
a furrow six feet wide In sandy soli and Mrs. J. D. Hoard near. South day with lhe latter's parents, Mr.
Is being developed al lhe state forest Haven. While there they attended and Mra. Harrison Blocher.
The many friends of Dale Town­
fire experiment stoUon near Ros- 1 the funeral of an uncle.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hauer and send will be glad to know he will
common by Gilbert S Stewart, for­
leach in the Vermontville aefiool for
est fire technician of the depart­ daughter nnd Miss Mabie Nolten of
ment of conservaUon who Is in Grass Lake were Sunday guests of this year.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Wolford. 8ol
charge of the stoUon The plow will Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Havens.
Mr. and Mn. Frank McNutt from Wolford and Mr. and Mrs. Killing of
be of extraordinarily heavy type and
mounted on rubber-tired wheels for near Irving were Sunday guests of West Manchester. Ind. M1m Clara
Blocher of Woodland and Mr. and
speedy transport on the highway the former's aunt. Mrs. Roy Oaks.
Kenneth and Alpheous Dunn and Mrs Otto Townsend and Franklin
and mobility in the woods. It to ex­
pected to be more effective than the Erwin Havens entered Hastings High were Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Harrison Blocher.
plows now generally in use by cut­
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Calkins from
ting through heavier roots and oth­
MARTIN CORNERS.
er similar obstructions. When drawn near Hastings called on Mr. and
The L. A. 8- supper al the church
by a tractor the plow can be used to Mrs. Dan Douglass Sunday.
Mrs. Hasel Oils and children of last Friday evening was well attend­
turn wide fire lines along the aides
and around the "head" of forest Hickory comers were Sunday guests ed. 412 45 being token in.
A new club. No. 6. has been added
of W H Otis
fires.
I Kenneth Dunn is m Detroit this lo our Aid society and this club
Approximately 50.000 acres of week Judging stock at tfte Fair. He home of Mrs. Bert VanderJagt
stock
and
the.
team
he
was
on
won.
northern forest lands had been
Wednesday. Sept. 16 for supper. A
burned over by lhe 2.300 forest fires thus securing him the trip to De­ cordial invitation to extended to all.
which had occurred in Michigan up troit. If he wins there he will then
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Weller arc lhe
to Sept. 1. according to records of go to Chicago to lhe Stock Show.
parents of a baby daughter, born at
the conservation department. The
Pennock hospital Sept. 2. Mrs.
GLASS CREEK.
upper peninsula. not including Isle
Weller and baby, have returned to
Ask John Havens about the five
Royale where the national
park
lhe heme of her parents. Mr. and
service Is in charge of fire suppres­ pound pickerel he caught tn Erway
sion. had 1.000 fires which burned lake last Sunday evening. It meas­
Remember Sunday school next
over approximately 35.000 acres. The ured thirty inches.
Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock.
Sunday visitors at Fred Otis’ were
lower peninsula had 1300 fires and
Come and bring another with you.
the IxAile Erways and Ray Otises of
14.000 acres burned over.
Your scribe certainly enjoyed the
Kalamazoo.
fine arUcle written by MLss Mabel
Mesdbmcs Minnie oorham. Mina
Northern Michigan porcupines are
SLsson regarding her eastern trip.
displaying strange appetites these Whitttmore and Eva Havens attend­ Many of thc places she visited were,
days. At a deer hunters' camp in the ed an extension meeting in Hastings places I visited myself so it was
Ogemaw Stale forest Thomas White, last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Erway were in doubly interesting. We envied her
conservation officer of Roscommon
her trip to Fort Ticonderoga and
county, found a porcupine busily Brighton last Friday where they lakes George and Champlain, as our
engaged in eating an aluminum tea­ took Ruth to begin her year's work grandmother, who was bom near
kettle which had been left by lhe as a teacher.
Fort Ticonderoga, so often told us
Bunday visitors at Forrest Hav­
hunters when they broke camp last
when we were quite small, many
fall. The end of the spout had been ens' were the Robt. McGIockllns. things about lakes George and
eaten away completely and only the John and Gordon Havens and Champlain and gay picnics she en­
rim ol thc cover was left. The teeth Eloise Storer of Hastings and Donna joyed there when a young girl.
marks of the porcupine were evident Foreman of Kalamazoo.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Geo. Beeman of
in many places on lhe kettle and
CARLTON CENTER.
the wooden handle. In the Pigeon Waterloo and Chas. Vclte and
There will be no church services
River state forest porcupines have daughter Rose of Woodland were
at Die local M E. church Sunday
been causing trouble this year by callers in thc Fred Olis home Fri­
as
our
pastor.
Miss Wheeler, will be
gnawing oil the glass insulators of day.
al Battle
Miss Virginia Havens was a Kal­ attending conference
lhe fire-tower telephone line.
amazoo vhltor Saturday. Miss Don­ Creek.
We are all sorry to hear of the
na Foreman came home with her
Secd for Michigan's future forcsU and remained over Labor Day.
serious illness of Caryl Fuller. He is
ill be collected on state forest
Mr. and Mrs Bruce Slddell and at Ann Arbor for observation and
areas beginning early this fall. Con­ daughters Beth and Patricia vLsiled treatment. We hope he will soon be
servation authorities here report
Mr nnd Mrs! Fred Olis last Mon- home much improved in health.
that more than 1QO.OOO pounds of t
Mrs. Marion Clem is confined to
pine copcs were harvested from the
Mr. and Sirs. Chas, w’hlltemorn her bed with heart ailment.
living trees for forest plantings dur- ; were Sunday visitors al Fred Bech­
Thomas Robinson and James Caring the past two years. conMstlng of
oenter are the new students from
tel's in Hastings.
30.000 white pine cones. 47.000 Nor-1
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Whittemore this community to enroll in Hastings
way pine cones and GO.000 jackplnc entertained lhe lattet's parents high school. Mayoma Valentine will
cones. Cones will be collected from
attend school in Woodland.
from Hastings Sunday.
12 state forests this fall by labor
Miss Virginia Havens. Miss Eloise
from the ccc camps. They will be Storer. Miss Donna Foreman and
DURFEE.
transported by truck to the Higgins
** John Havens called on Mr. and Mrs.
The Ladles' Aid of the EAst Balti­
I Lake state forest nursery where the
* Lowell Whittemore near Delton more U. B church wilt meet with
seed extraction plant Is located.
Mr. ar.d Mrs. John Hook Wednes­
; Monday.
day. Sept. 16. Pot luck dinner at
| A 139-page report of interest to ■
noon.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
i the petroleum industry of Michigan
Muse Grace Biulch is home again
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kantner and
| Ls now reidy for distribution by lhe
after assisting Mrs. Hoos of Has­
, geology division of thc department sons of Salop Rouge. La.. came last
ting for a week.
of conservation. It contains numcr- Monday evening to spend two weeks
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Couch and
1 Ous maps and tables and bears the with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Le­
family were callers of Mr. and Mrs.
I following title: "Extent and Avail­ vi Kantner. and other relatives.
Ralph Hershberger and friend of Garrett of Wall lake and Henry
ability of Natural Gas Reserves In
Adams of Delton.
Michigan Stray Sandstone Horizon Detroit spent from Friday until
Mrs. Perry Hunslckcr and’ Mr.
of Central Michigan." The cost Ls Monday with his brother. Waller
and Mrs. Harold Hunslckcr and ba­
SI 50 per copy, orders must be ac­ Hershberger.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Williams and by girl of Cleveland returned home
companied by cash, postal money
Thursday after a visit with Elroy
son.
Charles,
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ro
­
order or certified check.
bert Strolc of Battle Creek were Houghtoltn.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rice and
“Anybody can write novels and callers on Chas. Far lee and family
daughter attended the Under family
lhe worst of It is that nearly every­ L«bor Day
Mr. and Mrs. Ertlc FlanUan and reunion at Slewart lake Monday.
body docs."—George Bernard Shaw.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Lusk of Ann
Arbor spent Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Hoffman
Grover Brooks of Lansing spent
the week end and over Labor day at
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Brooks and
son attended the Williams reunion
at Sunfield Sunday.
Henry Van Syckles and son and
daughter of Mecosta county spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Will
Hoffman.

their 4-H club work during the past storage or under repair soon after
. ...
i the closing date, faculties will be
J
’
...
maintained for all tourist campers
’
who desire to remain, even though
Hayfever sufferers who visit the lhty
w yay unm nUd-Oc-*■(« nark.
Mlclilcan tobcr."
state
parks In nnrtham
northern Michigan
each year for relief need not look
for other places to slay as a result
How many trout will occupy *
of lhe official closing of the parks rape stretch of a good trout stream?
Sept. 15- "W« have arranged for The institute for fisheries research
special accommodations for hay­ here conservatively estimates 10.*
fever victims at a score or more of 000 The figure is reached by a com­
our stale parka in the northern part putation of tiie number of tagged
of thc slate." announced Walter J. brook trout known to have been In
Kingston. superintendent of Stale; a 175 mile stretch of the north
parks. "While most of the oudoor branch of lhe Au Sable river near
equipment at these parka will be
knocked down and placed in winter

CANDIDATE

FOR .CONGRESS

G4U.ED UPON FfiUMERf IN 2! QcUfUTiES

CO-OP TRACTOR

''Competition furnishes the Incen­
tive for people to rise, for genius to
come up."—Henry Ford.

Kidskia Similar to Carnal
Kldakln in appearance la «olta

PUBLIC ENEMIES

la laferlor, being lighter, stiffer and
lea supple.

&lt;jAY
It la certain that the Romans
used branding irons or a similar
method to Identify thalr cattle, and
It Is more than likely that the
custom is prehistoric. In all prob
ability the practice of marking
cattie to show ownership closely
followed their domestication.

0

BARRY COUNTY REPUBLICAN
CONVENTION.
At court room. Hastings. Tuesday,
Sept. 22nd. at 11 o'clock A. M . East­
ern Standard Time.
Tlie Republican County Conven­
tion for the purpose of electing 11
delegates and allemitc delegates to
tho Republican State convention
and to transact such other business
thal may legally come before It. will

Ungs on Tuesday. Sept. 22nd. at 11
o'clock A. M, Eastern Standard
Time.
The Slate convenUon will be held
In Grand Rapids on Tuesday, Sept.
28th. al 11 o'clock in the forenoon,
for Uie purpose of nominating can­
didates for the following stale offi­
ces, Secretary of Slate. Blate
Treasurer, Auditor General. Attor­
ney General and one Justice of the ’
Supreme Court to fill vacancy, and
for the transaction of such other
business as may properly come be­
fore it.
Delegates to the County Conven­
tion shall be elected at the Septem­
ber primary, and shall be one for
every seventy-five votes cast for the
Secretory of Stole at the last electlon and shall be apportioned as
follows:

Ratland

W.Jj;......

-Daniel in thc lion's den hit
lothing on thc Jay Walker.
Thc Jay Walker is cffronterl
xrsonitied as he saunters inti
he face of all care.

Jay Walkerj occupy half f/d
offins reserved far those ii//rJ
n Itraffic
Uy crossing
crossing in
in tne
the mien
midi
।”
’ujjic uy
3i
^,ey often uu/|

PtmIbcl i ' o their oxen graves.

Dr. Frank Carrothers,
Chrmn. Barry County
Republican Committee.
C. W. Clarke.
Secy. Barry county
Republican Committee.
July 29th, 1936.

HOPE CENTER.
' Clyde Leonard, who is serleul
j 111 with typhoid fever, was taken
Borgess hospital Sunday.
| Seward Walton Is attending schd
in Naperville, ill.
,1
Earl Gales lost a valuable cow
' Henry Moorhus had a cow r]
over by an automobile
highway breaking her leg.

WHY BE OUT OF WORK? LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE!
POSITIONS ABB WAFTINO — ALL GRADUATES PLACED
!
MODERN UP-TO-DATE SCHOOL

COMPLETE COURSE
NOW

SIX MONTHS

TO PAY!

ONLY M STARTS YOU

BEND ATTACHED COUPON FOB FREE BOOKLET

NAME ..
ADDBE3B ....

La MAR BEAUTY ACADEMY

Has Features &gt;017 WANT!
• EXTRA VALUES

• POWER
Oar Chrysler Six Industrial Motor unit is

and belt with a minimum of fuel and oil
consumption.

• EASILY CONVERTED

As regular equipment. Co-op Tractors are
•quipped with these features;
• SELF-STARTER

• ELECTRIC HEADLIGHTS
• BATTERY and GENERATOR
• FOOT and HAND BRAKES
• TRUCK TYPE STEERING
i GEARS

• ALL PURPOSE Machine
verts to 16 different widths of tread by spe­
cial lag arrangement. Axle always enclosed;

Well adapted to highway hauling. Will do 15
lo 44 miles per hour. Steen as easily aa
truck. Fuel and Oil cnnsuiupUon no greater.

No .effort hat been spared to make the Co-op Tractor the belt that
modem engineering can produce. Geon, axles and bearing! are of
the latest design and have adequate factor* of safety to insure long
life under severe duty. Tractor operates quietly. Be sure to see

and try this Tractor. We Invito a demonstration.

SEE US AT THE FAIR

to Our School Teachers
Nothing gives us more pleasure tlian
to be permitted to serve those who,
like yourself, are devoting their lives
so largely to thc service of others.
We invite you to make use of our
modem banking facilities—checking
savings, safe deposit, etc. Your de­
posits have the double protection
offered by this bank and by the Fed­
eral Deposit Insurance Corporation.
We wish to express our best wishes
for a happy and successful school year
for you. You can count upon our
friendly cooperation in all financial
matters. We shall hope jp have fre­
quent opportunities for serving you.

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc.
HASTINGS

- |
"The
Former Owned
Store

WOODLAND

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

-«ww»Wi-&lt;4

• j

�THE HASTINGS HANNES

THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER II. IBM
uring the past ■ storage or under repair soon after
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND; the closing date, f*cUilies will be
Mr. and Mr*. Beeman of Water­
i maintained for all tourist camper* loo and Cha*. Velte and daughter
' who desire to remain, even though were caller* last Friday in Uie Wm.
who visit the j lhty pj*n u&gt; stay until mid-Oc- Haven** home.
em Michigan' tober.”
Mr. and Mr*- Myron Bishop called
on Oley Douglas* of Hatting* and
sy as a result. j,ow many trout will occupy * other relative* at Hinds corner* and
of lhe park* mjl* *ireteh of a good trout stream? Delton Sunday.
arranged for Tfie institute for fisheries research
Alpheous Dunn lias been sick and
is for hayconservatively estimates 10,- under lhe doctor'* care for several
re or more of
fig^e ts reached by a com- day*.
northern part pupation of tiie number of tagged
Harold, clem of Benton Harbor
red Waiter J.■ brook trout known to have been tn and Mr. and Mr*. Cecil Ward of
lent of State'a j 75 rolie stretch of the north Rockford were over Sunday guests
f the
! branch of lhe Au Bable river near of their parents. Mr. and Mn. Harry
srks wUi be
file total was 2.437.
Clem.
ced in winter j
...
Mr. and Mr*. Qeo. Havens apent
A fire-fighting plow that will turn the week end with her parent*. Mr.
a furrow »ix feet wide in sandy soil and Mn. J. D Hoard near South
I* being developed at the state forest Haven. While there they attended
Are experiment station near Ros- Ii the funeral of an uncle.
Mr. and Mn. Herman Hauer and
common by Gilbert S. Stewart, for­
est fire technician of the depart­ daughter and Mias Mabie Nolten of
ment of conservation who Is in Ora*s Lake were Sunday guests of
Mr.
and Mrs. Wm. Havens.
charge of the station. The plow will
Mr. and Mn. Frank McNutt from
be of extraordinarily heavy type and
mounted on rubber-tired wheels for near Irving were Sunday guests of
speedy transport on the highway the former's aunt. Mrs. Roy Oaks.
j and mobility tn tiie woods. Il 1* ex­ , Kenneth and Alpheous Dunn and
, pected to be more affective than the :Erwin Havens entered Hastings High
। plows now generally in use by cutMr. and Mn. Morris Calkins from
| ting through heavier roots and oth­
er similar obstruction*. When drawn near Hastings called on Mr. and
by a tractor the plow can be usad to Mrs. Dan Douglass Sunday.
Mr*. Hasel Olis and children of
turn wide fire lines along the side*
and around lhe "head" of forest Hickory Comen were Sunday guests
of W H Otis.
i fires.
Kenneth Dunn ts in Detroit this
Approximately 50.000 acres of week Judging stock at thc Fair. He
northern forest lands had been stock and lhe team he was on won.
burned over by lhe 2.300 forest fires thus securing him the trip to De­
which had occurred in Michigan up troit. If he wins there he will then
to Sept. 1. according to records of go to Chicago to tlie Stock Show.
thc conservation department. Thc
upper peninsula, not including Isle
Roynle where the national park
service is in charge of fire suppres­
sion. had 1.000 fires which burned
over approximately 35.000 acres. Tlie
lower peninsula had 1300 fires and
14.000 acres burned over.

J”

GLASS CREEK.

Ask John Havens about the five
pound pickerel he caught tn Erway
lake last Sunday evening. It meas­
ured thirty inches.
Sunday visitors at Fred Otis’ were
the Louie Erway* and Ray Otises of
Kalamazoo.
Mesdamc* Minnie Gorham. Mina
Northern Michigan porcupines are
displaying strange appetites these Whittemore and Eva Haven* attend­
days. At a deer hunters’ camp in the ed an extension meeting in Hastings
Ogemaw State forest Thomas White, last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Erway were in
conservation officer of Roscommon
county, found a porcupine busily Brighton last Friday where they
engaged in eating an aluminum tea­ look Ruth to begin her year's work
as
a teacher.
kettle which had been left by the
Sunday visitors at Forrest Hav­
hunters when they broke camp last
fall. The end of the spout had been ens' were the Robt. McOlocklln*.
John
and Gordon Haven* and
eaten away completely and only the
Eloise Storer of Hastings and Donna
marks of the porcupine acre evident Foreman of Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Beeman of
in many place* on lhe kettle and
the wooden handle, in the Ptgeon Waterloo and Chas. Velte and
River mate forest porcupines have daughter Rose of Woodland were
been causing trouble this year by callers in the Fred Otis home Fri­
gnawing of! tlie glass insulators of day.
Miss Virginia Havens wa* a Kal­
the flre-tower telephone line.
amazoo -visitor Saturday. Ml** Don­
na Foreman came home with her
Seed for Michigan's future forest*
and remained over Labor Day.
will be collected on state forest
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Slddell and
areas beginning early this fall. Con-1 daughter* Beth and Patricia visited
nervation authorities here report
Mr and Mrs Fred Otis last Mon­
that more than 100.000 pounds of
day and Tuesday.
pine cooes were harvested from tiie
Mr and Mrs. cha* Whittemore
living trees for forest plantings dur­ were Sunday visitors al Fred Bech­
ing the past two years. consLsttng of
tel's in Hastings.
30.000 white pine cones. 47.000 Nor­ 1 Mr. and Mrs Russell Whittemore
way pine cones and CO.000 Jackpine entertained the latter's parents
cones. Cones will be collected from from Hasting* Sunday.
12 state forest* this fall by labor
ML\s Virginia Haven*. Miss Eloise
from thc CCC camps. They will be Storer. Miss Donna Foreman and
transported by truck to the Higgins
1 John Havens called on Mr. and Mrs.
Lake state forest nursery where the
Lowell Whittemore near Delton
seed extraction plant is located.
[ Monday.
A 139-page report of Interest to
tiie petroleum Industry of Michigan
is now resdy for distribution by the
geology division of the department
of conservation. It contains numer­
ous map* and tables and bear* the
I following title: -Extent and Availi ability of Natural Gas Reserve* in
| Michigan Stray Sandstone Horizon
i of Central Michigan." Thc cost is
(1 50 per copy. Order* must be acI com)&gt;anied by cash, postal money
order or certified check.

•

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kantner and
rotis of Baton Rouge. La. came last
Monday evening to spend two weeks
with iMeir parents. Mr. and Mrs. Le­
vi Kantner. and other relative*.
Ralph Hershberger and friend of
Detroit spent from Friday until
Monday with his brother. Waller
Hershberger.
Mr and Mr*. Floyd Williams and
son. Charles, and Mr. and Mr*. Ro­
bert Strole of Rattle Creek were
I "Anybody can write novel* and caller* on Chas Farlee and family
I the worst of it is that nearly every- Labor Day
body docs."—George Bernard Shaw. ।
Mr. and Mrs. Erile Flanigan and

SRVE

ft

daughter of De-.rull were week encl
guesU of Mr. and Mr*. Oscar FlanlMr. *nd Mr* Levi Kantner enter­
tained their children, grandchildren
and great-grandchild for dinner

and Mr*. Russell Kastner. Mr. and
Mr*. Willis Kantner and daughter
of Hasting*. Mr. and Mr*. Clauds
Kantner and tons of Louisian*. Mr.
and MF*. Guy Kantner and children
and MX And Mr*. Carl Wesointer,
jr.. and son of Detroit.
Charles Townsend left for North
Manchester. Ind., last Friday, where
he will attend college this year.
troll spent from Wednesday UH Fri­
day with the latter* parent*. Mr.
and Mn. Harrison Blocher.
The many friends of Dale Towntend will be glad to know he will
teach in the Vermontville school for
thi* year.
Mr and Mrs. Dave Wolford. Sol
Wolford and Mr. and Mr*. Killing of
West Manchester. Ind. Mio* Clara
Blociicr of Woodland and Mr. and
Mrs. Otto Townsend and Franklin
were Sunday dinner guest* of Mr.
and Mrs. Harrison Blocher.

MARTIN CORNERSlast Friday evening was well attend­
ed. 112 45 being taken in.
A new club. No. a. has been added
to our Aid society and this club
home of Mn. Bert VanderJagl
Wednesday. Sept. 16 for supper. A
cordial Invitation is extended to all.
Mr. and Mn. Ward Weller arc thc
parents of n baby daughter, bom at
Pennock hospital Sept. 2. Mr*
Weller and baby have returned to
the home of her parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Stuta.
i.
Remember Sunday school next
Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock.
Come and bring another with you.
Your scribe certainly enjoyed the
fine article written by Miss Mabel
Sisson regarding her eastern trip.
Many of the places she visited were
place* I visited myself so it was
doubly interesting. We envied her
her trip to Fort Ticonderoga and
lakes George and Champlain, as our
grandmother, who was bom near
Fort Ticonderoga, so often told u*
when we were quite small, many
things about lakes George and
Champlain and gay picnics she en­
joyed there when a young girl.

CARLTON CENTER.
There will be no church service*
at lhe local M E. church Sunday
as our pastor. Ml** Wheeler, will be
attending conference
at Battle
Creek.
We are all sorry to hear of thc
serious Hines* of caryl Fuller. He is
at Ann Arbor for observation and
treatment. We hope he will soon be
home much improved in health
Mrs. Marion clem Is confined to
her bed with heart ailment.
Thomas Robinson and James Car­
penter are the new students from
this community to enroll in Hastings
high school. Mayoma Valentine will
attend school in Woodland.

KidsUa Similar to CarMwl
Kldakln In appearanca la quits
simitar to caracul, but tb* leather
I* inferior, being lighter, stiffer and
lea* supple.
.

It la certain that the Roraana
used branding Irons oe a alrnllar
method to Identify their cattle, and
It 1* more than likely that the
cuMom 1* prehistoric. In all proh
ability the practice of marking
eat tie to show ownership doMly
followed their domestication.

PUBLIC ENEMIES

Statistic* have
been compiled
showing the amount of import* of
farm products for three years pre­
vious to the Roosevelt administra­
tion as well as since he became
President.
During lhe last three
years Of Mr. Hoover we bought an
average' of one hundred thousand
cattle per year from other coun­
tries nearly all from Canada. Dur­
ing the last two years of Hie Roose­
velt administration we have pur­
chased an average of two hundred
Miss Martan Tobias returned lo
fifty-five thousand cattle per year.
We exported many thousand pound* her home in Kalainaxoo Monday to
of hog* during the Hoover admirfls- attend school, after spending her
vacation
with her grandparent*. Mr.
trallon; while for the last Uro year*,
our exports of porkers have been and Mr*. C- N Tobias.
about one hundred and fifty head
ROBINHUE PARK.
yer year. We bought hogs from
Mr. and Mr*. Stevft Miller and
Canada on an average of about
25 000 pounds per year under the daughter. Helen, and friend of
Hoover administration; while *o. Clarksville called on Mr*. John Koifar In 1836 we have imported six Lar Friday night and attended the
million five hundred and thirty-six 1 party at home of Mr. and Mr*. Juthousand pound*.
We
formerly llarj Pott*.
A miscellaneous shower wax given
bought from
foreign
countries
canned meats amounting to about at the home of Mr. and Mr*. Julian
20.000.000 pounds a year. We bought Pott* Friday night honoring Mr.
Randall
Kirkpatrick.
from foreign countries 50.517.000 and Mr*.
pounds of canned, meal* so far thia About 45 were present. They re­
year, and 38 602.000 pound* In 1835. ceived a number of lovely gift*. The
We used lo tell com lo foreign evening wa* spent in playing pedro.
Mix* Betty Pott* and xLiter, Mr*.
countries; but last year we pur­
chased seventeen million, tlx hun­ Ralph Pinkbelner, were In Grand
dred twenty thousand bushel* of Rapid* Thursday.
Miss Lucille Smith of Battle
corn and so for this year five million
six hundred and sixty-two thousand Creek spent Bunday with her par­
bushels Borne wheal has always ents. Mr. and Mr* Howard Smith.
been shipped Into this country from Russell Colvin of Caledonia was al­
Canada averaging about seven mil­ so a visitor at the Smith home.

0

Al court room. Hastings, Tuesday,
Sept. 22nd. at 11 o'clock A. M , East­
ern Standard Time.
Tiie Republican County Conven­
tion for Uie purpose of electing 11
delegate* and alternate delegates to
th* Republican Slate convention
and lo transact such other business
thal may legally come before it. will
be held at the court room at Has­
ting* on Tuesday. Sept. 22nd. at 11
o'clock A. M. Eastern Standard
TimeThe State convention will be held
' In Grand Rapids on Tuesday. Sept.
29th, at 11 o'clock In the forenoon,
for Uie purpose of nominating can­
didates for the following state offi­
ces. Secretary of State, State
Treasurer. Auditor General, Attor­
ney General and one Justice of the
Supreme Court lo nil vacancy, and
for Uie transaction of such other
business as may properly come -be­
fore it.

Carita*

Daniel in ’the lion’s den lia
lothing on tlie Jay Walker.
The Jay Walker is effronter
personified hs he saunter* int
he face of all care.
Jay Walkers occupy half th
■offins reserved for those kille
h traffic Uy crossing in the mia
He of the block, they often wal
o their own graves.

HOPE CENTER.
Dr. Frank Carrolherx.
Chrmn. Barry County
Republican Committee.
C. W. Clarke.
Secy. Barry County
Republican Committee.
July 28th. 1836.

Clyde Leonard, who is xerlou
ill with typhoid fever, wa* taken
Borges* hospital Sunday.
Seward Walton Is attending sell
in Naperville. II).
Earl Oates lost a valuable cow
Henry Moorhus had a cow r
over by an automobile ~
highway breaking tier leg.

DVRFEE.
The Ladies' Aid of lhe East Balti­
more U B. church will meet with
Mr. ar.d Mrs John ffook Wednes­
day. Sept. 16. Pot luck dinner at
noon.
Mtsc Grace Biulch I* home again
after assisting Mrs. Hoos of Has­
ting for a week.
Mr and Mrs. Donald Couch and
famllyvwere callers of Mr. and Mrs.
Garrett of wall lake and Henry
Adam* of Delton.
Mrs. perry Hunslckcr and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Hunsicker and ba­
by girl of Cleveland returned home
Thursday after a visit with Elroy
Houghtalin.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rice and
daughter attended the Linder family
reunion at Stewart lake Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Lusk of Ann
Arbor spent Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Hoffman
Grover Brook* of Lansing spent
the week end and over Labor day at
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Brooks and
son attended the Williams reunion
at Sunfield Sunday.
Henry Van Syckles and son and
daughter of Mecosta county spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Will
Hoffman.

"Competition furnishes the incen­
tive for people lo rise, for genius to
come up."—Henry Ford.

Butler Smith and hl* mother.
Mr*. Dorca, Chapman of Hasting*
visited their niece aixl husband. Mr.
and Mr*. Edd. Newton, last. week.
Mr. and Mr*. Edd. Meyer* of Ionia
visited at Uie home of Edd. Newton
last Friday.
Mr. and Mr*. Harold Camp of
Grand Rapid* spent Bunday evening
With her grandparenu. Mr. and Mr*.
C- N- Tobla*.
W. O Tobias and son, Mr. and
Mrs. Keel Tobias and children and
Mr. and Mr* C. N- Tobias attended
the Tobias reunion at Milham park.
Kulamazoo. Labor day.
School began here Monday with
Mias Gertrude McPharlln a* teach-

Staliaticg Show Heavy Im• port! of Farm Product*
We Can Orow

BARRY COUNTY REPUBLICAN
CONVENTION.

Delegate* to the County Conven­
tion shall be elected at the Septem­
ber primary, and shall be one for
every seventy-five votes cast for the
Secretary of SUte at lhe last elec­
tion and shall be apportioned as
follows:
Rutland
I h&gt;
U'aedlan.l

HINDS CORNERS.

NEW DEAL NOT SO GOOD
FOR THE U. S. FARMER

lion bushels a year In recant years.
Bo far this year we imported near­
ly twenty million bushels. We used
to export cotton seed oil; but last
year we imported 104 million pound*

million pound*.
.
It will not be difficult for the
fanner to understand that imports
into thi* country of farm products
lake thal much away from ills home
market. The New Deal does not j
seem lo have worked out well for '
American farmer*, because it has
permitted such heavy imports of
products thal could be produced on
American farms.

He’ll Carry on
at Farley’s Post

BOWNE
Mr*. Harold Segr
day afternoon.

Mis* Mabel Wa
night with Dr.
of Caledonia eni
Ln Chicago.
Mr. and Mr*. ’
comitanied Mr. .
Benton to Chlcag
they were guesU
until Monday.
Mr. and Mrs.
Harris of Lanals
night with Mr.
Thomas Sunday
Mrs. Guy Smith
Winnie Freeland
station on U. B

With James A. Farley stepping
out temporarily from his post
ns postmaster general to devote
his time tn running the Demo­
cratic campaign. William W.
Howe*, above. Farley s first as­
sistant. will become acting head
of the Postoffice Department
August 1. when Farley's leave
of absence from the cabinet
begins.

NOTICE to DEMOCRATS
WIN WITH

GUY M
TYLER

There are 500 kind* xff shark*
la the world, but the *kln from
only three *|&gt;ccle* are used prin­
cipally, to provide leather for mak­
ing shoes.
These are the Arctic,
the tropica! and the silk shark, the
latter being caught off Hie Portu­
guese coast.
Slioes mn&lt;|e from
the Arctic shark have a woolly ap­
pearance, nnd are useful on the
golf course.
Women's shoes are
made from the *lik shark, and one
of Its most popular use* I* for
handbag*.
Sharks are caught In
large fish-nets about 200 yards long,
and six yards deep.

Democratic Candidate for

CONGRESS
Capable. Impartial, Honest

Qualified with Twenty Ye
Practical Public Service
Experience

Fur

cc

Undertaking

Cherry Lj
Burling L
Featuring
Be sure tc

CRE
WHY BE OUT OF WORK?

LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE!

Ne- Gt

POSITION* ABE WAITING — ALL GRADUATES PLACED

Pattern

MODERN UP-TO-DATE SCHOOL

COMPLETE COURSE
NOW ........... . .............

S,X MONTHS
TO PAY!

ONLY' U STARTS YOU

You Are Invited
TO VISIT OUR TENT AT
THE BARRY COUNTY FAIR

Colorful f&lt;
and load*
In both tig

33” and 3

E
Swet

■EMD ATTACHED dOUFON FOE FREE BOOKLET
NAME „...
ADDBE3S

CITY.

LoMAR BEAUTY ACADEMY

Only a Un

We W^ill Have On Display Modern

BATTLE CBEEK. M10H.

• GAS AND ELECTRIC RANGES
• GAS AND ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS

• FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS

FUEL

• ELECTRIC WASHERS AND IRONERS

NOW!

• GAS HOME HEATING UNITS

to Our School Teachers

ne

N

Ur u

ic.
ND

2257
We’ll Deliver ! — Because price* will toon advance
. . . because &gt;vcn now belter grade* are hard to

get from tho mine* . . . because you may not be
able to get what you want later on, we odvi*e you

to buy your winter'* cool now!

Nothing give* u* more pleasure than
to be permitted to serve those who,
like yourself, are devoting their live*
so largely to thc service of others.
We invite you to make use of our
modem banking facilities—checking
savings, safe deposit, etc. Your de­
posits have the double protection
offered by this bank and by the Fed­
eral Deposit Insurance Corporation.
We wish to express our best wishes
for a happy and successful school year
for you. You can count upon our
friendly cooperation in all financial
matter*. We shall hope Xp have fre­
quent opportunities for serving you.

Smith Bros., Velte &amp; Co
DEALERS IN WOOL. GRAIN. FEED. FLOUR, SALT, LIME,
CEMENT AND COAL
PHONE 2237
HASTINGS. MICH.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

• LATEST MODELS OF I. E. S. APPROVED
FLOOR and TABLE LAMPS

I
!

THREE MODERN TABLE LA
be GIVEN AWAY DURING

A knock

Slipowi

CONSUMERS POWER CO

I
You can
Wool fac
backing.
Plain or

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1936

NEW DEAL NOT SO GOOD I .
___
n •&gt;ar&gt;&gt;ar-r&gt;
Buller Smith end his
FOR THE U. S. FARMER :Mrs. Dorcas chapman of

mother.
Hasting*
------------visited their niece and husband. Mr.
Statistics Show Heavy Im- '*«‘d Mrs Edd. Newton, last weak,
port, of Form Product. I,
“J

He’ll Carry on
at Farley’s Post

Mis* Mabel Walls spent Saturday ' mt*. Watt Thomas attended a birth­
night pith Dr. and Mrs. Graybill day surprise on Frank Brent Sunof Caledonia enroute to her work day. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs.
In Chicago.
Lewis skinner of Leighton, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Benton ac- Mrs. Alfred Newman of Sparta. Mr.
coumunled Mr. and Mrs. Russel) 1 and Mrs. George Graybill and
BMiton to Chicago Saturday, where daughter of Caledonia and Mr. arid
they were guests of Mrs. Anna Bahr; Mrs. Jack Hendrickson of Grand
until Monday.
j Rapids.
Mr. und Mrs. John Thomas and i Mr. Clyde Starks and mother of
Harris of Lansing spent Saturday. Chicago were callers at Wayne Bennight with Mr. und Mra. Watt ton's Friday evening.
Thomas. Sunday they and Mr. and ।
----------------- -----------------------Mrs Guy Smith called on Mrs. I
LOWER CROOKED LAKE.
Winnie Freeland at lhe Madigan oil । Miss Bonnie Jean. Miss Mary Lou
station on U. 8. 16
[ and Dick Rogers returned to their

We Can Grow
1 last Friday.
• Statistics have
been compiled.' Mr. and Mrs. Harold Camp dt
showing lhe amount of imports of Grand Rapids spent Sunday evening
farm products tor three years pre- j with her grandparents.- Mr. and Mrs.
vlous lo the Roosevelt admlnhlra-1 C. N. Tobias.
tion as well as since he became
w. O. Tobias and son. Mr. and
president.
During the last three Mr*. Keel Tobins and children and
years of Mr. Hoover we bought an Mr. and Mrs C. N. Tobias attended
average of one hundred thousand lhe Tobias reunion at MlUiain park.
cattle per year from other coun­ Kalamazoo. Labor day.
tries nearly all from Canada. Dur­
School began here Monday with
ing the last two years of the Roose­ Miss Gertrude McPharlln os leachvelt administration we have pur­
chased an average of two hundred
Miss Marian Tobias returned lo
fifty-five thousand cattle per year.
We exported many thousand pounds her home m Kalamazoo Monday to
of hogs during lhe Hoover admlrtls- attend school, after spending her
vacation
with her grandparents. Mr.
tratlon; while for the last two years,
our exports of porkers have been und Mrs. C. N. Tobias.
about one hundred and fifty head
yer year. We bought hogs from
Canada on an average of about
25.000 pounds per year under the
Hoover administration; while ' to
far In 1030 we have Imported tlx
million five hundred and thirty-six
thousand pounds.
We
formerly
bought from
foreign
countries
canned meats amounting to about
20.000.000 pounds a year. We bought
from foreign countries 50,517.000
pounds of canned, meats so far this
year, and 38.602,000 pounds in 1035.
We used |o sell com to foreign
countries; but last year we pur­
chased seventeen million, six hun­
dred twenty thousand bushels of
com and so far this year five million
six hundred and sixty-two thousand

ROBINHUE PARK.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Miller and
। daughter. Helen, and friend of
Clarksville called on Mrs. John Kol­
lar Friday night and attended the
Krty at home of Mr. and Mrs. Jun Potts.
A miscellaneous shower was given
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Julian
Potts Friday night honoring Mr.
and Mrs.
Randall
Kirkpatrick
About 45 were present, They re­
ceived a number of lovely gifts. Tlie
evening was spent hi playing pedro.
Miss Betty Potts and sister. Mrs.
Ralph Pinkbelner. were in Grand
Rapids Thursday.
Miss Lucille Smith of Battle
Creek spent Sunday with her par­
bushels, some wheal has always ents. Mr. and Mrs Howard Smith
Russell
Colvin of Caledonia was al­
been shipped into this country from
Canada averaging about seven mil­ so a visitor at lhe Smith home.
lion bushels a year in recent years.
So far thia year we imported near­
ly twenty million bushels. Wc used
to export cotton seed oil; but last
year we Imported 104 million pounds '
of it and so for tills year over 82
million pounds.
It will not be difficult for the j
farmer to understand that Imports
Into this country of farm products
take that much nway from his home
market. The New Deal does not
seem to have worked out well for ’
American farmers, because it has
permitted such heavy Imports of
products that could be produced on
American farms.

BOWNE CENTER,
' Mr and Mrs. Jlovud Houghton
,,
WA urM 01 i*1™11 are visiting their parents.
Mr»
' Mr."and Mrs. Guy Smith, for a few
Mrs. Harold Segerstrom of Leighton .
•
•
were visitors at Watt Thomas' Mon-,
'’
day afternoon.
afternoon.
Mr Addle
and MriS
Merrill
Kercher,
any
Mrs.
B&lt;,nton
and Mr
and

With James A. Farley stepping
out temporarily from his post
as postmaster general to devote
his time tn running the Demo­
cratic campaign, William W.
Howes, above. Farley’s first as­
sistant, will become acting head
ot the PostoBice Department
August 1, when Farley's leave
ot absence from the cabinet
begins.

home In Kalamazoo, after spending
a week with their grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Zimmerman.
Leslie Bidelman of Pontiac spent
from Monday afternoon until Tues­
day afternoon at Frank Roush's.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Stenger ot Kal­
amazoo spent from Sunday and
Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Stenger and famUy.
Frank Roush and children spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver Roush at Maple Grove.
Mr. and Mrs. Nick pietersma and
daughter spent Friday In Kalama­
zoo.
Milo' school started Sept. 8 with
a total of 16 pupils. Mrs. Doris
Saunders is the teacher.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Stenger are
; Lhe parents of a daughter born-Aug.

in the world, but the skin from
only three *[&gt;c&lt;-les are used prin­
cipally, to provide leather for mak­
ing shoe*.
These are the Arctic,
the tropical and the silk shark, the
latter being caught off the Portu­
guese coast.
Shoes mn^e from
the Arctic shark have a woolly ap­
pearance, nnd are useful on the
golf course.
Women's shoes are
marie from lhe silk shark, and ona
of Ila most popular use* la for
handbag*.
Sharks are caught In
large fish nets about 200 yards long,
and six yards deep.

Thc Dorcas Society of North
Maple Grove will meet with Mrs.
Dan Roberts. Thursday afternoon
September 17.
Mrs. Ray Morganthaler, who has
been very ill, has been taken to
Pennock hospital for treatment.
. Mi*i Sylvia Whitmore of Battle
Creek spent Sunday and Labor Dey

;tle Creek were Sunday afternoon
callers on Mr. and Mrs. Vincent

The United Rtaiw

The best thing* any

breere. the Hxbt without us and
-rlthln.

WONDER VALUES FEATURES

NEW SLIPS
Sleek Panne Satin

\y/OfUl£tyalll£

98*
Bias cut to fit
smoothly and

NOTICE io DEMOCRATS

There tire 500 kinds of sharks

BRANCH DISTRICT.
About thfrty-flve relative* from
Woodland, Middleville and Parmelee
gathered at lhe Ostroth Adams
home last Wednesday evening to
remind Mrs. Sarah Ostroth of her
birthday. The evening wan spent wife t
In visiting and refreshments of ke nlng.

Lace trimmed
or tailored. V
or bodice tops.
Sizes 34 to 44.

WIN WITH

GUY M
TYLER

Satin Finish

RAYON SLIPS

49*

Superior Quality Felts

Democratic Candidate (or

JEAN

CONGRESS

NEDRA

A remarkable value! Sleek
satin finish rayon with lock­
stitch and corded seam.'.
Lace trimmed or tailurtl.

Capable, Impartial Honest
Qualified

with

Twenty

Experience

Undertakinr

Years'

Fur Trimmed

COATS

sie-so

Flattering New Styles

98

Cherry Lane Sport Myles’!
Burling Lane dressy types!
Featuring the new fleeces!
Be sure to see these to-day!

New high crowns, forward
sweep brims, manipulated
crowns—all the smartest
styles designed for flattery'
They’re young and smarti

CRETONNES

Boys’ Jackets

Famous Glcnbrooke

Sport COATS

Avenue Vat Print

D R E S S E S

37*
Trim and neat and cut for
perfect fit. Some • tailored
and some frilly. Fast color
Short or cap sleeves. 14-44.

Rayon PANTIES
Lost call for sum­
mer Panties, to
close out these
styles.

DRESS OXFORDS

OXFORDS

N"G^

Patterns!

You Are Invited
TO VISIT OUR TENT AT
THE BARRY COUNTY FAIR

Colorful for drapes, spreads
and loads of other things!
In both light and dark printa.
35' and 36' wide. A buy!

Boys’
Sweat Shirts
A rare buy—so be here early.
Only a limited quantity.

We Will Have On Display Modern
• GAS AND ELECTRIC RANGES

For

Tones!

40

Boys

JL

Men

.Hlochera of black side lealh-

Bal oxfords of sturdy black
side leather. Composition
sole and heck
Nailed. Un­

tor y.nir roncy.

Men’s
Polo Shirts
FOR FALL WEAR

\WORK SHIRTS
1 For Men Who

MSA'1

Demand

49

• GAS AND ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS

''Good quality blue chambray.
*. . . for hard service! Inter­
I lined collar, 2 pockets, steel
buttons. Boys’ sues------ R9«

For Boyi
and Girls
Stilchdowna of sturdy black
side leather. Composition sola
that won’t mark floors. Serv­
iceable drill lining.

Men's Oxhide

Work Pants

OVERALLS

Black and White Twill,

69s

Husky 2.20 denim! Cut‘full
for extra service, extra com­
I fort! Parva buckles, tufned
in seams. Extra sizes, too!

*

Boyp * Slacks

OXFORDS

Built for Hard Wear!

iF«r/^
Long sleeves, dark colors.
While they last, go at

Just the coats for every day
wear! Smart self-trimmed
fitted or swagger styles.
New woolen coatings!

Striped print twills . . . theyH
wear and wear and won't
show the dirt I 20 inch cufl
bottoms.

Reinforced I

Sure Value,!

• FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS
• ELECTRIC WASHERS AND IRONERS

New, pleated front drape and
slack models with two buckle
side straps. Wide range of
checks, plaids and stripes.

• GAS HOME HEATING UNITS
• LATEST MODELS OF 1. E. S. APPROVED
FLOOR and TABLE LAMPS

-WO^K SOCKS

Printed
Broadcloth
For New Fall

FREE

|
’

,'Tha famaus Rockford type,
tmixtwra -at blue and bro’
Beiafarted heeto and

THREE MODERN TABLE LAMPS will
be GIVEN AWAY DURING the Fair

CONSUMERS POWER CO

MEN'S SOCKS
Supon, Sweaters ■

98*
Wool face with flrm cation J
backing.
Slide
fasteners. ■
Plain or patterned.

Of Fancy Rayon and Cotton.

A real Value. While they last

True Blue Shirts
Fast Color
Broadcloth

Pairs

Good looking, hard wearing)
Styled as ’■ boys like 'em.

Wuthablet!

10
So low priced you’ll want
yards and yard* . , , for
your aprons . .■ . |
frocks titid clever wt
curtains. 36" wide a
quality you can
upon. All fast col

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER It. 1M&lt;
notice

| , Mrs. Agnes Kslky returned to,
Hastings. Monday evening, followI i mg a vacation spent with her son
,
,
I and wife. Mr. and Mrs. George KeiNcxt Saturday xllernoon at Camp ic&gt;._ other relatives and friends, to,
Barry Ray Jdhns. state Ht-Y secre- I remain with Mra. Gertrude Wilcox
tary. will conduct an. institute and and ®°n- Jo*- tor the »choal year.
retreat for officers, leaders, and ! Included among those who are at-,
-nTtw.ro nf
in Y
in Kent.
k-t&gt;i tending Hastings schools this year
members
of Hl
Y rhiha
clubs - in
ar(, Q^tla ptneld. David Robinson.

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

L NOTICES
wlfs. Eras Ho»r4o. •! lb* J"™*1110
few"5r*,’KJ. "S&amp;
TIOM. ■ Corporation -rassli-J uossr
■
—&gt; .L- Tt-1,-4 Kl.l.a n, Am.r!

N««b»ill». Harry CovMr. Mleblran. to
ItllUk OWNKilS' LOAN CORPORA­
TION. a Corporation orran It-d apder
....
'*•
m

MSB
1 |&gt;ri«rlr&gt;*t

*r

reruttr Ike drill «rrb&lt;rd
nr- or -nr hurt tbrreif;
NOW, TIIKIIKHlltK by

to 1h» blchrat h|4
hlcheat bidder of th«
Harry. Mkhlcan (lt»
b»ld&gt;n&lt; Circuit &lt;'• url

I and rxpcnira. inrltullnr an ' iimrn,
r—, whleh irmm art drrrribrd
1 follawo:
• htltl-

rlth O,r l.&lt;r.-lll»mARI«
i IlirrrinUn b-lnncinc.
r. rielil. till* ■»&lt;! int»

idiirrta: National Hank Annrt.

REPUBLICAN; STATE CONVENTION.
GRAND RAPlDB. PERT. .’»TH. lose.
BLESS I&gt;. MATHBWR.

| Mr. and Mr*. Paul Honald and
BABBEBS COBNEBE.
I crutches, because ot a sprained foot
she received as she made a misstep
in descending lhe stairs.
I Mn. Chat. Albright and son, who
Mr and Mrs. Clem Munger of
Battle Creek spent Labor Day with mtr Will Havens of Rutland
have oeen
been spending
spending two
two weeks
weeks al
at
nave
Mn Will Havens of Rutland. ___ , 1lhe)r
Mn. Paddock and children.
i their,ummer
summerhotne
homehere
herereturned
returnedu,to
MtM Alice Foley, who has been ctUcago Monday
Leon Solomon and family of De­
*1? ! Mr and
Chandler. Mr*,
troit were guest* Labor Day of Al
Solomon and daughter Caroline.
w■ nm Chajt. Will. Miss Minnie Chandler.
Garden Club member* remember
stiriT.
Mrr J- w Chandler and daughter,
I Marilyn. Miss Jeanette Perkins of
the meeting next week Thunday clnnatl. Ohio. Friday.
Mr and Mrs. L. J. Matthews at- Mishawaka. Ind.. Miss Lillian MatBarry. Eaton, and Calhoun Cos. • nosc M4Uie. Robert and Paul Ham- September 17. with Mr*. Margaretl
Garrett.
tended Uie funeral of Mn. Rollo; OjeWB and Geraldine Smith of
Thti camp for fellowship and guld- roond.
.! /tlulu
_,
,
n
„
vu
,
B
u
,
WH
.
Annual meeting of Delton Com­ Attains of Grand Rapids. Tuesday. arand Rapid,, and will Kent ot
---------he|(j Monday
MondBy
ance in spiritual and technical j Mr. and Mrs James F. Hammond. munUy
c
iuKj
u wU1
wi;;
Mrs. Adams wa* a former pupil of oouth Bend, Ind, were week end
development
of iiu.p.u:
helpful n&gt;-x
111-Y piupro- . daughter Natalie —
of- —
Lansing
and; uigii.
night OU|
September
14 in mw
tlw ww.MCom- Mr*. Matthews.
iiiiciu- u.
—-—— —
। gueeu at L. J. Matthews, and all atgrXin wC
------ 1------------" Z
----- «r Clrwn
Ran.
I
_t —
«. supper and
a
?1U continue
until
Sunday
P ' n,ece
Beverly
Fisher, of Grand Rap- | munity hall.
Pol ■luck
MUi Margaret Snyder of Katama- | tended a two day family reunion at
meeting
including
election
.
..
..
_
-----—
j A.J ' ids were Wednesday evening callers business
business
meeting
Including
clccUon
Xuiusn. xs
zoo ta spending a few week* wiUi Mr. and Mra. Ralph Leffler's al
of officers and program following. her parents.
.Woodland.
ian Smith of Baltic Creek. Edwin
Mr and Mrs. Carl Lenz &lt; nee Aims Everybody come.
Vote al Uie Primary election on
Taylor of Hastings. Men and H. 8. Lester» whose marriage occurred at
.
boys are expected from Charlotte,' Angola. Ind , Saturday. AURUst 39. Tuesday. September 15.
We arc »orry to hear that Clyde
Eaton Rapids. Grand ledge. Lake- ■ moved into the Arnold Malcolm rcsivlcw. Middleville. Woodland. Nash- I dencc during the past week. Their Leonard of Wall take was taken lo
vlllc and Freeport and several towns ' many friends wish lor them a long Borgess hospital Sunday.
in Kent Co. Each camper brings his and pleasant journey through life
The Gaskill reunion was held in
tiie church basement on Labor Day.
cot and blankets.
j together.
108 H- S. boys were in attendance [ Mr. and Mrs. Clarence L. Sisson,
PLEASANT HIMat the State Hi-Y camp on Torch ' Betty and Paul spent Sunday as
Mr. and Mrs. Waller Lewis and
take this year from more than 501 guests of Mr. and Mrs. Claude
family of Hastings spent thc week al
high schools. Barry and Eaton sent Fighter and family at their Gun the home ot his mother. Mra. Herb
10 boys and three leaders.
take cottage.
Cook, and husband.
The program of tiie Barry-Eaton
Mbs Lottie Thesink of lhe PenMrs. Bert Palmer entertained
Y. M. C A- includes local boards nr I nock hospital stall was a Monday Wednesday afternoon with a miscel­
committees in each town to assist f afternoon guest of Mrs. Ctalr Yclter. ,laneous
Mreuua o4
,„Mir, in ,honor
1U11V, u
.„. Earl
shower
of, m
Mrs.
with Bible study groups, conferences
Mbs Ruth Robinson left- Tuesday I van
Van Sickle. Tiie
Tlie bride received.many
of young people, vocational and per- afternoon for Slilawo-wce comity, useful and beautiful gifts,
sonal guidance interviews, with for- A here she will begin her teaching | Mrs. Addie Lewis called on Mrs.
um* ot adulU for problem discus- , duties this week nl the Newburgh Kryn VandenBcrg al Pennock hos-!
stems.
.&gt;-i&gt;nnl Rltiinted
re- :
school,
situated tuitliin
within five miles of ! nltnl
pimi 'Thuruiav
Thursday tuitern
where she had re-I
A special two dny institute for lay­ Uie school which her twin sister. | et-nily undergone a major operation. |
men and rural secretaries lias been Mis . Relha. is teaching, which । Mrs. VandenBerg Is recovering nicely i
makes It very pleasant for both.
| and expects to go to Uie home ot
Ralph Kidder of Irving Center i her daughter in Grund Rapids in
to be held at Ann Arbor Sept. 24­
I
25. with Edmund Linderman ot New , wa.i .in overnight guest of Mr. and j the near future for a short slay.
Mrs George K*-1 ley. Tuesday.
I Tho Sunshine club held a parly
York as director.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack McCoy of Friday evening at the home of the
Eaton Rapids. Charlotte. v.........
Grand
.........
Woodland and
Lodge. .......
Nashville.
ar.d | Grandville are visiting the latter's president, Ida Skinner, in honor of
Middle ville were on thc itinerary ol , parents. Mr and Mrs. Ed Stairs, i Mr. and Mrs. Vere Carter. It being!
Secretary Angell lost week. m Uu- Richard and Marlon Gamble also of I leap year thc ladies chose their
interest of Ulla week end HI-Y, Grandville arc visiting Uielr grand-' partners for pedro. While Uie prizes
training camp and local group work, parents.
were being awarded the bride and
-------------- &lt;
----------------Mv. and Mrs. Albert Hessmer of'groom were presented with a dozen
STATE ROAD.---------- Hastings were Friday evening guesls &lt; hnen napkins from Uie member*
Our school started Monday mom- uf M&gt;. and Mrs. Claude A. Ham- [of the club.
ing with Miss Maty Bulolph ms moitf.
Clare Williams has been al Jack­
teacher.
I Mr* Ixm Strouw o! Carlton- Mrs. son Ute past week and will be at Dec«-T.T Anri»ruM&gt; nnd &lt;i ui-.w Nellie Walker and Miss Marion troll Ulis week with the sheep.
t.-?’ Flonmc? have taxn h ‘h um u’&gt;11,lrd of Kalamazoo were Saturday
Mr. and MrM. Joseph Corrigan
c\re\or Mr itotd’Ti d- r-in? who1
callrrs at the l,omc
M ,,avc ^ughl the Spaeth farm,
can for Mrs. Lloyd Ant. rson. who E. Moore nnd. Miss Clara
Ur;l j_
----------------J. SKM)n
Sisson. I
----------------- «-----------------------e »--------------Mrs. Harvey Kenney &lt;nec Mur- ,
SOUTH SHULTZ.
, guerltc Veltcri of Lansing arrived | Mra. Bethel Peake was canning
Company in thc Jim Soth.ird Friday evening to rpend over Uie tomatoes one day last week, and as
school they go . . . Sturdy
home the pastweek were Mrs. Nettie holiday week end with her parents.1 -'he was lifting a four quart kettle
young bodies and healthy
Casey of Hinds Corners. Mr. nnd Mr n!)1j Mrr.. ciair Yeitcr. Mr. Ken- from the stove lo the table she
young minds . . . Keep
Mrs Art Chase.
a-. -I
Mr.
. »«and
-..aMrs.
Mrs.Clyde
Clyde n,.y motored over from Pierson La- stumbled nnd lhe conU-nLi of the
them that w&lt;y- Dive
Miller. Mr. nnd Mra. F-C
Francis Cole'
,,or Dny. luiving spent the week end kettle went over her iour-ycar old
rv.,T coleman nl hl. |arin Uu,re boU) rcturning to son. He was taken lo a doctor in
man and Belly. Mrs. Dora
them plenty ot rich High­
and Mrs Mae Johnson ol Rutland. Lansing that evening.
1 Hostings and is now .getting along
lands Dairy GRADE A
C. H. Bntmble of Lansing nnd nicely.
Mrs. Low Ashley has returned to
Milk ... It will help lo
........................
Mr.
Ronald BJengon off
ot Pleasant
Hill
**
“ and
“ Mrs.
*
”
her home alter being away working Morris Carter w.
• keep them well and alert!
I called nt lhe E. 8. Plficld home Hickory camera visited their gland-(
Tuesday.
I imrenu. Mr. and Mr*. Q. E. Kenyon I
Mrs. Janet Peltcngil*. spent Wed­
Mr. nnd Mrs. Floyd Walters and Sunday afternoon. Other callers ,
nesday with her fousln, Mrs. Nellie
and “.r
Marlon of Grand Rapids were Sun- Sunday were Mr, ?"d
J-,
Mamby of Lacey. •
High in Cream Content. Raw
day dinner guests of M E Moore Blown and Paul o! Grand Rapid.;
Mt. and Mrs James Sothard were , and Mi" Clara J. Sisson.
j mid Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wiawell of1
or Pacteurized. Pt. 5c; Qt.
in Hopkins Tuc.'dny.
Mr. and sir- Clarence Lrater and 1 Kataimuoo.
Everyone to planning on the fair Mr and Mt Kenneth Crawley of । Mr. and Mrs. Al Houser and i
; Dowling \pont Sunday with Mr. and daughters of Columbus. Ohio, siient |
Chiton Bocker will enter his team 1 Mrs. Carl Lenz.
| Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Ctar- 1
ir. Uie pulling contest at Lake Odes- : Mrs. Seth Cook &lt;nee Gladys Wai- lence Bwchlrr.
.a Monday. Clifton wo.i thtre last .tersi
crsl -j-mmic
Mrs. nmy
Amy ou&lt;mc»u»c
Bonneville &lt;-nu-i&gt;uuivu
entertained*
Timmle ano
nnd aauy
Sally amun
Smith mi
of I aim.
year. Tiu- best of luck to him again. lJin&gt;hig •pent the week end al the Uie Shultz Community Club Thurs- •
Hastings
ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.
Phone 2651
Mr ..iyi ..ir t i&gt;uu Miner u:h. mr ,
o{ t.
former's parents. Mr. day. Fourteen were present.
J
and
MrJim Solliard sp.nl and
WaUera. Tlmmie
------------------T-------------------------Labor Day at Lake Odessa.
। Sally ,in, renwl„lnK wllh Mrs. Wai1 tera for thc week.
! Mrs. George Kelley and her moth-1
' er. Mrs. Kidder, visited the tatter';.
1 Is'.cr. Mrs Lydia Kidder of Irving
TURKE CORNER*

or mobtoaob sale.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Fifirld and
family attended the funeral of Mrs. I
i Eifiehi s little nephew in Hustings. |
| sundiy.
,
L'.bor Day—and already tiie bum '
»f activities connected with the.
Barry county fair is well under way. !
Row Marie ain’t Rota rt Hammond
.ire exhibiting sheep in the 4-H club
-iiv-islon and David Robinson u calf .
i ■ tn tlie 4-H and alk&gt; one In the ,
Smith-Hughes
Agricultural Stu»• dent section.

,.
r.
•;
"J
r
;!i
.&gt;
■I

DELTON.
Mr;. Gertrude Chandler spent'
from Tuesday until Saturday with
Mta- Bertha Honeywell at Plainwell.

in Kalamazoo.
rue t.s of Mr. and Mrs. J. C..Horton I
Friday and Saturday on their re­
turn home to Arizona After .spending
their summer vacatjofi at Traverse
City.
•
Mrs Ralph Starring and baby of
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Pennock.
Mr'. Florence Forbes entertained
two sisters from northent Michigan

Mrs. Oscar Meyers of Cincinnati.!:
ihln l.s
K visiting
vl-ltlm- her
her mother.
mother Mrs.
Airs 'I !
Ohio.
Mattie Blackman und finds her j
much improved Mrs. Bessie Tungate ;
returned Sunday to continue caring 1
for Mrs Blackman and Mrs. Cheese- i
man hits returned to her home near
Dowling.
.
R. G. Renton and family moved
back into Delton Saturday after
■iH'nthim the summer at their cotluge at Witll lake.
The Gun lake school in Orange- j
vllie township voted to come in and ;
was admitted ihto the De!ton-W. K.
Kellogg Agricultural school ta.it.
week, our new schoolhouse » near- :
mg completion, so it won't be long &gt;
now until it is ready for use.
|
Mr. and Mrs H. T- Reynolds en­
tertained for dinner Labor Day. the
tatter's sister. Mr*. Maggie Portin- j
i:a. and family of Three Oaks, as ;
they were enroute to spend a few j i
days on d trip through northern ,
Michigan.
..
,4
Mr and Mrs. R. o. Henton bought ‘ ।
the little schoolhouse in Delton and
thc extra lot They arc moving the
'
building onto lhe lot and remodel- j
ing it into a nice comfortable home !
Tor their parents. Mr. and Mrs.
CMtelein.
'
&gt; I
Mr. and Mrs Charles Pixley of

“The Universal Car”
ONE NAME comes quickly to mind
when you think of “Thc Universal
Car." Thc description is distinctively
Ford. No other car is used by so
many millions of men and women in
every part of thc world. Everywhere
it is thc symbol of faithful service.
That has always been a Ford funda­
mental. Something new is constantly
being added in the way of extra value.
Each year the Ford has widened its
uppcul by increasing its usefulness
to motorists.

Today’s Ford V-8 is more than ever
“The Universal Car” because it en­
circles thc needs of more people than
any other Ford ever built. It reaches
out and up into new field* because it
has everything you need in u modern
automobile.
Thc Ford V-8 combines fine-car
performance, comfort, safety and
beauty with low first cost and low cost
of operation and up-kccp. It depre­
ciates slowly because it is made to last.
There is no other car like it

Only the Ford M Giris D&gt; !*•«•
. V■« ENGINE rEREOBM.
1. ANCE WITH ECONOMY

-&gt; SAFETY CLASS ALL
Z. abound at no extba
CHARGE

O SUPER-SAFETY

mechanical brakes

CENTBR-rmSB
T. RinlNC. COMFORT

r wei
nrnSTRUCTURE
steel body .AS
••
S.
’-FrUI.
WELL AS STEEL SURFACE

NEW INTERIOR

6. APPOINTMENTS

There will be no preaching serv­
ices here next Sunday morning as

George S'-okcs ot Grand Ledge is
vuitle.g hl! sister and husband. Mr.
and Mra C- J. Barnum:

Mrs. Laeey jopes t« making the
rounds Wof ntr daUy duties on

FORD
LOW MONTHLY TBKMS—KS

COMPANY

A MONTH. APTER USUAL DOWN PAYMENT. BUYS ANY MODEL
J»M FORD V.« CAR - FROM A/TY FORD DEALER — ANY*"H1RB IN THE UNITED STATES. AST YOUR
FORD DEALER ABOUT THE NEW
PER MONTH UNIVERSAL CREDIT COMPANY FINANCE PLANS.

�THE HASTINGS BANKER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER U. 1HI
ward Johnson and Mrs. Harley bcr* will have exhlbtu there.
'
Net Hi* Last Chasse
I
Brown ot Stickney. South Dakota,
Mrs Florence Mott, who has been
The original plan of Colnmboa
are guests of the Hughes famllUs spending nine weeks at Bear Uke
and Mr. and Mr*. Comlel Oappon, with her »on and wife, returned
France for backing for bls venture
Sr.
, home Saturday.
work when we have al least two
Bundav
Huehe* family enterenter- .
—------------across the Atlantic, bls brother be­
Sunday the Hughe*
By WILLARD BOLTE
breeds of English hog* thal are ex­ Sintd with a picnic at tho Charles
ing eomtnlNdooed to approach the
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
The poultry keeper who is selling - soybeans has consistently yielded pert* in converting pasture and
ughu cottags, Crooked lake, hon-1 Mrs
taurB ¥„
Mrs. Laura Vanaman passed English king. A message from Eng- 1
eggs at retail or through outlets about 5 bushels more wheal per grain into lean meat.
I oring Mr*. Homer Hughe.; U were BWBy Bunday nlgM
land actually eame inviting Colum­
_ ________
“—1----- W­
• where quality counts can pront by at acre than did wheat after cam. i In
in attendance.
I
an farmer*
’ bus to talk the matter over Juet•
Michigan
farmer* filling
filling silo*
silos this
this I ’"mi** Uvrtl* «rilth returned tn her ‘ Mr wld Mr“ awncy PlflkW
Kansas Experiment Station eyperl-|an experiment carried on since 1816
after he bad agreed with Spain for
—
Mrs. tan Engie attenaea
ment thal is reported in Poultry on clay Und at Purdue, in a rotation fall may effect economies in operat­ duJ**’. ...
° taachtr in the Springfield
funeral Bunday of the small the trip.
Tribune. The Kansas experimenter* of corn, wheat and clover. 900 lbs. ing timr ensilage cutlers by consid­ schools Battle Creek. This will be FO|) of jjr ftn(J Mrg Henry scheib
decided Ui find out the exact Im- of 3-13-6 fertiliser applied before ering some pointers given by D. D. her seventeenth year In thia school.
. ot Hastings.
parlance of cooling eggs quickly— wheal has siwwn an average in-; Eblnger. Michigan state college ag*
Mr. and Mrr Ned Wilkins enter- :
— cool
......1 room
——
r—AB—* of
a, 6
o 4. bushels of
nt wheal
bx.l over ' rlculluraL cnclneer.
1
Eblnger sugstoring them in a
with crease
Mr. and Mrs John Krussell ex-|
The Invention of lhe pressing msts that
high humidity—and marketing fre- • the yield where no fertiliser was gests
I1-* farmer*
~— may be able to talned a family party Monday in
quantly. E^s* were stored in one 1 used, on the Sand Boil Expert-1 cut ttheir
u- power requirements by giv- honor of their 30th wedding anni­ thia week.
I
credited tn one Enoch Robinson In
carcful ■steuwon
attention to
lo me
lhe cutter versary. Those unending were Mr.
room with a temperature of about ment Field near Culver, where Hieing carctu,
Mr. and Mn. Sidney Fifleld (pent
87 degrees, plus a humidity of about, soil was leachy and contained very knlvss. adjustment 'of elevating
of
Labor Day al Welcome Corners al- 1 1827.
40. Similar eggs were stored in an- little nitrogen. It was found twees- wings and by avoiding* excess speed
tending lhe Fifleld family reunion.
other room with an average tom- sary lo use extra nitrogen in the: of Uie culler. The knives should be |"*’Pld
lure of about 68 degree* plus spring largest and most profitable sharp and should be set as cJo*el&gt; °'
‘"
Mrs.orMAN'S HEART SKIPS
Galesburg;uMr.
and P. T. A. meeting at which time we
l&lt;llly of about 67. The results 1 wheal crops were secured byusing I as possible to lhe sheer plate Tn or-' I renBSpencer
™-nr"r of«•&lt;*•»*•■*•
'
BEATS—DUE TO GAS
elect our new officers tor the year.
showed that eggs
eggs held
held al
at lhe
lhe lower
lower .( Joo
300 ids
lbs.. 01
of 3-13-12
2-12-12 at
at seeding
seeding ume.
Ume. der to produce thc desired shearing Mrs. Donald Corwin of Gull lake;
Mr.
nnd
Mrs.
Frank
Parndlne
of
I.,..1.—— 1.&lt;.,
u I| w.iili
mrlna inn
ft. to
in liiKti'tiri
Inn Th। Cotne to church services Sunday
W. L. Adams was bleated so with
instead,nf
of ehnnnlnrr
chopping tiei
action.
The ad­
temperature and higher
humidity
with aa spring
top rlvaaalnr*
drewting nf
of 76
wing Kalamazoo; Mrs. Blanche Van. Hum at which time plans for an all day gas that his heart often missed
were worth hn average of 78c per j 100 lb*, of nitrogen fertilizer. On the justment of lhe elevating
case &lt;2.6c per dozen» more than I same sandy soil—where the com re- should be close. Not more than one- nnd Mrs. Don Chenancth of Kala­ public meeting will be announced. beats after eating. Adierika rid
lhe eggs held al thc higher temper-1 reived stable manure—it was found eighth Inch between housing and mazoo. They received mnny beauti­ Prayer meeting Wednesday. Sept.
16. at the schoolhouse, Willard Kid­ anything and feels fine. B. A. Lylure.
practical lo use 2-13-6 fertiliser for wing Ls necessary, Eblnger said. Tlie ful and useful gifts.
Barker. Druggist.—Adr.
Mrs. carl Krick Is tn Grand Rap­ der. leader.
blower should be set just to lift the
ensilage over Into thc sijo and not ids with her parents. Rev. nnd Mr*.
The widespread cutting of- com
------------fodder and lhe efforts of man.-f! Wallace's Farmer bring* u* the to provide any excess lifting. Excess L. D. Mlles. Her sister. Mrs. Avis
Bponable
is
in
a
hospital
there.
Mrs
farmers lo ensile und preserve ail following instructions for building a speed of the cutter .Increases power
available roughage this fall may temporary silo of mow fencing; Sc- requirement. About 400 revolutions Krick expects lo stay until her sis­
help to reduce the damage from corn lect a level spot—and make sure it b per minute Is sufficient for filling a ter Ls Improved.
George M. Woods. Jr., and John
borers and some other Michigan in- level by using a carpenter's level 40-fool silo, he points out. Farmers
sect pests for next year, believes C. on a long board. If the ground slopes who have electricity available may Woods will attend W. K. Kellogg
B Dibble. Michigan Stale College the »llo is liable to tip over. A 16- nnd It desirable to use an electric Agricultural again this year.
NOW ON DISPLAY
Your scribe was very pleasantly
cntomologht.
I foot diameter silo should not be motor In furnishing the power, a
more than 16 feet high, and a 12 or five-horsepower motor will be found surprised Friday when she was pre­
' 14-foot silo should not be more than satisfactory, provided the above sented a radio by her son and fam­
We can prove by your neighbor
Michigan has reached tiie point
ily.
Do
I
enjoy
It
and
the
kindly
points
are
considered.
Eblnger
said.
who has one. that they are the
of holding second place in lhe na- 112 feel high. Lay out your circle
tlon in dairy herd texting work, ac­ with a string—set up your first cir­ Use of such a motor will cut labor thoughts which prompted the gift?
best mode of healing your home
Indeed I do.
cording to reports received by A- C. 'cle of fencing with a six-inch lap— and O|&gt;erating cost, he said About
at a minimum coal, and will also
Mr. nnd Mrs. Vaughn Molt
Bnitzer. extension specialist In dairy and fasten firmly with wire. Then one kilowatt of an electrical energy
returned Monday after spending thc
add attractiveness and beauty to
husbandry at Michigan Stale Col­ line the inside with strong kraft pa­ Is needed for each ton of ullage week end and Labor Dny with thc |
the room. The prices are such
lege First rank U held by New ;per with a one-foot lap and lhe bot­ stored.'
home folks.
York state where 120 purebred herds tom of the paper folded in on the
that we firmly believe that there
Don Duncan returned lo Ills home
ground
to
make
an
air-seal.
Use
PRAIRIEVILLE..
are enrolled, compared lo lhe 114 1
is no other method or healer
The
election
of
church
’
ind
Sun
­
in
Kalamazoo
Monday
after
spend-|
rprmg-cllp
clothespins
to
hold
thc
herds in Michigan. Cow testers In 1
ing seven weeks with Mr. and Mrs I
used that will give as much heal
this slate, says Baltzer. can inform Ipaper in place until lhe silo is filled day school officers for thc coming
M W. Hughes
—
and
do
not
puncture
the
paper.
for the money. Prices arc from
owners of purebred herds of the ,
year
are:
church
—
secretary,
Lucile
Mrs. Florence Mott. Mrs. Maurice
procedure. Lifetime histories of each Now fill with silage up to six Inches Adrianson; treasurer. Ernest Farr;
cow in purebred herds Is another 1of the lop— then erect lhe second pianist. Mrs. Belle Shepherd; chor­ Hughes and Don Duncan attended
program that Is being stimulated in fsection of fencing with a three-inch ister, Mrs. Mabe) johncock. Sunday the Mott reunion al Beadle lake
Michigan. Herd record books assist 1lap. Pit the second section inside of school—Superintendent. Hazel Bill­ Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Arnie of
BUY FURNITURE NOW
in keeping the Individual cow rec- 'the first section. Tie the second
ings; assistant superintendent. Doris
ords. Identification, production, re- 1section lo the first with binder twine Johnson; secretary. Nina Munger; Niles were over Labor Day guests
AND SAVE t
production mid health facts are tn- 1about every twelve slats and cut lhe treasurer. Maurice Burchrttr; pian­ of Mr and Mrs. Milo Lehman
No
church
services
next
Bunday
twine
as
soon
a*
the
second
section
eluded In tiie Information kept on '
ist. Mabie johncock; chorister. Doris as the pastor will be at conference
thc individual anima!*. These facts. h
: filled, so that lhe upper fencing
Johnson;
cradle
roll
department.
al
Battle
Creek.
Some
of
the
memI
can
settle
with
the
silage.
When
;
Knlrx I. 1
«".**•*
ouauc, TTIItn i~
■
--- --------- •
It has been found, assist in the sales
K(1i‘i i full, seal thc top with 10 to 13 Inches Margaret Johncock; Home deparl- bers also expect lo attend. Sunday
of quality purebred animals. al
Biiii
- —— —•--------- -- —--— ment. Mrs. Jennie BAinngrax;
‘“ - —WVV
Bauinaras:
mlsmis- school will be at 10:15. We are hop-1
«W covered
LVTtllU with
WlUI three
UUCt ...............
-......... - —
........ "..................
another portion ot record keeping Ln &lt; V,
,
*'cl ,AM
5,aw
HASTINGS
PHONE 2226
dirt.
Be r.ure the silage “
Is Nonary superintendent. Lila Cowels; mg Rev. Bates will be returned to I
« rrcord ol th. pur.hred Herd &gt;ire
; ‘inches
“l” of -,,
't “
carefully 1and evenly around Sunday-school teachers. Mrs. Man- this charge.
..
।! packed uuciuuy
thc outside edges.
Ie* Billings. Pearl Brown. Mrs. RoWisconsin cherry trees that lost ’u,c
Mr. and Mrs. David McAra and
bert Burchett. Flossie Burchett.
llicir leaves last summer, because of I How much does It cost to raise a 1 Karl Krick, Dora Johnson. Doris Mr. and Mrs. Alden McAra of Flint
were Sunday and Monday guests at
,l«-rry lo.t „x&gt;l. «,rc dad U&gt;U Hereford ccalf
„„ to weaning Ume
ume in ! Johnson and Ula cowels.
the Billings home.
iprlni n.r- vn&gt;. ol Bordaux Ohio?
ohw, a correspondent
cre.pond,,,, of Ohio
oh,„ | Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hughes
Miss Mary Wilkins returned Sat­
mixture after blossoming arc rccom- 1 Parmer
----------- says
------ ■■
— ----thal• ■■
It cost
him----------$1482 and son of Logansport. Ind., visited urday evening from a three weeks'
mended by Wisconsin F.xjierimcnt to carry each cow last year—hence I Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Hughes over
visit to Detroit.
illation for the control of lists dis-1, If
Htindav
if cverv
every rnw
cow raUrti
raised a rnlf
calf, that wax
wav Sunday.
Gordon Wales. Ruf.seU Nunemakrase.—American Fruit Grower.
। the cost of thc calf. His cost was
Mrs. John liouvrner of Hastings er. Jean Rogers and Dork. Burke
'divided as follows: Feed from Nov visited her son Fermor tor a few spent Monday in Detroit. They ex­
Winter wheat responds more gen- 1 39 to May 15. fodder. $3.18; silage. days.
pected to visit tiie Ford plant and
rrounly to good fcrpllrallon than $2.71; soybean hay, 63c. Pasture from
We are sorry lo learn of Mrs. Jen­ other places of Interest.
does any other crop 'extensively May 15 to Nov. 30. $8.10. Last year's nie Drummond's illness and hope
Mrs. John Brigham of Decatur is
grown in the com belt, according to calves went into the feedlot on Dec. she will soon be much better. Mrs caring for tier mother. Mrs,’ Fred
an article by Prof. A- T. Wianco ot 4th and on July 21st of this year Drummond h a much loved former Hughes, who seems somewhat im­
Purdue University in Hoosier Farm­ they averaged 773 lbs. They were fed resident of this place and now lives proved.
er. Thc value cf fertilizer wu par­ .ear corn, corn and cob meal, silage, al 555 caas st. Grand Rapids.
Most every one here expected lo
ticularly brought out by thc cold soybean hay nnd a protein supple­
Mrs. Homer Hughes. Ivan and attend the Barry county Fair this
weather of las', winter, when fertll- , ment. Up w
, „
M„ Donald Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- week. Some of the 4-H club memto that time Mlv
they
had
ized plots nt Purdue .suffered much ' made 103 lbs. of beef for every
less winter killing und produced up bushel ot corn, plus 16 lbs. of pork,
to four Hines aS tnurh wheat. Where
wiicat follows com or soybeans.1I Breeder's Gass-Ur quotes a state­
there is greatest nerd of libera) fer- ment from Hie president of the Intllixlng nt seeding time. The theory 1.•tltule of American Meat Packers lo
that wheat following .soybeans would thc effect that one of lhe serious
need no nitrogen has been explod- i problems of the packing industry to­
Is ---------finding .a market
for ____
lard.
cd—as it was soon discovered that day
... ...
______ ...
nltrot'cn stored in the bean roots । Wlial lhe packers want Is more lean
IN THE PRIMARY ELECTION, SEPT. IS, 1936
could not be used by the wheal thaln meat and less fat in hog*. The Engfnll. Soybean land needs from 200I lish solved thLs problem long years
lo 400 pounds of complete fertilizer' ago by paying a premium for bacon^
—at lea? t as good as 2-12-6 for cen- type hogs—Tamwortha and Yorktral Indiana soil*—lhe amount de- ' shires—and our packers can solve it
pending upon whether thc com pre- in the same way as soon as they are
ceding the soybeans was manured ’ willing lo make it more profitable
Under such treatment, wheat after. for the American farmer to switcli

Weekly Farm Review

The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers

to the lean meal breads For nearly
a century we have been educating
PoUnd Chinas and Durocs to convert com into lard: Why waste time
and effort trying to undo all of this

DANCIN
PIRATE"
Charles Collin*. Frank Morgan aod
Steffi Dune

K

Tuetday, Sept. 15

I Married A Doctor
Pat O'Brian and Josephine Hutchinson

THE NEW ESTATE
HEATROLAS

*39.50

CTAn
□ I Ur

ASK

FOR

A

VOTE FOR

Swift

MEMORIALS

THE
NEW

sary knowledge of materials and lhe skill

Dr. Birge C. Swift. Democratle Candidate for Nomi­
nation for CongrtM from
the Fourth Dbtriet.

that is required in executing and erecting

He advocate* glvinc ■ .

Memorial Craft has given us lhe neces­

"the NEW DEAL
a SQUARE DEAL

We invite you to visit our display in our

Showroom at 221 E. State street.

DOUBLE FEATURB

i "Educating Father
The Jones Family
ALSO —

♦
♦

"Trailing West”
Dick Foron and Paula Stan*
*♦*♦#♦*♦#♦*♦*♦*♦*♦*♦*

at our tent
AT THE FAIR
Display

JOHN DEERE

TRACTORS and

s

IMPLEMENTS
CUTAWAY TRACTOR SHOWING

ALL THE WORKING PARTS

CONGRESS

Our many years of experience in the

memory of the one who has passed on.

Friday and Saturday, Sept. 11 and 19

1937

FOR

a lasting and satisfactory tribute lo the

His Brother's Wife
Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Taylor

*109.00

MILLER FURNITURE CO.

DEMOCRATIC BALLOT

Wed. and Thun., Sept. 16 asg 17

Dr. Birge C. Swift Is a born Democrat and has
pioneered for good government for more than
thirty years. He will work for leglslaUou

We

U
D

AUTOMATIC
WASHING
MACHINES

u
D
s
o A

have the finest selection to be found any­
where.

"

He believes in the New Deal and will support Pre*dent Roosevelt's program wholeheartedly, with­
out being In any sense a "Yea"
administration.

2.

During lhe week of die Fair we arc offering SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES.

t

Don’t fail to see and lo hear our Motion

STROMBERG

He is convinced that more equal distribution of

3

growing prosperity. He believe* In adequate
pension* for old people, unemployment insur­
ance, and oilier social reforms'

CARLTON RADIOS

s

Picture, a “Talkie,” “Surviving THE
TEST OF TIME,” at our Booth at the

Fairgrounds.

School teachers and stu­

dents should see this picture

very ed­

ucational

VOTE DEMOCRATIC
Campaign premise* arc easily mad
gotten. The districts best served in the Congress of the United
States are those with good men representing them. Thc Fourth
District needs a man in Congress who in not tlgd up with any or­
ganization, who will think for bimself, and who will put lhe wel­
fare of tbe nation first in bis work.
wealthy T»r highly organized minority group. He is sincere, husieel
anOnleUlgenl. You can depend on him lo do his best for you and

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
ESTABLISHED 1907

sympathies deep f

HASTINGS, MICH.
Swift to Washington as its representaUve In Congress.

Friend of BIRGE C. SWIFT
ONLY MONUMENT WOBKS

IN BARRY COUNTY

WHO PAY FOR THIS ADVERTISEMENT

GOODYEAR
BROS.HDWE
HASTINGS

PHONE 2IOI

N

A

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, gPTEMMB M. 1*M
_________________
___ _______
CkMRT.
Est Mary E Watkins, deed Fina) era!
Motors survived__
pretty
well. It________
MONEY.__________
Maybe Uie1 people don't,
Petition to transfer securities filed,
just atz»nn»&lt;1
stopped navinv
paying rtlvM«nda
dividends and wan*
want «&gt;a*«a»aa
a greater rllatrlhai
distribution of money । Mra. June Honeysett* and Mrs
order to transfer securities entered. aCCOUDt fil^d
closed up many of iu plant* and it and wealth, but our guess U that Lre Reynolds spent Wednesday and
Est.
Susanna
Schondclmayer,
Est william L Perrin, dee d Final froee right on to Uiat surplus and ’’
with
-Thursday
-------- *--------—■*
dec'd. Annual account filed.
account filed, waiver of notice filed,
still has it and Ls adding to it al­
order allowing account entered.
Brown.
Is visiting Mr.
though under Uie _ new law it will
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
PROBATE COURT.
Annual account filed, order appoint- .
Elizabeth Gibboney, dec'd. have to disgorge Mine of it before
tng
Gdn.
ad
litem
entered,
order
for
]
BolU
j
O
f
Admr
filed,
letters
of
adEst. Adalbert Rice, dee d. Testi­
, Bond of Admr nieo. teiurrs 01 k­ thc end of lhe year.
Ill again He has gone to Ann Ar- ■ June and Kay Solomon, who have
,. ministration issued, order limiting
mony of freeholders filed, order de­ publication entered.
be*n ’Piding Uie post month with
We can't shed any crocodile tears bar for treatment
termining Iwlrs enured.
Est. Earl Strickland, dec'd. Inven­- settlement issued.
over the terrible "plight" these big
1st. Charley Collins, dec'd. Testl- tory filed, order allowing claims en­■
Est. Sterling Eaton, dec’d. Final concerns will find themselves in. We
.mony of freeholders filed, order de­ tered. final account filed, order as­■ account filed.
S’"
do find that when most of them
signing residue entered.
termining heirs enured.
Est. Jay I. Ware, dec'd. Testimony were shut down and when dividends
. wver.1
several rtav«
days thi.
this WN&gt;k
week with
with rataUvea
relatives
Est. Elisabeth Gibboney. deed of freeholders filed, license to wll were not forthcoming that some 52.­ ousmess
**»‘- MllUBW UWIC. UCV. U. VIUl. u.Mr. and Mrs. Theron Caln oi
Waiver of notice filed, order ap­’ issued, bond on sale filed, oath be­ 000 cxecuUves in Uils country were Rutland and Mr. and Mra. Stewart In Katamasoo.
tewing claims entered.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hartman spent
. EH. Burdette Briggs, dec'd. War­ pointing Admr. entered.
drawing salaries, none of which was Caln of Davenport. Iowa, called on
fore sale filed.
thc week' end with relatives in De­
E»L Ross D Cadwallader. dec’d ’
- &lt;ant and Inventory filed.
.
Est. Agnes C- Rockwell, dec'd. Dls- less than (15.000 a year and from Mr. and Mrs. LaFayelU Usbome i troll.
•r.f
.1 Hrnnks tier'd Tnven- Petition for hearing-claims filed, no­' chante of Admr. filed, elate en- 1 tiial up lo lhe (500.000 a year drawn Friday afternoon.
lice to creditors issued.
by the esteemed William Randolph R'rmiLb^-k**1 Rstur^v were Mr and Mri Harvey Enxtan and family
। rolled. ’
Est. Roxanna Dawson, dec'd. Bpnd
I
Hearst.
r X! Est. Melissa Oole. dec'd. Final acEst. Carrie D Todd, dec’d Dis-1
Mrs. Charles Starflbeck andI wns.;
’tSo^ W,U1
j count riled, order allowing account on sale filed, oath before sale filed,; charge of executrix Issued, estate cnWe hope Gov. Landon isn't going
report of sale filed, order confirming
R entered.
Cieve- v M
Me Clarence and Charles.
cnaries. Jr.,
jr.. of
or cieveMrr ind Mr* nert HUnaer and
to shed loo many tears for these
rolled.
3&lt;&gt; Est. Elizabeth, Gibboney. dec'd.
Ohio. on
On Sunday Mn
Mr. .„d
and M,.
Mrs. .. “‘t.
,
Est- Harry LeGear. dec'd. Dls- poor, down-trodden rich, some of
cT land. Ohio,
Est.
Melissa
Cole,
dec'd.
Discharge
MMReilUon- for Admr. filed.
charge of Admr. issued, estate en­ whom actually had to put up their
elr J. J. Btarftbeck and their company ____ i with her sister, (irs. Murle
of executor issued, estate enrolled.
tea spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
rolled.
yachts for a year or two when, times
10
home
Est. Melissa A. Hotchkiss, dec'd. got
so bad We admit It is a crying
Mr. and Mrs. L R. Beeler and ”ear MUo
_
shame that they had to. but on lhe
Report of sale filed.
Est. Sarah B Smith, dec'd. Pell- other
,
hand there were about one family of Middleville spent Sunday ;
MORGAN.
a
lion for license to :*11 filed, order for tliou-Mind limes as many people in with Mr and Mra. Walter Culbert
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Van Bleet ul
of
publication entered.
the United States who were wonder­
The following letaUves spent Sun-. NMnvnie were guests of Mr*. Nellie
Est. Phebe DeMaranvillc. dec'd ing where their next meal was com­ day with Henry Shriber of near Woi* and family Labor day.
Petition for license to sell filed.
Fenwick: Mr. and Mrs John ShribMr8 Foley. Emma and Carlton
ing from.
। Est. John M Smith, dec'd. Final! If Gov. Landon wants to weep er. of Eaton Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. I jMgel of Marshall and Louis Gar, account filed, order assigning rest- 1on
,
someone's shoulder over the O. N- Landon. Mr and Mrs. Cleon ler of 3*^, Cretk were 8unday
------ - -*
•------ --------■ due entered, order allowing claim as plight of big business under the new Landon and son. Wayne. Mts. Annaguests
of —
GLenard
Earl.
tardy claim entered.
iaA
, let him go weep on Uie Buck and Esther. Mr. and Mrs.
Catherine McAdam and friend of
tax lBW
law.
| Est. Nora Bronsod. dec d. Petition jjjoujjjei- of poor, tattered and lorn Frank Shriber. Hazel and friend Saginaw visited Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
1 for Admr. filed, waiver of notice Mr HearsU There's a sympathetic and Mr. and Mrs. Leo Barry and Van Syckle over Uie week end.
[filed, order appointing Admr. en- ftfUow to mourn wllh
ton.
Mr. and Mrs. J. w. Shaffer and
tered. bond of Admr. filed, letters of (
son. Homer, of Otsego visited Mrs.
; Or there is Alfred Sloan. Jr., who
"What is bought is cheaper than
• administration issued.
Millie Flury Monday and called on
says the business skies are clouded a gift."—Cervantes.
Mr- and Mrs. Cha*. Harrington.
and lhe future of lhe government's
During lhe past week Arthur
| credit looks dark and then an­
Webb of Battle Creek. Opa| of Gull
nounces the erection of a five mil­
lake and Clayton of Yankee Bprings
-DEMOCRAT—
lion dollar assembly plant in New
called
on Mr. and Mra. Chas. Har­
Jersey for hU company, and governrington and family. ,
I .continued Irnnt p.rt 1. aee. at I “'“'I
U» ntentute todlator
Mr. and Mrs. Bordy Rowlader and
'
___________ —-------------- .------ | of government credit, reach an all
family
spent
Thursday evening
to lhe working classes becatfce it' time high.
with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Marlin of
■ does not permit the big corporations ’ If Landon can say "cockeyed" we
Dimondale.
! to lay up extra money for plant im- can certainly say -phooey," Mr.
Bordy Rowlader and family at­
provement. etc.
Sloan knows. If he knows anything,
tended the Golden and Phillips fam­
. Gov Landon hasn't studied the thal his company wouldn't be build­
ily reunion at Morgan Park Monday.
law very carefully. The law does ing the largest assembly plant In the
world
if
the
business
skies
were
permit lhe accumulation of reason- -—'■* “
— -M— ——
MIDDLEVILLE.
able surpluses. Il does not permit cloudy. NOR WOULD HIS COM­
Fred Brog cut his finger badly on
BUS DEPOT AT
the withdrawal from circulation of PANY CONTINUE TO INVEST
Wednesday when working Uie but­
the vast amounts of money which ITS SURPLUS FUNDS IN GOV­
ter cutter.
have been piled up as surplus tn the ERNMENT BONDS IF THE GOV­
Tlie street commission started
post by such concerns as General ERNMENTS CREDIT WAS AT
work on Sherman St. Thursday
Motors. United Slates Steel. Ameri­ ALL IN DANGER.
morning by grading and It is hoped
Mr. Sloan's acts belle his words.
can Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co., and
that It will receive a heavy coaUng
These big boys talk a lot but they
Uie like.
of gravel before long.
Phone
’t say
anything.
The argument Is used Usal Ifdon
-----------. —
---------- They
. can't, beCharles H. Whitmore and wife
Giese concerns had not had these i cause they know the purpose of the
2137
left Thursday P. M. for their home
big surpluses they could not have I tax bills Is TO ACCOMPLISH A
In Muskegon to be ready for their
DISTRIBUTION OF
| survived the depression. Well. Gen-1 GREATER
school duties on Tuesday after a
few days spent with lhe former's
parents. Mr. and Mrs O. D. Whit­
more.
The barn on the late H. J. Chap­
man place on Arlington St. ts being
torn down by Wm. Crldler. who will
use the matertai in a building on
his farm.
Mrs. John Winger has moved into
Miss cook's house on Arlington
street.
Mrs. Lottie Crldler entertained
l one of the Ladles' Aid circles of the
I M. E chureh on Thursday. An inj teresting playlet was part of lhe
program.
[
Mr. and Mra. Fred Granger and
| Herbert‘Thorpe left Friday evening
Apparently. Hollywood's young- for the Straits. They returned by
'. the scenic route down Lake Michi­
gan. making
naming tome
some stops with
wiin menus
friends
big way.
As evidence. Darla
y m
ranana,
along the way. gelling home MonHood and “Spanky"
M Yarland.
youthful I day evening.
two ot filmland's more
r
wn anjoylog a 1
n seemed good to see the happy
। «--------- «--------- ,—. ctjiidrfn on llu.tr

Court News

"I'm leaving my car
at Home this trip!
I've Found Bus Trav­
el Costs Less than
Driving ... and I en­
joy the ride so much
more when I don't
have to Watch thc
Rood Every Minute.

I’OLITCIAL NOTES

Tee for Two

'.jBJ

TRIO CAFE

FRIGIDAIRE-^’METER-MISER
GIVES TDD MORE RUlUMBiWT

session on the links.

Maverick Blaze Defies Control

This remaraable photograph shows a wild oil well fire In full blaze
after defying efforts of veteran Texas oil fire fighters to bring It
under control. The well caught fire soon after It was "brought in"
near Silsbee. Texas. This picture was taken after the fire had
burned 10 days

Oratorio and Opera Both
Were Started in Italy
to music which, like opera, requires
soloists, chorus and full orchestra
for Its performsnce. but dispenses
with the theatrical adjuncts of
scenery, costumes and acting. The
modern oratorio ami opera both
were originated in Italy, about 1000.
says a writer In the Philadelphia
Inquirer, and were originally Indis­
tinguishable from each other, ex-

tetor, 1700. partlciilari, In On- .
uany. the oratorio began to be clear-j
ly different from the opera, in the .
rellnqulshment of dramatic action
and nccesaorles. and came lo belong eaenttaliy to the class of con- [
cert music, with more or less of i
lhe qualities of church music. The
true oratorio style has been ileveldevel­
oped more remarkably In Germany
and England rather than France
or Italy.
The first and most universal sub­
ject for oratorios wns the Passion
and the greatest music Is that of
Bach's “I'asalon According to St
Matthew," written for service on
Good Friday. 1TJ0. In England lhe
treated epics as
. works of Handel ....
subjects for oratorios,

BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY

Come in - See the PROOF with your own eyes !

i

THE NEW FRIGIDAIRE
IS MUCH WIDER, ROOMIER
At the left is the new Frigidsire.. .at thc
right another refrigerator •/ tbe sesM

ft

t

the new Frigidsire is, how much more
accessible! It brings all the shelf space
out front. No crowding, or awkward pok­
ing into dark corners. Not a square inch
is wasted. Every dish of food, every pack-

UCTION SALE!

As I have decided to quit farming, I will have an auction
sale at my farm, located six miles north of Lacey or three miles
south of Reid's oil station, on

TUESDAY, SEPT. 15th
SALE TO BEGIN AT ONE O'CLOCK. I Offer the Following
HORSE AND CATTLE.

Up to 42

Horse, weight about 1300 lbs.

more space in

Jersey heifer, 2 yrs. old, fresh time of

front, easily
reached

J

Heifer, bred Aug. 2.

.

I

HOGS AND SHEEP.

No other refrigerator has all these advantages

15 thoroughbred Du roc shoots, weight
about 150 lbs.
Male hog. (
Brood sow, year old.
15 ewes. 15 lambs. Buck.

... gifts so much mon for so Unit monty! fajf
• Come ia and sec PROOF that this wider, roomier
“refrigerated pantry” ends groping in comers...
gives more usable shelf space for every size and
shape package. Sec how frozen trays come loose
at the touch of a finger, with Frigidsire's exclusive
Automatic In-Tray Release. How a whole meal can
be carried to the able at one trip, in tbe Portable
Utility Shelf How the Pull-Width Sliding Sbelva
bring everything right out before you!
Only Frigidaire gives you all these advantages
. . . and dozens more that save you work and
time. Prove to yourself their greater usability. And
see tbe PROOF that Frigidaire meets ALL FIVE Standards for Refrigerator Buy­
ing. You 11 agree it gives more for thc money than you ever thought possible!

CHICKENS.
Some Barred Rock hena.

$845°

HAY AND GRAIN
About 16 acres com in shock.
Quantity timothy hay.
Clover and alfalfa hay. -.

PHONE 2303

FARM TOOLS.
McCormick binder, 7-ft. cut.
John Deere hay loader.
Side delivery rake.
Oliver riding plow, No. 83.
Cale com planter. Empire drill.
2 Cale cultivators, 2-horse.
One-horse cultivator.
I. H. C. manure spreader.
Spike drag. Feed grinder.
Lumber wagon. 2 flat racks.
Top box. Koller. Sleighs.
Landing chutes. Stoneboot.
Float. Fanning mill.
Emery grinder. Stock tank.
Sap pails and spiles.
uantity potato crates. Cates.
og coops. Slats for crates.
Sheep rocks. Hoy rope.
Three-horse evener.
Economy King cream separator.
Other articles too numerous to men­
tion.

S

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. No goods removed until set­
tled for.
।

Consumers Power Company
HASTINGS,
HASTINGS,MICHIGAN
MICHIGAN

L C. SNYDER, Propr
Henry Flannery, Auctioneer.

HEi
FC

E. E. Gray, Clerk.

In .Denmark divorce by mutual
consent goes back to the Seven­
teenth century.

“You can't reform some people,”
said Uncle Eben. "Dey gits so dey
enjoys yoh eloquence in try In' to
persuade 'em.”

WHY EXPERIMENT?
Two years ago. after a vigorous
campaign during which I wrote and

,„a ln oppralnon
N,w
you tltclrt me by a ma­
Jorily of 13.1X10 and naturally I assumctl thal you desired that the
promises made during lhe qampalgn be kept and this was done,
So far, nd particular fault hes
been found nor criticism offered ex­
&lt;*J’t by Uiat group which was displeased becau.se I could not disre­
gard my promhex lo you. accept the
orders of Dr Townsend, and agree
to vote for a two per cent traruaction tax which. In effect, meant a
sales tax of from ten to thirty per
cent imposed upon all lhe necessi ­
ties of life, thus increasing your cost
of living.
Advantage Ls being taken of this
dissatisfaction. Although Governor
Brucker. Senator couzens. and the
Democratic candidates for U. S.
Senator are opposed to UiLs plan,
no organized criticism is made of
any, but I am now being opposed
by a candidate who promises a S200
per month pension, a promise which
he should know can never be ful­
filled. He is using this organiza­
tion for his own political advance­
ment. Do you want a rubber stamp
Congressman and the rubber stamp
in the control of a man who does
not even live In lhe stale?
Another candidate, who is Uie
present head of the House of David,
a pleasant gentleman, a former Cal­
ifornia county Judge, and a nun of
business experience, has entered Uie
field, but. and the thought which
I wish to convey to you is this:
You have a representative who
has kept the faith. I am sure Uiat
1 you will concede that I have been
conscientious, that I have been In­
dustrious. and no one doubts my
sincerity or frankness. So. if you
believe in economy in government.
I In a return to Congress of the pow­
er to coin money and to fix its val­
ue: If you'believe that monopoly
sixould be prohibited, that we should
once more return to those principles
I of government enunciated by our
forefathers and embodied in the
Declaration of Inde[&gt;endence and In
lhe Constitution, let me have your
support. ------------------------------------------ If you believe in what has been
the American form of government,
under which our NaUon has grown
In spite of all abuses, notwithstand­
ing the selfishness and greed of
powerful politicians, into a land
where has been the home of the
oppressed and the persecuted and
which once again, freed of the New
Deal experimenters, will become, the
land of opportunity, give me your
support, not only on election day,
but from now until the primary on
September 15 and then cm to No-

The New Deal has given you ex­
periments. Result—an ovrrwhelm। inr debt and a disregard of your
1 rights. ’ You need not experiment,
i You know what I represent and
what I will do. The present Is no
■ time for you to experiment when
selecting a representative. Let me
at the primary have a vote which
will encourage our party workers
and make Uie November task easle.'.
From now until the primary day
take the message to your friends
and acquaintances, for upon you
depends the result
Blncereiy.

CLARE E. HOFFMAN.
Republican Candidate for Congress,
Fourth District of Michigan;
—Political Adv.
.

GONE I—THE HIGH COST
OF STOMACH TROUBLE

Don't pay u.» lo BOO tor nIM
from stomach pains. Indigestion
hyperacidity. Try Dr. Emil’s Adla
Tablet*—3 weeks' treatment only |1.
Belief or your money back. Reed's
Drug Store, and B A. Ly Barker,
-nniMtnt _

8)1

'Mi
In
or

la

Hl
by

I

�Paul. Mn.
Um R. G
Q. Finnic
Flunk land
George Paul,
— .ment preparatory to change ot lo- suited &gt;s foilova
cation.
sun u»
Mrs Harold Logan of HUUngs

WOODLAND.

Mr. and Mrs. George Parrott and
HEALTH EXAMS PLANNED family
spent Sunday and Monday
Mr. and Mn. Chas. Row
Grand Rapids were live sues
FOR NEXT TWO MONTHS •I Flint.

Tuesday evening. Dr. and Mrs. R.

Mrs Marion Doster began teach­

G. Finnic will entertain the bridal
Mr. and Mn. Orville Flock enter­ Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Faul at*.— party including. Miss Louise Hilbert. ing at the Eagle school this week.'
The welcome
and
wonderful
tained relatives from Indiana over Saddlebag lake cottage over' the Don Shorno, Mrs Lawrence Hilbert

Barry Oo. Health Unit Gives
Advice on Annual Check­
Up for Pupils
on Monday.
Tbe following Information issued
by the Barry county Health Depart­
ment and lhe Michigan Medical So­
ciety is appropriate at tills Ume.
Il is planned lo have all children,
entering school for lhe first time
and al) eighth grade pupils given a
physical examination during Uw
next two months. The plan this year
deviates from previous years in thal
thc examinations will take place al
the family physician's office rather
Hum at school.
A child's success in school Is in
many ways dependent on his gen­
eral state of health. Surveys show
•that the backward child often is
found lo liave one or more defects—
usually remediable—which impede
both his mental- and physical devel­
opment.
A thorough Inventory of the
health of a child who is beginning
the school year h more important
Chan thc clothing, books and equip­
ment necessary for his admission.
Ail defects mould be checked, and
corrected as far as possible before
tiie child enters school so he will
not be handicapped in his work.
A child with bad eyes will not be
able to see what Is going on. and If
he tries, he may have a bad head­
ache. A child with Impaired hearing
will not understand the teacher's
explanations and may become tiie
schoolroom "dunce." A child with a
bad nose cannot, concentrate well.
Chronically diseased tonsils nnd
adenoids often make the child sus­
ceptible lo more contagious diseases
than lhe average. Bad teeth and thc
"gulping** of unchcwcd food will im­
pair digestion and the growth of a
child. Ill-fitting shoes may prac­
tically cripple thc child.
An annual physical examination
ns recommended by all modem med­
ical agencies, for children and
adults alike, will uncover defects in
thc early stages, permit Uieir correc­
tion before serious consequences re­
sult. and thus keep thc person nt
for Ills work.
The child of today is the man of
tomorrow, proper medical attention
of these developing bodies now will
insure a sturdy race of men and
women who can take over nnd
efficiently perform lhe tasks of this
work! when their turn comes.

NASHVILLE.
Miss Electa Fumlss of Battle
Creek sixmt the week end with her
sister, Miss Minnie Fumlss.
Mrs. Ralph Wetherbee. Miss Floy
Sheldon nnd Mrs. Gall Lykins were
al Battle Creek Thursday. •
.
Adolph Dausc visited friends in
Detroit last week.
Miss Doris Betts and Miss Ann
Mayo entered Davenport's Business
Institute in Grand Rapids Tuesday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Porter Kinnc called
on their daughter. Mrs. Ray Morgnntluder al Pennock hospital Sun­
il ay.
Tom Hoisington was in Jackson
Labor Dny.
Dr. S. M. Fowler of Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry James of Has­
tings. Mr. and Mrs. Gail Lykins
. and mmu spent Sunday at Stuart
take.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Meredith and
ion Judy of Newcastle. Ind., spent
a few days tlie first of the week
with Mr and Mrs. Ottlc Lykins.
Tiie Clover Leaf Club was de­
lightfully entertained Friday night
by Mrs. C. A. Biggs assisted by Mrs.
Fred Warner. After the business
meeting several games were played
after which dainty refreshmenu
Jere served. Mrs. William Justus
111 entertain the October meeting
nt her home near Kalamo.

Mrs. Glenn England entertained
eight couples with a weenie roast and,
bridge party al her cottage, Sleepy
Hollow, at Saddlebag lake Thursday
evening. High scores were woh by
Mrs. Robert Finnic and Karl C.
Faul Out of town guests were Dr.
and Mrs. R. G- Finnic of Hastings
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Finnic of
I/iulsvilie. Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Vere Miller of Chi­
cago spent the week end with Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Leffler and attend­
ed the Hutchinson reunion. Mrs.
Miller Is planning to slay two weeks.
Mrs. Luella Earle of Sacramento.
Cal., who is visiting her sister, Mrs.
E. J. Sheldon, has been ill for lhe

and daughters, Lorena and Ellen.
Mr. and Mn. E. O Shorno. Mr. and
Mn. J. V. Hilbert and BlrdslU Holly.

Ha lings
slwweri have held back tbe. Corn
crop allowing lhe wheat teed beds to Rally at the
ed’their
be fitted and nearly everyone list
Cayns. and
Serving will
the ground ready for drilling.
day.
1
Tlie Union cemetery circle meet­
ing scheduled for Wednesday. Sep­
closed last'
tember 0. has been postponed due
Sun
da
Will Hydg
-J mic
to
lhe Barry
Dauy county
luuuv fair.
mu.
.—
.
.
The Bullis school is in session 1 &lt;UI‘1 Mr. and Mrs. O. D. FUactl;
U»Ctt; Who
who
with Miss Frances DeMott of Has- nave
have been attending, returned name.
home.
Rev.
Van
Doren
has
been
returned
Ung* as teacher.
Mrs. Frank Van Syckie, who has for tho year, there being only tix
been in poor health this summer has minister* who were (hanged from
their location* of last year.
Mr. and Mr*. Heber Foster and
showing some improvement.
family visited in Ohio Saturday and
attending the conference -at Gull attended the Fozter reunion 'in Ad­
lake, called on his brother. Clayton rian Sunday.
Case. Monday night. Rev. Case was
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Huttqp of
returned to Kinde for his eighth Walled Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
year.
McCoy of Grand Rapids visited
Mrs. Jessie Norris has been spend­ Sunday at lhe Will Hyde's.
ing the past week at the home of
Mr. and. Mr*. H. J. Wilcox. Mr.
her son, Clare Norris and family, and Mrs. Vem Hawblitz motored to
while Mrs Tenn Buxton, who stays tlie lake shore Wednesday nnd
with her. is attending camp meet­ brought home some peadhes.
ing at Gladwin.
Those from this district attending
Harold Case, who has been affil­ Hastings High school arc Duane
iated with lhe general merchandise and Elaine Day. Alberta and Ken­
store of his brother. Clayton Case. neth McClelland. Clara Gillett.
Phono
ot Lacey has resigned the work and Dorothy Mac Potter. Martin's busj
will locate on a farm Gordon Lee of
thc Bullis district will succeed him
and is in training.
The recent election of officers at
thc Briggs Ladles' Aid meeting re-

Laurel Chapter No. 31 O. E/ 8.
met Tuesday night at thc Temple
EAST GUN LAKE*
for its regular meeting. A pot luck
Tuesday Mrs. Kenneth Andrew of
supper wm served with initiatory
Shelbyville spent the day with her
following.
grandparents, Mr. and Mn. Wm.
Funeral services for Mrs. Fred
Crawford.
Noban were field Thursday after­
Miss Jean Schumn of Chicago
noon at two o'clock. She had been
returned home Monday after spend­
in' lhe hospital eleven weeks in a
ing two weeks in tiie Null home.
diabetic coma. She leave* her hus­
Mrs. Null accompanied her lo Kal­
band and one son, Ray. of Kalamo
amazoo.
Rev. Harley Townsend conducted
Sunday several of his friends
the service; Mrs. Lykins sang. Bur­
helped little William Null celebrate
ial wasdn Lakeview cemetery.
his tenth blrlhady.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Dalhauser
Mrs. Willism Crawford spent Fri­
are visiting relatives in Chicago.
day night at the William Crons'
The Garden Club met Tuesday
Mrs. C. B Benham of Hastings U
afternoon al the home of Mrs. C. spending a few days with her home near Middleville.
A. Biggs. Mrs. Stella Purchia gave daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs,
Mr. and Mrs. Wolter Dcrdyne of
Pittsburgh arc spending a few days
the lesson.
Karl C. Paul.
Oscar Lucas of Chicago is the with lhe latter's parents, Mr. and
Thursday attending Uie funeral of guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mrs. J. Derdyne.
Herbert DeWayne Scrven. son of Faul. He is planning to stay until
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Serven.
ASSYRIA.
the middle of September.
The Philathca class met Friday
Tlie Burrough school, aside from
The Standard Bearers arc being
night in their class room. Hostesses entertained _
____ ,
Monday
evening
______
. by being painted and decorated, has a
were Mrs. Hah Thrun. Mra. Sarah their leader, Mrs. Rena Culler. This new piano, blackboards and up-loPoulsen and Mrs Agnes Weeks.
u tiie first meeting of the new year. date maps. Tlie iieclograph first in
Mrs. E. B. Smith spent last week
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Parker of use last year, |&gt;roved very useful.
with Mr. and Mrs. Merle Smith al Lansing visited her parents, Mr. and MUs Arabelle Bivens is lhe teacher.
Belmont
Silas Gaskill, due to failing
Mrs. T- W Thompson, over the week
Tiie firemen enjoyed their chick­ end. On Monday they visited rela­ health, is closing out his farm equipen supper Wednesday night al thc tives in Greenville.
Masonic Temple. There were fitly
Thc first meeting of the Woodland
I present. Guests were Mr. and Mn. Women's Study club will be held In
George Marshall and Mr. and Mrs. the schoolhouse Tuesday evening al
Vance Burlier of Vermontville. Mr. 8:00. Dean E Davenport will be thc
Barber is the fire chief there.
speaker
The subject of his talk
•The motion picture has pro­ will be "Woodland." especially as he
Worn- ;
gressed lo a point where it must be knew it in pioneer times.. Thc "
Within a few days thc Primary will be over. Thc campaigns for
oil
’
s
Club
have chosen ’*7 or their
considered among tho arLs."—Har­
County Offices have been friendly and "clean.” Whether I am
ran" begin
begin-­
study tills year "Michigan"
old Lloyd.
nominated or defeated 1 will always appreciate thc fairness of my
ning with the study of Woodland In
opponent
and the sincerity of my frtcrtds. I wish to thank all who
October Barry county will be lhe
arc giving me their support for this important County Oflicc.
subject and then every month some
If nominated and elected I promise jlou three things unreserved­
phase of Michigan history will be
studied, ending at thc close of the I
ly: FIRST—Strict compliance with thc Laws of Uier State of
club year with a pageant, cclebral- i
Michigan, for in no other way can the people of this community
ing the Woodland centennial.
&lt;
obtain the full benefits which the Legislature intended under
Mrs. Lenorc Srackargast. Mrs. Dell I
such statutes as. for example. Thc Soldiers' Relief Act and The
I Srackargasl. and Harold Srackar- I
Mothers' Pension Law. SECOND—That I will devote the train­
gast of Galesburg were callers at the
ing which 24 years of active law-practice has brought me to thc
home of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Sheldon ।
.’.elution of your probate problems. II Michigan law gives you
Friday afternoon.
what you ask in Probate Court I'll gel it for you; if It does not
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Giddings and ,
111 open thc book and show you why you cannot have it; and then
daughter. Ruth, and Mrs. John Velte
help you lo obtain the next best thing. Moreover, both my assist­
left for their home in Tawas City I
ant and I will do it with a smile, gladly. THIRD—That I will,
after spending the summer months
practice RIGID ECONOMY. I assure thc Voters that every item
in Woodland.
of EXPENSE which docs not bring definite benefit lo tlie TAX­
Miss Dorothy Dell and Miss Vir- i
PAYERS OF BARRY COUNTY will be eliminated.
ginla Faul entertained forty guests j
I am 40 years old, bom in Michigan, admitted to lhe practice
at thc latter's home Saturday eve­
of law in 191’4. married the same year. I have a son and a daugh­
ning with a miscellaneous showqr in I
ter who graduated from Hastings High fechool last Spring; have
I honor of Miss Louise Hilbert, whose I
| marriage to Don shorno will occur j
lived in Barry County aa my chosen home since 19'28. I served you
for four year* as Prosecutor and am now acting as Circuit Court
ion Sunday at 4:00 P. M. September
Commissioner.
13 at the Methodist church. The
rooms wei’e decorated with lovely I
May 1 respectfully ask for your support on next Tuesday?
bouquets of asters and zinnias.1

Sdv
Remodel! Repair!

See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co

BREAD

A FINAL WORD

BAKED BYA£flfi

Typical Huck Finn

Dainty refreshments were served by
the hostesses assisted by Miss Polly­
anna England and Miss Katherine
Spindler. Thc guest of honor was
the recipient of many beautiful and
practical gifts. Out of town guests
were Mrs. Lloyd Valentine. Mrs.

2-lb. Loaf
Whit*

Sliced
WHIM tlGNOMY Rt/lH

Macaroni
or SPAGHETTI

&gt;». 25c

Sincerely,

LAURENCE E. BARNETT
A LAWYER FOR PROBATE JUDGE"

Iona, Prepared

Acaorted
3
Jello
Noodles
Rajah Salad Dressing
Sandwich Spread
Post Bran Flakes
Mello Wheat

Spaghetti

3“25c
Winner ot a national contest.
Bill Ryerson, above, I3-ycarold Atlantic City, N. J., higftx
school student, was named to­
day's "moit typical Huckle­
berry Finn" by judges at Atlan­
tic City. As victor, Bill re­
ceived
thc
Traymore-Mark
Twain memorial trophy which
he holds in this picture. Bill
won his title from 150 other
freckle-faced youths.

snuui

Sultana

Peanut Butter
2-lb.

25c

ATTENTION

Rolled Oats

FARMERS

xi8c

When you come to the Fair Friday
or Saturday, bring your gallon can
and take home a gallon of

FLY SPRAY

Tomato or Vegetable

Cold? Throw on another blanket. Simple,isn't it? But

Soup

not so simple when it comes to your house. You can

hove your home snug for winter, too, but don't wait

GUARANTEED

75c

Regular Price, $1.00 a gallon
The Best Fly Spray on the market
Now is the time that flies
are the worst.
REMEMBER

too long. Start now to have those doors checked, those
windows tightened, to fix up that extra room, put on

that new roof ... all those things that need attention.
Have them fixed now and your home will be SNUG I
Remember last winter and be prepared.

The Home

Lumber Company is ready to help you. Just call and

5

Baker's or Hershey'

'i/pfant

Cocoa

We carry a complete line of building materials.

Call. Phone or Write

THE HOME LUMBER CO
HASTINGS "The Home Lumber Co. BuUdi Home.” PHONE 2276

Extracts
Sardines
Prunes
Fruit Jars
Jelly Glasses
Ajax Laundry Soap 10
Super Suds
Electric Bulbs
8 o'clock Coffee 1
Red Circle Coffee
Bokar Coffee

25c Bananas

let them know what you need, and they will send an

expert workman and the best of materials for the job.

Tomato Juice
Pineapple Juice
Apple Butter

Pork and Beans

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

The Best Fly Spray for 75 cents—
You furnish your can

PHONE

10

Today’s Biggott Broad Valval

Sunnyfield
Quick or Regular.

J7u ■

2515

2

Peaches 5Cabbage ; j

25c Onions

17
19

21
61c
3Bc
19c

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, l&amp;M

[CAL NOTES

! REVISE THE CONSTITUTION of! finely conceived, so free front poll-

sweet Innocent little pastime.

Kan Uli because the supreme court Ues. so practical that even Roosevelt

Yes—Landon's six fellow gover­
nors criticized his acceptance speech

Any active administration is like-.’Meily to have a small number of its | SINCE THEN THE MEASURE
uUnued from page 1. Sec. 21
By way of explanation, however—&gt; measures declared unconstitutional. ■, HAS PROVED OF SUCH OUTBENEFIT
Roca Doggie it this bridge didn't ALL SIX OF THEM WERE DEM- But when a chief execullve goes In STANDING
I tor unconstitutional measures on a , KOO8EVELT. HIMSELF, IS TRY­
have any roads leading to it; didn't GCRATS'
u_,——
i. hu
, Bm
,„n |.
It has aiwayi been our impression.' _
whcl^ale
scale
like
«•**»*•*
u do. ; ING TO CLAIM CREDIT FOR IT!
»vsn have any approaches specified
thh |
. . .
in tiie plans! So there It stands, an too. that there were forty-eight .in&lt;- "
thr nrrslConcensus of opinion seems to be
elaborate. Impressive looking center rtaiea in the Union; not seven. Thus i»
ih&gt;«- -rm
this entire group,
group. the only dent take*
take, the altitude
atUtoile that:
that. I m
------------ ---------------------- section that can’t be reached from out of tiih
,l.o attempted a criliclsni of right, the supreme court, ia wrong. of president Roosevelt is an admiseither bunk!
rno attempico a monmi m
-uurrme court."
h.
th.
But money was spent—and the ' Ot’RATS SPCer
I LANDON RECOGNIZES THAT (imnds of his vigorous young opponpeople of that region were given a !
nf thLs hluhlv mrtban AUTHORITY TO CHANGE THE, rnl, Wnber itrucker. In fact almost
DiooKntary glow of typical New,I n-vn-tral'wcle
the renmr’ks of Got-1 CONSTITUTION MUST COME । concurrent with his announcement.
.Dea! "novocalne prosperity."
___________ _______
FROM THE PEOPLE. ROOSEVELT Mr. couzens had mailed throughout
Probably the most expert bit of cmor Green of Rluxle island; “He HAS EXHIBITED A DESIRE TO 1 llle aUtc tl little booklet proclaimfV0*4 wtpaialve. happened when to speak. He was even a largrr DEAL
ahministratiON CAN
and what
n consistent
e&lt;m&lt;ku-nt oppo
nnnn.­
ADMINISTRATION
CAN ।. been and
what a
Harry Hopkins
.when
he finished
rtopKim began
ocean to
io wonder
wonurrj, question mark
n;
_
CHANGE THE CONSTITUTION nent of New Deal extravagance.
where the name “Uncle Sam" orlg- speaking."
TO SUIT ITSELF.
। Herewith arc direct quotations from
inaled. So he unleashed a small
How dashing! How utterly origl-1
• • •
j the booklet:
army of Bbondogglers to find out. nal! This k the same old bromide
Yes. the banking situation wm in a । Qn page 1(j under heading "SenFrom Maine to California these thal has been used by politicians of
hcuuu pur-ucu
M&gt;» alleged
aumeu 100.w- till
uubreeds
u.cvu,from time
v....rimmemorial!
.. ...
bad way four years ago-just as bad atorco^ns Always a Stalwart Realeuths
pursued this
ycsr-old
1 as the drouth stricken regions are pUbiican."lhe bookletsays:
year-old -mystery."
-mystery." After
After weeks
weeks and
and j, I'If“that
' ’ i«“the‘ best
‘ thal Governor
'
-weeks of research'his corps of os- Green can do it is a pretty evident igrlcullurally todaj. The drouth has'
........................
...
•■Throughout
his career .In public
BktanU turned in their reports— admission that downIn his heart he descended on Us for reasons beyond, ] life and in private life. Senator
and all gave the same answer. The couldn't find anything
very wrong the control of man; likewise tlie; I Couzens has voted the Republican
. Urm'
.....in"'the"
..
. * ’of. wiih"the
... .. -Landon'ipi^h.
■.............. ■
...r.rl/1 crisis
rrl. I.: which
tt-blrll caused
ralMJ-n our
CHIT finan“nri?naied
“.bra‘ln
'
' ’ world
ticket."
Bamuel Wlbon. who operated a Horner of Illinois did a little bit ’ clal Institutions to wobble was just
On page 19 he Ls described as
slaughter house at Trov. N Y.
। better. He claims that not leas than as much beyond human control xs ,.j
• LEADING THE FIGHT AGAINST
Il didn’t make any difference that eight statutes enacted during Lan- ( the weather.
THE AUTOCRATIC NEW DEAL.
this Information had already been 1 don’s administration have been de- ; Four years ago. Herbert Hoover. , POWERS IN THE GIGANTIC AP­
- -------- -u_ «--------....----------- ,, Clan-d unconstitutional by the Kan- then president invited Candidate; PROPRIATION BILL FOR WORK
j Franklin Roosevelt to talk over J RELIEF. IT WAS SENATOR COUZWashington Correspondent of the ras Supreme Court."
, Weill so What!
questions and problems concerning , ENS WHO LED THE FIGHT
I Governor Landon did not sponsor the financial crisis.
AGAINST THE NEW DEAL TAX
Rco-cvclt refused lo co-operate.
Olua
lnl 1930 SESSION OF
which eould have been purchased for these laws AFTER they had been
BILL, IN THE
; diclayed unconstitutional: he never 1 Currently. President Roosevelt CONGRESS "
the Capital!
I1 ordered
ordered Ills legislature to disregard ‘ asked Candidate
candidate All
Alf M. Landon to a !: ’“rhe above
— extracts are sufficient
Hr nurstinn
rmislltutlntinlitv in i conference fnr
What! Spend only a mere dollar 1 Ithe
question nf
of constitutionality
for Inkini.
taking nil
up nrnliletns
problems \0 ,|10W that at the beginning of
—
vn.i can
ran spend
ciwmrl thousands!
thaiioinrlcI
I tukxslliu
alnlnv tn
Senator COUZens COtlSldpassing lawn*
laws; he
Ire did
did lin!
not TRY
TRY to
to bebe- pertaining
to the
the drouth
drouth reelnn.
regioin__
when you
ALFRED LANDON ACCEPTED cred himselfTHAT'S NO WAY TO PLAY little the supreme court for declarBOONDOGGLE!
i pig
ing tnese
these measures ui.consuiuuoiiai;
unconstitutional; AND
and HAS GIVEN WHOLE
WHOLE HKART-i
HEART- ,
Yes indeed! Boon Daggle is a I he did not go about threatening to gp cO-OPERATION THUS SHOW-|
n„ rj,....... ..
INO HIS LOYAL AMERICANISM | deal.
HIS DESIRE 1X3 SERVE HIS' yci_ on)y three days later he re­
, COUNTRY RISES ABOVE HIS verses himself
completely and
PARTY-OR-HIS PERSONAL AM-1 comes out as astrong New Deal ally.
BITIONS.
| Why?
Roosevelt Is the Hiller by com- I Concensus of opinion Ls that he
■ partain!
1 knew he faced defeat for renoinlI nation and made thLs move to avoid
Nothing has done more to restore the disgrace of losing to a young
confidence in the banks of this opponent. A minority opinion seems
। country than lhe Federal Deposit | to be thal as a reward for his ”enInsurance Act—And this measure dorsement" he has been promised a
' was conceived by Senator Arthur cabinet post!
i Vandenberg
of Michigan
nnd, Certain it b that Mr. couzens*ac' through his oWn initiative was Hon has puzzled those who know
1 forced through congress AGAINST. him besf and undermined the faith
। THE EXPRESS COMMAND OF of those who have always admired
| ROOSEVELT!
; Ills frank, straightforward political
' Vandenberg's measure was so "fearlessness."

13 Plate Battery
•

SO

+

Exchange. Price

Support THOMAS READ
for

THE HEW

-■

LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
Primaries Sept. 15

STANDARD

REPUBLICAN TICKET

'MICHIGAN NEEDS THOMAS READ'

mu

*7-45
7.75
8.20

5.25-18.
5.50-17.
5.50-19.

•9.75
10.70
11.20

FOR TRUCKS AND DUIES
6.50-20. 21.95 8.25-20. 49.30
7.00-20. 29.20 9.00-20 CO.75
7.50-20. 35.20 19.75-20. 79-35

When you buy thc new
Firestone Standard, you save
five ways — better raw
materials, buying at source
of supply, more efficient

production and more economical distribution. All of these
ravings are passed on lo you iu thc greatest tire value you have
ever known.
Never before have you seen so much tire for thc money and
every tire carries the Firestone name and guarantee, which is
your assurance of greater non-skid efficiency, greater blowout
protection and longer mileage. It is almost unbelievable that
you could buy so much tire for so little money!
Don't delay. Get your new set of Firestone Standard Tires
now — a fresh supply just received. Once you see this new tire
you will agree that it is thc greatest tire value ever offered at
today's low prices.

s 4.40-21;

ROBINHUE PARK.
Last Week's Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Potts of Grand
Rapids and former's sister and hus­
band. daughter and friend from
Canada spent Wednesday night
with Julian Potts and family.
Mbs Lucille Smith began her
nurse's training course at Nichols
Memorial hospital. Battle Creek on
Monday.
Sunday callers of Mrs. John Kol­
lar were Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Skin­
ner of Leighton. Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Potts and pars. Winger and Alice.
. FAIR LAKE.
Howard) Morford of Clair spent
the week, end with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Morford.
.
Mrs. Andrew Adams of Bedford.
Mrs. Shirley Adams of Battle Creek.
Mrs. Rogers of Delton. Arthur
Knowles and Gerald Walling pf
Michigan Center were Sunday visi­
tors at Lotlie colllster's.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pierce and Mr.
and Mrs. Earl McOlocklin attended
lhe McGlocklln family reunion at
Olivet Sunday.
| Mrs. Reuben Webster is very ill
Florence Von Horn of Jackson
spent Sunday with her parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Porter Knowles.

DOUD CORNERS.
Mrs Jessie Norris and Mrs. Clair
Norris and son of Lacey visited at
H. Bergman's Saturday.
Jim Houghtaling of Battle Creek
visited his son. -John Houghtaling.
nnd family oven lhe week end.
Mr. and MrsjRobert McMennLs
visited their son and wife of Clov­
erdale Sunday.
The birthday party for MBs Vcrnlce Austin was well attended, it be• Ing her sixteenth birthday.

S

$£*95
4.50-20.
4.50-21.
4.75-19.

INCE thc startling
announcement of this
new tire sensation, Firestone
Factories have been busy
day and night in an effort to
(urn out sufficient tires for I
the big demand.
t

DUNHAM DISTRICT.

,
।
i
;

]

j

;
:

As Mechanical Cotton Picker Got First

Prank Savage who has lived at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Orson
McIntyre for the past thirty years
passed away Thursday evening, and
was buried In lhe Wilcox cemetery
Sunday. Rev. Rhoades officiating.
Hastings high school students
from this vicinity are Brandt Mc­
Intyre. Beatrice Buxton. Thelma
Sponseller. Ru&amp;rel Donovan. Enid
Cheeseman. Huron Healy. LAVera
Glliasple. Dorothy Mack and Neva
Cole. Nearly all ride on Mr. Mar
tin's school buses.
Harvey Dunkelbergir
of the
Weeks district spent Thursday with
his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
Ball.
•' &lt;
Mrs. Erble Zemke and two chil­
dren of Vermontville were guest*
Wednesday of Mrs. W. H. Cheese­
man.
Bunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Cheeseman were Mr. and Mrs.
Chas. Stanton. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
Stanton. Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Har­
ris and Mr. and Mrs. Royden Eagley who live near Wabascon lake.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Sponseller were Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Sponseller of Hanover. Mr.
and Mrs. Lockle Gillis of Jackson.
Mrs. Harvey Furlong ot Nashville.
Mr and Mrs. Earl Oler. Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Oler from Freeport.

Government experts are seeking to determine whether the Rust brothers’ new mechanical cotton
picker is economically feasible after the
line picked about an acre ot cotton in on hour at Its first
public demonstration. In Stoneville. Miss,
large part ot the cotton. It gathered green leaf
if and tine trash: and several observers believed that this
would reduce value of the pickings enough to offset savings in picking cost The machine is seen.
left above, as it moved through the cotton
his brother. John, is pictured right above, displaying pickings of the machine.
COATS GROVE.
Janet Smith of Delton have been After Sept. 25. they Intend starting
Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Smith were visiting the past week nt H. Wood­ in business of their own in a gen­
eral hardware und accessories store
away on a camping trip over lhe man's.
Geo. Coats and Mr. and Mrs in Swojjton. Ohio.
week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Berle Nash and two
The L. A. S. met with Mr. and Kendall Cools were at Pennock hos­
sons spent Sunday at Mr. and Mrs.
pital
on
Sunday
to
consult
a
spe
­
Mrs. F. C. WUig in Woodland last
Thursday with a good attendance, cialist for Kendall. He gave them Will Nash's near Marshall, all at­
tending
a reunion at Goguac lake
a Lio a good dinner and program. a favorable report on his condition,
on Labor Day.
Plans were made for lhe annual only recovery might be alow.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawblltx wens
chicken supper hi October.
Mr. nnd Mrs. John Woodman
Miss Grace Dawson of Lowell have been entertaining relatives in Battle creek Wednesday.
spent the week end at H. Wood­ from Detroit the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Adams and
man's.
Tlie D. G. T. O. Club will meet Mrs. Sarah OsUoth and Mr. and
Virginia Thompson is working at with Mrs. Orpha Richardson on Mrs. Loyal Lowell and son of near
the Dr. Finnle home in Hustings. _ Wednesday.
mCiuir»ui»y. ocpi.
»o. ucaucr.
Sept. 16.
Lender. num
Nina Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Sterling
S. R. Aldrich of Stroh. Ind. was Townsend. There is to be a Flower Oslrolh and family spent Sunday
a guest speaker at the all-day show and memberi of the Wood­ nt Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ostrolh'3.
meeting lost Sunday. In the mom- Iand club arc invited guests.
Mr. and Mrs. vcme Hawonlz and
iitg the subject was "Contending for
............
■
-began
- - - -her -------Ruth
Woodman
teach­ Mrs. Herbie Wilcox went lo tiie Lake
the Faith" and in the afternton.1 ing work In Coloma last Tuesday.
shore Wednesday to get peaches.
"The Gospel Call." Paul Stewart.
Arthur Todd, manager of our ele­
Mr. and Mrs. Theron Mead nnd
former chaplain at the Ionia Re­ vator here, was married Aug. 29 to baby of Battle Creek were Sunday
formatory. was also a sjx’aker In Miss Lucile French of Ionia coun­ evening dinner guests of Mr. and
the afternoon.
Mrs. Katherine ty. They hove been making a trip Mrs. Leslie Adams.
Clum nnd Mrs. Alice Chase sang to Virginia the jwuit week. Con­
Mrs. Charles Jones of Battle
“Under His Wings."
gratulations.
Creek is spending a few days with
Mr. and Mrs. Clement Jordan and
Mrs. Freda Marshall.
family expect to return from Mich- |
HIGHBANK.
Miss Velma Hoffman, after spend­
Igan City this week.
The Dorcas Aid Society will have ing most ot her vacation with her
Schoo) began last week with Mrs. an afternoon meeting next week parents. Mr. and Mrs. George Hoff­
Flossie Allcrdlng as lhe teacher.
Thursday at the home of Mr. and man. relumed Bunday to Jackson to
Mrs. Floyd Dunnigan and son. .
Mrs Dan Robertson.
Rex. Mrs. Frank Haight nnd Mrs. j About 45 neighbors from here
Tlie Moore school is closed LhW
Harlow Barnum went to Flora. IU.. went to thc home of Mr. and Mr.-). Friday for Children's Day at the
over the week end to visit relatives.
,
Clan- Marshall east of Bellevue to fair.
Corcnne Flegal of Kalamazoo and spend Sunday enjoying a picnic din- i
ncr in lhe yard.
Many Di. of Child Birth
■ Announcement Is made of the
Fifteen thousand women have
! marriage Sunday al Coldwater of; died annually of child birth In the
KJu Claire McDonald, daughter of United Slates for the last 20 yean
Dr. and Mrs. McDonald, of Cold­
This death nite lias remained prac­
water to George Hoffman. Jr., who
has been employed as bookkeeper in tically stationary In spite of im­
Co^lwntcr for the past five years. proved knowledge nnd equipment

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HASTINGS

THIS SPEAKS VOLUMES!
Barry County Unanimously
Endorses Burhans for State
Senator. Van Buren Super­
visors Support Him and Urge
his
Nomination.
Allegdlr
County Citizens and Officials
IN OPEN REVOLT AGAINST
MOSIER FURTHER SEEK­
ING THE 8ENATORSII1P.
Citizens Generally Predict the
Nomination of Burhans. The
Following Reasons Demand
That We’Elect a New Senator:
1.—It's VanBuren's turn. Al­
legan has furnished the Sen­
ator for fourteen years. 2.—
The District needs a belter
REPUBLICAN than is now on
thc job. 3.—Allegan’s prom­
ise if Van Buren furnished a
candidate on whom Van Bu­
ren agreed that they would
support such a candidate
must be fulfilled to Insure
parly harmony. Tills SPEAKS
VOLUMES. It shows that
business men and farm inter­
ests support Burhans for
State Senator.
We quote from the Barry
County signed
statement:
'The above list includes ev­
ery Republican Supervisor in
Barry County, each of whom
believes sincerely that the
party should name a new
FOR
candidate to run for the of­
fice of Stale Senator and that
this man sliould be EARL
BURHANS."
Signed by Supervisors Wil­
liam C. Strain. Assyria: Morse Backus. Barry: Ernest O. Smith,
Ctthleton; John Lipkry. - Hastings? Bernard DcOulia. Hope;
William McCann. Irving; Ferd Stevens. Johnstown: John Mar­
tens. Maple Orove; Albert L. Graves. Yankee Springs; Bert Brown,
Orangcwflle: Olis Boulter. Prairieville; M. W. Sluts, Rutland;
Glen Wotring. Woodland; Clyde Wilcox, Hastings City; Wm. A.
Schader. Pres. Hastings City Council.

Earl L. Burhans

STATE SENATOR

THEN ADD TO TIIE ABOVE STATEMENT THE
FOLLOWING ENDORSEMENT:
“We. tlie undersigned. Join hands with Barry and urge 100'7 loy­
alty to Burhans." Signed by Supervisors Will J. Richards. Pine
Grove; R. B. Fox. Bloomingdale; F. K. Tolles. Geneva: F. A. Dres­
sci. South Haven. 3rd Ward; Lewis W. Shields. South Haven. 2nd
Ward: Harley A. Tromp. South Haven. 1st Ward: Homer Turner,
Porter: John A. Schnake. South Haven: John Krohne. Keeler;
Bela O. Kennedy. Bangor; Earl Passmore,- Waverly; Jay Hlnck-

BURHANS THANKS VOTERS
The Barry' County Committee which has advanced Ills candidacy
locally wishes to thank ypu for the courteous reception of our can­
didate. He has made a clean and dignified campaign. Hb experi­
ence as Prosecutor. State Representative, Assistant Attorney Gen­
eral qualifies him by experience and training for the cffice. He
merits promotion. We urge you to vote. LETS MAKE BUR­
HANS OUR NEXT STATE SENATOR

BARRY COUNTY BURHANS’ COMMITTEE.

�EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

14 PAGES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THUSRDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1936

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

COUNTY REPUBLICANS GIVE HOFFMAN, BURHANS, CLEME
BIG MAJORITIES; DEMOCRATS VOTE SIX TO ONE FOR SWIF
W EVIDENCES
raws

RECORD ENROLLMENT
AT HASTINGS HIGH

Total on Monday Beached
590—An All-Time
High

Myers Wins Sheriff Nomination
Slight
Fair Attendance And Exhibits TEJCHERSHJVE
Exceed Those Of Former Years
NJOYABL" TIME ^ar8^n’ Vlouse Victor In Close Race
TWO TEACHERS

are

BRUCKER BEATS COUZENS;
MURPHY DOWNS GEO. WELSH

Con»«rvativw Estimate Gives Number
REGISTER NEARLY 100
Tiie enrollment of the high school
was increased by eight on Monday
ADDEJJO FACULTY,
PER CENT AT CLEAR
I
Ai 60,000 For Five Days Sept. 8-12
of this week, making the total 590.
LAKE ENCAMPMENT
1i Large Enrollment in High.
tilcl. is an all-Ume record It wm
The 1Mfl Barry County Fair camo every day he Jumped. His; feat wm
\
“
vc
®
dded
to
to
»
close
Saturday
evening
and
In
School and Grades
. . . .— .
.... ... .---- .
. — iu a viuac
i-vcniua uiu ui made more difficult because his left
Fitzgerald Swamps Fitch; Dickinson Wins Impressive
if* high
liloH school
arhnnl list at the
tha beginning
hacrlnnlnv j tbe opinion
_ _____________
_ ...attended
. . ..
the
of those__
who
it foot and ankle were tn a cast due '
SPEAKERS OF
I
PRACTICAL EXAMPLE
This Year
of the third week of Khool- The was one of the most successful in to a broken bone in his heel which
uiTinusi
nrniiTiTimi
New-Deal Senate Nominee
NATIONAL
REPUTATION i 1 On Monday several changes were Lead Over Read; Brown
OF ROAD BUILDING number of out-of-town students in many years
happened when he landed on the
NA
I IUNAL REPUTATION
- ’
~
th* high school and seventh and | A record aUendance marked every roof of the grandstand at Traverse
------------| made at the Central school and one |
Although only an average vote turned out for the primary Tueaday,
Missinterest
- - -the■“results
------ ran high. An •-------------tabulation
.......
— the raH. D. Cook and Family Had . eighth grades is now past the three day Maurice Foreman, secretary, and City to avoid landing in the crowds Discussions of Educational
Educational I new Lacher added to the staff.- ------in
unofficial
gives
| hundred mark, which exceeds by a Harold
who waa ln charge ot kt the fair grounds.
:
I Evida Williams of Battle Creek,w- Publlcans a tot*1 vot* ot 3-038 and tbe Democrats 1.108 for a grand total
l
eisiS?
Wonderful Ride Through | considerable any previous record. I llckcl
estimating conservaliveThe big amount of lhe purses of- .
Subjects
bub
Jecls Were
Were Features
Features
wln acl
assistant to Mias Jt
of 4,136. Republicans of this district ousted Frank Mosier tn ftvor of
| This increased attendance and lhe ly Ulal MOOO
entered the fair fered in lhe horse races attracted a j
'
Scenic Glacier Park
of Program
I McBain, who has been assigned- to
Earl Burhans. while Prank Murphy ran consistently ahead of Goerge
I There were plenty of evidences of ' increased number of foreign atu- &lt;rounds during the five days.
large number of racing horses and 1
rlnnte
— excellent atandlnv
__
.. .
.
Two
hundred
and
five
teachers
of
dents show th
lhe
standing
pits
enrolled.
Miss Williams is a Welsh. A contest of more than local Interest was the victory of CJaro
the races were all Interesting.
A---new
Tlie exhibits were more numerous-------------------------------------------- --- 1
the recent earthquakes in Helena
this
city
and
oUier
Barry
county
of the Hastings high school.
graduate
of
Western
State
TeachI
than in previous years, additional track record was set up in lhe freeespecially in some of the brick build-.
Hoffman over Felix Racette. Thia may or may not be an accurate m—
schools
were
enrolled
at
the
Teach
­
era' College at Kalamazoo.
tents being put up to take care of -------- -------------*—~
------------ -------Ings. Tlie road from Helena north |
___
on ure of the Townsend strength in this district. There is more than ■
lhe overflow. The amusement and 2:07 1*4. beating the previous track ers' Encampment held al Clear lake
to Great Falls follows down the
from Thursday evenmg till Satur­ Monday when ’the Fourth grade possibility that Dr. Racetie did not have the complete confidence at
commercial midways were larger
Missouri river, and it Ls hard to be- I
and more attractive and the stageelation
______ _ paid
______________________
the winner. James Plp- day noon under the auspices ot the from thc Second word school. Miss many Townsend members
Hero Uiat this Is Uie same old Mis­
W. K. Kellogg Foundation. In fact. Grace Edmonds, teacher, was trans- ,
shows belter than usually seen ata-er. an extra twenty-five dollars.
souri that we crossed near Omaha..
*
*
icqunly fairs. A fine display of fireThe winners
‘-------- —in lhe -----races were: Oils registration was almost 100 per ferred to the Central school buildThere seems to be twice as much
Ing as a temporary arrangement.
„
। works completed each evening's en- Wednesday afternoon In lhe pacing । cent, which was a splendid record.
A number of close races featured would look as if Mr. BruckW*
water in it here, and instead of be­
Tlie program (included a series of Mlaa Williams will also assist Miss, the Democratic and Republican pritertalnment.
race Jack Richardson. James Adams.
ing just a muddy trickle through a
discussions,
round
tables
and
lec
­
«
oi.
.
—
a.
or
v
mary
elccllon
t
hu
counly
.
several
i| wioe
h iwirt
I One of the features this year, os Ciiarles Eiderbrook. L. K. Bullen, Ed.
Edmonds with fourth grade work.
wide mudtiv
muddy ben
bed it
it Is
swift anrt
and 1|
clear, and there are a great many °°UNTY TREAB. MAUS RE- I last year, was the drawings for the Randall and Leo Crampton: tn lhe tures regarding!current educational
Arthur Lower, rhr
—Z*~‘ ±
who *taught
tn of the candidates were also victor- Fitzgerald swamped his opponent.
»iiu uinr me u great many
---- ----------------- ----------- — —~
problems all ot^ which were inter­
last year,
wsr added to
I.trout
—. fishermen
----------------------the
. ----------------------------------------------------------------------*• waa
to &gt;ous by landslide margins.
Fitch, by a vote of nearly eight to
along
bends and 0EIVE8
CHECK FOR $45 - I cars donated by Uie merchants and trotting race Mrs. Andy Adams. L. esting and helpful to lhe teachers. Nashville
the High school force K
beginning
his
*“'—*-■For the Republicans, complete re­ one. On thc democratic ticket
rapida We arrived. In Great Palis
7n PRnM
’
I business men of. Hastings and Barry K. Bullen. Andy Adams. James Piper
At eight o'clock Thursday eve­ work yesterday. Wednesday. Mr. । turns for thc county arc as follows;
county. The Hudson terraplane was and Johnson A: Jarvis.
Frank J. Murphy, endorsed by the
around 7:00 P. M., had a barbecue
890.70 FROM STATE
I lunch and sodas, went to a show
- ____
won on Wednesday by George
Thursday afternoon in the 2:18 ning. Dr. George E. Carrolhers from Lower will teach American govern­ Governor:
Roosevelt administration, seems to
RATE IQ Q7 7n DCD
t'Crakes of Hastings; the Plymouth pace: James Piper. W. L. Meyer. J. Ann Arbor spoke on • Reorganization ment. civics and glee club.
Frank D. Fitzgerald—2696.
have trimmed
Mr. George W.
and then to bed.
of
the
High
School
Curricula
to
Because
of
lhe
unusually
large
n«ic
lOqLfUrcn
on
Thursday
by
Lyle
Lancaster.
Roscoe
Conklin
Fitch
—
229.
H. Adams and Lee Tlnk; in lhe 2:20
Great Falls, Montana. Monday.
Meet
lhe
Needs
of
a
Changing
enrollment
It
was
necessary
to
hire
Majority far Fitzgerald—2469.
CENSUS PERSON Hastings. Route 5; lhe Ford on Fri- trot: Thomas Wynn, Charles Lewis.
only recently Joined the democratic
July 13th—2.282 miles from HuUCHJUD rEnaun |day by Bert pa|tner ot Middleville E. M. Stout. Johnson A: Jarvis. School Population." He said that these extra teachers.
Lieutenant-Governor:
tings. Temperature 62 degrees.
today, from every vocation and call­
—
—
Luren D. Dickinson—1922.
Great Falls is lhe second largest —
The —
FiffUrcs Show
There Are |' and ,the Chevrolet on Saturday by Charles Method and E. Van Blaring in life young people are enrolled
city in Montana, having a popula-,
J
®
Ar® cherter H-tfriy of Lake Odessa,
Thomas Read—767.
for governor I To turn him down
tlon of about 29.000. It derives Rs I
5,961 Between Ages of
I Marvin Coleman, the bat wing Perry Williams. Leo Crampton and I In large numbers—the total high |
Majority for Dickinson—1155.
school population having exceeded I
J. W. Kealey.
United States Senator:
name from lhe Great Falls of lhe,
Five and Twenty
I fl.yerfinement of cruelty.
Five
11plane from a height of eight to ten Friday afternoon in lhe 2:25 trot: the rlx million mark. With this
Missouri river, located about twelve
„
.
’ and Twenty
iwenty
Wilber M. Brucker—2015.
In this congressional district
। miles
m.«. from
num lhe
u&gt;e city,
city, where
wnere four
lour I Coun‘y Treasurer L
hou'a«d feet. His »f»mt'wi
” E. M. Stout. E. Van Blarcum. Wil- large school population has come
L. P
F.' Maus lias I ‘thousand
stunt was spec
specJames couzens—961.
Clare E. Hoffman received the re­
the
necessity
for
curriculum
reor
­
1 large hydroelectric ptanta are local-'
* check tor.
and attracted a targe crowd
Majority
for
Brucker
—
10M.
(Continued on page 8. See. 1&gt;
publican nomination with a ma­
ganizations which will best serve all
led. wldch generate power for the14? 890 70'
being the amount of ----------------------------------------------------------Congressman:
•
jority so far of about 8.600 and *&lt;tvClare e. Hoffman—1774.
city's principal Industries-copper'
!’Z?n'y •l’ponto™-d LOCAL GIRL CHOSEN
Most of the teachers stayed at the HE
APPEARS TO HAVE
Felix A. Racette—961.
majority may reach 10,000. Tha
Camp all night occupying the cab­
| H. T- Dewhirst—121.
BEEN SHAMEFULLY
QUEEN OF FESTIVAL
ins used by the Camp Fire girls dur­
We left Great Falk fairly early I 'r7°7'”
J™”- M the rate of (
! Majority for Hoffman—692.
concentrated on an effort to defeat
ing the summer.
TREATED
in the morning headed for Glacier | *7,70.
i
I
Plurality
over
Racette
—
1082.
| Dr. Gerald s. Craig, associate pro'State Senator:
I National Park and had breakfast in ', By school districts Uie apportlon- Florence Westerlind Select­
spoken opposition—not to old ags
‘ fessor of Natural Sciences at Teach­
I ment Is as.follows:
ed From Field of Sixteen
Choteau, about sixty miles north.
pensions which he favors, but to the
ers', College. New York,Cily. was Uie HIS NEW-FOUND LOVE
| Choteau Is located in one of the ASSYRIA TOWNSHIP:
plan of paying 9200 a month to
|
first
speaker
on
Friday
morning,
at
Kalamazoo
Monday
No. 1 Bell. 55 persons. $42350.
IS DISAPPOINTING
I principal, or as far as we could see
RAILROADS
HAVE
A
PINE
using
as
his
subject.
'The
Teach
­
No. 3 Fr.. Eagle, 17 persons. $130.­
Prom among sixteen contestants
judge of Probate:
from lhe road, the only agricultural
ing
of
Science
in
the
Elementary
A Shabby Trick Has Boon
from counties of southern Michigan,
Stuart Clement—2266.
RECORD FOR PASSEN­
country in Montana. They have 90.
more.
His opposition to thal VM
School with Special Emphasis upon
No. 4 Fr., Austin. 20 persons, $154. Miss Florence Westerlind was select­
Laurence E. Barnett—756.
plenty of water for irrigation, be­
Played Upon George by
GER SAPETY
the Health Education Aspects of
No. 5 Assyria Center. 70 persons. ed queen of tlie Southwestern
Majority for Clement—1510.
ing located not for from the eastern
Science Teaching." He said that a
Michigan Wheat FesUval at Kala­
HU New‘‘Friend'' (?)
Counly Treasurer:
slope of lhe continental divide. Tlie 1539.
show that people admire his frank
child has a right to the facta of
No. 6 Ellis, 18 persons. $138.60.
mazoo, Monday afternoon.
Tha REGULATIONS HAMPER
Will struln—837. - According to George Welsh's
crops did look pretty good; in fact
the universe, undiluted by unscien­
No. 7 Fr . Briggs. 43 persons. $331.­ contest was originally Intended as a
Walter Fisher—887.
they were about the only crops we
opinions and prejudices. Fairy statement he left the republican
10.
popularity event but turned into a
FURTHER DEVELOPMENT tific
George A. Clouse—997.
saw after leaving Nebraska.
party because Its doings did not
tales
and
fiction
can
have
no
part
In
No. 8 Fr. Checkered, 30 persons. beauty and style show. There were
Plurality for Clouse—110.
please him. He stepped over into
Not far north of Choteau we had
two entrants from Barry county; .Travel on Railways Thirty­ the interpretation of natural phe­ the democratic party, where he ex­ Register of Deeds:
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1) ; $231.
had a belter than two to one
nomena. Every classroom should be
| No. 9 Fr. Lincoln. 42 persons. Miss Barbara Trego, also of Has­
Vernor Webster—1763.
| $323.40.
a laboratory and a library where pected conditions would be much
Seven Times Safer Than
Maurice Waters—896.
tings. placed fourth.
more
to
his
liking.
He
must
be
a
WOLVERINE BEAGLE
children may experiment and geek disappointed man: because in. th».. Majority for
BALTIMORE TOWNSHIP:
Miss Westerlind has had a busy
Webster—937.
1
in
Automobiles
InformaUon from authentic sources.
No. 1 Dowling, 60 persons. $462.
CLUB FIELD TRIALS
week following her selection, and is
received tha following votes:
The speaker at the Rotary club
"The Activities of United States daily papers last w%ek.' especially in Democratic
No. 2 Striker. 31 persons, $238.70.
planning another busy one next
County Complete.
- •‘(comber, 25 persons, $192.- week when she visits Atlantic City. Monday noon was Mr. Emil Hanson, Office of Education' was the theme
Splendid Premiums Are Ofconnected with the general offices of thc talk by Dr. Mary Dabney presented evidences that George's I Governor:
50.
When announced the winner Mon­
new-found political love is not re-1 George Welsh—639.
I
fered for the Prize
NO. 4 Hendershott, 21 persons. day. she&gt;was presented a lovely bou­ of the Michigan Central at Detroit. Davis, who represented the Depart­
“
He spoke of "Transportation Prob­ ment of the Interior. The United ciprocatlng in a proper manner or I Frank Murphy—*662.
i
Winners
$161.70.
quet and later attended a reception.
Plurality for Murphy—23.
lems."
and in Barry. MJ,
States Office of Education was or­ spirit
No. 5 Weeks. 20 persons. $154.
Tuesday with her court she was
Lieutenant Governor:
On October 6 to 10. tlie sixteenth
The railroad interests qf this ganized in 1867 and has tho respenNo. 6 Durfee, 38 persons. $292.00. taken on a tour of Kalamazoo and
recently.
1.700,000
franked
letters
I
Henry
c.
Glasner
—484.
annual field trials nnd specialty
Burhans.
(Contlnued on page 3, Sec. 1)
No. 7 Fr. Barney Mills, 33 persons. shown Its outstanding places of in­ country, he said, represent its lorg- ,
show of the Wolverine Beagle Club
urging
support
of
the
democratic
U*
01
’
D.
Case
—
299.
est industrial organization in both |
terest. Today—Thursday—at 4:30
Charles P. Hernans—133.
will be held in Hastings, some fine $254.10.
party were sent Into Michigan.
men and capital investment. At thc
In this connection it might
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
the coronation ceremony will be held
TWO ADDRESSES
Leo J. Nowicki—51.
premiums being offered.
The envelope looked all right on
peak the railroads employed about
with
Governor
Fitzgerald
officiat
­
Majority for Glasner—1.
Officers of the Club are: Pres.. W.
1.700.000 men and their investment
BY MISS ROMA GANS the front side, but when you turned Plurality
ing, unless unexpected events pre­
Glasner over Leon case Monday, casting over 300.000 rotas
Le. Behrens. Muskegon; Vlce-Pres,. DR. GWINN SPOKE
exceeded twenty-four billions of
vent his attending. At nine o'clock
J. I. Kennedy. Detroit; Secy.-Treas..
suggested ballot for every Michi­
dollars.
I Beryl Bishop. Lansing; Asst. Secy.,
AT CLUB LUNCHEON this evening she will attend the There is no other Industry in this Speaks to Teachers in the gan democrat to vote at the pri­ United Stales Senator:
queen's ball given in her honor. Sat­
PreptlM Brown—549.
Charles
Boomer. East Lansing.
Afternoon and to the
mary; and this suggested ballot did
country, he said, that is so ham­
Ralph W. Lydy—OT.
MBBibers of lhe Field Trial com- Merchant! of City Heard urday afternoon she will lake part pered by regulations, governing al­
not contain Mr. Welsh's name! In­
tha
Public in Evening
in a parade and will attend a pag­
John H. Muyskrns—84.
■tttee are Beryl Bishop and Frank
stead it urged his opponent. Frank
most every acUvity. as are the rail­
election the
eant
that
evening.
DiscuiBion
of
'
'Socialized
Louis B. Ward—211.
Kingsbury of Lansing. Homer Smith
Miss Roma Gans of Minneapolis Murphy of Detroit, as the proper
road*. At each session of congress
As
her
award
for
winning
the
Majority far Brown—168.
ot Hastings. Charles Whitaker of |
Medicine”
some new statesmen takes a pot shot is tn the city today enroute from gubernatorial candidate for Michi­
contest
she
was
given
a
trip
to
At
­
Plurality for Brown over Wardher home to New York City where gan democrats to favor. This cute
Custer and Charles Boomer of East'
, Dr.'t^'
a. B Gwinn, who succeeds the lantic City with all expenses paid. at them. Increasing their problems,
Lansing. Elmer Gray of Indianapolis '..."
hoping thereby to please the voters she teaches at Columbia Univer­ idea was probably devised by the
and Leonard Bennett of Hinkley. IU.. i,A. Adrounle here, was
sity.
Parley satellites at Washington to Congressman:
accept; and U would aeem that thto
the speaker at the noon luncheon of tel. Miss Westerlind was also given of hU home district. The railroads
Birge Swift—927.
are Judges for the field trials. Herb ,
have not only paid their full shareI This afternoon at 4:15 o'clock. carry out the Farley-Roosevelt plan
the entire outfit which she modeled
Harvey Hope Jarvia—111.
Onnl or n&gt;,i w.me k
•» I
of the taxes of the country, but they Miss Gans will speak to city and of dictation even in state affairs.
the Specialty Show. Dr. B. A. Perry
. Socialized Medicine,
In the show while competing for
Guy
M.
Tyler
—
58.
rural
teachers
at
Central
auditori
­
Naturally Mr. Welsh's ire was
paid $7,500,000 In cash tart year to
presidency judging from the Maine
is a member of the bench show coinn\CJltlVhan&lt;ihepOrV’uyJjrniCr" the title.
Majority for Swift—748.
support the Interstate ’Commerce um. Her subject 13 "The Work of a aroused by this trespass upon his
results Monday. Thc republicans
mltlcc
lclul observers on the socialized plan
Plurality for Swift over Jarvis—
rights, using taxpayers' money to
Commission, which regulates every Teacher.”
All dog. entered must be the
?",nMn?L&lt;Wher: METHODIST PASTORS
Again at eight o'clock Miss Gans boost his opponent, and he said
form of railroad acUvity. In addition
four years that state has had a demhealth ln
Insurance
is required, and
bonafide property of lhe person i heMllh
",r,nf* *■
to all these expenses, the railroads will give a public address to which some things that were not compli­
! where 90 per cent of medical servFOR BARRY COUNTY are required to maintain their own all rural and city parents and any mentary about his new political as­
making the entry and a pedigree, so 1 Ices are paid by the government.
far as can be obtained, furnished
utpixuuiy those
uiusc in
ui the
Ilie
——
——
rood beds, tracks and right-of-way. others who may wish to attend are sociates. especially
upon request Club headquarters Delay in treatment, indifference to Rev. W. M. Jones Returned while their compeUlors have no Invited. The subject of her evening seats of party authority at Wash- I Plurality for Hughes—440.
. ... .
..... *. ......... T Mrl f ura •
during the week will be at tlie needs of patients, and requirements
talk has not been announced.
ington and in this state. It was a Legislature:
such expenses.
which is substantially troa of tha
for length of hospital treatment way
to Hastings—Rev. J. R.
Charles
P.
Parker
—863.
Parker House.
During the summer session at shabby trick to play on a new con­
The ralli^kads' record for safety of
Frank W. Bennett—289
There are seven classes in the field beyond what is necessary, are in­
Wooton at Nashville
passengers is outstanding. Not a Teachers' College, Misses Helen vert. especially when he is so modsisted upon. The Americans who re­
trials as follows;
Majority for Parker—574.
men. their aggregate majority ex­
The Michigan annual conference single railroad passenger was killed Wade. Rose DeFoe and Helen Furported
on
this
socialized
medical
Class A—Derby for dogs. 13 Inches
nlss were in some of the classes democratlc candidate for governor. Sheriff:
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
ceeding 50.000. The only contort
treatment did not believe it would of the Methodist Episcopal church
and under.
George H. Myera—481.
taught by Mtas Gans and all speak
Whether Mr. Welsh will be dis­
dosed Its session at Battle Creek on
John VanDerKolk—402.
Class B—Derby for dogs 15 inches be pleasing to the American people, Monday evening. Following are the
very highly of her and her work. illusioned about his new political
who like prompt service and don't
‘THE GREAT ZIEGFIELD” Ulis is a splendid privilege for the love
Charles A. Woodruff—283.
and under.
remains
to
be
seen.
He
may
say
ator White, republic
assignments of pastors for Barry
Class c—Open for all age dogs 13 appreciate red tape.
AT LOCAL THEATER people of Hastings and Barry coun­ things after the primary, as Mr. Plurality for Myvrs over Van Der
England has a form of socialized county:
inches and under.
ty to have the opportunity of hear­ Murphy has been named for the Kolk-79.
Banfleld—Rev. E. A. Exner.
medicine
not
like
Germany's,
but
Class D—Open for all bitches 13
State Resnlta
Delton—Rev. R, L. Bates.
Pictures Life of America's ing such a talented speaker as Miss governorship, by the aid of the cute
apparently no better as far as care
Inches and under.
Gans, who is brought here by the little trick of sending out from
Wilber M. Brucker defeated Sen­ lhe Maine government for the ;
Freeport—Rev. Fem Wheeler.
Greatest Showman on
Claw E—Two couple pack stakes. for the welfare of patients is con­
W. K. Kellogg Foundation.
Washington 1,700,000 franked gov­ ator Couzens by a nearly, two to
Hastings—Rev. W. Maytan Jones.
cerned. Neither one. in Dr. Gwinn's
Mixed ownership permitted.
Commissioner Maude ’W. Smith ernment envelopes, with a suggested one vote in the state primary.
centra ted upon ills election
Hastings
circuit
—
Rev.
V.
B.
the
Screen
Class F—Open for bitches over 13 judgment, offered any hope of su- Swemm.
has sent out cards to all rural ballot for Michigan democrats to
Congressman Prentiss J. Brown
...
pertcrity over our American plan of
Ray Branch, manager of the Strand
ud under 15 Inches.
Middleville—Rev. L. N. Rlgelnian. Theater, has secured "The Great teachers urging their attendance at vote at the primary, omitting Mr. seems to have been successful In
•­
Class G—Open for dogs over 13 medical treatment.
these
meetings.
Welsh's
name,
giving
only
the
name
getting
the
democratic
senatorial
Nashville—Rev. J. R. Wooton.
Every right-thinking American
Zlegfitld" at the same Ume that
and under 15 inches. The above
of his opponent. Mr. Frank Mur­ nomination. As the
republican
Woodland—Rev. F. J. Fitch.
It is appearing at the theaters in
classes will be run in this order. A. doctor will respond lo a call from
phy!
primary vole in the state will ex­
Some of our readers will be in­
K. C- 75 points are necessary to any source, if at all possible for him terested in the following assign­ the larger clUes of Michigan, giving
Mr. Welsh may conclude that he ceed 500.000 and the democratic
to
do
so.
whether
he
thinks
he
will
to the people of this community the
complete a field championship. En­
has jumped from the frying pan primary vote was only 200.000. it
ments to pastors who formerly privilege of seeing it along with the*
get
his
pay
or
not,
said
Dr7
Gwinn.
try fee in all show classes Is $1.00
Into the fire In changing his politi­
served in this city or county: Rev. larger cities at a lower admittance.
per entry and entries close Sept. 30.
cal affiliations.
L. L. Dewey •continues as district
EXTENSION CLASS.
STOCK JUDGING Tl
The officials of lhe field trials and spond to the cry of need for treat­ superintendent of the Grand Rapids To allow as many people oj possible
HONOR* AT
John C. Hoekje, registrar and di­
to see the picture. It will run for
WM. S. SCHADER ACCEPTS
bench show wiU follow in every de­ ment. The American plan of mak­
district. Rev. Matthew Duffy is re­
CHRYSLER CO. POSITION. rector of extension at Western
tail ihe regulations of the American ing smaller charges for people who turned to Ionia; Rev. Myron Hoyt four consecutive days Tuesday,
William 8. Schader. son of Wil­ Slate Teachers' College. Kalamazoo,
Kennel club. Approval of this an­ have smaller Incomes, and charging was sent to the Okemos Federated Wednesday. Thursday and Friday of
larger
fees
to
people
who
can
afford
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dana
Burgess.
next
week.
Because
of
this
the
usual
liam
A.
Schader.
has
accepted
a
nual meet has been given by the A.
has announced that
Professor
church; Rev. R. H. Bready is re­
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Burgess, who position with the Chrysler corpora­ George Sprau of the English De­
K. C.. with headquarters In New to pay. seems far superior to the turned to Amboy and Austin pas­ Tuesday night coupon will be can­
socialized plan. In his judgment it
celled.
reside In the Kerr apartment on tion at Detroit and left Wednesday partment of Western Stale will ofYork city.
torale. Rev. C- M- Conklin, who was
The admittance charged for this West Green street, came to Hastings to commence his work. During the
For several years these gatherings is less expensive. To have the state pastor of Hastings circuit, is placed
picture, while a little higher than from Petoskey. Mr. Burgess is a post summer he was connected with
have been held in Hastings where pay for medical service does not
at Cedar Springs; Rev. M. D. Mc­
the running fields are considered mean that it costs the patient noth­ Kean. who was for several years usual, is sUll considerably less than graduate of Western State Teach­ the educational tours conducted for •'Familiar Essay." Tha organisation
very suitable and conveniently lo­ ing. It means simply that tn some pastor at Middleville, was sent to .that charged at the larger theaters. ers' College at Kalamazoo and is a the sons of Chrysler employees and meeting for the class will be held
cated. Then too. there U ample ken­ other form, in the way of added Epworth church. Grand Rapids. Rev. This is the original road show that teacher in the commercial depart­ while in New York he personally
costa to goods he buys, or indirect
go to the Bto
ment at thc Hastings High school. met Walter P. Chrysler and other
has been allowing .throughout the
”
nel room at the fair grounds.
taxes, or direct taxes like the sales W. F. Philips goes to Ovid, Michl- ,country at an admittance fee of They have a seven months' old ion. executives of lhe firm, it hu been M-. at the Hastings High school.
later this fall
gan; Rev. a. A- Buege has the Mar­ 9180.
MAY BE TRIED THIS TERM.
learned on^good authority that
NEW PASTOR NAMED.
tin
and
Bradley
tliurches.
Rev.
R.
'
M
R
s
Evida
Williams.
tors
employed
by
the
ilaU,
without
Frank Barkruff. James Hitchcock.
“Young Bill* made a favorable im­
See the advertisement in this 1sE.
Yost
la
the
pastor
at
Oahtemo
and
The
Rev.
Walker
Jordan
la
tbe
Miss
Williams
is
the
new
assistant
William Service and Russell Hink­ regard to how efficiently or care­
pression and the new position re­
sue for further parUculars.
Oakwood. Rev.*Karl Keefer is con­
ley. charged with statutory offenses,
sulted from this meeting. William is
Central school. Her home is in Bat­ a graduate ot the Hastings High church for tha coming yur, thia
AN APPRECIATION.
were brought before Judge McPeek Ueves tlie American plan is better tinued at Watervliet. Rev. A. E.
Wynn, former pastor at Woodland,
I wish to thank the voters of
.. tle Creek and she is a graduate of school and Ferris institute at Big being his first pastorate. Rev. and
on Monday. They waived examina­ and more effective.
is stationed at Wheeler.
Mra. Jordan are young people and
Barry county for the fine support Western Stale Teachers' College al Rapids.
tion and stood mute before Uie
are greatly interacted In baDdtn«
given md for the Democratic nomi­ Kalamazoo. Miss Williams is affil­
judge when asked to plead. A plea
BASEBALL GAME.
CHICKEN*SUPPER.
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
iated with the Methodist church and
Dowling vs. Hilltop Brewery ot
nation for office of sheriff.
of not guilty was entered in each
is living, at the Guy C- Keller home
Thursday night. Sept. 24. Quim­
Very sincerely yours.
case. They may be tried at tills Jackaon. Sunday. Sept. 20. Vickery's.
Delton. Sat, Eve, Eckleris Orch.
on W. Green street.
by church, 5 P. M-. 35 cents.—Adv.
Clear lake.—Adv.
—Adv.
George H. Myers.
term of court.
.

BRICK BUILDINGS WERE
TOPPLED RECENTLY IN
HELENA, MONT.

'hear

PRIM MONEY
IS APPORTIONED:

THESADCASEOF
MR . GEORGE WELSH

05300705

CASH INVESTMENT

mXJiw

I

May We
Introduce

�TICK BAITINGS BANNKB, TBUMDAT. UTTIMAIl H, MSI
.......... ■

LOCAL NEWS

ELECTED

Home of Lowest Food Prices In Barry County

Soap Chips 27c

SUGAR
lOiClothBag

5 Lb. Box

Balloon

UQC

4^. 29c

Seedless Raisins

5

Molasses

RINSO * 19c

Bowlene

Caa

19c

Cream of Wheat

Pkg.

23c

Lga. Pkg.

19c

Quick or Regular

Wheaties
IZ sallow

KClIOgg S

Vacation Land

Coffee &gt; 15c

Com FlakeS Or
Port Toastie,

2

23c

Lga. Pkg*.

10c

5 - - 23c

Pancake Fldur

Our Mother’s Cocoa 2'- 15c

White House Coffee

21c

Del Monte Coffee

25c

Maxwell House Coffee

25c

Daonr Wa« or Green

DCdllb
VUl II

SalmonE 23

25c
23c

P &amp; G Soap

Quaker Oats

Syrup B33c

Lb. Pail

3 c.- 29c

FIRST CALL

Golden Bantam

2 c- 25c

FANCY CREAM STYLE

3

Tomatoes * ■ •

25c

10 u “•* 17 c

Onions

Picnics
FRESH GROUND

Hamburg 2

ooz. 25c

Oranges

Peaches for Canning
5C

Celery

Bunch

Fancy Chickens

Lb 23c

MEATS
20c Roast

Smoked
Shankless

C’T.
wlvCm

25c
Bacon S', res, . 20c Oleo

Weeks' Events al
The Country Club

wlth inflammatory rheumatism, but N. Knopf is substituting for Mias
wing" man al lhe fair
to convalescing.
DeMeyer.
i of unpleasant
Mr. and Mr*. Vern Sprague axe
Russell Kimmel of Lhe Banner
luncheon Tuesday for members
planning to soon move to Albion forte, who underwent a major opthe Hastings Country Club a
aluminum head frame
where he has employment.
their guests. Ztomias. petunlag. s
The next convention of Rotary In­ Pennock hospital, is recovering
nual phlox, Mier* and dahlias wi
ternational will be held in Nice, nicely and U able lo see hie friends.
frame cut hu bead, requiring tbe combined In boitqueU for t
France, the week of June 8th. 1037.
Nell Mannl Is the* winner of the service* of a physician. And he did luncheon tables and around I
Tire postponed aruiual meeting of fourth suit in Al McCall's suit draw­ these parachute stunts with one of lounge. Thlrty-eeven woman ■
the Baptist church will be held this ing. He will receive a »30 suit or his legs in a plaster cast. But he tended Uie luncheon, the numl
Thurtday evening Reports will be
provided lhe necessary thrills for being smaller aa school has beg
and guests have returned to th
given by thc officer*.
Thia Thursday evening at seven- lhe crowds of fair attendants.
Bill Stanley, the anglewarm mer- homes.
Mr. and Mra. Leslie Hawthorne thlrty o'clock the flrat meeting ot
Mra. James Bristol won the pr
are the parents of a son. Michael tbe official board ot the Methodiat
Joseph, bom Thursday at Pennock church will be held in the board home near the Falrgound*. hat
room at tha church. Plans for the
hoapiul. Congratulations.
'
Rev. c. 8. Rennells. pastor of the year’* work will be outlined by the
but the buxine** doe* not require 1
Hickory Corner* Wesleyan Metho­ pastor. the Rev. W. Maylan Jones.
dist church, brought the evening i City workmen are clearing the •peed as angleworms don't crawl Kiva Grainger of Charlotte; Mn
message at the local W. M. church old buildings from the Dawson and very fast. The angleworm industry Frank Carrothera. her daughter
Sunday evening.
f Beckwith •-*
-----—‘ Court
------- * street,
-*—* is Just in its infancy, but then "great Mra. Bruce Casper of Walia Walla
lot*
on•”
West
, Mrs. Allan H- Bishop of Cloverdale recently purchased by the city, to be oaks from little acorns grow.” And !Wash., and Mra. D 8. Goodyear
the fellow who bad plenty of angle­
was the lucky winner of the inner
Mra.
James Ironside of San Diegc
1
spring mattress at the Miller Fur- peeled lhe ground will be graded worm* to sell durinr the dry spell Calif.
1 nlture Co. booth at the fair. There this fall and the work be completed had the fishermen of Hastings and 1 Mrs. Harold Phillips was chair
vicinity treading a path to his door.
I were 1.500 entries,
in the spring.
.
Irving Charlton,
of Hastings 1man of lhe committee and wa* a*
I The Allegan County fair Is achedK Moses, who halls from New
I tiled for next week Sept. 22. 23. 24. York stale, was driving Monday township, has turned hl* 220 acre 1slated by Mrs. R. B. Harkness am
farm over to the conservation Dept,
25 and 28. Some fine exhibits have
to
be
converted
into
a
game refuge. ‘Arold and Mra. David Boyes
1 been planned, additional display Gon-Quin, on the apparently level
space being necessary.
stretch of road past the old Kurts Mr. Charlton'* property Include* the ' Mra. James W Radford will
| Charles McDermott of Delton was
The 35th Rotary District Annual old "Indian Landing" farm al chairman ot next week's lunche
Thoniapple
lake
that
evidently
was 1
I overcome by lhe heat while attend­ Frolic Ls being held in Grand Rap­
lhe favorite spot for the Indians
Ids today
at lhe
Kent country
ing lhe fair on Thursday. He was----------,_____
_ ____________
__ Club.
__
The September dinner at the Has
taken to Pennock hospital but was1 A golf tournament and other ac- long before the advent of the while tings Country Club for member
able to return lo his home that livttiea occupy the afternoon and man. A* evidence of this Mr Charl­ ' and guests will be Thursday eve
haa a very fine collection ot Inevening.
following dinner the Detroit World ton
dlan relics wy largely found 'near.
Bridge and dancin
A card from W- T- Wallace says he I champion football team members
' Ls spending some Ume at Grand &gt; will be present for a round table IbU pwpw. 1„ the ,rr,
days of Michigan the old Detroit I»«hast&gt;een *5cured.,*t?d
u*f“
Junction. Colorado. He says Grand diacuulon about football. Several trail passed near this property.
K.
.J
...
”
.
I Junction haa plenty of rocks on ex- i members from lhe Hastings club alcommittee Is Mr. and Mn
hibltion and that Colorado Is beau- tended the affair/
affair.SStS.S'S 2.S15&amp;K3
i On Wedne.uiay. September 23. lhe CORRESPONDENCE
liful this summer.
| Over at the Allegan County Fair ■ Fox Studios of Kalamasoo will open
COURSE OFFERED A v*nB“k,,k. • •
next week one of their free exhibits a branch of their dancing school
I will be. a three-legged calf which here In Community hall. Compe­
------------- I The last dancing party for th
gatnboU about as freely as a normal tent. well-trained teachers will give University of Michigan and junior. members of Die club an
calf dries upon four legs. The calf.r
,_____________________
instruction
tn tap. ballet, acrobatic
I their guesta will be held this eve
W. P. A. Sponsor This
which was born last Thanksgiving, and ballroom dancing. Mra. Fox is
I ning (Thursday) at thc clubhoua
is owned by an Allegan county man.. a graduate of Western state TeachDancing will be from elght-thlrt
Movement
j The members of the city council [ ers’ college and is well known
to twelve. Mr. and Mra. W. b
_ uu00111 nm &lt;nd wcond semester Stebbins and Mr. and Mra. Jac
have received complaints about lhe throughout the country for her
unMlchlgan central crossing on Michi-1i usual
usual and
and suceeasful
suceeasful revues
revues. One
C— 1 nret ye*r college courses will be of- । Stem will be In charge and wl
of lhe fered for Supervised Correspond' gan avenue. Il is very rough and in I of
of lhe
the moat
r. ‘ popular feature,
‘
i&gt;e moisted by Elen Leonard an
Study
at the beginning.of
lhe Junior Walton.
■ the council'* Judgment ought to be I school in its various
vMimua branches
ui&gt;M&gt;t&lt;&gt;ca has ,
------------------------•------- -n--------put in better condition. Accordingly been IU Charm School for young-1 “.nlv?Plty
l*nn on_ September
the city clerk was authorized to 1 tiers from three to five years old. I " ,
eouraea are designed eswritc a letter to lhe local agent of Registration will be on Tuesday. peclally for qualified high school• SELLS CLEAR LAKE
the railroad, requesting that this September 22. from 10:30 to 8 P. M„ graduates who are financially un­
RESORT PROPER'
able to go to collage. Others who
crossing be improved.
at Community hall.
can profit by the instruction and
who cannot attend college may en­ W. A. Crawford Makes Dei
roll. Thia program 1* sponsored by
With Frank Her­
lhe Extension Division of Uie Uni­
rington
versity of Michigan.
It is expected that lhe study cen­
Frank Herrington, who has cpr
™
Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557
® ter will be organised on a basis of ducted the clear lake resort for i
regular attendance for every slu- long, sold his property last week I
PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF SEPT. 2#TH
denl al a regular Ume each day. W. A- Crawford of Kalamazoo, wh
A supervisor will be appointed has taken possession, holding dano
where not less than 16 students the name as hai Mr Herrington.
SUNDAY and MONDAY, SEPT. 20 and 21
enroll and agree to spend al regular
For a long lime Mr. Crawford wi
periods, not leas than ten hours per connected with a paper mill ip Ka
’P. G. WODEHOUSE is in lhe MOVIESI
week (two hours per day) in super­ arnazoo Mr. Herrington rccommrni
vised study.
Mr. Crawford to the people of Barr
A two weeks' working conference county and say* he Ls sure the ne
for study supervisors will be held proprietor will conduct a good plac
xThe Sfiievepost Story I
at the University of Michigan, im­
Later Mr. Herrington plans to t
mediately before the opening of Uie lo ______
Florida for the winter and Mr
centers. September 14 to September Herrington and sons will rental
25. Supervisors will be given in- here where the boy* are in school
.—.... training in ,u--------Mr HerrlnRtnn has run a ROC
tensive
the —
technique
of.
study center management, and in clean place al clear lake, would ni
'Thoni You leevas"
guidance counselling. Study cen­ sell beer nor would he allow an
Matinee
ter supervisors will be available for rowdyism on lhe premises, alwa;
Sunday,
counselling with unemployed, out- Insisting on sobriety and decenc
of-school. young people tn addiUon He leaves a fine record as an exam
Frank Morgan • Billie Burka
to their regular duties In the super­
Eric Blora • Madge Evans
vision nf the study center.
|
-------Courses in lhe following subjects HASTINGS TO BE REPRESENT*!
Gay MGM Romanr-vl
may be taken for full college credit:
At the council meeting Frida
English. Geography, German. HLv night Mayor Leonard and lhe coui
tnrv.
Atoehro Plan*
Marman uz
tory. Latin. Crillrcre
College Algebra.
Plane -it
dl president. aAiderman
W
,
TUES.. WED.. THURS., Fill.,
Analytic Geometry. Trigonometry. Schader. were authorised to repr
SATURDAY ONLY
SEPT. 22. 23. 24 and 25
Mechanical Drawing. Political Sci­ sent this city at the Munlcip
SEPTEMBER 26
ence, Psychology, Sociology, French. League convention which will I
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
It Is expected that a sufficient held in Muskegon September 18, 1
number of people will enroll so that and II.
Doable Fea tare Attraction
a study center will be established at
This association of the cities •
lhe Hastings High school. Anyone Michigan has been helpful lo I
interested may learn further partic­ members. One of the reasons wh
ulars by calling Superintendent D. cities now get a part of the weigl
A. VanBuakirk.
tax Is due lo the activities of th
organization.
ACCIDENT VICTIM SHOWN
MARKED IMPROVEMENT.
Most pathetic. In the New Yor
The condition of Harriet Couch, elevator strike, have been lhe pen
With Warren William, Claire
12, daughter ot Mr. and Mra. George house dwellers caught In lobbi
Dodd. Winifred Shaw, Joaeph
Couch, who has been confined to without guides or alpen-stocks.
Pennock hospital since Saturday
King, Dick Foran—A Warner
night, is showing marked improve­
Bros. Flrat National Picture!
ment. according to Dr. A- B. Gwinn,
who U attending the child. The girl
— AND
was struck by a ear driven by Jim
Flanders of Hastings Saturday night
as she was leaving the fair grounds.
Il Li said she was walking on the
AUo lecture on true economics,
wrong side of the street with her
With Jane Withers, Jane Darmother and Flanders was meeting be held on vacant lol west of Haro
a car with bright lights and did not Smith's hardware on Slate St.,
see them. He Immediately look her 8:00 P. M . Saturday, Sept. 10.
to the hospital where she received
You can learn how lhe fame
treatment. Dr. owtnn said X-rays loses his farm, the laborer loses h
EPISODE MO. ». iniAL MUCK
ADULTS 35c — CHILDREN 10c
had been taken of the skull injuries home, the merchant loses his stoi
JOWBI IM - PHAMTOM RIDER."
which could not be completely diag­ and the manufacturer loses his fac
io r m.
nosed until the pictures are read. lory through the interest collectli
The girl also suffered bruises on the swindle. The issue Is to abolish in
body and legs.
teresl, or nothing else counts I

r| flLASE TFEATLFii

PICCADILLY
JIM/=
ROST. MONTGOMERY

M G M'S SHOW OF SHOWS

The CASE of the
VELVET CLAWS

Beef Kettle

lb.

Round, Swiss
or Sirloin

lb.

13c

19c

KINGNUT

lbs.

1 Ib.

Little Miss Nobody

NOW AT
POPULAR
PRICES!

of Direct Credits
On Parade

IRONSIDE’S

lbs.

RIB BOILING BEEF

over and h* suffered UceraUd

dent could not be determined, aa

FREE MOTION PICTURE

Cabbage

POTATOES

are now occupying the Jaha Watoaert home en East Watawt BL
Miss Margaret DeMkyor, taaahin the city schools. Is still UI st

27c

GRANITE MEMORIALS
are recognized for their beauty and dignity
of design and for fine workmanship and

choice materials. You will make no mistake

Ib.

in ordering a memorial from Ironside’s I
Serve
Yo unelf
and Save

Food Center

Open
Evenings
Until
9 p. nt.

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
ESTABLISHED I9O7

PHONE 2497

HASTINGS, MICH.

�THI HASTINGS BANNYB, THURSDAY, BEPTDfggM 17, 19M

PRHUIW MOHEY 'r&gt;—'"
ISJPPORTIDNEO

railroad earnings were I3.100.000.0W J

OBITUARY.

Fair Attendance,
Interest Ran' High

son, three sisters. Annie, Eliza bsth

I William David Platt was bom In
and the operating expense* were
No. 4 Tanner. 22 persons. &gt;169.40.
Novi, Oakland cxmnty, Feb. 25. 1850. enllne and John Beachey. together
only 49 per cent of the total income.
He later moved to Benton Harbor with many nephews and nieces and
No. 6 Fr. OUs. 25 persons. &gt;19250. In other words private owners and
where he married and lived until other relative* and friends. Funeral
managers of the railroads operated
No. 8 Edger. 22 persons. &gt;189.40.
he moved to Hastings with his fam­ services were held Wednesday Sept
No. 7 Fr. Goodwill, 18 persons. them twice as efficiently and eco(Continued from page 1. Sec. D
burned
ily twenty-one yean ago. residing:
nomlcally as did the government. If
NINE LETTERMEN
&gt;13840.
Springs United Brethren church
we need any other information on
—— -------------------------- ;— i No. 9 Yccklcy, 12 persons, &gt;92.40.
OUT FOR FOOTBALL aged 80 yrs.. 6 mos.. and 15 days.
(Continued from page i, 8ec. I)
THORNAPPLE TOWNSHIP:
that subject we can get it over In Ham Adams, Frank Talbot and Pal
ton, officiating. Burial In Yankee bouse and
Williams;
-in
lhe
2:22
pace.
Ed.
Canada.
The
Canadian
government
He
leaves
four
sons;
Floyd
and
WU“ . Township unit school, 625 persons.
BARRY TOWNSHIP:
owns and operates the Canadian Randall. Louie Schnle, S. C. Trum­ First Game at Grand Ledge ford Platt of Hastings. David Platt Springs cemetery.
&gt;&gt;441250.
Township unit school. Delton, 257 I WOODLAND TOWNSHIP:
National Railroad. For the last three
of Hickory Comers. Calvin Platt of
bull. Gioos Brothers; In tlie free
This Saturday, Sep­
■ persons, &gt;1378.90.
Battle Creek and a daughter. Mrs. HOUSE STRUCK BY
und Mrs.
]• Township unit sohool, 344 persons. years, in lhe face of increased traf­ for all James Piper. Crandall A
Clarence Cheney of Hickory Cor­
fic. the deficit for that railroad as
tember 19
LIGHTNING IN STORM.
CARLTON TOWNSHIP:
! &gt;2.64850.
Barnard. J. W. Kealey.
ners; a sister. Mrs. Belle Merrill of
No. 1 Rogers, 34 persons. &gt;201 80.
shown by tiie Canadian, govern­
Seventy-three
high
school
youths
Mr. and Mn. Wm. Zuschnltl had
The
race
for
ponies
owned
in
No. 2 Carlton Center; 41 persons, YANKEE SPRINGS:
ment's books, lias increased from Barry county was won by Tiieodorc have enrolled for football traln- Lansing, a brother Frank Platt of
No. 1 Fr. OilM. 20 persons. UM. &gt;35.000,000 In 1933 to over &gt;120,Hastings and two step-sisters, Mrs.
8315.70.
this fall, announces Coach Lyle
Cook. Hastings Route 2. Gerald Oib- ,, ing ----------------------------------------------No. 3 Fr. Yankee Springs, 23 per­
No. 3 Fr. Barnum, 39 persons.
000.000 in 1935.
son. Cloverdale, second and third ■ Bennett. Among them are nine let- Cynthia Wilcox of Hastings and
sons, &gt;177.10.
Mrs. Hannah Burkholder of Grand
&gt;30030.
Tlie . speaker aaid if the govern­
No. 4 Fr. Robbins. 29 persons, ment cannot keep its own books in place. Richard Burdick. Hastings.'! termen from last year's squad— Rapids; a granddaughter. Bernice
No. 4 Fr. Fish. 44 persons. &gt;338 80
Lester Hawks. Harold Griffith and Angell. D. Beumer. Doxey. Hall.
the black, how can It hope to keep
No. 6 pr. Welcome comers, 57 per­ &gt;22330.
Donald Townsend. This was a half Kelley. Ransom, Etruble. Scobey Platt; two grandsons. Rolland La­
No. 8 Fr. Ritchie. 3 persons. &gt;23.10.
rons. &gt;438 90.
lhe railroads in tlus black? We all mile race and all ponies were ridden and C. Smith. Nine reserves are velle of Hostings and Donald Platt
Total. 5.961 perrons. 545499 70.
No. 7&lt; vneney.
no.
Cheney. 21 persons, &gt;181.70.
sioi.iu.
know that government operation is by children.
. also Put for practice—BriU. Cappon, of Cleveland. Ohio, besides twelvi
No. 9 Friend. 34 perrons. &gt;261.80. |
les* efficient and more expensive
The horse pulling contests were Cogswell. Edmonds. C. Draper, Lzs- other grandchildren.
No. 10 Fr. Brown. 49 perrons. :
than private ownership. What the open only to Barry county horse ; He. Lu Ballister. H. Moore. Sothard
railroads desire on Uie ;*irt of lhe owners. The heavyweight contest and Karmes. Tlie balance of the Walldorf! chapel. Rev. T. H. Hoos
&gt;37730.
officiating.---------Interment
at Riverside
No. 11 ft. Coals Grove. 54 persons.
' American people Is fair treatment, was won by Owen Smith's team seventy-three ore recruits.
---------------;------------------------------&gt;41680.
the speaker said.
from Woodland. Harold Barlow, secSeven lettermen were lost to tlie j cemetery.
No. 12 Ragla, 22 perrons. &gt;169 40.
end. Ford Stowell, third, and Carl «!»»&lt;&gt; by their graduation in June—
'
CASTLETON TOWNSHIP:
Hovey, fourth.
' Walldorf!. Bump. Osborn. Caukln.
OBITUARY.
The'lightweight contest was won ' Brady. Kelly and Moore.
' Orville W. Murphy, son of Mr.
No. l Fr. Nashville, 317 persons.
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1&gt;
&gt;2.4440-90.
bv
Coach Bennett is rounding the and Mrs. James Murphy, was born
by a u-am
team nani-H
owned hv
by Clifton Becker.
Becker,
No. 2 Castleton center. 27 perrons,
R. t«am into shape,in anticipation of jin this city April 3. 1871. He died
of Hastings, second. Clarence ».
in 1035 Tn eight years, on the New
&gt;207 90.
Biiaw
Shaw Ot
of Mtoatcvuie.
Middleville, imru.
third. a
A.. r.
F -rtnnlng the first game which is to early Friday morning. September 11
No. 2 Fr. Lake View. 25 persons, York Central lines, there have been
Johnson. Bedford rural route, and he at Grand Ledge this week Sat- at lhe home of his sister, Mrs. Geo.
Welch. Fine lake. Barry counly. He
&gt;19250.
fourUi place was tied by Elmer Oil- I urday. Sept 19.
no fatalities among its passengers.
No. 3 Hosmer. 22 persons. &gt;169.40.,
"
”
was united in marriage In October,
lesple
nnd
orlie
Miller-of
HasUng*.
'————•••
'
(Continued from page 1. Sec. I)
No. « Wrllmu, 31 person.,. HIM. ?“•*“*“ I'ro't‘ ,“»&lt; nUlw.r travel
BASEBALL.
1899. to Miss Lenna Wheeler of
The pulLofl for the &gt;75 harness |
.. .5 Morgan.
..____ 19 persons,
. ____ &gt;14030. Iisk thirty-seven
tlllrtV-soven times
rtnfrar limn
limes safer
than nit.
au­
Due
lo
rain
on
Bunday
thc
Hos
­
No.
Woodland. While working in Grand
donated oy
by me
the rarm
Farm Bureau
Bureau oervServ- )
slbllity of collecting stalisUca
statistics and uonaieo
tomobile transportation, and thirty- Mbllity
tings
Independents
were
forced
to
No. 6 Felghner. |5 persons. &gt;11550. slx limes ns safe as that of airships. |
MOTHER'S
Large Package
showing the status and thc
William Parker manager wu-j postpone Uu-ir game with Freeport Rapids he attended the Mel Trotter
No. 7 Martin, 2&lt;i persons. &gt;20030.
At the present time the railroads | progress of education Uirougliout between Owen Smith of Woodland
No. 8 Barryvllle. 34 persons, &gt;201.- sutler from unfair competition. Tlie the United States. Il also deals with “nd Chflon Becker of Hastings with until October 4. when the local nine for some time. Later he Joined the
will go to Freeport to try for an
public pays the expense of up-keep organization and management of | Mr. Smith's team winning the . even break on their two game ser­ Methodist Episcopal church here, of I
which Mr. and Mrs Murphy were I
No. 10 Shores. 31 persons. &gt;238.70. for the highways, which are used by schools, establishment and mainle-; event.
' les.
Freeport look thc local boys
In- always faithful members. He was at
.
------------------------------------------ -----HASTINGS TOWNSHIP:
tlie trucks In transporting goods. I nance of efficient school systems and
me Hastings city schools were । to camp two weeks ago in a thrilling gindly. cheerful, companionable man
promoting the cause of education, j awarded an fifteen
fifteen dollar
dollar premium
premiumI | ‘ ,nu,
„.ns no7’u.nn untii .h; ‘'
No. 3 FUher. 17 perrons. &gt;130.90.
u/iui..
While t-nri,
truck "owners claim they .....
pay nromotlne th«- cauw of rduratlon (awarded
ra... rara‘. «.ra„ .,„hi .h- whose fr|endiy spirit won him many
‘ dteplay In the educational
No. 4 Fr. Gregory. 24 persons, license fees and gasoline tax enough K Discussions by Dr. R B Harkneu.
Director of the Barry County Health building. It consisted of a 100 square ?!j’‘ULXrt rotS. three^unZnd friends. He is survived by his wife,
&gt;184 80
to pay their share of the up-keep of
'one brother. Milton Murphy, his sis- j
No. 5 Fr. Allofl, 38 persons. &gt;292.- the highways, that claim Ls disputed. Unit, and Miss Rom- DeFoe Seplor I f«t of-wall space devoted to an ex- ! “
ter. Mrs. Welch, and an aunt. Mrs.
Family Health Counselor, rondtem-1 hiblt of school projects
M* u” “’e
60.
Even if they did they are still free Ing thc Health Department program.
From nil sides are heard favorable | 5* Zf . .‘
1 t 1
William Benton, who also lives at
No.' 7 Star. 37 perrons. &gt;284.90.
from the regular taxes which rail­ were very Intere.llng. They gave i comments on thc way lhe fair was
CAN Each
pine lake. The funeral was held
^{“ds' c“J
No. 8 Hastings Center. 13 perrons, roads pay on tiie assessed value of
Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at
&gt;100.10.
particular
emphasis
to
those
porconducted
und
it
h
generally
coni
all their property for the support tloivs of the program relating to : ceded that it was one of the best
the Walldorf! funeral home, con­
No. 9 Pratt. 26 |X&gt;rroiM. &gt;20030.
of tlie schools of this state. It cost
| held in th.- county. Members of thc
the Michigan Gases came down ducted by the Rev. W. Maylan Jones.
No. 10 Pr. Quimby, 31 persons. lhe railroads XHO.OOO.OOO lo main­ school children
Another talk by Dr. Davis al one- ' fair board are receiving congratulalh.c
lc?nJnt with Those from away who attended the
&gt;238.70.
tain and keep- their rights of way In
funeral
were »r.
Mr. ana
and Mrs. Clinton
thirty o'clock was on Uie
-Basic | U«n»
lions I™
from everyone
everyone and
and the
the herd
hard
~
luncr
»* were
u,l,,y
lhe -Brale
HASTINGS CITY:
condition for traffic, while their Principles
Underlying
Uie
ActMty
work
done
by
them
is
appreciated
only
we. althoughtherocond game
Lehman. Mr. andMrs. Dallas Leh1344 perrons. &gt;1034880.
taxes amount to an average of &gt;1.- Curriculum." It is recognized, she I by all. The members of Uw board l&lt;‘n^‘‘Lln “ scorel“JiHe in the sev- man and Mrs. Oscar Odean. all of
HOPE TOWNSHIP:
000.000 a day.
said that all learning is a matter of i arc Dr. Burton A Perry. president; !*,nth_t!uc 10 *?n'
all°*ed Scottville; Mr. and Mrs. Claude
No. 1 Doud. 24 jierrons. &gt;184 80.
The railroads at the present time
one ** *n Uje nt*hu Bishop. FUnt; Mr. and Mrs George
No. 2 Pr. McCallum. 27 persons, need rehabilitation. Their revenues activity and thal what U learned j Maurice Foreman, secretary; Harold 11lc
comes_____
from____
experience
The activity
activity ruaurr
Foster uriuurer.
treasurer; Mien
Glen uensniore,
Densmore, capI^bor Da«'.
wlU
late
Benton
Jrience. THC
■j ~
~
..
, .up
■ where Weteh and Mrs. William Benton.
&gt;207.90.
are not sufficient, under existing _____
....
1 n V
r.
c he left of! and will pitchddolnir
the opener
Fine lake: Fine
Rev. lake;
and Mrs.
ofWheeler of
P the1 catehlne
Rev.Wheeler
and Mrs.
No. 3 Cedar Creek. 20 persons. conditions nnd with the Increased program is u school curriculum i R K Hurd. Robert Martin. Fred ’5.1
composed of experiences selected to | Mayo. Ell Lindsey and R. H. Mett. **'*? o^nncS who ^has ffiteSd Sunfield, and Mr. and Mrs. Myers
&gt;154.
costs forced upon them by legisla­ give the boys and girl* an under-, directors.
।
ODonnilL
»
ho
has
pitched
of
Grand
Rapids.
No. 4 Hinds, 27 perrons. 5207DO,
ture. to keep their rlght;of-way and
No. 6 Shultz, 32 persons. &gt;246 40 equipment Up to what they ought to U»1hXe°fthe’rommmdtvUVthe na ‘
‘
-_____________ n'e Kn,nc;' wh,le tosln« lwo- wU1 hurl
OBITUARY.
No. 7 Fr. Brush Ridge. 31 perrons. be. Yet congress is considering the
Mary Beachey. daughter of Abra­
&gt;238.70. '
appropriation of &gt;600.000.000 for the---------------- ---------------- . - -------- ,
rr-KiTrrzrrizTVn. , receivinu
Tgd Tl IZ d 11 O 71S
Mme sUrU at one ham and Barbara Beachey. was
No. 9 Cloverdale. 38 perrons. &gt;292 - St Lawrence waterway, which would 1 ways of living and thinking. This \
60.
not add one ton to the volume of I type of program provides an op-,
oo'clock
.clock gharp
and
adtnlM10n
wiu
'
"
shr~al
—
Jno
—
-j—
»•&lt; bom March 28. 1878 and departed
products to be transported. Il would j portunity for guidance in the school;
charged
the
gate
but■------a free
this life Sept. 5. 1938. al the age of
IRVING TOWNSHIP:
We Redeem Your Camay Soap and Oxydol Coupons
the taxpayers a huge sum In or- 'of those traits of character common-: Brush Ridge Cemetery Circle will
.
win
m’ken tQ help 60 years. 5 months, and 10 days. She
No. 2 Fr. cobb, 5 perrons. &gt;3850. cost
der to put R in working order. It! ly listed as desirable for good dtl- meet wRh MU. Rena Pierce and * ‘1‘
*e
was united In marriage to Marshall
No. 3 Wood. 32 pemOM, 5246.40.
would not pay any tax to lhe state tens.
| Mrs Fanny Smith on South Han°‘ u,e *mun&lt;
E. Maze of Pioneer. Ohio. Nov. 2.
No. 4 Fr. Jones. 31 persons. &gt;238 or local districts, but would be
At two-thlrty Friday afternoon over Thursday. September 24.
1
( 1900. To this union were bom two
70.
maintained at the cost of the tax- group meetings were held with the
Ml.ihodht LAS Circle No a’home game of the season and your children. Georgia and one son. who
No. 5 Ryan. 30 perrons. &gt;231.
payers When all of this U coruld- various Family Health Counselors
I; A_K Circle No 3 iwmepune
a «ood tasll team died In infancy. She leaves lo mourn
Open Evenings
Phone 2458—Hastings
No. 6 Brew. 29 persons. &gt;223.30.
hr|d“at1 o'clock nt the home ol Mrs. George j In action. The boys have won twelve their loss besides the husband and
No. 7 Fillmore. 24 persons, &gt;184.80. cred any suggestions Uiat this pro- and
Mur|tel st
gg|neg t|jU
whlUj lo&amp;lng only daughter of Kalamazoo, one grandNo. 9 Fr. Freeport. 124 perrons. liosed waterway would lower tax- Educational Council aas also held at, HMlh
a
11
on
3s
absurd.
I
this
time.
.
six
Two
out
oL
town
games
will
wind
&gt;954 80.
in thc last session of congress a 1 A scries of short talks by teachers
Townsend plan meeting EpLvopal un the season. Hie boys play their
No. 10 Pleasant HID. 8 persons.
bill was Intrrxlumi
attended
summer
school parish Hnn— Wednesday
.. evening, nnal _______________
.u..- at r-t....
Introduced l&gt;v
by fu-nntzir
Senator who
&gt;61 GO.
house,
game with Dowling
Clear
No. 12 Pr. Little Brick. 29 'persons. Wheeler of Nevada proposing that proved helpful.
Sept. 23. at 8 o'clock. Rev. G. A. lake Sept. 27. and wind up the ses&gt;22330.
- the government take over und op-! Saturday morning Dr. Walter F. Sm|Ui of Holland is the speaker. 1 son at Freeport October 4th.
erate the railroads of the country.1 Dearborn from Harvard Univuplty
JOHNSTOWN TOWNSHIP:
In spite ol the disastrous results | spoke on 'Training Teachvrt to
The Petunia Garden Club willW. C. T. U. NOTES.
No. i King. 19 perrons. &gt;14630.
No. 2 Fr. Monroe. 56 persons. of government operation of lhe rail- Teach the Whole Child." So-called meet Thursday afternoon at two j Tiie W. C. T. U. of Barry county
roads during a par', of the World1 progressive education has empha- o'clock with Mrs. Nellie Hopkins. WHs very fortunate to secure one of
&gt;43130.
war
and
for
nearly
two
years
fol-1
rlzed
the
importance
of
learning
1012
N- Michigan Ave.
the little electric men (Mr. WUe by
No. 3 Fr. Parker. 10 persons. &gt;146.lowing the close of that war. What1 about things, but the more Import30.
.
Thc American . Legion Auxiliary admired by all who saw him and we
'
■
•' ­ innt learning, in the speaker's Judg­
of' the
rail
No. 4 Fr. Stevens, 26 persons. government• o|x-ralion
holds
Its
regular
meeting
thi*
roads would mean Is shown by thc ment. Ls learning about persons.
liojw his advice will be remembered •
&gt;200 20.
Friday evening a delightful pro- i Thursday evening at Uie usual hour. and heeded.
No. 5 Fr. Bristol. 38 perrons. government's own figures for the
year 1919. after the war was closed gram was given by teachers from the I It is expected thal a report of the . The local W. C- T U. met Tuesday
&gt;292 60.
and when we were at peace with the Hastings city schools and invited' department convention will be giv­ ; September 15. with Mrs. I. J. Smith.
' No. 6 Banfleld, 30 persons. &gt;231.
including
the
"Dionne en.
'
No. 7 Culver. 49 perrons. &gt;37730. world. During Uiat year thc gross guests,
Election of officers resulted os folrevmue of thc government from quints." who rendered several songs
No. 8 Fr. Fick. 20 perrons. &gt;154. •
i lows: Pres —Maude Zcrble; Rec.
Prof. Einstein has announced a . sec —Elizabeth
Parker; Treas.—
railroads was &gt;5.550,000.000. The which all enjoyed, thc quints wear­
No. 9 Bullis. 19 persons. &gt;14630.
ing
appropriate
costumes;
Miss
new
theory
of
space
nnd
matter,
!
Lenah Wood,
operating
expenses
of
lhe
railroads
•
No. 11 Burroughs. 33 persons,
under government operation took 85 Florence Campbell, pianist, wore a but the nine or ten of us who un­
■ &gt;254.10.
per cent of that total. Thai means nurse's uniform. Four delightful derstood relativity are not going to
'
MAPLE GROVE TOWNSHIP:
:
No. '1 Fr. Quaillrap. 42 persons. that the experiment pul the govern­ short skits were directed by Albert be lured away by this latest whimsy.
ment In thc red for considerably Becker and presented by some of the We're standing pat.
&gt;323.40.
No. 2 Maple Grove center. 31 per­ over a billion dollars. In the year teachers. Games under the direction
Miss Helen-----------Merron were a part of
1933. which .is recognized as the of
--------------------sons. &gt;238.70. .
No. 2 Fr. Mayo. 16 person*. &gt;12330 poorest year in railroad history, * lhe evening's program.
No 3 Fr. Moore. 35 persons. &gt;269 50.
No. 4 Fr. Dunham. 46 persons.
,_&gt;3M30.
l"« No. 5 Norton. 34 persons. &gt;261.80.
'h* No. 6 McKelvey. 31 j&gt;crsons. &gt;238.It’s not much of a job to fill a radiator with wa­
•■•'‘'70.
No. 7 Fr. Branch. 32 persons.
ter ... or pump up tires ... or dust off a wind­
&gt;24640.
shield. But those areipighty BIC things to your
No. 8 Belgh. 23 persons. &gt;177.10.
‘ '.JORANGEVILLE TOWNSHIP:
comfort and convenience. And we’re pleased
' *'
No. 2 Fulk. 32 persons. &gt;246.40.
No. 3 Orangeville. 139 persons. &gt;1.to do them for you . . . just to help you remem­
07030.
ber this station of courteous service . . .
No. 4 Blake. 34 persons. &gt;261.80.
I
!
!
|

Sporting Items

The DUCK PIN BOWLING

REPRESENT URGE
CASH INVESTMENT

IS NOW OPEN!

LINE UP YOUR TEAM MATES

TEACHERSHAVE
ENJOYABLE TIME

Leagues Start Soon

RINSO

19c

8 lbs.
SWEET
POTATOES

25c

3 cans DOGGIE DINNER
•
•
•
•
•

J,

‘^Orgamzations-^rZ “ZT 55

No. 2'/? can Pumpkin
No. 2'/? can Hominy^
No. 2 can Tomatoes-.
Tall can Mackerel-----No. 2 can Cut Beets..

COCOA

15c

25c

IO‘

Del Monte PEACHES "■‘iS" 2 can* 33c
29c
3 con, GREEN or WAX BEANS
73c
24 V? lbs. LEADER FLOUR
Del Monte Vacuum Pack Cotfee 27c Ib.

WALLACE GROCERY

You’ll Be Pleased With
Our Friendly Service

SPECIALS
In the Drug Deportment for Thursday

Friday and Saturday, Sept. 17, 18, 19!

&gt;27730
PRAIRIEVILLE TOWNSHIP:
No. 2 MHo. 9 persons. &gt;69.30.
No. 3 Fr. Prairieville, 67 persons.
1515.90.
&gt;
No. 4 Fr. South Pine Lake, 14 per­
sons. &gt;107.80.
No. 7 Calkins. 16 persons. &gt;12330.
No. 8 Fr. North Pine Lake. 43
perrons. &gt;331.10.
&gt;207.90.
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP:
No. 1 Al-Gon-Quin Lake, 14 per- ,
sons, &gt;10780.

LOW BUS
FARES to
KALAMAZOO

35c Mum Deodorant

...24c

I pt. Rubbing Alcohol

19c

1 pt. Mineral Oil

29c

25c Feenamint Gum

17c

25c J. &amp; J. Baby Talc

17c

1 Ib. carton Epsom Salts

10c

50c Garden Court Talcum

25c

69c-100 Puretest Aspirin

49c

35c Vick's Vapo Rub

' 25c Bayer's Aspirin

100 Halibut Liver Oil Capsules79c

5IXTY-DAY
ROUNDTRIP, $135

MANY OTHER SPECIALS in This Sale!

TO LANSING

YOU WILL SAVE WITH SAFETY

PEOPLES
Rapid Transit
10-8

SPECIAL—
13-Plate BATTERY

29c

35c Elkay's Fly Killer

SHOPPERS'
ROUND TRIP. $1.25
SIXTY-DAY
ROUNDTRIP, $1.80

BIC.or LITTLE!

.21c

ONE WAY$ .75

00

your car here for every driving attention—

39c-l Ib. bulk Psyllium Seed29c

SHOPPERS’
ROUND TRIM).00

ONE WAY

just to keep in your mind the fact that
you'll find greater satisfaction in bringing

29c

AT THE REXALL STORE

CARVETH £&gt; STEBBINS
GOODS DELIVERED — PHONE 2131

• We Make Window Shades to Fit Your Windows I

Batteries, Windshield Wipers

REGULAR
GASPRICE

Vulcanizing.

PllLIP'r'fl
SUNDCU
BLUE

Washing

MOTOR
FUEL

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                  <text>EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THUSRDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1936

14 PAGES

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

COUNTY REPUBLICANS GIVE HOFFMAN, BURHANS, CLEME
BIG MAJORITIES; DEMOCRATS VOTE SIX TO ONE FOR SWIF
SiW EVIDENCES
raws
BRI0K BUILDINGS WERE
TOPPLED RECENTLY IN
HELENA, MONT.

RECORD ENROLLMENT
AT HASTINGS HIGH
Total on Monday Beached
590—An All-Time
High
Tiie enrollment of the high school
was increased by eight on Monday
of this week, making the total 590.
tilcl. is an all-time record. Il was
\“vc
®dded to
if* high
liloH school
arhnnl list
1I«L at the
th- beginning
h—crlnnlnv
the
of the third week of
The
number of out-of-town students in
th* high school and seventh and
eighth grades is now past the three
hundred mark, which exceeds by a
considerable any previous record.
This increased attendance and lhe
increased number of foreign aturlnnte
&lt;hnn' th
— -vr-ll-nt
atandlm,
dents show
the
excellent standing
of the Hastings high school.

Myers Wins Sheriff Nomination
Slight
Fair Attendance And Exhibits TEJCHERSHJVE
Exceed Those Of Former Years
NJOYABL" TIME ^ar8^n’ Vlouse Victor In Close Race
Con»«rvativw Estimate Gives Number
As 60,000 For Five Days Sept. 8-12

TWO TEACHERS are

BRUCKER BEATS COUZENS;
MURPHY DOWNS GEO. WELSH

REGISTER NEARLY 100
ADDEJJO FACULTY [
PER CENT AT CLEAR
I
LAKE ENCAMPMENT
1i Large Enrollment in High,
School and Grades
Fitzgerald Swamps Fitch; Dickinson Wins Impressive
hear SPEAKERS OF
[
This Year
New-Deal Senate Nominee
uiTinusi
nrniiTiTimi
NATIONAL
REPUTATION i 1 On Monday several changes were Lead Over Read; Brown
NA
I IUNAL REPUTATION
- ’
~

The 1Mfl Barry County Fair camo every day he Jumped. His; feat was
to » close Saturday evening and In made more difficult because his left
_ .&lt;___________
_ ...attended
. . ..
j tbe opinion
of those__
who
it foot and ankle were tn a cast due [
was one of the most successful in to a broken bone In his heel which
many years
happened when he landed on the
| A record Sundance marked every roof of the grandstand at Traverse
------------| made at the Central school and one |
Although only an average vote turned out for the primary Tuesday,
day Maurice Foreman, secretary, and City to avoid landing in the crowds Discussions of Educational
MissInterest
- - -the■"results
------ ran high. An •-------------tabulation
.......
—U
...m rtH. D. Cook and Family Had .
Educational I new tcacher added to the staff.- ------in
unofficial
gives
|
Harold
who waa ln charge 0( at the fair grounds.
:
I Evida Williams of Battle Creek,TeniS?
w- Publlcans a to1*1 vot* ot
and lhe Democrats 1.108 for a grand total
Wonderful Ride Through |
I llckcl
estimating conservativeThe big amount of the purses of- .
Subjects
bub
Jecls Were Features
wln acl
assistant to Mias Jt
- to
of 4,136. Republicans of this district ousted Frank Mosier in favor ot
|
ly Ulal MOOO
entered the fair fered in the horse races attracted a j
'
Scenic Glacier Park
of
Program
I
McBain,
who
has
been
assigned
of Program
&lt;rounds during the five days.
I There were plenty of evidences of '
Earl Burhans. while Prank Murphy ran consistently ahead at Geerga
large number of racing horses and 1
__
.. .
the races were all Interesting.
A---new
The exhibits were more numerous-------------------------------------------- --- .1 Two hundred and five teachers of pits enrolled. Miss Williams is a Welsh. A contest of more than local interest was the victory of dare
the recent earthquakes in Helena
than in previous years, additional I track record was set up in the free- this city and other Barry county graduate of Western State Teach- I Hoffman over Felix Racette, Thia may or may not be an accurate mens
especially in some of the brick build-.
schools
were
enrolled
at
the
Teach
­
ers' College at Kalamazoo.
tents being put up to take care of -------- -------------*—~
------------ -------ings. The road from Helena north |
___
on ure of the Townsend strength in this district. There is more than a
the overflow. Tiie amusement and 2:07 1*4. beating the previous track ers' Encampment held al Clear lake
to Great Falls follows down the
from Thursday evenmg till Satur­ Monday when ’the Fourth grade possibility lhat Dr. Racetie did not have the complete confidence at
commercial midways were larger
Missouri river, and It Li hard to be- I
and more attractive and the stageelation
______ _ paid
______________________
the winner. James Plp- day noon under the auspices of the from the Second word school. Miss many Townsend members
Hero Lhat this Is the same old Mis­
W. K. Kellogg Foundation. In fact, Grace Edmonds, teacher, was trans- ,
shows
belter
than
usually
seen
ata-er.
an
extra
twenty-five
dollars.
souri that we crossed near Omaha.,
*
*
icqunly fairs. A fine display of fireThe winners
‘-------- —in the -----races were: tills registration was almost 100 per ferred to the Central school buildThere seems to be twice as much
Ing as a temporary arrangement.
„
। works completed each evening's cn- Wednesday afternoon In the pacing । cent, which was a splendid record.
A number of close races featured would look as if Mr. BruckW*
water In it here, and instead of be­
The program (included a series of Miss Williams will also assist Miss, the Democratic and Republican prltertainment.
race Jack Richardson. James Adams.
ing just a muddy trickle through a
discussions,
round
tables
and
lec
­
srssJs
or
v
mBry
elccllon
m
t
hu
counl
y.
several
i| wioe
su-irt anrt
.
I One of the features this year, os Ciiarles Eiderbrook. L. K. Bullen, Ed.
Edmonds with fourth grade work.
wide mudtiv
muddy bed
bed it
It is
is swift
and 1|
clear, and there are a great many °°UNTY TREAB. MAUS RE- I last year, was the drawings for the Randall and Leo Crampton: tn the tures regarding!current educational
Arthur Lower, rhr
—Z*~‘ ±
who *taught
tn of the candidates were also vlctor- Fitzgerald swamped his opponent.
»iiu uinr aic u great many
---- ----------------- ----------- — —~
problems all ot^ which were inter­ Nashville last year, wsr
I.trout fishermen
---------------along
- --------the
. bends and ----------------------------------------------------*• waa added to
to &gt;ous by landslide margins.
Fitch, by a vote of nearly eight to
0EIVE8 CHECK
FOR $45 - I cars donated by the merchant.', and trotting race Mrs. Andy Adams. L. esting and helpful to the teachers. the High school force
beginning
his
K
*“'—*-■For the Republicans, complete re­ one. On the democratic ticket
rapida We arrived. In Great Palis
7n PRnM
’
I business men of. Hastings and Barry K. Bullen. Andy Adams. James Piper
At eight o'clock Thursday eve­ work yesterday. Wednesday. Mr. . turns for the county arc aa follows;
county. The Hudson terraplane was and Johnson A: Jarvis.
Frank J. Murphy, endorsed by the
around 7:00 P. M., had a barbecue
890.70 FROM STATE
I lunch and sodas, went to a show
- ____
won on Wednesday by George
Thursday afternoon In the 2:18 ning. Dr. George E. Carrothers from Lower will tench American govern­ Governor:
Roosevelt administration, seems to
RATE IQ &lt;7 7n DCD
(Crakes of Hastings; the Plymouth pace: James Piper. W. L. Meyer. J. Ann Arbor spoke on • Reorganization ment. civics and glee club.
Frank D. Fitzgerald—2698.
have trimmed
Mr. George W.
and then to bed.
of
the
High
School
Curricula
to
Because
of
the
unusually
large
DM
I
C
lOi/./Urtn
on
Thursday
by
Lyle
Lancaster.
Roscoe
Conklin
Pitch
—
229.
H. Adams and Lee Tlnk; in the 2:20
Great Falls, Montana. Monday.
Meet
the
Needs
of
a
Changing
enrollment
It
was
necessary
to
lure
Majority far Fitzgerald—2469.
CENSUS PERSON Hastings. Route 5; theotFord
on Fri- trot: Thomas Wynn, Charles Lewis.
only recently Joined the democratic
July 13th—2282 miles from Has­
UEHOUO rEnaun |day by Bert
Middleville E. M. Stout. Johnson A: Jarvis. School Population." He said that these extra teachers.
Lieutenant-Governor:
tings. Temperature 62 degrees.
today, from every vocation and call­
—
—
Luren D. Dickinson—1922.
Great Falls is the second largest —
The —
FiffUrcs Show
There Are |' and ,the Chevrolet on Saturday by Charles Method and E. Van Blaring in life young people are enrolled
city in Montana, having a popuia-1
.
®
"
cherter
of ukc
Thomas Read—767.
for governor I To turn him down
In large numbers—the total high |
Majority for Dickinson—1155.
tlon of about 29.000. It derives its I
5,961 Between Ages of
I Marvin Coleman, the bat wing Perry Williams. Leo Crampton and I school population having exceeded I
J. W. Kealey.
United States Senator:
finement of cruelty.
name from the Great Falls of the,
Five
and
Twenty
I
fl
.
y
er
Five
Twenty
11plane from a height of eight to ten
Missouri river, located about twelve
„
.
’ and iwenty
Friday afternoon in the 2:25 trot: the rlx million mark. With this
Wilber M. Brucker—2015.
In this congressional district
। m.«.
hou'a«d feet. His »f»mt'wi
” E. M. Stout. E. Van Blarcum. Wil- large school population has come
miles num
from u&gt;e
the city,
city, wnere
where lour
four | Coun‘y Treasurer L
L. P
F.' Maus lias I ‘thousand
stunt was spec
specJames courens—961.
Clare E. Hoffman received the re­
the
necessity
for
curriculum
reor
­
1 large hydroelectric ptanta are local-'
* check tor.
and
* ‘‘W crowd
Majority
for
Brucker
—
10M.
(Continued on page 8. See. H
publican nomination with a ma­
ganizations which will best serve all
led. wlUch generate power for the14? 890 70'
lhe amount of.-----------------------------------------------------------Congressman:
•
jority so far of about 8.600 and *&lt;tvClare E. Hoffman—1774.
city's principal Industrles-copper J
”'?n*y ai!ponlo?'d LOCAL GIRL CHOSEN
Most of the teachers stayed at the HE
APPEARS TO HAVE
Lduc,,.wl„nnlw
Felix A. Racette—961.
majority may reach 10,000. Tha
Camp all night occupying the cab­
| H. T- Dewhirst—121.
BEEN SHAMEFULLY
QUEEN OF FESTIVAL
ins used by the Camp Fire girls dur­
! Majority for Hoffman—692.
We left Great Falk fairly early I
£.r‘°' ”
lhe
I
concentrated on an effort to defeat
Ing the summer.
TREATED
in the morning headed for Glacier | *7,70.
i
I
Plurality
over
Racette
—
1082.
| Dr. Gerald s. Craig, associate pro'State Senator:
| National Park and had breakfast in ', By school districts the apportlon- Florence Westerlind Select­
spoken opposition—not to old age
‘ fessor of Natural Sciences at TeachI ment Is as.follows:
ed From Field of Sixteen
Choteau, about sixty miles north.
pensions which he favors, but to the
ers',college. New York,Clly. was the HIS NEW-FOUND LOVE
| Choteau Is located in one of the ASSYRIA TOWNSHIP:
plan of paying 9200 a month to
[first speaker on Friday morning,
at
Kalamazoo
Monday
No.
1
Bell.
55
persons.
$42350.
IS DISAPPOINTING
I principal, or as far as we could see
RAILROADS
HAVE
A
PINE
using
as
his
subject.
'.The
Teach
­
No. 3 Fr.. Eagle, 17 persons. $130.­
Prom among sixteen contestants
judge of Probate:
from lhe road, the only agricultural
ing
of
Science
In
the
Elementary
A Shabby Trick Has Boon
from counties of southern Michigan,
Stuart Clement—2266.
RECORD FOR PASSEN­
country in Montana. They have 90.
more. Hla opposition to that VM
School with Special Emphasis upon
No. 4 Fr., Austin. 20 persons, $154. Miss Florence Westerlind was select­
Laurence E. Barnett—756.
plenty of water for irrigation, be­
Played Upon George by
GER SAPETY
the Health Education Aspects of
No. 5 Assyria Center. 70 persons. ed queen of the Southwestern
Majority for Clement—1510.
ing located not for from the eastern
Science Teaching." He said that a
Michigan Wheat FesUval at Kala­
HU New‘‘Friend'' (?)
Counly Treasurer:
slope of lhe continental divide. The 1539.
show that people admire his frank
child has a right to the facta of
No. 6 Ellis, 18 persons. $138.60.
mazoo, Monday afternoon.
Tha REGULATIONS HAMPER
WUl Steuin—837. - .
According to George Welsh*
crops did look pretty good; in fact
the universe, undiluted by unscien­
No. 7 Fr . Briggs. 43 persons. $331.­ contest was originally Intended as a
Walter Fisher—887.
they were about the only crops we
opinions and prejudices. Fairy statement he left the republican
10.
popularity event but turned into a
FURTHER DEVELOPMENT tific
George A. Clouse—997.
saw after leaving Nebraska.
party because Its doings did not
tales
and
fiction
can
have
no
part
In
No. 8 Fr. Checkered, 30 persons. beauty and style show. There were
Plurality for Clouse—110.
please him. He stepped over into
Not far north of Choteau we had
two entrants from Barry county; .Travel on Railways Thirty­ the interpretation of natural phe­ the democratic party, where he ex­ Register of Deeds:
(Continued on page 6. Bee. 1) ; $231.
had a belter than two to one
nomena. Every classroom should be
| No. 9 Fr. Lincoln. 42 persons. Miss Barbara Trego, also of Has­
Vernor Webster—1783.
| $323.40.
a laboratory and a library where pected conditions would be much
Seven Times Safer Than
Maurice Waters—896.
tings. placed fourth.
more
to
his
liking.
He
must
be
a
WOLVERINE BEAGLE
children may experiment and geek disappointed man: because in. th-.. Majority for
BALTIMORE TOWNSHIP:
Miss Westerlind has had a busy
Webster—937.
1
in Automobiles
Information from authentic sources.
No. 1 Dowling, 60 persons. $462.
CLUB FIELD TRIALS
week following her selection, and is
received tha following votes:
The speaker at the Rotary club
"The Activities of United States daily papers last wtek.' especially in Democratic
No. 2 Striker. 31 persons, $238.70.
planning another busy one next
County Complete.
- •‘fcOmber, 25 persons, $192.- week when she visits Atlantic City. Monday noon was Mr. Emil Hanson, Office of Education' was the theme
Splendid Premiums Are Ofconnected with the general offices of the talk by Dr. Mary Dabney presented evidences that George's I Governor:
50.
When announced the winner Mon­
I
fered for the Prize
new-found political love is not re-1 George Welsh—639.
NO. 4 Hendershott, 21 persons. day. she was presented a lovely bou­ of the Michigan Central at Detroit. Davis, who represented the Depart­
ciprocatlng in a proper manner or I Frank Murphy—*662.
“
i
Winners
$161.70.
quet and later attended a reception. He spoke of “Transportation Prob­ ment of the Interior. The United spirit
Plurality for Murphy—23.
lems."
and in Barry. MJ,
States Office of Education was or­
No. 5 Weeks. 20 persons. $154.
Tuesday with her court she was
Lieutenant Governor:
On October 6 to 10. the sixteenth
The railroad Interests qf this ganized In 1867 and has the respenNo. 6 Durfee, 38 persons. $292.00. taken on a tour of Kalamazoo and
recently.
1.700800
franked
letters
I
Henry
c.
Glasner
—484.
annual field trials and s;&gt;ecialty
Bur hans.
(Contlnued on page 3, Sec. 1)
No. 7 Fr. Barney Mills, 33 persons, shown Its outstanding places of in­ country, he said, represent Its larg- ,
show of the Wolverine Beagle Club
urging
support
of
the
democratic
Leon
D.
Case
—
299.
est industrial organization in both |
terest. Today—Thursday—at 4:30
Charles P. Hernans—133.
will be held In Hastings, some fine $254.10.
party were sent Into Michigan.
men and capital investment. At the
In this connection it might
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
the coronation ceremony will be held
TWO ADDRESSES
Leo J. Nowicki—51.
premiums being offered.
The envelope looked all right on
peak the railroads employed about
with
Governor
Fitzgerald
officiat
­
Majority for Glasner—1.
Officers of the Club are: Pres.. W.
1.700.000 men and their investment
BY MISS ROMA GANS the front side, but when you turned Plurality
ing. unless unexpected events pre­
Le. Behrens. Muskegon; Vlce-Pres,. DR. GWINN SPOKE
Glasner over Leon case Monday, casting over 300.000 rotas
exceeded twenty-four billions of
vent his attending. At nine o'clock
J. I. Kennedy. Detroit; Secy.-Treas..
suggested ballot for every Michi­
dollars.
[ Beryl Bishop. Lansing; Asst. Secy.,
AT CLUB LUNCHEON this evening she will attend the There is no other industry in thia Speaks to Teachers in the gan democrat to vote at the pri­ United Stales Senator:
queen's ball given in her honor. Sat­
Preptlsi Brown—549.
Charles
Boomer. East Lansing.
Afternoon and to the
mary; and this suggested ballot did
country, he said, that is so ham­
Ralph W. Lydy—99.
MBBibers of the Field Trial com- Merchant! of City Heard urday afternoon she will lake part pered by regulations, governing al­
not contain Mr. Welsh's name I In­
tha
Public in Evening
in a parade and will attend a pag­
John H. Muyskrns—84.
mlttee are Beryl Bishop and Frank
stead it urged his opponent. Frank
most every activity, as are the rail­
election the
eant
that
evening.
DiscuiBion
of
''Socialized
Louis B. Ward—211.
Kingsbury of Lansing. Homer Smith
Miss Roma Gans of Minneapolis Murphy of Detroit, as the proper
roads. At each session of congress
As
her
award
for
winning
the
Majority far Brown—168.
ot Hastings. Charles Whitaker of |
Medicine”
some new statesmen takes a pot shot is tn the city today enroute from gubernatorial candidate for Michi­
contest
she
was
given
a
trip
to
At
­
Plurality for Brown over WardCuster and Charles Boomer of East'
at them, increasing their problems, her home to New York City where gan democrats to favor. This cute
, Dr.'t^'
a. B Gwinn, who succeeds the lantic City with all expenses paid.
Lansing. Elmer Gray of Indianapolis '..."
hoping thereby to please the voters she teaches at Columbia Univer­ idea was probably devised by the
and Leonard BenneU of Hinkley. Ill.,
H' A. Adrounle here, was
sity.
Parley satellites at Washington to Congressman:
accept; and U would am that this
the speaker at the noon luncheon of tel. Miss Westerlind was also given of hU home district. The railroads
Birge Swift—927.
are Judges for the field trials. Herb ,
have not only paid their full shareI This afternoon at 4:15 o'clock. carry out the Farley-Roosevelt plan
the entire outfit which she modeled
Harvey Hope Jarvia—111.
of the taxes of the country, but they Miss Gans will speak to city and of dictation even In state affairs.
the Specialty Show. Dr. B. A. Perry
. Socialized Medicine.
In the show while competing for
Guy
M.
Tyler
—
58.
rural
teachers
at
Central
auditori
­
Naturally Mr. Welsh's ire was
paid $7,500,000 In cash lasj year to
presidency judging from the Maine
Is a member of the bench show coinn\CJltlVhan&lt;ihepOrV’uyJjrniCr" the title.
Majority for Swift—748.
support the Interstate ’Commerce um. Her subject 13 "The Work of a aroused by this trespass upon his
results Monday. The republicans
rnlltcc
lclul observers on the socialized plan
Plurality for Swift over Jarvis—
rights, using taxpayers' money to
Commission, which regulates every Teacher.”
All dog. entered must be the
?ermMn?L.Wher: METHODIST PASTORS
Again at eight o'clock Miss Gans boost his opponent, and he said
form of railroad activity. In addition
four years that state has had a demhealth ln
Insurance
is required, and
bonafide property of the person i heMllh
",r,nf* *■
to all these expenses, the railroads wUl give a pubUc address to which some things that were not compli­
! where 90 per cent of medical servFOR BARRY COUNTY are required to maintain their own all rural and city parents and any mentary about his new political as­
making the entry and a pedigree, so 1 ices arc paid by the government.
far as can be obtained, furnished
topwumy those
uiusc in
ui the
Ilie
——
——
road beds, tracks and right-of-way. others who may wish to attend are sociates. especially
upon request Club headquarters Delay in treatment, indifference to Rev. W. M. Jones Returned while their competitors have no invited. The subject of her evening seats of party authority at Wash- I Plurality for Hughes—440.
. ... .
.....
. ......... TlMrlalati.r—■
during the week will be at the needs of patients, and requirements
talk has not been announced.
ington and in this state. It was a Legislature:
such expenses.
which is substantially true of the
for length of hospital treatment way
to Hastings—Rev. J. R.
Charles
P.
Parker
—863.
Parker House.
During the summer session at shabby trick to play on a new con­
The ralli^kads' record for safety of
Frank W. Bennett—288.
There are seven classes In the field beyond what Is necessary, are in­
Wooton at Nashville
passengers is outstanding. Not a Teachers' College, Misses Helen vert. especially when he is so modsisted upon. The Americans who re­
trials as follows;
Majority for Parker—574.
men. their aggregate majority ex­
The Michigan annual conference single railroad passenger was killed Wade. Rose DeFoe and Helen Furported
on
this
socialized
medical
Class A—Derby for dogs. 13 Inches
nlss were In some of the classes democratlc candidate for governor. Sheriff:
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
ceeding 50.000. The only contort
treatment did not believe it would of the Methodist Episcopal church
and under.
George H. Myers-481.
taught by Mtas Gans and all speak
Whether Mr. Welsh will be dis­
dosed Its session at Battle Creek on
John VanDerKolk—402.
Claas B—Derby for dogs 15 inches be pleasing to the American people, Monday evening. Following are the
very highly of her and her work, illusioned about his new political
who like prompt service and don't
‘THE GREAT ZIEGFIELD” nils is a splendid privilege for the love
Charles A. Woodruff—283.
and under.
remains
to
be
seen.
He
may
say
ator White, republic
assignments of pastors for Barry
Class C—Open for all age dogs 13 appreciate red tape.
AT LOCAL THEATER people of Hastings and Barry coun­ things after the primary, as Mr. Plurality for Mjwrs over Van Der
England has a form of socialized county:
inches and under.
ty to have the opportunity of hear­ Murphy has been named for the Kolk-79.
Banfield—Rev. E. A. Exner.
medicine
not
like
Germany's,
but
Class D—Open for all bitches 13
State Results.
Delton—Rev. R, L. Bates.
Pictures Life of America's ing such a talented speaker as Miss governorship, by the aid of the cute
apparently no better as far as care
Inches and under.
Gans, who is brought here by the little trick of sending out from
Wilber M. Brucker defeated Sen­ the Maine government for the ;
Freeport—Rev. Fem Wheeler.
Greatest Showman on
Class E—Two couple pack stakes. for the welfare of patients Is con­
W. K. Kellogg Foundation.
Washington 1,700,000 franked gov­ ator Couzens by a nearly, two to
Hastings—Rev. W. Maytan Jones.
cerned. Neither one. in Dr. Gwinn's
Mixed ownership permitted.
Commissioner Maude 'W. Smith ernment envelopes, with a suggested one vote tn the state primary.
centrated upon ills election
Hastings
circuit
—
Rev.
V.
B.
the
Screen
Class F—Open for bitches over 13 judgment, offered any hope of su- Swemm.
has sent out cards to all rural ballot for Michigan democrats to
Congressman Prentiss J. Brown
...
pertcrity over our American plan of
Ray Branch, manager of the Strand
aad under 15 Inches.
Middleville—Rev. L. N. RlgelnUn. Theater, has secured "The Great teachers urging their attendance at vote at the primary, omitting Mr. seems to have been successful In
•­
Class G—Open for dogs over 13 medleal treatment.
these
meetings.
Welsh's
name,
giving
only
the
name
getting
the
democratic
senatorial
Nashville—Rev. J. R. Wooton.
Every right-thinking American
Zlegfitld" at the same lime that
and under 15 inches. The above
of his opponent. Mr. Frank Mur­ nomination. As the
republican
Woodland—Rev. F. J. Fitch.
It is appearing at the theaters in
classes will be run in this order. A. doctor will respond to a call from
phy!
primary vote in the state will ex­
Some of our readers will be in­
K. C- 75 points are necessary to any source. If at all possible for him terested in the following assign­ the larger cities of Michigan, giving
Mr. Welsh may conclude that he ceed 680.000 and the democratic
to
do
so.
whether
he
thinks
he
will
to the people of this community the
complete a field championship. En­
has jumped from the frying pan primary vote was only 200.000. it
ments to pastors who formerly privilege of seeing it along with the*
get
his
pay
or
not,
said
Dr7
Gwinn.
try fee in all show classes is $1.00
into the fire in changing his politi­
served in this city or county: Rev. larger cities at a lower admittance.
per entry and entries close Sept. 30.
cal affiliations.
L. L. Dewey •continues as district
EXTENSION CLASS.
STOCK JUDGING Tl
The officials of the field trials and spond to the cry of need for treat­ superintendent of the Grand Rapids To allow as many people os possible
HONORS AT
John C. Hoekje, registrar and di­
to see the picture. It will run for
WM. S. SCHADER ACCEPTS
bench show will follow in every de­ ment. The American plan of mak­
district. Rev. Matthew Duffy is re­
CHRYSLER CO. POSITION. rector of extension at Western
tail the regulations of the American ing smaller charges for people who turned to Ionia; Rev. Myron Hoyt four consecutive days Tuesday,
William s. Schader. son of Wil­ Slate Teachers' College. Kalamazoo,
Kennel club. Approval of this an­ have smaller incomes, and charging was sent to the Okemos Federated Wednesday. Thursday and Friday of
larger
fees
to
people
who
can
afford
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dena
Burgess.
next
week.
Because
of
this
the
usual
liam
A.
Schader.
has
accepted
a
nual meet has been given by the A.
has announced that
Professor
church; Rev. R. H. Bready is re­ Tuesday night coupon will be can­
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Burgess, who position with the Chrysler corpora­ George Sprau of the English De­
K. C.. with headquarters In New to pay. seems far superior to the
socialized plan. In his judgment It turned to Amboy and Austin pas­ celled.
reside in the Kerr apartment on tion at Detroit and left Wednesday partment of Western Stale wUl ofYork city.
torale. Rev. C- M- Conklin, who was
The admittance charged for this West Green street, came to Hastings to commence his work. During the
For several years these gatherings is less expensive. To have the state pastor of Hastings circuit, is placed
picture, while a little higher than from Petoskey. Mr. Burgess is a post summer he was connected with
have been held in Hastings where pay for medical service does not
at Cedar Springs; Rev. M. D. Mc­
the running fields are considered mean that it costs the patient noth­ Kean. who was for several years usual, is still considerably less than graduate of Western State Teach­ the educational tours conducted for •Familiar Essay." The organisation
very suitable and conveniently lo­ ing. It means simply that tn some pastor at Middleville, was sent to .that charged at the larger theaters. ers' College at Kalamazoo and is a the sons of Chrysler employees and meeting for the class will be held
cated. Then too. there is ample ken­ other form, in the way of added Epworth church. Grand Rapids. Rev. This is the original road show that teacher in the commercial depart­ while In New York he personally
costa to goods he buys, or indirect
go to tha Sto
has been allowing .throughout ”
the ment at the Hastings High school. met Walter P. Chrysler and other
nel room at the fair grounds.
taxes, or direct taxes like the sales W. F. Philips goes to Ovid, Michl- ,country at an admittance fee of They have a seven months' old son. executives of the firm, it hU been M-. at the Hastings High school.
later this fall
gan; Rev. a. A. Buege has the Mar­ 9180.
MAY BE TRIED THIS TERM.
learned on,, good authority that
NEW PASTOR NAMED.
tin
and
Bradley
tliurches.
Rev.
R.
'
M
R
s
Evida
Williams.
tors
employed
by
the
ilaU,
without
Frank Barkruff. James Hitchcock.
"Young Bill* made a favorable Im­
Bee the advertisement in this 1sE.
Yost
la
the
pastor
at
Oahtemo
and
The
Rev.
Walker
Jordan
la
the
Miss
Williams
is
the
new
assistant
William Service and Russell Hink­ regard to how efficiently or care­
pression and the new position re­
sue for further particulars.
Oakwood. Rev.*Karl Keefer is con­
ley. charged with statutory offenses,
sulted from this meeting. William is
Central school. Her home is in Bat­ a graduate of the Hastings High church for tha coming yur, thia
AN APPRECIATION.
were brought before Judge McPeek Ueves tile American plan is better tinued at Watervliet. Rev. A. E.
Wynn, former pastor at Woodland.
I wish to thank the voters of
.. tle Creek and she is a graduate of school and Ferris institute at Big being his first pastorate. Rev. and
on Monday. They waived examina­ and more effective.
i» stationed at Wheeler.
Mrs Jordan are young people and
Barry county for the fine support Western Stale Teachers' College al Rapids.
tion and stood mute before the
are greatly interacted tn bolkting
given md for the Democratic nomi­ Kalamazoo. Miss Williams is affil­
judge when asked to plead. A plea
BASEBALL GAME.
CHICKEN*SUPPER.
iated with the Methodist church and
nation for office of sheriff.
Dowling vs. Hilltop Brewery of
of not guilty was entered in each

PRACTICAL EXAMPLE
OF ROAD BUILDING

[

PRIM MONEY
ISAPPORTIONED;

THESADCASEOF
MR . GEORGE WELSH

local girl chosen

05300705

CASH INVESTMENT

mXJiw

I

May We
Introduce

DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.

case. They may be tried at tills Jackson. Sunday. Sept. 20. Vickery*.
Clear lake.—Adv.
term of court.
.

Delton. Sat, Eve, Eckler* Orch.
—Adv.

Very sincerely yours.
George H. Myers.

is living, at the Guy C. Keller home
Thursday night. Sept. 24. Quim­
on W. Green street.
by church, 5 P. M, 35 cents.—Adv.

�TICK BAITINGS BANNKB, TBUMDAT. UTTIMAIl H, MSI
......... ■

LOCAL NEWS

ELECTED

Home of Lowest Food Prices In Barry County

Soap Chips 27c

SUGAR
lOiClothBag

5 Lb. Box

Balloon

UQC

4^. 29c

Seedless Raisins

5

Molasses

RINSO * 19c

Bowlene

Caa

19c

Cream of Wheat

Pkg.

23c

Lg«. Pkg.

19c

Quick or Regular

Wheaties
KClIOgg S

Vacation Land

Coffee &gt; 15c

Com FlakeS Or
Post Toasties

2

23c

Lgo. Pkgs.

10c

5 - - 23c

Pancake Fldur

2'-

Our Mother’s Cocoa

15c

White House Coffee

21c

Del Monte Coffee

25c

Maxwell House Coffee

25c

Daonr Wax or Green

3 c.- 29c

P-wua,. Golden Bantam

2 c- 25c

DCdllb

VUl II

SalmonE 23

25c
23c

P &amp; G Soap

Quaker Oats

Syrup B33c

Lb. Pail

FIRST CALL

FANCY CREAM STYLE

3

Tomatoes * ■ •

25c

10 u “•* 17 c

Onions

ooz. 25c

Oranges

Peaches for Canning
5C

Celery

Bunch

Fancy Chickens

Lb 23c

MEATS

Picnics

20c Roast

Smoked
Shankless

FRESH GROUND

Hamburg 2

v'CvOlV

25c
Bacon S', res, . 20c Oleo

Beef Kettle

lb.

Round, Swiss
or Sirloin

lb.

13c

19c

KINGNUT

lbs.

1 lb.

Serve
Yo unelf
and Save

Weeks' Events al
The Country Club

wlth Inflammatory rheumatism, but N. Knopf Is substituting for Mias
wing" man al lhe fair
Is convalescing.
DeMeyer.
i of imyMaearit
Mr. and Mr*. Vem Sprague are
Russell Kimmel of Lhe Banner
luncheon Tuesday for members
planning to soon move to Albion forte, who underwent a major opthe Hastings Country Club a
aluminum head frame
where he has employment.
lheir gua*ts. Ztomias, petunias, a
The next convention of Rotary In­ Pennock hospital. is recovering
nual phlox, asters and dahlias wi
ternational will be held In Nice, nicely and is able to tee hla friends frame cut his head, requiring the combined in bouquets for I
France, the week of June 8th. 1037.
Nell Mannl Is the* winner of the services of a physician. And he did luncheon tables and around (
Tire postponed arutual meeting of fourth suit in Al McCall's suit draw­ these parachute stunts with one of lounge. Thirty-seven woman i
the Baptist church will be held this ing. He will receive a »30 suit or his legs in a plaster cast. But he tended Uie luncheon, ths numl
Thurtday evening Reports will be
provided lhe necessary thrills for being smaller aa school has beg
and guMts have returned to th
given by the officers.
Thia Thursday evening at seven- lhe crowds of fair attendants.
Bill Stanley, the angleworm mer- homes.
Mr. and Mra. Leslie Hawthorne thlrty o'clock the flrat meeting ot
Mra. James Bristol won the pr
are the parents of a son. Michael the official board ot the Methodist
Joseph, born Thursday nt Pennock church will be held in the board home near the Falrgound*. hat
hospital. Congratulations.
'
room at the church. Plans for the
Rev. c. 8. Rcnnell*. pastor of the year’* work will be outlined by the
but the buxines* does not require 1
Hickory Corner* Wesleyan Metho­ pastor, the Rev. W. Maylan Jones.
diet church, brought the evening i City workmen are clearing the speed as angleworms don't crawl Kiva Grainger of Charlotte; Mrs
message at the local W. M. church old buildings from the Dawson and very fast. The angleworm Industry Frank Oarrothera, her daughter
Sunday evening.
f Beckwith
•—**•- •-*
------—‘ Court
------- * street,
-*—* Is just In Ha infancy, but then "great Mra. Bruce Casper of Walla Walla
lots
on•”
West
, Mrs. Allan H- Bishop of Cloverdale recently purchased by the city, to be oaks from little acorns grow.” And !Wash., and Mra. D. 8. Goodyear
the fellow who bad plenty of angle­
was the lucky winner of the inner
Mra.
James Ironside of San Diegc
1
spring msltress at the MUIer Fur- peeled lhe ground will be graded worms to sell durinr the dry spell Calif.
1 nlture Co. booth at the fair. There this fall and the work be completed had the fishermen of Hastings and 1 Mrs. Harold Phillips was chair
vicinity treading a path to his door.
I were 1.500 entries,
in the spring.
.
Irving Charlton,
of Hastings 1man of lhe committee and was as
I The Allegan County fair Is schedK Moses, who halls from New
I tiled for next week Sept. 22. 23. 24. York state, was driving Monday township, has turned his 220 acre 1slated by Mra. R. B. Harkness am
farm over to lhe conservation Dept,
25 and 28. Some fine exhibits have
to
be
converted
into
a
game refuge. ‘Arold and Mra. David Boyes
1 been planned, additional display Oon-Quln, on the apparently level
-pace being necessary.
stretch of road past the old Kurts Mr. Charlton-* property includes the 1 Mra. James W Radford will
| Charles McDermott of Delton was
The 3Slh Rotary District Annual old "Indian Landing" farm al chairman ot next wwk's lunche
Thoniapple
lake
that
evidently
was 1
I overcome by lhe heat while attend­ Frolic Li being held In Grand Rap­
lhe favorite spot for the Indians
Ids today
at lhe
Kent country
ing lhe fair on Thursday. He was----------,_____
_ ____________
__ Club.
_.
The September dinner at the Has
taken to Pennock hospital but was1 A golf tournament and other ac- long before the advent of the while tings Country Club for member
able to return to his home that livlties occupy the afternoon and man. A* evidence of thia Mr. Charl­ ' and guests will be Thursday eve
has a very fine collection ot Inevening.
following dinner the Detroit World ton
dian'relics very largely found'near .
Bridge and dancln
A card from W. T- Wallace says he I champion football team members ■fl, pwpw. 1„ the
..riyl"1
' Li spending some time at Grand &gt; will be present for a round table
days of Michigan the old Detroit Ibeen *5cured.,*t?d
u*f“
Junction. Colorado. He says Grand discussion about football. Several trail passed near this property.
EL
.J
...
”
.
I Junction has plenty of rocks on ex- i members from lhe Hasting* club alcommittee Is Mr. and Mn
hibltion and that Colorado Is beau- tended the affair
affair.-r
SStS.S'S 2.S15&amp;K3
liful this summer.
i On Wednesday. September 23. lhe CORRESPONDENCE
| Over at the Allegan County Fair ■ Fox Studios of Kalamasoo will open
COURSE OFFERED A v*nB“k,,k. • •
next week one of their free exhibits a branch of their dancing school
I will be. a three-legged calf which here In Community hall. Compe­
------------- I The last dancing party for th
gsrnboU about as freely as a normal tent. well-trained teachers will give University of Michigan and junior. members of Die club an
calf dries upon four legs. The calf.r
,_____________________
instruction
tn tap. ballet, acrobatic
I their guests will be held this eve
W. P. A. Sponsor This
which was born last Thanksgiving, and ballroom dancing. Mra. Fox is
I ning (Thursday) at the clubhoua
is owned by an Allegan county man.. a graduate of Western State TeaehDancing will be from elght-thlrt
Movement
j The members of the city council [ ers- college and is well known
to twelve. Mr. and Mrs. W. b
_ uu00111 nm &lt;nd wcond semester Stebbins and Mr. and Mra. Jac
have received complaints about lhe throughout the country for her
unMlchlgan central crossing on Michi-1i usual
usual and
and successful
successful revues
revues. One
C— 1 nret ye*r college courses will be of- । Stem will be In charge and wl
of the fered for Supervised Correspond' gan avenue. Il is very rough and In of
of lhe
the mret
r. ‘ popular feature,
‘
Study
at the beginning.of
lhe i&gt;e assisted by Elen Leonard an
the council's judgment ought to be I school in
tn Its
iw various
vatmua branches
ui&gt;M&gt;c,&gt;ca has ------------------------•------- -n--------Junior Walton.
put in better condition. Accordingly been its Charm School for young-1 “.nlv?Plty
l*nn on_ Bejitember
lhe city clerk was authorized to 1 tiers from three to five years old. I 38 ,
courses are designed eswrltc a letter to lhe local agent of Registration will be on Tuesday. peclally for qualified high school• SELLS CLEAR LAKE
the railroad, requesting that this September 22. from 10:30 to 8 P. M„ graduate* who are financially un­
RESORT PROPER'
able to go to college. Others who
crossing be improved.
at Community hall.
can profit by the instruction and
who cannot attend college may en­ W. A. Crawford Makes Dei
roll. This program Is sponsored by
With Frank Her­
lhe Extension Division of Die Uni­
rington
versity of Michigan.
It la expected that lhe study cen­
Frank Herrington, who has cpr
™
Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557
® ter will be organised on a basis of ducted the clear lake resort for i
regular attendance for every stu­ long, sold his property last week I
PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF SEPT. 20TH
dent al a regular lime each day. W. A- Crawford of Kalamazoo, wh
A supervisor will be appointed has taken possession. holding dano
where not less than 16 students the name s.i hai Mr Herrington.
SUNDAY and MONDAY, SEPT. 20 and 21
enroll and agree to spend al regular
For a long lime Mr. Crawford wi
periods, not leas than ten hours per connected with a paper mill ip Ka
’P. G. WODEHOUSE is in lhe MOVIESI
week (two hours per day) in super­ arnazoo Mr. Herrington rccommrnt
vised study.
Mr. Crawford to the people of Barr
A two weeks' working conference county and says he Ln sure the ne
for study supervisors will be held proprietor will conduct a good plac
xThe Satevepotl Story I
at the University of Michigan. Im­
Later Mr. Herrington plans to t
mediately before the opening of Die to ______
Florida for the winter and Mr
centers. September 14 to September Herrington and sons will rental
25. Supervisors will be given in- here where the boys are in school
.—.... training I--------Mr HerrlnRtnn has run a ROC
tensive
In ,uthe technique
of.
study center management, and In clean place al clear lake, would ni
’Thank Voa leeves"
guidance counselling. Study cen­ sell beer nor would he allow an
Matinee
ter supervisors will be available for rowdyism on lhe premises, alwa;
ROST. MONTGOMERY
Sunday,
counselling with unemployed, oul- Insisting on sobriety and decenc
of-school. young people tn addition He leaves a fine record as an exam
Frank Morgan • Billie Burka
to their regular duties In the super­
Eric Bloro • Madge Evans
vision nt the study center.
|
-------Courses in lhe following subjects HASTINGS TO BE HEPRESENTRI
Gay MGM Romanr-vl
may be taken for full college credit:
At the council meeting Frida
EnglLih. Geography. German. HLv night Mayor Leonard and lhe cow
torv
Aloehro Plan*
Marman xir
tory. Latin
Latin. Collree
College Algebra.
Plane -it
dl president. aAiderman
W
,
TUES.. WED.. THURS., Fill.,
Analytic Geometry, Trigonometry. Schader, were authorised to repr
SATURDAY ONLY
SEPT. 22. 23. 24 and 25
Mechanical Drawing. Political Sci­ sent this city at the Munlcip
ence. Psychology, Sociology, French. League convention which will I
SEPTEMBER 26
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
It la expected that a sufficient held in Muskegon September 18, 1
number of people will enroll so lhat and II.
Doable Fea tare Attraction
a study center will be established at
This association of the cities •
lhe Hastings High school. Anyone Michigan has been helpful to I
interested may learn further partic­ members. One of the reasons wh
ulars by calling Superintendent D. cities now get a part of the weigl
A. VanBusklrk.
tax Is due to the activities of th
organization.
ACCIDENT VICTIM SHOWN
MARKED IMPROVEMENT.
Most pathetic, tn the New Yor
The condition of Harriet Couch, elevator strike, have been lhe pen
With Warren William, Claire
12, daughter ot Mr. and Mra. George house dwellers caught In lobbl
Dodd. Winifred Shaw, Jooeph
Couch, who has been confined to without guides or alpen-stocks.
Pennock hospital since Saturday
King, Dick Foran—A Warner
night, is showing marked improve­
Bros. Flrat National Picture!
ment. according to Dr. A- B. Gwinn,
who U attending the child. The girl
— AND
was struck by a ear driven by Jim
of Direct Credits
Flanders of Hastings Saturday night
as she was leaving the fair grounds.
On Parade
NOW AT
Il Is said she was walking on the
AUo
lecture on true economics,
wrong
side
of
the
street
with
her
POPULAR
With Jane Withers, Jane Darmother and Flanders was meeting be held on vacant lot west of Haro
a car with bright lights and did not Smith's hardware on Slate 81.,
PRICES!
see them. He Immediately look her 0:00 P. M. Saturday. Sept. 10.
to the hospital where she received
You can learn how the farms
treatment. Dr. owtnn said X-rays loses his farm, the laborer loose h
EPISODE MO. ». 1MMIAL MUCK
ADULTS 35c — CHILDREN 10c
had been taken of the skull injuries home, the merchant loses his stoi
JOWBI IM "PHANTOM RIDER."
which could not be completely diag­ and the manufacturer loses hla fac
io r m.
nosed until the pictures are read. lory through the interest colleclli
The girl also suffered bruises on the swindle. The issue la to abolish in
tercel, or nothing else counts I
body and legs.

r| flLASE TFEATLFii

PICCADILLY
JIM/=

M G M'S SHOW OF SHOWS

The CASE of the
VELVET CLAWS

Little Miss Nobody

IRONSIDE’S

lbs.

RIB BOILING BEEF

over and h« suffered UceraUd

dent could not be determined, aa

FREE MOTION PICTURE

Cabbage

POTATOES

are now occupying the Jaha Watoaert home so East Walnut St
Mias Margaret DeMkysr, taaafain the city school*. Is still Hi st

27c

are recognized for their beauty and dignity
of design and for fine workmanship and

choice materials. You will make no mistake

lb.

Food Center

GRANITE MEMORIALS

in ordering a memorial from Ironside’s I
Open
Evenings
Until
9 p. nt.

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
ESTABLISHED I9O7

PHONE 2497

HASTINGS, MICH.

�THI HASTINGS BANNYB, THURSDAY, BEPTDfggM 17, 19M

railroad earnings were I3.100.000.0W J

son, three sisters. Annie, ElUabeth
OBITUARY.
I William David Platt was bom In
and the operating expenses were
No. 4 Tanner. 22 persons. &gt;169.40.
Novi, Oakland cxmnty. Feb. 25. 1850. entine and John Beachey. together
only 49 per cent of the total income.
He later moved to Benton Harbor with many nephews and nieces and
No. 6 Fr. OUs. 25 person*. &gt;19250. In other words private owners and
where he married and lived until other relatives and friends. Funeral
managers of the railroads operated
No. 8 Edger, 22 persons. &gt;189.40.
he moved to Hastings with his fam­ services were held Wednesday Sept
No. 7 Fr. Goodwill, 18 persons, them twice as efficiently and eco(Continued from page 1. Sec. D
burned
ily twenty-one yean ago. residing
nomlcally as did the government. If
NINE LETTERMEN
&gt;13850.
Springs United Brethren church
we need any other information on
—— -------------------------- ;— i No. 9 Yccklcy, 12 persons, &gt;92.40.
OUT FOR FOOTBALL aged 80 yrs.. 6 mos.. and 15 days.
(Continued from page 1. 8ec. I)
THORNAPPLE TOWNSHIP:
that subject we can get it over In 11am Adams, Frank Talbot and Pal
ton, officiating. Burial In Yankee bouse and
Williams;
-in
lhe
2:22
pace.
Ed.
Canada.
The
Canadian
government
He
leaves
four
sons;
Floyd
and
WU“ . Township unit school, 625 persons.
BARRY TOWNSHIP:
owns and operates the Canadian Randall. Louie Schnle, s. C. Trum­ First Game at Grand Ledge ford Platt of Hastings. David Platt Springs cemetery.
&gt;&gt;441250.
Township unit school. Delton, 257 I WOODLAND TOWNSHIP:
of Hickory Comers. Calvin Platt of
National Railroad. For the last three bull. Gioos Brothers; in tiie free
This Saturday, Sep­
■ persons, &gt;1378.90.
Battle Creek and a daughter. Mrs. HOUSE STRUCK BY
and Mrs.
]• Township unit sohool, 344 persons, years, in lhe face of increased traf­ for all James Piper. Crandall A
Clarence Cheney of Hickory Cor­
fic. the deficit for that railroad as
tember 19
LIGHTNING IN STORM.
CARLTON TOWNSHIP:
&gt;2.648 80.
Barnard. J. W. Kealey.
ners; a sister. Mrs. Belle Merrill of
No. 1 Rogers, 34 persons. &gt;201 80.
shown by lhe Canadian, govern­
Seventy-three
high
school
youths
Mr. and Mra. Win. Zuachnltl had
The
race
for
ponies
owned
in
ment's books, lias increased from
Lansing, a brother Frank Platt of
No. 2 Carlton Center; 41 persons, YANKEE SPRINGS:
have
enrolled
for
football
tralnBarry
county
was
won
by
Theodore
No. 1 Fr. OilM. 20 persons. UM. &gt;35.000,000 In 1933 to over &gt;120,Hastings and two step-sisters. Mrs.
8315.70.
this fall,---------------------------------announces Coach Lyle
Cook. Hastings Route 2. Gerald Oib- ,, Ing
—- -------------No. 3 Fr. Yankee Springs, 23 per­
No. 3 Fr. Barnum, 39 persons.
000.000 in 1935.
son. Cloverdale, second and third ■ Bennett. Among them are nine let- Cynthia Wilcox of Hastings and
sons, &gt;177.10.
Mrs. Hannah Burkholder of Grand
&gt;30030.
Tiie . speaker said if the govern­
No. 4 Fr. Robbins. 29 persons, ment cannot keep its own books in place. Richard Burdick. Hastings.'! termen from last year's squad— Rapids; a granddaughter. Bernice
No. 4 Fr. Fish. 44 persons. &gt;33880
Lester Hawks. Harold Griffith and Angell. D. Beumer. Doxey. Hall.
the black, how can It hope to keep
No. 6 Fr. Welcome Comers, 57 per­ &gt;22330.
Donald Townsend. This was a half Kelley. Ransom, Etruble. Scobey Platt; two grandsons. Rolland La­
No. 8 Fr. Ritchie. 3 persons. &gt;23.10.
sons. &gt;438 90.
lhe railroads in the black? We all mile race and all ponies were ridden and C. Smith. Nine reserves are velle of Hastings and Donald Platt
Total. 5.961 persons. &gt;45499.70.
No. 7&lt; vnency,
no.
Cheney. 21 per
persons,
mm is, tioi.iu.
&gt;181.70.
know lhat government operation is by children.
. also Put for practice—Brill. Cappon, of Cleveland. Ohio, besides twelvi
No. 9 Friend. 34 persons. &gt;261.80. |
less efficient and more expensive
The horse pulling contests were Cogswell. Edmonds. C. Draper, Izs- other grandchildren.
No. 10 Fr. Brown. 49 persons. :
than private ownership. What the open only to Burry county horse (he. Lu Ballister, H. Moore. Sothard
railroads desire on the iwirt of lhe owners. The heavyweight contest and Karmes. Tiie balance of the Walldorf! chapel. Rev. T. H. Hoos
&gt;37730.
officiating.---------Interment
at Riverside
No. 11 ft. Coals Grove. 54 persons.
' American people Is fair treatment, wus won by Owen Smith's team seventy-three ore recruits.
---------------;------------------------------&gt;41630.
the speaker said.
from Woodland. Harold Barlow, secSeven lettermen were lost to Ute j cemetery.
No. 12 Ragla, 22 persons. &gt;169 40.
ond. Ford Stowell, third, and Carl ‘d"“d by tbeir graduation in June—
'
Hovey, fourth.
' Walldorf!. Bump. Osborn. Caukln.
OBITUARY.
CASTLETON TOWNSHIP:
The'lightweight contest was won ' Brady. Kelly and Moore.
' Orville W. Murphy, son of Mr.
No. 1 Fr. Nashville. 317 persons.
(Continued from page 1, Sec. 1&gt;
&gt;2.444050.
bv
Coach Bennett U rounding the and Mrs. James Murphy, was born
by a team owned hv
by Clifton Becker.
Becker,
No. 2 Castleton center. 27 persons.
of Hastings, second. Clarence
C»&gt;v,.kc R.
». team into shape,in anticipation of jin this city April 3. 1871. He died
in 1035 Tn eight years, on the New
&gt;207 90.
Bnaw
Shaw ot
of Mtcxneviue.
Middleville, uuru.
third. a
A.. r.
F -hmlng the first game which Is to early Friday morning. September 11
No. 2 Fr. Lake View. 25 persons. York Central lines, there have been
Johnson. Bedford rural route, and I* at Grand Ledge this week Sat- at lhe home of his sister, Mrs. Geo.
Welch. Fine lake. Barry counly. He
&gt;19250.
fourth place was tied by Elmer Oil-1 urday. Sept 19.
no fatalities among its passengers.
No. 3 Hosmer. 22 persons. &gt;169.40.,
"
”
was united in marriage In October,
lesple
and
Orlie
Miller-of
Hastings.
'————•••
'
(Continued from page 1. Sec. I)
No. « Wellman 31 person.,. HIM. ?“•*“*“ Prove ,“»&lt; nUlw.r travel
BASEBALL.
1899. to Miss Lenna Wheeler of
The pulLofl for the &gt;75 harness |
.. .5 Morgan.
..____ 19 persons,
. ____ &gt;14030. Iis
k thirty-seven
tlllrtV-M'Ven timet
rtnfrar limn
limes safer
than nit.
au­
Due
to
rain
on
Bunday
the
Hos
­
No.
Woodland. While working in Grand
donated oy
by tne
the rym
Farm Bureau
Serv- )
tomobile transportation, and thirty- slbllity
ilbllity of collecting statistics and uonaieo
Bureau oervtings
Independents
were
forced
to
No. 6 Felghner. |5 persons. &gt;11550. slx times ns safe as lhat of airships. |
MOTHER'S
Large Package
showing the status and the
William Parker manager was postpone their game with Freeport Rapids he attended the Mel Trotter
No. 7 Martin, 2&lt;i persons. &gt;20030.
At the present time the railroads | progress of education Uiroughout •*»»«»&gt; Owen Smith of Woodland
No. 8 Barryvllle. 34 persons, &gt;201.- sutler from unfair competition. The tlU! United States. Il also deals with “nd Clifton Becker of Hastings with until October 4. when the local nine for some time. Later he Joined the
will go to Freeport to try for an
public pays the expense of up-keep organization and management of | Mr. Smith's team winning the . even break on their two game ser­ Methodist Episcopal church here, of I
which Mr. and Mrs Murphy were I
No. 10 Shores. 31 persons. &gt;238.70.
for the highways, which are used by schools, establishment and mainte-;
' les.
Freeport look the local boys
In- always faithful members. He was at
.
------------------------------------------ -----HASTINGS TOWNSHIP:
the trucks in transporting goods. I nance of efficient school systems and
Tiie Hastings city schools were । to camp two weeks ago In a thrilling gindly. cheerful, companionable man
promoting the
the cause
cause of
of education
education, (awarded
j awarded an fifteen
fifteen dollar
dollar premium
premium I| ‘ ,nu,
„.ns ,o7’u.nn untii .h; ‘'
No. 3 FUher. 17 persons. &gt;130.90.
u/tui..
While truck "owners claim they pay nroinntlnc?
rara. «.ra„ .,„J™
hi .h- whose fr|endiy spirit won him many
Discussion* by Dr. R B Harkness, for » dteplay In the educational
No. 4 Fr. Gregory. 24 persons. license fees and gasoline tax enough
Director of the Barry County Health building. It consisted of a 100 square ?!j’‘ULXrt
thZ^uus tnd friends. He 1* survived by his wife,
&gt;184 80
to pay their share of the up-keep of
e
' one brother. Milton Murphy, his ste- j
No. 5 Fr. Allofl, 38 persons. &gt;292.- lhe highways, that claim La disputed. Unit, and Miss Ro.si DeFoe Seplor I f«t of-wall space devoted to an ex- ! “
ter. Mrs. Welch, and an aunt. Mr*.
Family Health Coupler, cimdtem-1 hlblt of school projects
M* u” “’e
60,
Even if they did they are still free Ing the Health Department program.
From nil sides are heard favorable |
Canids citv chunpE William Benton, who also Ilves at
No.' 7 Star. 37 persons. &gt;284.90.
from the regular taxes which rail­ were very Intere.llng. They gave i comments on the way lhe fair wus
CAN Each
pine lake. The funeral was held
^{“ds' c“J
No. 8 Hastings Center. 13 persons. roads pay on tiie assessed value of
Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at
particular
emphasis
to
those
porconducted
and
it
h
generally
con‘
i
&gt;100.10.
all their property for the support Umvs of the program relating to : ceded lhat it was one of the best
the Walldorf! funeral home, con­
No. 9 Pratt. 26 |X&gt;rsotM. &gt;20020.
of tiie schools of this state. It cost
| held in lhe county. Members of the J^y the Michigan Gases came down ducted by the Rev. W. Maylan Jones.
No. 10 Fr. Quimby, 31 persons. lhe railroads XHO.OOO.OOO to main­ school children
Another talk by Dr. Davis al one- ' fair board are receiving congratulacontent with Those from away who attended the
&gt;238.70.
tain and keep- their rights of way In u,l,,y
o'clock was on
on lhe
lhe -Brale
and the
hard SE^*!***
funeral
were »r.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
thirty o'clock
"Basic | U«n»
Hons t™
from everyone
everyone and
the hard
~ J,
luncr
»* were
HASTINGS CITY:
condition for traffic, while their Principles
Underlying
the
ActMty
work done by them is appreciated only we. althoughthewjeond game Lehman. Mr. andMrs. Dallas Leh1344 persons. &gt;1034880.
taxes amount to an average of &gt;1.- Curriculum." It is recognized, she I by all. The members of Die board l&lt;‘n^‘‘Lln “ scorel“JiHe in the sev- man and Mrs. Oscar Odean. all of
HOPE TOWNSHIP:
000.000 a day.
said that all learning is a matter of i arc Dr. Burton A Perry, president; !*,nth_t!uc 10 *?n'
all°*ed Scottville; Mr. and
Mrs. Claude
No. 1 Doud. 24 jiersons. &gt;184 80.
The railroads at the present time
one ** *n Uje nt*hu Bishop. FUnt; Mr. and Mrs George
No. 2 Fr. McCallum. 27 persons, need rehabilitation. Their revenues activity and that what I* learned j Maurice Foreman, secretary; Harold 11lc
comes from experience
The activity
activity ruaurr
Foster treasurer;
treasurer; uien
alen McriMnorc.
Densmore, capJ^bor
Dar. will lake up
Welch
Benton
Jrience. Tne
■j ~
~ where
..
, . ■ and Mrs. William Benton.
&gt;207.90.
are not sufficient, under existing ..* ..
1 n V
,
c he left of! and will pitch the opener FineFine
lake:lake;
Rev.Rev.
and and
Mrs.Mrs.
Wheeler
of of
Wheeler
No. 3 Cedar Creek. 20 persons. conditions and with the Increased program Is a school curriculum I R K Hurd. Robert Martin. Fred Jthe 1 catehlna
composed of experiences selected to | Mayo. Ell Lindsey and R. H. Mett. **'*? o^nncS who ^has ffiteSd Sunfield, and Mr. and Mrs. Myers
&gt;154.
costs forced upon them by legisla­ give the boys and girls an under-, directors.
।
ODonnilL
»
ho
has
pitched
of
Grand
Rapids.
No. 4 Hinds, 27 persons. &gt;207 50.
ture. to keep their rlght;of-way and
No. 6 Shultz, 32 persons. &gt;246 40 equipment Up to what they ought to ti»nhXeOfthe’wmmmdtvU\he na * --------- ■ '
‘
-_____________ n'e Kn,nc;' wh,le tosln« lwo- wU1 hurl
OBITUARY.
No. 7 Fr. Brush Ridge. 31 persons. be. Yet congress is considering the
Mary Beachey. daughter of Abra­
&gt;238.70. '
appropriation of &gt;600.000.000 for the---------------- ---------------- . - -------- ,
, receivina
Tgd Tl IZ d 11 O 71S
,cZ,',^rs.
sUrU at
ham and Barbara Beachey. was
No. 9 Cloverdale. 38 persons. &gt;292 - St Lawrence waterway, which would 1 »'»&gt;» of living and thinking. This \
60.
not add one ton to the volume of I type of program provides an op-,
o.o'clock
clock gharp
and no adtnlM10n
wiu1«« bom March 28. 1878 and departed
'
"
sh,“—
-J—but
■—r------products to be transported. Il would j portunity for guidance in the school;
charged
al the gate
a free
this life Sept. 5. 1938. al the age of
IRVING TOWNSHIP:
We Redeem Your Camay Soap and Oxydol Coupons
the taxpayers a huge sum in or- 'of those traits of character common-: Brush Ridge Cemetery Circle will
. M||...lon wdl
m’ken tQ help 60 years. 5 months, and 10 days. She
No. 2 Fr. Cobb, 5 persons. &gt;3850. cost
der to pul R in working order. It! ly Ibted
desirable for good citl- meet wRh MU. Rena Pierce and
1'
was united In marriage to Marshall
No. 3 Wood. 32 pemOM, &gt;246.40.
would not pay any tax to lhe state wn*.
| Mrs Fanny Smith on South Han°‘ u,e vluun&lt;
E. Maze of Pioneer. Ohio. Nov. 2.
No. 4 Fr. Jones. 31 persons. &gt;238 or local district*, but would be
At two-thlrty Friday afternoon over Thursday. September 24.
1
( 1900. To this union were bom two
70.
maintained at the cost of the tax- group meetings were held with the
Ml.ihodht LAS Circle No 3 home game of the season end your children. Georgia and one son. who
No. 5 Ryan. 30 persons. &gt;231.
payers. When all of this U eonsld- various Family Health Counselors
Wjjbodtal L. A_K Circle No 3 jwmepune
a «ood tasll team died In infancy. She leaves to mourn
Open Evenings
Phone 2458—Hastings
No. 6 Brew. 29 persons. &gt;223.30.
.®"a!* held'at1 °'clock nt thc home oi Mrs. George j in action. The boy* have won twelve their loss besides the husband and
No. 7 Fillmore. 24 ixirsons, &gt;184.80. cred any suggestion* that this pro- and
Mur|tel st
gg|neg t|jU
whlUj lo&amp;lng only daughter of Kalamazoo, one grandNo. 9 Fr. Freeport. 124 persons. l^scd waterway would lower tax- Educational Council aas also held at, HMlh
a
11
on3s
absurd.
I
this
time.
.
.
.
six
Two
out
of.
town
game*
will
wind
&gt;954 80.
in the last session of congress a 1 A scries of short talks by teachers
Townsend plan meeting Eiilvopal un the season. Hie boys play their
No. 10 Pleasant HID. 8 persons.
bill Was
tor who
attended
summer
school parish hmi...
, evening, nnal _____________
__.. r-t,..
was IntrrMlllrrd
Introduced bv
by Renn
Senator
&gt;61 GO.
house, iv»4n..Hn
Wednesday
game with Dowling
at Clear
No. 12 FT. Little Brick. 29 'persons. Wheeler of Nevada proposing that proved helpful.
Sept. 23. al 8 o'clock. Rev. G. A. lake Sept. 27. and wind up lhe ses&gt;22330.
- the government take over ond op-! Saturday morning Dr. Walter F. Sm|tiJ of Holland is the speaker. 1 son at Freeport October 4th.
erate the railroads of the country. I Dearborn from Harvard Univuplty
JOHNSTOWN TOWNSHIP:
In spite ol the disastrous results | spoke on 'Training Teachert to
The Petunia Garden Club will,
W. C. T. U. NOTES.
No. i King. 19 persons. &gt;14630.
No. 2 Fr. Monroe. 56 persons. of government operation of lhe rail- Teach the Whole Child." So-called meet Thursday afternoon at two j Tiie W. C. T. U. of Barry county
roads during a par! of the World1 progressive education has empha- o'clock with Mrs. Nellie Hopkins. WHs very fortunate to secure one of
8431-20.
war
and
for
nearly
two
years
fol-1
sized
the
importance
of
learning
1012
NMichigan
Ave.
the
little
electric men (Mr. Wise by
No. 3 Fr. Parker. 10 persons. &gt;146.lowing the close of that war. What1 about things, but the more irnport30.
.
The American . Legion Auxiliary admired by all who saw him and we
'
■
•' ­ innt learning, in the speaker's Judg­
of' the
rail
No. 4 Fr. Stevens, 26 persons. government• oixrallon
holds
It*
regular
meeting
this
roads would mean is shown by the ment. Is learning about persons.
hope his advice will be remembered •
&gt;200 20.
Friday evening a delightful pro- i Thursday evening at the usual hour. and heeded.
No. 5 Fr. Bristol. 38 persons. government's own figures for the
year 1919. after the war was closed gram was given by teachers from the I It is expected that a report of the . The local W. C- T U. met Tuesday
&gt;292 60.
and when we were at peace with the Hastings city schools and invited' department convention will be giv­ ; September 15. with Mrs. I. J. Smith.
' No. 6 Banfield, 30 persons. &gt;231.
including
the
"Dionne en.
'
No. 7 Culver. 49 persons. &gt;37730. world. During lhat year the gross guests,
Election of officers resulted aa folrevmue of the government from quints." who rendered several songs
No. 8 Fr. Fick. 20 persons. &gt;154. •
i lows: Pres —Maude Zcrble; Rec.
Prof. Einstein has announced a . sec —Elizabeth Parker; Treas.—
railroads was &gt;5.550,000.000. The which all enjoyed, the quints wear­
No. 9 Bullis. 19 persons. &gt;14630.
ing
appropriate
costumes;
Miss
new
theory
of
space
and
matter,
!
Lenah Wood,
operating
expenses
of
the
railroads
•
No. 11 Burroughs. 33 persons,
under government operation took 85 Florence Campbell, pianist, wore a but the nine or ten of us who un­
■ &gt;254.10.
Four delightful derstood relativity are not going to
jxt cent of that total. That means nurse's uniform.
'
MAPLE GROVE TOWNSHIP:
:
No. '1 Fr. Quaillrap. 42 persons. that the experiment pul the govern­ short skits were directed by Albert be lured away by this latest whimsy.
ment In the red for considerably Becker and presented by some of the We're standing pal.
$323.40.
No. 2 Maple Grove center, 31 per­ over a billion dollars. In the year teachers. Games under the direction
Miss Helen-----------Merson were a part of
1933. which .is recognized as the of
--------------------sons. &gt;238.70. .
No. 2 Fr. Mayo. 16 person*. &gt;12330 poorest year In railroad history, * lhe evening's program.
No 3 Fr. Moore. 35 persons. &gt;269 50.
No. 4 Fr. Dunham. 46 persons.
,_&gt;3M20.
l"« No. 5 Norton. 34 persons. &gt;261.80.
No. 6 McKelvey. 31 persons. &gt;238.•■•’‘'70.
It’s not much of a job to fill a radiator with wa­
No. 7 Fr. Branch. 32 persons.
ter ... or pump up tires ... or dust off a wind­
&gt;24640.
No. 8 Belgh, 23 persons. &gt;177.10.
shield. But those areipighty BIC things to your
‘ '-ORANGEVILLE TOWNSHIP:
comfort and convenience. And we’re pleased
' ''
No. 2 Fulk. 32 persons. &gt;246.40.
No. 3 Orangeville. 139 persons. &gt;1.to do them for you . . . just to help you remem­
07030.
ber this station of courteous service . . .
No. 4 Blake. 34 persons. &gt;261.80.

PRHURY MOHEY 'r&gt;—'"
ISJPPORTIDNEO
I
!
!
|

Fair Attendance,
Interest Ran' High

Sporting Items

The DUCK PIN BOWLING

REPRESENT URGE
CASH INVESTMENT

IS NOW OPEN!

LINE UP YOUR TEAM MATES

TEACHERSHAVE
ENJOYABLE TIME

Leagues Start Soon

RINSO

19c

8 lbs.
SWEET
POTATOES

25c

3 cans DOGGIE DINNER

•
•
•
•
•

ZT X

‘^Orgamzations-^rZ “

No. 2'/? can Pumpkin
No. 2'/? can Hominy^
No. 2 can Tomatoes-.
Tall can Mackerel------No. 2 can Cut Beets..

COCOA

15c

25c

IO‘

Del Monte PEACHES "■‘iS" 2 cant 33c
29c
3 eons GREEN or WAX BEANS
73c
24 V? lbs. LEADER FLOUR
Del Monte Vacuum Pack Cotfee 27c lb.

WALLACE GROCERY

SPECIALS

You’ll Be Pleased With
Our Friendly Service

In the Drug Deportment for Thursday

Friday and Saturday, Sept. 17, 18, 19!

&gt;27730
PRAIRIEVILLE TOWNSHIP:
No. 2 MHo. 9 persons. &gt;69.30.
No. 3 Fr. Prairieville, 67 persons.
1515.90.
&gt;
No. 4 Fr. South Pine Lake, 14 per­
sons. &gt;107.80.
No. 7 Calkins. 16 persons. &gt;123310.
No. 8 Fr. North Pine Lake, 43
persons. &gt;331.10.

&gt;20750.
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP:
No. 1 Al-Gon-Quin Lake, 14 per- ,
sons, &gt;10780.

LOW BUS
FARES to
KALAMAZOO
ONE WAY$ .75
SHOPPERS’
ROUND TRIM).00
5IXTY-DAY
ROUNDTRIP, $135

35c Mum Deodorant

...24c

I pt. Rubbing Alcohol

19c

1 pt. Mineral Oil

29c

25c Feenamint Gum

17c

25c J. &amp; J. Baby Talc

17c

1 lb. carton Epsom Salts

10c

50c Garden Court Talcum

25c

69c-100 Puretest Aspirin

49c
29c

35c Vick's Vapo Rub

.21c

' 25c Bayer's Aspirin

29c

35c Elkay's Fly Killer
100 Halibut Liver Oil Capsules79c

MANY OTHER SPECIALS in This Sale!
YOU WILL SAVE WITH SAFETY

ONE WAY
00
SHOPPERS'
ROUND TRIP. $1.25
SIXTY-DAY
ROUNDTRIP, $1.80

AT THE REXALL STORE

Rapid Transit
10-8

SPECIAL—
13-Plate BATTERY

39c-1 lb. bulk Psyllium Seed29c

TO LANSING

PEOPLES

just to keep in your mind the fact that
you'll find greater satisfaction in bringing
your car here for every driving attention—
BIC.or LITTLE!

CARVETH

STEBBINS

GOODS DELIVERED — PHONE 2131

• We Make Window Shades to Fit Your Windows I

Batteries, Windshield Wipers

REGULAR
GASPRICE

Vulcanizing.

BLUE

PllllP'r'fl
SUNDCU

Washing

MOTOR
FUEL

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBEH

Editorials

'Round About Town

17, 1936

PMt M Whan ha la called upon
to pm* through Saint Peter * gate,
he hopes lhat ta will be located

SOME COUNTY FAW
OBSERVATIONS

When people attend a county fair fair will

STATE CIVIL SERVICE

Now that the primary etocUon la)
m. H u Um. w
IM &lt;!«»■ I U"

familiar laoa* mining.

patronize certain

uMWWirf ,IOT ol eMU-

to separate a man from hla money!

this state.
Why
AUTUMN TIME.
Why shouldn't
shouldn't state
state job#
job# be
be caca- ■
reer jobs
of political joba?
"Where." asks Dita Baldwin of
Why Uni It just as important for
Northville Record. '1* there any
the state to give employment and j flow glory In the world than some
advancement on the basis of merit of the September day* in Mlchlas it U for private concerns? Why gan?
“”“
Only one logical answer comes to
should each new administration be
compelled to expend so much time mind—Some of Hie crisp, invigorat­
and worry lo the problem of meet­ ing October days yet lo come when
ing the demands of office seekers? the sky overhead is blue, the air
Civil service could take care of smoky with a faint haze and tiie
that; not with 100 per cent .satUfac- woodlands ablaze with color. Mlchifactlon perhaps but at least on a' gan comes mighty near to pcrfccmuch sounder basis Uian at jursent. tlon at such times. You will iutvc lo
People who say that civil service travel far and wide to find anything
can never be successful overtook the comparable.
example set by England Govern­
But wc won’t quibble with anyone
ment service there is a career job. over the comparative beauty ot
Employees are selected by examina­ September and October. It is enough
tion and advanced on the basts ol to say the Michigan autumns arc in
demonstrated ability. A government a class by themselves.
Job is an indication of merit; not
mere political puli. Possibly Hits is ,
PRIMARY A FAILURE.
one reason Uiat there are Jess gov­
Each year it becomes increasingernment scandals tn England than
ly evident that the primary elec­
tn our own United States.
tion. although excellent in theory, is
Civil service was established in
a -dud" in actual practice. Instead
England about 100 years ago to meet of helping establish a true demo-'
the problem of graft, inefficiency । cratic government, it has brought j
and violent partisanship. Naturally
about a government by organized
it wasn't
successful
at
first.
minorities.
Troubles developed which made the

UtMd

along with others, which hole they

11 an luc nous were bought aomc! body just had to win—and that'* a

worth.
Dumb 111 why do vacations always

asually

They're forever coralag and over come this way again.
But people expect this, took for­
Oh well! If I wait long enough ward to it. and It all really goe*
towards
making
a "successful"
county fair.
Talk about fishing!—Well that IB
one thing you can always do about
around that Che aland, operated by
fishing.

The primary election ha* not
system look rather bad. But gradhelped to improve the caliber of men
uklty this changed. A spirit of jwide
in public service developed and the running for office—This is especialservice became as completely di- j ly true in the metropolitan centers
vorccd from party jwlitics as any where a dozen or more candidate*
। from one party frequently run for
Governments may change tn Eng­ . the same office. Many fine citizens ,.
land but the routine of government who might be persuaded lo run for t
office if they could be nominated at |
keeps right on because lhe details
arc in the hands of competent em­ party conventions, hesjlalq to dp. so ;
ZY* L
C
ployees. There is no nervous, excit­ when faced with the necessity of i
conducting two campaigns. It fre-|
ed null to grab jobs.
fl'i —.7.-* ,
What England has done, mt can qucntly liappcnr-. especially with a &lt;
number of candidate, in the field.! LUNCHEONS AFFECT
do. There is no reason why public
SCHOOL PROGRESS. |
service In Michigan should not be that a comparative unknown backed
, by some solidly organized minority I Progress that a child makes in ।
divorce^ from politics; no reason
group steals the nomination from ; ^hool is influenced by Hie sort of
why the routine of government can­
lunch he
he cats
eat* at
at noon.
noon. Roberta
Roberta Her
Her-1
. ..
,.r ..
-m.- I| lunch
­
not be tian died by skilled employees, a better qualified candidate. Th &gt;h(?y
•hey. extension
extension nutrition
nutrition specialist,
specialist. |
trained to Uicir work instead of by num campaigns are usually bitter Ulchlsan stalc college, point* out '
enough; a primary campaign In ad- that Hits noon lunch should receive
"deserving party 'workers."
diHon to the main one multiplies lhe more attention than merely prepor- |
Michigan voters will do well tn
rhnmwK for
f&lt;w troublt
trouble .
' C0|M
l"(' * kft
teK0W5
*«ndwichc»
of mlscellangive considerable study lo the dilu­ chances
Mn(J g piw
of cg|tc_

jjlld Opinions;
ffildl UtflCTS Ody1

PURE SCIENCE

Mort!
important of all. ■&gt;
the
"
- ;primary
----------- • -Jiir noon lunch for the child who
never hii' lawn and probablv never must carry his meal will) him chai- '
■»m&gt; l»li» KH0UI.1, b, the
«■»»»*» MXljUll of I
.
the home maker.
Mis-s Hershey
, ago voter who considers hl- duty
..^ tf)e flrst p]acc every child .
1 well done when he turns out for the . should have at teiut one hot dish
main election, seldom, il ever, doc. each meal, particularly from Sep- i
an impressive perrenlage of lhe vote «««“»»
'
have a belter nutriUve value than
ttyn out for Ute primary. 1 Ins Job rold ones &lt;nd &lt;lsQ lcnd {o stlmU|)lle I
. Unusually left to a comparative few. tnc appetite and digestion. If hot
mostly party workers or interested! dxhes cannot be obtained at the
mlnorttv group, win,
tecklni: |
U«
luncheon tach
, .,...
box should be equipped with a lheralrz pgrUcular unS.dne.
I liim
M
homt mM I

While the political pot is bubbling
at super-heat, it Is sgmewhat sooth­
ing to reficci that in a laboratory in
California a group of craftsmen and
scientists arc going calmly and delibcrately about the task ot shaping
a disc of glass. 200 incifl's across,
into a parabolic reflector, designed
The party convention system ha-'' supply this lack."
at some future lime to catch the
ILS evils, but we Will challenge anyA good pattern for a lunch box |
light from star cluster* beyond the
„ w
ucr
™ X";
-i’
present range of astronomical ob­
servation and record them on sen­ Is an improvement. Probably the cgc nsn. peanut butter, baked
I worst features of lhe old convention ) beans or a substantial food with j
sitive photographic film.
; —
--------------- ------- ------------------------ I r—j — -------------- -7—■ 7 —• 1
.
,
v..
TO, ta. 11 .ucculully complM-1!
could be otatated
by In- hrg-aH
j bre.dand
mhllttAr*
tolttala .mimiUmt
.uccukot(iwl
lood' |
...
.... _ ...
a.lll-v a uvroi hallnt ui lhat dele- I —■
~
,
cd. will represent one of the most .stalling a secret ballot so that dele­
marvelous technical achievements gates could vote a* they saw fit.
The
writer
of
this
article
formerly
of all lime. The room In which this
work Is being done is kept at con­ favored the primary because, in
ul.di. rouble »nd.Uh.!
stant temperature lo help ffilnlmize thuw. 11 .«und» more
the errors due lo expansion and con­ than a party convention system. But raw or cooked vegetable* or pickled
like so many theories which read । vegetable or fruit; milk, for drink- •
traction. No visitors will be permit­
the parly primary system hat., hig or In a bottle of milk soup, cocoa, ।
ted to cuter tills room during the well,
„« bird up u&gt; cpeeUM-u: M. I
:
year* spent in grinding the disc
fruit or fruit juice; and something
Body heat and air currents set up given a "cure" which is worse than sweet.
the
original
malady.
If
a
thermos
bottle
is
available
a
by people moving about, even with
great care of the problem of provid­
the greatest of care, are sufficient tn
ing nutritive lunch for the child l«
THE COUNTY FAIR
upset the heat equilibrium of this
tolvcd. The homemaker should not ,
delicately balanced room During the
Officials of Hie Barry County Ag­ overlook tiie Importance of packing i
final polishing procev work can be ricultural Society arc to be con­ tiie lunch attractively and providing 1
gratulated for the type of fair they j little surprises In the choice of food I
; from day to day.
.
Ume with long intervals between put on this year. Never were the ck-1
[ Choice of lunch box has a great
operations. The slight heal caused hiblts more interesting; never was 1 influence upon the ease in which lhe 1
by friction is sufficient lo create an the midway cleaner; never was the child's noon meal is planned and al।"’“?U
“&gt;
almost imperceptible surface ex­ ;r»nd,und eMnUWIWM
n &lt;
i LbbcB boxes should always be of Un
pansion which might lead to errors
dciwv
Before m-.the »u
fair upnwu,
opened, the offi- ■j w aluminum
B]Urnmum so
so Uiat
that they
they may be
in’ grinding. Then after lhe disc is' cials assured patrons that undeslr- easily cleaned anS scalded

. .A-t*-------

completed comes the problem of Bhie attractions and -gyp'' game.' I
transporting it to a distant moun- would be eliminated entirely. This
--------TO CURB WEEDS.
tain top and there installing it In a rather difficult promise was kept 100' Fertilization of”lawns”durlng’lhe .
mechanism which can hold it with- per cent.
Only one concession j first part of September not only i
out lhe slightest sway and move it1 proved to be at al) objectionable and *',u increase the vigor of the grass ■
•beta » dcllcuilg urn II

M- lh.t

clp-rt tomceuuly. Prob-;

tow the stars in their course through ably few people rvalue what a diflithe heavens.
1 c**lt problem in management this
And what can this scientific mar- record represents.
vel do for us? Nothing very practical
An m all. the fair this year was
measured in terms of dollars and an "old-time" one plus many modcent*. However 11 can permit the em improvements. It was a place
human eye to go on journeys of ex-' where friend* could meet and visit,
ploration never before thought pos- where good entertainment was
Mile. Feasibly It may tielp aatrono-1 available at a very moderate price
men. lo discover
fact* about where there, were well arranged exthe universe which will
piece
mbits M1UWUIH
showing juai.
just «wui
about "ILUI
alLof hiv
the
—
. ........help
.
I'
—{’niuiio
togalher the great riddle of creation. । agricultural activity of the county

|

Tj-son. of the .Michigan State Col­
lege sods department.
An application now of fcrtUizer i
helps the grass to make growth |
ahead of weed.* and provides needed i
nourishment for lhe grass during I
the fall growing period, says Tyson.'
Because the lawn grass continue.*;
some grouih after the first frost*J
fertilization ot the lawn may be!
heiofui in rnnfrnlhr.n
helpful
controlling ’ crab gras*
which is killed at the first frost. Tl»e
J^*7L^8ra*s
continues 10 make
------°
J™*!? “?d ,^*hu*
“blc to
; crowd out the crab grass next
Another interesting tiling about t)ju$ interesting school and floral spring
this mechanism U the fact lhat a dUplay* as well. The 4-H Club ex- I[ If
- a
- complete fertilizer has been'
human eye wlU took mth it only on rhibiU wfte afalh awe of the featureI1 used during the present growing
very rare occasions Most of the obthe fair. It la Impossible to | season, five pound* of ammonium
sulphate
aervallon work *111 be done by spe- $pe.k too highly of the valuable I 3|
that per 1.000 square feet will be
: all that u ncetsaary now. n the
dal cameras which will make per— * y/n
—
v
—• ..
..
work being done through these clubs.i1 lawn v.has
not ubeen
fertilized during
manenl record* of live new terri-1 1.
............................
----------- —
The
fair official*( deserve congrat-1 Ul15 summer
one should use lu
10
....
.
' nour.rt.*-rw&gt;r
______
•___
tory explored.
ulalions...
for lhe
type of event
put P?lf'?
s,pcr 1000 (Ann
*duarp
feet
of_ a

yfa

Pouue.1 pmu. cam
n on
kUKdbm.
rrpubto rut .M 1.11

u
,w.
U1, „„ teld u,,,

but Uu r»m&gt;. untauuutontd du- .u^m u, popul.r rot m.n,
over!** of pure science go forward come.
,
r

Get right down to braas tacks and
tiie old fashlnoned paddle wheel,
with all the paddles sold, is about
lhe squaresl proposition. Homebody
percentage. Someone win* with
every turn, and "another soul made
tappy."

Bee that school exhibit? If you
didn't you missed one at lhe best
attractions on the grounds.

Ooops! There goes that shoulder out
The old "Floral" hall was truly a
of joint again! Dumb it! I've been
floral hall, attractively filled with
telling lhat story too many times of strictly honorable.
most beautiful flowers, reflecting a
late.
----------- .------------------------------- lot of credit on those wiio grew
enough Uvough for the gyp*) for- them,
lune teller*. *a. it to charged. Uwy !
...
commenced to “gyp" some ot Ute!r
Those exhibit* by lhe "4-H Clubs"
But I'm going right back after It confiding patron*, anxtou* to bear were of a very high order, and gave
what the future had in store for
-• —«■*------ •*— —
them. While listening to sweet prolot of young people today who
phetic words, a hand would deftly know" how lo “do things.'
lent that the spirit Doc?
fathom pocket* in search of filthy
...
a^UiiSTio
L°U of other *tUBrU°ns worthy
That was a swell fair.
ttoTy
of menU&lt;*‘- hut heck, we haven't
^rtnUU* 10 'nf,,
no ' Ume or *IMCC 10 nter 10
hUUnderstand tliat my friend Simon
(Happy) Ellerbeck bought himself a
Even lhe question of Health
wasn't overlooked, and the County
When he got through, he re- heads of the Romany prophets. Health Unit had an exhibit that
would interest anyone. Along with
I cltriKtened It the "Q-o-p-s-e-y"
a lol of other topics. the feeding
! Plane.
and care of babies were mentioned
Suggestive of this a verv large doll
And lhe christening wasn't done
Mrs Sue Nobles was
in the orthodox manner either.
pace Thursday afternoon there was was used.

tunc

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

GREAT men are those
who nt that sRjritual
is stronger than any
material force; that
thoughts
rule die
—Emerson.

Tne horse* on tiie Merry-go-round
weren't so bad either, were they
Dorothy?

Even Frank managed to stay on
TWENTY YEARS AGO
'em.
The brick work on lhe Ironside
Bros block on East State St., Is
Not I didn't draw one of lhe cars
being hurried so as lo have It en­ either!
closed before the/fall rains interfere
too much.
\
Every one seemed to like the fire
Work on lh^ Michigan Ave. pave­ works.
ment Li steadily progressing. It is
expected lhat tire cement will be laid
What an interesting life that Balto the bridge by Saturday afternoon. Man must lead.
Under the direction of coach Mil­
ler the members of the high school
After he gets down alive one day.
football squad have begun practice.
R. M Latnbie has purchased the cr he'll be lucky again tomorrow.
property on Blate St. occupied by
the Morrill. Lambic
Co. Clothing
When he came here lie had a
store of Mrs. Barbara Freeman.
broken heel. Added to lhe collection
during four days of jumping were a
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
Luther Bennett, a well-known and badly wrenched back, a stiff neck
eccentric pioneer resident of this and a deep gash on lhe back of the
city, died very suddenly al the head.

tion of a civil service system for '

Michigan.

tronlzlng this game. Women never
did seem to like mice nohow.

it

"Shallow u-u* croiurr atrjthmg that
u beyond their depth.’
SEPTEMBER
..................... ..........

“d
!
:
!

1
&gt;

Gir-

WEST Coast Africans kiss
** the ground three times in
greeting a friend. ' The same
thing la re-enacted these day*
on almost any college campus
as fraternity brethren are re­
united.
The Chinese sometimes use
grated potato for soap. Those
times being, no doubt, when
they have used their soap tn
making egg foyung or a simi-

Reduced to simplest form,
headaches, a scientist asserts,
are the amount of fluid in and
around the brain. Even sim­
pler, perhaps—the amount of
fluid in and around a bar.

A starfish has no brain, but
Is able to learn, differing in
the latter respect, professors

Crumbs of Wisdom

counly house. Wednesday. He had
eaten his dinner as usual and an I|
hour later was found dead in his I
room.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Lane attend­
ed the wedding of Miss - Bertha
Mitchell to W. H. Bowser ot Fort
Wayne at Grand Rapids Wednesday
evening.
Mrs. J. O. Nagler of Middleville
was lhe guest of Hasting* friends
Friday.
Henry Andrus left yesterday noon
to resume his duties in lhe U. B. naa) service after a brief leave.
.

FORTY YEARS AGO.
An ideal marriage was solemnized
I at 717 E Grand St Wednesday cvening. the most deeply interested
parties being Miss Libbie Jean.
I daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. P. T. Mc­
Laughlin of this place and H. E.
I Clark of the Grand Rapids Dally
: Democrat Tiie impressive ceremony
1 was jxrformed by Rev. Grigsby.
I The bride was becomingly attired in
■ yellow organdie and carried a white
i Bible The groom wore conventional
। full dress black.
1 We have heard many very hand­
some compliment* paid to Prosecuting Attorney James A Swcezey for
1 the very able manner in which he
conducted the criminal cases at the
last term of court.
FIFTY YEARS AGO
' Mrs. O. W Lowry is vUitlng her
i parent* in Oakland county.
Mr* Fred Bartow gave a pleasant
lea party to invited friend* flatur, day.
1
Miss Franc WtlUapis commenced a
, '.erm of school in the Chidester dis­
trict Monday morning.

a smash-up at the turn coming Into
the final home-stretch that was in­ Tne oealre to promote good liealth
deed fortunate. "Ivanwood'' was work, along with a matronly in­
leading with "Florence Direct" in stinct. prompted her to unconrctously shoo the files away from
--Major Elbrino" and “Czarina T." the doll's face, evidently fearful lest
the precious darling would be wak­
time for lhe two racers following to ened.

save themselves. Horse*, sulkeys and
with drivers tipping through the air
like the man on the flying trapeze,
and horses frantically writhing and
kicking to free themselves. Strange

ot poultry and livestock too. that
attracted a lot of people and a lot
ot admiration. So take II all around.
Il Is doubtful If Barry county ever
had a bigger, belter fair than the
one held this year, nor one that
drew a better attendance.

। In conclusion let's all remember
1 that "cracking good" fair* don't
"Ju*t happen." Somebody lias to
devote a lol of thought, time and
Saturday moming The city fire de­ consideration a* to what will best
partment responded to the alarm. please the people. So let's take our
Not much damage done, but there hat* ofi to the ofUccr*. They arc
lhe ones responsible. How wc would
tent.

Just to vary lhe monotony a tent

Rain almost invariably
comes and well attended, let* express our
some time during a Barry counly pleasure lo those responsible for
Ourr sincere compliment*
compliments and
fair It was hoped that this year
0,1
might
be
an
axoeptton.
but
Friday
congratulation* to the officer*,
Tommy achieved one of life's
■
rt •*■
■
minor ambitions when he saw. a evening old Jupiter Pluvtus opened I
parachutist land.
the flood gaU*. and made it Just'MMH......
a* uncomfortable a* possible for lhe I
|
PUBLIC ENCMIES
I always wanted to sec how hard
they hit.
The Barry county fair ofieis an |
From first-hand observation, he unusual opportunity for renewing
ON£ e.YE’o
can now say with
conviction. old acquaintances, and people who
"THEY BURE DO!"
pleased to return. For instance there
MO/VSTER5
was George Rowden of Eaton coun­
I always like the smell of hot dog*
ty. He and the writer started going
cooking.
.

Ho! Hum! Such a dull existence.

Tommy saw Bill Parker tearing
around lhe track on that big tractor
schoolhouse burned, and several old
ot his and Immediately wanted to
place a bet on him!
city hall were secured for teui[&gt;orary
school quarters.
There was no
But they told me he was merely
foundation under tiie building, and
smoothing the track for the panics

It even more miserable, a well pop­
Good old Bill. Always thinking of
ulated livery stable stood on the
the other fellow.
site ot the present dly ball. When
One of the town's prominent
young business man and an equally
well known j-oung barber, in com­
pany together at lhe fair, were
heard lo remark that they started
out with their wives but didn't have
any difficulty at all in ditching them.
Boys! Boys! Was that nice!

benfiet of the aroma, wafted from
the old livery stable. If there was
any Board of Health in those days
it didn't seem to be in, working or­
der. Such a school condition as we
then enjoyed (?) wouldn't be tol­
erated for a minute now. and howl*

AXlEZVr
CYCLOPS

ln« parents. But we "little seekers
Sorry to learn lhat the doctor*
after knowledge" seemed to survive
and nurse* al Pennock hospital
have taken my friend Russ Kimmel all right, and go on to a fairly ripe
in charge. But I guess they did a
good job of makeready and'll have
recognised one if you met It in the
him tn shape lo run again soon.

that H's all right not to get scared at
Understand that one of the broth­
things you can't
ers at the Bliss plant purchased a
anything about.
speed boat. In the first trial spin he
almoat won a race from a fellow
One of the fellows who ha*
Hunsberger. Kirk D. Davti of Mid­ who was rowing an old scow. Slick
dleville and Miss Jessie Eychleshy- with 'em. LaVem, you'll get there grown to like the fair" Is Solon
mer were united in marriage.
yet!
•
parents. Hastings township. Wed-

Way of Our World

Understand that one of the new
and feminine young teachers at the
NEWS GLXANTNGB.
High school nearly bowled over one
More than *250.000.000 ha* been
Kent to the folk* back home by ths new "Knock. Knock!" gag.
strlpas. young man. go stripes |
OCC boy*.

Cvclop5

During the World "War. Britain
hid It* important art treasure* In
"A great ethereal transmission an unused subway station at South
Cyclops, tha original One-Eyed
Well, at tesat Michigan doesn't
Understand that a new saxophone
system &lt;the term 'radio' will lie dis­ Kensington and in uncompleted
eve the World's Series to worry Monster, u»ed to make things
quartet ha* been organixad. to sup­
carded on lhe junk pile of the twen­
part* of tiie post office tube rail- ply sweet melody for our UUie city.
tieth century* wlU be spread over
miserable (or wayfarers, who
the world; and thl* mighty instru­
crossed his path.
Pete Fedewa. they tell me has a
ment of thtbdulure will unite all of
The "Four Umpcteers" they call
The first Japanese who came to
. new «&gt; rwu&gt;, now . H‘» P«»«&gt;‘-day counterpart,
the forms of entertainment which
the ona aJwayw tawn/io bring taout «he motorist, who drives around
we know today and present them to Masljlro Nakahama a boy
man In IW rer, cmlrt of hh
wto
pugM
™» »
Dee Walton. Hubs cook. John. the other
j at
with only one light burn­
K
8"S“r.’"r
I *™nr.n nlllng
InU» HorUi
— .
.L
—. ... ‘n8« 15 many t*™** niore danger­
Earl Tate, clerk at Food Center setous.
' “
■
*
l-L,
" n,,1We-1 Pacific, and vw mpi k&gt; a New Eng- the sound effect man. are the per­
/
.
, .
,
”
m
"W turn the switch of the receiver, and und whoo!
petrators of this calm-wrecking about to g«t himself engaged test
weak. Ha did such an efficient job'
trnrrs always carry
t„ •ulfcmu tut .pplud u&gt; w.u, u&gt; a greater opera, a higher drama and (
a more aesthetic ballet will
anoear
-‘------------------------------- ------------wtil
appear
The
univerac.
according
to
nat.
...
Ithe chemical. Otherwise the turf on’ the screen."—8. l. Rolhafel ursl sclenttel*. weigh* 30 qulnQOadrt. I For the fashion-minded young
rled, Tommy extends congratula/11st as soon as ihry “go
1 may be injured.
rffitny").
■clllioc texx*.
Wad*, Bus cJsvstond aajv, fo

BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.

ot 14

�TW

HjUTXHOB

DM 4 pri, 46 person*. M M.

smeam

Director of Orchestra

TO BUY ROOKS FOR
SCHOOL LIBRARIES

DUt. 4 Fri, 14 persons. ||44.
Dist. 7. M persona. 4144.

Money Came From Fineg Im­
posed in Justice and
Circuit Courts

Dial. 10 Prl, 31 parson*. 42.43.
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP:
DUt. 1. 1« prison*. 41-36Dlst. 3. 34 persons. 42-16.

County Treasurer L- P. Maus ha*
DUt. 5 Fri, 25 persons. 1225.
made the dUtrlbutkMi of the ac­
Dlst. 6. 22 prrson*. gl M.
cumulated tine money wliich had
DUt. 7 prl, it persons. 1152.
been paid In to the first of Septem­ THORNAPPLE TOWNSHIP
ber. He distributed 453449 lo the
Unit school, 625 parsons. 45625.
various school district* of the coun- WOODLAND TOWNSHIP:
Unit school. 344 persons. 43096.
school age luted in the school cen- YANKEE SPRINGS TOWNSHIP:
DUt. 1 Fri, 20 person*. 41.30.
must be used for Lhe purchase ot
Dial. 3 Prl, 23 persons, 42-07.
books for the school library. By dUDUt. 4 Prl, 29 persons. 4251.
trlcU the distribution was aa fol­
Total 5.941 person*. 4534 69.

this year W
next weak whoa Karl Wacker, direc­
tor of the Grand Rapids Symphony
orchestra will give an address at
the'Central auditorium. The meet-

Dial. 6. 32 persons. 4238.
Dist. 7 Prl.. 31 persons. 42.79.
DUt. 8. 38 persons. 43-42.
IRVING TOWNSHIP:
'
Dial. 3. 32 persons. 42.88.
Dist. 4 Prl. 31 persons. 42.78.
DW. 5. 30 persona. 4270.
DLst. 6. 29 persons. 42 81.
Dial. 7. 24 persons. 42.18.
Dirt. 0 Prl.. 124 persons. 411-1'
' ' Dist. 10. 8 persons. 4.73.

tlent in the hospital at Allentown.
Pa., where the family now resides.
Miss Heath was bom in this city
on August 20. 1914. and lived here
during h^r early years, moving with
the family to their present home
while still small. Sincere sympathy
is extended the family in their
bereavement.

’j

DHL 3 Prl, 35 persons. &gt;3 15

the "Bat Wing” man.

employed in thermometer*. Ims a

other metal. It Is utilised In a
thousand different ways In the arts,
chemistry and medicine. Mercuric
Mita, especially the chloride and Io­
dide; writes Trevor flanks. New
York city, In Collier's Weekly, are
tha moat powerful of all known antiseptica. Of the perrhlortde, one part
In 2.0U&amp;—the atrvngth commonly
employed In surgery — kills
known bacteria.

ING NUT

OLEO

37'

-5c

Crisp, Tender Buncha

ci«&gt;k. n.«i.

Onions

Oranges

Churning Into harbor io the Hawaiian Islands after taking part in
maneuvers in the Pacific ocean, the U. S. S. Arizona presents an
imposing picture of naval power. This photo was made from tha
U. S. S. Pennsylvania, flagship of the American fleet.

IO

u&gt;.

4c

lb. B.g

I7c

25c

Medium Sire

When, you are out

ful of your clothes.
But Mother says Mc­
CREERYS Clean­

Fresh Ground
Hamburger

Home Made
Pork Sausage

22c*

2&gt;29‘

ing makes dresses
and parly frocks look

Pork Shoulder Roast:

fresh and new

Beef Kettle Roast

PHONI 2140

McCREERYS
DRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Rib BoiHng Boof

Meaty Lb.

27c

Braadsd Beef, lb.

| Qc

Loes, Meaty. Lb.

13c

your figure by wearing hosiery

riously hurt. That's a peculiar qua!

You'll admit after trying them
once that ADMIRATIONS era

A BO0X Bill
FINK SEEMED
DESTINED TO BE fl
GQEflT mlITKZY €1 GuQE.

l(M\r AS A CHILE} WAP THE
y LEADING-S0L-OlEf2(N-THE
COMUONITY.

lions, really seems a hard way to
serve the Lord.
Going way up in the air close to
two miles, so that he could almost
hear lhe great celestial ciiorus and

SHEER WITCHERY

&lt;k-

va* extending from hla outstretched
bands to his hi pi. and another piece

washings.

33

limbs. This enables him lo “fly
through lhe air with the greatest
of caM" for a distance of a mile and IFULL
a half or more, when he opens hU

eon...

tom

FASHIONED • ALL SILK

u. N£w

FALL SHADES!

59c . 69c . 75c . $1.00
Waters Clothes Shop

CHIFFON AND SEftVICE

DQ1LLEDTW HElGHaOfZJ’ KOP
UNTIL HE GOE-YV UP —----------

But, today, HEin A
AfOVlE

o '

AMD

palace.

UFEIS LIKE THAT

Mary Lane

Stained silk, says a style scout,
So machines have made five mil­
will be the mode tills fall. Lovers of lion permanently Jobless! well, the
blueberry pic will the:eforc carry on first five million Americans had no
freely and fearlessly.
|Jobs, and they got by.

Th. NEW

Thun, Fri. and Sat.

FOR LADIES...
Woodbury's Face Pow­
der 25c for 19c
Woodbury's Face Pow­
der ...I—$1.00 for
Woodbury's Face Pow­
der x--------- 50c for
Woodbury's Face
Creams25c for
Armand's Face Powder25c for
Armand's Face Powder-------------------------- 50c for
Armand's
$1.00
. _
_ Face Powder
____
j-Qc for
Three Flower* Face Powder-------Le Debut
Pompeiian Face Powder-----------Porke-Dovit Face Powder
Porke-Davi* Face Cream----------Parke-Dari* Astringent-------------

FOR MEN... - '

having a good lime
you cafl't be too care­

struck a stone and knocked him un­
Maybe it** conscious. Another day h«

orchestra an Influence tiirougiioul
this section of Michigan. It Is pos­
sible that the orchestra can be
brought to Hastings and It would be

BUTTER

Naw Cabbage

chutes failed to open, and he came

badly hurt; at another tima ha
landed on a grandstand and bcoke

This Is BEAUTY WEEK
At LyBarkers

Celery

SafTMnded

parlmenl of the Grand Rapid.? j
Junior college to devote his whole ।
time to th* Grand Rapids Sym­
phony orchestra and to direct al
movement lo make Grand Rapids a
more nuuicaUy-miudcd city than it
is now. Hla energies will not be
confined to Grand Rapids but an

JOHNSTOWN TOWNSHIP:
Dlst. 1. 10 persons, gl.11.
Dili. 2 Fri, 56 persons, 45.04.
Dist. 3. Prl.. 10 persons, 41.71.
Dlst. 4 Prl.. 26 persons. 12.34.

Dlst. 6. 30 persons. 4270.
DUt. 7. 49 persons, 44-41.
DUt. 8 Prl.. 20 persons, 41J
DUt. 9. 19 persons. 41.71.
DM. 11. 33 persons. 4297
MAPLE GROVE TOWNSHIP:
Dlst. 1 Prl. 42 persons. 83.78.
Dlst 2. 31 persons. 42.79.

OsastaAlly

It

pond at the PI
he isn't always

Mr. Wacker will bring with him a
number of his musicians who will
PASSING OF MRS.
appear on tiie program.
NELLIE SULLIVAN.
Mrs. Nellie Sullivan, 78. widow of graUilated on obtaining Mr. WeckDUt. 1 Prl, 17 persons, gl53.
Michael Sullivan, fir, died Baturr er for their meeting and it ia hoped
DUt. 4 Prl.. 20 persons. 61-80.
day at her home. 632 W. Grant St,
Dial. 5. 70 persons. 1630.
after a long illness The family hear Mr. Wecker Wednesday night.
came to Hastings from Campbell
Dist. 7 Fri. 43 persona. 83 87.
Twp^ Ionia co., thirty-two years PARSING OF MBS.
Dist. 8 Prl, 30 persons. 82.70.
ago. surviving are three daughters.
AMY HEADLEY.
DUt. 9 Prl. 42 persons. 83-78.
Mrs. Julia Fighter of Grand Ledge
Mrs. Amy Headley, aged 85. moth­
BALTIMORE TOWNSHIP:
snd Mrs Nellie Conaway and Mlu er
______
of Mrs. Blanche Segerslrom of
Mary Sullivan of Hastings; one son. Middleville, died Monday evening.
Dial. 2. 3! persons. 42.78.
Michael E-. of Detroit; several The funeral will be held thU Thur.iDist. 3. 25 persons. g2.25.
grandchlldren and one great-grand- day afternoon at two o'clock with
Dist. 4. 21 persons. 4198.
son; a sUter. Mrs. Catherine Bar- burial in Mount Hope cemetery In
Dlst. 5. 20 persons, 4140.
ret of Hastings and a brother. Middleville.
Tlmmas Griffin, of Grand Rapids. |
—DUt. 7 Prl.. 33 persons. 42-97.
The funeral was held on Tuesday' BURUEAU OF STANDARDS
BARRY TOWNSHIP:
morning at ten o'clock al lhe St.
PERFORMS STRANGE TASKS.
Township unit school. Delton. 357
Rose church, with Father John V.
•’Satisfaction or’ Your Money
persons. 823 13.
Dillon officiating. Burial was made
Back." announced the first Ward
CARLTON TOWNSHIP:
In Riverside cemetery.
catalog, launching a new policy. So
Dlst. 1. 34 persons. 83 04.
say the company historians.
OBITUARY.
DUt. 3 Prl.. 39 persons, 43 51.
Hester Adella GarriMn was bom I M • Ann to going to absolutely
DUt. 4 Prl.. 44 persons. 4338.
May 20. 1451 in Hector. New York. 8U»«-«nK*
merchandlw- and to
DUt. 6 PTl.. 57 person?. 85.13.
the seventh child of Eliza Jane and K01"* to ®»ke any money. It must
Dirt. 7. 21 persons, gl 89.
I Robert Tale Garrison, and pa.wd ,n*te •ure that the merchandise to
DUt. 9. 34 persons. 43.06.
, away at her home In Hastings. Sep-1 "okay." And so there r&gt;ow exists the
DUt. 10 Prl.. 40 persons. 44 41.
lernbcr 6. 1936. aged 85 years. 31 Ward Bureau of Standards, where j
DUt. 11 Prl, 54 persons. 84 86.
months and 15 days. Site came to lo«» *»«»’« around on maUrcsses.,
Michigan with her parents in 1854 *uto batteries run n ruce to fee |
CASTLETON TOWNSHIP:
and with the exception ot a few | which can pul out "Juice" for the .
DM. 1 prl.. Nashville, 317 persons. years in Ohio, hod lived Ui Has- 1 longest time, fabrics are exposed to
42853.
tings and vicinity over 80 years'.
I artificial rain, sun and rubbing, and
DUt. 2. 27 pcr.xin*. 42.43.
*~.»I Q-1
.h» «...
I Women wash clothes by the hour—
DUt. 2 Prl. 25 persons. 42115.
m.in ' not 10
thc clothes clean but lo
three children. Olive. Tina Belle i
washing machines.
Dlst. 4. 32 persons. 4288.
and George, were bom. George died
There are tert* in this .bureau lab­
Dlst. 5. 10 persons, 41.71.
In infancy and her husband on June 1
,or everV
Dist. 8. 15 persons. &gt;135.
29. 1887. On April 2. 1889 she was or little, lough or fragile. Every
Dlst. 7. 26 persons, 4234.
married lo Isaac Weeks who died । nrUclc ha* tta purpose, and some
Dlst. 8. 34 persons. 43 00.
Dec 1. 1911. She is survived by one j
Dist. 10. 31 persons. 52.70.
LechUllnrr.! vised to'tell in advance how the
HASTINGS TOWNSHIP:
a
sister. Mrs Frank Bush, ten "TLlclo will respond to actual usage.
Dlst. 3. 17 persons. 4133.
'
• ­ 1 Tire beauty of a piece of merchan­
grandchildren,
twelve great-grand
Dlst. 4 Prl. 24 persons. 42 18.
children
and
many
nieces
and dise is perhaps the only quality
Dial. 5 Prl.. 38 persons. 43.42.
nepliew*. She had been a member which cannot be scientifically meas­
Dlst. 7. 37 persons. 4333.
of the Methodist church for many ured by the laboratories of the Ward
DUt. 8. 13 persons, 41-17Bureau of Standards.
years.
Dlst. 9. 35 persons. 4234.
Dial. 10 Prl.. 31 persons. 43.79.
DEATH OF JANE HEATH.
HASTINGS CITY:
Hastings-friends were siiocked Lo
1344 persons. 412050.
Mercury or quicksilver, so widely

Mi.w Jane Heath. 22. daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis W. Heath, for­
mer residents here. Mlu Heath had
been ill with streptococcus intec-

Is

Bxhibitlong

ASSYRIA TOWNSHIP:

Dlst. 3, 20 persons. |1 80.

THE LIFE OF “B4T
earth. If everything work* O. K.
FLYER" CDLEMM"* ** ■** “ *

Speaker At P.T.A.

ORANOEVIUJC TOWNSHIP:
DM. X 32 persau. 42M
D4M. I Fri, IM persons. 11251.
00. TKEAS. MAUfl SENDS
DM. 4.14 pmdns. 8354.
0HEUK8 TO SCHOOL
DU. 5 Fd, 31 persons. 83-24
PIUIBIBVXUJK
TOWW8SIF:
DUTB10TS
DM. 3. 9 persons. 4&lt;U-

HOPE TOWNSHIP;
Dial. 1. 24 persons. 4218.

mkndu thumpat. bbftkmbkb it, 1W

Hawaii Sees Unde Sam’s Might

MACK

Shirts
Have Arrived!

79c

39c
19c
17c
31c
59c

75c fer
— $1.50 for
60c for
.55c fixe for
.. .55t for
.55c sixe fer

49c
79c
39c
39c
39c
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33c sixe for
35c for
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29c
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24c
10c
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See the new onepiece Flexton Col’
lars on Mack

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at Popular Prices

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FOAMFIT'

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Foundation
GARMENTS

‘

Steam'* Shoring Cream
Gem Sharing Cream-----------------Steam's Shoring Lotion
Palmoliro After Sharing Powder
Colgate's Sharing Cream

FOR THE FAMILY ...
Squibb'* Tooth Paste, 40c sixe for 33c—25c sice Free
*
• - • “
.10c—3 for 19c
1 pt. A. D. $. Milk of Megnesie
50c for 29c
50c siie for 33c
Steam's Mouth Wash—1 pt. _
Mint Mouth Wash
___50c si*e 33c

The New Little

New Fall Style*. 1 Pa-

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feet Fit Giiiirantaod by an
experienced corsetiemi.

for boys are here.
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with Duke of Kent
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Magic Tooth Paste, Pcnslor Tooth Brush
with mug, for

EA
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MONIY OKDEKS All Timas of Day and Night !

'VANITY*

Clothes Shop
Silling Quality Keepi Ul Btuy

iiHIHIHHI..................

Frandst
"Exclusive But Not

HASTINGS

PMOl

|1

T

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. SEPTtMAtt IT,
duui Waterton Lakes Park, on the south shore of Lake McDonald, the ers on this, the west side of tha di­ farming and recreational grounds of
DAKOTA HORSES
north to form the Waterton-Ulacler
vide are entirely different from
(Mltaultu
During tha excavation of a well
it Indian
TO BE SOLD IN IONIA
near Findlay, Ohio, gaa waa found
dedicated In 1932 by both countries completed till 1933. and as an engi­
and carried by a wooden pipe to
The third carload of work horses
with appropriate ceremonies to com­ neering and landscaping accom­ cedar, hemlock, larch and white Into the deserts and rocks, and I
with bright, curiously marked
is being shipped from Blsmark. N.
memorate the record of long-stand­ plishment. it is one of the most pine, while on the cast slope they
D.. by Henry O. Putnam. County
ing peace and good will between the outstanding roadways of the world. art mostly spruce. Douglas fir and their present iocs
two countries.
Even the tunnels through lhe great lumber pine. Very few flowers ore much wander that
becom- Agricultural Agent, lo the Ionia
(Continued from page 1, Bee. 1)
Livestock Auction Company. This
All of our national parks are se­ overhanging rocks, where it would found on the west slope, on account Ing extinct.
carload will be shipped on Tuesday,
otherwise be impossible to build a of the dense forests, but on the cast
lected
os
such
because
they
are
the
We
left
Polson
tn
lhe
rain
around
a practical demonstration of how
September 15lh. for sate at the Ionia
side, from even above lhe Umber
. nneav
finest examples ui
In mis
this country OI
of
they build roads in this country, i some geological formation or nat- scenery is concerned. If the tunnel line down into the valleys. it is a pnu, ,ood pUm lo UU you how Livestock Auction,
on
Monday,
—
------we
fooled
ourselves
into
making
,
^Pi^^ber 21st, at 1.30 P. M.
veritable flower garden In early
When they decide to aonstruct a ■ ural phenomenon. Yellowstone Park
such
good
Ume
going
west.
We
kept
'
„
b,,n&lt;
**
new road, they don't put up a detour ।
the world's greatest geyser area through, they cut great windows out July. They seem to blossom right
sign and send you around it over Iand
outstanding game preserve, through the sides and widen the up tlirough lhe snow in the most lhe dock in the car set al Has-1Norlh D**01* farmers because ot
tings Ume and would get up and ,ack of feed- and ftrc consigned by
another gravel road, for the simple 1 Glacier Park is noted for Its unsurbrilliant and striking color#?
itert e«h momlnTby th‘t Ume “ui them to the
the Ionia
lonla ua^ion
Livestock Auction
reason that there Isn't any other | Pas»d Alpine scenery, its 250 lakes If you wish, and still absorb the
vta were fortunate to have seen
would quit al night by the local 'Company. These horses, and also
road; so you Just go. through If you iand 60 flwlers. It is located In the wonderful scenery. There are num­
the park when we did. as with con­
con: The road here I is not even northwest comer of Montana, is erous places to park along tiie road­
time. In this way we gained an those sold on September 7th. are be­
luugniy
liny
iiiuco north
norm to
io south
sou LI: way even nt tiie top of tiie divide, siderable sadness wt* have read tn hour's driving the first day. two ing arranged for by Harold Foster.
graveled: it Is a kind of a sand. rou
«h,y nfl
? ml,M
I and
miles
east to ----west,
cover­ where you may stop and enjoy views lhe papers, since returning home, hours for the next three days and Barry County Agricultural Agent,
which when it gels wet and packed1
"”4 thirty -------------* -------burning
of tiie glaciers and mountains tiiat forest fires were
! clown, makes a very fine surface for ing a Utile over 1.500 square miles.
three hours for Che last two days. and W. C. Cribbs, icnla Counly Ag­
large
which, up until
uniu three
uute years ago,
ago. tlirough
-------- — a —
* part
— of
— .lhe
■ park. Of course this system didn't work ricultural Agent.
driving. However we came on lo a
Entering the park al St. Mary we which,
only be enjoyed by the birds. I even crossing the divide above tim­ so good coming home.
Horses previously sold" brought
' new fill and before we realized It. went through the same formalities could
niL «»rir" i.
, I! berilne;
Berlin* ■ that
Hint some
tAmo of
nt tiie
th* hotels
hntel.
At breakfast in Polson I read In very good prices owing to the active
j were in to lhe running boards and
The park Is onlj open three have glregd bunwd md Ulc hl&lt;h.
i axles of all four wheels. When the Yellowstone. As soon as we con­ months of
the paper about the new Oregon demand for horaea in this county,
w. lhe
..... year v
.. account u.
clOsea. gna
nou
on
of ,( way
wy nu
has oecn
been closed,
and ithousands
Commemorative
postage
stamp. of this type.
| road gang down the line some dls- vinced the Ranger that we had no I the snow, which even in the middle of men are fighting the fires,
tance from us saw our predicament, dogs or firearms, we exchanged a i nf .Title* nrnrlv lilnr-lra th* rnn/l In
‘nlarler t&gt;arlr late I'
they came up and told us wc dollar bill for a slicker license and of July nearly blocks the road in 1 We left Glacier Park tale in the lime In Missoula. Montana, which Is THE PRIMARY OVER­
HEAD BATTLE BEGINS.
I shouldn't have tried to go through. started through the park on the only places We went through several afternoon and followed the Flat­ one of lhe orlglnairtowns of Uie old
Tiie returns indicate an alarming
। We believed them all right, but we highway crossing it. To really see stretches, where snow covered nearly head river down through Kallspel Oregon Territory, and was selected
' thought what a fine thing It would Glacier Park at its best, you should half the rood, and on lhe side where lo Polson, at the lower end of FJat- by the government as the town number of voters who have failed
it
had
not
been
shoveled
out
was
liead
lake,
where
we
had
a
trout
to
realize
that lhe slogan, "some­
where this stamp should first be
; have been If they had told us that spend several days and take side
i before we got Into it. or at least trips by horseback or hike back five to twenty feet deep and covered dinner and found cabins for the sold. Being one of those nuls known thing for nothing,'* if followed to Its
I put up a sign. With the help of a through the many trails to the lakes with dust. On one of these drifts night. It was a beautiful drive as a stamp collector, I Insisted on logical end. will ruin this cquntry.
some
miscreant,
possibly
a
Republic
­
around Flathead lake with a thun-1 driving out of our way about thirty
The President has well said. "We
j little pushing, we finally wallowed and glaciers; but on account of this
I out through the side of lhe fill and being a business trip. 1 thought an. had stood on tiie running board derxtorm Just ahead of us most of miles tn order to buy some of these must not rob Peter to pay Paul." but
' into the ditch and bumped along for possibly the company would think it of his car and written "Landon" in the way. and two complete rain­ Stamps and mall them out as first that U exactly what this adminis­
! a quarter of a mile or so where we was slow enough, without taking It letters six feet high by shaving off bows with both ends of each dipping day covers. If you are not a stamp tration has been doing—collecting
the dust so tiie while letters stood in U»e lake Just before sundown.
। got back up on the grade. Here we on horseback.
collector, you may think a first day money-by way of taxation, direct
Polson. Montana. Tuesday. July cover is some kind of a quilt to and indirect, from all taxable
i could look back and see how tiie
Anyway. Il isn't so bad to sit in a out on the gray background. As this
Ulh—2577 miles from home.
: road was being built. They pump nice. upholstered seat and climb
throw over you In the morning* but sources, to give In varying amounts
miles
from
both
directions
along
water out of a nearby Irrigation steep, snow-covered mountains in
Polson Is quite a lumber town, lhe it is really an envelope bearing a to special classes, to purchase the
i ditch and wash lhe fill down and let high gear, all the way on a wide, safe ■ the highway.
logs being rafted down Flathead new stamp, postmarked on the first support of that particular group.
There are only so many people
, it settle, and It really is a good road paved highway, especially If this! As a game refuge Glacier Park lake, which is the largest fresh day that it is offered on sale. In the
after it is once settled.
highway is built on purpose to at- ; does not compare with Yellowstone, water lake west of the Great Lakes. town selected, because of historical tn the country. As the President
1 We arrived at the entrance of ford the rider the most beautiful: although we saw several bears and It has quite unusual weaUier, never significant, to be the first town said. "Taxes are paid In the sweat
Glacier Park on the lower end of scenic views in the park. This "Go- I we understand lhat mountain sheep extremely iiol in summer and very selling the stamp. For some un­ of every man who labors." It neces­
'st. Mary’s lake at about 11:00 A. M. ing-to-the-Sun Highway" as it is and goats are usually seen on the mild in winter for Montana, never known reason these covers arc much ■sarily follows lhat lhe practice of
PHONE 2241
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
just an even 200 miles from Great called. Is about fifty miles long and j saddle and hiking trips back from getting cold enough to freeze the sought after by many collectors and collecting tax money from lhe man
Palls. Glacier National Park in the for the first ten miles skirts the] the highways. Ils lakes antLslreams lake over, and great flocks of duck are often quite valuable. You can who sweats and giving it to another
united. States Joins with the Cana- north shore of beautiful St. Mary, are famous for trout fishing, but and geese spend the winter on the imagine what a thrill I got upon special group will in lhe end wreck
lake, then around the edges of Go- । we did not have time to indulge.
lake. Il is surrounded by quite pro- returning home to find lhat I had Um country.
It is true that the giving of Fed­
Ing-lo-the-Sun. Pregan and Pol-1 Wd. stopped for lunch at Lake ducUve fanning country and was received about fifty letters from my­
eral funds for public works or var­
lock mountains, crossing the con- ; McDonald Hotel and rested a cou­ formerly part of Uie Flathead In­ self while I was gone.
tlnental divide at Logan Pass, and ple
,___________
of hours ___
along
„ —
Its ________
beautiful dian Reservation. From whot we obWe left Missoula a little after ious enterprises stimulates business.
winding down to and along the wooded shores. The trees and flow- j served throughout the trip the good noon, crossed the Idaho line about Just exactly as borrowing money on
4:00 P. M. and arrived in Spokane. home or farm or personal note In­
Washington. In Ume for dinner, a creases temporarily the borrower'!
purchasing power. But. In the qnd.
show and to stay all night.
someone must pay, and the someone
H. D. Cook.
is lhe wage-earner and lhe farmer.
This
Ls a lesson which must be
DEATH OF ROBT. MARTIN.
brought home to lhe voters between
Robert Martin, aged 59, died early
now and November 3.
Wednesday morning at his home in
The support and assistance given
Castleton township after an illness by those who so generously aided me
SINCERITY - MICHIGAN MILLED
Is appreciated and I hope to deserve
BARREL
that
assistance.
Ireland, coming to lhe United States
EIGHT SACKS »5 49
To those who opposed I con only
when a young man. On March 21. say lhat I regret lhat we could not
1919 he was united in marriage to agree on the issue at the primary,
For throe solid hours this mighty
Miss Juna Perry of this city, who but. that being over, may the false
motion picture pours forth heart­
survives him. The funeral will be at issue raised be forgotten and a unit­
lhe First Methodist church in tills ed front presented lo lhe common
throbbing drama merged with scan as
MICHIGAN MAID
*•
ruU
Barrel Eight (acks &gt;5.99
city on Friday afternoon at 2:30 enemy on the real issue, which Is
of dasaling wonder and songs of
EATMORK NUT OLEO 2 U». 27.
o'clock, the Rev. w. Maylan Jones —Shall our country continue under
officiating. Interment will be In the Constitution or shall we have a
stirring rhythms. Here are just a
IL bulk
Riverside cemetery. He was one of government of men. rather than ot
"MB
few of the breath-taking moments!
the director;, of the Barry County
COUNTRY CLUB APPLE BUTTEH GUal )*r IS.
Barrel Eight Sack. 86.79
Agricultural Society for many years
Sincerely,
and was a highly esteemed citizen —Political Adv. Clare E. Hoffman.
Qurl Jar
of his community and of Barry
SALAD DRESSING - PINT 1 tR 25.
county. Sincere sympathy is ex tend'The dignity of man ilea In hla

SAW EVIDENCES
DF EARTHQUAKES

BRIDGE
SUPPLIES

CARDS—Single and Double Decks
• TALLIES

• SCORE PADS

• PRIZES

FANCY WRAPPINGS for Prizes

Alto a Complete Stock of Gibson

Greeting Cards for All Occasions

Walgreen System
DRUG STORE

REED'S

KROGER STORES

mG.g6.60 SHOWS IN ONEI

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayor’) giant &gt;how—tha
sensation oi the nation—is here at last

FLOUR

AT POPULAR PRICES!

King’s Flake

BUTTER

71c

COOKIES

10c

MIRACLE WHIP

77c

Country Club’ti? 87c

37c

Gold Medal *1^ &gt;1.09

PANCAKE FLOUR

5

WHEAT PUFFS

JUMBO pk|
COUNTRY CUB - CRISPER - MORE TENDER

ODER VINECAR

GaUoa bulk
AYONDALE CIDLI VINEGAR QmH bollh 10.

FEED

vpuaw puw nanitaj sunmA
ed to the bereaved ones.

OR FJLL33URY'S

21c

Barrel

WHIZ - MICHIGAN MILLED

x 8c

Eight Sacks

S8.59

Lily White

95c

Eight Sacks 17.43

Barral

19c

desire to see beyond our material
| experiences."—Abbe Ernest Dlmnet.

100-lb.

Why not heat your home
the ECONOMICAL way

a.M suiru

WESCO SCRATCH

TOMATOES «r» im. r..c* 3

*£?• &gt;2.55

Egg Mash

25c

Zl.af.ld Qlrls

WESCO STARTDia AMD

GIANT

3

TOMATO JUICE

&gt;2.79

Growing Ma.h

29c

COtWTRY CLUB - RICH. RED

CHIU SAUCE

2

ttS

Block Salt

TOMATOES
CATSUP

&gt;2.29

Chick Food

19c

COUNTlt CU® - tasty, tangy

35c

10c
I

RICH. RED
1936 PACK

Oyster Shells •£* 79c

10c

l&lt;-e

16% Dairy

FRESH BREAD

11.95

10c

OH-TTET OX'B - 10. EBEBCT

ALLSPICE

REPEATED BY REQUEST

Mt. 25c

Orchard Cake

Pickling Spices

fefe* 25c

KERR ar HALL BIOS.

Cinnamon Bread “■

12c

Seminole Tissue 4

25c

CRAPES

GENUINE TOKAYS

QUARTS dos «5o

Wide Mouth rem ... 69c

2 -

CALIFORNIA 5UNK1ST '

2 - 35c
ORANGES
MEDIUM SIZE - SWEET AND JUICY

CABBAGE
3 - 10c
MICHIGAN - FIRM. SOUO HEAItt
Mich. Grapes

do« 55c

Mason Jars

baU«t

25c

BEEF POT
ROAST
MEATY

cuts

FOR EATING OR JELLT

Rolled Rib Roast

Sweet Potatoes
vnamsT

6 lb. 19c

Chuck Boast

■ laU

Boiling Beef

Mich. Celery
LAIGI TEMPER STALU

Mich. Onions

10.lh.ha, 19c

ik

19c

choici u.

15c

u.

10c

“

19c

eeueet

Bacon Squares
KXUUD'B

Ring Bologna

■e 15c

MICHIGAN U. 5. Na. 1 COBBLER

POTATOES
15 £ 39c

ESTATE HEATROLA

ncnnti

WILL DO IT to your ENTIRE SATISFACTION, as
we can prove by hundreds of satisfied customers

12%c

Lemons cow.™. i... 3 &lt;“* 10c

5c

»n Bresdwayl *Rib RITA, IhrM
MUSKETEERS, ROSALIE. KID BOOT
urlun ring, aown on &lt;nu laouiou
,1 THE GREAT ZIEGFELD. lh.

* METRO
COLDWTN-

Smoked Picnics

is. 21c

Pan Fish

“■

Roasting Chickens

10c
25c

who have been using them for yean

starring WILLIAM POWELL • MYRNA LOY * LUISE RAINER
IN A CAST OF 50 STARS! including Virginia Bruce, Frank Morgan,
Fannie Brice, Ray Bolger, Nat Pendleton, Harriet Hector, Ernest Cossart,
Reginald Owen, Joseph Cawthorn, and 300 Gorgeous Girls

STRAND THEATRE

4

DI A nA VC
DlU MAIO

he.l

will. ku lul with an ESTATE Hr.lraU.

Thai th. ESTATE HEATBOLA la mad. httl.r and

MICHIGAN

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY
AND FRIDAY—SEPTEMBER 22-25

FIRST SHOW EACH HIGHT STARTS AT
6:30 O'CLOCK
SECOND SHOW EACH NIGHT STARTS AT 9&gt;3O O’CLOCK
ADMISSION: ADULTS 35 Cant,
CHILDREN IOC.nl,

Uul w &gt;U1

I.!.Ij runnlN aalUlacthn.

MILLER FURNITURE CO
HASTINGS

PHONE 2226

�m ■ABWMD1 BAKNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER

17, UM

' Mr. and Mra. Charlss DeLano and 1 Robert Walldorff spent ths week TRANSFERRED TO
son Marvin of White Pigeon were end tn Detroit with Mr. and Mrs
SCHOOL ON CAMPUS.
—of Mr. and Mn. Earl Cham-, Emmet Harrison.
The friends of Miss Marguerite
over lhe week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklln of
Mra NetUc Hyde snterUtaed Mn.' AUe*‘n attended the fair on Batur- resident of this city and who taught
David'RocSwall of Pralrlsville on 22lrMndHvUtte&lt;1
ovfr

Social Events and Personal Mention s^'

Shomo-Hilbert

pleased to know that she lias been
Wednsaday and Thursday, the 1st- V**K end
Mrs.
Warren
Ler steo attending ths fair.
| Mr. and ^
rs w
*rren Carter ac- made supervisor ot second grade
Ab«n Johnsen Ml test Wednesday
Ralph Kenyon of KaUtaSMO W
aunts. MU*
Miss
Wr. n-rth. Rmfth and Mr* Ell. 'I compnnled
romPnnl«1 Mrs. Carter’s aunt*.
here for the fair on Thurtdiy.
and Mrs. E- O Bhomo. were united
on • BnsfhiM trip to New York.
Monday in Grand Rapids.
“
s
and
M"garet
Fulton,
to
8KJtam^LM^ JSd Ain,
Agnes and Mlu Margaret Fulton, to silanll Bhe
was doing similar
&gt;. B. Murphy attended tha state Poiliat® from Kalamazoo vial ed
(ionic in Brus.sclx Ont . Balur- work al the Lincoln consolidated
Donald Goucher was home from
Mlu Etta Hubbard of BatUa
Mrs ta^k*ln*tha°HMlLtam
tnd
Belle Pattison last Wednesday
&lt;f«dr*Uy i
returnln« Sunday. The Mlsxe*
Creek spent Thursday Id Um dty Battls creek over the WMk «nd.
school a few miles out from Ypsi­ afternoon at lhe Methodist Episco­
and
cook
la
tha
Hastings
fair.
took in lhe
| Pulton have been guexts of the Car- lanti last year.
Janet Lambart of Pontiac
The Roosevelt pal church tn Woodland In tha pre»Mrs. Corinna oould of Lansing
Lem Bishop of EmEm­ ters for a month.
Mr. and Mrs. Um
school Is on the campus of the
Monday and
pire. and their aon
pin.
son Eugene and i■ porrd B. ume jnj daughter, State Normal college, so her work
B Mr. and Mrs. ohMtor Btoweil and
fatally of Frankfort visited Mr. and Be^. vllltfd ln Toroillo ovcr lhc will be more pleasing on that ac­ banked with fems, baskets of regal
day guest of friend* al Orchard
Mr and Mrs Thos. Baird. Sr., via­
I UM Mr and Mra. Harold Hller ot Mr* Herbert Bishop over Labor Day.1 WM!k cnd wnd alio attended the Ca- count. Bhe succeeds Mlu Della lilies and candelabras. Mlu Ova Co­
son of Kalsmssoo attended lhe fair lake.
Mn. Phyllis Reynolds returned nadlan National Exhibition. Mr*. Jackson, who had taught as a super- vert ot Ithaca played a program of
on Thursday.
Bunday to Ann Arbor after spending I Lane and Kenneth returned with
wedding music and Rev E. J. Nest
Mrs. Nellie Matthews was here ed Mlu Olive Lathrop in Detroit ' K«nneth Blddie went to Grand ths summer with her daughter and them after a three weeks' visit with
veil school for over forty years, and
.
Rapids Monday where he wUl rtfrom Battle creek part ot last week Bunday.
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cordes relative* and friend*.
In all that lime she had never
The bride. ’given tn marriage by
Mlss Edith Benton of Battle »nhic hU studies.
attending the fair.
missed a single day. She la now past herHmcla, J. Victor Hilbert, wort
Miss Geraldine Isenhath was the
***
“
Creek
was
lhe
week
end
guut
of
1
Attorney
Kim
Sigler
spoke
at
lhe
Mias Dorothy Mack of Dowling
eighty and still in good health and white brocaded transparent velvet
। State Credit Association In Grand guest of her shier. MUs Alleen GRADUATES OF 1936
visited her sister, Mrs.’YUL* Kelley, MUs Margret Barnett.
possesses her mental faculties to a with a slit neckline and long sleeves
Isenhalh,
and
her
aunt.
Mrs.
W.
J.
,
eawe
rnn
enunni
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Buxton of Rapids on Monday.
Baturday and Bunday..
with tight pointed cuffs and train.
of Detroit over the week
LEAVE FOR SCHOOL marked degree.
Ionia were Bunday xuaste of Mk.
Btevan Bristol leaves the flret of Canwell,
I
----------Mrs. 0 B Hodges
'
week for Athlon tn anl*r mllaaa endan automobile trip through lhe up­
beaded pearl coronet fastened with
Julian Townsend relumed on Sat- Enter Various Colleges, Hoa­
for
his
second
year.
per peninsula last week.
orange blossoms. She carried a bou­
Miss Katherine Loftus spent lhe
X" Sb st,”««ato.&lt;c™~-'
r“ai*
on,! Enihu
! s',ecial ,,nnor’
I Mr. and Mrs. Harbert Bishop vlsltpltala and One Enlists
quet of white roses and swalnsona.
Rem Jeffries and son Harold of week end to Nashville as the guest | ed their daughter. Mrs. Sterling ZerMlu Lorena Hilbert, who attended
of Mrs. Margaret Downing.
well, lliey travelled about 250
in the Navy
”
‘
her sister as maid of honkr, wore a
J. M. Townsend Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Altonand Mr. • ^Lm Barbara Johnson leaves on miles from Grayling to Oscoda on I Member» of the claa* of 1936 are
gown of royal blue silk with a silver
,or Arn Arbor l0 re&gt;ume the AU Sable river.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Nobles of and Mrs Ray shroyar spent Bun| making plan* now to attend varlblue hat. Her flowers were Talisman
MU*
Suzanne
Sumner,
daughter
day
and
Monday
in
Chicago
visiting
her
studies
at
the
University,
Grandville were here the last of
Miss Winifred Johnston «pent the | ous school* to receive further eduof Mr. and Mrs. George Sumner. roses tied with pink tulle.
friends.
। Mr. and Mrs. Ben Merrick of East week end with Mr*. W. R. cook in j cation.
ths week and attended lhe fair.
Little Peggy Niethamer. dressed in
tlwse
who have definitely
on Sunday for Olivet where she
Mr. and Mrs. Will Harrison of state Road were Bunday guests of _______
Petoskey_________________
and on Monday_________
was theI j Among
/...._ _on
____
______________
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Taylor
guest ot Mrs
their school* are Ells- 1 w
‘" "
“'m1 ,h
" Conservatory of
will
attend
lhe
ot sheer pink organza. was flower gtrl.
—1 Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Merrick
miAst
Sir. and
snH Mrs. R. J. Me-1 decided mi
from ---Thursday
return today from their vacation Grand Rapids spent -------i Bhe carried a gold basket filled with
connection
. with the. colmiss
neien Biddle
xnaaie of
oi Grand
urand RapHap- Creery
ureery at
ai Traverse
traverse City.
uiiy. Bhe
one then
men worth
worm Newton, who
wno leaves Septetnnepiein- 1 Music
——— in —
-------- -......................
—■ rose petals. Birdsfll Holly, cousin of
Mlaa Helen
which they spent at Higgins lake to Bunday with Mr. anfl Mrs. Henry
Ida spent the week end with her i went
to apcuu
spend sue
the rest
attend Trl-Btate
wem to
iv Chicago
v&gt;uw*gu uv
im of ber
ucr 27 to
io aiienu
iti-oimm: Unlveruuivci- . - ---------- — Sumner
------ : . was ■presented
. .
with relatives.
the bride, performed the duties of
the u-erk
week with Mrs.
Grace Huling
at Angola.
Ind ■: Verlan UnLin- with a P}*
no nn&lt;1
’P* °
r,&lt;n SCDO1,
mother Mrs.
Mrs Newton Benner.
Rrnnrr
ths
Mrs Clracr*
Hulliur 1 aity
•tiv at
Anunla turt
piano
and P
pipe
organ
Mrs. Clarence W. Crawford left mother,
Mrs. Courtland McKay of Barenac
p bbecause
her
splendid
| Inllon io Cl-.ry Blalneu Collw I ___ »
-rA'“” of h
" ■"'-"■1
“ best man and Don Hynes and Rob­
Tuesday for Chicago to spend two
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Giddings were Bull.nl.
ability.
It
will
be
remembered
that ert E- Byrum ushered. Dr. aiyd Mr*.
Mlu
Cornelia
Eckardt
has
been
1
at
Ypsilanti:
Charles
Emrick.
Gen|
Bunday
guests
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Ear)
View spent fair week with Mr. and weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Rob­
R. G. Flnnie completed lhe wedding
i
Miss
Bumner
has
been
a
student
Erway at their Gun lake cottage
ert Jessen.
lhe guest of her cousins, Mr. and evleve Erway. Elizabeth Vande- ।
“
Mrs. Glen Brower.
New Fall Jackets for
party as master and mistress ot
Mlu Henrietta Bauer left on
Mrs. Wayne Mitchell of Battle Mr*. Jacob Rehor. from Monday till grift and Don Weaver to Western with Mr*. Archie McCoy for several ceremonies.
Mrs. Will Fighter of Grand Ledge
| years. She has also had practical
has been here the past week assist­ Tuesday for Evanston, ill., where Creek was lhe guest of Mrs. Fred Thursday. Miss Eckardt is a nurse in ' State Teachers’ College at Kalamabacks, full and half belts.
The mother of lhe bride chase a
ing with the care of her mother, she is a senior at the National Col­ Fairchild on Friday and Saturday. New York City and has been spend- zoo; Dora Day. Hugh Kelly. Her- training in teaching music.
.. For lhe dress of black-.crepe and wore a
Beautiful in style and etaMlu Marjory Stebbins leaves Sun­ tag
lege of Education.
Mn. Michael Sullivan.
Ing her vacation with her parent*,
parent*. man Newland and Edna Shultz to
the Flr.t pre.bytwl.n church shoulder bouquet of white rones and
day for Ann Arbor to resume her Mr. and Mra. Fred Eckardt, of M»u'«Vn"suu"coll.w
Mrs. C. E. Brower, Howard Brow­
Black; Light Blue and
Lansing; Robert Walldorff leaves1 since the resignation of Mrs Mc- a black velour hat. The mother of
studies at lhe University ot Michi­ Woodland.
er and Mlu Barbara Whalen of
Sunday for Albion College at Al- Coy. Her many friends extend con- the groom was attired tn black silk
gan.
In
Hastings
as
guests
of
Mr.
and
Portland spent Bunday with Mr.
cre[x- aith white trimming and a
Mrs. Clara MacLachlan ot Bay bion. and Helen Hubbell will enter ijraluUtions.
Mrs.
L.
K.
Barnett.
*
George
Hyde
of
Prairieville
Re
­
and Mrs. Glen Brower.
black velour hat and wore white
City and Mrs. Ella Harting of Chi­
"
***
.
Rev. j. A. McNulty attended the turned Home on Bunday after vis­ cago were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nichols hospital at Battle Creek.,
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Doyle returned
last week after a several weeks* visit Clergy Conference being led by iting ills grandmother. Mrs. Nettie Harold Foster last week. Mr. and Victor Munton ha* already left for i CIVIC FLAYEM PARTY OCT. 2.
A reception for flfly guests was
the University of Southern CalifocThe fall party origlnal y pUnned
•
with their daughter, Mrs. John Nichols Whittemore at Camp Roger, Hyde.
Mrs. Carl MacLachlan of Bay City nia. and Walter Caukin has enlist- I for
evening. September 18. held at lhe home of Mr. and Mr*.
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Mrs. Belle Edger of Jackson and were here also over tiie week end
fismmes. in Albany, N. Y.
b&gt; Uie members of the executive J. V. Hilbert following the ceremony.
her daughter. MUs Marceline, of and Mr*. Clara MacLachlan re­ ed in Hie navy
Mr. and Mrs. C L. Tester and
Mrs
Frank Niethamer. Mrs. John
Eighteen/of the graduates have ! hoard of the Hastings Civic Playys
ion visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. McNulty attended the board meet­ Albion visited Mrs. Edith Edger lumed home with them.
enrolled fdr post graduate work at Association has been postponed bc- Dell. Mrs. Glen covert and Mis* Kay
C B McDermott, of Delton on Bun­ ing of the Woman’s Auxiliary held Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Edmonds and Hastlngs High school and a number cause of conflicting date to the eve- Blake assUted in the dining room.
in Grand Rapids Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Allen of
day. later going to Kalamazoo.
The bridal couple will be al home
Mr and Mr*. William Clarke ot Flint were Saturday and Sunday Mr. and Mrs. E. C- Edmonds, ac­ have already taken position* of va- ntag of October 2. The e«nlwlll at 320 Oakton Ave.. Ann Arbor.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Kelley, son
companied by Mrs Martha Norton rlous kinds.
held at the •’loft” at Reed’s Opera
Jackie. Alvin Barke and Mlu Ruth Hartford were Bunday guest* of Mr.
of Kalamazoo, spent lhe week end
---------- &lt;*&gt;
house and further detail* will be an- Mich. Mn. Bhomo is a granddaugh- ।
Bpldel were callers at the Roy and Mra. Roman Feldpausch and Ironside.
ler of tiie Ute F. F. Hilbert, pioneer
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Milton
Edmonds
■
1
"
nounced
later.
Mr.
and
Mrs
Herman
Mr. and Mrs. James Murray of
Wright home tn Grand Rapid* Bun- Mr. and Mrs. C- B Hodges.
and Mr. and Mrs F. D. Nelson of
. ..
,,
Arold. chairman of the social com- banker of Woodland and is a grad- ■
Mr. and Mrs. B. D. McMurray and Grand Rapids were guest* of Mr.
uate of WoodUnd High school and '
mince, win be m charge.
and Mrs. Fred W Stebbins last Traverse City. They returned on
Mr*. A. A Wlllmonl has returned
Battle Creek college Mr. Bhomo is
Tuesday afternoon and Mrs. Norton
to her home tn Delton after visiting Hastings relatives and friends on Thursday.
a WoodUnd High school graduate,
pythian sisters.
J. H. Watkins of Lennon has went to her home on Wednesday.
Hastings relatives and friends for Saturday and Sunday and attended
The Rev. and Mrs C- M- Conklin
__________________________________ । Monday evening. Sept. 8. was the attended Virginia Military Institute.
been the guest of his son and wife.
about two weeks and attending the
j opening night for the Pythian 8U- Olivet College aod is now complet­
Mra. R. R. McPeck of Charlotte Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Watkins, the and family expect to move next
fair.
week to their new home at Cedar
The many friends and relatives of urn Temple after the summer vaca- ing hU dentistry course at Univer­
Mrs Fred Benham ot Battle Creek and Miss Marguerite Hetmaruiperger
sity of Michigan.
NUNN BUSH
Kneeland McNulty leaves Bunday Springs. Rev. conklln has been pas­ Mr. and Mrs. Fred OtU and Mr. and tion. Temple was preceded by a pot
visited Wednesday and Thursday of of Ypsilanti were guests of Mrs.
Out of town guests were Mr. and
tor of the Hastings circuit churches Mrs. Wm. Havens are Invited to luck with a goodly number-present,
EDGERTOWN
last week with her son and daugh­ Mary Evarts and MU* Agnes film on for New York, where he will con­ for the past five years. His many
help
them celebrate their golden The Brother Knights have been Mrs. Geo. Klnhman. and Mr. and
tinue his studies at St. Thomas
ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Wednesday.
Mrs LeRoy Klnhman and non
friends
wish
every
success
for
him
wedding
on
Sunday.
Sept.
27.
when
busy
redecorating
the
room*,
tnakNew Scotch Grain
Mr. and Mrs. Emery BUles re­ Choir School.
Benham.
they will hold open house at the mg them very attractive. Many Ronald, ot KaUmazoo; Mn. Joacare here. Heavy La
Mr. and Mrs Sam Nadu of Char­ and his family.
Miss Marjorie Stebbins returned turned on Monday to their home In
phine
Lewis
and
daughter.
Cheridel,
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Campbell of Havens home in Rutland township • thanks to all who have helped to
to withstand Fall
last week from a eight weeks' trip Peru. Ind., after a visit with her son lotte were guests of Mr. and Mra. Kearney. Nebr.. were in the city on during the afternoon and eventag 1 make our new home so pleasant.— Miss Elsie Bhomo and Mr*. Kate ।
and winter snows. C
in the west, spending most of her and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gas­ O. F. Chidester on Thursday and I Wednesday calling on Mr. and Mrs.
LaDue of Allegan; Robert E. Byrum
Mr. and Mrs. OtU and Mr. and
attended the fair.
lime with her cousin. Miss Julia kell. Ro. Broadway.
of Jackson; Don Hynes of Olivet;
Frank Newton and other friends. Mrs. Havens were the principals In;
Mrs, Ethel Renkes and grand­
Anne Templeton, al Medford. Ore­
.Mr. and Mrs. Glen Blake and
a double wedding,here In Hastings ;
They
were
former
residents
of
GOLDEN
WEDDING.
daughter
Beth
of
Wawaka.
Ind.,
daughter, Miss Winona Btlnhauer of
gon.
fitting
that. I The Rev. and Mrs. Henry C. Tra- daughter. Kay. of Middleville; Mr.
Barry county living near Bhuilz and fifty
—, year*
,—„ ago so It .is............
. ..........
Gerhard Burde, who has been Muskegon, visited the former’s fath­ were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
cnldrn !' bert of 4423 40th St.. San Diego, and Mn. A- E- Bnugg* and Miss
they should observe
qbserve their golden
Cedar Creek. This is their first visit thev
ronnected with lhe Barry Co. Health er. George Robinson, on Thursday Munton on Saturday.
• Jerry Abbott and sister of Detroit;
Mrs. Mabel Ritchie, who has been here in six years. They left Barry anniversaries together. Congralula-. California, are celebrating their
Unit as cub engineer this summer, and attended the fair.
lions are extended by the Banner, golden wedding anniversary Oct.. Mr. and Mn. Karl Johnson and
visiting her niece. Mrs. Ruth Baine, county in 1892.
went lo Cleveland Saturday, returnj family of Battle Creek; Mrs. Agnes
---------j 7th. Hl* daughter. Winifred Trabert
Mr. and Mr*. Robert W. Cook and
Ing later lo attend lhe graduate Gladstone. Mich, near Escanaba, for a month, relumed to her home
FAMILY DINNER.
, Haines of Detroit wishes lhat ailI Fisher and sons Don and Dwighl.
their son. Robert. Jr., and Mrs.
where he has accepted a position a* tn Nashville Battrtday.
Mrs. Albert Bcssmer and Mrs. C. I their friends in Hasting* and vi-. and Dr. and Mr*. R. G. Flnnie of
Harry Munton of Grand Rapids, Winifred Pryor of Lansing left early
Mrs. C. L. McXlnnls of Marysville. head of lhe English department in
I Saturday morning with MUs Con- O. DeCou entertained at a family dnity join in a surprise letter and[ Hastings; Mrs. Ella Bush of Loa An-&gt;&lt;
Wash., la the guest of her sister. lhe High school of that city.
geles. Cal.; Mr and Mn. Clyde
shower for them.
Mtar Alice LyBarker ana Mr. and Munton on Friday, all going to De­ itence ppok for Trenton. New Jer- dinner Sunday at the home ot Mr*, greeting
number
years ago
sef, where Mlu Constance is al- Be-^mer in honor of tiie birthday of ° A
---------’--------of*------------- the Rev.. Brown. Mr. and Mn. Albert Baker.
Phone 2396
ten Felghnar of Nashville spent
Wenneth Buehler and son. troit to see lhe ball game
Mrs. Rose Munson and her daugh- tending Ryder's Buxines* College Mim jean Arndt, who was home Trabert was pastor of the First
flunday litre with his slater*. Mrs. Kenneth, of Grand Rapids were
Edgar RcL'^r of Lansing; Mr. anti
Baptist
church
here.
Mrs.
Haines
After
leaving
Trenton,
the
other
from
the
Davenport-McLachian
In
­
week end guests of their parent*.
Cressey and Mrs. McKlnnis.
Mrs. L. R. Wolcott of Freeport; Mr.
geles. California, are visiting their four will journey to Washington stitute in Grand Rapids for the week graduating from our city schools.
Arthur E Mulholland ot Phlladel- Mr. and Mn. B. A- LyBarker.
and
Mrs.
V.
Wolcott
and
Mr.
and
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Adams and nieces, Mrs. Clark Kennedy and Mrs.. and back through points of inter­ end. Ten were present to enjoy the Their many friends extend con­ Mrs. Paul Miller of charlotte; Rev.
&lt; phia was a Hastings visitor last
est in Pennsylvania and New York, lovely flowers and cake. Later in lhe gratulations.
&gt;•; week. He often recalls tha pleasant daughters. Gene and celeste, of Stanley Mix. this week.
■nd Mrs. K J. Neal of Ionia; Mr and
Mrs. R. E. Ftnnle relumed Bun­. expecting to reach Hastings next evening lhe party attended Zieg•j life he and his family lived while Minneapolis are the guests of Mr*
Mrs. Glen Covert of Lake Odessa; County Fair when it made
fleld's in Bailie creek.
LOWERS TRACK RECORD.
.•] he was tn business here and has johnj Kurtz this week. Mn. Adams, day to her home tn Louisville. Ky., Saturday.
।
Those from away, who were here
For many years the trotting rec­ Miss Elva Covert. Ithaca; and Mlu wish lo compliment and c
after
a
visit
of
several
weeks
with
. never tost Interest In Hastings.
formerly Mlu Florence Peacock, is
Virginia Paul of Grand Rapids.
Ute tiie officers and direct*)
.
on
Tuesday
to
attend
lhe
funeral
of
ord
on
the
Hastings
fair
grounds
has
HONORED
MRS.
GRAINGER.
hereon.
Dr.
R.
O.
Flnnie.
and
fam
­
, !
Mrs. Henry Gaskill went to Ithaca a niece of Mrs. Kurtz.
Arnonq the parties for the bridal
!
Mrs.
Michael
Sullivan,
were:
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marlon
B.
Goodyear
enter
­
ij Monday for a visit and on her re­
Three of our local boys, Donald ily. Mr. Flnnie will return Ln a few
Mrs. Michael Sullivan of Detroit; tained Tuesday evening at
her fair this was broken by Jimmy Bum­ couple was a dinner party given last
; . lum will visit In Lansing. The Rev. Goucher. LArry Wolfe and Roy Fin­ days.
Dr.
and
I
week
Tuesday
evening
by
—
J
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Freemani Mr. and Mrs. Will Fighter of Grand home on South Jefferson street in pus. owned and driven by James
j,i Ines Marts and family of Six Lakes strom. who are playing with the
their home ।
■ Ledge; Robert Fighter of Big Rap- honor of Mrs. Elva Grainger of «
Piper of Dearborn.
In lhe free for
-- -------- -----------------------. are occupying Mn. Gaskill’s home Paul Neilson orchestra al Battle Furrow part of last week were her
ra-A Friday
Wrirtav the record
”* was
“ ’low- here.
I ids; Thomas Griffin. Mr. and Mrs. Charlotte. Contract was played at1 all race
•1 during the united Brethren Confer- Creek, leave today for an eight sister. Mlu Eleanor McArthur, and
another sister and her husband. Mr.. Phil Sullivan, Mis* Velha Anderson. three table*. Mrs. Grainger and ered to 2:07 1-4. That Is pretty fast ■
■. - ence here.
UCI c.
weeks* engagement tn Muskegon.
Mr*. C. W. Clarke winning the i time for a half mile track. It will
:|
MLss Rexuie Downing returned
Mr*. John Kurtz and Mr*. Victor ■nd Mrs. Claude Bigler, all of Grand1 Mr. and Mrs. Will Johnson. Mr. and
Mn. Joe Luke and Miss Josie Sul­ prizes. Mrs. Grainger was also pre- i probably be a long lime before it
III Saturday from Flint, where aha vls- Adams of Minneapolis left Tuesday Rapid*
I will be reduced again.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Epley have&gt; 11van of Grand Rapids; Myron and sented with a gift prize.
l!j lied friend* for a week. The pre- for Detroit to attend lhe wedding
•
Leon
Anderson
and
Mr
and
Mrs.
on Baturday of their niece, Mary closed their cottage at Gun lake
Mrs. Winona Downing, of Lansing, Elisabeth Dec, daughter of Mr. and ■nd leave today. Thursday, for the• Lew McDonald of Bowne; Mr. and
were the guests of relatives in Mr*. Francis Dee, to Francis Feeley. northern part of the state for ai Mrs. John L. Sullivan and family of
Cleveland.
Mr. and Mr*. Charles O’Hair and visit with Mr. Epley's brother andI Ionia and Mra. Nellie Westbrook of
Muir.
friends.
Bruce Casper has returned to his
home in Walla Walla. Wash., after a end guests of his sister and husband.
several weeks’ visit with relatives in Mr. and Mrs. O- W- Crawford. Ken­
H» slinas and Marshall. Mrs. Casper neth. thetr son, who has been here
will remain for two weeks longer (or six weeks, relumed home with
with her parents. Dr. and Mrs. them.
Frank Carrolhers.
Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Goucher left on
Mr and Mrs. Marlon 8. Hodgson Tuesday on a trip tlirough Canada
and son. Carveth. returned Bunday and to Nov York City. Atlantic City,
to their horns In Charleston. West Philadelphia and back to Cleveland
Va. Mrs Hodgson and Carveth have when they will visit Mrs. Goucher s
cousin. Will Bishop, and attend the
; parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. H Carveth. Exposition. Mlu Grace McCarty will
Mr Hodgson coming test Thursday. be the relief operator during Mr.
'
Victor Munton left Thursday for Goucher’s absence.
1 Lo* Angeles where he will attend the
University of southern California.
He was accompanied by his grand­
mother, Mrs Nellie Fox. with whom
be will make his home while at­
tending school. Mrs. Fox has been
NOONDAY PUNCHES
spending the summer with her
11:30 A. M. ta 2 P. M.
daughter, Mrs. oecll Munton.
A thrillin* eolhetkNi
Mrs. Bert Tinkler of this city re­
DINNIES
dr«Mtes, suit! and coat
turned to her home here Saturday
5:30 te 7:30 F. M.
•very type of jraraWRl t
after having spent several weeks
you will need to carry ;
tn Grand Rapids. Il will be remem­
SUNDAY DINNERS
bered that she fell (town the stairs
triumphantly throvfh
12:30 tw 2:30 F. M.
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Har. ley Tinkler while visiting them in
6 to 7:30 F. M.
East Grand Rapids. Bhe was tak­
en to Blodgett hospital where ev-

For Miss Sumner

’T’w’IO*

Holding
Holatng Open House
On Anniversaries
Un

$3«

T.S.B.

BARGAINS AT THE

Tune in on
Tunics!

BIG LITTLE STORE
Friday, Sept. 18

'Don't

Saturday Sept. 19

Neglect

DEL MONTE PEACHES—Sliced
or Halves____ _________ 2 for 35c

Their

GELATINE DESSERT_____ 2 pkgs. 9c

SPECIAL

Our New Fall

Fashions are here

Suits

RINSO, small size__________ 2 for 15c

(Large Size, 19c)

They're Back In School,
Have Their Eyes Examined !

PARKER HOUSE

•he made a good recovery.

DANCING CLASSES
ro* All ACES IN TH*

COMMUNITY

Children do not have tha understanding or experience

DOUGHNUTS . .............. ....dozen 12c

I *AUaMM

BUTTER, Middleville ____ a___ lb. 37c

Bring them in

for a complete eye examination.

DR. ALVA RUFF, Optometrist

CM UM-TuMu Oil,

..........

Jewelers end Opticians

HINMAN’S

FHONI 2634

Nearly % al a Century of Continuous Service

’10”

...lb. 17c

BESS MER'S
HASTINCS

Trimmed

MEAT SPECIALS
BEEF RIBS .....I_________ lb. 10c

BACON ______ '/z lb. sliced 18 Vic

I BAUET

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22
BwOnUa U:M U • B. X.

IS YOUR CHILD HANDICAPPED?

BEEF ROASTS

HALL

Ev*ry W*«tn**day. Starting Sapt. 23
T*P : AcaOSATIC

(1 lb. loaf, 6c)

to tell what’s wrong with them, to it’s up to you to

ruin a child's chances of being bright in school . . .

ANNOUNCI THI OKNINC OF

■

TEA ROLLS________________ dozen 6c

Me that it’s NOT their eyesight. Poor eyesight can

THE FOX STUDIOS OF KALAMAZOO

BREAD____________ ...2 lb. loaf 10c

Hastings

phons 2491

Michigan

IM WERT STATE

�accompanied him to the fair. He re­

WOODLAND.

INSURANCE

WANTS

UFB . AUTO . FIRE

b,U mlie »«.»lb M*rit_Qn&gt;w

TJ-J F rLHlDf'UN j Wrs. Lawrence Hilbert entertained turned home with his mother, broth­
UK Cn£j q* Hilbert-Bharoo bridal party at er and friend Bunday evening.
J HL
church

JASON E. MeKLWAIN

I

Our Service

"ul Yorea °h

• PROTECT You Conatently

&gt;O T«»r» Old '—

Wearer
CITIZENS MUTUAL

SHELDON'S

FOR 8ALK—100 colon rrat

spending the summer with relatives
In Hastings and Woodland, is re­
turning to her home in Los Angeles,
Saturday.
.
The Woodland Woman's Study
noon traEfi &gt;
FOR HALE

ABSTRACT OFFICE
FOX HALE__ toll
htn&gt;. 11 »"■ old. lloroee Cole. Konte

HASTING I. MICHIGAN

1 - rehearsal dinner Saturday eve. nlng. Out qf town guests were Mn.
seryice*
R. Q. Flnnie «f Hastings, Miss Elva In Kalamasoo Monday afternoon.
Ralph Kidder of Irving Center
uur j Olivet and Robert Byrum of Jack- was a Bunday caller at the home of
(Mr. and Mr*. Goorge Kelley.
Mr. and Mn. Clyd* Hoell and
HENDERSHOTT.
family attended the Mlh birthday
Mr. and Mn. Harvey Parmalee
Houkten. Puur.
Kalatnaxoo Sunday. Mn. Snell la an
aunt ot Mn. Ruell.
Floyd Garrison's on Bunday. Mis*
Mr. and Mn. Jacob Brady and ion
of Grand Rapid* spent the week end of Virginia Duck er in Hastings
with Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager.
from 'Friday until Monday night.
Mr. and Mn. Levi Kltson of Syra­
Mr. and Mrs. Merritt of Albion
cuse. bi, Mr. and Mrs. Garfield
Walker and Mrs. Louis Lanta of In- Hendershott from Wednesday until
Friday night and went to tn? fair
Minister.
with them.
Mr. and Mrs. A. E- Snugs* of De­
Sunday afternoon callers nt Al­
troit were week end guest* of Mr. bert Brill's were Mr. and Mrs. C. J.
and Mra J. V. Hilbert.
LAhr and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Slor-

of Coats Grove tn an exchange
meeting Wednesday evening In the
community room of the church.

FOR HAL
rXEE METHODIST CHURCH.
Colfax Strut

WANTED—EHerH emapl* lor farm
HoXr.
'
9 17
F&lt;»H HALE__&lt;40 ocrea. 0 mile* out
raira (ood huuar ond born. Iola
bov,
On main blob war Eric* S3.4UI
Write "M 1&gt;.” core Banner.
9 17

WANTED—P • lure for .beet. He. Clark
Ovrraiultb ■ t Carlton Center. Telephone 727--FS &gt;1 C Nirhola. 9 17
FOR KENT- 2 furril.hed otmriuieAta. 1
adult.
AI.9
nracea.
Hand, for w nek or .rlm.it
1 !l*i F
Center M a Helle Hrt.rk.
It 17
WANTED—f ixble Kiri fur (eneral
I'l.oite
.
tt 17
Foil SALK— ‘air 4 rr. old hof«ea. brok- — —ri&gt; and Ur 1 in.-itrhed. Albert tlreru.
Headache, 30 iryluulea
1 mile we. Khnc.n.niith .rbool or
Oillr. a.uitn Middle..lie
1. 17
Fob hale— luriw «ow and G t&gt;i(a. Bert
Center ruad.
9-17

000
INSN. TMLITS
set seen

imtl

bi.

COLDS

FEVER

PEACH RIDGE

HIGHEST PRICES

PEACHES
Prolific*, Elbertos, Hales

Your Dead Animals Are Worth
DOLLARS. To aasure yoaraelf of
getting the BEST PRICES, call
MR. FLOYD DENNY.

Exceptionally Fine Quality in Bushwire Peach Ridge Service Station.
Sparta, 'Michigan.

FOR HALE

FOR HAL

PEACH RIDGE GROWERS'
ASSOCIATION

phone charjei!

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY

'MEN NEEDED
FOK HE

Air Conditionin
Refrigeration

No Polls To V/aot Clothing

mn W ■ r—*,(
re o eloea
9 17

FOR KENT- Hou..
Phone 3132 after

Utilities Engineering
Institute
t M. Walla St.

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pad*

the Prescription Drug Store
HASTINGS

-

-

MI CHIDAM

Gaaraate*W Iran Flttfog

Pmch- Sisson.
Miss Betty Sisson was an over­
night guest of her uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mn. Shlriey Mayo in Has­
tings, Saturday. Her many friend*
will regret to learn that Mrs. Mayo
hat not been as well a* usual lately.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Kenney
(Marguerite Yelter) ot Lansing ar­
rived at lhe home of her parents.
lo’F’lt'. Mr. and Mn. Clair Yelter, Friday
— to spend the week eni
aturday Letter Yelter of

assist with the care of hl* father-in­
law, Mr. Lulkens, who was taken
seriously ill Thursday, passing away
late Saturday afternoon. Our heart­
felt sympathy Is extended to Mr*.
thurrh Lester Yelter In the loss of a dearly
. Dr.
beloved father.
Mr. and Mr*. Carl Lent (Alma
Lester) visited the latter's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Lester In DowUng Sunday.
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
Mrs. George Kelley won 3 first*. 3
cuuncu.
seconds and 2 thirds on her pens
of young fl. c. Rhode Island Reds
she exhibited at the Barry county
fair. David Robinson received an A
rating on each of the calves he ex­
hibited and won second on his 4-H
Club entry.
Robert
Hammond
placed first and fourth on the
Shropshire* he exhibited.
Mrs. Alberta Smith of Lansing
was a Monday afternoon guest u»
Mra. Edw. 'Wjilters. Tlmmle and
Sally who have been visiting in the
Edw. Walters home for a week re­
turned home with their mother.
in.iteo
Paul Bisson spent Saturday night
In Hastings with Mr. and Mrs.
UNITED BRETHREN CUVBCS
Carlton Bump and accompanied
IM CHRIST.
them to Um home of hi* parent*.
Baltimore Church.
where they were Sunday dinner
guests. Ml** Betty returned home
from Hastings with them also.
McCall tua Chcrch.
Misses Retha and Ruth Robinson
of near Bancroft and Lester Larabee
of Hastings were overnight and
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. H- J.
Robinson and visited lhe Barry Co.
PILGRIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE.
fair Saturday.
Miss M. Bernice
Detroit
RANGEVILLE CHURCH

WE ARE NOW PICKING

Paid for Dead Stock

Ckleaeo, Ill

PUBLIC

STENOGRAPHER
WUl do all kind* of aUnographic

------ . —_ ___

*

Farmers, Attention!
MISS DRUZILLA POWELL

FOR HALE
or
SCIENTIST.

first church

fAKE DePRIESTER.

cubist.

FHOMB 71T

SPIRELLA
Foundation Garments

BUYING

Comet*, girdles, brassieres de­
signed exclusively for you.

Mn. H. T. Young

t

- . I; aV&gt;

El IK st

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

lonnr People*

EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
Hnoting*

Room 1ft—2nd Floor. Phone 2J0I
Hosting* National Bank Building

On Thursday afternoon lhe La­
dles' Aid of the Methodist church
gave a party for Mn. Hoyt to show
their appreciation of her work in
the Aid and other departments of
the church. Rev. and Mn. Hoyt
will move to Okemos.
The Barry county association of
the Order ot lhe Eastern Star meet
here Thursday for an all day meet­
ing.
The annual Flower Day of the
Clover Leaf Club was
observed
Wednesday remembering lhe sick,
shut-ins and older people of the vil-

Included In the cost and she sings
"Ylddle on Your Fiddle," the same I
comedy song which she was singing ,
when Zlegfield first met her. The
burlesque theater Is an exact replica
of the one In which she sang.
&lt;
'
the farmsr-n
Mr.
ntlr.
Stouh? r
M
OU i

Nearly all from here attended the
fair at Hastings.
Fred Conrad of Wayne. Ill. and
Albert Hampton of East Delton
spent Saturday afternoon vbltlng
| atWill
WillCarl's.
Carl *.
.............. "
at
Mra. Will Carl vblted her son,
Bnd
laat
»nd Ut“"**“* Ulg falr a.t .Hastings.

Peter Pultz entertained several of'
hb young friends in honor of hb ■
birthday Monday.^ __________
II

Manchuria has suffered mor*
from currency confusion than al­
IRV?mT
most any otharrountry. Up to a
The Wlndes families. Z. F. Wlndes II f*w years agcf*the paper money

content* in the electrical storm of t
Friday night. Froncb Edgecomb and wife and I
her daughter. Mb* Donna Beach.
have moved back to Hasting*.
Miss Lillian Sowerby has returned
to her school work In Chicago.
Mr. and Mra. Wm. Schenkel en­
tertained the first of the w^ek, Mr.
Schenkel'* brother from Pnfiadelphla, also hb mother, sister and
brother-in-law from Owouo.
Mr. and Mra. John Bebon at-

“■&gt;
«“&gt; - •
wer? 1M"“
on,y b* “'“t*
bank* and foreign government*, but
&gt;l*o by areenai*. money changer*,
chsmbera
*"
u
of* commerce, grain mills,
distilleries produce exchanges, re­
tail store* and even private Indi­
vidual*.—Collier's Weekly.

Each candidate on entnnee to tbs
naval academy must hare normal,
or 20-20 vision in each eye.

DR, R. A. DENISON, DENTIST
Will Ba Hara EVERY SATURDAY
at tha NEW PARKER HOUSE
GUARANTIED Platm $^.50
... f

EXTRACTIONS________ 50c
NO NEEDLE DISTRESS

Fillings a* low as___ 50c

Plateg Repaired___ $1

IT WILL PAY YOU TO INVESTIGATE

GOOD USED CARS

FOR SALK

SEVERAL ranarl

Are Bargains if bought
at the RIGHT Price!

WE HAVE A FINE
Aisortment of USED

WANTED—Efficient rirlfor *

ICE BOXES

POTATOES FOR SALE—E

refrigerator.

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

111 8. Jefferson, Hastings

• Quite often you can get a bet­

MONTGOMERY WARD

FOR PUBLICATION.

V I.'....

.

FOR SALE

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

JOB PBINTINO.

OF MICHIGAN

JERRY ANDRUS

ai FELDPAUSCH'S

rlit be

HASTINGS MARKET!

CARDS of THANKS

BOND*
NOTARY PUBLICS

Duguld; economic* and art. Mbs
Ruth Bills; Junior high and shop.
Arthur Kays; coach, hbtory
literature, Arthur Johnson; Brglbh.
Latin, Junior high, Mary Humber*;
Miss Dorothy Kemp will have lhe
kindergarten in the morning and
afternoons will leach shorthand and
bookkeeping; Miss Martha Zemke,
biology, civics and sociology; Flory
Sheldon, upper Intermediate work.
Mb* Carrie Caley; Miss Frances
French the Intermediate grades and
Mra. Helen Butler the primary
grades. The music instructor has
not been hired since the resigna­
tion of Arthur Lower.
The Cheerful Charity class will
meet thb Friday with Mrs. Gideon
Gage with Mr*. Horace Babcock
assisting.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Flock looked
after things for Mr. and Mra. Ches­
ter Smith while they were in Ohio
attending the wedding of their son
Robert to MU* Leah Mendllng ot
Waterford. Ohio. They also vbited
relatives in Akron, Lodi and Massl-

till Monday of her brother-in-law
and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Claude A.
Hammond.
Miss Winifred Hayes and friend of
Grand Rapid* , were Sundjy guests
of the former'* urieje ahd aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. George KeitelDcnnb Yarger, Jr„ returned
Nearly everyone th this neighbor­ home Saturday from Jackson to re­
hood attended the Fatr which *as In
sume hl* school work.
our opinion' toe of lhe finist in ev­
Mra. Hattie Hire of Kalamasoo

FOK SAM

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

U&gt;II1 I-' MW aiviy ui a
—t-sn caricaturist
young American
caricaturist In
in Lon।don* who'phmTes'rnto'rmmmtte^dif. L.. ......__ .
.__ .
Acuities by unknowingly burles­
quing tn a comic strip the family of
lhe girl wit* whom he b In love.
The settings of London and New
York and the transatlantic steamer
backgrounds are described a* among
lhe most beautiful ever designed by
Cedric Gibbons.

had been In poor health since. He
leaves his widow, two sons, Glen of
tended the funeral of Mra. Belson'*
Detroit, Haley at home, four daugh­
aunt in Hastings last week.
"Die Great Zlegfield" a picture
ters. Mrs. William Bitgood of Mid­
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bpringer and
by the career of the noted
dleville, Mn. Donald Hill of Nash­ suggested
glorlfier of the American girl. 1* be- Ij Ida May spent several days last
ville. Pearl and Ruby at home.
। week in Hasting*.
Ing brought to lhe screen with Wil- 1I Mr. and Mra. Bud Betts from
11am Powell. In the title role. Myrna
and their daughter,
on a buying trip.
Loy. as hts wife. Billie Burke, and Muskegon
_r„r
„„ Mar­
r» and son.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betts and Lube Rainer as the starry-eyed |, garet. and her husband
Anna Held.
Held. Incident*
Incident* of
of the
the colorful
colorful ,,
M JL
Lal?
son Bobby were in Grand Rapids Anna
Sunday lo see Mbs Doris Betts, who career of Zlegfield are paraded be­ Vermontville were recent guests ot
, Mr and Mrs. Wm. Schenkel.
b attending business college.
fore your eyes, from th* Ume he !
I Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cushing of
started
in
the
show
burine**.
bally'
__
nr
,
nrT
,„
_
r
Mra. W. B. Cortright and Mra.
.1
h m, AllllM
Alma spent some
*Ome of
OI fair
ISlf WCCK
week St
at
Gall Lykins were in Hasting* Tues­ hooing Sandow. the strong man. at w M.c?nn-.
i^^n^ai?3 “ Ch,CM0-1
Richard Tompkln.
day.
Thehlnlmllxble com^Uanne Fannv ' °f Kalomaloo were Sunday visitor*
School began thb week although
the building Isn't quite completed.
The teachers thb year are: Bupt..
Ji: |
DOUO
W. -D. Wallace; principal. John O.

Ur. Frank Haines and son Ed­
ward were in Chicago Saturday at­
tending the art institute.
Mn. Grace Klelnhan* and son
also of Lansing were Sunday guest* Clift of Grand Rapid* were in town
Thursday.
there.
Mr. and Mn. Shirley Moore of
Gerald Thompson of Bowne ar­
Big Rapid* were recent vbltora of
rived at the home of hl* grandfath­
er. m. K. Mpore Saturday noon and

Copper, Aluminum,

Fidelity Corporation

a

j'
I’Ji!
-The Case of th* Valval CtewT
iterring Warren Williams.' ।
The picture £ a thrilling murder ;
mystery drama with a redoubtable''
ADVKRTI8INO RATK8:
atlemcy-detectlve. Perry Mason. I
—
solving a mysterious crim*. William
,
has the role of Mason while other* I, |,ln°.“‘T‘,elr
tn the case include Gordon Elliott,' Want fai«&gt;
Joseph King and Eddie Acuff.
j ^ra’ieuat.*
route
‘('a’rjToi’Wank*'
Robert Montgomery..Madge

NASHVILLE.
_ _
,
.
Funeral services for Philip Penfold. 5®. were held Sunday afternmn al twr, n'rlnrlr at th. Wllrn*
church, with Interment in the Wil­
cox cemetery. Rev. Prichard offi­
ciated. Mn. Gall Lykins sang. Mr.
Penfold was born and raised In Ma­
ple Grove, had been a blacksmith
here for a long time. Three years

Mr. and Mr*. James F. Hammdnd
and NUalle-of Lansing were over
the week end guest* of Mr, and Mn.
Claude A. Hammond. Mr. and Mrs.

liasUng* Phone.

MONEY FOR FALL!

Friday

make

"Util* Mia* NaMy.EIGHTY FIRST YKAR
■ Llllle Mbs Nobody" U concerned
with a lovable, mischievous orphan,
whose prank* continually keep her
in trouble. Il b a happy, heart­
warming hit, with Jane proving her
Identity tn a thrilling climax. In­
cluded in the cast are‘Jane Darwell. IN BARMY COUNTY. BIX MONTHS. *0«.
(if s*)4 la aSvsaco &gt;
Ralph Morgan. Bara Haden and
Harry Carey.

ery way that we'have ffver -had. .

Middle, ui

FOR RENT—All

Scrap Iron, Brass,

Zinc, Lead &amp; Batteries

THREE CORNERS.
Mrs. Henry Thompson. WlUls,
Frank and Mbs Pauline Moore were
Sunday guest of lhe former's father.

the school bus
through here.

The Halting) Banner

At the Theatre

FALL l*Af-TUHF

eoa.} that all Mil—---- -------- ----------ha illwM u CM th. hair* datenaiaod
Siackartad Ina aaM
A UUle FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW-

11

GEO. M. NEWTON

H.FeWpau&gt;ch ■ 3911

Registered OPTOMETRIST and

, STATE 8T.

HASTINGS

• We have some fine merchan-

new one, because the original own­

dise in 1934 and 1935 V-8 Ford

er has taken the first year’s depre­

Tudors and Fordors.

ciation which is about one-third

• Bring in your 1929 or 1930,

the sale price of the new car.

ANY MAKE, and ,we will make

• Therefore you can drive such

you a very liberal allowance to-

a car a year or-two and only take.-

Vard one of these cars.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO

D Bow.ber, Keth

MARKET. Phone 1616
FOOD CENTER 2609

a small depreciation.

ter bargain in a used car than a

Tali corn was grown by Indian
farmers, for one French chroni­
cler tells of getting lost more quick­
ly In the corn fields of the Hurons
than In the prairies and forests.

PHONE 2121

k

FORD PRODUCTS

HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1936

Barry Bypaths
By JANS CAMCRON

l&gt;l&gt;
ANTA MONICA, CALIF.
—Because Amos.’n* Andy
paid a mythical visit to* thia
community, the grateful popu­
lace will dedicate a bronze tab­
let in Palisades park, which is
not only a beautiful park but is
regarded by some enthusiastic
citizens as being practically the
main entrance to the Pacific
ocean.

S

That's California pride tor you—
the kind that inapirea ua to pass
resolutions endors­
ing the sunsets.
Well. I don't be­
lieve there's a small
city In this country
that ha a finer sunacts
than
Santa
Monica. And when
better
onca
are
available for towns

Monica wiU hava
them. Our boosters'
clubs will attend to
Irvin Cebb.
that
What I'm getting at, though, is
that any fellows who've given ai
much joy to the world as Amos 'n'
Andy deserve a whole set of
plaques. If they don't wear out,
thinking up their stuff until I get
tired of hearing it, they'U go on
forever.
"Hello, Kingfish.”

Tuesday morning an the Fair
grounds is FUN. (Capital letters,
please, Mr. Typesetter, or whatever
you are.) You take your exhibits
which are your pride*and Joy, be
they Holstein heifers or Johnny
cake, and wend your perilous way
through farm Implements, heavily
laden trucks, state Police and other
lady drivers with their crocheted
yokes and mustard pickles. We
parked beside a flock of geese and
ducks who were Industriously taking
a bath in what had been a clean
tub. In the Secretary's office are all
kinds of people asking all kinds of
questions which lhe staff good-na­
turedly Uy to answer. There is the
smell of new shavings, farm grains
and animals, hens are cackling their
concern over their new cages, old
men ask tremulously about the free
automobiles; tents are Ln all stages
of erection, booths are being deco­
rated. trotters are exercising on the
track. The Fair is here again!

The boys were more concerned
over the Bat Wing Jump and fire­
works than anything else. Palsy
intended to spend her time on the
Merry-go-round (as long as her
cash luted). Jerry looked blissfully
st tractors and 1 Inspected every ex­
hibit hall several times. Something
for all the family.
Wa're peeved at the President. He
left us out completely when he vis­
ited drouth areas. Didn’t he know we
had a drouth, around here? He
ought to see our corn. The cows
through the fence and think they're
bothering somebody.
Just finished lhe cutest little baby
dress. Now dont get excited; Il's
for a friend's new arrival.

Vocal Contortionists.
HY must tenors make such
Fair week has Just passed so we
funny, faces when they sing? will wind up with a poem by Ethel
Romig Puller.
And why must a lady vocalist clutch
both hands to her turn-turn when
she reaches after a high note, as There must be special angels
For watching little boys—
though she'd Just felt the first pangs
of cholera morbus? And why must Cherubim and seraphim
Who aren't averse to noise.
there ever be any professional pian­

W

ist who also is a professional dan­
druff fancier and looks as though
he should be gone over with one of
these sand blasting machines that
they use to clean off ofilce build­
ings. Just ordinary aoap and water
wouldn't do.
And.
why dees a basso in­
sist on singing at great length ot
the Joys of life at the bottom at a
coal mine and, for an encore, rohock me in the cra-hadlc of the daheep until I’m as seasick as a cow?
Hasn’t anybody since Rutherford B.
Hayes was President, thought up a
new song for bassos? And isn’t any­
body going to do so before the sands
ot lhe desert grow cold? It looks
like years and years to wait

Who Enow the thrill of sliding down
Steep roofs and climbing trees.
The lure ot angleworms In spring.
Who don't mind bottled bees.
Cherubim and seraphim
Who brings lads safely through
All the mischief and the grief
They somehow gel into.
Yu, tall wtoged guardians must be'
included in God's plan.
Else would any little boy
Grow up to be a man?

WHY LEAVES CHANGE
COLOR IN AUTUMN
Frost Action Does Not Gause
This Startling Trans­

France's Diplomatic Game.
V formation
HILE France was asking us to
inter into a "neutrality pact”
October, the month of flaming
I as regards Spain, It would appear
colors and falling leaves. Is at hand
the even then was extending very and countless shrubs and trees that
material "sympathies'* to the toy- tn summer were clad in modest
alist side. Anyhow, Italy thinks so, green are about to array themselves
and Germany, loo. And now Portu­ in gay garments of scarlet and gold.
Frost action has nothing to do
gal sprouts unrest and Great Britwith this startling transformation
aln Issues threats.
Since we already were neutral— of autumnal foliage. The change is
and. if we have any sense, will keep brought about, on the contrary, by
on being as neutral as a stap-and- the decomposition 01 certain sub­
go signal—America didn't need to stances which are found within the
leaves with the result that the
eater any pacts. And if we continue
green hue Is lost and more brilliant
minding our own business we'U colors take its place.
| have neither a sick headache nor a
Back of all this pageant color that
fresh batch of uncollectible foreign runs riot over the landscape la the
loans when the present mess is fact that certain trees and shrubs
over.
The point Is that France seem­ of winter as a precautionary meas­
ingly has been caught playing a ure in order to conserve food and
moisture and to prevent damage by
double diplomatic game.
wind, snow and ice. Before the
leaves change color, however, the
Wholesale Mercy.
HO killed Cock Robin? Who food factories in them cease to
cares? Dead, isn't he? His function and the valuable food with­
in is moved out and stored In the
I widow and orphans can go on relief,
woody layers of the twigs and
can't they? But how about pretty
Boy Sparrow? There's the one to velopa at the point where the leaf
think about—so young and so gifted stalk Joins the twig, making a bar­
and ambitious.
rier between the leaf and the trees.
The Women's Aid Society for tha Acids, mineral compounds and de­
Freeing of Crimlnals-How soon composing substances In varying
can we get that poor lad out into amounts now isolated within the
the sunshine once more? Ha takes leaves account for October's start­
aim so much better in the sun­ ling colors. Chemical analysis of
shine. Must we wait until ba breaks the content of leaves In autumn In­
dicates that the higher the acid con­
out?
The state parole board—Not at tent the more brilliant the color­
all, ladies, not at all. Just be pa­ ing. All too soon after donning
tient a little white, then teava It to their gorgeous fall robes the trees
lose them through the action of
wind and rain and frost which serve
Gov. Mushy J. Sapp—But why to detach the stalks from the par­
wait? When I think ot that bleak ent twig.
Alcatraz and that hard-hearted UnSince the substances Isolated in
Ide.8am I'm proud to have some the leaves of different kinds of
whdlesome sentiment In my soul trees vary considerably, so do the
Pais m&gt; that pardon blank.
■ I colors vary, converting the country­
I Pretty Boy Sparrow—Well, happy side into a pleasing pattern of crim­
days are here again. Say, I never: son and brown and gold.
This annual pageant of color be­
did like that canary much either.
gins in the lowlands where bright
Where's my tommy gun?
1
hued soft maple, seem ready to
burst into flame. Rapidly the color
LADY naturalist at the Smith­ spreads along roadside and hedge­
row and into the depths of woodlot
sonian In Washington has been and forest To aee Michigan trees
I experimenting and site says that
in their autumnal robes is to be
frogs not only listen to political
speeches on the radio but, by their in Michigan’s great fall pageant.
croaks at the finish. Indicate a deep There Is no admission charge. And
appreciation of same. This helps should you linger, the trees, 8lr
Walter Ralelgh-llke. will discard
their royal robes for you to tread
I which should command my entire upon.
■approval is the end the tegs grow'
Meat in liquid form Is something
Iso—especially when tried In crack-1
new from Vienna laboratories. Filling
| er crumbs.
the drugstore sandwich may yet be
On'second thought though, may- a spraying Job.
|

W

W

A

I'm giving him credit for.

When

IMVIX l. COBB.

Attention Is again drawn to ths
one plinth in Trafalgar Square
which Is not occupied by a statue
We have long wished that there

POLITICAL NOTES

MEDITATION.

the threshing dust cleared away.

BIRD SANCTUARY
NEAR MIDDLEVILLE

NEED CURFEW.

as much as anything Is a curfew.
Nearly every night one can aee chll-

Riley Stoi

Many Different Kindi of
from tolling hard each day.
running the streets as tete as eleven
That's when it’s wise to use our
Birds Found in This
REPUBLICAN
DEMOCRAT
o’clock. They are destroying people's
heads, when farming la our trade
Locality
The principal point of attack on If we hope to make a profit from
gardens, picking their fruit and
Roosavelt’a farm relief program
the Roosevelt administration by the
Middleville Is not only in close otherwise making a nuisance of
the plans which we have made.
.
proximity to Barry county’s "little themselves.
CANADA. In fact, they are crazy Old Guard Is that he has plunged
about II. At the same Ume they lhe country into debt. The federal Tiie art of farming is a year round I national park" but recently the state
If the parents at these children
Job and If we are to succeed
established lite first wildlife sanc- would lake a little time to find out campfire. Lute Bennett and
think that farmers over here ore deficit, they explain, has reached We
must make a study of livestock I
crazy for letting the government gel alarming proportions. Then how
luary in the county within a mile of where and what their little ones
can they explain the fact—and fact
Middleville. It is the SO acres along
by with It.
No cow nor chick nor hog nor sheep lhe Thomappie river owned Jolntly were doing, running the streets,
One ot our own Barry county citi­ it is—that the Roosevelt debt is
when they should be home and In
will thrive when poorly fed.
by Orrle T. Landacre and Mr. and bed. it would be better for the chil­
zens was In Canada during the past LESS. per dollar ot governmental
Mrs. Chas. H. Ring. The Landacre dren and a great relief to the neigh­
few days. He had lhe opportunity to
quires tiie best use of our head.
farm was formerly owned by lhe bors. If the parents haven't the will
drive about and talk with many
urn” there Is a very enlightening Divide the feed to best advantage Johnson sisters.
to do it it would be the proper thing
people.
Mr. and Mrs. Ring who came to call lhe truant officer.—Contrib­
so It will a profit show
"What do you think of Roosevelt?"• article by Robert H. Jackson, for­
recollect. After Fiddler Jims
merly associated with the Internal When fed to boule, or porky, or from Kalamazoo two years ago own uted.
he would ask.
20 acres along the river surrounding
even
a
lambing
doe.
.
Revenue
Bureau,
and
at
present
"We like him I Hope he wins lhe
their
home
and
have
set
up
feeding
And
when
they
fall
to
ahow
a
mar
­
,
counsel
for
the
Securities
Exchange
election." the Canadian farmer in­
neighborhood, but her parents ob­
stations and shelters and conse- JACK SAYLOR GIVEN •»
gin above feed costs and care
Commission. He is in a position to
jected to the match, saying that
variably replied.
quote exact figures. Read what he That's when we study the market, quently have many friends of vari­
SENTENCE SATURDAY
"What is the reason for this?"
ous species of song and game birds
and give to them lhe air.
••Why since Roosevelt made that&gt; has to say; It is of intense Interest
ing good fiddler, but a poor provider.
They have listed about 30 varieties
new tariff treaty we’ve had a won­. to every American.
A cow cannot produce us milk on1 of birds that nest in the Immediate Judge Gave Him From Six
There is no large debt or small
marry Fiddler Jim if she had to lira
derful market for our grain, milk,.
neighborhood of their home and 15
Months to Fourteen Years
cheese and other farm products In1 debt, except as related to lhe re- She must have some succulence to
' varieties spent the winter with tha
lhe united States, we’ve never hadl sources available for payment. One
keep herself in tone.
at Ionia
Ring
family
and
consumed
100
he said. "Nancy, you furnish ths
anything like It before," came the1 man may owe a million dollars and A little protein and carbohydrates1 pounds of sun-flower seeds besides
Jack Saylor. 41, of Marlon. Indbe solvent, another owe a thousand
reply.
too if the pail she's going to fill; other feeds.
though neighborhood gossip said ha
"But if you were an American1 and be bankrupt. The significant Good warm water and kind care1
The common varieties of birds । suing a bad check, was brought be­
farmer would you be equally en­ financial information is ratios and
help reduce the feed bill.
. are present in large numbers, in­ fore Judge Russell R. McPeek on didn't even do that.
.
thusiastic about Roosevelt's farm1 trends. The propheU of disaster
He fiddled for parties; lie fiddled
muraaay. Me
He was given from six
four kinds ot woodpeckers. Thursday.
publish only the liability side ot the 80 it goes with chicks and piggies.,' eluding
program?"
montiis
to
fourteen
years
at
the
dances, and be fiddled for all ha
and at one Ume 15 cardinals held
Il's folly to let them quit
’’I’ll say we wouldn't," came the■ ledger.
The steady growing from birth to» a group-meetlng al a feeding sta­ state reformatory at Ionia. This is iworth- In Che meantime his wife
answer. "We'd all be mighty sore.■
The most significant measure of
tion. Quail, pheasant and wild ducks a three months lighter minimum look hi sewing to keep things going,
the best market they can hit.
But as long as it's all right with the debt ot the Roosevelt admlnlssentence than was given his nephew.; Bui ah« was perfectly happy and
Thus showing a profit from the. are also abundant.
people in the United States, it's allI trallon is this; Tiie Roosevelt debt Is
LeVoy Cossaert. 27. of Colon. The ; contented and why not? Hadn't
feed we raised with summer toll
right with us. We've never had such LESS, per dollar of revenue, than
And gave us a manure pile to pul locality, ore frequent visitors and two were arrested at Freeport, fol- I *hf married the best fiddler on
an easy market for our productsI1 lhe Hoover debt was.
live In the sanctuary. Among them lowing an attempt to pass spurious I earth?
back upon the soil.
across the border. So. you71 find1
June 30. 1832. showed revenues
*• *
'
Mrs. Ring lists the Indigo bunting, checks in a Middleville hardware1
that all of us over here are pulling: from taxes and customs of 81.888,­ A farm without some livestock is an all blue bird; a Prothonotary store. Saylor lold the court that he
DOG 8 KILL 24 8HEXF.
for Roosevelt."
like a car without, some power.
000.000 and a gross national debt of
warbler which hu a canary yellow was not implicated In any of Cos- ' Dog warden. Roy EveretU, reHonest answers to straightforward1 118,487,000,000. For each dollar of They keep us busy during Ute win­ body with steel blue wings; purple saert’s check transactions previous ports that tn the last four weeks
questions!
ter and pay us for each hour
Hoover revenue there was owing
finch; one pair great blue herons; to the day of his arrest. Cossaert. complaints have been made to him
You can't blame Canadian farm­; 81032 of debt.
Wc spend in caring for them plus lhe bittern, a wading bird and two admitted lhat he had passed bogus of lhe killing of twenty-four sheep
ers for favoring a man who opened
the time we' study and read
June 30, 1836. showed revenues
years ago she sighted a white egret, cashier's checks on the Union Trust by dogs In this county. In some at
Hie doors to an easy market for from taxes _and
llu VMVU1I13
customs O1
of 83.890.-. To use to the best advantage our a Florida bird seldom seen In this Company. East 8t. Louis, tn several. the cases ha was able to catch and
pasture and our feed.
them! At the same time, they are
Bnd B
debt of 833 7TOMichigan towns. Including Delton, kill the marauding canines.
state.—Middleville sun.
talr enough to admit that If the sit- ' oOOOOO For eaSXttw of llSev.it
Study the hen feeds and their hab­
uatlon were reversed; if they were revenue U)ere b on|, „M of debt
its and cull the loafer out.
American farmers they would prob-| Our debt
b actually smaller Then clean and spray the coops
ably be anything except enthusiastic ln proportion to revenue backing
each week with no nits and lice
about a government which opened than the debt in the closing days of
tha
_ ______.
the tinnra
doors wide to farm imnnrta
Imports from the Hoover .u
administration.
While It pays best in the long run to lake
a neighboring country.
lhe average interest rate on the
good care ot all
80 we have the spectacle of a whole public debt in February, 1833, Your livestock in the winter and
farm relief program which relieves was 3.40 per cent, it had been re­
the crops In the fall.
American producers of their own duced by June 30. 1936. to 2M per
—By Gordon C. Edmonds.
home market by throwing the gate cent. The result „
,„ „
uxra
is u
lhat
It ,„,
requires
wide open to Canadian producers! . but a trifle more of the present
The Roosevelt administration is I revenues to carry the whole present GRAND LODGE TO
faced with a most difficult problem debt lhat it was costing Mr. HoovCONFER DEGREE
in simple mathematics. It must ex­ er's administration to carry his debt.
plain how you can spend twice as So. Judged either by cost to carry
much as you eam and still be money on or by revenues available, the Visitors Are Expected From
ahead. All of which brings us to the present debt compares favorably
Other I. O. O. F. Lodges
story of the "big-time," "high-pres­ with the debt of 1832. The last
Saturday Night
sure" merchant who said it was true three years of the Hoover adminis­
Final arrangements have been
he lost a half cent on every article tration. to March 3. 1833, produced a
soicl but that he figured to sell in deficit of 86520.000.000. which piled made by the local-J. 0. O. F. for
such big volumes that he would up lhe public debt by 85.060,000.000 the special •'Initiatory Degree" to be
make money In the end anyway.
net. This Increased debt was added given here this Saturday night.
For the past three and one-half at high interest cost and In the face Sept. 18. by the Grand Lodge of
years, the government of this coun­ of declining revenues. The Roos­ Michigan.
All members will meet at the
try has been piling up huge deficits, evelt deficits-are supported by in­
is at present spending twice as much creasing revenues and subject to Parker House for supper at 7:00
P. M.. after which the work will be
as It receives. We can kid ourselves low Interest costs.
put on at the I. o. O. F. Temple.
that we are "spending our way Into
Since you are not likely to see
prosperity" through such a policy— these authentic figures quoted in Besides our own five candidates,
But this doesn't get around the fact' many newspapers It would be wise to others will be here from Freeport,
that a day of reckoning is Just as clip out the preceding paragraphs Kalamazoo, Watervliet. Prairieville
certain to follow as it Is that night and ahow it to lhe next Old Guards­ and Buchanan. The attendance is
follows day- Utt fun to spend man who waxes emotional over the expected to be well over 100.
After lhe meeting a light lunch
money; easy to kid ourselves that we prospective ruin of our country's
will be served at the hall and sou­
arc creating a sound economic sys­ credit
venir programs will be given to all
tem—But it Isn't going to be any
present.
fun wheh we start to pay the bills.
Our government, any government, THIS AMENDMENT
DIDN’T HAVE TO lfc)RXOW.
is a pauper. It has no money and no
SHOULD BE DEFEATED Upon the recommendation of Lite
resources of Its own. It can only give
finance committee of the pity coun­
out that which it collects. When it
cil.
’ that body at their Fwday eve­
gives out exactly what Lt collects, Is Urged by the Real Estate
ning meeting authorized the trans­
we have a sound government living
Speculators—Would Do
fer of 82.835 from the City’s paving
within its income; when it spends
savings account to the street and
Serious Harm
twice as much as It collects, we have
paving checking account; also the
an unsound government which is
Another proposed amendment to transfer ot 85.411.09 from lhe paving
piling up trouble for its people.
the constitution of this state should maintenance fund to the general
The government can meet its
street fund checking account, and
deficit in one of three ways:
mostly by real estate dealers Inter­ 8440.92 from the paving maintenance
checking fund to the general street
3—It can Inflate Die currency and ested in selling city additions and
fund checking account. The large
destroy values like the German gov­ resort properties. It proposes that
hereafter there shall be no tax lev­ amount of paving and paving re­
ernment did
pairs which the city has done and is
* 3—It can enforce a policy of rigid ied upon real estate Ln Michigan.
What would become of our local doing this year made these trans­
economy and by spending less each governments If such a foolish prop­ fers necessary. AU this work has
year than It receives can secure a
been done without borrowing
osition
became
the
law
of
this
state?
surplus to meet its past due obliga­
Generally speaking it te safe to
tions.
A government deficit Is no differ­ oppose amendments proposed at an
MY AUTO.
election. People are not informed
ent than a private deficit—neither
about the possible effect they might An auto can give much pleasure, oa
will take care of itself by continued
have, and they are usually urged
spending.
When driven with discretion, or as
If a private Individual spends
fast as the thing will go.
stance, who have on axe to grind,
twice as much as he earns, he Is
believing that if adopted It would The cause of many accidents seems
heading toward bankruptcy—so Is a
a problem hard to guess
help their line of business.
government.
If the voters all understood the
The New Deal by fancy theories
loss would have been much less.
propositions, there would be little
and involved mathematics may at­
doubt about their deciding such
tempt to put forth impressive
matters on their merits. But where The rights of others should be con­
theories lo prove that you can spend
sidered
when on the highway
there is no chance for them to get
your way out of deficits but they
smooth.
the Information, they might make
can't get around the fact that two
a serious mistake. That is why, Stay on your own right aide and
from one is still minus one.
many dangers thus remove.
generally speaking, It Is safe to vote
No on proposed amendments to our Do not try to pass your leader, when
How real Is our so-called recovery! constitution.
traffic on left u thick.
Are we going down the high road
As others have their rights and need
toward prosperity when there are
more unemployed people in this TWO BARNS BURN
country today than there were four
ON WINDES FARM If you must take a drink of alcohol

HARVEST TIME

Are we Utopia-bound when we are
supporting millions of people on
public dole instead of providing
them constructive employment In
Industry or agriculture?
Are we headed toward a new mlllenlum when we destroy our own
agricultural production to such an
extent that we force ourselves to
depend on foreign countries for food
and clothing?
Yes Indeed! IT.IS TIME FOR A
NEW DEAL! But this time let’s give
the deck to some one who won't
stack it with deuces.
What do women voters of Barry
county think of Landon? Here is the
reply given by one prominent wom­
an who has given the subject of

and thought!
"Why I shall vote for Landon in
November?"
First may I say that I am NOT
publican party for the office of
preaident of these United Slates,
the highest honor we Americans can
bestow. Had the Republican party
at Cleveland nominated someone
without the attributes of character
(Continued on page 3, Sec. 3)

do so when the urge to drive
Men Were Shocked When DoIsnot
near.
.
As driving requires the best of one's
Lightning Hit Building
quick brain-power,
Friday Evening
And alcohol cause quickly, the brain

Two bams and some small out­
buildings were burned to the ground
on the farm of Z. F Wlndes about
seven miles west of town on M-37
on Friday evening. The two barns
wt^p struck by lightning. The fire
department from here aa well as
from Middleville was summoned,
but nothing could be dope to save
the outbuildings. The only work
the firemen could do was to pre­
vent the burning of the Wlndes
home. The loss is estimated at
around,16,000, and only partly cov­
ered by insurance.

to turn sour.
The roads are made for everybody,

Let others have their share and you
slay on your own.
Thus saving many an argument
over who has right of way,
And prolong the Ume for you to
meet your Judgment. Day.

Driving can be a pleasure for all
upon lhe strip.
If each will keep their place
out an a motor-trip.
But one road-hog alone can
lot of trouble.
barn when it was struck by the bolt. When out on the road he must do
They were stunned as were the
his driving double.
fifteen head of cattle In the bom.
The two men recovered and led Bpeed and boose and disrespect for
the cows into the pasture and then
other people's rights.
Cause most of the accidents we read
some of the machinery and'some
of every night.
pedigreed dogs.
And many could be prevented If
About four hundred bmhebi of
each their place would keep.
grain, two tractors and other farm Thus saving many heart-aches and
machinery were destroyed as well
quantity of hay,

The reward of labor—whether farmer, working man, profes­
sional man or business man—Harvest Time comes for one
and all. With each yearly harvest make plans for a "greater
one." The time when one reaches the Harvest Time of Life,
a well deserved, hard earned reward—strive tomakeitabountiful one. Let your Banker hel p you. He can aid you with
your financial problems, consu It with him. He is an expert on
these matters and fan advise you how to produce a sound
financial harvest for your "Fall Time of Life

Established

in 1886

HASTINGS CITY
TELEPHONE 2103

HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, IBM

I

rigid system of economy. Landon
carried Ulis economy program still
further—made a record for effi­ family returned to U»«lr home in
ciency lhat iron national attention Detroit Friday. Wendell Vreeland
end family returned Bunday.
60.000: Last year Kansas again
Mr and Mrs. Fred Rill* tone and
daughter, Frances, Of Detroit were
I liked this mild

POLITICAL NOTES
—Hrpublican—

NOW...BUILD

and ability which he

Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Hwm 2515

HmUori

Frank Sa(&lt;

Want to Buy or Sell?

(Continued from page 1. Sec. 3)

J

Try Our Want Column

' and enthusiastic regarding his elec­
tion.
1 I've watched with Interest his rap­
. Id rise in politics. He was the only
. Republican In our country to be
elected governor both In 1932 and
1934. which shows the utmost faith
of hb home folks in .his integrity
I and fairness.
| I like the remarks given in the
"Business Week" by the merchants
of Topeka who say that regardless
. of whether the merchant be Demo­
crat or Republican, lhe Alf Landon
j administration has been the most
' "businesslike" of any administration
in the stale's history. He has tn all
I cases divorced politics from business.
! As governor he has picked those for
I major posts who not only DO the
। job assigned them but are setting a
record for others to follow.
| As governor he followed Harry
! Woodring who had inaugurated a

FIRST IN COFFEE VALUES
THOMAS SPECIAL

M.5SI0N INN

Lb.

FAMILY CUP
4 Fp
pp
I KU
RU
I .1

CATSUP? 10°

GOOD GRADE
SANTOS Coffee
Low Price Now—
LB-

■ w

EVERY DAY LOW PRICE

GOLDEN SUN

SALMONS 12c

A FAVORITE
COFFEE in Vacuum Packed Tin.

CAN

f KU

EVERY DAY LOW PRICI

ROLLED OATS

6 25

EVERY DAV LOW PRICI

MACAR0NIT17c
CHEESE, Mild Colby

lb. 23c |

SALAD DRESSING qt jor 23c
LIBBY'B ot CAMPBELL'8

EVERY DAY LOW PRICE

Tomato Juic* CM* 15c

BEAN SPROUTS SXIS”1 3
25c
NIBLETS kSnJl’ COW?LE CAN 14c

peas

ioc

h^cah

asrjKr"

GREEN BEANS
PINEAPPLE SS‘^ts

10c
16c

If I ^1 f" A ft n

If I N I" I « A
W

■ ■

hL
yjSfjj

MORGAN

FRU|T

PECTIN
BOTTLE

M 17c
QHP

HERSHEY'S

Chocolate lL&lt;?pcm10c

FOR JAMS
JELLIES

CLIMALENE
USED FOR ALL CLEAKIXG
ruaroiM

BRING

FARNIA 2 ru.
KBLLOOO'S

KRUMBLES

ru 12c

3

Cana

25c

SIWE

container

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

FRUIT JARS QUARTS 65c
JAR COVERS MASON, ZINC
JAR RUBBERS
CDIOC'C
Of IVfcO

feed,

2

ANO J GLUES

SOFTASILK cake flour
MOLASSES AUNT OIANA
CALUMET BAKING POWDER

nGi

C. THOMAS STORES
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

the number of licenses Issued. clam­
ming operations this year in­
creased over the season of 1*35. but
remain far under the 1034 mark.

araanvlll*
Fr*lrl«tiU«

can't k®«P, a ten dollar
bill long ienough to get
fingoi-printa on il. They admit that
they aM extravagant.
In striking contrast, aro a lew
strange individuals who will go to al­
most any lengths to save a dime. They
boost o'f tLeir thrift. That is not thrift

2257

We’ll Deliver ! — Because prices will soon advance
get from the mines .
able to get what you want later m, wa adviia you
,

.

Thrift to Bomaihittg more than "tightftotodnoM". Thrift to not a flowof
that blooms in the mtoer’« garret.

puts as much money in cirthe bank.
Thrift saves. But
WASTES.

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.
DEALERS IN WOOL. GRAIN. FEED, FLOUR, SALT,

UME,

CEMENT AND COAL
HASTINGS, MICH.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

41b Ward
2nd Precinct.

Dr. Frank Carrothera,
Chrmn. Barry County
Republican committee.
C. W. Clarke.
Secy. Barry County
Republican Committee.
July 29th, 1936.

MISERS

I LB. CAN

to buy your winter's coal now!

The three-manth open season on
mussels In the producing streams of
southern Michigan comes to a close
Wednesday. Sept. 30. according lo

ARE NOT

PKG.

«

slble to determine whether the
dressed birds were cock pheasants
or hen pheasants.

SAVERS

No. IH CAN

POTATOES co,^^, - 39c
BOWLEN E
ONIONS YELLOW GLOBE 10 LBS 15c
Keeps Closet Bowls
OKC
Clean—3 Small Cans
fciw
BANANASZO H 3-17c
shinolacan 9Wc VflMMrXMWi
CABBAGE NEW, SOLID MEADS LB W
3"
BLACK—TAN—BBOWN

be satisfactorily identified. In the

It li a land of opportunity. The
Duek hunters in Michigan may
poorest can have a smart infant legally use sneak boats during the
hunting season
this fall, even
, worth $750 a week in Hollywood.

Inouii

25c

recovery from his recent operation.
Marjorie Reynolds ifpent several
days during fair week with Mr. and
Mrs. George Pulton in Hastings.
I Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Shurlow
। visited their aunt. Mrs. Chas. Shurlow ot Augusta Sunday. They
I found her tn falling health.
! Mr. and Mra. Harry McClurkln
'of Middleville spent the week end
with Mr. and Mrs. Ira Chaffee.
: Mrs. Sarah Ickes on account of
poor health, has gone to Battle
Creek U&gt; stay with her daughter.
Mrs. Archie Herrington.
|

I

JUEL

FOR CANNING
ANO RICKLING

SURE JELL

BATTLE CREEK. KICK

20c

LARGE BOX22c
3 SMALL PKGS. ... 25c

IU WEST STATE STREET

LoMAR BEAUTY ACADEMY

2nd Floor West End Bank Bldg.. Phon* »33Z.

GALLON, BULK-

IB

Kalkaska last week Wednesday eve­
ning after a two weeks' viait.
Jack Bradfield stayed with his
grandmother Wilcox at Hastings
from Thursday to Bunday afternoon.
A letter from Mrs. IK 1 Hr. ger states
she and eon arrived safely Ln Callfomla and are nicely situated In an .
apartment tn Arcadia for the winter. !
Mrs. Flower and Bernice were call­
ers of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Moreau
Sunday afternoon at Augusta.
1
Mra. jack Schults visited Mrs.
Harlan Scobey several days last
week and attended the fair with
Mra. Scobey. They spent Monday in
Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Quick spent
Sunday with the latter's sister and
husband. Mr. and Mrs. Vert Robin­
ton near Schultz.
Preaching service next Sunday at.
9:30 with Bunday school following.

COATS GROVE.
BRANCH DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bayne have re­
Mr. and Mrs. Ployd Fassctt and
turned home after taking n vaca­
daughter of Grand Ledge spent Sun­
tion tn Canada.
day
at
the Jesse Fossett home.
Major and Mrs. woodllef from
Nearly everyone in this locality
Los Angeles liavc been visiting their
attended the fair at Hastings last
cousin. Mrs. Geo. Coats.
The funeral of L. Monroe Covilie, ——.
.
of Grand Rapids was held al the I Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nelson vbited
church here last Saturday afternoon her brother at Lake Odessa one day
with burial In the Woodland ceme­
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Miller and
tery. Mrs. Flora Wood wa* a sister
and Melvin coviUt a brother of the three sons, of Wyoming. Mr. and
deceased who spent h*5 wly life Mrs. Kenneth Norton and daughter
in this neighborhood. The widow. of Marshall were Thursday visiters
Mrs. Banche Fast covilie. formerly at the Vincent Norton and Keith
Norton homes.
lived near Woodland.
Miss Margery Norton has begun
, Tiie church here looks very nice
I with Its new coat of paint. Tiie work her fourth school year in Nashville. I
HINDS CORNERS.
Quarterly meeting will be held at |I Floyd
a Tobias
iUU1M and
M1IU daughter Ul
, was done by Earl seasc of Wood­
the North Maple Grove church Sun-1I Kalamazoo
Kalxmazoo brought
brought his
his mother,
mother. ?Mrs.
land.
II C- —
-home ----Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Zerlclc and day. September 20.
N. ----Tobias,
Bunday.
The exterior beauty of the '37 Studebakers are matched by luxuriow
children of Lansing and Mr. and
I Nearly everyone around here at­
interiors. Upholstery in the 1937 Studebaker President la naw, and
EAST DELTON.
j Mrs. Wm. Flory' of Woodland spent
tended the fair al Hastings.
com«a In neutral tone# to harmonlza with tha body colors. Tha body
James Boulter and family and j wm.
CampbeTf,
his
brother
and
' Sunday with the Harve Woodmans.
Wm. Campbell", his brother and
colore are, in themselves, a distinct contribution to tha brilliance of
I Mrs Edith Richardson is visiting uncle. Sid Boulter of California sister, Lizzie, of Nebraska, called on
spent Sunday evening with Gay Wa- c. N. Tobias one day last week.
her son. Arthur Richardson.
tenite tn a color to harmonize with ’h* Interior trim; in care equipped
ters and family at Plainwell.
| Mrs. C. H. Brown of Alpena and
with the phantom staering. the gearshift ball is abb of tenite, to match
Mr. and Mra. Rex Water* accom- daughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs.
FAIR LAKE.
the bora-button in color. The President, leader of the 1937 Studoj The Kinsley Ladles' Aid Soclety pained Mr. and Mrs. Ike Lelnaar to 1 Harold comp of Grand Rapids, vis| will meet Sept. 23 for supper with Reed City on Labor Day. where they । ited her parents. Mr. and Mrs. C- N.
। Mrs. Earl Pennock. Mrs. Grace attenejed the reunion of the latter'* Tobias.
Sml’.n and Mrs. Harold Smith enter- family.
Sunday visitors at Ed. Newton's
though the summary of federal and]
11 tabling with her.
were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Payne
state migratory bird regulations ac-|
It’s not the hours you put in that of Hastings. Cloyd Payne and Miss
A chicken supper will be held al
companytng the 1938-1937 game law|
I the Bunnell church the evening of count. It is what you pul Into the Plumb of Grand Rapids. Mr. and
digests Implies that It is forbidden.]
Sept. 25. Everybody come.
hours.
Mrs. Ed. Meyers of Ionia and Mrs.
Ora Hinds of Rutland.
Wc felt unusually happy today,I
MUs Susie philips went to Clover­
and shook hands with three men.I
dale Tuesday to care for Mrs. Ger­
All small-game hunting licenses And one ot them asked. "What are!
ald Hines and baby.
Will Smith of Kalamazoo spent for the season of 1035-1938 and all you running for?" We will not|
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Burrell gun permits for lhe same period will shake hands with another person!
(
Phillips.
expire Wednesday. Sept. 30, Il has until after next November.
BRUSH RIDGE M'HOOL NOTES. been announced by conservation au­
Our school started -Monday Au­ thorities. The small-game hunting
BARRY
COUNTY
REPUBLICAN
I
gust 31 and we had perfect attend­
ance for the first week.
CONVENTION.
distributed to license dealers who
All grades are making hygiene will have them on hand for sale in
At court room. Hastings, Tuesday,I
project books.
time for the fall hunting season. Sept. 22nd. at 11 o’clock A. M., East-1
We had two days off for the fair, Gun permits arc Issued by local
while our teacher attended camp at conservation officers only and to in­ cm Standard Time.
The Republican County Conven-|
Clear lake.
dividuals who hold
small-game
Moat of us are going to attend the hunting licenses.
lion for lhe purpose ot electing ill
play “The Sleeping Beauty" al the
delegates and alternate delegates lol
Central school auditorium at Has­
The first legislative act regarding lhe Republican Slate convention]
tings.
deer In Michigan was recorded in
Some of lhe children have been 1859. In that year the state legisla­ and to transact such other business]
that may legally come before it. will!
taking charge of the penmanship ture limited lhe open hunting sea­
son to the last five months of the tings on Tuesday. Sept. 22nd. at 111
We have one new scholar this year. Previous to this action by the
year. Henry Arens, which makes ms I legislature there were no restrictions o'clock A. M, Eastern Standard]
WHY BE OUT OF WORK? LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE!
Time.
a total of twenty-two.
POSITIONS AKE WAITIMU — ALL OBADUATES PLACED
on method of take or season.
The State convention will be hcldl
The following officers were elected,
MODERN UP-TO-DATE SCHOOL
in Grand Rapids on Tuesday, Sept.]
at the first meeting of the Health
Deer
hunting
licenses
were
first
29th, nt 11 o'clock in lhe forenoon,]
Vuilrr Slat* 8np*rvtil«n. Eqntpratnl of tha tauit typa inch aa found In
and Happiness Club: Pres.—Don
introduced
in
Michigan
in
1805.
The
Uta better clxaa of akopn lodar. Stodente itt alvrn paraonal attention
for the purpose of nominating can-|
Pranshka; Vlce-Pres—Florian Safrom • group at axparicncad and w»U known taMrnctori.
iik;
Secy.—Edwin
Meiscnbach; resident license wm 50 cents; the didates for the following slake offi-|
COMPLETE COURSE
£&amp;
SIX MONTHS
Treas.—Jean Brownell; Re;»rler— non-resident license $25. Hunters cm. Secretary of State. State]
were allowed lo shoot as many as Treasurer. Auditor General. Attor­
Wilhelmina Pranshka.
NOW
TO PAY!
five deer per season.
Reporter. Wilhelmina Pranshka.
ney General and one Justice ot the
Supreme Court to fill vacancy. and|
Teacher. Margaret Johncock.
ONLY « STARTS YOU
Small game hunters who plan lo for the transaction ot such other]
on tha toad to aucceaa. Invrat now in a proftuton that will taint* a
go afield after the season opens business as may properly come be­
STRIKER.
steady poattloo and bring you unllmltad financial telntna.
next
month
will
be
wise
to
tack
this
&gt;
Willard
Ickes
is
111
al
this
writing
fore IL
Tha laadlng profaaaloa for woomb. Jail think I A few dollar* down pay.
mint wit! Hart you tn a proftulon that will anabl* you t* IUI *36 a
i Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Ickes of Lake memo In their caps: “I will not
Delegates to the County Conven­
wook. Day and night claaao*.
dress my game in the woods so as
| ode&amp;sa called there Sunday. ■
SEND ATTACHED COUPON FOR FREE BOOKLET
। Mrs. Cora Fulton, who has been to remove its Identity. It's illegal." tion shall be elected at the Septemvisiting Mr. and Mrs. Bert Fancher Last year a number of sportsmen
NAME ..............................
1 returned to tier home al Union City were taken Into custody by conser­ every seventy-five votes cast for tha
vation officers oecau.se the game Secretary of State at the last elec­
ADDRESS
---------- -—..— ---- —--------......... CITY...„...................M..._—
&lt; Sunday.
and shall be apportioned as
। We are glad to report lhat Leon they were carrying home had been tion
follows:
j
! Meyers is making a very satisfactory dressed in the field and could not

FILLBBURY-a

FOODS

PVRI CIDER

dies' Aid an Wednesday of
-Si H. J. Flower relumed from

The new barn lhe friends and
neighbors are building for Ciuu.
Williams is coming along fine. They
expect to finish lhe roof this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Shorter of
i
Cressey were Saturday viallotI at E.
D. Reynolds' home.

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

■**

EVERY DAY LOW PRICE

lead tha fair. The postponed meet­
ing will be Thursday afternoon of
this week with Mrs. Brandstetter
and Mrs. Boyle.

ance speech. It might have lacked ler Baturday and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Ricker of
*onio oratory,
but it certainly
showed he was an “every day Owendale and Jessie Ricker and
American," and it really sounded as son, Kent, visited at Mina Aldrich's
So summing It all up. I'm sure
the good job he has done as gover­
nor of Kansas and combined with
his many other qualifications will
make our government safe In his
hands.

The Studebaker President
in Style From Any Angle

I

A DcHcious Blond of
Fresh Roasted Coffee
-—Ground for Your
Rec irements.
LB.

Our Finest Blend of
Choice Coffees—Sovings of several cents

mungy wm repreaonted at the
Barry County fair last weak, many
attending soveral days.

failed
only
bearin

groan
each
frozen
until
His t
later
varie
manu
spring
tore
Farim

Re*
exper
t|i« c
nave
dtvld
field*
Ih a

the U
field
kola­
beef
paatu
ten a

same
numb
157 I
And
their
fields
field
grazl

due
Upaiw
that
the c
perk&gt;
amou
this
heaU
grees
pera
diate
plest
cows
Hoar

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, IM

Weekly Farm Review
The Beat Ideas from the Best Farm Papera
By WILLARD BOLTE
ter and spraying all parts of the
plant thoroughly. Be careful not to
get the solution on your clothing or
near buildings because of Are haz­
ard.—Indian Parmer’s Guide.

Pennsylvania Stale College reports
that, In their experiments, hens—
both Barred Rocks and Leghorns—
consumed considerably less feed In
batteries than they did In pens, un­
doubtedly due to lhe fact that the
Here are Cornell University's rec­
hens in the batteries took less exer­
cise. Over a period ot 44 weeks, ommendations for making pastures
the battery hens consumed an over- belter: 111 In September, select an

feed, as compared with an average
of 84 Iba. per hen In the pens. How­
ever. the battery hens ate a larger
percentage ot mash, which reduced
the saving on the feed bill.

An apple orchard—planted in
Wealthy* and Sweet Russets In 1917
in Lyon County, Minnesota—has
failed to produce a crop of apples
only one year since It came into
bearing. The secret Is found in.the
fact that the owner mulches' Uie
ground wiUi three Inches of manure
each fall—os soon as the ground has
frozen—thus delaying Uie blooming
until danger of late frost has passed.
His trees frequently bloom a week
later than other trees of the same
varieties in his neighborhood. The
manure is disked Into Uie soil every
spring and helps to conserve mois­
ture tor dry seasons—Capper’s
Farmer.

and If you can't afford lo treat all
of the field treat what you can and
continue Die job next year. (2)
Broadcast 800 lbs. of 16% super­
phosphate and repeat lhe applica­
tion in four years. (3) If the soil
needs lime to grow cioveni. have it
tested and spread the lime. &lt;4&gt; If
the soil is light and sandy, it will
pay to apply 100 lbs. of muriate of
liotaah per acre. (51 If there is no
Kent wild white clover tn your pas­
ture now. broadcast a pound of seed
to lhe acre next March—mixing the
seed with sand or granulated phos­
phate to pennit even sowing. &lt;&lt;J&gt;
If you have excess manure, mix it
with tiie superphosphate and ap­
ply 8 lo 10 tons of manure per acre.
(?) Good grazing management is
fully as profitable and Important
os good fertilizer.—American Agriculturtat.

When there is not sufficient good
Results naturally vary In different fresh iinslurc to carry both ewes
experiments and different parts of and lambs. Michigan Slate College
tiie country, but all of the results we recommends weaning Uie lambs and
have seen thus far are Ln favor of letting them have the pasture.
dividing pastures into two or more Many of the winners In the Wol'-.
fields and grazing them alternately. verine Lamb Production Contest
In a recent issue of Hog Breeder is have weaned liielr lambs at 3%
a report of a grazing experiment at months and placed them on secondthe U. 8. Department of Agriculture growth alfalfa pasture — getting
field station at Ardmore, South Da­ them used to grain by feeding oats
kota—Ln which two-year-old grade in a creep before weaning and
beef steers were pastured on native gradually changing lo com or bar­
pasture, al the rate of one steer per ley. By keeping the ewes on dry­
ten acres, and gained 83 lbs. each tn pasture after weaning, the milk­
122 days. Another lot of steers— flow is dried off normally without
some age and number and same udder trouble.—Michigan Farmer.
. number of acres per steer—gained
The University
of
Tennessee
157 lbs. In lhe same length of time.
states that any farmer with as
And lhe only difference was that
their pasture was divided into two many as 10 cattle to winter can
use a trench silo to advantage. A
fields and they were moved from one
fleld to the other as soon as the
tom, 7 feet deep, and 45 feel long,
grazing in one got short.
will hold enough silage to feed 20
cows for five months. In estimat­
Michigan State College reports
ing tonnage, figure 05 cubic feet
that the bitter or strong flavor that
to the ton of silage after It settles.
some-times appears in cream or but­
Maximum efficient size is 15 feet
ter after a few days of storage is
due to a chemical substance called wide and 8 feet deep. If greater
capacity is needed it ta better to
lipase—a natural Ingredient in milk
make the trench longer—or dig two
that usually causes no trouble until
trenches—rather than to exceed
lhe cow is well along In her lactation
these dimensions.—Southern Agri­
period and giving only a small
culturist.
amount of milk. The developing of
this rancidity can be slopped by
Korean lespedeza pasture will
healing lhe milk to 140 or 145 de­ make beef—and make it fast. In
grees and holding II at that tem­ the fall of 1934. an Indiana corperature for several minutes imme­ respendent of Cappers Farmer
diately after milking—but the sim­ turned
100 common 2-year-old
plest plan Is to dry off the cow or steers into a fleld of 5-inch drouthcows that cause the trouble.— 8tunU*d lespedeza and -they gained
Hoard's Dairyman.
an average of 3% ibs. dally for a
period of 17 days without other
Because the southern states have
feed,
in September. 1935, when
a long, alow flowering season, with
there was no drouth, an Illinois
such a slow production of nectar
correspondent of the same paper
that bees frequently cannot store up
put 58 thin cows and 49 calves in
much honey for market, southern his lespedeza fleld and for 21 days
bee-keepers find it more profitable
those cows made an average gain
to keep their bees swarming and sell of about 5 lbs. each, while the
the bees themselves to bee-keepers calves made an average of about 2
In colder regions. One prominent Iba. each per day, without other
Indiana bee-keeper, living in Hen­ \feed.
dricks county, bought a number of
these two-pound packages of south­
When borers attack plum, peach
ern bees thte spring—and early in and apple trees above the ground
August many of lhe new hives hod line, the Department of Agriculture
Aored 200 lbs. of honey.—Prairie recommends mixing paradtchloroParmer.
benzlne with cottonseed oil—'i lb.
to the quart of oil—and painting
. The best way to solve lhe problem it on tiie affected area—Copper's
of what to do for Ivy poisoning is lo Farmer.
destroy the poison ivy plants. Pur­
due University says that this can
Scrubbing lhe floor is said to be
be done by dissolving a pound of good for the figure. Another view is
sodium chiunite Ui a gallon ol wa- Uiat It's good for lhe floor.

PRAIRIEVILLE

home or with Mra. Elizabeth Wood,
where site will coll for them. All
Odd Fellows and Rebekahs
and
tHetr families are invitee! to attend
lhe co-operative dinner at the home
unday, Sept. 20? at which time the
gifts will be given.
Mr. and Mra. Waille Smith and
Karl. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Felder
and Min, Mr. and Mra. Raleigh
Adrtanson and family ond Mr. and
Mra John Oliphant and Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Miner and daughter
spent Sunday at Homer with Mr.
and Mrs. Mason Miner, the occa­
sion bring the birthdays of Uie
host and hostess.
Mr. and Mm. Albert Roger.'; at­
tended the funeral of the former's
brother, R. D. Pratt, al Battle Creek
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Murray were
In Kalamazoo Saturday.

Mra. Ethel Slebbcru accompanied
her satwin-iaw and daughter on a
motor trip to Denver, Colo., where
they will visit relatives.
Mrs. Silas Doster will leave by
motor for New York Thursday to
visit her*oister. Mrs. William Den­
mark. She will be accompanied by I
her brother. Harry DeCrocker, of
Battle Creek and her stater. Mra.
Fred Ehrman of Grand Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. David Honeywell
visited Niagara Palls and oilier
places of interest over Labor day.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Higgins will
move soon into a cottage un the
north side of Crooked! lake. The
children will still be able to attend
our school.
Arthur Nunemaker and family
have moved to Crooked lake. Bak­
er's landing, and William Blohm
and family will move to Bingham
Comers Monday. Mr. Blohm has
PODlfNK.
purchased a filling station and
Corobelle Weldon has returned
small store there.
from a two weeks' visit in Detroit.
Mra. John Drummond. 85. a for­
Hobart Kenyon and family have
mer resident, passed away Thurs­ moved back on the farm after
day night at six o'clock at her home sending a year in northern Micbiin Grand Rapids. Qhe is survived
by a daughter. Miks Laura, at home,
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Caln of
a son. Rockwell, of Fisher-Drum­ Des Moines. Iowa, who have been
mond Wall Paper Company, Grand visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs
Rapids, and several grandchildren. Theron Cain, hove returned home.
The Prairieville friends extend sin­
Mrs. Bertha Cotant has been on
cere sympathy. Those who attend­ Uie sick list.
ed the funeral from here were: Mr.
Mr. and. Mrs. Homer Bauchman
and Mrs. David Artllp, Mra. Wilbur visited her parents in Niles but
Polley, Miss Myrtle Smith and Mra.
Sarah Smith.
Mrs. Blanch Otta of Lansing has
The members of District No. 26 been via
visiting her sister, Mra. Frank
of Odd Fellows and Rebekalts of I Waters
which
Prairieville
Rebekah
— everyone
-- --- - - -.-—-7
— :—-lodge
—•, is'
Nearly
In this vicinity
a part, are requested to give one attended the Barry county fair,
can (or morel of fruit or vegetables
----------------- __________1___
per member to the home pt Jack­
Whcn male eyebrows are plucked
son. Mrs. Stella Barber fc chair­ out, as per an edict of the national
man of the local lodge and asks that beauty congress, what's lhe embat­
Ute donations be left either al her tled taxpayer going to hang on by?

, SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson of
Hickory Comers were guests Sat­
urday night and Sunday of Ute lat­
ter's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Havens.
Mrs. Frelda Lord and mother, Mrs.
Bartholomew of BalUe Creek were
Bunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy

Earl McGlocklln of Banfleld was a
guest Thursday of his nephew.
Harry Dunn and family.
Mr. and Mrs Myron Bishop and
baby were Sunday visitors at the
home of tiie former's parents. Mr.
mid Mrs. Alfred Bishop ot Hinds
Corners.
Kenneth Dunn was hi Detroit
last week attending the fair. He was
on tiie winning stock judging team
and with Uie other members will
judge Mock al the Stock Show Ln
Chicago.
TiiLs community was well repre­
sented with winning exhibitors al
the fair. Alpheous and Kenneth
Dunn won several premiums on
their sheep; Erwin Havens won first
with his Shetland pony. Glass
Creek Extension Club look first
prize on their display, and Otis
school took several premiums on
their exhibit.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Otis of Glosi
Creek and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hav­
ens will celebrate their golden wed­
ding anniversaries the last of this
month. They plan lo hold open
house for their friends and relatives
Sunday afternoon and evening, Sept.
27 at lhe home ot the latter couple.
Both couples are wel/and favorably
known in this and neighboring com­
munities and have always taken on
active part in all social and Grange
activities.

Raw

or Pasteurized.
PINT 5c
QUART

19

Produced under the su­
pervision of the State
Health Department,Grade
A milk is one of the purest
milks produced. Low in
bacteria, high in vitamins.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hasting*

GLASS CREEK.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Otte and Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Erway attended the
Methodist conference at BatUc

Constl
ADLER I K
LYBARKER,

I SELL MORE COFFEE
THAN ANYONE ELSE
-AND I GRIND EACH
POUND TO ORDER

RED CIRCLE

AQn 1,b
. WC »k&lt;.

17c

MILD AND MELLOW

39e

RICH AND FULL-BODIED

fear

STUDEBAKERS

PHOTOGRAPH

.GAIN Studebaker leads off

ANO AUTOMATIC OVIRDRIVI

NEW UNDIRSLUNG RIAR AXUt

GIVI BIG ROOMY INTERIORS —

CHAIR HIIQHT MATS — L1G AND
HUD ROOM TO SPARS

WORLD’S
LAROIST LUGGAOI CAPACITY

BUILT-IN WARM-AIR WINDSHIELD

MFROSTIRS

WORLD’S IASIIST CLOSING DOORS
WITH IXCLUSIVI NON-RATTLI
ROTARY DOOR LOCKS

AUTOMATIC Hill HOLDIR

with a hit that's a l»»x office
Bcnnutionl Magnificent new
Preaident Eights .. • headliners
in every inch from top to tires!
Impressive new low-priced
Dictators . . . the greatest six
cylinder values ever offered!

louvers! Beautifully rounder!
one-piece hood lops that lift
up from the front! Sweeping
air foil fenders I Domed diac
whcela! Am! interiors, ric-hly
styled by Helen Dryden, that
are lhe largest, moat luxurious
you have ever seen!
But the real thrill la in driv­
ing these Studebakers! Do so
now! See how much more an
exciting new 1937 Studebaker
offers than you ever thought a
little money would buy! Prices,
are Just a few dollars above
those of lowest priced carol

filu
5 PRESIDENT
SEDANS FREE

WOBLD’S STIONGIST, SAFIST ANO

VIGOROUS AND WINEY

27c
15

Clean Quick

Crackers
Carnation
Milk
SunnyAaU
Rolled Oats
Splandid
Pancake Flour
Ovaltine
Educator Crax
Herb-Ox Bouillon Cubes
Whit. Sllcnd
Bread
Kraft's Velveeta Cheese
B«Hc Vinegar
Pickling Spice
Kirk's Flake Soap
Whitehouse Milk
Prunes
MeHo Wheat
Spaghetti
Iona Pork and Beans
Tomatoes
Del Maiz Niblets
Canvas Gloves

29&lt;

55&lt;
15

19c

25c
29c
21c
21c

15c

15c
3

27

A &amp; P MEATS

Celery

COME III TODAY FOR
YOUR FREE ENTRY CARO,

Telephone 2101

25c

3 •“ 25
A &amp; P PRODUCE

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE
Hatting*, Mich.

2

BOKAR

die Presidential Election

IXQUSTV1 NEW IASY PARKING
stm/Sno GIAR

Phone 2651

Caryl Puller, who has been In the
Ann Arbor hospital, returned home
Sunday much improved in health.

THE SPOTLIGHT CARS OF 1937;

USE HIGHLANDS DAIRY
GRADE A MILK
FOR BETTER RESULTS

Mias Hazel Calms, teacher of the
Carlton Center school, attended the
teachers' encampment nt Clear lake

SOUTH SHULTZ.
Those from here who attended Uie
Pair u^ld it was the best fair that

KONOMT Of Ft AM OU CUANU

Content.

CARLTON CENTER.
the morning and Bunday school im­
mediately after. We are all glad

EIGHT O'CLOCK

WORLD'S FIRST CAS| WITH DUAL

High in Cream

Whittemore visited them Bunday.

ANNOUNCING

"A Rose By Any
Other Name
Would Smell
As Sweet
But Grade A milk by any
other name might not be
as good. Highlands Dairy
Standard-Grade A—is your
assurance of uniform
quality and high standard
of purity.

was ever held In Hastings.
Byron Moody and family of South
Maple Grove spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Hom.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Campbell of
Shelton. Neb., and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Campbell of Lapeer and Mrs. I.laic
Hall of Potlatch, Idaho, and Prank
Hallock of Milo vtaited Rom Hallock
Friday and also called on Mr. and
Mrs. George Kenyon.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hine are the
proud parents of a son born Sept.
12. congratulations.
Mrs. Mina Kenyon spent Thurs­
day sight seeing and visiting relalives in Muskegon.
The Shultz Community Club will
meet with Mra. John Hine Oct. 1.
Visitors at Mr. and Mrs. G. E.
Kenyon's last week were Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Mlnzey of Adrian; Mr.
and Mrs. A. B- Mlnzey. Mr. and

Potatoes
Cabbage
Grapes

Picnic Hams »-»
Solid Head*

39c
u. 3c

Boiling Beef

15c

Chunk Bacon

Beef Roast

P I'OOI) s

�THE HASTING8 BANNER, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, IBM
MORGAN.
Rev. and Mra. Allen Delong and
granddaughter. Alean. of Grand
Ledge and Mr. and Mrs. Shaffer of
Otsego visited Mrs. Millie Ftury
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gervls Hill of

LEGAL NOTICE.

SB 3 SB

STATE OF MICHIGAN.
CIRCUIT COURT FOB THE COUNTY
or BARRY. IN CHANCERY.

IIKBKHY given

I

W. M. A- Thursday. The next
meeting will be with Mra. Ruth Osbom of Pinhook, Sept. 34.
Duward Strong of Clarksville
spent Saturday night with Vaughn
Geiger. Vaughn accompanied Duward home on Sunday to attend a
birthday dinner Ln honor of DuNellie Wolf Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Latham and ward's mother.
Dale Geiger spent lhe week end
son, Martin, attended the Barry
in Lansing.
county fair Friday
I v&lt;Mr. Hnrrv Whitman
Mildred Hamblin, who attends
| and daughter. Phyllis, of Battle school al Hastings, and Gladys
। Creek spent Sunday with Mrs. Nel- Hamblin, who attends school al
.« Wolf.
Clarksville, spent the week end with
.t H Of the Nortbeut f^rilon.i He
| Mr. and Mrs. V L. Latham of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles
• Kalamazoo were Saturday guests of Hamblin.
' Mr. and Mrs. Fred Latham. The
William Porrltt of Bourne began
■ two families attended the Latham - wiring -the home of Floyd Neeb for
reunion al Hanover. Mich.. Sunday, electricity this Monday morning.
| Mr. and Mra. Ernest Mead and | Eighteen guests enjoyed a birth children arc spending ft week at day dinner at the home of Mr. and
BANKRUPTCY NOTICE
I Macey, Ind . with Mrs. Mead's par-1 Mrs. J. F Brake Sunday in honor
ents.
i ot Mr. Brake's 64th birthday. Those
Mra. Elgin Mead, who spent a who attended were John E. Brake
couple of weeks with her daughter, and family. Elwood Brake and famDorotny. and husband at Newaygo, ily and Mrs. Mattle Cool of Ionia;
returned home last week.
j Duane Gray and Grace Grimes of
Ernest Young and family of Ra- Lake Odessa. Donald Slowlns and
venna spent the week end with Mr. family of South Boston and Mr. and
HY THE
Ihi
and Mra. Donald Mead.
| Mrs. Art
*“* ”
Van
— Ailsburg
*****----------of
* ”
Grand
—*
। Rapids.
___________
-------------1 Elwood Brake. Jr., of Ionia spent
PLEASANT...VALLEY.
Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Mesccar ■ l»art of last week with his grandarid baby of Lansing spent Sunday parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Brake,
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert I
'
HIGIIBANK.
Mesccar.
I Mr. and Mra. Harry Green and

nil IT IH PtTRTItKR ORDERED HY'

— family of Barryvllle spent Sunday
i with Mr. and Mrs. Worth Green.
I Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jones and
i». I daughter. Gloria, ot Battle Creek
spent Sunday afternoon and eve-

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

blitz.
Ehret Skidmore of Augusta spent
few days at the home of Mr. and

OHKIE J. 81.LITER
kI um«

the Flein

ronr nl uld Bill |
tnd Ihnt In

•I.Ill f nV. SIT.:.' I

1

NOTICE MORTGAGE BALE.

in HOME OWNERS' LOAN COR-

.'.'hi'll

NOTICE or MOBTOAOE BALE.
Drfaulli htrlnr b»»n moilo (and •

N».h«ll1r, Harry ■
ItOllE. OWNERS'
NOTICE Or MOBTOAUn SALE.
Default*
•—

Mrs Frankie White of Middleville,
spent Saturday in Grand Rapids.
Mrs. Chas. B. Johnson acoomrlnga and family to Hastings Bat-

lovely display of fire works in the
evening.
.
Mr. Walters of Middleville Is dobulldlngs for Mrs. Chas. B. John-

KLINGENSMITH.
The community was shocked al
the parsing of Mrs. M. E. Maze last
week. She had been in poor health
for some Ume. Much sympathy is
extended to the bereaved family.
Gordon 'Green returned from De­
troit after spending the week with
his aunt. Mrs. Will Green. Dale,
Leota. Florence, Virginia and Donna
Lapham ot Maple Grove also spent
the week there. They went through
Ford's Motor Co. and saw how a
Ford was made. They also attended
the lair, spent a day al lhe Zoo
and went lo Belle Isle.
Mrs. James Storkan returned lo
her home after spending some Ume
in Cleveland with relatives.
Mrs. Helms and daughter of north­
ern Michigan relumed to her home
after spending the past three weeks;
with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins.
Alice Rose Latta is attending Mid­
dleville school tills year. She at­
tended the last two years in BalUc
Creek.
Archie Burd has returned home
from Nashville where he had been
working for Frank Green lhe past
month.
Mr. and Mrs. Manson Stanton
and children of Assyria Center spent
Sunday- with Mr. and Mrs. Albert

BUY AT SUMMER PRICES
Let us FILL your COAL BIN

before winter prices
take effect.

QUALITY COALS AT
LOWEST PRICES

ORDER YOUR COAL TODAY!

ix'iner of Bartow lake were callers
Mrs. Charley Janes of Battle there Sunday.
Foundations are being laid for
Creek is spending a few days with
several buildings at Mud lake. Many
Mra. Freda Marshall.
and Mft. Frank Hawblitz carpenters have been pul to work.
Calvin
Hili of Traverse City has
rallcrs gt Bedford Sunday.
been visiting bls uncle. Oil Hill, a
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Alice
Bowerman
of Hastings spent
The Union Cemetery Circle will
the week end with her father. Jim
Bowerman.
Wednesday, Sept. 23.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Conklln. who
were recently married, are happy
over the poiwraton of a set of dishes “STOMACH PAINS SO BAD
and some silverware presented by
the people of the community near I COULD HARDLY WORK”
Says C. 8. Gross: "After taking'
the South Maple Grove church.

HASTINGS
PHONE 2118

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
"The Farmer Owned Store"

They are now located on the Silas Dr. Emil's Adla Tablets Use pains:
are gone and I eat anything’.'' Try !
Gaskill place.
The Wilcox cemetery Circle will Adla treatment on our money back I
have no September meeting, but guarantee. Reeds Drug Store, and
|
will serve dinner Wednesday. Oc­ B. A. LyBarker. Druggtat.Adv.
tober 7. at the Grange hall, Maple
Grove Center.
Maynard Tucker, the Dunham
teacher, attended the teachers' en­
campment at Clear lake from
Thursday evening until Saluntiy
noon.

ireBCribrd lor hit «...
RUSSELL R M»

NOTICE TO CRBDTTOBN

NOT in: TH

I EREHY GIVEN.

ORDER TOK ruin. CATION

HOME OWNERN* LOAN CORPO­
RATION. NnrlrUM.

MARTIN CORNERS.
Our teacher. Miss Ruby Cogswell,
attended the teachers' encampment
at Clear lake last Friday and Sat­
urday.
Elmer Leslie of Detroit was n din­
ner guest of Mr and Mra. Orr Fish­
er Monday of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Grashubi vis­
ited her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ro­
land Barry, last week and attended
the good old Barry county fair.
Mrs. Jennie Combs and Forest
and Myrtle Mead of Kalamazoo
were Sunday afternoon callers at
Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher's.
Most everyone attended lhe fair
last week and there surely was a
crowd. It would make some of the
crowds of years ago look slim, but
now people have a better chance to
get there than in the old horse and
buggy days.

WOODLAND
MICHIGAN

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

LONG DISTANCE
TELEPHONE RATES NOW
LOWER THAN EVER

SOUTH TIIORNAPPLE.
Mrs. Ada Shaw passed the latter
part of the week near Nashville
with her son. Clarence Shaw.
Tony Stromburg has purchased
a car of Henry Chase. Mr. Chase
was calling on old friends recently
as he expects to pass the winter
with relatives as usual.
Mrs. Robt. Garrett and sister,

Note the comparison of the new reduced rates and old rates for long di*taucc calls between the representative cities listed below. Rates for calls to ;
other points are correspondingly low. These reductions apply to both stationUxtation and person-to-penoa rates . . . day, night and all day Sunday. .

NOTICE OF MORTGAGE HALE.

TYPICAL 3 MINUTE RATES

HOME OWNER*

LOAN CORPO

MGIiimu
■&gt;T nf M

oann or

sauy

in

Allegan County Fair
Sept. 22 to 26—Day and Night
5 Gorgeous Days of Fun and Thrills!

rn.c. am

5 Hilarious Entertaining Nights!

4 AUTOMOBILES GIVEN AWAY FREE!
Cash Prizes .Each Afternoon and

Evening

to Grandstand

Patrons

Pony, Bicycles, Wrist Watches and Other Prizes for Children on Tuesday

G
"'fN rM. (E 1
r&lt;wG TS 1-. R i
1936

SUNDAYS

AND

ncw

OLD

NCW

NIGHT AND
DAY

OLD

NEW

SUNDAYS
OLD

NEW

otb

Cadillac

Port Huron

55

• 55

• 130

Ann Arbor

Alpena

1.05

1.15

.60

.60

1.40

1.45

.95

Grand Rapids

Escanaba

1.05

120

.60

.60

1.40

150

.95

.95

St. Joseph

Menominee

1.10

125

.65

.65

1.50

155

.95

.95

Monroe

Petoskey

1.15

1.40

.70

.70

1.55

1.7S

1.05

1.10

Saginaw

Negaunee

us

1.55

.80

30

1.65

L95

1.15

120

Nile*

iron Mountain

125

155

30

1.65

1.95

1.15

120

Battle Creek

Pittsburgh

125

1.40

.75

M
M

135

130

1.15

120

Sault Ste. Marie

Detroit

125

155

30

1.65

1.95

1.15

120

• 1.00

•LIO •

•140 • .90

• .90

.95

Flint

Marquette

1.30

1.65

.80

JS

1.70

2.05

1.20

125

School Children Admitted FREE Tues­
day. Many special prizes for children.

Grand Rapids Seo Scout Band, Kalama­
zoo Sea Scout Drum and Bugle Corps.

.Marquette

Jackson

1J5

L75

.80

.90

1.75

220

120

135

laming

Ironwood

130

L90

.90

.95

1.90

2.40

1.30

1.45

Record display of Stock ond Form prod­
ucts.

The Best Midway at any county fair.

Pontiac

Houghton

1.55

2.00

.95

1J»

230

250

1.40

150

The Bat Man's thrilling and spectacular
performance.

Detroit

Washington

135

L70

.95

LOO

2.00

2.15

140

1.45

Grand Rapids

St. Louis

1.60

L7S

.95

1.00

2.05

220

1.40

1.45

The Hustrci Brothers of Hamburg, Ger­
many, in a daring righ wire act, coming
here direct from the San Diego ezposition.

Detroit

New York

1.80

2.05

1.05

1.15

2.30

255

135

155

Lansing

New York

2.10

235

125

130

2.75

3.00

1.90

1.95

commercial dis­

Two Mammoth Musical Revues—Monhattan Vanities and Parisian Rcvols.

Hill-Wilbur Circus Combination — ele­
phants, ponies, dogs and everything.
OWXKRR' LnAN'COBFO

DAY

BETWEfN

BANDS GALORE! Including Kolamazoo
High School Band, Consolidated Allegan
County High School Bond of 125 pieces;

Many Free Acts—Complete change of
oil talent oil Friday.

•

PERSON-TO-PERSON

NIGHT AND

Four days of Horse Races with a large
entry of pacers, trotters and runners.
Also team pulling contests.

Extensive school and
plays.
STATE CO.'.Vi
i.'i bl. IT BOTH

STATION-TO-STATION

Final* of- Amateur Contest.

SCOUT DAY, Saturday. Big review of
Scout Troops. All Boy ond Girl Scouts
Admitted FREE.
Tickets en sole at reduced prices until
September 19.

Flint

New Orleans

325

3.75

1.85

2.00

4.00

4.75

2.60

3.00

Detroit

Denver

3.75

425

2.10

250

4.75

525

3.10

350

Royal Oak

Loe Angeles

6.00

725

3.75

425

7.75

9.00

5.50

6.00

/

-

★ There baa been a drastic redaction, also, in the overtime rate on
penoD-lo-pcnoa cells when the talking period exceeds six minutes. /

DON'T MISS THE ALLEGAN FAIR... ALLEGAN, MICHIGAN
THE GREATEST FAIR IN 84 YEARS OF EXHIBITIONS

MICHIGAN

RE

TELEPHONE

CO.

�vw» ■ntwrna dannkb. thubsday, khmndb.

Mias Bertha Milter. who has been
confined to her bod for some Ume.
was taken to the University hospi­
tal at Ann Arbor on Tuesday for
observation. Her nxither. Mrs. Belle
Miller, and sister, Mra. Alma Dur­
Howard Martin, who furnished
ham, accompanied her.
school bus transportation for the
Hastings High school students of
tn Middleville recently to see the this locality and on the route, has
new granddaughter, bom to Mr. and been employed nftln this year for
Mrs. Howard Getty of Middleville. the work. One new bug to to serv­
ice and tha one used but year. Car­
She wUl be called Joan Klien.
Harold Case, who has been work­ ol Miller, Lucille Oole and Hva Maning at hto brother, Clayton Case's lay of the Brian district entered
More, finished his time Baturday this year and Leola Cortright to a
ulght, He will be succeeded by sophomore.
The Union Cemetery organisation
Cllfiord Lee of Battle Creek, who
has been Ln training the past week.

Mr. and Mra. Harrison BJoeher
wore Bunday guest* of Mr. and Mra.
Prod Buckingham in Middleville.
Bev. and Mn. Harley Townsend
IQUTHWMT WOODLAND.
spent Sunday afternoon In Grand
Mr. end Mra Owen Smith spent Rapids.
Marvin Kanlner suffered a pain- |
the week end and over Labor Day
in tne north visiting the Straits and ful injury Tuesday when the trap
door in the granary came down and
other places of interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kantner struck him on the forehead.
and sons ot Baton Rouge. I*., who
have been visiting relatives hare for
two weeks, toft Bunday morning for
| thMr. and Mrs^Btephen Perrin and

-----

faiafWaw
SALE PRICES ‘s^Um

/V Great Fa// Display

Ums HARDWARE fair
ANNOUNCEMENT

COMI!—WARDS INVITE YOU—ond you—to Courte­
sy Night. during WARDS HARDWARE FAIR, owning
thia week. Plenty of interestiai remoaatrationa of the
newest fell merchendiae — heating stern, hunting
equipment, tools, washing machinal, furnaces, pressure
cookers and many other lines.

3000 u*
AUTO JACK

FRIDAY IS THE IIC NIGHTt

OftC
O€&gt;

Rog. 98c. Double acre*
type. Lifts easily—fast •
Gsars turn in grease I

WARDS FAIR
HAWTHORNE BIKE
...;z

EXTRA [QUIPPEDI
Y,t Indued In Prlel

' Hi

^hhsomii

Delta electric light and

horn-

Steel Tape. 6 Pt Flexible,
rigid tap* Polished steel
caoe. Buy now!

to *!S

AND GET WARD

24«a

RIFLE ACTIO

Nw-Cota Varnish

GoHm

rodeoed to

OQ
O&lt;&gt;

11.19 value I For iaeldo
woodwork and furniture.

WARDS FAIR

WARDS FAIR

WARDSj

I FAIR '

REPUTING SHOTGUN-WARDS FAMOUS

Cast-iron saves fuel!

“Western Field”

lOM-in. ekiDet,
Ineide highly
poliehed and
ground. A Ward
value and saving.

23“»

»*«.SbllMSe«
6i4-7%-10«/rK.

SenaarioMlJ

!m 1,70

Chicken Fryer, If-la ■

Sp.1.1-

90 lb. Slate Surface roofi/g.
Covers 100 eq. ft Color fasti
Resists fire.

It Compmm with

A *90 RANGE
520 lbs of massive cast iron strength.
Eatra-weight and axtra-strangth In
every part Thrilllngly modern,
balanced design! LoetroUs full por­
celain, triple coateA easy to clean.

WARDS FAIR

DOWN

puts it In your
bitchon

.WARDS tor SAViRGS t&gt; 8TDVY1

—

GUARANTEE*
TUBES AT CUT PRICES
alvsrtlS*
Rambtere
Ward! shoppers paid
11.40 for other wallknown brande of the
tame weight-thickness
and elaaticltyl Slice
for all tiree proportion­
ately reduced I Hurry I

THAT IS

Label

Satfe* Fmt

WARDS SOAP CHIPS. Finest quality of famom maker. Yet too what you save-by buying
thia 22 os. package with the ward Isbell

WartoeBoap YMto -J for 25c
White Naptha Soap. 19 for 25c

WARDS FAIR
Team Harness
BIDUeiO 90%

Wards 1937 Airlines

Nationally Advertised Products!

Wfertlw

REVOLUTIONIZING RADIO

White Floating Soap. 1 for Sc
Warth Cleanser--------S fee 1e

Awards

An 18’x3(T enameled Hat
rim aink .,. . Built-In type
... at an amaxing price I

(WARDS.

fair

No numbers to remember, or
forget! Tune your station by
letter, or city (or wave length)
just aa you prefer I Letters to
big you can tune eunding up!
Choose from all three wave
bands, by touching a button.

B-Tnbe Console
Low.n prU.d Mwi. DUICorwoUI Two.p—1 .mi., m.J&lt;h« 4U1 i plMUr. lo UM. Th. &lt;rth»* m

hljh 4d.U,,r Chrem. plmd.

d»w..

ONLY 1100 DOWN—tar P^tat,

PHONE 2691

HASTTKGS, MICH.

US S JEFFERSON ST.

PHON! W»t

4

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, iPTOOn If, ItM
Library.
I
Activities.
,
_______________
MIDDLEVILLE.
nesday tart 800 bushels were takeh
The Library Commission is asking
activity program was presentA party from Detroit is working
erenoo. who Ire. Loon lo plnre I J* &lt;• .JiKknre MrexUr M U Ure
,
I. Ire,. . Mock of
Lightning played some peculiar
return them No more books will be desire of the faculty to have every “eur
' ‘7' 8
lease a uiocx or
given put until all are returned and I •tudchl enter at least home room certain sections’ of land on which tricks around here, one man had
the Library Commission makes new jnnd one oth«r activity. Hie list of ‘ to prospect for oil. It Is several years the milk stool kicked out from un­
der him and two cows knocked
arrangements for the year.
/
activities follows: Art. Hl-Y.F. F. A- s|nce a wildcat well was driven a few down. No fire resulted, however, and
4-H Club. Home Ec. club. Home
....
neither of the two men In the barn
room. Hobby Club. Science Club. struck and then it was a banded. We was injured.
School was closed Friday and the
Commercial Department.
I
Boys and Girls M Club. T. K. j Hope this co. will find oil if they
teachers attended
the
Kellogg
Last spring when enrollments were
Lightning struck a garage of An­
Trumpet,
Junior
Orchestra,
Senior
Teachers Decampment at Clear lake made for the school year 1036-37.
i .should make the attempt.
drew Wieringa on Grand Rapids
I During the storm Friday evening street, tearing off some siding and
where they were entertained from 25 signed up for bookkeeping but on Band.
5:00 o'clock Thursday untd Satur­ the first day of school the class
lightning
struck
the
targe
barn
on
I
making
quite a bole in the building.
ROBINHUE PARK.
day afternoon.
numbered 50. This made it neces­
Mr. Sewery and Mrs. Eva Manker j lhe Z. F. Windes farm southeast of I John A. Loftus has been hired by
sary to order more books for the’ of Grand Rapids spent Thursday town and burned it and adjoining
the officers of the Pleasant Hill dis­
Gym. Floor Reflnished.
course and. to hold two sections
buildings
to
tiie
ground,
although
tiie
trict to transport their pupils to
। with Mr. and Mrs. George Poland.
The gym. floor lias been sanded of lhe class.
| Callers al the Kollar home the fire departments from here and Has­ school here.
Athktlrt
PWt week wcrc Mr- *nd Mrs‘ Otto tings answered the call. Both of the
Lionel Baird and family of Grand
school and community. Thb makes
«
, .u ?■ u .
.
.
Kunde of Freeport. Mr. and Mrs. sons were In the bam mllkbig but Rapids spent lhe week end with his
Uie floor space of, 3,600 sq. ft. avail­
New football helmets and suits Albert
of Lansing. Will John- neither was Injured lo any extent parents here.
.„dare.h.
-------------| Mn Q|
MfJ Mar&lt;ret and the live stock was gotten out
have arrived and the boys
en-------­
able for games and recreation.
thusiastic. Coach Smnlley and Van Baker and Mrs. Teno Batey.
|i safely. Much of Uie farm machinDKLTON.
New High School Library.
Syckle have begun field work. The I Howard Smith Is showing his cot­ cry was burned as well as the sea­
Everyone went to the fair. We
son's hay. a heavy loss to Mr. Win­
The Board of Education has pur­ games for the season are as follows: tie at Hartford fair this week.
think it was truthfully advertised
des.
’
chased tables and chairs for lhe I Sept. 18. Martin,.here. 2:30,
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Potts of Grand
this lime as lhe biggest and best
Oct. 2, Nashville, there, 2:30.
Senior High school library where
Rapids were Sunday callers ot Mr.
The Barry fair was well patronized
Oct, 9. Lake Odessa, here. 3:30.
lliere arc reference books for the
and Mrs. Julian PotLs.
by the people from this vicinity and
Congratulations are extended lo
use of students. The pupils appreOct. 23. Caledonia, there. 3:00.
Miss Lucille Smith of Battle all reports are to the effect that it
Oct. 30. BeldUig. here. 2:30.
elate this new system which Is in
Creek spent lhe week end with her was one of the best fairs ever held. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Spanable of Owos­
Nov. 6. State High. here. 3:30.
keeping with lhe best that any
parents, Mr.
Howard .
A large amount of pickles are be­ so on the arrival of twin daughters
school bos to offer to its pupils.
' Nov. 20, Wayland, here. 2:30.
Smith.
ing delivered here of late; on Wed- in a hospital in Grand Rapids one
day last week. Mrs. Sponable was
formerly Miss Avis Mlles of Delton.
Mrs. Ray Howard and daughter.
May Belle, of Ackers* Point have
moved Into Mrs. Nina Ware's cot-

Thornapple - Kellogg
School Notes

body put oh It.

SOUTH BO1VNE.

1

V M C * rrrssa
* • M. V. A. ITEMS

Walter Duffy and family of Grand I
daughter. Kathryn, went to Marcel­ Rapids visited Sunctay al the Cram1
lus Sunday to attend a family re­ er home.
Will Mishler and family visited
‘
Lena
faU camP for leaders
Mrs Cllsta Ray spent a part of their mother, Mrs. L
*na ’Mishler, of
last week with friends in Hastings.! Logan 8und,
&gt;- afUr
’‘oon
Sunday
afternoon.
and Hl-x officers in the nature of
tL*"‘ •'“&gt;
U&gt; Huiln., :
,
*n imuiuu wu ireu u u» V remp
Too much
rein now ~
L&gt; M in.
o,
«■£
- ----------“ ■ t^gchen
nion growers.
(rowers.
Friday
. te affair wu directed by Ray
onion
| Friday.
* uunj.
Inhni
Slain
v
-a___
Johns,
Slate
Y Secretary
for town
No one around Delton was lucky ! Marshall Hyde and family of Port
and country work, assisted by carl
enough to draw a new car at the fair ■ Huron and Mrs. Margaret Camtaky
but the Delton Garden Club got five ' md husband of Lansing called at Metzger of Kent county Y, also War,
tan McCall, principal of Charlotte
premiums out of fifteen entries and will Pardee's home Monday,
high school. E. Taylor of Hastings
the Delton Extension Group drew
-L __re----- .. _ - .
. .
high school. Wm. Carmichael of
fourth ptace on their exhibit of col- Indiana over lhe week end.
Middleville high achool. C- J. Bar­
Mr. and Mrs. Will Cosgriff of num of Delton high school and F.
The Delton-W. K. Kellogg Agri­ Lowell spent Sunday with Jennie W. James of East Grand Rapids
cultural school will open lhe school Pardee.
high school, a Rector of Comstock
year Ln the new building Monday,
A targe number attended the Has­ Park. Mrs. C. J. Barnum and Mrs.
September 21. The building will not tings fair from this neighborhood W. F. Duddles of Delton assisted
be entirely computed, but will be
Mrs. Angell with lhe cooking on
so that the most of the rooms will
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Chrlslopel of Sunday. Rev. Rlgelman of Middle­
be acceptable for use. The leaching Indiana and son. James, of Clarks­ ville was the Saturday evening
staff will be C. J. Barnum, Supt. ville were Sunday guests of Elmer
speaker. T. 8. K. Reid gave Instruc­
teaching agriculture; w. J. Duddles. Shaffer. Other callers were Mr. and tions in archery and George Aten in
Prln.. teaching science; Miss Mary Mrs. Paul Kauffman, and family of
E. Roush, home economics; R. G. pleasant Valley. Roy. Edna and Vel­
Sheathelm. manual training and ma Berkey and Homer Overholt of
An interesting event to lake place
mathematics; Miss Loretta Magner, Clarksville.
this fall Li the annual Bute Older
Latin,and English; R. a. Dunnavan.
Boys* conference to be held at Pon­
music and social science; Miss Agnes
BANFIELD.
tiac Thanksgiving week end. Dr.
Blllvln. 6th grade; Mrs. Helen Cor­
Ted Darling and family will soon Frank Sluts is one of lhe main
win. 4th and Sth grades; Mra. Ella
speakers and he alone would make
Rogers 2nd and 3rd grades: Mrs. occupy the tenant house on lhe the meetings worth the cost.
Lettie Kahler 1st grade and kinder­ Stile's farm north of Banfield.
The Barry county fair was well
garten. Elwyn Hayward ta the custo­
ing school year.
STONY POINT.
attended by residents of this vi­
Mrs. Ella
Rogers
entertained dian.
cinity. The drawing of the automo­
Mrs. John Morgan is recovering
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Duddles are biles was a great factor.
Tuesday
evening honoring* her
nicely from her recent auto acci­
daughter's. Mrs. Boyse Leonard's, living in lhe Henton cottage at Wall
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Doty will mo­ dent.
take. Mr. Duddles comes from Sher­ tor to Oklahoma and other western
birthday.
Ed. Deakin and family spent La­
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wertman wood lo Delton as principal ot the stales accompanied by Mrs. Doty's bor Day vacation with relatives hi
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. new Agricultural school.
sister. Mrs. Dell Mosher, who re­ Chicago.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
c.
J.
Barnum
and
Earl Burdick at Fine take.
sides in the west and has been
Mrs. Stauffer of Grand Rapids
Ross Waters drove the chassis of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Duddles altend- visiting for some time in Michigan. has been visiting at tiie home of
Tiie farmers In this vicinity are Mra. John Hiding for a few days.
Wayne, Ind., last week to luive tiie C. A. camp at Stuart lake Sunday.
greatly hindered in their fall work
In our opinion the Barry counly
by the targe amount of rainfall. The fair was the best yet.
pastures have been greatly beneEd. Deakin was called lo Lansing
filtad however.
last Wednesday because of the seri­
We understand Rev. Exner lias ous condition of hta brother, who
been assigned again to lhe M. E.
churches of Banfleld and Dowling. lory. The brother died Friday and
We wish him a successful year.
funeral services were held on Mon­
.
The house occupied by lhe Central day.
Telephone Co. is receiving a new
Ed. Deakin has moved to Has­
coal of paint, lhe work being done tings.
Kalamazoo, Michigan
by SiUrley Norris.
BARRYVII.LE.
I
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
There will be a meeting of/the
Prepares for Every Type of
An all day meeting will take place board of trustees al lhe church'Fri­
Teaching, also offers pro-pro­
at the Wood schoolhouse Saturday, day evening. The c. E. busbiess
September 19. The speakers will be meeting will be held Thursday night
fessional ond pberol Arts
' the Rev. E. L. Crocker of Hastings. at L. A. Day's following choir prac­
Rev. Burkey of Freeport and Rev. tise. Prayer meeting al Mr. and
Courses.
j Fields of Middleville, who will also Mrs. Samuel Geiger's Tuesday eve­
: bring a group of young people to ning.
bring messages In song and must.
Miss Marjorie Gillett of Muskegon
A youthful, energetic and growing
The service will begin al 10 A. M. was home for lhe Labor Day holi­
and last through the evening. Pot day.
Imtilution with modern buildings
Our teacher, Miss Myrtle Wilson,
luck dinner al 1 o'clock.
and equipment and with carefully
attended the teachers' encampment
at Clear lake Friday and Saturday
CEDAR CREEK.
selected and efficient Instructors.
Mrs. Lizzie Campbell Hall of and the children attended the fair.
Washington and Will Campbell of There are fourteen children enrolled
Nebraska are visiting relatives and in our rural achool.
Friends of Mrs. Elsie Childs, a
friends here.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Campbell have former resident, will be sorry to hear
moved into the Skidmore house that she is very ill and in Ute hos­
pital at Hastings.
north of Hinds Corners.
Mrs. E. H. Lathrop is slowly gain­
Mrs. Agnes Hammonds of Aurora.
Hl., and Thurlow Carpenter of Chi­ ing and able to sit up part of the
cago arc spending this wecfi with time.
Miss Dora Day goes to M. 8. C.
Complete Information and calaMr. and Mrs. Ardy Owen.
E. E. Calms of Barryvllle and East Lansing. Tuesday to begin her
Miss Gladys Cairns of Baltimore studies there. She is taking a course
township spent the week end with in home economics, majoring in die­
Paul V. Sangren, President
Lloyd Owen and family. Mr. and tetics. Her mother and stater expect
John C. Hoekje, Registrar.
Mrs. Clarence calms and Mias Hazel to go there a little later to live.
People have been busy attending
Calms of Hastings spent Sunday
frelre
-- - *
afternoon at the Owen home.
Mrs. Gay Skinner of Chicago visit­
ed from Friday till Sunday at the
wm Hyde s.
Mr. and Mrs. Olan Foster. Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Foster and family
spent the week end at Heber Foster's
and attended the fair to see the tat­
ter's daughter. Norma, who was one
of the "Sweethearts on Review.** She
returned home with them for two
days when their act is pul on at
Hartford.
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Wilcox spent
Bunday with their son. Kenneth,
and family of Kalamazoo

WESTERN STATE
TEACHERS COLLEGE

o en

FALL TERM

Begins September 21, 1936

aoo

"I Used To Feel Sour E.very
Time I Thought of Winter . . . .
With Drafts Coming Through
Windows and Walls

TIME NOW TO

• BUILD
• REMODEL

• REPAIR
• REROOF

QUIMBY.
Wallace Bl de Iman of Detroit and
Robert Nash ot Hopkins visited
their grandparents last week.
School began here September 6.
with Mrs. Cole as teacher.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bloom enter­
tained Mr. and Mrs. Van Luk«- and
family of Delton Sunday.
Miss Ruth Hoffman of Battle
Creek spent part of last week al her
home here.
E. J. Kellogg of Eaton Rapids and
Miss Velma Kellogg of Kalamaxoo
spent Uie week end with Glenn Kel­
logg and family.
Barry county Fair was well rep­
resented from this community. Now
we are wondering what has become
of the -Barry-Twin Centenary,

• REDECORATE

with the Meter-Miser
FRIGIDAIRE

with

the

METER­

____

MISER meets all five standards for
refrigerator buying—and proves it!

AUTOMATIC, GAS

• INSULATE

GAS RANGES

WATER HEATER

• Cheek for Drafts

Your choice of either the
beautiful A-B or Detroit Jewel
Gas Ranges.

• Foster Freezing . . . More Ice
More Usability

Five-Year Protection Plan
Over one and one-half million, more

• Full Porcelain Finish
• Automatic Oven Control

• Full Insulation

nuke.

Yau can’t go wrong!

$1.79 Down Installs It!

• Automatic Lighting

... and gives you trouble-free

• Large Warming Ovens and
Storage Compartment

automatic water heating for
y&lt; ar- lo come. Over 100 have

Frigidaires in use than any other

$3.00 Down, 36 Moe. on Balance

Preslo Chan go! Make an Au­
tomatic Gas Water Heater out
of your old tank.

Lower Operating Costs

Safer Food Protection

5

A-Bor DETROIT JEWEL

Regular Value, $94.50

been installed in Hastings

Harvest Special, $79.50

this year.

CONSUMERS POWER CO

"But Now Our House is Proof
Against Winter's Wind and
Cold. The Home Lumber Co.
Has Given Our House A Good
Going Over, Insulated It, Put
On a Good Roof, Repainted,
and Put it in Shape for Winter.

cm

TELI
M

SAW

Look
pie

Bpol
July I

grown
the se
ton. L
thorou
Sltuat
seven

dred
only f
dustria
mines
ecu. a
to pu
both t
laln^i
In lhe
resort
ful dr:
We
of Sp&lt;
lines u

and w
about
(Co

COU
au

The
tion w
room
day:
clrcul
ment

count;
ventia
intere
rolhei
comm
order
lhe
chalrr
Uiat

secom
motio
Tied,
vllle.
Ury.
gan in
credet
lectrd
zatior
mitte&lt;

pears
rrsolu
mostl'
New 1
for II
the s

ports
tion i
The

living

namei
and e
It nec
result
gates
Del.
ner,
count:
Prank
Stuart

Cook:
Lestei
Feigh.
Mohle
The

Wood
town:
Olenr
tens.
Prairl
Chari
and A
ship.

• REPAINT

FRIGIDAIRE

EIGI

REDUCED

BUS FARE

remat
rolhei
the p
cans
An

To Grand Rapids
Now
Only

$130

■ ROUND
-"-TRIP!

organ
in th
voters
and v
Thl
conve

4 BUSES DAILY

LOCAL BUS DEPOT

THE HOME LUMBER CO

TRIO CAFE

HASTINGS "Uts Home Lumber Co. Builde Homa' PHONE 2276

Him,. 2137, Hu|Im&gt;

Bee
Sarah
will b
deme
Reed
list a
other
beds
vacuu
full P

�</text>
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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

CITY OF SEATTLE
F NALLY REACHED

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24,1936

14 PAGES

STATE CHAMPIONS

ple's Money—May Ruin
Salmon Industry

Barry County 4-H Livestock Judging Team which took first place in the
Slate Livestock Judging Contest al the Michigan Slate Fair.
TOP ROW:—Albert Bell. Richard Wallace. Co. Agri. Agent Foster.1 BOTTOM ROW:—Aden Campbell. Kenneth Dunn.
Barry County’s 4-H Livestock Every year since starting club work
Judging team look first place in the these boys have applied tiiemseives
State Livestock
rjvestock jJltalna
contest neui
held 10
* “ndrr County
AgeRl
State
jtiugmg central
&lt;ndwor
lhflr
dub kK|eiW
at the Michigan State fair. This Is Two year,
RlCh*rd Wallace and
the first time a Barry county team Albert Bell attended the state fair
has won this high honor according a* member* of a team from Barry
to Harold J. Foster. Barry County county. They were not good enough
Agricultural Agent. The team was to win then but they were willing to
made up of Albert Bell of Nashville, study two more year* to fit themRtchard Wallace of Bedford. Aden selves for the first place team In the
Campbell of Middleville and Ken- state.
nelh Dunn of Hasting*.
' —
Both Aden and Dunn •hove re­
In winning this honor the boys ceived considerable help from Clare
will be awarded a trip to the Inter­ Williams of Irving township, leader
national Livestock show tn Chicago of the Pleasant Hill Livestock club.
. tn December. Here the boy* will be Dunn also had some good training
' in competition against 4-H Livestock under T. N. Knopf, head ot agricul­
team* from the other State*. The tural studies at the Hasting* High
- -boys will be I.'
In Chicago about n
a week
school.
visiting the slock show, stock yard*,
Bell and Wallace have been study­
packing plants. International Har­ ing with County Agent Foster for
vester Co., mall order houses, radio the past six years. Four years ago
stations and other points of interest they took part in a state meet for
in Chicago. This trip is one greatly the first lime but were not quite
desired by every livestock club mem­ good enough to take the honors.
ber in Michigan.
Two years ago they had another
These boys have been working chance to compete but turned it
hard on livestock Judging for several down because they did not think
years to attain their skill In this they were quite ready. Both have
work. Richard Wallace and Albertdone
,.
considerable outside study.
Bell started In 4-H Club work six | The team is now pointing toward
years ago when county Agent Foster the national meet. Here they will
came to Barry county. Aden Camp- meet
— the top •lot of the 4-H Clubs In
•
bell and Keiuieth Dunn started 4-H this country. Naturally they are go­
Livestock Club work f^ur years ago. ing to do their best to win.
I

The Republican county conven­
tion wn* called to meet in the court
room in this city at 11 A. M.. Tues­
day; but a trial was in progress In
circuit court so that an adjourn­
ment to the American Legion Home
was necessary.
Every township* and ward In the
county was represented al the con­
vention and there was a splendid
interest manifested. Dr. Frank Carrolher*. chairman of the county
committee, called the convention to
order, read the call and suggested
the nomination of a temporary
chairman
A delegate proposed
DEMOCRATS HOLD
that Dr. Carrother* be the tempo­
THEIR CONVENTION
rary chairman
The motion was
seconded, and a delegate put the
motion which was unanimously car­
Elect Delegates to State
ried. Len W Feighner. of Nash­
Meet— Endorse Present
ville. was made temporary' secre- •
tary. Committees on permanent or­
Administration
CO. CANVASSERS ENDED
ganization and order of buslne.js.
The democratic county convention
credentials and resolutions were se­
THEIR LABORS ON
was held In the supervisors' rqom of
lected. The committee on organi­
the courthouse on Monday evening
SATURDAY
zation and order of business sub­
of tnta week, in the absence of the
mitted about the usual plan which
county chairman. Dr. John Wooton.
was unanimously adopted. A list MOST VOTES CAST
Lynn Brown was made teinjxjrary
of delegates to the convention ap­
FOR CONGRESSMAN chairman. The convention selected
pear* elsewhere In this issue The
as delegate* to the state convention
resolutions were short and confined
Louis B. Ward Asks a Re­ Dr. Birge C. Swift of Middleville. A.
mostly to reasons for defeating the
Lynn Brown and George H. Myers
count of His Votes for
New Deal al the November election
of Hastings. The alternate* chosen
for the benefit of the country and
were Forrest Babcock. Nashville.
U. 8. Senator
the safe-guarding of the interests
The county canvassers, consisting Mr*. E J. Pratt and Mrs. Fred Steb­
of Its people The committee re­
Probate judge Stuart Clement. bins of this city.
ports were given after the convcn- of
1
R seems that the democratic state
County
Clerk
Allan
c.
Hyde
and
tlon reassembled In the afternoon. 1
Treasurer L F. Maus com- headquarters had announced that
The state convention, which Is County
1
democratic
county
committees
to be held In Grand Rapids, could I6eted their labors on Saturday. Fol­
should
pay the democratic state cen­
be attended with ease by anyone 1 wing are the official figure* for the
tral committee *2.00 for each deleliving In Barry county. According- 1two parties:
to county conventions, , and
ly when the list of voting precincts
Republican.
00 each for delegates to the state
was called, there were twenty-five Governor.
&lt;
convention. This matter was debat­
names proposed for eleven delegates
Frank D. Fitzgerald 2.687
ed In the convention, but no defi­
and eleven alternates. That made
Roscoe C- Fitch
nite decision was reached.
It necessary to order a ballot, as a
Geo. M. Welsh
10
The committee on resolution*
result of which the following dele­
brought In a report endorsing the
gates and alternates were named:
Total .2.826
administration of President Roose­
Delegates: Hon. Ellis E. Faulk- 1Lieutenant Governor.
velt. also the state and county can­
ner. Delton: Clyde Wilcox, city:
Luren D. Dickinson
1812
didates and urged the complete
county clerk. Allan C. Hyde; Dr.
Thomas Read
764
organization of the county for cam­
Frank Carrothers; Judge of probate.
paign purposes.
Stuart Clement; prosecuting attor­
Total
2.670
ney. Archie McDonald; Richard iUnited States senator
IMPORTANT TO EVERY VOTER.
Cook; Miss Rachel Caln. Rutland;
Wilber M- Brucker
Lester Brumm. Woodland; Len W,
James Couzens .
Feighner. Nashville, and Mrs. J. P.
Louis B. Ward
Mahler of Irving.
The alternates were: Paul Faulk­
TotalT ...
..
2.878
ner. Middleville: E. O. Smith. 1Representative in Congress.
Woodland; Feed Stevens. Johns­
Clare E. Hoffman 1.870
town: Adelbert Oortright. Hastings;
Felix Racette 1.018
Glenn Swift, Assyria: John Mar­
H. T. Dewhlrsl 148
tens. Maple Grove: Charles Hughes,
the city hall any day between eight
Prairieville; Ed Babbitt. Freeport;
Total
.3.037
Charles Van Vranken. Baltimore, State
t
Senator.
for registration will be Saturday, Ocand A. D. Lowell of Hastings town­
Earl L. Burnhans
1.731
ship.
Frank O. Mosier .
A rattling good talk was given
by Representative Faulkner. The
.2574
Total
remark* of the chairman. Dr. Car- .Judge of Probate.
rother*. were very timely, urging
Stuart Clement
.2.266
the pulling together of the republi­
Laurence K Barnett
. 756
cans of the county for the benefit
AN APPRECIATION.
not only of the county ticket but
.3622
Total
I deeply appreciate the votes and
the state and national tickets.
&lt;
County
Treasurer.
support given ma at the primary
An Interesting reixirt was made
George A. Clouse
election and wish to thank the vot­
by Mrs. John C. Ketcham on the
Walter Fisher ...
ers of Barry county for their favor*.
work which the women's republican
Wm. C- Strain ..
. 842
Now that the nomination has been
organization has done and Is doing
given me I will be thankful for every
in the way of contacting women
Total
.2.726
voters and urging them to register jRegister of Deeds.
November 3.1 have given my best to
and vote.
Vernor Webster
1.767
the service of Barry county as your
This was the snappiest county
Maurice Waters
816
probate Judge and will alm io serve
convention held here in many yean.
acceptably all the people if elected.
• 2583
Total ..........................
Stuart clement.
Democratic.
Probate judge.
—Adv.
Governor.
DELTON SCHOOL
Geo. M. Welsh
OPENED MONDAY.
Frank Murphy
The new Delton-Kellogg school
EST. SARAH ROGERS.
Uecausc of the death of Mrs.
was opened Monday. Work on the
1475
Total ....................
interior of the building has not been
Sarah Rogers, her personal property Lieutenant Governor.
will be sold at- auction at her resi­
entirely
finished, but enough ha*
Henry C. Olasner ..
dence. 209 W. Mill St. with Dewey
been completed so that part of the
Reed as auctioneer, included In the
room* can be occupied. It Is a fine
Leo J. Nowicki ...
list are a davenport, rockers and
school building and 1* greatly ap­
Cha*. F. Hernan*
138
other chairs, buffet, tables, bookcase,
preciated by the people of Delton
beds and bedding, clock, heatrola.
and the surrounding country.
Total 113
vacuum cleaner, electric fan and
(Continued on page 6. Bee. 1)
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
other' electric fixtures, lamps, rugs.
Delton. Bat, Eve, Bckler's Orth.
Spotlight October 8. Save ths
date.—Adv.
full particulars.

PRIMARYELECTION
OFF CIAL FIGURES

Ste

One Auction Sale

American Legion and Auxil­
iary Go to Benton Har­
bor Bunday

al the coffee urn
I
'
o’clock, price 60 cents. Reservations
Report* were given by the town- ' ENTERTAINED AT COUN­
ship chairmen on the enrollment'
TDV PI HD CATIIDGAV should be made in advance with
work that lias been .done and later |
InT LLUU oAlunUAT Comrade Dauchy, care Hotel Vin­
cent.
a iiuiiuu irpmi wiu picscuwru
it is hoped there may be a large
Civic Players Plan "Fund" the county convention In session at Played Goll On the Local
the Legion home.
'I
~
-attendance
-------------------as--Legion
------------------------officer* will
...—
be
Course
and Enjoyed- a
So All Children May
elected and several other matter* of
Additional sectional chairmen.
Fine
Luncheon
Importance
are up for discussion.
Mrs
Ernest
Smith
and
Mrs.
J.
P
See the Play
Reports
of
the
Department
and
Molilei. were named to work with
„
A great bunch of fellows! Hastings
To save lime and shifting of,■ Mrs. Bert Brown, and another chair- had the honor Saturday of enter- National conventions are to be given
scenery the staff of the Hastings man for the southeastern part of tabling 40 or 50 men. high up in .----also.
Civic Players I* presenting for the the county will be named later.
railroad circles, and the great ma- 1 Department Commander Cox has
first time a two-story stage setting
IL was decided that the present jorlly of our citizens were not even 1 been Invited to attend and Finance
Al) will remember that In the fa­ officers should continue in office un- aware of their presence It isn't oft- Officer Tatman will give his report,
miliar story of the “Bleeping til the annual meeting in April.
. en that a city of this size has the! Auxiliary reports are also scheduled.
Beauty” the fair princes* climbs up
——
«••
— -•
—*— —
J-- Bauer
and Unit
distinction
of khaving
such a --------groupI । Laurence
—-------- ..
---------Post
— --------------•...
t
into a dusty attic where the wicked
I with'n Ils limit*.
I »111 be we» represented at
old witch sits at her spinning wheel
I The occasion was the annual | convention, it is expected.
among the cobwebs disguised as an
' meeting of the Freight Claim Agents
old woman and hands the princess
,of the leading railroads of the |
the fatal spindle which pricks her
, country. In business and railroad •
finger and produces the century of
circles these men are not only well!
sleep from which she is awakened
I known, but highly regarded. The[
by the kiss of the dashing young
I annual
annual meeting
was really
really hem
held in
in
PinWT
RFHPTVF
PIN
AT
pa
'
mg was
prince. Because of the spacious ac­ EIGHT RECEIVE FINAL PA- j Battle Cmeet
reek Uie prevlous evening.
commodation* of the Central audi­
but tn deference to col.'Tyden and
PERS IN CIRCUIT
torium the patrons of the local
Clarence Crawford of the Interna­ ALL MUST BE USED FOR
play will see the princess start up
COURT HERE
tional Seal Ai Lock Co., which sup­
the stair* and then the drapes
HIGHWAY AND STREET
plies these railroads with car seals,
trimming the top of the stage set­
the meeting was adjourned to the
WORK
ting will rise and disclose the attic GERMAN SUBJECT
Hasting* country Club. A delicious
room above.

3 MATINEES PLANNED
FOR “SLEEPING BEAUTY'

Looks Like Waste of Peo­

Full Harmony

FOURTH DISTRICT
CONVENTION MEETS

OF MANY OF THE LEADING
INNOVATION WILL SAVE
The Fourth District meeting of
The Republican women's organl- j
zatton met on Tuesday, luncheon be- |
RAILROADS OF THE
the American Ixulon and Auxiliary
TIME, SHIFTING OF
will be held al Benton Harbor on
Ing served in the Methodist church •
COUNTRY
SOENERY
pallors. Mr*. Nellie Cross presided.1
Bunday. Sept. 27.‘Dinner will be

COAST CITY

All Townships Represented
■
' —Meet Proceeds With

'OFFICIALS ANO
1
CLAIMAGENTS

Republican Women Met on,
Tuesday at Methodist
I
Church *

SAW GRAND COULEE DAM
—TO COST $168,000,000

COUNTY REPUBLICANS
HOLD CONVENTION

ON ENROLLMENT

SEI FOB M — -■■■

TELL OF SPECTACULAR
MARINE PARADE AT

Spokane. Washington. Wednesday
July 15. 2881 miles.
In the last fifty years Spokane has
grown from a few pioneer cabins to
the second largest city in Washing­
ton. Il is a very beautiful and
thoroughly modern Industrial city.
Situated on the Spokane river, wijh
seven hydro-electric plants which
have a capacity of nearly two hun­
dred thousand horsepower, it not
only furnishes power for Ils own In­
dustries but oi*ratc* surrounding
mines and extensive Irrigation proj­
ect*. as well as furnishing the power
to pull transcontinental trains over
both the Rocky and cascade mountainaranges. It is beautifully situated
in the heart of the mountain lake
resort region and has many beauti­
ful drives within it* own limit*.
We had quite a time getting out
of Spokane, as these western trunk
lines are not well marked like those
"bf Michigan and the middle west;
and when we came to the first sign,
about thirty miles out of town, we
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)

13683629

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

SEVERAL!1

NEXT
WILL REPRE1RNT
PARTIES IN COUNTY
OONVEMTIOMB

DELEGATES SHOULD
’
PRESERVE THESE LISTS
Democrats Failed to Name
Delegates in Nine of

25 Precincts
An important duty of the voters
at a primary election is the nalnln&lt;
of delegate* to future county con­
vention* which will be held for Um

primary, on all the primary ballots
the spaces for delegates to county
conventions are left blank, to the

FIFO

COUNH RECEIVES
A $20,137 CHECK

to citizenship
IS REPATRIATED

The county fair and the opening
of school delayed the beginning of Number Also File Tbeir Pe­
rehearsals, so at the present time
titions Asking for Natthe hard-working cast is devoting
four nights a week to the prepara­
nralixation
tion of the romantic story ot the
The naturalization of foreignbeautiful princess and the cruel
witch. Following is the complete
American citizens is always impres­
sive. The largest number of such
their appearance on the stage: Dr.
naturalizations
granted In this
Mouslashe, the prime minister. Buncounty in many years was In the
Dennison: Hilda, the palace cook,
circuit court here on Wednesday of
mother of Dagmar. Irloa Smith;
last week. Thue admitted to citi­
Magnus, the palace man-of-allzenship were William Tilmarsh and
work. George Aten: Beeda. **■
the
“
lodge-keeper's
wife.
Marceline his brother. Clark, of Nashville, for­
mer British subjects; Adam j. LeinCampbell: King Rex. the
. . jovial
hart of Orangeville, also a former
monarch. Tom Myers: Queen HeBritish subject; John Misac of Mid­
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
dleville.
Czecho-Slovaklan;
Mrs.
Nettle Viola Neward of Orangeville,
former British subject; Mrs. Angellea Clemens, route 4. Hastings, former British subject; Mrs. Winifred
Janson of Hastings, farmer German
subject; and Myron IC- Altman of
Hastlngs.
Hastings. former^
i ormer British
nnusn subject,
suoject.
« Volweiler
— &gt;------of• ...
jui. ­
Mr*. ----------Emma OMiddle
MISS YVONNE TREGO NOW ville. who was born in Adrian.
Michigan, but married a German in
STATIONED AT CHEY­
1823 was repatriated. Her husband
died in 1833
ENNE, WYO.
Petition for citizenship was filed
by Henry p. Janson. Hastings, who
AIRPLANES FLY 100
was born in Mecklenberg. Germany.
HOURS A MONTH Mrs Janson was admitted to citizen­
ship on Wednesday. Mr. Janson is
Make 1,000 Mile Trip From the blind musician who plays on the
streets here nearly every day,
Chicago to Cheyenne in
Mr*. Estelle May Titmarsh. Nash­
ville. route 2. wife of William ■Tit­
About Six Hours
Hastings friends will be interested marsh who was admitted to citizen­
ship.
has also filed her petition. She
in hearing from Miss Yvonne Trego,
who is hostess on one of the planes was bom in Ohio but married a
of the United Airlines. She is hav­ British subject and so has to be
• .
ing a wonderful experiejtqe and repatriated.
Amo* Henry Clemens. 76. route 4
writes interestingly of her work, as
Hastings, husband of Mr*. Angelica
follows:
Clemens,
who
was
naturalized
Wed
­
Cheyenne. Wyoming,
nesday and who was a former Brit­
Tuesday, Sept. 15.
ish subject, was bom In Waterloo,
Dear Hastings Friends:
Canada.
Clemens
came
to
Detroit
in
I'm afraid as a correspondent I
wouldn't be in Class A. though I 1865.
Mrs. Minnie Baker. 73. Middleville,
have started a letter to you several
times with the usual interruptions who was born in Collingwood. Can­
ada. married Joshua D. Baker in
before it was half finished.
Because I am the youngest girl on 1825. has filed her petition for Amer­
my division I was chosen to move ican citizenship.
Mr* Jennie Smith. 48. of this elty,
out here to Cheyenne temporarily to
replace a senior girl recently trans­ who was bom in Beith. Scotland,
ferred to the coast. I made a hur­ and who came to America with her
ried trip home last Sunday, then husband in 1823. has filed a petition
rushed back, packed and came out for citizenship. Her husband was
granted such citizenship In February
here last night.
Don't quite know what news or of this year.
This is the largest number of nat­
information would be of interest to
you. but will try and give you a uralization cases that have come
rough idea of what we do. We fly into thi* county for many years.

FINDSHERWORK
VERY NTE ESTING

for el) the townships and wards,
while the democrats failed to select
any delegates in both Barry pre­
cincts. Carlton. Irving 2nd precinct,
Johnstown. Orangeville. Prairieville.
try Club at noon Saturday by the COUNTY ROAD COMM.'S
Yankee Springs, and in the first
international Seal A- Lock Company,
ward of Hastings.
PORTION $16,252.57
after which the gueste threw off the
Following U the official list of
restraint* of a busy life and ptayed
delegates chosen at the September
golf, cards or whatever their fancies Hastings and Four Villages 15 primary to serve as delegate* to
dictated Those who cared to fish—
their party county convention* for
of Barry County Receive
and there were quite a number who
mend that each of the delegate*
did—were later conveyed to the Ty$3,884.43
den cottage at Gun lake, where they
preserve this list.
fished to their heart's content—with reived this week from the state a
Republican Delegates.
what success we did not learn.
check for 820.137. which is the sec­
Assyria township—William strain
For several years now, these prom­ ond quarter of Barry county's share
and Olen BwifU
inent railroad officials have mode an of the weight tax and the first half
Baltimore—Orlle FUher and Lloyd
annual visit to Hastings and have' year of Barry county's share of that
Gaskill.
expressed their appreciation of the part of the gas tax which is appor­
Barry—Morse Backus. Charles
sincere welcome accorded them and tioned to counties.
Hammond. Art Collison and Ver­
especially the wann-hearted hos­
In accordance with the law one- nor Webster.
pitality with which they have been half of this or 81066850. was trans­
Carlton — Lawrence Farrell and
received. Formality was thrown to ferred to the county rood commis­
the winds and everyone went in for sion to be used tn building and
Castleton—Len W. Feighner. J.
_w
_______________________________
a
good
time. All were charmed with maintaining county roads.
C. McDerby. J. ft. smith. C. E. Ma­
the surpassing beauty of the CounAccording to the taw the re­
1 try Club, the unusual outlook over maining half is distributed between ter. E. H. Lathrop and Ralph De­
vine.
the forested hills and the charming the county, the county's incorporat­
Hastings—John Lipkey and Wal­
golf course. We hope that these gened villages and this city, based on ter Bidclman.
tiemen may continue their “annual
population. The distribution of this
Hope—Jesse Osgood. Bernard Devuju
second half Is as follows:
Golia and George Clouse.
.
At the Country Club, the contest
County Road commission—86,184.Irving—J. E. Bab" —
that created no Uttle interest was
Buehler. C- J. Moore
as to who could walk away with the'
City of Hastings—82J15.il.
Walker.
’Tyden Seal Golf Trophy.” The’
Village of Freeport—8186-27.
Johnstown—Ferd Stevens and Al­
honor of winning this fell to Mr. W.
Village of Woodland—8185.33.
bert Lyons.
J. Hargis, of Detroit, Freight Claim1
Village of Middleville—838683.
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
Village of Nashville—860169.
Samuel Ruckmaatee.
Total—41066850.
Orangeville—Bert
Brown
SSRt
Thia distribution is made under John Klillck.
. Acts 7 and 8 of the Public Acts of
Prairieville—Charles Hughes, 0416
1834. section 5. All this money given Boulter and Floyd She ip.
i to cities and villages must be used
Rutland—Rachel Cain. M W.
। for improving roads or streets.
Stutz and Frank Water*.
Thornapple—P. M. Faulkner. O.
E. Blake, C. A. E. Lund. T. D.
POSTER CONTEST FOR
French and J. D. Dietrich.
TWENTY-FIVE
GROUPS
“
SLEEPING
BEAUTY'
Yankee Springs—Albert GravM
ENROLL FOR EXTEN­
and Gladeon Briggs.
Woodland—Glen Wotring. L- IL
SION COURSE
All School Children Are In­

PERFECT IIC THEIR
onins

LESSONS ON THE “WELL
DRESSED WOMAN”

vited to Enter—Rules

Listed Below

The poster contest, sponsored
among tiw schools of the county and
Miss Eleaor Cramer of M. S. city, by the Hastings Civic Player*,
in connection with their children'*
C. Gives First One or
play, -The Sleeping Beauty.” prom­
October 27-28
ises to be more popular than ever
' Women over the county are show­ before.
ing a real Interest in the Home Ec­
Each year the school children of
onomics Extension courses from the community prepare original
Michigan State College to be offered posters depleting some scene from
this winter. Local groups are per­ the play which the Civic Players
fecting their organizations and ap­ produce—always some favorite old
pointing leaders for the lessons, ac­ fairy legend—and prizes are award­
cording to H. J. Foster. County Ag­ ed the tinners. Remarkable ex­
ricultural
Agent.
Twenty-five amples ot individual originality re­
groups have already enrolled their sult and rorne fine pieces of art work
organizations with Mr. Foster.
are exhibited in the windows along
The main course for the winter State street. Duplicate contests are
about 100 hour* a month, which is
WANTED—A KING.
will be on Second Year Clothing, a conducted in Hastings and all other
about two round trip* a week. The
Hastings Civic Players are look­ follow-up of last year's work. The schools tn the county so that com­
distance from Chicago to Cheyenne
is approximately 1.000 miles and can ing for a king. This role tn the five lessons this year will be on the petition between city and country
be traveled in six hour*. Statistics forthcoming production of "The subject. “The Well Dressed Wom­ schools will not occur.
The rules of the contest are as
show belter time can be made going Sleeping Beauty” is open. It re­ an.” Mias Eleanor Cramer, cloth­
east than west because of the pre­ quires a Jolly. King cole, type of ing specialist of Michigan State fallows:
1. Posters must be not les* than
vailing westerly winds or strong character Interpretation. All Inter­ College, will give the lessons to the
ested
are
requested
to
call
2660
Tom
local
group
leaders.
The
first
les
­
14x16
Inches and must be drawn or
head winds. As you probably know,
the altitude the plane files Is deter­ Myers, originally scheduled for the son will be given on October 27 and mounted upon a backing which will
mined by the weather. The distance part, is leaving soon to take over a 28. and after that a lesson about make them stand upright without
every four weeks.
bending. They must depict some
may be anywhere from 2600 to 12.­ new Job.
The first lesson will study style scene from "The Sleeping Beauty”
000 feet. The motors, however, are
CHICKEN SUPPER.
trends and their adaptation to in­ or exclusively refer thereto.
super-charged for a high altitude,
Thursday night. Sept. 24. Quimby dividual needs both from buying
2. Each poster must contain a
but if It's rough at a higher distance church. 8 P. M-. 35c.—Adv.
new clothes or remodeling clothes legible reference to three items.
(Continued on page 3, Sec. D
of last year.
,-----------------------------------Following lesson*-------------------will
’ The Sleeping BeautyF ’The
AN APPRECIATION.
REV. MARY J. LOEW
To all those who supported me cover colors and lines, accessories.: tings civic Players" and "OCt. 18. 20
COMING OCTOBER 4. so loyally in the recent primary elec­ foundation garments and up-to-. and 21.” These three phrase* may be
The monthly missionary program tion I extend my grateful apprecia­ date construction processes as well • enlarged or altered but ail three
as posture.
■ must appear on the poster to permit
al the Pilgrim Holiness Tabernacle tion and thanks.
This year's lessons will not in- , it to qualify.
has been postponed till Oct. 4 be­ —Adv.
Wm. C.. Strain.
cause of the visit of Rev. Mary J.
elude as much construction work
3. Prises will be awarded tn three
as last year, therefore, five or six ' classes. Junior Class (up to and In­
Loew of Dorr, who is a missionary
more local groups could be accom- j eluding 5lh grade pupils) Lntermeto North Rhodesia. Africa, for the
Pilgrim Holiness church. Miss Loew
modated If new groups wish to cn- diate class (including 6lh, 7th and
• roll.
8th grades) Senior class (Including
services, Sunday. Oct. 4. She will
’ Before a local group can enroll &lt; all High School students). In aach
for the course it I* necessary that | class the first prize will be four reIllustrate her work with stereopticon
there be at least six women inter- served seat* at a matinee perfor­
slides. Rev. Hoo* states that her
talks at the Owosso camp ground
ested tn the work. These women mance of “Sleeping Beauty;” second
were so well attended as to tax the
.
a I will then elect a preaident and tec- j prise, two reserved seats. These
Arthur Ixxwer, who has Joined retary of the group and appoint arize*
”
prizes will be duniicated
duplicated as to "city
"city"
seating capacity of the Seminary
Chapel each morning. Further notice the faculty of the Hastings High two leaders to attend the lesson and “country and village” schools.
I meetings with Mias Cramer and
4. All posters must have the name,
of services and time will be given achool.
Mr.
Lower,
who
Is
a
graduate
of
then relay the lessons to the local age and school of the pupil upon
next week.
Western State Teacher*' College at group. Further information on the
Kalamazoo,
leaches
civics and organization of groups can be se­
A CORRECTION.
5. All posters must be delivered to
In the September 10 issue of the American government and has cured from the county agent’s of­
Banner a summary of the shooting charge of the boya*«glee club and fice.
season regulations was given. One ehorus.
.
Mr. Lower's home l* in Marshall BARRY COUNTY ROD
paragraph had to deal with the 100AND GUN CLUB MEETS. the Hastings civic Players.
fool regulation for the location ofand
___________
he taught
,______________________
last year al Nashville.
The Barry County Rod and Gun
duck blinds in which it stated that I He has at times played violin and
“chicken iurrRJL
this order had been rancwiled,
------viola with the Battle "
Creek
—•- Sym“— Club will meet at the Barry County
Road
Commission
garage on Monday
George A. Sumner, local conser­ . phony orchestra and has had exper­
suing
and
male evening.
quartets.Sept. 28, at 7:30 o'clock. If
__ _
__ _______
vation officer, state* that thia can­ ience In ____
S—Adv
cellation refen to the federal regu­ He Is also interested in choir work, you are interested in getting bluegill
Mr Lower is affiliated with the fingerlings for your favorite lake.
lations and not to the state. The
100-foot regulation la still affective. Methodist church and is living at!be sure to attend this meeting. A
In the state of Michigan and will be the McOuffin home at 320 South .good attendance Is desired. Walter
Church street.______________________| Eaton, secretary.
rigidly enforced thia fall.

May We
Introduce

cent of the voter* in any precinct

gates In the spaces provided on tho
primary' ballot
The republicans of this county
seem to have done belter than Che

and Albert Reesor.
Hastings city—Will Chase, Clyde
Wilcox. Art Haven. Archie Relckand Clarence K. Davis, Harry Milter,
Henry Sheldon and Burton Perry,
Richard Cook. Dr. Frank Carrothcr*.
A. D. McDonald. Al Becker. Will
Schader. c. H Osborn, Stuart Cle­
ment and Mrs. Nellie Cross.
Assyria township—M. J. Hartom
and Bernard Tasker.

and John Birman.
A Strickland. Fred White. William
Martin. Merrill Hinkley and Igrts
Shafer.
Hastings-Ben Merrick, An3rw&gt;
Kennedy and Jack O’Connor.
Hope—■George Kahler and Harry
Bivens.
Irving—W. W. Boughner and 08to Lightfoot.
Maple Grove—Fred Mayo and E.

Grey.
lan Potts. Cliff Gardner. Irving Mc­
Fall. T. I. Gillette, and Robert Vaa-

Hastlngs city—Frank
Ho
Walter Wallace. A- Lynn Brow
Goggins, George Mvers. Bart
Has-

DISTRICT TEACHKM

the Barry County
ple-Kellogg school

In

the flrat meeting of Che year.
Quest speakers are Dr.

Michigan Education Journal.

RALLY XIXT

There will

�THE HASTING 8 BANNER. THUMDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1939
Oarveth A Slebbin* adv. thi* week
tells you how to gel 1100 worth
of Chicopee medicine far Wc.—Adv.
Ilion with the Mu*kc«oci Platan
The Greenville business men have
organised a branch ot the Better
Credit* League with K. O. Seiber
ing several weeks at Cadillac during a* president and Mr*. Eleanor Back­
the hay fever season, has full Um* us a* secretary and treasurer.
Some one took Robert Rlior s car,
which was parked on the south
But on* person. Ven William*. side of the courtitouse square Sat­
urday evening. It waa found Sunday
mastership at Hickory comers. The morning in the city's, parking lot
dale for the examination will be anThe local High school football
team will iJlay • their flret -evening
. Russell Kimmel of the Banner game ot the season when they meet
force ha* »ufHciently recovered Lansing Central Saturday night on
from his recent operation so he has a flood-lighted field In that city.
been removed to hl* home on N.
On Tuesday evening. October fl.
Michigan Ave.
the American Legion and Auxiliary
W. M Stebbins has been confined will hold a Joint installation of their
to hi* home by tensilltu lor several recently elected officer*. Full de­
days. Il wa* the second time in thir­ tail* will be announced next week.
teen years that Bill had missed at­
The recent rain* have brought on
tending the Rotary club.
a second crop of cucumbers and
An electric Robot" delivering a I Hastings housewives, who paid the
lecture In Prandsen's window Bat-1 high prices during the dry spell,
urday afternoon attracted the at­ wish they had walled for the later
tention of a large number of peo­ ones One farmer expecu. if we
ple. He was placed there by oflt- have some warm days this month,
cen of the Woman's Christian to have a second crop of muskI
i melons.
Temperance Union.

Mr. and Mr*.

LOCAL NEWS
of Turkish toweling.
kMXlyesr Bros. lUrdr. will tell you about

IL—Adv.
Fro*l mad* 1U appearance Friday
in Uta K»W place*. Fortunately it
was not heavy enough to do any

Harry Wood, who Injured * his
knee recently, has Improved to he
was able to resume his work on
Mr*. J. M- Leach ha* *old her
Slewart place. In this city to Mr.
and Mrs. Nil* Olsson.
Mrs Sarah Powell and MU* Dru' &gt;111* Powell moved on Monday to
an spar linent on W Court St.. in
"te Je&amp;ae Kelly home.
No farmer who need* a truck can
prices quoted for reconditioned
trucks by the Universal Garage —

from the UUagt Mr*. French ha* BRUSH RIDGE
taken an active part in the com­
COMMUNITY CLUB.
munity life and had beep ete*tej to
The Brush Ridge Community

An eighteen family apartment
house U being erected tn Midland
according to the Midland Republi­
can. Something of thia kind would
help the housing situation in Has­
tings.
.
If you want to see a beautiful
yard, visit the home of Alderman
Fred Pierson In the second ward.
The scarlet salvia tn front of the
white fence make* an attractive
arrangement.

Haatinsa friend* wUl be toterosted to know that Edmond and John
Howgrd. ten* of Mr and Mrs. U O.
Howard of Manion, formerly of thi*
city, are attending the Ypsilanti
Normal thi* year. MUs Winifred
Howard U a student at W. 8. T. O-,
and Mlaa AgDc* Howard Is teaching
tn Reed City.
Mr. and Mr* Kim Bigler have
rented th* o: W. Ctarte home on
Weal Green, and will move in from
Gun lake the Bret part of Novem­
Wall lake last week to cast id* vote ber. Mr and Mrs. Clarke will rent
at the primary and looked quite an apartment in Grand Rapids un­
like 1U* old self. He la gaining til after the holidays when they
steadily from hU recent Illness for will go io Florida for the remainder
which all ar- gratefulMalvtn Newton, meal cutter at
At the United Brethren Confer­
ence which closed here on Sunday, FeldpauMh'a market. Is handing out
the Rev. g. O MeSherry was re­ real cigar* to hU friends.-He wa*
turned to the local church for an­ married on Monday in Indiana to
other year. This is good new* to the Mr*. Arnold of the second ward.
member* i-.a iriends of th* church. Hasitnn. Mel *ay» the *econd ward
Is Home. Bweet Home, to him as

of the Women s Reading Olub —
Middleville Bun.
ty-fpur present.
A Ford coupe, the properly of Dr.
It was suggested by MUs JohnLrnd of MiddlevlUe, wa* stolen cock. our school teachar, that her
Tuesday night at about 0:30 acoord- language classes make appropriate
Invitation* f
Blaknsy. At IAU writing th* car bad
not been recovered
At thia writing—Wednesday noon

as program committee, with Mr*.
Mina pranshka tn charge

ts-mr old Weep
charged with statu

day) for Ann Arbor, where he will
take a course m sanitary engineer­
ing at the University of Michigan.
He U attending school on a acTtolarahlp granted by the Michigan
State Department of Health. Crans­
ton h a graduate of the civil engi­
neering school of the University.

FOOD

YOU M

Th*

c*M vu given to the jury al ll:M.
Hie entire pans! of thirty jurors
was called before the attorneys ac­
cepted twelve men to Uy the case.
Medford. Oregon, has invested a
lot of money in an up-to-date air­
port. it will be pleasing to many
friend* here to know that Frederick
Heath, a former Hasting* boy. u
due to a biasing oil stove tn the h*PP7 boyhood cay*.
chairman of the airport committee,
home of Otto Ttetx. His place Is at | Mr*. Sidney French and children and ha* also served on the city
the comer of Bond and Montgomery moved to Grand Rapids last week council for aevtral year* Frederick
streets.
The
truck
responded and are living with her mother. Mrs.
promptly and there wa* not much O. N. Watoon at 15 Prospect avenue. well known druggist hare, and Ilk*
J--------We are sorry to lose thi* family hi* father is engaged In the retail
damage.
drug bualnet*.
Cranston Wilcox has resigned hl*
position as engineers aid on the
Yankee Spring* project and with

I
I
i
।
I

FOUR HURT ON M-11.
An accident occurred at Clear lake
a little after midnight Saturday
night. Orl Naylor. Hasting* town­
ship. two gentlemen friends and
three young ladle* had been attend­
ing a dance al Herrington * resort.
Clear lake, a* they started for home,
they drove onto M-37. Another car
driven by Wayne Bruce of Battle
Creek coming from the north
crashed Into inern. All four men
were cut and bruised, but none serlou»ly Injured. The young ladles es­
caped with bruises. The four men
were brought to the hospital here
where surgical attention was given
their injuries.

of

th*

Mr and Mr* Prod Andon gav*
us an Invitation to meat with them
the second Friday night In October.
No program waa prepared far thia
meeting so the president asked for
volunteers on what we had dona or
had seen that would ba interesting
to others. Mr* Mln* Pramhka gave
an interesting report on bar trip to
the 8trall* and back Ml** Jotin cock
told about the dental and health
examination* of the tchool children
which are being done this year Sup­
per was then rented and all de­
parted at a lata hour hoping to see
more out at the next meeting.

COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHBOX.
Attendance at the weekly lunch­
eon* al the Hastings Country Club,
while not a* large a* during the
summer, ha* bold up well during
September, due probably to the
lovely weather. Thirty-five members
and guest* were present Tue*d*y
when slnnias and petunias were
used to decorate the luncheon tables
and lounge.
Mr*. Harry O. Haye* won the
prise for high score for contract and
the golf event, a low gross. In the

Finnic.
Guests from oyt of town were Mrs.
Leland Holly ot Muskegon who was

Casper of Walla Walla. Wash., with
her mother. Mrs. Frank Carrolhers.
and Mrs. Roland Webb of Grand
Rapids with Mrs. C P. Lathrop.
The committee in charge was
composed of Mrs. James Radford,
chairman. Mrs. a. E. Johnson. Mrs
C. P- Lathrop. Mrs. Frank Angell
and Mrs. R. R McPeak of Charlotte
Mrs. Wilbur Lane is chairman of
next week'* luncheon.

mm

CONFERENCE

asks BBTtma or bishop
h. h. rovr roa nir

rou» TBSB8

RAISE MOO FOR
EXTENSION WORK
PmIotrI Appointment* Are
Read—Th* Bev. McBherry
Returns to Hasting*
The United Brethren Conference
convened at the Heslinga chureh
last week from Wednesday till Buntereattng gathering.
During the conference the sum
of SftOO was raised tor Conference
Extension work.
Bishop H. H. Foul ot Indianapolis,
Ind., has served the church for
twenty-four years as bishop and la
highly respected and beloved. The

turn lor another four year*, which
la splendid proof of hla success. Con­
ference Superintendent j. p. Hatton,

thal capacity, other pastoral ap­
pointments ware as follows:
Adamsville - Kessinglon — AL
Spa fiordBerrien Springs—M. R. Davis.
Benton Harber—M. K RichardBar ton-Chase—J. A. Reynold*.
Brown City—L. A. Dana.
Carlisle—G. R. McDonald.
Chspel H1U—Archie wolf.
Detroit—
EUcUd Avenue—M. F. Wolverton.
Hillcrest—J. P. Hatton.
Trinity—J. A. Beardsley.
Eaton Rapids—W. D
Slratlwi
(supply).
Gallen—R. O. Moon.
Gilford—H. D. Mead*.
Grant Center—G. E Harris. •
Grand Rapids—
F1r»l church—I. E. Runk.
Wyoming Park—O. E- McDonald.
Hastings—E. O Mc8herry.

MARRIAGE LICENSE.
Roy Nash. Delton, route 1.............. 40
Marcellus - Pleasant Valley — Jn
Lucy perrlgo. Delton, route 1 ... .53 care of conference Superintendent.
Montgomery—C. F. Mager.
Oak Grove—w. L. Gunther.
Ogden*Jasper—K. P. Highley.
Bethel—Care of Supt.
Six Lakes-South Hinton — Inez
Marta.
Tailman—W. B Seymour.
flatting*, Michigan ■ Telephone* 2244-2557
Waterloo—R. K. uhrig.
St. Johns-West Bingham-Bengal
PBOGRAM FOR WEEK OF SEPT. tTTH
—J. R. Hawkind
SUNDAY and MONDAY, SEPT. 27 and 28
Union-Naomi—Archie wolf.
District
Superintendent*
are
Grand Rapid* G. K McDonald; Big
Rapids. I. g. Runk; Banton Harbor.
With Randolph Scott, Henry Wilcoxon, Binnlc Barnes
M.
K.
Richardson;
Detroit.
J.
P
and Heather Angel
Hatton; Southeast. A- L. SpafTord.
Bargain Matinee Sunday. 1:M and 1:90 h'clock for adults.
Council of AdminUlxatlan: j. p
Prices at all other performances of this picture—
Hatton.
A.
I*
SpafTord.
1.
g
Runk
Adults 15c; Children 19o
G. E. McDonald, M. K Richardson
and L. 8- Long.
COUPON NIGHT—TUESDAY, SEPT. 29
President Donebrakr Seminary
A. T. Howard;
Mlutonartea
in
Africa, Rev. and Mrs. e. W TenterEvangelist at Large. Rev. Edna B.
With Humphrey Bogart. Beverly Roberta. RobL Mlddletna*
Hughes; Deaconneu, Mrs. Laura B
SAVE COUPONS—No coupon* will be given out after 9 P. M.
Grant.
on Monday

TKAND THEAT£|=

Meet Your Frir ids, See Barry County’s Biggest Food Store, Save Money
Chipso

Cloth FREE

Super Suds

—&gt;■ 16c

Ivory Flakes

SUGAR

Premier
Golden Bantam

2 bar. | |c

Sweet Heart Soap

Cloth Bag

THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS

u„. r.tk...

CORN

Palm Olive Soap

Lux Toilet Soap

10 lbs

25c

4

'No. 2 Con

Miracle Whip Salad Dressing .&lt;37c

I

49

Champion Salad Dressing

13c

Karo Syrup »

12c

ix ib. ...

Salt, quality iodine

Hershey’s Cocoa &gt; »•

Ovaltine
Orange Slices or Chocolate Drops
Candy Bars

29c

it. IOc

3&lt;~ IOc

2 Boxes |5C

France-American

1

Beef Roast

IOc

Corned Beef Hash

BANANAS

Crackers

Firm, Yellow

2 t &gt;.

box

15c

1 SPECIAL I

ifc-sTi. 23c

... 17c
17c

magoo Get* Into
Trouble

HNTH0N9
DVERSE
HERVEY ALLEN

2 — 29c

MARCH
Olivia

! SPECIAL I

PsHAVILLAND
OWINN • CLAUD* BAIN*

Fbr sometime Lew Acker of Hope
whose home is near Acker* Point
kept missing wheal which he had
garnered from this year's crop. Thi
officer* were made acquainted with
the situation and it wa* finally *et
lied that Clarence h. Bosley, g*
of Kalamazoo, who occupied a cot
lage at the Point for some time, wai
connected with the disappearance o
the wheat. He was accordingly ar
rested Wednesday afternoon anc
brought before Justice Oorlright. Hi
waived examination. Bail wa* flxe&lt;

Judge MePeek will determine
that Bosley has admitted his guilt
taking 3* buriwla of the whea
which Acker has missed
Bosky has admitted taking 2
txg* of Lew Acker's wheat whicl
was stared tn a rabbllry near Ack
er's house. He ha* also admitted tak
Ing some fencing from North Pal
tenon »treet. Kalamazoo, which wa
u»ed in a pwa project there. He al*
acknowledges that he took a tea
kettle and other aluminum artlclej
which were stored In the rabbitry.
The case ha* not yet come up fa
trial.

DIM AT UNIVERSITY
HOSPITAL ON FRIDAY

1 ib 5c

VISIT THIS NEW DEPARTMENT
Sweet Potatoes
Oranges, Sweet and Juicy
Fancy Tomatoes for Cannins
Fancy Grape Fruit

CONFESSES THAT
HE TOOK WHEAT
Olarenoe H. Boaley of Kale-

33c
3 — 25c

17c

Liberty Bell

IttCV

2

Del Monte Peas

Spaghetti

21c

specirl ! I

Th* Biggest Adventure
comeg The Greatest Entertain­
ment Within Theatre Wallsl

55c

Salmon, Del Monte Red

!

2

2'-25c
lOO.ixx

Tomato Juice c.u.«.i.
Armour’s Veribest Corned Beef

First Call Peas

WED., THURS. ond FRI.. Sept. 30 — Oct. 1 and

Three Can Limit

IOc

2

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

p 10

Pink Salmon

Tomatoes

TWO AGAINST THE WORLD

QUALITY MEATS COST LESS

6

19c

2

35c

w. 89c
525c

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P. M

Floyd Greiner. 39. of Woodlan.
died at the University hospital U
Ann Arbor Friday night and the re
mains were brought to his hiwv- h
Woodland for interment lit th
Woodland cemetery. Funeral serv
low were held at the United Broth
ren chureh in that village on Mon
day &gt;t two oteloek. surviving are hl
wife, Colette, and hla father. Wil
llam T. Groiner, of Guymon. Okla

Fresh Ground Hamburger
Beef Kettle Roasts
King Nut Oleo
Round, Swiss or Sirloin Steak
Smoked Picnics, Shankless

2 1b.- 29c

14c
2 lb. 25c
au&lt;—&lt;c«. n. 19c
■b. 21c

FOOD CENTER

SATURDAY ONLY—OCT. 3

“COUNTERFEIT”

Deputy BhertfT Bodford ot Mid
dleville on Wednesday brought Rm
Robinson to the Jail here. He picket
him up in Middleville on a charge o
driving while Intoxicated. He wa.
brought before Justice etaitoe a
Middleville who fixed the fine anc
costa at
40. He was uhabta to p*'
Immediately after the fine Wa* a*
jessed, but later rel«UvM paid th!

With ( bester Merri*. Margot Grahame. Marian Kareh

PUBLIC ENEMY'S WIFE
PAT O’BRIEN and MARGARET LINDSAY
BIDEB*

PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
A daughter waa bom to Mr. a
Mra Maurice Johncock, Dallas

On &amp;ept. II a *on wa* born to Mr
and Mr* Floyd M«ln. Railroad BL
A dau*htar was been to Mr. anc
Mr*. Lynn Mix. 2U N. S«&gt;on4 BL

�THI HASTINGS BANKER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER U, 1838

IREN
INCE I
’ BISHOP
; rar
u

IN WORK |
IcBherry
itinfi
Conference
ags church

» the sum
Conference
ndianapolls, ■
church for ■

loved

The

ears, which H
access. Con- ■
I F Hatton. ■

i. Davis.
C Rtchard-

teynold*.

aid.
rolf.

Wolverton.
Stratton

i arris. ■

ink.
McDonald. ■
erry.
! I
lormes.
j
alley - !::■
;;i.i&lt;
i;l Ml

nlher.
lighlay.

on — Inez!

uun-Bengal
Wolf.
j
•nt*
ere:
Sonald; Big I
ton Harbor,
trolt. J. F.l
Spafford. I
ition: j. F.l
I. B. Runk,I
Richardson I

Seminary,
marie*
In I
v. Edna B.

WHEAT
Into
er nf llopr.^l
icrs Point.M
ch he had^H

timed wlth^R
fiiiiiiiy
Bosley. 35
c tune. »'.■
pearance of^H
rdlngly ar-^H

alright

mine
■■ -I.'.. .jKl
1 hl* gullt^^H
Lhc whea^B

taking 29^1
irat. whlri^H
near Ack-^H
ml tied uk-^H
which wsj^M

rabbi try.
ome up fc

i

Friday]

hospital Li

per cent of the apples In this coun-1 right their boats the last time. They i alone. Buffalo, deer and elk. quite I Oeo. Sykes, Agent. M. C. R. R-,
try being ralsea under irrigation In : *1“
&gt;°&lt; rolling contests. In tame, roam the hills and even came Bsttle Creek.
thi« .n,.n di.tri^t wwnn.it rtni.ht I•hich two contestants on the samel up to the car once when we had vaF. T. Stein. Battle Creek.
thlv
^hundie^d
WOU,d lry 10 t,UOw eaCh Otrter C&gt;t*d “ The U°Ul slrea,n*
,uU
L. Frontfetter. BaUle Creek.
~?^?htUAfdt^m
balance and Into the water by |of rainbow and brown-speckled trout
Among local residents present to
f*r "lhem a,Ur arBnd COU” ,pinning the log with their feet. One ’ —so tame that-they wtU eat chunk* assist in entertaining the visitors
DEVIL'S FOOD CARL
- nnunea1 of the old wooden six-masted China I of raw meal from your hand.
Prom Wenatchee we crossed ll*e cupptr&gt; ws* towed through with a I We were entertained for an hour
Cascade
range
over
Blewett
Pass/to
■
on
the
side
of
It
stating
that
it
or
so
by
the
man
who
owns
the
re(Continued from pnge 1. Bee. 1)
Vllim Scaling
Hau tha
... be .beached
___ K- ■ and
.. I-____
_____
K. . He turned out to be a crack Crawford. James Radford, C. W. Do­
. Cle Elum.
the Hlatatw-a
distance Ah
on would
burned
on__tort.
Mix these three ingredients and
lan. H. H. Peirce. H. W. Frost. J. E.
were on the wrong highway, head­ the map between there two towns 1* Saturday night. This pageant was sharpshooter and most clever with Tyden. H. P. Phillips. Oeo. Crakes let them stand until cooled. Add to
a wonderful opportunity a lasso.
the following cake mixture:
ed south Instead of west. We re­ slightly over thirty miles, but the certainly
and W- R Cook.
.
I.-Ji.-UK— ...
II.
I.
I.
.
IltlU
hit
In.
speedometer
recorded
eighty,
in
one
I do hope Uiis Is a little bit In­
2-2 cup shortening.
traced our steps to the center of
town and finally got nearly forty five mile stretch near the summit range a variety of ship* that it formative and a fairly clear picture
2 eggs, beaten separately.
miles out of town on the right high­ ■ tlx re are over one hundred and sev­ would lake years to see otherwise. Il of tiie work and airline a* a whole.
___ ...in....
from ......
eight __
o'clock
the...
eve- if there I* any information or qurs2 1-2 cups sifted cake flour.
way when we discovered Uial we enty turns, and these are not just lasted .......
road but real, nlng till nearly one the next morn- lion I can answer, be sure and write
3-4 teaspoon salt.
had left part of our baggage at the bend* tn the
2 teaspoons baking powder.
tourist camp; so had to return. We sharp turns that make your tires ing; but was so interesting that the me.
hard wooden state d(d not even '
Sincerely.
had driven over three hours and screech al thirty miles an hour.
Yvonne Trego.
We found a nice camp just out ot bother us till we tried to stand up !
1 teaspoon rarilia.
were right where we started.
Cle
Elum
on
the
Yakima
river
and.
Blend the shortening and . sugar
We finally did get away and this
H. D- Cook.
(Continued from page i. Sec. 1)
time we intentionally drove about after a good fish dinner and a walk
gellier the flour, salt and baking
seventy miles out of our way In or­ along the river, retired early.
Cle Elum. Washington. Thursday.
der to visit the Grand Coulee Dam
gins, his domestically-inclined con­ pewder and add to the blended mix­
site on Hie Columbia river. Grand July 16. 3236 miles.
i sort. Beatrice Goggins: Fairy Mary ture alternately with the sour milk.
Coulee Is the old. dry canyon gorge
Heatherbloom from the Land of Add vanilla flavoring and stir in
Cle Elum Is quite a small town,
the cocoa mixture. Beat well. Fold
of the Columbia river, from which but It ha* nice tourist camps and
it was diverted during the last gla­ restaurants. We took advantage of
ther Snowflake from the Land of In the stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour
cial period. It Is about fifty miles the quietness to gel a good night's
Winter. Donna Myers; Fairy Thelma into two-nlne-lnch layer pans lined
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
long. At the lower end. la "Dry rest before covering the last hun­
Truth from Uie Land of Will-Be. with waxed paper, and bake tn a
Reed; Fairy Autumn moderate oven 250 degrees F. 25
Falls" where the stream, one and dred miles into Seattle, where we
Agent for the Prre Marquette R. R Cyntheal
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
one-half miles wide, once plunged arrived in lime for lunch. We feared
Moonlight
from-the Land of Sleep. minutes. Put together and cover*
Following U a list of ...V
KVI.VW.,.*
the ■railroad
«...
------- ------------with Never Fall Icing.
and fell five hundred feet in five we might have to come back to Cle
official* and friends present al the M
„°
------rma ”
Ih-ans;
■.....Witch Thomclaw,
great horseshoe falls. A beautiful, Elum for the night, as the Shriners and the wind* are stronger, then a luncheon at the Country Club Sal-1 "Itcht of B!
Black Castle. Honora
lower altitude 1.* maintained. One urday:
1 Pratt: Dagmar.
-------- the “Giri with the MOLDED SALMON WITH
green-fringed lake now nils the convention was on In Seattle and It
CUCUMBER SAUCE.
basin al the foot ot the falls. You was reported that all the hotels and notices that a high altitude Increases (
scar."
Florence
O
’
Donnell;
Peter,
Parks ----------Archer. ’ -----------General ,
Claim
the appetite and also tends to make
-------------- the blind, boy. a poet. Roy Hatha­
1 con a*Imon.
who have seen Niagara can appre­ camps for miles around were full. you
ileepy. Because of the excellent' Agent. Alton R. R . Chicago,
ciate what a sight this must have However, we went direct to the
way Princess Borgehllde. Margret
business in the past four months,
C. H. Dietrich. Executive Vice
been thousands of years ago. “* the Evergreen Camp, which we had se­
Barnett: Prince Royal, prince of the
United Airline* have put on two ex- Chrinn.. A«n of Am. R. Rs.. Chifalls were over three times as high lected before leaving Hastings, and tra schedules, one from New York to I cago.
Land of Promise, Will Taffee; Sil­
1 t mustard.
and three times as wide as Niagara. found it full; but they hid just
ver Arrow, the faithful horse of
Oakland. California, and one re- |
Freight Claim Division,
Few grains cayenne.
Our highway as well as a railroad started a new camp a few blocks
Prince Royal, by Himself.
claim
now traverses the bottom of this away and we were fortunate to be turning. All In all we have seven, w c JohnioI)t
The
great
popularity
of
the
an
­
Yor« ?nd °“k' I Agent, c. dr N. W. Ry.. Chicago,
1 1-2 T melted butter.
gorge from the dam to Coulee City, the first one* to occupy a brand new. innn rrwn^rtlvriv ovsrv
nual play ha.* convinced the Civic
o* hA&gt;ir«
I
thirty-five miles south; but when modern cabin with garage which land respectively every 24 hours.
P. C- Maegly. Asst. Oenl. Freight Players that another maUnee will
Our work consists mainly of mak­ Agent. A- T. A: S- F- Ry.. Chicago.
the dam is completed the gorge will had just been completed.
be necessary this year to accommo­
ing the passengers comfortable and
2 T granulated gelatin.
be filled with water to form a res­
After lunch I called up Mr. ThorsThe
C. B Anderson. Freight Claim date their Ultle patrons.
ervoir for irrigating thousands, pos­ dalc, the Viking representative in relieving them of any fear or appre­
"Sleeping Beauty" will be presented
Agent, c. &amp;t E. I. RR-. Chicago.
Remove skin and bones of sal­
sibly millions, of acres of treeless, the northwest, to report that I had hension they might have £f flying
O. Maxey. Supt. Loa* &amp; Damage the afternoon of Monday. October mon. Flake. Mix dry ingredients,
barren desert land In the Columbia arrived and would be al the office in We also serve breakfast, lunch and
IB. for the children of Hastings and beaten egg yolks, butter, milk
Prevention,
C.
RI.
Ac
PRy..
Chi
­
dinner on the planes as the oc­
basin.
the morning. We intended to ven­
schools;
Tuesday
afternoon,
October
cago.
The dam will be five hundred feel ture out ourselves and try to see casion warrants, free of charge.
20. toj pupils from country schools; and vinegar and cook over boiling
A E Halderman. District Manager Tuesday evening for adults, and water, stirring constantly until mix­
I might mention that the planes
high and over a mile and a half the town tn the afternoon, but Mr.
Add gelatin which
long, financed by PWA allotment*, Thorsdale Insisted on taking us and carry 270 gallons of gasoline, using of Wistcm Weighing Ac Insp. Bur­ Wednesday afternoon. October 21, ture thickens
has been soaked in cold water.
Milwaukee. WL*.
OU to
W 65
UU gallons
gUUUUA for
1UI every IIUUI
hour Ul
of eau.
'
and provides for the greatest single 1 am afraid we wouldn't have seen 60
for those who could not attend the Strain and add to salmon. Put in
harnessing of hydro-electric re­ much If he hadn't, as Seattle L* a flying. Refueling Is done a* often as | O. W. Loderhose, Freight Claim other performances.
ring
or
loaf
mold
and chill. Unmold
th*
■&lt;
rrt,*Alln».
I
k
possible
In
the
east
a*
gasoline
Is
sources in the world. Its estimated real city with plenty to we. and if
The slogan the Players have on plate with lettuce border. Fill
cost la 8188.000.000.00. It will have you don't know just where to go you more expensive In the west. United cogo.
adopted L* "Let Every Child in Bar­ center of ring with cucumber sauce.
eighteen power units, each generat­ are liable not to see anything but Airlines are getting twenty new
8. Sonnenberg, captain of Police. ry County See The 'Sleeping Beau­
Douglas planes in October, some CAN. W. Ry.. Chicago.
ing a million horsepower. Pam­ traffic.
ty"' and there has been an excel­
carrying 14 passengers, others 21.
phlets are given visitors at the dam
A. C. Mundy. Freight Claim De­ lent response, they report. There
Seattle has a population of nearly
p,^^^ c. A- N- W. Ry.. Chicago.
site which explain that the project 400.000 and ha* one of the flnest The cabin will be much larger and partment.
will be a single admission price of
Beat one cup or 30 per cent
Benedict. Manager. Hotel ten cents for all afternoon per­
should pay out in thirty or forty harbors in the world, its great docks the chairs swivel and oversluffed. | ew
-------j cream until stiff and add one-quar­
year*. IF they can sell all of their accommodating
You've no doubt heard of the , Sherman. Chicago.
formances and parents are urged ter teaspoon of salt, a few grains of
120 ocean-going
irrigation water and surplus power!
p, a. Rankin. Asst Freight Claim to accompany their children. Mati­ pepper and gradually two table­
vessels at one lime. On the west It •'Frontier Day*" celebration held in
Far be It from me to criticise our Is bounded by Puget Sound and on Cheyenne annually during July. Bev- Agent. A. T. A- 8 F. Ry.. Chicago.
nee scats will be unreserved to spoons of vinegar. Last add pulp of
p, b. Huntington. Auditor. B. A- avoid the confusion of exchanging
government. The following is just the east by Lake Washington—a eral ot the girls and I attended the
one cucumber, pared, chopped and
my own opinion which may. of beautiful fresh water lake twenty performance one afternoon which o. RR. Chicago.
tickets for reservations. Seats for pressed in cheesecloth to remove all
course, be wrong: In the first place miles long, a canal with huge locks lasted four hours. People came from | oeo. Wasshauscn. Freight Claim the evening performance may be juice.
*
connect* Lake Washington with the all over the U. 8. A- to see the Agent. Chicago North Shore A Mil- reserved at Cordes Newsstand as
if they sell all their power and wa­ Sound through Lake Union. Il is "Rodco" which Is supposed to be *-aukee RR.. Chicago.
usual, and will be 25c for adults and GRAPEFRUIT AND
g. l. Ray. Auditor. Det. &amp; Toledo 15c for children.
ter; but (t pa.s.M-&lt;l through a great here (hat the ocean vessels are the "daddy of them all." Incidentally
SALMON SALAD.
they
announced
the
number
of
cars
snore
Line
RR..
Toledo.
number of other Irrigation projects brought up Into the fresh water for
The Civic Players have established
o. E. Sommers. " Freight Claim a fund to pay the admission of chil­
where the ditches were all In. with a few days to free them of bar­ from each state and it interested
2 cups grapefruit pieces.
me to learn that four were there Agent. Ann Arbor RR. Toledo.
water running through them for nacles.
2 cups flaked salmon.
dren who might otherwise be un­
from Michigan. Miss Frontier and I j c. Napp. Dlvn. Freight Claim
miles upon miles. But then* seemed
1 cup diced cucumber.
After returning from our sightsee­ hnr (artv-ln-wnitina
able
to attend. This fund was for­
NYC RR Toledo
charming
to be very few. If any. .farms or ing trip we were joined by Mrs. her lady-in-waiting were rharmlncr
1 cup diced celery.
merly provided by generous persons
farmers to occupy the land. Second Thorsdale and all went to Ute Wa­ young ladles, dressed in beautiful I Win. John. Freight Claim Agent. outside the Organization, but this
Lzltuce.
—Even if they did sell the water and ler Carnival, pul on for the Sitrln- silk shirt*, breeches and boots and Pittsburgh &amp; Lake Erie RR.. Pltu- year the 'Placers will sponsor it
Mix grapefruit, salmon, cucum­
the farms were occupied and pro­ ers convention in the canal men­ large white Stetson hat*. I under­ burgh. Pa.
themselves.
However, donation* ber and celery and top with slight­
stand the wealthy ranchers make
ductive. our country already ha* t * tioned above. Huge
Geo.
Collin*.
Freight
Claim
Dept..
will be thankfully received and duly ly sweetened grapefruit French
grandstands
many acres in production that It were erected on both sides of the bid* for the title of "ML*.* Frontier ’ B A O. RR . Chicago
acknowledged. They may be made dressing (made with 4 tablespoons
seem* necessary to plow under the canal. There must have been fully for their daughter*. People, especial- I Howard Kaser. ........
Freight Claim cither to the treasurer. Mrs. Rich­ grapefruit juice 6 tablespoons salad
crops, anc\ it would mean abandon­ a hundred thousand people there to ly the women, become more excited Agent Wheeling A Lake Erie RR. ard Grow, or the business manager, oil. salt, pepper*. Serve on lettuce
ing farms In other parte of the witness flip spectacle. This carnival over a rodeo than any wrestling । Cleveland: O.
with mayonnaise.
Orville Sayles.
country, or else another over-pro­ was in the nature of a marine pa­ match or horse race I’ve ever wit- ( a. E. Sauer. E
duction and more plowing under. rade of practically every type of nessed. Heavy beta are placed" on Jackson. Mich,
Third—Spokane, with a population boat built, from battleships and the riders anti much excitement! R^y Kollnian
of a little over a iiundred thousand, huge freighters to Eskimo kayaks prevail* as the steers do their best rr
RR. Jackson. Mien.
Midi.
Is the only city ot any Mze within and South Sea outriggers, inter­ to throw Uieir.man.
H. L. Margctt*. Gen'l. Supt.. M. C;
hundreds of miles of the dam. and It spersed with beautiful decorated
One of the loveliest places near R. R.. Detroit.
already ha* more power than It can float* from the different Shrine Cheyenne is Trail's End. A group
R F. DeForcst. Supt. Trans.. M. C.
use. Grand Coulee dam will gener­ temples and ending up with a mag­ of us drove there on a picnic two R. R. Detroit.
ate approximately one hundred nificent fireworks display out on week* ago. a distance of about 55
G. F. Wheeler. Freight Claim
times the power now used in Spo­ (Lake Union. There were U. 8. de­ miles southwest. There is no sur- | Agent. M. C. R. R-. Detroit.
—---- • ------• cutters,
-W
— '
kane and the surrounding territory. ktroyer*. coast
--------'• **
’ -------guard
light'
face
9011
U-----------”™- o«»b
’ “
which i Hugo Brandes. Chief of Police.
Fourth—As n PWA project it will ships and the ■ Explorer." the all- ------------------------------19 “ beautiful brick------red.------------—
A now- Grand Trunk RR.. Detroit,
not furnish a very great amount of wood ship of the Geodetic Survey, colored
crust of soil
covers Hie
rocks I _____
H. 8- ________
Johnson. _______
Freight Claim
_________________
__________
_ ______
tabor compared to the cost of the which spends all its time in survey­ and huge structures of innumerable | Agent. Detroit. Toledo St Ironton
project; as It is certainly not being ing the bottom of the ocean, finding shapes can be seen all along the "
RR
______
. Detroit.
' "
built with wheelbarrows and shovel*. reefs and shoals and locating new drive. Till* particular resort—not a
M. J. Max. Chief of Police, Mich.
Here we saw giant cranes handling channels for shipping. Also Seattle dude ranch—is located in a canyon Cent. RR. Detroit.
six yard bucket* of cement from cars Are boats, police boat*, fishing boat* in Ute Rocky Mountain*. Part ot the
W. J. Hargis. Freight Claim Agent,
brought by train from the biggest I of all descriptions, tugs, oil tankers, land L* owned by the man who Prre Marquette. Detroit.
cement mixing plant in the world. A whalers and private yachts and lite jnalntains the place and several
E. C. Neitels. Battle creek.
Ira in load of probably 100 yards or small schooner "Progress" with Cap- acres belong to the state. He told us
E. Wallace. Traffic Manager. Kel­
more of cement was being poured lain Drake, tte 80-year old captain 318.000 had been spent for fencing logg’s. Battle Creek.
about every ten minutes; and nil and crew, who has sailed it alone for
the labor. In sight at least, was a thousands of miles about the world.
craneman, a locomotive engineer, and Also an Indian war canoe race be­
one or two bucket men, The grave) tween three different tribes in
and cement all come to the mixing forty-foot dugouts, not over twenty
plant on belt conveyors, so there Inches wide; a race between three
cannot be much labor connected different life-saving crews, in which
with the cement mixing. Fifth—And al given times, at the firing of a
I believe the most serious, is the gun. they would capsize, right their
damage which this dam. also the boat, get back in and row till the
Bonneville dam, another PWA proj­ next gun flred. This was repeated six
ect farther down the river. Is liable times during the race, and was sure­
to do to the salmon Industry. The ly a test of endurance, as some of
Columbia river Is the greatest sal­ the crews barely had strength to
mon stream in the world, and the
products of the salmon canning in­
dustry along the river are valued al
over 3200.000.000 00 annually. If the
•almon cannot freely come and go
. . . ond KEEP THEM HEALTHY and producing eggs.
to the headwaters of the river, they
will either dis or possibly seek some
It is also a good time to Worm your chickens before
other river or rivers In which to
spawn. Now that these two dams
winter. We hove a Worm Powder to mix with Toed,
are well under way the government
has begun to worry about the fish
and feed the whole flock at one feeding. We have
problem, but has appropriated only
sizes suitable for all sized flocks.
a fraction of the amount of money
which their engineers figured would
be required to construct the nec­
essary fish ladders for this purpose;
and there is a question of whether
the fish would use them if con­
Reg. Price Special
structed. For the good of the coun­
try I hope I am wrong, but it looks
25 lb. Sixe____ -------- $2.50
S2.13
to me as though the government Is
15 lb. Sixc____ -------- $1.75
$1.49
•pending around two hundred mil­
lions dollar*—and possibly more be­
7 lb. Sixe ___ $ .85
$ .70
fore they get through—on these two
projects which I doubt will ever
The stove here represented gives the wood ond cool
3 lb. Sixe
_ ____$ .45
$ .38
even begin to pay the interest on
users the lost word in beauty ond efficiency ... it
the Investment, and are more than
1 «/z lb. Size___ ---------$ .25
S .21
likely to ruin an industry which is
has a large.roomy oven ond will bake to the most
already paying two hundred million
critical user's satisfaction and is priced at only
dollars a year. It just doesn't make
good sense.
$89.95. We also have other makes ot from
Well. I'm glad I got all that off
$14.50 up.
Reg. Price Special
my chest, because wehave just nice­
ly storied on our trip and have a lot
1000 Bird Sixe $5.40
$4.59
Some beautiful table model Gas Ranges in stock
of Interesting things to see. and
besides we have to be in Seattle
500 Bird Size $3.00
which we ore quoting ot very low prices . . ' priced
$2.55
tomorrow on business. After lunch
as low as $49.50. We are also showing some hand­
250 Bird Siss $1.90
$1.62
tn Coulee City, population 400, we
drove on west till we again came
some Estate Gas Ranges ot wonderful values.
100 Bird Size $ .90
$ -79
to the Columbia river and crossed
it into Wenatchee, the apple capital
50 Bird Sixe $ .50
$. 43
Come in and look them over ... we know we can
of America, it was certainly a treat
suit you both in price and quality.1
to nee something green growing
PHONE 2140
. again, as nearly all day we had been
driving up and down hills through
dry gorges and canyons of bare,
black rocky formations that, al­
though beautiful in a wild, rugged
way, would not have been quite so
HASTINGS
PHONE 2226
severe end tiresome If they had the
softening effect of some kind of
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
vegetation. We passed mile* and
mile* of orchards, about twenty-five

CITY DF SEATTIE
.. F HILLY BHCHED

Helpful Suggestions

04233238

SET FOR PLAY

FINDS HER WORK
VERY INTERESTING

OFFICIALSAND
CLAIMAGENTS

HATS
by Jean Nedra

Your Fall costume needs one of these amart fur or
wool felta for perfection! Stunning atjrlca with the
new Alpine crowns, the newest forward sweep brims,
and the amartest trimmings! Lovely colon to match
or accent your costumes! For women and miaaea.

Smart Fall Styles!

Glen Row FROCKS
Each One A
Splendid Value!

You know the satisfaction
these Glen Rows always
give . . . and thia Fail we
have improved upon them I
Attractive one and two
piece styles with unusual
trimming details. The new
colon are all here, and
they are al) very 1936! At­
tractive fabrics I Intanot
ing sleeve treatments, new
necklines and collan. They
have the appearance of
much
more
expensive
frocks.
You’ll want to buy several
while the stocks are fresh
and size ranges complete!

CHANGEABLE WEATHER Causes Your
Poultry Ills . .. Now Is the Time to
Feed DR. HESS

PAN-A-MIN

We Carry a Big Stock of

STOVES

PAN-A-MIN

/ wear sports-back

suits because they're

ted Broth;

NEW FALL

Penney*5

High Standard Arch-Support

CYNTHIA OXFOBM

SJ49

Come in and let us show you a
handsome line of Gas Stoves and
Electric Ranges-also for
wood and coal.

co m I o r t able and

packed with style. .

non. okia-

1 of Mld-^U
ought Rnt^M

charge c.*^M

And I'll say that Me-

Creery's cert a i n I y

Poultry Worm Powder

know how to clean

• and and press them

so they look right

"AL

DelUm.

Uroad Zi

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS

MILLER FURNITURE CO

Blucher oxro

�—s Editorials

’Round About Town

AT OPPOSITK POLIS

Statue o/I/IBEUty

HELPING THE FARMER.

wheat, and various other commod-

The New Deal claims respondbllity for an Increase In farm prices..
•
Apparently no credit is given to the
Almighty for a scries of drouthsi
which, combined with lhe adminis­■
tration's policy of deliberate crop&gt;
I
and Uveelock destruction, raised
prices not through the healthy।
,
channels of Increased demand but
rather through the unsound routei
of self enforced scarcity. Here isi
an analysis of the situation made।
by the Boone. la.. News-Republican,,
located In the heart of the great,

iUes.
On-Oct. 6. 1933. Mr. Roosevelt
said: "I know of-flo excessively hlgn !
duties on farm products, i do not i
intend that such duties be lowered." I
Mr. Hull ot Tennessee changed the I
President's mind.. As a result we j

a law like the AAA

Mr. Roosevelt has said repcatedOn the other hand, the farmer of ; ly to judge people by what they do;

Iowa was not relieved from compc- ■[not by what they say.

tition by the sacrifices of the AAA. j
| Applying this maxim, therefore,
Down In Texas, where the govern­ the "typical prairie state." compares
ment shut off raising cotton, they more than favorably-with the stale
Immediately put their idle land into' over which Mr. Roosevelt ruled as
corn production and raised hogs, governor.
nullifying Iowa's efforts at reducNor Is Texas and the south the

and I enjoy reading oocne ot your

Pungent Paragraphs

Yours very truly,

But my boss says nix on politics.
Oh well! That topic Isn't neglect­
ed much these days anyway!
j Saw my friend Frank strolling
1 down the main drag Saturday In a
' decidedly Esquirish country costume.

I

HOW -RILEY’HELPED
TWO HEEDYXIDS

Wonder what color combination
Ray U going to use on his new A TRUE "RILEY STORY" IS
theater?

TOLD BY "OLD
TIMER"

Tommy beta it won't be dull, anyNot every young fellow crashes In­
to a big bunch of cash.

That's why he is driving

a

new

It seems that he inadvertently
swerved into the path ot a comely
shekels (who knows, perhaps of
''shlekels'* too), bearing down at
high speed.

No one was injured in the mlxup—
I And Ferris had enough insurance
Understand they're a bit worried
about Emerson Struble at the A. &amp;

=z&gt;nn(---------- innc=zz

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say
It is quite evident that the de­
pression is over. Last Sunday night
thieves broke into a local church and
stole &lt;49. Now. of course, we regret
very much that any church should
lose &lt;49. but is it not a fine thing,
readers, that any church should
HAVE &lt;49 In cash for a burglar to
come along and steal? You know
absolute Impossibility for a burglar
to make an honest living stealing
money from churches; you can
imagine (particularly, dear reader,
if you have ever been a burglar) how
a burglar feels when he spends at
least &lt;1.85 for nitro-glycerine to blow
s church safe with and then finds
nothing in the safe except 18 cents
in pennies and the senior deacon's
upper plate. Things like this dis­
courage a burglar and often make
him determined to take up a life of
crime. Things have changed; the
Moj-c Abundant Life for Burglars is
now an actuality —G. R. Chronicle

DR. TOWNSEND S EXIT.
While we haye referred to the
Townsend old age pension plan in
these columns several times in the
past few months, we cannot refrain
from again drawing attention to the
promoter of this plan and to its
present status, as disclosed by the
congressional committee named to
investigate the. entire scheme. As
brought out In the committee hear­
ings held recently, the questions
asked were so pertinent that Dr.
Townsend, the author of the plan
who had been questioned, abruptly
walked out on the committee leav­
ing it flat and stating he would not

answer any more questions unless
under arrest.
Since then it has been decided by
the committee to indict the old age
pensioner and have him tried by
the federal court for contempt. Fol­
lowing this two of his former col­
leagues who fy»d resigned from the
entire scheme stated on the witness i
stand that since their withdrawal 1
the whole plan was now a "racket" j
and if the scheme advocated were to
be carried out an entire re-organiza­
tion would be necessary.
The vision of &lt;200 a month for all'
over 60. as advocated, is just a dream i
and as such was destined to have j

since the "South Sea Bubble." ot I
years ago. Its exposure and admls- .
slons of Ute officials connected with
it his fortunately put a slop to a
scheme noted for its wool gathering
fantasy —Virginia Gazette.

Way of Our World
NEWS GLEANINGS.

A Quotation

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

It seems he is growing a mustache.

iron out there by our boat Dad's
Iron f
"Naw. naw,'*
Riley answered.
"Your pa never saw that tron. it
came floating down the river last
night and I snagged it In. didn’t I
Dutch?" speaking to Dutch Wil­
mont.
Dutch said, "Yup, that's so. It
“Now run along," said Riley, "and
ask ma no more questions. But load
that Iron In your boat and gel It

back here before the cupalo runs
THE WANTED TO GET
। dry. And boys, put It out in front
TO A S. S. PICNIC I so I can weigh it. Then I'll tell your

But I understand that Ferris Hc
Lathrop did at Cleveland not long

pa about it and he can pay you

Deviled the Scheme— your money."
The Boyx Knew They
Since those days of long ago I've
done some hard work. But poling
Earned the Money

An old Hastings boy who has been
reading the Riley stories in the Ban­
ner sends us another. His letter was
sent from Albany. New York, and
reads as follows:
Hastings Banner.
Hastings, Michigan.
Gentlemen:
The writer is much interested In
your series of "Riley Stortea" as I
spent all my early life In the beau­
tiful little city of Hastings, and knew
Riley very well. Here is a story that
probably never was told by him. so
It will be my contribution about this
quite versatile and very likeable man
who took real delight In helping "us
kids." Thia story concerns myself
and my boyhood friend. Sylvester
Greusel. Jr, nicknamed "Betty" and

that old scow up the river, loading
It with scrap iron and floating It
down to the Broadway bridge, un­
loading the scrap iron and then
wheeling It all by wheelbarrow, ten
wheelbarrow loads U&gt; all. over to
the Engine ti iron Works, will al­
ways stand out in my memory as a
mighty tough job for two kids. But
we got the scrap iron over there,
weighed It up and were we proud
kids when we were handed one dol-

Years after thia episode I visited
Sylvester Greusel, 8r. He was very
old. but his mind was keen and his
memory good. During my visit he
asked me If X remembered about
selling this &lt;3 worth ot scrap Iron.

To date, he has about three hairs
first Ume that this whole thing of
on one side and four on the other
selling that scrap iron was Just a
YOU have not ful­
and his fellow employees fear that Ungs."
put up Job, engineered by Riley and
filled every duty un­
the unbalanced condition may dis­
"Betty" and I wanted very, very heartily sponsored Sylvester Greusel.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
less you have fulfilled
much to attend a Bunday school 8r, Just to see us two kids "earn our
I At a meeting jjf the directors of tort his face.
picnic to be held at Grand Ledge picnic money by the sweat of our
that of being jilcasant.
the Hospital association Monday it
under the auspices of the Episcopal
Don't get discouraged, boy!
—Charles Buxton.
1 was voted unanimously to change
and Presbyterian churches of Has­
We went from Hastings on the
; the name of the hospital from Good
Even King Ben was a smooth­ tings. All we lacked was the money
, Samaritan to Pennock hospital.
to make the trip. The railroad fare over the Pere Marquette to Grand
faced
lad
once
I
At present the enrollment of stu­
over
to
Grand
Ledge
and
return
waa
Ledge, and all the way back for 75c.
; dents in the high school is 395.
This week's
nomination —
for —
the 75c, and gracious, that was a lot of To me It seemed almost like going
' The members of the II
—tings
--------- -----------------Hastings
Anti-Tuberculosis
Society nt a ' Hastings Hall of Eligible Bachelors money for any kid in those days to halfway round the world. We re­
meeting Tuesday afternoon decided i —Herman Jones, efficient young spend all at one Ume. So if we went lumed home that .night at 10:30
on that picnic excursion we had to thoroughly tired out and ready for
to employ a visiting nurse for two
two ' manager of the c Thomas Store.
a sound night's rest.
months.
WONDER
Sorry to hear that genial Bill olher. We considered various ways
But “Time Marches On" and forty
C. H. Osborn intends to tear down
WHY 1
the
"dough"—even years or more later I often think ot
। the old building between Coscarelll's Stebbins is down with a strep throat.1 of raising
thought
of
putting
on
another
Min
­
GET
Coming
along
fine
though.
how Riley engineered II so that two
■ fruit store and the building occupied
strel
Show
in
"Hennle"
Goodyear's
kids
could attend a picnic that they
j by Billy Michael. It is one of the
bam. just as we had done once be- . had set their hearts on attending.
Well. Bill usually knows how
oldest landmarks in the city and one
fore when we were tn financial dis-1
"Old Timer."
of the few relics of pioneer Hastings. meet such an emergency.
"Hr tfui looks too little ax lunuelf lool[«
tress. But we discarded this idea,
Fable: once upon a time an adult
coo little to hinue!/."
Coach Bennett's boys. I see, start­ because after this show our treas­
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
urer absconded and the-only satis­ person began to keep a diary, and
SEPTEMBER
While other towns are enduring ed the season well.
34—W*u Sirtttt Bl*&lt;k Frifaction we had was later when to­ six months later hadn't skipped a
an ice famine, Hastings is keeping
day.
Understand that the Civic Players gether we gave hint * black eye.
cool. Both local ice firms have a good
supply, and the hot season would are looking for a king.
Inspiration is an express train of
Riley, who always had a warm spot thought. But it's work that keeps
have to be very extended to cause
That's the trouble with kings, in his heart for young kids In dis­ | the steam up.
any suffering.
•
The first annual sale of the Barry some one is always looking for 'em. tress and found them Jobs when he
I Go. Stock Breeders Assn, will be
could, to help them eam a little pin
But this is just for a nice part In money. He had even given •'Betty'"
I held in connection with the Earry
। Co. Pair in the Judging ring. W. H. a swell play—no danger Involved. and 1 Jobs before this down at the
PUBLIC ENEMIES
foundry, varnishing plow-polnta at
Couch will act as auctioneer.
Understand that Blake Boylan Is two cenU per doeen—and gosh, they
| Will J. Field is now reporting fdr
back in circulation again.
got heavy after we had handled
| the Grand Rapids Herald.
a few dozen of them. But the plow
Albert J. Geiger of Woodland, left
He's here for the winter after a point buainess right at this time was
Thursday for Denver. Colo. to spend
a few days with his sisters. While, residence in Detroit, they tell me.
very slack, and "nothing doing" in
there he received a promotion from
this line. So with our sources of in­
assistant surgeon in the navy and BURNING WORDS
come cut off, we poured out our dis­
tress on Riley, who talked it all over
goes back’as regular navy surgeon.
SPOKEN TO PARENTS with us. He finally told us that per­
Gardner Potter of Orchard Park.
New York, is visiting Mr. and Mrs
haps he could tell us Just how we
J.
Edgar
Hoover
Calls
on
could each earn a dollar, and for
W- N. Chidester and other relatives
and friends in this city.
Them to Restore Fam­
The next day we were Johnny-onily
Discipline
FORTY' YEARS AGO.
J Edgar Hoover is the director of
James H. Dewing, general manthe federal "G-Men." who have done thlng doing.
that the road will be extended south such wonderful work in putting an
"Yes," he said, "I got an idea, and
from Kalamazoo to the Grand end to kidnapping and are now
here it is. You kids built a boat
Trunk road within a year, but Jtlst after bank robbers. In the nature
LTARR1ED by six unsolved
last spring, didn't you?"
where, they will join has not been of things Mr. Hoover has made not
n "torso murders," Cleveland
I only
a study
of
crimes but also of
definitely settled. .
, „
....
---------------------------------police arc trying to keep their
tH.lw causes.
ranu, He
tr. Isla concerned, t/v.
"Well, air,” he aald, "I know where
This community was shocked Sun- their
too.
heads.
i day morning to learn of the sudden | over the fact that foreign-born there is a heap of scrap iron that
death of Columbus Knight, superin-. communists are at work trying to you can get, and sell to this foun­
Andy Kerr. Colgate football
tendent of the Table Co. al 11 break down our American insUtu- dry. But you’ve got to use your boat
coach, is teaching his quarter­
o'clock Saturday night.
lions and Ideals. Their work Is to take it down the river to the
backs to cal) signals to the
Seth Angle and wife left Thurs­ largely directed to young people, Broadway bridge. From there it can
rhythmic cadence of a metro­
day morning for Chicago where they who have come from homes where be unloaded, put onto a wheelbar­
nome. Heli expect his team
will make their future home.
parents have become careless and row and wheeled to ort scrap iron
to "swing it" this season..
even indifferent *to the proper train­ pile. Just north of the Engine and
Iron Works."
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
ing of their children.
Three Burmese women snake i A large number of Hastings people
That was all of six blocks from the
In an address on Friday of last
charmers have such power over
go to-Grand Rapids this week to week Mr. Hoover spoke in burning point of debarkation and no side­
hear Edfcln Booth.
their king cobras that the
-words to a big audience in New York walks along the -whole route.
snakes kiss them. Some Ameri­ I There never was so much interest City. He said:
"Now. bays," said Riley, “Just pole
can women have the same . taken In the county fair as at the
"Quite aside from the criminal your boat up the river, anchor it
; present time. This’ Indicates a large wreckage of youth, which lays a near the old river dam. and tomor­
power over their husbands.
I fair and a grand success for the so- heavy enough burden on us all. par­ row morning 111 tell you where this
। ciety.
ental Indifference tn America tends iron mine U located."
contain more vitamin A than ! The annual ball of the Hastings to create a weakening even ot our
We poled our boat up the river
does spinach, according to the | fire department will-take place In own political structure.
just according to Instructions, and
"Instigators of subversive activ­
New Jersey Dental Society But
Union hall Thursday evening Sept.
ities against our form of government kids to pole that old scow up over
don't tell Johnny they're good ',30.
for him.
j Lieut. A. D. Knlskem was one of recruit their army of revolt from the rifles It produced a lot of per­
■ the Judges of the prise drill al the the ranks of youth. And they wjn spiration and blisters, because it was
these tragic, misguided young xaal- a balky old ark. But Just Imagine
Sponges are a low form of I state fair.
ots because parents , have been too
animal life, with power to eat
our consternation the next morn­
laxy
too Igor
ant of existing--------condl"I believe that essential religion , —
.or
----------- -------------------------and digest. Sometimes they are
ing when we found-a large pile of
is one of the world's supreme*! i Hops, or too enamored of false phll- old iron right near our boat all
called "in-laws" by young hus­
needs. and I believe that one of thc osophlaa to attack teachings foreign
bands
ready for transportation down the
greatest contributions
that the, to our ideal* and repugnant to the
river. We were curious to know, too,
Uiflted Blates over can. or ever will. M)Ud American wisdom and com- there that iron came from.
Not only is the Hom Blower
make to world progress—greater by mon sengo which should exist In ev•Betty" Greusel said. “Ill bet you _a nuisance but ft ii also one of
far than any contribution which we I erv
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
ery home.
■ We are constantly confronted that Riley has rolled this iron down
"Nothing Is particularly hard If
the bank from Father's scrap pile the moil dangcrou&lt; users of the
with
lhe
realisation
that
crime
is
you divide It into small jobs."—
tn furnishing an example to the costing America a minimum of 15 and I'm going to uk him about it." highways.
Henry Ford.
By wronfiy assuming that his
world of how the religious life of a billion dollars a y*ar We cannot
_
___ ______
_
ean
evolve intelligently.
In- forget that 1.500.000 ptnons annualhorn will always give him the
"No financial system Is sounder nation
- spirinib'. reverently, completely di- ly roll up a total of 1A08.000 major
or more useful than its manage
i
right-of-way, the Hom Blower
unreason,
all crimes.
know that the crime Works busy
menu—Melvin A. TMjMr., rorced
..............' from all
, lamping
... .. sand In mould- causes many accidents.
B
------------superstition, and all unwholesome1 army of America include* snore than Ing boxes and singing "Old Dog
The good drittr drives no th
■Styles are histories in fabric."— emotionalism." — Robert Andrews . 700.000 boys and girls of less than | Tray" at the top of tits voice.

THE HOftN/
BLOWEft

•BL A

A local bonus recipient flndj^he
First lighthouse built in North
wasn't fighting to save the world for America was a conical masonry tow­
IIUb peculiar fact that when the democracy. Il was for a fur coal for er erected by Massachusetts in 1716.
on Beacon Island now known as
the wife.—Detroit News.
Lighthouse Island, al entrance of
becomes the shibboleth. This U
In a lecture to husbands a speaker Boston Harbor.
well illustrated In treaties which
said. "Stay at home in the evenings
Secretary Of SUte Hull, a Tennessee
The Sahara Desert Is larger than
and hold your wife's hand." This the United States.
—eauxirat
Pul bito effect in
certainly cures the. strumming an
)g Uxt year. Under the AAA and
the piano, but it leaves the major
Tlte trans-Siberian railroad runs
it (janadlan trade treaty thc Unllproblem of the wireless pmctlca'ly from Leintngrad to Vladivostok. 5 ?0Utac has become an importing
480 mile*
untouched —Punch.
ttntrv with regard to all farm
Because a . girl with pretty teeth
tier hand, it has ] originality, modern style; imltatlaughs at your Joke is no sign that
Of cotton, corn, ling an old classic In a new way.
Gabrielle Chanel.
the joke is cs{&gt;ecially amusing.

roily competition which the middle

I this part ot the country, u there
much of Interest to eastern peo-

P

therewith are a few photos.
If there are any friends of 38 dar country and Old Mexico.
Well, the primary skirmish is over. years ago, now probably cl eased as
Wishing you continued success in
old-timers, who remember ths writ­ the publication of ah exceedingly
er.
they might also be interested.
Everything settled
temporarily
now except the printers' bills!

price of com for the three New
l|jc
states treasury can­
Deal years ending Dec. 31. 1935. was nol kcCp Up U)C raln of checks inS1 3-4 cents per bushel, while U&gt;c definitely.
'
average price for the twelve years
Wc cannoi take the farmer to task
preceding the New Deal was 7C cents ' jor aCceptlng . these checks. You
per bushel. The same approximate wouW do u and , w0Uld
u n
percentages are true about wheat. Unt.|(.
(ool enough to throw
and other grains, live stock, and |noney W1 tbere seems lo be no
other products which tiie farmer J 1&gt;arllcular moral sanctity in nol
puts into lhe market.
| grabbing it.

ahe had exiled the hoar amt wa* ■ s(XMj
more ln coltege.*. Thia
!!?“
.'"J”’1
.TI ■*&gt;»*«•» p"1'1'
•&gt;» ™ik»
They
through
.
wwa
—.. wenta a*.
... a
. long rigma- .rvcral
degrees higher In literacy
role of figuring and finally soaked than
,
most of America.
her for &lt;18 penally, which she paid
Illiteracy in the whole country is j
out of her limited means.
Yes. this can happen here, under against
,
3.7 for New Yore.

Organ MT Oflha death of Harry Hayes. He
and the writer were friends since the
days we attended Miss Wolf's kin­
dergarten sixty years ago.
I enjoyed Will's description ot his
country radically dlfforent
tai which MlcW‘n people

AMERICAN
LIBERTY

the New Deal -planned economy."
Abraham Lincoln said:
If we buy a ton of steel rails
in England for &lt;90. America gets
the steel rails, but England gets
the &lt;90. But if we buy the
midwest corn belt:
;
steel rails in the U- 8. we have
fho steel rails and the &lt;90, too.
cent coni?'
। We wonder if the checks that
That is the poser which will be'
certain farmers receive from the
the main argument of the New Deal
government compensate for the loss
Ln the farming areas.
. of markets which they have sufOf course, nobody wants to go jerc(| T,w producer Is beginning to
back to 8 cent coni, nor is there any .
(Hat in the Jong run he Is
danger of it. Furthermore, there is i sjnlpiy receiving money which he
no New Dea! argument in the fact hM dlhcr a|rrady paW ln or wlll
of 8 cent corn, for the reason that have
~ to pay --...
back. Every 2sound
stallilics show that the average buslnr
'man and farm.-r knows

penM lo lhe .Idw U&gt; Maine, she |
„ mlnJ p.,,, „„ ,„u
h.d talehered two bojs lor U» use;
„hool „ sn, yotl ,uu. [M
ot the Ixmll, Lxlee on led.-r.l, bomc o,
„ld p„lc&gt;, m
utooper. exiled. she told them U»l j proportion u u,, popoucton utd &gt;

a sun I think a good lamsuch as you provide will hurl
psrty There is no way to

Hastings Banner.
HaaUngs, Mich.

50 YEARS OMJ ”
October. 2fl.

have had a year's imports from for- ;
elgn farmers of &lt;1491.099297. under i

Possibly Mr. Wallace takes credit
The only question the farmer is
for lhe present dollar a bushel corn, now asking himself is. How long will
Mr. Wallace is a good clalmer. Yet. r la^t? Thc answer is. Well, at least
any farmer knows thc AAA is dead. I unt|| election,
and that lhe present skyrocketing
prices of grain are due to the Al-' It has always been our opinion
mighty and the drouth, not to the j that the policy of crop control verges
New Deal. We congratulate the ' closely on the Insane. No man. howfarmer—If he's got any to sell.
! ever wise, can predict from one ytar
tmtatwuia, lhe all-wise Newlo the neat wh«l «ro«ne eaMIUon*
Deal aarteulural admtalauatlon Ins ।I “
may
or bbe. A misule in ),ul«nienL
| might mean misery and want •"
to •an
need U so he hasn't, tn June
“
called in all scaled cbm loans, de­ entire nation. Imagine, if you can.
mandins Immediate payment and. the condition which mlshl be preva.
today if crops in Europe. Asia
retain, any extension oi Ume. The lent*t__ii sell,
tu
farmer had to
brlnstat the and South America had foiled like
price down as low as 42 cents in they *“2^ here!
some Iowa counties. This whim re- j
SLIGHTLY IREGULAR.
suited in a direct loss to the farmer­
producer. The drouth came along i A merchant here received this
and forced Hie price of corn xs high । week n copy of the 1936 Democratic
platform mailed under the frank of
a* &lt;1.10. The speculator, not the I
I Joe T. Robinson, senate floor leader
farmer, got the benefit.
of tlic Roosevelt administration.
A more pertinent question is. Do,,
Without doubt tills Is only one of
you want to go back to the AAA? ,
j thousands that have been sent out
Who got the gravy from that crea- | ’
at government exiicaw. There Is no
lure of the brain trust? Well, Sena­
particular reason to believe that
tor Vandenberg of Micidgan
itan pried
jincu .u
jK(Wt.rs would "fa-1
out information from ar
JJ1
'°rt’ onc citizen of a midwest town
secretary of agriculture that, out of '
i in this manner and -neglect" all
the &lt;1.171.0694)67 handed out. more
of the others. Whether or not this
t|an 1.000 beneficiaries received over
। mailing was done with the full ap­
gjo.OOO. Beginning al the top of
proval of Mr. Robinson is beside the
the list the Hawaiian Commercial
! point. The important thing is that
Sugar company drew &lt;1.032.037. and j 1campaign literature was mailed at
so on down through the sugar com- ’'
। public expense and that such action
panles. New York banks. New York ',
। represents gross misuse ot public
life insurance companies, stale penl-1I funds. Not so long ago the New Deal
Unliaries, British owned pine and ,
1 sent an investigator lo Detroit for
land companies, cotton kings, really i
the express purpose of "smearing"
operators—all dipping into the pub-1
Brurker. Nothing happened; tn fact
lie treasury for &lt;50.000 up to nearly
. the Investigator departed as quietly
a' million for not doing .semething. t' a* possible. By wiy of suggestion—
Hint looks very dubious to lhe dirt,
If public money is to be spent un­
farmer who got a check of &lt;25 or
earthing the irregular use of funds
more Indeed. It is difficult lo figure
tor campaign purposes, the Invesllout where the faimer comes in in
gallon might at least be ImparUa)
this royal generosity of a Washing- |
and include the activities of both
ton bureaucracy to corjwrations an.1)
political parties.
binks— no mention of which was'
made In the preamble to the AAA. j
CONCERNING SCHOOLS
The malefactors of great wealth'j A report is going around that
icem to have got the best ot it.
[
। Governor Landon copies from a
Compere this generous treatment. ,uu wl}crc
of the sugar companies, banks. and
corpor.Uan. will, wliai h.p- '
ol
K,nM„

Itl The
Public Forum |t|
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Crumbs of Wisdom

J Millikan.

1 voting age."

"Betty" said, "Say, Riley, U the.t

hit head —&lt; not his homl.

____

�THE HA8TING8 BANNER, THURSDAY. BEFTIMBKK U 18M

FIMKS
SPOKE IT BOW
BUBJIOT WAI
“DUTHI
AMD BX1P0M1IMILITIM OP VOT1B0"

URGED RESPECT FOR
THOSE IN AUTHORITY

ferred io tho Senate a* lite "can at

SOCIAL EVENTS
Coolidge If be had had such an n-

DORIS RYAN TOWED
KALAMAZOO MAN
then

Senior class
representative*— dink for pupils interested in the
WEEK END GATHERING FOR
GRAND RAPIDS GUE8TS. Bradford Hinckley. Donald Doxey.
Margaret Flngieton and Btapten
Johnson.
and more are expected thb year.
Mbs Marte Spaulding and Miss
Junior Class
representative*— 13&gt;b feature U unique with Hasting*.
Dorothy Krootm of Grand Rapids. Harry Thompson. Jane Harrington.
Ronald Ingram and Wayne Flnk-

belner.
which nearly troas him
vice-pteckSsnt said. •'Tbe offiee of
Dibble
' '
vlce-onsManl of lhe United Bute*, Oeramooy to Toko Flaoo
Freihmen representative—Glare
■A, if too (Ugnlted to be treated with
/ SUordo; BToalDf at
Bush.
lerilg."
of
absence
during
which
Ume
sire
Girls'
League
representative—
Brida'a Sana
Tho speaker pleaded for respect
will travel in the west- On Saturday Ruth Hathaway. f
for those In authority, respect for
Mtaa Doris Marguerite Ryan,
the ofitoee which they flf which
Home
room
repreaentallvaa—
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
ought to call for respect for lhe men
Room
103Jane
Snyder;
Room 303
Ryan. Ml Baal Grand street, will party to Battle Creekchoeyn by the people to All them,

beUarrted Saturday evening to Mel­
vin Gelow, son of Mr. and Mr*. Otto BUSINESS WOMEN'S
HOSPITAL GUILD MEETS.
Gelow, 1303 Stockbridge ayenug.
Misa Arlene Campbell wa* ho*teas
Kslenssoo. The ceromony I* to be
performed at the home by lhe Rev. to the Business Women* Hospital
Frank Sparks, editor of lhe Grand fault In not giving more attention to W- Maylan Jones of the' First Guild for their September meeting.
Rapids Herald and an enthusiastic lhe manner in which our govern­ Methodist church in the presence of । A delicious chicken dinner wa*
ment is carried on. He told of a
served to twenty-six al lhe McCow­
Rotarian, was the speaker al lhe Grand Rapids young lady who camo relatives anti immediate friends.
an hotel al Long lake. Hostesses for
noon luncheon of lhe Hastings Ro­ to him to have him explain soma­
tary club Monday. His theme waa thing about politics She said she choeen as bridesmaid and Gerald ’ an entertainment feature several
"The Duties and Responsibilities of had Just registered so she Could vote. Ryan, brother of tho bride, will serre of the members told of their vaca­
Voters." He explained that he waa He asked her if she were planning a* best man.
The bride's gown of white velvet tion trips. Mrs. A- J- Vedder Is lhe
bom in Maine, where politics are tak­ to go lo lhe primary election. To his
hostess for October.
en very seriously. Citizens of Maine surprise she replied. -Why should I b made on princess lines with floor
know they are cither democrats or go to that? That is Just a focal mat­ length skirt and full sleeves and she
MUSIC CLUBS MEET.
republicans and in his boyhood had ter In Grand Rapids." That waa her will carry a shower bouquet of white
Patricia calkins delightfully en­
very definite notions as to why. He imprtseion of It. Re disabused her roses and pink snapdragon*. Mbs tertained the Mozart Music Club
gown
a pale ™
blue I
mind on that subject, and then be­ Trego's
fo™.l and
sh.will
will be
rarA
Thur.day evening. Sept 17. ImoIf a democratic torch light proces­ gan to Inquire how much she knew formal and she will carty pink roses I
? nraetlee P
sion were lo pass down the street about our country, its government and snapdragon*. Mb.-. Barbara Wilwhere he lived, his father would and the manner Ln which we select
In the afternoon. Mrs. I. J. —
Smith
order all lights out. the blinds closed our officers. He was aurprloed to find
entertained her younger music pu­
and direct that none of lhe family that she knew almost nothing about many, will wear a floor length pils from four until six o'clock.
could
look —
nt _a democratic
-------- even
--------------...o WM H q(»u- gown of peach crepe and a corsage Marguerite Harris won Die prize in
of
mixed
flower*.
procexslon. Democrats in that day i uate of the Grand Rapids school*,
,
mui u&gt;TUUu&gt;i iu. this divisionme
for in.m.
practicing the moat
had equally strong prejudices; but She was not to blame, he said, but
pw home will be decorated with, hours. The children had a happy
there waa one thing that was im- • the school* certainly are to blame, tall candelabra with lighted taper*. llJnc.
pressed upon him in his home and He called attention lo the fact that baskets of flowers and palms. A re- ,
*2^ h2*u&lt;,ul?r. “ * c,^*en.
al’ I 0,6 llud* of our Kovernmenl at our ceptlon follows thc ceremony, a
ways vote when the opportunity was I state university la nqi required,
bride'* cake decorating the' buffet
given him. and tn always respect I not evan encouraged, one can U
serving table.
those in authority, no matter what ’ it
It If enough others
other* are interested
Interested to
The couple will make their home
party they might represerit.
I form
a class
*
‘ a. That is a fearful lack. In Kalamazoo where the groom h
-He
-----------------remembered
—..
that
v~..
Congressman
.---------lhe .-------speaker
r said. In our system of
employed a* mail carrier,
.
—-------------------------------------—
Boutelle
was a near neighbor,
and'!education.
education. IEvery boy and girl who
The bride b a graduate of the
Girl's soccer practice
started
that he was accorded lhe highest re- graduate* from the high school, Hastings High school slid has been
•peel by everybody in that city. Peo-1 ought to know not only what are employed as ap operator at Fox'* Tuesday, Sept. 23. after school, un­
der the direction of Mbs Helen
pie, trusted Lo hi* honor and Ln teg- ■ lhe
1H*------------------— lo be filled In beauty parlor.
Important «"»*
office*
Meraon. Practice sessions will be
rily lo fittingly represent them at lhe township or ward or county, but
held every Tuesday and Thursday.
Washington. They knew he was also In the stale and nation, and
NEW IDKA CLUB.
A* yet the teams have not been se­
honest. Al lhe present time very how those candidates are chosen.
Mr*. Ed. Tudor wa* hostess for the lected. Approximately 50 glrb an­
While
Mr.
spark*
U
a
republican
Utile attention is paid lo congress­
September meeting of the club. Mrs. swered the first coll. Eleven mem­
men. and they arc not held in high hb addreA* was entirely non-partl- Bump and Mrs. Roush were kucsLs bers are required for each of the
repute. Mr. Sparks believed that **n. All who heard it, no matter After a lovely 6:30 dinner and after four teams Miss Merton states that
the primary system of making noml- i what lheir politics, could not fall to the regular business, the evening an unusual amount of Interest I* be­
nations b largely responsible for!I be Impressed with what he said.
was spent in telling summer vaca­ ing dbplayed. The tnterclass games
thta changed altitude toward public |
tion experiences by Lhe different will begin in about two week*.
OBITUARY.
servants. There 1* certainly a retrogreuicn from Uiat day to this. He | Robert T. Martin, youngest son of Joyable.
Thc Weekly News Review edited
can still recall how peeved he felt ____
by Walter E. Meyer in Washington.
when Grover Cleveland was elected bom Ln County Tyrone. Ireland. ATTENDED STATE
D- C- b being used in the history
MEDICAL MEET.
and
government classes to keep thc
could be hoped fnr from his admin-1lo.
10. 1936,
1938, alter
after an Illness
illness of fourteen
Dr. R. B. Harkness of ths Barry
islration when he was re-elected. weeks
* with
' general* ’tuberculosis.
"
....
Al County Health Unit wa* in Detroit puplb informed on lhe current
That wa* thc altitude ot the repub­ the age of fourteen he came to thb week attending the session* of events of the united States as well
licans of that day. But it turned America with his aunt. Martha J. the Michigan Slate Medical society, as those of oilier countries. High
out that Grover Cleveland made one Kennedy, with whom he lived for which commenced Monday and con­ school puplb are showing a great
of the soundest and best presidents nineteen years, his mother coming to cluded today. The largest exhibit in interest in what is going on in lhe
this country ever had. and from that this country in 1883. He was united its hbtory featured the convention, world concerning politics, science,
.
experience Mr. Sparks said that he In marriage lo June perry on March the fourth and fifth floors of lhe and music.
long ago reached the conclusion that 31. 1819. He wax a member of the Book-CadHlac Hotel being devoted
Thc Journalism class under thc
this country is nol going to the dogs, Masonic Blu* Lodge of Hastings, a to S3 scientific and 73 technical preno matter which parly may be in director of lhe Barry county Fair sentaUons. u&gt;«r
Over 2.000 nrcuiucra
member* wm
and direction of Harold Logan Is well
““ signing ot the
power.
Association and was Interested in all their wive* attended lhe convention. undcr
Mr. Sparks described hi* exper­ public enterprises. He was a brecd- Dr. Harkness wa* the delegate of the Fortnight engraving contract with
the
&amp; oUlver Engraving Coin­
“
** John *■
iences al Cleveland and Philadelphia ler of registered Shropshire sheep. Barry County Medical society.
i pany, one of the largest in United
attending thc recent national con­ Poland China hogs and Guernsey
I Stales. Il Is expected that some ot
HONORED GUESTS.
ventions and lhe altitude of dele­ cattle and spent many happy hours
About thirty friends and neigh­ the annual pictures will be token
gations toward lhe high office for watching and caring for them. He
which they were lo make nomina­ leaves,to mourn hl* loss, his wife, bors gathered nt lhe home of Ute during the last week In September.
tions. Il was nol what It should be. a bo Linden Bryans, who has made
Hastings' grldder* go to Umslng
He gave it as his Judgment that his Home with them for the past nesday evening for a farewell party
Theodor* Roosevelt wa* lhe great­ nine years, three half-brothers. Wil­ In honor of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ben­ Saturday night. September 36, for a
est politician who ever occupied the liam and Elmer Gillespie of Has­ nett, parent* of Mrs. Crocker, and n football game with Lansing cen­
White House. Ho Illustrated this by tings and George Gillespie of abler. Mr*. Florence Schneider, all tral's Big Reds under lhe light*.
incidents that showed hb Intuition Charleston. W. Va.. two cousins, Mrs. of Dalton. N. Y. A program, consist­ Last year they returned on thc
and good Judgment. Three recent Eldon Matthews and Andrew B. ing of readings and music, followed short end of a 51-0 score but should
presidents, all of them high class Kennedy, besides a number of nieces by light refreshments, made a de­ give a belter account of themselves
men. had nol been successful as and nephews and many friends. Fu- ( lightful evening for all.
thb year.
presidents because they did nol un­ neral services were held al lhe First ■
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED.
I Following is the roster of thc
derstand politics. These were Taft. Methodist church in Hasting* on
Mrs. George H. Post has an-1 Faculty-Student Council and the
Wilson and Hoover. He spoke of Mr. Saturday afternoon at two-thirty!
Hoover as an engineer
His engi­ o'clock. Thc Rev. C. M. Oonklin nounced the engagement and an-' list of officers: chairman. Donald
neering experience had taught him read the Scripture, the Rev. W. preaching marriage of her daugh- i Doxey;
Vlce-Chrm..
Bradford
that a straight line was the shortest Maylan Jones offered prayer and ter. Emma Lucile Wiilitt*. to Clark [ Hinckley; Secretary. Jane Harringdistance between two points; but he the Rev. Karl H. Keefer of Water­ Welker of Grand Haven. Mr. Welk-| ton; Treasurer. Wayne Finkbeincr.
vliet
gave
lhe
sermon.
At
Riverside
never discovered that thc shortest
er b the son of Mr. and Mrs. c. Faculty representatives. Fred 8.
distance between two points in poli­ cemetery the Masons had charge of Welker of Ionia and b the produce Jone*. Chrm.. Mis* Merson. Jos.
tics is often lhe longest way around, the burial service.
manager of the Atlantic and Pa- Brozak. Albert Becker and Miss
so he offended lhe politicians of his
ciflc Tea company there.
Michael.
own and the opposite parly. That FOURTH DISTRICT
W. C. T. U. CONVENTION.
was quite true of Wilson and Taft.
The Fourth District of lha Mich­
He described President Coolidge as
a politician from thc sub-stratum igan Woman* Christian Temper­
underneath him to lhe highest point ance Union, comprising lhe same
in Uie stratosphere. He was a silent six counties as the Fourth Con­
man but he knew the game. He re­ gressional District, will hold it* an­
membered an interview he had with nual convention al the Presbyterian
Mr. Coolidge. His description of it church Ln Sturgis. Oct. 1 and 3.
wa* very humorou* Thc then vice­ commencing at 1:30 on Thursday.
president had spoken before the The principal speaker on Thursday
Zach Chandler club tn Lansing. He will be Mrs. Mary E. Hudson, state
had the opportunity to meet him al corresponding secretary and nation­
the hotel after the address, and gave al secretary and national director
an amusing account ot the inter­ of Cllisenahip. Mrs. Hudson la a
view. which consisted of almost un­ well informed woman and a very
broken silence on lhe part of Cool­ able speaker. An Interesting fea­
idge and rather awkward attempts ture of Friday's session will be two
to start conversation himself. Final­ medal contests, a gold and a pearl.
ly he managed lo think of an amus­ All who are interested in temper­
ing statement made by Vice-Presi­ ance work are urged lo attend this
dent Marshall, in which he had re­ meeting, both women and men.

Every Young Person Ought unless they are unquestionably un­
fit
.
to Know How Our Gov­
He eloeed with lhe statement that
ernment la Run
he believed that our schools are al

Hastings High School
Activities

—Otara Bu*h; Room 307—Wllto
Jones; Room 213—Marjory Tinker;
Room 304—Mary FUher; Room 306
—Janet Smith; Room 306—Kathryn
8aunder*; Room 307—James Dibble.
; Boys' Union officer*—Pres., DeFor­
est Walton; Vlce-Pres. Robt. Hen-

ney;, Sergeant-at-arms,

Marshall

Cook.

Society wiU be held an Tuesday.
DAILY DEVOTIONS
OF BUSY PEOPLE.
Till* b a busy age in which we
live. When we compare our dally
activities with a generation or so

DRUG SPECIALS
For Friday And Saturday
ASPIRIN, bottle of 10019c
ALCOHOL, pint19c
HINKLE'S PILLS, 100 ................. ..16c
MILK OF MAGNESIA, pint19c
COD LIVER OIL, pt., plain or mint, 59c
HALIVER OIL Coptuloi, box of 50, 79c
HOT WATER BOTTLE 2-qt. else, 59c
FOUNTAIN SYRINGE, 2-qt. else -59c
ORLISS TOOTHPASTE17c
DR. WEST'S TOOTHPASTE17c
MILK OF MAGNESIA Toofhpoete, 29c
RUBINOFF MINERAL OIL, qt.
59c
(half gal., 98c; gal, $1.79)

ft F F

Wolgrqon Syetem

Keel/ 3 drugstore
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

FHONI 2241 ,

BUTTER
FRESH

O

Creamery

which much time was formerly de- be lhe speaker.

Smoked
Shanlil.il

FRANKFURTERS

C
X.da"’'

Skinless , LB.

25c

The fourteenth annual Spotlight
will be held. Friday. October 9 in the
Central auditorium. IL will be uni­
que this year with the theme based
on highlights in Barry county's
hbtory. The students followed up
suggestion* gathered at lhe Centen­
nial exhibit held Ln lhe schoob last
spring and will present them Ln the
manner of thc "March of Time."
Among the episodes will be an In­
dian trial, as It was and as it
might have been; an old-fashioned
corn husking bee and a glimpse of
n night at lhe opera house. The en­
tire presentation b planned and
carried out by the students spon­
sored by the Faculty-Student Asso­ business, if no lime b available be­
fore going to work. The Upper Room
ciation.
b publbhed without profit al five
Hastings High school has Joined oenta per copy and may be ob­
tained from the local Methodbl pas­
the Michigan High School Forensic tors.
Association again thb year. Thc
question debated will be—Resolved: '
PARENTS OF TWINS.
That all electric utilities should be
Mr. and Mrs Robert Sponable of
governmentally owned and operated. Owosso are the parents of twin
Thb is a subject which has already daughters. Nancy Lee and Sue Anne,
aroused considerable interest among bom at Butterworth hospital In
citizen* and/power companies. The Grand Rapids on Monday. Sept. 7.
students art busy gathering fact* They weighed five and six pounds.
and information from every avail­ Mother and daughters are doing
able source (Concerning private ver­ splendidly and returned on Thurssus Rovemmant-owned plants. If
anyone ha* anything to offer them son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry 8ponable
along thb line, the debater* would of this city and hi* wife was. be­
be very glad to have it. Four varsity fore her marriage. Mis* Avia Mlle*,
debater* are returning lid* year. daughter of the Rev. and MT*. L. D.
Marian Hewitt. Ruth Hathaway. De­ Mile*, former Delton residents. In
Forrest Walton and Robert Henncy. the Eberly family from which Roband many other promising candlmore than a dozen sets of twin*, also
Their first debate will be held No­ some triplets as old Adam Eberly.
vember 27. although the side and Robert's grandfather. The latter also
their opponent have not yet been has twin sisters.
assigned. In the meantime the aquad
will be holding practice debates at
The road of our nation's destiny
community meetings and with other is now turned back to the village.
school*.
The American people may find that
This year for lhe second time lhe skyscrapers empty shells before they
debate squad b sponsoring lhe De­ turn their backs again on the rural
bate Porum. It b in the nature of a communities."—Dr. Oliver E. Baker.

OBITUARY.
Mr*. Sarah Ann

holding thair

Roger*

paaaed

of Hastings twenty-five years and
of Barry county all her life. She

W. of Grand Rapids; one daughter.1 with the quortermaater We cannot
Mrs. Myrtle L Palmer, of Battle afford to Lose any members, and
Creek; one brother. John Olmstead. I you cannot afford to foee yout
of Grand Rapids and four grand-1 membership. Why not cheek up
children. Funeral services were held and act beta* It's too late?

1

S A L E of
YARD GOODS
ouHngi on4 priaH . . . OUT TH IT MUST 00 AT
LESS THAN COST!

Plain White Sheet
Size 72 x 99
Soft and Fleecy

PRINTS

22c and '25c values

Dork and Light
36 Ira. Wide

Broadcloth
Swrouckan
Gingham*

Choice
Yard

*!_J
E JBELLIN
■ fl ■
Ihort
B fl

f

Y-f*&lt;Wr OPINING

Y*Front opening. A wide La itex waistband sup­
ports Hie abdomen, strengthens the back and

STEAKS

LB.

23c

encourages erect posture. Worn as underwear,
excellent for men of all ages—stout or slender.
Especially restful for riding, golfing and hiking.
Beilin shorh give needed protection after an
abdominal operation.
ALL WAIST sizes FROM 6IZC 30

Full of Juice

I5e

Waters Clothes Shop
Exclusive Distributor
Hastings, Mich*

Telephone 2335

45c
Real Fine Qualities
Many Stylet

29c

"PRINTZESS" CO’MARY LANE" CO
"BLUMFIELD" FRO
SPORT COATS . $10.00
DRESS COATS, $16.7$,

All Silk

FALL WASH
Sport Skirt*, Wool

Priced at
»|00

Ule Deliver

Blanket Special

PRINTS
New Fall Pattern*

19c

'2

them by havtnc everyone tin

who preceded her in death three
years ago. Besides her many friends

OUR BEST

i&gt;s

‘El.DPAUSCH
•M/KRKET’

a full

months.

03

SWEET POTATOES 6

Ph «ne . -

C. G. DeCou and Mrs. Warren
Moore. Bring thimbles as wo have
towel* to hem.—Mrs. Otto^aenhath,

Ready-Made Sheet*
81 x 99
QQc
Only—

Bellin ihorts are comfortable knitted brief* with

Grapefruit:

604 w. Walnut St., assisted

36 in. Muslin

|9c

Oranges

talned on Thursday evening. Oct. 1,

Unbltachad Muslin

LB.

Medium Size O Cc

the day.

Notice the Ridiculoutly Low Prices
—and Help to Carry Them Away!

MINCED HAM

Round, Sirloin or Swiss

opening event for the 1838-37 year'* preeent
program ot lhe Hasting* Women's will bo
Club, president Dr. Emil Leffler ot
Battle Creek college will give lhe
address of the afternoon. Roll cal)

in thb age there are as many glrLn
and women as there are men em­
ployed In business and industry. In­
stead of Just one person In a home
Kling up tn lhe morning and nuhaway to work, there may be.
three or four in lhe same family.
Because of thb dally rush and the
brief lime that the members of a
family are privileged to be together,
the religious and spiritual life of
most of our homes ha* suffered
greatly.
In order to reach and to lift the
level of the spiritual life of our
homes, evangslbtic agencies of the
Northern and Southern Methodist
churches are publishing The Upper
Room, a 96-page booklet, containing
a spiritual meditation, .scripture
reading, and prayer for each day ot
the quarter. Thb booklet can be
carried tn lhe ladies' pocketbook or
the men's coat pocket, to be read

PICNICS

"J C
t b'

There waa a

living at a dlzxy pace. Thing* to

"My Wife
Likes the
Service al
Feldpausch
Market”

REED'S

Organista

"Erclwive Bur
H ASTI NOS

�THE HASTINGS BANNEB, THtOMDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, UM

Sporting Items

at

I

OPENS SEM
WITH 11-0 WIN

Axminsters
IK. "foel-CDHlfort"

Hol-blati tvrni

Into reel heat

Regularly

!

do*?

22°4

Lounge Chair and Ottomanl
Pillow-back; big, carved knuc­
kle arms I Tapestry Cover.
Perfect fi;o control I

AnU-tcorch lid
for light
cooking.

2 &gt;1

Made to sell up to 132.951 Made
of fine blended, imported wools
just like real, expensive orientals I
Persian, Chinese, modem, floral,
and hooked rug patterns I

RADIATES!

WAH1HHEIM

57««

30

S5.9S
Qiralltyl

Ileartliglow Gives Both

Ths direct heat of a real hearth, plus circulating heat that will
fill 4 or 5 whole rooms with healthful, moist, warm air. A fin*
piece of furniture . . . tall, graceful, modem, in rich grained,
chromium trimmed walnut porcelain. Built rugged, to keep youi
home warm for many winters to come. Burns coal and wood.

Chart®

$1.79 Value Chenille Rugi.

Fireplace Cozineu, Plu» Whole Hou*e Comfort!

Wards

Hall Usual Price!

88“
FEATHER PILLOWS! 18x
25 size filled with purified
hen feathersl Drill tickingl

Mg

SALE! One of the finest hard
surface rugs you can buy! Patterns
for every room in your home I

U» .. SUS . THIS .. sue . tdSK . . KU

Reg. 37c Wayrfo/eu. YW.Gdi d'.arfP'
Widths, se. yd-

Ward* Sensational 1937

Airline Radios
77ie

Finest Wards Ever Soldi

I • Record-breaking Low Prices!

5-TUBE A. C. DELUXE
MANTEL

JO***

Big 91 Saving!

4»i

OCCASIONAL
walnut I

CHAIR!

Attractive covers I

A big little superheterodyne with automatic
volume control, personal tone control,, ar.d
super-dynamic speaker. 2 wave bands, gets
distant U. S, Europe, police calls. Licensed
by RCA and Hazeltine. An amazing low price!

6-TUBE BATTERY
MANTEL

32^’*

A handsome radio with lighted dial, automatic
volume control, and 2 wave bands. Low bat­
tery drain. Licensed by RCA and Haxeltine.

I npalnleu Chair

Wards—World's Largest Retailer of Radios

Paint it any color I Heavy
SOLID HARDWOOD with
wide, roomy seat I

Combination Offer: A

Year’s Supply of SOAP

with Oversize WASIIElt

bmail Lorrying Charge

2. Washboard -action
3. Pressure cleansing
Lovell wringer.

This offer ends October 3rd! Washer alone is a
859.50 to 169.50 value! Soap worth about 851
Oversize tub hold* 20% more clothe*. Washe*
cleaner, quicker because of Wards Triple-Action!
Famous Lovell wringer, balloon rolls, adjustable
preuure, safety-bar release! Come see it today!

5994
Large 78 inch davenport—covered
in beautiful, Modem striped and
plain tapestry combination I Carved

ItOOFIXG
THIS WEEK ONLY!^&gt;

. t

- --a

Selected felt, heavy as­
phalt coating, mica sur­
face. Resists weather,
water, fire. Save!

21” Fobric
O'niteCase

Usually 81.00.

DOWN

2 Pc. MODERN

74«

88&lt;

Wards Famous
Trlpiw-actlon:

Of Haitingg Country Club,
Defeating Dave Good­

year fl-4

Hastings Country club was deter­
mined Sunday when Dr. Ken McIn­
tyre defeated David Goodyear 6 lo 4.
These championship matches aro
H. H. S. GRID TEAM BEATS tor 36 hofau of golf, IB being played
in lhe forenoon and 18 in the after­
GRAND LEDGE, THERE, noon.
This match proml«cd to be a very
SATURDAY
hotly contested one as the two con-

HALTS DETERMINED
DRIVE IN SECOND HALF

HT CUKCTLATES!

DR. KEN NkjINTYRE NEW
GOLF CHAMPION

3 pockets —
Waterproof.

LONGEST
WEARING
SKATES

Usually 11.65.
Dreadnaught
steel wheels.

Regularly 81.291 Holds enough for two.
with pint vacuum bottle.

EASY LIFT PUMP ,
»I 50 regularly! Easy action pump for
UAH. -&gt;n •&gt; — i—r

QT. FLOOR PAINT ]
Wards regular 59c Coverall Paint, high
gloss finish. Qt.

COMMANDER PLUG

TUBE PATCH KITS ]

Some big Wo»h«« Equipped with Eaiyitmtiag Ga*oliaa Engine, and Soop . .

lion. Save I

Usually 19c! 72 square Inchpj Of mate­
rial; with two tubes cement.

Local. Flay Lan.inj Con.

17
14®

Montgomery Ward

to wtu, th, ehampiombip tor u&gt;. ■

tral in Hl&lt;ht
Game Sal.
°
nau seiueu down to turn uarra anti
The High school grldders opened dt. Houghton of Caledonia. As thi
their season at Grand Ledge. Sat- Dr. found u impossible to play, 11
urday. by trouncing the Ute city leaves Mr. Baird as the champiot
eleven 13-0.
'
in this clou.
The Benneltmen were forced to wc extend congratulations to the
In .fen ____ ■____ ....
..... ...._____
first few minutes of the opening that there will be plenty of fellows
quarter, but were well rewarded lying in WBu for them next year,
when Kelly of Hastings blocked a
--punt made by Grand Ledge and re­
covered the ball in midfield. Hall
made IB yards through lhe line* for
a first down and Scobey skirted1
around end for a touchdown on the
next play Th* extra point was nol
made. The rest of the quarter was
an exchange of punts between the
two teams.
BAND AND PARADE T(
Hastings carried the fight tn the
PRECEDE GAME HERE
second quarter by making five flrat
downs but was unable lo cross the
OCTOBER 2
goal line. The Grand Ledgers were
unable lo penetrate the stone wall
line of defense which the Bennett- H. H. S. ALUMNI
men put up. Angell at center backed
INVITED TO ATTENt
up lhe line splendidly and figured
largely Ln stopping line plunges and Everyone Should Help Boob
power plays.
Hastings
Qridders at This ’
The third quarter was Lhe most
exciting of the whole game. Grand
Annual Event
Ledge came on the field at the open­
The annual Hastings High schoc
ing of the last half and displayed a
determination and fight that all but homecoming football game will b
took the local lads of! their feet. The played with Allegan High schoc:
Friday
afternoon. October 2, a.
tile city men made a first down,
3:30 o'clock. The High school ban1'
their first In lhe game, in lhe initial
play. However, they were not satis­ will participate and a student pa
rade
before
lhe game from th
fied with Uiat and started a march
school to the field is planned. Ajn
in the general direction of the goal
line. It was halted only by a five alumni are Invited to be presertyard penalty for taking too much and lend their support to thei
team.
tune.
Since Hastings defeated Allege
The Benneltmen then emerged
from their slump, while In the sha­ 41-0 in 1925. no victory over its an’
dent rival has been won by the l&lt;rz
dows ot their own goal post* and
cal
school. In recent years neve
with a fine piece ot generalship on
lhe part of Charley Struble, got out ha* more than one touchdown sep
arated lhe two in the final scort .
of an otherwise bad situation.
but
Allegan
has Invariably been vic*1
Tile local lads made two first
downs in this quarter to even the torious. Every indication is tho
count in that category. However, Hastings will enter the gam? th
underdog again and the loyal surf1’
their opponents
completed two
passes, the only ones of the game, port of alumni and townspeople p
F&gt;
to outplay the home town boys In hoped for.
Hastings ho* nine returning letter­
that division.
The fourth quarter was marked men from the team which lost lark
year
to
Allegan
0-0.
while
Allegaf'j
by Hastings constantly threatening
about twice as many retuminpj
to score. A series of double reverse ha*
veteran*. Walldorf! and W. Cat?nj
play* took the local lads across the
goal line with Smith carrying the Bump at tackle and H. Kelly, IP’-I
pigskin. Hall then slipped around
for the extra point.
The Grand Hinckley and Brady In lhe bactf’J
Ledgers then made a series of cost­ field are missing from the Ha.1*"1
ly fumbles which kept them from tings starting line-up of last yea®
being considered a threat. In fact Good replacements are available*'
as the game ended lhe Benneltmen but It Is a question whether the
were driving on to what looked like can cope with Allegan's veterans.
another touchdown.
Gold is In evidence, however,
The line-ups were:
the squad has had the advai
Hastings (13)
Grand
"
- -Ledge
•—
(0) of a year's practice under Cv.v|
“
Dick Bennett's system. Allegan has re­
Smith
Boyer
Cappan
placed its veteran football coacii
Mackenzie
Beumer
John Damoth, this year. Clan
M. Gates Muma, who has had unusual suc^
Angell
Hunter
Moore
cess during the last six years a
Waggott coach at Decatur, has assumed tif •
Doxey
Irish football coaching duties. Whethd1:
Ransom (C.)
Blough
Hall
Q
n change In football system will rd"
R. Gates fleet In Allegan's ability at thfe
Struble
Scobey
R. H. Kingsley (C ) early season date, only lhe garrtn
Dixon can tell.
Kelly
F‘
Substitutions: Hastings; Leslie.
Hastings' probable starting llnrP'
Sothard. Schwarts, Edmonds, UzBalllster, Oaukln, Shay. Rennick Central game on Sept. 26 include#®
McLeod, Draper and
Cogswell. RE. Ransom: RT. Doxey; LG. FT
Grand Ledge; Aldrich.
Barker. Beumer; C. Angell; RG, E. Moonf*
Wolfe, Maguire, De Moss. Harrod. LT, Cappon or MacLeod; LE, (•'*
Gilbert. Frederick. Hayes and Gid- Smith; Q. Hall; LH. Struble; Rif®
ley. Officials: Umpire; Albaugh. Al­ Scobey; F, Kelley.
r*
ma; Referee. Robinson, M. 8. C.
kt
Next Saturday the team goes lo HASTINGS WINS
TENNIS MATCDd
Lansing to play a night game against
Tiie Central Michigan TennIt,
the Lansing Central eleven. Hastings
was defeated 52-0 In their skirmish League held Its tournament heikt
last Sunday afternoon with 10 lean]
with them last year.
from Hastings. Grand Ledge. lonlag
"It is essential Jhat business peo­ Middleville and Grandville compeih
ple have more character, more sta­ ing. Perry and Crothers of Hastlnibility and more moral purpose In won lhe final match, defeating Dofr.
Life."—Str Josiah Stamp.
and Bell ot Grand Ledge.
k-

ALLEGAN GAME
ATHOMECOMIN0

(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)

|39

5Si.,S.Dr1i,S

rumble. Oo.Uy to Lo..r.-“J

PRIMARY ELECTION
OFF CIAL FIGURES

LUNCH KIT-BOTTLE '

first 18 hole*, in the afternoon both

United States senator.
Prentiss M- Brown .'..
Louts B. Ward
Ralph W. Llddy
John H. Muyskens ..

.204

Total
Representative hi Congress.
Birge O. Swift
Harvey H. Jarvis
Guy M. Tyler
Roman I. Jarvis, Sr
Bernard H- Dlny

.011

67

10

Total

.1.115

State Senator.
Don E. Hughes ..
David Rosenheim

.115

Total
Representative in Legislature.
Chas. F. Parker .
Prank W. Bennatt
Total
Sheriff.
George H. Myers
John Van Der Kolk
Chas. A. Woodruff
Total
On Monday Judge Clement re­
ceived a totter from Louis A. Ward,
who wa* a candidate for the democratic nomination tor United State*

Senator, asking for a report of Un­
votes in Barry county. The resujs,
was not close In this county as col
be seen by the above figures, so It hr
'just possible that no recount of th!
, ballot* here will be requested. A n
count is a long tedious procedure. r&lt;!
qulring considerable expense, so ML
| Ward will no doubt take the ballofJ
from those counties where there wi|n
a closer vote than in Barry count!.

DEATH OF HIRAM RU88. f'
Hiram at
Russ,
died In
on this
Tuesd*»
evening
his 55.
home
Sa"
after several weeks' illness Wltf"
heart trouble. Funeral services wl|"
be held at the home. 334 W. Cout
St, on Friday afternoon at tvr'
o'clock, with burial in Rlverslcf*
cemetery. He is survived by hl
mother. Mrs. E. C. Russ, and tw
sisters, Mrs. W. J. Field an,
Mrs. Don Bllvin, a niece. Mrt
Cranston Wilcox, and a nephevi'
Robert Field, of thb city. For mat?"
years Mr. Russ conducted a grocer'®
store In Hastings and recently htr:
worked at Wahjamega near Care!
He was a devoted member of tn"
First Church of Christ Scientist^
In this city and served for mart*
The bereaved ones have the ayi
pathy of a wide circle of friend*.

JANE M. NEWMAN DIES.
month* old. were held on
home of her parent*. Mr. and 3
Ervin Newman of Irving town!
Burial in the Orangeville cemet
-Surviving
------------- -------------are the---parent* and
brother* and slaters.

So
Mr- and
relatives I
WUUam
Judge I
visited rtl
day.

from N°T

Mr* Mini
Mrs. Karl
Friday til

family vi
Rapid* oi
amaxoo »

Mrs. »
children t
ville over
Bunday a
art Brady

Patricia

Monday :
Strait* a:
visited f|
with Mr.
Harry Bi
Of Mr*, k

Edwin
on Tue»d
Ing the
daughter

craft.
Bolter o
Mrs. D.
Bunday.

Mrs- G«

Mrs. Nel
on Frida
Mlu Ru

Mr*. E
ruff) of ।
the weel

Harry, J
and Mn
Chelsea
Mra J
a visit i
Black a
Black of
Kenn*
Grand i
Lachlan
Mias
Mn. 01
spent 11
Mrs. Fri

Kalama:
ncssort I
Miu Flc

called I*
thc sari
niece. h&gt;

trait wa
daughte

Bunday
She haa
Rogers.
MUST!
Pinch a
on aunc
her horr

Arbor 8

verslty *
Mrs. L
Hooker,
Sunday
and Mr.

•Od Mr
Dorothy

Bvang
Is vUlllt
called i
Mrs. 8a
there.

•on Rot
Trenton
ington,
the ea*l
MLsm.
Gldding
of Batt
»nd Mr

WU.. wi
From he

his bro&lt;
Melci
Minn,,

ylilt wt

vicinity
In twen
Ham
White

where t
fishing.

Mackin

s

Hl

�TO IUIT1M08 banner, Tgi-WUT,

Social Events and Personal Mention

Mr. and Mn. L. M. CurUu and
son of Owoaao wve guests of Mrs
Ella Wolfe Bunday night.
Mn- 8. J- Fetter of South Bond
I* rial Ung her daughter. Mr*. Ar­
thur Reasoner, tor twp weeks.

Mrs. Clarence Wood spent Bunday Eart Lansing spent the week end
in Rsllevue with relatives.
with hla mother, Mr*. Erma GardWUUam 8cb*der, Jr, was home

Judge and Mn. Stuart Clement
visited relatives in AUagtn on Bun-

city on Monday on business.
8- A Holbrook ot Lansing cslbd
on Hastings trtends last week.

Mlsa Loretta DeVault was home ' lb*

--- --------------- --

from North Manchester. Ind, over day.

the week end.
I
Mlaa Mary McSwain la apendtag

Miss Lucille Karmee la attending
Acme School of Buslnaaa tn Lan,­

*
‘
‘
Bradley of Lanalng visltMr* Minnie Brice.
g* friends part of lhe part
Mrs. D. E. Fuller visited bar aunt, 1 ~
Mrs- Karkar. of Battle creek from .
_____ _______
_ _____
Friday till Bunday.
1 D gYench spent Thursday in Grand
Mr. and Mr*. Henry Mulder and Rapids.
family visited relatives In Grand | Dr. Clark 8- Whmlar of Grand
Rapid* on Bunday.
I Rapid* was In the dly on Saturday
Mr. and Mr*. A. J. Clark of Kai- on business.
amaioo were Bunday guests ot Ms.1 -- •
—
Mrs. Jessie
RUbridgtr
visited
and Mr*. Dell Button.
relatives In Kalamaaoo from Friday
Mrs. Howard Birdsall and two Uli Monday.
children visited relatives "at Middle­
John Chandler returned Bunday
ville over lhe week end.
to Kalamaaoo where he Is a student
Mr. and Mrs. Milo DeVries were
Mrs Charles Holmes of near How­
•rt Brady of Kalamaaoo
ard City Is the guest of Mrs. KU
Mr. and Mrs A- I* Houvener and Nash end other relatives.
Patricia visited Mn. Houvener * sis­
Miss Emma chandler left Tuester at Prairieville Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M Townsend left student al w. 8- T- 0
Monday for a motor trip to the
Mr. gnd Mrs. Bert Gould of Flint
Btralla and lhe.upper peninsula
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Miss PhylUs Allcrdlng of Elmdale Baehsiler over the week end.
visited from Thursday till Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Otnccbeaux
with Mr. and Mn. Willard WhiteMrs James Parmer and Mrs. Chaffee ..
at Nashville Sunday.
Harry Baldwin were guests Bunday | Mr. and Mra. Donald D. Smith of
Dr. and Mrs. W H. Thwaltes and O. J. Lahr over the week end.
son. Murray of Grand Rapids, visit­
Mis* Janet Teal ot Kalamazoo
ed Mrs. Dennis Murray on Tuesday. spent th* week end In Hastings as
Edwin Smith has been In Jackson lha guest of her sister. Mr*. K. 8.
on Tuesday ajid Wednesday attend­ McIntyre.
ing the Grand Lodge ot lhe I. Q.
Mr*. Calvin Plumley and daugh­
ter. Mrs. G Winston Sheffield, visit­
Mr. and Mrs. Marcel Evalet and ed relatives In Detroit on Thursday
daughter Enid spent Bunday with and. Friday.
Dr. and Mr*. R. 8. Harter of School­
Mr. and Mrs J. F. Edmands have
craft.
gone to Cuyahoga Falls. Ohio, for a
Mrs George Potter and Miss Edith visit with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Frase
potter of Lanalng visited Dr. and and family.
Mrs. D D. Walton and family on
Mrs. T. D French and Mr* Clif­
Bunday.
ford Brainard of Battle Creek were
Mr. and Mrs. Dell Button and luncheon guests of Mr*. Fred E. HUI
Mrs- George Smith were guests of In Grand Rapid* Friday.
Mr*. Nellie DeYoung ot Grandville
Mrs. Meda Lake of Pontiac, who
en Friday.
has been visiting her brother and
Mr and Mrs Roger Merrick and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Plumley,
Miss Ruth Merrick of Detroit visit­ far several weeks, went to Detroit on
ed Mr. and Mr* Ben Merrick over Thursday.
lhe week end.
,
Mrs. K. 6. McIntyre and Mn. R.
Mn. E. W. Smith (Winnie Waid- O. Finnic attended an afternoon
ruffi of Grand Rapids was lhe guest UI1U
,V party M
bridge
al the home w
of Mr*.
of her aunt. Mr*. Sarah Powers, over l Charles 8. McIntyre. Jr, in Kalathe week end.
maaoo last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wood and
Mr. and Mrs. E A- Frandscn and
Harry, Jr, visited her cousins, Mr. children of Ionia and Mrs. Harry O.
and Mrs. Alva Chapman, of near Hayea spent the week end at Wall
Chelsea on Sunday.
lake. Hobin Williams of Ionia was
Mr» J. F. Black has returned from tho guest of Philip Fraudsen.
a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Mias Jeanne Cincebeaux left Fri­
Black and Mr. and Mrs. Bernard day for Chicago for a few days' visit
Black of Sunfield Twp.
with friends and Monday went to
Kenneth Biddle was home from Jacksonville where she will start her
Grand Rapids over lhe week end- senior year al Illinois Woman's ColHe is attending the Davenpoct-McLachlan school there.
* Mr- and Mrs. Charles 8. Polls and
Mias Beatrice Carruthers and •daughter. Virginia, left Saturday
Mn. Clara Mannaasau of Detroit morning (or Naw York city, where
spent the week end with Dr. and Virginia will commence her last
Mrs Frank Carrolhcrs.
year at the juiUlard School of
Dr. and Mrs D. P- Walton were |n Music.
Kalamaaoo on Thursday and wltMrs. M»H&gt;da McUtughlln of Musnessod lhe crowning ot lhe Queen. began Visited at lhe Dan Aahalter
MU* Florence Westerlindhome part of last week. She re­
Mr. and Mrs. C. W Clarke were turned to Grand Rapids Thursday
railed lo Eaton Rapids Monday by In company with Dr. Winifred Mcthe serious Illness of Mr. Clarke's Lravy, who visited Hastings friends
niece. Mrs. 8. M Kelffer.
that day. also coming to meet her
Mr. and Mn. J. J. Siefen of De­ niece, Joyce McLravy. of Lansing.
troit were Sunday guest* ot their
Mn. Mary Hilton. Mrs. Minnie
daughter and her husband. Mr. and Phillipa. Mrs. Edna Wood and Mr*.
Mrs. Dorrance L Trethrlc.
Phillips'
daughter. Mrs. Harold
Mrs. Erma Messacjtr returned on VandeGiessen of Battle Creek, left
Bunday to her home tn Freeport. Sunday morning on a ten days'
Bho has been caring for Mrs Sarah *■*trip in the east They wjll gQ l0
Rogen, who died last week.
Cleveland for a dly atthe
__ ___
Great
MUrns Helen Furnte*. Elizabeth Lakes Exposition, lo Washington,
Finch and Helen Wade were guests New York and home by way of Cal­
on Sunday ot ML** Helen Menon al lender. Ont, to see the Dionne quin­
her home In South Haven.
tuplets
W. Maylan Jones, Jr, went to Ann
Arbor Saturday. He will return this
week for a few days before the uni­
versity opens for the fall term.
Mrs Lxnnic Hooker and son. Aural
Hooker, of Port Byron. N- Y, were
Sunday guast* of Mr*. Mary Cooper
and Mr. and Mn. H. J. Freeland.
Mr* Ada Frost and son Robert
•nd Mrs pear) Vasa and daughter
Dorothy of Albion were Bunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alonso Trim.
BvangelUt Vai Buxton of Cadillac
la visiting in the city a few day*. He
galled at Pennock hospital" to see
Mrs. Sam Buxton, who U a patient

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cook and
•an Robert relumed on Friday from
Trenton, n. J, Philadelphia. Wash­
ington, D. C, and other points in
the east.
Misses Beatrice and Katherine
Giddings and Mrs. Arthur Percival
of Battle Creek were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Giddings over tho
Week end.
N. B- Waterman of Burlington.
Wis, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
E. A- Burton Monday night, going
from here to Mount Pleasant to visit
his brother.
Melchior Ragla of Little Fork.
Minn, came Sunday for a week’s
visit with relatives tn Hastings and
vicinity. This is his first visit hare
in.twenty-one years.
Harry Waters. Paul Bryant. Gian
White and Mr. Bales spent Satur­
day and Bunday at Northport
where they enjoyed some deep water
fishing. They brought back M
of
Mackinaw trout.

a business trip.
Dr. and Mrs. E. J. praU visited
relatives In Chicago on Bunday

the city on Tuesday On buslnaaa
Andrew Cook left Tuesday f«
Welch. W. Va, where he will visit
relaUvea.
Mis* Nina colllge of Battle Creek
called on Mr* Ella Wolfe Sunday
afternoon
Mis* Irene Jone* has returned to
Kalamaaoo where she L* a student

Mickey Wiley relumed on Friday
from Chicago where he had been
since Wednesday.
Bishop Kuhn returned to Ann
Arbor Tuesday where he Is a senior
at the University.
Ian Ironside leave* Thursday for
Ann Arbor to resume hla studies at
the University.
Mr- and MN. C. H Hinman and
Mr. and Mrs. W L- Hinman spent
Bunday in Bay city.
Mrs. Rosa Trego Is leaving Friday
for a two weeks' visit with her
daughter. Mrs. Neil Pbh of Bangor.
Mr and Mrs W. L Hinman were
tn Grand Rapids on Tuesday at­
tending the funeral of J. W. Walker.
Insurance Commissioner John C.
Ketcham waa the keynote speaker at
th* Republican county convention
In Sagtnaw on Tuesday.
8. A. Shelton returns today to his
home, in Marshfield. Mo, after a
visit with his daughter and husband.
Mr. and Mrs. John C- Ketoham.
• Mrs Grace Harak left Bunday for
her home In Loe Angeles, Cal, aft­
W
er a
a uirue
three nyuim*
months' vuuc
visit wiui
with ner
her

SUNDAY DINNIRS

IlilO to 2iS0 P. M.

^„c?*MrCld’Ed

a rf

t Burdick creek? later building another

BIG LITTLE STORE
SUGAR

Don t

IO

Neglect

Their

49c

W AT BAIRBT
HONEYMOON AT
ATLANTIC CITY

Loren Boyag and Hits For•no© Westerlind Wed
on Monday
Weaterlind. daughter of

How They’re

Mr. and

Mn DavM
en. Ind, on Monday, the single ring
service being read by the officiating
clergyman. The bride wore a dart
green travelling dress with match­
ing accessories.

crowned as Michigan's wheal Queen
at Kalamaaoo. a tree trip to At­
lantic City being the reward, ao
it a honeymoon trip. They plan to
be away for a week and upon their
return will reside In this city.
Both are graduates of lhe Has­
tings High school, the groom being
a member of lhe class of 1933 and
Mrs. Boyes completed her course in
June, 1938. She has been employed
ip an insurance office here since
graduation and Mr. Boyes is asso­
ciated with the Home Lumber Co.
Their
many
Hastings friends
unite in best wishes.

ANCHOR 8. 8. CLASS
ELECTS NEW OFFICERS.
The Anchor class of the Metho­
dist Bunday School. Mrs. Guy C.
Keller, teacher, held a very enjoy­
able meeting on Friday evening al
lhe home of Mis* Soph* Wallace.
Miss Norma Jacobson assisted the
hostess.
Election of officers resulted as fol­
lows: Pres, Mlu Phyllis Hinman;
Vice-Pres. Miss Phyllis Newton;
Secy.-Treas, Miss Cornelia Sever-

• Ntw

and ixclusivi i

By HART KHAFFNIR fr MARX

From th© looks of things, well
dressed men oil over the country
are going Cheerio Stripes. No won­
der/ They're gay and colorful, in
two ond three-tone stripes ond new
colors of Tudor grey, dusted blue
ond briar brown.

’18’°te*3250
Edgertown and Nuhn Bush Shoes SQ.95
for Fall era now in stock________ O

T. S. BAIRD
CLOTHING aed SNOBS FOR MEN

They re Beck In School,
Have Their Eyes Examined 1
Children do not have the underataading or experience

tell what’s wrong with thgm, to ii’t up to you to
ho H»ot It’s NOT tholr oyoelght.

Foor oyotight can

COFFEE
SURE FINE
MAXWELL HOUSE
1 lb. can 22c
SPRY

ib.
lb.
3 lb. can

Bring thorn In

for a complete eye examination.

BESSMER'S
HASTINGS

Jswahra and Opticians
fHONl I«14

tall cans
Red Salmon
Hershey's Cocoa 2 1 lb. cans
4 cans
Cleanser
lb.
Butter MUdiniHe
Corn Flakes «•('««»’« u«. p**-

sne cuua voiea io pay no on me
church budget, the same as last)U«rman Arold arc chairmen of the
year, and plans for Hally Day were committee and have announced
j. - -.. Games
——
— .
.. . 1that
91 — I 191*VA
there will
will be H.n.lr'.
dancing A.iHm
during
discussed.
and
refreshments
the evening, Martin's orchestra
closed a delightful evening.
having been secured. Other arrange­
ments
will
be
announced
at
a
future
FAREWELL PABTY.
Friday evening. Sept. ig. the mem­ data.
bers and friends of the Hastings
TEA TO HONOR MKB. CROSS.
circuit Methodist churches paid
Members of the Barry County
their pastor, the Rev. C- M. Conklin,
and family a visit al their home on Federation ot Women's Clubs will
next Saturday
afternoon.
East Green St. Il was a farewell entertain
__________________
_____
______
party as they arc leaving to take up । September 38. at lhe Emmanuel
eve- iParish
;
the work in Cedar Springs The eve-1
bouse in honor of Mrs. M. J.
spent In visiting and singNtanlial purse waa
Ing A substantial
was present- ■1
ed them by the Rev. W. M. Jones. '
Refreshments were served. While I
we deeply regret their leaving us. I
all join in wishing them success and
happiness in their new field of labor.

Hastings

THONS 2«l

PLAYS EXHIBITION MATCH.

Alhambra. Cal.. In

an

exhibition

the game. Il la under the auspices of
the Staten bland Horseshoe League

James b driving and will be are
panled by Mrs. RoeeU Blanton.

k

Knitting, crochtting, needle-point ond oil kinds of
fancy work. Instructions will be furnished with pur­
chases of yam. We have a complete stock._ Instruc­
tion under the personal direction of Mrs. Dorothy
Adrounie ... 126 South Broodway.
SPECIAL CLASSES FOR YOUNG GIRLS

CINDERELLA DRESSES
answers your demand for

New Fall

HATS fl
They're Rich!

They're Smooth!
They're Flattering!

Daahbu high

21c
25c
19c
37c
10c

Michigan

MAST1NM

ANNOUNCING THE OPENING
OF THE ADROUNIE ART SHOP

DANCING PARTY AT CLUBThe dancing party for the Junior
members of lhe Hastings Country
club and their guests Thursday eve­
ning was attended by twenty-five
couples. The door prises were won
by Miss Margaret Densmore and
Ed Storkan of Middleville and Mar­
lin's orchestra played the program

25c
29c
63c

HINMAN’S

•

of lhe Hastings civic Players asso­
ciation have not been completed but our clubs in tho county are invited
the affair will be held on Friday to attend.

ruin a child’s chance* of being bright In school . . .
IS YOUR CHILD HANDICAPRIM

9OYS

CIVICS PLAYERS PARTY OCT. S.. cross, who U president
Detailed plans tor the fall party western district of Wo

Evw”

Ntorly H of a Conhiry of CooHnooui Sonic.

PARKIR HOUSE

. Fred Prentice were
guests of Mr. and Mn Donald Pren­
tice of BttirgU on Saturday and
Bunday.
Mrs- Aben Johnson and Mrs.
James ironside accompanied Mix*
Barbara Johnson to Ann Arbor on
Tuesday
Mrs. Paul Dyer &lt; Lillian Wolfe)- of
Kalamaaoo. Is spending part of her
vacation with her mother, Mrs Ella
Wolfe.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Sherk and
Richard of Chicago were guesU of
Mr. and Mrs. A. K- Fandscn over tnond and son. Richard Leo. and
the week end.
Miss Maorene Wlllltts of Lanalng.
Larry Wolfe of Muskegon came Mrs. Dorr Willill* and sons. Nona
home to spend Monday and Tues­ and Rodney.
of Battle Creek
day with his mother. Mrs. Ella and Clark Welker of South Haven.
Wolfe, and Robert.
Mr. and Mrs. OrUe Bishop and
family of Holland were over Sun­ HONOR GUEST
days guests ot Mr. and Mrs. Lee
AT FAMILY PARTY
Hubbard of Rutland Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Paul and Hickory Corners Map, B. F.
Utile son of Chicago have been vis­
Burdick, Celebrates His
iting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Paul and
other relative* for a few day*.
Ninetieth Birthday
Miss LaCrus of South America
On Bunday Benjamin Franklin
and Mlu Alice Corrigan from Chi­
Burdick, better known as Prank or
cago visited Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Eggleston over lhe week end.
ner at lhe home of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Britton and
daughter and Mr. Johnson of Kai- ।' William Clark on the old Burdick
two and one-half miles
amaxoo
uuuuu were
weir Sunday
ounuay guests
gucau of
oi Mr.
Mr Ii; homestead,
"
and Mrs- Wm. Haywood, parents of
Arnt is
Mrs Britton
i Mr- Burdick was born Sept 18.
Bunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. ।lMfl' m*kln« hUn
°r
Harry Ritchie and Mra Hazel Hink^me^to
ley were Mr and Mr* Nelson WilliB. Burdick who came to
S. w Ait wmiS““‘U"d’N

THE

DR. ALVA RUFF, Optometrist

DINNERS
9:10 to YtlO F. M.

u. w

Glenn Brower, a B Gidley Earl! Andrews of Grand Rapids were Sun- .ent ••
ln thfUU.
Chamberlain. Robert Qorham. WinNewlon and ' days was filled with various tasks.
,U» Mrtrtbk „d . Obkrtrt. Jrtne.
Hrtrt.
|
h .
„ drtv, lb.
went to Detroit Saturday afternoon family and Mrs. Etta Faul were In *l d
"h*tl
and on Bunday saw lhe Tigers play Ovid on Sunday attending the Jar- 2*1^“ *
at Navin Field.
vb family .reunion at the home of School day* were few In Pioneer
Dr. C- V. McPharlln. who has been Mr and Mra James Nell
tUnes for ,nosl °r lhe children but
living with hU sister. Mr*. Frank
Dr. and Mrs. Roland p. Webb of
was privileged to attend until
Kurts, for the past three year*, has □rand Rapids. Mr. and Mr*. James I
ni
°f T’
gone to El Paso. Texas, and will also Irons’de of san Diego. California &gt;
Morford being hb first
attend the Texas centennial al Dal­
and Mba Olive Lathrop of Detroit»Macher.
las. He U looking for a place to lo­ were Sunday guesla of Dr. and Mrs.
Hc ,w“ marrled
S’"
cate in that section.
C P Lathrop
phronla Brunney. daughter of Mr.
Mrs. w. R- Cook returns on Sun­
Miss Angellne Dorn boa of Holland *',d “rs,.J°hn..Brun"*^l°2 Dec"n"
day from Petoskey where she has
was lhe guest of Mis* Rosalie Cas- ,ber
been for several weeks. Richard cadden over lhe week end. Other !»»•&gt;’
Mr^Bufd‘CLl‘ 1,1 .T
Cook will spend Saturday and Sun­ guesb on Bunday were Mta Lob, cedent health and takes long walks
day in Petoskey also.
Edison, John Smith and Wm. Dem- ea£*? d,y'
, ,
, ...
Mr and Mr*. William Grigsby left aray of Grand Rapids
’
t:‘°“ present for the celebration
Wednesday by automobile for West­
Th, Mv.
M, E. L. Crocker.
,8Snd;’ ‘“!“dM
u,\
field, N. J- where they will spend Mr. .nd Mr, Wm Ber.n.rt Mr,
Bnrdlck
oi .Erne 7
Uke; Mr.
ana
Mrs
wm.
Bennett.
Mrs.
_Lk
. 7.nd
two or three week* as guests of Mr. Mr.
—
,
—SchnMto
.
. .
.
e.,1/4
*zm
Florets
»nd- .Mr.
wd. Jr».
Mr* vlHzw.
•F
“, “
“ nf Alland Mrs. E C. Reeb.
Mr, JMeph Mead Walled Mr. a.xl
Mr. and Mr. O rde Burdkk
Tom Baird. Jr, returned Wednes­
Mr, Darr Mead 01 Kalama.no Tuea“»
day from Benton Harbor where he da,
Beni IS They al» enjoyed . L" Burdick .nd lw u&gt;na and Mr.
wo* the guest since last Saturday of Sp
the PaXem. Wperli"d
Whldhy. ~n and
Duane DeLoach, an editor of the
MUM. which proved rnrnl Inlare.una. ■Uuihley ot Hickory corner;; hn.
Benton Harbor Palladium.
Sumner Myer, returned on m. and. Mr, Oranl IKon ot PelHrnj;
Mr. and Mr*. Albert Blaser and day troth Nel York city where he 1 Mr “nd Mr, Herbert Burda*
daughter Jean and ’ Mrs. Katie
bai been employed by lhe How York I
"“J,
Blaser of LovtU. Mr. and Mrs. John
Central railroad on rtsnal con-1 Mrs NelUe tholel. Mr. and Mr,
Bcrl of N. Lowell were Sunday call­
rtrucltan work. Part ot lhe lime he 1 Brunney Drolel. Mr. and Mr, Hu,h
ers at the Marcel Evalet home.
waa alatloned al Byranue. H. Y. On
«nd
"“I" B“',d1'? “d
Charles F. Parker. Jr, has re­ TPrtday he went lo Ann Arbor lo Mlaa
Ml&amp;s Eleanor Greer
Battle C
Creek.
Omro ot Bailie
reek,
turned to Ann Arbor to complete his
.IDT„„.V’ Mthuinc.
senior year at the University of attend lhe unlverally. Iran which
graduates
In lhe
swing.
BIRTHDAY
.
Michigan. He is High Tau of thc heMr.
and Mrs
Robert
J. Folll* ofI! Monday
was gathlkinu
lhe eighty-fifth
Lambda-Chi Alpha fraternity.
■
Fred L. Bush of Battle Creek and Lethbridge. Alberta. Canada, who birthday of p. N. Reed, so his daughMrs. Malle Tllkens of Campau lake have been vteltlng Mr. and Mrs. Er- ter. Mrs. O- P- Sinkler. entertained
were here Sunday, tho latter help­ mont Newton and other relatives in the evening in his honor, nine
ing to&lt;are for her mother. Mrs. Eu­ and friends for a week, left on guest* being present. Mr. Reed was
Monday for Paisley. Ont, for two. the recipient of many birthday
gene Rush, who is not so well.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Lane were weeks then will go to Winnipeg and greetings and other remembrances,
In Saranac Sunday to see his fath­ later to Montreal to spend the win- and lhe evening was a happy one
er. who is seriously 111. They also ter with their son. Mrs. FoUls will for him and hb relatives and
be remembered as Miss Minnie For-1 friends. Congratulations are ex lendcalled on Mrs. J. K Clark of Bel­
'
mont. Ont, and her daughter. Miss ter. a former Hastings resident.
Olive Clark, of Grand Rapids who
•re patients at Butterworth hoapltal
in Grand Rapids. Mr* Clark re­
cently underwent a very serious op­
eration.

SPECIAL
NOONDAY LUNCHES
1I1S0 A. M. tel P. M.

Mrs. Wm. Haywood returned Bun­
day after vuiung tar a week with
her daughter and family in Kalama-

tumais

Mrs Lyman Johnson has returned*
from a stay of aeverel weeks at
Spruce, near Al Pena, where Mr.
Johnson U constructing a road. Her
daughter. Mtm Doria Johnson, went
to Spruce after her mother.
Mr. ana Mrs. Theodore Kilmer
and children and Mr. and Mr*. Har­
ry Barnum of Lansing visited Mr
and Mrs A. J. Larsen on Bunday.
Mlm Rosebud Larsen returned to
LAtuing with them for a visit.
Mrs. c A. Kerr returned Monday
from Eagle River. WU, where aha
spent some time with her sister at
BaM lake. Mrs. Cora Dunning and
Harold Dunning of Whiting. Ind,
relumed with Mrs. Kerr for a few
days' visit.
Callers al Bert Johnson's Bunday
were Mr. and Mr*. B. H Jay. Mr.
and Mr*. Roy McMillen and Phyllis
of Byron Center. Mr*. Frank Coman
and two daughters. Mr. and Mr*.
Lee Johnson and Mrs. Ida Pike of.
Middleville.
Sunday guests of Mr*. George H.
Post were William WllUlts of Bat-

CINDERELLA

D

�■rat BAITTXOB BAXWIR. TNtJMBAT. inttMH 14, !&gt;**

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

URANCE

WANTS

AUTO . FIRE

The Hasting* Banner

Lets Old Sol Do the Work

THE CHURCHES

McElwain

JOON e.

COOK BRON.. Editors.
RIQHTY-riRST YEAH

b 13c

Our Service
CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co .

WaRTEU

TO litRR ratr

ro**n&gt;&gt;i BUgreRirnoKR omb rt.k
IN ADVANCE

WOULD THADF
IVA.S'TKD TO Ht

OFFICE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

H»k. HUi
rri Hr*

JEFFERSON ST. UNITED BRECHREX
CHURCH.

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

ADVERTISING RATES:

riBST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
aaiXBTIRT.

nJ Llaek
lekioe 1300 lb*. Kat eh

1V.TIH-J f
130 W U

r^h
I tunc »i 7.30
Yankr* I

JOB riilNTINO,

Klinrtnii

FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH.

KELVINATOR

InM&amp;i

Hoping for a “UtUe less sun next time." Dr. Charles G. Abbott
examines his sun ray machine which operates a half-horsepower
steam engine by Old Sol's heat alone. After showing hit invention
successfully for newsreel cameramen. Dr. Abbott, secretary of the
Smithsonian Institution, saw his demonstration before tha Third
World Power Conference in Washington, D. C.. ruined when the
day’s Intense heat melted solder connections, allowing an all-lm'
portant chemical to escape.

? ft

Ft&gt;K HALF

DEATH OF BABY.
Joyce E. four months old daugh­
ter of Mr. and Mrs. George Owen,
died on Sunday night. Services were
cemetery on Tuesday at ten A. M-,
Father J. V. Diljon officiating. The
parents and two other children sur-

SALES AND SERVICE
IRVING.

I V
n Bai

H. E. Smith Hdwc.
O&lt; MALE
—■ ..........
FOR HAL

WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH

? Jit

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock
DOLLARS. To luurr yourself of
getting the BEST PRICES, call
•&gt;' MR- FLOYD DENNY.

COATS GROVE.
The P. T. A. meeting will be held
this Friday evening with lhe pro­
gram in charge of Mr. and Mra.
Jesse Chase; refreshmenu in charge
of Mrs. Floyd elum and Mra. John
Woodman. The following are the
committees for the remainder of the
year: October—Program: Mr. and
Mrs. W. Coolbaugh. Mr. and Mrs
Nelson Case. Refreshments: Mr. and
Mrs. Alton Woods. Mr. and Mrs
Arthur Teeter.
November—Wom­
an's Night. Program: Irene Brooks.
Mary Townsend. Refreshments, Ag­
nes Haight. Florence Dunning. De­
cember—Program: Mrs Allcrdlng
and the school. RefreshmenU. Cleon
Smith. Kenneth Kelsey. January—
Men's Night-xProgram, Merle Rich­
ardson. Dwight Barnum. Refresh­
menU. Frank Haight, D. Townsend.
February—Program. Gordon Ends­
ley. Mr. and Mrs. William Murphy.
RefreshmenU. Ethel Kelmer, Helen
Demand. March—Program. Mr. and
Mrs. George Ragla. Refreshments,
Iva Busbin. Olive Cassel. April—Pro­
gram. 4-H Clubs and leaden. Re­
freshments,
Orpha
Richardson.
Dorothy Barnum.

Mr. and Mra. Lyle Wilcox and
family have moved lo Hastings Mr.
Wilcox was born In Irving In thc
house from which he moved.
Mr and Mrs. Phil Nichols have
scarlet fever and are quarantined.
Mr. and Mrs. John Perry received
word of the arrival of a HUle’grandda ughter. Betty Jane Tompkins,
bom at Bronson hospital. Kalama-

Mrs. Fred Camp, whose home is

Foh

bor where she has employment in
a sorority hoi we
MIm Madeline Baker of Kalama-

'Men
Field, of Middleiille i

Glen Lampson and family of
Grand Haven «pent Bunday with
his mother and brother here.
John Burchett and son of Rich­
land Junction spent Sunday with
hU mother-in-law, Mrs. Lucretia
Benham, and his son and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Burchett, who
live with Mra. Benham.

BAPTIST CHURCH

"AKRON" MODERN

v.?r’s.; FoX TKRHIERH

MICHANO-FOIM TRUSS
FOE WORK OR PLAY

FOB HALE—Yrarllne ShroiMhl

ALFALFA HAY v
■ ■Pwlr. Ph... 7
for sale—t..
t^a Hul.tarJ
HORNE FOR KALE
1400 Iba. WmU
of alnek. F.4 DrMoll.

STATE ROAD.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Coleman
and Mrs Lucy Coleman visited Fri­
day tn Battle Creek with Mr. and AWARDED FIRST PLACE
AT BUTTER EXHIBIT.
Mra. Glen Coleman.
At the butter exhibit held al the
Mra. Janet Pettengill spent Fri­
day with Mra. Dora Coleman of Indiana Slate fair. Indianapolis,
Ind.,• the —
entry
nuuanuRutland
. —
* from* Farmers' CoSeveral Iron, here attended th, :&lt;4»rau,e Creamery Aa.n Haah.hle,
funeral ot Robert Martin Rrtdaj 1
. ""t hlaee. The DuUer
sliow was sponsored by lhe Mid­
afternoon.
Company Sunday at Jim Both- West Producers' Creameries. Inc.
association
of oo-operatlve1
ord's were Mr. and Mra. Clyde Mil- an
*cr, »r .uu mra. ati vnaae was- cr**mtrles ™d entries were re­
tings; Mr. and Mra Murray Myers W*™ rrom Indiana. Michigan. Il- ‘
and son of Ionia; Mra. Mae Hart llnoU and Tcnn?y*'_________

YOH HALE

H FOR

HIR SALE-50 MTiii
5Oe rath.
Mra.

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponp* Rubber Pods

HMMH
wANfrr»—&lt;-n&gt;aM&gt;

HRfNtl YOfR ba.k-i

FOR SALE

FoH HALE—Hum.

EMMANUEL CHURCH (EaUeSMl).

the Prescription Drug Store

Hastings

8raRh 01 T*mp"
CKANOR
R. T1MR.
CHANGE IN
IN R.
R- RTIME.
On aepUmber
Oh
September n
27 rufem
eastern ,lAhdwd
standard I'
OU,J “» «'» »• xlopldd &gt;1 *11 Mlchlmn
CMII I. vUllln, h.r broths .nd c,,,., iul,oia to IhU »Uto. Thi, I
wile. Mr. Mid Mr, J,mdA BoUtord. u Lhr rendl ot ,n ordrr Inuod by,
HhrrsUIr Coramerco commit- J
new barn and outbuildings which
‘
tion. The commission, however, re- 1
adds much to their appearance.
■ fused lo fix eastern standard time;
for Chicago.
•

COLDS

With men winning a knitting con-।
test In Boston and prixes for Jain in |
the adult stage, though they hiber­ Chltago, women don't seem to excel i
I
any
more except al singing baritone,
nate part of thia time.
[for lhe radio.

Michigan

KABTIBOB

USED BIKES

3-

FOR SALE—Girls' and Boys'
used bikes In good condition.

Farmer*, Attention!
PRICE far VEAL. LAMBS. HOGS &lt;M

tffenon

- » FIRST UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH.

Lifs of Butlorfli..

Not

BUYING

USBB. TAHITI
• list aaas mom

FEVER

„ . ,
t
Headache, 30 mi

MODERN Ft'IlNIHHF.D h

COMMAND
ATTENTION

S?
Ally. CMir.

rifts Iran*

with I

GAMBLE STORE

000

TOOK THE GROCERIES.
Willard Landis
of Woodland
bought 1150 worth of groceries here
Saturday evening end put tiiem in
his car. parked on the north side of
’he courthouse square. As he left the
door unlocked, someone who was
evidently looking for such plunder.

CHURCH or THE UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST

all

butterflies

are

Ureal getting UlaalraUona. and

abort- j

GRANGE PROGRAMS
IEVINO GRANGE

Scrap Iron, Brass,

I President Roosevelt went lo Notre
' D*me t0 receive »n honorary degree.
There Is also some suspicion that he
wished to ask what a quarterback
should be next.

Halting* Banner
JOB PRINTING

Copper, Aluminum,

Zinc, Lend &amp; Botterios

MONEY FOR FALL!
al 1:30.

GLENN F. LAUBAUQH

COATS OROVE CHURCH OT CHRIST

r» natainc mao io &gt;*&gt;« rot. ana
WHERE AR Il win ba U ika aAtaaiaei

Fidelity Corporation
SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

OF MICHIGAN

ALL KINDS or INSURANCE
BOTANY PUBLICS

Hastings National Bank Building

FOR HEXT— Fui
Modern. rliaae
aalra at 4|; 1
For hale—o.t

CARDS of THANKS
CARD OF THANKI

EMERSON ROYER
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN

WK HAVE A FINE

Assortment

of

USED

GRAPES FOR
FOR RENT"

UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
Balttawra Ckarek

CARD OF THANK

ICE BOXES

CONCRETE

HASTINGS MARKETS

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

Lillie rhanlr

rrfrijtnier.

If

MONTGOMERY WARD

111 8. Jefferson, Hu tings

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

./KXL,

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

at FELOPAUSCH'S

on busy streets is measured in millions of carmiles annually—and millions of car itofii. Can you make
these stops swiftly, surely, with least possible skidding?
You can if your streets are concrete. Concrete's gritty sur­
face grips and holds tires, offers maximum traction in any
weather. Its uniform riding surface gives you driving con­
fidence—a further safety aid. And at night, concrete's light­
gray, highly visible color makes your streets safer for
motorist and pedestrian alike.

NOTICE or SALE.
lanae Cklck

A Uttle FORESIGHT TODAY Maj
Maoa vision tomorrow

MARKET-Phone 1616

FOOD CENTER 2609

GEO. M. NEWTON

H.FaUaausch ■ 1911

Restored OPTOMETRIST and

—III III ■

'

on concrete.

MUdllari. 93 00
Rrraiek teas. SS.t

PORTLAND CKMKNT ASSOCIATION
cSISSL0' ™* “"“OT

HASTINGS

BANNER WANT ADV8. PAT

MlMrid’s.ltk. Beelalae of Prakata.

2012 Olds Tower Bldg., Lansing, Mich.
MiUrwTiltK RaeUtae af FrebaU.

�THURDAY, SEPT, 24, 1936

|

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER
From
^.&lt;(^1=^1 POLITICAL NOTES ISCITYLUBLE । Instructors
Michigan University

|

SECTION

GOOD SHOWING OF
LOCAL ASSOCIATION

Riley

IN SUCH (CASE?

.about: ui»n

_________anniif'

lagstaff,

F

ariz.

—

There's nothing new about
the fable. The only novelty is
in the moral.

th. ■hi.

. ...i

body and his dog was present. I
didn’t know we had so many varie­
ties of poultry and stock in Barry
county. The Pair officials can take a

High Herd Honors for Barry
County Go to Lloyd
DEMOCRAT
REPUBLICAN
, County
Schoo)
Commissioner
Gaskill
This week Barry county Repub­ Democrat Balanced Kansas Budget WHnftP
PRfiPPPTV
ARP Maude
Smith has received an anOrERTY ARE
nouncemenl
of ..A
Coursc m
licans call as their chief witness
Daring Hoover Panic;
Didn’t W --County Agent Foster received re­
Close a Hinjle School.
AGAINST the New Deal. FRANKTHE TREES ALONG
i Education." to be held al lhe Senior ports Saturday from the Michigan
UN D ROOSEVELT, president of
: High school in Battle Creek at varOUR STREETS?
11OU5 times during the coming State College Dairy Department with a carnival troupe. I gM Mm
the United States!
,
fact, I held that distinguished po­
sition Just prior to the present oc­
cupant.” said Acting Secretary of
War Harry H. Woodring, in an ad­
dress at Portland. Maine. "And I.
too, balanced the State budget. Just
as did every governor of Kanias for
lhe past 75 years, because lhe State
law requires a balanced budget.
But not e single individual In the
entire country said I should be
elected President of lhe United
Fair enough! Let's go!
States because I had balanced the
Kansas budget.
Mr. Roosevelt, what did you say
"Balancing the budget in my ad­
concerning Re-employment?
ministration was far more difficult
Mr. Roosevelt:
than It is today. At that time Mr.
"Al Baltimore. October 25. 1932. Hoover was still President and the
I said: "It is no lime for delay when farm Income was shriveling with
11.000.000 of honest. Industrious and each succeeding year. But I am
willing men and women are tramp­ E&gt;ud to say I accomplished the
ing the streets and roads of our
lancing without closing schools
country looking tor work . . . and and reducing teachers' salaries in
we ot the Democratic party will not a manner that constitutes a blot
of shame upon any civilized state.
"In his 1935 message lo the Legis­
"In a statement. June 14. 1933. I
said: 'It is a primary purpose of my lature. lhe Governor of Kansas said
administration lo co-operate with that he had slashed 40 per cent
from —
the -----cost —
ot operating
the State* and wiUr Industry, to se- ------r--------- - -the
cure work opportunities for as many* schools of our State. As a result,
of Uie unemployed as possible, by” —
— “
— *
“ —
'—
«
more
than
450
schools
were closed,
a
total
of
7.000
teachers
are work­
Which they will find employment
ing for less than 810 a week and
through normal channels.*
"In a message to Congress. Jan. 4. the State has dropped from 15lh
1935. I said: The Federal govern­ to 37th in national rating. The
ment must and shall quit this busi­ State Superintendent. W. T. Mark­
ness of relief. I am nol willing that ham. reported that over 8,000 boys
Uie vitality of our people be further and girls were unable to complete
the school u
term in 1935. He polntsapped by lhe giving of cash, or lhe
small...,
appropriation
market baskets, or a few hours of
ou^ Uiatt a
- -------------------------—
weekly work, cutting gras*, raking
HW-OOC by the Legislature would
leaves* or picking up paper in pub- haVe prevented such a catastrophe.
..
. ."
vol
yet the Governor failert
failed to rccotnrecom­
1UUOC are
Bit lhe
HIC WORDS v.
Those
of Mil
the new
New mend such a course. I call Dial
Deal concerning re-employment— dangerous economy,
herewith is lhe record lo date:
1j "I realize Uiat 1the Republican
In March. 1936. there were unemj.
­ ' nominee for lhe Presidency U perfeclly free to select any Issue he
ployed according to:
chooses in running for lite Presi­
The American Federation
dency. Perhaps he finds II politi­
of Labor ........................... 12,184.000 cally expedient to attack the poli­
The National
Industrial
cy of spending to bring thi* country
Conference Board .......... 9.649.000 out of the greatest depression in
(This Is greater than tile estimat­ history. But it 1* a matter of rec­
ed unemployment of 1932).
ord that the Governor of JCansas
As of January. 1936. at least 19.­ never once protested against this
000.000 people were receiving relief essential granting of federal funds
benefits according to Relief Ad­ when he was the recipient. On lhe
ministrator Hopkins. In testimony other hand, he sought every bene­
from the Federal
given before lhe House of Represen- i fit
— he
—could
-------- ---get ------tatives hearings on First Deficiency Government and In 1934 he ran
Bill. 1936.
I for re-election on his record of coThe following table shows the ! operation with Rooaevell relief poll­
growth in the number of cases on j cle*.
relief (a case may be an Individual j "The period Just ahead of us may
or an entire family):
be the most fateful in modem world
Cases on Relief history. The spirit of war U abroad
Month
1 again in Europe and lhe nations
1933
3 908 068 walch eacJl other anxiously, sus­
July
'
' | plciously, armed and ready
to
1934
4355 493 1
if
spark is set off. By
July
'
j comparison, we are moving forward
1935
4530 832 *° B new era ol soc1*1 and economic
June
'
1 security for surpassing anything we
Ma?ch
.s 300 000 ! l^ve imown before. The Chamber

For. as Mr. Roosevelt said, at
There were some pretty fine birds Butte. Montana, on Sept. 19. 1932:
One night a camel came and tn lhe poultry building. Don’t think "But remember well, that altitude
and method—lhe way we do things,
begged to be allowed to poke hla
gathered under one ropf before. The is nearly always the measure of our
cold nose inside an Arab's tenL
So lhe Arab, being a good-hearted Golden Sebright* wiUr their blue sincerity.**
In other words. Judge people by
Arab, says yes. Pretty soon the ribbon took my eye. Nearly all the
varieties had topknots. Palsy called what they do—NOT BY WHAT
camel claimed his
them hats.
THEY SAY!
ears were chilly and
could ho shove In

And would you believe we had to
many ponies tn the county? And two
tiny colts Inclined to bile anything
within reach.
,

And the Arab taid

Next the camel
got permission to
put his neck In out
of lhe weather, and.
after that, his fore­
legs and then his
front hump, closely
followed by his rear
bump. tod dfudly

&gt;'’!■&gt; C«bb

his hindquarters.
When morning came lhe camel
was Inside lhe tent, completely fill­
ing It, and the Arab had been crowd­
ed outside and there he was—poor
shivering wretch, as homeless as a
Moral—Every Ume I hear of an
Imported Communist smuggling
himself Into our midst. 1 think of
a cold-nosed cameL

Holding the Bag.
T J P TO now our government has
declined all Invitations to Jump
Into |he Italian-German-Frencb-Rusaian-Briliih snarl, but watch for an
effort lo Induce America lo Join in
when lhe lime comes for dividing
up control over poor old Spain's
ports, islands and remaining coloni­
al possessions.
' Not that we'd want anything out
of the grab-bag and not that they'd
give us anything. They'd merely
expect us to hold thc bag after­
wards. which would make two bags
in all—this little new one and the
big one we’ve been holding ever
since 1918.

Travelers* Homecoming.
/CALIFORNIA travel bureaus re­
port an increase of incoming
tourists. But then again, on thc
other hand, part of it may be due
to returning residents who went
hurriedly away when the papers
started printing a certain romantie
diary. If your sins do not always
find you out, at least they frequently
find you getting out
Il’s ail over now and p$ace and
quiet have been restored to our
borne circles, but at lhe height of
the rush one involuntarily was re­
minded of the ancient story of the
Frenchman who .et with ills friend
he could prove every man, however
outwardly pure, had a dreaded sec­
ret in his life. So. to test it. ho

spec ted notables in Paris an anony­
mous telegram reading as follows:
"AU la discovered. Flee at once.”
And next morning nine of them
were gone and the tenth had com­
mitted suicide.

“Backward" British Justice.
p'NGLISH news - reel producers
hsvc been fined 810,000 — and
that's Importent money in sny lan­
guage — for titling s film. ’’An
Attempt on the King's Ufa."
Mind you. they weren't punished
for any injury this title might do
his majesty. Incredible though It

Such a fine large exhibit of 4-H
Club stock. Some of lhe boys' stock
actually looked better than their
Dads’ . . . perhaps because they have
more time for grooming and curry­
ing. It struck me that the 4-H club
members themselves are a pretty
fine bunch of lads and lassies. I saw
Interested groups of them around
their respective exhibit halls and
tenia, and I thought of the time,
not so far back, when country
young people's one desire was to
get to town to work and they were
half-ashamed that they lived in the
country. The 4-H Club program has
done more to promote agriculture
than anyone can possibly realize.
The girls had some canned fruit
there that would have taken rib­
bons in the Women's Home Eco­
nomics hall, and their dresses and
fancy work were •’tops.”

The only drawback in lhe stock
halls was the files. Heard one man
say. "This would be a good place
to demonstrate Flytox." a yearling
bull was pestered until he choked
himself to death. Il might have
been accidental, but lo one who had
to spend much time there. It seemed
suicide.
The school exhibits were very
good. Soap carving, wood carving,
posters, books of every conceivable
kind, mountings ot leaves, woods,
weeds, flowers and other nature sub­
jects. historical movies and even doll
houses with their tiny occupants
made an Interesting display. Of
course, we gave dur regard to lhe
electrical robot with his book of wise
sayings on "Alcohol." It made a big
hit with the boys.

Thc display of lhe conservation
department was one worthy of a
much larger city than Hostings We
ought to have a permanent building
or museum for our native wild life
exhibitions. We have our own taxi­
dermist, so there’s no need to send
pels away to be sluffed for pos­
terity
■
The Revue was good, although
Jane's kind heart was touched by
the slght'of those poor girls without
clothing and winter coming on. With
characteristic
Impulsiveness,
we
suggested to a lady near us that we
pass the hat for them, but the
wheezy gentleman on our left said
It wouldn't do any good. A friend of
his tried to buy a chorus girl some
clothes but she wouldn't let him.

The contortionist was pretty good,
but I guess Ripley never saw our lit­
tle Buster drape himself off the end
of the piano bench and twist in and
out a rocker and still be in a position
to read the funny papers.

The act where the boy Jumped
backwards onto the bed and then
somersaulted in the air and landed
on his partner’s shoulders was espe­
cially pleasing to me. Our kids have
done Uiat on the couch for years,
only they have varied landing
tempt of court for prejudicing the places, not always on another's neck.
case against McMahor. (the man And sometimes, it ends in music—
who tried to shoot King Edward) be­ not Betty Bryden’s Band, either. It's
nice to know you have two good
fore he was brought to trial."
show acta in your own home.

gather forgotten criminal case.
Possibly you msy remember a MISS CATTON IS
GUEST SPEAKER
certain murderer's tris! and what
sort of publicity went before IL and
what actually occurred whilst 'twas County Sunday School Con­
being held, and what ths aftermath
vention Meets at
has been, with attorneys and key­
Delton
witnesses and—yes—actually some
The
annual Barry county Bunday
of the Jurors peddling their private
Views for public consumption; and School convention will be held this
the governor of a great state dis­ year at the Delton Methodist church
playing curious and violent actlvi- on Tuesday afternoon and evening.
October 20.
ties, even when the verdict had
Miss lone catton of Lansing will
been called a fair one fcj the high be the guest speaker at both ses­
courts?
sions along with many Interesting
Backward race, these Britishers, five-minute talks by our county peotrying people by the evidence and
Another large framed picture is
not by the newspape; 4 and the
to be given to the Bunday School
movihg-plcture cameras.
receiving the most credit*—one
ACK EAST, a distinguished con­ credit per mile per person. At six
tinental chef rises up to outline o'clock a 25 cent supper will be
Make your reservation with
the American gentleman's ideal dinserved.
­
ner. He names eight courses, which Mrs. Robert Barnes of Delton.
is too many, and no domestic flavor Watch for program in full detail In
next
week's
Banner. E. E. Jones.
about any part of it
/
In rebuttal. I crave to offer a
menu of all native products.
956 DEATHS IN JULY
First. Lynnhsven oysters on the
DUE TO EXTREME HEAT.
half shell. with western celery and
A compilation of death rates Just
ripe olives.
Issued by the Michigan Department
of Health shows that during July 956
_ Second, terrapin stew.
* Third, rice-fed canvasback duck, deaths were directly attributed to
with iye hominy and a bakec adne- lhe extreme heat with 336 being re­
corded In Detroit alone. This is a
Fourth, one very small slice ot startling contrast to the 25 deaths
in July 1935. Ttia total
hlckory-and-sassatras-cured razor­ recorded
number of deaths in July was 33.545,
back ham with watercress salad, an Increase of eight par cent over

B

soused in a plain oil and vinegar
dressing.
Arabian sheiks art said to be
Fifth, toasted southern beaten
biscuit and a mere morsel of old- taking up golf. Travelers are find­
fashioned country rat cheese—pre­ ing it dlflfcult to distinguish be­
tween
a sandstorm and an impulsive
ferably from Herkimer county. New
son of the desert battling his way
out ot a bunker.
levin &amp; COBB.

hnonUu. lhe dates are Oct. 27. Nov. Allowing lhe standing of the Barry
April 6 and 20 County Cow Testing Association in
■ comparison with other slate cow
testing associations.
morning with hu
------------- | Among lhe speakers are Howard 1 The report shows lhe high herd
Falling of a Large Limb i McCluskey. S. A. Courtis. Willard 1 honors for the county going tn
17
n
C Olson. Calvin O Davis and Fran- 'Lloyd Gaskill of Dowling with ..
From a Big Tree Brought
cU Curtis, all coming from the Uni- purebred Holstein* averaging 1,170 'operation or they will toon
Up This Question
| versity of Michigan. Tiie general ip,. Of rofik and 411 lbs. of fat for 1
The question of ownership of the
lhUfPJeltL??,‘!,?r rlhe monlhtrees in the streets of this city is c'nl at.ud^'1s of
■ The high two year old Individual wiah you would go through with ms,
liable to become more and more Im- 2^“ ‘2
■ P*de Holstein owned by 1tell them my condition and pass a
Giant a* they become older and Schools, ThU course is jUaJine-d pri- Huhlanda
of Hastings with 1subscription paper " t said. “Old
;er. No citizen is permitted to cut “d1} for ^dool commissioners Mid , 42 9 lbs of
Thc hl&lt;h three yWkr
down a tree in the street near hLs
superintendent*, as
wa5 aUo owned by Highland*
premises without permission of the county is nearer Battle Creek than DjUry with
of faL Uoyd
city. No one can trim the trees with?Lher. cenU.r
Gaskill of Dowling own* the high
out the city * authority. We are not *111“lv5n,"®m here four year old with 54.8 iba. of butcriticising that situation: it is no,are lnc|uded with that citj.
‘terfat and 1.888 lbs. of milk for lhe liberally.
doubt Im* as it should be. But1
** '
.month.
there h a point in tills matter that GOV. FITZGERALD ASKS
| a purebred Jersey owned by Glen
may come to public attention.
|
smoc CfiD TUC AfiCfi I Ingrain of Hastings was high aged block.
During a windstorm the other)
fflUnt run I fiC RUEU cow jn
asaoclatlon for the
night a large, dead limb from an elm 1
------------| month, with 1.451 lbs milk and 92.9* that stood near the old Hasting* Mtree was torn loose and dropped for- Wants State to Appropriate 1 )bs. fat. Thi* cow is high mature
ty or fifty feet to lhe parking
* nnf. -nn .
n] .
) COw in the association work in
below on South Hanover street
$4,UUU,UUU for Ula
I Michigan for the month. Thi* buth ranger and
Suppose that limb had struck some-;
Age Pensions.
brings real honor lo lhe herd of
one who was walking on tiie sideGovernor Fitzgerald savs that it Is ' Mr' I»8Tan’ “ u,erc **re 1S*®8 “*»
du,'n'mon,h“* and make it

«
i. n
«
I °f Commerce of the U. S. has Just
Thus the Roosevelt Record on Un- | announced
wU1
the best year
employment stands:
|in business since the boom year of
Words^-Promlsed drastic redi*:- । ]02g.
Uo.n'..
«
.
...... I “We are emerging in such splenAction*—Unemployment has IN- did
dld fashion
faihionlfro
m the
the troubles
trouble., that
that
,frqm
CREASED by 35 PER CENT!
afflict the world because we nmrch
behind a great leader. We have in
the White House a man worthy of
Mr. president, what have you said the best traditions of those immor­
concerning Uie cost of relief?
tals who have gone before him. We
Mr. Roosevelt:
all know how the exploiters of lhe
"In the budget message, Jan. 3. people hate this man In the White
1934, I said: 'If we maintain the House. We know that even though
course I have outlined, we can con­ the whole country suffered the con­
fidently look forward to cumulative sequences. they would gladly adopt
beneficial forces represented by in­ any kind of unworthy tactics to
creased volume of business, more brings about his defeat.
general profit, greater employment,
"By every test of ability, knowl­
and a diminution of relief - ex­ edge.
experience
and
purpose.
penses.*
Franklin D. Roosevelt stands head
"In the budget message. Jan. 3. and shoulders above every one’of
1938, I said: 'We can look forward his rivals tor the Presidency. A na­
today toward a continued reduction tion takes Its quality from the
of deficits, lo Increased lax receipts, character of its leader. Without
and to declining expenditures for being unkind to the Republican
the needy unemployed.'
nominee, it is certainly true that
"On Nov. 15. 1933. I said: This he has failed to exhibit those su­
4400,000.000 (for Civil Works Ad­ perior qualities of Judgment, under­
ministration) isn't going to cost the standing, courage and leadership
Federal
Government any more which we must expect of the man
money, because we are taking it out who aspires lo sit in the White
Of Ute large Public Work appropria­ House in the present situation of
tion of 83400,000400. It Is using a world affairs."
portion of that fund in a very prac­
tical way.'**
It may nol be an elegant expres­
Those are the words ot the ad­ sion but if there la anything that
ministration concerning relief costs gives us a pain in lhe neck Is to
—Herewith la the record to date:
hear Frank Fitzgerald go up and
Relief Expenditures, reported in down the State talking about how
the Budget for 1937, have totaled as he balanced the budget.
follows:
Is there a school child In Michi­
Year Dided
gan who doesn’t know that, if the
June 30
Expenditure Slate budget is balanced it is be­
.1 1J81,800.000
1934 ...
1935 ....
. 2441400.000 passed during the Democratic ad­
1938* ...
. 3.118.700400 ministration. brings in forty-five
million dollars a year to the slate
Total ........................ 86.821400.000 and the liquor tax brings fifteen
•Treasury Department statement millions more, and the payment of
of emergepey relief expenditures back taxes made possible by busi­
classified in accordance with thc ness recovery brings tn millions
testimony of the Works Progress Ad­ more.
ministrator before the Senate Ap­
Fitzgerald had as much to do with
propriations Committee. May. 1938.
those two sources of revenue as did
the Sultan of Zulu. But to add in­
1934. President Roosevelt said: "I sult to injury, the man has the ef­
have the honor to request an addi­ frontery to yell about the spending
tional 1950,000.000 for the purpose of of the federal government and then
the Federal Emergency Relief Act oomplain because Michigan is not.
of 1933 . . . and for continuing the according to his story, getting its
Civil Works Program." (Refer to fair share of federal moneys.
Roosevelt's statement of Nov. 15.
1933. presented in preceding para­ them do. swallow such guff
graph).
Frank Fitzgerald is spouting, would
Thus thc Roosevelt Record on Re­ be hard for anyone to conceive. Mr.
lief cost stands:
Fltxgerald is two-timing the peo­
Words—Promises steady dlmlnu- ple OT Michigan and Frank McKay
of Grand Rapids sits back and gives
Actions — Relief
costs
have the dear people the merry ha-ha.
STEADILY INCREASED I
And he should. He has a laugh com­
ing.

Let’s try another.
What did you sajr. Mr. Roosevelt,
concerning political activities in
connection with the use of relief
money?
Mr. Roosevelt:
"I subscribed to Uie Democratic
Platform of 1932 which said: 'We
(Continued on page 2. Bee. 2)

NA8HVILLE HIGH IS GROWING.
The people of
Nashville are
pleased over the fine enrollment of
lhe Nashville high school which has
reached a total of 148. or 24 more
than the first day’s enrollment.
There are 85 resident pupils and 63non-resldents.

U) and 24. Dec. 8.
IN CASE OF ACCIDENT
WHERE IS LIABILITY?|S„M.*,7.;np.M

ttWwouidf°ha«C had^r'iahlVo’trirn Ih0UiCS 01 Michigan. To this end he | John Foster is tester of the At­
er would have had no right. to trim W|U
nexl lcglilalure lo ap. soclation. Cow testing association
M-0WXW0 instead of 82.- work lias gradually been on the in*tTnd-r!000 000 ,or old
pensions, to be crease in the county since he took
r^riifTJn i.»U oh«2ivn&lt;i irnm
with an equal amount by over the Job two year* ago. It is
spoke loudly enough to that the old
federal government The ellgi-, possible for Mr. Foster to accom- trooper evidently beard what tee
J!*?&gt;cJdeljP 11
L n?1' ble age for old age pensions will be modate one or two more herds on
I\ reduced, if the governor shall be test during lhe coming year. Aplh^C|lly&lt; °f
m •uccessful. to 65 instead of 70. His 1 plication* can be made at the counneeded fi'xin*; it waa tho heads of
bc KUlrt to ?lh“ cto U rare.” I’1"’-11 lte ta&lt;l»b.lure tod U&gt;e to'.- » Mtol'. oMc.

-----

ss:«.

is responsible, iie ought to under­
stand his liability. It should be
somebody's business to look after
tree* with large, dead limbs on them.
Hie tree* along the street frontages
are on ground that belongs to the
city. The lot owner who set out the
trees does not own the property on
which Urey stand, for it is public
property. Therefore the question of
liability Is one that ought to be de­
termined.
The Banner would be glad to pdbllsh the opinion of tht/city attorney
on Uiat subject.
\
Blessed are they who are not sat­
isfied to let well enough alone. All
that the world is today we owe to
them
lt the trend for gigantic liners
continues, the world may yet boost
another ship as big as the May­
flower must have been.

a month for an aged couple and 430
IN GRAND RAPIDS,
a month for a single person. Thb
The famous United States Navy
would enable them to be cared for Band of Washington. D- C-. will sp­
in reasonable comfort outside of pear In concert, the afternoon and
county homes, so Uie governor be- , evening ot October 2nd. at the Civic
UeVes. While the Banner did not and auditorium In Grand Rapids, under
could not agree with lhe "Town- 1 auspices of lhe Christian Dideavor
send Plan" of 8300 per month pen- union, according to H. Fred Oilman,
sion for all persons 60 years old or . chairman of the committee in
over, we believe this country will charge. The United Blates Navy
one day be grateful to him for band is the famous musical organlbringlng lhe matter of the needs of zation conducted by Lt. Charles
aged persons to lhe attention of the Benter. U. 8. N-. heard four times
over national
radio
people of this country.
1 weekly
““-----------"—' —
•*- • broad
■* ­
' casting chains.
__________________________
| Tiie proceeds from the concert
FLOURISII1NG KELLOGG
SCHOOL, ticket sales are to help finance the
The Kellogg school, south of Hick- expenses of the World Christian Enory Comers just over lhe county; deavor convention to be held in
line, serves five former Barry coun-1 Grand Rapids in 1937. This conventy rural districts, so that Barry tlou will
"* attract •ten
— *•
k-* -or
­
thousand
county is very much interested in it. more religious young people from all
The school has 302 students tills over lhe world, and it is a fine
year. 172 in lhe first six grades. 38 In thing to have so wonderful a con­
the seventh and eighth grades and cert series for lhe benefit of such
a splendid movement.
92 in the high school.

r«w.- n u Mid uui
formation might be obtained from
Sheriff Jay Blakney._________
TELEPHONE GIRLS MEET.
Tiie monthly meeting of Uie eight
traffic employees of the Michigan

ter*. The meeting was concluded at
the home of Mrs. Dorothy
on South Broadway where retreat-

passing

or oris

fulim.

editor of the 8L Johns

Ionia, died Saturday at hla
in Mason. Michigan. He waa U

highly respected by all who
him.

STYLES CHANGE
IN BANKING, TOO
Style plays an important part in our daily lives ...

merchandise of all types changes constantly—
Automobiles and Clothing are watched closer than
any other items—BUT Styles in Banking also

change. The Banker of today is called upon to sup­
ply services that were unheard of a few years ago.
Change lias demanded that the Banker keep abreast
of the trend and adjust himself to meet it. Today

you can go to your Banker for advice on any finan­
cial matter.

The Hastings City Bank is in style... we have kept

pace with the progress of this community anti have
served it constantly for the past half century. Our
officers are qualfiied to administer banking in the

fullest extent—our assistants are chosen .nd
trained to perform their duties efficiently,
and courteously. This is a modem bank. We

our customers to take advantage of the many i
ices we offer and invite others to come in andN

them also

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER U, 1834
masoo Monday. Ha will major in
NASHVILLE.
I | Mra. E. D. Olmstead. in Nashville.
i isteator of West Virginia to a. county [ Important agricultural producU:
thc backing of thb administration
chemistry.
cninmoditv
ilia
i«sj
The Misses Darts B$tU and
100 per cent, even if you hit tire big-, relief supervisor, as read before the
Nelson
Mrs. Leon Adriaruon of Olivet U
Mayo, who are attending school In
Senate by Senator Holt, Democrat «»»»« • •
-Republican—
; of West Virginia.
Grand Rapids, spent me week end
carrying out thia general program.' '* "Dear Committeeman:
11**’1’
(Continued from pagel. Sec. 3&gt;
Those are the words of the /lew
"Contact all houses in your dl- Hiri
The Ftlday afternoon bridge club
was entertained at Uie home bf
condemn the Improper and excessive Deal administration—The record to1 vision and get the names of all I n null ... SI.STXOOO lb.
Mr*. Gertrude cole. kh. and Mf».
33O.M3.OO lb. Mrs. Max Wller.
men on relief, also of those holding
Use of money in political activities.' date is ns follows:
On Wednesday the members of Monroe and. Dora Foster of Battle of the season.
“I hand you herewith a list of doc­ WPA jobs. Urge them to register
Meanwhile thc volume of agri­
Creek were Saturday evening callerg
Mrs. Ida Hughes. Mr. and Mfs.
tors In Ohio county. Kindly separate Democratic on March 28 or else lose ,cultural exports from Ute United the Tuesday afternoon bridge club at Heber Pwtek s. MBs Afnes Foster
William Johnson and Mn. Harry
of the National Emergency Council. Uie Democrats and the Republicans I their jobs."
States has declined. The quanti­ enjoyed a pot luck luncheon al the
Brawn ef BUckney. South' Dakota,
and list them in order of priority
ties of individual commodiUas ex­
"Sincerely yours.'’
field.
moved to Elmdale
•o
we
may
notify
our
safely
fore
­
you to be absolutely hardbolted, if
I Signed:*
"Charles McDonald." Iported have declined as follows, ac­
Tiie county Eastern Star unelamen and compensation men as to I Thc above is reproduced from a 1cording lo Department of Com­
tlon was entertained hero on Thurs­ the funeral of Mrs. Jacob Geiger ot
- your own states who is trying to get who is eligible to participate in case I: photostatic copy of a letter signed merce figures:
Freeport
Wednesday
afternoon.
day.
The
morning
was
devoted
to
Our Ladies’ Aid will have a bake
Mn. Doria Hyde. Mra. Dina Mc­
* pttfltteri advantage out of the relief of Injury."—Tills is from a letter I1 by a Democratic leader of the 14th Colinn .................. . ....._._.__.3S prr cinl
business and reports from thc. differ­ Mrs. Thera Hagler returned home Kibben and Miss Norms Castle were rale at the Cloverdale town hall.
—&gt; *human
' ■ *---— - and you. will have
KaVA written by the State Relief Admin­
of
needs.
I ward in Philadelphia on March 14.
ent chapters. The election at offi­ with them for a visit.
In Hastings Thursday night to hear October 3.
, 1936. ten days before the Pcnnsylmeeting
cers resulted in the following:
A good crowd attended tha Com­
■ vania primary registrations, as ,I.«r.l ...... ,........ —.....
munity meeting at Mr. and Mrs.
.™S3 t&gt;»r e.nl Pres., Mrs. Olive Talbot of Middle­
HRESTOHE'S NEWEST
MOST SENSATIONAL । printed in the Philadelphia Inquirer Thus tiie Roosevelt, record on ville; first vice pres., Mrs. Wm. Hin­
Dan McOoUum'a in Brush Ridge Fri­
FREEPORT.
| ot March 28. 1936.
;
day evening. Mr. and Mn. Ell
home and foreign markets for ag­ man of Hastings; second vice pres., Hastings High school will furnish
Lindsay ot Pine lake gave very In­
Harry L. Hopkins. Works Prog- ;riculture stands to date as follows: Mrs. Mary Henton of Delton; sec.- the program. After this Ernest Ap­
TIRE DEVELOPMENT . . ■
I rcss Administrator. In reply to n I Words—Promised to give the full treas, Lenna Kirpatrlck of Middle­ pleman of Nashville will talk about
teresting travel talks on their resenatorial request for an Invest!- ।benefit of the domestic market to ville; chaplain. Mrs. Florence Munro rural electrification for this com­
oent Michigan Farmer Travel Tour
gallon of alleged Irregularities,,,American farmers; promised to help of Nashville; marshal. Lulu Nagter munity. AU Who are 'Interested are
tnrough the Panama region and
welcome to attend.
March 5. 1936. replied: "I AM SURE American farmers expand their
many other places. This was the
Wilson willltls was a week end
THAT I CANNOT BE HELD RE- 1 ,markets abroad.
McCoy of Hastings. In the afternoon
Mary Wedel; 2nd vice pres., Mrs. first entertainment of Its kind ever
guest
of
his
parents.
Rev.
and
Mrs.
SPONSIBLE FOR THE ACTS OF, Actions—HAS PERMITTED THE lhe ritualistic work was given by
Millie Wolcott; sec.. Mrs. Ida Howk, enjoyed at our community meet­
officers chosen *from the different J. J. WlUltts. He has secured a posi­ trvas. Mrs. Allie Hoyt; pianist. Rev. ings and wm highly appreciated.
DUMB POLITICIANS "
,
tion as principal tn on* of the
Mias Mildred Osgood of New York
Thus thc Roosevelt record on Po- ] !FROM ABROAD TO INCREASE chapters in lhe county. Mrs. Flora
schools in Detroit. Clayton WUlitts, Fem Wheeler.
lit teal Activities in Relief Admin- , 1ENORMOUSLY; HAS REDUCED Sutherland, worthy grand matron
Mrr. Charles Blgbec of Chase has City visited her people recently enDetroit and Miss Elieabeth Griffin,
THE VOLUME OF AGRICULTUR­
btration Ls as follows:
teach the coining year.
EXPORTS TO
FOREIGN lhe community house by the Meth­ Charlotte were Sunday callers. Mrs.
Words—Promised 100 per cent .AL
WlUltts and Helen called on Archie
Congratulations to Harold .Ward
odist Aid.
backing of administration to keep : COUNTRIES.
&lt;
Mrs. Jake Geiger
Newton and children In the after­
OTt-hta marriage to H1m Allda Mcrelief administration free of goll- '
the home of Un in
noon.
Clurkln. Our wish is for a long and
tics.
That's all there will be space for pointed pastor of the Methodist
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lewis
Hyda
of
South
Actions—WASHED HANDS OF ।this week. A recess will be called In church occupied the pulpit Sunday.
weeks. Burial last Wednesday In happy voyage on lhe matrimonial
sex for them.
RESPONSIBILITY TO KEEP RE- ।the hearing with more Important The Rev. M. E. Hoyt, who had been Lyons visited his parents. Mr. and Freeport cemetery.
The Deltnn school opened Mon­
here three and a half years preached Mn will Hyde Sunday.
LIEF ADMINISTRATION FREE ttestimony to follow.
The following ladles were enter­
Most of the farmers of this comat okemo. the two pastors exchang­
OP POLITICS.
tained at the home of Mrs. Kenneth day In the fine new school building
Penoyer in Grand Rapids last with three of our young people
I Republicans were surprised that ing charges.
lhe weathffi remains favorable.
boarding the new bus at Barnes*
Thursday:
Mesdames
Leon
Howk.
George Welsh received as many
Three birthdays were celebrated
comer. They are Shirley Anders,
Mr. Roosevelt, what did you say 1 votes ax he did in the race with Corlls Barnes, are moving to Has­ with a dinner Sunday at the Albert John Rickert, Dmi Brown. Jay
Blough. Chas. Austin, Anna Bmelk- Teddy Hayward and James Springconcerning home and forcten mar­ Frank Murphy, the candidate whom tings.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Yarger. Jr., McClelland home, those honored be­
kets?
James Farley picked for Michigan and son, Douglas, were at Jackson ing Mrs. McClelland. Kenneth and i er and daughter Marlon, Watt Thom­
Harold Springer ta building a new
4.90.20 •MJ
as, Merle Karcher and little son
Mr. Roosevelt:
Democrats. Welsh is a turncoat,
Florence Myers. Other guests were ।
Jerry. A very pleasant day waa spent triple garage.
"In a telegram to Leon McCord, an opportunist, a-Republican last Friday.,
7.75
4.90-21
Our school children are thorough­
Around 35 people who are sick or Homer Myers. George Overholt and i In visiting and recalling former days
member
of
the
Democratic
National
year,
a
Democrat
this
—
a
“
man
who
Greta Hefflebower of Woodland and
4.79-19
Committee from Alabama. July 8. knows what" next year. He has shut in, were remembered Friday Miss Edith McClelland ot St. Law­ when Mrs. Penoyer lived In Free­ ly enjoying new adjustable seats.
afternoon by the clover Leaf club al
The old ones were pretty completely
900-19
port.
1933. I said: 'Finally. I have made made many futile attempts lo get
rence Hospital. Lansing.
945.17
Kenneth firasndle and MLm Elisa­ sculptured when the writer went to
It clear, ever since my nomination office as a Republican and finally their annual Flower Day.
Raymond Green was one of a
school and have surely **aat" a good
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kuns of near
a year ago. that I subscribe to the 1 offered himself to the Democrats—
group of twenty-five boys from all beth Van Hbutsn of Grand Rapids many children since. They must
Democratic platform 100 per cent.' a party he has. tn the past, criti­ Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Orville over the state to attend a 4-H club were united in marriage In Ind. last
have been well-made.
nils Democratic Platform of 1932 cised severely. Consequently, the Flook spent Sunday with Mr. and Forestry Conservation camp at Pig­ week. They journeyed to Baltimore.
Mrs.
Halpin
of
Jackson.
&amp;M.19 15.M
Maryland on their
honeymoon
said concerning home and foreign fact that a candidate with this rec­
BANFIELl).
eon River for four days during the
where they were guests of Mr. and
15.55
markets: 'We favor . . . effective ord can win thousands of votes
6.00-20
Delbert Heath of Hastings calle(
past
week.
They
had
classes
and
control of crop surpluses so that away from the administration's Lansing spent the week end with made trips, one day covering 200 Mrs. Arthur Seifert. Congratulations. at Irvin cedar's Bunday.
Sammy Roush, who met with
our farmers may have thc full ben­ own pet candidate. Indicates, that the laiter's sister. Mrs. Grace Calk­ miles, visited fish hatcheries and
The
Johnstown
Pioneer meeting
efit of the domestic market.' Also Democrats are by no means sold Ins and Chester.
quite a serious accident two weeks
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kohler are the Hastwlck pines. They learned ■go. is able to be around again with win be held at the Banfleld church,
the platform said: 'We condemn on Mr. Murphy.
Thursday, oct. 1. Pot luck dinner
how to fight forest fires and many
spending a week in 8t. Louis. Mo.
the aid of crutches.
. . . the unsound policy of restrict­
at noon. Rev. Maylan Janes of tho
Nor Is there any reason why they
Mr. and Mrs Fred Warner and other things. It was a great ex­
ing agricultural products to the de­
Mrs. Harold Rosenberger enter­ Hastings M. E. church will give tho
I should be.
Mrs. Mary Hope were guests ot Mr. perience for any boy.
mands of domestic markets.'''
tained several guests one evening talk.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gillett were
His public record Is not one to and Mrs. Hector Hawkins at Lan­
Those arc the words of thc Roose­
The boys of the Banfield school
Sunday guests at Dorr Webb’s at last week In honor of Jean Everhart
sing
Sunday.
inspire
confidence.
He
wrecked
the
velt Administration.—The record
who returned to her home in Fiori- crossed bats with the Burroughs
Sli, Hasting*. Michigan
Mrs. Mabie Elder has gone to Nashville.
, finances of Detroit with unsound.
; is as follows: .
school boys last week and defeated
Impractical measures: he played Greenville for two weeks.
them,
we have 30 boys and 3 girls
• Sunoco Gas and Olis. Greasing | Competition for the American politics with relief (which accounts
PRAIRIEVILLE.
The D. 8. Class will meet Friday
! domestic market has Increased as a
spending the summer tn Btcanaba
• Volcanlxlng.
Washing j result &lt;■•' ' Islng Imports. From 1932 for his Detroit vote); he Is a typi­ afternoon with Mrs. Cora Parks.
Batteries, Windshield Wipers
The Prairieville Methodist Sun­ with her daughter. Mra. Guy Rimp­ enrolled tn this district, with Elsie
Conklin as teacher.
j to 1935 ,:.e volume of Imports of cal "windbag" politician who is | Born to Mr. and Mrs. Harold day ichool was held for fifty-one son has returned to her home.
Lee Cornell of near climax visit­
• crude foodstuffs Increased 41 per great on oratory and very deficient Housler of Vermontville at the com­ Sundays during lhe past year, with
Bob Kenyon and Correene Qle.M ed the home folks Bunday.
BLUE
I cent and of manufactured food­ in executive ability as a public of- ; munity hospital a daughter, who an average attendance ot seventy- of Kalamaxoo called at the home
MOTOR
Farmers are
threshing their
REGULAR
Octal. It has taken Detroit about has been named Roma Gaye.
four. The largest attendance was of Mr. and Mrs. L- R. Wolcott Bun­
stuffs increased 49 per cent.
eloverseed in this vicinity. The yield
Roger
Sackett
and
Jack
Smith
three
years
to
recover
from
his
ad।
ninety-four;
the
smallest
thirty-six;
FUEL
The following table gives the vol­
gasprice m
ii
is very good this year.
Imre gone to Kplamazoo where they total attendance for the yeaf. 3.748. day.
.
ume imports in 1932 and 1935 for ministration.
Mr. and Mrs. Joel Hummel, nee
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Don
Putnam were
will
attend
ty*atern
Blate
Teachers'
The total collection for the year was Clara Lewis, of Nashville, were en­
Always behind Frank Murphy Is
Saturday guests ot oeo. Ransom tn
3117.99.
lhe heavy, dictatorial hand ot Bass ' college.
tertained at a miscellaneous shower Rutland.
Jim Farley. If Mr. Murphy were 1 Ryan Williams haq returned home
Mrs. Sarah Smith and daughters Sunday at the home of the bride's
entertained Mr. and Mrs. David Art­ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lewis.
elected, this state would be gov­ after a trip to California.
FAIR LAKE.
Mrs. Lyman has returned here lip of Wall lake and Mira Laura
erned from New York, not from
Quests came from Battle Creek,
The Bunnell Ladies* Aid will
uaiu.n,.
Lansing. rrana
Frank u.on
didn'ts wane
want
to after spending a few weeks with her Drummond of Grand Rapids al din­ Grand Rapids. Lanalng. Belding and meet October 1st for dinner with
leave his place and his staff of .
*“. ner Friday evening. Miss Laura Freeport. The bride and groom re­
native servants in the Philippines—
M1“ Pauline Dause has gone to stayed until Sunday afternoon be­ ceived many lovely and useful gifts
but Jim raid "come" and Frank left La~£« W visit her stater. Mrs fore returning home.
■nd wishes for a long and happy
All remember lhe chicken supper
on the next boat.
I Harold Voelker, and
Mr. and Mrs. George Adrlanson life.
at the Bunnell church Friday night,
(. .
Mrs. Ida Wolfe is visiting relatives and daughter visited their son Leon
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tabberer were
A baby girl named Doris Ann waa
Frank Murphy Is a mete pupiiel . Battle rreek
In Grand Rapids Saturday, while bom to Mr. and Mn. Claud Norris
who bows and speaks and smirks
'- - - and family in olivet Sunday.
Those from the local Rebekah there Mrs. Tabberer attended a of Carlton Center Thursday. Mra
according to thc manipulation of j
|
___
BARRYVILLE.
.
,
Norris waa formerly of thia neigh­
lhe strings held firmly hi the hands
nie new officers for the-Ladles' lodge who went to Jackson Sunday Flower Show.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Weaver of Elm- borhood.
of thc Roosevelt-Farley machine. I Aid arc as follows: Pres..■’Mrs. were Mesdames Stella Barber, Mary
Flower. Ethel Honeywell. Maude
Let's give Frank Murphy thc Maude Mead; vice pres.. Mrs. Zana Smith; Misses Clara Scott and Lucy
sound trouncing he deserves and , Day; sec., Mrs. Ethel Green; tress.. Norris. Mr. and Mra. John Doster.
keep the government of Michigan Mrs. Grace Hyde. A supper is being
Mr. and Mrs. Ike DeBack. Mr. and
■ planned, so watch
for the announcein Michigan.
............
............. .
Mrs. Clinton Castle. Miss Norma
jment. The Missionary society is to
Castle. Miss Bernice Flower and
. DOUD CORNERS.
; meet with Mrs. Dave McClelland at Frederick castle. 917 quarts of fruit
k«nrirnn Wednesday
wednexrisv afternoon and
mere will be a chicken pie supper Morgan.
were presented the home by the
nt the Bunnell church Friday Sept. It is planned to have the prayer members of district number 38. We
25. Colored people from Battle' meeting each Tuesday evening at have one member in the home. John
Creek have charge of program.
&gt; Samuel Geiger’s home.
Kammerer. He Is well and likes It
We are soon to lose n good neigh- , Mrs. Clara Day and daughters there.
I bor as Archie Mattison Ls to move to moved to Lansing Friday.
Our sick are Mrs. Verne Callhrop.
Now Only
। Dowling on thc Art Covey place he
Mrs. Mary Neal spent the week John DeBack and Peter Dcleys. We
Round Trip
has purchased.
lend at the home of her daughter,
are wishing them a return to good
heath soon.
Thursday Mrs. Florence MoU. Mrs.
Good Any Day—Any Schedule
Jennie Baumgras. Mrs. Maggie Leh­
man and Miss Lucy Norris were In
Nashville at the O. E. 8. Association.
The chapter to which they belong
put on memorial work.
Thursday evening Clinton Castle,
Norma Castle and Frederick. Lucy
Norris and Mrs. N. H. Barber at­
tended an I. O. O. F. banquet at
Burr Oak hall. Kalamaxoo. honoring
Mr. Hummel prominent In Oddfel­
lowship. a delightful evening was
reported.
Russell Nunemaker entered West­
ern State Teachers' college. Kala-

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142 East State Street

Hastings

N
OF HASTINGS
haitingj.

Michigan

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1238

Weekly Farm Review
The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers
By WILLARD BOLTE
One of the successful poultry­
keepers in the Chicago suburban
district keep* Leghorn hens in cages
and be lisd considerable trouble be­
cause hl* hen* were frightened by
visitors. He solved the problem com­
pletely, according to poultry Trib­
une, by installing a small radio and
keeping it going. We have heard of
the same plan being used lo pre­
vent poult* and ducklings from be­
ing stampeded at night.

When this writer graduated from
Michigan Bute college, in 1906, I
had never seen a field ot alfalfa, lo
the best of my knowledge. Anyway
when I arrived in Logan, Utah, that
falL a* the brand-new head of thc
poultry department of the Utah
State College. I found them taking
lhe sixth crop of hay from an irri­
gated field of alfalfa—and had to
ask Bill Jardine what it wa*. All of
which is ancient history but leads
up to Uie fact Uiat this year Michi­
gan Ls growing over a million acres
of alfalfa—and some day it will
grow five million. Nineteen thirtyfour told the story—and 1936 is rub­
bing it in. The drouth year of 1934
produced an average of 1.2 tons of
alfalfa hay per acre—as compared
with but .57 tons of mixed hay on
Michigan farms.

son. Even though there is a reason­
able increase in colls foaled during
Uie coming year, Hudson anticipates
Dial It will be three lo five yean
before Michigan may nol have to
Import so heavily. The estimated
avenge age of work stock in the
state is ten years. Horsemen consid­
er an animal's peak of value is from
lhe sixth lo eighth year. "Every
farmer need nol go into lhe business
of raising colts for sale.” explains
Hudson. "But Uie average farmer
can «el! afford to raise colts for the
replacement of his own supply. Rais­
ing horses on a large scale requires
a combination of technical ability,
equipment, and pastures as well as
an aptitude for lhe business."

■Ill be with Mrs. Schultz with Mn.
Crowel and Mrs. Philman commit­
tee on entertainment. Il will be a
dinner meeting.
Mr*. Flower and Bernice attend­
ed the Wheat Harvest Festival at
Klndleberger Park last Saturday
evening.
Richard Gilbert 1* attending High
school at Delton.
Mesdames Brandstetter and Boyle
were Kalamazoo choppers last Wed­
nesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Cramer of
Wisconsin after spending a couple
of week* with thair sons. Kenneth
and Thoma* Spaw1 and families left
for their new home in Boyton. Flor­
ida. last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Spaw entertained twelve in
honor of their parents al their cot­
tage on Crooked lake recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Schultz had for
guests recently their nephew and
wife. Mr. and Mrs. Palmer of Chl-

Twenty per cent superphosphate
for the third consecutive year
proved- It* superiority as a wheat
fertiliser, according to results of
tests conducted by county agricul­
tural agents in five Michigan coun­
ties in cooperation with the Michi­
gan State College soils extension
service. Till* phosphate was applied
in the form of a 0-20-0 commercial
fertilizer and was put on at seeding
time to wheat demonstration plots
on seven farms in Monroe. Macomb.
Huron. Branch and Gladwin coun­
ties. A typical example of the super­
iority of the superphosphate over
another commonly used commercial
fertilizer wm $5.43 return for each
dollar fertilizer Investment u con­
trasted with |4 87 returned per dol­
lar Invested when a 2-12-6 fertilizer
was used. These average* over the
three-year period were obtained on
lhe Harry Green farm in Macomb
county. The rate of application was
12^ pounds per acre.

per committees, and Beatrice Dunn­
ing. genera! chairman of lhe pro­
gram committees.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Patton enter­
tained at dinner Thursday. Mr. and
Mrs Will DePriester of Augusta
Mrs. Elizabeth purse and Mr. and
Mrs. M D. Stein of Fostoria. Ohio,
Mr. and Mrs. William Ashby.
and Miss Ruth Lawrence of Bat­
Maurice-and Lyle spent Sunday at
tle Creek.
lhe home of the former's parent*.
Mrs. Margaret Patton and her
Mr. and Mrs. John McKibbin. of
guest, Mrs. Elisabeth Pune, visited
Yankee Springs.
Mr and Mrs. Gerald DePrlestcr In
Charley Williams' new bam which
Hastings Saturday.
has been donated and built by his
Mr. and Mn. Bert Patton were
friend* and neighbors is nearly com-1
entertained Sunday in the home ot
pleled. The old bam was burned in Mrs. Electa England at Gun lake.
July.
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Ashby had a
BRANCH DISTRICT.
.shower and dance on Mr. and MrMr. and Mrs Ted Plummer of
William Ashby at the Cloverdale Battle Creek were Sunday guests
town hall Saturday night. They re­ ot Mr. and Mn. Keith Norton.
ceived many useful present*, unipng
Mrs Clara Day has moved lo
them three rolling pin* and a fong Lansing where site ha* a position
wooden beef steak pounder. Look and her daughter, Dora, Li attend­
out. Bill! There were over sixty ing M 8. C.
friend* and relatives present and a
Mr. and Mn. Clare Mason of
good time was reported by all.
Nashville were Sunday visitors at
HOPE CENTER.
Mr. and Mn. Fred Ashby are
spending a few days with their son.
Clyde Ashby, of Kalamazoo.
Clyde Leonard who lias been in
Borgejs hospital. Kalamazoo. Is bet-

Mrs. Ida Turner, who has spent
the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nel­
several weeks with relatives In lhe
DELTON.
son.
northern part of the state is ex­
Mrs. Hattie Whittemore enter­
Mr. and Mn. Gerald Skidmore
pected home this week.
tained last Thursday. Mrs. Ethel of Hastings spent Sunday with the
The Rebekahs from Milo with sev­ Humphrey of Ionia, and Mrs. Dell iformer's parents. Mr. and Mra. Er­
eral from Prairieville drove to lhe Sutton of Hastings, and on Sunday inest Skidmore.
Odd Fellows Home in Jackson Sun­ she had as guest* Mrs Ida palma• Miss Sylvia Whitmore of Battle
day where they met representatives tler. Mrs. Miranda Sisson and An- &lt;Creek spent Sunday with her par­
from the Lodge* of the 8. W. dis­ drew Houfstatter ot Hastings.
।ents. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Whitmore.
trict lo present the home with a do­
Mrs Roy Morganthaler is home
Mrs. Clara Willison entertained
nation of canned fruit (over 900
from Pennock hospital where she
quarts and several glasses ot Jelly). Thursday her two nieces of Sagi- ■lias been for treatment.
The meeting was called to order by naw. Mrs. Purse of Ft. Wayne. Ind .
Mr. and Mn. Forrest Kinney
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marshall
Coilhe Pres. Mrs. Shoe of Kalamazoo.
spent Sunday with their daughter,
Tiie three oldest members of lhe throp of Prairieville.
Mr. and Mrs. John Doster, with Mrs. Richard Bird, who is 1IL
home (all over 90 years) were pre­
Sod not only absorbs much more
sented. The Home is beautifully sit­ Mrs. Homer Flower of Milo vis­
rainfall than bare ground—but it
SOUTH BOWNE.
uated in a wooded tract and is com­ ited the Odd Fellows Home nt Jack­
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Shaffer at­
holds lhe moisture In the soil bel­
.
modious. up to date and convenient son Sunday.
ter In recent erosion experiments, it
Philip Quick has been having the ।tended lhe shower at the home of
In
every
way.
There
gjre
nearly
100
Owen Nash in honor of their son,
was found that grassland took up
inmates. Odd Fellows and Rebekahs, Ume of his life the past two week*. Raymond and bride, Friday eve­
about 6 inches mote of the annual
who enjoy all the comforts of a real With his uncle. Lewi* Moore of ning.
rainfall than did adjoining com
home. The doors were all open and Battle Creek, he went on an auto
land—which explains one of the
Mattle Mishler waa at the home
trip
to
Niagara
Falls,
through
one could visit every part of the inreason* why com does ao well follow ­
of Stella Rozier Saturday afternoon
sUtullon. It did our hearts good to Pennsylvania. Virginia and Ken- 'toicare for Mrs. Hatton, while Stella
ing sod in a dry season.—Kansas
visited
several
interest- ,
we what oddfellowship was doing In tuckv,
was away on business.
Ing places and saw many sights
this line of work.
Stanley Coles and family of Rome
Hyacinths, tulips and narcissi for
in answering a correspondent who
Twenty-one members and two which he will never forget.
Thc Women's Foreign Missionary Center. Will Cosgrlff and wife of
was having difficulty in getting lop spring flowering in 1937 should be guests of Uie H. V. Club enjoyed the
Lowell and Mr. and Mra. Will Par­
prices for eggs shipped direct lo the In lhe ground now in order to get a hospitality of Mrs. Brandstetter and Society will meet with Mrs. Alice dee spent Sunday with Jennie ParNew York market. Poultry Tribune good start, advises p. R. Krone, ex­ daughter. Mrs Boyle last Thursday Collins Friday afternoon.
Miss Carolyn Solomon. Mrs. Ber­
publishes the following set of rules: tension specialist in horticulture al when lhe H. L. Club was called to
Fred Williams of Freeport did
&lt;l&gt; Keep all layers away from the Michigan State college. Hyaclntlu order at their home by the president, tha Bu*h. Rev. and Mrs Bates and some plastering for Jennie Pardee
males after the hatching season Is should be set two to five inches be­ Mrs. Prouty. After lhe business ses­ Mrs. Lucy Dings attended the dis- and built a chimney for Stella Roover. (2i Provide wholesome feed low the surface of the soil, deeper in sion. a speaker. Miss Gaines, of lhe trlct convention of the W. F. M. S.
and fresh water in clean vessels. &lt;3* sand than In heavy soil. Tulips M. State Hospital was introduced at Grand Rapids lost Thursday and
Mrs. Pete Griffin and Mrs. Lacey
Gather eggs several times a day in siiould be placed three to four inches and gave a most interesting talk on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Terry of Clum and son. Clare, were in Has­
hot weather and do not let broody In the soil except Darwins which the work the students of Occupa­
tings on business Monday.
hens set on them. &lt;4» When the eggs go an inch lower. Narcissi should be tional Therapy were doing for the Litchfield spent the week end with
Fred Houma and family and sis­
are gathered, place them in wire planted two times the depth of lhe patients along ths lines of rug-mak­ Mr. and Mrs. Wade Town.
ter. Ida. of Qrindvllle called at the
Mrs. Eloyse Leonard and Barbara
baskets or on wire incubator trays bulb for best results. None of these ing, mechanical drawing, woodwork,
Jennie Pardee home and at Will
and coo) them quickly In a damp three flowering bulbs will do as well book binding, scrap book*, lace and spent last week in Chicago.
Pardee's
Friday afternoon.
in
clay
as
they
will
in
a
light
fertile
Everyone remember lhe chicken
temperature of not more than'65
embroidery and other fine sewing.
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Griffin of
degrees. Do not pul Uiem into egg loam, according to Mr. Krone.
The next meeting will be Oct. 1 at supper at the Bunnell church next Bellevue visited several days last
cases for at least 24 hours. (5) Do
the home of Mrs. Bertha Humphrey Friday night. The program will be week with Mr. and Mrs. Pete GrifU} U
luiuicu inilliiy
----- -------- -------- -------Spraying with Dreft, obtainable with Mrs. McClary co-hostess and luuiuiuu
furnished by
n'colored
family giuu|&gt;
group |■ _
nol wash eggs. Those that cannot be
of singers from Battle Creek, who! "n “Pd. Ma.r. , '
cleaned wiUi a piece of emery doth at drug and grocery stores, is sug­ will be a dinner meeting.
come highly recommended
1 ,A,,b“by ^lr.. BrTZTd
mended.
should not be sold. &lt;6* cull out both gested by E. I. McDaniel. Michigan
MI.U Irene
Miss
jreue Barber,
uaruer. who Is
is driving
oriving
Jimmie .......
(Tinker) Harrington
Harrington was
was|
Mr “n‘* Mrs- chesler Rlchardextra large eggs and'those that are Stat- College entomologist, to con- bock and forth lo her school in ■
badly injured Monday after- '. son on Sept. 1. and will answer to
misshapen or under 22 ounces to jtrol thfi boxelder bug. now a nuls- Battle creek, entertained guests|1 quite
..w.. last week,
WC«. while
wnne working
worau.g on
on I, th* W
^ce N*dene.
noon
the dozen. i7i Pack In clean new , ance in many parts of Michigan.
from that city Saturday and Sun- , the
new bam being built for Charles I „Oc^ „ !/are
y
Al*.hough
there
are no reports ...
of , | day.
lubc
"
,
cases? WIUI
with new lllicia
fillers iuiu
and nau
flats—SUU
and
I
Williams.
RlchI
any
damage
done
“
—
‘
“
*—
'*
market twice a week. (8i Do nol inlx 1
do™ «cept
boxrider I| Mr. and Mrs. F Gilbert enter­ winiums. The
*nc scaffold
scanoia broke
oroxc and
anu । »•’’"*’ «»««&gt;.&lt;«
------- .. Chester
---------- .------.
,
i
-^,.,
x
.„
i
o...
'
ardson
Sunday
afternoon.
dropped
him
about
10
feet
onto
lhe
8
«
nd
?*
a,*n*Joe
“n' and
Joe and
colors and size* tn the same case if
troublesome. I
tained a friend from Marcellus a top of a stone pile. He was brought ?el1" Sco,u of Cterksville were Sunyou wish to get the highest prices 7he.L
r h0U*s U,r?u“h crBckA Ii couple of days last week.
to Delton to the home of his broth- day cven‘n8 callcrx
from parUcular markets
lln
““*&gt;■ ’The
r’”
&gt;e door or
or screen «
fittings.
are perfectly Harmless but are
er, Charles Harrington, where l.e
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Fertilizer is a recognized antidote.' unsightly and annoying.
was cared for, and was :£le to be
Thereofwas
largeto
number
at the taken to hla own home SaWrday.
. The proportion
theaDreft
use
for Hessian fly damage. ..
A great i
CONSTIPATED 30 YEARS
manv Missouri farmers now follow ,(is 0 ounces in 10 gallons of water.1 Rally day service al the school
many
-- ­
Al the anuual UlfcKUtM
business UlLl
meeting
Ullfc
AIDED BY OLD REMEDY
Saturday.
Several
good* of the Delton Community Club lost,
the practice of planting their wheat This must be applied lo strike the house
far rarllor Ihnn tha
: bun's
bug's bodv
body ns
as the
thc snrav
.spray it
Is tint
not effec­ speakers .were present.
Monday night the following offl- [ “For
„ ..thirty
,
years I had constipaMr. and Mrs. Bob Scobey of near cers were elected: Edward Lowry, tlon. Souring food from stomach
hi order to use it for fall pasture— tive a* a repcllant Sometimes water
Leach
lake
spent
Sunday
with
her
and they offset thc fly damage by under pressure has been found satis­
president: Lula Wertman, vice- (choked me. Since taking Adlerika
..................
w person. wu.up.uu..
president:....
J. L. Dannlels^secretary: ......
j I am a .„
new
Constipation la
feeding it plenty of good fertilizer. factory with frequent applications parent*. Mr and Mr*. Engle.
Mr. and Mrs Henry Krussell of j laj
Lois
It is admitted that waiting to plant from the ordinary garden hose.
U Flowers,
riuwcia, treasurer;
iicuauici. Bertha
sxrriiu* AdAu- 1 a
i» thing
iiiuiit of
ot tiie
the past."
puai."—
—Alice
Alice Bums.
Burn*,
(irnn.l
c.wnf lbw
o/nuV end ams,
___ ________
_____ of ...
. sup...... .I B. A.
. ■„■■..■
__ Druggist.
____. . —Adv.
. .
Grand Rnnlri.
Rapids spent
the week
general, chairman
the
LyBarker,
until thc free date would result In a
MILO.
at the home ot his brother. John
larger wheat crop—but often the
Krussell.
fall pasturage is more important
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kidder called
than the extra bushels of wheat and the schoolhouse next Friday evening.
the fertilizer produces extra grain to | Sept. 25. Prof. Cecil Barnum of at the home of his mother. Mrs.
rr|&gt;iacv that lost through fly damage. Delton will be lhe speaker. Program Carrie Couch, of Middleville. Sun­
In
charge
of
MU*
Nina
Fenner.
day.
—Missouri Rurallst.
Everyone invited.
Mrs. Lydia Kidder made a busi­
A successful meeting of the Aid at ness trip to Hastings Saturday.
With com prices soaring Into the
Sunday evening. Sept. 27. there
•tratonphere. hog feeders will prob­ tiie home of Mrs. N. H. Barber last
ably And it more economical to use Wednesday where supper was served will be a revival meeting nt thc
wheal middlings to supplant part of to thirty people and a good program Wood schoolhouse with Rev. Fields
lhe com in the ration. A writer in of work wa* mapped out. Mesdames of Middleville as the evangelist Ev­
Missouri Rurallst say* that a ration Hall ami Francisco prr.vnled an en­ eryone welcome. Prayer meeting
compased of 10 parts com. 5 parts joyable pogrom. The next meeting Sept. 30. Sidney Ftfleld. leader.
middlings and 1 part tankage should
give excellent gains—although hogs
weighing over 100 lbs. can use com
to belter advantage.

More than S1.000.000 will go out
of Michigan during the coming year
for the purchase of more than ten
thousand horses largely for replace­
ment purpo-ie.s because horses are
dying taster than they are being
raised in the state, according to R.
8- Hudson, horseman al Michigan
. Slate college.
Important factors
which have operated during the
present season to reduce the horse
population of Michigan have been
the abnormal weather conditions,
the prevalence of distemper and
heavy mortality In foals, says Hud-

LOW BUS
FARES to
KALAMAZOO
ONE WAY .—5 75
SHOPPERS’
ROUNDTRIP. 51.00
SIXTY-DAY
ROUNDTRIP, 5135

PEOPLES
Rapid Transit
______________________ 10-6

WHITE SLICED IS 10c
Sunnyfield Flour

IONA FLOUR
’1.57

Splendid Flour
Pillcbury Flour

WHITEHOUSE

Softaiilk Cake Flour

40c

M.ll .

CAMPBELL’S

TOMATO SOUP

29c
RAJAH

Salad Ureuing
j«r

jR

7V

Pork and Beans

5

25c

Let us FILL your COAL BIN
before winter prices
take effect.

QUALITY COALS AT
LOWEST PRICES

1932—131 in. Ford BB Chassis and cab
with new motor, $225.00.

1933-Ford V-8 Panel, new motor with
only 6,000 mites, $275.00.
1936—157 in. Ford V-8 Demonstrator
cost new $936.00, at $675.00.

You Can't Afford to Be Without a

ORDER YOUR ^COAL TODAY!

HASTINGS

PHONE 2118

WOODLAND
MICHIGAN

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
"The Farmer Owned Store”

Truck at the Above Prices!

UNIVERSAL
GARAGE COMPANY
PHON.E 2121

$l,7»
± 63c

9S

Spry Shortening
Mince Meat

a..

Daily Dog Food
Heinz Soup*
*«.v«u«
Corned Beef

10c
5 ■*» &gt;Sc
j .... Jfc

'JT? 17c
,k IT*

17c

Red Beans

3 — 25c

3 2“.” 25c

Pear
H~ F*&lt;k
8 o'Clock Coffee
to . 55c

5

25c

3

29c
£ 19c

Red Circle Coffee

Peanut Butter
Sultana

21c
It 23c
N^MI0c

Red Hen Molarter
Tomato Juice
Campbell's Soup

uir- foe

3 — 25c

Bulk Pickling Spice

1O:'35c
Bulk Vinegar

25c
£ 3»c

Our Own Tea
Canvas Glove*

1 &gt;-1' 25c

Sunbrite Cleanser

5 — 25c

Sunnyfield Corn Flakes
Mello Wheat

- 19c

—
Popular Brand*

BUY AT SUMMER PRICES

,o;.?$2.55

Growing Math
16% Dairy Feed

Bokar Coffee

Pure Cider

1929-157 in. Ford AA stake body
at $150.00.

’^$2.35

। TJkS2.55

Egg Math

Baby Food

AJAX SOAP

1929-131 in. Ford AA( stake body
at $125.00.

Uhl I. IK.
Rocoivo a Kitchen-Aid FREE

Kaffee Hag or Sanka

IONA

TRUCKS

1929-157 in. Chevrolet Chassis and
cob, $135.00.

bag FFR
M Hing Co. and

Scratch Feed

3 uX 29c

;

i ** 25c
!
«»&lt;

Birquick Flour
Henkel's

ANN PAGE

KETCHUP

4

2\i,,bSi.o»

Gold Medal Flour

Mil
If
mttn

6

’^Wc

Lily White Flour

24%-lb. bag 79c

% 25c

1929-G. M. C. Panel at $85.00.

TO LANSING
ONE WAY &gt;1.00
SHOPPERS*
ROUND TRIP, $1.25
SIXTY-DAY
ROUNDTRIP, 51.80

FOOD STOBt

GOOD USED
at Bargain Prices!

When the mower Is used
heavy and tangled crops lhe mowed
material usually will pile up on the
grass board. This can be corrected
by removing Uie grass board and
replacing it with a 1-2 inch rod
about 5 feet long, that Is bent up­
ward and inward toward the seat.—
Hoard's Dairyman.

A s P Bread _for
-ouri.hlng,- ta„
^velLbalanced diet
G,rt « loaf today!

carton

PINK SALMON

2~23c

tor 9«

F*ri" c""al

lie

Bulk Macaroni or Spaghetti 4
Apple Butter

21c

Swsnidown Csk« Flour

tu

Woodbury'*

lie

i7c

Morton's Salt

He

Fig Bars or Ginger Snap*

lie

Post Toastier

fo&lt;

Instant Pottum

Ik

Calumet Baking Powder

ONIONS
CAULIFLOWER
CABBAGE Solid Heads
GRAPES California Tokays
APPLES WulUiy VaHaiy

Ur«. Whit.

(MH) S'

HASTINGS, MICH
WBBM

PR1CU

Hm4.

I

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBWB U IM8

LEGAL NOTICES I

Thornapplc- Kellogg
School Notes

uowau

on f.l
kavfoc «ua»d
mortxM&gt;
M

m

NOW. THEREFORE

bring their lunch to eat in the new
dining hall under the supervision
of a teacher.

Payenfo

meeting |n Has-

Bsbtmb Choke­

Last Thursday ballots ware MOt
lo parents whose children rite on
Athletics.
school busses for them to role on
T. K- came through with flying the question of whether or not the
colors to win Its first football game transportation facillUes should re­
against Martin Friday by the acore main after school for football games.
The result of thc vole was as fol­
realised Uiat Coach Arthur Smalley lows: The number of families that
has a fine team Ln the making. desired to have the busses stay until
About five veterans have relumed the games are over. 01; those who
from last year's squad, a great many wished them to stay until 6:00. 12;
of the 1935 squad having graduated 10 wanted them to stay until 4:30
last year. The boys will play the and 45 did nol want them to stay at
Nashville team at Nashville Friday. al), several ballots contained remarks
C'mon. you fans I Support the team! saying that the parents did not care
whether busses remained or not and
Faculty News.
others consented to thc delayJt the
Six new faculty members. Paula teachers keep the smaller children
Idrd. NOTICE; IB HEREBY GIVEN. Shaffer, Patricia Lynd. Margaret under their Immediate care until
Ul ea Wnlartdar. October Hih, ISIS. Lindke. Arthur Smalley. Pauline
busses leave.
Bellinger, and Madge Hunsberger,
Perhaps most games will be over
have been added to the T. K. staff.
before b o’clock and lhe faculty will
Miss Shaffer Is the Junior high
cooperate with parents In supervis­
teacher and will coach girls’ ath­
letics. Mlu Lynd is lhe commercial ing thc activities of the smaller chil­
dren until busses leave. We thank
unTdu* ••atom of Michigan State College and Is the parents for expressing their
■uma which mar the Home Ec. teacher. Mr. Smalley is opinions so kindly and it is our
"or intoranr* «n itilc fooltell coach and Junior high policy to comply with their requests.
We shall be happy to receive sug­
gestions from any parent that we
may more fully provide for every
d ’f
’T"* ol '
New Teachers Initiated.
w‘ «n” •ii«en*r*i 1 The faculty of T. K. Journeyed to child’s progress in his work and his
era dracribed aa, Gun lake Wednesday night lo inl- happiness in school.
LeRoy Bell
&gt;nd I Hate its new members. Skating
in, ' seemed to be the order of the eveHINDS CORNERS.
par- i ning. Rumor has it that Van was
,(y. | the victim of several whacks also.
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Bishop and
.rdradorf Addition
~
“
baby of Rutland spent Sunday with
aahriila. Mlrbicao.
New Schedule.
his brother and wife. Mr. and Mrs.
rordrd put th»r» [ we think it advisable to explain Allen Bishop.
hilao"’ ’
briefly'the new schedule now being
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bishop spent
hrrrditam'Ma and | practiced at T. K. There are six pern­
io brtnniim. and lods
i0(]s iIn
n the
llC
w
school
day
consislFew Americans think of thc date as a product of American agricul­
lhe new
consist­ Saturday afternoon with Mr. and
ture, ycl this fruit is harvested every year In Arizona and southern
ing of one hpur each. This calls for Mrs. Chas. Welch in Baltimore.
Mrs. Paul Brown of Alpine spent
California where irrigation has made possible growth of dole palms
forty-five minutes of recitation with
fifteen minutes of study under the Wednesday and Thursday with her
This picture \wus taken on the Yuma federal reclamation project in
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO­
personal supervision of the Inslruc- parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Tobias.
southeastern lArizona. Water for this project comes from the ColoRATION. Mortocw:
Glonn D. M.th»«.
tor. The students thus far have ex­
Mr. and Mra. Everett Meyer of
(
rado river below Boulder Dam.
pressed satisfaction with the new Centerville spent Saturday with
off io"*»g i arrangement.
her father. W. O. Tobias. Her
Innin. Mlrhli
---------------- '■------------------------------- । The new schedule also brings into father accompanied them home
HIGHBANK.
NORTHWEST THORNAPPLE.
notice to creditorb.
1 consideration the new overlapping Sunday for a few days’ visit.
Mr. and Mn. Leslie Adams and
Thc Consumers Power Company
Probata Court tor. noon hour. Half of the students are
Mr. and Mrs. Edd Newton spent
'
of FUrrorr 1 eXCUSC&lt;1 ,Or n00n *l 11:00 10 12:15 Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Forrest of Hastings is putting on a cook­ Mrs. Sarah Ostrolh called on Mr.
ing demonstration Ln lhe M. E. and Mrs. Gayion Fisher ot near
while lhe other half continue with Hall in Hastings.
_______ _ Vermontville Sunday.
[church basement ____
next Thursday.
n that fonr »»»&lt;&gt;&gt;• their cUsses until 12:1} when they
Orville Tobias of Detroit visited 1! Oct. 1st. at 2 o’clock Prizes will be
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Manning
rrd /orCToditara to I h*ve lhelr noon tl11 1:3°- This new
his
parents.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
C.
‘
N.
To-'
given
away. Admission is free and and family of Marshall were Sun­
■
&gt;rd ' method-gives the advantage of an ui.. ,----- a,..,------c.
—
evcryone
invited.
day guests of Mr. and Mra. Frank
hour and quarter noon. In thb way bias, from Wednesday until Sun­
Mrs. Gienn Allen is in Jackson Hawblitz. Evening callers were Mr
we are able to allow students who day. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias
and Mr. and Mrs. Mell Hendershott, part of this week attending the K. and Mrs. Merle Hecker and daugh­
nil of Kalamaxoo. also spent Sun­ of P. convention, she being the dele­ ter. Joan Patricia, of Hastings.
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
day at thc Tobias home.
gate sent from thc Middleville
State of Mltbic
OuesU Sunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Webster and chapter.
Mr. and Mrs. Worth Green were
their son. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Web­
Mr. and Vrf. Harry SUmsqn and Mr. and Mrs Clare Marshal) and
ster
ot
Urbandale,
called
Sunday
family and Cleon Mead of Belle­
A. II. 1936.
evening on Mr. and Mrs. C. N. To­ family attended the funeral of their vue. Mr. and Mrs. Verne Hawblitz,
»Vrr. A. 1&gt;. 195R.
sisler-ln-law. Mrs. Rose Adams, in
I’rrarnl. Hoa. 8tU
bias.
and family. Mra. Freda Marshall
Grand Rapids Thursday.
.NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
The first community meeting was
and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jones ot
... al
„ thc
„„ schoolhouse Friday 1 Mr «M Mn Bail Brown .nil
held
Ight
I son. Robert, of Grand Rapids were Battle Creek.
night.
Mr. and Mix Will.Ouy of Nash­
Mr. and Mrs. Clark awviM.iaouM
Robinson noy
and ---------Saturday
of Mr. and
.....
--- evening
-- -guests
i
ville spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mr. and Mra. George Robinson of I Mrs. Otis Morgan.^ \
Hastings called on Mr. and Mrs. I The Ladies’ Aid held their Sep- Mrs. Byron Guy.
Mrs. Charles Jones of BatUc
Edd Newton and Mrt. Mary Payne icmber meeting Thursday after­
Inner. A. I&gt;. 1946.
last week.
noon and Die following officers were Creek and Mrs. Freda Marshall
----------------- -----------------------elected for thc coming year: Mra. spent Friday afternoon with Mrs.
Will
Hawbliu.
MORGAN.
Harry Stimson. Pres.: Mrs. Malcolm
Mr. and Mrs. Bordy Rowladcr McIver. Asst. Pres.; Mrs. R0,J*rt
Some hitchhikers' now refuse to
and daughter. June, were guests of Tolan. Secy.; Mrs. Clair Zcrbe.
Ben Waite and family of lhe Pratt jTreas. Next Sunday will be elec­ ride with a man who has no radio in
district Sunday
I Hon of officers nt Sunday school.
Mrs. Kate Corwin ConraS oT! Byron Ward of Caledonia har
Wayne. Ill., and son-tn-law. Win 1 purchased
the
(ormer
Hooper
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION
Davis, visited Millie Flury and Lc- j Freahncy farm from Mrs. Metta
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
tha Adkins Sunday.
Morgan of Ypsilanti.
Clarence Rowlader and friend. I--------------- «
----------------Esther Grey, spent Sunday with hia '
KLINGENSMITH.
sister. Mrs. Lena Roscoe, at Nash- I Charles Storkan has relumed
v,“5• home after spending a few wceka
Hon. Stuart Cltment. Jade*
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Earl of Kai- [ |n Big Rapids,
aino and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Maier •
The DufTy house is nearly coraof Battle Creek were Sunday guests
geted. Mr. and Mrs. Danny Dufof Glcnard Earl.
expect to live there.
Mra. Harry Hammond of Ver- 1
montville visited Mrs. Millie Flury. I Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Finkbclner
who is slowly recovering from her and children of Barlow lake called
illness and is able to be up and at thc Green home Sunday eve­
ning.
about a little.
Mr. and Mra. George Hohn and
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Tripp and
Mrs. Bradley and son of Alngcr Lois. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Green
called on Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Har­ and Joyce spent Saturday in Kal­
It la fiirlhrr orrtrrrd that nubile not Ira rington Sunday.
amazoo.

Kfepert Y groups organlzad last
rn O r»i« pl
rplnn VMk. the gtra with Mra. Hunter.
le&gt;Mr. and Mr. Ah|U directing ths
Ml; or. niteit a (eu, tae» jD-Y. ifatadlth Lawk, president.
V. »
&lt;4 MlMeuao. pad
Mlddkvilte Hl-Y met at the school
this Tuesday ovoning for a spacial
&gt;. dtecUlg. 'll Mi. | to »- bualnaas meeting.
The itinerary of Secretary
irt «efck included IgUm |

HOME OWNERS’ LOAN t'OHI'O-

LENH D. MATHEWS.

NOTICE OF MOBTOAOE SALE.

■ •UI-oKAl IOS

NOW. THEREFORE br

ridfd. NOTICE IS
~
•
'&gt;rl»..«r ...... ........ ..
."iu. F.itt'rn HUnd

A radio announcer la a oersor
thinks people will enjoy music
If he ACtd excited about It.

"A Rote By Any
Other Name
Would Smell
An Sweet”

PJXh.’sriBC.rtj

penara. inriun
kick prroiOot

Wednesday evening
t and PfapcU Moore

An Important meettos for yettUt
M
MT II
MR h
an Arter Ute tellirtM teto

Wish la ClM&gt;
Content.

Rfw

or Pogtauriiod.

PINT 5«

QUA1T

But Grode A milk by any
other name might not be
as good. Highlands Dairy
standord-Grqde A-is your
assurance ot uniform
auality and high standard
of purify.

Produced under the su­
pervision of the State
Health Department,Grade
A milk is one of the purest
milks produced. Low in
bacterio, high in vitamins.
USE HIGHLANDS DAIRY

GRADE A MILK
FOR RFTTER RESULTS

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone IS5I

ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.

Hailing.

Absolutely FREE!
&lt;IA PIECE TURKISH
JV
towel set

Value *63°
ALL FREE!

NOTICE nr MORTGAGE BALE.

NOTICE MORTGAGE BALE

FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY
WITH THIS BEAUTIFUL 1936

•
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO:
ReBLF.NN
» Att"r»

sw

AutoMatic

&amp;FUEL
IMOUI!

l»3« MU.I "AUTOMATIC" WASHU ..$59.95
12 Turfcl.h Foe. Tow.1., 16 In. . 28 In-------)
6 Turki.h l.tf, Tow.li, 22 is. . M In.— &gt; 6.50
. 12 TnAi.li WnA Claft,. 12 In. • 12 In... J

s- Washer -»

. Mr tow |

STATE OF MICHIGAN.
THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE

g&gt;gd Thii $«nsationcil Offer

ib.il... (ii osonai

•o.-.v

NOTICE Ifr'il'ERERT OIVEX

: H&gt;

.

» at MH e aurt n

The Greatest • AUTOMATIC"

Waibcr Value in a
Quarter Century

Total Value____________ «

Special Offer *59

Be sure to see the New 1936 "AUTOMATIC" Washers
before you buy. See the smart, new streamlined dessign
. . . New Color Beauty . . New Exclusive Features ■that
mean extra value for every dollar you invest.
Conntr. MkhWae

•

2257

We’ll Deliver! — Because prices will soon advance

I-.Ei- UDl.le \ !■ STATE to

. . . because •wen now better grades arc hard to
-get from the mines ... because you may not be

See the New Invention that assure you the lowest cost
per washing . . new savings every time you use your AU­
TOMATIC. It’s on Outstanding Value even without the
FREE OFFER.
.
'
- ■. n..;

able to get what you want later on. we advise you

to buy your winter’s cool norJ

J? ORAgD

■
*

RAPIDS ON TUESDAY.
RiPT. 39. IO3«. COMMENCING
AT 11 A. J(.
rr Coeatz &gt;111 b, r«tlil.d to

HOWARD C. LAWRENCE
Mn public*a 8ut« Contral C

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.

HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPO­
RATION. MortxMco.

ton!., Mirbirau .

________________ ____ ________ _

1 aiMICTftalffi I

i

HOME OWNERS- LOAN CORPOD^mIiSw

Il
I

DEALER^ IN WOOL, GRAIN. FEED, FLOUR. SALT, UME,
CEMENT AND COAL
PHONE 2257
HASTINGS, MICH.

Coa&gt;« la and Sa&lt; fat Yaurwlf What Thi»
FREE OFFER REALLY SAV|$ YOU.

oodyear Bras. Hardware Co.
Phone 2101

Halting!, Michigan

�Tai ajUTiWOI 1AHMIK TMUMPAT. IITTIMBtB M. UM

TuMSiat mu.

HENDERSHOTT.

At Last—The Perfect Robot Hen!

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

Laura Drykr

The first small-game hunting li­
cense issued by conservation offi­
cer Arthur O. Greer in Calhoun
county went lo one of the few
Michigan hunter* who can say he
hunted wild turkeys in this stale.
Ths applicant was Albert Graham,
who will be g7 year* old Oet. 10. tn’
IMS Graham and his brother shot
the test deer tn the vicinity ot Mar­
engo. but he say* hla experience in
hunting wild turkey* stands out tn
his memory. HI* greatest hunting
disappointment came after he had
stalked a flock of turkey* and his
gun failed to ftea. he rtlates. Oreham distributed 40 bushels of grain
to feeding station* for game and
song birds test winter.
Hunters who are training their
dog* on wild game must confine
their activities to the hour* between
sunrise and sunset, the department
of conservation announces. Racoon
dog* cannot legally be trained on
racoons *t night. Hunters are al­
lowed by law to train their dogs
until the 13lh ot March, 1037. The
law specifically forbid*, however,
jx&gt;s.sesslon of a rifle or shotgun by
lhe hunter training hi* dog during
the closed season on upland game.

Michigan will be in a position this
fall to begin a large-scale program
of cover and food improvement for
wildlife on IU refuge areas.
The enlarged program has been
made possible by the availability of
aultebla planting stock from the
new hardwood nursery. esUbliahed
in the hardwood state forest near
Wolverine early this year.
A half-million
trees will be
planted thi* fall and next spring to
furnish browse for deer and cover
and food for other wildlife. Sumac,
dogwood, wild roses, white ash are
included in the species to be plant­
ed. The wild rose* will be relished by
sharpUUed grouse and prairie chick­
ens.
The department also plana to
supply hardwood stock for the Wa­
terloo. Yankee Springs and Alle­
gan federal project* in southern
Michigan.

The hard-pressed inoosc herd on
Isle Royale will benefit, at least
temporarily, from the fire which
burned over approximately 35.OOQ
acres on the island during lhe past
summer, believes Paul
Hickle,.
mammaloglst of the department of
conservation. Hickle says that the
Immediate effect* ot lhe fire may be
beneficial to the moose by providing
* new food supply next winter tn an
area in which the moose had
browsed out everything within their
reach. Many balsam and birch tree*
escaped the full effects of the fire in
lhe burned-over area, especially
where Lhe flames confined them­
selves chiefly to the ground vegeta­
tion. In many Instances, however,
the root structures of large trees
were weakened so that they are like­
ly to fall during the strong winds
of the coming autumn months and
a* a result of heavy snows next win­
ter.
The attitude of lhe department of
conservation toward deer hunter*
who lose their Identification tag*
while In the wood* this fall l» going
to be "atlff-bitted." H. R. Sayre,
thief of field administration, said
that problem* win arise from the
new license-tag regulation* which
will ncccasartly require strict InterGtatlon and application of the
. 'The hunter who loses hla tag
will be one of these problem*." Sayre
Slated "No doubt there will be many
of them, unless the tag te securely
sewed on so that brush can't take It
off. But many hunters will want to
change garmenta; they won't be
Sewing the tags on th* backs ot
their coate. When the license tag
Is lost in the woods, there 1* only
one thing the hunter can do to avoid
embarrassment and that is to un­
load hl* rifle and quit hunting until
a new lag can be obtained.”

Robert Bart 1* driving * new
They found her

Ungs on Sunday.

a

Slone and many oUwri.

E

The story deplete a happy home
where the shadowy past of twenty
years before, in which th* wife and
mother were victims of a lurid scan­
dal. waa forgotten tn the joys of the
present But on the eve of the wed­
ding df thia woman's daughter to
the scion of a wealthy society fam­
ily. a radio corporation saw a chance
lu increase It* profits by biasing
thia story to the war id. The talent­
ed cast headed by Humphrey Bo­
gart include* Beverly Roberta. Lin-

tnoM
T&gt;rk&gt; Sertic. nt Mt BmiM
ha* approved the request and in­
formed H- D. RuhL bead at the
game dlvtaitm. that he may go ahead
with plan*.

t the Theatre

to everyone. making you feel
staying out-of-door*, became ai

Blare WUSams EX
lost _
a L„_.
horse 2
Mon­
roe running In
day. Another horse
la th*
field with her Adopted her coll
Is how raising "twins."
around tha corner*
The Ladle*' Aid will meet thi*

U&gt;e eighteenth century are
and faithfully reproduced with no
pity or lynthetlc sympathy Injected.

"Anthony Adverse" u a gigantic
production based on the famous no­
vel of Hervey Allen. Baslde* March
the cast Include* Olivia de HaviL

Photographic taets kg
Indicate that lightning I

DOWLDfG.
The Ladtea' Aid Society wfli have Clark's Will the ladles all plan to be
a fried chicken supper on Tueaday
evening. October 3. at the Dowling
chureh to which the public is in­
C. Clark and Mr* Ronald
vited.
Mr. and Mrs Manville Whitney, Haynes attended the W. F. M. 8.
who are now located at Holland, *re district convention last Thursday
with Mra. Robt Garrison of Battle
Creek Mr*. Haynes and Mrs. Oeo.
Tuesday.
her on Friday.
----------- from Hendershott
and Quimby gathered at th* per­
sonas* In Hastings Friday night
land were guests Saturday of their
daughter and husband, Mr. and
Mr* Lewi* otia.
Mr. and Mra. Oilie Fisher were
guests Bunday of Mr. and Mn. Ed.
Titus at Cloverdale. They also
called on Mr. and Mrs Otto Fry
at their Wall lake home.
Howard Edmonds, who recently
purchased the Cora Kia property,
i* making improvements on the
garage bulldnlg and win soon locate
in our village.
Mr. and Mra. Norton Blocum and
children.
Wallao*
Norton
and
daughter. Mra. Etta Btanton, and
Irving Fisher and family at Ver­
montville spent Bunday with Frank
Hammond at hla farm home near
Milo.
The nest Townsend meeting w.ll
be held at the Dowling church on
Tuesday evening. Sept. ». with Mr
Moore from Kalamaaoo as th*
speaker.

DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mra. Ball and son of
Glenwood visited their son. George
Ball, snd family from Wednesday
until Friday.
Mr and Mrs. E. Whitney and Mra.
Ida Chcroeman of Nashville called
at Clyde Cheeseman's Sunday aft­
ernoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Farrah and
family ot Hasting* were guests Sun­
day at Geo. Ball's.
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Cheeseman
and daughter spent Sunday with
Mrs. Alice Bailey and family at
Laurence Flnefrock's in Woodland.
The tnen are all working hard to
»et their wheat In ai Ine recent
niMa”had left the ground so soft
it waa impossible to wort on it un­
til the last few days.

CLOVERDALE.
Mr. and Mr*. R. E Pierce and
daughter. M«ry Joyce, were enter­
tained Bunday at the home of Mr.
and Mra. Cela Thornton of Battle
treek tn honor of the wedding an-

Pierce. Mt. and Mrs. Lyle Sage and
Mr. and Mr*. Cela Thornton of BatMr. and Mn. Frank Humeston
and friends of Jackson spent lhe
week end al their eottage.
Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Eames and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Snyder ot
Kalamazoo spent lhe week end at
their cottage here.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kellogg of
Kalamazoo spent Saturday evening
visiting friend* around cloverdale.
Friends of Mr*. Ed. Pennels Will
be glad to know that she 1* getting
The Dibble family of Detroit spent
the week end al their cottage here.
Mr and Mr*. Maurice Loucks bf
Midland returned to their home aft­
er spending a week with their moth­
er. Mrs. Lou Anna Patton.
Gererive Flower and friend of
Kalkmasoo spent the week end at
the Delos Flower home.

SOUTH 8HULTZ.
Our four high school pupils
started to Delton to School tn th*
new building, Monday.
George Brockway of Adrian. Wes­
ley Brockway of Galesburg and Eva
Frazier and daughter Jean of Kal­
BARBERS CORNERS.
amazoo were dinner guests of Mr.
Mr. and Mr*. L. J. Matthew* and and Mra George Kenyon. Mr. and
MUs Nora Matthew* attended the Mra. Alv* Kenyon of Bellevue speht
Cook family reunion nt Elkhart. In* Bunday evening with them.
dlana. over lhe week end. Mabel Hom of Battle Creek vis­
Mr. and Mrs. John Weaver were ited her parents two days last week.
Bunday guests at Will Flory's in
Mra. Ada Ashby entertained the
Woodland.
Cedar Creek Cemetery Circl* Wed­
Miss Minnie Matthews who has nesday.
been spending a couple of weeks
Clyde Campbell and Mr. and Mn.
with relatives tn Indiana returned Emmo DeHaan of Kalamasoo vis­
home Sunday.
ited Rom Hallock Sunday and also
Mr. and Mrs Herman Hauer and called on Mr. and Mr*. G. E. K*ndaughter Mabelie and Mis* Mabelle
Nollen of Grass Lake were caller*
St- nul'i CatjiMr*!. uxidon. wu
fet Floyd Cluin’*, OOata Grave. Bun­
S3 yean tn bunding.
day.

Mr*. Conklin. Refreshments were
served and they presented
the
Conklins with a puree as an ex­
pression of the lasting friendships
they have made here. We regret
losing this fine family but all fee)
that It is for their best interests

Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lulhbar &amp; Cbal Co.
PkMsiSlt
FfwA ***•
Niiflno

After six year* of experimentation, the U. S. Department of Agri­
culture ha* brought forth Gertrude, a mechanical hen that lays
egg* th* size of coconuts and tells spectator* Just how it's done.
Gertrud* isn't the first robot hen, but she's lhe first perfected me­
chanical fowl. One of Gertrude's predecessors, for instance, laid
her egg* hind part forward. AnoUier described operations in a
deep bass voice. This new 1036 model is six feet tall, electrically
lighted, produces her eggs in the correct dlrccUon and speak*
soprano.

won't be »o hard Cedar Spgjiga is a
fine small town and we hope they
will be happy there.
THREE CORNERS.
। Wv are sorry to know that Dirk
Remember there will be church
Mbs Retha Robinson, who has Hoffman was seriously injured one
services next Bunday. Come and | a teaching position in a rural com­ day tart week by a hor»e and -now
munity near Bancroft, was a week has his leg in a cast.
Mrsy Fanny Boniface, who has
end guest of her parents. Mr and
DURFEE.
been 111 at the home of her daugh­
Mr*. H- J. Robinson.
Sunday school Sunday at the us­
Mrs. Lu I ken* of Kalamazoo was ter, Mrs. Frank Bloom for some
ual time. 10:30, followed by class
time, was taken back to her home
meeting. Christian Endeavor Sun­ the house guest of Mr. and Mrs in Orangeville last week much Im­
day evening before preaching at Clare- Yeiter from Monday until proved.
returning home with Les1:00 o'clock
।I Saturday
ter 7'*
Teller
who w
was
a Saturday
Saturday !
Eddie
Gamble
underwent an I
ter
“? who
“ *
SOUTHWEST CARLTON,
operation for appendicitis Tuesday ' cnieit
BUest thfre
I You are all invited lo attend the
at Pennock hospital.
. Mr. and Mra. Clarence L. Sisson Booster night program of Carlton
•----- ---—•------of
*~
- City,
—■ - 1
—•*- ------—■*— -------—of* Grange at the hall on Wednesday
Mra. Ann*
Boylng
Kan***
and’ •family
were **
Sunday
guests
Mo., spent several days last week Mrs. Erma Brown in the Jones dls- evening September 30.
wflh Mr. and Mra. Sam Couch and I trtet.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brown of
other relatives In this community.; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Waiters, Don- Grand Rapid* were Sunday visitors
The first Durfee P. T. A. of the J na and Alyce of Battle Creek were of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Culbert.
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. 8trodtbeck
season will be held at the school- Sunday evening dinner ■ guests ot
railed. Sunday
house Friday evening, Sept 25.
Mr. and Mr*. Edw. Walters.
.
. afternoon on Mr. and
Mr. and Mra. Chas. Hammood I Mr*. Claude A. Hammond called Mrs. Arthur Strodlbeck and son of
and Mia* Mary Baulch speA lastj on Mr*. Roy {Taffee in Hastings. North Broadway.
week at Bear lake.
Tuesday afterrtoon. .
| *••MiM Donna Mend
J ot*------West—
Has
- ­
Mtea Grace Baulch *penl Bunday I Mr. and Mra. Homer Smith and tings and Mrs. Wm. Shriber and
in Hastings
1 daughter. Dorolha of Hastings and children of Hastings spent Saturday
ivening -r
and
Sunday with Mr. —
and
Mr. and Mra. George James of their guests were Sunday evening :•
” ?
*
Hastings called on Mr. and Mrs.) callers at thr tiome of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Frank Shrltwr
H J.
NORTHEAST .STRIKER.
William Hoffman Sunday..
**
* Robinson.
Mr.
and,
Mrs.
Delbert
Reynolds
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Yelter and Mr.
Mr. and Mra. George Baulch and
family spent Sunday with lhe Chas. and Mrs. Lester Yeiter of Kalama- ’tatted their niece,. .Mrs. Byron
zoo motored to Lansing Sunday to Girard
of— Holland
‘ ---------------------Sunday. Mrs.
Hammond fgfnily.
Tom Hoffman will have hte ton­ spend the day with Mr. and Mrs. Addie Montgomery who spent the
H*rvey Kenney ।Marguerite Yeiter). past week there returned home with
sils removed next Wednesday.
Ralph Smith of Holland called a*, them.
Mra. Sarah Ickes la home after
spending some time with Mr. and the Edw. Walters' home, Thursday. I Mrs Daniel Poland and daughter
... i Floyd Walter* and Marion of Dorothy of Middleville spent the
Mra. Archie Herrington in Baltic
। Grand Rapids spent Sunday evening past week at Uie home of Mr. and
Creek.
Mr. and Mr*. Art Fisher and fam- tn the Edw. Walters' home.
Mrs. Wm Cramer. Jr., and the week
ily of Lansing and Mr. Adams of '
-- --------------- -----------------------end with Mr and Mra. Oscar ManDelton spent Bunday with Mi. and I m
,
'ning of Hastings.
Mrs. Donald Couch.
1 The L.
chicken
Mr an(
— A--- 8— will
- serve
--- -d.iuj Mrs
n.a. Lc0 Reynolds
tvt.jtt'...— had a
.---------------- *♦*----------------I. supper
Ippet at
«l Quimby church Thursday phone installed last week.
EAST
AST WALL LAKE
, night. Everybody Invited.
| _________________________________
___________________________________
AND VICINITY.
A large number of Quimby pco- rl.aD«lrnrrn TDFATMFMT
Bunday visitora at E. D. Reynolds'' pie attended the farewell parly for uUAKARItEM IKUUBRNI
FOR TENDER STOMACH
were Mr. and Mr*. Warren Calms Rev. and Mr*. Conklin at tiie parwnage Friday night. We wish them . Dr. Emil's Adla Tablets bring
Mrs. R M. Sprague of Toledo, much success in their new field at quick relief from a sore stomach,
Cedai
Springs
'
pains
between meals due to acidity.
Ohio, came Saturday for a two
Much sympathy Is expressed to Indigestion and heartburn. If not
weeks' stay at her eottage here.
-------------—money
---------- ■* te refunded. Reed's
James Harrington ia recovering Mr*.* Juna
Martin
In the death of —
your
--------nicely after his fall last week white her husband, who was well known Drug Store, and B. A. LyBarker,
Drugs bt. Adv.
working on Chas. Williams'bam. (here.

Owing to the death of the late Mrt. Sarah A. Rogers, I
will dispose of her personal property at public auction at her
residence, 209 W. Mill St., on

SATURDAY, SEPT. 26
Beginning al one o'clock P. M. I offer the following
Good over*tuff*d davenport.

2

good read rocking chain.

5 other rocker*.

Antique bureau.

•

Small round drop loaf table.

Round oak dining table.
6 leather seated chain.
Practically new buffet.
Several small stands.
Bookcase.

Walnut gateleg table.
Stewart-Warner radio, 9 tubes.

Dish**, cooking utensil* of ail kinds.

Tools, electric fixtures, electric fan.
Fruit cans, violet ray medtfne.

.

Victrola (Victor).
Several dressen and beds and springs,
all good.
Good bedding of olf kinds.
New walnut dock. Largo trunk.
Several picturee. Several lamps.
Several small rugs. AB gas stove
Florence Hot Blast hooting stove.
New Estate heatrola.
Good kitchen cabinet

dlton.

Fane* stretcher*.

Kitchen cabinet.

Milk safe.

Cook stove.

Kitchen table.

Library table.

3 dining choirs.

Rocking chair.

Costwmer.

Bed and spring*.

Fruit cant.

Also large truck load of good furniture.

And many other articles.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. Nothing re­

moved until settled for.

F. W. ROGERS, Admr.
Dewey Reed, Auctioneer.
Clifford Hammond Clerk.

6 DAYS A WEEK

C.THOMAS

FAMILY FOOD BUYERS ENJOY CONSISTENT SAVINGS HERE
ON NATIONALLY KNOWN AND POPULAR BRAND FOODS!
NO ADVANCE IN PRICK

GtEEN GIANT

PEAS
The

FAMOUS

Bic.

3 25

FIG BARS

PEANUT BUTTER ill. 25‘

DEL MAIZ

NIBLETS

fil

FRESH CORN Off
the Cob

CA

Kw Cl
POST
TOASTIES
LARGE
rKG.

NOW...BUILD

UCTION SALE

« 4 &lt;
I I

COCOA

2

LABEL

11

12c

CAMPBELL'S » 2 cans 15c
.s'^ST

c?..

25

ruiox-a wobcbbtbhixe
SAUCE
iottul 14c

2 - 25c

CORNED BEEF

MUFFETS

SPAGHETTI

SUNBRITE

BWT°QUALnXc««

17c

PK6S.

10c

glSCUITSHEAT 4

'fiST6

cleanser

LARGE
CAN

10c

6 cans 27c

SPRY SHORTENING
I LB. CAN 22c - 3 LB. CAN 63c
ASK FOR NIW AMI Pit RICIH

LIMA BEANS
PEAS
SPINACH HEALTHFUL’

CERTO

DRY GREEN PEAS TXtcrt 5c

CAMAY

No. I JERSEY

SWEET POTATOES 5
13c
CABBAGE
■I*
2c
ONIONS
10 in. 15c
ORANGES Jules'ORAHCS
■ 15c
SOFTO
TISSUE
Sheet

22
SOAP CC
BAR— J

$1®

C. THOMAS
iu wtsfinw rrwtf

c
CANS

PET MILK

14°

EGG NOODLES
SLICED PINEAPPLE KIT.!. 10c

10*

BRAND

FOR COOKING OR TABLE USE

KARO SYRUP

GRAPE­
NUT
FLAKES

PURITY

HUSKIEST - He

DELICIOUS

FRESH
ROASTED
COFHI

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER U. 1H1
ist Florence a. Trumper. Proof ot. Est Gordon Aubd. Inventory, filed,
wifi fiUd. order admitting will en-. annual account filed.
‘—-*■
I Est. Raymond W. Serven et al Pe­
Est. E. R- Sylvester. Annual ac­ tit Ion and nominations of Gdn. filed.
I order appointing Gdn. entered.
count of trustee filed.
PROBATE COURT.
Bit. Matilda Noban. Petition for I Est. Melissa Roe. Petition for 11­
I cense lo sell filed, order for pubheaAOinr.
Admr. niea.
filed, tetters
letters w
of aummisiraadminIstra- Admr. filed, waiver of notice filed, ! tion entered.
IAorder
—A—r limiting
IIwaIHfam settlea—IlW. ,. Iorder appointing Admr entered
tkm issued,
Est. Ellse Vosmer. Order appolnt------ . —
----- . —
....— .for
—’ ,hearing
----- .— I I Est. Joseph Peterson, Annual ac- ,
ment
entered,
petition
ing Admr. entered.
claims filed, notice to creditors is-r sunt filed.
Est. George a. Fuller. Annua) ac­
____
Eat. Dirk Wallenburg. Annual acEst. Burdette Briggs. Petition for.Icounl
count filed.
license to sell filed order for publl-J —*
— * **—r&gt;l—1
Est. Elizabeth Glbboney. Order al­
lowing account entered, discharge of
cation entered.
Est. Elizabeth Glbboney. Inven­
Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
tory filed, final account filed.
Est. Jean Roe. Release of Gdn.
E»t. John McLravy. Inventory
filed, discharge of Gdn. issued.
executrix niea. letters testamentary i
_
filed.
E»t. Almon B. Parr. Bond of
Eat. Adeline Hefflebower. Order issued, order limiting settlement entered.
petition
for
hearing
claims
Admr
filed. leUera of admlnlaUaallowing claims entered.
flled.
notice
to
creditors
Issued,
in"dcr
limiting settle­
Est. Margaret E. Shilling. Petition
I menl entered.
for Admr. filed, waivers of notice venlory filed
Est. John W. Albertson. Annual
Est. Marjone E. Gay, et al, Petlfiled, order appointing Admr. enaccounl filed.
| tion and mfmlnatlons of Gdn. filed.
|

Court News

I

order appointing Gdn. entered.
Est. Nancy J. Winters. Final ac­
count filed, order for publication en­
tered.
Est. Philip T. _ Colgrove. Petition
for authority to discharge mortgage
filed, order to* discharge mortgage
entered.
Est. Mary E. Watkins. Order as.’Ignlr.g residue entered, discharge of
Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Wayne E. Gray, et al. Bond of
Gdn. filed, letters of guardianship
issued.
Est. MclLua Roe. petition for aulority to sell bond filed, order to sell
bond entered.
Est. Hannah B. Robinson. Order
allowing claims entered.
Est. Mary J. Brooks. Petition for
license lo sell filed.
Est. C. L- Glasgow. Petition for
authority lo sell bonds filed, order
lo dispose of bonds entered.

IRONSIDES

GRANITE MEMORIALS
are recognized for their beauty and dignity
of design and for fine workmanship and
choice materials. You will make no mistake
in ordering a memorial from Ironside’s!

ASSYRIA.
Mrs. Arietta Bristol Fuller and son
and daughter of New York, are vis­
iting al the home of her mother.
Mrs. Hattie .Bristol. and her broth­
er. Earl Bristol, and family of the
Stevens district.
The Briggs Ladles' Aid society will
meet on Thursday, October 1. for
pot luck dinner and will tie com­
fortables'. Mrs. Nellie Miller and Mrs.
Mary Clark are the committee In
charge. )
Mrs. Haidee Stanton Buxton, who
entered Pennock hospital last week
for observation will submit to an
operation on Tuesday morning. Her
sisters. Mrs. Nellie Miller. Mrs.
Kate cole and Mra. Mabel Durham
visited her Sunday.
| Mrs. Laura Holker of Helena.;
i Montana, is a guest at the home of
her cousins. Mr. and Mrs. Will Stan­
ton. AU were Sunday gueste of their

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
ESTABLISHED 1907

PHONE 2497

PLEASANT VALLEY.
Carl Seger, wife and baby of Mid­
dleville visited at Mrs. Jane Kime's
home Sunday.
Roy Kauffman and family of East,
Campbell Spent Sunday at Bert |
Mesecar’s home.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Robbins of
Ionia spent Sunday evening al Em­
ery Kime's.
Vaughn Geiger left Sunday for
Kalamazoo where he will attend
school tills year.
Jane. Gaytha. Joyce and Magda­
lena Kime attended the Dunkard
Aid al the home of Mra. Gordan
Stahl Thursday.
Ivan Slater and family of Ionia
and Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Slater
spent Friday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Scott.
Russell Taylor and family ot Ber­
lin spent Bunday with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. "Harley Taylor.
Cecil Preston has purchased the
church sheds and will use them for
onion sheds.
Miss Frances Scott of Grand Rap­
ids spent the week end at home.
Mrs. Mrytie Mole ot Lansing spent
lhe week end with Clayton Mote and
family.
Several from here attended pray­
er meeting at the home of our pas­
tor and wife. Rev. and Mrs. Batdorf ot Freeport. They were given
a donation of vegetables and fruits
after which Ice cream and cake were
served.

HASTINGS, MICH.

daughter. Mrs. Hattie More, of
Charlotte.
Mrs. Bertha Brown of Washing­
ton, D. C-. who has been visiting her
sister, Mrs. Bessie Strickland, has
returned home.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry McGrath, who
have been located at Lacey the past
year, are moving to Idaho where they
lived before coming here.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Case and
daughter, Norma, spent Sunday at
the home of Mr. and Mra. Daniel
Case ot East LeRoy. Miss Norma re­
turning to her work at Lansing.
One hundred seven people were
served at lhe Briggs Ladles' Aid so­
ciety on Thursday evening at the
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Cole home. Pro­
ceeds were fourteen dollars. Former
pastor. Rev. A. L. Ellsworth and
wife, ot Battle Creek were present.
The Rev. and Mrs. C. L- Schleuter,
who have been on the Battle Creek
circuit the past two years, leave on
Wednesday for their newly assigned
pastorate at Mulliken. He will be
succeeded by the Rev. Victor Huflon
from lhe Mulliken charge.
The third clip ot alfalfa is of very
good growth.

SOUTH THORNAPPLE.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Nichols have
their residence wired for electric
lights. The company has secured
enough subscribers so will soon run
a line from the Spreen place by
Spreen Creek south to Oates cor­
ners and then east towards Hastings.
The Oates schoolhouse is also wired
for lights.
A a ell is being driven at the
Gales schoolhouse.
Mrs. Chas. B. Johnson accom­
panied Mr. and Mra. Glen Nichols to
Hastings lest Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mra. Theodore Wleringa
and two children, Theodore. Jr., and
Anna May. of MlddlevUle were
guests Sunday afternoon of their
mother. Mrs. Chas. B. Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Nichols had as
guests over the week end. Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Proper of Henderson­
ville. N. CCOAT8 GROVE.
E. S. Thompson preached here
last Sunday morning at the regu­
lar service and P. C. Wing.will
preach next Sunday morning.
The D. O. T. O. Club held its
September meeting lost Wednesday

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Bunday with Mr. and Mra. George
Poland of Grand Rapids and found
Mr. Poland improving In health aft-

Mrs Howard Smith and daugh­
ter. Ruth, and Mra. Jessie Baird
cauea
r». jonn
called on M
Mra.
John n.onar
Kollar Monaay.
Monday.
Mr.
Mrs Frank Travis of Has' Unj&gt; were Tuesday evening callers,
lnj Urj
Kermeen of near
Caledonia and Mr. and Mrs. Vur
Adams of south of Middleville
were Sunday callers.
Wright Clifford and family and
Leo Crane and family spent Sun­
Woodman, second to Ola Kimble day with Mr. and Mra. Arthur
and third to Mary Townsend. Re­ Blander of Yankee Springs.
freshments were served to about
Miss Lucille Smith of Battle
fifty.
Creek spent Sunday with her moth­
er. Mra. Howard Smith.
Ing their annual chicken supper on
Oct. 8.
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Haight en­
Miss Betty Wotring spent Satur­
tertained the former's uncle from. day night and Sunday with Miss
Grand Rapids last Sunday.
Lorena Hilbert of Woodland.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Cotton and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rise and chil­
daughter of Lansing s^re calling on
dren of Woodland were Sunday
relatives and friends here Sunday. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sand-

M1DDLEV1LLE.
Mr. and Mra. Royal Frantz and
Mra. W. L. Bohns has purchased
children of North Vermontville
a business in Wayland and took pos­ called on Guy Kantner and family
session Sept. 17th.
Sunday.
O. E Gardner was overseeing the
Chas. Parlee and family, Melvin
re-roofing of his block here last
Coville, Mr. and Mra. Floyd Wil­
liams and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
The Clive Churchill family moved
Strole of Battle Creek and Mra.
out to lhe former Henry Potts farm
Ralph Rozema and daughter of
just east of the former Moe school- Grand Rapids were Sunday dinner
। house. Clive will live with his moth­ guests of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Wil­
er here, we understand, so as to be liams. near Dowling.
Mr. and Mra. Forrest Christian
Mrs. C. A- Gardner has been en­ and son entertained their company,
joying a visit with her father. Mr. Mr. and Mra. Karston and son. at
Brown, from near Detroit, for a few the Christian cottage at Wall lake
days. He will soon leave for the
over the week end.
southland to spend the winter.
Lavem Chase and family of Jack­
MARTIN CORNERS.
son spent the week end with his
The L. A. 8. will serve a chicken
mother. Mrs. Sophia chase, of Sher­
supper at lhe church Tuesday eve­
man street.
Vem Llctka is employed at the ning. Sept. 29. They are hoping lo
General Motors plant in Grand have a good crowd to serve, so re­
member the date and come lo a
Rapids.
Primary election passed off last
week with a splendid vote.
The Pythian sisters lodge started
their winter season Monday evening
with a pot luck supper before their
meeting.
Some of the farmers say they will
have quite a crop of beans If the
weather holds good for a time, as
lhe new growth Is setting full. Frost
must hold off for several wrecks for
these to mature.
Sherman street is receiving a coat­
ing of gravel, a much needed Im­
provement. that will be appreciated
by all traveling over it.

Dorothy and Marjorie Cogswell of
Lakeview spent Saturday at Orr
Fisher’s.
Sunday school next Sunday at
the usual hour, 10:30 o'clock.
Our community was saddened
Wednesday morning to hear of Uie
death of our friend and neighbor,
Robert Martin. As a boy Robert
attended school and Sunday school
here, and lias always lived in Uris
vicinity since coming to this coun­
try. and had many friends, who
sincerely regret his passing. HU
funeral was held Friday from the
MethodUt church in Hastings and
was one of lhe largest ever held
CEDAR CREEK.
«... ...u
-------- ---------Mr.
and .....
Mrs. Henry Wertman
ac- from Uiat church. The many floral
companied by Louie DuboU vUited ' tributes attested the high esteem
•*
------ i-Wertman
n.»_
wfojcfamily
h he was
held
Myron
and
In Bat
­ by hU friends
tle Creek Sunday.
and fellowmen.
I There will be a chicken supper
HICKORY CORNERS.
at Bunnell church Friday evening.
Mr. and Mra. C. Control! of De­
Sept. 25.
Entertainment will be
furnished by Scotts' colored quartet troit spent the week end with her
from Battle Creek; supper will start parents. Mr. and Mra. B. Campbell.
Chas, and Eva Beck of Galesburg
A little girl came to gladden the were Sunday guests of Mr. and
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold’Ltttei' Mrs. Stewart Waters and Mr. and
last week. Mother and dkdghtZf Mrs. Gordie Durkee of Delton were
I visitors In the evening.
doing fine.
Mr. and Mra. Glen Asplnall and
Mr. and Mra. Baker and friend
of Hastings visited at the home of Mrs. Camell of Banfield were callera at O Haynes's Wednesday eve­
Mr. and Mrs. Leavitt Sunday.
We are glad to report Jimmie ning.
Herrington is Improving after toe­ ' Clayton Haynes of Battle Creek
ing badly Injured while working on spent the week end with the homo
Charlie Williams* bam.
folks.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Lechleltner
Mr. and Mra. Albert Reams of
Kalamazoo spent Sunday afternoon were Sunday guests of their daugh­
ter.’Mr and Mra. Nell Welcher. of
with Mr. and Mra. John Gurd.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Hammond of Battle Creek.
Mrs. Donald Johnston, who has
Battle Creek visited at the home of
been 111 so long, passed away at her
Ardy Owen last Saturday.
The flrat community club of this home Thursday afternoon. The fu­
year Is Friday .night. Oct. 3. It is neral wns held at the homo Satur­
hoped for a good sized crowd as it Is day and burial was made at Bloom­
election of officers. We are glad ingdale. Rev. C. 8. Renncls offi­
of the fine interest that has been ciated. The family have the sin­
shown in this club even by people cere sympathy of the friends and
neighbors in their sad bereavement.
outside the community.

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ROBINHUE PARS.
bers of the Woodland Study Club
were present. The program was in
charge of Mrs Nelson Case and
was as follows: Members respond­
ed to roll call by giving lhe name
of a book they had enjoyed; duet
by Alice Chase and Ola Kimble;
book
on "Pitcairn
Island" w,
by
mvu
. report M..
.
Nane Coolbaugh; piano and violin
duet by Margaret and Audra Densmore of Hastings, and they respond-- »—■
quels of flowers were exhibited and
they were Judged by Miss Parrott
and Mra. Hilbert of Woodland. The

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER

—--------------- ——--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ——
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR
14 PAGES
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1936
SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

8

MOHILEY

Hastings High School Football Squad

MT. RAINIER IS THIRD
HIGHEST MOUNTAIN
IN THE U. 8.

Huge Glaciers and Deep
Snow Drifts Surrounded
Their Cabins
Seattle. Washington. Friday. July
X7y—X won't bore you much with’
what happened on this date os you
have been told before that this was
a business trip and not a pleasure
trip and so 1 spent lhe day until
three o'clock at the office and with
the head of the Northwestern In­
spection Bureau. Maude and. the
family had lunch and spent most
of lhe day with Mrs. Thorsdale
shopping and sight-seeing. Al three
o'clock we decided that, inasmuch
as It was a nice clear day, we would
spend lhe night on Mt. Rainier.
Maude and I took the car back to
the cabin and packed up while Mr.
Thorsdale took Leslie, David and HASTINGS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SQUAD After Two Preliminary Games. Will Open the 1938 Football
Marion over to the frozen aquarium
Season Here FRIDAY, Wllh ■ GAME Against ALLEGAN HIGH.
where they have around two hun­
FRONT ROW—Tom Shay. Howard Moore. Bill Ransom, Clint Scobeyt” Norman Hall. Horace Angell. Merl Kel­
dred varieties of fish of all sizes and
shapes frozen with a very thin coal ley. Charles Struble. Cleone Smith. Richard Bessmer. Donald Doxey.
of Ice over them. The temperature SECOND ROW—Fred Rennlck, Maurice Cogswell. Her man Beumer. Earl Cappon. Arthur LaBalllster, Carl
inside the aquarium la below freez­ Edmonds. Bob McLeod. Carl Draper. Rex Leslie. Clinton Brill. Bob Caukin.
ing so it does a good Job of preserv­ THIRD ROW—Coach Lyle Bennett, Garret Isham. Eugene Bush. Kenneth Gillespie. Bill Gladstone, Bernard
ing the fish Ln a natural condition as Davis. Wellesley Ironside, Arlen Martin, Richard Ken yon. Ivan Snyder. Richard Springer. Bob Jacobs. Assist­
ant Coach Joe Brozak.
weU as lhe spectators.
ML Rainier is about 65 miles in FOURTH ROW—Lyle Gillespie, Paul Adcock. Wayne Plnkbelner. Frank Rogers. Donald Kelley. Charles Mc­
a straight line from Seattle, and it, Donald. Paul Draper. Walter Hobbs. Kenneth Tinker. Wesley VanDenberg. Laurence Moore
ate«ell as several of the other iso­ FIFTH ROW—Manager Clarence Brady. Gerald Rogers. Robert Reed. Charles Severance. Keith Clark. Bob
lated snow capped, extinct volcanic Clark. Howard Hinckley. Edward Bentz. Jack Francisco, James Dibble, John Will. Manager Marshall Cook.
cones In this vicinity, are easily vis­
Tomorrow. Friday, will be a gala nlsh the opposition comes to Has­ | the go and the line-up Is never
ible from Seattle on clear days. We
made reservations in Seattle for two day for football fans In Hastings, tings with a record of ten victories definite as a result. The tentative
cobins at paradise Valley and start­ inasmuch as lhe first home game of in as many years and one tie game line-up for this week will Include:
ed on the hundred mile Journey. the season is to be played at lhe and one loss so far this year. They Ransom and Smith at end. Cappon
• After having driven 3.400 miles in a r Fair grounds. This Ls to be the played a 0-0 tie with the powerful and Doxey at tackle, although
week, a mere hundred mllee, starting homecoming game as well, which Dowagiac eleven, and missed a vic­ Draper and McLeod have made good
at five o'clock in the afternoon, should bring togetlier many of the tory by one touchdown from St. joe showings of late. Bessmer and either
didn't seem like any more than driv- stars o! yesteryear as well as a num- last Saturday. The score was 18 to 13 Brill or Moore at guard and Angeil
। at center. Struble. Kelley. Sothard.
Ing over to Freeport from Hastings, ber of loyal alumni.
in favor of St. Joe. but Allegan
The thirty-one mile drive to Ta-1 pr0CPedinrt a„ scheduled to start showed the victors' an aerial game Scobey. Hail and caukin will bld fair
ST
bT“,,Ut “Y^'lat 3:15 with a parade which wlil which brought the crowd to their for the back field position.
A good game Ls assured in view of
boulevard skirting the shore of Pit-1
al lhe central school. The
feet lime and again.
the fine record shown by both teams
get Sound. From Tacoma on to hiBh school band will make its inlHastings is considered to be an so far. All those able to* attend are
Rainlrr where the UhiUt has not l(al appearance of the year and will improved team over their last year
urged to do so. It Is probable the
0F
1,8 cut °7 a
y i head the procession which will term- mates who held Allegan to one
1936 varsity canAbreak the Jinx
(Continued on page 5. Set. 1)
1
touchdown. This year's reserve ma­ which has tralle^Plhe local team in
inate at lhe fair grounds.
The Allegan team which will fur­ terial Is keeping the veterans on

ANNUAL SPOTLIGHT
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9 PLAN CONTINUATION

’ ADVANCE TICKET SALE

Dressmaking Contest I PROMISES BIG CROWDS
“The Past Lives Again” Is 1
OFPARK PROJECT
Theme—Five Acts on
Additional Funds Asked to
The Hastings commercial club “Sleeping Beauty” Cast Pic­
the Program
will again sponsor a Santa Claus
Complete Work in Yan­
tures to Be Taken
"The Past Lives Again.” depicting
dressmaking contest, according to
kee Springs
Sunday
events of the put one hundred years
an announcement by Miss Eva A.
Continuation of development work
at the Yankee Springs recreation
demonstration project for at least
another three months is planned by
the national park service, it has

Iglnaflly being developed by the Re­
settlement Administration, but was
later taken over by the national
park service's branch of planning
and state cooperation.
At the present time the work, of
development at Yankee Springs is
going forward under an allotment
of 841.280. made to carry work
through August and September.
Park service officials have revealed
that a request for funds to carry on
the development of Yankee Springs
for another three months had been
made to the while House and it is
। expected that funds for the project
will be made available from this
year's relief appropriation. Although
the park service did not reveal th?
amount
requested for
Yankee
Springs, it was intimated the allot­
ment will total over 860.000.
To eventually complete the work
planned for Yankee Springs over a
year’s work will be required. Upon
completion of development work it
is anticipated that the area will be
turned over to state park authorities
for use as a state pork.

OPENING A NEW
FOOD CENTER STORE
William Thomas Will Man­
age Business in Nash­
ville

Hecox. secretary. The contest last
year was highly successful, over 300
dresses being distributed to needy
girls.
It is expected that the same rules
will govern the contest as those used
lost year but no definite announce­
ment to tills effect can be made un­
til Che committee has been appoint­
ed and have a meeting to make
their plans.
Church societies, clubs, lodges and
Individuals may enter lhe contest
and donations for materials will be
greatly appreciated. Prizes will be
awarded and it Ls expected that en­
tries will be divided in three groups
with three prizes awarded in each
group.
Last year the Rotary club provid­
ed shoes for the boys and it Ls hoped
some similar arrangement can be
made again.
The committee members will be
announced as soon as all members
have accepted tiielr appointments.

COMMR. THOMPSON
SPEAKS WEDNESDAY

The advance ticket sale for the
three matinees and lhe evening per­
formance of "Sleeping Beauty.” the
Hastings Civic Players play for
children to be given Oct. 19. 20 and:
21 at the Central School auditorium,
lias been better than for any of the
previous children's plays.
Mrs. Maude W. Smith, county:
school commissioner, reports that'
many of lhe rural teachers Have al­
ready sent in- their requisitions for
tickets, wkh 30 and more names on
the lists. She also says more posters
than ever before are in the process
of making and it all indicates that
the children of the county are an­
ticipating this play adapted from an
old fairy story.
Pictures of the cast are being
taken this Bunday and the costume
committee will have ready the color­
ful and elaborate outfits to be worn
by the members.
Tickets may be secured at the
schools in the city and county but
they may also be secured at (Cordes
Newsstand Oct. 10. when tickets will
go on sale there. There will be no
reserved seats for the three matinees
and the usual arrangement will be
carried out for the evening perfor­
mance.

Pomona
Grange
Secures
Him for October Meet­
NEW THEATER TO BE
ing at Star Hall
NAMED THE BARRY.

James F. Thompson, stale com­
missioner of agriculture, will be the
guest speaker at the regular meet­
ing of the Barry Pomona grange.
Wednesday evening. Oct. 7. at the
Star Grange hall. Mr. Thompson al­
ways Is in considerable demand as
a speaker and the members of the
grange feel fortunate in securing
him for this meeting.
The program, which follows the
business session, will consist of a
short play given by members of the
Carlton center grange, readings and
musical selections.
Cooperative refreshments will be
served. It is hoped there, will be a
large attendance
to hear
Mr.
Thompson.

Roman Feldpausch
announces
that In October he plans to open a
Food center in Nashville in the
store formerly occupied by Mr. Appelman on N. Main st. He plans to
have this a self serve store with the
same type of merchandising as at the
VERT ROBINSON.
Feldpausch Food Center. Complete
Having sold his farm. Vert Rob­ grocery and vegetable departments
inson will dispose of his personal will be maintained. William Thomas
property at public auction at the of this city has been selected as
farm, known as the Henry Zerbel manager of the Nashville store.
■firm. titx. 10 Hope Twp.. on M-43.
Nashville residents may be assured JUDGE McPEEK SPOKE
second house south of the end of of good merchandise and excellent
AT GRAND LEDGE MEET.
the pavement. Mr. Robinson has a service at this Food Center store.
Judge R. R. McPeek of Charlotte
nlcW list to be disposed of including
was the speaker at th* dedication
horses, 6 mlloh cows, bull, sheep,
RALLY DAY.
ceremonies of the Fitzgerald Park at
swine, feed, a lot of farm tools,
Rally day services will be held at Grand Ledge. Gov. Fitzgerald also
harnesses and household goods. the First
Methodist Episcopal spoke and paid high tribute to
Dewey Reed will serve as auctioneer church next Sunday. Interesting Judge McPeek. saying that he hoped
and Albert Lyon as clerk. Read the services and good music have been it would be his pleasure to appoint
auction sale advertisement in this provided. Sunday evening services him as Judge of the supreme bench
issue and remember the" date.
will be resumed that night at 7:30. during his term ns governor. Gov.
The pastor's subject will be "What Fitzgerald and Judge McPeek were
WINDE8~AND SONS.
Would Jesus Do it He Came to Has­ both born In Grand Ledge and have
Because of the recent destruction tings?” There will also be a five been close friends for years. In his
of their barns by fire. Wlndes and minute talk on **What*s the trouble
reference to Judge McPeek, Gov.
Sons
an -auction
—- are
.. having
.----- -- --------- . sale
---- . I UI
In Uic
the iiuiy
Holy. Land?” There
i iici c wui
will uc
be Fitzgerald spoke of this fact and of
at tho
Firm Irv.alaH
the Haarthnm
Hawthorn Hill Fann
located.. llnging of beautiful hymns led by his admiration for lhe Judge’s legal
on M-37 two and one-half miles I thc cholr
ability and trained mind.
MU or Mlddlovlllo. ThU wUl be
rau„h Kh001 wU1 open al
an o/unwon anU WUh A. W. Hllxo, '
.1.,^. Ior .u x,,.
AN APPRECIATION.
“
?■ ’ScC,nn , »““■
« xlx"lS
I wish to thank the voters of
as clerk. Included in th# list are your attendance will be a helo to Barry Co. for their loyal support
Uhe*d of good grad. Holstatns. all I lhe church and a boost for your ow£
given me at the primary election.
good, healthy animals, nearly all i religious life.
—Adv.
Vernor Webster.
young and due this winter and1
__________ &lt;gl
Spring; also Duroc sow and many
SUFFER AT FREEPORT,
DANCE AT CROOKED LAKE.
articles which are useful on a farm. ■ Chicken supper at Freeport M. E.
Delton, Bat, Eve, Eckler's Orch8m the adv. for partlculara.
| church. Wed., evening, oct. 7.—Adv.

Two Auction Sales

Subject Is “Back-Tracking
Marco Polo”—Exhibit
of Oriental Curios
. Arthur F. Kane, who so delighted
tils hearers here last spring. Is com­
ing again on either Oct. 12th or
14th. for a return address on "Back­
Tracking Marco Polo." Mr. Kane
will appear at the central auditor- &gt;
lum under the auspices of lhe High
school. Admission prices are 10 j

BASE COVERS OVER
HUNDRED_SQ. MILES

of Barry county will be the theme
of the fourteenth annual Spotlight
to be given In the Central auditor­
ium. October 9.
The senior class under the direc­
tion of Miss Michael and Mr. Rein­
hardt will present an act. As It Is
and As It Might Have Been." The
four episodes of it were written by
members of the class and deal with
lhe founding and naming of Yankee
Springs.
Under the supervision of Miss
Robson, the Juniors are preparing a
hit parade of the ten best song hits
of the last century. "Believe II or
Not of Barry county” Ls the title
of the sophomores' contribution to
the spotlight, and promises to be a
rather wierd portrayal of some of
the oddities of the county years ago.
Mr. Logan and Mr. Lower are the
advisers.
Miss Merson and Mr. Gamer ue
assisting lhe freshmen with a good
oldfuhloned
com husking bee.
There will be the finding of lhe red
ear and regular old-fashioned music
to bring back memories of those
“good old days." The faculty will
present as their contribution to the
success of the Spotlight "A Night at
the Opera House." a glimpse bock
stage when a group of amateurs try
to put on a play.
Committee chairmen for the affair
include: Betty McMillen, general
chairman; Jocelyn Ironside, pub­
licity; Leone Leonard, tickets; Mar­
garet Hummel, program; Grace
Dawson, furniture; Marian Hewitt;
ushers; Ruth Winslow, properties;
Darrell Aldrich, stage; Donald Feld­
pausch. carpenter; Clarence Walters,
electrician; Woodrow Allerdlng. cur­
tain. and Ruth Hathaway, make up.

RETURN LECTURE BY
ARTHUR F. KANE

Ray Branch, manager of the
Strand theater, has announced that
lhe new theater being built In the
building formerly occupied by the
White Globe will be known as the
Barry Theater. He Is hoping that
the theater will be opened October
10 when Will Rogers In "State Fair"
will be shown. The delay in opening
Is caused by the decision to enlarge
the building so the seating capacity
MISSIONARY LECTURE.
Dr. F. M. Wilson, for 30 years a
missionary in India, will give an il­
lustrated lecture Tuesday evening
al 7:30 In the First Methodist
church. Dr. Wilson knows Ir^dia
and its customs like a book. He has
his own colored slides and a num­
ber of Indian costumes which will
also be displayed. No charge for
admission. A silver offering will be
taken to defray expenaes.
MISSIONARY HERE.
Mis* Neva Lane, furloughed mis­
sionary from Guatemala, will be the
speaker at a missionary service
Thursday evening, October 1 at the
Church of lhe Nazarene. Miss Lane
has served several years on the field.
Service begins at 7:30. Come and
bring your friends with you.

DEMOCRATIC COM­

MITTEE OFFICERS.
The democratic candidates for
county offices selected Gentium E.
Raveranee MMrflevllla
■■ chairman
Severance.
Middleville. as
and S. E. Powers. Nashville, vice­
chairman, and Prank Hoonan of
thia city, secretary. and Bert Lan­
caster of this city, treasurer of their
county committee.
,
SPOTLIGHT.
At Central auditorium.

OPERATORS, OWN­
ERS CO-OPERATE
FARMERS SIGNING UP FOR
SOIL CONSERVATION
PROGRAM

I DDfiT
DllUI

ACCEPT POSITIONS
IN ANN ARBOR |
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Logan
Leaving Soon for New
Field

I !Ui
QUEST SPBAXn AT

Harold Logan, who hu taught
FIRST MEETING IS H.
journalism and history Ln the Has­
tings High school for the put five
H. REINE0K1
years, hu resigned his position to
accept onj u teacher of social
TOTAL OF 1961
science In the Ann Arbor High, IN CHARGE OF
’
HAVE APPLIED school. He will remain here until j
_______
FEDERAL BUREAU
his successor is selected, the Banner
1_
„
4 —--------_ , ~M...uremenl. Is informed.
Mrs. Logan, who hu been con-: Excellent Programs Sched*
date will be given next week.
I
to Be Received for the
netted with the Barry County
uje(j for tjja Other Six
In addition to his lecture. Mr.
«...
Health Unit, u school nurse for
„ "7
" J/ ’
Kane brings an exhibit of costumes I
wexi 1W0 weeKS
the northeut part of the county, hu
Monthly Gathering!
and oriental curios from such in-1 Barry county farm operators and also accepted a ixultlon-Y with the j The first meeting of th« Hut Inga
terestlng places as Slam. Burma,' owners are entering Into the Feder- Ann Arbor schools, she will be the Brotherhood will be held on Mon­
Hindustan. Persia, Arabia and Af- al 8011 Conservation program ac- nurse for the high school and tour ! day night. October 26 Ordinarily
ghanlstan. His talk Is replete wllh cording to Harold J. Foster, county grade schools, she expects.
. it would be held an the 19th, but
stories of his thrilling adventures. 1 agricultural agent. Lost spring loIt is a matter of regret that Mr. I the speaker booked for the first
Whiie still a lad Mr. Kane had a cal committeemen took work sheets
and Mrs Logan are leaving Hasting* meeting could not come on the 19th,
consuming curiosity about other covering 3.754 farms in Barry coun­ but their friends wish them every but could on the 38th. hence Uta
lands and peoples, being especially I/- To date 1961 of these farm ...
m... im
change in date.
success
In «h.i.
their new field of i.iw».
labor.
Interested In Marco Polo and his owners have applied So Mr. Foster’s
By the way. have you purchased
travels, so In early boyhood he de- office for measurement of their .
J your season Brotherhood ticket?
cidcd to gain first hand knowledge farms upon which payments will'
The price is held u it hu been in
by -back-tracking” the trips taken 1 later be made.

IFIELDTBIW.S1NB
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I ' SPEW SHOW

by Marco Polo.
I Every farmer in Barry county
Being a keen observer he has be- | should have received a letter setcome familiar with the manners and | tln6 forth lhe soil depleting 1935
customs of lhe various countries he i crops for his farm. This Is the de— on
zxr, xxxVxt
—y. :
has visited knowing them as few , nteftnc
plying haVnr
base for Ih,
the FarX
farm
which
people know their own country. You the 1938
193« payment
payment will
wiu be
be based.
based.
will want to hear him at 7:30 P. M. Farmers should compare their 1936
soil depleting crops against this fig- '
Oct. 12 or 14. Watch for dale.
ure and apply for measurement and |
payment if they have fewer soil de-

WWE MS
FINE NEW ME

CONVENIENT TOR LODGE
AND SOCIAL QATHZRtNOB

ITS DINING AND CLUB
ROOMS ARE FEATURES
Well Appointed Lodge Room,
With Property Room
and Ante Room
The member, of Berry Lodyr
KnbrhU or PylhUx hod their hrK
meeting Mondoy nlyh: In their line
new home—U u a really “homey"
home. It
It utilizes
UUlUes the
lhe entire
entire second
aecond
home.
story of what use^ to be known as
the "Jesse Townsend double store.”
on North Michigan avenue. It is
now owned by'Bari Boyes, an en­
thusiastic member of lhe order. He.
Ln cooperation with lhe lodge and
with members of the lodge who are
in a position to give their time to
doing extra work In fitting up lhe
rooms, have made it a delightful
place.
The entire second story Is given
over to Barry Lodge. The space has
been partitioned, so that it Ls now a
most con ven lent" place for Halting*
Pythian*. Every rqom has been dec­
orated-walls put .in fine condition,
the floors painted—all made splc
and span.
First, there is the lodge room,
which has been made ideal for the
regular work of the order. Ttiert is
a commodious property room, also
an ante room both opening Into the
lodge room, so that for the regular
work of the order everything Is con­
venient.
There Is a men’s club room, neat
and fine, equipped with toilet and
lavatory. There is also a room for
the ladles wllh similar equipment.
For social and special occasions
there Ls a large dining room. Next
to it Is the fine and splendidly^
equipped kitchen, with lots of room
and plenty of places to keep things.
It is so arranged that serving from

-------------

ANNUAL MEET OF WOL- entertaining and worthwhile.
For the opening night. October
VERINE BEAGLE CLUB
OPENS MONDAY

the federal bureau of Investigation
of lhe United States Department of
m.d, ror, ENTRIES EXPECTED
Justice,.-in. that city. Mr. Relneckn
spreading of lime and marl on the
TO
S
URPAS
S
RECORD
farm, the seeding of clovers and
our readers know what a remark­
alfalfa, the plowing down of soil
building crops and other recom­ Officers Announce Farms on
breaking up lhe kidnap gangs. Now
mended practices. Even though
Which Field Trials Are
they arc after the bank bandits. K
1961 fanners have applied to date
will be interesting to hear from a
to Be Run
there are many more farms in Bar­
ry county eligible to draw payment
The sixteenth annual field trials man who intimately knows the work
| If the operator should apply for and specialty show of the Wolver­
program
felt
measurement. Dale for appealing inc
ine Beagle
ucagic uiud
Club open ncre
here on Mon- up the Brotherhood
,--------- ,, "
A"
a,,. &lt;xu&gt;bn J. -nd cine on Solur- ,
. ot
BraU?*rtK”d **
for measurement will be received dor. oelober 10. preliminary enlriea !
Indicate
Ural
there
will
be
a
splendid
■
“
l
”
f
■
“
»
•
by the county agent’s office for at
.ilendanee a, 11IU
„5 bent,
* likewise Interrated.
Farmers who have not yet applied anticipated. Last year dog fanciers I
^ovember rmettoj. on
for measurement should do so now came from Wisconsin. New Yort. ..
(16‘h. which u Father and Son
or make certain that they would Pennsylvania, and Canada, and I
not have any payment’ coming more dogs were entered from HU- ‘ «5ames leoach&gt;^fkthc urJitem
should their farm be measured. In nols. Indiana. Ohio. New York and
«t Kalamazoo. He
Lit... from
trom Michigan.
Michigan.I. A
A"_
“•
"f" “
oceounu wllh lhe Pennsylvania than
Each year the mine. and attend-1, ‘
ISn
“",l “J *• nn““
ante have increased so ll is reported
'n^.,
"
*“
that
this
year
.
.Ill
exceed
all
b
'_J
“
£«_
!?r p“7'1*nl1 a*lou“ apply and bring
For LAccemoer
December 31.
21. tnera
there win
wlil ba w
..a___
.
ror
others.
m°OT ln*» E,rr&gt; ““nW.
Claude Hammond, field marshal,
ANNUAL SUNDAY
announces that the field trials will
run cm lhe late William Coleman
SCHOOL CONVENTION be
He Is Mr. E B. Root, supcrintendfarm in Rutland Twp.. the Bates

V?

near the Morris Calkins farm,
Worthwhile Program Has farm
the John Ironside farm and lhe
Leon Bauer farm near the Ryan SCHOOL BOARD MADE
Been Arranged—Mias
school, all |n Irving township.
EXCELLENT CHOICE
Catton to Speak
There were forty-five entries In

Barry county Sunday Schools will
hold their annual Sunday School
convention at the Delton Methodist
church on Tuesday afternoon and
evening. Oct. 20. Miss lone Catton of
Lansing will be with us agaln~lh!¥
year. Her topic for the afternoon
will be ’The church of today and
tomorrow;" in the evening "The
Ideal Christian Youth." There will
also be several Ave-minute talks
along the same subjects by our
county people, with special music
afternoon and evening.
A lovely framed picture "Follow
Me" will be given to the Sunday
School receiving most credits, one
credit per mile per person. Two
years ago Prairieville Sunday School
won the picture and last year Wood­
land Sunday School.
A twenty-five cent supper will be
served at Delton church by making
supper reservations with Mrs. Rob­
ert Barnes of Delton.
This annual Sunday School meet­
ing Is worthwhile and profitable, a
convention
that every Sunday
School worker should plan to at­
tend. and one to which every school
should send as many representatives
as possible.
Watch for itemized program in
next week's Banner, e. E. Jones.

the bench show last year and
doubtless there will be many more
this time. Herb Grant of Fort
Waype is Judge for the Specialty
jghow and Elmer Gray of Indian­
apolis and Leonard Bennett of
Hinkley. Il), are to Judge the field
trials. The kennels are to be at the
fair grounds the same as before and
a man will be stationed there to give
desired Information about where
the running is taking place each
day and to answer other questions
for the visitors, club headquarters

All dogs entered must be the
bonafide property &lt;Jf the person
making the entry and a pedigree, so
far as can be obtained, furnished
upon request. There arc seven class­
es in the field trials as follows:
Class A—Derby for dogs. 13 Inches
and under.
Class B—Derby for dogs 15 Indies
and under.
,
Class C—Open for all age dogs 13
Inches and under.
Class D—Open for all bitches 13
Inches and under.
Class E—Two couple pack stake*.
Mixed ownership permitted.
Class P—Open for bitches over 13
and under 15 inches.
Class G—Open fur dogs over 13
and under 15 inches:The above

We are sure the members of Barry
Lodge will appreciate the generosity
of Mr. Boyes in taking such pains,
and In going to the expense he has
to alter the upstairs of this double
store, so as to make It such a fine
place, with such a homey atmos­
REQUEST TWO MORE TRAINS.
phere. for this lodge to hold its
At the meeting of the Commercial
gatherings. All the rooms are to be club Tuesday it was unanimously complete a field championship. En­
heated with natural gu, so they can voted that the secretary be directed try fee In all show classes is &gt;1.00
per entry and entries closed Sept.'30.
be kept clean and orderly.
to express the sentiment of the busi­
The officials of the field trials and
Wllh such a fine place to meet, ness men of Hastings as favoring
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1)
with everything arranged to make the putting on of a regular morning
this a delightful Pythian home, east bound passenger train on tills
there will no doubt be greatly In­ branch of the Michigan Central, also THE CITY ADVANCES
creased interest Ln this organiza­ an afternoon west bound train. We
CASH FOR PAVING
tion.
are glad that consideration ,1s being
Barry Lodge hu had a wonderful given to this matter, as we believe Gives the Property Owners
history. Borne of our city's best It will be a convenience for many
Three Years to Repay
known men in the pul were en­ and good business for the railroad.
thusiastic members of this Lodge.
Without Interest
The late federal circuit judge, Loyal
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS.
We mentioned last week the fact
About September 1 we sent a no­
E. Knappen of Grand Rapids, wu
that the council had voted M&gt; take
one of Its first members. As long u
89.379A8
from two savings account*.
the
iub*cri
pilon
date
he lived in Hutlngs he took a keen _________ _ ____________ ,________
Interest tn Barry Lodge and filled; would soon expire, requesting their. which they had In the two banks
I here, and divert it to the street
all the chairs. There was the late '---------- ' ”** *"
*■--------- ’
*
Judge Clement Smith, so long
At the session of the council Fri­
circuit Judge, who likewise wu a
day night this resolution was
loyal Pythian. He wu twice its
changed. The new resolution di­
Chancellor commander. Then there
wu the late Phillip T. Colgrove. who give thia notice their attention and rects that this money be used to fi­
nance lhe property owners' share of
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
the cost of curb, gutter and tarmac
on the streets recently Improved.
This
sum is to toe repaid to the city
AN APPRECIATION.
| I Wish to thank the Republican by the properly owners concerned
I voters of Barry county for Che sup­ within three years by special as­
port given me at the primary. Will sessment. The council voted that
greatly appreciate your support for as it is repaid, the savings accounts
. the office of county treasurer at the shall be reimbursed.
It is fine that the city Is tn such
general election.
a good financial position that It
—Adv.
Geo. A- Clouse.
could advance this money to make
Rev. and Mrs. Walker N. Jordan. I
"GOIN* MODERN."
•
Rev. and Mrs. jordan come to
Fast moving comedy. ‘Coin’ the Improved streets to pay their asHastings from Rockford. Rev. Jor­ Modern." at Woodland school audldan being the pastor of the Free |
.
' torlum Friday night, Oct. 2. auspices years to pay it tn. one-third each
...„u
------ -------------... .iss a weU
Methodist church here and at Stony Lutheran
League. —
This
year, without interest. That Is sure­
Point. This Is Mr. Jordan's first selected comedy with a weH selected ly generous treatment on the part
pastorate end he Is taking his stud­ cast. Prices 10c-25c. Don’t fall to of the city.
________
ies now through lhe conference see this "Laugh HlI" of the season.
course. Mr. Jordan was engaged in -Adv.
CHURCH SUFFER.
the grocery business in Rockford be­
U. B Ladles’ Aid. Wednesday, Oct.
fore coming here.
CHICKEN SUFFER.
Rev. and Mrs. jordan live on East___________________ ..._____ __ __ _
SPOTLIGHT. '
Colfax street near Boltwood and. Grove, oct. 9. 8 P. M 35c a platehave one son aged six months.
I Adv.
Friday night, Oct. 9.

May We
Introduce---

। meetings. The seven "eats" at the
’ Brotherhood meetings would cost
; more than 82.00 at any restaurant
in Hastings. In addition there are

Fred Johnson Resigns
Board Selects Dr. Lock­
wood for Vacancy
Fred Johnson, who has been a

man for lhe Hastings Manufacturing
Co. takes him away from this city
so much that iw Is unable to givw
member of the school board. Accord­
ingly he resigned his place. The
school board at their last meeting
elected Dr. George B. Lockwood to
fill the vacancy and he has qualified.
choice in selecting Dr. Lockwood. Ho
Is interested deeply from the stand­
point of a parent, having children in
the schools; and his interest gOM
beyond that. He has been an inter­
ested member of and an enthusiastic

te aid our schools. The board could
not have made a better selection.

THOUGHT THEY HAD
CHEAP CHICKEN MEAT.
Bat It Didn't Turn Out That
Way for Two Lansing
A good-sized rooster, property of
Mrs Orlle Smith of Irving, wan­
dered out into lhe highway last Frl.
day. About the same time two Lan­
sing men drove up that highway,
with five beagle hounds In the back
of their car. which they expected to
train for the approaching hunttag

er. but no one apparently saw IL
One of the men got out. pul the
chicken in the auto and drove on
north, where they stopped the car.

train the dogs. A lady who works
Mrs. Smith saw lhe man pick up I
rooster and told Mrs. Smith ah
sheriff. He and Undcr-Bhttiff
car was located and found II
men who admitted they had I
ceased rooster and planned a
en dinner. They made a libel
tlement with Mrs. smith and
that they would not ba gu
such a stunt again.

nesday of last weak and
the following m the offiMf
county committee: Obolra
Frank CorroUMra;

Bheidon;

�THE HASTINGS KANNTK THUBSDAV, OCTOMB 1. 1W

Look

Look!

SUGAR 49
Cream Nut

Soda
Crackers

Peanut
Butter

Liberty Bell

2 it 25c

2s.14c
ff
Uortee

Vacation 1
or vimm

17c

U

Whit* Home Coffee lv. 23c

Del Monte Coffee cv. 25 c
Marshmallows
17c
£. 23c
Rolled Oats
2
23c
Wheaties
Corn Flakes mui.„ 2 19c
Corn Syrup uul sBA"^i35c
Raisins
29c
Big Ben Soap 6 &gt;»&gt; 25c
Balloon Soap
29c

RINSO
Ige. pkg

19c

DEL MONTE
Tall Can 23t
Salmon, Red
3 No. 2| Cans 55c
Peaches
Fruit Cocktail
2 - 29c
3&lt;~55c
Pineapple
3 cane /(Qc
Peas Early Garden
Mother's Best
99c
Milk Shurfine, Pet or Carnation Can 8c
Cleanser dutch
4 i« 2Qc
3 i- 15c
Camay Soap
P &amp; G Soap IO
39c

See the 8poUl«hl, ftlday, OeL A—

Pillsbury's
Harvest Time

The council voted Friday evening
to heat the city hall with natural
|ga*.
' Charles Paul was the fifth wlnner m McCall's Suit Club. He gets
■ a S30 suit for *2450.
City EnglMer Sparks was granted
a two-weeks' vacation by the coun­
cil Friday evening. He surely has

parents of a daughter born Satur­
day. Qept. 36. Blw wUl ba called
Shirley Ann.
The time of the circuit court Mon­
day was taken up with the consld-

tian* were granted. &lt;
Miss Helen Bogart. 224 East Bond
Evangelist T. C. ’Vanderjagt of
street, who has been IU. has not re­
Grand Rapids will hold services at
covered sufficiently to resume her
the Baptist church next Sunday
school work.
morning and evening.
Miss Alice LyBarker is employed
as a beauty operator at the Ftox
shop, taking the place of Miss Doris ence Westerlind) have taken a fur­
nished house on North Michigan
Ryan, who was married recently.
. Cottage owners at Wall lake .re­ avenue for the winter.
Eugene Waring of lhe Consumers
port large numbers of wild ducks
gathering there. They are tame now power company reports that 280
but lhe first day of the hunting
stalled Ln Barry county, and orders
reason will change that.
Erls Jarman was elected by the are still coming tn. About 187 of
members of the fire department as a
Henry Janson, the blind musician
member in place of Loren Myers.
Friday evening this election was who play* cm our city streets, wishes
people to understand that he Is no*
I confirmed by the council.
Ever have mashed potatoes turn on the welfare rolls of Barry coun­
, sour during the heat of summer? If ty. On the other band he has him­
' so. Just scald lhe milk or cream be- self and family to support by his
| fore adding to the potatoes and the own eflarts.
Don't miss the Spotlight, Oct. 8 —
trouble will be eliminated.
Do you
remember smw
last jrrn«
year at this Adv.
;1 uu
JUU rciiicsnocs
••
I time we were all excited over the ! The 1937 automobile license plates
) World Series? Detroit under ail dr- ; will be lhe same color as the 1935
, cumstances did well to finish in sec- plates, according to Mrs Avis Tyler,
on place and here's hoping we can 1 Barry county branch manager. The
! celebrate again next year.
; letters and numbers are maize on a
Mrs. Ethan Kidder, who has been black background.
1 at hei home on South street for i Hon. J. C- Keicham. commissioner
! some lime, returned Sunday to the j of insurance, spoke Wednesday aftPlainwell hospital for treatment.: emoon at a meeting of the Clinton
Her daughter. Juanita. Is a nurse County Republican Women's Club
there.
I at St. Johns. His subject was
------■“ vs? Performance.”

ed vice-city chairman of the Re­
publican1 Women's organisation and
will take over the duties of the city
chairman. Mrs. John C. Ketcham,
when she is absent from the city.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bender of
Middleville are the parents of a son.
Robert
Gordan.
bom Monday
morning at Blodgett hospital in
Grand Rapids. Mrs. Bender was for­
merly Miss Alice Hackney of this
city.
It looks as if lhe supply of natural
exhausted. There was brought in
last week in the Belvedere field. In
Montcalm county, a new gas well
with a dally now of 118.000.000 cubic

‘7 re been sending my
things to McCreery’s

By vote of lhe council lhe Con­
sumers Power company was directed
to install a bracket lamp on the east
side of Jefferson street, at the Junc| lion of that street and the alley back

Express Pink

Pancake Flour

Mn 10c

5.23c

years! In all that lime

Pels Naptha

I've had little reason

SOAP

to com plain about their

service or their work.

“ 41c-

They have always
proved

reliable and

reasonable**

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables

Mrs. Minnie ghriner was boateM
to ba* bridge club Saturday aveatag
for deisert.

'

for a good number of

Salmon

The wax piuaeum in the Bessmer
building on State street attracted
a large number of patrons during
the time it was here. Personally the
figures gave us a start, thinking we
should salute or say "Howdy every
time we passedWhile browsing around Gettys­
burg. Dr. R. B. Harkness caine
across a tablet on which his father's
name was included in an honor roll;
his father was a lieutenant colonel
in a Pennsylvania regiment and was
wounded eight times during the war.
—Up and Down Main Street in the
Charlotte Republican-Tribune.
Melvin Hornsby, son of Mrs. Ida
Bogirt. was injured Friday morning
when about a ton of dirt fell on him
when he was working on the PWA
sewer job on Green street. He was
taken home by Drli Thompson. A
j doctor was summoned but the in­
. Juries were not serious and he was
' able to return to work on Monday
'j morning.

McCREERY’S

DRY CLEANERS

Sweet

Grade A

Grapefruit

Potatoes

Potatoes

5,or 25c

6,bs 19c

pec,&lt; 39c

PHONE 2T40
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

LUNCHEON ATTENDANCE MRS. CARVETH WILL
CONTINUES TO BE LARGE
ATTEND STATE MEET

busy with a contested divwee cage.

LOCAL NEWS

Sweet, Juicy

TRANE) T1EATKF

r

thia writing the fine had nol ba«n
paid.
At thetr meeting Monday night
the Barry County Rod and Gun

Last Event of the Year Next The Federation of Women's
-To Sect Three
Uluba Moots Waxt Week
at Maniatea

Continued Intaraat in the weekly
luncheon* al the Haxtinga country
200.000 fingerling blue gills, which
Club was again shown Tuesday
have been reared in the club's own when M members and guests a|.
pond at Orangeville. Representatives tended lhe luncheon. Datiil&amp;a. zin­
of lakes where the planting of the nia*. marl golds and other fall flowfingerling* vu desired wore present.
Two can driven by Ira Peake, of bouquet of dark red cockscomb and
Hope and Cleo Hopkins came to­ yellow daisies being particularly
gether tat th* highway crossing west outstanding.
of the Rutland cemetery about 5:30
yesterday afternoon. Both drivers Mrs M. R. Kinde of Manhall and i
were making the crossing on differ­ th* golf event in-the morning, a
ent road*. They were bruised and blind low gross. was taken by Mrs
cut. but not seriously hurt. The cars Robert O'Connor.
’
will need considerable overhauling.
Out of town guests included Mrs.
Henry Brigg*, postmaster of Los Kinde of Marshall, who was with
Angelas. Cal . died Sunday night in Mrs. R- O. Finnic; Mrs. James Iron­
Washington. This may be of spe­ side of San Diego, Cal., with Mrs.
cial interest to some of our readers, Aben Johnson and Mrs. Elsie Pur­
_______
________
____ __ ntaa of Nashville with Mrs. C. 8.
as his widow
was_
a ______
former_ _Hastings
girl. Miss . Mary Dennis, daughter of McIntyre.
Mr. and Mn. George Dennis, former j Mrs. Wilbur Lane 'was chairman
resident* of this city. Mr. Briggs at- of the committee and was assisted
...II. -a kl.L
— news^ by* Mrs.
U n.rv.fK
A. H. Carvelh. Mrs. War­
Mined quite
high —
position Iin
paper circles, at one limo being ren E- Carter. Mrs. David 8. Good­
managing editor of lhe Kalamaxoo year and Mrs. John Ironside.
The luncheon next Tuesday will
came European correspondent for a
year and there is some talk of con­
The spirit that once seemed to tinuing them through October if
enough interest b shown. The last
numbers at Thomapple lake still luncheon la always followed by the
seems to prevail, and descendants of annual business meeting when re­
the noble red man sUll seem to love ports are given and three new mem­
to go there. The Indian Landing bers of lhe executive board are elect­
farm Is owned by Irving Charlton. ed AU dues should be paid as lhe
Last week a nephew of the oldest, books wUl be closed immediately
Indian woman in Michigan made after the meeting. The executive
Mr. Charlton a beautiful bow and board is desirous of a large attend­
arrow to add to his fin* collection of ance on Tuesday as several import­
Indian relic*, and lhe Indian bask­ ant matters will come up for discus­
et weavers always go lo him al this sion. Mrs. David French U chairman
farm to get their cars tinkered up. of the luncheon committee.

opens on Monday end concludes
Carvwth. who ia chairman of

and Wednesday morning sessions
and have charge of a luncheon Wed­
nesday noon. Tuesday evening at
the banquet in honor of the peat
presidents. Mrs. Carvelh wUl re­
spond to a toast and will preside al
University of Michigan will speak.
The banquet in honor of the past

M. R Keyworth of Detroit, flnt
vice-prealdent of lhe federation and

Fnr her Wednesday
luncheon
speaker Mrs. carvelh has secured
Herald C. Hunt, superintendent of
time was assistant principal of the
local high school.
On Thursday evening th* Hamil­
ton club members wUl hold Uialr
annual dinner. This club la com­
posed of the officers and prominent
dub women who worked with Mrs.
Burritt Hamilton of Rattle Creek
when she was stale president in
1918. Mrs. Carvelh has been a mem­
ber of this club since its organiza­
tion and will respond to a toast on
the program faUowing the dinner.

BRIDGE— LUNCUSON.
dian church and schoolhouse on this
On Saturday a lovely bridgeIndian Landing farm, and on lop of
a hill nearby is the huge boulder on
with Misses Helen Merson. Lnb
which the Indians used to pound, Carter. Esther Doty and Helen Furtheir corn.
nlss, Mrs. R. O- Hubbard and Mrs.
Itah HUI as hostesses. The guest*
COUNTY WOMEN'S CLUBS were the women teachers of the city
schools, twenty-five in aU. Decora­
HONOR MRS. M. J. CROSS tions of autumn garden flowers
made the luncheon tables attractive.
Delightful Tea Saturday Aft­ Miss Evlda WlUiams won the
number prize and Miss Elizabeth
ernoon at the Parish
Finch had top contract score with
House
Miss Jennet Michael having low
Mrs. M- J. Cross, who Ls presi­ score.
dent of the southwestern district of
BIRTHDAY HURI’RISE.
the Michigan Federation of Wom­
Mrs. Elton Baker was pleasantly
en's clubs, was lhe honor guest at
a delightful tea given by members of surprised on her birthday. Septem­
ber
24.
at the home of her parents,
the Barry County Federation of
Women's clubs Saturday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kelly of 806
at the Episcopal parish house. 8. Washington SL. ten guests ar­
Guests from ail over the county were riving for dinner. The table was
present between the hours of three decorated with colorful garden
and five, lhe clubs of Woodland. flowers and a beautiful yellow and
Nashville. Fteeport and Middleville blue cake.
Don Chase entertained with gui­
being well re pre.ven ted.
tar and songs. Lovely gift* were
Mrs. Gerald Smith and Mrs. L. F.
Maus furnished violin and piano made and many friends wished
music during the afternoon and a Mrs. Baker a very happy birthday.

short program consisting of a foal­
ball reading and an encore by Mrs.
Frank 8- Boles of Nashville and vo­
cal solos by Mrs. F. G. Pulu. also of
Nashville, was enjoyed. Baskets and
vases of fall garden flowers were
used for decorations and the tea
table had a large bouquet of vari­
colored cosmos with candles at each
end. Mrs. J. P. Mohler of Middleville
and Mrs. Frank Adair poured.
Mrs. Mohler presented the guest I
of honor with a lovely black suede
purse as the gift of the Federation
and Mrs. cross gave a short talk.
Mrs. Mohler and Mrs. Adair were
in charge of the arrangements and
were assisted by Mrs. Ben Gldley
and Mrs. John Brass, who were in
charge of the refreshments, and
Mrs. L. E- Barnett. Mrs. Richard A.
Grcos and Mrs. E- A- Burton, who
did lhe decorating.

ENTERTAINS WITH TEA.
Tuesday afternoon twenty young
women from the Methodist church
were entertained at tea at the
home of Mrs. W. Maytan Jones, who
was assisted by Mrs. Maude Brown
and Mrs. Florence Fleming, the
president* of lhe Foreign and Home
Missionary Societies respectively.
I
Mrs. Jones outlined lhe missionary |
program far lhe year which was
very interesting. Mrs. M. L- Cook;
and Mrs. A. D. Knl&amp;kern were honor'
guests.

f.t -RAJPOOT AGONY)

COMMITTEE FOR FISH SUPPER.
At the meeting of the Rod and
Gun dub Monday evening. President
Burton Perry, named the following
to make plans for the annual fish
■supper: George V/. Leonard. Homer
Smith. Frank Kelly, Paul Bryant
and Arthur WllUtls.

ENTERTAINED 500 CLUB.
NOTICE.
Mrs. Lucy Creglow was hostess to
_I will
v_____________
r____ ___________
not be responsible
for any
lhe eight members of her 500 club debts contracted by othera than myTuesday afternoon at her home.
self .—Mrs. ,H. J. Flower.

SEE OUR WINDOW

CRUE'S SHOE STORI
Next to City Bank

Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 HL_

IV.

4c

Hubbard Squash
New Carrots 3 bd». lOc
New Cabbage
2 "»• 5c

Apples
Onions
Bananas

8 - 25c
IO O-Sm 15c
3
19c

QUALITY MEATS
Rib Boiling

BEEF
» 10c

Beef Kettle

Roasts
- 13c

Pork Sausage m!".' is. 19c
BuHer Shull* or Freeport 1b. 36c
Hamburg &lt;Gl»d 2 »* 29c

OLEO
Kingnut

2b25c

Bologna c.^i. a
Pork Loin Roast
Veal Roast

FRESH SIDE PORK

u.

|5c

u&gt;. 21c
22c

- 19c

SUNDAY on* MONDAY. OCTOBER 4 ond 5

"To Mary—with Love
WARNER BAXTER and MYRNA LOY
TUESDAY. OCTOBER 6

Yours

for the

Asking

CEOKCS RAFT and DOLORES COSTILLO
BARRYMORE

WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY and FRIDAY
OCTOBER 7, 8 and 9
i

My Man Godfrey4
William Powell and Carole Lombard
SATURDAY. OCTOBER 10
FEATURE NO. 1

They Met in a Taxi"
CHESTER MORRIS and FAY WRAY

Food Center

-------------------- FEATURE NO. 2 —

BUCK JONES in

RIDE ’EM, COWBOY’’

ENDURING TRIBUTE
You loved them in life

WE INVITE YOU TO VISIT our

Yew faal yeur raapeniifcility to ear-

FINEST DIPLAY wa h«v« gear

pa fuata rha name af yau* loved

had. in a variety of price ranger

it with a awitoble memorial fo* fv

ORDER NOW for Fall or Spring de­
livery.

tort ganaratiowg.

TELEPHONE 2497

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
ESTABLISHED 1907

ALWAYS RELIABLE

HASTINCS. MICH.

Hastiaj

�THE BAfiWNGN BANNY*. THTTMUDAY. OCTOBER 1, 1918

BROTHERHOOD
TICKETS ON SALE

SCHOOLS FURNISH
ol I
TWO GOOD PROGRAMS

han b^n Terr helplul u&gt; IU m,m-

DOWLING.

Preparation! are well under way for
AC one lime Ifom the member,
the fried chicken supper which will
Ra
—rte TLodge
aRo- w
—
_______
Barry
were
recruited fit
the—
members of Hastings Division No. Debater! Kntertain Rotari­ 6. in the church dining room by tlie
19, Uniform Rank. This division,
Ladles' Aid Society. There will be
ans—Musicians the Com­
in competitive drill, won the cham­
lou of good things, so come out and
pionship in this state for three times
enjoy one of our good suppers.
mercial Club
• Continued front page 1. Sec. 1»
In succession. Il won the world
Mrs. Harold Stanton wu In Has­
A f)ne opportunity hu been given
championship in competitive drill
tings a part of lut week with her
al CincliinaU. Milwaukee and Wash­ the business men of Hastings to get mother, Mrs Sam Buxton, who un­
ington.
acquainted with some of the work derwent a major operation at Pen­
Root Is not only a teacher of fine
A lodge with such a history Is of the dty schools litis past week. nock hospital We are glad to re­
reputation but Is a farmer u well.
surely worth sustaining. We are cer­
O! course, he cannot gel out and tain that tlie members of Barry At Ute Rotary club Monday there port that Mrs. Buxton Is making
was a debate by young men from a good recovery.
do the actual work on the farm, ex­ Lodge. In their fine new quarters, Lhe High school on the question of
Mike Smith, who hu been Ln very
cept In vacation periods He owns should repeat, and possibly exceed government ownership and opera­ poor health this summer, la gradu­
several farms. Mine of them hav­ lhe history -and achievements of tion of all electric lines. The debate ally growing worse and his condi­
ing previously been abandoned. Barry Lodge in put years.
wu under the direction of Albert tion at present Ls considered quite
•nu- present Chancellor Com­ | Becker, debate coach for lhe high serious.
They are all in Van Buren county.
He has made it his business to build mander. Herbert Calkins, not only school. The ability to think and to
News wu received Bqndsy of the
up these run-down farms and make takes an Interest in the work, but expreu one's opinions at a public death of Rev. Weston, father of
hu
donated many days' labor to gathering is worth while; and Rev. Harold Weston, who wu our
ttiem profltable. and he has been
quite successful. HL* theme will be refitting and decorating lhe new training for It is valuable.
pastor a few years ago. Both fami­
"Farm Problems" Barry county quarters. Tn this connection the
At the meeting of Die Commer­ lies lived at Banfleld al that time.
hu a considerable acreage which work of Ed. Downs. Lloyd Storer cial club Tuesday noon the members
Mr. and Mrs Milton Trafford and
needs just such treatment as Mr. and Harry Young, should also be were privileged lo hear tlie Junior Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gaskill attend­
Root has given to the farms he mentioned, u their services are out­ band directed by Mr. Lewis Hine. ed the Allegan fair Friday, and
owns, so there will be special inter­ standing Other members also as­ In lhe short time in which they Mrs Etta Stanton and friend at­
sisted in the work u they were able. have been under Mr. Hine's direc­ tended the fair Thursday and called
est in his talk
Monday evening. January 18. the
tion. they have made wonderful on Mrs. Lottie Delano, who wu a
speaker will be Dean Anthony, of
RALLY DAY PROGRAM.
progress. A girls' sextette, directed former resident of this locality.
the Michigan State College at Ea.il
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burdick and
A special "Rally Day" program is by Miss Olerum. supervisor of music
Lansing. County Agent Harold Foe- being sponsored by the Sunday in the schools, gave two delightful son of Hickory Corners were Sun­
ter. who secured him. vouches for school of the Wesleyan Methodist, selections. Mr. Arthur Lower, assist­ day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
him u a very Interesting speaker.. Sunday. Oct. 4. at 10:00 A. M. Al ant director of muilc and teacher in Otto.
■
who will discuss the problems of this service a program will be given the junior high, gave two flne vocal
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Matteson are
education and the technical train-1 by the children of lhe Sunday solos, which were so heartily ap­ now located in the home which
Ing necessary for farming In these,, school. Tills Is also promotion Bun­ plauded that he wu compelled lo they recently purchased of Arthur
Covey.
— a.
d»y- at which time a number will be respond lo an encore.
The Februnry 15 meeting will be assigned lo new claws for the comOr He Fisher went to Lake Odessa
add rewed by Rev. Charles W. Me- , mg year. All the parents are espe- CIVIC PLAYERS HARVEST
Tuesday with a load of chickens.
Kinsey
Kinwv nf
of Mrwmt
Mount Pi
Pleasant.
MMU1t. Rev. rtally Invited and the public is also
PARTY AT LOFT FRIDAY.
Don't forget that next Sunday to
Jones, pastor of the Methodist I, welcome.
The harvest dancing party plan­ Rally Day in tlie Sunday school.
church. Is well acquainted with him ,
ned by lhe Hastings Civic Players
and says he Is a pieulng and force- I
OBITUARY.
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
association
for
their
"gueslnlte
’
'
ful speaker and will bring a mu- I
1 Lloyd Allerding, oldest son of Friday evening at lhe loft in the old
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kidder’s
rage which will please tlie Brother-1
Mathias and 8v«*n Allerding. wu Reed's opera house promises to be a baby ia very sick at thia writing.
hood.
born in Carlton township. Barry Co., most successful artair. An effort is
Mrs. Bertha Krussell visited her
For Monday night. March 15. the
Feb. 22nd. 1864. and passed to the being made to have the young peo-’ -son. William Krussell. of Battle
speaker will be Chester P. O'Hara Great Beyond, at the home of his pie attend and members of the as­ Creek last Friday.
of Detroit. Mr. O'Hara la fllUng the son Orvin in Campbell township, on
sociation aie .privileged to invite
Mrs. Rose Engle called on her
office of deputy attorney general in
guests. The loft Li being decorated mother. Mrs. Emma Norton.
of
a way that hxi been most satisfac­
7 mos . and 3 days He was united in suitably for the occasion and re­ Hastings, Saturday.
tory to that department and to lhe marriage January 27. 1884 to Jennie
freshments will be served. Martin's
]&gt;eople of Detroit. He hu gotten Alice Marlowe who preceded him
Edgar Ftneid was
five piece orchestra will play the Friday night
after law-breaking gangs, convicted tn death March 18. 1932. Surviving
program of dances.
elected president for the coming
them and done a lot of excellent
are two sons. Scott of Carlton. Oryear.
work. He Li at present engaged in vin of Campbell and a daughter.
ANNIVERSARY MEETING.
Remember the special meetings
lhe trial of the members of lhe Mrs. Earl McKibben of Hastings;
T)»e sixtieth anniversary of Mid­ at the schoolhouse this week. Rev.
Black Legion organization, who arc two brothers. Wm. and Andrew of
Fields will preach every evening.
responsible for the murder of a col­ Carlton, and two sisters, Mrs. Ed­ dleville Chapter. No. 17. Order of Plenty of music and singing. Ev­
ored man in that city. He has Just ward Waite of carlton and Mrs. Eastern star, will be observed by a eryone welcome.
been nominated, and it is believed Josephine carpenter of Hastings; program to be given at the Middle­
he will be elected, as prosecuting six grandchildren, one great-grand­ ville Masonic Temple Saturday aft­
NORTH HOPE.
attorney on. the republican ticket daughter and a host of friends to ernoon and evening, Oct. 3. The
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Anders and
chapter was organized on that dale
In Wayne county. He is a flne law­ mourn his passing.
In 1876. Mrs. Maude Bell Li chair­ mother spent Sunday with Mr. and
yer and a fine man.
man for the day. The program will Mrs. Chas. Welch in the striker dis­
The cloning meeting on April 19
OBITUARY.
Include a reception, exemplification trict.
wlil have a program which the
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hart and
P&lt;ter DeLeys was bom tn lhe of degrees of 60 years ago by memmembers of the Brotherhood will
Netherlands.
May
10.
1807
and
hers in costume, a dinner and a daughter spent Sunday with Mr.
thoroughly enjoy. Mr. Jacob Kindelberger of Kaliftnazoo. president passed away Sept. 23. at his home at program open lo the public in the and Mrs. William Havens In South­
west
Rutland to help them celebrate
of tlie Kalamazoo Vegetable Parch­ lhe age of sixty-nine. He came to evening. Mrs. Josephine Ellis of Totheir flflelh wedding day.
ment Company, will give a talk America at the age of thirty-five peka. Kan., is the only surviving
Mr. and Mrs.-Earl Peake at Has­
about n trip he recently completed and was united in marriage with member, of lhe 19 charter members.
tings spent Sunday with Ous and
in South Africa. Mr. Kindelberger Mrs. Mary Cappon. who survives
Doris Peake.
CONFERRING DEGREES.
is a pleasing speaker and all Will him. Besides his widow lie leaves
Albert Hampton of Bunnel dis­
be interested in what he will have three children: John of Chicago.
Hastings Odd-Fellow Lodge No. 58
trict spent Thursday with his
to say. On that evening the Parch­ Mrs. Gamer Brown of Three Rivers is conferring the Initiatory degree
ment quartet, fine fellows and flne and Mrs. Duane Harrington of Kal­ next Tuesday night. October 6. on daughter, Mrs. Morse Murphy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Teal of
singers, will furnish part of the amazoo. One son. Adrian, passed several candidates. Following the de­
program.
away MX years ago. He also leaves gree work lunch will be served. AU Kalamazoo spent lhe week end at
their cottage here.
Last year wxi one of the moat four step-children. Corneil Cappon of members are urged to be present.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hill of Bat­
successful In the history of the Detroit. Mrs. LaVeme Birdsall of
Plans are being formulated tq con­ tle creek spent Sunday with their
Brotherhood.
The
ticket sales Kalamazoo. LaVina Cappon also of tinue giving degree work the bal­
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ulrich.
reached 275. it ought lo crons the Kalamazoo and Charles cappon of ance of the month of October. Tlie
300 mark this time.
Hastings.
candidates are among those who
Mr. DeLeys spent the but twenty- were initiated two weeks ago by the
five years of his life on the farm Michigan Grand Lodge Degree Start.
where he (Mused away.
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
DEATH OF MRS. MAIN.
Seventeen patients and several
Mrs. Floyd Main, aged 27. died babies are registered al Pennock
Tuesday morning at Pennock hospi­ hospital this Wednesday morning.
tal after i an illness of two weeks
During the past week lhe births
She Is survived by her husband; her at lhe hospital were: Mr. and Mrs.
(Continued from page 1, Sec. It
mother. Mrs. Ray Hull of Hullngs; Cleo cahi. Hastings. Route 4. a son
not only filled the offices of Barry two sisters. Mrs. Ruby Hughes of on Sept. 29; Mr. and Mrs. Norval
Lodge, but was later made Grand Augusta and Mrs. Eunice EUiott of Nielson. Hastings. Route 2, a girl
Chancellor of the order in this state, Hullngs, and one brother. Raymond on Sept. 24; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrenee
and then the Supreme Chancellor. HulL also of Hullngs. Funeral serv­ Oarllnger. Nashville. Route 1. a girl
Knights of Pythias of the World. ices arc being held this Thursday on Sept. 24; Mr. and Mrs. Duane
There is something about the work morning at ten o'clock at the Unit­ Miller, w. Grand St., a girl on Sept.
of the Knights of Pythias that ed Brethren church, the Rev. E. O.
brings men together, produces a real McSherry In charge. Burial was in
fellowship and friendship, which Riverside cemetery.

BARRY LODGE HAS
FINE NEW HOME

Wall Paper

DELTON.
Miss Frances Woodhams. Instruc­
tor in the Ball school at Kalama­
zoo. will be at Delton community
hall Saturday. Oct. 3. at nine A. M.
to organise classes in all kinds of
dances—toe. tap, clog, ballet, ate.
Classes for aU ages may be organized
If desired.—Adv.

SOUTH SHULTZ.
Those from here attending school
at Delton are Victor Hine, Fred
Peake, Evelyn Hom and Lorraine
and Loma Bonneville.
Mrs. Mae Anders of Kalamazoo
called on Mrs. Mina Kenyon Thurs­
day.
The frost that we had last week
did no damage to the gardens or
erppa in this place.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Thompson,
who have both been very ill with in­
testinal flu. are better.
.
Blanch Carpenter of Kalamazoo
spent the week end with iter par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Andy Carpenter.

Our schoolhouse looks very nice 1
POT LUCK 8UPFERin a fresh coat of nalnt.
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Hom attend­
ed the Allegan fair Friday.
Mrs. Mabel Moody of South Ma­ and pot luck supper on Friday.
ple Grove la spending two weeks Cards were played and an enjoyable
with her daughter. Mrs. Martha time had by all present. A torsiy
Hom.
.

HOl'TH THOKSArrLE-____
Hullngs u a reminder of the day.
Mrs. George Thomas has rented
her farm and sold off her grain as
she U going lo Hickory Comers lo
be with Mr. Thomas who Is running
THE REFRESHINGLY
a blacksmith shop there.
was shoving sapd tn around the new
bridge over the Spreen creek. One
auto passed over Thursday, and
Friday the road was open for trafflic.
But Saturday lhe roadmen were in
turn piking —throwing in from the
outside of the road. The rains have
made the roud so soft that the
fences are closed again.

SENSATIONAL

FRESHER
Ffc

A|ll

I

LOW
HOT DATED

BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY

COFFEE

PENNEY'S ■

lb. bag

(3-lb. bag 49c)
HOT DATED

FRENCH BRAND coffee
COUNTRY CLUB PACUD
BEECH-NUT COFFEE
MAY CARDENS TEA

21c
25c
25c
25c

HIXKII - JAFAH - CAR lA.VDLU (OTMUM

*“

CLOCK BREAD
'

Michigan Maid

Eatmart

NUT O LEO

BUTTER

69c 2 - 25c

2

2 1 91c
4 - 19c
20c
10c
10c

MOTOR OIL
NORTHERN TISSUE
PRUNES
NEW 1934 PACK
CATSUP
8 VARiETlES
COOKIES
W1117. - MICHIGAN MILLED

PANCAKE FLOUR

21c

PURITAN MVPLF. SYRUP Plat jag 19&lt;

Fall Flour Er Feed Sale

FLOUR —T73c
BUY A BARREL

KING'S FLAKE
BUY A BARREL

COUNTRY CLUB
BUY A BARREL

GOLD MEDAL

77c
8589

EIGHT SACKS

OR PILLSBURY*

BUY A BARREL

85.68

EIGHT SACKS
MICHIGAN**
FAVORITE
EIGHT SACKS
LtDORSTORY

86 79

M.11

3

BCHT MCU

&lt;S 79

LILY WHITE FLOUR
BUY A BARREL

95c

EIGHT MCU

EC
ER scratch
WESCO
iCGiU

1001b.

»7.«5

$2.35

WESCO ECG MASH

S155

WESCO CHICK FEED

*2.29

SIRS

16% DAIRY FEED

BLOCK SALT

SALE!

50-lb.

block

- 1 Sc

CHUCK ROAST
Beef Pol Roast lb 12V4c

Our Fall.Clean-Up Sale of 1936 Wall
Papers starts Thursday and continues
through the First Week in October.
Every paper loft of our 1936 stock will
be SOLD at CLOSE-OUT PRICES!

Rolled Rib Roas!

- icARLING LAMB
Chops

&lt;»"

ik- 15c

Lamb Slew

SHOULDER ROAST
*■ 19c

MEN'S

Lightweight

■

10c

Pig Feel

CRAPFRUIT

MEDIUM SIZE-SIN RIPRNKD FLORIDA FRUIT

MICH. POTATOES
Polo Typot
Raglan*
Frap-ArounJt

Idaho Bakers 10 lu- 33c

Squash

Sweet Potatoes 6

Rutabagas

Mich. Cabbage

Special for this week I
A good shade, 36x6 ft.

Fabrica hand picked

2QC

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
Goods Delivered

Phone 2131

Hastings, Mich

durability! Saaaan'

14 s

Cauliflower

15c

Bl I K - PICKLKD

IHtTLSC

Pan Fish

12ftc

Leona Sausage

19c

WE MAKE WINDOW SHADES TO FIT
YOUR WINDOWS

*■ 19c

- 19c

LEG O' LAMB
Bacon Squares

WINDOW SHADES

35c

C. Q. - CONTROLLED QUALITY BEEF

BEEF STEAK

Kitchens, Bedrooms, Dining Rooms
and Halls and Living Roams . . . this
includes all 30-inch as well as 18'inch papers. YOU CAN AFFORD TO PA­
PER THAT ROOM NOW!

6c

2fcc
~h 15c

KROGEI

Cranberries
Melons

* 10c

19c
33c

�BOOST THE COUNTY—
TRADE AT HOME

The Hastings Banner
A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, OCTOBEB 1. IW .

'Round About Town

iM®

EXIT RECALCITIANT8.
I federal financing made necessary by'
m the eyes of Dun Cochrane. edl- 0,6 •unprecedented magnitude of
ter of lhe Hartford Day Sprint.*
!deOelta.
“There is a touch of Iryxiy* in the
“In *u conscience, can an admindefeat of Read and Nuiier. Renub- btratiofl which has so frequently
.Beans, in Michigan and everywhere.
h* ■ m‘ttcr “ «Urec«y K*rh'
•have been Merely critical of con-!
your
rwsponalbUlMea &lt;bal-

irrosn sanra

on its former promises and started
off "hell-bent” toward "the more
abundant life."
Good old congress, or at least the
Democratic portion, closed its. eyes
and followed in lock step lo a
monotonous chant of YES. yes!
YES. yes I
Only when congress followed the
president without question or rea­
son as he broke pledge after pledge,
were lhe terms "rubber stamps'* and
• "yes men" applied lo congress.

:
!
;
•
•
&gt;
t
■

flame ta th* woods, fields or along
th* road*.
in eas* of fire know where to
find th* nrerret. fir* alarm box and
study lhe directions ta advance.
ALWAYB save life before propcr-

madx to ranlteo to wacth a premS W ewr*,

UDVOa AXOVHT OF
rax loss '

FOUND THE MAN WHO
TOOK DR, LUND’S CAR
INSURANCE CANNOT
REPLACE PROPERTY­ Sheriffs Force Arre ata Sver-

tgrees tpr ite spineless servility in ancln« lhe tns«l«et&gt; ask for your
obeying orders from Capitol Hill. I *upport and trifle with your comBubservlent congressmen have, quite n‘on scns*
thP* campaign alibis
properly, been branded as rubber 1 about mysterious foreign forces and
stamps' or 'yes men.' "
thu 5I*clou» talk about sound fiscal
We admit that it is easy to regard P°“clM Bnd administration?
the matter tn this light although
can ,Ule 1116 condltlon best by
there is no real parallel between the &lt;’uolln« onc
from a docutwo situations
'ment PubUshed * we*k
*nd
BoowwU .u nx.pl Into otto tor, ■*&gt;"• b&gt; b0,»
B smllh
pramlang W: redura th. ra.1
, *»d.Cel«ln Coolldw:
"'All th.
the —
costs nf
of ilocal,
state an
and
■orernment, reduce or .1 lent .tern
—■ Mare
the expansion of Federal bureauc­ national government must be re­
racy, balancing the budget. There duced without fear and without fa­
vor. UnleM
Unless the
lhe people, u,rou
through
wer. other promises. of course, di- I vor
«h unlunl'
reeled toward prejudices of various' fled ‘“‘on,nd tUe char£e °r
groups and classes. B.I .w.
Ite grre:
clr
“ l'na
i theiri l"
government,
they "&gt;«r
will »find

mu. o, people were Imprrered by ■ Itet Itelr rerernment HAS TAKEN
Ite three pleAre. menUpned aboee. CHARGE OF THEM- Independence
Ate. in the -rereepta,.' were an ’
“ M”' "“1 “»
unprecedenled n.pnber M Demo- I
•’“wte wU1 ”“a luel&lt; *“ •
crate reprerenuure. and wn.rar. I
0, renHude lo an
rent Waablnatonward Cor lhe ex-1 «•“»»
&lt;"a relteh mlpreas purpose ol aupporUna the, nwltea
preeldent In Ite proaram ol eeon-»"*
““ wamln. Is
0^
true, and the first and most ImAl test, wllh almost solid bscMn,.
“a
!“'■
tee president xpperaed to be drlyol" "a"'1
Ina wlte terolte wide open Inward : auce c,f'nM'
tee lullUUtent ol hl. promises. Al! "* P™"™
contributing lo
this point no one heard lhe epUteU1 economic dissslcr ha. teen this Inoi -rubber sump- or -yes men- ap- j
««ml admlnWreUon and
piled to congress, beeaure eongrerei11'' »&gt;»eurlty and uncertainly teat
■waa doing tee thin, It luM teen •'*“ ■&gt;‘r&gt;'a'a "'a «™n&gt; «“'■ "&lt; “■
i eommlaaloned to do by overwhelm. ThOT 11 renl,““
“ll “
tag public vote
veritable cancer on the body politic
: But Iten a plnkl.l. or swastika or «"a
“ prophecy lo aai btateahin tinge began lo appear In ' ’u" &gt;“ &gt;»•' 11 «' r™“" ll"' a'­
: presidential legislation The ulmin.
« &gt;'“11
“
! islretion turned lu back resolulely :to beltar telngs?"

mVEWFIK

Understand that our efficient city
marshal isn't much of----*•“
sailor.
Zlp. Hitxoner and wires, they tell
me. went "deep sea" fishing foe the
big ones off Northport point not so
long ago.

Up eame a storm which lofted
high waves into the atmosphere

They tell me he can talk a Job of
blacksmithing that comperes favor• My with the best there Is.
No wonder the boy is a successful
fisherman, no wonder!

Weep! W-e-e-p! w-E-E-PI Etc,

Have Just learned that Mr. and
Mrs Harold Logan are leaving our
little city within lhe very near fu­
ture for Ann Arbor.

Sporting Items |

TRUMAN 0. WEBBER
■
ATTENDED G. A. R. MEET Backward Glances;

Tommy will always believeihal it
was hte excellent publicity that tot
Harold such an excellent bld on the
auction block.

No! The above la not antl-Ncw
Bits of Yesterday
Enlisted in the Union Army
This week's nomination for lhe
Deal invective. II is merely a scries
Hastings Hall
of Oblivion—The
of quotations from the address LANSING DEFEATS
at Age of 13, Serving
"Knock! Knock!" erase.
Duration of War
j
twenty years ago.
Franklin D. Roosevelt gave at Pitts­
H. H. S. ELEVEN 27-0
Interest
of
Barry/county
folks
is
burgh on Oct. 19. 1932 when he was
In Tommy's expert opinion, the
Truman O. Webber has relumed r particularly centered upon the state
a presidential candidate. We agree, Local Team Makes Good from
nm Washington.
WMhinemn D.
n C.
n where
.h,r. he
h. Rcpublkan conren&amp;n in Saginaw pun is no longer the lowest form of
however, that It is a thorough con­
attended the annual meeting of the Thursday as Hon. W. W Potter is humor.
Showing Against Power­
Grand Army of lhe Republic.
demnation of the Roosevelt policies.
a candidate for nomination for atful Central Team
I The following Interesting story j tomey general.
Somehow Roosevelt's past words
The Hastings High school griddecs concerning him was received from I Mrs. Henry Ragla la visiting her
and promises rise like fitful ghosU displayed a decided improvement | a Washington correspondent:
i parents in Weltersburg. New York
to plague and torment his actions.
over lhe 1935 team last Saturday ! Truman O. Webber, of- Hastings,
-- Demmitt There we go again.
night under the floodlights at PAl-: leaned forward on his crutches, Mrs Olenn Brower.
The malady hangs on with more
ON THE DEFENSIVE
tinglll field In Lansing, by holding looked squarely out through a pair
Tite automobile U steadily coming
President Roosevelt Is distinctly lhe powerful Lansing Central eleven 1 of spectacles under the brim of a into its own. A truck freight line persistency than a head cold.
------------------bn)wn
clAlmcd
ouuundlng
„„„„„„„
sent lo the senate and Mr. Read • on tlie defensive in the current
। has been established between Battle
This week's nomination for the
The game was played amid Inter­ "youngext" «nd -Irel- llltex among [ c„k ,na vcrmomvlte wlte &gt; lr|.
Ito the office of lieutenant governor campaign. He replies to Landon's
Hastings Hall of Eligible Bachelors—
mittent showers which made hand­ veterans of the Grand Army of lhe . weekly service.
Howard Teustak.
up-and-comlrw
largely on public approval of a charge that there has been too ling of lhe ball difficult for both Republic.
The September
young
produce manager al the A.
really flne program put forward by much spending by saying a million sides. Hastings speedy backfield was
wh0118 c.^ht&gt;-?c *bt; 1 lhc estimated yield of wheat in this
the present governor of Michigan spent, lo save ten million Is a good slowed down to a minimum by the attended lhe annual celebration of 5late thls p.ar u jg bushels p„ acre
lhe veterans of the Grand Army of I
People wanted men in the legists- mvcsflpjcnl. Note that he says "mll- slippery field.
Bennett's boys. I see. open the
in^lhe first quarter the initial the Republic in Washington and it
FORTY YEARS AGO.
ture at Lansing to help put his lion''—not "billion." As a matter of score by Lansing central was made was at the G. A R. reunion that he I invitations are Issued for the mar- grid season here Friday by taking
on Allegan.
measures into effect.
record the spending of the Roosevelt
as a result of three offside penalties
am/hC y°unf« ««»»«"« riage of MISS Ora McClintock to Alwhich
netted
three
first
downs
for
soldler here—I mean fighter, not mond Dwight Hoskta. Jr, of GarIt was while the governor was In administration is:
Tommy*!! be right there on the
the Big Reds and a power play in drummer boy." He enlisted seven rdsvllle. Ohio.
process of attempting to put hte i Fiscal year of—
sidelines yelling I
and famlly
which Hayes, the veteran Central times when he was 13 years old. The , w w*
program into effect, that a group of' 133&lt;
, 7,105,050,084 95
on'Oreen 8t
full-back carried the pigskin over seventh Ume. for some reason he ln, mto the
That was museum last week
recalcitrants, apparently for pur- 1935
7-275.X25.16S.57
the goal line. Hayes also made a doesn't know, he was not put out of owned by Oscar young
poses of patronage tone man iden- j 19M
8 879 796 257 00 perfect boot for lhe extra point.
tte lilted Army bre.ure of Ite ggr.
HgrrlWM Br.dl. enUrUlned brought more than one passer-by up
wllh a start.
"T m lhe
.te last
Ire. survivor
M,rel.™ of
ol lhe
te. two ,
prana.,
The
Centraliles
combined
a
series
"I'm
titled with this group, later con- 1W7 (eJt,
7.763.000.000 00
of running plays climaxed by an cavalry companies that captured nlng complimentary to Mias Agnes
teased at activate meeting that this!
Understand a helpful customer of
end sweep with Warren carrying Jeffenon Davis near Dublin. Geor­ Rich of Traverse City.
lhe Thomas store thought one of the
charge was true* heckled the gov»31 023X73 5OT00 the ball for another touchdown la­ gia. on April 26. 1665." he said. "I
The robbery of Mr. Jackson in
Hayes again was In the 1st Wisconsin Cavalry. Maple Grove and the Chinaman in figures had gotten in the wrong win­
eraor and w Impeded the progrevAccordlng to lhe presideht's own ter In the quarter.
dow
by mistake—It was only Al
of legislation that they pretty et-, yardstick, therefore lie. "the spend- scored the extra point on a place­ We were with lhe 1st Michigan this city should prove a warning to Prentice doing a little Job of trim­
Cavalry."
ment kick.
all who have money hidden away in
fecuvely blocked important parts of, lng of one mllHon to wvc Un mUllou
The second quarter found lhe
Pursuit of the president of the trunks, old stockings or anywhere ming.
his program.
I is a good investment!, the question Bennetlmen coming Into their own Confederacy ended. Webber said,
about the house.
These men were not attempting to
,
and lhe capital city eleven were un­ with Davis’ capture by Lieut. Cols.
The wedding of Miss Belle Steb­
I
prevent lhe governor from breaking
HAg TOE sPENDiNO
3i able to score. In fact a blocked Harendon and Pritchard.
bins to George 8. Hooper of Dallas.
Webber, wearing his own bFown , ------------_lrlHUlicu -v UH. nomr
kick which Ransom recovered kept
campaign
pledges;
they
were. BILLION DOLLARS SAVED US the Lansing team in the shadow of
A.nd “P' c*P1Blncd he n®Yer ■ ot the bride's parents at S o'clock
whether they fully realized it or not. 13J0 B1LWONJip
their own goal posts in the last few had the money to buy a fancy blue । yesterday afternoon. Rev. w. W.
helping block a program they had,
IaM
of the nBUonal minutes of lhe second quarter. unUorm for one of these reunions,
of Emmanuel church offlclatWhen the gun was fired ending the
He vT
u00™1?, ed The C0UPte were attended by
been sent to Lansing to support.
’
....
, ----------- ---near Madteon. Wls, when the Civil
Agnes Rich of Traverse City
There ts a world of difference be­ time it was supposed to total 320
Lansing Central
war broke out. He observed hte 17th and wtuiam Stebbins
tween the legislators who attempted billions. Assuming that post-depresThe third quarter was practically
,the , d7 i A very pretty wedding occurred at each other because they know they
to assist the governor in living up lo slon values have brought the wealth a repetition of the first in which *7“ld™1 Unco,fih5U APrl,1lhe tlomf of Mr *nd Mrs. Robert can. but who know, deep down,
campaign promises and lhe servile of this country to approximately lhe Warren got off on an end sweep 1864. He was still l^when he Ml ironside last evening when their oid- they'd die if anything ever happened
which
was
slopped
on
the
one
yard
congressmen who blindly folloaed same figure as in 1922. the Roosevelt
b-e,t dau,hUr
Un,ud
marrU«e to their love, comes to the screen In
this picture. -To Mary—Wllh Love"
line. He carried over on a power type photograph of himself at the j
Oard D Bcnnett
the president in his plank-wrecking.|. administration will thus have spent play a moment later. Hayes again end o! the »ar. resplendent in blue .
...
co-starring Warner Baxter and
pledge-breaking spree.
Myrna Loy. others in the cast are
FIFTY YEARS AGO
in four years 10 PER CENT OF THE booted the extra point. Before the unlfoim. saber pointed upward in
end of lhe third quarter Warren his left hand
Constructive independence and
revolver pointed
A Uit „u u
driven on the Ian Hunter. Claire Trevor and Jean
ENTIRE WORTH OF THIS COUN­ broke through the line and raced 55
self-centered recalcitrancy arc cnI ,Ku'c,ty's ,ou ,l the foot Of Jefferson St. Dixon.
. TRY
. yards for another touchdown. The
had ■WO Br*nds®ns_ln
I to secure second vein water. Samples
lirely different things.
extra point was; not
Mr. converted
Roosevelt on
saysWorld
that war
it is
anda a son'll! the Spanish , wlll
lhe Agricultural rol- George Raft and Deleree Barrj man
.
■ Three generations. Webber him- )rge tor analysis and should it prove
1 good investment to spend one dollar lhe play.
The picture revolves around lhe
WORDS AND DEEDS
The last quarter again found the
ifa»lhcrK. ’»nd,J1
lhe rl*hl &lt;lu*ltty the waler works
lo save ten—a vague generality to
problems of a "tough guy" who sets
"We al! know that our own fam­
local lads turning on lhe heal and father, all fought for lhe Unton. His p|ant
located there
holding their opponents scoreless. A mother's father was tn lhe War of
The Heatings house is rapidly ap- up a gambling layout tn a mansion,
ily credit depends in large part on which anyone could agree.
seeking
to pull the society trade
Applying this principle, therefore. passing game was uncorked by the ,812-. „____________________
। proaching completion and will be
the stability of lhe credit of lhe
Miss Barrymore, a society girl, aids
Mr. Roosevelt must Justify his 31 Bennettmen tn the last frame which
...;the flnest hotel ln
respects be- him in getting Um plgee In operation
United Slates. And here at least is ,
brought Coach Mlddlesworths men SUPT. VANBUSKIRK
I tween Jackson and Grand Rapids
billion spending program by polntand in giving It the proper "lone."
one field in which all business, big
lo their feet in a hurry.
iq nw tup pnnnnAu 1 ,c&lt;wrl ne*r
buUt»■’&lt;» &gt;■***
, lng out where he has saved or added
is aided by James Gleason.
The fleet feet of Charley Struble
business and the individual's is at
lo UN I nt rnUunAM of concrete walk at Nashville this Raft
Lynne overman and Edgar Ken­
. to the worth of this country a total and Clint Scobey, who played the
------------i wasonthe mertfy of our big government'
best game of hte career so far. kept Meeting in Kalamazoo to Pay I Dr- and Mrs. Lowry returned Sat- nedy.
of
310
billion
dollars
—
or
an
amount
down In Washington.
the
Lansing
team
on
edge
at
all
Tribute to Dr. Dwight
|
w,lh frtend* W
* "Now the credit of lhe family de-I1 equivalent to all the national
William PwuU and Carole 1Mtimes. Cleone Smith and Horace
pends chiefly on whether the fam­ wealth that has been built up in Angell furnished lhe bulk of the
B. Waldo
Miss Lombard visits the city dump
THREE SONS INJURED.
ily is living within ite income And the United Slates from 1776 to 1923! defensive power and kept the op­
to discover a "forgotten man" In or­
At
the
Central
high
school
audi
­
The three sons of Mrs. James
So far Mr. Roosevelt has not ponents from making the game a
this is so of the nation. If the natorium in Kalamazoo this. Thurs­ Lancaster. Hastings R. P. D. No. 4. der to win a prise. she finds him in
demonstrated where hte spending of lop-sided affair.
the
person of William Powell. Bhe
day. evening, stale and local edu­ were injured Friday evening when
lion Is living within lu Income, Its
The line-ups were:
31 billions has even created 31 bil­ Hastings (0)
----- — —
credit to good.
Lansing central
(27&gt; cators and many Kalamazoo civic lhe car their mother was driving wins the prize and then appoints
him the family butter, and Powell
and community leaders will join In
Draper
"If in some crisis, it live&gt; beyond lions in new wealth. *
L. E
Holmes a tribute to Doctor Dwight B. Waldo, got odt of control, crashed through finds he has to cope with one of lhe
The fact of lhe matter te that In- Cappon
L.T.
DeWitt president emeritus of Western Blate a guard rail and rolled down a 16- nuttiest families tn America. Tn the
L-O.
Code Teachers College and two other foot bank on the camp ground road .-upporting cast are Alice Brady.
■ unrelly terra, remporerll, on re.°‘
w“u'’-,M Ro°"' Bessmer
Angell
C.
Harper members of Western suite's facul­ four mites south of here. Paul. 10. Gall Patrick and Jean Dixoe.
! ran.»k rerm. But. 1! lit &gt; .pend•»*» nr»f.m
Brill
A
RG
Denise ty, Dr. William McCracken and suffered a broken arm. a deep cut at
■ Utrtll II throw! thrernion to th- ,n ■l“1M 4"Ml
15 “Uw,‘ Doxey
RT
Stemburg Dr. Ernest Bumham. who have the back of hte neck and possible tn■ WM,. u wlinn, u m.k. no urethra
•'hre.tlotu to t»&gt; TM. Ransom
R EDuncan served with Dr Waldo since the be­ temal Injuries. Nile. 14. has a brok­
en shoulder blade, two broken riba
L. H
Tycocki ginning of lhe college.
The story re vol vtsabout the oOttr’ u Ul In .preidhw. rxrer.a. &gt;u renin; ।14 ““
«■«ll" Ne» “•&gt; Struble
and minor cuts. Neal, twin brother ful escapade of a beautiful drew
Bothard
Hayes
re Ite limit ol ure p«&gt;pU'. pox' u , “
““ Aiterreut propt.!
Dr. Waldo was named as the
Scobey tC »
Bolster president of lhe college When it was of Nile, although thrown through model peeing •» «n OaMpMg hgirthe
top
of
the
car.
escaped
with
. pay and continues to pile up :
Hall
Warren first launched. He has been very
deficits, u is on lhe road to bank-1 Pungent Paragraphs
Substitutions: Hastings; c. Smith. successful and hte two associates minor scratches on lhe face. Junior bride at all but a girl accused
ruptcy.
i An Inventor has devised an appa- Moore. Kelley. McLeod, Edmonds. have cooperated fully and heartily Olllons. a neighbor of lhe Lancas­ of lhe theft al a valuable necklace.
LaBalluter.
Cbgswell.
caukin.
Ren- with him. helping him to win the ters, suffered minor cuts and Mrs. CMeter Morris is a taxi driver and
'Our federal extravagance and ratus that turns on the' radio at
Lancaster was unhurt.
in lhe supporting cast art Ltottel
nlck and Leslie Lansing Central;
Improvidence bear a double evil; 7:00 A. M. rings a bell, flashes a Bates. Brozany. Coryell, b. Brown. flne reputation pf that well-known
Blanttr and ftoyawnd Waibum.
college.
"A small boy's reactions at hte first
‘ first, our people and our business-light and blows a horn -Pres- re-1 Miller. Hilliard. Baldwin. Guy.Childs,
Among lhe speakers on Lhe pro­ sight of the sea are very significant.'
•A prehistoric tooth. 11 feet long,
cannot carry Ito excessive burdens of .port. WsYe not tn the market for Schuon. Perry and Wright. Official: gram will be superintendent David says a writer. But he is generally
raUon; eecond. our credit stnic- such a dingus, it might wake us up., R1!;er^e: J SpeeUnan. Mhaouri; uni- VanBusklrk of the Hastings city quite happy once it has been ex­ has been unearthed in Siberia " It
puls the six-deck special sanffwtth
re U unprerral bj Ite unorUxxtol -N LouU Brer-Tinre
.
’■ J
l“*a schools, who Is also president of the plained to him that the creamy
Michigan Educational Association.
breakers are not caused by soap.
dreamed.

Safety
Sala*
ARTMafed
Which Bray OiUieB
Should KtgdBy proclamation
Oov.
Frank
D. Fltogerald has set aside the week
of October 4 to 11 as "Fire Preven­
tion Week.' The purpose of thia is
to "endeavor to hare *1) the people
of Michigan
Individually
and
through various organizations dlscovsr and eorrret existing fire haz­
ards, promote measures of public
and private fire protection, extend
instruction ta fire prevention among
adults, as well as achooi children,
and arouse lhe people generally to
Lhe need tm habits of greater oare.'
Hr'e loss in Michigan ta 1135 to­
talled 67.Mt.Mg and the following
safety rules are advocated by the
Fire Marshal's Division of lhe De­
partment of insurance ta an effort
to reduce this amount.
Place Mores, furnaces and pipes
far enough from Walk and wood­
work to avoid overheating.
Cover UM neoreat wooden surfacas
with asbestos board, sheet iron or
Un; if iron oc tin Ls used, leave an
air space behind ll.
Whare stovepipes or healing pipes
pass through walls, enclose the
pipes ta galvanised Iron, double­
walled. venUlated UU«.Jes al least
13 Inches wider thv.'the diameter of
the pipes.
Never pou? kerosene into a coal or
wood stove, even when the Are is
out.
Never put ashes Into wooden boxes
or barrels; have a strong metal can.
Study the drafts and dampen
Keep children from playing loo
near the fire, screen or no screen.
Be careful not to Ute stove polish
on a hot stove; wail until it Is eold.
Don't allow rubbish lo accumulate
anywhere ta lhe borne
Always remember that you must
take no chancre with garoltae. It Ls
one of lhe most dangerous substanre* ta common use. It must al­
ways be kept ta tlghUy fastened
cans; never in glare bottles.
Do not use it for cleantag; get a
safe cleaning preparation.
Gasoline In quantity should be
kept in underground tanks.
Make sure lamps, stove*, heaters
that bum gu. and all pipes and
connections are Well made, tight and
free from leaks. When you smell es­
caping gas. first open doors and
windows, and then And lhe leak at I
once. Never look for a leak with n
hgnted match, lamp, candle or flame
of any kind. Use an electric flash­
light.
Remember that the human body
Is a conductor; do not touch wires,
rails or anything which may be
charged with electricity.
Do not have wiring done or con­
nections made by anyone but an ex­
pert and careful etectriclan.
Never drop a mkteh. cigar, cig­
arette or anything with a spark or

ett D. Alleo, Who Admita He Did It
Everett D. Allen, of Eaton county,
wu arrested by the Barry bounty
sheriff's officers Friday ta connection
with lhe ths ft of Dr. C- A. Lund's
ear, which wu taken from ta front
of Dr. Lund's office ta Middleville
last week Tuesday. The arrest was
mad* Friday night on the farm of
his courin. Clinton Allen, who lives
four mile* north of Hastings. Allen
is also wanted by lhe sheriff of Eat­
on county. It seems that two years
ago. on June 6. he grabbed off a car
ta that county but has managed to
elude the officers.
It appears that Allen hu con­
fessed that he took Dr. Lund's car.
It seems probable that he will not
be released to the Eaton county
sheriff, but wlil be tried here.
According to Allen's confession,
after taking the car he came to HuUng* and left our city on M-43. He
stopped at Royee Baine's oil station,
at th* end of lhe pavement, and
procured iix gallons of gu. He told
Mr. Baine that he wanted lo buy
some cigarettes. While Baine wu ta
his store getting them. Allen drove
away. He made a wide circuit with
lhe Lund ear. which wu finally
found ta a driveway near Barbers
Corners Friday night.

ILL HEALTH DOUBTLESS
UNBALANCED HIS MIND
Delbert Enxian, Living Sooth
of Cressey, took His
Life Bunday
Delbert Enzlan. age 69. who used
to live in Prairieville near Cressey
but of late resided south of that
plap*. over tho line ta Kalamazoo
county, committed suicide al his
home Sunday noon. He had been
suffering for some lime from 111
health and was greatly discouraged
over his physicial condlUon which
undoubtedly unbalanced hl* mind;
but It wu not thought by hl* family
that he would take that way to end
hl* suffering*. Mr*. Enzlan had Juil
left the house to go to the home of
her son across lhe road when she
heard the shot.
Returning she
found him sitting at the foot of the
cellar stairs dead. An Inquest wai
held to be unnecessary
Surviving
are the widow and six children. The
body wu removed to the Henton
undertaking establishment at Del­
ton. Funeral services were held at
two o'clock Tuesday afternoon at
the home, conducted by the Rev. B
B Belles of Richland. Burial was In
lhe Cressey cemetery.

It appear* that Mrs. Huey Long,
recently appointed to the Senate to
succeed to lhe post left open by her
late husband, bakes a very good
cake. Maybe congress could fi­
nance the bonus by holdtag a sals
on the lawn.

PRICE WITHOUT QUALITY
MEANS NOTHING

At the ‘Theatre

6IOJ- $59.95 Last Aerial

BUY PHILCO
QUALITY MUCHANOIH AT POPULAR PRICES

USED RADIOS, $5.00 to $15.00

WARD BAINE
• SHOWZOOMS AT LONG

b

MOORE S

�)36
an&lt;

ind

(R

«ty.
nty
id'*

ilia

len

car

Ml-.
not

He

nd
in

sran the night
rnniiB

THl HABTING* BANNWt, WTOMBAT, OCTOW1 1, 19*
discovered that there were butterfliU among th* flowers. He lit out on

Qhariaa

Boomer,

CELEBRATE THEIR
GOLDEN WEDDING

Kingsbury of Lansing. Homer Smith
of Hastings, Charles Whitaker of
Custer and Charles Beeman of Bast

K F W. Nows

Mr. and Mrs. Walter BMelThe Auxiliary held ite regular
man Held Open Honea
meeting Thursday and transacted
An invitation I* extended to all
Yeetarday
much Important business. The bays

Uful spoclmsns. altogether different
from anything wo have In Michigan.
wind* from the Padflc
I wished that I had a quarter of hte
who are interested io attend these
pep,
a* it wa* all I could do to drag
trials and to visit the bench ahow
through beautiful" forest*;" nW!
press with overwhelming weight
hope they never do u complete a job again.
down the mountain sides. Under this
ol cutting* to wu done in Michigan.
pressure the anow hardens into ice
We entered the park, getting anoth­
high atmosphere. We and the whole mass pushes down
Legion Pott And
er decoration for the windshield, a la In Chia
Into the valleys. Several of these
little before seven o'clock, and ar­ would be. walking along on top of glaciers are over six miles long.
Unit Activities
rived at our cabin* In time to see
the *un set over lhe icy mountain. dripping off .my chin. The only still so warm that jet* of steam come
After dinner, in the cafeteria wo at­ place you would feel at all comfort­ out of them and melt great caverns) Next Tuesday evening October fl
tended the tangers' lecture on the able would be your feel, when the through the edge* of the mass of
7
o,
formation of the mountain and ite enow went over your shoe tope. The Ice. Mount Rainier has been mildly Itlie Am&lt;,rlra” l^alon post and Auxglaciers illustrated with movies and regular climbers, who go up to the aoUve several times In lhe last ccn-1lllar? Unit are to hold a Joint Inslide*, we nearly froze reluming to top of lhe mountain, have to wear tury, the lari feeble eruption being i slallallon of officer* at the Legion
our cabins, as there are snow drift*
। roomi'
• P°l luc“ WP■ever*! feet deep all around them; with grease to keep from being
*“ *rlter P"**’ per at afx-lhlrty o'clock
but after building up a good fire and badly burned We saw some people
crawling In under, two heavy wool
The new Izgion officer* are: Com­
blanket* we forgot all about the and they looked like boiled owls, a* cheater boat leaving the dock, and mander. Adalbert oortrlght; 1st
cold till the next morning at *un- their faces wera a beautiful mul­ there wouldn't be another for three
berry shade, while the akin around hours. It looked as if we were going Vice-Comm., Leon Leonard of Del­
Mount Rainier. National Park, their eye* where it It was protected to miss our chance for a home cook­ ton; 2nd Vice-Comm.. Floyd Wood;
Saturday. July 18lh—Mount Rain­
ed meal which, after a week of eat­ Adjutant. Wm. Parker; Finance Of­
ier la Lite third highest mountain In
ing each meal in a different res­ ficer, Harry Larsen; chaplain, Cor­
the country, being only a hundred
taurant, had really appealed to us.
Officer
feel or ao leas than Mt. Whitney in thousand feet higher than the camp, However we got out. lhe map to see nelius Manni; Welfare
California or Ml. Elbert in Colorado. but we got beck far enough so we where Manchester was and found Maurice Foreman; Publicity, Harry
It appears much higher than 'll could look down on top of soma of that by going to Bremerton and Wood; Sgt. at Arm*. Forrest Smith;
really te. because its white peak 14.­ lhe glaciers. Ths viaw is beyond driving twenty-live or thirty miles Executive Comm.. Dr. B. C- Swift.
Dr. Robert Harkness and Bernard
408 feet above sea level, riaee over description and some of the pictures
we could make it; so we took the Reed
two miles above the surrounding which Leslie took through lhe pine ferry to Bremerton, —
We were glad
------ | Auxiliary officers to be Installed
mountainous territory. The base of trees with lhe glacier* in lhe back­ we missed.__ .____ __________ ____
rd the other boat ax the are: p™Mrs. sterling Rogers; 1st
the cone itself covers over a hundred ground are the most treasured of
one we found ourselves driving onto’ Vlce-Pres., Mrs. Dan Lewis; 2nd
square miles.
lhe whole trip.
was the famous streamlined. Diesel1 Vlce-Pres. Mrs. Cornelius Manni;
Paradtee Valley, where we stayed,
We finally got back to camp, but powered, Kaiakaia. which
r Secretary. Mrs. Pauline Bliss; Treaste only a little over a third of the found that we had lost David, or
two nights before rn the
' urer. Mrs. Henry Hubert; chaplain.
sray up lhe mountain, but ll te plen­ rather that he had lost us. We sat pageant.
Mrs. Don Foreman; 8gt. at Arms,
ty far for comfort, a* huge glacier* down on the porch to wait for him.
Thia trip was another thrilling ex­’ Mrs. Hazel Hinkley; Historian.. Mrs.
surround It on three side* and deep and then heard him talking In
Herrington;
Executive
drift* from last winter's snow are another cabin across the way. He perience as part of lhe Pacific Fleet• Donna
was anchored tn the bay and we had
everywhere.
had returned ahead of us and the a chance to examine the ships al1 comm . Mrs Harry Wood. Mr*. HarWe had been told that sunrise lady in the other cabin saw him close range. The U. 8. navy yard,; ry Waters and Mrs. Erls Jarman.
■ J
.
over Mt. Rainier la a wonderful come wllh his net and she called wtiere the ships are overhauled and
light, and I have no doubt it te. I him over. She was the wife of lhe many of them are built. U located tn
This week Thursday evening, to­
got up in time to aee it and built a professor of entomology In the Uni­ Bremerton and while passing It we night. lhe regular meeting of lhe
fire in the stove so It would be versity of California and her hus­
almost rubbed noses with the two Auxiliary will be held followed by
warm for us to drew and then band was up on the mountain col­
lunch and entertainment. Mr*.
crawled back under lhe blankets to lecting specimen*. From' her con- largest airplane carrier ship* in the Sterling Rogers, delegate. Ls to give
navy.
wail for the room to warm up a bit. versatton with Daye, you would
The road from Bremerton to Man­ a report of the district convention
When I woke U»e next time lhe »un | have thought they were life-long
held
on Sunday at Benton Harbor.
chester follows the shore of lhe bay
was well up; and even though we | friends. She insisted on getting
missed seeing it rise by an hour or | David's addreaa and giving him and was a beautiful drive. The
Sunday was Gold Star Mothers'
only thing that marred it was that
so. we did enjoy the feeling of it hers so that they could exchange Just as we were slowing down for [। Day. so the Auxiliary remembered
when we were dressed and out doom, specimens. We had been Invited to
Mr. Thoradaie's house, two car* were ji their five Gold Star Mothers with
We were quite late for breakfast a* lhe Thorsdale'*
summer
•home.
------- racing on lhe road trying lo pass|' appropriate cards. They are. Mrs.
— laid to
lo stop and feed peanutz to
toacross
--------- “the
*—’■*Sound
*
— Seattle, for .
from
’otKer “.7 the same"ume they Emma Bush. Mrs. Otto Miller. Mrs.
tame chipmunk* and nutcrack- dinner, and it began to look as if passed
- n 1 ua.'
er with"the .rmiult
l
. that
y we IMlnnle $»w,“ ,nd
OrBC'
era Dial seemed lo be everywhere David would never get through h.d m b.nl rmkr, «.d two )■»&gt;•
"“Ihluw
around tlie porch of lhe dining looking at the Professor's specimens med door*. As neither of lhe carslH“r'c&gt; °‘ Nashville.^
lodge. These nutcrackers arc about I or exhibiting hte own to the Pro­
as bin as a crow and they act a good 1 fewor's wife. However he finally did
deal like one. but they are about tlie break away and we checked out and w «ot tMto numter. W, -or, ,t.d 1
we got tneir numbers, we were giaa z..
, - .7.
. jSS
,. ,
color of. and arc marked a great1 started for Seattle.
that no serious accident resulted and I
*lle"ded tt®r°^‘
deal like, a blue Jay. They are sol When we crowed the Ntequally also glad that we were able to be In 'convention
'w’vpn,,on of
n1 the
“»• Legion
1*°,on and
*nrt aux
*’*’•tame that they will eat out of your river we parked the car and walked
illary at Benton Harbor on Bunday.
lime
for
dinner,
as
It
was
all
that
we
hand and even light on you if you I back up the river for about a mile
had hoped for and their home was a Dinner was served at the Hotel
have anything for them to eat, but; to the mouth of Ntequally Glacier,
; Vincent followed by the inlroducbeautiful
place
lo
spend
the
night.
if you don't, they perch up in the' I had always wanted to see what a
' lion of guests, Mr. Sullivan acting as
H. D. Cook.
trees or on the roof and tell you I glacier looked like right up dose,
' toastmaster. Mrs. Marie Schrumpf of
what they think of you. Tlie brisk 1 and ll was worth the trip up lhe
Niles stated that this year there
cold air gave us a good appetite arid ■ rocky trail to sec ll. The foot of,
। were 14.010 Unit
members In
we ate a regular lumberjack break- this glacier is an ice cliff about four
Michigan and lhe goal for 1937 is
1
15.000.
fast with oatmeal. Item and hot i hundred feel high and perhaps six ■
cakes and coffee.
j hundred feet wide. The river flows
| Ail of the rural one and two room
After breakfast we hiked back on out of the bottom of It from a semi­
schools in the Fourth District arc to
one of lhe trails up the ride of the i circular Ice cave about fifty feet |
. be presented with new United Stales
mountain, and. it surely was beautl- wide and fifteen feet high. The wa1 flag*. This will mean,86 for the ont
ful. Whenever we were not walking [ter te about the color of milk, lhe
'room schools arid two for the two­
(Continued from page 1, Bcc. 1)
through snow, we were walking ["boldr being catlscd by flne particle* of ------------------------------------------------------------ room schools .in Barry county. Mrs.
through beds of flowers of all kinds! rock'scoured from the bottom of lhe bench show will follow In every de- j Harry Wood was named u chair­
and sizes of the most beautiful and । valley by the rock* which the glacier tail lhe regulations of the American man for this county.
(triking colors you ever saw. There carries along wllh it. This glacier Kennel Club. Approval of this an- j Announcement of the place for
were signs posu-d around the camp, is moving or really flowing down the nual meet has twrn given by the A. I the November convention will be
warning you not to pick flowers In; valley al an average rate of sixteen :K. C-. with headquarters in New ' made later.
the iiark. As there were thousands , inches a day. However the lower end York City* • *----------------of acres of these flowers, Maude te al such a low altitude that the
Cups ara to be awarded lhe win-' SHOWER FOR MISS WILLITTS.
Miss Lucile Wlllilts will be the
could not resist the temptation and. warm air ismelting the ice more
;ners as premiums for the various
we brought back a small collection' than sixteen inches a day and in- ।classes. Several of the trophies have guest of honor at a shower to be
and now have them pressed in our! stead of\lhe glacier coming further Ibeen donated by local business men Riven Friday evening by Mrs. Lannes
guide book. I hope on Maude's ac-. down the valley each year, the face iand various organizations.
Kenfleld and Mrs. Burr Cooley at
Officers of the Club are: Proa.. W., the home of Mrs. Kenfleld. Mi-a
count that no government secret of it te really moving up lhe valley
agent ever reads this, a* she is a about 70 feet a year. If any of you :E. Behrens. Muskegon; Vlce-Pres. i Wlllttte will be married some time In
Elly good Cook and we would miss | are planning on seeing this glacier, ,J. I. Kennedy. Detroit; Secy.-Treas, October lo Clark Welker of Grand
around the house at meal times. don't wait too long or you will have :Beryl Bishop, Lansing; Asst. Secy..1 Haven.
at least.
1 to walk farther than we did. Il te a
We had worked up lhe trail for real walk and the sharp rocks will
perhaps three quarter* of a mile and I take more than Just the polish off
my heart was tuning up about 200 your shoes,
revolution* a minute when David. Ntequally Is one of lhe six great

(Continued from pare f. Bee. 1)

»

--"j. s

YMterday. Wednesday, was the
golden wedding anniversary of MT.
and Mrs. Walter Bldelman of Quim­
by and In observance of the day
they held open house in the after­
noon from two to four and tn the
evening from seven to nine.
Walter Bldelman and Mtea Minnie
Gaskill were united in marriage on
September 30. IBM at Dowling at
Oaskill. They have resided on their
present farm for the 50 years and
have been actively Identified with
community interest*. Mrs. Bldelman
being a member of the Quimby
Methodist church and Ladles' Aid
Society and ha* filled aeveral of its
offices.
Three children blessed the home
of Mr. and Mr*. Bldelman. one son.
Fred, who did seven years ago.
and two daughters. Mrs. Gerald
Nash of Hopkins and Mrs. Howard
Ware of near Hopkin*. There are
ilso two grandson*, on* grand­
daughter and two great grandson*
in the family.
Many friends called on Wednes*
day to congratulate the bride and
groom of fifty year* and all unite
in wishing they may be able to cele­
brate their diamond anniversary

of the Port entertained themselves
until the meeting was over and then young
were treated to frledcakes and cof­
fee. Thanks; Th* next meeting will Joyed and all joined
be October I. al which time nomi­
Reluctant Indeed wore we to lay
nation and election of Auxiliary officera wlU take place. Every member
te urged to be present.

Tonight is election night for post
members . A kefen interest is being
shown in this election and every
member is expected to be there.

■Comrade Vem Yarger. whose bam
was struck by lightning *everai
weeks ago. is building it up again.
He plans to give a grand born
dance when it Is completed.

YE OLDE TYME FRIENDS CLUB.
Forty-nine members and guests
were present to enjoy lhe splendid
hospitality of Mr. and Mrs. Dorr
Kenyon, at their pleasant home in
this city, on Saturday. Sept. 26. the
occasion being the sixteenth annual
reunion of Ye Olde Tyme Friends. I
Many a hearty and happy greetlng was exchanged among these
frtemte of many years and visiting
most thoroughly enjoyed.
A bountiful cafeteria dinner was
served to which Justice wu done by
all—no one apparently fearing the i
SLIPPED UNDER
addition of a few extra pounds, but
THE EDITOR'S DOOR. happy in the fine sociability of the
September 23. 1936. A. D. (After occasion.
Dawn)—At the gulch of Mr*. Keith
A short business meeting wu
Fox. beauty operator No. 13 In tlie called by our president. Mis* Minnie
city of Hastings, county of Barry, Matthews, and new officers elected
stale of Michigan, a bridal shower and committees appointed for the
fell on Miso Doria Ryan stop. Bunco
was cheated at by Misses Jerry Isenhath. Doris Ryan. Kilty Atkins,
3arb Trego. Bettie Relckord, Eu­
genia
LyBarkpr
and Margaret
Tolles.
Prizes' were disgustedly
grabbed by Dorjk stop! Lucile WUUtU reported oh rick list. The feed
bag was dragged In stop. The gar­
bage can was passed containing
chicken salad and crumpled cake.

BUTTER 3O‘
KINGNUT
OLEO

2 25c

GRAPE

FRUIT

5

26c

LADIES INVITED

J. REHOR

WE WILL ENJOY YOUR FATRONAM-FttoM 1314

JF’orni, Dressy and Practical

stop. The gifts were presented and
the Meyers 5c to 81.00 store was
well represented. The last straw
stop. Back scratching was enjoyed
by all stop. Knock Knock. Who's
there? Saul. Saul Who?
Saul,
there an t no more Period.

Separate or Twin
Sweater* at
I

S4.B8
Dmhi or

SILK BLOU8E8
g

Children'* All Wool S'

♦a to 44 at gia
Wool Scarfs

Sleepingwear

Waters Clothes Shop

5

WOMEN'S PAJAMAS
In Rayon, Balbriggan and

18749201

&gt;

will
------- I..,win Mad
*i**w *ww *wg**iwc*ww

Sweaters and Blouses

FIELD TRIALS AND

SHULTZ - FREEPORT

BOWLI

S4

GOWNS
From Balbriggan or
Oullng. at ........

•i

MEN'S PAJAMAS
Outing or Broadcloth

3

|j|,

BOYS* OUTING PAJAMAS ai1

Sportsmen
Deer Hunters
Out Door Men

'Carter'*" Union Suit*
CHILDMFN'H Bill, CHAHBMT

PLAY SUITS

Visit This
Store for

60'

Women’s Knitted

SOO
WOOLS

DRESSES
THE SMART AND PRACTICAL MUM
FOR FALL AND WINTIR

l|

AU Weol Wonted, ctato woven Drew.

• JACKETS
• BREECHES

• CAPS

High Grade

• Flannel Shirts

HUNTING
SUPPLIES
WINCHESTER MODEL "97"
REPEATER—12 and 16 0a.
REMINGTON MODEL 31A
REPEATER—12, 16 and 20 ga
REMINGTON Sportsman Auto-Load-

WINCHESTER MODEL 12 REPEATER,
12, 16 and 20 ga.t
WINCHESTER SINGLE BARREL
SHOTGUN ____

’26”
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»850

Sweet Potatoes 6 "&gt;«• 19c
HUBBARD
SQUASH
4cib

Spare Ribs

SINGLE and DOUBLE Barral Cunt, $7.00 fa $29.50

HEAVY DUCK HUNTING COAT$fi.5O

Remington, Winch«*t*r, Savage

'

Home Made — Pork

SAUSAGE

! 2Ock
Le« n and Meaty

lb.

|7C

PORK LOIN

FRESH GROUND

ROASTS
Pio PoH. O O c
Rib End
XbJL|^

Hamburg

2 «• 29e

HIGH POWER RIFLES
.22 Cal. Single Shot Rifle* $4.80 up
.22 Col. Repeating Rifle*, $10.85 up

G.E. GOODYEAR HDWE.
HASTINGS

FHONI 2HI

Of All Description*
Irtnti***

e WOOL HOSE

Veal Shoulder Roast “&gt;■ 23c

TTELDPAUSCH

T'MARKET- V‘-C17

• Phone

Ule Deliver \

In All Weights and
Colors

ALSO SOO WOOL
JACKETS and
BREECHES
for Women
LADIES' HEAVY
PLAID SPORT
JACKETS and
SKI PANTS
Come in and try on

some garments. You
ore welcome wheth­

er you purchase
or not.

The latest and best styles of Silk Dyumi from
the foremost manufacturer* ot popular price*—
$3.98

FOR SPORTS

designed by

PRINTZESS
Here** the smart topper you
have always lunged fur . . .
‘'Uumalurt" J* the new. toll,
tufted fabric that i* routing so
much furor in lhe world of
ne»s, »po&lt;t». mMuriag and in
town *m| you'll he fashion-

IXJK.

’24.75

OTHI* t*O*T COATS

WATERS

AH Wwl
’10°°.w’1275

Clothes Shop

M. fir F. STYLE SHOP

Stlling Quality Kttfit Ui tusy

New Silk Frocks
$2$8’

Bloomfield Fin*

♦7W

Dr*t**i .18.19

DRESS COATS
FUR TRIMMBD

♦I6”»24”*39’54”
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Frandt
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H ASTIHtS

�tUtotefa in UJ&amp;fafo

&amp;&amp; HARDWARE STORE
WARDS-HEADQUARTERS FOR SPORTSMEN!

Look Around • You’ll See More
Hawthornes Thon
Moke

WITH WARDS
EXCLUSIVE
NEW

SYMPHONY DIRECTOR
SPEAKER AT P. T. A.

Organizations

DOWN

Several Selection! by String
Trio Completed the
Program

Club will be held Friday at 1 o'clock
in the parlors of the Methodist
church. This will be an open meet­
ing with Dr. Emil Leffler, president
of Battle Creek College, giving the

A special meeting of Hastings
Chapter No. 7, Order of Eastern
Star, will be held Tuesday evening.
October 6, at the Masonic Temple.
Refreshmenu will be served after
the meeting.
Hospital guild No. 18 will meet
Thursday. October 8 with Mrs
Charlie Hinman on North Michi­
gan avenue. Please bring thimbles.*

with Karl Wecker of the . Grand
Rapids Symphony orchestra as the
speaker. He gave a brief outline of
lhe origin of orchestral instruments,
lhe purpose of which was not. he
said, to trace the history of music
but to show that it was not a prod­
uct put full-fledged and perfect upon
a market for general consumption.’
It is something which has grown
| as humanity has grown, reflecting its
1 various stages of development and
the conditions under which It has

In conclusion a trio, piano, violin
T-1-.wUno
_&lt;n “nd cell°- comPQ-’’^ of members of
DwHng Cemetery Circle will lhe orchestra though not represenlameet in the church dining room for tire of It. played a group of numbe": ”8‘*nUh D™ce." "Autumn

Rid, It
Away

AIRLINE
RADIOS

Red Head
Reliance

Shells
12-&amp;auge
Box of 25

Motorbikes!
Wards two-speed tuner
whizzes them by ... in
great big letters you
can read from your 50yard-line scat, across

lied Dead Long Range
Wards finest shell;
increases rsnge 15 to
20 yards; smokeless.
Maximum Load.

44

Rivenide Balloon Tiret
Broad Parking Stand
Roomy Trozel Saddle
Wide-Broced Handle-

•

Models for Men, Women, Boys
and Girls! Here's the ideal bike
for all types of riding, equal to
bikes selling elsewhere for as
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mudguards, the double bar frame,
the fork truss rods, the handsome
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Save Up to’/jon Wards Paints!
|

16»

OUTSIDE PAINTS

Certified Kalsomine
Finest quality. 5-lba.

WAIL FINISHES
Gas Radiant HEATER

607

USE WARDS BUDGET PLAN I

Reduced! Big

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29»

HOT WATER COIL
Heals water in furnace!
piece steel pl|Le!
gt

l«g»l

Stove Hoards

NEATSFOOT OIL

for ffour Heater

Specially reduced for this
sale! Big size and weight,
at a small price. Heats up to
3 rooms. Heating unit, cab­
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cast iron, for long wear.
Burns coal and wood.

SPARK PLUG

SEPARATOR

Wards Standard Reg. 00c.
| /■ f o
Good quality.
Savel
Naw Suprama Plvg . « » • • 45&lt;

Fast and thorough! Milk is
diluted with ice or cold water
... rapid separation! Valued

HOOFING

can buy! Save! Pt. .. Cl

like

Drain Pipa Solvent. . 19c

*the NEWI

1 lb. size. For frozen drains,
clogged toilets, and prevents
clogging.
.

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Savg on 8-Ponny Noil*I
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split! Dozen fc

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1O»7

18 Month Road King. 83.95
21 Me. Winter King, 34J5

DELIVER

FREE

ANYWHERE

Montgomery Ward
lit 124SOUTH JEFFERSON

PHONE 2691

Freeport. He had been in falling
health for several months and his
death was not unexpected. He was
born ln Carlton township. For 14
&gt;ears he was sexton of the Fuller
’ and Carlton center cemeteries.

C1RCLE NO. 7 ELECTS OFFICERS. Scott.
of Carlton township; a
Mrs. Robert Moore entertained 26 daughter. Mrs Earl McKibben of
members of Circle No. 7 of the Hastings; two brothers. William and
Methodist Ladles'
Aid
Society I Andrew of Carlton township, and
Thursday evening at her home on . two sisters, Mrs. Edwin Waite of
South Broadway. Mrs. Leroy Foster , Carlton and Mrs. Josephine Carpenwas elected chairman for the year ter of Hastings. Funeral services
and the other officers are: Mrs.; were held Sunday at the home at 1
Clarence Tester, vice chairman; o'clock and at 2 o'clock at the CarlMrs. D. Sharp, secretary and treas- ton Center church. Burial was in
urcr. and Mrs. Ellis Kelly, chairman 1 the Puller cemetery.
games and readings furnished the
------ '—-------- ------------ freshmenu were served by lhe host­
ess assisted by Mrs Sharp. Mrs.
Kelly and Mrs. A. R Van TH. Mrs.
Jay Blakney will be hostess for lhe
October meeting.

‘

DEATH OF LORA NORTON.
Lora G. Norton, aged 76. died on
Sunday at his home in Grand Rap­
ids. having been ill all summer. He
was bom in Syracuse. N. Y.. but
has made his home in Michigan for
many years, surviving are three
sons and two daughters, Gay Norton,

BIRTHDAY PARTY.
Miss Mary Louise Waring will ob­ Benedict of Hastings and Nathan
serve her first birthday Sunday wllh and Ralph Norton of Grand Rapids;
a family party. Her grandparents
from Grand Rapids and from Chi­
cago and several aunts and uncles
from Lansing will come to help her
celebrate.

WATCH
THIS SPACE

O-zz

Friday A Saturday Only

WARDS

Lloyd Allerding. aged 72.‘ a life­
long resident of Barry county, died

Kant Roll Clothespins
For C/iev. 26-33 . £ Excl

Heats 1 or 2 rooms. Brown
ripple-spray finish! Giant wickleos burners are powerful,
dean, economical! Leak proof
fual tank! Sturdy steel cabinet.
Burner adjusts to 5 different
temperatures. Big saving!

Circle No. 2. Mrs. Glenn tJensmore
chairman. A good attendance is de­

Reg. 3 He. Efficient cleanser—
won't harm your
4 Qc

Quality' ....... th.

with Oversize Wash

luncheon will precede lhe business
meeting. The ptograin of "Vacation

WHITE NAPTHA SOAP

Use before Anti-

Generators

lbs. of massive cast
iron strength I Thrillingly modern balanced
design. Lustrous . full
porcelain finish, triple
coated, easy to clean.

Rockwell. Surviving are the widow
and three daughters. Mrs. William
street, Ray of Battle creek. Mrs. Jay Erie
of Gull lake and Mrs. Earl Butler of

RADIATOR FLUSH

tool*

SLATE SURFACE

Range
52»r»

Stale

A..® nuMx&gt;H
uume wi»
meet with Mrs. Ernestine Edger.
Wednesday afternoon, Oct. 7. 1836.
Your presence Ls requested.

Coverall House Paint
Standard quality, gU $1.57

Sturdy cast iron frame, brass
finished. 5 double radiants of
fine ceramic tile. Approved
by the Am. Gas Assn.

George Harthy. east
Thursday. Oct. 1.

A meeting of the general L. A. S.
will be held at the social parlors of
lhe Methodist church on Wednesday

WARDS SELL HUNTING LICENSES

Forged Stee*

meeting. It was a successful be­
.
. ginning for the Central P. T. A.
Townsend plan meeting Episcopal &gt;'e,r The program for the October
parish house Wednesday evening.. meeting will be of a different type,
Oct. 7, al eight o'clock. Geo. Vose of ‘he school children putting on the
i Kalamazoo is to be the speaker.
Meeting of Advisory Board -• •*-home of Mrs. Brock. 130 E.
St.. Monday evening, Oct. S.
home was a mile and a half west of
Family Night for members of the I Hickory Comers, died Thursday last
Odd Fellows and Rebekah lodges . week, his death being due to a heart
will be held Friday evening. Oct. 3. aliment.
at the hall. The lodge will furnish ' **" —"-------- -­
meat and potatoes for the supper Michigan Agricultural college, now
and members are asked to bring one Hie State college, and had lived most

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Announcement
and
our

Sale

�tkb iuthmob wuona,

Thursday,

octomb i, w

Mr. and Mrs Karl Coieman spent
I the week end Ln Dapeor. Alma and

to visited in Detroit!

end.

Social Events and Personal Mention
J. W. Armbruster weal M Ohio
SXtarned^Moc?:
Monday on a business trip.
Ro* Taylor M Grand Raolda spent । d*T
HIM Mildred Angell was home
Monday
In
the
cUy.
'
Misa
Ada
Michael
at Detroit ipent
from CaostanUne over the week and.
Mr*. Betty (Mine was home from
**«k “» wlth Mias Nonna
Emil Tyden left Friday morning
[MMtaal.
for Greene. Iowa, to spend a week at ChtaM® over the week md.
MV. and Mr* Kim Staler ^jent1 Wte*too Merrick Ms* toen vteltlng
his farm.
I
** wwt* FU*&gt;n a few days
Edward Bollum. Jr, of Detroit Bunday with friends in Niles.
Mr. and Mr*- Harold phlUlpa are u'“ ***\
.
Mr*. Cordell* Sawyer al Flint te tn at- unite thia wook visiUng Mr. ■' Mr tad Mri R. M. Lambte rePhUilp*' parent*.
, tur»*d Monday from a vtelt to at.
Mr. and Mr*. Prank Andrus were J0hru ,nd neighboring towns,
Mr and Mrs. Edvard Bollum
Mrs. J. M. McElwain of Lansing in Traverse city the Aral of the
I
Planning to spend lhe week end
waa lhe guest Monday and Tuesday wook on business.
Mr.
and Mra. Charles Di Imo of Yjj*’ “L?04
°' B Bo‘lun» of
of Miss Mary McElwain.
W1U1
। "uifiTrbx ta,u, lataoMis* Rachel Caln of Lansing spent
the week end here with her parents.
Mrs. Forrest B. Lane spent Mon- ^c^taUcoUeg?kkX?«marl8id
Mr. and Mrs. Theron Cain
c^Je
« art and
Mrs. Ixura Clarke of Lansing is day in Saranac as lhe guest of Mr.

Walter Barnum and other relative*.
Mn. Gertrude Houvener u the
guest ef her daughter and husband.
Mr. and Mn. Curtis Butt, of Plym­
outh.
Richard and Hubert Pairchild of
Detroit spent Sunday with their
parents. Mr. and Mn Fred Falrchlld.
Miss Mary McElwain relumed
Bunday from Detroit, when she
spent a week of her vacation with
Miss Lucille Ksrmes and Mr. and
Mrs Harold Wright of Lansing were
Sunday guests of their parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Karmes.
Boutli Bend were week end guests of
Mr. and Mrs. George Green. Mr.
Wixom ia Mn- Green's son.
Mis. Pern Benedict, who has been
visiting in Hastings wllh relatives
for lhe past three weeks, returned

Mr. and Mrs. Luther Griffin of
Irene Rayner and family, last Fri­
day while enroute to Oxford. Mich
Mrs. Flory Mole of Greenville and
Mrs. Margaret Mote of Lansing were
guests last week of Mrs. Phoebe
Mote and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Alien.
Mr and Mrs. Arthur Livingston
Peter Stahl of Bowne were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs Henry WeavMrs. A. R- Van Til and children.
Linda and Betsey, are in Grand
Rapids this waek ax the guests nf
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Smith.
Mrs. Bruce Casper relumed Sun­
day lo her home at Walla Walla.
Wash, after a several weeks' visit
wllh her parents. Dr. and Mrs.
Frank Carrothera.
Mr. and Mrs Hugo Wunderlich
leave today. Thursday, for Atoka.
Oklahoma, to visit for a month with
relatives. Enroute they will visit his
sister in Lincoln. Nebr.
Mrs. Robert McClure Love of
Wallham. Mass, was the guisl last
week of her parents. Dr. and Mrs. R.
B Harkness. Mrs. Love attended the
air meet in Detroit before coming
here.
,,
j
Mrs. Winona Downing was home
from Lansing for the week end. She
was accompanied by Mrs. Corinne
Gould, who attended the Republican
convention in Grand Rapids Monday
and Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Larsen spent
Sunday in Lansing with Mr. and
Mrs. Theodore Kilmer and Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Barnum. John, who hkd
been visiting there for a week, re­
turned home with hte parents.
Miss Jeanne Cincebeaux has re­
turned lo Jacksonville. Ill, to at­
tend MacMurray college for Wom-

throe days, of Mr. and Mrs. W. L.
-Bellg. Sr, and son William. Jr., of
Chicago.
Mrs. Clara Lamoreaux of Fremont
eame Thursday u&gt; spend lhe week
with Mrs. L- J. Matthews and Mrs.
J. R. Hayes. Dr. Bert Amerman ac­
companied Mrs. Uunoreaux to Has­
tings. returning lo Fremont that
Mr. and Mrs. C. W Clarke. Mr.
and Mrs E. J. Huffman of Grand
Rapids, Mr. and Mn.
William
Kronewlller of Middleville and Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Fumtes of Nashville
spent Saturday and Bunday at the
Hayes cottage at Wall lake.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Eggleston were Elmer Warren
and Misa Lena Warren of Sunfield
Twp . Mr. and Mn. Harold Eggleston
and family of Grand Rapids and
&gt;4rs. Wlil Eggleston of Litchfield,
the latter remaining for a longer
ylstt.

and Mra. F. E- lAne.
i igr an(] yra waiter Snrdar have
Mr. and Mr* William McCall of' M IUC,U this week uT .nd Mrs
hteMmD£wMMre,\fiv&lt;McCall,U °* i HobMl Thon,“ ir'd *lx children of
hte motner, Mra. Mary Mccau.
Traverse cilv
Un. rnd M«boiw aIM&gt;U» Mr „,d U, L. Hare., .nd Mr
iT^te^vex T^Zta? for

*

A U Harvey of Grand

’I**11 Bunday with Mr. and
Ogden. Utah, where she will *P*na j^n Oh*rlte Hinman.
th* winter wllh relatives and.
frO(a oul
town wbo gt.

MM nrt Mwac! »a
Mrs Maui

Mr *n&lt;1 *tri- Moore. Mr. and
on . Mrs. Sam Gibbs, Mr. and Mn. Fred

8ar»c&lt;*1 oi

•PW’d lw0 w««ks wllh hte

Mr and Mn W N Chidester were

™ • enived last weak to

DINNER AT COUNTRY
CLUB ENJOYAILE AFFAIR

Dtnolsf sad OoRlrtct Wm
InterUtawoRl for tie

Mn. Q. F. ohlflester was Um guest
sister of Mm. Alice
lYeniif
at Chartotto friends Tuaaday.
Mtea Mabel Kall waa at her home
near Holland over Um week end.
MIm Mary Campbell visited In CELEBRATE THEIR
a ILVER WEDDING. Club Eighty*!
Kiluniwe Saturday and Bunday
MUs Evlda Williams spent the
Barry county friends of Mr. and
week end at her home in Battle Mrs Alonso Hilton will be Inter­
ested in the following account of profusion to decorate the clubhoua*
creek.
David and Loren Boyes went to their silver wedding anniversary
Katamasoo Tuesday evening on which appeared in the Saugus.
David VaU
Mr. and Mn. Alonso HHtan of 'enough players for three tables,
Vail of Muskegon visited
Mn. Harold Phillips and Mn. Guy
Mr. and Mn. E A- Burton over the 53 Chestnut street. East Saugus, ob- ,C. Keller winning the honors.
week end.
served their silver wedding xnnlverOut-of-town guests wsee Mr. and
Mra. Carrie Bchenkel of Owosso te sary yesterday afternoon. Sept. 20. ■Mn. James ironside of San Diego.
the guest of Mrs. Jacob Rehor for , al the Patterson pavilion. Lincoln ,Gallf. and Mr. and Mn. R. A.
a law daya.
j avenue when some 200 friends tanFrandaen of Ionia, who were enterMrs. Richard Green of Nashville dered a reception lo U»e couple.
vUlted her sister. Mrs Alonso Trim.' The pavilion was prettily decoThe committee in charge was
Tuesday and Wednesday.
&lt; rated in autumn color*, and the
Mr. and Mrs. John A- Wallace of 1 couple, standing tn a bower of cut ,Grooa. chairmen; Dr. and Mrs.
Gull lake were weak end guests of. flowers, received the felicitations of Prank Carrothen and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mn. Charles FWul.
thou present. They received a David VanBusklrk. Martin's flyeMr. and Mrs. A- L. Houvener at-; greet many handsome gift*,
tended lhe funeral of her brother- , An entertainment was presented
in-law al Prairieville Friday.
| by the Echo Mandolin Club of Lynn
These dinners have been pleasant
Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Harkness and Mn. Gertrude Brterly of Sau- . features of lhe program al the ciub,
spent Sunday in Charlotte the1 gus rendered several vocal solos helping to promote a friendly and
guests of Mr. and Mrs Muri DeFoe. Guaals were present from Saugus. sociable feeling so necessary ta a
Levant McIntyre and daughter. Lynn. New Haven. Conn, Marble- successful country dub Two din­
Mrs. Carl Perkins, of near Wood-1 head and Swampscott.
ners. one in October snd the other
land visited Mrs. Bert Tinkler 8un- [ Mn. Edith R. Freeman, preal- in November, will complete lhe pro­
day.
I dent of the Ladies' Aid Society of gram orgtnally outlined.
Mr. and Mn. Lorraine laenhath of &lt; the
East
Saugus
Community
Saginaw spent ths week end wllh church, was general chairman of FIRST MEETING OF
hte pargnu. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Isen- the reception, assisted by Mn.
BANNER 8. 8. CLASS.
hath.
J Elisabeth
Edmunds
and
Mn.
Mrs. Fred Johnson will entertain
Mrs. Harold Shaw (Theda Wolfe) George Gosselin on lhe decorating
the Banner class of the Methodist
of Grand Rapids called on her I committee; Mrs
Herbert Hatch
Sunday School at their opening
father and other relatives last Wed- j and Mn. Margaret Kelly, refraah*—
menu; Mn. Herbert Newhall, in I meeting on Tuesday evening, Oct. 11.
----nesday.
Lynden Snyder. Margaret Tolles charge of gifu. while ushen were I
and Geraldine laenhalh called on Mlu Virginia Hatch. Mn. Bernice
Bob walldorfl at Albion Sunday Hahlen, Mn. Olive Fairchild and Mrs Warren Roush end Mn. Oor-

Chapman
of Caro. Miss
nephew.
n
-nh''’'
j Blanche Spaulding of Muskegon;
Mrs. Charles Crookston of Middle­
mnk Whll&lt; of Caledonia;
ville ‘
------------------*" **
wU*'
*n&lt;*
M M Leo Sutton of Kalamarxx) and Mr.
Crookslon.
and Mrs. Blynn Hubbel and Mr. and
Mrs Ophelia O'Hatr left Wednes­ Mrs. George Klngsberry of Wayne.
day for UmlsvUla and Bardstown.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. James afternoon.
MIm Dorothy Baatr.
Ky . where she will spend a month and daughter, Evelyn, Mrs. p. M.
and serving; Rev. and Mrs W MayMr. and Mrs. c. W- Dolan and
Mr. and Mrs. Hilton have been Ian Jones, devotions; Miss Bertha
with relatives.
James and Mrs. Resell P. Stanton Mr. and Mrs. David 8. Goodyear
of Saugus for the past
Roy Finstrom who plays In tn or­ returned Monday night from New spent the week end at North port on residents
1----- s and both are prominent Stickney, program. Following the
chestra tn Ludington visited his York Oily.
pot luck supper and business meet­
a fishing trip.
work of lhe East Saugus ing. there will be a "song fest" pre­
parents. Mr. and Mrs. C- F. Fin­
Eddie Gamble of lhe Durfee dis­
Miss Margaret Merrick.
who charch.
strom. Monday.
ceding the program. Members are
trict returned home Tuesday from teaches in Royal Oak. spent SaturThey
were
married
In
Hastings.
Mr and Mrs. Harold Foster re­ Pennock hospital. HU mother. Mn. i day with her parents. Mr. and Mn.
asked to bring suggestions fcr work
Mich . Sept. 20. 1811. by the Rev. the coming year. Guests are invited
lumed Tuesday from Chicago, where Edward Gamble of Grand Rapids, is Wayne Merrick,
John W. Sheehan of lhe Hastings
Mr. Foster attend a live stock mar­ caring for him.
■, ■■-u. n-u
— and Mr and Methodist Epicopal church. Mr. and prospective members will re­
‘ring
himMrs Jacob
Rehor
keting meeting.
Mrs. A. A. Anderson and Mrs. Fred 1 Mrs. Floyd Rice were Sunday guest* Hilton la a member of the Nashville ceive a hearty welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Simmons of HHl of Grand Rapids and Mrs.: of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bessmer and
Masonic lodge, and Mrs. Hilton ia Mrs. J. M- Townsend; Vice-Frei
Kalamazoo were Bunday guests of T. David French of Middleville were “
•
• • of- ■Owosso.
Mrs. Carrie
Bchenkel
president of the Women's Home
Mrs. Ruth Baine. Mr. Simmons was
Miss Grace Pierson; Becy.-TTeas
lhe guaata of Mrs. cliflord Brainard
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kline and Missionary Society.
a former high school coach here.
in Battle Creek Monday.
George Huffman of Detroit were
They have two children. Ordway
Mias Margaret Murphy of South
Mrs. Warren Rouih.
Mr. and Mra. Kenneth Laberteaux guests Friday and over the week end Hilton,
scoutmaster
of
Saugus
Haven and Carl Eckstrom of New
and Mr. and Mr*, a. L Brown at­ of Mr. and Mrs. G- F. Chidester
___ _ M. ___
_ _________________
Troop
and Miss
Hasel Hilton.
Carlisle. Ind., spent the week end
tended the Michigan Slate-Wayne
Mrs. W L. GeUton of Highland *n officer In Saugus chapter Order PAST MATRONS' CLUB
with Mr. and Mn. George Green.
ELECTS OFFICERS.
University football game at Lansing Park was called here Tuesday by the of the Eastern Star,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Huizenga of Saturday.
The Georgina Bauer Past Maserious Illness of Mrs. Ben Blakney.'
-----Barlow lake and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
ANNOUNCE MARRIAGE.
IUona' Club of Barry county we*
Wlllte W. Crocker and daughter who ta suffering from heart trouble.
Fuller of Maple Grove were Sunday
Bessie of Hudson. Mich, spent a
Mr. and Mrs Emerson Stauffer
guest*
of Mr. and Mrs. O
Den
Lewis.* . t9w
,U
Mr* Mid^wParker
PennffiovUlu^&lt; hlc
hu *°n ' and “n R°n*ld «rre Sunday guests marrl&gt;ae of Mtea Chrystal May I
f.wr davs lhU
this we&lt;k vtattlnv
brother. Rev. E. L Crocker and ! of her parent*. J4r. and Mrs. Ray weaver and Llovd L Victor?™ ; NoMf ctupur or HkWrr Comm
Knyee21
and
K,,prer 01A1Jord 1. Vlowrv on 1I
Toml.-Hro enjor.d
Sunday P. M, Sept. 20. at the Meth­ the bountiful pot luck dinner and
T*n^Ken "ctark’^ and1 i^^molher *l
Crocker homf
1 Mr- and Mrs. Nelson Gardner were odist parsonage al Blissfield. Mich., the afternoon was spent with visit­
with tlie Rev. Alfred Eddy officlat- ing and various business matters.
m2 aKj Cterk of Twonto and MLm
W J Watkln» «P*nt last: lhe week end guest* of her parents. ln.
nlivA rSrk of Grand R^n^s were I ***k ,n Wyandotte with her daugh- ’ Mr. and Mrs. William MUke. Nelson ,nL
As It was the annual election of
slnSay Sanin, Xi X.
'। Ur
h,le Mr
‘ns *
“ U
“ M 8 C
E“l Un‘ i The bride te the daughter of Mr. officers the following were chosen:
ter.' norence
Florence,' *
while
Mr. W&gt;Ut
Watkins
was
---------- । an&lt;1 Mfa. JDealle H. Weaver. 410 So.
-- ----------making Ids annual tour of the mid­ Un«
Mr«. O»rdn,r U U&gt; B.UI«
meuw. u&gt;d » Pres, Mrs Georgina Bauer. HasMrs. Forrest B Lane.
Ungs;
Vlce-Pres, Mrs Lillian Vance,
hu been employed |
0, lhe Hullncs High
dle division of the Michigan Central Cr,k. where
Mrs. L. H. Evart* and Mtes Agnes
Railway In the Interests of the Or­
••• &gt;*"•■
___ I whool In u&gt;e cleee e( ». Mr. Vte- Nashville; Secy.-Treas, Mrs. Nellie
Sim leave Sunday for their western
Mrx. ..
Ray
Lacy and Mrs. Emma
der of Railwsy Telegraphers.
........................
* 1 tory. ncenlly or Kelomuoe. U * Cross. Hastings.
trip. They will spend six weak* in
An mviutioii was extended by lhe
Kllpfer of Alto. Mrs. Lydia Simpson native of Connecticut and a grad­’
Colorado and lhe remainder of the
la visiting her parents, MT. and of Freeport and Orson Simpson of uate of the East Maine Conference Freeport Chapter to meet with them
winter ai PaaA'dena, Cal.
Mrs. John Barker. On Bunday Mrs Washington. D. C, were Tuesday seminary at Bucksport. Maine. He' for the May meeting and their in­
Mrs. J. P. Mohler. Mr*. John C.
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Emer­ attended lhe University of Akron, vitation waa gratefully accepted.
Long.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Barker
and
Ketcham and Mrs M. J. Cross at­
son Stauffer.
at Akron. Ohio, and the Chicago
tended a luncheon mealing of Re- Omer Barker visited Mr. and Mrs.
Those here from out of town to Musical College, also W. S. T. C. JAKE MILLER ON
Kbllcan women Monday at the Leo Shoemaker at Wayne. Mrs.
ALMA FOOTBALL TEAM.
Shoemaker te also a daughter of attend the funeral of Lora O. Nor­ at Kalamazoo.
ntlind hotel in Grand Rapids.
Jake Miller, aon of Mrs. Maude
ton on Tuesday were: Walter Nor­
Mr. and Mrs. Barker.
.
After a wedding trip to the Great
Mr
and Mrs. Frank
Adair.
ton. _______
Chechango
Forks....N. -Y
John L^kes Exposition at Cleveland and Miller of 429 W. Apple street, is a
Rev. e. L. Crocker and family at-____
_________
. .--------Charles Young and Mr. and Mr*.
good prospect for a position as half­
Harry Young visited Mrs. Henry tended the funeral services for Mrs.1 and Oman Walers. Tustin; Mr. and to Niagara Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Vic­ back on the Alm* College team this
E F. McCarty al PitUford. Satur- | Mrs. Clyde Densiow and Mrs. Amy tory will make their home in To­
Phillips Of Battle creek on Sunday.
day. Mrs. McCarty, a prominent Parker. Mt Pleaaanl; Mr. and Mrs. ledo. Ohio, where Mr. Victory is em­ season, according ta Coach Gordon
Mrs. Adair staying for a longer visit.
Macdonald. Jake, who is a junior
worker in the Wesleyan Methodist | Charley Parker. Blanchard; Mr. and ployed with the Toledo Blade.
Mrs. Cora Dunning and aon. Hkrat the Presbyterian college. Is very
waa instantly killed in an 1 Mrs. Paul Waters, parchment; Mrs.
old. returned Friday to their home church,
fast and an exceptional puntar. In
automobile accident four miles | Roy Hamilton. Battle Creek; Mr
ENTERTAIN8 SMALL GROUP.
in Whiting, ind, after a few days'
north of Jackson last week Wedncs-1 and Mrs. Nathan Norton. Mr. and
Mrs.
W
L.
Hinman
entertained
a
Mrs. Ralph
Mr. "•*
and Mrs.
day.
--------------- "Norton.
—— *'Dunning and Mrs. Kerr are sisters.
small group al bridge on Friday eve­ conference team of the south cen­
Mr. and Mrs. William Smith had joel Norton. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Nor­
Mrs Lizzie Laubaugb and Mrs.
ning. with Mrs. Edgar Brooks win­ tral high schaol athletic association
as guest* last Thursday hte brother. ton. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Van Am Berg, Mr ning lop score and Mrs. Harry Cross Miller te sura of a permanent place
day) for Chicago, where they will Nicholas and son and his wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Pedley. Mr. and
and
Mrs.
Willard
Smith,
of
Banta
Fe,
visit for two weeks wllh Mrs. DuckMrs. Elmar Thompson. Mrs. Myrtle
er s daughter and husband. Rev. and New Mexico. They all were in
Grand Rapids from Friday till Bun­ Hershberger. Mrs. Jennie whitting.
Mn. Roy Shut!.
Charlie Hershberger. Rudy and Ar­
Mra C. W. Crawford relumed day attending a family reunion at
thur Thies. Peter Franks and Chan­
Sunday from Chicago, where she the home of Mr. Smith's sister, Mrs
cey Norton of Grand Rapids.
spent two weeks with her daughter, Camille Van wengen.

The BIG

Mn. Robert Jessen. Mr. Crawford
spent the week end Uwre returning
with Mn. Crawford.
Mn. Dennis Murray. Mrs. W. L
Shutters. Mn. R. T. F. Dodds and
Mn. C. W. Wes pin ter spent Mon­
day with Dr. Murray in Grand Rap­
Ids at the home of his daughter.
Mrs W. H Thwaltes.

LITTLE

Friday, Oct. 2

LEKTRO’SHAVt
IHTWUTE

yea

had. Traly, Faekard to *e

Bauwe......... IT MAI
SHAVES YOU CHAN!

T. S. BAIRD
HASTINGS
PHONE 2396
MANglACfgaU 8V IICTHtMH FIOaUCTI CBMPANV;FtlCllltN

Golden Wedding

the celebration as well as flvt nepto-

The golden wedding anniversary
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. WooUton
was celebrated Saturday afternoon
Young People s Fellowship etocted
al the home of their oldest daughter. the following officers:
Mrs. Monte J. Smith. 1000 South
Park street. The house was prettily
decorated with yellow autumn flowpresident. Paul Bataa
rted out throughout lhe two course Robert Burch,
luncheon, which was served ta S3 I
relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Wooblon received 1
many gifts and cards to remind
them of the happy day.
. , j
Charles E. Woolstcn and Carrie '

SPECIA
NOONDAY LUNCH

sister, Mrs. Thomas Tungate at Parmalce. They have resided In Carlton
township north of Hastings for lhe

levs, Mrs. Monte Smith of Hastings i
and Mrs. Minnie R. Falconer of In lng Twp, three sons. Frank C.
Wootelon of Kalamazoo. Robert M I
of Carlton Twp, and George D. of1
MUo. They also have eleven grand-.
children and six greal-grandchll-

DINNERS
5:30 to 7:30 F. M.

SUNDAY DINNKRS
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.

PARKER HOUSI I

STORE

Saturday, Oct. 3

PEANUT BUTTER j

Haas will attend lhe M. B C —Uni­
versity of Michigan game at Ann
Arbor Saturday.
Mixa Evans------will go
------------------------------------to London. Ont. to visit her aunt ftjr
8 week and Mr. Haas will visit
friends tn Buffalo.

"Doni

Neglect

Cream Nut
Fino Quality—

jfc

lb.
Jar

I

Their

REED’S

Eyes

Vitamin Products
COD LIVER OIL, plain or mint, pt. 69c

They’re Back In School
Have Their Eyes Examined !

Porka-Davis Halivor Oil Capsulaa
Plain—■« el 50........... -BTc
of 100................—-I1.5T

Parke-Davis Hahver Oil Capsules

Children do not hove the understanding or oxporionca
to toll what’s wrong with thorn, so It’s up to you to
mo that it's NOT thoir eyesight.

Fortified—Bex of 50 ..SI.09
Box of 100______ ____.$1.97

SQUIBB COD LIVER OIL

Poor eyesight can

ruin a child's chances of being bright in school . . .

IS YOUR CHILD HANDICAPPED?

Bring them in

for a complete eye examination.

12 ee.___

.SU»

SQUIBB ODIX TABLETS

89c

SQUIBB YEAST TABLETS

49c

ALL OTHIR POPULAR VITAMIN PRODUCTS
AT MONEY SAVING PRICKS

DR. ALVA RUFF, Optomstrist

BESSMER’S
Jawtlan and Opticians

REED'S
HA1TIIMS. MICHIGAN

HASTINGS
PHONI 2241

PHONE 2634

Nearly % of • Ceetury of Continuous Service

Marshmallows
it. |7c
Matches Ohio Blue Tip 6 boxes 23c
Cracker Jack
4 Uta. I5c
Ovaltine Regular 50c She
35c
Bran Flakes^* 3 Um 27c
Butter MIDDLEVILLE
u 37c
Beef Roasts
*. I7|c
I8|c
Sliced Bacon
Pork Chops ^cm e 23c

HINMAN’S
Hastings

PHCNI mi

Michigan

ZENITH RADIO
It will be a revelation to you to know just what the
NEW ZENITH will do in the way of ptling far­
away stations, and its tone quolitiM and selectivity
in tuning, together with the split second arrange­
ment mokas it a leader far ahead in Its field. The
way the public has accepted and purchased this
wonderful radio is the reason why the Zenith Co.
had to add ta Its already large equipment
two million dollar factory this last year.

MILLER FURNITUR
HMTIMS

�FIRE

The annual L. A- 8- chicken sup­
per will be held at the church baaement on Thursday evening. Oct. g.
Mr. and Mrs. E. G- Smith were at
। Midland on Saturday and Sunday.
I Mrs. Clement Long and son. How|ar and wife of Virginia, have been
, vLslUng Mr. and Mn. Wm. Brooks

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

ERAGED 11 CENTS
PER &gt;1,000

Our Service

■

Al the P. T. A. meeting last Fri­
day evening Mrs. Orpha Richardson

IN BARRY
CO COST
WAS
2™ CENTS
ON $1,000
!"* Mra A,lc* ch“*
The State Has Footed Larg­
er Share of Relief Bo
Far in Year 1036

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co.

The Halting! Banner

,nUr«t.W-

trips, the former tn Upper Michigan
and the latter concerning her trip
out west. Tlie school children gave
an Indian play and light refresh­
ments were served.
.
S. R. Aldrich, of Stroh. Ind., will
preach here next Sunday morning.

,8‘A%

I tn Michigan cost lhe Michigan tax­
I payer? For the . average property
I owner In the state during July it
amounted to 11 cents for every $1,000
the counties and local municipali­
ties contributed, according to a

SHELDON'S

Saturday.
Our sympathy to Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Jenkins and children in the
loss of their baby. Homer Ralph.
Mrs. Bertha McKibbln of Has­
tings spent last Tuesday^wlth Mrs.

"during the first seven months of
1936. approximately 61 per cent of
all relief costs were borne by the
.•tale government through diversion
of sales tax collections. Total relief

ABSTRACT OFFICE

GRANGE PROGRAMS

amounted to $13,222,772. The state
paid $8,065,891 of this bill which
amounted to 28 per cent of the totai sales tax collections, consequent­
ly. in addition lo the 11 cents paid
trice Hooper of Battle Creek visited
by property owners for every $1,000
Rally Day la October 11 at our Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Harrington
of assessed valuation for lhe local
Sunday.
contribution to relief, eight mills out Sunday school.
Bob Knight and Glenard ^arl
of every dollar spent by any one In
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
HENDERSHOTT.
Michigan for commodity purchases
Gene Myer.
went to pay for the state's share of
Mr. and Mrs. John vanSyckle. Mr.
and Mrs. Elwood VanSyckle, Mr. and

K E LVINATO R
SALES AND SERVICE

Lansing. Catherine McAdams and
Maurene VanSyckle of Saginaw
Albert Brill went to Oberlin. Ohio, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
with Richard DeMott and spent the Wm. .VanSyckle and helped Mr.
week end wllh relatives. He says lhe VanSyckle celebrate his birthday. .
Cleveland Great- Lakes celebration
has drawn such crowds that every
available room as far away as El­
yria and some in Oberlin have been
rented and people have lo ride Into
Cleveland on trains to get in. It look

H. E. Smith Hdwe.

"In some counties, or course, the
actual cost to taxpayers was much
less than the state average. In Mon­
roe county in July, for example, it
amounted to only $02 per $1,000. in
Eaton. $.03. and In Calhoun. $.08 In
July." In Barry county It was 2 1-2
cents per 81.000 of county’s valua­
glon section of the great parade to friend In Australia without raising
tion for July of this year.
pass through tlie streets. People your voice." says a writer. In fact,
even rented dry goods boxes to all you have to raise Is the money.
stand on to get a glimse of the pa­
rade. As high as one hundred dol­
lars has been paid for a room In
Cleveland.

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock

CARDS of THANKS

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FOIM TRUSS

thirty-four present and they had a
fine time in spite of lhe bad weather.
The L. A- 8. are planning a chick­
en supper Instead of having their
regular meeting in October.

Roll[HALF-

HASTINGS MARKETS

Strickland district were Bunday eve­
ning visitors at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Bordy Row lader.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Clark and
I Alice Ann Hinzelman. of Jacjuon
spent Sunday wllh Mrs. Le^ia Ad-

OLD

June Gross spent Sunday night
with her grandparents. Mr. and

ADjUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pods
No Leg Strap*

Howard Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Whitman and
Mr. and Mrs. Dorrance Shaffer of
Battle Creek were guests of Mrs.
Nellie Wolf Sunday.
Clayton Webb of Gun lake. Ar­
thur Webb of Battle Creek. Mar­
guerite Mills of Nashville and Bea-

The Prescription Drug Store

Foil SALK—Nhruirabir" ram ttrnr Winter
Wyandctltr rr.ekrrrla. 1’Stvr
K*rt Tub....

Farmer!, Attention!
X will pay the HIGHEST MARKET

FARM FOR SALE

Men—$21.20 to Start
Copper, Aluminum,

New pion.

Not convening.

Write or opply Fuller Bruth

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

Company, Crond Ropid,, Mich.

SPECIAL SALE of
USED CARS and TRUCKS

FOR HALF Oak ilintnc table “phJn!
.torr
Mr.. W. 11. Rott.lt
344S.
WANTKIF— Frw da,, old ..If
’’in s 1
Si.brde
I’bor.r 72B- F«l
FOR HALF.—lull (■■■Ml year ■■bl
Iirtie. Of, rrltle r-arli. Au*ltli m-hanO.
•i mil. rant Haiti* Urn.. I'i-i
FOR HALF—Part of my lol in CH-r.idr
rrtnrtrry. AUo |i(Iit «a(nli. I.T-'t* H. ■
■Fanny rr 1‘hitnr i'.tl'.l
FOR HAI.K—Yrarllny IlvUtaln bull. F.
F Xtrhol.
Phon* 720—P&lt;l.
10 1
FilR HALFr»— and 1
I'h.-nr
Hbro|&gt;abir» Lurk. A t. t’lar
|O 1 i
745—FIS
LOST— Hraglr imp. our innuth
mil* wr«l of Ryan arhnoIbMi. r. Horn
a rd FEran. Rout* 2. Howard

THIS WEEK THURS., FRI. and SAT., OCTOBER lit, 2nd, 3rd
Greatly Reduced Price! on Our Complete Stock of Cars and
Truck! to Reduce Our Stock before 1937 Model: Appear!

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

AUDITORIUM",*"
EMERSON ROYER

$225.00

No. 1274-1934 V-8 TUDOR SEDAN

$350.00

No. 1127-19^5, V-8 FORDOR SEDAN ..

$475.00

No. 1290-1929 OLDSMOBILE COACH

$145.00

No. 1218-1934 V-8 DELUXE FORDOR .

Ono„&gt;D,v Wednesda

MONEY FOR FALL!

No. 1277-1932 V-8 FORDOR SEDAN

No. 1288-1929 MODEL A TUDOR
No. 1299-1933 V-8 TUDOR (new motor)

JERRY ANDRUS

WLS

Fidelity Corporation

On Parade

GENEBAL IXSCXANCE

No. 1292-1929 MODEL A FORDOR

$375.00

.$ 95.00
$335.00
$125.00

No. 1295-1928 HUDSON COACH

.$ 35.00

No. 1245-1928 PONTIAC COACH

.$ 35.00

1936 FORD V-8 Deluxe Fordor Sedan Demonstrator
Lulu Belle and
Skyland Scotty

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

bE feldpauschs

POSITIVKLY'

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO

MARKET. Phon* 2616
FOOO CENTER 2609
H. Fefdpauech • 3921

Equipped with Rodio. White Side Wall Tim. Chroma Wheel,
Only 4.000 Mila.—naw in June.' 1»3«. Salla
S££E.0C
naw at S863.OO—A BARGAIN at OOU

GEO. M. NEWTON

PHONE 2121
AUDITORIUM, GRAND RAH DS

Ford Dealen

HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, OCT. 1, 1936
loodwwoooteowoeooqt

rSafwiia

Barry Bypaths 8
By JANE CAMERON

POLITICAL NOTES

ft

Frank Spark*
TeihOfi'M

SECTII

Well Known Couples Celebrate
Their Golden Anniversaries

Riley

DEMOCRAT
i The Banner mentioned last week
IICHIGAN WAS RIGHT Tfi
Many of the older resident* 1
"Forcing" tbe Farmers.
that Prank M. Sparks, editor of the
There is a aet speech being de-1 □rand Rapids Herald, gave a fine
ity will remember Um time
livered in this slate that the farmers । talk al the Hastings Rotary Club on
of Michigan were "farced" to com­ Monday of that week. Mr. Sparks
ply with the AAA provisions, while I conducts Ln his paper on the editor­
tour, accornj
they were tn force, whether they ial page, a column headed "Reflec­
U. 8. Lags Behind.
wanted it or not.
tions of an Editor." In that column
sliver campaign of IBM. At any rate
ollywood calif
Through lhe September and Oc­
We can't imagine how the Repub- [ in the following Thursday’s Issue of
when the train stopped, it WM'
—What I saw at the na- tober canning season the country
llran high command thinks that the Herald, he commented on his
boarded by Merrick Heed, a flrrt
housewife's song should be "Home
story is going to gel over with the ( visit to Hastings as follows:
tional air races in Los Angeles On
claiu mechanic and a loyal Civil w*»
tin Range."
farmers. No one had to comply with i Went down to Hastings Monday
veteran. Merrick marched up and
set me to thinking. It's a dan­
the provisions of the AAA unless I to talk to the Hustings Rotary club.
ehook hands with the General say­
Had
a
bully
time
although
I
missed
gerous thing—thinking is—
they
did
so
voluntarily.
Thousands
t
Even our car has taken up that
ing as he did to. " General, X waa
some
of
my
old
friends
there.
Dear
of farmers did not. Other thousands ’
and nearly always upsetting to crazy "Knock, knock" game.
old
Phil
Colgrove
is
no
more.
It
was
did. BUT NO ONE HAD TO.
the battle field." The General re­
the peace of mind.
Phil,
you
know,
who
days,
nights.
A gentleman named Ripley—not
Just
why
the
story
is
told,
we
1
plied. -comrade, I am pleased to
I'm thinking that no 'onget Is the Robert of "Believe It Or Not" fame,
don't pretend to know. It will react i Sundays and holidays talked and
navy our first line of defense nor j but Charles Ripley—has an all-elecagainst those telling it. It will make 1 worked for good roads and more
started on thia tour 1 have mrt
the army the second
trie house. Everything from cooking
no votes for Landon. It will disgust good roads. I don't think Phil ever
nearly a hundred soldiers who car­
line. I'm thinking
lhe spinach to putting out the cal
I those who know the truth and there came to Grand Rapids without
ried me off the battle field.”
dropping in to see me. I mLss his
that the chief peril—
is done by pressing a button. It
Isn't a farmer in Barry county who
calls
and
I
certainly
missed
him
and the chief securi­
would be some mix-up If you pressed
doesn't.
TO DISCUSS FEDERAL
when I was In his old town. I missed
ty from that peril—
the wrong one sometime. He has
Why spread such preposterous big Bill potter—excuse me. Mr. JusBOIL CONSERVATION^
, taken most of the drudgery out of
So. Mr. Parley, will you tell us ' yarns when there ore real issues to
Questions pertaining lo lite gen­
housework for his wife, and gets what you have said concerning the i discuss? The Republicans could well tlce Potter—also. They tell me BUI
And of all the
or Mr. Justice or something or other
reduced rates because he uses so post office department?
Over one hundred fifty guests al- . mazoo. Mrs. Izola Dunn and Mrr.. eral outline of the 1837 Federal flat*
make Federal spending an Issue. 13 improving greatly and will soon
Conservation program for Barry
much electricity. After a meal you
Mr. Parley:
It is an issue and the issue Ls be his own seif again. He had a tended lhe celebration of the golden Frances Erway of Hastings, t Mrs. county will be dlacuaaed by County
put the dishes in an electric dish­
wedding anniversaries of Mr. and 1 Edna Burkland of Ann Arbor. Mrs.
In a radio message lo President [ whether
Federal spending
and pretty close enough call at that.
fully behind In lhe
washer and presto! they are done. I Roosevelt. July 20. 1B34. I said:
Mrs. Fred Otis and Mr. and Mrs.1 Bessie Slddell of Hillsdale. Mrs. Lu- Agricultural Agent Harold J. Fos­
matter of airplane
: Roosevelt measures have brought
But some of my old friends were Wm. Havens at the home of lhe lot- elite Lletxke and Mrs. Catherine De­ ter at a general county meeting ta
&lt;1
can't
remember
whether
it
seta
j
"When
I
assume
the
office
of
.back prosperity. Whether our na­
protection. It would
the table or not.) If a mosquito or , Postmaster General' you expressed tional Income has increased suffi­ there Just the same. Mort Town­ ter. where they kept open house Vries of Lansing and Robert al the court house, Thursday. Octobei
fly annoys you, press a button and lhe desire that the postal service ciently to justify Ute spending is send led the singing and he always Sunday afternoon and evening.
1 home.
At this meeting Barry count,
presto I a death ray kills It. Might be so conducted that the revenues what every person will have lo de­ can do a good Job al that. Kim Sig­
Tills event was preceded by a
The family of Mr. and Mrs. Ha- producers will be allowed to ofies
ler. spick and span as usual, was
try that on borrowing neighbors. land expenditures would approxl- termine.
four year* ago. It would take In­ They might even have a button for iinately balance each other.
there. He had to leave before I was family dinner at the home of each I vens consists of two daughters, Mrs. their suggestions as to what ths
k Whether the national debt in­ through, thus saving himself much couple. At the home of Mr. and | Mary Johnson of Hickory Corners 1937 program should cover. Farm.
finitely longer than that to make spanking Junior, unless they're j "I have lhe honor to inform you
Mra. Otis. forty-four
children. • and Mrs. Lena Hart of Hastings,
it ai strong as the present footing modem parents and let the little , that pre-audited figures for the crease has been a good Investment pain and anguish. Of course the
grandchildren and great-grandchil-1 There are also six grandchildren
of any country which conceivably darling do as he pleases, and then I fiscal year ended June 30. 1034. show. or not. and whether the recovery Cook brothers wire there. They are dren were present and at the home and two great-grandchildren. Mr.
might attack us.
expect him to turn around over । after making the usual adjust- measures have brought us sufficient­ regular Rotarians who never miss of Mr. and Mrs. Havens, thirty-four Havens is a native of Jackson coun- 1938 prografn' now in operation.
ly bock on the prosperity road is the a meeting either at home or wherev­
Only one meeting will be held b*
Well, we could always lock the night and be thoughtful and con­ ment-s authorized by law for certain
he —
was ------bom- 72
-------- —
-- years
.----- . ago
the county for this purpose.
issue.
er they happen to be. They're news­ relatlves gathered. A remarkable ty where
stable after the horse was gone—If siderate of others the rest of his [subventions and free mailing serv­
whO ,^^4 the county
Cill it boondoggling or call it paper men. tod. That’s something feature was that all children, grand- and Mrs. Havens, aged 68. was bom I
the stable hadn't been blown flat life. There! We got w—a—y of! the ices. that our postal receipts ex­ waste or call it whatever you will,
children and great-grandchildren of in Barry county.
meetings are being urged by Henry
else
which
may
be
said
Ln
their
fa
­
track! The maid reads while she ceeded expenditures for the first
each
couple
were
present.
Both
couples
have
been
active
in
I
a
. Wallace, Secretary of Agricultural
the
issue
is
whether
the
money
we
vor
or
against
them.
I'm
not
sure
does the laundry, and there's a gad­ time since 1010, the surplus being
have
spent
has
bettered
our
general
The
Havens
home
was
decorated
the
Grange
and
other
community
—
—
—
------------ - object-.
*
which. Anyway I had a mighty
»..v
—-------- - ----------------- — —
“to keep their fundamental
get to turn the pages for her. Truly approximately 15.000.000.
JAPANESE doctor has landed
condition sufficiently to Justify the good time and there were no casual- with an abundance of autumn ' activities and have always been In­
an Ingenious family.
“I take pride in making this fa­
with the word that, by follow­
ties among the members so I guess flowers and both couples received terested in every helpful enterprise,
expenditure.
vorable
report
and
am
sure
that
it
ing a few simple rules, a fellow This column probably has the dis­
I numerous lovely gifts.
They have the best wishes and help to check soil erosion. to Im­
Our own notion is that by increas­ it was more or less successful.
will be most gratifying to you."
The tiling I enjoyed moat about | Among the guests were Mr. and congratulations of a wide circle of prove soli fertility, to encourage
lives to be 240 rears old. He didn't tinction of being the only one in the
Recalling Mr. Roosevelt's words: ing the national debt seven billions
■ay. but I figure tills applies only । United States not to attempt a wise •'But remember well, that attitude or ten billions or twelve billions or the event was the drive down and Mrs. John Miller of Grass Lake and friends who unite in extending better land use. and to maintain
back. I went by M-37 which runs the occasion held a double meaning felicitations.
whatever
the
amount
is
(opinions
farm Income,” state* Mr. Wallace,
to those of us who never go motor­ crack about actresses' diaries.
and method—the way we do things.
vary), IL has been a rattling good through pretty country and I never for them as it was their forty-fourth
ing.
Ls nearly aways the measure of our
CIVIL SERVICE EXAM,
Here's a fine poem by Margaret sincerity," let's compare the Farley investment to Increase the annual have seen the country looking more wedding anniversary. Mrs. Miller is
The principal rules are to sleep
GRAND RAJHM,
national
income
from
a
low
of
for
­
beautiful
than
it
was
Monday.
The
a
sister
of
Mrs.
Otis
and
Mr.
Havens.
The
United
States
Civil
Service
on a hard mattress with a metal Songster entitled "Neighbors:"
words with lhe Farley Performance.
ty-three billions in 1833 to sixty- fields, which a few weeks ago were Guests from the following places Commission has announced an ex­
pillow and learn to wriggle like a Perhaps her face was rather plain.
Here It Is!
five billions in 1836. Any lime we can burned so brown as to look hope- gatheied to extend congratulations; amination for various grades of fuel of Columbus the famous WUJ on
I do not know—
In 1034 the annua! report of the
goldfish. Whether, in time, the be­
spend twelve dollars and increase less forever, were green as could be. ! Chicago. Kalamazoo. Detroit. Brigh-1 technologists. The salaries range parade will come to the Civic audi­
Post Office Department showed:
ginner sprouts gills and a fantail Is For always it was lighted by
our income thereby twenty-two dol­ Farmers working their land were I ton. Trenton. Hillsdale. Grass Lake.from *3.800 to *5.600 a year. Ap- torium. Grand Rapids, for one day
An inner glow.
A surplus of .......... *12.161,415.03
not stated, but it sounds plausible.
lars, it seems lo us we have made an turnlng up nice mellow soil and the , Lansing. White Cloud. Grand Rap- pllcanu must have completed a only. Wednesday, October 7, giving
Her hands, hard toll had roughened
However, lhe secre• I've already spoken to a tinsmith
exceptionally
good investment^ And trees and shrubs were as clean as in ids. Lowell. Wyoming Park. Lake fup 4.year course leading to a bach- three performance* at 3:30. 7 and
•
them
Ury of lhe Treas­
about a pillow and, on awakening
that Is exactly what lhe United the early part of lhe year. These I Odessa, Ann Arbor. Hickory Cor- elor's degree Ln a college or unlverAnd made them red.
ury's annual report
this morning, mode a few experi­ But they were like a blessing on
Slates
did. It spent twelve billions recent rains certainly have brought 1 ners. Wayland. Freeport. Cloverdale,' gjty of recognized standing with mashows the post Of­
mental wriggles.
My Intentions
(to
take
the
top
figure) and got back things back In a most amazing fash- 1 Hastings and nearby communities. [ jor work in chemical engineering. dance. Merry Go -Round and
My down-bent head!
fice
Department
an extra twenty-two billions, which Ion. Il hardly seemed/ possible a I Fifty years ago tlie two couples mechanical engineering, fuel techmight fool some people, but t don't ■
hod:
seems to us to be about as shrewd a few weeks ago but it Was only rain were married here in Hastings at the I nology. or chemistry, and must have the strooge&amp;t and most enter tail
believe they'd fool a goldfish, unless She was my neighbor—when the day
A deficit of.............. *52.003.206.00
business move as we could possibly that was needed to do the trick. And Methodist church and have always jl(Uj certain specified experience.
he'd been drinking or something.
entertainments ever seen from
was overcast
j Pul! information may be obtained wis radio station. Chicago. '
have made. And at tlie some time it was so warm and bright. I think , lived near neighbors.
I'm afraid my finning was faulty. ' She gave me courage—ah, she lent
A discrepancy of ..*84.164.71100
me
Besides. I didn't feel any too digni­
In 1035 the annual report of the that we were borrowing Hut money I've never enjoyed driving more 1 Mr. otU. who is 72 years old. was . from H. C. Wunderlich. Secretory program will be headed by 1
to
Increase
our
national
Income
we
than
then.
The
tough
part
of
It
was
bom
in
Rutland
township
and
Mrs.
O
f
th
C
y.
S.
Civil
Service
Board
of
Belle and Skyland BcoUy who
Strength
to
last
fied-greeting the dewy dawn by
Post Office Department showed:
actually reduced our interest pay­ that I had lo come back and go to [ Otis was bom in Washtenaw coun-1 Examiners, at the post office.'
introduce a new routine of at
Until the skies wei4 bright again!
behaving goldfishiously.
A surplus of .......... t 4.964.14931
.
ment* on our total federal debt BE­ banging away at this typewriter, ty 69 years ago. Two years after |
and funny sayings.
She'd always share
However, the Secre­
।
These
are
lhe
days
when
I
would
their
marriage
they
moved
to
their
,
According
to
a
Professor,
England
LOW WHAT WE WERE PAYING
Her food, her roof, her hopes with
tary of the Treas­
War Names Confusing.
They tell you to cultivate a
like
to
pick
my
time
to
go
where
I
present
home.
They
have
seven
•
was
once
"smooth
carpet
of
living
BEFORE WE INCREASED OUR
me—
ury's annual report
NT0T content with coining eighty
desire
and
when
I
desire.
But
the
daughters
and
three
sons.
Mrs.
Nina
I
green."
But
that
was
before
golf
was
NATIONAL DEBT TO
BRING
Her faith In prayer. ..
shows the Post Of­
1 ’ or ninety separate different
Erway, Ray and Lyle Otis of Kala-1 Invented, of course.
ABOUT RECOVERY. IN SHORT. family must eat
fice
Department
and confusing names for the oppos­ Perhaps her face was rather plain
WE ARE ACTUALLY PAYING
had:
ing forces In Spain, lhe correspond­
LESS INTEREST FOR THE THIR­
I could not guess—
A deficit of.............. *63.970.40530
ents have gone and thunk up a
TY-THREE BILLION DOLLAR NA­
I ever saw it lighted with
plum bran* new one—extremists.
TIONAL
DEBT THAN WE WERE
Real loveliness!
A discrepancy of ..*68.93434431
Maybe, though, the point is well Indeed. I like to tell myself
PAYING FOR THE TWENTY-ONE
Combined discrep­
BILLION DOLLAR DEBT.
taken. The dispatches would seem
That Heaven will be
ancy for the two
Roosevelt may have his fallings
rather to indicate that quite a num­ A place ^liere neighbors. Just as
years _..................*133.09936534 “
dear.
ber of persons over there have late­
So, Mr Varley's record in adminis­ &lt;we all have), but when it comes ta
Lhe money end of the deal, lhe city
Will welcome me!
ly shown a tendency to verge to­
tration of the Post Office Depart­
slickers haven't "takein" him. He
ward the extreme.
ment sUnds:
seems lo have "taken" them.
And picking out the various par­ M. S. C. OFFERS 35
Words—Reported nice surpluses
RvlnHf
ties mixed up in the French politi­
operation.
SHORT COURSES from
Colonel Frank Knox, say* that jf
cal mess—that's another tough Job.
Actions — Accumulated
deficits Franklin D. Roosevelt Ls re-elected
Only today I ran Into this one—left­ Instruction in Dairy Work, from operation amounting to *115,- President It will spell ruin for the
973.701.00 In two years.
centrist. ll sort of suggests Ty Cobb
United States!
Poultry, Floriculture,
in his palmy days, covering the
We had never thought tlie col­
outfield. But—that couldn't be be­
Thank you Mr. Farley, now will onel was a moron but now we are
Home Economics
you tell us what you have said about Inclined to think he Ls. Neither the
cause the French don't go In for
Opportunities continue to knock
baseball. They prefer dueling as be­ at lhe door for Michigan's farm boys Airmail contracts.
re-election, nor the defeat of
At Wilmington. Delaware. March President Roosevelt or lhe election
ing Just os exciting.
.
and girls even If they do not have
or the defeat of Gov. Landon will
1 must say it's discouraging Just complete college courses in their 20. 1934. I said:
"The simple fact is that from spell ruin to the United States.
when, by following lhe news from education, asserts Ralph W. Tenny,
records
taken from the files of lhe
How anyone short of a simpleton
Paris, I'm beginning to get the Reds short course director at Michigan
Post
Office
Department,
from
the
can work himself up to the point
unscrambled from the Palo Pinks, Bute college. He announces the
files of air mall contractors; them­ where he gives voice to such non­
and the Mauves from the Helio­ opening Oct. 26 of the Michigan
selves. and from evidence produced sense Is beyond us. The UnltAl
tropes. and the Holy Rollers from State College schedule far 1038-1037 before the Senate
Investigating
the Merry Widows, to have this add­ in short courses, special courses and Committee. It was clearly shown States Is greater than any man or
any set of men in It. The United
Style plays an important part in our daily
ed complication bust right in my conferences.
Owners of farms seek farm man­ that these contracts were given and States must have been built on a
face. Looks as though I'll have to
obtained
through
collusion
and very poor and unsound foundation If
agers, dairy and creamery operators
merchandise of all types changes constantly—
start it all over again.
fraud.
the
election
or
defeat
of
any
man
In
still seek specially trained and farm
"If this administration was going this country can spell ruin for It.
bred youths, certified seed growers,
How to Reduce.
Neither colonel Knox nor any
Automobiles and Clothing are watched closer
fruit growers and poultrymen con- to keep faith with the people, these
VER since the day when I was
Uned to demand trained help. More fraudulent contracts had to be other map in this country actually
known among friends as Thy­ than sixteen thousand have been wiped out.”
believes such a statement. It is a
any other items—BUT Styles in Banking also
Those are Mr. parley's words.
roid Deficiency levy, the human deenrolled
­
part of the untruths of thek cam­
in short course work at the
The action Uken was:
tour, I've fought the losing fight college since the first one was start­
paign. It is an indication of the cali­
On
February
9,
1934.
Postmaster
change. The Banker of today is called upon to sup­
against overweight
bre
of
some
of
the
men
who
run
for
ed in 1804.
I tried dieting and became the
The catalog for the 42nd year, Genera] Parley cancelled all do­ public office In this country and
best friend the American spinach in­ containing announcements and de­ mestic governmenUl air mall con­ Colonel Knox 13 one of them.
ply services that were unheard of a few years
Neither Mr. Roosevelt nor Mr.
dustry ever knew, yet had only to scriptions of the 35 short courses, tracts. This was done without hear­
tum my head to brag and I re­ special courses, and conferences to ings. The cancellation became effec­ Landon nor Mr. Knox nor Mr.
Change has demanded that the Banker keep abreast
tive upop ten days' notice rather Hearst, nor any others you may
gained, practically instantaneously, be held this year, has Just been
than upon sixty days' notice as re­ mention can ruin this country even
what I’d last I exercised until I printed and a copy may be obtained
quired by the independent Offices' if they tried. But ll is a severe and
of the trend and adjust himself to meet it.
had the Jitters, but when I'd taken from the short Course Office. Michi­ Appropriation Act of June 16. 1833.
serious reflection upon the Intelli­
oil half a pound. II bounced right gan State college. East Lansing.
On the same day, by Executive gence or supposed intelligence of
Credits obtained by students at­
back while the doctors were reviv­
you can go to your Banker for advice on any finan­
Order.
President
Roosevelt
com
­
such
a
man
as
Colonel
Knox
that
tending courses of six weeks or long­
ing me.
er may be evaluated and applied on manded the Army to fly the air malL he could think the American peo­
But now I've found the absolute­
Twelve Army flyers lost their ple will believe such balderdash.
cial matter.
regular collegiate courses. These
ly certain cure for reduction. It's courses include instruction in gen­ lives in pursuance of this order. .
We’ve heard the colonel talk. He's
working in a moving picture with eral agriculture, various phases of
The cost of Army operation of the a great talker, but he doesn't say
little Jane Withers. When she sets dairy work, poultry, agricultural en­ air mall wu *3.700,000.
anything. He's one of these old
The Hastings City Bank is in style ... we have kept
The Department of Justice after boys who thinks the younger gener­
the pace you can track yourself gineering. floriculture, home eco­
^-backz home by your cwn perspira- nomics. goif course management, a lapse of more than two years hu ation doesn't know anything and
'tlon.' Another engagement with forestry and wildlife conservation. failed to bring indictments against that the country Ls going to the
pace with lhe progress of this community and have
the
aviation
companies
for
the
col
­
dogs.
Janie and I could be rented out The last course Is being offered for
lusion and fraud alleged by the
Colonel Knox is one of these old
as my own living skeleton.
the first time this year.
served it constantly for the past half century. Our
postmaster General in his.speech of boys who exclaim: "God bless my
March 20. 1834.
DEPARTMENT DOES
sou), what Ls the country coming to."
Has Memories of Valencia.
Private companies have resumed when anyone announces that some­
officers are qualfiied to administer banking in th©
NOT ENDORSE GOODS.
I TS hard to concentrate on pen­
Numerous complaints have been carrying the air mail.
thing new has been discovered, go­
* nant fights bi the big leagues
So the Farley record on airmail ing to be tried or has been tried
received at Lansing recently that
fullest extent—our assistants are chosen ■nd
when we read of war-racked Spain, talesmen of school supplies and contracts stands:
successfully. He is out of tune with
with 100,000 already dead.
.
Words—Promised lo show col­ the times. This country isn't going
equipment are claiming endorsement
I hope the lovely old city of Va­ by the Department of Public In­ lusion and fraud.
trained to perform their duties efficiently,
to be ruined, even by Col. Knox.
lencia has escaped lhe common ru­ struction in pushing the sale of
Action—After
two years hu The only thing he can ruin is his
in. Se/sn years ago I was travel­ merchandise.
shown nothing which even indicates voice or possibly the patience of his
and
courteously. This is a modem bank.
ing around and about over three
Dr.Eugene B. Elliott, superintend­ collusion and fraud.
listener*.
continents, and at every stop had ent of public instruction, states that
This record should also lake Into
customers to take advantage of the
JURY COULDN'T AGREE.
listened morning, noon and night, his department doen not recom­ account the ignorance of the ad­
to the song "Valencia."
On Thursday evening the Jury
mend the purchase of any specific ministration u to requirements for
So a friend and I made a pilgrim­ brands of merchandise. The pur­ flying the airmail which resulted tn winch tried the case of the people
ices we offer and invite others to come in and
age to the town in which presum­ chase of supplies and equipment, he lhe tragic deatli of twelve army fly­ vs. Russell Hinckley, charged with
ably, the thing originated, and Va­ declared, is entirely a matter of lo­ ers who tort their lives through in­ a statutory offense, after deliberat­
them also.
lencia turned out to be lhe one spot cal choice, consistent with general adequate equipment and training—a ing over twelve hour*. Informed
on the map where nobody bad ever standards of quality recommended sacrlfic to bureaucratic blundering! Judge McPeek that they were un­
able to agree and that there was
played that tune or sung it or by the state.
Now while on the subject of no chance to arrive at a verdict. It
Complaints
of this character
hummed It or whistled It, or even
should be referred promptly to his "BUREAUORACY"—Will you taka is claimed that the jury stood on
heard of .It
the stand again for a few moments. every ballot seven tor conviction
It was indeed a relief. So wo office or to that of the county com­
and five for acquittal. The entire
missioner of schools. Dr. Elliott said. Mr. Rooeevelt? Thank you!
stayed a week., The sherry-endMr. Rooeevelt, what did you say panel was exhausted before a Jury
The complaint should give the
egg before luncheon was also quite name of the salesman and of the concerning "Bureaucracy?"
could be found. There may be a
good—all but the eggl
(Continued on page 2. Sec.«
retrial of the case during thia term.
offending company.
,_______ ____
C. OOM ,

VjoLI)
about

H

,

REPUBLICAN

Another columnist points out that
"life begins al forty, and so do
fallen arches, lumbago, baldness,
bay windows'and the tendency to
tell the same story three or four
Mmes lo the same person."

Before returning to their key wit­
ness against the New Deal—ie.
President Pranklln D. Roosevelt—
'Barry county Republicans wish tb
I call to the stand for a few moments
■ the “prime minister" of the Ameri­
can Dictatorship. James A- Parley,
■that typical Tammany politician
who quit his position on the New
York boxing commission to enter
I the field of statesmanship by hold­
ing down three jobs: As postmas­
ter general In the president's cablnet; as chairman of the National
'democratic committee; as chairman
1 of the democratic committee of New
York State.
I The post office department Ls a
' public expense, deficit, of which
must be paid for. directly or indi­
rectly. by everyday citizens such as
you and me.

A

STYLES CHANGE

IN BANKING, TOO
lives ...

than

E

ago.

Today

quickly

We urge

many MHfl

CITY

TELEPHONE 2103

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. OCTOBER I. IBM

I POLITICAL NOTES

Again at Brooklyn, Nov. 4. IBM, I
said: '
The people of America demand
a reduction of Federal expenditure
K CM be accomplished do( only- by
reducing tbe expenditure* of exit­
ing dapartmoDU, bet It ean be done
by abolishing many useless com­
missions, bureaus and functions, and
It can be done by consolidating
many acUvitiaa of lhe government.”
Thoae an Mr. Roosevelt's WORDS
concerning ■'Bureaucracy'' Herewith

—Republican—
&lt; Continued from page 1. See. 2)

f

Mr. Roooeerelt:
At Sioux CUy. sept. 20. IBM. I

YOUR

HCjKXR

I VX VZ I &gt;

■ ■ VZkw

• .
,
~
■fa.?-.

1

■mrJK
HQ|k

.

i

We are attempting loo many
functions and we need a ■impllflcaI tlon of what the Federal Govern­
ment Is giving to the people.
"1 accuse the present Admlnistralion of being the greatest spending
administration In peace times In all
our history—one which has piled
bureau on bureau, commission on
commission, and has failed to antlcipate lhe dire needs or reduced
earning power of the people. Burraus 1.1id bureaucrats have been re­
. tallied at the expense of the lax-

Before lhe Rooeevelt Adm inisIra-

lng with the production and distri­
bution of power, in ISM there were
TWENTY-THREE
agencies con­
cerned with it.
Before lhe Rooeevelt Administra­
tion. there were TWO agencies of

Health
Guard

SAVE EYESIGHT
Naw that the children are back In school and the whole
family will be reading more during the fall evenings . . .
.isn't it ogood time to think of better home lighting? Eyes
need the benefit of reading and studying in comfort—un­
der adequate light. The new Better Sight Lamps provide
plenty of soft, glarcless light for close-seeing eye tasks.

1

I E- S. APPROVED

Sale Lamps

High in Cream

and to qi

or Pasteurised.

Tlie high
lands Dai

-I

SMART, NEW MODELS

lieli milk

Raw

Content.

PINT 5c

QUART

dealing

with

In artistic winner—evrh greater
'slue than la-t vear\ leader.
Ivory sn&lt;l gt&gt;M. «r bronze. Pan Itment »hai|e. 100 watt lamp. Gm■ ealnl ilifftiM-r tlimw* light &lt;&gt;n

mile trip
TTiey called on

Mr. and Mrs. Ralf Hibbard of
Kalamazoo spent Friday evening at
E- D. Reynolds.
Mr. and Mra. Oren Meachem of
Qnraffn*
Toledo. Ohio./Mil.
vUlled MrsSpragufrom Thursday lo Tuesday. Haroli
Andrews and family of Kalamaaoi
spent Sunday at his home.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler en
tertalned Mr and
Mrs.
Franl
son Thom- Hom of South Shultz Sunday fo
were in town 'dlnncr
neas. Thomas I-------------------------------------—

HIGHLAN
Phone 2651

the

J rove Evangel lrecelve a new
&gt;thcr repairs.
Of Woodland
-. Mra. LUlle
afternoon.
. who teaches
i home over the

your ili|
an extra

$4.95 cosh or time
95c dqwn, $1 mo.

*

fomla. among them R T. French,
problem.
whom they found greatly unproved
sincere aymj
Before the Roosevelt Adralntotra■ftsM-i
school win haw In health.
The Are alram Thursday evening
a Rally Octc
Government to which foreign trada
came from the home of Leo Crane.
ent. each one to receive a rally day i northeast of town. Fortunately lltare TWELVE agencies concerned
with thia activity.
The Pythian Slaters' Past Chiefs'
(Mr. Taxpayer waa heard tn a
Club bald their monthly meeting
whispered aside lo say; "Wonder
at the home of Mr» Minnie John­
why our foreign market for farm
son, Main street. Friday afternoon.
products has been cut all lo pieces
A pleasant making wag enjoyed
Uwn!"—Judge raps for order).
eywell Sunday.
and light refreahmenta served.
Before the RooeeveU Administra­
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Hughre.
The O. E. 8. had a pot luck sup­
tion. four government agencies Mra Beszle Hughes. Charles Hughes.
per Friday evening.
were making Ioans to farmers. To­ 8r, Mrs. Belle Mullan ind Jane
Mra. Della Allen spent part of
day there are THIRTEEN agencies spent Bunday with relatives in Mar-.
i
last
week vUlUng friends In Calcengaged in making such loans.
[ donla. She returned home Sunday.
T*' Pickle pUnt closed Friday as
his residence
Unkj were full
s&lt;xne of
Surviving are the euke, Qm
to were froited.
Jiree children,
fellows disappointed* at not
v&gt; Hrown being able to sell Uwlr loads tried
Mn. Margaret
atart a
Deputy Sheriff
iazoo and four o&lt;wri Bedford appeared on lhe
e! Cappon of —
•
- - ”
------ppon of HasHigh street baa been plowed up
i Alvina Cap- and the old gravel drawu of! and
u now being gravelled again—a wel­
come Improvement as thia street
burial in the carries much heavy traffic.
. The family
of their many
SOUTH BOWNEClarence Benedict attended the
to Verne Cal- funeral of his cousin. Frank Bene­
wandered from dict. of Clarksville Friday after-,
noon.
a Mr. HurdleMrs. Pete Griffin and daughter,
Marlon, was m Hastings Saturday
id to be killed, on buslne.M
relumed from
Jessie Blough and family of Has­
.'os in Denver. tings w«r« dinner gueals of Jerry
। Blough Sunday. Other callers were
fd the Kellogg Harold Yoder and
family. Roy
imen. Monday, Blough and wife of Freeport and
on of Mlddle- Lester Blough and John Cannevaln
her niece, Mrs.
of North Bowne.
family
last
Harry Fields of Freeport assisted
jerry Blough cutting oom last week.
went to Ann Mrs. Fields was a supper guest
she will enroll there Friday evening.
in the UnlverWill Coagriff and wife of Lowell,
and Junie Pardee were in Rutland1
s and children Bunday afternoon and called al the
•e visiting her home of Will Havens, it being Mr.
i. W. R. Norris. and Mra. WUl Havens and Mr. and
Mrs Fred OUs golden wedding an­
niversary
Mrs. Eliza Knowles and son.
young people Woodrow, and wife and Lucille1
Lentz of Freeport vLsited Thursday
evening al Will Miahler's.
usual
binine »
c.
—
ftir. and
VllU Mr* JUIUI
Mr.
John Mishler, and.
lng was held. Marilyn Martin of Grand Rapids,
and refresh-1 John Thayler and family of Comp‘ bell. Mrs Ida Hoffman of Charlotte
of Hope and visited Sunday at Wlil Mishler's.
Sunday to j —
.........Mishler.
—-—•— John
—-• Thayltr and
Win
ng them to Edd. Babbitt made a business trip
c of Mr. and Monday lo Dowagiac.
Ron'* parents,
EAST WALL LAKE.
» . the guest
Ed. Matureen and wife of Kala­
Enid Cheeae- mazoo spent two days at their cot-

TEEM aganclaa

a nee.

C

rBAUUKVnXL

The community woe sheets 4 to turned from their
through the west.
«lan. which oceured Sunday morn-

000100000202010100000102030101020202020002190000

(Loud guffaws from Mr. and Mn.
John Taxpayer sitting tn the jury
box—Judge rap* sharply for or­
der).

£1

Before the Roosevelt Administra­
tion. there were FOUR agencies of
the Government dealing with hous-

ROBERT W.

I

Kho°' ■" N"*“ SMOKING AND DUNKING1
WATCH VOUR STOMACH

$1.95 DOWN

mln&lt;
It waa
r Hastings
A
d been arre.sl?d
i old charge of
&gt;n county and
he doctor's car.

8 MONTHS on Balance

Only $10.95 CASH

A

Anirtlirr new one—smart bridge

lighting -either

for

For quick relief from indication
and upset stomach due to excessive
। smoking and drinking try Dr. Emil's
| Adla Tablets Sold on money back
| guarantee Reed's Drug Store, and
। B. A. LyBarker. Druggist.—Adv.

I

decoration

Having sold my farm,
Mjlr. Iwry or brunzr and gold:
harmonizing silk shade; 1(K&gt;vialt lamp.

aouthwest of Hastings on
the pavement, on

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2nd
SALE BEGINNING AT 12:30 O'CLOCK SHARF.

Ono
Ono
Ona
One
One

95c DOWN
6 MONTHS on Balance

Only $7.45 CASH
it i»- «n I. E. S. lamp in a -mall

new design that hath' - the tn..tn
in light. You've a plare f..r th!-.
Ilnmn- or ivory anti gold.. Plait­
ed &gt;ilk vhade.

four-year-old colt.
thrcw-year-old, unbroken.
bay mare, weight 1500 lbs.
brown mare. 7 yrs. old. wt. 1500.
bay marc. 3 yrs. old. wt. 1400 lbs.

COWS.
Jersey cow, 6 years old, calf by side.
Guernsey cow, 5 years old. bred June
11th.
Guernsey cow, 2 years old, bred June

$1.95 DOWN
8 MONTHS ON BALANCE

Only $14.20 CASH !
&gt;our living r-om.

Jersey heifer, fresh.
Guernsey heifer, bred May 29th.
■ Jersey cow, 4 years old. fresh.
Guernsey bull, 1 -year old.

new ia).200jtxi
.
bulb inrluderl; rontcalcd difluver
and other (eaturev.

10 Shropi.

ASK ABOUT OUR

TRIAL

McCormick binder, 7-ft. cat.
2 Osborna mowers, 5-ft. cut.
POO riding plow. Ona walking p
Oliver riding cultivator.
Two-horM walklag cultivator.
One-horse cultivator.
Wagon. Hay rock. Caltipacker.
Side delivery rake. 2 tanks.
John Deere hay loader.

Cauldron kettle. Tank hooter.
Lawn mower. Dunham cuiti-hoe.
HARNESSES.

Now double harnota.
Crotchback harneu.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

SHEEP.
3 fine wool.

HOGS.
4 shoots, wt. 125 lbs. Brood sow.

17 tons hay.

PLAN

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING:—

FARM IMPLIMINTS.

HORSES.

FEED.
9’/g acres corn.

Economy King cream Mparstor*
30-gal. Jar. Kitchen cabinet.
Victrola. Sideboard. 2 iron bedsteads.
Oak bedstead. 4 chairs.
Spray puma. Gat lamp. Gas laatem.
Cushman Yl H. P. motor.

SUPER SERVICE
Realty Mean* a SUPERIOR type of
of your cor you get Superior Service.

rials and maintain a complete staff
of trained attendants. Aay detail,
large or small, receives the attention
it deserves. For a complete Superior
Service stop in er coll Andrus Service
Station.
13 Plate BATTERY-—$3.95 lx ch.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH,

TELPHONE 2305

Consumers Power Co.

electricity

\

,s
CHEAPO
than

A

EYE$IGhT

//.

j \

until settled far.

VERT ROBINSON
PROPRIETOR
MWEY Ml». AKtiMfo.

ALMBT LVOH. CO*.

suNacn "‘u

�■ TBE HASTINGS BANNER, THTBSDAT. OCTOBER 1. ItM

Weekly Farm Review
The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers
By WILLARD BOLTE
Fighting has killed or ruined
many a splendid young cockerel that
was being raised for breeding pur■ poae*. One practical method of pre­
venting fighting is to keep several
mature cocks in the yard with the
cockerels. An even better plan Is to
provide roosting poles In the yardthree feet above tlie ground—*0 that
lhe les* aggressive cockerels can fly
up out of reach of their enemies.—
American Poultry Journal.

stack so that the top of lhe post will
remain covered. Keep tlie sides of
the stack straight and have the
straw at the ground extend outside
of the stack. This system will per­
mit quicker, safer and cleaner cur­
ing—and will make it easy to seed
fall grains while the stacks are still
in tlie field.—Michigan Parmer.

Summer fallowing for wheat is
something we normally associate
with lhe far western states—where
When Clay county. Indiana, went it takes lhe rainfall of two years to
about sheep-raising in a serious way grow one good crop of wheat. But
there were only 118 flocks of sheep Prairie Farmer carries a story of a
on 2J00 farms. Today there are 25(5 large wheat grower in Randolph
flocks—and this increase is due al­ county. Indiana, who has been sum­
most entirely to the influence and mer-fallowing his wheat. fields for
success of lhe boys in lhe 4-H club* years because he Ls sure, that it pays.
of the county. By following what His year* of experience have dem­
they call lhe clay county System of onstrated that he can copnt on 15
Sheep Production, club members of' moro bushels of wheat to the acre if
that county have made consistent the whcat i*IK1 does not grow a crop
winnings al the state fat lamb show* the season that it Ls planted to
at Indianapolis. And here Ls tlie. wheat.
system: (1) Start with good-bodied
’
grade ewea—preferably Shropshire*. I The
Tlie use
use of
of liming
liming materials
materials on
on
&lt;2) Breed them to a good purebred 1 acld .oji, u B profitable investment
Shropshire or Southdown ram—for j and not an expense, according to
February or March lambing. &lt;3» ohio Stale University. Al the Ex&gt;f*ke provtalon for spring pasture perlment station Farm at Wooster,
pry pasture ta not suitable lor । an investment of gl 00 In lime luu
lambs. (4) Carry the ewes on oat* . brought a return of from 42.00 to
and legume hay during gestation. I
per acre—the largest returns
(S) A* won as lamb* are old enough । being secured where not more than
to eat, feed them a mixture of equal 1
neCessary amount of lime was
part* of oate and aheUed com In appilcd to odd Wita-and where alcreeps. (8) Keep on feeding in creeps yaifa )iay wu grown following the
when they go onto pasture. (7) Dock llmlng. n thc farmer has no other
AnH
I. within
wvl. kvlrv in
fiv« of birth,
H I j .» ■ _ ■
....... .. ■■ ..............
and rv.lv.
castrate
30 4
days
method of spreading it, his manure
(8) Dose both ewes and lambs for spreader
,
may be covered with a lay­
worms every 30 days. (9» Dip mature ,er of manure, straw or earth and
sheep a* soon after shearing as pos- ।the limestone spread thinly on top
sible &lt;Clay County has a traveling (of this filler.—Ohio Farmer.
lank truck for this purpose). (10)
Rough tlie ewes through summer
Right now is a good time for
after lamb* are weaned—then put Michigan farmer* to select seed
them on good pasture and feed a lit- (com and get it Ln storage lo avoid
lie grain, if necessary, to flush them ,cold and wet weather damage, sugbefore breeding.—Capper's Farmer. (gesU R. E. Decker, specialist In
Fortunately, young calves are al- ;farm crops at Michigan State Col­
most 100 per cent Immune to Bang's lege. Tlie experience many farm­
disease, hence it 1* possible to raise 'ers met In 1B35 should be a good
healthy calves from cows that react. 1guide. Rainy fall weather last year
The danger in having reactors on :produced soft com and freezing
the farm is found in the liability of weather later added to this con­
the disease spreading to healthy 'dition to reduce germination to a
mature cows. Wliere dairymen have 'dangerously low point. Too many
reactor cow* that are too valuable ;farmers, he finds, still continue to
as breeders to send them to the pick their seed com out of the crib
block, they are successfully follow­ in the spring. Early selection in
husking from the row or from the
ing one of two general plans. If two ,
barns are available lhe reactors are ' 'shock Ls recommended. Another
isolated in one of them—and where safeguard Is to select three time* a*
there is but one barn lhe reactors much seed a* will be needed, to al­
are stanchioned as far as possible &gt; low for low germination and belter
from the healthy herd and the two . selection later, or for possible sale.

LENT CORNERS.
Edna Riee of South Haven is mak­
ing an Indefinite visit with Mr. and
Mr*. Lawrence Hammond.
Mr. and Mra. Robert Burchett are
driving a new Plymouth car, and
Mr. and Mr* Clare Thoma*, a new
Chevrolet.
Mrs. Minnie Hammond of Has­
tings spent lhe past week with Mr.
and Mrs. Marc Hammond.
Mra. Earl Carpenter is very sick
al this writing.
Mrs. Thurl cook and aon Ken­
neth of Plainwell and Thelma Bali
and children of Allegan
spent
Thursday with Mrs. Leland Ham­
mond.
Mrs Iva Smith of Comstock spent
the week end with Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Hammond
Mis* Emma Chandler of Kalama­
zoo spent the week end at the Marc
Hammond home.
Word was received Bunday of the
death of Delbert Enzlan of Cressey.
Much sympathy 1* extended the be­
reaved family.
James Von Hout of Prairieville is
staying with his brother. Will and
wife, a few days.

nicely and has returned to her' Carlton and Mr. and Mra. Leo Barry badly while washing windows at her
home.
i and son spent Sunday with Mra. home Friday.
Rev. Weston, a farmer resident Mary Getaenhaver and family of
Harry Zeller 1* assisting wllh tlie
of this vicinity and father of Rev. near Potterville.
n
.iuHI Weston
nov.
— -J
Mr. and Mrs.
Harold
of Allegan, was
laid
Mra. Wm.
..... Shriber and Tuttle.
to rest in lhe Banficld cemetery children of Hastings spent Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Flynn Tuttle and
last Monday
I evening wllh Mr. and Mra. Prank daughter of the Center Road spent
Mr. and Mrs Don Putnam leave Shriber
Sunday with Mra. Jane Tuttle.
Thursday for southern OiUo op a
THE CROS8ROAD8.
FAIR LAKE.
week'* visit. They will motor with
Mr. and Mra. Dell Fausey of BalThe Aral meeting of lhe Ryan
The Kinsley Ladies* Aid meeting
—
—----------------------------------- -------------- , which was held at Mra. Earl Pen­
Geo. Wlckwtre and Henry were al the -schoolhouse
, nock's, waa largely attended. The
in Middleville on business last WedMr. and
meeting IVI
for October will
llu Mra. Kenneth Hurleys
---uicvmid
wi*, be
wv held
1 spent from Thursday until Sunday i wjth Mrs. Fem Houvenlr for dinMra. Mary Putnam sjent Imi with Mr. and Mra. Ben Burwell of! ner, Mrs. Myrtle Lelnaar and Mra.
Wednesday and Thur*
- ' »ck- Detroit and on Sunday called on । jesaie Willison in
In the group enter
enter-son attending tile Pyt
Sistcra' Mr
Mr. and Mrs
Mrs. Wager and Mr. and taming
t-inlna with her.
convention.
Mrs. Wiseman of Lansing.
Mr. and Mrs. I*"
**---------------*
Ike ’Lelnaar
spent
----------------- »♦*----------------| Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Hinkley of. Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Jack
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
coats Grove are spending a few Horton of Delton.
Mr. and Mrs Oscar Hall of Has- days with Mr. and Mr*. Will Page,
Edwin. Roland and Clarence Pix­
ting* called Tuesday evening on Mr.
“ and■ Mrs. Harry Boughner of• ley spent Sunday with their par­
Mr.
Freeport and Mr and Mrs. Harry ents
Mr. and Mrs. Dite Willison
and Mr*. Leo Barry.
Mr. and Mrs Eugene Nichols at­ Merritt of Albion were Bunday of Delton were also callers there.
tended the Allegan fair Wedneiday. guests of Mr. and Mrs. George
Mr*. Anna Ruck entertained the Townsend.
Mra. Gladys Cook had lhe mtaDorcas Society Thursday afternoon
Mrs. Nina Barry of Southeast , fortune to cut her right arm very

SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
Billy Newland of the M. 8. C.
spent the week end with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Newland.
Sunday dinner guest* of Mr and
Mrs. Wm Havens were Mr. and Mrs
John Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Rhelmensnider. Mra. Nelson peterron and three children and Mrs.
Bertie Ortbring of Grass Lake. Mr.
and Mrs Oscar Otis of Trenton and
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Kamp and Mr.
Prins and son of Chicago.
Mr. and Mra. H. T. Lord of Bat­
tle Creek were week end guest* of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Oaks. Mr. agjl
Mrs. Oley Douglass and children of
Bowens Mills were callers In the
evening.
Mrs. Emma Otis of Wayland was
guest from Saturday to Monday at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ha­
vens
The write-up of the golden wed­
ding celebration will be found on
another page.

INSIST ON
MICHIGAN MADE

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Best for Cooking —Baking —Canning
Jams and Jellies—Candy Making
Frostings —Table Use
Always ask for one of these quality brands—
PIONEER
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RED ARROW
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HOUSEWIFE'S FAVORITE

BANFIELD.
Mr. and Mra. Walter Snyder and
Mra. Millie Haney of Hastings vis­
ited at Twin Cedars Sunday afternoon.
Mr*. Sam Buxton, Who recently
underwent a serious operation in
Pennock iiospltal, ts
recovering

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29-34

HASTINGS
PHONE 2118

writing.
. Mr. and Mra. John Hopkins of ।
W1(n( Mrs. Clear an&lt;
Flint.
and« If.
Mr. and Ur.
Mrs.
Ofsie Miller of Scottsville were Sat­
urday night guests of Otto Town­
send and family.
Tbe Brethren Aid Society met at

COCONUT

Double Barrel Springfield

re-

nephew* clamor for

Mr and Mrs Floyd Van Wee were
Sunday dinner guesta of Rev. and
Mra. Leonard Hazel tine in Hastings.

MOLASSES

Nationally advertised famous makes.

Hunting Coat

ROTAL

Let u&gt; FILL your COAL BIN
before winter price*
take effect.

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mr and Mrs. Isaac William* of
Dowling were Wednesday dinner

CAKE FLOUR 5&amp;25c

HUNTING GOOOGat
LOWEST PRICES!

(S.95

BUY AT SUMMER PRICES

daughter. Donna, at Jackson spent
Saturday night and Sunday with
Mra. Lottie Colltater and children.

FAREE FLUFF

“« SLXlS mJ."

gan State College, suggest* the time
I for the replanting. North of a line
between Bay City and Ludington
fall planting Ls recommended. South
of this line in the state replanting
in the spring is considered best be­
, cause fall planted trees in
this
, southern section are subject to frost
Next to dirty bean*, tlie bean heaving. Forest tree seedlings to
can be obtained
grower's greatest concern ta exces-,j use
- for- this rpurpose
— - ------------------------.-----sive moisture after harvest. To avoid ' through the forestry department of
at *****
East
both of these troubles. Michigan Michigan
"
“ State College **
State college recommends stacking Lansing at a nominal cost.
the beans by thc McNaughton sys­
'
TAMARAC.
tem as follows: Tlie beans are pulled
Mr. and Mrs. Bertie L. Smith were
with a bean-puller and are thrown
Into a windrow containing 8 row* of called to Grand Rapids Sunday by
beans, by means of a side-delivery ....
rake. Then drive a row of steel fence | thur Bruet. Burial was in Grand
posts about 4 or 5 feel apart in thc Rapids al the Oak Hill cemetery. He
line between four windrows and | Is survived by hta wife, lhe former
make a foundation pad of straw Stata V. Smith, an infant daughter,
around the bottom of each post—6 { his parents and one sister. He was
Inches thick and 4 feet in diameter.. 20 years of age.
Now stack four windrow* of bean* | Mrs. Russell McLenllhan (Letha
on this row of post*— placing a large I Smith) ta seriously' ill in a Grand
cap of beans over lhe lop of each j Rapid* hospital.

einlly.

CHOCOLATE

are never permitted lo mingle or ।
pasture the same ground or use'the 1 Losses tn forest trees resulting
from the drouth th I* summer re­
same water trough. Reactors are

Calvin. and are kept UoUKd
to, at
calving
Isolated for
least a month thereafter, as this is
tlie most dangerous period. Calves
from reactors are raised in the usual
manner and are isolated from the
reactor herd within a month after
being taken of! milk—always before
they are nine months old.—Ameri­
can Agriculturist.

to Mr. and Mra. Maurice

2nu. 15c

�tsi HArrntoi amnia, Tmran&gt;«T. ocroaaa i. n»

NOTICES

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

Coart for
Freeport Nl-Y Club had their op­
art uid ol tho enlng party Monday evening with
«r HsatUm. la ganiM and refreshments
Safety
__ k.1-_
’LL.?- nw’’ su»rt CUWML J»4«« re8ular meeting test week.
C. F. Angell attended the Youth
Tn Un n»it« w tb« «u'« »f WiUian; Bnd Adult conference in Ann Arbor
Saturday and a Secretarial Seminar
there Thursday and Friday.
Tuesday.’ October 0. Is the first
meeting of all Barry county minis­
ters and Sunday school leaders with
Ma r»*l
. .. .
pot luck dinner at noon, in the Ber­
ryville church. Miss Fern Wheeler,
h secretary and Rev. Rigelman,
president: and October 30 at Del­
ton. the County Bunday School con­
vention. afternoon and evening.
Hastings Hi-Y Club have a party
thia Friday evening for freshmen
boys with a big time in store.
Rarlater ol Fr°Mt*
T. S. K. Reid accompanied C. F.
Angell to Eaton Rapids last Wed­
OXDEB FOB rUBLlOATIOM.
nesday evening and gave a fine talk
to the Hi-Y Club there.

Claude A. Hammond Included Vi­
and MN- Lao &lt;7. Hammond and Mr.
and Mra James P. Hammond and
Natalia of Lansing.
,
There wm a good attendance al
the first P. T. A meeting of the
school year. After thc business
meeting community singing was en­
joyed followed by refreshments. The
teacher. Willard Kidder, will pre­
sent a Hailooween program for the
next meeting which assures us of
an exceptionally fine one. •
Much as one regrets the coming
of killing frosts yet everyone loves
to see the countryside assume its
kaleidoscope of color. Already many
shrubs and trees are aglow withiautumnal beauty.

Car! Lena and Mrs. Rodney War­
ner.
to their

former

home

BRANCH DISTRICT.
Mr. and Mra. Wayne Conklin, who
lire in Allegan, arc to be congratu-

in

Mr. and Mra. Roy Smith and
family have bought the Mrs. Susan­
na Smith property.
MF. and Mrs. Kenneth Norton and
Mr. and Mra. Clyde Hamilton are Joyce of Marshall, MT. and MN.
visiting relatives in and around Rudolph Hall of Battle Creek were
Bunday caller* oh their parents, Mr
Adrian.
and Mra. Vincent Norton.
A number of farmers were able
rteonburg. Va. His work wlil be with
the State Department of Health.
spite of t$e rainy weather.
Th- wires of the firemen enjoyed
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklin of
a party Thursday afternoon at thc
home of Mra. Voyle Varney, a lovely Allegan were week-end guests of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Darby.
pot luck luncheon wu served.

Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Northrup
MARTIN CORNERS.
were in Ballis Creek Saturday.
Remember the Sunday school next
Mias Pauline Fumiss entertained
Sunday at 10:30 o'clock, followed her bridge club Friday afternoon.
by preaching by our nejr pastor.
Mr. and Mr* Will Spelman of Ne­
Rev. Swemm. Come ouvand hear braska are visiting his brother.
him.
Charles Spelman and wife and other
The L. A. S. supper at Mra. Van- relatives.
derjagt's was well attended and lhe
A meeting was held at the school­
proceeds were 14.45.
house last Wednesday with lhe dif­
Our old friends and neighbors. ferent organisations represented lo
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Hilton of Sau- record all social, educational and re­
Sus. Maas., celebrated their twenty- creational events. A calendar with
fifth
flh wedc
wedding
1*'--------anniversary
*---------------- —
Sunday.
*•“
the dates and places will be placed
Mr and Mrs. Carl Lens visited ! Sept. 30. at the Patterson Club Ra­ in the office at the schoolhouse and
the latter's parents. Mr. and Mra. Vllioh In Saugus, about 200 being bulletins will be placed about town
Claude Lester, of Dowling and her ' present to do them honor. A fine with the week's events listed. The
.brother
.
...
..
...
...
_
_
W.
Mill™
and wife. Mr. and Mra. Her- , picture of Mr. and Mra. Hilton ap- following will represent the various
berl Letter. of Cedar Creek. Sunday. | peered in lhe Saugus Herald with groups. The village. President. L.
I Jimmie Fisher and friend of Has- , the account of the event. We extend G. Cole; schools. Menno Wenger,
I tings were Monday afternoon can- congratulations and wish for them president of the board of education,
[ era at the Claude A. Hammond many more happy years together. Mr* W d. Wallace. Principal J. D.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jones of i, Duguid n,iu
and Miss rvuMr
Ruth oil,.,,
Bills: scouts
rirnndvllfn and Mr.
Mr and Mra.
Mra Lowell
Iziivrll ooy
r^.. G.
r&lt; Brumm; camp fire girls.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Kenney of Orandvilfe
Lansing spent over the week end Demond of North Stony Point were Mus Frances French; chamber of
with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Orr commerce. V. J. Bera; Community
FUh«'',
,
Brotherhood.
Ralph
V.
Hess;
Yelter.
air. and
ana Mrs. Norman
norman Barry
Harry are
are Knights of Pythias. Charles Higdon.
Mr.
• Rev. Crocker of Hastings was a
frC!lhmlln cllls5 of
h(gh
It la fartki
living («
in .h.
lhe Hre.re
house recently vacated)Tuesday evening dinner guest in the -vln.
by Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hilton.
Edw.
Wallers
home.
school
won
thc
Sophomore-Fresh
­
' ffurux* la’tki
Mra Claude A. Hammond visited ' We were glad to hear &lt;Jl the man day events by one point at
artpapar printed
Mra. Peter Huver and Mr. and Mra. good luck that befell Mr. and Mra. Riverside athletic field Friday after­
Wayne Conklin of Allegan. They noon. Freshman boy* and girls won
Nay Bump in Hastings last week.
Week-end visitors at the home of were so lucky as to draw a new car
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Robinson were at the Allegan fair. Mra. Conklin tle for both classes; the sophomore
their daughters. Misses Ruth and was formerly Miss Prances Darby, girls won the jumping contest; the
■OttOB OF MOXTQAQB aA LB
Retha. of Bancroft and Lester Lar- who taught dur school here two freshmen girls thc potato race; the
years ago and Mr. Conklin is Hie pushing contest and the relay race
abec of Hastings.
Mrs. Edgar S. Flfield was among son of our pastor. Rev. Conklin.
were won by the sophomore boys.
those who enjoyed "The Great
The losers give the wclner roast tills
NASHVILLE.
Ziegflcld" at lhe Strand theater In
week. The Junior-Senior hunt will
Hastings
Tuesday
evening
and
Mr.
Mrs.
Clinton
F.
Smith
and
Mrs.
take place Friday night. Oct. 9.
TION. a Corporation etgaaiied under
Albert Ostroth of Chicago spent the
The Women's Literary Club will
daiad Jan* 50th. 1»34. »nd r&lt;-r«rM In j Q Q y |od
week end with their many relatives open their year's work on Wednes­
on jairSth. | Mra. Claude A. Hammond was an enroute to Bay City, where Mrs. day. Oct. 7. with a one o'clock
itaa. in Liiwr er of Noriraw. on1r»&lt;:* afternoon guest of Miss Mary Sulll- Ostroth will spend the winter with luncheon.
ar I van »nd Mra Wm Fighter of Grand her son. Rev. D. C. Ostroth. and
Mrs. Ida Wolfe has returned from
«t*r« ih* retire printirai and areraad la- l^dge at the former's home In Has- family.
a visit with relatives in Battle
Urre&gt; Utrere &lt;l»». whuhJ1.?”! tings, Wednesday.
Mis* Pauline Dause Is in Lansing Creek.
**“*
■ r
Tuesday evening prayer service at where she has employment.
thc Walters home was well attend­
Mr. and Mrs. Arch' Lykins and
HINDS CORNERS. ‘
ed. There were twenty-three pres­ son of Portland..Ind, called- on Mr.
Miss Margaret Moore spent Sat­
ent
and Mrs. Ottle Lykins Bunday.
(4925 40) and
urday with Miss omagene Garrison
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mt*, chartes Betts anctson. Bobby; in Cloverdale.
were in Battle Creek Saturday.
Mrs. Stella Bump of Hastings vis­
। Jerry Warner underwent an operited “
her
daughter, Mr.
Mra. William
er daughter.
' atlon Saturday night for appendl- ’ Yfoow,
OV-X,- the
rh. week
...
• u. “.I, u ii.rr,. ”
I dlls at lhe Nashville Community 1 Moore, over
end.
. tml.lan of ml r-url. hrld *4 lh, hosnlta)
M1“ Irene Gaskill Of Hastings Is
&gt;t. oSico in the Hi,
iiMtinn. in
Mon(U.. sept. 28. at the I visiting nt lhe Charlie Gaskill home.
I hospital a son to Mr. and Mrs. John Mr- and Mrs. Gaskill visited her
Higdon
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Mrs. Ralph Wetherbee. her moth- Martx. near Naahjdlle Bunday
Mrs. Almon
Almon ’shefdon
Sheldon of KalamtKalamg- 11, .Mr
and_Mra.
Alien BLhop
BUhop visited
er. Mrs?
Mr. and
Mrs. Allen
zoo. Miss Floy Sheldon. Mrs. BeedJe Mr. and Mra. Charles Welch In
_ Gail Lykins
. ____
__ &lt; ..
Baltimore, Radirdav
Saturday.
and
Mrs.
were ...
in Bat­ RnltlHinrr
Mra. Mary Payne is spending the
tle Creek Saturday.
The first meeting of thc Chamber week in Hastings with her chil­
of commerce for the fall was held dren.
Mr. and Mrs. Keet Tobias were
Monday night al the Community
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Everett
houae.
The Clover Leaf Club will meet Meyer of Centervine Sunday. His
father
relumed with them after
Friday night at the home of Mrs.
Pearl Justus near Kalamo. A good having spent the past week there.
The correspondent would be very
attendance is desired.
Mr. and Mrs. George Parrott and grateful if those having news items
son. Kirs. Della Bowman and Mrs. | would call her Sunday night or
Fred Ackett spent the week end Monday morning.
with relatives in Flint.
Mrs. James Lancaster had a bod
The "We Are Four" club was en-1 accident Friday. She was taking
tertained Wednesday at the home of; her sons to a ball game at the Doud
Mrs. Coy Brumm for a one o'clock school and the steering gear locked.
I Thr
finnrd nvrr
The rar
car Upped
over and
and arts
was bn.-llv
badly
luncheon.
„... I The General Aid of lhe M. E. wrecked. 8he escaped Injury, but
p I church was held Wednesday after- Nile and Paul each have a broken
r'« t« । noon al the home of Mrs. Frank arm and another boy riding with
i.‘a7t ' Lena. Assisting were Mrs. Carl them has some broken ribs and cuu
i a. i Tuttle. Mrs. W. B. Cortright. Mrs. Ion his face.

shore after peaches one day laat
week and found them pretty wall
cleaned up.
Mr. and Mrs. Sydnoy. who pur­
chased lhe Chas. WlUlaon home,
are making many Improvements on

HICKORY COBNBBS.
Saturday availing tWMH at O.
Haynes' were Mr. and Mn. Wallow
Borden of Kalamaiod, Clayton of
Battle Creek and MAroeltnc Oamj»-

Howard Aspini
at the Prank Ma
Sunday with his
field.
Mr. and Mra. Merton Rockwall
and children or Kalamasoo were
Bunday gue»U of hb mother. Mr*.
Ada Rockwell.
।
Don Johnston spent Saturday with
friends in Kalamaaoo.
Mr. and Mra. Geo. Elliot of De­
troit were week-end cuaaU of their
mother. Mrs. Ella Elliot.
।

NOW... BUILD
Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

PMaa Mil

Week Saga

I hOn.’e

FRIGIDAIRE

A-B or DETROIT JEWEL

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GAS RANGES

miCIDAIBt will. the METER­
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•
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• Automatic Lighting
• Large Worming Ovens and
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$3.00 Down, 36 Mos. on Balance

Harvest Special, $79.50

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Preslo Chango! MAKE AN
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....... old lank.

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FREE AUTOMATIC water
healing for years ’to come.
Over 100 have been installed
in Hastings this year.

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.- ■&lt; w Xa ii-nr.-r. -r
x-wn- ,
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of Or.»«.«&gt;!’». Il.rrr Co-iuit. Mtrt
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Manhattan COAL

2257

A Cod C»l at a low Prica

WE LL DELIVER!

Because PRICKS WILL SOON ADVANCE . . . be-

what you want later on, wo advise you to buy your
winter's coal NOW !
imrt.oinr.i Ikmuln belnerinx. tbA ■
Mtate. richt. HU, *n&lt; lain.il w»U
lk« narteteort h*.l in ,(14 InnAe
I

CORPO­

RATION. MortaasM.,
Ulesa P. MS'Sevr
.
I Ba|ia^?4&amp;es*7ftiiaul itsk 1
Ionia. MkbUsn.
Oil O

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.
DEALERS IN WOOL. GRAIN. FEW. FLOUR, BALT. LIME.
CEMENT AN* COAL
PHONE 1231

BASTINGS, MfUB.

FALL HARVEST

�BA1TTN08 BANNER, THUBADAT, OCTOBER 1, 1IM

ham district who has been in ill

PROBATE COURT.
Eat. Raymond
Valentine, OUy .. .
Roberta Bhaw, Mldlanshlp Issued.
Est. Phebe De M aran v Ute. Waiver
The MlasM Dorothy and Barbara
of notice filed, testimony offreeDU.TON.
LcUn4 «&lt; ^alamaaoe called «n thalr
holdens filed, license to *cll Issued.
mother, Mr*. Leland, at tbe Eddy
1st. aarah A- Downing. Order al­
home tost Wednesday.
o’clock Bunday morning by th* An
lowing claims entered.
Elwood Eddy aUrted work Uli*
Monday morning with the Young

E*l. Agnes Bristol. Warrant and
Inventory filed.
EsL Nora Bronson, inventory filed,
final account filed.
EsL Etta Mather. Testimony of
freeholders filed, license to sell Is­
sued. oath before sale filed, bond on
sale filed, report of sale filed.
Est. Matilda Noban Bond of
Admr. filed, letter* of administra­
tion lisued, order limiting settle­
ment entered.
Est. Nora Bronson. Order allow­
ing account entered, discharge of
Adair, issued, estate enrolled.
Est. Wm- N Gladstone. Nomina­
tion of odn. filed, order appointing
Odo. entered, bond of Gdn. filed, let­
ters of guardianship Issued. Inven­
tory filed, petition for license to sell
filed, waiver of notice filed.
Est. Nellie Sullivan, petition for
Admr. filed.
Est. Wm. N. Gladstone. PeUllon
for determination of heir* filed, or­
der for publication entered.
Eat. Owen L. Dodge, petition for
extension of widow's allowance filed,
order granting extension of widow's
allowance entered.
Est. Henry Roe. Renewal bond
filed, order to release surety on bond
entered.
Est. Elbe Vasmer. Bond of Admr.
filed, letter* of administration Is­
sued. order limiting settlement en­
tered, petition for hearing of claims
filed, notice to creditors Issued.
Est. William N. Gladstone. Testi­
mony filed, license to sell issued,
oath before sale filed, report of sale
filed.
»t. Robert T. Martin. Will filed,
petition for probate filed, petition
for special Admr. filed, order ap­
pointing special Admr. entered, bond
of special Admr. filed, letters of spe­
cial Admr. issued, order for publicatlon entered.
Est. William E. Johncock. Report
ut nb filed.
Est. Margaret E. Shilling. Bond of
Admr. filed, letters of administration
Issued. Inventory filed.
Est Celia M- Traver. Warrant and
inventory filed.
Est. Flora M. Taylor. Order al­
lowing claims entered.
Bit Giles Shepard. Annual ac­
count of trustee filed, order for pub­
lication entered, order appointing
Gdn. ad litem entered.
Est. Martha Benson. Order allow­
ing claims entered, order to trans­
fer stock entered, final account filed.
Est. Seth Belle Shields, et al.
Bond of Admr. filed, letter* of ad-'
ministration Issued.

was filled with hay. a part of which
belonged to Leon Pennock. No cause

Mias Virginia Eddy of New York,
who has been spending some Ume
wilb friends in Detroit and Grand

relatives here.
Mrs. Hortense Farrington
started—just another
mysterious daughter. Mm. Nora Carey of
coda. Wash., are vial Ung the
Our Bunday School will hold a mer's aUter. Mra. Luolna Eddy.
Rally Day neat Sunday and every- 1* the first time they have seen

and
Bu­
for­
This
each

comfortsbits Is schedThursday of this week with
&gt;ry Clark and Mrs. Nellie
—session of ths Pleas­
ure Birthday organization will be
held on Wednesday of next week
with Mr*. Lavella Miller as hostess
at her bane.
Ekrl Bristol had tbe misfortune
last week to break a bone in his
right hand when it got caught In
the drill.
Tlie Steven* Parent Teacher or­
ganization resumed activities on
Friday night by holding the first
session for this school year.
Mrs Arietta Bristol Fuller anil
family have returned to their home
In New York after a two weeks' visit
with relatives here.

QUIMBY.
program and entartalnment will be
prepared by the different classes.
Mr. and Mr*. Henry Carpenter of
North Adams spent from Friday
night until Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. C. J. Barnum and also called
on old friends Ip Delton.
Mr. and Mr*. Leon Dunning enter­
tained the young married people*'
Sunday school Clara Saturday eve­
ning with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Car­
penter a* the honored guesta.
Rev. and Mrs- George Brown of
White Pigeon were guests of Mr. and
Mr*. L. N. Bu*h Saturday.
Sunday School classes No. 8 and
7 will hold their social meeting on
Monday night October 5th. at the
home of Mr. and Mr*. C. J. Barnum.
A pot hick supper will be served at
7 o'clock with a business meeting
and program following.
Mr. and Mr*. L. N. Bush spent
Wednesday at their collage at Eat­
on Rapids.
Several Delton people . attended
the chicken supper and program at
the Bunnell church Friday night.
The annual Barry county Sunday
School convention will be held In
the Delton M. E. church on Tues­
day afternoon and evening. October
20. Miss lone catton of Uuuing will
be the guest speaker at both sessions.
Mrs. Luclna Eddy entertained her
cousin, Mr*. Lucy Penne!*, of Rich­
land last Thursday.
Me*. Julia W*Uer I* spending a
few day* visiting relatives in In­
dians.
Rex Shealhehn spent the week
end in Elkhart. Ind., and Miss
Mary Roush spent thc week end
wllh her sister tn Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnes and
family and Mr*. Wright spent Bun­
day In Flint.
Mrs. Julia Doster entertained one
day last week Mrs. Homer Hughes
and two sons. Mrs. Harley Brown
and daughter, Mrs. Edward John­
son of spickncy. Routh Dakota.
Tbe Past Matrons' club of the Q.
E 8- of Barry co. held an all day
me*Ung at the home of Mr*. R. G.
Henton on Thursday of last week.

HOPE CENTER.
We are glad to hear that Jimmie
Harrington U improving after being
badly injured tn a fall while budd­
ing Charlev Williams’ bam.

Mr. and Mr*. Walter Bldelman
celebrated their fiftieth wedding
anniversary Wednesday.
building a home here in connection
with their oil station.
Hollis Hoffman expects to come

his father, who was quite seriously
Fred Ashby. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ash­ injured.
At the election bf Sunday School
by returned to Kalamazoo, to spend
ofScers Sunday Robert Glasgow was
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Ashby and retained as Superintendent
family spent Bunday tn Bettie Creek
PLEASANT VALLEY.
with Mr. and Mrs Hoyt HouidsMr. and Mrs. Floyd Neeb and
worth.
Clyde Leonard has been very sick children accompanied by Mr. and
Mrs.
Lee
Osborn of Pinhook spent
and unable to do hl* work so the
neighbors spent two days last week Sunday with Mrs. Osborn's sister.
fitting the ground and drilling his Mr*. Earl Galucha and family of
Charlotte.
MIm Lillian Ixyrer. who teaches
Mrs. Melissa Ashby has returned
to the home of her daughter. Mr*, at Maple Rapids, spent the week end
pern Houldsworth of Battle Creek at the H. W. Geiger home.
Gordon Ritter, wife and baby of
home of her son. Fred Ashby, of Clarksville spent Bunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Will Hallibcrger.
Delton.
Vaughn Geiger spent the week end
Hastings were Sunday evening call­ with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. H. W.
Geiger. Emery Benedict and family
ers at the Fred Ashby home.
of Ionia were Sunday visitors also.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Neeb and
ASSYRIA
family were in Ionia Saturday afterLyman Tompkins, who has been il noon.
in 111 health for some ttme. was
Clarence, Kime and wife and Mrs.
taken to Leila hospital. Battle
Jane Kime were In Grand Rapids
Monday.
Thursday he submitted to an opWilbur Dye and family of Lake,
Odessa spent Sunday with Bert'
Our new pastor filled the pulpit
al tlie morning service Sunday at
A Rood crowd was present at Mrs.
thc Briggs and Base Line churches.

Harold Case ha* had employment
al ths Medkin Lake building project Thursday. The next meeting will
be with Mrs. John F. Bra^e. Octo­
of the Bailey brothers.
ber 8. All day meeting, everyone Is
urged to attend.
engaged In getting their wheat tn.
MIm Norbcrtg Perverse of Pin­
Mrs. Lena Buxton accompanied
her son, Maurice Buxton, on a trip hook spent over Sunday with Gladys
to Centerville on Wednesday. Mr. Hamblin.
Lavem HuUlbcrger began work In
Buxton is a state trooper stationed
Detroit Monday.
x
at Lansing.
Vem Allerding and family and
At a recent session of the Ellis
his
mother. Mrs. Alice Allerding, of
Cemetery Association Mrs. Pearl
Coats
Grove
spent
Thursday
after
­
I’hlnnlsey was elected president;
Albert Clark, vice-president: Anna noon at Elmer Scott’s.
Mrs. clayton Mote entertained
Graybum, secretary and Mary
relatives from Ohio last week.
Clark, treasurer.
Mrs. Mabie Van Allsbury spent
Admr. filed, letters of administration Galesburg were Sunday guests at the University hospital at Ann Ar­
Issued.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordie Durkee.
bor for treatment, returned home
The Delton L. A- 8. will hold an I last week much Improved In health.
E»t. Wm- E. Aldrich. Final account
filed.
all clay meeting on Wednesday. Oc- ।
to be able to resume her school
of Gdn. filed, discharge of Odn. Is­ Leon Leonard. Dinner
will be work in the Lansing schools.
sued.
,
served
Mrs. Norma Kesler of the Dun-

UCTION SALE

Saturday afternoon with her parante. Mr. and Mr*. J. F. Brake.
Eldlane Preston spent aver Bun­
day with her parent*, Mr. and Mr*.
Caeli Preston.

REPORT OF BRIGGS SCHOOL.
For the month ending September
No. of boys enrolled—IS.
No. of girls enrolled—8.
Total enrollment_ 23.
Bum of dally attendance—4123.
Bum of dally membership—438.

■ Those neither absent nor tardy
for the month were—Duane Bab­
cock. Eugene Cortright. Leroy. Leon­
ard and Duane Ruthruff. Loeta
Tack. Ronald and Mildred Williams,
Patricia Durham.
Maxine Brandt visited the Has­
tings high school one day this month
and Margaret Cortright visited lhe
Section Hill school where she ex­
pects soon lo become a pupil
Those receiving 100 per cent In
our teste this month were—Spelling,
Margaret Cortright and Maxine
Brandl In English, Margaret Cort­
right. in Civil Government. Mar­
garet Cortright and Patricia Dur­
ham. and arithmetic. Margaret Cort­
right.
Visitors for this month were Her­
bert and Richard Rorabeck of Hick­
ory corners. Mbs Evelyn Karcjewskl
of Grand Raptds. Mrs. Smith of
Hastings. Phyllis, Jackie, and Mrs.
Bouts. Carol Miller. George TerpenIng apd Rubs Reneau, local.
Each Monday morning we learn
five facte about Michigan. Last week
for art. safety praters were made by
the 4lh. Sth. 7th and 8th grades.
Our teacher. Mrs. Lelnaar. attend­
ed the group meeting at the Lincoln
school Thursday night. — Patricia
Durnam. reporter. Lillian Lelnaar,
teacher.

LOW BUS
FARES to
KALAMAZOO
ONE WAY____ $ .75
SHOPPERS'
ROUND TRIP, $1.00
SIXTY-DAY
ROUND TRIP, $1.35

TO LANSING
ONE WAY____ $1.00
SHOPPERS'
ROUND TRIP, $1.25

SIXTY-DAY \

ROUNDTRIP, $1.80

PEOPLES
itapid Trans It
10-8

Isnt
Winter
Fun!

HAWTHORN HILL FARM
Localcd on M-37, two and ouohalf miles east of Middleville and eight
miles northweal of liabtings and near Irving road, on

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6
COMMENCING AT liOO P.M., WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING;-

14

HEAD

HEAD

GOOD GRADE HOLSTEINS
All brad and raiiad an our farm. Good, healthy, rugged
animate, nearly all young ang du« to freshen thii coming
winter and spring.

A|m Duroc-Jsrtsy brood

dap to farra*.

Six acres ensilage oorn. Carbide light gas nvacfeiee. Drag
lino hoist. Lot blqcksmjth repairs. Lot junk apd mi,cel
Iqmqus items.
HU IF U!JI Jt

TGgMS:—CASH ANO SITT LID W AT RATI OF SALE

WINCES &amp; SONS, Qwn«r«
A. W. HILZEY, AucHonoar.

5

WM. B. McCANN, Clark.

Sandwich Spread
Calumet
Salt
Scot Tissue
Waldorf Tissue
Palmolive
Pancake Flour
8 o'Clock Coffee

WHEN ITS COZY
and WARM INSIDE
Cold weather is fun and healthy . . . outside!
But inside—drafty, chilly houses are danger­
ous for little folks, and uncomfortable for
grown-ups. . . . This winter enjoy a winter­
proof home..
We are experienced in making homes wintertight, and can suggest ways to eliminate drafts
and cut down fuel bills. Sometimes it’s weath­
er stripping, the roof, insulation, or any of the
many things that make a house drafty.
Call today, a complete inspection will be well
worth while.

"BUILDS HOMES’
HASTINGS
PHONG 2278

19c
roll*

Me

rails

15c
25c
21c
43c
19c
23c
10c

te: 19c
Rinso or Oxydol
19c
Or
Ciagar Soaps
25c
Pink Salmon
23c
4X Sugar
15c
Snowdrift
55c
te’ 10c
Instant Postum
39c
Postum Cereal
19c
Bowltne,D,,no' Sw,iflu’h
19c
Soda «r Qxabaai
Crackers
ISc

Jii
Pet

Mello What
Farina C«ul

2

25c
Sparkle

Gelatine Dessert

Baker’s Ceeea

10c
Feb NantKa

Scot Towels

3 ■* 25c
DAILY

Dog Food

6 - 25c
ALL FLAVOR*

Jello

Cabbage Soli&lt;i h««i
Sweet Potatoes

Yellow Onions
Tokay Grape;
Potatoes Michigw.
Celery Large lunch

Lei us make your home /Finter-Tight!

The HOME LUMBER CO

£ 19c

Bokar Coffee
Mince Meat
■u 25C
Prune* K2
Blrdwye
k~- 25c
Matches
...k 27e
Broom*
Tomatoes
25c
Karo Syrup
25c
Molasses
10c
2000.Mil.
rJft99
c
A-Penn Oil
T5.*&gt;|j2
Gold Medal Flour
Corned Beef
15c
Corned Beef Hash
15c
Na. 2
Corn
10c
lb.
Maxwell House Coff.a
27c
Beechnut Coffee
27c
lb.
Del Monte Coffee
27c
lb.
Hills Bros. Coffee
29c
Swansdown *=*
23c
..rt- Jf.fj
Cigarettes

Am. Family Flakes

Complete ruin by fire of our barns this late in the year requires disposal
of stock on hand to the highest bidder al public auction, at

14

LABQl WHITE

Listen lo

StatioQ

IO tb. 15

�THE PASTINGS BANNER. THTUBDAT, OCtotjB 1. !&gt;M
, and Mr and Mrs. Will Flory enter-1-----------Park. Illinois,
and Chas. Pnwvr-il of mer's parents. Mr. and
Mrs.
having
him In death1|
I Mrs. L- A. Day and daughter. Elaine I
--------- .------------------------------------------------------... Wm. {old.
------------- -preceded
------------------------------------MILO
.tslned
._ . ...
__ .__ —___
...
110
TTie
funeral was held ■ ■
wereRundav
Sunday&gt;ue«ts
guestsofof Mr.
Mr. Warner. anniUv
Sunday.
19months
monthsuo
ago.
The
t
-dies*’’ Aid
the ....
following
Sunday
at....
the. Chicago ware
- ™
.. funeral was hsld
.nrf
LadU
AW are
*" aelllna
*Hln« old were appointed program committee
and Mrs. F. E- Border.
j.
Lenore Dowden of Eaton 13Uondaw
al
al »e
lh* hfl'n'
and'---------•------------- ------------ •thc October meeting.
Conservation and
“«y s
eu£!
xxrx
10 *ne,p - forFrank
ft. and Mn. Clyde Ruel) attend- latter's home: Mr. and Mra. Chas.
Hyde of the Dunham diaMrs. Alma Slough of Phillipsburg. Rapids spent lhe week end with Mr.
th* Mural of the former’s cous- Kepner of Canon City, Mr. and
I trict spent the week end at hte
Outdoor Notes
Mrs. Horence HurlbuL of Afie- Mrs. clarenca Kepner of Flint. Mrs. Ohio, was the guest of her cousin. and Mrs. F. E Border.
dames Hon^well. L^’ Norrte' an’d nephew’s. Will Hyde.
Warner. Wednesday night
MUf
MnnIon #nd clyd(_ field preached the funeral services
i. Wednesday. Mrs. HurlbuL died
Sarah Mohler of South Woodland. and Thursday.
Munlon of Hastings were callers at and Mrs. Rena Culler sang. Burial in Mary Polley motored to South Hav.
y suddenly on Monday.
Woodland cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. ,
Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Shorno spent the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Greiner were faithful members ol
Mr. and Mn. Jolin Weaver of Has­
Tens of. thousands of hunters
tings and Mr. and Mrs Delbert Slo- Sunday wllh relatives in Allegan.'
Munlon Sunday evening.
the Woodland U. B. church and he '
throughout the upper peninsula and
Mr and Mrs. Frank Nielhamer of
Floyd M. Greiner, aged 39. passed will be sadly missed Ln the com­
from many parts of lhe lower pen­
ion of Woodland. This was in lhe Woodland attended a gathering of away in Ann Arbor Friday. Scptem- munity.
of Toledo. Ohio, this week. '
insula are preparing to celebrate
nature of a reunion as Mrs. Carpen­ thc Jordan family at the home of
Mr. and Mn. Arthur Giddings and
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond McLeod ter, Mrs. Flory. Mrs. Slocum. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Tucker of
lhe opening today of the xmall-game
ISiS
M™
i
and children of Grand Rapids spent Mohler and Mrs. Weaver are sis­ Clarksville in honor of the latter's treatment two days previous. Mr. daughter Ruth of Tawaa City spent
hunting season in the upper penGreiner had been 111 for several the week end with Misa Carrie OrozMr.
Mra M.rb, . BradAdb
“C",
ters. the first four living in Wood­ birthday.
iiMUla. Beginning Oct 1 season
months
following
a
stroke.
He
was
inger.
Mn.
John
Velte
who
has
been
Williams.
land. and Mrs. Weaver in Hastings.
opens
on rabblte. ruffed grouse,
mn.
W
wramran.,
K.,.™.“
d
bornin
Ionia
county
and
moved
to
spending a few weeks with her sis­
Mrs Lawrence Hilbert. .MIm Lor­
prairie chickens, sharptailed grouse,
Miss'Winifred Border of Oak ena Hilbert and Mrs. J. Reteinger Sunfield where he resided for ten ter, Mias Orozinger. returned to TaMr. and Mrs. Claud Carpenter
Mra. J. Brandmura .nd d.d^- US".r
.. fox squirrels and woodcock in all
were Grand Rapids shoppers Satur­ years, coming u&gt; Woodland four was City with them.
ter. Mra. Boyle, and Mra. N. H. Bar- 1 -J! *
r eh^h
counties of Michigan north of lha
day.
Straits. Fourteen days later the
STONY POINT.
Mr. and Mrs H. J- Sung of Bat­ Colette Leonard of Woodland in
season on these upland species will
Mr and Mrs. H. J. Waggoner and
tle creek and Mrs. C. B. Benham of Sunfield in 1926. Tills past year he
open in lhe lower peninsula, bringHartings were Bunday guests of Mr. has been connected with Faul's son. Kenneth of Olivet visited B. J. .1 l»r MB bom. In K.I.muno
’
P
“
„'J
'
tm
--------------------------------------------------’
.m ln« niqre than ■ quarter-million
Wellman one of lhe rainy days last
and Mrs. Karl C Paul.
Mrs
Mrs, Rarhar
Barber ha*
has n,iw.haam&lt;
purchased lha
the' I* M. We hope a good many Will
n,. hunters into the open. The open
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Warner of dow and his father. Wm. Greiner
J. Vandertie house and tot In Rich° en,°y U
hunting season on ducks, geese and
Mr. and Mrs Royal Barnum have
Lake Odessa were guests of the for- of Guymon. Okla., a son. 3 1-2-years
and has rented the same to
o,.fTru nt nM_ K.i_ br»nl- coot- Jacksnipe, rails and
arrangements all made to spend the land
Kalamazoo parties.
Mra. Barber
®«alllnule* H the “me throughout
coming winter with their two daugh­ will continue her residence in MUo. Ml^iohn
Runda^
lhe ,ute’ The SCMon opens-on Oct.
ters in California. They are going in
I company with Earl Hathaway of
Rutland who is going there to spend
I the winter with his daughter. They
i and Michigan are jolncome here for lhe winter about the
state -------line to
I expect to leave Tuesday. Oct 6.
Mr ind Mrs E J Beck and Mr
'’ana»aiong
’----- - the
----------------—
' Mr. and Mrs. Barry Wellman first of November. They will spend and Mra. Fred Henney were in
A telephone
run
W^conAin
I made a business trip to Hickory the month of October in their home I Grand Rapids Thursday afternoon *1'*
Ln Hastings.
, Comers one day last week.
on business
"re ,ower near Pembine to the
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Schulte spent।.
I Bom, Wednesday. Sept. 23rd. to
'
ibMichigan tower at Faithom in
* "’
northern Menominee county, a dis­
Mr. and, Mrs. Lawrence Garllnger. the week end In Chicago attending
. J?
nn.
I an 8 1-2 ib. baby girl. She will an­ the latter’s slater’s wedding anni- .
tance of approximately ll miles.
versary
1 Mr. ttnd Mrs. rted Oils enter' ewer to the name of Shirley Ann.
When "smokes" are sighted tower­
Mra. lUrUn Se«b.y ml ryutey
i John Mead and his Ford car are
men between the two points will be
wllh her slater Mrs Nina Tack at 1 drcn n honor ol their 50th wedI both growing old but when they both uSy. O?
Mr iS lira '&lt;&lt;“■«
■»' SunrUy. About able to make cross-shots by com­
municating over llje telephone, thus
I get into a wreck as they 'did last
Scobey visited the former’s mother j
vi™mtePH^eiisf°attended a
ascertaining the location of fires and
। week. John caps lhe climax by makand
at Welcome
Miss riVirginia
Havens
attended
Mr.family
and'jirs
STouick spent ' ^
’
ln MU,dlev,lle
,ula whether they are in Michigan or
lng the more rapid recovery of the
Wisconsin territory.
, l*’°Sunday with their daughter and , aS, * h
wred neehtet
I Mr. and Mrs. Royal Barnum en- family
at Lacey. Mrs. Quick remain- -Mr’ and ¥r!’. Pred.
°l.
. tertained a number of relatives at
(Hastings and Mr. and Mra. Lowell
A system of auxiliary fire stations,
YOUR SUPPORT AT THE ELECTION
I their home last Sunday. Among those lng for a few days. '
' Whittemore of Delton were Sun-. in which fire apparatus can be
Louis Dunn of Galesburg and day vteltors at Chas. Whittemore's. I cached for local use. is being built
present were Mr. and Mrs. Shirley
NOV. 3, 1936, WILL BE APPRECIATED
Barnum of Lansing, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Flower and . Mr. and Mrs. Russell Whittemore ’ for the department of conservation
Dee Snyder of Hastings and Mr. and children were callers at the Floacr ।j visited the latter’s parents in Has- j by CCC labor. The purpose te to
Mrs. Grover Davenport of Ctover- home Sunday afternoon.
eliminate, .time-consuming long-dis- ’
The Home Literary Club will be II tings Sunday.
....
, dale.
\
Rara ?
Prwzv
Lanee transport
traiunevrt of
nf heavy
heavv fire-fight
flea-fleht­
entertained next Thursday. Oct. 1.1 wlMn
^
wt. inrnt lost waelr ' Lance
at the home of Mrs. Bertha HumHavens. ing equipment In the areas involved.
Four auxiliary stations already have
phrey with Mrs McClary assisting '
been built. Log shelter* have been
her
a miftieni Txmra.■ I., w.iii .u «Several
from
this vicinity
Sin
ll“ *»
“« «&lt;"*»
»«••“attend■«
constructed at Beney In lhe upper
peninsula and on Indian river near
S»M°f.
Burt Lake state park in northeast­
d.y
Fran Barnum
wSrSl2fX ern part of the lower peninsula;
day ™in,.
evening. Prof.
Barnum giving
frame buildings have been com-f
an excellent address.
Erway of Grand Rapids. Mr. and pleted at Manistique and at Gwinn
Mrs. Dick Rose snd Miss Esther in the upper peninsula. Plows, hand­
BOWNE CENTER.
George Huntington has been quite Erway of Hastings were Sunday vis­ water tanks, shovels tractors and
itors at Roy Erway’s.
trucks will be stored Ln these build­
ill with bronchitis.
Louis Havens was a Battle Creek ings. so that when fires occur in
The Ladies' Aid served a bountiful
the locality It will not be necessary
chicken supper to a large crowd visitor last Friday.
John Erway of M. S. C. and Ruth to haul equipment from district con­
Thursday evening. Proceeds were
E. Erway of Burlington were Sun­ servation headquarters.
over »100.
day
guests
of
their
parents.
Mr.
and
Mn. Merrill Kercher and son. Jer­
Chairman William H. Loutll an«
ry. and Mrs. Watt Thomas were Mrs. Ray Erway.
Mr. and Mra. Chas. Whittemore nounced that the state conservation
Grand Rapids visitors Tuesday.
Day
Night A- Sunday
Glen Godfry and family are spent Saturday evening with live commission had accepted an Invi­
former's mother at Delton.
tation to hold Its October meeting
driving a new Chevrolet.
Station-Station
StaUon-Statlon
In Boyne City. The commissioners
Sunday visitors at Watt Thomas’
A conservative bank is literally
LOWER CROOKED LAKE.
were Mr. and Mn. Fred Skeldlng
Miss Marie Rounds of Battle will meet in Boyne City on Thursday
bank that never travels too fast. In
Alma
..S .50
S .35
and daughter of Lyons. Mr. and Creek returned to her home after and Friday. October 8 and 9.
its management, it observes all the
Mn. Kenneth Penoyer and Mr. and a week's visit wllh her grandpar­
Ann Arbor
rules of the road and the conditions
.65
.35
Mrs. Merrill Kareher and son.
Sixteen hundred cock pheasants
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stengers.
of thc road. There is no nodding St
Orson Simpson from the west
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Louden of ' are being held in pens at the state
Benton Harbor
.35
visited his brother. John, and wife । Gull lake and Mr. and Mrs. Russell game farm here for release as soon
the wheel.
lhe past week.
as lhe pheasant hunting season Is
Tolles
of
Delton
visited
at
A.
R.
The
conservative
bank
protects
its
Chicago*
.75
.45
over. The birds are all adults and
Louden's Sunday afternoon.
depositors as the careful driver pro­
BARKY VILLE.
Mr. and Mra. Ftoyd Collison of will be "planted" Ln areas favorable
Cleveland*
tects his passengers.
1.05
.60
The Ladies’ Aid will serve a chick­ Delton spent Sunday evening with to pheasants. The numbtr of
pheasants already released by state
en
supper
at
lhe
church
Friday
eve
­
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stenger.
The officers and directors of thia
Cincinnati'
ning. Oct. 2. the proceeds to be used
... 1.15
.65
Mr. and Mrs. John Wallace spent game men so far this year In proven
bank are men of progressive views.
for redecorating the parsonage. Saturday night and Sunday with pheasants areas totals 2378.
They are interested in seeing this
Detroit
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Faul of Hastings.
.40
community go forward, but they be­
thirty-five cents a plate. You are
Donald Kingsbury spent the week | Michigan's new conservation lab­
cordially Invited.
lieve in "making haste slowly."
end with friends at Hastings and . oratory on wheels will swing through
Edmore ...
.50
.35
Mrs. Arthur Jones of Grandville North Irvtng.
the upper peninsula during the first
When you bank here your financial
is visiting at the home of her broth­
Mr. and Mrs. N. Pietersma and part of October for the annual
Flint
.65
interests are in careful hands.
.35
er. Merritt Mead.
daughter spent Friday evening in I check up by slate game men of bird
.651
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox Kalamazoo with friends.
| hunting conditions.
Fort Wayne*
.40
and little Donna of Kalamazoo were
week end visitors at the home of his
Grand Haven
.45
parents. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Wilcox
Bunday dinner guests also included
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
Mr. and Mrs. Vem Wilcox and
Hillsdale
.55
.35
daughters. Virginia and Charlotte,
of Dowling.
Holland
.40
Mrs. Clara Day of Lansing called
on her parents. Rev. and Mrs. J. J.
Jackson
.45
.35
Willitts Sunday.
Howard Rice has secured employ­
Muskegon
.55
.35
ment In Battle Creek and expects to
move there soon. Ashley Van Doren
Niles
.60
also began work tn Battle Creek
.35
Monday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Green and
Owosso
.50
.35
family visited at her brother's. Floyd
PHONE, WRITE, OR CALL
Fossett. in charlotte Sunday
Pontiac
75

WOODLAND.

BMlfiNliS

ELLIS E. FAULKNER

CANDIDATE FOR RE-ELECTION AS

REPRESENTATIVE IN THE
STATE LEGISLATURE
ON THE REPUBLICAN TICKET

CWLH.J

FROM

THE RULES OF

HASTINGS to

N
K

OF HASTINGS

BUS INFORMATION

.40

Saginaw

.65

South Haven

South Bend*

.45

.35

.55

• Toledo

.35
.70

.40

These rales are for (be first 3-minute talking
period, and are subject to Federal tax where
the charge ia 50c or more. They are in effect
•very night from 7 P. M. anti! 4:30 A. M.
Also from 7 P. ,M. every Saturday night until
4:30 A. .M. Monday. Kates to other points,are
correspondingly low. Ask “Long Distance".

We should get a FWEE ESTI­
MATE oa boating with Natural

sterikd am Autoanatoc Natewal Gat

1

ARE MSB IN HFEC1

fvfry sunon

Rhone 2137

PHONE 2305
Ur FREE ESTIMATE e&gt;

NATURAL
GAS HEATING

CONSUMERS
POWER

COMPANY

CREAM NUT

Creamery Butter

35c lb

TILtFHON

MICHIGAN IlH

long DISTANCE RMtS

Trio Cafe

October Food Specials!
ly wiHcaN toakorr^w for our FREE
ESTIMATE and no -ore tanJfag

bwgnn

Bui Depot

Friday ‘evening. There was a dlscus»ipn about electricity for this communlty with Mr. Kelley of Hartings.
Chas. Day was elected sponsor. We
were favored by vocal and piano
solos by Mrs. Richard Green of
Nashville and a splendid talk by
Mrs. Taft of Nashville about the
salmon in Oregon, which was espe­
cially enjoyed by all. Then lhe chil­
dren played the popular Knock­
Knock game which waa well done
and caused quite a little amusement.

.35

Peanut Butter

23k

2 X 25c

DEL MONTE COFFEE (Vacuum Pack)
6 lb&gt;. SWEET POTATOES
_______
Bacon Squares

19c lb

CANNING
TOMATOES

75c
Tharadsy and Friday
THIS WEEK

10 bar* P &amp; G SOAP (large size)
24’/2 lb. sack LEADER FLOUR ..
5 lbs. FAMO PANCAKE FLOUR
CORN FLAKES (largo eize) ....

25c lb.
...19c

10 Ibt. Beet Sugar

49c
39c
75c
25c
10c

WALLACE GROCERY
OHM EVENINGS

HASTINGS—RHONE 2458

FREE DELIVERY.

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

FIRST EXPERIENCE
WITH OCE1N EIDES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1936

16 PAGES
SECOND ANNUAL
DEBATE FORUM
Representative!
of Forty
High Schools Invited
to Hastings

DISTRIBUTION OF
DEL NODENT TUXES

FIVE ACTS COMPRISE
“THE SPOTLIGHT”

One Hundred Twenty-Five
to Participate Friday
Evening

TREAS. MAUS COLLECTS
GEODUOKS, OYSTERS AND
"The Spotlight” with a cast of
On Friday evening. October 16.
$14,024.06 DURING
about 125 students of the Hastings
representatives of forty high schools
SPIDER CLAMS ARE
High school will be presented on
in central and western Michigan
THRU MONTHS
FOUND ON SHORE
Friday night at eight o'clock at Cen­
will meet at Hasting* for lhe sec­
tral auditorium. This

ond annual debate forum, sponsored

is

an

M.S.G.SPECIM.ST
TO HOLD MEET N6S

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8
-JO WHITE HERE
j
TKIXOW LA,KIFOR GREENVILLE GAME iX’uT^^'S^y

Jo-Jo White. Tiger outfielder, will I
*7?^
officiate at Hastings-Greenville foot- |
ball game here. Nov. 7. according to 1
------------word received this week by Joe BroPRODTTflTTGN GF nTTATTTVMk- director of athletics. Asrtstlng !
n&gt;
—”“ 7°^ renuttance
rttUDUUTLUN OF QUALITY him will be perry Deakln of Detroit. I,n lh* «”•&gt;•»« then encte«d- If
DAIRY PRODUCTS TO
Xy k~l
“ the op-

BE
BE DISCUSSED
DISCUSSED

colorful Tlgah Man In a new role.

all­

school show with the theme •“The TO EXHIBIT MODELS
by Albert Becker, debate coach in CITY AND FOUR VILLONGVIEW IS A
League, a conference
Hastings High. Debating method*
Pa*t Lives Again." dealing With life
OF MILK HOUSES i this year.
PRE-PLANNED CITY and this year’s debate question will
1-AQES GET $2,920.90 in the past century In Barry coun­

Many
Interesting
Sights
Along Columbia Biver
Highway Drive

I

THE GOVEHNMENTS
COUSflM

Six

Auction Sales

City. and Village*.

City of Hartings 8 135737!
Village of Nashville
Village of Middleville
Village of Woodland .
Village of Freeport

these various acts, it is impossible Thursday. Prof. Hayes with the
.1 232030 to print the names of gU the par­ truck will hold a meeting at the
Dried Milk plant at Hastings. On
ticipants.
/
Townships.
Friday, October 16 the meeting will
45037
Assyria Township 8
be held at the Delton Co-op. Cream­
21140
Maple Grove Township
ery at 10:00 A. M- and the Mlddle692 85
Castleton Ttownshlp...........
608 2D
Woodland Township ....
Prof. Hayes will have for distribu­
236.73
Johnstown Township ....
tion various bulletins on the produc­
112.10
Baltimore Township
tion of quality dairy product*. He
190.60
Hasting* Townshipwill discus* any particular problem*
107.67
Carlton Township
that may be brought up al the meet­
31230 MISS IONE OATTON ”07 ings. A. A. Roth of the Health De­
Barry Township-------------21547
Hope Township---------------partment will discuss sediment tests
88.07,
Rutland Township LANSING TO BE THE
and other test* of quality dairy
707.67
'
Irving Township
products.
County Agent Foster
GUEST SPEAKER
702.87 ।
Prairieville Township ....
plans to attend the meetings to dis­
359.27
•
------------Orangeville Township ....
cuss dairy questions or other things
360.48 SPLENDID
PROGRAM
Yankee Springs Township
--------- -----------------------। people in attendance may be Inter- i
726.57.
------- ---------------Thomapple Township ....
WILL BE RENDERED
“ •'«“■ “• "»'«•“*•...
.
_____
।
a uu iu u
This
■c iu&gt;.
1* the
uiur
first
uirtime
quality
the
Total to Townships ...I’ 617 51 Reports of
-A TT
__
—J rlalr.r
Daw,.
Year's
Work and
d&lt;lrx lni*V
yuck, ha.
Barr&gt; counState Tax Fund
• .
A!
•
.
I ‘ty
y ,nd
and 11
it u
Is expected that
thata
_ large
Election pf Officers Are
-----------------------------— view the
•
General Fund ..................... 4,817.48
number
of dairymen will
Covert Road Redemption
exhibits, models and chart* shown
5848
^,0 Scheduled
Fund------- -------- --------------.
.
245351 Barry county Sunday Schools1 at these four county meetings.
Drain Fund ..
--------- —- 1 will hold their annua! convention at
.81432435 the Delton Methodist church on ITS A BUSY CORNER
Grand Total
i *'»----------------। Tuesday afternoon and evening. Oct.
AT STATE—HANOVER
PEANUTS CROWN
20. Following Is the program;
IM DADQV rnilMTV
1:30 Interpreted Hymn Service Pcdeetriaas Bealiie It When
IN oAnnT bUUN I I । with Worship—Rev. McSherry, Has-

SUM SCHOO
9842359^

!0

There Is Heavy
Help do Our
Traffic
Farmer,
Meets WithRev Rlgelman.
Church- School -Teachers -Need?—] ‘ One of the Welfare projects of
J 1
*1* a
Mtddlevllle
the federal government is having
• Splendid Success,
2:14Duel by Prairieville. Ladles.
traffic count* m*iie on congested

Olyde Ooville, Castleton Twp. i Uni“« what Kind of

-

MEMORVEXPERT
PERFORMS FEITS

Clyde Covllle. of Castleton town- ' 2:36' What Shall we Teach the
ship, brought to the Banner office Child' In -0e Church?—Mabe) Elder,
Saturday a handful of very large. Nashville. &gt;
nice “Jumbo” peanuts that he grew' 2:35 HoW Shall We Guide Beginon hl* farm. Just to try “some-j ning Teacher*L-Mrs.,Amy. Bower,
thing new” he sent away last spring Hasting*.
'
and bought a few "Virginia Jumbo” I 2:40 The church School Hour at
peanut* for seed. He only had seed Ite Befit—Mrs. H. Burge**, Hastings,
enough to plant 32 hills, planting
2:45 How Does Your Youth Group
them about 24 inches apart each ; Plan and conduct It* Own Worship?
*&gt;«i. —Hlldred chase. Kilpatrick.
way. He •_&lt;&gt;_
tells ...
us lliat •»._
the —
whole
2: 50 How Can Our church Pro­
planting wouldn't cover a space of
more than 15 feet square. Prom thia gram for Adults. Help to Better a
little plot he gathered over a tyishel More Abundant Life?—Royal Bry­
ant, Dowling.
of nice, large peanuts.
Solo—Lena Warren, Woodland.
A* far a* we are able to learn the
Offering.
people of this county have never
3: 15 The Church of Today and
peanuts. Their;
attempted to grow peanut*,
nmt
culture ha* been left for the south.1 Tomorrow—Miss lone catton, Lanw'uere sun. light, sandy soil, andjatog. _
j u
Business
Conducted by
weather conditions are supposed to
n"r
— Meeting
- v
be about right. But Barry county Pres. Mrs. Alice Griffin.
Reports and election of officers.
has plenty of sandy soli. In fact
Prayer. Mr*. Griffin. Woodland.
Mr. Covllle made his planting on a
6:00 Supper. 25c. Kindly make
small, sandy plot, and about the
with
Mrs. Robert
only sandy place that he has on his reservations
Barnes. Delton.
farm.
Theme for the Evening.
At the rate these peanut* were
produced on Mr. Covllle’* farm, it
7:15 Election of Young People’s of­
would Indicate a crop of around 200
bushels per acre. Inquiry reveals ficers. Mrs. Melvin Smith. Vicethat retailers along the street are
7:30 installation of officers—Miss
now paying from 6 to fl’,4 cent*
per pound for such peanuts in large Catton.
Song Service.
quantities, with the “shucks on."
Prayer—George Schalbly, Wood­
For the shelled meats they pay
.
about twice as much. This 1* for land.
Offering.
the big “Jumbo'' variety such as
Picture presented. "Follow Me."
Mr. Covllle produced. Naturally he
is quite enthused over his new ven­ (One credit per mile per person al(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1.)
ture. and next year is planning to
devote a larger space to growing
SEED CLEANING MACHINE.
peanuts. Ever since “A boy sat on
A new seed cleaning machine lias
the burning deck, eating peanuts
by the peck," the little peanut has recently been Installed In the plant
become very popular. Merchant* at of the King seed company In Battle
times. Invite you In to eat them Creek. It ha* always been a problem
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
and throw the shuck* on the floor. to remove the foul seeds from the
D. W. DODGE.
Mr.
Covllle'*
venture
will be clover without wasting a consider­
D. W. Dodge 1* quitting farming
able quantity of good seed. This new
watched with interest.
and will have an auction sale at his
process almost hand picks the seeds.
? farm, 1 1-2 miles south of Freeport
The farmers of Barry county will be
DELEGATES CHOSEN.
ur 7 mile* north and 3-4 mile we«t
Delegate* chosen by the Harry Interested in seeing this process
of Hastings. Dewey Reed is the auc­
County Young Democrat club to and may do so at the plant of the
tioneer and
Clifford Hammond,
represent the local club at the state King Seed company in Battle Creek.
clerk. He offer* 3 horse*. 2 cows. 13
convention of young democrats in
■heep. 87 hen* and pullet*, quantity
81. Joseph. Mich., on Friday and REPUBLICAN BALLY
TUESDAY. OCTOBER 13.
of hay. straw and fertiliser, and a
Saturday are a* follows: Mr*. Irloa
Dean Eugene Davenport of Wood­
long list of farm tool*. Full particu­
Smith. Mrs. Virginia Baird. Harold
lars In the fdv. in this issue.
,*
Parker. Mrs. Horace Powers and Mr. land will be the speaker at a Re­
publican rally to be held next Tues­
GEORGE 8. MARSHALL. JR.
ternate* selected wvre Dr. Stuart day evening. October 13, at the
George 6. Marshall has decided to
Lofdahl, Tom Myer* and Chas. An- Briggs church In Auyria township.
Mil most of his stock and will have
The Ladles’ Aid of the xhurch*wlll
nable.
an auction sale at the farm, known
serve a fried chicken cjlnner, com­
as the “George 8- Marshall farm,"
mencing at 0:SO o'clock. The tickets
REXALL ONE-CENT SALE.
ene mile north and one mile wc»t of the same good
The original Rexall one-cent sale
Maple Grove Center or 2 miles fished as clerk Iin the Hastings
will be held next week al Carveth .rally
— will
-------------be Immediately
----------- -after —
dlngouth and 4 miles west of Nashville
At Btebbln*, the Rexall store, com- | ner, the committee hoping to start
/•In Maple Grove township. Henry ctfenty’* first state liquor store.
mencing on Wednesday. Adverttelng, at 8 o'clock. All residents of Barry
for the sate is nation-wide over a I county are invited to attend and as
nest Gray clerk. He offers two further promise that I will persons!- radio net-work and all Rexall stores 1 usual they know that Dean Daven.------—.
matched spans of -----horses, -•good
ly investigate
every complaint oom­ In the country have their sates the port‘ will have
— r. worth
£-“- --•
— mcswhUe
worker*; eight cows all good milkers. Ing
,, to the
,,,, office and
and act immediate - •ante week, see their advertisement
.-------four young
“ cattle,
3"“~. 30
“ Shrop
sr_-p ewe*.
ewes, ly.
and. that vI wtn
"’ call In the slate
M
30 lambs.
laipbs. 3 brood sow*
sows and "8 police only. If and
i
FRIED CHICKEN SUPPER.
when, it becomes
shoal*. Also a quantity ot hay and necessary’io protect the public in­
The only thing harder than per­
By Hendershott L. A. 8. at
grain. The adv. will give you all the terest. aeo. H. Myers. Democratic suading the average man to make schoolhouse Wednesday. Oct. 14.
particulars.
speeches i* |» gel him to stop.
starting at | o'clock.—Adv.
candidate for sheriff.—Adv.

spots in cities and in totng rural
areas, one week ago Saturday, from

low* made a count of the car* which
passed the comer where M-79 and
M-37 Intersect, comer of State and
South Hanover. In the 12 hour* a
total of 627 cars passed that comer
on M-79 or turned into it from M-37.
The count would have been mater­
ially Increased had the two young
men continued until 12 o'clock P.
M.. probably reaching 1300 If not
more. There are time* when It 1*
dangerous for pedestrians to cross
Hanover at that intersection, and if
the person on foot does not "look in
three direction* before he crosses.”
he is liable to get hurt,

Matinees for Children's
Play

Visited Middleville
School and Pine Lake
Camp
Because Barry

county wa*

tt

A. 8. KELLOGG ASTONISH-1! ”
7 flr*
V?
Kellogg Foundation began Its health
E8 B0TABIAN8 WITH
work for the benefit of the children
and youth. Hasting*. MUMtevUM 8Ml
HIS ABULITY
CALLED EVERY MAN
I. the Pine lake Kellogg camp were
favored with a visit from no lea* *

POSTER W MBS
MOUNCED;

Total

HE INSPECTED
AND CAMP

newly formed

' Plans are also being considered to
tyPour short »klts । have been pre­ County Agent Foster and arTan,e a banquet following the
pared by the Seniors, namely. “The
A. A. Roth Are Scheduled 1 game at which White will be the
Stage Coach Stops at Yankee
♦ « fln.oV *1.
principal speaker and the Hastings
to Speak AllO
I WJ(1 Greenville teams the guests of
Springs.” written by Robert Ken­
The Michigan Blate college Dairy honor.
ney; “The Origin
of Yankee
Such a banquet, many hope, might
Springs" written by Marian Hewitt; Department co-operating with Co.
"History A* It Was and as It Might i Agent Harold Foster and A. A. Roth also help to arouse new interest in
Have Been." DeForest Walton, au-1 of the Barry county Health Unit | high school baseball which was re­
thor; '.'Old Law* of BSrry county"! will bold four meetings stressing j established a* a sport here last s«aquality dairy products. Meetings will; son.
compiled by Meriela Stites.
-----“A flong Hit Parade" featuring be held al four of the creameries 1
old and new songs is the. offering of over lhe county on Thursday and
the Junior class with a large cast of Friday. October 15 and 16.
Proj.
J.
G.
Hayes
of
the
Michigan
'
characters.
If Robert Ripley could be here he Slate College Dairy Department will
might get some new Ideas u the discus* the production of clean milk
Sophomore class is using as its and cream al these meetings. The
theme “Believe It Or Not." One advantage of quality product*, from
division is: "Who's Who and What’s ^consumer demand standpoint .will
What;" another is the “Oddltorlum" be covered during lhe discussion. NINE PBIZE8 AWABDED
and the third. “The Country Store." Prof. Haye* will exhibit a truck load
TO PUPILS IN CITY AND
An “Old Fashioned Husking Bee" of milk house models, cooling tanks
BARRY OdUNTY
is the Freshman act which was and other equipment necessary to
the production of high quality dairy
written by Agnes Johnson.
All the mishap* that can occur in products. Ideas can be gained from “SLEEPING BEAUTY”
iIVVl UL.HUI l___
one performance will be presertted these models a* to how to construct
CAST PRACTICES
-oijn by lhe Faculty group in their *how- I thl* equipment on the farm.
The first meeting of the series will
62^82
“ ing of on ' Amateur'Group in the
248 56 119001" The scene lakes place back- be held atj the Nashville Co-op. Civic Players Plan Three
Creamery Mt 10:00 o'clock Thursday.

be topic* for discussion.
The meeting opens with a discus­ State of Michigan Was Paid
sion followed by noon lunch and
Small Sum of $617.61
group conference*. At six dinner wlU
for Property Tax
be served and in the evening there
Li to be a practice debate followed
Lost week County Treasurer Maus
by dancing and entertainment.
distributed among the townships,
Members of the Hartings debate villages and this city the.dellnquent
team thl* year arc Ruth Hathaway, taxes belonging to them which he
Marian Hewitt. Robert Heney. De­ had collected during tiie months of
Forest Walton. Achsah Buck, Law­ May. June and July of thl* year.
rence Moore,
Phyllis Hinman, A small part, 861741. he paid to
Wayne Finkbelner. Laura Sabin., the BM1VC
alate U1
of Michigan on back _
taxes
Russell Engle. Emerson Calms and | whkh
been assessed to defray
Horace Angell.
B part of the expenses of lhe state
state
a
when there were property taxes
I levied to pay state expenses. This
city and the four village* of the
county received a total of 8232030.
'The township treasurers received
186.264.95. The county’s share of the
1 total distribution was 85.12139. of
। which 84417.46 belonged to the
county's general fund, from which
ZVZ2.TS
EVENTS
PROVE
THAT nearly all the county's expenseA-are
paid.
MANY SOUND BANKS

Manchester. Washington. Bunday.
July 19th, 3652 miles from home.
Manchester is Just a small fishing
and resort village across the Bound
from Seattle arid Mr. Thorsdale's
summer home I* about three miles
nprth on the shore road, across the
bay from Brem-rton. This wa* our
first experience with tides. When
we went to bed last night the water
was right up to the road in front of
the house; but when we got up this
morning it was a good city block
away from Die rood and still going
out. David wa* up before anybody,
and we had all we could do to get
him away from the beach long
enough to eat hl* pancakes and
eausage; and I didn't blame him
much, not on account of the break­
fast. but on account of the thing* to
see along the shore. The whole place
WEBE CLOSED
wa* Just alive with all kinds of *ea
life. Spider crab* and dozens of oth­
er kind* of crab* were crawling
SHOULD
HAVE BEEN
about Tn all direction* over the bar­
curacies; clams, oysters and geoducks
AIDED BY THE U. S.
I Or gooeyducks, a* they are usually
, called, were spouting fountains of
। water up through the sand and Gave Them No Chance to
rocks; starfish and great seaworms
Benefit by Appreciation
of all color* and sizes were clinging
of the Bonds
to the under aides of the rocks;
, while in the water were Jelly fish
The Hart Courier comes to hand
. and other swimming and crawling with the announcement that a divi­
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
dend of 12’4 per rent is to be paid
by the receiver of the First National
Bank of that city, Which failed to
reopen after the bank holiday This
makes a total of 77’4 per cent which
ha* been paid by that bank to it*
depositors. The receiver states that
JOHN WAGNER ESTATE.
other payments will be made. It
On unother page will be found an seems probable that 90 per cent and
. ad for one of the old-fashioned big possibly more of all the deposits
1 auction sales. To close the estate of will be paid.
| the late John Wagner an auction sale
When any bank, on forced llquldawill be held at the premises two tlon, can pay such a percentage as
miles east and one and a quarter; that of its deposits, it would seem
miles north of Woodland, or three to be convincing proof that the
and a quarter mile* straight north bank never ought to have been
of Warnerville on M-14. H. O Penn-1 closed. Take the case of the HasIngton will be the auctioneer and W. tings Natkmal Bank, which ha* alC. McCartney, clerk. The adminis­ rtady paid 85 per rent of it* depos­
trator of the estate is Karl F. it*, with prospect* that considerably
Eckardl. There is a big offering—a more, probably 100 per rent can be
span of work horses, ten cow*, three paid. We believe that such a result
young cattle. 18 breeding ewes, *ow „.„
w. that if the ,right counte had
show*
and eight pigs. 17 tons of alfalfa been taken by the government au­
and mixed hav.
..
hay. 400 bushel*
bushels at
of aid
old thorities, that h
bank
would never
corn. 500 bushels of oat* and 15 have been put tn a receiver's hands.
acres of corn In shock. There Is al­
Take the two Detroit banks, which
so offered a long list of desirable precipitated the trouble in this
farm tools. Mr. Wagner was a good state and country-rihe First Na­
farmer and kept his tools In good tional and the Guardian Nation­
condition. The advertisement In al | The Guardtan'National Bank
this issue will give you all the par­ of Detroit ha* paid .85 per cent
ticulars. plan to attend this sale if on it* depoalts and itlll has as­
you are interested in any of the set* which according to the re­
numerous articles listed.
ceiver. will enable the bank to pay
at least 92 and possibly 100 per cent
C. H. FELTZER.
of it* deposits. Had these bank*
C. H. Mixer has decided to quit been given reasonable assistance at
fanning and will have an auction the critical time both would have
pulled through. Both of them were
Freeport. Henry Flannery will be compelled to sell their bonds, which
the auctioneer and Clyde Tooker, have since greatly appreciated, in a
clerk.
He offers 4 horses. 7 good depressed market. It they had been
cows. 2 young heifer*. 3 brood sows, aided as they should have been their
over 100 Barred Rock yearling hens depositors would have been saved
and pullets, quantity of hay. corn all the trouble they have gone
and oats, and a long list of desirable through and the banka would still
and usable farm tools. He also Ot­ be doing business,
ten at private sale his 85 acre farm,
It seem* to us that the govern­
good building*, good soil. 14 acres ment’s course in forcing so many
timber. Read the adv. for thl* sale banks Into liquidation not only was
In this issue of the Banner.
unwise but very unfair to the bank*
ahd to their depositor*.
GEORGE KAHLER.
As he has rented hl* farm. George
Kahler will have an auction at his REPUBLICANS OPEN
place, one and one-half mile* east
HEADQUARTERS HERE
of Cloverdale, with Henry Flannery
as auctioneer. Mr. Kahler offer* 3
Republican headquarter*
have
horses. 4 cow*. 20 sheep. 150 chick­ been opened in Room No. 8 on the
ens. farm tools, household goods second floor of the National Bank
and miscellaneous articles. Bee the building, according to the county
adv. on another page foe full par­ committee. There will be literature,
ticular*.
posters, buttons, etc. placed there
for distribution and those interested
HAROLD E. YODER.
are invited to go in and help them­
On another page will be found an selves. Chairs and tables have been
auction sale adv. for Harold E. Yod­ placed in the room so that people may
er. which will be of interest to those took over the material at their leis­
who yant to buy horse*, cattle, hogs, ure if they so desire. The members
sheep, farm tools, etc. Mr. Yoder's of the county committee stete that
farm Is located a mile north of they hope in particular that the
Freeport on county road 601. He has younger voter* of the county -will
an extra large sale with N. O. take this opportunity to study the
Thoma* as the auctioneer and Republican side of the campaign is­
Charles Colby, clerk. Read the adv. sues.
tor full particulars.

l'

F0RM1R
GREATLY
FOUNDATION1

dX teVklX^

,‘nd

'

'
I

BY HIS FULL NAME.

His Talent for Remembering
Hoover called a "Child-Health ConWas Not Natural But
discuss that very vital topic, and to
Gradually Developed

। The members of the Rotary club
• Monday were privileged to hear and
| see a demonstration of memory
training given by A. 8- Kellogg of
। Chicago, a memory expert. Mr. Kel. logg I* not only a memory expert but
.ci apeuer,
uuk W1U1
I •a ciy
clever
speaker, uiuiif
filling nw
his talk
with
Ibumorous and witty remark*.
I Mr. Kellogg had never been in
Hastings before and had never met
any of lhe member* of the club in­
dividually. During lhe luncheon

Last Saturday more than 300 pos­
ters were delivered to the office of
the county commissioner of schools
by the school children of the coun­
ty and city to be entered in the
poster contest held In connection
with the Civic Players' children’s
play, “The Sleeping Beauty." The
posters showed an amazing amount
of originality and artistic ability
and the Judge* found it difficult to
make their decisions because of the
uniform excellence of the brilliantly
colored entries. Miss Mary Camp­
bell. art instructor of the Hastings
schools. Mrs. Maude Smith, county
school commissioner, and Mrs. Burr
VanHouten. general chairman of
the Civic Players, acted us Judges
quality
and the following awards were
made:
County and village schools—Jun­
ior class, Donald Maurer. Norton
»chool. first prize: Ernest Gordon.
Castleton Center school, second

Intermediate class—Margery Dry­
er, Algonquin Lake school, first
prise;
Beatrice
Ball.
Dunham
school second nrize.
Senior class—Kathryn Horton.
Delton high school, first prise; MaybcIle
Delton^g:h
nrle
■
second prise.
Hastings city schools — Junior
class.
Duane
Ottosen.
Central
school, first prize; Catherine Royer.
Central, second prize.
Intermediate class —MarJorie
Boyas. Central, first prize; Kenneth
Lane. Central, second prize.
Senior class—Robert Reed. Bas­
ing high school, first prize; Richard
Lester, Dowling high school, second
prize.
The prizes are blocks of specially

which will be presented the after­
noons of October 19. 20 and 21. at
the Central auditorium. At these
matinees anyone may attend at the
bargain price of ten rent* for all.
man, woman or child, and capacity
audiences are apparently assured.
On Saturday more than 1.000 coun­
ty and village children had pur­
chased their ticket* from Mr. Cor­
CLASS OFFICERS
AT HIGH SCHOOL. des. who is in charge of the ticket
Officers elected by the senior,
The executive committee has re­
Junior and freshman classes of Has­
tings High school have been an­ quested the Banner to urge Has­
tings children os’ well as adults in­
nounced.
Bradford Hinckley was elected tending to witness the Monday mat­
president of the senior class. Other inee to purchase their tickets now
officers elected by the seniors were:
Donald Doxey, vice president; Mar­ school reservations which has al­
garet Flngleton, secretary;
and ready more than filled every seat
Stephen Johnson, treasurer. Miss for the Tuesday matinee, will be
Jannet Michael and Herbert Rein­ given tickets to the Monday mati­
hardt were chosen faculty advisors. nee if they are not taken by local
Junior class officers elected were: children. In that case it is possible
Harry Thompson, president; Ronald that the-Wednesday matinee will be
In gram, vice president; Jane Har­ abandoned.
Rehearsals are speeding up to five
rington, secretary; and Wayne Ftakbelner, treasurer. Miss Ruth Rob­ nights each week, costumes are be­
son and Albert Becker were chosen ing completed, the white horse
which vaults the six foot stone wall.
faculty advisors.
The freshman class chose the fol­ 1* being made mechanically perfect
lowing officers: Clara Bush, presi­ and the illusion of a whole kingdom
dent; Gerald Garrison, vice presi­ I full of alarm bells when the Prindent; John Isenhath. secretary; and
Elton McGhann. treasurer. Miss fee ted.
The committee report, that a letHelen Mer*on and Roy Gamer were
chosen faculty advisor*.
Sophomore officers have not been Kellogg Foundation in Battle Creek,
reading in part: "We have heard
eletced.
a great deal about the Civic Play­
ers from various friends In Has­
POSTPONED INSTALLATION.
The Joint installation of the offi­ tings and know you have a very fine
cers of the American Legion Poet organisation." The letter continues
and Auxiliary has been postponed by saying that LL Martindale of
for one week—till Tuesday evening. the Foundation’* camps in Barry
October 13. Mr*. E. F. Sayles will county had been written relative to
act as installing officer for the bringing all the children at the
Auxiliary and no announcement has camps to see “The Sleeping Beau­
yet been made for the Post. Dinner ty"
The advance sale for reserved
at six-thirty o’clock will precede the
seat* for the Tuesday evening per­
business session..
formance will open at Cordes' news­
TO CONFER DEGREE.
stand Saturday morning. October
Member* of the I. O. O. F. are 10.
urged to attend the meeting next
RUMMAGE RALE.
Tuesday night-wben the second de­
Beta sigma Phi Sorority will hold
gree will be conferred on several
candidates from this city and from a rummage sale in Bessmer Bldg..
Saturday, Oct. 10.—Adv.
PralrievlUe.

formulate plans for promoting good
health for the children at thia

States The W. K. Kellogg

president Hoover was much inter*
touch with the Foundation’s work
ever since. He had contemplated a
visit to Battle Creek to sea al first
hand what the Foundation 1* ac­
tually doing. He had set several ten-

gram committee, sat near him and
named the member* of the club to
him. After the luncheon when he Friday night and Saturday. Ha was
entertained al the W. K. Kellogg
home Friday night, after his arrival
his surname as well.
Mr. Kellogg gave himself another the Foundation stall, and
test that was remarkable. He had a them with questions until we.
booklet of about twenty pages that midnight. According to the m&lt;
contained much general information
Including a list of the cities of the deeply Interested tn th* aubX
United States arranged according child-welfare, but he ha* giv
to their population* in 1920 and much thought and study. His
1830. These were passed to the mem­
ber*. He did not have one himself. point. He expressed hl* warm

called to him by about two dozen
of the members, one a lime, he wa*
able to quickly state the population
of each city and the numerical or­
der of the city in the list, whether
it be number one or one hundred.
Probably tbe most remarkable
demonstration of his ability to re­
member wa* given by the speaker
when a member of the club was

Saturday morning Mr. Hoover
spected the
Foundation's h*
quarters in Battle creek and 1
complimented the organlaatioi
it* thorough and systematic i

whe.-e Lt operates.

cardboard a list of household needs
any of which a wife was liable to Hillsdale and Van Buren
ask lier husband to bring home.
These articles were suggested by
members of the club. The twenty
aw'thtrflru part of the test* without
... .. . ,___ _
Health Unit, in the Homa
able to repeat the list correctly and Co.'* building on North 1
lous articles by giving only its num-

correct answer.
Mr. Kellogg stated that his ability
to remember was not a natural gift
but distinctly an acquired one.
When he was in Chicago he worked
In the Y. M. C. A. headquarter*,
where he was plagued by his inabil­
ity to remember names. His failure
was so outstanding that the secre-

(Continued on page 4. 8K.

HEAR ARTHUR KANE
WEDNESDAY

Nil

'Back Tracking Marco 1
Announced as His
Subject

Resident* of Hartings and 1
that he see a certain person in Chi­
cago who had ability to help a per­ Wedncsday evening. Oct. 14.
son to cultivate his memory. He did Arthur Kane will give hi* tli
so at once and Mr. Kellogg says
that he has benefitted all his life
from these lessons. Mr. Kellogg has of the High school Central
added certain method* of his own
which have proved very helpful and
successful.
The Rotarians were deeply inter­
ested and he was given a big hand
when he had concluded his talk.

DEMOCRATS NAME

I

COMMITTEE HEADS j
The Barry County Democratic
committee at a meeting of candldates, county conventton delegates
and the committee called by chairman Oershum Severance on Sept.
29 named the following members of
the advisory board for the county:
Dr. Birge C. Swift, chairman. Wil11am J. Field. William Harper, CUf
Gardner, Ed. Kraft, Pearl Lightfoot,
Laurence Finefrock. Gladys Gaskill.
and Harry Fennels. Mr*. Virginia
Baird was named public relation*
chairman.
A. Lyiui Brown was named city
chairman for the committee and th*
following township cnairmen were
appointed: Assyria. Charles 8erven; Baltimore. Len Oswald; Barry,
Fred Elliot; Carlton, John Usbome;
Castleton, 8. E. Powers; Hastings.
Andrew Kennedy; Hop*, Burrell
Phillipa; Irving. William Shenkel;
Johnstown, Orville Dunn; Maple
Grove, Fred Mayo; Orangeville. Heber Pike; Prairieville. WUi’am MeKibben; Rutland, Charles Woodruff;
Thomapple, T. I- Gillette; Woodland. Dorr Stowell; and Yankee
Springs, John W. Duflee.
Committeemen to work with the
chairman in each township were also appointed at the meeting. Speakrrs during the evening which was
interrupted to listen to the Syracuse
speecii of president Franklin Roo*evelt. were Mrs. E- J. Pratt. Don K.
Hughes. Dr. Birge Swift and aff

harmony,

’Prosperity |s a state of mind, not! ONE-CENT BALE
state of purse."—Roy L. Smith.
I
PROVES POPULAR.
NOTICE.
11crested in the advertisement of B.
Want to find good, permanent a. LyBarkar, Hastings druggist. He
home for a twelve year* old girl. In- ■ la featuring a one-bent sale and the
quire of Judge Clement al Probate Hem* listed include mo*t anything

Many of our readers will rem*tn«

|

DANOB AT

]
.-back-tracking" Um great'
(
,through Siam. Burma.
,Nepal. Afghanistan. 1
j
,
,
.
]
.

,Live* of a Bengal Lanoeri
all their thrill* be make* U
,cidental to progress io a fa

.
,equipment. Ethiopian
.

,
foot
,
1 Arthur Kane's
.polltan. Ho
i
best
in all poop

'
‘
;

�OR. LEFFLER SPEAKS

LOCAL NtWi

SUGAR!

is alffl confined U
!

IN CLOTH BAG AT

FOOD CENTER
Chase &amp; Sanborn's

Coffee

COFFEE

Cocoa

*22c

Viking or Vacation Land

Our Mother**

2:. 15c

Tea Siftings

“• 10c

Coffee Hag •

,b 37c

Quick or Regular
Large Size

19c

2

23c

Attention Hunters!

9c

79c I

Pancake Flour

21c

Sun Ray Wheat Selox

19c

To satisfy our desire to give Hastings Sportsman

23c

the beat possible bargains, our March for Shotgun
Shell* ho* been widespread and intense. A* the

pkg.

pkg.

5c

High Grade Shall* that are Equal to Waitgm Super

X, Peter's High Velocity, Winchester Super Speed.
• High Bate Shell* that sell from
$1.02 to $1.15, but we will tell—

Salad Dressing

Z

®- 19c
Our Cowl Luck la Your "Cumol"

Fried Cakes

12c

Catsup

10c

Old Mammy '*

Hastings, Mich.

17c

CASTILE

Riiril b

W. A. HALL
205 So. Jefferson St.

hardwater

sCJTpi^

Dibble and Grand streets. When the

and has opened a Uaed Furniture
ehandtM to uaed furniture, uaed
radios, tugs, pianos, etc. but will
of any kb&gt;d. If you art looking for
some good uaed furniture and fur­
nishings. see Don Taffee's fine new
stock. Hla prices are right. See his
adv. on page •
The manager of Walker de Sons
pickle plant at MiddlevlHe signed a
warrant Tuesday tor the arrest of
Charles, Bert and Fred Beattie and
Harry Shults, cnargtng them wfth
aaaaull They were brought before
justice Matthew* that day. Chas,
•nd Bert Beattte and Harry Shultz
admitted their guilt and were assested 110 fine and coate. Fred Beatentered as not guilty.
Frank Kelley, farmer Janitor of
the court house, and known as
"Court House Kelley." was calling
on old friends to the city last week.
Since lie left here Frank says that "he

he has been way out to Fargo.'* but
he seemed pleased to get back to old
HasUnga Frank was a likeable fel­
low. but occasionally advanced some
rather unusual ideas one of them
was that when he dies, he hoped
they would bury him in a Jewish
graveyard, because that would be
lhe last place they would ever look
for an Irishman.

U. S. No. 1, Peck

35c

Grapefruit

5

25c

THEODORE S. K. REID

Head Lettuce Cd..

2 &lt;’■

25c

CANDIDATE FOR

Squash

,k 3c

JUDGE OF PROBATE

Cauliflower

25c

VALLES FOR CONSIDERATION:
Moi J than 20 years of experience in teaching and leadership, as well

10

ONIONS
SMOKED

PICNICS
Shankless, Lb.

19c

lb.
bag

14c

Cottage Cheese19c
Rnact !OLVED J”
FlUdbL

Pig Hearts

10c

SIDE PORK “

lb.

19c

CUBED STEAK
SWISS STEAK

lb.
lb.

»todt.Mr..Artbur_nabrtorLan.
MM. .uur or Ih. ,n»m.
w,’„„
«
Mr. and
,„a Ur&gt;
, W1U
Mr.
Mrs. A1Um
Adam*
will
l 183 East Van Buren.
HONORED WITH DINNER.
_______
Mr. and__
Mrs. John McLeod enter'
talned at dinner Wednesday ei
nlng complimentary to Harold a;
Miss Laura Hoskins of Rennvll
Minn. who .are visiting relaUt
here.

jTTRAND THE ATE ■=
Haniaga, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 M .
PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF OCTOBER 11TH

SUNDAY and MONDAY, OCT. II and 12

Herbert Monholl and Ruth Chatterton

"GIRLS

Twelve yeaR of succewful business management

DORMITORY”

COUPON NIGHT — TUISDAY, OCT. 13

"Give Me Your Heart:”
With Kay Francis and Georg* Brent

I feel that my education and experience have well qualified me for lhe
major portion of lhe duties associated with the office of Probate Judge.
I seek lhe office of Probate Judge with liumbleness, but with a passion­
ate desire to see that justice, mingled with tolerance, kindness and courtesy,
is extended to every one seeking service and counsel . . . and all alike.
It is my desire that no malice, prejudice, spite, selfish motive or politi­
cal favoritism be allowed to enter into the administration of lhe affairs and

25c

duties of the Probate office.

SMCIAL ATTRACTION
WID.. THUR1 and fill., OCT. 14. 15 and 16
3 Famous Star*—Fradric March, Warner Baxter,
Lional Barrymore

"Tha ROAD To GLORY"
OUILDRE* 1* OBMTS

19c
—

Food Center

hU HU&gt; birthday. Ah th. ehhdrrn .
t living in the stale were there, in-1
। eluding their wives and husbands.
the grandchildren, also Mrs Borah'
I A. Tinkler, a sister who has passed
I her gist birthday. Mr. Bchants has
. been spending the summer with his.
' youngest son. Wm. H. Jr, in Eaton I
county doing light work and chorea
. on lhe farm. Of course all at the
। party had a good dinner.
I

Adatns of Delton, was solemnised
the home of the bride's parent* ।
Saturday evening, the Rev. Rail
L. Bates reading lhe SrtUn
ceremony
’aM

University of Howard Payne; University of Texas and Chicago En*
gineering . . . Graduate of all three. And other special iced courses.

Served the last two vears hs chairman for the Boy Scout Program of
lhe American I .eg ion. Stale of Michigan.

Beef Kettle Roast - 13c
lb.

Marriage Announced

a&gt; program planning for leisure hours, among the youth of our country.
I have confidence in YOUTH.

Served a portion of two years as Hastings City Councilman.

2 - 27c

BOILING BEEF &gt;»

climb. She suggested that if eec
one shared willingly of their talent
the top of the mountain would t
reached with ease and pleasure tc
all.
“
Roll call was responded to by th

Served two years as Barry County Clerk, and Clerk of the Circuit
Court, under Hon. Judge McPeek.

20c

Boost. »•, Te»&lt;

tyre, tn welcoming the members, lik­
ened lhe club year to the ascending
of a mountain and asked that al

music committee, opened the pro­
gram with the following piano num­
ber*. Beethoven's Sonata Pathetiaue Allegro movement and Allegro
Schereando which were greatly en­
joyed.
Offley&gt;. Games were played during
Mr*. D. A. VanBuskirk. progfan
lhe evening, the bride and Miss chairman, had secured Dr. beffler
Grace Reickord winning the priaea. president of the Battle Creek col­
Miss Reickord presenting her gift to lege. as the speaker for lhe after­
the guest of honor. Refreshment* noon.
Dr Leffler chose a* his subject.
the Cecoralions for lhe table being “ParaanaUliea" tn accord with the
carried out in pink. Th^ guesta in­ theme "Personalities of Today.'
cluded Mrs. Kenneth Sanderson. chosen for the year's study by Um
Mrs Richard Jacobs. Miss Phllena dub.
McDonald, Mias Geraldine Williams,
in opening he spoke of an article
Mias Bettie Reickord and Miss that had appeared tn a magaxine
Grace Reickord.
entitled “Learn to Wiggle Youi
Ears." A college instructor in ad­
dressing a freshman class "told
them to learn to do something that
w|ll set you apart from the rest ol
, you! class." Learn to develop youi
1
i.——...i I,
aJ (me talent and you develop a per­
Announcement has been made
because
behind
every
acVWIIOf sonallty,
VI - ----,
---. .. ..
--- .---- -------lhe marriage tn Grand Rapids on itlon ** ,n individual. He com pHSunday afternoon, September JI, at ■ nsented the club as a group of woxithree o'clock of Mis* Norma L. cn who
«!»»»« of developing s
Evans and Frank Earl Haas. Jr., of Personality in having a worthwhlh
Muskegon Heights. The single ring lnterTlt In something outside th(
—- ­
_________ _________ * ,_________ &gt;___ .T I hnnv
home, r-1nh
club work that I,
is mh«t
construc
tive doe* much for the Individual
Michigan diocese of the Episcopal ' Tasks of every day life need not bi
i
drab
if
we
cultivate
pleasing
personchurch at hla home. Only members
1 alltie* They are capable of chang­
of the Immediate families were presIng one's mode of living.
I There is a difference between no­
The bride is the daughter of Mr. toriety and personalities. Making
lhe headlines of lhe newspaper doc:
Rapids and has been employed as not always indicate a great personsecretary at the Banner office since I allty. They are more apt to be found
lhe first of the year. Ftor her wed­ among the ordinary, humble people
ding she wore a rose dress made in , such as The Christ and some of lh&lt;
tunic style and trimmed with white great philosophers.
braid. Her accessories were black.
। This fine talk made a splendid
foundation for lhe year's study.
Mrs Frank Earl Haas of Muskegon | At a meeting of the board follow­
Heights and is employed as district Ing the luncheon nine names for ac­
4-H club leader for Van Buren, tive membership and two for asso­
Kent. Barry and Allegan counties.
ciate were presented and accepted
Mr. and Mrs. Haas are on a trip
ADAMS—J ACKBON.
In the east this week, lint attend­
The marriage of Miss Ule Jackao
ing the Michigan state and Uni­
versity of Michigan fo&amp;bsli game in daughter of Mr. and Mrs Ml
Jackson
of Battle Creek, to Robe
Ann Arbor Saturday knd then'go­

BENEFIT BRIDGE PARTY.
Mr. and Mrs. clarence W. Craw­
ford are opening their home this ing to London. Ont., to visit Mrs
Thursday evening for a benefit Haas' aunt.
bridge party for lhe Emmanuel
Episcopal church. Both auction and
BIRTHDAY DINNER.
contract will be played. Miss Sara
A ouUl birthday party U»1 place
Beryl Schidor is assisting Mrs.
EmS.
Crawford.
J1"
Mtoou-MM In honor or hlr .lh-

SOAP CHIPS &amp;&amp;27c
Potatoes

new board tntmbm are: MH. Rob- phsslMd With small pots of ivy at
aach place.

Mrs. David T. French. Mrs. Guy
C. Ohase i Re tty Lindsay), who is Keller. Mrs. Leslie Hawthorne. Mn.
president of the Grand Rapids
Fred W Btebblne. Mn. Herman ArLeague at women Voters. This or­
old. Mrs. Robert O'Connor and Mn.
ganisation U outlining a fine proEdward VanPoperbig A resume of
the mason's acUviUoa wlU be given
Another new Industry in Has­ next week. The luncheon committing* is the Quality Rhee Shop at
IIS No. Michigan Are, Jack Bcmpt. Mrs. David T. French, chairman.
proprietor. He tee had U years' Mrs. D. A. VanBuskirk, Mrs. Ellis
experience in manufacturing har- Faulkner of DeHon. Mrs. H. A.
Adrounie. Mn. Fred W. Stebbins
and Mrs. Harold Smith.
.
harnessaa. oiling, repairing, etc.—
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER.
The alarm of fire early WedneiMiss Ethel Ragte entertained at a
miscellaneous shower last Wednes­
day evening at her home in honor

rtraction in lhe chimney ended lhe
trouble.
Don Taffee has remodeled the

19c

JELL-O
4 Popular Brands

people
rie Bennett are
Coach and Mrs. Lyle
of a_tughter.
dat
___ __parents
____________
Mary
Mta Donna Myer* has aobapted a 'the
position in Um office of lhe Hastings Katherine, bom al Pennock hos­
Manufacturing company and com­ pital on Friday morning. The Utile
one weighed nine pounds . Both are
menced her work there last week.
An epidemic of boat stealing on doing nlotly.
| the Thornapple rivwr has been rsI ported It would be well If owners window has a very aUracUve display
; would lock or otherwise take care designed to remind hunters that lhe
■ of their boats
| season is near al hand. Bluffed anlM, ywd JObMM. &gt;UC.IM wort.™l* IOM by HuUnn- UMldjimUl.
on WcdnMl.y ol tht d..th ol Mr
T“Sr- •“ 5 • MMbler.bl.
f.lMr, Oswald Webb, al Knd Cily. I
&gt;■“ «*«U,en»aa bl Uw
; after a long illness. The funeral
Wanter—A robin to add co our
, wilt be held on Friday.
' Mrs. Wayne Merrick reports that spring bouquet! On Wednesday
Mrs,
Charles
Rogers
: she has two bunches of welgelte in morning.
■ blossom and several people have brought to* this office a bouquet con­
' mentioned having a second blossom- taining snowballs, forsythla buds,
Ing of spiraea. Most of us are glad flowering honeysuckle, trumpet vine
I the cold weather has been slow In flower and a rosebud. Rather un! coming.

'

Farina

Ralston

Cigaretts

Forty members of the Hasting*
country club attended the final
The Hastings Women'*
Clut
luncheon of the season Tuesday at opened their year's activity Fl
lhe club house. The chief item of Oct. L with a luncheon in
। noon.
seriously ill at pennock hospital
Methodist church parlors. About
The Lowell showboat committoe
ttecUan at three new member* tn
with ulcers, is reported as being ' reports a net profit of 11.Ml.*7. The
somewhat improved.
and Mrs Ftaak Ragers bf Hastings, the board and two additional ones
। show was an • much larger
io lake the plate of two boanl mamthan ever before Mid the attendance art rocaividg congratulations.

6c Is, 9c

BREAD "Sr
Quaker Oats

- 17c

BOARD MEMBERS ELECTED.

ON “PERSONALITIES’

Opening Luncheon of Wonen’i Club Very Injoy able Ivtat

Mr. and Mn. Ceci
iLotflae Reger*) are the
a seven and ohe-imlf pot

SUGAR! SUGAR!

1049c

hl* bed. M
Mrs. Do!

He i* employed as
accompanied lhe Hastings High
TM case of the People vs. Russel! football team U&gt; Ann Arbor 8* tutfertlM. charged with a statutory day where they attended the game
offense, was bronght up foe triM oft

SOCIAL EVENTS

Regardless of political affiliations, I feel that moat voters appreciate
courteous, dependable and efficient public office holders. I believe that my
past reputation as well as character, warrants every VOTER’S personal con­
sideration. May I appeal to the honest personal vote of every Barry County
CitiMH?
November 3rd, General Election,

THEODORE (Ted) S. K. REID,
CANDIDATE. DEMOCRATIC TICKET, FOR PROBATE JUDGE.

IATURDAY ONLT — OCTOHR 17
DOUBLE FEATURE FROG RAM

DON’T TURN ’EM LOOSE”
WHh Lewi* Slana, Jimmy Gteaaen. Brace Cabo*. Loolse Latimer
— PLUS —

John Wayne in The Sea Spoilers'
Matiaae Only
Adalt* Ue - ChUdrtn IM

�TTtt HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, OCTOBER t, 1838

OBITUARY.
was bom in Sandusky Co . Ohio, on
OBITUARY.
untimely passing to the Great Be- ;
Frank E. Wolcott, son of George yond. She resided in Rutland and
Lora O. Norton, son of Hiram and June 21. 1871 and passed away at
Dianlha Norton, was bom August her home in Hastings on Sunday.' and Mary Wolcott, was born in Has- Hope townships until February 1.
1919. when she moved with her par- 1
Oct.
4.
aged
65
years.
3
months
and
.
Ungs
March
10.
1868
and
passed
22, 1860. in Syracuse. N Y. and
passed away September 27. 1936. uge 15 days, she had been in poor health . away at his -home. 606 Elm St.. enU to Hastings where she spent the
76 years. 1 month and 5 days, al the for a long time, death being due to Kalamazoo, Sept. 28. aged 68 yean, remaining days of her life. Surviv- ‘
heart
trouble.
In
1890
she
was
,
He
lived
in
Hastings
until
five
years
Ing are lhe husband and one son.
home of his son Ralph in Grand
ago when
*— ‘------------he moved
J to Kalamazoo.
----------- Floyd. Jr., mother, two sisters. Mrs.
Rapids. At the age of three years married to Sanford C, Rogers of---------he came with his parents to Michi­ Carlton, who passed away in Octo­ He was employed by the Wool Boot Ruby Hughes of Augusta Ind Mrs. i
gan. first to Galesburg and later to ber. 1907. To tills union were bom CO., as foreman for thfrty years. He Eunice Elliott of Irving, and one'
Barry Co., where practically his en­ one daughter and three sons, the was a member of the Masonic or­ brother Raymond at home, an aged ’
tire lifetime has been spent. Being daughter, Viola, and one son pre­ der. Those left to cherish his mem­ grandmother of Hastings and many
one of a family of dine children he ceding her In death, in December. ory are his wife. Elsie Wolcott, a relatives and friends.
F. । brother. Fred Woleott. and a neph­
She was a member of the Bunday
knew tne
anew
the nanunipe
hardships or
of me
life in those 1917. she married Benjamin
,
early days. September 25. 1893. he । ,D*ak“eJ,l °LM?Uw' 8uL'?’,1,?g "e I ew, Ray Wolcott, both of Hastings, school of lhe United Brethren!
was united in marriage to Estclla .
1,uab“1,d: two sons. Sterling C. besides a host of friends. The fu- church serving as its secretary fori
Waters. Six children blessed this |
!!oUn,“ and H“[9'
!I neral was held tn Kalamazoo on a number of years.
union: Gay Norton. Mrs. Maurice ■ 2!?n?.£ap,,&lt;1,L *
MyFUc Thursday and the remains brought
Roush and Mrs. Harold Benedict of .
/.L °r“’^
:Rhl?.° to Hastings for burial tn Riverside
OBITUARY.
this city. Nathan and Ralph Norton ?rottlerf;
nd Adelbcrt Shlve- .cemetery, the Rev. J. A. McNulty
Delbert Enzlan. ran of Chas, and
of Grand Rapids and Benjamin M* ot
, ‘lepJdJ^htf,r’ 'officiating.
Dorothea Enzlan. was bom May 15. |
_____ ._ .... ........... *
i। Mrs. Willis L. Oelston
Gelston of Detroit:
Detroit;
1867 in Prairieville Twp. He was
OBITUARY.
married to Nora Ashley In 1893. who 1
Following the death of hlsdevotcd I four grandchildren, three stepftclile Belle, daughter of Oliver passed away in 1898. To this union
wife In 1922 he moved from Irving I grandchildren, several nieces, neph­
ews-------and _
a -----host of ______
friends. For and Isabelle Atkins, was bom Dec. were bom two children. Flossie and
Twp.. to. Hastings and only last fall ----many
years
she
was
a
member
ot
.
18.
1878.
In
Rutland.
Barry
county,
Ella, in 1900 he was united In mar­
gave up his home here to live with
the son who has tenderly cared for the First Presbyterian cffiirch. at- , On April 14. 1897 she was united In riage to Adella Shermer of Cleve­
him throughout lhe weeks he has tending as long as she was able. marriage to George R. Edger. To land, Ohio. To Ulis union were
been n patient sufferer. He Is sur­ Mrs. Blakney possessed a happy, this union were bom six children, bom seven children, three of whom
vived by two brothers. Waller of cheerful disposition which made her four sons and two daughters. Frank­ died In infancy. He also leaves to
many friends, she will be greatly ie and Lionel having died in in­ mourn their lou ten grandchildren
Chenango Forks. N. Yt. and Joel of
Grand Rapids; one sister. Mrs. Myr- missed by her husband and family fancy. On October 4. 1938, she de- and one great-grandchild. Also a
sister. Mrs. Matilda cohyer who has
lie Hershberger of Grand Rapids, to whom site was devoted.
Funeral services were held at the South Washington St., at U» age made her home with him for several
his three sons and two daughters, I
five grandchildren, many nieces. I church Wednesday afternoon at one of 57 yrs.. 9 months, 15 days. She years and a foster brother. Wm. Eno
’
clock,
the
Rev.
J.
W.
Hitching
of
­
xian. of Ocala. Florida.
nephews, other relative^ and friends.
He spent his enUre life in this'
Unassuming, conscientious and' ficiating. Interment was made in band, two sons. Harold and Loyal,
two daughters. Goldis and Mrs. community and was well known
with a keen sense of humor ■ he Riverside cemetery.
Darlie E. Puller, al) of Hastings, a throughout Barry and Kalamazoo
found for himself a place'in life
DEATH OF DR. HONEYWELL.
sister. Mary Knlckerbacor of Has­ counties having been very promi­
and to him his family, children and
Dr. Bert H. Honeywell, a promi­ tings. five grandchildren, four neph- nent in all farm organizations, six
grandchildren, meaht everything.
Throughout hla great suffering dur­ nent citizen of Ann Arbor, died very i• ews, two nieces, and a host of years ago he suffered a stroke of
I paralysis and from that time his
ing his last sickness there was al­ suddenly Sunday last at his home, friends.
She was a loving mother,
health has been failing. His death
ways a smile when they entered lhe nged 59. He was born in Prairieville
on September 27. 1936. came as a
room. Today the earthly book of life township, graduated from the Uni­ wife and a good neighbor.
nm-riisnv
.great shock to his many relatives
of Lorn Norton Ls closed. A loving versity dental school in 1905 and
RuU&gt;ck&lt;^^"o&lt;R.ywdl;".a'rK.W ”’°ra
“
father has gone home.
Irom the medical school in 1909. and
Funeral services were held at the had practiced his profession ever
190v
Funeral services were held from
Methodist church In Hastings Tues­ since in Ann Arbor. The burial will
n “2, U ^nn0C« hU Utc Urm homf on Tuesday,
day afternoon. Rev. Jones officiat­ be in Prairieville village cemetery. n^nih?
‘fl
mi*27
1 8&lt;‘Pl'mbcr » at 2 o’clock wtUi Rev.
ing. Burial In Irving cemetery.
He is survived by his widow, one months and 6 days. She was mar- F'v."Belles
‘latir
E. V. Belies’offic
officiating.
Burial was
daughter, a brother, former county
OBITUARY.
clerk David Honeywell of Prairie­ This sacred relationship was of
Eliza Eldorado Shively, daughter ville. two Usters. Bcrtlia of Plainwell short, duration being severed by
There are approximately 66.000,000
of Solomon and Annette Shively. and Mrs. Eli Lindsey of Prairieville. what seems to all-who knew her, her eligible voters in the United States.

For Boyt
and Girb

“

- 0^

W

Sturdy black side leather. Mark­
less composition sole. Drill-lined
■titchdown shoes.

Black kid Bluchers . .. the fam««• J- C. Penney all-leather

Inexpensive . . . Comfortable . . . Serviceable!^

DRESS OXFORDS

For

Goodyear wait Blocbars of black
sida leather, leather soles, rub­
ber heels. Excellent values)

WcilqreerL
3 DAYS

"f you canned
--------- use ,wo of

F“ r^ t O
Kttu 3

THURSDAY
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY

Walgreen Syitem
DRUGSTORE

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

“me «„ide male

«P your own eombi _
“■&gt;" •f«X.wo

PHONE 2241

•oiling at the
“me price.

Vitcolized

Flou-T««

MILK OF
MAGNESIA

So/i rn.it.

Men’s Bluchers

BAL OXFORDS

BUck side leather uppers, cow»position soles and heels. Naiiod.
Really exceptional values!

Sturdy, block side leather up-

Nnifcd

Toilet Tissue

Full Pinti

2-51

Serviceable

for Active Boys and Girls!

HIGH SHOES

98c
ORLIS

PERFECTION

TOOTH PASTE

2 Tube I 2

4-ox. Slits

Stock up on drugs and medi­
cine cheat needa while these
low prices prevail Buy your
supply now for all winter!

Y°&gt;n i.u O.I.. ....I.

MOUTH WASH

2'«5fc

MONARCH 1-QUART

”

POLICE LAST

HOT WATER BOTTLE 2»86&lt;
Ol.fwn

COD
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MALTED MILK&amp;ib. .2l»76'

Plat Sint

2 &lt;or 101

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Pcau-DouR**
. (PO-DOl

SHAVING
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Gl.nt Slit

1&lt;SALE SPECIALS!

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2-61«
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2-51«
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S22!£®:«*.......

122™rASTE

2!F,GS
SHAVE CREAM

2iM;......

..., 2-'31‘

...... 2-76&lt;
J J e
CLEANING FLUID
Q gx,
DENTAL KMORATE

S2S?.Kf“«....... 2-'26&lt;
!1AO™££A,,M... 2&lt;~61&lt;

H'om'i Whitt

GYM SHOES
For Outdoor Sports, tool

HALIBUT LIVER
....... 2-26* Od
PUJa...... O
X 126
I
TOOTH (RUSH
A u. AO*
0 At
OMraaNU.
AfiNrlmf S&lt;3U&lt;.... dL
HINKLE PILLS
OtoeOAe
f±*MU2S":,ALM 2-61*
Po-Do
Double Wga

qu*my
black
side'
stitehdown shoes. With

COLD CREAM

outstanding drissis
FOR WOMEN AND MISSES!

Perfected

CLEANSING
TISSUES

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Outs
quality—in vaius and in
smartness! New fabrics with exciting
surface interest, and in gorgooua col­
ors. Princeaa and tunic stviee, aa well
as more conservative lineal Chk trim-

2»-51c

REED’S
rriNos, Michigan

�OST THK COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

The Hastings Banner
A PACK OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Editorials

THURSDAY, OCTOBKR A, 1M6

'Round About Town

NAMES COMMITTEE
FM FAMILY NI8HT

and mm Altman Arold were gen-

KnifhU of FythiM Ara Sajoyiaf Their Sew

. THE TWO ROOSEVELTS.
. valuation took place) American dol“'Prealdant Roosevelt '* speech a t tars to foreign lands.
Pittsburgh, Friday, was an amazing!
...

Ude and John Barnett.

contradiction of the promises and1 Mr. Roosevelt also took occasion
the platform which were instrumen-; at Pittsburgh. Friday, to remark
tai tn sending him into the White 1 that for the first time since 1881 a
________ n
Ik.
1 v«ar
wlthmit a hank
• »&gt;d*' wave of public approval.
i failure. This he used a* an lllustruFour years ago Roosevelt thrilled' Hon to prove that the New Deal
the nation by promising:

ears.

The officers elected tor the
following year ware: Commander.
Wtatay B Webb- Br Vtoe-Oommtatar, Vem D. Sinclair: Jr.. VicaAlton Wood; ChapRuuell; Quartermaster.

1 program ha* worked.

1— To reduct government spend­

ing.
2— To balance lhe budget.
3— To reduce Federal bureaucracy.
There were other promises. It Is
true, but these three were the ones
• that fired the public imagination.
Al Pittsburgh. Friday. Roosevelt
said: "To balance our budget, hi
1933 or 1934 or 1935 would have been
a crime against the American peo­
ple."

MM: -1 .ft-uld Ilk. l«
Ioud
enoagb to be heard in Washington.

Understand that lhe big lake trout and
In and , about Grand Traverse
weren't at all Impreaaad by the pres­
pony.
ence* of Hubby Hubbard. Squire
Sigler, cliff Dolan and Frank An- Ing hmaell
ilalght-oLhand act I y Louis Ooddru* last weak end.
frey and Kenneth BTOwer,
_______ —
the
In fact, they tell me that even the world's only left-handed prestidi­
Utile ones turned away with a cold­ gitator. completed thd bill.
shouldered h-u-m-p-h!
The neat Family Night and supThe*e take trout are mighty, Krr will be held Monday evantng
ovamber 2. C. C- Herbert Oalkln,
mighty exclusive creature*. It would
ha* named the following Knight*
seem.
and their wive* to act as the com­
In fact. If it hadn't been for a mittee for neat toailh. Mr. and
nice fish dealer near the landing Mra. Kart Smith, chrmn.; Mr. and
place, lhe heroes of our little ditty Mra. Theron Caln, mt. and Mra.
Chas. Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs.
would have returned Irautless.
James Long. Mr. and Mr*. Chas.
Hehl Hehl Hehl Who says that Leonard. Mr. and Mrs. Burton PerTommy never gels result*?

the fact that It was THE FEDERAL
DEPOSIT INSURANCE ACT form­
ulated by Senator Vandenberg of
Michigan and passed by congress
despite Roosevelt’s personal disap­
proval that re-established in the
minds ot lhe American public faith
in banking institutions. When peo­
ple became assured that their sav­
ings would be guaranteed by the
i Federal .government.
they took
funds kept in hoarding and placed
them in bank* again. This act also |
put an end to lhe bank runs which I

had as much to do with banking
collapse a* unsound management.

Also at Pittsburgh. Oct. 19. 1932:
“In all conscience, can an adminis­
tration which has so frequently
failed In a matter so directly touch­
ing your responsibilities (BALANC­
ING THE BUDGET) ask for your
support and trifle with your com­
mon sense by these campaign alibis
about mysterious foreign forces and
this specious talk about sound fiscal
policies and administration?"

Mr. Roosevelt, at Pittsburgh. Frldny, also attempted to show that
Understand that many an unat­
the Increase tn deficit wa* only eight
tached and comely young damsel
ha* enquired tlyly of the other A. de
billion, not fifteen billion as treas­
P. clerk*—Who to Howard Teurink.
ury records show.
Eight billion, he admits, have gone
Watch out boy l
for direct expenditures. But he ln7
These Barry county dsmolselle*
slits that about seven billion* have .
are up and coming creatures.
not been "Just spent" but have been ,
। used for developing or preserving
No .-hrlnklng violet*, they!
the resources of tills country.
There is some Justice In this con- 1
Well. Tommy got you into thta,
balance the budget; In
fellow,
so he thinks it only' Justice
tention. Part of the money, al-'
to give you fair warning.
though no one knows how big or
how little the percentage may be.
secretary of my bos* 1*
। has gone for useful, constructive
er honeymoon!
_..
DIRFEE.
sort of reception and ,
kalanred the budget!
((purposes. Even so. one must not for­
“• acquainted" meeting for our d
L
J
Bom Tuesday. Oct. 89. to Mr. and •'■
'get-acqualnted"
At- the conclusion of his speech get that the coat of government conWeil, that means one leu familiar
Mr*. Cleo cared, a.son weighing 7 new minister and family.
fanUly, ._
., R^y. | LmICKWUYU
Friday he said that it might be posmyfcwh‘iGhw
face hanging around the front office.
i-2 pound*.'
' ,
.. ।
gibte to balance lhe budget in a that done
.
.by private
. . concerns.
-----Mr. and Mrs. Donald Couch will
Miss rwui«
Alma mitvss.
Hilton. _ m&gt;aa
Miss . vua
Lfla ;
But don't get me wrong! Norma
move to Hwstlhgs Monday.
j Weeks and Miss Jean Kuball liave am
few more years IF the receipt* of
will be back on the job again soon.
But there ta no dodging the fact
Mr. and Mrs. Wlltard Ickes spent entered High school in Hastings
the government continue to Increase. i that a good portion of thl* item
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
Sunday with Mr. and Mra. Oliver from our district.
Lots of happy withes to both of
He said nothing further about re­ which the president list* as an asset Ickes of Lake Odessa and attended | ”
Remember
Sunday
school
next‘ I
Hastings will be Included In the
-------- 1— ‘the
w“ “
—"*------“—’-----ducing the cost of government to has been consumed for such eml­ lhe Calvler church.
I Sunday
at ------10:30 —
A. __
M. —
Be ------sure I dUes which Charles E Hughe* will 'em.
1--------, —
anH be there.
th Ar*
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Wolf of'‘ and
viait on hta campaign tour of
meet revenue.
, nently unuseful things as the abor­ Plainwell and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer | Mr. and Mrs. Carl TTaulweln of | Michigan Friday. Octfiber M e
Tommy feels pretty flat this week.
tive "Quoddy" Tidal Dam; the half Lusk of Ann Arbor spent Sunday near Morgan visited their mother.; *D
rtrr A.
* W.
Ut Woodburne
U/Aruthl.rnA 1.AA
*
has gone to
Yes l You guessed it. He bet on the
in attempting to Justify the gi­ completed ditch through Florida with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoffman Mrs. Eva Trautwein. Bunday after- Chicago to study new methods of
Oiantsf
noon.
1 blood transfusion.
gantic expenditures of lhe New Deal that was fortunately stopped before . and Dori*.
Mr. and Mr*. H. F. Munn of the
Nearly TOO hunting licenses have
Mr. and Mr*. Clayton Erb of
regime. Mr. Roosevelt said at Pitts­ it had drained the subsurface water
Well If it hadn't been for Gehrig,
Center Road were Bunday guest* bef'11 issued by county Clerk An­
burgh. Friday: -nils coat-money. reservoirs of one of the richest ag- I Grand Rapid* spent several day*
drus.- Th
The
110 and DI Maggio, and Croaetti. and
= highest record wan ;;c
last week with Mrs. Anna Ham­ ol Mr. and Mrs. Orr Fisher.
Lazzeri. and Powell and Selkirk and
We tnew in March. 1933. that it ricultural regions In the state; a dog J muuu.
Mr*. ouiiui
Sarah Orsborn 01
ot jiasungj
Hastings ln on* d*J'mond.
mio.
Rolfe and Dickey. Tommy still lnBert Birman Is seriously 111 in' spent Sunday with her son. Morris
would cost money.
- We knew lliat it pound with hot and cold running '
Treasurer P. a. Sheldon reporta
Orsboni
and
jI tha^
that he has so far re
received 26^23 29 slsts. the Giants might have won.
।। rw
-—
•* family.
•—
would cost money for several years watcr anq individual baths; the , Pennock hospital.
| The
chicken supper at the_church ,r°m the recent fair.
________________________
to come."
magnificent center portion of »j Mrs. Walter Ickes is spending this
But what can you do, anyway,
evenina was well utWhile Carl Wespini
wespinter wa* digging
week-with Mrs. Mary Herrington In last Tuesday evening
against a team which think* a base­
But were millions of those who bridge. In a southern state, which ' Battld Qreek.
tended and netted the L A. 6. a trench in the basement of the new
ball is Just something io knock the
voted for Roosevelt prepared for lacks approaches at either end; re-1
----------------- -----------------------238.65 after expenses were all paid. high school building Tuesday after­ cover off from.
EAST WALL LAKE.
There wa* a good attendance at noon, he uncovered fragments of a
such a wholesale unleashing of the settlement projects where the slm- j
Mr. and Mrs. David DeForest and ’the p T A &gt;"1 Friday evening and black walnut casket and pieces of
Wretched Bngllih. I know—It’s
Federal Treasury? Particularly In plest sqrt of small home* have coat ■
*tunts
“ program, game* *and
nt' alun
ta were bone—remains of a pioneer grave of Just plain American as *he is spoke
thousands of dollars each to devel-I son o\Detroit spent the week end ,i a
__________ _________________
long ago.
(enjoyed
by all.
at the vreeland cottage.
by uncultured clucks like me.
on Oct. 19, 1932. Mr. Roosevelt had ' op: a water nroject in the west that
Mrs R. M Sprague returned to ।| Mr. and Mr*. Frank Cogswell and
F'ORTY
YEARS
AGO
I
children
ot
Hastings
and
Mrs.
Ruth
'
said:______________________________ ■ will destroy in salmon Ashing Indus- her home In Toledo. Ohio. Sunday
That afiimal display In the Pan­
--------- and sons of Castleton wenT,lc Ladies whist club held their
Vnmcy
Cen“I regard reduction In Federal try as much value each year a*;
ter were Bunday afternoon callers nrst meeting for the winter at the ney window 1* mighty Interesting—
spending as one of the most Im- might be derived from lhe sale of tage here.
• ••
, home of Mrs. H. A. Barber yester­ but wa'il bet Oeorge came out sec­
Martha Reynolds of Urbandale
ond
best with skunks.
•
portant issues of Chis campaign. In I power, even if the power could be . came Friday for a visit with Mr. and
day afternoon.
. Mrs. J. C- Andrus was called home
SOUTH BOWNE.
my opinion II is the mo*l direct and i sold to advantage.
Mrs. Clifford Kahler.
SOUTH BOWNE.
from
New
York
state
Friday
by
the
E.
DReynolds
made
a
business
effective contribution that governIt Is unjust to say that all of the
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Richardson of,
Grand Rapids were Sunday evening Illness of her husband. Dr. Andrus. Mr. and Mra. Edwin Donahue of De­
ment can make to bwsinesa."
money ha* been thus wasted but the trip to Nashville Thursday.
Oscar Schumann, now with the troit spent th* week end with Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thad Cook of South supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ches­
Also: "Now i am going to disclose f«ct remains that one has no more Shultz, who were recently married ter Richardson.
Charlotte Republican, spent Bunday and Mr*. L Andrews and Minnie
to you a definite personal conclusion ; right to list such things a* a&amp;se * are moving Into Cha*. Kahler's ten­
Bouck.
John Kareher recenUy sold hta in this city.
Lee Ban), the laundryman, rob­
•Miss Eleanor Miller visited her
Which I
lhe d«, ,Iur 1 n&gt; , lh«n «n .cecununt hu to &gt;Ut «- ant house. Mr. and Mrs. Orville residence to a Caledonia party, who
bed oi 1262 a week ago Sunday, folks at carilon Friday night and
nomKwM th chleMo. Here II Urlt.ulIM
»' their r.ee vwlue. Gray are moving onto the Givens' has moved his family here.
farm and Lowell Whittemore and
Mr. Hutchinson. Jr., has rented proved that Chinese fully appre­ Saturday.
Before .n, men enter, my eeblnel. I There will be «&gt;me value derived
wife have moved Into a collage at lhe house at the top of the hill ciate the nature of an oath. At the
Sylvester
Branderberry
and
he mutt give me &gt; two-lold pledge from U&gt;U portion ol lhe "«'&lt;“&gt; «■ Wall lake.
formerly known a* the AllbrMht examination Tuesday the counsel daughter of Grand Rapids called at
asked if he knew what would be­ Will Pardee's Friday and also at
. r^ndlture—But It WILL NOT be
Mr. and Mrs w B. Bera closed house.
come
of
him
If
he
told
a
Ue.
Lee
Mr. ai.d Mr*. John Blocher en­
.1 seven billion dollar* worth, nor any- their store last week and are spend­
“1. Absolute loyalty to the Demo­
ing Mint time with their son, Glen, tertained their children. Robert, of Sam promptly replied. -Vta. me go turned home with them and spent
cratic platform and especially to Its where near that figure,
and family in Hasting*, before going Kalamazoo and daughter and hus­ to hellee, and have hellie hot
economy plank.
’ who spoke al Pills-1 to I heir home In Nashville.
He** lake.
band. Mr. and Mrs. Reno Ange- limee!"
■ The Roosevelt
-2. Complete co-operation with1
lelto. of Plainwell over the week
Mr*. Hllsa Knowles of Freeport
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
burgh on Friday was a political
PLEASANT VALLEY.
end.
i
visited Jennie Pardee Wednesday.
me, looking to economy and reor­
James clarke is making radical
Dale Geiger spent lhe weak end
stranger to the Roosevelt who spoke ,
The Stanley cotes of Bowne Cen­
Improvements
on
his
residence
ganization in this department '•
at
Lansing.
ter
are spending a few days with
MIDDLEVILLE.
there in 1932. Even the most agile
property.
Jennie Pardee. Mr. Cowles is work­
Is there anything here to prepare plank-straddler in all history could | Dtrward Strong of Clarksville
Miaaicvine was
Middleville
ns well represented r
.spent over Sunday at the H. W.
ing at the Gee Hardware In LowoU
lhe mind few the avalanche of ex- not have reconciled or bridged the Geiger home.
and drives back and forth to his
pendliures that followed?
. tgap that separated them.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Hulllbcrgcr of
Jennie Pardee and Mra. Stanley
One was a militant crusader for Detroit spent the week end with -rove tnetr own cars.
■
Grand Chapter of America. R. A. Coles and children were In Hastings
Mr. and Mr*. Grant Hulllbci^er.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kenyon of
During the speech Friday. Roose­ government economy, for a drastic
Vaughn Geiger was home from Merrlttc were the guests ot their. M. Mr. striker is Grand High Priest Friday afternoon.
velt also referred to the ••millions curtailment In the Federal bureauc­ Kalamazoo over lhe week end.
of the Michigan Grand Lodge.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Yoder visited
aunt. Mrs. Sarah Campbell. Tues­
Robert Rogers left a yam weigh­ Mrs. Dora Kepky of Mlddlev!Us
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Kune and day and Wednesday.
racy for bringing Income and exing 11 pounds at this office. Next! Tuesday afternoon.
campalgnlng for office.
’pendltures more nearly tn harmony. Mrs. Emery Kime were Grand Rap­
Rev.
w.
A.
Hunsberger
and
his
ids
shopiiepi
Thursday.
Mrs. Andy Hoffman of Charlotte
son of Philadelphia. Ohio, have been
He might have added that four[Thr oUwr was a man distinctly on
family have moved to their new visited at Will Mlahler's the first ot
Mary and Alice Stauffer of Cale­
years'later, after billions of goverp-, lht. defense, attempting to Justify donia spent Saturday and Sunday lhe guest* of Mr. and Mrs. c. B. home »t Coldwater.
ment spending, there are still as'lhe billions of dollars Increase In forenoon with their sister. Mrs. La- Arnold for a few days. They spent
Thursday on account of the Illness
some of the time al their Barlow
HOPE CENTER.
many unemployed and on relief roles thr deficit, trying to excuse an ad­ vcm Hulliberger.
of her husband. Mr. and Mr*. Mkhlake cottage enjoying the fishing.
Mrs. Floy McDermott, attended
Dr. J. N. Wenger, wife and three
ler took her to Lake Odessa, from
as there were in 1932. This Is a mac- ministration that has had more in
Ths dog owned by Mr. and Mrs.
boy* of Caledonia spent Sunday D D. Wolverton was run over last the fourth district W c. T. U. con­ where her son. Roland, took her to
ter of official record.
"
j common with the swastika, the with Dr. Wenger's sister, Mrs. J. F.
vention at Sturgis last Thureday
her home.
week and killed.
• • •
I blackshirt or the red flag than it has Brake and family.
and Friday.
Will Mtahler and family aaeamMr and Mr*. Hugh Hall and child.'
Mr and Mrs. Ilarley Taylor en­ who had been visiting here. - re- ■ Clyde Leonard is not Improving panled by Lucy Oraybel of Illinois
Mr. Roosevelt at Pittsburgh. Fri-'wtth the principles of Washington,
tertained in honor of Mra. Russell turned to their home in Chicago1 as fast as ills friends would like to visited at the Muri Hoetattltt1*
day. also attempted to Justify hta | Jefferson or Lincoln.
have him.
Taylor's birthday. Sunday. Mr and
home in cami ' “
Tuesday. They were accompanied by
expenditure* by pointing out that ।
----------- —
Rev.
Seward
Walton
and
his
Mrs. Rlttengcr of South Lowell and Mrs. William Hacker and her. Us­
noon.
WHO PAYS?
under previous administrations mil­
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Taylor and ter. Mrs. T. I. Gillette and two grandmother. Mra. Mina Aldrich,
! There are at present 52 govern- family of Berlin.
were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrw
lions of dollars had been Invested '
daughters.
Dale^ Conklin Bunday at Maple
ment taxes on every loaf of bread
Mr.
and
Mrs
Garfield
Slater
en
­
Tom Clamence and
abroad with rather unfortunate (The total amount* to about two
Many towns were represented at
tertained. Sunday, in honor of their
Mrs. Nora Oteuitnco
lhe sixtieth anniversary celebration
consequences.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gobles of
’ cents, on every ten cent loaf. The grandson. Hillis Stuart's birthday of the Middleville chapter of the Traverse City spent Saturday with Red the lattar's
lhe following guests: Mr and Mis.
Bergman. Wednesday.
,
.
Ord-r of Eastern star Saturday. ’ ; Mrs. W. K Aldrich.
farmer pays six government taxes;
.
Mra. Robert McMannls1 vtaltM
might have added that he. himself,’Isix are paid by the. grain elevator; Norm Stuart. Mr. and Mrs. Verc
Mr. and Mra. Fred Ashby returned ' Mrs. Bnma Weyerman ot lhe Hinds
Howlcite and family of Clarksville.
regarded these foreign investments four are paid by the flour mill; Mr. and Mr?. Elmer Scott, and Mr.
LOWER CROOKED LAKE.
from
Kalamaaoo Bunday after &lt; district Friday.
'
Mra. A. R. Louden spent lhe past spending the week with their chflMr bhd Mn WW Oqri
tailed ap
eleven are paid by lhe railroads; and Mrs. Ivan Slater of Ionia, and
|
____
Mr. and Mn. Lester Stuart and week in Kalamazoo with her stater. dren there.
George and Mary Hayman
WBtfseven are paid by the flour trucker; family of South Boston.
Mr and Mrs Earl Oates visited ryvllle Sunday.
*
”
Mrs. Frank Kelley. Mr and Mra.
eleven are paid by the baking com­
Bernard the fprmer', father. E. B Gate*.. Mrs Will Cart will entertain the
Claude Scott, who teaches the Star Kelley'* daughter. Mrs
pany and seven are paid by lhe re­ rchool in Kent county, attended a Kemple, being very aick in New who la a patient al Pennock hog-. Oadar Creak Cemitery otrde OlBorgcss hospital. pttaL
|
*a
tail distributor. This helps to answer teachers' meeting al Cascade WedMr. and Mrs. Joe Stenger were In
other speculator. guessed wrong. lhe question, who pays lor our gov­
Mr. and Mr*.
F Brake and Battle Creek shopping Thursday.
The marts went down, not up and ernment. in the final analysis it
Mr. and Mra. Joe Stenger and
Mrs. Ida Livingston spent Wednes­
Is always the purchaser who pays1 day with Mr* Lydu Brake of Cale­ family spent Bunday With their ton
companies at the time, lost many 4 the lax. Government extravagance donia.
and family al Kalamazoo. Miss Ber­
•
Mrs. Crystal Shearer and Phytlta1
good dollar for their clients
Mr* Myrtle Mote of
Linelng tha Stenger returned home with
..
spent the week end with the home them.
Mr. Roosevelt has no Just reason ccssive commodity coati
Donald Kingsbury. Frank Roush
folks.
to criticise thoaa who Invested mon______________
_ _
Mrs. Melissa Ashby,
who’ has been
and children spent Sunday with Mr.
because ba. hinueU. was
a man claims to have invented an
MARTIN CORNERS.
and Mr*. Frank Rouah of MaBrlde spending lhe summer with her aun,
entrepreneurs working to |unsinkable boat. It will go down in
The community is planning a pot
Mr. and Mra. N. Pietensma and md Ashby, went ta Mr daWhluck supper and program at the daughter spent Sunday In Kalamagood «this was before de- history—Children's Newspaper
church Tuesday evening of tnu ।
Lu Battle Creek last week.

r

(jldtlCCS! ,
Bits of Yesterday\

•' ,h~

J.

0. ffwfft; Judge Advocate. Adelbert
oortrlghl
The commander-elect will an­
nounce lhe appointed officer* on
Nov. ia, when there will be an in­
stallation of officers.

Adelbert Oortright look lhe obli­
.gation test Thursday night and now
is one of our comrades.
Th* Post voted unanimously to
lake part of the proceed* of the
*tand we had at the fair, to buy our
iI port oolora. The color* selected cost
our poet 9130 F. O. B. and wo are
mighty glad to be able to have
them.

Commander Paton named coinradts Webb, Sinclair, and Yarger as
the dahce committee, to make arHarold Smith. Mr. and Mr*. Robt. rangemanta'knd further plan*
“nd Ri. 1| th&lt; h*™
d*n
nc„
« 10
oorhim. Mr. and Mn. On-l-r
b.m a,
w w he
h,r^
a ln
u, lhe
Cards end entertainment, Mr. and .near future. "Die committee met on
Mrs. Roy Hubbard.
Tuesday night but at present plans

The Lodge I* Indebted to Brother;
Be sure and watch next week's
Clarence Bennett for a splendid
davenport-lounge which adds
a Banner for full detail*.
great deal to the appearance of the
Comrade cortrlghl. commander of
new club room.
American Legion post, and comrade
SIXTY COUPLES '
Webb, commander-elect of lhe V. F.
ATTEND DANCE W. Boat, are making plans, where­
The harvest dance given by the by they hops the two Veterans'
Hasting* Olvte Players association posts can co-operate with each oth­
at me ion at kmo'b opera house er not only for the,benefit of the
wa* attended by about alxty cou- i ex-service men but also for the bonepies. The party wa* successful In fit of the surrounding community.

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP
MEN I Hara Ara tha Finegt

FALL
SUITS
you hove over looked ot

al $223°
ENGLISH TOWN
SUITS
Nawl Every Suit in our casus a brand nuw
gormont. Only Fino hard wuiring, puro
worsteds. They will give severnl
Masons waar.

English Town Topcoats* 185° *2I50

Her* is news for High
School Follow* and
Small Man!

ENGLISH TOWN

PREPS

♦|630 ’I830
VISIT OUR SPORTSWEAR DEFT.
Duck Hunting Coati,

BroteMl Uhd Cbp« . . . Hold Woolon Jackctg For Men
S«IH ... GMr
Wam»fi‘t $mw a»4 Sid Swlti...
^hrahi Ski HffN . . . Knh
. hire Wool
SkoHnf Socki end MlHa for GHa ord Womn.

WATERS
CLOTHES SHOP
SELLING QUALITY KEEPS US BUSY
miPHONI Ui5

HMWir

�TW1 HABTtNQg MMXM, BTOUOAT, OCTOMB I, ICT

BETA

and baraldry, family cm*

SIBMA PHI

MEET
|r
. , _ 7
AT QRASO RIPID81 CeWnatorf TWr

Silver Annivnary

Two Daloff&amp;tag Brat by Looil
Sorority—State Of- ' ■
Hoars Hooted

j Sporting Items

day a* two P.
M Ue United
Brethren church in Woodbury. BUr«

Mro. Urooo rad Mn. Moln.

of

tyro Attrad Bmloni
Epwoam LEAGUETownsend plan meeting, Episcopal ALLEGAN DEFEATS
On Sunday. October 4. Hr. and
artth house Wednesday evening,
Uo Fodorotion
HASTINGS 14-0
Mrs. B. A. Lyiarksr celebrated their
at
0:00
In the parlors of IM Meth­
Mbs Ethel Ragto and Mbs Gerper night. Coma dine with tu. I*
silver wedding anniversary, many
aldlns Williams attended the ses­
the
to to be ■ penny supper and after Home-Oominf Gam* Friday odist ehurch. Devotions win be led
a-,——o
the
sions of the state convention of lhe friends and relatives calling and
at
Fair
Grouudi
Well
Bala Sigma phi sorority Saturday helping to make It a day that will be State Federation of Women's Clubs, live issues of the day. Bring your
will be recreation and refraahmenU
is attending the sessions ot the Fed­
An interesting program te being
and Bunday at Grand Rapids as the long remembered.
'
’
Attended
.
eration at Manistee
She had friends with you
delegates from the local chapter.
planned and all young people
Dinner guests included Mr. and charge of the district tuneham at
The High school grtdders went
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wood and
invited.
Mn. H. A. Timm. Caledonia; Mr.: lhe Chippewa hotel Tuesday nocm
Mrs. Hazel Hinkley wen* on Bater al Mra. Fred Johnson, the meet- me fair grounds when they lost to
and on ounaay
Bunday evening aiumaea
attended a
abend the
the dancing ' ~~
,. ana
urday evening to attend
Ing of the Banner Bunday School j Alkgan by a score of 14 to 0. It was
party held
held to
to the
ttto ballroom
Ultoxm at
st the
tite |“r*’I Oinnar a* Bear Lake given tor the class will be held next Tuesday a well played game for the most
‘
w,.
w.
ntemtwra of lhe stole board by the
Pantlind hotel.
nru^v
mJ- recording secretory of the iedert- evening with Mrs. Clayton Hlnck- '■ pan with Angell playing his usual
The convention opened with a I
ley. If the weather Is good a aullar
aieuar defensive
ocieiuiva game
Kama and
ana Btrubte
ouuuw
J. Drury. Detroit, Mr. and Mra.
u— Arllf Hopktns.
banquet Saturday evening, with
---------- —
—--hla own brilliant
playing.
I Kenneth .Buehler, Mr. rad Mra ; M'n K s McIntyre, president ot marshmallow roast will also be en-., outenlnlng —
It waa lhe Hastings home-coming
Tb. dS .b’KSd “ u mSrS I
X “”.1$
the local club, attended the sessions
fame
and
was
well
attended.
aa lhe delegate of the club and the
Attention Pythian Sisters—Next! The line-ups were; ”
Ml .Kort wu runuihed u ewch ,
of
Tueaday.at 0:M at Temple, pot luck. Hastings (0)
, Allegan (14)
Mohler Ot MiddlevlUa.
supper **
followed
’•““"* by Temple meet­ Smith
.
|
Th. ,uu council
held «un-l^“~^
Mn. Cross, as retiring president
ing; business of importance to be Draper
day morning, S2 of the 40 chapters ^n_
Johnson
of the district, will give her report
transacted. All members requested R. Beumer
in
Kains kMr.Minfart nV lings friends were entertained.
On Riverside Standard Qual­
Blanz
at
a
business
session
of
the
Federa
­
WM«£t
! Ml. .nd Mm LylMrUr
u&gt;.
to be present. Committee In charge Angell
Baker
tion.
ity Tires! Saturday your last
of supper. Chairman, Mra. Lloyd Brill
Reuhle
Martan/Williams of Grand Rapids; sincere congratulations and best
chance to Save at this week'
Storer, aaabtanta, Mrs. Henry Mul­ Doxey
wtahea of a wide circle of friends.
PASSING
OF
MRS.
Watson
vlcc-pres.. Marlon Grevalin ot Port
der and Mrs. Albert Meyers.—x x x Ransom
ANNA
M.
HUBS.
Nyberg
Huron; cor.-sec, Marcella Dough­
DINNER AND M0.
Zavtlx
erty of Grand Rapids; rec.-sec.,
The BapUst Missionary society Struble
on
Wednesday
afternoon
of
last
Mr. and Mra. John Hewitt enter­
Brinlnger
$5.05
4.40-21 -.
Margaret Tobin of Muskegon and
’ WU1
will meet with
Mrs r-Muic,
Earner Lanfcar Sottiard
wun a*l».
—
tained the sixteen members of the week, after an Illness of eighteen on North Michigan avenue tar elec-1 S'®** &lt;c)
Miller
tress. Mrs. McGannon of Ionia.
$5.65
4.50- 21 _.
(C) Retach
The council was followed by a N. K. Club at a lovely six-thirty dln- months. Anna Hubbell was bom in tlon of officers Wednesday. October
Canada tn IMS. coming with her
luncheon at 12 o'clock at which Miss ncr on Saturday evening, faU flow­
Substitutions: Hastings, Cappon.
14,
at
two
o'clock.
Visitor!
welcome.
$5.98
4.75-19
Terry again spoke. One of lhe'fea­ ers furnishing the table and room parents to Bt. Clair. Mich., when
Kelley. McLeod. Draper. La BalUs­
v. the convention -o the en- decorations. During the evening
The Women's Missionary society ter, Rennlck, H. Beaamer and
tures of
was
$6.98
5.25-18
tertelnment offered by lhe Grand "M0" was played, top scores going united tn marriage to E. C. Russ on of the Methodbt Episcopal church Moore: Allegan. Morehouse. Sbslb,
5.50- 17 .
$7.75
Rapids chapters, planning a tour of, to Miss Doris Cappon and Boyd July 14. 1M0. Ute family coming to wlU meet with Mrs. E- F Bottum at Plotla and Preston.
one of the furniture centers and a Clark and low prizes to Mrs. Dan Hastings in 189J. Mr. Russ died In her home on East Walnut street
Officiate: Referee. Avery of W. B.
$8.65
6.00-16 .
stylo show and reception at the Ashalter and John Hewitt. The 1222. Surviving are two daughters, Wednesday afternoon. October 14. at T. C, umpire, Emery of W. B. T. C.
Mrs.
W.
J.
Field
and
Mrs.
Don
pantlind hotel.
i Brand prize went to Mr. and Mra.
2:20 o'clock. Mrs. Robert Burch will
Tite local chapter of lhe sorority Boyd Clark. A delightful time to Bllven. of Hastings, lhe only son, have charge of the music and devo- METHODIST RALLY 8UPFPER.
Despite the heavy rain there were
han been active since Ito organlza-: reported.
Fro* Mounting Service I
tlonals. Mra. Wayne Merrick b pro­
before his mother. Mrs. Russ was a gram chairman and will review the about one hundred present at the
member of the First Methodist first few chapters of the foreign rally supper held In the social rooms
M1HH WILL1TT8 HONORED,
Mra. A. D. McDonald assisting her.
church and of L. A. 8 Circle NA 2. missionary study
book.
"Congo of lhe Methodist church Wednesday
l Mrs. Burr Cooley and Mrs. Lannes
Save NOW!. .On
CTOMes.'t Mrs. Will Mbhler will give evening. A fine pot luck supper was
VALENTINE—SHAW.
. Kcnfleld were Joint hoateasea at a
Thursday evening. Oct. 1. Mias mtoccilaneouit olxnrer last Friday woman of high Christian Ideals and a paper on "Our Missionaries .to। enjoyed, after which the pastor
was loved by her friends because of Africa." Mra Alton c. Hyde will D*। stated som^ of hte alms for the new
Hot Woter Heater
Roberta Bhaw. only daughter ot evening in honor of Miss Lucile
her loyalty, her faithfulness to her a guest for lhe afternoon and willi conference
emterenc?
wear.
District
Superin
\year.
SuperinMr. end Mrs. Prank Bhaw of Mid- Wlllltto, who will be married Bun­
^Installation^
. Dewey
r-~-“ of Grand Rapdievllie, and Arthur 8- Valentine, day, October II, to Clark Welker of home and her family and her uni­ contribute as her part of the pro- lendent L.
versal
kindness.
The
funeral
was
sent and made a very
gram a short discussion of the Bel-1 Ids wa
youngest son of Mr. and Mra. J. L. Grant! Haven. The entertainment,
held at the home. 334 West Court glan Congo. Members and friendsI ■ ninety
timely iaia. There was community
Valentine
of this city,
were-----------unitedconstating of beano and other games,
------------------------------------------|1 singing led by John C. Keteham. It
Usual Imtallation
in marriage al the home of lhe
al Mrs Cooley'a home and the 8*.. on Friday afternoon with Audley are cordially Invited to attend.
i waa in every respect an enjoyable
groom's parents, 220 W. Marshall at. refreshments were served by the Hewitt of Grand Rapids, a reader
from the First Church of Christ.
' affair.
Fric* $1.25
HIGHBANK.
The house was decorated with hostesses al the home of Mra KenScientist, officiating. Interment was
Mr. and Mra. Clare Marshall and
- -------------snapdragons, zinnias and dahlias.. ndd. The numerous prizes given for
in Riverside.
family of Bellevue called on Mrs. DEATH OF GEORGE
An arch was formed of large bask- • me beano game were presented to
Freda
Marshall
and
Mrs.
Worth
I
SMITH
OF
LAKE
ODESSA.
eta of zinnias and dahlias and the guest of honor,
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT.
Green Saturday.
George smith. 72. of Lake Odem
cathedral candies In the living |
■
Mr. and Mrs. John MacLeod an­
Mr. and Mra. Leslie Adams and well known in Barry county, died
ONLY
W
rooms In front of which Rev. Jones | UHNORINR MR AND
nounce the engagement of their Mrs. Sarah Ostrolh called on Mr. on Saturday in the hospital in that
of lhe Methodist church performed HU is UH I is U Win. AHU
granddaughter, Miss Lucille Alice and Mra. Rodger Warner and sons village, death being due to pneuthe single ring servtoe. The bride
MRS. F. E. JOHNSTON MacLeod. to Philip M. Turnes. Jr.. in Naahvllle and Mrs. Mary Ann 1 moma. He was a member of lhe firm
Oct savings this week. Offer
and groom were attended by MIm 1
•
o
—
EPS.
tGAMv.
V
p
II
a
a
.
t
x
.
Na*
1 of Smith Bro.. Velte de Co . that has
applies to installation ot ANY
Evelyn Armstrong and Gayion Fry
of Hastings. The wedding will be
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawblilz elevators In Hartings, coals Grove,
। Knights Templar Annual In­ tn late November.
ot Middleville.
aulo healer Ln Wards stock.
were callers at Woodland recently. Lake odeuut and surrounding towns
Only the immediate families were,
spection on Thursday,
Mrs, Dan Hickey of Vermontville He to survived by a son. Raymond
present, some beautiful gifts were I
called on Mrs. Freda Marsimll Prt- Smith of Lake Odessa, and a daugh­
November 12
presented to the bride and groom. I
ter. Hilda, of Woodbury; a brother.
day.
They will be at home at 828 So. • The Knights Templar of Hartings
Ebri Marshall of Marshall spent David Smith of Lake Odessa and a
Jefferson St- after Oct. 10.
PHONE 2*91 • HASTINGS
1 wlU pay honor to Eminent Sir FtnSunday with his mother. Mrs. Freda sister. Mra. Anna Shelter of Wood­
arum
&lt;• Johnston and Mrs. Johnston
bury.
The Ladles' Aid Society of the Marshall.
.... .W,.N8 RCHOLARSinP.
| on Thursday evening of this week
church will
meet
With lhe plan of awarding J2 un-.
g
t Juck dtnner
program Presbyterian
der-graduate scholarship, annually m lhrMawmic Temple. ThTL- Thursday. October IS. for a one
U&gt; Mkhltxn BMT; coUm Imtom
W11
ln thrp „ltun,
, o'clock luncheon. A good attend­
Allie C. Young,
r&gt;lnz Inlo 1U&gt; nun y.«r of exeeu- f.r.w.11
for if H||
we||, ance is desired.
Uon. the atumm Meeuuon ef the Mr ind url Johnlton
he ImvThe regular meeting of the
W .ludenia MS reelptenw of th«e
[n
lh.
to p^,. Thornapple Garden club will be en­
Kholmhlp. Ohly 30 ■holmhUe | d
c,|„ Tb,
chAlmln
were .warded h, iraa when the Ide.
Jtoe
eonmltlee m eh.rne tertained by Mrs. Pauline McOm™ ere.led. but for e.eh of the) J ,E Kmlnr. enlert.lnmmt 1. ber this Thursday afternoon, Oct. A
tUCTnoive wn »
• &gt;«“ Eminent Sir Frank Carrolhm. P. fleers, every member U urged to at­
awarded in Michigan, one to the ■ q
tend.
outstanding student in each sena-, '
...

RIVERSIDE
TIRE SALE!

MONTGOMERY WARD

Organizations

torial district of the state.

j

An Interesting feature of lhe eve-

J* J•
Templar Ladies' AuxUlary. and the
in applied pkcUon of
chairman and secretary of
this
ting will be Mesdames HUI and
FAMII.Y PARTY.
■
Mrs. Anna cheeseman of Maple
Grove entertained Bunday in honor
of her sister and husband. Mr. and । The annual Knights Templar In­
Mrs. L. C- Schill, ot Cleveland. Ohio, spection will be held on Thursday
Those present were Mr and Mrs. evening. Nov. jj. The Inspection
George Eaton and three sons and thia year wlll'be made by the Grand
Lloyd
Eaton of
Nashville. Mra.' WhM/t of the Grand Commandeer
Edith Bechtel. Mr. and Mrs. Her- of Michigan. Eminent Str Frank
bert Eaton and family. Mr. and Mra. Millard of Flint. It ts anticipated
Gtorgc Maurer and family, and Mr. that there will be present delega­
ting! Mrs. clarence Bump and fam- Ilona of Sir Knights from Battle
lly of Hastings. Harry Cheeseman Creek.
------*'—
Marshall.
—*Kalamazoo.
---------------- * Lan
- ­
of Dowling. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey sing. Charlotte and Grand Rapids.
Cheeseman and family and Mr. and The inspection will be preceded by
Mrs. John Norton and family pt a banquet tn lhe Masonic dining
room.—r. A. Adair. Recorder.
Maple Grove.

a scholarship f°r th*-'
son Gardner, senior
•ctoncc.

■bte Southeast Rutland W C. T.
U. will meet with Mrs. Prank Wa­
ters Wednesday kftemoon. oct. 14.
The program subject b "Chrbtlan
Citizenship."

2645

Red Head Shell»-1»£■
Hard hitting aMUa; none
liner mads.
** “

Two-m-Ont

ENDURING TRIBUTE
You loved thorn in life . . . you

Wl INVITE YOU TO VISIT our

In death.

ihtwroom. Wa have at proitnt tha

IIEATEIl
5»»5

FINEST DISPLAY wa hava avar

had, in a variety *fpric* ranges.
livery.

TELEPHONE 2497
Only U.M Own

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS
ALWAYS EIMASLI

HASTINGS. MtCH.

59

Each

ROLLER SKATES
Steel Ball Bearing,
ankle pad. pairwO

QAc

BUMPER STOPS
Reg. Me. Heavy steel. 7Qc
Saves fetflers, ftdr .. ■ v

Part Waal
Double Blanket*

Single, Half Wool

Size 72x64.
$4.9*
All shade*, ot— C

Pastel, R*vofriM*.. Silk
Binding Blanket. JM.98
Wonderful value! C

Cotton Blankets
SINGLE—'

89*

All Wool Ken­
wood Blonkett

DOUBLE-

NOTICE OUR WINDOW

Fireplsco corintss, plus
whole-house comfort I Tha
only hsstar that circaUtts as wall aa rtdisttl
hsitl Fills 4 to S rooms
with healthfully moist
warm air. Built to last:
heating unit and most of
cabinet art haavy cast
iron. Burns coal, wood.

HASTINGS

HEADQUARTERS FOR POPULAR
MADE BY THE FOMMO$T

1*39

All Wool Sport Coat*—
at--.l .....$10.00

AXE HANDLES
Bld. site. Hickory
OEc
handle1........ fcU

ASPHALT ROOF PAINT
Renews your, present roof-Gal. fw

100 sq. ft.
roll
I

|* DS

COMMANOI* *.".ry
33 plate, tits VI nukes of cots.
!ne installation.
Ip.Tt
Exchange
C

AUTO TOT DkUSIHC
Water proofs your
car Up

Fur Trimmtd Coat*------ .
ot$16.7S, $24,75,

7QC

a Q&lt;
Iw

Montgomery Ward
PHONS 2691

Hundreds of Ne
Coats and Dre

TOP FILL FOUNTAIN
2 gallon size.
Poultry
I

35 Lb. TALC ROOFINC

ORDER NOW far Fall ar Spring da-

ESTAILHHID 1907

70x84—

hall. The subject, “Heraldry” will
be Introduced by Mrs. Marian
Goodyear, leader for the afternoon.
Anyone Interested in tha after­
noon's subject Is welcome as a guest.
The speaker Is an authority on gen-

Shoal. &lt; ih.ll. In T ...on4.; .moolb. 0pnuUbl. .cUon: bl«k
,l“‘
bluH H«l b.rr.1. -•*&gt; bzluu.d.

it with * suitable memorial for futurc generations.

Shoot Blanket*
Site 72x99—NoYke th*
six*! Plain cream, close

Mabel Louise Keech of Centerville
will address the members and guests
of lhe Women's Club Friday after-

$30 value

peluata the name of your laved

Part Wool
Plaid Blankets

Look Around - YOU'LL SEE MORE HAWTHORNE BIKES THAN ANY OTHER MAKE

AUTO FLOOR MATS

You fool your responsibility to ptr-

Better and Lower in Price Than
in Spite of a Higher
Last Year
Market! Buy NOV and SAVE!

The Leo A. Miller Post Auxiliary
No. 3326 will meet promptly at eight
o'clock in the G. A. R. hall this
Thursday evening. AU members are
requMted to be present aa Ihb will
be nomination and election night.

Repealing Shotgun

cherish their memory

New Blankets

ill a juhbson st.

"Lamalurs” Coat* at only
Fin* Silk Frock*, $3.91, $
Knitted Drat***, $2.M,
Sport Skirt* and $w«a

Front
"Etdtuivd But
H ASTINOS

�ocryin I. in.

m B«&lt;TWn« lOffn,
। Umea right along the shore of the
। river, at other times, Just a ledge
carved into the side of the perpen' dicular rock cUff a thousand feet or
more above the water, through tunjnete and over bridges. It passes a
, number of great slender waterfalls
flowing over lhe cliffs, some of them
(Oontlnued from pogw 1. flee. 2*
over seven hundred feet high. We
went through Bonneville where lhe
■ things too numerous to mention.
government is building another huge
These gooeyducks deserve a 11 Ute PWA dam across the Columbia,
special mention. The/ are a spe­ similar but smaller than lhe Grand
cies of clam, with a shell about Coulee project mentioned two weeks
the. size of a lady's handbag, and the
The Dalles. Oregon, Monday, July
rhell te usually burled about a foot
or two deep in the sand.. The head 20th, 3942 miles out of Hosting*.
The Dalles, a city about the slxe of
or neck or proboscis, or i whatever
It te they eat with, te about an Inch Hastings, seta Its name from the
and a half or two Inches In diameter French words "Lea Dalles." which
and reaches way up to the surface refer to the chasm through which
and the end of it te all you can see. !the Columbia river flows, so narrow
But the minute you touch it or start .at this point that the river, which
digging for it. it te pulled down and is normally about a quarter to a
it te quite a race to dig one out be­ half mile wide, is contracted to a
fore he get* away. These as well as ,width of from 130 to 200 feel.
all the other clams which he saw in
We got a good early start and
great quantities are very fine eating ,drove the 280 mites to Crater Lake
i but we didn’t idree lhe lima'to cook ,
1 them. David did. however, get two before noon passing through Bend.
Just south of which the road passes
I beautiful specimens
of starfish through
;
great black lava flows
I which he wrapped up In papers and ,
which are famous for their Ice
put in the compartment with the (caves.
spare tire to dry.
Crater Lake National Park, locat­
We had expected to get away by ed in southern Oregon, on the very
nine o'clock, but the farther out the crest
(
pf the Cascade Range, is one
tide got the more interesting things of
( lhe nation’s unique scenic won­
derlands. Crater Lake itself rests in
finally got started. Instead of taking the very heart of a mighty moun­
the ferry back to Seattle and com­ tain, whose destruction resulted In
ing down the regular route, we went the formation of a vast crater, in
west along the Hood Canal out on which water from rain and melting
the Olympic Peninsula and then snows has accumulated. The lake
south and east to Olympia, the state is roughly six miles In diameter,
capital, located at theaxireme south nearly half a mile deep, with per­
end of Puget SoundTFrom Olympia
pendicular lava cliff walls rising from
we went on south through Centralia a quarter to a half mile above Its
to Longview. I had always wanted surface all around. The color ot the
to see Longview, as a few years water te the outstanding character­
ago lhe company installed what te istic ot the lake, it being an almost
probably the largest sprinkler sys­ unbelievably deep turquoise blue,
tem In lhe world. In lhe world’s caused by the great depth and clear­
largest sawmills, which are located ness of lhe waler. Near the middle
here. Longview, founded by lhe
of the lake te Wlrard Island, a per­
Long-Bell or Weyerhauser Timber fect little crater and cone rising
Co., te the only pre-planned city in
the west. It te situated at the Junc­ face, and marks the lost dying ef­
tion of the cowlltz and Columbia
fort of this huge volcano.
rivers both of which are navigable
A scenic highway skirts the lake
for ocean ships. The city te Just for nineteen miles around Uie top
thirteen years old and has a popu­ of the rim. we entered from the
lation of nearly 11,000.
southeast side, and when we came
From Longview we followed the to the road leading up to the rim we
north shore of the Columbia river found It under construction and had
crossing It from Vancouver. Wash­ to make a detour. Unlike moat
ington to Portland. Oregon, then on detours this one was a short cut. a
up lhe south side, over the beautiful single road, almost straight up the
Columbia River Highway to The mountain side. We hadn’t put any
Dalles, where we spent the night. water Ln the car since leaving Has­
No words can describe the beauty of tings. and by lhe time we had
the Columbia River Highway. It te climbed a few hundred feet we were
a wide, safe, paved highway, some- blowing steam and had to stop.
There being no place for mile* to

fee. after a short illness. A private
funeral will be held Friday after*
Ronald R. Stauffer, aged two and
noon al the residence with burial
one-half years, died on Wednesday In the Bowne Center cemetery. Sin­
cere sympathy is extended the be-

Cold Weather
Is On the Way
Call 2276 TODAY and
Have "The Home Fixit Man"

•
•
•
•
•
•

WINDOWS and DOORS
FLOORS and WALLS
STORM SASH
STORM DOORS
WEATHER STRIP
INSULATION

A few additions and repairs may be all that are neces­
sary to make your home snug and comfortable this
winter. Home Lumber Co. prices will make the
Job an economical one.

The HOME LUMBER CO.
"BUILDS HOMES'
HASTINGS
PHONE 2276

FIRST EXPERIENCE
WITH OCEAN TIDES

Il to cool off We repeated this per­
formance several times and finally
got to the top and back on the new
road. I was quite worried for fear
we would damage the motor, but
David got more enjoyment out of
this than any other part of the trip,
aa these quarter hour stops gave
him plenty of opportunity to scour
the countryside for bugs and but­
terflies. The view after reaching the
top was well worth the effort as ev­
ery turn presented a wonderful new
view of the Jewel-llke lake in its
setting of vari-colored lava cliffs
and huge white snow drifts.
Upon reaching the north en­
trance ranger station, we found
spring water flowing through a pipe

AMERICA’S MOST COPIED RADIO always a year ahead I

10N6.DISTANCE-RAD IO

OFFERS for 1937

to lhe roadside, and you can imagine formed him that Lhe beautiful furHAVING RECEPTIION
our relief when we found that In­
Maude Wallace. Hastings.
stead of lhe radiator being dry, two Hastings by, the Grand Rapid*
8:06 Christian Youth In Missions
FOR TWO CANDIDATES
Bookcase and chair Co. The former —Paul Braith, woodland.
8:10 The Ideal Christian YouthPrentiss M. Brown and Ray­
suffer lhe same as humans In high
Miss lone Catton. Lansing.
Bong—"Follow the Gleam."
altitude. Water bolte al such a low the Foundation, and several mem­
mond Starr Here on
temperature that the extra exertion ber* of hl* headquarters staff. Dr.
Benediction—Rev. Ralph Bates.
Yriday
ot a short, hard cUmb in low gear in Harkness states that Mr. Hoover
asked~many questions about tha
Offlcers—Adult:
Prentiss M Brown. Democratic
the hot sun te aU that It need* to-------generate steam.
I Foundation’s work In Barry county
Pres.—Mrs. Alice Griffin. Wood­ party candidate for United States
We continued on around the rim and gave to It his approval Dr. landSenator, and Raymond Starr, Dem­
and from the west side we could ! Harkness Informed us that from the
Vlce-Pres.—Rev. Hoyt, Nashville.
ocratic party candidate tor attor­
kwtV right Hdown
awti rxr,
VaakrnM
look
on fnn
top nt
of U/lvard
Wizard niiMtinn*
questlons the *ex-Presldent
asked Ifit
Island, which is a perfect miniature is evident that he plans ip have
Assist. Bec.-Trea*.—Robert Olas- ney general In Michigan, will be In
of Mt. Rainier. Mt. Hood or any of
Hastings on Friday. Oct. 9. when a
the numerous other extinct vol­ some other California county. While
Children's Div.—Mrs. Joe Broaak. reception will be held for them at
canoes in this region.
Young People’s Div.—Rev. Mc­ the Parker house ab three o'clock.
They wlU also speak on lhe north
Ever since leaving The Dalles in inference from his queries was that Nulty
Vacation School—Josephine Rom- court nouse
house steps, discussing
discussing cointhe morning we smelled a peculiar he had such plans Ln mind.
AU the folks in the local head­ tg.
.
palgn issue*.
quarters speak glowingly of the gra­
Adult—Rev. Ralph Bates. Delton. I A county Democratic rally will be
able when we were moving right cious way in which Mr. Hoover met
School Adult Div.—Frank Angell, i held at- the Delton community hall
Leadership—Mrs. A. W. Wood- on Tuesday. Oct. 13 at seven-thirty
along with lhe windows open, but them, and how deeply Interested
bume.
o’clock, when a national speaker
each time we stopped it seemed to
Young People's Officers. Pres.,' will be present and give an address.
get beyond the peculiar odor stage, white here.
Thl*
is
the
first
time
a
former
Miss
Bernice Springer.
------and was terrible. While we stopped
President
ot
the
United
Blates
ever
Vice-Pre*.—Mrs. Melvin Smith.
to lake pictures of Wlxard Island
BARRY CO. LAKES WELL
we begin a little private detective visited Hastings. A special train,
STOCKED WITH FISH
Treas.—Melvin Smith.’ ~ work. We took out the seat cushions carrying lhe late President Theo­
j Tlw members of the Barry County
Leader—Josephine Romig.
to see if there were any old dead dore Roosevelt, once made a short
_ ___________ Rod and Gun club Sunday planted ■
He
hamburgers or other food under­ stop at the depot here.
£“ S
neath. and then took all the bag­ did not make a speech, but waved OFFICERS WILL ATTEND
gage out of the compartment back his greetings from the rear of the
GRAND CHAPTER
of the back seat but found nothing, train to the large crowd which had
in walking around lhe car, while assembled to see him. It seem* to
nan._
Txnnn-. Br»«. superintendent, and Charle.examining lhe tires, we were nearly us that that occurred Ln 1612. when MF*. Bauer to Be the Honor Perkins. foreman, at the fish hatch­
knocked unconscious
when
we
Quest at Several
iwy assisting. Dinner for 60 of thr
opened the tire compartment to Progressive ticket against President
aee.i
M
worzers was served at the club’i
check the spare tire. David's star­ Taft.
AIIUirB
building at the rearing ponds at Orfish could not survive our modem
From Hastings Mr. Hoover and
Mrs. Alma Flngleton and Hugh I angevllle. Don Foreman being in
methods of transportation. They the Foundation executives drove to Riley, worthy matron and worthy • charge. Army ••slum" was the mate
were given a decent burial by heav­
patron of Hastings Chapter, No. 7, r*
dish
1^ “
on **the
----------menu. A
‘ detailed ------repot
ing them over the cliff Into the lake. Middleville, to visit the fine Kel­ Order of Eastern Star, and Mrs. ।of the number of fish planted Ir
This Is probably the only attempt logg school in that village- There
Fred Jones, associate matron, will ।
that has ever been made to Intro­ the former President had the op­
attend the sessions of the Grand ’The club now la busy making plan*
duce starfish In crater Lake, but I portunity of seeing- the splendid
Chapter to be held in Grand Rap­
have a smelly suspicion that the
school plant, which owes its exist­ Ids October 13, 14 and 15. as dele­ Thursday. October 29.
experiment was not a success.
.
ence to the W. K. Kellogg Founda­ gates of the local chapter.
We got a lot more enjoyment out
Mra. Georgina Bauer, who last
tion. and inspecting the special
of the rest of the trip around the
rim. the read In many places being rooms and equipment for carrying year was grand worthy matron of
on the Foundation's health work the grand chapter, will also attend
dug through deep snow banks with
with the chUdrtn and young people. lhe sessions. Mrs. Bauer la a
steam shovels, and vje finally ar­
The former President was next member of the committee on ap­
rived for/lunch at the park head­
conveyed to the Foundation's Pine peal* and grievances of the general
quarters on the south side of the
grand chapter of the world and will &lt;
lake. A zigzag trail leads a thousand
derful
work the Foundation is doing open tiie grand chapter meeting !
feet or so down the face of lhe cliff
for the 50 handicapped and under­ Wednesday morning. It is expected I
to the lake at this point, and we
that Mrs. Minnie E. Keyes, of Wash- '
privileged
children
who
are
bchad planned to go down. However,
ington, D. C„ the right worthy
we found the trail closed, as an ac­
greatly Interested in ail he saw In
cident had Just occurred and, the
taught school here, and Mrs. Fran- i
rangers were trying to recover from the Middleville Kellogg school and ces Haum. of Milan. Tenn., the .
a rocky ledge far below, the body of in the Pine lake camp as well as most worthy grand matron, will at­
a boy from Virginia who tried to Hastings. He stated that if such tend the sessions.
।
save time by cutting crosslot*, in­
Mrs. Bauer and Glenn Tupper of I
stead of following the marked trail. county and community there would
Bt. Johns, who was worthy grand
This dampened our enthusiasm for result a very great improvement*In patron last year, will be the guests I
the
physical,
mental
and
moral
con
­
seeing any mure ot the park so we
of honor at a number of occasions.
ditions In Uils country.
-'
started on for Medford.
Our readers can see from all this The Bauerettes, who took an active
The road for most of lhe seventypart bi the meeting lost year and
five miles follows along lhe bank of how much the w. K. Kellogg Foun­
are composed of members of the
the world-famous trout stream, the dation has done and Is doing for various Grand Rapids chapters, will
Rogue river, and we envied the Barry county.
entertain at dinner Monday eve­
numerous anglers whom we saw In
ning at the Rowe hotel in Mrs.
most every bend of the river. It was
Bauer's honor.
Wednesday noon
quite a hot day and It was a great
Mra. Bauer and Mr. Tupper will be
relief to gel to our camp in Medford
the honor guests at a luncheon giv­
and cool off In a ,cold shower before
en
by
lhe
Bauer-Tupper
club of
dinner.
v—J
Wayne county and Wednesday eve­
H. D. Cook.
ning at six o'clock they will be re­
ceived into the past matrons' and
' BENEWED WITH
(Continued from page 1. 8ec. 1)
patrons' club of the grand chapter.
McCREERY'S
Wednesday morning at a breakfast
lending the convention*.
DRY CLEANING
the o. B. B. club, composed of the
7:45 What te lhe Best Type of officers who served under Mrs.
Sunday
Evening
Program
for Bauer and Mr. Tupper, will enter­
Youth?—Lewis Meredith. Freeport.
tain for them.
■ ,
look . . . *a4 FEEL .
7:50 What te tiie Best Type of
All business and ritualistic ses­
Sunday
Evening
Program
for sions will be held in the Civic au­
(Continued from page 1. Bee. 3)
Youth?—Rev. W. M. Jones. Has­ ditorium with headquarters In the
by them for lhe Foundation’* work tings.
Pantlind hotel and it te expected
Ln this county. He seemed much
7:55 Guitar and Whistle Number that the attendance will be as large
pleased when Dr. Harkness in- —Teddy Hayward."McCallum.
or larger than that of last year.

SUNDAY SCHOOL
CONVENT ON OCT. 20

HER ERI HOOVER
STS RISINGS

McCREERY’J

DRY CLEANER!

MARRIAGE LICENSES.
Robert L. Lester, Hickory Cor­
PHONE 2140
ner* .............................................
Marian E. Clarke. Hickory CorHASTINGS, MICHIGAN

. available in four modern

42 MODELS

cabinet finithei Iwolnul

bone white

. mople

AUCTION SALE

and eboniied)... priced from $292^ tO *750*

Chas. McCullough. Orangeville ..44
Adeline M Nash. Prairieville .

Model No. 6-S-152

Sp«*k*r, V*k*-MuiicBl«h HStlity
Control. S*MlUTlty C*atr*L Light-

Having rented my farm, I will have on auction sale ot the farm located one
and one-half miles east of Cloverdale, quarter mile south from M-43, Section
22, Hope Township, on

Chase &amp; Sanborn's

COFFEE

IM

MONDAY, OCTOBER 12
STARTING AT 1 ::00 O'CLOCK.

• 22c

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY:

Butter
HORSES.
Bay mare, 8 yr*, old, wt. 1400.
Pair gray geldings, wt. 2600,

good

CATTLE.
Red and while Durham cow, 6 yrs. old,
bred Aug. 19.
Red cow, part jersey, 4 yrs., due Jan.

Guernsey heifer, coming 2 yrs. old, due

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• Lightning Station Finder

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। and rou-U h*^ a nt* Msadard by which to jadg*.;

MILLER FURNITURE CO
i

PHONE 2226

20 good breeding ewes, 10 two-yr.-olds.
65 yaarling White Leghorn hens, extra
good layers.
85 White Leghorn pullets, good ones.

3 ten-gallon milk cans. Milk pails.
Garland range.
Garland base burning hard coal heatRound Oak hooter, &gt;Im 18.
Jewel heater, slxe 14. Kitchen cabinet.
Dining tabla, 12-ft. extension.
2 sat* dining chairs. 2 rockers.
Bedsprings end mattress

com

carrying terms are very reasonable.

HASTINGS

SHEEP AND POULTRY.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND
MISCELLANEOUS.

FARM TOOLS.
McCormick binder, 7-ft. cut.
McCormick mower, 5-ft. cu.
10-ft. dump rake. Hay Rack.
Studebaker wagon, 3-in. tires
3-section spring tooth harrow

o’ Headphones for the Hard-of-Hearing

Wl CAN ARRANGE FOR EASY PAYMENTS in
yoo Souro to buy o radio that woy

Black and white heifer, coming 2 yrs.
old, due Jan. 25.

Spika tooth harrow.
2-horsa walking cultivator.
2 ona-horsa cultivator*. Oil drum.
13 hole grain drill.
500-chick brooder stove.
Oliver walking plow. No. 99
Pair bob sleighs, new lost year.
theller.
Double harness. Com
*
* “
Single harnMS. Crass seeder.
4 horse collars. Com planter.
Potato planter and other small tools.

-37c

Shulls or Freoport

Spare Ribs
Fancy
Spring

Chickens

»■ 23c

- 19c

BEEF
KETTLE
ROASTS
Branded Beef

- 18c
Frankfurters
Bacon

Armour** Star

19c
Klb- pU-

25c

Cauliflower

25c

Cabbage

* 2c

Firm Hard HoU*

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. No goods removed until settled fee.

Mod&lt;| No. e-D-m

GEORGE KAHLER, Prop
HINRY FLANNERY, AueHeeeer.

19c

Head Lettuce

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�=

TH ■AOTWO1 RANWER, THURSDAY, OCTOMB S, IW
Hlltadata tart Tuesday.

! I Board Of Education

Social Events and Personal Mention
Miss Ruth Farr was

In

Entertains Employees

■r &gt;04 Mn lx
wuilui
talth o«u
r,-— L--&gt; M__ !&gt;: --

Grand

KA ...I.

Fred 2. Hill of Grand Rapids was
tn. the city Monday on business.
Mr. and Mrs. William Grindle and
Mrs. Dorrance Trethrlc was in
Grand Rapids Friday on business.
Hasting* friend* tart daughter Of LarwaU. Ind. were the
called
Miss Rose Clark was in Chicago
Mtaa Mary Brockway of Grand ^*on WUtaey.
Monday and Tuesday on business.
Rapid* ta th* guest of Mr. and Mr*. । Nr*. Fred Foster and daughter,
home in Big Rapid* over lhe week M. L. cook.
June, of Laming are (pending aevend.
Mr. ana Mrs. Hugn oa*e ot asT
~ ------------- --—H. Maurice Miyphy and two chil­t syrla
called on Mrs. Clarence Grohe
u
dren ot Howell were In the city on tu.«i., ounm,
|
“m &lt;1
Saturday.
Mr. and Mr*. Paul flush of Char­
CW.
UU Thurnla,
lotte called at lhe Roy Bush home1 me week end with hla parent*. Mr. returning on Friday
and Mr*. Calvin Plumley,
;
Kenneth Laberteauz
on Sunday,
,
,
Mr*. Edith Bonnell returned on and Mr. at^ Mra Robert M^r. of
Mn Karl Hamilton of Charlotte
Kt Friday night with her stater,
Vf1111
ner rormer home at Fife Lake.
game in Ann Arbor Saturday
Roy E. Bush.
Mr and Mr. Roe* Bidelman and ’ Mr and Mrs* charte* DoX were
The Rev. and Mr*. E. O. MoSherry
Sunday with Mr.1 called to Mtukegon Thuraday by the
went to Three Riven on Monday Norn?t Jew?
and Mra. Aleck Hanna of Bparta.
। death of Mra. Doyle'* brother G A
Mra. Kim Bigler and daughters. w2fThf’mI«.?nrfn Mri C°uteWe- The funeral was held’on
Betty and Madeline, were in Ann was the guut of Mr. and Mra. Saturday
Arbor over the week end.
James Bristol part of last week.
k,. and Mrs. clarence Goucher
Mrs. L. D. Clemens of Battle
Jlk mi ' ern ulp' yU1Un« ln New York
creek wa* the week end guest of Dr. Mre dn2n
Mrs. Dan Lewis over the week end. Washington.
Philadelphia
and
and Mrs. o. L. Lockwood.
Mr. and Mr*. Roas Johnson and । Cleveland
Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Green visited
‘
°'z
Vo-UnMr. and Mrs Raymond DahtatTom
week end with relative* In London,, u *p*nt toe week end at toe home
of Detroit over the week end. •
Mr. and Mr*. Harold Smith and
Mrs. Marguerite Parker were in, ch^ren of £Ln^»MJS?undn.dv
Battle Creek Bunday evening.
tl children of Kalamazoo were Bunday cr-g redding
Mr. John j.
Bnd Mrt
Frank Andrus, Clifford Dolan, Roy gurau of Mr. and Mra. John Mac0.-™.. BPTln,. I “““a
.IT.USj’Uf!
Hubbard and Kim Bigler spent Ute ^B. jouuon
week end al Northport on*a Ashing
trip.
L
Mrs. Frederick H- Taylor accom­
Hunter) in Rockford.
panied her father. E. 0. King of Monday.
Mr. and Mr*. Leland Sutherland
Mr. ahd Mrs. Walter Bnyder and and daughter. Mta* Alete, and Mr.
Lansing, to lhe game at Ann Arbor
Mr*. Jacob Haney were the guests and Mra. wm. Winans of Ann Ar­
Saturday.
,
Mra. Mary Mills of MlddteviUe was, j Bunday of Mr. and Mrs. Franz Dahl bor were Sunday guest* of Mr. and
family
at Montague.
Montague.
----- ------lly at
the Bunday guest of her daughter and
Mrs. George M. Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. A- J. Epley have
and husband. Mr. and Mra. John
Christ Weinert and daughter,
returned from a visit in Cedar Mr*. L. W. Lehr. Herbert Lehr and
Wilkes, and family.
Springs
and
Band
Lake where they :family all of Toledo were guest* at
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Wells of
Grand Rapid* were Mond*v guest* were lhe guest* of nieces.
lhe home of Mr. and Mra. V. D.
Mr. and Mn. Ernest Hathaway of Wldrlg over the week end.
of Mr. ahd Mrs. Ed. VanPoperlng.
Milwaukee. Wls . were guest* of his
They spent the d*y fishing.
MU* Grace McCarty of Lansing, a
Mr. and Mrs. Jyry Johnson at- parent*. Mr. and Mn. Mason Hath­ Western Union relief manager, who
traded the game at Ann Arbor Sat­ away, on Saturday and Sunday.
| has been substituting for Clarence
Sherman Hunt spent a few days Goucher, while he wa* away, left
urday and spent Bunday with Mrs.
the past week visiting old school- .Tuesday for Plainwell to relieve the
Johnson's sister at Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Prand*en and males and friends around Mason os manager there.
children. Philip and Helen, of Ionia the guest of Minnie R. Hernans.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Amlin of
Mr. and Mn. Hiram Hopwood and ,Chicago spent the week end with
were Sunday guest* of Mr*. FrandMr. and Mrs. Tower and aon, Rich­ Mr*. Amlin's parent*. Mr. and Mrs.
sen's mother. Mr*. H- O. Hayes.
,
Orvln Birman of Baltimore spent ard. of Belding were Sunday callers O.
P. flintier Mr. and Mr*. Henry
several days al John Wilkes' so as to at the home of Mn. Archie McCoy. Blebert of Elkhart, Ind., were Bun­
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Maurer of day
'
be near hta father. Blrt Blrtnan. who
callers also.
Is seriously ill at Pennock hospital. Charlotte visited their daughter and
W. T. Wallace of Jonesville came
Mr*. John P. Goodyear left Fri­ husband. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bush. .Tuesday to attend- the teacher's
day for Detroit to spend several and family from Friday till Bunday. ,dinner and visit friends. Mr. Wal­
Mm. Forrest Woodln and daugh­ lace relumed last week from Grand
weeks with her daughter and hus­
band. judge and Mrs. Donald Van ter of Belmont came Friday for a Junction, Colorado, where he had
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Newton Ben- &gt;
Zile.
Mr. and Mr*. James 8. Ironside ner. Mr. Woodln came for Bunday,
Ml** Geraldine Iscnhath. Miss
Donald Wldrlg has resigned his Josephine Chase, Mrs. Maude Miller.
were week end guests of Mtaa Olive
Lathrop tn Detroit and are spending position at the Kroger store and Albert Dykstra and Dan Walldorf!
the week in Cleveland a* guest* of went to Lansing Bunday where he attended lhe Alblon-Alma football
will enter lhe Larfsing Business Uni­
relatives.
game at Albion Saturday. Robert
Mis* Harriet Pieraon attended the versity.
Walldorf! returned home with them
Harold Hoskins and slater, MLss
Michigan State College-University
of Michigan game at Ahn Arbor Laura Hoskins, of Rennvllle, Minn.,
Saturday and remained for Sunday
ployed aa a hostess on the plane*
as the guest of Miss Barbara John- their staters. Misses Mildred, Hazel of the United Airline*, has been
and Irene Hoskins, and other again transferred. She. left Chicana
M)nMr. and Mrs. W. O. Pinch df Ko­
Mr n:id Mrs. Charles Barnes, ml Bunday morning for CalifomUl
komo. Ind., came Friday for a few
where she has been assigned but she
days' visit with Misses Elisabeth company with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde does not know her definite schedule
Finch and Helen Wade going to Gamble and Doria of Jackson, re­ there.
Chicago on Monday. All spent Ute turned on Bunday from a trip in
Henry Trim and- Mr. and Mrs.
northern Michigan. Enroute they Alonzo Trim were among the four­
week end at Traverse City.
Mrs. Melinda Lite of Hasting* visited Ates. Barnes' cousin. Mrs. teen relatives who attended a blrthHugh Truman (Eunn
(Edith oorooni
Gordoni or
of
came Bunday evening and will be. Hugn
day dinner Sunday in honor of Mrs.
toe guest of Mr*. 8. B. Weaver and Harrisville. Also called on Mr. and Trim which wa* given by her par­
husband for a couple of week* Mr*, i Mr*. [R. J. McCreery of Traverae ent*. Mr. and Mrs. otto Schulze, al
Lite is doing some quilling for Mrs.' City 4nd were Bunday guest* of Mrs. their home in Nashville. Mrs. Trim
Weaver.—Clarksville Record.
I Barnes' brother, Fred Becker, of
remained for a longer visit.
Mr. and Mrs. olenn White and [ Scottville.
Mrs. M. Fedewa. Miu Ambra and
___ &lt; Mrs.
....
nr
Krrllan and
i»nrt Mn
Dr. n
R. M Serljsn
Mrs. Rrr
Serl-Mr. and
Andrew Matthews
Peter were Bunday guests of Mr.
were in Northport on a fishing trip jan. Dr. Birge Swift and Mrs. and Mrs. Albert Feldpausch, and
Bunday, lhe Matthews being the Swift. Mr. and Mrs. Dllllon Wol­ family In Grand Rapids. On Friday
verton
and
Mra.
Wolverton's
moth
­
guest* of Mr. and Mrs. White. They
Mrs, Fedewa and Peter spent the
returned to Hastings with 30 pounds er. Mrs. V. E. Ford, and Mrs. Phll- day In Lansing visiting Mr. and Mrs.
ena McDonald, of the W. K. Kellogg
of Itah.
John Bower and Mr. and Mrs. Jo­
Mrs. Ralph ERRleston. Mrs. will foundation staff, all of Middleville, seph Hefner.
Chase. Mr*. Charles McIntyre and and Dr. C- P. Lathrop and Mrs
Mrs.‘C- W. Clarke attended a des­ Lathrop and Df. R. B- Harkness and
sert bridge at Nashville last week Mrs. Harkness ot Hastings wer
Wednesday given by Mrs. G. W. dinner guests of Miss Rose DeFoe a
Gribben. Mrs. C. P. Sprague. Mra. J. the Carnes Thvern. Sunday.—Char
lotte Republican-Tribune.
C. Furnlss and Mr*. Elsie Furnis*.

miss wimm to Marry
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11

Armbnufr-Offlty

Ceremony to Be Bend at the

were In Grand Rapids flaturdv- ,
Episcopal Ohnroh at
Mr. and Mr*. Darrell Jonas spent i on* of lhe delightful eranta of
toe weak and with relative* tn Big i tote achbo) year was lhe dinner on
Nine O'clock
Rapid*.
1 Tuesday »venlng given by the board
Miss
Lucile WIIUIU, daughter o&lt;
Mr. and Mrs. C. L Texter (pent j of education for the teachers and
too week at Holland take on a camp- other employee* and their husbands
ing trip.
I and wive* covers for the chicken street, will be united in marriage
Don Flatter attended the Great | dinner were laid for ninety-two in Bunday morning to Clark Welker,
Lakaa Exposition al Cleveland over lhe recreation room al Central
of Grand Haven, son of Mr. and
toe week end.
school Excellent service was given
Mr*. Ette Burges* of Athens Is , by a group of young men. who stood Mrs. C. W. Welker of Ionia. The
spending the week with her stater, at attention as the guest* marched
Mr*. Hugh Rltey.
I tn. Bouquet* ot autumn flowers and at the Emmanuel Episcopal church
Mr. and Mrs. Charles 8l*son of | branches of colored leave* made at- by the Rev. J. A- McNulty In the
MaroeliUa spent Bunday with reta- tractive decorations.
tl™L,n HaxUngs.
I a. Lynn Brown Introduced Dr. G.
Mrs. Chartaa H. Leonard and Mrs. L Lockwood, who presided k*
Mum Mua. tpml Wntaod., .nd .
nuu&lt; uw! poMUU,
today in Ch caao.____
I admirably. T. N. Knopt 1*0 the
o~rn Toihum un Thur^., r«. ,&lt;|COT„ u lht „„
It was originally a wide gold band
a ylalt with nUUvea In Orand Bap..
QronUn RawUaon mpond- and has been recut to match the en­
ds and Muskecon
■*
&lt;&lt;-&gt;.,a.., musical
a—. program gagement ring.
Ids
Muskegon.
ed: .A u.
delightful
Mrs. Sarah BrandsteUer Is visit­ furnished lhe entertainment. In­
The couple will be attended by
ing her daughter. Mrs. Mason Nor­ cluding selections by lhe faculty
wood. In Kalamazoo for several days. —
and
Mrs.
trio. W"
Miss vvm.
Jean KJ
Glcrum.
—-- UMi, m
Arthur UVWLow- bride.
—• • Mr.
• —
— —
— —Leo Hammond
—■—
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bartllng of Glen er and Lewis Hine, accompanied by of Lansing and the bride will be
Ellyn, Ill., were guests ot J. E. Tyden Miss Esther Doty, solos by Mtas given in marriage by her brother,
and Miss Tillie Tyden over the week Glerum. a duet by Miss Glerum and William O. WUlltts, of Battle Creek.
Mr. Lower, clarinet solos by Mr. Mr*. Thomas G- Baird. Jr, stater of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johncock and Hine, solo by Mr. Lower and a saxo- tbe bride, will entertain the wedding
family of Prairieville spent Bunday phon* quartette consisting of Dr. D. psrty al a breakfast at the Parker
with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. D. Walton. Hubert D. Cook. Howard house.
Frost and John erve.
, After a honeymoon In northern
Dr. and Mrs. c. P. Lathrop and
Regret was expressed bv A U Michigan Mr. and MT*. Welker win
Mr. and Mrs. John c. Ketcham and
over
k.vta,
daughter, Mary, were Bunday
aay guests Brown
;----Webb bl । Lz^’n
I ~ w.nel.wl BM. w. T. W.llM.
Grand Rapids.
of -Jonnrllte
vid Mila uertrude
m.o
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Shulters and ■—
------------ .--------------------------------------a graduate of the Hastings High
Mr. CUT. Hair were in Bridle.: H»°'P&lt;°n were honor dneau.
school and the Barry County Nor­
and Grand Rapids on Monday. Mrs. | *
mal and has been employed at lhe
Gordon Clement, their daughter, te j
CHARITY GUILD MEETS,
Meyers store here.
much Improved in health.
The charily Guild of Pennock
Mr. and Mra. A. A. Roth spent the 1 hospital was delightfully entertained
RUB-DEM ELECT.
week end with her parents. Mr. and ' at seven o'clock dessert on Monday
The Sub-Debs had their first
Mrs. William Ford, of Dearborn.1 at the home of Mrs. W. O. Bauer. meeting for this year teat Monday
night at the home of Miss Isabel
Mra. Mary Evarts this winter.
1 Mrs. Russell Bauer and Mra. H. A­
Mr. and Mrs. Gar Tribble .of Kai- Adrounlc. After lhe short business
amazoo and Mr. and Mrs. Rolla meeting and the introduction ol follows: President, ML-j Leone Leon­
Viele and family of Vermontville ‘ four new members, the remainder of ard; Treasurer,
Miss
Dorothy
were Sunday guest* ot their par- the evening was spent al contract, Roush and Secretary. Mtaa Audi*
ents. Mr. and Mrs Gary Crook.
1 ------------------- to **"
top wore---going
Mrs. Wm. Cork­ Densmore.
ins
and
consolation
to
Mrs.
Floyd
_
After
________
the
_____
meeting
.
__
„
refreshment*
____
Miss Katherine Giddings and
Miss Beatrice Giddings of Battle •Brown.—Mrs. Birdie C- Lane. Chrm. were served by the hostess.
Creek and Mr. and Mrs. Loren
Johnson of Middleville were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Oldding*.
Among those from Hastings who
attended the football game at Ann
Arbor on Saturday were Mr. and 4tg
Mrs. Harold Foster. Laird Wotring. .^j
Harold Parker. William WilliIla and V?
Leo Hammond.
Callers on Mrs. Bert Tinkler were '
Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs., '&lt;&gt;?
Harley Tinkler of Grand Rapids; on {W
Friday Mrs. Emerson Edger of
Rutland; Percy and Sidney Allen
of Bowens Mills spent Sunday with | vM
her and the Rev. W. Maytan Jones ,
called on Monday taking her a I
beautiful bouquet of flowers.
'
Mrs. Dolly Lee left Tuesday at I
6:15 P. M- from Chicago and cx- Sg
pected to arrive in Ogden. Utah, v;
about 8:00 P. M, Wednesday night. ?►&gt;'
She went on one ot the Union |
Pacific streamlined trains that al- ‘
tain* d speed of from 80 to 100 miles |
mi hoasi «ha will spend the winter
with Mr. and Mrs. Worthington
In Ogden.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Potto re­
turned Friday evening from a two
weeks' visit In the east; taking their,
daughter. Virginia, who te a student
al the Julllard School of Music to
New York. While In New York Mr
and Mrs. Potts were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Davis and they spent
a few days In Washington. D. C,
with Mr*. Polls’ brother and
‘
Col. and Mrs. oladeon Barnes.

Luxuriously Fur-Trimmed

COATS
$

§

BRIDGE DINNER.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Stebbins en­
tertained twelve guests Monday eve­
ning at dinner followed by contract.
The prises were won by Mrs. Gordon
A. Ironside and Frank C. Andrus.

nert Offley of

fiowera, an Indirect
rangemcnl casting
toe wedding party

the Wedding March from Lohen*

elint suit. trimmed

Her bouquet was of Joan Hill
She was attended by her
ML** June Offley, of lensing
suit was Of brown cr»rx

child of Detroit, who la a lifelong
friend of the groom.

the luncheon which followed al toe
home of the bride's parents were
Geraldine Williams arid Ethel Regia
of Hastings and Hfldred Figg of
Vermontville.
'
Mr*. Offley choae for her daugh­
ter’s wedding a Dubonnet crepe and
she wore a coraage of mixed flow­
ers. The groom's mother wore a

Blue Ridge
Homespuns
If there ever wm a fabric
that “waare like iron," H’a
Homespuns, woven of super*

strong,

iwo-ply

twists,

Nineteen guest* were present for
lhe luncheon following the cere­
mony, the home being decorated
with fall flowers.
afternoon by car and house trailer
for Clearwater. Fla. planning to
make several stope on the way.
They will spend the winter in FtorlThe bride is a graduate of the
Vermontville high school In the

in Sport and Dreae styled.

*3fc’°
The smartest of all purwe topcoats, double breast1, full and half belts, to be
worn for a topcoat or light

Michigan. where she took a eoutac

deep-tone checks, tn

The groom has lived al) hta life
In Hastings, is a graduate ef the
Hastings High school in the class of
Technical school at Atlanta. At the
present time he ta manager of the
Kist Dairy Store.
Out-of-town guests at the wed­
ding Included the groom's parent*.
Mr, and Mrs. Armbruster: hl* sls-

Richard Jacoba and Mr. and Mra.
Kenneth Sanderson, an of Hastings,
ahd Richard Fairchild of DeIron
Rlnesa prevented tha groom’* *1*ter and husband. Dr. and Mra.
। Charles 8. McIntyre of Kalamazoo.
I from attending the wedding.

ULTRA CLUB' MEETING.
Twenty-two members of the ultra
। club were entertained tart Friday

Mr.
pot
the
Ed.

18
T.S.B

SPECI
NOONDAY

and Mn. Kim Bigler. After the
luck dinner bridge was played,
first prizes being won by Mr*.
Lawrence and Ermont Newton.

mont Newton and Burdette Sutton.
LUNCHEON AND CONTRACT.
Covers ware laid for eight at a
bridge-luncheon given on Ttiursday

PARKER HOUSE

ury to Mrs. Gall Conklin of Battle
Creek. At contract the honors were

James Radford.

THE

BIG LITTLE STORE

stives and friends In Loutavllte,!

Hit iMtii sign

r

CIMCMTI

"Don't
Neglect

Their

Eyu

FAYBHUIT
KNM

COFFEE, Viking, full flavored, H&gt;. 19c
College Inn Tomato Juice, 5 &gt;lxe, 23c

19c

NORTHERN TISSUE, 4 rolls

Light House Cleanser- 4 cans ____ 19c

They’re Back In School,
Have Their Eyes Examined !
Children do not have tha understanding M experience

IVORY SOAP DEAL

PAV E THE GAF

2larg«MM,
22c value—
_
2 medium rise, 12c value— j 4 n

3?cTotal—'

to tell what's wrong with thorn, so it's up to you to
see that it's NOT their eyesight. Poor eyesight con
ruin a child's chpnces of being bright in school . . .

IS YOUR CHILD HANDICAPPED?

Bring them in

for a complete eye examination,

DR. ALVA RUFF, Optometrist

BUTTER, Middleville
BEEF RIBS

*n cn«»&gt; B«r

BACON, sliced

BESSMER’S
Jewelers and Opticians
HASTINGS

PHONI 26M

Nearly H af a Can fury of Contiguous Service

lb. 18c

■/sib. 17c

HINMAN’S
Hastings

Know all coals by their fur trim ... and
these boast luxurious Fdx, Wolf, Marmink, Caracul, Beaverette and Seal!
They fit to perfection and flare for fash­
ion ... with princess ideas to make you
queenly! Made of new nubby woolens,
they are warmly interlined. In all New
Shades. Sizes 14 to 50.

lb. 35c

I—a wd Meal, 2 lbs. 23c

BEEF ROASTS

PHONE 2491

in

colors of Blue, Cray, Brown,

Michigan

i&lt;| Cinderella Dresses
•S

138 W. STATE ST.

HASTINGS

wrfirt.IuliAl

�Tire HASTINGS BAfflg TltURSBAT. PCTOBKR L 1»M

INSURANCE
LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

p»t milted
Lb-o. Umi

WANTS

DUNHAM DISTRICT.
Sunday visitor* of Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Harding were Mrs. Harry Ma­
son and Mrs. George Mason of Bat­
tle Creek, and Mr. and Mra. LeRoy
McKelvey and family and Mr. and

THE CHURCHES

The L. A. 8. met with Mrs. Edna
Kidder Thursday afternoon and
during the business session plans
were made for a baked goods sate
to be held Saturday, October H. at
Nashville at Glasgow's store. They
also have a quantity of extracts
which nuy be obtained from various
members.
Sunday, Mrs. Annie Cheese man's
sons and daughters and their fam­
ilies met at her home for the d-y

Our Service
Te PROTECT You CouUaUy
AdJmlFalrh
P.yPro-rtly
We Isons Mom. InacMU Goods.
Privett Oeregeo M LOW BATES

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fir* Insurance Co.

ABSTRACT OFFICE

AH I AM going oat of the real eclair
bociaeaa I offer about a doien houtea
and lota at a bargain. Call al the
Hard Dell .lore, North Broadway If
XO HCNTiXG. trapping, trecpaa.ing or
nannina of doga allowed on my farm.
Her. 11. Johmtown Twp. J. D. Craw.
10 2S
FOR RENT—« room hou«e in Irving vll
late. No eleetrir llglita. Good well
Photic SISS
105 So. Church BL
and building whirl, can be uaed for
garage
Inquire of William McCann.
10 11
&gt;X&gt;R SALE—Two full blood Hhrop.hlra
raoia and 300 While Wyandotte pul
let*. W. K. Towuend. Clarkaallle.
IO-13
NOTICE—I hereby forbid all bunting,
trapping or running of deci on m&gt;
farm in Hadloga Inwn.hip. Mra. C.
P. Flynn. Haat.ng., Route 1 10 If.
FOR SALE—Full blooded Heagle hound,
Your Dead Animate Are Worth
broken for hunting Art Richar.laon.
DOLLARS. To aware yourself of
Freeport
1015
' getting the BEST PRICES, call
FOR HALE—lloo.e trailer
Cheap H
taken el ooee. George Thoiupauai. Ha*
MR. FLOYD DENNY.
Unfa. Houle S.
10 15
Phone Hastings 2539—We pay the NOTICE—AH running of doge. hunting,
climbing or railing fence, and otherphone charges!
if.
wlee Ire* pairing un my farm are for­
bidden. See. 9. Ha.ting. Twp. Mra.
Mae Poller
10 1.1
FUR RALE—Extra good amall farm.
Good
location. 137 H. Clinloh Hl.
"AKRON" MODERN
Charlotte. Mirh.
10 15
HALE—Holbrook .lock farm. 120
MICHANO-FORM TRUSS FOR
arm. Good produrllve aoll: fine
building*: two houaea. Will aril all
FOB WORK OR PLAY
together or 30 and 40 aeparate. Live
nia Saoath RebUr Bock Pads
clock, tool. and erepa Included^ Mlle

f BARMY COUNTY. SIX MONTHS. *0e.
(If MM la advance.)

OLLI

WB.V4H’»«■ WS

* Several children of the Dunham
school have made posters to enter
in the contest advertising "The
Sleeping Beauty” to be given soon
at Hastings.

73 HEAD feeding cattle from 200 to 300
lba_ alao few breeding reel and few
young hone, for aale Glenn Miller.
Ilailinge. Routt 3. Half mile reel
Barber'* rornert and half mile north.

TUUF

what

Misses Thelma and Neva Ball vis­
ited their sister, Mrs.- Edith Dunk* Iberger. in the Weeks district, Satur­
day and Sunday.
Miss Enid Cheeseman spent the
week end as guest of Miss Katheryn

3
SHELDON'S

The Hastings Banner

HASTTBGB. MICHIQAM

Prca the careleu acta of others,
the wlee san correct* hu own.
Demand a coder o A be tract before
buying or loanLis noeey on real
aetata. FLAY SAFE.

moving pic
death of oi
man has i
guard of tl
its little ct
ond gener
talent is 1
gap whei
loomed a 1
a pioneer i
Irving Tha
g«nl«s of C
showman, a
terpreter ol
tricky art

SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Marshal) spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs Dale
Downing near Nashville.
Mr. anil Mrs. Robert Gray ac­
companied Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord
Gray to West Branch visiting sev­
eral days last week.

CARDS of THANKS

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock

spent Thursday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Leonard at Delton.
EYa Jarrard te assisting Mrs.

the limits ol
only a Napo

HASTINGS MARKETS

payroll.
M
when the op
lly love whe
Is guilty.

display
champ:
OLD

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pods
No Leg Shape

The Prescription Drug Store
»- A. LT BABKBS, Treat.

iHS^
Farmers, Attention!

DORRANCE TRETHRIC
JNJURANCE-SUWCE.

I VID w U« HIGHEST MAXEBT
MICE fat VEAL. LAMBS. MOOS aad
CATTLE for cash at Um Hiatlug* Steck

Fidelity Corporation

team's trip
seriously a

Scrap Iron. Brats,

Copper, Aluminum,

Zinc, Lead &amp; Batteries

Our Special Sale of Used Cars and Trucks

FOR SALE—Onion., eveet Spanl.h end
yellow nnee. all .ire., thirty rent. to
nw dollar a bu.hel
Dell Colton
Phone.741—F2
tn a

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

Will Continue This Week at Greatly Reduced Prices

JFas
SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

GRANGE PROGRAMS

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

GEO. M. NEWTON
balloon from which he can watch
his pupils pole-vaulting. He must
hav? some ambitious Jumpers.

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE

ANNOUNCEMENT
HAVE OPENED A

WANTED

MONEY FOR FALL!

•» FELDPAUSCH’S

FOOD CENTER 2609

H. Foldpauach . 3921

$475

No. 1218—1934 Ford V-8 Deluxe Fordor .

$450

$375

No. 1274-1934 Fbrd V-8 Std. Tudor ...

$425

$350

No. 1284-1934 Ford V-8 Deluxe Fordor

$450

$375

No. 1288-1929 Ford Model A Tudor

$125

$ 95

No. 1299-1933 Ford V-8, motor recond't'd .$360
No. 11*18-1933 Ford V-8 Panel Delivery$290

$325

No. 1265-1929 Ford AA, 157, chassis &amp; cab .$150

$125

No. 1292-1929 Ford Model A Fordor Sedan .$150

$125

USED FURNITURE STORE

136-1929 Ford Model AA Truck­
stake body

$175

$125
a black

No. 1155-1932 Ford.AA, chassis and cab—
new motor$290

$235

No. 1109-1932 Ford V-8 Fordor Sedan

$265

$225

No. 1276-1935 Ford V-8 Coach

$525

$450

Special! 1936 FORD V-8

Or MICHIGAN

an early
rate aU t
being sna
think up a

157 la. Stake Truck Demonstrator

On My Premises, 302 N. Broadway, Starting
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15.

PRICES SIGHT.

Fidelity Corporation

forcibly on
Ing feebly

$240

HAVE USED PIANOS, RADIOS, RUGS
AND FURNITURE FOR SALE

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
MARKET. Phon. 2616

$525

o.

Registered OPTOMETRIST and
BEE BETTER!

Now

No. 1127-1935 Ford V-8 Fordor Sedan

DON TAFFEE
302 N. Broadway

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO.
PHONE 2121

Ford Deafen

HASTINGS

cause, by
taxpayer
hi* pants.

�I Banner

j

THURSDAY, OCT. 8, 1936

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER

S"«3S?*

^L.at

(ofchif Barry Bypaths

Jj/pwySriM 1: :*jan™°n::
about:
t MONTH*. so*.

IREK MONTH!.

OLLYWOOD, CALIF/—

H

Big an industry aa tha
moving picture industry is, the
death of one slender, shy, frail

man has stunned it. The old
guard of this business has lost
its little corporal and the sec­
ond generation of .producing
talent is left with a yawning
gap where yesterday there
loomed a leader who was both
a pioneer and a progressive.
Irving Thalberg was an authentic
genius ot lhe films — a master
showman, a daft in­
terpreter of that
tricky a r t which
finds 11 s medium
through story and

GROVE,
farahali spent

lie.
srt Gray acMrs. Gaylord
visiting sevC. Marshall
ioon with Mr.
ird at Delton.
.Misting Mrs.
h the housc-

fore they breed an­
other Thalberg out
here. For men of
his brain, his ener­
gy, his pathfinding
instincts don't come
in sets, don't Often grvias 8. Cobb
come singly.
The name Napoleon has been
overworked to describe ability with­
in tome email body, but here, to
only a Napoleon but a Daniel Boone
and a Balzac all rolled Ur one.

home Friday.

RKETS
Ort. ?, leas.

ETHRIC
MU4CE-.

aration
INCING
lank Bldg.
Pteoas 2307

REPUBLICAN

_______
,____ ____________
,. ­
Tiie
moat Ingenious
modem in
Will Mr. Franklin D. Roosevelt
vention—lhe tipper. And the only please step forward to the witness
thing our kids can't figure out after stand? Thank you.
taking it apart.
Mr. Roosevelt, there has been over
a period of years an ^agitation to
Another unusual name—an Indian reduce lhe patronage evil in this
princess named Hutmaker Hast country and to substitute! in its
name).
stead a merit system so that gov­
ernment Jobs can be career Jobs, not
Red cabbage 1s nice In salad, but political Jobs. Therefore wlU you
for lhe luwa Mike don't put IL In kindly tell us what you have said
a boiled dinner. I did once and concerning:
jerry wanted to know If I rinsed the
CIVIL SERVICE.
mop in It.
,
Mr. Roosevelt:
In a tetter to the Civil Service Re­
We peach consumers ought to In­ form league. August. 1933. I said:
sist on tree-ripened fruit. Borne of •The merit system in civil service te
in
no danger at my hands; but on
lhe
"plcked-before-they-get-thelr
growth" peaches we've had this year the contrary. I hope that it will be
taste like quinine. No excuse for extended and improved during my
having to eat such stuff when we term as President."
In a letter to H. Elliott Kaplan,
live within a half hour's drive from
secretary of the National Civil
orchards.
Service Reform League. Sept. 17.
1935, I said: “The merit system has
One reason
we're prejudiced
been and will continue to be extend­
against child psychologists te be­
cause a certain well-known one al­ ed during my administration."
Then in a radio address to the
ways begins his little piece with a
League of Women voters on Jan. 30,
mother nagging her poor down-trod­
den offspring. In the first place,
modem mothers don't nag. And the lion of greater moment or broad­
er effect than the maintenance,
youngster is probably a double­
strengthening, and extension ot the
geared peeler who can think rings
merit system, established In the
around hte hard-working mother.
How would the child psychologist competitive principles of the Civil
know? He probably never took care Service Act. whose 53rd birthday is
being celebrated this month.*. . i
of a group ot children for an hour
in hte life. Al least his writings am glad to assure your great orgsmization of my support in this
don't sound that way.
effort."
Those are the words of the
In a modem electric farm equip­
ped by rea there are window Roosevelt Administration. Herewith
(Remember
screens that electrocute flies and te its performance
Roosevelt's
remark at Butte. Mon­
other Insects that come in contact
with them. And fences are Just one tana. Sept. 19. 1932: “But remem­
electrified wire. The old sow will ber well, that attitude and method
have on Interesting time scratching —lhe way we do things, te nearly
her back on that, won't she? And always the measure of our sin­
where wlU Ma hang the overalls cerity").
when she runs out ot clothesline?
From June 30. 1932. to April 1936.
They should play safe and put three
strands around lhe watermelon the number of employees in the
patch. A board fence used to be Executive Branch of the Federal
considered necessary for band prac­ Government (excluding the Army
tice for lhe neighborhood cals, but and Navy and excluding large num­
now their sweet retrain comes from ban of employees In various Feder­
the lilac bushes outside the bedroom al "Emergency” and "Relief" agen­
window. Bring on your live wire!
cies not classified in Civil Service
Commission reports as Executive
It Is reported in the back-to-the- Employees).
land movement that two million
people who lived in cities or vil­
lages prior to 1830 have moved back ees in the Executive Branch of the
to farms. There are sUll a few va­ Federal Government NOT under
cant ones.
Civil Service INCREASED from 19.9

Payroll Patriots.
OME low Industrial royalist has
been checking up on the sisters
and the cousins and the aunts of
New Dealers who are on the federal
payroll.
Wo call that nepotism
when the opposition does it. or fam­
ily love when one of our own crowd
is guilty.
Twould seem Dixieland leads in
this display of domestic affection.
T1jo champion is Senator Smith of
South Carolina.
There were all
sorts of delegates at the Demo­
cratic national convention, but be
was the only walking delegate —
walked out twice, and each time
walked right back again. Ha has
five relatives drawing salaries from
Uncle Sam. Even Uncle Jack Gar­
ner. the sphinx of Texas, has
Prom th? Internal onal News col­
three.
umn: "DeValera ot the Irish Free
This looks like an l^Sbrovemenl
State made a powerful speech at the
on the old southern system, when
kinfolks dropped in for a week-end
and stayed the rest of their Uvea. Ian sanctions. He made a spirited
call for statesmen to attempt to
settle world affairs by diplomatic
methods now, before It is too late.
VEN in sun-kicked California,
He attracted a good deal of atten­
summer te on its lest legs. This tion with lhe words. The problems
one will go down in history as the that distract Europe today should
summer which produced handies, not be left for soldiers to decide. . .
knock-knocks; lhe dust storm and they should be tackled now by the
the campaign speech, these two be­ statesmen.’"
ing interchangeable terms In most
doesn't know much about It.
cases; likewise the seventeen-year
locust and the gentleman who was but it seems that If two war-crazed
in active charge ot our Olympic dictators could be subdued, Europe
would
find
most of her troubles
team's trip to Berlin. People were
seriously annoyed in other ways.

S

E

Pronunciations: Dionne—In CanPolitical Geysers.
AN It be we made a mistake
by plowing under cotton Instead

C
:ks
:es
ow
475

J75
150

175
95

i25
MO

125
125
125

That famous phenomenon of na­
ture in Yellowstone park, which
spouts at such frequent intervals
ought to be getting uneasy. Any

old faithful and become known as
the Junior John Hamilton geyser.
And Secretary Ickes certainly te
qHaMfytag as the minute-man of tha
nmr revolution — or oftener than
Knox isk'l 4olng so badly, either,
in the modern version of “the spirit
so hard on the cardrum. Still, it's
a grand thing — but surprising —
to find a newspaper editor who talks
forcibly on his feet Instead ot writ­
ing feebly on his seat
On the other hand, Uhde Jack
Garner continues to be the Ideal
back-seat driver — the one who
hasn't raid a single word during
the entire trip.

Dictators and Shirt Tails.
ETS see. Among others, we
now Have the blue shirts tn
the brown shirts in Ger­
many, the red shirts In Russia, and,
ot course, the black shirts in Italy,
which seems the most practical of

L
Ireland,

125

a black shirt for months and
months.
So maybe we're too quick. The
alarmhis among us are predicting
an early dictatorship here. At tha
rate all the standard shares art

&gt;50 '

think up a naw color in shirts, sod.

iter

you can't fcave a dictatorship with­
out a shirt to match — that's tha
rule. Lavender hasn't been taken

135

)0

0
&lt;GS

kind of sissy, and. while, a gravy­
colored shirt might suit the careless
eater, it lacks zing, don’t you think?
have a good long tail to ft, be­
cause, by that time, tha Americaa
texpayer probably win have ioet
his pants.
'
*

POLITICAL NOTES

I don't know how to pronounce it
here or in Mexico. Quintuplets te
qutn'-tu-plet, Mussolini te mooseso-lee'-nee. Coughlin te cog-lln,

statThelped
BY OIL RIGHTS
Bonuses and Fees Paid Into
State Treasury Total
&gt;600,000
The oil industry In Michigan has
been given access to approximately
22,000 acres of state-owned land for
development and in partial payment
has paid 112.717 In bonuses in the
state general fund.
The land became available when
private operators bld In the oil and
gas lease rights on 21X9 acres of
land held by the state in fee at a
public aucUon conducted by the de­
partment of conservation in Lan-

The total of bonusra paid. 812,717,
te the largest amount recorded for
a sale of oU and gas lease rights on
state-owned land In nearly seven
years. The high record. 813.730. was
established Feb. 27. 1930. when In­
terim was first developing in the oil
and gas possibilities of Michigan.
Since Its beginning the oil and
gas industry has paid into the state
general fund by bonuses, royalties,
rentals and fees, a total of 8600.000
or 8100.000 a year. This revenue first
started during the latter part of
1929. The first sale of oil and gas
lease rights conducted by the de­
partment of conservation was held
on Dec. 30, 1920. according to the
department lands authorities.
WILL ATTEND CONVENTION.
Louis A. Sunday, president, and
E. A? Parker, treasurer of the Michi­
gan Mutual Windstorm Insurance
Company, leave Saturday for Phila­
delphia. where they will attend the
convention of the National Associa­
tion of Mutual Insurance Com panCLAY HILL8.
Mr*. Mary Sharp and Mrs. Vance
Sharp of Middleville spent Thurs­
day at Leon Potts' and accompan­
ied Mrs. Potts to the cooking dem-

church.
Floyd Haight and wife and Fran­
cis Haight and family of Grand
Rapids were Saturday visitors at
Thoae atrange-looklng people who Eugene Haight's.
are creeping back Into public office
here and there arc Republicans. Re­
member?
spent Bunday at Guy McNee's.

During the same period there was
an ACTUAL DECLINE OF 11.897 IN
THE NUMBER OF SUCH EM­
PLOYEES UNDER CIVIL SERV­
ICE.
This compares with an almost
uninterrupted increase in the pro­
portion of Federal employees under
Civil service from the time of
President Arthur In 1883. when the
principle was first established. The
record te shown In lhe following
------------table:

DEMOCRAT
FAIR TREATMENT OF
NEWS IS PROPOSED.
In a radio address from Hyde
Park to the New York Herald Trib­
une Forum on Current Topics.
President Roosevelt commended the
Forum idea, since "anything that
makes for tolerance of opinion and
contributes to the general education
ot our people tn the issues of gov­
ernmental policy u of vast value."
He then followed with rather
pointed observations on lhe freedom
and fairness of the press;
"It te natural, I suppose, in a cam­
paign year, for advocates and adver­
saries of any policy or process of
government to relapse Into exagger­
ation and invective, and so becloud
the controversy as to make it pos­
sible for the future of lhe country to
be determined in rancor and tem­
per instead of by calm deliberation
and clear thinking.
"I don't know that there Is any
actual remedy for this stale of
affairs. But I believe that It te with­
in tiie pOwer and province of the
press to make whatever improve­
ment te possible. I do not think
that anybody objects to a statement
of opinion or an argument, either
pro or con. being put forth in the
editorial pages provided the edi­
torials do not contain misstatements
of fact.
"That, unless I entirely misun­
derstand newspaper psychology, te
what the newspaper editorial col­
umns are for.
"I do not believe—and I do not
think any disagreement Is possible
on this subject—that a Journal's
news columns ought to be tampered
with, either by coloring news or by
leaving out news. The news is the
commodity that is marketed to the
whole people. . .
•'In the welter of passion, which
te apparently still inseparable from
our political campaigns, you and I
hear about the liberty of the press­
regimentation of the press against
the government and regimentation
of the press by lhe government.
"It Is doubtful if the United
States ever had an administration
since the days when Washington
was accused of despotism and aspir­
ations to kingship that had the
slightest desire to muzzle anybody.
The.unchecked virulence of assaults
on almost every administration
since the beginning of our history in
Itself te best proof of that statement.

"The time may come when the
policies of the nation will be de­
termined with a serenity and logic
that any serious business problem te
decided among the directors of the
business, but I must reluctantly
confess that we have not reached
that day."

INTERESTING PAPER

^rlanoM AUTO TAGS

PRINTED IN I

Riley

TRACE CAR GROWTH

The McCall Family Identified
Will Oppoie Hoffman, Who
With Early Church in
Has Taken Stand Against
Dungannon
Townsend Plan
DISPLAY OP LICENSES
Mra. J. A. McCall Is In possession
PHOM
1908
TO
PRESENT
remembered aa a candidate at lhe
of a newspaper that Is very inter­
primary on the republican ballot In
esting. The pungannon News, pubDAY ARRANGED
llshed at Dungannon, Ireland, the (
ram.r ta™ »i ta
hta

The make-up resembles the news- 1
papers in England with all sorti of
advertising and no news on lhe first
pa&lt;e.
'
I Of especial Interrat to Mra. MeCall was an article about Dungan­
non which told something of lhe
early history of the place. One
paragraph reads; In ecclesiastical
matters, the ruins of the old church
of the Parish ot Drumglass (of
which Dungannon te the center)
have a long history extending back

MICHIGAN PLATE PLAIN
COMPARED TO OTHERS
_.

.

First Plate Was Metal Disc
and Only Cost Fifty
Cents

One of the primary attractions in
the basement of the state capital, so
for os tourist Interest is concerned,
|s the display ot Michigan's automo­
bile license plates from 1908 to the
present day. recently mounted in a
glass case by direction of Orville E.
Atwood. Secretary of State.
a record dated in the year 1302,
The first "plate." that of 1908. was
thirty years prior to the days of a mere metal disc, or seal, the small­
Edward the Black Prince and the est
.
license "plate" ever Issued by the
Battle of Cressy. Numbers of M'- ;slate,
state. In
in uiai
that year, oniy
only aoout
about 3.150
3,100
Calls, Mulgrtws, Loughrans. and motor vehicles were registered, in
Donnellys (families which still ex­ Michigan; the discs cost but 50c
ist in the neighborhood) were the each.
Rectors in ,prc-Reformatlon
days. I In 1909. a comparatively enor­
—
— .— ----------At least
twentv members
members ot
of the
the M'M'- I, mous plate of heavy leather, with
At
least twenty
Call family held positions In the1 tin "house numbers" nailed to R.
church in the various parishes (two was fashioned. There was no indlI of whom became Deans of Ar- cation on the plates of the year 1smagh). Thirty-seven Loughrans and sued, but It was so distinctive, there
nine Mulgrews are also mentioned, was hardly much need for that.
The first recorded Rector of DrumThe state's seal was first used on
glass was William M'Call, who held, plates In 1910. when an enameled
that office in 1371. forty yean be-. plate was formed from heavy metal,
fore the Battle of Agincourt and The seal appeared either enameled
lhe days Of Joan of Arc.
or riveted, each year thereafter inThe M'Calls mentioned above eluding 1919. when It was last used,
were ancestors of the Hastings Me- The biggest license tag was issued
Calls and the latter are naturally , m 1928. Letters were first used in
proud of their genealogy as they 1933. Twenty-nine tags are condoubtless have reason to be.
1 tained In the display.
--------- .
, ,* * *
.................... 1 Near this case is one containing
1936 license plates from other states.
Michigan's is almost prosaic com­
pared with that of some states, not­
ably that of Tennessee, the only
state in the union to shape ita plates
to follow Its geographical outlines.
The Pilgrim Holiness Tabernaclej The outline of Montana appears
is observing their annual Rally Day,' in the background of Its plate, howSunday, Oct. 18 with three services, ever. Wyoming divides its plate nuThe morning service at ten o'clock' merals with the figure of a "bronbegins with a short study session i cho buster" astride a pony. A pellfollowed by a special program. The । can divides lhe Louisiana numerafternoon service will open at 2:30 als into halves. Pennsylvania. "The
with Rev. J. c. Brillhart of Emman-1 Keystone State." displays a small
uel P. H. church of Battle Creek, keystone on its plate.
assisted by special talent, both musl-1 Maine's plates carry the word
cal and vocal. The evening service I "Vacationland" across the bottom,
will be In charge of Pres. H. T. Mills Rhode Island calls attention to Its
of Bible Holiness seminary. Owos-, "300th anniversary" of statehood
so. assisted by tijc Seminary Qu ar-' this year on ita plates, while Texas
tette. Any changed in the above pro- simlllarly remembers its "centengram will be nil'de In next week's nlal" with that word displayed.
announcement. All old friends of. Arizona achieves distinction by
Hastings City Mission and others: making ita plates from copper, re­
interested will be welcomed by the , minding people that this is “The
special welcoming committee.
' copper State."

Observe Rally Day
With Three Services .

Universal Garage now

opposition to Congressman Clare night the subject they
Hoffman. He lacked over 12,000
votes of getting lire nomination. Mr.
Racette is not at all bigoted about
his politics. He seems to be ready to
run for office for any old party. His
Lord, will do! so long as I get on a
Missouri. the land of good
ticket."
.

nominated by the Farmer-Labor
party for congressman. If he fails
to gel that, he will attempt to secure
the nomination of the People's Pro­
gressive party. Representatives of
lhe Townsend clubs in the district
have endorsed him. not that they
have any hope of electing him. but
to show their ugly feeling toward
Congressman Hoffman. As Mr. Hoff­
man long ago announced that he te
In favor of an old age pension by
the federal government, but not the
Impossible 8200 a month plan, there
would not seem to be reasonable
basis for emnlty toward him on that
account.
It is safe to say that Mr. Racette
will not be elected to congress. We
believe the people of this district
admire the straightforward course
which our congressman has an­
nounced in this matter. He Is for a
practical and practicable old age
pension, but not In favor of one that
would add 820.000.000.000 to the
yearly tax burdens of the Ameri­
can people. That Is the amount re­
quired for the 1200 a month pension
for everybody 65 years old or over.
Just the bore statement that It
would take 820.000,000.000 to pay the
Townsend plan pension for one year
shows the absurdity of the plan.

prtetor of a hotel In the c
Hannibal, one night 1 was
with a broad-brimmed hat dis­
mounted from a beautiful fleet­
footed horse. He inquired if he

week?
"I replied. "Sure, we can accom­
modate you."
"The stranger stepped Into thd
office and I requested him to regis­
ter. With a bold hand he wrote '?,

related to the notorious Jesse cr
Frank James, do you?'"
“He looked me square in the eye

don't get frightened. 1 didn’t come
to sack the town. 1 have been aa-

pie duneto town that week to see
Prank James than came to see the

(The James brothers,

Jesse

and

adoes of their day. Following the

by a supposed friend. Frank sur­
rendered to Lhe law and announced
that hereafter he was "going
ALLEN 18 SENTENCED.
Everett V. Aden, who had admit­ straight '—which he did. He was a
ted to Judge McPeek that he had fine-looking man. talL powerful,
driven away with the automobile of and soft-spoken. He took to the
Dr. Lund, of Middleville, but with­ Chatauqua platform, end gave hie.
out Intent to steal the car. was lecture in Hastings on the "Futility
brought before lhe Jifdge for sen­ of a Life of Crime." No man in the
tence Wednesday afternoon. He was world was better qualified Io speak
given from one to two years at from experience than he. and he
Jackson. Allen, who comes from a
good home and good family, admit- de*lre to right some of the many
ted that when he drank he was ।
that he had done society,
seized with a mania for taking cars. Many of the older residents htro
but that he did not intend to steal I
--------- -In
Hastings
on the Hastings Chathem—Just wanted to drive around
tauqua lecture course. He was just
the country.
•'another good man gone wron"
Newspaper pictures seem to indi­ had brains enough to see that
cate that these diplomats are a fun­
ny-looking bunch, but you'd prob­ years on the platform tn
ably look funny, too. if you had to
tongue in your cheek.

—Bditor).

MAY SET RECORD
FOR MEMBERSHIP

TO YOUT

More Schools Than Ever En­
roll for Debates
This Year

3 i Sti

Many Michigan high schools will
again resump their activity in speech
: work and the state-wide contests in
debate sponsored by The Michigan
High School Forensic Association
MlKialey .. 1801 35S.OOO ISO.OOO
T*K- I.----- 1811 370.000 143.000 3B 4 each year. Judging from the many
Wiltea---- IBIS
438.000 141.000 33'3 | enrollments already pouring into
----------------- ■- office, a record for
the Auoclatlon's
a?.e membership may be set this season.
IterSiuc
30.3
fuUid*.
80.8 Some Michigan high schools, not
heretofore enrolled, have expressed
their intention of participating in
the organization's speech activities
It la to be noted from the above for lhe first time this year.
The increased enrollment during
table that between the years 1918
and 1018, when President Wilson the last few years Is indicative of the
organized the nation for war. the ever increasing Interest in pu
number of employees of govern­ .•peaking training in the schools
ment Increased 479,703. Despite this the great benefits it afforcta for
growth. President Wilson was able ter business and professional life
Much interest has been aroused in
to Increase the total proportion un­
the question chosen for all Associa­
der civil Service by 2 J per cent.
tion debates this season. It Is one
Tlius Mr. Roosevelt's record in which has been argued much and
Civil Service stands:
often during the last year. It con­
Ward* Promised to extend Civil cerns governmental ownership and
Service during his administration. operation of - all electrical utilities.
Action*—
Since
1932
has Material on the subject is being sent
DOUBLED THE NUMBER OF D4- to all participating schools through
PLOYEEB NOT UNDER CIVIL the courtesy of the Library Exten­
SERVICE TO
BRING
THE sion Service of the University of
STRENGTH OP CIVIL SERVICE Michigan.
The debates will be conducted In
TO THE LOWEST EBB SINCE
two series, with the first debate of
1901.*
•Note—It Is significant to note a preliminary series on November 27.
here that Roosevelt's record as Following the preliminaries, an
president corresponds exactly with elimination series will be conducted
his record as governor of New York. with the qualifying schools in the
participating. The
As governor of New York he also preliminaries
PROFESSED great friendliness to elimination tilts will culminate on
the Civil Service cause. But when April 30. with The Twentieth Annual
State
championship
Debate to be
it came to ACTIONS he vetoed a
Civil Service bill that would have held In HUI auditorium. Ann Arbor,
removed a large range of state Jobs between the two remaining schools.
from the hands of the spoilsmen. Gold watches are presented to each
The bill* he vetoed was universally contestant In this contest.

pronounced fair and workable by
non-partisan observers. Mr. Roose­
velt gave no clear-cut reason for his
veto.

RACETTE NOW RUNS
ON DIFFERENT TICKET

Autumn-time marks the taginning of renewed ambi­
tion . . . Youth again comes into its own—athletics, so
cial and educational activities afe again in full swing
. . . so we dedicate this space to the Youth of this com­
munity and extend to them’our best wishes for a happy,
successful year. We are as vitally interested in you
as we have l&gt;een in the Youth of the past; many of our
customers started with us when they were in High
school and' continued through the years. Many have
seen troublesome times, even as some of you will, but
they found this Bank ready to help them through. So,
today, we invite the Youth of this community to make
this Bank their Bank

SCAN REGULATIONS
OF STATE SENATE
Success of Luren D. Dickin­

Thank you very much, Mr. Presi­
son Recalls Old
dent. It te clear from the above
facta that although you express
“Rule &lt;"
sympathy for civil Service as an
The
success
of Luren D. Dickinson
abstract Idea you are at heart a
thorough-going spoilsman of the of Charlotte as republican nominee
for
lieutenant-governor
has resulted
Andrew Jackson school.
in the looking up of "Rule 4" of the
Now,
MXPresident,
people state senate regulations. That rule,
which prohibits smoking during ses­
around here are quite interested
the agricultural administration of sions of the senate, was rigidly en­
our Federal government, since all forced by Mr. Dickinson during the
many years when he was lleutenparlments either directly or INDI­
RECTLY wlU you please tell us not enforced during the last two
what you have said concerning the
tenant-governor. The fact that Mr.
DEPARTMENT of AGRICULTURE. Dickinson has been made the nomi­
nee of hte party, with the proba­
first, Of course. I subscribed to bility of hte election, baa revived In­
the Democratic platform of 1932 terest In this
which said: "We condemn the ex­
travagance of tha Farm Board."
Then. at Sacramento. Sept. 22. senate if ho were •ucceaaful this
1032, I said: “I have called for a
(Continued bn page 8. Bee. 2)
nothing.

Stop in and see us
. . . the value of a
good banking con­
nection increaias
with the yean.
Make it a- part of
your education to
know your banker.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, OCTOBER «. ISM

rules tar Um coating

Thornapple-Kellogg
School Notes

The Women * club held e
The Club also voted to hire Mias
Helen Matson aa referee for lheir tian for the T. K- Faculty

student in scholarship and cilia®ship each week.___

The Ha
polAU; and an E will bo a negative banquet el
S. The highest eltlaensklp mark
will be one; the second highest will
be a two; a three Will be unsatis­
factory; and a four will make any
player Ineligible.
4. Eligibility blanks will be fur­
nished by the school administration.
I. Students must have their quo­
tient given to the coach before each

eclricil
—■

CHEAPER

wnie roast on
I Streeter's Landing at Gun lake last
I Tuesday night, students and teach­
ers started to arrive at atx o'clock
and kept on arriving until *even, thirty
After filling themselves up
- on wienies and marshmallows, the
party danced al lhe pavilion. The
juniors wtah ta thank Mr. and Mr*.
Streeter for lheir kindness and hos­
pitality In extending to us the use
Attention Parents.
of the pavilion and boat* free of
I charge. Thia l« the second party the
Parents are requested. If-possible
1 class has held there, each one prov- to telephone tar children during one
ot tbelr study periods. In case of
j Ing a great success.
absolute necessity, however, wo will
be glad to call them from classes.
Fire DHIL
A Are drill wu held during the
week, the classes marching out in Department New*
Giri's T. K. Club.
1 this order—Kindergarten and first
! grade, side door;
second, third.
The T. K- Club held Ita first
[ fourth grades and home economic* meeting last Tuesday. The business
classes, front door; fifth, sixth ot the day consisted of election of
grades, and lunch room occupants, officers and representatives of the
back door; Agricultural room, green Athletic
Association.
Kathleen
house door; Upstairs the north end While was chosen as president and
। marched down the front stairs and Betty Swift received the office of
' out front door; the south end down secretary. Catherine coman and
backstairs and out back door.
Martha Schad were chosen as Ath­
letic Association representative*
।
' Eligibility Rales.
Only girls who have earned JetThe following are the eligibility Iters are eligible for the Club.

NOW...BUILD
SIGHT is your most precious pos­
session. Yet do you read, sew, work
where the light is never adequate
for even simple visual work? Can
you say for sure? Don't guess.
BE SURE!
Hove your home lighting measured
FREE!

Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Phone 2515

Frank Sage

Hastings

juice, city chicken, potatoes au gra­ *. c. Swift, club president, gave an
tin. buttered beans, pear salad, bak­ address of welcome in which aha
ing powder btaeuiu, grape Jelly, cofof the Machen and the club's pleas­
ure in working with the school.
The Barry County Education As­
The speaker of the evening was
sociation met Tuesday night in lhe .Karl Wecker, director of the Sym­
new dining hall for a banquet and phony Orchestra of Orand Rapids,
who gave an address regarding mus­
the Home Economica Club,
ic. Mr Wee Ur jitroduoed hta string
trio which rendered eeveral num­
tor of the Mr* loumal and the ber* of fine mu»ic. Tiie entire group
only editor of an educational jour- rose to show appreciation for the
splendid music.
Who," ()&gt;oke of lhe journal and It*
The faculty enjoyed etary minute
work. Dr. A. J. Phillips, executive of the evening and wishes to thank
secretary of M. E- A. talked of the lhe club for the ftae hospitality.
teacher’s retirement, teacher’s ten­
ure. and bills to be voted upon by
SOUTH SHULTZ.
the public. Bupi. D. A. VanBuskirk.
The Shuita Sunday school will
M E. A. president, also talked of have a harveat social at tha hail
lhe bills. Mn. Maude Smith, presi­ at Shullx Thursday evening.
dent oA Barry County Educational
Mra. Gladys Chamberlain and her
As-'oclatlon and also county School slater. Bessie Lewis, spent Thursday
Commissioner, also addressed lhe tn Battle Creek.
group.
Wc enjoy the articles In the Ban­
ner by Mr. Cook about hte western
trip.
Alice Mohler. Dorothy Pender and
Mias Lucy Sullivan and friend of
Dorothy Fischer are post-graduates Kahmaaoo spent Tuesday after­
who have enrolled for a commercial noon and evening with Mr. and
course. Alice Mohler la taking busi­ Mra. Frank Hom.
ness. bookkeeping and typing. Doro­
Mr. and Mr*. Harry Mlsener of
thy Fischer and Dorothy Render are Katemaaoo spent Sunday with their
taking typing and bookkeeping.
parents, Mr. and Mra. O. E. Ken­
yon. Mr. and Mra. L. Martin and
Mary and John of Kalamazoo were
In lhe first real test of the season callers there in the afternoon.
Friday night T. K- lied Nashville by
Jeasie Hine pleasantly enter­
the score of 8-6. Nashville got ita tained the Shults Community Club
score in the first quarter The score Thursday.
remained 6-0 until the teat three
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Horn were
minutes of play when lhe T. K- dinner guests of Mr. and Mra.
gameness showed itself. Ben Reser Charley Kahler of North Barry
Intercepted a Nashville pass and Thursday evening.
ran 80 yards to a touchdown. The
Wedding bells rang on our street
point after the touchdown was test week. Thad Cook and Rena
missed.
Whipple were married Thursday
evening. They win live In Charley
Sophomores Initiate Freshmen.
Kahler's tenant house.
The Sophomore claw initiated lhe
Mra. Martha Hom te spending
Freshmen last week by treating thl* week with her brother. Byron
them to a wienie roast a* well as Moody, of South Maple Grove.
giving them some nice egg and flour
Mra. Clarence Baechler and moth­
sandwiches and overripe banana*. er. Mrs. Rose Baechler. attended a
Later they went to the dance hall luncheon at Leach lake Thursday,
where a very enjoyable evening was Mra. Will Dillon of Grand Rapid*
spent.
was hostess. Tuesday they attended
a luncheon al Mrs. Milton Mur­
Reception fw Facuiiy.
phy's home near Freeport In honor
of Mra. Jennie Freeland's birthday.

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Older eyes need almost
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to hove adequate and
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Objective Rote for those who make greater use of electric

FORD A ..
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TOP MATERIAL

Hoppe* Powder
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Um

affiliated

. — Gibeon hotel in
giBdanatl a Recognition dinner is
being held for C. I*. Rowe, who was
State CM. Sea. here tor many years
and organised both Barry and Eaton
counties. The National
Council
meeting u being Mid In Cincin­
nati that week.

A- and formerly Boy*’ Secretary at
Jackson Y. te home on furlough and
spoke In Eaton Rapids recently.
"15.000.000 saved each day to
American people In coat of current,
by lhe improved electric bulb "
Hastings Hi-Y Club handled the
program for the*Boya* Union Fresh­
man party Friday evening. Regular
Y meetings for all H. S. boys will be­
gin next week tn Hasting*.
October 11 te Founders Day of the
Y. M. C- A., being lhe birthday of
George William*, who was the orig­
inator of the Y. M. C. A. near Lon­
don in 1644.
THE CROSSROADS.

lle Creek spent Bunday with John
Cook and family.
Don Sledge spent Saturday night
and Bunday at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Star Grimmett of
Grand Ledge visited Mr. and Mrs
Kenneth Hurless Sunday.
Lucius wills and Mrs. Bertha
Couch of Heatings spent Sunday
afternoon with Clyde Sledge and
family.
MUs Maxine Stodge of Grand
Rapids te spending the week with
her parents.
ASSYRIA.
Mtaa Ara be De Bivens accompanied
by her mother. Mra. Sylvia Bivens,
Etale Conklin and uncle. Ben Conk­
lin. left Friday night for Marlin.
Ohio, to (pend the week end with
retell vea.
Rom Bivens from near NaahvlUe
visited al the home of hla daughter,
Mrs. Isabel Case. on Thursday. He
soon leaves for Sheridan. Wyoming,
hla former home.
Mr. antrMn. Hugh case spent
Bunday at tha Mrs. Anna Rltaman home. An uncle, George Geeseman and daughter. Mrs. Stella
Bander and her husband and son.
Dalton, and daughter. Susanne, of
Gibsonburg, Ohio, were also there.
Mrs. sander remained for the week.
Mra. Elsie Casteleln la assisting
at the shlrUe RJtxman home for a
time.
Mrs. Olive Tobis* spent Saturday
in Battle creek with her daughter.
Mrs. Hasel Tuttle. She also visited
her son. Lyman Tompktns. at Leila
hospital, who 1a much Improved.
OuesU at lhe Goorge Shafe home
on Sunday were old time friends
from Kalamazoo. Mrs. Mary Pepper
and son. Royal, and family and
Mrs. Anna Draper.
Walter Shafe began work at MedklfTs Lake project teal week.
A Republican Rally wlU be held at
the Briggs church on Tueaday eve­
ning. October 13. The Brigg* Ladies
Aid will serve a fried chicken sup­
per preceding lhe meeting serving
al 6:30. Mrs. Lottie Jone*. Mra. Kate
Cole. Evangle Miller and Helen
Cole are In charge.
’

HICKORY CORNERS.
Geo. Thomas, who operates the
blacksmith shop here, has moved
his family from Middleville into
the rooms over the Williams* store.
Mr. and Mra. Btawart Waters and
little daughter spent Bunday with
their sister. Mr. and Mn. Clarence
Payne of Hope Center.

Health
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QUART
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HUNTING BOOTS

Buckland and uaughter of Litch­
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The new bridge ta open for traffic
after being closed for seven weeks
The people along the highway are
very thankful.

of

IS minutes each
the ABC chain K:4S
hg talks things over"

Cast Iron Manifold Heaters

plan embraces a low Transition Rate for the same or a less

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ELECTRICITY
Cheap electricity" Is now a household word. With our now

WEEKS CORNERS.
Mr. and Mra. Ousts Day and fam­
ily of Barryvilie were Sunday guests
ot Mr. and Mra. Leslie Dickerson.
Mr. and Mra. Lyle Dickerson and
Jean visited Mr and Mra. Garner
Hampton Sunday.
Other visitors

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tended Friday. They expect to move
to their new home near Bellevue in
the near future.

SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Miss Acluah Buck attended a sur­
prise birthday party on Mtes Cor­
nelia Beverwyk of Hasting* on
Wednesday evening.
Mra. Lafayette Uabome. Mra.
Frank Shriber. Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Bsrry and son were In Battle Creek
Thursday afternoon.
Pau) Strodtbeck of near Clarks­
ville called on hte parents, Mr. and
Mra. J. J. Strodtbeck. Sunday aft­
ernoon.
Lester Warner of Woodland and
Mr. and Mra. Wm. Shriber and fam­
ily of Haallnga apent Sunday with
Mr. and Mra. Frank Shriber and
family.

MARK’S Opens the Hunting
Season With MORE BARGAINS!
Why shield children from every
danger — EXCEPT EYESTRAIN?
School days, dark days arc here—
homework, reading and games on
the floor, all need light. LIGHT!
Give young eyes a chance—don't
force them into the one out of five
school youths who are eye-cripples,
partly due to poor light. Electricity
is now too cheap for thalli

r. courtesy

caenty leach-

NEVER UNDERSOLD! NEVER OUTVALUED!

Y.M.&amp;A. ITEMS

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.

Hutun

�**9 Mayffoi
-Rm Woawn's Club held a recep­
Tha Club ateo voted to hire Mtesi
Helen Merson aa referee for their tion far lhe T. K. Faculty FriOY
evening at the K- of F. hail. The
club mtmbera and husbands spent

ciltten*

Jllh KT KSy ^embm.V‘4S

Y.M.C. A. ITEMS
r. owrtesy

ot

the

affiliated

Weekly Farm Review
The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers
By WILLARD'BOLTE

legatite

est will Juice, city chicken, potatoes
insatls- tin. buttered beans, paar sal
Ing powder biscuits, grape Jelly, cofBarry cwmly Twcbora BawgaeL
Lratlon.
Ir quo- social!on mat Tuesday night in the
nw dining hall for a banquet and
meeting. The banquet was served by
the Home economics Otub, 137

wsslble

only editor of an educational Jour-

V WlU Who," spoke of the Journal and Its
work. Dr. A. J. Phillips, executive
classes.
secretary of M. E. A., talked of lhe
teacher's retirement, teacher'., ten­
. Club, ure, and bills to be voted upon by
lhe public. SupL D. A. VanBuskirk.
i first M. E A. president, also talked of
□sinew the bills. Mrs. Maude Smith, presi­
dent ol Barry county Educational
Association and also County School
ithleen Commissioner, also addressed lhe
nt and group.

teMbcr was rec«rted to dinner by
* ehib member. After dinner Mr*.
B- C- Swift, dub president, gave *n
address of welcome ta which she
ot the teachers and the club's pleas­
ure tn working with th* school.
The speaker of the evening was
.Kart Weckvr, director of the Sym­
phony Orchestra'of Grand Rapids,
who gave an address regarding mus­
ic. Mr. Wecker introduced his string
trio which rendered eeveral num­
bers ot fine music. The entire group
rose to show appreciation for the
splendid music.
The faculty enjoyed eNry minute
of the evening and wishes to thank
lhe club for the ftaa hospitality.

cased 18 minutes each
over the ABC chain 11:45
* gong talks things over"
October 21 al the Gibaon hotel In
iDctonsU a Recognition dinner is

State Go. Bee. here tar many years
and organized both Barry and Eaton
count!**. The National Council
meeting is betog held in Cincin­
nati that week.
J. C. Field of Lima, Peru, Y. M. C.
A- and formerly Boys' Secretary at
Jackson Y, la home on furlough and
spoke In Eaton Rapid* recently,
"15.000.000 saved each day to
American people In coat of current,
by the Improved electric bulb."
' Hastings Hl-Y Club handled the
program for the "Boys* Union Fresh­
man party Friday evening. Regular
Y meetings for all H. 8. boys will be­
gin next week In Hastings.
.
October li is Founders Day of the
Y. M. C. A., being the birthday of
George Williams, who was the orig­
ins tor of the Y. M. C. A. near Lon­
don ta 1844.

SOUTH SHULTZ.
The Shulta Sunday school will
have a harvaat soda! al the hall
at Shultz Thursday evening.
Mra. Gladys Chamberlain and her
stater. Bessie Lewis, spent Thursday
ta Battle Creek.
We enjoy the articles ta the Ban­
ner by Mr. Cook about hte western
i and
Peat-Groduatea Enroll
trip.
s AthAlice Mohler. Dorothy Pender and
MLu Lucy Sullivan and friend of
Dorothy Fischer art post-graduates Kalamazoo spent Tuesday after­
THE CROSSROADS.
id let- who have enrolled for a commercial
noon and evening with Mr. and
course. Alice Mohler Is taking busi­ Mra. Frank Hom.
tie Creek spent Sunday with John
ness. bookkeeping and typing. Doro-1
Mr. and Mrs.- Harry Mteener of Cook and family.
thy Fischer and Dorothy pender arc I Kalamazoo spent Bunday with their
Don Sledge spent Saturday night
taking typing and bookkeeping.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Ken- and Bunday at home.
Mr. and Mra. Star Grimmett of
T. K. Tie* Nashville.
Mary and John of Kalamazoo were
Grand
Ledge visited Mr. and Mrs.
In the first real test of the season callers there in the afternoon.
Kenneth Hurless Bunday.
Friday night T. K. tied Nashville by
Jessie Hine pleasantly enter­
Lucius wills and Mrs. Bertha
tained the Shults Community Club Couch of Hastings spent Bunday
score in the first quarter. The score Thursday.
afternoon with Clyde Stedge and
remained fl-0 until the last three
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hom were family.
minutes of play when the T. K. dinner guesls of Mr. and Mra.
Miss Maxine Sledge of Grand
gameneu showed itself. Ben Reser Charley Kahler of North Barry
Rapids is spending the week with
Intercepted a Nashville pass and Thursday evening.
her parents.
ran 80 yards to a touchdown. Tiie
Wedding bells rang on our street
point after the touchdown was last week. Thad Cook and Rena
ASSYRIA.
missed.
Whipple were married 'Thursday
Miss Arabclle Bivens accompanied;
evening. They will live in Charley
by her mother. Mrs. Bylvla Bivens, I
Sophomores Initiate Freshmen.
Kahler's tenant house.
Elsie
Conklin
and uncle. Ben conk- J
The Sophomore class initiated lire
Mra. Martha Hom Is spending
Freshmen last week by treating this week with her brother, Byron lln. left Friday night for Marlin. I
Ohio, to spend the week end with I
them to a wienie roast as well as Moody, of South Maple Grove.
relatives.
giving them some nice egg and flour
Mrs. Clarence Baechler and moth­
Ross Bivens from near Nashville I
sandwiches and overripe bananas. er. Mrs. Rose Baechler. attended a
Later they went to lhe dance hall luncheon at Leach lake Thursday, visited at the home of his daughter. I
where a very enjoyable evening was Mrs. Will Dillon of Grand Rapids Mrs. Isabel case, on Thursday. He I
soon leaves for Sheridan. Wyoming, ]
spent.
was hostess. Tuesday they attended
former home.
a luncheon at Mrs. Milton Mur­ his
Reception for Faculty.
Mr. anti Mra. Hugh Case spent 1
phy's home near Freeport to honor Bunday at the Mrs. Anna Rita-1
of Mrs. Jennie Freeland's birthday.
man home. An uncle. George GeeseVert Robinson's sale was well at­
man and daughter, Mrs. Stella
tended Friday. They expect to move Bander and her husband and son.
to lheir new home near Bellevue to Delton, and daughter, Suzanne, of
the near future.
Gibsonburg. Ohio, were also there.
Mrs. Bander remained for lhe week.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Mrs. Elsie Castelein Is assisting
Miss Achsah Buck attended a sur­
prise birthday party on Miss Cor­ at lhe shlrlle Rllzman home for a
nelia Beverwyk of Hastings on time.
Mrs. Olive Tobias spent Saturday
Wednesday evening.
Mra. Lafayette Osborne. Mrs. to Battle creek with her daughter.
Frank Shriber. Mr. and Mra. Leo Mrs. Hazel Tuttle. She also visited
Barry and son were to Battle Creek her son. Lyman Tompkins, at Leila
hospital, who is much Improved.
Thursday afternoon.
Guests at the George Bhafe home
Paul Strodtbeck of near Clarks­
ville called on his parents. Mr. and on Sunday were old lime friends
Mra. J. J. Strodtbeck, Sunday aft­ from Kalamazoo. Mrs. Mary Pepper
and son. Royal, and family and
ernoon.
Lester Warner of Woodland and Mrs. Anna Draper.
Waiter Bhafe began work at MedMr. and Mra. Wm. Shriber and fam­
ily of Hastings spent Sunday with klff's Lake project last week.
A Republican Rally will be held at
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bhriber and
lhe Briggs church on Tuesday eve­
family.
ning, October 13. The Briggs Ladles
Aid will serve a fried chicken sup­
WEEKS CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs.iGusta Day and fam­ per preceding lhe meeting serving
ily of Barryvilte were Bunday guests at 6:30. Mrs. Lottie Jones. Mra. Kate
Cole. Evangle Miller and Helen
of Mr. and Mra. Leslie Dickerson.
1
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Dickerson and Cole are In charge.

ER OUTVALUED!
iting

iAINS!
IELD

■UNS
tested; fine

12

$g95

HAMMER-

HUNTING BOOTS

iCOT
JER
TERS

*3”
$5’5

octomi

«■ iw

tot closed a couple days last week

church will sponsor a reception for
the teachers and members of the
school board on Friday evening, Oc­
tober 9.. to be held to lhe church.
Everyone u cordially invited.
MLu Marie Neuschacffer enter­
tained the teachers to her territory
Monday evening In the church base­
ment.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Pennock visllRalph Starring at Level Park BunMr. and Mrs. Peter Adrianson ta
company with Mr. and Mra. George
Adrianson of Prairieville
spent
Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. John
Fentae at Dowagiac.
Mr. and Mn. Glenn Williams. Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Williams and Mr.
and Mrs. John Adams enjoyed a
motor trip to Newberry ta the Upper
pelntosuta going Saturday and re­
turning Sunday.
Dr. and Mrs. 8- E. Farwell are
spending a ten days' vacation in
New York. A doctor from Chicago
Is taking Dr. Farwell's place during
his absence.
M1S3 Elhelyn Bnyder of Battie
Creek and Mrs. Kate Burdick of
Hickory Comers spent Tuesday and
Wednesday with Mrs. Lula E Wert­
man.
Miss France-; Woodhaus of Kala­
mazoo organized a dancing school ta
Delton last Saturday at the Com­
munity hall.
The regular monthly meeting of
lhe Delton Community club will be
held on Monday night. October 12.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnes and
MV. and Mrs. Clarence Stevens will
have charge of serving the co-oper-

Mn. Fred Van Luke and their famCllfford Gatader at Plainwell Bun­
day. the occasion being a birthday
party for Clifford Gatoder.

Wilbur Solomon of Detroit was
Rev. Bales' church announce­
ments are; Prayer meeting Thurs­
day night at 8 o'clock, lhe Bunday
School lesson for the following Bun­
day being lhe topic; officers and
tend; the sermon subject for Sun­
day morning service h "The Medi­
cine of the Bugle,'*
Mr. and Mrs. John Harrington
had as Sunday dinner guests, Mr.
and Mrs. George Harrington of Kal­
amazoo. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Har­
rington of Delton. William and
James Harrington of cedar Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pennock and
to celebrate the blrthcjqy of three of
the brothers, •Charles; John and
James Harrington.
C. J. Barnum. Mrs. Ella Rogers.
Mrs. Helen Corwin. Miss Magner
and Miss Roush drove to Reading
Thursday to visit lhe school there.
On Friday Miss Roush and Miss
Magner visited the school to Lan-

Rapids where Im
school building.
A quiet wedding took place Sat- luring his hip. :
to Grand Rapk
well as can be e
Baltle Creek when their daughter.
Ule. was united to marriage to Rob­
ert Adams of Delton. Tire ceremony and children vi
was performed by Rev. Ralph L. of Mrs. Schenki
Bates, pastor of lhe M. E. church ot band. Mr. and
Delton. Mrs. Arthur Fisher of Lan­ mond. in Jack*
sing, sister of tiie groom, acted as
Hie newly ete
bridesmaid and
Wayne Jakson. Ladle*' Aid Sod
brother of the bride, acted as best George Grab*; v
man. The bride was attired in blue er Waddell; sec
silk. About fifty guests witnessed Prank McNutt.
lhe ceremony. Those from Delton
who attended were John McBain, bert Butler and
Kathryn. Dorothea and Winifred
McBain, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lel- were overnight \
naar and Forrest and Reva Lelnaar, cently.
Bob Mitchell. Mr. and Mrs. Carl
The Misses M
Bootsman and Margaret, Henry and Pauline E
Adams. Mr. and Mrs. George Eddy
and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dickerson.
Mr. and Mrs. Adams will be at home

Creek.
wishes
tended
Delton

Congratulations and best
for a happy future are ex­
to tiie bride and groom by
friends.

IRVING.
Mr. and Mrs. John Perry have
gone to Kalamazoo to visit their
daughter and husband and the little
Our local school resumed Its ses­ granddaughter. Betsey Jane Tomp­
sions thia Monday morning after be- kins.

Natural Gas Burner installed in

trial plan.

program is In charge of Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Norwood. They have
engaged Miss Mary Gaines of lhe
Kalamazoo State hospital to give
a talk.
Last Wednesday Mrs. John Doster
entertained for dinner Mrs. Oscar
Ehrman. Mrs. Carrie Ehrman, Mra.
Mary Swak and Mrs. May Miller
all of Kalamazoo and Mrs. Frances
Norwood of Delton.
Mr. and Mrs. Mason Norwood of
Kalamazoo and Mrs. Sarah Brand«tetter of Hastings were.week end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cheater
Banghart.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Van Luster
celebrated their fortieth wedding
anniversary Thursday. Oct. 1st. by
entertaining twelve relatives and
friends from Battle Creek al a deo'clock. The rooms were decorated
with garden flowers and the evening
was spent with music and cards.
Gifts of silver were left as a mo­
ment© of the occasion.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Wertman
spent Saturday afternoon and Sun­
day with Mr. and Mrs. Milton No­
bles at Grandville.
Mra. Julia Doster and daughter,
Elizabeth. Mrs. Eloyse Leonard and
Mrs. Frances Norwood were Kala­
mazoo shoppers on Friday.
MCls Ruby Vanderwood
and
friend of Kalamazoo spent Bunday
with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Vanderwood.

Alexander Mb;

and Mn. WlU Dunning. Mr. and

WITH NJ
HEALTH
FRESHNE
SEALED
IN
-.(OT0*

Don t Jr ait—Dial 2305
FREE ESTIMATES FOR

NATURAL GAS HEATING

CONSUMERS
POWER COMPANY

NO DOWN
PAYMENT

UCTION SALE!
Hoving decided to sell most of my stock, I will hove on
ouction sole at the farm known os the George S. Marshall
farm, one mile north and one mile west of Maple Grove Cen­
ter or two miles south and three miles west of Nashville, in
Maple Grove township, on

Health
Guard

honeycomb

chrome
iet running

HICKORY CORNERS.
Geo. Thomas, who operates the
blacksmith shop here, has moved
Buckland and daughter of Litch­ his family from Middleville Into
field.
the rooms over the Williams' store.
The new bridge Is open for traffic
Mr. and Mrs. stewart Waters and
after being closed for seven weeks little daughter spent Bunday with
The people along the highway are their sister. Mr. and Mra. Clarence
very thankful.
Payne ot Hope center.
Hampton Sunday.
Other visitors
were Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Armour of

»18’5

Purdue University offers three
tested methods for eradicating Can­ ly do not return a profit. With aver■ AI, falrAa
ada thtatlaa. on small patches, aOM
spraying with sodium chlorate is
recommended. The patch should be and Interest oh the investment.
permitted to get a good growth and
------------should not bo disturbed. Plants I The Pennsylvania State Departwili usually have sufficient growth ment of Agriculture nas Issued the
ta May or June. Then sec that the, following rules to aid every dairy­
ground is free from manure, straw man to produce fresh, wholesome
and dead vegetation. Spray thor- cream that will grade No. 1: (1)
oughly with a solution of one pound Keep bams. cows, utensils and
of sodium chlorate to lhe gallon I equipment CLEAN and sanitary,
of water—using two gallons of spray
-----------------------------Wash
and sterilize **■
the
separa­
to the square rod. Repeat with a tor, pans, palls and an milk uten­
gallon to tiw square rod three or sils immediately after each using.
four weeks later. Large infested (3) Warm cream must be cooled aft­
areas arc beat eradicated either by er separating—and before mixing
persistent cultivation or by smother­ with alder cream. &lt;4) Keep all
ing the thisUes with a good stand cream to a covered container and to
of alfalfa will do the Job In four to a cool place—preferably to a tank
five years, provided you have a thick of cold water—and protect it at all
stand and thoroughly tear up the times from Insects and dust or dirt.
thistle patches before seeding the &lt;51 Market your cream at least twice
alfalfa.
The
clean-cultivation a week and protect from the hot sun
method requires plowing before the and from freezing.—Ohio Parmer.
middle of May and then cultivating
once a week or oftener. It necessary,
A one-man sack filler can easily
to make It impossible for * single be made by cutting the bottom out
thistle leaf to come through the' of an oil pall—hanging lhe sack un­
ground. Use an implement that will der lhe pall with a couple of wire
cut them off four or five inches un-, hooks—and hanging lhe poll handle
derground. Keep it up until after on a nail or hook.—Prairie Panner.
a killing frost and watch for them j
In calf feeding experiments at
next spring.—Indiana
Farmer's
I Ohio Experiment Station, calves re-I
Guide.
reiving skim ml Ik are almost tovari-:
More than thirty years ago’ an ’ably the best, even to comparison;
Iowa farmer wrote In Wallace's | with calves receiving such substlFarmer. "Tiie man who rides a i tutps as milk powder and blood
manure spreader long enough will ■ flour. Growing pigs and chlekens al­
ride to an automobile some day." so show faster growth—superior
That was before the general use of condition—and return a market
lime and commercial fertilizer and price of 70c to BOc per cwt. for sklmsuperphosphate — before lespedeza nillk. compared to sklmmllk powder
and soybeans and alfalfa and sweet and buttermilk powder, liquid skimclover had swept across the coun­ fnllk Is usually worth about 60c for
try. But it is still good farm gospel. feeding young animals and poultry
at present prices.—Ohio Farmer.
For three successive years a cor­
respondent of capper's Parmer, liv­
Every owner of a large herd of
ing In Howard County. Missouri, has dairy cows is occasionally faced with
sowed oats to his field of Korean the problem of a cow that will not
lespedeza. Each year lhe lespedeza dry off. A Connecticut correspond­
has reseeded Itself and the ground 13 ent of Hoard's Dairyman has been
disked and seeded to oats. He uses 100 per cent successful to handling
the oats for early pasture—leaving such cases by one of the following
part of lhe field for grain If need­ methods: If the cow is on grain,
ed—and then the lespedeza comes radically increase her gratin for a
along to furnish summer pasture.
week and then cut It down Just as
fast. If she 1s on pasture, tie her up
Overfeeding brood sows causes and give her nothing but a little
pigs to scour, and Minnesota Experi­ timothy hay and Just as little water
ment Station warns farmers to as site can get along with.
watch lheir pigs closely for sytnptoms. On the first djy after fur­
An Indiana correspondent of In­
rowing the sow should receive noth- diana Farmer's Guide puls lhe al­
tog but warm water. Beginning with ------falfa—
hay
-- --------from-------a large
-------------------------field into the
the second day she may have a 111- i mow with the help of but one other
tie wheat bran or oats, but no com , man—and puts U in as fast as his
for at least two weeks, and the । hay cutter will handle it. The hay­
amount of grain can be gradually | field te locatedJtatmediatoly adjaincrcascd until the sow Is on full i cent to his bam, After curing to the
feed nt the end of two weeks. If lhe windrow, one man picks up the hay
pigs scour, cut the sow's rations in ; with a buck rake and runs It right
half—add a small handful of epsotn up to the cutter—where It is fed by
salts to her slop—and give each pig cue num while the other drives the
a tea*[xxjnful ot mineral oil. Keep j buck rake back for another big load,
pens and bedding dry at all times.]
—Wallace's
Farmer.
____ __________
. Southern counties ta Wisconsin
________
’
| have been having trouble with barWrltlng In Missouri Rurallst, | ley fields turning yellow ta MayGeorge Jordan Lt Inclined to believe and with potato plants turning yel­
lhat Missouri farmers will continue low. plant specialists from the Uni­
te find soybeans more valuable as a 1 versity of Wisconsin report that the
hay crop than as a cash crop. Mis-: barley trouble is not a disease but
sour! results have shown that soy- 1 usually a lack of both potash and
beans grown for grata will pro- , phosphorus—plus dry weather. The
duce more cash than 20 bushels of ■ potato trouble is the yellow dwarf
com to lhe acre, but considerably ; disease—aggravated by high temleu than a 60-bushel com crop. And peratures. The one best insurance
ta any case the value of q good crop I against yellow dwarf is certified seed
of soybean hay Li almost always I stock.—Wisconsin Agriculturist.
higher than the value of the beans
,, ------1
t
Massachusetts
Commissioner
of
if the grower ta prepared to feed the 1 **
”
‘ *
*'
I Education is under Are for no leu
soy or has a good local market.
an offense than paying (10 for a
The average egg-production of wastebasket. His critics do not real­
American hens Is way under 100 ize that this piece of furniture
eggs per year, yet Wallace's Farm­ should be lhe busiest one in almost
er reports that pullets that do not any office.

fggy»A*.

DELTON.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Adrianson and
children of Battle creek were Bun­
day guests ot lheir parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Peter Adrianson.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Parker have
moved to Battle Creek, where he has
employment.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13

HUNTER'S AXE

Commencing at 1:00 o'clock, sharp. I offer the following
SHELL VEST

5 to $9.95
HORSES.

Heaters
-98c
$3.98
$3.98
$4.35

FOOT BALLS. Genu­
ine leather. Valve blad-

rBH

BUY AT SUMMER PRICES

g9e

M MODED-Fall

Let ui FILL your COAL BIN
before winter prices
take effect.

*2.48
IATBUAL

MOTOR OIL

79
RIES

29
Higk in Cream
FELT DRAFT Mate Me

plate.
VOLT

Every child needs plenty of good,

&lt; GALS.

FREF.ZEOMETERS 29c
TAIL LIGHT Bulbs 3c
ROLL ROOFING ..tie

rich milk to help guard their health

Raw

and to quickly restore lost energy.

er Fegteurisod.

The high vitamin content in High­

Content.

lands Dairy Grade A Milk will help
PINT 5c
QUART

MARK'S

ORDER YOUR COAL TODAY!

to prevent colds by building resist­

ance. During lhe cold months have
your Highlands Dairy Man leave

Electric HEATERS

QUALITY COALS AT
LOWEST PRICES

an extra quart for extra protection.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.

HMtinM

HASTINGS
PHONE 2118

Span of black mares, well matched,
8 yean old, weight 2600.
(These mores both raised colts this
Cr and ore both bred back. They are
d and gentle, good workers.)
Span of well matched bay geldings,
good worker*, weight 3000.
CATTLE.
Guernsey and Durham cow, 7 yrs., coif
by tide.
Brown Swiss cow, 6 yn., freah 8 wka.
Durham cow, 4 yn., froth 8 weeks.
Durham cow, 6 yn. to freshen in 5 wkt.
Holstein-Jeney cow, 6 yn., to freshen

Holiteln cow, 7 yrs., duo in spring, giv­
ing good man of milk.
Cucrntey-Holitcin cow, 7 yrs., giving
good mm of milk, duo in spring.
Jitein cow, 5 yn., freshened 12 wkx.
ago and bred back.
(The above mentioned cows are oil
good milkers.)

Durham bull, well brad, 2 yean old.
2 Durham and Holstein steen, 2 yean
old.
Durham steer, 2 yean old.
3 other head of young cattle, Durhams.
SHEEP.

15 Shrop IWM, 4 yean old.
5 older Shrop ewer 20 Shrop lamba.
Shrop ram, 3 yean old.

HOCS.
Poland China brood sow with 8 pigi.
Red and black sow, with 7 pigs.
White sow, due this fall. 8 shoots.

SWE1
KIA*
GUt

Cl

FEED.

About 300 shocks of good hard com.
10 tons alfalfa hay.
10 fang clover and timothy hay, mostly
clover.

B

SW

WOODLAND
MICHIGAN

TERMS:—CASH.

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
"The Farmer Owned Store”

No property removed until settled for

George S. Marshall Jr., Propr
Henry Flannery, Auctioneer.

Erneit Gray, Clerk
IS. WtST

�m jMrffoi b^nxml

Weekly Farm Review
The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers
By

WIU.ARD'BOLTE

Purdue University offers three
tested methods for eradicating Can­ ly do not return a profit. With averada thb ties. On small patches,
spraying with sodium chlorate b 140 eggs to pay for feed and care
recommended. The patch should be and Interest oh lhe Investment.
permitted to gel a good growth and
should not be dblurbed. Plante
The Pennsylvania state Depart­
of Agriculture has luued the,
will usually have sufficient growth ment
------------___________________________
in May or June. Then see that the | following rules to aid every dairyground is free from manure, straw man te produce fresh, wholesome
and dead vegetation. Spray thor- cream that will grade No. 1: (1)
oughly with a solution of one pound Keep bantu, cows, utensils and
of sodium chlorate te the gallon! equipment CLEAN and sanitary,
of water—using two gaUons of spray . (3&gt; Wash —
and
-■ sterilize •*lhe
------------separa­
to the square rod. Repeat with a tor. pans, pails and all milk uten­
gallon io the square rod three or sils immediately after each using.
four weeks later. Large infested (3) Warm cream must be cooled aft­
areas are best eradicated either by er separating--and before mixing
persbtent cultivation or by smother­ with older cream. (4) Keep all
ing the thbljes with a good.stand cream in a covered container and in
of alfalfa will do lhe job in four to a cool place—preferably In a tank
five years, provided you have a thick of cold water—and protect it at all
stand and thoroughly tear up the times from insects and dust or dirt.
thistle patches before seeding Ute (5) Market your cream at least twice
alfalfa.
The
clean-cultivation- a week and protect from the hoc sun
method requires plowing before Ute and from freezing.—Ohio Farmer.
middle of Moy and then cultivating '
once a week or oftener, if-necessary.1 A one-man sack filler can easily
to make It impossible for a single be made by cutting the bottom out
thistle leaf to come through the of an oil pall—hanging the sack un­
ground. Use an implement that will der the pail with a couple of wire
cut them off four or five inches un- hooks—and hanging the pail handle
derground. Keep it up until after on a nail or hook.—Prairie Panner,
a killing frost and watch for them I
----------- next
spring.—Indiana
Farmer's
In calf feeding experiments at
I Ohio Experiment Station, calves re­
Guide.
. 1 reiving sklmmllk are almost InvariMorc than thirty years ago' an । ably the best, even in comparison
Iowa farmer wrote in Wallace's | with calves receiving such substiFarmer. "The man who rides a tutes as milk powder and, blood
manure spreader long enough will1 flour. Growing pigs and chickens alrlde In an automobile some day.’" so
” “show
*----»- - -----------•••—
faster
growth
—-------superior
That was before the general use of condition—and return a market
lime and commerclai fertilizer and price of Ibc to BOc per cwt. for sklmsuperphosphate — before lespedeza milk. compared to sklmmllk powder
and soybeans and alfalfa and sweet and buttermilk powder, liquid sklmclover had swept across the coun­ rnlik is usually worth about 60c for
try. But II is still good farm gospel. feeding young animals and poultry
al present prices.—Ohio Farmer.
For three successive years a cor­
respondent of capper's Farmer, liv­
Every owner of a large herd of
ing In Howard County. Missouri, has ' dairy
—_________________
___________
cowj Is occasionally
faced with
sowed oats in his field of Korean the problem of a cow that wiU not
lespedeza. Each year the lespedeza dry
'
' Connecticut
" ' correspond­
off. A
has reseeded itself and the ground b ent of Hoard’s Dairyman has been
dbked and seeded to oats. He uses 100 per cent successful In handling
the oats for early posture—leaving such cases by one of the following
part of the field for grain if need­ methods: If the cow is on grain,
ed—and then the lespedeza comes radically Increase her grain for a
along to furnish summer pasture.
week and then cut it down Just as
fast. If she Is on pasture, tie her up
Overfeeding brood sows causes and give her nothing but a little
pigs to scour, and Minnesota Experi­ timothy hay and just as little water
ment Station warns farmers to as site can get along with.
watch their pigs closely for sympfonts. On the first day after far- j An Indiana correspondent of In­
rowing the sow should receivp noth-1 cllana Farmer's Guide puts the ai-1
Ing but warm water. Beginning with falfa hay from a large field into the I
the second day site may have a Hl- । mow with tiie help of but one other I
tie wheat bran or oats. but no corn j man—and puts it In as fast as his1
for at least two weeks, and the . hay cutter wlU handle IL The hay- j
amount of grain can be gradually 1 field is located Immediately adjainercased until the sow Is on full ■ cent to his barn. After curing In the'
feed at the end of two weeks. If the windrow, one man picks up the hay
pigs scour, cut tiie sow's rations In , with a buck rake and runs it right
half—add a small handful of epsotn up to the cutter—where It b fed by
salts to her slop—and give each pig , one man. while the other drives the
a teaspoonful ot mineral oil. Keep buck rake back for another big load,
pens and bedding dry at all times. |
—Wallace's
______________
Farmer.
Southern counties in Wisconsin
_______ have been having troubio with barWritlng in Missouri Rural 1st, । Icy fields turning yellow In MayGeorge Jordan is Inclined to believe and with potato plants turning yelIhat Missouri farmers will continue, low. plain specialists from the Uni­
te find soybeans more valuable as a 'Iverslty of Wisconsin report that the
hay crop than as a cash crop. Mb- \barley trouble b not a disease but
sourl results have shown that soy-' usually a lack of both potash and1
beans grown for grain will pro- phosphorus—plus dry weather. The
duce more cash than 20 bushels of potato trouble b the yellow dwarf
coni te lhe acre, but considerably j disease—aggravated by high ternleu than a 60-bushel com crop. And ! peratures. The one best Insurance
in any case the value of a good crop ' against yeUow dwarf b certified seed
of soybean hay Is almost always I stock.—Wisconsin Agriculturist,
higher than the value of the beans I
----------------- &lt; • *
if the grower h prepared te feed lhe
Massachusetts Commissioner of
soy or has a good local market.
' Education b under fire for no less
________ an offense than paying |io for a
The average egg-production of I wastebasket. Hb critics do not realAmerican hens b way under 1001 be that thb piece of furniture
eggs per year, yet Wallace's Farm- should be the busiest one in almost
er reports that pullets Uiat do not any office.

tjtyUBAY. ocrom t,

imi

---------- - u,

’

Last Wednesday Mrs. John Doster
entertained for dinner Mrs. Oscar
Ehrman. Mrs. Carrie Ehrman. Mrs.
Mary Swak and Mrs. May Miller
all ot Kalamazoo and Mrs. Frances
Norwood of Delton.
Mr. and Mrs. Mason Norwood of
Kalamazoo and Mrs Harsh Branditetter of Hastings were week end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Banghart.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Van Luster
celebrated their fortieth wedding
anniversary Thursday. Oct. 1st. by
entertaining twelve relatives and
friends from Battle Creek at a de­
licious chicken dinner served at 6:30
o'clock. The rooms were decorated
with garden flowers and the evening
was spent with music and cards.
Gifts of silver were left as a momen to of the occasion.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Wertman
spent Saturday afternoon and Sun­
day with Mr. and Mrs. Millon No­
bles at Grandville.
Mrs. Julia Doster and daughter,
Elizabeth, Mn. Eloyse Leonard and
Mrs. Frances Norwood were Kala­
mazoo shoppers on Friday.
Mfits Ruby Vanderwood
and
friend of Kalamazoo spent Sunday
with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Sam
vanderwood.

C.THMK

WITH NATURES
HEALTH AND
FRESHNESS
SEALED
IN

THOMAS

special
coffee
Pr.»h aid

DeViciou*
Flavor

AUCTION SALE!
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13

LB.

bag

MAXWELL HOUSE-27c

MACARONIS 3-17c

Devour

HORSES.

QUALITY COALS AT
7 LOWEST PRICES

ORDER YOUR GOAL TODAY!

HASTINGS
RHONE 2118

Span of black mares, well matched,
8 yean old, waight 2600.
(These mares bath raised colts this
year and are both bred back. They are
kind and gentle, good worken.)
Span of well matched bay geldings,
good worken, weight 3000.
CATTLE.

Guernsey and Durham cow, 7 yn., calf
by side.
Brown Swiss cow, 6 yn., fresh 8 wks.
Durham cow, 4 yn., fresh 8 weeks.
Durham cow, 6 yn. to freshen in 5 wks.
Holstein-Jeney cow, 6 yn., to freshen
Holstein cow, 7 yn., due in spring, giv­
ing good mess of milk.
Guernsey-Holstein cow, 7 yn., giving
good mess of milk, due in spring.
Holstein cow, 5 yn., freshened 12 wks.
ago and bred back.
(Tha abova mentioned cows are oil
good milkan.)

PINEAPPLES 21*
FANCY HAWAIIAN CRUSHED

SALAD DRESSINGS
FRESH, CREAMY

SHur.
15 Shrop ewes, 4 yean old.
5 older Shrop ewes. 20 Shrop lambs.
Shrop ram, 3 yean old.

5C

KRE-MEL 3-1
CHOCOLATE. VANILLA, CARMEL FLAVORS

TE A
I Esf&gt;

HOGS.

Poland China brood sow with 8 pigs.
Red and black sow, with 7 pigs.
White sow, due this fall. 8 shoots.

MISSION INN
FINEST OraM

VANILLA

FLAVOR^

U. S. No. I COMLSM

Apples IO t»
WEALTHY

Grapefruit

S. Marshall Jr., Propr
Auctioneer.

!S4

Potatoes

FEED.
About 300 shocks of good hard com.
10 tons alfalfa hay.
10 tons clovar and Hmothy hay, mostly

No property removed until lettled for.

ffThe Farmer Owned Store”

MILKE" 3-22°
JELLY
PRESERVES

5c

Durham bull, well brad, 2 yean old.
2 Durham and Holstein steen, 2 yean
old.
Durham steer, 2 yean old.
3 other head of young cattle, Durhams.

WOODLAND
MICHIGAN

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc

23'

CHEESE

BROWN SUGAR « 5c
bag

Commencing at 1:00 o'clock, sharp. I offer the following

Let us.FILL your COAL BIN
before winter prices
take effect.

—

FOOD VALUE

Having decided to sell most of my stock, I will have an
auction sale at the farm known as the George S. Marshall
farm, one mile north and one mili west of Maple Grove Cen­
ter or two miles south and three miles west of Nashville, in
Maple Grove township, on

BUY AT SUMMER PRICES

-......... — -- ----

Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dunning. Mr. Ing closed a couple days last week
Alexander Mayville fell al tha the young people's class of Uw Irv­
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Adrianson and and Mrs. Will Dunning. Mr. snd because there was no heat In tiie home of his daughter tn Grand ing Sunday School last Friday night.
Rapids where he was visiting, frac­ AU report a fine time.
children of Battle Creek were Sun­ Mrs. Bert Galnder and Mr. and school buildtrig.
A quiet wedding took place Bat­ turing his hip. He is In a hospital
day guests of their parents, Mr. Mrs. Fred Van Luke and their famin Grand Rapids and is doing as •C Vandalia for several months. la
and Mrs. Peter Adrianson.
C11 fiord Galnder al Plainwell Sun­ of Mr. and Mrs. Milo Jackson at well as can be expected, considering
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Parker have day, the occasion being a birthday
pltal.
Battle Creek when lheir daughter,
vicinity
moved to Battle Creek, where he has party for Clifford Oalnder.
Mn. Annie C. Pierce of Hastings
Ule.
was
united
in
marriage
to
Rob
­
Mr. and Mrs. William Bchenkel
employment.
C. B.
Wilbur Solomon of De troll was ert Adams of Delton. The ceremony and children visited al the home
Tiie members of the local M. E.
was performed by Rev. Ralph L. of Mrs Schenkel’s sister and hus­ A. O. Hathaway.
church will sponsor a reception for
Arbor V_
Rev. Bates' church announce - Bate.), pastor of the M. E. church of band. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Ray­
the teachers and members of the,
redressed
CARLTON CENTER.
school board on Friday evening, Oc­' menu are; Prayer meeting Thurs­ Delton. Mrs. Arthur Fisher of Lan­ mond. in Jackson recently.
The newly elected officers of the
tober B., to be held in lhe church. day night at 8 o'clock, the Bunday sing. sister of the groom, acted as
Wayne Jakson. Ladles’ Aid Society are; Pres.. Mn. week Thursday. Oct. 8, for dinner Walters ot
School lesson for the following Bun­ bridesmaid and
Everyone Is cordially Invited.
Miss Marie Neuschaeffer enter­. day being the topic; officers and| brother of the bride, acted as best George Grabe; vice-pres.. Mn. Post­ with Mr. and Mrs. John Usborne. little daughter of
tained the tesellers in her territory, teachers are especially urged to al­ man. The bride was attired in blue er Waddell; secy, and treas, Mrs. All are cordially invited.
Church services at the Carlton M. Henney Saturday l..
Monday evening in the church base­, tend; the sermon subject for Bun-1 silk. About fifty guests witnessed Frank McNuU.
day morning service b "Tiie Medi- the ceremony. Those from Delton
Mrs. Emma Butler and son. Gil­ E. church are held each Bunday
ment.
Mbs Hazel Calms
who attended were John McBain. bert Butler and wife from Detroit, evening. Sunday School at seven
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Pennock visit-. cine of the Bugle,'*
Mr. and Mrs. John Harrington Kathryn. Dorothea and Winifred also her son, Walter and children, and preaching at eight o'clock. Ev­
Ralph Starring at Level Park Sun- had as Sunday dinner guesls. Mr. McBain. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lel- were overnight visitors In Irving re­ eryone is invited and urged to. at­
and Mrs. George Harrington of Ka|- nuar and Forrest and Reva Lclnaar. cently.
tend these services.
Sunday with the latt,
Tiie Misses Marie. Doria, Dorothy
— —
,— -------- ...oehtaff: husband. Mr. and Mra.
The
Freeport-parlton
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrianson in, amazoo. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Har- Bob Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
company with Mr. and Mrs. George, rington of Delton. William and Scotsman and Margaret, Henry and Pauline Everson entertained young peoples' choir met at the of Pleasant Valley,
Adrianson of Prairieville
spent James Harrington ot cedar Creek. Adanu. Mr. and Mrs. George Eddy
Thursday with Mr. and Mn. John Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pennock and and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dickerson.
Joyce of Gull lake. The occasion was
Fenina at Dowagiac.
Mr. and Mn. Glenn Williams, Mr. to celebrate the birthday of three of at 163 East Van Buren St. Battle I
and Mn. Roger Williams and Mr. the brothers. • Charles, John and Creek. Congratulations and best,
wishes for a happy future are ex­
and Mn. John Adams enjoyed a James Harrington.
C. J. Barnum. Mrs. Ella Rogers. tended to the bride and groom by I
motor trip to Newberry in the Upper
peininsula going Saturday and re­ Mrs. Helen Corwin, Mbs Magner Delton friends.
and Mbs Roush drove to Reading
turning Sunday.
IRVING.
Dr. and Mn. B- E. Farwell are Thursday to visit the school there.
Mr. and Mrs. John Perry have
spending a ten days’ vacation in On Friday Mbs Roush and Miss
.
New York. A doctor from Chicago Magner vhlted the school in Lon- gone to Kalamazoo to visit their
Ylng.
daughter
and
husband and the little
13 taking Dr. Farwell’s place during
Our local school resumed Its ses­ granddaughter. Betsey Jane Tomp­
Mbs Elhelyn Snyder of Battle sions this Monday morning after be- kins.
Creek and Mrs. Kate Burdick of
Hickory Corners spent Tuesday and
NEW, FRESH FOODS
Wednesday with Mrs. Lula E. Wert­
remember
man.
NEW PACK Canned Foods,
YOU SAVE,,
Mbs Frances Woodhaus of Kala­
BUYINGTHE
JELLIES and PRESERVIS,
mazoo organized a danclna^chool In
C.THOMAS
Delton last Saturday al Die Com­
BULK FOODS ... ALL TO
STORES
munity hall.
EVERYDAY
The regular monthly meeting of
M^KE YOUR FALL MINUS
lhe Delton Community club will be
LOW PRICE
held on Monday night. October 12.
MORE TASTE-TEMPTINC
WAY*
Mr. and Mra. Robert Barnes and
and YOUR FOOD DOLLAR
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Stevens will
have charge of serving the co-oper­
GO FARTHER
ative aupper al 6:30 o'clock. The
program b in charge of Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Norwood. They have
engaged Mbs Mary Gaines of the
Kalamazoo Slate hospital to give

DELTON.

Erneit Gray, Clerk.
im WUT rrATT nun

�TWB ■AffTtWOE DAMNED. WUMPAT. OOfeKl «. IBM
WOODLAND.

BOWUWO.
NOTICES I The Cemetery Circle will meet at
MMMHagwaw the church this wook on Thursday,
.........tt.iu
I Oct, a. for dinner. Tha maatings
0BDXB FOB FVBUCATI0N
| WBJ.f dUconUnuad during the *um-

dlituiM thg|

LEGAL

held at the Woodland tovuabip * at the schoolhouse •&amp;£ speaker of
school Friday October IB. Mra. Lhe evening wilF be Mane Jay Cady
Ralph Leffler, general chainaan, j of the Pantlind Hotel, Grand Rapand her co-workers have planned a ids
mer months. Everyone te welcome Ruth Chatterton and Horbort Mar. larger and better fair than ever.
The Methodist Ladles' Aid 601 Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Miller of
shall in "Girt*’ Dormitory." Tha Rhythm Band will put on an ciety. dub. No. 4.
served
a
Jackson. Dr. and Mn. Darnels of
Halted aa tha most important entertainment in a room by them- f chicken supper M lhe church WedAurora, and Mn. Eva Orwisbe and auwo^
y
/«***. owi*n* selves There will be lota of aide nesday evening, October 7.
rreaeal: Boa. Biotri Clsmsat. Jodz&gt; daughter of Pennsylvania were | amen
(pronounced
Bee-moan shows and a big main show, includ-.
»e &gt; ---------------' iTu?-suer of Ik. .mat. of William ,U“Ji£UP?ay nf Mr and UrS Wal’ I S^-moani makes her debut in this Ing a clever play in citargc of Mn. I
EAST DELTON.
. Ulad.t.**,ter Oruubc.
| film. The story ot a young girl nuB
„ Klteon. *.«,
Hugh
They ....
will also have Oct 1 Letter
.
- — a quick •lunch
•--*
—■*!. Mr
Ui. B. oi*4*io&lt;m* u.tax filed io Mid
Mrs Eva Striker of Athens vte-■ knowing the tumult of love tor the i a country
store,
stand
________ Mri Bext Gaindrr anW&gt;«
Ot .T”
0,41
Ume-- u*“ lAwmiwrj
Dormitory u
opani
with namourgera.
hamburgers, not
hot cogs.
dogs. psr.
pte. cmcof-1■ tartalned
hartainad al
at Sunday
Sunday dinner.
dinner. Mr.
Mr. and
and Frank Arnett ol Batik creek and
:."7£u*7S.h' rfHer’
’•“
“ UUK
^m* I wun
r (acre* he m*4. ov
t
S, A
a Wertman over
Over the week
Week end. m
(n an exclusive
evrtnalve finishing
hrilrhlne school.
ag-hnnl (M. ^A.i.Knn'.
rtwzH,. TLennon «*
rrntats
Ik*rourt
Uli aIhiir, **•
doughnuts .nd
and nEHar
other eate in
to ;i ....
Mra. Oeorge
of Hastings.
Rev. and Mrs FranR Mdw w
MiiU«d io ubsru ■ A reception and shower was gi’^n where the daughters of lite very tempt the appetite, a candy booth | Mr. and Mr* Robert Loudrn (pent Catedonia.
k
*
&lt; n. I
C &lt;
al Uie *®**lhy we “Ilt «o complete their and Ice cream. There will be loto of. Saturday night and Sunday With
Mr. and Mra. Clyde CovlUf rare
Il to *r^«r»&lt;L
1
u
th.
evening.
Supper
was
1
education.
Herbert
Marshall
plays
games
to
try
your
skill
and
a
big
friends.
Mr.
and
Mn.
Henry
Btewirk in th*
•-—j
w— eauesuon nerocri Mwrsnau piays
Bunday dinner gwste of ML *nd
Joyed by a large
of Uie ro
je &amp;
»u *gie«., b«
s. m
M.1i to «&gt;
enjoyed
fauie number
rote
of director of ti»a
th* school I bingo stand The Agricultural De- art near Lansing.
I friends
fHMute and
.nA w.i.Ete*.
.nA the
th. young
vn.,n« JI md ----------- -------- ----------------------------We wen vary lorry to hear of lhe , Mrs. Verdap Oeviflg *n4 daughter
s*ld
relative* and
Chatterton
a member ofpertinent will have an exhibit will?
near
Freeport.
couple were the recipients of many me faculty.
prises and the Home Economic girls 1 sudden death of T. N. Rockwell on
Mr. and Mrs. York Duffy of Kai*
miscellaneous gifts. Mr*. Lem was
are planning a big exhibit. Don't Friday.
formerly Miss Aims Lester.
| K*y FruuU, George Brent starforget the date. Friday. October 16. | The oldaet son of Mr. and Mrs
nz. in [h* I Mrs Anna Pierce of Hastings was ;
ring in -Give Me Yonr Heart.’ Come, bring ail the Children and J*m*s
-------------------------------Boulton wm—Ukcn -----very •••
Hl
u pruiM । the gUM[ ot hcr aon
Marshall ! MUs Francis has the role of a
urd*y.
Friday noon
rrnuu.
Pien-e. and family Friday and Sal- । momerteM English girl who Jiat
Mr and Mrs Ed Covey of Goble*
Much sympathy la fdt for tha
• urday.
1 been brought up by her father, a spent lhe week end with their family ol Delbert Dihah ol Creswy HMUno and Mrs clomcni bon* ot
; Virginia called on Chaa Parlee and
Mrs. Clem Ems and children of sctenttet living in Italy. Returning daughter and husband. Mr. and who died on Sunday afternoon.
obder ro* rnuCATioN.
Kellys bland are guests of her par- t0 London for a visit she meets a Mrs
rr». Clyde Ruel! and family.
Mrs Alta Louden is caring (or.I son Thursday afternoon.
....
•r Mxhicsa. Ui* Probni* Ceart lot enLs. Mr. and Mn. L. J. Onnsbe. । yOupg British nobleman whose wife
Jacob
Maurice
johncock
‘“^HUiex ano chu­
Jacuu Crockett
CiuvkcU and
wfiu Mr.
adi. and
»uw Mrs.
•**•"&gt;.: Mr*.
mi* m
»u*ilc juiuiwa
* and
»uu baby.
uavy.
, Count, of “"fj
. .. , .. I this week.
। u a semi-invalid, and the two fall C. T
Mr.
T. Rise
Rise of
ot Beaverton.
Beaverton. Irvin
Irvin Hoov-1
HoovMr. and
and Mr*
Mr*. Uster
Lz»ter Snyder
Snyder and
and dr“" ®‘
XTte
Hotter', te I Mljs V"da Ht,nman; ’ho was op- desperately In love a desperate sil- er and Mis* Helen Brambury of sou
Sunday
““ “'*• WalUr
*™ of
nt Kalamazoo
traUma.™ were Hnmt.v
mi ih« siu d*» id
crated on for appendicitis at Fan-. u*iion follow* but most striking ot Battle Creek were Sunday dinner evening guests of Mr and Mr* Ike «-r*nocrger.
llmaar
I Mr
MllU of
4 J? tf16 O. .
' nock hospital last week. U making I alI u lhe treatment which is frank guests of Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Rise.
-*nu Ho. sin.rt ci»-*.E.
„ good recovery and U exoocled and brilliant, but clean and in gopd 1
Z_.&gt;v
Creek were Bunday guests of Mr.
Mrs. Alma Slough of Miami, spent
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND| •nd Mn. Paul Townsend.
!»,. m.iur Of Iht Mini* ot Jtetert home in a few days. Mrs. Cheney, |- •
1
torn*. dx&gt;**r*
who has been staying at tiie Hoff -.
The community was saddened ;
■
"
11
——
• cousin. Mn. Wm. Warner.
"
»iitss isitt “f. s.“. im" !&gt;“”'■ iirt »iu&gt;
At Durban Bernard Shaw advo.
"Don't Turn ’Em Loose.” starring
Cha». H. Brown of Grand Ledge Thursday evening by the death of
,»ni now on si* in thi. mutt v«r । recently• which resulted in a frac- , James Gleason. Louise Latimer and ' was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. Levi Kantner. Mr. Kantner has been rated that convict* should be put in­
&gt;* to b* u. i*.i will
* lured arm. Bert Birman is a med!- Betty Grable, this picture portrays ,nd
na Mrsucu
wimama
hi
P°°
r
health
for
a
long
time.
He
to
dress-clothe*
and
sent
to
*ym. Dell williams.
lid
.. vfiSf. “«7h“i™l
taplul « pruMr
Fay CWing were will be greatly missed in thl* com- phony concert* Yet wt have always
me evils of turning unrepentant
j,,. and Mr* 7.,
Ikon thereof »nd •hoinl.trntioa of ent.
munlty. We extend our sympathy to understood that Mr. Shaw was g
public enemies loose from the big I Grand• Rapids visitors —
Monday.
"X'Cl. .“4. """
MO&gt;M. Will te house via lhe parole route.
, Thursday Mr. and Mrs. Ralph the widow, children and other rela- humane man.
(Leffler entertained Miss Doreen |
! club meeting which will be held at
Clary. Frederick Clary and Robert'
the church on Tuesday evening. Oct.
Bronson ot Hastings in honor of
113
Mrs Joseph will attend and,
Featuring the yeai's most impres­ Ellen Jean's birthday.
assLst with the entertainment part sive cast, tliis film is baited as the
Mis* Amy Harger of Grand Haven
j ot the program. All members are strangest drama of love ever brought
spent the week end with her broth­
• urged to be present and others are Io the screen Warner Baxter is seen
er. Walter Harger, and family.
welcome.
as the war-weary commander of a
Miss Dorothy Hynes of Mason
•Die next Ladies- Aid dinner will;j valorous
,_,wua ,regiment.
CB,UW.1U -U1W
June Lang as spent lhe week end with her par­
be held on Thursday Oct 22 This Mo
nique. the lovely French nurse,
Monique,
nurfie, ; enu. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hynes.
'
is a change of date for this month provides
—
him with his" only
• interert
• _„u m.o, w.
Mr. and Mrs. D. B- Green spent
only.
NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE.
M.arch' BaxU»’» Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Walter
chief aid. falls deeply in love with
of Orand jupids
Monique too. The triangle creates
Mr and Mrs Q^id England of
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION,
fn«it* nf Mtrhiran. th* Probata Court (or a crisis between the two men. which Grand Rapids were Sunday guests
&lt; ,h* Count* ct Harr*
is Increased when Baxter finds out ( or Mr» Otenn England and daughNaabitll*. n*rr» Cva.tr. Mirhnin. to
VI a araaton nf aaid court. Ii*ld al th* thal his father. Lionel Barrymore.
poiiyanna and Margery.
HONK OWhT.HS' LOAN COHI'ORAibat* nffir* In th* cil* of ffaalmr*.
T1ON. • r«t|&gt;*r*tlna orzaniird under In aai.l r..UUt., nr. lb* d*tlg dal nt Hal. te a private in hte regiment
Mr
M„ F. E BordPr lrll
U&gt;. tow. of th. Unilad BlalM of Am-rir*. lemln-r. a. II IDia.
*•* .
Monday for Oak Park. III., to visit
(at.4 Jun. 30th. 1V31. ami ronmlad ta
Prraanl: Hun. Btuarl rieniut. JuJca
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
their daughter. MUs Winifred Borof Frnhal*.
Mr. and Mrs Roy Oaks and chll- dcr Mrs Border will stay this week. 1
n tlir maltrr nf th* *atar* nf &lt; aniu
M t oddmeton and lr*lia C. Codfiingl"". dren were Sunday guests of their Mr Uorder returning Tuesday.
I
Mrs
Ernest Parr of
1Cathrrn H*rrin hating Alrd in aaid son and brother. Lemuel Oaks. and. Mr
family of Middleville.
[ Prairieville were Sunday dinner I
■Ur nr (rrrrr W ttiaAf !&gt;&gt;' thl* rourl (r
Mr and Mrs. Francis Gorham gueaU Bt the home of Mr and Mrs.
ar* or »*r* &lt;b» li«al krira .were Battle creek visitors last Fri-! E j. Sheldon. Sunday afternoon
irrmtHlm
I.r eal.l 4erw«eiJ anti rnltlie* Io iahwit
;d%
.
. .. ..
callers were B Cro6.J)eld gnd |!rs.
,
Nina Un it rral ratal*.
brine! p«I »«
1 » nrdrr*d. ■ lia| lb* 'JJrd dt, dl O* ; Oley Douglas* ol Hasting* egme ■ CanKron of rKalamaxoo and' Mu
Haafrrd T«
*r. A. It iS3C. al ton o'clock in tlia recently to make his home with ffls
Mrs Dallw, p„.ker o( Lansing. '
MMKHt. at aaid pmtral* nSir*. i r and .(
.
Louella Eurie, who hqs been!
h*r -b, aLOOirUrd tnr hraritur aaid Bait |brotjKj, paq Douglass.
lion.
1 Mr. and Mrs Oley Douglass and, spending the summer with hcr sis- I
Il ih furl her nril'ra* lhaE publl* nntlr* children of Bowen* Mill* were Sun- Ur Mrs ahcldon. is leaving Tuesth*r*«&gt;f 1.* rt.rn br irahliralioa nt a ropv
nt llti* nratrr. for thr** au*r**ai** arrln I day guests of the former s parents. d,iy for hfr homc ln Sacramento, i
• i'1'.a to aaid da* of h*ario«. in th* Mr. and Mrs. Dan Douglass
Caj Mr and Mra sheldon arc tak- I
11 . .tli.C* Bannrr. a neaatiaurr prlnUd
Sunday guests and callers in the lng hcr as Ur „ Kalamazoo
and rirmilatad in naid eaniatT.
home of Mr. and Mrs. FrancLs
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and I
Ftuart flemanl. Judfa ol Probat*.
A Ira* ropr.
Gorham were Mr and Mr.. Ernest, Mra D B. Green were Mr and Mrs.
Mitilrrd itoailh. Rrxiattf of Trnbat*.
Gornsin and children and Mr. and ' s w SmU11 and Mr and Mrs Ward ■
■ Mrs. Buhl Beattie and children ot areen and daughter PhyUis. of
N0TICB TO CREDITOM.
, Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert gouth Woodland.
!
Rtat* of Ml'htean. lb* Probst* Onart fur
BiShop and daughter and Mr. ami
Mrs
wtlllama and Miss MilUw Coan** of Barr,.
I* tb* niatirr uf th* *&gt;tat* of Lora &lt;1. 'Mn. Floyd Buakirk Of Hastings.
| dred wlHlams were Orand Rapids
Norton. g|*«*a.rd
tamahat
visitors Saturday
)
Nolira i&gt; brrrbr &lt;n*o that (oar Boaiba1
Perry stoieUwlule” working on I c
Bom leaves Tuesday tor
from lb* il'ltb tlax «i( H*i,trinl&gt;rr. A. D ,
IO1«. hav* b»*n alinaad for rrrdilora (o
nrrarnt th*ir rlairnh acataal said d*c*A**d the Dorothy Wise farm, broke hri S™ An.^
■aid roort tor raaiainalioa and adiual arm cranking a tractor He was National Lutheran conference. He |
r.t and that all crcdhnra nf aaid da- taken ^ Pennock hospital and is w“htp^1?t*d as dt'U,Ct
rr.l
rr.tu.trd In prrarnt their
• “ lh' d^1
,whlch„w“
Im. In aaid coairt at Eh* vrobat* nffira doing as well as can be expected.
1 n lhalrif* ot Ilaatlnca. In aaid raunlr.
Mrs Della cotton has been visit- J recently held in Ohio, he w&gt;U vc .
.... i.* Vrf,.er i|,r don. da* of January.
„
It IK.i? and that a.id rlalma will lw I Ing 1-kc son. Charles CoUon. al »one lw?
i . ■rat • . ...1 *r.U&gt;1 nr. Month., lhe l.t Mulliken for the past week.
*
A ROO&lt;1 CTOWtl
thc P1"* '
t of Fr'iruar.. A It i»37. at ten ,
Mr. and Mrs Bertie Smith vLslted ’ 9“n8,*Atx?r” ’ wluc!? *“
I
0 *lo*k in III* form mb
their daughter Mrs stela V Bruett!
*•'
Lutheran .zague at the
l*at.il. Mk-piambrr *&lt;&gt;. 1936
at orand*
X-lix. They | "“"I .-dimrtum Friday erenln,
Sloan Clrraanl. Jodra of Probata

OPENING NEW HARNESS
AND SHOE REPAIR SHOP
Saturday. Oct. 10, at J IS No. Michigan
CVfTPM MADE HASHIM AND ULTO-PATE

SHOE RWAIRINC.
ALSO HARNESS M»AI»INC AND OILINC
Twpoly-fiya yeprs axptfianc# in the manufacturing
of Horne*J ond Shoes hove taught me how to give
"yeu the beat for lew. Oyr ahop ic eguippod with mod­

ern machinery oM

can give you prompt and effi-

.. cient ifryice. We gl$p carry a complete line of Col­
Ion,

Halters, Bodies, Strap Work and

Collar

Pads,

together with a general line of,team " -

COM! IN AND lit Ul

QUALITY SHOE SHOP

AUCTION SALE

Having rented my farm I will sell my personal property at public
auction at my farm, one 'mile north of Free|&gt;ort on county road
601 on

Friday, October 16

Beginning at 12:30 o’clock sharp, I offer the following property

HORSES

BLACK MARE, 7 yrs. old, wt. 1300.

BLACK GELDING, 12 yrs., wt. 1300.

HOME OWNERS' uus CORPO
RATION Mortcao*.
Glrna D Math.«a

NOTICE MORTGAGE BALE

■ &gt;u

PORATKlN

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
.I
Stat* nf Mirbican. tha Trobala Court for
1 be 1 curt* of Barr*
In th* maltrr &gt;.f Ih* ratal* of Nrlba
Bn'lliaan. drr**a*d
'
if
]
i • &gt; &gt;*nt Ihrir rfairaa aralnat aaid d*r*aa*d
i tail rnurt fnr riiminiUhti and adjuat |
ment and ih*l all rreditora of uid d* |
rraaed *r» requiror! Io proarnl ihalr
rlaina to atid roort al tha probat* oBr*
la lb* eit, nf Haatinca. In aaid *ou«l». on
•;
th,
j,, „f Jar.uarr. A. I*
1'.-T and .ha. earl rlall... ».11 l.» hxard
1 a ■aid .....
nu Vrdna.da* th. 37lb
1 a ' &gt;f J.ri.,.r. A It IVJ7. al l*»
. r i .. b lb thr forenoon
laird. H*|.t*rnl.*r id. A l»
Stuart ITimasl. Jadxa of Prob*la

were accompanied by thru hephna. T'” m“7 1"ar
lht 1’us. ,1"
Lealle Smith and Cecil todon of' *■&gt; f “P
1,“"
woodland
I ment ot lhe church with chair.
Mr. and Mrs. N. McClelland and
&gt;■&gt;'
*»• «'»"
1
Mr
and Mrs
R I ot
smith
were *
Ver- I, Kalamazoo
and Mr
and
Mr*. dm-L
Roy
mont.iie
rIUI«.
sJSday.
Norwn ol carliOT
were
Sunday
__________ , B t
ner guesto. 6f Mr. and Mr*.. Paul 1
The car tn watch is the car be- Smith.
hind the car in front of you.
I The October meeting of the

NOW" TliEijEFOIfE b.

A

SMI

ill

tCKH- LOAM CORFU

co“°-

JERSEY COW, 7 yrs., fresh 6 weeks.

ASK US ABOUT

Manhatton COAL

2257

J&amp;

A Good Coal at a Low Price

WE'LL DELIVER I
Because PRICES WlU SOON ADVANCE . . . be-

the mines . . . baco^M you moy not bo able to gat
what you want Io ter on. we advise you to buy your
wiotofg cool NOW !

Smith Bros., Velte &amp; Co.
DEALERS IN WOOL. GRAIN, FEED. FLOUR. SALT, LIME,
CEMENT AND GOAL
PHONS K57

Atioraay f** Martgaga*

JERSEY COW ond colt by side, 4 yrs.
JERSEY COW and calf by side, 7 yrs.

FUEL
NOW!

HASTINGS. MICH.

DURHAM-GUERNSEY COW, 7 yrs. old,
fresh 7 weeks.
GUERNSEY COW, 6 yrs., fresh 5 weeks.
RED DURHAM COW, 7 yrs., bred July
27.
JERSEY COW, due to freshen Apr. 3.
GUERNSEY COW, 5 yrs., duo Nov. 20.
GUERNSEY COW, 7 yrs., due Doc.
DURHAM-JERSEY COW, 10 yrs., brad
Moy 28.
JERSEY COW, 6 yrs., fresh 7 weeks.
2 YEARLING JERSEY BULLS.

HOGS, SHEEP
CHESTER WHITE SOW and 9 pigs.
DUROC SOW, duo Oct. 20.
2 WHITE SOWS, bred. 1 BOAR6 FEEDER PIGS, wt. 60 lbs.
TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

11 SHROP EWES, 1 to 4 yrs. old.
SHROP RAM. 3 yaors old.

POULTRY
75 YEARLING LEGHORN HENS.
25 LEGHORN PULLETS.

FARM IMPLEMENTS

BAY MARE COLT, 18 moi. old.

JERSEY COW and calf by side, 5 yrs.

NOTICE OP MORTGAGE BALE.
Drfaulta ti*«inr b»»n B ad* (and aorh
d'fa-ilta barinc rontgaard for nor* thaa
nu.»tx da&gt;&gt;&gt; m th* ronduiaaa ot a rar

.red to r*rn&lt;*r th* debt a.rtir*d b»
,ai 1 i- tit.c- nr an* part therrof:
.'&lt;&lt;W IIIEKP.roHK hr *trta* of tha
rr • f ral- ..nt,,, , | ... gi d mr-rt
- and |i.r. i»t to th. Stalut.a nf th*
Sia r. nf Mrrhlran m meh r... mad. and
■ led NrtTICK IS HEREBY GIVEN
r
M nlar tiriober 3(lh. mil. at
i.r. O rlvrlr for-n—.0 Eaatrrn Standard
Tim* at tha North front (nor nf th*
&lt; uart Mnu.a In ta* Car *f Hattinaa.
•
of Harr* Mi-hiaaa (that bant
It* Mar* of kioldtac Tlrruit rotjn in aaid
fount it aaid mortcacr trill b* for*r|o&gt;*4
]•* a ••!* ar public aurtlrui Io lb* bicbrat
bidder of th* trer^g.. de.rrittad la a&lt;U
otortiac* nr an ameb th*rrof aa maa ba
e.aar* t. : ir th. am ...nt d;e
&gt;fnr.
aa.d and an* a-tm nr a-trna which hi* b*
t a t •■* th* nndrr.irnrd at or b*fnr* aalj
tala■ for tai.a and'or Inauranr. on aaid
mi..a. and all other anma said b, lt&gt;a
!-rei&lt;t&gt;.d with interrat thereon pnr
ad. nl tn law (nd to Ik* l.rma ot aaid
’tear*, and «'l legal enata cbarrra ar(
i"rUdinc an attorn** • fra.
r' wetuiei arf d.arrtbed aa fullowa:
’bat rrrtain nt*c. or parrel nf land
. ■. al. I .. 1&gt;|. r..wr,atuo nt Orange. III.
mt* ..f Harer Michigan, otora particn
lari * d.arribrd aa:
tom rr.armM at Nnrtbwraf r"rerr
V AV rorn &gt; He* Tw.alr fTOt:
'l h-nr. Ea«t Thirty rirht mda fE 3*
1 i
South Trit rod» 10 10 R &gt; ;
1 h»t»r* Eart klrht rrida IK: 1 B.):
j ie.Bth Ten roda f8. 10 R.i; Waal
1 '■irlySii rode fW 4S R.); thaae*
Twatitv fhda fN 30 R d En b*«.
| L.rfh
n Town Two North nf Rang. T*a
Wart (T 2 N nf R. 10 W»*tl. Barry
1 ■aunt* Mlrbican "

«i(.( SOTirr.
that on Frida.
t" 0***.•*}». ,ns

ROAN MARE, 4 yrs. old, wt. 1500.
2 BAY COLTS, 1 yeor old.

CATTLE

tad -IP l.anra A II»tfn»r r.f lb. T—n
abln .4 Ot.nah.ill* Barr* Cnu«U. With
Iran to th* IfnUK OWNKRtT LOAN
&lt;oKI-nRATION a r.at(...exion araaauad
Irr th, la* a of th* Colled Slat*, nt
Ar*. *rira d.t-4 Jne* ;»ih l(fu. and r,
d-d in tb» offlr. of th* H-Clat** of
■da for Ha*r* f'-intr. Mlrbicaa na
r ITth tilt m t r.er »7 nf Mort
•• -r 1'trand raid ninrt&lt;a»**
1-r rleetr.l under th* term* of aaid
rt«.r»
d-lar- If* -ntir* inn rival
.• r ,. 1 . lere.i thrtrnr du* whlrh
•n u ti dura brr.hr .a.rrt*. pirauant
«h .h there 1. rlaim.d la b» du. aad
&gt; 1
•• 1 rr I^tcacr &gt;• "he date r.f
Ibtt1 ni.rir* for ririarinal and inl.r».t th.
i of fit.. Th..j.and Fiflr and 04/100
r»-.i :... (fl A-,onti and „» ,ui| nr vro

100 dollar.

BAY GELDING, 11 yrs., wt. 1550.

MsCormick-Dosring wagon, now.
McCormick-Deering walking plow.
McCormick-Deering riding cultivator.
New Idea manure spreader.
McCormick binder 6-ft cut.
McCormick mawgr, 5-ft. cut.
Oliver cultjpacker, 8-ft.
Dana side delivery rake.
McCormick 2-oactien drag.
McCormick 60-tooth spike drag.
C. B. fit Q. earn planter. Hay tedder.
Superior fertilizer grain drill.
Sleighs with bunks.
30-gal. kettle. Grindstone.
2 10-gel milk cons. 5-gal. can.
250-chick coal brooder.
Forks, shovels and miscellaneous gar.
den and carpenter tools.

HARNESSES
NEW DOUBLE HARNESS.
19-in. COLLAR. 22-in. COLLAR.

FEED
8 TONS OF ALFALFA HAY.

NOTHING TO Bl REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR

HAROLD E. YODER, Proprietor
N. C. THOMAS, Auctioneer

-

harness hardware.

CHARLES COLBY, Clark.

�'Mo Recount’Com
Taxpayer! Money

fer tha Ump dwnfd « recruU
matters by Atwood, ecares go hte

melter for ca^kterxlloii.
•Ute Uw governing racounte pro­

Records Ln Hie otlcc of Orvillp E vides that a paUlioT tor rgcggut
Atwood. Secretary of State, and Eay be wlttjdrawp Anytime, *nd u«r the Jaw there te no proviptep
Ch» Union of lhe Board of Stele
Canvassers, together with estimates for the *tete and counties to lye
of expenses by scores of counties in reimbursed for roaUt.
If
lhe recount te completed and
Michigan. indicate that recount pe­
there
has,-------been-,no
in thr
titions based on the Sept IS prl- —
-----------r change r
marks, though since withdrawn, vote then lhe cguqllas receive 66
cost the texpayers of lhe state well for each precinct recounted and Um
over 4500 In actual expenditures.
' state receives nothing.
Telegraph mesages from Atwood J
—-w • ■
■■ ■■
to the S3 county clerks, advising
TOOK THE W1W COURSE,
them lo take charge of ballot boxes,1 Nashville te greatly tateresteg Jn
were followed by supplemental ones the paving and rerouting of M-lf
as amendments to original petitions ' south of that Village. Trielr wjdewere allowed by the stem board. ’ awake Chamber of commerce has
Withdrawal of [KtiUons caused a sent a deputation to consult vlth
third wave of telegrams.
These
charges amounted to more th.an
8100. Many long distance telephone
calls were Involved as well.
Each telegram wm confirmed by
registered mall. Preparations in
the state catflol for an impending

N£ CENT BRINGS

HOME THE

WfDNESbAY

EXTRA PACKAGE

FRIDAY Ahl) SATO
/ Now is the tima to stock up and save
f money. Many other articles included in

You pay the regular price for any item V.
on this sale and by adding only one penny, X
you may have another one of the same item.

this sale not listed In this advertisement.

JEAN NOLAN

«&lt;•' ,|1

Basic Tiitue Cream

thr .ft

Beauty Lotion, Natural

Stw .SI

Beauty Lotion, Brunette

There new cosmetic creation! represent lhe loletl dis­

COLGATE &amp; WRISLEY
lOc SOAP ASSORTED

All Purpote Cream

Cleansing Geam far Dry

No single preparation can produce the best results on all

Cleansing Cream for Normal or Oily Ski*

types of skin. JEAN NOLAN BASIC TREATMENT
CREAMS AND LOTIONS are prepared especially to

Foundation Cream

meet lhe requirements of different types of skin.

Hand Cream

There

Hand Lotion ;,

are special formulas lor normal or oily skin and for dry
and sensitive skin.

Tonic Astringent for Dry or Sensitive Skin.

Only the most costly ingredients are used and it is not
possible lo produce any finer cosmetics.

$1.50 Best Quality Olive Oil, 1 qt97c

Special Astringent for Normal or Oily Sfcie.. .^f fff

Ordinary profits

are sacrificed to introduce these exquisite Beauty Aids

Tissue Cream for Normal orOHy Sid

at one cent sale prices.

Face Powder

40c Tr. Vanilla Comp. N.O. 1-2pt. ..27c

FOR TEETH, MOUTH, GUMS FOR MEN WHO SHAVE

4 az. Spirits of Camphor29c

35c Grove's Bromo Quinine.24c

.2 for
.2 for
2 for

Mog-Lac Tooth Paste

Anliscptine Tooth Paste

$1.20 Caldwell's Syr. of Pepsin84c

Penslar Dental Cream

60c Coldwell's Syr. of Popein--------- 42c

Antisopline Tooth Powdet • . ■.

20c Caldwell's Syr. of Pepsin11c

Anlisepline Liquid, 16 or.
Sodium Perborate, flavored

69c

$1.00 DeWitt's Kodol Digestive
50c DeWitt's Kodol Digestive34c

25c HenephsCough Drops

1 for

-

.2 for
2 for
2 for
2 for
2 for

-

Mag-Lac Tooth Brush
Penslar Tooth Brush

Junior Tooth Brush
Boraline, liquid astringent, 16

10c F &amp; F Cough Drops6c

Colonial Club Shaving Cream. . 2 for
Colonial Club Shaving Lotion - 2 for
Colonial Club Talc for Men . . 2 for
Coloniql Club Bay Rum2
for
Colonial Club Lilac Vegetal . 2 for
Colonial Club Raior Blades, 5s .2 for
Nelson sBrushhee Shaving Cream 2
- for
Nelson's Shaving Lotion.
9 for
Nelson's Shaving Cream
2 for
Penslar Brushless Shaving
Cream, 8 az. jar
Nelson’s Lavender Water

31
.11
.24
.ir
.11
.26
.36
.16
.26

17c

$2.50 Hess Stock Food 25 lbs. ....$1.99
$2.50 Hess Stock Ponamin, 25 lbs. $1.99

$1.25 Miller Liquid Wok, qt,------------49c
10c Hopps for Stomach Distress6c

Ink-red, blue, black ond blue black _.7c

25c Colgate's Talcum9c
“uDAY

THURSDAY

SUPER VALUE
COUPON

Sign this coupon, and bring II to oar xtero on
Wednesday or ThiMwday and ret a fall »L«4 Me
bottle of CampMor lee Lotion tor onir—

10‘ ™ISCO^‘*V“ 40‘

SATUHDAr
•&gt; F&lt;Un «

SUPER VALUE
COUPON
•&gt;

segvlor 50c tsrbe of htog-loc the
•dgtaol Milk oi Mageeote'
Teeth P«t«, ht aaly

gr Sensitive SkU-

coveries in lhe science pl da/mplplogy and cosmology.

CREATIONS IT NELSON, DETROIT

Jeon Nolan Face Powder—Assorted Shades
.
Spring Blossoms Face Powder—Assorted Shades
Fleur du Midi Face Powder—Assorted Shades .
Spring Blossoms Rouge, Assorted Shades
.
Fleur du Midi Rouge, Assorted Shades
Cocoa Buller Cold Cream
Theatrical Cleansing Cream
Fleur du Midi Vanishing Cream
Fleur du Midi Cold Cream ,y.
Fleur du Midi Bvtlennilk Cleansing Geam. ... ..
Fleur du Midi Tissue Cream
Fleur du Midi Vanishing Cream Lotion

Spring BJougmt Almond and Buttermilk Cream
Spring Blossoms Cold Cream
Spring Blossoms Vanishing Cream
.Almond and Cucumber Cream
Cosmetine 7.'777 T.T..7
Camphor Ice Lotion
.‘Ti.. l*.7*.
Glycerine and Boy Rum, 4 os.7.’*. . 7.

Glycerine 6 Rose Waler. .
Nation’&lt; Lavender Water.
Penslar Skin Balm

FOR THE HAIR AND SCALP
Shompona
Penslar Hair Tonic. . . •
Bay Rum. Boraled, 16 oi
Ecu de Ouinme, 16 os..
Colonial Club Hair Oil.
Colonial Club Bov Rum
Spring Blossoms Brilliant,

Fig ond Senna Lazoliva.
Lozotive Cold Capsules .
Cherry Bark Cough Syrup
Eye Tone

Call or Oil, 8 os
Epsom Sall, 9 os
Senna Leaves, t os
Castor Oil, 3 oi
Camphorated Oil, 2 ot
Boric Acid Crystals, 4 ot
While Liniesenl
Cascora Aromatic
Eye Bort. f
Spirit Camphor, I oi
Sodium Phosphate, Effervescent
Poe-Garic (Liquid Analgetic)
Syrup Hypophosphiies .Compound .
Boric Acid Pgwder (Siltor Top), 4 ou.
CmcamEm.TaMeudep) .

Colonial Club Hail Tonic .
.S1
Row Ho.. Oil
•
-«•
Petroleum Hair Tonic
Colonial Club Tonic Shampoo .SI
Penstar Brillionline .86
Germicidal Soap, 1%86

Boric Acid Powder
Boric Acid Ointment.
Aromatic Castor Oil

■fete

Glycerine, 3 on...
Soda MW Tablets (100)

Rochelle Salt, 3 os. tins. .
Alum Powde&gt;ed, 4 on
Loxobve Cold Bieolcrs
A.inngent Tkrool Gargle
-.AVSHmMbMhI Cold Spot Com Remover
Limbering Oil . .
Mollonic
Mineral Agar
. ,
|
M| Ped lor Athletes Fool
.
• I t
MS VcgrioM.
I
While Pine and Tor
K
Aspirin Tablets, 24 ....
Cathartic Active Pills . . .
- . . ■
-«« Tfeoi Easy foor Pewde&gt;
Comp Licorige Powder. 4 ois ....
.
White Pme and Spruce Bottom
..
Buchy, Juniper ooj Palmetto Pills . ■ •
Milk of Magnesia Tablets

/

qesic

The Prescription Drug Store
TELEPHONE 2115

B. A. LyBARKEC

HASTINGS, MICH.

�BAKNMU TmmSPAY. OTTOBOt 1 IMS

-----------------the previous administration had at IN THE REGULAR DEPARTMENT
POLITICAL NOTES its
disposal a revolving fund of OP AGRICULTURE.
—Republican —
$500,000,000. On December 31, 19J5. DEPARTMENT of AGRICUl/TURE
No.
approximately *175,000,000 of this
Cost
Employed
(Continued from PM* 1. Sec. 3)
appropriation still remained.
1931 ............ M1IFI5417............. M371
During
the
FIRST
~
THERE
■ iW ............ 4M.W4.141............*7,175
reorganisation of the Department of REP COL—TWO............
■/...INCREASE *117.118524........... lM.104
Agriculture U&gt; the end that it may
bi addition to all of the above.
serve the people more and cost the Agricultural Adjustment AdmlnMte'ikTn ureter itX^veli fund, te there has been an expenditure by
- ——---------I the Resettlement Administration for
'rural purposes of *74.100,000.
All of the above figures come from
ENOUGH for the Department: of than ONE AND ONE-HALF BIL­
Agriculture to gel something more LION DOLLARS of this total have the Budget Message, Jan. 3, 1038.
and U. S. Civil Service Commission
useful than we are^now getting. I
k
have already proposed its reorgani­ years- the Roosevelt administration Reports.
Thus the record of the Roosevelt
sation. I am going to insist that we
get more service for lhe farmer for as lhe previous government spent Administration in Ute Department
of Agriculture stands :
Worda—Promised drastic cuts In
Those are Ute words of the Roose­
In addition lo these expenditures
velt administration. Now let us ex­ under lhe AAA. Uie following table the cost of this department and re­
amine Its performance.
indicates Uie INCREASE IN COST organization to simplify Its strucAND
NUMBER
OP
EMPLOYEES
|
lure.
The Federal Farm Board under

LOW PRICES

Worda—Condemns policy of re­
ACTION8—INCREASED lhe cost concerning crop restriction. His sub­
stricting and destruction of agricul­
of emergency expenditures by 470 sequent actions are os follows:
In the summer of 1933 the govern­ tural production.
per cent; INCREASED the cost of
regular department expenditures by ment PAID farmers under the AAA
37.0 per cent; INCREASED lhe to PLOW UP 10.500,000 ACRES of policy ol dra«Uc
number of employees in the regular growing cotton, or 25 PER CENT
OF THE TOTAL ACREAGEThcnk you. Mr. President, even
department by 72 per cent.
Tiie Bunkhead _______
cotton ____________
Act of 1934 though your actions are not in harThank you, Mr. President.
It set a LIMIT of 10.000.090 BALES of , rnony with your words. And now
cotton
lo
be
marketed
by
farmer*
।
finally,
finally.
will vou
you tell us what you
is &gt;9
is nww
also C.iutiu
evident lliat you invur
favor I11-------- _________
&gt;9
_
have said about your EMERGEN­
economy—os
an
ABSTRACT’ ,r0I“ tllc ia3&lt;-|S3S cr°PIDEA!" Now will you be so kind as
In lhe fall of 1933. lhe AAA DE­ CY program.
Mr. Roosevelt:
lo tell us a few of the things you 1STROYED 6.200.000 PIGS
and
220.000 PROS­
have said concerning CROP RE- SLAUGHTERED
Monon
The Preamble to lhe Agricul­
PECTIVE MOTHER SOWS al a tural Adjustment Act of 1933 which
8TRICTION.
cost of more than thirty million dol- was Duuwa
oushed lnrougn
through ran8reM
congress Wlul
with
Mr. Roosevelt:
lars. The total live weight of Urn pigs my IuU ttpprO¥B] g^. “An act to
In the first place. I promised lo
uphold lhe Democratic Platform of and sows slaughtered was 443.627348 reneve the aviating National eco­
pounds.
Of
this
only
97,064.159
^^
emergency by increasing
1932 which said: "We condemn. . .
the unsound policy of restricting pounds of food products were ob- .Cultural purchasing power, to
TTw , ral&gt;e revenue for extraordinary ex­
agricultural products lo the de­ talned—an Incredible waste
rest was either converted into in- ■ senses Incurred by reason of such
mands of the domestic markets."
Then at Topeka on Sept. 14. 1932.1 edible grease or fertilizer—or Just । emergency, to provide EMER! GENCY relief with respect to agI said: When Ute futility of main-j destroyed.
The AAA RETIRED approximate-. rlcultural Indebtedness, to provide
talnlng prices of wheat and cotton
through so-called stabilization be­ ly 36,000.000 acres of com. wheat.' for orderly liquidation of Joint slock
cotton
and
tobacco
from
cultivation,
land banks, and for other purposes.’
came apparent, the President’s
Farm Board, of which his Secretary or one-tenth of the land In cultlva-1 That Is what lhe Roosevelt Ad­
of Agriculture was a member, In­ tlon In the united States.
ministration said concerning thevented the cruel Joke of advising
The above figures come from Ag­
farmers lo allow 20 per cent of their ricultural Adjustment Admlnlslra- act to meet Emerceney conditions..
wheat lands to lie Idle, to plow up Hon reports.
Those are the words of lhe Ad­
every third row of cotton and to
Thus the record of lhe Roosevelt ministration BEFORE the act was
shoot every tenth dairy cow.
Administration on Crop Restriction
This Is what Mr. ROosevell SAID stands:
1
Herewith Is the action of the

IS NOW THE POLICY OF YOUR

A &amp; P FOOD STORE

cn
n

Iona Cocoa

Iona Pork and Beans
Prunes ££
“ 10c ’5T

6 .*2. 49c

Baby Foods
Karo Syrup
Molasses

3 — l*c
tt nu
"^1* 1Oc

•**

4

IJc

10c

A &amp; P Ammonia
Bulk Vinegar

M

Dried Peaches
Campbell's Soups

h~c~»

t *»■ &gt;fc

auHL

3 — SSc
10c

Larsen's Veg-All

Iona Spaghetti

4,s^19£
Bulk Macaroni
and Spaghetti
■

a 5‘
V

SPLENDID

Pancake Flour

’■« 21e

Bread

’

Dog Food

Matches

6

25'

Chocolate
Cookies

- 15'
1 Er

Pottum Cereal
i Ac

19

$c

aap.wwu

DoggteDin^.r^Keb’L-Ratioa 3

Canvas Gloves

3

Mexwell House Coffee
Beechnut Coffee

*«

23c

2 »*• He

Post Toasties

sr
5o®f&gt;

2

Oxydol or Rinso

Cigarettes
p°—"'“x
Snowdrift
19c
Kellogg's All Bran

Instant Postum
Fig Bars or Ginger Snaps
Argo Gloss Starch

15c
1ST »»c

"w".”

15c
** 5c
« — 25e
$1.15
M 55c

Reasons!
When a banker mentions ‘'saving" you may be
excused for thinking that he "lias his own axe
to grind", and therefore, not take very seriously
what you read in an advertisement.
The facts are that banks today do not par­

ticularly care for savings deposits as a means of

income. It is hard to invest the money in ways

that will even equal the interest the bank must

pay the savings depositor.
But we do know that every man
and woman not already“well fixed"
for life, should save regularly for

their own happiness and protection
... That is why we keep "harping”

on this subject.

OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Agricultural

CLEAN or SELL
CLOVER SEED
KING S BATTLE CREEK

HIGHEST PRICES PAID

STANDARD
SERVICF

H.C. KING
&amp; SONS, Inc.

*7" 39c
3

25c
it 91c

9

93c

9

Soa-y^u

RING BOLOGNA
2 lbs.
FRESH GROUND BEEF
2 lbs.
BEEF SHORT RIBS
CHOICE BEEF ROAST
FRESH HAM ROAST
ROUND, SIRLOIN or SWISS STEAK

Out infront and
in the spotlight!

■S’ 19c

SEE AND DRIVE THE

EXCITING NEW 1937

15c
A?

Grape-Nuts
Calumet Baking Powder

L

9c
16c
91c

25c
25c
lb. lOc
lb. 16c
lb. 25c
lb. 21c

For
For

A * l» FOOD STORES
Lul.n lo “Coffo. Tim." with K.I. Smith B.nd
~E,«7 Txwdg*■ M

B
A
N
K

This for Selfish

P. M. at the grave. Burial Ur Prai­
Adjustment rieville cemetery.
Mr. and Mra. Grand DePriester
MERE EMERGENCY OPERATION entertained their granddaughter.
Patricia Baker, over lhe week end.
or a static agoacy-**
Thus lhe record of lhe Roosevelt Sunday there was a birthday din­
Administration in regard to the ner for Miss Patricia In honor of
her 4th birthday anniversary.
AAA stands as follows:
The Ladies’ Aid will be held at
Worda—Promised that the AAA the home of Mra. George Cowels of
would be considered an EMERGEN­ Delton. October 14. Pot luck din- '
CY measure.
ner.
ACTIONS—Stated, .after act was
Watch for lhe notice of the re­
passed, that lhe administration nev­ publican banquet at the M. E.
er intended It to be a MERE EMER­ church In the near future. Hon.
GENCY OPERATION.
John C. Ketcham will be one of lhe
speakers.
From the above facta one can
conclude that lhe proper way to
NORTH HOPE.
arrive at Mr. Roosevelt’s probable
Don’t forget the Brush Ridge
action la; TAKE HIS WORDS. community club will meet Friday
FIGURE OUT THE EXACT OP­ night. Oct. 9. al lhe home of Mr.
POSITE OP WHAT HE SAYS— and Mrs. Fred Anders. Refresh­
AND THERE IS YOUR CORRECT ments are pumpkin pie. sweet cider
ANSWER.
and doughnuts.
Thia la not deceltfulnesa (or even
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Whltemore
and baby of Delton spent Sunday
MERELY TYPICAL ROOSEVELT I wiUj Mr. and Mrs. Thedore Pransli’■8TATE8MANBHIP."
1 kn.
। Mr. and Mra. Louis Ferguson of
Cloverdale spent Sunday evening
PRAIRIEVILLE.
Tiie Sunshine Lady from the with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Pranshka.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles cappon and
Michigan Bakeries entertained the
children at school Thursday after­ son of Hastings spent Sunday with
noon with a movie comedy. She also Mr. and Mrs. Morse Murphy.
gave each child a Sunshine maga­
NORTHEAST ORANGEVILLE.
zine and a balloon. Judging by the
Tiie locality gladly welcomes the
noise much appreciation was felt.
rreturn of the Byron McKibbin fam­
Mr. and Mrs’. N. J. Sehweiter of I1ily. They have bought lhe Homer
Plainwell and Mr. and Mra. John jMcKibbin place, better known as
DePriester ot Dowling were Sunday the
t
Hank Count place.
guests of Mr. and Mra. Jake JoltnTwenty
friends and relatives
son and Dora.
hgathered at the home of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hughes of 1Mrs/Oeiorge McKibbin Sunday and
worked
on
the
new kitchen.
Logansport. Ind., visited his par- 1
Mr. and Mrs. John McKibbin were
ents. Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Hughes.
Sunday. Mra. Dexter Brigham and ccalled lo the home of Fred Ashby of
Mrs. John Brigham of Decatur were IDelton early Sunday morning be­
Wednesday callers.
ccause of lhe illness of their daugh­
Richard Hughes. 82. passed away tter. Viola Ashby.. Mr. and Mrs. Wil­
at the home of Mr. and Mra. Lyle 1liam Ashby relumed home wltn
while she recovers from lhe
Tobias late Saturday night. Mr. them
1
Hughes' home had been in this vi- 1flu.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jenkins have
clnlty nearly all his life, but on ac­
moved
Into the old Haines house.
count of 111 health had been stay- '
Ing with his children. Funeral was held in the Methodist
Episopal .
church Tuesday at 2 o'clock and
burial was In the Prairieville cem­
etery. He leaves four children.1
Karl of Cleveland. Delos of Toledo.
Mra. Alfred Anson of Cooper and
Mra. Lyle Tobias of Battle Creek
and several grandchildren.
Mra. Jennie Nevins was taken to ‘
University of Michigan hospital.
Ann Arbor. Sunday morning, where
she will be a medical patient. Her
many friends wish her a speedy re&lt;covery.
Do not forget the Sunday school
Rally Sunday, Oct. 11. Mra. Doris
Bring your clover seed lo lhe
Johnson has charge of lhe program.
King Seed Co.. Battle Creek.
Mr. and Mra. Harold Reed and
family of Augusta visited Mra. Amy
Most efficient seed cleaning
Silcock and Mr. and Mrs. William
McKibbin and Ronald Sunday.
|
plant in Michigan. Cute down
The boys and girls of tha Pnri-1
screenings.
rlevllle school have organized a 4-H
Club. At their meeting, the boys
ALL GOOD SEED SAVED!
elected the following officers: Pres.,
Forrest Stafford;
vice-president,
Ronald McKibbin: Secy.,
ciair!
Munger: Treas.. Lloyd Boniface.
The girls elected: Pres., Virginia I
Houvener; vice-president. Rosetnae 1
you phone Battle Creek, 8168.
Higgins; Secy.. Virginia Lewis;
Treas., Eleanor Lewis. Tiie girls
named their club "The Flying Nee- .
die."
Tuesday. Mrs. Myrtle Page, pres- 1
Ident of Rebekah Assembly, and
Mra. Butterfield, both of Lansing, ■
visited our local lodge.
BATTLE CREEK, MICH.
Mra. Sarah Smith and daughters
had Miss Ruth Nelson of Battle ।
Three blocks south of Monu­
Creek as a guest over the week end. i
ment Square.
Dr. Bert H. Honeywell. 59. of Ann 1
Arbor, died suddenly Sunday fore- .
noon of a heart attack. The doctor
that the

X- l»c
~ c~l—
*ii ru—

Daily Dog Food

Pink Salmon
4X Sugar
Carn FIaL»&lt;

15c

■tr He

Swansdown Cake Flour
Morton's Salt
Bouquet

T
I
O
N
A
L

We’re Not Telling You

?. *3c
"^"■$1.12

Bokar Coffee
Gold Medal
Corned Beef
Corned Beef Hesh

Chipso
Crackers
Jello

lie
ft «7c
It 17c
li Me
‘it 17c
It, 19c

Hills Bros. Coffee
Del Monte Coffee
8 o'Clock Coffee

VrOOavUFy S

BIRDSEYE

u u

tii

4-19=

£

Iona Pork and
Beans

N

Administration AFTER spent many years in Prairieville
township and has many friends
statement on Oct. 25, 1935. here. He was a brother of Mtsa
Bertha Honeywell of Plainwell, Mrs.
Ell Lindsey and D. Honeywell of
Prairieville. Funeral services at

Roosevelt

WE CASH WPA CHECKS
r»ICU FLOSS* SALES TAX

From oil cleaner

Ji

underslvng root

%

fit I*

’ODO

frorien • Only can with Automatic HUI Holderl a Wprld'i shongatl, safari ond

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE
HACT1NSS

«

PHONE 2101

�TUI BASTTWOg BAWNKB, TmmgDAT. OCTOBgX i, im
Eat. Robert T. Marita- Inventory I She will enter th* Minneapolis Col-1

COUNT HOUSE NEWS

aS'

fiSd Sate enSted^1* °X

(ippr. ItaaMwHWWL
»*t. Von O. Morton. PeUtion tor

MARRIAGE UOINJU
M. C. *u**«U, Assyria ............
Olive P. Wilbur, Assyria

Atar. filed. waiver of notice filed.
ortCT sppotattng Ater. entared.
bead of Atanr. filed, letter* ot ad-

Mary Orarnt, Vermontville .......... U

Htttantnl

PROBATE COURT.
Kit. R. Sidney Pranch. Order al­
lowing claluta entared.
Eat. Melissa A. Hotchkiss. Order
confirming sale entered.
Eat. Thoma* W. Ronan. Order as­
signing residue entered, discharge of
administratrix issued, estate en­
rolled.
Eat. Giles Shepard. Acceptance of
trust filed, report of guardian ad
litem filed.
Eat. Annie J. cutler. Petition for
license to eell filed, order for publi­
cation entered.
Est. Millie Haynes. Fins! sccount
filed, order assigning residue en­
tered.
Est. Thomas A. Johnson. Final ac­
count filed, waiver of nollco filed,
order allowing account entered, dis­
charge of Admr. issued, estate en­
rolled.
Est. Etta Mather. Order confirm­
ing sale entered.
Eat George J. Doster. Order lo
assign bonds entared. final account
of Admr. filed.
Est. Kenneth H. Doeter. et al. Ad­
ditional bond of Odn. filed.
Est Nellie Sullivan. Bond of ad­
ministratrix filed, letter* of adminis­
tration Issued, order limiting settle­
ment entered, peUtion for hearing
claims filed, notice lo creditors Is­
sued.
Ext. Adella Weeks. Waiver of no­
tice filed, proof of will filed, order
admitting will entered, bond of
executrix filed, letters testamentary
issued, order limiting settlement en­
tered. petition for hearing claims
filed
Est. Mary Harry, inventory filed,
final account filed, order allowing
account entered, discharge of ad­
ministratrix Issued, estate enrolled.
Est. George Alvan Oaks. Bond of
Odn. filed, letter* ol guardianship
Issued.
Est. William H. Couch. Petition
for license to sell filed.
Ext. Annie E. Young. Final ac­
count of Admr. filed. dtecharge of
Admr. Issued, order allowing claims
entered.
Est. Albert Chase. Final account
filed, order assigning residue en­
tered. discharge of Adinr. Issued, es­
tate enrolled.
EsL Cassius M Coddtagton. Pe­
tition for determination of heir*
filed, order for publication entered.
EsL Icella c. CodfUngtorft Petition
for determination of heirs filed, or­
der for publication entered.
Est. Jernes Cheeseman. Annual
account filed.
Est Jay L. ware. Order confirm­
ing sale entered.
Est. Almon B. Fan-, petition for
hearing of claims filed, notice to
creditors Issued, inventory filed.

mtaistraUon Issued, order limiting

entend.

petition

for

hearing cl* 1ms filed, notice to credlE*L William N. Gladitone. Order
confirming sale entered.
E*t. Wlntem r. Aldrich. Order as­
signing residue entered, discharge of
Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
Est. wm. O'Donnor. Discharge of
special administrator Issued, estate
enrolled.
Bit. Lloyd Awarding. will filed,
petition for probate filed
Est. Leonard R- Jacob*. Order al­
lowing account entered, discharge
of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
NEEDED MORE JURORS.
For lhe trial of Russell Hinckley,
mentioned last week, lhe entire
panel ot thirty Jurors was examined.
Judge McPeck has ordered that
twelve more Jurors be added to the
panel, lhe new members being
drawn by county clerk Allan Hyde
and Justices Adelbert Oortright of
this city and Ben Bowman of Rut­
land. The additional Jurors are as
follows: Johnstown, LaVern Quick;
Maple Grove, Ward Cheeaeman;
Orangevllle. Herman Morehouse;
Prairieville. Ernest Morehouse; Rut­
land. George Qrabe; Thomapple.
Clark O. Kenyon; Woodland. Lau­
rence Faul; Assyria. Floyd Milter;
Barry; Cart Scotsman; Carlton
John Richardson. The new Jurors
were ordered to report Tueaday of

HENDERSHOTT.
aa their guests over Saturday night
WeIby Crockford Mr ^nd^Wj^&amp;mtsl Ma Heum'vl*h- and Bunday. Mr. and Mra. Striker I
of Athens. Sunday afternoon call­
and family
*——
• •*-...........
- unde,
- -spent
the —
week end at ited
their
Myron —
Whitworth,
ers were Mrs. Custer and son, Mr.1
lhe J. L. Crockford farm ta Carlton. near Banfield on Bunday.
West, of Hasting*.
MX*. Claude Carpenter has been
Clinton Brill was ta Ann Arbor
Mr. and Mr*. Wilbur Shanti en­
tak«n to her daughter's. Mrs. Oten Saturday with the Hastings football tertained Bunday with a family
Covert of Lake Odeas*. Mr*. Carpen­
dinner ta honor ot hla father, Wm.
Mr. and Mra. Chas. Van Vrank- Schantz's birthday.
ter ho been quite 111 for the put
en called on the latter's brother.
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
LMUr Brumm te ta Grand Rapids Will Johncock, near Delton on Sun­
The special meetings al the
thia week as a defecate to the Re­ day.
Mrs. Grace Bauer and Mis. Wm schoolhouse dosed Bunday night
publican State convention.
Andrews
of
Hastings
with
Mr.
and
with
a large crowd Attending. Rev.
A large crowd attended lhe recep­
Battle George Smith from Owosso brought
tion far lhe Woodland Township Mrs. Curtis Garrison ot
school teacher, given by lhe P T. A Creek called
“X at
*v Chas. Hendershott's Uie message.
Friday evening. Mr. E. Davenport 18l?ld*y_afu.nl??nMrs. Rose Engle attended the fu­
। Mn. Court Btrowbridge, who has neral of Mrs. Ruth Main of Has­
been with her daughter. Mn. De­ ting* Wednesday ot last week. Ma.
Mrs. Olm England. Pollyanna and Witt Rowley, tn Jackson the past Main was a sister of Mra. Eunice
Marjory were Orand Rapids visitors
Elliott.
’
,
Saturday.
David Lee Scobey of near Leach '
Rowley* have a new baby girl, born
Mr*. J. V. Hilbert entertained Mr. last Tuesday.
lake spent part of last week with |
Mr. and Mra, Leo Hendershott at­ hte grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. En- I
Mrs. F. E. Border Friday evening ta tended a party In Shull* Saturday gle.
honor of Mr. Hilbert's birthday.
night, given In honor of Mra. Gor­
The school children are all happy '
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rice called on don TomiMon's and Mrs. Vert Rob­ over their new merry-go-round on j
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Roberts of Lake inson'* birthdays. On Bunday Mr. the playground. Even some of the
Odessa Bunday afternoon and made arid Mrs. Hendershott with Mrs. grownups tried it out to their *orlhe acquaintance ot lhe latter's new Frances Hendershott and Mra. Hol­
comb visited Mr. and Mrs. Dale
daughter.
Shatterly (Winnie Bryans) near
ROBINHUE PARK.
1. ,,
net t t^ttar
The nel8hbor» had a mtecellanc- gate the coal furnace In such a
.'
"T ,. ’
.
ou« shower Friday night for Mr. and I
Mra. Evrid Jackson ha« returned Mrs Eddie Brlningathull (Doretha way that, while It still functions as
after ten days .pent carlnf for
of Alin Arbor
lhe
. capable as ever. It la hidden from
daughter. Mrs. Ernest Barnes, of of her parents ta the MeOmbcr dis-' sight, and the remaining part ot
H‘£u p’y..
. s. „ I,
Iulct
»n Traver family i the basement Is ready to be cleaned
Mr. and Mrs. John Kollar were caused the delay in having
this and painted for recreation purposes.
A room can be built around It In
U,e parents
youn« cou
P‘e
On
Of
SundayfOr her
entertained
and Mr*. Geo. Poland attend- with a dinner and ihower by the I ItMlf.
Tymc ' meeting In Has- relatives in her home. She received
‘"15! „ &gt;rZ,£ uu .
.
....
«n«ny Pre«y and useful gifts.
The Ralph Flnkbe ners of MiddleMr. and
Ronald Hayne* had 1
vilie were Sunday visitors of Uie J. I
M. Fotta.
| —------------------------------------------------------ 1
The
Clive
Churchills
of
MMdleBURNING
GNAWING
PAINS
vfUe are now installed in lhe Henry I
.J1"*
Bnf*

t

WOODLAND.
Oct. 1 Letter.
Potts' farm home Mr Churchill re- |
IN STOMACH RELIEVED
Gordon Finnic of Hastings is vis­ matalng ta Middleville lo pursue his I Neutralize irritating acids with
iting mt. and Mrs. J. V. Hilbert for duties a* village marshal.
) Dr. Emil's Adla Tablets. Prevent a I
Mra. Edith Clifford left Saturday 1 sore, inflamed stomach, yet eal |
Blrdsili Holly was in Grand Rap­ afternoon for her former home In 1 what you want. Adla gives relief or
Ids Tueaday on business.
Spokane. Wash., to visit her parents your money back. Reed's Drug Store
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nlelhamer and other relatives.
| and B. A. LyBarkcr. Druggist.—Adv. I
and children were guests ot Mr. and
Mrs. Forrest Roberts of Muir on
Sunday.

Bunday with Mr. and Mr*. Geo. L.
Klrshtnan of Kalamazoo,
Mr. and Mr*. Leon Tyler were ta
Detroit Sunday, the guests of the
latter * sister and husband, Mr. and
Mra. Paul Eagelkroudt.
Mesdames J. V- Hilbert, T. H.
Cobb, Lester Brumm and Karl C.
Faul attended lhe tea given by the
Barry County Federation of Wom­
en's Club In honor of Mra. M- J.
Cross, retiring district president, al
lhe parish house. Hastings. Saturday '
afternoon.
Mrs. Glen England and daughters.'
Pollyanna and Marjory, and Jean
England of Hastings spent Sunday ;
with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harrison |
of Detroit
Mrs. Lawrence Hilbert and Mrs.,
J. V. Hilbert accompanied Miss
Lorena Hilbert to Kalamazoo Mon- ■
day where she left for Minneapolis. ‘

46 Years Continuous Service
to Conservative Investors
Whether you have funds in email or large amounts,

you will be interested in learning of our different plans
for safely and profitably keeping them at work.

Capitol Savings &amp; Loan Co.
112 East Allegan Street

J. L. MAUS. Representative, zn S. Park BL. Hastings, Mich.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14
COMMENCING AT 12:30 AND WILL OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY

HAY AND FEED.

COWS AND YOUNG CATTLE.
Block and white cow, 8 yr*., due Oct. 12.
Block cow, 5 yrw„ freih 6 weeks.
.
Block cow, 9 yrs., freshened 6 weeks ago.
Black and white cow, 9 yrs., freshened 6 week* ago.
Red and white cow, 4 yrs., bred July 3.
White cow, 4 yrs., duo Oct. 30.
Black and white cow, 3 yrs., fresh 6 week*.
(All the cows ond heifers listed are TB and abor­
tion tested.)
Helfer calf, year old. Heifer calf, 6 mos. old.

HOGS.
Duroc cow, due Oct. 8.

2 white sows, not bred.

CHICKENS.
95 Barred Rock hens, yearling*.
Also a few Barred Rock pullet*.

TERMS:—CASH.

1 lb. ORANGE SLICES _.10c SUPER SUDS—
Large six 2 for --lb. Me
Smatt *ixe 3 for

Creamery Butter

1 lb. box CHOCOLATE CHERRIES19c
CHASE &amp; SANBORN'S COFFEE, 1 lb.22c
DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE, diced or crushed. No. 1 six _.10c
IODIN SALT, 2 lb. box, 2 for
_____________ .15c
6 rolls Toilet Paper, »o.r 25c
6 cans Sunbritc Cleanser, 29c
RITZ, full pound pkg. ..23c

MULLER'S BREAD—
2 lb. loaf
1 lb. loaf

HARVEST TIME PANCAKE FLOUR, 5 lbs
THIS IS A VERY FINE PRODUCT . . . YOU WILL LIKE IT

WE BUY CREAM, POULTRY AND EGGS J

WALLACE GROCERY
HASTINGS—PHON I 2458

OPIN EVENINGS

&lt;

FRU MLIVUY

AUCTION SALE

In order to close the estate of the late John Wagner, I will sell at
public auction, two miles cast and 1
miles north of Woodland, or
3 % miles north of Warnerville on M-14, on

10 ton* alfalfa hay.
Quantity of oat*.

THURSDAY, OCT. 15

Lansing, Michigan

Having decided to quit forming, I will have an auction sole at my farm, 1 1-2
miles east of Freeport, known as the Fish farm, on

HORSES.

6 lb». SWEET POTATOES ...................... ..........................
10 lb*. SUGAR __________________________ '.

Write us direct or aee our local representative, MR.

J. L. MAUS, for full information.

AUCTION SALE
Colt, 16 mo*, old. Bay mare, wt. 1500.
Bay mare, wt. 1300. Black mare, wt. 1400.

DISCOVERED

10 acre* corn in shock.

FARM TOOLS.
John Deere binder, 6-ft. cut.
John Deere manure spreader.
New Deere hay loader.
Hayes-Doyton side delivery rake.
Farmer’s Favorite grain drill.
McCormick mower, 5-ft. cut. Deering 2-roll huskcr.
Little Willie riding cultivator.
3 walking cultivator*. Gale riding plow.
Cale walking plow. 2 three-sec. drag*. Spike drag.
Steel hay tedder. Corrugated roller. Potato Killer.
2-hole power com shelkr. Ford powered buxx rig.
Hercule* drag-saw with angina. Belknap sleighs.
2—1 '/z H. P. gasoline engines. Tank neataT.
2 wagon* with stock rack*. Scale*. Double harno**.
Maple syrup outfit, complete. Third horse harness.
United power washing machine. Cauldron kettle.
DeLaval cream separator, No. 15.
Other articles too numerous to mention.
•

Commencing at 12:30 sharp, the following described property:

FARM TOOLS

HORSES
Block gelding, 12 years old, wt. 1400.
Block gelding, 17 years old, wt. 1500.

10 Cows, 3 Young Cattie
Durham cow, 4 yrs., fresh in June,
Durham cow, 7 yrs., fresh.
Durham cow, 3 yrs., fresh.
Durham cow, 6 yrs., fresh.
Durham cow, 6 yrs., fresh in June,
Durham cow, 6 yrs., fresh in Moy.
Durham cow, 4 yrs., giving milk,
Durham cow, 6 yrs., giving milk.
Durham cow, 10 yn., giving milk.
Durham cow, 8 yn., giving milk.
One year-old steer. 2 yearling heifers.

SHEEP
18 Shrop breeding ewer

HOGS
Brood sow and 8 pigs.

HAY
2 tons of alfalfa. 15 tons of mixed hay.

GRAIN
400 bu. old corn. 500 bu. oats.
15 acres of corn in shock.

Deering grain binder.
Keystone hoy loader.
Keystone side rake. Deering mower.
New Idea manure spreader, nearly new.
Thomas grain drill.
Milter bean puller.
John Deere corn planter, ferilixer at­
tachment.
McCormick-Deering double disc.
.
Dunham cultipacker.
Three-sec. Syracuse spring tooth drag.
McCormick-Doering two-horse cultiva­
tor. Moore walking plow.
I. H. C. wagon. Studebaker wagon.
Flat rack with stock rack.
Sot Belknap sleighs. Single fop buggy.
Light spring wagon. Fanning mill.
Swell-box cutter. Separator canvas.
Single and double harpoon fork and
pulley. Double shovel cultivator.
Corn shelter. 75 bushel crate*.
50 groin bags. 22-ft. ladder.
2 now 1-in. hay ropes, 120 ft. each.
4 hay slings. Fence stretcher.
Quantity lumber. -2 log chain*.
Quantity of drain tile.
2 tots of double hornet*.
Fork*, (hovel*, whifftetree* ond other
small tools used on farm.

NO GOODS REMOVED UNLESS SETTLED FOR.

C. H. FELTZER, Prop.
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctionxr.

CLYDE TOOKER Clark.

FARM FOR SALE—My 85 acr* farm, good productive soil, good building*, 14 acres
of standing timber, is offered at private sale on liberal terms.

TERMS CASH-Nothing Moved Until Settled Far

KARL F. ECKARDT
ADMINISTRATOR

■

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. OCTOBER A 1838

OUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

I Mrs. B. StLine1 and Mrs. Rose ’ Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Sam 1 Mrs. H. A. Woodman attended lhe
... ----- --- of -------- —.a------._ Pate of Quimby.
iDtatrlci W. C. T. U. Convention at
। Miedendorf
Grand
Rapid*
wens
' Sunday guests
Mr. and Mrs. O. I Esther Grey was the guest ot Sturgis last Thursday and Friday.
i Clarence Rowlader Sunday.
I' There to to be a teachers' mect|b. Baxter.
Mr.
and
Mn.
Clair
Van
Sickle
of
Ing al the church here on Oct. It.
| Among the things we note on our
• lv • “^ic^new^etu^^lhTfrSt ’W®Sickle but Tues- ' Ind, were guests at tha Thompson
M Uj£ew offte* t£th“n window
™ Wednesday while Calher- home on Sunday.
of
the News onice._potn.on wmuows
McAdama
Mral. retotl^
Van Sickle
Miss Freda Smith was in Kaia2.d";tore."very"7t^v.."i
aecX?
“*
U,
OtJc nulMak?
ta ‘.'-I'.
mazoo Saturday.
and hand store in the Frank Dem- I Q°^d^
“bb
I Miss Ruth Woodman of Coloma
Ing building. Mr. Easby of Hastings , Opal
Onal Webb
Wehh of
of Gull
Oul1 lake la spend““n
Ing a few days’ vacation with the' and Miss Martan Woodman of the
is lhe proprietor. Lefty Stuart also liome folks.
* Starr commonwealth at Albion were
has new lettering on the bakery
Ona Moy Whitman of Battle home for the week end.
windows. Mrs. Lewis Overholt gone
Creek is planning on coming home 1
------------ - -----from Brumm's store and Marguerite
HINDS CORNERS.
Brown In her place. Our main
Nashville High school.
Mrs. Joe Nevilt and granddaughI
ter
of
Athena
visited
Mr.
and Mrs.
FREEPORT.
] the laying of new water mains.
BRANCH DISTRICT.
j Ed Newton last Tueaday.
Ye scribe to back on the job again ] Hoy Nagler driving: a yellow Jtruck,
Forrest Bldelman and Miss Edna'
U------- ------Mr. and Mra Fred Meyers
and•
after nine weeks' absence. »°w-•
8**en
MUi Oita,
ever due to the lateness of our re- 1
large electric clock In the win Ellenbaas at, Hastings are visiting i son, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Smithson
mm X «&gt;“ “X™ “u ° llukk! ■&gt;»« « O» SlneUlr suUon. Chme friends irr'Urand Rapids for a few and daughter of Detroit, visited Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ed
Newton
Saturday.
days.
&gt;hu wmk u
WU1 .ppmel.u ,
rlmlS
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nelaon attend­
Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Phillipa and
your items again and will do our ।
to. .« make ou, cohmm Inur,.-,
? XX ed a family reunion at the home of children and Mrs. Vida Phillipa vis­
hrr .sister. Mrs. Walter Bird, near ited the latter's brother and wife,
M,. .nd Mr». Tknner
&gt;»1
1XX Ann Arbor. Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Smith, near
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Sage and Paw Paw Sunday.
X
w±’ ■ Mdi. lrom M. Wmm.k work on &gt; family of Saline were calling on
Mr. and Mrs Keel Tobias and
SuuU of Or, .nd Mn. H. S. Wedel. ।
cltaax
u beck In old neighbors in this totality Sun­
children and his father, W. O. To­
“
■
Mrs. Emma Slsson went to Orand : school. Another of our good women day.
bias. attended a shower at Ed Trav­
The Dorcas Society of North er's in honor of their daughter,
Rapids the fore part of last week has been laid to rest. Mrs. Anna
for a visit with her son. Winfield, Geiger, after a long, patient Illness, Maple Grove will hold an all day Dorothea, Sunday.
meeting Thursday. October 8. al the
and family and this week to visiting
The Cedar Creek Cemetery Circle
at the Chas. Deming home near
will meet al the home of Mr. and
NORTHWEST THORNAPPLE.
Rhoades.
Remus.
Jerry Lentz of Battle Creek is Mrs. Will Carl October 14 for an
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rau enter­
At the meeting of the P. T. A.
afternoon
meeting.
slaying with his aunt, Mrs. Keith
held at the schoolhouse last week tained relatives from Jackson Sun­
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias and
Norton, for a few days.
Thursday evening the following of­ day.
Mrs. Mildred Bird, who has been daughter. Marian, of Kalamazoo
ficers were elected for the year:
Mr. and Mrs. Lorerr Gardner and : ill at lhe home of her parents. Mr. spent Sunday with his parents. Mr.
Mrs. Arthur Moore. Pres.; Mrs. Wm. »n J«bk Mr .nd Mr« WmCard- j
u
Mishler, parent vice-president; Mrs. nkk ot CoMonU »e«
Sundo, !d aU, „ o. up . t-n ot U&gt;.
Gordon Usbome. teacher vice-pres­ guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Keagle.; tlme
BARBERS CORNERS.
ident. and Mrs. Robert Hunter sec­ Mr. and Mrs. Alger Ward and son ; v&lt;r
Mrs Vincent Norton and
Guests of Mrs. Jerry Foley Sun­
of Clarksville were afternoon call- j M“r ™
retary-treasurer.
day were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huver of
Mrs. Earl Jack of Detroit, Mrs. erl_
a . ,
k.
•. . ,
. | at Wall lake Tueaday to visit their Lansing ana Wayne Bump of Has­
Edgar Cheney and daughter. Don- ! . T?.e
C 'ibuW?i&lt;C*ltZ'It^n1Sd brother. Judge Wm. W. Potter, and
tings.
na, of Howell, were Monday and by Mrs. George Schrbeder of Cale- fanillv
Mr. and Mrs. Shroyer visited Uietr
'
--Monday night guests of their moth­ donla Friday with a fine attend-1
daughter. Mrs. Bert Palmer, of Mid­
er. Mrs. H. W. Gosch.
ance. The ladles finished tying a
PLEASANT HILL.
dleville. Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sisson and quilt for Miss Freeman and helped
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Carter
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stowell of
daughter Roberta returned Friday quilt on one for Mrs. Schroeder.
spent Bunday with Mrs. Mary Kerr NewarJh-QMo. are visiting Mr. and
evening from Pairmount.
Ind.,
Congatulations .to our neighbors. and daughter. Nettle, al Lowell.
Mrs. Dudley Kennedy.
*
where they spent nine weeks with Mr. and Mrs. George KrauL who
Mr. and Mrs. John Murphy of
The Misses Nora. Evelyn and
Mrs. Sisson's parents. Mr. and Mrs. were married In Grand Rapids Grand Rapids spent Sunday with
Minnie Matthews and Mrs. Etta
R. B. Carter.
Thursday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bennett.
Bump were dinner guests at Nay
Miss Donna Moore of Jackson
We extend our sympathy to Mr.
Mrs. Addie Lewis is having a new
spent the week end here with her________________________
and Mrs. Harold Stimson_________
of Grand chimney built and other repairs be­ Bump's in Hastings Sunday honor­
ing Mrs. Etta BUmp's and Miss El­
parents. Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Moore. I Rapids (formerly residents here) In ing mode.
len Bump’s birthdays.
We understand the Goodenougn the loss of their daughter. Betti1
Several members of lhe Irving
Dr. and Mrs. Lester Brumm and
family, who came here some time Lou. Funeral services were held Gorden club attended lhe farewell
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Munion of
ago from Hastings and purchased Monday Ln Grand Rapids.
party for Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Carter Woodland were callers at John
the Dipp house on cherry St., have J Mrs. HutUe Carpenter U caring Sunday. We are very sorry to lose
relumed to Hostings to live again.; for Mrs. Dora Kepkey, who has these good people from Uie neigh­ Weaver's. Sunday.
Dr. B J. Amerman of Fremont
Last Friday evening at the Mo- . been very sick the past week, but borhood but wish them happiness
sonic Temple a reception occurred is on lhe gain. She had callers and success in lheir new home at
for the teachers of Freeport High from Hastings. Grand Rapids. Bow­ Grand Rapids, where their son. thews and Mrs. Clara Larnoreaux,
who has been visiting there for a
school and Rev. Mtas Fem Wheeler.1 ens Mills and Leighton lost week.
Wendell, is working.
.
The gathering was sponsored by the
We all enjoyed Mra. Wltoon's oook- . Clifton Campbell completed hla week, returned to Premont with
Mm on Monday.
•
P. T. A., the Woman's Club and Ing demonstration last Thursday
the L. A. S. A very pleasant eve- and some that were lucky enjoyed
nlng and One program were enjoyed the eats. Mrs. Russell Beeler ot
LENT CORNERS.
by a good sized crowd.
j Middleville drew the lamp given
Mr. and Mrs. George comfort. Jr.,
Revival services are continuing at away by lhe Consumers Power Co. of Kalamazoo spent Sunday with
tiie U B. church this week with I Two weeks from Sunday. Oct. 11. her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marc
Rev. Griffen of Woodland os speak- is Rally Day at the M. E. Sunday Hammond.
er. Mrs. Griffen is bringing real I school. Come and help us make it
Rollins Hall of Kalamazoo called
Bible messages and the interest and a success.
on his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jay
attendance are increasing. Rev. '
***
Hall. Sunday.
I Batdorf invites Everyone lo the
MORGAN.
Miss Velma Brouard. who has
Harry Whitman and daughter. been assisting Mrs. John Oswald,
services.
A Rally Day program, directed by Phyllis, and Mr. Benard of Battle returned to her home last week.
Mrs. H. 3. Wedel, was held at the Creek were Sunday guests of Mrs.
Mbs Dorothy Butler of Kalama­
ONE WAY____ $ .75
M. E. church Sunday morning. Pro­ Nellie Wolf.
zoo is visiting her mother. Mrs.
SHOPPERS'
motion certificates were presented
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith and Melvin Crum.
and newly elected Sunday school of­ daughter. Helen, of Ionia and Mrs.
Virgil Britton of Kalamazoo spent
ROUNDTRIP, $1.00
ficers were Installed. We will give Agnes Reeling of Cadillac visited the week end with Mr. and Mrs.
SIXTY-DAY
Glcnard Earl and Bob Knight Sun- Clare Thomas.
the names next week.
&lt;’*n!
c- D Baxter has been very ill| day.
ROUNDTRIP, $1.35
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Moore and
i.iaiu I with a heart ailment the past two
Lrtha Adkins spent the week end children. Mr. and Mrs. George
weeks but is some belter at present, at Jackson with Mr. and Mrs. By- Moshler. Mr. and Mrs. Elton Mush­
। The Re(] ftnd Whlle store received I ron Clark.
ier and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Britton,
„„ ih» 1 a fresh coal ot red paint Monday. ' Mr. and Mrs. B. Rowlader spent all of Kalamazoo, spent Sunday at
ONE WAY____ &gt;1.00
the Clare Thomas home.
SHOPPERS*
Emanuel Tombs and daughter.
Beverly of Richland spent Sunday
ROUNDTRIP, $1.25
with Joe Tombs.
**•*•
*'

NEW
BUS FARES

J

• EFFECTIVE OCT. 1ST
NEW LOW FARES to Moiy Citi«

Bus Depot

Trio Cafe

“MY SKIN WAS FULL OF
PIMPLES AND BLEMISHES”

Phone 2137

Says Verna Schlepp: "Since using
Adlerlka the pimples urc gone. My
skin to smooth and glows with
health." Adlerlka washes BOTH
j bowels, rids you of poisons that
' cause a bad complexion. B. A. Lyj Barker.—Adv.

TOILET GOODS
60c Klenzo Cocoznut Oil
Shampoo 2 for file
75c Lavender Bath
Salts 2 for 76c
35c Jaunine Beauty
Creami 2 for 36c
60c M&gt;31 Shaving Cream

60c Iluol Skin Lotion
25c Stag Powder for Men
2 for 26c

KLENZO
ANTISEPTIC

X2-50c
A

A

Brewers' Yeast

21« 80c
35c Stag Brushless
Shaving Cr. 2 for 36c
10c Bouquet Ramee
Toilet Soap 2 for 11c

Scalp Tonic 2 for 76c
60c Mill Dental
Paale 2 fur 51C

ORDERLIES

^T2-51C

at

LOW BUS
FARES to

KALAMAZOO

TO LANSING

Pound Liggett's Assorted Chocolates

1

81c

75c Rexall Theatrical Cold Cream

2

far

76c

39c Rexall mm »r «osn..,o Tooth Paste

2

far

40c

25c Rexall Sharing Cream

2

far

26c

$1 Symbol w.t« urn. - r„i- sm,.

2

50c Rexillana Cough Syrup

2 Hr

$1 Melo Malt wm coo uvt« on

2 br $1.01

$1 Puretest Cod Liver Oil Tablets

110’*

$1.01
51c

- 60c Laxative Salt, 7 oza.
25c Cold Tablets Spec.. 30'a
60c Cherry Bark Cough Syr.
25f Corn Solvent

PURETEST PRODUCTS

26&lt;

2 « $1.01

19c Klenzo Facial Tissues

2 l«

2Oc

25c Firstaid Readymade Bandage

2

26c

50c Cascade Pound Paper or Envelopes

2

51c

Tastes Better

... is Better I

ACTION for
HEADACHES,
COLDS...

"QUINS"

a&gt;aaor
MR

Hu’i&amp;tssr
COD LIVER OIL

of Magnesia

r«,2'-4ic

JT^-SOc

£5c Soda M int Tablets, 140'12 for 26c
20c Spirit! Camphor. 1-ox. 2 for 21c

6c Wafer Roils
2 for 6c
Vincent's Assorted Chocs., 1-Ib. 2 for 61c
Cadet Wrapped Caramels, 1-lb. 2 for 86c
Fenway Chocolats-covered Cherries.
%
.
1-lb. 2 for 61c
Milk Chocolate BanU-lb.
2 for 20c
Horton's ChocolateR*r, fc-lb. 2 for 11c
Assorted Chocolate Ban
2 for 8c

10-4

I offer the following property:—

AT REGULAR PRICE
with

HORSES.
Bay mare, 15 yrs. old. good worker,
barrel mare. 11 yrs. old, in fool.
Good 5 months old colt.

COWS

Guernsey and Holstein cow. 6 yrs. old.
fresh 6 weeks.
a
Guernsey and Holstein cow. 2 yrs. old,
fresh.
SHEEP.
13 head of grade Shropshire!.
CHICKENS.
^1 young pullets. Barred Rocks and
White Wyandotte*.
16 yearling hens.
HAY. STRAW AND FERTILIZER.
9 tons clover and timothy hay. _
4 tons bright straw.
About 150 lbs. of fertiliser.

TOOLS. ETC.
Champion binder. 6-ft. cut.
Grain drill.

Champion mower. 5-H. cut.
John Deere sulky plow.
P &amp; O walking plow.
3-sec. spring tooth harrow.
Melotte cream separator.
Spike tooth harrow. 5*tooth cultivator.
Two-horse riding cultivator.
Farm truck and rack.
Buzx rig with 3-horse Int. engine.
Old wagon and dump boards.
10-ft. dump rake.
Planet jr. garden drill.
2 good cylinder pumps. Land roller.
5 gals, harness oil. &lt;00 ft. 1-in. pipe.
, Large stock tank. Heater tank.
3 rolls of asphalt paper.
1 3-4 H. F. engine. Ford motor.
100 ft. hay rope and harpoon fork.
Famous Heatrola heater, good as new.
Kitchen range. Set platform scales.
12-qt. cold pack canner.
10 rods wire fence. Ctaam freezer.
Caulron kettle. Forks, shovels and hoes.
And numerous small tools and other ar­
ticles.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

SALE DATES, OCTOBER 14, 15, 16, 17

CARVEtH &amp; STEBBINS
Goods Delivered

Rapid Transit

TOP PERFORMANCE

HARNESS.
.
Good double harness, 1 3-4 inch, new.

CANDY

'The Rexall Store'

PEOPLES

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13
Sale to Comltnence at 1:00 o’clock.

I. 2
2 r«
&lt;« 16c 2 2 r«

$1 Puretest Halibut liter Oil Capsules

REXALL REMEDIES

Having decided to quit farming, I will dispose of my personal property at
public auction at my farm, located 1 1*2 miles south of Freeport or 7 miles north
and 3-4 mile west of Hastings, on

SIXTY-DAY
ROUNDTRIP, $1.80

2 hr $1.01

10c un Jonteel Toilet Goods

Puretest Epsom Salt

UCTION SALE!

COATS GROVE.
The D. G. T. O. club meeting is
held this week Wednesday afternoon
with Mrs. Ola Kimble. Margaret
Coats as leader.
On Thursday of thia week lhe L.
A S- wlU serve a chicken supper at
the church basement.

Phone 2131

AVE with SAFETY»ai your^exqgg DRUG STORE

NOTHING

REMOVED

UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

D. W. DODGE, Prop

and

Sunoco
MERCURY MADE

MOTOR OIL
They are made in only ONE
Quality and sell al ONE price!

NO SECOND GRADE
NO THIRD GRADE

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER

mended the
invention at

m of Stroh,
e Thompson

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

ebvt. project

Albion were

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1936'

14 PAGES

THE SLEEPING BEAUTY” COMES TO HASTINGS

Democratic Meeting Had to
Be Held at Parker
.
House Friday

IT MUD HUE

lr. and Mrs.

CHILDREN B PLAYGROUND
BEING DEVELOPED ON
ITS SHORES

Meyers and
•rt .Hnilthwn
1. visited Mr.
Saturday.
Phillip* and
Phillips vis­

Jupiter Pluvlus was not on hli
good behavior Friday when Prentiss
for United

M- Brown, candidate

billed to speak from the courthouse
steps, but that • was Impossible.
About 50 political friends assembled
in the offices of the Parker House
and listened to a very earnest ad-

Smith, near

Recreational Resorts For
Adults Planned for
Gun Lake

daughter,

About two miles north of Oun
lake is Mud lake.
The govern­
ment is constructing a 30 acre play­
ground for undetprlvliegad chil­
dren on Its shores. It Is planned to
have the entire project completed
before January 1. A visit to the
points where government work Is
under way will show a considerable
number of foundations already
made and a lot of lumber already
on the ground ready for building
operations.
The shore of this lake where the
camp is located is not suitable for
bathing, but that defect will be
easily remedied. While the con­
struction crews are busy with tnelr
work, other mett are at wotk re­
moving the brush, logs and dead
trees for a considerable distance
back from the lake shore. Boon they
will be making the bathing beaches
which will not be difficult, as there
is plenty of sand in the vicinity
which will be spread along the
«s and In the water for a conrable distance -from the shore
The top layel of muck will be

Jtery Circle
14 for an
Tobias and
Kalamazoo
parents, Mr.

Foley Sun­
toy Huver of
mp of Has-

visited their
tner, of MidStowell of
Ing Mr. and
Evelyn

and

Brumm and
Munlon of
of Fremont

Lamoreaux.
there for a
emont with

US
ZOO
-$ .75
$1.00
$1.35

ING
.$1.00
$1.25

$1.80

ES
10-1

ICE

CE

.

TV. pri&gt;gram la being somewhat
retarded by the difficulty of getting
skilled Ynan for the carpenter and
mason work. As winter draws near­
er it is believed more skilled work­
men will be available, and then the
project will be pushed more rapidly.
working at the Mud lake project.
The men employed axe certified to
the national park service by the
emergency relief commissions of
Barry. Calhoun and Kalamazoo
counties, the necessary cash for it
coming through the U. 8. depart­
ment of the Interior at Washing-

Preaent plans as outlined by
Henry I. Davies, project manager,
call for the establishment of other
camps at Deep lake, about eight
miles south of Middleville, at Long
lake, north of oun lake, and on the
northern peninsula of Gun lake.
C. V. Saunders, superintendent of
field construction, estimated that it
would take two years to complete
all the work laid out Ip Um Yankee
Springs project. The camps at
Mud. Deep and Long lakes are de­
signed for children, while the plans
for the Gun lake peninsula call
for the establishment of recreation­
al facilities for adults.
In order to increase the useful­
ness of the camp, the engineers
have laid the Mud lake project out
in four units of six cabins each.
This will make it possible for the
park managstnent to issue permits

HAROLD E. YODER.

fl

the three matinees and the evening
performance of the Hastings Civic
Players* children’s play. "The Sleep­
ing Beauty.” indicates full houses
for each showing. The cast is re­
hearsing every night tills week and
all stage properties are ready.
Among the properties is a cradle
used In the prologue that is almost
one hundred years old. H was pur­
chased in Boston and belongs to
the family of Mrs. L. E. Barnett.
The spinning wheel in the second
act is equally as old and was loaned

RESULTS WOULD
BEDEPLORIBLE
VOTXRS SHOULD DRFRAT
TWO AMBNDMNNTS

~ Innovkmbkr

MEAN REDUCTION

voter should oppose, are these: The
first would hereafter exempt all real

purposes. What that would do to the
schools In rural districts as wall as
in cities and villages can well be
Imagined, a further attack is made
on state aid to the public schools
by another amendment which pro-

Michigan schools; and it has given
Ing obtained from the tales tax.
Exempting food products would take,
it Is estimated, from twelve to fif­
teen million dollars of the sales tax,
receipts. That would mean a aeriou-i reduction in state aid to schools
and relief.
U Barry county had to pay an
the money spent here for relief work
Instead of getting the major part of

would know what it means. If the
state had to cut to a very small
the public schools, the plight
e schools can ven be Imagined.

ice!
DE

and half mile south of Hickory
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS.
Corners, with Harold Newkirk as
auctioneer and the Augusta State pervisors began their October Mu­
Bank as clerk. Included In the list ston Monday morning. It will be up
are 3 horses. |7 head of cattle, to them to apportion the tans and
quantity of hay and feed, lot of
farm tools, etc. see the adv. on an­
other page for full particulars.

OCTOBER MEETING OF

ber of the Barry county poor com­

mission. t

cnurcn. in

arayria.

eluded—Hobtelns and
also is head young call
particulars.

stories run through the action of
the play and there is* also good
comedy in the roles of live good
King Rex. Doctor Moustaahe and
Magnus, the man-of-all-work about
the palace.
Hugo Walton. Infant son of Dr. and
Seals for the Tuesday evening perMrs. D. D. Walton, will assume the
role of -female impersonator" and Newntand. Tickets tor the mati­
will make his entrance in* the pro­ nees are at a premium. Just this
logue as the infant princess, re­ week &lt; requisition of 200 tickets
clining in his royal robes on the coming In from Middleville. The
royal cushion.
Civic Players’ children’s play is be­
The story of "Bleeping Beauty" coming an ■ institution Ln Barn1
will be equally Interesting to chil­ county and la looked forward to all
dren and adults. Two distinct love year by the children of the county.

Sen. Vandenberg To

Give Radio Address
Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg'Is
scheduled to broadcast over station
WJR. Detroit. Saturday eventag at
8:30 o’clock. This radio address
promises to be especially enlighten­
ing to all who ore interested in
present political issues. Be sure to
hear him Saturday evening.

REV. J. A. McNULTY TO
LEAVE HASTINGS

Qoei to DowafUo, Three
November 1
The Rev. J. A. McNulty, pastor of
the Emmanuel Episcopal church for
Ute past five years, lias accepted a
call to Bl. Paul’s Episcopal church
at Dowagiac. He will also have the
mission charges of Trinity church
al Three Rivers and St. Mark's
assisted by lay readers in all three
places.
—'
Fr. McNulty'reslgnJJ his church
here Bunday afternoon at .a spe­
cial meeting of the vestry and re­
quested relief from hla duties No­
vember 1. It Is expected that the
All Saints' Day services on Sunday.
November I. when a large confirma­
tion class Is being presented, will be
Fr. McNulty's last service In Has­
tings.
Members of Emmanuel pariah are

City taxpayers have made the
bast record in meeting tltelr obliga­
tions to the city this year of any
recent year. The total levy made
was 133,000, and of that sum only
•3400, or a little less than eight per
cent, remains upald. Last year the
record was far better than the year
before, but the unpaid balance this he has endeared himself to them
during his stay here by his untiring
and faithful service to the parish.
They are glad, however, to have

MURPHY WILL SPEAK
AT H. S. AUDITORIUM

service and wish him every success
in his work.
Fr. McNulty took his college work
Honorable Frank Murphy of De- at Columbia University and received
his bachelor’s degree at General
Theological seminary, New York
City. He came to Hsfttogs to April.
dty next Monday night at 1931. from Alamosa.’colo. He is a
member of both the Rotary and
over the Michigan net- Commercial clubs and has been ac­
tive in civic affairs during his five

RAIN INTERFERED
WITH FIELD TRIALS
Entries in Variom (nines
Exceeded Those of the
Previous Years

x.

&gt;

for tourists" should be permitted to
perform that service. There ought
to be rigid rules for sanitation In
all such places that would make
them safe for tourists.
clatlons of this state appreciate the

regulations of tourist camps and
cabins and tourist rooming places
and places furnishing meals to
tourists. such as would give them
every assurance In Michigan that
tourist camps, cabins, rooming
places and the serving of meals
would be conducted In a manner
though the weather was vary rainy, that would make them sanitary—
the field trials were run between safe for the tourist and his family.
showers and all seemed satisfied
We hope the stale department of
with the results.
In the derby list there were 32 essary authority for inspection of
starters in the 13 inch class; 14 all such places, and that none be
starters in the 13 Inch all age dogs permitted to operate without a
state license.
bitches class; 19 starters In the 15
inch derby; 8 starters in the 15 posing state licensing of all tourist
inch all age bitches class, and 16 rooms, parks, camps and cabins;
startersxln the 15 inch all aged dogs strict registration of guests In
division. —‘
lodging places and more strict san­
Following are the winners in the itary and health standards was bevarious classes:
*
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
Thirteen loch derby. 1. Bishop’s
Bugler, owned by Beryl Bishop. FREIGHT CAB TIPS
Lansing; 2, Cataract Speed. Wm
*
OVER ON WAREROUSE.
Lynch. Detroit: 3, Babe’s Queen.
tut Thursday evening as work­
Clyde Young, Bau Claire; 4. Gon- men were unloading a freight car

Wolverine Beagle Club held Its
sixteenth annual field trials and
bench show here In Hastings, with
headquarters at the Parker House.
The number of entries in all classes

Niles; 5. Masterly Spanky.
Kopp. Johnson Creek, Wls.

E.

owned by Dr. accoiintable reason tipped over,
crashing into the comer of the
Rob Roy 4lh, Guy Lewis. In­
dianapolis, Ind.; 3. Riverside Mike. one and made quite a hole in the
Claud Robbins. Indianapolis, Ind.; building.
4. Bishop’s Bugler. Beryl Bishop,
Lansing; Reserve. Cataract Speed.
Wm. Lynch, Detroit
September was an unusually good
Thirteen inch A. A. bitches: 1, month for new Insurance • for the
Hard Time Little Susie, owned by Michigan Mutual Windstorm Insur­
George Hali. Detroit; 2. Waco Lady. ance Company of this city. During
Budd Burns, Detroit; 3. shawanoo that month the agents added M,Ruby. Mack Bctdmmell, Detroit; 4. 535456 to the insurance in’ force.
Sylvan Onyx, L F. Armstrong, Mus­ This large sum together with the
kegon; Reserve. Masterly Jewel. A. larger additions mads during the
sunimer months will bring the total
J. Whitcomb, Milwaukee Wi*.
Fifteen Inch derby: 1. shawanoo insurance In force well toward the
coveted •400,000,000 total. A &gt;400,Forest, Ontario; . 2. King, John 000,000 company in a city like Has­
tings U something to think about.
(Continued on page 3. Bee. 1)
This large sum has been built up
painstakingly by the good manageMRS. F. ANDRUS IN

CHARGE OF CONTEST
Donationi of WoRey and Ma­
terials Asked for Girls’
Dresses

BASSET HOUND TRIALS
HERE NEXT WEI

Fir«t Sanctioned Bunt to Be
Held at the H. Batea

first
ea. with officers as follows: Pm.,
William Frits, Dearborn. E. N- Salts.

Nattke, Battle Creek, announce
their First Sanction AKC
Field
Trial for Bas&amp;et hounds to be held

the first one ever held in the United
t^7ure will be two stakes run at
this field trial—the derby. Saturday
afternoon, and the all-ags stake,
which will start immediately after
the derby is completed. Prizes will
be offered and rosettes awarded the
four winners in the ail-age stakes.
The judges will be H. P. Consett.
Detroit, and Al R F. Steinke. Ann
Arbor. Club headquarters win be
at the Parker House. The dogs will
be kenneled at Um fair grounds. It
has been announced that the trials
will be on the Homer Bates farm
In Irving township.
There will be a banquet in. the
dining room of the Parker House

ANNUAL GAME DINNER
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29

Saturday eve.

Orch. New
orgat we’ll

. The time is rapidly app
for the fiistjTMcting of the
hood. whloJi will be held &lt;
day evening, October 2S Til
Detroit, representing tbs
States department of jusll
which department the
operate. Mr. RetaMw U

cities, especially
and the bank robbers.

later. It will

fortunate to have the
of getting first-hand

“If you have not purchased
Brotherhood season ticket, cfc

The Barry County Rod and Gun
Club will have their fall game din­
ner Thursday evening, October 29,
at Community hall. To accommo­
date the eight hundred and fifty
members of the club tickets for
them will be on sale until October
22. If. at that time, there Is room Keeler. Frank Kelley.
for the genera) public, they then
may procure tickets for the dinner.
Tickets may be obtained from Clif­
ford Gardner at Middleville. Ches­ Inster Banghart, at Delton. W. A. Ea­
ton al the National Bank and Ho­
mer Smith at the Coffee Shop In
Hastings.
Arrangements for the dinner and
program have not been completed.
Kim Sigler will be toastmaster and
It Is hoped to have a speaker from
the state department of conserva­
tion. The complete reogram will be day School gathering
given next week. George H. Leon­ afternoon and cvanli
ard is general chairman of the dlneur interesting friend.
Cation of Lansing, (yc

S. S. Convention

Tuesday,

K. .OF P. STAG SUPPER.
Members of the KnlghLs of Pyth­
ias lodge will have a stag pot luck
supper Monday evening. October 19,
over Oates Hardware,
dishea will be furnished

sandwiches-and one other dish. A
social time will follow the supper.

will

EVANGELISTIC SERVICES.
The Pilgrim Holiness Tabernacle
13 to hold a series of revival meet­
ings beginning Sunday. Oct. 35. The
Rev. C. A. Hoos of Sault Bte. Marie.

will be the evangelist. Rev. C. A
Hoos and family will visit his par-

AN UNUSUALLY
NUMBS! *0

during thl&lt; time.

DON TAFFEE COMPLETES
FURNITURE DISPLAY ROOM.

A Total of $0 On
Fnaoat T«

Don Toffee has completed remod­
Ooart
elling the building on his premises
at &gt;03 N. Broadway which ha win
Wednesday for
use as headquarters and display

Darrel Jones,

Passing of Amendments 3
And 4 Would Spell Calamity

Jack W. O’Connor,
Democratic Candidate
County Clerk.

Warren Roush
Sapper Squad for
First Mo«Ufi&lt;

furniture business.
by looking after the welfare and in­
terests of the policy holders. That portunities tn his own home town
accounts for the Windstorm Oo-’s
town.

that office, except when clerking
radios and for Circuit court and Board of Bu- would be wurthUae

Royal and Estel ptajtag^ in the
Stanton riiy band •KljQHred io
Um high school sraMsirt Bet W
They play a variety of bfass’lnstrumenta.
JIGG8 DINNE R.
F. T- A- FAIR.
Emmanuel parish house Thurs­
Mr. Bwem U not a stranger to
^Woodland school. Friday, oct 11. day. Oct 15. I JO to 7:00. 35 cents. fiToeiZS’SuStMfi mofSTof
Democratic candidate
.Register of Deeds.

TO TELL ABDI
WONDEI

Tickets Now on Sale for
Members of Barry County
Rod and Gun Club

May We
Introduce-

BARN DANCt
O1VR HIM A RAISE
Saturday night. Oct. |7. Mm vet­
Respectfully,
erans of Foreign Wars are raonior.
Ear! R. Boyes,

OF TH1
Mil

who desire to attend should register
at the Parker House not later than
noon. There will be suitable speak­
ers and a gentleman front the Con­
servation department in Lansing

Mrs. prank Andrus has been ap­
pointed chairman of the Sonia
Annual meeting of Barry County Claus dressmaking contest spon­
R. L. O. A. and Auxiliary will be sored by the Hastings Commercial
held at American Legion hall. Has­ Club, according to an announcetings, Saturday, evening, Oct. 17.
Supper at 6:30 served by Legion tary. Warren Carter will have
Auxiliary. All Postal workers are charge of the display and Mrs. W.
urged to attend.—8acy.
If You Would Koop Local Control of
R. Cook and Winn Green are the
publicity committee.
Schools, Twpc., Cities, Than Vote NO
CHURCH SUPPER.
The members of the staff of the
Served - by Missionary Union
Barry County Health Unit of the
Dr. C- A. Crawford of the state aid given by the state to public
CENTRAL F. T.
Methodist church, Friday, Oct.
W. K. Kellogg Foundation will as­ department of public Instruction, schools, and in equal amount tak
tak-­
5 to 7 o’clock. 35o-Adv.
sist as they did last year, assigning
held this evening, October 15, at
was the speaker at the Hastings en from the state’s contribution to
and distributing
the garments
• ■
commercial club meeting Tuesday welfare work in the counties.
Asked by someone in his audience
noon. Dr. Crawford’s theme was
will be a children's program and
advantage. The health counsellors
Amendments 3 and 4. which will
refreshments served to the play­
are familiar with conditions In their
room.
districts and twill be of great as­ handed to voters on November 5. In not have positive knowledge, but in
sistance to the committee.
•
his judgment, and It was generally
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
Donations of material or money
of the indescribable confusion in
The voters of Barry county, by
for materials will be gratefully re­ which the governmental affairs of know, that it was the brewers of
their continued support during a
ceived as there are many Individuals townships, villages, cities, schools, this state who are anxious to avoid
long period of time, have educated
and church
organizations that
me In the efficient handling of the Rev. and Mrs. Blucher B. Bwem. would like to enter the contest but school districts as well as the state
itself will be plunged if these two to have beer classed as a "food.”
Barry County Records.' FOR NO
cannot afford to furnish the ma­
carried. and thus not subject to Um sales
ONE WOULD ARGUE THAT A Hastings from Stanton and live at terials. Thes: donations may be amendments shall be
Amendment No. 4 would abolish all
MAN WITH TWELVE YEARS’ EXAmendment No. 4 would cause
taxation of property in this state.
Is
in
charge
of
the
five
churches
of
PERIENCK ON ANY JOB WAS
merclal Club office and for a small
NOT MORE EFFICIENT THAN A the Hastings Methodist circuit. amount of money some child will
NEW MAN. NO MATTER HOW They have a family of six children, be made happy by the gift of a in that event, the financial support
of Michigan schools will be out in school district, township, village,
FINE A MAN HE MIGHT BE. And Bernard. 19. and Royal, 17, working
two, so that we would be having cities and slate, it is claimed that
If the voters are voting as they would at Stanton at the present time;
four or five months of school in­
hire a man in’their private buxi- AUoe, 15; Mildred, M; Estel. 11. and
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
stead of nine. He pointed out that boosting it for purely selfish purnaM. then I apply for the Job ex­ Celestine. 4.
Rev. Sworn received hte Bachelor for County Clerk, and believe hi until some way of raMbw money
actly as I wouM for a job in pri­
other
than by properly tax could, be
of
Arts
degree
at
Albion
college
vate Industry. I can and will con­
giving constant service in that of­
tinue to give efficient service If you where he also obtained his Bachelor fice. If elected It will be my alm to provided, cities would ba without
will hire ma again. Private Industry of Music degree. Mr. Swem s hobby give personal tcrvice to all those police protection, fire protection.

ANNUAL MEETING.

ent time the state has apportioned
wall toward twelve millions of dol-

Because of sickness. Frank and voted down emphatically.
Clara Messenger wiU have an aui-

Mic Daaciine

ta the Civic Players by the Board of
Education from its well-equipped
museum.
For the first time on the local

OF SCHOOL MONEY LESS THAN EIGHT PER
CENT REMAINS UNPAID
State Funds for Relief Work
in Counties Total About
Of the dtp’s $83,000 Tax
Levy All But $2,600
$0,000,000
Has Been Paid

FRANK AND CLARA
MESSENGER

Harold Belcher la to be auctioneer

Four Recommendations at
Association Meeting Held
in Grand Rapids

CLUB HERE

Hastings Civic Players cast which will present "The Sleeping Beauty.” tn Central Auditorium, Monday
afternoon at 3:11, and Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons at 3:15 o’clock and Tuesday evening at 7:15.

NE

MR8. LULA M. LATTA-

THERE IS NEED FOR
REGULATION OF CAMPS

FIELD Hffl
SPECHLTYSHOW

8MITB-BENNETT.
Having rented «, small place,
Smith and Bennslt have decided to
dispose qf their joint personal
. properly so will liave air auction
sale at ths prank Bennett farm, a
mile west and a half mile south of
Green's comers at Nashville. Henry
Flannery will cry the’ sale and C.
’ R- Shaw will clerk, included in this
list are two horses, a fine lot of
cattle—six cows and 12 head young
cattle—hogs and poultry, hay and
grain and aome’good farm tools and
household goods. If you are to the
market for some cattle, you wil]
want to attend this sale which is
advertised on another pare of the
Banner.
■

MICHIGAN OFFERS FINE
VACATION POSBIBILITIES TO TOURISTS

ent and convincing speaker—a man
who .has the highest reputation In
The people of Michigan are be­
his home town and the parts of the coming aware of the large and
state where he Is well known. All1 growing Importance of the state’s
who heard him were pleased with, resort business.
Lost year over
the spirit of fairness and good I S300.000000 in cash was spent in
Judgment he
by rwv.
resorters,
of
— evidenced in making
———• Michigan vj
Hl*. outride u*
his
address,
a
few
republics""
—
■
—
•
-*
—
•—■— It was
—
a few republicans were , automobile manufacturing.
present, but they were not con- I this state’s largest industry. And it
that
___ .It I___■_______ a- a__ ._____
- ..
that Mr. Brown thinks it la.
(worth cultivating.
Among the things necessary to do
to Insure an increase to Michigan's
resort business is to assure outsid­
ers who drive into this state to
spend their vacations that rooming
houses and cabins shall be elean
and sanitary, and that those which
pretend to furnish drinking water
meals to tourists shall supply
A FINE ATTENDANCE AT and
them with food and drink free from
WOLVERINE BEAGLE , diseate producing germs. Not every
one who puts out a sign "rooms

be interested In defeating two constltuUonal amendments which will
appear on the November amend­
ment ballot. If these two amend­
ments should carry, it will cut the
revenue of the schools of this state
Ins will be made available to pub­ by MOM0400. a good share of which
lic.and private agencies that desire the state pays for the'support of the
to finance vacation periods for un­ schools tn local school districts M
the present time. This would mean,
derprivileged children.
in all probability, for most of the
schools of the state that they could
be kept open for but five months in­
Three Auction Sales stead of nine months; and that
would be a calamity.

ed an auction sale adv. for Harold
E- Yoder, who will have a sale at
bls place, a mile north of Freeport
on,county road 601. Mr. Yoder has
a fine lot of horses, cattle, hogs,
sheep, farm tools, etc. You eon find
■the complete list in last week's
Banner. This la a large sale and
merits a good attendance and
Spirited bidding.

»H5W
RESORT BUSINESS

ticket. amr

RELIEF ROLLS SUPPLY
MEN FOR THE WORK

Tobias and

RAIN INTERFERES
WITH SPEECHES

Hon. as

drawn for Um pi
previous extra doae
mentioned last ww

DEMOCRATS^
The following D

Ing will
hall.
.
Thursday. Oct. ■

tings with

Will

�THg HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, UM

of Carvelh &amp; Stebbln*.

CELEBRATION

^SALE

To Celebrate the Grand Opening of Our Food Center In Nashville We
At Both Stores

Offer To You These EKtraordinary Values

NASHVILLE and HASTINGS
&lt;
&lt;
&lt;
&lt;
&lt;
&lt;

►
&gt;
►
►
►
►

Soda
Crackers

SUGAR
10 Lbs. 49c

2 Lb. Box
&gt;

7c

•

|10 Lb. Limit

Kellogg's Corn Flakes
Post Toasties
Kellogg’s All Bran

Pancake Flour

Jack Frost 4x Sugar

i

Ivory Soap

35c

Brands

SALMON
T1- Cln

I I

1^1 L^J
All lOc Tobacco

3 &lt;« 25c

All 15c Tobacco

2 &lt;« 25c

Muller’s Milk

d

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
Dry Onions

Bananas
Head Lettuce

Applet
Sweet Potatoes

GiaatPkga.

5

28c

19c

2

Rosedale Salmon -

17c

Peas, 1st Row

lOc

Pineapple

Bantam

u,..fT.,Mu.d

2 &lt;- 25c
4 Lb. 25c

i.&lt;b |Oc
• Lb..

2

i-

Lb.

HUnTERS STRAPPERS
X

•

/

|7C

Blit* Coffee

Lb. 25c

Del Monte Coffee

Lb. 27c

/ F00TWE*R

f
'

COLD,

WET

FEET

THE FAMILY"
IF YOU WEAR THESE!

Man's "First Quality" HIP BOOTS

Tough!

1

Only the finest

II

Pound

5 Lb. Box

I

materials go into

these fresh, live
gum boots.

Priced Only

2 u- 25c |

Rib Boiling Beef

Butter

2

ls

I3c

lu-

27c

ls

35c

MLS.ns. 19c

HAMBURG

2 LU. 25c |

NASHVILLE

Detroit
Dr. Byington I* weU-knovn by
ty. He was bora and grew to young
manhood in the township of Barry
near HldRory corners. He first prac­
ticed hb profession tn Charlotte
before bb appointment to the Kel­
logg Foundation staff, and was

staff. Hl* new appointment be­
comes effective Nov. 4.
Dr. Byinton’s duties in Detroit
with the Foundation. He will carry
out the same kind of a child-health
program as that sponsored by the
Foundation In the rural districts of
the seven counties in which the
Foundation operates. Dr. Byington
has been outstandingly successful
in securing the cooperation of the
doctors in all seven counties in
carrying on health work with pu­
pils of the rural, village and city
school*. It will be hb business as we
understand It tn his new work to
get in touch and keep In touch with
the medical profession of Detroit
and secure their cooperation in
health work in and through the
schools. He has the tact and ability

Dr. Byington's successor tn the
Foundation staff has not yet been
announced. The Banner Joins the
Dr's.- tnany friends in wishing him
every success in his new position,
which la a fine promotion fbr him.

AQEO INDIAN RETURNS
TO CHARMED SPOT
Her, First Visit to Irfii&amp;n
Landing Was Nearly One
Hundred Years Ago
“Grandma" Sarah Isaac, the. 110,
year old Indian, and her nephew,
recently spent a day and night at
the Indian Landing farm seeking I
material with which to make bas- 1
ket*. I. D. Charlton has a collection
of 30 basket* made by her after she
passed the century mark. Thi* aged 1
Indian baaket weaver Informed Mr.
Charlton, who now owns the Indlan Landing farm, that her first!
visit to Indian Landing was nearly I
a century ago when she was only j
13 years old; that at that time all ।
the country around was Just a huge |
forest, the home of wild animal and
bird life of nearly every desert p- |
tion and Ideal for the out-of-door
life of her people, she first came I
to Indian Landing with her parent*
to an Indian "Medicine Dance." |
She said that at the time there were
fully 100 Indian* present. They had |
made an enclosure out of brush tor I
the dance, and st either end hung a '
brass kettle full of venslon. Two
deer had been killed for thh oc- 1
caslon "A«ka*aw." the old Indian
Chief, was preseni at that dance.
Some of the older resident* of the
county will recall that old Chief
Askasaw used to attend the Barry
County
Pioneer
meetings, long
since discontinued, and on al least
one occasion made a talk before
the old Pioneers Meeting held In
the old Union hall, on the top floor
of which b now occupied by the A.
&amp; P. store. Chief Askasaw was a
very intelligent, friendly Indian and
made many warm friends among
the early settler*. Following hb
death, which occurred probably

funeral.

BOOT VALUE!

:lover^

SEEDS
fLEANEDJ

SIZES

WHIll you wait 1

’1.98

Heavy Duty Work Rubbers!
THICK RED |

soles—

6 Lbk 19c

Serve Yourself and Save

Children's Galoshes

98c *2.19
•OYS'

is. I9c

Eckrich Bacon

19c

Why Pay
More!

MINS
SIZES

LS. IOC

- •--■

Beef Kettle Roast
Kingnut Oleo

HERE'S A FAVORITE!

as direcLhe city of

) Goodyear, the pioneer hardware
merchant of the eity, passed a subtcripUon paper and bought a tomb­
stone to mark Atkasaw's grave.
Otherwise perhaps his last resting
place might have soon become lost,
as was that of ti|e great ''Chief
Noonday.” whose burial spot was
near the old Indian Mission near
Cressey, though no one knows its
exact location.
Chief Askasaw'* remains were
buried In what Is now the Barryville cemetery, and the sAne mark­
ing the spot was donated by ad­
miring friends, jehlal Mead who
wa* Interpreter for the Indians was

LACE
PACS

u 15c

Minced Ham

Steak

GetOutdoors
with a pair of
15-inch Wa­
ter-tight, All
Rubber

*3*2

CHOK E MEATS
PURE LARD

The Finest Mode—
Regardless of Price !

I
NO

Thay'ra Extra

Soap Chips I

RUBBER

w

// /

23c

FOODCENTER
HASTINGS

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Sterling
Zerbel (Hilda Bishop) of Kalamasoo on Saturday a son. who has
been named Herman Frederick. proprietor of the coffee Shop, has
Grandpa Herman is quite elated
closed his hotel at Trail's End, Oun
over hl*, namesake. Mother and ton
are doing nicely.
People complain but it is well ,U&gt;
,
the road south from the MethodUt remember that Americans are far Cinoeboaux la visiting, relative* in
Illinois at preseni. having made the
church.
trip with her daughter, Jeanne,
Yo-yos are again coming into
when she returned to her studies at
popular favor. We've heard of yo­
yo tournament* and contest*. At persons, in Italy one to each 153. McMurray College, Jacksonville. Ill.
—Plainwell Enterprise.
that, the manipulation of one is and in Russk one to each 5.000.
Oley Douglas*, who has lived
Quite an art.
The poison sumac shrubs have
Mr. and MrA. Dan Robert*, who । been colored beautifully this fall, but. »&gt;°ne many
have been living near Nashville.'
have moved to Hastings to care for so pleasant. For particulars ask ward, ha* relumed to Rutland, his
his-mother, Mrs. Flora Robert*, who Ernest Hayes. Joe Broaak. Fred birthplace, to spend hi* remain­
Jones. Don SlegeL or Hubert Cook. ing day*, in his younger day* Oley
. Paul V. Bangren will be Inaug­ Or Miss Mary Campbell might tell was an expert horseman, and after
urated a* president of Western you something about it.
en to Chicago by the Spaldings,
State Teachers College on Satur­
day, Nov. 7 the ceremonies to take ■Jlgg* dinner" of corn beef and owners of the Croquet factory, ss
place in the men's gymnarium.
I
their coachman. Oley san that tn
Remember the annual Red Cross Emmanuel church this evening those days be knew Chicago like a
Roll Call for member* start* No- from 5:30 to 7:00 o'clock. MH. book.
| vember 11 and closes on Thankaglv- Rehor'a friends appreciate her abil­
Ing, Nov. 35. Mrs- Forrest Johnson ity in preparing "Jlggs dlnnen,'.' SERMON TOPIC IB
b Barry county’s Roll Call chair­ and will doubtless be on hand to
man this year.
Next Bunday evening, the Rev.
Mrs. Frank Haywood, who lives
T. Maytan Jones will give his resIn the circuit court of this coun­
in Carlton township found a six ty there was tried last week one
and a seven leaf clover the other case and the previous week another,
Jupday. Four and fire leaf clovers are in which the defendants were
common but six and seven leaf ones charged with statutory rape. As ment came over America, what
are not found ao often.
there are two other cases pending would be your attitude toward the
Did you see the lovely dahlia* in against two man involving the same Jew? Now is thb lime to think such
the Banner office
window last
a proposition over. Five minutes will
week? They were grown by Mrs. A. until all the canes have been tried be taken to stale a* clearly as posI D. ateckle of Freeport, who certain­
The city council considered rou­ Mbte what ia happening in Spain
ly knows /her dahlia*. Of especial tine business largely' at their ses­ The singing of old and new hymn*
beauty were the fellow and red sion Friday night. Among the Items will be part of the service at the
ones.
considered was that of speed-lmlt First Method!*! church Bunday 6veMary Williams. 14. of Middleville signs to be placed at various places
will exhibit a pen of pure bred on the principally travelled streets
A student declares that he did not
Southdown lambs In the special of the city. The matter was referred
junior live stock feeding contest of to the council's public safely com­ pass a recent examination because
the international Live Stock Ex­ mittee. with instructions to investi­ he was unable to give the meaning
position al Chicago. November 28 gate and report al the next meet­ of "Jejune.” “phrontbtery" and “ro­
domontade.” Words failed him.
i to December 5.
ing.

2 c... 25c

Viking Coffee

COFFEE

last four
director of

ad*, tn this issue will explain how.

Matthews is recuperating nicely
from an appendicitis operation per­
formed Saturday at Pennock hos­
pital.
One of the loveliest trees we
have seen, robed in its autumn garb

15c

DR. BYINGTON GETS
_
A FINE PROMOTION
Z.ssvss roudsttox (laH to
Tsks Up SiaSsr Work'
to Detroit

Mr*, chartea
‘ha Ze.“

IO a." 39c

Large Bars

Del Monte Corn

Ute Ameri-

On Saturday
ter Carriers' A*
gioif home.

Blackbirds by the hundreds are
congregating in various parte of the

2lC

I L7”?jL1| I w’’ite House| I

4 Popular

BREAD

2
Giant Bars

Brillo

d

Cigaretts

3 Package Limit

American Family Soap

15c

2

JELLO
I

lie

83c

Karo Syrup

17c

17c

P &amp; G Soap

69c
24 H Lb. Sack

Large Package

Super Suds

23c

Perfect Flour-

Moosehead Flour

Large Package

He

23c

HarveiCI

OXYDOL

3 Package Limit

19c

Cream of Wheat

RINSO

TM MaMta church aa Mate
Road I* being redecorated and wired

1.09

WE BUY SEEDI

TsiapteM BUUs Ortek tiu ।
|nsag*
» 4»»mu &lt;»u
Cliulil thasgts art very r«u
able. Wi. Uera I* aa ctasga

HASTINGS CUT RATE SHOE STORE
"BARRY COUNTYS IUS1KT SHM fTOBK"

114 W. STATE ST.

HASTINGS, MICH.

H. C. King » *«■.
SOUTH DIVIS10X arniT
BATTUI CUU. MlOHIO AX

�........ ........ .

•Vote NO On 3rd,
4th Amendment
(Continued from page 1. Bee. 1)

would iiavc ,lo pass the test of the
Supreme court, all of which would
take probably two years, possibly
mor5 What would happen to local
schools, counties and state govern­
ment in the meantime? Anyone cat),
see that there would be In all prob­
ability two years of tiie worst pos­
sible confusion that thb state has
ever known. The resulting chaos
would affect Michigan worse than
the recent depression. In other
words, to pass'these two amend­
ments would spell calamity.
The speaker called attention to
the fact that the constitution of the
state of Michigan requires that all
taxation shall bear equally upon the
citizens of the stated so U would
not be possible to propose a grad­
uated income tax. The same Income
tax rate must apply to Henry Ford
that would have to apply to the
humblest laborer In Michigan. The
federal government’s heavy Income
taxes in Michigan have never pro­
duced half of 4ie 1147.000.000 now
raised by taxing property.
Another thing which the vpters
of every locality should consider
would be the fact that passing this
amendment would take aWay all
local control of schooh. townships,
villages and cities. AU that would be
vested in the state, and we would
have to accept whatever the legis­
lature or the state officers were
willing to dole out to us! Are the
voters of Michigan ready to sur­
render all local government and be
ruled from Lansing?
It teems as If the voters of thb
state cannot be so short-sighted as
to favor these two amendments in
view of the hardsnips that would
be caused to the schooh and to ev­
ery type of government If they
should be passed by the voters »
November 3.

ts^suswws

IR»&gt;HW.»l&gt;W

cupp, named recently to study the iROTARIANS HEAR
problem al the request of the four
COL. W. R. WHEELER
recognized tourist associations of
the state.

DR. WM. M. PUFFER
DIES AT KALAMAZOO
Was Pastor of the Local
Methodist Church for
Four Years

u.w«t

taxes.
condition."

the Regular U. S. Infantry.
were the following salient points:
1. That tourist rooms, parks,
camps and cabins be licensed tar a
nominal fee by the-state health de­
partment. with the deportment hav­
Ing power to revoke any license.
2. That the criminal code be
amended to require all places lodg­
ing tourists to obtain their correct
names and addresses. Guests would
be culpable for wrongly Identifying
themselves.
3..That authority be given the
state health commissioner and the
agricultural commissioner to for­
mulate rules of sanitation and
standards for all places receiving
tourists as paying guests.
4. That state and local enforce­
ment officers be given concurrent
authority to compel sanitation and
cleanliness In tourbt lodging and
eating places.

szmma,

the Monday noon luncheon. Ho

maneuvers held in and about Al­
legan county this summer.
Ool. Wheeler used aa an illustra­
tion the disaster which befell the
First French Colonials in the Ar­
dennes Forest near the Belgium and
Luxembourg border during the
World war.
Nearly thirty thousand man were
literally led to the slaughter because
of the stupid blunders made by
those in charge of this division.

to correct errors. A blunder more
often than not means the live* of
thousands of men. Consequently
tliese so called "war games.- to give
both privates and officers a chance
to get experience under conditions
which resemble as closely as possi­
ble a real battle front.

PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
hospital has averaged from 17 to 20
day 10 were registered.

and Mrs. Joseph Williams. Hastings,
Dr. William M. Puffer, a former Route 5.
On Oct. 11, a daughter was born
pastor of the local Methodist Epis­
copal church, died Saturday morn- to Mr. and Mrs. Orval Hammond.
Hastings, Route s.
had been 111 for many-months. The
funeral waa held at the First Meth­ WE WERE FOOLED ONCE
odist Episcopal church in Kalama­
zoo Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock.
Can It Be Done Again?
About sixty ministers from this
section of the stele were tn attend­
ance /md several participated In Die President Roosevelt, seeking your
service. The Scripture was read by votes said:
“This depression b today's
Rev. Ellsworth, end Dr. p. J. Maproblem. W&lt;* can not. and must
veety gave the opening prayer. Dr.
not. borrow against the future
J. C. Floyd, of Grand Rapids, a
iopg time friend of Dr. Puffer, gave
For three long years the
Federal Government has been,
on the road toward bank­
ruptcy."
■The members of the Con-

here be talked last Thursday, h
lade these statements:
“Now the credit of the fam­
ily depends chiefly on whether
that family Is living within Its
income end this is so of the
nation. But if. like a spend­
thrift. it throws discretion to
the winds, Is willing to make no
sacrifice at aU In spending, ex­
tends Its taxing to the limit of
b on tjte road to bankruptcy."
President Roosevelt then was
talking of the so-called Hoover
deficit and ha promised to reduce
government expenditures twentyfive per cent, to balance the budget,
to avoid deflclU. On those promises
he won the election. Did he keep
those promises?
Lest Thursday night to told us
that under hb administration the
national income had increased from
thirty-eight billion dollars to sixty
billions, that the national debt
should be paid out of the increase
Ln national Income, without addi­
tional taxes.
But instead of reducing govern­
ment
expense
twenty-five
par
cent, as he promised
he in-

■
'L.L-IN,—W
dal adviser; McCarl, former Comp-1
of thousands unemployed.
In view of these facte admitted, trailer General of the United
never denied, how can the Preaident States, and hundreds of others,
expect us to place confidence tn his good, loyal Democrats, have repu­
present promises?
diated because they loved their
Does he think that we have for­ country mare than their party.
gotten what Lincoln said:
“You may deceive all the
perlmen Ung. teas spending, less
people part of the time, and
taxation. Turn to
and
Knox—Landon, a veteran of the
part of the people all the time,
but not all the people all the
time.”
।
Turn. then, from the advice of honest business enterprises, their
the man of inherited wealth, from own money; who will know how to
the matt who, when he become gov­ conserve the nation's energies and
ernor of New York, found a treas­ resources and to cut out waste and
ury balance of something like five extravagance.
For two years I have fought the
million dollars' and left the state
bankrupt; who. as President. Ln a waste, extravagance, political bylittle -over three years, has put on
an orgy of spending, the like of
which has never been known.
•'
Turn from the New Dealers' ad­ ed done. I am ready to continue the
ministration which Democrats, like battle, and Landon, when elected,
former Governor Ritchie of Mary­ will need aggressive congressmen. '
Keep your hired man. He has'
land; Al Smith, once Democratic
candidate for presidency; former been on the job, shown himself
Governor Ely of Massachusetts; faithful.
Respectfully.
Bainbridge Colby, former Secre­ Oct. 1930.
tary of Stale under Wilson; Doug­
CLARE E- HOFFMAN.
las. Roosevelt s own Director of the Republican candidate for Congress.
Budget; Warburg, his own finan(Political Adv.)

deficit, of
The government's
which he complained —
so bitterly.
has been Increased, under hb admlnbtrallon. sixty-one per cent.
And for thia spending what have
we had? Waste and extravagance,
fraud in relief, unfinished projects
by the thousands, a hole tn the
ground called the Florida canal, a
dam called Paasamaquoddy across

' C. Galloway. Palo; 3. Ctay Hill King. Morton Jackson. Muskegon; ,
4 Rhawanrsn Rubv Mart Ftrhtm- i
men. Detroit; Reserve, True Blue I
Spot. Curley Richmond. Detroit.
The cup for the best type hound
in the field was awarded to Will- I
cliff Lou owned by jack Wilson of
Detroit.
Judges for the field trlab were 1
Elmer Gray of Indianapolb and ‘
Leonard Bennett of Hinkley. HL
I।
There were thirty-four entries In II
. tlie bench show, which was licensed
by the A- K C.. Champion Muir- I
land's Princess, owned by George
Grant of Lansing winning Ute tro­
phy for the best breed. In the class
for dogs not exceeding 13 Inches.
Gibb's Steal Away owned by J. W
Gibbs of Detroit, won first; Masterly
• Matchless, owned by E. A Kopp of
Johnson Creek. Wb.. placed first Ln
the class not exceeding 15 inches.

42143550

RESOR

the others
active ^ent
in the Methodist,
-LT^ire
were R^v
church, who
who were
were present
present were
Rev."
church,
were Rev.
^rt?.^ratKB Jac^randStiSr
K{ ^SwSv
P’LrCnln^l!’
°.r“M*
Bnd Dr D^Lantarter
oi ’uansui*.
•'’une
Dk Puffer waa 70 years old at the
limey of his death. He had served
hb church for more than half a
century. He was bom tn Vermont.
One of his early pastorates waa '^1
that
Hastings, where he
for

time
then permittedt,nder
under018
the rules
,lm
* Uwn
of the church. He waa a construc­
tive pastor who made real founda­
tions for all the work he did here.
There are many In Hastings who
remember him and feel grateful to
him for hb good work while here.
After leaving thb city he filled
pastorates In Manistee. Grand Rap­
ids. Albion. Kalamazoo, and served
several terms as dbtrict superin­
tendent of the Lansing and Kala­
mazoo dbtrlcte. For nearly sixteen
years he had been superintendent
of Bronson hospital. He took charge
of the work when it wu a very
small isUlitution. Through hb good

of 175,000 to one worth well above
1400,000 and has become the fine
fore the West Michigan Tourist an&lt;V and successful hospital It is today.
Resort association In annual ses- • Naturally reserved, as Is custom­
slon Thursday afternoon at the ary with Vermonters, Rev. Puffer
Pantllnd hotel. Grand Rapids.
couki unbend with his friends and
The recommendations, prepared
by the state attorney general's of- was a fine type of Christian man­
flee, were presented by Assistant hood. and a faithful, loyal, helpful
Attorney General Milton Q. Behan- - Christian minister.
*

(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)

HUNTING SEASON
No. 3 SIZE

25c

isS Lbs. Sweet . 4 £e
POTATOES
19

10 Lbs.
SUGAR

J Lbs. Tokay Offc
GRAPES-C9

1 Lb. Cboeo- 4 Ac
late Drops — I U

The summer things that are put away (or winter . .’. need
protection, too. Moths will damage summer garments during
the winter as they do winter garments during the summer.
Be SAFE! Before putting them away send them to McCrecry’s
for dry cleaning. Dry cleaning destroys the larvae
and PREVENTS “MOTH DAMAGE.”

McCreery’s Dry Cleaners
PHONE 2140

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

UNIONS
Here's a suit you
u«l Winter weight
rib knit cotton for
warmth. Full
standard sizes.

34'

FLOUR

’1.15

BACON
SQUARES

19k

Phone 245*—Hastings

weight

Wlnur

An amazing price
for full fashioned
chiffon stocking/
with silk plcot
tops. Fall snides.

tuck stitch vests

combed

cotton.

Children’s sixes, 2

PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF OCTOBER IS
SUNDAY and MONDAY, OCTOBER 18 and 19
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

The TEXAS RANGERS’
With FRED MacMURRAY, JACK OAKIE. JEAN PARKER,
LLOYD NOLAN and EDWARD ELLIS
BAMADS &gt; MATini 8aMey. 1:0 m&gt;4 1:00 •■•lack, fax Malte.

COUPON NIGHT — TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20

' Mem's
GLOVES

ANNE SHIRLEY and JOHN BEAL in

’’M’LISS”
With GUY KIBBEE and MORONI OLSEN
Hn'i AU Wool Hnitr

t°hhe

M™’&lt; AU O-nl

Hn'i OrHUt

COSSACKS

WEDNESDAY ord THlJkSOAY, OCT. 21 &lt;u,d 22

"RHYTHM

Genuine black
leather! Lined for
real warmth! But-,
ton style and out-

RANGE”

With BING CROSBY. FRANCES FARMER and BOB BURNS
ADULTS SS CXXTS

CltlLDXXM 10 CIXTI

Heavy warm jackets—all wool!

Built to wear like iron.

FRIDAY and SATURDAY, OCTOBIR 23 and 24
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

Warner Oland in

“CHARLIE
CHAN AT THE RACE TRACK”

BOOT SOCKS

“THE BIG NOISE” with Guy Kibbee
Matinee, Ratarday. Only.

/or IFarutfhj

HO 8 I E R Y
Rib knit cotton etockinga
Fine (or school and play
Sixes S W 9H-

Wooly lone b«0&lt;
socks for boy*.
Mod. to wear—
w&gt;th reinforced
to* and heels.

• Stardr!

DANCING
At Clear Lake Lodge
Every Saturday and
Sunday Evenings

Free Delivery

Woman's

Underweak

• Tlmlnl

WALLACE GROCERY
Open Evenlags

'

fTKAND
THEATCI=
Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 BL—

(Frosh Oysters)

Creamery
BUTTER

SOk

HOSIERY

With KEYS LUK.E. HELEN WOOD and THOMAS BECK
— PLUS —

Hubbard Squash, ripa medium size, lb. 3c
10 lb. bag DRY ONIONS_________ 14c
JELLO, any flavor---------------------------- 5c
DEL MONTE COFFEE ...................... lb. 27c
24 ’A LU.
PILLSBURY'S o&lt;
GOLD MIDAL

PSm, 2IH

Get Into Summer Things Too

Are you hunting bargain*? Here are tome!
3 Cans
Tomatoes

Trio Cafe

STARTING THURSDAY
OCTOBER 15 th

||f MOTHSI|||||IMOTHSI|||

Thomas Havings; 3. Rnnald Rob- B
|
trta. M C
Galloway, Palo; 4. B
j
Marve'i, Susanna. Mane Manne B
j
Jackson; Reserve, O'Dell's Driver. B
,
Frank J O'Dell. Grund Rapids.
|
Fifteen Inch all age bitches 1,
Haig': Doffnc. owned by Dr Pre:
ton Hngmk-re Preston. Ont ; 2.
Whittakers Bell
W
E Behrens.
p.
I
Muskegon; 3. Masterly Hjrookcy.
■ u
I
Rob Eche. Milwaukee. Wb ; 4 Wil)
Chff Lou.'Jack Wilson. Detroit; Re_______ ■
serve. Wlkesall s Queen, Wm. W!kew w „ PUIVER
sail. Grand Rapids.
___________________
In the fifteen Inch al! age dogs
ni.hn„
m.v. nt
the sermon. Bishop Edgar Blake of
class the winners were: 1. Orth's .I Detroit^ offering the closing prayer.
Bugle Boy Barney, owned by J. D.
2^te^th! n^ch
Jarvis. Flint; 2. Ronald Regent. M
*£**?!»,«*
n

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7ih

jliou. with a total national debt of
I thirty-four billion dollars. Our intereat charge la now upward of
nine hundred million dollars per

practical value, and still hundreds

SPEC ILK ■

EFFECTIVE ALL DIVISIONS

•WALVAM«R

stead of a deficit of. as during the
Hoover administration, three billion
dollars, he admitted he had given
us a deficit of eight billion, and the

mediate economy."

(Continued from page 1, Sec. 1)

IMPORTANT
SCHEDULE C

Mask by Martin's Oirhsotr.

Hallowe'en Dance October 30

— HASTINGS, MICHI!

Jterrfyf

�I

■—
boost the county-

TWUM AT HOMS

The
a

fist or editorials and

A CAUT AIL-AMIIICAN DOIS HIS STUFF

THURSDAY, OCTOBEA IS. 19M

Itl

’Round About Trawl

THE NEW “MODEL?"
11I DIGESTS POLL POINTS
-TO LANDON AS VICTOR.
constitution
was recently j
It the Literary Digest's nation­
। b»‘ the New Deal Admfnls(ration for the Philippine common­ wide presidential poll is xs accurate
wealth. One can't help but wander fm
ui sw*. imo.
whether or not this document is and 1920. and as nearly correct os'
an exataplc ot what Mr. Roosevelt
and such radical advisers as Tugwell and Hopkins regard as a model
for "self-governing" people.
1
.'

|

j

Public Forum |||

LftTSA* TO THE EDITOR
Hrtta

tore town the country over, as the
Nature Association b
number of taxa* an a loaf at bread. trying to do, that oar Wild IKe 1*

•nUUrd -Who Pays" ratattva to the American

It was In it* poll In the congressional
election year of 1934, then the Indlcations point now unmistakably to
the election of Alfred M Landon as

tat birds have already suffered
compute extinction all because of
the natural love for shooting them
which some people cannot repress.
Personally I would much rather

president of the United States on
Constitution gives to the president. November 3. In the post the Digest's
I polls have come within less than 2
per cent ot Indicating the actual re­
1—Suspend the writ of habeas
suits at the following November
corpus, the final court protection of
elections.
individual liberty. No American 1 The Digest has copyrighted It*
president has ever had this power tabulations, so we are not permitted
It is a power which tyrants and
. to publish the actual figures. But.
dictators atone, have exercised
without quoting them, we can state
3—Ha la authorized to exercise
point to Mr. Landon's
general supervtakm over all local
t,y a decisive majority, both
govenunents. This has a decidedly
eait
Of the elector-

Kin da hud to get a good radio

Udons busy saving the country.
Cliff Dolan, they tell me. has acme
actual photographs to allow that he
hauled in some big ones off North­
port point.

Bet my friend George Sumner
will have a busy day of It Thurs­
day.

A lot of the boys will be attracted
by fine feathers as the pheasants
fly Wow what a tongue twister.

3— He may be authorized in any . in the Digest's issue of last week,
"national emergency" to promul- the total number of votes tabulated
gate rule* and regulations to carry up u&gt; that time exceeded 750.000.
out any declared national policy, with 31 of the 48 votes represented.
(Under such a aet-up almost any- jof which Mr. Landon ha* conslderthlng could happen. It would be a ; ably over one luilf, the Roosevelt
perfect
»et-up for
Philippine , vote being under 40 per cent of the
"Brain Trust ").
i total and the Lemke vote being

Well. Tommy's sympathy Is with
the pheasants. He hopes they all
escape.

Yup I Just a crusty old tneanle.
This week's nomination for the
Hastings Hall of Oblivion—A song
which hns something with a star
falling right out of heaven down in­
to someone's lap.

4— He can. if he pleases, certify
that immediate enactment of leglslatlon Is a necessity and thereupon
be can suspend requirements even
that congress shall have printed

[ about 4 per cent of the total.
1 The Digest's table reveal* the votIng record of those voters who arc
! tabulated who voted for either
| Hoover or Roosevelt In 1932 Adding
copies of lhe bill before It is enact-1 the Roosevelt voters who supported
ed. (This U a surprising parallel | him in 1932. who will vote for him

Tommy wishes It had landed
smack on the crooner's thick skull
and stopped the noise before it got
started.

to the "must" legislation which this year, and the voters who voted
President Roosevelt has been de- | lor him In 1932 who will this year
mandlng from hl* servile congress), vote for Landon or Lemke, and dl-

divMually at each i
cess of making and

out of my hand and learn to know
me as their friend than to try to
paid by farmor (T). grain alavator. ferret thtfm out of their gras*
flour mill, railroad. flour tracker, home*, defenseless a* they are. with
tatting eerapony and r4 tall dlstrtb- no means of come back, and kill
them. If they had any mean* of
alter multiplication only 13 at the protection such as a good rifle or
shotgun tho hunters themselves
rtate, county, total oe municipal would leave them alone. A* it U
such as;
Local real-estate tax, they haven't a *portlng chance. No
county real-estate tax, municipal man believe* In shooting al a de­
real-estate tax. school district real- fenseless HUMAN; why pick on
these bird and animal friends of
alctpal personal taxes, sale* tax. ours? Why? Becauae It te, In the
various motor vehicle taxes, groin,
exactly
the most elevating sport in
storage tax**, elaeteklty tax. etc.
the world to take pot shot* at
three .are Federal; on income, on friends. That’* what these feathered
and furry inhabitant* are. They are
These three are not hidden taxes, there to make their living as best
they can without any relief, WPA
but are ail direct taxes.
By means of adding th* taxes tn- help, doctors or scientific aid. social
vdNed in the making ot the bread­
wrapper it would easily double the teachers, preachers or any other
farm of gineral assistance. How
taxes on the loaf of bread.

Just an Informal ntAe to ask you
if you mean at any time In the near
future to make any editorial com­
ment on the matter ot hunting In
Barry county and tn gtheral. 11 you
do I wish to offer you my unquali­
fied endorsement a* a member at
the American Nature Association^
and a* one who la. committed to a
policy of conservation of wild life.
I have a small parcel of land
south of Hastings, adjoining Vem
Haywood's place on the east and ex­
tending down to the shore of New­
ton lake. This piece of wild land
was purchased for the sole purpose
of creating a natural sanctuary for
birds and small game and with the
idea of later on building a perma­
nent home for myself whep ready
to leave the hectit city life and set­
tle c.own on what 1 Mtve accumu­
lated at that time. Living at a dis­
tance It is difficult for me to exer- 1
else due care over the place and to
that end I have made'arrangements
to have the place placarded against
hunting and treipaMing and have
employed watchers to heh|j*M^otect the hundreds of phbasant and
quail that are already making their
home there. I have also given in­
struction* to my friend* In Hastings
to insert a notice |n the Banner tor
me to the effect that all hunters are
warned to stay off.
Now this may be all well and
good, as far as my awn Interests are
concerned, but it may sound selfish
to a good many fine people who live
In and about Hastings and who get
a little pleasure now and then out
of going out with gun and dog and
trying their luck. I just want to say
this word to those good people
through you. If you consider It
worth your while to pas* it on. 80
far as 1 know there &lt;s no rearon to
slaughter fine birds or antmals ex­
cept for food. If anybody up there Is
suffering tn that respect I will be

Thb week's nomination for the
Hasting* Hall of Eligible Bachelors
5— He may be impeached only i *'d«n»
Ulr lW2 Roosevelt vote
—Wilbur Watson, grocery expert at
foe "culpable violation of the con- . ’hlch is now supporting Landon by
the a &amp; P- It Is rumored, however
that Wilbur may be leaving era- lit­
sUtution " Thus he ran disregard ,Lhat ‘otaI- and we B*'11 lh,t 20
tle city roon. Not of necessity, how­
UK MUUtuUM tram Ume to Ume P"
ll" UMUtod role
ever, Tommy hastens to say. Who
ixTfeel MI.W-KU » taw .. 1“'
,-«■
knows—after ail. thb is *1111 Leap
W doe.n-1
-eulpebta” Moul II. 11111 W •“»Port UaMOI tnd ll»t Conservation and’ ‘
Backward Glances;
Oto W l».lte,l IM nmr bran « W ronlrat II .111 be
to,
Bits of Yesterday । Understand that our city marshal
Outdoor Notes
Treating
mm iuM taUlude In the oath he ui’Umke. "
""" In lhe same man­
-n ■"
ip
T , ■■ ■ ,f Opportunity for law-abiding cltiIs going to lake one ot the wellrequired to take before assuming ner the Digest s tabulation of votes
known younger badness men on a
।
sens
of
Michigan
to
advance
anothumco even
««u M*~»u
-&gt;, —
—« at
—____
for Hoover in 1932. which will
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
office,
though we
have
leastj cast
।
conduct'd hunting trip up near
Plenum ol Um T.Mu.m.nM „ m
ln thel,
u
one ta’w htetori" who has violated 'ntr^ ** c“‘
Many will be Interested In the Midland.
1
Falls area in its natural wilderness
"
| and we find that
per cent of the state will dominate the policy of the le«nMS »«&gt; «* Provided at th* No- announcement of Ute marriage at
hta pledge.
. .. 12
- n...
Didn't Bennett's boys do swell al
vole cast for Hoover In 1932 will department, of .’onservation in ad-i vember election when voters will Ludington last evening of Miss Veia
Furthermore this Philippine Con­
ministering lhe tract as a state have a chance to insert new "teeth''' SU,.vfr ol lhal cl,y 10
T East G- R 1
this year favor Mr Roosevelt, and
i Knlskem
stitution centers many Important
jtate's gun law.
that 1 1-2 per cent ot the Hoover park. It Is probable, that most of ln
j The installing of the city's boulclhe "development will be on the i Specifically,
------ —
—
■
powers directly in lhe Federal gov­
The boys can play ball when they
the voters
- ----- will
---- decide vard lights will be under way in less
1932 vote wiU go to Lemke In 1936 north side of the river Park headernment. For example
--------tnan
lhan B W
w^.
eek.
K, wotk
Work nas
has ocen
been nrdr- «t their minds to it.
' Applying these percentages to the quarters will probably be located on the merits of a joint resolution
.....
____ ....
»y Uie ins reelKlature
&gt;«uuuir. with
« U&gt; | .,. d
by tac&gt; „
1—Philippine federal state "shall
total Hoover and Roosevelt vote tn ( • lake “ short distance north Of the a view to amending the eonslltutten ,----- -------—•­
Anyway. Il isn't always so simple
regulate lhe relations between laboi
only
contemplated»ccm
Access M t|val the unreasonable search and •I will arrive this week
1S31. .nd .Min, Ih. n-re.nu... river The«■&gt;
’ «nwmnl.tM
to win as it seems with eleven other
to k,,e
the falU w,u
will w
be by foot paths ^llun. clausr of lhe ^mutton ' Mr and Mrs Oscar Young, well­
and capital In industry and agricul.
«»
.pre .nd Ih. .uu- m«&gt; provld. to ,h°’" ■”
(h. woods
.oM. Acquisition of -S|ja|j not be construed to bar from |, known pioneer residents of this city, young enthusiasts out there trying
, vo|'«
. «»'•,
, (' ,.hr»u,h
through
sure ano me
fvear an(1. fof
,r, who
dH
H&gt;&lt; p&gt;|1&lt;the
pnlmd
to do the same things.
celebrated
their
golden
wedding
era Ulis year, and for voters who did , the Falls round out plans of the rV|denCc m any court of criminal
compulsory arbitration A citizen as
not report their 1932 vote tn the DI- . conservation
department
jurisdiction,
or ui
In any
any oriiiiitiai
criminal unipro- (Anniversary. Sat, October 7. at
. .
' ,
. far a huge
. । JUI
UW.IHIHI, ui
And also, somehow or other, the
an Individual no longer counts.
gest poll this year and we find that wlldemess
.llderaem reere.Uon.1
recreational .re»
area m
in Ite
the „,
CPedlng
ai„e before .ny
any m.«UU.«
magistrate or their home of W Green St, where
earth keeps turning no matter
ropmoob, . ’ upper pentarata T
'”' L
“' a
“’"' ; Ju
------------------------ -------------------The
Lake
super,u--„ ------lbe
nre-erm, or
3—All educational institutions U &lt;h. poll .hl,
Mr. and Mrs Chas. G. Welssert which side wins.
I lor Stole Fore.i in which lhe KU, ,ny
d.njermu «.pon. KUed
shall be under the supervision of
’ ( substantially correct cross-section of
are Jocaied L, rapidly
bceomtna ■ b, any peace oOcer oulalde me cur- returned Thursday frotn a ten days'
and subject to regulation by the the voters of lhe whole country, as popurar »Hh me type ol lourlM
Tommy used to be s player, him­
01
a,,ulnE „ou* in mi, visit in Harrison.
self
federal state. (This means exit free­ did the Digest's polls in five prev­ who wants an unspoiled wilder- stale FORTY YEARS AGO
dom ot thought If lhe state desires ( ious national election campaigns, neM&gt;
In other words, lhe law-abiding
Those benches on the sidelines do
A R and John McOmber rode to
• •• ••
I r-ltrtnn
citizen wilt
will rnfaln
retain Kin
his HepHt
right tea
to ..aln.
maln—A fundamental condition for then Mr. Landon will poll about
get awfully hard before the game is
The latest official report* on for- I l“Ui arms in his own home for the . Ionia on their wheels Sunday.
dictatorship).
Dr and Mrs. W A. Lampman
4.000.000 more votes than will Mr. esl-flre losses in Michigan Ihl* year protection of himself and family,
3—The federal state may estab-. Roosevelt on November 3 next.
show that 2.389 fires occurred and | but the critnli
criminal found In possession and Miss Wllda Blivln were at Mus­
ASSYRIA.
Ep­ I
llsh and operate Industries In the j There is. of course, the chance 49 JOO acres were burned over of dangerous weapons, in his motor kegon last week to attend the Spname of lhe national welfare. (This |
Tnesc
car »r
or cHcwncrc
rtsewb
none, worth League convention
‘
*”1
These are not cne
the nnai
final figures, coneon- &gt; c«
elsewhere ouuioc
outside ms
his home.
that the Digest’s method of carry­ serration
authorities
say. t
It, l.
is ex- rannnt
cannot hlHa
hide Iw-hlriH
behind IK*
the rnnitlHiUny,
constitution. B
elected second v ice- brother. Fordney Roach, of Ohio,
.M,k
uUto. ...
ing on Ils poll may not accurately nected
that
fires
will*continue
to
but
must
face
the
court
with
the
I
P
r
®
al
d*n*_
....
an&lt;
*
MtiS
ArabeUe
Bivens spent 8unpected that fires will*continue to but must face the court with the
federal corporate state that now reflect the sentiment of lhe voters occur this fall, particularly during । seized weapons admissible as evlLang Dickinson was found dead day
div at the lake shore.
in his bed Friday morning, having
M„ 8y,TlB Blvens and daughter,
exists In Soviet Russia. It also ,
hunting seasons and if the woods' dcnce against him
Arabclle. and ^frs. Una conklm
bring* to mind many of the expen- [ rPft thts year a, u wai ln lhc four are drv.
| If the proposal is adopted, no died tome time ta the night
R I Hendershot: has
the community nigM pro- IRVING CENTENARIAN
- - I longer will it be possible for the
sire experiments along this line preceding presidential elections, and
‘°,U .°*.nfd .by H .0 a50dyearl«r»m at the Banfield school on Pri­
NOW IN H°SPITAL
| criminal to carry deadly weapons
Hunters will be able to unleash ' in violalion of the law and snap his on W Main street Mr.-Hender-1 day
evening. —
The program was in
and---go after
one ,m
---------------------„ enipcemuu omcers
rne “hott now own5 ■“ the ,ota «tend- [charge of lhe tatter's daughter, Alexander
America's No. 1 socialist. Dr Tug- Monal ejection of 1934. then It this their coon dogs
The
Mayville,
100
most‘ -popular
game II fingers
ol at enforcement
^option ofofficers.
the^pro®
m,rof Michigan's tr~--------------------1
result
ot
the
adootion
of
theVnroi Ml» Elsie conklin. teacher, at Banwell'.
year points unmistakably to the animals—the raccoon Yeari Old, Suffered Frac­
ble 'shop
of AA BUck
Black &amp;
&amp; 300
Son.
•cco°nM- beginning
amendineni will be that taw- I ble
tlop ot
I n*,|d
4—Members of the Philippine Su-1 cl«.uon of Ajfrctl M London
Nov. 1 The fall' hunting
season
„
oroin
.
?--»«
°.n 1 abiding citizens will have am pic 1
tured Left Hip
Mrs Mota Hyde of Hastings atpreme Court must quit at the age
---------------.
raccoon Ut Um lower
tr peninsula l। protect
protection in their homes, but law-1
FIFTY YEARS AGO
| tended the pleasure Birthday meetAlexander Mayville, who for sev­
opens on that day and remain* I U— gunmen
’u
will carry their insteuBerry county hns 18 students at । ing on Wednesday al the home of eral years had resided near Irving
OATH VS ACTION
open to and including Dev. 15 Slate I ‘
University.
unconstitutional without the con­
|
Mrs.
Lovallc
Miller.
Mrs.
Hyde,
a
On March 4. 1933. when taking law does not permit an open hunt­ menta of murder at their peril 1.
and
who
1* 105 year* old. suffered a
.J J
- I.u 1 - OT,aMiner. Mrs. iiyue. a
(non,, rc.
re.nden., UMwnn hoho™r!l fractured left hip Monday night of
There will be no arguments of eoun-1 -The ,«ld &lt;tn move.
currence of two-thlrd, of the court
। lormer
th" oath of office President
ing Rooseseason on______
raccoon tn the upper
the city dads In the matter of build-1
—'
- member.
(Senator
the
New -Deal can- vrlt said , "I
--------- — Norris,
----- - —
- -----Franklin Delano ' peninsula,
on arrest were not taken "by due Inn the water works.
| The citizens of the Ellis district at his daughter. Mrs Emma 81mdidate for re-election in Nebraska. npo*evelt, do solemnly swear that
proccs* of law” and therefore not1 A chatatKiua circle will be or­ , are sponsoring a box social to be
Loans of department of conser­ admUsable----•*—
।I ganizrd here In the near future.
as---evidence
has already proposed a similar ।, wU1 fillthfully execute lhe office of
held on Friday night at the schooi- Grand Rapids He was taken to St
vation moving picture* for the year
The most notable Instahfr which | P T Colgrove attended the an- ! house.
noiue The
rne proceeds
procc^ wlu
M used In
ln Mary's hospital Wednesday night.
measure for our own supreme President of the United States, and ending Sept 30 totalled 2.9M The
will be
shows the need of this change in the nua) .-cwton of the Knights ot I the pUrchMe oi a flrgt aid kit for
But in spite of the seriousness of
to the best of my ability, precourt).--------------------------------------------------[will
.......
-- 1
— -• ------- -— •-«» W..k He...-- *-2,__ .
______ —.
------ ——■— ---•
---------—
—
-------■
----------.
..
”
---"
mo
scnooi. “
the Injury for people of advanced
* . clubv
. teacher
Thus the Phllipjilne constitution ; ^rve. protect and defend the Con- *.
.. of
„"
. , Tied
rle&lt;1 through
through the
the supreme
supreme court,
court, was
was; »•»
WM Heeled
elected Grand
Grand Master
Master al
al Al*»
Arina |I th
lhe
age. hospital attendant* Thursday
whlch was formulated by President I slltuUon o{ .hP united States "
(
-I'
uuut.
iui
lilt*
morning reported hl* condition apMassie. Detroit gangsters wpH-1
’Roosevelt and his New Deal colyear. IatPr on Julj. 5 1M5 attendance of S55.961 persons

Arrtendmenl Aimed
At State'* Criminal*

SOUTH SHULTZ.
I
’
known to the police. Stem and *
Mr and Mrs. Frank Horn enter- A “2*121 £*
leagues;
| m * letter to Representative SamSome writers anti map-makers Massie were arrested in Detroit In
1— Gives the president dietatonal net b HUI. regarding the Guffey continue to refer to the famous wa­ 1931. Police stopped the cab In talned al a miscellaneous shower , rordney Roach Of Ohio Is spendterway
between
lhe
lower
and
up
­
powers over ©origTej.s ond. the courtr Coal —
- “"I
“ ••**
— YOUR
Bill, he said:
HOPE
which they were riding because it and bride at their home Tuesday I pwnte. Rev. and Mrs. Roach of
...
&lt; Mnnlr
2— Places Industry. agriculture. .COMMITTEE WILL NOT PERMIT&gt; per peninsulas of Michigan as the was exceeding the jpeed limit. The
MapleOmvo
Grove. ,
night.
' "Strait of Mackinac ' This is tn­
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Case were in
tabor, and education directly under DOUBTS AS TO CONSTITUTION- i correct according to lhe latest ap- men were ahned in violation of the
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Misener of
law but Judge John P Sea lien of
Lansing Sunday. Miss Norma hat­
the control of the Federal state REASOK-1
proved spelling The state and na- recorder's court
ALfTY
HOWEVER
1
dismissed
the Kalamazoo called on lhetr parcnU ing rpent the week end here re­
HE BUGPresident Roosevelt, after the veto Able TO BLOCK THE
SUG­ &gt; tlonai boards of geographic names charge against theni on the ground Wednesday.
turned to her work.
Lorraine and Izrrna Bonneville
j officially have approved the name that (he arresting officers had no
of hi* key measures, remarked that GESTED L EGISLATIONI ••
''
Mrs. Norma Kesler, who has been
reasonable grounds for stuplcian spent Friday night with their uncle
Hi one breaiti lit says, TI Will
will de
de­ rsu*,ts ot Mackinac.'the United state* constltutlun was
ahd aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mtoethat they were unlawfully armed.
daughter, Mrs. Edna Case, was tak­
nfw fire t0Wf&gt; of t|w
1
written back in the "horse and fend the Constnjuqp; - in the next
The supreme courHater upheld that ner of Kalamazoo.
en last week to Pennock hospital
The
Bunday
School
party
al
the
/ buggy age." Officials and advisers breath he advises. Disregard the | to-climb stairway type .arc to be j decision In a five to three opinion.
hall w»» well attended. Refresh­ for treatment.
close to him have recommended I constitution"
“
I erected by conservation authorities
Mr. and Mr*. O- C. Hewitt. Mr.
tnalil Is lime to rewrite the ConBecause of this two-sided atulutlal
,he h^P ot CCC workersthls a large number of simitar cases, ment* were served and all enjoyed and Mr*. Harold Case. Mrs Sylvia
* social time together. Next Sun­
which
led
the
1935
legislature
to
Bivens and daughter. Arabella, at­
•UIuUm; .n tain, K up W d.U-\„,.„d . dneumrni wlUfli repre ।
idS
pass a joint resolution submitting a day we hope to see a full bouse at tended a farewell party al Assyria
Possibly thia Philippine Const!- sente the keystone of their personal I county. Walsh between Seney and constitutional amendment to rem­ church. A young man from the
Center for Mtv. Evallne Streeter of
lutlon Is not the exact model which freedom. America!.* may be par- I■ Shfngleton.
shingieton. Frederick south 'of De­ edy what nearly every taw enforce­ mountain* ol Kentucky Will talk to the Moody Bible Institute who b
Mr. Roosevelt would implant in this'doned tor bemR a bit apprehensive I wardJ in Crawford county
‘ and South ment officer believes to be a defect
Sir
ven rwmnson
Mr. «na
and Mrs Vert
Robinson were being sent a* a missionary to In1 Presque Isle north of Atlanta in
... m the basic statute. This measure given
a farewell party at the home G1* b*
chSSY
country; perhap-, it does,not repre-1 about the possibility of a EuropeanMontmorency county. Visit— “ to was originally sponsored by the
*enl hl* e»cl idea or a United j type dictatorship graaually crowd- .Michigan who get nervous __...
^n! State Crime GommUsten and was of Mr. and Mr*. George Clause
Btates OOMUUiUon. 1936 Model. mg out representative government
- . 1 climbing fire towers. wiU find the .Introduced tn the senate by Sen- । Wednesday night. There were ff7 m a parse of one hundred dollars
present and all enjoyed the laneh- ® ’
new type a HtW eMier to negoHowever, there are so many clauses in this country
audience and
and niertaw
pledges' tar
eon and iptendtd music later. welffrom the audience
One must never lose sight of the'...
tn the document which represent
shall miss them here but wish them! her support in the foreign held.
Crime commission. — From Slate
Um exact ideas which Ise and his fact tn.l tfe aieuwr. of turop. .1-'
success In their new home. They
WU1 ;q on the air in Crime Commission. Lansing.
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
were presented with a banittlfiij
*0 began by undermining and Ignor- Michigan
beginning
Wednesday,
lamp..
■1 Mr. and MrsMrs. Delbert Rcyi
ing document* which ' guaranteed j Oct? 14- Ofi that Mte a Writs 01 lou* other organization* &gt;'keUye tn floor lamp.
We welcome our new neighbors,' entertained refatlvee from
certain express right* and liberties weekly conservation broadcasts will
Mr.
and
Mrs.
C
Marshall
who
have
“
'*
”
■larljwl by the
tK« department of the conservation movement. '- .
| be started
H. Sunday,
Ing a bit apprehensive.
of the people they determined to
nolda
of
H
bought the Robinson home and arc
' conservation over Station WKAR at
Saturday
rule
and Bunday guest
One Uilng is certain. If anything rule.
Michigan State college. East Lan­
Violator* of game laws win be
al all resembling the Philippine
sing. An attempt will be made to having ■ hard time to dodge Hie
a crow-Mclion of conjcrta- law in Midland county Uitg fall. At
Way of Qur World
cu»uuu« &lt;m
mu. Mr
Pungent Paragraphs present
Mrs. Frederick Fuhr attended a
tlon activity in Michigan, in­ the request ot the Midland Sports­
own
. dictatorship is ..
own. wn
we would no tenser
longer be citizens . \ A
the most. satis-'
NEWS GIXANDiGB.
cluding . news reports and i eom-» man'* club 10 aherifT* deputle* will
of a democratic commonwealth; we factory form of government, if you■ ment of
general r canearvatlon
Thursday afternoon.
affair*, sportsmen* group*.* activi­
Mr. and Mrs William Cramer, if..
thejnmates were high school gradties of women's conservation organihave purchased the Lyman Uhl
Farm
^Hl
IhM Mm

been staying racenUy. visited him
Wednesday night and found him as
cheerful as usual.
Mayville has lived In Michigan
since he was 33 years old. coining to
Coldwater from Ohlq, when, he says,
there were still indiari* In the slate
who told how to build a weather­
proof cabin.
worked |h the sawmill* a* engineer
and millwright for 31 yegrs. He al­
so worked tn furnltur* and wood­
working factories at Jtawaygo and
Glrarde center near caldtfater. Li­
ter he settled In Irvin/ oft a small
farm.
A centenarian buddy at Mayville's
was Thomas Gordon of Howard
CRy, who died within the last year
at the age of 108. The pair had been
friend* since 1373 when they became
acquainted while lumbering tn Um
northern pert of Um state. In 1933
they celebrated their birthday anniversarls* toother tn Gfand Rapid*.

give them a break In lhetr helple**
effort to live. Let's try to Improve
ntrr marksmanship, if it must bg
Improved, in som*. other wav than
by the needless slaughter of these
gift* of the Creator.
I hope you Will understand the
spirit in which this la written and
that you. a* an Influence for good
In Barry county will do your ut­
most to further the campaign to
eonssrve and improve our wild life.
Sincerely yours.
Noble Cain.

Waters Clothes Shop

SATURDAY

SPECIAL
October 17th
With every dress
shirt bought at
the regular price
of SI.19, 81.25
$1.50 and $2, we
will GIVE abso­
lutely ....

FREE
A New Fall

TIE!
Our Regular
49c Quality!

Remember, this is
for ONE day only
Saturday, Oct. 17!
You may select any
shirt in the store at
the above prices,
including plain

un»i»
Sttaflay with Harvey Hartwells M
Doster.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Maynard of
Katamaaoo were

Bunday

evening
visited

CLOTHES SHOP
SfUiMg Q—lii, Keen Ul Btf'

�TM HAfTTNOJI HWflTOMeM, QCTQMB If, ttH
OMTUABY.

SERIES OF RAOM)
SROAOCXm BEGINS

SOCIAL

.. October 3. &lt;
fiwahmen MR

BANNER CUM

foltowtag a brief lUnesa. The
waa held Bunday morning Jr

TitoMay evening with

will
tenera

ot two vocal aotos by Mrs. Oorten
Bdtnontls and piano aotaa by Mra.

enjoyed.
For the November meeting on
Tuesday evening, the seventeenth.
Mra. Charlca Hinman b to be hoat-

Organisations
aipUM udMT «*1

M4 ,l*Hr

on Wednesdiy. Oct M t. U. UdHI

HONORED AT LtrtiCHBON.

Centerville, who was the speaker at
last Friday's meeting of the Wom­
en's club, waa the guest at honor At
a luneheon given that noon at the
Krker HOnae by Mrs. Marten B
Ooo&lt;^e&lt;r The fosate besides Miss
Keech were Mrt. K. B McIntyre
Mrs. Fred W Stobttnk. Mrs. W. R
Qoot and Mrs H G Flflrtte.

FLIES mtOS OAKLAND
TO 1.09 ANGltES. CAL
Word reeetved here by her aurents from M1M Yvonne Trego sMtet
that she ia now making a dally
round trip airplane night from Los
Angeles to Oakland. Caflfomia. It
takes two and one-half hour* ac­
tual flying time each arty. She Is
enjoying her work very much.

Ths petunia otrti* nil meet tab
ahemoee m»urwtay&gt; t£ IM heme
of Mra. William H Roush. 837 Hay
street.

ss

Bru*h R1
will rbeei
ThurMsy,
ntied to I

hTses-aSS.

rsurz.

BMetUlcn DpMlaMst
will broadcast rteh. Gaines followed that assbud
Meh group to learning the names of
the ether gtoup. As part of a short
&lt;t Meh month front
MDgTXth. UM frathmen ware wrtcomed by DeForfit Walton. Jr..
president of the council, and a reIBbnsa was given by Leo Johnson. Mr.
m m&gt;.
Bdcker. Mr. Brottk and
Mr Lower
the advantsheets will carry on their dbaUlettM and mute. Dad AnceD Invitod all high school boys to attend

meeting* October 13 so that they
ma^ not neglect lhe spiritual aide
Gnpe juiee and doughnuts were
served kator in the evening, the ciemahri glmoet exceeding the supply.
The Hl-Y deserves credit for their
HU reMMMMhip WNh eti
Groups UMl wtafc to ergaMM May lupport of thb Mffgir as they guarobtaJN tntottneni bkMka sm! fur-* anttod Any defleH tn expenses and
aastotod in the jireporatlon ot lhe
protrtm.

THREE 8L10tITLY INJURED.

nlng. oct. 31 at g o'cldti.

Troop 75 of the Boy Scouts ot
America has started out its new
eft's Club, acheduMd for Friday, Oc­ year successfully. Under lhe leader­
tober IB. hag been Cancelled because ship of John Hewitt. Scoutmaster,
of the inabIMty ot Mrs. M R Key­
and Norval Stamm. axstsUnt Scout­
wortfl 0f Detroit to come for the
master. Troop 75 has const out of
lhe doldrums whteh have gripped it
RURPKfHED ON BltTHDAY.
eak bn •MraonallUM of Today- and the rest of RMbttag In Barry
Mrs. Ward Erway was pMuantid at the late boar of her can­
county the last six month* Troop
■ s.uprtaed on her birthday last
nation it Waa impotabte to obtain
speaker to take her place. The

EMI Grand street. Eighteen

Friday. November 6, when Federa­ aueetos U
toeohtMUting
tion Day will be observed.

Erway. Mra Clara Erway, Ed BmiUi
and Ray Erway Refreshmenu were
served.
,
U. B. churth Tuesday P. M.. Oct.
38. It to to be a union meeting with
DANCING PARTY.
allFhe missionary aocleties of Has­
)A delightful dancing party wu tings and every member U urged to
heft at U
the
home ' be present. There will be a
m John Benedict heme
- —
talk
*■ —
by
Friday evening wfth *3 guesla al-1 Mrs. MeNuMy. • playlet by several
tending. There was a lovely (upper । ladles and special music. Everybody
and all reported a fine Ume.
j welcome.

(DsALE!
Still a good atiortmont of itoma in
out ONE-CENT SALE, and for this
reason we will continue it through
this week. .Don't waif at these
items are limited.

REED’S

WALGREEN SYSTEM

DREG STORE
PHONE

Uw tartte­
en and the

2241

HASTINGS

at

troop conxmltjeaae Kelley.

Fred Rogers, a WPA worker of
Charlotte, wax driving home from
thia city in a Ford truck Monday
afternoon With him an the truck
wera Gerald Kaaler. also of Char। lotto, end Miss Helen Smith of
Grand Rapids A3 he approached
the crossing ot the little stream
near A- O. Lowell* farm, about
three the
mfles
east of
lhe.heel.
city, he
appiled
hrato.
The
loekZ
Mid the truck went over the. 15loot embankment or the south side

rtovflfe township cemetery at Prai­
rieville Mr* Compton was bom to
Bridgeton. N- J., tn 1872 and came
with her husband to Mtehlgan in
1830. finally settling tn thb com­
munity. Due to poor health tn ra­
cent years, she ha* not taken a
very active part tn community af­
fairs but has acquired a goodly
number of friends who will long
remember her kindly intereat in
those around her. Besides her husband. Mrs. Compton is survived by
1 her
brother,
Charles
M Gal­
hard of Bridgeton. N. J.; two sons.
Charles C. Compton. Associate En­
tomologist of Die IlllnoU Slate
Natural Hbtory Survey, and Dr. PKenneth Compton. Dean of Sioux
Pall* College. 8- Dakota; a daugh­
ter. Mrs. H. F. Small of Alma, and
eight grandchildren.

OBITUARY.
Mrs Ida Hughes. 77, wife of Fred
J. Hughes, daughter of William and
Olive Lindsey, and granddaughter at
Mr. and Mra. Ell Waite 'prominent
in lhe early history of Prairieville
township! died at her home here at
Prairitvilte Thursday night. Mrs.
Hughex was a life tong resident of
thb place and vicinity, loved by all
having the pleasure of her ac­
quaintance She was seriously 111
since December. She was a mem­
ber ot the Baptist church. Funeral
services were held at the home Sun­
day afternoon. Rev Ralph Bates In
[charge and the remains were laid
cemetery
। to
—, rest-•tn lhe Prairieville
&gt;«”ly
। Surviving are the husband;
a
;
.rfhl’n'oT'lJ^

' ganjport. Indiana; and Cassius of
Prairtevtlle; five sisters. Irene Go*'
of Kalamasoo. Mrs. Kato Brigham
of Plainwell. Mr*. Lillian Gibson of
Nashville. Mra. Margaret Brigham
BRUSH RIDGE
COMMUNITY CLUB. of Decatur and Mrs Susie Hall of
cert* room. This was followed by &lt;
Pine Lake; one brother. Eli Lind­
discussion of plan* for the year and
The Brush Ridge Community Club sey of Pine Lake; and a grandson
then an informal leaden’ msettng. met with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Anders ' Fred J. Hughe* of Logansport SinSept. 21. the meeting conflicted Friday
evening,
about
sixty
being
t?—-*■
——.----- -.tc —--'cere sympathy is extended to the
Mreaenl. The place of the next &gt;
in* at the schoolhouse. so the troop meeting b at the school unless it j
-r s r__________
Had some drill practice on the school has to be changed so as to have BRUSH RIDGE CEXiEground! and on lhe Bliss Co, drive­ electriclty. as the program is to be 1
TKRY CIRCLE,
way. Afterward* they went back to put on by the Checkerboard Feed 1 Mt« Rena Pierce and Mra. Fanny
store. The date will be announced I smith were hostesses to members ot
and cake were served by the scout- later. Mra Rose McCallum waa ap-1 the circle for the September meetpotnted tn charge of supper. The mg. we certainly are Indebted to
' A few days before the next troop program consisted at group singing. LheAF
• * •ladies
•
•for "
—*- -dinner
-------the *lovely
| meeting, the troop committee met a talk by Die school nurse. Mix- and entertainment, which we en­
। and planned a treat for the boys. Neuschaeffcr. urging parents to joyed
■ Word was spread around the troop have their school and pre-school
Donations for lhe pump which we
by lhe grapevine telegraph method children examined by their own are trying to have put tn the ceme­
and the troop met Sept. 28 at 6:15 family doctor and dentist If the tery have been steadHy coming in
at the schoolhouse where they were parent
cgn't
afford It
it Die
the Kellofg
Kellof
t afford
----- ent can
and we hbpoJto report much pro­
met by can driven by Jtsae KeMy. | Health Unit U to do It for them
gress at our next meeting.
Steve Cooley and Jay Mead and
—
------------Other
numbers—on—
the
---- ---------------,—program
w------ , ---- --------a areare
urged
to to
remember
Members
urged
remember
were Hawaiian guitar music by Mrs ; the new membership drive whicW
0am Keller's landing on Stewart Prank Sanders and Russell Nash I takes place at this lime each year,
lake. Other refreshments furnished and guessing games Refreshments I Bring a new member or an inter­
by lhe committee Included baked wwe served at a late hour and all | e*ted person to lhe next meeting
beans, hot coeoa. apples, bananas, departed declaring it a happy eve- ( which will be held with Mrs John
rolls and marshmallows. Everybody, Ring.------------------------------------------------------nines
had a good time including two at
&gt;
OBITUARY.
lhe boys who got into some poLson DEATH OF MIDDLEVILLE RESIDENT i Ronald Raymond Stauffer, only
Albert R. Delano. 56 died at hb !chlW ol Enteraan and Marian SlaufITte meeting thia last Monday
J*,l,-and
night wasn't much of a meeting due home six miles northeast of Mid- i *cr- *•’ ^?rn
dleville Bunday evening. He U sur­ | departed this life. Oct. 7. 1936 st
Scoutmaster who had Co work that! vived bjMhls wife; one daughter, the tender age of two years, five
evening. It had been planned to Mrs. Rex Robinson of Middleville; months and twenty-seven days On
tom the new t"UOa but this was hU parents and two br6therx. The June 16. 1934 he was baptised by the
poaMMwd until the next meeting.
A. M. on Wednesday with burial in ber of lhe Oradle Roll of Hasting*
Methodtxt church. He leaves to
Lakeside cemetery tn Muskegon.
mourn his loss his father and
fdr»o&lt;ten The
Sixty per cent of air transport fly­ mother. hl« grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Lacy. Mrs. Alcid Stauffer,
ing Ln the U. a Is done at night.
snatch chib, heads and tails and
aattered cuts and bruises which
were treated by a loeal physician.
meeting on sept. 14 Their injuries were not serious

. built a home In the
of ■ acboolnet. It is the eaa•otolton yet advanced for

WEEK-END

FAMILY
The
sw

M six-thtrly o'clock. The following

IRONSII

Charge ol arrangements: Mr. ana
Mrs. Fred Stebbins, chairmen; Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Front. Mr. and i
I, Polfus,
Mrs Arthur crothera. Mr. and Mr*

Marble, nr. and Un R. O. Finnic.
ten Smith and Mra. Josephine
Whitmore
Rally day. Bunday, October 2S.
will be observed by special pro- 1
grams now being prepared

IN DEMAND AN
FOUIT1CAL SPEAKER.
Insurance c,T3mmi«ioner John c 1
Ketcham is busy these days giving
political addrc.ves in various parts
of the state Yesterday. Wednesday,
he spoke at Clarksville at noon and
in the evening was honor guest at
a banquet in Eaton Rapids. Part '
of the day he travelled on Cover- ,
nor Alfred M Landon's train.
j

The Home of Quoflty ord CwframoaM,. •
for FALL oad IFUINC MHUf. MoM oory rMMXwM*.

IRONS1HB BROTHfiM
EslabfMkU Iftrf

PHONE 24*7

uttw

2 Coat Days
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
It’s Time to Choose Your Coat!
Prices are lower than later,
far, rrta terid I and labor a:
advancing.

We have all wool Coat*, mat
by the beat makers, with gua
anteed linings—whether it’*
110.00 Coat dr a S$4.75tJ

is the
woman

whose coai is a

Our stock is complete
sizes, colors end style
lions.

Printzess

Use Our Cetiw

LAYAWAY F

*&gt; Become lhe proud owner of a
Printzess and know what It is to
own the coat ol your dreams. A

coai fashioned with such ad toil
expoTtoen that it conslanlly inspires
you to look your best. A coai pro­
portioned with such undorslanding
of lhe American figure Li’s a joy to
slip into. A coai made by experts
from the finest of materials . . .
crowned with lovely furs. To own
a Princess fashion is to own a coat
in which you can take loy now and

Every lactywttocl

her coat this Fi

"Mary Ua"Chacolato

Candy with tha compHOWnH St «M
M. &amp; F. Styi. Shag

for months to come.

SAVINGS
For YOU!
COTTAGE CHEESE
LEG OF LAMB
PORK ROAST Fresh Ham
KETTLE ROAST a..f
STEAK Round, Sirloin or Swiss

ib. 25 c
ib. 25 c

21c

39°°

BACON

REPAIR and MODERNIZE

ARMOUR'S STAR

l!4

NATIONAL BANK OF HASTINGS

Ik- Pk»-

19c

Under the NATIONAL HOUSING ACT
MINTt OH pwiLLINQS, CA*ACtS, SUtlNWS P*OP«»TY
anpfasm luiteiMh. T:-'.'-

DRESS C
16”

ib. 16c

ib. 23c

SMOKED PICNICS Shanltlass, Ib.

ANY HWnn OWMI MAY APPLY FC* AN FH. A. MODUNIZATlON LOAN (IUNNINC HOM ONi TO POU* Y*X|S. *0* JMF*OVI-

IO~ 12“ I

2 ib.. 19c

ib. 35c
BUTTER Shultx dr Fr««port
dox.
25 c
ORANGES Sweet and Juicy
SWEET POTATOES 6 ib.. 19c

-a'iy.Virz.11 |l

\fntluaye in otir(|annent DepartmentJ)

M. &amp; F. STYIxK SHOP

FRA.y DS
EXCLUSIVE BUT
HASTINGS. MICH

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

Silk Dr.

sfrintzesfi ^ppareio

NOT
TEL

�CTT MASTING S RAXNKK, TgUMSDAT, OCTOtt H, 1W
EDAUlf UrWTAU
rrWnik IvCvilUn

pointed official record keeper.

I ©3orting Items

but no official action was taken.

HAtTINflS WINS AT
GRAND RAPIDS 12-6

At the Theatre
rifkUH Spirit ot the Local
Toom Show, Wall is
Fred MacMarray, Jack OaUe
Moskay', Gama
East Grand Rapids Monday aft-

'

America’s first seml-mllltary or­
ganisation at state officers, the
Texas Rangers. Is made lhe theme’
of a sweeping, panoramic film his-

from Saturday because of wet
grounds. The fighting spirit of the
invaders and Struble's exceptional
punts kept the heavier suburban
team subdued throughout the first
half. The Hastings boys seized a
scoring opportunity resulting from
a poor But punt and passed for the
only touchdown of the first half.

I

INJURED FRIDAY P. M.

Klng Vidor’s “Texas Rangers." fea­
turing Fred MacMurray and the
wise -cracking jack Oakie. Jean
Parker appears as the daughter of
the leader of the military post.
..
1

half C. Smith, Hastings left end.
Capturing for the screen the col­
caught a fumble by Williams, East’
and' lhe glamour of C
California’s
fullback and raced across for lhe!or IU,C
lipid!ilasllnx. teuchdown. Exit old-time
old-time mining
mining camp.,
camps. "M'Hss,"
to be Qn&lt;
one" ot
of th
the season’s
then opened an offensive, mixing 1 turns
lurns out 10
passes, reverses and off-tackle plays, most delightful love stories. Anne
which resulted in a touchdown. Shirley Is Ideally cast In the Ulle
Late in lhe fourth quarter another role as the shy girl who falls in Jove
£xt Mta&lt;± ended Just before the —
5“hout k3
’owln
-----—-« wh-1!t “ is. John
i»«. ____ co-starring
«- honors
as the quiet school-teacher hero
and Guy Kibbee is cast as Anne's .
yard line,
‘
worthless
father.
mo Hastings team deserves com—1-------I
USS.1 “Charlie chan A.
Al Th.T^h.The Race Track."

£5 SSk-X^.

i

STS

McKibbln teachers.

parents. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Oaks. |
tended the funeral of lhe Utter’s gensmith neighborhood. Mra Bel*
Those from here who attended
-bringing the most people
cousin, Herbert c. Latta, of Battle •on is moving back into her own the Spotlight Friday evening enJ
Detroit 0»r Oraihed Into services.
house.
*
creek Thursday.
Hirn on North BroadI ***• Hthworth of Battle Creek
The Ladles’ Aid Society wiU serve Joyed It very much.
Mln Doris Hartman attended a
nnn on nonu orysu
conducted the church services Bun­
a chicken supper Thursday evening.
wayHill
J d*y.
ot Mias LMM Tyler of Augusta
Hastings were Sunday callers »l thl
Two persons wm injured Friday J Mr. and Mra. WiU Young of
Saturday afternoon for Mrs. JQhn
Dan Douglass home.
ster, Middleville, formerly of Irving
afternoon at about 5:30 when two (Bellevue were Bunday guests of Mr.
McComb, a recent bride.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Peterson ol
cars, one driven by Norvln Clifton. and Mrs. Jake Johnson.
township, October 9. a son.
Grass Lake spent Bunday night and
of Detroit and the other by Frank J Mr and Mr» George Coats and
Clarence Rawlader is the new M. Monday with her cousin. Wm. Ha­
tKVXNO.
Those neither absent nor tardy
Newton of Rutland township, collld- . falnlly of Coau Grove were guests the first month of school are: Fred­
vens.
The first Quarterly Conference
ed at the Junction of North Broad- ot Mr Bnd Mra w F Smith Bun­ C1K.K
The McCallum community clut
&gt;■&lt;*»&lt; . .
erick Castle, Mcvmc
George nju&lt;,
Hyde. UI»U.
Clair
way
Clifton was
, dgv
way and
ana M-37.
*-•»&lt;. Mr.
-r
,
day.
Mumer.
Stlclp.
Carl
Smith,
16.16.
pot
luck
supper.
Mem
­
will hold 1U October meeting thli
Munger.Allan
Allan
BHelp,
Carl
Smith.octoper
October
Pot
luck
supper.
Memlnv.&lt; DAnlf.*.
8OUTHWK8T RUTLAND.
driving down the Broadway hill to- I &gt;MT and Mri Mason Miner and • ILloyd
Boniface, George Hennenltt, I hw*rn
beta nt
of MIArllnvtlla
Middleville rhtireh
church am
are IninFriday evening lhe 16th at thi
IL'flrrl
tOWTl
and
Ml*.
NCWtdl
was
.
X_&lt;
—
wnM
TLCre
—
—
I
—
«
a
TL.1*n
vllr/S
ward town
Mr. Newton
■ jgughters. of Homer. Mr. and Mrs. Charlene and Helen Hoe venaIr Tiled.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Dunn ofjwtuv
home u&gt;
of nu.
Mr. wms
and.Mra.
-mts. unn
Jim Wilcox
nucu*
making a left turn when the Ulf - I XJUIV» OUIIUI und MUs
Mwd
Mbs Lillian Bowerby and another Bedford were Sunday guests of the
Mrs. Clara Robinson left Mondaj
tu— NeUle
nwwaau JOhnCOCk, Jtllet Lewis,
.An ear .struck
ton
1-tvafe h,t.
his AW*
own; U
He
■ suffered pan -_____ —&lt;»_________
■ .—
of A
Orangeville
were
Bunday
Donaldene and Roland McKibbln. teacher from the Chicago schools former’s brother, Harry Dunn.
for her home In Grand Rapids aft­
a severe scalp laceration.
er spending some time visiting hei
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wallle ; jane Mullen. Robert Quick, Marcei- spent the week end with - Miss
In lhe Clifton car besides Mr. Bmlth and Karl.
Bowens Milla and Mr. and Mrs. sister, Mrs. Win. Havens, and othet
■ la Shepard and Robert Wilkins 'eowerby’s mother here.
Clifton were his wife and Mr. and • Mrs. Isaac Compton of Milo who Mrs. Doris Hyde and Mrs. Hotel
Lemuell Oaks of Middleville were retetlves.
Mrs. Peteramark of Detroit. Mr.
Clifton was hurt but not seriously.
The other occupants of the car ascaped with bruises. Newton's car

Un. W. F. Smith waa hoateu al
to lhe
crooked
lake home Wednesday
night for Mrs Willis Babcock, for­
merly Miss Opal Honeywell, a recent
bride of Battle Creek. Numerous
gifts wen given her.
William Houvener has an apple

Ungs and vicinity U

“■12” INNERSPRINGS

Spring Arbor Junior
--------Free Methodist church. Colfax st.. j
Bunday evening. Prof. Lowell will be |
remembered as the director of the
A Cappella chorus at the High
school auditorium last spring.
|

DOUD CORNERS.
Mrs. Winnie Buxton of Maple
Grove and Mra. Jessie Norris of La­
cey visited at H. Berban’s Wednes­
day Mrs. Norris remaining until
Sunday. Tom Clemence and daugh­
ter and Nora Clemence of Bed­
ford and Sate Clark of Battle Creek
। were Friday visitors at the Bergl man home.
| Mr. and Mrs. H- Bergman and
i MJs. Jessie Norris called on Mrs.
Webster of Northeast Barry Sun­
day.
The Harvest Festival will be held
I at the Bunnell church Friday. Oct.
I 10.
| George Moore of Chicago visited
| his parents over the week end.
i Little Dickie Carl visited his
grandparents over the week end
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carl of Hastings
came Sunday to take home.

[ward

week speciai

Let us FILL your COAL BIN

before winter prices
take effect.
QUALITY COALS AT
LOWEST PRICES

ORDER YOUR COAL TODAY!

HASTINGS

PHONE 2118

W00DLAND

MICHIGAN

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
The Farmer Owned Store'

FAIR LAKE.
I Mr. and Mrs. Claud Norris of
Carlton spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mix. Porter Knowles.
, Sunday visitors ut Mrs. Mildred
Prltx. were her mother. Mrs. Frank
Davis. Miss Blanche Goldsworthy
' and Arthur Long brake of Battle
Creek and Mrs. Ray Pierce of Ban­
. field.
I Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Armour spent
Sunday In Litchfield as guests of
William Buckland.
I Robert Lester and Miss Marlon
Clark were married Tuesday eve­
ning at Hickory comers. They re­
side In Hastings. Best wishes arc
extended to this young couple.
Word has been tecelved from
Banfield of lhe death of Mrs Lydia
Jones.

EAST DELTON.
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Boulter of
Cressey spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs James Boulter.
Mr. and Mrs. Ike Lelnaar spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Claud Hammond near Hinds
Corners.
Miss Lorrene Collison of Battle
Creek spent Bunday at home.

PRAIRIEVILLE.
Mr. and Mrs Silas Doster went
to Cooper Tuesday to attend the fu­
neral of lhe former’s brother, John
Doeter.
.

8
9)
4J

$4.49 UNPAINTED

TABLE 3«»
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you to stain or paint any
color I Large shaped topi

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WARD WEEK SPECIAI

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coils money can buy—deep, fluffy layers of felt­

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JS

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Reg. $10 Platform Spring! 99 Coils!
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la*. IK""

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Comes in 4 finishes with big
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topi 5 pc. glassware set I

[WARD WEEK SPECIAL!

114.95 Coil Spring—165 Resilient Coils.

9.88

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11.88

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ARD WEEK SPECIAL

.8

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8

Inner-spring

Mattresa

%

5
.8

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12““

o

209 ionercoilsl Felted cot­
ton upholstering I Sisal
peds! Sateen ticking I

[WARD WEEK SPECIAL,

I

Regularly 927.95—0x12

Axminsters
sp«ioi
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«5

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I

BUY AT SUMMER PRICES

It’s Ward Week at Wa rds

It’s Ward Week atWa rds

PROF. LOWELL CQMINO.

The First Ward P. T. A- Will be
held Monday evening. Oct. 19th.
There will be a good program and
Warner Oland. as Charlie Chan.
refreshments.
faces the greatest odds of his ca__________
.
ner—80.000 to 1—In - Charlie Chan HAPPY BIRTHDAY
at .the
climax
ol
..
k- Race Track.” The ...
----------8UBFM8F BUNDAY.
the film occurs during lhe breath- , Mr. and Mrs. M
. Falconer were
M. o
D.
less moments of the Ban Juanita honor
at a surprlso party at
HASTINGS JOINS
Handicap, with Chan, alone of all llu. hotne of
WEST CENTRAL LEAGUE the 80.000 spectators aware that couer, on Bunday. October 11. The
Mrs
annual championship trophies for a ruthleu murderer U about to evanl
nuu wo
wm complimentary
complimentary to
io Mrs.
«-------- — as•-—
| ••
M. —
D- —
Falconer,
tier-----------seven•lyfootball, basket ball and baseball strike again.
will be awarded by the newlyninth birthday is on Friday. Octo, w
fanned West central League, which Bing Crosby. Bob Bums in
“Rhythm on lhe Range.", A lovely &lt;0^,. was wrved to
Includes the schools of Hastings.
Burns and Crosby are cast iu twenty-six. the two sons, three
Ionia. Greenville and Belding, ac­
cording to action taken at a meeting cowtxsys
cowboj-s who invade
Invade New York, win
wla w
daughters and their families, Inprizes In a rodeo, and start back for eluding three of their eleven great­
in Belding High Monday evening
Plaques to be made in school Arizona. Frances Farmer Is cast as a grandchildren, being present,
shops were also suggested for golf society-girl fleeing from a marriage 1 Many
ana useful
,beautiful
________________________
gifts
she does not to go thru with. Biz were
—--------------------and tennis.
presented
Mrs. ------------Falconer, and
The first Annual Field Day of the —
song
- ----------------------hits are launched In the Cros- pictures were taken of lhe four gen­
league will be held at Ionia on May by-Bums musical.
erations.
It was a pleasant gathering, all
uniting tn extending best wishes to
Mrs. Falconer for many more such
happy birthdays.
stanfitng on the line. Struble and
Scobey played well In lhe backfield
and Scobey was especially brilliant
on defense.
_____________

■WT

Over ana hundred were'present at
Sunday school rally Sunday

R^. $6,951

9» Coil

SPRING

491

Wif/i $90 Features I

/&lt; 88

Cast Iron Range

Wholesale rug prices dropped for juat a few
days—Ward buyers rushed to the market and
placed a tremendous order to give you this sen*
sational value I Think of it—genuine seamleu
Axminsters made from fine, imported wools, in

99 resilient coil springs
provide fine mattress sup­
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week SPECIA

[ward WEEK SPECIAL

E ARD

SAVE I 4-to.5.ROOM

33

Circulating

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&lt;3
MR-TIGHT HEATER

Long winter evenings can be comfortable ones, if you
spend them in a winter-proof home. Costs are sur­
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Company’s efficient “Fix-it-Man” do the needed
work and the quality materials they use insure com­
fort for years to come.
•

9)
,9,'

hdnifd

»«&lt;•

SPtCIAL PRICE I

w.,d. Uu„.

4 &lt;&gt;88
Jf ™

WEEK SPECIAL

Wand Week

$aAe !

150 Qu.ldv, Pr.lo.m.. ;r. 8,

Gvrev Washer

34"“
Compares with heaters |20
to 135 higher ItHuge sue ano

Ward Week only. DoubteGeamed steel body prevents

It’s Ward
Week at
THE HOME LUMBER CO. ‘tS'S! "IIX HASTINGS,
MICHIGAN

and wood. Ward Week only!

MONTCOMEKY WARD
US SOUTH JEFFERSON STREET

TELEPHONE 2M1

�OP**— **■

W

Grand Rapids aaturfey evening 1
Where aba waa teUHaoaM at Ud i

Social Events and Personal Mention

dty and

and JoAnne Flnnle were to Grand Marshall ♦Uited Mr. and Mn. L. F i
MMB « Monday.

Schult*

of

Cara.

Mu* Edmonds ware a floor length

—•——•

Rapid* Balurday

Alvin

PR^tW^THEON

waa hotne from

X..
H.CU4
Servo on Kxeoutive
Board

“ re,'^n
*• _
Mr. aM Mr*. John Hoevenalr and

a

|Ann Arbor where

ehe

was

the

* guest an Sunday of MU* Katherine

"«&lt;•

kss1 ’o^.

| abroad visiting girl*’ scliool* and Nutty.
women are M*- given, one was for the highest I has given many addresses since re­
turning to the United State* in risgc by her brother. William O.
total
score
for
the
summer
and
one
lb* 2^2k end
IJ•’..rrtura?d ® Tb-ttoy•
I Mr. and Mra. Gordon clement and
Wlllitta ot Battle Creek, wore a
Claude Wood, over the week end.
Mr and Mri Lowell Herbert of children and Mr*. Belle clement of for the highest Individual score.
Seattle for Nanking.
Mrs. Lewis Oarman I* the golf club
Mr. and Mra. A. J. vedder wm Otete# wm Bunday gueata of Mr. VeMing spent Saturday and Sun­ champion and will have her name
BUSINESS WOMEN'S
guest* of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. More and Mrs. A- X Herbert.
day with Judge and Mrs Stuart
axd lapels at beaver and a gold
engraved on lhe cup. Prises were
HOSPITAL GUILD. •afin btouaa. Her accessories wen
of Marshall on Saturday and BunMr. and Mrs. Archie McDonald1-—- ■
Thirty-two members and guests
day.
.
spent the week end tn Winchester.
are: Mrs. Robert O’Connor as run­ of the Business Women* Hospital
Mr. and Mr*. Earl McKibben and Canada, with relatives.
, । Mr. and Mrs. ^oman Feldpausch, ner-up to the club champion; Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. Willard White VUlted' Mrs. Mattie Striker U spending Mrs. Wm. Thomas and Mrs. o. R. G. Finnic as winner at the con­ Guild enjoyed a lovely dinner at
The attendants were Mr. and
the home of Mrs. Harrison Blocher
Mr. White’s mother in Ovid ®m-'twn
"rtth
hrntruir at hi.
■
LTT- TX.-- -------------------- ' Fsldpau*ch. also Mr*. Charles Park- solation match; Mrs. O’Connor of Woodland on Monday evening,
J ..
«
i 12 iST *2^ aum’e^A.r wsra u “ MWdtovllIe motored lo Notre July handicap; Mra. Frederick H.
» u&gt;d Ml. C. W.JTt»w «
»•
*11“ r"«*r
MWnUy for th, UoO.ll Taylor, runner-up; Mrs. O’Connor with Mr*. A. J. Vedder as hostess.
The table* were centered with bou­
Kalamazoo spent Sunday evening BUMay guest* of Mr. and Mr*. game
June ringer; Mrs. Garman. July quet? of autumn garden flower*
with his sister, Mrs. Clarence Bwt Garter of Middleville.
'
n.nkin
ringer, and Mrs. Taylor, August flanked with bras* candelabra with
nmho
1 Mra. Agnee Fisher la spending this l ,4r- *na "trs- Rankin Hyde and ringer.
navy blue suit
Mr*. Ray Branch won the white cathedral candles.
° Mr and Mrs George Snyder and Weck to Ba tele creek with Mr. Mid
vUlted Mr*
After the dinner and the business
Mr* John Buehler of Cakdonls Mrs Karl Johnson and family
K ’ tot^nd ^SiT^hen huT.i^d' prize for the high total bridge score
were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs I
WkHace Osborn waa Che “k “nUI 3ynday- *h«p hl* grand- and the holder of the highest inShirley Mayo*
guest of Mis* Gertrude Bentley at. J1.011*’'
*on- P*ul
1004
Mr* Vedder's home where bunco talned the wedding party and outThe club house lounge was unus- was
was pl*ye
played, a contribution was of-town guests at a wedding break­
Ur
wr.
' Kalamazoo over the week end
:hUn home.
._ for
.
Ior Ule hOSually attractive for lhe last lunch- made
family of Naahvtlte spent Balurday 1 US. and Mra. Emerson Wolfs of
On Tuesday evening. Mrs. Fred eon. Michaelmas daisies, yellow and pita],
fast immediately after the cerewith ills sister and family, Mr. and
*«« Bunday guasU of Mr. I Jones, Mrs. w. L. Hinman, Mra.
orange marigolds making lovely
Mra Roy E Busb
1
Mra- D*” Cotton, her paranta.' Harold Radford and Mra. Delbert
table decorations were an elaborate
bouquets. Bpray* of
Michigan
holly
I
«.
w
ANNUAL FALL PICNIC.
Mr. Mid Mn. K»roM BhBddkX I D«oU&gt;»
Fry M UnMM ru- ! WH&lt;™, m U&gt; orurd Ifcpldr
bride's cake tn the center with gold
I
and daughter Mtsaana of De troll1
hcr grandparents. Mr. and Mr*, attending the opening session of and snow berries mixed with green | a delightful occasion Sunday was and white taper* at each end.
were u*ed on lhe luncheon tables thB annual fall picnic at Mr*. R M
Following the the breakfast Mr.!
were waa* end gueata of Mr and
K- Bevorance. several days last the Grand chapter of the O. E. 8
Mrs L E Barnett
'
{weak.
| Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmer and the color scheme being further, Bates’ cottage at Gun Uke. when and Mr*. Welker left on a short
| relativea and friends gathered for
Mr and Mrs. H Boanall
Mrs ■ MrMr’- George Briggs of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gladstone carried out in lhe menu.
trip to Northern Michigan after
Swift and Richard and Huber! Fair-1 Detroit ate guests of their da ugh-1 and two chUdran were Sunday
the luncheon with no guests pres- attending were Mrs. Bates, Mra
....
rv^udiu MKl nuu«« rwu
U-. I.-V .
nt ktf anrt XX—
XX—, —
Grand H*veh, where Mr. Welker is
O’Connell of Battle Creek^lt being
employed as produce manager foe
and Mra. F. L. Fairchild.
the latter * twentieth wedding ar.nl- Ing. There was no golf event in the Nichol*. Dr. and Mrs. Frederick H. the Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co.
morning on account of lhe rain and
of belSt were tiara&lt;xTwXm-Oh* t—oer^Friday.
Lansing, Dr. and Mrs. Q.* M. Over­
Mr. and Mrs. James Langston re­
street Of Detroit, Dr. and Mr*. Bruce
turned on Thursday from a month s Charles S. Potts.
jordan.
eral of Mrs. B. F. Blakney.
The luncheons Uils year have Hayden and daughter. Isabel, and Ionia, Mr. and Mrs. Hammond ot
Lansing. William O. WlUltta ot Bat­
Mr*. Albert Herney and mother
been very enjoyable with a good at­
and Misses Adah and zella Odell ‘ F*rt
la* we*k
Oun uke w,th ' *o1* TbeT ,Uo ■ »i*ited Mr. and tendance at each one. The women friend. Marjorie Kerner, of Saginaw tle Creek. MU' Mai&gt;rtne WUlltts of
."
?
. .
Ur .wrf Mr. Mnrw.
..
Mr. nnhrrt V
,T„I. r
_
: Thursday guest*
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER. .
of the association have done a great
,
guests.
Snyder ot South
Mrs. Clark Welker, a recent bride, ot Mishawaka, Ind.
deal to reiurnlfth the club house
I ot
Mr. and Mr*. R. w. Cook. Dr. and l north.
was the guest of honor last Wed­
'cn0 i Mrs. D. D. Walton and Mrs. G. L.
The Rev. W Maylan Jones and paying most of the expenses Uiem- nesday evening nt a miscellaneous
MISS WALES ON STAFF
and Lockwood were in Grand Rapid* on Charles Bacheller attended a dlsshower given by MIm Barbara
with
her
board
of
director*
worked
; Tuesday.
I trirt moating at the Second BL
OF FOUNDATION
*0«.In-law, mt. and Mr*. Beatty.
Wilcox and Mr*. Melvin Ge low
•
jn—i.. Methodist church In Grand Rapids falthlully and all consider the sea­ i Dori* Ryan) at Mr*. Ge low’s home
Mr..end Mrs. Ray Waters. Torn
— —— -»t—
-i
-----son a highly successful one.
and Virginia spent Sunday in Char- i Ca^-' waa the guest of her cou-sin. on Tuesday evening, at which Bl*hThe executive board met Imme­ in Kalamazoo. Bridge was played, Will Serve. In Advisory Ca­
over
the
■Otte with their daughter and hua- Mrs. George Coleman,
*”
nv
~ tlw
diately after the luncheon and or­ the winner* presenting their prize*
pacity for Several
*^Mr. and Mrs. John C. Ketcham ganised with the following officers:
band, Mr. and Mr*. Tom Taffee.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn coulter and
Mr. and Mrs. Oarroll McOuffln
tending from Hastings were Mr*.
■oathi
and daughter ol Lansing visited daughters ot Detroit will be guests
Lannes Kenfield. Mrs.----------Keith--------Fox.
James Bristol;
--- --------------------------------------------------------MU*
Marguerite Wales of New
gave the address at 'a memorial
Mrs. Anna McOuffln and. Mrs. Isa­
French; ireas. Mr*. O. C Keller; Ml** Barbara Trego. Miss Alice LyMcDonald.
service for the Ute William Taylor, golf committee. Mr* Leslie Haw-1 Barker and Ml*s Eugenia LyBarker York CHy has joined lhe *taff of
bel Can-others over the week end.
Mr. and Mr*. Harry Bidehnan the blind musicUn. who formerly
Mrs. Mabel Colgrove and mother
thome. Mrs Robert O’Connor and
----- raT*-oLr. ibx----advisory capacity. For the past IS
,
LE8TEB—CLARK.
Mrs. Rose colgrove. have returned and son of Pontiac spent Saturday lived to Barry county and had a Mr*. Ed. Van Popering, and bridge
lo Hatting* from Greenville and arc with Mr. and Mrs. Ros* Bidelman wide acquaintance.
committee. Mrs Herman Arold and
On Bunday Mr and Mrs. Arthur Mrs. Fred W. Stebbins.
marrlage on jruesday evenlng. Oc- director of the Henry Street Visit­
living In Mrs. Oolgrove's home on and mother.
ing Nurse service tn New York with
Mr.
and
Mr*.
W.
J.
Welkin*
vlsitHaven
and
Eleanor
and
Mrs.
Erma
South Jefferson street.
The association Sponsored under
a staff of 265 supervisors and nurses
Im.rance Trethric was In Grand ---------- ------------- ------------------ --- — __ Gardner visited NeUon Haven of the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hasting* and Robert L. Lester of serving under her.
F. Wortinger. of Constantine | Leslie, father of Arthur Haven and
Hickory Corners.
The ceremony
Rapids on buaineas Friday. On Wed- Mrs.
MUM---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- &gt; —
n.W Stebbins a Series of dances for junert Gardner of*Tanslng *were ateo ior mrra'*rl of
club "»&gt; thcb was read by the Rev. C. 8. Rennell* periencc in work similar to what is
al the Wesleyan par.ionagc at Hick­
lhe Fidelity Corporation, of Grand
fuoste of Mr H.ra
guests The parties were given tv­
ory corner*. The bride has been an done by the staff of the Foundation
Rapid* spent ths
.^pid*
the day here
here.
Dr. and Mra. E J Pratt are tr* lwo or lhree *Mk‘ Bnd W,re
Mrs. C. E. Thomas ot Detroit b. Richard Potts of Hammond. Ind.
operator in the local telephone of­ and will be connected with the
spending Friday and Saturday In enJ°*'cri
the young Peoplethe guest of her daughter and hu*-1
fice and the groom is employed as mindatfon for several months. She
Frau will attrnrl
attend '
FAST MATRONS’ CLUB.
a truck driver. They wlll make will survey and make recommenda­
band. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Goodyear. | Mr. and Mrs. Aleck Hanna and Detroit, where Dr Pr«ll
tion* for work In all the counties
The Past Matrons club of the their home In Hickory Corners.
Mn. Ooddyear * sister. Mis* Eleanor; James Tucker of Sparta were Sun- the lectures of Dr. Muncie, recently
and it Is expected she win be to
returned from two years’ research In o E iS WM entertained by Mr*.
LUNCHEON At'mARSHIlL
Mr and Mrs. William Welton, i Bidelman. *
Europe, on "Deafness—Its Cause. jacob Haney al her home on 8.
speak to th? member* of the staff
M» &gt;»»!&gt;£ -wtta, £. we»2
“■’•MT*
Pl2yent_
„
Cure.7. *»»
i-_- -•
.:i»«hover
St., VII
on riiuny
Friday afternoon.!
----- .-----------’MIUWVCT Ol..
and make her survey here.
.
luncheon
and
contract
to
several
ulster and husband. Mr. and Mrs.
Teeter and several
The Rev. and Mrs. T. H. Hoos aewnteen members attending. Mr.
Mrs.’'
Dr. Haven Emerson, who is an
□aorge Baulah. for a week, returned Lrt^diJn*n Ca.edonla. motored to had as guests over the week end Ered Wolcott being guest of honor. I Hasting* women last Saturday at
Mrs. EUa Krumpen, Miss Ethel TjIC pot |Uck dinner was served her home in MarstiaiL Those present honorary member of the board of
Sunday lo their hotne in OreenylilL; KaJkaaka on Sunday.
j Sunday gucste of Mr- and Mrs. Krumpen. Mrs. Grace Ainger and buncl Uyte&gt; bouquets of beautiful were Mrs, David S. Goodyear. Mrs. trustees, is an associate of Mias
°f Genoa City, | autumn flowers centering the tables. John Noble*. Mrs. R. G. Flnnle. wale*’. He is an adviser on techni­
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Willard and Freeman Furrow were Mr. and Mr*
Dewaync Pugh were dinner guests
Mis* Eleanor Mc- Wia. The ladle* were tha, mother. A shorl business session and Mrs. Robert O'Connor. Mrs. Leslie cal subjects and has given addresses
on Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. Jack-1 Arthur of Grand R*plds.
and slaters of Mrs. Hoc*.
| visiting were enjoyed, Mrs. Wolcott Hawthorne. Mrs. K. 8. McIntyre to the members of the staff.
and Mrs. Ed. Van Popering. Prizes
son Snyder of South Hastings, the . ,Nf-^fid Mra Weldon Bronson,
Quasi* at.the home of Mr. and, being presented with a nice gift.
VICTORY TEA FOR
M„
Roser, wlll entertain
occasion being Mr. Willard’s birth-'
O«jrte Robinson and Mr*. Mr*. Jacob weyennsn of Shulls the
REPUBLICAN WOMEN.
Belle Brock spent the week end
W0*^.^VG be*n ,Mr
Mrs the club on Wednesday. October 28. nle and Mr*. Van popering.
All Interested women of Hasting*
..Arthur Skidmore of
Mlio
on.
-----The Rev. and Mrs. W. Maylan |। with relatives in Jaokseh.
ENTERTAINS
CLUB.
and Barry county are Invited to at­
BRIDGE CLUB MEETS.
Jones and Mr. and Mr*. M. L. Cook 1I Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Van Dyke and Thursday; Bunday her cousins. Mr
Mrs. O. M. Brower entertained a tend a tea Saturday afternoon. OcMrs.___Edwin
Truman ----and
__ _______
____ __________
Mr* Herman Arold entertained
and Mrs. A- D. Knlskcrn were to &gt; daughter*. Barbara and Norma, of and
group of eight ladies at a charming
Kalamazoo Monday afternoon al- Detroit spent the week end with daughter Virginia of Mason were the eight members of her bridge bridge-dinner on Saturday evening, American JLegian hall on Church
there and to the evening Mr. and club Tuesday afternoon at the first
tending Ute funeral of the Rev. W..
MT. and Mrs. C. H. Hinman and Mrs. James Shrine of lhe Striker. meeting of the year. Dessert was the guests comprising her bridge street opposite the First Methodist
M. Puffer.
club winner* were Mr*. Charles church. A brief program present­
A. R. Brummett and sons. Worth । Oharlt* and Mra W- L. Hinman district called. Monday evening served at one-thirty and contract Leonard and Mrs. Edw. Lawrence. ing vital political topics will ba
'------_
— ------------------*-3 *- *— *“J
visited Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harvey guest* were Mr. and
presented by th? active worker* In
i Van Popcring and Mrs Jack Stem
Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs. O. and family ot Flint over the week Radford of Hasting*.
club.
the campaign.
R. Green. Mr. Brummett is presi­
Mr. and Mrs. Allen pender vis­
dent of the First National Bank at
ited Mr. and Mr* Lloyd Pender of
New Carlisle.
Miss Helen wade. Mr*. M O- Hill.
Miss Elisabeth Finch and Mis* and also called on friends In Mu*- '
Helen Fumlsa and her mother. Mr*.
Mr*. Edith Martin and son John
Elsie Firm is* of Nashville, spent the
and Mrs. Charlotte Noble and
daughter. Louise, ot East Lansing
Traverse city.
Mr. and MT* David A. VanBu*- visited their shier and aunt. Mrs.
klrk were to Birmingham Friday at­
Mra. Richard Groos. Mrs. James'
tending the funeral of Charles W
Crandall, superintendent of the Bristol. Mrs. Aben Johnson. Mrs..
sciwota there. Mr. VanBuskirk act­ Hannan Arold and Mr*. James.
Radford wera to Grand Rapid* on
ed a* a pallbearer.
Mr*.
relumed
Mr*. Isabel
Isabel Pancoast‘
’
* Thursday whert Mr*. Groo* enterSunday from a six weeks’ visit wtUi1 ^b&gt;ed the ladles at luncheon at the
her daughter and husband. Dr. and 1 Wotneti s City dub. They also heard

Ml-

Af

Bnd

W T Ort**** wt0

Tht

Energy

THE

BIG UTILE STORE
Friday, Oct. 16

Mr. B,™ lUj.Ua ol

B«. , * &gt;»&lt;* '•’!«» ,

Food

Saturday, Oct. 17

CHIPPEWA
BREECHES

I IJj\

Full cut—breeches made of the
same fine material that the coat ia—
large knee and also double seat*

with double knee covering—strong*

ly reinforced, and waler repellent.

T. S. taAIRD
CLOTHING

SHOES for MEN
ROYS
PHONE 2396

•

•

Your New Hat
It Here!
Flattering pew Mylee in felt* and veloun

•2“
Dualling high

IF

crowns in black* brown, f
grey and ruaL

YOU

W«AR

SIZE

HERE ARE

LBS.

FASHI
As Muth at '/&lt; OFF Oa

BUTTER ....'...L..'.........Ib. 35c
Jack Frost Powdared Sugar, 2 boxes 15c

JILLO-AII Flavors ..
CREAM OF WHEAT

AIL C*U|N

-pkg. 5c
pkg. 23c

QUAKER Macaroni, Noodle* or
Spaghetti ......................3 boxe* 25c
MARSHMALLOWS ......Ib. box 19c

SPECIAL

ONE PACKAGE MAPLE MIX FREE!
Coo^IdU J.ind ot

MAMEg ONE PINT MIX flYRUP. OUR BEFORE THE
1
.. _U — gUPFI.Y u XXHAUgTXD.

Hlfh in CrwiM
Content. Row
or Potteurisod.
MNT Sc
QUART

they BMd I0U o(

the kind

Highl.nd, Dairy 0«d« A Mllkl

tA,Ku*

SUNDAY DINNIU
u&gt;n n *&gt;n r. m.
» •« 7J0 7. M.

PARKER HOUSE

Sj.50 Sg SO $.| g.OO

PINE GRANULATED

SUGAR

5

and friends of Kalamazoo. and Mr.
and Mra RusmII Hart and family.*

NOONDAY LtlNCHB
11:90 A. M. f»2F. M.
«INNIM
&gt; 7:10F. M.

gj

/

MEDIUM RED SALMON ..2 can* 35c
on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Er­
nest Johncock, ML and Ifrs. James
*u. - am
Hickory cor■ank Fox and

and plenty of room for aboil-

der action.

,K“‘‘

fore going to Saginaw Mr* Pan- Cnorryman which was very inter­
coast spent six weeks with relatives Mtln«.
_
.
and friends In Hornell. N. Y.
......
- . ,
,

Three Rivers and In various places
places in Indiana. Next Sunday the
Rev. L. E. severance win conduct
the services at the First United
Brethren church.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. D. feauer and.
Mr. and Mr*. H«iry Weaver at-j
tended lhe Newaygo Ootof Hair op ’
Bunday and were dinner guests at ■
DP. and Mrs. L. E. Holly al thefc
summer home on the Scenic Drlw;
at Muakegon. In the gflegnoon the

Double front and back—gime

Hostings

wire Aamibikc,

tHONI 2*91

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
t*ko.«2Ml

ROBERT W: COOK, rifo"

HuUM»

------------------ ----------------------------- ---- -------------------------------

�THt BA»nWO« BtXNn, taCTlDAT, QCTpMBJIHy

WANTS

UFI . AUTO . FIRE
I
W1LUAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON R MsELWAIN
I PRrne na NaU Ban BMg.

T. PROTECT You Ce-teaily
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promotly
FriTBU OBTBew at LOW RATU

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co.
J. L. M AUS

IMU BrertMatettva

KmUbsk

THE CHURCHES New Books In

.
Public Library

W—41.»J
DRIVING TO FLORIDA abmU X
Woute lih»

WANTBD—l&gt;~4U&lt; UbU. CO Iba. aad
no. Elf Uadaev
tL
APPl.B»—WMltbr. NelalMk. W.W Rit FOR MALI
•r« aa4 P««n4 Hw»»U: aba h«u»r.
Carl bare.. H Mito *.. U Bito X.. M MIDDLE AHF.D
mil. IL Hbkorv
--------------- 1L
TOR HALE—Rmail ea-l lr&gt;m an4 »lwl ’
rank Unra, 4 b®l. 511 F. Uilnut tf. ,
WANTED TO HIRE maa br monih. Mar |
rl*4 er (larto. Muti be wmc.uil aad ,
alwtri aeber. D. W. U.lnun Phoae
T'-’T —&gt;"211L
APPMR FOR BALK—W.altb.. »»4 Me
Inteake! aew read». CU»r applet,
lie ba*bel. Hall'! O«rbar4. 4 »&gt;i«
wr«l ef Freeperc_________
&lt;’
75 HF-Ah feediat eatito Iran 300 to 600
Iba.. al.o few breediac »w»« aad few

Mlalitor.

etlng. Evening
If I W.re a Ja

H

aa

hut vmitbd bbethun church
B. 0. Mcgbanv. Bester.

OFFICE

BaaTXNOB. michiou

So Nl’NTtNO. «

CARDS of THANKS

FOR RALE— Wta(

xdK&amp;Hxa

HIGHEST PRICES

FIRST CHUBCH OF CHBIBT.
SCIENTIST.

FOB HALF

1.. Khepherd |
■ (arm Orangeeille TwZ '
X” j&lt;‘r.
rupert
&gt; a. z.. ■ _ a■ Mln M
FMR KKl &gt; T
and eaiir. lol .t .1,i... i.n .. • . f . r * i in Kmland
Twp Cheap tor ta.h, li,,u re H./r. 1
William., Boole 1

Paid for Dead Stock
gelling lhe BEST PRICES, eaU
MR. FLOYD DENNY.

F. ill

AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FOIM TRUSS

NOTICE

WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH

wagea.
Eapeei.ne rd bw.
chorea
Widow'.
home
Welle ' Man ranr of Da nnrr 10 1'. |
FOR HALE- Three ■ a. I &lt; &gt;f ,earlinc.
I II &lt; ..1
|w» .t.rr* and a 1r1fr.
l» 15
wallader Ita.I.nr* Ro.,,. 1
for half.—row, fira.k ... wrrh, ara
Mr. Geo KI Holt. Ila.l.n a. Hoot. 2
Call an&gt; da, bul Mor. 4 a , «r Frldaa
»i&gt; 15

PILGRIM HOLINESS TARRRNACLE.

FOB WORK OR PLAY
FOR
MOTtcii—All r»
climbing

SO
FOR HALE

ida » T 30
nd Mr.
..I neadar
Mr. J

FOB HALE

FOR HALE
FBBB SuTBODIBT CHURCH.

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads

FOB HALF.

Die Prescription Drug Store

WANTtK

term &gt;» Rutland

hastixos...................... saanaAi

hut friistteiiw church

GearaateeW Trvn HttJa,

GRANGE PROGRAMS
Farmers, Attention!

MAPLE LEAF GRANGE

ALL Bl'NNING of do&lt;. bnnllaa. elimb
treapaa.lnc on mr farm are forbidden
Heelion 33 TTi'iruappl. town.hip. Mra
Chaa B Jobh.on. 2 mile, anulh of Mid
\ dloYilte,
10 15

IAKB DirBLEBTEJL.

BUYING
Scrap Iron, Brass,

IBVINO GRANGE

■ON FIVE Lt

Bo".r*3
Maata ui Hldaa.
Co«t. Mt walihL 4c to 4He.
Heifara »4 .leer. 4 We to Sa. O

LOST—M

appoietna.
People
a ■ ... being he!4
abnut ham plea.e
3534 \iallora al

Bastings

CHURCH Or OOP.

on COMMISSION
COATS GROVE CHURCH OF CHBIBT.

FOR HALE-

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

FOR HALF.-I.

BONDI
N0TABT PUBLIC*

church or THB united- VMnMar
IMl —
CHUB. iff la.
’■ i:V« A'
Woodland Ctr™

roti haLi:-

Mlddllnri. 12 00.

IT
ORDER TOB PUBLICATION

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May

and near will come to hear It.
Mr. and Mrs. Welby Crockford
spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs
Omo Knowles of Angola. Ind.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dell visited
relatives in Detroit from Saturday
until Monday.
MTS. Elsie Potter of Nashville
spent Thursday with Mrs Welby
Crockford.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fisher and
son. Edward, were Sunday guests of
Mr. ahd Mnu Karl Paul.
The members of the Methodist
Episcopal church are planning a rexapUon of their new minister, Rev.
'Htirh
narlnrs of
Filch, in the parlors
ot the church
Wednesday evening
Announ&amp;ments have been .re­
ceived from Mr. and Mrs. Cecil O.
Roberts. (Louise Rogers» of the ar­
rival of a daughter. Mary Louise.
October .5. at Baton Rouge, La.
Congratulations.

The marriage ceremony of Wini­
fred Border of Oak Park. IU.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. E Bor-

FOR HALF.-

Mean VISION TOMORROW—

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY

Registered OPTOMETRIST and

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call

SALE OF

10-1S

HOUSEHOLD GOODS

£££ COLDS

000

west of Harold Smith a Hardware Store

st FELDPAUSCH'S

hi

"iii ar iiiH

Vtiii i tin tiBiain

DORRANCE TRETHRIC
INSURANCE SERVICE

BARN DAM Ji!

MARKET ■ Phone 2616

Fidelity Corporation

SPONSORED BY VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS

FOOD CENTER 2609

LOANS and FINANCING

MUSIC BY KELLYS KLASSY KUARTETT

H.FeWoeuech . 3021

Walnut

Hastings National Bank Bldg.

Dining

1—le-Tubo MAJESTIC Radio,
beautiful walnut console cab­
inet, wonderful
ftrt
tone. .ONLY—
CUaUU

LIVING

Refreshments by Ladles' Auxiliary.

new style case*

1—PIANO, built to be used tn
a church only. Perfect condlSt ’SSSt

*35.00 u *50.00
Brea.

PIANO-

Beautlful finish, small studio
upright: wonderful lone: tn
perfect condition. With bench

’40.00

’30.00

8KWXNG MACHINE

SUITES—

ROOM

your choice

’30.00

'

’12.00
BABY

BUGGY — Genuine

Heywood-Wakeffekl.

In per-

*12.00
SIMMONS BID and

Honest Dealings. Clean Merak

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17th

SATURDAY NIGHT . OCTOBER 17th
VERN YARCER’S BiC NEW BARN

PHONE 2543

ONCE IN A LIFETIME!

l-Grtimell

FEVER

Bring in any article you may have for sole.

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

L A. CASE, Proprietor

*40.00

JERRY ANDRUS

WANTED

CASE’S 24-HOUR
SERVICE GARAGE

Suite—beautiful finish, up­
holstered chair seats? Queen

HASTINGS •xperiencc er capital needed. Write

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

PIED BY DON PIERCE. I OFFER TIRE AND BAT­
TERY SERVICE, AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICAL,
CARBURETOR AND SPEEDOMETER SERVICE AS
WELL AS GENERAL RPAIRING. I SEPCIALiZE
IN FORD SERVICE. ALL NEW AND OLD
FRIENDS CAN CALL ON ME FOR SATISFIED
SERVICE WITH A SMILE, 24 HOURS . .
DAY OR NIGHT.

1—7-Ptece

SEE
GEO. M. NEWTON

”**■•■* II
,,o"“

mala MOirTg^

Comer.
Kathleen Norris—The American a week-end visitor at Roy Preston's.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bump and
Flaggs.
Wayne Bump of Hastings and Mr.
Louis Adamic—Cradle of Life.
CEDAR CREEK.
Lida Larrlmore—Two Keys to a and Mrs. Roy Huver of Lansing
spent Sunday at Mrs. Jerry Foley's.
Cabin.
The annual Harvest Festival will
Mrs. Blough of Hastings spent be al the Bunnell church thia week
Maso De La Roche—Whiteoak
Thursday
afternoon with Mrs. Her- Friday night. After the program
Harvest.
-------------------------------------------------------Lloyd C. Douglas—White Banners, i man Hauer.
Zane Grey—Lost Wagon Train.
| Mra. Etta Bump and the Misses menl.
■
Non-Flctlon.
' Evelyn and Nora Matthews spent
Mrs. John Gurd entertained a
WliLRogers—TheTlliterate Digest. । Sunday with Mrs. Rose Trego of company of youngsters Saturday
Orville Adams—Elements of Die- Hastings.
afternoon in honor of her daugh­
Mr. and Mrs. Cnmet Dancer ot ter Margaret's birthday.
sei EngineerUig
in
Chelsea
were
week-end
visitors
at
Claude Q. Bowers—Jefferson
Mrs. Mary Hunt of Hastings la
Herman Hauer's. Other guests on
power.
Sunday were Mr. ’ and Mrs. Floyd spending the week with Mrs. Allie
June Platt—Party Cookbook.
Frederic
L.. Paxson—Pre-War Clum of Coals Grove, and Miss Kelley.
Mr. and Mrs. Ouyla Pease. Mrs.
Mabelle Notten of Grau Lake.
Years. 1913-1917.
'
Dunkley, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Pease
Stuart Chase—Rich Land. Poor
and daughter attended lhe funeral
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Land.
Mrs. Eugene Nichols spent Wed­ of Mrs. O. Shupp of Charlotte lair
Marjorie HHUa—Live Alone and
Wednesday.
' * '
nesday in Battle Creek.
Like It.
Most everyone attended the ftm
Wm. Rosengarten—Choosing Your
Word came Saturday that Keith raising at Will Gurd's last Thurs­
Life Work.
Marlowe of Grand Rapids was mar­ day. The bam will soon be com­
Louis Untermeyer. ed —Modem ried on Saturday and he and his
pleted._________ ~ ~'
American Poetry.
bride called on Mr. and Mrs. Lafay­
Louis Untermeyer. ed—Modern ette Usborne Sunday afternoon.
MORGAN.
British Poetry
Congratulations.
Mr Merle Husbman of Lansing
Thomas A. Daly—McAroni Bal­
Mrs. Anna Buck and daughter visited from Saturday until Mon­
lads.
and Kendall and lady friend spent day at lhe home of Wm. Adams.
Thos. E. Snyder—Our Enemy lhe
Saturday afternoon with Mrs, Tate
Mr. and Mrs Roy Hsmmercher
Termite
Buck and family of Battle Creek of Kalamazoo, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Norman Beasley—Michigan.
and Miss Actual) stayed lhe week Waite of Pratt district. Mr. gnd
Jean Barnes. Librarian.
Mrs. Bernie Schomer of Battle
end.
Mr. and Mrs Caryl Fuller and Creek tailed on Mr. and Mrs. B.
3
WOODLAND.
Rowlader Sunday.
Mr and Mrs Robert Austin of daughter spent Friday In Battle
Sterling Delier "and famUy of
* •
Lansing were Sunday guests of Mrs. Creek.
Jackson also Mrs. Ina DcBoldt
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Williams
Rhoda Austin and Mr. and Mrs.
spent the week end with Mr. and called -on Mrs. Miller Flury Bunday.
Herald Classic
%
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Adams of Lan­
P E. Border received word Mon­ Mrs. Jerry Elsenhood of East Lc- sing were callers at the Adams
day of the death of his sister. Mrs Roy.
home Sunday.
Mr and Mra. Wilbur Wood of
Will Norton, of Des Moines. Iowa.
Mrs. D- A. McClelland has re­
Don't forget the big P. T A. fair Grand Rapids called on Mra. Anna ceived word that Mrs. WUi Hayter,
al the Woodland school Friday. Oc­ Buck Sundsff afternoon.
formerly of this place but now of
Mrs. Lafayette Usbome and Mrs. Eaton Rapids, has a new baby girl.
tober 18. There will be something
happening every minute. Come and Henry Williams spent Thursday
Mrs. Lelha Adkhi entertained the
with their sister, Mrs. Lyle Qutinby, Bunco club al her home Thursday
'
Mr and ^Irs Floyd Griener are re­ of Battle Creek.
evening.
Hasel
Shriber
and
friend
and
Mr
ceiving congratulations on lhe birth
Every man must have some
of a daughter. Joan May Saturday. and Mrs. Leo Barry and son called
on Mr. and Mra. John Visser of achievement to boast about. If only
October 10.
Park and Mary
Barry
Mr. and Mrs Ernest Shomo spent Comstock
-------------- ---------------------------------. .of । lhe fact that he wears summer un­
dies ell winter.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Grand Rapids Sunday afternoon.
Pearse
Pcan&gt;e of Grand Rapids
Rapid.,
___ ____________________ ____________
( Leon Tyler and family and Mrs.
Della Manktelow called on Mr and
Mrs. Orson Sheldon of Vermontville
Sunday.
Rev and Mrs Fay C. Whig accompaled by Mr and Mrs. Ernest
Smith of Coats Grove spent Sunday
In Stroh. Ind.
I HAVE OPENED A GARAGE FOR GENERAL
The Women's Study Club will
hold their October meeting Tues­
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING AT 21S EAST STATE
day evening at the schoolhouse with
ST. IN THE FREER BUILDING FORMERLY OCCU­
Marie Jay Cady of the Pantllnd ho-

The Rhythm Band wlll perform

v&lt;&gt; lit -V IN'.

tear

Tires.
Jas. B. Hendryx—Grubstake Gold. Harbor.
Fo^taw^iiuBiscHimo.Ng. oxi“ybmb
Faith Baldwin—Men Are Sueh
will be at home In Oak Park, Hl..
ADVkRTiaiMQ MATkl:
Robert A- Bennet—Man Against 1013 1-3 North Blvd. Apt. S3.
DUptey teYWtlslas - xsiaa sb
Mustang.
BARBERS CORNERS.
Elisabeth Corbett—Mrs. Meigs and
Sunday visitors at L. J. Matthews'
Mr. Cunningham.
were Mr. and Mra. Charles Smith
Doria Leslie—Fair Company.
Lucy A- Hancock—Gay Pretend­ of Farmington; Mra. Simmons at
Athens; Russell Benedict and son
ing.
Karl Detser—Contrabando.
George of Jscluon; Frank Atkin­
Henry Herbert Knibbs—The Ton- son. Robert Jonea, Mrs. Jackson.
Mra. Maude Smith ahd daughter
to Kid.
;
Geraldine
of Grand Rapids; Mr. worda. Ibe,
Jackson Cole—Black Gold,
Bess Streeter Aldrich—Man Who ■ and Mrs. T. J. Brovant ot Baldwin. All pbliuan
Caught lhe Weather.
; Kansas; and Jesse Brovant.
Rufus King—Case of lhe Constant! Mr .and Mra. Herman Heuer spent
God.
.
। spent Monday afternoon In MiddleJOB PRINTING.
Patricia Wentworth—Hole and ville.
_

&gt;14. Oar r».

Copper, Aluminum,

rnun*

ANNOUNCEMENT

EMMANUEL CHURCH (Epleeopal).
J A. MeNaltT. *. D., Lector
3S&amp; W Cantor St

FOR HAL

Zinc, Lead &amp; Batteries

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

HAST INGS MARKETS

bwbtt

Erle Stanley Gardner—Case of the
maid. John HUI. Ufa kmc »ri«nd of
Stuttering Bishop.
' '
. Louise Plait Hauck—Whippoorwill
Beautiful and appropriate music
House.
Jackson Gregory—Into the Bun- waa played softly by the church or­
ganist during the ceremony which
was
witnessed by immediate mem­
Margaret Mitchell—Gone With
bers of the families. After lhe servlhe Wind.
Berta Ruck—Sleeping Beauty.
Darruh Aldrich— Earth Never beautiful country home of Mr. and

rlalT MBTHODIST XrlBCOrAL

SHELDON'S
ABSTRACT

The Halting! Banner
ton Harbor, MkIi. wga performed
by Rev. A- P- Ttaverae at BL Johns
Episcopal ehurch In Bl. Joseph.
Mich, on Saturday at 11:0g A. M.

c£,‘-i

“ ■ z li

on ent a word, no advernmanrr for less than m®.

S i

Our Service

104J

SALE STARTS AT 1:30

‘Two blocks from Main St., *tis true.
But Two Miks from high prices, too!

TERMS OF SALE are cash.' NoHiinf removed until
settled for.

BM N. BROADWAY

HASTINGS, MICH.

�THURSDAY, OCT. 15, 1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER
. FOUND
I~
NEAR ALLEGAN J

P^qpOLITICAL NOTES:0'1 "ElLF0U"D
By JANS CAMERON

bl
1‘ratoing California.

ERNALIS, CALIF—The,

V

used 10 say that California
flowers had no real smell, and
that California birds had no

song—and that's a lie because
the resident mocking bird feels
i&gt; hi. Chri..i.„ du., .« get ,igh.
under my bedroom window and
sing all night—and that Califomia grown foods had no

flavor.
it's true California still produces
one pear which suggests a low
grade of damp cot­
ton batting, and one
variety of fig which
could pas&lt; for li­
brary paste, and a
certain tropical
pawpaw
which
makes you think
you've been licking
postage stamps. And
there's a special
breed of mushrooms
which is about the
size of a derby hat irvLn 8. Cebb
and tastes like one.
But we can grow apricots and
cherries and nectarines and peaches
noble berries and luscious prunes
and delectable grapes; and, on this
great ranch, about lhe finest mel­
ons I ever ate. There's likewise a
red onion which has a taste all
right—eat it raw and you teste it
tor days and days.
And if you think our flowers don't
smell enough, try our politics.

Trouble* of
I IFE In these parts I* lust one
thing after another, and somelimes It's several things after anof the autograph collectors upon a
poor, shy movie star, or the yelp­
ing onslaught of our estate beagles
when a visiting nobleman incau­
tiously Intimates that he might
sell his trailer and buy a lot.
But complications also pile up for
a life-long resident who has been
now and so Is qualified lo join the
Early Pioneers' California society.
Here I go and take on a radio pro­
gram—and I did so hope to fly east
to see what Mrs Harrison Williams
will be wearing this fait Al times
lhe temptation Just to drop every­
thing and start has been well-nigh
overpowering,

Reducing Motor Accidents.
E'RE great people at starting

Wsomething, but. just then,
along comes a new crusade or a

new movement or a new style to di­
vided skirts and we tra.l off after
that, forgetting lhe issue which had
scerned so passionately Important
Last January wc were all enlistthe highroad. With the year nearly
three-fourths gone, what have Wo
done to reduce the appalling mor­
tality? Ano what are we going to do
before all of us. except the Idiots
and drunkards, who sre supposed to
be the special ward of providence,
have been mowed down?
I'm reminded of the colored man
in Mississippi who waa convicted
of murder, and hla lawyer forgot
to filo an appeal, and finally the
condemned man sat down and wrote
thia letter: "Dear Guvnor: Please,
auh. 1 to on the middle of a particu­
lar fix and onleasen you do aomethln’ right away, they hang mo
Friday—here 'tla Wedneaday al­
ready!’'

* Saving Your Teeth.
HOUGH thy teeth be but state­

ly ruins, with English ivy grow­
T
ing all over them and bullbats nest­

ing in the hollows, fight off for as
long as possible those who think the
root of all evil is lhe bottom of your
remaining bicuspid. Donrt let 'em
be too fast- about photographing
your jaw either.
No man ever yet had an X-ray
picture that flattered him. Particuterior view of lhe human face.
Because, the next thing you know,
a gentleman In a while smock is
testing some forceps and saying,
"This may hurt—just a little." And
then the next thing after that, your

I did so and lhe result !s that, no
matter what else is on the menu. I
go in for the Cobb pink plate spe­
cial A fellow does get tired of
having everything be eats taste like
rubber.
IRVIN 8. COBB.
CAR AND TRUCK CRASH.
Kenneth V. Buys of Battle Creek
and two girl companions, Mrs. Thel­
ma Rayner and Miss Evelyn Leslie
of this city, were hurt slightly
Thursday evening when Mr. Bujta
attempted to make a U-tum on
M-37 north of Bedford. He collided
with a truck, owned by lhe O. K
Laundry of Battle Creek, driven by
Charles Ickes, a former resident of
this city now of Battle Creek. Mr.
Buys was taken to a Batik Creek
hospital His injuries were not con­
sidered serious although very pain­
ful.

It Is a great kindness to trust peoewith an Important secret. They
I so Important while telling it.

5__________________________

fcy——REPUBLICAN
REPUBLICAN

DEMOCRAT
DEMOCRAT

« C,ub Hean

Uh&gt;,u Heraldry
Traverse
Sands
After Drilling Depth
। Ail illustrated talk on Heraldry
. was the topic for the program Priof 1,340 Feet

Reached

ONION PRICES ARE
A DISAPPOINTMENT

t

ju,.

nifev

Raised Good Crops of

The city bend will have to toot1
Yes! We agree with iha views Mr
A PRESIDENT UNAFRAID.
.
Onions This Year
like the dickens to keep warm these | Roosevelt expressed to his Hyde
] day o! the Ha-.tlngs Women's Club'
Il
You
you coma
could oe
be proua.
proud, n
if you were
»t has
nas been
oeen known
xnown for
tor some time
tune ..
nf lh„
™
The* onion growers ot this coun­ benchas on the
nights.
listening the
night
■ Park speech lo the New York Her- ustening
me olher
ouwr mg
nt that
mat you
you , that
mat there
mere was
was oU
on underneath
unaemeam the
me | Mr,
Mrs. Marian Goodyear, chairman ty who generally have good yields ■What'a the matter. Hiteyt
•
• • •
.
aid Tribune Forum on Current Top­ were an American. For over the air ' territory in and about the city of
this
year
are not realizing the high
came the voice of America un- | Allegan, but It had never been Jfor
” lhe afternoon,
\ k thbir introduced the
I see in a Karo syrup advertise-1 les when he said that:
prices they had hoped for and ex­ aren't you working? Are you
ment that spanky MacFarland owes
-Anythlnt that makes for tpler- afraid. The voice of lhe President found in quantities enough to Justipected. At the present lime 60 I replied, "1 have retired, cr
n£rvnejd of workP Mlli cent* per 100 lbs. or 30 cents a the fact, they retired me." •
all he is and will ever be lo Karo i ance Of opinion and contributes to of The United States, saying "These fy any Urge deveiopment Several
.vrun
-----------generftl edufaUon of 0Uf p^. tilings we have done; these things I experimental wells had been put K,a.h
syrup. w»«..
Won't our VM.
kids -make
use---of
| bushel Is the lop price for the best
““ '"A'
the
as much work aa 1.1 would say, “fttt
that one next lime we have waffles! pie to the issues of governmental «. vlU ealiw u. di; •• m not 1 down .inc, 1M». wlien uw n„t
quality,
with lhe ne
next
lower
U.
armorial
to*
8111!'- wlth
« lowe
-r grade
Showlna
armorial bearings."
beat
showing nt
of n.l
oil was fni.nrt
found then.
there, h,,r
but VlenCe °«
quitting."
policy is of vast value "
| All summer we have eaten a
no worthwhile
results
were-----------accotn- started by the need of Identifies- Onion growing is a difficult and done enough?
That
was
the
essence
of
the
—
--------------------------------Also:
"It
Is
natural.
1
suppose,
to
u,
non in all ages and all quarters ot ~
Twi
. brand of breakfast food we didn't a campaign year, for advocates and Roosevelt speech, though not the 1
the world distinguishing symbols 1
rt,k&gt; ?.aT ' whe,re„{‘.J*
.
'especially
for
— -•
----- ■
However, on Wednesday of last
‘
’care
r because
Bud
only
yield
teen .doplrd ty trite, or n.-,”
'1" crop relied upon to “
‘h cash
adversaries of any policy or pro­ - •
the whistle has blown. Go and finish
and
generally went lo lhe store after It cess of
gave to me
lhe munoiis
millions wno
who lunieu
turned io
to week a different
or government
govcrnmeni to
io relapse into g»»e
- 7- - more
- --- favor- -­
lions; by families or chieftains. The On good ground they produce from
!
’X* exaggeration and Invective, and so ; him for leadership In 1932. the miln?. 00
of totemism 500 to 1.000 bushels per acre, when
Saul Hudson
Hudson, a mlle
mile “
and
a mysterious business loiK-iore
becloud the controversy as to make i Hons of lite submerged whom he ffarm
‘rm of 88,11
“d “
nave they •" Pr°P"&gt;y cultivated and
which students of folk-lore have
half
rforth
and
west
of
Allegan.
Il
now he has decided to be an avia­ it possible for lhe future of the I has rescued and who are grateful
most
nrimLHve *hcn lhe U)‘l *nd weather vcondl- INCREASE NOTED IN
discovered among n.
^.i.......
ilor
country to be determined In rancor' and lhe message likewise to n much reached lhe Traverse sand at a peoples, is regarded as one of lhe
WHOOPING COUGH HERE
’ that occurs the price Is so low that
I
...
smaller
number
whom
he *'
also
res­ depth of 1.310 feet. After it had forerunner* of true heraldry.
and temper instead of by calm de------------------1----------— *"
--------penetrated that rock for about a
.
. , ,
.
.
j, mere
there' us
is issue
little ur
or no prom,
profit, vzcnsionoccasioncued—and who are not grateful.
; What a cute name for a dress liberation and clear thinking "
In tu InUncy. every
' all
, bamper
, Dangerous Disease for Chil­
foot, oil filled lhe piping and later
shop "Cinderella." And what a cute
It was the voice of courage and
surnet wh«
he plr.-ed Thb tuiper price. U U Che hope th.t
dress tn lhe window Saturday. We i 100 per cant with these views and confidence, courage and confidence ?as in considerable quantities issued
dren Under Two Years
rom lhe well, so that it was quite C.IUAW ureet contu.hn, which 1,0 th,
crop m,y turn out th«
had to concentrate like everything so to avoid ail rancor and exagger- ot such degree that It sounded a
....
.. ..
.. ..
difficult to get it under control, as to the systematizing of heraldry and
on mountainous stacks of school a lion we propose to have you, your­ new note in a campaign that had the pressure was heavy,
later consolidating it into a science
books and winter clothing for the self, answer questions which we threatened to establish a low mark
Dr. Harkness, head of the Barry
Heraldry as it Ls today, was lhe EFFECTIVE DATE OF CON­
Allegan is naturally quite excited
Children to get past it.
County Health Department, states
। with a sincere desire for calm de­ in political mediocrity. For. until over the discovery, which will lead out growth of the crusader Armory
STITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS. that there to an Increasing amount
, liberation and clear thinking, be- now, his enemies have had the air to further drilling.
satisfied a need which had long been
Three of the four proposed of whooping cough in thia city.
Patsy spent too much lime in the 1 Neve will prove that neither you nor and the newspapers pretty much to
fell. When fully armed one gallopThl5
disease is practically contag­
should be themselves, and lhe air and the WHERE THE FISH WERE
amendments
to
the
state
constisoapsuds. She said, "My hands arc j your administration
1 nig knight was like another, bu)
ious for the first four weeks after
trusted with the honor and respon­ newspapers have been filled with
tutlon
will. If approved by a majorwilted"
PLANTED IN BARRY CO. identity of friend or foe was soon
sibility of administering the affairs whimperings and mean fears. The
»y of the voters expressing them- the victim comes down with It. It
For the information of lhe many learned by the colorsand symbols
selves on these questions, become is dangerous to young children, very
fishermen in Barry county, we list on their shields '
Another most interesting celebrity of The United 8 la tea of America.
Coat of arms are notlimitedto 1 operative 30 days after election dangerous to children under two
Mr. Roosevelt, the monetary pol­ He revealed anew that a man-sized herewith lhe number of fish plant­
interview by Thomas Sugrue, re­
man is still at the controls in ed in lhe various lakes In lhe coun- royalty or descendants of royalty .
Orville E. Atwood. Secretary of years of age. The parents In any
porter for the American magazine. icy of this country has undoubted­
as is generally thought. Anyone State, points out The effective date family where there Is a case of thia
In the October issue. Il Is cleverly ly come In for a good deal of criti­ Washington, doing the man-sized
Job he was chosen to do. wholly un­
of °nc
one of the proposals is provided kind should have the help of the
Wall, 24,000; Oun. 27.000; Middle who has done some thing outstand- I °f
presented In the form of a play cism. So, in order co avoid exagge*.
bothered
by
lhe
yelping
of
the
alien
and
rancor
will
you
please
for
by
the proposal itself. The state­ family doctor, and the case should
ing.
usually
in
the
field
of
battle
(Carlton
Twp
&gt;.
14.OOO;
Payne.
15.
­
with Clifford Odets. America's most
panicky minority mentioned above 000; Crooked. 18.000; Thomapple can win one Some are acquired
ment —
is —
in —
response
many
in- be reported to lhe county health
by
.------- ---to -----. —
.
. ,------promising young playwright as the tell us what you have said aad done
In Europe quiries on this
thLs point which have department at once. Parents should
I There is a political candidate in 29.000; Barlow, 14.000; Pine. (Prai- &lt; the payment of a fee. in
lead, It is called "A Social Drama concerning the Gold Clause:
MR. ROOSEVELT:
I the field against the President. His rievllle Twp ). 17.000; Leach. Long; often times the purchaser of an to*” wnt to the Department of do their best to prevent contagion
in one Act" and entitled "Mr.
from the disease. That will not be
At Brooklyn. Nov 4. 1932, I said campaign to date has not been in­ (Hope Twp), Podunk. Clear. Sad- estate may buy the crest
State.
...
““ Of te
Odets Regrets " It is so much more
Section 2. Article 17 of the State a serious matter. All that is neces­
interesting In this form than just "The business men of the country spiring. He has obviously sought lo diebag. Jbrdan. 10.000 each; Wil- family who owned the property.
. . . were told in blunt language in be two thlhgs. a man in whom the kinson.______
provides:
"Every sary
...
....
... is to keep other members, par­
Joned, Guernsey. Bristol, An interesting feature of the pro- Constitution
a dry sketch of Mr. Odets life O O.
Des Moines. Iowa, (by President masses of the American people, the 9.000 each; Stewart. 7.000; Big Ce- Krum was 'the sterroptlcon views amendment shall lake effect thlr- ticularly the children, away from
McIntyre mentioned Mr Odets re­
non- n-r
’nnnn- 'shown of the Holy Land, the land ty days after the election at which the victim.
dar and Holcomb. k6.000;
O'Connor,
cently in his column. He is only Hoover), how close an escape the farmers and the laborers, could put rf.r
country
had
some
months
ago
from
of
the
Crusades,
taken
by
the
It
Is
approved."
Atwood
points
out.
their
confidence,
on
the
one
hand,
Myers.
Cox.
Baker.
Pine
(Hope
thirty and has lately had three of
j Proposal No 1. relative to search V. F. W. AUXILIARY
his plays produced on Broadway in going off lhe gold standard. Tills. and a man to whom the privileged Twp &gt;. Pleasant. Mud (Hope Twp.). speaker.
ELECTS OFFICERS.
------------:----------------and seizure, and Proposal No. 3.
few of the past could look for reas­ Culver. Long,
(Hastings
Twp.) I
less titan a month. He Is considered
providing for exemptions of certain
representative of American youth a libel on the credit ol the Unit­ surance that their day would come Lawhead. Lower. Sugarbush. Deep I WON TEN FIRST. EIGHT
icr Post. Veterans of Foreign Wan
Senator Glass made a again. Ke has presented a blurred Warner (Prairieville Twp.). Shelp. ■
Qrrnun d'rCMIIIMQ foodstuffs and prepared meals from Auxiliary No. 3326 on Thursday
and is unanimously labeled by crit­ ed States.
OuLUPlU rntMIUMd Lhe provisions of the retail sales
ics as -the white hope of the devastating challenge that no re­ picture of himself and his program Tillotson. Newton. Warner i Orange­
tax.- wouia
would mus
thus Decome
become en«
effective on evening the following officers were
ville Two 1 Fish Bassett Harwood „ .
—
—
—„
1&gt;X
American theater " it
It is well worth sponsible -government
--------- ' —",would have
which to undo the damage he has Tanner. Lake No. 21. Balker (Hope , ®ar Boyea Was Very 1 Sue- Dec 3. If approved Nov, 3.
&gt;our llm, &gt;o r,.d Ur Ode. H- 1
able In gold If it knew lhe promise, done himself and his candidacy; Twp),
Proposal No.
3. requiring the leg­
Al-Oon-Quln, Carr and
.
cessful With His Dis­
I YES. THE COVENANT, to pay in­ in which, to say. to present a nega­ Tamarac. 5.000 each; Middle &lt;Bal­
islature to provide general laws for Matthews; Jr. Vice-Pres_ Mildred

In a Battle Creek dally is a very terest and principal in gold ot
Interesting article on our Mata- specified weight and fineness per
nuska pioneers who are facing their dollar embodied In these securities
second winter tn Alaska One thou­ was as dubious as the President of
sand acres of hay. wheal, barley, lhe United Slates claims It was."
Thank you. Mr. President. That,
oats, potatoes and garden truck have
been harvested this summer. House­ in plain language is what you said.
wives have canned large quantities Now let us examine the records and
of salmon, preserved wild berries
and fruits which they brought from honorable and sacred responsibili­
' the nearby hills, in addition lo what ties of chief executive.
On April 34. Mr President, only a
I they kept for their own use. they
I marketed 55.000 pounds of vege- month after you assumed office,
| tables at towns along the Alaska one-half billion to government se­
railroad. The road from Anchorage curities ware offered to Investors of
lo Matanuika was completed IhLs lhe United Steles Printed on the
summer so they can go to Anchor- I,face of these securities was the
age lo shop and go lo the theater 1 COVENANT:
'The notes will be dated May
whenever they pleaae. cellars and !
barns are filled and they are look- | 2. 1933. . . the principal and in­
Ing forward lo this winter with as- ' terest of the notes will be payable
surance. Last winter there was mild 1 In United States gold coin of the
and they sent us their sympathy. :
Seven new families have drawn i Only forty-two days later. Mr.
tracts and are establishing homes, iRoosevelt, on June 5. 1™.
1933. you
Three hundred and four children 1signed a joint resolution of con­
are enrolled in the modern schools 1gress abrogating the Gold clause
with "fifteen teachers. The potato in all^ existing and future public
crop averaged nine tons to the 1and private contracts.
acre They can also shoot all the
This matter of repudiation of ex­
wild game to eat and can that they !isting government contracts was
carried to the Supreme Court,
which on Feb. 18. 193S. rendered
The reputed home of Hiawatha in the following decision:
the Upper Peninsula north of New­
“THE UNITED STATES ARE
berry. "Tahqunmenon Falls." and
AS MUCH BOUND BY THEIR
surrounding territory has Just been
CONTRACTS AS ARE INDIVID
taken over by the federal govern­
UALS." If they repadiate their
ment and will be converted Into a
obligations, it is as much repudia­
state park. The place Is famed for
Its scenic wonders but little visited
because of Its Inaccessibility. A road
would be if the repudlator had
will be built and lhe beauties ot this
been a state or a municipality or
roaring cascade in a gorge with 100a citizen."
fool banks will be open lo public
Are we to understand. Mr. Presi­
enjoyment. They are the only siz­ dent. that only forty-two days be­
able falls between Niagara and the
fore you repudiated all government
Rockies, and engineers say If har­
gold contracts, and al lhe very time
nessed. the falls could produce 266.­
you issued these half billion in new
000.000 kilowatt hours of electricity
securities, you had not lhe slight­
annually.
est suspicion that such a step would
be necessary? Do you want us to
My favorite Will Rogers joke: His believe that less than a month and
mother and father both had Chero­
a half away, no sign or indication
kee Indian blood in their veins. The
of the approaching collapse (if. Infact gave Rogers quite a lot of
quiet satisfaction in his later life.
collapse) was visible? If there were
He said of it. "My ancestors didn't
clouds on lhe horizon, so to speak.
come over on the Mayflower, hut
If there were any doubts in the
they met the boat.” Some of hla
minds of you or your officials that
friends tried lo boom him as a posslble presidential candidate. He ex­ the gold standard could not be up­
held. was it honorable or trust­
plained his coolness to the Idea by
worthy of your administration to
saying, "A comedian can only last
permit these securities to be Issued
until he takes himself seriously or
his audience takes him seriously, with the gold clause covenant?
Thus the Roosevelt record on the
and I don't want either one of them
to happen to me until I'm dead—If gold clause is as follows:
WORDS—Promised lo regard tile
then. 80 let's stop all thia foolish­
government's obligation on gold
ness right now.”
contracts as a sacred covenant; asSHORT WAY LINES BUY
CENTRAL COACH PERMITS. about maintaining the gold stand­
“
The acquisition of the permits ard.
ACTIONS — Repudiated existing
of Central Coach Lines, operating
between Lansing, Marshall, Cold­ gold contracts with citizens, mu­
water. and Fort Wayne Is an­ nicipalities and foreign countries
nounced by short Way Lines, Inc_ alike; took the United Slates off lhe
of Toledo, Ohio. The addition of the gold standard.
Thank you very much. Mr. Presi­
this Important 130 mile route in­
creases the length of the Intrastate dent. Your actions, then, were the
routes of Short Way to 668 miles exact opposites of your words and
promtoes
I
The coordination and consolidation
Another point, Mr. President. Will
of schedules will not only tend to
Improve existing service but will tie you tell us what you have said about
together the service to numerous sound currency and currency poli­
Important points In central and cies so that, without exaggeration
western Michigan. New coaches and invective, without so beclouding
have been ordered and a general the controversy as to make it pos­
consolidation of terminals will be sible for the future of the country
to be determined in rancor and tem­
made.
per liujteacl of by calm deliberation
CONCERT BY STATE
and clear thinking, we may judge
FUTURE FARMERS' BAND. the extent to which you have kept
Friday evening there will be giv­ your word with lhe American peo­
en at the w. K. Kellogg Agricul­ ple?
tural school south of Hickory Cor­
Mr. Roosevelt:
ners a concert by the Blate Future
The Democratic Platform of 1932
to which I subscribed 100 per cent
group U composed of students from said: -We advocate a sound curall parts of Michigan, and after the
Al Brooklyn. Nov. 4. 1H1, I said:
One of the most commonly repeatd misrepresentations by Republi(Oonttaued oc page X Sac. 2)

play of Apples
.
Carl Boyes, a brother of Register
of Deeds Earl Boyer, purchased the
old A- P Lawrence farm in Barry
township two years ago He was
interested in lhe large orchard on
that farm, and has spent much time
and effort on its development It
evidently paid him to do so. for he
has brought it up into such exceilent condition that it produces a
, very fine quality of fruit. Al the
recent Barry county fair, he capPresident Roosevelt In referring
tured 10 first premiums and eight
to this "foolish fear" about lhe
I second premiums on his display On
crushing load
the public debt
The world's total of unmined coal 1 five varieties he won both first and
will Impose upon your children
'second premiums.
Is 7g trillion metric tons.
and mine declared in his Pitts­
burgh speech: "This debt is not
going to be paid by oppressive tax­
ation on future generations. Il is
not going to be paid by taking
away the hard won savings of the
present generation II Is going to
be paid out of an Increased national
income and increased individual in­
come produced by increasing na­
tional prosperity "
tive that has suffered from double
exposure.
The President has cleared the air
has let a flood of light into the
campaign, revealing that he knows
he is going and Is moving resolutely
on his way in this light his oppon­
ent will have lo reveal not only
where he stands but lhe direction Ln
which he proposes to move—wheth­
er east or west or In a circle.

timore Twp.), 4.000; Blue, 3.000;
Lake No 1, England. Adams. Little
Cedar. Larabcc. Gull. Lime. Wil­
liams. McDonald. Bool. Head. Ken­
yon. Taylor and Lamb. 2,000 each;
Fair, 1,500; Long (Johnstown Twp.i
Mud (Johnstown Twp &gt; 1.000 each,
making a grand total of 446.500 fish
planted in Lhe county.
The work was done'liy the mem­
bers of lhe Rod and Gun Club of
Barry county assisted by the De­
partment of Conservation and the
National Park service

After reading Alf Smith's speech
the other night supportihg Alf Lan­
don. sounds like some little quip,
like alf and 'alf is in order.

H

TO YOUTH
cial and educational activities are again in full swing
... so we dedicate this space to lhe Youth of this com-

munily and extend to them our best wishes for a happy,

as we have been in the Youth of the past; many of our
customers started with us when they were in High

school and continued through the years. Many have

seen troublesome times, even as some of you will, but
they found this Bank ready to help them through. So,

today, we invite the Youth of this community to make
this Bank their Bank.

It's true that many poor people
were fed.
It's true that many would
be dead.
Than see husband or son
there and soak
And have their girls taught to drink
and to smoke
It's fresh in our minds how the
cow and the calf
Must all be reduced almost lo half
The sow and her pigs were ground
upon the spot.
And farmers were paid for lhe
crops they raised not.
We want a man who loves God and
will do as he should
And will help olher folks to try to
be good.
Now, maybe you think I am mak­
ing a fus*.
But we don't went a dictator to dlc-

CHARGED WITH FRAUD.

been fitted with —„----------------- .
cold feet. Nevertheless we shaft
go on believing that a leopard can­
not change lia spats.

successful year. We are as vitally interested in you

I wish we could put u man in there
That after election would be honest
and square;
That after he was seated in the
president's chair.
The promises he had made wouldn't
turn to hot air

Deputy Sheriff Kajey of Nash­
ville on Wednesday picked up Mor­
ris Broad and C. C. Hooatkamp on
the streets of that village for the
sheriff of Bhlawuaee county. They
were wanted there tot Alleged fraud
in selling magazines in Corunna.
1t&gt;e pair were brought to the jail
here and the Shiawassee sheriff
took the men away that evening.

speakers, we read. Is that they re­
fuse to speak up. The trouble with
others Is that they refuse to dry up.

Autumn*timc marks the beginning of renewed ajnbi-

I'M WONDERING.

And keep off the yotea, that would
yoke us up tight.
We are free and we'll stay so. or
else we will fight.
Let us all keep our head and work
to tills end.
And we may have two hundred dol­
lars to spend.
E. H. Adams.

Iowa co-eds are forbidden to bring
their knitting into the dining hall.
thus eliminating danger of learning.
too late, that the spaghetti was a
scarf

Florence Burch. Chaplain. Nora
Russell; Cond. Elma Cry an; Guard,
Ruby wood; Trustee. 8 moo. Velma
Crane; Trustee, year,’ Edith Wait;
historian. Mary Matthews; Patriot­
ic Instructor. Floy BechteL

tion . . . Youth ugain comes into its own—athletic*, to*

I'm wondering what's the name of
lhe man
That's going to be my Uncle Sam?
11 wish somebody would tell to me
If it's Alf. or Billy or Franklin D.l

Let us keep this Democracy a safe
place to live;
And lo lhe Father above praise and
honor we'li give.
We don't want a communist to
govern this land.
Let red blooded Americans take a
.
firm aland.

the incorporation of counties, would
become port of lhe constitution at
the
same---lime
as"Proposals *1 —
and
'“-------------------"* *3.
but without effectiveness until lhe
legislature obeyed its mandates.'
proposal No, 4. abolishing property
taxes and authorizing the enact­
ment of a graduated income tax.
would become effective Jan 1. 1938.
by the language of the proposed
amendment Itself. Atwood explains.

Stop in and see us

. . . the value of a
good banking con­
nection

increases

with the years.
Make it a part of

your education to
know your banker.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 13, IBM

POLITICAL NOTES

ldtte{nffo*d In rsncpr and temper IpvroUve. without so bedoudtng the
•
MHO.
.
.
I
nt
r,lm A«Hh»r*tlrtn and controversy as to make it nosslble
The Home Literary dub was
tor the future of the country to be called to order Oct. 1 gt the home
determined In rancor and temper of Mrs. D. Humphrey with Mrs.
tnstasd of by calm ddlbaratton and । MoCMry eo-bostees. Th* meeting
(Continued from page 1. 8ec. 3)
half year
thinking, that your promise
1 Peo^te axe eomtag to appreciate clear
e«TU.
I)Qot&gt;Je
your
i can spe|)pws. including the President. Mr Pr*sld«nL that tiffs country 1*
tttoru
10 100 pgr cgnt
' has been the claim that lhe Dcmo- no tonier entirely bolpted from ,
conditions abroad. Stable conditions ■
.
81r Georg* Williams, who founded
■ exalte position with regard to money
IU Ojlfin and Growth.", waa car­
mV vr n a
_u' lias npt bpen made sudden tly abroad, for example, sxarcb* »|
up lhe abortive attempt ried over. Mn Gilkey and daughter.
Hablllxln* in0ug»o« op our owp ■ of
aSStUa to prove unllclear The pr^^dpH ^s seeing vi­ business;
unstable
condl Horn-,cnie&lt;1
cut
--------at money on the part of tlful piano duets and Mcsdsmea Vera
» hArmful
harmful cfTec'.
eir»c' on Wilber Brucksr during the primary
sions of rubber dollars This is only abroad have a
Hl-Y Clubs art being planned for
i part of his campaign of fear. 1 am business here We may wl*h that campaign. Prentiss Brown, his New Lawrence and Lulu snlffin with two
vocal duels and readings were given in several high schools over the
' not going to cbaractertec these the facte were different but we
by Mrs. L. Leonard and Mn. H. area.
i statements I merely present lhe must accept these things as they
Middlcvm, m-v entertained the
1 fact.,
Tire Democratic Platform arc. AU of us were Interested in there must be some hateful and Flower. The hasteases served a d«ilclou* one o'clock dinner. The next Freshman boys at their regular
specifically declares. 'We advocate a what you said concerning a World stabler tare* back 01 L1&gt;c former
meeting test week.
Economic and Monetary Conference Michigan governor. Well, since the
all haaards.' That. I take it la plain because at the possible good, such a Federal sgenU backed out ol Michi­ J K. Flower Oct 33 with Mrs. New­
conference could do to world eco­ gan as quietly as possible without kirk as*btlng. There were nineteen Sunday evening hearing the camp
Englbn'
mambers and three guests present. reports of six local boys at the eve­
Thb is what Mr Roosevelt said nomic stability. Will you please tel) uncovering anything which even re­
Mr and Mrs. Martin Jone* and ning service in the
Methodist
concernutg currency. His actions arc us what you have said on this sub­ sembled Irregularity. It Is pretty
the latter'* mother. Mrs. Saunders, church
a* follows
ject t
evident that no grounds for com­ all of Grand Rapid* spent the week
The Barry Co. 8 8- Convention al
MR ROOSEVELT:
On April 20. 1933. lhe gold standplaint could be found.
1 ard was ABANDONED UNDER AN | First, of course, 1 subscribed .100
—n Wen. on the other hand, there is end with Mr and Mrs. Harlan Sco­ Delton Oct 20 has an Interesting
program for all young people
EXECUTIVE ORDER ISSUED BY’ P«r cent to lhe Democratic Plat-1uro questioning of who Is behind bey and Mr. and Mrs. £ Quick.
J
,
—wilk .-u ..w.
i
quoawwimg oi wno is Denina
W. C- Schulte is entertaining
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
--------- "jejs ' srsLsrs “ ?„ x“^’&lt; a Mn
abler from Buffalo. N. Y.. also
&amp;*&amp;5
On May 13. 19U. President RooseWEST HOPE.
relatives from Chicago.
sell approved the Thomas Amend­
The Community Club will meet
Mr*. H- J. Flower and Bernice
ment to the Agricultural Adjust­ trade and facilitate exchange."
to run for the senate than Mr spent lhe week end with Mr. and with Mr and Mrs. James Wilcox
In
a
message
to
the
World
Eco
­
ment Act which gave the president
Murphy had lo leave hh palace in
this Friday evening- Miss Marie
nomic conference ©n May 18. 1M3 the Philippines. But Jim Farley said Mr* IL M Kennedy and son* at
the following powers
Nctuchaeffer of lhe Kellogg Foun­
Dowagiac.
said: "The
Economic Con1— To issue three billton dollars of I-------------- World
-------------------------■ come on boy., toe the mark"—and
Billie Schultx, who has been em­ dation la expected lo give a talk on
”^cr in lhe boys did.
currency in the form of unsecured tzrzr.::
ference must establish order
the
work that 1* being carried on
ployed by an optical company in In­
place
present
by a
United States notes (flat money)
------of
- --the
---------------* chaos **•
Are we going to let Jim Parley dianapolis. ha* been transferred to in Barry county. Everyone In the
2— Ta fix the weights of the gold stabiUMtion of currencies, by free­ bow Michigan or shall we reserve
community is urged to attend.
an office in San Francisco
and silver dolbrs at such amounts ing lhe flow ot world trade, and by this responsibility aa our own right?
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Collison have
Mr and Mn. Karl Palmatler and
a* lhe president finds necessary International action to raise price
Thousands of Michigan beet .sons of Kalamamo visited their Just finished a very neat woodshed.
In Uioru lUpptoenl
„
ilhe rubber dollar)
and to pro­ lev.11. n
Vosbr'a wood trucks from Kalamother and B. N. and Nina Fenner
vide for the unlimited coinage of i.xU.W.i.1
pw»mi
I , ux.1
V. . -re««d.Friday evening. Robert remaining at; masoo arc hauling wood away from
Aznimm
e
r&lt;v-nv»rx'
hv
k
I&lt;
c
inn
con—
.
■
_
...
_
economic
recovery
by
wise
and
con
­
gold and silver al the ratio so fixed;
Down in Florida, however, one Cor­ the farm until Sunday evening.
our extensive wooded areas as fast
or to reduce the weight of lhe gold sidered international action."
as they can. Kalamatoo haa used
poration alone received il.0S7.6M
Thb b what Mr. Roosevelt said for not rablng sugar. or nearly half
dollar i without reference to silver)
an enormous amount of our wood
MARTIN CORNERS.
concerning lhe conference. Here­
by any amount up lo 50 per cent.
during the past tour years.
On January I. 1934. lhe President, with b what he did:
beet sugar grow«ra of Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bales and
by Club No. I at the home of Mrs.
_z ____________
_____
On July 3. 1033. the usefulness of
by
proclamation ....reduced
the gold
YET THE NEW DEAL ADMINIS­ Aril* Slocum Wednesday. Oct 31, daughter Barbara have spent con­
content of the dollar to 39.08 per the World Monetary and Economic TRATION PROFESSES TO BE
siderable lime this fall at their farm
all —
practical THE CHAMPION OF THE 'LIT­ for dinner.
cant ol what It had formerly been Conference waa for *"
Mr and Mra. Lowell Demand and In lhe Sand Hills, here.
The above proclamation Included purposes ended by a radio message TLE FELLOW" IN COMPETITION
Mr. and Mrs Earl McKibbln vis­
lhe following statement: "I RE­ from President Roosevelt to Lite WITH THE MONEYED INTER­
Flatter vUited Mr. and Mrs. Arthur ited her sister and husband. Mr.
SERVE THE RIGHT BY VIRTUE Conference tn London
ESTS
snd Mrs Lawrence Eaton, of Burl­
Jones
of Grandville, Sunday.
The world will not tong be lulled
OF THE AUTHORITY VESTED
ington. last Sunday, and made the
IN ME TO ALTER AND MODIFY by the specious policy of achieving
DOWLING.
other chicken a upper Tuesday eve­ acquaintance of the new baby boy
a temporary and probably an arti­
THE PROCLAMATION."
bom recently He weighed 8 pounds
The Parent Teachers’ meeting will ning, Oct 37.
Thus lhe Roosevelt record on ficial atabUlty In foreign exchange
be held at lhe schoolhouse Friday I _________
Mra Carl________
Ora&amp;hiua _ of Pewamo and has been named Darrel Albert.
1 sound currency b
night with a pot luck supper begin- spent from Wednesday until Sun­ Mrs. Eaton was formerly M1m Mary
WORDS—Promised to maintain a tries."
Mugrldge and is well known here.
Thus che Roosevelt record cm the ning at 7:30. A program will fol- day with her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
sound currency at »1) hazards
Filltag lhe neighborhood silos Is
promired to evoid the rubber dollar World F.conomlc conference stands low, which is in charge of Mrs Lora Roland Barry. Mr. and Mrs Barry lhe occupation around here at presWilcox and Mrs. Clara Rees
took her back home Bunday.
ACTIONS—Abandoned the gold as follows:
Tlie
church
U
'
The
Young
People's
clr—
•
111*
Dowling
Church
b
being
givswung
revpies
Class
met
at
.
WORDS—Promised to support a en a coat of paint thb week which ihe home of Mias Ruby Cogswell I ..
standard, gave us a rubber dollar
Mr *nd Mr* Bert McKlbbiu alen
a
coat
of
paint
this
week
which
,XQme
Ml
*'
Rui»
Economic--------------Conference de- adds g^ady
that b a dollar, the gold content orWorld
-------- -----------------m IU .ppear.L
T^rCilnrdiv
Saturday evening. NlcT re-1 Ynd^ “le ^neral of hb aunt, Mrs.
~
la«f
__ ......
value of which can be altered b&gt; signed to restore international trade house which belongs to Mr and freshmenls were served and a good Jo“eP&gt;’ Hartley, in Kalatnaxoo. Sunpresidential decree
and facilitate exchange.
„
Thank you very much. Mr PresiACTIONS—Destroyed all possible Mra. Jake DeCrocker. U abo under- llmf rnjoyed by alt They plan to .
. co.. «. P.IM, ■
« I.U l»
luure
S
dent It is very evident that one can ’ hope of results at World Economic ,-ln, epak.

—

THE LIGHT METER SHOWS
WHY SHE FROWNS
LADY, YOU NIED
THREE TIMES AS
MUCH LICHT
FOR DARNING!

Eyestrain . . probably the commonest ailment among civilized
people . . . and one which medical science demonstrates has
a widespread and harmful effect on lhe entire nervous system
is often caused In insufficient light. With today's cheap
electricity, correct lighting i» an advantage available to every­
one . . . one mi important to your oun and children's physical
well-being, that you should give it most serious consideration.

This is lhe new Sight
Mctfc that measures
your lighting

Have your home

. .

y.m.c.a. mans

'

say without exaggeration and In- Conference by measage belittling IV
i vectne. without so beclouding the j purpose
r
controversry as to make it possible
Once again. Mr President, il can
for the future of the country to be be zald without exaggeration and

2

Save eyesight with a

You Just Think You Can’t

Better Sight lamp

al this Sal©

price?

Bcll&lt; r &gt;ight lamps have been n ivnlifii alh drtelupcd for lhe «pr.

enough light

of lhe proper »

•trairs^ Bui that's not all' The

Eat Meat
because you are in the habit of trad­

ing at one place and think that's

W

The 1

With prop
-aderahip w
increase U

in Kain val*
bulletin nc
. lhe Bulb
Late Collegi

Ululfa In
■ rtmtnU ,ii
I In coinpl!
l the :&lt;&lt;UI.
ItliUMtlull
cdl:.»' null
id nii-tliodl
utilize'..■&gt;11

falfa for t

MUI
[)ll!l!.« II.
24-1933 U.
n L.iil .it.
million il
an prod n
T Wr:.’&gt;
■nt
; -.i ’
■■:■-■ •*,;!

e state w

riod the o
ving the

r hundred
production

i Ln the U|
eraged 19.

alnage. ea
:llon and
Ullzers.

PO1
courage

Remember that the Ladles' Aid
CARLTON CENTER.
two grandsons from the school legv0,1 T1lltr’day'001Mr and Mrs Jay Wing were Ing us five scholars Of the twenty­
.«ut*u Sunday of their brother. Mr. ! one homes that make up thb school
W1!tfc8 Ql *nd Mra Fay Wing of Woodland I dblricl. we have Mr. and Mrs. Ida
Battle Creek visited their uncle and and attended services at the Coats Good’s baby. Mr and Mrs. Qeoffrey
aunt. Mr and Mrs 8. A Wertman. Grove
Sunday morning.
fceller’s’s two
twosmall
small children.
children.Mr.
Mr. and
and
- ------ —church
_
1 IKeller
Sunday. Mr. Wilkes has been em&lt;»—»• &lt;from
------- •»-.
---------------" _. alI 1 Mr*..--------Several
thb
community
Harry,-------------------------------------Dinwiddle's daughter
ployed as a mall carrier at Battle tended the Spotlight al Hasting* and Mr and Mrs. Harold SpringCreek for thirty years and U re­ High which was enjoyed very much. ' er's four children
A handful of
tiring thb week from active service
Mrs Wm Crockford entertained , young people finish out the Ibl of
Mr. and Mrs. John Chamberlain her daughter and husband from our future hopes.
and daughter Patricia of Hastings Sturgis, Sunday.
I
-------------- &lt;♦«■----------------spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs
EAST WALL LAKE­
----------------- ---Marshall Pierce and family.
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
, Sunday visitors at E D Reynold'
। Mr. and Mn Harvey Babcock and
There ...
will be no church at ....
the were Mr and Mrs Lee Reynolds.,
daughters moved last week to Vick- schoolhouse next Sunday. October Mr. and Mn. Irv Barber of Cresery'a resort. Clear lake, where they &lt;8. because of the revival meetings ' &gt;ey. Mrs. Ntftlle Barber and niece,
will occupy one of the cottages.
«l Moullen church. Prayer meet- . Katie, and husband of Kelamaxoo.
Bible study and prayer meeting big al the schoolhouse WeffnasAay
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kahler enter­
will be held at the home ol Mr. and evening. Sidney Flfield will be the 1 talned Mr and Mrs. Gamer HampMr* Milton Trafford Thursday eve- ' leader
I ton and two children from Hastings
ning.
Walter Norton of Chenango Forks. Sunday.
------ - —* f-----N Y.. visited Thursday and Friday
Mr and Mr*. Elmer Reynolds and
wnen should the average com- of test week with his nieces. Mrs | Martha Reynolds suited Wcdnesposer stop writing popular songs?’ KrusaeU and Mrs. Engle and Mrs. day with Mr and Mrs W J. Cairns
wonders a writer Now---------------------- ; Belson of Irving.
I of near Doster.

the only place in town.

model' arc ixuiulilul.

huiid-lintcd p.iri liment -hade- with Hist the right diitounl »l

P it

CASH AND BUY FOR LESS!

PRICES UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE

FARM SPARE RIBS
H.»&lt;* down

Sirloin Steak

T Adder

Ml a nionlli

Round Steak

Juicy

Must popular!

Swiss Steak

bronze. Hurtiionizin
TOO wall lamp in tie* &lt;jiffu»n
light above and Lelov&lt;

20

DalickHii

u.

Beef Roasts

14c

UCTION SALE
On account of the death of my husband I will sell
at public auction on the H. C. Ijitta farm situated
south of Assyria Center to Baseline road or 8^4
miles north of Battle Creek and ^4 mile east, or *4
mile west of Baseline church on

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20 8®WT
I offer lhe following property:

Beef or Pork Liverb°",‘ lk- 15c

Hamburg Steak

Lard

Homo Rendered Lb. 16c

Sausage
Beef Ribs b-

40 Head of Dairy Cattle

2

2 u* 30c

Farm Style Lb.

15c

10c And

Beef Hearts Beef Tongues

8
Gcacciul!

Plenty of Pork and Veal at Reasonable Prices
aod aa •■iractiun

THE ONLY MEAT MUKET IN HASTINGS
Good Moat * Low Pricat - Poor Service

ELECTRICITY

CONSUMERS
sewss eoMPAHv
.::

Hpfsw.

mm-

Open Wed. and Sat, Only

"(Jicsp Elect ricin" 1. a hmn'hold

GEO. SMITH, Jr.
EAST STATE IT,

HASTHKS, MICH.

REG
GAS

23 milch cows, Guernsey, Holstein and Durham,
average age 4 to 5 years, all tested.
15 yurling htiftri «nd calves, Guernsey end Holstien.

7 Head of Horses

G

Pair bay mar««, 5 and 6, weight 3200, with foal
Brown mare, 12 years old, with foal
Brown mare, II years old
Pair bay colts, 2 years old
Bay colt, 18 months old

And all farm implements, hay and grain
TERMS CASH—All goods to he settled for before
taken from premises.

MRS. LULA M. LATTA, Propr
Harold Be|cher, Auctioneer

s

W. C. Struiu, Clerk

�■.Tljg HASTINGS BANNTIt,

IfiT
If year

oundtd

not cut

Bfd for
er the
tod the
regular
Rapid.*
• camp

th odist

resting

1 meet
Wilcox

Fopnlalk on
led on
in the
a have
«Wd.
Kalay from
as fast
i used
wood

and i
t con-j
r farm

In vUBurlde Uic
&gt;y boy
xxinds
Albert.
, Mary

. pres-

i, Mrs.
, Suntheir
renlyschooi
s. Ida
offrey
r. and
ighlcr
prtag‘ul of

mold.*
noIds.
Oresniece,
azoo.
rntcrfatnps tings

s and
dnestalrns

KLINGENSMITH.
NASHVILLE.
on the plants and scattering it on
the bare spots in draws and sloughs
Miss Doris Betts and Miss Anne
There will be a box social given
The cattle will trample the seed in­ Mayo of Grand Rapids spent the at lhe Yankee Springs schoolhouse
to the ground as they eat the sweet week end at their home here.
Friday, Oct. 30. at 8 o'clock.
clover.—Wallace's Fanner.
The Clover Leaf club was delight­
We have a new school bus this
fully entertained Friday evening at morning its the old one was not
By WILLARD BOLTE
f TIMOTHY.
lhe home of Mrs. Pearl Justus near large enough lo accommodate the
Timothy hay got its bad name for Kalamo. A short business session children, there being about 40 chil­
ers in Michigan and other states Is
ALFALFA.
With prophecies that Michigan's offered in the announcement that a
was held after which two guessing dren lo ride.
uder.-hlp with a million acres of new laying contest will be opened of most Importance for horse feed contests were played
Lovely re­
Judge and Mrs. Stuart Clement
if alf u la but a promise of a great- on the campus of Michigan Slate and was permitted to stand until freshments were served.
were callers at lhe Burd and Green
• increase In the use of this legume College al East Lansing for a 51 ripe before mowing. In view of the
Mr and Mrs. William Hecker and homes Sunday.
fact that the clovers do not grow
the state, farmers in Michigan weeks test beginning October 1.
Mr and Mrs Ives of near Gun
"There is an incentive lo better well In much of New England, the daughter. Jean, spent the w&amp;tk end lake entertained Mr and Mrs. Har­
ui gam valuable information from
bulletin now available by writing breeding in there -contests," says C. New Hampshire Experiment Station
ry Clem. Mrs. Elsie Penbrook. Noble
Una. Ohio.
the Bulletin Room. Michigan G. Card, head ot lhe poultry hus­ has for many years been working
Saunders and C Allen one evening
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Brumm
and
with
timothy
hay
for
dairy
cow
ate College. Ea.it Lansing, for a bandry department at the college.
mother. Mrs. L. 8 Brumm and son.
py ut Circular Bulletin No. 154. Tlicre was little progressive com­ feeding—and recent experiments
Many carpenters have gone to
Lynn, of Sharon. Pa., spent from
lltalta In Michigan “ Eleven de- mercial poultry breeding previous have shown conclusively that tim­
Thursday until Monday with Vic work on the camp buildings at Mud ,
irtrnenta at the college coo|wrat- to the start of the first contest at othy iiay makes an excellent dairy
a
Half of a Brumm and family and on Sunday lake. They are working on the mess
------ ---------------------- -----l in compiling useful information the college In 1922-23.
hall.
27 cottages and lhe Infirmary I
That first year the high pen of [stand of timothy—cut
tut on June 10th they all enjoyed a dinner at lhe
&gt; Hie teedbed preparation. liming,
home of Mr. and Mrs Fred Brumm building now.
rtlllzutiun. inoculation, varieties, ten birds hod a 51 weeks record ol '—produced 212 lbs. of crude protein
Mr. and Mra Douglas Rouse of
edlng methods, time of cutting 2125 eggs In 1933-34. the high pen per acre. The other half—not cut Dr. Dean Brumm and Miss Ardis Battle Creek spent Sunday with j
Brumm of Lansing and Maurice
id methods of curing Methods was that of E C Foreman. Lowell. | until July 30th—produced more tons
Purchls of Nashville were also pres­ Mr. and Mrs. Albert Green and j
Utilization of the crop include a Mich , whose ten layers had a rec- I of hay but only 153 lbs. of crude ent.
helped little Lois Tripp celebrate '
scusston of the feeding value of ord of 2755 eggs in 1934-35. W 8 I protein per acre. The early cutting
The Ladles' Aid of Ute Evangelical her first biniiday.
falfn for ail classes of livestock Hannah und Sons. Grand Rapids, ran 10 per cent crude protein, which
Wedding bells will ring lhe lat­
church
met Wednesday afternoon at
i use for green manure o-s pasture had a pen with a high individual I placed It in strong competition wth
ter port of this month for Miss
lhe
home
of
Miss
Amy
Hartwell.
one or in mixtures, seed prcxluc- bird laying 327 eggs. That Is real some of lhe legumes. Both ton­
Ann Plockovich and Jim Storkan
Jack Smith and Roger Sackett, Ann
•
। nage and protein content were
m and alfalfa hir, a* a cash rrup production "
of
Grand Rapids Mr Storkan was .
An Increase of 50 eggs per year i strongly affected by the fertility of who are attending Western State formerly a resident here
isl ot production r-UiiwUs ore
Teachers' college al Kalamazoo,
per bird in commercial flocks, il l» the soil,—Hoard's Dairyman
Mr and Mrs Burd are expecting |
spent the week end at their homes
। ixnnted out. offers a reul step in I
------------Mrs. Inez Wash spent Tuesday in lo build a new house on their farm |
...--- ------------ -----------' breeding more efficient poultry far I
KILAGE.
soon
During the ten-year period of distribution from hatcheries and I
Plenty of stunted com was going Lansing
The Freshman-Sophomore classes
24-1933 the bean crop In Michi- flocks In the |3 contests already * into silos as early as the last ot
PODUNK.
h had an annual average value of ‘ completed and the 14th. now in | July in Kansas this year Even that enjoyed a welner roast Friday
Mr and Mrs R. B Gardner have
million dollars in' summaries of | progress, the breeders making en- |early, much of it was w dry that night at the Gardner home
The first football game of the sea- moved to Richland.
an production costs obtained by , tries pay costs of the competition. । water had to be added during the
•on
was
played
Friday
afternoon
I' Wright of Use farm manage- —
—-— to
•— far
•*-•-this
--------1 -|------------------------- ------Geo. Ransom made a business
The- "•
high
pen
year■-is
cutting
process -------Henry
Hatch-•of•'—
the
*nt department at Michigan State that of the Royal Poultry Farm at Kansas Farmer stall recommends with Middleville, resulting tn a tie. trip to Detroit Tuesday
&gt;Uege. wide variation in profits Zeeland, with 2226 eggs and seven pumping the water to the top of 6 to 6 . A forward pass, from Right
Mrs Hobart Kenyon is visiting
d ios-.es were found on farms in weeks records still lo be made.
। the
allo
two
"
"* and running It into the ’ Halfback Dennis Yorgcr to Right her husband up north for
e state where records of costa
-gooseneck"—because much more End Bob Beatty resulted in a touch.
DAIRY.
' water can be added without the down for Nashville in the first per•re kept accurately In a four year
Mrs. Mary Caln and Mrs. May- I
Illinois
Experiment
rlod the one third of the farmers
Station chance of clogging lhe _____
blower pipe tod Middleville made a touch down belle Laubaugh entertained the D I
also
'
advises
- welting
--------- { the top
vlng the lowest yields per acre strongly recommends the feeding He “
D. D.'s at the home of Mrs. Cain I
Dr. 3 M. Fowler of Battle Creek lust Thursday Mrs Martha Brown
d an average production of »9 of grain to offset costly drops in do*,,, thoroughly for some time aftsheta which cost |4-87 field run milk production when postures fail tr mung—lo prevent drying out and called at the Gall Lykins' home will entertain next lime.
Mr and Mrs. Cody) Laubaugh VU- I
r hundred. This yield resulted in Such supplementary grain rations stopping the fermentation and tight Saturday Mrs. Lykins and twin sons
accompanied him to Woodland
ited her parents in Nashville, Sun-!
production losa of &gt;7 12 per acre should contain at least 15 per cent settling,
------------Mr and Mrs. Nelson Brumm and day.
ten all costs were included Grow- of protein, and dairymen will find
now will Hold
bet- ,
hold up belTURKEY MONEY.
daughter. Annella. attended the fu­
i in the upper third In production that lhe milk flow
eraged 199
IQS bushels
bushels per
per acre
acre propro- I ter if lhe cows have access .to darktht post two years—1934 neral of Mrs Brumm's uncle Bert
. ..
During the
eraged
ced al a cost of 82.85 per hundred I ened. cool barns or sheds during lhe Bnd '.ZZZ
1935—oa vo-ag
student
ol Walker, at Cheasanlng
d representing a profit of 87 47 heal of the day —Prairie Farmer.
।I Kearny
-------------------Mrs. E. T Morris will entertain
county, Nebraska, has raised
r acre Profit factors were good
---------- —
a total of 680 turkeys and made lhe Main street division of the M E
BOG
LAND.
alnage. early planting, variety sen profit over feed of 8898. Other Aid on October 8
Bogs
that
are
loo
soft
to
handle
On Friday night the annual Jun­
:tion and wise use of manures and 1
boys In Lhe same high school class
in ordinary ways can be successful­
tiUzers.
raised 873 turkeys In 1935. with ior-Senior Hunt will be held
ly seeded to sweet clover. accordUig such good returns that all of “
Miss Phyllis Brumm of Grand
them
POULTRY NOTES.
I to Iowa Slate College, by mowing are Increasing their turkey
flocks Rapids spent Thursday night with
couragement to poultry breed- | ripe sweet clover while the dew is for 1936.—Capper's Farmer
her parents. Mr and Mrs Coy G
Brumm.
VEALS.
Harry Beard and family have
In the summer months lhe de­ moved into the Etile Mather home
mand is for small cuts of meat, and which they recently purchased
a 150-ID. calf may bring as much
Mr. and Mrs Joe Hummel have
os 3c per pound more than one that moved into the Frank Kellogg house
weighs 200 lbs. With this spread on the north side
the lighter call can easily bring i
Electricity has been turned on for
more money than the calf weighing Lhe people living south of town as
200 lbs. or more, provided It is in far os the Ed. Penfold farm and cast
good flesh After August the heavier of the three bridges to Gilbert Dlckkinds will again bring good prices ron's and Frank Ryaman's.
—Wallace's Former.
Mr. and Mrs Frank Feighner are
visiting their daughter. Mrs C C. DETROIT
just fortunate
HIGHBANK.
Gibson, and family and son. Earle
The Moore school will hold their Feighner. in Detroit
I new 1937 Dodge." says Eugene B.
first P. T A meeting Friday evening,
Rally Day will be observed Sun­
i Oct. 16. The program will be put day at the Evangelical church at n | Meek. "If everybody Tails' like 1 did.
on by the teacher. Miss Helen Wil­ o'clock.
letts. and pupils.
thia year. Dodge certainly gala my
Doni worry when you stumble.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawblitz
'
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rdtnember a worm is about the
thing that can't fall down.
Frank Jones In Battle Creek
It's a wise Motorigt who doesn't wait । Sunday evening visitors of Merlyn
until the last minute! ... By putting . and Lynn Marshall were MUs Beth
McArthur of Grand Rapids and
your cor in shape now you'll gave time
Harry Tomson Junior Walton. Wil­
liam Ransom. Reid Furro-' --'
and
and trouble as well as money!
Marshall Cook of Hastings.
Mra. Aaron Treece of near Alle­
Drive in for a ?Pre-Winter‘
gan spent a few days with Mrs.
Veda Guy and family last week.
Tune-Up!
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Reid and sons
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mra. Milo Kecks at Bedford.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Reid and Mrs.
Berle Nash and sons attended a fu­
neral In Battle Creek Thursday aft­
ernoon.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hoffman
spent Sunday at Mr. and
Mra.
Glenn Overamilb's at Sunfield.

Weekly Farm Review

The Hest Ideas from the Best Farm Papers

SEES NEW CAR

PEANUT
BUTTER

SALAD
DRESSING

2-lb.

29

25

California Dried Fruit Sale
Prunes
Raisins

4

Prunes
Sunsweet Apricots

59'

Prunes
Bulk Apricots

19'

Prunes
L‘
Dried Peaches

Firestone Tires and Tubes
Batteries, Windshield Wipers

• Vulcanizing.

BLUE

PlIklMHfl
SUNDCU

Michigan

Washing

MOTOR
FUEL

FOOT BALL—

PYREX CUSTARD CUP SETS,

6 cups and rack------------ ------KITCHEN LIGHTING
UNIT

ELECTRIC CORN
POPPERS
ELECTRIC WAFFLE
IRON
KITCHEN
STOOL —

98
39
79
79
$-| 19

67

JOHNSON'S RAPID FLOW
FILTER DISCS1_____________ faW

"EXCEL” SHOTGUN
——j

All Gauges

WINCHESTER SINGLE
SHOTGUN ...-------------MARLIN .22
RIFLE

..*6”
’850
»4»°

Michigan is—and always has been self­
don’t want—outside political bosses tell­
ing us how to run our affairs. We shall—

must—preserve the principle of

and

state’s

rights,

guaranteed

us

by

the

Constitution of the United States. Keep
Tammany and Dictatorship out of Mich­

igan.

Vote Straight Republican on

ALADDIN LAMP

G. E. GOODYEAR HDWE
142 E. STATE ST.

We don’t need—and we

$IA.4O

(Tripod and Shade Extra)

HASTINGS

PHONE 2331

25'

Pancake Flour

Bulk Green Tea

Cocoa
Hot Tamales

.i«.

|Qc

a.

29c

VOTE STRAIGHT

REPUBLICAN
wwucam lunsiHnALWMMniti

Red Beans

19®
4 large cans 29c

Ritz Crackers

Pacific Tissue

15'

19«

Wil.en’.
Certified

Chili Con Carne

t 21«

2 * 25‘
Wilson’.
Certified

2,V,"25'

Y.1I«m

43'
Pet or Carnation Milk 3 £'.23'

Red Hen Mollasses

Bran Flakes

10'

3

No. 1

Ovaltine
Campbell’s Soup

25'

19'
10'

Sunnyfiaid

57'

29'
Chickan 3

Larsen’s Veg-All

25'

Rajah Syrup

qz' 25®
SPLENDID

Pancake Flour
5-lb.
bag

21«

N:.3“ 10'

Post Toasties

Bread

3 -- 25'

Dog Food
Beech-Nut Coffee

lb. tin

Hills Bros. Coffee

lb. tin

27'
27'

29C
n.,u. 27c

io*
Jello
All Flavors

*1.12

Corned Beef Hash
Morton’s Salt

2

15'

All Brai

Woodbury’s

2

15'

ftr 19*

15'

Oxydol or Rinso

November 3rd!

WINCHESTER MODEL 64
30 Cql.

2

Gold Medal "

govern’'ng.

Valve Type Bladder--------------

19'

Del Monte Coffee

E. 8. Thompson will preach here
next Sunday morning.
Mr. and Mra. F. C. Wing and Mr.
and Mra. E. O. Smith were at Stroh.
Ind., and attended church services
there last Sunday.

HARDWARES and I
HOUSEWARES

2

Maxwell House Coffee

o\)tt

25*

S«rp« Dried Fruita for Any Meal

Rolled Oats

Hastings,

19'
19'

HAVE YOUR CAR READY!

COATS GROVE.
Mr. and Mrs. E. 8. Thompson and
daughter. Virginia, and grand­
daughter. Anna Mae Dunnigan,
were al West Sebewa on Sunday
and In the afternoon attended n
home coming service.
Max Coats was home from Michi­
gan State College for the week end.
Mr. and Mra. Clarence Wood of
Hastings. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Nell, Detroit, and Mr. and Mra. D.
Townsend visited al the Kendall
Coats home on Sunday.
About 141 was taken in for the
supper served by the L. A. S. last

25'

Sparkle
FAMOUS GELATINE
DESSERT

&gt;&lt;"-• OOe
• pkt-

33'

Pineapple Juice

Sts.,

SPORT­
ING
GOODS

RAJAN

It Won’t Be Long Now!

y\O^r

REGULAR
GASPRICE

SULTANA

19'

Chipso

19'

Crackers

15'

Daily Dog Food

Cigarettes

KELLOGG’S

4X Sugar
Brown or White

- 25'
$l.15

15*

■&gt;. 2c
Hubbard Squash
5 hr 25c
Grapefruit s«&lt;ne,»
MCk 1C
Table Queen Squash
st
19c
Brussel Sprouts
» 2c
Cabbage souug-d.

» FOOD STOIC
Li.t.n lo "Coffoo Tim." with K.I. Smith Bud
............
StalfaB WBBM

WI CASH WF A
FRicunuaa«i

�tMK HASTINGS

often ro* mueanox

r. A

I* u&gt;* nttur
”
rukt

or
part !■»«&lt;
Mow TIIKttKFOHl:

THUMP AY, OCTOTtK «, II

FREEPORT.
to their home here Bunday after and Mrs. Victor Biaaon l**l Friday
evening.
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Geiger of near
Alto called on h«r father. R. W.
Gosch. last Friday.
Barbara Jean and Palsy O’Har­
row of Grand Rapids were Sunday
lair the room filled with Smoke causing dinner guests of Mrs. Ellen Yarger.
Rev. E. B. Griffen of Woodland
the alarm Fortunately no damage
attended lhe services at lhe U. B.
was done except by the smoke.
church last Friday evening.
Last Friday. Oct #. being Mr. and
Mr and Mrs. Jacob Oleas of
Mn. Jed Stowe's 35th wedding an- Bowtie were Bunday dinner guests
nivrrsary. a group of their frlend-s o(
daUghter. Mra. Vivian Andropped in on them tn the after- rtrrson. at the Dr Wedel home .
noon and gave them a genuine surftnd Mrs. Victor Sisson and
prise
Following an afternoon cf daughter Roberta were Sunday
visiting, a bountiful pot luck .up- | &lt;UMts ot Rev F. Loomis and tam­
per was served Those present were Hy at Saranac and attended eveRev and Mrs Crocker of Hastings, nlng service at Orleans.
Rev Geo Smith of Owooo. Rev., Revival wrvices are continuing at
Vernon Paulson of Newaygo, Mr* thc u B church this week. Rev
------- .Laubaugh
...K...-6. and a..._u.
-------of
, A|)ce OrtfTcn ef woodland is the
Orson
daughter
i Cents Grove Miss Clara Curtis of evxDgell»t and her messages are
Diamond Springs, Mrs Ruby Lewis proving helpful to al) who hear The
.
and children and Mr
and Mra attendance Is increasing and lhe
1
Wesley Stowe and baby
We Join Intereat Hkcwtoe.
i th. the friends of Mr and Mrs Stow
Dr and Mrs H B. Wedel were
tn wishing them many more "Buch Grand Rapids visitors last Thurs­
I happy occasions
day
A partial list of Ute new offic-ra j Mr and Mrs E M Batdorf of
lot tlie M E. Sunday school In- I Rudyard were Thursday night and
___ Friday guests of her sUtcr and huseludes:—Supt. Mrs H. S Wept-l.
Asst SUpt. Ralph Moore. Prfhiary band. Mr and Mr*. John Ftsh
y,. LawMr and Mra. Clarence Doty and
Supt.. Zona Smelker. Secy
•
children of Battle Creek were Sun­
.rence-Barcroft. Asst. Secy. Helena
Braendle: pianist. Dorothy Vau day guests of Mrs Doty * parents.
Patten; librarian. Raymond Bunn; Mr and Mra Ed Coat.
Mr and Mrs H M Boughner
Ml*«. SupL. Mrs Elma Van patten;
chorister. Mra. Merle Nceb; Asat. were Bunday guests of Mr and Mrs
Ctoo ’ Townsend of North Hastings.
chorister! Mra. Elma Van Patten
Carl Rkdkert of Grand Rapids was
‘ Victor Sisaen attended the Funeral
of his cousin.’ Mrs Ben Blakpey at gren on o«r street* Saturday eve­
the Hastings Presbyterian church ning’’

last Wednesday afternoon
Mra
QUIMBY.
Blakeney, known to many hero a-'
Mra Er Leila Souder of Gibson­
i JVt Shite Icy. later Pet Rngm.
passed away at her home on Sun­ burg, Ohi6. who has been visiting
Sturdy Rittman, returned
day evening after an Illness of less Mra

1 1

: ii ANK
Bi:

THE CONSERVATION COMKIIIIOS
RACCOON IN THE LOWER PE
NIN8ULA

The e”'.". ”rl*u’ ’n.tr

•nd n.»rr i-

OXDEB FOX PUBLICATION.

Dr and Mra. H S. Wedel and
two daughters spent Sunday with
friends al Atm Arbor
Mr and Mrs Harlow Segar. Mrs
Eva Segar and Mrs J E. Babbitt
attended the funeral of Mn B F
Blakney at Hastings last week
Miss Velenta Doyle was home
from her school duties al Kalama­
zoo over Sunday and was the guest
of her parents. Mr and Mrs John
Doyle
Revival services arc in prognra
at the Moulton Wesleyan Metho­
dist church southwest of town. A
large nt lewda nee k. reported and
Rev Geo Smith of Owosso, evange­
list Ls bringing splendid gospel mes­
sages
Mrs 11 W Gosch returned home
Sunday after visiting her children
at Detroit. Howel) and Dearborn
since Tuesday Her son. Don Rich­
ard* and family of Dearborn
brought her home

Aid will meet
The qirtnat
Thursday. bct&lt;
18. with Mrs
Grace Chaffer
Dr Milton Burge cf! Lansing spent
the week end nt Jay Smith's.
Mr and Mra Jasper Held and
Mr and Mrs On- Haywood visited
Wesley French m Asayfla. Sunday
Mra. Anna Rltzman is not im­
proving aS we wish Sunday callers
there were Mrs Alfred Wilkins and
Stella Wade of Battle Creek Mn
Edim liubburd. Mrs F Walter and
Mr and Mrs Stanley Thorpe of
Saranac
The W F M S nf Hastings cir­
cuit held then monthly meeting al
lhe home of Pearl Lowell. Rev
Swrtntn Installed officers previously
elected
Mr and Mrs Laubaugh and Mr
and Mrs Leslie Kelley of Milo
helped Mrs Julia Hicks celebrate
her birthday nt the Samson home
Sunday Many happy returns.

NOTICE T.J CREDITORS

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

MIMLinUA
OharUe Dav*, 71 tor Rome yaws
resident of Uto county home died

ELLIS E. FAULKNER

last Thursday morning The funeral
was held at the Baptist ehureh Baturday. He leaves several nieces and I1
nephews lo mourn his passing.
i
W. P Corson U mourning the lou I

of hla large yellow Shepherd deg. I
that was poisoned recently.

REPRESENTATIVE in the
STATE LEGISLATURE

Pennock hospital on the 4th and at
last report* U not doing very well. |
Mra. Mary Ruaeli U recovering j
from her recent illneas.
been spending several months with
her parents, left Friday noon for i
New Jersey, where she has employ- •
ment.
The village U making plans for
water mains to cover outlying dis­
tricts.
The French Mills are enclosing
some of their feed shed* on lhe
loading docks
E H. Sandefur has nearly com­
pleted the garage al hl* home on
Broadway.
----------------------------------------------------The
dinner given by the Ladies'
Aid In the Methodut church base-

ON THE REPUBLICAN TICKET
YOU* SUPPORT AT THE ELECTION
NOV. X 1936, WILL BE APPRECIATED

tended.

SOUTHWEST WOODLAND. •
Mr and Mr* John Oak* of Ohio
spent the week end with Mr. and
Mrs. Otto Townsend
Harrison Blocher waa very much
surprised Sunday when all of hie
ohlldren and their families came U)
remind him of his birthday. Tlwec
Hershberger and children of Indt-

Detroit. Mr and Mra.
William
Strong and baby of Jackson and
MUs Olenna Blocher of Holland.
Little John R. Barnum, who broke
to Blodgett hospital. Grand Rapids.
On Friday Dr John T.
Hodgeson operated on hla arm.
scraping lhe bene and removing a
small piece HU mother. Mn. J.
Leon Barnum, accompanied him to
Grand Rapids and will stay with i
Mrs Nora Hamilton as long u John .
Is in the hoapltal
Mr and Mra Ezra Dell and
daughter of Lansing were week-end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Wot-

Iasi week

NOW!
ASK US ABOUT

Miss Phoebe Oaks u moving to
her house In Woodland t|iU yeek.
Mrs Ouy Kantncr and Mrs. Levi
Kantner were Friday dinner guests
of Mrs I j Smith tn Hastings The
latter remained until Sunday and
visited relatives there
Mr and Mra Forrest Christian
and son Richard spent Sunday aft­
ernoon In Kalamazoo with Mra.
Anna Christian

Manhattan COAL
WI LL DiLIVIR !

Became PRICES WILL SOON ADVANCE . . . be-

ROBINHVL PARK.
Lucile smith of Battle Creek.
spent the week end at home
‘
Mr and Mrs Chas Harris ot Irv­
ing township are now Installed In
lhe Mrs. J no. Wenger place.

the mines . . . because you may not be able to get
what you want later on. we odviie you to buy your
winter'! cool NOW !

Constipation
It eonitlpattan r«a*».
Gm. In­

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.

I. Hkin. «'t aMlrU Nl1«f •Uh Al»l-X-

SAT.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOV.

^CHEVROLET &gt;937

iianm MORTGAGE SALL

in
, P

CANDIDATE FOR RE-ELECTION AS w

DEALERS &lt;N WOd., GRAIN. FEED. FLOUR. 8ALT. LIME.
CRMENT AND COAL
PHONE 1157
HASTINGS. MICH.

B. A. LYBARKER, DniggUt

AUCTION SALE
On account of sickness, we will have an auction sale at

our farm, 1 mile west and half mile south of Hickory Corners,

MONDAY, OCTOBER 19
Commencing el One o'Clock, We Offer the Following Property:

FARM TOOLS.

HORSES.
Pair aged work hones, wt. 2600 lbs.

CATTLE.
■ lock cow, 5 year* old.
Black cow, 3 yean old.
Jersey cow. 8 yrs., fresh in July.

Jersey cow, 9 yrs., fresh in August.
Heifer calf. 8 months old.

Heifer calf. 3 months old.

HAY AND FEED.
200 bushels of oats.
About 12 tong mixed hay.
About 250 shocks of good corn.
&lt; Thirls

TERMS:—CASH.

Oliver riding plow, nearly new.
Oliver walking plow.
New Idea manure spreader, good one.
McCormick grain binder, 7-ft. cut.
Hone com planter with 80 rads of wire.
Farm wagon with box and hay rack.
Threc-secfion spring tooth drag.
Oliver riding cultivator.
Dump hay rake. Five-tooth cultivator.
Set of crotch broaching harness.
Third-horse harness.
Deering mowing machine.
Stool land roller. 50 potato crates.
30 groin bags. Set platform gcoles.
Quantity of rope and hoy forks and

DeLaval cream geparator. No. 12.
Water aeparatgr.
Two ton-gal mlHc cam.
Forks. shovels and other articles used
on the farm.
brooder houac, 6x8.

No goods to bo removed until settled for.

FRANK AND CLARA MESSENGER
RROMMETOW

JUTLOX. R.rtaMV*
Gina D ank»’i
(

LOAN CO&amp;FO-

WANT ADVB. PAT

Beak »MU
Owl Oct II

Harold Newkirk. Auctioneer

Augusta State Bonk, Clerk

�THE HASTINGS BANNIB, THUBBDAY OCTOBIB 15, IIM
arger of Carlton

AlMHKxm caUara wm

Aciivitiei

^u’iu,*™1

BWBBBBpRBRBBWBRSRBWBWBnaam tance tax determined.

cquAtHou#News

Trv-outa have begun this week In
the dramatics classes for the senior!
play "New Pires." It deals with the ’
11tempts of a father to get hla
family to work by putting them on
a farm tn Missouri. The play with a
cut of thirteen characters will be
presented December 4.
A few minor changes have been
made In the high school leaching
program due to the resignation of,
Mr. Logan. Mr. Taylor ts now taking
lhe journalism classes and Mr.
Carl Damson, who will soon Join the
the faculty, will teach history.

Day And f«m

and Mcs. Ralph DaVlne, Mr. and
Mra Cameron McIntyre. Quimby,

Minnie Halley of Nashville.
End
Russell Mead of Grand Rapids at*
landed lha funeral of Bert Walker
in Chesaning Sunday. Mra. Mead
remained qrlih her sister for a few
days and later will bring her home.
Bunday dinner guests al Samuel
Oelgtr's were Mr. and Mra. J. B
WoUa. Hastings, Mra Thera Nagley, Heber Foster and family. Don­
ald Geiger and two children of
Saranac called in lhe afternoon and
Mr. and Mra. Otiger relumed home
with him for a few days. Mrs
farler
returned
Mr.
and
Thera Nr~*
------*------ ■* with "*
-------*
tolfe.
Mr. and Mrs- Arthur Lathrop,
Prairieville, were In the community
Bunday, 'nicy report that Mra.
Louise Lathrop la not so wch at
preaept.

CLOVERDALE.

i dee and daughter. Marton, visited
.M awlw U lUlMw.y

J*„“* ?S_V*«** .
Mrs. Harold Yoder waa In Grand
PBOBATE CQUBT.
Tuesday and w»a a auj^w
Est. John W- Olmstead. Final ac­
guest of Mr. and Mra. John Htgcount filed, order assigning residue lax determined,
Eat. Lloyd Allcrding. Bond of ex- Zinia of Grandville. Harold aqd
entered, discharge of Admr. Issued,
ecutor filed, totters testamentary U- [ children were there tn the ergninw.
uUlg enroll^
Est. LUa B. Burlne. Final account sued, order limiting settlement en- 1 Mra. Yoder returning home '
tered, petition for hearing claims them.
Wednesday
evening filed.
filed, notice to creditors issued.
Mr. and Mra. Edd Lacy and W
Claude A. Hammood ■ Est. Newell H. Barbqr. Petition
Est. Wilson Berkeley Thomas.
home, making arrangements for the for hearing claims filed, notice to . Order lo Increase amount of funds 11am PorriU and family attend
lhe funeral of Utile Ronald Btguf■'First Banctioned Field Trial for creditors
Iiu»tu
used for
minor enwreu.
entered.
- _ .—_ issued
J ..
_ .
__
iur minor
fer
ir
oi Hastings,
of
nastmgs. rriaay
Friday afternoon.
BaMctt Hounds," scheduled for Oct.
?UiSd&lt;?BS" Testimony
Spaulding. Warrant
of freeholders filed, license to jel! J iIid mvenU&gt;r&gt;.
24 add
A.1'.-?..'1"?.-.' a™*
Misses Ruth and Retha Robinson issued, bond on sale filed, oath be- ‘ Est
- - Wayne
—
- -Inven­ funeral at a cousin in Indiana Sun­
E- Gay,
el- al.
of near Corunna visited their par- fore sale filed.
day afternoon.
tory filed
■
Dst John Kahler Final account
Est William Evans. Final account
Noah Bhriner
and
daughter.
and family over the week end..
filed.
filed, waiver of notice filed.
Wealthy Miller and family of ElkRalph Smith of Holland wa
Est. Nancy J. Winters. Settlement i
Est. Lelo Cooper and Keith E hart. Ind.. visited the week end at
agreement filed.
[ Lancaster. Nominations of Qdn Elmer Bluffer's.
hoow Saturday.
Est. John Willtoon. Order allow- I filed, order appointing Gtfn. enter­
Bunday guests entertained in lhe mg claims entered.
I
ed.
Edgar Flfield home Included Mr I Est Sarah B Smith. Testimony | gj,
g Masher Order allow­
and Mrs. Nell Newton and family j filed, license to sell Issued, oath be- lna ci.im« entered
o&lt; Carlton. Mr. and Mrs Wm. Ft- fore sale filed, bond on sale, report
8
mterea
field and family of Rutland and Mr. I of sale filed.
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
and MTS. 6- P. Flfield ot lhe Cobb ■ Est. Lloyd AHerding Waiver of
dlatrict.
; notice filed, proof of will filed, order Herbert L Thorpe. Middleville . 25
Anna May Coles. Middleville
.21
Mra. Claude A Hammond. Rose admitting will entered.
u*rle and Bobert. and David Rob-1 Est Emma Wagner
j. Final ac­ Cmrk Welker. Jr . Grand Haven 23
Emma Lucille Willitts. Hastings 23
inson attended
a. 4-H
meeting
filed, filed.
waiver of
----------,------ --------— »,Club
— —-------.v.1 count
of notice
Wednesday evening at the home of order allowing account entered
Albert D Bteeby. Hastings
.23
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Williams in the
Est. Adella Weeks, inventory Cecile M Stine. Hastings 20
pleasant HUI district.-------------------------i filed, final account filed, order al- Clarence A Straus. Thornappto
Mr. —
AM.
and AM
Mra. Jed Btowc of Free- lowing
, A ,1 I g account entered, LSVIIU
bond ot
Twp
..
30
I
At
_
I
__
,
__
_
port and Rev. Crocker of Hastings I trustee filed, letters of truitec- Mildred L KuhUc. Allegan Co...21
were TSieaday evening callers at the I ship issued. Inventory filed
Edw Walters home
' Est M B Brooks Order allow- Ernest G Sears. Hastings
Marie M Berberlck. Ohio .
. 31
Bunday guests of Mr. and Mn. | mg claims entered

guests of Mr. and

the high school last Mday night
The net receipt^ whieh K0 into the
genual fund of the' Faculty-Stu­
dent Association were more than
they have been since 1MB. The
acts were all well received by the
audience, and especially appreciated
was the work of Mias Jean Barnes
as the director of a group of ama­
teurs backstage Just before the cur­
tain goes up. The acts were con­
nected by announcements over the
public address system by Howard
Front, and lhe musical Interludes
were furnished by Elaine Day and
Norma Jacobean.

L“h“'

B... MU, t Do-nu,. inaerftance tax determined.
Est. Martha Benson. Inheritance 1

Mrs. Mary urans
Crails lias
wa.
nas r

visit her children this
u planning on “*— *'
other points u
will vbi^.two
and
Ilea. Bhe has been employed
home of Heber. Pike tor ti
four years.

NATURE’S BIGGEST FOOD BARGAINS I

Mr and Mra. waJter Ooebies of
„
a were Mr and
j .i Est Mary E. Larkin Petition for
Traverse City spent Saturday vflth Claude A- Hammond
SOUTH BOWNE.
Mrs.--------------------------James F. Hammond
and Nata--------------------------, 1 license to sell filed, order for pub­
Tlie new elock system In the high Mrs. A'drlch.
Mr and Mrs R D. Bancroft of
lic, Mr.—
and
4 OIJO.
Mrs.L*:u
LeovC nnniiiKH^u
Hammond , Haitian entered
school building Is being Installed
Don’t forget to attend the "Har- ----------Allo were callers al Harold Yoder s.
and
J Dicky Lee
•— and
—* Miss *'
Maureen
Est. Elise Vasmrr Inventory filed Sunday.
this week. All the timepieces are
Eliza Paul. Exempllhooked up to the muter clock In hall Friday evening at 7:30 put on Willette of Lansing, Mtos LucJte Wil-1 Est Jennie ____
Mr and Mrs. Will Coagritf of
the central building.
by the Evangelical church. Please Utts of Hastings. Mrs. TalUfferro of ' ned copy of last will and testament Lowell and Mr. and Mra. Will Parbring sandwiches and one other Battle creek and Bernard Ryan of1 filed, petition for probate of forjackson.
i elgn will filed, order for publicatlun
At a recent assembly Mr. Arcnte dish.
Miss Frances Bhelllngton of Has- entered,
Of the traffic division of the AAA
The Cloverdale L. A, 5. will meet
- - ~
w
“SHARP STOMACH PAINS
Walters
‘
gave ah Illustrated safety talk to with hjr.v otto Locktedt Thursday. tings visited at lhe Edw
I &lt;
UPSET MY WHOLE SYSTEM
home Bunday afternoon.
the members of the Junior and sen­ Co-operative dinner as usiual.
: EsL i.
L. xTa..
May Avar*
Ayers. TnhrriFan^e
Inheritance1' Bays, E. Henlges: "I tried a 81
ior high schools. He pointed out
Mr and Mrs Ralph Eames and
bottle &lt;3 weeks' treatment! ol Dr.
DUNHAM
DISTRICT.
tax determined
the chief traffic hazards and gave Mr and Mrs. Chas. Snyder of Kal'
The L A- B. are planning to hold
Est. Adelaide c Slocking Inheri­ Emil s Adla Tablets under your
constructive suggestions on how lo amatoo spent the week end at lhe
U.MUUUKU.
guarantee Now the pains are gone
avoid accidents.
Eames cottage here.
tance lax determined.
•
Est. Nancy C. Winurs Inherl- and I cat anything. Reeds Drug
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kellogg and Glasgow store in Nashville, Satur­
....................
Store and B- A. LyBarkcr.—Adv
Twelve Michigan high schools family of Kainmasoo spent Sunday day. October 17. The president.
Mra. Clyde Checseman, would also
have accepted their Invitations to with Mr. and Mrs. Rom Pierce.
the second annual debate forum to
The first meeting of the P. T. A appreciate the offer of a place for
be held in the Central building Fri­ was held ar lhe loam hall Friday an all day meeting.
Mrs. Leonard Davis of Nashville
day afternoon. October 18. Those night. Songs were sung. Mrs. Glenna
expected are Wayland. Kalamazoo Humeston, of Jackson as pianist. was a guest of Mrs. Maude Harding
Central, oomstock. Plainwell, paw The following officers were elected: Wednesday and Thursday.
kjra Edna Jones of Battle Creek,
Paw. Ionia. Greenville. Middleville, Pres.. Gertrude Monica; vice-pres,
Holland Christian. Grandville. Lan­ De Los Flower; sec.. Mrs. Velma who has been visiting her cousin.
Wolfe; treas.. Mra Mcllvane. P. T Mra. Dorothy Hoffman.» spent the
sing Eastern and AUegan.
Beginning at 4 15 there will be A meetings will ba held every sec­ latter part of the week at lha home
of Mr. and Mra Grover Marshall. 1
an hour s discussion of the various ond Friday in lhe month.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Cheeseman i
phases of government ownership of
Mrs. Eva
McNutt Is visiting
electric utilities. Including eight friends and relatives at Otsego a and children spent Sunday wtth j
Mrs. Cheeseman's parents. Mr. and
talks by students from the various
Mrs.
Sam Buxton, nt Banfield. Mrs. i
schools. At 5:15 the group wlll be
Mrs. Glenna Humeston of Jack­
divided tor negaUve and affirmative son spent a couple of days al her Buxton had recently returned from
discussions. A dinner will be served cottage with her father from Bat­ Pennock hospital.
Ward Cheeseman was al Hastings
in the playroom at 4. followed by a tle Creek and Mrs. Lee MacDonald
Tuesday on jury duty
social hour Al 7 15 there will be a ot Home Acres.
Chas. Jones of Battle Creek spent
debate between Ionia and Paw PawLaura Hoakcn and Harold Hosken
on the staled question. There will of Renville. Minn., are visiting rela­ Sunday with Mra. Jones at Claud
be a parly In lhe playroom at Q tives In Hastings and Cloverdale. Hoffman's. Afternoon callers were
o'clock »nd the visitors will leave Mrs. Wolfe and Hasel Hosken. who Mr. and Mrs. Claud Jones of Banfor home at 10.
had been visiting in Minnesota Ute 1 fic'd and Mr and Mrs. Wm. HoCMarian Hewitt ts general chair­ past month, accompanied them to . mgn.
Pbona 2515
Frank Sage
Hastings
man ot the affair with lhe follow­ Michigan.
’
’
- ----- ----------------ing committees assisting her: Ar­
BANFIELD.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lewis are the :
rangements—Lawrence Moore. Rus­ parents of a girl born Sept. 24. She 1 The P. T A. had their first meet­
sell Engle and Achsah Buck. Deco­ will be called Barbara Elaine.
t Ing of lhe year last Friday night
-----------------J and elected Mrs. Glenn Asplnall as
rations—lAWa
Babin.
Emerson.
THREE CORNERS.--------------- president.
Cairns. Program. Ruth Hathaway
Monday marked the opening of
Mrs. Don Putman attended a Past
and Wayne Flnkbclncr. Social—
the
Wolverine
Beagle
Club
Field
1 Matrons' Eastern Star party in HasHorace Angell, and PhyUls Hinman.
Invitations—Phyllis Hinman. Dale TrlaU wiUi the running of the 131 Ungs last Friday
inch and 15 inch derbies. Claude
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Peter Dilgttr
Crawley and DeForrest Walton.
Hammond la one of lhe Judges in' at Nichols hospital in Battle Creek,
%ABKYV1UX.
the 15 Inch class.
. seven pound
The county Ministerial meeting
Mrs. Beth Cook (Gladys Walters) I Mrs. Lydia Jones passed away at
WA» held al the church Tuesday of Lansing came Wednesday to I the home of her daughter. Edith
with fellowship dinner at noon. The spend a few days with her parents,, Groat, last Saturday evening. Mra.
chicken supper at the church last Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Walters, and ax- Jones was 84 years ot age and had
Friday evening was well attended, stot in caring for her mother, who I been an Invalid for the post year,
proceeds being 528-55. Ethel Green's was suffering from an acute attack she leaves her husband. John Jones,
Sunday school class had a weiner of intesUnal fiu.
I * son. Harold, and daughter. Mrs.
roost In the woods by the church
Mrs. Allee Gardner and Mrs. Leo Groat. The funeral was held
Saturday evening.
Clara Thompson of Bowne spent I at her late home Tuesday.
Will Hyde has been quite sick Friday afternoon with the latter’a
The Johnstown Pioneer meeting
And we suggest that YOU STOP HIS INROADS
the past week. Sunday
dinner father. M. E. Moore, and aunt, Miss was held the first Thursday in OcClara J. Bisson.
tober with forty-five In attendance.
of COLD UPON YOUR HOME with a GENUINE
Chas. McCoy, Mr. and Mra. Wm.
Mr.s. Claude a. Hammond was a D. D. Putoam was elected president
Cory and two children of Grand dinner guest of Mrs. Roy Taffec In and Mrs. Fred Stiles secretary for
Rapids, Mr. and Mrs. Gent Oanka Hastings on Friday.
| the coming year.

NOW...BUILD

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See its for all kinds of
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Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co

KING WINTER WILL
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VALLSAU

DRIED FRUIT

CALIEOKHIA'S FINEST P»ut&gt; FHWTl—HIGHLY ALMLIHI
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DATES
3 25c
FIGS
LB. PKG.

I

UNPITTED

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PACKAGE RAISINS

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PACKAGES

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15 OZ. PACKAGE—

10

RAISINS

ROLLED OATS
FRISH, WHOLESOME

Estate HEATROLA

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PRUNES

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PORKABEANS

10c

HUSKIER w-at rakes -.lie
CREAM OF WHEATS 23c
KELLOGG**

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lc SALE

13th, Ifrtii wd 17th

THt HPULL JTO«
GOODS DELIVERED
HASTINGS

SWEET POTATOES 5

13c

COFFEE

HEAD LETTUCE—.2 u. 17c

4 "J
lift

CHEESE SPREADS
AMERICAN
BRICK
PIMENTO

ONIONS

No. I YELLOW

5 Afc

7C

i ou will find that by using this means of heating, your
coal bills or wood bills will be greatly diminished and
you will have an even, warm flow of air.
Your fluors will bo warm and you will experience no
cold spots common to many other ly|»cs of healers.
L&gt;-t the ESTATE HEATROLA sell itself to you as it has
its thousands of others. We. will lei you be the judge and
bc-glad lo abide by your decision.

PANCAKE
FLOUR
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About ONE-HALF the REGULAR PRICE !
REXALL REMEDIES ... PURE TEST PRODUCTS
HOSPITAL SUPPLIER . .. STATIONERY
and TOILET GOODS I

3 Big Days—Thursday, Friday and Saturday

ALL BRAN 28W

Today's Bigtest Coffee

IS NOW ON!

Any 2 Articles at the Regular
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THOMAS

PHONE 2226
IM W&lt;=T STATtITXHT

£ML«*T

�THF HASTINGS BANNER. THLTISD
'f.1
j*"'
*"'
tn the ImX minute of play to tie
' the g»ma up.
- - Meeh*'*le*I Drawing Claaa.
Sixteen hew drawink sets have
been received by Mr. Holtforth's
mechanlcal drawing class.

'
Fifth Grade.
The fifU» grade ha* started a na­
lure club will) Mr Bell as »p«)ti*or
Tiwy have been learning about
| aevds. Next week their topic will br
"How nature takes rare of her ctuictren in Winter '
,
Library Committee Meets
। The library committee- com|x&gt;*td
[of Mr* Otto. Mr* Srrijun Mijutzi Mr Bell. Hurdetn Briu-wav
and Mr* Seekre! met Wrdnr-.da,
1 night They decided that each read,
|er must have u iard signed by turn‘

maooo district meeting of lhe M. P.
I Sunday with their parents, Mr and I.
NASHVILLE.
I Tlie Woman* Literary Club met church in Assyria Tuesday. A do­
In J Mrs. Roy McBain
N. Bush were al the ubrory Wednesday. Oct. 7. for
of canned fruit is to be col_
—
’
----..
—
.
-------lion given in honor of lhe school ‘ Sunday guesta of Mr and Mrs. Ben ; ^he opening meeting. A lovely one lected and sent to our mlaalon at
by “
Di-1
board and faculty of lhe Delton-W.l Gaaklli al Comstock.
-o'clock luncheon vu served1 t,
I Plne RM«e. Ky. The young people
larllnger oI the Christian Endeavor ore
K. Kellogg Agricultural school at^ The County Bunday School Con- ;vuion 1 wllh Mrs. Jesse Garllnger
Mr VanSicki- has been ill for two lhe church Friday evening. Rev. venllon will be held in the Delton I ln charge, a short business session ulannlng a party bl lhe church
mt* week and Mrs. Bonne­ Ralph L. Bates acted as master of M. E. church on Tuesday. Oct. 20
peja during which three names basement on Hallowe'en.
..lie l.o* been taking his place.
ceremonies.
The honor guest* | Mr and Mrs. Merle Harrington; were presented for membership
Rev. and Mrs. O. N. Gillett of
AthieUes.
First Grade News.
Ward Bender Ls lhe new assistant
:ani tormea
formed a receiving line
une in
m front of
of; or
of Katamasoo
Kaiamaxoo were Sunday
sunoay gucsis
guest* MrM
Mrs jonn
pn purchta
purcbls openea
opened tne
lhe pro­ Midland Park. Gull Lake, will cele­
In a downpour of rain last Pri— bum*H so
ba that
fh.l every Ana
Anlr* I nt
r,.l. parent!.
rw&gt;ranlv
Mr
ami Mrs
Mr* :grajn playing ../'niinfvw
im brate their golden wedding anni­
one —could
of •tneir
and
"Country /lavatanfl*'
Gardena" Vby
The flrM grade children are gojntutor and also drives Bus No.
I’_ I lhe church
Ing to atVoul the story of The
march in line and shake hands! Charles Harrington Mr. and Mrs. (ptrcy Granger. Greeting* by the versary Saturday. Oct. 34. at the
■*,. ..
----- • Mr
-- L— N• Bush gave 1 VLewls Tucker nt
-|U.—. Mrs. Floyd Everts. -rt.g
Hi - ci'ler mrl- have returned■ to with
them
of ValamilTAA
Kalamazoo Wl-T/
were president.
The Barryville church. They will be
game showed again that we have a Three Bears. With lhe help of a
hostess.
tntrolimo, utter having beenquaranthe welcome
to the teachers I also callers there.
j-------- Mr*. Maude'wotring. «-•
— glad to welcome their friends there.
fighting team to be proud of. and a high school student*, they are build,
tifii-l lor a number of weeks with Rev. Bates also bade them welcome | Mr. and Mrs. Jim Whittemore of duced the guest speaker. Mrs. Ar­ Rev. Gillett has served the Barry­
fighting Captain. It was Reser Ln Ing the house, and are making their
• ti let h-ti-r
to the church: Mr. Dunnavan lhe ' Grand Rapids visited al George thur Btancell of Detroit, who gave ville church as pastor. three times
lhe Nashville game who ran 82 yards own furniture from orange boxes
GeraMitH- Frizzt-l ha*
left our new principal
gave a response in . Whittemore's from Friday
until. a very inspiring talk oh Action. She In the past.
Mhoul and wiil attend a uliool in behalf of lhe teacher*: C J. Bam-'Sunday.
was presented with a gift. Mr*
Mrs. H. J. Wilcox visited Mrs. El­
urn. ?upt . entertained with two
Mrs Luis Wertman visited her purchls dated the program with a sie Childs of Vermontville. Tues­
' ,'Oios and Mrs. Leon Leonard gave cousin. Claude Nobles, of Climax pis no »olo. The next meeting will day. Mrs. Childs is slowly improv­
two reading*. Wafer* and punch ~
'
Tuesday.
ing from her recent operation.
Mrs. Eloyse Leonard entertained
Fred Elder of Lansing spent a few
Mr and Mrs Will Hyde visited
The Teacher* Hobby Club, in­ Saturday evening with a few tables days at hl* home here,
lhe former's sister. Mr*. Louise
rutu.u.ied of twenty-eight members. cluding teachers of lhe Delton of bridge, complimentary to her
Mrs Claude Jones of Banflcld Lathrop. Ln Prairieville. Friday.
school
and
15
others
in
the
four
week
end guests, the MLsses Alma
The* had a bu mess meeting and
Mr and Mrs Harvey Green and
spent
last
week
with
her
parents
uGutn- ' d U&gt;r following committers southwest townships at the county, and Edna Bauman of Chicago
met at the Delton M E church Last | Rev Ellsworth of Battle creek.
Creek. Mr and Mr* George Dickson and family were Sunday guests ot his
parents. Mr and Mrs. Geo. Green,
Monday
night for their monthly a retired minister, preached a very called on her many friends here
ig -C Skinner ----—- -------of
Ute Moore district.
Miss Floy Sheldon spent Saturday
—“*■ Ml”
A
Campbell meeting with.
’-* Marie Neu- Interesting sermon here Sunday
Mrs. Mary Nea) is spending lhe
_..hostess
--------- officers for the morning Next Sunday the speaker and Sunday with her sister. Mrs.
•. C CHfford *chaeffer as
year -acre
were Circled
elected aa
us follows Presl- will be Luren D Dickinson. Repub- Robert Messimer and brother. Mr week with a niece in Marshall.
la.-.t committee y-*cr
Mr*. Bert Walker of Chesaning
ilcnt Mr* Ella Rogers, Delton, vice I lean candidate for lieutenant-gov- and Mrs Von Sheldon at Char"
brought her sister. Mrs. Merritt
lolte.
pres Clara S'anton. Orangeville; ernor.
Tne regular meeting ,of Laurel Mead, home Saturday and wlll re­
secretary. Mis* Scidmore. Cedar
A
• **Republican
—u,‘— —
rally and banquet
Chapter No 31 O E S. met at the main with her mother. Mr* Anna
will
be
held
next
Wednesday
night.
।
creek;
treasurer.
Rix
Sheathelm.
Debating.
temple Tuesday night. Mrs W. A. DeVine, for a few day*.
October 21. in the Delton Com■ Delton.
■: tune m
Mrs Clara Day and daughters of
• history T
Isaac compton. 64 who re- munlly hall The Ladies' Aid of the Vance is attending Grand Chapter
•.ruin Tills | ..idt-d south of Delton on M-43 died church will serve dinner comment- in Grund ..
.
Rapids
a* a delegate from Lansing visited her parent*. Rev.
• am will b«- in tne Michigan
but- Friday morning. She was bom in mg at 6:30 Tickets may be pur- Laurel Chapter.
| and Mrs. J. J. Wlllllta. Sunday
...a de
a..K..._
;i» league and I' under the coach- New Jersey. Dec
• The Garden Club met Tuesday
12.
1871
She chased of Mr*. L^on Dunning
j
—*—
SAVE MONEY by owning one of our Good Used Cori or Trucks,
. At the
BRANCH DISTRICT.
n. *■! Mos lutz: The question this leave* her husband, two ton* and
Our
sympathy
1* extended
"
, J to afternoon with Mrs. Sam Smith.
----------- Aldrich, ....
Mrs Char|es Bells
and
• ar
Rewilved that all Electric one daughter Services were held in Kenneth
who .had to re- .। Mr
...
Mr, and Mrs. Floyd Fassett and
price* we are offering these used car* you are getting a bettei
Hcnion's
funeral home Sunday turn to Borge&amp;s hospital last week i *on and H C Zuschnltt spent Sun- daughter of charlotte spent Sun­
than you would in the purchase of a new unit
wltli the
Rev Ralph Bates official- and have his leg put back in a ' day with the laltgr'a sister. Mrs day at lhe Jesse Fauetl home.
in* Burial in Prairieville
। cast.
| Mary Henny. at Freeport
Orban Lenta of Battle Creek vlsNOW
NORTHEAST ORANGEVILLE.
Friday
morning Rev Bates look Dr and Mrs. Finch of Augusta । The "We Are Four" club enjoyed Jted his little son who is at the
charge of the morning assembly in were Sunday evening guesu of Dr a one o'clock luncheon Wednesday home of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Nor­
No. 1297-1933 Ford V-8 Coupe
Mr and Mr'
Lyall McKibbm
S* -----...•.•
«&gt;..•.
1
tni&lt;
High
room
of
the
Deiton
school
I
and
Mrs.
Ed.
Lowry
;
ut
lhe
home
of
Mrs.
Fred
Warner.
the
Mrs,
tne
|
ton.
and family of Otsego spent SunNo. 1274-1934 Ford V-8 Tudor
The Evangelical Sunday school
The classes have elected officers as
Mx.- A F Murray of Plainwell
Mrs Mildred Bird, who is II) at
follow* Scnlor.v—Pre.*.. Elvcrt Mott. ' was the guest of Mrs James Collin* enjoyed ir "Get To-Gelher'' Monday the home of her parents. Mr and
M' Kibtnu
No. 1284-1934 Ford V-8 Deluxe Fordor-----evening In the basement of the Mrs. Forrest Kinney, is gaining
Vlee-Pres Leo Chamberlain. Sec
- •
Mr ----and---Mrs
Basil-------Hayward
and church. A pro&lt;ram was enjoyed slowly
returned to I RusmII Smith; Treas . Robert Lou—
---- -------- -------------No: 1276-1935 Ford V-8 Coach
I den. Student counsel. Lynden Col- 1 Mr and Mrs James Green of Alto with Maurice Purchla acting as
Rally. Day
,______________________
services will be held at
! lisoti AthtaUc Representative. Les- spent Sunday with Mr. and Mr*
toastmaster.
Light refreshments . me North Maple Grove church
Ii ter .McLeod,,
1 .
. cla&amp;s
_.
. J„.— Prin. ...
No.
99-1929 Ford Model A Spt. Coupe
Adviser.
W Wll) }ja}rWarti gr
were served.
-Bunday. October IB.
The Inland Lakes Garden Club
Dr and Mrs W A Vance spent
' j Duddles, Junior*—Pres. Lucile
Mr and Mrs Dan Roberta are
No. 1277-1932 Ford V-8 Fordor Sedan
Saeger. Vlce-Pres. Linden ItoUden; year book* are now ready for dis­ Saturday and Sunday with friends staying with the former’s mother In
PREVIEWS NEW MODEL
It any member full* lo at Ann Arbor
Sec Jean Roger.*, Treas. Joyce tribution
Hastings, as she is in poor health.
No. 1197-1930 Ford Model A Pickup
Rea*rr, S C Warren Mell vain. get cue. notify Mrs Leda Harring­
Mr and Mrs
D D Myers ot
The P T. A meeting wlll be Fri­
Hammond. Ind . spent lhe week end day evening at the schoolhouse
Ath
Rep . Desmond Wooislon; ton.
No. 1293-1935 Ford V-8 Cou pe
____
with lhe latter * mother. Mrs. Frank judge Clement will be the speaker
. . Sheathelm. Sopho...
.
There was a Democratic political
Class Adv , Rex
morev^Pre* Joan Roger.*; Vice- meeting in lhe hail Tuesday night McDerby.
•
and cider and doughnuts will be
No. 1155-1932 Ford Model A A Chassis and
The C C. Class met Thursday served.
pre* Milan Casey; Sec. Winifred | of this week, but announcements
Otto; Treas., Mildred Smith; Stu- were not made in lime last week for with Mrs Clyde Brigg* at Hastings
Cab and new motor_____________________$275
to 1include
it ‘in
our---items.
There were 27 present and all re­
j den'. Counsel. Naomi Pennock. Ath u*- *—
------------THE CROSSROADS.
Wednesday
was
Uncle
John
Mc
­
port
a tine time
Rep Betty Jean Casey; Class Adv
Lucius Brouse of Indiana is vis­
Mrs Mabie Elder entertained the iting Mrs Jane Tuttle and Mr and
Miss Doretta Magner Freshman— Bain s B4th birthday and Sfmday
he was happily surprised by his rel­ BaptLst Ladies' Aid at her home on Mrs Orval Tuttle for a few days.
pre* Helen Nunamaker; Vice-Pres
K.niuth Gates; Sec Mary Marl' atives who came with well filled h»*« Thursday
SPECIAL!— 1936 DELUXE FORDOR TOURING
Mr and Mr*. Richard Wakeham
' HVnlon; Ttcas.. Charlene Castle;, keu* and a lovely birthday cake
The football game between Belle­ and Johnnie, Adelberl Purnell and
. C— Thelma
.
..Mott;
—
. Alh Rep
Demonstrator, equipped with heater and defrost■■
Those present from away were. Mr vue and Nashville was postponed Mr and Mrs J W Farr of Battle
S
and Mrs Ross Lamont of Battle last Friday because of lhe bad Creek were Sunday supper guests
Gerald Gibson, Cla.** Adv
er; hoi 15000 miles: color, black; in fine condiTT
Girls. Mb* Creek Mr and Mrs E L Town­ weather and the condition of lhe of Mr and Mrs. Orley Smith.
High - .Pres
M»rv Roush
Junior ------send. Mi and' 2Mr*
2
-Ray
. Wood
‘ and' playing field
Mr and Mrs Orval Tuttle. Mrs
tion. Sells new for $813.00. NOW—
William Kroos;
Vice-Prcs. Elsie
Vice-Pres
'
Leon Greer of Augusta
Mrs Viola Feighner is visiting Jane Tuttle and their guest. Mr.
Dr P G
Bernard, who pre­ Mrs Nellie Bailey al Battle Creek Brouse. spent Sunday afternoon
Manlell. Sec Harold Gate*; Treas,
Mrs Millie Roc has moved lo the with Mr and Mrs. George Marble
Phyllis Reuser. S C
Ro**- Mary viously practiced In Pelton, but wtio
Williams. Ath Rep. Jack Johnson.
of Rutland
J M Rousch has bought the Julia
MILWAUKEE—*'l*v» just had a view Clas* Adv. Raymond WHnewskt. mg special Xjjay work in Ann ArThere are 283 pupil* enrolled In the bur will resume hl* medical proc- Jone* property on the south side
of the new 1917 Dodge " says Mra
GLASS CREEK.
Delton W K KeLWgg Ag School
. nec
tice tin*
this wee*
week nt
at hl*
m* notne
home in
on the . Tin- Junior-Senior hunt wa* held
John Erway of M 8 C and Miss
WUlard Hall and family of Kai- 1 north stiore ot
of. Crooked lake
kike Dr Dr
Friday nlulit
Fridav
night, with the Seniors hldhid­
am&amp;zoo were guests in lhe Hughes “
Bernard' ‘has also begun ”
the erection ing in lhe Otto B Lass Flour mill Ruth E Erway and a friend of
dnvuig now. I wouldn't b» lurprued
there, of a small hospital and office The Juniors were given an hour to Brighton were Sunday visitors at
home over the week end
FORD PRODUCTS
PHONE 2121
HASTINGS
,... Dorethea
„ and Kalh- building, which he expect* to have find the seniors, which they failed Ray Erway'.i
Th' Mi"e*
Sunday visitors at Forrest Hav­
ryn Me Bum of Battle Creek spent ready for use in a tew month*
lo do So they will give lhe Senior?
ens' were Mr and Mrs. Vert Rob­
a banquet on November 13. . .
I
Evangelistic services started Sun­ inson of ShultaeMrs. Katherine Hart.
day night at lhe
Evangelical Robert and Grace and Ed Bedford
। church. The local pastor. Rev El- of Middleville, and Mr. and Mr*.
( mer Prichard, wlll conduct the serv­ Nelson Peterson and Donald and
ice*. with Harley Bailey of Petos­
Mr and Mr*. Clyde JStacren en­
key a- song leader He received his
vocal training at Central State tertained their parents and grand­
mother from Eaton Rapids. Sunday.
Teachers college
Sunday visitors al Roy Erway's
Miss Geraldine Hecker of Ypsi­
lanti spent the week end at her were Mr and Mrs Al Wolfe. Maur­
ice Erway and Harold Sharp of
home here
Dr Loyal Flower ot Delton was Grand Rapids. Mr and Mrs Dick
Rose and Esther Erway of Hastings.
I in town Saturday afternoon
Mrs Russell Whittemore attend­
Hoving bought o small place we will sell at public auction on the form known
ed lhe funeral of a friend Ln Bat­
BARRYVILLE.
lie Creek last Thursday
.
The
Ladles'
Aid
will
serve
a
din
­
as the Frank Bennett farm, located one mile west and a half mile south of Green's
Sunday visitors at Fred Otis' were
ner at the home of Mr and Mr*
Clayton McKeown. Quimby. Friday Mr and Mr* Louie Erway and Norcorners ot Nashville, on
|
man.
also
Harold.
Lorraine
and
Several from this community
piai) lo attend the Lanslng-Kaia- Barbara Otis of Kalamaioo.

.....

.............—

Thonupple-Krllogg
School Note

SAVE MONEY

'

1 self and guarantor. They also de­
cided to- make investigations to
find more valuable magaxlnes and

DELTON.

A pleasant

social

function

EIGHT

MELV

BY OWNING ONE OF
OUR GOOD

USED

THROW
TORE
B

USED

CARS

ROBER

HUR'

Young
Fran
*

TRUCKS

Melvin
Post of

fr

WAS
. _$335
$425
$450
..$525
. $125
$265
$165
. $485

$295
$350
$375
$450
$ 75
$225
$130
$435

$225

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO

AUCTION SALE! I-' Difference ?

WEDNESDAY. OCT. 21st
STARTING AT 1:30 P. M.
HORSES.
Boy mare, 9 years old. weight 1400 Ib*.
Block gelding. 12 year* old. weight 1400.

172 bushels oats.

Wtiultl you pay lc for a Pheasant? Often that
is the difference between gelling your bird and not
getting il. ‘Here’s the reason: . . . (-heap shells
cost aboul 3c each and good ones about 4c. A 3c
shell, with soft shot, soft wads, and black powder,

Wood binder. 6-ft cut.
Wood mower. 5-ft. cut.

Sterling hay loader.

Dayton side rake.

Dunham cultipacker. good.

3-sec. Oliver drag, nearly new.
99 Oliver walking plow, good, nearly new.

HEIFERS and CALVES.
2-year-old Durham-jersey, bred July 17.
1 '/2-year-old white Durham heifer, bred Sept. 22.
1 Vi-year-old Jersey heifer, bred Aug. 31.
2 Durham heifer*. 1 year old. twins.
3 heifer calves, 4 month* old.
2 steers, 4 months old.
2-year-old roan Durham bull, registered.

HOGS and POULTRY.
0. 1. C. brood sow. 1 Vi years old.
40 White Leghorns, year old.
3 old geese.
5 young geese.

HAY and GRAIN.
4 Vi tons clover hoy.
5'/4 ton* alfalfa hoy. first cutting.

VanBrunt grain drill, fertiliser attachment, good.

Wagon.

3Va

x 10Ja. good.

Flat rack.

Miller bean puller, used two Seasons.

Stock rock sides.

2-horse walking cultivator.

Land roller. 7-tooth 1-horse cultivator, new.
Dump boards. Hog crate.
1 '-i horse gas engine.
Pump jack
6-borrel stock tank.
Page fence stretchers.
Team harness, heavy, used one year.
Double shovel plow.
15 crates.
35 grain sack*.
Horse collars.
One 8 and one 10-gol. can.
3-horse cvener. Two 2-horse cvcner*.
Corn planter. Small tools.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
Majestic range, good. Day bed.
Milk pails.
Dining table. 8-ft.
Other articles not mentioned

Parlor choir.

does not give you lhe distance, power or penetra­
tion so often necessary lo bring down the game.
A 4c shell, with chilled shot, hard wads and smoke­
less powder, gives you all three . . . Greater dis­
tance! Greater power! Greater penetration! . . and Better Pattern. Chilled shot being harder will
cut clearly thrdugh the feathers, as it retains its
true shape after it is fired and until it strikes its
mark, l he better powder and wadding give great­

SMITH - BENNETT. Proprs
Auctioneer.

C. R. SHAW, Clerk.

FOR CHAPPED or REDDENED HANDS
50c CHAMBERLAIN'S HAND LOTION ............... 32c
50c VELURE LOTION....................................... 1-------- 32c

FOR THAT HEAD COLD
50c NORWICH NOSE DROPS----------------------------- 29e
50c NAVAP INHALANT29c
NOW'S fhe Time to U»e Antiseptic Solutions;
$1.00 2 T. 37 SOLUTION

79c

OTHER SPECIALS
69c
51.00 DEWITTS DIURETIC PILLS _
$1.00 DEWITT'S COMPOUND IRON PILLS ___69c
$1.25 PIERCE S FAVORITE P£. TAB..97c
$1.00 FOLEY'S PILLS—a kidney stimulant------- 79c
$1.25 KONJOLA ___97c
$1.00 ADLERIKA _.79c
50c Comp. WHITE PINE COUCH SYRUP----------29c

LYKO TONIC-59c
51.50 ARGAROL, 16 o. «ix.-------_97c

er power and accuracy.

* If you want to just shoot . . . buy cheap shells,
but if you waul game, stop al Goodyear Brothers’
Hardware and buy the better shells. Remember,
there’s only lc difference!

HIGH GRADE GUNS, AMMUNITION
AND SPORTMEN'S SUPPLIES

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH ON DAY OF SALE. Nothing removed until settled for.

HENRY FLANNERY,

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

SPECIALS

140 bushels old corn.

92 shocks of corn. fair.

TOOLS.

•9-year-old Durham-|er*ey cow. bred Feb. 20.
'5-yeor-old black Jersey cow, bred Mar. 22.
5- year-old white Durham cow. fresh, with calf

A5

WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING:—

cows.
4- year-old Holstein cow. bred Aug. 23.
3-yeor-old spotted cow. bred Feb. 20.
W-fireor-old Holstein cow. bred June 7.

3

GOODYEAR BROS.
HARDWARE COMPANY

$1.00 ADLA TABLETS_____________

25c ARNICA SALVI_________________
50c DE WITT'S GALL SALVE
25c GLYCERINE SOAP
1 pint RUBBING ALCOHOL
SQUIBB'S TOOTH POWDER. 40c *ise
. (And 25c *iu FREED

,79c.
_17c
_32c
_19c
-29c
_33c

50c CASCARA. 4 os. 29c
25c CASCARA, 2 os. 17c
SQUIBB'S BABY TALC
50c STEARNS' SHAVING CREAM
29c
75c VINCE TOOTH POWDER
52c

tion. wa
near Ba

before h
pltal he
hours la
motorcyc

aumerx F
on their

I

I

Just W
pavemer
pened t
knows Ji
sign an।
30 feet.
the side

. about It

lowing L
recover
he labor

told bin
on

M-4

the ahei
bu lance
summor

Post «■
taken L
b still '
recover
be anyi
Juries £
The I
Ring a
started
O'clock
know j

good wi

written
made !

ANOT
TO A

Farm-

Cl

lime a
lives o

a mast

Michlg
honor
that s
of lhe
same c
Her w
manufi
fliness
whettw

cord ini
With
Regina
expect

ways
condlt:
moder
painte
tidy
farm i
milk f
Mrs.

her he
in ma
farm,
readlr
fancy
comm

0

Don 1

Broad
house
suite*
and c
See L
Reed

officii
would
one.
that

appro
matte
nine.
but n
It mli

Me:

Rebel
vi led
SUppe
gram

HASTINGS

Sportsmen** Headquarter*

Phone 2101

aboul

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER

j

a J

-------------------------------------------------------------------- ;------------ ;-------------------------------------------------------------------- *--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------- ---------- ---------------------------------------------------------- - ---------------------

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

16 PAGES

HASTNGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. OCTOBER’22, 1936

*

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

MELVIN POST IS
!;iflie‘h a?-1™”!? F"r GEESE GITHED
"ESSSe-EINETIOTETI)
ACCIDENT VICTIM Ha8,ing8 ?,.y ?°.nk Oct-26
LiDnMwm
IN CLOVER FIELDi“^cbX° 10
.KARL
!
AT

Attend—Kim Sigler,

THROWN FROM HIS MOTORCYOLE NEAR BAR.
BER8 CORNERS

Gives Half Century of Service
Without A Loss to Depositors

0. D. BAUER WITNESSED
UNUSUAL BIGHT ON
WEDNESDAY
done |

Toastmaster

b

ITHERHOOD OPENS
‘M [rniLp
BROTHERHOOD
NEXT MONDAY NIGHT LULU lllO

PLEASES

The Government’s ‘'G-Men"
Subject of Talk by Mem­
ber of G-Men

.

MORE THAN 3,000 I
I Karl H Keefer of Watervliet has' PRESENTED WITH LIFE­
The first meeting of the Hastings
! been secured as the main speaker
TIME PASS TO LEAGUE
AUDITORIUM FOR
Brotherhood will be held next Mon­
I for the Barry County Rod and Oun
BASEBALL
GAMES
MATINEES
day
night.
The
speaker
will
be
H.
I Club game dinner Thursday. Octo- 1
It would be very difficult for moil and Woodbury. They had
H. Reinecke of Detroit. Of the Unit- !
-tar am
I ber 29. at seven o'clock at Comof our renders to visualize what Has­ this with the hope that, with bet- ..D
. v
imunlty hall. It Is exp..-ctcd that nt, |N BOTH NATIONAL
ROBERT FRANTZ BADLY
facilities,
factories , AIR WAS LITERALLY
ed States department of Justice. His BETTY BARRY AGAIN
tings was like fifty years ago on ter railroad
least 400 people will attend. Tickets ।
would
be
induced
to
locate
here
'
the
26lh
day
of
October,
when
a
HURT IN THE ACCIDENT
OFFERS COMMENTS
FILLEDWITH BIRDS —«
fTiS
h umand
XAND
AMERICANLEAGUES theme will be the work of the G-:
— -Jle in
Hastings
various ।
that time there was no manufac­
charter was granted to theAtHasmen. He Is a member of that or- 1
------------parts of the county, members
of
---------------Young Po.t Wa. Taking ”"?•
‘“""J turing of any kind In Hastings, ex­
and in a position to give Banner’a Never Yailinw (AL.
I OnlookersEstimated That
th* club being given until today
AnAdmirer
inFort
Myers, ganlzatlon
6
_.
_
.
businesshere.
here.The
Thepopulation
populationofof cept a couple of sawmills.
first hand information about It. His i Banner ■ never rauiOf (K, Ininbusiness
...
(Thurxriav)
tz&gt;
nhtnln
tHalr
iThursday)
to
obtain
their
tickets.
Frantz to His Home in
1 the city at that ----------------*--•—
Then this city had but one
time was subslanaddress will be interesting and in- I molt) Mystery Critic Give*
There Were About Fifteen ।I After today those not members of 1
Florida,
Responsible
Hally 3.000 The Michigan Central bank. Competition was the domi­
1
Woodland Village
1 the club may obtain tlckeU
| railroad was completed to Hastings nant idea, and It was felt by
Hundred in Flock
lor the Honor
' The program as arranged by the 1
Melvin Pant. 21. son of George । from
from Jackson
Jarltlon In
(n 18C9
K Ac the business men here that there
1889 The c
C.. K.
The Banner la indebted to C. D
supper squad and will be assisted , Dear Mr. Editor:
Post of this city, and employed by I g
recently been constructed to was urgent need of another bank,
committee is as fallows invocation.
by
Roy
Thomas.
Ray
Erway.
Leslie
, in bet you are wondering whsthCharlie
("Lady")
Baldwin
was
sur
­
IM and
.nH F.rl
thrir oil
nil sta
ata.­
dly
K.UmKWO At
Ed.
Ear) Smith tn
in their
7T. onion: welcome,
—). Pres. B. A.
whose stockholders would be made Bauer for the following Interesting pr.
Allan Hyde. Forrest cr or nol Hllle
u g01ng
prised and naturally very delighted Lockwood.
tion. was Injured In an accident lime the latter road was owned In- up of business men who would be account of an unusual sight:
, 7:~;
-------- —
Perry, ‘toastmaster.
Kim Sigler;
,
' „ . “
.
to receive a •'Lifetime Pass” to all Havens. Fred A. Smith. Robert
Here Is a goose story that puls , community singing led by J
M. ball games In the American and Na­ Cook. John Havens. George Heath., you a&lt;ain- WeU«“»er ia—
1 dependefflly
Its owners hoped to ready, with the cooperation of the
octad.TVudw nHh.uja airt
.. elU1„ „ u,, o„nd
„ ... the climax on all of my hunting Townsend; Introductions by Mr
tional Leagues as a slight apprecia­ Arthur Keeler. Frank Kelley. Ev- No. Really I think that thaw plays
n.i„„
n. was brought
renreh. re
I™. I। „ — 0, lhI
before he
to re.
the hoarealized that the C. K Ac S.. In- experiences In distant lands and Sigler; Hawaiian musical entertain- tion of the fparkllng record that he erett Swegles. Ernest Kenyon. Jay I tor children are Just about the nlaapltal here about two and ft half tern, so as to give Hastings railroad stead of benefltUng had hurt the 1 right here In Michigan.
1 me™ b&gt;' Mr Baker and his assoelaBlakney. Ed Sayles. Dr. Guy Keller, est thing that the Civic Players do.
hours later. He was driving his competition, which was then very town by taking away a considerable | Once In a life-Unie. and hardly; tes from Kalamazoo. "Balt for the made 50 years ago. when league ball Jacob Wolfe. George Scott and Burl And my but do they pack ’em ini
motorcycle With him was Robert Important, as a one railroad town portion of Ils trading territory. What that, will the opportunity present 8“ckrr*; bV lhe toastmaster and was comparatively in Its Infancy. Rising.
vulgar but
but expreulvs
expreulve
' —to use a vulgar
This Lifetime Paas is one that he
Frantz. iu&gt; employee of the Con- |
i term.
paid very high freight rates. That was needed was employment for , Itself, for many people at least, to 'Game' by Rev Karl Keefer
will
greatly
treasure
as
long
as
lie
Sumer* Power Company They were । effort failed, and the New York Cen- men in Hastings who would live witness a concentration of wild I Thc committee in charge Is ,
Really. Mr. Editor, it is difficult
on their way to Woodland which Is | tral a few years ago bought the C here and Increase the population ' geese as it was my pleasure to do ! composed of George H. Leonard, lives, as will anyone to whom it may
'
to
criticise
a
children's
play.
Yow
fail after Charlie has passed on
Frantz's home.
! see you can't Judge them merely by
j K &amp; S. The Interstate Commerce of the city to compensate for the about 2:30 Wednesday afternoon, | chairman. Homer Smith. Frank Kel- It is a solid slab of sliver about 4'.
. k&gt;'- Pau* Bryant and Arthur Wil­
J“‘
“»
&gt;*«1™ “!“» ,comm»..on
। Commission m.n,
many year.
years .,o
ago end- loss of trading territory, thus help- ' Oct. 14lh
Inches long by 21. Inches wide. On
pavm.nl on M-U wm.Oun, haphl „„
whlth lk&gt;p. Ing to maintain it as a business
My wife and I In company with !
pened
It Is the following In raised letters
™.n.a to
u, his
a,. motorcycle—no one II
„mxuua)
center.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Caldwell of I
very artistically arranged.—
knows Just what It struck a road I senger rates There were no paved
About this Ume a young -man Grandville took the Vermontville | REPUBLICANS PLAN
hearted childish laughter which Ulla
-THE NATIONAL AND AM­
sign and threw young Post about | streets here nfty years ago—no named Clifford D Beebe carfie to, road to go to Charlotte to attend
rrtiiaiTv urrTiim
the auditorium with Its lovely (but
30 feet. He landed on his head ut!
ERICAN MAJOR LEAGUES
LUUN I I MttllNu
, telephones, no
radios. Through Hastings from Kalamazoo He had ' the funeral of our mutual friend.
ABOUT TWENTY ENTRIES '»r ever so noisy) melody. Or parOF PROFESSIONAL BASE­
lhe side of lhe roadway. HU skull , the two railroad lines, Hastings did had banking experience and wanted the late Fred curtls.
We were
BALL PRESENT THIS LIFE­
EXPECTED TO REGISTER I
I have the benefit of dally papers to start a bank in Hastings. He sue- i within about eight miles of Char- Campaign to End With Barry
TIME PASS TO LADY BALD­
■ bout re. hud end one ooL Both ,
Q„nd ,u dl
ceeded in Interesting several gen- I lotte and in the heart of a well
FOR TRIALS
। orites Come and go across the stage.
WIN IN APPRECIATION OF
tiemen. al) of whom were anxious । developed forming community, when I Tour and Big Rally in Cen­
1 Maybe, even, by the sparkle of eoLONG AND MERITORIOUS
lowing th. cccldent Fecnu did not
,[h wh#, w&gt;, CIpKred (rom h,v. for the growth of this community । our attention was called to a great |
। Joyment in thousands of little eyaa
tral Auditorium
SERVICE.
WILLIAM HARnewer until .non. I o clock, when
„||rmd
The result of his efforts was the I commotion of large birds flying In I
1 which are gifted with a vision de­
BREED
SOMEWHAT
R1DGE. AMERICAN LEAGUE.
he laboriously crawled to the home of Hastings had raised considerable 1 establishment of lhe Hastings City confusion and hovering over a par-1 Barry county Republicans have
planned several meetings about lhe
NEW
IN
STATES
j
„ ..
FERD
C.
FRICK.
NATIONAL
of Mr. Shroyer not far away and I sums to secure the C.
C- K. Ac 8. and J Bank.
'
'■
It ----was -------organized
'—J on lhe I ticular spot In a field. At first
cdunty for the final days of lhe
told him about the accident Word later for Its extension to Woodland
i.iauul.”
1
------------any of lhe matins, wm have to
j glance 1 thought they must be a campaign, according to the County | LEAGUE.
((Continued on page 3. Sec. 2.)
was conveyed to Russell Smelker i
j flock of crows as crows were the
so there will be at least one fellow Fanciers to Hold Banquet at admit that the -weeping Beauty*
Committee
Activities
will
culminate
on M-43 from whose home they
' only birds that. I had
ever seen ---------that wKh
«... ..
c.c&gt; have vu
never
to
pnru„r Wnnaa
—Rrrollant
was
a roaring success. Hw
How Un,
thaw
Parker
Home—
ExceUaot ।I *
“ •
------------swing around the county on1 Ln1 Hastings who will
~
~
started for Woodland. He called EIGHTY REGISTER
worry again about getting a ticket
i acted in a similar
al—
way. but upon
-7— ,
M
.j
youngsters did laugh and chuckle
an all-county
the sheriff at about 1 30. The amSINCE PRIMARIES 1 lanl For Rou',,,
drawing nearer
Program Arranged
, and yell and holler. It was all aa
irer I saw some of them , rally ln lhe evening at Central au­ to any ball game tn either the Am­
buiance and medical aid were also
. N*U°“‘ TO'
.re
v.u»
«.
--------------------------------------------------------m,
TT7
i i q
I *■«* «h0w white, some black and a ditorium here commencing at 7:30
The Basset
Hound
Club .of
Amerl- colorful
as one of our beautiful Ocsummoned
The two Injured men
1 lie If orlll Jlipper
large number grey By this time we
UlUe rnhuu &lt;«™, u . num, rre- . „ „ „ tald „ Amerte„ Knurel &gt;&lt;*er W
Wert brought to Pennock hospital. Total List in Hastings Now
and could °Clterewlth U a schedule of the ognltlon of Charlie Baldwin, fa- , club
Trial Saturday
Little Bettey is not even going to
Post was dead before his body was
mous all over the country 50 years [ and aunda&gt;- October 24 and 25. al attempt a detailed analysis of thia ।
। hear the honking of the geese above programs.
Reaches the 3,000
taken into the institution Frantz [
The Methodist L- A- 8 Is plan- i^e nobe of the cor and knew there: 1 Friday. Oct
1 ptay. Thoae hundreds of happy Ut­
23—Meeting
at ago as Lady" Baldwin and recogU still there It U believed he will
Mark
nlng another Round The World I was something taking place much
ilized as one of the
pitchers
oBlceM of thp Basset Hound ' ll« youngsters have already given
Nashville
in
the
new
High
school
recover as there did not appear to I
.« .h.
X’S“
lh» on,
nnr or
nf .
a few I -■
&lt;&gt;« •&lt;
Of the Ordinary Wc KlM
pulled u,
UP
CVer ^UCKt
on Clab ot America ore William Fritz “ much better answer than I could
According to City Clerk Rogers .up,.,. .IU.1W tn
be anything critical about his In­ about 80 voters have registered here
Today If any pitcher wins 20 of
E. M Seitz of Muske- possibly hope to do.
j
----------- ----.
'
ociocK, junge iiugnes win oe
.... Th. u...
“f
juries at this writing
»I ..
-------.w_lhe costumes
।
it PTttlllMl
since the primary. Previous to the i
ped lhe car. Ollier cars were stop- jjie «peaker The film "Let's Look games and loses 10 during any tea- I gon; Carl Noltke of Battle Creek
thought
very
The two young men had been vis­ primary about 385 had registered Thursday evening. Nov 5
son he Is regarded as a "whiz.” In The Field Trial committee la com- ty and that double-deck stag* ta
ping
nine and nw^nte
people rilmhlne
climbing mH
out, I| at. .the
k n
aLn
Record will be shown This
Each of the eight Circles of the farmers rame running across the
iting at the Smelker home and These with the carry-over In the
1886 Baldwin hung up a ^co^d of [x)scu
O1
ulto
posed of Otto A
A. urigoojr,
Grigsby, cnairtnan.
chairman.i. -**the second ■*.».
act was ■
a .uw.
mast cleverly
L .A. 8 has been assigned certain fields qnd soon lhe road was lined I Is the first and only time this film 43 games won and 12 lost. We doubt ■ Lading;
started from there at about eleven
James
E.
Lee
of
Battle
arranged
affair.
Thia
was
the
direct
.....I. xiua
MW dlraot
list make a total of a little over
Lansine:
I-m- nt
1
o'clock for Woodland No one will 3.000 It Is Improbable that 3,000 kinds of food to sell al their par­ with travelers and farmers We hadI' will be shown In lhe county.
if IH.H rei-ord nnx nver iu-nn even 1 _
..... .
..
.... of Director
_ ___ Barnett's Ingonu.. —
result
। Creek and Carl Notlke. lhe secreSaturday. Oct, 24—Meeting at
know Just what happened that votes will be cast in tills city. There ticular booth, so a balanced meal
(Continued on page 5. Bee. 2.)
| Uy. My that man I Juit think of III
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 2 )
। tary, Battle Creek.
Hickory corners preceded by dinner
__________ ____________
caused the accident
Post was a Is no way to cut the Ust of voters may be purchased at small cost For
I As Uie Bassett Hound is somewhat He not only wrote the play and di­
Instance,
the
countries
of
Sweden.
good worker and a fine young man below what It now shows A number
£
'"'.STATE PAYS TUITION
of a new breed In the United States. rected it but designed the scenanr
.................................
He was considered a careful driver of Individuals on the list are not England. China. Germany, Italy and . DEMOCRATIC RALLY
•~—•-OcL 27—Meeting at ।
FOR RURAL STUDENTS [there will not be more than twenty
of a car or motorcycle As this is now in Hastings. Some are single the United Slates are among those I
FRIDAY NIGHT, OCT. 23 J Prairieville preceded by dinner at
------------।—
Basset
——
----------Hounds—at —
lhe -------trial.— It
— la
written no arrangements have been men who would be entitled to vote to be represented. If you like saucr- j
”
”
'
'••
--••••
I
------ ‘~ well? My goodness, there were three
8:30 o'clock. Probate Judge Stuart Hastings, Nashville, Middle- ' exncctcd
expected that
that some
some eood
good F
Bassets
made for the funeral
here unlias they have registered kraut and welners. or chop suey, Edmond 0. Shields, Lansing, Clement will act as toastmaster With
entered Thorp are to be thousand or more young enthutlor any of a score or more varieties
Ville,
Freeport,
Delton
somewhere else Their names are
I two stakes run. Saturday the Derby
John
C Ketcham “
and
Luna
of
WUl Speak at Central
!ohn r
nrt Mrs. Tjm
* nt
of food, you con find It st this
ANOTHER HONOR COMES
properly registered here and there
I class will be run. No doubt later In wen! And who is anyone to co
। Allegan the speakers. Women of
Schools Get Benefit
Round The World supper Watch
is no reason for removing them.
' the afternoon the all-age stake will diet such a verdiet as that!
Prairieville and Orangeville are coAuditorium
TO MRS. LOTTIE CRIDLER There
Under laws recently enacted the
are others wnose names can­ for further details net week.
I operating to pul on the dinner.
be started, and completed Sunday. little Betty has to shudder a
The democrats have succeeded In
state of Michigan now pays the | A.
.
of Aim Arbor and remembrance of that horrible,
I Friday, Oct. 30—Tour of the coun­ h«h .thoo, MUCH M
Farmer’s
Wife
Magazine not be stricken from the list, but
uvln, ,. \ E. Steinke .’US,
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
securing Edmond C Shields of Lan- I ty
; whose whereabouts are al present
ly with aU
all county candidates ln
In.­ in rural districts, where
-hm only
ml. .Uh.
cl,ud( A ,Um
eight ,i Ihc
Chooses Her for Im­
of a witch. To think that ouott • '
I unknown. But the election board
sing, the democratic national com - I eluded tn the caravan as well as grades ore taught, when such pupils
would
have
no
right
to
strike
off
mond
of
Hastings
will be the Field lovely lady as Honora Pratt COUM
mltteeman for Michigan, to speak congressman Clare Hoffman and
portant Work
go on to high school.
_
their names until they have evi­
Marshak. The headquarters will be
to the people of Barry county on Earl Burhans. candidate for stele
County Treasurer Maus has'Jukt
It will be remembered that some­ dence that would warrant them In
at Ute Parker House and the dogs ugly!
Friday night of this week. October senator. The tour will include the
received 428.698 00 from the slate, will be kenneled at the fair grounds.
time ago Mrs Lottie Crldler. who so'doing. It is probable that the
Well. Mr. Editor, you probably do.
23. at the Central auditorium. Mr. । following stops:
to be paid to districts having high
lives an a farm about two miles number of votes cast In Hostings
Shields Is an outstanding attorney
Delton—10:00 o'clock
(starting schools, for tuition of rural pupils, No doubt the same courses will be not consider this much at a crillwest of Middleville, was honored as will be in the neighborhood of 2.400.
of this state, a world traveler, for-1 point of lour),
run over as the Wolverine Beagle
in the amounts as follows:
a master farm homemaker by the
mer regent of the University of'I ------— ——
- o'clock.
•• •
Club uses
Dowling
10:45
Barry Twp
Farmer's Wife magazine and the
A banquet at the Parker House
Michigan and Is a very close friend
Maple Grove—11:15 o'clock.
Nashville .
Michigan Slate College Another SUPERVISORS AID TWO
[ of
President----------------Roosevelt.
will be held al B P. M. The price auditorium filled with laughter and
------------------Nashville—12:30 o'clock i "Lunch Freeport
honor has come to Mrs. Crldler In
’ il on1 t*411 be 75c per person. The public cheers, what more can you ask? •
WORTHY INSTITUTIONS
During Friday the Roosevelt Car-1 al M. E- church).
Prairieville
that she has been named as one
Yes. these annual children's plays
i-mS*
1
*
tavlted 10 "ttend Ulis banquet If
avan will make u tour of Barry j Woodland—2:00 o'clock.
Thornapple-Kellogg
of the 500 women selected by that
they desire. If they leave their
county with other speakers
i Freeport—3:30 o'clock.
same magazine as a "render tester." Vote $150 to Starr Common­
Woodland Twp
names with the clerk at the desk
Her work will be to test various
Hastings
city
wealth. $900 to Pen­
Yours until the next
before noon on Saturday. October
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
Hastlngs-7 30
o'clock;
manufactured products as to their
24. There will be several good
I cm the Democratic candidate County Rally. Central auditorium;
nock Hospital
fitness for farm home use. to decide i
for County Clerk, and believe In | Congressman Clare Hoffman and
speakers on the program and also a
whether the magazine should give
The supervisors
--------------------took_rup the respeaker
from
the
Conservation
De
­
COUNTY
GETS WEIGHT
-----.
—
—
-----.
i
^{rs
Charles
Bacon
of
Grand
Rap
­
giving constant service in that of­
ite approval to the manufacture of i quest of the Starr Commonwealth
partment at Lansing.
fice. If elected It will be my alm to ids, speakers.
TAX CASH, $15309.31
such products and to label them ac- for an appropriation to assist that
The public Is Invited to watch
give personal service to all those
cordlngly.
very helpful institution in carry- To the People of Barry County:
these Basse* Hounds work during
&lt;
I am too busy taking care of your who have business to transact In TALK BY FRANK
City Receives $3,440.51, the
Wlth the assistance of her son Ing on Its woaderful work for boys.
Saturday and Sunday, but they
Reginald. Mrs Crldler operates a I Al the present time two Barry business in the office of Barry that office, except when clerking
MURPHY MONDAY EVE
must abide by the rules laid down
County’s Villages Got
fine 200-acre farm. As one would | county lads are in the Institution, County Treasurer to campaign in for Circuit Court and Board of Su­
by the Basset Hound Club of Am­
pervisors.
expect 'from anything Mrs Crldler The Commonwealth recently lost
$1,331.37
Democratic Candidates Diserica. In order for the dogs to be
Jack W O'Connor.
Is connected with, this farm Is al- one of Its principal buildings by fire, my own behalf, but If you have
' at their best, the gallery must not
Democratic
eaxraidate
‘cuss Questions of So­
ways kept m the neatest possible and the Insurance did not cover the liked my services in the post I
Interfere. The public is asked to celved from the state a remittance
County Clerk.
condition. The home U fine and 1 loss Consequently It Is now in even would appreciate receiving your;
for 419487.79. This Is the third quarcial
Security
please
refrain
from
any
loud
talk.
—Adv. 10-29.
modem; the barns always well- I greater need than usual. Because of vote November 3. 1936.
1
The Basset Hound Is usually a oneFrank Murphy, democratic candi­
painted and the premises clean and ILs good work and the situation in
man dog and they resent strangers. divided between the county, thia
Lorenzo Maus.
NEW LOCATION.
date for governor, was in the city
tidy. There Is a dairy herd on the | which It finds itself the supervisors
Therefore, if the public should in­ city and the villages of the county
on Monday evening for a dinner
farm which has taken high rank in । voted to Increase their usual approterfere In any way with these dogs as follows:
and
address.
About
one
hundred
milk production
prlation of 4100 to 4150 this year
County Treasurer.
I
51Q s jeBer$on street.—Adv.
they will not be at their beau
Mrs. Crldler is not only able to
In considering the urgent need
paid immediately to the Barry
Odd Fellow hall but more attended
give her thought and attention to | and the splendid service whloti
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
NEED COUNTY TOURIST
the address at Central auditorium
her home and to assisting her son 1 Pennock hospital renders to the
later.
The voters of Barry county, by
.in making
■*&gt;
. &gt;■
...
‘— people of Barry county, and the.
out
the problems
of, •the
PARK
—
COMM.
NAMED
In his address Mr. Murphy stressed
farm, but she also finds time for fact that through It considerable their continued support during a
the necessity of social security and
HORACE POWERS
reading, growing of flowers and sums of money are saved to the long period of time, have educated
Superviaors Giving Thia Mat­ and 8, section 5. Public A«ta of 1424.
social Justice.
Democratic Candidate for the office
fancy work. She is also active In county In the treatment of certain me In the efficient handling of the
Of ths second half the county road
ter Consideration at Oc­
Following Mr. Murphy's talk he
of Prosecuting Attorney
community affairs.
afflicted cases, the zupervisors ap­ Barry County Records. FOR NO
commission will receive a little over
left
for
Charlotte
to
attend
a
meet
­
Barry
County.
ONE
WOULD
ARGUE
THAT
A
propriated the sum of 4900 for the
tober Session
ing and Raymond Starr of Grand
Mr Powers was bom and raised
MAN WITH TWELVE YEARS' EX­
hospital for the year 1937.
The board of supervisors Is very Hastings wUl be paid 43.4401.
Rapids,
candidate
for
attorney
gen
­
in
Nashville.
Barry
county.
Mich.
PERIENCE ON ANY JOB WAS
properly
recognizing
the
need
of
eral. spoke here.
He Is a graduate of the Literary and
NOT MORE EFFICIENT THAN A
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
Carl Damson.
Law Departments of the University Barry county, with so many lakes,
Because my official duties re­ NEW MAN. NO MATTER HOW
Mr Damson !s the new member
The village of Middleville HliM.
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS.
of Michigan, and Is now associated having a county pork In which re­
quire undivided attention, it will be FINE A MAN HE MIGHT BE. And of the Hastings High school faculty
The village of Nashville. 4*84.70.
DON TAFFEE.
We again ask the attention of with Kim Bigler In tt* practice of sorters can camp, which they can
impossible, for me to carry on an if the voters are voting as they would coming here from Lansing, where he
In order to expand his business
law In Hastings.—Political Adver­ make their headquarters while In
active campaign for re-election fo: hire a man In their private busi­ was a teacher in the school for
the county. With automobiles, and which this money Is divided anong
Don Taffee will hold an auction sale a second term as prosecuting at­ ness. then I apply for the Job ex- ।
tisement.—10-29.
, blind children. Mr. Damson's home
with the lakes of the county within the county, thia city and the Vilat his place of business. 302 North
torney of Barry county on the Re­ actly as I would for a Job in prl- j। Is In Holland and he attended Hope
a comparatively short distance of
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
Broadway. The sale will Include
publican ticket. I have attempted to vate Industry. I can and will con­ 1 College, receiving his Bachelor’s and
any point In the county, it will be use It for strictly highway ar
household
furniture, living-room
settle their subscription account To the voters of Barry county:
give careful and considerate at­
Master's degrees there. He also has
I
am
a
candidate
for
Register
of
possible to locate such a county purposes—that Is for building ar
suites, pianos, dining-room sultea
done work
0,6 University of
tention to all county business which **’!
Deeds on the Republican ticket at1 park where it will be a great con- Improving streets, crosswalks, curb
and other miscellaneous articles. has passed through my office. I and individuals don't
dont fire a man be
be-­ ................
.
...
...
Michigan.
Damson
teaches
venlence
to resorters. The matter and gutter, ate.
See the ad In this paper. Dewey
did response to our recent notices thc election on Tuesday. Nov. 3rd.,
hope that my record during the cause he Is experienced—THEY history.
Reed Is the auctioneer.
sent through the mail; but there and feel Justified in asking your was brought to the attention of the MONEY DONATED FOB
past two years has been such that GIVE HIM A RAISE
Mr. Damson is living at the home
support because I have demon­ board by resolution. The supervisors
Respectfully.
It
makes
me
worthy
of
consideration
NOT 80 BIO.
strated that I have the confidence voted that Chairman Wotring select
Earl R. Boyes.
for re-election to a second term.
East Bond street. He Is a member predate it If they will do so.
of Die electorate in my community a committee of three to look into
Democratic Candidate
the Commercial Club,
of the Methodist church. It is also
official election ballot this year Your vote on Nov. 3 will be appre­
as they have seen flt to elect me as this matter and report later. He
Register of Deeds. .
interesting that Mr. Damson is □
would be a very large and unwieldy ciated.
justice of the Peace, Supervisor named Supervisors Brown of Or­
BEAUTY SPECIALIST HERE.
Sincerely,
brother of Mrs. Thomas J. Simmons
angeville. Mayor Leonard of this
Miss Sally Kleckner. beauty spe­ and for the last 10 years clerk of city and Stevens of Johnstown as
Archie D- McDonald.
that there would be sixteen tickets
the
township.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
cialist sent out by M. Langlois, well
tost sponsored by the Chib.
on the ballot. Howevct as the time
one time teaching here.
If elected I will give the county a the committee.
I am a candidate on the repub­
Mr. Damson's hobbles are hunting, known authority on the care of the courteous and efficient administra­
approached for determining the BIO OPENING DAY SATURDAY.
who cannot afford to buy
The new Food Center" In Nash­ lican ticket for re-election as sher­ fishing, hiking—In fact any of the skin, will be at Carveth and Steb­ tion.
SUMAC POISONING
bins.
the
Rexall
drug
store,
next
iff
of
Barry
county.
I
have
given
ville.
owned
by
the
proprietors
of
out door sports.
nine. It Is sUll a good sized ballot,
Vemqr Webster.
week beginning on Monday. Miss
Prank Andrus.
but not so unwieldy as II was feared I Food Canter and the Feldpausch my best service to the duties of my
Kleckner
gives
free
beauty
treatMarket here, had a wry successful office, and will appreciate your sup­
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon R. Vaughn.
It might be.
TO BARRY COUNTY VOTERS. to give another Installment of Hu­
_________________ opening In that village on Saturday. port at the polls Tuesday. November
interesting
travel
j I am a candidate for re-election bert Cook's
Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn are new ar­
I. O- O. F. FAMILY NIGHT.
| Roman Feldpausch tells us that the 4. jay Blakney.—Adv. 2 wks.
rivals in Hastings coming here from who may make appointment) with to the office of county clerk on the
Members of the Odd Fellows and I crowd was twice as large as antlcl। Republican ticket. If re-elected 11
Lansing. They previously resided In
Rebekahs and their families ara In- p*ted. and kept seven clerks busy SPECIAL MEETING OF
l will give the tame honest, cheer­ poisoning and was unable to write a
Ohio. Mr. Vaughn is tn the employ
DANCE AT CRESSEY.
vited to the Family Night pot luck during *the
‘- day
J-------J ------■—
and
evening.
V. F. W. TONIGHT. of the Consumers Power Company
letter. That Is also true this weak.
Saturday eve. Eckler's Orch. New ful service ta-all as I have during
supper on Tuesday evening. Oct. 27.
the past two years. As reference I
Commander paton of the v. F. W. as a gas service man.
management.
Don't
forget
we
’
ll
BAltRY
THEATER
TO
OPEN.
at six-thirty. Meat and potatoes are
Post has called a special meeting at
El ^X^a^nSS1 »“ve ‘ Halloween party.—Adv.
to be furnished by the lodge. A pro­
The new Barry Theater will open the half tonight, Thursday. Oct. 22.
_____
। have had business with my office.
POLITICAL ANNOUNC
gram and dancing will follow.
this Friday, October 23. for a four Some -matters of special Interest are children, two daughters, Betty aged
RUMMAGE BALE.
Respectfully yours.
I am the republican
day run. Friday and Saturday will to bo considered and all are urged to 11. Joyce 7 end one »on, Eugene,
Presbyterian church. Oct. 29. 30.1 —Adv. 2 wks.
Allan c. Hyde.
ADDRESS REQUESTED.
feature -The End of the Trail” and
aged 4. They ere affiliated with the
1
-----Adv.
Out
10-29.
----------------- -—*-----------------Anyone who knows the where- "The Princess cornea Awom’' will
county and will appreciate your
_________ ___
______
.
BUMMAOB ****Christian Science church.
RUMMAGE SALE.
1 Methodist church parlors Friday support at the general election Nov.
be shown Sunday, and Monday.
CHICKEN SUPPER.
Mr. Vaughn *ay» he has no par­
please send notice to 333 W. Green Further dstalls on definite plans will
Al C. Thomas store Bldg, BaL.'p. M. and Saturday, Oct. 23. 24.
Bonfield church. Wednesday. Oct. ticular hobbles but does enjoy MiSt, Hastings, Mich.—Adv.
be given next week.
'
Oct. 24 —Adv.
| Auspices Missionary union.—Adv.
Ing and hunting.
.

L

.

BASSETMEET
HERE OCT 24-25

i May We
Introduce

One Auction Sales

�'—
loCALMM ’ !*&lt;*•

Trace tour Steps to
HASTINGS

AND

NASHVILLE

FOOD CENTER
SUGAR xs IO«” 49c
P6-GSOAP IO “■ 39c
GIANT SIZE BARS

SSL SOAP
IO ““39c

u.^s..P4

Climaiene

1.9c

19c

Bowlene

2 -■ He

Camay Soap

IO BAR LIMIT

AMONIA

Old Witch

COFFEE

Maxwell House

9c

252C

lb.

Viking Coffee
Fl0Ur Moth.. . B..t

RAISINS
SEEDLESS

4

q/ta

LB. PKG.

17c

2g'/lb.B.y

Pet Milk

8c

Rumford

21c

23c

Cake Flour

Corn Flakes

PRUNES

New

Pack

2 pt',’.' 19c

3 »&gt;*• 25c
c.'. lOc

Pink Salmon t

FIRST ROW
No. 2 CAN each

lOc

'»■

Oriental

PEAS
9c

99C

2

25c

Chocolate Drops

lOc
lOc

Orange Slices
Molasses

25 c

5

POTATOES -- 29c
U.S. No. I

Sweet Potatoes 6 L,s

16c

Head Lettuce

15c

Apples "&lt;'•&lt;»'

19c

Oranges

23c

! spgcini!

CRISCO
PEANUT
BUTTER
IN BULK
POUND-

PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF OCTOBER 23TH

SUNDAY and MONDAY. OCTOBER 25 and 26

"SING, BABY, SING”

21

"A STAR for a NIGHT”

2 - 25c

Grand Opening of Hasting^
Modern Theatre^ Fri., Oct, 23
• HEATED BY NATURAL GAS
• AIR CONDITIONED
• COMFORTABLE SEATS

Pork Roast

Rib Boiling Beef

lOc

Hamburg

Beef Kettle Roast

13c

Bacon Squares

sk-td«c.u

f^g.. d

n

|Qc

2 »■ 25 c
» 2Oc

each Friday-Soturdoy and Sundoy-Monday with a Matinee
Only on Sunday starting at 3, and
continuous to closing ... Evening
performance, 7-9.

JOAN BLOMOUX. DICK T0WIU. WAMKtN WILLIAM In

"STAGE STRUCK”
With FRANK McHUOH
*-

ADULTS (5 DENTS

We feel thit we ghould netlfy dll pof•hfi of small children that we have
no proviiian for rail leu children
Which makes it hectMary not to admit
any children in Or Mi of parent!.

MARRIAGE LICENSE.
Marie E Lyons, Middleville ...24
Neola M. Nell, Middleville IB

FcioveiTI

SEEDS
kCLEANEDJ
WHILE YOU WAIT I

CBStoaEM 10 CBNT8

ADULTS 15c

CHILDREN 10c

EGGS

SATURDAY ONLY — OCTOHR 31
DOUBLE FEATUtt PROGRAM

Food Center
Sertie Yourself and Saie
Oe*N BYKHUr* UNtlL 9 O'CLOCK

STATE SENDS IXf.MSAl.
County treasurer Maus received
from the state highway department
this week a check for g27.5W.Bl
This Is the amount apportioned to
Barry county under lhe McNltt law
for the construction and Improve­
ment of township roads. A previous
check for the same amount had
been received earlier this year.

WED.. THURS. ond FRI.. OCTOHR It. 29 and 30
SFICIAL ATTRACTION

19c

HASTINGS

There haw town meag eriiictanu
trwl

Our Opening Polley will be a show

A

Of

•w

MU?.

fTCAND TtiEATRF

COUPON NIGHT — TUESDAY. OCtOtE*

BUY

tieon.ndi T*n

*100 u mi*

thing for thi county as Well as a
for thamaelVM tn
granting I1M to the Barry Owhty
Rod and Gun Club, the cash to be
used for the upkeep of the rearing
ponds in Orangeville. This action
was taken by the board at Uurtr
Wednesday session. Barry county

Adali. 23t: CkUdron 10c.

gr*de

FINE SUGGESTION
BY ATTORNEY SIGLER

I ovbr hi* ilingM and creditable act

•' clock.

I
IkJC

W E

Jtaa Woodard. n.
of lha late Martin Woodard.

££!?«

unabW to al
slona of tl»

3 lb. Can

Smetod, ShonUoir

Y CO- BUOKNT.

* (Jun Otul

resided In Barry

With CLAIRE TREVOR, JANE HARWELL. ARL1NE JUDGE

Picnics

of Rod

church of
Ills s0erdy recovery
lhe lupefvisors* room for that pur­
‘
George Couch wgs brought to Jail
df VatJ Buren. Ark. Private fu­ pose. But It Is not lultabte. it is
here early Tuesday morning by
neral services were held at thg not sound-proof. B is possible for
Night Wllce flhtilla on i dtedrdtriy
, In
____________
Hooch funeral chapel
Pueblo on iWople rtAhding m usl hAIHMy to
charge. He admitted his guilt bsFriday, with Interment
ilerment in Ksastawn
Roselawn . overhear remark* made by the
fort Justice CdrtHafit *ho. oh
bdmetety In that city.
Jurors krth wMn the hall door Is
Tuesday riitht. SgsesaM him I14JD derful lakes. Many of It* resort
doaed. That Is true of the adjoin­
fine and costs or 16 day* In-Jail. He takes are only party developed
ing room, which has a connecting
OF
covering from her recent Illness.
is boarding at peasant with lhe Many more could be made suitable INFORMATION
Blim
in
liiTrnroT
door Inkling* of jurors' talk have
The new school at Lowell will be sheriff.
PUBLIC
INTEREST
been gathered by persona standing
dedicated at a program Friday evepeople
to
come
to
Barry
county
Edirard FtaUler, who lived south
------------In the hallway for that very purJust to look at the lakes, beautiful Regrulxtlong for Scarlet Fev­
Emerson Royer lias accepted a of Orangeville In the onion district,
The deliberations or t Jury should I
position as electrician in Detroit was brought to the Jail Monday by
er Quarantine Are
fish while they are here. Stocking
never be other than secret. That 1* I
and left Sunday evening for that State Policeman R. W. Eaton. Fensler was wanted in Indiana on sevFrdsented
not poulble under present condl-1
era) charge*. He was turned over to cempllahed only through having
tlon*. Sometimes the officer Is I
During
the
j
—
U
k
many
in
­
rearing ponds, such as the ones at
called into the room. Then the door I
patlcnt at Pennock Deputy Sheriff R. M. Dunlap of
Indiana, Monday Orangeville, within the take dis­ quiries have been made at Lhe U open and it U easy to hear What j
ho&lt;H&gt;ltal. state that her condition Is port Wayne.
trict. where hundreds of thousands Health Department office regarding tome of the Juror* are saying, f
i night
improved
of fingerlings can be reared and quarantine of scarlet fever casta. BdmSUmes a Juror has to be tat out J
!
The
Red
Cross
year-round
service
No circuit court .sessions are bei of health education and consirva- placed in the takes. The county Because this information Is of pub­ of the room for necessary purpose* I
lic interest, the follow*—
TTien the door has to be opened and I
as Judge McPeek is holding court | lion, as well a* the emergency re­
and securing
of
the lions are quoted from t
lief activities, is made possible building
persons standing In the htlllray can I
In charlotte
Orangeville ponds. The initiative Epartmerit of Health
Mr and Mr* Jesse Blough are 1 through Red Cross membership dol1 control of communicable dis- easily hear the talk that goes on in-1
was taken and the work was done
aide the room.
the parents of a daughter bqm I&gt; tar* received by the local chapter
Jl has happened at some terms of I
Tuesday. Oct 13.
She has been] during the annual roll call cam- under the auspices of the Rod and
For Exposed Persons:— (1) Liv­
I palgn. It is a gtature of civic tn- Gun Club; but It ought not to be
court that two Juries were odt all
named Imogene.
ing in the house with the patient.—
Mr and Mrs J W Disinter, who j terest to Join the Red Cross In the expected that a purely voluntary Exposed adults and children who the same time, and there is no pro-1
a*.wjctatlon. with no resources to
period
from
Armistice
Day
to
vision
tn the court house for but I
have recently coma to Hastings, are ,
draw on except very small dues, have previously had the disease one Jury. Ordinarily that is suffl-l
। occupying the E A. Cankin apart- [1 Thanksgiving. Mr*. Forrest John­
; son is Roil Call chairman for Barry should meet all lhe expense of may be released by the health offi­ dent; but if one Jury cannot agree I
i ment, 321 3- Jefferson St.
cer
to
live
elsewhere.
The
records
building and maintaining rearing
and argues Ute situation for a long!
Richard Jacobs is the new clerk ।। county this year.
of the health department shall be
ponds In this county.
lime. It Is possible for another short |
nt carveth * Stebbins' He is an 1 Did you see that “white elephant”
There are other places within the the only competent evidence to es­ case to be heard and submitted to I
experienced pharmacist, graduating I( at the Methodist church? It rep|I resents the old church debt which county where such ponds could be tablish a claim of a previous attack
from Perris Institute last June.
itoreover now that ladle* are sub-1
and ought to M located to propa­ of scarlet fever. Wage earners may
.
has
been
carried
along
for
a
ntun) Mr and Mrs. D. W Dodge have (
gate fingerling perch, blue gills and come and go as usual provided that Ject to JUry service and are actually
, moved from near Freeport to the | ber of years. Each square on the
they have no contact with the pa­
J
elephant
represents
IS
of
the
debt.
ben.
which
would
make
the
fishing
drain
for such service, toilet pro­
i former John Roberta place. Just j
tient and that their work does not
north of the Presbyterian church. | As fast as the squares are sold the In Barry county takes far belter. bring them In contact with children visions should be provided that I
The schools of Hastings and Bar- 1' elephant becomes a different color. That is no idle statement, as Gun or with milk or food supplies. Ex­ would not make It necessary for
1 Various church societies, a* well as take Is positive proof of the value
ry county are closed today and to­
posed susceptible children may be either the men or the women on a I
. morrow as the teachers are attend­ individuals, have pledged a square. Of such rearing ponds. The Gun released for seven days from the Jury to call an officer to allow them
Lake Resort Association, with the
to leave the room.
Ing lhe district M. E A meeting In On Tuesday evening. Nov. 10. the
One day last week Attorney Kimi
campaign closes with
a
family co-operation and a&amp;ststanee of Mark time of last possible contact with
Icirand Rapids
the patient. They may then return
Andrew a Matthews, who re­ night supper and program in the Ritchie, who donated the land for to school if they have had none Sigler went before the board of su­
The membership the purpose, has two rearing ponds
pervisors and presented this whole]
cently underwent an operation at church parlors
of lhe symptoms of the disease.
situation
to them, and made a very!
।
has
found
that
white
elephant*
are
| Pennock hospital, has been moved to .
Isolation shall mean restriction
the last four or five years many
practical suggestion
that would
his home and is making a satis-1j very unprofitable.
thousand fingerlings have been of a case or suspected case of com­ succeufuliy solve the problems In­
factory recovery
municable dLseaae to a part of the
PASSING OF 8. J.
placed
tn
Gun
lake
directly
from
volved. The “attic.” or 3rd story of
Mrs Jay Mead had the mlsforBENEDICT ON SATURDAY. these ponds. No take Ln the count)' house with all contact limited as far lhe court house is not occupied. It
tunc to break both bones In her .I Samuel J. Benedict, aged 72. who
as possible. No contact with the
right wrist on Friday, when her I had been a resident of Barry coun- [ is fished more than Gun take. Yet patient shall mean no contact can be reached by a stairway al­
the record is that the fishing has
ready built. Mr. Sigler explained to
I ankle gave way letting her fall to
| ty nearly al) hL* life, died on Satur­ Improved to a large extent since either directly nr indirectly with lhe supervisors Dial two suitable
j the ground. She is getting along as I
The health officer
day night at his home here follow­ these ponds were In operation Be­ the patient
Jury room* could be constructed in
well ns possible
Ing a long Hines* He Is survived by I fore that time It was getting io shall ordinarily interpret this as re­ this third story, at comparatively
1 One of the most valuable pairs of
quiring that lhe patient and the
, his wife, four sons. Robert of Ha*- I
I hand* tn osteopathic profession. Dr tings. John of Los Angeles, and I that It was hardly worthwhile to person who is nurse and attendant small expense, and adequate toilet
spend
time
fishing
Ln
that
take
be
­
facilities provided for both men and
’ Edwin Pratt tells us. are those ol | Russell and Claud of Jackson; four1
for the patient, doca not enter any
cause the catch was so meager.
women.
• Dr Curtis Muncie, under whom he
daughters.
Mrs. Laura Ewing of
We are sure that the board did a part of lhe house that the wage
tn such a place a Jury pould,do[ has taken special, training
The
earner aLso enter*; or handle any
1 hands In question arc Insured tor Grand Rapids and Mr*. Ruth wise thing In making the appro­ utensils or food, or any articles that llberate with no chance to' over­
Thomas. Mrs. Arvls Cruttenden and priation It did and will be Justified
hear whit they were saying ta each
i 1400.000
the
wage
earner
also
handles.
Margaret of Hastings: also lWo sis­ In going farther should opportunity
other, and without the necessity oil
Announcements have been recalling an officer so frequently.
|
| celved by Hastings friends of the ters. Mrs. Vlnnle Johnson of Irving present Itself.
PLANS CONSIDERED TO
With two
rooms,
two Juried
1 birth of a daughter Mary Cathryn and Mr*. Maty Morehouse of Cad­
illac
Mr. Benedict had been a
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
USE NEW PARK could deliberate at the same time,
I to Mr and Mr* Carlton L Crlta
member of the I- O. O F lodge tor
u
one
would
be
at
the
extreme
|
Sunday visitors at Mr and Mrs
■ Minnie Gamble' of Vicksburg on
Some time ago a large committee, western part and the other the ex­
thlrty-flve years. Funeral services Walter Culberts were Mrs. A. M.
Saturday. Oct 17 Congratulations
were conducted by the Rev. J. w. Oates and daughter Betty Dawn of representing various localities in treme eastern part of that floor.
are extended
Barry
county
and
such
organization.'
We believe Mr Bigler has made a|
1 The Banner Job department has Kltehing at the Odd Fellow hall Qrand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Sydney
on Tuesday afternoon at two o'clock. Gelb and Mrs. Freda Klump- of a* the Camp Fire Girl*. Y. M. C.^, good suggestion that can and
been printing ballots—amendments
Boy Beouta. the Barry County should be acted upon.
| Burial was tn the Barry villi ccme- Caledonia.
and official—the past week. The ' tery.
Hubert Marlowe of Kalamazoo Health Unit, lhe 4-H clubs and
amendments have been delivered
spent Saturday night and Sunday women's organizations, was named PRESBYTERIANS TO
Lo County Clerk Allan C Hyde and PASSING OF MRS.
for the purpose of making plans
’ the official ballots will be delivered
CELIA HAMILTON. I and Mrs. Florence Usborne of Lake for the use of the government park
spent Sunday with Mr and
| today It Is expected
GIVE BIBLE PLAY
Miss Jean Barnes received word 1Odessa
«... LaFayette u
.—.k:
facllltle* at Gun lake for the beneUsborne
Mr' Charles Leat
Mrs
Leary. 320 West Wednesday morning of the death, Mrs.
Mrs. Arthur Yarger and children' m
lhe &gt; oun'’ P*°Pk o( ,hc counSouth street, has been notified that on Tuesday of her cousin. Mrs. Ce- 1
Presenting "Queen Esther"!
she Is one of the winners in the Au­ Ita Hamilton iCella Ensign i. at| .'pent Bunday with Mr and Mr* ’ A representative of lhe federal
Next Sunday Evening
gust Rexall letter writing contest Santa Monica. CaL Mrs Hamilton I Carl Jackson, near Clarksville
Mr and Mrs. Wm Shriber and government will be here next Wed­
and ha* received her prize. The con­ had .*pent three weeks with Mis*
at Church
nesday, October 28. A meeting of
test was nation-wide and thousands Barner just recently, going from | children of HS'ting* spent Sunday the committee will be held al the ,
।
On
Sunday evening a colorful]
with
Mr
and
Mrs.
Frank
Bhrlber
o! entries were sent In
here to her home In Los Angeles.1
and also called on Mr*. Anna Buck offices of lhe Barry County Health play entitled “Queen Brther” will
Clifiord Martens, small son of For many years Mrs
Hamilton
Unit of this city for lhe purpose of be presented in the auditorium of
on
Sunday
afternoon.
Carl Martens of Nashville. was lived in thl* citv and later In Dela­
MH
1 y ana
normpn carisidering such plans a meeting the
First
Presbyterian church.
Mrs. ixro
Leo 0.1
Barry
and Normgn
brought to pcnnock hospital Sat- ware. Ohio Funeral services will be called
on Mr. and Mrs O*ear H*ll
»*’d
‘hb committee several There will be four Interesting
rec ■h e'd from belnc kicked ‘'eld
L°'
V'liL-T-t of
’astings Thuraday
of * n
Hastings
Thursday afternoon
afternoon " 1 days
rt»v* ago. Those
Th"w‘ at
al that
lhal meeting
"»&lt;*««« are
are scenes Interspersed with music tnd
Juries recchcd '[mu
....
—— at
— Forest1________ , t , ’, remain* will be cremated
asked to plan to attend the mcet- singing.
in the face by a horse. He Is much 1 LMrn cemetery in that city
। rylctator_An arbitrary individual Ing to be held next Wednesday evcTTie scenes are as follow.:
better and has been taken to his .
. .« «■&gt;
—
I------ The Garden of the Palace!
who makes big news and won t let nlng it 7:30 at the health unit ofhome
"Die man who has to rake up the
fices.
at Bushan.
The Woodland P T A. Fair on ' leaves hasn't time to rhapsodize It get into the paper.
II—Throne room of lhe King.
Friday evening drew a large num- ' over autumn foliage
।
III—Queen
Esther's
Banquet]
Chamber.
TV—The Grand Finale.
The play will begin at 7:30 and'
| will last one hour. Everybody is
! given a cordial invitation and a *11I ver collection will be taken to
Hastings. Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557
defray expenses.

Tha Vegetable
Shortening

BOLOGNA

tupEhvigORS AID WMK

A)Po)Hlli

tatanu

Q. P. Hinkler is HI at hh home on
g Madison jt.

Mri. R.'O. Pinnta ta a virtim of
th. mumps.
A dauthtet was born qn Get. 17
to MY. and Mr* adorgd Varney of I
Woodland al Penwk hospital.
j
A. J. Larsen it recovering nicily
from an operation performed al&lt;
Sparrow hospital in Lan*tag.
Miss Mareta Kennedy has accept­
ed a position at Reed's drug store,
beginning her work on Bunday.
Mrs Wm Gammage, who lives

'jM&amp;«£

??&gt;&gt; *■ T. A. mrniber* put_9C

NASHVILLE
Open Wedueada'i and Saturday Evenings

FRANCIS LEDERER and ANN SOTHIRN In

"My American Wife”
With Fred Stone And BlBW Bartte-A ParaasAaai Ftetort
— PLUS —
•• —i’
ROSb ALEXANDER. BRVKRLY ROBERTS. aM JOSEPH
CAWTHOBNE Ml

"HOT MON6Y”
»U«- wa W *Un u

tH-fe &gt;&lt;

3:M o'clock MatlBec Only

WWWWWMWMMW

FRIDAY-SATURDAY

WE BUY SEEDI

Jack Holt m WofthaTrail
AND COMlSY

SUNDAY-MONDAY
fred

Mcmurray a caroli lombard m

'The Prince** Came* Aero**'
comedy

Si.
vmoixaALD BEEPS
SOUTH DtVIKOM STMIT
femi CUU, M10H10AJT

�TOT ttAgTlNGS BANNCT,,TmyDAT,

Sporting Items ■ ^Organizations
I

The W C- T. U. anti Missionary
meeting hks been postponed till
Tuesday, Oct. 27. when they will
I meet at the United Brethren church

H, H. S. DOWNS

liHAnl
“// 1I atftelhe«ulTemple
*r
ulInllLuIIII IlrL 1/
ILjOcl.
27. Trust us many

M.'

Pythian Bisters meeting.
Tuesday. 7:30 P.
Bisters as

THIRD

QUARTER

DRIVES

BRING THE WINNING
TOUCHDOWN

BENNETTMEN UPSET
DOPE BY VICTORY

**

Bu4lnrM °r

'

| Mrs. Ella Myers Is entertaining
i the Past chiefs Club of the Pythian
.Sisters this Thursday evening at
1 her home. 309 8. Jefferson St.

SAVE YOUR HOME
—YOUR COUNTRY

Gray for Fall

! butter and salt and pepper to taste.
*•’; C h P
, Combine salmon and pickle with: ?nt^
eight slices bacon which
' sauce Brush outside of loaf with i ha,v.tf bccn c‘?t, 1x1 P1^5
fried.
। melted butter and fill box with mix- .
“!a'
j lure. Bake in hot oven &lt;425 degrees i
l“d~,.m?t

The regular meeting of the Barry
County Rod and Gun Club will be
held Monday evening, October 27. at
7:30 at the emergency relief office
at the court house. Regular busi­
ness will be transacted and plans
completed for the dinner on Octo-

Helpful Suggestions

i our Cows Will Show

Nice Profit

Passes attempted .
Pastes completed .
Yds. on |Mv&gt;ws ..
Passes intercepted by ...
Iricompleted imsscs

if Fed a

To guide his plane aright.

Cork Is being tried as paving on
new highways in Britain. Our
thoughts are with the city employee
who must pull stoppers from man­
holes.

The King and Queen of Italy have
sent In their wedding rings, but
thus far the gold returns from such
sources have been disappointing.
Perhaps Mussolini expected them
to turn In their crowns.

■ns SAID.
He took full possession
Of the middle of lhe road.
And gave no heed by word or deed.
Of any other's load.
But when his apple cart upset.
He’d murmur and complain,
Tho’ when you spilled and he rode
high.
He'd gloat anent his gain.
I wander when his fellowmen
Shall learn he’s on the spot.
Theyll say "Poor John, may he be
gone.
Where we surmise he's not."
Signed. A Reader.

IRONSIDE’S MEMORIALS

BALANCED

Farm Bureau
Service Dairy

HASTINGS

Ball and pepper.
Brown previously cooked mush-1
rooms and celery In butler. Mix;
thoroughly
with
the
shredded!
chicken and season. Line a deep!
Tie spices in a cheesecloth bag.
loaf pan with wax paper, then
Chop tomatoes, onions and peppers
Une*the’pan with a layer of the
together and cover with salt. Let
cooked rice, about three-quarters
stand over night. Drain, add vlneof an inch thick. Press the rice
, gar r.nd spices and let come to a
firmly together, over Die sides and boll. Pack into clean hot Jan. parbottom of the pan. Fill the center
Hally seal and process Ln a hot
cavity with ths chicken mixture. |: water ,_
ul lnr
bath
for 25 minutes. Complete
pressing it firmly. Spread a layer
. -1Inlnfdla
afur removlng
tf|'y
of rice over the top and place pan from canner
y
In a moderate oven &lt;350 degrees F &gt;
to heat al) thoroughly. When done.1
.
~~
unmold. remove the wax paper and
garnish loaf with sliced hard cooked
eggs and sliced stuffed olives.
APPLES ON A STICK.
1 c brown sugar.
1-2 c granulated sugar
1-2 c maple flavored com syrup.
1-4 I salt
1 t vanilla.,
Cook sugay, com syrup, water, salt
and butter until syrup crackles
when tried In cold water. Remove
from flre and add flavoring. Stick
a wooden skewer Ln the stem end '
of apple and dip apples one at a
time into hot syrup and place on
an oiled pan to cool. Faces may be
made in lhe apples by applying bits
of raisins and candled cherries to
lhe side of the apples before the
-syrup cools.

ORANGE CHARLOTTE.
1 pkg orange gelatin.
1 c boiling waler.

2 T sugar.
1 c orange Juice.
Pulp from 2 oranges, drained
from Juice.
I c cream, whipped.
Dissolve gelatin In boiling water,
add salt, sugar and orange Juice
and chill until mixture begins to
thicken. Then Whip with a rotary
egg beater until frothy Fold In
the fruit and cream and pour mix­
ture into a mold. ChlU. Benes 10.

NEW MOON SANDWICHES.
1 pkg. cream cheese.
Orated-carrots.
1-2 t granulated sugar.
Balt.
Dash of cayenne pepper.
Cream the cheese and add as
much grated carrot os It will hold.
Add salt and cayenne to taste and
blend in sugar. Spread roughly on

r

Dry Cleaning

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES INC
HASTINGS

PHONE 2118

Sport and Dress

Dresses COATS

Dry Cleaning!!
iOur

There's more to cleoning
than just malting clothes
look clean. Your Clean­
er must understand fab­
rics
. various materials
must be handled in dif­
ferent ways so as to re­

famous

Slenderize

dresses! Specially designed
for the shorter-than-averJage figure! New fabrics
and smart, unusual trim­
mings. Sizes 14s to 24s.

HATS

clothes that ore really
clean.
Coll McCreery's
' for quality cleaning and

pressing, . .

The kind of coals that us­
ually sell for a great deal
more! Rich fur trimmings,
smart surface interest
woolens, youthful styles I
Sizes 12 to 20, 38 to 46.

Smartest! Newest!

tain the original texture
and colors. Only expert
workmen can give you

Phone 2140.

98

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS - MICHIGAN
Choose

an

over-popular

sports felts for your excit­
ing football dates!

Also,

close-fitting nals—metallic,
ribbon and velvet turbans.

There are thousands of low cost
miles in these . . .

See them today!

USED TRUCKS
No. 1265-1929 Ford Model AA, long

$1 *1 E
119

wheel boie, chain?
ond cab

No. 136-1929, 131 inch FORD Model
AA Stoke
truck

*125

No. 1155—1932 Ford Model B, chassis
and cab, dual wheels,
new motor

*195
*235
$85
New Glenbreoke

Trode your car for a bettor one, it will
serve as a down payment with
liberal terms on balance.

COATS
$1Q«9O

UNIVERSAL

For sports and dress wearf
Luxurious fur trimminglovely new woolens. Fitted
and swagger models for

DON’T MISS THESE BARGAINS I

Ask about it!

Flattering and
Youthful!

and

ALSO EXCEPTIONAL BARGAINS In
1932, 1933, l93A .nd 1935 Ford V-8
Fordors, Tudors and Coupes

OO

No By-Products

Established 1907

1 qt. vinegar.
1-2 c horseradish.
1 T cinnamon.
1 T allspice.
1-4 t cloves.
3 T mustard.
Few bay'leaves.

No. 1027-1929 G. M. C.
Standard Panel

FUS BUREAU 110118 CO. lac.

PHONE 2497

4 c boiled rice.
1-2 c mushrooms.
1-2 c sliced celery.

IQOLbLMt

Made of all GOOD
grains, concentrates.

IRONSIDE RROTRERS

P.) until brown. Serve with sauce
made by mixing one weU beaten egr4 [J* B
0Ten
with two-thirds cup mayonnaise. U»oro’J8hly heated.
Cook over low flame, stirring conCHOW-CHOW.
stonily until-it begins to thicken. |
1 pk. green tomatoes.
2 large anions.
10 green peppers.
HALI.GWEEN CHICKEN LOAF.
6
hot peppers.
2 c_ minced chicken.

No. 1118-1933 Ford V-8,
Standard Panel

CwL

The Home of-Quality and Craftsmanship. • Design­
ers and producers of Memorial ArF. • Sec us NOW
for FALL and SPRING Setting. Prices very reasonable.

Makes about 11 zandwlehes.

STUFFED BAKED POTATOES.
Remove sides and top crusts from
Bake six large potatoes unpl
. loaf and hollow out Inside. To milk,
odd one cup of crumbs and c&lt;x&gt;k ।
JIT"
over low flame until smooth. Re-1 o.*Tn’ ro!J
Cut a slice from
move from fire, add one tablespoon I
potato Into a

By rescuing It from the hands of
those who think more of Hie Old
World and Ite institutions than
they do of America.
Do you know that we have seven
and one half million unnaturalized
foreigners In this country?
That there are six million unnat­
uralized foreigners holding Ameri­
can jobs?
That there are one and one half
million unnaturalized foreigners on
our relief roils which the taxpayers
are elding and supporting?
That there are three and one half
million foreigners In tills country
who are here Illegally and whom

bor, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt’s inti­
mate friend, refuses to order de­
ported. though the law requires It?
Do you know that Americans In
foreign countries are permitted to
hold Jobs there but a short time
and that none are supported by
The High school varsity took Lhelr
foreign aid?
old rival*—the Charlotte eleven—In­
Charity is a fine tiling, but it ’
to camp last Saturday by a score of
A regular meeting of Leo A. Mil­
ler Post,—
No.
3326 auxiliary .---------will be should begin at home.
12-7.
-------------- -----------------------Gathered around the President
The Bennett men advanced Into held this evening al 8 o’clock at the
there by his consent, are
R. Hall. All members are re­ and
the enemy’s territory after rceeiv- G.
~ A ~
Ing the kick ofl but were halted quested to come. Ella H. Bush, secy. Hopkins, ’the spender;” Wallace,
•the Apostle of Scarcity." who
when two passes were knocked down
«.u
i.w, . Circle No 7 of the MeUtodtsl L. would prevent lhe growing of crops,
and u.c
the «...
ball w»
was w»
lost u&gt;.
on uvw&gt;».
downs. The
Goblemm started n return march
s wl" meet with
Jay Blok- destroy crops, make hogs into grease
down the field which stopped xud- | ,ley today. Thursday. Oct. 22.
and fertilizer, give Hie American dodeniy when Hall of Hastings inter- j —
■
' - - -- “ - - - I mestlc market to foreigners; TugHospital Guild No. 18 Is having
• । well, who builds at excessive cost
ceptcd a pa*s and was downed tn a card jrarty at the home of Mrs.
*
’
teams with government
mid-field The local lads kept the Dan Lewis. 312 W Mill 8t.. on Fri­ homes and towns
ball in Charlotte?, territory the rest, day. tomorrow, at two o’clock. A money, where there Is no one to
live in them; Frankfurter and his
of the quarter by punting and play­ general invitation Is extended.
disciples, who think the constitu­
Ing an nir-llght defensive game1
which forced their opponents to'
tion out of date; and a host of
SAVE BOUGHAGE
others who have aided In centraliz­
punt.
’
Fall fasntons snow an increas­
in the second quarter the two
TO FEED COWS ing power in Wiuhlngton.
ing trend toward tones In gray.
The President said In a message
teams started
an exchange of
------------This youthful, one-piece sports
►
punt* but Angell playing his usual Overcome Supply Shortage to congress:
frock, 'worn by Pat Paterson,
"Within our borders, as In the
stellar defensive role broke through
—
— ...
film player, will be found tn
by Conserving Materials
world al large, popular opinion
lhe line and blocked a Charlotte
the wardrobe of the wellis at war with a power-seeking
bool which he recovered on the |
Usually Wasted
dressed college girl this fa IL
minority."
four-yard line On the third down | Michigan dairymen with fore­
The
frock is of gray wool,
and goal to go. Scobey .‘.wept around ' sight will be able to save their check '&gt;
"We have returned lhe control
topped by a belted jacket of
of the Federal Government to
end and crossed the line tor the1 books from embarrassment next
gray and green plaid tweed.
the city of Washington."
IM U, M &gt;»&lt;
Tbe
winter by pulling up now all „„
Hie
■» ordinary
nrwhw* po«lbl», &gt;I There is a power-seeking minor­
gray antelope
« d-ad ball Bcorr « U&gt;&lt; end ol U«
A B
Mlcll!j.n ity. but It is located in Washington; j
nr.lr
n.n In
Mn-'lrnr,
n .. .................
. . dairyman.
. .
It surrounds lhe President. Not on- /
1,1 fnvnr
J’?'or nf
rf H
»sUnK? , stBt0 College
extension
apples, celery and nuts and serve
The third quarter brought the
During the
the coming
coming season
season in
in ly the control of the Federal Gov- j on lettuce with mayonnaise or cook­
During
ernment.
but
of
the
state
Govern|
Charlotte team their first score as whlch lt ls obvious that feed suped dressing. It may be served very
the result of recovered punt and p|to wlll be reduced, dairymen will menu, has been returned to Wash­ attractively
In
chrysanthemum
aertei of power plays
Dewey
that ,n extn| ,Uck ,now ihed. Ington. and Dial power is In the cups, made from grapefruit shells
hands of this small group which
crossed the line with the pigskin ful cr pjUu| o( BUCh
cut down In strips simulating chry­
The extra point uas converted on ordinarily goes to waste will come In rules by executive order, not by santhemum petal.
a completed pa.vs
handy Quality of the second mow- law. and there Iles lhe danger, a
The defense ot the Bennetlmen mg. wild hay. Immature com stover dictatorship lit the making.
SALMON TOMATO LOAF.
The foregoing are facts, if you
-,e&gt;, tightened up «»».
then
with na -r.*
7-8 o-nr..
score ond oU}|_r WJuU| rougha|JO niky not
2 c salmon
in favor of Charlotte, and while be the best but it is important to love your home, your country, if
1-2 c drained cooked tomatoes.
they were In mid-field Scobey swept gamer all lhe crops jx&gt;ssible from you want opportunity for your
1 T melted butter or substitute.
children,
elect
a
Republican
Presi
­
around end and behind perfect even the fence rows, ditches and
Salt and pepper.
dent and a Republican Congress­
blocking made a 45-yard run for woodlots, says Ballzer
man who knows his way about, who
the second touchdown for the Has­
Panners who have sufficient hay
1 egg. well beaten.
has the courage to stand forth and
ting, team
The extra point was and
lvvuother
uy feed, by conserving M
these
Flake salmon and remove bones.
not made but Hastings took the waste roughages, may be able to fight the battle against the New Combine salmon, tomatoes, crumbs,
lead 12-7 and did not relinquish It convert them into some extra cash Deal
It the foregoing statement meets, butter or substitute and egg and
for the re a of the game
or may bp ablc t0 M11 Mnw ot Uiclr
। season to taste. Mix lightly with
Charlotte rcsortea to an aerial better feed, in making a clean sweep with your approval, not only let. iI two forks. Pour Into well greased
have your vote on election day. I
game l:» un ntlempl to overcome tho. ot the farm for all possible waste me
but from'now until that day. hdp *
“d
*nt0 lo‘f
lead in the last quarter, but were roughages, the farmer should not oust tile New Dealers. This anneal is
^._h0L
?25 ^egrces f ?
oust
the
New
Dealers.
This
appeal
is
unable to complete a pass As the overlook swamp grass, beet
beet tops,
tops,
for 20 to 30 minutes. Serve with
game ended the Benneiimen were fc&lt;euc and similar roughages. Bak- made to patriotic Democrats whose tomato or olive sauce.
advanring down the field with short ery un
jJ brewery refuse, apple pomand
pom­ party organization has been stolen |
galns which were tagged
and pp
peaa vmcry
vlncry refuse
refuse have
have valval- from them, as well as to Republic-1 RICE. EGG AND FISH LOAF.
— for another
—.... we and
.
touchdown.
ue_ 1,0 the hungry cow and can be ans.
' 1 c cold boiled rice.
Respectfully.
The line-ups were
I converted Into milk and butterfat.
3 hard cooked eggs.
Hastings &lt;
”■
CLARE E. HOFFMAN.
&lt;12&gt;
Charlotte &lt;7) I
■Feeding these low quality rough1 c cooked fish, flaked.
Republican
Candidate
for
Congress.
Colllns I ages In small amounts dally may
Smith
। 1 c minced onion.
Draper
I 1 egg, slightly beaten,
Shaffer | conserve more expensive feed.” —Political Adv.
McLeod
Ray BalUer advises
-The addition of
i 3 thin slices bacon, diced.
Angell
Howe 1 molasses and the chopping or grindSall and paprika to taste.
Moore
Everta j Ing of the material will help to
1-2 c milk.
Doxry
Nelson 1 make the roughage more palatable.
Butter baking mold. Frybacon
LaBallister
Bryan | "With every indication of high
lightly, add onion and then fish
Teutant I prlves1 for grains and concentrates
Struble
and rice Combine milk and egg and
WALDORF
SALAD.
Scobey i C
Tullis this coming fall and winter, low
add to first mixture. Season to taste.
Bessmer
Dewey grade roughages can be fed to dry
Slice one egg in thin rings and
4 large grapefruit.
Hall
rc» Putnam I cows, due to stand dry for many 2-3
place around side of mold for gar­
cup diced apple.
Substitutions: Hastings; Sotlmrd.
Sothard ! months,
months. young open heifers which
nish. Press fish mixture Into mold
4 teaspoons sugar.
Brill and Rennlck Charlotte; Che- | must be wintered through, and In
and bake in moderate oven. &lt;350 de­
1-3 cup diced celery.
grees P.) for about 30 minutes. Turn
ney and Roush. Officials: umpire. • moderate quantities to the herd bull.
1-3 cup broken walnut meats.
out on hot platter and serve with
Hill. Ill Referee. Murray. Olivet. I| "Regular addlUons of salt or mix­
Lettuce.
tomato sauce. Serves five.
In a preliminary game the second ture of two pounds of salt and one
Segment grapefruit and cut
stringers played to a 0-6 deadlock pound odorless steamed bone meal
SALMON BOX.
The Hastings scrubs ha,d several to every one hundred pounds grain marinate apples. Sprinkle apples
I loaf bread.
scoring opportunities but failed to fed should be supplied. No money with sugar. Combine grapefruit.
1 c milk.
should be spent for the purchase of
take advantage of them
This week Saturday the local fans fancy mixed mineral mixtures other
will have a chance to sec lhe var­ than steamed bone meal."
sity on their home grounds again.
THE YEAR'S TWILIGHT.
They will meet Lakeview. Battle
Queen Autumn crooning softly,
Creek, at lhe fair grounds at 2:30 .
I Tucks her flower babes to sleep,
o’clock.
| And bkts King Winter when he
Summary of game:
comes.
First downs
To lay their blankets deep
Yds. by scrimmage ...
132—122
Then Jealous for his safe return.
Yds. punting
..
.285- 271
Through old year’s gathering night.

Blocked Punt Pave# Way for
First Hastings Score—
End Run, Second

tt, 1838

Butter.
Salt and pepper.
1 can salmon, flaked.

GARAGE COMPANY
PHONi 2121

HASTINGS, MICH

women and misses.
12 to 20, 38 to 44

Sixes

New Fall Glen Raw

These
dresses
little to
to-day!
grand

unwuuUy
show
be si
Nov

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

SOCl
Hl

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

BASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Editorials

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22. 19M

'Round About Town I'it I

THE HUNTING SEASON

5

Public Forum

|J|

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

pnckxe—the penalty for infraction
In your article of Oct. • Issue you being 11.000 flna or imprisonment
say that Racette will run on a dif­
latlon sponsored by the New Deal
Reader.
ferent ticket. That la a mistake,
administration Is not the NRA. the
X am running aa an Independent
■Hep.r
"JlL. I. Ou.. .• 1...
The following was contributed by
AAA, or other similar bits of alpha­
a Barry county friend and well13000
to
Congressman
Hoffman,
betical nonsense which a wise and
.
courre you know better, being wtah*r;
|tmrt Supreme Court declared uneditor ot your paper. It waa WOO.I read the figure* long and dry.
Of deficit* and gains as the years
K&gt; by.
there bill* must take a back rest to I No
W1U
t0 )0U Uninn*
ticket." That U While politicians quarrel, frantic
the 8O-CALLED Social Security |U1 you Bre M yearJ&lt; old
nlr
and droll.
Act which, in figurative terms, i* a ; amount
lo you depends upon
ROOMvelt gave my man work.
itor to your subeertbera. qnd a good
highway robber disguised In the how o]d you
now and also up.
they call it dole.
Christian, as I understood you pro­
Docs a rabbit's foot really bring fess to be. You should not use the Great politicians figure and Ium.
dress Ot a Good Samaritan.
i on how many weeks and years you
But what do THEY know about
■ luck?
Unfortunately for those whom it work between now and the time you
US?
the Impossible 8200 a month plan."
it is Intended to hit hardest. Ute I reach 65
Zip Thompson, j understand, now Dear Mr. Editor, you do not under­
claims that they do not.
stand the towruend plan. It la a Four years ago my man was a
workman and employee, lhe bur­
Abraham Epstein, executive secre­
slouch.
den of this act will not make itself
He paced, he sulked, he grumbled, j
And Zip speaks from experience. country cannot aland an adequa
tary of lhe American Association
felt until Jan. 1st, 1937, almost two
nnd grouched.
pension, but It can stand a (300
for Social security says that thia i
He Mt under fool, with no place to*
months after election day! You ( means that young working men and I
He went hunting with one of month as a recovery plan.
these lucky tokens tied around his
vote on Nov. 3 but this Security Act
women will be forced to pay prernOur
cupboards were bare, our
neck,
they
tell
me,
and
didn't
get
a
cette will not be elected to Con­
does hot begin to dig Into your i
pennies low.
thing until after he had removed It gress." You fall to inform your sub­
pock&gt;t book until after all lhe bolI
(the rabbit's foot, that is, not the scribers there will be cast at least Our baby was 111 and couldn't grow.
,
1 which are about 40 per cent nifher
lot* are counted. Remember this | (.
.
neeki.
60,000
in lhe ivniui
fourth
—' - additional votes ...
fact! Il Is an Important bit of
„ ,, , J
. district November 3rd election that Now my curtains are crisp, my floors
have a gleam.
Wonder If that dusky-eklnned.. didn’t vote tn lhe primaries and
strategy on the part of the New
retirement benefits.
uniformed gentleman I saw stand- those srt independent votes
ao My little girl Is healthy and clean
Ina
___ ..."T’ .
We have wholesome food from
Ing at
nt attenllnn
attention In
tn fmnt
front n!
of the please
do not count your chickens
I Furthermore benefits will be paid
which lo choose.
Parker House late Monday after­ before they are hatched because
The Social Security Act affects
We all have new clothing and well­
noon was one of the "valleys"?
the average person with a job as only to those who retire from active
you may have to announce me as
filling shoe*
work.
Hie next congressman of the fourth
follows:
Wish
my
good
friend
George
district after November 3rd.
The politicians may figure and fuss
Beginning Jan. 1 and thereafter 1 Tin* tables below Illustrate what ।
could have straightened me out on
Now Mr. Editor. If you wish to be
this Act means to the working man
But
what ore figures compared lo
the
matter.
every employer wiU be compelled
fair to your townsend subscribers
US?
i and woman Table No. I gives the
to deduct from your pay check One
and to a fellow cltteen, you will I'm sick of all this political hate
I weekly and yearly paymenu for dlfBut. strange as il
seem.
print this article in your paper.
Per Gent of the total salary paid
feel that with Lincoln Presi­
George wasn’t there.
Felix A Raceltc
dent Roosevelt Is great,
This rule applies up to wages or ferent wage levels. Table No. 2 gives
I the benefits promised for different
He gave us food, before Twas too
But I must get away from this
I submit a comparison of the
late.
,A"
wage scales.
subject or my boss will accuse inc words of Herbert Hoover and of
—A Barry county housewife,
of flirting with politics.
Janies Warburg, former financial
iisi—5th Bl. West.
adviser of Preaident Roosevelt.
Hehl Hehl Heh! Politics Is (or
Calgary. Alberta.
Herbert Hoovqr in hl* convention
October 14. 1936.
Tommy wants to filrt with ns long address my»; The 1933 campaign The Hastings Banner.
123 40
37'vC (19 50
3QC
15c ( 7.80
•15.00
as there’s so much other nice ma­ waa a pretty good imitation of the
Hastings,
Michigan.
first stage of European politics. You
4Bc
40C
20 80
terial running around Loo.se.
32c
832
(16.00
Dear
Sir*.
may recall the promises of the more
3632
17c
34c
• 17.00
Each week we look forward with
Some nf the pheasant huntsmen abundant lite, the propaganda of
28 08
a great deal of pleasure to receiv­
23.40
tell me it la a lucky thing that my hate.
24 70
19.76
10c
38c
(19.00
Once seated in office, lhe first de­ ing cur Banner I find mention of so
friend George Sumner can't be ev­
mnnv old friends and both my hus­
26 00
60c
mand of these European despotisms
20 80
erywhere at once.
10.40
40c
(20.00
was for power and "action." Legis­ band and I enjoy the editorial page.
75c 39.00
13 00
26 00
32 60
•25.00
We depend very largely upon the
Some of these people who call latures were told they must dele­
B0c
Saturday Evening Post and your
15A0
31.20
75c
89 -00
•3000
hunting murder, can kill, clean and gate their authorities. Their free Banntr for our Ideas of conditions
SI 00
52 00
20.80
•40.00
cook a chicken with perfect Im­ debate was suppressed. The powers
In general -at nome." I think I am
n~T rTaai^r.-r’*T^r-^r-*»«^' I
1 50
70.00
2600
65 00
demanded are all the same pattern.
52 00
U'H.AT wealth it is lo
punity
•MhO
50c
ns good a Republican a* my Father
They demand planned economy.,
30 W
60.00
7500
MOO
(57.60
have such friends that
VOTE NO
was even though we arc not there
TWENTY YEARS AGO
This week's nomination tor the They regimented industry and ag­
The people of M^higan will vote '
we cannot thaink of
The Hastings chamber of Com­ Hastings Hall of Eligible Bachelors! riculture. They pul the government! Jv—hu.h.nrt
.....
WEEKLY BENEFITS IF you ARE NOW
Nov 3 on an amendment to Hie I
bWg,l" WJ,'‘1 the Swift
' merce has sent out circular letters —Kenneth Goggins robust manager into business They engaged in gi-1 c
them without clcva। constitution abolishing lhe prop- ।
_ec
Canadian
to farmers within a radius of 7 of the meat department at Food ganllc government undertaklnip. br,nch ot
lion.
-Thoreau.
branch
of 8
Swift
and
Co We have
erty tax for all purposes except the |
*n&lt;:h 01
*'" *
n&lt;1 C
miles of Hastings to see whether Center. Kennle maintains he hasn't They created vast organizations of br
I payment of existing debts
But ,
*4 38
5 83
(15.00
| they win support a mlik condensing a single marital Intention—but spoils henchmen and subsidized tx-en located in Vancouver but are
now
being
transferred
to
Calgary.
taxes
may
be
levied
on
the
income
|
i
plant
here
6 08
10.08
(16 00
then, a proud boost often preceded a dependents. They corrupted cur­ The two children and I drove
. of property.
I "Uncle Charley" Andrus has been fall. Watch out boy!
rency and credit, They drugged the
9 68
1053
(1700
thinking of the people with propa­ through about a month ago to get
re-elected custodian of the court
J 0 08
I0J8
68
।
located
so
the
school
progrc.vs
(IB 00
Rich Mr X owns an office build- I
Understand that Bus Cleveland ganda at the people's expense.
house for the tenth consecutive
1 wouldn't suffer too seriously
J
6 88
(1900
ing. or a 40-famlly apartment house,
Is the first person in town to use an
..r Oullck
If there are any Items in this -------------------wc are expecting
Mr (
this
I or both. They are half or two- |
5M
8 88
10 88
(20 00
The old building on Jefferson St electric razor
stage in the march of collectivism week Will vou please
। thirds rented, and the maintenance ।
that
1038
1283
(25.00
next to W J Michael's shop owned
.
that the
the New
New Deal
Deal has
has not
not imitated
imitated f Banner
Banner to
to j»3
JO311 ' Fifth
Fifth 61.. West
| expense consumes the entire revc- I
by C H. O&gt;bom ha* been comBut that doesn't prove much be- il
ii must i,
have
— been an oversight.
Ca|Bary. Aiberta.
- Canada.
Instead of
13.96 I nue So rich Mr X pays no tex. I
.'•88
7JB
(30 00
pletely demolished, it was one of1 ra'i-’-e Buule doesn't have much un&lt;1» In Ute preceding chapters, the former address?
1631
(40 00
88
8 88
10 88
, except hl* share of the tax on ex“A* ta the drat letter In all the oldest buildings in town and derbrush to work on anyway,
Thanking you and with beat
iHell Bent Fbr Election) I have set
(50.00
| isting debt; and when the existwn* used as a grocery store and
’ * *
wishes.
|
am.
forth
my
reasons
for
thinking:
alphabet*
of
the
world
ex
­
i ing debt I* paid off. he will pay no I
15 86
saloon.
,
According to the hunting stories That Mr Roosevelt a* president
izba
Sincerely.
' tax at all
He Isn't making any [ cept the Ethiopian. But now that
Mbs Aimee Rcnker. of this city Warren Carter has been telling he
Greta Smith Gulick,
Mussolini has “civilized’ the
moriby on his property.
wa* chosen to represent the 300 * !nust
Umbering up hl* tongue for portant promises which he made
■Mrs Glenn e Gulick •
Thus it you are now getting (20 00 only 120 00 per
weekly ;
Ethiopians, that will probably
Nevertheless, that property has
freshmen girls at the annual ban-, dccr season up north
when a candidate for that office;
per week, your employer will lie retirement payments will only be police and Arc protection. The i be changed.
quet given (he freshmen by the Y
- - that he failed to carry out a far COUNTY SETTLES FOR
forced under ihl* act to turn over (888
Those boys must have a swell time
I street on which it faces is cleaned. ,
W C A. al Ann Arbor
Fall fashions tn women's hats
j fitting about the camp fire—that 13 greater number of the more im­
and the pavement is kept In repair. I
ITS SHARE OF COST
(10.40 of your earning* to the gov­
portant; and that he fulfilled In
AN IMPORTANT THING TO RE-|I Garbage and waste_ are collected.
nre featuring leathers, and men
FORTY YEARS AGO
if they have any kind ot imagination very large measure the promise*
ernment during the first three years, MEMBER IB
probably
will
give
them
the
THAT
YOUNG । It get* all "the municipal service !
Sen. Frank Plumley of Vermont at all.
that had been made by the socialist County Normal School Will
ultimately he will be forced to turn WORKING MEN AND WOMEN lh*1 Mr Yone of the ablest orators who ever
• • •
grocer, receives.
|
candidate, Mr, Norman Thoma*.
Not
Be Kept Up Thia
over (3120 per year If you arc
graced a stump, will spmk in Has- ;
If 1 believed all they tell me. I
&lt;2&gt; That Mr. Roosevelt's present
ARE FORCED TO PAY PR EM- —
— I
Postal
laws
require
that tings the Friday night before elec- might conclude that Barry county
Year
getting (3000 per week you will be­
purpoeo is to give the nation a&gt;
IUMS FOR THEIR OLD AGE ANAriirlt.
»« «»»• «&gt;»■«&gt; i movie film be labeled "high ex­
tlon.
|
is
just
about
depopulated
of
pheosgin by having (15 60 per year de­ NUITIE8 WHICH ARE ABOUT
Under the slate law governing
"more abundant life" by first veal_____ _
iot ’n^LrilJ
I plosives” when shipped around
Mrs w K Barber returned from. ante and bunnies
Ing In a central federal bureaucracy 1 county normal schools, lhe stale Is
ducted from your earning,, and end 40 PER CENT HIGHER THAN
Adrian Monday when she attended t
...
'
headed by himself complete dicta- lo pay " definite proportion of tho
by having (46.80 clipped from your ANY PRIVATE INSURANCE COM- I
Breen, movie censor, made them the meeting ot lhe Eastern Star y George tells me there probably loria! powers irrer all the factors C&lt;"1 °t carrying on such a school,
Grand chapter. Over 300 delegates . are a few missing
that effect lhe economic ar.d social The city whirr the school Is localMr Y. the grocer works hard six ,
PANY WOULD REQUIRE FOR
were present. Mrs A A Matteson I
‘
"
lite of the nation, and. second, using cd and the county in which that
wnat Uao you «ei
mismf RFTnRS’WFNT
aa&gt;'3 m
urrK
He nhl&gt;
“ Kec1’
The new glass building to be of Middleville was elected grand
Wonder if they’ll be calling Baldy, tbeae powers lo produce by execu- city ts situated share equally the re­
m jor
T.M.
: 1mr
“ 8AMERA
RETiREMENT
DENf--nnnramprmion.
&amp;ndlnc
he h
M &lt;o h.ve
.
built In New York will btfva no secretary.
■Bill" again this season
live management, the "more abun-1 tnalnder. The county's share this
Gate receipts' at the slate fair
beoehu ,m he pud umd &gt;»u .ee
year for the work of the normal
dent
life."
,
,
.
,
.Ito lhe customers, even during rush
a s.ifety measure tor brokers held at Grand Rapids this year: Start running if you
him
if you paid a» h(&gt;urs. or he will lose them
65 year* old and only then U you
In other words If
And
That ts a purpose to which we school for the previous school year
were
(fl.000
smaller
than
last
year
about
it
though.
looking
forward
to
lhe
next
retire from work Th* payment' dr- much m insurance premiums lol at the endpremiums
of the year he figures
was (793 64. which the board of
.
___
cannot r.uhscrlbc because
stock market crash.
(*&gt; To accomplish this purpose supervisor has voted to pay. Thai
would o
gel
ha-s mode
mode"
pend upon your average wcck'v nrivate rnmnsnir, you
vnu wnoirl
.-l' by his books that he has
FIFTY YEARS AGO
Nobody likes to be in it up to
mean* to substitute for the Ameri­ expense will not be necessary for lhe
&lt;»
cm mar. lor ,™r monr,
Mr Y Uwretoe Wil h.r,
The Hastings roller mill Is com­ their neck, do they, boy?
earntag-s and the number of yr;
Bats in a cave near San Ancan form of government a central present school year, as lhe county
to pay an income tax. and it will
pleted and ts now running
than the gov-mment proposes but.
B &lt;Undj. because he will nol '
"authoritarian" state along the normal has been discontinued.
Chester Messer and Dan Reynold;.
, nrj. IIBVC
They
have w
some nice ilrumtnrrs
tons of live Insects annually.
doe, not guarantee to give you I only have to pay for his own police
lines of lhe various European ex­ | Increased requirements for teachreturned Monday from a ten-days’.I and loo
u-rs and
looters
and warblers among the
But HERE IS A JOKER SINCE The government can break Us con- 1 and
protection, the matnie- ra An enterprising business man
periments In socialism and dictator­ । era have made county normals of
trip to New York.
-high school
faculty,
they tel) me.
might
rent
them
out
to
’
summer
much less value, Normal college
ship and because.
trxrt
Leroy Jackson of Lansing was the
tract at
at will
will aitn
with private
private tndividindivid­ ' nan" oI 1h“ I*™"*™ *na his sew•cottagers.
(bi The hope that by thus sacri­ training with a life certificate has
*
er. the cleaning of the street, and
- CLAIMS TO BENEFITS. AND CONguest of his old schoolmate. Judge
uals and you can’t do n thing about
ole. part Of last week
pleased with the first appearance ot ficing our traditional freedom, we been made so desirable for any per­
TRIBUTION8
WHICH
START it Consequently if the government al! lhe real of the service the city |
give* him. but contribute to the ’
shall attain a "more abundant life" son who plana to follow leaching
•n&gt;e
in IhB eny
(oM.
NEXT JANUARY WILL GO INTO evgr decided to use lhe funds which cost ot those services for Mr X* .
is a vain and foolish hope, a* no as a profession that a course In a
ntered Saiuraav
. . .
entered
Saturday nlahl
night and nets
acts nf
ot
THE GENERAL FUND. THERE
one has more cogently pointed out teachers' college Is sought by liioso
vandalism committed.
K tt-might accumulate through the office building, apartment house or 1
Bennett's boys biffed Charlotte. than Mr. Roosevelt himself when who plan to be public school teach' IS NO DEFINITE' A£®URANCE
other property which is bringing
Whooppee!
money n takes from your pay check him in no income
he was governor of New York.
THAT ANNUITIES WHATEVER BE
Jor purposes other than old age aiiWhich will make it sweet for the
(3) That Mr. Roosevelt's individ­
PAID. NOTHING TN THE ACT
I WHAT ARE YQU
Raxor blades made of glass arc re­
NEWS
GLEANINGS.
uality is such as to make him an In­
nutty payments, there is nothing few persons who can qualify a* Mr |
HOLLERING ABOUT?
ported from Czechoslovakia—they
CAN PREVENT FUTURE CON­ you could do about it The Fed­ X. but-not so nice for the man who •
The difference of 1-1000 an inch In I, Eighty years ago the employee* effective and dangerous man to are.Inexpensive'and, although they
GRESSES FROM DISSIPATING
hard for a living, like Mr. Y .
have In the White House because his
the depth of the pit on a golf ball.'
eral government cannot be &gt;tied for work*
Cgnnol
be resharpened, they have a
, of Carson. Pirle. scotl fit co. at ChlIt 13 therefore reasonable to con- I
THE FUNDS AS THEY PLEASE
may mean as much as 14 yards of ‘ cage were handed lhe following actions and intellectual processes
breaking a contract like a private elude that Mr Y will vote again.-,-. ■
"The opportunity of &lt;i fifmmr idJom
arc too greatly dominated by his
variation in Ils carry.
j rules:
tomei to you to Lwrlrd "
the proposed amendment, and he I
emotions, and because his .cmot'onkl
But assuming tor the moment concern.
Joreph Aspdln, a stone-mason of’ Store must be open from 6 A. M drive U primarily an Inordinate de­
that payment* will be made a* per
Another thing to consider U theI1 will be everlastingly right in so do- I
OCTOBER
j tag — Detroit News.
Q
2t—Sar»ti Bernhardt trail
sire for popularity.
1 Leeds. England. I* credited with or- । to a p. M lhelyear arounoi.
schedule. Table No 2 shows that if cost of administering this act No
Mr. Roosevelt has definitely de­
IsuuUnc wd n.aur., -rorllind Oe8U)„,
b. „,Ki co«nUr&gt;.
ihent.
i base shelves and show cases dusted; termined lhe issue on which he
I
must, go to lhe country next year.
ten the next five years at an average- Some claim that adminbiralion
1.MM0O raowcuu n» Mil o!
SUM ■"a
He has definitely determined that
BRIEF OB8ERVATION8.
I
wage of (30.00 per week, you may costs will consume most of the funds!
u... &gt;r.r
Lo
r.“ Sf*.; d“"
the issue shall be whether or not
"In the new day, let us trust that j
' retire, providing you give up all collected, certain it is from the exfilling station or garage to every |
J?
we want to (bandon the home rule
mile and a half un surfaced high- ° 4
(w there
galnful occupation^ and draw from perience of other countries that the problems which In past decades
principle, state rights and the fun­
wavs in the IT r
lore oreakia.se (if mere is time to
the insurance fund lhe munificent, such an Act ril! mean a new army seemed to inhere in the industrial |
damental
concept ot our Constl’Incarly hiTI
do so&gt; and attend to customers who
system shall be solved Under Ideal
[ THAT QUY J
luUonal democracy in order to make
JHXT NfTWfT.J
sum of (3M PER WEEK. If you of Federal employees 100.000 strong conditions, we should avoid nol only i
Science has a device tor splitting | “li­
IGCST NO MOAe
a try for the “more abundant life"
ari now twenty years old and work or more. They will get a sure bene­ the peaks of extreme and artificial
IjeNll TRAN
the atom, not two ways, but 30. It
Store must not be opened on the by setting up a bureaucratic dicta­
should pul all cutters ot drugstore I Sabbath unless necessary and then
for lhe next forty-five years at an fit from lhe funds taken from your prosperity, but. what h most Im-!
torship of master minds In Wash­
layer
cakes
on
their
mettle.
I
only
for
a
few
minutes.
portant.
the
terrible
declines
into
I
weekly wage.
ington.
-M«sMdnn*rti
the valley of depression and des-'
Correct thlTS^re -That', a L?'C
Mr. Warburg stales that Mr.
you.and your family may then re­
pair " -John J Bennett. Jr.. New I
good radio program children." said
the^rtwr a8
re Rooeevell In anticipating the in­
.
tire. If you give up all gainful oc- , BUT MR WORKINGMAN AND York Stale Attorney-General.
Cliff.
dad. but you haven't got R loud £•***
validation of lha AAA by the Su­
flQUtfT.’
'
cupatlon. and receive (1283 per MISS OR MRS WORKING WOM­
enough
"
dances
and
other
places
of
amuse
preme
Court said with obvious cha­
"This U a time when we must be I
;
week. To get the maximum benefit AN. WILL YOU?
1 ment. will surely give hl* employer
grin that this would mean a return
humble »nd hesitant in our judg- ‘
Middle names were once illegal in 1 reason lo be suspicious of Ills in­
of (11)61 per week you must’ have
menus, but if the United States gets ;
England English royalty itself had legrity and honesty.
achieved lhe task of working lor­
out of step with the rest al the I
but a single baptismal name until1 Each employee must nol pay lea*
’
ty-five yean (commencing at' the
world economically by Increasing
the time of William III. who was a ' than (5 00 per year to the church any crop a* he pleased."
- —
w._, .
, Thc sU&gt;ck
shows new and prices of her commodities to a level i
Ot the ineffectivcnes* nf much of
. and must attend Bunday School
™
i~l Kl ji’per wrt'l ‘“n»Wn« bwincy. a.v.r.1 mdu.- very much above that of other! The oldest guidebook in the world Dutchman.
the federal control laws he cite* lhe
regularly.
countries the consequences may be ls
"DtaCTlPtion of Greece." by
lnc Michigan nun
way urparvThe
Highway
Departstricture* on cotton planting fol­
&gt; worUr U IXW
yem old aid trUU °“ r'““‘
“•« s»»" “2 serious."—Dj. Harold o Moulton one Pauaanlas, of whom lilUe U menl
has a truck with a magnetic . Men employee* are given on* lowed by strictures on peanut rail­
«MVa iloddlly Ur the nerflhlrly the prlc* 01 * 'xnk
"Piece.—a President.
Brookings
Institution known save that he was bom
bom In sweeper ui.k
which sock* up nail* and night s weak for courting and two ing which va* substituted For colve*n al on iverere were ol uo 00 p“° worW •««•■
Washington.
If they go to prayer meeting.
'
Lydia and flourished In lhe second metal scraps on the highways.
After 14 hour* of work In Ui*
century under lhe Emperor Hadrian.
(Mr wMk. ht may retire on a salary । Every man ha* a right to hb own
"We no longer regard leisure u He Spent many years trawling
The Gardenia was named after' store, leisure hours should be spent
the potato crop. A taw name to exist
from lhe government of |J1.71 per opinion, but before radio became m a chance for idleness —William
through Greece, and recorded ills Alexander Garden. *p early Ameri­ moaily in reading.
that no one could grow more tiuui
WMk but if he 1* les* fortunate and mduatry he could bore only a lew Green.
travels.
can botanist.
buzhela of potatoes without a
। Marble Arch, now opposite five
edgemattagm to earn over lhe thirty-. people at a time with it.-MUwankee
Tiie most dangerous unempioy"No presidential third term" U on- ware Road. London, stood until 1IS1 special license, or to buy .any pota­
More than 500,000 female work­
= -U
unemployment of the ers are registered In the building ly an unwritten taw in the United j at the central aolraoce of Bucktag­ toes not stamped with lha special
mind. —Ernest Hopkin*.
State*.
'bamPklMO.
stamp
or packed in the prescribed
Industry in Russia.
A ROBBER IN DISGUISE.

is extracted from that portion of
the saliiry above this amount.
Another joker is that this lax Is
to be gradually boasted for the next
twelve years until it reaches a
maximum or
of a Three
sure® ret
Per Cent deI duction from the weekly

V

5

|ij

$

•&gt;V

and Opinions;
What Others Say
tmnT

Views

A

Quotation

Backward Glances;- ■
Bits of Yesterday

Way of Our World

TRAFFIC

Crumbs of Wisdom

Pungent Paragraphs

a

U

GgatGetters

nour.c* i
daughter.
Raymond
nols. Th
Saturday,
point, ini

Carl C. Cc
The coup
and Mrs.
tie Cieek,

and wore
Mrs. HI
lings Hlg
State Te
Mr. Hlati
Brownato
tended E
College ii
Unlverslt:

tor Bales
to their f
menu, 11

The mi
to Albert
Btceby. a
of the br
Charles f
The Rev
the slngl
presence
and tntii
silver all
bride. h«
chrysant
Myra St

chrysant
grooms m
,nony a
Uen sue
Mr ar

DELI Gil

terlindi

tlal ever
On Tl
Den.smo'
attcndni

Mrs Rii

twentyThlrtj
mlscella
Boyes'
ward.vor
A ton
shower
John N
cm on I

DE
Mr.-.
Dclphln
her nm
eon wo
Mrs. R

Kins •

�TM minus, wmn. attiMOAr. octoix* n, mi
II—&gt;■!&gt;!—na il well—*■11'

MISOUXANtOVB itowa

PRESENTS VOLUME
i
TO PUBLIC LIBRARY'

I

SOCIAL EVENTS : &gt;£SS!^
t£^Ti
with a mUoellaneoua shower for

Oirsle No 8 ef Uw Msthodtet L. A­
*. at har homo on Monday avanlng.
American Leyton AaxQUry1
------- .—•*"l'srre. Arthur B. Valentine at the Bha wa* aaalatad by Mr*. Gary
HIATT-GIDDINGS.
home ot Mra J. L. Vatetatta*. Bev- Crook and Mn. Joa. Tredinnick
Gives History Covering
The usual pot luck supper wm
Mr and Mrs Ouy Giddings an- •"*
Yeert 1134-34
served foliowod by the burine** seanounce the marriage of their Z*™!
Aa * part of It* Community Bervdaughter.
w‘
daughter. Beatrice
Beatrice B.
K Giddings.
Giddings. to
to NTrt43n
~ S? dlacuaaad. MU* Mary Brockway of
IM work lhe American Legion Auxil­
Raymond R Hiatt. aon of Mr and
Mre vTlSuiS re?
iary hM recently purchased a his­
Mrs B. O Hiatt of Brownstown. I1H- ’”“l 01 honor’ Mr* ValM1UM «’ Grand Rapid* and Mr*. Fred Smith
tory of that organisation for the
celvad acme very lovely gifts. Outnol*. The wedding took place on of-town gueate were Mrs. Frank
years 1FM-1K4 which Mrs Ham
Saturday October 17. in Crown
PARENTS OF SON.
| Wood, who hM hut closed her year ‘
fihaw of Middleville and Mra Rich­
point. Ind
The single ring cere­
A little Boy Scout came Monday
a*- president of the local Unit, ha*
ards of Cincinnati, Oho. mother and
mony was performed by the Rev.
presented to the Ha«Ung» public
to
make
hl*
home
with
Mr.
and
Mr*
Carl C. Cole nf the Christian church. aunt ot lhe bride
Lloyd Shafer. Peru. III. He weighed
The coupl? were attended by Mr.
seven
and
one-half
pound*
Mother
The history tell* of "the past ten
MM. HAAS HONOKKD.
and Mrs Frank Rutherford of Bat­
and son are doing well and Daddy to
year* of effort and achievement tn
1 Mrs F Earl Haas. Jr.. (Norma anticipating a great future for hl*
tle deck.
support of lhe American Legion and '
Evans) was the guest ot honor at a aon. congratulations are extended
The bride chose a brown wool suit miscellaneous shower given by Mrs.
tn service lo America."
and wore brown and gold accessor­ Ouy Keller at her home last Thurs­ by their friend* in Hasting* and
In the United BtatM there are ».Barry oounty
M0 Unite with a membership of
ies.
day evening Musical selection* by
K0.0M
Mrs. Hiatt is a graduate of Has­ Mrs. H. J. Foster and Mra J. A.
MoCULLOUGH—NASH.
|
Thia history I* finely illustrated
tings High school and of Western McNulty furnished part of the en­
Charles M McCullough ot Orwith pictures of national officer*;
State Teachers’ College and to a tertainment, and much poetic abil­
scene* from various conventions;
teacher In lhe Battle Creek schools. ity and varying degrees of di­ angevllle and Adeline May Nash of1
Prairieville
township
were
united
hospital
scenes where poppta are
Mr. Hiatt to a graduate of the plomacy were brought out during
being made by disabled veterans
Brownstown High school and at­ the course of the evening. Fourteen in marriage Monday morning by
justice ot the peace Adalbert Cort­
and other Interesting views.
tended Eastern Illinois Teaching guests were present.
I right at hl* office Th* witnesses
In donating this volume to the I
College in Charleston. 111., and the
I were Gilbert Helmling of Doster |
library Mr* Wool and the other
NEW IDKA CLUB.
University of Southern Illinois. He
Auxiliary member* felt they were
Is connected with Montgomery Mo­ | Mrs Frans Willison was the Oc- and Katie QUphant of Delton.
rendering a real service a* the his। lober hostess with a lovely dinner
tor Biles Co
lory contain* so much reliable in­
Mr. and Mrs Hiatt arc at home at 6:30 The spirit of autumn was
formation concerning tha work of
to their friends in lhe Abbey Apart­ carried out In house and table dec| orations. After dinner we were tak­
both the Legion and the Auxiliary
ments. 130 N Division. Battle Creek
in the United States and other
en to the school auditorium to listen
I lo Arthur Kkne’s travel lecture
countries a* well. You will find It
8TEEBY—STINE.
interesting and Informative reading.
which delighted all; then a return
Mra.
P.
E
Johnston
wm
hostess
The marriage ot Miss Cecil Bllne i to Mrs. Willison's home where lhe
Tk. Freaek Faralga L*giea
'
lo Albert Streby. gon of Aaron &gt; business meeting was held followed to lhe Three Time* Four Club on
Friday
evening.
Dessert
wm
served
Streby. was solemnised al the home by a lively social Um*.-u*
The French Foreign Legtoa aefollowed by bridge, it wa* a very
of lhe bride’s parents. Mr. and Mr&lt;
cepte men of eny nationality over !
delightful event.
Charles Btlne. on Saturday evening.
TEA FOR GUARDIANS.
eighteen years of age and under ,
Ttu; Rev Lemuel severance read
forty, who measure one meter end '
Mrs. Anna Newton entertained
the single ring ceremony In lhe I On Wednesday afternoon of last
BA centimeter* (fir* feat), and whose j
presence of the Immediate families week Mrs. A. L. Brown entertained the twelve members of th* J. P. F.
। the Hastings Camp Fire Guardian* Club on Wednesday afternoon at
physical fitness Is proved by a cer- '
and Intimate friends.
1 at tea. nine being present. The hon­ her home in the first ward.
tiflcate presented at the recruiting
A gown of French organdy and or guest was MIm Marian Bamabey
office.
silver slipper* were worn by the of Bailie creek, an assistant execuToday. Thursday, Mrs. Krmont
Enilstmant t* for five yeara, after
bride, her bouquet being of white । five lite ladle* enjoyed a dtocuasion
Newton I* hosleaa to the Y. M. L.
which the loldlar may reenlist for
chrysanthemum*. Her sister. Mis* ' of Camp Fire work. Later in the
Myra Stine, wore yellow satin and afternoon. Miss Barnabey spoke lo Club at their regular pot luck
a period of one to five year*. After '
brown slippers and carried yellow । the four active Camp Fire groups luncheon.
15 year* of service be I* panslon^J
chrysanthemum^ Leo Nyr was lhe । at school
la proportion to the pay ha hM re- .
___ __________
The members of an Einbroidery
groomsman. Following the cere­
reived. Tt&gt;e Foreign Legtoe la gar- i
Club farmed quite a number of
mony a reception was held for Lif­ ’ DINNER AT GRAND RAPTOR.
risoned In the French possession* [
years ago when their children wrre
I
Mr
and
Mrs.
CW
Wesplnter,
ts en guests.
small, are being entertained this
of northern Africa (Algeria and j
Mi and Mrs Streby will reride Mr* R F T- Dodds. Mr. and Mr*.
AXler more than 500,000 mile* ot successful experimentation In
Morocco), In Tonkin and tn Asiatic |
fall by several of the member*
oh B MtehllU' A"
Tuesday they were the guest* of
trans-Paciflc airmail flights. Pan American Airway*' three great
Turkey. Recruit* are enlisted on
Mr*. W. A. Hall at a dessert bridge,
Clipper ship* are scheduled to begin regular passenger service Oct
French territory, and foreigners
on lost Thursday of Mr*. D. C.
21 over the 8000-mile route from San Francisco to Manila. At top
anxious to join must travel there
Bronson and the week before of
the China Clipper is shown over Golden Gate on one ot its airmail
Mr. a. A
In Mrs George Newton These mect: at their own expenae.
voyages and below—the other end of the trail—la Manila harbor,
Grand
Rapids.
The
affair
wa*
given
Mrs. Loren Boyes 'Florence Wes­
I ing* are the first one* to be held
where the old world and new now meet Map shows the Cup­
! There's one place America could
terlind! ha* be-n recently honored to celebrate Mr. Anderson’* birth- Ln four year* The member* in­
pers' route (solid black line) from San Francisco to Manila, ordi­
| stand a little erosion—In some of
__________
with several delightful post-nup­ d«y __________
clude Mr* Hall. Mr* Bronaon. Mrs
narily covered Ln 80 hours. From Manila to China La only rix
। Ito current novels.
tial events.
Newton. Mr* W. W Potter of LanENTERTAINED WITH
hours'
more
flying
time.
On Thursday evening. MIm Audra
SUNDAY DINNER. ring. Mrs. Anna McGufftn. Mrs E.
Densmore entertained with a linen
Mrs. Geo. Hulinga
entertained 1F Bollum and Mrs. Frank CarHIGH .SCHOOL NOTES.
I I
shower for Mr*. Boyes, with ten in ,
ROAD COMMISSION
with a dinner on Sunday lhe fol­ rothera.
attendance.
Tile annual Ag-HE exposition (
lowing ladles: Mrs. John Hullngs of
A grocery shower st the home of
SPENDS MORE MONEY sponsored by the P F A- will be1
Mrs E F, Bottum i* entertaining
Stony Point. Mrs. Mary McIntyre.
Mr* Richard covey. E State Road,
held in the high school gym Nov. 5
Mrs Rose Waldron and Mrs. Jennie lhe members of her bridge club
was previously given for Mrs Boyes, Waters all of Hatting*. A bounti­ today (Thursday) al her home on Does More Work, Guta B&amp;l- and 6 A special program arranged
Waters Clothes Shop
twenty-five guests being present
for Friday night will be given In1
ful repast was served by the host­ East Walnut street. Mr and Mr*
ance,
But
Haa
Thirty guests were Invited to a
the Central auditorium
One ot.
ess and all proclaim Mrs Hullng* Bottum will leave soon for Grand
miscellaneous shower given by Mr.*
Enough
Rapids
to
spend
the
winter
the
main
feature*
of
the
ex-1
Boyes’ mother. Mrs
O*car Ed- a royal entertainer.
During this year the Barry coun­ position will be the exhibit of the
wardson. of Muskegon recently
1
conservation
department
The North Michigan Ave Birth­ ty road commission has done a lar-1 state
ENTERTAINED AT DINNER.
A taming event is a miscellaneous
Mr .. Harry O Hayes entertained day Club wa* delightfully enter­ ger volume ot work than ordinarily. which was shorn al Ute stele fair
shower with Mr* Boyes’ aunt. Mrs. eight guest* at dinner last Friday tained on Wednesday evening by A* a consequence the cash on hand i tn Detroit this year. This la the
John Nelson, of Muskegon as hosi­ evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs Mrs. Wm Bollman
in the various road funds 1* less ii largest exhibit the department has. |
er on Saturday evening. Oct 31.
E A Burton and Miss Ruth Handy,
than half of what it wa* a year ago. 60x30 feet, and contains specimen*'
who leave November 3 to spend lhe FISCHER’S ORCHESTRA EN­
On Oct 1. IMS the road commls- i ot all of Michigan’s fish, birds and
DELPHIAN STUDY CLUB.
1 winter at Miami. Fla
GAGED FOR BLISS CO. PARTI’. *lon had a balance on hand of animals.
Dwight Ferris to manager of the
Mr.- Robert cook entertained the I
------- ------Oct 31 to the date *et for the tlO0.46O.B5 It* ca*h receipt* during
Delphian Stud, Club on Monday at I
IS FRATERNITY FLEDGE.
second annual party given by lhe the year from the state have been exposition and will be assisted by
her home on W Green St Lunch-1
Victor Munton of 123 E Blate employees of the E W B11m Com­ J183.007.05, making a total of &lt;293.­ Hiram Healy. The Ag-HE exhibi­
eon a tvs served io nine after which Road. Hastings, wa* pledged last pany and their guest*.
tion
put on by Hastings high school
548 80 The commission has paid out
Mrs Robert Wnltnn of Kalamaroo week lo lhe Sigma Chi Della social
This year Odd Fellow’s hall ha* for labor, supplies and machinery holds the record for being the larg-1
reviewed the book "Long Live lhe fraternity al lhe University of been secured, and Ftochrr'* orches­ during the year 3738.84267 which est In lhe stele.
Klnj 1 Southern California.
tra of Kalamazoo will furnish mu*ic left a balance on hand Oct. I this
A very complete
DEATH OF MAX SMITH.
for the dancing. Halloween decora- year of 353.70563. More money will |
Max E. Smith was bom in Oer- ,
lions and favors will be used
। come fron} the state this year so
•lock of Plaid
A floor show to being planned in | the road commission will have funds i many on April 39. 1860 and died;
connection, card game* are on lhe I for necessary work in 1936. and a at his home near Dowling on Tues-1
program for those who prefer this i good balance at the end of the year. day. Oct. 31. aged 78 years. 5 mo*, ,
JACKETS, SKI
133 day*. Funeral services will be ,
| form of entertainment lo dancing
Door prizes will also be given. When
Taxes are the chief exception to 1 held at the residence today. Thur*SUITS and SKI
the first party was held last year the rule that what goes up must i day. oet- 23, at eleven o'clock, with'
| interment tn the Union cemetery.
; It* success succeeded all expecte- come down.
l Uon*. and by the way tickets are .
PANTS
: being engaged for the present af- j
Every Saturday and
I fair It la expected over 300 will be
Sunday Evening*
for woman, misses
I tn attendance.
FRESH HAM
Marie by Mania'* Orrheaira
Statistician* «ay there are more
and children.
Hallowe'en Dance October 30
than wo kinds of game* played with
ball*
. why there are more than
that number played with golf ball*.

Club Meetings

Play-1 ex ranui
keep me very presentable. Made af liquid latex, they're
tissue-thin, soft, cool. They're stainless, odorless, and

I

non-irritating, and they'll outlast and outwash any
\
pants you ever saw. Demi-Tasse,
\ Medium, Large; flesh, white or blue . ftPWW® J

X. Gib end CerfiejS Sheets . ....n.oo/

\ M^/ and TthpSnnt OrdmNU /

I

You’ll Went These
Features in Your
Hosiery!

I
'

ciMUcur throw*

1.

flnlah.
4ubtoOT_
wear* UMteflnWely.

Visit Our

Sportswear

Department

DANCING
At (Hear Lake Lodge

Pork Roasts
25c PORK LOIN

ROASTS
a. 22c Bi
Freeh Ground

Ham Ends

Hamburg

2

BOYS’ and GIRLS'
ONE OR TWO-PIECE

SPORT COATS

Snow Suits

for men and boys.

PRICU RANCE

$225 $391 $5,0°
Deer

Suede Gloves

Hunters

Smoked

29c

BLAZERS,

MACKINAWS,

19c -

Here i* one of the

largest stocks of

CHICKENS r-rHEAD LETTUCE
GRAPE FRUIT

MR. FARMER...
do your farm buildings need repairs?
• All Indication* Point to Building
Year .

Mataria!*

Being

Much Higher Next

. SO SAVt MONEY by Doing Your REPAIR WORK THIS FALL

Consult us concerning repairing under the
NATIONAL HOUSING ACT!
Improve lhe appearance and value ofyour farm!

•

NATIONAL BANK
OF HASTINGS

HASTINGS, M1CUICAN

■

■

■

TELEPHONE

*21?

“

CELERY CABBAGE
BUTTER
APPLES

23c
lOc
5
26c
r.~&gt;. lOc
’i 34c

Soo Wools

7.*- 25c

Prices that are
Right- too.

Hubbardren

w

SQUASH

CRANBERRIES

ELDPAUSCH

•MARKET’

Phone 2272 We Deliver
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

- 3c

in Michigan.

in Fabric, Suede and Kid
Heavy shirts, sox,
gfoves,' mitts ond
wool underwear.

2 - 35c

WATERS
CLOTHES SHOP

SfEing Quthtf Etrpt Ui &gt;S*y

5Oc • 85c • ♦
ADVANCE SALEo/ j
Outing Flannel Night
Pajamas—at Ptsy

Fra

�tfttmrrHna euryt*. tpcmoif. ocro*t».c. n»
pounds Is normally marketed and is
usually worth from one and one
half to two million dollars.
Bees do mart than make a honey
Fifty to Sixty Fonndi of crop. Michigan's important fruit
and seed production U aided an­
Hooey Needed to Keep
nually. Kelly estimates, to the ex­
Average OeUhy
tent of 21 million dollars because
.. Aids far Michigan's 2OO.M4 sol- of the work of bees in fertilizing
fruit and other crop blossoms.
X on les of bees will be Watched more
closely this winter because of an
XI increase In honey prices of 10 to 15 FIRESIDES TURN
01 per cent, in lhe opinion of R. H.
TO POPPING CORN
&gt;'. Kelty. extension
beekeeper at
Good weather for ducks In the
X Michigan State College.
He auvtses
or- rau
fall 01
of inc
the year usually
usuauy mean*
means mat
that
advises severs:
several projects deV signed to keep colonies fed and ’ families which resort lo popcorn
comfortable for the winter. A colony •"
for fireside gatherings
—•— —are —
about
•
1 should contain five to seven pounds ready lo open the season for cider,
Xfof bees, with a young and active crisp apples and popcbm and it's
a queen. Weak colonies may be unit­ usually about the time that Hallo­
V cd by placing a sheet ot newspaper ween approaches.
High prices for popcorn this fall
0 winter feeding should have between and unfavorable weather for a good
V 50 to 60 pounds of well ripened home grown supply point out the
X 1 white honey, preferably ctorer. The necessity of better care In harvest­
1 supply should be checked now. not ing and storing, according to J. R
Duncan of the farm crops depart­
X, at Christmas.
0
For winter protection Kelly sug- ment al Michigan State College.
‘ gests the use of tar paper covering. I Years spent In the study of pop­
1 grouping two or three colony corn growing and use have given
houses under each shelter. Exten­ Duncan many points of information
sion Bulletin No. 77. "The Tar [about the crop. In harvesting, the
paper Packing Case for Wintering popcorn must be allowed to mature
Bees." describes lhe process. The thoroughly on the stalk, immature
bulletin may be obtained by writ­ ears are high in moisture and may
ing the Bulletin Room, Michigan nol only spoil but spread mold
State college. East Lansing.
spores to the more mature ears with
Honey
produced
in
1936
in which they comj in contact.
Michigan Is being called lhe best
Corn should be dead to the third
honey crop in 10 years, although I Joint below lhe tassel if it is to be
there I* a comparatively light crop. cut and shocked. If husked from
Commercially
million the hill, the stalk should be en-

WINTERING BEES
REQUIRE LARDER

Fairchild s
Phone 2522

144 E. State St.

DRESSES
New

Arrival*
in Silk
Crepe

r

SALES TAX INCLUDED

COTTON CREPE
and RAYON ___.

s1.98

Sweater BLOUSES
$4 QQ
at
$1.00 and
I &gt;30
TWIN SWEATER
SETS at $2.25 and

QQ
U.3O

HATS, $1.00 to $3.98

tirely brown and dead before uporating the ear from the stalk.
Most important to those who
handle the popper, whether that
person Is the grower or a city buyer,
is the moisture content. Fourteen
per eent Is considered best.
Too little moisture, says Duncan,
causes corn to pop quickly and
feebly. Sprinkle with a little Water
three to four days befaFe using, or
hang In a bag where moisture can
be absorbed from the air. Too little
moisture causes popcorn to steam
and then scorch with Utile popping.
The corn should be placed in a
moderately warm dry place where
the temperature Is between 60 and
70 degrees.
.

The Ute President William Mc­
Kinley attended a school managed
by Presbyterian and Methodist
clergymen. When but twenty-four
he was chosen superintendent of
the Bdnday school. How deep-sentmade manifest when, at Buffalo,
September fl. 1901. be wag mortally
Wounded by an assassin. “It Is
God's way," he said. “Hla will, not
odH) be done.” John Hay declared:
“President McKinley showed the
world how a Christian gentleman
utiould live and bow a Christian
could die.”
.

Grant’s Tomb
The corner stone ot Grant’s tomb
on Riverside drive In New York,
was laid by President Harrison on
April 27. 1892. the seventieth anni­
versary of Grant’s birth.
It was
dedicated on the seventy-fifth annlverimry.
The cost was Sbont
$000,000. which was subscribed by
90.000 persona—none of It being
paid by elfher the government or
the city.

Not many years ago on ths plains
of Argentina, tbs gauebos, or cow­
boys. used a unique method of cootown. The lady would alt on a dried ,;
horsehide while th* gentleman,1;
mounted on Ida horse. would drag ।
It along the ground by a long rope
tied to hla oaddle. All the had to I

Ing over the bumps and keep from
choking on the dust stirred op by

Einstein has been photographed
looking through a glass-bottomed
boa: in Bermuda. Maybe we should
brace ourselves for a theory on
"A man who can take another's
view Is a rare philosopher." says a
writer. Or a suburban builder.

।

I

Thunderstorm* occur on an aver-1
Java, which Incidentally la the most
densely populated land mas* In ths
world—821 to the square mile.

it’s Ward

The origin of game* la loat In
antiquity and acme which are atlll
played are too old to be traced to
their eouree. Herodotua tella ua.
aaye Tlt-Blta Magazine, that moal
of them were Invented by tb, Lydiana a* a palliative nt n time of
acute famine which lasted 18 yeara.
Tho Lydiana decides! to play game*
one day and eat on the next. They
claimed to be the Inventora of ninny
populnr Greek game*. Including
kntickle-bonea, ball and dice.
During the excavation of the pal­
ace of Minoa In Crete an ornate
backgammon board was discovered.
The Greeks played a game called
aiyx. which was adopted by the
Roman* and become the Twelve­
Line game, and survives today a*
backgammon. Snbaequently Roman
officialdom frowned jupon game* Insolving dice becmirt they led to
heavy gambling.
Cheas Is reputes! to be of Indian
origin, and It must bo the game
which ha* been played longest with­
out any alteration of rule*, alnce
castling wa* Introduced In the Sixteen th century, j

Huge Machine
for a Tiny Job

'
1
|

•

Boundary cotnmlulonera who dieborders of British Guiana and Braall describe It as resembling the

iimrriwini

WARD WEEK ENDS SATURDAY

This nuge tcienum maenme
built to develop 800.000 volts
will smash the nuclei of atoms,
which are less than one-thousanflth the size ot a pinhead.
The apparatus will occupy two
floors at one end of a hail In a
University ot Chicago building.

South for 97th
Winter

[WARD WEEK SPECIAL!

35 Lb. Smooth

£
8

ROLL
ROOFING
Sov.£rtra O(h&lt;*
WanfWMi OCFbolL

FOR YOUR
OLD ICE BOX

Low-cost, light-weight as­
phalt roofing, smooth talc
surface. Buy now!

Guaranteed 24 Mo.l
New Winter Kina

£

*20

47s

REFRIGERATOR

EXCH.

Big 6!&gt; Cv. Fl Slit

Reg. $5.25.
45 platea In­
stead of tuuWith Old Im 801

WARD WEEK SPECIA

8

Stanoard Quality
Hot Water Heater

At I

Almost unbelievable at^ys low price! A beautiful wal­
nut-grained AC consofefAvith Wards exclusive Movie

Ward Week brings

Dial. (See at a glance what station you’re hearing!)

frigeratorl 13 sq. ft.

metal tubes, rugged and silent! Chrome plated rubber

cabinet,
porcelain
interior, automatic
light! 11.50 value!

mounted chassis. Speaker is housed in a curvilinear

Year
Protection
Plan

With Porcelain Ex­
terior and old box—
$134.95
6 1/3 Cu. Ft. Deluxe
with ice box. $140.95

Regular 1J9I
Self - polish-

\ MH
t^^ai . .

_— ' - • *

.

*

i t ’ '■
’i-

tool atari.

COMB'N
SNIP

55c

.3

PUBLIC ENEMIES

$55.00

6-tube A. C. Airline Mantel .

$17.95

Q&amp;OS

Vn^$MUtqSW'PcMV(\

Ward Week Onlyl

00
Cast Iron
RANGE

491s

Down

Wards biggest range
value, extra low priced.
500 Iba. of massive cast

Super House Paint
America’s finest house paint I Guaran­
teed to look as well, cover aa much
surface and last as long as any paint
made regardless of name or price!
(Bring container for free thinners.)

[ward

■WARD WEEK SPECIAL

FEATURES!

5 W o Prices Reduced during
J
Word Week Onlyl

Pull 42-in. sice ... big,
roomy cabinet! Cast
iron rink covered with
Finest Quality porce­
lain enamel; rolled
steel cabinet finished
in white, easy-to-cletn

$3 DOWN. $4 month.
Small carrying charge.

WITH $90

-j Free Linseed Oil and
* Turpentine with 5 gals.

2294

$WAL H

CftEEPfP)

240

strong. Thrilllngly
modern balanced de­
sign. Full porcelain,
Bavel

G.l,

week special

WARD WEEK SPECIAL

[WARD WEEK SPECIA
With every piece of Sala Aluminum you may
buy ono of the abova utensils for................ ,

h

Aluniiiiuiiiware
This quality alu­
minumware at ..

100% PURE.PENN OIL
Ward Week 1 A 1 C
Me Trfco— IU24L

5

rs

“TH £
1 l-tube A. C. Airline Coniole

CABINET SINK

Ward
Weohl

Save 15?*
Ward Week!
12' Igth. 3'
blade of tem­
pered steel.

(rounded) chamber. Liquametal interior. (Did you ever
hear of more for the money?) Save, during Ward Week!

____________ 1

Hack Saw
Blades
’

Save 20SI
10"
Flexi­
ble.Tungsten

All three wave bands; hear the whole world! Genuine

Wards Sell More Radios than any retailer in the World

uj ARD WEEK SPECIAL

high gios*!

[WARD WEEK SPECIA

Frail but earnestly Hoping lo
live to the century mark. John
D. Rockefeller. Sr., is shown
here ns he arrived in Florida to
spend his 97th winter nt his air­
conditioned home, "Casements.

The Cathode Ray “eye" takes the guess out of tuning!

ever on thia big fam-

With Fittings
Equal to a
11295 heater.
Save In Ward
Week

1OO
B-H-gal.

8

Wnrd Week Only! 7 Tubes!

Only « DOWN!
Carrying Charge

;j»S

Wax with
Spreader

.5

37««

on Any 1936 Model Famous M-W Electric

90-35c qL grade I
•LO0 - 6 Gal.
$ qL can 72c. Pl:

TEA KETTLE. 5 quart —.....
PERCOLATOR, «-ewp ...............
COVERED KETTLE, 8-qt. ......
DOUBLE BOILER, IS quart ..
DISH PAN, 14-qaart....................
8AUCE PAN SET, 3 piece*........
REGULAR |LM VALUE

IVft Ward Week at
HUM SOUTH ISFFIMON CT.

79‘

Cast Iron Furnace

O' o' .J

No other furnace has

ALL Wards

featu •os!

6788
money-saving efficiency! This
furnace actually pays for itlelf

is Wardco Iron, a new, tough
alloy that gives years of extra
wear I
See this valuo today!
BIO M-INCH FIREPOT

R eg u Iany 574.951

2 Big Modern Piece*

5R““
Covered in combination tapes­
try I New style features! Rich­
ly carved arm panels I Restful
78 inch davenport!

$5 DOWN, $6 Moe th, Carrying Charg

MONTGOMERY WARD
TSLIFHONi 2691

Not so innocent as one might
think is this candidate for "pub­
lic enemy" of the highway di»-„
honors.
'
By inconsiderately edging his
car across the saicty lines of
cross-walks at'strect comers, the
Cross-Walk Creeper forces ped­
estrians into danger zones. Many
serious accidents result.
Good drivers are considerate
of others—they obey the law by
stoMinq back of the cross-walk,
Capital* on Mlssitrippl Riser
IL Paul. Mlntu and Baton
tab located on the Ulularipni river.

�T— BAgTIMOr BAMHt* TWVX8DAT, OCTOBMl M, 1W

e
Job

t

I MIm Belva Riley wa* home from
Mra. Sarah Brandstetter ha* ra„
, Midland over the waek end.
| turned from a visit ot several weeks REPUBLICAN WOMEN
! Mr*. Roy puller and Ml** Lettie with relatives in Delton and KalaATTEND TEA SATURDAY *"■
Oam were tn Grand Rapids last । tnazco. She also visited Mr. and
Wednesday.
’
Mra. Hubert Btakney of Ann Arbor. Two Speikert Discing Cam- and
Mr*. All* Navins of Orangeville I Mr. and Mr*. Archie Tobias. Ray­
pai&lt;n—Plan Active
------- -- ------------------------ -------- -----Twp. wm the guest of Mrs. Nettie 1 mond Tobias, Dora Thermo*. Mr.
I Mr. and Mn Frank Pennine of1
one ‘‘•y ’•* **eki °&lt;McareU1 and JlmmY Jrnnlng* al)
unit
Organisation
LOMU were tue»te of Mr
Mra I *"•
Emerson Hammond from Hastings were in Grand RapMT*.
Carina c. Warrington, an it- !
UotoIltoSh m Frtdav
“dMrt- entertained rreeto from OekEeid., Id* Thursday to hear Prealdent
torney from Fort Wayne. Ind., and ]:
,
।
o^t
end
Roowvelt speak.
Hon. John O- Ketcham wm toej;

] *

Social Events and Personal Mention
51

1

Trai
Mrs. Jason McElwain and MUs U from Tburaday tiu Saturday.
! JJ2hTOfH^hRfiulh’* hrother’ w"’iLs. P. E. Adair tbU week.
Igue.u of Mr and Mr.
Emily McElwain wtri tn Detroit
MT. and Mn. Eime Andie were
T’ ^“hI Mr. uid Mr*. Edgar Brooks had j workman. Mr*, o Brien and Mrs J SSL tea'^wrh aUcrdcdbr J^reSaturday.
hv
WM »n«‘oea °7 ■*«. agwaman,

• 7tre

MT. and MTS. H. W- HWer ot Ionia

J

1

acnine,
1 volts,
atoms,
*-thouinlicnd.
py two

nlding.

rth

I

John
shown
ridn to

ncnts.”

€S

raoocri ana pana jonnzon or
.7
—
Battle creek are spending the week,ren
and d*u«ht,'rs
of Belle
Belle-- »n&lt;! Mrs. A. J. Vedder on Bunday.
mother. Mrs. Margaret Laberteaux.; spoke „„ plhe
secmt,
I *T «nd Mr*. Ray Nobann of
spent the week end with relatives with Mra. Agnes piahrr.
Woodland'
”, La£**Ujne Mra and d»u«rtter. Dorlene, of Jackson
what lt wou!d me^
tne
Mr.
and
Mrs
Donald
Bmelker
are
™
Woodland
In East Lansing.
"
• " “ .. ............... ..
.. ......... a"dt
™d
E-J. Cavender labor^ man LTim. wSrtStSJ
vUlllng Mr. and Mrs
William'
tu.e,?„of
,ndi D. M. Stuart and Miss Dona Stuart
Mr. and Mn. Dorrance TYelhrlc Thoma*
were in Grand Rapid* on Thursday. of Leslie, parent* of Mrs Kenneth wh0 h sent out by the Republican
of WlUlanutou.
I Mr ATrlm nd Henry TrUnand children were Sunday guests of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
AB.
Oidley
and
son
Laberteaux.
1
.
--------i.-i
■
----.e_
Mr. and Mr*. Wayne Merrick *nd *
v“d*»’ln- who.u a
National committee, explained the
relative* In Lansing.
Philip visited relatives In Owosso
i main issues ot the campaign.
** W..8 J;, c„' *“ ho’ne' and Lapeer from Wednesday till
Mrs. Tom Taffee of Charlotte Mr*. J. F. Stack visited friends in '
,rOm Wednesday Hl! Bunday with
Mrs
Warren
Carter-.----------was in
ARMISTICE DAY TO
.I —
-----------------spent Bunday with her parents. Mr. Laka Odessa on Sunday
Sunday.
nrr
noccoucn
ucoc
llhar
»« of lhe tK0 vrangetnenta. a
Mr. and Mra. Clarence DaPtenIa
,nd
Charles 1
and Mn. Ray Water*.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ball and lite
BE OBSERVED HERE, large bouquet of fall flowers cenMn. Harold Wright ot Lansing of Grand Rapid* were Bunday I v«*wut.
i tie son Charles of Flint called on
--tering
the
table.
Mr*.
M.
J.
Cross
was a Sunday guest of her parent*. guests of Mr. and Mn. Chari**' Mr*. Yem Bumford. Mrs. Deed*• Frank and Miss Lettie Garn on
Veterans' Organizations and I and Mrs. Elite Faulkner, of Delton
Pott*.
wd to*. Warren Roush। Sunday.
i poured.
Mr- and Mrs C J. Merrick and I »•« hi Freeport on Tuesday afterAuxiliaries Name Their
~~
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Prues* and
I Preceding the luncheon Mra.
Renke* from Detroit «pent the week eon ot Grand Rapids were guest* noon attending the funeral of Mr*, son. Eldred, and Mr. and Mrs. RuI Ketcham entertained at a buffet
Committees
tod at their farm home here.
of Mr. and Mrs. E-A. Caukin on Fred Brunner.
dolph-Scharr spent lhe • week end
I Mrs. Nellie a R. Hopkins and I in Lansing.
i About Mty-flve were present al
Mr. and Mra. Robert McCall of Bunday.
’h°,
Detroit spent the week end with
Mr. and Mr*. Karl Hamilton and daughter. Ooidfc. motored to Gun
Mr. and Mrs. John Schram of the Joint installation of the officer*
his mother. Mra. Mary McCall.
children of Charlotte spent Tues-1 lake. Martin. Btelbyville and Oun ।I Grand Rapids were guests of Mr of the American Legion and Auxill-. ™ X
^re
Mr. and Mn. D. D- Smith and day with her sister. Mrs. R. E. Bush, i plains on Thursday, calling on iI and Mrs. Fred Pierson from Satur- ary last Tuesday evening al the Legion
home
,
R
'lcePr«lllrot’
Susanne of Detroit were guest* of and family.
friends and relatives.
I| day Lili Monday.
PtaET£ being made now for a
Hastings relatives from Friday LUI turned
JJtoav^a^rJti;1
Mra. R. H. Bread, of!I Mr. and Mrs. John Racine are, fte^Tor'X0^ 22*12. E P
Bunday.
An?Hte^
I
ln November with the idee of
Mira
• ^htbridge. Ohio, were lhe guest* moving to Battle Creek where he
Mr. and Mr* Harold Kibbe and retell01 Ur and
I ha* been transferred by the Con­ Sayles for the Auxiliary, both do-,
Cs A.
• Kerr
"
I — —----- ---w&lt;,
on
U&gt;g the work in a creditable manner I lM*P,n8 11 permanent organization
Alva Kibbe of Manton were over relative* in Fl nt.
|I Tuesday
Tuesday night.
night. Dr.
Dr. Hr
Bready U on a sumer* Power Co.
Dinner preceded the installation i acUve &gt;n Ule
Mis* Charlotte Hubbard wa*
Bunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs. A.
I
Sunday
guest*
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Kiking tour through’. Ohio and
J- epfry
home from Kalamazoo the tatter
hlgan thLs week. Mr. and Mrs | Prank Adair were Mrs. Henry Phil­ and dancing wa* enjoyed later in (TI.EBR.4TE ANNIVERSARIES,
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Oelow (Dori* part of the week during the teach­ Kerr accompanied Dr. and Mr* ; Up* of Battle Creek and Mrs. Harley the evening. All report a very en- ; -p.T0
anniversaries were
Ryani of Kalamazoo spent the week er*’ Institute there.
Joyabte time.
, celebrated over the week end by
Bready lo the meeting al Battle I Rec of Muskegon.
Mias
Emma
chandler
was
home
end with her parent*. Mr. and Mra.
1 Mr. and Mrs. Cilfton Day of
The American Legion Auxiliary i* lwo Hastings couples. Mr. and Mra.
t Creek Tuesday evening.
*•
Walter Ryan.
I paw Paw visited his parents. Mr. planning for it* Christmas bazaar c. w curke »ere the gue«te of
Mr. and Mrs. R. w. Cook and
Mn. Greeley Fox i* spending the
। and Mr*. Frank Day. of South on Saturday. Dec. 5. The »ale will their daughter and son-in-law. Mr.
family, Mr. and Mr*. Hubert Cook Hastings on Sunday.
week with her daughter and hus- the M. E. A. tn Kalamazoo.
be in the I afternoon, followed by the 1 tnd
XU1 CaMtdy. in Grand
and family and Dr. and Mr*. O. L.,
bind. Mr. and Mr*. Ntok Weber, in
Mrs. Melvin Shafe and children annual dinner. Members arc a*ked Rapid* for the occasion and Mr.
dren. Lawrence and Mary Elisabeth, Izxkwood and family, also Mr. and i of Battle creek spent Sunday with lo make contributions for lhe sale. Bn(j kIri o, p. Chidester went to
Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mn. Earl McKibben and of Detroit were week end guests of Mr*- D. D. Smith of Detroit left her lister and husband. Mr. and
Adclbcrt
Cortright.
commander
of
,
Detroit
with
their daughter. Helen,
this ihbtoing tdr Gaylord to remain Mrs. Archie Tobias.
Joe McKnight were In Lansing to Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Edmonds.
lhe Legion, ha* named a committee o( Oran(j Rapid*, where they were
Mr. and Mrs. Glen coulter and until Sunday. They have rented, Mrs. L. R. Glasgow and Miss consisting of Don Foreman. Harry the guesl* of Mr. and Mra. Frank
children. Patty and Tom. of De­ cotuigea at the taka there and the, Sadie Glasgow were In Lansing on Larsen and Maurice Foreman, to ( K)|ne ftnd George Huffman,
row hoepltal there.
men will enjoy some hurtling.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sbensley of
--Wednesday where they saw and co-operate with the veterans of ।
Dr. and Mrs. Alva O Ruff, for-1 heard President Roosevelt.
Foreign Wars for the observance j
powner's Grove near Chicago were A. D. McDonald over the week end.
DINNER FOR GUE8T8.
Mrs. G. M. Brower went to Belle- merly of Dinsing, who have been
week end guest* of her parents. Mr.
-----------------------------------------------------Mrs. Robert Jessen and little son of ArmbiUce Day. The committee
aLong bland. N. Y-. on Wed- living at their Gull lake home this of Chicago are guests of Mr. nilM
and from the latter organization Is Roy dinner given on Saturday evening
y where she Is lhe guest of summer have taken the Mills home Mrs. clarence crawford. Mr. Jes-en Bush and Floyd Platt. Mrs, Ster- by Mr. and Mrs. A. D. McDonald
A. A. Roth, sanitary engineer at
lhe Barry County Health Unit, and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Fuller and fam­ SN. Michigan AVe. for the whiter, is expected later in the week.
ling Roger*, president of the Legion honoring their guest*. Mr. and Mrs.
. Ruff has been practicing op-j
Miss Marion Cavender and Mia* Auxiliary, appointed Mra. Don Fore-; Glen ----Mr*. Roth are spending a week's ily.
Coulter,
-of* Detroit.
—“ “
Bopquet*
— -----toinetry in Lanaing *lnce 1913 and Charlotte Conley of Midland were man. Mrs Donna Herrington and of chrysanthemums made attrac­
vacation with her parents at DearMorenci were guests Tuesday of ha* now taken over the optical de-' guests of Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Mrs. Henry Hubert For lhe V. F tive decorations.
Mra. Ida Neuschaefer ha* re­ Mrs. Etta Blough and Betty, and purtment at the Chase jewelry store 1 Laberteaux over the week end,
W. Auxiliary Mr*. Bush and Mrs.
At contract lhe honors were
|
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Herda of Jack­
turned from a visit with relative* In Mr. and Mrs. Vernor Blough and formerly Benmer*.
won by Mrs. Earl Coleman and Mr.
Platt comprise the committee.
South Dakota. Nebraska and Den- family.
These committees met on Monday Coulter and Mrs. coulter wa* given
Dr. and Mr*. D. D. Walton. Mr ' son spent the week end with Hie
Principal Bmerttu* W. T. Wallace and Mr*. Roy corde*, Mrs. W. R , home *&lt;&gt;*&gt;“• Mr. and Mr* Dan M-’- evening and decided upon a banquet a guest prize.
of Jonesville was in the city this' Cook. ft. M cook. Mr. and Mra. A lhew3' and E’don Matthews and on Armistice night. Nov, !! It will
July 1.
ENJOY GAME DINNER.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Garner and
be held in the I. O- O F hall, lhe
D. McDonald. Mr. and Mrs. Orville
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Fox. Russell
to. and Mr*. Don Foreman »pent Grand Rapids on Thursday and Baylis ahd Mrs Burr Van Houten1
Mr*. O. E. Goodyear was in Rebekahs furnishing the dinner.
me week end at West Branch the Friday.
attended the opening play of the Grand Rapids Monday attending The price is 75 cents per plate and Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. Slocum. Mr.
Mrs. T. N. Knopf and Mr*. M. O. Kalamazoo Civic Players' reason., 1110 monthly religious educational ticket* will go on sale next week A and Mrs. William Hubbard. Mr. and
fuest* of relatives of Mr. and Mrs.
Hill visited Mrs. Jean Fennell of "The Late Christopher Bean," on conference held al Grace Episcopal dance will follow the program, it Ls 1 Mra. Dan Hall and Mr. and Mra.
Bernard McPharlln enjoyed a game
Guest* of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Traverse City over the week end. Thursday evening.
expected.
i church.
Complete plans;, committee*, etc. | dinner Monday evening at the home
Rebblns on Thursday and Friday of Wm. Fennell of South Haven aoMrs. John F- Goodyear relumed
Mr*. Frank Andrus and Mary,
►st week were Mr s. Carl I. Israel- cotnpanied them.
Friday from Detroit where she had will be given 1n_pext week'* Ban­ ot Mr. and Mrs. McPharlln on
jane
and
Mra.
Frank
Pender
were
North Michigan avenue.
Mr. and Mr*, Rhlrley Kermeen
nn and Mrs. A. R. Browning of
been visiting her daughter and son­ ner
iron Mountain.
and sop Jack of near Middleville to Traverse City part of last week in-law. Judge and Mr*
Donald
They report about eight inches of
RETURNS TO COLLEGE.
Mrs. Lou Anna Patton ot Clover­ called Sunday on Mr*. George Well­
GAME SUPPER.
snow in that vicinity while they1 Van Zlle.
Bernard F Banosch, son of Peter
file was in the city on Monday fare. who 1* recuperating from a
Mr.
and
Mrs
A)
Bessmcr,
Mr
and
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Clarence
Bump
enT .returned to
were there.
Banasch. Hastings, has
t-&gt; meet a friend. MIm Emma Dick­ major operation.
Mrs. Edwin Johncock and Dr and
Mr. ahd Mrs. Raymond OUbert
Mr tod
Mrs.
Hunt —
of Mrs. Burton a Perry left Sunday tertalned Tuesday with a game «up- tho university of Detroit this fail,
erson. of Detroit, who will be her
.
------ Herold
-—r—C.r----------per for Mr. and Mrs. Edward Luder, nanasck a graduate of Hasting*
»d Me apijtfr*. Edor Gilbert of Jtatamazoo spent Mondty evening; for Kalkaska for a week’s partridge Mr*. Stella Bump and Mr and Mrs.
Reffool.Hi i sophotnoto in the
ukegto Ind ML** Stella Heath of Flth Mr. and Mra. W. M. Btebbin*. I hunting trip
8. H. Nevins of Kalamazoo I*
Carlton Bump Later in the evtolng college of Engineering. He ta Workmaking hl* home here with hl* sis­ Niles were Bunday guest* of Mr.
*Trc enroute home from 8t. I
Miss Grace Dawson of Lowell they all aenl to lhe home of Mr |nR toward the degree of Bachelor
JWttU tod Saginaw where Mr. who has been attending high school
ter and husband. Mr. and Mr*. John and Mr*. George B. Heath.
and Mrs Max Bump in Carlton Of Aeronautical Engineering.
McLeod. On Monday. Mr. Nevins be­
Guest* of Mr. and Mr*. Jame* M. Hunt spoke *t a M- E A meeting.' here, left Bunday for Grand Rap­ township to help celebrate Mr. Max
-----Waiter Waitace and sister-in-taw. ids, where she will enter the high Bump’s birthday.
gan work al the LyBarker drug Gilmer op Bunday were- Mr. and
BRIDGE—LUNCHEON.
Mrs. Floyd Van Auker of Belding Mrs. Earl Bumford, returned on ■ school there.
store.
Autumn flowers were used as
Mrs C- L. McKlnnb left Thurs­ and Mr. and Mr*. Bernard McCon­ Monday from Hendersonville. N.| Mr. and Mrs. R. H- Loppenthlcn
GAME DINNER.
table decorations for the bridge­
day for her home In Marysville. nell and Bobble of Battle Creek.
C-. Where they went to see Mrs. were in Ludington on Monday to
Mr and Mrs Lyle Scudder enter­ luncheon at the home of Mrs. Ros*
Wash., after a visit with )ier ulster.
Mbs Barbara Wilcox, who Ln at­ Wallace. Her new address I* 614 attend the funeral of his cousin. Dr. tained with a game dinner on Johnson
..w
on Tuesday, covers being
tending the Western State Teachers' Fourth Ave.. West, ccare Oliver John Loppenthlen. who was killed
Tuesday evening, six being present, laid for eight. At bridge Mr*. James
in an auto accident.
companled Mrs. McKlnnls as far a* college at Kalamaxoo. spent from rwftt
Dahl. Hendersonville. N. ~
C.
The evening was spent with knitting Batson and Mrs. Fred Jones held
Thursday to Bunday with her par­
Grand Rapid*.
. ,
H- P. Henderson of New York 1 Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Westerlind. and visiting.
j the winning scores.
City was the guest of his sister and Melvin and Carol Ann of Muskegon
Mr. and Mrs. Jahn Zagelmeier re­ ent*. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wilcox.
turned to this city on Wednesday
Edrl chee*eman and Mr. and Mrs. husband. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Mat­ spent from Wednesday to Sunday
from Houghton, where they had John Norton of Maple Grove and thew*. from Bunday till Wednesday. with their daughter and husband.
•pent fifteen week* with their Mr. and Mr*, clarence Bump spent They accompanied him to Grand Mr. and Mrs. Loren Boyes.
daughter and family. Mr. and Mrs. Sunday In Mason as the guests of Rapids for a short visit. He left that
MU* Evelyn Johnson was home
their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Milton evening for Chicago to visit a from South Haven over the week
Samuel Homer.
Fred Durkee left Monday morn­ Beebe.
mother In Alton, HI., also a sister end. She wa* accompanied by a
ing for Okmulgee. Okla., to visit
Mr. and Mr*..Forest James and th Iowa before returning to New friend. Miss Margaret Murphy, also
I
relative*. He will’ return with Mr*. son. Jack, of Houghton Lake are York.
a teacher in South Haven.
Durkee and Mr. and Mrs. Hugo spending the week with Mr*. James'
Wunderlich, who have been there parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Er­
for several week*.
way. On Sunday they were *11
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Atten spent gutst* of Mrs. Erway's brother. Law­
Farrell,, —
of _
Carlton
Center.
Sunday with friends In Okemos. rence
____________
__ ____________
They were accompanied by Mr. At- | Among those who attended the
ten's mother and sister, Mra. Fred | home-coming football game in East
Atten. Sr., and MYs. Olasner Ham-1 Lansing on Saturday were Mr. and
Ilion of Battle'Creek.
Mrs. Don Siegel, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Miss Ethel Rag I*, secretary at the Haas. Henry Sheldon. Joe McBarry Oounty Health Unit, has re­ Knlght. R. M. Cook. Clarence Craw­
turned from * two weeks' vacation ford. Archie D. McDonald. Dr. R.
spent In coats Grove with her par­ B. Harkness snd Jerry Johnson.
ent* and In Plymouth where she
Dr. and Mrs. E- J. Pratt And Dr.
spent four days with friend.-,.
___
__ _— ____________
and__
Mra. ..
F. ...
H. Taylor
go to Detroit
Friday, Oct. 23
Saturday, Oct. 24
Dr. Frank Carrolhers returned on Monday to attend the sessions of
Friday from Detroit where he and I the State Osteopathic Association
Mrs. Carrothera were called by the I convention which meets there on
HERMAN'S LIBERTY BELL
death of Mrs. Clara Mapnassau. a Tuesday and Wednesday. Dr. and
friend of MIm Beatrice Carrolhers. Mrs. Taylor will be the guesl* of
Mrs. carrolher* will return today Dr. and Mrs., c. M. Overstreet.
(Thursday).
They will return on Thursday.

wh0
irv crepeMtKkaqn
1 PCTtomed the duties of beat man.

Monroe la a former graduate
of Hastings High school and Mr.
U1GA1

QpU««o

at Chicago.

Mftfow' wili'mate

•

CHILD LEAGUE MEETS.
The Child Conservation League
met With Mr*. Burr Van HMten.
Monday. October 12 for ‘a discussion
of eugenic*. The following papers
were given—Mra.
A- B. Oidley.
Overcoming hereditary trait* by
training and environment; Mr*.
P^llo Sheldon, IHumtaatlng facte
concerning
prenatal influences;
Mr*, a. Cartright. Relative influ­
ence of heredity and environment
upon Crime and delinquency; Mr*,
rorreat Johnson, Alarming increase
of inferior stock over superior.
The League win hold 1U next
home of Mrs. a. B- Oldtey. Center

C. will discuss further the same sub­
let'-

DINNER FOR SUB-DEM.
,
Mn. Muri H. DeFoe Is an terlab -

L^l

BIG

year are: Deeptone Brown*,
Blue and Tudor Grey.

CONTEST LUNCHEON.

■ ----- --- ,,
afternoon by Mn. Warren Carter.
It was a one o'clock luncheon giv­
en by the loser* in a membership
contest, with lhe winner* a* guests.
A delightful time ts reported.

SPECIALS for
FRIDAY .»&lt;&gt; SATURDAY

SPECIAL
NOONDAY LUNCHES
DINNERS
5:30 to 7:30

t.

M.

SUNDAY DINNERS
12:30 to 2:30 R. M.

« to 7:30 7. M.

PARKER HOUSE

Milk of magnesia.

.iu

Hat.............. :

rttNKLE'J Pfllis, DaUM *&lt; !* .....

.17c

-s—SMSBS-a*
DON’T BE FAT!
might
• “pubty di*-,.

ISSUr iff* urr'Ltf

ggp.fflt.'SAJs

ing his
ncs of
rrs, the
is pedMany
ideratf
late by

ONE POUND LOAF

6c

at

$10*?
to *32.88

f’EbTn
LEKI
tt.N
4e«
IMk rwc 10

Kjn 59

6 regular boxes 55c
FOR BETTER
JAMS, JELLIES

SALMON, Red Sockeye
H feRSH EY'S COCOA

Ur,.
BoHl.

|OI VC

2 tall cant 49c
6 boxes 25c

SURISEt JELLY POWDER, 6 boxes 25c

BOWLENE

REED’S o:ST?m’e
BHONf *241

SUCH FURS t

SUCH CLOTHS!

/SUCH LINES I

your money it you

Middleville
lb. 34c
FLAKES, Millers 40%, 3 bx&gt;. 25c

SUPER SUDS

Fko™ xm

You’ll get moil foi

buy your fur trim*

DRIVE IN NOW!
• Heaters
•'Oil Changed

• Plugs Cleaned
• Battery Charged

9

med coat at Cinder­
ella

Drusen!

. . .

Traitsmhsion ond
Differential Checked

There’s high style,

• Timing Adjusted

beautiful fur and fine

• Radiator Drained
end Flushed

model.

PrificcM styldg

fabric*

13 PLATE BATTERY-S3.95 Exeh

3SS! 19c

Hostings

rHONi 2451

Michigan

every a

Expensive fabrira inch

all the hew materials . . . Penian l.amb, Wl

Raccoon, Krimnier and Fbx fur trim. Excalhd
tailored and warmly iniatlitwd.

HINMAN’S

in

.. modified flared I

... belted models and boxy swagger*, they are

lavishly fur irimfadd.

• «; ami* dataiUMiaM

HASTING*, MICHIGAN
Baton

BRAN

T.S.B,

bx. 15c

BUTTER,
ASPliUN TAtiLrrL Batik If 1N ...

Nunn Bush and Ldgertown
Scotch Grain Shoe* for Win-

can 9c
&gt;/2 lb. 10c

PEAS,
BLACK PEPPER

BREAD

Many other itetsa f^ your

Winter Wardrobe—Under­
wear, Wool Hose, Lindd

2boxI4|c

Sunshine
First Row Brond

BUTTER COOKIES,

lUIUrk.. Wb&gt;*MaU Wl»m

• V«k»«Uta&lt;.

BLUE

G"E Sun a ca

and

has gone to Ann Arbor lo live. Mtw
Mane Rowe is sponsor of the No. I
group.

LITTLE Store!

CRACKERS

Winterhaven

checks, all around belt* add
slash pocket* — Long-wear­
ing Boucle*, finely tailored
Melton* and lhe colors thia

LOW PRICES

at the

Kew

Woolcraft Overcoat* axe hl

D. group and lhe tftrte have asked'
Mrs. Dillon Wolverton of Middleville

winter S

.H

Style and Quality
Popular Pric«*l

Ci
138 .W. STATE

Siam 14 tel

�—J—
INSURANCE
LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

Coupe Newest in Lincoln-Zephyr Line

THUR:

what

CARDS of THANKS
AUCTIONEER
DEWEY REED

ERNA
That al
mentality
Lloyd Gee
when he aa.
that Gen. ’
quivering •
the British
to rob him
1 A correzpo
I happened

V

Our Service
To PROTECT Yew Con.tantly
Adjwat Fairly
Pay Promptly

GRANGE PROGRAMS

exactly wh

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co.

FOUR STORAGE TYPES
KEEP VEGETABLES

thereby dost
integrity aa

Garden Produce and Low
Priced Fall Supplies Can

Be Kept for Winter
Not many of the common vege­
tables available in lhe fall need be
wasted fpr lack of Immediate use
By making plans for canning some
and coring the rest according to

HIGHEST PRICES

round supply can be maintained 1-‘ll

.un«u c H lawn. ««*.»&gt;« •' “ •“"»

Paid for Dead Stock

pl“ “ ""

specialist In horticulture at Michi-1
,
■
gan State College and author of Jirraios ar vsnsD BRETHREN
The Home Vegetable
-------------

horseradish, parsnips. winter rad­
ishes. rutabagas, turnips, salsify and
cabbage. Cool, moist conditions are
best. Potatoes may be put in an
open bln away from furnace heat
Cabbage may be stored without

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS

forward to gtvo access lo a compart*
meat back of the seat big enough to
ultra smart body lines is 'hr tiggeai
Lincoln Zephyt news for 1937 The pearance, which retains ths origi­ bold a good alzed steamer trunk.
nality of line typical of lhe Lincoln- Thia supplements the usual luggage
ing lines, modifying the iir stream Zephyr bodies Tbs coupe'i single
upper ?ody treatment nt lhe all seat la amply wide for three adulla.
pasienger types, which alone were
available last year The rear quarter

Joins Aviation’s The Hastings Banner
Hall of Fame

America’s Tallest
Qorn in 1936?

Cold, moist conditions with ample
air circulation are best for celery

NEW

durlng the
transport ae

XL naviam,
the only Im
hasn’t a die
the high Ui

and covered with moist sol) Others
in this group can be covered with
moist sand to prevent wilting and

FOR WORK OR PLAY
Ala Smooth R.bb.r'Soclr Pad.

force, and h
ing "qulven
suspicion" I
ample grou
his auspldoi
he didn't q

fling forelf

parsley and endive Celery should
be dug with roots and soil attached
and planted in moist spnd on lhe

OLD

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pad.
No Leg Strap*

table.: need cool, dry conditions with
plenty of air Slatted crates insure
ventilation. A cool attic room with
temperatures close to freezing Is

The Prescription Drug Store

Squashes and pumpkins complete
the classes These vegetables need
cool and dry quarters with good an

Farmers, Attention!
STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY

It U estimated that the average
bus passes a stationary person In
three fifths of a second Especially
if he lias his hand up to slop it.

RELIABLE MAN WANTED lo call
on farmers In N. Barry County. No
experience or capital weeded. Write
today. McNESS CO.. Dept B. Free­
port, Illinois.
10-22

Scrap Iron, Brass,

plete o solo flight over the At­
lantic ocean by the hazardous
east-west route. Mra. Beryl
Markham takes her place among

When it cornea to raising com,
G. A. Huckstcp of Cape Girar­
deau county, Mo., refuses to take
a back seat for lowans. Huckstep, shown above with this
year’s sample stalk, 15 feet 2
inches tn height, claims credit

I MUST EMPLOY AT ONCE

Coppar, Aluminum,

Zinc, Lead &amp; Batteries
FOR HALE-

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

South Pole Once Wanner;
Various Places Now Cold
There Is evidence that while the
gigantic dlnosaura of IW.OOO.OOO
years ago wen* wallowing in
swamps where Rocky mountain
(teaks now pierce lhe sky the South
pole was humid and subtropical. It la
even seen as possible that under
the great Antarctic Ice cap may lie
the fossilized bones of giant rep­
tiles which once grazed the lush
vegetation then growing where
there Is now nothing but Ice. ob­
serves a correspondent In Pathfind­
er Magazine
Foaalllzed plants and bones found
near the Sonth pole and In other
sections of the world Indicate that
the earth during her long life has
been subject to chills and fever. lie­
: gtons now cold have alternately
[‘been hot and cold ‘In past ages.
| and the tropica of today may have
at some time been covered with

SHELDON &amp; SHELDON

PUZZLE

INSURANCE

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and

HASTINGS MARKETS

1836.
His land yielded 100
bushels an acre despite a severe
midsummer drouth.

i

sent out a circular letter to their
colleagues urging them to hasten
their coming.
A second circular
letter followed, a week later, but
nearly .a month had elapaed before
rum. The house wa» able to organlxe on March 90. but the senate
not until April fl.

All------ and wife, who hate been
living with his wife’s people, have 1
had to leave town on account of
her parents having gone to live with
the grandparents.

INVESTORS ATTENTION!

botly frten
the diatingi

fortress at Hopton caztle dating
from (be time ot Edward the First.

veiled on March 4, 17S0. The day
was ushered In by the tiring of
cannon and the ringing of belle In
New York, and this ceremony was
repeated at noon and at sunset, but
In Federal ball only eight senators |
and thirteen representatives made I
their appearance—not enough to I
form a quorum of either house. A
whole week passed, and. no more

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE

after her history-making trip.
The bandage on her forehead
covers a slight scalp wound, rc-

Knighton Is a charming little town
on the Terne In the Welsh border,
land of Shropshire. The surround­
ing hills have the dignity ot moun­
tains and provide many fine vlewg.
For the lover of antiquity, the nat­
uralist and the angler, the district
has many attractions. The great
Caractacna waged many battles
here and hla earthworks still may

Grand Ribbon Docoratioa
A Grand Ribbon Is simply a decoration of honor conferred upon a I
citizen of the United States by a
foreign government or foreign rul- j
er. The Department of States says
that any decoration of thia kind
may not be received by any person
holding an office of profit or trust
under the United Stales as provided
In a section of the Constitution.
When such honor Is conferred by a
foreign government It Is held by the
Department of State for the reciplent until such time as he mag
give up his position.

Compxitioa of Howey
Honey Is composed of two sim­
ple sugars which, absorbed directly
Into the blood stream, are directly
converted Into energy without tax­
ing the digestive system._____

gentleman
of a formlj
"Oh. oh.
to say the'
"Well a
rymore, "I

BEAUTIFUL
FRENCH LILACS

what becoi
the bralnp

MRS. ROY C. FULLER

October Specials!
Standard PEAS

No. 2
Cam

gw
VC

f

VV regul

Royal Gelatin
DESSERT £|
All Flavors &lt;J

SALMON
4
Pink. Tall Can I I

3 Cons No. 2
TOMATOES -___

’/a lb. Black Peppei
Creamery Butter ..

PRUNES, largo siu, 10c
PET MILK, large can, 8c

3 Cons DOGGIE &lt;
DINNER z._______ I

MILLER S CORN
FLAKES Ig. also

likeness a
dentlal ca

Statistic
ready our

Of?c

4 fle
I U

[Board ot
Church o:
Christ wtl

Sweet Potatoes
Mom

WANTED’
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
FELDPAUSCH’S

MARKET • Phone 2616

FOOD CENTER 2609
H. FoUHuxh • 3921

DORRANCE TRETHRIC
INSURANCE SERVICE

Fidelity Corporation

new over ■ period of 46 years.
During all thia time il has never failed to earn and
pay satisfactory dividends to its shareholder*.
Write ua direct or inquire of our local representa­
tive, J. L. Maus.

Ed
Kilpatrick
Circuit, Os

Texas Seedless Grape Fruit, 3 for 17c
FIRST OF THE SEASON—FINE QUALITY

Capitol Savings &amp; Loan Co.
112 East Allefin Street

Lansing, Micbigai

WALLACE GROCERY
om mian

nm

m. mi™.

SclenUi
Ings by u
Of Balrno

�X.

Line

1

THURSDAY, OCT. 22, 1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER

what

V A(2tb

POLITICAL NOTES

1937 LICENSE PLATES
ARE_NOW ON SALE
May Be Purchased for Either
Waw or For Died

REPUBLICAN

about:

HOW TO MEET
SHEEP FROM DOGS

FORMER CHAI

^x0"4

Garg
A MOVE IN THE
M Topic
.
RIGHT DIRECTION.
Setretary of State Atwood an­ JOHNSTOWN FARMER HAS
At the Friday afternoon meeting
Prank Murphy. Democratic can-' nounced, that the sate of 1937 au­
A VERY SIMPLE
of the Hastings women’s Club, Rev.
tomobile
license
plate*
would
start
didate for governor, save If he la
REMEDY
elected governor he will sponsor a Wednesday of this week. October 21
lain of the State Reformatory, gave
law to permit secret balloting at
sale of 1837 plates the following:
ADD ONE OR TWO LUSTY ' an address on -Crime and Youth.” About thia
under the present law the voter ' “I feel that by releasing plates
muU
ror
Or
GOATS TO YOUR FLOCK
greatest
national
Republican ballot
That Isn't m- be expedited because lhe automo­
bile industry is in production on Goats Will Do The Trick and
day are purely sectional but this is
1837 models and these cars are now
knows
Furniah Proof To Con­
not true of crime. Ii U t problem
In
possession
of
dealers
for
retail
_
that Involves our entire country and write a little song
^Tm? voter ca^ v&lt;^ to
vict Dog Ovmer
one that Will require the concerted
Plates may be purchased now for
Too late for comment last, week enwv
effort Ol
of UH:
lhe lliuon
nation w
to cnecx.
check. j.
J. chorus which ran aa
0X1 e^ber
a letter received after moat of
wlH1
tidteL The independent voter, who mm me first or me year draws near was
,h„ Banner's pages’ _
“ "15*
" &gt;
uias n*
cerite in color, it jells without pec-1
the
were
made
up
’*
tLr
P ccriminal
ftaUnal *army
nny ot
at N(.w°VMkld“lr“vtO
P®l- it la doubtful If there win be many 11*
of America
America today
today ito
In­­
I tin.
press. it
It is
is especially inter- [,cludes vnonno
British and French
dress while Governor ot New York ।------- »--- —---------- -—■— •-­ ___ .____ «_________
for
the
press,
Kz&gt;««
*iri&gt;
u«&lt;
700.00) boys (tod girls of teas' Everything around
pyrchases of license plates to put
esting to pur farmer readers, so we man voting age.
on March 2, 1930. I said:
under the present ayttem.
'
onto old cars.
are passing it on to them mis week.
We tried some of those huge-The United States constitution
In Michigan. 30 per cent of
The estimated cost of crime each
The letter is from Mr. and Mfs
F.’s divisions for ab­
topped half gallon fruit Jara this has proven itself the most marvel­ the voters are normally Democrats,
John W. Holcomb, who live tn the year is 13 billion dollars which Is
year. Trying to sell them made us ously elastic compilation of rules of 40 per cent normally Republicans
sorption Into their
nard
to
comprehend
when we real­
southern part of Johnstown townthink of the Hunt Stock company’s Government ever written. . . It was and 30 per cent normally Independ­
own commands and
ize that the total estinteted Income
ehlp. first house south of the Hing
comedian who described his diffi­ clear to the framers of our Consti­ ents. Therefore 30 per cent of the
thereby destroy its
for all educational purposes during
school on the. west side of lhe road
culties In trying to hug a fat girl.
CRASH ON
tution that the greatest possible voters in this state are barred from
Integrity as a con­
on the Banfield rood to Battle lhe year of 1931-1932 was slightly
liberty of self government must be making the primary choices they
On Bunday
over 3 billion. Tremendous as tho
solidated
fighting
Creek.
' Only one store In Hastings where given to each state, and that any desire. They are denied a secret
force, and if Persh­
The writers .f the letter are con«*
national
administration
attempting
ballot.
you can buy paper patterns any
cemed about the large number of .
U
regret­
ing “quivered with
The Michigan primary law was
more. Th I* is probably due to so
suspicion” he had
sheep killed by dogs in Barry I W® »U ^ke to share in taking
tlon. . . would Inevitably result at passed only after a terrific contro­
u. to- be credit
creditfor
fnrsomeone
uvnMinewho
»hnha* mad*
made Morehouse and her mother. Mrs.
ample grounds for Irvla8.CoM much rtady-to-wegr plothlng being some future time in a dissolution of
county. They have-n..a right
eold^ but It is very inconvenient to
versy. And when it finally was
good
in
our
community,
but Rev.
his suspicion.
But
concerted. Just before this was
the Union itself.
Court street a Ford. Model T.
dressmakers and seamstresses.
shoved through the legislature it
he didn't quiver from any other
written the Banner telephoned the Stuart asks, what is our reaction driven by Norman Fillington of
“Now to bring about government was in a form to suit the politicians
county clerk's office and found that. concerning someone who ha* failed? Rutland cradted into his car, roll­
emotions—not so as you'd notice It
Most hilarious short story title— by oligarchy, masquerading as de­ and the politicians only.
We cannot evade this responsibility.
After ell our bragging about ofmocracy. It'Ll fundamentally essen­
tug it over twice. Fillington’s cap
There
is
a
great
deal
of
agitation
.The Wedding of the Little Tainted
pervisors, there .had been submit­ If we'share in the credit for those also made two overturns. Mr. More­
fletepey, wo did slip in the matters
tial . that practically all authority for the repeal of the primary law.
ted 56 claims for damages to sheep who succeed we must also share in house escaped with a few cute on
and control be cenlraUzid in our That agitation comes mainly from
of ordnance, airplanes, tanks, and,
the
blame
for
those
who
fall.
by
dogs!
;
during the first few months. In
A short, short story for Collier's: national government. The Individ­ politicians who desire to go back
Mr. and Mrs. Holcomb feel that
The sources of crime as men­
transport service at tho front. But Patsy’s Utile pet kitten indicated ual sovereignty of our states must to the convention system which U
they know a remedy for this situa- tioned by Rev. Stuart are varied old. suffered much from shock. She
there were certain elements in to her catlike way that ahe could first be destroyed. . . We are safe less expensive for the politicians
but his interest and sympathy go
which wo never failed — in mao smell a mouse in lhe supply cup­ from the danger of any such de­ and more to their liking and more
readers. Their letter ts as follows:
out to that large group who be­ itoCfound to be in a serious condi­
parture from the principles on convenient for framing slates of
power and manhood and manly board. I opened the door and lifted
come involved through carelessness tion. Fillington was not much hurt.
Bedford. Michigan.
her in. She sniffed, crouched, then which this country was founded Just candidates.
and undue appreciation of the Both cans were badly damaged.
so long as the individual home rule
The present primary law should
Oct. 13. 1936.
pounced I She grabbed
it
and
rights of others. In this group,
of
the
states
Is
scrupulously
pre
­
brought It to lay triumphantly at
Editor Hastings Banner.
‘
the real source of trouble may be LOSES FINGER IN *
served
and
fought
for
whenever
placed
by
a
taw
which
will
permit
I pxCLUDING Britons and Scandl- my feet. The pancake greaser!
found in the companions chosen by
they seem to danger.”
HUNTING ACCIDENT.
all those who so desire, to vote
It is certainly too bad there should
I •*-* navlans, oyrs remains almost
the youth. This factor alone may
When I took the oath of office without disclosing the party they
be such a ton of sheep to the ownEmil Schwucho. aged 79. of near
Poor liUle Buster will never make
determine his future usefulness In
I the only important white race tost
as president of-the United Blates on belong to. And also it should be re­
Dowling
had
Che misfortune to lose
another
Houdini
in
spite
ot
laborious
the world.
I hasn't a dictatorship or wqrse. And
placed by a law which will permit
taxpayers of Barry county, when
his first finger on his left hand
and inexhaustible efforts. He is an­ March 4, 1933. I said:
I the high tfde of communism Ups other “worry wart” and clumsily re­
“I. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, do a Democrat to vote for a particular
in conclusion Rev. Stuart stated while hunting on Friday afternoon.
REV. DON CABRICK.
there is such a simple remedy so
that the most valuable possession
I these shores, which or.ce we thought hearsed the disappearing coin act solemnly swear that I will faithfully Republican, If he does not approve
Presiding Elder of United Breth­
I were Insulated by time and distance Until he considered II perfect. Then execute the office of President of those on his own ticket, and vice ren church of Michigan Conference how the owners of large flocks of the young person carries out into
the United States, and will, to the
will conduct revival meetings at the sheep protected their flocks from the world with him today. Is not hi* ground it was discharged acci­
against evil alien contacts.
he called in Patsy for an audience
The present primary law is all Baltimore U. B. church. 6 1-2 miles depredations by bears and wolves wardrobe or his bank account: it la dentally. It was thought he may
We still stand aloof from entan- and performed with a great flourish. best of my ability, preserve, protect
I fling foreign alliances despite pres­ Al the conclusion he asked her and defend the Constitution of the wrong and Mr. Murphy’s declara­ south and 2 miles east ot Hastings. when lhe country was new? Cer­ his character. If he has the prop­
United
States
”
home and school training and
tion in favor of the aecret ballot is Come and bring your friends.
tainly the same remedy should pro­ er
-the A*
gun toreports
Inflict be
such
insure from within and without, but where the penny luu! gone to. She
community life, he lias three of the of
&lt;ury
wasan
doing
This la what Mr. Roosevelt has a step in the right direction. If
tect them from dogs.
no longer may we bar treasonable »ald. "Why. you big mutt, you just said concerning the Constitution.
&lt;rTMte«t Kafmniarrls anlnat rrinif* -- __ It _____ .1,
**_.___ - i*_z.
Gov. Fitzgerald will make a similar BILL OF SALE SHOWS
Simply turn a goat or more In greatest safeguards against crime* as well as pcgaible. This was lha
foreign propaganda — not with put It up your sleeve, don’t you To quote his own words, however, declaration and the successful can­
HOW TIMES CHANGE. with your flock, according to the To provide these things for our first hunting accident reported in
remember?"
science making duck-ponds out of
“But remember welL that altitude didate keeps his promise, there will
size of the flock. You will have one youth should be a challenge''!!: all this county, we understand.
oceans. Moreover, cundry great
and method— the way we do things, be *hot only secret balloting, but a an auction sale given to the Banner of lhe best protections against dogs adults.
The country fifth, sixth, seventh
powers work to turn out warplsnes and eighth grades have undergone is nearly always the measure of our very much larger primary vote cast.
you can find—especially if the goat
DEATH OF D. CAZIER.
ASSIST IN DISASTERS.
capable of spanning a sea or a con- some drastic changes during the sincerity.” Therefore let us examine Considerably less than half the vot­ terest to our readers. The sale oc­ has horns. Also you will have evi­
a few of the things that have ers now go to the polls al a pri­ curred in Kentucky and shows ma­ dence against the dog which no dog
During lhe past twelve months
tlnent on a single hostile dash.
pest few years os we parents who
who had been 111 for several a
brought
the
Constitution
Into
the
Isn't it about time wo realised— have bought a new set of books each
mary election. That is all wrong terially how. times have changed.
owner can refute. The killer will be the American public has called on died Sunday afternoon al Per
Following;is the bill:
convicted far quicker than any the Red Cross to assist ' victims in
we. the foolish virgin amongst the year know. The science which Is limelight during the reign of Mr. and lhe wrong can be easily righted.
hospital. He is survived by
Room veil.
’To whom^it may concern:
Jury ever convicted a murderer.
nations, we who once fondly Uiicled replacing old subjects ts certainly
bro tliers, William and Terry C
Nine key measures of the New
“Having Told my farm and In­
“Back to the Constitution I”
We live in the southern part of this particular time, the Red Cross both of tyuhville. The fu
this land was protected by its hem- making some keen-minded youngDeal have been declared uncon­
One gets the impression from tending to move to Missouri. I will Johnstown township, first house comes to us for our support. Enlist
fspheric isoUtlon — that we're Just iters. but laust help thinking they stitutional. Thue include: OU Con­
was held at the Hess funeral
campaign propaganda thal Presi­ sell at public sale, one mile west and south of King schoolhouse on west as a member of this society between
aomething
vitally
I about as isolated as Daniel was in are mlsstog
'
trol Sections of NRA. Joint Reso­ dent franklin D. Roosevelt's admin­ four miles south of. Harrisburg, Ky, side of the road (Bonfield road) Armistice Day and Thanksgiving. in Naihullc on Tuesday
valuable when they eliminated the
the lion's den?
at two-thirty o'clock.
lution of Congress Invalidating the istration, in Its attempt to provide on Saturday, September 26. 1850 and will be glad to talk with sheep
And Daniel had a miracle to fall I study of our. American poets. Our Gold Clause In Existing Government measures for bringing about recov­ the following property to wit:
owners at any time.
youngsters hardly know what Long­
I back onl
Bonds.
Railroad
pension
Act,
Na
­
"One buck negro. 25 years old.
ery from the depression, lias been
Sincerely.
fellow wrote, and this winter
will
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Holcomb,
have "Snowbound.” "Evangeline," tional Industrial Recovery Act, making high-handed attempts to weight 210 pounds; four negro
j
Benevolence in Reverse.
Bedford. Michigan. Route I.
"Hiawatha’’ and many others at Frailer-Lemke Farm Mortgage Mor­ shatter, distort, or In other ways to wenches from 18 to 24 years old:
atorium. Removal of Federal Tr ade maltreat Lhe national Constitution. three negro boys 6 years old; 12
Y EDICT Japan has deleted from home in me evening.
Commissioner Humphry by Presi­
In facing such peculiarly-extra­ hoes; one pine sled; 6 yokes oxen, DISCUSSION OF
her dictionary ail mention of
dent Roosevelt, Agricultural Ad­ ordinary charges,
TIMELY TOPICS.
I the "war.” To the Koreans and the
the President well broken; ten ox yokes with
WARNS OF BLOAT DUE
justment Act. Guffey Coal Act, stands not alone but In the illus­ hickory bows; two ox carta with six
Sunday evening at 7:30 Rev.
Chinese and the Manchuriana those
Municipal Corporation Bankruptcy trious company of Washington. tires; one saddle pony, five years jones will talk on the subject “Pub­
should Indeed be tidings of great
TO FALL GRASSES
old;
one
side
saddle;
eight
double
­
lie
Enemy
Number
One.” Who is
Jefferson. Jackson, Lincoln and
joy— to fln l out what'a been violent^
The Supreme Court decision de­ Theodore Roosevelt. They, too, his­ shovel plows, 10 and 12 inches; 25 your public enemy number one?
ly happening to them was merely Tender Graages, Due to Re&lt; daring the National industrial Re­
tory shows, were accused of dlsre- one-gallon jugs of whiskey; one For the five minute weekly pulpit
a benevolent brand o&amp; peace.
■
covery Act unconstitutional among gardlng the Constitution, of being hundred gallons of apple cider; one editorial the subject will be “Which
cent Hains,' Easily Fer­
Even to, P.'s Larely possible that
other things *ajd:
- ---------------------India's 60------------Million-------Outdictators, of wasting the public barrel of good sorghum; two bar- Way Will
ment, Gause Trouble
soma of the survivors of this neigh­
money, and of being incompetent rels soap; one good negro whip and i casts Go?” These are timely topics,
borly friendship may atlU be like
two tons two-year-old tobacco.
1 They are informing, interesting and
County Agent Harold Foster is construed to reach all enterprise to be presidents.
■Terms; Cash—I need the money, i challenging. The service is planned
the distinguished American actor— receiving many farm calls because and transactions which could be
There is nothing mysterious about
“Col. H. Johnson, auctioneer; Bill lo be helpful and worshipful. You
I think it was Jaek Barrymore—wbo of bloat to cattle due to fall pos­ said to have an indirect effect upon the Constitution. It is not a fetish
turing. in response to a call at the interstate commerce, the Federal to be regarded with superstition; or Crawford, clerk and Joe Cooley. • will enjoy it. Come to the Metho­
lot honor, a notable .from foreign State college Dairy department the authority would embrace practical­ blind devotion; nor did it* fram­ owner.
dial church Bunday evening at 7:30.
parts, was, as the saying goes, following information has been re- ly all the activities of the people and ers intend it aa such for they fore­
THE AUTHORITY OF THE STATE saw clxanges would be needed and
rather chucking his weight about
Cows pastured on young tender OVKt^ FIX DOMESTIC CON-. provided for making them. It is a
So Barrymore leaned over to a
plants such as alfalfa, clover and CKHNt WOULD EXIST ONLY BY concise, briefly-written program of
tablemale and wnlspered: “The
buckwheat are more subject to SUFFERANCE OF THE FEDERAL national procedure, which the ordi­
gentleman'seems to be something bloat at this time ot year than at GOVERNMENT."
.
nary citizen can understand.if he
of a formljjabte ass, doesn't he?”
The Bupfreme Court decision de­ will take time to read it and not
any other, warns o. P. Huffman, as­
sociate professor in dairy husban­ claring the Agricultural Adjustment allow himself to be misled by politi­
to say that” said the ether.
Act
unconstitutional
said
among
dry. He finds this Is due to the fact
cal spellbinders, who seek to take
•'Well at least” murmured Bar­ that such pasture grasses are so' other things:
advantage of hl* ignorance and at­
rymore, “he'll do till one comes.”
’THIS ACT INVADES THE RE­ tempt to make him believe It is in­
easily fermented in the paunch of
lhe cow. The rains during lhe past SERVED RIGHTS OF STATES. It vested with something it does not
few weeks have brought about a is a statutory plan to regulate and
Great American Pests.
It is a statement of plain, prac­
HEN he's not working at hit condition which has Increased the control agricultural production, a
regular trade, I know now prevalence and possibility of bloat matter beyond the powers delegated tical principles adopted twelve
to the Federal Government."
years after the Declaration of lnwhat becomes of the gentleman with
. The supreme court decision de­
the brainpan development of a Po­
vises. “Never turn hungry cows on claring the Guffey Coal Act uncon­
tomac shad who makea a business
abundant Juicy pasture. Feed cows stitutional aald among other things:
Its purpose is explained In the
of silting at the ringside and yelling hay and straw before tunflhg" to
“STATE POWERS CAN NEITH­ preamble:
to some poor dub at a pugilist, while pasture, and also have a pile of hay ER BE APPROPRIATED ON THE
the people of the United
the latter is being whipped into a AT A.*1AT■ Ih
■***..,** &lt;** * ‘ - A*
(Continued on page 2. Sec. 2)
Unued on page 2. See. 2)
custard, “Go on, kid—he can't hurt
you.”
Cows should be given free access
to water to the pasture. On many
nature, this party attends picture farms, however, this cannot be done.
theaters and hisses madly , aa tho If water la not available in the pea­
likeness of ths opposition prtii- lure, the cows should be given wa­
dentlal candidate is fleshed on the ter sparingly until a part of the
paunch contents have been digested.
-In case cows become bloated on
Statistics show that Ma breed al­
The New Deal Administration has
Bajlie creek have a baby daughter. bees eharged with disregarding the
A case ot a little Treat being a. Ng
ERNALIS, CALIF. - treat. Now you think up one about' civU rights reserved to state! and
individuals under terms of the Con­
That ahell of a once great
stitution of ths United Slates. If
mentality which is David
tills is true, it is a serious offense.
Three favorite lllustraton In popLloyd George may be right
all ranccr and exaggeration and so1
when he says in his latest book Prohatka and Jahn Falter. And that we may arrive al a conclusion 1
that Gen. John Pershing "was Wallace Morgan's
sharp-beaked by calm deliberation and dear
crowds
can
spoil
a
story
for
me.
quivering with suspicion, that
Park speech to me New xorx Herthe British and French meant
aid Tribune Forum on Current
Topics, will you tell what you have 1
to rob him of his army,”
•
A correspondent in France |n 1918, cranberries and a quince or two. Any said concerning state* right* as
guaranteed by the constitution7
1
I happened to Jrnow that that was ■proportions. It ts also a beautiful i’
,,
„
MW

V

as to a corupartU big enough to
steamer trunk,
a usual luggage
inlveraa.-/' Lin-

■igs Banner
K BROS.. Ul«i.

■ Mall. Poatnild:
(. ONE YEAR. 1100.
f. SIX MONTHS. 80s.
Y. TIIRER MONTHS.

XHJNTY. ONE Yl
II’TIONH, ONE Yl
INO RATER;

KHt nfflrr addrcM.
IINTINO.

B

•harming little town
the Welsh borderire. The surroundle dignity of mounantiquit)’. the natangler, the district
ctlona The great
ted many bn t Ilea
rthworka still may

pton castle dating
r Eduard th* First

ipoaed of two aimIi, absorbed directly
itream. are directly
•nergy without taxve system.

JTIFUL
4 LILACS
f C. FULLER
’
10-22

ials!
ielatin

REAL BARGAINS

Mid
Electric Stoves
in MODERN GAS

W

ready numbers nearly two millions
and la constantly Increasing bemenu for bloat which seem to work.
causa, owing lo a regrettable over­
sight of nature, this species spawns
dose to shore and the hatch all live. ouncea of kerosene to a quart of
IRVIN 8. COBB.
water. The kerosene stops the gas
formation. In mild cases of bloat,
a stick or rope U frequently used
ANNOUNCEMENT.
I. Beginning Friday, Oct. 23. Dr. J. In the cow's mouth to facilitate the
E. Harwood and the Conference loss of gas from the paunch. Tap­
ping
the paunch with a trocaf
Board of Religious Education, of
Church ot the United Brethren In
Christ will make an itinerary tour
OUGHT TO CURE ’EM.
of the Michigan conference In the
The authorities in Um city of
Interests of the Christian Endeavor
and Bunday School work 'of the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, are taring
drastic steps ' to cure drunken drivchurch, which will lay the foun­
dation for the convention of Reeleven such men. all under jail
llglous Education to be held at the
sentence, were taken to the morgue
Kilpatrick church an me Woodland
to Pittaburgh, where they gazed at
| circuit, Oct. 30, 31. and Nov. 1.

T 56
25'
go size, 10c

arge can, 8c

10‘
ettuce

Rev. C-'E. Carlson* who has
spent several years op the African
Mission field. Dr. J. E. Harwood and
ocher outstanding speakers will ap­
pear on the convention program.
Do not miss IL
»

3 for 17c
LITY

Scientists have discovered p
igi by ancient Indians on tho
f Salmon River canyon in Ii

CERY
if

evtdenee of a former experiment
with a PWA.

Hoving purchased the Bessmer
Jewelry Store, I wish to announce
that offer Nov. 1 the store will be
under new management, and will
be known as the Chase Jewelry
Store.
■
To the residents of Hastings and
surrounding country, I wish to is­
sue ah invitation to come In and
inspect our New Stock. Whether
you have little or much to spend,
you are welcome here.

death which ted them tn repaaUng
to chorus: "I am thoroughly aware
of the fact that g dnmkap driver i«
a potential killer, m appreciation
Of mr good fortune to not goto* to
for a much more aerioua

We ore oho offering o Complete Wotch ond
Optical Rtpair Service.
All former stock drastically reduced.

HU la

HASTINGS

Uw

Hina

yr mac.

motor vehicle."

-■You can enjoy a WARMER home this
winter by eliminating draft*. Storm
windows and doors will do the job, and
the savings in fuel will help to pay for
them. Call today and have the Home
Lumber Company’s DRAFT EXPERT
inspect your home. A small investment
will assure you of a WARMER home
this winter. Don’t wait... do it NOW!

THE HOME LUMBER CO
^Builds Homes”

PHONE 2634

HASTINGS

PHONE 2276

We have on our floors several strictly modem

up-to-date Gas and Electric Stoves on which w&lt;
quoting Extremely Low ond Attractive
order to get the space which they occupy

room for our Greatly Enlarged Stock ol
Dining Room Suites.

A

■•ouHImI Gm

TO CLOSE OUT—A
Electric Cooker '

MILLER
HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, OCTOBIB Ml, iMt
"T-~

POLITICAL NOTES
-Republiegu- ‘

not

that that

(Continued froqi page 1, frc. 1),
I ONI HiHO MOB A*DSCATro OB

। THE OTHER. . . Evary Journey to a
forbidden land begins wi»n the first to the people of the United Slates.
step; and the danger of sirh a step
Thus th* ROQMVall record con­
I by lisa Federal govemmewt in the
direction of taking over lhe powefs cerning the OotutllMUon of the
of the'states Is that the end of the United Slates is as follows:.
Journey may find lhe states so dS;
spoiled of their powers. . as to re­ . tect and dafend jhe coastUutton of
duce them to Huie more than geo­ lha United States; while Governor
graphical subdivisions of lhe ns-. of New York expressed a "alnowe"
belief in the sanctity of Siatee
tionai domain."
1 Righto.
Shortly after the NRA had beon
Actions—Pushad "musC leglsladeclared unconstitutional. President । lion through congress which would
Roosevelt sent a letter to Samuel have destroyed the rights of states,
B. HUI. regarding lhe Guffey Coal would have centralized all power
Bill which said:
tn the Federal government; advised
■ I HOPE YOUR OOMMITTBS a congressman to disregard tho
WILL NOT PERMIT DOUBTS AS Constitution.
TO CONSTITUTIONALITY. HOW­
EVER REASONABLE. TO BLOCK
THE
SUGGESTED
LEGISLA­ coticemed. the Constitution of lhe
TION."
. United fl7
In 1933 President Roosevelt look a ' of paper.

now:

MEASURED LIGHT

Studebakers

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measured lighting chcek-up comes in. All you have to do is phone us,
and a lighting advisor will measure the lighting in your home with
a Light Meter, free of charge.

protect the eyes
of young and old
"BETTER SIGHT"

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■

f*

I

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These new lamps, developed by lhe Illuminating En­
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times as much light as ordinary lamps. Smart, at­
tractive designs. too. Now you are offered a great
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end to try it FREE!

I

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HASTINGS

gvairinWf f MlMMit.

UTji

PHONE 2101

end Mn. ®mer

choose, may upset tho entire »Uuc-

Dtmtag ai
daughter. Roberta, were buatneai
privUegao which our visitors at Haitinga Friday after - Deming and

TION. HOWEVER, IB THE ONLY
ONB THAT HAS EVER ATTEMPT­
ED TO ANaWKR THE QUESTION
OF UNOONSTITUTIONALTTY BY
ATTACKING
THE
SUPREME
COURT AND THE OONBTITUTION ITBELF.
There are legitimate ways provid­
ed by the constitoUon for altering
Ito eentanu. In fast It ipeclfitelly
says that this la a right vhlsh b tn-

Do you want an administration
returned to lhe White House which
by Uta actions (although not by its

times exhibited a thinly-veiled hos­
tility to the Conalltutlon of the
United states and the nine just men
who Interprete it—lhe only farce
hlch has stood firm between the

If you do want to wreck the tra­
ditional government of this country
why not turn things over to the
Communists or SoclsUsU who hsvc
at least been frank enough to tell
us what they will do" when they
come to power, in fact a great many
of the New D*al measures were di­
rectly borrowed from the program
outlined by Socialist Norman Thom­
as In 1932 and Li the exact opposite
of what Mr. Roosevelt promised
this country while he was cam­
paigning for office. Well. Roosevelt
got millions ot votes to the few
thousand given Norman Thomas
but the people of this country got
the Thomas program anyway—AU
of which, speaking politically or
otherwise Is certainly a new way
of dealing although not exactly the
kind of a New Deal which this
country expected.
•

.GONE—THE HIGH COST
OF STOMACH TROUBLE
Don't pay »250 to 55-00 for relief
from stomadh pains. Indigestion,
hyperacidity. Try Dr. Emil's Adla
Tablets—3 weeks' treatment only »1.
Relief or your money back. Reed's
Drug Store and B. A. LyBarker,
Druggist.—Adv.

AUCTION SALE

Nan

&amp;
a-UU'* W' B *huwh
tors Uil* Thursday avsnfeg,

It to true that unconstitutional noted violinist at civic auditorium^
measures have been sponsored be­
fore by various administrations in time in Detroit the guest
the history of our country.

and in them alone. It la a right
which a president or a oongma may not violate. It U one of
the several clauses tn this old "horse
and buggy document which guar­
antee lie people freedom from dic­
tatorial rule.

Exciting New

pMtcds IfUUity

Uberally governed country la Bur.
ope. cluaens do not have any righto

village" Sunday

Bnmri
ited relatives at Grand Rapids and
Coopersville Bunday.
Mias Be mice Burkey and friend.
Ed. Burma, of Kalamazoo were
Bunday guests t her parents. Jtev.
and Mra. L. p. Burkey.
Mr. apq Mrs. Albert Wells were
in Grand Rapids from Wednesday
until Friday of last week. They were
guests al the home of the lalter'a
sister. Mrs. Gm. H
WUla. Mrs.
Walls attended Grand Chapter O&lt; E8. and heard Gov. Landon on Wed­
nesday night.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Yarger ot
Grand Rapids called al the home
of his mother. Mrs. Ellen Yarger
last Saturday. Mrs. Yarger Accom­
panied them home for a few days'
visit.
Mrs. Mary Hooper went to Has­
tings last week Tuesday for a
couple weeks' visit wtth her sister,
Mrs. Fannie Spaulding.
Percy Rosser was lhe guest of
relatives at Lansing Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Ricca of
south Haven spent Sunday with the
latter's parents. Mr. and Mrs. L.
F. Burkey.
■
Dr. and Mrs. H- 8. Wedel have
purchased the Albert Wells resi­
dence and are having an addition
built on for an office. They expect
to move as soon as the addition to
completed. We understand that Mr
and Mrs. Wells will occupy a part
of lhe Mrs. Dema Rensch houas for
the present.
Mr. and Mrz. victor Bisson and
Roberta, were Bunday guests of Miss
Mabel Sisson at Hastings.
Dr. and Mra. H 8. Wedel and
two daughters and Mrs. Vivian An­
derson were Sunday dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Gless of
Bowne.
Mrs. B. Stlmel, Mrs. Rose Mlcdendorf and Mrs. Anna Scott of Grand
Rapids were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
C. B. Baxter Monday.
The revival meetings which had
been in progress for three weeks at
the U. B- church, closed Sunday
evening.
J. E- Roush received the message
last Wednesday evening that his
brother. W«n. T. Roush, had passed
away that afternoon at his home
at -Saginaw. Mr. Roush, oldest son
of Samuel and Mary Roush, was
bom in Bowne and spent his boy­
hood years in this vicinity where
he had a large circle of friends. He
had been a sufferer with a heart
aliment for several years. He is
survived by one son. Sherman of
Saginaw, three aptera, Mra. Ellen
Bowe of Rising Bun. Ohio, Mrs.
Hasel Barnhart of Portland and
Mrs. pearl Lindsey of Lansing, four
brothers, Frank of Orville. Ohio, El­
mer of Freeport. Ftoyd of Clarks­
ville and Andrew of Hasting*. Fu­
neral services conducted by the Ma­
sonic Order were held at Saginaw

had Wen .much worse and on M
urday night, death released il
from her pains, Mrs. Bninnl
through her association with il
husband tn the store, had mal
many staunch friends, who h*J
sympathised with her in her to]
Illness. Duriiig this time Mr. Bru!
ner's hsallh has fail'd and at tl
time of her passing, ha U in vd
poor health. Mrs. Brunner J
deeply interested In everything th
meant the betterment of Freepd
and was liberal with her Ume. td
ent and money in any «uch caul
She was a member of lhe Method^
church and an active member |
the Wecwns Foreign MUstonal
Bodaly aa long as her health pd
mitted. The todv lay in stole tn t
Methodist church from 12:10 ud
2 on Tuesday the ladies of the m]
stonary Society acting as guards!
honor. The funeral sernwn was d
livered by Rev. M. W. Duffey 1
lonta, assisted by Rev. Pern Whed
er. Interment In pleasant jfl
cemetery.
BANPIBLD.
A pleasant surprise party w
given by the neighbore last Prld
lips, who are moving to Battle Crei
this week.
Mr- and Mrs. DeVon Putnam
Jackson spent the week end wi
their partnts at Twin Cedars. p|
Von has been transferred to W&lt;
Uamston. near Unstaa. and thl
are moving there this week.
The Lades' Aid of the M.
church will hold their annual frlchicken nipper in the chur«
basement Wednesday evening. O&lt;

Ooorge Wlekwire and Henry ape
Saturday with friends In Bati
Creek.
NORTH WEST THORNAPPLE.
October 15 Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kermeon, N
and Mrs. Wayne Kenneen, Mr. as
Mrs. Shirley Kcrmeen and M
John attended a surprise party &lt;
thalr brother. Archie Kermoen
Hastings Saturday evening
Mr. and Mn. Everett Swegles
Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. Murrf
Schnurr ot Grand Rapids we)
Bunday guests of Mr. and Mn. Eu
Kcrmeen.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Brown
Leighton w*rt Sunday guests of M
and Mrs. Otis Morgan.
The Ladles' Aid entertained at
farewell party In the church bas
mant Thursday evening in han.
of Mra. Graoe wood and daughU
LoU Geraldine, who arc leaving l&lt;
Ohio where they will reside.

OF SLIGHTLY USED FURNITURE
As I need room for continued remodeling and expansion,
I will sell at public auction
—

05c down
Bl a momh

«

MONTHS
ON BALANCE

You'll marvel, al lhe change this
lamp makes In brightening a room.
Pleasing ivory or bronze and gold.
New diffuser gives flood of shadow­
ier light. Try one!

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24
at 2:00 o'clock on my premise* at 302 No. Broadway, corner
of Broadway and Mill street*, 2 block* north of Monument in
Hasting* the following (lightly used furniture

PIANOS
Wonderful Assortment . . . Standord Makes—Such
Strobcr, Grinnell and Coble. All in good condition . . . Fino Tone... New
Style Casos en. Fumed Oak, pak. Mahogany and Walnut Finishes.
EXCEPTIONAL VALUE*!
■

N.arly Now Walnut BEDROOM SUITES, complete.

WALNUT 8-Pioce DINING SUITES.
And this new beauty in 1U choice
color harmonies is a winner—a style
leader, too. You'll be proud of the
charm ft adds. Uke to try it?—

LIVING ROOM SUITES—All in good condition
RADIOS—Standard makes, beautiful cabinets
HEATING STOVES.

ASK US AIOUT

Simmons BEDS and SPRINGS.
You have a reading chair tint will be worlds pleas- ba I
I J
enter with this smart bridge design-let im send IyGW6Su*
one to you—try it yourself. Youll be delighted.

IBS
down

«

MONTHS

Some Odd Dressers, Chest* of Draw«r*, Reckers, Occa­
sional Chairs and other articles too numerous to
mention.
NOJUNK!

TERMS

wafd. With wsg
our now
new ujw
low . (airs
rales
"J,lw2feer ““
fl*lrKily for better, easier, more economical home
'.l®Or'new reU(lfnt‘*l electric plan embraces a tow TnuurtUon Rale

* Ie“ ’duanuty
ot
------— electricity
....... .^..7 than previously qaed
ipen
r ®?
??58Ctl
3ecy’Te
’e ****
RaU for those
thoae.who
^who make greater use.
uw,o(
of
‘‘‘•d ’PPltonces (This is one'of 'Uye lowest residential

A Co«d Coal at a Lew Price
WI'LL DILI V«!

i«m

ON BALANCE

■a».p .kevk)^ u „„ ,----------houtehold
&gt;ar
M .i
•m
tShtt

Manhattan COAL

and
ana aa
claatolc
cleglrlc
electric

CASH.

until settled for.

OSH

«*•( rw »«»l l»»»r

w» «4»lw

(• bin mi

DON TAFFEE, Propr
DEWEY REED, Auctioneer.

CONSUMERS POWER CO

wets wiu. soon advance

No goods temovod

CLIFFORD HAMMOND, Clerk

Smith Bro*., Veit* &amp; Co.
DKALBM W WIMH.. OBAIN, FBI®. FLOUR. BALT* UMB,
cuont m COAL

PHONE Mil

HARTINGS, MJCR.

�Havtings Qty Bank
50th Anniversary

Jtenwon.

(Continued from paga 1, Sac. 1)

daternUnattan had g
id years of Ufa, Purl]
w weeks her COOdlU
uch worse and on 04
Mina. Mn
Brunn
’ aaaoolaUon with H
tho store, had ma
ch friends, win hid
with her in her lol
!K UlU time Mr. BnJ
has failed and at tl
pawing, ha b tn vd
*• Mrs. Brunner wl
f«ted In everything tfi
betterment of ProepJ
*»J with her Ume. td
ney tn any *uch caul
•mber erf the Method!
an active member |
bar health

lurch from ij.jo

“ wd by Rev, Fern Whe
nt in picauni i
JANFI1LD.
t aurprUe party w
nelfhbor* hat Prld

moving to Battle Ore/
frs. Devon Putnam
It the week end wi
। at Twin Ccdan. pl
n tranaferred lo w;
tr Lanalng. and th
here thU week.
Aid ot the M.
lold their annual Tri*
w in
lhe chur&lt;
idnesday evening. O&gt;

kwirc and Henry ape I

h Irlencu

in

Ball

jST THORNAPPLE,
ra. Earl Kermeen. N
yne Kermeen. Mr. at
Kermeen and a&lt;
d a lurprUe party &lt;
. Archie Kermeen
urday evening.
r». Everett Bweglaa
Mr. and Mrs. Murr
3rand Rapid* we
i of Mr. and Mn. Ea
rs. Elmer Brown
i Sunday guests of K
Morgan.
Aid entertained at
' in the church bas

i Wood and dauihU
who are leaving f
Iwy will rcalde.

BOUT

charter being number 11. Us capi­
tal 850.000. It U still ope rating un­
der that same charter, and has
now the oldest stale bank charter
In Michigan.
Tne .following were the original
Incorporator, and stockholders:
John A. Greble, hardware dealer.
Clifford D. Beebe, banker.
Chester Messer, fgrrn Implement
-dealer.
•
William H. Goodyear, druggist.
E. Y. Hogle, dry goods dealer.
William H. powers, county clerk
for many terms and an accountant
Robert Dawson, retired business
' man.
Richard B. Messer. Interested with
his brother Chester in farm Imple­
ments.
Washington Sponable. a farmer
of Hastings township.
William 8. Goodyear, dry goods
merchant.
James L. Crawley, member of the
* firm of Stauffer and Crawley.
" John M. Nevins, former publisher
of lhe Banner and later postmaster
of Hastings.
- William J. Holloway and Lucius
L. Holloway, druggists.
Philip T. Colgrove, attorney.
M. L. Cook, publisher.
Jeremiah M. Rogers, a Carlton
fanner.
David R. Cook and Philo A. Shel­
don, owners of the abstract office
here.
«
Loyal E. Knappen and Christo­
pher H. Van Arman, members of lhe
taw npn of Knapncn and Van Ar­
man.
Phlneas Smith, grocer.
.
Julius Russell, dry goods dealer.
Charles C. Mason, furniture dealWillis P. Polhemus, doctor.
Robert I. Hendershott, at that
time a salesman for a wholesale
jewelry house, later a business man
in Hastings.
Dan W. Reynolds, associated with
Cliestcr and Richard Messer in the
firm of Messer Bros, and Reynolds,
Implement dealers.
George Preston, grocer.
Leonard E. Stauffer, of the firm
of Stauffer and Crawley.
Samuel L. Hinchman, a Baltimore
farmer.
Alvin W. Bailey, a pioneer busi­
ness man who had retired.
Clement Smith, attorney.
David 8. Goodyear, then asso­
ciated with his father In the hard­
ware business.
Waller J. Robertson of Thornap­
ple, a farmer.
David G. Rpblnson, a retired
hardware merchant.
Of these thirty-five original stock­
holders of the Hastings City Bank
only three are living today: Dr. W.
P. Polhemus of san Diego, Califor­
nia. CIIfiord D. Beebe of Kalamaboo and M L. Cook of this dty.
The first board of directors and
the officers of the Hostings City
Bank after Its Incorporation were
aa follows: Board of directors!!'
David G. Robinson, wm. 8. Good­
year. Cli fiord D. Beebe. John
Greble. Chester Messer, Wm. H.
Powers and Loyal E. Knappen who
later moved to Grand Rapids and
became one of the leading attor­
neys of that city and was chosen
first a federal district judge and
later elevated to the federal cir­
cuit bench. The officers chosen by
the board of directors were as fol­
lows: President. Judge D. O. Robin­
son; vice-president, Wm. 8. Good­
year; cashier. C. D. Be6 be who had
much to do with getting the bonk
started on a satisfactory basis.
While the founders of the City
Bank recognized that serving this
city and county was the main ob­
jective. they also decided that
the bank
must be
conduct­
ed so as to take advantage of
prosperous years to accumulate
reserves, which would carry it
through periods
of depression.
That conservative plan of the
founders hu been followed. During
the depression which began In
' 1929, It was the largo reserve set
aside in prosperous years that en­
abled the bank to cave its deposi­
tors from loss on their deposits and
its stockholders from losing their
stock.
The new bank entered actively
Into the movements and enterprises
started soon thereafter to -promote
the development of Hastings and Its
trading territory. All directors,
stockholders and officers were lib­
eral subscribers to the capital
slock of the first factories estab­
lished in this city in 1889 and 1890.
Hie bank extended banking ac­
commodations to these enterprises.
It can be stated without contradic­
tion that, without ita aid and en­
couragement In the way of loans
and helpful service tn many other
, directions. Hastings never could
have become the manufacturing
town it is today.
On the other hand- it is only fair
to say that, although.the bank was
liberal In its policies toward manu­
facturing* enterprises then and in
succeeding ytars—much more liber­
al than it could be with present
banking restrictions—the bank it-

accommodations It extended to the
factories of this city.
in July 1890 an important change
took place in the bonk. Mr. Beebe
had become Interested in outside'
ventures and felt that he did not
care to continue fols banking con­
nection in Hastings. He and an as­
sociate owned the majority of tha
stock. In'July 1890 the flrm of
Messer Bros, and Reynolds, consist­
ing of Chester Meaaer, Richard
Messer and Den W. Reynolds, pur­
chased of Mr. Beebe lhe controlling
tatercst In lhe Hastings City Bank.
Mr. Beebe moved away from the
city and Pan W. Reynolds was
chosen cashier in his place on July
17. 1890, serving 10 years with fine
ability. Chester Messer
became
president on July 24. 1899 on the
death of judge D. G. Robinson, the
bank’s first president, Richard B.
Messer was elected vice-president
it that lime. HU son-in-law. Archie
A. Anderson, was named as cashier
it the bank on March 13, 1900 on
the death of Dun W. Reynolds. M.

ANNIVERSAf
CELEBRATING

Half a Century of Continuous Ser

board of directors In 1890. The two
Messers so long connected with the
bank, with their splendid business
taient and
ample means were
great assets to the bank and to the
business interests of Hastings.
On Pec. 17, 1899 tfie capital of
the bank was Increased to 878.000.
The charter was extended In 1911.
M. A. Lambie was made cashier
September 28. 1919 to succeed A. A.
Anderson, who had taken up anoth­
er line of business and moved to
Grand Rapids. Mr. Anderson had
had cood banking experience before
coming here, and served capably
and acceptably for nineteen yean

RICHARD B. MESSER
'
PmMent

aiESTEB MESSER

DAVID C. ROBINSON
FresUaal
1886 — 1899
'

Pr^iiJenl
1999 — 1WI

named president. September 31,
192! to succeed his brother. Chester
named vice-president on, January
11. 1927 and on the death of Richdent of the bank. F- W. Stabbins
then became vice-president.
The capital stock of the bank was.
Increased on January 23, 1934 to
8150.000. Printed elsewhere in the
bank's advertisement this week Is
given the financial report of lhe
bank. Following Is a list of the pres­
ent officers and employees: M. L.
Cook, president: F. W. Stebbins,
vice-president; M. A. Lambie. vice­
president and cashier; Roy W.
Chandler. aaaUtant cashier; L. E.
Lowell, assistant cashier; Omer
Barker, Savings Teller; Lester De­
Vault. teller; Miss Winifred Johns­
ton. stenographer and Mrs. Nellie
Conaway." bookkeeper. The board of
directors consists of Dr. C- 6. Mc­
Intyre. Robert T. Walton, Kellar
Stem. R. c. Fuller, a. H. Caxvelh.
M. A. Lambie. F- W. Stabbins and
M. L Cook.
The Hastings City Bank has a
record of service to the city of Has­
tings and Barry county ot which it
may well be proud—especially of
the fact that it weathered the se­
vere panic of 1893. the lesser one of
1908 and the far more severe de­
pression which began In 1929. It
ciline through them all with a rec­
ord of paying 100 cents on the dol­
lar to every depositor, except dur­
ing the restricted period following
the banking holiday. While It was
a severe trial for the bank and Its
officers during the two major panics,
the bank survived both and saved
Its depositors from losing their de­
posits and Its utockholders froth loss
of their stock. At the present time
its savings deposits and total de­
posits are larger than at any prev­
ious date In its history.
Our readers will be Interested In
some statistics covering the years
1929. 1933 and 1936. in which we
give the total amount of the de-

MAURICE A. LAI
CodUer

CUFFORD D. BEEBE
Casfcivr

50 YEARS of
1886-1936
N October 26, the Hastings City Bank will celebrate ita

O

fiftieth birthday, and as birthdays are a good time to

have come.

lowest point in 1933 after lhe bonk­
ing holiday, and at lhe present time,
ir every case the figures are taken
on. the 15th of October each year.
On the 15th of October. 1939 the
total deposits of the bank were 81.­
271.77330. On October IS. 1933 the
total had dwindled to 8556.500.83,
which shows how drastically the
deposits wero reduced between those
dates. The deposits on Oct. 15. 1936
were 81,363,935 30. or 192.000 larger
than Oct. 15. 1929.
.
Our readers will be interested In
the savings deposits record. On Oct,
15. 1929 the savings deposits In the
Hostings city bank were 1595356.15.
On October 15. 1933. at the low
point of the depression, the savings
deposits had shrunk to *286,750.12.
On October 15. 1936 they had re­
bounded to 8730.68833.
In the fifty years’ history of this
bank, aside from the present board,
the City Bank has been served by
lhe following directors: Clifford D.
Beebe,"John A. Greble, William H.
Powers. Chester Messer. Loyal E.
Knappen. Robert Dawson, William
8. Goodyear. David a. Robinson.
Dan W. Reynolds and Richard B.
Messer, all of whom we have pre­
viously mentioned. In addition were
lhe following: Newman A. Fuller.
Philip T. Oolgrove, Honorable John
Carveth. Miner 8. Keeler, David 8
Goodyear, 8r.. R. T. French. Luke
Waters,’ a. A. Anderson. Frank Hor­
ton. Dr. George R. Hyde, Emil Tyden end Thomas Sullivan. Of this
(Continued on page 8, Sec. 2)

Founded in the early days of Barry County’s history and
located in the county seat, this institution has continuously
merited the confidence of the men entrusted with the responsi­

bility of making our community what it is today, and from

time to time has been privileged to render some assistance in
its growth.

The intervening years from 1886 to 1936 have been filled

abundantly not only with the activities normally confronting
a young and rapidly growing community — such as wars, pe­
riods of unrest, economic depressions, etc., — but it has been

.

an era of great inventions changing completely the develop-, '

ment of the community.

The introduction of railroads, gas,

electricity, telephones, telegraph, and in recent years automo­
biles, airplanes* and radios — all accepted today as common- - .

place and necessities of life — at lhe time brought about great
economic changes.

It is interesting to note that the Hastings Gty Bank has the

honor of being the oldest state bank in the State of Michigan
operating under its original charter.

The fact that this bank has continued down through the

years, constantly rendering a broader service, is the strongest
possible endorsement of the ideals laid down by its founders

and passed on unchanged to their successors. As we stand on

Remodel! Repair!

the threshold of our fiftieth anniversary, we look back with'
pride to that day when this bank was founded and look forward

See us for all kinds of

with confidence to the future.

. '

Building Materials
I. BALT, UMB,

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Him«2S1S

Frank Jk«.

Hnttap

-

take Block, we ask you to pause with us and see how far we

NOW...BUILD

nWOB. MJCK.

1919

1900 — 1919 ,

1884 — 1890

i COAL

• M« to f«t
tabuyjvvr

1917 u

K

1921 — 1927

HASTINGS CITY
HASTINGS

_

.

\

____ t ■■

�NOTICES

I

MMSsaagssiMMBWW

knew that national

P0U™^TES

BAUYVILUK.

'

Rev. and Mrs. O. IV. QiUttt of

__ ..
vtab dRflMB Ute Midland Park, Gull l*&gt;e, WW cele­
executive
exocuUv* power*,
powers, it to &lt;totod that brate thalr Rolden wMOHTM «B

"" DBMtM/ltAl—

‘

ARinUA.
Mr. BDd Mn. Walter ptantoo
pent Sunday with friend* m Grand

iMMfV M William McCullough's

the president “shall give to the
Wnumied frw pue i, ftc. 1&gt;~
Congress infarm* lion tri the state' a short program bet
Chariot te^spent
of the union,
Union, ana
and reoommand
for
.. ■■ - ————— -------------------------- of
reoommana iw
at Joe Etengsr's
Jr cau &gt;t«Ua. in order to form a mm perconalderatton such jnegtur**, and « o'clock. AU th
Uudan.
.
, .
parent*. Mr. and
taM union, Mtatelteh Justice, irutD-e M
ahaO Mpam c iw|gy Mg *»“ welcome.
pedten"; heSi. on extraordinary
Mr- and Mrs. Dorr Webb and
honorlng their
W. IM Ito. OoUtoa at Battle
Creak and Mr and Mn Bert Btenoccasions, convene both houses, or Robert of NBshvlUa werg fraatar
dinner guests of K. J. WUtoSV
either of them ..."
Kenneth Wilcox of Kalamasoo came
and our
the church the
It to evident, then that the pur­ home Sunday evening to stay until
submitted aut to the chicken
Lyman Tomi
pose of our Constitution 1* to pro- I 1A1MOiy
ruesdsy CVE
evening, to have the pleas.
church Tuesday at
vide for development of a happy, i,
ure o
Urit
o.*f h
hunting
a couple days. Mr*. ,_______
and aet how nice the
prosperous, peaceful nation. It does Wlleoy
—and■ baby are al her parents, I wwx and to much lmprov»d Ln
wiiuam coRjweii i
not require the logic of a matura jlev. Thompsonof Coat* Grov». I health.
Dorothy and Greta, of
mind to understand that tho fram­
Mr. and Mrs Clifton Day and I Mra. Doris Warner of DateoU to MIm MvJorle Cogryell &lt;
ers did not Intend that the 'bleas- daughter of P»w P»w, Mr. And Mr*.! spending th* w«k at the home.of
mui* of n«»»ii । mga of liberty - should be financial Prank Day and daughter of Has- | her parents. Mr. *nd Mr*. Fred MU- and Minor Baeman of Oj
ware Sunday gurato ot M
&gt;otha i pente*- economic depresalons. and tlhgs called on L. A- Day and famUy
D bread Unas and thalr accompanying Bunday afternoon.
Mra. . Clyde
Mn. Marion Doster from
the
Hendershott and Mrs. Helen Wil­ Kagle school, Mn. Lillian Leinaar of
?•* i It L* evident, too. that the fram- kin* of Hasting* were Friday after-1
the Brljgi, MIm Marlon Kline qf Itod her mother, Mra. Bva TTautd» «n Intended the Constitution for a noon eallera.
the Mils attended the Teacher*' weln, Saturday to Monday.
HTolk'ftdiuRmE1. U tirroe »r th
ih.ir foundation upon which a wise and
The children of Lhe rural school meet at Kalamazoo on Thursday
Lloyd Goodman of Camp Custer
m..
posterity would erect a with their teacher and several of
and Friday.
was a week-ind visitor at Alice and
irx~ ..'"“riL------ T“ the mother* attended the "Bteeplng
The Briggs Ladles' Aid will hold Melvin Whetstone's,
i b. intentions of the preamble: To In- [ aegmy n Hasting* Wednesday aft- a regular session at the church
There, will bo pp school after
&lt;h.! 4Ur&gt; domestic tranquility, provide emoon.
basement
on Thursday.
October 3». Wednesday thia week as the teacher,
—-------------------------------------------------; far common defense, promote the
There wa* a meeting at Chas.
Mr. and Mrs. sherd Stone of Lake Miss Ruby Coanrall, will attend the
Doled. Orloher 'J. A H 1934.
general welfare.”
Day'* Friday night when most of City spent Sunday at lhe home of I teachers’ tnaUjule tn Grand Rapids,
’
Is not this preamble alone a lhe contract* were signed for elec­ their sister. Mra. Rose Miller. The
----------------- -----------------------standing Indictment of conditions tricity. Il will probably be impos­ day was observed by a family gath- i«
HINDS CORNERS.
MORTGAGE BALE.
,0B which have from time to time in sible for the company to get the line ering. Mra. Agnes Purcell. Mrs I Bruce Hendershott of Kalamaii-a our history developed unhappy epl- built before Christmas.
A F1HEI. FRESHER BREAD
Pr\Ofn^lUe °nuC' Mra *°° &amp;peul from Thursday until BunM« sodesf
i
-------------- ------------------ ------------- Veda Guy of Baltimore. Mr. and
W[n.
grandfather C N To*
OB TOUR MONEY BACK
We have never tiad a “common A. Day. Mr*
Cha*. Dey. Mrs Mra.Prfd Miller were among those
n
«r“na,avnerN *°bias.
defense." Wliai it* neglect has cost Harry oreen and Mr* Heber Foster present.
Born lo Mr. and Mr*. Orval Ham­
an is not for discussion here. Bach eco- attended the district meeting al A*- ‘ Mr*. Rose Ktowitter oi BaUle
nomto crisis has soon baen forgot­ syria Tuesday. The next one la to Creek and sister, Mra. Sarah Folk- mond. October 11. a daughter. She
ten in a recurrant period of proe- mest at BarryvUJe church. Dec. 8. 1 wire of Detroit, were guesU of Mr. wlU be called Bhlrley Lea.
Mr. and Mra. Cyrus BUkworth of
v'tylsDS perity. which contained germs for
Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Mead vialt- ' and Mrs. Emerson Cortrlght at
Battle Creek spent Tuesday at the
' J0'*-1 developing the'next depression.
ed lhe former's sister and husband.; Lacey.
r
The Constitution, when adopted Mr and Mra Arthur Jones of | Mr. and Mra. Harold Case were home of her uncle, W. Q. Tobias.
Mr*. Thelma Meyer and Mias Bet­
Grandville and accompanied them in Charlotte on Saturday on busl- ty Meyer of Certtervllie visited the
radical, that conservatlvea through­ to Montague to visit Mrs. Lester ness.
FRMH Ml CH K, A* NAIU
BUTTRR
former's father and brother, W. O.
2
65c
out the world wen shocked.
►
M*ad.
I Miss Arabella Bivens accompanTobias and Mr. and Mrs. Keet ToAs to whom they intended should
Mr. and Mra. Heber Poster and ' led by Miss Freda Smith ot Ooat*
2 1!X 25c
rule the United 8Utes. the framer* family drove to Vicksburg Bunday J Grove' harrii!tfered‘m"the‘teaciv | ^Phu^sheMon^f’Hastings called
LARD
left no doubt They explained In afternoon to call on cousins. Mr. era’ extension courc at the Western . oa Mr and m-j
D&lt;..dje Sun.
7 DcadIe 8wn
lhe flrst sentence: "We, the people and Mr* 8am Wtoe. Saturday aft- Blate TWachsr*’ College al Kalama- 2?y
9UICK OATS
COUNTRY CLUB
of the United States." It is clearly ernoon they called on Mr. and Mr*, i zoo for th* Saturday *esalon*.
i
evident they expected them to keep Warren Cairns west of Cressey.
Tuesday night two large bams on '
■
■ 1
control and let no minority get Into
The Ladies' Aid wu delightfully j th* A. J. Miller farm, Ailed with DULL
I
9CU HEADACHES
HEADACHES GONE.
GONE.
PANCAKE
FLOUR
power like that which Theodore antertaiiwd last Friday at the h&lt;y and straw, granary with a| SIMPLE
SIMrt*REMEDY
REMEDY DOES
DOtl IT
Roosevelt on April 4. 1311. called pleasant home of Mr. and Mr* quantity of oat*, barley and rye.
Headache* catraad bv mnstinaUnn
lhe "Romanoffs of our social and Clayton McKeown. Plans were made ; and hog house were burned. The 1 -. HCa°“n? caused by constipation
FILS NAPTHA SOAP
industrial world," or like that which al this time for a supper on Nov. 6 house nearby was emptied asapre- are gone after one dose of Adlerlka
In IMO stole the presidential nomi­
' caution but wm not harmed. About This clean* poisons out of BOTH
TWINKLE
GELATIN DES.BRT
25c
nation from Leonard Wood and
PLEASANT VALLAY.
|(eleven
elevenVctock
nervoSwa.^A SbItK?
o'clock7hs
the’hre~
fire w*Tdto«^-'
was dtooovltu*o - uu. o. noru
s.
made Harding’s admlnUlralion one
Vaughn Geiger of Kalamazoo ' ered hv
by n
a brother ■rmei
across the rnarf
road. Druggist —Adv
of the most Infamous in our history. apent
&gt;ent from Wednesday evening un
un-|
.
•
•
­ who aept in the alram.
YILLOW
CORN
MIAL
It Is very evident that, "We, the
til Bunday with his parents. Mr.
people," are given a very wide range and Mrs. H W Geiger
.ROrN BCII Ik. k. fr
nr for.rlo.rd »&gt; Ih
In providing for "Promoting the
Lewi* Tanner and Mr*. Mattie
i general welfare." It Is left for them Phillipa of Berlin spent Bunday aft­
HENKELS VILVET CAKE FLOUR
27c
t to decide what these mediums shall ernoon with Mr. and Mra. Bert'
mtMKI!L*S BEST FAMILY FLOUR Slft-lb. u
Mesecar. Mr and Mrs. Harold Ca- .
DDIIUEC
KRDUBR’S .•’l YCl IIKU
President Roosevelt, instead of
rKUrlE3
70A0 SIZE
cult of Lansing were visitors over
19c
disregarding the Constitution, is en­ Sunday.
SUKSVEET PRUNKS - TEXtHIIIZED - I It
deavoring to carry out jts inten­
MONK OtraKKH’ MUN tOHJ'O
Mrs. Emery Benedict and Joan of
tions. He was’ confronted with a
Ionia are spending the week with
SUN-MAID - SEi.DLLM
RAISINS
29c
national emergency more critical
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. H. W.
than any ever before faced by an Geiger.
incoming president. He recom­
Mr*. H W. Geiger and Vaughn
STATE OF MICHIGAN—OBDKB OF mended to congress the measures
COOKIES FIVE VARII.T1E3 - OVEN FflESII
10c
THE CONSERVATION COMMISSION
were in Ionia Saturday.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
RACCOON IN THE LOWER PB- ho Judged “necessary and expedi­
Mr*. Dell Scott spent part of last •
QU* FASHIONED
ent." Prompt action was needed to
week at Grand Rapid* with her
relieve the distressed nation and he
CHOCOLATE
DROPS
10c
sister. Mrs. Ed. Cool.
has acted nol only effectively but
John E. Brake and family spent
he also instituted measures to “in­
ASS’T CHOCOLATES
19c
Sunday with her parents, Mr. and
sure domestic tranquility' and to
JELLY BLtXS OR STICK DROPS lb. ball 10c
Mra. Roy Kayser of South Boston.
■'promote the general welfare"—
Rev Lavam Hulllbarger. who Is .
home and farm loans, social seeurlemployed in Detroit, apent Sunday
CHIFSO - OXYDOL
19c
ty. public works aid. *ium clearance, at home.
OR AMERICAN FAMILY SOAP FLAKES
reforestation, resettlement, bank in­
Mrs. J. F- Brake spent Friday
surance. work for students, and
night and Saturday In Grand Rap­
CIGARITTIS SIX POPULAR VARIETIES
$1.15
•r brlorr thmany score* of other aids.
id* with her daughter, Mrs. Mabie
In other words. Preaident Roose­ Van Allsburg.
DOCCH DINNER
49c
velt ha* placed Into practical ful­
Hllisr.
lx.;
Snct'IT
Ik
Mt
lo.
fillment in the machinery of gov­
SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
ernment some of the humane ideals
Mrs. Cha*. Poth of Grand Rapid*
the people have long cherished.
CHOCOLATE CHIP
25c
UOFIMASTKH.
spent last week with Mr. and Mrs.
* WK. n.LICkH-0 LA... CAKK - CHK.'L
Ik :«&lt; 10.
G. C Marahall and Mr. Poth came
■ OTICE TO CREDITORS
\
BOWNE CENTER.
Saturday. They returned home with
Sunday callers at Ouy Smith’s Mr. end Mra. Allen Lahr, who vis­
W AYLAND OSGOOD. 8ccr.Ur)
were Mrs Howard Houghton. Mra ited at Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pulley'*.
HOT PRICES ON HOT DATED COFFEES I
DeShong ....
------------and daughter U4
of Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Harve Cheeseman
ORDER FOR FUBUOATIOH.
Mr*. Alice Houghton of Clarksville, i
family spent Bunday with Mr.
Mr*.
Mra. Merrill Karcher *nd
and son. Qer-1
Oer- and Mr* 8&lt;m Buxton at Bun field,
aM
and
X.
—
aid. and Mr. and Mr*. Walt ThomK&gt; Mr. and Un Karl Vend*
«*--------------------------------------------------------- Gelson at a Kalamazoo hospital a
FRINCH BRAND COFFII
21c
I Mr* Wayne Benton spent Tues- 1 b&lt;&gt;y- who will answer to the pame |
I day night with her son, Russel, In iat Roh&lt;ld James. Mr. Vande Gol- [
COUNTRY CLUB COFFII » - 25c
I Grand Rapids,
I aon I* a nephew of Mrs. Lulu GrayVACUUM PACKED
Mr. and Mrs Dick Reid and chllSunday, Mr. and Mra. L. W- Jar­
. dren of Detroit spent Wednesday I rtrd entertained Mr. and Mr*. Art
' night at Guy Smith's enroute to | Go** of Battle Creek, Jimmy Welktheir new home in Portland, Or*-, **
***" and Mr. and
'
er *'
of "*■**'*
Battle Creek
where Mr. Reed ha* been trans- Mrs. Robert Gray, in honor of Mrs.
STRING HALF
I ferred by the government. Mr* Jarrard'a father, George Hecker,
Butt Half *■ 25c — Cantar Slices
39c
I Reid will be remembered as Luclna who celebrated hl* seventy-seventh
I Clemen*.
birthday on Prldav.
I
G Q. CONTROLLED QUALITY
I Mr and Mrs. John Simpson spent
jame* Van de Geiion and son. Karl,
। Sunday In Lansing.
of Kalamazoo spent Friday night
Mr*. Merrill Karchgr and eon and and Saturday with Mr*. Lulu Gray
.c. U CATIIOUJCI, VVUITV
Mra Watt Thoma* assisted Mrs. Mn. Gray relumed home with them
I for a ihort »tay
BEEF CHUCK ROAST
I Mr. and Mn. Lester Preston vis­
C. Q. CVfTnoLUD 0CWTT
ited their grandson. Kenneth, at
REEF POT T.OAST
&amp;ut Lansing Thy*d*y evening.

jffs*1

KROGERSTORES

The Bigged triad Value in Town/

KROCIR S CLOCK

BREAD
^2-10 c

•St

17c

JEWEL COFFEE

SMOKED HAMS - 21c

25c

ROLLED RIB ROAST

UHDLB FOB ruiuciTiOE

SOUTH BOWNK
VUitoni at Art and Chester Rich-,
ardAon's Sunday were Ray Richard-1
son and wife oi Grand Rapids, Carl'
Hewitt and family of Woodland and
Mra. Agnes Hewitt. Saranac.

HURTS Of HADDOCK
MOCK CHICKEN LOAF
BROADCAST SAUSAGE
FRRS-SHOBB OYSTERS

ARMOUR'S

CHICKENS
nrai nnwKD -

NOW. TIIEKErOHE 1.

medium n&gt;vi.

To Battle Creek

lb.

14ftc
35c

-*•'

30c

* 19c

HEAD LETTUCE 2 * 15c

9:10 A. M.

LARGE. FIRM HEADS

i so

r.

m.

MKH. POTATOES

6:35 r M.
t»:40r. M.

To Grand Rapid.

ORDER FOB PUBLICATION

• :«5 A. M.
1:20 f. M.

10:29 P. M.

Complete Information at
BUR DEpOT

V.
ts;
ek»
pfr&gt;i

rnone 2137

RaaUter of Pr.b.tc.

Hasting!

GRAMS

SEE THE 1937
STROMBERGCARLSON RADIO
GOODYEAR BRO MOW

31c

(lUSKEL |L3B)

CALIFORNIA TOKAY -X*. 1 QUALITY 3

BANANAS

25c

te«.

GOLDEX YRLLOV FRUIT

25c

CBAMMUITp WMl£!SrJ**£.LW

19c

... cor nocioA.
n’u. or llta

ORANGES

HONEY

25c

59c

TWAT'S FURR

MUSHROOMS

■_

14 Vic

H"

UPPER S QUALITY APPLES
Mick - TOR CDOK1M,

4

IM-

25c

MK2L - WONDERFUL EATING

4 **.

23c

MICH. - RATING OR COOKING

4 *■, 23c

JONATHAN

dbmoous
McIntosh

1&gt;C

•

MJOX-EATING OR COOKING

BOX DRUCIOUS
ALL V.LRIITltS Ke. 1 GRADE

3

»- 23c

�mJUCT01 banner, wtuiat. owga m mm

HISTDItV OF THE
BOWK
JOHN BOWNB 0AM1
MICHIGAN IN THE
Y1AB OF 1887

«».

bend-&lt;s if ttwy didn't bend enough

l char­
Carotins

!my letter,. There were nc
TO e'«nu until Lincoln was st

LIFE IN PIONEER
DAYS WAS NOT EASY
----------- -

Hl. Trip to O^rontU r«r
Oold Proved a 1Dismal
I twaan. The orchestra consisted of
Disappointment
pant

throe men with Gaarga Brooks lhe
Being asked by a prominent lady lesdsr. He certainly knew how to get
of Heatings to write concerning tha music out of hla violin and we chil­
pioneers of early days and with the dren would sleap on tha benches.
consent of lhe Banner, I have
We often made tripe to Kalama­
chosen the Bowne family of which soo to visit Aunt Julia, stopping at
I am a member.
Hunt's tavern far refreshments and
in the year 1774 three Wetahmen to water the horse* Coming to Has­
came over the seas from Wales, Wil­ tings we would stop at Yankee
liam. Benjamin and John Bowne- Springs hotel kept by “Yankee"
tha tatter my great-grandfather. My Lewi*.
grandfather, also
named
John
In 1B66 my father came to Has­
Bowne. was born in Pennsylvania in tings and purchased tha private
1786. From there he went to Court­ bank ob Henry A. Goodyear. Later
land. New York and In 1837 came he organised Die Hastings National
to Michigan as one of the .first set­ bank and waa president of it until
tler* taking up s farm near Prairie­
ville, He had twelve children: dent of Ute Fourth National Bank
Rachel Bowne
_*
_____ L.
—
Dimmock.
EU‘
m '
of Grand Rapids and established
Bowne Williams. Amanda Bowne banks tn Eaton Rapids. Lowell.
David Jones. Sarah Bowne Adam, Middleville and Larimore. North Da­
Sprague. John Bowne. Andrew Jack­ kota My brother was cashier of the
son Bowne (hta favorite name). latter for many yean. My father
Halen Bowne Bacon. Mary Bowne owned a store in Middleville known
Bwoetland. Willie, wiio died very
young. Josephine Bowne Tag gert. lime president of the Grand Rapids
William Bowno and Alice Bbwne Consolidated Street Railway and of
’^‘XTUritel aa a I lhe Al* bartine ^^i
company.C^v^Uo;
He yas a
short bluff sturdylnteilta.nlman a “
whlch nomlnaU&lt;1 tu^
sucreaful farmer, sometimes petU-1 and Hendrtckl. H. was a daiagate to
L?&lt;r.r.and.n0?«.,?.U •enttor'.uH! i «» »nd Democratic candidate far
dlfd
l,9'
My
wV treasurer in 1870 and 1876. He was
- was French, a fine old tady with t ,tron&lt;ly urfed for
united
black hair and eyes and fine com- BUtca senatorahip, but having so
piexlon a* I remember her The tart |
buslnea relation, he refined,
twenty ye*rs
I He and Mr. Bush of Kalamaaoo furJf*At ",gh,‘ •*“ *“ l,f.U!d ‘J10 niahod the funds to build the C. K.
her bed and In the morning into her . „ rAllrotd Much flin
been
chair. Her chief conwlatlon wa, (« * ofthat little line, but one
mding,^. Bible as her handa wer. X ” X-yoT re«h«?
on (t

wmellm.. I anjoyed ridt ^ad a paw.
„ udinl demo-

unetunplnlnind.[c„t ,nd believed wo ihould hove o
in il&gt;o&gt;e dej. Uieb• food wu cm- I democratic paper,
paper. so
« be
be e.ubiuh«l
established
“‘J1,*
. L J "T .? ;I the
IK" Barry
«■"&gt; County Demoerol.
Democrat. Bo
He ebo
also
luod for IWM The, lud f.w fniiLV , ,„racd J ponneroMp wild BumoU
mwUy epplej which IBoy deled on .
p, lM „„„
Mu
strings
and festoons of which I luureou wore Indeed nuny end veradorned the
the wall,
Pork was
waa their
their ■
he wsT^alway, rtrlcUy
adorned
wall, pork
chief mew unlew lhe, lummd
„,a
, iMly jenenuu
game or brought home fish. My . n.H&gt;rc
Jrwldr.U.erh.dnuptauwUh Ivor, I
moUwr.
Jennie Kenfleld
Jennie Kenfleld
My mother.
key, to hta home then, but he had i
7
a dulcimer, a three-cornered affair. ing county. New York. February 33,
To get any minlr one had to pound 1832 She came to Michigan when
il with two stick*. I’ve never seen
one olnce then and often wonder1, but thirteen years old. Her forefath­
i ers were of Revolutionary stock, and
what became of that one
1 her great-grandfather
helped to
My people on both Udes fought
.«IU u&gt;
the tea om
overboard
in *«««.
Boston
m Ch. Revolnuonwr «.r Ahroh.m I| throw
huwhnr ‘ War hmthvr William r-n.
Lincoln'a,
Lincoln
rgrest-areal-grandfather
--------------- ------------ - fteld W1|g
u hunUr
nahermsrrled
married a Salter airl
girl who wa.
wa* a ' *'
h- hroughl
niece of John Bowne. a prosporou*
• iffonitrouv fiah that when its
merchant of New Jersey Ida Tarbell haifd'Uai
r
placed on his shoulder Ita
to her writings substantiates the L
tall touched lhe ground. Thai’s no
statement that the Lincoln and -fish'*
..
story, end yat to a way it is.
Bowne famine* were
Intimate) ‘o^grendmothe’rifiviite
friends and neighbors
In the 11-1 quotations 7_z_
from ths ______
Indian__ lan­
brary al Buffalo. New York there Is '
guage was "cow win nee shins,
a book written by Cornelius Mitch- nltchy nobby. Kerning poo-puc pee
cl) entitled "The Quaker Cross, a wigwam
Whoopi" which means
Tale of the Old Bowne House" pub- ,■faow do you do. my friend? Come
Itaiicd by Parson*
to my wigwam. Whoop!" She told
One of Lhe four son, born to my how the Indians cam^one day and
grandfather died young; William demanded food. They 'saw the baby
was for many year, the owner of a '
in the cradle and began to sharpen
harness shop in Augusta. John be­
their knives and looked at her and
came a successful merchant to the
then meaningly at the baby. Need­
west, lhe fourth was Andrew Jackless to say they got the food. Once a
aon Bowne. my father. One day he
few drunken ones came in at night
had gone after the cows and on his
return fell a bullet whts past his 1and threw themselves down before
the fireplace. Before dawn my
head Hta father explained that a
short time before a band of Indians 1grandfather emptied out the whisk­
had come to the hou.se and demand- 'ey and filled ihem with plain water
ed that his grandmother prepare ,which made them very angry.
Wolves were plentiful in those days.
them a meal which she did although
Orandma Renfield named the Ut­
badly frightened Hi, father went to
thetr camp but like lhe Arabs they ile town of Rutland after Rutland,
had "folded their tents and silently Vermont from which she came, and
the town of Bowne was named for
stolen away."
From 1851 to 1853 my father wa, my grandfather Bowne.
My mother's brother. Hiram Ken­
a student In lhe branch academy of
lhe Univcrrity of Michigan and la­ fleld. built the flrst courthouse and
ter studied to the law office of jail combined, at a cost of 33411.
and
lha flrat upper bridge. My
Marsh Giddings of Kalamasoo. ’
James sweesey wa, hU boon com­ brother Willie, as we called him,
panion. But not finding lhe law ;manufactured cigars and waa to the
exactly to hi* taste, he with two
companions left by way ot tne 1kind genial man .with many friend.
Isthmus of Panama for the gold
fields of California. He endured
many hardships and had to pay 10c
for a glaas ot water He was taken
sick and might have 'Ued had it not
bean for lhe help of the Mason*.
For all his hard tabor and many
disappointments air he had to show
was a bottle of panned gold, some of
which I still have to my possession.
On his return he opened a dry goods
store in Prairieville and sold every­
thing from boots to pins and molaaaes to calico. Entering the store
with him was Sylvanu* Oook. the
bookkeeper, who married Ann Ells*
Mead Kenfleld. my mother's stater­
in-law. Mr. Cook was the brother of
the late David cook, a smart enter•prising man. and father of Henry
Cook. David Freeman and Eddie
Brown worked to my father's store
as clerk*.
When I was small I had a very
vivid imagination and vowad I
would be a ettcus performer when
I grew up. for right across the road
from my fathers store were blllboards with beautiful painted ladies
(lancing on Ute backs oi while
hones. They nearly took my breath
away Tho** were happy day* and
I loved to go to school. Two teach­
er* whom I remember very wall
were Addis Paake and Theodore
Diamond, who made u* mind and
learn, too. We spoke pieces after
school end mine was always the
- same: "Needle* and pins, needla,
and pin*. When a man marriel,

Ritchie. Lucy Bugbae. Sarah and
Oane Hawthorne, Foster Patton and
Jimmy Lewi* who used to throw

ill

PRAIRIEVILLE.

morning. Oct. 36.

(Ocattlnuad twm paga 1.

families whom i remember wm tbs
Garrets, lhe Wales, Brandstetlars.
I Doetars. Earles and Freemans. I ro1 member a Mrs Collier who had
।, oeayurui
beautiful long
tang black
black curia.
curls.
I Oppocito my father', .tore was
&lt; lhe hotel; where public dance, were

±e„±,do^“urthX
She was a member of lhe Methodirt .
eliurjb. and
chMrtuf

FIE MUFF TO
WFMM
9*,'^

young man he attended Devoe Colfather of Leah Hulett and Frances
Hlerley, both living tn Toledo, Ohio.
;My brother Charles attended Heidel­
berg university In Tiffin, Ohio, (or
In those early days nearly every­
1one lived In log cabins. Once on a trip
through northern Michigan, i met
a woman wht&gt; atlU lived In one. It
was completely furnished inside, and
you wouldn't believe that anything
ao beautiful could bo buUt ot logs.
One cold winter's night our
schoolhouse burned. IL waa on the
exact spot where Central now
' stands. What a sensation It made!
AU our books had gone up In smoke!
Some of the taachera I fondly rer.iember wore WUl J. Stuart. Estelle
Tyler. Hannah McNair and her sis­
ter Alloa McNair Wllltams. We all
drank from the sama dipper, and
many times lhe teacher would send
me and my chum over to the Wightllson) to draw waler in the old oak­
en bucket, what a difference bo-

approached.

Ralph Bates;
Brown will

At that Uma, toe, foul Start

introduce

4 ftaplds, DetreM, OhtaMgo

couple from Pennsyfcanlis,
Roberta. Ill wrench 'ea poodI
from every corner of I
There were Mn. Jamea Roberta and
COipmllteO.
taka three lurty7 whiffs at I Speaker—Mrs Luna; ,".?»
Mo,*~**^**~*'
Deem eountje The Leo A. Miller port
Mrs. Grigsby, wife of our Presbyter­
eAnts
to thank everybody who came
ian minMar. Aunt Emma Goodyear
Doster and Hon. John C. Ketcham
and both Mr, Haye,
and many on him. Despite this great handi­ will conclude the program of the and helped u* make such ■ succcaa
of our dance. The committee was
others whom I haven't time to men­ cap, Baldwin had a marvelous awning.
•
“strike-ouf record, bearing ample
tion.
Mn Corwin spent Bunday with asked to bold another one next Glen Blake of Middleville.
One eold Icy winter day I met confirmation of his dealing speed her grandson end family of Mid­
Un Lawrence Bird and
David cook aa he wa, rounding lhe and curves. Ifcsffite the large num- dleville.
the Banner offioe. Ha
Mra. Ida Farr and Mre. Haael
hold thU dance.
hla equilibrium and I wa recall. hU average waa about Billing, accompanied Rev. and Mra
Woodland.
mine, but I eaught him seven "strike-auto" for each g-me Bates to a district banquet giwn at
that ha pitched—a wonderful rw- tha Second sttett Methodist ehureh
------------ ----- ------------------- .... „.
land Women'
and breaking bla lag over again.
at Grand Rapids, Tuesday awning, new* in the Banner every weak as Society of the
------ amn
Lute Bennett and Happy Georgs balls ware not counted at “strike,." Bishop E. Blake was lhe apeaker of! we are going to give another FaalhJbd Freeport
the evening.
| ar party thia year. Plans are being
were two of lhe town's characters,
and the greatest aensatton in many
Our teachers, MYs Doris Hyde j made to make our party thia year
Mr*
Claude
Carpenter
(Hannah
ball managers evidently gave no and Mrs. Hasel McKlbbin; also Mrs. bigger and belter than last year's
aaw it but it certainly existed. I thought to. or consideration of. the Edns McKlbbin and Mra. Irene ao you want to be sure to reserve
don't mtnd snakes for I think they idea that It would be good business jephet attended the Teachers' In­ that night for our party.
Grand Rapids, R. T. D. No. 5.
are one Of ood's beautiful creatures.
stitute at Kalamazoo Thursday and
for service through several years, Friday.
On Thursday. Nov. 13. there will
mean a black widow spider and I as they do now. Today the up-toMrs. Winifred Epley end daugh­ be Installation of officers. This will
date
basebau
manage^
spend
lota
will flee as from a pestilence.
ter, Clara Jtne. and Mr. and Mrs. be of greater satisfaction to us be­
Well, funny things happen, and as of money for expert doctors, trainers Lon Bandage of Grand Rapids vis­
Shakespeare puts il "All lhe world’s and masaaglsts. to kwp players and ited Mrs. Jennie Baumgras Sunday. cause we hope to have our color* by munity.
that time, and have a department
a stage and men and women merely especially pitcher*, in th* best of
Victor Anson of Pine lake ha* officer here to present them to our
Kyera. They have their exits and condition, and it brings good returns purchased the Albert Higgins prop­
Ir entrance*, and man In his without question, or it would not be erty and will move to our village
time playa many parts’*
continued. In Baldwin's day lhe
Please remember If you served
thought seemad to ba to work pitch­
Mrs. Florence Hughes. Mrs. Mar­
Au revotr.
er* to the very limit In an effort garet Daniels and Mrs. Baumgras your country In lime of war. on
Kittle Bowne Olney.
to make them "earn their money." attended the Colonial session of lhe foreign soil or hostile waters, you
should belong to the Veteran* of
If the opposing team commenced
Foreign Wars Why not Join up
lo hit. there was never a thought Grand Rapids last week.
with your comrades and help u*
of sending In a "rehaf pltcherThe remains of Mn. Mabel with our program? Our pledge is to
he Just had to keep right on and Montgomery of Battle Creek were
be
loyal to the law* and constitution
"take It." and get out of it the beet brought here for burial Saturday
of
our country and helpful to our
way ba could. When Baldwin was afternoon.
Featuring Claire Trevor, Jane
comrades and our commnutty.
pitching for Dauoit there were
Darwall. Arline
Judge.
Evelyn
Mr* Sarah Smith and daughter*
many “exhibition" games played entertained at dinner Sunday Dr.
Venable and Alan Dinthart. "Star
(Continued from page 1. Bsc 1)
WOODLAND.
For a Night" tells a story of how
and ha had to pilch hl* share of and Mn. Charles Mullen and Mre.
madcap chorus girls turn a mualcaJ
those. Bo In IgM It ia probable that Ada Cortright of Otsego. Mrs Cortto climb a bank about eight feet he pitched «3 or 70 games an told. rlght will stay for a longer visit. In Hasting, were Bunday afternoon show topay-turvy and Broadway
high to get on a level with the sur­ If anv consldaration had bean given the afternoon they went to Haarounding country The air was lit­ to physical endurance, and the
mother* dream coma true.
erally ah geeee. whirling, twisting, limit which a human body can
LlUle Bobby Harger Is spending
circling, rising, alighting so that stand. "Lady" Baldwin would hare
few weeks with hla grandparents.
they presented a very spotted, mot­
what Improved.
ley effect tn the air not unlike a
ThU romantic story Is of a titled
Roland and Donaldlne McKlbbin
pieee of ooarae figured eallco and a wonder.
nobleman who marnps an Ameri­
spent the latter part ot the week
all thia accompanied by a terrific
can girl, and then seta about to
A half century ago ''Lady Bald­ with their grandmother, Mr*. Ed­
din of noise aa though one goose win and his catcher. Jim McGuire, ward Woodman of Orangeville.
prove himself a belter American
gueeta of the latter'a parent*, Mr
was trying to out-squawk another. put Hastings on lhe map in big letMr. and Mrs. Verne Calthrop en­ and Mr, p. e Border Mr and than she U and a better cowboy
than his neighbors In Arison*. The
ten in baseball circle*. In 1884 this tertained at Bunday dinner to
bank we could see what was going Kr signed up with Milwaukee, be- honor of Mr. and Mra. Llewellyn Mr,. James Sumner of Battle Creek cast also include* Fred Stone, BHUe
were afternoon caller.
on. The geaae had concentrated
Burka. Grant Mitchell and many
hlghly recommended by tho late Erb's twelfth wedding anniversary.
Dale Hauer, who is attending other*.
about twenty rods across a fraahly W T. Brown, then connected with Beside, the honor guests were
Kalamasoo
Normal,
visited
hta
par
­
cultivated level field and In a field the A. O. Bpaldtng Co. The next L*nLar Erb of Delton and Mr,
of clover that had not been cut the year. 1885. they were signed up with Georgle Bglltogtan of Pine lake. ents. Mr. and Mrs. John Hauer,
second time. They were on a slight the Detroit league -The first op­ Mr. and Mra. Paul Nagel of Gull from Wednesday until Bunday.
Miss Virginia Faul and Oreydon
hill tn plain view from lhe road and ponent that "Lady" Baldwin had lake spent the afternoon with them.
"Stage Struck** with an all star
Fsul of Grand Rapid, spent the
almost within gun shot. The con­
cast Including Dick Powell. Joan
The Rebekah* will entertain the
centration covered about two acres New York league team, that num­ Oddfellow, of the local lodge and week end with their parents, Mr. Biondell. Warren William. Frank
and the geese were so thick they bered among It* members, as we their wives or lady friends at a sup­ end Mrs. Lawrence Faul. and at­ McHugh.
Jeanne
Madden, the
tended the P. T. A. fair Friday eve­
completely covered the ground. A remember.
Roger
Connor, the per Saturday night. There will be ning. Mr. and Mr*. Chas. Row- Yacht Club Boys and a large
small number of them were con­ league-leading slugger, and several a program.
supporting cast depict, the whip­
lader of Grand Rapids were Bun­
stantly rising in lhe air. would cir­ others almost as good. When new*
ping Into shape of a Broadway
Mr and Mrs. Newman Deal of day dinner guepta.
cle the bunch a few time* and then came that Baldwin was to pitch, Grand Rapids visited his mother,
musical comedy from the selection
Mr. and Mr*. Victor Roush and
settle back on the ground.
local friends and baseball enthusi- Mrs. David Deal. Bunday.
•on, Wayne, of Detroit apent the
It was Interesting to note how
haarsals to the premiere perfor­
Mr and Mrs W. R. Norris are
•hey tried to form in a flock in the innings by telegraph. A score board entertaining Mr and Mr*. Datoa week end with the latter'a parent*, mance
air with birds ot their kind and It was put up In front of Busby Brae.' Hughea and children of Toledo,-O-. Mr. and Mr*. John Ralrigh. Mr.
and MIK RXdon Ralrigh and &lt;fci|was their failure to do ao that barber shop on the north side of
dren of North Woodbury were Sun­
caused them to re-alight for a bet­ State street near where Tom Baird's
Featuring an astonishing num­
day "dinner guests.
ter start There were several kinds clothing store now is. That side­ EAST WALL LAKE
ber ot Hollywood's most famous
Mr. and Mra. Ward Planta and
walk wa* packed during the prog­
AND VICINITY. daughters. Bevarly and Bonnie, vis­ comedians, a wildly riotous story and
they did not seem to be able to ress of the game. The score finally
ited the letter's parents, Mr. and “Bing. Baby Stag5 la one of the
separate themselves. We watched ended 1 to 0 in favor of New York,
but the next morning the name of days the past week with her daugh- Mra. Milan Trubo, from Thursday most hilarious triumphs brought to
until Bunday.
lhe air and settled on the ground. Charlie Baldwin was flashed In larg'
the screen.
With Alice Faye,
Mr- and Mra. David Kilpatrick of
Mr and Mrs. E D. Reynolds and
Then all at once as by an order letters In the dally press. Two days
Adolph Menjou. Gregory Ratoff, Ted
from an old captain a large flock, after that it was flashed again when Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler and Jackson ware week-end gueal* of Healy, paUy Kelly. Michael Whalan
about two hundred, rose In the air. he defeated the strong Boston team sons spent Bunday to Vicksburg Mr. and Mra. Frank Kilpatrick.
Bom to Mr. and MI*. George Var­
They were all grey, circled to gain 3 to 1- How effective he was against with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hudson
elevation, formed lhe ~V", and de­ other league teams I* shown by the and daughter. Mabel. The occasion ney at Pennock hospital. Haaltaga. with a gale tt laughter and
a girl on Saturday. October 17.
parted for parts unknown. One fact that the Philadelphia league was Mrs. Hudson*s birthday.
tinuea through to a hilarious
OoQgralulattons.
could not miss them from the flock
dusloo.
Mr. and Mrs. Madison Couch of
Mr and Mr* Ralph Leffler and
still left on lhe ground. It Is Im­ of his delivery for 43 innings tai suc­ Detroit spent the week end at thalr
nSBKK P. Tpossible to describe such a sight so cession—or more than four games. cottage hare preparing it for winter. daughtara accompanied Mr. and
Mr». Hubert Bronson of Harttop
aa to thrill some one who was not
Though the crowning glory of hla
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Maturen af Ka|.
career was a half a century ago, amasoo spent a couple days here OR g trip through Newaygo county a'Thanksgiving pot luck
Hardy and Oxbow dams Nor. ft right o'clock al the
to use your imagination if you E friends and admirers all over the past week.
come anywhere near to completing
country write him occasionally.
Bunday visitor, at Chas. Kahler's
MlaaJennle Wright and Mn. Dethe pen picture I have tried to draw Indeed it Is a surprising fact that an were Mr. and Mrs. La rem Shedd
for you.
admirer In Fort Myers. Florida. Is and son of Galesburg and Mrs. Varo Rhffiaud M Washington. D C..
*&gt;*« ^siting relatives ta WeolThe close proximity and lhe utter really responsible for Mr. Baldwin's Martha Reynolds.'
.
hnd^ang Lake Odeeea thia past
Indifference lhe geese paid to the securing this silver "Lifetime Pass."
Mr. and Mr, Ed- Good have
dish and your own table service.
line of human spectators showed The gentleman's name la Frederick moved into Geo
Eddy's tenant
Mra. Gertrude Btahl and friend Come and bring your neighbors.
they were so tired and occupied with Fisher, whom Mr. Baldwin never houtetheir own affairs that they had no
Mrs. Mary Kahllo and children of
■OUR CHANGED.
fear from ouulde molestation. A Bul Mr. Fisher, an admirer of the Orangeville and Mtes Mary Joyce
neighboring farm woman standing work of "Lady'' Baldwin) from hia Pierce of Cloverdale called on their
In Florida, started the Aunt Martha Reynolds Balurday
by us said the geese had been there I home
for forty-five minutes and how ••wheels" In motion that resulted in afternoon al the home of Clifford children of Lansing apent Bunday
With Mr. and Mrs- Wlll Flory
much longer they remained I do
Kahler.
Mr. and Mre. Karl C Paul and
not know as we had to go on our greatest pitchers that baseball ever
the change.
way. Jt was estimated by count and knew. It was very thoughtful on
IRVING.
otherwise that there were between Mr. Fisher's part and the officials
Bunday evening lhe young people Md Mni H. J. Btang at Battle
fourteen and fifteen hundred geese of both leagues -very cheerfully and of the church and community mat Creak.
DUCK’S
VI
Will Oarltoger of Cadillac called
perked on that knoll al one time. very promptly concurred tn honor­ at the hall and organised an Ep­
on hia aiater, Mn. Gilbert McLeod.
ing "Lady" Baldwin. Along with worth League.
Borne goose dinner, I say.
hosts of friends lhe Banner hopes
People are moving into the vil­ Rpwdey .
C. D Bauer.
Vane
Wotting
has
been
giving
that Charlie may Occupy a front lage for the winter. Mr. and Mra.
scat at these league games for many Argyle Wlndes will spend the win­ chalk talks and have them planned
QUIMBY.
'
ter with Mr*. Boaerby who is nol for the near future to Belding.
MIm Velma Kellogg, who recently vaars tzi mmvery well. Mr and Mrs. Ben Nagel Ionia. Grand Ledge and Lake Odes­
gad from Mahar's Business
DRUNKEN YOUTH.
and four daughters will live to tha sa.
In Kalamasoo, now has a
Up at Frederick one day last week Butler house. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
School will be dosed Thursday
with the Hastings Manu- there was held the funeral of a
Nance hare moved Into the house gnd Friday df thia week on account
g Company.
Mventaen-year-old girl, a member at the Intersection of the road* at of the Teacher*' rnsUtute whleli will
Mra. Nils Castalaln and BiUy re­ of the senior data of lhe Frederick the east of the village.
be held in Grand Rapids and De­
turned Bunday from a week's vUd high school. The young woman was
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills of troit for ihta district.
with her sister near Cresaey.
popular among the youth of the vil­ Hastings were Sunday vtaltors at
Mr*. Del] William, spent the first
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vrooman lage and her death had cast a pall Wm. McCann's.
of last wa«k with her daughter. Mrs.
have moved to Hastings and Mr. over the entire community. Attend­
Mr. and Mrs. poster Waddell en­ Raymond McLeod, of Grand Rap­
' ” i
and Mrs. Kenneth Reynolds now ing lhe funeral as pallbtarsw were tertained het pefente and sister id*.
occupy the house vacated by the eight young men from the Junior from near Lowell Bunday.
Mr. and Mr*. J. L. Smith and Mr
Vroomans. Mr. and Mrs. James and senior classes and serving as
Mrs. William Schenkel and Carol and Mn. John Hauer and Dale
Blackford will occupy the house va­ honorary pallbearers ware eight visited her mother, Mn. E D. Lake, Hauer attended the Rural Letter
young women of similar sge.
• of Vermontville one day last week. Carriers' Association al American
cated by the Reynolds.
Over In the Otsego county Jail al
Mrs- Myrta Sheffield of Hastings
Mrs. Isa Graham and children tegton hall to Hartings Saturday
Is now assisting to the care of Mr*. Gaylord while the funeral rim were of Grand Rapid* came Bunday to evening.
. Mr'
r J «te«»n tu­
Anna Rittman, who Is in
poor being held were t»o young men of see her mother. Mr* Bowerby.
lhe Mme community, one under
health.
Mr. and Mr* Rtthard Tompkins tted the former's brother, George
sentence to serve 60 day* for drank and little daughter of Kalamaroo Sheldon, of Oroenvi»e from 6*turMr. and Mia. Vera Bumford and
driving, the other, not driving but were Bunday guests of her parents day until Monday.
children vialted hl* staler In Kala- riding In the car and Just as drunk.
Mr. and MM R. O. Bhorno
maaoo, Bunday.
■ •
Mn. Jawrence HUbert and fl*
Paul Cola M Battle creek, fonnarThe young woman whose tragic
death had stunned a community
Frank Barkruff vu tried before
and with friends here.
had fallen from the car in question, • Jury In circuit court last weak on
was called
The P. T. A. Mid thalr Ont meet­ meeting Instant death as her frail a charge of statutory rape. The
ing Friday night. A short Hallow- body struck the pavement while the circumstance, and condition, were
the fire
similar to throe tn ellter cases thai
frartt. hare been tried and tn which tharf I
added some much needed room on
* ot an was a dlsagrertnant, w tha Jury. I

I dearly lorad Grandma
salt-rising bread. too.

EYE

• ooNviciim &gt;v rc*r

evening of dancing and
The Birthday AM regetina at
The young woman Ii —__
ChaBea's Thursday waa wed ymmB meh ere ttLML WMb Ib tM
l Ml nd 14. A ehlckcn eupper vQ) be person who sold the drtaka? The
eerwd at the chareh Oct W.
m Thwe will be a Mtaalengry lecture
at the.church Friday, October 33,

Gmm

Bowne**

I hare a pleasant memory of a women wort humps on thetr backs
young man named WUl Scudder who called bustles. They had Um Gra-

copciudad &lt;W

Nielhamar

Ostroih of Maple Orow. E
and Bartha M Battle Creek.

•hip. a talk

At the Theatre

GEESE fiATHEREB
IN MH FELD

no water works, no electricity, no
fine school*, paved streets, railroads,
telephones or fire department. The
cow* ran riot in the streets, the
pleasant tinkling of their balls off­
setting the disagreeable fact that their oil statami.
erywhere, and many U
ped to gather them a
Grandma KenftekUa.

committee

of ngted. WhaU Um um of having
r**Ah|MM»F Th. fiunreme Cos

ArtJSrJTyff?

The alarm waa•&lt;
er farmer, in that

house, which

�nt tuitw twn mutur octgtei M MW
’

COATM GROVE.

'

■ । ■ । ■■■wm

। si mai nW'*** miiret

■772711 SALESMAN ANNOY

NOTBD EXPLORER MAKES
CENSUS BUREAU
RETURN VISIT TO HASTINGS.
GIVES OUT FIGUI
Last Wednesday evening Has­
tings people had the privilege of
by Formal* tha
FROBATE COURT.
Should Observe Practice of hearing another lecture by Ardour Eatlmatea
Population
of Our City
I
F. Kane, noted explorer, who ad­
E»l. William Roe. Renews) bond
Calling at Bear of the
cent on the income of the larger of Gdn. filed
Wood and Mr. and Mr*. Arthur
Inspection of high scliool locker*
dressed a teachers' meeting here last
in 1986
Teeter Ln charge of refreshments.
corporations doing business in this
Honse
Winter. RU' topic this time was
Est.
Hannah
Geiger.
PslltUo
for
Washington.
D
C,
sept.
M
—
Has]
BBAZ. MTATI BFI0ULA- state.
.
Mr. and Mn. Dell Rich and WUl ol the faculty were assigned a cer­
A PTOUM baa Man mada u. Ua ^aca-Tnckma Mano Mo" u&gt;«
tings’ population for 1938 1* cstlJ
"So that a corporation that now Admr. filed, order for publication Pattengill of Battle Creek visited at tain number of lockers each and
U» «*-&lt;«.U? £ mated
TOM MBS TO 1VADE
at 5469. having increased ap]
pays Jfl.000,000 per year In property entered. '
completed the work In a short time.
Harley Bease s last Friday.
Est. ESwin Sherman. Annual ae&gt;
and salesmen who make a practice ।
frOn. Q^in* u&gt; Europe taken proximately 32 during the five yearJ
taxes to the state of Michigan
.
TAXES
The D. O. T. O. Club met with
from 1930 through 1935. according
would get off with about J300.000. count filed.
of
going
to
the
front
dooas
of
the
by
the
great
Venetian.
Following
The first issue of Ute Fortnight
, Mrs Floyd Kimbli last Wednesday
"A* representative of the manuto
a
formula
worked out by the c«n4
EsL Melissa Roe. Testimony of afternoon. It wa* ••Child Welfare"
homes they visit rattier than lo the 1* the substance of the lecture as
WANT NO TAX ON THEIR
facUncrs, I ought to be for this freeholders filed, license to sail Is­
sus bureau and used by the bureau
day and lire program wu In charge Journaltem class will put out * feur- back doors. The woman who caltad
to compute municipal populations I
amendment because It certainly is sued, oath before sale filed.
OWN VACANT PROPERTY going
of Margaret coats. The leader gave page paper once in four weeks and this office an Monday said her baby Lauris Andes*, member of the
to relieve the large foreign
Bated primarily on an estimate of
Journalism class at lhe high school.
E*t. Doris Bmlth. Annual ac­ a talk on childhood quarrels and a mimeographed sheet between
companies of a great part of their
After twelve years of study Ln the national population for 1936. thd
count filed.
Nina Townsend spoke on lhe sub­ times. The Portnight staff is com- when four different men—la undryThat Ii Why They Are Urg­ taxation burden.
census bureau formula considers the
Est. Raymond W- Berven. el al ject. "About Tiiose Dishes" and a
man. dry cleaner’* man. magazine preparation for the .trip, Mr. Kane number of births and deaths and
"However, the Michigan Manu­
ing Votei for Proposed
went
first
to
Mexico,
there
taking
Sper.
"Shall
I
Spank?"
wu
given
salesman and a Salvation Army so­
facturers’ association is opposed to Petition for license to sell filed,
net - Immigration and emigration
Alma Boulter. Mrs. Lynn Osgood
Amendment
licitor—came to the front screen a freighter to Japan. The croasing since 1930. Allowance was made fod
this amendment. We are opposed to testimony of freeholders filed, li­
Of Woodland and her sister, Mrs. ganlzed at the high school and cap- door and rapped. Naturally the took thirty days, and the fare of unregistered births and death*. Thd
Tne Banner has
The
nos heretofore
ncrcioiurr caex- n lor several reasons, uui u mere cense to sell Issued, oath before
rice became very monotonous. He
Ola Kimble, sang. "Throw Another
baby wu awakened each time.
pressed our own sentiments with re- j were no others, the following pro­ sale filed.
national population, so estimated, id
class elected es follows: Freshmen—
Anyway It seems that Hutlngs Is found the Japanese an Intelligent. 127621.000. an increase qf 4.748.00(1
Est. Charles H. Dsvi*. Petition
gard to proposed amendment Num-[vision is enough:
Industrious, honest, polite people
her 4 which will appear
. on - —1. "The
------------J- of all -----------------r._______
proceeds
taxes upon for Admr. filed, order for publica­ were served for refreshments. The Captain. Dawn Hampton; Sports over run with aU kind* of solicitors with intensely nationalistic tenden­ over the 1930 population. Hastings^
following officers were elected for manager. Jane Snyder. Sophomores and agent* who are often not u
tion
entered.
amendment ballot at the November ’ incomes shall be distributed to the
cies. They consider,the emperor a population waa 5.227 in 1930 and 5.1
Est. Dell B. Dolph. Order allow­ next year; Pres.. Sopha Smith; —Captain. Helen atrimbach; sports courteous and kindly u they should
132 in 1930.
j
3 -election. This amendment pro- j several counties, townships, school
Demand;
Sec.. manager. Pearl Hathaway. Juniors ba. And it would seem also that descendant of a sun god.
poses to eliminate all taxation on (districts, cities, villages and other ing claims entered, petition for Il- Vlce-Pres.. pearl
To figure Hastings' population bd
in China many women of the
Margaret coals and Treas., Ola —Captain, Lenora Pew; sports they should observe the same regu?
real estate. How it would operate, we i political subdivision.* of lhe state, as
the census bureau formula, which id
Kimble
manager,
jane
Harrington.
Senior*
latlons here u they do In other nobility still have bound feet. Some rather complicated, lhe relaUonahld
notice filed, license to. mortgage is­
think, is told very dearly in an ad- 1 may be provided by law."
aqmen
of
thirty-five
have
feet
the
Hubert
Follick
of
Hastings
visit
­
—Captain. Leone Leonard; sport*
sued. bond on mortgage filed.
dress given by John L. Lovett, head ।
‘Pork B*ml' Provision.
of the population Increase betweeri
In most elites they are obliged size of a year-old American baby, 1930 and 1935 to the increase be]
Est. Raymood W. Berven. Bond ed Lloyd Demand Saturday night manager, Phyllis Beck.
of Michigan Manufacturers' Asso- I "Provided by taw" means by the
and Sunday.
to go to back door* but sales­ and must be carried around where- tween 1920 and 1930. for the coun]
elation in an address to a Battle legislature, and it means that the
ever they go. m Canton about 150,­
The Birthday Club meeting will
Interclass soccer games began men and delivery men seem to
try as a whole, is adjusted for Has]
Creek dinner club as reported in the very life of the local, school districts.
be held with Mrs. Alice Chase this after school Tuesday, October 13. forget It when they arrive in 000 peapte live in smalF houseboats, tings according to the relaUonahld
Moon-Journal of that city.
| of the townships, villages, cities and slgnlng residue entered, discharge of
called umpan*. and some of them
Friday afternoon.
It is lhe duty of the sports manag­ Hastings. Everyone can appreciate never set foot on tend al) their which Hastings' 1920 to 1930 popu]
Following is the .account as given | counties will depend upon pork-bor- Admr. issusd, estate enrolled.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Chas.
Simpson
and
Just
how
annoyed
this
busy
mother
Est.
Alonzo
E.
Ke
nasion.
Petition
ers
to
keep
a
record
of
the
honor
in that paper;
rel legislation enacted in Lansing.
lives. Boys, chickens and other latlorr increase bore |o .that of thd
must hgve been on Monday morn­ household animals art secured lo whole country for the sarpq pqfiocB
Addressing the Rotary club this-Let us assume that Wayne county for license to sell filed, order for children of Augusta visited test Fri­ points made by each girl.
day at Willard Demand's.
ing and she cannot be blamed for
The chief factor in the reduced
noon, John L. Lovett, general man-1 made a combination with enough publication entered.
the boats by ropes «o Ural should
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hubert
Redlnour
of
Est. Hiram J. Kenfleld. Order al­
ager of the Michigan Manufactur- districts to get 51 votes. Then the
There have been recent additions faellng disturbed at her frequent in­ they fall' overboard they may be rite al which lhe populaUcn of thd
Battle Creek visited at Russell De­
er* axaoclation,
ers
nwoaauwi, charged
ciuubiu that
mat all
un rest of the state ........
might go without
........... , lowing claims entered.
to the music department In the terruptions and the awaking of her rescued, but the girls must save United States has increased slncd
Eit.
Sarah—
B.--------Bmlth. Ofdrr con- mand'* on Sunday.
1930. os compared to the ten yeai
home owners will be required "toI adequate funds; or the remainder
----- ----------form of two kettle drums and a baby.
themselves.
Life,
especially
female
If all housewives would protest to
----------- upon
._ shat
entered.
oif the
uie state
Slave might
nugnv gang up against
agauui ' firming
jiiuiuij sale tuw,™.
period prior to 1930.1* a slacking off
pay
an.----------Income. tax .
based
____ ,O
targe
bass horn. Mr. Hine is build­
I DUNHAM DISTRICT.
;
theae silesmen, etc., perhaps Ln time life. Is held very cheaply Ln the In immlgraUon. according to thd
It would cost to rent his home" if Wayne county, and the city of De- t Est. Lora O- Norton. Warrant and
The first meeting of the Dun­ ing up a fine musical organization they might be trained to use the Orient.
filed.
’“*
lhe proposed amendment No 4 to trait and the county of Wayne cer- inventory •*
From Canton Mr. Kane proceeded census bureau. A declining blrtn
ham community club, formerly the' (or lhe high school, and a stringed
Ekrt.
Dell
BDolph.
Petition
for
rate ho* also been a factor Ln thd
tainly
would
be
inadequately
fithe constitution of Michigan is
instrument class has recently been
lo the Dutch East Indies, visiting
widow's allowance filed. orde&gt;graut- Dunham P. T. A. was held at the formed. There are eight student*
adopted by the voters in the NovemSingapore, Java and the Isle of trend, the bureau reports.
schoolhouse, Friday evening.
THREE CORNERS.
allocation of all funds for the sup­ ing widow's allowance entered.
The bureau warns that lhe pop
in
the class, six of them studying
Bali, called the "Last Paradise,"
Tho
L.
A.
B.
will
serve
pot
luck
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Leonard
Walters
Erl. Goldis N. Edger. Nomination
ulatton estimate obtained by it
Outllnlng his views on proposal port of all government In lhe state
dinner. Thursday, October 29. at lhe violin and two cello. The members and son of Carlton were Sunday perhaps because there the women formute Is necessarily based on th]
No. 4 and dealing. Ln general, with of Michigan be made by Lhe legis­ of Gdn. filed, order appointing Gdn home of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Conklin. of
' liw class arc Lucille Cole, Carol I dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed­ do all the work while the men give
assumption that lhe relative in
lhe additional taxes that arc re­ lature is so vicious and so utterly entered, bond of Gdn. filed. lstter«
Miller.
Marjorie
Tasker,
Vertand
sound
advice,
ffn
Stem.
Burma
and
who live west and south of Lacey. ■
gar 8- FifiUd and family.
crease between one area and anolh
quired to support social security. Mr' unfair to the school children, to the of guardianship issued.
Clark.
Shirley Fredrickson. Robert
Coffee and potatoes are provided.
1
Howard Janes of Clare and Har­ parts of India the native* wear the er has been the same since 1930 a
police and to the fire department*,
Lovett said as follows, in part:
&lt; Eileen Daniels and Evelyn
Mrs. Edna Jones of Battle Creek Kidder.
:
old Nepplln of Pontiac came Wed- scrape, a piece of cloth about two It was during the decade before, an]
“The issue* before the electors of and to the citizens of this state, lowing claims entered.
Hunt.
yard* long wrapped around their
Est. Mary N. Williams. Order al­
be delectlon on that this
mis amendment
amenament should
si
that in at least some Instances ChU
Michigan in the coming election
cousin, Mrs. Edna Kidder.
Mrs. H. J. Robinson to enjoy pheas­ waist. At night it becomes their regularity of Increase has not bete
lowing claims entered.
primarily feated overwhelmingly.
November 3rd
center
Last Friday the freshmen girls
Mra Lucy Johnson of McComb.
ant shooting. Tho latter relumed sheet, and If really necessary to maintained.
"Another absurdity is lhe follow­
around taxation. For instance, lhe
•
,
were assigned their “big sisters" who
wash. It serve* as a towel.
Mississippi,
Is
spending
the
week
to
Ids
home
Friday
evening
but
Mr.
people ot Michigan are asked to ing part of the amendment: 'In­ flled.
help them as much as they can to
After leaving the south China Bea.
Est. Theron A- Aldrich. Discharge with her brother, Bert Harding, and become adjusted and part of lhe Jones is remaining for a longer Kane and his while companion
Vote upon a proposal to amend lhe come from real and personal prop­
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
wife.
visit.
Michigan constitution to do away erty may be taxed uniformly with of Admr. Issued, estate enrolled.
school
life.
started
Intend.
They
went
a
hun
­
Last Tuesday. Mr. and Ml*. Claud
Miss M. Bernice Wing of Detroit
Est. Mattie Spaulding. Order lo
with the uniform rule ot taxation. Income from other sources." This
Hoffman and sons went to Lan­
was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. dred miles into the Jungle by truck,
means that the legislature may tax seU bond* entered.
Several pictures for lhe 1931 an­
and then were forced to throw away
Est. Margaret E- Shilling. Final caster. Ohio, to visit lhe Royal nual Fortnight were taken Friday Claude A. Hammond and family
except for the payment of debts, to
their camp beds and trunk* and go
from Friday until Bunday.
do away with the tax on Intangibles higher rate than other incomes, or account filed, order assigning resi­ Donovan family, who travel with
on as best they might from village
due entered, discharge of Admr. a rodeo, returning Saturday.
and other evidences of wealth and
Saturday callers at Clyde Wal­
family of Hutlngs spent Bunday to village, walking or riding always
to substitute in its place an income
Income higher rate than the income from issued, estate enrolled.
pushing westward.
Many High school students were with Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Moulton.
ton
were
Mrs.
Mina
Aldrich
of
Del
­
Est.
Flora
M.
Taylor.
Inheritance
tax. Also, thb amendment would real estate. In other words, the
After days of steady trudging,
ton. Seward Walton ot Naperville, excused from classes Thursday to
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Walters and
give to the legislature the power of taxpayer is at the mercy of lhe tax. determined.
their heavy shoes fell off in shredj.
Est. Nellie Sullivan, Inventory Ill., and a frtend of his from Ken­ go hunting. Lessens had to be pre­ Marlon of Grand Rapids were Sun­
allocating all ot the funds for the | legislature both as to dlscrimlnatucky. who also attends lire Semi­ pared beforehand, however. A* yet day dinner guests of M. E. Moore their clothes became tattered and
Uon and
os *"
to allocation.
filed.
support of all branches of govern- "
"" ~~
“
their
tempers exceedingly ragge0.
no
great
slaughter
of
game
has
been
and Clara J. Bisson.
Est. L- Blanche Johnoock. Order nary at-Naperville.
Estimates Probable Rates.
ment.
reported.
Rev. and Mrs. E. C- Crocker of They were forced to carry packs qt
• What will the rate have to be to give deed entered, final account
Analyze* Proposal.
EAST DELTON.
Hutlngs and Rev. O. E. Smith of wood with them In the morning Jo
"Let us analyze what this proposal to raise J147400.000? Less than filed.'
About 400 students have joined Owosso were dinner guests at the that they could have a small fire at
Est. Susannah Oaks. Order allow­ ' Mr. and Mrs. Ike Lelnaar and
No. 4 means in detail. In the first J30.000.000 per year Is raised in
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Morford were the various clubs offered at th4 Edw. Walters home Thursday.
night.
place, the local communities, from Michigan now from the federal in­ ing claims entered.
Mr. Kane concluded hls cross­
Friday night till Monday morn­
Est. Mary Bell Johncock. Order In Battle Creek on business on Fri­ High school. The enrollment In
lhe counties down to the school come tax. ThU means a rate of
day afternoon
each
one will be kept below 40. ing. guest* of the H. J. Robinsons country Journey in Berlin and addtil
districts, raised 1147.500.000 for the about five times tire federal rate to allowing claims entered.
much to hls delightful talk by dress­
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Art
Collison
spent
Among
the
clubs
listed
ere.a
sports
were
their
daughter*.
Retha
and
Est. Morris Curtis. Petition and
fiscal year ending June 30. 1938. raise *147.000,000. Obviously, no in­
ing
In the costumes of the various
Sunday
evening
with
hls
brother.
club
for
both
boys
and
girls;
leath
­
Ruth of near Bancroft. They also
for the support of schools, town­ dividual or any business could live order to pay expenses of hospitali­ Elba, in Kalamazoo.
ercraft; outdoor club whose proj­ attended the Teachers' Institute in countries he was describing. At lhe
ships. villages, cities and counties--------in Michigan
--------- —_____
under—any
,_________
such rate.
_ zation filed, Inventory filed.
Mason Newton wu given a birth­ ects will Include pheasant raising, Valuing Monday and Tuesday.
close of his .lecture he called for
This tax all came from property. I So It means that net incomes will
questions
and in answering them re­
day postcard shower on Tuesday of bird feeding station* etc.; a girls*
Mra. Green, daughter Barbara
either real or personal No part of | have to be abandoned In favor of
MARRIAGE LICENSEStest week. He received eighty-seven personality club, taking up social re­ and Mrs. Jack McCoy of Grand­ lated many other interesting anec­
the revenue for the support of state a tax upon gross Incomes. It means Orlo s. Strang, Holland .................24 greetings.
lations. personal care and attention ville called an lhe latter's mother. dotes which put a deft finishing
government comes from property, that every working man. no matter Margaret E- Ackerson. Riddleville 24
touch to an already thrilling
Mr. and Mrs
Gay Waters of and boy and girl problems; a leisure Mrs. Ida Stairs, recently.
Therefore, we are dealing with a. how tittle he may receive,, will be । Gordon R. Wales. Doster .. ......... 22
Plainwell visited hls brother. Rex, time club which will Investigate as
David Robinson and Lester Lara- travel talk.
propotelto abolish the tax on prop- taxed al a high rate for the support
Doris o. Burke. Delton ............... 18 and wife Bunday evening.
many leisure time activities as pos­ bee of Hastings spent Friday near
erty which Is used only for the sup- of government."
MILO.
Mr.
and
Mrs
Ike
Leinaar
enter
­
sible.
Bancroft hunting pheasant*.
port of schools, police and fire de—
— •--------------• Mr.
In addition
to this
proposal.
DELTON.
tained for Sunday dinner Mr. and
Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Marble of October 15 Letter.
partments, and county officials.
Lovett said, the people of Michi­
ftuth Richards of Niles and Clare Mrs. Maurice Crookston and Leo
Fourteen schools attended the Kalamazoo visited Mr. and Mrs.
"Bo. with the abolition
the gan have other taxes. The old age
The 28th annual meeting of the
Richards of Jackson spent the week Quick of Hastings and Mr. and second annual debate forum held Edgar 8. Flfield and family, Thurs­
properly lax. J147.000.000 must be pension tax of one per cent will be
Prairieville Twp. Sunday School
at the Central building last Friday. day.
raised somewhere else.
But the deducted from the pay envelope of end with their mother and brother. Mrs. Ike Johnson of Delton.
convention will be held at Milo
Mn. Blanche Richards and Paul.
Linden Collison had the misfor­ One of the features of the after­
property tax is
properly
Is not aoousnea.
abolished. Il
ii ejery
every work!
worker in Michigan starting
church Bunday afternoon. Oct. 25.
Miss Marie Neuschaeffer and Mra. tune to break one of his fingers
SOUTH SHULTZ.
still remains for the payment ot I January I. This deduction will
beginning al 1:30 P. M. A good
S Rogers attended a teachers' while playing ball on Thursday.
cross-examination.
Ed. O'Brien.
Eva
Bonneville
of
Battle
Creek
program
with on address by Rev.
bond Issues and any other debt* -----"
“
----reach three per cent In 1949. and
Ung and supper in Hastings
Miss
Jessie
Willison
will
enter
­
Kalamazoo
Central
taking
a
nega
­
spent
the
week
end
with
her
broth
­
that these communities may have. when the unemployment act Is
Dewey, D. 8.. of Grand Rapids, a
tain
the
Kingsley
Ladies'
Aid
the
tive
stand,
was
cross-examined
by
Friday
night.
er.
Lester.
William
Bonneville
and
Bo. as a matter of fact, no money passed In Michigan at least an­
chalk talk by A. R. Parker of Kala­
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Will
Sheldon
of
fourth
Wednesday
of
this
month
Robert
Henney
of
Hastings
and
on
daughter.
Suzanne,
of
Battle
Creek
is saved to the property owner
masoo. a reading by Mrs Paul
other two per cent will be taken,
with Mrs. Fern Houvener and Mrs. the affirmative Phyllis Hinman ex­ and Mr. Raymond of Clare visited
"Next, the uniform rule of taxa­ from the pay envelopes of the
Brown, and musical selection* to o
i*a»r
Mrytie Lelnaar as helpers.
amined Thelma Brower of Com­ them Sundaytion. which has been Ln the Michi­ workers. "Taxation Is fast catching ard family Saturday.
charge of Mra D W Shepherd
Mr. and Mra. Clarence Cosby and
stock. Donald Weaver, class ot 1928,
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Norton and
gan constitution since it wits orig­ up with us." he said, "and instead of
Milo Ladles* Aid will be enlerDURFEE.
Dorothy of Battle Creek spent Bun­
inally adopted and U Ln the con- providing economy. —
------ —of re­ Barbara Jean, also Noah Dings of
Instead
talod al the home of W. O. Bchultx
Mrs. Willard Ickes accompanied
■UtuUon of practically every sen- | during the cost of government, we Vicksburg spent Sunday with Mr. Mra. Wayne Wheeler of Battle chairman of the dgbate between day with Mr. and Mra. Byron Lewis. Wed.. OcL 21. for the first dinahd Mra. Harvey Ding*.
Faw Paw and Ionia. Ninety-one
Mrs. Amy Bonneville spent last
slble state tn the United States, and ‘ find schemes every day advanced
Mrs- Lucy Dings reports that she Creek to visit Mr. and Mrs. Harold were present at the dinner served at
was Ln the constitution of the ( for taking more money away from
Phllman program committee.
Swanson at Big Rapids from
Mr*. Adah Mlscner.
United States until the federal In-1 the citizens oi lhe state."
Thursday until Bunday.
Fifteen were in attendance at lhe
Visitors at O. EL Kenyon's Bun­
come tax amendment was added. Is
The revival meeting* wlU start
There will be a debate tourna­ day were Mr. and Mr* Harry MlsMrs. "Barnum had a snowball bios •
wiped out of our constitution.
|
CLOVERDALE.
Monday,
October
2S.
at
8
o'clock
at
aom
on
her
bush;
Carolyn
Solomon
ment
at
Kalamasoo
Central
No
­
Mrs. N. H. Barber last Friday
"Why
•wny was the uniform rule of Ij Mra. Lou Anna Patton Is enter­
the East Baltimore United Breth­ vember 6 in which Hastings expects Mason Crossman and Mr. and Mrs. co-operative dinner was
taxation adopted in the consUtu- uinlng her friend. Miss
Emma wore a boUQuat of spring violet* on
her coat to church Sunday; Mr*. ren church.
lo participate.
Bterken and four children of Grand a good program given.
tlonT Xt was to protect the small Dickerson, of Detroit this week.
Rapid*.
property owner, and lhe persons of 1 Mrs Ltezic Pennels and son, Paul, Ray picked a mess of peas out of
Leon Blanton and daughter of Bat­
Loma Bonneville visited her aunt
The High school football eleven
small means from being assessed at I and frtend of Kalamazoo spent
flower growers say they have nice: tle Creek came Bunday a*d helped will meet the Lakeview, Battle Creek In Kalamasoo from Friday until
a higher rate than lhe targe com- Sunday with Mrs. Harry Pennels.
celebrate
the
forty-eighth
wedding
al
the
falr
grounds,
this
Batflower*
now
than
Urey
had
any
tune
Mr. and Mrs. T. Tack and daugh­
Sunday.
panics and targe property owners । waiter Lewis made a business trip
annlvefsary
of
Mr
and
Mra.
Hoffj
‘
urday.
■
—
October
■
—
24
at
-*
2:30.
—
This
■ha*
­
this
summer.
Fifty-one guests were present at ters of Lacey visited their parents.
who. presumably, would have more | to port Wayne over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Adam of
' been designated parents' day. and lhe shower given Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs. B. Quick, Bunday aftInfluence with the assessing offlWinona Brooks of Kalamazoo waj
Donald Richard, infant son of , ^d'ci^Tholding seas^tlckete rn*y
BalUe
creek
spent
the
week
end
ernnon.
In the evening. Mr ’ and
cers than the small taxpayer
( home owr ltw. wwk end
with their father. Henry Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete TietJens,
has i tnke their parents to the game free
Mra. Maurice Crookston of Has­
acts BfKtuuuvc inicrcii.
Mr. and Mra. Roy Headley of
Elmer Kelley of Grand Rapids is been at Pennock hospital for treat- Of charge
Frank Horns. A program including tings visited in the Quick home.
J*?' eSUU iPc&lt;:uI*tor3 1 «
Ugu.v. spent
Augusta
spent ounuay
Sunday wnn
with mr.
Mr. arid spending several days with ids ment and Is much Improved in
’
• • •
Mrs. Jennie Chase returned to her
a reading by Mr*. J. W. Tedrow,
who initiated this proposal and who Mra Grant Dickerson.
health.
_
| Thursday
Thursday and
and Friday
Friday of
of tula
this weak
week songs by Miss Lucile and Mis* Katy
are backing it. would wipe out the : Mra Grant Dickerson and Mra. brother, Homer.
The L. A- 8. will gather papers
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Lusk of Ann the teachers of the city and coun- Kahler and piano selections by For­ tend the burial services of her
one protection that the small tax- | Da]C Monica attended the Barry Co.
and
magazines
Monday
afternoon.
A;
‘
»
r
»P
e
nt
Sunday
with
Mr
and
ty
Khoo
U
win
attend
the
regional
brother-in-law's
ashes brought from
est
Kahler
was
given.
Refreshments
payer Ln
Michigan
has
had.
m
Maccabre Rally at Richland. ThursTonl
E. n-.
A- In
raid.
| day.
, Honman.
----.
_
I meeting of the
ure M.
Ml. n.
ui Grand
WIBUU were served and the couple re­ California by his wife, Mrs. Will
“Obviously." Mr. Lovett
sc
nie Delton Community Club will
Eddie Gamble relumed to Has- j Rapids. Mr VanBuskirk as presi­ ceived many gifts. Among the
^S to | Mra. Lucy „„„„„„
Davenport spent Thurssponsor
a
Halloween
party
at
the
tings
High
school
Monday
after
dent
of
the
Association
will
adfamily
lot
In
Riverside
cemetery,
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Henry
te to IttMon. TJer wW w put a.y „
vlwUM h„ ,rte„a
hail on Halloween night. Mr. and several weeks of absence because dress lhe entire assembly of teach- Thale.
male. Mr. and Mr*.
Mrs. Archie Naugle*
Naugles
away In *ome New York bank vault । Mrs.
Mrs. Martin
Martin DeBmit.
DeSmlt.
Mrs. C. J. Barnum and Mr. and Mrs. of illness.
era.
Mr. Becker.
After a week's visit with her sis­
era Mr.
Becker. Mr.
Mr. Taylor
Taylor and
and and Lucy Sullivan of Kalamazoo,
*n-‘l£C.,pe^n!r l“*Uon , .
. | Mr
Mr. ana
and Mra.
Mra. urover
Grover amrenpors
Davenport
Mr. Conklin of the high school art and Mr. and Mr*. John McLeod^ ter. Mrs. Bchultx, Mrs. Nora BwarJ*?*1
re*1
Rc,a, । entertained for dinner Bunday. Mr. R. J. Duddie* will have charge of
SOUTH BOWNE.
the whole affair. Everyone is in­
tttate which has an income will ' an(J
Jftke
of Oun
also scheduled to take part in tho Eric McLeod and Mr. and Mrs. WUl rer returned to her home Ln Buffalo,
Candace Bassett and Mrs. Geo.
last Saturday.
Martin of Hasting*.
program.
Si?
FV0 ^C0tne„l“ Wh*t I Mr. and Mra. Frank Humeston vited and the committee requests
Mrs. H. J Flower and Miss Ber­
real estate has Income? First, the | Of Jackson and Mr, and Mra. Ben- that everyone come attired in Hal­ McPherson of Grand Rapids visited
HRNDKR8HOTT.
nice were guests for dinner Sunday
An athletic banquet will be held
home in which any person lives. , nett of La^ng 8pcnt the week end loween costume, as that 1* half of diet's.
the
fun.
v
Maxine
DePriester
from
---------------------------------—
—
_
the
following the Greenville game. No­
The home owner_ will be auessed on at the Humeston cottage here,
Mr. and Mrs. U. D. Nash and Mr.
Center
Rood
wu
the
Wednesday
Moreau
at Augusta.
tha hte.
th.
baste of Wh.t
what rent h.
he —
would
..w । Mri
Davenport is visiting
and Mrs. John Hammer and sons of vember 7. featuring Jo-Jo While as night guest of Margaret Garrison
BOWNE CENTER.
P P’
™ “■ 1 her
n.r daughter. Mrs.
mt, Wm.
wm. Pierce,
rwa. of
m October is Utter.
Muskegon, Mrs. Delia Perkins and speoker. The softball committee is
DOWLING.
naerging their banquet with tills
place to live Ln. Bo that instead of I charlotte.
Miss Marian smelker is visiUng friend of Grand Rapids called at
Emil Schwucho wu rather
paying a
-vt-w
. property ...
lax limited to ..
15 ।| Joyce Christensen of Rutland
one to make it a larger event. There schoolhouse, and Virginia Durkee of
Will Pardee's Sunday.
fortunate test week and lost a
will be tickets for both men and'
mills, the home owner will be re- ,| spent lhe week end with her uncle.
Mrs. Zora Poe of Grand Rapids
Trenton, New
Mr. and Mra. Cha*. Van Vranken tian of hte index finger while ad­
qulred lo pay an Income tax based 1 Frank Barnard.
women.
Jersey.
called at the homes of Will Mish­
visited their daughter. Mr*. Basil justing hls gun in preparing for a
upon what it would cost to rent hla
Guy Bmlth was given a pleasant ler and C. M. Benedict Thursday
Hayward in Alto last Saturday and trip to the woods. It necessitated a
home with no limit on the amount a dinner on election day. Tuesday,
CARLTON CENTER.
birthday surprise Bunday. Mr. and afternoon.
on
Bunday the Wilbur Schantz trip‘to the hospital Instead.
Mrs. Elmer Marlowe spent from
Nov. 3.
Mrs. Earl Smith, Mr. and Mra.
Danny Zook and family of Clarks­
The Dowling Townsend Club will
family were guesl* of the Haywards.
that
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens enter­ Howard Bmlth. Mr. And Mrs. Gall ville visited al Harold Yoder's Bun­ Wednesday until Friday In Grand
Mr. and Mrs Harvey Parmalee have an all day meeting with a dlnRapids visiting her son, Elton Mar­
tained Mrs. Anna Howael and Burkholder anjl Mr. and Mrs. Clay­ day evening.
store. The owner of a store who is daughter. A)wllda. and Mr. and Mrs ton Waterman all of Grand Rap­
lowe.
.
raabv. D»f»nd»nl.
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Griffin of
the church followed by speakers In
Floyd Garrison**.
renting it to someone else, would ■ Van Norghey of Kalamasoo.
■OTICK OP BILK.
Mrs. Ralph Henney visited her
id* were dinner guests.
Bellevue and Mart Griffin and
Grace Brill wu home from Kala­ the afternoon.
have to pay a tax upon his income
Mra. Bchwancoff of Chicago 1*
laurence Benton of Grand Rap­ family of CUo spent the week end daughter. Mrs. Thelma Johnson, mazoo from Thursday afternoon
Mrs. Hannah Kemmerllng. for­
from the property. All property visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnids spent Bunday with hls parents. with their parents. Mr and Mra. also some cousins In Grand Rapids until Bunday night. She wu on merly of this place is recovering I
which was used and brought forth
from Wednesday until Sunday aft­ leave after an illneu from sinus in­ from her recent Illness at the home
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Benton.
Pete Griffin.
an income would certainly have to
Mr. and Mrs. James Graham of
Mabie Watts of Chicago spent
C. M. Benedict was Ln Clarksville ernoon.
fection.
.
,
pay a tax much higher Uian the tax Detroit spent Sunday with Mr. and
the week end with home folks.
Saturday.
Mrs Edward Lawrence and Miss
Mr. and Mra. John Armstrong trict.
now paid by property.
Mrs. Bert McCallum.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Ben Ion of
Jessie Wilson of Hastings visited from the Gregory district ware Sun­
Mr. and Mr*. Orlle Flshef~ were
hope’centeb.
"Who, then, is behind this amend­
Grand
Rapids
called
on
Mr.
and
the
former's
sister,
Mn.
Chas.
Bunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
day guests at Albert Brill'*.
ment? Obviously, the real estate
THE CROSSROADS.
Vernon Textcr of Hostings spent Paulas Friday afternoon.
Mrs. Merrill''Karcher Bunday eve­
Mrs. France* Hendershott and Kahler and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Titus
speculator who ha* bought vacant
Mis* Jean Stedge of Big, Rapids ning.
lhe week end with hls grandparents.
at Cloverdale.
property to bold for an advanced spent the week end with her par­
Mr. and Mra. Chas. McDermott.
Banfield were guests Sunday ot Mr. list the
price, or to subdivide It and sell the ents. Mr. and Mra. Clyde Stedge.
FODUNK.
Sunday guests at the Fred Ash­
The church and Sunday school the approaching maariage of Miss
tot*, does not want any property
Teddy Cook and family attended
Mr* Robert Kenyan and son by home were Mr. and Mra. Millon
Madeline Stanton and Wilfred Ellis
Rally
Day
1*
thia
next
Bunday.
Each
a birthday dinner at the home of
Warner and Clyde Ashby of Kala­
person 1* urged to help make this a which will take place in Battle
visit with Mr. Kenyon, who Is build­ mazoo and Forest Brocklebank of evening.
Creek tn lata October. Several ahowMiddleville In honor of Mra. George ing roods in the northern pert of Battle Creak.
Jay Wing was In Grand Rapid* homecoming for old friends and
haw a residence tn Darts.
,
the stat^.
Clare Ashby and family spent Wednesday on business.
and shortly after the ceremonj
Mrs. Jane Tultlc spent Sunday
There was no school *t Podunk Bunday in Marshall with their par­
Mr*. Gilbert Fisher of Ha»tlng* own table service.
afternoon with Mrs Clara Tinkler Thursday and Friday as dur teacher ents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Trine.
spent Friday afternoon with her *Uwhere they both will have employ
of Hasting*.
attended the Teachers Institute at
MMawaa.
_
•
Mr. and Mra. Chas. McDermott
Mra. Doris TalUferro of Battle Kalamlaoo.
KI* Sliltr. All«ra«r fer Plalatiff. erywhere the Banner goes look for
D«^:’Oc,o*JJ *•
Mra. Berth* Cotent mods * bujl- Leon Dunning's in Delton Bunday.
Borne people expect too
Bunday with Mr. andM1* Lee
nee* trip to Battle Creak Thuraday. Mr. and Mra. Burdette Lyttta of fallow went into a New 1
ttk and family at Hickory Car­
bank accounts
Williams.
Mr. and Mr*- Monte fteploge «nTha tnith-inforcas
tertslned thair daughter and grand­ occasion being Mrs. Lyttle's birth­ something to eat when
daughter at a birthday dinner day. Mn. Lyttle is a sister of Mrs
fake funnels
omitted
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY
Thursday.
'
Dunning-

COURTHOUSE NEWS

IS BICK OF IT

The P. T. A- will meet Friday
evening Oct. 30 with Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Coolbaugh and Mr. and
Mrs. Nelson Case In charge of

Hantingi High i
Activiluu

BUSY HOUSEWIVES

�iy»iiiAT, ocroan n, mr

TWW

■RANCH DI»TR1CT.

Weekly Farm Review

AFTER THE VICTORY,
THE REMEDY

tendance. Probate Judge Stuart Ciement explained lhe
tod Um school children
program, QovghnuU an
Uw ytfreahnwnta.

ByWiUMtDBOLTt

On*

K2S,

SVH
cull* hta
*o)idate*

A4WB4WKB3
Mr. and Mn. B

stove. a&gt; each new bunch of chicks
I* hatched be consolidates his lay­
ers still more until 4 af the laying gracte*.
ALFALFA FOR BILAQK.
To mi . alios that still have room
{!L*hat u aptly termed “Insurance
claim* that they are nol too crowd­
ed for efficient production a* he Michigan tftete College are recare u*es
all-night light* the year mending use of third cuttings of
"round. The chick* go to colony alfalfa for silag*. Thd process does
away with the problem of making
hay in wet faU weather and make*
a good feed that can be kept almost
FLY SPRAY.
Indefinitely. outline gt thia Um* of
Kansas Experiment BteUon’ re- rear, aay* H. o. Rather. Mad of the
pert* that too free use of fly sprays. farm eropa department, takes ten
—eepeeially those 'with an oil base, needed vigor from th* plant* than
may clog the pore* of a cow'* skin it would have tn September, ao tha!
and not only reduce perspiration next spring's growth ha* a better
but likewise reduoe milk flow. Fly chance from an October cutting. To
spray* should be applied tightly to make silage lhe college Is recon the outside of the eoaU-not forced mending the addition of so pound*
down to the akin.—Kansas Panner.
adding water to the molasses tot
TURKEY TROUBLES.
more even distribution as th* c«l
Pendulou* crop—a turkey trou­ legume 1* blown Intp lhe allo.
ble that often affseta aa many as
CULLING TIME.
arid territory—la becoming more
Culling time offers two ways to
make the poultry flock more profit,
country, according to the Univeralty able, according to a suggestion from
Of California. Bad heredity 1* the Michigan State college department*.
major cau*w~followed by unfavor­ Primarily culling offer* an oppor­
able weather condition*. The trou­ tunity to make egg production
ble la meet prevalent during heat more economical. A* pullet* and
wave* that cause the turkeys to hen* go into the laying houses for
drink large Quantities of water,— the winter, however, price* for
culled chicken* aye not especially
per cent of ihoae affected. No aatla- high. Bo farm f» mil lei with winter
faeUwy method of treatment ha* menus tn mind can add to the food
yet been discovered and the uni- supply by canning the cull hen* a*
veraity experts recommend marking well a* calves and surplus vegetables
all turkeys that show any evidence 1 •nd fruit*.
of this trouble to avoid uiing them '
MICHIGAN 8HEEF.
Michigan sheep growtr* Interest­
LAM* RATIONS.
ed tn producing a maximum crop of
Colorado Experiment Station re­ lamb* in 1D3T should Insure thereport* that recent experiments with *elve* against the failure zjf the
wet sugar beet pulp for lamb feed­ stock rem. advises George A. Brown,
ing were decidedly favorable to its head of the anima! husbandry deaddition to the ration. The stand­ Ktment al Michigan State col­
ard ration was barley and alfalfa
t. Occasionally a ram Is sterile
hay. When the wet beet pulp wu and at other tlmre a ram which
added lo this ration, lhe lambs sired a crop of lambs a year ago hu
gained 5.8 more pounds in M days— lost hl* usefulness. After a ram hu
the feed co*: SUS'leas per cwt. of been in five week*, one should
gain—and the lambs hdd so much place *ome colored material. *uch
better finish that they were valued u yellow okre stirred up with a Ute
at 50c more per cwt. Pulp cost SIAS J|e oil, or branding fluid on hli
per ton. The beet-pulp lamb* rbreast which will mark any ewer
ihowed an estimate profit of He that are returning, snd if a notice­
each —Sheep Breeder.
able number return to the ram, an­
other slye should be obtained at
CLEANING DITCHES.
once. Professor Brown suggests it 1*
cleaning gras*, weed* and !oo*e dirt good practice for neighboring farm­
out of drainage ditches. For narrow ers to exchange sire* after the first
ditches, drag the bottom with an old five week*, thus having the advan­
threshing cylinder or a disk fasten­ tage of turning in a second alre.
ed with a long log chain to a pole
MORGAN.
that has a team hitched to each
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hammond of
end. Where tho ditch 1* wider and,
more round, use the two team* and Vermontville and Howard Shaffer
l&gt;ole lo drag the bottom with a of Otsego called on Mrs. Millie
wheel from a corn planter or a bin­ Flury Thursday evening.
der bull wheel—with lhe edge of the
wheel
ground
sharp.—Wallace's Rapid*. Rev. Quitman smith. Rev.
Salisbury and son. mt. White and
Farmer.
son. all of Belding, Clare Mead of
WINDMILL CONTROL.
Battle Creek. Rev. and Mrs. Jorden
A correspondent
of
Nebraska and son of Hastings ware guests of
Farmer ha* solved the problem of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mead and Mr.
automatically controlling the wind­ and Mrs. Elgin Mead Thursday.
mill that pump* water for hl* stock
Mrs. Millie Fluyy entertained her
two mile* from home. Hl* watering brother Austin DeLong and nephew.
tank 1* act close «to the windmil)— Rev. Allen peLong. and wife of
a steel drum floating on lhe surface Grand Ledge Bunday.
of the water in lhe tank is fastened
Mr. and Mr*, w. Y. Adam* enter­
to a hinged wooden arm that I* at­ tained over Bunday o|en Adams
tached to the chain governing the and family. Marie Huahman, Mr.
windmill—and a* lhe drum rise* or and Mrs. Shneeberger. Kfr and Mra,
lower* with the water in the stock Weinharl Allen end Carl Adams, W.
tank It luma the windmill of! or on

Rowtadsr and

made work, a fraction of lhe money
taken from him by, excessive tax­
ation; not a curtailment ot hl* lib­
Day exercises were con­ erty. of hi* right U&gt; do business In
st lhe North Maple Grove a lawful, proper manner, but legis­
lation which win prevent waste.
LitUa Gerald Lentz. who has been
staying with hls aunt, Mrs. Keith fundi appropriated for relief, a re­
Norton, returned to his home in duction In hl* tax burden, a lessen­
Battle Creek last Thursday.
ing In the number of federal em­
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Plummer and ployes. fewer laws and less official*
children of Battle creek were Bun- lo administer them. Let us give
him legislation which will do away
with that horde of public official*
Norton.
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Norton who now crowd Waihington like
and Mias Margery were lo Marshal!
Bunday the gue*t* of their son. tcred out all over lhe country like
Kenneth Norton and Mr*. Norton., a cloud of locuits until It 1* said

Mn. Brnert Qoldsn to celebrate tho
birthday of Mra. Edith Waite.
Mr. and Mrs. Marcel (valet and
daughter Enid, Mr. and Mrs. W.
Adam* and Maurice Adrlanaon were
visitors at tho home of Albert Blaser
of North Low«ll last Friday. Maur­
ice remaining for a few day* to help
with sppte picking.
Visitor* at tho Chas. Harrington
home Sunday were Marguerite
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
MID* of Nashville, Arthur Webb
Mr. and Mr*. Byron McKlbbin
and Beatrice Hooper of Battle and children moved—
last
-uweek
.m----------from,
□reek. Opal Webb of Gull lake and Mr* Wayne Bmlth* house to lhe
farm in Orangeville township that
they purchased recently from Mrs.
the afternoon.
Homer McKlbbin.
MILOMn. H- j. Krau* of Gull lake
left lor New York Olty Saturday
where she goe* for medical advice
and treatments.
Many happy memories are as­
sociated with OQtebeg 11. when Mrs
Florence Slater of Kalamasoo en­
tertained the “school girl*” of be-

o'clock luncheon at her hdtnc In
Kalamasoo. The afternoon was
spent. vUUing and many photo­
graph* of those day* were also dis­
played. The company wu composed
of Mr*. Kraus. Mrs. Florence Moll.
Mr*. Mary Flower and Mr* Slater.
Mr* Bellinger was unable to be
Xesdames Schulte, Quiet, Bar-

Ralamaroo Mr. and Mr*. Gilbert
were aUo Kalamazoo viallora that
Last Thursday Gerald Mercure of
Kalamasoo came lo the Bradfield
home to aecompany John Bradfield
and son. Merle, on a hunting trip
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Bradfield en­
tertained Mr. Mercure and aon.
Jack and daughter. Arlene, for dln-

W. A- Spaulding was accompanied
to hl* farm here last Thursday by
Judge W. W- Pottar of Lansing.
loween box social el the school­
house Friday evening. Oct. 30. Four
prize* will be given for the best
and funniest costumes.
Mr*. Bradfield took a load of
school pupil* to Ha*Ung* Wednes­
day afternoon to attend "The Bleep­
ing Beauty** mallnae.
Mr. and Mrs Tvd Tack and chil­
dren spent the week end with their
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Quick.
Several from hero enjoyed the
band concert at the Kellogt-Ag,
school Friday evening given by the
Future Farmer.’ of America band
Just before they entrained on Sat­
urday for Kansas City, where they
will play thia week. Ross Norwood
of MUo^ 1* one of the number.
Remember the Bunday School
Convention at Milo n«xt Bunday,

Landon and a Republican Cwgreu

government payroll.
Give him legUlation which will
withdraw government from private
business, which will prevent mon­
opoly. which will give producer and
consumer hls just due, which will
give the American consumer mar­
ket to ti&gt;e American farmer-pro­
South Haven and Sam Smith of ducer. which will bring our expen­
Grand Junction spent Saturday ditures within our Income, which
with tho former'* daughter. Mrs will enable industry to provide job*
Geo.^Havrn*.
at a living wage rather than giving
Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Oak* and government aid through dole or
baby of Middleville visited from relief payment*, which tend to pre­
Wednesday until Sunday with the vent re-employment and bring lhe
former's parent*, Mr. and Mr*. Roy farmer, in hi* effort lo secure help,
Oak*.
in competition with governmentThe Misses Donna and Leona paid men. In short, let ua be hon­
Bagley and MUUcent Bird of Kal- est with ourselves, live within our
sm**oo visited the former’s grand­ income, encourage industry and
parent*, Mr. and Mrs. Franel* Gor­ thrift, and with public fund* give
ham, from Thursday until Monday. to those, and only those, who are de­
A large crowd had an enjoyable serving of that aid and who are
time at tho Community Club meet­ ■willing, when occasion arise*, to
ing Friday evening al the home of help themselves.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilcox. Mr. and
Democrat* have been robbed Of
Mra Everett McCallum will enter­
their party organisation, their plat­
tain in November.
.
form ha* been scrapped by the New
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dunn enter­ Dealers. Let us then. Democrat* and
tained tha following guest* on Republicans, join together again*!
Bunday: Frank Schrier of Ann liie New Dealer* and the Commu­
Arbor. Mrs. Schrier and Mr. and nists in this election and then carry
Mrs. Louie Erway and daughter. out those promises made in *32 to
Marian, of Kalsmszoo. the occasion ■ practice economy, balance lhe bud­
being In honor of Hubert Schrier'*'
get, reduce the number ot Federal
third birthday.
officeholtfers aud. at lhe »ame lime
go forward on lhe theory that
American men and women are still
Many Once&gt; wwa
Deaf
capable of thinking and of doing
NOW near Again for themselves—* theory which will
-• keep for us and our children the
Many who once were - hard of
hearing'' have solved their prob­ same opportunities which we for­
lem through lhe pre^tcription of a merly enjoyed and this In a land
noted
Vienna specialist. It is which Is free from regimentation
called OURINE. Before you invest and dictatorship—in short, a gov­
In expensive hearing devices, try ernment under laws enacted by th*
one bottle of OURINE. See if it people’s representative*, rattier than
doesn't help you. loo. to banish a government of men. grasping
UKing in
earache, ringing and buising
"~ । power and advancement for themj selves. If you bcliFve in these things,
ears, earache, chronic headache.
L ‘
ir better 1 let me have your vote on election
and enable you to hear
Relief 1* quick and lhe cost 1*
only a few cent* a day. Money back 1
Respectfully,
guarantee
Gel OURINE today
CLARE E- HOFFMAN.
Carve th &amp; Stebbins. The Rexall I Republican Candidate for Congress.
BUwe. Hutlngs. Mich.—Adv.
—Political Adv.
.•

,

FAIR LAKETha Kinsley Ladies' Aid meeting
will be held October ag. for dinner,
with Mrs. Jason Willison, Mn. Ike
Lelnaar and Mrs. Henry Houvenlr
|n the group entertaining with her.
About 30 young people dropped In
on Ml** Alice Willison Saturday
evening to remind her ot her birth­
day. Games were played and a
fine supper served.
Mrs. Mildred Frits and Mr*. Lot­
tie CoUtater attended the funeral
Wednesday in BaUla Creek of Mn.
George Goldsworthy.

When there's freight to go, when there's freight
to come, insist It move by railroad.
.
Freight via railroad means efficient handling,
speedy movement, on-time arrival.
Freight via railroad means a protected shipper,
a protected shipment, a protected delivery.
Freight via railroad means using the only trans­
it agency whose average charge is less than a
penny ■ ton • mile. ■

Make this « habta Have *11 height go—and
' wrefwA Ir-&lt; ■ *»
1 ••
, .

BanifttM v^aowwwaow
amiterra Tinw
*w*.»

I9c
C; 20&lt;

GOOD LUCK

2 - 25«

lb. pkg. 20c

Margarine
2^ IRc 139,c

Red Circle Coffee
Philadelphia
O-SoGud rae

■ $1.I2

Pillsbury Flour

Hwl5«
Salada Tea
Blue
.11
Cigarettes
*5*
W IF
Chipso or Rinso
3 ’•*’ 25c
Canvas Gloves
2
15«
Crackers
Morton's Sfflt
15'
Lux or Ivory Flakes
2fe
Fig Bars
3 &gt;u 25'
MaxweltHouse Coffee “■ 27«
Beech-Nut Coffee
7 27'
tom Flakes
*“■*“
ST
ijc
Sparkle

6

1 *•«*•

Sllcad .

Jello

POSTS

POST

Toasties

AT

± 2!c

-

ALL FLAVORS

2P

INSTANT

Postum

California Dried Fruit Sale,
4 - 2|P
Prunes
»29c
JSX
33t
Raisins
Cree
’£?■ 59c
Prunes
Sunsweet Apricots

MOWN

Nvw
YB-40 Siae

Prunes
Bulk Apricots

4^^
11jf
In Michigan, 82 yean

/* r

/

t

ag°' 'h6 RePubHcan
Party was born. We
are, by every tradition,

representation in the Senate of the United

Stites.

Dried Reaches

2

15c

FREE OFFER

&gt;

r

♦fa

*

RAJAH EXTRACT

understands the problems and needs of the

•

people of this Slate, and who has established

4

■4

Elect Foimer Gov Wil BUR M
u s

BRUCKER.......
■VUUCAN STAT| CgNHAL MMMfHU

2Jt

4

By electing Wilbur M.' Brucker—

SERVE* AS ATT’Y. GENERAL
ARB GOVERNOR

DAILY

Dog Food

Serve Dried FnsUe tor Any Moot

we shall send to Waihington a man who’

a permanent record for honest, loyil and

5-25c

IF
I9c

2

a Republican State, and need Republican

efficient public service*

MKK1OAN

8 o'Clock Coffee

Whit*,
Bread
Calpmet
Argo Starch

sured.

Insist it move by
railroad • . • .

BOKARcoffee

S» th*
II.. of Fr«&gt;h
V*«H*W«t Drily «i it* A OP

WEEK SND SPKIAkS

HMD'teTTyCt
WMMkAffW
IWSSR, tPPMIT*

&gt; TTWRl WvINNI MWi
Clibllpe Bfflf IfeMit

«

NretUaf
-IT*
-

If RA H*
wt-n*

Mrreaal *
• ■VNw"f

—wn1/

.

1

�THE BASTINGS BANNER, THCWDAY, OCTOMQI 88, iff
. IT«-W.--k-U&gt;»r MMaz «.»H -»&gt;/ &gt;■ • -» I
NASHVILLE. .
The call of the bsb-whlte , isr 13. 14. 15 and 10 years who hold a |
The Are department was called district.
Plans were made Sunday for a
made only by the male bird, says ai small-game hunting license must be I Mr. and Mrs Peter Kuns of near
Stewart of Whlt- out last Tuesday night to the Ar­
accompanied by a iMrent. legal or I Hastings spent Sunday with Mr.
welhknoem wildlife authority.
n engaged aa mu­ thur Milter farm near Assyria The i Rally day on Bunday. October 25 ao
i. She begap her bams and most of the other build- keep lhe day especially ■ f"T that,
authorised guardian.white hunting'and Mr*. Orville Flook.
tag* burned. The fire department There will be a pot luck dinner at
Th(. „We
C1 b Wljoye4
According to repotU issued by the or trapping on land* not. tenanted
^Continued frotn page 3. Bee. 3)
by their parent*, states Director P 1
cloclt |uncheon Wednesday
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brumm and saved the house from catching fire. noon and a program in ths after­
J. Hoffmaster of the department of.
of Mn^red^X/.
noon,
son. Bruce, called at the hospital In
long list only C- D. Beebe of KalaCRISSEY.
Battle
Creek
to
see
Frank
Louer
of
year,
but
the
gas
production
has
Baturday. Oct. 3t. Is lhe last day
o. 3.
THREE CORNERS.
October IB Letter.
increased. Up to Sept. 1 the gas panted by on older person. Juveniles I afternoon
with Mrs. Llfeble Wil- Augusta, who is ill there.
production was 3,777,410.000 cubic
Rapid*, R. T. French of Los Angeles,
Miss Doris Bbulter entertained October 15 Letter.
Delbert Caxler, 71. passed away
betwecn the age* at 12 and 17 us-;
Small wonder .a sparkle light* A. A: Anderson of Grand Rapids
Sunday afternoon at Pennock hos­ at a birthday supper Tuesday eve­
ually plead Ignorance of the law, Mrs Hale Sackett and two daughFrank Hortom of Los Angeles and ■
Season on fux squirrels In the upper
ning in honor of her mother. Mrs.
when Interrogated by u conserve-1 ters Emily And Lucille. Mrs. Ralph pital. He had spent hls entire life
All )W»t persons of the ages-of tion officer.
| Welherbee and Mrs. Gall Lykins In or ngar Nashville. He had been lOtls Boulter. Those present were. words spring to hls Upa when the Emil Tyden or thia city are now Uvin poor health for .several monlha. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kahler and hillsides flame with autumn beau­
"Becadte ot hl* age the boy may Ul'rr ut Hastings Saturday.
He leaves two brothers, William and I Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler of ty! Michigan with Its many Inland th* bcajro h. U u vitally interest­
nol always be held accountable for
Mr and. Mrs. Vent Bera have Perry Csxier of Nashville; three Kost Delton.
lakes and miles upon miles of ed in lha success of the bank as If *
hls violation, but hls parent or le- moved in with'Mr ujul Mrs. Warner sisters, Mrs Myrtle Moore.
Mrs. j Mrs. Peter Rlckermaji and MIm Great Lakes marshes la indeed a he were a member. Hla deep In­
gal guardian should be informed Beru lu spend the winter.
terest was manifested throughout
°f ®*ule ,Cn*k
Marie culler have been spending "hunters paradise."
and whether he is or not hr is subB P Seward ha* gone to Battle Mrs Nettle Beard, nieces and1 MVera| days in Kalamasoo
Willis
Thompson
of Bowne was a
----------------r----------------------------------ject to prosecution for permitting Creek to make Ills home with hl* nephews. Funeral services were 1 Mrs. D. Enaian Mrs Till Conyer Bunday guest of hls grandfather, help to the bonk In meeting Ils
hls charge lo hunt or trap in viola- daughter. Mrs Lucy Dexter.
problems
in that trying Ume.
held Tuesday afternoon at 2:30. and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Enaian {M. E Moore, and aunt. Clara J.
tion
i The
the Brother____ ___ ’ 2 „
. ' The present officers, directors and
—— of
-- the
— law
---. first
... meeting of...
..
-- Mo'clock at the Hess funeral home. |, and
ann children
ctiiuirti) spent
loenl snday
Rnanv with
wlLn Mr.
Mr '““55 „
Director Hoffmaster calls Utter- hood will be on Monday. Oct. 20. । conducted by Rev.Dorotha Hnyter.; and Mrs.
Leslie Enxlon at Bradley
I
,~ «...
..
*'nt “ HolUnd employees have served the bank,
tion to the varying numbers of gun The supjier will be served at the | Mri. o«ll Lykin*sang. Burial was
Mr and Mrs Murte Reynolds and ' ■
for tbe following periods: M. L. ’
- ----------Mr. Bna
and Mr*.
Murte «*y
Reynolds
and
,
accidents Involvingboys between I Community house after which
the -—
— --------------------- ---—----------------- 'Ij son
M
M Solomon
MUrle
nolas
»nd '
in • Lakeview
cemetery.
and Percy
and
daugh-1
MU*
Roblhson ' of near Cook as officer or director of the ,
'■
' “
‘
'
company will go to the new school
Mr and Mrs. Porter Kinne spent । ter* spent Sunday with relatives at Bancroft motored over in her new bank since 1890. Cashier M. A.
each year "Mere youngsters who auditorium where Gerald Walker. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grand Ledge.
Clir
•P®w* vhe“d.w,2h,VM Lambie began hls connection with
should no*, be allowed io have a gun of the Detroit Tigers, will be tfye Hawthorne and family near Lacey, i Mr. and Mrs. Harold Myers and, PBrcnla- Mr. and Mrs. H- J. Robin- the bank tn 1903 and has continued
are among thaw wounded or killed speaker The public Is invited lo
with It ever since, serving as cash­
Mrs. Leia Roe of the Kellogg 1 Nettie Barber of Kalgmaxoo spent:
, each fail and winter by shooting the talk and admission tickets are school and Miss Jean Roe of Kala- Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Irving
M”- Claude A. Hammond called ier from 1919 up to the present
| accidents." the Director says "The on sale al Dlsmonte's ilore.
time. F. W. Stebbins was employed
| presence of an older 'person might
The Woman's Literary Club met
as clerk by the bonk from 1899 to
I have prevented a mishap and saved at the library Wednesday afternoon
1908. when he began business for
at 2 30 o'clock for Federation Day.
and Mrs. Otto Swart* and Nancy himself. He went on Die board of
The
business
session
was
conducted
1
ment.
When hunting or trapping on
of Grand Rapids spent Sunday eve­ directors in 1920 and has continued
i carried off jme of tho prises.
lands on which their parents are by th. president. Mts. Floyd Everts., p^ng Dllbahner of Chicago was
ning with Mr. anU Mrs. Edgar Fi- up to lhe present time. Kellar Stem
।
Word
was
received
Monday
at
not regularly domiciled juveniles The following program was given:
caller at the Gall Lykins home । the death of Mrs Verna Smiley who fleld.
*
of tbe ages of |3 14. 15 and l« Roll call. Vacation memories: read- Friday
1| made her borne tor several years at
Mrs. Anna Marble of Eaton Rap­ A. H. Carveth since 1928; Roy C. .
years must have a small-game li­ mg ol constitution and by-laws: , q..,..
' Only three days af school this 1 the home of Mr. Stocking. The ids Is spending a few weeks with Fuller since 1918; Dr. C. 8. McIn­
cense Issued on application and music, selected;
High Lights of _. j.
her
brother,
M. E. Moore.
°
tyre since 1927; Robert T. Walton
„
week tu lhe teachers are aUendlng i funeral was held, at Bloomingdale
County Federation. Mrs
Mrs. Claude A- Hammond at­ since 1930. Of the employees In lhe
Wordv 1 Ule .HuUtute at Grand Rapids.
' on Wednesday.
dian and must he accompanied by Maurer.
Mispronounced
_____ _
- - '
Mrs. W. H. Klelnhan* of Grand I Mr- *nd Mrs. E. D- Reynolds of tended a card party at the home ot bank Roy Chandler has served
the parent, guardian or an adult Mrs Frank Lentz; Artistic inter
­
i w,u l®'1^ and Mrs. Mattle Reynolds Mrs. Frank Barry, assisted by Mrs. since 1910; MU&gt; Winifred Johnston
representative authorial by them
pretations. Miss French's
Little 1 Rapids spent Monday here.
| Mrs. Edith Mayo spent last week oi Urbandale vteited Mr and Mrs Albert Barry, In Carlton Thursday since 1918; Loyal Lowell since 1920;
afternoon.
Omer Barker since 1937; Lester De­
j In Grand Rapid* as her sister un- , Warren cairns Thursday.
Several ladles of thia neighbor­ Vault since 1930; Mrs Nellie Cona­
, derwent an operation.
'
---- ------------------hood attended the missionary meet­ way since 1935 She had also served
HENDERSHOTT.
The Welcome Philealhea class ob.
ing at Mrs. Fife's home in the Fill­ the bank for several years before
served their tenth anniversary Fri- October 15 Letter.
more district last Wednesday after­ her marriage.
day night at lhe Community house.
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Hendershott noon.
'।
Il is filling that the Hastings
! The banquet was served at 0.30' and son of Kalamazoo were ,Sun­
Mr. and Mr*. Leo C- Hammond,
o'clock with the following program: day guesU at lhe home of their Dicky Lee and Mis* Maureen WU- City Bank should celebrate Ils
fiftieth anniversary. The other ten
March. Mrs. Jient Nelson. Lansing: [ mother, Mrs. Frances Hendershott
lllta of Lansing and WUliam Wllinvocation by Rev. M. E Hoyt of callers through the day were Mr Utts ot Battle Cftek were Sunday state banks'whose slate charters
Okemos; coinpiunlty singing led by and Mrs. Allan Haywood of Battle callen at lhe Claude A- Hammond were granted previous to No. 11,
which Is the number given the city
Mrs W R, Dean; toastmLstress, Creek. Mrs. Burrel Phillips. Oer- home.
Bank, have all dropped out of the
Mrs Stewart Lofdahl; Welcome, i trade Phillips, Miss Susie Phillips
help you to
plcturt, either by consolidation wltte
Mrs. Marlin Grahani; Response, and Mrs. Chas. Gaskill all from the
X 1KK./YO A CARLTON.
NORTHEAST
other banks or by failure to reopen
Mrs W L Gibson; vocaljsolo, Mrs. Hinds
. , district.
' Mr. and Mrs. Alonso Decker vlsattain the new beauty
W R. Dean: Class History. Mrs. 1 '*
'
Mrs EUla "Lahr
went to Cedar lle(1 friends m Battle Creek Sun- after th* banking holiday In 1933.
The City Bank has come through
George F. Evans: vocal duet. Mrs. ' Sprhigs Sunday with Mr. and Mrs day.
demanded today
Dean And Mrs Sackett: short talk.
Lahr Of H“tu’8S 10 vUU rel" ' Mr. and Mrs. Lyte Lydy of Maple the recent depression, with a record
Rev. J R Woaton. violin solo. Miss aUJ5S’ .....
,
Grove spent Sunday with hl* par- of meeting a shrinkage of 8700.000
in
deposits between 1929 and 1933,
Marjorie
Hoyt;
short
play.
"Sophie
Eniext M. ran and lund, .cent tnu, Mr. „a M„ tou
We have engaged Miss Sally Kleck­
mast of It In 1932 and early In 1933.
-ond.. at the ----------clyd#
of Sonneyville." reminiscences ^nd Sunday
home of- -------------hls mother „
ner to ducim with you your own in­
closmg.
| Mrs. Lilly Matteson in the Weeks and two lady friends of Royal Oak. The fact that it could pay nearly
dividual beauty problems
sixty per cent of its deposits in so
Clair Olmsted of Grand Rapids I short a time shows that it was a
She conies here at our expense, di­
was home over Sunday.
sound bank.
rect from personal training by Lang­
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Marlow and
Now with federal deposit Insur­
lois. world-famous beauty authority,
two children ot Mt. Clemens were
week end guests of their parents, ance on all deposits ot 95.000.00 or
Without charge to you she will give
less, with an ample capital struc­
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Marlow.
you a 45-minute consultation, includ­
ture. the bank has now reached a
ing a restful Cara Nome facial, a skin
greater volume of deposits than It
NORTHEAST IRVINO.
diagnosis, and a glorifying make-up;
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Walker of had In 1929. a very creditable rec­
and will help you outline your daily
Hastings were Sunday guests of Mr. ord. Ils officers, directors and em­
CANDIDATE FOR RE-ELECTION AS
ployees have still the one outstand­
complexion care. This consultation is
and Mrs. Earl Oler and family.
Miss Marguerite Scgar. who U ing purpose. which Is to give tho
light in planning far our customers,
teaching school in the Chidester best possible banking service to the
district, spent the week end with people of Hastings and Barry
Phone for nn appointment now. Only
her parents. Mr. and Mra. Harlow county.
10 consultations a day can be given —
Il Is tilting that the City Bank
Segar.
between the hours 9 n.m. to 4:45 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pierce of Lan­ should stress th$ completion of fifty
sing spent Saturday and Sunday years of banking service on its
fiftieth anniversary. Many friends
with Mrs. Irma Brown.
Nome Beauty Week
Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Lightfoot were of the bank have already extended
ON THE REPUBLICAN TICKET
to lu officers and staff their con­
In Grand Rapids Wednesday.
MONDAY. OCTOBER 15 to SATURDAY OCTOBER 31
Mrs. Ida Moore ts visiting her gratulations over the bank's golden
heartily
brother. James A. Matthews, at Mid­ anniversary and have
YOUR SUPPORT AT THE ELECTION
wished 50 more prosperous years for
dleville.
the institution. Many more will do
HASTINGS
THE REXAI.L STOKE
PHONE 2131
NOV. 3, &gt;936, WILL BE APPRECIATED
Prescription for highway safety: so during the coming week, for on
Automobllp brakes operated by the Tuesday next the bank will have
reached the half century mark.
Xi
horn button.

IlaxtingK City Bonk
50th Annivenary

Conservation and
• Outdoor Notes

HAV^ BEEN nrr.

-

bedded

Let Miss

Sally Kleckner

Telephone calls to distant points

now cost less

day or night

than ever before, reductions apply

ing to both station-to-station and

person-to-person messages.

ELLIS E. FAULKNER

The lowest rates to most points
are in effect after 7 every night

REPRESENTATIVE IN THE
STATE LEGISLATURE

and all day Sunday. For instance,

Cara

during those periods, you can call

the following representative

CARVETH &amp; STE HINAS

points and talk three minutes for

FAC or LESS
B • Rates to other points

IAsk
are c°rresp(iiuiin^&gt;ow“Long Distance”

N

STATION-TO-STATION CALLS

FROM HASTINGS TO
ADRIAN

NIGHT AND SUNDAT
RATES

I

DAY
RATES

C. THOMAS STORES
BIG FOOD BUYS

CALIFORNIA'S FINEST NEW CROP

A FALL FESTIVAL OF EXTRA VALUES FOR THRIFTY FOOD BUYERS
THOMAS SPECIAL

COFFEE

COCOA xr 2

8.35

S.65

.35

.65

SOUTH BEND. Ind.

.35

.55

Golden Bantam

Cream Style

Extra Biq

BIC RAPIDS

.35

.60

CADILLAC

..10

.80

CHICAGO, ILL.

.4.5

.75

DETROIT

.40

.80

FLINT

.35

.65

TOLEDO, OHIO

.40

.70

MANISTEE

.45

.85

TRAVERSE CITY

.50

.90

FT. WAYNE. Ind.

.40

.65

PONTIAC

.40

.75

JUICE

.35

.50

Oven Baked

.50

.80

OWOSSO

/

PRllj

DRIED FRUIT SALE

ANN ARBOR

Milwaukee, Wis.

lERYft

: C.THOMAS STORES

Sweet, Tender
Medium Size
Eafly June

FRESH FIG BAR

COOKIES’

3

ii-

25c

SURESET
4 ■■‘-15c
CAMPBELL'S
TOMATO
Q
| E

Z

l«JC
f"

PORK &amp; BEANS PC

No. 2
Cans

No. 2
Can

9 Snow Queen
All Purpose Flour

CATSUP

24&lt;/z lb.
bag

Good Flavor
Large 14 ox. bpttle
.

MUFFETS
Wh.xt BiicuiU. pk,. I -JC

MUSTARD

FLORIDA JUICE

ORANGES

,

-29c

SNOWDRIFT jit. CQ_
SHORTENING -3OC

HEAD LETTUCE

SHINOLA

CRANBERRIES

cm

9c

MATCHES
6 box.. I9c
SAL SODA 2&gt;£ lb. box Sc

CARROTS 5—

2 -15c

cm..

a. 19c

la. 3c

15c
25c
10c
75c
10c

1

CMAMSTYIX

QI.

10c

BROWN SUGAR 10 IU- 47c
MACARONI
3- 17c
Q Na.1
TOMATOES
W eaos 25c
5c CANDY BARS 3- 10c!

PRUNES

NATURE’S BIGGEST FOOD BARGAINS

Sweet, Tender, Medium size “ 7c
LARGE 40-50 SIZE
3 - 25c

RAISINS
SEEDLESS, BULK
NOT-A-SEED
IDEALSEEDED

3
25c
3 It,.- 25c
Ji,0' ’Oc

APPLE BUTTER
2 ft
PEANUT BUTTER
3
JELLY
IrAfiST
Orange MARMALADEfSUA.1*

17c
25c
25c
27c

SODA CRACKERS 5SJ
15c
, SOUP MIXTURE
3 h? 25c
PEAS. BARLEY. RICE, LENTILS, ALPHABETS

XEN-L-RATION
DOG FOOD
'
3 cant 25c
KEN-L-BISCUIT
large box 18c

OLD DUTCH CLEANSER
MX MOW TOO MAY UOUVX WM.
XIKM' A—1 H.UK QUALITY K1LVKUWABK
MADK BY OMKIDA. LU.

3 cans 23c

6 cans 45c

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
16 PAGES

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1936

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 io 8

Summary of Social Security Act WOODLAND PAY NG Social Security Act NOT’COUNIYS
CONTINUES US
■
OS SCHOOL BONDS What It Purports To Bel
HELPFUL SERVICE
Facb For All to Comider—Shall

.

AMERICAN RED 0R0B8
FRIEND TO MANY
THOUSANDS

is

DISASTER RELIEF
MOUNTED IN 1936
Mrs. Forrest Johnson Is the
Roll Gall Chairman for
Barry County
The annual Roll Call for Red
CroM memberships is approaching
—starting Armistice Day. Nov 11
and closing on Thanksgiving Day.
Nov 26
Its continued program of
relief to disaster sufferers, of im­
mediate rare for those injured hi
accident* and the splendidly hu­
manitarian work in every time of
need should make every citizen
ready lo become a member without
urging
Tills organization draws no dUtlnctlon
of* race, creed or color, Ita
“
"

-

f

Ww Bo Stampwdwd Into This Costly

IGINALLY $125,000.00,
ORIGINALLY
$125,000.00,
Measure by the Federal Government?
WILL BE BUT $39,000
1— Social Security Act not truly money will be taken out of Hastings
NEXT MARCH
’’social” since every one will pay for and turned over to the Federal
It directly or indirectly yet only one
group of people will receive benefits.
2— It force* employees to pay 40
per cent more for the Insurance
they get than could be had by car­
rying similar policle* with private
companiej.
3— Farmers, farm labor, household
employees and employees In small
shop* get no benefit from thl* act
even though
- they
- all will contribute
. through Indirect taxation,
4* —Nothing
“
’In —
the act’ guarantee*
payment ot Insurance The money
collected goes Into general fluid
which U under Hie control of congres.*.
5 It adds to the overhead cost
of production thereby increasing
cost ot goods to the consumer
6—Will cost Hastings employer*
and employees $58,000 in 1937—This

‘ BARRY SUPERVISORS
The Red Crow
doe.* not dL*-

OPPOSE FEDERAL LAW

simply aids
If
you want to help
your less fortu­
nate neighbors—
the undcrprlvi-

Believe Social Security Law
Is Unjust to Barry
‘
County

Treasury In a fund which Congress
“
will
*’* control.
—*—’
7—This levy reaches a maximum
i based on present employment con­
ditions herei of $81,000 in 1949
bureaucrats to the Federal payroll
In Germany where conditions art­
less complicated titan they are here
70.000 agents are required to admin­
ister a similar law
9— No one knows how much it
will dost to adniuiishfr Hits law nor
does the act say how funds for this
purpose shall be provided
10— The New Dea) Administration

HAD NO OUTSIDE AID
IN ERECTING SCHOOL

&gt;

Employees Hit Directly Through Payroll Tax
Industry Can Pass On Its Share As Overhead
Expense — Insurance Payments Not Guaranteed
is to be regretted that until

Fine Building Meeting Town­
ship Educational and
Social Needs

has been Utile QbicusMoii of the socalled Social Security’ laws, which
President Roosevelt put on his
The Woodland consolidated school -must" program and which were
building ul Woodland village was crowded through congress late in IL*
erected in 1923
On the first day long session, with little time for
proper consideration Other nations
sold $100,000 of bond* interest 4 1-2
per cent
On December 1. 1923 elude unemployment and old age
pensions
and the care of needy old
they sold $25,000 more of bonds at
4- -3-4- rper cent The voters of the people, children and afflicted per­
Ktaud.*.
Unfortunately the United
li- Alfred M Landon has pledged , township authorized lhe selling of son-himself
t.&gt; at once take steps to1 M30.000 of school bond* but the Stales has attempted, under tha
.
leadership of the President U) do
, nullify this act and lo appoint a board by careful management, was
nori-purlban board to give this able to construct and furnish the
study or Investigation
building bv selling only $125 000
question tile attention It deserve-.
r countries
of lhe $130,000 as voted
The township has kept up the In­
terest on these bond* and reduced
TO OUR 8UBSCKIBERS.
the principal lo $63,000 Hie first
IltKi.uuo h all payable next March DESCRIPTIONS ARE
It has been reduced bv payments
from $100,000 to $46 000 and the
FOUND DEFECTIVE
$25,000 lo $17,000 but the $17 000
can nut be paid any faster accord­ Auditor
their subscription to the Bannr
General Returns
ing to lhe term* of the bond* than

Several—Not Included

The B«rrv county board of super­
visors put themselves on record as
opixised to the social Security laws
of the national government, believ­
ing that they are an injustice, par­
ticularly lo a county like Barry
The Banner shows In another ar­
ticle tn this Issue how the farmer
and farm laborer will pay Uielr
share indirectly on 6 per cent of the |
9 per cent tax levied on pay rolls,
but no fanner or farm laborer will
share In Hie benetlts No person
employed .u a domestic in any home

The Social Security
under three heading.*

laws

come to needy old oeople. also
needy children.
.... ----------This
...
blind or crippled children-etc.
for relief of needy old people needy money is not to be p«ud by the fed­
children, crippled children, blind eral gavernmenl unless the stale
Z H
.cwwa
children and other types of afflict­ -rw.r
where 'MS..
such .«VM
needy
persons u
live
shall
quality for sucli help from the feded persons
...
...
. .... . ■
t2&gt; Old Age Retirement pay,
with payments bawd on the right which will, directly or Indirectly,
of the
persons
receiving such tax the people of that slate so that
payments not on the ground of thet state can practically match
nerd or afflictions of any sort
dollars with Die federal --------&gt;3&gt; Tile third classification is de­ rnent to aid such needy persons
fined as "Unemployment
Insur­
ance." meaning by that term pay­ lew people will criticise. Michigan
ments to laborer' during periods ua., the very first state to qualify
for 1 Um share of federal money to aid
when they- air out of work
needy old people and afflicted chil­
Aid For Needy.
dren The money appropriated by
Act provides that the U S govern­ the federal government for such aid
(Continued on page 8. Sec 2i
ment shall pay up to $15 a month

The annual game supper ui the
Barry County Rod and Gun Club
will be held this Thursday evening,
at 7 o’clock a', the Community nail,
as announced by the committee The

OVER HALF THE AM
IS FOB BELIEF
W0BK

STATE AND NATION ALSO
CONTRIBUTE MUCH TO IT
H”»'
Amount. Oo»p*r.d
With Oogt of guoh ^jrorj[

in 1890
In the closing session of
county board of supervisors

tiw
last

year was adopted. This was arlginally fixed by the board’s com. mitlee on finances and approved by
the ----------------county lax
commission
at
-- —
—
$98,000.
The items of the budget are as
follows:
Board of supervisors....$ 2B00
Contagionj diseases
Coroners
Fuel, courthouse and Jail
1M0
Waler and HghU
M0
Books, stationery, sup­
plies ...........................
IJMO
Elections
EXTEND GREETINGS
Recording
births
and
200
deaths .?.
AND BEST WISHES
Insurance- ...’
Burial-of -soldiers
Friends Remember The Has­
. 28.000
Circuit court ..
. 5.000
tings City Bank on
Probate court .
. 2.000

will be paid in 1953
J V Dillon The
.
welcome will be
Anniversary
In May Tax Sale
To meet the $48,000 due next
trillion home
Tile supervisors have received extended by Dr Burton A Perry,
March the Woodland consolidated
president of the club Kim Sigler tmg* City Bank celebrated its goldwttle their subscription account
Pennock hospital
school board has uccumulsU-d a from the auditor general descrip­
Starr Commonwealth ...
tions of land on which taxes were
rend will lead the community .sing­
Fvderal
Agr. work
The district will ralw 18.500 this unpaid previous to 1935. which de­ ing and Rev Karl Keefer of Water­ tlnuous banking service to this city
Orangeville rearing ponds
100
year to apply on the principal of scriptions lire defective, therefore vliet will give the address. The ad­ and county We gave u history of
ARRANGE PARTIES
M others’ Pensions .................
the debt, also the interest due this the state declines to Include them in vance ticket sale promises a fine at­ the bank last week so It is not |
Emergency welfare relief 10.000
necessary to mention that at this
FOR YOUNGSTERS year, and this will be done without Taxes on the defective descriptions tendance
time Many visitors called during
amounted to $7 477 44
This city
Stale hospital and Ju­
die day The lobby of the bank was
Boya at Fairgrounds and the crating expenses so that this could had the biggest bunch of them, the RECALLS SEEING
venile Institutions .... 13.000
filled with beautiful bouquets of
loses and baskets of lovely chry- ;
Girls at Gym on
be done Of the $8,500. $1,000 Is to returned taxes amounting to $3
LARGE
FLOCKS
Total ........
SMJrt
243
-60
11
would
wem
u.*
If
H
would
santhemunu.
sent
by
the
Central
be pa.d on the outstanding $17,000
.
,
Halloween
pay the city to employ u surveyor to
Hanover Bunk and Trust Company , The last four items in the budget
sons. Whether employers of labor or
Halloween falls on Saturday night
’
correct
' description.*
----' city
J. A. Fans Tells About Some of New York City, the Continental call for $51500 or over half the budnot will have to pay their share in- [hij week and a* I* customary the own money $23000 to pay on the
Illinois National Bunk and Trust
of His Past Ex­
directly, in increased cost of goods merchants have planned a party $40,000 The school board have w- tborr These returned taxes of $3 •
Company of Chicago. The National work. These four Hema alone ar*
and services they buy. lhe 6 per Ior
boys and girls
Bank of Hastings. The National about twice what Uiezentire counperiences
! cured permission from Lansing 10
which means that other taxpayers I
cent which employers of labor pay
me festivities will start with a
Bunk of Detroit; Paine. Webber Ac
J
A
Faa.*
read
C
D
Bauer
’
s
to the government on their pay pBrade. the children meeting near Interest. $23,000 of bonds so that the will luivr to foot the bill for them.1
dll ton to what- the county pay*
Then too the disabled veteran
article tn last week Banner about Co. Grand Rapids, Heber Fuger &amp;
rolls. As this 8 per cent Is part of ( llle central school at 7 30 o’clock । entire SA6 000 of the original $100Winden
of Detroit: Mr and Mrs A should be added 825.000 or mote to
needs your help
Hb. problems of
the descriptions had been correct.
the overhead expense of operating They will march down State St
oc contributed by the stale and na­
readjustment are still acute and
recently *uw in Eutun county Mr A Anderson of Grand Rapid-*; The
aj factory,
plant
or business.
It
will
WMt u,
[p
monument
where the
lhe 1] •l h« result of these uocrutlons
tional.-------------------------------governments for such
work in
Michigan
Mutual
Windstorm
Com-------- —
w
factory.
piunt
uusmeas.
it
win
west
monument
where
we should .share them
Many of
scriptlons to be repealed once they Fans said that made him feel young pan? of this c|t&gt;. the Consumers U*li county. Then the county's pop*
again, because he remembered a
get
on
the
rolls,
because
supervisors
of that factory’s or firm * products the gymnasium and the boys
the Red Cross.
---------- — —- — —debt of the district from $63,000 as have to pul down the descriptions time in 1895 when thousands of Power Company and the Hastings \ ulatton was larger than it Is now,
or services
; the f-|
—
Bonner Boutonnieres of gardenia? and the preceding three years W«rw
fairgrounds.
Joseph Brozak ~
is &gt;, l8 Bl prc4ent u&gt; $30,000. which the
Over 1.173.000 persons have re­
We think lhe supervisors were ln charge of the bo
y4 Bnd
M1AS He!1Iet. ‘ district W||] retire as rapidly as pos- that they find in the assessment geese lighted on a big wheat field for the employees, officers and dl- years of depression, following tha
(OV*
1M MUs
ceived first aid training and 700.000
well within their righta in protest- en Merson of the glrb. other leach- 1
rectors of the bank were given by panic
-----of
* "1893.
“**
&lt; Continued on page 6 See 1 •
have been taught water safety and Ing agaiftst thb Social Security law. rrs acting, a* well as a number
new supervisor he would be quite Upjohn farm near Richland Then Clyde Wilcox, florist. Congratula­
(Continued on page 6 tP-c li
apt to take tne description* made by he was working
- on that farm for tory telegrams and letters came Ag-HE EXHIBIT
passed by congress on the insistence of the business men being present
TO THOUGHTFUL VOTERS.
hL* predecessor as being correct. All' Jac0“ i^Lrocker
of President Roosevelt It will cer- Bt
fairground.*
from the bank’s correspondents In
NOVEMBER 54
talnly be a great detriment to the
Games will be played and prizes
Because we believe that the econ- lhe
.... townships
.
. had considerable sums t.. V“^,r’ n 8J9 or, 9?° A b 8 ft%k 1 Chicago. Detroit and New York City,
- tn the defective list- jxtiple of a rural county like Burry, given u&gt; contest winners os m for­ omy policies of Governor Frank D. . -involved
Cas- lighted on section 14 In Orangeville also from the Michigan Banking
had “
the
Hope
Fttrgernld have been of unesttmable tleton ‘
— 1largest.
------- ‘ $847 13; "
----- township, close to Bugbee Comers. Association and the Michigan Bell ' This Year's Show Will B*
-------------------------- ——
I mer years. A bonfire for the boys
Mr
Fail*
remarked
that
he
could
value to Michigan and because coming next with $576.22; Irving
not gel one of Uietn os he had no Telephone Company Many deposi­
Larger Than Ever
STARTS DAMAGE
Ellis Faulkner, our present repre­ closely following with $518.05 Maple
tainment
KALAMAZOO ‘ LIVE­
gun He believe* lhe reason why lhe tors and friends of the bank, in­
Before
Contributions have been made by sentative to the state legislature, Grove had $17 42 returned taxes geese were not afraid of Mr Bauer cluding the officers and directors of
SUIT AGAINST CITY
STOCK SALES CO.
lhe city of Hastings the C'-mmcr- has shown himself a consistent sup­ Hustings township $20 03, Woodland and the others who saw them In the National Bank of Hastings, all
The
fifteenth
annual
Barry
Tills company was organised by ..
Yankee Springs.
$49 22.
porter of
these policies, and has
clal Club and lhe Rotary Club so portcr
01 mere
nas $99 06.
Eaton county was because of their gave their personal congratulations county Ag-HE exposition, sponsored
and is sponsored by. the Kalamazoo Vern Manee Alleges Defec- refreshments and prizes may be represented the Interests of this Rutland $41
and
best
wishes
for
the
future.
j
।
by
Hie
f
P.
a
and Home Economics
uncanny knowledge of whether lhe
Chandler of Commerce, and offers
Turchased
‘for
at both ix&gt;y
girts.
county
In
such
a fair•— -•
business-like
tive
Sewers
Have
Caused
purchased
'
J
boysa and
■
girls
■
1
—
—
—
**•
*-■. department of the High school, will
folks looking al them have guns or
a splendid market for all kinds and
FAMILY NIGHT.
It^would seem that with all that ) manner, we believe he deserves a
te held November 5 and 6. On
REPUBLICAN TOUR,
grades of livestock The livestock b
Trouble
( is
— done
u_._ to
WM give
B.-u the
„„ children aa happy
uupp; 'second term Mr Fitzgerald kept The Knights of Pythias lodge Is not.
He said that usually wild geese
sold ut miction directly to packer*
RALLY HERE FRIDAY'S^ “m Ji'i.XSiS'lS
------------------------1;, . nb .promises to the voters of Barry having a Family Night pot luck sup­
Vern A Manee. who owns a gar- ...
time
on Halloween that ...
they ahoult,
con
be
more
readily
seen
on
side
and other purchaser.* By this meth­ age just beyond the eastern city go directly home and not be al- 'county
---------- We
know
that Ellb---------Faulk------ ------------------Bm, Coor.li IMpubllewns will I!K'
?&gt;
od I' 1* claimed that the consigner limit* and beyond the Bliss plant. , lowed on the street committing ncr Is 100 per cent for policies that per al the Pythian hall Monday- roads, because the automobiles on
evening.
starting
at
six-thirty lhe more travelled highways make conoMe U.'lr &lt;npWi ErlrlM
&lt;* “»• “WK
receive.* better prices for hL* live­ has brought lull against the city depredations
have
tills“state
of
various
kinds **
— *brought
------ *“ **■*■
— * a balanced
------- J o’clock, when all members and their so much noise In the days when he wim * enm umr ol u» oounu ' “&gt;«y&gt;lM&gt;
|J» eu. eon«nUla&gt;
stock than by any other marketing ot Hastings, through hl* attorney , Think It over, parents.
budget and sound management He families will be welcome. A pro­
»rrd
»
public
ou,
in
Ccn\
*"*&lt;""&gt; “ “»
recalls seeing such Immense flock.*
plan The company’s new yards nt Adelberl Cortrlght. asking damages
has demonstrated this and therefore gram is also being prepared
----rn.lf
there were only horses and bicycles. Uwl audliorlrim hern commencing al,
KaLnniizoo provide scats for 700 of $3 000. This damage, he claims.,
we believe deserves support on a
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
Congaeaaman Clara
caplalnM In retail Ito nU&gt;,
' Then people did not go at break­ 7 30 o'clock
person.* and ran take care of 2.000 was due to defective sewers which
strictly non-partisan basLi
We
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
neck speed. They went to sec some- Holtman and Mr. diarle. Bacon ot nl«M ,PW»» ’L“ loci"* «« &lt;«*head nf stock
Farmers and con­ the city has built underneath the |
know what Mr Faulkner will do
*■&gt;«
■&gt;»«
‘ thing and got home safely. Now Oaond Rapid, will te the apeakera. I
signers can bring stock to thb mar­ Michigan Central track*. ‘ connect­
Why experiment?
they ro at a high speed, which
Herewith Is lhe program of the I
.
.
ket to be sold each week The pack­ ing with both the Bits.* plant as
This advertisement has been con­
Kenner
Kenneth Dunn U
- manager
of Um ’
make* It mure difficult to see. and lour;
er* and others will be there to buy well a* lhe north and south road
tributed by friends of Mr Faulkner
Ag department, assisted by Huron
Friday,
Oct.
30
—
Tour
of
the
inaybe
they
have
to
be
taken
to
a
the stock
Read the adv in thb which corners with M-79 near Mr.
who wish to see the sound govern­
Healy.
Chairmen
of
the
various
dlHospital,
and
sometimes
they
get
county with all county candidates
issue.
Monee’s place. Because ot defect*,
ment of the past two years con­
home when the undertaker does the Included In Ute caravan as well as
he claims the sewers are unable to
tinued
driving.
, Congressman Clare Hoffman and
CLAYTON COLEMAN.
FAULKNER FOR REPRESENT­
carry away the quantity of water
Earl Burhans. candidate fo: state nard Davis; corn. Alpheoo* Dunn;
AS Clayton Coleman has sold his that pours into them during heavy
ATIVE NON-PARTIHAN COM­
CHASE AND MAYO RE-ELECTED, senator The tour Will Include the vegetables. Ernest Van ayckle; fruit.
farm he will have an■ auction
sale storms
----------- -------ms
ne
MITTEE
Adv
He minima
claims mew
these ueievea
defects I
. Clinton Brill; potatoes, Forrest-Colt;
..
have caused the flooding of his place. '
Thursday was set by the super­ following slops:
rural schools. Carl Draper; mlscelDelton—10:00 o’clock
(starting
id one mile south of Hick- 1 injuring hb properly, has dlstrib- 1
visors
as
the
day
far
making
ap
­
CHICKEN DINNER.
। laneous, Wayne Perris; program.
mers. sec
35
Twp..
uUxj uiiiicaiiny
unhealthy garbage
on his
pointments for superintendent of point of tour).
~
— Borey
------ ’
--r-.| uwu
—•I Emerson Cairns; grade schools.
Quimby
church.
Tuesday,
Nov
3.
—
rv
Wlannerv
nurKnn
—
,
■
..
...
.
.
.
.
...
Dowling
—
10
45
o
’
clock
Wltb Henry Flannery a* auctioneer pr,.mUe# and caused a loss to him
the poor for a term of three years
Bogart.
5 to 7 30. 35c —Adv.
Maple Grove-11:15 o'clock.&lt;1 unch I Richard
and K- E Oray. clerk Mr Coleman ln hls garaKC because the flood
and « member of the county road
1,1 lhe Home Economics division
offers. 9
offer.
3 hnrw.
horses. *
5 h„d
head ot r..,U
cattle. WBUf &lt;&lt;x
hu gBlollM iyiUtn
Nashville—12:30 o'clock
”
commission for the some term WUbaked goods and a complete ward­
lgs. fine lot of chickens, farm tools, at the garage
Ham Chase was re-elected to the
The facta alleged
'
robe
iiave
been added lo lhe list of
'.’.'oodland—2 00 o’clock.
ouschold goods, etc See the adv are set up In a bill of complaint,
poor commission and Fred Mayo of
entries open to Home Be. atutaitar
in this Issue
I reeport—3 30 o’clock.
Maple Grove was continued as a
which ha.* been filed with the
1 Bernice Calms is manager and
Middleville-»
30
o'clock.
To
the
People
of
Barry
County:
member
of
the
county
road
commis
­
county clerk
1 G ladya Benntll. assistant.
H.istings—7:30 o'clock; All-Coun- ,
BEN BLAKNEY.
I am too busy taking care of your
sion
HORACE TOWERS
ty rally. Central auditorium; Con-1 Professor Peltlgrove at Michigan
Because of the death of his wife.
college will Judge the fair. In
business In the office of Barry
Democratic Candidate for the office
gressman Clare Hoffman and Mrs. 1State
1
Ben Blakney will dispose of his GOOD RETURNS
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
of
Prnsecutlnt
Attorney
County
Treasurer
to
campaign
in
Charles Bacon of Grand Rapids. 1'addition to the premiums given tn
household goods al his residence. 1
Barry County.
ON SUGAR BEETS . my own behalf, but if you have
323 W. Apple Bl., with Dewey Reed I
Dr and Mrs Alva O. Ruff.
speakers.
, , ,
.
ten* boys~ pbd^~hlghett ~in
as auctioneer and Clifford --Ham—, ' _
„
I llked my aervlces In the past I
Mr. Powers was born and raised
Dr and Mrs. Ruff live at 1019
mond. clerk He offers a XI
r.lcc
if1 CroP on Do”“Jd Tank • Plxrm 'would .pprelwu rralvlns ,our North Michigan avenue coming to 1n Nashville. Barry county. Mich
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
I em the Democratic candidate ! show at chlcagoPIn December
Is a.graduate
of the Literary
and
household articles Including, table
Hastings from Gull Lake whereHe
-------------------------------------------- ------I vole November 3. 1938.
Averaged 21 Tons to
and six chairs, rockers, sewing ma­
they spent the summer Previously ,
Departments of the University
for county clerk, and believe In ! Thll Barry county erpnaitinn haa
chine. beds
complete,
curtains,
Lorenzo
Maus.
।
they
resided
at
Lansing
where
Dr.
'
Michigan,
and
Is
now
associated
the Acre
giving constant service in that of- lhe reCord of being the largest of­
J
Ruff
practiced
optometry
for
20
wlt
h
Kim
Sigler
In
the
practice
ot
lamps, dishes. etc. See the adv. for
Democratic candidate for Barry
fice. If elected It will be my alm to,
Of |U ^inA in the state and it
Donald Tank whose farm Is on
| years.
1 law In Hastings.—Political Adverfull particulars.
give personal service to all thoae exp9cU&lt;1 th*i &lt;m.
County Treasurer.
Doster. Route 1. finished last week
J Dr. Ruff is the optometrist at the | tioement.—10-29.
who have business to transact In fujly M jafte Bn(j ptrhapa larger
drawing sugar beets from 5.19 acres
G. E. KENYON.
Chase Jewelry store, formerly Bess- I
* • *
'
that
office,
except
when
clerking
i
hBn
in Drevtoua wars
to
the
Holland
beet
sugar
factory.
Ill Health obliges 0 E Kenyon to •
mer’s. Hr Is a graduate of the 1 POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
for Circuit court and Board of _8u-1
nwi*
—
quit farming He will therefore have I Hb crop on the 5 1-5 acres was 115
The voters of Barry county, by Hutchinson school at LaPorle. Ind. To the voters of Barry county.:
pervbors.
an auction sale at his farm on M-43. tons- or Bbout 21 t0IU 10
acre
CONFIRMATION AT“
their continued support duzing a
Dr. and Mrs. Ruff expect lo at- 1 I am a candidate for Regbter of
*
Jack
W
O
’
Connor.
nine miles southwest of Hastings or | Under present conditions the
long period of time, have educated lend the Baptbt church in Hastings. Deeds on the Republican ticket at
EMMANUEL
CHURCH
Democratic
Candidate
one mile south of the Shulta school-1 powers and sugar factories share me In the efficient handling of the
------------- ! the election on Tuesday. Nov. 3rd..
County Clerk.
house, on section 15. Hope township on 1 S®*50 b*t-'l3. so farmers who Barry County Record*. FOR NO Mr and Mrs Robert W MacArthur, and feeI justified in asking your
Farewell Sunday for the Bet.
elected to the office of sheriff —Adv. 10-29.
Henry Flannery will be the auc-1 hBve » Kood croP
su8ttr
Mr
and
Mrs
MacArthur,
who
live
I
support
because
I
have
demonONE WOULD ARGUE THAT A
the same good record that I estabUoneer and Lester Bonneville, clerk. । certain of a good profit.
J. k. MoMnlty—Two
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
MAN WITH TWELVE YEARS’ EX­ ■ t 314 West State road, came to £tnited that I have the confidence llshed as clerk In the Hastings postHe offers a span of work horses, four
----------------- —-----------------PERIENCE ON ANY JOB WAS Hastings a week ago from Ithaca. 0[ tpc electorate in my community offiee and os manager of Barry
I am a candidate on the repub­
Servioei Scheduled
cows. 50 hens. 10 tons alfalfa hoy. I POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
Mr
MacArthur
Is mupujou
employed m
I M uj
they
have M
seen fit to
elect me as
NOT MORE EFFICIENT THAN A | Mich. “
»■ «.»«-«*
»*■«. u.
ey hBVe
_____________
lican
ticket
tor
re-election
aa
sher
­
Next
Sunday will be the
bv W»lldorff
Wnltrlnrff and
artrl Son
Qnn u
■« a
a licensed • ....
n. Supervisor county’* first state liquor store, will
a long list of farm tools. See the
justice of ....
lhe n
Peace.
Because my official duties re- NEW MAN. NO MATTER HOW by
iff of Barry county. I have given J A. McNulty's last Bundr- ■
adv. for date and full particulars. ‘ quire undivided attention, it will be PINE A MAN HE MIGHT BE. And I embalmer.
for Lhe
i0 vears c)erk o{ be Carried into thL* new office. I my best service to the duties of my
further promise that I will personal­
________
I Impossible for me to carry on an if lhe voters are voting a* they would
*nd Mrs’ MacArthur are Mill- , y,e township
office,
and
will
appreciate
your
ly investigate every complaint com­
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
active campaign for re-election for hire a man In their private bust- 1 laUd wlth the Methodist church. : —
---------------If -----------------------elected I will give
the county
a
port at the polls Tuesday, Novel
I am a candidate for re-election n secOnd term as prosecuting at- ne*», then I apply for the Job ex- They have one daughter. JoAnn.1 courteous and efficient admlnlstra- ing to the office and act Immedlate- 3. Jay Blakney.—Adv. 3 wks.
। iy. and that I will call in the stale
__________ ______________
for a second term as Judge of Pro- torney of Barry county on the Re- actly a* I would for a Job In pri- “Bed fourteen months.
UU1
,
tlon.
police only If and when. Il becomes
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT,
the Republlcan ticket. My publican ticket. I have attempted to vate Industry. 1 can and will con-1
Mr MacArthur says he has no A&lt;jv 10-39
Vemor Webster.
necessary
to
protect
the
public
Inr am
republican candidate the rite of
qualification* for office include sevcarefu] oni1 considerate at- Untie to give efficient service If you Particular hobbles but doe* enjoy
1 offlco of treasurer of Barry
cn years experience as probate reg- I tention to all county business which will hire me again. Private Industry I “ fishing trip occasionally.
TO. —
BARRY
COUNTY
VOTERS. leres’- Oeo H. Myers. Democratic ■ Ior
------------------------ -----------------Ister and four years a* Judge. If has passed through my office. I and Individual* don’t fire a man be- I
re-election : candidate for sheriff —Adv.
----------- —
---------------~I am a candidate for re-election
county
and
will ---------appreciate
your
re-elected I promise to give my best hope that my record during the causa h* 1* experienced—THEY I
Mr’j
p ” es
to the office of county clerk on the
, support at the general election Nov.
, Mr and Mrs. Oles came to Has­
efforts to the duties of this office. . p*^ two ,years
ha* been «uch k.
that»
CHICKEN SUPPER.
V—
GIVE
HIM
A
RAISE.
Verv I ilnrwrwl
v me worthy
I ■■
. . .. .jw......
; tings fro»h Greenville and are living will give the .«ame honest, cheer-1
Very sincerely yours.
it makes
of-wconsideration
George A. Clouse.
Respectfully,
Star Grange
Orange hill.
hall. w«
Wed. Nov.
at 517 West Walnut street.
Adv.—10-29
Stuart Clement.
ful service to all as I have during starling at 5 P. M.—Adv.
for re-election to a second term.
Earl R. Boyes.
Bunday, Nov. 1.
Mr. Oles Is the supervising teach­ the past two years. As reference I
NEW LOCATION.
1 Your vote on Nov. 3 will be appreDemocratic Candidate
NOTICE.
er of the correspondence center es­ am glad to refer you to those who I
Register of Deeds.
PRIZE MASQUERADE.
AU ex-service men are Invited elated.
tablished
here
by
the
University
of
have had business with my office.
• Moose hail. Saturday night,
-Adv.
Sincerely.
to attend a meeting this. Thursday,
AU floea at 510 0- Jefferaan atraaL—Adv.
Michigan.
MrOles
holds
a
mas
­
Respectfully yours.
Archie D. McDonald.
evening at the Veterans of Foreign —Adv.
ter's degree obtained al the Univer­ —Adv. 2 wks,
Allan C. Hyde. I welcome.—Adv.
Out ll-B.
RUMMAGE SALE.
Wars’ hall In Otsego at eight o’clock.
Presbyterian church, Oct. 29, 30, sity of Michigan and is a member,
DANCE AT CLEAR LAKE.
RUMMAGE SALE.
The speakers will be former V. F.
FMEPOBT O.K.
of the American Legion.
DANCE AT CRESSEY.
W. commander Vandenberg and
will servo their annual chicken
Old fashioned mixed dances Fri­
Mr. and Mrs. Oles, who have one I Saturday eve. Eckier’s Orch. New I Central P. T. A. al C. Thomas
Dr. Robert Sparr of Benton Harbor day night. Regular dance Saturday
Don’t forget we’ll j store Bldg.. Prl. and Sat, Oct. 30 dinner Wed. evening. Nev. ♦. Attaitt.
BUB-DEB BAKE BALE.
son. aged 9. are affiliated with the management.
A good attendance Is desired.
night—Adv.
50c; children Mce-Adv.
Oct, 11. Feldpausch Market.—Adv. Presbyterian church.
have a Halloween party.—Adv.
1 and 31—Adv.
—do so by Joining forces with the
Red Cross, which is an active agent
for the relief of suffering
During tlie past year the Ameri­
can Red
brought permanent
help to more Qian 131.000 families
affected by disasters which struck
39 of the 48Mnt('s Trained nurses
were fumlsMcd to care for those
hurt by Qoo&lt;l lire wind and earth­
quake food was given the hungry,
clolhlng wiui diAlrlbuled. the homeleas were sheltered and this "Great­
est Mother stayed on the Job until
all were able to help themselves and
were assured of a livelihood
Be­
cause of your membership dollar,
the Red Cross was enabled to ren-

Four Auction Sales

K

May We
Introduce

I iltJf'“T* W

' RepubUcan llcket If re‘clected 1

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1»M

‘ Wise Advice From

The Banner office b Indebted to- FALL CONCERT BY
GO ROUND THE
Mr.. Prank Haywood ot Carltontowtuhip for a bouquet of rates.
MUSIC GROUPS
She »ays the bush has many buds I
but a white frost Thursday night High School Students to Pre­
Varioui Oountriea Will Be
O P Slnkler. who has--teen very spoiled al! chance* of further bldsRepresented at the Methsent Program at the
ln letters u well as Ui addresses
HI. la reported as on the gain.
soms.
:
odiit Uhurch
j
Governor Fitzgerald has said to hh
•Mrs Russell Kantner and MLu
Gordon Thompson, who live, near'
Auditorium
Be sure to reserve Thursday eve-]
Ethel Jones are victims of the Shultz, had the mhfortune lo wt I
H„Unls „Uh lchool minlca| supporter*: -U you people vole for
mumps.
several ribs broken *ben
when a helf«
heifer organizations
orBBnlzaUons”will
wi’li present their fall
fall Ithe Republican national and slate nlng, Nov. - 5. for the Round thd
he
was
leading
became
fraction
on
AlSay
Nov
13
at
elih
«*
rore
*
nd
d0
*
n
»
he was leading became fractious
..
1
World supper at the Methodhd
John Schultz, aged 11. wa* the He
b doing as well as possible but
under X dlwclkm U Mbs U
"ln« RepubUcan
naming
Rcpuoucan member,
inemoers of
01 lhe
me church.
I
first person to buy a ticket at lhe
doesn't care to
। state iMt&lt;iatim
legislature, ao that
that th*
the «
adh.
Each one of the eight Ladies' Aid
_ repeat the exper- .‘ Jeftn
ai-erum. »j....
r Hine and. —r .stat*
new Barry Cheater
1 tnlnhtraUon's program will not be Circles will have a separate booth!
Mr and Mrs Wallace Osborn and lence.
I. gratetul to Mr and “T'r." xylophone
It
mterfered
appropriately decorated, where food
me Banner is grawiui to mi aim
A new xyiopnone purenasea oy i
family have mr^ved Into their new
Mrs. Fred Nye of BanBeld for the the school will be played by Robert "P£JL.w“
I™ may be purchaaed. Circle No. 1 will
home on West Grand street.
____ _______________
_______________ ne.tr. tor uie nrat | ’lU1 ln lh*,‘
lwo
represent Germany and will Mil
dahlias brought to the Ban- Bush In the orchestra for the nnt |
Seen from our office window—a 'lovely
week. Suth
8u?h acts
acts of
of -----time---In public. A
new --------sousaphone
1 ner office last week.
. -----•------- b&gt; ’7““’’ °f the Democratic B»JOr* sauer kraut and welners; Circle Nq
young girl proudly leading a pretty
deeply
appreciated
wl
n
tx
played
by
carl
Bogart
In
the
lr
h
"
2. lhe United States, selling baked
, kindness are deeply appreciated
white shaggy'~dog on a leash.
_• various bril­ &gt;,.41. han(j
। you like the economic record and
beans and steak; Circle No. 3, Ice-1
'The dahlia* were of
Earl Hubbell ot Rutland suffered liant colors affd unusual for thb
A combined
combined group
group composca
compo^d 01
of
f Governor
he land, ice cream and cake; Circle Nol
A
------ -°-------------Fitzgerald,
----- -------- -..
.....
i
ask.
vou
to
sunnort
members
of
the
cuts on his face and an Injured lime ot year.
of‘ variuua
various auiuai
kinds
me
u.. cnorun.
chan.. Kiri.- glee Cua
ciuo ^C
anu th.
uic II —'lYk1 ’4,’ Michigan, pies u
shoulder when he was kicked by a
Earl Curtis met with an unusual boys'
5, —
Ireland,
potatoes; —
Cir!,
oovs glee
Kiee club
ciuo will
wm sing
buik the
inc final
iu&gt;» 1| l^gLvlature
—
. who
, will
*
.you
~ to pul hb |Icircle
-------- No.
-— —
—. y
hofbJ
accident lhe other day While slid- number accompanied by Lh'e -----or- nros.-am
Pro8"“m In force
force. In
In thb
this eountv
countyI C!e No 6, Sweden, Q
Swedbh
—..... —
cookie!
•
Thb tz
b something differ- IJJ}*1 *°“*d ..m'an,
I and salads; Circle No. 7. China]
At a rcccn crippled children's mg down a ladder his Anger caught chestra
TT.2:
clinic '■ponsorod by the St Johns on a nail In one of the rungs in ent and new
new and
and promises
to be IEllls E Faulkner for re-election to Chop gUey. rice and tea; Circle Nq
promises
Rotary Club. 15 children were ex­ such s way that lhe finger could nol worth hearing.
1 the house and Earl Burhans. Re- 1 g. BrazlL coffee and milk The Ctrl
, or removea is was necessary 10 »»»■ ,
Tickets may be purchased at the Publ|can candidate for the slate C|e chairman will have charge o|
amined
The ooard of supervisors allowed oul tpe ladder rung which he cat- | office beginning Nov 10 at 10 15 Mnalcher booth assisted by *ome ot thl
'irnli'i.l claims tn
—— .r ,*
...
Xau-to.**.
I
.
•
.....
.
.
i.
*—
I member*
I
criminal
to the evtent
extent cit
ot rled in his lhand
to the doctor s pr|Ce of tickets will be ten cents If SERVICES
FOR MELVIN POST. I The price* will be reasonable sJ
1982 !8 and miscellaneous claims of ....
where .w_
the Injury
-----------was--------cared- •tor
—
bought in advance and fifteen cents
Funeral
services
tor
Melvin
Post,
you
may get a fine dinner at a mod]
If purchased at the door
Ml* Mary McElwain moved this ROTARIANS HEAR
21. who was fatally injured last crate cost Make your plans lo bl
week to an apartment
In
Mrs
DR. R. B- HARKNESS.
Tuesday evening In a motorcycle sic- | there as serving begins at AvI
Pauline McOmber's
building
on
Dr Robert Harknesa. head ot the HOW CRIMINALS
cldcnt on M-43, were held Friday 1 o'clock.
county health unit and In charge
West Court St
। morning from lhe home of his par- 1
—7----------■• • •
I
ABE
APPREHENDED
Hastings lodge No 58 I O O F ot thi W K Kellogg Foundation
I enls. Mr and Mrs George H Post, MR. FARLEY BUTTS INTO
L» putting throuth a number of work in this county, was the speak­
1723 West Green street Rev J A
. J" '
initiations and Is experiencing u er al the Rotary Club luncheon James D. Cunningham Guest McNulty of the Emmanuel EpbOUR DISTRICT AFFAIRl
; Monday
rubslwtial growth
,
. Ur Harkness gave an tncopal church officiated
The body '
-------------I
Speaker at Brother­
Mr and Mrs Clayton Brandstet- - foresting account of his recent visit
, was Ukrn by train to New York I Sends Certificate to Ger
hood
ter .ire the parents of a daughter . io New Orleans to attend sessions of
where services were heir! at the
.
lhe
National
public
Health
Associa
­
born .ast Thursday
She
.......................
’ .. .................
’ -------Tile Hastings Brotherhood year home of his brother Burial was tn
shum Severance as Pres­
tion
called Mary Michael
opened auspiciously on Monday eve­ the Elba Center cemetery
idential Elector
Dr Harkness Is lhe master of a ning with a fine enrollment
Mr and Mrs Carl Patten • Belly
Be­
Besides his parents, he Is survived I
Doiilei &gt; have rented the apartment droll wn and he has a keen sense of cause of Illness H H Reinecke of by his grandmother. Mrs. Flora I □crahum Severance, chairman q
in Mrs J W Sage s house, vacated humor and a deep Insight into the Detroit was unable to come, but he Past, Bosom, N. Y . three brothers, j the democratic county committed
1 ---------health .problems,
not only
locally sent his assistant. James D Cun­ Gerald Post and Cornelius Post. El- ' Is very proud of an honor he ha
by Miss Mary McElwain
-------------- ...
, ..
------He
Dr Leslie Kenoyer ■&gt;( W S T C but throughout this country
ningham. who gave a very Interest­ ba N Y and William G WHlitU Of Just received He has a certlAcal
was the speaker at the meeting Of gave a very interesting address
ing address about crime and the Battle Creek, five sisters. Cornelia signed by National Democratic Clirn
the Child Conservation League on----------- -;s»
detection of criminals, the Bertil- Post. Elba. N Y Mrs Tom Baird. James A Farley lo prove thut th
honor had been bestowed. The ceJ
Monday at the home of Mrs A B ST, ROSE PUPILS
lon system and the science of fin­ Jr . ot Hastings. Mrs Clarke Welker t
Gldley
------------------------- printing
Next week we will of Grand Haven. Mrs Leo Ham­ i tificate announces thru Mr. Sevei
. ante is appointed presidential eled
FURNISHED PROGRAM ger
The first snowstorm of lhe sea­
print a resume ot hb address which mond and Miss Maurene WIliltLs of
tor for this congressional dlstrlq
.-was crowded out LhLv week
son came Sunday night. Oct 26
Lansing, a great aunt. Miss Ida This cw-Uncate seem* to bear oJ
Roofs were white on Monday ■ Members of the Commercial
Payne ot Hastings, and numerous
the claim of republicans that tl
morning and the wind was blowing ,
POLICE POST AT PAW PAW
Club Held Meeting on
cousins in this vicinity and Delton
TO BE DEDICATED.
a gale
Tuesday
everything in Washington. Hereld
On Thursday evening Nov 5 the
The new district headquarter* of
lore presidential electors have bed
Hastings
Cleveland orchestra directed by Ar i The
— --------... _Coinmertlai Club the Michigan Slate Police at Pnw OVER TWO HUNDRED
chosen at duly called convenUoJ
tur Rodz.lnski is to give a concert had an interesting meeting Tues- Paw first of 25 modem police posts
AT CONVENTION fnr that purpose Mr Srvcrancq
tn the Civic auditorium in Grand day noon at which matters of gen- built for the state, will be dedicat­
appointment on the democrat]
Raptds
'—' ----------- “ .................. ~
ed Thursday. October 29 with a Twenty
Different Sunday ticket should have been made at I
Reminders
of
winter boiling cussed, and a course of action with public Inspection and dinner
convention representing
all tn
radiators, heavy Irosl on roofs and reference to Halloween was decided
Schools Send Delegates
Suite WPA Administrator Louis
,
counties
ot this congre.ulotlal dll
lawns trees devoid of leaves, short­ upon as will be seen elsewhere The M Nlms will deliver the dedication
' tricl instead of by the chairman I
to Delton
er days fur coats red noses and progrr.m was furnished by younger
The annual Barry county Sunday the democratic national comnilttd
pupll-s of St Rose school with Miss cepted for the *tatc by Cap! C J
cold fingers
Hastings merchants are display­ Marcella Goggins at the piano and Scavarda ot the Stale Police The School convention which was held Mr Severance is worthy of lhe hoi
ing in their windows warm clothing her mother Francis Goggins Intro­ program will be under the auspice- at Delton Tuesday afternoon and or What we criticise Is Mr Purled
by , P-irt in It
|
and renting units of all ktnrts this duced tne numbers on the program ot the Southwest Michigan Asroci t- evening. Oct 20 was iyaitenrled
Schools of
Ft.uik Murphy's nomination •I
The nnc demeanor of the children tioii of Law Enforcing officers, of twonty different Sunday Schools of
t-o hundred nif democratic candidate tor kovci
from St Rose school while waiting which Fred W Roper chief 01 po­ the county with over two
thrw necessities
nor
was
due
to
Mr
Farley
s
mel
people present Miss lone Catton
The old building* on the lots on for their chance on the program lice of South Haven, b president
dling with Michigan politics. Co]
East Couri street purchased by the was noted by lhe members of
Gur«t.s and lhe general public will closiTi the convention with an ad­ gressmnn Prentbs M Brown de.hrl
city for a parking space have been the club and lhe beautiful curt- assemble al the new post at 5 P dress on her trip abroad on the
-The
Ideal
Christian t«&gt; run for congress again In l|
ales of the youngsters made a M (or an inspection ot the build­ subject
deep impression upon everybody ing At a 30 a public dinner will be Youth which was enjoyed by al! district, where he hud been twU
rends making use of the lot
for the lower hoiw But M
The Bonhcur Farms of Middle- There were violin solos songs, a served in the gymnasium ot the U)The picture Follow Me ’ whs won elected
Farley and lhe New Deal Intcrfcrd
Hile are entering a flock ot pure­ duet of violin and comet and a Paw Paw high school by ladles of by the Hastings Methodist Sunday
bred Suffolk sheep in the 1936 In­ piano solo, also a vocal duel all of lhe Eastern Star The dinner and School Baseline Sunday school re- and insisted that he run for U. I
Senator,
did
reiving
second
place
and
Woodland
“and
"'4 he a
’'' We conft
ternational Livestock Exposition to
the program which follow are op. n
that we detest such outside Intcrfc
be held m Chicago Nov 28 lo Dec 5 evident th st the pupil* were not only to anyone Interested
A modest Methodist third
etice In the affairs of thl* state.
Elmer Eckert ot
Freeport and well-trained In music but in good
convention nt Barryville church —
Hollis McIntyre ot Nashville have manners as well.
E E Jones Sec
been culled a» traverse jurors tot
BOARD APPORTIONS
The ...me ar Ma™ .tad.n, .1 SOFT BALL. ATHLETIC
| lhe November term ot federal court
in Grand
Grand Rapids
Wonder |»’
BARRY COUNTY Tl
uhlch convenes in
Rapids Cornell University is "I
BANQUET_AT SCHOOL
w^' co™
what
he's
called
for
short
on Nev ]6
.
.
...,
r xl
mtheir rrguln: business meeUhg In Thia City Will Pay Near
Jo-Jo White of the Tigers thPlr hnU salurdRy oci 24 ai25 Per Cent of $98,000
Will Be the Principal
way* glad tor the Sood attendance
County Tax
,
We had one inspector. Kathren
Speaker
Sheldon of Kalamazoo Our monthhoard of supervisors, wn
Members of tne soft ball league ly birthday dinner was h real ban- they had completed their ■
who have be.*n plai'iihig a banquet quet. with five members from Knla- porUonmenl.
found
that
q
as a Atting close to a successful rnuzoo Corps as our gursLs. Mem­
twilight league schedule have de- bers please keep up lhe good wok I in the various supervisors' dlslril
cKied to merge then affair with the of calling on the sick and shut-ins were as follows
annual athletic banquet at the Has- Our next meeting will be NoveinAssyria
tings High school
bcr 14 — Press Corr
Baltimore
Stinduv Evening'
The banquet will be held Sa.ur------------- * •
-----------. Barry
day evening. November 7 at the
Time was wnen a man who could ।
Cartton .
high school following the game conduct his business without burCastleton --.
with Greenville Jo-Jo White of rowing money was considered a AHallowe'en Dance October 30
Hastings township
lhe Detroit Tigers will be the prin- nancier Today the man who can
City I and 4 wards
dpal speaker
borrow money Is called a financier
City 2 and 3 wards
Hope
Irving
Johnstown
Maple Grove
Orangeville
Prairieville
Rutland
Thornai&gt;pir
Woodland
Yankee Springs

LOCAL NEWS

LOOK

I

AT THESE

VALUES!
KI
I Fancy R&lt;&lt;&lt; sacke&gt;,e Ta|*

C AI K/l

w Libby’s or Del Monte 1 Ib.can

TOMATO SOUP

t

Ci/*

V

2p^. 23c

13c

2

^5°

CIG ARETTESlV.T,'sink.

CAMPBELLS

2 ■&gt;.. 19c
DATES N.-c-p
2’, «■ 9c
PUMPKIN oUm™,-.
LIBBY’S SAUER KRAUT h.»h&lt;:,n. 2 t-l“ 25 c
No S tin 23C
TOMATO JUICE .........
txm ... I7c
CORNED BEEF *™-.-.v.„k...
L.„. Took.,. 23c
RITZ CRACKERS
Ik. 17c
VIKING COFFEE
ik
9c
ORANGE SLICES

SUGAR

10 «»• 49c

PIRATE or WHOLESOME

KARO SYRUP

PANCAKE FLOUR

5 is. P.H 35 c

2 lb. So. I5c
SODA CRACKERS uk„.,^
ot. Belli* lOc
CATSUP u.c.»
69c
FRENCH’S PERFECT FLOUR »•.».
83c
MOOSEHEAD FLOUR
««■*.
25c
H &amp; H OATS
u. 5 c
FANCY BLUE ROSE RICE

FRESH DOUGHNUTS
doi.

CHIPSO
Flakes or Granules

X 19c
Medium tue

PINEAPPLE
LIBBY'S

|Oc

2 for 17c

KIRK S COCO
HARD WATER

Large Bars

CASTILE

25c

6 -

25c

FHEMI F i&lt; 1 ITS - VI :u KTABLES
POTATOES
u ’ - 29c

CELERY
bunch

£

DANCING
Al Clear Lake Lodge

0. K. SOAP
6

8

THE GENERAL
DIED AT DAWN

25c

A 1. ITY .MlE. LTS
PORK SAUSAGE
2 ib. 33c

Pork Shoulder Roast
lb I9C

&amp;
tJ*

With Gory Cooper and Madeline Carroll

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 3

SPENDTHRIFT
With Henry Fonda. Pat Paterson. Mary Brian and
George Barbier

ROUND, SIRLOIN or SWISS STEAK &gt; 19c
RIB ROAST Boned and Rolled
.k
19c
Ik
I2|c
BEEF KETTLE ROAST
Ik
I Ot
BOILING BEEF
HIND QUARTERS Ib. 12c
BEEF FRONT QUARTERS lb. | | C
2«... 27c
KING NUT OLEO

•’SWINGTIME
With Fred .Astaire and Ginger Rogen. Victor Moore
and Helen Broderick

GRAND JURY
NO. 2

Thank You Jeeves
OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK

«s=s=

Open w ctliiodnv and Saturday Evening

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
OCTOBER 30 AND 31

This

FURY
IT'S

with SPENCER TRACY
SYLVIA SIDNEY

TAILOI
MADE

for
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, NOV. 4 ond 5

FRIDAY ond SATURDAY. NOV. 6 and 7

Food Center

Total

SUNDAY and MONDAY. NOV. I ond 2

APPLES

Er]

HOME MADE

World for supper

Gov. Fitxgei

SUNDAY AND MONDAY
NOVEMBER I AND 2

THE ALL
AMERICAN
CHUMP"
ADULTS 15c
CHILDREN lOc
MATINEE SUNDAY at 3=00 P.M.

YO
ALONE
A MeCALL’S tailor-made

You look yo'ur best In II
because It will fit perfectly.
the style most flallerlng lo

’21“ TO '45'
Dress Uf) fnr

Thanbjiving!

“AL” G. McCALL
ns s.

mr. HASTiNcs

�Tin! HARTINGR BANNER. THURSDAY, OCTOBER Id, li»

Mr. Taxpayer
RECORD
• Four years ago a couple of YOUR EMPLOYEES made some promises to you (the Taxpayer). They PROMISED to cut down the running expenses of your government.

• Every voter should be interested to know HOW these PROMISES have been kept.
• If your name is not on a tax-roll, perhaps you will say: "OH! GOVERNMENT EXPENSES, WHETHER STATE OR NATIONAL, DO NOT CONCERN ME! I OWN NO
PROPERTY; MY NAME IS NOT ON THE TAX ROLL. I PAY NO TAXES."
• Right there is where a very great many people are fooling themselves.
• President Roosevelt has said: "60 PERCENT OF UNITED STATES REVENUES COME FROM TAXES ON COMMODITIES."
• Walter Lippman says that the figure is NEARER 90 PERCENT THAN 60.

• No matter whether your name is on the tax-roll or whether it isn't, whenever you buy clothing, shoes, furniture, tobacco, groceries, or any other commodity, you
help topoyo share of thot THIRTEEN BILLIONS WHICH HAVE BEEN SPENT BY THE "NEW DEAL" GOVERNMENT. Now let's turn to the promises made by two
of your employees in your Government:

GOVERNOR FITZGERALD’S RECORD

PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT’S RECORD

of Governor of Michigan in 1934, he PROMISED the

When Franklin D. Roosevelt became president of the United States in 1932, these are a FEW of the
PROMISES HE made:

When Frank Fitzgerald assumed

the

office

people of this State:

A Balanced Budget.

A Balanced Budget.

Reduction of the running expenses of the Government by 25 percent.

No.New Dcbti to he contracted.

Abolition of many useless Boards and Commissions.

&lt;31

No new taxes.

Reduction of the National Debt.

Governor Fitzgerald has more than MADE GOOD on his promises.

How has President Roosevelt made good on HIS PROMISES?

The General Fund of the State has been taken out of the Deficit column, where it stood ot $6,775,­

In three and one-half years of the "NEW DEAL" the National debt has been increased $13,000,­
000,000 (Thirteen BILLIONS). Michigan’s share (your, our share) of this debt, based on poulation, is
$520,000,000 (Five Hundred and Twenty Millions). BARRY COUNTY’S share, based on popula­
tion, is $2,184,000.00.

000 on January 1, 1935, and changed to a SURPLUS of $10,261,000 on September 22, 1936.

All State Current expenses paid in full to date.

Increased interest burden EVERY YEAR on the Thirteen Billions of Increased debt amounting to
$325,000,000 (Three Hundred Twenty-five Millions) at 2 Vi percent per annum. Michigan's share
of this increased interest burden, $13,000,000.
BARRY COUNTY'S Share, based on population
$54,600.00.

No new bond issues and no increase of State Debt of any nature.

The State Property Tax hai been abolished, meaning on annual saving to the taxpayers of Barry county
of $12,261.00.

151

Has saved the farmers of Barry county ANNUALLY through abolishing of the Rural School Tuition

Instead of REDUCING the cost of National Government by 25 percent, the "NEW DEAL" has IN­
CREASED the cost more then 72 percent.

tax an amount of $26,698.00.
&lt; 61

Instead of abolishing "useless Boards and Commissions" an untold number of alphabetical vagaries
have been set up as a refuge for "deserving political workers," ond more than 800,000 of these "de­
serving” henchmen have been taken care of ot the expense of those who do honest work.

Has reduced telephone, gas and electric rates to October 20, 1936, by on amount of $7,157,915.

most of which saving hos been in the household use of these utilities.
Schools have been kept open throughout the State by prompt payment of State Aid, instead of prom-

Increased the necessary aid »o the aged and infirm in an amount of $2,924,000.

(5»

In addition to all of this the increase demanded by the tax for "Social Security," which tax is deducted
from every worker’s pay envelope, beginning January 1 next will amount to $4,000,000,000 (Four

BILLIONS) each and every year, of which Michigan's share will be $159,000,000 (One Hundred
Fifty-Nine Millions). BARRY COUNTY’S share, based on population, will be $672,000.00 each year.

GOVERNOR ALFRED M. LANDON, REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT, HAS MADE A RECORD
AS GOVERNOR OF KANSAS SIMILAR TO THAT OF GOVERNOR FITZGERALD IN MICHIGAN
• Based on population, and figured at 2 Vi percent interest, Michigan's share of the $13,000,000,000 (Thirteen BILLIONS) INCREASE in the National debt in the

past three and one-half years is $520,000,000 (Five Hundred MILLIONS).
• Michigan's share of the $325,000,000 (Three Hundred Twenty-five MILLIONS) annual increase of the interest burden is $13,000,000 (Thirteen MILLIONS) each
ond every year.

• If Governor Fitzgerald had increased our State Debt in proportion as the National Government has increased the National Debt; if he had increased the interest bur­
den in such proportion; if he hadcommitted us to the Roosevelt "Social Security" program, grossly unfair to the workingman who must pay the bill out of his wages, then

HOW MANY VOTES WOULD HE GET?
HOW MANY VOTES OUGHT MR. ROOSEVELT TO GET?

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY. OCTOBER 29. 1936

—e Editorials

Itl The Public Forum 141“"“?SUFFe,

PRINCIPLE ABOVE PARTY.
| Mr. Hoover and Mr. Moley both
"Men may differ—and they have arrived Independently at the same
a right to differ—os to the merits or conclusion:
"No corporate in­
demerits of the New Deal as such.'I Editor* Moley:
"

i elded with the Introduction ot New
; Deal
”
tie Polla When Yon Vote
Deal poUdas.
DdlclM.
। 5-The present stage of business
Ti.A.dn„
Dear Editor[ recovery coincided with supreme i
on *ue8uay
After listening to al) the nameat- ।
court
decisions
which
nullified
the
A
comparison of the amount of
Ing propaganda that has been clr-I
jNew Deal "recovery” measures.
’state aid distributed by counties to
ciliated during this campaign about I If the master minds at WUhing- the various school district* before
our chief executive, we wonder now -1 ton will only tend to balancing the ' *nd 811'cc the enactment of the
If our old school books knew what
is very■ inter
­
budget and giving us economical sales tax *"in 1932-33
— •---------they were talking about when they [- government, this country will get
esting as well as enlightening.
analyzed treason. The most vicious;
In Barry county the sum paid by
accusations have been hurled al i along alright. I didn't intend this
as strictly political comment even the county In 1932-33 was 489401.32
him. among them Communism and
while in 1935-36 It had been In­
if there Is a more glowing example though It is evident that I do think
Landon li the man.
creased to 4173.691.04. Figures for
of true straight forward American­
I know this is a long letter but the city of Hastings shqw that in
ism typified tn one man we have
will appreciate it if you will print 1932-33, the school district received
ft even in part.
y
43143757. compared
with
456­
Even the member* of his family
A Local Business Man.
025.15 in 1936. or 754 percentage of
have been targets in the vile mud­
increase, in the state of Michigan
slinging ot the political "snoopers”
the distribution to schools in 19.12-33
October 17. 1936.
whose Job it Is to think up dirt and
was 420.777.181.72. and In 1935-36
misconstrue every word and action Cook Brothers.
was 435.0)8.554 59. an Uicreasc of
of the President and his family. Also Editors of the Banner.
414.241.372 87 or 68 5 per cent.
a great deal of it originates with Hastings. Michigan.
These figures come from Hie office
disgruntled Job-seekers and we are Gentlemen:
of Eugene B. Elliott, superintendent
Inclined to wonder why so many
The Democrats arc making an is„„„„„
public instruction, and ore there­
fif'SES?*
millionaires &lt;29 out of every 30 &gt; arq, .u. or .ne Knuu Khoob n b of
io anxious to defeat him and are purely a fake issue. They arc dis-, ‘°S'.“““cn.uc'
What is the source of this big in­
leaving no stone unturned to do so. toning the fact that the settled
in funds available for .’chool
Can it be because during the pres­ policy of Kansas prohibits state aid crease
aid do
‘
'.7
ta“
“
*•"“*
ent cdmlnLstration the.se same mil­ to school*, a policy unvaried for
lionaires have ^r,,
been called
vu..ru upon
uput, to
K, *ixty year*. This, of course, docs
doc*
Should the
the amendment
amendment No.
No 3a to
m be
Should
near their burden of taxation? How put Kansas forty-eighth in state aid 1 voU.d on n_xl Ttirsrlav
“Z
bo so
«&gt; lncon«L,unt
[o scnoois.
whooh. But
Bui u
masu-r of
ot tael.
n of thr constitution th* MmZe.1
‘
can they
tney be
inconsistent ,Urc«
since m
we ., to
as a matter
fact. 1)Brt
T»r loLKlMi w.u. comln. from'tn- 101*1 .mounu w .p.M on }und
„„
them about Rooscvc Us un-Amcri- I schools through local district aid fttxHit muoooon nrr v«r

I concede to every man his own
opinion on that subject, but I do
deny that, simply because of party
membership, the New Deal as a de­
parture from Democratic doctrine
has a Just claim on the automatic
support of any Democrat."—John
W. Davis. Firmer Democratic Presldential Nominee.

NOV. 3
Tuesday. Nov. 3. Is'election day.
Il is the duty of every citizen to
vote. We have stated our own po
~~ ­
sition clearly In this campaign. It
has been against the present ad­
ministration which we believe is
centralizing too much power in the
Federal government and which ha-,
attempted to discredit the one docu­
ment in the world which sets forth
and guarantees specific civil liber­
ties to Its people. But whether you
agree or disagree with this view­
point we urge you strongly to tote
the time on election day to cast
your ballot

LETTERS TO THE EDITOfc
Hostings. Michigan,
October 26. 1936.

come-tax payer could long keep out
&gt;of trouble with the Treasury If he
persisted in using similar methods "
Ex-President Hoover: "If on In­
come-tax
payer of any corporation
i
kept
books like the administration,
I
that
is. if they showed similar
I
morals
In Juggling their accounts,
i
they would be put in Jail"

&amp;

FOUR AMENDMENTS
about the Amendment*

They have been summarized and rcviewed to such an extent in stale
newspaper* that only a brief com­
ment ts necessary here Strnngt
it may seem all observers ag
Amendment No J should be adopted
as it will assist police m their war
against organized crime particularly
tn the larger cities Amenlfincnts 2.

।
1
j
I

3 and 4 should be voted down They
contain concealed dynamite and arc
harmful A brief review follows

Amendment No. 1—An amendfiTTht to permit firearms and other
dangerous weapon.* seized outsldr
dwellings, outbuildings and lands
closely adjacent thereto, to be In­
troduced as evidence m any crim­
inal .procedure Under the presen
law. tor example, if a poller other
should observe a car parked by th
road and on becoming suspiciou
should search ‘.hat car and subse­
quently discover dangerous firearms
concealed inside, these firearms
could not be used us evidence in
any criminal procedure The pres­
ent law holds that since the weapons
were concealed the police officer
had no lawful right to institute
search for them and that the men
accidental discovery ol them was an
Infringement of personal rights un­
der the terms of the state constitu
linn. Tins amendment will prevent
POOR COPY
criminals from hiding behind such
ft must be the twin comets which
are to blame.
&lt;
technical dodges as this
Last week lhe fighting Father
In our opinion this Amendment
Coughlin apologized for calling the
' president a "liar." As a matter ot
Amendment No. 2.—An amend­ fact he reiterated the charges he
ment to require lows permitting made al Cleveland but admitted
better language might hove been
counties lo incorporate: and. on ap­
M'lectcd than the short and ugly­
prov'd by majorities of certain word used.
specified electors lo adopt a charter
Ou the same day the Detroit priest
A poorly written proposal of obscure made his apology (?) the House of |
Commons In London saw its most I
meaning
The intention Of this
stormy session since back in the'
amendment m undoubtedly to per- eighties when the entire Irish delemil certain of the sparsely settled -gallon was suspended by the speaker
counties of the state to consolidate and' the -----■
■ -to -•
members dragged
the
streets by lhe police Last Thursday
only three members were suspended
of government
But regardless of but the House became a rioting mob
its intention the interpretation of whctK Hu Majesty's minister
the amendment Is not clear
H
might open the way to a wholesale
consolidation and concrntration of
power thus removing the govern­
ment even further from the people

____ ' Defeat Amendment No. 3 at

We «re sick to death of the old other states in thte region Our de- reduction, and no provision te mSe
rubber stamps "National Debt." «rce of literacy also is high, and we. lor replacing this lo*s In reve rn.”
Unbalanced Budget."
"Our tax ■ h«v, more farm boy. m high schools । n would mean ctrtXeni of s^rvburdened children." and -the poor , than any state in the Union and lcCB an&lt;f-3iC levying of new taxes
MISLEADING BOOKKEEPING,
little piggies." Remember lhe "little t”°rc college students per capita | W|j|Ch no onc wanLs
’
Not by any stretch of the imagi­
piggies" are going lo market
now | than your state, which speaks well,
go lt wni t0 vour n-rmnal innation can Raymond Moley and
and they couldn't before These1 f°r the Kansas educational system. tcrcst ftnd tor jZ.
* x. .
Herbert Hoover be called' polities I
1 phrases are moth-eaten and
worn I «m sending herewith an article schools the old acrnenslon
mid
out. We cannot applaud them even .which I hope you con print in your I wf-ifar(.' flinds
M
{und
cronies or even friends. Moley as
if we believed them because we paper It wUl interest tehool people ! for cnppW chudJn U» deKt
a New Deal braintruster led the at­
have to use our hand* to stifle our I and will tend lo answer the fake 1 amendment next Tucvdav Vot- 401
tack agoinst Hoover four years ago
yawns. But we did think Mr. Van- educational issue raised against i, , , '
1’
Since then, the former professor ha •
। denberg's phonograph record skill"
J
~ te
'
Sffl!
PAYS OUT $10,280.88
become editor of an independent
was the cutest thing Do you know
any more good parlor tricks. Sena­ deeply these aspersions, and on be­
DELINQUENT TAXES
magazine
tor? We actually stayed awake all half of Governor Landon, who I •
Quite by chance last week th?
through it.
know Is very sorry that his candi- Collected in Autrust—Uounformer president and the former
. .
®
All quip aside, we want to say dacy has brought this attack upon'
bralntrustcr spoke their minds con­
most emphatically right here and our state, i most heartily hope you । *y&gt; Townships, Villages and
“'
- . —
now. U the Roosevelt AdmUUstxa- can run my enclosed statement overt
cerning New Deal bookkeeping; the
Oity
Oct
Benefit
my
.signature.
I
shall
be
pleased
If
;
tion
nas
been
a
National
Calamity,
one before an audience in Philadel­
Treasurer Lorenzo Mima
give us more of it. We can take it you could give it a small editoriali1 onCounty
Saturday distnbut'-d 310.280.88 of
phia. the other through his maganotice.
and maybe after the
delinquent toxrs. which had been
tine. Today.
Sincerely yours.
counted the author of ah these
paid in to the treasurer during the
They must have been astonished
W A. White.
falsifications ‘*111 find out Uiat
' month of August. W.‘ will give the
Slime does nol pay '
to find that, no matter how im
I Dear Mr Editor
amounts whlbh each taxing unit
A Reader
apart they might be on the subje.:
TWENTY YEARS AGO
At this stage of the game any । will receive, as follow*
| political comment Ls probably excess । City of "
--------- 41.230.18
------------Degrees in the O E 8 chapter Dear Mr Editor:
of political economy, they were ab­
Hastings
otifi-rn-d uixrti Mr anti Mrs
Village of Middleville .
‘0.53
solutely tn accord on the subject o'
Night after night and day after baggage.
But 1 wonder Just how many t«o-1
Village of Freeport
.
day
i
have
been
listening
to
New
I
simple arithmetic Each scored th'pie
have
read
about
the
results
of
:
Village
of
Woodland
&gt;36 79
Deal speeches or reading New Deal ।
present administration for the minuvcra.ure
wn
K
n
asserts
uiat
Duali
inducted
by
the
St.
Louis
‘
Village
of
Nashville
literature which asserts that busi- I
request co nnvr their farms on sec­ ttcaa
ness recovery
recovery came
Dispatch
one of
the many ।
canic coincident
coincident with
with i
7.
'
------ -----.. .
journals
which ba* j
tion* 19 Hastings and 24 anti 25. New
Deal policies and .legislation
i Democratic
c „ ^°.
UTa ?
Total paid to city and
accounts
Rutland, made bird refuges for the With me. even though I am a per- J found lhe
villages 41,671.48
" New
r’1 Deal too much to
A*. Pittsburgh,
the
president
next five years has been granted bj son nl considerable patience, enough |: stomach, among the former class- |
The following amounts were paid
claimed that only eight billion dol­
1 the state game warden
mates ot Aif M. London and lo townships and will go into the
is
enough,
particularly
when
the
lars of lhe thirteen billton dollar
Prof L G Michael left Monday na-ertions have nothing nt nil to , Franklin D, Roosevelt. The result Is regular township funds.
really astounding.
for th«- east where he will lecture on do with the fact-s of lhe case
Increase in deficit was really deficit;
Assyria .
..
$ 199.59
various topics connected With his
About 90 per cent of Landon's
that five billion dollars of Hie
The most reliable guide to the1
Maple Orove
long sojourn in Russia and attend condition of business activity of this classmates are going to vote far him.
total represented recoverable axCastleton
345 14
conferences on Kler.ttilc discover- country u, u.e
weca.y
ropon
o;
car
,
the weekly report oi car t O’.*^ "boul ,30 P" cent of RooseWoodland
aet*. chiefly loan.* made by the
I
dartany
at
the
New
vcl1
4
cliWBmates.
however,
are
goloadings ■!u
I
from lhe_* CM.I " o.&gt; I
**•' “I1"'
Johnstown
393 56
government. But both Mr Moley
The Barry County Normal has Dea] experts from lhe
Baltimore
125 73
been commended in h letter sent to clown to examine
-xa.niM u.™
r,.»rU and
J™"*
. T*"
and Mr. Hoover pointed out that th?
these re]»rt.s
and
Hastings township
132 00
ch county normal principals m the still claim that recovery coincides ot Roosevelt's former classmates
government has been spending this
Carlton
238 90
“The oIJ cfj\\t »nur; [&gt;y iuwud
think so little of him that they are
state for H* organization of the with New Deal measures
Barry
..
.
451
34
money as fast as it comes m rattier
Nonna) class into a regular Boys'
As a matter oFfact” recovery be- f5'”’
°f
Hope
147 14
OCTOBER
than using the funds for reducing
and Girls' club Miss Anna Bryant gan in September, 1932 and lasted I
S&gt;
Rutland
.
.
221.56
b29 Ful’on'
indebtedness
In other words the
Cowie., .i.v.istant state club leader tor four months In July and Aug- &gt;0,u 8&gt;&gt;? ?2ur grapes? Allrlgh. thcn
Irving .
...
005.30
recommends that other county nor- ust Height car loading* reached1 w,,y arc 90 pcr ccnt of Llindon s
recommend*
government is creating new deficits
Prairieville
..
innU follow the example set by the the lowest 0.erage of the denres- |,ornicr dominates sticking by turn?1
107.13
as fast as old debts arc paid off
Orangeville
itastiM*
,ton D
lh&lt;? JWMt four
p
Why L» it they don't go sour grapes
Hastings v-hnni
school.
397.76
Yankee
Springs
Suppose Mr. Farmer, or Mr
vote
for Roosevelt?
they increased 87 per cent, one of . *and
n'1 *
o** ,m
Thomappie ...
37828
Business man or Mr Working man than It is al present
Almost to a man Landon 5 former
FORTY YEARS AGO
health. Sir Kingsley Wood, was
the largest non-seasonal Increases
IB Ulh BtBre ta
that you borrowed 4150 at the bank
Probably th« largest audience in history Remember, thb increase classmates say that they have al­
In our opinion this amendment called a contemptible little rat"
Total paid to to wnthat ever assembled in the Nashville came five months before the New ways admired him personally, that
and HLs Majesty’s home secretary
and immediately loaned this money deserves a vote of NO’
ships .
. .44.706.27
ojiera house greeted Gen Lew Wal­ Deal assumed office and almost a । lie has kept ills word, that he thinks :. Of the delinquent taxes the sum
Amendment No. 3-An amendd“""cd liar.
I'OVEMBt-H
out on mortgage security Theo­
I
things
through,
that
he
always
:
year
before
any
of
the
New
Deal
1
lace
Thursday
evening
Extra
seats
,
।
Dignified debate which ordinarily
' of 4890.27 was returned lo the state
retically a statement of your con­ ment providing for exempting ccr- ls expected to settle matters among
has
been
progressively
minded,
that
had been put
in andbetween seven I iwlicles were put into effect.
of Michigan as uncollected taxes
dition would be
liabilities—4150 tain articles of foot! and prepared the people of civilteed nations gives
and eight hundred people were / Then come March. 1933, and the he Is Just a fine type of American for years when the stale levied a
&lt;The indebtedness at the bank': menh from the sales tax A thor- *a&gt;J°
present
banking
collapse.
which
also 'citizen whether In public or private property tax. which it does not do
“ndcr Certain conShirley W
Smith comes home brought a halt to the recovery But life.
assets—4150 (the income from the oughly bad. un.-ound proposal unless ditton.s We may as well blame th?
The county's general fund
A I.so. almost to a man. Roosevelts now
from Ann Arbor Saturday to regts- by April business wa.. on the upreceived 42.91251 Covert road re­
mortgage loan i In other word* you one wishes to see the entire sales .comets fur the fall of the foruin as
ter his first vote for Wm McKinley 1 trend again and lasted through July. former classmates say that neither demption fund. 410025. making a
to take the blame upon ourselves.
would be "all square "
tax structure wrecked It would be
Deliberative bodies of late years
On Monday Ort 26 occurred the This is contrary to the gossip being in college or out did he ever dis­ grand total of 410280 88
But supposing that instead of us­
tor an unlimited hove developed into pits of assassi73rd birthday 01 J J Hendershott spread by New Deal orators who play much ability, except tn oratory,
ol Irving About 50 of 1.1s old time' claim that the period immediately that he never had lhe faculty of
•.h-b-s Millions in
ot personal character Abuse
ing lhe Income from the mortgage bt of "exempt'
•friends
——i. and
—. relative*
—
celebrated
--------- ■following the bank collapse was the thinking things through to a logi­ C.H. OSBORN HAS
to repay the bank, you apent It a* evenur would lac cut immediately and vituperation have taken the
conclusion, that on many oc­
place of logic and debate Calm de­
with him Guests were also invited worst in the history of the nation. cal
'
VARIOUS DUTIES
fas', as it came In When payments rom the state income This mean- liberation based on fact has given
in honor ot G J Beamer of this Nothing is more untrue As a mat­ casions lie has behaved erratically,
were complete you would no longer :hal-millions would have 1*&gt; b&gt;- add- way to vacuous tirades founded on
City, formerly of Irving. who&lt;e ter of fact the upswing in business 'going back on promises without in­ Serves as Probation Officer,
tending to be dishonest about It.
birthday
also
occurred
the
same
levies The prejudice and whimsical theorizing
have any income from your Joan
was
so
well
underway
during
the
in. though it is more •••
County Agent and Friend
day Monday was also the 40th wed­ last quarter of 1932 that even the 'Several who are going to vote for
lain- t form
America la not alone Perhaps as
but you would still- owe the bank 53^, tax is one of
mislvtl
than throwing
him admit that they arc doing so
‘ ‘
m other things America merely copding anniversary of Mr and Mrs banking holiday couldn l stop it.
of the Ooujt
Wil! Durant
4150
of taxes we have
liad Its on- lc?—nncj nmices lxx)r COpy al nlftl
Hrnckr-hhoit
The second spurt to business us I because of old arsoClatlon.s and that
C H Osborn fills three [Witlons
they
really
have
no
confidence
in
Than a statement of your account danger U that it L*
irted so ea,- Ingham County News
have pointed out and as the report
in Barry county He I* the "Friend
him
01
what
he
stands
for
FIFTY
YEARS
AGO
would be; Llnblhtles— |1SO 'The in­
of freight cor loadings will verify
Has-uugs is_ to have w second began in April. 1933. and lasted
Well this certainly means some­ of the Court," As such he lias
Paul Poire'
debtedness at the bank ■. asset' - scious of government extravagance
Way
bank with Clifford Beebe of Kal- through July. New Dealers claim thing, Your classmates don't very charge of the collections in alimony
cases. As probation officer he ha*
40.00 'since the uicomc from th-' as they were when the great bulk of
mazoo a prime mover in the proj- that ineir policies caused an imme-''often go wrong in Judging you.
NEWS GLEANINGS.
mortgage has already been spent’
ct However, qioat of the 450.000 dlnte spurt to business. Well the |। They sec lhe true . Inwardness of charge of all who are placed on
MXorlsts paid 12 per cent of thr
.ip'ita] ».* taken by business ineir first bit of New Deal legislation was .you us even associates and friends probation by the circuit judge. He
Well this Is Just thr sort ol
is also the Barry County Agent for
total taxes collected by federal
and farmers in Hustings and vi­ passed during Junc of 1933 and was in later life are unable to do.
transaction lhe Federal govcrr.meii' ands whe
lhe State Welfare Board, and as
state and local agencies duruig 1934
lian flou ow orcn.&gt;
This
is no attempt
j' not
noi put
par into
uno effect
cnees until
unui July.
auiy. 1933,1
1933.1। ..V
—
"•'Ju”'*"' to
•" sling
—71* mud. such has lo pass on mothers' pen­
has been carrying on It has been
The express office is now located and u was durmg this month that a U “ ‘‘"W calling attention to a
sions. He is also head of lhe Barry
prices ranging up to S10
borrowing money from the bank 'in i- 1* a -nod tax provided we do no’
------------In the room with Kep Silsbee, first second halt in the upward swing of I P0*1 conducted with perfect honesty
County Old Age Assistance Board.
this case the American
prop!making exemption.Tar J-'. 8 U.*U1
457 miles ot
door i.onh oi John cole , harntu
MpocnMl. In olh.r word., I
‘■'?'t“ . ..... .... .. _
Holding that office by virtue of the
through government bonds'; it
Ir. our opinion tin amendmeu'Worlds’rail mileie’** Cenf °
,
I the halt in business coincided ex- , Personally
Porionally I- think that lhe -next
—r- fact that he Is the county agent of
Th. Barlow A- co. elevator is one; actIy wlth lhc introduction of New four »*»" are «oln“ to'be wu«h
has been loaning the money on drxrves a vote
I ones. I want
wont a man In
in the White the State Welfare board. Mr Osr
of the most coti'picuous building; in pea| meftsurcs
.ones.
born's report to the board of su­
mortgage security and n has been
Amendment
—Au amendFreight car loadmgs in May. Hou*
U
"“able, and
15UOO(KX1 milts. 1 RO .000 passen­
pervisors was interesting
spending the money from the:-- ment prohlbitm:
With thr completion of water Junc and July of 1W&lt; increased on. ‘ «ympathellc A real midwest AmerDec 31 1937 gers. 3000 tons of mail, 900 tons of
As Friend of the court, ho has 46
works water motors will doubtless j.. 4 p,.r Cisnl ovcr a S|m(iar period 1 ,can who knous whnl lhe ^hl for
loans as fast as received. Yet it has aji rca| and |K.r,
express
, active alltnonv cases and 17 morn
come ffito general use for running' ln ,^3 fts compared’with an ln.-exUtence rtahy means
also been subtracting these Iooq,' rxccpB m meet existing indebtedllch* marhltn-rv
...
....
Tn mv nnlnlnn thjt mm I-. Alffom the total debt juz I as though nt.s-: prohibiting new license taxr- HC11,t
He-,
arc
not
too
high.
and
Ifi33
Yel
the
New
5upcr
/rcd
M.
Landon.
A%
onkcr he had 'h,rRJ
derived from the Jungle fowl of
they were actually being applied tn upon the ownership, ixissessuni ut India
.
| men" claim that it was their poll'
A «e“aer
of 29 persons placed on probatfod
thr reduction of the deficit.
um- of real and personal property;
clcs whlch «*v&lt;? «&gt; impetus to btulTHE FARMER’S CRISIS(during lhe year, and at lhe presend
The fellow who spent the money permitting tne taxation «fincome
BRIEF
OBSERVATIONS, | IAs a malter
____ ....
k_ ___
charge.
I
BRIEF
OBSERVATIONS,
of ....
fact. .thc
uexl_ dc. ] The UlI,e h“ corac- “l“»”t the hour I1”* ha’’ l&lt; ,n
, ro.iUc and whatever community ad­
As county agent for the State
from hit 4150 mortgage loan in- from property uniformly with other vertising that was done would not
To vote for crucial things
Led by these great financiers— elded upswing Hi business rime in । Whether we'll have presidents
Welfare Board he gave his approval
stead of repaying the bank ccr- income; and providing t
,,,eJ be paying a cent for these services. |
the robber barons of the olden days | August. 1935. and followed
very | Or whether well have kings!
to 56 mothers’ pensions, requiring
tainly wouldn't presufne to say that moneys from income laxr-1
Even if a property were not .show­
were pikers by comparison—our na-1 shortly after supreme court de­
89.74452 per year.
.
A Reader.
hr no longer was Indebted to the {distributed among local units of ' ms a real income it would still be
licti lost it* money. That means ui-idsions which virtually nullified evAs head of tiieold age luinUtance
tlc But If the nation hiw lost faith cry mea»ure that the New Deal hadI Dear Mr. Editor:
board he drafts lhe papers, reports
bank. Why then should the Federal government within the .-.unc m a
using those municipal services and
that honest men In high places still: passed. Thb uptrend has continuedI
I wish to make clear that hi last such cases lo the state board al
government maintain that these 1 manner later to be provided by law
should contribute toward them. It
exbl. God help us!"—Mary E. Turn- without Interruption to the present week's article the quotations were Lansing, and InvcstlgaUx any casd
so-called recoverable loans are axvicious law which would hustii Is an amendment
.
bull.
. and undoubtedly will continue if the chiefly from
which would play
James
Warburg's at their request. The total numbet
*lOt,g..Ul?.PlaJ°?5..rCal ”UU_mr" ir,«^1 ^o‘thc’hand'' of telitah ’rra'l
------------- I Federal government at Washington
i liook. "Hell Bent For Election." On- of aged persons who were granted
. - ..
- ,
I
*&gt;*11*- l***V UK 11
"It is fortunate that while merrl-, WUI Just tend to its own business1 ly lhe first four paragraphs were assistance in this county was-3211
received from them as fast as re- A perfectly
mtcr-sts
- -sood business •propertv.
•
. vestate
5mbbv uitefCnL*.
ment
is
merely
the
evidence
ofi
ihe
;
and
not
try
to
take
over
the
duties
1 quoted from Mr. Hoover * convention during the year, of whom 17 diet
teivvd?
—
*- -as —
-------------- •house or!‘ ln ftur-oplnioh
’
such
an apartment
thL amcnDm'lit:
mood-of a moment; cheerfulness • ahd liberties bf private citizens,
speech. I submit the following;
within that" time. The approxlmati
Or as Mr. Moley put it: "If thr business block, for example, could deserves a vote of NO’
I
may be the permanent attainment
Any fair critic who will go over
Lawrence Sullivan In his docu- amount ot money coining from Ihtj
subtraction of recoverable assets escape all form* of tax except inof a lifetime "—Henry M Dawes. ■ tpeje weekly- car loading report*‘ meijted book, “Pralude to Panic” rc- state and national government
To wnunarlzr »e believe that a
president
Century
of Progress CBnnot help but reach the following views in detail lhe indisputable into Barty county for oid age os-I
from the gross debt Ls valid, then cmae tax. Il t, very easy f6r such a ,lud). ol
amendments will I
World s Fair, Chicago
i conclusions:
conclusions:
world statistics on which Mr. Wal- ststance is 44400 per month.
the Treasury's handling of lhe rc- property to show no income or brtrig any reasonable thinker to the I
I 1—The bottom of the depression1 tef Ltppm.snji based lhe following
cepita Is. to use a charitable word, negligible
"I should like to remind you that
income
Consequently. following conclusion.
VUitors to New York City m«5
t conclusion—"There Is very .good
—
all people who have given the mat­ ; was reached in 1932.
unsound. Democratic'orators should this property which was deceiving:
2
—
Recovery
was
well
under
way
1
statistical evidence which goes to now see the world's largest and moal
Amendment No. 1—Vote YES.
ter any attention realize that our
refrain from leading their listeners from the municipality fire prole-’ prove that as a purely economic spectacular electric algn. The sigr
spelling is 5t» years out of date, and ; during the last quarter of 1932.
Amendment No. 3—Vote NO.
3—The bank holiday caused only phenomenon the world depression in Times Square features chewlnj
to believe that 48.000.000.000 is the Uon, lights, police protection, and',
that It is hopelessly Inadequate to;
Amendment No. 3—Vote NO.
reached a low point in the mid-, Igum. and is 10 stories high and a
total increate In Uje national debt." tht oenent of sidewalks unci good1
express our living spoken language.’’.j a temporary halt to business.
4—The next sag Ui business com-1
iConllnued on page 6. Bee. 2)
1icity block long.
—Dr. Guy 8. Lowman.

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

Backward Glances,
Bits of Yesterday

of Our World

Crumbs Of WISdom

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 39. 1&gt;M

Ttoy Bendel! of Chicago wasI Members

enjoy

pioneer luncheon
Social Events and Per- j M^ora^dSnTT: u»i
juest of Mrs. Katherine Poppeu of
sonal Mention
Contest Losers in Circle No.
| Otsego Thursday night.

4

Ml.* Margret Barnett spent
' week end in Battle Creek u
Mrs. Richard A. Oroos spent juest of Mis* Edith Benton.
Tuesday and
... Wednesday
wranraoa, In ChiQl uu&gt;ke

Studebaker Has New
Controlled Ventilation

LS' *»“* a B“a“- TO*1

BARRY THEATER
OPENED FRIDAY

I Est. Wilson Birkley ThottaM. An-' Irt. Bamusl Marshall. Annual ac­
jnual account filed
count filed.
Manager Branch Will Show
Kat« L Row^n ordtr al—
.Callhon. Pinal ac- (
I lowing claims entered.
;&lt;
High Quality Brand
] Est Alvin Hathaway. Warrant and1
„. Burgeas. Ptnsl ac-i1
of Picture*
1 inventory filed.
' count filed.
------------

Entertain the
Winners

McihqdUt L. A. 8. Circlo No 4 had
Est. Giles Shepard.
» ,XZ
‘S°' Order allow-1
a delightful time at their contest
Ing account entered.
u-n w. rrlxhner or HuMUI. w» ■“
luncheon at the homeiof Mrs. War­
the public over the week end Good !
for publication ratarad.
In^U^ellF on Sa.urday urraUM'
*U
1I . Est.
ren Carter last Wednesday The
I crowds greeted the shows.
Es- William N. Gladstone. TesEst. Frank P. HUbert. Petition for
Circle had been divided into two
: The theater h an attractive addl-:
on determination of heirs determination of heirs filed, order
Rev, Clinton ot Grand Rapid, wax
°! J!!;.-'?
' tion to the main street. The mar-lfllcd- order determining heirs en-• fOT publication entered.
groups, the True Blues. Mrs. C. D.
a guest of Dr. F. G. Sheffield on pe,7y
5
T, Si! d ’L,
Bauer, captain, and the Willing
quee has a row of electric lights &gt; te”O- .
Morton Ayres Bassett. Peti- ten funeral home
Friday
1 Mrs. John Condon of Three Rlv- Workers. Mrs. Charles Hinman,
and wncn
when an
all tne
the painting is aone.
done.1M,y Ajtcs Final account tion
t^n ior
fm Aamr.
Admr. filed,
of no। ana
ntea. waiver or
Mn a A Anderson of Grand f^L,p:nl,’rtrn T!‘ur«Uy J? **ndiy captain, the latter group being the
| the color scheme for lhe lobby and , n'«d- order for publicaton entered, uce fljedi order appointing Admr. wta ln 018 p
Rapids was a Friday guest of Mis. J1"8 *• tlw BU8sl oi Mre R B winners.
marquee
will
be
green
and
maize.
,
Mary
J
Brooks.
Order
alentered.
uiuiqucr: wlu wv fci4i.ii anu uuuu.
—.---- --------&gt;-• ■
Dennis Murray.
1 HNrxr.ess.
—
.
...
.
___
■
tnwtnLrtAlmx
pntrrrrl
.
____ .
DEA an Ow MnO» *1
A chou suey '.uncheon was served i
The ticket office to of black and lowing claims entered.
1 E.,t. Albert Lentz. Annual account
Mrs. Lloyd McUormlck and chilMr and Mrs ,Iomcr ln8r“m ttnd and each member was requested tf&gt; I
a
1 Est.
! white »&gt;.«
gtas*
L*"' Cassius L.
v.- Glasgow. Petition
**y-~ ' flied
dr“ of^itrnti
of Mr. ***
—-CT tr 7
—
gji. pjora M. Taylor. Final acTne theatea will seat 330 people, 1&lt; and orderlo
purchase
truck "hd.
filed.
bring soma article pertaining to
Homer Warner.
***“ cnd ln,FUnl wllh Mr and Mrs pioneer days. Mrs. M U‘ Cook and I
Est. Lola s
8. Mf
Moshrr.
Final «
ac- count ftkdi order for publication
Thp building ta long and nirrow but
“hrr Rinat
ount
filed,
waiver
notice
filed, entered.
'
amazoo after an lUnma of four*
the scats
so nrraiiKcu
arranged ijink
that ev- ।
I co
nl
nlcd
Mr*. Luther Loehr left on Monday
H r.rvrth »« Mrs. A D- Kniskern. guests, gave
... aYc
aic so
—«---------- ---------- of
-- -------—
for Miami. Florida, where she will' Mr *nd Mre, A• H- c’rV8U» *8rc int&lt; resting talks 4bo-.1t pioneer life
eryone wl'l
-.......have a 'full
" view of' the
' 1 OT&lt;1' r awhndng residue entered,
.
j j
dis._
E5t
Ejt A
Adelbcrt
delbcrt D.
D. Olmvtaad.
Olmstead. Pinal
Pina! weeks. Mrs. Kemple be far* her mar­
spend the winter
1 urcx 8nd «ucsu °* U:elr dBU«hu?r
riage lived at Hickory Comers. Fu«?
Admr. Issued,
estate cn8CC0Unl UIX.M.
fllcd.
--Mrs llrrn?n Valentine of Detroit ’ «n&lt;1 hrr burtand. Mr. and Mrs In Woodland township as a part I
screen. The
.... seats are
— comfortable
... IMI WIVir i. Tr — of ---of the program
rltii red r0,J5d,,,.
I Est. Charles Est.
A. Arnuti
Charles A. Armstrong. Order
and
made
of
brown
wood
visited nt lhe Ernest Edmond* home R°^rt Burrell, of Detroit.
afternoon at two o'clock
Among the pioneer keepeakes on I
muict
EiJ- Mary N Wlulams. Petition allowing claims entered.
leather wav*
seals auu
and tea
red piuiti
plush backs.
Miss
Mary
who h^-.
has display were the following; Mrs 1 The Studebaker 1937 models hive The
nart of last week
Mu
® MBr
* Brockway, utx
wall decoration consists ot lhe ; fw- license to sell filed, order for
--■—
—Proof of will
Est.
Nellie
BEdger.
rn unique new ventilating system.
TyJcn and Richard Gfon, been the guest of Mr. .nd Mrs. M Cook had a blue dish that her I
lower par: In dark brown with pan- publication entered.
enuredfiled, declination of trust ,filed, orFront windows are equipped with ch of maize and yellow above.
went lo Chicago Tuesday for several L C°ok. has returned to Clark Me- grandmother had used, also a home-1
I1 Est.
Kenneth
H.
band and four sonx, Bernard. Jr,
E5t- Kenneth H. Doster, et al. der admitting will entered.
dayi on business.
.
morUI Hoine ln Or,and B»Pld*
the wind-wing type of controlled
Richard. John and Paul. She
.•pun linen winding sheet made by
Tne «amc standard motion pic- ’ fcUJl0" for. “utfi°rlly
cxP?nd,
‘
Mr. and Mr* Theodore Bush of
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. M Nix- Mr. Cook's grandmother Marshall. 1
ventilators. The rear half of the Hire machine and sound equipment I ff°r education of minors filed,
A man must make good,
or niece of Mrs. Herman Zerbel
Royal Oak were callers nt the Roy °n nn ®undat{ wc!5 *?r'
^Jrs
window can be rolled down in are used at the Barry as at lhe order granting authority entered
make room
Mrs. Charles Paul of Hastings,
Mrs. Bauer had the first lamp used I
Henry
Coryell
and
Mr
and
Mrs.
Bush home Sunday
MM,rv
,nrt
‘nd
by Mrs Chas. H- Bauer; there |
the usual way. Both front and Strand
The policy for the pres- : -----------------------------------------------------------Harold Phillips will return Satur­ George DeMaus of Battle Creek.
were long lace mitts, a key wound
rear ventilators may be adjusted ent at least is to run the theater I,.,..,,. ---------------------- ---------------- Mr and Mrs. W L Hinman went
day from a ten day business tr.p in
watch, baby's fancy open work knit f
to
admit
fresh
air
and
also
expel
on
Friday.
Saturday.
Sunday
and
[
to Tgwaa Cilv on Friday for a few hose, an old money bag. baby pic­
Ohio and New York
stale air without draft. The cowl Monday, opening it nt other times
"'iFrVMMk'jM RM, o, B»n,3r
-“h‘‘t1’
“f
tures of various members, a man's,
ventilator is geared for easy ac­ when the program makes it advlsWn, lhe «e« -nd wun Mr mKlv .
Mr
Mrr M C Mu.tor handmade linen vest, a much betion and screened to exclude in- able.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B Walker of ,r
Irv
Mr, B.,.« Trrsa.
"-­ ruffled and Jewelled gown loaned '
I Ray Branch, manager of the two
Mr. and Mrs. J M. Gjlmer spent ing and Mrs. Anna Wlllltts of by Mrs D- 8- Goodyear. Sr., an ex-1
I theaters, is proud of the fact that
South
Har
tings
were
the
week
end
Sunday In Holland ns guests of Mr
hlblt of quills, etc Of especial In- I
. Insofar as he was able in remodelguest*
of
Dr
LL
’
jdc
Hendershott
and
and Mr*. Durr Clark.
tcre.st was the old clock owned by
I Ing the building, he used Hassisters of Detroit.
Mrs Carter which has been passed
Mrs. Sam Nadu of Charlotte was
j Ungs labor and bought his mater- j
Mr. and Mrs. George Sheffield. Dr. down to several generations. It was |
in the city on Thursday and Fri­ F G SheOi-ld and Mrs Edith Bon­
• lais in Hastings He says that Has- I
made In the 1500's. Two utile girls.
day visiting friends
• Ungs laborers can do any Job re­
nell were guests of Mr and Mrs.
quired of them us well as those im­
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Amid and Olrn Sheffield of near Battle Creek Emogene Moore and Sally Brandstetter. were also guests The former I
ported from the cities and that Has­
daughters spent the week end with la* week Sunday.
A delightful music recital was
wore
a
dress
Unit
had
belonged
to'
relatives and friend-’, in Sagmaw
—, Mrs Surah E Heald of Lansing Mrs. Carter when she was two years iveh at the parish house on Thurs- tings businessmen carry ns higt:
arrive was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
, Ay evening of last week by lhe pu- trade merchandise as can be found
Dr Viola Stunner
.... -------old and Sally wore a boy's suit that
। anywhere. Mr Branch Is to be con­
Thursday from Si. Louis to spend’ Roh lost week. They accompanied wo-t seventy-four years old,
I' pils of Mrs I J Smith. The general
, gratulatcd on lhe fine appearance
a few days with Mrs. Harold Phil­ her to her home on Saturday, reOther guests of the Circle were I theme wm "Give Me Music." and of his building arid everyone wLshes
tuniing that same day.
lips.
Mrs. W Maytan Jones, Mrs. Leia;I the
— program was
- divided
------ into
. - four
,
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. Cross, MLss Sara Schnder. Mrs cal-1 *roups. Music of childhood. Forty. him sucess In tlu^new enterprise.
JOLLY EI^IIT CLUB.
.
.
...Mr,. ....
. . , Dufcra A A nidlno
” . Vnufh
Fluml-y
and
Wln«lon
Rldlnx
TuuUl f.rnni.
Group.:
and friends in Hickory Corners and Win. Roh were Mr. and Mrs. Frank VIM
|Fon&gt;
Dukrs".
Music ol Ifcr
Battle Creek the latter part uf lhe Schkilmcister and daughter. Mr and Sheffleld.
;
Mrs. Edith Bbnnell entertained,
Full Power. Mid randlra
Cburrti ; Popular Mu.le -Lrt . Sinn
week.
,2"
lhe Jolly Eight bridge club on;
C Roh, nil of Grand Rapids.
noil In Uic rarlou. room, .nd on I Askin, olid Cla-vaical Mu.ic
All Silk, 7-Strand
afternoon.
Winning ,
Mr and Mrs Earl Wareham and U,r luncbcra, laMra
I „ lmrr»l&gt; rwd will. Uw piano num- Thursday
daughters. Jan and Sandra of De­
SERVICE HOSE, at
Al lhe buMnra, v„M |» for”7' wlerllonk
»l&gt;-. ’cores were held by Mrs. Arthur '
troit. wire week end guest* at the mar olhcers ware rcrlecUd and one ’ PrupriMe rradU’sEveryone en-- Wheating and Mrs V D Wldrig.
Kellar Stem home. Mrs Wareham now member received
WM lhe proercm. lhe nrala pre.• The hostess served a lovely lunch. |
*3” ’5" ’6”
and daughter* remaining for the
__________ . , ___________
i ent including the parents ami relI UNCHFON—BRIDGE
i nt,vt'* of the children partirlpatlim
Bunday guests of Mr and Mrs.
FULL FASHIONED —
Mr. jihn F Goodiear deluhl-!
01
Pn-venl. prmllnk Uw
T N. Knopf were MLss Jean Fen­ fully entertained
MbtAkrt.inxiH thirty
.h4,4k, guests
uho.i. nt
.. a
. '1 "iHirc program but all agreed it
Ji; 59' ,„d 69
nell and ML" Norma Haldeman of
on* o'clock luncheon Tuesday at her was the best one they have present­
Detroit and Mr and Mrs. Arthur
PROBATE COURT.
home on South Washington street ; ed. all being deserving of credit.
Fancy AR Wool Efl
Ffniwll and Jack and Wm Fennell Yellow chrysanthemums were used '
Est. Robert T Martin Proof of
Ski Soduv—
UU
DEATII OF CHAS. D. BIRDSALL. will filed.
of South Raven.
of uua
our city readers -will reLeigh Pretty man of Muskegon on the small luncheon tables and I Many ut
While All Wool 25
Est. Allee M coolbaugh Waiver
Height* and William Smith of bouquets of lhe larger chrysanthe- rncinbtr Charles D. Birdsall, who □f notice filed, order appointing
mums made attractive decorations was
nc3r
c)tj. WKj resided
Grandville were 'juesta of Dwight
Girls' Twin
Children's
19
in the living room and sun parlor. h, Hastln(ls for ^ven,) &gt;ear&gt;. but Admr entered.
Fisher th- Inst of the week, the Thr luncheon was served buffet. Mrs '
Sweaters, » to M
Est Newell II Barber Warrant
School Hose—
three r.oltlg cn tc Albion on Satur­ ■n,xl„r^n w»..rrv^b..ne. Mr. wllM. hntnc lwd bret! in Grand and inventory filed
M E Nevins. Mrs. c W Wesplnter Rnpiib tor some tilin'. Mr Bird­
day foi the college homecoming.
Est James H. Na*h. cl al. Annual
and Mrs. O E Goodyear OAslsting sall suffered u heart attack on
Mis-. Emma Carpenter
Mrs
in the dining room Contract w Thur.'doy of last week and died a* account of Gdn filed.
Maurice Hynes. Mrs Myrtle Brown
Est Flora M. Taylor, order to displayed during the afternoon. Mrs a result of it The funeral w,is held
and Mrr Edward Smith attended
Roy cordes and Mrs W R. Cook Saturday at 2 P. M at Oreenhoe's lose of Consumers PowYr stock cn- ।
the Rcbeku:i assembly at Bay City
t
winning lhe prize* Mrs A A An­ chap-1. Grand Rapids. Ute body •ered.
from Monday until Wednesday Mrs
Est. Alice M Coolbamth Bond of
derson and Mr* C W Clarke of
Himes was th? delegate from Hie lo­ Grand Rapids and Mrs. Florence । was brought to Riverside cemetery Admr filed, letters of adminktra- ,
itfre for burial
rn) lodge.
lion issued
Whitney of Nanticoke, pa, were out I
Mr. Birdsall wax born Sept. 3. 1878.
Est. Myron johncock Nomination 1
1 of town guests.
BIRTHDAY PARTY.
M K»a
■»&gt; 01 hu UUr M
oan filed, orotr
pporal„, .
of Gdn
order ,
appointing
Mr*' C. I, Texter entertained
jws In Grand Rapid* For quite
enlcredt bond ol odn Bled,
RAPIDS.
a
[
On
^
tlaM
.
|
U
.
a
salesman
for
.
,.™ n..
a ratoman lor
oI
twelve guests Saturday evening nt
Honoring
Mr
and
J
----------------her home In honor of' Mr. Texter 's
Mrs. Jamco, t|1P Hastings Table Company, but
No more buying your clothes
Mr.
*“11 . nr
recent years was associated ventory filed.
birthday Br.dgc was played, the Ironside of Son Diego. rCalif
Est. L. Blanche Johncock Ord
in incorrect sixes! We take
prise:, being won by Mr* Leroy Fos­ and Mrs. E J. Hut!man of Grand with 'he Securities Investment CorThere’s plenty of good
particular delight in fitting
ter. Mrs. diaries Faul. Ben Gldley
wear left in last year’s
shorter women who look
clothing. Send them to
their best in half size fash­
ATTENDS BANQUET.
ions. The newest and smart­
MU* Barbara Johnson of Has­
incm for you. Our clean­
est in coats and frocks in
tings attended the annual PanhclEst. William E. Johncock. Order
LUNCHEON ON FRIDAY.
lenlc banAuet held in Ute Women's
a nephew. Howard Birdsall, of this
ing process restores origi­
sixes and prices that fit to
Mrs f^ay Slone of Battle Creek. a
confirming sale entered.
League building nt the University
nal color ond texture and
Mrs.
Jonh
Condon
of
Three
Rivers
cn
&gt;Est.
Sarah
EWalters.
Order
alcf Michigan on Monday
and Mrs. Harold Pelham were'| President
with a lowtag account
entered,
wc will press them back
Hresiaent Quezon
yucaili starts
ciuu
------- - ---------- discharge
--- severe handicap.
handicap. He
He cannot
of Admr. issued. estate enrolled.
BEANO PARTY.
luncheon guests of Mrs Robert B severe
into shape.
- ..blame
Missei', 12 to 20
.. .
_ __ i__-------.I...,
I......
e»-o
Est. uoKoia
Melissa T?nA
Roe. Order
Order ronfil
confirm­
Mrs. Sterling Rogera entertained Harkness last Friday. Contract was | anything
on a previous adtnlnlstrafitieen members of the American played in Che afternoon.
ing sale entered.
I tlon.
*
PHONE 2140
Wom.n',. 36 . «/ S3 98
Legion Auxiliary on Friday evening'
TWENTY-TWO PRESENT.
complimentary
lo Mrs
Forrest
Holl Siu,. I4’/i
54,89
A delightful Halloween party was
Smith Bruno was played and al)
to 26'A( $7.85
enjoyed by twenty-two members of |
had a delightful time.
Mrs. Fred Johnson's Sunday school |
Stouts. 38 Vi to
I $7.89
class in the Methodist church par-i1
DINNER PARTY.
Mt* and Mrs A K. Frnndscn en­ lors on Tuesday evening. Games I
HASTINGS - MICHIGAN j tertained
..S2W
irrimnra Tuesday
lut-sany evening at a were played and popcorn and apples '
,f ' small dinner party.
served.

Friday and Saturday
END of the MONTH

Piano Pupils
Present Prop;ruin

SALE

SNOW SUITS

HOSE VALUES

4»c

SAVE on

COURT HOUSE NEWS

1 IF YOU'RE 5 FEET 5 OR UNDER

JFe Specialize
in fitting you!

Fall Clothes

T

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS

ijWtOODS

COAT SPECIALS
For Friday and Saturday!
Fur Trimmed Dress Coats

MR. PROPERTY OWNER!
Do you know
you can im­
prove YOUR
home under
THE
NATIONAL
HOUSING
ACT PLAN

with guaran-

Home Made

Pork Sausage

Pork Loin Roasts
Rib End

2 ,b- 33c

ib.

19c

’1675

"CARTER" Underwear
Rayon. Silk and WooL

and &gt;o to
in WARM
BALBRIGGAN

PAJAMAS

Salt-

TAX INCLUDED!

SHULTZ OR FREEPORT

33c

BUTTER
Beef Kettle

Round, Sirloin or

ROASTS

Swiss Steak

14c

ib.

19c

25 50‘ 69

chilly nighte. bwlbrWoM
■he boat nerl Unahrinktn light. fast colors . , .

union suits

11.69. *1.9*. S2.25

warmth without weight.

Children's Underwear . . .
Children's Sleeping Suits . ,
Children's Pajamas and
Gownv

Small, medium and

Paste) colors.

Blanket Bargains
For Friday ond Saturday
Conditions Indicate that costs arc rising. DON'T Wait! NOW IS THE TIME!

• PAINT
O SHINGLE /
• NEW BATH.
• FURNACE

OINSULATE
e FOUNDATION
• IMPROVE INTERIOR
• IMPROVE EXTERIOR

Low Cost monthly pay­
ments running from
one to four years. Con­
sult us about your
problems.

XATIOXAL BANK
OF HASTINGS
I E I. E P II (&gt; K E

Picnics

ib.

Smoked, Shaoklesi

Potatoes u s-"- &gt;
Apples Cooking or Eating

20c

- 29c

7 - 25c

PIRATE OR WHOLESOME

Pancake Flour

5A;21c

eldpausch

F

•MARKET’

Phone. 2772 We DeliverHASTINGS. MICHIGAN.

DOUBLE PLAID BLANKETS,
70 » 8p. o( ONLY.
ALL W&lt;50L SLANKETS. FASTIL
SHADES. 72,34. Sptln

,M
°

DOUBLE BLANKETS. PART WOOLSp.M
72x84. SPECIAL—
SINGLES..IZb 84. PART WOOL.

14 .78

■

Fdhcy Plaids at—

FRA Ml S
EXCLUSIVE

BUT

HASTINGS, M 1CH.

NOT

E X P E H 8g

TELEPH

�THR HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 19, 19M

tically every CCC camp were trained PAST POLLS
LS HAVE
HAVE

WOODUND PAY NG lfw^s.SSw-2 CONTINUES ITS
15183293
IIS SCHOOL BONDS

than half their cost paid by theiJhal practically all Woodland folks
I Kellogg Foundation or by tiie fed- are glad they have the building.
J eral government or-by both. The big altnough It has meant a considerI addition that has Just been com- 1 able hardship during the deprrs-luu
I pitted at the Nashville school has (O meet the paymenu on the prin(Continued from put 1. Bee. u j been largely financed with govern- , cipal and interest of lhe bonds But
। ment and Kellogg Foundation lunds. by cutting tiie bonus to *39.000 from
Mbte. As the *23.000 bonds have not1 But Woodland haa paid tier own 1125.000. as they will next March, the
yet been sold. It cannot be stated WBy. For several years noV,&gt; the school debt will not be so trouble­
now just how rap.dly they will be township has kept up its pay menu some.
paid; but lhe district will clean up on the principal and interest of the
all Its bonds in a comparatively, bonds, yet the,school tax rate has DEATH OF MRS.
MATTIE BLACHMAN.
few years.
! not been increased. Woodland has
Mrs Mattle Blachman, a long
The township of Woodland, which handled her school financial probcomprisei the Woodland school dis- lems in a very creditable maimer tune resident of Barry county, died
trict. has met this debt burden sue- They have a fine echopl plant to Mt her home in Delton Tuesday
cessfuily. and has done it without show tor their money. The proposi- night after an illness of'lwo months
outeioe help of any kind. In other tlon to build a consolidated school The funeral will be held at her
words they bought and paid for carried thr township by u small ma­ late residence on Friday at 10 30 A
their own. The consolidated schools jurity; but lhe township has re­ M. An obituary sketch will appear
al Middleville. Delton und the Kel- ceived such benefits from its con- next week.

,
,

(Continued from page 1, Sec. 1»

rescue methods by lhe Red Cross.
Harry county people should be es­
pecially interested in this branch
ot Red Cross work as there are so
m*W W- hm .ham U« «nlcra
a IrauwU Me aa««r mlaM ba
necessary at any time. Al present
.necessary
there
,h’r’ are
nr* several licensed life sav­
ers in Barry county who are ready
to assist when needed. Boys in
CCC camps are given an unusual op­
portunity to learn life saving meth­
ods. Groups of leaders from prac­

* * PENNEY'S ALL-AMERICAN VALUES IN

FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY* * * * ★ *

Work MITTENS

79®

Style

rana cotton lining.

Snri/c Cluih!

For Sound Sleep!

Night Shirts

All Wool!

I

Light weight and romfurLable!

BLANKETS

j-

Aft C
m.

*
j

Not less than 5% wool and
the balance firm, soft cotton
Stitched ends. Pretty plaid
singles, priced very low.

k
k
j

70

Men'i Suet!

fastener front

Carefully made of fancy striped
flannelette. 54’ long, silky frogs,
military
type collar, breast

Sport collar.

lie' Better buy enough to keep
you warm all winter!

Navy meltons, shadowtones.

Men’s Oxfords

MEN’S SHIR1 s

w,u,

/ ough! Warm!
Black aide leather uppers. New

j

Wooly GLOVES

BOOT SOCKS

WORK SOCKS
Split Sole

Part Wool!
Wool!

Heavy Ribbed!

Black Cotton

&lt;

button

flap

For women!
Knit wrtet and
short gauntlet cuff1 Multi-col­
ored. Warn as toaat! 6 to i

A

sturdy,

fine

40% to 50% wool
with solid rein­
forced heel and
toe for added

heel give added

ing color tops.
Made (or out-

yarn. Sues 10-

&gt;£“ Re ­

LINED

GLOVES

PLAID BLANKETS J
i

I
........
‘
”
""
=
| =================

Organizations
,

BEEN
been accurate
_______

Lji&lt;rary Digeofs
_?Oi
r

Last Re7

t

”

Mallnews। Gate Keeper. Glenn M1H
tor; Cere,. Mrs. Clyde Btedge; PoJ
mana. Mrs. Mary Scudder; Flora

------- - Mrs. Willten Bailie; 'pianist. Mn

’

The regular meeting of lhe Leo Bertha Rivers; Executive committee
ha held
Halal Charles Green. W. C. Rivers .and
Herman Hauer; Home Ec. commlti
at
be installedE tee. Jessie Scobey. Mrs. Nellie Bumd
by8 o'clock. Officers
pr(.will
lldenl
and Mrs. Rena Hauer.
Musser, who has installed ofiicers
ABSENT VOTERS TO VOTE. I
"here
- "
before. All members
- are urged
City Clerk Sterling Rogers has sJ
to be present.

port
।! A M;lIcr
wU1
Port Shows Landon la
It
Millar p^t
Dnal No
Mn 3326
WM will
Leading
Thursday evening. Nov. 5. promptly

Pnr
.V—v. presidential .iMbiinn
For every
election
.
since
1910 and including that year.
,
and
in lhe election of 1934. lhe Lilentry
Digest has conducted a pre­
'
election poll It has been remark­
ably accurate. The actual results of
the polls taken in 1932 and 1934
varied less than 1 1-2 per cent front
the actual figures of the elections
which followed.
•
SETSDigest
GOAL
600
The Literary
pollOF
as given
DDCCCCC HU PnUTECT II* ,la test issue. October 24. records
untbbtb IN bUIM I tbl a towl of 2jM73fl ballou. If the
Digest's poll is as accurate, or any-

far sent out absent voters' ballot!
Townsend plan meeting at Macto 40 persons who will elthet not bJ
cabee hall^Monday night, Nov. 2. 8
o'clock. Chas. Josef of Mendon is in Hastings on election day. but whl
are registered voters here, or whl
Ute 1 peaker.
are sick and will be unable lo vote
in person, judging from expertencl
On account
of the Round _
The
_____________
________
।
World Supper Nov. 5. Circle No. 1 in Die past two general elections. 11
of the Methodist L- A- 8. will hold b probable that lhe total numbel
its meeting one week earlier—on of absent voters who will ask an!
Mrs. Andrus Asks Makers to
Thursday afternoon. October ...
29. st receive ballots from lhe city clftrj
Remember Older Girls
, 1920. 1924. 1928 and 1932 and In the home of Mrs. Herman Soder. Ihl» K“r w*1* reach *el1 toward lOQ
--------------------------------------------------------- 1
• 1934 Alfred M Landon will be the 235 E- High St.
in County
next President of lhe United Slates.
The Past NOble Grunds of the Re- Last year in the Santa Claus of the number of voles polled by
bekah
lodge
will
haue
a
Halloween
I dressmaking contest 300 dresses tiie
-•
—
----- •Landon
--•*— -----■--- ---------•­
Digest,
receives
nearly
were entered und distributed by thr 55 per cent ajid Roosevelt not quite Iparty al the home oPMlss Catherine
Weeber, Friduy evening, Oct- 30.
1 health counsellors of the Barry 41 per cent.
1 County Health Unit. While this was
Thirty-two states will. If the Dl-1
... .
..
a very rood showing for the first ges’. A poll is correct, line up fur I T,le Altofl P T. A will hold their
year of tiie contest. Il was only half Undon. sixteen for Roosevelt New 1 J"1 meeting of the year on Frlenoigh to take care of the girls in York. Pennsylvania. Illinoi'. Ohio. 1 day30. Bring sandwlche.. and
I am a candidate on the
the county needing dresses.
Minnesota. Wisconsin.
MlclHRan, one nl*,er dish.
Democratic ticket for return
Mrs. Frank C. Andrus, who Iis *ftwu Indiana. Nebraska and West
The past matrons and patrons of
IT Vlrululn
ImUrnt*. Inru*
chairman of the contest this year
Virginia .ill
all indicate
large majurilo lhe State Legislature. •
has set h.T goal at 600 dresses and uM for Landon, as do all lhe New Hastings Chapter No 7. Order of
has several suggestions to offer to Englund slates. New Jersey and Eastern Star, will be the guests of
I do not believe that any
honor at u special meeting Tues­
tO T.nWr .«r.e'TS 1 Delaware. Nearly all lhe western day evening. November 3. Dinner al
one wlio Is One Hundred per
While it is fun to makr outfits for I states except Nevada
which they will be guests, will be
lhe younger girls, from two to
eight. I New Mexico and Art
----------------------------------------------Arizona line up
cent
partisan can faithfully
served ut 6:30 followed by a pro­
lhe
girls
from eight to fourteen
------- “ for
- • the —
.
------ ------Kansas governor. California
gram.
represent ALL the people.
need them ju-.t as much and in last promises lo be close, but still shows
years contest they were overlooked a good majority for Landon. The
The Goodwill L. A- 6. will meet
and disappointed It is hoped that southern slates including Arkansas. with Mrs. Amil Bauchman Friday.
My independent altitude is
this year individuals, church or- • Oklahoma.
Kentucky. Tennessee .oaouer
October 30
30. ]Pol luck dinner at noon.
well enough known to require
ganlzations and other clubs will re- land Maryland and Arizona are all followed
_- bv
_y business meeting in
member the older girls and include ' safe in lhe Roosevelt column. The the afternoon.
-----------no further comment.
. them in their plans.
I only northern states indicated as I
If
for Rna-wvell
*&lt; u&gt;. Woman
wumaii knows
iw■vws of a
■* particular
pwi uvular !. being
ucmg ior
Ktxvcven in the
me Digest's
ingest a
Surgery Guild No. 10 will meet
favor Rural Electrification
child for whom she wishes to make poll are Montana and Utah.
(with Mrs Forrest Potter on
N.
by ANY feasible plan. To be
a drew! she mny do so and still en- i if the election this year shall be Broadway on Thursday afternoon,
ter liny garment in the contest, uc- the reverse of what the Digest poll Nov. 5. Member., bring thimbles as
accomplished as quickly as
cordink to Mrs Andrus. This makes indlcatcs It will be lhe first time in , we have sewing lo do. Assisting
possible; lhe accomplishment
it possible tor thb particular child nearly twenty
‘
years that that has committee will be Mrs. Mary Watto be given a dress and lhe maker been true.
| ers and Mrs. Ermonl Newton.—Mrs.
of which was held up by the
to share in the chances of winning
Otto Isenhath. Secy.
present legislature by refusing
a prize.
I Hospital Guild No. 14 will have
As stated oefore. money has al­ ATTORNEY JAMES
to puss needed legislation
ri PA RY TA QPPAk R silver tea and baked goods sale
ready been donated (or dresses end
uiXAn
u orcMix al. the
Qf, Mix
Aben
GLuMnli iIU
.. hmne
.
M
Aben Johllaon
Johnson.
complying with National reg­
may be Obtained from Mrs Andrus
------------.
I 309 80. Park St.. Thursday. Oct. 29.
or Miss Eva A Hecox, secretary of
ulations thereby leaving the
the Commercial Club, by individuals Perfecting Plans for Armis- ■ at 2 o'clock. Quests are Invited.
rural folks out on a limb. Un­
or organizations who cannot afford
tice Banquet at I. 0.
L
to furnish their own materials.
less haste Is made Michigan
0. F. Hall
Headquarters for the contest are
stanch lo lose *1,400,000 al­
in the National Bunk ot Hastings
The committees in charge of the
building on the second floor Some Armlsllcv Day banquet and program 1
lotted to lhe State for th*t
one will be in the office every Wed­
purpose.
nesday and Saturday afternoon so arc completing their preliminary arrangemenu. The b«nQuel win be „ M»D. t KuMr wra hcleu in
workers may get materials they may­ .
... ,
her bridge club of eight on IhursaHfrnoon
’
need. Also those who would like lo at the I. O. O. F iiall on Wednesday.
I ask you to compare the
donate materia] or money tor it Nov li ui seven P. M . with the Re- j
...
accomplishments of lhe Leg­
mny leave It there on either of these bekah ladies serving lhe dinner
; Mrs. Fred Prentice entertained Ute
afternoons
islature of 33-"34 with those
Tickets are seventy-five cents U and I club on Wednesday after­
each, and Mayor Charles H. Leon- ;noon at her home in lhe second
of lhe present Legislature,
FUNERAL ON SATURDAY.
ard had the honor ot purchasing
The funaral of Mrs Roy Barnum
which at its adjournment was
the
first
one.
Those
who
have
lick,
of coats GroVe was held al Si. Rose eu for sab are Don Foreman al j The American Legion Auxiliary U
classed as the DO-NOTHING
church on Saturday morning at nine
o'clock. Father John V. Dillon of- Consumers Power Co.. Angelo Spirts, having a Halloween party this eveLEGISLATURE, even by a
Clorence Workman. E- F. Sayles. nlng -•
•
------x
—
----al the home of Mrs. Pauline
nclatlti’t
Relatives and friends
partisan press.
from Woodland. Cottis Grove and Harry Larsen. James Clark ot Mid­ Bliss, s. Washington St.
dleville. Leon Leonard of Delton.
Ha tings were present Burla) was
Henry Hubert. Mrs Wilbur Platt
The Anchor class of the Metho*
Let me quote from James
in Ml Calvary cemetery.
I and Mrs. Donna Herrington.
dist Sunday Schoo) enjoyed a Hal­
Holme &lt; Republican&gt;, who has
Attorney Kim Sigler will preside loween parly at Use home of Mrs.
I as the toastmaster, with Command­ Guy Keller on Wednesday evening .
been in the legislature many
; er Adelbert Cortrlght introduc­
years: "This legislature will
ing him. It is expected that there REORGANIZATION OF
1 will be a male quartet and a colored
go down in history as lhe
WELCOME
GRANGE
I orchestra to furnish music.
Ar­
worst
legislature Michigan
rangements have been made with
Charter Mem­
I James Cleary, a prominent Battle Thirty-Six
ever had."
’ Creek attorney. 10 give the address I
'
“
bers
Enrolled Friday
10 the guests, and his topic will.
My opponent Is now saying
Night
I doubtless pertain lo • Americanism ' 1
j Mr Cleary is in demand as a speak-' Thirty-six
Tnirty-slx charter members were
that the reason they accomI er at luncheon club-s and before enrolled al the reorganization meet.plished nothing was the Dem­
I men's groups in southern Michigan, ing of the Welcome Orange on FrtI This is the first lime in several day evening. They chose the first
ocrats wouldn't let them—
' years that there has been a public and third Friday evenings of each
PRETTY SOFT, that!
1 observance of Armistice Day. but month as their meeting dates.
| the members of the American Le-1 Earl ~
--------- “con­
Brewer of Byron Center
Relying on my own record
I glon end Auxiliary and the Veterans ducted the business session and the
of Foreign Wars and their Auxil­ following
officers were chosen:
I ask you lo return me to the
iary are co-operating with the idea Worthy Master, Roy Preston; Over­
legislature on Nov. 3rd.
of making this banquet an out­ seer. Peter Miller; Lecturer. Mrs.
standing one. Gel your ticket early Hazel Doutlass; Steward. Lewis Bai­
as only a certain number can be lie; Asst. Stewards. Otto and Mrs.
accommodated in the I. O- O. F. Clara Tietz; Chaplain. Mrs Pern
hail.
. Preston; Treaaurer. Andrew
A.

i

To the People of
Barry County:

Club Meetings

Men’s Shirts

DwMr B&lt;J
Sa&lt;, tr,w

S
men acted us instructors for boys
in the camps, the Red Cross staff
aiming when so requested
Archie D. McDonald Is chairman
for Barry county; Mrs. Otto Uenhatii, secretary; Orville Sayles,
treasurer;
Mrs. Forrest Johnson.
Roll Call chairman. Besides these
ofiicers are lhe chairmen of the
various departments. In a later bsue of the Banner, the township
and city workers will be announced
. and plans are being made for an
. mienuee Tbembennjp drive .ran—
-___
... ..7
m'g
on________
Wednesday.
Nov. ..11.

s

Pastels!

Button or
IFrui Strap

Warmly lined
9 for large boys.
_ ... .
wear well. Blaek and brown.

Bedding Week Sale-At Wards

Work MITTENS
Elite Heavyweight

UNIONS

49®

BY REQUEST:

UfalfyuAf tk* SuM.cOu/yu*f

Mammoth Hotel'

Weather

faction

MEN’S SOCKS

INNmNG MATTRESS

with white fleec-

legs. Full slan-

95

They’ll wear I

id colors.

PANTS

sturdy wool Generously cut for
eomfixt Hark oxford grey.

I

W

Buy

Men's Part

FINE BLANKET*
Part
Wool

«1.9S

SERVICE CAPS
For WiMrr

Good looking pastel plaids.
Lustrous 3 inch sateen bind­
ing Nol less than 5% wool.
Double bed sue. 70' x 80*.

C—lMl

rtdC
TpO

Warm durable corduroy or mel--

Wool

UNIONS

.

98c

I.
I

$3 DOWN
dll be refunded I

Sale I
The S3NSATI0N of the August
_
Almost overnight the demand wee to great
that in many cases it .exceeded the eupplyl
NOW—for a limited time we are repeat­
ing thie offer I Think of it—110 OFF REOULAR PRICE and look at these expensive
features!
270 cushiony coils I Quilted
sisal pads I Deep, fluffy layers of new felted
cotton I Heavy. 6 oi. herringbone ticking I

S17 Vls-CMUnSpiUfl.................... 9.94

Winter weight unions. 10% wool
ter wwsoU-and long service!
1 Standard site*. Tan random.

Si 4.95 Inncripring Mottfcij .... 0.94

Montgomery Ward
hft TiMIT 8ft

RHONE 2691

HASTINGS

111 $. JEFFIRSON ST.

�THB HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 29, 19M

ANNIVERSARY 8URPBI8K.

Social Events and Personal Mention
George R Green was

in

South

Holloway.
Mrs. Phoebe Mote U spending the
week with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lapo

yrirtn' wwtn

Mrs. Ray Noban of Bellevue was a
Mr. and Mrs. 8 p. Nichols and
Friday visitor of her sister, Mr*. Al-, ton, Jim. of Detroit were week end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Bar­
Dr. abd Mrs. C- P. Lathrop spent neUthe week end in Detroit with Miss
Mr. and Mra. Hubert Blakney of
Olive lAthrop.
Ann Arbor were guests of his parMra. Harold Phillips and Mn. IenU- BhmrW and Mrs jay BlakGeorge Coleman were in Battle neX- ovcr the
«’&lt;!■
Creek oh Bunday.
' Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lewis were
Mrs. T. H. Hoos. who has been Ounday gueaU of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
In University hospital tn Ann Arbor Keyes of Godwin Heights. Grand
for ten da vs. to improving.
, ?*Pi t*' Mr Key” U ln very P00*”
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Koolstra of health.
’
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Coupland of
Grand Rapids were Sunday gUesU
Michigan City. Ind., came on Tues­
of Mr. and Mn. Henry Mulder.
day
a v*Mt
visit wnr
with her sister and
r- A.
x Perry
n—. of Mt. Morris
i. a
*y *for
”r ■
Mn. G.
husband
Mr
—
I£r. and
—.4 Mrs Sterling
Is lhe guest of her slater and hus- h
FluiMna
' Mr
ana

Mrs. Florence Whitney of Nantl- onzo Trim.

On the evening of Oct. 15 Mr. and wedded Rte together.
Mrs. Charles Parker of Middleville,
end Mbs Betty Leary, daughter of Mr;. Lester Miller saw a string of
Mr. and Mr*. Charles Leary, stole lights coming up the road. In a
Betiey I. Rollo of Kingsley,
a march on their friends and were few minutes horns began to blow to
married on Sunday afternoon in remind Mr. and Mrs. Miller they daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Wauseon. Ohio. J&gt;y H. H- Ham. On had come to help them celebrate Rollo, and Rexford K. Reid, sou of
anniversary
Mrs. Virgie Reid, of Hastings, were
Saturday mey
they wen*
went to Aim
Ann nruor
Arbor their
asiuraay
----- .C.silver
. . wedding ----,-----to the game where they were the over thirty m aU. The evening was united in marriage at eight-thirty
spent
with vi*itin»
visiting and same*
games after o'clock Friday craning. Oct 23. at
guests of Charles Parker. Jr., and' lnrl
't w,th
Miss Marion Lunlz. who nccom- which Rene Carey presented Mr. the home of Mrs. Reid, the Rev. B.
,
panled Mr. and Mr*. Parker %to and Mrs. Miller with some silver J. Adcock officiating.
pieces
and
a
silver
offering
in be­
The bride was attired in brown
Wauseon and were their attendants
half of relatives and friends. Rev. crepe
... with gold trimmings. and _
was
and
Mrs.
Carey
gave
a
song
which
attended
by
Miss
Phyllis
Reid,
who
Both
D'-UI Mr.
nn. will!
and Mrs.
min. IHI-II
Parker are
niv
- - &lt;------■
,u— came
ted —
crepe. Richard
Bishop
graduates of the Hastings High — —
'"Joy'dthen
.
.lunch,
... wore
— —
----------- —
school The former is employed al Therc w«« lw0 lovelJ' cakes. one for performed the dutlea of beat man.
the
Center and
Mr and Mrs. Reid will make their
inc Feldpausch
criapau&amp;cji Food
rwxi vcuki
mu,' t,lc brlde; one ,or u,e ”Poom
~ after
..
«
.. ..............
. . office of lhe whlrh
Mr*.
Parker
b in the
which .11!
all ftf-nartr/l
departed wUhlnlr
wishing Mr
Mr. «hd
and hnm™
home In
tn Dnntlan
Pontiac.
Hastings Mfg
Co. Their many------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ,------ friends extend best wishes.
mami^^MaMWMMnaMaBnHWiMawH

Clarence W. Crawford left Mon­
day for Buffalo lo attend a meeting
of 300 railroad men.
Ray Hlldingrr of Cleveland was a
week end visitor at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. A. Tolles.
Mr. and Mn. Cosh Clark of
CHEER UP PARTY.
Grand Haven spent Bunday with
The first cheer Up party of the
his mother. Mrs. Clara Clark.
autumn sc won will be peld on Mon- j
Mrs. F. A. Curtis arrived Tuesday band. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Lamble.
■ Richard Poley, Forrest Yargcr. day evening, Nov. 2. In the com­
from Detroit to spend a week visit
B. 8 Plumley of Pontiac visited
Bernard McPharlln. Russell Cleve­ munity hall. Fuller building. All,
his bt other and wife. Mr. and Mrs.
ing Mr. and Mn. O. F. Chidester.
land and Winn Green went on a man ltd couplev arc invited to at- 1
Calvin Plumley, over the week end.. hunting w
trip &gt;1V1M
near the rulc
Pine I1&gt;CJ
river ( tend these dancing parties.
Mra.
and -a On Sunday.
troll over the week end. Mrs. CarK..-. Genevieve Kirby ...»
Committee member* are Mayor
rothers returning with him Mon- i friend
menu from
rrom Detroit were guest* of
or , Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Randolph and Mrs. Charles H. Leonard, chair­
Mr, and Mrs. Earl Coleman on Frl- , of Royal Oak and Mrs Ella Graves men. Mr and Mrs. David Good­
day.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry E. Johnson day.
I of Detroit were Sunday guest* of the year. Mr and Mrs Kim Sigler. Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Clarke
spent the week end In Lansing with
latter's sister and husband. Mr. and Mrs P W. Stebbins and Dr.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas have moved to Grand Rapids and and Mrs. Calvin Plumley.
and Mn. R G Finnic, also Mr.
are at home at 1400 Thomas St.
Frost.
and Mr*. Ralph Hess of Nashville.
H e
Mr. and Mrs. F. Wortinger of ConMn. Clair Fuller and son. Robert, i
*,nd «r“n&lt;w“UKhter. Gwfn
spent the week end with relatives In
Grand Rapids
and Muskegon of Owosso spent the week end with De11 Wertingen nf Three Rivers,
HALLOWEEN SURPRISE.
her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. A. L.
»umU of ,Mr
w J
Mr. and Mr*. George W. Sheffield
Heights.
Houvener.
j Watkins over the week end.
Mrs. Ophelia O'Hair relumed Fri­
and Mr. and Mr*. G. Winston
—z
—
Mrs. Alfred Birch, who ha* been Sheffield were given a Halloween
day from xLouisville
and Bardstown., Mr. and Mrs. Ray Huven and two
Ky, where she spent a month with I, childien
Onondaga
guest—of—MU*
Prances Crowell.- surprize party Saturday evening at
........... ».of v,..
—.—-»- Visited Mr. I the --------—---------------------------an/4
Arthirr
nvrr
on
tn
relatives and friends.
■II «uu
and mi*,
Mrs. aiwiu,
Arthur U.v.n
&lt;&gt;■&gt;»»■•
Huven »&lt;«■
over thr
xm,
the ij returned
■»»»•••&gt;»
relumed —
on■ flundsv
Sunday
j »»
to hrr
her hnrr.p
home In
.*&gt;
In &gt; the former * home by a group ut
।i Chicago. Mr Birch and daughter | Battle Creek friend*. The guest,
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Monica were iI meek
week end
end.
week end guests of their daughter
Mr. and Mrs. George Combs and ■ came“ Friday
J 1 *for’ “
the week end.
‘
I from Ural city were Mr and Mrs.
and husband, Mr and Mrs. Dale three sons of Detroit were guests of || Mrs. Adallne Lockhart of BiutT-1 George Pilgrim; Mr and Mr*. Benj.
Bassett, in Grand Rapids.
' Mr. and Mrs. Earl coleman over the ton, Ind., is visiting her sUter, Mr* Betz; Mr and Mrs. Carol BeckMr. and Mrs. Kenneth Buehler I week end.
N. V. Porter. Mr*. Lockhart has also with; MLss Helen Leys; MU* Elaine
her eighty-second birth- ! Pilgrim; MLss Marian Metcalf; Bob
and san, Kenneth, of Grand Rapids. | Mr and Mrs. Forrest Woodin and celebrated
,
«pent the week end with her parents, &lt; daughter of Belmont visited Mr. ,day while with her sUter ancrTamlly. j Digby; Lawrence Betz and Ed*&lt; I
and Mrs. Newton Benner over the
Mr. and Mr*. B. A. LyBarkcr.
Guest* over lhe week end of Mr*. Betz.
week
end.
Richard and Hubert Fairchild of
Fred Johnson and-family were her
—------------ * • *
-------Tiie Rev. and Mr* E O. Mc- sister and husband. Mr. and Mrs. A.1
PARTY FOR PLAY CAST.
Detroit and B. A. Withey ot Omer,
near Bay City, were week end guests Sherry returned dn Monday from W. Campbell, of Laramie. Wyo. MUs j Through the courtesy and genertiieir visit in Three Rivers and near Evelyn Johnson wrs also home osltv of a number of member* of the
of Mr and Mr*. Fred Fairchild.
Dr. R. B. Harkness returned Sat­ Elkhart. Ind.
from South Haven over the week executive board of the Hastings
Mr. and Mrs. Craig Sheffield and end.
urday from New Orleans, where he
,
Civic Players lhe member* of the
attended lhe annua) meeting of lhe Mr. and Mrs. carl Sheffield and
Mr. and Mrs R K Hurd and son, I cast of "Bleeping Beauty" and their
American Public Health association. families were Sunday guests of Kal­ Philip, relumed Monday from a six | guest* enjoyed a dancing party
Mr* Emma S. Evans relumed amazoo relatives.
_..
—
weeks' trip through
the -----west and Wednesday evening nt the “loft" in
Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Bumham and south- They visited Iowa. Nebraska. Reed
ojwtu • house Martin s or­
Wednesday from Dundee, N Y..
where she has been visiting and will Maxine of Lansing were guest* of Wyoming.
Washington.
Oregon. chestra played and The Man on
be at home with her cousin. Mrs. I. Miss Grace Edmonds Bunday after­ California. Arizona. Texas. Louis­ lhe Flying Trapeze" enjoyed tho
noon and evening.
F. McCoy.
Paul Jones and circles as much a-s
iana and Tennes&amp;ec.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Phillips (Agnes
Mr. and Mrs. Miner Seeley re­
Mrs W W. Long, who _________
has been anyone present
turned on Friday from a visit with DeakiiiM of Kalamazoo were guests | Uyjng jn .Lansing, wa* lhe guest of
Prof, and Mrs Earl Sherfi of of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dcaklns. mr. and Mr*. Calvin Plumley in er ATTEND CHILD CONFERENCE.
-I,
m week end. From
,,,,, here .she has
over the week end
end.
Chicago. On Tuesday they went lo nvpr
Mrs L F Maus, president of the
the
Mrs Belva Kenyon and Mrs. gone to California and will later
Flint to visit relatives
Mr and Mrs. Forest Jsines and Laura Wlbon nf Waterfnrd. N. Y.. leave for an indefinite ttay In Aus­ and Mr*. F w Stebbin* were ir&gt;
son. Jack, who have been visiting came Monday for a visit with Mr. tralia wilii a friend.
Lansing
yesterday
attending
a
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest and Mrs Ben Merrick
Mrs. Jes.se Crandall ot South Bind Child Conference al the Womans
Mr* Otto Schulze and LewLs and eaihe Thursday
_______ t for a visit with Dr. Club house in that city Dr. Lois
Erway. for a week, returned Sun­
day to their home at Houghton lake. Earl Schulze and children of Nash- , „nd Mrs. D D Walton and family Hayden Merk of Nfw York City und
her on Sun- Dr Helen Doherty
..
Mr». John W. Armbruster spent villc vUlted Mr. and Mrs, Alonzo
. Crandall
v-—came
—... for ....
ol Boston were
|I (jay.
visitor* were i lhe
the wtek end with her daughter and Trim and Henry Trim Sunday.
day. other
Other Bunday visitors
the speakers. The conference was
Mr. and Mrs. Kim Bigler and yr. Bn(j ^rs. John Walton of K»l- ‘ sponsored by the Democratic state
husband. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Mc­
Intyre. at Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mrs. family have moved in from Gun arnazoo and Mr. Smith and Mr I central committee
'
■
■»•■*■
Albert Dyer und son. Kcnnbth. went take and are living in the C. W.. Trotnow of South Bend.
Clorke home on West Green Mreet
Ml -- ­
after her on Sunday.
atrert
Mrs.
Edw. Smith.
Mr.
and Mrs
BETA SIGMA PHI .MEET.
Mrs Dora Fedewa. MLss Ambra
Amh” l —
Earl smith and Mr*. Myra WoodThe member* of Beta Sigma Phi.
Mr and Mr* Ray Hiatt and Mis*
______________
tere_
8undgy
mansec
and
daughter
Sybil
were
in
1
the
business
girls'
sorority, enjoyed
Katherine Giddings of Battle Creek, und Peter Fedewa
---------------...»
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Poth and I guests of a cousin. Father Fedewa,; Detroit Isst Wednesday to attend i a social meeting Wednesday evening
daughter of Kalamazoo, and Mrs.; of Howell und attended a homecom- I tthe
j,e wedding ot Kenneth Smith and I at the home of
ol Miss Ethel Ragla in
In
Viola Proos and daughter of Grand Ing.
I**'
------ -•at—-—।-------— —
.. . .
. pot. .luck
. dinner
... .
...
| Miss —
Ruby Washbum
the-•Hope
| Carlton
township.
A
Rapids were Sunday guests)of Mr.! 3
——LsrDonald
• Reformed church. They also at- was served and a program of same*
and Mrs. Guy Giddings
! Roy Finstrom, who arc playing with tended the wedding breakfast al enjoyed. Miss Ragla and ML** Ger(Paul Nielson's orchestra in Muske- the bride’s home
| aldlnc Williams were lhe hostesses.
, gon. visited their relatives Monday
I and Tuesday. They will commence
an engagement In St. Jo next week.
' Mrs. Gertrude Houvener returned
' on Saturday from Plymouth where
NOONDAY LUNCHES
! she had been spending five weeks
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
with her daughter and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Butt. Mr. Butt
DINNERS
twinging her home and returning on
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.
Sunday to Plymouth.
, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Carter were
SUNDAY DINNERS
! in Bay City over lhe week end at1 tending lhe golden wedding annl12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
1 versary of Mr. and Mrs. George
6 to 7:30 P. M.
Beattie, old friends of the Carter
, family. They also visited their son
,»nd wife. Mr and Mrs. Clare F.
I Carter, of Saginaw.

PEOPLE SHAVE

ELECTRICALLY

PARKER HOUSE

EVERY DAY
The

BIG

Friday, Oct. 31

LITTLE

OFFERS

Store

■kdgk

of-town
Mrs. Ray Branch holding the
ning scores.

An executive meeting of the Barry
County council of Religious Edu-

president. Mrs

2

The Barry County Republicans have a ticket which they ar* proud to pre­
sent. Each man is a fine citizen and will continue the good administra­
tion for which Barry has won an enviable reputation.

VOTE FOR THESE MEN
FOR CONGRESS—

• FOR SHERIFF—

CLARE E. HOFFMAN
\ Candidate for a second term.

Has given us a clean. competent administration ot
this office, also one of lhe least expensive in yean.
Jay is on lhe job constantly and runs lhe office with
smoothness and precision. He is strict without being

49c

BACON
Vz Ib. sliced IS'/zc
PORK CHOPS, End Cuts
19c
PORK ROASTS Lean Shoulder Cuts
23 C

overbearing or harsh. Ho deserves a second term.

ilppurlunit) (or everyone.

• FOR PROSECUTING ATTORNEY —

FOR STATE SENATOR—

EARL L. BURHANS.
Paw Paw attorney, al present assistant attorney gen­
eral. Mr. Ilurlians stands high in the regard of
his &lt;&gt;wn people, than which there is no Letter recoinmrndatioii. He is honest, able and keeps his proin-

STUART CLEMENT.

FINE GRANULATED

COFFEE, Viking
Ib. 17c
pkg. 23c
RITZ CRACKERS
PUMPKIN, No. 2&gt;/z size
2 for 19c
BUTTER, Best Quality
Ib. 34c
CRACKER JACK
4 pkg.. 15c
JELLO, All Flavors
2 for 11c
CLIMALENE
3 Reg. 10c pkgs. 20c
HERSHEY'S COCOA
6 boxes 25c

JAY BLAKNEY.

Able, sincere, fear­

less. a real fighter. He advocates: Government by
Constitution, not by dictatorship; a balanced bud­
get; a hall in foolish spending; assistance lo the
unfortunate and aged; anti-trust legislation; pre­
vention of monopoly; hands off private business;

FOR JUDGE OF PROBATE—

SVGA*

PACKARD

archie d.

McDonald.

Running for a second term. A rising young attorney
who believes that the job of prosecutor b to be just;
not ruthless. He has won several especially dif­
ficult cases for the colinly and has been the mediator
in settling many misunderstandings outside of lhe
court thereby saving the county expensive trials.

• FOR REGISTER OF DEEDS—

VERNOR WEBSTER.
Well versed in township and county affairs through
experience as township clerk and supervisor. Held
in high regard by all who know him. He is quali­
fied lo give a competent, friendly adminbtralioti of
this office.

FOR DRAIN COMMISSIONER—

ANDREW MATTHEWS.

Seven sears as probate register and four years as
judge have given him a thorough knowledge of the
dutes of this office. He has won inure than local
recognition in handling of probate and juvenile af- ’
fairs.

has served many years as justice of peace. Is known

FOR COUNTY CLERK-

FOR CIRCUIT COURT COMMISSIONS**—

ALLAN C. HYDE.
A 'thorough mid practical experience in township .
and county affairs combined with a pleasant manner
of meeting people have made Mr. Hyde unc of the

most competent county clerks to hold office here in
many years. 1* vice-president of the Stale Associa­
tion of County Clerks.

A man so well known to lhe people of Barry county
that no detailed comment b needed. Mr. Matthews

for his fair and unbiased decbions.

-

WILLIAM G. BAUER art
ADELBERT CORTRIGHT.
Attorneys of known ability.

Capable of performing

the duties of this office in an efficient, satisfactory
manner.

e FOR CORONERS—
Hectric shaver, or who were iiuppdnlrt with Imperfect

b 1200000 Mrter Barter

ilj sharer with

n share cieaaly. clasel), painlessly.
. UrtM ar lather. Titre's M heart
loo tsugh...M skis Ina taorhy. AM best of
ail...IT REALLY SHAVES YOU CLEAN!

bl B
V1D&lt;

FOR COUNTY TREASURER—

GEORGE CLOUSE.
A man of business experience and of unquestioned
integrity.-. George believes that friendliness and effi­
ciency arc two important factors in public office.

DR. C. F. LATHROP art
DR. GORDON FISHER.
Both qualified physicians and surgeons of coashbf*
able experience. They are both fine citbens and will

give the county excellent service. ,

Muufadnred by Didagrspli FrodacU Canpn)
MaMlartarm far anr S3 June for lM I’raj

HIN.MA.VN
Hastings

FH0NI 24*1

Michigan

Fits-

The "New Deal" ha. departed io radically from American concept* af
maximum civil liberty with a minimum of concentrated political power
that it deserves a vote of censure which will be felt from the highest etective office in the land to the lowest.

His fine record in the slate legislature during the
past two years is an outstanding recommendation
for a second term. Ever a foe of waste and extrava­
gance in government. Ellis Lacked Fitzgerald's incos­

SUGAR

in

We hove hod the soundest state administration of recerit yean.
gerald has kept his promises.

ELLIS E. FAULKNEK

Saturday, Nov. 1

Griffin,

A STRAIGHT REPUBLICAN VOTE Is Essential This Year Becans*

FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE—

U/k'H 22

Alice

Vote Republican!

lot economy MX) |&gt;cr cent.

IO

voncnon.

Mom*, uajx wmc n
entertained eight gUMto,
vllle Bayes and Mn. K. 8.

Oh Sale At

BARRY COUNTY REPUBLICAN COMMI1

T. S. BAIUD’S
"CloihiHg and Shoes for Men and Boys'

UAST1NGS

Ml

�TUB HAftTING' BANNZH. Tnt'BADAT. OCTOBER t», IM

paor hort

INSURANCE

WANTS

THE CHURCHES

Otn CKKT A WORD. NO ADVKR- 1
TDSXMKNT FOR LESS THAN 25c j

JEFFERSON ST. UNITED BRETHREN
mraami.

|

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE
WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL

JASON e. McElwain
Hmm Utt, NalL Bank Bldg.

1.

.......... .

•

.

.

Tho.. w.utin&lt; vlnlrr ai-pln
ur
J»r now. Not Nunda,. Frutlittl'l*
i.l-onr E M Dunh.p. I&gt;o.t»r Mirb it
WANTED—Frrdlnr lambt. 6U lb. and
up F.H l.ihd.rv D.lton
If
AWLF.S— Wralthv. Melnloak. W«H Ri«
1 »r&gt; and Found Hw.fU: alto kon.r
! C.rl Hum. H nd. K . 4 mil. N . W
•M East Clinton St, HASTINGS
! ’mll« E. H.rkr.r« i'nrn»r.
’(
rksua ar Writ, tn D.U or
j WANTED TO HIKE man tir m«nlb M.r
SUS. DM. at Ba-nn.r Oflk..
I find -nr •fuel. Nuil l» ron&gt;P.trnt ar.d
tf.
at*.,.
D. W. Urlm.n. I'b.mr
733
—
F-.-I
_______________
IT
---------------------------------------------------------75 HEAD fwdirr eatllr trow UuO tu MIO
1 lb« .
f.-* br».niilir rwr. and
j

1

AUCTIONEER
DEWEY REED

I

Our Service
WES1 EVAN METHODIST CHURCH
Adjuat Fairly

APPLES FOR HALE—Jonathan,. Ur.mr.'

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co.

PILGRIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE

NEED FOR MUSEUM
' Pistol* and Revolver*,
"Small Tima” Fire Arma
IN CITY AND COUNTY
Hundreds of Pioneer
Historical Items Are
Available

Paid for Dead Stock
DOLLARS. To assure yourself of
getting the BEST PRICES, call
MR. FLOYD DENNY.
Phone Hastings 2539—We pay the

EMMANUEL CHURCH lEplicupil).
D.. R.ctor.

tury. nnd It wns nol until 1H42 that
the military musket made by the
United States government for Its
Infantry men was produced with s
rifled barrel.

1 movement provided someone took
the initiative In lhe mutter Will
you make yourself a'committee of
one tc help bring a museum to this
city nnd county?

Painted Desert nn Area
of Plateaus and Mesas

"AKRON" MODERN

MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY

No Porn To Went Clothing

GRANGE PROGRAMS

FOB KALE!

ORANGE NOTICE

I.itth' t.olurauu tn

miles. At the south. It ends near
the Santa Fe railway, which crosses

E. H. ADAMS. Freeport

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

nt on altitude nf

CARDS of THANKS

NOTICE !

CHURCH or con

Trlnsslc shales und sandstones.

Bankrupt Stocks

Die Prescription Drug Store

COATS GROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST.

MICHIGAN

HASTINGS

TWO BRAND NEW LIVING
ROOM SUITES; sturdy con­
struction; high quality up­
holstering latest style design.
Your choice of color—Rust or
Green. Only 2 left
M
FOR ONLY—

Farmers, Attention!
x will pay tha HIGHEST MARKET

You can't keep both yourself and
your business In a liquid condition.

RACETTE

Tho Porcelain Tower of Nanking
was designed by the Emperor Yung
lo (1403-28) on a previously sacred
site to commemorate the virtues of
his mother. It wns tiegun In 1413
nnd destroyed during the Talplng
rebellion. The tower was octagonal

INDEPENDENT
CANDIDATE

outer walls cased with the finest
white, porcelain bricks. Each of the
nine stories In which the bnlldlnB

CONGRESS

banging eaves of awn glared tiles

less of Party and elect an

The unknown Individual who first
focused Its rnys with s magnifying
ginM nnd Mt a splint of wood or I
piece of paper on lire, accidentally I
cered. although he might not
known It. the power of the j
Later came others refining on 1
thia discovery with larger magnify-1
Ing glasses and concave focusing
mirrors which concentrated the
rnya so that their heat boiled wa­
ter. thus producing strain which
might drive rnclnes.

stand lOOf-i for the peo­
ple and will be fair to

Use his sticker, regard­
FIRST UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH.

Pedigreed Nursery Stock
Guaranteed. Replacement*
FREE !

COOK BBOB_ editors.

ranges considerably less than tbelr
Isn't tiwre. Ln Uic city of Has­ contemporary muskets and rifles,
tings or Barry county, a person or notes at. authority In tho Chicago
persons wiio could exert some In­ Tribune. The muzzle velocity of
fluence for the establishment of a
museum tor this city or coqnty?
the .dri Colt nutninntlc pistol. Is
Dozens of people have treasured only about one-third Hint of tho IN BARMY COUNTY. 8IX MONTHS, 80s.
Springfield rille, nnd, because of Its,
(It paid In ad ran re.)
‘
in Barry County, three months.
nate for Ulis purpose If they were
sure the articles would be cared for barrel. It Is doubtful whether It
OUTRIDE BARRY COUNTY. ONE YEAR
and properly preserved.
will shoot as far aa*somo of Uta
IS ADVAN0X -...................... ........ -St.SO
Last April when the city schools better types of old-time smoothbore FOR BION HUBBCRIFTIONB, ONE YEAR
IN ADVANCE ...
observed the centennial hundreds of muskets. It la Intended for close
pioneer items were exhibited that
ADVERTISING RATkM:
action only and not for sniping.
could doubtless be. obtained as a
A bullet popular long ago was
start for such an Institution.
the illnle ball, which, despite Its
As tiie years pass the original
mime, was not n ball nt all, but a
owners die and their belongings are
passed on to dthAs. many of whom heavy callbered bullet similar In
would nol care for these old relics shape to certain bullets still used
rifles.
and would therefore destroy them In low-powered sporting
or give priceless articles lo tiie Guns in which lhe Mini* ball wne
children for^playthi.igs Now is the used generally were sighted to
time to commence this enterprise 1.000 yards, were Accurate at a dis­
while lhe relics are in good condi­ tance of about MX) yards, and had
tion No time like the prcM-nt fur a maximum range of about a mile.
itartlng a project of this kind.
The Germans nnd other Euro­
Amcng lhe delightful tilings in peans were ex(N&gt;riiuenilng with
JOB PRINTING
lhe eastern states arc Hie museums, rifling an early ns lhe Sixteenth
lhe historical collections, the old
century,
though It did not c&lt;h"e Into
homes which are so well preserved
and lhe markers everywhere, all
l indicating a love and respect for tiie
pioneer people and a wish to pre­
' rente the things they had possessed,
i There are plenty of p?ople in
Barry county who. we are sure.

HIGHEST PRICES

The Halting* Banner

I Pistols and revolvers. never eonand ‘ sldered anything tnnrt titan suppleI raenrary arms In tho serious bual-

lavender, pub* green and gray,
whence the name ••painted."

UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
IN CHRIST

Baltlmota Chnrch

honest fighter that will

Sausage was a favorite food
among many people ns far back ai

whichever party is elect­
ed
50,000 additional
voters will vote Nov 3rd.

If you use his slicker he
can win. Secure stickers

rear polls.

FELIX A. RACETTE

of which are' Will pl and Oriilbl.
Hie pueblos are plctnmqindy built
on clifTs which i&gt;r*&gt;Jecl from n high

Also Complete Line of Slight­

IAKE DaPRIEBTER.

ly Used Furniture.

PHONE 717—F3

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

Me Cal urn Church

DONTAFFEE
302 N. Broadway.

BUYING

Hastings.
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH

Scrop Iron, Brass,

Me an mv

Copper. Aluminum,

Zinc. Lead &amp; Batteries

\your house hold

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone 1437

HuUnn

’B&gt;etore yoiphave a.-fife/

Qhe utmost in
TONAL BEAUTY
'
nncfr,■TONAL
PERFECTION

I i.tit Our

tEttglifil) ®nnnt
Clothes Department
Beautiful new colorings
in long-wearing wor­
steds . . . single and dou­
ble breasted models . . .
in regulars and stubs.

t 1c
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
SCIENTIST

PIANO
SPECIAL

Hunds* Bchool

One standard make piano—
small upright; beautiful fin­
ish; fine tone, spien- $4 Q-^
did action—ONLY— ' ©

*22.50

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

No.
I40L

ABSTRACTS - PHONE 2105

DON TAFFEE
302 No. Broadway, 'Hastings
____ in=»

1

'

1

cnicago oi n pm point or metallic
pratnrllntum. the world's second
heaviest clement Has thr searching
party tried lifting up the name and
looking under it?

COLDS
■■a

usm. uatm
SAivr. aau Man

Headache, 30 minute. i *,,!t RALE

I

Little foresight today May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—
|

S B I

**

•­

GEO. M. NEWTON

Kalamazoo Range
tion—Very Cheap for Cash. ;&gt;'*»«

I

Open Evenings

sale

302 N. Broadway.

Registered OPTOMETRIST and J

SEE BETTER!
HASTINGS

1» W. STATE ST.

JERRY ANDRUS
OLNEKAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

2 d0, 5

DORRANCE TRETHRIC

INSURANCE SERVICE

Fidelity Corporation

CLOTHES
PINS

HASTINGS MARKETS
Del

Monte Grope

LOANS and FINANCING
Hutlngi National Bank Bldg.
Phan, 2307

Hubbard Squash
(Ripe) —
5 Lbs. SWEET
POTATOES—

WANTED

1 MUST EMPLOY at once
a

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
FELDPAUSCH’S

MARKET-Phon. 2616

man

living

in

town or on farm.

manent work.

satisfied

with

small

Per­

Must be
earning

FOOD CENTER 2609

$75 a month at fist.

H.F.IdHUxh -3921

Address “X” care Banner

Molasses
KISSES

9'/2

Phone 2458—Hastings

24’/i Sack
Pillsbury's
FLOUR

Free Delivery

QUAKER
Macar6ni and
Spaghetti

51.12,/2' 3 it. 19'
Fruit

29‘
3
15

Ritx Crackers, lye. OQc
sixe pkg.—
Creamery BUTTER,

Bulk Dates, new
crop—1 Ib.—

New Pack,
Medium Size

PRUNES
25 Lb.
Box—

34c

10 Lbs. SUGAR____ 49c
4 A
IU

Stromberg-Carlson
with the Exclusive

ACOUSTICAL
LABYRINTH
Edge Lighted Sclectorlitc Dial

Carpinchoe Leather Speaker
Tri-Focal Tuning

/I Neiu 'Jpriqht

TABLE '----MODEL

&lt;118.50 to 821.50

Your New

PORTIS HAT
The feature hat for men who care. Our
cases are f il led with the same styles and
colors as are now featured in Esquire
and Saturday Evening Post.

82.08 to 85.00

Nd.BO-U

Goodyear Bros.
Hardware Co.
Hastings

WE BUY POULTRY, CREAM, AND EGGS

A new shipment has arrived from Eng­
lishtown. The new soft fleeces that are
so popular right now.

Is Here!
BBS

Bancroft
PEAS

2 .... 25

$16.50 to $16.50

TOPCOATS

V.-..-,* Harm.., .

WALLACE GROCERY
a

Hi-School Sixes

Phone 2101

WATERS
CLOTHES SHOP
SELLING QUALITY KEEPS US BUSY

�I

81**1*1-11 I..* *

l! REPORT OF SURPLUS

(POLITICAL NOTES;

Barry Bypaths
9r JAMS CAMSKOH

l&gt;l&gt;

|

. a good Idea—that one of young
Don Taffee's to «ell good, clean used
l furniture, and I hope he Is success­
ful. We must-see him about a
1 couch—an Indestructible one—so
, the kids can do their acrobatic* and
|
Salad Mixers de Luxe.
not have II collapse or lose 1U stuff­
ansing mich About * ing We have been unsuccessful so
’ far In our queit. and have about
once in so often you meet i decided to have one hewn out of
the man—it's always a man— ' granite. The present one has.
who knows how to make the; pound for pound, more nails than
other material* put together.

L

,

r
»

of the United Stales will
re tamed in their verdict on
presidential elecUon of

e
the

Imported

paragraph

In

thl*

IN

CHARLEVOIX LAKE

SECTION
il

COMMODITY CORP.
New Books In
Public Library I Diatributiong in Barry Conn-1

!

■’*1

Riley Ston

: Largest Rainbow Taken In
.,
.,-.-1—^—।
---------------------------------------------------------&lt;
Michigan in Thirty

ty- Include Varied Lift
' One night I stepped into Joe
1.1BKAKY HEWS.-------------------- Of ArtieltE
;nur&gt; uwn&gt; UlRW wm WMUJI
no
vou
want
know
whether
'
Distribution
of more than
4,500 tobacco. Joe. Bob Dawson, Jobs
H»r.U A. Srunn Ud A Uirdl
Do &gt;ou want to know whether
q{
lMJWboW
surdulss. of Win, . HctM M dlU",
,nd ’h'“
“““m « the movie you Intend to see to-. fumtuhingj an&lt;j 73500 pounds of, pedro. When Joe got up to wait «ft
communUP-A .ruly Uwmprrtmil-I1”1”- pouna ’"nbo’ lr"‘ in night K rated as worth your money | food stuffs in Barry county has just me. Bob Dawaon who sat next to
ac- by the critic* and whether you had been announced by lhe Federal the stove, pulled a roll ofshoemak*
Me -mbodtoenl of ..o widely dll-|
Mr Smnh...
'

DEMOCRAT

REPUBLICAN

.

Rr-.ld.nt Rdo-kv-lt u edkra-d;
by hU opooh-nu. .mon, uthsr .b-1

Years

Jeren. tonus ot Europe^ rule.

______________
»____________
£lc°pl,B"r’’' Harold
aSST’o’i Ka£»!^
r“»^
”uoUUW
I Brockway.
L- D. Pierce
aiiu
iwo*
It equally as absurd to think that Adatni
Adams of
of KaUmazoo,
Kalamazoo, was
wa* trolling
trolling
.M msk. tb~ diuw »■ wh.n M cpturw M. prUe
Have what they say. There Is un, TCon*er atton‘
*h

—

ft?

bnur U»« Johnny alon.
or park S"W“
'"’"‘““I
i?
hlm *' h°m" Y°“
b.n.»“ud from Ihla dlatrtouXr y- : lh« wit ol Joft dhalr
and flJld out Qr come
cordln„ w atcven selmecy. district i Joe returned. Ml down tn the
---------------------a» iwt
—U
a- iiTstaTt
—aj -k----- al
,__
_ ___ .27™-''
..._
Mwaam^U’u.
lha’Sis.'wbS
ttrWwM
—
t'o.-yduywli
I ______
oTiT
STS
snd'-^d
lhe play in the Motion Picture Re- port which cover* the period from I the next customer entered. Joo at4

view Digest which is published ev- j Janua:y 1 to Octobea 1 of thl* year, tempted to get up. but the chatr
The v took the scale* to determine erv Frtd,‘y We have “ll
back; The
beneficiaries included only stuck right to him.
toe ateof thefUh
numbers, too. There are reviews,
persons whose need* were' Everybody
laughed,
but Joe
Lr^tosa^lhey had. won- Jj?
“^7^? cerUflr‘1 b&gt;
W‘OU\.COUJ!1? ’ SSf?1. .7!
**?
27 leading newspapers and maga- I emergenc y
relief agencies. The Philip Lutz was a shoemaker and
In this concluding column we al­ camouflage to alarm lhe timid and derful time, pictures were taken zines, opinion* expressed In eleven ' food-, and other items were t-sued ' of course, used shoemaker's wax. so
get their voles—it Ls an old. old and lhe party was entertained at
so wish to thank the Banner for to gel
outstanding trade paper-., and Uie ' |tl addition to other tornu of direct Joe quite naturally laid everything
dressings he’s practically a total
witli Thanksgiving and ChrUt- giving space for discussion of the ; trick.
i dinner by the residents of Charleaudience suitability ratings und. relief antf thus did nut Interfere to him. Did he read the riot act lo
Tus
as KI
sv job whlftts
VQlX.
|]oss.
1 nia* approaching, we begin to think issues. We believe, on the whole,
In tsarwlllfstf
handling 1&gt;*
lhe
big
which volx.
recommendations of 28 national and 1 with noruml inerclwndising in lice Phil? It was in German, and Joe
In addition to the 12 pound fish,
Nevertheless, a decent salad “f big dinner* with all lhe family that the campaign has been a clean confronted him—to bring the Naregional evaluating organizations I district. At the same time health ; talked to him like a "Dutch uncle,"
1
r present and no room to serve them. one and that people have been lion out ot lhe greatest depression lhe party also caught five additional This is a new service of which we ' and food standards were raised.
A* 1 understood German fairly
' Wt* have had a brain storm .and studying the questions carefully.
in its history—lhe president like fish, making a total bf 25 pounds. hope you will avail yourselves.
(boons to humanity.
| Following L-s a consolidated te- well, it wasn't difficult to catch th*
ahull Invent a dining room that you
other men confronted with big jobs । Another Interesting experience the Books Recently Added lo
(The right cumminport of distribution* tor Barry 1 meaning. Leaving out some ot the
men had wa* the catching of some
j can pull out like an accordion or
Tile
almost
unbelievably
large
anywhere,
made
some
mistakes,
but
The
county UIIU
and UAMJ
alto WAC
the kHUJC
entire UUMK.
district I words which wouldn’t look *0 well
Igling ot astringent.
* a.a Ubrary.
a^w.—.J. LOUJiVy
, collapsible drinking cup. Of course. number of discrepancies between the these were not made in an attempt j smelt, in twenty minutes limes
1 ■
-• Inception
■
-■ ot -lite ---------------Fiction. s
] since
tiie
program 1in print, what Joe said in substance
the table and chairs will work the New Deal promLys and actions have to benefit himself but in an effort lhey filled a ten-quart poll.
Hauck. Louise Platt—Truce With [ as a WPA project in January up was this: -Shoe Cobbler, a joke is
The trout is on display ,In thr
made
____ to
it dlfflculf
present un
t ode- , to bring speedy relief to the public
to October, wnen the distribution of ':a joke, but when It interferes with
|smooth bland dresscomfortables In II, too We haven't quate picture of the extensive rami- . 7-^ remedies President Roosevelt Goodyear Bros. Hardware window. Life.
a man's business, it ceases to be a
ling—there you have
Margaret Flint—The Old Ashburn surplus commodities became a staleworked out the details yet. Don't flcatlon of broken pledges It ha* left propoftc&lt;1 wtre sanctioned by a conwioe project.
1,joker
know how about the stone wall. It'd lts wake. Compare the Roose- • £
by the people, who'
(something. But ofPlace.
ONION PRICE IS
Diversity ot operations in Barry
ot light
llvht material *0
so you
vou |' VPit statements n
.. . .
,.
___
Anne Parrish —Oolden Wedding.
should be of
oft i&lt;no.*n
1932-33 wiih
with hl&lt;
his tired
of straining their eyes to catch
county
Ls
illustrated
by
the
figures
SLIGHTLY HIGHER
BASSET TRIAL RUNS
Jnvnh C. Uncoln—Great-Aunt
wouldn't have to hitch a horse- on ll | actions as chief executive and one a glimpse of that evasive person­
ed by a monstrosity
for foodstuffs. In pounds beef. 8 865; '
Lavlnln.
evrryUme you had company—lhe ' would be justified In concluding lhal age—tival promised man of Pros- i ■ . .
■featuring
whipped
HELD IN THE COUNTY
Hill—The Substitute mutton. 3.080; beans. 6.100; broth. 1
dining room, nol lhe stone wall, there were two men involved as far
.round u» corner | InduHry Developed Into ImIcream, hut kernel*.
broth. 383; jam. 2.178; rolled oaU. '
We ll let lhe stone mason worry apwt politically a.-, Thoma. Jeffer- wsfre ready to let their trusted rep- |
Ouest.
portant One for Barry
4.163; peas. 3.711; flour. i2«03; milk. Favorable Condition! Make
3.
8
Van
Dine
—
The
Kidnap
Murabout Uie wall part. We got a head- Wl and UnIn.
resentotivr try any kind of relief:
'
2.150; prunes. 2M2; apples. 27J60;
1
• • *
measures. There was on unanimous ।
County
Repeat Meet a
Imarshmalluws
o r Irvin t&gt;. Cobb . ache over lhe rest of ll already.
Mary Ellen Cha-4-—Mary Christ butter. ?00.
a...i
in 4i.k.. 1 Where direct comment on t*“* I CIBmor
union
Iplckled ginger.
clamor lor
for me
the guvernmem
government u&gt;
to «iu
aid—
—
Onion grower*
grower* uq
in; nany
Barty cowiiy
county—
—
Clothing include* all
wearing j
Certainty
And the newest thing in dishes- pzeridenl has been.concerned special and |f lherf,
doubt aboul lhr i aI)ll th, onloll ln0u*Uy ha* in- mas.
apparel
for
mm,
women
und
chll1
I Such an atrocity is never a salad.
Drexel Drake-The Falcon s Prey.
have four or five colors In one set. i care has been taken lo check and 1 constitutionality of some proposed ; creased to large proportions In thl*
e„ 1X" oX
i
£XeP to^ I w Ui ££.l’X2?h.ve been
Put a crust on it and II might puss
Kathleen Moore Knight—-Wheel dreii. Household furnhlilngs in­ Hound trial run was held here Sat­
clude
mattresses.
comforters. ।
Ifor pie, but would be very lowd0 not1beUev5
•"&gt; of our statenot t|)e American way encouraged by a wnall raise in lhe That Turned.
sheets, pillow cases, towels, etc urday and Sunday with headquar(grade pie.
m tor onions. When the
....
»"&gt;» w'“" Unn-wo»l" O’" Garden seeds: packages contain a
, menu have been In error. We are —n&amp;dtailon. Il was a time when | prices offered
of others.
I doubly confirmed in tills opinion cverT jjfe boat, even- |ife roft, and crop was .gathered
lhe
best
figure
I
large
selection
o!
vegetable
seeds. Basset hound is rather a new
“•“'."“.“T
MUter-U».|
| Concerning Mr. Earl Browder.
wnen on looking
tooxuig back
uuex over the
u ma-I
| when
preserver aboard lhe Ship of they could get for their onions was
Toys include rag doll* and animal* breed tn this country, the entry
1
jl-.rr had . lonjlna u&gt;lur|,| .uhmKted by
nr.
,a „ jaunched and If 160c per hundred pound.*, or about
AVING been discouraged by a
ew Deal, stAU lnm
ihou|d
made up from scraps at sewing 11UU1W
„_
H.
CBailey
—
A
Clue
For
Mr.
For[».««
a
bear
cub.
n
aeema
lo
me
Mend,
we
ond
lhal
not
once
have
ln
inem
urn
,
»c
a
bu.h.1,
perhaps overzealou.*
police
h‘ve
wers ir.v dafccti lr. thsr..
. 30c s buihJl. We understand this
H
project*. The figure, for the coun- aclaU Mpect
interest will
they are the cutest small animal, they answered the argument* which I would Instantly reveal them.
I offer has been Increased nos
anoiher year.
Wm. Maclveod Raine—To Ride ly: clothing. 2^73; household furlEarl Browder, one of the almost in existence. Of all my friends and j have been put forth in this column.
.
very
A portion of the president's pro- . While that does
not give
nbhlngs. 1.624;
seeds. 16.
The
ln t*,.
a&lt;e
cUu
(countless candidates for President. relatives who go north deer-hunllng : They have failed to do this nol bemargin
to the“■*
growers.
gram wa* found unconstitutionalgood "*
-------------------------- It Is the River With.
ASK CHANGE IN "RELIEF' LAW.
PowdeV nJ^-d b!“ c'
Non-Fiction.
Inow threatens suits for false arrest. each year—bless lhe brave lad*—I , cause they would not but because The remainder brought desired re­ certainly much better titan the pre- &gt;
The board of supervisors at their L
d
« ue e««» *,
, sun^ Postage-Stamp Cato| A* Al Smith says, let's look al can't find one who dares take a cub.! they COULD not. The fact* submlt- run*. Because some of hl* measures,
no matter how far from mamma I tod are on the records In black and
is to be hoped that loKuc' 1937 ,
, „
, recent session by resolution recomapproved by the representative* of cent better. Ilt-------------------in found b, u&gt;. I
1 Burn* Mantle, ed —Best Play* of m,nd,d Uwt .
bear It Is.
white, stated so plainly that not the people, were found unco«utltu- the price willi advance to ..a n.n
full
dol(communism—stands for all commu
' 1935-1936
• • •
even a child could misinterpret tlonal, tiie president wo* declared by
next legislature to turn expenditures
Inlsm stands for. Therefore he must
-- ---------------------- --lo the manager: them.
'
Della T. Lutes—The C ountry (or relief over to local authorities. Ajax, owned by J. E. Hill ot Battle
The
gate-keeper
his opponents to be disregarding
Book on the Russian governmsnl as
____
"B
om. there is an umpire at lhe
Kitchen.
I lhe stale lo aid such local ituthorl- Creek; fourth. Nottkes Pal. owned
SUNDAY EVENING TOPIC.
the constitution and wa* called dic­
Humphrey — Green
the one Ideal government II being | gate with two friend*."
But the most clear cut Indictment
Al the First Methodist church Sun­ I Zephlne
au n doe* now. by payment) by H. Frazee of Grand Rapid* and
tatorial.
reserve dog.
Hillcrest Polntalr,
Ithn
wrv
H.iwnr
nr.
4
tieelerllftn
nf
''What?**
vaxtav?
the
m
•'What?" gasped tiie manager. "An of
.. __
the_____________________________
New Deal ha* been made nol
■the very flower and perfection of
!" Mountain* to Sierra*.
The crisis, thanks to his wisdom day evening. Rev. M. W Jone.i 7 till
, , ,___________________ owned by E M. Seitz of Muskegon.
umpire with two friends? Let him in j by a Republican but by John W.
Taintor
and --------Monro—The Score---------- ----■applied communism.
and his Ztatesmaiuhip. has paved. speak on “The New Germany" deal1 RELEASED FROM HOSPITAL. | A banquet Saturday night at tl»
I Now. In Russia any man publicly free and give him lhe best seat In ; Davis, a lifelong Democrat and u Tiie supreme court lias ruled what Ing with the subject of Nazism or lory's Handbook.
, Robert Frantz of Woodland who Iwlel wu* a feature of the meek
'former
--------Democratic
--------- ---------------presidential
’■*—
What ha* Mr. Hitler done । Bell—Having a Party.
(advocating doing away with the ex­ the stadium."
Ls constitutional and what is not ' Hitlerism.
' --wa* with
fatal' Officials
and*
tor wrrniauy
Germany miu
and what is he doing I
AUce T. Hobart—
nomlr.ee. In private life Mr. Davis
rM«m
—Yang
• —‘b Yin.
*
— • Melvin
..........Post
...... In. the ........
........... . — owners
----- -- of . the dogs
. —a
haling notional system and substitut­
constitutional. There Ls&lt;■ftno
reason 'W
f.nJimn
to Europe? The pulpit editorial or five 1 Telephone 2552 Hours 10 lo 11:45 motorcycle accident near
Barber* j were enthusiastic over the lay-out of
A contest In the Capper's Farmer Lt a lawyer of outstanding ability,
ing tome other system therefor
lo believe it will cease to
to Iiuicuun. | m|nu(e QUesUo|l Bnd answer period Monday.
Tuesday.
Wednesday. Comers and who was also token to the land in Barry county for trial
ol
Interest
to
needleworkers,
offers
a
sane
libera)
and
a
student
of
gov
­
(would find himself in jail—nr even
or that congress will In some way will be on the question \"Whal is Thursday and Friday mornings. Pennock hospital after lhe accident. I runs and the reception given Uiem
three substantial cash prises for lhe ernment.
lose its veto power
Un a worse (lx—before he cuuld sey three best Ideas for making Christ­
•the
u- Roman Church x seeking in ii in
io *□ t&gt;
r. m. «&gt;vi»rv
every ■fi*-mftnn
micnwwi. i&lt; in t
» ur««
w—» released
nicn— u from
num the
me hospital
ik»p«ki and
«&lt;&gt;u Ii hele. It was understood tliat
~ tna
The 11-point Indictment of the [
। Then, why this silly, alarmist talk Washington?" A service ilial will o'clock Tuesday and Saturday eve-' taken to his home Thursday.The I future runs ot lhe Basset hound* '
Uackovitz Robcrtsonoffskl.
mas gifts or bazaar "best sellers" New Deal by Mr. Davis led with lhe I
I So what I say is Utal Mr. Browder and ten smaller prizes. You have to charge ttiat tiie Roosevelt Adminis­ ' about dictatorship?
keep you up with lhe limes. An hour nings.
1
— -in
w. will be no —
i.. ।wnai
M be kfield
-m here lbecause
-r.ikr of
— 1
I --------uuctor.kthink*
there
seriwould
of ihr
these
The communist* and socialists
Jean
Barnes.
Librarian
I
ous
complications
in
this
case.
I
favorable
conditions.
mail In the finished article and it tration has been responsible for
|
are advocating some things thought of worship and information.
will be returned. I know where one the passage of a whole series of
of
and
discussed
long
before
those
&gt;• preaches, which, of course, be Is coming from and wouldn't it be law* ... In violation of coiutBuparties were thought of. To think
loes. he ought to go around kissing fun if several Barry county ladles tlonal provisions. . . . “no matter that lhe American people would
competed. The October issue is how reasonable the doubU as to I "fall for" the tyrannical regimenta­
tverybody on both checks.
where you will Ond the information. their constitutionality "
tion nf
of the one nnd
and the visionary
Ten more detailed indictment*
Cruelly to Animals.
plan* of the other is expressing
We started on lhe top of this follow tn order:
ATELY a dog was tried before
very Hille confidence In their com­
and then pul our poem al lhe end
1. Surrender by Congress at the
mon sense or tn the representatives
a judge for biting a boy. And
and have four lines here to fill In. demand of the President at it* con­
(another judge waa appealed to, that
Being Scotchy we are going to fill stitutional power and duty to make or the president they elect. One
ne save an elephant condemned to them, too, whether they print It or and deciare law*, to regulate the hundred years ago. however, men
[die. So iom.- one proves that, nol. Maybe /they won't print any of value of money, to levy and col­ were working sixteen nours dally
through many centuries, animals It. But the \four line* are done.
lect taxes and disburse the pro­ for about one-quarter the wages
lhey receive today. It is very easy
were accused of V' crimes—dogs,
to think that when shorter hours
rats, pigs, oxen, rooster*, storks. The night I* dark and windy
2- Appropriation with a carefree
hand of billions of public money to were urged someone was ready lo
shout "Socialism." or whatever
There
are
pumpkins
on
lhe
gatepost
be
spent,
nol
as
Congress
should
■hoppers, dolphins, locust*, gadflies,
"ism” happened to be troubling the
I eels, ond. being convicted, were And witches in the air.
have directed, but In such fashion
non-progresslves of that time.
and to such ends as suited the exec­
(burned, flayed, hanged, destroyed
The charge against the adminis­
But what is Palsy doing
utive pleasure — lhe only vUible
Itojr alow torture.
criterion being that the money tration that It has "meddled with
I But think of lhe charge* on which Wrapped up from head to feel?
business'' recalls what the president's
should be spent with the maximum
I the so-called brute* might condemn She's starling out to be a ghost
of haste and the minimum of de­ Illustrious relative. Theodore Roose­
(mankind—offense* of which lhey In that enormous sheet.
liberation and not always without velt said In a letter be wrote May
I rarely or never have been guilty—
IB. 1918. to Will H. Hay*, men chair­
*n eye to political results.
She tiptoes down the stair steps
Intalice; slaughter ot weaker thing*
3. Repudiation of the terms of man of the Republican National
When someone grabs her shoe!
Ifor love ot slaughter; deliberate And someone else lets out a howl. payment in Government bonds: and Committee:
"There 1* no use In trying tq rally
Iwaatcfulnes* of natural reaourcea; And someone screeches • Bool"
after tho Supreme Court had de­
I wanton destruction of nature- beau­
clared thA repudiation to be unlaw­ round the past. . . . New Issues are
ful, giving thfi right to sue for going to force themselves into Am­
ties: wars without rational cause; "I guess we scared her tliat time.
erican politics and those issues are
(unnecessary greed; bearing false "It serve* her right," laughed the
lured, the. passage of a law shut­ going to require a party yrldch be­
(witness; neglect of our own young;
boy*.
ting lite court* to the injured lieves In a strong centralised govA
(drunkenness; slothfulr.ess; bigotry; '•Just look at Patsy run because
eminent that shall be strong for
eltlaen.
"She
tripped
on
her
own
toys."
I intolerance.
4. ETonomy treated as a vice and the purpose ot construction and not
not a*!; a virtue; funds raised by for the purpose of checking the
progress of things. The new Issue*,
UNITED BRETHREN
|
Newspapers Vs. Spellbinders.
taxation and borrowing wastefully
which will require a strongly cen­
N MY reportorlal youth nearly
CHURCH MEETING •petit, 'wastofuflv scent- and then tralized government are gomg to
•very newspaper, big or Utile.
reborrowed, with each new promise
I was bitterly partisan. We distorted
Of * balanced budget sounding more revolve about:
Fine Program Prepared for hollow and distant than the last.
"Transportation; price fixing; rig­
tacts nnd editorialized In news stor­
Convention at the Kil­
fl. Public pay roll swollen by the id pubUc control, tf not ownership
ies when dealing with the accursed
addition of tens of thousands of of mines, forest* and waterways."
opposition.
Otherwise we'd have
patrick Church
"And If the Republican 'party
new
employee*.
[been traitors to a sacred cause.
Ai the Kilpatrick church in
I. MounRng burden of. taxation takes the ground that the world
These times the average paper, Woodland township on Oct. 30. 31
both direct and Indirect, correspond­
big or Uttle, prints honest accounts and Nov. 1 there will be a conven­ ing to an ever-mounting expendi­ Republican party Is lost- 11 wre
concerning both sides—their rela­ tion of the United Brethren church. ture. •
• &lt;1 Ml can be no doubt that labor must
tive chances as revealed by polls, This Is a religious education con­
7. Federal Government entering have a new voice in tha manage­
their waning or gaining hopes. The vention with the central theme tM field of private enterprise and ment of Industrial affairs."
Speaking about a supreme court
"Practicing
political views of a columnist or a ,
_________ the Presence of Jesus." engaging In ofiefi and destructive
decision which found unconstitu­
special contributor may differ from i The aesaions open Friday evening competition with II* citizens.
the publisher s poUcy-stiU be gives 1
-------------------------------is —
when **•
the
principal address
to »be
I. Persistent and unremitting ef- tional a law enacted in New York
slate
designed to correct unhealthy
given
hy
Dr.
J.
EHarwood,
general
bring the entire economic
them space.
of religious education.
adcial life of the country un­ condition* in bakeshops. Theodore
But
nui me
lhe spciioinucrs
spellbinders go ngin
right ou
on secretary
-........ -------------------------------------.—
•puu.ln, »&lt;.!«. which
“‘"J*’
der the centralized control and Roosevelt quoted the words of Abra­
lhe protection of depositors by paying only a por­
October 26th, 1886, lhe Hastings City Bank was
.
. ...
in
In the evenina.
evening. Rev. ueotae
George Flem
rietn-­ regimentation of the Federal Gov­ ham Lincoln in regard to the Dred
knows Is fiction.
And lhe volun­
ing Is to give an address on "Christ­ ernment and It* Washington bur- Scott decision, "I believe lhe de­
tion of its earnings to the stockholders and retaining
teer debaters clamor with prejudice ian Endeavor and Mission*.''
started with a small capital and organized on a con-,
cision was improperly made, and I
and misinformation for their am­
The Bunday programs center
the greater part for lhe suqilus and undivided profits
9. To this end. the building up go (or reversing It."
servative basis. Little did lhe original founders real­
munition.
Theodore Roosevelt favored recall
around the Sunday School, three of a aeries of controls which tiie
L~ By &gt;the way. will all those who sessions being held. Dr. Harwood
accounts. This hank stands today a living memento
President declares would provide of Judicial decisions. In addition
ize that they were starling an institution that was to
ever'heard of anybody being con­ and Rev. Fleming will both speak on •hackles for lhe liberties of the to the attack on the courts. Presi­
lo lhe integrity of the men who liave been chosen lo
play so important a part in the development of this
verted by one of these barber-shop Sunday. Lack of space forbids print­ people If they fell Into lhe wrong dent Theodore Roosevelt w*s also
criticised for "attacking property"
arguments kindly raise their right ing lhe complete program.
hands.
l&gt;e ils officers. The same conservative policy adopted
community, hardly could lhey foresee lhe problems
'10. Flame* of class feeling, class thus In an address at the dedication
hands?
' , , .
by lhe original founders has passed to each succeed­
haired and class cupidity steadily. of the John Brown battlefield at Os­
M.S. C. ENROLLMENT"
that were to confront it, nor could they prophecy that
EING frightfully smart to begin
Industriously,
and
dangerously awatomie. Kansas:
ing officer and is the policy under which the present
INCREASED BY 600 fanned.
'The friend ot property, the true
this bank would celebrate ils fiftieth birthday. But
with. I know as much regarding
conservative, is he who Insists that
currency Juggling as the next fellow
officers operate. Il will lie the guiding factor (or
lhe foundation on which this financial institution was
-Lwhlch is‘precisely nothing ai'alL Oriffinally a School for Ag­
Another .aUong Indictment of the property shall be the servant and
not
the
master
of
the
common
­
Rooeevtll
Administration
Is
the
long
those to corned Built on the principles of sound bank­
riculture—Offen Seven
built has proved to be a sound one which was due
list at DerflocraUc leaders who have wealth; who Insist* that the crea­
ing and proven by fifty years of good times and bad
Oounea
openly broken with the New Deal ture of man's making shall be the
to tiie fact that the orginal incorporators estahli^Jied
when they talk in terms of billions
The enrollment at Michigan or registered their protests through servant and not the master of the
or trillions or JIUloos, they've got
times, this bank merits your confidence. , /j
man who mode It. The citizens of
the policy of building a strong capital structure for
us going down for the third tlm* State College at East Lansing has
NeWton D. Baker. Al Smith. the United States must effectively
l Increased BOO over list year’s HsL
with * low gurgling cry.
making a record enrollment of 4.60B Bainbridge Oolby, Henry Brocken - control the mighty commercial
And the more a financial techni­
forces which they themselves have
for the 103B-IM7 *ea*ion, according
cian. with both his panto pockets
called Into battig.**
to figures Issued by Robert R. Bhaw.
fuD of figures, tries to explain these
President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
T?
president.
.
governmental manipulations, tL«
Originally in IM? the *chool was who CoUld well grace lhe council* of In his recovery program, put into
more convinced I am that, like lhe lounoca
concje of
oi bbtwuimu
c any party—-where are they? Fight­ effect some measures ktranga Indeed
founded „
a* B
a college
agriculture
average specialist, be has concern i bul now otJm cqu^ Of-study In ing against the New Deal In the to conservative and
trated on being expertly ignorant i Revcn divisions. The student* are name of preserving a real democ- minds—but they e-"
seem strange to U
-bidden.
Upon one involved subject rather I divided aa follows: Agriculture, W;
Thoma* Jefferaqn much-sought man.
Ay, 'who
than remaining, as most of us do. Applied science, tfTO; Knginaering,
broadly and comprehensively Ignor- j gl3; Home economics. BIB; Liberal
iblM servant* of whom any party
pr.
ant upon practically all subject*.
art*. 1OB; Veterinary acknee, 3*B.
Why change admlnUtrallont?
'.
■ ,
IRVIN 8. COBB.
I and graduate school. IN.
(Continued on page 2. Bee. 3)

perfect salad dressing, and on
the slightest provocation does
Those who saw him say that Gov.
[so. The trouble with this party , Landon's even nicer looking than
|is when you get him off salad his pictures.

and
Lion.

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, OCT. 29, 1936

Ihoagbtful

condderatlon

poc­

fortunately a considerable element
of the voting public which 1* fu»Hble and easily scared by political
propaganda Therms are mere

H

L

50 Years

I

1886

1936

B

HASTINGS CITY BANK
TELEPHONE

2103

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. OCTOBER t», 1834
DELTON.
Mrs. Barnum Friday afternoon, Oct. o'clock whan aU wlU unmask and
Mn. Glenn E. Gulick «
ieanT,n« oul u‘e PfO«Y»«n* mad* ln and Are. John Garner, you will restunts and games wiU be entered Smith) has moved with her bus
Mr. and Mr*. Tom Pokock pt
i 1032.
into. Fried cakes and cider will be , and family from Cancguver to
■n—
' Where js carter Qia&amp;a? Where is nominee for vice-president, prob­ Lansing ftrt jueete of Mr. and jarsJ
ably one of the most unhappy nomi­ Gaorgs RcmUsi Bunday. My. and Um® rary UAly PHd»y when she aarvod through the evening for the gary. Alberta. Canada. 1831—6th Rt. Mrs Cecil Oler and children
-------------- ------- 1 John Nance Gamer? Robust and
nees In the entire United Slates.
fell on the sidewalk In front qf the small sum of firs ocnu to defray West. Mr. Gulick U connected wth Freeport and Mr. and Mrs. Cab
Powtl! and Ftoyd Main and M
hahffrart. We hbM It Wm not pr&lt;*»
,n . .................. ..
. ...............................i them, who should be taking an acahajjow play will be given.
dlan branch of »wtft and. Co.
Effa Hull of Hasting*.
'
‘i serious.
The*e men all see in the New day.
owu.w ha nrond—where are th/V? ।,lve P**1 in
esmpeign Carter
Mr. and Mr*. Dallas. Parker of
should be prou0—where arg tneyr,
•r-j
literally damning Dea) a distinct threat to lhe Am­
Mrs. Alice Btantoa. Mrs. Malinta
Rev. Bates' sermon subject next
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ransom wi
VlWty dUguztod and disillusioned
by f.mt pf.pi. or si- erican democracy; they sea in it the
Sunday morning Is “The Medicine Lanaing spent the week end with Sunday guests of Mr. and U
her
patents.
MY.
and
Mr*.
T.
W.
start
ol
a
Federal
dictatorship
pat
­
of
the
Bugle."
Oliver Hayward ot Kalamazoo.
teacher* njlght mend the State
from their contacts with the New ]fncc when he has not been critiThompeon.
»
terned
after
traditional
European
Rev.
Bates
officiated
at
a
quiet
Elmer Loahr of Jackson has bi
Teachers' institute at Grand Rapids. home of Mr. and Mrs Henry Borg­
Deai Administration; voluntarily re-. ciztng it vigorously on the floor of
but Impressive wedding ceremony
visiting his mother, Mn. Jen
Vav rwuiimj at Wash- lhe Senate, in public speeches or models; they see in It an about face
Mrs. Sylvia Knappen of Richland man on Thursday.
signed tmn key poslUau al V. ash m
new,p.pe? John Gamer so from the liberal, democratic doc­
Bunday iiigm
night at e:io
4:15 ociock
o'clock.. The
inc Lansing visitors Monday.
Loehr.
Mr. and Mr*. John Van Holde of ouuuiy
ington because they became con-1 far has made Oljly one br|ef trines of Thomas Jefferson; they see has rented fixe Slater building Comstock wore Bunday guasU of contracting parties were Gordon1 Ninety guest* attended the Re­
Wale*, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd j publican banquet held at lhe MelHvinced that the New Deal had no speech, a rather apologetic one lack­ Constitution; they see In It unsound J
MILO.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrianson.
I
Waies, and Miss Dorris Burke, odlal church Tuesday evening, OcIt may Interest friends of Roy Adintention of keeping the promises or ing the usual Gamer enthusiasm
Over twenty enjoyed the me&lt;
which cn onl, led I
31.
’ A
* «**ti**«.&gt;.
dellcioua chicken Hinn..
dinner
rianaon. former Delton boy but now daughter of Mr. and Mr*. Thadeus lober •
ing of Milo Ladies’ Aid last We
to bankruptcy and currency Infla- ।
. &gt;•
n*vnnM.
Burke all of Prairieville. The cou­ was served by the members of the
Uon: Uwr
in 11 un«.und Mrtcul-1
.n”
Tlytai
Methodist Laare*
Ladles' Ata.
Aid. urani
Grant osgooa
Osgood ~” ■
been engaged a* soloist in the Con­ ple were attended by Frank Wales, Mxtnoaist
was in charge of lhe banquet. Mr
.?d
.. y ™
lur.1 polidr. u&gt;.l open U&gt;, door. In “'“'I”
’Wgregational church In Rattle Creek brother of the groom and Miss Lu­
roeldn compeu.lon IWoddh K»-l»
, Sm,u, The services are broadcast. every cile Cole. Following the ceremony a E Davenport was the toasun**ter
nt
,r , “ ,
Earnest X dmlUl
and
Ellis
Faulkner
pf
Delton,
stole ‘
of AnUhnntf
deliberate nrnn
crop rfxtnirtlnndestruction: thev
they '
reception
was
held
at
the
bride's
! and daughter Maxine and J. F Bunday morning.
reprt.-enlallve.
one
of
lhe
speakers
.
I
«
"
ed
°
rd
n?~
see in it an administration which
Mesdames Leon Leonard. Charles I home and Ice cream and cake were
11
Mrs. Doster. Reports were gbn
has been promoting an unhealthy : Stlnchcomb. attended the funeral Harrington. Harry Wertman. Mias served. Mr. and Mrs. Wales will live
of thc latter's brother. Everett
iiiNnR mRNFRR
' *nd olhcr business token care &lt;
attitude toward government; they ■
Maxine Henton and Barbara and in Albion after Nov. 1. where he will
Paul Kellar and Charlei Cooper I
see in it an administration which ‘'Stlnchcomb. at Marshall tart Wed­ Betty Leonard went to Climax be employed as a mechanic In lhe
nesday.
of Detroit spent Wednesday with!
d
has been deliberately fanning the, ' A. W. Burpee, a prominent real- Thursday night to see the Prairie Ford garage.
Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Tobias.
I cd
l’rM'dcnt- Mrs. Phllm
flames of class distrust and hatred.
dent of this community, who for- Farmer WLB Home Talent Show,
j Mr. and Mr*. Everett Meyer of WOODLAND.
Centerville spent Saturday and I crn0®n which consisted of readin.
meriy operated a livery stable here. which was given under auspices of
Above everything else these men dled Bl J;ao A M
al hL, the Ladles Library and High School
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith and
Sunday with &gt;er father and brqth-. »{*£*
£11^1^
are Americans to whom country hotne here Hf had
m U1 health and directed by Vivian OrUfith. daughter. Marilyn, of Lake Odessa 1I er
W O Tobias and Mr and Mrs | The
celptsnexj
formeeting
the day
813.
willtotaled
be at the
b
mean.' more than political labels for somzHc WBS
ln Prairie Parmer WL£ Community were caller* at the home of Mf. | Kee^blL.
and Mrs. John Dell Sunday after­
They are modem patriots of ■ high wake-hma township. Kalamazoo Co. Service, inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Tobias and
Nov 18
Mr. arid Mra. Ellis E. Faulkner noon. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tasker their son. Mr. and Mrs. Robert To- | On Thursday. Oct. 32. the H.
ordfr
. .
Oct 31. 1842. Hc was married De,
• • •
(cember 7 1898 t0 MLm Edllb
were in Lansing on business Friday of West Odessa were dinner guests
.nm Tnurso.v
bl“ ftl&gt; of Detroit. Mrs. C. H. Brown , Club was entertained al the ha
In
n . saythrop who
NoVfrnber
6. 1831. —MUs
Bernice
Gaskill
of Cornstock there
Thursday.
........closing
\
-may we
. aga
.
uuup
aicudled
nvrcuiucr
o. 1UL
■ —--------——■ —
----------------------Mrs
H
J^mus was a guest
Alpena and her daughter*. Mr of-Mrs. J. K.* Flower
---------- —
for a on
(Cast your ballot on election day, Mr Burpee leave* two eon* Har- i vlslLed her aunt and uncle. Mr Thursda^ atT^t *uck chteken *nd
“arold Comp of Grand o'clock dinner. Mrs. Flower wl
' Nov 3. Do not neglect this Impor- . old and Floyd of Delton. ' aeVen ( and Mra. L. N. Bush over the week
assisted by her daughter. Mn. GJ
tarn civic duly.
; grandchildren; two brothers. J. 8. iendm”'"
Hazen, and Mrs. Delos Flower. TH
Newton
of
Hastings
'
hoU
,rtd
Mnd
Mr
w,d
Mrs
1
more oI Kalamazoo; William of Perry ! Members of the Sunday school
Mr and Er“. Dtozid G«er and
T°b'“ «n«l daughter of Kal- meeting was called to order by Mn
I,
In?- .L’LinT R^hu 1 Funeral services were held at 3:30.cl““*s Nos. 6 and 7 arc Invited to,
Prouty, president, and opened ■
m-mk
h
Sund,y ln Henton's funeral home ,m"1 Tuesday night Nov 3 with Mr
son. Morgan, visited Mr. and Mr*, j
nSlr
H5.r
JIi dmlr singing from the club song boi
mann-Hclnk
wUh Rfv RaJph
offlclillng and Mrs. U N. Bush and listen In J. L. Brady of Grand Rapids from ■ d,y
Thursday until Sunday and a«cnd-! C' N.
*"d “U^rtvd ^eir and the collect. Roll was answer!
------- - ------------------------------------------------t0 r*dl° returns of election
by "My favorite magazine and whjl
-------------------------------------------------------- Burial
BurialininPratrlcvlUe
PratrlcvlUecemetery.
cemetery.
Swings! ^evening on hi? seventy-fifm A poem. "Hooka." by Edgar Gurl
Mr. and Mrs. Elbs E- Faulkner
O JL _
A L /W — _ 1 Mr and Mrs. Raymond WisnewAlways ask for one of these quality brands
was read by Mrs Wade. Mn. Whll
W I O m a V ll VI fl 5 !kl ,re thc proud pa rente of a baby; and Bessie Faulkner entertained
PIONf.FR
GRLAI LAKES
RED ARROW
by also read a poem by Edgar OueJ
Oo* *M«.«r AULBRlKa —'-*-*•- — ’
nold
Faulkner
and
Edward
Baas
of
"Gone with the Wind" by Margrl
BIG CHIEF
HOUSEWIFE'S FAVORITE
i’;u: m
and Mrs. Ed. Lowry on Wednesday Battle Creek; Mrs. William Toot
Mitchel was reviewed by Mrs. Even
Mrs. Robert Bom entertained two , WIU Moore. t
Clippings and pictures of lhe Hol
Nov. 4 for dinner Mrs. Belle Bar­ and daughter Kathryn of Grand
Miv»«r»*
FOR SAI.F RY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
num and Mrs. Blanch Williams are Rapids; Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Rector tables of bridge Thursday evening.
ver dam and search light in M
of Renton Harbor; and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. C. Ruell won high score and
..
.. t„
________________ i the program committee.
Mrs T H Cobb consolation
I
Mr*. Capt. Shellenbarg- Angeles sent by Mn. Bellinger wel
Mr and Mrs Ravn oi\d McLeod tT of ncar Vermontville and Mr and displayed.
B. A. LYBARKER, Druggist
■ The W P M. 8. will meet with Robert Faulkner and son David ol
Coloma:
Mr and Mn. Raymond McLeod
McCaIJum of Cloverdalc
Mr. and Mrs. Vert Robinson I
Mr. »bd Mrs. Laverne Shedd of and children of
.. Qrand
--------—
r— . gjMnt Sundny W)U, Mr and Mrs
Rapids
near Battle Creek were visitors ovl
Galesburg were Suhday guests of spent the week end with their par-' 1 Donald McCallum.
night of their sister. Mrs.
Ea
Mr. and Mrs. John Harrington.
I ents here.
Mrs. Jessie Robinson of Hickory I Mr. and Mrs. V. K Brumm of ' Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson of Quick. They and Mr. and Ma
Hickory Comers and Mr and Mrs. Schultz were guests for dlnnl
[ Comers and Mrs. Lydia Holtom of Nashville Were callers at the home
William Hart and daughter of Has­ Thursday evening.
iLturaHnll
trv.nl
R.mrlov
U.1-H
Kir
nt
Mr
-nd
Sir,
SX'elhv
r?mclrfnrrt
Marshall spent Sunday with Mr. of Mr. and Mrs. Welby Crockford
tings were guests on Sunday at.
Mrs. Harlan Scobey and Mn. Jal
Sunday evening
, and Mrs. Charles Harrington.
GOOD GRACIOUS!
lhe home of Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Schultz have nursing positions I
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Walters of Pot­
Hart.
Battle Creek at the present.
terville spent the week with Mrs. receiving congratulations on the
MY FOOD DOLLAR
There was no school Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. E. Quick were I
Ada Thorpe who relumed home birth of a son. John Vaughn. Friday
nnd Friday as our teacher. Miss Hastings Saturday evening ad
October 23.
SURELY HAS SHRUNK
Kith them to spend thc winter
teachers called on Mr. and Mrs. Mauril
Mr. nnd Mrs H A. Kilson attend­ Johncock attended thc
Mr. and Mr*. John Harrington
meeting al Grand Rapids.
IN THE LAST t YEARS
Crookston. Harlan Scobey acconl
attended the funeral
of Mr*. ed the teachers' Institute in Detroit ,
pank-d them.
Blanche Kemple at Kalamazoo Thun day Friday and Saturday nnd !
GLASS CREEK.
had lhe
pleasure
Monday afternoon.
___
.... ,
______ ot hearing
_ Mrs. 1
The Township Sunday school cod
Norman Erway and Harold OH»
Dr. and Mrs. Edward Lowry cn-; Amelia Earhart Putnam, noted avia- of Kalamazoo were week end visit­ ventton was well attended and I
tertalned over the week end the trlx and speaker.
, uta
,u„y visitors good meeting resulted. The dial
ors MV
at ricu
Fred Otis. oui
Sunday
doctor's sister and family. Mr and | Mr and Mrs. Fay C. Wing visited thcre wcrc Lyl. om,
fornijy of talk by Mr Parker of Kalamazd
Mrs. 8. C. Brown, of Flint
friends in Plainwell Sunday
,i Kalamazoo
Kalamazoo and
and Chas.
Chas. Erway
Erway of
of was funny, instructive and helpfu
BUT DON’T FORGET—
The Delton Highschool will have j Mrs George Varney and baby Rguie creek and
friend
Kala- I Dr Dewey gave us some vital thin]
v."!.
...« of
if If;'.-thetr first party In the new school । daughter came home from Pennock zoo
THAT SAME DOLLAR
to think of. and the music under tl
building on Thursday night this i hospital In Hastings Saturday
John Erway of M 5. C was a 1 direction ot Mrs. Shepherd wil
Keek. It is to be a Halloween party. I Mr and Mrs. Will Warner. Lester week end guest of his parents here Arthur Lathrop as song leader wl
WILL BUY MORE
and Friday night they will attend | Warner. Mrs Rebecca Smith and
Miss Virginia Havens attended I splendid
ELECTRICITY TODAY
the Kellogg A? Fair at the Kellogg Miss Hazel Scrieber c'.
of Hastings
z~ the M E A
nt Orahd Rapid.,
John Brandstetter was taken quil
I school.
x }
were Sunday dinner guesu of Mr
4llMr
„,
lu rFriday..
M,r_ Thursday
nnd
sick last Wednesday but is soinl
Everyone young and old are cor-1 mid Mrs. Julian Smithof Battle
. . Bul1day visitors nt Chas Whlttc- wlint improved at this writing. I
|dtally invited to attend the Hal- Creek.
mores were Mrs. Cleo Brown and
HENDERSHOTT.
I
loween parly at the hall on Satur-I
Mrs Howard Harper
and son, children of Hickory Comers and Mr
Miss Virginia Duckcr of Hal
day night from 8 until IQ o'clock | Arden, are both victims of
the and M„ Lowell Whittemore and
The grand march will begirt-'al 8:301 mumps.
।, b
aby of
tings spent the week end' vacalM
baby
of Delton.
Delton.
"■।
Honoring the birthdays of John with Margaret Garrison TogcthJ
| and Virginia Havens the following thev visited Margaret's aUter. Mi
। were Sunday guests at Forrest Ha- Harvey parmalce. in Battle Creek
A. C Clark and family entertatni
I venk: Robt McGlocklin and family
| and Mbs Eloise Storer of Hastings Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Clark of Dll
।
Mrs. Sarah Erway and Mrs and a few days last week.
DeWitt Rowley and family fra
Clara Erway spent last week with
Jackson spent the past week
! relatives In Grand Rapids
Cour
’
.
Strowbridgc's.
|
Mr. and Mrs Merritt Gales of
Chas Van Vranken was In AS
Lansing were Sunday gucste al
from Thursday
Saturday
1 Clyde
ljul Warren's.
n,ll&lt;u,,
........
......... ——until
------ -----.------ * na
Anita McGlocU
McGlocklln
IsI helping Basil Hayward build
Anils
— of . Hastings
...
...
-- .. . ...........
nn.iK. Ib.
■i’4 1
visiting her grandparents. Mr. and garage. During the week end 1
and Mr*. Van Vranken visited th
' Mrs. Forrest Havens
cousin. Ray Brundage, in Lansl
The Rally day exercises didn't &lt;
PODUNK.
Mrs. Ralph Brown and daughter.
Jaunlla. visited her brother. Oliver shed but Ute day was enjoyed I
Hayward. of Kalamazoo Friday.
those present. Rev. and Mrs. Woe
Joe Cowles of Marquette visited cn of Battle Creek and Rev. Keef
from Watervliet were honor gue;
home folks last Wednesday.
Sunday visitors at Monte Rep­ and gave short talks.

NOTES

INSIST ON

Th

lerestin
hlbited
dlfferen
travele
scmbly

J?*

Educat
held a
Hl* tal
cducat
vocalic
for mt

MICHIGAN MADE

Mr.
Ute Ind
held in
membc
.inittee

BEET SUGAR

The
Tuesda
grade
and m

» £.SSL”., «•&gt;&gt;*■ M’ *"a “7

Best foi Cooking — Baking-Canning
Jams and Jellies—Candy Making
Frostings—Table Use

went
school.
Mr. H
Robe

ADLERIKA

In ve

Intend

Ing 1m

Miss

.team
where
round

"TS

G a les
score
test, t

%

Gales
down
startec
failed

down
In the
Ftschc
kick
enoug
cmerg
contes

If
&amp;

A-

Live Better withj^p

ELECTRICITY

The

Nov.
help
of th
• by ass
Guy
• i panic
- vlslte
towns
•
MU
■'

play.
Wedn
lhe p
'
Mr
of Ka

•' and I
&gt; alien
Gran

talite
SuM

Balti
and

St

• "CHEAP ELECTKICm " ia now a hotiM’hold word.
iDijira.stcfl with footl anti otlirr living coats—-it ia otic d

• And no wonder. This housewife is Irvin lo fill ;r market
based on U. S.
basket with dollars that must meet higher prie
governincnl figures, the average family’.- fuod costs half again
as much as in 1933.

FUEL
NOW!

NO NEW TAXES
NO NEW BESTS
ANS A BALANCED BWDSET!

• And electricity?—cheaper than ever! That's one place you
can save anil live belter, too. Does more than ever: does it bet­
ter. Compared with what some call "good old pre-war days,' the

Ever

ha

isl

/ J

DOWN

• Today's new low rates open the way to -o niahy conveniences
—so much enjoyment from new appliances, bought on easier
terms than ever—su many economies and savings over older

Two years ago, Michigan wa« millions of dollar* in
the rad.

would be no new taxes, no new debts—and a

DOWN

4

We were overburdened with taxes and

debts. Fitigerald promised us that, if elected, there
balanced budget.

DOWN !

We have

i

emerged, in two short years, with a state treasury
showing over five million dollars balance! Think of

.

on November 3rd!

Electric refrigeration to preserve supplies co»Lv

DOWN

He kept his word!

this amazing achievement when you go to lhe polls
h&gt;

many things electrically.

*

less quantity of oteetrieity than previously

tag and appliances. (This i» one of the low •

CONSUMERS
power
^Hastin"=, Mich.

2251

ASK US ABOUT

nr

Manhattan COAL

fb
St

A Good Coal ot

WI LL DELIVER!

Bccsum PRICES WILL SOON ADVANCE ... be­
cause even now bettaegradas are hard to get from
the mines . . . became you may not bo ebie to get
what you wont later on, we advise you to buy ypur

winUr'i cool NOW!

ru.. .

**

Company .
Phone 2305

'i

/

SS FITZGERALD

Smith Bros., Velte &amp; Co.
DEALERS IN WOOL, GRAIN, FEED. FLOUR. SALT, LIME,
CEMENT AND COAL

PHONE £237

HASTINGS, MICH.

�Tlnt wyrtHns nwn. tubmpat, orroin i», ira

Thorn apple-Kellogg
School Notes

H.H.S. SCORES
THIRD VICTORY

PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
FIFTY LIVESTOCK
During the peut week the follow­
CLAIMS PRESENTED ;ing babies were born at the hos­

OBOE* FOX PUBLICATION.
Sials ot Mleklas
lh» CoUOtT Of

Result of Attack* by Dogs [Clayton
la a Three Months’
.Andrew

a. o'Vok

pital: A daughter lo Mr. and Mra.
Rrandstetter; 603 8. Broad-

Period

Mr. Kane visited our school last
week and hi* talk proved both in­
teresting and educational. He ex­
hibited inodes of dress from the
different countries In which he had

B1NNKTTMBN BEAT LAKE
The supervisors' committee on
VIEW, BATTLE CREEK,
livestock claims had over fifty such
claims presented for injury to sheep
14 TO 13

sembiy the student* were allowed lo
tuk questions concerning hh talk.

VISITORS STEP OUT
TO EARLY LEAD

and fowl$ by d°gi- The bills pare for
*4 sheep? SB lambs. 37 turkeys and

th

Gerald Burghduff. city. Route 1. on
,Oct. 26; a daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
.Rial Kellogg. 434 E. Walnut St., on
Oct27._____________________
1

JUDGE R. R. McPEEK

SENTENCES TWO MEN
7 chickens killed; but that does not
begin to cover the damage. Thc
worrying of a flock of sheep by a One to Serve Ninety Days
killer-dog Ln itself would cause seri­
in Jail—Other Goes to
Mr. Bell will speak at the Rural Hastings Pushes Over Win­ ous damage to the flock. The bills
Educational meeting, which is being
ning Score With But Two
Jackson Prison
covered a three-months period dur­
held at Grand Rapids. Thursday
ing
which
the
dogs
seemed
to
be
Judge
McPeek on Thursday fore­
Minutes Left to Go
His talk outline mentions consumer
especially active.
noon sentenced Russell H. Service
The Hastings High school grid­
education, better use of leisure time,
Last week a Banner correspond- of this city to W days in Jail, He
vocational skills and appreciation men got their third successive taste &lt;nt suggested that flock owners who had been convicted In circuit court
lor music und art.
.
[of victory last Saturday by defeat­ wish to prevent injury to their ,of assault and battery. Hf was
ing Battle Creek Lakeview 14-13. sheep by dogs should get a good charged with a more serious offense
Mr Hollforth chairman of M. E. A. hpre Jt WM a hard-fought battle ; biUy goat or two. especially one with also that of statutory rape; but
Mr. Hollforth wax chairman of ay me way with Uikevlew leadln.? good horns, and he would take care the Jury brought in a verdict of as- (
the industrial arts M. E A. meetings'. un&lt;|| two minutes before lhe Anal of the dogs.
sault and battery, and the judge
held in Grand Rapids. He is also a ’ ahlstte
'
-**
gave him the limit of 90 days Ln the
member of the state executive com- ,| coacn
coach Bennett started me
the sues
subs :
Hort: CENTER.
county Jail.
.inittee for Industrial arts.
It
‘ ‘ ’
but Lakeview
scared a touchdown 1 William Mclivaln and family of
On the same forenoon Frank
I In the first quarter on a pass The North Hope have moved on the Barkruff of this city, who wm tried
Mother's Club.
I first stringers were sent in al this George Kahler farm and Mr. and and convicted in lhe circuit court
The Mother's Club met last point and the Uy for the extra'Mrs. George Kahler have moved on a charge of statutory rape. wa.-.
Tuesday and Miss Brog, the .first point was frustrated.
...r www
The
two'Into Ed. Titus house near Clovrr- brought up for sentence Thc Judge
grade teacher, talked on new ideas | t(.am., mgaged Ln s punting duel the , dale.
and methods that had been present- Ternalndr-r of the quarter.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gates and-Mr. Jackson prison.
ed to her at summer m »&gt;ooI
At
opening of the second । and Mrs. Fred Ashby spent Thurs- i
COUNCIL
DOINGS.
WMA.MW a
w kick
•
V»K**M*» with
...... Mr.
*•*. . and
_.U Mrs.
.... ... Wai.
----- --------- --------—
T U
I quarter, Lakeview blocked
day evening
recovered on the one 1 lace Na Dell near Cloverdate.
| The council s session Friday eve-।
With inches to go Wat-1
*Mr. and Mrs. Burdette
StT,' ..re M, cXtcbto
X»^'™u71toto
.to; B.UU
IK." Lyttle ot Ining was unusually short. Tiie pein- •
ed over the line for lhe , Battle Creek spent lhe week end clpai item of business was lhe upMr Hnlt^rth ^«i
I
l°uchdown.
The extra with her parents. Mr. and Mrs proval of bills.
MLJi . ? hld M y*u,®lekle-1 pom waA made on a placemen: j Ch ar lex McDermott.
Tiie council granted Night Police I
Robert Lyons, former teacher of:
| callers In the Fred Ashby home Clarence Shultz a two weeks' vaca­
T
K. visited our school lastweefc. i wuh lhf
13_0 ln (avor Of I Bunday were Mr. and Mrs. M|#on tion.
Thc council received a petition
Report Card Investigation.
i Lakeview lhe Bcnnettmen settled | Warner. Ear) Fish and Arnold
from the county road commission
Investigation of report cords Is down and received a fine break when - Aacks of Kalamazoo
asking that a storm sewer be built
now uvuik
being tu.iicu
carried on
on uy
by our
oursuper| a Lakeview
Mr.. ----and—
Mra.
nuw
super-:——- ■ — - player kicked out
---- . of.
_----. WUUam
---- , --Ashby and
__ _______
. Z-..-lO-varrt line.
lln» Tne
Tito, ball
full ,I Maurice
Maurlre spent
XTtoTit HtindaV
intendent
and. lhe faculty.
Report_! kwu.nrf.
bounds M.
on &gt;h»
lhe 12-yard
Sunday evening at the county garage. This petition
to H»stlng
Hastings
Struble and with the former's parents. Mr. and was referred to the street committee
card* from all over thr U 8 are be- went t°
;&lt; and Btroble
for investigation und report.
ing investigated lo see If we might Hall combined three running plays Mrs. John McKIVbin of Yankee
■ •
for
u -first down,
und
Scobey
swept Springs.
belter oura in any way.
OBDEB FOB PUBLICATION.
around end for the touchdown.

OXDEK FOB PU1LICATIOW.

UKDBKjrOK PUBLICATION.
m«ioA

&lt;&gt;f »I4 rour
In IS* dl«

CEDAR CREEK.

•

:
•

■'
&gt;

a
-

The next meeting of Lhe Cedar
Creek community club will be on
Nov ti Everybody please COtlle and
help lo encourage lhe new president
ot lhe club by your presence and
by assisting in any way you can.
Guyla Pease and family accom­
ponied by Leslie pease and family
visited Lawrence Bostwick o! Ross
township Sunday.
Sperty
Miss Skidmore and scholars and Leslie
Harrington
reverai of lhe mothers attended the Draper
French
play. "Sleeping Beauty" at Hastings McLeod
Thompson
Wednesday afternoon. All enjoyed । Bchwsrtz
Camburn
I Cogswell
lhe play.
Mahoney
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Monroe and son Cappon
Carpenter
of Kalamazoo visited at the home of Clark
RELavenlse Campbel) Friday.
* Caukln
Burdick
There was no school Thursday Shay
Hopkins
L.H.
and Friday as Miss Helen Skidmore Rennlck
Watkins
nite tided the teachers Institute al So that d
Bathrick
Grand Rapids.
Smith.
Substitutions: Hastings
_____
Leslie Gould and family enter- H. Bessmer, Brill, Angell. Moore.
lalned company from Paw Paw Doxey. LaBaUlster. Hull. Struble.
Sunday.
Scobey &lt;CJ. and R. Bessmer. Lake­
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hammond of view—Rolfe. Nolan. Isaacs (CJ.. and
Battle Creek and Mrs Mary Owen Rook. Officiate—White. W. 8. T. C.
of Midland Park visited Ardy Owen Referee—Guenther.
W. 8. T. C-.
and family Sunday.
umpire.
In a preliminary game the re­
serves walloped the Laks view scrubs
Studebaker’s New Eaty- 20-7. The Hastings second stringshowed power and speed and
Closing Rotary Door era
took advantage of all scoring op­
Locks Banish Rattle* portunities.
The Bennellgien play their first
conference game of the season next
prlday night when they go to Ionia.
With their record of three victories
behind them, lhey have a great
responsibility lo shoulder to win
their next till.

Even a child can cloce a 1937 Stude­
baker door securely with one fin­
ger due to Studebaker's exclusive
new rotary door locks. This lock
has two distinct advantages. It
shakes shut—and cannot shake
open. Because of this character ­
istic. it takes up or compensates
for wear automatically and elimi­
nates rattles. New and ranch
stronger Yale locks are also used
for doors and ignition in the 1937
Studebaker.___________________

FOOD

Lily White Flour
ft.'b77C
Iona Flour
Splendid Flour
‘•I 73c
$|«
Gold Medal SIX
5-lb.
Rowena Pancake Flour
25C
5-lb.
Sunnyfield' Paitry " Flour
19C
Pancake Flour *-•
IOC
Peanut Brittle
2
25C
pW«.
Baker's Cocoanut
9C
IOC
Tea Siftings
Del Monte Coffee
Hills Bros. Coffee

27c
27c
29c
27C
23c
15C

lb.

Maxwell Hous. Coffee

Whitehouse Coffee
Brown Sugar
2
4X Sugar
2
Instant Postum

pair of skis through a day-coach
wcre u„,bk „ mike m
M(|l h
tocll
Ulrlt
0,„k ol cto ,.ni, wton sco,
1TO,veml , ^tovlavt tumble
.
. in midfield. From that point on ik
lhe
Bcnnettmen started a march down
the field, terminating with Smith
crossing tiie goal line on a 22-yard
run. Scobey again coverted the ex­
tra point which won lhe game on
a running play.
With two minutes left to play lhe
Roemen attempted to overcome the
lead willi their passing attack which
proved unsuccessful.
The starting line-ups were:
Hastings &lt;14&gt;
— t!3)
....
Lakeview

FOOD STORES
This Week!

Beechnut Coffee o^-x-r-u.

down three minutes alter lhe game played good defensive ball and an 1 »l 1,000
toMd|o!''lton?X‘1to“lhdo»J''T
Ito vUltoi .1-!
JJ'TiuXto'to'll “11 to

hi U1. endtoto to a .core. B
Ftotor .cored 111. cau.. point on a
kick from purenum Thu *'•«•&lt;
anouah. howarer. and aatobuca
emerged lhe victor of a gruelling
contest 12-7.

ANNIVERS
SALE

At All A&amp;P

PLEASANT HILL
I Scobey also converted lhe extra
--------pct. 22 Letter.
Mbs lutzl. Mr Carmichael and point.
Ed. -Bedford
spent —
the
Mr Bell accomiranlcd
JCLurii[&gt;umi-u the
me debating
ueoaiuig ' Lakeview
UUtevicw received but
out was
wua foryd
---------- f
- week end
- -■ team to Hnsttngs Friday evening to punt and Hustings storied *■ at the home 01 nu suter. ws. n. c.
where the teams and qoaches of auf-1 steady march down the field which I Krv't or Charlotte.
rounding schools had been invited, halted on lhe one yard line. The
MF*4ra- Cm-Uii Pierce of Al­
—— I hJrnin ««• tore/ W
from IJ?'01
t‘" Kf
Athletics.
behind their own goal line a.i the|*nFi, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Carter.
T. K. Love, to Galesburg 12-7.
half ended
Hastlnys on the
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Palmer and
T K lost a hard fought game to I s^ort end of a 13-1 acore
I l'tUe Mn of B*rlow
wer* 8un"
Galesburg last Friday night by the . NeUhcr Uam was able to put! d*y gu«te of Mr. and Mrs. Bert
score uf 12-7. It was a rough con-1 acrou a ^ore in lhe third quarter. Palmer.
test, three men being forced out of ■
Lakeview made two first downs i The Garden club m.i with Laura
the T K team because of Injuries. b virtue of oenalUes Inflicted on Carter for an all day meeting
Galesburg scored their first touch- £/£nVlnwm Both elevens dis- . Thursday with a pot luck dinner

'

Don’t Miss The

Taylor. 411 W. Slate St.

Calumet Baking Powder

lb.

CW

8 O'CLOCK

COFFEE
3-lb. bag 40c

BOKAR COFFEE

■ 21£
5UNBRITE

CLEANSES

WYANDOTTE

5
25c
Suds X 3^25' ft." I*7C
10 X 39C
6 X 25C
x" 25c

*“**.’!■-

fQc

39C
2|t

Palmolive Soap

Bread

a.

5 •- 25c

6
Silver Dust 'X'c.”™ 2
25c
Laundry Starch **
X 18c
|QC
Mince Meat &lt;»•-*“•
Kaffee Hag OF Senka
37C
No. 303
Larsen's V eg- All v
10c
AU Flavors
Jello
5C
19c
American Family Flakes

Daily Dog Food
Rajah Syrup

WHEATIES

I5C

Gelatine Dessert

CHEVROLET

With Shirley Tempi.
Picture Premium

9C

CLEANSER

MARSHMALLOWS
Angeles

CAMPFIRE
MARSHMALLOWS

M7C
COCOA

FREE OFFER 1—A 4-ox. can ANN PAGE BAKING POWDER

Baker's or Harahey’s

MIDDLEVILLE.
Oct. 23 Leiter.

Vanilla Extract

Doughnuts

15C
I2C

2 ~ 25e

relumed to Middleville after spend­
ing the summer at their ranch at
Merritt. Mich.
Mrs. E. M. Eaton and daughter
of Grand Rapids called on friends
here Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hooper have
gone lo Grand Rapids for the win­
ter. Their son will go lo school in
Middleville, boarding with Miss

IOC

ELECTIN
BILK

Cracker Jack

Genuine Vitrock-Waro MIXING BOWL FREE -with on.

Henkel’s

Mary Moe.
Forrest Clark is improving hla
house on West Main street. He Ls
raising the roof on part ot It and
enlarging another part.
Hunters were out in force on
Thursday but report that the game

Remodel! Repair!
See us for all kinds of
Building Materials
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co
Ftew 2115

Best Family Flour

$f.05

1000-Hour G. E.

Velvet Cake rX Flour X 29c
With an entirely new type of motor car body

—now available for the first time on any low-

NOW...BUILD

Fresh Dally

priced car—combining new silence with new
safety for your family.

lhp£tu|

Picnic Hams
Fillets
Hubbardston Apples R"«IO lu
Grapes F«ncv Emp,r°i

E

FOOD

Lilian to "CoS— Tim." with K.t. Smith Bu4

Station WBBM

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER M. UM
with fall flowers and candles, were Mrs. Roydon Warner, Mra. Gladys THEY WOULD DESTROY US
Ollgua. Mn. Emma Green. all pf
On Thursday of thl* wook. tho served Jello, cake, and cocoa
Dick Moulton of Muskegon visit­ Lowell. Don and Allee Crawford of Those Who Are Not for Us
U. B- churches of Lowell. Fretport
Ionia, Rcy AUfUst Nagler of Evart,
and Lake Odessa unite for a Re­ ed his sister, Mrs. Roy Hagler Sat­ Ml** Eula Naglar 9t tWAU. X11-,
Are Aftinst Us
ligious Education convention at Hus urday and enjoyed some hunting MU* Gibb* and Mra Neliu Smith
Thorn who would destroy our Gov­
Lake Odessa church. Morning, aft­ with L. B Lester.
of Ada. Rav. and Jjn. W A. toner
ernoon and evening sessions will
Members of lhe local W. F M. 8. of Banfield. Mr*. Thera Naglsr. ernment are in control Their own
be held with Rev. J. E. Harwood, of are planning to attend the Barry Mu Warren Roush and Mra. Ver- । words prove it. Shall they scawnHuntington as main speaker.
County Convention of the Society da Rumford of ffHUnga.
plish their purpose/
The Misses Loma June and Betty at the Middleville M- E. church
| More than two years ago. Wilson s
Stuart visited at the home of their this Thursday.
PRAIRIEVILLE.
1 Secretary of State. Bainbridge Col­
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Mrs. H- M Boughner was called
Teachers and pupil* of lhe Prai­ by. speaking of the J3raln Trusters
Yetter at Lowell, from Wednesday to Saginaw last Wednesday by the
'
evening until Sunday evening of 'rerlou.1: illness of her sister. Mrs rieville school* were guests of the said:
Civic Players of Hastings for the
las’, week.
"The overturn ot oar institu­
Chas. Neil. Mrs. Nell underwent an
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Batdorf and operation on Thursday and Is mak-1 mntlr.ee performance of "Sleeping
tions. including our Constitu­
children, and Mrs Clayton Hark- I ing a splendid recovery. Mrs. Beauty" last week. TTioae who fuftion. U the avowed goal."
nlahed tran*portaUon were: Mesnew of Sunfield
were Sunday ]
On January 1. 1831 I heard the
Boughner returned home Saturday dame* Hankin Hyde. William Mfguests of their parents. Rev. and I
President make the following atateKlbbln, Farmer Houvenlr, Clinton menU in hi* message to congress:
Mrs. J. L. Batdorf. Howard. Jr. re- | evening.
mained for a few days visit with his, Mrs. Mary Dodge visited lhe fore Castle and MU* Norma Castle. It
"Within our borders, as in the
part of the week at the Hahn home wa* a wonderful treat to all of
grandparents
world at Urge, popular opinion
them, and you should hear
the
The W. M- A- of the U B church west ot town.
U al war with a power-seeking
Mr and Mrs. Victor Sisson and' youngsters talk about it I
meets at the home of Mrs. Mary
minority.”
Dodge on Thursday of next week daughter motored to near Remus■
Robert Conway ha* accepted a
-We have returned the control
Tiie members of the Senior class Tuesday and were guests at the I position on a farm near Lansing
of the Federal Government lo
of F. H. S. are working on their home of Mr and Mrs. Chas Deming and left Saturday night.
the city of Washington.”
plav •-Mountain Mumps** which will Mra Emitu Sisson, who has been '
Harry Brunson of Chicago was a
-In
thirty-four monllu we
be given on Nov 19 and 20 From visiting at the Deming home the I guest of his cousins. Mr.* and Mra. I
have built up new Instruments
ail reports this is a very exceptional past two weeks, returned home with ' Ernest Farr, the last of the week
| of public power. In lhe hands
play -nd no doubt will draw a full them.
of a people's Govermhenl this
Rev c L Wilkins brought the | Mia* Lucile Adrlanson returned 1
house each night
power is wholesome and proper.
Mrs Ken Braendie. -on K and message at the U B church last | from a week's visit with relatives
| but in tiie hands of political
Ralph Stuart. Jr . had an exper­ Sunday evening. At next Sunday at Battle Creek. Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Manley Billings. Mrs. ■ puppets of an economic autoc­
ience on Tuesday evening of last evening s service. Rev L. F Burkey
racy such power would provide
Hasel
Billings,
Lyle
and
Lita
spent
week, that they hope never to re­ will preach.
(hackles for the liberties of the
peat. Mrs Braendle was driving lhe
The first quarterly conference' from Thursday until Saturday aft­ I people."
ernoon with relatives in Fljpt.
ear and just this side of Carlton
will be held at the U B. church on
‘
AU very true, and In whose hands
Center, supposedly due to loose
Mr and Mrs Emory Pox and does thl* power now rest? In thc
Sunday evening and Monday. No­
gravel, thrown up by a grader that
, vember 8 and 9. with the newly । Mrs Oscar Stultt at Detroit and
had but lately gone over the road, । elected presiding elder. Rev. Don ’ Mn Oscar Palmer of Hastings were hands of Tugwell, Wallace. Hopkins,
and the Austrlan-bom Felix Frank­
site lost control of the car. ll left
guests of Mrs David Deal Friday.
furter. Disregard what tiie political
the road, went into the ditch and I Carrick, in charge.
The local school was closed lastj Lorane Johnson, small daughter
turned end over end twice, wreck­ Thursday and Friday while the | of Mr. and Mrs. LewU Johnson, who opponents of lhe President may say
and let him be judged by lhe worda
ing thc car. bruising tiie occupants
teachers attended the Institute at has been seriously HI at Borgess of his friends and associates One
but slightly
hospital. U. somewhat Improved
of his advisers and hLs principal fa­
There was a good attendance at Grand Rapids.
Mrs. Will Van Hom and Dwight vorite said:
Mr and Mrs. Edgar Cheney and
the stcreoptican and costume lec­
Van Hom spent last week with Mr.
"If there arc any of you here
ture given by Mr and Mrs. Wilson, i daughter. Donna, of Howell were i and Mrs. Hutson of Battle Creek.
।
Sunday
guests
of
their
parents,
Mr.
1
w'no don't believe that this Is a
returned missionaries from India. at1
The Ladies' Aid will hold their
fight between thc Haves and thc
the M E- church last Thursday eve­ and Mrs H W. Oosch
bazaar
at
th«
MethodUt
church
No
­
Hake Nou. then you have no
ning. Out of respect to Mrs Edith ' Clayton Bunn of near Green lake vember 3. A chicken supper will
visited at the home of his parents.,
place In the P E- R. A.”
Brunner, a faithful member of the
be served from 6 to 8 o'clock, a
According lo Hopkins, thc man
W F M S. whose death occurred Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bunn. Monday program following the supper.
Rev. and Mrs. J. I Batdorf spent
who'said that we acre "too damned
last week lhe Mother and Daughter
Miss Doris Burke and Gordon
banquet, scheduled for that evening, Friday night and Saturday with I Wales were united in marriage Bun­ dumb" to understand, the battle I*
their
son
John
and
family
at
Grand
between
those who have homes,
was called off Instead, about fifty
day al the home of the bride's par­
members and friends gathered in Rapids. On Saturday. Rev. Batdorf ents by the Rev Ralph Bates. Mrs. property, businesses, and those who
thr basement following the lecture, was one ot a trio that fished al Wales U a graduate of the Kellogg have nol. That Ls the opinion of
Black
Lake
And
the
finish
of
thc
।
Harry Hopkins, and the President
and. at tables prettily decorated
story Is that they had a dandy Ash , Agricultural school of Gull lake. retain* him in power Speaking ot
The groom graduated from our the change which hc was asked to
dinner on Sunday.
MORTGAGE BALE
We understand that someone en- &gt; school and has been manager of bring about. Rex Tugwell, another
tered a local potato patch one night - the Cappon garage for nearly two presidential favorite said:
last week, dug and look away sev-' years Hc ha* resigned his position
"We have, however, the duty
here and secured a similar one in
oral bushels of potatoes
of avoiding violence as thc pro­
A fine improvement has recently I Albion. Tiie best wishes ot their
cess goes on."
been made al the local Creamery many friends go with them to their
In other words, thl* change In our
Gray shingles have placed on the new home. They were attended by goveminrRt will be accomplished but
Frank E. Wales, brother of ths Tugwell hopes it may be without
sides, giving it a fine appearance
Leap Karcher began work on the 1 groom, and M'.ss Lucile Cole of Kai- Civil War.
qew office gpd yralting, room at the
George N Peek, thc President's
Mr and Mrs. Dwight Wilkins of administrator of thc AAA. said:
home of Dr Wedel, thc Albert Wells
house, and it will soon be completed, Spokane arrived Bunday morning
"I eventually found that 1 was
for an Indefinite visit with their
and ready for occupancy
not in a Democratic adminis­
W- have just learned too late to parents Mr and Mrs Ned Wilkins
tration but in * curious collccMr. and Mr*. Ned Wilkins enter­
: gel any of lhe particulars ot the
lion of socialist* nnd interna­
very recent marriage of Miss Helen tained Sunday in honor of Mr and
tionalists who were neither Re­
Eash. daughter of Mr
anti Mrs Mrs Dwight Wilkins: Mr and Mrs.
publican.-. hor Democrats '
i A T Eash and Floyd Burkey, wn ' Donald Cowen and children and
There arclhree and one half mil­
Glen
E3|U
of
Gull
lake.
Mr
and
of Rev and Mrs L F Burkey. At
lion foreigner* tn this country who
least, we extend our heartiest best Mrs Harold Tyson and children and are here in violation of law and
wishes to Mr. and Mrs. Burkey and Frank Hakenstrom of Battle Creek France- Perkin.*. Secretary ot Labor.
will give more information next and Mrs Orrcn 8|&gt;encer nnd chil­ Eleanor Roosevelt's Intimate frieqd,
dren ot Galesburg
week.
violates her constitutional oath cf
The m E- church was crowded I
I office and refuses lo order thrm de­
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
last Tuesday afternoon tor the fnported. though lire law require* It.
John Puller and Roy Smith nf
neral of Mrs. F. E. Brunner, whose
True, the power has been re­
death occurred on Sunday evening Battle Creek called on Earl Engle- turned to Washington, to a Tugwell
over the week end.
after an llln»s of more than two
a Hopkins, a Wallace. * Perkins,
Mrs.
L
Kosbar
an&lt;|
family
have
roar* The service was conducted by
moved into the Will Cams tenant and by mean* of such power so re­
Rev M W. Duffy of Ionia, who
turned. Hopkins wastes your money.
house for thc winter while her hus­ I lets Farley buy votes with relief
united Mr and Mrs. Brunner In
band Ls at lh»- Legion hospital.
marriage on Nov 24. 1916- He wa*
funds. Tugwell builds homes and
PLEASANT 'RIDGEassisted by Rev pom Wheeler and
towns where there i* no one to live
Rev W A Exner Local business
George Teeter of Scottville Is ax- ' m them and works toward a revo­
places were closed during the hour sisiing Arthur Teeter with an ad­ lution; Wallace kills Hie pigs, de­
of the funeral and many floral trlb- dition on his bam.
. stroy* food, limits Hie crop prodneutes told of thc high esteem in
Kenneth Kelsey was in Kalama­ ' lion until we arc threatened with a
which the deceased was held Much zoo on Wednesday afternoon at­ scarcity; and Frances Perkins. Beesympathy Ls expressed for Mr. tending a Moblloll banquet.
1 retary of Labor, openly defies lhe
Brunner in his great loss. Among
Thc P T. A. meeting will be held la* of tho land and permits crimlthe out of town people here for the Friday evening. Oct
30. Bring . nal aliens to stay here on relief.
funeral were: Mr and Mra Chas. sandwiches or fried cakes and table
Tugwell hope* to avoid Civil War
land Hopkins *ay* the bailie ba­
Hurley and daughter Blanche. Mrs service.
Milton Register. Mr and Mrs Wal­
Richard Abbey ot Hastings. Mr ' tween those who have and those
ter Brown. Mrs. James Getthess. Mr and Mrs Charles Averley of Battle ■ who have not wiU go on.
and Mrs. Reed Naglcr. all of Or^nd Creek. Weldon and Buster Cole and । The week of October 10. cami Rapids. Mr and Mrs Claude War­ Mr and Mrs Cecil Ronk of Bedford palgntng. President Roosevelt said:
"We have made strides under
, ner of Coopersville. Mr and Mrs spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs ।
' Bangs and daughter Dora. Mr and Lester Kinnc.
my administration, but we have

11

rniroiT.

FINAL CLEAN-UP
OF USED CARS AND TRUCKS
BEFORE

1937

alopg

tent. approve* of tha doctrinM of
Tugwall. W»U*ce and Hopkin*, of
the unlawful act* of Madam Perk­
ins. and. if redacted, according to
his own slaiemenl. he wiU gq
"further along the *arr.e Unea*
If you wish lo retain your home,
your church, your property, your
liberty: you should know how to
vote.

Maple Grove also eponl Um day
there. In tha aXtarnom Mr. Lapham
and &gt;&lt;r. and Mrs
Green visited
Donna and Batty Lapham »t thg
Pine lake camp and found them
getting along very well
Mr. tut Mrs Wm- BUnfon and
children of Orangeville spent Bun­
day with the letter's mother. Mr*.
MMNPENSMITH.
Claude WlUaoa.
Oct- 23 14UM.
Mr. and Mrs Albert Green enter­
tained a party of twelve with Ice
cream and cake In honor ot their
Sunday
daughter
Esther's birthday and lit*
ban Green and family. Lee Lapbam.
Leota. Florence and Virginia of He Lots Tripp's first birthday. ’

AUCTION SALE
On account of poor health, I om obliged to quit farming
&gt;0 will sell my personal property, and will have an auction
sale af my farm, 9 miles southwest of Hastings on M-43, and
1 mile south of Shults schoolhouse, on section 15, Hope town­
ship, on
'

FRIDAY, NOV. 6, 1936
Commencing at 1:00 F. M., sharp.

I offer the following:-—

Spring footh drag, 17 teeth.

HORSES.
Sorrel gelding. 14 yrs., wt. 1550.
Brown mare, 15 yrs., wh 1550.

Spike tooth drag.
Combination hoy and atock rack.
Lumber wagon. 5-tooth cultivator.

cows.
Red cow, 5 yn., giving milk; duo March
25.
,
Jeraey halfar, 2 yrs., giving milk; due
March 3.
Guernaey heifer, 2 yn., giving milk;
due Feb. 21.
Guernsey cow, giving 12 quarts of milk;
dua in May.
POULTRY.
50 heavy hens.

Double shovel cultivator.
Garden cultivator.
Potato plow with wings.
Platform acales. Corn ahellcr.
Hay slings. Buggy. 2 sets thills.

2 six-tine forks.
HARNESS.
Good heel cheln harness.
Light driving harness.
Old harness.

miscellaneous.

HAY.
10 ton* alfalfa hay.

Work bench ond vise.
Quantity crates and bags.
OU drum, 50-gol.
Other articles too numerous to men­
tion.

FARM TOOLS.
Mower. 5-ft. cut. nearly new.
Dump rake, nearly new.

TERMS:—CASH. No property removed until rettled for.

GEORGE E. KENYON, Propr.
Laster Sonneville, Clerk.

Henry Flannery, Auctioneer.

AUCTION

OPENING SALE

TH U RSDAY, NOV. 5,1936

NOW

WAS

No.
No.
No.
No.
No.

1277-1932
1274-1932
1284-1934
1127-1935
1297-1933

Ford V-8 Fordor Sedan ...$275
Ford V-8 Coach $395
Ford V-8 Deluxe Fordor
.$425
Ford V-8 Fordor Sedan$525
Ford V-8 Coupe.. $335 '

$225
$350
$375
$465
'$295

No.
No.
No.
No.

1254-1934
1291-1929
1288-1929
1293-1935

Ford V-8 Tudor....................... $395
Ford Model A Coupe ...$125
Ford Model A Tudor$125
Ford V-8 Coupe . . ________ $495

$350
$ 85
$ 95
$425

ALSO A FEW GOOD USED TRUCKS

• SPECIAL—1936 DELUXE FORDOR TOURING
DEMONSTRATOR, equipped with heater

are gofpg furthar

AND EACH THURSDAY THEREAFTER

MODELS

and defroster; has 15,000 milts; black:
fine condition. Sell* new for $813—NOW

not |on« far enoMh yet. Wl
wm MqM-"
The President, by giving hl* con­

KALAMAZOO LIVE STOCK SALES CO.
Make this your Live Stock Market fof All Grades end Kinds of Live Stock. Shorter
hovl. less shrinkage, competitive bidding by peckers will net more dollars for you
gt Kalamasoo. We invite you to attend thia sole as It is your rparket.

SELLING PRICES — No Yardage Charge
Dgacon Calf----------------------------------

toyghs end Stags undfr 350

Harses 5 per rent up fo $108. I per cent on
aU addiltenal ever SlOO.
A dwrga of one-half of one per rent addi­
tional is made on all sales for insuranr-e of
(lock and guaranteed payment* to seller.
MbceBapeesu Items. 3 to 10 per coot, de­
pending on time required for sale.
■PSCIAL REDUCTION ON CARLOAD

pounds-----------------------------------------

■■
j
j
W*

.25

Hogs, par head _—$ .25
Shoaty, und*r 60 pounds-----------.15
Sow ond pigs
1.25
Boars, Bred Sows* .50
Roughs and Stags over 350
pounds
.50

Cottle—sold singly_,__r|1,00
Cow end Coif1.50

Voel Calf

.25

Bulls 1.25

Sheep, per hood _______________ $ 25
Lambs, per head-------- ----------------.25

LOTS.

SALE EVUY THURSDAY

Universal Garage Coo
PHONE 2121

FORD PRODUCTS

HASTINGS

PADDY MILLIS KOAD AT G. T. W. R. R.

KALAMAZOO LIVE STOCK SALES CO.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, OCTOMB »■ IM

Hastings Hit'll
School
®
®
Activities

AUUtet. returned home
&lt;m
Sunday. Her mother. Evangie Mil­
ler. accompanied her to Detroit.
Thc Brigg* Udia*' Aid will lie
comfortable* at die meeting an
Following b the nonor list for Thur.day Pot luck dinnsr.
the fir*: marking period of the
The Rev. V. C. Hufum. our new
school term. All students have an |x*ter. held service* Bunday after­
average of b or above Zabelle Ad- noon at thc Veterans' hospital, at
rounle. Darrel) Aldrich. Laurts An- camp Custer.
ders. Horace Angell. Loll AMialter. । The Pleasure Birthday organlzaJgcquclyn Bachman. Alice thick, lion wa* entertained on WednuFhyllta B‘fk. Victor Bclilto. Gladys day. Oct 28. at 'the home of Mra.
Bennett. Ro. site
Bennett. Herman Peggy .Miller of BatUe Creek.
BCMtncr. Albert
Boston.Beulah
Mr*. Nina Power* Sloop of IndlSu«h, Cl-tra Bush. Robert Bush. ann. who ya* called here by the
Bernice Calm-.
Emerson Calm*, death of her uncle. Max Smith, of
cr of
of
Keith Clark. Verlahd Clark, Kathryn Dowling, spent the remainder
here
Conklin, Louise Conklin. Imogene the week with other relative* j1.1.
Cooley. Catherine Davins, Bernard
Andy Wyman, who sustained hip
Elvis. Elaine DnJ-. Mary Dcakir)*. injuries while attending school some
ma DcWcerd. Rut-sell Donovan, time ago. which resulted In compllBtuart Edmond*. Lucllln Entires, entions, has been under observation
Maxine Erway. Margaret Fingleton,. and X-ray at Pennock hospital re­
He was —
taken
to Grand
Mary Fliher. Duane Fox. Oma Jean [cently. -----------—■ —-*
Oarrlwn. Dorli GIUe»ple. Norman | Rapids on Tuesday for treatment
Hull. Pearl Hathaway. Ruth Hatha­ by a specialist there.
Way. Huron Healy. Robert Henney.
Marian Hewitt. Phyllis Hlnnuui.
SOUTH SHULTZ.
Margaret Hummel. Joyce
Hyde.
Mr and Mrs. Alva Kenyon. Don­
Rose Mary Jacobs. Agnes Johnson.1
ald. Bobble and Bernice, of Belle­
Lyle Johnson.Stephen Johnson. Dor- ,'vue. Gordon Kenyon of Hastings,
ptiiy Jonas. Richard Karnies. John ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kenyon of
Larsen. Hazel mar Mannl. Diana
Hickory Comers. Mr. and Mra. H.
Matthew*. Beatrice Mead. Enid Mtaener of Kalamazoo and Lester
Mohkr. Jar.o Nash. Phyllis Ncwlon.
Bonneville came Sunday to spend
palmer Osoorn. Patricia O*born, the day with their parents
and
Marian Palmer. Ned Rennlck. San­
grandparents lo honor two birth­
ford Rogers. Robert Roush, Wilma days.
Royer, Magdaline
Bchelb.
Sam
The meeting of the Communitly
Bchwartz. Betty Sigler. DeForest
Club has been postponed until Nov.
,'Bnydcr. Jane Snyder. Neva Stanton.
12.
Aferleta Stiles. Helen Strlinback.
Mabel Hgm of Bailie Creek spent
‘Maxine Tooker. Lucille Warner. BetJte Weaver. Charlotte Wilcox. Vlrent*. Mr. and Mra. Fred Hom
-glnla Wilcox.
There were eight
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hom visited
JXMt-graduate student* on the honor
friends in Kalamazoo Saturday
toll: Anna Cairns. Hazel Caukln. night and Sunday.
•Madeline cook. Norma Jacobson,
Mra Roger Wlswell of Kalamazoo
ffoorothy Johnson. Ruth McUiughlln.1
called on Mina Kenyon Thursday.
|Jary Stamm and Virginia Waters.
WEST HOPE.
i- Thirty members ol thc Crops class
Thc Ladles' Aid will have a chick­
Of the high school went tn Battle en supper nt the home of Mr. and
Creek recently and visited the Kel­ Mrs. Ray Barnes on Nov. B. Friday
logg factory where the entire pro- evening, serving to begin al 6'20
ot making corn flakes was o'clock
Our three teachers. Mira Olenna
.dehionstrated to them.
O'good. Mrs. Lena Laubaugh and
- The boys' and girls’ assemblies Russell Laubaugh. attended the
Skrcre held la*i Monday Thc boys Teachers' Institute at Grand Rap­
Lsrcrc given a talk on conservation by id'. Thursday and Friday.
MUscs Elizabeth. Rose and Cath­
’fcon i rvation Officer George Sumner
»iaac&lt;l oli their questions nu the sub- erine Clark of Hastings called at
■ led. The boys glee club sang and a their sister's Mrs. Wm. McCallum's
Reading wm. given
by Robert home Sunday
Maurice Craig of Hastings Is
ijlrownc
working in tills neighborhood on the
' In the glil-. assembly after m*et- soil conservation program.
Mils Olenna Osgood spent thc
tng their big" and •little" alsters. a
msket ball game between Juniors week end in Baltic Creek with her
juid sophomores was played, with cousin nnd family. Mr and Met
the jimtor.i tht* winners Dancing Fay Haffendcn

।

‘ followed lh&lt;

NASHVILLE.
fmunlly house with over one hun­
Catholic church in Hastings
i
BOUTMWYBT WOODLAND.
Mr.
Mr*.
E -----------------8. Thompeon.
—and
------------------------- ,[ Mra Ubbte Marahall spmt from d™ Mtendtag the auror wMch
Mr. and Mra. Stephen Carter and
Mr and Mr*. P C. Wing and Mr* 'Thursday until Bunday with her
Put °P
• committee. After Mr- and Mra Vere Carter rtalted
John pancklvish of Detroit wa*
Beaaie Woodman attended the Oold-1 seen Claude Marahall. and family ®hlch they went to the new high
a week end gueat of Keith Fattep.
an Wedding celebration tor Mr. and ' in Lan*lng.
’
lc^o?l *u41tertum where there
Mra. C. Carter's sister at Kent City
Mr. and Mr*. Harry Bandbrook
=.T2
™ General Aid of th. Metho- ‘ »“»e
to
Mr*. Geo Goodemoot tn Weat Tam
Bespent Sunday tn Grand Rapids with
Urt,
Ab0?1 “° dl*l church met Wedne^lay afterMr *
and Mr*. Vere Carter. Mr.
guests
*•**£"; McKenxi
gucsu enjoyed a
* dtomr
dinner and pro- won
McKenzie and stater. Mr*. Fettes
noon with
with Mrs.
Mra. Duguld
Duguld. Assisting
. ....
Jean Kancur has the mumps.
«rara.
were
I attended a lecture Monday evening
wtrw Mr*.
Mn. Johnson.
Johnson, Mra.
Mn. Vance.
Mr. and Mrs. 8. W. Perrin of De­
Mn. Cheater Smith and Mn. J. C. Stewart, tap dance
dance by Miss French, In Kalamazoo
MASTIN OOBNKRS.
troit were Friday night to Bunday
violin duet by Joeef Mix and Wil­
Sunday achool at 11 o'clock, fol­
The Irving Garden Club will hold guests oi Ur- and Mra. Chaa. FarThe election boards appointed to liam Hecker. Jr., anc) iwo solos by IU
iu next
uc«i meeting
nircur.g with
wnn Mn.
oars. Earl
can Van
van lee.
ice. JoMph
josepti Partee
ranee of
or Montpelier,
atonipener,
lowed by a pot luck dinner and *
election tn Dr. Lofdahl was given.
Bring . zerrs
aerre at
‘l the
lhe November
Nov
program in the afternoon. rT_
Syckle of Middleville. Nov. 19.
! Ohio, vu a guest there Thursday.
................
Castleton
are: Precinct
t duh
dulv, £
Mllelon township
t0'Tv'!
your own sandwiches,
one other
Miss Wilma Hom of Ypailantl
znd
your
own
table
service.
,
J*®and your own table service.
spent the week end at. her home
Mr.
„ \thverb£r.
Mr. and
and Mr*
Mra. Orr
Orr Fisher
Fuller and
ana Mra.
Mra. ■ rr-here.
H
Coeswell
were Sunday
Sunday dinn
er kU1S- C&gt;olah Rasey. Precinct No. ?—
H.
Cogswell were
dinner
fuoSTrur.
™
■A.'K
:
Allen Bruqjpi of Detroit spent the
—A Ua&gt;
-....ll Lta- , orr l‘
guests of
Mr. .
and Xfr.
Mrs TLowell
-mend of North Caeli eon. Mr. and
P‘
°*fllnlCT and Nciaon week end with his parent*, Mr. and
Mra Charles Brumm.
Mrs.
Mra. Arthur Jones and
nnd son,
son. Donalfi.
Donald. . Brumm
Brumm.
of Grandville were also guest* there.
The Woman's Literary Club met ’ Rev. Elmer Prichard and Harley
The Martin P. T. A. meeting will at thc library Wednesday afternoon. Bailey spent Monday in Detroit
Mra. George Campbell and Mra.
be a week earlier than usual owing Mrs. Elsie Kumiss was hostess. The
to olhpr things occurring thc same ’ program was: Roll call—Vacation Charles Kohler were In Grand Rap­
date, so will m?ct this Friday eve- Memories; Reading of Constitution ids Monday.
Ha* Feigner, who has been tn poor
nlng, Oct. 30.
Mid By-Laws; High Light* of CounAl thc L. A. 8. meeting at Mra. ty Federation. Mrs Franz Maurer; health for some time, suffered a
Arlie Slocum's last Wednesday, thc 1 Mispronounced Word*. Mrs. Frank stroke and hi* condition is serious.
following officers were elected:
Artistic interpretations, Mi*s
PLEASANT HILL.
Pres. Miss Alice Whetstone; Vice- 'French's Little Tot*.
------Pres.., —
Mrs --------------------------Velma Dem'ond;—
Secy..
....
Mr. and Mr*. Carl Tuttle have
Mr. and Mr*. Joseph Corrigan are
Mra. Chrtatlna
Christina VanderJagt:
VanderJagt; Trea*.,
Trca*. Ihgone to Baltimore.
Md.,
... to
. visit their building a large addition on the
Mrs. Nina Barry, and Flower BupL. I jon. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Tuttle. Jr., house on lhe farm recently purMr*. Allie Munn.
I *nd family.
I chased by them.
| Mr. Jaffee ha* moved hLs dry | Word was received by Mr. and
SOUTHWEST WOODI AND
I ™r- Jancc ha* moved hLs dry | woru was received by Mr. ana
i^v mS Orlffm Mra Eda. Tv- «&lt;xxU ilock
Kocher buiW- Mri ®«&gt;mour Jor,Un of AUAdlavtito
let and Mira E*ther £hXt of ing
of the
the death
deathqrd
"AuntManila" JorJoe.. north of the
.... Kroger .tore
| ,ot
! "Aunt
Loraine
1*
night dan of Urbandale.
Woodland and Miss Nevah Fariee
— - Welch
- the
- new
-Mrs. George Konzen of South
attended the Sunday Schoo) con- 111operator at the Bell telephone office.
venlion at the Methodist church in I Mr*. Clair Roach of South Ver- Bend. Ind., spent the week with her
. mon tv Hie underwent a major cp- parents. Mr. and Mrs. •».
R. w
J.. WilDelton. Tuesday.
wmMiss Glenn* Blocher and friend, erallon Friday at the local hospital, i Hams, returning home Friday.
Mr. Van Lent, of Holland came . Mr*' Rlc^*rd
-,1* .vt41tln* i Mr and Mra. Clare Williams and
Monday night, the former to spend ' **
”r# —
E-- —
E Vender
and children were Ml
In Allegan rilUAV
Friday
.--er.. ----- -------------- ----- .week,
__ .uT,-..
_______
_ couple 1
In Detrnlt
.; afternoon
____________
._____
Detro11on....
business.
a
the _____
latter_to
spend. a
The Misses Jean Bmlth and Jean
Mr and
Ir&gt; WMtbrook of
of days.
.pent he week end In Grand
hu 4l&gt;tfr Bnd hui.
Mr *nd Mra. Ellsworth Smith and Brown
*
Mr Bnd M„ gtephen Carter,
daughter and Mra. Hawkins of Has- 1Rapids with lhe Misses Doris Bette
Wednesday.
tings spent Bunday afternoon with 1and Anne Mayo.
Warner and Mrs. Gall, Mr ,ncl Mra Lester Raymond of
Mr. and Mr*. Cha*. Fariee and fam- Lykins
, Mra. Fred
were In BaUle Cwk Tues-4™,. H.pklns were Bundl^cte
Uy.
&gt;
j ..
her parents. Mr. and Mra. CUflon
NORTHWEST THORNAPPLE.
Mr. and Mra. Charles Mape&gt; are l Campbell'.
Oct. 22 Letter.
i
r*lBUv“ ,n Oh£'
, 1 Mr. and Mra Clare Williams took
The Parmelee A,d Society was
,’Y11 “wp throu«:‘
“pp«
held In lhe basement of lhe church &lt;er lhe body of Arthur Heck*thorn, p^t of the toww. Michigan BaturThursday with a good attendance. |FUneral services were held Monday d*y *nd Sunday, and also visited
The newly elected president, Mrs. ।afternoon al two o clock at the Hess friends near ML Pleasant. They
Harry Stimson, appointed her com- ।funeral home with burial al l*tke- . report the potatoes and beet harmltteez for the year, and for thc .vlew cemetery.
.
I VMl tn full swing.
.
chicken supper and rale to be held
The first Brotherhood meeting , Ed Bedford spent the past week
next month. Nov. 19th.
, was held Monday night at the com- at the home of hl* *l*ter. Mra. N.
Mrs. Murray Bchnurr and nephew.
Jackie Fowler, of Grand Rapids,
wer; Wednesday gueat* of her I,
brother, Earl Kerrnccn and family. I j
Mr and Mra. Herman Brown of i
Grand Rapids w«rre Bunday guests i
of their stater. Mr*. OU* Morgan, b
Mr. and Mrs Verne Thomas were j
Sunday dinner guests of Miss Flos- I ]
sie Wenger and jean of Grand Rap­
ids. Mr*. Mary Bldelman was also
o guest.
,
Mr. and Mrs Earl Kcrmnen en-‘i
tcrtalned Mr. nnd Mrs Hiram Oar-1
rett and Mr. and Mrs Jake Dotzcrt
Monday evening for supper, ll be|ng
Mr. Dotxert's birthday
Mr and Mrs Glenn Allen and I
son. Richard, and Scott Sherwood,
were guests of relatives in Grand!
Rapids Sunday.

THE YEAR’S GREATEST FOOD V

Sale1 bulk

tooot

NEW, FRESH, WHOLESOME BULK FOODS IN
NATURE'S PUREST FORM. NOW IS YOUR OP­
PORTUNITY TO HAVE YQUR FAVORITE HOME
COOKED MENUS.... SENSATIONAL BARGAINS
FOR|fAMILY FOOD BUYERS.

STOCK UP NOW FOR WINTER WITH THESE QUALITY
FOODS AT C. THOMAS STORES THIS WEEK.

ELLIS E. FAULKNER

CANDIDATE FOR RE-ELECTION AS

REPRESENTATIVE IN THE
STATE LEGISLATURE

ON THE REPUBLICAN TICKET
YOUR SUPPORT AT THE ELECTION
NOV. 3, 1936, WILL BE APPRECIATED

MANY DELIGHTFUL WAYS
PREPARING

Gold.o, Unpitud

A

U» in SaUd» and

Pastries, Delicious

PEARL,

AUCTION SALE

MEDIUM
or FINE

«■ 15c
PEAS
5C COFFEE
MACARONI “Lr"™ 3^17c
PEAS2»- 11C
EGG NOODLES E7 £14c
3 . 25c
RAISINS
cookies
FAMILY CUP
GOOD GRADE
SANTOS COFFEE

SPLIT GREEN

Owing to the death of my wife, I will dispose of my house­
hold goods at public auction, at my residence, 323 W. Ap
pie street, Hastings, on

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31*
‘.'Winter’s coming

DRY PEAS It 13e
Wil ’P
LB. 5*
IBIW/Imi of
NAW BEANS 17C
COCONUT 110‘
■
I
3-25"
B
TAPIOC
2“ 15c
FANCY BLUE ROSE

game
COATS GROVE.
. . .
Mn Mattie Kimble of Hastings
Tli'' M-nior mix&lt; r was in Id after visited her son. Floyd, and family
kchool Tuesday with a law attend- on Sunday.
• anc • from all cln
Mrs. H. A. Woodman and daugh­
ter. Ruth, were in Battle Creek
Saturday afternoon Marian Wood­
man
returned with them for the
xtas* ring* and hope to have them
tn a few weeks
The Birthday meeting was held
. । The football game with Pima will with Mn Alice Chase last Thursday
ROBINHUE PARK.
be played Friday nlKht at 7 jo In­ alM'KQpn with a good attendance. Oct. 22 Letter.
Wm. Kollar of Lowell was a caller
stead of Wednesday a* had been
low Barnum and Mra. E. 5. Tilomp- ।at thc John Kollar's Monday
scheduled.
.son
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Manker of Grand Rapids was
S Tiie music department will have Mra Boulter and the hostess.
a Bunday visitor of thc Geo Po­
Tiie Extension class held a meet- ;lands.
L-ghargc of the assembly Friday
ing
with
Mra.
Ola
Kimble
last
Fri
­
fcmornmg
day evening and secured some new
ASSYRIA.
RMnben
Mr and Mrs Harold Ca-c nnd
Mrs. Lucy Bamum. who had been
► family, who have spent the sum- a resident here for n good many
bimer at the I- A Hyde fanm arc years, died on Wednesday morning
Sinov'.ng this week to the Frank at her home here. She had been .
^Wilkes form of the Burroughs dte- In poor health for some time and
been
confined to her bed much of'
Klrict. which he has rented.
------- -----Mr nnd Mra Jay Cole attended thr 'time She leaves _______
a husband |
a'thr funeral of their uncle. Max nnd son and a circle of other rclalives zr.d
nnd frier.i;.
friends. Fur.«ra;
Funeral service* ,
■Smith. of Dowling
tlvc;
r Mrs. Doris Warner ot Detroit, who wcr? held at the house Saturday
&amp;ipent last week with her parent*, morning and at B o'clock at the
!

SPLIT YELLOW

4 &lt;

ea

LIMA BEANS is 12c

gets

family

SALE STARTS AT 1:30 O'CLOCK.
Good rpund oak 8 ft. dining
table and 6 good leather
covered choirs.
Large leather rocking chair.
Arm chair. Several rockers.
Sewing machine.
Library table.
Small round stand.
Oak hall rack. Large mirror.
Large davenport. Sideboard.
Kitchen table. Wall shelf.
Medicine cabinet.
Serving table.
Wood bed, springs and mat­
tress

plenty

of Highland! Dairy

Grade

A

milk.

It

helps keep them fit

by building up their

resistance, and I get

bettor results when
I use it in cooking
and baking."

High in Crasm Content. Raw
or Paitaurirad. Pt. 5c; Qi.

Nothing

Phone 2651

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hggtingi

HEAD LETTUCE

DEWEY REED, Auctionoer..
CLIFFORD HAMMOND, Clerk

6c

ICEBERG

Brown Sugar, 10 Ib*. 47c
Granulated

10 lbs. 50c

POTATOES

HALLOWEEN PARTY ITEMS
MARSHMALLOWS
14c
u 10c
CHOCOLATE DROPS
BORDEN’S CARMELS
12c
CRACKER JACK FALSE FACES PKG. 4c
2 £2' 25c
CANADA DRY
PUMPKIN FINEST FOR PIES* 3N^?25c
PUMPKIN PIE SPICE
7c
PEACHES ,s L?Jc£NS 2
“5c
SALAD DRESSING CREAMY QT. 3c
QT.
PICKLES
SVWT AHO MIXED
5c
QT. JAR
OLIVES FANCY QUEENS
5c

u s-n.1

29c

LIPTON'S TEA
YIUOW LA«U

23'I

45’

SUNBRITE CLEANSE

('.THOMAS St&lt;
WIST STATI STtllT

peat

HUSKIES ~&gt; 11c
ROYAL Kt{£35c

BEN BLAKNEY, Prop
323 W. Apple Street.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

10 us 15c

ONIONS

Small drestsr with large oval
gla». Commode.
Cedar chest. Dresser.
Iron bed and springs.
2 feather beds, goose feath­
ers. 7 pairs curtains.
2 good 9x12 rugs.
Several small rugs.
Floor lamps.
5 burner Easy Way kerosene
stove. Ironing board.
Quantity of cooking utensils.
Quantity of dishes. Trunk.
Wash tubs. Jars.
Garden tools, shovels, etc.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.
romovod until Mttlad for.

lbs

Sss

doesn’t bother mo.

I sec to It thot my

BANXn W

�mr

wastimm binntr, twub&lt;day.

—i^—aa-j m, . ।

COMSfrikltton and

nf

Outdoor Notes countlH-

vflfl

nV

-zlN»
eras

October m.

ini

——- duction refiorted at 49.679 barrels of ] the buck on the Town Corner farm ' water as hue ns 15 minutes, some nations due to Mr. Hoover's nego'°° daUJ’- The *e,L&lt; completed dur- five miles northeast of Mason while students of anlmaLs say.
,n| lh* elght-month period covered hunting pheasants in that vicinity.
.
»
Yet the war debt problem was not
,
by the report were drilled in 35 Conservation authorities are wonThe northern tip of lhe lower his baby. Mr Hoover was forbidden
derlng « it was one of the deer nerin»'a and mur-H
the unner by Congreu to make reductions In
------------------------------• . •
which escaped from the state game peninsula was covered by an ancient the debt, with the co-operation of
1
1-Farm near
wveral
L...... .
.
Mr. Roosevelt, which he sought,
| yeart ago. (eoloifi.su *ay.
A total of tTi new ol) wells was ing Ingham county, less than a
• • •
certain reduction* might have been
rompleted In Michigan between Jan. dozen miles from lhe capital buildThe steelhead run is pn in Pent। traded for concession* of stabilised
1 ahd Sept- 1 with an initial pro- ing. Matt Keenan of Lansing saw water lake and fishermen are troll- 1
world currency, world, disarmament,
i ing for them with spoon hooks. Stvand trade concessions proposed to
1 e-ral good-size steelhead trout have
1 aid the farmer. Mr Hoover had long
। been taken, one being reported at ■
before election been negotiating
|g pounds. Tiie special fail season.
■ Continued from page 4. Sec I)
11 for the taking of this specie* of 1
cooperate. Might nut the shambles
11 trout in the lakes and streams des- ! •ummer of 1932 and that in all lhe of Ethiopia and Spain and immi­
Illgnated for the purpose 1* open to" leading countries a very slow but nence of Russian intervention have
L and including Nov. 30.
. ...
been avoided along wilh (11.000.000 Thls upturn
upturn persuung
perauung tn
In Europe.
Europe, 1000 *'c,r dl'bt default now a -matter
• • •
Tnu
.... Mr.
... Sullivan,
— .u
------- .u_tiie
. last
. of history.
■ Michigan commercial fbhermen say*
through
Will Ob'erve a legal holiday on • quarter of 1933 was "done to death " I Mr. Roosevelt did not use his con­
Whitelbb next month to give theu in the United Stales. Today in spite trol of lhe Lame Duck congress, hi/
I species a chance to rpawn and re- | of our asserted prosperity according influence with Mr. Garner lo check
I planish their supplies m lhe Great to thc latest authentic statistics, we Hie publ.cation of R F C- loans, re­
I
Some spawner*. both white- | stand sixth ot the major nation*, in quested by the fine democratic di­
। fl'h und lake trout, are taken by world recovery.
rectorship of that Invaluable insti-'
■c-ommerclal fishermen a» a rule |
Sullivan h conclusions tally tuUon. Tiie result of continued
•Just
iLL-t l^fnrr
-inrl after
nfl^t rlrrt»H
..nenn. with
.....
.
...
before and
closed seasons
Mr. Lippmanrt*.
The
so- publication was the closing of 1000
Under lhe law ti-bermen taking' called btmxmy |unlc of 1933 war banks &lt;prrlude,to panic) involving
I such fish mu-t preserve and terr&gt;,‘ psychological in nature.
a
few lhe security of millions of people
J.he
‘hem 10 I। “
■n
day*
ui .er r-.CMSFie au .u
nt rauuseven
Roosevt-n
■state hatcheries for incubation and ; cla&lt;e(t lhe Ull(1^ w p,r cent of Roosevelt did not endorse.
DraDACatlon mirnn-es ftowral ^f'lhem were
....
drcte7;d solwni
..
. Lud
. re­
A* time advances! lhe president
hatcheries ,»1 be receiving add I- opened. But in the interim tie no- elec.'s pre-election radical associa­
I tlonal suppiie' nf lake trout as well, ijonai government had a**erted con- tions were more and more in evi­
■a, some whitefVh eSgs. It Is expect- Uol- t¥cf phluw oI lhL, wa, u re. dence. Propaganda favoring dicta­
I ed. early in November.
—
- • ui a.e
versa)
Hoover policy. The torship and soft money wav not
I
"Michigan State Forests." a three- pre.vs *;ate* that bonks are obliged frowned on by him.
j to buy uusernment bonds, against
On August..29 1932 Mr Henry A
I1 reel motion picture, will be rewhich they issue bunk credits to re- - Wallace advised George N Peek that
I, leased by the education division, de- ,
Ulr |fU,r„lIWIU_p.u,llu&lt;ri
1 tUu.ir.-i- the government—promise^ । Mr Tugwell seemed to have lhe in­
I £f‘r,,ne,nt ot c®*’'rn'*l'on- Nov. 15. ; to' pay 'founded
upon
promLses
to
----- -- '
----- --------*~J Side track and that hr wus against
Tne picture wiU be placed in the
lr. ?uch proportion a* to jeop- -'honest money '
nCI’o'1
Ubr*ry *nd
u‘- »hote Vandal .structure
On January 5 1933 Mr Tugwell
l
•&gt;“- "*u™. Th* 1T.0M0W n« 1 said to Mr. Hand, legardltig the ccopuUL UMKtalV Ita-.CTU ol,
&gt;uch .
hUtl„cu,d I nomlc situation. "We should worry
i
Iro!n l[lt lia.«».w».&lt;xio Bros, or I about anythUig but renabUita'.lng
with . plcUM-Ul huiory ol Michl- lucp , maucr ol Uw New Del debt tiie country after March 4 Hr klated
,M&gt;.
but *bo rhpo. pnwnl
u„.oa,„ v, thl
,ded I Uli* iripoiLsibiilty would be placed
•
.......
.«»&gt;»»
wu., to
UV.IU.U
lores!
n™.,.mcnr
pr.rlk.r
„„ pay* a „
K of uthis nu- in Hooter„ lap. The banking sy»7’ l aebl w
wno
debt
! scenes in state forests and
and the
the .lure-j —
Tne average citizen. Even if tern w^ulil probably collapse, ful­
various ways in which lhe state for­ repudiaUon
ler----------an embargo on thr yellow
or inflation should be
ests now are be In ( utilised.
re.-orted to. thr average tiUren chips (doing uwuy with gold stand­
.
evtr.lually would pay both In mater- ard). suspension of specie payment*
a 27, con^‘l,ed
««*» ot
ial values and in coin of freedom,
and tefiailon (inflation' it necesdepartment of conservation are, „
steadily filling up with rifles and ■,
downward trends
Mr Tugwell was once dismissed
shotguns forfeited by individuals ,roIn the Maine and national e.rcby president Roosevelt after lhe
who
violated me
the cunscrvauwi
conservation laws
laws I।
®&lt; ----‘“2unrelieved
niiv vwtavcu
,,
;
- by
/ the
;;
* during September and the early &lt;^l**olh:Urd reaffirmation* of the charge ot communistic activities
we
t made yhy was he dismissed?
_»
-------- nfesldent-elect
ol his campaign
part ot October.
Seventy-seven
Bic'ldcr
Why wus he reinstated? Why was
„, V*
hunters -**u*cu
accused u.
of U.WUU,
shooting u
deer
or —
™ „^,csu ' 10 SOtind ,nonr&gt;- b“1'
lhe Soviet Russia recognized? So
pheasant or otherwise violating the »nced budget, etc.

*■'** ’ \

Public Forum

Your Cows Will Show a
if Fed n
Nice Profit

BALANCED
RATION

Farm Bureau
Service Dairy

oo
Cwt.

of all GOOD
concenlrutes.

Ask about it!

No By - Products

Mr. Rooseveltlhe
* control of
Lame Duck congress and his in­
fluence in world affairs was obstruc­
live. Hc turned the promised sup­
port of Mr. Garner towards ba lane
mg the administration budget into
opposition to the sales lax bill—
which was responsible for the con­
tinued depression law*
a
press
statement attributed to him. de­
cided France to default interest
payment on her war debt on Dec
Beaver can remain alive under 15. 1932—thUigs most ol the debtor

game
laws, surrendered
_ _______________
—their gun*
following arrest by conservation of! fleers during September alone. Unts redeemed by the original owners. a concession granted in extenI uaung circumstances, lhe firearms
are sold by thc department and lhe
I proceeds placed in lhe game pro­
, teclion fund, which helps lo finance
. conservation activities throughout
the stale.

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES INC.
PHONE 2118

HASTINGS

■

WINNERS IN THE
WORLD’S GREATEST ROAD TEST
ANNOUNCED BY STANDARD OIL

tract which verbally he reprerented
ROUTH THORNAFFI.E.
Millen at Grand Rapids Monday.
as having the approval of his fath­
Mr. and Mn. David Strong and
er and received (5.000 In cath a* a
The WPA workers Saturday re­ Mr. and Mn. cyrU Bateman of Ea­
binder. And under a -gentleman*, moved the remainder of tiie ma­ ton Rapid* spent Sunday with Mr.
agreement" incident to the written terials user! in conslrucUng the and Mn. Ernie Baleman.
contract he entered Into a plan lo bridge over the creek on Mrs. Olen
Mn. Bert Fancher and Mn. Or­
reorganize lhe country's air lines Nichols' farm to the place east of ville Pursell go to Hastings Tues­
Into a national monopoly. Wa* lhe Oates Comers where a bridge Ls to day for the first extension lesson.
president a party lo this transac­ be built over OUas Creek, near tiie
Mrs. Edward Rice. Mrs. Orville
tion? We know that for at least six home ot Mr. and Mrs Fred Marks.
Pursell. Mrs Torn Hoffman and
weeks from Feb. 2. 1934 lo March
Ben Parks has taken his slieep MU* Calms took tiie pupils ot the
17. 1934. the efforts of Elliott and
Durfee n hool to 'The Sleeping
til* associates dovetailed so closely
Beauty'* at Hastings Tuesday.
with (he administration's action.-, least ten of them have been killed
Mr. and Mn. Snerd Slone of
dial even cancellation of air mall v mangled by dogs while pasturing
Lake City and Mn. Agnus Pursell
2dntnrls on Feb. 9 1934 seems to
Haymond Bunn of Freeport j* of Battle Creek spent lhe forepart
have been aimed ot furthering,this
LMisUng
Robert
Garrett
with
his
.ci Mine.
ville Pursell.
Is the pre's. that beleaguered arm work.
■:.tadel of the people s rights, to 1 George Will-on and family ore
LENT, CORNER.-).
ulame for looking askance at James j moving into lhe home of Mr ano
John Lantzer of Plainwell spent
Roosevelt's business connecllcn.-^ Mr*. Jolm Carter from lhe Beu
lhe week
end al the Leland Ham,- —
-------------wilh lhe radio station that sup- | Nagel farm.
Mr. McConnell of MiddievtUe ha* mond home
pressed lhe Vandenbcrg-RooM-veit j
Mr. _.2
and ™_.
Mrs. ______
Arthur Paul and
debate—or for •■xclaimlng on the i just completed wiring tiie houses,
bam
ut&gt;d
mllkhou.se
un
the
farm
children
of
Kalamazoo spent baturwaste and radical nature of Mrs I
day night and Sunday wilh her sURoutevcll's Arlhurdnle. West Vir- j of Mrs. Ada Shaw *
Roberl
Walters
of-Middleville
is
ter
and
husband.
Mr
and Mrs. Lykl
{Utia project or her reputed interest 1
corn --------------------------for Mrs. Charles- —
B ■ Francisco.
in ihu- tugwi-llian resettlement al- •nuking -------arm pts as in tiie Jersey settlemeifi Johnson.
Mrs. Leland Hammond and son.!
.
...
Walter Orlffelh Is assisting with,
„ pi, given by
U7|
I Stuart, attended M
tiie
play
■nd------------Woods .Lake.
Texas .project-.?
Have we dictatorship or dynasty» tiie work un the farm of Ben Parks I the Civic Players. "*ne Slecptn&lt;|
ReaBer.
who is
rr^ployed
in
Yankee Beauty." at
Ki the
me Central
vciiubi auditorium
uuuirazi null)
Springs.
I at Hastings. Wednesday afternoon.I
STATE ROAM.
, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Crum spent!
( the week end at Traverse City.
I
let. M Letter.
। Arthur Fox of Kalamazoo spent!
•ct.uol wa*. field last Friday evening I •••= w. a- v,. uic*
« r* 1 .
u? week end with Paul Thomas. I
All enjoyed the program given bj *4arber at Milo on Wednesday Of- ■ •lhe
The
MLvses
Opal
Brearly,
Arlene!
leers' tor
year---are **
Mrs
..---------------------------- -Miss Crystal Thomas of Hasting*
"* the
,u‘ ensuing
*—------—
'r*
r.wuwBKn
w«v served ti'arvey Enzlan. president:
Mrs Recor and Jean Hammond motored]
Priedcakes K..U
and VVMCC
coffee were
by Mrs Viola Kennedy and Mr- Carl Hartman, vice-president; Mrs' to Remus. Mich..^Bunday and apent|
■has. McNulty, treasurer and Mrs the day with a former szhixilmalcJ
! MUs Bally Rankert.I
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Col-man vis­ iugene Morreli. secretary.
Little Jack Klinger had the mb- , Mr and Mrs. George Comfort. Jr .l
ited t e lull vea in, Grund Rapids
nursaay.
ortur.e U&gt; fall on a sharp stub by .of Kalamazoo spent Bunday witiJ
Thursday.
Homer Beckeris remodeling
hl* lhe roadside one day last week cut- the latter's parent*, Mr and MrsJ
*•. —
——
j
nou
w where &gt;»James
O Connortiv.K
lives 'ting
J ting a deep gash in his side and Marcus Hammond.
I laying him up for .several days.Olli ‘ Robrrl Butlrr of Battle Creek!
Jlmtnk- doing the work.
Mrs. D. Enzlan and Mrs 7
Mr and Mrs. Howard Cheeseman
*»«
«» m*i*^
of Battle Creek visited Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mr*. Leslie Enzlan and
James Sothurd Thursday
family at Bradley
:
Mr. and Mr*. Murle Reynolds and
HIGH BANK.
Misses Freda Scott. Dorothy La­ Mr. und Mrs Warren Cairn* sjtenl
Sunday
with
Mr
and
Mrs.
Chas
throp. Elaine Day. Merlyn Marshall
1
visited at the Michigan Stale Col­ Hudson at Vicksburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Enzlan and |
u
lege Friday as guests ol Mis* Dora
Day. Merlyn and Dorothy called children. Mr. . and Mrs. Millard I
an Edith McClelland at the St. Law­ Houser and Mr and Mrs. Lee Rey- I
nolds
’
rence hospital the same day.
..•nee
.7
. spent
*^7 Sunday with Mr. and
Mr ... .Mr.
u^-i, rl tuwi
M”" Ledie Enzlan at Bradley to:
Mr. and Mrs. Milo Keck of Bed- fjeln Mrs D Enzian celebrate her
ford and Mr. and Mrs. Claud Reids ■
ceworaie ner
birthday.
campaign
were guests Sunday at Fred Reid s.;
,
Mrs. Allie Burchett of Kalamazoo
Read pages 17 to 24 of the Octo­
Ervin Bates and family of Wood-1 ,penl Thursday night and Friday
ber Reader s Digest and tear for land visited Wednesday al Mrs with Mr«. Coityer and Mrs. D. EnAmerica Tiie assertions therein Leslie Adams' and Mra. Sarah Os- zlan.
1
I made transcend scandal, being sub­ troth's.
Onr school will hold a fair on j^?' n • 1
•.]
:
stantiated by documentary evidence
Earl Marshall ot Marshall spent a Friday evening. October 23.
fl
I\lUC Willi 1UC
nearly tilling eight columns. If lhe
1 chargi s made are not charges of few days with his mother. Mrs
DOUD UORNERS.
Th* Northeast Barry LAS
Mrs. Floyd Seeley of Pittsburgh
1 the rbargrs verbatim
surprised
Mrs. Daisy
Bergman I
Your friehds will tell
•
"Elliott Roosevelt made a contract and Mrs Victor Jones and children
"liursday.
wltn Anthony G Fokker to sell mili­ of Nashville visited Mrs. Frank
tell you that I am
Tom elemence and daughter of
tary airplanes to Russia detouring HawbllU Friday.
, Bedford visited at IL Bergman's
courteous, careful, and
around the Afm-rlcan embargo by
Mr and Mrs Elza Jansen and
camouflaging—ihe planes as com­ family and Mu. Clark Osborne of , Friday
anxiods
to serve you.
Elwood Holton of Battle Creek
mercial types
He wrote a letter, Richland vLsited at Mr. and Mrs.
(called on ills uncle and aunt. Mr
setting forth the terms of this con- Geo Hoffman's Sunday afternoon 1
Let me have on oppor। and Mrs Robert McMannls MonI day.
tunty to save you traf­
Mrs. Myrtle Hall and sons. Ken­
fic worries, parking
neth and Royst. and friend of Deproblems, and unnectrolt visited at Fred WYighfs and
John Hallock's over the ween end
eVfbry expenses.

JLLi

»n your next trip

Millions Will Want to
Switch to Amazing
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.
Brilliant New 1937 Dodge Captures
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1,200,000 MIDWEST MOTORISTS
JOINED IN SEARCH FOR

DURFEE.
■ The East Baltimore Aid Society
I was entertained by Mr. and Mrs
Ralph Striker Wednesday
There
। was a large attendance and pro­
ever* were (6 25
The P T. A- meeting at the Dur­
, fee schoolhouse Friday evening was
very enjoyable.
Recent guests of Mr and Mrs.
Jack Moore were Mrs
Ambrose
Marble of Eaton Rapids. Mrs Edna
Grlbbons of Battle Creek. Maury
Moore of Freeport and MLss Marian
Walters of Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. William Hoffman
attended the funeral of Dell Mac-

THIRD PRIZE WINNER
*25059 in Cash
w, T. HENDERSON

LOUIS SCHNEIDER
RFD No. 4, Clinton. Mieeouri

MISSOURI

heul rooking lop. finished
in a satin black gun metal
Circulating heat in oven
provided by oven side lin­
ings which also furnish ten

A W. Brtnn. IBn

oven rack elevations. Du­
plex grates fnr wood or
roal. Exira length for

krlaiKXsl
i. Maori. tklMiMK St.. Hjnxraih
■ McCord. M3) N Mcndxn. Induna

DOROTHY WRIGHT AND RENE BELLINGER

D. A. HIKSCHLER

FRANCIS J. PFLAUM
2943 N. 47th Ave.. Omaha. Neb.

IOWA

Hvv. I Fredtuwiul. Newell
Wilbur II lluduw. R R :
V. J. Hara-fen. Tn . N
IH Kurt Jara&gt;c*e. 2216 (j
H. V. Mum, 2SI7 Kmoay
ll £ ScUvabuech, 350 Ma

TEN PBIZE WINNERS
$50.00 in Cash

tinned &lt;-np|»er reservoir.

"Such unart, racy, beautiful tintt," eaya Dorothy Wright of New
York’a younger eocial eat..."Such iuxurioua interior a... you Juat
can't blame anybody for wanting to ewitch to Dodget"... And her
•y thaf

E. J. TERWELP
1625 Chestnut St., Quincy, III.

LEONARD V. OKSANEN
3203 N. 33rd St., Milwaukee. Wie.

I

NEW MONOGRAM RANGE

I rule1 »lrr« e
Chart™ A Hell. Marahall

INDIANA

FIVE PRIZE WINNERS—*100°° in Ci»h

GF.ORG!. B. WEITZEL
Mi Mark I wain, Detroit, Mich.

(AT THE TRIO CAFE)

Nallxe. IH2*» y.lth

/.

FIRST PRIZE WINNER—’1,000®° in Cash
W. J. FINN, 245 W. 38th,St., Indianapolis, Ind.

SECOND PRIZE WINNER
’5000® ln cash

BUS DEPOT
Phone 2137, Hostings

Earl Hartl

. . .TRUTH ABOUT GASOLINE MILEAGE
• The following persons not only complied with all rules and reg­
ulations ol particifiation in "The World's Greatest Road Test." but
also, in lhe opinion of lhe Judges’ Committee, submilled the moat
valuable itatementt of 75 words or less on the subject of “What I
learned about gasoline mileage while taking part in The World's
Greatest Road Test " The Judges- Committee was composed ol
ProfcswY Uoyd D. Ilerrold of Northwestern University. Chas. M.
Hayes, (resident of the Chicago Motor Club, aid Charles C. Merz,
member of the Society of Automotive Engineers.

foj

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NEBRASKA

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Ke.
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KANSAS

NORTH DAKOTA

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give you comfortable heat
in severe weather. Large
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SOUTH DAKOTA

175 PRIZEWINNERS
$10.00 in Cash
LHvta WaCwlJlJU W/*K Vurt. Nabr.
Mn Feolm Waebw (riM-IMh S* .
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CALIFORNIA

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TWENTY PRIZE WINNERS
$25.00 in Cash

WISCONSIN

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ILLINOIS

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MR. AND MRS. ROBERT CATON PALMER

economy and durability
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Room Size—
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MINNESOTA
rith record-breaking economy... the new 1937

WYOMING

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE
TILEPHONI 2531

OP

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POSTED

AT

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STANDARD

6lAllRS*

STATIONS

HASTINGS. MICH.

�THS BAITINGS BAHNtB. THCBSPAT. OCTOBM *1. 1»M

Weekly Farm Review
The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers
By WILLARD BOLTE
LAYING CAGM.
In making a survey of four large
poultry plant* in illlnoia—where ail
or a large part of the layers are
kept In batteries—Poultry Tribune
learned that egg production coat of
production, and amount of labor
per hundred hens was about the
same for those in cages as tor those
kept on lhe floor. The chief advan­
tages of the battery plan were found
tn lhe greater number ot hens that
could be kept In a given floor space
•nd thc greater ease of detecting
and removing non-Isjers and sick
hens.

rled a strap and a snap to bold the
lantern. The lantern can thua be
harm's way and the light spread*
much farther.
BULL F«N.
Xi you have a bull that enjoy* try-

pen. you can pul a stop to It by
installing one of these electrically
charged fence wires Inside of thc
regular fence —■Capper's Farmer.

day.
I Ed. Elmpeon of Grand RapidsJ ed Mra. Letter Preston's grandson
Mra. Arthur Johncock left
for called on Mr and Mra. L- R. John- Kenneth Cavanaugh who is atUndChlcago Saturday to visit
her son Bunday.
•— •* - "
,j.
and Mrs. Ray Barton and lit*
lit-’ Mr. and Mra. I*. J. Matthewe
daughter a few __
days.
| Mr. nnd
Mrs
Ldter Monica
Monl"“ and son
wm • ■'
p *.-on
att nt
DjiniH* snont
Ant- -, Rpe/U the wMk end in Debolt and
Hc
o! Grand Rapids,
spent Satthe Judges in the Basset hound field
Mr*.
Ar-'urd»y
evening
with her slater and, Farmtagtan viailtag relaffvec.
Charles, vial ted Mr, ;and
-----------— —
.------- ,---------- ----------------------trial* Bunday.
... Creek.
u Friday, family.
*i- ....
Mrs. .L »
R. Johnson.
...i...
।i The MLses Nora. Minnie and Lil­
Mr. and Mrs. Ix&gt;u|* Coleman. Jun­ thur Borm at Battle
Mr. and Mra. R. E. Plata and
Mr and Mrs. Arnold Dunning of1. han Matthews are vbltlng relatives
ior and Virginia at Grand Rapids
Kt Friday with Mr. and Mrs. daughter motored to Flint to vhlt Kalamazoo were lhe guests X)f L. R 1
_______
frCsUw^-'endfa^-'
^
s^d
so&lt;Ha^£
i&gt;U
rday.
■
Mr. and Mn. Ira Blawsdn and fam- Johnson and son. Harold. Saturday.
. Walters.
a couple of
days
last W
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Teller mo­ Uy for
*and^Ww.
M.d
J,*Dibbie
and i
BANUELD.
' W
M* f»Uter. IxaMr.Raymond.
and Mra and
M J.
and I Mrs Ida Arnold and Mrs. Nellie,
tored to Kalamazoo Sunday where
Mr.Dibble
and Mra.
P™10”- °J ^&gt;plf &lt;-*rqve
Raymond, and Mr. and ““
zmiimiu «w*u m**_ ~ -­
they were guests of their son and son, srd
j^B*MHitaeira^enHoward Summer* of Detroit tpent
tpent|, Wyckoff of Battle creek spent last 8U
Bunday
the week end at their cottage.
Thursday at the Oco. Wickwire tertatned
Mr ai al dinner Thursday eve­
Mra. Raymond Blakslee of Des home
ning in honor of their guesta, Mr.
--------, Mr Mrs
nnd MrH cunorrf cooper of
and Mrs. Clarence Sisson were thc I ---------Motaea-- ia risltlng c.
her
mother,
I Hopkins and Mrs Howard Parma- and Mr; J W. chandler and daugh­
former'* brother and wife. Mr. And Martha Replogic.
| lee and daughter. Clara, of Way­ ter Marilyn Jane of Mbhawaka,
Mr*. Forrest Bisson and daughter, I
-------------- • ••-----land spent Bunday with Mr. and Ind.
Diana, of Tenting
I
DOWLING.

OaakUl Beauty."
lock ttwwZtnMky
aakooi &lt;o 1
seeMlaa
"Sleeptag
aftarwoon.
‘ Jacquelyn Thomas is chairman of
lhe program Friday momtal.
I
There wa* do achool last Thura- .
day and Friday a* Mbs OaaklU at­
tended the tazUtute in Grand Rap-

The fourth grade pupils are workig on a dairy farm project.

to Battle Creek to Ute W future,
Mary Oamphtar,

STONY POINT.

OVIUN1 fee my taf. amd
Mr*. James Hammond and daugh- I Mrs. Mary Burrouglu
EAST There
GUN LAKE.
_____ _______
vu no school Thursday
Aiptaall has returned
M EGGH TO PAY______
_______ ter, Natalie, of Lanttaa and Mrs.1 ApCnl the past two yeai
■ ’— miioaMifc
our teacher attend­
Mra. Cora Parker and Mrs. James and Friday
r working a month near
PU1XET6 BOARD. Ajvta Huver of Grand Rapids wire | cr*viUe. Penn., is vialUn*
' Null were in Plainwell on basinets ed Die
Poultry men at Michigan State Bunday guest* of Mrs. Claude A. and old friends around Dowling thb Hickory comers.
______ __
__r....... r ]and
r_____
L,
—'* Exner gttwtaed Tuesday.
., .Mrs. Jennie
•
•­ Combs, son and
chUdren.
I week.
1
t
R*'
College point out the value of fall Hammond
MILK ODORS.
Mr. and Mra. Harvey Kenney and I
Fr(vd fitAn!.v of r&gt;. 1 &lt;he funeral of Mrs. Brunner in , ~ Halson
'
Castor of Kalamazoo daughter. Mr. Forest and M1M Myr- created by a
With the exception of wild onions culling when pulleLs are placed Into
cailed on Wm Crawford Friday
t tie Mead of Kalamazoo called on
01 Mr F'"'—----------- -- --------------------and one or two other weed*, most a laying house for winter by the
Mrs Wm
Crawlord and Mrs the B. J. Wellman's Bunday afterfact
that
for
average
prices
tor
eggs
of
Lansing
visited
Mr.
and
Mrs
weed odors leave the cows udder
and Mrs. Orllc Fbher
James Null called on friends and noon.
"BARBERS CORNERS.
within three or four hours after and feed it takes a total of 90 eggs Clair Teller, Saturday.
I Mr. and Mra. Claud^, Demond OURINE. ooata only a few
Hie P. T. A. is sponsoring a Hal­
Mrs. Roy Preston and son. Don­ relatives in Otsego Thursday.
they are eaten. When lhe datry,- to pay for the bird's feed for the
Walter Slater has returned after were In Lansing over the?week end. dally. Money returned If not
loween party for the young folks ald accompanied Mrs. Grace Brake
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
man 1* having trouble with off- year.
Saturday
night,
beginning
at
6:30.
Mrs Lester Preston and Vern Dc- spending two weeks at bis home in 1 Mr. and Mra. Bert VanderJagt tied, carveth A Stabtdna. Tho 1
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Marlowe of
flavored milk. Kentucky Experiment
■
Chicago.
; visited friends at Lowell last week. Store. Hastings. MJch.-Adv,
when
they
will
visit
thc
homes
in
Mott lo Lansing Sunday. They vliritStation recommends removing thc cessful winter egg production. In Grandville spent Bunday with Mr. the community where a light of
kiiu Mra.
mra. Lafayette
uniejciic Usbome.
wsuuriic.
- - ..........I- j.
.. —,I-------, ....
_
[IlP
---cows from pasture and confining addition to thc culling, the house and
Mr. and Mra Wesley Pew and »«ne
kind b displayed
on
the
must
be
clean
nnd
birds
should
be
them in the bam, dry lob or a clean
daughter of Hastings called on Mr* I porches, and receive a little remempasture, for several hours before free from lice, mites and disease.
Anna Buck and family Sunday eve- hrance.
Be sure the pulleu are free from-------each milking.—Southern Agricul­
ning.
Mr. and Mra Victor Sproul and
lice and mites, cull the birds care- ; ning.
turist.
___
_______________
____
_ ______
fully
and keep only
those
that____
arcI Mr.
**~ and Mrs. Wm. Shriber and daughters of Detroit and other loheavy and well developed. They I family of Hastings. Mr. and Mrs cal relative* attended a supper at
MOLES.
should show plenty of yellow color I Frank Shriber and Mr. and Mrs. thr Howard Stanton home Saturday
A correspondent of Kansas Fann-1
In beak and shank. Beware of pale Leo Barry and Norman spent Bun- evening, following lhe wedding of
er writes that a sure-fire way to get
faces, bleached shanks and ruffled j day with Mr. and Mrs. Emmet Don- Miss Madeline Stanton and Wllford
rid of moles is lo open a small hole leathers as they may be signs of ley and son of Big Rapids.
1 EULs.
In the tunnel, now and then, and worms. In case of doubt, open up '
“I've called lhe Home Lumber Company and they’re
The Ladies' Aid Society is fur­
drop in a little lye with a few drops
if |
a bird showing symptoms and n
CARLTON CENTER,
going to send up an expert lo ‘Winter Proof' lhe
nishing a chicken supper for tiie i
of waler added to make ll stick to
conditions arc not easily diagnosed.
The
Carlton L. A. 8.
will serve Bedford Eastern Star members nt
Thc
S.
the mole's feel. And a correspondent
house. We won’t be uncomfortable this winter."
call In expert assistance.
«an election
■“*
"
dinner
Tuesday, Nov. “3, the church Thursday night. About I
of Wallace's Farmer says that the
at
Carlton
Orange
hall.
Alb
are
55
of
them
are
expected.
same scheme will drive rats off the
cordially Invited.
*
--------------- «»&gt; ------------I
BOTH GOOD. BAD
place.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Marlow and
TO PLOW IN FALL.
MIDDLEVILLE.
Good roll -management, riddance son. Ervta. were in Grand Rapid., i । a stag game supper was enjoyed ]
BEES.
“/'in 30 glad—the children can play on lhe floors all
Straw-loft hives enable an Otta­ of pest* and fall plowing of sod can Saturday and attended the wedding by the Masons In their hall Thurs- |
day night With lhe additions of,
wa County i Michigan • bee-keeper go hand in hand If soil, topography of lhe latter's twin brother. Elton
over lhe house and I won't have lo worry about their
and use of the land are tnken Into
Mbs Hazel Calms attended the some chickens they had a splendid
to hold fils losses down lo 1 per cent
account, advise members of the en­ teacher*' institute al Grand Rapids meal, prefigred and served by mein- I
gelling colds from drafts /he way they did Iasi year.
in u region where 18 below zero Isj
bers.
Juat nice snappy winter weather. In tomology and lhe soils departments ■Hiuraday and Friday.
I know we’ll be snug as a bug in a rug this winter.”
at Michigan State college.
Chester Henney from Mt. Gilead.
Mrs. Isabelle Lx-ppcr returned
preparing for winter, he remove* the.
To kill off such pests as cutworms, Ohio, visited at lhe Kick home near from Detroit last week, where she
. hive top—lays two com cobs cto-m' wise on the brood frame—spreads a army worms and wire worms about Freeport, also at Ralph and Fred had been assisting m thc care of
. to winter over tn a sod field, it b Henney'o in thb community, dur­ .tick iclaUves.
piece of burlap over tiie entire top
Pythian post chiefs chib met with
of Die hive—and then puts on a good practice to plow under lhe sod ing the past week.
thb fall if thc field is to be put Into
Mra. MAl Bedford on Thursday A I
auptjy and packs ll full of chaff and
a cultivated crop In 1937, suggests
CIAJVERDALE.
very profitable meeting was enjoyed
f\ne Jtraw. Tar paper is then wrapRay Hutson, entomologist.
Special meeting of Cloverdale
Mr and Mrs Charles H. Whllpe&lt;f a*-ouud lhe hive—reaching from
Agreement with thb practice In Townsend Club Thursday. Oct. 29. ] more, of Muskegon Heights, were
thc'^bpttotn to an'Inch above the
tOR^and that lop Inch Is tucked In view of soil conservation U added at the town hall.
I the wxek end gue-.ts of lhe former's
with reservations by professor C. E.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ed.
Hunt
and
parents. Mr and Mrs. O D. Whit
before tiie hive top is put on. Thc
object of the corn cobs is to penult MU lai. head of the. soils department Thomas Prince were guests of Mr more nf Sherman street.
at lhe college. He agrees that thc
Mr and Mrs Vern Chav of J«ckthe bees to move across, ijm top of ’ loss of thc pests will help crops, but and Mrs. Arthur Shattuck of How­
ard City. Sunday.
son were Sunday guests of thr for­
tire brood frames.—Capper's Farrnadvises precautions. Level fields
Mra. Harry Owens and daughter. mer’s mother. Mra. Sophia Chase. I
' where soil washing will not occur Mary, spent a couple of days last and family.
1 can be plowed under and left in week visiting friends in Kalamazoo.
WATERPROOFING CANVAS.
rough condition to mellow. Earlier
Connie Jones of Kalamazoo spent
To water-proof binder and stack .' working
RUl.u.g in
III spring will
rii.t result, —
and
... a ,vw,aBj0 with
— *,i* lit*
*iiu|»l chia,
her gl
grandparents,
covers, mix 7 1-2 lbs. of crude oil.; the sod will have rotted to add tu ] Mrfew,days
and Mrs. Roy Pennels, retum- “STOMACH PAINS SO BAD
1 lb. of yellow beeswax, 1 1-2 lbs.
the
crop's
chances.
ing
wilh her parents Bunday.
I COULD HARDLY WORK”
of Bermuda asphalt. 3 gels, of gasoToo
often,
however,
farmers
with
There
will
be
a
Penny
Social held
oline and 2 gaLv of kerosene. This 1
8ays C. 8 Orooe: "After taking
rolling fields or operating tracts at the town hall Friday Evening,
will cover 40 •■•quare yards of can- ;
Dr.
Emil'S AdU&gt; Tablets lhe pains |
which have light soils inclined to Oct. 30. pul on by the young peo­
vas with one coat, which is usually
are gone nnd 1 eat anything" Try i
sufficient. Thc materials arc mixed blow get their plowing done in the ple's class
Thc Cloverdale L. A. S. will serve Adla treatment on our money back
hot by setting the mixing vessel In
washing ot Ute a public dinner at thr Mra Emma guarantee Reed's Drug Store, and I
hot water. Keep away from fire.— During winter
j
soU occurs, or the topsoil Ls blown Johncock home. Tuesday, election। B A LyBarkcr. Druggist —Adv
Wallace's Farmer.
i away, by heavy winds. Cover .crops
HORSES.
1
I on thew fl'eM-' ue
spring.
Steers and lambs arc nol thc only when the fields can be plowed and
critters that can turn roughage into seeded with less lou of soil,
dollars Last winter a Lake County ।
THREE CORNERS.
(Indiana* correspondent of Cap-/
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Sisson and
per's
Farmer bought
28 thin
_____ ...
horses
In North Dakota—carried
c
’ 'Mr. and Mrs. Al Hovey of Hastings
them through the winter on nothing spent Tuesday wilh the former's
but shock com and soybean hay s°P and daughter-in-law. Mr. and
that had been put through the • Mts. Clarence Bisson.
Mias Lottie Tueslnk of the Penroughage mill—and when spring , Miss
came they were In such fine flesh nock hospital staff was the guest
that lhey sold al a nice profit. The of Mrs .Clair Teller Friday after­
feed was ground ' together
on noon.
thc basis of n bundle of com to! Ur *nd Mrs. Leo Hammond and
each sheaf of soybean hay.
I Dicky Lee of Lansing were Thurs----------- , day afternoon guests of Mra. Claude
CHORES.
A. Hammond. Dicky Lee remaining
Here is an excellent Idea for the । for a longer visit.
safe handling of a lantern In the
Quests nt the Edd. Walters home
cow bam. A correspondent of Kan-' during the past week were Mr. and
sas Farmer strung a tight wire: Mra. Louts Everdecn and Chas. Mer­
over head behind the cows, with a ithew. all of Lansing.
loose ring on thc wire which car-|
Ralph and Walter Kidder are

Bering to Bo. cl Nice Watm. Wmie z

r &lt;
4

» ■

CALL US TODAY AND LET US "WINTER PROOF" YOUR HOMS

THE HOME LUMBER CO.

AUCTION

Investigate

SPEED QUEEN

Having sold my farm, I will have an auction sale at the farm two
east and one mile south of Hickory Corners, or nine miles
of Delton, See. 35, Barry township, known as the Henry W«™

WASHERS

THURSDAY,

Commencing at 1:00 o’Clock P. M., I offer the

Drive an

1 Studebaker
I it’s THE SPOTLIGHT CAR OF 1037
‘Wc emphatically believe that there is no belter
Woshing Machine mode ot any price thon thc
SPEED QUEEN, which sells for only $39.50, $49.50
and $59.50.

Sorrel mare, 8 yrs. old, wt.
1,500.
Bay horse, 6 yrs old., wt.
1,450.
Holstein cow, 8 yrs. old,
fresh.
Holstein cow, 6 yrs old,
bred Aug. 3.
Jersey cow, 6 yrs. old, bred
Aug. 5.
Guernsey cow, 3 yrs. old.
bred Aug. 30.
Guernsey heifer, 18 mas.
old, bred July 10.
O. I. C. sow and 9 pigs.
60 yearling Leghorn hens.
75 Leghorn laying pullets.

15 Buff Cochin laying pul­
lets.
30 White Wyandotte lay­
ing pullets.
Oliver mower, new.
Oliver dump rake, new.
New Idea manure spread­
er.
99 Oliver plow, now. *"
Oliver wagons, new.
2- horse cultivator.
1-horse cultivator. Roller.
16-ft. hay rack, new.
3- section drag.
Weeder, new. Stoneboat.
Double harness, now.
Platform scales.

DeLoval craam Mparator.
No. 12. Whool borraL
Water Mparator.
Coal brooder (tore, nc...
70 posts. 40 rods wire.
Corn. Oats. Grain bag*.
Crates. Milk cent.
Crocks. WhiHlotreos.
Shovels, forks ond other
small tool*.
II-ft. 3 x 12-ft. linoleum
rug.
Garland heating ttove,
No. 18.
Gray and white President
Kalamaxoo range, new.

The woshing part of this machine has only three
hardened steel gears which run in a bath of oil,
thus enabling it, in our estimation, to outlast any

Terms Cash. No Property Removed Until

woshing machine on' the market, and it will do your

washing os quickly and os cleanly as any machine

»M M MNW &lt;U F...

made . . . this wc can prove by hundreds of house­
keepers in this vicinity, who already have one . . .

Iwi CM w«h baill-ia warm air dWmWan •
Oily cm wM A Wornotic Hill Haldm a Wgrtf.
mUi pnd quiets
flM Bad kwdra. • fcadebdsrT CL t. Budoaf Nm oSea law liatf payms*.

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO.
HASTINGS

PHONE 2101

let us give you a demonstration ond prove what
we claim.

MILLER FURNITURE CO.
HASTINGS

PHONE.2226

CLAYTON
ROPRI

HENRY FLANNERY,

�TTTE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, IBM

'•OFFICERS’ SALARIES
NOT CHANGED BY BOARD J

BOARD CONSIDERS
ADDITIONAL ROOMS

a considerable share of the east of
tiite federal aid tltrough increased
cost of goods lhey buy. to the coat of
which has been added Hie 6 per
Superviiora Adopt Report of
j
cent which employers must pay on
Grand Ledge Hl-Y plans on its
their pay rolls. Rut neither farm­
tigate
and Give
Re­
Their Committee on
j
'
’’
ers
nor farm laborers will receive
regular meeting* for Wednesday
"Swine Time."
port Later
nights, Lm AubD. leader. Ken
Salaries
j -“awln
g Time,"
timCi inc
Swing
the new Fred As- |I We mentioned Hie excellent *ug- one penny of benefit. Persons who
do
nol employ any mate or female
Waggilt, a member, suffered a frac­
talre-GInger Rogers musical, ~
Is!
The supervisors’ committee on ! taire-Ginger
tured ankle txme in thc game Fri­ salaries made their report to lhe I more generous to those who eager­ gestlon made by Attorney Kim 81g- labor will likewise help maintain
day with Bast Lansing.
ii'YJ'lCT'uu'Ytaik.Ia.id
P«U . •" 10 ""
01
uuh this fund through Indirect taxation,
board fixing the AmOUnL* to be paid l»
■"•ll
nhnl,ln.fnn:^&lt;1 nalr
,__________________
Quit* apart from politics, the peo- city which was booming ten years unles* you have good schools for
________by
caused
increased cost of _____
goods
Eaton Rapids Hl-Y is helping with to Hie county officers. Tiie report
lhey buy. which Increase 1* passed &lt; P'c of Kama* feel that lhey are ago. issued cash warrants only about everybody.
Uw churches and high school In wa* adopted as follows:
on to them by the employers of la- ' being unjustly maligned by Lhe ; Mu.
.i,
.nn ...
Kansas school* also stand the tert
» Youth and Adult Forum fur
....*2,000
Probate Judge
bor. Employer* and their employee* ! Democratic
National Committee,
•unday. November 22. afternoon and
tuxes were attributed after Hie (un&gt;—■&gt; a •
Probate register ... .... 1.000
The urgent need of such rooms was will jtay lhe cast. The employees will | which- L* sending out stori.s to lhe
evening. MXu Ione catton of Lan­
rhytiinu of “The Way You Look . ____ ___,
June period, these warrants would be
Prosecuting attorney .... 1.500
...
______
stated fully in the
Banner______
lustnot escape paying. Tiie employers i effect Duel /our hundred school
sing will give an address at tiie I County clerk
.. 2.000 | Tonight.” "Never Gonna Dance." week. The board gave eonaldera-1 will pas* theirs on to lhe public, house* in Kansas were closed and takep up und cash warrants UsUed governor. Is 3.7 per cent. Kansas
Pick Yourself Up' and the "Waltz tion to the matter and appointed i There are 26.000.000 employed per- | Hut eight thousand students were drfllng July. August, and Septem­
county clerk employee ... 1.000
I has only 12 per cent of her popuHaatlngu Y groups have been
Then lhe sciwols would go
Register of deeds ... ... ”2.000 I In Swing Time," ul! by Jerome Kern, a committee lo Investigate. That soiu in tills country who will pay ' without schooling. That 1* one of ber.
oack to time warrant ba*u When ,aUo? who canno1 r’fa.d or wrlu’
County
treasurer
...
..
2.000 | who scored this picture.
committee repoited that, in their' the percentage we hereafter men-Itbe cases where lhe facta don't back to lime warrant baste. When
Kit. from the Methodist church. I
Treasurer clerk hire . ... 1.000
i
judgment,
two
upstair*
rooms,
totion.
which
will
be
taken
out
of
M
Hie.
truth.
Il
Is
true
that
many
uary after the December tax period.' rh^n*
t
Cwwh Bennett and Mr. Brozak as-1 School Commissioner .. . 1.350
* General Died al Dawn." gether with suitable toilet facilities: their wage*, as the act provides No 1 schoolhouse* have been closed ’ in the warrant* again would be taken
fa^Sad^M re.
s|sl with games in the gym. The i.
&gt; School Commr. clerk hire
an
meeting is each Tuesday evening I"
*«din
h
f th
The awakening of China’s teem­ And proper heating of lhe rooms.'old age retirement pension will be Kansas, poasibly 400 But they have up and cash warrant! Uiued for a
School commr. mileage ..
ing million* to battle against age- would involve an expense of about I paid until the laborer has reached been cloied not becameof financial month or two. when lhe schools
5?*' W
y„.hoo|
I Drain commr
Barry and Eaton counties have
old oppression Ls lhe basis ot a *1000 It would seem osIf the board ! the age of 65 years. If he should difficulties, but because of cansoilSheriff. 2.000
ought to authorize suchun expend!-1 die before he reaches the age of 65 Nation
Consolidation
ho* been
Ugen assigned 45 delegates for lhe;
1
thrilling
romance
o!
Intrigue
and
rant basis. These time warrants
“f .
! Sheriff.* mileage. 500
lure.
hl* estate will receive 3 1-2 per cent caused by two things: first, good drew 6 per cent Interest. The bankAnnual conference ot Older Buys, t
n
300 | adventure. "The General Died nt
Matron at jail
.. . .
------------m , lump sum on the total wages he
road*, which make It possible to
Dawn." wilh Gary Cooper a_- a dash- i
. 1.200
Undcr-sherlff
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
| ha* received up to that time as transport children euslly over long- ers liked them. But Uie.^ash basis !**•”.
ing soldier-of-fortune who links his 1
Charlotte Hl-Y and Girl Reserves j Deputy sheriff, not exceed 1200
law has destroyed that soil snap “
Mr'
Clara
Wilder
of
Battle
Creek
shown
by
the
government's
book*
.
er
distances
than
formerly,
and
v..ua
wuucr
U.
iwuc
urcea
government'*
booksdistance*
man
are making plans for some observ*!1 3 members of poor bd .. . COO | fate with the oppressed, and with
toy the bankers And now. wlten a ‘.J**"!?
viMt'.nw
her
daughter.
Mrs
FranI
--------------u&gt;
n..,
i..
..m
I
m-nnrt
in
u.-»
nf
&gt;■&lt;«
'
**
visiting
her
daughter.
Mrs.
FranI
g
ep
t
a
t
Washington.
But
he
will
second.
In
the
western
end
of
the
------»&gt; nmiririiriju. uut lie will.---------- •
••••
ance of the Week of Prayer. Nov. 8- । Clerk hire, poor bd .
650 ' beautiful Madeleine Carrol) as they cis
Cis Gorham
Gorham and
and husband
htlsbnnd.
rA»lvn none of
nt what
.&gt;» the
.... employers 1 sl
stale
in what Is known
IrnAwn as
a« the
Ilia du»l
rinut taxpayer pays n dollar in Kansas, "c
receive
ate In
I 3 road Commr* .
WK) i woman whose charms are used by
u
Mrs Richard Laubaugh and son. ■ pay in. which seems unfair to u*. i bowl lhe population has moved out.
a scheming war-lord to destroy him.
*46.500.000.000 was taken from | Janitor
1.100
Russell, and Mis* Evelyn Newland | Beginning January 1. 193?. every | ®° ^**1 while many schoolhouse*
honest business by gambling and j Probation
law came at least 4 per cent of evJ*
and
officer
attended the teachers institute at employer of labor must deduct, at; have been abandoned, virtually no cry tax dollar went lo pay Interest ।
! Henry Fanda-Fat Patterson
,n .¥* ^a****1 e*en remotely aflotteries in 1935.
This Includes
360.
Friend of Court .
— —
a -«
—— —
—.i. «1 _
— centI Irhiirtren
lhe
end
of —
every
month,
per
children nr*
areri«ni»d
denied .-&gt;.^1
school privileges, on time warrants.
in "Spendthrift.'' Gr-&lt;nd Rapid* last Thursday and &gt;*
J’7Un,&lt; lb*
“hTupunch boards and chances on qullta.1 The board voted *760 to be divid- i
•
The picture1 has Henry Fundn. Pat Friday.
of
the
total
wages
of
each
employee
'
Tht
official
record
show*
that
jn
i...
.u
.
j
t
,
The
Democrats
have
unfairly
taken
—Christian Herald.
I ed equally between lhe register of Patterson and Mary Brian In lead­
Mr and Mrs Cecil Wald, of Rock­ which have been paid during that ] 1535-36 school year, only three out
Moreover, the Landon provisions., lh&lt;. racll about r(&gt;n*olidated school*
which put teeth in lhe Kansas bud- ind ttailAteT .b^i
«h£|nnswru ninTRir-r
I dcedi *nd U,l! 0,d
of" ...»
ing roles ana »...
tells the story of a
month
Thl* comes directly from ot Hie
school* In the stale of
&gt;,
B u
, flee for clerk hire. The matron of .
millionaire tilavbovy who find to ol iu-r (Mtrenls. Mr and Mra. Harry
get law. required a definite educa- j house* and have twisted their meantional budget submitted to lhe peo- '
iwi.tea tneir mean
| lose twenty-three millions to find | Clem
ditBcultie*. These three
Allegan spent, the week end at the
for prlioner.s and tramps, and i lhe right girl With the running of ; Bert McKlbbln had the mlsfor- 1 per cent tax on hi* wages will be nanclal
.Tt T**1,w I y““ “»■&gt; 1“«
"Ui&gt; r.1* or
paid by the employee also by the ein- “hoot* had a tola! enrollment of
home rf
al cornnit.rclal rate, for
of the
lhe tatter*
latter’s narenta.
parents. Mr
Mr. abp
U.. ,u„„y
„„ o, ,„m
the Kentucky Derby as a part ot the tunc to loose a colt recently and ployer for u period of three years— 'nln’’ popUw These nine pupil* «hoc! boor^llnder u&gt;r
and Mrs. John Darby.
I
Sunday
he
lost
a
horse
, laundry work she may do for pris- plot. ’’SpendlhrUt'' Is a comedy­
1937. 1938 und 1939. Beginning in ;h**’* been re-enrolled in olher
Fi«d Keech nnd Mrs. Nellie Mat- January. 1940 the laborer will have I school* and given bu* transportsromance.
M
P 5
per rem ol bu-r.ey
tle Creek (pent Saturday with her !
.
iriww. w Bjule cn»b w«e Bun°», I ...
Poord, and lh&gt;n Ule Anl,ri,al&lt;
and
1-2 per cent deducted from „„
hit Uonpamu. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Nor- .
W 1° the county clerk reg„umb„ ol lollrg, g^_
------- -------. guests ut the (ormers sister und f pny
yie employer must also pay ' There are record* where Kanaa* ^UKlMU ro bu, trill, .nd ndieu
later uf deeds and county treasurer
»U, ~
luride
uato ut
m proportion
proportion io
io population
popuUUon in
In
"Grand Jury’ presents Stone, as husband. Mi ;u&gt;d Mrs
Francis 1 । |.2 p«.r cent on each employee’s. teacher* have been employed and The bo*rd niuri
Our tint snow storm Ls here this!ls 10
ol a11
Tbeu ,cei “re
.
~ ol ■IU i| uaica
budifel• “
...111
demonrlrorin, the
rile Kansas T^L
vond that
.ViT of New
an
average
citizen
who
smaiAies
Gorham
;
jxi
y.
thc
same
payable
each
month
paid
wages
for
a
full
term
ot
school
।
p»i,.
inv
xune
pajrauw
racn
niumn.
:
•
—
«■
।
K,
uctnonsiraung
fur
beyond
(Maid»y)
morning
tnI° thc counly Ueasury
iwmaayi morning.
i Ul p**
|w fwfj
racketeering In his City on ids own
Children.
grandchildren
and I That will
**111 continue for the vear*
in Western
WesternKansas
--------- 'In lhe dust
* - ‘"Cl that Kansas school taxes go yorg or uie seaboard states and
year* I «Ul
cul ln
&gt;,
....
.4
&gt;
1
n
.........
'
liztu
I
u
lisrw
nnt
.lo.l.
m.
I
*._
1
Of
K
all
SUS
seh(MlL
k
.
*
.......
....
■
.....
hook.
Tiie
theme
of
the
film
is
great-grandchildren
gatin-rvd
at
tiie
for
Kansas
school'..
1940.
41
undi42.
Beginning
January
'
b®**
where
not
a
single
pupil
wiu
an any criminal work or any other
; with all these things have anything
wor*
mr the
inc county.
ununy. emphasized by lhe (oct that Stone I home ot W H OIL. Sunday to help 1, 1943 the /employer und the ern- ’•ncolted during the entire year,
work ne
he may
may douufor
। wrlously'wrong with lhe Kansas
He Ls allowed mileage of *500 und , Is forced Into bls daring action be- him celebrate his birthday
The ployec will tuch pay 2 per cent of! During the Landon admllilslrutlun.
employe's
wage&gt;^._
Into this
also lo retain fees tiiat may be paid ■ cause his fellow citizens on r« grand ; guests Included Mr. and Mrs Harry 1 the -----1—TU-------he old
bucked the passage of tiie Rees
been a KaruMs policy since Kansas
As for Governor Landon's atllwith
to him In civil cases The board al­ Jury, who regard their duties light- Foster uf Bellevue. Mr und Mrs age retirement fund. That will con- cooperative school law which equip* came Into statehood in 1879. Gov- ' tude. here ll is in a nutshell:
lows 5c a mile as mileage lo officers ly. consistently fall to indict ob- I Fred Barlow und children of Hns- tlnue for 1943. 1944 and 1945. Be­ weak dLstrlcu to cooperate in the enters have tried time and again to I In a special message to lhe leg Is_.
...
Mrs Harold
■•-Harmon ginning with January I. 1940 the1 education of children, in this co­ —- 1J &gt;11 ,
, who are required to use their auto- viously guilty gangsters. Included lings, Mr und' *'
nnd daughter ot Gul) lake. Mr. und employer and employee will each, operation where schoolhouses are
| mobiles In their work, but thL* don
Mrs. Nile Casteleln nnd son of pay 2 1-2 per cent uf the employee's abandoned and children are cared_
not apply to lhe sheriff
„B„Quimby nnd Mrs Hun-1 Oils and wage. That will continue for 1946. for cuUlde the district, will be ! with teeth.—But even though we do lation as will make certain the con­
AT THE BARKY.
children of Hickory Corners Mrs 1947 and 1948 Beginning January I. found mosl of the agony which is | not give state aid to whool* and I tlnuance of a free and adequ&amp;to
The odd thing about the incredi­
Castelein of Quimby was also u 1949 and regularly thereafter the squeezing tears out of lhe Demo- even though we are the 48lb lUlt' public school system for the slate.
ble pictures Ln tiie seed catalog is Sylvia Sidney and Spenguest
their appearance of being photo­
a
employer and the employee will craU about Kansas schools. The‘in stale school aid. neverthetesa in! The schools of Kansas must jind
Drama that stuns like the blow
graphs.
each pay 3 per cent of each em- schoolhouses ore closed, of course Kansas, a rural stale, the statistics । will be maintained, for our public
of a blackjack
because It could
But the children are cared for
| show that more farmer boys and school system Is the foundation of
You can't fool all the people all happen to any one of you. IT DID
Kansas most properly has a right girl* are attending high school than the State and Nation.”
'
Unemployment insurance.
WALGREEN SYSTEM the lime, but some who attempt It HAPPEN TO THESE TWO; In
Beginning January 1. 1942. every to be proud of her schools. And in any other American state. More- i We Kansans are. of course, proud
DRUG STORE
score what seem* to be an impos- nocent of any crime, they were the
employer of eight persons or more Governor Landon ha* hvlpjd uur. over, ctnsua bureau 11 cures show ‘ of Ouveniur Landon. We hotie to
vieilths of mob violence: two lovers
common
school*
more
than
the
avthat
Karuca*
ha*
more
coliece
grad
­
HASTINGS «ib)y high average
in this country must pay 1 per cent
ste him elected, But I am sending
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1»
'
।
lnt0 lhe jitfemo of men’s
proportion
lo her popula
-..
—. —
..h ^.ubM,,
•- •--------------------•­ ­ out this tetter so that after theof the .w
total
wages u
that
person H
or. WM* governor. Thc best piece of uates In ---------j maddest passions. And then he ।
corporation paid for the year 1936 slate school legislation In recent tion than any other American state. elecUon. no matter who wins, the
planned the amazing revenge that ।tax fur Unit purpose, hs it is fur re­ Into an unemployment insurance! -veftrs L* the Landon cash bash law. If anything seriously was wrong people of your stale where Hit*
made strong men scream for pity .
fund on Januaty I. 1938 Hie em- | 11 requires boards of education lo
calumny about Kansas education
I and a city hung its head in shame! ।tirement pay to the ag .1. or unem­
ployment insurance, but *1* taken ployer must pay 2 per of his total sl0P bsuUig lime warrants Before distinction* would not come lo Kan­ has been circulated for - political
Wtts passed many, a con- sas. You can’t have Hje highest per- ,purposes
__________
, not leave Kansas „.
M,
from the federal treasury We will payroll tor 1937. and In January th“l
may
wilh
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
------- .
of boys and girls in high ■ Uie stigma of neglected education.
all pay our share whenever we buy 1939 and annually thereafter h,.; slde.able number, sometime* u ma- centage*
' Delbert and E A Reynolds ac­ any article upon which there Is a mu*t pay 3 per cent of his payroll Jonty
boards of edu.school
. of the
-----Kansas
- -------- -----------------------and
the highest
percentage Education is one of our particular
com pan led by the latter'.* sun federal or state tax to rnbe the (or the maintenance of unemploy-! cation
ratlnn were issuing time warrants
ot —
college
n.
graduates In a population | prides, and lhe record.* show that
Kenneth, of Quimby, who drove fur money or when we pay federal in­ ment insurance, ^hi laborer in any to meetpayrolls. The school
baaid composed of 65 per cent uf Ainerl- our pride lias produced result*,
W. A. While
them and Fred and Frank Rey­ come ar sales tax or any other spe­ slate like Michigan cannot have thc hi a prosperous western Kansas cun* w ith Amerlcan-boni parents I
nold* of Hastings spent the week cial tax levied for such aid
in benefit of this unemployment in­
----- ---- ------------ —.Michigan the state * part of lhe surance from the federal govern­ benefit from it. Every person em­ The Detroit employer of No. 99.912 reached
65, under this Socte'
Mr nnd Mrs Robert Shriner nnd ] money lo meet the national govem- ment unless his state shall pass I ployed in domestic service and ev­ would aUo be required lo keep up j Security law than he would obtain
two children of Lansing are visiting ment on a 50-50 basis for such help laws satisfactory to the federal gov- eryone employed as a laborer on a the paymenu In Detroit as . tho I with less money than this arrangc; tor ’the
needy is taken from the crnmenl for the payment by thalj farm will likewise have lo pay his HasUngs employer had done bi ment will coat Wm from any one
Mr. and Mr*. Asa Randall
’
The first P. T A meeting for thl* sales lax. to wnieh all contribute, state of unemployment Insurance to or her share of this employers' 6 Hastings. The number of removals of lhe big Insurance companies of
and lor winch the con.suiAer pays. lhe employed persons living In the
year will be held Friday. Oci 30
of laboring people from one place ; this country, which are much more
Mrs. Edith Cramer visited her The government’s part of the cost stale That Ls. If Michigan did not creased prices of services or cOm- to another Ls very large In this econoTnlcally managed and operated
take steps at the coming session ot modules that would result from country, ll can be seen that to keep than the government would operate
sister-in-law. Mrs Virgie Reed, ot
much le - than for retirement pay the legislature to adopt anfi put In­ | that added cost. None of these ,accurately the accounts of 26.000.- ; this pension buslnes;;.
। Hastings Friday.
■
I Mrs. E L Houghfalin. who has or unemployment insurance.
to’ effect an unemployment insur­ would get any benefit whatever All ( ooo people
wo,lld involve much
We have tried lo state Lhe silua---- ’*ance law, every employer In this consumers wha do not employ any i
been seriously ill for the past two
bookkeeplng
and an army of book-1 tlon „ u nppi1M to aIj laborers un­
This part of the Social Security state would be paying the full labor will not be subject to any di­ keepers al Washington.
weeks. L* recovering slowly Her par­
a
forty der the federal Security Act.
„
.
ents. Mr and Mrs George Klink of Act of tiie federal government Is percentage required by the law on reel tax, but will have to pay their
,L“
■“*&gt;
„ too,
The Home of Quality and Craftsmanship. • Design­
, Sparta and her sister ami husband. one fur which the recipient of lhe hi* nayroll to the federal govern­ share of this increase in the price* building might be able to house I.J'*1
• Mr. and Mrs Claude Redman of benefit L* not qualified by reason of ment. and the unemployed laboring of goods or services, due to the 6 them The expense of all this would
ers and producers of Memorial Art. • See us NOW
per
cent
federal
tax
on
employer*
of
J
'
—
i
telned
that
the
tel
Grand Rapids, visited her on Sun­ any need, but ll Ls to be given him man in lhe slate would get nothing,
T-. ’r, — ■ • ., .
instltuUo(L* and firms In Has—
for FALL and SPRING Setting. Prices very reasonable.
' day.
us a matter of right when he be­ because ol the failure of the state--------tabor The
state---would
have to in- .-Mr.. _________
--------------------------------. । I
comes 65. and because he has con­ to enact legislation satisfactory to crease Its texes, either by an In-. ways ore notoriously slow, ineffl'he federal xovcmmei.l,
government.
creased sales tax. or by some other' clent and costly when compared! persons B considerably over *900.000
tributed. as we all will, very liber­ the
annually. Call It *900,000 These
'*
••—
. — form of 5peC|ai tax. The laborers with private enterprises.
Rexford K Reid. Hastings
J21 ally in order that he may get such
persons and institution* hero In
pay. All employees. except those of
~ law
’
*
' on After January 1. 1949. every one who receive lhe benefit of lhe reThe
as "
it stands
lhe .books
Bethllne R. Rollo. Grand Traverse'
their employees
federal and state governments nnd of the 26.000.000 employed persons in llrement pension or the unemploy­ today seems very unfair lo the Hastings and
PHONE 2497
Established 1907
HASTINGS
county
except laborers on farms or do­ this country will be taxed directly ment pension would have to pay farmer and to farm laborers. They would, after the first of January
Anson R. Dodge. Hasting
mestic help, share In this old age 3 per cent on his or her wages for their share of any increased state get no benefits from It whatever, al­ 1949. be paying into the federal
treasury
*61,000
a
year! We believe
Alice E. Fenn. Ciiarloile
retirement money. Farmers will pay the retirement fund. They will have taxes necessary to enable the state though they will j»y their full
from the federal---govern
no wUy to avoid paying that lax. to
—receive
---------- ------------------------------------ - slmre of lhe increased cost of goods the 850 people on these payrolls of
They can not pass their burden on । ment any funds lo be paid by lhe which employers will pom on lo Hastings firms or corporations, ernto someone else. It will be their own i government for unemployment in­ them. Millions of others than farm­ ploybig eight or more persons, wpuld
burden. and lhey will have to stand । Murance. or for aid for needy chil­ ers wdl likewise have .to pay indi­ be able to provide far better insurli.
I dren or adults or needy aged ,pcr- rectly their share of thia tax. mice and far larger retirement pay
for their employees for considerably
On and after January 1. 1949. “ns.
Neither lhey nor their household
leu money than *81.000 a year. A
. ... employer
—- ------- ------------- ------------expense of looking
after the
every
of eight
personsi orThe
1 ----------------------------------------servants would get any benefits.
large percentage of the loss would
more will be paying 6 per cent of accounts of 26.000.000 working peoThe laborer, in all Institutions
be
the bookkeepbig expense at
»&gt;I.
--------..
.^
&gt;.
.
ple
at
Washington,
and
lhe
ac
­
his total payroll Into lhe federal
employing eight or more persons,
retirement and the unemployment counts kept there with all employer* will be paying directly 3 per cent of Washington, and the army of ex­
aminers
and other employees who
insurance funds.
The employer, of eight persons or more, would be his wages to the government after
would
be on lhe Job. and the gen­
whether manufacturer of goods or enormous Each one of the 26.000.000 January 1. 1949 He and his fama producer of public services, must would be given a number nt Wash­ Dy will also be paying their full eral wastefulness of government
operation.
consider this 6 per cent as an over­ ington Every employer would haveshare of increased cost of _______
goods and
With reference to lhe unemploy­
head expense, as it would be. and lo give the government * numbers [ services which the employers could,
FOR THE WEEK . . EXTENDING FROM THURS­
he will pass it on lo the public In for his employees when he remitted and would have to. pass on to the ment insurance feature of lhe se­
lo the government lhe percentage ’ public. In addition lhe laborer curities act it is claimed that the
DAY. OCT. 29th to THURSDAY NOV. 5th !
law
does not compel lhe govern­
services or commodities
The 26,­ which he Ls required lo deduct from would have to pay his full share of
000.000 laborers and their families, their pay. The books, would all be whatever taxes lhe stale Is com- ment to pay ll out at all. The gov­
who constitute half of the popu­ kept at Washington. If laborer No. | pelled to Impose in order to get the ernment could keep It or use it for
lation of this country, will be pay­ 99.912. we will say. lived in Hastings, benefits of these federal laws for lhe other purpose*, if used for pensions
, U-l. full
r.,11 share nt
______
_____ ■’ at Washington there would be kept' citizens of that state, If a person or other unemployment Insurance,
ing their
of the
employers
6 per cent In increased cost of’an account of what he paid toward 1 started to work in 1949 when he lhe government would have to take
services and commodities, which had: lhe old age retirement fund, also was •twenty
- - years old
•• and quit
----- thl* money amounting to billions of
been increased due ip this 6 per. what his employer paid Into the when he was 65. working avery dollars yearly, and invest it in
cent federal tax on employers of fund. If laborer 99JH2 should move working day, he would be getting far something that would be safe as pos­
labor. Every farmer would be pay- to Detroit, he would have lo rc- less in the way of monthly pay­ sible and pay an average of 3 per
ing his ah&amp;re of lhe Increased cost port that fact to Washington and , ments &gt;auM&gt;
from the‘federal government. cent interest. 'Which would mean
of services or of manufactured goods his new employer would have lo be j and his estate far leas In the way federal bonds, or bonds guaranteed
^resulting
'resulting from these federal taxes, i notified of his number and what I of Insurance from the federal gov- by lhe federal government. The Is­
[ and win have no way of celling any I wages he ixad been paid at Hastings. 1 eminent If he died before he suing of such bonds would put the
money into the treasury, which con­
gress could easily squander for foolish
Winter driving need not be trou­
thing! Just as they have been doing.
The people would then get little or
blesome. Wite motorists will have
no benefits therefrom. Our bonded
debt would thus Increase, and it
their cars checked and serviced for
might be possible to bankrupt the
government of the United Slates
the coming cold weather. A little
by Issuing bonds for the billions of
dollars that will come Into lhe fed­
time now will save you lots of trou­
eral treasury from tiie 9 per cent
annual levy on the payrolls of the
ble and expense later on.
country compelled by the Social
EXCHANGE
Security Act
In ordbiary times manufacturers
DON’T RISK IT!
HAVE YOUR
of Roods and producers of public
services would pass their share ot
CAR ••WINTER-SERVICED" NOW!
the tax.on to their customers; but

Y. M. C. A. ITEMS

tfie &lt;Theatre

J

KANSAS SCHOOLS

t £» S»Z k 1 « jr&lt;

A Statement of Facts Submitted by Wim Allen White on
the School Situation in Kansas

I

Slenderise

JU-VAN

ZZ

Social Security Act Fails
to Accomplish Purpose

IRONSIDE’S MEMORIALS

1HONS1IBE BKOTHEHS

SPECIALS
In the Drug Department

WINTER DRIVING
13 PLATE
BATTERY

ANDRUS SERVICE f
Umlnn

court
Mlrhl,.n

Washing

BLUE

SUNOCO

1 pt. Kord's RUBBING ALCOHOL, 19c
1 Ib. PRICE'S EPSOM SALTS .
10c
100 HOBART'S ASPIRIN, 5 gr. ..33c
$1.00 MILES' NERVINE ..89c
35c VICK'S VAPO RUB^-_&lt;:.29c
50c IPANA TOOTH PASTE41c
50c KOLYNOS TOOTH PASTE .. .41 c
40c FL-ETCHER'S CASTORIA ....33c
60c SYRUP OF FIGS49c
$1.50 Pinkham's COMPOUND . $1.29
25c Cherry Bark Cough Syrup 19c
25c KOTEX19c
20c box KLENZO TISSUES ......14c
MANY OTHER SPECIALS
Yan Can SAVE with SAFETY at the REXALL STORE

Minna 9940 Cor&gt; ^cff*r*«n and
lllUIHJ LLTU 8ta_

Seven Days of Real Savings In
Nationally Advertised Drags

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
THE REXALL DRUGGISTS
HASTINGS

'

-

PHONE 2131

34-35 might come, when the em­
ployer might not have aufficlent
business so that lie could add lhe
tax. Then it might swamp him in
a few yean, some think that that is
exactly what Dr. Tugwell. Com­
missioner of Agriculture Wallace
and other vldonarles who arc so
close lo lhe President really want,
as it would give lhe government a
chance to step in and operate the
private enterprises which their ownWe think we have said enough to
show that this BocUl Security Act Is
loaded with possibilities of most
harmful results.

�</text>
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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

SECTION ONE—PACES 1 to 8

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5,1936

16 PAGES

"NEW DEAL” AGAIN SWEEPS NATI
BARRY CO. REPUBLICANS WIN ENTIRE SLATE OF OFFIC
n-

Amendments Fail To Carry; STUDY QUESTION
Maus, Boyes Lose By Narrow
Margins; Blakney, McDonald, 0SF. or v^reii spmnob
Tr
j
*
a
T
1
llydc^ C/lcmcnt Atvuy 1 o l^ood

JjPUUS,

1

H. H. S. MUSIC GROUPS
Tickets Oo on Sale at Office
on Thursday, Novem­
ber 10

Tickets will go on sale. Tuesday.
November 10. for Hie annual Pall
Concert to be presented by lhe
Hastings High school music or­
ganizations. The High school or­
chestra and band will be conducted
cno TU/n rnilklTICQ Iby MI Hine; chorus and boys' glee
rUri I vVU LUUN I Ito ! club will be under lhe direction of
and M^Jean Glerum
Wm. Noyes Ooodall Was will direct the girls' glee club. T he
Here Representing the
i final number of the concert will be
presented by all Ute vocal groups
Federal Service
combined with the orchestra. Tick­
On Wednesday evening of R.st ! ets may be purchased aL Ute High
week a meeting was held in the of­ school office at 10:15 o'clock, price
fice at the Barry County Health1 of tickets will be ten cents If
Unit of representatives of the bought in advance and fifteen cents
schools. Commercial Club. Rotary if purchased at the door.
Club. Y. M. C. A, Boy Scouts. Camp
Fire Girls, lhe churches, the board
of supervisors and representatives
from various townships of this
county; also representatives ot the
AllegSn County Health Unit, Its
schools. Boy Scouts and various
communities of that county. The
meeting was called for the purpose
of hearing William Noyes Goodall ABOUT THE USUAL NUMof the National Park Service. Mr. |
nvn no niflPH aop
Goodall
represents
the Omaha
BER 0F CAflES ABE

chrIStmas seasonEC

PROJECT WAS TOPIC

for discussion

FfLitlknpr Rp-plpctpd? name committees

Ale trtecrew..

Majority no—1259.
As usual. Barry county treated the
proposed amendments roughly. Not No. 3:
one got by. Even the first amend­
No—2067.
ment which was widely recommend­
Majority no—1445.
ed to assist police officials In their
war on crime appeared on Its way No. 4:
to defeat In lhe face of Incomplete
returns (10 out of 35 precincts)
Majority No—1420.
which give a margin of 77 to the
Voters of Hastings agreed closely
negative vote. The other three were
on their way to a more complete with those of other precincts on the
burial by margins of three to one choice for president and governor.
Hastings City gave Landon 1271
or better.
' in seventeen of lhe 25 precincts. to 1004 for Roosevelt or 56 per cent
Andrew Matthews has piled up a of the total. The other precincts of
lead, of 1214 over Floyd Craig for the county combined gave Landon
lhe office of drain commissioner, 3689 to 2812 for Roosevelt or 57.7 Of
fors. Clarence Lathrop and Gordon the total.
When II came to governor. Has­
Fisher have piled up leads of about i
1000 over their democratic oppon- tings City gave Fitzgerald 1485 to
enta. Drs. Stewart Lofdahl and Alex- j 821 for Murphy or 645 of the total.
The re
rest
of ‘the
ander Gwinn In 13 of the 25 pre-1 Tftc
«l 01
heJ precincts of the
cknc.,
I. county
~zzz‘-; combined
““—“J gave Fitzgerald
to u
2324
The lone democratic candidate to !I 4285t of
— for Murphy or 65 per
। cent of lhe total.
win was clayton Greenfield who run ।
,
unopposed for the office of county
surveyor.
Herewith Is a summary of the
county returns:
Complete Returns.
President:
Landon—4960.
Roosevelt—3816.
AND MOTORING THROUGH
Majority for Landon—1141.
Governor:
THEM MEMORABLE
Fitzgerald—5770.
EXPERIENCE
Murphy—3145
Majority for Fitzgerald—2025.
Lieutenant Governor:
GET FIRST VIEWS OF
Dickinson—5370.
Nowicki-3293.
THE PACIFIC OCEAN
Majority for Dickinson—2077
Secretary of state:

Murphy, Brown Certain Victors;
Burhans, Hoffman, In Early Lead
&lt;

------------ -------------Ul1UBSTDBIN0UET
Night
CONTEST WINNERS WILL
Members of the retailers' division
BE ANNOUNCED AT
of the Hastings Commercial Club
’
accepted
the
report
of lhe commitANNUAL EVENT

FITZGERALD,
MEMBEHS OF 4-HBRUCKER
_

bvried by tremehdovs
ADVERSE WAYNE VOTE!

In lhe face of a Democratic tide which appears to be sweeping the
i tee on Christmas plans at their nation, Barry county Republicans stood firm, giving majorities to lhe
| meeting last Wednesday noon at j entire ticket including national, state and local offices.
OVER TWO HUNDRED
‘ the Parker Hou*.
The committee, i
Tile closest race in the county was for the register of deeds' office.
DCrIOTDATinaio u*nc olcn Bro*cr- chairman. Walter | Vernor Webater winning by a majority of 67. Two yoon ago he lot* to
ntulo 1 nA I lUPio MAUt Wfcilace and G. E. carpenter, sug- । Mr. Boyes by 31. The fact that Mr. Boyes ran far ahead of hk ticket
-----------gested that the lamp posts on Slate . te a tribute 4o the fine service he has given the jxnmly over a period of
4-H Flag” Is the Street, Jefferson as fur as Court | twelve years. George Clouse and Pete Maus ateo staged a close race for
"Under tl
and Court street be decorated with ■ lhe treasurer's office. Mr. Clouse finally winning by a majority of 327.
Name bf Popular Film
Christmas trees and that trees and ‘
The slate at this writing &lt; Wednesday morningi appears to favor the
colored lights be used on the Democrat* with Fitzgerald and Brucker failing to establish out-state
to Be Shown •
Barry county summer 4-H clubs monument. It Is Impossible to use majorities large enough to overcome the huge Wayne county vole. Clare
will hold their annual fall achieve- u*ht* on l*’e lamp P°iU
lhcre b i Hoffman is ahead al present in the race for congressman from the Fourth
menl banquet at Puller hall In Has- no ws&gt;’ of mald,|K the electrical District, while Earl Burhans is winner for stale senator by a comfortable
tings at 7:00 P M. Friday evening ! connections but individual mer- margin.
....
&gt; .
. rhantu were nrved
■ ■■
.... —ft nit. Vntillrner
retiinwl tn
urged tn
to use*
use liwiiLx
lights un
on
November 13. according to an an­ chants
nouncement by Harold J. Poster. the fronts of buildings.
„„om. VETERANS WILL
|
•
The Christmas shopping
1
Barry county agricultural agent. All
OBSERVE ARMISTICE, 886 over hte opponent. Charlee
club ,
i daily
j Barry county summer 4-H cUt
----- . open on Friday. December 4. |
.
.
i
window
iHght
celebration.
I
......
------------.Parker.
Stuart
Clement
won
the
headquarters of that service.
LISTED
members completing their project with
Naturally Mr. Goodall was first
। and filing a report and story of the Th* stores will be open that evening. Banquet at I. 0. 0. F. Hall I*04®1* Jud8* ofnce by “ majority
eh..." ----------B. HMM.
J*_______ . .
,.trfAtu
:■&gt;&lt;!•**
01 im •"LESS?!*.
over incooorc a. iu nawu
called upon to explain what would HMI Y FIVF PFRtinMQ
i project with the county agent's ofCheater
w_-------------- —or,
Sponsored
by
Patriotic
Archie D- McDonald was relumed to
tirel_ I ri»t rcnauno
nee are guests of the county exten- the retallsrs dhUlon. lias appoint-.
; the prosecutor's office by a margin at
iegan and Barry, In order that their
CHARGED WITH CRIME sion department.
rd the following committee to be In '
Organisations
people, especially the children of
------------- ■ Winners of various contests will be S,harge\A R, V^? TU' ch“lrman- ■ Tickets for Die Armistice Day ban- 1887. nlasllcy ,raQ ulc vicltel. „
Jay Blakney lead the ticket In
lhe two counties, might have the
—
------------—
—
Bernard
Reed.
J.
C.
Penney
Co.
and
Term Will Open November announced at the banquet. The
quet. sponsored by th* Veterans of Uie
for
winning from
recreational privileges of the 5.000
...
Barry county fair te sending tliree Miller Furniture Qo.
Foreign Wars and the American U- Oeorge Mye„ by a majority o.’ 3804. .
acre park in Yankee Springs, par14—Jury to Be Called
boys to lhe Liternational Livestock |
glon and their Auxiliaries, al the Allan c
defeated Jack OC(M&gt;
tlcularly of the campbig headquar• Show and the Battle Creek En-1
1 i° Sx. P’ h&gt;U' u.re
* "*dv 1,or for
01 counl’
the 2Ut
lers which lhe government te now
quirer-News te sending one boy to;
sale. The committees to charge ask b a majoeltv of ^172.
constructing'al Mud lake. The gov­
The circuit court for Barry coun­
Judgto?from radio and press ro.
thte same show. These boys are
ernment iuu sites for at least two ty will convene on Monday. Novem­ picked on their grade of club work
Monday night so the Rebekah ladies
u appea„ ny.. Pmidsni
more camps, possibly three, on the ber 14. The jury will not be sum­ carried on during the year and this
will know for how many to prepare.
hiwbeen relumed to Of­
land which they have purchased or moned until the following Monday placing will be' anhounced at lhe .
fice by an overwhelming majority.
। have options an, on lhe shores of —November 21. The cases listed are banquet. Honor members and dele- !
, Gun lake or ot the other lakes em- about llie same In number as pre­ ' gates to stale club week will also be!
■axes io siaie ciuo wees wm
De p__ nonaa nAT T
n.T T
five
-~ named al the banquet. Achievement BED CROSS ROLL OALL ’ Don Foreman. Angelo Spirts, Clar- I Complete returns to Uw fouriX
। braced In the Yankee Springs pork. vious terms. There are only “
1 Mr. Goodall explained that lhe criminal cases. Following Is the
and certificate awards will be made
Larsen. Henry Hubert. Mrs. Wilbur precincts In Berrien county.
OPENS --ON ARMISTICE
government had gone Into those complete calendar:
। to all members completing
i Plate. Mrs. Doniui Herringtegl and i Congressman Clare E. Hoffnu
Criminal Causes.
projects with a view of affording
DAY, NOV. 11
at lhe Banner office. Also by Leon majority of 7490 over hte oppe
Thfe People vs. William Wisner,. I The banquet program will consist
Hubert Cook Describes San recreational privileges to the peo• cJ music by the Baseline 4-H ComLeonard of Delton and James Clark Guy Tyler. Mr. Hoffman rec
j pie within an area which could be breaking and -entering.
rtiunlty orchestra and group sing- PRCI IMINARY Pl
of Middleville.
; majorities in the following «xa
Case—3267.
Francisco’s ‘‘Chinatown”
reasonably served The government
The People vs. Ivan Roush, as­■ Ing
Ing led
Jed bv
by Dr.
Dr. Luther
Luther West
West, one of:
of; ' •» tUI m I HMD 1 runtlw
Majority for Atwood—2150.
has already constructed five largesault and battery.
I
the
local
leaders
of
the
Baseline
4-H
j
—
One
Keen
Oriental
BEING
COMPLETED
Attorney General
[ camps, adjacent to larger cities. | The People vs. Russell Hinckley.
'■
Club.
The
talking
motion
picture.
I
Medford. Oregon. Tuesday. July 21.
Crowley—6221
■ Continued on page 6. Sec. 1.)
statutory rape
Fla8‘ wl-r&gt; r13? **' ®4rs- Forrest Johnson, Chair - present a floor show. Attorney Kim cotmtiea: Berrien. 2724; CMS, MS.
Starr—3377.
4JIB miles from home.
The People vs. James Hitchcock. shown on the program.
Tills is a |
Medford, the county seat of SANTA CLAUS CONTEST
Bigler has accepted lhe duties of i----------------- «*»
,T3
Majority for Crowley—1844.
statutory rape.
¥CtJr
UU|r ,_
n ulU0
man, Securing Workers
very pQp
popular
4-H
Club uikuik
talking ■
Blate Treasurer
Jackson county, te the fifth largest
The People vs. Clarence Bosley. plcture t0
shoarn for (he first I
toastmaster and James Cleary, a CAN YOU ASSIST
WILL CLOSE DEC. 14 larceny from a ^dwelling.
Warner—5051.
city tn Oregon, having a population
in the Various Wards
B.Uk Cr«k l.wnr. -Bl ki„ U&gt;.
Ume ln
counly
Fry-3579.
ot artund 11.0Q0. Il Ls a city of fine |
------------address.
|
PENNOCK
HOSPITAL?
^nrr
. ---------------Causes.
;, Over 200
zuu reservations
rraervauuns for
xor the
inc banwin-I1 Richard P. Swigart. a representaMajority for Warner—1472.
homes and beautiful stores and I DrCaBCS To Be Judged By
Warren
n Rtadei
I.vnns
. . |jBVe
. w
uai! .I,,ve of
If you have not yet purchased •
------------Warren
Stadel v«
vs. Wm
Wm.
Lyons
Quel
wllh vouniy
county
American Red
Cross,
was.
; '
' G..------------- —
7.
quei
nave oecn made
maoe wun
1
“ —
.—
Auditor General
public buildings and has large
i
Home
Economic
lid R.
R. G.
G. Lyons,
Lvons. trespass
tresnass on
Oil Die
tile Agent.
.... oniC€ w date Thls
... |I m
In the city
rltv on
nn Thursday
'T'hnrartav evening
pveninir , your ticket, belter do so today as a All Kinds of Fruits and Veg­
and
lumbering, canning and fruit pack'
O’Hara—5202
etablet Gan Be ‘
. ..
...
azures a real crowd and a good I for tt ™**Dng with the Barry coun- good time is assured all who attend.,
Gun dry—3395.
Experts
I Ing interests. It Is surrounded by
Minnie Van Wle vs. Fidelity llme Ajl rewvaMona niuat t&gt;e lx* by । ty Red Cross officers and workers
Majority for O'Hara—1807.
I territory of almost unlimited natural
The committee Ln charge u
of, JMW
the Health and Accident Company, as- November 7 to assure a plate at the I There was a good attendance at the
Used
■
■
■'
1■ 1 "
1
j resources. The tourist court where I Santa Claus dressmaking context
Justice of Supreme Court:
sumpail.
lu
---------gaUiering
held
at
the
office
of
the
CTL-pp
Aurtinn
S/llpv
i , j banquet.
Toy—4839
|wr stayed. I believe, te the largest sponsored by the Hastings Com­
chairman. Archie D McDonald
flTCe ZiMCLlWH OGlCb |
^arTeJtlng th,,,. fj|U rTT»w^Chandler—3158.
I and one of the finest we found any- : merclal Club has decided to close
National Merchandising System
In the course of hte talk. Mr. Swt■
about finished wtth that
Majority for Toy—1681
; where on the trip, there being nearly ; me contest on Monday. December vs. C. T. Hess At Son. assumpsit.
gart spoke of tbe fact that MichlUnited States senator;
a hundred modem cabins with a n. according to Mrs. Frank C. AnFrancllle Miller vs. E. A- Rogers,
Brucker—5031.
central building containing a large drus. chairman. This will allow for assumpsit.
disasters calling । Because of the death of hte wife'pim Of vegetables of
Brown—3572
swimming pool, restaurant, etc.
i pienly of Ume for the judging and
Lottie Stauffer vs. Arthur Kotesky.
Majority for Brucker—1459.
I planned to attend Rotary al distribution of the dresaes before and Homer Kolesky. trespass on the
The annual Roll Call for the
licip while
Willie auuic
help
some |, iciuiuk
retiring num
from tuiiiiiiig
farming anu
and wiu
will uwu
hold *, tatocs. onions, tomatoes.
Congressman Fourth District:
noon so we slept late and then | Christmas.
_
Barry county chapter of lhe Amer- ,■
of the other slates' a public auction to dispose of his
Hoffman—4900.
Maude and I called on Mr. and Mrs.! As stated previously, lhe contest
in lhe matter of the estate of lean Red Cross will begin on Ar-’
are not
t so fortu-' property at his farm located the wm you kindly
'Tyler—3481.
F-Td tkHCBl^W?0 WlU1 t f500 ।11 dlvld*&lt;l
Uire* classes—adults, I Caleb Risbrldger (deceased), appeal mbtlce Day, November 11th. and
nate.
F
■
—
-*
—
—
—
*•—■ hospital-and its
__
Since the!first load east ot the County farm
Majority for Hoffman—1419.
Frederick or “Teg'' as most of us ■ pupHs of hlgh schools and pupils from Probate Court.
end on Thanksgiving Day. There Is
floods In the .and 1 1-2 miles south, then east to mtion can make
State Senator Eighth District:
remember him. have a fine drug; ot junior high schools (seventh and
Alfred Myers vs. Amy Oarbutl, Utile need for me to remind dtl- ।
spring there have1 the first place on the south side of vegetables.
Burhans—5154.
store Ln Medford. Fred had been'eighth grades). Three prizes of IS. appeal from Justice Court )
nens of our community how vital the
been three major lhe road. Or from Ute east turn at
Or If you ti
Hughes—3472.
13 and |2 will be awarded In each
Hany o. Mohrmann. Recr. vs Red Cross is tn the Ufe of our coun-'
the George Scott corners, south to ned or dried.
Majority for Burhans—1682.
there and was still in bed but was
.^H*. C.
v. Hurd,
„u.u, assumpsit.
—I
the past year, both from I country, uiciuuuij
Joseph
including uic
the dust buiiuih.
storms. viic
the second
then to lhe
jkxu.iu left turn,
»uii, Mien
uic (j,- Hospital vjuiu oe very graiot
State Representative:
making a fine recovery. He and for girls from five to 14 years In­
John Brandstelter and Nina J. aclual observation and from lhe ac-I' that have required the services of second place west of Striker school- tor It.
Mrs. Heath both look exactly the clusive.
Boyle, survivor
survivor oi
of uieuu
Glenn Boyle,
vs. cou"t* of. *ork done which were
| the Hcd
Red cross
Cross—
—caring for the in
inuoyie.
uvyic. v».
­ house*The sale includes a fine list, should it be Impouibl* tor you
Parker—3942.
.
... . Blom
—.
..
.known
r^ww ’i.T
—-me
- '
same and very little if any older
Judges for the contest'have not Albert
(wouUmer
u ?.'!!"“ dallv RISES
re»«Ml&gt;Ultan
work
'
‘
"
' kM‘ of ^ows, several hogs, horses, chick- bring your contributtau to tl
Majority for Faulkner—886.
than when they left Hastings over yet been selected but It is expected Bert Blom),
। “*ve
how Important
—- - ■ areas. ens. tools, grain and household bospiuL Just write or phono Ml
uiuuh. assumpsit.
. seen just
----- -------—-w----------- It
-­ la j reconstruction
in the afflicted
j twenty years ago. They have a beau- that home economic experts who are
Judge of Probate:
Maurice West vs. Gordon Havens.
**. ll&gt;vc
«Uve agency
sunrrintendent 330R, OT
Through
efforts, a , goods.
xprougn Mr.
rar. Swigart's
awxgan a enures,
gouus. Henry
nci.ry Flannery
fuuuki; will
* do
uu the
wwI. sfinoontti
HAMwcn. superintendent,
Clement—5386.
। tlful home and &gt;e enjoyed the visit. strangers to people In Barry counon the case
Ule American people to admlnlsl
Red Cross trailer, featuring Shirley auctioneering and E. E. Gray will'jgya. jj A vanBusklrk, 3380, and
I We were especially pleased to have
Retd-3393.
Claude Hoffman. Admr for the t“!?tan,ce whcn lhe ne*d arU*»Temple, has been secured and will, act as clerk.
' someone will call
for the artictea doMajority for Clement—1993.
&lt; Mrs. Heath give us the last Banestate
of
‘
jamea
*Che«ema*n7
de
“
'
The
frequency
with
which
this
Women In the various communi­
be shown at the Strand during the
i
----------■ nated
Prosecuting Attorney:
। ner, as we had been moving too fast ties of the county have been asked to ceased, vs. Manville Whitney and ne*“ do*4 arLM- has been demonmembership campaign.
I
FRANK OLNER.
This plea te made to the farowyg
McDonald-5318
to get any mail or any news from take charge of the work in their dis­
. strated during the past twelve
(Contlnued
on
page
8.
Bee.
3)
One
of
the
new
departures
of
Red
!
Frank
Olner
has
redded
to
quit
1
u
the
county,
knowing
Of thelr ganPowers—3431.
home.
I months when we recall the floods. Cross service Is the Farm and Home farming so will have anauction sale ' crosity In years past and feeling
trict. The list Is not complete now
Majority for McDonald—1887.
After attending Rotary with Fred­ but will be announced as soon as FINE PROGRAM FOR
II the tornadoes, the hurricanes, and Accident Prevention program, and at hte farm 4 1-2miles
northwest' iun that they will be glad to aretra
Sheriff:
I the epidemics that have been suf­
erick. we started fpr California at Mrs. Andrus hears from those who
Charles Paul was named as chair- of Hastings, or half mile
'
— west
------ —of
• 1 something—for olbrro.
Blakney—5838.
(Continued on page fl. Bee. 1.)
have been asked to serve.
Ag-HE EXPOSITION fered in various parts of this great man for that department In tixe Algonquin lake, second ixouse
touse after;
after । several of U
ti
Myers—3234.
country, and the work that the-Rea local organization.
Mrs. Floyd Gaskell.'who is elty
left turn. Dewey Reed auctioneer , mu
this city have
Majority for Blakney—2604.
chairman, la In charge of the dis­ Two One-Act Plays and Skit Cross has done to relieve distress
Barry county's membership quota and Clifford Hammond, clerk. Mr. can
canned
ned fruit,
fruit.
PLEASE NOTICE.
County Clerk:
.
and
actual
suffering
as
a
result
of
tribution of materials at the com­
this year te 600 and the officers are Olner offers two horses. 7 head of piekies this ye
On October 19 the Hastings
Hyde—5416.
to Be Special Fea­
these catastrophes.
munity room upstairs in the Na­
hopeful of reaching that goal.
cattle. 93 chickens, corn. hay. auto, । have donated kitchen
ntsnafle
O'Connor—3244.
The Red Cross comes to us now
tional bank building.
Mrs. Forrest Johnson. Roll Call farm tools and housshold goods. Bee, dishes, towste. bedding and oW
tures
Its customers a letter requesting
, Majority for Hyde—2172.
with another appeal for membership chairman, reports the following the adv. for particulars.
1 ------- — - —
—
1
that
tbe
letter
be
retarned
te
the
County Treasurer:
An Interesting program has been dues that will finance the work dur­
ROUND
THE
WORLD
. ineir snare. inaimUCB
George Clouse—4540.
arranged to be held tn the Central ing the year ahead. Qur Red Cross corners nave ucen secures so
the northern half of tbe county,
WILLIAM HILL.
' &gt; hospital is operated for
SUPPER TONIGHT auditorium Friday evening. Nov. 6 asks little from the community, yet For
Maus—4213.
Mrs.
Victor
Hilbert
of
Woodland.
As
William
Hill
has
sold
his
farm
1
1
_
foik&gt;&gt;
alI
ah0u
j4
tM
I
gift from the bank. If for any
Majority for Clouse—837.
at 8:15, bringing to a close the fif­ contributes much to the general wel­
Chrm.; for the southern half. Mrs. C. he will dispose of his personal propprop-!
economical ms In Um
reason YOU did not receive your
Register of Deeds:
Methodist L. A. 8. Offers teenth annual Barry county Ag-HE fare of our people.
Webster—4448.
exposition.
Two one-act plays.
It gives me great pleasure, there­
Food From Various
Boyes—&lt;381.
“Common Clay." a courtroom farce fore, as mayor of the city of Has­
north of coals Grove. Dewey Reedi^"
Hastings.
Mrs.
Harry
Wood.
First
Majority for Webster—67.
and
an
old-time
melodrama
“
Nick
­
Countries
tings, to hereby set aside the desig­ ward. Mrs. Robert Dryer,
er. chairman.
oU^r/ hav, hl
chairman, Is auctioneer and ArUe Endsley,
Incomplete Retomo.
Tonight te the Round The World ed" will be presented by Mr. Beck­ nated period as the Ume when all Mrs. Leo Taffee. Mrs r
David
Boyes. I clerk. The list includes 2 cows, a hog. I
due (o lha
-—
if you
Circuit coutt commissioner—16 out
supper at the Methodist social er's dramatics class and two mem­ past members will be asked to renew Mrs. Lizzie Laubaugh,. —
Mrs. Hugh .' 40'chlckens.
farm tools,- -harness. etc.I forU
th. m&lt;n,nnf
- ---------------------------------tetter,
ot 36 precincts
rooms, sponsored by the eight L. A. bers of the faculty respectively. The their membership and for those who Myers, Mrs. R. Schlllman. Mrs. Ira See the adv. for details.
fleers, the guilds and the
Cortrlght—3084.
F. F. A. and Home Economics class1 have not enrolled before to add their
Shultz. Mrs. Richard Leslie. Miss
Bauer—3036.
kinds of food representative of will present their Idea of a Barry names to the ranks of Red Cross
WILLIAM C. ANDERSON.
(Continued on page 8, See. 1)
the gift we intended for him. If
Both unopposed.
many countries. The items for sale county fair fifty years ago In a skit members In our community.
Having decided to quit farming.
Drain Commissioner—11 out of 25
Charles H. Leonard.
are reasonably priced—five cents called "Let's Go to the Fair."
DR. R. B. HARKNESS HEADS
lnctg:
A
smalt
admission
charge
will
be
Mayor.
each and one cent for a pat of but­
WORK IN TWO COUNTIES.
thews—3858.
/
made
and
a
door
prize
of
a
turkey
ter. Bo you see you can get a com­
Hastings City Bank.
Craig—2644
Dr. Robert B. Harkness, head of
HOW THE H. 8. VOTED.
plete meal at a very reasonable awarded ths holder ot lhe lucky
greatly appreciated, we
Majority for Matthews-1214.
Pres. Roosevelt had a majority of the Barry County Health Unit of i
price. There will be nice, fresh rolls. ticket. The exposition will be open
.
.
...
Coroners—13 out of 25 precincts:
to the public Thursday and Friday IB tn the election held Tuesday al the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, will I
for the next year have charge °f (Watch’for'Jt
Dr. Lathrop, Republican—2811.
HOLDING ANNUAL MEETING. I made, come and get some aauer- both day and evening in the high the Hastings High school. Otherwise the Eaton County Unit because of
***** Bay^' wttcn lorP1'
Dr. Lofdkhl. Democrat—1782.
school
gymnasium.
There
te no ad- lhe Republican party candidates re­
Barry County R. L. C. A. and kraut and welners from Germany, —
--- —
--------- -----;---------------------five o'clock
Majority for Dr. Lathrop—829.
Auxiliary meets at Nashville Meth- or chop zuey from ‘China, or ice , mJ“ion charge.
ceived a majority with the excep­
SAW AN ALBINO CROW.
. Dr. Fisher, Republican—2690.
odtet church on Friday evening, Nov. I cream from Iceland, or baked beans! The premium list for this year a tion of Earl Boyes who had a small Dr. J. W. Davis of the Eaton county
Wayne Smith and Stanley Stauf­
Dr. Gwinn, Democrat—1634.
staff.
Dr.
Davis
te
taking
post
­
i
exposition
is
higher
than
that
of
6. Supper at 6:30. Annual meeting from the United States, or coffee t1*
'
~
~ lead over Vernor Webster.
fer had lhe surprise of their Use*
Majority for Dr. Fisher—1050.
graduate
work
at
the
John
Hopkins
On the amendments the students
all members requested to be pres- from Brazil, etc
'-preceding years, running batween
the other day while In a field near
Unlyerslty at Washington. ©. C.
Surveyor—10 out of 28 precincts:
Remember th.
data,
tonight,
and 8M0. Qreii interest U beent.—Secy.
lhe Buller pmllb farm In HasUngt
Greenfield. Democrat, unopposed
startlng al five o'clock
«I»own ,n
event which has dded "No" on the other three.
TO THE VOTERS OF
, nr
'_______
I b*«n
annual affair sipce Its
1
MERCHANDISING EVENT.
BARRY
COUNTY.
NEW LOCATION.
। J. C. Penney company announces
FRIED CHICKEN SUFFER.
modest beginning In 1931, and th.
The Republican Oounty Commit­
No. 1:
Dr. Gordon P. Pteher has moved
In this Issue a pre-winter merDowling church, Nov. 13, 5:34} P. largest attendance of any year te
Yes—1047.
from |M W. center to hte new of­ tee wishes to thank all those workers
ciiandtelng event. Fine values are M.. 25 cents. Auspices Cemetery expected.
No-llH.
fices at 510 5- Jefferson street.—Adv. and voters who gave the Republican
offered.
j Circle.—Adv.
party support Ln the present cam­
Majority no-87.
Out 11-5.
paign.
CHICKEN BUFFER.
L. A. S. CHICKEN MflrtHHL
, ---------- No. 3:
Dr. F. Carroihars.
DANCE AT NO. IRVING.
Presbyterian
church
Saturday' Briggs church, mils east lacey Nov. 10. Start serving al I P. M —
Chalrmgn.
Orange hall Friday* Nov. 8—Adv.
No—1773.
night. Nov. 7. 5 to 7. price 35c.—Adv., Tues., Nov. 10, 6 o'dOdt^-Adv.
■ Adv.
•-*-

COURT CALENDAR
NOVEMBER TERM

REDWOOD FORESTS i
! ARE WONDERFUL

BARRY COUNTY'S
OUOTA IS 600-^-

A Proclamation

E

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 10M

- rwinjo

5® ANNIVERSARY

OF
FOOD CENTER
r

Both Hastings and Nashville Food Centers Will

CELEBRATE

this BIG

SALE

With VALUES Listed Below
I

IN CLOTH BAG

1O'-47C| o
10 LB. LIMIT
10 LB. LIMIT

B

■■

lb. box

MARSHMALLOW COOKIES 2 lbs. 25c
FIG BARS
3 lbs. 25c
ROLLED OATS
5 Ib. bag 23c
PEANUT BUTTER Cream Nul 2 lb, jar 25c
PALMOLIVE SOAP
bar 5c
RINSO
Ig. pkg. 17c

J

SYRUP
BLUE LABEL

5ib- p*i 35°
3 for 14c

KREMEL
ASK ABOUT SPECIAL OFFER

UNIT
MAZOLA OIL
SPECIAL
BLACK PEPPER

BALLOON

Oxydol

Karo

*

Soda
Crackers

SUGAR

pkg.
qt.
,‘SL,
'/2 lb. pkg.

pt. 27c

11c
50c
35c
10c

Pink

CHIPS

SALMON

Large Package

18c

5 ",b”&lt; 25c

10c

NEW DATES
FELS NAPHTHA SOAP

3 lbs. 25c
bar 4c

PILLSBURY HARVEST TIME

PANCAKE FLOUR
5 Ib. sack 23c
DEL MONTE COFFEE
Ib. 26c
DEL MONTE PEACHES No. 2l/z can 17c

4 lb. pkg. 29c

SEEDLESS RAISINS

Fresh Fruits anti Vegetables
GRAPEFRUIT, Seedless
HEAD LETTUCE

4 for 19c
2 for 13c

FIRM, HARD. CRISP HEADS

DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE JUICE

TALL CAN

46 oz. tin 29c

■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
Mita Rose DeFoe entertained a
!
tk/r 117 Q
’rouP
Hastings young folk* for a
/¥£. nJ
Mix-thirty dinner Thuraday at lhe
| home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
M. H. DeFoe. Bingo proved lhe dl-

Organizations

JO-JO WHITE

GUEST SPEAKEf

Boft Ball League and Ath
letlc Banquet at H. 8.
derwent a serious operation several dancing. Covers were laid for twen­ tunla circle will be held today.
weeks ago at Pvnnockk Hospital, ty. — Charlotte Republican-Tribune. Thursday, at two P. M., at the home
Oymnaaium

was taken to her home on Monday The young people were lhe mem­ of Mrs. Flora Vandlen, 820 E. Bond
bers of the two Sub-Deb groups of Bl. A pot luck dinner will be served.
afternoon.
to attend'the athletic banquet to to
Judge R. R. McPeek held court Ha* tings.
in Lansing last week
Report of delegate* attending the held at the High achool Saturday ev&lt;
various Women's Club Federation nlng at fl o'clock. The softball leagt
Albert W. Drake of Woodland la GAME DINNER WELL
meeting* will be given at the gen­
enrolled at M. 8. C.. taking the
ATTENDED THURSDAY eral meeting to be held Friday aft­ has merged its annual banquet wit
short course in agriculture.
thl* meeting to make It a largr
ernoon in the Masonic hall. "Who's affair than usual. The present
Roy G. Hubbard is still confined
to hLs home and Is unable to walk. Bev. Karl Keefer Gave Ad­ Who in Our Federation " The cour.- of Jo-Jo White, a member of 11
ty.
Mrs.
H.
L.
Carroll:
the
district.
Detroit Tigers, one of th* outfielder1
He Is having trouble with his left
dress—Kim Sigler
| Mr*. Chester Hodges and the state. I* attracting quite a number ot ou
knee.
1 Mrs. Ken I th McIntyre. Federation
Toastmaster
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bauer, have
.
--------------------------—
of-loan visitor*. other honor guee
moved into their home on Bo. Han-1 Tne
fame dinner of lhe Barry •
*'***_“ 1,1 charge of the social at the banquet will be "Lady Bali
over 81.. formerly owned by George i County Rod and Gun club held i committee.
I win. Hailing* famous ball
Stowell.
| Thursday evening at Community .
i and the members ot the Greenvil
,
lclt
of
.....
.
wnaro
u
,
,,
4
people.
riw
,
Marie
Rowe
and
Una]
Bishop John N. McCormick of | h*11 *»s attended by 442 people. The 1
I high school football team.
of‘,
ar' hostesses for lhe Novein­
Grand Rapids will hold services' dinner was served by members z
Edwin L. Taylor is general
. lcc
-- ----------- ...—e._ &gt;—d,.d.u. ' bcr meeting of the Business Worn-,
Sunday at the Emmanuel Episcopal |the 81 R0-® Parish who handled lhe ,
। man tn charge of arrangemen
en's
hospital Cguild
next Monday
church.
large crowd in a fine manner.
- --—
.— ..—«.
notified with A. Lynn Brown os toaalmast
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H.
The Invocation was given by Fr.
and ticket chairman. Late reques
Jelll* of Flint a daughter. Susan 'Dillon and the welcome by the ab°ut lhe place, etc.-.
। for tickets should be' phoned In
Caroline. November 2. Mrs Jelll* I P"® B. A. Perry. J. M Townsend'
' either Mr. Taylor or Mr. Brown I
u-u the
me communRy
comniuniiy ■'lnBh'8
sii.giug uaf
aucr
, ..
.
/ '----- | Thursday al the latest. The dlnn ,
was formerly Thelma Kelley
led.
^
,
InUMueUon,
m.d.
0,
.
&gt;"
n
'
a
"«l"'
»«•«■»
} will be served by the U B Ladle
Mis.' Jean Glerum. music super-, *’'**' *“
-*--**— -*- *Kim ---------BUler. ------------------- H.w.li.n
whoopln,
In U&gt;U du- Aid at fifty cent* a plate. Women i
I visor Of the Hastings schools, was1------------ , “&lt;
■ by
•
- - Baker
- - -his asso- trict.—Majesty Becker.
guest soloist Bl the Presbyterian I music
Mr.
and। well a* men are expected to I
; church in Kalamazoo Sunday.
elates of Kalamazoo was well re­
present.
Hospital Guild No. 18 will meet
: The fire alarm on Sunday was'relved and "Bait for lhe Suckers"
caused by
oy a
a fire
nre In
in the
the basement
of
II caused
basement of
Ur 8*8&gt;« contained i.umrrou.
numerous « s’^efferMn Thursda? N^U DENTAL SOCIETY PLANS
the
Kist
Dairy
Store
The
cause
was
*
‘
ortea
about
lhe
hunting
and
Osh£0
^Jefferson
Thursday.
Nov.
u..
mi- rvisi Lmiry swrt *ne cause was
PROGRAMS FOR YEAI
nre caused
eauseri small ,n
ing
mem-­ '-"ryDoay come.
|I unknown and the fire
£ experiences of the various mem
The program committee of Barr]
damage
‘ hers Mr. Sigler then presented Rev. I
Eaton Dental society met last evi
Charles H. Leonard has begun' Karl H- Keefer of Watervliet, lhe | Townsend plan meeting al Mac* nlng at Nashville to formulate pla^
enbee hall Thursday evening. Nov.
extensive remodeling on his funeral i 'Peaker of lhe evening He chose
lor this year'* activities. Throun
home, corner 8 Jefferson and Wai-! M hls subject "Game" and the main 12. a'. 8 o'clock. We are asking for the generosity ot lhe W. K. Kellod
.oawn. he
n. teft with ills
m. audience
&gt;» “ll “• *“
U"
nut St*. He is planning a very con-, Ihoughl
Foundation good speakers arc a]
'
lh.&lt; mo«. —
or •— —
do not
oui- ,
vcnlent and commodious place
sured for lhe meeting* this year. ■
Dr Claude Root of Greenville has &lt;loors enough. Most everyone is too
Dr George L- Lockwood I* pre.-]
Pythian Sisters Attention—Pot
been elected vice-president of the Interested In hi* or her own Job to
appoinj
luck supper Tuesday evening 6:30. dent of ,the
„ society
- and has----------□
Michigan Osteopathic Association. «c‘ out ln the wood' 10 observe lhe
committees: Ed«
Ed'
. Nov 10. at the temple. There will be cd
«» lhe following committee*:
Dr and Mr*. Root are well known works of Ood
the form of nature.ii guests from Nashville and Middle-; cation. Dr. R. H Wilkes. Olivet; E
In
having
gueste B
a ;‘-11 wai a splendid
talk—and
well
... Hastings, IU
..IUC been gueflu,
------------------“, vlIlf ut ai many staUri Bl powibic John Wooton and Dr. Franz Will
!, number
number of
of times
times of
of Dr.
Dr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. ' re£f?'ea .
..
.
„
be nresent x x x
«». Hastings; Dr. G. iederbaui
I K J.
| TO'
eonwrv.Uan depart- "
. ch„JJU, “ J „ M v&gt;nc,
_______
ChK-~.„ ___
Mixses Esther Doty. Helen Mer-1 ment was represented by John
■
1
Members of the Leo A. Miller Rapids;
Publicity.
Dr. F. E. Lowr]
son. Vivian Reynold* and LoU Car- Bra‘'- superintendent of tlie local Post No. 3328 Auxiliary will meet Delton. Dr. D. J. Wight and L.
ter, of Halting*, weh- supper guests hatchery; L. H. Rector of the field this evening at eight o'clock at the Donald Cole. Charlotte and Dr. I
of Mr.and Mrs. Ted Carlson Wed- I admlnlxuative division; George Eg- O. A. R. hall. Officers for the com-1 Carrolhers. Hastings; program, Il
I nesday
evening —Rockford Regis- 1 berl nt lhe educational division; R.
Ing year will be Installed. A pot luck Wm Vance, Nashville. Dr
Qhf
ter
1 H. Bartlett of the game division and luncheon will follow. Members are, Baribeau. Grand Ledge. Dr. J.
Mrs.
Chas. Van Wordenof Chi-1 L A Davenport ot lhe game dlone. Dowdlgan. charlotte and Dr! ~
O.
asked to bring sandwiches and one
| cago. who has been III in Pennock,
dbh
uth-'r d
—. and the Auxiliary will Lockwood.
| hospital for several weeks, has been 1
furnish the coffee.
I taken to the home of her parents, ENROLLMENT IS
DROVE CAR AWAY.
' Mr. and Mrs. Herman Zerbel. where
Some time between midnight ai
The 8. E- Rutland W C. T. U
LARGEST EVER Ls sponsoring a family night to be six o'clock
she is gaining nicely.
Saturday
morning-------sdm
-----------------------, -----------A break in the main street storm
_
------- -—- ,
held at the Goodwill church Wed- one took Willltt Page's car from 1
sewer near the culvert over Fall Five Hundred Elghty-FOUr nesday evening. Nov. 11. There will garage at 127 w Clinton street,
Creek caused th? dirt underneath,
Attending lhe Hiah
be a pot luck supper at 7:30 and , was found early lhe next day abr.
ih, panmenL .1 &lt;h.l polnl u&gt; ... 1
then a program, consisting of spe-1 three miles south of town, near t
roi
i It was repaired so that it is not noSchool
clal music, a one-act piny, and an English comers, where lhe —
•
| tlceable now. but it might have been
The high school enrollment on
on address by John C Ketcham. This I urns off near Fall Creek to go we.
much more troublesome If it had October 30 was the largest in Us meeting is open to everyone. "
Rc- ward The car key was under
। not bten discovered early
hUtory.
cushion The thief must have fou
hUtory There
There were
were 292
292 boys
boys and
and 312
312 member the date and come
Mrs. E J. Pratt and Mrs. Harry girls In the four claves Six hundred
It. or m*V have known in advan
Bennett of Middleville escaped sen- pupils Iwve registered since the beCircle No. 3 of. the Ladles' Aid where It was. because he used t
oils Injury last week when a truck ginning of the year, but sixteen of Society of Hie Methodist church will car all right enough. No clue to t
। backed Into their car near Grand । them have dropjied out In order to meet Friday afternoon a: the home tx&gt;rwn who took it.
J Ledge.
The. ,™,w
truck was owned by
i^e th
u.. the
t(&gt; W(Jrk or
theJ. have
of Mrs. Nina BaLson. West Mill 81
Lawrence Market of Grand Ledge moved away, leaving the present
FIRST METHODIST
Mrs. E- W- Delano of Allegan, pro­
' and was driven by H L. Brooks
EPISCOPAL CHURC
active and actual enrollment of 661
| Recently while hunting north of
Sunday evening at 7:30 Rev.
By grades the enrollment Is us gram chairman for the State Feder '
Gun lake Charlie Potts saw a nice, follow* Ninth grade. 175; tenth ation of Garden Clubs, will be the Mayion Jones will speak on "T
large deer, and while walking grade. 128; eleventh grade
149; speaker at the next meeting of the New Italy" and will discuss Hie sti
through the woods, came upon a twelfth grade. 110;
ot
Fascism
as express'
post-graduate Garden Club to be held Thursday. Ject
I voung poMum that had evidently bourses. 22. total. 584
November 12 at lhe home ot Mrs. throuqn Italy's leader. Mr. Mussolr
Frank Andrus. Her topic will be erne For the five minute question a
fallen from a tree In early pioneer
, , ._______________
i days, thi* section near Gun lake was ] &gt; In lime the rewriters of history ot interest to all members, and a I answer period, w111 Hitlerism
very popular as a deer-huntlng1 may gel around to the case of good attendance 1* aaslred
Fascism come to America? Pasct
• ground, and has plenty of good ' Humpty Duinpty and discover that
is spreading through Europe. Do
' cover'' for their protection.
'I a ‘high
------- pushed him
JOEL DeMOND FOUND
..................................................................
court
wo want II here In America? This
DEAD ON FLOOR, a service which will interest y&lt;
Joel DeMond. 71. was found dead Keep up with the times and knat his home, just of! the center road, what's gong on.
Wednesday morning, lying on his
-----face on the floor. It was estimated
Moath-Breeding Fish
tliat he had been dead for about
The Egyptian mouth • breed*
twenty-four hours, death being due which protects its young by carr
to apoplexy. Coroner Gordon Fish­ Ing them In the mouth for sever
er slated, we are Informed Mrs De­ weeks, will. If caught, lock its jai
Mond was visiting her daughter. and never betray the fact that ba*
Mrs. Robert WooLston. so Mr DeOld Faahioncd Mixed Dance*
Mond was staying alone Surviving
Friday Night. Regular Dance
are lhe wife and six children. Mrs. young grow sllghliy older, they a
Woolsloh
of Hastings. Della of Lan- : allowed to go out and play. But
Saturday Niglil.
। sing. Ford. Roy. Roland DeMond [ the least sign of danger the ba
fish rush back. This mouth nurse
and Mrs. Nora Buller of Kalamazoo
Muaie 1&gt;, JHartin'a Orchcalra
No funeral arrangements have yet I protect* the young until they gr&lt;
| been made.
too big to be accommodated.

DANCING
At Clear I&gt;ake Lodge

doz. 29c

FLORIDA ORANGES

n

v:

DEL MONTE

i

I

PEAS
14c

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF NOV. 8

Early Garden—No. 2 Can

SUNDAY and MONDAY. NOV. 8 and 9
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

OCR BEAUTIFUL NEW POPULAR PRICED THEATRE

LORETTA YOUNG In Helen H«n» fackun’,

POLICY

"RAMONA”

HIND QUARTER of BEEF
FRONT QUARTER of BEEF
BEEF KETTLE ROAST

LARD

2

lb. 12c
lb. 11c
lb. 12c

25c ||

BEEF STEAK Round. Swim or Sirloia
Ib. 19C
LEG 0 VEAL, Boned and Rolled Ib. 19c
RIB BOILING BEEF
Ib. 10c

PORK SAUSAGE, Home Made 2 lbs. 33c
PORK SHOULDER ROASTS
Ib. 18c
PIG LIVER
2 lbs. 23c

Peanut Butter

Bulk

Ib.

lOc

KING NUT OLEO
2 lbs. 27c
SMOKED PORK SAUSAGE
Ib. 23c
HAMBURGER, Fresh Ground 2 lbs. 29c

BARGAIN MATINEE Munday. 1:00 and 3:00 O'clock for
Adult*. Price* at all other performances of this picture—
Adults 25c — Children 10c

OCCASIONAL SPECIAL SHOWINGS IN MID WEEK
PRICES ALWAYS — ADULTS I5e — CHILDREN 10c

COUPON NIGHT — TUESDAY. NOV. 10
SUNDAY ond MONDAY. NOV 8 and 9

a

"LADY BE CAREFUL"

CHARLIE RUGGLES. MARY BOLAND ond

*

With Lew Ayre*. Mary Carlisle and Larry Crabbe

ADOLPHE MENJOU in

FOOD CENTER
HASTINGS

Lowest Prices In Barry County

Opan Evcningi Until 9 P. M. '

NASHVILLE
Open Evenings Until fl P. M.

/

t
F
j
j
i

SAVE COUPONS—No Coupon* Will Be Given Out After

“WIVES NEVER KNOW”
ADDED — COMEDY. 'THE LUCKY SWEDE"
ADULTS 15c — CHILDREN 10c

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. NOV. 11 and 12
KATHARINE HEPBURN and FREDRIC
MARCH in

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. NOV. II and 12

"MARY OF SCOTLAND"
With Florence Eldridge and Ian Keith

SPECIAL REQUEST RETURN ENGAGEMENT
JEANETTE MacDONALD and NELSON EDDY in

ADULTS 25c — CHILDREN 10c

“NAUGHTY MARIETTA”

FRIDAY end SATURDAY. NOV. 13 and 14
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

with frank Morgan and elsa lanchester
ADULTS 13c — CHILDREN 10c

A

t
t

With DON AMECHE

FRIDAY — SATURDAY EVENING SHOWS ONLY
SUNDAY — MONDAY
MATINEE. SUNDAY. 3:90 O’CLOCK — 5:00 O'CLOCK

BABY BEEF SALE!

1
0

FRIDAY end SATURDAY, NOV. 13 end 14

KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED

BARBARA STANWYCK in

$
• "

"THE BRIDE WALKS OUT"
With KOStKT YOUNG an* CENI HAYMOND
— PLUS —

Starring ROBERT KENT with Rosalind Keith. Alan

“AND SUDDEN DEATH’’

ADDED — COMEDY, "FOR THE LOVE OF PETE*
ADULTS ISe — CHILDREN Ifle

EVENING PRICES! Adults 20c — Children 10c
MATINEE SATURDAY. 3:00 O'clock and 5:00 O'clock
ADULTS 15c

With FRANCES DRAKE

S

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5. 1910

PENNEY S SAYS:

UNION SUITS

Big Soft Wooly Pastel Plaid

ego

SKI

J”.

BOOTS

f W

$2.49

rjW

(H 49'

The right weight
for all winter
\CjVi\
Fine ribbed cot
1.4
ton with rayon
I3A/
stnpc. Sizes 2 to
13/
12 with drop
— seat. 14 to 16
with open seal

4 II™ of warmth ntvJ salisfaelion. Not levs lhan 5% wooL Ex­
Ira large. 72x84 inches. A treat
al this unusually low price!

____

SBIBBRR

Very light smoked elk. While
compuslttun rubber sole. Collar
is lined with bright |&gt;laid

For Every Occasion!
Glen Row is a trade mark
that assures you satisfac­
tion! Very smart new Fall
styles in one and two piece
models. Lovely fabrics! In­
teresting trimming details!

ySanSy

DRESSES

■RBS.'xV^’U

J

Here are lovely frocks for
every woman! Home-mak­
ers, college girls, business
girls—here are sly les for
all! Sizes 12 to 44!

1

Of heavy wontted!
You can
enjoy cold wea­
ther when your
hands are warm.
Multi - colored,
striped. 4 to 6.

BLANKET*
SmMI,
Colors

Gowns

I-98

49c

Wrek

For
iS25
Women -

blankets

Misses' Sport Gloves

FROCKS

Sunday Night and
Hostess

UNDERWEAR
Unusually Fine Quality Part Wool

1.01 No. JI-01B

New Glen Row

Misses’ and

JlChildren's

BLANKETS
a’7”9

‘

j

$«,98 J
j

Heavy Worsted Gloves

.v

49c

Women love
them!
Fingers
‘"Pl *arm
as toast! Colorful as all oul:
doors! Striped
patterns. 6 to 8.

VEK-4C/

8
2
5

40% wool filled . . . Craftsman. one of our most popu.
lar single blankets. 3-inch h
J silk binding. 70"x80'.
k

MW

JSGwjL

1
\
\ I1
ij
I t
'
/ \
Yu Vs’\lJ
’

f'001' forking pastel plaids. Not
’*■*• ,‘lan C,*'i '*,0O,- Closely wov­
en for warmth’ 70 x 80 inches.

ftrrL7
' ।5

PLAID BLANKETS

$%-98

w
w«&gt;i

Beautifully woven and fin­
ished. In clear, bright block
n 1 kids. 4-inch Duroshcen
binding. 70 x 80 inches.

Rayon and cotton tuck stitch
panties with
elastic top. The
vesta have rayon trimming.
Both
regular
and extra sixes.

! wwic.r. Blanket.
!
$4.98 i
|

2
J
S

Colors

Wool, angora and silk scien- t
tifically blended into beauti- Ik
ful single blanket*. An h
achievement! 70‘ x 80’.

MEN’S SOCKS

Mens Heavyweight

Part Wool!

UNIONS

Durable!

Fur Trimmed

COATS

•16-5®

Lovely velvets in deep, rich
shades that flatter so much I
Just as smart in size 12 as
in size 44! For almost any
informal evening 1

Cherry Lane Sport styles!
Burling Lane dressy types!
Featuring the new fleeces!
Be sure to see these to-day!

OXFORDS

Rib Knit

Single Blanket!

*5Pk

Colton

For Ertry-

$

Day Wear

/

riisr*
Double Bed

Site, 70?Tier

MEN’S GLOVES

"O

■

Black kid Bluchers . . . the fam­
ous J. C. Penney all-l«atlMr
shoes that really wear.

Lo« No. 10-100

iivl
it?

Mtn-I AU Wool

Work Shirts

UNIONS

MRfi

Not let« than 5% wool; ba la neo
firm, soft cotton. Stitched ends.
Pretty plaids! Singles.

&lt;3

-J
•

Men’s Suede Cloth

i

Moleskin Flannel!

Men’s 15% Wool

Men’s All Wool

Men's Shirts

UNIONS

COSSACKS

Mr.'. )&gt;%

n_■

Wwl

UNIONS

Men’s Felt Shoes
For Cold Vesther. Get Yoon Tod.y!
3 Style*. '

Boys’ Jackets
.

-Tones!

$‘9.69

1 Heavy 32 oz. wool. Talon fast­
ener front. Large selection of ।
1 popular colors. Men's Shadow
Tone*----- — , . . R8-9®'

NIGHT SHIRTS
(

Winter

Part Wool

1 5 «,a,r,l5&lt;!
The famous Rockford tvpe. A
mixture of blue and brown (
1 cotton. Reinforced heels and
toes. Ribbed cotton tops.

Button Style

Weight

or Warmth!

Man’s All Rubber
Arctics

J
•
•
J

Durable black retan leather. 1
Freedom where you need II
. . . snug fit whole yoo want
IL 16-inches high. Nailed.

'.................. iiiiiiiyn*

8-INCH BOOTS

Work MITTENS
Yellow Shank

Horsehide

|

A tough and sturdy mitten
Built for long w*ar«Knit wrist
and soft leather palm and back.

WORK CAPS
sp".. 49c to
Types, Too! .
98c
Just the thing for Winter com­
fort. Corduroys and meltons in
Blizzard and Hunter models.

HI-CUT BOOTS

SI.98, 2.29,1.98

Light Weight lor owr Fell Shoot.

Wooly long boot
socks for boys.
.Made to wear—
with reinforced
toes and heels.
Colored tops. -

Slipover ot'

Men'* Union Suit!

BOOT SOCKS

WORK SOCKS

than the average
amount of wear
in these rib knit
unions. Stand­
ard sizes..

16-INCH BOOTS

For men I' Acidblack
Hvdnte leather,
Nickle hooks
and eyelets For
wet
weather.
Rubber he*L

■■F ir resisting
ftv
■jtf
Olfe.

HASTINGS, MICH.

Ut Na. 10-258*

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

-0

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5. 1936

Editorials

'Round About Town
How to the line,
Una. let the qulpe
ntllna
Hew
fall where they may I

MICHIGAN STILL LEADS!
i have since feudal times been sc­
once again Michigan has the customed tp dictatorial rule. Never,

wont traffic record in the United except for short intervals, have they
States. More people were killed here experienced anything which even
in automobile accidents during the resembles democratic government,
on lhe contrary,
was
put week-end than In any other; America,
‘
|
section of lhe country Slippery founded by people who loved Ute
roads and poor visibility didn't seem idea of freedom so much that they
to Instill the least bit of caution Into ।cut home ties and sailed across the
those habitually careless driven who ।ocean to establish themselves In a
always seem willing to risk their igreat, undeveloped country. They re-1
own necks and the live* of others irented "remote control" rule so |
to save possibly a few seconds. It imuch that they even rose up tn re­
never seems to occur lo a certain Ibellion against the mother country |
declared themselves Independ- i
.type of driver that another car may and
i

&lt;be approaching around the blind
comer which he is breexlly negotlating on the wrong side or racing towards him near the crest of the hill,
It nevor occurs lo them that another
car may also be about to appear

By Observing Tommy.

, These politico boys &lt;and gels. too.
| bless 'em) got so long winded last
, week that they drove Tommy clear
' on the page.

ent. Then when the idea of a federatlon of states was broached, they
set forth a bill of civil rights and
liberties designed to guarantee forever protection from a too strong­
ly centralized rule.

I "leadership," we might better
without lhe "leadership."

,

They have to sit up late al night
to think up something funnier than
the stun that appears in lhe news
'columns.—at. Louis Star-Times.

:not often; once in u while, pauiblv.
a measure of questionable north
gets by.
But on the whole this No all’-

tude toward amendments I* a good' • An apartment house janitor has
thing.
broken the worlds pole vault rec­
ord." So that's the way those felWHAT PRICE LEADERSHIP
। lows keep warm in lhe winter.—San
A newspaper columnist comment­ 1 Francisco chronicle.
Ing on world flairs, recently de­
clared that lhe biggest factor In' It is illegal in Alabama
to

sprinkle salt on railroad tracks,
iiad leadership io offer ' Leadcrsht; which seems a queer way to catch a
is important. Uicm- days. ’ the writer j train anyway.—Boston Transcript,
declared "in fact it is so imjxirtaiit [
_______

want leadership, of course But we laying good times And yet. too |
db not want and will not tolerate for j much money got us; into the hard
long that type of leadership winch .tunes—Atchison Globe
rule* with a dictatorial hand, which[
regiment* its people.-makmu them)I The popularity of mystery stories
[isn't surprising It's the only kind of
mere cogs in the state machine
|
Just how far ahead doc* a nation ■ thing you can read with the radio
get under dictatorial rule’ Are Iuiy going-Detroit Free Pres*.

or Germany, for example, any bet­
’
ter ofl under Mussolini and Hitler
f
than they were before? Are lhelr
people any happier, any safer, any*
more free from tyranny? We doubt

Flying Auto” Lands in Washington

Although Tommy admits there Is
little to choose by way of prefer­
ence between a crooner and a
"spellbinder."

Judging from the amount of soap
and paraffin on the down town store
windows. Tommy deduces that our
demon police force was on the job
I as usual.
'

Hehl Heh! Heh! There’s one form
of Halloween deviltry that is getung more uncommon than of yore.
Not because the young buckets
and buekettes of the present lack
Imagination, indeed no!

Views and Opinions; I
W/iat Others Say)
Six or more amendments to our ।
State constitution may be submitted
to voters at the November election,
the number depending upon how
many signatures may be obtained
upon the petitions for submission
We expect to comment upon these
proposed amendments, one al a time,
before election, provided they are fi­
nally submitted, one of them, which ’
will undoubtedly appear upon lhe
ballot, provides for a "one-man li­
quor control commission for the col­
lection of state (liquor) taxes." and
for "placing liquor .sales In private
hands." We believe this amendment
Is clearly a step in the wrong direc­
tion. So long as liquor must be sold
in Michigan, we are firmly Con­
vinced that It is being handled bet­
ter through state stores than it
would be when acid by individual?!
for private profit. We do not believe
anyone will differ with us on this
point, for private profit has always
aggravated lhe evils of the liquor
business; tn fact, we very much
doubt the advisability ot having the
Mate sell liquor through specially
designated demers. That hard liquor ,
is being handled on a much better '
bash than beer no one can deny.'
and the reason is because beer is be­
ing sold by individuals for private
profit The people of Michigan who
wish to drink beer and wine could,'
get all they need and conditions

Backward Glances;
It’s just that in these modern
of ours they're bringing more
Bits of Yesterday i limes
and more of 'em inside, and con-

A Quotation
•7 WILL d&lt;. somelliing" will solve more
problems than “Some­
things must be done.”
—Ano.n

TWENTY \ LARS AGO
|
A pretty but inform*! wedding'
took place Saturday evening. Octo-1
ber 38. at th- home of Mrs Mattle
Spaulding when her daughter Mnbelle became the bride of Clare ।
Grigsby of Richland.
| Hiram S«:ey. Hl years old. will

!
I
•
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i

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TN the glowworm family, only
A the female Is luminous, while
in the genus homo, it's usually
the male who gets I1L

Angling is believed the mosl
popular sport In America, es­
pecially among the debutantes.
We can't understand why that
Waterbury, Conn., burglar who
took a bath and shaved In each
ot 30 houses he robbed, doesn't
come clean.

That college band that Is hav­
ing such a hard lime finding a
student who can play lhe eupho­
nium might start out by teach­
ing students how to spell IL

A Berkeley, Calif., fellow who
worked his way through colleger
with sleiffit of hand magic must
have been able to pull dough out
of dad's hat

Tommy has seen many a peaceful
citizen caught unawares
• • •
Understand that my good friend
George Sumner has a fancy bird
dog that
uok
inai likes
lines nothing
Doming better
ociier than
man
--------- an unsuspecting
-------- out
- of•
to flush
calf
—... siesta.
a —
comfort* bit* --------afternoon's
leave next Tuesday for Baldwin
* * *
where he will hunt deer with hls two
They say that this is one of the
grandsons
| ?ccret sorrows of George's life
The home of Mr and Mrs Ray'
- - Waters wa* the scene of a
n happy|
happy! Wbnder If Dave caught that big
gathering Tuesday evening when ■ trout ho had displayed in hls hardemployees of the Frandren store en- ware store window?
tertalncd at a Halloween |»arty
there with eighteen guests present I
One of the boldest acts ever commltted in this city was performed
NEWS GLEANINGS.
Saturday morning when a thief stole
*36 from lhe money drawer in the
Friesian peasants in northern
, Michigan Central station.
Germany use vaulting poles to get
Manager Mason of Hie Thornapover the numerous drainage ditches
pic Gas &amp; Electric company states
tn the region
that lhe new system of boulevard
lighting will be ready for service a
The average Negro buys goods of
week from next Monday night
a better quality than do others of
The firm of Morrill. Lambie Ft Co similar income.
have.begun the installation of a fine
new front in their store.
Two rain drops In North Dakota
arc equal to three in Texas because
THIRTY YEARS AGO
of greater evaporation &gt;n the south­
Mrs. Arthur Broun entertained ern Mate.
the "Green St Crowd" Halloween
A 20-page newspaper could be
evening tn honor of Mtss Winona
published for 2,112
on lhe------free
Bennett.
,i -----------------------— -years
-----------------icnl nnnuallv
Am-vlnan
Lee Pryor and Maurice Lambic material
'nnterial sent
annually tn
to American
went to Ann Arbor Saturday to wit- PaPers
ne.ss the Ann Arbor-Vanderbilt foot­
. The cost of handling free mall
ball game
' for government officials and bur­
At st Rose church Nov 5 occur­
red the marriage of Julia E Sul­ eaus has risen to *23.000.000 Ln one

Way of Our World

would be infinitely improved if the

livan to WUltfltn Fighter of Free-

out of the hands of private indivldunis and sold only through Suite Uquor stores tn the same manner as
hatd liquors. We do not like the idea
ot our State being u» the liquor
business. but if that b the best
method at handling It that is the
way it should be done. W H Ber­
key. Cassopolis Vigilant

Jos. Ptlug. Jr . who will leave
Thursday for New York to be gone
several weeks
very pleasantly
surprised at hls home by lhe em­
ployees of the Banner office where
Mr Pflug u employed as foreman

Crumbs of Wisdom

BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
Oirls in New York are having
their sweethearts’ portrait* painted
"As our Industrial mechanism be­
on the fingernails. Later, ot course. comes more and more complicated..
। they will be under their thumbs.— greater and greater Intelligence is'
needed lo deal with it."—Alfred p
I Regina Leader-Post.
Sloan.

।

American will accept the verdict,
and work for the common cause of
the good of our country That is the
spirit of Democracy. You have my
sincere congratulations.''
And Uie president's reply,
"I am grateful to you for your
generous telegram and I am con­
fident that all of u* Americans will
now pull together for the common
good. I send you every good wish."
These message* of two great Am­
ericans should guide the rest of us
in the long pull we have before us
upwaid toward the light.
Sincerely.
Honora Pratt.

Maybe radio programs will even
get back to normal.

that the people ui many nation, । Shipping bean* to Boston as port
have given up almost everything to'of a federal food allotment sounds
get it."
it."
la
lot like
like carrying
carrying coals
coals to Newget
a lot
RegaidleK. ol the outcome *&gt;! th’’ castle.—Detroit Free Press
election, wr do not believe that this
------------attitude Is true of America
We j They say a lark of mor

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Everything Is settled but election
beta and printers' bills.

POSTED PROPERTY
People would be surprised to hear
the stories of property destruction
both petty and serious reported by
farmers of this county who have
permitted hunters the courtesy of
using their property. Livestock has
been killed, fences tom down, gales
left open. If guest* tn your home
brokeup furniture, tipped over
tables or ripped down pictures, you 1

Pungent Paragraphs

‘The Public Forum |||

Anyway, by this time most of the
mud ball* will have been thrown,
and the last inflamed throat stilled
momentarily under soothing minis­
trations of iukc warm llsterlne.

do

would have every reason to be
mighty sore But certain people,
when hunting privileges are extend­
ed lo them by surprisingly tolerant
farmers, show no consideration at
all for the owner A fence Is in the
This is just another dcmonvtra- , path—AU right, cut it down. A gate
tion of the wisdom of keeping of con* has to be opened—Why bother to
slitutlonal change forever free of close it! can you wonder that each
legislatures or executive decrees- It year more and more properly is
is a power that should be jealously j&gt;osted? Not all hunters are careless,
guarded by people who desire dem- probably only a small fraction of
UndoubtedLy them, but lhe ones who are heedless
ocralic government
constitutional certainly make it difficult for the
many
o!
these
changes would have been made if (Others. Farmers arc just the same as
the matter had been left to the leg­ anyone; they appreciate considerislature. Organized and vociferous allon in return for courtesy
.minorities could undoubtedly have I
stirred up some action But if leit
to popular vole, an amendment can­
not gel
get by
oy unless
unies* lhe
me need for
tor it is
Is
almost overwhelming Sometimes •« I
good propoution w discarded blit ' ’tition
"*''- ’becoming **keener every day.

[j|

1
| To the Editor:
' The people of lhe United Slates
have spoken right out loud this time
Party lines have vanished We have
again given to Franklin D. Rooeevelt
the greatest honor and the TOUGHEST JOB within the gift-of the
American people.
It Is time for u* to lay down our
arms and to forget that wa have had
differences of opinion and to all
puli together once again as a great
people
Governor Landon expressed thia
so well h\ hl* telegram to the?president whan ha said:
"The nation has spoken. Every

Oh well. I guess these periodic
windstorms kindn help clear the at­
mosphere!

suddenly at lhe junction ot a blind
to people who have grown up unInlersectlon. Il isn't necessarily the der these traditions, leadership Is of
fast driver who I* a menace to traf- second importance to freedom It is!
fie; rather it I* the habitually our opinion that people are awakenheedless one, lhe motorist who Is al- mg to the fact that lhe Federal govways taking chances. Sooner or later, ernment Ls attempting to "comer"
however, the odds always catch up too much power.
with them—or at least the unfortu­
If we must give up civil liberties
nate victims they smash into.
| to gain what some people call
MOSTLY "NO!''
Once again it appears that the
proposed amendments to the state
constitution have fared rather poor­
ly. Usually very little attention 1’
given lo these meazures by the ma­
jority of voters with the result tha'.
most of them vote "No" Ju.it to be
on the safe side Undoubtedly 9999
per cent of the lime this is the be*t
possible action.
If even « small
Traction of Hie proposed additions
were grafted on to our state consti­
tution. It would soon be a complicat­
ed mass of contradictions Since a
. constitution is a statement of civil
'rights. It Is well to keep Uvat state­
ment as simple and clearly worded
aS possible

That Count*—-Wot Its SIm

'When auger comes in or the door,
undcm lejf'i cut of the uindou*.

NOVEMBER
flight ecrow continent e»

!
।

I

FORTY YEARS AGO.
Mis* Grace Johnston of Wichita, I
Kansas, was united in marriage to,
Mason c Nevin* of thus city al the
home of the bride In that city last!
Wednesday.
Phln Smith was called to Ncbras-1
ka Friday by the illness of hl* moth­
er who suffered a stroke.
Ozcar Schumann of Charlotte,
wa* home over Sunday.
t
Hany Merritt- who work* for Mr 1
Gamble on the Edwin L. Richard,
farm husked 115 bushels of corn.
bound the stalks and ret them up
one day last week.

The fastest known motion of stars
is 4.800-miles a second!

A highway 18 feel wide from
Boston to New Orleans could be
paved with the plate glass made in
America each year.
A native Hawaiian feast called
"Luau" consists of nine courses,
none of which are cooked in uten­
sils; all are served without dishes,
and are eaten with lhe fingers.

lhe first gasoline tax was im­
posed by Oregon, in 1919. Since
then motorists have paid more
than *4.600.000.000 in gas taxes.

Olhciai* oi Liu- U. t&gt; Department ot Loininci
turned out in Washington lhe other day lo welcome lhe 'Flying
Auto " shown above after it landed un a grassy dioi tn the ousines*
district, and. inset, before ll alignteo to enug along Pennsylvania
avenue
Developed in Philadelphia for the Bureau oi Air Com­
merce.. lhe autogiro lias rotor wing* which can be folded back, al­
lowing it lo be driven like .in automobile when not in flight.

Sporting Items
red pass from Struble to LaBitlhater.
[Smith converted the extra point on
- 1 a double reverse
Ionia received again but was
| forced to punt after losing ground
I At this point coach Bennett rent
■ the second stringers in io relieve
the badly battered and bruised regu­
BENNETTMEN CAME FROM lars The scrubs displayed the same
fighting spirit and determination
BEHIND TO SCORE
which had put the .varsity out in
WIN
front with a 22-7 score They did
not relinquish the ball for the res’,
of
the gnne and were driving hard
GAME IS PLAYED
at the goal line for another touch­
UNDER FLOODLIGHTS down as the game ended.
The line-ups
Second Team Also Shows Hastings &lt;?2&gt;
Ionia &lt;7*
I Smith
Fighting Spirit Under
Campbell
I McLeod
Odinga
Fire
! Brill
Gallop
The BenneUniin took a satisfying Angell
Arndt
sip from the cup of victory last Fri­ Moore
Erridge
day night when they defeated the Doxey
Bospc:
Ionia gridmen 22-7 under the flood­ La Ba Ulster
Baur!
lights.
Scobey &lt;C)
Zander?
Ionia opened the game by pounc­ Struble
ing on the local lads for a touch - R Bessmer
Coak
down and an extra point In the first Hall
Settled
Q
quarter. Thwaites and 8chied com­
Substitutions: Hastings. H Bea­
bined in a series of end sweeps and mer. Shay, caukin. Cappon. Sch­
line plunges for long gains to pul wartz, Rennick. Solhard, Draper,
lhe Beavermen on Hastings' 13-yard Leslie and Kelley
Ionia. Scage.
line and Zanders crowed the goal Bleri. George, Vaster. E Brown. R
line on an end run. Zanders abo Brown. Hazard. Nichols. Martin and
booted lhe extra point
The rest Schlernllzauer
of lhe quarter was spotted with
Official*. Referee. Hood. M S. C.;
fumbles by both sides, each team head linesman. Woodman M S. C ;
missing scoring opportunities.
umpire Ambrose. Ypsilanti
The second quarter opened with
Why is it that the average person
lhe Benneltmen in possession of the
ball
A completed pass gave them can hear a clock tick across the
their Initial first down of the game room, but can't hear the radio un­
Bcobey
Struble, the fleet-foot­ less it'* turned up high enough to
ed halfbacks of Hastings, completed carry four blocks?
a pass'for 22 yard* and marched
The girls of soviet Russia arc be­
down lhe field on short gains lo the
ing taught to make parachute
nine-yard line. The Ionia defense
jumps. We don’t know why. unless
bolstered and Hastings lost the ball
it is that 1936 is a leap year
on down, on lhe three-yard line

m.ns
BEAT IONA 22-91
q

Zanders got off a beautiful kick
Year round golf Is played in the
from behind hla own goal line South. Making the golfer's theme
which Beumer ran back lo the 45- song. "In Dixie Land 111 Take My
yard marker. Struble slipped around Stance."
More than 18,000 movie "extras" end for 20 yards. On th? next play
are registered as available;
but, he went through the line and dem­
Because of lhelr ambitious and'
papyr clothing Ls coming soon."
there are jobs for only about 800 a onstrated some fine broken field
"One of the ..moat constructive I
running Lo score the first Hastings
willful rulrrv Germany and luly ] siys
Ednwnd Jone* It may forces tn the world today Is the en­
day on lhe average.
1
touchdown of lhe game. The extra
are doubtless nearer the brink of
strange for a while, dropping deavor of organized womanhood,
.
Fbr hasty and approximate cal- point was not converted.
conflict today than they have been jnto a bcokbinder's for a press.— rural as well as urban, in all na­
culalion. multiply the hour of sunHastings kicked off and Ionia
tions to maintain lhe moral, spirit­
in years Both nation* can arm. u to Milwaukee journal
FIFTY
YEARS
AGO.
ret
by
two
and
get
lhe
number
of
'
was stopped on the 32-yard line.
(—Cincinnati Sentinel. Fret
ual. and cultural values of life in
hours of daylight; multiply the Two bad passes from center sent
true, but Ls this armament a pro-1
_______
.
lhe face of economic chaos "—Mrs.
occupy the.house being built by hour of sunrise by two and gel the the ball back into the race track
tectum or a mere threat to lhelr' An Australian is astounded by the' Franklin D. Roosevelt.
number of hours of darkness.
which gave lhe Benneltmen an au­
more powerful neighbors?
t
Messer Bros, arc building a ware­
tomatic safety and pul them tn .the
"Each farm can provide for its
Even if they existed as subject' iwith all meals They resent it. too.
Certain Old English buildings
house oti lhe property purchased by
lead 8-7 as lhe first half ended.
own lumber and Umber needs. Trees
have been painted with milk, on the
them of Spaulding Bros.
stales, the people of Italy and Ger- iIf it Is called soup—San Francisco are just as much a crop as wheat,
The third quarter opened with
The mother of c. D Beebe of Kal­ theory that the water w-ould eva­ Ionia receiving. The prison city
many could be no more regimented (Chronicle
cotton, potatoes, or anything else."
amazoo. who is largely interested In porate and leave a casein film to eleven were penalized 15 yards on
—President Roosevelt.
nor harshly governed than ttiyy arc
lhe new bank to b- started in this protect the ancient atones.
the nrst play and punted on their
A visiting African chief announced
m preMht. They have no civil libcity, was one of lhe victims of th*-1
third down. The two teams ex­
"Not only Is one man’s expense,
that the black man cannot
The largest flower in the world u Rio. Wis.. railroad accident. This! The huge *um appropriated for changed panto until lonta fumbled
erUe*; they are not permitted to recently
’
another man a income, but one' said to be Raffl*sia Arnold! or Ar-calamity
ww,
is.Ki
relief
would
wvwiu
j'*7* nut the
permit
eric
___ ___ ____
has_____
delayed
______________
the business «.,
of work
the white man's justic"
have opiniohs; tney have not the understand
’
man’s debt Is another man’s credit ")■ nold’s rafflosia. It was discovered by' perfecting the arrangement* (or the I spending of *480 a minute since the a Hastings kick with one of the
white man has a Job to under­ —Henry Kittredge Norton, econo-1
Bennettmen
recovering.
Struble
right to vote, except to vote in favor The
'
•
year
1
AD.
I Dr. Joseph Arnold UTM-UIS). Th* openUig-of the bank
some bits of it hlznself —j m^t.
smashed through the line but wav
of the dictatorship; they have no stand
’
entire flower measure* alxiui a yard' BlSiness al the new roller mill is 1 Plsh dealer* irf Indent Greece
downed ort lhe one-yard Hue. Hall
property that Ls free from the levy Punch.
I
across,
and
weighs
about
13
pounds,
booming
and
Mr.
Field
is
highly
:
wer
.
obliged
to
stand
until
they
took
tha
pigskin
over
un
a
power
"It ha* always given me genuine
Ito ground tun
IL*
lint u
is flesh-colored or, pleased at lhe large patronage given
given Mld B|| lhelr
ThU custom en- play for tha second touchdown of
of the state; they have do court to
pleasure to rec tjw star*, and vallnv
with heavy mnHHnu
.
Another thing that puzzles us is
yellow, with
mottling*nt
of Hull
dullI Il,lm
him hv
by fl,a
the people nl
of Barry county I courageci low prices.
defend'their civil right*. In short.
the game Struble again converted
Stripes flying anywhere "-Lieut.purple.
_
■
I
--------:
-------------------------------,
________
lhe extra point on an otPtackle
11 la doubtful that Germany or Italx hoar the first man discovered that Gen. Sadao Araki. Minister of War.
---------------- ------------------------| . When an automobile has traveled' Sweden's population (more than- smash
♦
ever ruled their colonics a* strictly !spinach wasn't just another weed.— Japan.
The Longest City in the World.
20.000 miles the ernnk shaft ha* re-1 84OOB0O) I* lea* than that of New
Detroit Free Press
The remainder ot lhe quarter was
Honolulu.
for
administrative voiced 60.000.000 times—the breaker; York City.
and severely as they arc permitting
"There are two ways of making
an
exchange of fumbles by both
themselves
was made to reach outJo point* have opened and closed IM---------- UKmaeives to
to be
oe ruled
ruiea by
oy dictator*.
mewvors 1; A
no
yourself stand out from the crowd. purpores,
Midway Island—1.200 iflilea to the ■ 000.000 times, and the ignition' Th® Queen Mary contain* the teams with Hastings in powculon
One
is
by
having
a
Job
so
big
you
Italy and Germany are examples marry a woman unless he likes her
northwest, and to Palmyra island cable* have delivered 3^00.000JXX) ■ largest room ever constructed In a of the ball a* the quarter ended 15-7
can go home before the bell ring*
I volt*.
ship—the main dirtnln? room. 118 In favor of Hartings.
of the type of government that cooking. In fact, it ought to be a if you want to. The other is by hav­ 960 mile* south.
----------------------- &lt;* ► ■ ... y
; feel by 160 feet, and three decks
In the last frame the Bennettexist* in Europe today. This to not case of iovc at nx*t bite.-chari- ing so much to do that you must
It takes 600 pounds of ingredient I Sixty per cent of lhe scliools in high. The Britannia, the Cunard men, not satisfied wlUi the score. ■
surprising since Use people there Vazl.
•tay after the others are gone."— to make one 376-pound barrel of America are still lhe one-room i company's first ship, could be placed, marched down tha field and again I
Henry Ford.
.
cement.
kind.
' m tnj room.
crossed the goal line on a complet-

—John PhiUip Souu ircet

j

1
।
I
|

'TRAFFIC

iatGetters

�THS ■SSTtMM SAMMXB. THinUDAT. HOVSMBSS 1, &gt;UC

INSPECTION NOV. 12 OF
1
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR'

High Living for Penthouse Pony

Supper Will Be Served by
Templar Ladin*
I

The countess Barbara Hutton
Mdlvgnl van Haugwltg-Reventlow
has bean ton out of lhe aoctol regis­
ter. *o now we all have something th
common with bar.

Auxiliary
Eminent Sir Hugh E. Riley, cap- 1
tain general of Hastings Commandary No 55, report* that all Sir
Knight* are expected to attend the
inspection on Thursday evening.
November 12. The inspecting ofil- I
cer on this occasion will be Eml- i
nent Sir Frank Millard of Flint,
grand warder of the Grand Com­
mandcry of Michigan, and formerly
a captain in lhe United States.
army.
In preparation for lhe floor drills '
there win be a practice on Thurs­
day. November 5. at 7:30 o'clock,
and also on Sunday afternoon. No- I
vember 8. at 2:30 o'clock. The
KnlghU will wear full Templar uni- j
form with sword, black slice* and
black pant*, on the night of the I
inspection
During the past ten years. Haslings Commandcry has been rated
ninety-nine per cent. This is out­
standing in a commandery ot this,
size. The commander and officers
are anxious that this high rating
may be maintained this year.
A supper will he served by the
newly organized Templar Ladle*'
Auxiliary of which Mrs. M. O- Hill 1*
the president.

LOCAL DEBATERS

Printings
Fashion

Hera'a a sumptuous (tabic. Thl* hone "put up** at a penthouae
atop a Chicago hotel when it* owner. •’Silver Dollar’’ Brady, visited
Chicago.
A wealthy cowixiy-miner. Brady, pictured jFith hi*
SOUTH BOWNE.
horse, wns in the Windy City lo Interest merchants tn hl* theory
Oct. 29 Letter.
New Plan of Triangle De­
that pulling silver dollar* tn pay envelopes, and giving them a*
Ralph Andrews of Lansing spent
change would stimulate buying ond help speed return of prosperity- j
lhe week end at L Andrews'
bates Proves Very
Zona Smelker and Marguerite
Young and Don Ameche. ,
Popular
Seger of Irving accompanied Mrs.
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
Loretta Young la featured in the
J I LOCAL GRIDDERS TO
Peter
Griffin
and
Marlon
to
Grand
France's king, Francif I, twenty- 1
A
series
of
triangle
debates
han
title role of "Ramona,’’ with Don
lUpids Thursday to attend the1
Amelia Wallers and Cecil Mun ton;
PLAY HERE SATURDAY six. and England's monarch, Henry
Ameche as Alessandro and Kent tbeen outlined for several Michigan
। teachers' Institute. Miss Eleanor Mil- !
a report for the Hecond ward 1* not Taylor. Pauline Frederick. Katherine t
high schools. The first one wft ler also went and was the guest of i
V1IL
twenty-nine, mat in 1520 upon
yet available
Third ward. Mrs. DeMllle heading the cast of thou- ;
held at
Hastings last Thurs­ candace Bassett while in lhe city Bennettmen Have Hopes of the "Field of tha Cloth of Gold.’’ ;
Gordon Ftoher. chairman;
Mra.!rands
I(in0JI Although
Aiuwu&lt;n "Ramona" provea
proved (
between Guinea and Ardes. for tha
Mrs Elmer Shaffer accompanied
"
•■ ’ •
■
Clarence Texter. Mra T. N. Knopf. *nmethlng of a hardship for II* day. Oct. 29 with team* from Ionia
Continuing
Winning
most expressive wrestling match i
Hastings Paul Kauffman to Indiana Friday |
VaVn' M” J?c?, P“i.* 1
It U a delight to its au- and Kalamazoo Central
Streak
ever held. A gorgeous palace was [
SCkM^"’ A w D.r&gt;?*”
" £ dlences. The film Is produced tn the affirmative team composed of Rob­ to visit her parent*, her father not i
The High s/hool eleven play lhelr ' especially erected for the occasion
o^rSr‘S‘»..?OUrth 1i“rd'
F nt&gt;w perfect Technicolors. The pic- ert Henney. Emervtir Calms and being very well. They will return
Ruth Hathaway debated the Kal­ home Monday
j third home game of lhe season at! and furnished with gold dishes, gilt |
rh*,rn»\n- her assistants lure u
lrom the
b&gt;.
will be announced later.
&gt;«imo name written by Helen Hunt amazoo negative; and the local neg­ ’ Mr and Mrs. Abe Eash called at j the fair grounds on Saturday aft- furniture and rarest ornaments. |
ative squad with DcForesl Walton. । Muri Hoxleltler's tn Campbell Sun­
Tlie Roll Call campaign opens on Jackson.
I fmt?n. The game is scheduled for The most beautiful women and disUiwrence Moore and Marian Hewitt day afternoon.
tingulshed men gathered in mag- '
Wednesday. Nov II. and cloacs on I
------------opposed lhe Ionia affirmative team
-—.------------2:30 and will be lhe second confer- ■
Thanksgiving Day. Nov 26, as is |
"Mary of Scotland."
nificent dress. More than 2.200
NORTHEAST STRIKER.
„ ,,
,
1I once game or me season
the cuMom.
"Mary of Scotland " as brought to Completing the triangle the KatoMr. and Mrs. John Kollar of Mid- ।
...
- . sheep and other viands tn similar j
When the folicitor calls on you,! the screen with Katharine Hepburn matoo affirmative debated lhe Ionia dlevllle
were
sund.y
dinner
neeul
OirmelUe
.-111
mek,
lhelr
Hr.l
proportions were prepared for the 1
negative.
have your membership dollar ready. an
&lt;l Frederic
ana
rreaenc March
Marcn co-starring.
co-starring, Is
i* I|
,.nvn )u&gt;.„
of* *
a -------magnificent
romantic
I
raJj* the *
.»« of Mr and Mrs Wm. Cramer. Jr. ' appearance In Hastings as a grid rl-; feasting that fallowed. Altogether.
Half of every *1.00 received remains the story
------------------- ---------Mr. and Mrs. Willard Randall of | vnl They are at the bottom In &gt;5.000,000 to 510.000,000 was spent |
(..ti.mnh n.. &lt;»i„, I scheduled that the school in the
If ma
I «*n‘ral P°lnl shall entertain lhe ' Kalamazoo visited Mr. and Mrs. |CBguc standings by virtue of a 7-fl 1 upon a bout at which nothing was 1
with the local chapter for work here
recalls, as did Maxwell Andersons v,
in lhe county, the other half going play
^lr i!? kSTwm Cremer ec“ ,h' h“lls °' B'WU1&gt;
I
from which it Is adapted, that T ‘™ T
to national headquarters.
Mary 8luart
Bluart lost
lost her
her head
head and
and '' r’.T’’
3_°.
f
“
Hal (her of lhe kings was a good
Mavar Charles H Leonard wns Mnrv
companled their daughter and hus- I They are not to be under-rated ‘
——acrown
—.,, kabecause
,
ii in helcl at Kalamft.oo
with. Kalamazoo
the devoted herself
।
•&gt;„ n_„.
a.u„ band of Lansing lo ML Clemens | however, because what they lack In
the first Barry county resident to
K^^rnb""*
ft’nJHn’IE
purchase a 1P36-37 membership, fol­
Saturday, where they visited Mr. I weight they make up in speed Their
i main objective will
be
to
topple
the
lowing his custom of several years rrearric Marcn.
, h,Rh
Bfflrm&gt;Uve team nnd and Mrs George Jensen.
.
.
Lalani Hawalan Village. Hono­
| Phyllis Hinman look a negative
Tlie P T. A meeting at the Strik­ local grlddcrs from the tie for first
lulu. aims to preserve tha tradition*
While attending lhe Regional "And Sudden Death" with Ranstand in place of DePoresl Walton I er schoolhouse was well attended place.
and custom* of old Hawaii. Within
Conference held in Mnsing last week;
I This type of debate gives more pu-■ Friday evening. The teacher and
Last
Friday
night's
victory
for
Death ridea with a group of care­
Mrs Otto iscnhath and Mrx John­
, pil* an opportunity to speak than pupils pul on a very fine program. the Bennettmen put them in a tie lhe American metropolis It present*
son received many new ideas (or free young people in their sport I. the nrdfhnry debate
Several men in till* vicinity arc for first with Belding. Ionia and island pageants, dance drama*, lulocal work. They also heard a model roadsters In this romance-I.' The schedule tor the next two tri-1 gelling ready to go deer hunting.
Greenville have each' lost one and aus (native feasts), hulas and old
splendid address by Robert K drama "And Sudden Death." The angle discussions is as follows Nov ।
chant*, using native artists.
Bondy national director ot Dass­ story L", the first to come out of Hol­ 12. Plainwell and Gobles. Nov 17. GREENVILLE GAME HAS
lywood whiifh takes tin thrill-power
gait Walls Primitively Drilled
ler
Relief,
the
talk
being
bioadcast
I
DOUBLE SIGNIFICANCE.
«. ,M-W,
k«;» uau,
' 7lr" .r frn~ ,CT*
Ionia and Greenville Dec. 9 there I
Girls In New York are having
The luncheon wus served al the
the
&amp; lhc win be a debate at the Delton Com-1I When Hastings playa Greenville
With equipment no more modern
their sweethearts' portraits painted
Union building at M 8 C Edgar | ‘-^way
munlt..
fln(1
Is expee’ed that on the local field Saturday. It will on lhelr finger nails. Later, of than bamboo pipes, the Chinese suc­
Gordon, chairman cf th- Monroe
,
Ia
froin Middleville will oppose mark the first meeting of these two I course, theyll be under
their ceeded in drilling salt well* 1000
Co. chapter wax present also Mon8™** w*“*
„ I lhe Hasting-- rnuad
neg league rivals since 1923 when
feet deep.
thumbs.
roc Co was the first to establish i'
Barbara Stanwyck with ine
। Greenville was victorious by a scone
highway firs’, std station tn coop-1Gew&lt; Rflymond «nd Robert Young,
of JO to fl Not only u this the first
Tapir in United Stater
eratlon with the Red Cross ThW •P*M*U*- thu new comedy-drama [
Weal Central League game played
In
day* the
tapir In
to
Is also a new lyi»e of service started ,r"CM th** m«lrlmonlal adventures i
in prehistoric
prenistonc day*
tt.c tapir
during the past year nrd is prov- o( a &gt;°W firebrand and hls luxury- | much hi* same form roamed most tempt by the «ocal team to secure I
Ing a helpful pha-M- of lhe organlxa- 1 lovln8 brldP w,,° Uy
I,vc 0,1 «5 . of ttie continents of the North Tem- the lead in tho League, an honor 1
i “a ■week
with
Icmjsorary disastrous
disa--.trous |' pcrato
Uon's activities
rw‘l&lt; w,l
h temporary
pcrala zone. His
Hi* bones
bone* have beer.
been now shared with Belding Hastings,
■ results.
I uncovered in lhe United States. al the peak of a four-game winning
DEATH OF A. MAYVILLE.
Europa and Asia. A tapir almost streak, is the favorite, but the visi­
Alexander Manville, 106. of Ining
I Identical with the South American t tors are not out-classed. Coach Ben­
township, died Friday at
Grand
lxw
vaniue.
..
I
nt arecently
Rnnlck hospital Hr tell
| "Lady B* Careful" is a high-speed I
*•* 'l ’ "!
»M o' nett Is trying to keep the bogey of
while visiting his daughter. Mrs 'cOmcc,&gt;
»obj‘ •nd 8*1' *1lh ,u
‘hat the family . ovcr-confidence away from hls boys.
Emms Slmmnn- In Grand Rapids dllcf BCtlnn
P&gt;“e ln Pan"-, wa« »c«tered all over the world. | Jo Jo White and perry Dcakln of
Detroit will officiate at the game.
Previous to this injury hr had cn- I ma °when tho battleship on | The tapir failed to develop in tha i
Jovrd cood health He had chopped which Baker. Ayres and Larry i face of competition, however, and
A mere lad in Melrose. Mam . can
wood and walked a mile every day Crabbe are serving put* up for sev- ! today is confined to localille* most lift l.lfls pounds Maybe it's evoluera! d"*
days5 ol
of »horeleavc.
shoreleavc.
Hr was buried at Howard City.
t crtl
peculiarly adapted to hls survival. I tlon. grooming posterity for the nattonal debt.___________________
fHE CROSSROADS.
Mr and Mrs Thomas Beck of
I tost if irs were Sunday gucsLv
of
A thoroughly delightful and hiMrs. Jane Tuttle
lartoua comedy of married life..
Mr and Mrs Clvdr S'cdec spent । "Wives
wives Never Know
Know” brings
onngs to me
the .
Saturday and Sunday In Big Rap- wreon that charming and inhni- [
Through years of experi­
ids, the RUC&amp;L-. of Mr. and Mrs. Jack 1 tablr* screen husband and wife,'
Allen
( Charlie Ruggles and Mary Boland. |
ence in outfitting sports­
John Cook and family •.pent Sun- Il Is a story of a happily wedded
day with Miss Jennie McBain of pair whose romance goes on the I
Hustings
i rocks when they lake the ndvlce of j
men we positively
Mr and Mr&gt; Plynn Tuttle of I Adolphe Mcnjou. cost as a novelist.
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN.
Lakeview spent Sunday afternoon
„„ — --------- , * • ►-----———
KNOW that
with Mrs Jane Tuttle
Why do we build fine highway* lo
Richard Skinner is .spending a allract tourlste and then tear down
FANCY
few week.-, with Mr and Mrs. Orley 1 ,Uie.
lhRt ■"r»cl tourists to
Veal Shoulder
Smith.
j bulld 110t (1°S -lands?

BARRY COUNTY'S

At the Theatre |

SCHEDULE CONTESTS

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

★ Every Prirtfiea* coat it faahioned with the are you'd expect
for you. The fun Mid fabric* arc
the newest forma of flattery. In

fuhiop*4ang famous for quality
and beauty.. .and we're proud to
present them. Come in icon
and let us show them to you.

16” 24” 3600
Coat Promotion for Friday and Saturday • .

*’Printxe88” Sport Cdati
PLAID BACKSI VALUES Mf ffP
UP TO ’23.50, SPECIAL at
&gt;O&lt;

SPORT COAT
* 1O««
ALL WOOL SKIRTS at$1.«
Fast Colored Wa&gt;h Dresiei, 98c and $1.9
NEW ARRIVALS IN SILK DRESSES—
$3.98, $4.85, $7.89, $9.89

DEER HUNTERS!

FORMFI
CORSETS,
CORSELIT
AND BRASSIERES

HERE'S THE STORE
THAT TAKES CARE
OF YOUR NEEDS!

eldpausch

• NEW MOMLS
FOR STOUT
SLIM
TALL
SHORT

F

■MARKET­

Moderate Prices

Phone 1.112 IDe Deliver

Chickens

Blankets

2Oc

Shultz or Freeport

LETTER
HEADS AND
BUSINESS
STATIONERY
'/Yow letterhead is often
your flrat contact with a
prospective customer . . .
does it took like a real
salesman?
Every lellerhead should be a business
go-getter . . . distinctive,
confl4enee-bulldlng.
ejepleaslng. handsome.
We
have expert* al designing
bminem letterheads In the
best modem trends. Your
choice of tbe beet bond pa­
pers. the most beautiful
types and the moat inter­
esting illustrations is in­
vited.

Hastings Banner
JOB PRINTING

will keep you dry and warm
in any kind of weather

it

Beef Roast

Mottle

Lb.

14c

KINGNUT

|

BUTTER

35c

it.

2 27c

them to us fur clean­

restores original

Home Rendered

Chase &amp; Sanborn’s

color ui]d flufluicbs. ...

LARD

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new

tlic

luxury

blankets

at

of

the

aiiutll cost of cleaning.

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Del Mon-te Peas c.V 14c
Del Monte Peaches eV 17c

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Outstanding Values

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NOTICE OUR WINDOW

LADIES' STYLES ALSO

SOO CAPS
$ J .35
Others at 69c, 98c

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$398

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Pork Roast

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Before you put them .
on for the winter, send

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SOO WOOLS

ROAST

50% WOOL. 3i.9$

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ALL RED SOCKS
Long lengths, /IQ1
Heavy weight—*13

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HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANKER. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5. ISM

FAO« ftrx

Performance, Beauty and Safety Mark Chevrolet’s Completely New Cars
Chevrolet** 1937 engine la com-

rolet engineering principle*. It '

A representative model from ChevTvlat'a new line, typifying its beauty and
grace—the Master De Luxe Sport
Sedan with trunk. Note the distinc­
tive “apeed line" extending back
from the aide of the hood.
Unirterl construction joins the
floor, cowl aarembly, panel*, and
Turret Top of Chevrolet** u!iailcnt. all-atecl body, to form one
integral atructure, welded in all
joint*, and reinforced and braced
for permanent silence and safety.

The. land part of the city Is a my- camps If these shall be built. He
rind. 1 believe the proper word Is.' stated that tbe facilities of thes?
t! (winkling and shimmering lights.! cam os could be obtained at a very
and lhe harbor « even harder lo, small rental and that it was expectde xrlbe. In the near foreground ed that thone who attend the camps,
art- the wharves with their seven-' nr th-lr friend.* and relatives, would
teen miles of berthing space for one provide the necessary funds to
hundred thirty throe different carry on lhe camps, which would
•tearmhip lines to all part* of the Include adequate supervision.
as
world. Further out lhe lights of
II as policing lhe camps and takL'lant liners, ferries, tugs and boats ing proper care of them. He suggested
that
committee
be chosen•
oi all drscrlptlons ran ue *ren corn- ■ —
“■* •*■
“* -a----------*“
ing and going In al! directions, and' from each county lo visit the differ­
In lhe distance other twinkling and ent parts of the county and learn
shtininerlnK lights show the location wnui lite prospects might be for
of Oakland. Berkeley, and other lhe usif of such camps by lhe peo­
cl!Ic. acrri A tiie bay As they work ple of each county, how they would
' on - the two bridge* night and day be sponsored, etc. He asked that
the) wi re lighted up -so as to b? this investigation be made In the
plainly vkilble. and even Alcatraz at i yery near future, so that a report
Hight did not look so cold and unln- : by liie two committees of lhelr flndIngs could be sent to the National
idling.
Our next .stop was at Fisherman's Park Service headquarters at Oma­
Wharf, bordering the harbor of lhe I ha. Nebraska, before Die middle of
Jt.iiian fishing fleet. Here arc many 1 December. He said that, if re­
quired. he would corne again to help
serving practically nothing but ,------------frame a,-----------plan or,---------------plans for---lhe
--------fudrinks and seafood most ot the lat- i Itrre operation ot these camps,
ter being bulled. broiled or baked
Alt r this talk by Mr. Goodall,
out of dour* un the sidewalks. Lou- Hie chairman of lhe meeting wa*
*ters.'ciate. *hnmp. oysters and irv-reted to appoint a committee
clams and doz-nw of other tilings of seven to represent Barry count/
that I couldn't class,fy were being and Biol Allegan county select a
served It nil looked verv invltlf&gt;« like number for that county. The
Lut you would enjoy It a lot more if two committees will gel together !■&gt;
you had u Clothes pin to put On your the near future and decide how to
go ;•( the matter of obtaining the
information which Mr Goodall de- ,
'iror. Also what suggestions they '
ment and vailed it another won­ desire to make for the opera*.i &gt;i
derful day.
of the camps for the benefit of th *

U. OF M. CENTER CLASSES “
NOW FORMING HERE -should be
Beauty and utility

। people of the two counties, also If

extended and lo what

i counties.
In the nature aj things, such a
committee must be so .'elected that
ills mtinbers can L easily gotten toirelher. so that Ito work can be cor- I
i rled on as expeditiously and conJ P. Gie*. who is supervising venlenlly as po&amp;Mble.
teachei (of lhe correspondence cen­
The chairman of the meeting
ter estaollshrd here by lhe Univer­ i Hated that he wished time to consity of Michigan, announces that
slder the appointments for
the
clasM-.- «are being formed now mid Barry county committee Tito folthat It Is an cxrelk-nt time tor any- j lowing day he named lo represent,
io ... mrr. ll-UJi । Barry „
„„
ul
„
county on Ulis committee:
th. Ubr;.r&gt; ...r&gt; mornln, Horn
D,
H.rluiM, County A«nc
until ,1...„ o„H ..«•&lt;■ dun™ lton)ld
Q|cnn
from one to three o'clock.
chairman of the board of supervis­
CTtl&lt;^ls arv
.tO ors
wucox «nu
wiiuiun
ors.- Viyuc
Clyde Wilcox
and William
IM uM ur.du.tr, and .du u
Mrs. Roy llubbord .nd
who
uho llau
have. uti educational
etlilcational backbiieit- ..
Fred W. Stebbins.
ground but all adults are welcome to '
It
is
expected
that
lhe
Allegan
attend the classes. Tliere i* a fifty |
cent
and students must furnish1 committee will be named very soon,
This racing plane, reported to be the smallest of its type in the
and that lhe two committees will
world, has a wmgspreud of 14 feet nr.d. with the pilot, wclglis only
their own books
co-operate in their UkvcsligalioiM
All academic subjects are offered
1300 pounds. Dv.igncd by Harry Crosby, the plane is powered by
and recommendations
q, the course and older students
un eight-cylinder. 300-hursepuwer motor. A iiicc'i.mie I* shown
Among those present from Alle­
probably would be Interested in
pulling final touches on the plane before it was cjilercd in U.e
gan county were Su|&gt;crintcndeni
p,ychology. sociology, natural his*
National Air Races at Los Angeles.
tory oJ Michigan. English literature Killian of the Allegan schools and
Floyd E. Holland, head of the Boy­
an(j creative writing,
This M a fine opportunity for Scout committee for Allegan coun- |
Royal Highway
Beginning ot First Century
ty Aside from tbe.se there were :
the student unable to go to school
Kamehameha Highway from HonThe first century begun on Janualso representatives from OLscgo
and for the older person who wishes
and other places in Allegan county, oulu around the Island of Oahu in 1 ary 1 ot lhe year I. On December
td add to hl* ejiucntlon.
whose names we have been unable Hawaii is perhajix the only Ameri­ , 3t, year 99. therefore, we had had
to obtain.
i can road named for a king. Rich 99 years, ot the hrs* century mid a
in legendary lore, every rock and 1 whole year had lo pass before lhe
spring, every landmark along it end of that century So the tvVen­
Once ’Twas Said Tobacco
has aome story relating to Polyne­ ' ticlh century began on January 1,
"Stayeth Growing Fatte”
sian mythology.
| 1901.
No advertisement of recent limes

University Credits ’Given—Academic Subjects
Taught

ahield ia .of treater
ing better viaion.

New power, economy, durability, safety and comfort, coupled
with striking new beauty, characterize Chevrolet's new models
for 1937. They, are offered in two series, Master and Master
De Luxe, virtually identical in appearance.

Tiniest Speed Plane One of Fastest

Chevrolet’s fully-enclosed Knee-Action is furnished at no extra
cost on the Master De Luxe models; and new Syncro-Mesh
transmission, and safety plate glass all around at no extra cost,
feature all models cf both series.

ant industrial and commercial cen-' got up on top and into the main buy everything Ln sight, clean rester in Uli* part of the country, luin- nnrt
"* of the citv which is fairly level.
' launinu. and tea rooms, where they
We arrived al the rush hours and enjoyed having you inspect lhelr
berinu being the principle Industry.
had quite----a time •
gelling
through spotless kichens. Christian missions,
The road from here to San Fr.m- -------------------- -- -----Chinese schools, theaters, temples
Hwo. 11. tict th, Wrote Redwood “ lh,' l»« ■» &lt;«•»»'
for.
We
exactly 1lost,
M,h«w. u one ot the mml be.uu- ing '"
r
w
' weren't """*
~' mid joss hou*e. We visited tiie
Chinese capitol of America, where
ful and interesting drives in the but we didn't know Just where we
six men. lhe head* o! each of lhe
world. We pmaied through grove
...
(Continued from page i. Sec.J1&gt;
*six Tongs, settle all disputes among
— after grove of there giant trees.1 2! L?L
we
“* liad selected was located. How­ all lhe Chinese in tills country Tiie
about two o'clock on the hottest towering hundreds of feel into the ever
we did finally get there, but it conference room is beautifully furafternoon we had so far experienced air before tiie first branches are was so late that all the cabins were nlshed with Chinese furniture: the
Upon entering some of
on the whole trip It was a beautiful reached.
filled and it looked like another rug on the floor L* hand-woven m
drive over winding road&gt; through the3e grove*, you had almost the night In n hotel for us. But we the form of a map of China, and L*
same
sensation
as
entering
a
tundense timber. We crossed the Cali­
were lucky again, as lhe proprietor at least forty feet long by twenty
fornia line about 3:30 and were &lt;-oon
of the camp directed us lo a fur­ feet wide
shunted over on a ilde track with on a sunshiney day that it was al­ nished apartment with a garage.
The Chinese telephone exchange
twenty or thirty other cars' to be in- most necessary to burn your lights
Before going to dinner we ar­ was un interesting place For years
apectcd I have gone through the to see lhe roadway We stopped by
ranged with the proprietor lo get us the telephone company could not
customs on entering and leaving one tree which is 364 feel high and a driver guide so that we could go o_.„
gel any Chinese subscribers, but flCanada, pigland.
France.
Italy supposed to be lhe world's highest.
back down town and see some of . daily got one Chinaman to take it
Germany and the United States, Many of lhe trees were much bigger
the sights. This was one of lhe over on a commission basis.
"
He
but never have I seen as thorough in-diameter than our car was long. most enjoyable evenings of our1
did a good Job of it and got about
a Job as they do on entering Cali­
whole trip, it certainly was a re­ 1.300 subscribers
He is becoming
fornia. Every one of our four suit­ on both sides of the road would be lief to sit back and relax and have
a
very
rich
num
from
hl.*
commis
­
cases. two grips and three or four hewed out in order to make the road somebody driving who knew where
- - of lobaccp's merits than was a cersions. To protect himself from ever
~~
hand bags, knitting bags. etc., had
(Continued from page 1. Sec. It'
tain Scotch physician. Dr. William
get —
there. The
losing
onened
u» —
and
some beautiful photo- to go and how
, to
- --- - ------- the ■&gt;job.
” the subscribers are
to be gotten out. *M_V
c,~
- ' Leslie took
o,
only
oniy dnteteck
arawoacK U
at .11
mi was me l»ei
ract not
not numborod
numbered If you want to talk
... .
.
- ,,
.."T’ Barclay, back in 1611. according to
pawed through before we were given
the
guide
stuttered
and
quite
tn
—
'
to
anybody
in
Chinatown
you
have
*'"lch
are
now
in
operation,
their
a Cambridge.
the forest
forest was
was open
anen enough
enough to
to let
let n
lnc
guide _stuttered
and___quite
frt-. .to anybody
in vnmuiown
you
nave
------ .Ims—lM*rn
- -----siKinsort-tl
— -- ---nv- nrcnnl.
,-.v. Mass.. United Press
.
__
'
j
..
___
;.
..
.
.
..
.
.
ti.se
___
our "naturalization papers" and al­ the
Ute
win, nuuuuh -n, Ute. .h.
"I", "’* -non".',™
v"‘l' ______I”
""'?'
J HIV. &amp;IIC
....
. . *----lowed to enter. It really injured our
•
■--------------------M&gt;mt
The good doctors'
laudatory
Redwood
fOme notnt
P01”1 nt
of ini&lt;&gt;rr«t
in,erMt h»fnrn
before he Chinaman and hi* Chinese girl op­ rations in such cities as New York.
....
pride to think that we were suspect­ flnc.t thing about the
Minneapolis
and
Chicago The
his
nis eraiois are me only ones in me
......
■
.
_ ... words concerning the weed were
h'ghwav is the fact that the trees crnld.. get .lhe
,, words
- out of
-■
ed of trying lo smuggle dope, liquor can
never dc cm uuwn ■- wiwe
— Dul world who know how to get them ‘lur-'Ulon of what can be done with discovered in a monograph titled
there mouth, ,oJ'
*hot “ - *'«
or diamonds into this foreign land: can never be cut down, as up
Mich ’
a ■project
a* **
that
in Ynnk^e
W "
•»&gt;•••"«« »■»"«&gt;&gt; “ on «» ptone.
”*“ "
“* “
_
op.,..«*,has
lul orru
ue.uuMu,
«c- •'NepenUtet or th. Vertue. of Tabut upon inve«iigatlon we found
Spring*
not been
definitely deWe also -i-i.
visited one of the Chinese termined
The government
government is
is baccobX Alfred C. Potter, for
that all they were looking for was rich men and donated to the public* l"r .5cen5ry, an&lt;' Suite frequently . tuThe
as state parks
should ask him lhe same questions temples and were shown how they anxious1 to know
how niucil Use !«.- forty-eight years Harvardumverfruit flies and in’.ect pests The only
...
“ wond lime just lo hear his la- worship: but inasmuch as most oi fa| communitiescould and would ally's librarian.
thing we had in the car that they
We arrived in Rausalito
....
.
Sausalito, across
“ temple was "**
'
~
Wrote Dr. Barclay:
the space---in •*
thl.
de- lnakp flI t!)P privileges
alforded
by
dldn't open up was David's tin box the Golden Gate from San Fran­ driver and I considered him a pretty­ ---------------voted to showcases full of souvenirs tlu. j g.. cami&gt;
containing a couple hundred or more cisco. in lime to catch the five
. or canips
. -n the Yan-"It (tobacco) preserve th from-the
good guide, as he only got lest twice for sale we carried away the im- •— —•— -—
•------------ ----------------iruwetx I shudder to think what o'clock ferry. This was lhe only
and that isn't bad for San Fran­ pression that they worshipped tour­ kee Springs park area Tiie govern- toothach; it cureth the migraine,
would have happ ned if they had nxrt of the trip where we did not
ment aL*o would like suggestions the colicke. lhe cough, the cold; It
cisco after dark.
ists
to
quite
an
extent.
found them. While they were goinu appreciate the wide roominess and
*h0.WOU“
ilayelh growing fatte; it is the antiOur first stop was In Chinatown..
After making a few purchares redly interested as to wjiat fur- uuur o, nZpocnronai.we meian.
through our stuff. Leslie and I lack ot running boards on our new
_■"■'.'“‘'/' .Tfl. ” •••”2 dote of Hypochrondiacke melonlooked over some of the Uilnits they car By the time we had stopped which covers twelve square blocks, in some of the shops we got back thrr camping facilities are desired cho|ie. lt prep,reUi the stomacka
had previously confiscated and other cars were parked on both has a Chinese population of over in the enr and went through the in addition to lhe ones already placed in glass Jnrs We came to the sides of us so close that we could 16.000 and is lhe largest Chinatown Latin Quarter lo the top of Tele- planned and building at Mud lake, for meat; it maketh a clear voice,
conclusion that lhe main thing they onh- onen the doors a few inches, in the world outside of the Orient graph Hill, where you gel a bird's- The Park Service wants to know it maketh a sweet breath, it clearso Maude and I had to slay in. The Il was a surprise to us lo find such eye view of the whole city and har- what lhe prospect* would be for the eth the sight ... it comfortelh
throw away any fruit grown in any r-*t of the family, however, climbed a clean place with modem buildings bor The view at night cannot be continued use. during tiie camping nerves . . . And in a few words it
state but California. Florida oranges out through the windows and went and well-dressed, intelligent and , descr'bed in word* so like other season, of such o camp as the gov­ is the
princesse
physical
and grapefruit were held up a* the u|&gt; on deck it wasn't so bad however prosperous looking inhabitants We , travel writers I will try to do It. eniment is building, er of further plants .
had expected a Chinatown like they
moat horrible examples If they have
ha&gt;e
in
New
York,
only
on
a
larger
these stations on all the roads lead­ front of the boat and could see out
scale, with eerie subterranean pas­
ing Into California, their unem­ of both sides as well as in front.
ployment problem must be pretty
We passed quite near lo Al Ca­ sages. and basements two or three
well solved, as I presume there are pone’s summer home on Alcatraz stories underground and suspicious
around twenty men working th this Island, but he must liave been in­ looking characters lurking about In
darkened doorways We found beau­
one station
side with the other guests as we
From here on. each ridge we could not see him basking about tiful shops where you wanted to
crosigd. w- found the air getting in the sunshine We could see both
much cooler as we.were nearing the the new Golden Gate bridge which
Pacific. W" Anally came right out is about completed, and the skeleton
of the Oakland bridge, both of
In the extreme northwest corner of which
*
will be the largest bridges
with
lhe slate and on the beautiful Red- in
■
lhe world of their kind when
(
wood highway extending along the completed.
coast from lhe Columbia river In
On leaving the boat we encoun­
DE - AND YOU'LL bECIDE
A LOOK-A
Washington to San Francisco We ।
tered the steepest climbing we had
continued down the coast to Eureka sem
,
anywtiere it was hist like
through grove after grove of giant ’climbing n flight of stairs.
and
redwoods. Al limes the road would looked
।
like one from a distance.
come out of the forest and cling to Each
:
block would run up almost
the tides of the perpendicular cliff* at
’
an angle of forty-five degrees
overlooking the ocean' We passed ,and. level qff at the intersections
WALGREEN SYSTEM
over and under and through clouds ,with the side streets This c-mllnDRUG STORE
rolling In off the water and would ,
ued for five or six blocks till we PHONE 22 AI
HASTINGS
gel occasional glimpses through
them of the sun setting over the '
waves. It was truly a beautiful
sight.
We got into Eureka too late to
get into a tourist camp and had to
ttay at a hotel for the first time. We
must have made quite an impression
on the natives, as it took all the
bell-hops they had to carry our bag­
gage In and stow it away in our
rooms. When we got to our rooms
we found tjiat the. hotel was not
strictly modem in a technical sense
but ll'a nol necessary to state all the
particulars. The cold air had brought ,
back our appetites apid we all had
a beefsteak dinner. Went to a picture
AMERICA’S FINEST LOW-PRICED CAR
show and then lo bed.
Eureka, California. Wednesday.
The Crowning Achievement of Pontiac*
July 23. 4.538 miles out.
Eureka is the farthest west city in
the United states. It is situated on
a landlocked harbor, accommodating the largest deep draft ocean going ।
1937 Pontiac.
|lat a
rteanuhlps and is the most importThe Home of Quolity and Craftsmanship. • Desig
difference that makegin roominess, riding ease, (mart­
ert and producers of Memorial Art. • See us NOW
a better value — enriched with more

REDWOOD FORESTS
ARE WONDERFUL

STUDY OUESTION
03069815

... .you wgnt tQ

2-: .

ON DISPLAY!

Improve Your Figure

JU-VAN

for FALL and SPRING Setting. Prices very reasonable.

If stomach GAS prevents sleeping
on right ride try Adlerlka. One done
brings out poisons and relieves cas

IRONSIDE BROTHERS

all night. B. A. LyBaricer.!
-A4r
I

Estobllthed 1907

MEN'S
HEAVY RUBBERS

ALL RUBBER

PACS
12-inch wate.r tight Lace Paca
IPear them with
heavy socks

$2&amp;9
SHEEPSKIN MOCCASINS89c

’’Berry County’s Busiest Shoe Store"
114 W. STATE ST. ‘
HASTINGS. MICH.

HASTINGS

REAHM MOTOR SALES

Thick Red Soles, Combinotion, complete with $0.85
Knit Felt Shoe—

HASTINGS CUT-RATE SHOE STORE

Pootiac, official economy champion of it* price-

FHONE 2497

• Hove Worm, Dry Feet While North. Here you will
find o complete line of WARM. WATER­
PROOF HUNTING FOOTWEAR !

^he 1937SilverStreaks

IRONSIDE’S MEMORIALS

DON’T SLEEP ON LEFT
SIDE-AFFECTS HEART

BE PREPARED FOR COLD WEATHER !

201 S. J«ff»r*on

Midi.

�TUB MARTDfQB BANNKR THURSDAY, NOVEMBER g, IBM

Social Events and Personal Mention
Dr. and Mn. C- P Lathrop attend-. Miss BetUs Reickord will attend
Mr. and Mrs. David Boyes ware in
ed a dinner party in honor of Mr. Um inaugural ball for Um new presiKalamazoo on, Friday.
Robert Walldorff was home from and Mn. W. J. Packham of Bramp- dent of Western State Teachars'
ton.
Ont., Friday evening al the' College al Kalamazoo Friday night
Albion over the week end.
. -t —- .--1 law.
n„n,__
Mbs Irma Waters was home from
Webb of Grand Rapids.
i Mn. M. H- DeFoe and daughter.
Owosso over the ijreek end.
Rev. and Mn. j. A- McNUllyTnd1
,r* apendlng lhe week end at
Miss Charlotte Hubbard was home
daughter Mary Elizabeth, leave Frt- ' the Fitzgerald campaign headquarMIm Barbara Wilcox was home day for their new home In Do- Urs at the Hotel Statler. Detroitfrom W. 8. T. C. over the week end. wagiac. where Rev. McNulty will Chylotte Itepublican-TObUM.
Mr. and Mn.•*eKim
Bigler
”f ri
’f.’;;. and
Clare Beach of Detroit U making

astest

weighs only
lowered by

lered hi ti.e

cjt-n nn JnnuOn December
8. we had had
century and a
ass before the

HER I

an extended visit with his mother,
Mrs. Mary Beach.
Albert Dyer and Fred Meyer at­
tended the football game at Ann
Arbor on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Johnson of
Battle creek were Sunday guests of
Mrs. Agnes Fisher.
Mr and Mrs Loren Boyes visited
relatives In Muskegon Saturday
night and Sunday.
Mrs. Cora Parker has closed her
collage at Gun lake and is living
now at the Parker House.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Smith of
Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fleming.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Euner of
Hillman were guests of Mrs. Clar­
ence Orohe Thursday and Friday.
Miss Esther Smith of Lansing H
spending a week's vacation with her
parents. Mr and Mrs. Butler Smith.
Mr and Mrs. Harry Waters, Mrs
Don Smelker and MU-s Irma Wa­
ters were in Grand Rapids on Balurday.
Mr and Mrs L E. Colgrove of
Birmingham were Bunday guest* of
Mrs. Rose Colgrove and Mrs Mabel
Colgrove
Mrs. M. J- Cross had as guests on
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. B C. Pen­
nock and daughter. Bernice, of
Kalamazoo
Miss Grace Edmonds visited Mrs.
Mae Nutting and Mrs. Addle Chase
and daughter. Lots, of Lansing from
Friday till Bunday.
।
C. H Young has relumed from
\ s two weeks' visit with hls daugh­
ter and husband. Mr and Mrs. Har­
old L- Steiger, ot Lansing.
Mr. and Mrs Frank Adair. Nell
Adair and Mias TheoJine Rogers
were Sunday guests of Mrs. Harry
Parker and family of Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs Paul Dyer of Kala­
mazoo spent Sunday with the lat­
ter's mother. Mrs. Elia Wolfe, and
help celebrate Robert's birthday.

here Tuesday to cast hte vote as he
retains hte residence here. He
plans to spend the winter months in
Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Edw. p. Johnston
and granddaughter. Patty, of Grand
Rapids were guests of the former's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. E. John­
ston. on Friday.
Rev. Cha* a Hoos of Sault Sle.
Marie, who has been preaching at
the Pilgrim Holiness Tabernacle, relurned to his home Thursday morn­
ing owing to hte wife's illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Bperry Thomas of
Assyria spent Sunday with Mxa.
Clarence Grohe. Saturday callers of
Mrs. Orohe were Mr. and Mrs
Glendale Allison of Butgoon. Ohio.
MLvc.s
Suzanne Sumner and
Mary Fra in relumed to Olivet Col­
lege Sunday evening after spending
the week end with Miss Sumner's
parents. Mr and Mrs. Oeorge Sum­
ner.
Mrs Frank Baker. Mrs. Gerald
Skidmore. Miss Clara Blocher and
Miss Ida Flory of Woodland were
in Ann Arbor Sunday to visit Mlsk
Edith Blocher who is a patient in
the University hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ritchie, Mrs.
Haul Hinkley and son. Richard,
spent Sunday In Battle Creek as
gucita of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Black.

ts you will

ER-

in's Block

KNIT
FELT
1H0ES
PECIAL !

The

BIG

FRIDAY. NOV. 6

VIKING

COFFEE
it.

OPEN HOUSE ON
SUNDAY AFTERNOON

Children's Parties

On Tuesday. November 10. Mr.
and Mrs. Burt W. BUson of Carlton
Twp„ will celebrate their fiftieth
wedding anniversary in honor of
this event, they wlU bold open
house on Sunday afternoon. Nov. 8,
from two lo six o'clock, at lhe home
of their daughter and husband. Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon C Edmonds. 602
So. Hanover-St., in this city, when
lhelr friends are Invited to call.
Congratulations and boat wishes
are extended to ths bride and groom
of fifty years.

Mrs Avia Tyler entertained eleven
little girls Thursday afternoon after
school in honor of her daughter.
Patty, who celebrated her ninth
birthday.
Halloween decorallona
were used on the supper table and
stunts and games were enjoyed

Catherine Royer celebrated her
tenth birthday and Halloween with
a party for ten girls Saturday after­
noon at the home of her grand­
I
parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Engel.
k
WEDDING Ai*r«ivMM&gt;A»x.
ANNIVERSARY.
Gamer, were played and supper
Th'
ot Mr Mld
Vernc
served.
Co*«Tove ot Kalamo. Eaton county.
waa the
center of*a
moat enjoyable
-----------------------------------Bend Uroe gunday. November I The oc-

1

Evans motored to Olivet Friday evenlng to attend the Ollret College ■ MJfr'^d“r*'
symphony orchestra, the opening
concert of lhe year. MIm Suzanne ^h.u’P
Sumner and her roommate. Miss
Mary Fraim, of Detroit, returned H
nl r*lty ,wnc
university
game al
at South
with them for lhe atek end.
I W,F
1.
- to
a
a C,,lOn **■' ,O hOnOr lh' n,tV'
8
el«hlh wedding anniversary ot Mr.
Mias Marie Rowe spent Saturday I??"'
,anddau
-----------«- hWr
------:- and
*no Mrs
mm. Fred
rveti Cosgrove
ucagrovr of
oi Kalaino
naiamo
with
her brother in Charlotte.
I MarilynSui
Clarke, ^0™
of Kalamazoo
spent “tnam.htn
________________________________
J5S.7
“ ‘K
^;p. cton
.nd
township,
Eaton enuntv
county
Mrs.
Roy
Cordes
and
Mrs.
Orville
S.,k. w.n m on»d MPU. Thun- Ulu K«-, MLu CLtertn. .nd XU. |
.n’LwLTJi .

d
V"
I
a^iK— D
1*
«hnner. brought tn well filled basday.
WS i *“U by lh°** wh° C*nlC 10
hOn’
Mr. and Mrs. G. Winston Shef­ Pra'nk
field visited In Detroit over the SJT? R*yno}ds •”tl Kenneth Rey- 1 or u&gt; this elderly couple Other
w«. cmm.
| n°‘ .
,tn.
i?ll friends came, bringing gifts
Mtea Florence Campbell spent
«lf oldest brother. RlTtw occasion was also to celebrate
Sunday and Monday in Hillsdale i don
iU
nn*! Mr. CcMgrove's senniy-ninth birthvirtting cousins.
f°°1' H * co,,dllton u day. After dinner there was a short

&gt; T«d a. AwH «......

।

Margret Barnett.
j
*■ v* oteoouw reave
Dr. and Mrs. A. B- Gwinn and today (Thursday* for Charleston.
children spent Sunday with rela- West VB-. ^^nd the week end
BMendlng came from R,,.
Uves tn Dearborn.
Slid “mJ
4 h^‘ ch**U;r. Lansing, Marshall. Battle
Dr. Winifred McLravy of Grand 1
. *nd
Marion B
Kalamazoo. Bellevue. Ver­
Rapids was the guest of Mrs. B. F. • 1,?7*son'
..
„
-----*
—
•
••
raontville and Charlotte, as well
Cowles Saturday night.
I .“r„aPd. Mr*
^rl Haas Jr.. as from their own community. At
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Roush spent attended the opening banquet of the(lhe time of leaving
every* one
aund»x wiu. Mr, lumb'. ™.h.r,
*“&gt;« «»"
«pp,
Mrs Mary Henney. al Freeport
n flUlc Co1’ turns of the honored day.
Mtes Amelia Walters and MIm 1 &gt;*&lt;*•
.
i
- - 7
Leila Jordan attended a Halloween! .**?*• M. 8. Charlton (Helen Ely)
MISSIONARY MEETING.
srty in
uesda*'
The Women&gt; Missionary Society
party
In Charlotte Saturday night.
night !ot JRf&gt;ya* &lt;*1 *“ * &lt;Heal T
Tuesday
. J. Larsen relumed
... .
1 and
Wadneadav
al al
•*-A.
Friday from
and
Wednesday
lhe----------home---of -Mr.1' of lhe M. E. church will hold a meetanxlng and
R- Cook. She was en- ing Wednesday, November 11. al the
Lansing
and has
has made
made a .complete Iano "“*■
•covery
from
hls
recent
operation
r
°
uU
9
0nv
,r
°m
the
A.
AU.
W.
seshome
of Mrs M. L. Cook
Mrs .
recovery from hls recent operation.
Mr.
Martens of ak"'
a — ?£
and
I Kntekem will have charge of the
rar. and
aiiu Mrs.
mu, Harry
mu) raMwm*
---­ R^P^
—
. of - Dr.
— and.aI »,,
an&lt;&lt;Mrs. Don
rv—Kelley
tr.n—. and ...
Mr„ A H (jarveth
BayCity
were . guests
“u.
■. and
Mr. &lt;i^votlonM
Mrs.R. G. Flnnle over lhe week
i *"d
Hamiltonof Battle
will review the first chapters of the
end
Creek ,nd
,nd
Mrs William home study book called "A Preface
Mr. and Mrs Herold C. Hunt and
Z”! ,u“U of to Reasonable Understanding." Miss
—... .. ....
. .. Mr. and Urj n p Carri*v
son. Douglas, of Kalamazoo spent Mr. and Mrs. H E- Carrick Monday Lettie Gam will give a map talk on
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs W. M- evening and all attended the Cheer- Negro schools. Mrs. Gordon Fisher
Up dancing party.
ha* prepared a paper on the Ne­
Stebbins.
groes in lhe south and it will be
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wood were
EVENING DENSERT-BRIIM1E.
read by Mrs. Joe Brozak Members
Sunday guests of Mrs. Wood's sister
Mrs
Guy
Bauer
and
Mrs
Rus
­
will bring Christmas gifts for lhe
and husband. Mr. and Mrs. Donald
sell Bauer were hostesses Friday Indians of the Methodist mission in
Murphy, at Almena, Mich
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Smelker of evening al a lovely deasert-bridge Kansas.
Hartings were week end guests of given al the home of Mrs. GuyHONORED MRS. (IBTIS.
Bauer on South Broadway Hallow­
Mrs. John McOmber was hostess
een decorations were used on the
Hot County Herald. Ithaca.
Mrs. Clara Wilkes and daughter. tables and lighted pumpkins were at a delightful bridge luncheon Sat­
urday
tn honor of Mrs F. A. Curtis
placed
around
lhe
rooms,
lhe
elec
­
Pauline, of Eaton Rapids were
Sunday guests of Mrs. Wilkes' neph­ tric lights also being covered by of Detroit, who was Ute house guest
large paper pumpkins. Contract was of Mrs. G. F. Chidester. The lunch­
ew. Dorrance Trethric, and family.
eon
was
served at lhe Parker House,
Mrs. Dennis Murray. Mm. C. W. played at six tables, Mrs L. R.
winning high wore. Mrs. covers being laid for sixteen. Au­
Wcspinler. Mrs. R. T. F. Dodds and (Glasgow
[
Mrs. W. L. Shulters spent Friday In R W Cook and Mrs. Kim Sigler tumn leaves and chrysanthemums
Grand Rapids visiting Dr. Murray. tied for the other prize. Mrs. Bigler made attractive table decorations.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Wunderlich winning the cut. After the bridge Contract was played at Mrs Mcand
Mr. and ----------------------------Mrs. Fred Durkee .re­ the horteues announced a ■'treasure Omber's home on West Court street,
--------lumod Thursda) from a month's hunt" with the result that all the Mrs. w. N Chidester winning high
..... ir
tn okmulgee
and
other
cities guests found packages with their' score, Mrs. Curtis was presented
.visit
’
■* —
•
numbers on them.
with a guest prize.
... Okl
„xlahoma.
Mrs, McOmbcr is entertaining an­
Mias Florence Wade and niece.
other group next Saturday
Barbara Wad*, of Traverse City are , FORTY GUESTS ENJOY
HALLOWEEN PARTY.
guests of Misses Helen Wade and I
Elizabeth Finch thl, week. They | W. R. Craig entertained forty of
Mrs. Frank Rogers entertained
hls friends at a Halloween party
came on Friday.
mt. and
ana Mrs.
Mra. Fred
rrea Bohn
Bonn spent
.pern.
"’kW*" honor of Mr. and the members of the J. F. T. Club
Mr.
Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Frank I Jff^®luart
and ■*’’? Dkklf" at a one o’clock cooperative dinner
„ _
....... ..
......
... .. of Detroit and Miss
MI
m
n-rtrnH.
r-r.i&lt;r
at
her farm home north of Dowling
Gertrude
Craig
Russell of Hastings at their cottage
at Algonquin lake.—Charlotte Re­ of Pontiac.
Those from away were Mr. and tractively decorated in autumn col­
publican-Tribune.
ors and foliage. Fourteen members
Mrs. R. B Harkness and Mrs. W. Mrs. Lawrence Rullege and daugh­
were present including Mrs. Coop­
R. Cook were tn Charlotte Friday ter Mary and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
er of New York, mother of Mrs.
attending a meeting of the Wom­ Chapple and son Jackie of Pontiac; Jennie Freeland, as guest Follow­
an's Club. Mrs. R. R. McPeek gave William Adair of Chatham. Canada
ing lhe dinner bridge was played,
an interesting talk on her trip last and Eddie Germund and Maurice | and the annual exchange of glfu
Storey
and
friends
of
Portland.
The
summer lo historic old Williamsburg,
took place. Mrs. Cooper was pre­
Va.. which recently has bean re­ evening was spent playing cards and sented a guest gift
dancing
after
which
a
pot
luck
sup
­
stored.
per was served. In lhe early hours
of the morning the guests departed PARTIES FOR MRS. MeNULTY.
Members of the guild of the Em­
all declaring Mr. Craig a very royal
manuel Episcopal church met for
entertainer.
a pot luck luncheon Wednesday all
the Parish House to honor Mrs. J. I
SORORITY TARTY.
A. McNulty, who leaves Friday fori
Members of lhe Bela Sigma Pill Ikliaclar Mrs RRfMi.I,.. .. .. - Dowagiac. Mrs. McNulty was pre­
sorority enjoyed a social meeting last
sented with a number of gifts by
Wednesday at the home of Miss
Ute various members of the guijd
Ethel Ragla who was assisted by I Mrs. G L. Lockwood on Monday
MIm Geraldine Williams. Dinner । en
.-rt.ln_rt at --------- '■ ...
.• •
SATURDAY, NOV. 7
—»ea „rvcd al u.-lhln, o'clock and I entertained
m
home
nn wen
wm ail
Kally.ee,i s.mea were played dur.
Mr^McN^t,
tog Ito evening. Mr.,. Clarence
01
“"W
Wood and MLu Helen Butolph win­
PARTY FOR NOBLE GRANDS.
ning the prizes. Mrs. Wood, a re­
MLss Katherine Weber entertained
cent bride, was presented with a twenty-nine part noble grands of
gift.
the Rebekah lodge at a Halloween
party Friday evening at her home
ULTRA CLUB MEETING.
"Die members of the Ultra Club on East Bond street. Pedro was
played. Mrs. Rex Forman. Mrs
were entertained last Wednesday
Maurice Roush. Mrs Henry Bo thar d
evening by Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
and Mrs. Harry 'McDonald winnuig
Roush at their home on South
lhe prizes Refreshments were aen-ed
Broadway. A pot luck dinner was
by lhe hostess. assisted by Mrs.
served at 6:30 with Halloween favors
Charles Wood and Mrs. Harry Wood
decorating the table. Honors tn the
bridge
game
were
won
by
Mrs.
oriore s»me were won By Mr- I
FAST
|
PAST MATRONH'
MATRONK TARTY.
HWfOM Newwn. Mn. Kto; Sister.
Mn. rr.nl Bogers w&gt;MtM by
William A. seliader and Olio Isen-1 Mn. Berben Freeland enlerlalnrd
DSwlI lhe local Part Matrons of lhe O. E.
8 al a one o'clock dessert Wednes­
CLEVER HALLOWEEN
day. October 28. The luncheon tables
COSTUMES IN EVIDENCE. were lovely with autumn colors. Mrs.
I The Halloween masquerade held
Libbie Asnaller won high score in
by the
lodge proved to be
bunco which followed lhe luncheon
very enjoyable. First costume prizes and Mrs. Putnam was awarded a
were awarded to Mlxs Beatrice guest prize.
Christiansen for lhe ladies and Dan
Kurr tor the men. Some clever
DINNER PARTY.
costumes were worn showing much
Mr. end Mrs. Herman Amid en­
| originality.
tertained at dinner Bunday night at
lhelr home on West Green street.
ENTERTAINED AT DINNER.
I Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Roth enter­ The guests were Dr. and Mrs. K. 8.
McIntyre, Mr. and Mrs. James Rad­
tained al dinner on Tuesday evening
ford and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dr. and Mrs Robert B. Harkness.
O’Connor, pr and Mrs. McIntyre
' Mrs. John H Nobles. Mlu Roee Dcwon lhe bridge honors.
Foe and MUa Marie Neuschaetcr.
LOCAL GIRL HONORED.
Word has been received from Big
Rapids that MUs Jean Btedgc of
tbe cteM of *35. who te now a stu­
dent al Ferrte InsUlute in the
Commercial department, has been1
NOONDAY LUNCH IS
pledged to the Thct* Alpha chapter i
of the Kappa Delta Phi Sorority.
DINNIRS
H?r Hastings' friends extend best!
wisher,.
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.

L MICH.

ALPACA!
OVERCOAT
Let the wind howl
ond the thermometer
slide to zero—end be­
low’ You’ll be worm
os last summer's sun
in your North Haven
"Alpaca.' Wear-resist­
ing and tailored beau­
tifully . . . lightweight
ond styled correctly.

u

And A GREAT VARIETY of STYLES nd COLORS.

S15.00 to *34.50
T. S. BAIRD
"Clothing and Shoes for Men and Boysn
MIONt 23M

HASTINGS

round on top of these. Press down
lightly ao that a ring of tha pink
meat will show. Pour the remaining
sauce around, garnish with slices of
hard-cooked egg and bits of pan­
ley.

1-1 t pepper.
1-1 t paprtta.
1 1-3 c medium while sauce.

Shred salmon and combine with
partaey. lemon Juice, salt, peppar
and paprika. Combine Masoned
SAUBACH AND CORN FKITTTRB
1 c summer sausage, chopped.
ur.tU Miff and fold into fish mix­
1 small can whole-kernel corn.
1 c flour.
- ture. Turn into a greased bakinc
dish or individual ramekins and ss*.
1 t baking powder.

slow oven
(350 degrees)
until
Halt.
Chop sausage finely
Drain the firm. Serve Immediately.
com and add the dry ingredient?
which have been sifted together
6 T butler.
Add the sausage and beaten egg
HAM SOUFFLE.
1 c powdered sugar
Add 1 cup ot finely chopped ham yolks. Mix thoroughly. Fold In stiff­
Grated rind and Juice of 2 tan­
and —
drop
by
' to 1 cup cream sauce, made by. ly beaten egg whites —
w »»
combining 2 tablespoons butter. 3 &lt; the spoonful into hot lard. Let fry gerines or 1 orange.
Cream butter, beat In sugar
tablespoons flour, and 1 cup milk until a golden brown and serve 1mgradually, then add rind and juice.
end cooking together in a double' mediately.
For salmon puffs, a regular re­
boiler Add the beaten yolks of two!
• ■ cipe tor croquettex may be used
(eggs and eook a minute or two, —u.^2^'R£.A8TL,
or —
individual
salmon aoufftes could
longer Chill, then add the stiffly । Th* ehuek. rump, or heel of —
—.—I bnun whiu. oi na. lr«n»l&lt;. u
P“n"
a buiured PakUiB duh ,t&gt;d bake
I? bpned and rollad. ar .coked
GERMAN POTATO SALAD.
In a .low oven until pulled and aei,, toll. Ito toew to. allhoukh. U boned ,
about M tntoute. serve al or.ee
, J” “• “tod more eerily .deedv, I 1 12 small potatoes.
i 1 ‘talk celery.
HAM TOAST
I D’Td«* the meat with flour, sea* sprigs parsley.
HAM TOAST.
',&lt;« U wm,
pepper, and
1-3 .»• *»«d
. T“v ? •
?
IO' break.
„ „„ ,n 1U&gt;11„ pol urd. Add 1 ’ T vinegar.
fast, but ham toast is something you | smaU amount of moisture either i 8011 potatoes with skins on
can couni on for a lasting impvs- wmer meal stock vegetabl- stock «lted water. Cut celery and bac
slon
»
. .
1 tomato Juice, or dilute vinegar. »n small pieces, mince parsley. 1
To prepare ham toast, moisten • cover ughtly and let cook slowly । b»con chips until crisp. Ben
finely minced ham with thick on
o{ lhc llovf „ ta tht oven I skin from potatoes -MU
while nsa
hat a
cream sauce, reaervlng part of the , unUl done about three hours
I slice. Add fried bacon, celery, pa
sauce and keeping hot Cut bread ,
ley. Add vinegar to bacon fat
Into rounds of two sizes and toast.
SALMON SOUFFLE.
pan. reheat, and mix lightly w
and Butter them Arrange the larg­
1 1-3 c canned salmon.
। salad w&gt; that bUcm will not
er ones on a hot serving dish or on
1 T minced parsley.
.broken. Serve while hot.
। lhe hot individual plates. Heap with ' 1 L lemon Juice.
Chopped onion may be added
'salad if desired.
.
creamed ham. Place a smaller toast j 1-3 t salt.

•[ 1

COFFEE

a

shone

WEAR A DIP,
SNUG, LUXURIOUS

SURE-FINE

25c

HINMAN
’S
xml
Hastings

HAM LOAF.
i Benes 50 &gt;
6 pounds smoked ham.
4 1-2 pounds veal.
2 pounds lean pork.
।
4 1-2 c bread crumbs.
I
1 No. 2 1-3 can tomato soup.
!
1 1-4 quarts milk.
1 large onion.
8 eggs.
Mix lhe ground ham. veal, and
pork together
with the bread
crumbs. Beason with grated onion
Motsten with slightly beaten eggs'
and milk. Use enough milk to make
the loaf quite soft. Pack into wellgreased loaf pans and pour tomato
roup over them. Bake In a slow oven
&lt;3CX) degrees F.) for about one and
a half hours.

LITTLE Store

BEEF RIBS, Lean
2 lb». 23c
BEEF ROAST, Chicago Beef
Ib. 18c
Standing Rib Roait, Not Boned, Ib. 15c
LARD, Beit Pure
2 Ibi. 29c

STORE

• TaaJL
1-4 I pepper.
3 c flour.
3 quarts bread crumbs
1 quart hot water.
Lard tor browning
Have a pocket cut In lhe chops
from the inside; that is, from the
•ide next to the bone. Make a
dressing of the bread crumbs moist­
ened with hot water, stuff the chops
t with this dressing. Mix lhe salt,
pepper and flour together. Dtp the
; chops In this ahd brown them in hot
! lard. Then, place the chops tn a
covered baking pan. Add a small
। amount of water, cover, and bake
I slowly for about one hour.
I Meat loaves come in for their
share of notice when It comes to
I planning banquet meals, and. in­
deed, there are many things to be
said tn their favor. Salient among
them te the fact that meal loaves
can be easily and attractively served
for it requires very little skill to
I slice a loaf into neat slices of praeI Ucally equal size.
There are many kinds of meat
loaves, but here Is one which com­
bines The smoky flavor of ham with
pork and veal.

At OU M« Winter!

MANY OTHER NEW COATS IN OUR STOCK, TOO.
220002240102160022020200281600018913000101280001020026010102023900010

SURE FINE MILK, toll coni 2 for 15c
SODA CRACKERS
2 Ib. box 15c
PALMOLIVE SOAP
bar 5c
Dal Monte Paachat
- num. k«. tit 17c
Baking Powder, Rumford, 12 oz. can 19c
Clean Quick Soap Chips un. n» tu »u&lt;18c

89c

Htlpful Suggestions |

Mr. and Mrs. Buel W. Sisson
BAKED bTUFFED FORK CHOFti.
Obserrln&lt; Their Golden
Halloween Is typically a children's
(Serves SO)
holiday and many parties were giv­
50 double pork chope.
I
Wedding
en by them during tha latter part of

Michigan

SPECIAL

SUNDAY DINNERS
12ii0 to 2i30 P. M.
'
6 to 7x30 P. M.

PARKER HOUSE

DODGE-FENN.
Mb* Alice Fenn and Allison!
Dodge of Hartings were married at
Battle Creek Tuesday, Mr. and Mn.
Dodge went to housekeeping im­
mediately gt Hastings where . the
groom is Employed.—Charlotte Rcpubllcan-Tribune.

t*

“What shall I

do with these?”
aiway. find a few
Housekeepers
odds and ends " left over." WHAT
SHALL YOU DO WITH THEM? . ..
SELL THEM OF COURSE. Sell them
for ready cash instead of lugging them
up to the attic. An inexpensive Wank
Adv. will turn the trick, just
Phone MIm Adlaker
At Phone 2415

HASTINGS BANN

WANT-A

,-.

�TIIE HASTINGS BANWFJI. THtJBMDAY, NOVYTOKB 8, 1W

I for

INSURANCE

rai

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO

FIRE
WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL .
JOON K. MeEL WAIN

HALLOWEEN QUIET
IN HASTINGS

England's Official Crown
Dates Back for Centuries

"SMCB,‘"

Parties Were Given for the England is the crown of St Edward
Boys and Girls by the
the Confessor. For elght-and-g-hatf
centuries Britain's kings have had
Commercial Club

, toh R!|.l &lt; HI »!' U—fk
! ISM 1L&lt; 1 :Uin Heid

it ilk»b rU

.iiiTh-L.1

c,"i ;r.1
1 FUR SALE --lloilnr ni.»*.
| nln»«
FUR KALE--7 m-nlha &lt;ild Gu

ra

ot Dan "Lewis on West Mill street
; The boys were entertained at the
(fair grounds, lhe number estimated
; at about 200. and a smaller group of
&lt; girls had games at lhe high school
. gymnasium. These entertainments
[•were sponsored by the Hastings
Jefferson ST. uxited rrethren Commercial dub. Joe Brozak had
church. i charge of the boys and Miss Helen
Merton helped with the girls' party.

...
।
________ n i.i

r

s.

Hsiel Hell
AFFl.ES FOR RALE

It’s Easy to See
Through Her

sAl

■i । * • ii -1II l-lr|4&gt;»nr |.!tm
Hl.rl 1.4. « Al.biracl •applit..
LtltlL-e A I'.enl
1. K Hi. • it.- S A «.» r. &gt;11

I..M HA 14.

1 r|O
.... 5 35
'
7!ti!

HRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH.

a

KOK HAL.

------------- -

=“ Z

Our Service

FOR HALE—Ilona, aad l»t »u Kaat HU..

To PROTECT You Coaitently
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly

- her
11
HALE IU3I model A dump tr.,.1
tub. k.a.t.uabla prira Harsh Kouab. Full
«tlh Ward Mdranl.r Im.
Will .ell
adsini.lrairia, 730 t: Groud.
II Id
I.,,.
a.narstr
No irade
llii.tltl
W AXTKB— M.d.11- arad lady tor rom
Jun... '« mile auutt. Ma.u arhrml Apantun for a Intar in rsuntrr Sosa
Will pa&gt; .mall »a&lt;aa. &lt;0'4 boma f.r
rl«ht part) Write "M" ears Hanner. Full SALK S-e.lt. II F HtoWeli W.n.d
l-’-l. Hunte 1. Um-dland I'bune

Wa Inrura Hosts. HoassbaM Oooda
FrtvsU Os.-km si LOW RATES

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co.
&lt;»■ Kalaaiuoa NatL Bank BIAS­
A Baasa Oospaai Orsaalsad la,a.

!

Ja La M
Local Rsaraasotsuva.

AUS

HasUacs.

FUR HALE Sew m.lrl. (ra.lr J-r.e,
raw. 0 sear* old
t&lt; Pteal«Hl
Flu,nr 7|&gt; H
tit
WANtF.h Store LatMinr. Mo.t tw l&gt;.
r.K,.l mndilion o., s,,„ st W,11 |«g

.BrK=s
z ?:

------

•

'

'FOR HALE- Derr .'Sr 1’0 ruuada 30 00
aiuninn.lHan. ta.r ronditwu. Hpno»BrM.
Ui|t action. lira.unable price. I'aol
Holcomb. Route l Mtddlrnlle
IIS
FUK SAl.E—Tea mouths old re»t&gt;trred
Uuernari bull. al«o two (fade Uuertt
aef tows Htale accredited bsrd Alsu
taro bottom, toor boras plow. 11. N

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock
Your Dead Anhnals Are Worth
DOLLARS. To assure yourself of
Zetiinx the BEST PRICES, call
MR. FLOYD DENNY.
Phone Hastings 2535—We pay the

FOR SALE—l-i” L-ehou. pull I-

COATS GROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST

SALE » family aparlmrnt r
t rctndilinn Superb loeation »
rilrw pr.re s— ur write Mr ‘
Hrirham, 30 E Van Burrt*
tile «,reek.

Vra. eAli". a

A

CARDS of THANKS
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads
No Leg Strap*

The Prescription Drug Store

i nn of i

HASTINGS............................ MICHIGAN
GasrsafevW Tran FttUag

WANTED—1

GRANGE PROGRAMS

FUR RALE —

IRVINO ORANGE

■MP EVERT TUESDAY
lo t SAI P

MAPLE LEAF GRANGE

BUYING
Colonial Paint Styles
In early Colonial houses white
paint was the only color used for
woodwork, except tor the real ma­
hogany used in handrails and. oc­
casionally. stair balusters.
The
stair was always beautiful in its
mahogany and white paint The
floors of wide boards were painted
red or squash color.

Scrap Iron, Brass,
Copper, Aluminum,

Zinc, Lead &amp; Batteries

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
nasUngs

ooatheaat ol Mi,Id

t.YOU« l
rd at.d lallia in.I
Rstural h.ii-r. Bub-'

'
.
]

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
I

Mean VISION TOMORROW—

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and

HASTINGS

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

nettle t o,

si &lt;&gt;u

COLDS

v Vv

fever

trailer
Hit.hc
riilT's’ll I -'.I 1

Most Annoying Garden Weed
Purslane is probably the most
pestiferous »«««»
garden &gt;cca
weed. 111
Its UliCX
thick
•ucculent stems store up such a
supply of water that they manage
to maintain life for many hours
after being separated from their
roots, and will soon develop new
ones at the spot where they are
thrown.

HASTINGS MARKETS

HAVING DEITIDED sot t. f

Heligoland. Germany
.Heligoland. Germany, lakes Its
name. Holyland, from having been
I a center of Christian activit; in the
j Seventh century, but it later fell In-

I'vlnmu'iion II
E H Thomp&gt;ot&gt;

"AKRON" MODERN

Farmers, Attention!

T CHURCH,
cock. Mlnlaiar

FOX TEKKIF.KH 4 ...... old il.rn.. a. 1
.ar ».role .l.«.bl- to
I..—.
aatrb dura, hustet. a.i.l plajn.Url.tlaratlleeJ Ilmira g." Sun.lt.re \ .1
1. , H.—l .0.1 Plant t'A ll.mu 1 Xn.h

FUR HALE—30 Barr,st Rock pullet.
atartins t* lay Art bur Batea. Wood
IIS
land Fboae SO—F5.
FOR SALE—I youas &lt;ee«e. ntr,
abetil 0 month, old. Fhone 31IM
drern'. Hlud.u, 437 South Mia
11 i
Haslinfi
F&lt;lH RALE- 4'abl.air la 1). - ,
F.
Jeraiy Tull and" bla&lt; lr Ib
hnund.
Mr. Mildred F«. U. Uur Mlle.
HauS.ld
FOU RALE -Martin .!3 CM deer ride

many other crowns in existence,
and kings used to carry a set of
regalia around with them. The
great coronation crown was uncom­
fortably heavy, and could'not be
worn during a long public cere­
mony. Even when the king was
crowned it was supported on his
head.
The crown that was broken up
and sold by order of Oliver Crom­
well's parliament in IMS was des­
cribed as "of massy gold weighing
seven pounds six ounces" and en­
riched with rubles
sapphires,
emeralds, diamonds and pearls. It
When Charles II was restored to
the throne, the bill of Sir Robert
Vyner. the famous goldsmith who
supplied the new regalia, came to
&gt;160.000. This included two crowns.
The state crowns often were re­
made for various kings, and a spe­
cial one was wrought for King
John. John, however, did not lose
it in lhe wash, as history recalls,
for it was still in existence in 1290.
Henry V wore hls crown while
actually fighting at the battle of
Agincourt. It is said it saved hls
life when the Duke of Alencon
aimed a lusty blow at the king's
head, chipping a piece of! the
crown with his sword. Richard III
wore his crown at the battle of
Bosworth Field where he was
kilted.
A new Imperial crown was made
for the coronation of George IV,
■nd another for that of Queen Vic­
toria. Queen Victoria's crown was
placed above the coffin of George
V for the funeral procession.

AUCTIONEER
DEWEY REED

i
Al.l M.li-i

&lt;&gt; l.u ll.enat
PILGRIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE.
. T II. Hnoa. Filter.

ll.t U. L&gt;
U

Yea.

Ul ' al-.v'l. '

BOWSE CENTER.
Mr and Mrs Orvln Smelker and
Marian were Thursday night supper
guests of their parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Anderson of Sparta, the occa­
sion being Mr and Mrs Anderson's CHVRCH OT THE^gJ’TED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST
illly-foiirth wedding anniversary. j
................
cult
—E B &lt;]
Mr. and Mrs Harold Nash of ।
Lowell and Mrs Jennie Flynn and
Clare spent Sunday at John Nash's
Mi*, and Mrs John Thomas of
Lansing. Mr. and Mrs Lewis Skin­
ner of U-ighton. Mrs. Addle Benton
and Wllilun Muisliall of Grand
' Rapids were Sunday dinner guests
of Mr and Mrs Merrill Karcher
। Other callers in lhe afternoon
j were Myron Thompson and family
of Jackson and Mr and Mrs. Henry
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH
Karcher and Maud and Mr and
Mn. Nell Karcher of Freeport.
Mr and Mr» Montgomery of De­
Church—Mid.
troit visited tlielr cousins. Mr and
Mrs. Asuhel Thompson. Sunday
•rhuol. lo C.O
forenoon.
Mrs Ellen Seese, who
11 OO A. SI.
has been visiting in Detroit for a
few clays, returned to her home in
&lt;&gt;o l‘
Freeport with them.
a ao r.
Mrs Gertrude Thomas and Mrs
Irma Brown were in Hastings Sat­
urday.
Mrs. Addie Benton returned to FIRST UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH.
her home Sunday after spending the
nut four weeks with Mrs Lewis
Skinner of Leighton.

I
,

UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
IN CHRIST.

Baltimore Cbnrcb.

II to A. M

I
MeCallE

.
।

II TO

1

EMMANUEL CHURCH
j

1 bands that ravaged the Hanseatic
1 merchant traffic ot the North Sea.
To this Hamburg put a stop. Join­
ing tiie Island to the neighboring
Schleswig, whence it passed to Den­
mark and Anally to England about
lhe beginning of the last century.
The trading ot Heligoland to Ger­
many for the island of Zanzibar off
the African coast brought on ■a
storm of popular protest In both
countries. In England, the trans­
action was explained as ths wish
Azerbaijan lies In the south-east- of Queen Victoria to grant a favor
to her nephew, the young Emperor
of the Soviet Union and is therefore William.
part ot Europe, but lhe people are
for the most part ot Asiatic origin
Sights In Naples
The
of this small, but i Sights to be seen in Naples. Italy,
,
-population
„
Important Soviet republic, rutrt ot 1 delude the Cett.edr.l, builtIZ1:
th. Cueee.en Mention whleb eho u,o N.llonal Mureunt. eonutnln. e
Include. Geor.l., Abkhrr.r .„d ; prl„te.. collection ot .nUqultU.;
outer sm.lkr ouionomou rc.ton,. j U1C s.n C.rlc Oper. hou.e, one o&lt;
ir only two end « belt mlll.on. It, I ute ler.e.t In Europe; tbe mo.t
c.pllal I, Beko, one ot the .ro.te.t complete m.rlne Mu.rlum In lhe
oil producing center. In the world, j WQrld, end the Unlver.liy ot N«A million and ■ halt ot the people ; pt,,, rounded tn mt
ot Azerbaijan are Turks who speak
Wood Tanks Oldest
Azerbaijani; the rest are Tats. &gt;
Lezgians. Talish. Avartxy. Ar- I
Although vats and tanks in indus­
menians. Kurds. Tatars. Assyrians. try can be made of many mate­
Greeks and Russians, in Baku. I rials. chemical plants rely to some
mosques tower above crooked ori- extent on wood tanks, which are
enlal streets in contrast to lhe mod- I among the oldest vessels used by
ern workers' apattments in lhe out- ' man.
lying sections.

ADVERTISING RATXBl

JOB PRINTING.

World's Hottest Spot
The hottest place In the world is
believed to bo a province called
Ladak. in Kashmir. India, says Tit­
Bits Magazine. The temperature
rises sometimes to 160 degrees in
the daytime, yet lhe province is sit­
uated among the glaciers of the
Himalaya mountains.
Al night­
time. however, the temperature
may be only 45 degrees.

I MUST EMPLOY at once
a

man

living

manent work.

satisfied

in

small

Must be

with

earning

$75 a month at first.

Write "X" Care of
this paper.

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

BEEF BY THE QUAR­
TER FOR SALE.

.

PHONE 3909
HERMAN

FELDPAU8C1I

WANTED
upright or nearly new
player piano for small bal­
ance due on contracts.

Finance DepL. P. O. Box
Ml, Detroit, Michigan.

But fils, often mistaken tor rabies 1
by hysterical people, are common.
When a dog tails unconscious, snap­
ping his teeth together. frothing at
the mouth, shaking convulsively, it ,
is not a sign of rabies. The only sure ।

• AUTO LOANS and Refinancing

fully.

TO GIVE YOU READY CASH. OR TO REDUCE
YOUR PAYMENTS. OR BOTH

Soils in the Hawaiian islands, westernmost agricultural section of
the United States, are made up ot
decomposed basaltic lava.

ORDER TOR PUBLICATION.
Slate of Michlfa

'

Fidelity Corporation of Michigan
16—2nd Floor Hastings National Bank Bldg.

5-Pc. WALNUT BED­
ROOM SUITE, complete.
Used only 3
$ftft.50
weeks—•ONLY W

NOT1CB TO CREDITORS

Phone 2307

FURNITURE SPECIALS

PIANOS—
$4 ft.50
Standard makes I O up

KITCHENETTE SETPainted; Newest $15.50
style—ONLY—
0
OIL HEATER—
Coad condition—

Sj.oo

FLORENCE AUTO-MATIC OIL COOK STOVE—
Perfect condition. $ft.00
ONLY—
£
ROCKING CHAIRS and
OCCASIONAL CHAIRS

75'^125
BRIDGE, FLOOR and

TABLE LAMPS—

50' . *2 °°
STOVES. ODD PIECES.
SUCH AS CABINETS,
STANDS. BOOKCASES.
ETC.. Fr£

DON TAFFEE
302 NO. BROADWAY

arid tourt
March A.
ctslon means victory and to waver
means failure.

E

BRAND NEW LIVING
ROOM SUITES —Sturdy
construction,
beautiful,
high grade upholstering.
Regular price $ftft.95
$69.50—ONLY OC

Windsor, England
Windsor, England, is located on
the Thames rjver. about 21 miles
west of London. Windsor castle
covers 12 acres of ground in the
Home park, which is about four
j
miles in circumference. A tree-lined

Great park, which has a circuit of
Wanted lo Keep Jumbo
18 allies. The castle, consisting of
London Zoo was over­
whelmed by a great storm of pro­ numerous chapels, cloisters and
apartments, is dominated by the
test in 1BS1 when Jumbo, ths
largest captive elephant
ever round tower, which was built by
known, was sold to Barnum. Meet­ . Edward III. The Van Dyke room
ings were held, editorials werr pub­ contains a priceless art collection.
lished and a song wa scopula n zed About one-half mile from tiie castle
in a vain effort to keep him in Eng­ stands Frogmore. a handsome mau­
land. At his sailing he not only soleum of Queen Victoria and her
received countless messages of sor­ husban^.
row and bon voyage but also thou­
sands ot presents. Including dolls,
Napoleon used to say, "If your
eiderdown quilts, games,
sewing
adversary can bring a powerful
machines and books. — Collier's
force to attack a certain post ten
Weekly.
minutes sooner than you can bring
Bad Egg
up a supporting force, you are beatThe
solicitous .waitress
ap­
proached -the young diner. "I for- plans be the.most perfect that can
wanted your eggs turned over?"
" ’Sa good idea." replied the boy.
"Turn ’em over to ths museuml"

Showing
ana
vein in the complicated struc­
ture qf the human body, this
••transparent woman” is lo be
taken on a two-year tour and
exhibited in every section of
lhe United States
The model
l.i made ot a non-inflammable
substance, "cellhom." Its con­
struction was made possible
through funds provided by S.
IL Camp of Jackson. Mich.

IN BARRY COUNTY. THREE MONTHS.
IN ADVANCB .... ............_.x._....
OUTSIDE BAHRY COUNTY. ONk YEAR
IN ADVANCE _____ ,_____ ___ .SIAS
FUBIMN SUBBCRIPTIOXS. ONI YEAR
IN ADVANCB.83.00

9 5S—Hood
ll&gt;&lt; w.tr.bip i
Hperlsl mu.i,

Natural Icebox in New

pleasantly warm to the touch does
not seem a likely setting for a de­
posit of perpetual ice. Yet in just
such a locality, where the brazen
New Mexican sun beats down upon
a surface which once was molten
stone, a deposit of perpetual ice
does exist, says Natural History.
Signboards lead lhe traveler to a
voleantc sink, an abrupt degression
of an estimated depth of seventyfive feet This was produced when a
natural tunnel in the lava bed
caved in. The tunnel was caused by
tiie flowing away of molten lava
from the lower part of the bed
after the upper surface had cooled
and hardened.
Its presence so near the hot sur­
face of the ground depends prlmanly upon the tact that lava la
among Nature's most efficient tem­
perature insulators. The lava con­
tains an infinite number of minute
pores and cavities, and the dead
air in them hinders the transmis­
sion ot heat through the stone from
the sun.

eighty first yka»

Edward's crown placed on their
heads, although there have been
new ooea during thot time.
The monks of Westminster said
the pious Edward had bequeathed
hls regalia to their care In order
that future kings should be crowned
with it in the Abbey church. In

A rainy and cold evening on Hal­
loween kept the usual pranks to a
minimum. Windows received their
I usual soaping, a lew cabbages were
J thrown around and Uw utreru were
। noisy. The only serious incident was

PHONE 2165

The Hasting! Banner

The official name of the crown ot

WORD. HO ADVKRTIMMBWr FOR LISS THAN

HASTINGS. MICH.

"Two blocks from Main St., *tis true—
but—two blocks from high prices too

�THURSDAY, NOV. 5, 1936

|

what

THE HASTINGS BANNER
BROTHERHOOD
J
’ HEARD G-MAN

Barry Bypath*]

the man charged with or impeded ’

So successful has been thl* work .
with criminal* Dial Congreas has1

PIONEER DAYS IN
THE EMPIRE STATE |

v- F- w-

SECTI
YOUNG PEOPLE

PLAN GATHERING [

'll

&lt;

Riley

Local United Brethren Group ' ----------- m
tynd or Middle.
The last meeting before Insu
tlon of officers was held Thuri
to Entertain Lake
j wtwn ,or*u**i atowdigw Ma
are not criminals and have no’
ville Has a Lot of
Odeasa
Folks
11£
crSkViini
’Sdih aba fiS
crim*,
‘
thought
of
committing
crime,
butp.u-.
October
29.
A
general
conclusion
of
■
, .
*
The country Qentleman gives us up
Relics
CUNNINGHAM TOOK I Is done purely to identify them. Sup**encs
the year's business
Uie
bu-iine.cs was Included
Included and
Campaign's
Campaign
a Hom*
Homa alrctcb.
fthU: "The United State* I* in a
The young people of the Hastings, time I knew moat everyone fa ifi
—------------ --------------------------I pose, for instance, a body should be ! Mrs. Mattle Prindle Lynd of Mid- plans for the coming year discussed.
everly hills cai if i,errlble fix
want or straw, ail plaoe of mb. reineoke [found In some lonely place ip tile ,db/Ville is the possessor of a quan- 1 Robert Ross Bllvin became a mein- United Brethren church are enter- tings and vicinity and bated
r—
..
’ . e»mp,i
*
the
of Panama
t
west and a finger print obtained and | llty of pioneer relics and historical ber.
talning th* young pepole of the leave old friend* But a man DM
—•Here
the
6
n manufacturers
H
uu. country
l&gt;.« hat*
dint &lt;te«n1 wwn wan
WH0 it
WAS
ILL
Luke
Odessa
United „ Brethren .follow hte Job.
l-ent to Washington. If that man P®P*rs which she prizes highly. Mrs. I
. a •
practically on its last leg*,! their plants. Three
Tier:: hundred and
ar.d i
L"
m
.had previously been finger printed. [
.Tri^n
toltowing in-| The 5UbJbcl of our feather party church on Monday. Nov. 9, atf r wOrk&gt;d ln nmk Creek eb
„ ...
—2-— In
... EXPLAINED METHODS
when ..
it ....
isn't $tan&lt;linc oon
its! ,nJ’W-'fchi- -.-mattress
factorial
„
uWn moved to OhkNN
m.nr-an 1 Washington could Immediately give teresUng-tolt of family history which was wbicd temporarily because of eight P M. All other young pepole'
.। , .
.
.
.
”
.,
Kansas alone
...
"
clone have closed
closed. Break.
Break— — ——— *■
are Invited Following te th* pro- wh.r.
daughters were BUanS
head and spinning aro»'”l
fast food makers In all part* of Uw |
C.
--------OF .FEDERAL BUREAU the name
of—
the mon. hl* residence | we are passing on to our readers: I tiie p
reOTrauons being
preparations
being made
made for
for the
lhe
gram, with 'Thanksgiving” as the
After the girls had M
My grandmother's parent* lived Armistice night banquet, ..
-i)Ut yet not a peep out ol the I land have nearlv exhausted their, _.
—i—
« ...
J?*1 the n“iea„°‘ hla ””**"?*•
thente:
i Diet*d their college courses and t
three fairest h.ired vn.mo «Mrve stocks. Thar* te hardly a! Finger Prints Are a Poiltive th* present time thousands of In the western part of New York
Welcome—Mary Stamm.
I for California, I decided to tot
hope, of the New Deal7
! ^r? o^ ^*‘‘„‘^o^ld '
M“Dcivilians are sending in their finger and in the year of 1812 had their
Department chaplain Hartman of
trying time* with lhe Indian*. Just
Devotions—Biblical Thanksgiving back to th* old home town, *
prints for identification.
Post 505. Battle Creek, will be here
The speaker
speaker gave
gave concrete
concrete cases
case* I at lhe time of the breaking out of
.... putting
...
'
Criminals
—Mildred Follick.
i tings.
They'r* still
on an act. —i! ----------Kentucky
homes. There hasn't been I
OriminalB
II The
next
Thursday
for
Installation
of
,
hat's known in vnu teville a* a a prominent person hung in effigy ’ At the openiag meeting of lhe J
recen,1
W ,
' th* war one June day her parents officers and also to present our Post :
Special Music—Hastings Young
when I got off tha train at I
umb act
had, ,? *° u,e
of and a neighbor (neighbors were;I color* lo us. This will be an open People
l old pzsscngtr depot, there wpa
dumb
act-—entitled
_...The Lollo Boy* anywhere ih the nation during the I Hastings Brotherhood last week , "”8er1pr,
scarce • In those days—even In lhe j'
—
•
■
test
three
months
because
of
tack
of
■
James
D.
Cunningham
talked
about
,hc
c
riminal*
and
their
convict
ion.
(
I
meeting
and
we
are
expecting
a
Thanksgiving
Origin
—
Lake
Odeslarge crowd to meet th* train
In a Sub-Cellar."
! old Empire state) were warned,
the necessary sluffing. The United i the G-men He was suhstituiinD far
.
' *** ,
that Buffalo was burned and that1I delegation of three or tour cars of
Horrid
tales abound. Jo
Tls rumoredIWc*th&lt;r
tha
tthaai^luTaau
h“ MtoppedMrH. HRamacke of Detroit, head PT “
_ ,
.
Music—Lake Odessa Y. P.
th* Indians would be after their people from the two Post* In Battle
co'P'ns reporting the direction the wind will of the federal bureau of investlgaCreek. All members ol the local Post
'inanxsjiivaig n,a.y — &gt;mogene • know me. "Well." I thought to mfscalps before morning. Acting on lhe
rrotn tne white
there being no *Uaw* u&gt; use lion In this slate.
Mr. Cunfling.
...
self, “all the old timer* sent be
and their families are urged to be Cooley.
thought of lhe Irishman who said.
j dead." so 1 stepped
House dungeon
iMKY^W1^ indicators. Even lhe beasts and ham Is associated with Mr. Reinecke
present.
"If I knew where death would over­
I Music—Haatlnga Y. P.
caused by Tugwel)
Tucwell
m being til
w I hir.u
birds win
will soon feel the effect of the I in lhe work. Mr. Reinecke
take me I would be far from that
, . ,
■ .
. ,
Thankigivlng Ideal—Lake Odea- veteran telegraph operator­
1k® I shortage cows everywhere will fail1 could not come.
Vem
Sinclair
has
been
appointed
,
a
y
p
“
place." they hitched their ox-team
gag out of hi* mouth
[ to gel their necessary sleep next | Last week on account of the
key.
National Book Week will be. ob­ [ to a sled, their cnly means of trans­ chairman ot lhe" Americanization
’
with both hands tied
wlntei because of Ute lack of ade- crowded condition* of our columns. served in the schools the week of
I said. ••Hello. Hub.”
committee. We hope to hear more
I quate bedding. And next spring j due to articles relating lo politics, November 15 to 19. Special project* portation. and started for a larger about IhLs committee during the
Song Leader —Ruth McLaugid.n.
._
He swung around in hl* chair and
settlement
which
look
two
or
three
nr*
being
undertaken
in
various
|
thousand* of birds are going to ' wc were unable to give the substance Zt’o.
And a note believed
Hastings, and Lester Rush, Luke said. "Hello. Riley. Going away?"
"----------------------! days Thls P,aCf lhey louqd desert- coming year.
I commit race suicide, because they' of Mr. Cunningham s address. He ciasse-s.
Odessa. Pep songs.
| That sort of made me think ti!
to have been written
ed w (o wgrd
(he redsklns they
I will be unable to get straws for their ' held the closest attention of the
by Harry Hopkins
The Ladles' Auxiliary are holding ‘ General Chairman-Helen Adams,
'
*
*
made
a
stand
for
lhe
night
and
I nest*, straw voting ha* sure raised members of* the
'
Brotherhood and
has Oren slipped
A "Fortnight. Jr" was Issued by whiled away the hours iii playing
ig their installation of officer* this t Following the program there will half as Important as we think wa
lhe dickens!”
was most heartily applauded at the uic
i-|Thur*day
....
.
.with
.
the juuiniinui
Journalism cuu*
class uun
last Wednesnruxo- , ani
drum.*
nu ana
and nte*.
fifes, singing and runiTnursaay evening at b‘ ociock. we
■ social .hour
games and are.
through lhe bar*
conclusion of hl* speech. In fact day. Thl* mimeographed sheet is loaning bullets. The noise was to give understand u pot luck supper will refreshment* tn charge of
Mrs.
-----------------* m ’
begging
somebody
the members fell that had Mr. supplement the regular school pajn-r
A
street
car
conductor
a&amp;ked
a
lit
­
.v_-.
-------------------------. army. Ix-nabclle Tift and Mrs. Amy Bow- COWELS CHANGES
, the
appearance of a great
But- ■be served,
to smuggle in a Ale irvInS. Cobb
tle girl her age. "If your corporation Reinecke himself come he could not and furnish the student* fun and*-----■*- - -neighbor
• ••
1
soon —
another
came after
in a loaf ot bread.
------------—
------------I
PLEA TO GUILTY
have
made
a
more
Interesting
or
ac
­
doesn’t object, I will pay adult fore
J them and told them that„„
the news Our Post has mad* very nice pro.
.by advertising.
Xlchberg. once the merriest ot the and keep my statistics to myself" ceptable talk. We believe our read­ frolic unhampered
• • •
| was a false alarm. So they turned gress thia summer under the leadcr- FARMYARD LIGHTS GOOD
-----------administration's songsters, doesn't was tbe reply that fell upon hLs as­ ers will be much Interested In a
Al
the
club
hour
Monday
morning
about
and
after
a
long
and
tireI
ship
of
Commander
Paton.
Beside*
guard
against
thieves
.
Justice
Suspend*
Fine on
chirp any more, having oven in' tonished ears.
summary ot hls talk to the Brother­ the Travel Club sponsored by Mr. । some Journey reached home. That gaining eighteen new members we
DeMre for better lighting in lhe
~
‘
J
duced to take on the rolo of the man
hood.’The substance of Mr. Cun­ Becker visited the Yankee Springs ' night a little daughter was ------Payment of Costs
in
born—to *«•«.»
have —organized our
Auxiliary,
farm home ana other farm build-,
In lhe iron mask.
In the McCall's pattern depart­ ningham's address Is a* follows:
them,
who
was
my
/grandmother.
I
bought
a
new
flag
for
the
window,
u
the-Case
.
---------- -- ----------------------------- -- --------------------------------ing* Ls the principal motive which'
The federal bureau of Investiga­ Park project. The club te beginning
ment 1* a page of ski accessories un­
Il was said that 1st her birth lhe I set of silverware, our Post color* and ucluat^s ranne„ to secure electric
Fred Cowels. 17. of Plainwell had
lhelr study of travel near home and
der this heading "Oh. say can you tion was organized In 1906, but it will later branch out into national figure of an India* brave showed i made a number of contact* by put- service. Thl* better lighting how- hte nearing in justice Andrew MatRemote-Control Patriotism.
could not accomplish much because
ski?" Pretty clever.
clearly on her forthead. Afterward I ting un several public affairs. Al- l cver Is too often confined to the in- : thews' court on Saturday afternoon,
Its member* owed their appolnl- and International travel.
TA ID you ever notice that these
wxs seventeen years old though we have not brought our &lt;erior
tcrior of the
lhe buildlnu*
buildings onlv
only, un
coweis wa.
was arn-.ted
arrestea ror
uniawrmiy
when she was
On 1 onwel.
for unlawful!?
t»,.
। ment* to politics and not to their
impassioned European Hole*
her father, who raised horses to sell! membership up to 100 yet, we are many ol
w-c^ued electrified । hunting on posted land*, lhe cora"*&gt;d? w,r Joh1?' fitness for the place, in 1924 Harmen, who to boldly defy tyrants in
n«
~
farm* lhe kerosene Lvntern still ptaint being brought by Walter
a* a budnm
business, buitt
built a hi»
big stone I। &gt;tin
&gt;till working.
euvenuemenu Un « Btonc
oon*a Baby rvwucr
Powder advertLsements
attorney general
What rule
the homeland, generally pui two or ■ are
iirr auralv
MUreJy erowimt
Krowlng. what
eule utile
utUe j Jnder Pretldenl Coolidge. He^ecld- lhe High school sponsored by Miss house employing a boss mason and i
----***
serves
a*
the
only
source
of
light
In
Spaulding.
Il
is
alleged
that
Coweta
Michael. It is to be called the So­
carpenter for the Job. I think the GLENN DENSMORE SAW
three national boundaries between I rascals they ore.
the yard.
«hot a squirrel in a tree on /kba
cd that politics must be rooted out cial Activities Club and will devote figure of the Indian must have faded
METEOR -rum
THURSDAY.
wrrrna
themselves and the nbjet &gt;a ol their
lighting Is desirable on ev- 1 Spaulding farm in Prairieville Twp,
of this branch of government service its efforts toward* various means of
Glenn
Densmore
had
an
experhate bore tutting loose? One fiery
Why. oh why. didn't we know and believed he knew Just the man being of service to the achooL The somewhat, as my grandmother cap­
ery farm, says D. G. Ebinger. agri- and that right below th* squirrel
Henry •lencc test week he will never forget, cultural engineering department at was the no trespassing sign, five
mason. E™,
anti-fascist waited until nv got tc about Communist Browders visit to do It. So he selected J. Edgar club te composed mostly of upper tured the boss
le boss
boss 11 wU*
remembered meteors were
Hoboken to tell Mus«o in- right to lo Michigan last spring? Wc could Hoovri and gave him a free hand classmen although its membership Prindle. and her only sister, the
State College. . Light shots going through the sign. Cowala
reported by citizens In various parts Michigan
his face—lhe face being ant) 5.000 have saved some good rich over-ripe and induced Congress to take away te not limited to them. This week carpenter. Mr. Beardslee. People for
makes It possible to do the farm who had previously pleaded not
incubator egg* (that didn't hatch) all political control from lhe G-men. they are assisting with the work miles around used to say that John of lower Michigan.
Mr. Densmore was talking to four chores after dark with ease, in less guilty, changed hls plea lo guilty,
Stevens
paid
for
hls
big
stone
to
pass
around
among
the
reception
time
and
with
greater safety to the He was assessed $10 fin* and M-M
thought of him.
Thereafter no politics has been al­ for Die athletic banquet Saturday
house which still stand*, with horse* laborers in the beet Held on a farm worker.
committee, oh. well. It's probably
Il sometimes becomes costa or ten days in Jail. Th* fine
' Not that I'd blame any patrint for just as well, just our luck to hit a lowed to enter any department evening.
near Gun lake when hls attention.,
and girls.
.
'necessary to guard against thieves was suspended upon payment ot
was caught by wliat seemed to him
playing safety first, dictator* being cop and have lo be bulled out of the of that work and from that Ume on
Mattle
Prindle
Lynd.
and other night prowlers. Properly costs by the young man's father,
its membership was all trained. For
Classes in the High school partici­
to be a big silver-colored ball with located yard light helps serve this
•o sensitive to crillriim. Ii fact. I Ritz suite at lhe county Jail.
-- ----- ----------*- ■------------ * many year* and until very recently, pated in the general election held
two large flames of fire. When the
EXECUTIVE MEETING.
like the idea to much. I m think­
purpose. The cost of these lights is iof twenty-one children.
only educated and qualified ac­
An executive meeting of the Bar­ meteor came closer to the ground often paid back several times by a I
ing ot taking a correipondence
Mr. and Mrs. Favorite have a baby countants or educated and qualified , Tuesday by having their own mock
boy. That inspires a few more pun*. attorneys could Join th* G-men. i contest. The member* of the eiec- ry County Council of Religious Ed­ the tall was plainly discernible.
course in lion-taming. myself.
noticeable decrease in theft. Where-1 A publisher te after Hall* SelaMi*
Mr. Densmore said it was a thrill­
How's this one—"No matter if they Their work was largely with bank tlon board were chosen from U»e, ucation. tnet al the home of the
ever they are lautalled they should for a book. It would describe tha
have a dozen, they'll all be favor­ defaulters so Uial skilled ac- ) government and economics chutes. president. Mrs. Alice Griffin. In ing sight and one he will always flood the barnyard with light.
, feelings of a conquering lion on b*Rooms 301. 310. 205 and 206 were Woodland. A pot luck sujjper was remember.
Debunking Politics.
ite*."
1
- ------------------ ------------------- ' uig ttirown to th* Christians.
• countant* were necessary to go over ; set aside for the election booths. served
'
■rvcd at seven o'clock.
o'clock
C. M. Hendershott, who lives tn
Despite lhe report that America i
AN nothing be done lo stop the
I tiie books of such institutions, and । The voting classes met in these
Five
members
of
the^bo$rd
were
।
the
Hendershott
district,
also
tells
has
drifted
another
Inch
farther
It
cost
$35.00)
to
kiU
a
soldier
In
j
Another example of wasted effort
destructive utterancis of this
I tn the case of criminate It wa*
revnt. also two guests.—■
| us that he saw the meteor in the away from Europe, steamship com-!
i rooms, and there wa* a special 30­
'J0* "“i"’ *1“ &gt;“1 necessary
■&gt;«&lt;»—XT that ™
the m.e.u,.ten
investigators te.unman. Al Smith? Think ol him. a* ne
Much business was discussed — ।[ northwestern sky and wa* thrilled panics
panles have announced reduction in I poems to hls fiancee's eyebrow
TtLte1*'';a,.Sn|d»rBte&gt;d I.ter.l law, and how io ' minute period provided for tiie
did In that Philadelphia speech of
i
teachers
and
post-graduates
to
cast
Pearl Burgess. Secy.
‘by the unusual sight.
--------------- •—
steamship
rates.
of the wealth "
of the" apply them. Since that time this de“ much
”
his, urging the voters to sift the., how
I their ballots. This election wa* held
can beAconverted
into
bunk out of lhe campa* (n und study |&gt;rorld
'
--------- .—. ~
J
I partmenl has opened the door so
»I the
u» next few
tew y„...
rem. Kt tho« who live Ud experience with the idea of stimulating Inter­
materials in
the fact*. Doe* he wont to deflate t
cat In the Intelligent choice of lo­
&lt;A&gt;lng
pretty wood
good Job
Europe 1*
Is K
*oing a uretlv
lob ■on
_____
.
___________
....
-nollce forces who as such devoted cal. stale and national officials.
the whole system ot American polltheir time to Investigation of crime
tics? Would you hire « cook who
and had proper educational back­
squeezed all lhe meat out of the
Friday morning the music depart­
Lieutenant's wife: "What kind of
ment of the High school presented
sausage and fried the sausage skin a dress are you going lo wear to ground have been admitted.
Before any man will be considered a very enjoyable program in lhe
for breakfast?
the Navy Ball?"
for the force, hls parentage, his ex­ Central auditorium. The boys' glee
Even so. maybe a little debunk­
Ensign's wife: "We're supposed to perience In school or college or busi­
ing would bo gratifying to quite a wear something to match our es­ ness, If he is engaged in business, club under Mr. Lower's direction
sang the "Sea Chanty" and "Old
Jot of us who wish to sta-t concen­ cort's hair, what are you going to are thoroughly
investigated. He King Cole." The girk led by MU*
trating on footbail as soon as possi­ wear?"
Lleutcnant'sl wife: "I guess I had must be a man of good character. Glerum gave a Negro croon, “Stop
ble. I’m especially interested In
After being satisfied that the man is That Buzzln' ~ and another num­
better
stay
heme.
My
husband
1*
how Yale comes out on its clever
properly quaHfied. he is recommend­ ber. "Alice Holiday." Mr. Lower, a
bald."
ed to Mr. Hoover for appointment. recent addition to the faculty of tiie
Utile Idea of selling to a commer­
Before he can be named, however, High school, gave two vocal solos
cial broadcast the radio rights tot
You have often heard that walk­
all games played or lhe home ing Is one of the best, exercise* to he must undergo at least fourteen and as encore sang "Rollin' Down
grounds. But tiie fellow who gets ,make a man hale and hearty. But weeks of Intensive training al Wash­ to Rio." The High school orchestra
ington.
The speaker said that Mr. under the direction of Mr. Hine
the empty-bottle* concession te lhe :have you ever seen a mall carrier
Hoover had around him the finest concluded the program with the
one who'U really elcan up.
who looked "hale and hearty"
experts In criminal Investigation overture "Luspiel." a novelty num­
enough to whip a truck driver?
that can be found in the world. Aft­ ber. "The Clock." and for their clos­
er that training they are taken to
"Lead Denar’s" Immortality.
Col. J. C- Robinson of Chicago Quantico. Virginia, where they are ing selection played "Moonlight
OW some old triends do hang ha* Just opened a flying rchool for
and Roses" m Paul Whiteman style.
trained and must show themselves This orchestra deserves commenda­
negroes. Col. Robinson served in the
on!
thoroughly proficient in the use of tion for lhelr skilled Interpretation
Ethiopian air force in the recent
all kinds of guns. This is done so of the various type* ot music which
•bouts, it appeared as a short story war with Italy.
that when they, are on an investi­ they played. Much credit 1* also
in Everybody's magazine under the
gation. the criminal for whom they due Mr. Hine for hls fine work In
SHERIFF’S FORCE
title, "The Lead Dollar.'*
are hunting shall not be better getting
—
--------organization
Into
armed or a better shot than the OTwenty yeara ago. believing I
GETS OFFENDERS I men.
was using an actual occurrence
There are thirty-seven held ofwhich never before had been Ac­
The fire bell startled lhe students
Three Youths Brought Into
out of their classes the sixth hour
tionized. 1 wrote it. too. and called
Justice Court and
It "Heart of Lead." and. barely in
time, was saved by Bob Davla and
Sentenced
' within three minutes. »It proved to
Charlie Van Loan from the unin­
About two week* ago Arthur Hal­
tentional but nonetheless serious lit­ stead. who I* employed at the field forces, they are called In once be Just a fire drill.
erary crime of plagiarism.
Parker House and who had kept hls a month for consultation and fur­
The senior class mixer was held
Fifteen yeara ago. Octavus Roy car In the old livery barn north of ther training and once Ln eighteen after school last Tuesday. The
Cohen and I just did head off a that hostelry, found that hls car months everyone must go lo Wash­ grand march wa* led by MU* Mi­
ington to be re-examined, to have
had
been
stripped
of
it*
battery,
young girl writer who already had
chael. Marian Hewitt, Junior Leon­
any new law* explained to him and
ard and Jarncs Nash to the music
sold the same tale to a pleased edi­ spare lire and tube and other ac­
to be retrained for hU work.
of Jack Rearick's orchestra. Bonnie
tor. I forget now what she called cessories. He reported the matter
Th* principal question In the Carpenter entertained with a tap
to the sheriff's office. At first the
her version.
officers had no clue* to guide them hunting of criminals is to know dance and a piano solo was given
Today, practically complete in all In detecting who might have taken something about Ute mon before go­ by Robert Bush. Cards were played
Its sequences—poker game, bogus lhe missing articles. Last week a ing after him. Half the work U by those who did not care to dance.
money, practical jokes, good Sa­ representative of the sheriff's de­ done when «uch Information U ob­
maritan, homeless girl, skeptical partment and Marshal Thompson tained. He told ot the old Bertlllon
Mr. Becker's dramatic* class ha*
hotel clerk, pitiable suicide and all determined to find the offenders. As system with Ita photograpiis and I been divided Into four groups, each
—I find this dear old familiar stand­ a result of lhelr effort* they arrest­ careful physical measurements of I of which will construct a miniature
criminals. This was thought to be
by in the current issue of a popular ed Bernard Vander Water and Ivan
set for lhe staging of the senior
perfect, but thorough trial of It
Play. The best one will serve a*
monthly with .yet another author Allerding of this city and Floyd
October 26th,11886, the Hastings City Bank was
the protection of depbsitors by paying only a por«
McClurkln of Rutland. The officer* proved that It had many imperfec­ the model for the school stage set
sponsoring IL
found all the evidence they needed tions. and it wa* abandoned lor the
started with a small capital and organized on a con­
tion of its earnings to the stockholders and retaining
in the case. The three young men finger print plan of Identification of
Jack Garner's Activities.
were taken before Justice Mat­ criminals which haf worked so suc­ INCREASE LOANS
.
servative basis. Little did lhe original founders real­
the greater part for lhe surplus agd undivided profits
BY SUM OF $61,000.
ONTH after month. Uncle Jack thew* Thursday. He gave Vander cessfully. At first the entire ten fin­
gers were printed, but now only one
accounts. This bank stands today a living memento
ize that they were starting an institution that was to
The Charlotte Production Credit
Garner never said anything Water and McClurkln each thirty
may be used.
association covering Barry. Eaton
days
but'—Oitritl" and then not for pub
­ In the county jail unless they
play
so
important
a
part
in
the
development
of
this
to the integrity of the men who have been chosen to
At present In Washington there and Ingham counties has made a
lication. It seemed that, If defeat­ each paid $29.50 fine and costs and are 6.200,000 finger prints of men
gain of approximately $61,000 in the
Allerding sixty day* unless he paid
be its officers. The same conservative policy adopted
community, hardly could they foresee die problems
ed. bo would go back from the com­
fine and cost* of $54.50. At this charged with, suspected or proven first eight months of this year, com­
parative obscurity of Washington to writing they have not been able to guilty of crime. Fourteen thousand pared with last year. A two day con­
by the original founders has passed to each succeed­
that were lo confront it, nor could they prophecy that
the blazing prominence of Uvalde produce the money and are board­ new one* are added every day. and ference was held it Marshall last
county, Texas, as the most finished ing, With the sheriff.
within thirty-six hours after re­ week which was attended by Pried A.
this bank would celebrate its fiftieth birthday. But
ing officer and is the policy under which lhe present
specimen of sound-proof nominee
ceiving the 1400, the finger print* Smith of this city, president of the
officers operate. It will be the guiding factor for
the foundation on which this financial institution was
SOUTH BOWNE.
at Washington would show whether association. Mr. Smith reporta that
American politics ever produced.
The Harold Rosenberger family any of the 1400 new ones have been between Jan. 1 and Sept I the asso­
those to come. Built on the principles of sound Itaitkbuilt has proved to be a sound one which was due
ple to all innocent bys^ndcrs—he's of Freeport called at the Harold previously finger printed or not. He ciation had loaned it* members
Yoder home last Monday evening. said the tip of each finger ha* on over $149,000 and in that same time
to the fact that the orginal incorporators established
just a candidate.
ing and proven by fifty year* of good time* and bed
Rev. and Mrs. Roush of Ashley the average 130 point* for identifi­ the members have repaid $77,700,
Having read his first speech. Pm were dinner guests Wednesday at cation. Chances that two might
times, this bank merits your confidence.
the policy of building a strong capital structure for
which was 33 per cent of all the
reminded of the English gentlewom­ the William Mishler home.
have the same finger print* are » business on it* books up to the end
an who fell on hard times but did
William Mishler and family vis­ remote a* lo be out of consideration. of August.
♦
ited Bunday afternoon with Muri It con be mathematically proved
YouTl find the’ present crop of
driven by necessity to peddle their Holstetler and family of Campbell. that If there were only thirty, in­
surprteingly well up on
Choir practice for the young peo­ stead of 130. points in the finger* to
all the big question* of th* day. if
So she picked out a back alley ple was held at Elmer Shaffer's be considered, there would be only
one chance In six trillion of making you refrain from embarrassing them
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Griffin and a mistake, while with 130 points,
as ahc'crept stealthily along, whisMarion have moved from tha Mc- tiie chances are practically nothing.
As we understand the National
Culla farm to tha Jennie Pardee As a matter of fact. the identity of
warning, the
"Fresh eggs, tuppence. 1‘ hope farm.
twelve of the prtaripal point* in Economy League's
Mrs. Elmer Shaffer returned finger printing is considered *uffl- WRA. PWA. AAA and CWA will

By JANG CAMGRON

3SXSS » te XZ .“«;«*"•

about’ ®x*&lt;&lt;&lt;***^&lt;&lt;**&lt;*^c*&lt;^'^

B

Hastings Hluh School
Activities

C

H

1886

1936

M

HASTINGS CITY BANK

TELEPHONE 2103

LOBB.

home Monday evening after visit­ dent to show that the Anger print*
at Washington are the print* of
ing relatives at Kokomo, Ind.

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�Tub

HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER S. IBM

in Lake Odessa the guests of Battle Creek hospital
In's steter-ln-law. Mrs. UsMr. and Mrs. Ralph Brown and her neighbor* and frteni
daughter Juanita spent Sunday in Halloween parfy Sxturdai
ommunity was shocked to Orangeville th* guests of Mrs. Cayds. mu«k and danclig
evening all too quickly. All depart­
ed far their hqffie* decl*rjng Mr*.
Laubeugh 4 rojel eftieHatner.
Frank Water* had the tfiUfartune
to have doc* get tn at hls sheep,
killing a very valuable one.
George Ransom and Estelte L*Ubaugh. made a business trip to
Grand Rapids Friday.
Mrs. Anna Laubeugh and daugh­
ter Gladys and Mr. and Mr*. Cody
Laubeugh attended a birthday party
Sunday at Mr. Kinney's al Nashville

w

AUCTION SALE
Having sold my farm, I will dispose of my-proporty at pub­
lic auction at the farm located 1 1-2 miles east of Barbers
Corners, then 1 mile north, or 2 miles west and I mile north
of Coats Grove, on

THURSDAY, NOV. |2th
Commencing at 1:00 o'clock. I offer the following property
COWS.
Holstein cow, fresh in spring.
Jersey and Hereford cow, 8
years old, giving milk.

HOG.

Shoot, weight 90 lbs.
CHICKENS.
40 mixed hens.

HAY AND GRAIN
About 130 shocks of corn.
8 tons mixed hay.

TOOLS AND HARNESS.
Good double work harness.
Thomas drill, 11 hois.

Osborne mower, 5-ft. cut.
2-horse dump rake.
Steel land roller.
Single harness.
Good mower.
2-horse riding cultivator.
Single cultivator.
4 ten-gal. milk cans.
800-lb. platform scales.
Cider barrels.
Grindstone.
' Hay fork and knife.
Forks, shovels, hoes &amp; many
bfhet articles too numer­
ous to mention.

TERMS OF SALE:—CASH. No goods

removed until settled for.

WILLIAM HILL, Propr
Dewey Reed, Auctioneer.
Arlie Endsley, Clerk

tenuon of conservation observer* on
tbe personal danger* to which consgrvatlon officer* expose themselves
in Una of duty. Hardly a month
goes by in which one or more of
thortl who i
uniforms of 1
Fisheries authorities are waiting vision is i
for th&gt; annual heavy runs of fin­ manhandled.
gerling perch from the Great Lakes
have suspected
» under arrest.
fi«h can be started on Ume lor

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

stocking inland water*, particularly
the designated “pike" lake*. With
__
_
____ being reserved by the department
tha____
exception
of a very few ,
year*.
unmen*e school* of young perch of conservation for Governor Frank
5EX KrJZiuti.SVfS.ufcS* D
" • "p*"*1
along the shoreline* of I^ke* Michl- ment
—
moroAn.
gan and Huron in the fall anq tn meni w
Oct 29 Letter.
some
instance*
have
run
up
stream
...........................
* *
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Adams were in
total of 503 person* will have
Lansing on business last Saturday. Fisheries woriter* ctepend. upon
ih.M nu&gt;. for IMU
pejeh I ■» V,.l tub: w hunt d«r durln&lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Renkes and
slocking
njptill.k
since
perch
.re
•&gt;»
'.
’
-J*!
“
P"
’
«~0« Wtfnnlnd
son... Donald and Jerry, and Miss
not prop.it.ted .1. lhe EtcherU, &lt; H°’- l!
lorbld. the
Linda Endrems of Grand Rapids
isnnnce pt Ucenus to tune trho
vLsited Sunday al the home of Mar­ lor planting tn Inland neters.
• • • .have violated the deer law* or hilled
cel Evalet and family.
'
nr
wminrir/f
onnlh*r
hnnr.r
Now
U the
the Ume
Ume for
for bird
bird students
student* or wounded another hunter in
in the
Claud Gross and children and
and
Now 1*
....
. .wood*.
Many
Mrs.
.ws.Olive
uuveOros*
uros»ofoinear
nearLeach
ueacnlake
ixice, and sportsmen's
"pwmhuxu---.clubs
hum
.to----------plan ...
their
- - of-- the»e
- __ -hunter*
-----­
spent Sunday
■
with -Mr.
and- -Mrs.
‘ winter
winter bird
bird feedlna
feeding nrocrams.
programs. sass
sa&gt;s
t d"r’hunUn«
— Rowlader.
------ I the department of conservation. Ar- privileges not only for this year.
B.
__
_
but
for
the
next
two.
three
four
or
three,
rsngement*
with
farmer*
for
corn
Mi-, and Mrs. Dorence Shaffer and
,
children and Mr. end Mrs. Lewis ■nd other grain* can be made with five yean.
Hili of Grand Rapids were guesLs greater advantage at thL* time
Bird feeding station* should be
"Michigan Waterfowl Manageof Mrs. Nellie Wolf Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Frucci and established early so that they will | ment.” 328-page book written by Dr.
children of Lansing spent Sunday start lhe birds coming before heavy • Mlles D Pimle and published by
the department of conservation, will
with Mr, and Mrs. Wm V*n Syckte ruiow*.
• • *
I soon be on the bookselve* of C. A.
Mr. and Mrs Wm. Adam* were
The killing of Andrew Bchmeltz. | Whitney, managing director of lhe
the guest* of their son. Donald
Bowlard, and family ot Duck lake M. a conservation officer In Mar-1 Colonial Ammunition Co. Ltd., at
quette
county,
ha*
focused
the
at; Mt. Eden. Auckland. New Zealand.
Sunday.
Arthur Webb of Battle Creek, son
of Mrs. Cha*. Harrington and Mis*
Beatrice Hooper of Battle Creek,
daughter of Mrs Welter Lewis of
Freeport were united in marriage at
Angola. Ind.. October 17. at the M
F church. Rev. Smith officiating.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Webb of Bat­
tle Creek called on Mr. and Mrs.
। Chas. Harrington Sunday.
! Mr. and Mr*. Cl*lr Van Byckle of
| Lanstng spent Tuesday and Wed। nesday with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Van
Syckir________ ___ __________

5

c#

EAST WALL LAKE
AND VICINITY.
Mr. and Mr*. Ed. Maturen of Kal­
amazoo spent a couple of days at
their cottage the paat week.
Mrs. Martha Reynold* returned to
I her home in Urbundale Saturday
after visiting lhe past four week*
with relatives here.
|
Mina Aldrich spent Wednesday
I with Mr. and Mrs Carl Ricker In
I Hastings.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Krliter and
1 .sons and Cha*. Loubaugn were
Battle Creek shoppers Saturday.

WEST ORANGEVILLE AND
EAST GUN MARSH.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hansen and
■three Utile boys from Clarksville
visited tbe former’s parents. Mr. and
i Mrs. Ben Hansen, over the week end.
Bob Beattie started work this
Monday morning for the Yellow
Tsxtcab company of Kalamazoo
Mr. and Mrs. Will Werner have
started housekeeping in their new
horn* at OUego where Mr. Werner
has a job In lhe paper mill.

Stour...
NEW 1937
Studebakers

ea.

AMERICA’S SPOTLIGHT CARS
Worid’i first cars with dual economy olffbm

oil cleaner and automatic overdrive B-New

AUCTION SALE!

undenlung rear ailes give big roomy interior* — chair height seali • World i
largest luggage capacity • World’s easiest closing doors with eiduiive nanrattle rotary door lock* * World’s first can with built-in warm air deltoiien •

Only con with Automalic Hill Holder * World’s siroagesf, safest and quieted
-II «iMl Mdief • Studebaker’• G I. I. Budget Plan offers low time payments.

Having decided to quit farming, I will dispose of my property at public auction
ot my farm located 4 1-2 miles northwest of Hastings, or 1-2 mile west of Al-GonQuin lake, turn left off M-37, second house, on

WEDNESDAY, NOV. II
SALE STARTS AT 1:00 O'CLOCK. (OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY

HORSES.
Bay gelding, wt. 1,300; 14 years old.
Brown gelding, wt. 1,400; 13 years old,
(Good workers.)

cows.
Holstein cow, 12 yrs., pasture bred,
Holstein cow, 8 yrs., due in February,
Holstein cow, 6 yrs., pasture bred,
Holstein cow, 2 yrs., pasture bred,
Holstein cow, 2 yrs., pasture bred.
Guernsey cow, 5 yrs., giving- milk.
Yearling heifer.
CHICKENS.
8 spring chickens. 13 heavy hens.

CORN AND HAY.
6 tens alfalfa hay. 250 crates of corn,
5 acres of corn In field.
AUTOMOBILE and tools.
Whippet two door, 1929 model.
McCormick mower, 5-ft. cut.

John Deere mower, 5-ft. cut, nearly new.
2-horse dump rake. Grain drill.
Corn sheller. 3-sec. spring tooth drag.
Wagon and rack. Wagon and box
7-tooth cultivator.
John Deere hay loader.
Oliver riding cultivator.
Oliver double riding plow.
Walking plow. Spike tooth drag.
45 gals, kerosene and drum.
Gasoline drum. 4 milk cans.
Diabola cream separator. Cider barrel.
Ice cream freezer. Iron kettle.
Numerous miscellaneous articles.

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO
PHONE 2101

HASTINGS

Be Smart

Whflney* money-order tor seven
shilling* ha* come * *—
** ’
**■
“■
than any other
request fbr
llca tlon.

Templeton. a deer-nunter ।

special church attendance in'thto

son.
Templeton will use a square
piece of red cloth on the opposite

A Hl-Y club I* being organised at
Vermontville with the cooperation
shoulder straps as a background for of the school superintendent and
his numbered license Lag. The tag
will be sewed on Hie rad cloth, which
The Adult and Youth Forum to be
will fit squarely between the shoul­ held
in Eaton Rapid* Nov. M will
ders as required by law. If weather
furnish a program ot keen interest
condition* permit of light clothing
to all who go. and delegation* from
ar suddenly require heavy, warmer
other point* In the area ar* urged,
garuwnta. Templeton can slip Use
to attend. The meeting begin* at
red cloth easily over hl* back no
2.M and close* at 8 with a stirring
matter what he l* Wearing. This
address by MU* lone Catton.
makes a quick, easy change. When
Middleville Hl-Y club have the
the teg te sewed on the back of the
hunting coat and a change of gar­ Initiation of their new member* thl*
ments I* necessary, It must be de­ week Wednesday, with a big supper
tached and sewed or pinned on lhe al C«mp Barry or at a home In
Middleville. Wm. CarmlchMc) Is the
coat to be worn.
•?
leader and EHU Cross, president.
C. P. Angell was In Nashville
Tne largest planting of black baa*
fingerlings made In the upper pen­ Tuesday noon to meet with notne
insula ha* just been completed from high school boy* relative to a local
lower Michigan hatcherie*. Nearly Hl-Y club there. Tuesday afternoon
100.000 young bass, averaging about at Middleville was held the month­
four Inches but some 10 inches or ly meeting of lhe Barry County
Ministerial Association with Rev.
more tn length, were planted.
Fitch of Woodland giving the ad­
dress. Thl* is the fourteenth year
MeOMBER SCHOOL DISTRICT.
of
the organization. Rev. Rdgelman
Mr. and Mr*. J. c. Clark of Dur­
of
Middleville M. E. church I* the
and and Mrs. Anna Busey of Fen­
ton vteited their brother and family, president thl* year.
Grand Ledge member* ot the lo­
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Clark, the past
cal area Y committee and friend*
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Traver *pent held a meeting at the schoolhouie
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Howard last Monday evening with some of
the high school boy* a* guests, for
Kimerling in Battle Creek.
the transaction of local buslne**.
Mr*. Charles Haney and Cather­ program plan* and state Older
ine spent a few day* In Grand Boys Conference representation.
Rapids last week
The Older Boy*' Y group at Ha»Miss Gwendolyn Gaskill spent the tifirTheld their regular meeting last
week end in Ann Arbor with Mr. week at the home of Mr. and Mrs
and Mrs. Eddie Brlningsthall and C- F. Angell. They not only enjoyed
attended the Michigan football a chicken supper but had a special
game.
program, with Ml** Rose DeFoc as
Mrs. Lawrence Christiansen en­ guest speaker, who gave a very In­
tertained wit^ ■ Halloween party teresting talk on her experience* in
Saturday afternoon for Louise and New York Uib summer. Wm Hack­
Leland
ney. who studied photography there,
Mr and Mrs. Archie Sinclair pf also told of some of hte experiences
BatUe Cicek spent Sunday with Mr. and look a picture of the group.
and Mr*. Vern Sinclair.
JURY LIST NOVEMBER TERM­
Following Is lhe jury for the No­
POWERS ECHOES.
vember term of circuit court:
Oct 29 Letter.
Marciu* Bagley. Orangeville.
Mr. and Mrs Henry Frost had
Lyle Biddle. Rutland.
as week end guests their son. Bid. I
Vern G. Bivens. Maple Grove.
and friend. Mis* Viola Frit* of । Walter J. Brown. Castleton.
Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs. Knight, ■ Robert Burch. Hastings city.
■bo of Detroit.
Verne Colton. Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dick of ' William Craig. Johnstown.
Detroit spent the week end at the
Lovtll Dewey, Barry.
horn- o! her aunt*, the Misses AlFloyd Dillenbcck. Castleton.
mlra and Nell Recd.
Correll Eldred. Assyria
Don Saeger ot Freepor’. visited . Herl Fancher. Baltimore
hi* son. carl, and family Sunday.
| Ward Green. Woodland.
Richard and Russell Palmer of I Carl Heise. Woodland
Detroit spent the week end with j Charles Hinman. Hastings City.
their parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Miner i James Hull. Orangeville
Lyle Lelnaar. Barry.
Palmer.
Blanche Merrick. Hastings.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Nagel and fam­
William Moore. Hope.
ily moved to Irving Saturday *~~
for
Roy McCall. Irving.
the winter.
,•
George NoBke, Thoma pple.
William Norris. Orangeville.
CARLTON CENTER. &lt;
Royal Rice. Baltimore.
Our community te saddened this
Otto
BchanU. Thornapple.
Monday morning by lhe death of
Cyrus Shroyer. Carlton.
Miss Noreen Clem, oldest daughter
Sterling Sponable. Rutland.
of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Clem, who
August Tasker. Carlton.
passed away this morning after a
Harry Walsh. Yankee Springs.
brief illness at Pennock hospital.
Walter Warner. Prairieville.
Mr and Mrs. Jay Wing visited rel­
Claude Wilson. Yankee Springs.
atives in Holland Sunday.
A. F. Wing. Assyria.
Mr*. Col. Yarger Ls caring for

Mrs. Jonathan Kick ot near FreeDUNHAM DISTRICT.
| port. Mrs. Kick is 111 with heart
Oct. 29 Letter.
। trouble.
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Marsha
Mrs. Wm. Hale was In Battle
and the latter'* »teter. Mr*. Henr
Creek. Friday.
Volt* and daughter of Wisconsli
called at Clem Kidder’* Bunday all
emoon.
Mr. and Mr*. Horace Wagoner ar
son of Olivet were Sunday guests &lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert McOtocklin.
The High school and local &lt;cht&gt;
pupil* enjoyed a vacation Thtirsd*
■nd Friday. «hiie their teachers a
tended the institute al Grand Rai
id*.
Mr.. Tucker
mi
jucaer ana
and hl*
nu pupus
pupils ar
ar
I several from the community sa
•Steeping
Beauty"
al Centr
•chool auditorium. Tuesday afte
noon.
Mr*. Olive McIntyre and Katl
eryu and Mrs. Pearl McQlockl
called on Mrs. Ida Cheeseman
Nashville. Saturday afternoon.
I Sunday evening, November I r
viva! services will begin at Sou
| Maple Grove, with Rev. Rhoade*
I charge and Harley Bailey of l*eto
| key to lead the singing.
Mr. and Mrs. Royal Donovan ha
:turned from their summer * tea
la with the rodeo.

save repair bills, get
a better car now and

Save Money
• The NEW 1937 FORD will be here Nov. 14th, ond

from now until then we are going to offer our stock of
Used Cars and Trucks at BARGAIN PRICES.

O YOU WON'T NEED CASH NOW—Bring in your old

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
2 heating stoves, wood and coal.
Brusfer piano. Buffet. Victor radio.
Wardway electric washing machine, new
12-gauge double barrelled shotgun
38 caliber rifle.

car and use it as the down payment on a better one and

Other articles not mentioned.

GAINS !

we will arrange liberal terms for the balance.

• Come at once and look ov«r Otir stock of Used Cars
and Trucks and get the FIRST CHOICE of MANY BAR­

TERMS OF SALE—CASH: Nothing removed until settled for.

FRANK OLNER, Prop
DEWEY REED,

A 1 Ir A■A n A ■
Auctioneer

n. ■ n h

. .. .

CLIFFORD HAMMOND, Cletk

Y.M. C. A, ITEMS
The International
"5
Prayer" observed by lhe Y.
and tbe Y. M. C. A. 1* Nov
It This L* a world wtele «er

Universal Garage Co
PHONE 2121

FORD PRODUCTS

HASTINGS

LOWER CROOKED LAKE.
Oct. 29 Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Boylen of O'
lake *pcnt Monday evening at Frai
Roush’s
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Zttnmr
mtn and fatnlly of Galesburg *pr
the week end at C- Zimmer man’s
Mr. and Mn. Bert Stenger
Kalamazoo spent Sunday al J
Stenger's.
Donald Kingsbury spent the we
end tn Hastings.
Mr. and Mr*, a. Round* and fit
Uy of Battle Creek spent Sunday
Joe Stenger’s.
Frank Roush and three chlldr
and Mia* Rena Stenger were
Hasting* Wtdnuday afternoon.

Chicago Pharmacist
CurbsDoafnet
A Chicago phi
fertd tor yearwl
notees and deal
solved hb case
ration ot a Vi&lt;
counties* other
vice* failed to
i* wed and praised by_____ _
wtio were hard of hearing, bothei
by head nptec*. earache, ringlpy
bussing in car*. 11 you drgM
proachlnc deafness, gel OU fl
today.
Relief i* immedUtfej
the coal I* only a few cent* a •
Money back U dissatisfied.—Carv
A Btebblus, the Resell Store, H
lings. Mich.—Adv.

Oct.

pupil
parin
I I.Hl’
rupre

playa
Thur,
hall I
hlbiU
Ing t
when
given
the I
dress
event
prom
state:

will t
Will I
thur

Belen
Repo
City,
talioi
Hallo
ing c
holde

hi

won ■
* mu

Cated
cry r
eccon

end i
foiled
ment
prove
, their
Beldl

prese
last *
trate&lt;
dlagi:
ment

comn
on cc
Mbs
uboui
Bhe
been
debal
Chon
8»ifc

ot th
Race
nice
conel

Hulk

weneach
one ।

acrot
orchc
cider
and
Mr t
lucre
with

Mr
the 1
terta

prog*

�the

ITEMS
1
"wetit of
the Y. W. O. A.

stance in this
ug organised at
he cooperation
rtntentahl and

tih Forum to be
Is Nov. « will
if keen Interest
elegaUons from
eUng begins at
with a stirring
i Cation.
club have Ute
w members this
th a Dig supper
at a home In
rmlchiel Is the
la. preiidcnt.
in Nashville
leet with some
alive to a local
raday afternoon
rid the raonthBarry County
on with Rev.
giving the adrourteerjlh year
Rev. Rl^elman
church U the

ibers ol the loec snd friends
:he schoolhouse
; with some of
s os guests, for
local business.
State Older
resentation.
■ group at Haslar meeting last
f Mr and Mrs
.at only enjoyed
t had a special
Rom- DcFoc a*

• experiences in
ler. Wm. Hackitography there,
hU experiences
the group.

MBER TERM,
try for the Noult court:
rangcvllle.
tnd.
aple Greve,
Castleton,
tings city,
tings,
instown.

Castleton,
syrla.
ttmorc
sdland.
and
{astirga City,
[cvlilc
Hasting*.

loma pple.
angevllle.
lore,
irnapple.
triton.
Rutland,
triton,
kee Springs,
ralricvllle.
nkee Springs.
1ST* ICT.

rover Marsha
er. Mrs. Hem
of Wlseonsli
•r's Sunday aft

:e Wagoner ar
unday guests &lt;
: McGIocklln.
&lt;nd local sebo
alien TtnirscL
etc teacher* a
at Grand Rai
hls pupils ar
ommunity sa
at Cenlr
Tuesday afte

yre and Kat)
irl McGIockl
Clxescman
afternoon,
.'ovrmber l r
&gt;egln al Sou
tev. Rhoades
lalley of Pc to
Ing.
I Donovan ha
summer's tra

NOW...B

Remodel! Rep

See us for all kinds of
Building Materi

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

will be as follows: Chairman; Ar­ weighed in nearly every position, but ;
thur Griffith. President ol the F. F. they made up for this in fight and
,A. Music—T. K. Giee Club; Hal­ spirit. Belding went home that night
loween Surprise by the sixth grade; । defeated by a Class C school.
Science Novelty by Science Dept; I
State High from Kalamazbo Is our
Report ot P.-F A. trip to Kansas! opi»ncnt.....
w. Fans, you.....
this„„
week.
have
City. Charles Chamberlain; Presen-1 a team to be proud of. Come out and
lation of fair awards; Duet. MLv, boost U..'
Bailonger-Mr. Cunningham; Award-,
------------------ &lt; •*
■
ing of ten projects to lucky ticket I
BRANCH DISTRICT.
holder.
The Dorcas Society of North
I Maple Grove will be entertained by
.P/1
.
Mrs Sarah OstroUi and Mr* Mabie
T„
K‘ Der“u
.. Adams. Thursday. Nov. 12 for an
Di the annual football game with ail day mPcUng.
1Ien°n,Lr,V"1' c,lw,0,llf' T. K • Mrs Fred Nelson was called to
won 6-0. File ganie was played on i.NashvIlle by the serious illness of
a muudy field n a mist of rain. It
daughter-ln-taw. Mr*. Clare
was a comparatively slow game, with &gt; MUM)n
Caledonia fumbling practically evMr and Mrs
cry punt T. K. made. Early in Uie [
of Hastings were Sunday evesecond quarter. T K- scored on a Mlllg gueaU of Mr and Mrs Hcnry
pas* from Peeling lo Fenton In lhe Bldelman
TnJ°n&lt;‘
. Ux,ch‘Jow" j Mias Edna Ellenbaas of Hasting*
tolled on u fake kick teom place - | waa tt 8Uest, Bl ule Henry Bldelman
ment. 1 K.s stalwart defense again i hom, 8undfly.
PI0:'''0. —»&gt;
Mr. .nd Mr*. Keith Norton «na
, their territory mart ot the lime Rarl*ru attended a Halloween party
StMlnt u our opponent thu week. .„
0, Mr „,d
Blu
l&gt; T A
| Wlilte near Marshal).
A very worthwhile' w«r.rn wy, ..11"11™’ &gt;»«’" “
B"ulh
prerenird lo pvrenis and t.-icher* “•’&gt;*
ekureh Bund.y eveC« Wedne^evlnmi Ah X" I "&gt;"«■«'&gt; E &gt;' &gt;U&gt;«de.. the puuir

traled talk was given on the cause, |ln c,,nr9ediagnosis, prevention and treat- ——
ment of tuberculosis, which was the
—
best ever heard by laymen in this |
community. MIm Rose DeFoe talked
on community and school relations
MU:. Tutzl told parents and teachers
about a new venture of lhe school
Open Evenings
She named tiie students who have
been chosen to represent T. K. in
WE BUY
debate. They arc as follows. Charles
Chamberlain, Betty Streeter. Betty
Swift. Maxine powers. Robert Car­
ter and Viola Fischer.
■
MOTHER'S CLUB.
The first Mother's club of the year
was held m lhe new lunch rooms
of the school Tuesday. Oct. 20 Mrs.
Kaechelc. the now president, had a .
nice program after which the moth-1
ers held lhelr business meeting und
concluded with tea.

HINDS CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Tobias visited
her brother. Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Newton, in Hastings Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bishop arc
moving Into Mrs. Harry Waters'
place.
Mrs. Vida Phillips of Hastings
spent the week end with her son.
Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Phillips and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bunnell of
Kalamazoo called on Mr. and Mrs.
Edd. Newton and Mr. und Mrs. Or­
ville Hammond Sunday afternoon.
Richard Beadle spent the week
end with his grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. John Brogan.
Mr. and Mrs. Edd. Tudor and
Mrs. Stella Bump of Hastings colled
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Will
Moore Bunday afternoon.
The Doud school had a Halloween
party at lhe Kline and Golden home
Saturday evening. There were 18
guests and they report a fine time,

HIGH SCHOOL DANCE.
Friday, Oct 23. 1U36. n High school

K. gym Many guests from outside
wen- present due to the fact that
each student wm allowed to Invite
one guest. Howard Marlin's orches- |
trs supplied th- music and also an
acrobatic act by a member of hls
orchestra. The Junior class sold
cider. The Senior class sold hats
and ran a make-believe fish jwnd,
Mr Carmichael, their ctass adviser,
increased the fun by filling balloons
with hydrogen gas.
FACULTY PARTY.
Mrs. McDonald, school nurse of
the W K Kellogg High school en­
tertained the T -K. faculty al din­
ner at the "Diner" Monday evening.
Oct. 26. Following dinner a short
program and recreation was given]

Phone 2458—Hastings

week

end Sunday morning. Funeral services Marshall

|

^CHEVROLET «37
GSnip(etefi[~lleiu~
ON DISPLAY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7

Free Delivery

POULTRY, CREAM, AND

Gold Medal
FLOUR

*1.15

PALM OLIVE
SOAP

5‘
Fell Naphtha
Soap, Bar— *T

EGGS

Soda
Crackers

15

2.0Lxb-

GOOD DROOM—Painted Handle and
1 ENAMELED (Rubber Edge) Du*t Pan—BOTH

Kingnut
Margarine

Aaraarinn

FIG BARS
p
OQ&gt;
Lb».

CO

Sweet
Potatoes

WH ExATIES

2

lu27‘

2 pkgs* for 23c

5

u.

15‘

SQUASH, 3c Lb.

3 SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUITS
17c
GRIMES GOLDEN APPLES .. 1 bu. $1.00
SPRAYED FRUIT-MEDIUM SIZE

2 for 15c

HEAD LETTUCE

MODERNIZE far PROFIT

new in every feature, fitting and
It’s the newest of all low-priced cars
fabric . i . also the most thoroughly safe, the most thoroughly proved,
the most thoroughly dependable

It Pays!

N SATURDAY, November 7, Chevrolet will present the brilliant

O

successor to the only complete low-priced cur—Chevrolet for

1937, lhe complete car—completely new.

You’ll want to see it, for

it reveals an even greater measure of superiority over its field

It Pays

than the fine car which in 1936 aet a new all-time high in Chev­
rolet sales.

Chevrolet for 1937 is new all through ... new in the unequaled

anyone who

: Boylen of q

beauty of its Diamond Crown Speedline Styling . . . new in the

unmatched comfort and safety of its All-Silent, AU-Steel Body,

owns a piece

odore Zttnmr
jalesburg ape
Him merman's
trt Stenger
mday at J

of property to

now available for the first time on any low-priced car . . . and

NEW HIGH-COMPRES5ION
VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE

keep ic up to

spent the we

date

funds and fit
pent Bunday

and

in good repair

three childr
ngcr were
afternoon.

icbt. who st

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Chaffee of Lansing were over the
Mason are spending a few days
with hls parents. They were called
here by the death ot her aunt. Mrs.
Roach, of Nashville.
Mrs. Leo Reynolds and Marjorie
spent Saturday in Battle Creek.

moat excitingly new in the greatly increased power and accelcr-

too, Ulis thrilling motor car is proved all through.

tntncdlatb-n
• tenia a A
Wied.—Garr
all Store. H

It embodies

all the extra-value features which have made Chevrolet depend­

HYDRAULIC MAKIS
dept

able and complete beyond any other car in its price range.

NEW ALL-SILENT,
ALL-STEEL BODIES

Visit your nearest Chevrolet dealer.
plete car—completely new.

See and drive the com­

Let your own good judgment tell you

IMPROVED GLIDING
KNEE-ACTION RIDE*

that this new Chevrolet for 1937 is the outstanding value of thia

•ll-decl bodies

MODERNIZE UNDER THE NATIONAL
HOUSING ACT through THIS BANK

new motor year!

NEW DIAMOND CROWN
SPEEDLINE STYLING

CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN

Making thia new 1937 Chevrolet lhe smartest

NATIONAL BANK
OF HASTINGS
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

TELEPHONE

2217

SAFETY HATI GLASS
All AROUND

THESE
sUmUrd

SUPfl-IAPf

GENUINE FISHER
NO DRAFT VENTILATION
him. OUR1
by thoustr

-

WALLACE GROCERY

LED LAKE.

mscist
Dwrfnei

Hastings banner. Thursday. November 5. ire

OUIMBY
I with ghosts, witches and refresh* I guests of Mrs. Kenney's parents, Mr. will be held Tuesday at 2 o'clock al I
at the school, Miss Cameron, a li­
Mr .nd Mr. Hrt RICm.n wd rn.nu M&gt; Unporunl mn 0/U&gt;. .«•■ «nd_Mr. ^CUUV.II^ _
brarian of the W. K. Kellogg Foun­
nlng '
- *
I Over Ute week end and Sunday1 Charles, living at home, she leaves
Thornapple-Kellogg
dation library, spoke on recent books Mr. and Mrs. Glendale Allison of
Ralph Skidmore and Mr. tnd Mrs.! guests of Mr and Mrs.'H. J. Rob- ‘a brother Ln Grand Rapids.
for young'people and children. MIm Burgoon. O.. were week end visitor* Jack Snyder visited'Mr. and Mrs. &gt; inson were their daughters. Retha I Mr. and Mrs. Beil of Detroit
School Noles
Marguerite Tnucetl also gave an at lhe Ritaman home.
Nevelt
Everette
of
Decatur
Satur] and Ruth of near Bancroft and have been spending their vacation
Mrs. Pearl Lowell took a load of
lntere«tli&lt; account of her girlhood
day.
Lester Lara bee of Hastings.
J with the former's uncle. Fred
experiences in India. Cards fur­ ladies to the district meeting of the
-------------- ——*-----------------I Last Friday evening the teacher. Granger, and family.
Oct. 29 Notes.
nished the entertainment for the Foreign Missionary Society al Mid­
: Willard Kidder, presented a fine |--------------- ‘“------------------ '
THREE CORNERS.
rest of Ute evening, and scores were dleville Thursday.
IIIGHBANK.
Itr. and Mrs. Lyle Clark and Halloween program for the October '
Mrs. Julia Hicks of Hastings visit­
won by Miss Lindke and Mr. Van
Al the time of UiLs writing the
About 30 boys of Hastings High
ed al the Samson home over Ute family of Allo spent Bunday with,• P. T. A. meeting. The mothers and
i daughters of the district will pre- 1 and neighborhood attended tne i
pupils are busily engaged in pre­ Syckle.
week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Yelter.
,
sent
lhe
November
program;
the
paring exhibits for the fair. Each
birthday
party
given for Lynn Mar- I
Mrs. Clayton
Mrs. Leo C. Hammond,
ssnusi. Dvitww*.
*/*••*. McKeown returned- --- Mr. and -------------ANNUAL SCHOOL FAIR.
, I ladles will meet to discuss plans aliali at Ills home last Wednesday •
grade and each department .will be
The annual school fair was held .Sunday from a visit In Cadillac and ,of Lansing came Wednesday -everepresented again this year.
. at T.-K. school. October 29 and 30. Grand Rapid*. Returning with her nlng for Dicky Lee who had been , next Tuesday afternoon.
evening. Games, music and
pot
luck supper were enjoyed by all.
I
Tiie buildings will be opened for Every department of the school was I were Mr. and Mrs. C. W. McKeown visiting hls grandparents. Mr. and
MIDDLEVILLE.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hoffman I
parents and friends to see lhe dis­ ably represented with exhibits of I and Mr. and Mr*. Frank Wilson Mrs. Claude a. Hammond and fam-1
■
—
_ i- r.Mrs. Clair Getty lias returned visited Dr. and Mrs. Hugh McDori- ,
plays nt 7;0l1 In tiie evening both lhelr
who .rxnl
spent tlu&gt;
the dav
day at
al thr
lite MrKrown
McKeown
work.
Dr. r,.
Carrothera of ii.lhe wHn
Thursday and Friday. Al 8.00 lhe school of education of the Univer­ home.
Mrs John Olner and son. Robert, from a few weeks' visit with her , aid al Coldwater. Bunday. Mr. and (
hall bell* will ring and then the ex­ sity of Michigan was the speaker on
Mr. and Mr*. By Edmonds spent of Rutland were Saturday afternoon people in Canada.
Wm. H. McKevitl received word ' ton. Ohio, were guests also. ■
hibit* will be closed fur the meet­ the program Thursday evening, and the day in Kaiamo visiting relatives guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Kelon Thursday of lhe death of hls
ing to be held In the auditorium i hls address was well received About and lhelr old home.
near Allegan
_________________________
moved here last week.
Myrtle Wilson, the teacher at
where excellent programs will be 1.400 people attended the fair durMrs. Bruton DeCocker of Ute Ry­ oldest brother. Harry, who went________
Phono 2515
Frank Sago
given, Dr. Geurge E. Carrothers of । Ing the two days and no unfavor­ Borryvlile. visited Donna McKeown an district called at Ute Bdw. Wal­ west many years ago and had been They will occupy part of her daugha druggist there for many years, ter's house.
- lhe University of Michigan will ad­ able comment on It was heard.
Saturday.
ters home Monday afternoon.
dress the audience on Thursday
Mrs. Cole entertained her pupils
Benny Adcock of Hastings spent Besides Wm. there is another i Kenneth Brower of Hastings
spent the week end with Lynn Marevening. Dr. Carrothers has been
with a Halloween party at the Bunday as a guest in the Edgar S. brother. James, in tiie west.
ATHLETICS.
prominent as an educator In many
Friday afternoon.
Mrs. Minnie B. Whllwam. aged shall.
Flfield home.
T. K proved what a real football schoolhouse
&gt;
.
ulales and in the Philippine Islands ...................................
Our teacher. Willard Kidder. Ls 62 years, who has been ill for some ; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Snyder of the:
.~. —
, —
__ . The Birthday club will hold lhe
supremacy mean* w
when
they
downed
months, at her home, just of! Grand Striker district spent Friday eve-1
C-11*&gt; Tww
On Friday evening the program Belding, a lough Class B outfit. November meeting al Aleen Riu- driving a new car.
will be put on by the school which &gt; Wllh a score of 13-12. T. K. was out- man's Wednesday. Nov. 11.
Mr. and Mrs Harvey Kenney of Rapids street. pas.ud away early nlng widt Mr and Mrs. Laurel Want to DUy OT OCll / 1 Fy vzUT yVMlX

Eliminating drift*, sstoke, windshield cloudin'

R. K
HASTINGS, MICH

HURD

P®|T I

PHONE 2680

I
DELTON, Ml

�THI HALTING* BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVDOO 3, 1W
MUlly; f-————R
NASHVILLE.
gave music: song by Kelsey family;
reading by Mrs Nane Coolbaugh
I Sunday with relative* ns
Sunday with relativM near Adrian. Chruttansou/ mother ot Mis ' Har­
—J’ The former’* mother relumed
rati
with old Heater kvtag pm away.
them to spend the winter.
On account of the rain Satur­
PBdBATE COURT.
will —
meet
bsteoMa bML....
r „— 1 The Cfiover _aLeaf
—. Club —
aw. day night lhe Halloween party at
Eit. Annie J. Cutler. Testimony
dsdsaha uvtM sorttoaM fsr msh tass Friday nigtu al Uw home of Mr*. the ball diamond wa* pastpoMd. If
u
“
”
KTwmK.1
cS!
’
uno
voum
.
ths
weather I* favorable it will be
Thuraday with Mr*. Harlow Bar­
fora sale filed.
Funeral MTVic** for Mr*. Clair held Tuesday night.
num. Dinner served by Club No. *. aster and Clara R htid.t.r. rt.Und
Eat. Lee Bailey. Order allowing whose chairman is Mr*. Mattie a.L‘V(iX‘'ySTS
MU* Maxine Martin, daughter of
claims entered.
(
Jr al lne wara runerai Hom* m Mr. and Mr*. William Martin, fell
Kimble.
Eat John Dorsey Bennett. Patitton
ibaUaltod Vermontville, conducted by Bev. down the «lalr» at the schoolhouse
Earl and Donald Chase
were
for Admr. filed, order for publica­ home for lhe week end to observe Slates of Aatarira. da I ad Jaaa lai. 1*14 Wheeler of Woodbury. Burial was
and r«w»dad la lite oils* at tea BagiaK in Kalama osmetery.
tion entered
Mr. and Mr*. Daniel Oarllnger
lhelr mother's birthday and the
«)■■:&lt;I TMO^un
The Garden OIU»
Chib ma,
met ma.y
Friday vtetted the latter’* mother at White­
Est. Sterling Eaton. Order allow­ family were guests al a birthday » °:«
ing account entered, discharge ot dinner at E. Davenport's in South Mart(mm ea Pa** 3*» aa* Mid «Mvi night at the home of Mn. Percy house, Ohio, a few day* last week.
tMM baont riKted ■endar a* israa *f Lehman for their Hxhowsen party,
Admr Issued, estate enrolled.
Kenneth Lykins of Charlotte wa*
Woodland on Sunday.
said marlxasa lo davlarv Ik. aalir* oris___
.__ .__ ,____ ___ ______ . ri_ *
Est. Matilda Noban. Inventory
Un. Lyman has returned from at the Gall Lykin* home Thursday
Ruth and Marlon Woodman wenIfited.
Mr. and Mra. O. N- Hullinger of
home for the week end.
8*1. Nellie B. Edger. Bond of
Chicago, Mr. and Mr*. W. O KulMrs. Mattie Klmbte of Hastings
. .
. ...
ustamentary visited at Floyd Kimble's on sunRegular meeting of Laurel chap- linger of Royal Oak. A. M Bullin­
Admr.
filed,
tetters
loo lor
oat ia
_
«*»
««
«
W
a
fem
V,'.
1.4
settlement enger. Jr, of Milwaukee. Wla.. and
at Toor Th»K»»n4 Ona
«n **4 *0'100 Delian
ii.n Tuesday night Nov. 10 at ths Ma­ Rutaell Hollinger of Grand Rapid*
tered.
The D- O. T. O. Club meets next
sonic Temple. This will be election were here to help their mother and
Est. Raymond W. Ssrren. et al. week Wednesday evening at the
Order
confirming
sate Interest.
grandmother. Mr*. Elmira Hullin--------------------- - —
--------church where they will have an t.. ro*o«n th.
.. ... __________
to be present. Refreshments will be ger. celebrate her birthday.
Est. Cassius M- Oodding ton Tes,upper followed by a pro-... —
aH
nrrtm* Hotormlnlno
____ __________
_______
tlmany HI
filed,
order
determining gram
NOW. THERRFORX. by »&gt;rtu. of the served.
The postponed meeting of the
In charge.A.
of_________
Ola Kimble
and■
&gt;&gt;W
of
»*!•
eooitiaeS
io
.*14
wort
Harley
Bailey
of
Petoskey,
who
heirs entered.
Chamber of Commerce wa* held
Mary Townsend.
Est. icelia c Coddlngton. Testi­
Monday night at the I. O O. F hall.
mony filed, order determining heirs
Mra Margaret Wagner received
IRVING.
entered.
the prize given at lhe Star Theater
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beumer
Est. Albert cole. Final account
Saturday night.
.
and Mr*. Caroline Bchenkel
of
8?y
rtUMilagZ
'
lh81r
meeting*
filed.
,
E»t Grace Cole Annual account Owosso were week-end visitors at
hic.n, (lhai b«u* , Mr*. Gharte* Bette. Mix* Doris
HENDERSHOTT.
Wm. Bchenkel*.
SS”! ‘•/aU B*«a. Mra. B. T. Morri* and Mr*.
filed.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas, van Vranken
Alex
Mayville, a»i-u
aged •»&gt;,
105, ukj
died re
Est. George Townsend order al™
c* ~»yvtuc.
n=-­
.K O»1&gt; «“■&gt;• •«" '« »•“* °'“k spent Thursday and Friday last
lowing claims entered.
cently in Grand Rapids where he
pr.mi.v. dMeriu* Saturday.
week in Alto at Basil Hayward s. On
Est. Robert T. Martin. Proof of and bti wife had gone to spend lhe
*o nath ib*r»M
Mr. and Mr*. John Johnson and Friday Mrs. Van Vranken was in
will filed, order admitting will en- winter. He had resided In and near
daughter of St. Mary * Lake *peni Grand Rapids with her grandured
Irving for lhe last sixteen year*.
dsughler. Mrs. James Green, who
.r (h» und.r.ir&gt;»4 the week end here.
E*t Edward 8 Mayo Final ac- He I* survived by the widow, tiiree
&gt; fur uim und/or
Mr. and Mr*. Elmer Northrup were ha* rented an apartment there for
count filed, order allowing account1 daughters •
and
— ----one —
son. He «
wa*
—
J10?'-’..J0'.*' ln
Creek Monday.
(ti“si** to tb»
Mr*. Victor Brumm wa* ho*te»s to
entered, discharge of Admr. issued, burled In Reynolds township, near
The Ladles* Aid are making plan*
Howard City.
KS. and all ia«ai lhe Evangelical Aid Wednesday aft- for another chicken supper at the
estate enrolled.
Mrs Sybil Warner and Alton will
-schoolhouse on Tuesday, November
Est. Jerome Cole. Inventory filed,
r.miM. srs 4« nloe Bhaw
Bvelyn Lundstrum. 10.
final account filed, order for publi­ spend the winter with Mr. and Mrs
John Ten Harkel In Grand Rapids
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Brill and
cation entered
of
and Mrs. Winnie Lundstrum.
i Est. Kennetii H Doster, et al. ln- Later Mr*. Warner will locate In
Mtiavi. Coniur
MU4
Maurer has been til. Mr*. Ells Lahr vUlted relative* at
Hastings, having sold her home in of Barry.
:• M.iiraUriy Her sister, Mrs. Gardner, has been Harris Creek on Sunday.
venfpry filed.
Sr.rribM
Vandalia.
Leland and Louise Christensen
E*t Howard Isham. Annual ac­
with her.
earner
Mri Car] L&lt;.nU wm entertain her entertained their schoolmates with
Mis* Marjory
of Rutland.
luum filed.
intu
— ... . Johnson ..
—.
count
o'dT* to th. bridge club on Thursday afternoon. a Halloween party Saturday after­
Est Reason Dunn. Order allowing । who has been assisting Mrs. Perry
claims entered.
I with her work, will remain here
th.ue. N.rth
Mr*. Gilbert Dickinson i* at the noon.
-------e
ih»ar» community hospital. She ran al Mr. and Mrs Fay Whitworth and
Est. Margaret Eleanor Maichele [ while Mr. Perry goek deer hunting.
Inventory died. Anal account filed. I Mr. and Mrs. Dan Roberts of Has4(«t **n ru3tT naU ln hcr foot
Herbert of Johnstown were dinner
te b.&lt;l»nla». teca&lt;kar
walver of notice filed, order assign- tings were recent Visitors at Wil­
Mrs Frank Hecker ta spending, guests at Floyd Garrison's on BunKaal
of abort da rrirtu’n. whirl:
In the afternoon
visited
b, ftr.t MMy some time with Mr. Hecker at day.
"
— •*they
—
ing residue entered, discharge of ham McCann's, also Mr. and Mrs.
William Slab- rhelsea
lhelr cousin. Irving Fisher, near
Admr. filed, estate enrolled.
[ Wm. McCann of East Lansing.
Est. Mary E Larkin. Testimony of
Ronald BeIson, who has been
Mr. and Mrs. WiUttm Hecker and Vermontville.
Wilbur
Schantz
and
family
called
freeholders filed, license to sell la-' confined |o hl* home with scarlet
oth.r trarpoa*. family and Mt*s Freida Hecker were
.h*ll a.bm on his mother. Mrs. Schantz at W
sued, oath before sale filed, bond on f fever. Is much Improved.
W. Potter's at Wall lake Sunday aft­
sale filed.
Clyde and Arthur Schlfiman have
ernoon.
Est- Jennie Eliza Paul. Order ad- gone to the upper peninsula to hunt
Mr*. Lillie Huffman and Mr. and
milting will entered.
, and trap.
• ••
Mr* Lx-on Stanton of Battle Creek
----- ■“
Mr. and Mrs. E D. Johnson enter­
FAIR LAKE.
called on Mr*. France* Hendershott
tained their children from Ionia.
Twenty-eight young people from Howard City, Middleville and Grand
Sunday afternoon
Urbandale gave Edward Lechleltner Rapids on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs Leo Hendershott and
a big surprise Monday evening at
Merle were in Allegan Sunday la
The Ladies' Aid will meet at lhe
hls home O ernes were played and hall Friday. Nov. 6. There are
visit friend*.
refreshments were served
quilts to be lied.
The meeting for November of the
nle Gorham* misfortune tn falling
LENT CORNERS.
Kinsley Aid Society will be held the
and breaking her hip.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hamilton
. Mrs. Henry Tobias ia seriously ill.
third Wednesday for dinner. Mrs 1
Edith Willison. Mr* Gladys Wllli(Margaret Burchetti are the par­
having suflrred a stroke of a|npk-xy
son and Mrs Violet Dudley form enls of a daughter who will -instvir
i to lhe name of Mary Louise
the group entertaining
Mid mu
Ed. Ca.M,idy of Baltic Creek spent
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall er.t'rTwin babies, a boy and a girl.
....
Sunday at tiie home of Mr. and Mr*.
were born Oct. 28, to Mr. and Mrs. talned for Sunday dinner IMr. and
w Ern|p Matteson.
Maurice Ford st Pennock hospital Mrs Lyle Francisco and children
ii*s wmIu | Tiie friend* at Hendershott extend
CHAXCERY ORDER
’r- ‘"..ft} ' congratulations to Mr and Mrs Rial
lYicy weighed S'i lbs each. They and Walter Me MannL* ot Doster
Miss jean Hammond of Kalama­ Riat* ot Mlcbican. tha Ctrralt
Kellogg on the birth of their baby
have been named Ruth Ann and
Prsbats.
(irl.
•
zoo spent the week end with her
Ruwell Earl
Mr and Mr*. Ed Hunt from
Eben Lelnaar and family of Ce­ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marc Ham­
dar Creek spent Bunday with Ike mond.
Mr. and Mrs Harold Whittemore
Grant Muir hout-e but have not yet
Lelnaar and wife,
come to *tay.
Ike Lelnaar Is entertaining IHs and children. Irving Frye and John
sister. Mrs Nettie Casey, of Bas­ Thomas attended lhe funeral of
inV
DURFEE.
Clyde Davidson of Vande Cooke
ing*.
•3rd
day
of
o/
Homer Hammond is 111 with heart
A large crowd was entertained nt lake. Jackson. Tuesday. Mrs. David­
trouble.
a Halloween
party
at Harold son was formerly Edith Frye
t
Clrarat.
Judes
.
^,r
and
Mr* Amos Clemens acMrs. Lawrence Hammond enter­
Smith's Saturday night. Progressive
« ositto of Joha componled by Mrs. Curtis of Lantained ten little Hoys and girl* and •
pedro was played.
,»d
sing attended the funeral of Israel
lhe teacher. Miss Buckley. Friday
:|H« ei-.i In Mid Haff of Harting* Sunday
COATH OROVK.
at a Halloween and birthday party i
। William Hoffman who i» wriously
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Royer of as a surprise for her boys. Robert1
I. Ill has been taken lo Pennock hosHasting* visited Mr. and Mrs. Ken­ and Norman. They celebrated Rob­
। pital for treatment.
dall Coals and son last Sundayerts eighth birthday. Games ard
"
I Mr. and Mrs Cha*. Clark of YorkRobert Luse spent Sunday with | stunts were played,
after which
,4 vllle spent Sunday with Mr. and
Paul Woodman and Mr. Haner of , light refreshments were served.
the Starr Commonwealth of Albion 1 The table and rooms were anproI Robert Gardner L* 111 with pleural
also visited in the Woodman home. I priately decorated tor Halloween.
|
"imon■« *t Pennock iKMpitai
Freda Smith gave a Halloween | Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hammond
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Moore and -son
party at the Smith cottage at I of Hastings were visiting In the
Adalbert Cortricht.
Crooked lake on Saturday evening. neighborhood Friday.
At the P. T. A meeting last Fri­ | Mr. and Mrs. Howard Prolo enday.
day evening the following program tcrtalned al a Halloween dancing
tne revival meetings m progress
wa* given: Orchestra from Quimby ! party Saturday evening.
at Ea»l Baltimore United Brethren
church are doing very nicely. Come
and hear Rev. Don Carrick.
Mr. and Mr* Don couch of Has­
tings spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Couch.
The East Baltimore Ladle*' Aid
Society will be entertained by Mr.
and Mm. Bert Fancher and Mr. and
Mr*. Ray Clemens al lite home of
Hlokoa
the former Wednesday. November

LEGAL NOTICES

COURT HOUSE NEWS

and other equipment.
Tbe Extension'group wiU meet
Friday with Mrs. Mary Townsend.

end TERRnPlRHES Mt /UK
Bnt N«w Con la Hirtory wM PROVED EnduraiKi, tetemxa, ftonaMy . . .

With New Selective Automatic Shift
They're here today! The com­
pletely new 1937 Hudsons and
Tcrraplaneal Loafer . . . lower . ..
wider! More power! More room!
New interior luxury that will
amaze you. Widest seat* any popu­
lar priced cars ever had! “Cars
that almost drive themselves*' . . .

with Hudson’s new Selective /Xutomatic Shift, an optional extra.
Come in and in these beautiful
new Hudsons and Terraplanes . . .
take one out and drivt it . . . and
you'll decide to step ahead in a
completely new 1937 Hudson or
Tcrrnplane!

The Completely New 1937

HUDSON

The Completely Now l|ll

TERRAPLANE

S,*ICHT1D

122 and 129-iacb Wtcelb..ei ... 101 and 122 H.P.

II7-inch Wha.lb..* ... M end 101 Horaapawar

o» J ■*/»*//»
tltOaadaO
U K /" //nJ,*. Ei:h. f.o.t. D/trolt;
Ww
1’aadardfroap tfatttturirt ntro.

’EQC SlA'-.V/SS
nrift aatra.

THREE BIG STEPS AHEAD
o/ alt the rest

NO. 1 CAR of the Low Price Field
... In tin. powtr. nttti fraturct

4

lx&gt;w Rate Time Paymaal Plea

Dhivz

CARS BUILT BY

HUDSON

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO.
PHONE 2101

HASTINGS

TEMAPLAMt. f 515: HUDSON SIX. M95: HUDSON EIGHT. B770: COMMERCIAL CAM. WTC. ALL F81CE8 F.O.B. DETROIT

AUCTION SALE
Due to the death of my wife and advanced age. I have sold my farm and will
dispose of my personal property at public auction at my farm, the first road east
of the County Farm, then south 1 */i miles, then east first place on the south side
of the rood. Or coming from the east, turn at the George Scott corners south
to second left turn, second place west of Striker schoolhouse, on

TUESDAY, NOV. 10

YOU CAN SAVE
ON YOUR COLD REMEDIES AND
COLD PREVENTIVE MEDICINES!

There teems to be on epidemic of cold* in Michigan
BEGINNING AT

1:30

O'CLOCK SHARP.

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING:—

Bolanlcally

lhe

Lemon

“JIM” MoSATU
When “
There are
city and vien

Gulre. who i
hi* home in .
Yeara ago
strong ball
Baldwin aa
Gulre at cal
teams outside
could clean i
Their good r
known throu.
they were pic
league club, a
of the Natloi
the American

to terribly o
pelted to
the Detroit to

and had to c
joined the Ph

and McGuire
ord* when pa
a fraction ot
friend* of J
ry to learn of
home at Du ch
of Albion Ho &lt;

ollc church. /
A. M with bui
Ury at Albior
McGuire'* f

•uch thing* a*
Hl* gnarled
showed lhe eC

leagues, aa w
gam?' Jteiere
He silk firn
lied, khfl his
good-natured.
The Novcm

Wieland la ehi
committee ar
charge ot ref*

son. Carl, and
motored lo K
were dinner
parents. Mr. a
Mr. and Mr
Arthur, n-.ovi
goods to an

ha* a good jol
Mr and Mi

home of Mr. a
one day th- Ic
Mr and M:
Campbell wer-

Muu. Norcer
ter of Mr
and
Clove:d
Carlton Cente
Mondav mom
pltal. foilowin.
streptococcus

funeral home
was taken to
grandparent'.
Thomas. Fune
not been com|
Much tympall
bereaved ones
Remember
"Mountain Mt
I. O. O. F. hall

Mr. and M
Bowne were &lt;
and Mrs. H. 1
Wednesday.
Mr. and M
(Gladys Adan
on their grand
E. H. Adam* I

panted by lhe
son Laubaugh
Grove and Mto Wisconsin a
itcd relatives
Auburn. Moun
returning horn
panied by Mr*
Gray, who pla
ler here
Clay Adams
he Adam* o! M
day afternoon

rued Intertet
Il dora b.rahi

T’JI'"

now . . . and for ONE SOLID WEEK we are putting

&gt;( Barry.
of uid roorl. bald

on a Sale of COLD PREVENTIVES and REMEDIES !

HORSES.

Fair sorrel mores (matched’.

Land roller.
Mowing machine.

Riding cultivator.

COWS

Guernsey
Guernsey
Guernsey
Guernsey
Guernsey
Guernsey
Guernsey

heifer, bred Aug. 3.
heifer, bred July 13.
3-year-old. bred July 24.
4-year-old. bred July 28.
3-yeor-old. bred August 4.
7-year-old. bred August 18.
8-year-old, bred Sept. 28.

Walking wheel cultivator.

Five-tooth walking cultivator.

4 fat hogs, 200 lbs. or more.
Sow with 9 pigs.

Good heavy wagon and hay rock.

GRAIN.

90 bushel* oats.
200 to 300 bushels corn.
Fodder from 7 acres of ground.

CHICKENS.

75 Leghorn hens.

/

TOOLS.
Three-section spring tooth harrow.
99 Oliver plow (nearly new).

We Mention Only a Few of Our Specie! Prices

Double harness (nearly new I.

15 to 20 tons alfalfa hoy.

HOGS.

Sale Starts Thursday, Nov. 5th, and
Ends Wednesday, Nov. 11 !

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

Laurel range (nearly new).
Beds.

Cooking utensil* and dlthet.

Other article* too numerous to men­

tion.

35c Vick's Vopo-Rub29c
35c Vick's Noh and Throat Drops, 24c
$1.00 Pure Test Cod Liver Oil79c
49c Hobart's Aspirin Tablets29c
$1.00 Haliver Oil Capsules79c
25c White Pine Expectorant19c
50c Cherry Bark Cough Syrup39c
1 pt. 29c Rubbing Alcohol19c
I pt. 40c Mineral Oil29c
Mi-31, Our Best Antiseptic_49c
1 Lot 10c Soaps, choice
5c
25c Rexall Cold Special Tablets l_.19c
30c Hill's Cascara.Quinine24c

’Ws.-a 'staft
•n Friday. Deaember dlb. 10 J* at
‘eloeW forenoon. Eaatara Standard
•I tha NortS from door nt tbe
Henio la iba Clt■ of tfa.ilua.

laa.. arcardiag

vambtr. A. t

ISRTVp*

f.rwlnaed
it. hi.y
irrib.4 IB

Your fr
tell yoi
lav and to iba
•4 all laeal teau

OMDEB FOk FUBXJCATIOM.
Htatf of *IUbls*n. tbe Frobsle Coal

HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

f CRAY Clerk

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

Let me

.... IfflL,!?.* CTStJ-S,

ia .aid roautr, on
I.bar. A n ISIS

•iSKT STS!

tunty tc

problem
essor

... :ia»rs

BUS

&gt;irtv *l&gt;bt Unk« (n b»rtiel*v.

(AT TH

'll’;,'
SS4. I03S.
:w LOAM CORFO-

Phono 2

iiwf
-------- —
)t i. t-irthar ordered, tbtl pal
Iberoot be slaoa by pablieaua.

THE RtXALL DRUGGISTS

HASTINGS

courtcoi
anxious

nor -f tha Wtet bag

TERMS:—CASH. No property removed until settled for.

E. A. REYNOLDS, Propr.

JR de

on yoi

Lil”?.-.

PHONE 2131
Mndrod’sadlK Baslalar ot Probate.

�THE HASTPiOS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1. ItM

enU. Mr. and Mrs. R. tt. Adams.
The program will be aa
follows: home of her son. William Cogswell. TRUCK. CAR CRASH
have been helntng with atrvkMB
The Piper children,
ON FREEPORT MAD. Who
at Assyria^SlM
Mrs. E- Olton and Mrs H M. “The Story ot the Harp"
by Mrs. In Lakeview Bunday.
tad von &gt;uMey *r»
SATURDAY AT ALBION Boughner visited Mr. and Mrs. W. R, An)to Walter. The Story ot Esther" I The Rally day at lhe church Sunmumps.
*•_ aft- by
W-IJ-..
»... Word
UM.*»-a■- —
------------- BehUTman of No. Irving Friday
Mn. »«*_
MaryuWedel.
Study1 -&lt;»
day
w*a a decided SUCCESS. BTOUnd
in their
enroute home from Hastings In
Mrs Grace Hyde accompanied
Wai Catcher tor Detroit ernoon.
by Mrs. Helen Letter. Roil call to 78 being ipreeent to enjoy the dinner ; truck Saturday afternoon and came Mrs. Madeline Gonka of Yorkvihe
’ Or .&lt;vS Mr, rr.d M.pud (X R*. »•
B,b“
and the afternoon program of songs down Figure Eight hill. William Mrs. May Rothhaar, Nashville, Mrs’
When "Lady" Baldwin
and fine talk by Rev. Swem. Mrs. I Boughnrr drove out onto the main LUcy Dexter, Battle Crock. Idru
mus were Bunday guest* of Mr. and
wlU1 thankfulness.
.
from the west, and not seeing Bertha McCoy of Orahd Rapids to
-------- —. - - •• —— - jhe L. A- S- to planning to terve Culler and another lady of Wood-:road
Pitched
Mn. Anna Christian,
t—truck,
_____________
... The
.... Walled Laks Wcdnsaday to visit
rammed into It.
a Jlggs supper on the evening of land and Paul Smith of North the
Castleton sang, end Rev. Swem. ac- Boughner car struck the truck Just Mrs. Charlotte Hulon. They recity and vicnlty who will remembsi
MIm Ruth Tabberer of Detroit
by —
hto
daughter
on. the
iront—
of ---the
drive wheels, knock- turned
...
—
—----—
77
—in—
—....
tLuiitu Friday.
ruuay.
James, belter known as "JUn." Mc­ spent the week end here, the guest ■ We have been Informed that Mr. eompanled
ing them out of line and forcing
Mr. and Mrs Ralph DeVine vte- her daughter, Mra. Hamid Hecker.
Gulre, who died Saturday last atiof her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred and Mrs. Duncan Park* will move piano, gaveus some fine violin
1 the truck to the side of the road. it*d her alrter and family, Mr and
into the Bisson house, just vacated muria.
hls home in
his
In Albion.
Tabberer
The YoungPeople's class will hold after throwing
Mrs. Blough and Mr* Claude Holcomb of Lalnas- ed for a number of years. Mrs.
by Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Austin and
Years ago Hastings had a very
--------------- Dorothy lo
ground. The truck burg. Bunday Mr and Mrs Dale Christian had been ill for some
strong ball team, with "Lady" a caller al the home of Dr. and that Donald Buehler to to move into a fair in the church basement
Thursday evening. Nov. 13. There then turned over pinning Mr. DeVine of' Nashville accompanied time. Funeral services were held al
Baldwin aa pitcher and Jim Mc­ Mrs. «. 5- Wedel last Friday after­ the house now occupied by Mr. and
the southwest woodland church
will be a good program and an or­ Blough's son. Russell, underneath, them.
'
Mra. Parka.
Guire as catcher. There were few noon.
(Monday afternoon.
Allen Fish, amlsted by John Fish chestra from Battle Creek will fur­ Neither Mr. Boughner nor Mr.
teams outside of professionals that
The W. M. A. of the U. B. church
nish the music. There will be re­ Blough was Injured. Mrs. Blough
SOUTH WEST WOODLAND.
1 Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Black. Mr.
could clean up on lhe local nine. Is holding an all day meeting today and Chas. Overholt with hls I truck,
freshment
booths
and
other
attrac
­
was
moat
seriouslv
Injured
alr
...
....
Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Smith and. and Mrs. Vere Owen and son. RonTheir good record became so well at lhe home of Mra. Mary Dodge. moved a large chicken house from
! though it to thought that her in- d
---------- -- — -------w--- ------ -- - -^..1.
oumil ... — •
Fnnk
■uv«u
winner to
u being
ocing served
serveu io
wit public
puuuc ,bf home of Mr*. Mary Dodge to tions.
known nuuu&lt;iiuui
throughout me
lhe mbsc
state uiBi
that - Dinner
to the
Juries
lurire are not as serious as at first *nd
and grandson of
ot Hastings called on |■ dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otiy
Guy
they were picked up by the Detroit at noon and work is planned for the A1|®na
•** J??‘u ,y* .
MORGAN.
feared. Dorothy was slightly bruised Cha_,
,nd (omUy 8unday , Kantner and children. Mr. and Mn
iun... club, when
...u_ ’ll ___
_______ ,__ itodies."
.j,_
'
। Mrs Elnora Whitney
Whitnev I*
Is clerking
clrrkuii
league
w»*Vmember
Donald Kin&lt;
Mr. and Mrs Gene Mier of Bat­ and Russell received several patn- afternoon.
; Russell Kantner and Mn. Mag^e afternoon and
of the Natldnal League Instead of । Krith T«bberer of Klngaley camo
lh® . “JX
W1*111- ttpl*otaf
but not serious cuts.
tie Creek were Sunday dinner ful
guest*
the American League, before the Friday to the home of hte uncle.
,
-- ---------Tira damage to the Boughner ear
latter was organised. Baldwin was Fred Tabberer. and Is assteUng In
Mr
i an°Mr*.
¥r?iHH'W.
J Gosch called 1 of Olcnard Earl.
on Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Geiger of | Mra. Millie Flury went to Otsego
so terribly over-worked" and com- Installing an engine at the mill,
damage to the front of the car. The
near
Alto
Saturday
afternoon
and
।
last
Thursday
to
spend
lhe
winter
pelted to pitch *o miny games for
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. van Oeveran.
with her niece. Mrs. J. W. Shatter. truck damage, was so great that It
•i
— Detroit ------. -----— owners and proprietors of George's visited Timpson's orchard.
the
team--that &lt;_
In a
very--few
wa* necessary for Mr. Blough to
yeara he ruined ills pitching arm Tavern, have purchased the home | Dr. and Mrs. H- Wedel were I Tha Alfred Noem family of Chi­
turn it in on a new one. Peculiar
and had to quit. "Jim" McGuire bn Cherry street, occupied by Mr. Grand Rapids visitor* last Thursday i cago are spending a few days nt
circumstances about this accident
Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Deming of! their cottage here.
joined the Philadelphians later and and Mrs. John Fteh and expect to
Grand Rapids were Bunday guests IMr. and Mra. Gusto Day
and fam- were that both drivers’ names begin
take possession soon. Mr. and Mrs.
with B The two families live across
American League. Both Baldwin Fteh have rented from Mrs. Frank of hls mother. Mrs. Nancy Deming |Uy of Barryville and Mr. and Mrs.
Run’ and Mrs 8 O. Voorhees Clare Norris and family of Lmxy, lhe road from each other here and
and McGuire made their great rec­ Walton, the Dipp house and are pre­
wer* Bunday guests of her parents. Ispent Bunday with Mr and Mra.' were about seven miles away when
ords when pay for such talent was paring to move Into It.
they wrecked.—Sent by Freeport
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Peter
Workman
nt
D.
A.
McClelland.
a fraction of what II is now.
I Mr. nnd Mrs. Byron Clark of I correspondent.
Friend* of Jim McGuire were sor­ Halloween juused very quietly here’ Kalamacoo.
Aunt Nancy Deming returned to I Jackson visited Mra. Lelhn Adkins I
ry to learn of hl* death at his farm Soaped windows In lhe business secBARRYVILL&amp;
her home last Friday after spending I Friday.
home at Duck lake, ten miles north
several week* at tiie A. B Pish I Mr. and Mr*. Jim Ward of Mus-1I Tiie Ladles' Aid will serve a chickof Albion. He died of pneumonia. Hls all the damage done. home. Bhe Is not very well al prea- kegon. Mr. and Mra. Guy Reed of en supper at the church basement'
funeral was held at St. Johns Cath­
We understand that Mr. and Mrs. ent.
I
I Battle Creek and Mr. and
Mrs. I Friday evening, Nov. fl
olic church. Albion, jesterday at 10 Peter Griffen who „.,
fc been U
,U1,
have
living
Mra. Lillie Blake of Grand Rapids Lewis Hill of Grand Rapids werl I The program pul on by several
A. M. with burial in Riverside cerne- &lt;&gt;n the McCalla farm, have rented
lery at Albion.
’ ithe
Ha izr&lt;
T.nm. Pardee farm and was a Bunday evening supper guest guests Sunday of Nellie Wolf nnd of the Hostings High (school pupils
Mrs. Jennie
under
the
direction
of
Mr.
Becker
of
Aunt
Nancy
Deming
family.
.
McGuire's fame as a catcher was will move onto it soon.
I*
Mr. anrf
and Mr,
Mrs. Gmren
George Wnn.lM0k
Woodcock wm much enjoyed by Uioce present
won in the days when there were no Pardee will spend the winter . I The young people Of the M. E. 1 Mr
ln church had a Halloween party in and children and Mr. and
Mrs. at the P. T. A. Friday evening.
such things as thickly padded mills. town with Mrs Eliza Knowles.
,
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Day and fam­
_ t the church basement last SaturdAy Loyle English of Lansing
spent
Hls gnarled hands and finger*
Mrs. Lawrence Johnson of Bowne1; evening and report a fine time
Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ben ily were Bunday dinnei guests of
showed the effects of serving behind Center spent last Thursday with her.
Mr. and Mr$. Dave McClelland of
Boat* ter
lhe batter In 1A91 games for major
Mr. and Mrs Clair Van Syckle Morgan. Their daughter, Mrs.
leagues, aa well as many amateur
of Lansing spent part of last week Claire Norris, and family were
gamer „wtiere he was the catcher. loween Party al the M. E. church ne!Wn* CTen“’*
with Mr. and Mrs Wm. Van dyckfe. guests there ipso. Mr*. Norrto was a
He wu B fine type, never got rat­ basement tost Thursday evening and
— ■ —2.
* -------|
Floyd
Burkey,
23.
non
of
Rev
and
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Webb ot former teaqhcr in the Barr/vllle
tled. k*pt hls head and was always report a merry time.
Mrs- L. F. Burkey oi Freeport and
­ .school.
good-natured.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mias Helen Eash, daughter of Mr. Battle Creek and Mrs. Joe Hum
Ashley Van Doren of Battle Creek
mel of Nashville called on Mrs
"
Mrs. Ralph Stewart were Mr. and
, wa* home Bunday
FREEPORT.
and Mrs. A. T E*«h of South
Mrs. Fred Bchwader ot Campbell. Bowne. stole a inarch on their Chas Harrington Monday
The November meeting of lhe P.
Junior Bock is the new pupil in 1 Mr and Mra. Cameron McIntyre
Mto^^Manon^nd'phvllto
YT^rr^f
Irlen&lt;1
'
wncn
‘
nr
&gt;
motored
to
friends when they motored to the Morgan school
T. A. to being held at lhe school­
Ills parents and children ot Quimby. Russell
house this Thursday evening. Ray tlwTn Marton and Ph&gt;,Us Yeltcr of Middlebury. Ind.. «nd were married live in one of Wayne Christopher's Mead of Grand Rapids and Miss
ards
inbsi
June Mitchell also of Grand Rapids
Wieland is chairman of the program
whm,
'on Saturday. October 24. The erreFloods of heat
mony WM P",ormed b&gt; R*v Motl cottages at Morgan jiark.
committee and Ree Wilcox is in ltafurda?Sm^r vteKf
Marguerite
Mills
gave
a Hallow­ were Bunday guests at Mr. and Mrs.
forward—down —
Saturday from a visit of several pastor oi
o( me
thf m
M t..
F enuren
chureh nt
gt uui
lhgl
Merritt Mead's.
cltargc of refreshment.
een
party
at
the
home
of
her
parweeks with relatives at Detroit.
place and was witnessed by Mr and I
Mr. and Mrs. Gail Lightfoot and
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox and
Mrs Ellen Yargcr left Monday for Mrs. Clair Eash Mr Burkey, with cn|*. Mr. and Mra. Clues. Harring- little Donna of Kalamazoo spent
son. Carl, and niece. Mtos Iris Mlles,
heaters I
a few days visit with her oromer. hls father, conducts the BAB to». Friday night. After playing their week of vacation at the home
motored lo Kalamazoo Bunday and
aj^jropriate- games, wieners and
J. V Grtndcl and wife al Spring
were dinner guest of the latter's
marshmallows were roasted
and of hls parents. H. J. Wilcox, and
“Standard Quaf." Heatar 83 93
popular among the younger set in
parent. Mr. and Mrs. Emery Mlles.
with buns and other fixings., also at her parents'. Rev. and Mra.
Rev and Mrs. J. I. Batdorf and lhe village. The bride is a senior in served----------------—_________
', Thompson, of C »U Grove.
Mr. and Mn. J C Austin and son.
Mn. A. B. Fish attended the Christ­ rhe local high school and Is well
With a new glass frying pan it is' The new roof on our school house
Arthur, moved
their household
ian Endeavor convention at Kilpat­ known. They plan to make Free­ possible to tell whether lhe break- I to quite an improvement.
goods to Grand Rapids Bunday
rick church last Saturday.
*■------- J ’* “■** ■
“ I Rev. and Mra. Clark, traveling
port lhelr home and have the best *“*
where we understand Mr Austin
Rev Don Carrick of Woodland taumes ot their many friends.
it must be the toast.
has a good job.
evangelists of the M. R. conference,
will be in charge of lhe First Quar­
Miss Josephine Novtekey. daugh­
Mr and Mrs. John Helntzlnrnan
terly conference at the U, B. chutch ter of Mr. and Mrs. a G Novlskey
of Lake Odessa were callers at the
127.95 Vo/u./
Sunday and Monday evenings. Ev­ of Freeport, became the brldo of
home of Mr and Mra. P A. Thomas
eryone is Invited to these services.
231 Innercoilt
Ellwyn Johnson, son of Mr. and
one day th** latter part of the week.
Quite a number gathered on Mrs. George S. Johnson of Francis
Mr and Mrs Fred Schwadcr- of
Main street last Friday afternoon to Ave., s. E.. in a ceremony that took
Sanitised Tick
Campbell were Sunday afternoon
welcome the . Republican caravan place In Klisc Memorial chepei on
callers at the home ot Mr und Mrs.
bearing the county candidates and Friday afternoon al 7 o'clock.
'
Ed. coats.
Mr. Burhans and others. The band
The Rev. Charles Warren HehMuv. Norccn clem, oldest daugh­
« OB MORE
that preceded lhe caravan fur­ ley read the double ring service in
is saying: "It’s Wards foe Beddingf Tbs Am
ter of Mr and Mrs Marlon Clem of
nished some excellent music and the the presence of 100 guests
ask ticking ia imported and SANITIZED! Qi
Carlton Center, passed away early
talks by.’ Mr. Burhans and Mr.
The bride chose an ankle length
Monday morning nt Pennock hos­
sisal pads!
‘
‘ ’
Ketcham won loud applause.
dress of royal blue velvet cut tunic
pital. following a short illness with
handles. H
Sunday guest* at tne home of style with a runted neck fastened I
streptococcus infection. The body ■
Rev. and Mrs. J. I. Batdorf were with a rhinestone clip. She carried
JMW V4&gt; 1 f&gt; CU&lt; FMam feM
lhelr children; Mr. and Mrs. Irving white roses and pompons Mrs. Ger­
America's finest I None better
funeral home and Monday evening
5 Batdorf and four children of hard KUnde attended her .sister as
at any price! Knife edge spark
was taken to the home of her
Stockbridge. Mr and Mrs. Lark matron of honor and wore a dress
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. p. A.
gap gives single GIANT
Ambs of Leslie. Mr. and Mrs. John of green moire silk and carried u /
Thomas. Funeral arrangements had
spark!
Easier starting!
Batdorf and four children of Grand bouquet of baby mums.
/
not been completed at this writing.
Smoother idling! Oss-saving I
Rapids. A chicken dinner and oil Ito ■ George Johnson. Jr., acted as bqst
Much sympathy la extended to the
fittings (was served In honor of tha man for hls brother and K^Icr
beretved ones.
birthdays of Irving and hls mother. Hendershott
and James Ehuart
Remember the
Senior
play
Quite a few local farmers have ushered. Mr. and Mrs. Jamis^tuarl I
"Mountain Mumps.'* to be staged in
reported finding some of lhelr potavnc wrulnnK
llBr
.v as
wedding
parly
I. O. O- F. hall. Nov. 19 and 20. They toes frown. Although not as large I Completed the
mUUfM
of ccJKSiy,

‘JIM’’ MoQUIRE DIED

1

Tell the Story of Wards Economic
Op eration to Save Your Dollar

W

F

xrs'fi® IO”5

Millions Will Want to
:i Switch to Amazing
New Car motsaysts

1694'

43*

Supreme Qu a I itg .

L"'

SPARK PH &lt;2

Brilliant New 1937 Dodge Captures
Spotlight at Sensational New York Preview!

a

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ollhouse of
Bowne were dinner guests of Mr.
• nd Mrs. H. W- Gosch last week
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Dana
(Gladys Adams’ of Detroit, celled
on their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
E. H Adama last Friday afternoon.
Mr and Mrs. Jud Stowe, accompanied by their daughter. Mrs. Or­
son Laubaugh and baby of Coats
Grove and Meredith Lewis motored
to Wisconsin on October IS and vis­
ited relatives and friends at New
Auburn. Moundville and Friendship,
returning home October 26. accomjwnled by Mr* Stowe's mother. Mr*.
Gray, who plans to spend Hie win­
ter here.
Clay Adams of Hastings and Les­
lie Adams ot Maple Grove were Sun­
day afternoon guests of their par-

b crop as some years, the potatoes । Orand
}|.rald
,
1
here are of a fair rise and a splen-1
.
-- -------------------—•----------------J1 I
---------— CORNERS.
——i-----did quality
and
are--bringing
a good
MARTIN
I price.
| The P. T. A. Friday evening was
I The
The November meeting of lhe well attended and ail enjoyed
Women's Literary dub will be held. Judge Clen&gt;ent's talk. The sale of
„
.
on Thursday
evening.
November
13. । candy and popcorn netted 83.W).
h^e\f
Mra’araTe
M^rnh?'
.1 &gt;K«
COgSWell VUItCd At th«
lhe hmu.
home of »»r- ZIMM
Orace MluW |I
I

/.

VALVE TYPE FOOTBALL

$

Strongly stitched; with
14 ■»(!
bladder. Usually $1.98—
I■ Iw

•70 M«
1H.CN 4
Roduedl

Limited time onlyl

FLAT TOP LUNCH KITS
Usually $1.29. Includes
half pint bottle—

"Winter's coming/

DOROTHY WRIGHT AND RENE BELLINGER
"Such smart. racy, beautiful Hnti," says Dorothy Wright of Nnr

]

1.00

CREAM WHIP
Equipped with cord and
electric motor. Reg. $1.00-

I M4 tn it that my

MOUSf TRAPS

family gett plenty

Regulation slxa. a household friend. 3 for—

of Hlghlaadt Dairy

Grade A milk.

It "

by building up their

Ov

39 PLATES—12 Months 80 QC
GUARANTEEExch £.90

better results when

, courteous, careful, and
! anxious to serve you.

I use it in cooking

WIN A
PRIZE

and baking.'

In Wards Wood­
working Contest

| Let me hpve an opportunty to save you traf­
fic worries, parking
problems, and unnec­
essary expenses.

(AT TH? TRI0 CAFE)

QQc

Commander Auto Battery

resistance, and I get

Your friends will fell
tell you that J/am

BUS DEPOT

Studio III’

LEATHER HALTER
•1.00 regularly. Finest
chrcme leather—

holp$ keep them fit

I R le with me
! Ofi your next trip

gc

MR. AND MRS. ROBERT CATON PALMER
•Til bet literally thouaanda upon thousands... trill tun to Dodge aa
aoon aa they see thia amaaing now edition." exclaims the charming
Mr.
J nX X.. K...X..J .^4.
___ ra.-x-a- -_____ ..i.u.
airitch to it."
• Scoring with one sensational new feature after another...combining brilliant
new “windstream" beauty with record-breaking economy... tbe new 1837
ru^a. la
h.tl~4 a. .U- VI. _
.V "
.. ...
.........

*

Phono 2137, Heatings

I

High ia Cream Content. Raw
or Patiaurlied. Pt. 5cj Qi.

No age limit! Prices
awarded according
to two age groups.
Class A —17 yeara
and over. Claas B—
16 year* and under.
Cows in today to Word}

money-saving Dodge of them all!
See thisa maxing new Dodge now on display at your Dodge dealer's! Drive it!
Diacbver for yourself Its breath-taking beauty — its roomy, luxurious Interiors
— lie manv a.r.'V nmvlafona_ 4,a ---------- 1 - - - ---- ■■ -a_j___ .___ ...m
'5 "Switch

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
Phone 2451

1ROBERT W.’COOK, Prop.

Ha»ting«

asasssasassss

FORREST L JOHNSON
220 E. State St.

Hastings

111-124 imiUON. SOUTH

|50 valuot Parma1
gent mstai back gu43
•
irm auarwirt ^*^..1

�THE BASTINGS -BANNER. TltmSDkV. NOVEMBER 5. IHC
•----------------------------------------------

VAItll.TIES OF 1937.
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
1
- "Varieties of 1937' has been bookeo
wxinesday evening a son was'**
PROFITABLE CROP01 l,,e
Theater. Battle Creek, burn to Mr and Mrs. Merle DunkelSPONSORS RECITAL
for ’he week of November Bill. As berger of the Weeks district, al the
From
I"&gt;I*~'&gt;*;*““ =&gt;;' Produced About Fifteen Tons !rr*. j“r.
JEL'? will build his home of her parent*. Mr. and Mrs.
Three
Xntertaineni
■ «►«»*
show &gt;in
Battle
Creek. tnU being his
Ball
g
has been prominent in directing lit- &gt;
n «■"!
’ nred.it
on Plot of About
20th consecutive season, and from
tie theater groups which have pre­
Traverae City Coming to
The Yoimg People's Class was enlhe show
will
tour 1 joyably entertained Thursday evesented "Servant In the House,"
■ Battle
,, , Creek
„
,
,
Six
Acres
Kilpatrick
Church
Pennsylvania und fl­ nlng at the home of Robert and La.
"Death Takes a Holiday" and "Snow^
Ohio.
Indiana.
Pennsylvania
- ------------... way into
..rW Nri
york
Tne KUpatrlck Christian Endeav- wmte and Seven Dwarfs. "
1 Mrs w J prck' wno "VM on ",e naliy
work its
Vera Gllla-sple. The girls provided
or Society of Woodland Twn, Is
No charge
state.
Lox suppers.
No
charge will
will be
be made
made but
but a sd- Chatfield farm on the Rutland,
aponroring a recltul on Friday eve- ver offermg
’ti k Tar
offering taken to be used for Yankee Springs town line, brought
brought
Thursday afternoon Mr. and Mrs.
nlng at aighl o'clock al the church, the Medical MtsMormry fund of lhe to lhe Banner office kut week .some ,.KlM ’ |lobrrl. u,e
Z1
W. II Chee.z-man culled on the lat­
। while Siberian millet which was R.ld .beauty, the clltford Wayne ter s father. Ed. Brumm, near lhe
A program of vocal music, piano Christian Endeavor Society.
Base Line church,
and xylophone
numbers
and
, .»
t
j readBrcnuj,. of tne crowded condition । grOwn by Mr. Peck. She stated that Family. Interna'.tonally famous in­
Ings Will be presented by
thiec of, our
n..r columns it
1. 13
I. Impossible
imn^.hle lo
to w|wn
raUu comm&lt;nced U1 g^p. dicn Quintette which have Jeat re­ , Revival .services are being held
Traverse City residents, Mrs. MuuJe print* the complete program.
,
turned from a triumphant European
Sisson Mann*, vocalist. Mrs Lucy
________ , -,
tember. th? grain was about three
urduy ev.-ning.
Ute Draa. ra.der. M ». V».
No,
lUn, 10
Ull but m.d. • »«•»«&lt;« singing duck. "Vi" Shaffer, a Battle
Mr and Mrs- Roy Gillaspie and
glnla Mann*. Instrumentalist. These
,,
.
.
growth and produced thirteen u&gt; Creek favorite, Freddie Carlton and daughter were guests Sunday of
ehtertalners are being brought to •'0,Jd «asollnp
resembling chee;*. nftcen tons on a six acre plat. Cows
Alma Miller, direct from Hollywood, Mr and Mrs Ciuu. OlUaspie north
Woodland through the efforts of J. picnic sandwiches, to avoid unhappy I are especially fond of this millet the best comedy dance team in tiie
of
Dowling, lhe occasion being In
O. Yank, who is a teacher tn Trav- mistakes, will have to be pul up In ' and when it Is fed no grain is re- । business. Marne White, acrobatic
honor of LuVera and Chas. Oil­
erae City. Mrs. Manns directs the liquid form.
, qulred. but It Is bud for horses.
I starette of Benny Meyerort's bund. la.ple'» blr-hduys.
{Carol Paige and eight pages from
' her book of terpsichore. Rudy Paul,
sliver toned tebor from Tennessee,
all set to music by the Varieties
Swing Band

CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR

gj.S'Xt11MILLET_P.R.0_V?S.

.“

show starting Ibursday. Saturday
night stariL-Ui at 11:30 liter- will
be another complete change o! tag*
featuring* Bl-(t Smith's lamci . mid­
night show frolic.

CoffeeWeek

DOWLING.
The Community Birthday Club
will be entertained by Mrs Myra
Wright at her home Thursday aft­
ernoon. Nov. 5. Refreshments mid
program are scheduled.
Mn Jennie Gorham, who make,
her home with MIm Lizzie Smith,
met with a very unfortunate acci­
dent Friday afternoon a hen she
fractured her hip. Mrs. Gorham, «

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Th/’MS'es Jean Hunt
Will of Hastings were
guests of Virginia and
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The French corporation vs. Frad
Rock. Preinda Rock and the Vil­ Mbu Myrtle Wflson. attended a
lage ol Middleville, bill to establish teachers' meeting in Coats Grove
und
foreclose lien.
Monday evening. On the way home
Allan C. McCurdy. Rrcr. Suocnsor
Thelma E Lancaster vs. Kenneth they were flagged at the comer
to Ord. Dye vs. Richard Loppennorth of Scotts comers by six young
thlen and wife, mortgage foreclosure. C. Lancaster, bill for divorce.
whose automobile had turned
Verin L Deeds vs. Marvel M PrSu
Daniel J.
Hastings Milk people^hlly
coLewis
bill vs.
ofTomXirte,?*"'
inJu.U.g two of lhe
Deeds, bill lo annual marriage.
'boyM- Mrslook Uiem to HiuHastings Building At Loan vs. restrain nuisance.
Arthur CroUtcr*. mortgage fore­
Jomes Siiull v._ Lucille Shull, bill i
L
J n
far divorce.
| Mra' Clayton McKeown and Donclosure.
Elmer O. Bivens vs. FannW C. Blv«**• “«&gt;«• Mrs. Van Daren. DorHurry O. Mohrmann. Recr. vs. Ed­
olhy LAlhrop and Mrs. Heber Foster
ward Babcock el ah mortgage fbre- ens. bill for divorce.
Myrna J. Chrhtie vs, Carl Christie.*'
Sdn&lt;**y School convenclo-ture.'
.i tian
fion at
al Delian
Delton TUeM.v
Tuesday.
Jake DePrlestcr et al. vs. Hugh blll for divorae.
Mrs. Harry Green's blrthdoy was
Johnson et al., moratorium.
Lewis M- Ashley vs. Bess Marie
by a dinner•—
at her home
EdwaN D. Bnrber vs. Martin Ashley, bill for divorce.
-honored
- -------------------------Lydia Watson vs. Carl Wateon. bill ®undB* w*u‘
“nd Mr‘* F1'JV‘&gt;
Goodenough et al., clear title.
Fossett
Paruett and
and babv
baby nf-Hharlmia
of• Charlotte. Mr
Mr.
Allan C- McCurdy. Heer.. Succes­ for divorce
sor to Qeo. Dye. vs. Earl E. Engle
Sunrise HUI Dairy'- Inc. vs. Merle and Mrs. Geo. Green of Moore dlsand wife, mortgage foreclosure.
E. Drake.
'
i . ,
------------------- —-- ------Chas. F. Monica and wife vs.
Minnie O. Wiseman'vs. Claude E. ,u*,
„
...
K
Wiseman, bill for divorce.
rhe Barryville church was lhe
Glendon Silsbee vs. Maggie Moy *fenp
“ v‘r* hBPP&gt; *old'n
tlon.
dl"« celebration Saturday when lite
Haze! D. McConnell vs. Wm. T. Sllsbee. bill for divorce.
Alice M Roberts vs. Orin J. Rob“'‘d,Mr" f? * Ollku Gf Uld'
McConnell, bill lot divorce.
Uknd Pftrk' Oul1
greeted their
Hany O. Mohrmann vs. Gordon erts bill (or divorce
Wm. D. Lawton and wife vs. friend* on their fiftieth wedding
Edmonds and wife, mortgage foreRalph W. Rogers el al. bill to cor- •mHversary The church was prrtBetty.J. Greiner vs. Alfred Grein- recl description.
decorated with fall flowers and
-----------------------------. Helen M. Bchlfla vs. George -golden
chrysanthemums.
The
Kathi-ryn Hart vs. Delton S'.ale '.-Schifla. blU for divorce.
' president of tbe conference. RevBank, moratorium.
Ethelyn Messenger vs Clarence
Wilson. Rev. Oscar Smith ot
. Mtrknev
Hickory Comers and o.v
Rev. Van rw».
DorHarty Leonard and Clara Leonard &gt; Messenger, bill for divorce
...
r.
..
Ffrn r Brumbaugh vs. Harry cn B“ve
talks, their son. Glen
&lt;Continued from page 1, Sec. J&gt;
■Gillett, wife and sou Paul gave
tracts.
Brumbaugh, bill for divorce.
.me. nn ptvgrcw. has
musical numbers. Mrs. Theodore
Blanche Eddy vs. Win. D.-Golla , .u«
S B. Babcock, trespass on lhe case
Le. n made for more than a year. Du'mer of Grand Rapi0s and Mrs.
Orio W. JudkiiH. Admr. vs. Earl cl al., mortgage foreclosure.
-------- | Nelson Brumm of Nashville each
George Norris et al. vs. W. II.1
___
Coleman, trespass on lhe case,
Whitmore el al., mortgage foreindustrial Co. vs. Leon D.
D i, s5“
"n« “■ aul
s,u,° Bnd
nnd R
Rt‘‘v
'v- JJ- JJ WllUtts
Wlliltte
Harry O Mohrmann. Recr.. vs- closure.
I cool
&gt;,ooi and
ana Andrew
Anart-w Dooley,
uootey. auumpait.
assumtMii. i !*'“d ,a v?ry, nttlng P°*m composed
Lewis H. Cook, assumpsit..
Bertha Weaver vs. LaVern Weav-1 Madison
-■ —
—
------nn
»-«
Furniture
Co.
vs. Mike ' hv himaeir
hlm*“ tnr i»&gt;«
«*e no-a«i
occasion
Ice
Frank IL Gould, vs. Mrs, Sarah er. bill for divorce.
Gjukick assumpsit
, c™*"' »»d cake were served to the
Foreman, attachment.
MadeJ UIIU
and Mary
Harry
Mohrmann,
Rrcr.
•......7 O
— ---------------J Wielgo'x v*. ’ «u«“ following the program
Chas. H. Osborn. Adirr. David Joseph C. Hurd, mortgage foreclos- Michi e! and Helena
- ■
Mr.
und
Mrs.
Nelson
Zauackl. as- ,
Morthland* estate. vs. Ethel Minnurd ‘ ure
and Annella. Mr. and Mrs. Dale De­
""
MimpalL
--------&gt; Phyllis perdun vs. Kenneth Per­
Alfred Moerdyk vs. ortnn Glynn et Vine of Nashville were Sunday
Ernest Appleman vs. Chas Dol- mjn. bill for divorce.
guesLs of their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
houser. appeal from Justice court.
Anna Goodin vs. Harry Goodin.
Arnett Auto Co. vs. B. M. Hanson Ralph DeVine.
Jessie Smith vs George Granger, bill for divorce.
Some of the Arizona Indians do
Settle Granger, trespass on the case.
John A. Jennings vs. J. &amp; Jacobs
White Brothers VS. t.‘ H. Cook. their painting at night Thia ex­
Clare Wllbamson v.-. Lee-Burdick. , Bnd H w coulter el al..
assumpsit.
plains why their output so cloaely
et al. assumpd:
Sadie L.
L Harwood vs. Mary B.
B
Ernest Vermulen et al. vs. Phoebe reserflbles the work of lhe modern­
Clark Robinson, surviving part- stephens el al., bill to correct er- Manker. trespass on the case.
■ ists.
ncr of Rcbinson A; Wolfe, vs. Lyle ror.
Gilbert Verburg vs. Oren Davis,
R. B.adl./ assumpsit
, Herbert D. Wotring. Ex., vs. Lewis
trespass on the case.
.
A new hardweuring cloth Invent­
Joseph DeRuiter vs. Hirsch Bros., H coog. determination of interest
Ada McKay vs. Clayton C. Pet­ ed by a German La said to be treatAi CO- assumpsit.
• ------: tlngill. assumpsit.
.I ed with metal. Can't you imagine
Ethel Elrlc vs. Fred Livingston.; Gerald L Adams vs. Louise E.
—
■-*- bagpipers
.—b wearing corFrvd Mackey vs. Wm. E. Seltler., ■ Scottish
Emma Livingston, assumpsit.
Adams, bill for divorce.
trespass on the case.
ruguted-iron kilte!
Harvey W. Tinkler Ex . vs. HandlChester Whitman vs. Bernice J.
Fred Mackey v». Mrs. Ed. Seltler. i
■ -ew-v----------------ton A Nichols, assumpsit.
Whitman, bill for divorce.
appeal from Justice Court.
An English lecturer, embarking
Farmers State Bank vs.
Wm. H Rich and Anna Dickenson
Dolly J. Lee vs. Robert L Chad-1 on a tour o! the United States, sayr
Campbell et ok attachment
i, vs. Charles H. Leonard, bill for ac- I wick, trespass on the ca.se.
Americans don't know how to use
Universal Garage Co . a Michigan counting,
1 Jay Norton vs. Ben Kelsey, appeal their leisure. Hence English leccorporal;on. vs. Paul Bryant, as—
Allan
C. McCurdy. Recr. Succe.s- ,I from Justice Court.
1 tUi’ers.
sumpsit.
1 sor to Geo. Dye vs. Claud Mead and
Chancery Cause*.
Verne Manee vs. City of Hus- wife, mortgage foreclosure
Will Tobias vs. Mabel Tobias, di­
Dorothy Guyney vs. Richard Guy- vorce.
Th* Village of Nashville, a cor­ ney. bill for divorce.
Clyde C. Slemons. State Commr.
poration vs Nora B Dawson, sole
Dorothy Shupp vs. Lynn Shupp. ,of Health, vs. the Village of Nashand only heir as assignee of John bill fo: divorce.
| vllle. bill for mandatory injunction.
Ansel J. Kinne und wife vs. Claude 1 C. Carl McGufTy et al. vs. Wm. P
Sptlinan. bill to correct .descrip­ Streeter, bill of complaint to vacate
Woodland Exchange Bank vs. lions.
James E and Daisy B. Guy. mort­
Etta I. Boise vs. Harry L, Boise, i
gage foreclosure moratorium
bill for divorce.
Brail, mortgage foreclosure.
Henry Hitt et al, vs. Henry i Henrietta Cappon va. John Cop­
Harry o. Mohrmann. Recr. vs.
Schaibley. injunction to conserve' i pon. bill for divorce
suae «
»v«uae
Richard w
O-. Tuke
el al., uw
mortgage
estate.
\
। Jennie Kalkofen vs. Sebastian foreclosure
Wm. wtsncC add Etta Wisner vs. Kalkofen, bill for divorce
।
j.‘Matthews el al. vs. Jas­
I Gco.iu Wilson, bill lo set aside deed.
. John W. McLeod and Lillian i
Q ueKonlng, bill for temporary
John Vander Kolk et al. vs. 1 McLeod vs. Laura B. Edger, stay . injunction.
Farmers State Bank of Middleville, ■ foreclosure.
I Edward E. Purdy and Gora Purdy
assignee Chas, and Ada Sylvester,
Lucy J Stadei vs. William Stadel. vs. otto O. Linsley. Elzdra Llnsley.
moratorium
bill for divorce.
moratorium.
Madeline1 Norman vs. Harley Nor- ,
' mon. bill for divorce.
1
BARRYV1LLE.
Hazel O- Renkcs vs. John C. Oct. 29 Letter.
Renkes. bill for divorce
I The Missionary Society will meet
George Miller and Nora Dawson with Mrs. Anna DeVine Wednesvs. Eliza Wood et al. bill to quiet day. The Christian Endeavor will
| title.
have a Halloween party in lhe baseOur ash pile used to be a dum
I Mabel Mugridge vs. Raymond I men of the church Saturday evesight blgger'n our coal pile. NOW
। Mugridge, bill for divorce.
nlng. All the young people of the
it's Just t'other way 'round. We
| Viola Dagcn v». cecll Dagen. bill community are invited. Plea.se bring
get the heat stead of the ashes.
for divorce.
—
sandwiches.
You know that's what you want
Ruth C. Myers vs. Harvey W.
Tn ere will be a p. T- A. meeting
to ca late on in the winter
&gt; Myers, bill for divorce.
...
nt ....
lhe tBarryvllle
school Friday eveAshes never done nobody nolh'n'.
। Louie Lord vsl Stella Lord, bill nlng. School was cU&gt;s*-‘&lt;i last Thurs-

ORANGES

COURT CALENDAR
NOVEMBER TERM

WINTER

CAR

NEEDS!

YOU CAN SAVE at MARK’S
Drive in COMFORT with a
HOT WATER HEATER!

3 10c
oo.. 25c

COUP.
MODEL SHOWN, 83.95"

3

DFAC sweet and tender
iCHj EVERGOOD BRAND

DIAMOND

Can

YOUR

GET

GRAPEFRUITS. 4 for 17c

TOMATOES

16 O«

The Boy Scouts of America or­
ganized Feb « ’UlO. today numbers
1 0G4.265 member*
, £

M

Bag

Quality

and Helen
we«*k-&lt;iid
Charlotte

at the JUNne of hls grandparent..
Mr. and Mrs. Milton T:afford.
| Relatives from Battle creek. Jack­
; son. Kalamazoo and Mapk Grave
I were entertained at the home of
Mr and Mra. Chas Gillespie SunI day in honor of .Mr Gillespie's
! seventy-sixth birthday
A cooper­
, alive dinner was enjoyed oy lhe
family
| Miss Neva June Stanton of Hnstings was the guest of Muis NyU
' Pierce Sunday.
The Dowling Cemetery Circle is
^sponsoring a supper which will be
[ held in the near future in the
church dining room
| Mr... John Chamberlain will give
' a piano recital of her pupils at the
Dowling church Friday evening. No­
vember 6
Mildred and Robert Gaskill enter­
tained Hie King's Heralds nt their
I home Saturday afternoon wilil a
Halloween party

LARGE
No. 2'/g
CANS

PANCAKE
FLOUR

where .she

No. 2
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25c

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CORN 525.™
CAN 10c
SPINACH FRESH CANNED
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10c
PORK &amp; BEANS C..FWI’. 4 c."' 25c
TOMATO SOUP CswpUiri 2 c... 15c
PEACHES ’,LLS’cIc0UNS 2 cl..’25c
PINEAPPLE HALF SLICES No. 2 Cea 16c

SUGAR

10 ‘“48c

GREEN GIANT PEAS
BIC TENDER
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Coil Iron Heaters
Ford A Layon type

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' day and Friday for tbe teacher to
Myrtle M. Brown vs, Earl Brown, attend the State Teacher's convenblll for divorce.
.
1 tlon in Grand Rapids. Miss Helen
Ooldy Mae Roberta vs. Arthur J. willitts also attended.
Roberts, bill for divorce.
I Elaine Day and Dorothy Lathrop
Marie McKay vs. Alvin R. McKoy, accompanied Frieda Scott of QuimblU tor divorce.
, by to East Lansing Friday to visit M.
Susanna Hazeldlne vs. Donald F 18. C. Miss Merlyn Marshall of the
Weeks. Cecilia A. Weeks, bill for Branch district was also with the
foreclosure.
• group.

HUNTING

freezing, fire, theft, broken case,
running dry. Replaced or re­
paired FREE!

'1 7

Kalanuuoo Improvement Co. -va.

title.

&lt;■ y

J

WOULD GRACE ANY
HOME IN WHICH IT
WAS PLACED.

MILLER FURNITURE CO.
HASTINGS

FHONF

Z226

Brumm

�TTjB BASTOW MM*”, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER S, ItM
had M guezU over the week and |

Weekly Farm Review

। Mr. and Mrt Gwg« Scott and Mr. Jack were In Hastings Saturday
and Mr* Gowan of Detroit and Mr. Jack remaining to attend the Hal­
and Mr». James Coot of Climax.
, loween party at the fair grounds.
The Dclfon Community Chib will |। On Bunday Mr and Mrs. Bradmeet ag*to Monday night Nov. d
with a cooperative zupper as usual uncle in Galesburg. tn charge of Mr. and Mrs Ed. Low- j: W. A Spaulding and Mrs. Wilcox
ry and Mr.'and Mrs. C. J. Bornum.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon MoorhUJ are
on the program committee and they ;
have engaged Albert Becker of1
Hastings to bring hls debating!
team* down and debate on the nubject "The Government Ownership
of Electrical companies." There will
be other features on the program &lt;

Tha Batt Ideas from the Bent Farm Papers
tyWlLLAUD BOLTS
MOVING PULLKTH INDOOR8.

Ira on a han. one oi them—which
WW S!

quarter*—and the equal importance
of not parting u&gt; feed the laying
ration for al least two weeks after
moving (him if they have not al­
ready been started. Changing both
ration and quarters at the ume
moment is too abrupt a change.

ter brought out the weaknesses of
many strawberry varieties—and as
a result the New Jersey Experiment
Station now lists Lupton. CaUkll).
Dorsett. Fairfax and N. J. 35 as the

known to rutn a suit of clothing tn
one night—and If they are numerway to get rid of them Is poison, ac­
cording to MLwxiri Rurallst. Make a
mixture of 1 Ib. bran. I oz. parts
green. 3 oz. syrup, 1-4 of an or­
ange ground up with the peel. I 1-3
plnLs waler. Mix lhe bran and par),
green dry. stir the orange and the
ayrup into the waler and then stir
In the bran mixture. Place In shal­
low dishes where the crickets can get
Ib—but keep away from pets and
children. Keep the bail moist.

dlans Farmer's Guide. Farmers
should make a survey of wooded
pastures artd eradicate these dead­
ly plants before turning to the bat­
tle. The plant thrives only In
wooded mu
Blossoms are pure
•white and clustered—appearing In
early September and lasting through
October. Leaves art In pairs and are
thin, with three . prominent veins.
Plants grow from 1 td 3 feet . high.
This poisonous plant can be dis­
tinguished from others that resem­
ble It by the fact that the left half
of the under surface of each leaf

Mrs. Grace Faulkner entertained
make ups were originated and there her bridge club on Tuesday.
was something for amusement for
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Thomas of
all ages throughout! all the evening. Kalamazoo were guests of Rev. and
The committee In charge is to be Mrs. Ralph Bates Sunday
commended upon their accomplish^
Mr and Mrs. Carl Oorlcne o.’
Three Oaks were week end guests
of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Reynolds and
they all were Bunday dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Leonard.
I Roll call answered by ’One thing I
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Whipple and
learned last month.” Subject. "Bulbs family ot Kalamazoo spent Bunday
that bloom when winter comes ” with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lelnaar
Mrs. Mary Moorhtu and Mrs. Ella
Because ot the fact that rye has a I
Reynolds will be in charge of the of Middleville were Saturday eve­
reputation of being a "poor soil”
ning guests ot Mr and Mrs. E E.
crop, there ia a general tendency to
raise rye on poor sol! without fer­ been tn 111 health for so many years,
tilizer. according to Michigan State passed away at her home Tuesday
College. As a matter of fact, count­ night, October 27. and funeral serv­ for Harvey. HU where she will spend
less station and farm tests have ices were held at Lhe home Friday two weeks visiting relatives and
helping her father. Henry Hhlcr.
proved that rye will pay a big profit
celebrate ins eightieth birthday.
for sufficient plant food of the right
kind, in 1935. one-half of a sandy
field tn Berrien county was treated
with 250 lbs. ot 4-18-4 fertilizer to
Republican banquet at Prairieville
lhe acre and the other half was left
unfertilized. The fertilized field pro­ wish to take up lhe work this year I last Tuesday evening also the rally
duced 315 bushels of grain to the are requested to be present at this at Hastings Friday evening.
acre—and the unfertilized field pro­
Many will be interested to know
meeting. .
.
duced 5.3 bushels —Michigan Farm- I Announcement has been made of Of Warren Bellinger's accident
the
approaching
marriage on Wliile trying to help his little
Thanksgiving day of Mias Marquita daughter In some of her acrobatic
work he slipped on a rug on lhe
Turkey World publishes an article M. Henton. daughter At Mr. and
polished floor, fell and broke three
that should be interesting u&gt; those Mrs. R. O. Henton. Delton, to Ivan
who would like to engage tn turkey J. Smith, son of Mr and Mrs. W. F
and crushed two others,
raising in a limited way with a Smith, crooked take. Miss Henton is necessitate hls lying in bed
minimum Investment In buildings. a graduate of ArgubrlghC Business
It describes an ell-purpose house College. Battle Creek, and Is em­
ployed
in
the
office
ofC.J.
Barnum.
Thursday.
that la used first tor a laying house
—then U converted Into a brooder superintendent ot the Delton-W. K.
Kellogg Agricultural school.
Mr
Bmlth studied nt the Cincinnati by the M. I Club at Galesburg. Thi
College of Embalming and lx asso­ H. L Club put on the program con­
ciated with the R. O. Henton Fu- sisting of readings, instruments

Whtn corn bi scarce and highpriced. the hog feeders of lhe coun­
try begin to think about other
grains. Feeding tests at Nebraska
Experiment Station indicate that it
requires an average ot 6 3-4 bushels porch covered with poultry netting
of shelled com plus 45 lb.s. of tank­ on top. Both house and parch are
age to make 100 lbs. of pork in a built on skids so that they can be
moved separately. Both have oneinch mesh wire floors which permit
the droppings to fell through to Uia
when barley Lt Ute aubbtitute it will ground- and both of the wire floor.
require 10 bushels of barley and 6
1x2-Inch strips of wood arc tacked
on lop of lhe wire so that tiie tur­
keys will not get sore feet from
standing on the wire exclusively.
Many poultrymen let the cockerels Just before the laying season starts
run with the pullets too long. The 40 breeders are placed in lhe house

early laying Poults are started In
battery brooders In another build­
show a belter profit if sold at 2 lbs. ing—and when the laying hens are
or less, as lhe cost of gains after moved out ot the house It is thor­
that v.eight Is always higher.—Poul­ oughly cleaned and disinfected,
try Tribune.
tough building paper Is used to cov­
er the wire floor of Hie house and
the paper Is covered with Utter.
Beef steers usually outgain beef
heifers of the same age and quality
When the house Is no longer needed
by 10 per cent lo 12 per cent under
for brooding, it L* moved to the
the same condition.,, according to
range. The two end-doors and lhe
Wallace's Farmer. The average cost
of gain Is about the same, except
that the heifers will cost more per
pound during the last part of the
feeding period If they arc brought to
a very high finish. Helfers will

they usually should be sold at
weights of not more than BOO lbs. I
to avoid dockage. Many experienced ।
beef feeders go on the theory that
heifers are not a. good buy unless I
they can be secured for 20 per cent i
leu than steer calves of equal qual-

Now the Hollywood people\are
threatening to move to Florida. But
we suspect that the threat is more
talkie thia movie.

A woman press correspondent
found II Duce munching an olive
You'd think a diet like that would
show up to Ums to the diplomacy.

Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Ford arc
receiving congratulations on the
arrival of twin babies at Pennock
hospital last week. They have been
named Ruth Ann and Russell Earl.
Mrs. Ford was formerly Miss Han­
nah Jones.
Mr .. Sylvia Knappen Ls now nice­
ly located in her new place of busi­
ness to the Slater building across
from the drug store.
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Eddy have
moved lo 32 Tompkins Ave Battle
creek, where Mr Eddy has employ-

Harrington

Mrs Blrdena Lyttle of Battle
Creek spent the week end with her
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ciias. Mc­
Dermott. and called on Mr.
and
Mrs. Clarence Texter of Hastings.
Ed. Gates went to Pennock hos­
pital Saturday where he liad an
operation. At last reports he was
getting along well.__________

staying with her daughter, Lorain,
at Borgesa hospital, returned home
Thursday. Lorain is considerably
Improved and will be brought home

Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Adrianson,
Miss Lucille Adrlanson and Mrs.
Lewis Jolmson attended tiie funeral
of little Arlene Adrlanson of Neeley.
Friday.
Our main street has been graded
anti graveled preparatory lo sur­
Town and daughters of Plainwell facing with blacktop In the spring.
nnd Mr and Mrs Will Louden and
George Wood and sons. Junior and
grandson of Gull lake.
John, attended the fair at Kellogg's,
pull lake. Oeorge took first premilertalned on Saturday evening with
a Halloween party. About sixty of
Roy Anderson of Detroit and Har­
vey Mills of Pontiac were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Mills.
Mrs. Jennie Baumgrass had fpr
guests Friday. Mn. R. J. Maus. Mrs.
Maude Egnn and Mrs. Lee McDow
on Monday.
&lt;her granddaughter) of New York
Mrs. Ella Rogers and granddaugh- I City.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip OToole and
| Patty of Battle Creek were Sunday
on Thursday of last week
Mrs guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. N. Honey­
Nettle Casey of Hinds Corners is well Mrs Hyde of Hastings was a
spending some time al lhe Lelnaar truest Saturday.
Andy Haven and Miss Lucy Uav-

Mrs. Anna.Buck and family spent!
home of Mrs. Andy I-oudcn o;t Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Ford Enz of North Woodland.
Thursday.
Lyle Collison attended a Hallow­
'Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Quimby and
een party to Kalamazoo Friday Mrs Jasper Herrick and daughter
of Bottle Creek spent Wednesday
tr. and Mrs. Robert Louden xpunt with Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette Uslurday evening in Battle Creek
Miss Acluah Suck spent Thursday
night with LeNora Pew of Hustings.

E Applegate ot Cloverdale
Sunday with Mrs. Muis Ald-

Mr. and Mrs. Clair Ashby enter­
tained Sunday in honor of Clalr'.t
i birthday. Mrs William Trine nnd
ion and daughter. Mrs Dorothy
tlined guests from Chicago from Bond and two sons of Marshall and
Friday till Bunday evening.
Mrs Fred Ashby.
Louis Dunn of Oalcsburg and Mr

and friend and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Jackson of near Clarksville spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Target.

Stitch

Time
Tha old adage applies to your
home oa well as your garments.
Drafts not only moke you •*comfortable, but ore dangerous
to the health off your family.
A nail or two now will save you
a lot of time, expense end die­
comfort later on. Call today end
lot tha "FIX-IT MAN" save you
a lot of trouble. Maybe it's fuel
a storm sash, a patch on the
well, a crack in the floor, new
storm windows or doors. What­
ever it may be ho will tell you
just what needs to bo done, ond
do it for you at a reasonable

Enjoy o comfortable home this
nter. Call 2276.

THE HOME
LUMBER CO.
»UILW HOMB"
HASTINGS

Sunday afternoon.
staying

THE GIFT FOR
WANTED
NEW JOY/N L/V/N&amp;/

spent

costumes and one in particular
very beautiful. Over eight do

FRIGIDAIRE - METERMISE1

BATTLE CRfcEK
ENTIRE WEEK STARTING

SUNDAY, NOV. 8TH

•MASH
I*
STAGE
MKVUE

Breaks AllRecords for Value-Giving

One Full Hour
Of Dazzling Stage
Entertainment

BERT SMITH

VARIETIES
Complete with all these Money-Saving,

FUEL
NOW!

"KIKi” ROBERTS

Work-Saving Frlgldaire Advantages.

Famous Ziegfeld Beauty
"In tha Flesh" "Only1'

Famous Meter-Miser Mechanism
Food-Safety Indicator • Five-Year
Protection Plan • Automatic Reset
Defroster • 63 Big Ice Cubes—6 lbs.
at one freezing! • 5.1 cu. ft. capacity
—10.7 sq. ft. shelf area e Automatic
Interior Light • Double-Range Cold
Control • Removable Shelves • Au­
tomatic Ice-Tray Release • Wider,
Roomier, More Front Shelf .— ■ ,
Space • Stainless Porce­
lain in Seamless Interior • j' z.
Giant Porcelain Hydrator.

Famous Indian Quintette

LEW FINE
And Hia Singing puck
* Old Paia arc tha Best Pat a'

ASK US ABOUT

MAZIE WHITE
Acrobatic Staratto

CAROL PAIGE
Eight Pages From Mar Book

WI LL •1LIVIK l

RUDY PAUL

I.O..H rtlGU WILL SOON ADVANCE . . . b.cause a /on now better grodcu arc hard to gat from
fhe mines . .. because you spay not ba able »o
whit you wdnf later ori.wf advise yob to buy f&amp;ir
winter's cad NOW!

And Sixteen
Sweet Sixteen*
Ail a«t to.,Mj

"VARIET
Swing B

Smith Bros., Volte &amp; Co.

—dri tha Screen—

DEALERS IN WOOL, GRAIN, FtED, FLOUR, BALT, LIME,
CEMENT AND COAL
*

"PrWn the 8tr4tch’

HASTINGS. MICH.

Patricia

ellis

$3.00 Down

Come In and see the PROOF.

CL1FFORD WAYNE FAMILY

"VI” SHAFFER

Manhattan COAL

MICHIGAN

ANO NIGHTS

40c

Kiddies 15c

Meets All 5 Standards
for Refrigerator Buying
and PROVES Itl
1. Umr OpwaUai C.H

2. S.fw Fte. N,litMl.
3. fate, tnulM—Mot te.

4. MotUuMH,
5. Ota-Vur Onterta. Hal

Thi Most Usable Rifrlteritir

Ever Built.

Consumers Power C
PHONE 2305

�THE HASTING* BANNER, THimSDAT, NOVEMBER S. 1H4
son for optimism In comparing 193d calves more than half ot this llve- SENIOR CLASS BEGINS
wlth the year 1932 when Michigan i stock incohie. hogs second In ImPLAY- PRACTU
down to 119 mil- nortanaa
portante and sheen
sheep and lambs third
third
Poultry is tha third important
lion dollars.
In this date 80 per cent of the source of Michigan farm income, Double Oast Selected for
Livestock Produces
Sixty
with
over
31
millions
or
almost
12
farm income H derived from live­
Po**ible
Matinee
■
Per Cent of the
stock and livestock products, with per cent of the 1935 total.
Performance
j
less than 40 per cent from actual
Total
.
TO CELE­
Work l* getting under way on the DEPARTMENT
J
1 Farmers in Michigan are in a sale* of crops and miscellaneous POSTER CONTEST TO
। fairly advantageous position finan- product*.
AID POTATOES play 'New Fires" to be presented by BRATE 100TH ANNIVERthe
senior
class
in
the
Central
audi
­
Gunn
*
figure*
on
lhe
division
of
BABY NEXT YEAR
1 dally this year when compared with
i agricultural producers in many the 1935 income of 185 million dol­ |100 in Prize* Offered to torium early tn December. A double
cost has been selected temporarily
। other slates, in comparing crops and lars received by farmers are as fol­
with live hope that it will be poa- ICOPPER LEADS LIST
Student* in High
I prices to estimate cash going into lows:
slble to give two performances, a
Dairy products. $5 millions; sales
'.rural pocketbooks. R. V. Ounn. ex­
OF MINERAL RESOURCES
Schools
matinee on December 3 and an
’ tension special!** in economic* at of livestock, more titan 38 millions,
Statewide interest hi stimulating evening performance December 4. .
Michigan State college, th Mb rea- wilir eash sales from cattle and
more consumption within the state. The play has a single modem set- ■Iron, Limestone, Gold Found
of Michigan grown* potatoes I* be­ Ung. and deals with tjie attempts of
in Quantitiei in the
ing aided by the announcement of a father lo get hls indolent family
Upper Peninaula
a poster conle.t open to any slu- •' to work by putting them on a farm
dent in the ninth, unth. eleventh Ln Missouri. Great Interest Is being
Frank Pardee, who 1* connectedor twelfth grades of the Michigan shown in lhe interpretations of the with
i
the oil and gas division, a* well
public schools for use in connection characters, and work has already ।as the mining engineering depart­
with Michigan Potato Week to be begun on lhe first ftcl. Committees ment.
।
of the state conservation orcentered Ln Detroit. December 1. 2 to have charge of costumes, proper- ।
and 3.
ty. etc., will be appointed this week noon
।
luncheon of the Hastings Ro­
As well a* consumer demand, the
Following are member* of the Un- ।tary club on Monday.
purpase Ls to promote lhe produc­ La live casts a* announced by Mr.
Mr. Pardee explained that next
tion, grading and marketing of bet­ Becker. head of the dramatic* de- ■year will mark the one hundredth
ter potatoes. The Michigan Qual­ partmenl: Glenn Miller. Merle Kel- ,anniversary of Hie Michigan Geo­
ity potato association is cooperating ley. Woodrow Alleidlng. Orvllfe logical Survey, which has had so
with Michigan State College and Ballance. Donald Feldpausch. Law­ much to do with the development
the Michigan state Department of rence Moore, Darrel) Aidrich. Stu- ,of oil. mineral and other resources
Agriculture, the Detroit Board of art Edmands. Frank Rogers, Ber- ,of this state. In that time there
Trade and hotel and restaurant as­ ns rd Williams. Lloyd Hopkins. Rob­ have been only nine state geologists,
sociations.
•
ert Henney. Billy Gladstone. Elson which show* that lhe slate has been
One hundred dollars Ln prize* is Harrington. Franklin Browrie. Billy well and competently served. The
offered, with a first prize of 825 aud Ransctne. Ray Sigler. Clarence Wai-, animal budget, which was orlgi24 other smaller awards. Posters ter*. Jocelyn Ironside. Marian Hew­ naliv 842,000. has been increased lo
must be mailed with postage pre­ itt. Leola Cortright. Leone Leonard. *44500. which shows that lhe tax
paid on or before November 25 to Betty McMillen. Isabel Sage. Frieda burdens of Michigan people have
H. C Moore. Michigan Slate Col­ Scott. Margaret Fingleton. Ruth not been much increased by that
lege. East Lansing.
Hathaway. Evadene Struble. Doro­ department.
The size must be 14 by 22 inches, thy Roush. Margaret Hummel. Al­
The first engineer, lhe man who
on three or four ply cardboard stiff berta McClelland. Virginia Town­ had much to do with Ute develop­
enough lo stand erect. Poster paints send. Elaine Day. Ruth Winslow ment of lhe mineral resources of
of not more than three rotors, with and Lucille FOotc
Michigan, was Douglas Houghton.
black or white lo be considered a
He with hls assistant Mr Hubbard
color, are other rules Flat colon,
blazed Ute way for developing lhe
and simple designs will have the
Miss Norma Case ot Lansing spent stale's resources.
best chance. Slogans should not be from Friday until Tuesday night
fn the upper peninsula this
of more than six words and Miould with her parent*. Mr. and Mrs state has some wonderful mineral
be illustrated In the posters. Ideas, Hugh case.
resources which are principally of
attractiveness tnd neatness wiU
The Briggs Ladies' Aid Society are four kinds. Flr.tl* copper. Copper
count most in judging. Student's , sponsoring the annual fried ...
_____ mining has been at a low ebb In
chicken
name, address and name of senool supper at the church basement on this state in recent years, because of
—
.... U», A 1 —
.
..____ .__
must
be placed on the Ko.l,
back nf
of •lhe
Tuesday. November 10.
the exceedingly low price of that
poster In the upper right hand cor­
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Cortright metal. The mines of Michigan are
ner.
and family who have always lived deep mines and the ore more dlfPasters which win or receive hon­ in the Briggs district are moving to cult to treat, so that when the price
orable mention become the property their new home In the Section Hili of copper dropped to 5 1-2. 6. 7 and
of the quality potato association. district near Bellevue.
8c a pound. Michigan mines could
Others will be returned If an ad­
The Albert Clark hunting party not compete This created b serious
dressed label and postage is en­ including hls son. Morris Clark of social problem In the upper pen tn- ■
closed with entries for return post­ Battle Creek. Henry Gray of Ban­ sula, because some provision had to
age. During the Detroit exhibit a field and Claytort Case leave Nov. be made for the thousands of men
stale potato queen will be crowned 12 for the north, where they will be who were thrown out of work. The
from among the three winners at in camp through lhe hunting sea- Calumet and Hecla Mining Com­
lhe fictional shows at Iron Rlvyr, son
pany. which owns a good shore of
Kalkaska and Mayville.
Lurcn D. Dickinson of Charlotte the copper mines, Is to be commend­
ed for what It did during the seven
DISTRICT SV FT. COMING.
Ute Briggs church on Sunday. No­ years beginning in 1929. At that
Rev W H Joppie. District Si.pt. vember 8.
lime the company had cash re­
of the Pilgrim Holiness churches of
Mr. and Mrs. Don Jewel of Beulah, sources of nearlv 810.000.000. It had
Michigan, will speak al lhe localj Mich., former resident here, are exmany hundred thousand tons of re­
Tabernacle, next Sunday. Nov 8.
week called by lhe fined copper, produced at prices
This 1* hls quarterly Visit- Co™' county agents meeting at Lansing, which made it Impossible to sell it
reunion will be administered at 11 Mr Jewell u
agent ftt Beu- except at a toss That company has
A. M All former friends a*
A
us well as .
done its best for Its employees.
lhe general public arc Invited.
I Virgil Whipple son of Mrs. Roy When lhe tide recently turned, and
When ttUnee' ~hu «»nd lhe I Terpenhw jM Mlh RubyReyno1 Michigan copper mines could again
nreuh of Maine hlihw.y on which wb° *ere married *1 Angele. Ind,■ be operated, at that time the Calcar,
lo com uphill. 11 me»i'in
“ September have recently located
'“‘“d1 urnet and Hecla company had near­
know what It Is that keeps the new at Assyria Center. They came here' ly used ail IU cash, also nearly all
I from Marengo.
the proceeds of the sale of Ils stock
millinery on.
t,r
- . The members of the Will Stanton1 of copper, and had a wry moderate
Human beings are taller tn the family gathered at the Mr. and Mrs.• sum on hand with which to begin
mornings than al night. ' say* a Herbert Reynolds' home of Bellevue! operations anew. It is again being
Harley Street expert
And much1 Sunday honoring their twenty-' profitably operated; but lhe price
shorter again at the end of the 1 fifth wedding anniversary.
of copper needs to be Increased con­
month.
1
siderably above what It now is in
_____ ___
__
j The modern home has every com’ order to make the operations of tha
intrlgulng combinations of the I fort except a soundproof telephone• Calumet and Hecla really profitable.
whole alphabet can never put 8up-1 booth to protect tho»c who aren't1
The next great mineral resource
ply 6t Demand out of business.
I talking.
ot Michigan Is Iron. Michigan ha*
- soft ore mines, where lhe ore can be
scooped up with steam shovel*. It
also has Iron mines where blasting
is required, because lhe mineral 1*
•o hard. Hie automobile manufac­
turers particularly require different
blends of iron orc. so that some iron
district* cannot be operated now—
for instance, those in Iron county.
Michigan, because of lhe amount of
sulphur in the ore
The next great resource of lhe up­
fl fl
• Rates to other points
per (jenlnxula 1* limestone. IL la a
big resource and Ls Lhe very purest
of IlmestoAe.
Hie re 1s another
are correspondingly low.
mineral called ■•dolmlle." which re­
sembles limestone but has more
magnesia.
The fourth great mineral resource
Is gold. The production of gold in
lhe upper peninsula has not yet
reached big figures, but prospecting
Is revealing new deposits. In Hough­
ton county, a company, owned by
the Calumet and Hecla, is now pro­
i
From
ducing better than 8600-000 worth of
gold a year and plans to greatly In­
DAY
1
NIGH1 AND SUNDAY
crease that production.
Tiie speaker said that it Is in ev­
RATES
RATES
ery way desirable that lhe gold re­
source* of Michigan be developed,
because of lhe fact that, when the
A\X ARBOR
S .35
8 .65
demand for iron 1* small lhe de­
mand for gold I* heavy, so that lhe
DETROIT
.80
.40
gold mining will lake up the alack
in iron mining.
The speaker believed that there
.75
CHICAGO. ILL.
.45
ought to be an aerial survey of the
entire stale of Michigan. It ha*
.35
.65
FLINT
been demonstrated that that kind
of prospecting is far better than a
PONTIAC
.40
.75
surface survey Ln revealing mineral
resource*. He believes that further
SAGINAW
.65
.35
and large deposits of copper, as well
ss of gold and Iron, will be revealed
Happy Indeed l» the man who can
through such a survey.
CLEA ELAND, 0.
.60
1.05 .

09971808

1 FARMERS' INCOME ON

PRICES

RISE IN STATE farm Income was

03722589

.^^disi/ince

in[s

^vebeeh
V Reduced
L

Telephone calls to distant points
now cost less

day or night

than ever before, reductions apply-

ing to both station-to-station and

person-1 &gt; person messages.

The lowest rates to most points.
are in effect after 7 every' night

mid all day Sunday. For instance,

during those periods, you can call

the following representative

points and talk three minutes for

Let It
Drop
My
Car’s
Safe”

AC or LESS

9
W

Aik “Lone Didance"

STATION-TO-STATION CALLS

1 HASTINGS to

1.05

Al.PENAo

.60

BAD AXE
1 - LUDINGTON

.45

.85'

.40

.75

|

TOLEDO, 0.
CADILLAC

.40

.70

.40

.80

1

CHARLEVOIX

.55

1.00

LAPEER

.40

.75

MONROE

.40

.80

-W1 NTER-PROOF” your car. Win­
ter- proofing Induces winter olL
winter grease, battery cheek, gen­
erator adjustment for winter driv-

one filling LasU all winter.

STOP IN TODAY AND ENJOY
A WORRY-FREE WINTER!

ANDRUS SERVICE •
* Phone 2240

Taw h TharUayt, A A F Bead WMoa, Starria* Kata Smith
ami a Big Ca*t at Katertalmra, 8 U • f . M_, Sutioa WBBM

I

|

All Priam Pin. 3% Salm Tax
W. Cash WPA Check.

m,c^gan

BaUerha. Wtodahleld WIptCT

8Uu,

Hastings,

Valcantting.

BLUE

sundco

Michigan
Washing

MOTOR

FUEL

KUNGENSMITH.
Oct. 29 Letter.
Mrs. James
Btoriaui.
Edward.
Charles and Ann and Mrs. Oliver
Peterson and baby attended the
wedding of Miss Ann Plockovlch and
Jim Slorkan at a Catholic church
in Grand Rapids October 23.
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Bowerman October 10 a boy. He will
answer to lhe name of Harold
Archie.
Bom lo Mr. and Mr*. C. Bchondelmeyer October 24 a baby boy.
Mr. and Mr*. Archie Burd have
begun building their new house.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Duffy are set­
tled in their new home.
Mr. and Mrs. Gardner and son of
latter * father. M E Maze
The President will submit a bud­
get of about 87.000.000.000 He must
have moments when he wishes Fin­
land owed us more important
money.

From the way automobiles are
selling. people are looking at Old
Man Depression from rear-vision
mirrors.

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

_ ‘Underway’
JESMWBRIYFOR
ELECTION BOIRO iMajor Cllan?«
In
R
"
”
&gt;
,
S
c
.
h
°
o1
Areas
i ONE (MENDMENL
NUKES CWISS
orriOIAL XBTUHNS VARY
BUT LITTLE riOM
FIRST FIOUREB

SECTION ONE—PACES 1 to 8

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12,1936

14 PAGES

kra N
o-RaR —Educations!
Education.! Weak
W..L Brings
Rrinn.
More Are
N»«ded
Up Many llama of "Unfiniahed Buainew"

ADDED $3,244,765
DURING OCTOBER

। Windstorm
Oo.’s
Agents,
Added That Volume Ot
New Insurance

MILK COMPANY
STARTS INJUNCTION

NAMES ASSISTANTS
1 CiTUCD
FOR DRESS CONTEST lift I HUI
Vice-Ohairmen Appointed In
Every District Of
i
Oounty
.. ।

OTHER THREE RECEIVE I NotwlUutanding the 1 lateness of SUIT TRANSFERRED TO
Mrs. Frank c. Andrus, who is BROTHERHOOD
county chairman of the Banta Claus
that
at
DECISIVE DEFEAT BY
FEDERAL COURT BY
the Miason and the feet that the
dressmaking contest, has secured
! time for severe windstorms Is targeUSUAL FLA®
STATE VOTERS
JUDGE
McPEEK
women
in all sections of the county'
I ly passed, the agents of the Wlndwork

man

This week. November 9-15, is | schools too small to do the
to assist her. The project Is a'rAAru .... nv'iura
' storm Insurance company of this
known as American
Education &gt;I required of them, and too many
many riner n»ir- onnuonnrn
worthwhile one and Mn. Andrus COACH JUD Hl AMES
:city added 13.244.765 of new insur- CASE INVOLVES TWO
-------Week throughout the United States. | small, weak school districts.to per- rlnol UNt SruNdOKtU
says everyone 1s eager to help.
I
isiii i oe&gt; TUC
DV nOiUC PrtteulociAki anc&lt;? to that company in the month
FVFRY CnilNTY HFFIPF * w&lt;*k when education in all Hamit good schools for country chll-r
WILL DC I Ht orEi
CONTRACTS FOR MILK The vice chairmen for the county
BY CHIME COMMISSION of October. This fine showing, toin educational ,I dren. Too frequently rural school
school •
even l LUUNI I UrrlUC phases b sstressed
ircASed In
-are as lonows:
——
,
follows: Mrs Clarence Mater,
Mater. 1I
umricia have
nave been
ueen poorly
poony planned.
pianneu. '
—
gether with the large increases
circles.
jI districts
Sunrise
HUI
Dairy
Receives
&gt;'■'»»&gt;»«;
««
Mu
unde. Middle. Allen Frentloa Chairaaa Of
Few Scattering Vqtei Given
’
AU
too
Often
large
school
districts
Present
Sales
And
Property
,
"hown
in
previous
tnontlLs.
will
The unfinished business of edu- j
~
.~xc:
,
ville;
Mrs.
Welby
Crockford.
Wood!
J
VilleMrs
Welhv
Croektaed
Wsvad.
Supp«r B(|Uad—Will
I*.
—
----------------.u
----------I
T
Pnm-ir
“
‘
**
thp
Insurance
in
force
in
that
cation is one of the themes for con- 1 have
by the JfrryFor Candidates Of The
Cancellations From Dept.
land; Mrs R. a. Henton. Delton;
iaxea
rtcmain
unchanged
I
company
to
over
moo.ooo.ooo. making
-deration this week. Since society ,
'TT.1?? 2°. to'
, Mrs. Lewis Otis. DowlU$; Mrs. BtelBa Finn Altair
it one of the largest Insurance com­
Minor Parties
does not remain the same from gen-,...—._railroads and other rich tax-1
Of Agriculture
On Our Statutes
Recently tHe'sunrl-w Hill Diiry ‘^"Suita^M^^ 3”.
The Barry county returning board potion' to^irneratlon"1 Ui^educa- 1 *b’e property and to provide good ' our readers will be Interested in panies In the country. Hastings and
— ' The November meeting of UM
.... - ------------------ Belle Mullen. Hastings Brotherhood will be Mi
to canvass the election returns In iionai needs ot child™ &lt;U1M b«
w
hl* »•"&gt; ™unly
on ih, toi.
I"1.
Company of thta city, of which An- Prairieville; Mr&lt;. W. -M.
■ Jones, Hick- on the fourth Monday eight of thta
Ihta county cxmslsu of the probate Ulr ,Atne o lho6e ot prcced'ng gen- neighborhoods. Many other children amendments that w.-re submitted., 5.rm u./t Ji h drew Matthews is secretary, began ,
Judge, the county clerk and the 'rations
Amendment 1t carnen
carried inis
(his county
county oy
by . dimensions. Under the mutual plan Injunction proceedings against Merle orv Corners; Mrs. Ted Stevens, La- | month, instead of the third as It u*.
rations.
| have been neglected. Each state Ainenameni
county
completed ■ Jn no
nn pan
~&gt;&gt;-r nr our society have ■ needs
-------- ,treasurer.
--------------- They ----------------«««» a
a plan
plan for
for each
each area,
area, for
for the
the a
&amp; *maU
^mall malaritv
majority, while
while the
the other
other lhe &gt;“ount of Insurance In force ' E. Drake of Battle Creek for whqt cey. and Mrs. Ross Pierce. Clover*! ually is. This change tn data wm
, made because the speaker fog the
organization
of iaLUfartnrv
satisfactory cehnni
school ,v.
three
were
decisively
defeated vu‘c’ becomes really the capital stock of | is claimed to be his part In an al- dale.
their work last week and made out. changes oorne more rapidly than In “
«“riization of
— —
— .a
—
These various women wtlf have ■ evening could not come on Um UHJg
districts
and
the
consolidation
of
t
Amendment
1
waa
to
give
police
' com,*ny’
i leged illegal setting aside of a con­ charge
the official returns which vary a lhe
One of the major
ot the distribution of mater- j but could come on the 23d.
T
little but not much from , those educational Jobs of our day is to schools, a plan based on the most and sheriff's officers the right to.
- tract of that dairy company with lata to Individuals and organisations | The meeting thia month will be •
to iret I; rnnn.mi«printed in the Banner of lot week, develop rural schools that will bel- effective and economical
the Veterans' Hospital at Camp Cus- who wish to make dre ves and willFather and Son banquet. The
ccwl0Inlca' wav
*»yto"itei
conn-cute“arm&lt;
armTuwT ttej found in'
The following are the official re- •ter
— serve
—— the
---------•- -»
&gt; —
all the children. ! an automobile VI
or other vehicle
and
- ~ schools
----------for --Lie UIIU
! ter. This was brought up In our clr- also collect the completed garments.1 speaker will be Jud Myomas mrtl
needs
of ------rural
peo- good
lulls:
| cult court last week. Mr Drake claims ।
, pie. In no other field of American Such plans have within recent use them as evidence against the I
Mr.&lt; Andrus emphasizes again I of the Western State Teachers’ OoU
For President—
, that he is virtually a government that tlir voal this vear is for son
, (xiucauon are there so many items years been developed on a large; occupant or owner of the car. Be-1
••
u.
WL*
Alfred M. Landon—4.950.
1 employee and mat the questions in­
of unfinished business as in rural scale in North Carolina. New York.: fore this amendment was earned I
Arkansas,
Missouri.
Alabama
and
'
the
officers
might
capture
the
weap!
Franklin D. Roosevelt— 3.880.
volved in the case are federal inat- that every needy child In the coun-! folks that makes him a fav
education. Among these Hems are:
Win Lemkt--37C
West
Virginia.
This
year
under
the
j
ons.
but
could
not
use
them
os
evl, 'll&gt; IACUACI
- ------u
——. w.«a.
LVUIU IIU. u»«- kJIVIII UA c»l-|
Il ters
A MIIU,
and. wieaciuir.
therefore, bill
through
MI'S I ■ UAH
his »iat- ty oe remembered st Christmas, (Uch gatherings. For the t
111
Beucr school IMIU
and UlA.IIl.1
district VA
or-- , ----SOOnSOiWhlO
Of
the
United
State
S
rl
—
nr.
.v.ln.f
r-.lmln.l
.ml*
—
Majority for Landon—1.070.
ganiulion.
States! dence against the criminal, unless NEW LAWS RF8P0NRTRT F tomey requested the transfer of the lime.
imnlxattan. (2) more adequate supsue- : "F*’’140‘'*,)lp of
*-•
•—• -there
------- •-is
;of Hie Brotlierhood
Governor—
1 ervislon and administration, (j, I Office of Education, c proJett, fi-। they had iuul a search warrant,!
' »uii
-*ult tn
to »»•••
the tinitaui
United. rimim
States district
■ mission; but every membar w
Frank D Fitzgerald. R.—5.699.
I high-school advantages for all rur- . ’tanced by federal funds, to plan which gave them the right io search 1
FOR THE ADDITIONAL
. court at Grand Rapids. That dte-'
: one or more boys with him
Frank Murphy, D.—3.146.
| al children. (4) better school build- • better organization of sahooli, the car or the criminal, previous to,
pudilan
of
the
case
was
not
opposed
DUTIES
Majority for Fitzgerald—2553.
I Ings. (5) more adequate and eqqlt- , “nd school districts In rural ureas. । capturing the firearins. This amend- '■
। by L E. Barnett. attorney for the'
takes. The Bro*! • rhood Father
Lieutenant Governor—
• able finance.
I u ^‘“g carried on by the state de- ment ought u&gt; help In the enforce- •
. Sunrise Company. Because the issues
Lurcn D. Dickinson. R.—5481.
j . &lt;11 Rural schools need better or- partments of education In ten ment of the criminal laws of this DELINQUENT TAXES
raised did apply to federal matters.
have^alwayx been very enjoyable i
Lao J. Nowicki. D— 3381.
ganlxatlon. There are too many1 (Continued on page 3. Sec. Jj
' state. Barry county's
AkinTUCD oaiicc 1 Judge McPeek granted the transfer
county’s vote in favor of
of•
Majority for Dickinson—2.004.
_______________________________ this
’ this
amendment
amendmentwas
was
3602.
3602.
against
againstIIIt
'
)
ANU I Mtn LAUot
of the suit to the federal court.
i
; Allen Prentice will be captain
Secretary of State—
qiiBJumPTinN Nnnrv
I3-241- ■ "“Jority for It of 361. No I
/
-------------| Facts upon which this litigation'
1 the supper squad. The other msi
SLBSCBIPT1ON Nonet.
(doubt
most ui
of wir
the vunn
vows Return
against u
it. County Olerk
Hyde
Busy was boiwd are Interesting. It i
Orville E- Atwood—5.421.
..
i
uwwu
'■ *pp««r. MEMBIBSHir BOLL CALL
We
c are
arc again asking the compsracomnara-!. were
u-rre recorded
rxmrdi.a because people —
are I
J
Lockwood,
DeWayne Pew, Wayne
1“’
STARTED YESTERDAY
Lock
Man During The Past
Majority for Atwood—2,154.
U*^X.
n,*‘e*b*n who h*’e n®&lt; I getting tired of this method of loadabout two years ago. the owner of
Merrick. Keith Yerty. Earl Cham­
Attorney General—
paid their subscription arrearages as mg up our constitution, and felt I
Few Weeks
a dairy business In Battle Creek. He !
IK COUNTY
berlain. Ray Clemens. Harry Dunn,
David H. Crowley—6,215.
.....................................
-......... iX;th7„”7
™'di
»«»«&gt;. sold his business. In the sale, so It;
Lester DeVault. Fay MarMe. Her­
Raymond W. Starr—3,377.
Is claimed, he agreed that for a per­
man Hauer. Sterling Rogers. Art
QUOTA THIS YEAR
Majority for Crowley—1,838.
iod of five years, he would not en-!
Keeler. Burl Rising. George CarpenState Treasurer—
powdble. Kindly give this matter
gage in the sale of milk in the city:
IS 600 MEMBERS
NEW LAW DOUBLES ALL
Howard M. Warner—5.058.
of Battle Creek, or within a radius
xr
u
i
X
--------7
.■
„
'
m&lt;nt
- •toy Erway. K. J. Crook.
Theodore I. Fry—3.575.
I
LEVIES HADE ON
of 10 miles from that city.
National Organisation Has DeVries. Every member of
Majority for Warner—1.433.
Mr. Ashley learned that the Vet-!
|
INHERITANCES
i to,r,dd». *Xr'X’ Jto
S“ £ ui: erans* Hospital at Camp Custer,
Auditor General—
Ai.l.ted Thou.wnd. Ot
U
„
.
ent
at
this Father and Bon gai
John J. o Hara-5.208
just outside of Battle Creek, was in;
Veteran! During Year
I ing.
George T. Oundry—3J95.
SOME DEDUCTIONS
a position to award a contract;
Yesterday. November 11. the an- '
.
Majority for O’Hara—1.813.
for three-months' periods to some­ nual Bed cross Roll Call for mem-, 0111 TH 1110100(1
Justice of Supreme court—
ARE NOWPERMITTED
. one who would supply the hospital bershlps started In Barry county.iSfl U bHRnil IS! II
Harry S. Toy-5.108.
MARTIN CRONK.
l with from 1600 to 1700 pounds of with Mrs. Forrest Johnson as Roll Uflll I IlnllUiUuU
Bert D. Chandler—3.457.
As he has decided to quit farming.
J Mosey Raised By This Tax
pasteurised milk each day. the milk
Majority for Toy—1.651.
Charier
mill T fill I
Martin Cronk will have an after­
I to meet the hospital s requirements Call chairman. Mayor
Ooaii Into
Tn tn State
Atatn Primary
Prlmnrv
Ooes
Leonard purcha_sed the first memUllll I I IN I
United States Senator—
noon sale at hb place two miles west
os to quality. Mr. Ashley entered In­
I Hl'.! )
Wilber M. Brucker—5.030.
of Hastings on M-43. Mr. Cronk of­
School Fund
! to a contract with the hospital in, bcrshlp, as is his custom.
Mrs.
Johnson
reports
that
the,
ww»h.s wu i
Prentiss m. Brown—3671.
Slate Inheritance taxes levied so fers three good work horses, eight
Majority for Brucker—1.459.
SKJUE?Ih!HJUI THE LABailT
far this year in the Barry county head ot cattle, a sow. hay and com
Congressman—
was &gt;496 m favor of II and 4.922 ££e frwn Uje^various «rtlna or£ January. February and March of!
probate Judge's office amount to a and some farm tools. Henry Flan­
securing
mem-1
---------------------------------- IM
(Continued on page 3. Sec.
against it. a No majority of 3426
I
n they ^e Tot ^ade oT lhu
“,d «** «»• “
W»al
LOOKED HARBOB
total of 1641550. The total has been nery is the auctioneer and Wm. Gor­
bers. visiting the
Amendment NO a nrot»»ed tn ex. I-----J._. . /
---maae -. the BatUe creek milk dealers did not I
increased since the first of May by ham. clerk. See the adv. for com­
THE WORLD
offices and stores,
JO-JO WHITE GUEST
plete
details.
| enjoy this proceeding and accord-1
reason of the fact that the new
the factories and
Ingly obtained an injunction, re-1
Inheritance tax law went into
AT ATHLETIC BANQUET state
the homes: BuslI
JOHN ZUSCHN1TT.
straining him from delivering milk
effect at that time. That law doub­
neas district, Mrs. PRESIDIO WAS A
As he Is unable to continue farm­
to the hospital, because of his five"Tigah Man" And Charles ted the tax on direct heirs of deceased Ing because of poor health. John —,-------------- - ---- ... ..
Harry Wood.
SPANISH GARRI
■
(Continued on page 1. Sec 2.)
;
Zuschnltt will hive an auction slit U said that A"""
this amendment was I tabulated, all the figures totalled.
"Lady" Baldwin Dliouss |
" ....
‘ZxpXTfTh^ cT T
Mrs. Donald 8^/ Mr.7^ GrtiUr Loa Aaffelat ■
. tax on inheritances by indirect heirs his farm two miles cast and one lETX
el&lt;- ™
Thlk hue aHJ.d -terSTS;
I- MUSIC STUDENTS
New And Old Baseball
' from 5 per cent to 10 per cent. There mile north of Freeport, with Henry — • • !*
hBd- c*r? I the work of the three eountv ofriUlMF rnuPCDT Johnston. Mrs Edw. Downs. Mrs.
Jo-Jo White. Tiger outfielder, who are certain exemptions provided in Flannery as auctioneer. Mr. Zusch­
UIVINb LUNLcnl Harry lArsen. Mrs. E. F. Bayias.
officiated at the game last Saturday the law. That is. there are deduc- nltt offers a good matched team, x, x s?
.
Mrs. John Wood and Miss Mabel
---------—
and spoke at the annual athletic tlons from the amounts willed to five Holstein cows, two heifers,
Fine
Program
For This An- Bisson, al) representing the A metIbanquet afterward, proved to be the certain heirs in levying the taxes. sheep, hogs, hay. poultry, farm tools JXTi “a™
1
’XSJS.'*
ual Event At The
I
Le»i®»» Auxiliary; First Ward. day. July 23rd.
moat popular man at the game as On Indirect heirs living ouulde the and miscellaneous articles. Also a
। Mrs. Robert Dryer, chairman. Mrs.
well as the banquet.
sfaite there are no deductions—thi stave silo, see hte adv. on another
Auditorium
I Leo Taffee. Mrs. David Boyes. Mrs. breakfast and with
He very obligingly autographed full 10 per cent on the entire amount pag.- for complete Information.
proposed amendment, the vote being Sriateiure^ith Serened d’.bn
Approximately 125 students from Arthur Laubaugh.
Mrs. ■ Hugh
everything pul before him and an­ Inherited must be paid.
,
WM. C. ANDBBSON
vei 1 673
nn
k itsi_ a
mainritv
. e#latttiure witn
mainrltvl
Wlln rcicreiicc
rcIcrellcc to
W delinOelin- the high school music organizations Mycrsv Mrs; Ira Shultz. Miss Amelia we decided to drive around
swered a barrage of questions at the
The money raised by tills state
w
nuM°rl‘y
' ! quent
0U'M taxes has added Immensely will present the fall concert Friday, Walters. Mrs- Allerdlng. Mrs. BanOn another page of tjils tsauc
same time. During the half at the Inheritance tax goes Into the pri­
4
I *°
WOfk *”
• COUMy treas- November 13 at 8 o'clock in the dersort. Mn. Ena Rockwood. Mrs. Francisco la built on a
game he was besieged by young and mary school fund and helps U) will be found Wm. C. Anderson's
Amendment No. 4 proposed to'
M. tax. There L"r‘ ’'"“..O-nUuUrb. but l». Central auditorium under the dl- ! H- «• Blfdmll and Mrs. Ottoaen; alold alike and showed his southern support the public schools. The fed. auction sale advertisement. He of­ abolish the real estate
hospitality In welcoming everyone. eral government also levies Inheri­ fer? a fine lot of personal property was no provision In this proposition cause of duplicate systems of book­ recUon of Mr. Lower. Mr. Hine and.« Howard Frost at the factories.
keeping. the county clerk's duties Miss Jean Olerum. Rehearsal work |
(Otalttoued on page 8. Bee. I)
His greatest thrill, no doubt, was tance taxes, but the latter are grad­ for sale as he is retiring from farm­ for any other way of raising the
San Francisco Bay. the »
----------------- -----------------------when he sal beside our own Charles uated according to the amount ^f ing. M&gt;. Anderson's farm is located money to carry on schools and lo­ are also Increased, but not to such for this concert is being carried on
land-locked harbor in the ■
"Lady" Baldwin at the banquet the estate. Prom the levy made by one mile north and four miles west cal governments. There was only the an extent as are those of the coun­ during school hour, in the various
Connecting the bay with the
table. Their conversation was of the federal government trie amount of Freeport included in the list are suggestion thql it might be done by ty treasurer. A recent law look organizations. Price of tickets is
is the Golden Gate, a s trait
course, baseball as it was played In levied by the state as an inheritance 45 DVJuun cattle, some purtbred, two an income tax. it was proven beyond away from township clerks all the ten cents if purchased in advance
Ian mil** —IA* wH* NM
teams, hogs, sheep, poultry, corn, question ^hat an Income lax. at even recording and the keeping of chat­ and fifteen cents If purchased at the
yesteryear and today.
tax is deducted. With most estate*,
The "Tiguh Man." in his speech, therefore the federal government grain, firm tools, household goods, higher rates than the government tel mortgages, bills of sale and like door. Tickets are on sale only at
evidences
of
indebtedness
or
own
­
tic.
See
the
advertisement
for
com
­
the
high
school
office
at
10:15
A.
brought out the rules of today and gels no returns. It Is from the large
now charges, would not raise the
ership,
and
placed
all
this
with
the
tog
constructed.
plete.
Information^
N.
C.
Thomas
is
M. This concert promises to t^c i
showed how the old timers were in­ estates that your uncle Samuel re­
money that Is now raised by taxWe studied &lt;
the auctioneer
’ST and
S?th the sale begins ,tloa ot pr°pert&gt;'-The voters °f thi* register of deeds, who has to keep good and worth hearing. The pro-! The regular Women's Recreation
. strumental tn making them.
ceives his Inheritance money.
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1)
kt 1O.*M a. r
— "—
gram Is as follows:
! class will hold Its first meeting for
m„ —
with
and-----------------------------thU state evidently
"Lady" Baldwin followed White
Since the first of January the
i
« i lunch gt noon. iI county .------- felt
.~~I
IV.**
*r. the
kr.* 15-mlll* —
High School Bond
I the winter season on Thursday. No­
on the speakers' roster and was giv­ following estates have paid inherl- HAIIDI E •PACT
PUHCCU
llh
*t. with
tax«■limitation,
en as great an ovation as the Tiger tance taxes in Barry county:
i uWUDl_E LAol LnuoCri
there Is no need for furtiter inter­
Anticipation ............
Al Hayes
rlar. He recounted past experiences Est. Eva 8. Johnsong 101.92 •j 101.&amp;2 I
FOR SENIOR PLAY frerence
"t?&lt;*.wllh
roPer‘y Ux
, Determination ... George Douglas1 fore the holidays will consist main­ to follow the shore
with the P
property
tax. AcAc­
in baseball and told how on hta off ' Est. Mary E. Morgenthaler .. 53863
w l
1 I cordlrutlv
this
nrotxMltlon
»a&lt;
ric.
cordingly
proposition was den.,
&lt;
. i
High School Orchestra
I ly of folk dancing, clogging and re­ City where we stayed was
creational games, but after the first
day he was kept busy taking tickets. Est. Rieka Eckardt\
Ifeated decisively In the state. This
.The Gypsy Festival ... Al Hayes of the year basket ball will be edited San Francisco we started
Matinee
Performance
Is county cast a vote of about 3 2-3 to
In the modern idiom it would prob­ Est. Isaac Golden
'
°
I Andantlno ........... Edwin H. Lemar
to the program. Anyone wishing to
ably i&gt;e summed up as "never a dull Ksl. Phebe Newberry
I against this projxisal. the vote be­
Gipsy Air,
24A0iI
Scheduled For Dec. 3,
Two Guitars
enter the class please call the high
moment."
ing yes. 1.483, no 5.487. a majority of
605Ji I
Est. Rhoda A. Wolf
Girls' Glee Club
school or come to the meeting hills overlooking the
Evening, Dec. 4
A. Lynn Brown acted as toastmas­ Est. George J. Doster
Mention was made a few weeks
410.10,1 The senior play "New Fires" is 4.005 against It. These are official
ago about the lifetime pass recently Spinning Song .German Folk Song Thursday night.
ter and Introduced the Hastings Est. Malvina Lombard ....
figures.
23.09 ।
Boulevard right
and Greenville coaches as well as
given Charles Baldwin by the Am­ Allah's Holiday .... Rudolf Frlml
38 JS getting under way In fine shape. Two
rough Golden O
Boys' Glee Club
. CLARK MEMORIAL HOME
their respective teams. Perry Detk­ Est. Ada Downing Lewis .
erican and
National
baseball
226J5 casta have been selected and com- FLOYD GIBBONS
Lincoln
Three Chanteys. Away to Rio. Ar­
leagues.
ins, coach al Detroit Southeastern, Est. L. May Ayres (10%).
2499 68 mlltee chairmen appointed. The
DOING A FINE WORK
ranged
Marshall
Bartholomew
also gave an impromptu talk.
It
Is
an
attractive
silver
plate,
VISITS LOCAL PLANT
Est. Claude c. Stocking ..
48140 matinee performance Thursday aft­
nicely engraved and naturally Mr. May Now Thy Spirit ....Fr. Jas.I
Est. Sarah A. Downing ...
196 22 ernoon Dec. 3 will be presented by
8chu!tky Methodists of Western Mich­
Est. Martha Benson
People Here Talk Baldwin is very proud of it. Many Old King Cole------- Cecil Forsyth
138 J5 Stuart Edmonds, Isabel Sage. Wil­ Many
of his friends have asked to see it.
igan Asked To Increase
Est. Tillie E. Lichty
15.27 liam Gladstone. Evadcne Struble,
Chorus
With International News
so he has loaned it to C. B. Hodges
Est. Nancy E. Winters ...
Margaret
Hummel.
Franklin
Endowment
Negro Spiritual
for display in his Jewelry store show Steal Away
Browne. Frank Rogers. Freda Scott,
137
Commentator
Give Ear Unto Prayer .. Jacques
The
_________
claim of
.
the Clark Memorial BABN DESTROYED BY
window,
where
all
may
have
a
Jocelyn
Ironside.
Glen
Miller.
Leola
i Est. Chas. A. Armstrong ... 144.13
Floyd
Gibbons. Internationally
Arcade! t ILu.;
Home for Old
old people upon the Meth­
i Est.-Anna 8. Bender
82 JI Oortrlght, Orville Ballance, Alberta knovm news commentator, whose
Hop. You Grasshopper. Hop
odists
of* western Michigan will be
Est. Adelbert D. Olmstead ..
78.04 McClelland. Virginia Townsend and latest fame comes from his sensa­
presented
at
the
First Methodist
Christopher
O'Hara
HASTINGS WOMEN'S CLUB.
Lucille Foote. The ^.st for the eve­ tional reporting from Madrid of the
Finale
church next Bunday, November 15.
Mr. and Mrs. Shirley B. Henry.
Mrs. Russell Me Peek of Charlotte
Total ...
• M41550 ning performance Dec. 4 will con- Spanish war over a nationwide Na­1
Mr. and Mrs. Henry come to Has­
Vocal groups with orchestra
1 Events of the past month have
■ slat of Darrell Aldrich. Betty Mc- tional Broadcasting radio hook-up, will give the program at the Worn­
served to promote a better acquaint­ day evening. The origin
tings from Charlevoix, where Mr.
Land of Hope and Glory
PERMIT8 TO CARRY WEAPONS. Millen, Robert Henney. Ruth Hatha- visited the Hastings Manufacturing; en's club meeting tomorrow. Friday.
Edward Elgar ance of local Methodists with this Is unknown and when
The board in this county for UDorothy Roush. Ray Bigler, Company Tuesday for a business afternoon. She will tell the story of
levotx sentinel. They are living at
old people's home, maintained by
' old Williamsburg, for eighty years PICTURES OF CLARK
censing the carrying of concealed Dloyd Hopkins. Margaret Plngleton. conference.
136 East Clinton sheet.
the Michigan Conference of the
MEMORIAL HOME. Methodist Episcopal church, for re­
Arriving at Battle Creek at 9:30 the capital of Virginia and one of
Mr. Henry Is employed as chief weapons met Saturday and granted Marian Hewitt, Woodrow Allerdlng.
' the most famous colonial towns In
A county meeting for friends of tired ministers, ministers' wives and
linotype operator and machinist in sixteen permits to carry such weap- 1-&lt;xine Leonard. Donald Feldpauach, Tuesday morning Mr. Gibbons, ac­
Day and Rpth Winslow,
companied by his secretary, was America, now restored and recon­ Clark Memorial Home In Grand widows and other worthy old peo­
the composing room of the Ban- ons. The following were the 11-,
censces: Donald Allerdlng. Carlton
Albert Becker, dramatics coach, met by o. w. Dolan, secretary of structed according to Its original Rapids will be held in the dining ple.
the
* play with Hasel1 rCau^the Hastings Manufacturing Com­ plan. Judge and Mrs McPeek visit­ rooms of the local First Methodist
Both Mr. and Mrs. Henry were township; Clayton Allerdlng. Carl- will direct ,K
On October 13 a delegation of
ed Williamsburg
this summer, church Thursday evening, Novem­ members from all over this section
members of
the
Congregational ton township; Glenn D. Roush. kln, assistant director. Committee pany. and driven to Hastings.
chairmen
are as follows: James
Maple
Grove;
Malcolm
Hoyt.
Mid
­
After a trip through the Hastings spending several days, there. The ber 12. Supper will be served at 7 of the state attended a meeting at
church in Charlevoix. Mr. Henry is
Nash,
stage
and
scenery;
Clarence
plant where Mr. Gibbons expressed story she brings to the Club is a P. M. by ladles of the church. Dr. Grand Rapids, which was addressed
a member of the American Legion dleville; Gordon Edmonds. Has­
fascinating
one.
full
of
romance
and
Hugh Kennedy will be the speaker by Bishop Edgar Blake In the inter­
having served for two yean In tings; William D. Bell. NaahriUe; Walters and Elson Harrington, anistement at the intricate processes
France as a member of the Fifth Paul L. Kaiser, Carlton township; proprertles; Lawrence Moore, fur­ of manufacture required for the historical interest, supplemented by of the evening. A moving picture ests of the Home. Its work was Il­
Machine Gun Battalion of the Sec­ Ray W. Erway, Rutland township; niture; Carl Conrad, electrician; manufacture of piston rings, a short many reproductions. It will be an will be shown illustrating the work lustrated to the visitors by means
■ afternoon Club members will not done at this home and the cam­
ond Division. At the time Mr. and Orlo Roush. Hastings; Daniel L An- Bernard Williams, publicity; Kath­ business conference was held.
,1 care to miss. The meeting as usual paign now in progress. Phomsyour
Mrs. Henry left Charlevoix, Mrs. nlson. Middleville; Ralph Egglaaton. arine Clark, program; Lucille Foote,
Mathodlsta from this part of the munity house In
V. Townsend, makeup; Parker House tor Mr. Gibbons and Is at the Masonic temple and be­ supper reservations to 2141.
Henry was president of the Amer­ Hastings; Heber Pike. Orangeville; tickets;
Frank Lee. Middleville; Fred Tar­ Elaine Day. costumes; and Merle his secretary, Xben Johnson. Clif­ gins at 2:30 with the literary de­
ican Legion Auxiliary.
DVMnnBt
o..w
Home, wncre w»ey were snown auuuv
partment
in
charge.
_
Reed^
E
m^?
E
sta^
G
i«
8
'h!^e
re
lh* institution and saw the wondarbell.
Nashville;
Warren
E.
Carter.
Kelley,
----------------------curtain.
ford-Dolan. Harold Phillips. Frank
They have five children: Robert,
The program will be followed by
ttecd s drug store is being rer,r.
giving the old people.
aged 15; Duane, 14; Dale. 13; Helen Hastings and Louis c. Waffter. Has-; Model settings for the play were Foote, Howard Frost and Edward
a social hour with tea.
modeled to make a larger Ice cream
w Maylan Jooea will draver
Ungs.
made by several members of the Bauer.
a brief 7
----------- dramatics class and two of them ex­
Mr. Henry, who is the nephew of
Mr. Gibbons departed on the 1:30
IN APPRECIATION.
| hlbited at the Ag-HE last Thurs- train tor Detroit where he lectured
lures many good bargains. It will
WOODLAND SENIORS.
D. C. Bronson and Henry Wellman
you io look them to
,
Presenting three-act play. “The
I wish to express my appreclaUon day ®nd ^khlay.
.
on Wednesday.
of Hastings, enjoys all outdoor
at auditorium. Nov. i
.4 —
'
*
Mr. uiuuvm
wu.
Gibbons was
MM UIMHVICWCQ
interviewed by
oy a
u Ghost
-Parade."
-----sports but Is sorry he does not havs for your support at the recant elec-1
---------------. . APPRECIATION.
"NAUGHTY MARIETTA."
reporter white at the depot here. ।13, 8 p- M—Adv.
time to enjoy them as much as he lion.
i
-------------- -------------------------------- I k&lt;n deeply grateful to the elec- r 'AfgLL.
ai^» (
i
This
nature
comes
to
the
Barry
The reported asked him If he had'
*
would like.
Vernon Webster.
•
RUMMAGE
SALE.
| tors of Barry county for your sup- •• „8*?~S *
news.
Mr.what
Gibbons
said.h.“Yea.'’!I Next
by special request. It Is a full any
Register of Deeds
When
asked
it wix
Thomas store. Prl. and port at the polls on Nov. 3.
, «“***«}“
TO BARRY COUNTY VOTERS.
length picture featuring Jeannette
Elect.
I wish to express appreciation for —Adv.
। McDonald and Nelson Eddy. The
the fine support given me by the
_________ _ __________
RUMMAGB SALE.
| amount it iseks,
'
picture tells the story of the found­ Landen had sued the Literary Di-'
voters of Barry county Nov. &gt;•
RUMMAOS IAU.
DANCI AT WELCOME.
I Al Legion hall. Saturday. No*. 14, fioant Wprit ta *0
- __
Jng _....
ot New ___
Orleans and features Et for breach of promise." CertainBMWbMl prwbrt«rUn
ehimh. view Herlmt.
the Digest's figures wei
'
Friday. Nov. 18. Scharf's Orch. auspices of two Camp Piro Giris’ present tttera an
Hw. Jl-U. MWW w. M.
asms.Everyone
welcome.
—
Adv.
groups.
—
Adv.
•
I
the
Clark
Homa.
i R»rk.

repubucanTwin

; IftlPDCACC
IIULf f Oh ’ 111(101/
UU I |\ flC
Il|

I COUNT! OFFICERS

NIMESTHEH
CROSS WORKERS:

TWENTY ESTATES
! PAY STATE S6315.50

i Three Auction Sales

- - --____

SS’d""’" J“U‘‘'"r'SS?or‘?S

JFomen To Hai-e

Recreation Class

Lifetime Pass On
Display At Hodges

May We
Introduce

S3

B—Mr.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, IMS

TWO

f nr I r

of

JU

LOCAL NEWS

Specials—that
speak for themselves
OHIO

VIKING

MATCHES

COFFEE
15c »•

3c b°‘
First Row Peas E.ri,jUn.
Armour’s Pork &amp; Beans

IOc
IOc
IOc
23c

can
large 26 ox. can

Express Salmon
CheGSG

lb.

Full Cream Longhorn

Wheaties

10c
QUAKER OATS
larga pkg.
19c

SUGAR
*S. 49c
Jack Froit 4x
Sugar 2i*»a«. 15c

Climalene or Bowlene
Canvas Gloves
Ivory Soap
Dreft

med. size

rolls

Li 19c
19c
IOc
B 2 f°r
19c
large pkg.
23c
bars
He
pair

2 for He

CHIPSO

CRISCO

large pkg.

3 lb. can

19c

53c

TISSUE
5

Wholatoma or Pirate

lg«. can

Lava Soap
Seminole Toilet

Pancake
FLOUR

25c

Members
the Hasting* Woman'a Club win be Interested to learn
that MW- R R. McPeek will be the

Friday, afternoon, repeating the
Have you seen ike new Plymouth?program on old WllUamsburj which
it'a a wow. Like riding on air.—Adv. ahe gave recently before the Char­
Justice and Mrs. W W. Potter lott&lt; Women'* Club
havg gone from Wall lake to their
Tou «««&lt;* Imagine the differhome In Ea&lt;t Lansing
1"“* ta
new Hy mouth I RJde«.
Dr. Rotarr B- H.rtoru
b«„ I

nl.TT. or MRS. MURRAY.
Mrs Dwinls Murray died at h

Organizations

JURY GAVE MRS. GUYNEY
DAMAGES OF $1,750

Thursday afternoon. Mrt. Murray,!
who would haw been 70 years old Trial
Concluded In Judge
Ths Child conservation League in January, had bean in poor health
Verdier’g Oo«rt, Grand
will meet Monday evening at tight
o'clock at tho homo of Mrs Herbert
Bapidg
Tuesday
Rlnihart. 929 8 Jefferson street. death wm unexpected
1 A Jury in the circuit court of

Judge Verdler in Grand Rapids yes
Townsend plan meeting. Maccabee hall Thursday night. Nov. 12. 8 late Mr. and Mra. M. B- Btcbbtnn, । ,terday gave a verdiet ot ll.YW and
o'clock. Rev
Francis Reams of pioneer residents of Hastings. She coata in favor ol Mrs. Dorothy OoyGrand junction will be the speaker. had lived all her life here having ney. In her &gt;10,800 damage suit
against the Fidelity Corporation of
been at one time In bualneas In the
Michigan and Frank B. Bird, the
I Have you seen the new Plymouth? . of interest here: one of those "no
! The regular meeting of Hasting* store now owned by A. J. Larsen. Grand Rapids branch manager of
। It's a wow. Like riding on alr—Adv puahee. no pullee. go like helle aile
Chapter NO. 7. Order of the Eastern 1 Until a few years ago she had been that corporation. Mrs Ouyney will
Don Taflee this week offers a samee" buggies waa in town Tuesactive In community work. 6he was
Star,
will
be
held
Tuesday
evening,
i
be remembered as the wife ot a for­
goodly number ot bargains in used; day. end led the kids a merry chase i
president of the Women's board of mer landlord of the Parker House.
I furniture. A visit to his store on N up and down the streets. The oc- Pennock hospital at the time the She was represented In the proceed­
Broadway would be worth while.
cupanta stopped and fed the thing a I
present building was erected, was
ings by Attorney Kim Bigler of thia
I Oji Tuesday evening the Pythian fp»' gallons ot gasoline about noon
a member of the Women's Club and city, and the defendants by Attor­
worked faithfully tn the- Emmanu­
ney m. Thomas Ward ot Grand
el Eplsco[&gt;al church of which she Rapids.
had been a member for many years.
Mrs. Quyney was originally ar­
The I funeral
services
held
November
19. at 8were
o'clock.
rested on an alleged einbenlement
Saturday afternoon at the home,
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
Regular meeting Knighti of the Rev. J. A. McNulty officiating. charge, arising out ot a contract
purchase
ot an automobile. She was
I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Solomon. 202 Pythtas Monday. Nov 16. 8 P. M. Burial was In Riverside cemetery. |
held in the Grand Rapids Jail for
6 Broadway, are Uie parents of a; Important. Please be present.
She Li survived by her husband.!
several days before being released
10 lo Mr 1
A'OU.’BTiSoO.M «U en- Dr. Dennis Murray, who-ii in poor I
on ball. The embezzlement charge
health and living with his daughter. |
and Mr* Frederick Fuhr. Hastings1
Delphian Study Club Mp W. H. Thwaltes in Grand Rap- j was dropped, after a hearing before
Police Judge Creswell: hence the
Route 4
°“ Mo,ultt&gt;
ids; three sisters, Mrs. C. W. Wes-1 suit for damages.
■ On Nov 4 a daughter was bom to
T&gt;ie w c — jj wJU
al Um&gt; pinter of Hostings; Mrs. R. T. P.
. moved toHasUnga
from Battle Xflerwn St" ROr” n”**'
9 11°^ °f*5" Jo**^ln* 8“ndMy 8 Dodds of Kansas City and Mrs.
OBITUARY.
i Creek and are llvbi. In the Newton
Burr Fawett Na*hJ?°V J? George 8. Hooper of Memphis, and . Anna Kalherman. youngest child
-hm.u. nn ih- mn-.r nt uirhi.. &gt;Mr. anoxsts. Burr
nssett. Ni'n- f^nah Wood, leader.
Everybody one brotiter. W. M. Stebbins of of Elder Jeremiah
and Anna
hou&gt;e on the comer of Mlchiga.i vlUe Route I.are the parents of a w-]cnme
Hastings.
avenue and Court street.
'
Nov ,
welcome.
1 Christian Kalherman. was born near
Gettysburg, Ohio. March 9. 1971. and
DEATH OF GEORGE BARNES.
.
1 On Wednesday
Wednesday morning
morning twentytwenty- officers
OFFICERS released
RELEASED
ferent call for a demonstration and one patients were registered al the
Georges Barnes of Howell, oldest , passed to her eternal rest In the home
JOSEPH SILKE.
see for yourself —Adv
newspaperman in the state, who had I, of her daughter. Geneva, tn Kalama, a»
Joseph Silke, ot Middleville, was passed his ninetieth year, died at|1 zoo. on Oct. 29. 1938. having reacheu
Did you notice the large "Red
DEATH nF FD HATES
P‘cked Up b) °®ceri therc
I cross' on the east side of the monu­
the age of 85 years. 7 months, and
DEATH OF ED. GATES
Thursday of last week. It waa his hopie last week Tuesday. He
ment on W State St ? ft was placed
20 days. Her childhood and young
a9*d 75. a J.
life
long
lhat be
he might
might have the served with Oen. Sherman, was In; womanhood were spent tn Ohio
there by the Barry Co. chapter a&gt;
“
j ,o,
i* thought Dutt
I a reminder ot the annual Roll Call 7
. _-?!de?
S‘?en’‘’ of
"f .BMrry. ™Unty dJf? *UdC I*hlch
wiiUii •&gt;
•» m
Middleville
&gt;uuk&lt;&gt;uc woman be- the March lo the Sea. enlisting; where she received her education
I now in progress
£
denly
en,*‘ Tueaday
Tuesday night at Pennock
Pennock[. ileves
hcVM lbf
,hc lMl
last bl
Ul th
th&lt;,. ,
vlllagc
t
p^j. when he was only eighteen years of
In the common schools, and she also
- tee
* that new
... car of the
hosoital
where he where
had *eem
he had
nxh aeemlngly
u.offl„ ....
Hr wa
.A , wn t6 stoop over age. After the Civil war he grad­, spent several terms in Manchester
Go
min­ .hospital
uated from the Blate Normal, later
ute—a Plymouth it really I* dif­ been recovering from his illness. He . Whfle in the postofllcc and pick up from the University of Michigan and. College. At the age of sixteen she
had lived on the same farm in Hope something from the floor. It was
ferent and ha* It the look*!—Adv
accepted the call of her Savior to
was
a
teacher
for
several
years.
In
• Mr. and Mr*. Leslie Hawthorne townrhlp for fifty years. Surviving1 thoU((ht 1|C lnlgbl b-vc plfltetl up 1889 he bought the Howell Repub­1 follow Him. and was received into
have purchased the house on Michi­ are four sous, and one daughter The ■ lbe mUainf casb wbrn Sllkp was lican. In 1938 he purchased the Liv­ the Church of the Brethren through
funeral willi be held at the home brought here he denied that he had
. the rltc^of Christian bapllsni. Her
gan avenue owned by the late Mr*. this
Thursdayr afternoon •»
...
-------------- ...
. । ingston Press, which was published
at 2:30 . bat
j the money,
explained
that . he
characteristic energetic and enthu*। Faye Donley They arc enlarging, re­
.. ---------------lev. J. W
Kltchlng
of-, did *toop over in the postoffice, that in Howell, and combined the two lastlc life es well as her intellectual
modeling and redecorating It and o'clock, the Re:.
and continued to serve his paper up
nclating
BUrial
will
be
in
the
Ce.
.
.1
I
Ih.
a
3c
st&gt;H)p
on
the
floor
and
. expect to move about November 17
to within five days of his decease. training found for her an active
dat
Creek
cemetery.
picked it up. had II with him and
1 Go see that new ear of the min­
He had many friends among news­ place in her church's program, hav­
showed it to the officers He had
ute—a Plymouth. It really I* dif­
paper men of the ..tate and was al­ ing served very efficiently In the
KENDALL SISTERS.
about &lt;10 in cash in his pockets, but ways a familiar figure at Press Asso­ Sunday school and In the Women '
, ferent and has it the look*!—Adv
A concert to be given Friday eve­ was able to give a satisfactory ac­
Mr and Mrs Harold Foster have
ciation meeting.*. He was a member work, both in the home chureh and
, purchased of Wm. Kronewtttcr the ning. Nov 13. at eight o'clock under count of where he had obtained it. of the Presbyterian church and up
. ­ the District of Michigan.
former H D Selden property on No. tile auspices Of the young people « Accordingly he was released
to a &gt; ear or two ago had been a1 On Feb. 19. 1899 she was united
1 in marriage to Lewis Christian. A*,
Broadway, just north of-the bridge choir, of the Freeport McthodUL
teacher in the Sunday school.
BOOK MENDING PROJECT.
They arc making Improvements and church will feature the Kendall
thia lime she came to -live In hb
expect to occupy the house about slaters. who will give a fine selection
home in the vicinity of Woodland
Four women are still working In
AHR LARGER BENEFITS.
of harmony song*. The choir will the city hall on this project of re
where she accepted In a most beauThe
Michigan
Milk
Producer*
A-«You cannot imagine the differ­ ting several sacred selections and binding books, and it can continue
■ Hful way the mothering of his two
&gt;uk-m ■ociatlon met In Lansing last wee.-,; sons. Lawrence and Forrest. To this
ence In this new Plymouth! Ride* with other added attractions your indefinitely if books ran be wm
obtained
drive* and performs like no other In evening will be an enjoyable one A t0 repair This project has been tn and pul Uiemselves on record a» fa­• union twer children were born,
voring greater benefits than thor-• Omar and Mr*
free will offering will be taken.
—
...
Geneva Hecker.
its class—Adv
progress
for about a year r.ow and
carried In tlw National Soil Conser­ Thia union was broken by the death
several thousand books from the
vation program ot the federal gov-- of her husband on June 29. 1915
rural, graded and city uchooL* as
i ernmrnt
From
thia
time
the
full responslwell as the Hasting*. Nashville and
The a-v-oclation put Itself on-rec­' blllly for the training of her chilMiddleville public libraries have
ord as urging that bcneflta to be' dren rested with her. In order that
teen pul into splendid condition .it
paid by the federal government be' they might receive the educational
very low coat. Telephone 2645 or 3303
if you have some book* that nev&lt;l I distributed in larger measure to' advantages she desired for them she
1 farmers who carry out the programi went lo live In Hastings. Later she
mending.
of growing alfalfa, clover and other' went to live with her children where
legumes for replenishment ot Ute• she was lovingly cared for till the
VISITS BENTON HARBOR.
■oil.
end. She was preceded In death by
Mrs Arlene Perkins, manager of
her parents, her husband, seven
the Cinderella Shop, has returned
ATTEND STATE MEETING.
__ __
and two sisters.
from her trip to the Cinderella' The members of IM staff of the I brothers
’"survlWoi“are'the ron. Omar and
warehouse
warenouse at
ai Benton
Benton Harbor,
Harbor, where
where.I B
rountv Wealth Unit .r- •ire in the daughter. Mr*.. Harold Hecker.
. £tWd£j£r and Clhants ‘’for^the 1
of Kalamazoo. the two stepsons
Lawrence a! Ha.rtlrtfYand Forrfct of
Woodland, seven grandchildren, two
'1W wm«! H.rfaor b.nnrh ol u,t ™
'Liters. Mrs Mary Ftahcr, of Wood­
WSA open to laymen and the other land. and Mrs Robert McMillan of
, Cinderella Sluw., ___________
|
„„ domed l» lerhnkel.
Pittsburgh, Pa . and one brother.
ntv
Flinn to HAVE
aubjecu. Headquarters for the con- Jacob of Bradford. Ohio.
HLV riiiLO TO HAt t
fcrcncc were at the Olds Hotel.
i

U1rM,.n BUU MrtlcM Sock.,.

|XJ.gl

„----------=T£ SsSSgsSgy
vs

IRONSIDE’S MEMORIALS

-i.

OBITUARY.

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
Potatoes u-s- N»-1
Parsnips, Turnips, Bagas
Florida Oranges

peek

or Carrots

BACON
RISDLEbS

Fresh Ground

Sliced

2 "» 25c

1 It O N SI» E BIIOTII EKS
PHONE 2497

Established 1907

HASTINGS

&lt;&lt;«• 23c

Apples, Cooking or Eating

Hamburg

25c
it. 3c

The Home of Quality and Craftsmanship. • Design­
ers and producers of Memorial Art. • See us NOW
for FALL and SPRING Setting. Prices very reasonable.

U fcr 19c
8 |b* 25c

BAItilY Til EAT 11

.■Lad

Hanting^. Michigan

VEAL

ROASTS
Boneless

OUR BEAUTIFUL NEW
POPULAR PRICED THEATRE

19c »&gt;

28c &gt;«

R'v L. C. Philo and the boy*'.
SPECIAL MEETING.
Joel J Dernond. non ot William
quartet of the Bible Holinevi Semi-1 Hastings Lodge No 52 F. &amp; A. M i(mu
cn Mcmonu
, and nci
Helen
Dernond. was
was oom
bom aent
Sept.
nary will have charge of the morn-1 held a special communication on ?g IM5 in Castleton Twp. and de­
Ing services st the Pilgrim Holinem Wednesday evening. Arthur J Fox, parted this life at his home in
Txbemscle at 11 oclock Sunday, of Almont, grand lecturer, discussed jCastleton Nov 2 seed 71 vear« i
Nov. 15.
| the organization of district degree ;; montti. five days. Both ....
------ 1.
his ’parent
■
-1
teams Visitors were present from | were natives ot New York, hb
CIRCLE NO. 7.
। mother's maiden name being Helen
Circle No 7 of the MethodiM1
l
Lerrel.
Both
parents
and
his
two
church will meet at the home ofl An American team has just de­
Mrs. Ellis Kelley al 277 8 Hanover1 feated an English team at contract, .'Liters preceded him In death. Mr
(street on Thursday evening. Novem- The natural conclusion Is that Cbn- Dernond had been in good health,
and hi* sudden death came aa a sur­
ber 18 at 8 o'clock.
don Bridge b falling down
prise. He was a good husband,
thoughtful neighbor, a kind and lov­
ing father and will be greatly missed
; tn hU home where he had resided
nearly 35 years. Left to moum arc
j hi* wife. Anna, nnd six children
Mrs. Oil WooUton of Hasting*. Mr:.
, Nora Butler of Kalamazoo and four
I son*. Ford. Roy and Rollin of KalaHasting*, Michigan - Telephones 2244*2557 HL—
i mazoo and Della of mnstng, two
1 brothers Willard of coals Grove
land Robert of Kalamo. ten grandPROGRAM FOR WEEK OF NOVEMBER 15
I children, and three great-grand। children, and a host of relatives and
Sunday. Monday, November 15. 16
1 friends. Funeral at Baptist church
Friday. Nov. 8 and burial In BapUM
I cemetery al woodland wiUi Mr.
I Adcock officiating.

XT KAND THEAIRF
"OLD HUTCH”

WITH ERIC LINDEN. CECILIA PARKER, ELIZA­
BETH PATTERSON. ROBERT McWADE.

OBITUARY.
Orvin Albertus Birman, son ot
William H. and Ida V. Birman, was
borrt Feb 14. IM5 in Carlton town­
ship, and departed this life Nov. 4.

COUPON NIGHT—Tuesday. November 17

SI years. 8 months and 20 days. He
was united In marriage to Sarah M.
Williams on Dec. 24. 1907. To this
union nve children were born. Paul
W. of Battle Creek. Orvin A. and
' Frederick R.. at home. Nellie M. of
Battle Creek and BeniIce Bryans of
Cloverdale, ifr had lived on hl*
farm in Baltimore township for the
past 27 years and had been stale bee
inspector for Barry and Allegan
counties for the past nine years. He
leave* to mourn his loss the five
children, nine grandchildren, his
aged father, two brothers, two uls­
ters and a host of other relatives
and friends who will sadly mUs
him. The funeral waa conducted by
Rev. Edward Gamble at the U. B.
church in Baltimore on Bunday, in­
terment in the Valley Home ceme­
tery.

Occasional Special Showings in Mid-Week!
Price* Always ADVLTS 15c

CHILDREN 1«e

Armour’s Hams M-I,o,- Wh--°r SK,"k n*1' it. 23c
Center Slices

Sunday. Monday. November 15. 16

lb. 39c

Leg of Yearling Lamb

Mutton Roasts
1
Beef Chuck Roasts
Beef Kettle Roasts

15c
Stew *• 5c
Ib.
15c
ib.
12c
ib. 25c
ib. 25c
ib.

12c

Veal Steak
Slab Bacon 2 to 3 lb- p,,c*

Food Center
Serve Youfself and Save
HASTINGS

OPEN EVENINGS

NASHVILLE

$
THE JONES FAMILY
| "BACK TO NATURE

"I’D GIVE MY LIFE”
With Sir Guy Standing, Frances Drake, Tam Brown
Janet Beecher. Robert Gleckler. A Paramount
Picture.
SAVE COUFONS — Wa Ccupana Win X( Ottta Oat A/lSt •

P.

With Jed Prouty. Dixie Dunbar. Shirley Deane
ADDED— THE CITY'S SLICKER". "VlUphane Billboard"
.
ADVLTS lie
CHILDREN 10c

Wednesday. Thursday. Friday. Nov. 18. 19, 20

Wednesday. Thursday. November 18, 19

"LIBELED LADY”

SPECIAL BARGAIN ATTRACTION

"A Midsummer Night’s Dream”

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

With Jean Harlow, William Powell, Myrna Loy.
Spencer Tracy. Walter Connolly:
ADULTS 25 CENTS

CHILDREN 10 CENTS

By William Shakespeare. .Music by Felix Mendebaehn

With Jomes Cagney. Joe E. Brown, Dick Powell.
Jeon Muir. Victor Jory, And Others. A Warner
Bros. Production.
This Picture Was Shown At Top Prices AU Over the Country
ADULTS 15c
CHILDREN lie

Friday. Saturday, November 20. 21

SATURDAY ONLY. NOVEMBER 21
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

"KELLY the SECOND”
WITH PATSY KELLY. GUINN "BIG BOY" WIL­
LIAMS. PERT KELTON. CHARLIE CHASE

"Hopalong Cassidy Returns"

— PLUS —
•&gt;,
ELEANORS WHITNEY and TOM BROWN in

With WILLIAM BOYD.'GEOftCt HAYES. CAIL
SHERIDAN. EVELYN BRENT

"ROSE BOWL’’

ADVI.TR lite

CHILDREN 10c

5S

MATINEE F. AL. ADULTS 15c

I

BRUSH RIDGE * *
CEMETERY CIRCLE.

The Brush Ridge Cemetery Circle
met with Mrs. John Hine for their
October meeting. The following of­
ficers were elected: President, Mr*.
Mina Pranshka, vice-president. Mr*.
May Anders; secretary. Mrs. Hasel
Nash; treasurer. Mrs. Mildred Ho­
vey; flower secretary. Mrs. Christy
Aldrich. The next meeting will be
held with Mrs. Ida Carpenter. No­
vember 19 Notice the change in
dale. The Thanksgiving bazaar will
be held al that Um*.
I think that I shall never aer a
billboard aa lovely as a tree. Per*

i*u. i n

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1934

ELECTION 001RD
MIKES MISS
(OcnUnued from pegs 1, floc. 1)
Clare E. Hoffman—4.904.
O'JX M. Tyler—3.451.
Pehx A. Racelte—421.
Plurality fur Hoffman-1.453.

Majority for Fisher—1.800.
County Surveyor—
There was no nominee oti the Re­
publican ticket. Clayton Greenfield
on the Democrat ticket received
3451.
.
There were a few scattering votes
for the Socialist, communist. Fariner-Ubor, Socialist-Labor, commonweath and American parties, but
they wore co few thkt we thought It
no', worth while lo give them.

Blate Senator—
Earl L. Burhana—5.145.
Don E. Hughe*—3,454.
Majority for Burharu—1.691.
Representative in Legislature—
Ellis E. Faulkner—4437.
• Charles P. Parker—3432.
Majority for Faulkner—905.
Judge ot Probate—
Stuart Clement—5.373.
Theodore 8. K Reld-3.487.
Majority for Clement—1.886.
ProwcuUnc Attorney—
Archie D. McDonald—6418.
Horace power*—3,435.
Majority for McDonald—1483.
Sheriff­
Jay BLakneyv-6458.
George H. Myers—3.083.
Majority for Blakney—2.775.
County Clerk—
Allan Hyde—5.416.
Jack O'Connor—3.347
'
Majority for Hyde—2.063.
County Treasurer George A. Clouse—4.597.
Lorenzo F. Maus—4.203.
Majority for Clouse—394.
Register of DeedsVernon Webster—4.448.
Earl R. Boye*—4.382
Majority for We te ter—60.
Circuit Court Commissioners—
Adelbert Cortright received 5.186,
William O. Bauer. 5.012. Both wcrei
on the Republican ticket and there
wm no opposition lo either.
County Drain Commissioner—
Andrew Matthews—5,078.
Floyd C. Craig—3.559.
Majority for Matthews—1419.
Coroners—
C. P. Lathrop. R.—5,115.
Stuart Lofdahl, D—3467.
Majority for Lathrop—1.548.
Gordon L- Plaher, R.—5.071.
' Alexander B. Gwinn. D.—3,271.

Corn And Vegetable Exhibits
Beit Ever Shown In
Ag Division
The attendance at the Barry
county Ag-HE exposition held al the
high school last Thursday and Fri­
day was approximately 3400. High­
est ratings for quality and quantity
of exhibits were given Oaylm Bris­
tol. Brandt McIntyre. Fred Clouse.
Wayne Ferris. Duane Day. John
Moore, Harold Eckert, Wyman Clag­
gett. Bernard Davis and Donald
Newton. As rewards these boya will
attend, the International Stock
Show at Chicago the last of this
manti).
In the agricultural division, the
corn and vegetable exhibits were
by far the best ever shown al an ex­
position of thia kind. The Home
Economics department, while offer­
ing no sweepstakes or special prem­
iums, was larger than in previous
years due lo the addition of baked
goods to the list of entries.
First prlzt! tor exhibits of rural
schools went to Otis with Durfee
second. Omtral sixth grade took
first for exhibits of grade schools.
Tile door prize offered Friday
night waa won by Mrs. William
Strickland who Ilves on the Carlton
Center road.

PRAIRIE GROUP.
The Prairie group of the M. S. C.
Home Economics Extension courses
met Friday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Oscar Kaechele. The lesson
on "Pall Fashions" was given by the
leaders, Mrs. Minnie Johnson and
Mrs. Roy McCall.

Major Change* Underway I
■ : In Rural School Area*

'An Elephant
Never
Forgets

(Continued from pa&lt;e i. 8ee-l)~j
state.*. These plans will no doubt
result in many beneficial changes
In our rural school organisation.
'4&gt;
High school
advantages
should be made available to all
rural children. Only about forty
per cent of the rural boys and glrla
of high school age are tn high
school. Too often the high schools
that are attended by rural children
are very small institutions with all
the limitations as to breadth of
training * small school can offer,
and all the disadvantages of high
per pupil cost that universally go
with small high schools.
&lt;3) Rural school buildings arc
too often wholly inadequate. Mil­
lions of children in country dis­
tricts are attending school in un­
safe and unsanitary hovels unlit
for carrying on an educational provealed that there are more than
1500 teachers employed for children
who have no school building al all,
the children being boused tn plan­
tation tenement houses. . cotton
pens, and the Like. In contrast with
thia situation, the more affluent
communities and cities of the na­
tion have many beautiful school'
buildings planned and equipped ac- ,
cording to the beat educational and '
architectural Ideals. These differ- 1
ences are reflected by the statistics
showing that the average value per
pupil of school property in cities

erage value for rural pupils, 8347
u compared to 1151.

Some disaffection has been Ln evi­
dence at the winter Olvmpln*. hu.t
nothing of a critical nature. We be­
lieve that hurling me aeiy is a sum-1
'mer event
With the exception of world un­
rest. a four-year-old garden hose can
break out In the most places.

Of course It seems like a hard
world if you're looking for a soft
spot.

DANCING
At Clear Lake Lodfl
Old Fashioned Mixed ihw
Friday NighL Ragahr D*
Saturday Nlghl.
Waste by Marite's OwUstM

• HAVE YOU
FORGOTTEN
THIS
That winter it coming.
Have your cor "WlnterMrvicad" NOW. Avoid
expensive and troubletomo delays loter on.
Drive in now for a

SAVE ON
FIRESTONE
TIRES

Auto Needs at Wards

COURIER TYPE
4.40-21
$4-83
4.50-21
5.37
4.75-19
5.67
30x3’/g __ 4.33

"Wlnter-servkinx"

bi-

grease. radiator flushed

Bte.
Batteries. Windshield Wipers

checked and adjusted
for winter driving ana
Ignition Inspected.

REGULAR
GASPRICE

Hastings,

Mlchlxan

Sunoco Gaa and Oils
Vulcanizing

_
BLUE
DllRiMMpI
SUNDCU

Greasing
Washing

MOTOR
FUEL

Auto Fan
4 in.
fan

165
I

Electric! Quiet
Motor!
Adjust­
able bracket.

Generator

e.ck.^.

**&lt;19
A

Regular 83 69. For
Ford A - 28 - 32.
Just like new!

Guaranteed
24 MoetM

^5™
America's beat 3­
yr. battery.

New! tl Way Heater
w
Ma
I ■ ■
°
tlons. Forward.
Wards
Downward, or
Finest
both!
Gives
more hem than most 819 95 theaters.
Improved standard qi
Manifold heater for

Floods heat In
three _ direc-

SPECIALS THIS
I

Distinctive Lines!

WEEK jND

$4.98

2-Gallon can

Reg. 33c Standard
Quality Plug 29c
each.
Reg. 81.00 Lined
Brake Shoes, 75c
exchange.

Froclu with flair! Beauti­
fully designed and skillfully
made. These are outstand­
ing 1 For sports, street and
business. Sixes 12 to 44.

How To Get Your Share

CYNTHIA SUPS
So stunning you'd think
they cost twice as much!
Outstanding fabrics, gor­
geous fur trimming and
Important styles place these
coata among the beat val­
ues of the year I For women
and misaes.' 12-20, 3S-46.

Nature has been unusually kind to the
growers who farm in the sugar beet
areas of Michigan. Your natural soil
is just about “made to order” for a
profitable planting of Sugar Beets.
Naturally incomes vary from season to
season. Circumstances control them.
One year they are good—another not
so good, etc. But that is true of any
business.
In this matter of making a living, we must
consider the long pull.
The essential consideration, from every
standpoint, in the profitable growing
of Sugar Beets, u to etick to a regular
acreage in beets every tingle year. If
you do that you will make more money
in the long run.
Here's why: Sugar Beets fit into your
rotation program admirably.
For you grow beets not only to make
money but also for the beneficial effect
on your soil.
The growing and proper cultivation of
beets gives to your soil those necessary
properties required to keep it healthy,
fertile and productive of other crops in
the natural cycle of rotation.

Come to

Your rotation might be clover, com, then
Sugar Beets, then oats or barley, but
whatever might be the best rotation for
your locality, you’ll be money ahead if
you plant beets every single year.

Reg. 84.05 12-Mo.
Guarantee
Bat­
ten-. 82.88, excli.
Reg. 57c 4-way
Rim Nut Wrenv.

PENNEY’S
_

--Z

‘ .... v

.

bulk, plus tax.

Wards Washer Show! See This

Ward Washer!
A $69.50 to 179.50 VoIm.

gsr
Charge

Now here is another important point:
Beets are unusually “tough”. They can
“stand the gaff”. As a matter of fact,
beets, more than any other crop, de­
velop in wet weather, in dry weather,
in hot weather and in cold weather.

39®®

Washes cleaner, quicker by ac­
tual test! Oversize tab bolds
more clothes! Lovell adjustable
pressure wringer, balloon rolls!
Wit* GaK&gt;se Esttae . , .fegjg

This means that when you grow beets
and get up against adverse weather
conditions, you are more certain of a
good yield than you are with any other
cultivated crop.
You can make more money on Sugar Beets
on a year in and year out basis than you
can from any other crop, and there are
ample facts to back this statement.

Wards ,,

6995
8-TUEE a.c. console

You’ll always get your just share of
Michigan’s $10,(X)Q,000 Sugar Beet crop
if you stick to a regular Sugar Beet
planting year after year, after year.

The nation's gridirons, In peal
b'g letters.- World rang* and
power. 2-spssd timer. Metal
tubes. Tuning eys.

[NEWS! EXTRA! AEWAi

Farmers and Manufacturers Beet Sugar
Association, Saginaw, Michigan.

For Reliable Year In and Year Out Profits

*_

5-Qf Change

30 - 35c a quart quality! Word's
Winter grades give easy starting ot
sub-zero temperature! Free drain
service at Wards!

DRESSES

ONL

IOO% Pure Pennsylvania Oil

ON YOUR OLD RADIO'

YOU CAN’T BEAT SUGAR BEETS

Mont gnmri
।

I

Hi U. Mhm., T«U^toM

•

�The Hastings Banner

boost the county.
TRADE AT HOME

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

Editorials

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1936

ONE OF LIFI't LITTLE PROBLEMS

'Round About Town

IN FT .A Nnran FIELDS.
friends who hoped that he would
In Flanders fields the popples blow win. but by a narrow margin as a
B«twe*n the crosses, row on row. j warning to proceed cauUoualy.
That mark our place; and In the sky
This sixeable minority is probably
The larks, still bravely singing, fiy more compact and more unified in
heard amid the funs below, lu convictions than the great maWa are the D*ad. Short days ago
Jority which endorsed Mr. RooMvelt.
Wa lived. f«U dawn, saw sunset glow. In »Ue. “ compares favorably with
Loved and were loved, and now we either of the two main stems (the
I conservative and the radical) which j
united to uphold Che New Deal.
In Flanders fields.
!;
The minority must adjust Itself to'
Take up our quarrel with the foe;
To you from falling hands we throw the New Deal program. It must
The torch; be yours to hold It high. judge new legislation and proposed
IF YE BREAK FAITH WITH U8 measures fairly; Il must appreciate
the fact that fully sixty per cent of
WHO DIE
WE SHALL NOT SLEEP though the electorate have given the ad­
ministration a blank check to go
popples grow
ahead yet must not surrender its
m Handers fields.
own convictions. It must give in­
John McRae. 1918.
telligent. studied criticism.
' It has a voice which deserves ta
IN VAIN?
Armistice day. just passed again be heard and must be heard if "us
brings up the question; “Did the Americans are now to pull together
slaughter and destruction ot the for Dm common good.”

fall where they may I

I

■

By observing Tommy.

the trophy in the West Central
League.
The standings tn the league to

R.H. S.ELEVffl
LEADS IEWh-.,
WIN

FROM

I Ionia

..

0REZNV1LLE oraenvtu.

PUTS BBNNXTTMXB
IN FRONT

-

SOUTH TUORNAPPLE.

Mrs. Smalts returned home last
week after spending some Umo in
Grand Rapids at the home of her
daughter and family.
4
Raymond Bunn accompanied hla
brother on Sunday to visit their
parents.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charlie
Locals Score In First Period
Bunn and family, of Freeport.
—Visitor* Uncork Paas
Mr. and Mrs. Small* entertain­
ed their son. Carroll Smaltz, and
Attack Lat^ In Game
Understand that Jedge Clement,
Barbara Smalta,
of
The high school gridmen went daughter,
Abe VanTU and an old work horse
Grand Rapids on Sunday.
had quite a "necking’' party recently. into first place in the West Central
Andy McCrea la auteUng at the
League last Saturday by virtue of
Bmalta home as both Mr. and Mrs.
I
their
13-6
win
over
Greenville
and
Il seems that Abe and the jedge
Smalts are tn poor health.
heard a funny noise as they were the 0-0 tie between Ionia and Bel­
out pursuing the bunnies across ding. Belding and Hastings were tied
for first place previous to Saturday s
country Saturday afternoon.
encounter.
I Looking about they spied a horse
The Bennettmen received to op­
Watert Clothwi Shop
। mired clear in up to Its nostrils—Bo en the game and were marching
HOW TtigY'CRE'ATE
I WE'VE OFTEN WONDERED
down the field in great style when
our heroes rushed away for help.
Pearl, a Greenville back, intercepted
With the aid of a board, a dray­ a pass. The procedure waa then re­
horse and a log chain they even­ versed until the spud city men lost
tually succeeded tn pulling the poor the ball on downs pn Hastings' 20
World war fall to Impress its lesdefense of both
beastie out by hl* long tough ncckle. yard line. The
GOOD WORK.
atm on people; shall hate and dis­
teams tightened at this point and a
Supl. D. A. VanBuskirk deaervea
trust again triumph over reason;
Tommy Is trying to think up some punting duel ensued.
Greenville
was
in
possession of
suitable
award
for
the
heroic
pair,
praise,
we
believe,
for
conducting
a
are we forever destined to plunge
but for once his imagination fails the ball at the opening of the sec­
headlong into self-inflicted slaugh­ mock election among High school
ond quarter but was forced to punt
him.
ter?" Has the memory of the last :students on election day. Regular
after trying the line unsuccessfully.
great conflict already grown so dim Iintructlon ballots were used and the
Stalwart* of the Loyal Order of Struble fired a pan to Bcobey
Neckers has been considered, but who was stopped after making 18
(while thousands of maimed still entire election adhered as closely
this, perhaps, does not carry with it Kds. Scobey. Struble, and Sothard
pass away their wrecked lives in to official regulations as possible,
an attack which put the Ben­
a degree of dignity suitable for the
wheel chairs and hospital beds) that Such an election should help to
occasion or for the heroes In ques­ nettmen on the one yard line. Stru­
nations again feel that warfare arouse interest in the questions of
ble smashed through the center of
tion.
the line for the touchdown. The ex­
pays? Do those rows of white crosses the day and, even more important,
If more huntsmen like Abe and tra point was not converted.
in France and Belgium signify perhaps, it will instruct students in
Again the defense tightened and
the Jedge roamed the hills and dales
nothing deeper than ostentatious the proper manner of filling out a
of our fair county, who knows, per­ the beat either team could do wos
sentiment? Is Mussolini right when ballot. Many adults do not know
For Young Men O Boys
haps equtne mortality might be exchange punts, as the half end­
he says that armed conflict is our how to do this correctly. Since the
ed Hastings was in possession of th”
considerably reduced.
Men's Plain Blue Double
ball and Bess mar. the plunging full­
sad destiny? Many people tn the ballot is one of the safeguards of
back. was ripping up the Oreenville
Tommy
is
glad
they
got
there
tn
Breasted Navy Blue. 4
world are not ready to admit that popular government, a mock flection
defense. As the half ended Hostings
time.
Pockets.
$f" 98
this last statement is true, even like the one conducted at Hastings
WOMEN’S HATS/
was leading with a 8-0 score.
One Half Belt — w
though the evidence of history is High Is an Important bit of civic
Hastings received as play was re­
Understand that after generations
against them.
&lt; training.
of effort, there ta at last a baby gtrl sumed In the third quarter. A first
BOYS
’
SIZIS
...
$5.50
in the Adcock family. Congratula­ down and a completed pass of 21
yards put the local lads deep in the
tions. .
POST ELECTION THOUGHTS.
THEY SERVED WELL
enemy's territory. Oreenville inter­
. The overwhelming proportions of
... the Rev. and Mrs. J. A.
We wish
Understand that tire local Saxo­ cepted a pass which halted the
the Roosevelt victory surprised even McNulty all success In their new
phone Four have Just about recov­ rally. Pearl got loose for a 15 yard
ered from their too intimate contact gain and Kingsbury. Greenville's
hl, clow inmd, it wra » bnllUM "0'l‘ B°th
*•“"&gt; ,1u *
/.V THINKING lov­
ground
gamer,
with
poison sumac and are looking most consistent
penon.l trtlntra which .ran hU 1&gt;U. "**"» te’'' B“U1
smashed through the line to Has­
ingly about others we
workers and had extraordinary sue-1
FORWARD.
j
TWENTY YEARS AGO.
tings secondary defense for a first
! ngnin
think helpfully about
tcra.l opponent, muu bcknowMw „„
„rryhu! „„
|orl Tb,
lpol„ TO
down. Greenville punted after being
This community
was greatly
Heavy Pure Wool, $0.98
ouroelvea. ~
and admire. He ran far ahead ot chlidren. The vacation Bible Schools 5t*mP oi approval ho* evidently
j shocked Tuesday evening by the
A portion of the "wuffer" element spilled for a 15 yard low. Hastings
Zipper-----------------C
—MacDonald
state tleketawhlch included many they conducted atte.cted nwre than:
^.’^1,1^.
death of Dr. J. F- McOufiln who of our HI city. I understand, is. moved out of the danger tone by
punting. As the quarter ended. An- '
candidates brought forward to bol■* ——
। dent
• Roosevelt
&lt;’*Bl BnQ"
appears
,'*‘lt ■r»n**r*
to be to
re­ he »•passed away unexpectedly after a out hunting for more sumac.
H
pvm. PVIU6ll.in.
lira/ iuiv
IK. | IV Uli
local
comment. The,
ten ■
&gt; 1niche
In
,ltb
|,^„t electoral
Sell, playing a bang-up defensive I
short illnesj.
Mr hu UramtUt tn rappowdly
th.t will be dUflcttU
vote in the history ot the nation.
)nnt
Along with other Improvements
Understand my editor made a game, intercepted a pass and was 1
doubtful regions. Doubtful? It seems to All.
What happened? No one as yet
that Manager Ames is making at break in reporting the Rod and Chin downed in mid-field.
almost ludicrous that this word wax
seems certain and it will take sev­
The way was paved for the second
the Barry hotel is the changing of Club game dinner. Those Kalama­
eral
days
for
opinion
to
JellIt
was
ever used. All pre-election forecasts
the cervices from the American to zoo musicians were on the program Hastings touchdown in the last
generally conceded, despite the out- 1
quarter when Greenville fumbled a
the European plan.
all right but they didn't appear.
were shattered in a million pieces.
come of the Literary Digest poll,
lateral pass on the 37 yard line
As Governor Landon expressed it:
THIRTY YEARS AGO
Heh! Heh! Hehl They got one on which Hastings recovered. After ft
Beautiful
$"7-95
Of all the words tn the dictionary, that Roosevelt would win. Not even
Another business change has tak­ you that time, boy*
the most ardent democrats, though,
live yard penalty Smith, of Hastings
Plaids ---------------- f
en place in Hastings. C. H. Osborn
made 10 yards on a double reverse
American will accept the verdict and the two whose meanings seem most dared prophesy such a victory. .
uncertain are “probably thunderMUSSOLINI has ordered his
has cold an intercut in hLi clothing
The best explanation is that the
They tell me that John Brock did and Hall snared a pass for 28 yards
work for the common cause of the
16 ■ 18 - 20
and Glioe business to Ed. Huffman. a pretty good Job supplementing the more. On the third down with one
democrats voted straight and that
people to raise larger fam­
good of our country-- That is tht
The firm will hereafter be known as radio reports, election eve. In fact, yard to go Hall went through the
the Industrial and welfare vote
ilies. Knowing what happened
•PM or Darner^., Wc „
lhii flocked to the New Deel standard.
Tlic Osborn-Huffman Co.
to the Conquering Lion of
they tell me that when John was In line with the pigskin. Scobey con­
Leading democrats admit that the
No on. ran 4o more Uu .ueu
u
&gt;nd
Judah, the stork is expected to
the vicinity, you couldn’t hear the verted the extra point on an o(IFORTY YEARS AGO.
tackle smash.
Solid South, while bound by tra­
radio at all.
prove very submissive.
wlu.1 he reran MnUra. CerUm I
An Innovation in church music In
dition lo the democratic party, is
Greenville elected to receive and
the form ot a vested boy choir will
: lei IhU ,o unehmtomea -anUi. opposed to most of the features of
Television is reported
to
Well. Tommy at least didn't lose uncorked an aerial game in sheer
no doubt prove a fine addition to
11
““l Worl4-H«.U
the New Deal.
any money on the election. He bet a desperation which put them on the
have flopped at the Berlin
the services
of the Episcopal
the Issues of government spending;
Already there is talk that A labor
Olympics. The consequences of
quarter on Roosevelt and Landon one yard line. They attempted nine
church.
peases In which six were completed
and hoped they'd both win.
rad the erprauon o( Federal power
Vorauoaln, Traielln, wm. 06- party will be launched tn most
Eleanor Holm Jarrett's disbar­
Dork Grey
$*$.75
John Kurtz is quite seriously 111
In their last minute rally. Kingsbury
ment from the swimming team
h.ra lo.t ajranranee-.! trail ram- u„Ce lrom h0„,
h„d„ states in 1938 and that It will be
and is confined to the house.
Color __________
in operation on a nation-wide scale
I did have lo resist the tempta­ smashed through Ihe line and on
arc never-ending, it seems.
poraelly
|ih*n uraal without p,,.—Detroit
Miss
Jessie
Sage
of
Kalamazoo
U
for the presidential election ot 1940.
tion. though, to make a few side the second attempt plunged over the
visiting
hcr
sister.
Mrs.
Carveth.
The popular vote which returned : prec Preus.
It appears certain that It was the
bets on which quarter I would lose. goal line. The extra point was not
A spider in Detroit can gpcll
Roosevelt to power also has given
■
converted as Hastings broke through
labor vote which placed president
out names with his web. With
Chet Hodges, they tell me. won and blocked the kick.
him topheavy majorities in house
In an Indian election, it is stated, Roosevelt so far out in front.
true insect sagacity, however,
Now Stock Just Received
Hastings wisely elected to receive
so many election bets that Becky
and senate. He has even more of a only 300 voted out of a population of ] “Forward with Roosevelt'' was the
NEWS GLEANINGS/
ho has refrained from starting
slogan. But even Roosevelt himself
and were in possession of the ball
hopes
he
can
now
gel
rid
of
the
old
a diary.
mandate to go ahead than he had 6.000 Gradually, the redskins arc'
aa the game ended.
The U- S. has more than &lt;0 per blue sweater.
four years ago.
learning the white man'
The line-upa were;
cent
of
the
world's
estimated
stock
Scientists tell us that prehis­
of unmined coal. U. 8.-3,214.898.­
Hastings—13
Greenville
---------------- —“8
But Tommy hopes not.
Seemingly thU country Is more Sudbury (Eng.) Star
toric man depended more on his
000,000 World—7AOO OOO.OOOOOO tons.
Smith
Johnson
unified politically than it has been!
------------ears than does modern man.
How could the tennis season ever McLeod
since th* *ar!y days of the Repub-1 Instead ot two chickens in every
Rich
Checked Sateen SE-98
Co?ls of government of ail kinds'
This is rather hard to believe
gel started without iu annua! ap­ Brill
Gibson
since no primitive male ever
required 8 per cent of national in­ pearance.
Lining
w
lie. Wc aay. "seemingly" because P°l the trend now seems to be to- has so far declined to reveal the di­
Angel!
Ingerham
chauffeured Wifie on an auto
come tn 1913; In 1936 almost 30 per
there are a few mild ripples on Uu?' ward two government employees tor rection he intends to take when lie
Moore
King
trip.
cent was required.
It's an unfailing sign that spring Doxoy
surface which indicate potential in-1 every taxpayer —Ohio State Journal, starts forward.
(Ct Ranney
R
The
republicans
are
left
small
so
­
w
here.
LaBa
Ulster
Merren
temal friction.
'
------------Americans today consume seven
Hall
Ha linen burg
One branch of the Rootevelt sup-1 Amateurs have been so successful lace. About ths best they can do b
Q
times mere sugar per capita than
With Leothor
$g.9B
to buy up back copies of the Liter­
Bernie Reed. I see. is remodelling Struble
Pearl
they did 100 years ago.
porters, for example, believed that!la th*
field that ary Digest Hero tn Michigan it ap­
the interior Of his store to make Bessmer
Kingsburv
Collar and Cuffs
onec re-elected, he would grow con-1 thCT0 b ®°me ta!k of lhem invading pears on Wednesday morning that
The average wardrobe n only one more room for soda guzzlers. Here's Scobey (C»
(Ci Anderson
Bxtr Ye
Detroiters will be in control of the
serwatlve. Having “primed the coUe«e football.—Life,
and one-third suits per man in the hoping we don't have a cold, damp
.CANT
Substitutions. Hastings. H. Besssummer, boy.
pump.*’w to speak, rad h.rlmt| All
rad eqral. state. What U the Philippines' loss
U. 5mer. Cappon, Cogswell. Leslie, Renis Michigan's gain.
nlck. and Sothard. Greenville. Lea.
shoved the flywheel ot mdueuy prat; bul ,.ow „„ ,„u , ..rau.ted mIngham county, as thta is writ­
A ship leaves New York every 20
Where was Ray when the lamps Nelson, Brown. Vos. Wood. Edaall,
dead
deed center,
eenlee. some ot hl.
his followers'
Mt™m!
wp.td.-ctMthh.n Time,. ten Wednesday morning, has all but
minutes and a freight train leaves went out? Answer—w-a-a-a-y up in and Becker.
abandoned the republican column.
predict that he will now modify hb]
there every 5 minutes.
the air I
’iT^uhoiioic.itrJ (U’ure by oTnin
Officials. Umpire Jo jo White. DeStar.
Lansing has turned ihe tide The
punitive tactics against business and
trolt Tigers. Referee. Perry Deskins,
There are 1692 island* in the
u
an
aaewiplicc
of
the
cheater."
county outside of Lansing Is still re­
Understand that Charlie Hinman,
will adopt measures to encouragManage-license clerks complain publican but In the city of Lansing
Thousand Island group in the St. and Warren Carter are going to in­ YpsUanU.
The local gridders will face their
Lawrence river.
economy and to restore the national that the girls aren't availing them­ the tide is strongly democratic
;.QtOo*«.'^—G«r.j»t«n bomb IltrriA.
troduce my friend Bill Parker to the greatest opposition Saturday when
“Forward" was a winning slogan.
mysteries of deer hunting.
solvency- Other powerful forces, on selves of .leap year. Perhaps
.
.
they're
they meet the Belquig eleven at the
th* contrary, expect him to take up wailing to make sure 1938 is const 1- We are now on our way but no one
fair ground*. If Belding should win
Selling Quality Keeps Us Busy
yet knows exactly where —InRham
in Saturday's tUl.they will also win
the experiments tn national plan- [ tutional.—Kansas CUy Star
«U |&gt;m« cd (oostaU te
, County News
nlng and regimentation of industry)
------- -—■
..
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
servants
are “
uld to
and agriculture from the point1 Domestic
‘
* ■•*
* be
Nelson Heaty. who suffered a
where they were left stranded by more considerate than they used to
stroke over a week ago. died Sun­
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
Supreme Court decisions. Now that be. We hear that when a cook gave ।
day evening. Nov. I. al the home of
he has the power, they expect him;1notice the other day she offered to
"Tobacco Ls a nuisance in polar
his brother. Willis Healy, where fu­
j sign any reasonably-worded refer- travel. It affects the (ndurance of a ’
to go the limit along the paths |
neral services were held Wednes­
NOW THtRfcb A VIEW TRACT ।
recommended by such advisors asience hcr emPloVer c*re&lt;1 to write man in low temperatures more than
day forenoon, conducted by Rev.
MAKES TOU GLAD YOU'RE J
in temperate climes."—Capt. Rob।
about
herself
—
Humorist.
Rhoades. Burial was by Mr. Healy’s
Tugwell.
ALIVE i /-------- —*
ret A. Bartlett, areUc explorer.
wife in the cemetery at Mendon.
Both 6dra rannot be tKht. Thera j All t„ra;.,llor Irpcru lhll „
Revival services will continue all
that in
“Some men. especially politicians,
Is bound to be keen. If not biller. jgisjoUri and Arkansas hillbilly
this,week except Saturday evening
have such a command of language
Mrs. Libbte Marshall of Nashville
du.wotnnv.mt |n m ot the tw-'ertoe u aeraeulnfl. rvobwhly mt de. that you arc tempted to say that the
spent part of last week with her
1:
creasing—Just transferred to the language ha* command of them."—
nieei*. Mrs. Dorothy Hoffman.
Without attempting to beliUlr ] radJa-Prortdence News-Tribune.
O. Bernard Shaw.
Basil Tbbias spent the week end
Interesting prize contest* al ail limes. During November
the compteteneM of Mr. Roosevelt's
with Eugene and Keith Ball.
"What
wc expect from the
TUBKEYS and CHICKENS WILL BE GIVEN for high scores.
isio.
victory, it is well to point out tiiat
A bee's sling is l-JJ of an inch Churches of all denominations is the
Mrs. Ida Cheeseman of Nashville
came
Saturday
to
spend
several
more than fifteen million people I long. The oilier two feet is imagl- destruction of mllitariMn."-Prof.
FRIDAY NIGHT will be special LADIES' NIGHT. Free Inslrucdays with her sons, Ward and Clyde
Albert Elmteta.
reglstered disapproval of his poUcle.d nation.—Office Economist.
| There is only one authentic por­
Chceseman
I trail ot Columbus- the one that
In a popular government the minor, .
------------“It seems to me that you can.
inc u. a. a
ctiKiwmira uasi
Uy must yield t» Ute will ot Ute ms. „ wh“ “ “
“ ““
Judge nowadays broadly speaking, once belonged to Paulus JbvIUs, and
. Thursday by Rev. and Mrs. Rhoades'
Team* Intereated in getting into the league which will atari
the degree of civiUntlon to which b. *1111 in the postcsstoii ot the de
| al thelr home.
JorUy. But lo Ute.ve ntleen million.
any country has attained by t£0 Orchl family (descendants of Jolosba Ute eteetton doe, not me.nw'
i
Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Briafit and
JOHN DUBOIS, at once.
simple step*, the structure of the riusi of. Como.-Ths portrait reveals
daughter. Lucile, of Battle Creek,
train, the .r,ume„t TT1U minority; *p***l n* “ “"r
toclal organization, nnd the degree a man with a elean-stiavtn face,
spent the week end at Wallace
doer no, believe thst the heralc!p“nen.
of personal freedom enjoyed by all thin gray hair, high forehead, and
achievement of winning all bul two
Grandma says—“In tt)« very, near cJas.M'.s in the community."—Win- satL thoughtful eyes.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gillasple and
of the forty-eight state* will correct) future men will eat baked beans and'■ sum Churchill.
.
family caligq at Geo. Ball's Sunday
evening.
The • greatest doll manufactory In
unsound trends or rectify past'say. 'Ah, dear, these are just like
wrongs. Tills same opinion has been1 mother used to open.' "—Royal Ar- tend surface te Mount Everest, and the world i$ ta the little German,
town of’ Sonneberg. In the Thur­
I six and one-half tons of precious
impU*d by many of Mr. Roo*evelt'a)canum Bulletin.
the lowest b the shore of the Dead ingian Forest. The Industry dates
M
diamonds have been produced in
bl
back to the thirteenth century.
1 South Africa since 1867.

JO-JO WHITE, TIGER
STAR, REFEREES GAME

Here Is

Value

A-

D.B. Jackets

Pio

and Blazers

THOSE STYLES IN

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

A Quotation

| Backward Glances;
I
Bits of Yesterday ,

BOYS'

BLAZERS

‘ LT"'/?

Young Men's Plaid

MACKINAWS

Pungent Paragraphs

Men's All Wool

Heavy PANTS

O

IVay of Our World

Suede Leather

BLAZERS

Fancy Plaited Back

O

.

WATERS

CLOTHES SHOP

Crumbs of Wisdom

ATTENTION!

w

The Hastings Bowling Alley Is
Now Under New Management

BOWLING

�Till HAB TIN OS BANNSK, THURSDAY. NOVEMBtK it, ItU

METHODISTS CLEAN UP

IK WORK 0

1

$2675 FLOATING DEBT

Hastings High School
Activities

At the Theatre

PMtor Devisee Novel Plan
—Oharch And Congrega­
A pep assembly was held in the
High school auditorium last Fri­
tion Cooperate

Without question the volume of
work in the treasurer’s office has
been nearly doubled. The work in
the county clerk's office Is three
tlmeia what it was a few years ago.
yet compartively small clerk hire
la given to the county clerk and
treasurer although all their fees
are turned in to the county.
As an instance of the pressbig
demands upon one of the county
officers, one has only to note what
happened in recent weeks to Coun­
ty Clerk Allan Hyde. For several
weeks there were from one to ’.wo

n"f

■ ■”’« '"’"i-t •

American Legion

iy. Charite Chate, Guinn Williams.
When “the boy friend" lote. evThe tragedy of a condemned cry job he obtains because he can­
eritrwti man’, march to the gallows, alone not restrain his imputee to puth in (
the dread “last mile." U graphically I the face, ot those who annoy him. I
brought to the screen tn "I'd Give what ia a girl to do? With such a!
My Life” bated on "The Noooe," i basis for IU story. "Kelly the Sec­
stage thriller of a decade ago. Tom ond" establishes a new record for
Brown plays the young gangster laughter production.
sentenced to death for killing hu
The debating team held anoth
blackmailing racketeer father. Sir
It’s oar basineu to know cleaning mta
Guy Standing heads the cast.

■

Hasting, team. The assembly was
j clowd with the playbig of the school in their series of triangle debates at
lllary
। song by the bond.
Kalamazoo last Friday. They won
from Coldwater and Marshall but
The Olrls' Sports Hub enjoyed a lost to Kalamazoo Central and Paw
supper hike aftea school Tuesday.. Paw. On Monday they will meet
Patty calkins was chairman of the
hike, and each girl brought what
she lilted for supp.’r.
.
Mr. Becker has purchased new
equipment for his moving picture I
The second hour speech class pre­ camera including a telephoto high­
sented a program at the Barryvllle speed lens. three photo-flood refleeter. which make It possible to ]
P. T. A- last week.
take good plcures in classrooms, and on Tuesday, November 17, al Mrs.
The annual Fall Festival present­ cutting and cementing equipment.1 Don Foremans, when a pot luck
ed by the muaic departments of the Mr. Becker la planning a showing ofsupper will be served at 6:30 o’clock
high school will be held this Friday this new apparatus at noon about Bring your own Christmas bazaar
I sewing lo both of these meetings.
program followed the supper, after evening. Nov. 13 1r the Central au- November 25.
which the elephant was given prop­
er consideration. Hie entire 835
The junior girl* will meet
equates were taken. Of course the
Monday
Ladies’ Aid had to shoulder nearly seniors this week to play off
night November 2. New members
half the indebtedness, the rest be­ championship soccer gamfc.
taken into the club were Carl Ed­
ing taken by Individuals All the
monds. Wayne Flnkbelfler, Norman
members of the church nnd con­
gregation are pleased to think that
this floating debt will soon be can­ for programs at various meetings elected last spring to officiate this
Yesterday morning the
Unit
celled. This will leave the church Last Tuesday Ruth McLaughlin gave school year are: President. Horace
a reading for the Eastern Star. Angell; vice-president. Clinton Sco­ members nttencksd the ArnWaicc
Wednesday evening Robert caukln. bey; secretary. Robert Henney; Day exercises at Central auditor­
treasurer. Alpheous Dunn.
ium. presented by the high school.
POWERS ECHOES
To swell their treasury the boys
The party at the Irving Orange
have sold pencils with football
hall Friday night was very well at­
schedules on them, and dotighnuU.
tended. Everyone had a fine time.
This week. November SKo !fl, has which proved very popular. The club thusiasm and
Another party on Friday evening.
been designated American Educa- provides speakers for high school m- ' u predicted.

fell that this debt ought to be
cleaned up and took an Ingenious
way to do It. He arranged with
1 Richard Loppenthlen to make a pic­
ture of a huge white elephant, on
' which were marked 535 squares, each
square representing *5 00. He asked
the members of the congregation, if
; they could do so. to lake one or
more of these f quart. marked on
| the white elephant. When a square
was taken its color was changed to
gray. The elephant became more
, and more "spotted" as the squares
■ were subscribed. Tuesday evening a
। "White Elephant Supper" was held

week. He had to be present In the
court room and he and hte clerk
had to be ready to produce niea In
the different cases, or to tell from
their records what attorney had the
filea. Whenever the court is in ses­
sion there is extra work in that of­
fice. While the court was being held,
the supervisors assembled for their
October session of three weeks. The
county clerk is the clerk of that'
body, has to be with them while
they are in session and keep an
accurate and permanent record of
what they do. Their proceedings
fill many pages In the clerk’s books.
All the time this wm going on.
there was the usual run of business.
The county clerk, by reason of his
office, has to notarize applications
for those who want driven.' licenses
In addition there was the sending
out of the election supplies, getung
those supplies in proper form to
send to the voting precincts; and
that Is no small Job. The county
clerk, was a candidate for reelection.
He had to give some thought and
attention to his campaign, although
it was very little he could do with
that on account of his regular officlal duties The supervisors arc com­
pelled to keep the county expenses
al tlie minimum so they felt they

Rapids, spent Friday at the home
of hcr aunt and uncle. Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Frost.
.
On Tuesday morn big Arthur
Bradford was notified two dogs
were seen in his flock of sheep.
Upon investigation he found ten

. . . both yam and oar own! And well be
glad to prove lo yon that McCreary*. Mr.ice save, you money by better cleaning
. better preulng, and longer life ter

Wallace Beery in "Old Hutch."
Th. .lory will be remembered
from IU original appearance In the
Saturday Evening Post.
Garret
Smith is the author. The narrative
in an account of the highly ammilmt
adventure, of the laziest man in
town, following his discovery of
SIOO.OOO in thousand dollar bills. Ce-

PHONE 2140

••Libeled Lady."
William Powell. Myrna lx»y. Wai- ।
ter Ctmnelly. Jean Harlow. Spencer I
Tracy- and many others included in 1
the cart. "Libeled Lady" Is the story
of America’s second wealthiest girl
who sue* a newspaper. Poweil is the
reporter whose Job it is to make
love to the heiress and urge her to
drop the suit. To complicate things.

McCREERY’S
DRY

CLEANERS

HASTINGS

MICHIGAN

REMODELING SALE
FIlIDA¥r AND SATURDAY

home the past week because of ill“
*"
* *“

Mias Daisy Frost, of Owosso,
spent the week end at the home of
her parent*.

"Kelly the Steond" with PaUy Ba*. -4*ln**“an.

Tom Brown In I'd Give My Lif.-**1

Use Journalism class 1* attempting
day morning in charge ot Mr. BroFor several years a floating debt.
to Increase Die circulation of the 1
-Wlr-h
Inxitrv^N hv th. trv-nl Mk. There were selections by the
band, talks by Mr. Brozak and Mr.
SSKhoaXISi
The sheriff Is required bv law to ’
X^c*!Tlcd ! rnnk'n^ra.^tr^Beckcr added to
make out all applications for driv- at the banka with small reduction.
program by impersonating an
•re* licenses .nd collect, th. fees | in thelaM.three year.. The pwjor of j
X^edon“

for them, forwarding them to the
secretary of state. In cities Ilka
Hastings the city marshal or chief
of police has to do such work. Mich­
igan’s dog law has added to the
work of supervisors as well ta of
the sheriff and county treasurer. In
addition there is the recording of
many pap-.-rs and the keeping of
records now required that were not
formerly demanded of county offl-

Tracy u Powell*, boa. and te tn 10
with Jean Harlow who ta married

Style. Workmanship
and Good Materials
Are The Three Most Important
Factors In A Dress Or Coat

Palmer, who ha* sheep In an ad­
joining field, found one ewe dead
and another severely wounded.

PRINTZESS COATS

The Brush Ridge Community club

MEET ABOVE SPECIFICATIONS

for their November meeting on Fri­
day evening. The program was a
Mr. Hyde and his clerk worked not free t.lkl* on "Hidden Harvest." put
only the regular hours but much on by the Purina feed company and
overtime in order to keep anywhere presented through the courtesy of
near up with the work required ot
them. That has been true before, Instructive and enjoyable. About
but was necessary during the busy sixty were present for supper. The
weeks ot September and October. next meeting will be on December
Anyone who thinks that holding
a county office is a snap, that it is
a good place lo get "easy money."
has another think coming.
,
An enterprising firm is offering to
-11*11 poultry to small farmers on the

15c SPECIALS
CHOICE OF THESE ITEMS

•
•
•
•
•
•

Rubbing Alcohol
Milk of Magnesia
Hinkle's Pills, 100
Aspirin Tablets, 100
Dr. West's Tooth Paste
Orlis Tooth Paste

1 Bottle Furniture Polish
1 Jar Silver Polish FREE
With Either
’.
2 Lbs. PASTE WAX at «&lt;
1 Qt. LIQUID at ....89&lt;

ronderful assortment of personally selected dressYou arc invited lo inspect the selection, and if in need

nf a frock for winter, the lime i.* right,
price*
arc advancing rapidly. The assortment of sizes, colors y

GLASS ASH
TRAYS AND
COASTERS

Don't Suj
rroin^dverweight
• is no M«d tn suffer under tbs
• n ot brsutj-dulronr.c surplus
Ju-Van. ths nurvskxM n«w r»-

GLASS
MEASURING
CUPS

and materials is most complete.

!?&lt;of Mrs Chas. Hinman. with thir­ j little down.
teen members present. The lesson.
•‘Choosing the Right Fall Fashions" I .j tUnd or fall by my refusal to
was interestingly
presented
by I accept as a necessary condition of
the leaders. Mrs Edward Echlmaw \our future a 1&gt;Cnnanent army of.
•nd Mrs C- D. Bauer.
I unemployed."—President Roosevelt.

Prices - $3.98, $4.89, $7.85, $9.89
Sport Coots, $10.00, $12.75, $15.00
Dress Fur Trimmed Coats ot $16.50
$24.75, $39.00

ADMIRATION
IBON CLAD HOSE

29c SPECIALS

29c SPECIALS

• Rusiian Mineral Oil. Pint

• Dental Perborate, 50c Sin

• Campho Lyptus Nose Drops

• L'Adonna Toiletries

• White Pine &amp; Tor Cough
Syrup
• Koller's Syrup Figs
9 .

• 50c Mary Lake Lavender
Lotion
• Fletcher's Castono, 40c Sin

59c 69‘ 85

VALUES

All Silk Substandard Hose In Dark Fall Shades
Cotton Lisle Hose. Ribbed Top At
Silk And Wool Full Foshioned Hose At
Children's School Stockings ..

HEINZ SOUP
All Varieties Except Consomme and Clam Chowder.

HEINZ

SUGAR

CATSUP

35c

rioo

Veal Steak

Hamburger

25c

Sausage

BALBRIGGAN GOWNS
And PAJAMAS
In All Sixes At

LACE CLOTHS
and Linen Setw
For Thanksgiving or
Gilts
we have n coinpletn line ol
fine cloths and sets.

SQUIBB MINERAL OIL
And Ager, 16 os.---------- -VICKS Vapo-Rub

2Oc

3 DELIVERIES DAILY, S, IO «. m. ,od 3 p. m.

"CARTER” UNION
SUITS AND SINGLE
EXTRA GOOD VALUES
IN BLANKETS

OUR HANDKERCHIEF D EPARTMENT Is Most Complete.
Fine Imported Chinese Handker­
chiefs Hand Embroider**.

15' 25' 50

ORLIS ANTISEPTIC,
2 One-Half Pint Bottloi

HALIBUT LIVER OIL
CAPSULES, Box of 50
COD LIVER OIL, Pint

GEM RAZOR WITH
BLADES

NU-VEL SANITARY NAPKINS
2 For

I LB. MALTED MILK.
Plain or Chocolate - --------------

SQUIBB YEAST
TABLETS
SQUIBB CHOCOLATE
VITAVOSI
SYRUP PEPSIN,
60c Sin
MILES ALKA SELTZER,
50c Siso,
BROMO SELTZER,
60c Sin
CITRATES ond CARBONATI
8 Os., Regular $1.25 Vahn
ZONITI ANTISEPTIC.
60c Siso —

WATCH FOR OPENING OF OUR NSW SODA GRII

•MARKET- TO
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN.

GROVE'S BROMO
QUININE

PREP SHAVING CREAM.
Tube or jar, 2 For----------

'ELDPAUSCH

Phone 1272 U'e Deliver

....L—...

LYONS TOOTH POWDER.
Small-------------- - -------------

FOUNTAIN SYRINGE.
2 Quart Guaranteed--------------

Beef Pot Roast
Pork Shoulder Roast

IPANA TOOTH
PASTE

HOT WATER BOTTLE.
•2 Quart Guaranteed----------------

CHILDRENS PAJAMAS
And SLEEPING SUITS

Sliced Bacon

|AD SALTS.
Condanaed

IODENT TOOTH
PASTE

Outstanding Value* In
Blips. Many Styles and

IO Lb. Limit

BUTTER

SLIPS, GOWNS
UNDERWEAR

MAN o'WAR SHAVING
CREAM

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�Tin: HASTINGS BAfflTB. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER It, »M
Well, now that they're got the
another twice u quickly m you thought up a method to avoid the crusade* and the last days of Pom­
could a few years ago. Thh gives. new tai levies. -We are thriftily peii into the movies, it ought not to
you more time after arrival to won- keeping our Incomes below the S40.- be long before Usey get around to
doing the New Deal.

NAMES THE RED
CROSS WORKERS
(Continued from page 1. Sec li

N
A

GIVING YOU
the Right Kind of
BANKING COOPERATION

■ill Beattie. Mr&gt; Howard Birdsall.
Mrs. Craig. Mrs Frrd Prentice. Mr
Wood. Mrs. Dun A-halter. MrHomer Wjrr.rr aLro H--rchell Pullick at th; BIK, Co Third Ward.
Mrs. Gordon Fisher, chairman, Mrs.
Clurerce Textcr. Mr* T. N. Knop!.
Mrs C B Hodges. Mrs W G Da-

Your financial needs are not always
the same. Your business problems
vary with general business condi­
tions, the season of the year, and
many other factors.
Nevertheless, you will find
the service of this bank helpful at
all times because our officers are
■uffidently interested in your wel­
fare io give you just the kind of
cooperation you may need.
Our aim is lo help you to
make the best use of your financial
resources, and to provide the use
of valuable banking facilities which
would not otherwise be available
to you.

0
N
A

B
A
N
K

In the Second Ward the worker,
are: Mr;. Allen Pender, chairman.
Mr-. Harry ThomjMon. Mrs. Prank
McMillan. Mrs. J. M. Townsend.

OF

Pratt, chairman, Mrs Lewis Hine.
Mrs. Ben Gidley Miss Gertrude
Hampton MKs Ellen Leonard. MLs
Anne p-rr- Mr- Lawrence. Mrs A
also Churls

Worl:cr- in the northern half of
Barry county as announc'd by the
chn rrr-n. Mr* Victor HHberl. of
u...i
... .
r,. .....
Wotxl.i d are Mr. L H ..umm.

Wcih Mr A Bates u: d Miss S
Fi-hcr Wxxlland; Rev F C. Wing
Coat- Gru-.-e; Mrs. Vance and Mr.:
hr Mlddl.v.Ue; Mrs Wells. Frec. I**' ’•
Mr C J Barnum and Mrs Leon
I Cum.Ing of IX'Hon. chairmen for
'th.- scifthern port ql the county, rc। per; the following work -r&gt; Mr*.
I Albert Jones and W C Manby. AsI syrla; Mrs Robert Burchett. Dos-

HASTINGS

: Burn ctoveiduk
Hiz-1 cSk
B.hinas
’ Dunn Delton; Mrs SrnHh
“d

lake; Mrs. Margate: • &gt;«&gt;&gt;&gt;-..
Wall take; Mrs
Waiter Orrr.sbc
’ Mrs. Lloyd Gaskill and Mrs Millon
Trafford Dowling; Mis* C Morgan,
,
jJohnstown Granite; Leo Lawrence.
-

Hickory Corner*,- Mrs. Lee Kill ck.'
.North Pine lake; Mn. Bert Fanch-1
... Dur,~ aw.ki: Mr. J w

HEARD INTERESTING

» j r
K'KJ'T'Q,
SOCIAL EVENTS

v*a

u

anmiv ixmi*

TALK ABOUT INDIA

the people there he said that t
more Riteltylnt, especially I!
high caste people, are as clean
any other people on earth a* tar
their habits go. take freque
baths, etc. The Mohammedan* pr
five times a day. fifteen minul
each time. Before doing so th
wash their hands up to the elboi
A Mohammedan Is permitted

Lawrence. Hickory Corner-.
Rev. Edward Pohlman, A
The Feldpausch Food Center L- | AUXILIARY OFFICERS
co-operating splendidly by putting! HUA,U,HnT UrriUErtO
Missionary, Spoke To
In a Red Cross window display/
INSTALLED THURSDAY
Rotarians
which has attracted a lot of alter.- 1
’JiS
lion mid I* worthy of commendation. Supper Served^ New VaiEach one of the.*- workers B sup­
forms Worn For
In India as a mtoslonary. was the can support them. He Ls also per
plied witn literatim-, receipts and
p;».i
speaker al the Rotary club Monday milled to dlvorqe them any lime hi
pin* and will ta- glad to receive |
First Time
noon. He gave an Interesting talk may wish and lake on new affinj
yutir dollar. Women will also be r.i ’
Installation of the officers of the.about Die people of Uial country, lies.
botli banks to receive mcinkaership..
Leo A. Miller Auxiliary No. 3326 quite different from wiiat one would
on Saturday.
Speaking generally of the peopl
took
place
last
Thursday
evening,
ordinarily hear, as It had to do of India he &gt;«id they are peaceful
Barry county’s quota this year h
Pa t ixpt.J»rev Pearl E Musser of with the home life and customs a*
600. and this means that 1300 Kalamazoo and members of the ! well as religious condition* of that very kind and have many fine qual
Hies. The country is awakenln]
would be available for local work ifAUce V Murphy post.
.... who Instituted , country. He brought with him
■
_.
*ev- The caste system ha* been it
the quota I* filled ns lialf of each ti.e local auxiliary, wen- the install- j ernl article* that gave one a better
most serious drawback and Uiat I
dollar collected remains-with the »»&gt;N officers. Ihe new officers are:11idea
-*------of
' •*
— «-■
“-----------•­
the
Indian
people.
being gradually eliminated. Th
total chapter, the other hall going ltrs. Him* Paton; Sr. vlce-prrs.. .
.. The proud Moliatnmedan* rpeaker
are
told many other thing
______ headquarters
.......
Matthews;
Jr. vice-pres..
orto nuttonul
Mary Mary
Matthews;
Jr. vice-pres..
Mil- MJ- |nol given to showing more than about
India that were very inter
During the- past jeur thirty-nine' d’ed Platt: trea .. Florence Burch; dinary courtesy lo other*, while the eating.
•tales have received Red CnAs aid
Ella ...
H Bush; ..Chaplain.
Noru
devotees
of the .AMIMU
Hindu .C,l^&lt;v*l
religion are
..... ......
....................
.. - I• wm.
wo*.,. v.
conductress. Elma
with a wide range of'service* to Ru-&gt;ell;
**
*’ Cryan; : quite deferential.
‘
IK VINO.
Hie American jieople. AcsHUince in guard. Ruby Wood; trustees. Lulu • In regard to the home life, he
Mr. and Mrs. B&lt;-n Nagel enter!
the form ol food, clothing, mtd.cal Clark. EdUh Walt and Velma Crane, ,y*ated that the women and girls touted 30 members of the Neil fnml
f India are not much considered,
aid. shel er and rehabilitation o! nforiari. Mary Matthews; p-itrlo
liy Sunday in honor of her ulsteil
homes and fainilies following fir*-. nT-.it tor. Floy Bechtel, and inu;i- A Rtri Ls not welcomed as an addi­
tion to the family and. until very Mrs. Margaret Nell Zerbel, of Wlsi
flood ar.U various disasters. H the ct!:. Eva Tinker.
Ftory ot the past year. For flflyA pot luck supper was strv d tojrecently, few of them were permit- consin. who Is visiting here.
The church has a new furnad
five year* the Red Cross has dor." about CO guests and un enjuyubli \ ted to get an education. It 1* the
lime was had by all Several of the I women who mn ntaln the caste and a pew Janitor and no one need
&lt;««»ter rchef work
fear to come to church lest thej
H
interesting to know also that I'.dles wore their new uniforms for!system there. In the home the man catch cold now.
durlng
yrar 2^6088 formei th«- first time and they looked n-ai eats first. After he has had what
Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Peeling and
•
he wants his wife Is permitted to
service mon have come to the R-d and pretty.
Oro.* for some form of assisjanct*
The Post and Auxiliary will have:. ,«lt at the table. If there Ls any- son of Detroit were seen on oui
stints Sunday.
and have not teen turned away juint open installation this Thur - thing left the children get it. HusMis* Lillian Sowerby was homd
day
evening.
A
pot
luck
supper
wll!
band
and
wife
do
not
walk
along
The local chapter Ila* given aid to
from Chicago last week.
many veterans in puet years when be served and the members of the I the street together. The husband
Mr. and Mrs. Dell Wilcox of Rud
requests came from Barry county Battle Creek Past and Anxil vr-. ! walks several feet ahead of his
land
were Sunday visitor* at tiui
ex-service nu n and those who may have been invited to attend The I wife. In this country on entering
have met with some inLJortune ..new
— colors
-------- will
--------ber;prs-nt&lt;d
--------------nt ttys.. --------------n heme we
---------------show our
- respect for ----the home of Mrs. Wilcox's brother. Wil­
liam McCann.
while passing through the Lounty.1 Lime. All members and their famine ; eu-&gt;le living there by removing our
The Ladles' Aid Society cleaned
--------—
■
■- ■
ure urged to be present.---------- headgear. In that country U 1*
the church Friday after the new
es and creel!* and colors of human —------------‘ .'"..-uP
1 *
~~
....................
1*-,, .--------shown by taking off the shoes. He furnace wm Installed.
fohdwi’.h ite M-rvice of mUUstry. But , DEDICATES
OPERETTA
...
J- .... - t01d ,,f * ,rl-nd 01 hU&gt; • hlKh c—U‘
TO ",n
CHAM.
TOY KF.KR. | I.dlUl, who vhllrd 111 hl. home.' John perry and FXtrrest Buehlei
the Red Cross con serve in the fu-|
™
***&lt;
n A K«T received n«he u; honoe OT&gt;C„ h, wy,
M„ p.hlmu. ( are going north lo hunt deer.
tun- a* it lias In the past only^to, . eeque.l of hee he cued
through
your
continued generous tea»e« whehl»Iurlved.;»p)ol|n
maxing a request or ner ne used |
CARLTON CENTER.
lnruu
*n &gt;
our
eontuim
C“‘n:i lime. The Noble owin' l.le.1 eompo-IUpn. u; I the
wool “pteue,"
lodl.n ,unl
7
- RoU
r.
fcoc wuiu
piraioe HU
rxi* muuui
Burse
.........
looked no
up in
In astonishment and said
said. .
.N,c*’ols of 8*Kola. Norther
L&lt; greater than ever—prevent­ operetta. The Bos.on Tea Party, lo-ked
able yictdt nt* of certain types are which was dedicated to "Chas. "Do you say nl-a-e to her?" Mr. ““*!**?• U «P"ndlng some Un
did.. The
IhcreLslng; disease and epidemic •Pop' Kerr. Hastings. Michigan." Pohlman
&lt;uuuuan replied
irpiicu that
iiiav lie luu
I lie “l u“? homes
..... of
__ Ralph
,— and
. .Pn
. _
spread their blight over new areas. These gentlemen have been friends Indian guest said he couldn't un- ., HMiney. »i
|
William* Ls quite III
Ul at
al tha
U
nature on the rampage haunts fam- for years and. of course. Mr. Kerr derstand that, for in India the wife [ Henry Williams
must do what the husband ask*.
P
r
^«
nl
lliar places and strikes where it has appreciates the courtesy.
lt ’ Mr
Mr. “
and
Shroyer
and
She U bought and paid for. so it
’d Mrs. Lloyd ah
«&gt;ver ar
never struck before. With justifiable
ENTERTAINS CLUB.
family of Marshall spent BundaJ
pride the Red Cross points to pai.t
MLss Mary McElwain entertained 1* her business lo do what lie re' ­ , with the latter* sister. Mr. and Mr*]
accomplishment* and urges new her bridge club on Monday evening quest*.
family.
|
He spoke of Ghandl and the civil-i Hale
- - carpenter
------- and
—-------—
memberships so that its works of at hcr new -honfe on West Court StJay Wing were
mercy may be geared to uicreasing two tables being in play. The win­ disobedience campaign which he
had carried on. He slated that
Su»d**
former'^
need.
ning scores were held by Mrs. Min­ Olrnndl u I.OI U, «ucl&gt; hl&gt;&gt;. t.vor i
ot OrMid RAPld,.
Yon can do your part by buying a nie Shriner and Mrs. W. L. Hinman.
_______ __ ___________ now. 11 U br,.nnln, lo b. reco«. I
■“ «”• Join Hoblruon .nJ
membership when the solicitor calls
Chute. M. Sch.uli My, Ih. Ion.- nl.-.l by Ihe people of Indi. Ih.l
— .v
--------------------------------------' O-..1-W
— i—
of the former!
The kancaroo. acaardlng to a er
the. depression
last*, the greater
' British
rulers have
------, otv*,i
-given
------ guest* Sunday
-&gt; reaiiv
reany
Mr and
1Utol2
naturblUt,
hk? the elephant In will be the followUtg prosperity, them a much better government,
that it never forget*. Unfortunately That's Uke sitting on a hot stovt— than they would get from their own Tasker of West Odessa.
Il u neither to elephants nor lo the longer you sit the better it feels people,
' 'if ■’
I Social tact 1* making your cotnJ
kangaroo* that we lend money now when you get up.
‘
— p®«y f«l *» home- ev«' U’ou»» M
c T ’2utuJfn u .we
and then.
----------------- *« -------------------------------ri-gardthe people of India as inniev «err1
-- -------------1 A JoumalLsl is a newspaper work- feriors. They have some of the ,
, a ______________
A nadir asks almt niun did the er who thinkslibelIsn’t libel
ifthe world’smost famous scholar* and' Rip Van Winkle slept for
2d
most forcivilization. Well, what
word-alleged" appears
Infront
of are wonderful mathematicians
I years, but. of course, his neighbor]
about the man who invented taxes’ It.
Speaking of the cleanliness of । didn’t have a radio.

AN ACE-OLD PROBLEM FOR BUSY HOUSEWIVES. C. THOMAS

FurTrimmed COATS

STORE S HELPFUL SERVICE EVERY DAY SUGGESTS A PLEASING
VARIETY OF FOODS. BULK FOODS FOR TASTY HOME COOK­
ED MENUS. CANNED FOODS FOR EASY-TO-PREPARE MEALS.

C.THOMAS STORES

DRIED FRUITS FOR SALADS. PUDDINGS. ETC., FRESH FRUITS

Rich FURS

AND VEGETABLES. QUALITY FOODS COMBINED WITH CON­
SISTENT "EVERYDAY LOW PRICES."

DI^C
|

FANCY BLUE ROSE

Many Ways of Preparing

LB.

SPRY

1 Pound
OOc I 3 Pound
Con CC |
Con

CHEESE
22‘
FIGBARSEJ 25c
DATES --­ 3L,s 25c
UNPITTED

nd
11 li r o swect* tender
■&gt; I I IH r
1

SANTA CLARAS
medium size

CAKE FLOUR 5 BAG 25c
LB.
CALUMET POWDER ICAN
22c
VANILLA FLAVOR0
I
15c
MISSION INN VANILLA Oi 19c
MOLASSES
K.?; 48c

aVa^H JR

r t Alto ^eds

S15c

WAX BEANS ~ 10c

■

18c

$3988

You're going to get
more value than you
hoped for . . . ond pay
less than you expect­
ed. Aristocrats of the
coat world in nubby
weaves, n e vy hoiry I
woolens and suedelike fabrics. these
coats are meticulous­
ly tailored . . . warm­
ly interlined . . .■ and
magnificently fur
trimmed!

Thomas Special. Vg Ib. 13c
MISSION INN.
Finest Green,
Ib."V

’/g

NATIONAL CHEESE WEEK
PHILADELPHIA CREAM. Pkg10&lt;
KRAFT'S-VELVETA. &lt;/i Lb. Pkg20c
KRAFTS-OLD ENGLISH, Vi Ib. pkg. 22c
SWANKY SWIG SPREADS ISc
SWIFT S SPREADS. 2 1-4 Lb. Pkg,. 15c

SALAD DRESSING
23c
CRANBERRY SAUCE Can 17c

,,P

SODA CRACKERS
15c
SOUP MIXTURE 3 h°.'25c
RICG, PSAS, BARLEY, LENTILS

EAGLE BRAND MILK
SWEETENED. CONDENSED
Saliu-fintah Aluminum Hol Dish
Pad For 10c and one Eagle

to

Misses' Sizes 12 To 20
Women's Sizes 36 To 48

ANO 4 OZ. TRIAL SIZE FREE

LB.

RAISINS 3■ 25c
CORNED beef 17c
Beef Stew ss 15‘
MINCEMEATS
ROYAL KEIFFER

Fitted Types!
New Swaggers!
Belted Models!
Princess Coats!
New Collars!
New Colors!
New Sleeves!

FAREE FLUFF

PINEAPPLE

$1488

FABRICS

DO

ASK FOR NEW PINEAPPLE CAKE RECIPE

I r 11

Of A

Finer

FINEST NEW
SHORTENING

Fox!
Caracul!
Fluffy Badger!
Blue Dyed Fox!
Superb Raccoon!

ft

20c

ONE CENTSALEI

121 WIST STATI STRUT

HASTINGS, MICH.

SEMINOLE TISSUE
3 Rolls19c
1 Roll
4 Rolls
20c

SPORT COATS $|O86
In All Loading Shod*

1

Cinderella Dresses
138 W. Stet*, Hasting*

�TO HAJITING| EANNKBy THUM8DAY, NQVKMMB 13, IBS

aid that 1
xc Lally t
a* clean

Social Events and Personal Mention

imedan* p
teen mini

Edward and Walter Gaukin were
tn Grand Rapid* Tuesday.
tn Grand Rapid* co TueMay.
ithe city Monday.
Mias Maxine Wunderlich wasJ Mr. and Mr*, jerry Johnson spent
Harry Miller was tn Grand Rap­
ids on Tuesday on business.
home from BeMmg over the week the week end with relatives in Lan'ring.
Mr and Mrs W J. Watkins vis­ end.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Foster ot | Mr*. Anna Wolf of the Cinderella
ited near Three Rivers on Bunday
__ Mildred Angell wm home umuu WT. Bund*, r»,u dl Blwp ,pro: Bundw with IrtawU tn
Miss
from Don*tan Une over the week and.1 Ha*tlngi friend*.
Battle Crock.
Harold A. Phillips returned Mon- LH"' Sarah Brandstetter went to
“
day from a business Rip to Bt. I Delk® yesterday to visit Mr. and
J** ^?ay ’tte”'
Louis.
I Mr*. Chester Banghart.
i **7"® “®rT.lca„. u
— .
. .
.
Miu
at.-. eJ
"rt- Grant Hitchcock of Jaekson

*rmltted
Ls also per
any time h
i new affinl

if the
ny fine qt

and that
inated. T
■ther thin
• very Inta

Nagel enterl
he Nell faml
rbel, of Wh
here.
new fumac

ch lest

Peeling ant

llcojt of Rut&lt;

brother, Wil:!ely cteanet
ter the nev

rest Buehl

ila. Noriher
some tin

Shroyer and
lent Bunday
Hr. and Mn
mlly.
Wing wen
fie former'!
da.
obinson and
ilnson wert
•&gt;e former'!
&gt;trs. Harold

[ your conv
though you

Is nelghl

“ “T

,^'«“wJTd

“

William, Robert and Cart Thtek
of Marshall were in th* city Mon­
day.
Mr. and Mr*. Wendell Ashley had
a* Bunday guest* Mr. and Mrs. Oren
Bugbee of Charlotte.
Mr. and Mrs Burt Farrell of
Carlton were Bunday guest* of their
daughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs
Mr and Mrs Charles Paul. Mari­
etta and David and Mr*. EUa Faul
were Ln Lansing Bunday spending
the day with Mr. Paul's aister. Mr*.
Richard O'Brien, and family.

DEER HUNTERS LEAVE.
The end of th* week will see the
usual migration ot deer hunter* to
the northern woods, one group,
composed of Keith Fox. Lyle Rock­
hill. Lyle Scudder snd Dutch Hoc
verulr go u&gt; Bruce's crossing in
Ooegebic county.
John Armbruster, E*rl Bhute and
R*y Smith leave today for Macki­
nac county where they have hunted
for several years.
Warren Carter. C- H- Hinman and
WUllam P. Parker with men from
Hartford and Bay City go to their
camp on the Taquemenon River in
the Upper Peninsula.
John Barker. Omar Barker and
Charles Freer leave Friday for the
AU Sable river north of Roscom­
mon.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Alien. Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Thomas and Mr. and Mrs.
Fay Allerdlng will hunt near Ken­
ton. nurUiwesl of Marquette.
Charles H. Leonard. Harold New­
ton and Andrew Roush return to
their usual location at Hulbert In the
Upper peninsula and a party com­
posed of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ea­
ton. Mr and Mrs. B. M. Johncock.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Daniels and
Homer Smith la planning to try it*
luck in Ontonagon county

H-nx W.«.
fatally were guests of relatives in । f®° came Friday for a visit with Mlu Rosc
Pllnl on Bimd.y.
"im'jji'ijdj;'JH'XS’i.u.,, 1
BUIn ol IWtroil
mar. HIM.
m.i
----- ------- - ---- —----- -------------- wmv hIQ vtim,
Sunday from Orend Rapids where t*r"
Bylvanl*. Ohio, are spending
Stuart Clement
she visited her sister
'
th
the
* ***
week
k w,th
with h
her
*r parents, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs- Ray waters and Mr.
Mr. and Mn. L. F. Maus and. Mri Kellar Stem.
1 and Mrs. Harry McDonald spent
Martha Lou visited relative* In,. Mr and Mrs Gary Crook left on 1 Sunday and Monday In Chicago.
Marshall on Sunday.
Thursday-in
Thursday in Itheir house trailer for
Mr. and Mrs. Piynn Matthews and
nwU..
Tampa
and other family of Grand Rapids were BunMLs* Gertrude Bentley of Kais- .•Tw.; Wo
"h' .•
——-----------------mazoo spent the week end with Mr.' PObibs in Florida,
i day guests of Mrs. Mamie Manee,
and Mrs. C- A- Kerr
. Mn. Isabel Pancoast leaves this. Mrs. I. N. Tolles of Cleveland is
Mr and Mn. Claude Kelley and
for Saginaw where ,«he will!
spending two weeks with her son
Mr*. George Tolhurst were in Grand i »P®nd several weeks with Dr. anJ and wife. Mr. and Mrs A Tolles.
Rapids on Saturday.
j M*»- BruCf Hayden.
Mrs. John Nobles and Miss Marie
Mn. William White of Ovid Is
Mr’ John Dawwn had as Bun- Neuschaefer spent the week end in
the gue«t of her son and wife. Mr. I &lt;u&gt;’ «umU h,r •UUr *nd brother- I Whitehall with Mrs. Nobles' mother,
and Mn WUlard White.
| in-law. Mr. and Mn. L. T. Ratteni Miss Beatrice Carrothers of De­
Andrew cook returned Monday *”10' of Grand Rapids.
i troll spent the week end with her
from a several days' visit with rela-1 MlM Beulah Bevrewnce and fath- j
- parents. Dr. and Mrs. Frank Car­
lives in Mecosta county.
I rr *Tnt ,o Katamaaoo Saturday for ■! rothers.
Sheriff and Mr*. Jay Blakney vis- Lhe
M|Ur,Uon of President Paul1
ited their son. Hubert Blakney. In * Bangren and Dads day.
: M. Style Shop wa* In Chicago on a
Ann Arbor over the week end,
' Miss Margaret Merrick wax home I buying trip Wednesday and ThursMrs. MWIMI
John OIW.IBO,
Sparks. ^a..
Jr., VI
of wvuvi.
Detroit ------,r&lt;””----------------------O“k °»l—Sunday.
She
— ------ . d1
V ofwas
l*St W®ck.
U spending the week with her par- '
i “r- and Mra Jack OConnor. Tom
mis. mi
&gt;nu Mrs.
m«s. c.
u. F.
r. Angell
niigru
ents.
Mr and
.,
,.,.jand Anne spent Sunday at Coral
Mr. and Mrs. John Wood and
Mr. and Mrs. L- E- Severance left;(With Mrs. O’Cohnor* parent*. Dr.
Floyd wood visited Mr. and Mrs. Tuesday for Michigan City. Ind.; and Mr*. Winn Nobles.
*•
Neville Wood of Lapeer on Bunday. rur «n extended visit with Mr. and
Supt. and Mrs D. A. VanBuskirk PAST MATRONS AND
Mrs Burr Clark of Holland vis- i Mrg W. O- Wey.
PATRONS HONORED.
, were tn Kalamazoo Saturday atI
Ited her parent*. Mr and Mrs.1 My. and Mrs James Ironside and lending the Inauguration of Presl-,
The past matrons and past patrons
James Gilmer, from Friday till eon ,e&gt;1 Thursday for their home in dent Bangren at W. 8 T. C.
of Hastings Chapter No. 7, Order of
Sunday
8,n Diego. Cal., after spending sevMU-* Jean Gierum and MIm Lena
Mrs. Lillian Anders and Mrs.. "■&gt;
here with relatives.
Leiter, teacher* in the local schools. chicken dinner and intertainment
Frank Wolcott of Kalamazoo visited
Mrs
Richard Kenfield (Helen; were guest* of their families in at the Temple Tuesday evening. Nov.
Hasting* relatives and friends on Wilson) and baby daughter of Kalamazoo over the week end.
3. After th* dinner the honor guests
Kunday.
I Grand Rapids came Saturday to
were escorted into the chapter room
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davl* of. vli‘l Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson.
spending today (Thursday) with by Mrs. Elva Marshall and Mis*
Battle creek were Friday visitors of
Mrs. Nettle Townsend acrompan- Mr*. Lockwood's relatives In Fort Margaret Densmore dresMxi tn co­
Henry Trim and Mr. and Mrs ! 'ed her daughter. Mrs. J. A. Gary, to
lonial costume* a* Mrs. Florence
Wayne and Columbia City. Ind.
Alonzo Trim.
I her home in Chicago on Bunday
MU* Marie Rowe of the High Marble sang "Auld Lang Syne "
Henry Trim and Mrs. Alonzo Trim 1 *hert she win stay for several
school faculty and Mis* Beatrice They were then presented with re­
।
visited the latter's parents. Mr. and. *eeks
Blos-om. superintendent of Pennock ceipt cases and corsages. Mrs. W. L.
Mrs. otto Bchulze. of Naahvllle last
C. W. Wesplnter was tn Detroit hospital, spent the week end with Hinman was given her life mem­
I
Wedrtesday
I Friday attending a meeting of all their relatives in Big Rapids.
bership certificate by Mr*. Georg­
Mr*. John McLravy and Mrs. U|e Ford dealer* in the United
Mis* Josie and Miss Phenla Car­ ina Bauer. pa*t worthy grand maI
Mary Van Dugteren are guest* of • Btates. The 1M7 Ford a-a* exhibited penicc
wbu lake vaucu
penter ui
of Wall
called wi
on bus
Mrs Uon of Michigan A program of
Dr. Winifred McLravy of Grtmd 1
*hem.
Nettle Hyde Saturday Her ion. I reading*.
musical numbers, lap
Rapids for several day*
| Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Chidester left Rankin Hyde, and family of Prairie-1 dances and short talks wa* given,
Mis* Florence Watkins and Fred Sunday evening for Winter Park. vllle also visited Mrs Hyde the same —
Interspersed
returns.
------------ - with
,u -election
---------------*------Headman of Wyandotte were guesU Fla., where they will spend the winThe members of the past Matrons
&gt; day.
of Mr. and Mr* W. J Watkln* Fri- ■ ’er with their son. the Rev. W I Mrs. James Caldwell of Hesperia club presented Mrs Alma Pingteton.
• day night and Saturday.
Keith Chidester, and family.
1 has come to spend the winter with the present matron. with a lovely
I
Mr and Mrs Alphonse Chase and
Mr. and Mrs. Ben McMurray of
| her sister and husband. Dr. and Mrs. gift.
two children of Detroit were 8*1 - . Toledo, were In the city on Friday j. A. Wooton, the latter going to
urd*y and Sunday guests of Mr. enroute to Grand Rapids on busi- I Hesperia for Mrs. Caldaell on 6atA DCOCKa—FIFIELD.
’h and Mrs. Arthur chase
&gt;»«**. They returned here Saturday
On Saturday afternoon at three
vun friends
inena* over
over the
uie week
weex end.
ena.
Ur??? ‘
.... , ,,,
Ed Kelley returned Tuesday eve-1 “»&gt; vUit
Rov&lt;,(c
Fuller &lt;«
the 'latter
a’ld Mrs. J. WIT
Distngcr
and o'clock, the marriage ot Benjamin
.«
th. p.„h
L.h.
Sn"
nlng to hi* home In Fort MarlUon.
r.-,
_.hk
‘leaves
-------1'..
'. !
A. Adcock, son of the Rev. and Mrs.
। Iowa, after a short vbil with rela- P**’
’•»&gt;*
for the Perch Lake i
B J. Adcock of Hastings, and Miss
Jkuve* and friends in the city
i Club in Oscoda Oo.. where he will
left today for their home in Hunt­ Marjorie Flfield, daughter ot Mr.
Harry Wood was in Grand Rapids 1 spend some time hunting. Gerald
ingburg. Ind. They will return to and Mrs. Edgar Fifield ot Irving
Wednesday evening attending a ' NaatY of. Hopkins will accompany Hastings in January
township, was solemnized, the Rev.
meeting of the Railway Express em- ; him.
Merwyn Plumley of Detroit, visit­ E. L- Crocker reading the single
...ployec* at the MOMpn Ipw*
Mr tn(1 Mia Walter Snyder. Mr.
,,,r Dr and Mrs. D D. Walton andjand Mr*. Aller/farfDonaid and Mrs. ed his parent*. Mr. and-Mr* Calvin ring ceremony at the home of the
Plumley over the week end. coming bride's parents Only the members
sons were in Lansing on Sunday at- J- H, Haney visited Mrs Haney *
of the Immediate families and Inti­
at
tending a reunion ot the Potter aunt. Mrs.
**’• Huldah Grundman. .»
Ul. At last report Mr. Plumley was mate friends witnessed the cere­
Monroe on Bunday. Mrs. Grund­
.family. Fourteen were present.
considerably improved.
mony.
■ Mr and Mrs. Fred Fairchild and man is *1 year* old.
Ben Blakney left Saturday for
Attending the bride, who wore a
MIm Mabel Sisson was the guest
;.Mr*. Wayne Mitchell of Battle
Michigan City. Ind . for a few days' gown of blur crepe, was her sister.
• Creek spent Sunday and Monday tn of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Bisson and visit then going on to Chicago. UvMiss Ordetta Fifield. while Arthur
; Detroit with Richard and Hubert family of Kalamazoo Saturday ter he plans lo spend the winter
Adcock served as best man for his
night and Sunday, other guest*
j Fairchild.
with the Rev. and Mr*. W. L. Gels- brother
! Mrs. Gilbert Bigelow and daugh­ wire Mrs. U. C. Mann* and Mis* ton of Highland Park. Detroit
Mr. and Mrs. Adcock are residing
ter. carroll L»t, of Grand Rapid* Virginia Manns of Traverse City.
xMrs. John F. Goodyear had a* In an apartment on 8. Broadway.
Mr*.
Clarence
Shaw,
with
her
sla
­
•visited the former's sister and huaguests Saturday and Sunday her Beat wishes are extended.
iband. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mulder. ter. Mr*. Clyde Wilcox, and Mrs. daughter. Mrs Donald Van Zllc.
Will Field, both of Hastings, spent
Jon Thursday.
Mrs. Goodyear'* grandson. phUUp
WEDDING DATE BET.
! Mr and Mrs. C- F Finsti'otn and
Van ZUe. Mrs. Robert Drysdale and
Friend* of Mr. and Mr*. Royce
•Roy Finstrom were in East Lansing and Mrs. Cranston Wilcox of Ann Mis* Margaret Bolton, all of De­
G. Henton ot Deium wiU be inter­
Sunday attending a military re- Arbor. During their stay they heard troit.
ested tn the announcement that
I view al M. 8. C-. Hartley Finstrom Kirsten Flagstag. Norwegian drama­
County Clerk Allan Hyde. Sheriff their daughter. Miss Marquita, has
tic soprano.—Nashville News.
being one of the participants.
Jay Blakney. Weldon Bronson and chosen Thanksgiving day for the
Warren Roush of till* city. Grant date ot her wedding to Ivan J.
Osgood. Roscoe. Hynes and Perry Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. F.
Lehman ot woodland will Wave to­ Smith, of Crooked lake.
morrow to hunt deer in the north­
Mi*s Henton U a graduate of the
ern part of Michigan In Crawford Hastings High school and of Argucounty.
brighl BimUuk* College of Batth
1 Hastings wa* well represented al Creek and i* now employed in the
the presentation of "The Great office of C. J. Barnum, superinten­
WaiU " al the Cirte Auditorium In dent of schools at Delton. Mr.
Grand Rapids Tuesday evening. Smith studied at the Cincinnati
1 Among those attending were Mr... College of Embalming and U now
' Ki 8. McIntyre. Mrs Jack Stein. associated with the R. O. Henton
Mrs. R. O. Ftnnie. Mrs Marguerite Funeral Home in Delton.
Parker. Ml'J Belva Riley and Mr.
and Mrs. Frank C- Andrus. Mr. and
POST GRADUATE WORK.
। Mrs. T. D. French and Mr. and Mn*.
। Dillon Wolverton of Middleville also Carrothers and Dr. John Wooton
leave Saturday. Dec. 5. for New
I attended.
] Mr*. Agnes Fisher. Mrs. R. W- York, where they will take post
Cook. MN. A. D. Mc.Donald. Mrs. graduate work at Ihe Guggenheim
' Glenn Densmore and Mrs. Ja*. Foundation. They wjll also attend
, Lang were In Grand Rapid.* an the Greater New York Dental
■ Tuesday where they attended the meeting and will have the privilege
District La dies' Aid Society held of observing the latest method* In
at Trinity church. Mrs. Cook dental practice. The opportunity to
gave a talk on the .benefit to attend these course* U made |K*s*lble
; the church ahd the minister M by the W K. Kellogg Foundation.
eall* made by the L A. 8. The Rev.
L. L. Dewey, district sujiertntendeni. LUNCHEON IN BATTLE CREEK.
Mr?. John Nbbles. Mfrs Marie
wa* instrumental tn having this dl*­
Neuschaefer. Mis* Philomena Mc­
. trict society organized.
Week end visitor* at the home of Donald and MLss Roe# DeFbc. health
counsellors
at the Barry County
Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Severance
were. MT. and Mrs. 8 H. Chapellc of Health Unit, attended a luncheon
beaot
Ypsilanti. Mrs. Charlotte Ndble and Saturday at the Kellogg Hotel in
granddaughter of East Lansing. Mn Battle Creek in honor of Miss MarPhyllis McDowell of Saginaw. Miss gafet Wales of New York. All the
LARGE SIZE BOX
Beulah Severance ot Pontiac. Ml*i counsellors bt the seven uhlts of the
Loi* Severance and Kenneth Perry W. k. Kellogg Foundation were
of Sturgis, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Sev­ present at the luncheon. .

The

BIG

LITTLE Store
Saturday, Nov. 14

Friday, Nov. 13

MINCE

DATES
FANCY
BULK

2pk9* 19c

2 -19‘

Powdered Sugar 2
15c
Chipso
I9c
Salad Dressing Fall Quarts 29c
2™. 10c
Pork &amp; Beans
Beef Roasts
lb. |7c
Beef Steak Swiss or Sirloin Ib. I9c
It. pkg. 18c
Bacon Dickory Brand
•

Vl

HINMAN’S
Hastings

s

PHON* 2491

Michigan

erance and mm. Mrs. F. J. LaMaster
and David and Donald Severance of
Detroit and Mr. and Mrs. Cha*.
Byce, Dorothy and Richard of Kal­
amaSOO
Those from out of ’oan who at­
tended the funeral ot Mrs. Dennis
Murray on Saturday afternoon
were: Mrs. George B. Hooper and
daughter. Mrs. Larry creaon of
Memphis; Dr. and Mn W. H.
Thwaltes and family of Grand
Rapid*; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Mer­
ritt of Mulliken; Mrs. Flora Menesli.
Mr. and Mfs- Howard High. Mr. and
Mr*. WlUard Mcnesh. Mr. and Mr*.
Sam Qlerum. Miss Nellie Stebbins.

CONTRACT—LUNCHEON.
MM. Harold A Pelham enter­
tained eight guest* at luncheon and
contract bridge Friday *t the home
ot her mother. Mrs D. 8. Goodyear,
on West Center street A lovely boufiuet of eiWyMnthemums centered
the luncheon table. Contract hon­
or* were won by Mrs. Frank C. An­
drus.
’

POT LUCK CLUB.
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Cook enter­
tained th«lr pot luck club on PrH
day evening, cover* being laid fbr
eight. At contract. Mr. and Mix
James Bristol won the. prize* for
high score.
...... (

and Mrs. E- J- Huffman. Mr. and
srttmrrf itteriito; ■ '
MrK Clarence DePlanta. Mr. -and &gt; .'
Mr:. Cimrnce wood entertained
Mn. Claud* Stuart. Mrs. Jessie
Pittenget, Mrs. Maude Allsbury amj the member* of Tau chapter. Beta
Mrjgrtd Mrs c. W. Clgrke. all bfl Blgma Phi sorority, at her home last
Grand Rapids. C. W. Wesplnter. Jr., evening. Mrs. Bari Chamberlain
of Detroit and Mrs. Gordon element spoke to U&gt;* girls, using "Arr *a her
subject.

BaoWM-WKAWWJUt

CELEBRATE THEIR

The

GOLDEN WEDDING

marriage

of

Mias

Marte

OUttWG GOUBi_____
WEDDING BUNIMT*

land will celebrate their golden
And Mn. Buel 8te*on
and Mn. Bert Brown or Doater, took wedding annivemry. So on Bandog,
Were Honored Lait
place Saturday in Jackson.
'
la Um afternoon from two UH ata
Sunday

Fifty yean ago November 10.
Boel Bisson and Mita Lillian Cowie*
neighbor! are invited to can.
were united Ln marriage al the
formed the setting. There were &gt;0
have four
home of the bride's parents. Mr.
guests prevent for the rites and the children, Fred and
reception following at tha bride's Fred William* of H
and Edd
township, in the presence of about
fifty guests.
A white velvet gown tn the Empresent Sunday
On Sunday their two daughters,
fosUvk.r*. ■

Verdsn Covllle, entertained In hon­ father. lA full length veil extended
ENTERTAIN FOR GUEST
or of their parents’ golden wedding
over the train ot her gown and she
Mlsa Emily MeEtwoln wm hostess
carried white mums and roses, tied at a ebarming dmiert-bridge on BatHanover St. Open house was held
with white satin.
ty friends and relauve* called to J"
ima
*treet iriint
be th Btacy of Evanston. Ill., eight
extend congratulation* to the bride ^?re .
'
and groom of fifty yean. Thel^J 1 ,hort weddln' U,p 10 Chl‘ were used on the luncheon tabtea
rooms wore decorated with bou,tr
,
Mary Williams were the winners.
ET BUSINESS WOMEN’S
Saturday evening. Miss Grace Ed­
rd1
'
HOSPITAL GUILD MEETS,
ea. Among the gueat* were seven
., monds entertained eight friends in
Misses
Marie
non
ana
ucna
txiwho were present at the wedding I.
¥arie Ro” aPd Lena ¥*’ rraiwi or mui omey. me guests oeter were hostesses at the November ling members of hcr abridge club,
in 1$M.
Six couaUu came from Cleveland meeting of the Business Women's । Mlsa Helen Wade held high confor the golden anniversary on Bun­ Rcspitel Guild on Monday evening, tract score and Mis* Stacy received
day. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bisson, Mr.
and Mr*. Fred Sisson and son. Don­
ald 8ls*on. and Mis* Hasel Biaaon. Prank Trego, thirty members and SNOWSTORM DELAYED
HASTINGS TRAVELLERS.
Bunday noon they entertained Mr. two guests being In attendance
Plans were discussed tar the
Mr. and Mrs. E- A. Burton and
Mim Ruth Handy had rather an
lite Parker House, the table being
Miss Anne Burton and ML'-t Rose Kpleasant experience last week.
DcFoc as hostesses
ey left here on Tuesday for Day­
After the business session con­ tona Beach. Fla., and while driving
Another guest at the gathering
on Sunday was Mrs Sisson's fath­ tests were enjoyed with Mn. Charles on Wednesday In Kentucky ran into
er. A. J. Cowles, of Otsego, who Paul. Miss Florence Campbel) and a hard snowstorm which delayed
them unUl the next day. They saw
is ninety-one years of age Others Miss Jean Barnes as winners.
five trucks off the road, several cars
came from Lowell, Alto. Freeport,
SATURDAY EVENING PARTY.
overturned and the roads were
Otsego and Woodland lo offer felicRation*. the honor guests also reMIm I**b*l sage entertained a treacherous so they waited until the
reiving many lovely gifts, cards and croup of young people at her home
messages.
I Saturday evening. Those present ward. Michigan afforded better
In the evening a family dinner' wrre
Leonard. Jocelyn Iron- weather than that
wa* served at the home of Mr. and *lde- Marcella Kennedy. Dorothy
Mrs. Edmonds, honoring her par-1 Roush. Betty Sigler. Gordon Crocb­
LUNCHEON AND BRIDGE.
ent*
/
1 er*. Jean »gland. Bob Oortln. Out
Mn. John McOmber entertained
Mr. and Mr*. Slsaon have lived in' of ‘®*n
Michael Tem- thirty-two guest* al a one o'clock
Carlton township for about twen- P*- PhUUp Hanson and Laurence Juncheon Saturday at the Parker
ty-*lx year*, and have also resided Mildford of Grand Rapids. Contract House, chrysanthemums in an at­
in Freeport and Hastings. They was played and. httoont went to tractive arrangement were used on
have a wide circle of friends who Jocelyn ironside and Gordon Crolh- Ihe tables. The guest* then went to
wish for them many more happy ers. Dancing was also enjoyed and Mrs. McOmber* home on West
refreshments served.
anniversaries.
.Court street where contract was)
played. The prizes were won by Mrs.
LUNCHEON AT BATTLE
GOING TO PARADENA
Isabel Carrothers and Mrs. Iisbvl
CREEK ON TUESDAY. Pancoast and Mrs. c W Clarke ot
THIS WEEK SATURDAY.
Mr*. L. H. Evart* write* the Ban­
On Tuesday afternoon Mn. Bes­
ner mat she and her sister. Miss sie Tuttle snd MIm Mildred Tuttle Florida, was presented a gift prise
Agnes 81m. who have been spending of Hillsdale entertained six Has­ by the hostess.
several weeks in Fruita. Colo., are tings ladle* at a luncheon at the
leaving Saturday. Nov j*. for Pmm- Kellogg hotel tn Battle Creek. The
INJURED IN FALL.
dens, cal . where they will remain ladles were Mr*. A. D. Kni&amp;kern.
Mrs. Henry Smith had the mis­
for the winter months. They are to Mr* A K Frandsen. Mrs D. A.fortune
_________________
W1..U., „
to fall Bunday ,morning
as
occupy the .*ame apartment they VanBusklrk. Mn. Nellie Cro«, Mn. *he
-V.------------was getting
...----------------------up. straining
&lt; a hgaligahad two years ago and their address Ouy C. Keller and Mias Rom DeFoe. &gt; ment in her left limb. She U atlll
L* 224 N MadUon Ave.. Pasadena. The
. .,v ladles spent the afternoon with confined to her bed. - Mn. Nellie
Cal. They have enjoyed their stay j sewing
—&lt;— and vUitlng.
i MatthewB of Bau&gt; CrMbl{ ca[JW
on the ranch at Fruita and the'-------------------- *—
Sunday to care for Mrs Smith.
weather ha* been pleasant most of!
SMITH—CBIDLBB.
________ _
the time The first of last week they I
MUs Virginia Leddy Smith of .
u AND I CLUB.
Mrs. Dan Lewi* entertained th
had a light tnowfall. but on Salur- ■ c;h^M° ?nd,R^’a1ld {'rldlirr- a011'
day had cleared so the air was of Mrs. Lottie Cridler, local, were U and I bridge club on Wednesday
balmy Hsstlnxi friends hope Mrs. united tn marriage last Saturday. afternoon at hcr home on W. Mill
Evaru and Mni Sim may have a October 31st In Park Congregation- Bt.
happy winter tn Pasadena.
al church at Grand Rapid*. Rev.
E. A. Thompson performing the
BENEFIT PARTY.
ceremony. The young eouple will
The new home ot Mr. and,Mrs. reside on the Cridler farm upon
Wallace Osborn on West' Grand their rtlum from their honeymoon.
- Mlddiernifr Ban.
emoon for a parly for the benefit ot
the Bishop's League's Fund of the
LUNCHEON AT HOME.
Episcopal church. Fourteen tables
A delightful one o'clock luncheon
DINNERS
of cards were In play. Mrs. Arthur was given last Thursday by Mn. K.
Crothers having high score for pe­ B. McIntyre at her home cm Bouih
SiJO h&gt; 7:90 r. M.
dro. Mrs. Harsh powers for auction Washington street. Sixteen guests
bridge and Mrs. Roy Cordes. Mrs. were entertained. Contract was
SUNDAY DINNERS
Gay Jordan and Mrs. Marian B. played and the honors won by Mn.
12:90 ta 2:90 F. M.
Goodyear for contract. Mrs. Isabel R. W. Cook. Mrs. Harold PhllUpe
Pancoast and Mrs. C. P. Lathrop and Mrs. R. A- Orooe.
6 ta 7:90 S. M.
drew the door prizes.

IXEISAJ’

BRIDGE CLUB MEETING.
Mrs. R. O. Finnic was hostess to
the eight members ot her bridge
club Tuesday afternoon for dessert.
Prises were won by Mrs. Leslie Hawthome. Mrs. Robert O'Connor and
Mrs. K. 8. McIntyre.

Four tables of contract were in
play at a dessert bridge given last
Thursday afternoon by Mrs. Arthur
Reasonef at her home on West
Court street. Honors were won by
Mrs. Gordon Fisher and Mrs. OUy
C. KeUer.

'You Can't Match
Glassies Against
Agates"

PARKCR HOUSE

WUllam

Hunters

ChippewoWoolan*
for your trip north
pellent coals and breecbea by

and

black

plaid.

Th*

and double at shoulder head.
Breeches have double seat
DuPont ArMax to make them
more water proof.

$7.50, $9.50, $11

such

hunter.

T. S. BAIRD
Phone 2396

Does WINTER Get

L1
| I
j

YOUR

A Basic Business Rule
Learned at Age 9
“Classic*,’* as wc remember from our boyhood marblc-playing days, were despised imitations of agates,
the true aristocrats of the game. At sight they were
hard to tell apart—but woe unto the lad who tried to
play g)as$ics for agates All confidence and respect
for him fled; and husinesb relationships were there­
after scorned.
The Prescription Drug Store operates on the princi­
ple which this moral teacher. Inferior merchandise
and second-hand standards of doing buuintM are ta­
boo., Oiir trade Is conducted on the tested grounds of
confidence.
.
Our integrity, our bincere
desire to be of superior
service arc well recognized
throughout Barry county.

Learn to depend on us al­
ways Our pkeacriplion
weights and measures arc
accurate. Our merchandise
is hedter. Our prices are
reasonable. We will not let
you down.

Whosc doesn't it gel?

With fuel bills, discum*

forts and dozens of other reasons, winter does
look tough. Well, you can do something about it
. . . Call the Home Lumber Company and

let them show you how lo gel more enjoyment
out of it. A few dollars and a little time will
prove lo you that winter isn't so bad. For in*

stance, storm windows will slop a lot of drafts
and save in fud what you |iay for them. And
you’ll have comfort besides. The Home Lumber
Company’s expert will show you just what your
home needs. •
o COMXMlTABU
thh winter. Call U76.

TUB HO
LUMBER
"IUILM

haStin**

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, IBM

WOODLAND.
i Sunday afternoon with Mr. and1 Now we know why they call cm
Baby Bonds—because every baby in
w. c. t. u. »ui in~i u u»: J"* «"•“
« ar»nd U&gt;i land U going to have to help
hcun« of Mr* J. L. Smith. Friday' RjphD
pay for 'em some day/
MH afternoon. November 13 at 2 o clock.'
McCarley—Hecker.
‘ Mr. and Mr«. Ralph RUe and famMLm Belt B. Hecker, daughter of
Viacb’r B,B«w'm. Mudau®”18’ ' l,X wrre Sunday gtiesu of the Ut- 1
yioU Hecker, became Uie bride
NOTICE OF ABANDOXMRNT OP
HiailWAY
| ter’* lister and family. Mr. and Mrs., of Kenneth £■ McCurdy, ion of Mr.
1 Morris Quigg of Mason.
and Mrs. Will McCurdy of Lake
Mr. and Mr*. Grant Osgood and Odessa, al a ceremony which took
Mrs. Percy Lehman called on Ute pUce al the home of the bride’«
‘formers mother. Mrs. E. P. Osgood, mother- Sunday. November I. Rev.
- -- and• sister.
Mrs CE. -------Skinner of- :Ccn
Don Carrick of Sunfield read the
single ring service in the presence
Grand Rapids Sunoay afternoon.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Mr. and Mrs. Jason Vrugglnk , of 20 guests Miss Rutii E. McCurdy,
SCIENTIST.
(Evelyn ParroUt have returned to sister of Uie groom, was jnaid of
their home ifi Allegan alter a Unee honor mid Wlnfleld F. Alnsworlii.of

■saaH^naflaBBMEH I

INSURANCE

rur runorurc
THE CH UKCntib

WANTS

UFE . AUTO . FIRE
WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON K. McELWAlN'

74 UfcAD fMglBC Milla tr« 200 lo 500
tba, ai,« law br*agla&lt; waa aad taw
»aa*X bu»»u for «al«. Jl«u* Millar. POTATuEH FOR UAl.
Ha«tka«a. Nyuta &gt;. Ha I nil* aaat
taartar a corsan a»J Lal nil* »*rth.
_________ 1L CURX AM* FuDDEB

FOR HAUL

'

Yll.uiw KlTAIIAIlA-r Ur aala
r»l.l, Lu.llrl, rwr, da&gt; l.ut SU1.
Mail V.’ 1. .... Nt . I.i.l L, &gt;u.r
»•&lt;! ut Baohraaa
ins

H-l. sv.t
Mare Bru
W Krlly. _______________
rob RaM&gt;— pue»bf»4 OatorJ

AUCTIONEER
DEWEY REED

Our Service
To PROTECT You CoiuUntiy
Adjust Fairly

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insifrance Co.

»X&gt;K ii*LE—150 Ha rr*4 Hark pullaia. 5
n«a. O&lt;4. r aula- ■ oath, sua nil* ra«l
&lt;.t \V void*a 4. F.,
FOR HAl.E—llmiaa^ u4 lyl va E»al lliair
ralaia of Lora Nor
lap. Ruaueable orva Kara* Rouah.
II 12
a.liklolatratrii, 71 E Oraa.l
ndt dALF^-ll IN*. 4 aaaka oU. Ix&gt;ula
Rkrlia. 3 nilaa ooth vt MIJJIrlillr
11 12
Fob kale—t* p
K*(U. loll* sou
“fit
HotLard. Kiel*

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock

&gt;100 00
FOR RENT

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS

.at.. Rout1
Fhunr F.'l Fl I
aall - &lt;■ iiern&lt;r. Lull .'*11, 5 inn.
ohl. Aho I-. KL...1. ■ I.lau.1 R-.1 |.ul
hl.. May balrhe.l. Fred A. Henna.
a a-1l-hoar r.’l —FT 3
.arret.
Full SALE- •( abl.arr lr 11.
Purebred
La, la ati.l turnip., la It.
Jar**, Lull and l.lar k and tan bound
Mra Mlldi *J Fr.ra, four mile, W*a*
Il &gt;
lunflal,!
FitH SALE —■CO bl&lt; lyl'- Frirli.b While
l.arhorQ I .Ullel., b
ltaa...11.l,|. l.rli. 51Ir. Fred Jordan
Niakailla. Houle a. 1-Lur.a -JI — FJI
FnH SSLS ■ ■I ,1!. 3 year. ..Id Mlle
l larrl.re Stea.n■H.rtb .4
II IT
liaitvt.
WANT Ell—11laalthy w n m an * ll tn ,. “
: with homework
year. ..1.1 ■ a.
and rar. .. 1t batt le.. r.«r. ■ cr . • i — o
iu t.nuly
n&lt;«, or bra.y Id:
i-.C. Flea.a Ut bnlne ... Ilelloi, ar.d *4
-... . 1. .1. a.vu.ri ll rite •
are tn— at •• tit. Arthur 11 E.IJy 111.'
WANTED - Wooilrut ter. r.n .hare, or
3 mile, ea.t &lt;.f
.ill |.ay I &gt;F r.ii.t
Cloirrdala ..r hall rude «iil Doud
,rl&gt;..lh..u.e fl.ar.dl er lartu
II 12

Your Dead Animals Are Worth
FOI( SALE—C
DOLLARS. To assure younelf of
getting the BEST PRICES, oil
FOR HALE

Phone Has lino 2539—We pay the
phone charges!
tf.

FOB SAI

fur

I’JllH FOR RALE

FOR WORK OR PLAY

CARDS of THANKS

' months stay with home folks
• The November irieeUng, of the Rose' E. Wilson of Portland played
Women’s Study Club will be held, the Lohengrin wedding march. The
Tuesday evening at- the schoolhouse. j bride wore a royal blue velvet gown.
I with silver accessories. She carrier
hrbt UNiTnn brethren church. ■
Mr. and Mrs. John Hauer called !
E. o MeShorrr. Paator.
on Mr. and Mrs. Will Mohler of an arm bouquet of white chj-ysanRetiaoae*. 61* E Grand at Pbon* S850 jiajip-g, Monday afternoon and them urns and pink roses and swan। sonla tied with silver ribbon. Mr.
found Mr. Mohler somewhat im­
1 and Mrs. McCurdy are taking a trip
proved in health.
1 through the eastern stales and on
Mrs. Welby Crockford is chairman
of Woodland district for the Santa their return will be at home an the
farm with her mother. The bride
Claus ’Dressmaking Contest, spon­
graduated from Woodland High
sored by the Commercial Club of
i school in the class of 1934.
Hasting*.
Min Gaybrelie Saleve of Detroit
spent the week end with Mr. and &gt; The senior* will present thrir play
lh£,n&lt; Mrs. John Dell and Miss Dorothy next Friday night. November 13 'at
' ‘ ‘ DclL Elwyn Dell of Leslie was home 8.00 o’clock in the school auditor­
over the week end.
ium. It is a mystery farce tn three
Mrs. Glenn England entertained acts.
CHURCH OF OOD.
at two tables of bridge
- last ThursThe cast 1* a* follows: Arne WatRrit Stat* SV Goodyear Balldlnir
day evening High score was won by klns wh0 inherits the hotel-PhyUi*
Mrs. Ralph UHlir. second. Mr*. Rudl Mttmie Rose, fresh from New
Knrl Faul and consoUtion. Mrs york-POllyanna England
Aleck
Robert Born
smart and Ted LewLs. headliners In
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and vaudevUlc—Richard ChristUn and
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
Mr? Fay C- wtng we:e Mr. and Mrs. - LaRUe McMiUm. The sheriff—AmIN CHRIHT.
। Mnnfurd Martin and children. Mrs. qjj Towns. Rast us. a scared colored
Gambia. Pastor.
Orphn VanHuesen and Mrs. Alta.
oayiord Flory. AbsoUm
MorrU of KaUmazoo.
’ Hawkea. on old Inhabitant-John
Rev. Fitch.
accompanied
by Hyn„. Abe Hlggenbotlom. a paying
Clarence Tyler. Howard and Opal BUest—Robert UJery. Billy MMont
Baker and Dorothy HeLse. attended I or th? jp.j Ruby Fllm co - Beatrice
un Epworth League Coventlon at . Muroliy. Claudia. Flo and The Pest.
McCallum Chut.'S
Grand Rapids Saturday
' . Movlt. ■ actresses—ElouLse Smith.
Mrs. Donald Shorno of Ann Arbor Mur„
Heien Brodbcck.
spent tin- week frnd with her mother. | MlM Ab|gail Jones, just a sweet
Mrs ^Lawrence Hilbert.
. young thing—Helen Reesor. Jonas
Mr. and Mrs. H. J Slang of Bat- j ’U1(l Matilda, two mysterious guests
tie Cteek and Mrs. c B Benham of _A|icn Houghton und’Annle RotenFIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH,
Hastings were Sunday guest.* of Mr I (bai
" H,, Parlor.
’ —----------- .*&gt;
■ **-------Phon* 2205. and Mrs. Karl C. Faul and family. |
Misses Ruth and Naomi Seibert. | mk* Emily Post says potato chips
Miss Muriel Haney and Arnold । mny
caten with the fingers.
Macey of Phillipsburg. Ohio, were something telLi us MBs Emily must
Saturday evening guests of Mr. and httVC tried to spear one with a fork.
Mr*. Will Warner and Lester War-j
-------------- ■ »— —-----------A hick town Ls a place where you
ner.
Mr. and Mrs. E. O Shorno spent ' are awakened at 4 A- M. to deliver
Sunday with MLls Elsie Shorno of a message to a neighbor who has no
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
I phone
Allegan.
CHURCH.
—
.----- M(nl»t»r.
Chas Rowlnder and Oreydon Faul
Pbon. 2141
is W Walnut.
ot Grand Rapids were Sunday
guests of Mr and Mrs. Lawrence
Faul Mrs chas Rowlader and MLss
Virginia Faul arc on their way to1
Los Angeles. Cal, to see the former’s
sister. Mrs Vada Harrow, who is
TO
serlovily 111.
Mr and Mrs. Will Warner and
Lester Warner were Sunday guests j
of Mr and Mrs. Walter Posher of j
South Woodland.
Mr. and Mrs. Delmond Culler |
Every day at 9:40 a.m.
spent thesweak end with the latter’s
Ar. Chicago 2:45 P. M.
JEFFERSON ST UNITED BRETHREN sister and Husband. Mr and Mrs
CHURCH.
W c Hubbell of Detroit.
Ono Way Fore $2.75
Mrs. Glenn England and daugh-1
Uts. Pollyanna and Margery, anti I
Jeon England of Hastings spent

NEW BUS
CHICAGO

FOR BALE—If

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubber Pads

I hr

WASTED — Load of alf*lta nr .lo
R C. tlerhtlsrr. Phan* "U©—F
Uarb lake.
FOR HAlF. -Foar bit. tojrlher on W.
tliUlo® Kt. Stuart Clement.
Il fri

Mr,
Mr
Mr
Mr.
Mr.

N-ra Haller.
Ford 11 emo nd
Dalia Datuon.
Roy Dam..nd
Itullln Demur

A M Morning wor
■ t &lt;1. It l M •&gt;&gt;!.la .- • Ttrnj/ht. Ma.
... 1.4 .. ......... -I-”
.m ■ | ■
I..*
i- m
-at. ' Which Wa»f

PREPARE YOUR CAR
FOR COLD WEATHER

fhe Prescription Drug Store

I
I1UVY ■

COOK BROS.. B41Mr«.
K1OI1TY FIRST YEAR

IX BARRY COUXTY. THUER MONTHS.
IN ADVANCE ...................................... *Sa

rvRF.ioN HViiscKirrioxii. oxb yeaB
IN ,^]&gt;VAN&lt;tr
____ _ ___ JXO0

• SEE US FOR YOUR
AUTO, INSURANCE.
WOLViRINE NO EXCLUSION
POLICIES.

CtlMMlKKIUN
rd Wnlria*.

HOT ICE TO CREDITORS

E. R. LAWRENCE A SON
STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY
RELIABLE MAN WANTED to eaU

experience or capital needed. Write
today. MeNESH CO.. Dept. B, Free-

WANTED
upright

contracts.
ticuun, write

261. Detroit. Michigan.

GENERAL AGENT
WANTED!

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
BEEF BY THE QUAR­
TER FOR SALE.

PHONE 3909
HERMAN

authomi
hUaaaUTo *ocb * tnaa w* will oH*r * Ub«r*l
tract vlU Hom* Ofllc* Meric* plua the
aaataunc* ot a Plaid Bnp*eriaor. Otv«

FELDPAUSCH

MEN NEEDED
To Train For
Electric Refrigeration
Air Conditioning

WANTED
FURS AND HIDES

Highest market

banlcal tacU-natloa
alL'y for ualsltg.

25

etlu

Dal
UTILITIES ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE

As Shown (116.50 Hail

Mascot Honeycomb Core, $3.25

rRICB far VEAL. LAMBS BOOS sad
CATTLE for cash at the HaeUnxe Stock
Yards sup EVBBY TUESDAY

nearly

prices

fore telling. Always

MlCinOAR

Farmers, Attention!

or

KOT ICE TO CREDITORS

DRIVE IN COMFORT WITH A
Hot Water HEATER

BAPTIST CHURCH.
B J Adeoc k Mlntalar.
o'in lav ,'1.0,1 at in D'elork. el.aaaa

rail. Flu,4

OASTDiaa

O

The Hastings Banner

5U.95

«0* N. Wails St.. Chicago. Hi.

paid.

la

ths

yoor hunter
friends.

ARCHIE TOBIAS
n-- block north of Hastings
National Bank.

Others ....... $5.95 to $6.95

CAST IRON MANIFOLD HEATERS
WEBLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH

Ford A (Uyon type) ------- 98c
Ford V-8 A Chev$3.98
Ford A (Manifold type) ..$L98
Plymouth And Dodge ...$4.48
THERMOSTATS FOR ALL CARS’.’*&lt;• up

GOOD eating potato.&lt; I

• AUTO LOANS and Refinancing...

BUYING
EAST ORANGEVILLE AND
WEST GUN MARSH.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Patterson and
Morris Canaan motored to Marshall
Sunday where they spent the day church of the united brethren
with ti»e Utter's brother. Al. Canaan | woodland circuit—F. b. aeurin. D. D.
and family. Morris Canaan remain­
ing for the week before leaving here

Scrap Iron, Brail,
Copper, Aluminum,
Zinc, Lead &amp; Botteriei

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
PboM 207

Hasting*

lt ■rou??

5oe» aoid Kundaj.

FOR HALKdonbl* tai
••ft**' car
POIC 8ALF.A UtUc FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

SEE
GEO. M. NEWTON

Fok 8ALX2 ••»*, ol
E. BnuJ f*l
&gt;'&gt;U SAL?

Registered OPTOMETRIST and
f. STATE BT.

ttn High attended the carnival
given at the high school building tn
luroip* Martin by the students and faculty.
&gt;c« ic.! Mrs Prank Marks and Mr*. C E‘j
clay Adana. B*- vanEtt attended the High school'
carnival at Martin Friday night
The enamel of the tourist business j "

GUARANTEED
GENERATORS
Radiator Coven
Make

EXCHANGE

your heater
-IQ
better, most Ford A A
ChevM Exch. W

i

Seats and railings in the public
parks ace being painted. A spirit
of qu'et optlmbm prevails amongst
sult-eleiners.

10-

Radiator

STOP LEAK

39 Plata, 6 volt, Guaran­
teed 1 Year, Exch. $2.79
FREE RECHARGE And loan­
er during guarantee period.

INSTALLED FREE!

OEHHAL INKL'KANCE
AGENCY

ALCOHOL
Frost Shields
Batlas_________
FOB HALE—Mill

Flaihlight

CELLS

JERRY ANDRUS

fifth
COLDS
VW fever

P.95 to $7.00 S4
Value
■

BULBS

Mu.'soKnl
Ls ----------------understood to
for Canada has scarcely been
/------- —
— desire
-------scratched It is revealed that the . greatly peace on earth Indications
Uiflted S'-ates has 25.000.000 motor- ' are that he has the exact piece in
mind. too.

HASTINGS MARKETS

AUTO ROBES

INVADER BATTERIES

Headlight
-

PHILADELPHIA

»P4«
C

39'

ORDER FOSS PUBLICATION.

HASTINGS

TO GIVE YOU READY CASH. OR TO REDUCE
YOUR PAYMENTS, OR BOTH

Electric Suction Cup
Attachment. $ 4 .98
Only
I
Other a 55c I* S2.4S !

&gt;„ ...

3
Felt Draft

MATS
AU Can

29
SPARK
PLUGS

Fidelity Corporation of Michigan
10—2nd Floor Hustings National Bank Bldg.

Phone 2307

QUALITY FURNITURE
BRAND NEW LIVING
ROOM SUITES —Sturdy
construction, beautiful,
high grade' upholstering.
Regular price SQQ.95
$69 50—ONLY OC
PIANOS—
$4 a.50
Standard makes I O up

KITCHENETTE SRT —
Painted. Newest $4.95
style—ONLY—
■»
WALNUT CHESTS OF
DRAWERS
*3*5
95

WALNUT

DRESSERS

*3”

J8 45

OIL HEATER— $4 .00
Good condition— I
ROCKING CHAIRS and
OCCASIONAL CHAIRS

75' 1, ’125
BRIDGE, FLOOR ond
TABLE LAMPS—

50‘ • •’T0
YOUTH S BED — SIM­
MONS—Complete, Used
Only 1 Month $4 A .95
ONLY—
I ■»

STOVES. ODD PIECES.
—CABINETS, STANDS,
BOOKCASES, Etc., Etc.

XA.-JOO

DON TAFFEE
49

IWK

MARK'S STORES, INC

302 NO. BROADWAY

HASTINGS. MICH.

^Two blocks from Main St., ’tis true—
but—two blocks from high prices too

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, NOV. 12, 1936
, . ............................................................ .

Barry BypathsISM

SECT)

FMKISCO iSw-jSvS{MILK CONIPMIY
H LI n HILLS:e^S==! STIRTS INJUNCTION

proxrexs. Mr. Matthew*, secretary price and
of lhe company, went lo the Veter- were latizfl
an*' Hospital, explaining that he was
-------try ing ------to get
- ••
tiie
-------matter
••—
straightened nnwa
HOME I
GUt gnd a5keJ for another contract . Glsu
•
Nr JANE CAMERON
the public would enthuse over blue 1
for the months of October. Novem­ teresUng and |
' prints and meciianical drawing* lo |
ber and December. The hospital vember t al the horns
—--------------------- 1 the same extent, financially, us 1
was glad to give tne contract, but Erway when they rcceh
* w,‘at an opportunity for Jour-'
pu, rsr,,'
!■■■■. nalists thLs stork race Ls. and they । (Continued from page 1. Sec. 1) ; they do moving pictures.
tiie company wa.4 only permitted to
to be--------^passing ..
It up. Th*
most
------- --------.... ww,.
[
T7
Z
~ । On lhe
the way Dock lo
to the camp1 year contract to keep out of the claimed was to be distributed among deUyer milk for seven, days in the an." Tiie leaders, Mrt
unjisual will over made, several him- , pinnacles on both side*. The south- .
stopped ai the Hollywood Bowl. I milk business In the Battle Creek the producer. of milk who supply month of October. whf&gt;» the contract and Mrs. Florence Norton.
[a
dred1 uniall
-_-»i---------------------clUaens for m
Toronto ,j
to!em
: •■••• end of «■*
the bridge
”'™*" and IU ap- j B
* natural amphitheatre
ainpnnneaire Just
juxt outout-! area.
urea. Mr.
wr. Ashley
Asmry did
oiu not tninic
think he tiie dealers of Battle Creek. What was again cancelled by the secretary------- -—■— ---------- . ——-j
rirnarh
rill------------rlirhl through
IhrAiiuh
th, FrePrr. ' aj.de
j. Ml
.7__ . where
.
.frequent
............ I ‘ was
.
......
.
. .because authority he had to make such a of agriculture
Several new haU and coilw. y* ।
,
.support
. av
fur
. .....
lhe ......
next decade V.
or .W*.
two rbroach
—----- -----cut
right
----- the
o..f UVII/WIASU
Hollywood
WUTIC
violating
hU Icontract,
'। ....I
i&gt;,« personal, human angles to tin
In in
.
....................
,,...................
,
,
_not. at. di-mand, und Just how he figure.-, tiie
What authority Mr. Drake had for ltnu w« shown. Fourteen m*mand the
Mdlo.
in wane
some,. nixrnS
places marine
making itit. outdoor plays
and,
pageants are j he
was selling
al wholesale,
. uw rw.-.i.d u,.v ru&gt;«&lt; it
tn, .. necessary to move some of the put on. A troupe of esthetic dancers | retail, and was making his sale out-. »!09 per month have not been ex­ taking the course he d:d. what bers were enrolled at the first me«lfvpui
v
mi
i
c
r
\
i
if
“
U
P
,Of
“
EVERLY HILLS, CALIF, lot of political chatter.
huge coast defense guns. The Pre- vere rehearsing for some futureJ zide of the city; but the injunction plained. The company declined to recomniendatlons Ke made to the big.
—Now that the casualty I
...
sldlo u one of the oldest military p^y an(j we
down very close, restrained him from entering Into। pay it. claiming that it would wipe authorities at Washington, and the . Th* December meeting win b*
real reason for cancelling the con- belt! with Mrs. Fred Barlow
in Has*
. ____
I [^ervat2&gt;^,to^-r
2Ltl&lt;he1i'Ma
IUd a1*1**
10 ‘the
and w»»nw »eni
them iw
for any further contract *iai
with me
the nwhos- out all its profit, and that they did_______________________
lists are drifting in, there'sj Aflni«oytaNo»mbwl&lt;cCiUX'^;"^
Mr~-r~
“;'»
« tront
•«"»"»
। not believe that he had authority tract, are not known definitely. It IsUngs.
1* j Ungs.—Mn.
Mrs. Frond*
FrancU Qorfaaas,
Qorhaau &gt;«»cy..
Bqcy,.
talk nf action m cut dmvn the I "No1 To° 8«nslble' by Lanora Mat- | b*111’ t2abl .
J* * 8pan‘ ‘ whlte
11 an
P,UJ
talk of action to tut down the I tlng|y WfOer and 1IluHrated by lhe
h?uie,n°u ence between • rehearaal and the; r appears that after he sold his | to make such a demand or to cause hoped that this case may be tried tn ।
•••
;
'ithe cancellation of the contract, the federal district court and that!
HICKORY CORNERS.
,
needless fatalities that mark baby artist. Ruth Steed. Mrs. Bteed occupied bF the
c,u.b u aU । finished product where they nave. Baltie Creek budness Ashlev In-1
every gunning season.
j U the only one who can make a ' t‘»*t remain* of the original Span- thf
.
lr
war
paln
t
Btu
t
MMturncj
onl,
.
.
,
r
”
,^
s
,
ey
,
n
‘
i
.
------7
—
-------------.7
—
~
-----------------------—
.
When
ask
“
d
to
show
his
authority,
it
msy
be
determined
whether
Mr.
1
Miss
Marcelene
Campbell
of
Hazuu-ir war pumi ami costumes on
eserv gunning srasini.
mic
wuuh&gt;.
inoae a : l«h .buildings.
....
.uI«
KoHe
1- wiuy
.....V
and Brr Inspired by a large sym- tended 10 *tart 1,1 the dairy buslneita; ,he produced a part
of Lhe...
AAA Act. Drake-------------was exceeding
h authority' tings rp-.nt the week end with th*
.
_*
j
.
Greenhorn* prowl thr glade, firing1 baby's neck against his chest and
Duu&lt;un«sand air Inspired by a large sym..
......
Prom
here
we
continued
east
'
phony
orchestra.
At
tiie
rehearsal
[
near
this
city
—
making
butter
and
P
ass
*
d
in
i
93
&lt;
which
the
officers
of
in
what
he
did
in
this
w.uv-.. v. ... .....
... u. uu* matter, alto home folks.
' ohnnv nrrhxlrn At th* r*hzi**nl
at anything that moves. All who Inake *' "J»«t rtebt." And the exProm here
company
and their attorney L"- whether the drparlnu-nt of agrlcul-’ Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Borden o!
pression m
in 1the eyes is natural loo. -slonf Marina Boulevard and Em- their face* were homely, theli hair I other dairy products. It 'ecmx that
c®r
can afford hunting
ne..^
tern declared unconstltu- tun- und’-r the circumstances, had Kalamazoo were Saturday evening
A cute story and -natural" Ulus- barcadero. past the ferry docks1 bedraggled, their bare feet dirty 1 hi* investment here was larger lha.i. Iirve
nrV‘* lias
11
license* and hightrations.
where
where we
we landed
landed the
lhe day
day before
before and
and aa phonograph
phonograph record
record replaced
replaced; he
be anticipated
aiuiciputed He
He bought
bought aa farm
farm llbnal by the Supreme Court of the the right id cancel the contract rn- guests of their parent;. Mr. and
powered rifles art
^gnd along the wharves where, when I the orchestra, and although It was I *nd built a fine plant and. as u re- United States. The company'.', re- u-red Into in July and the later one Mn. O. Haynes.
eligible. They rarely
ithey are not having strike*, nearly | not an Inspiring sight, it was per- ’nit. owed sums to several firms and quest fur him to explain how he had intend into on the first of October. I Clayton Haynes of Baltie Creek
cookie'/ Woraot'to1 taste 'haFone ” 'orty million
tons
’of freight
j spiring and
very...a
educational.
hit big game, but
It would seem that Mr. Drake’and end
J his mother. Mrs. O- Haynes,
——
l
n.niix.
..r arc
r~a„v.,
.ni,i„_
------ —■ "
i indisiduuh which debts hr was un­ authority under on illegal art to
seem able lo blast
...
’ ; annually loaded on ships to all parts
After dinner we didn't feel like able to pay Hl&lt; creditors felt that make such a demand upon Lhe Sun- the ucretary of agriculture ought spent Sunday with his sister and
&lt;
down humans al any
Ever since The fllrenin. Reautv
,oUoWed,?n around, going right lo bed. but there was I w'lille Mr Ashley personally had ri.se Hill Dairy Company has never to be mud* lo show any right they family of Lake Odessa.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Stewart
Water*
..... further
tuiMin convvu- lxt'n k’‘s»'rred But the contract had to make a demand of $209 a
Kver since Tne Bleeping Beauty the bay as far as we could and fin- [nothing else to do unless we dared been restrained from
cancelled. a&gt;. we have explained, month from the Sunrise Hill Dairy spent Sunday evening *1 Jason Wil­
**•' Presented. my four c5llklrr'1 of .ally ran out of road and liad to re- : to drive the car and take a chance tracts with tiie Veterans’ Hospital t
assorted ages and tastes have been I trace our steps part way and cut nn ?ftt*n&lt;r ir*&lt;t
there would be nothing to prevent bv the 'r«eiary of agriculture, it is Company, to be pa.cl into lhe treas- son's.
mount guides' heads
imitating the old witch 1,1 the play ' round me hills lo get back on our *ucn a' comfortable night that we them from forming a corporation to
upon representation* made ury of the Kalamazoo-Buttle Creek
there'd be handsome
and talking about her. 1 wondered route to Loa Angele*. In the parts eouui riet^in the caMf we couldn't gather the milk, pasteurize it and,t,v
by v,r
Mr Drake.
milk district organization, and by
n'jW"
trophies over many
«ho played the part that made such of the city which we visited, and I find our way back so wc started deliver it to tiie hospital. In that1 Tiie Sunrise company was paying 'hat orgunizaUon dlitributed among
a mantelpiece in this
an impression. I knew it must have believe it U true ot the whole city. I out for Hollywood and got there way they would be able lo liquidate for milk to farmers of Burry county 'he milk producers of the Battle
been expwrtly done and ran t u bit there are no home* with yards and' XithoJt eve
aSte B .S ee
Ashley's debts, as there was a fair a higher price than the Haiti** Creek urea..
land.
surprised u&gt; fcam it was Mrs Pratt , garden*, everybody live in apart- We went m wtroer BrouS”^
’
further
are.
goracn*. everytxxiy uvea tn apart- ( We went Co Warner Brother* Tlu&gt; margin of profit in the delivery ot Creek milk dealers were paying ut., "I..-gal‘ ■ questions
cal interest**^
8*Cond ln °*
&gt;■ &gt;iment
ment buildings
buildings built
built right
right up
up to
to the!
the Iatre
alre and
and saw •■Rn.it.Ur
"Boulder Dam" and 1600 to 1700 pounds of milk and that time to producers of milk who whether Mr .Drake can be called a
so the old story runs—who got goshthe contracted--price*
sidewalk*. This Is the only /way Out ’Earthworm Tractors’,
both of cream dally- at
- ------------------------------- supplied them with the milk they federal employee; whether he has
awfully tired of being shut at by
- - ; the six hundred tliouxand fnhabi-1 these pictures being only a week 1 Accordingly these creditors formed sold in Baltic Crtek. Therefore IL legal cutharlty to act in such a ma*.city slickera. So he made n complete
Botanical
American;1--------tanu---------could •possibly
in the city.
so VIU.
old. We
frit UU1U*
quite urouii
proud 0I
of ’ wh*t
known
,hc Sunriw Hili could not b-- claimed Hint the Sun­
- - name*
- of --------------——&lt; live —
---J, For
V. mj
” I .ril
suit of broad awning stripes, al­ towns
iwns are: Leaf. N. C_; Stem
a* It la
lx square
&lt;nn»r» 1| ourselvea
^i..
.when we returned home1 1 Dairy iCompany. of which Andrew rise Hili Company, in underbidding fact that that act bus been invahStem. M.
B C
C.;t i.as
is onlv
only about *L«
six mi
miles
ternately white and black. He fig­ Buds. III.; Petal, Miss.; Blossom, | and bounded on three sides by wa- as easily as we would in Hastings
Mattht-w- of this city was the x-cre- Battle creek dealers for the Veter­ dutrd. The question of the legality
jter. Another reason we heard of |
Hubert Cook.
tary. Ttliis was done for the purpose ans' Hospital milk supply.- waa able of the milk dealers' organisation of
ured Unit ought to save him. but. Tex.; and Branch, Wisconsin.
of cur/ylng on the business with the to get the busint-a by unfair compe­ the cities of Knhmazoo and Battle
on his next trip Into the woods, an
• • •
| but of course do not believe, for not
Veterans' Hospital Mr. Matthew* tition. nor because it wax paying less Creek Li also involved in the cancel­
If I could write what I feel 11 having lawns 1* Hurt lhe fog Is
AMNIIAI ADl/irc fllUFM
amateur potted him Ihe first shot.
111UIVtN
___________________
... We
went in person to lhe hospital, en­ fur 1U milk; because it was actually lation of
the two contract...
At the inquest, the coroner said: would rave about ihe pungent ungldenw throughout most of lhe year
into a contract for the three paying more. The company war, would think the question ought to be
"We know you didn't mean lo of shucked walnuts, the crackle of , that It would be Impossible to mow |
TO DEER HUNTERS tered
J ’ -------- -- whether the Veterans'
‘
months of July. August and Sep­ hauling the milk from its plant. determined
kill poor Eph. but how in thunder dry leaves under your feet, lhe In- them. Tiie people who love homer,,
tember this year Tills was done in Just cast of thLs city, to the has- Hospital has a right lo award a con­
did you think a man dressed like vlgoraUng air and keen relish for iand &lt;*nien* live across tiie bay in
A.a In ntx-n competition. Ihe Sunrise Hill, pital, which
much .uc.io
farther than
wmvu was
»» muui
u«n tract to somebody outside the Bat­
fall garden foods that go with tiie
"* "
*1
him could be a deer?"
Dairy, being lhe lowest bidder, was the Battle Creek dealers would have tle Creek urea, when both the milk
have more room to spread out.
|
Checking Hunting
."I didn't think he was a deer." atmospheric change. The walnut
awarded the contract. They em- to haul their milk. Yet if it hud been and the price are satisfactory to the
odor
is
unforgettable,
and
*0
I*
the
We slopped in Palo Allo and.
Conditions
confessed the remorseful one. "I
ployed
Mr.
Ashley
to
pasteurize
the
permitted
to
continue,
the
company
hospital It seems like unwarranted
stain if you get It on your hands.
drove through the grounds of Stan.
.. ,
,
.
thought he was a zebra."
ford Univeralty with iu beautiful I V1:0 lh*n«s {_or &lt;‘eer »unters to milk. The hospital authorities state would have made a fair profit, so interference by the government in
for' b“‘des “voldtog gun that the company furnished them a Attorney Barnett claims The con­ the buxine.1 s of a company that was
If you don't believe Leila Lambert, sandstone buildings roofed with red I *’l,Sh
,ost ln tllf woo&lt;ls fine grade of milk, with very low tract was obtained in open compeli- paying farmers in this vicinity a
the novelist. Is improving read tile. When former President Hoover I acc'^”biT MUST indeed be true that provi­ "Yours—With Love” in November visited Hastings a short time ««o
*un’a,?d bacterl* count, and they were well lion, its bid being lhe lowest. The higher price than was paid to farm­
; milk It furnished was entirely ac- ers who supply Battle Creek dealers
dence luuks after idiots and McCall’s. An amusing half hour.
he never even stopped at our house k, 2’* l,,exal game, are included by pleased with it.
Aint life grand wnen the wind
The Sunrise Hill Company re- ceptable to the hospital authorities with milk. For the farmers who were
drunkards. Else how could all such
or called me up. and I have con- sU,T ,r"en
th,e d’P»Hment of conis howlin' outside and the snow I
thf‘,lr “"nual ,*ord °r ceived its pay for the two full1 at Buttle Creek. But this did not supplying the Sunrise Company witli
blowin’ and the bin is plum’full I
The very newest thing—growing eluded that he probably felt alight- ■
advice
dvlce lo
to thQ
those
~ who go nor:h
north *to
“ ha
bag“ months, but did not receive pay fur prevent lhe secretary' °f agriculture milk tnls Is a vital question, and it
of coal? All you have to do Is I
I rude with n prize specimen yes­ your vegetables in a chemical tank. ed because we treated him the same "
a
buck.
milk
delivered
fur
nine
days
in
SepI
from
cancelling
the
contract
on
is
surely
one
to
that
company.
to call Smith Bras., Valle &amp; Co.. I
terday. He seemed lucid enough un­ You plant in a shallow tank partly way in Palo Alto. In San Jone we
lembei.
That
contract
with
the
I
m
»!
September
9.
on
representation*
If
slept
can
be
taken
to
test
the
full of water and to which Ute nec­- caved in
over.
and they will give you prompt I«
&gt;1. Report any evidences of overvomruci wiui uicmwtn another fender, the
Uir fellow
’
m*d&lt;*.
so
it
is
claimed
by
Mr.
Drake,
arbitrary
course
taken
in
cancelling
service and quality coal.
|
was what fooled me. If ever I ride essary soil elements have been add­• In frontof us stopped very sud-1 browsing ob.-.&lt;-rred in your humlnx i P*'-** was cancelled, so it is clainiec.1 acting as Ute adminlttraior for lhe; tiie two contracts, their legality
• denly wiliiout signaling U&gt; avoid ' ftre*. Brow»e*lini-* in early or well-1
'he secretary of agriculture upon
with him again, which heaven for- ed. A scientist named Arthur Pills­
Battle Creek-Kalamazoo milk dis-ought
—• to
’ •-be " determined.
J ’‘It doesn't
'
•
bury brings us this idea and says• hilling a dog. but we still ii*d one advanced stages are indications that j representation* made to it by Mr.
adrninKtra- trict. The matter was taken up by 1 seem as if our government ought lo
tluit when it is made practical, wet good one left and a whole Insurance decr food supplies are being de-1 Merie,Draki\ jrho
: lor of th.- Bittle Creek anj Kala- Mr. Barnett, as ultonicy for the be in the businew of stepping tn and
„
, lean grow a years supply al thef: policy so there was nothing to wor- pteled.
We had a set of ovc.,w
U&gt; but- prcsent
' mazoo milk .district
Sunrise Hill Dairy Company, with raying that a dairy company, pay­
vcrcoat
exoerl-­• ry about.
present monthly cost. In an experi
| 2. Report io conservation officers
tons, the tup off ot a stop signal and ment tank potatoes produced be­
The question involved in tiie Illi- tiie department ot agriculture at ing the same or u better price to
•
The trip from here on to'Sanla ithe shooting ot buck deer that have
gatloJi of the Sunrise Hili Dairy, Washington. Letters were written. milk producers than Bailie Creek
tween two and three thousand bush-- Maria where we stayed all night i an aluminum lag in one ear
we arrived. So we didn't actually
Company against Mr. Drake Is replies received, but no sathfac'.lon dairymen are paying, must be denied
s wm quite uneventful, except that' Game men of the department
the right to compete in selling milk
hit anybody, this being due. I think, 104 buahels. Flowers grown by thiss lhe names of these old Spanish want all available information on whether he hud authority lo act. as was obtained.
PHONE 2257
HASTINGS
to his holding dead on the murk method orc twice as large. Nastur­• towns could not help but make you ; over-browsed deer yards this win- administrator of lhe Battle Creek1 While this correspondence was Ln to a government hospital, when tha
instead of lending it by a few laches, tiums grew so fast that they fellI study up your history, to find that Ur and report* of heavy browsing
as one should when one's target is down under their own weight. Near­- they were originally a chain of tn any yard will be checked and will
moving, lie hopes for better luck ly all the plants had lo have sup-’ , en'y * t’ne religious miss ions, prove helpful to the department.
next time.
- founded In the reventeen seventies The numbered tags in the ears of
Yet there was no rush. There Tn a to plants can be harvested in&gt; and extending all the way f~*~■ deer,
■
- - from ■buck
several• score of- which
rarely is. And that's the funny part March after having been planted in1 Mexico to San Prancbco,
; have been tagged, help show how far
about an aulomaniac's reactions. December, and some of the plant*s
Santa Maria. California, Friday. 1 the deer have moved away from the
It's the only funny part—the rest Is grew as large as 25 feet Ln heightt July 24th, 5181 miles out We beat all yards by the hunting season.
and 40 In width. That sound* pretty/ previous records last night by gotragedy.
Conservation men here advise
big to me. but the article U taken1 Ing to bed al eight-thirty and get­
hunters to "take it easy” if they get
irojn an authentic.-source.
ting underway at seven this momThe Simpson Affair.
lost in the woods. The early sensa4ng. Santa Mafia i* about lhe size
HE simple name of Simpson
I/&gt;l3 of "bright idea* come to u'v of Hastings and the county fair tlons of fear or panic should be
has become practically a house­ Wo cap plant a mess at sweet cphj
suppressed as quickly as possible. If
hold word in America, but 'Us said ui the bread tins for Christmas din­ DaVid and Marlon were quite dis- the hunter is hopelessly mixed up
in tiie woods with night falling and
millions of English people haven't ner I sliould think ypu. could pUt
OPfidihtM to Have U* drive Mway
a
gun shot faits to bring an arwweryobr wiiote garden in a' wa*h tub without paying-them a vlall. Prom
not in their public prints. It's an- And harvest It between; washings/It hete on. Or. in fact, from San Fran- Ing signal. It would be better for lhe
would be quite a temptation to drop Clapo gn. to Loa Angele* we began individual to bed down where he is
a tew potato eye* tn ihf gold Ash teeing new kind* of tree* and vege­ under a lean to with a campfire,
from home to hear the nsws.
It Il's true, as exclusively reported bowl, sprinkle |n a lUtl* chemical tation that were strange to us. It than to strike out in the dark.
over here, that his majesty invited and behold! .new potatoes and tep quite a While before ire were Searching groups may come out in
a premier and primate—two ot the whales for d!-uter. I don't know the •Ute Wa could even tell an orange time and no one can be lost long If
he stays tn one place and sends up
highest cards Ir. the whole deck— name of this magical chemical, but tree when we saw it. but as wc got a smoke.
MAURICE A.
MARSHALL L. COOK
to mind their own business, he set Mamma Dionne must have got a further south we would occasionally
f-iJUre
President
•niff of it.
,
■
If there is plenty of daylight left,
the tunc for the daily press of his
Me some ripe fruit mixed in with
1919
the green one* and then we knew the lost hunter should try to reckon
realm to dance by.
What became of Alvin York? I what they were. The road moet of his position as best he can and then
However, the British newspapers have often wondered, and the
start out In a leisurely gait to con­
never did develop the high arts of Country Home answers In an Ar­ the way wa* right on the shores of
serve
his
energies.
He
may
find
a
keyhole peeping and transom lift­ mistice Day article of Mr. York's the ocean. We passed through oil fire tower, a telephone’line or a
ing tc the extent practiced by a doing* since he refused piovle of­ field*, many of the well* being drill­ fire-line truck trail which will lead
certain peculiar school of Ameri­ fers and the like and returned to his ed right hi the ocean, with the oil him In time lo other hunters or a
can Journalism. With them, an Eng­ native hills In Tennessee. His pic­ being pumped from them directly hunting camp.
into tankers, anchored farther out
lishman's house still Is his castle/- tures show a well-fed. competent, from shore.
though It be a glass house. Or even keen-looking man of probably fortyTHE NEW RUSSIA.
I don't know Just when we enter­
a royal palace.
five. a good farmer and family man. ed greater Los Angeles, but we
At the First Methodist Episcopal
But some of the London gosslp- He married the girl who waited for thought we had driven al least church Sunday evening Rev. Jones
wrlters must be so swollen up with him upon returning home and has thirty miles along Ventura Boule­ will speak on "The New Russia."
strangulated copy they've probably six sturdy children. 400 acres of vard before we came to North Hol­ Can any good come out of Russia?
had to have their clothes let out land, good buildings, blooded stock lywood where we had selected our What is it all about? The five min­
Now. tf baply 'twas purely a Yankee and Is showing his hill neighbors cabins, but here we found that it ute question and answer period will
affair—instead ot being, as It were, how to succeed by the modern waa still twelve or fifteen miles to be devoted to the subject. "Do we
People often wonder who are the men responsible for the Op­
fifty-fifty—how those boys would love methods as taught In our agricul­ the center of the city. We had driv­ need a Federal law to curb lynch­
tural colleges. After the war when
en over fifty-four hundred miles ing?" Since 1882 over 5.000 people
he could have had anything for the
to get to Los Angeles and IU bet have been lynched In this country
eration of a bank. Some of them are seldom seen in the bank,
asking, he obtained a good highway
where
the
law
says
that
"No
one
you could easily drive that far right
running into his nallv* hills and a
shall be deprived of life, liberty or
F. In his first message to ths modem school building, (consolidat­ in Los Angeles without going on the
but nevertheless the success of that institution depends on
property without due process of
•next congress, our newly-elected ed) so that his and his neighbors' same street twice.
We unloaded our freight and
President—should come right out children could have the educational
them to a great extent.
passengers
at
the
Tower
auto
COATff
GROVE
GROUP.
and advocate the following things: advantages that he missed. His war
court in North Hollywood and be- ! The Coats Grove extension clast
First—Taking steps lo collect, or record is this— He captured single­
fore eating lunch had them find n held their first lesson at the home
at least try to collect, what those handed, with a Springfield rifle and driver to show us the town In the
of Mrs. Andrew Townsend for an
The directors of a bank are an excellent measure of its worth,
defaulting debtor nations owe us; an automatic revolver, Hill 223. com­
I c»n‘l «*« now why we
„vu&gt;H «&gt;
*ne
day UI
meeting
on novemocr
November 0.
fl. The
second—Instructing the proper de­ pelled the surrender of 132 privates, were afraid of driving around San all
meeting was called to order by the
soundness and integrity. We are proud to point publicly to the
partments promptly to deport all a major, three lieutenants, 35 ma­ Francisco with only thirty-six chairman. Mrs. Kendall Coats, who
chine
guns
and
killed
20
ot
the
en
­
aliens illegally admitted to this coun­
Mu»r»
-rot Inal
___ . .....
.
Lsquare mllM
miles lo
to get
lost In
in. whnn
when held a short
business session. Four­
try and therefore here in defiance emy in the encounter.
men who serve on our board. Many have been directors from
Los Angeles and its suburbs has teen members answered to roll call.
of our Immigration laws; third°'rwi
*
^
U
]
0USa
&lt;T
d
.v
.
o
pui
iuck
owner
wm
served
ut
I A pot luck dinner was served at
This made me laugh: A teacher
authorizing Immediate action so that was explaining to the class about
Our driver first took us around to noon. The meeting was then turned
ten to thirty years. They all lend their active guidance to the
all unnaturalized communists and Egyptian wonders and told them see. externally, the principal movie over lo the leaders. Mrs. Laurence
-------- . —
anda .u„
then■’ chMe and Mrg Floyd Klmble whQ
other foreign-bom enemies of the that the Pyramids took 2,000 years studios around Hollywood
shaping of this bank’s policy.
government which shelters them— to build. "Must have been a govern­ through the residential districts of gave the lesson on "Fall Fashions."
including especially such of these as ment project." was the guess of one Hollywood and Beverly Hills to see The trend of the fashions is neck­
the homes of most of the celebri­ lines higher, waist and skirts slight­
are on federal relief rolls or hold of the boys.
ties We of course enjoyed this, but ly shorter. New fabrics were dis­
private jobs to the exclusion of citi­
Look at these pictures, and we believe that you will recog­
zen*—shall be put out of this coun­
The cutest little crocheted set the trip was of no permanent value, cussed and samples shown. The next
as
if you would put me In front of meeting will be at Mrs. Wayne Off­
try and kept out.
Z
shown In the November Capper's
nize some of them as business men with whom you do business
any of these homes today I couldn't ley's December 18.
Well. If he did do those vary Parmer, for girls from 5 to 12. It Is
for the life of me tell you who lived i
things, there wouldn't be, as Adsm done In popcorn stitch and consists there, with the possible exception
every day. This bank renders a persona) service, and you are
LOWER CROOKED LAKE.
Bede orjee said, a dry throat left
of Mary Pickford's. After we had
Mr. and Mrs. Allison R. Louden
among the kind of Americans I trot crochet and Just right for chill seen several of these beautiful spent Sunday with their daughter
invited to consult with anyone of these men. He is your banker.
days.
around with.
homes, we, or at least I. had kind and husband. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
IRVIN 8. COBB.
of * suspicion that he knew we Nash of Vicksburg.
GROUP NO. 3.
Mrs. Pauline Rupe and Mra. Helen
The first meeting of the Extension were Just hicks from the slicks of
DEATH OF DAN ZANT.
Club Oraup. No. 3 met Nov. « at Michigan, and that lte» could tell Hovenlr spent Wednesday with Mrs.
Don Zant of Charlotte, who
us anything he wanted to without Edith bouden.
Donald Kingsbury ipent the week
travelled for 35 years through this Green street. An outline of the year's fear of contradiction. However
end in Hastings.
district for the Edwin Moore Co.. course was given and discussed,
Mrs. Virgie Reid, Mrs. Vesta
died Tuesday at his home. He was Some new and interesting patterns Crawford, sure enough there was
well known to the merchants of were shown including collars, hats her husband. Franchot Tone, In the Harthy. Mrs. Neva Tate and MIm
Hastings.
and bereU.
driveway fussing around the car Phyllis Reid of Hutlnga spent Mon­
— though wu.
and even
this vuvuuMwuv.
circumstance d*y at Prank Roush's.
Living was cheap In the old days.
In England the King can make a
ot prove anything In HollyMr. and Mr*. Roy Maynard ol
Junior's happiness required a penny | common man great. Over here it
did restore our confidence In Kalamazoo were Saturday callers
stick of licorice Instead of gasoline. । takes a majority of the delegates.
Ide. I won't try to give you at Frank Roush's.
"

&gt;n i

I

und Kalamazoo milk district, as he
I did in grttlrix the contract cancelled,
I It i&lt; claimed that Mr. Drake's work
। l« now under the
lhe direction of th
th&lt;-—— ------- _»
federal j
department
of agriculture
• Mr. Drake insisted that .the Sunrise
1 (Hill Dairy Company niust |*iy to

B

I

SMITH BROS.
VELTE &amp; CO.

T

DIR

TORS

1

I

HASTINGS CITY BANK

TELEPHONE lioa

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 12,HJ4

HHSSanHMaaaBBBMBBB'

£jt. Flora M. Taylor. Waiver of

COURT HOUSE NEWS

M' “*nUW

Athton Wilcox Burpee. PetlMARRIACE LICENSE.
| »U&gt;n for Adfnr. filed, waiver of noBenjamln A. Adcock. Jr. City ... 31 tlce filed, order appointing Admr.
Marjorie O. Plfield. Irving Twp.
16 : entered, bond of Admr. filed, tetter*
-----------------------------I of administration Issued.
order
----------------------------------------'limiting settlement entered, petition
PKOBATE
COURT.
Est Albert. Cole Release of Odn
hearing of claim* filed, notice lo
creditors issued.
filed, discharge of Gdn. tesued.
erediizw.
Est. Ahan Oak*, inventory filed. ' Est. Tillie E. Llchty. Discharge of
Est. Andrew SchafThauier. Re­ executor Issued, estate enrolled.
, Eat. Annie Wolcott. Petition for
newal bond of executor filed
as- license lo mortgage filed.
Est. Mary A. Burgess. Order —
signing residue entered, discharge- of, Est. Robert T. Martin. Bond ot
executrix
filed,-----------letters-------------------testamentary
executor issued, estate enrolled.
-1-----------—------Est. Nancy J. Winter., Petition for tesued. order limiting settlement en-'
license to sell filed
I tetvei

OUR GREAT

PRETHANKSGIVING

YEAR END
BARGAIN
CA

HARDWARE ITEMS
ENAMELED DUTCH OVEN

$1.25

PYREX TOP OF STOVE

VALUE FEATURES ON
THESE LEADING HOME APPLIANCES
Then

NOTHING TO PAY
UNTIL APRIL
Liberal

TRADE-IN
Allowances Make Prices Lower

NEWEST MODELS,
LATEST IMPROVEMENTS
AT MOST ATTRACTIVE PRICES EVER!

WARE SET 13 Pieces)

$2.65

ROASTERS, ENAMELED

AND ALUMINUM . ...85i to $2.50
PYREX CASSEROLES ..95c to $1.50
PYREX CUSTARD CUP SET

Wire Pot With 6 Cups

39c

ELECTRIC HEATER

$1.19

10 QT. WATERLESS COOKER.$3.25
KITCHEN SHEARS$1.00

PARING KNIVES,
(Good Quality)

15c

KITCHEN LIGHTING UNIT

AND

LONG TIME EASY PAYMENT
PLAN THAT'S A WINNER
SPECIALS ON COMBINATIONS. TOO
Tire home rnnvenirnrrs
,
-­
—this easy way. This look- to be the biggest carnival of bargains w
ever had—and with al] lire latest models and many improvements you profit from every nig value feature. Don’t wait another week.

GAS RANGES

Your Opportunity to
Own and Enjoy the latest

HARDWARE
142 E. State

For
10 Days
Only

tin- one

Allen of Lake Odessa
Among th- line lectures heard will Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Gllbcr'.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Klahn of Lo- was one by Dr. James Pollock of | Dickinson, Mi. and Mrs. Philip DaiAngeles, cal., spent Tuesday and Ann Arbor, whose subject was "CHI- । hau.-^r. Charles Dalhauur, Ward
Wednesday with Mr and Mrs John zenship and Adult Education " He I Smith and son. Mr. and Mrs Frank
said. "Wc must improve citizen ■ Haines Bimie Reynolds and WIIMr. and Mrs Roy Kauffman and thlnking and simplify government ', bum Lundstrum.
three children of East Campbell He'fell Uial the women of America I Mim Bertha Woodard of Battle
spent Sunday with her parent,. Mr were not a* well informed
’ as those Creek spent the week end nt hcr
and Mrs Bert Me.secar. and family, of other countries
home here.
1 Vaiifihn Geiger was home from
Mr,. J P Mohler, county presi- j Mr. and Mrs. Elwln Nash ....v.
and son.
Phone 2331
.Kalamazoo over the week end and dent,
ent. who aLo
also attended this meetnwc!- ! Edward,
KHu-arri went lo
tn Ann Arbor
Arhnr Tliurs-Fiittrs.
; his cousin Deward Strong of Clarks- Ing spoke of the talk glvcp by A.; day. Their daughter. Mrs. James
. Ville spent lhe week end with lum. , Lawrence Brcwn of Minneapolis, his ! McLaughlin, of Ypsilanti who had
’ '• - , been visiting here, returned to her
| home.
। The Women's Literary Club met
Wednesday afternoon al the Llbrary for Peace Day. with Mrs. Jea.sc
I Garlmger as hostess. Response—
j What Patriotism Means to Me.
Am-rlca the Beautiful was sung by
I the Club symposium "The Croa* of
I Peace" by Gibbs was given in a very
interesting manner by Mrs. Elwln
Nash. Mrs. William Vance and Mrs.
Elsie Furnl**. Piano duct. "Stars
and Stripes Forever" wm played by
Mrs. Coy Bnimin and Mrs. Nelson
Brumin. on November 1R. Book Day
will be observed. Each one coming
is to be dressed to represent a book.
Tom Hoslngton was in Hastings
Saturday on business.
Eugene Partridge, 83. passed away
at his home Saturday night after
an illneu of several years. He leaves
his wife, two sons Bert ot Nash­
ville and Leon of Flint and one
one daughter. Mr*. Carl Convl* of
Battle creek. Funeral services were
held Tuesday afternoon at the Hess
Funeral Home with burial hi the
Kalamo cemetery.
Mrs. Mae Hanes, wife of Elmer
Hanes, passed away Sunday after­
noon at lhe home of her daughter.
Mrs. Jake Hollister, where she had
been III for some lime. Besides the
husband she leaves two daughters.
Mrs. Hollister and Mbu&gt; Grace Reid
of Bridgeport. Conn., and one son.
A NATIONALLY KNOWN MATTRESS FACTORY hot made us an ex­
Lewis Reid of Hastings; her mother.
Mrs. Mary Scathornc and two sis­
tremely low offer that is good for ten days only on the wall known AIR
ters, Ur*. Charles Lynn and Mu*
FLO INNER SPRING MATTRESS that sells the world over for $2950.
Daisy Scathomc of Nashville. Fu­
neral services wcre held Wednesday
afternoon at the Hess Funeral
FOR TEN DAYS ONLY—As an inducement for you to try this wonderful
home conducted by Rev. J. J. Willit*.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betts and
son acre at Grand Rapids Sunday
to see their daughter. Mbs Doris
Bette.

ABC WASHER

Thus you hove the complete bed outfit

lint with &lt;&gt;|&lt;1 washing wnte; in with M.\
HU.I.IM)M. Trade the old on this grc.
“April payment plan"—make the prj&lt;
even cheaper. Models list a* low as ? 19.50.

Remember that this inaltrrss has a fine

imported Belgium lick under which arc

Small Down Payment Install* It.
NOTHING TO PAY UNTIL APRIL.
IRONERS ON THIS SPECIAL OFFER.
TOO.

placed several layers of fine soft downy
rollon felt—then a strung siacl pad is

sewed over a full 2IJ0 coil base.

Smoll Down Payment Installs It.

No More To Pay Until April

lhe softest, easiest and lhe most lasting
bed y ou have had lhe pleasure of sleep­
ing on. The mattress is fully guaran­
teed iti writing for a period of five

MILLER FURNITURE COMPANY
HASTIN.GS,. MICH

BARBERS CORNERS.
Mr. snd Mrs. Flynn Matthews, of
Grand Rapids spent Sunday after­
noon with Mrs. Etta Bump.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Manker and
daughter, Roberta of East Wood*
land were visitors at John Weaver'*.
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Logan Hunt of Flint
were callers at L. J. Matthews sun-

&lt;ny-

'......................

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hauer and
daughter. Mabelle. were Bunday
callers at I. Rowley's in Hastings.

years. So you lake no chances.

Take advantage of this wonderful offer as it will only last for ten days. Sale
begins Friday, November 11th.

mo-t useful home

CONSUMERS POWER CO

All

I rcss alone.
llicac features-together will^Tvc you

Should you desire to hove the mattress and do not need a spring and bed
we will give to you ABSOLUTELY FREE a fine handsome pair of pure all
wool blankets.
-

GAS WATER HEATER

“Tour hot water lank can be made into
lull AUTOMATIC gas water healer.”

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sou can have it and save money. 3-ycar
terms; liberal trade-in. un uld heater ami
lurnaie coil.

change the

10

Small Down Payment Installs It
No More To Pay Until April
3 Year Payment Plan

COME IN — SEE OUR
GREAT VALUES — OR
PHONE 2305.

at
Women.'*

Science

Arota, chairAn interesting meeting of the
Heatings Woman's Club was held on
Friday afternoon, Nov. 8. at lhe Ma­
sonic Temple, the program being Sadie Glasgow. Mrs. Q. C. Keller
•'Who's Who In our Federation.*' Re­ and Mrs. O. D. Bauer presided ut
ports were given by tiie delegates the attractive tea table.
who had attended the county, dis­
NASHVILLE.
trict and slate meetings.'
.
Mr. and Mrs. George Parrott and
Due to the fact that tiie club Ls
featuring "Personalities” as their family were at Battle Creek BaturQUIMBY.
subject this year the reports dealt
Bom Nov. 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Earl
thc —
outstanding
and
Mrs. Jay Smith was a Grand , telth
—- —- —
———— •people
—•—----Rapids vteltor ThUMday.
j‘heir Put 111 lhc different meeting,. Schultz an eight pound daughter,
Mr. and Mr*. Clayton McKeown 1 Mrs. Duane Bauer reported for who ha* been named Winona Mae.
wcre Kalamazoo visitors Tuesday, 'he county meeting held at Wood- Charlotte Saturday.
speaker
Mrs Chas. Burke returning with land Iasi spring. The
--------l"~ of lhe
The Clover Leaf club met Friday
them. Mr. Burke spent Sunday al day was Prof. Henderson of Ann Ar­ | night with Mrs. Milo Young, a*ai*tbor who spoke on “The Personality
the McKeown home.
WM Mr# cUre CoJ*
During
of Uncle Sam.' prof; Hent:------ *--Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ware and
,
the business meeting plans for the
Mr. ana Mrs Gerald Nash of Hop­ a keen sense of humor ant.
Women ! ChrUtmJl8 parly wcre m,dc- A
kins spent Sunday with their par­ mlliarity with addressing
.- Women's
r------ । Christmas tree and exchange of
Clubs around the stale
always
’
I «lfu wll! follow the pot luck supper,
ent*.
marks him as a favorite.
□rite In
in hte
huiI Thc Barry
Hural Mall
Mr. and Mrs. Neal Welcher. of talk he brought out the thought that
Battle Creek, visited Donna Mc­ lhe future depends on the person- Carrier's association and its auxil­
iary met Friday night at the Com­
Keown Sunday.
j alitles ot each nation.
munity house. The following of­
Mr. and Mrs E McCltukin. of
The district meeting held nt Hllls- ficers were elected Pres.. Bob Burns
Middleville, are visiting al
Ini
of Delton; vice-pres.. Charles C.
Chaffee's
zak- She spoke of the presiding of­ Higdon of Nashville; secretary and
The Quimby Extension class held ficer. Mrs. Nellie Cross, also of the treas.. Glenn Griffith of Middleville.
their first meeting with Mrs Ruth slate president, Mrs. Chapman,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Langham and
Hummel in Hastings. October 30th. who gave an address on club work. son were Battle Creek visitors Sat­
The next meeting will be in De­ The most forceful speaker of lite urday.
cember with Mrs. Georgia Samson. meeting was Mrs. Karl P. KatzenMrs. Clarence Maron, aged 40.
ML&amp;s Grace HUI, of Battle Creek, meyer. educational counsellor and passed away at her home here Tues­
spent Sunday with her family.
former Denn of Women at Hills­ day night following an illness of
Otis Farr leaves Tuesday for the dale college, who talked on Interna­ several months. She was born in In­
upper peninsula foy the hunting tional Affairs. '
diana but came to Nashville al art
season
Mrs. Kcnlth McIntyre gave her early age. She leave., her husband:
reMdentM|‘h!r?eld1&lt;.rt“«?nfrt.v
nr!,t
»"P«Mlon»’of
rsl ‘impressions
of a
a state
State FcderaFcdera- ; ivo
two son*,
son*. Robert of Detroit and
home Of rn-r d.uLhL? Mr?
' “on n,cctl"K Tht
'
1
meeting
was
held
Richard, * senior in the high school;
T..~ I.*!.;
u
hwf w ofht ' M J H° ‘ *n
in Manistee
Manistee in
in October.
October Mrs.
Mrs. MeinMein- three
'hree aixl
viziers, MTs. Mabie Forman of
lister, in Nashville.
tyre opened hcr remarks by speak- Detroit. MlT.'Vera curlh of Wood­
The Quimby P. T A have their ing of the dlflcrent types of women land
Lee of
'—J and
—"* Mrs.
"" Gladys -------- Ore­
meeting Friday night. Mr. Becker. present, many of them unusual In gon; two, aunt*. Mr,. ELsie Tarbell,
I of Hastings high school, with his
their Intellect, charm, poise and who had cared for her. Mrs. Grace
scholars, will furnish the program. manner of presiding. Mrs Roberta Mollenhour of Indiana and one un­
Refreshments will be served. Wel­ Campbell Lawson, president of the cle. Milo Ehret of .near Nashville.
come extended to all.
General Federation, was the speak­ She wa* active in lhe Women's Lit­
er for the opening night. Mrs. Law­ erary Club and lhe Pythian Sisters.
PLEASANT VALLEY.
son. whose grandfather was a full । Funeral service* were held Friday
Floyd Nreb and family spent Sun­ blooded Indian spoke on "Women's I afternoon at two o'clock at lhe Hess
day with her parents Mr and Mrs Clubs. A Living Force.”
Funeral Home. Rev. Elmer PrichLee O-'bom of Pinhook
1 Mrs
F. W. Chapman.
state nrd officiated and Harley Bailey of
Considerable moving has „
taken, president was ULXUUAU
„- •
**ng BUTUl tn UkCViCW
described „
as „n 8
graplace lately. Mr. and Mrs --------- &lt;‘lou# nntl charming woman that cemetery.
Hulllberger moved Into Mrs.
each of us would like to be. Hcr
Mr. and Mrs. Gall Lj'kltu *i»d
Scott's house. Mr and Mr- w
Will excellent simplicity of manner in. wln “«“• Charles and Sherman.
Hulllberger moved Into their house conducting meetings made hcr lhe I
Wednesday morning for Grand
vacated by oranu and Gordon Hit- perfect president.
Marlas. Upper Peininsula, on a
e Wil! 1
J;
....in hunting trip. Clyde could will have
U r ° (11 charge of the machine shop during
Hulllberger formerly uvea.
lived.
and
evening
???.'
J,
’
?
pRr
"
,&lt;hcir
abtence. Others leaving this
Sunday afternoon a;..: ....
lie and family
1«*’used by all clubs, wa . WM&gt;k Brp O)enn ai1(1 Floyd White,
visitor., of Emery Kline
family :
Hw:kcr Dr p. o.
were Mr. and Mrs. Chas Buclic ot best expresaed by her own quotation.
। nnd Ado|pll DaHKr Jr Mr and Mfv
Odessa township and Mr,. Clara Older. Heavens First Law.

a*.

One of the cheapest.

"The

MATTRESS S|PE€IAL

FRIGIDAIRE
special qlFcr—.uni let auluinatic
Models were never Imfor-.’
«*onipli*lcyou like.

subject being.

Federation Day
At JFomen’s Club

G. E. GOODYEAR

a ' A completely new model, new sty Ic. good look.-,
and devices (hat mean better cooking, furl economy. Icswork, lime saved. Trade your old stove as payment on
See thi* and other models now on

Smoll Down Payment Installs It.
No Payments Until April
3 YEAR TERMS

$1.25

Est. Nancy J. Winters. Waiver of
notice ffied, testimony of freeholder,
flted.- license to sell Issued, oath be­
fore sale filed, bond on sale filed,
report of sale filed, order confirming
sale entered, order allowing account
entered.
Est. George H. swan. Annual ac­
count filed.
Est. Amanda Hart. Order allowing
claim* entered, final account filed,
order assigning residue entered.
Kat. Minnie B. Whitman. Will
filed, petition for probate filed, order
for publication entered.'

PHONE 2226

Once Deaf—Now
Helps Others To Hear
The prescription of a Vienna ear
specialist ha* been brought to this
country by Charles Foucck, a well-;
known Chicago druggist, who waa
once deaf but who cleared up hi* I
condition through this prescrip-,
lion. Through him thousands of
other suffereni have tried thia I
formula and secured amazing relief j
from Iwad noise*, ringing and buzz­
ing In ears, earache, and arc now
able to Iwar more distinctly. Thi*i
prescription called Ourine. costal
Sly « few cent* a day-yqur money j
ck tf not delighted Cervath A:
Slcbbjus The Rexall Store, Haailnss. Mich.—Adv.
■

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THTTRSpAY, NOVEMBER », BM

horry to lose this fine couple from monds, at

FREEPORT.

three
civil service
fw a
to.. _ _toto..

Hastings

where

PLEASANT HILL.

open’

SOUTH BOWNE.

’four children, of Niles, spent the

boo

Tuooday,

i Mr.
Mr. ano
and Mrs.
Mrs. s.
S. W.
W. zanaree
Zaharee ana
and ’”
®“.f ",°*
n&gt; •
!** •J‘br&gt; ,0
lbe
occ
The
Sunshine ciuu
club met
met witn
with Mrs.
Gwendolyn. uunter
MUhler was
was a
a tout
Thunr—
•*—•
--------- *. i,on Gl
me ounsmne
Mrs
uwsnaoiyn
*- ; *•&lt;* end at Walt Thomas’. .
EXAMINATIONS SOONI! — - Billy
m----------------Monuonar,
a&gt;t-1
?!
!'
‘.1
uS v
'" c*"" 'r"“r“‘« — ,&lt;sax
aiwr zucit of
or Virginia
vinmu Moore
moo« !
—-----«----------------■■
‘th them to their future
hom. a .
th-ir wnMon
*tf»d&lt;lin» annlvereazt
,,—
Jgy -upper
Rusaell
Russell Benton
Benloti and
and famlli
family were
Sunday
Ben*u wvi * j-- uMiaa bus mu.
u, uvuig.
z Caller* al the Wayne
r.Bf.K wbi
-- ---------iurd»y night and Bunday guests ol
Chance To Obtain B. R. A. IDr-und Mrs » 8 Wcd?1
**"»•
oldetl member wi»o can not ree i william Mishler and family vBl ted
Ru’
,
Mn.
Viau
Sltoo
rand
&gt;
-MHI
Uurary
Ctali
mnia
'
Io
T,
.
illy.
[ily.
I, Mrs. virwr
wunu » VBBII , ,
v..--. ........., lo
an(j lhc making ot dresses t': Sunduv afternoon with the former's *e‘‘ and family mov«&lt;l to KalamaIta. Thumta,
taw.r, be „„„
OT ctauun.1
mu.
Poaition If You Are
Wp undtrilUnd lhal John r&gt;. •In
in lull
full Woom
bloom In
in tar
her tauk
back yaH
yatd MonMem- this
Thursday nynlxiy
evening at Ita
theJwrne
given out ,for
Chrutma* was dudis- 1
.i T
lS^
=■----------------------------------------------------Sncceaaful
wSd^SXsS‘L wm. &gt;2- rtav J*
‘b? “
^‘ nrul lr&gt; K^.llTe
’n^^k
f
“
wnium co^ove of
Rather
an un
unusual
Of Mr*. Grace Murphy
of Bownc. A
A &gt;&lt;■..»!
n w
wn.
r„ hr...
II &gt;2^5
“I K
77" “..
make
dresses oilI Lowell
Lowell and
and Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. S3
eululty ,
0, to,Dop-t
.L
j.r .to.
. .P^cul
twvt t»,«
tar.et the swto
Senior jur
Ptav ’' terl.il
. ;,Uand
. ‘ ..three
-William
toviupctiiife cununuuem'. lor me ,
-------,—
”
.----. . ta’
larger -Ues at a special meet- and Mrs. Jennie Pardee attended
Sunday dinner guests of Rev. and
purpose of rfcurbig eligible ll.u ’'“m tourePU" H*
tb&gt;\.fr
wllh Uat“a Pal,n*' — _
gQl
^n weddto
F ---------innW'rsary
r'
L. F. Burkey were MBs Bernice “Ta o r fiu.
‘V
u “
—
----------_
of'
from wlilch appointment* will be cent'Y burned. This hou*e, which Mrs.
Burkey and friend. Mr. Ed. Burma Uidav^v^tX*
4 Nov 18
Mr and Mrs. Buel Sluon at Has­
mad. to fill vacancies in th. future..
tbe
H ---------------------- ..a
Friday evening*. No
Nov »}
10 and 20.
Frlcky
| Mr
Mr and
and Mrs
Mrs. CUfton
Clifton Campbell
Campbell tings Sunday.
wiU be conducted fur the following |
old
l?0UA* •nd„WM ",0’’,ed of Kalamazoo and Mr. und Mrs.
The pupils of the Jennings school
claa*e* of poaition* on lhe following from lb* *°l »hrre
R°y Nogh-r Floyd E. Burkey.
er- ■
it n Bunday with Mr. und Mrs. Lester and Carolyn Thompson were enter­
a-.----- - « . ...
i house now stand*.
Mrs. George Porbey andson. Ger;
w SH”
HOP»U.,
tained with a Halloween party at
Mr
Vli'tnr Rlunn
Mr. and Mr&lt;
Mrs. Victor
Sisson and aid. and Mrs. H. M. Bouuliner called
Social Service Supervisor* and
nd nlitaC.
..
X.&lt;r a,,d
an.t Mrs.
K.fr&lt; Howard
lln*a»d Lewis saw
«au’ Murton Griffin's last Wednesday
~
' Mr
VWtcra—1. 11. Ill-Thursday. Nov. daughter. Roberta. were at Kilpat­ on Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Wolfe and
■
rick church, southeast of Woodland Mn. Thera Nagler at Hastings Bun­
Mrs. Warren Burrarrer and son,/'111' torch »t«»*t parade at Grand night.
Wh.
Mr. and Mr*. Raymond Shaffer of
Bookkeeper* and Accountants— Friday evening, attending a recital day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe Clarence, gbltad Mr. Burrarrer at hh Rapids Monday evening
given by Mrs. Maude Bisson Manns have both been quite 111, the latter place of employment near Alpena' Mr* Kryn VandenBerg hi* re­ CampAi Lake spent Bunday after­
Friday. November 20lh.
noon at lhe Elmer Shaffer home.
and
daughter.
Virginia,
and
Mrs.
being
much
Improved.
Mr.
Wolfe
Junior. Senior and Head Clerk.-.—
a part of last week.
i turned from her daughter'.* in
Mr und Mrs. Mart Griffin and
Lucy Lather Dean of Traverte City. still remaining seriously HL
Monday. November 23rd.
There was a large attendance at, Grand Rapids wlirre she has been
Texas Saadlata
Carole Joan of Clio Were week end
Claude Walton went lo Flint Mon­ thc meeting of the W. M. A. at the j recovering from an operation,
Typists. Stenographers and Sec­ The program consisted of vocal
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Griffin
solos, piano and xylophone solos am! day to get some new Chevrolets.
retaries—Tuesday. November 24lh.
home of Mrs. Mary Dodge last, Bunday guests of Mr. and Mr*. R. and Marian. Sunday they all at­
A special program has been an­ Thursday, a public dinner was j wiuiams were Mr und Mrs. By­
Applicants orc to secure applica­ readings.
New Crop. Med.
tended a birthday party at Mrs
ar, and
Mr.
ana Mrs. John
jonn fiad
Fish moved
moveu, nounced
nounceu for
tor this
inis week Friday evecve- served at noon.
tion blanks from the Barry County
• ron Rowlader and children of Har- Jennie Rounds of Bellevue, The
Size
'
-a,
Monday
Into the Mrs. Frank Walton ning
at the M. E. church featuring
ERA office, Court home. Hosting*. ---------i................................................................
* ...........
Mrs. O. R. Lightfoot, who ha* ri* Creek and Mrs. Mnnker and Mr. party was given In honor of Mrs.
•Michigan, and after Alling them out house, better known as lhe Prank , the young people a choir and the been quite 111 for the past several surrey of Grand Rapid*.
Creamery Butter
Peter Griffin's grandmother. Mr*
are to forward tham to the n.-arest ।WoUc house, at lhe east end of Kendall SBters. Free will offering.
weeks, was taken to University ho*,.
d ,,
nPalmrr xlj,r.
ls
Field Representative whore name i ch«rry »Ueet.
We Join their many friends In ?or*ot»crvRt'onAamir treatmen'T^r "aret aI,d Puul sp*nt Sunda&gt;’ *’lth Rounds, and of Carole Joan Griflin'*
birthdays.
ond address will be supplied bv the
Frank C. Deming of Grand Rap- I extending our best wbhes to Mr. £»°“t£S &gt;SSjS■“
■■ v
“ s
'“d- of
j Mr and Mrs. “
Earl
Van
Syckle
Mr*. Frank Miller and citlldren
local ERA.
ldi
ln town ,a5t w‘*k Tuesday ■ and Mrs. Orville Kokx of Bellevue.
of Indiana were Sunday dinner
It 1c planned that written testa ’21,111 b1’ mother. Mr*. Nancy Dem- Mrs. -Kokx, prior to Iter marriage, home soon, well on the rood to re­ Middleville.
Word has been received of the guests ot Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Shaf­
will w
be vviiuux.icu
conducted uuiuik
during mr
the mornmorn-! .,ln*- :accompanied
him_home
for.—
an I wa* Lillian Thaler, daughter of Mr. covery.
,---- •---------- ---------- . —
ta„ and oral Intoalew, In lhe
, tadellnto aur. Mr,. Demin, liar and Mr*. John Thaler. TheU mar- ।
Van oeveran. death of Mrs Ella Jordan ot Detroit, fer and family.
Clarence Benedict was a Hastings
purchased the property which occurred Monday. Burial at
ernoone. Typln, Uru In addluon to ■**"
“&gt;
tad loUowln, rluge, which occurred in Indiana I w(UJ
the “
removal
toe und- la*l May. was only recently an- &lt;
oral murrle.. .Ill He rondueted on ""
■—■■ of an Infected ----------vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Jolin Detroit Thursday afternoon. Mrs. visitor Wednesday.
The Harold Yoder family vUlted
nv.rmur. 24tic|
«u.. *Uf™’ • »"*«
,nrn‘tl nounced With her sister Eleanor. k*h. are moving their household Jordan was fur a ihnnber of years
Tuesday afternoon. November
at Andrew Allen’s of Coopersville
Applicants will only nred to furnish, boJ* (or “/iwcdy recovery.
Mrs. Kokx hu* been attending the goods from Grand Rapids Uib week a resident of Middleville.
Sunday.
pencils for the examination.
I Rev and Mrs. j. L- Ickes visited LaMar Beauty School at Battle .-ml*
। This property
property B
Is belter
belter known
known lo
to the
the
MIDDLEVILLE.
Locations where the examinations I f,lends
Hastings the forepart of Creek the past two months.
I'older
_.a_ .residents
—..
.u»&gt;.
w
v
as tiie Dr. H. F.
BOWNE CENTER.
A daughter was born to Mr. and Peckham home and* later owned by
will be held are as follows:
’
----- v
Mrs. Sophia Chase Is spending a
Mrs. Derr.a Rensch was In Has­ Mrs. Chas. Price on Thursday. Nov. I Mr. and Mrs. Ransom Walton.
few days with her eon. Vem, and
Alice Nash, of Lowell, spent Sun­
Battle Creek Benloi High school
tings on business last Friday.
day with hcr parent^, Mr. and Mrs.
family. In Jackson.
Bldg. Room A-l. W. Von Buren Bl.
Mr. und Mrs. Albert Weih were In
Mrs. Wm. Mishler entertained the
Many truck loads of sugar beets John Nash.
Grand Rapidly—Kent County ERA.
EAST GUN LAKE.
Grand Rapids on business Lust W.' F. M. 8. of the M. E. church at
Guy Smith has had a crew of
Gilbert Bldg.
Mrs. Florence Bates and children go through every day on Uielr way
tier home last Friday afU-moon.
fifteen digging potatoes the pail
Kalamazoo—Kaki ma zoo ERA 412 Thursday.
and Charles Hufford of Grand Rap- to lhe Holland plant.
“' Mrs. Chas. Bunn entertained the
Mrs. B. Sllmel, Mrs. Rose Mlrden,
M1
Many of our hunters are prepar­
W Michigan Avenue.
King's Heralds at her home Satur- durf and. Mrs. Anna Bcott of Grand NuU ^ome
ing
for
their
northern
trip
after
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Penoyer
Molassei Candy
&lt;&gt;UU IIUUK.
—— ---- -7-------------- - ------ ----- ------J day afternoon. ------------------------Pauline Moore _
B Rapids were guest* of Mr. and Mrs. I —
Walter
Slater. James Null and; deer. Some of them will be leaving and son. of Grand Rapids, spent
ROUTH SHULTZ.
Kisses,
C- B. Baxter last Wednesday.
Saturday afternoon at Walt ThomMr*. Carrie • Bponable of But ■ to,d’r of u,r Krou? .
Carl Sheerin left Friday for Chi-.h* » few «*&gt;'*■
Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Parks have cago
c
wnCTC they have employment
IlMtings and Mr-; B/ rtha Kenyon ! Fr&lt;-eport High school will be closed
Pound ... I
where
Till* Mbnday evening occurred
of Hickory comer* and Mrs Mary 00 Thursday and Friday of Thanks- moved into the house on Cherry j7or
Mrs. Addle Benton B visiting
m. ft
■&gt; «w weeks
w«wX*.
•1,10 OrAt Electing of the Middleville
street known------------------as the Margaret
- ----------------BBson
Mr
j• M:. ' jojin Russen left j brotherhood. A large number ut- Ruasell Benton and family this
Freer of Hastings spent Friday aft- l’lk'W week.
emoon with Mr*. Sarah Kenyon. 1 Mr “,ld Mrs
wer* weck house and recently vacated by Mr. Thureday for ihelr wlnter home in! tended.
Austin
...
.J ’' '
i; -mj— —
h» 0--..and Mrs
Mrs. Ctins.
Gluts. Austin.
Mrs. Capitola Buechler L* enter- cnd «UMU of ,he former's sister. nnrf
Florida.
The Pythian —
order
will
have _a
Leap and Loyd Karcher. of Free­
Mr. and Mrs Elmer Sisson. Mr. ' Mrs. Cora Parker and Mrs James potluck supper this Tuesday eve- port. are building a house for Will
talnlng several relatives from Ohio. ! Mr*. Jessie Johnson, at Grand
and Mrs Fred Bisson and son, Don­ Null were in Plainwell last Tues- i»Uw at which time plans will be Fox.
Rev. U-wG Horn and fiunily of R®PldsIonia called on his parents last week I Mra Albert Wells has accepted a ald, MUs Hazel Sisson, all of Cleve­ jay
] made for lhe winter’* activities.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Thoma* and
Mr. and Mrs. Lee McFall and |X»Hton In Grand Rapids and will land. Ohio, called at the Victor Sis­
Joan King of Munroe and SB and assume her duties next Monday son home Bunday forenoon. In the
Mr* Qeorje Brockway of Adrian morning, she and Mr. WeUs expect afternoon they were guests of Mr
spent Saturday and Sunday with 10 move to the city a* soon as a and Mrs. B. W. SL'.son at the hotnMr. and Mrs. G. E-Kenyon. Mr. and j "‘^ble house Is located. We are of their daughter. Mrs Gordon EdMrs. Harry MBener of Kalamazoo J
visited there Sunday and Wendell
Kenyon of Battle Creek and Ronald
Kenyon of Hickory Comers visited
them Tuesday afternoon.
Lucy Sullivan of Kalamazoo spent
Wednesday and Thursday with Mr.
and Mrs Prank Hom,
John Minzcy of Mancelona came
Tuesday lo spend the winter with
hb sister. Mrs. Mina Kenyon.
Clinton Horn spent Sunday with ■
Elmer Ander* of Brush Ridge.
Adelben craven and wife enter­
tained Mrs Ozzo Smith of Kala­
mazoo and Mr* Ruth Myers of Has­
tings last week Also Mr and Mrs.
Laurence Hamilton of lensing were
guests over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Ros* Beison are
spending the week with her folks,
the Henry craven.';.
The Shultz p. T. A. will be the
20lh at lhe schoolhouse. Mrs. Clouse
and Mrs. Thompson having charge
of lhe program.
I

WALLACE GROC
THE COLDER Ths WEATHER The
TER The BARGAIN-LOOK!
PRUNES

Grapufruit

3

3

25'

.

BULK
DATES

IT

. 35'

2

lu

19*

DOUGH NUTS, Saturday, Dozsn
10 Lb. SACK ONIONS________
5 Lbt. SWEET POTATOES____
Van Camp's
PORK And
BEANS

Powdered
SUGAR

2 n„.19’

2 c... 19'

4 Ac
U

QUAKER
OATS
Qakk or Regular

19*

10 Lbs. GRANULATED SUGAR, _..49c
Large Skinless Frankfurts, Lb_____15c

CHEVROLET^
(arnpMe Gvi_- Conipfete(i|~)}£iir

r FAMOUS
REASONS
why you should give

PURETEST Cod Liver OIL

to your baby

LENT CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. Edd. Britton arid
son of Kalamazoo spent Sunday,
with Mr. and Mrs Clare Thomas.
Mrs. Dora Otto B caring for Mrs.
Kendall Harrington of Silver Crees,
who B seriously ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Joy Hall were Sun­
day dinner guests of their daugh­
ter. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Moorhuj
of Delton. Mr and Mrs. Kirby Ma­
son and daughter and Dick Hall
were callers In the afternoon.
Arthur Fox of Kalamazoo ts workhelping with the beans.
Mrs. Lyle Francisco and Mrs. Le­
land Hammond attended the play
given at the Mgthodbt church at
Prairieville, Tuesday evening, en-.
titled "The Minister's New Car."
MBs Hattie Hawley Is visiting MBs
Dora Brandstelter a few weeks.
I
Mtns Opal Brearly and Miss Jean
Hammond of Kalamazoo spent the
week end with Mr. and Mrs. Marc
Hammond. Miss Emma Chandler
accompanied them to Kalamazoo
Bunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Chandler
and Pauline and Emma spent Sun­
day afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.,
Marc Hammond.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Barnes of
Nashville spent Bunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Hammond.

I'

Dr. ALLAN R. DAFOE still prescribes
Puretesl Cod Liver Oil as an essential
part of the Dionne quinhiplets daily diet.

Their amazing record of sturdy growth
gives any mother five sound reasons for
feeding her baby Puretest Cod Liver Oil.
It is rich in natural vitamins A and D, so
essential lo the development of straight
legs and sound teeth.

NEW DIAMOND CROWN SPEEDUNE STYLING
NEW HIGH-COMFRESSION
VALVE4N-HEAD ENGINE

Making till* new 1937 Chevrolet I lie smartcat
and moat distinct!ve'of all low-priced cars.

MUFECTED HYDRAULIC MAKK

Much more

Its price

For the first time, the very newest

things in motor car beauty,

SAFETY!

comfort, safety and performance

BUY FU«ETEST COO LIVES OIL TOCETHEK

come to you with the additional

SAVE
WITH

WITH

YOU*

OTHER

BABY

NEEDS AT

advantage of being thoroughly

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

proved, thoroughly reliable.

THE REXALL DRUGGISTS
HASTINGS

PHONE 2131

BANNER WANT ADV8. PAY

NEW

AU-SILENT,

AU-STEEL

BODIES

(With Solid Staal Turret Top
—Unlataal Construction)

SEE THE 1937
STROMBERGCARLSON RADIO
GOODYEAR BR01HDW,

THE ONLY COMPLETE CAR
PRICED SO LOW

GENUINE FISHER
NO MAR VENTILATION
—promoting health, comfort, safety.

IMPROVED GUDINO
KNiE-ACDON RIDi’

SAFETY PLATE GLASS AU AROUND
(dNimiNO

5UPER-SAFI SHOCKPROOF STHRINO*

R. K. HURD
HASTINGS, MICH

PHONE 2680

DELTOI

�Ttt llHtfOl

. shbvOwxvr zutcamo.

I

RaNMBB,

tWVBaDAY, MOtmOJOL 11, 1,14

fMN M the hunter eon certify ttat

un rrrt au*&gt;» ot, ttmnp

Mrs. wm. Hard* had U guests ipent, several dayi tart week with
pcverel days lart week her stater, her father, w. H Otis.

nurhbcr

MH Clara Robinson of Grand RepCongratulations to the , teacher
Mr- *nd MrK Bart Newland were
Ida and MTS- Barah Erway at Glass and pupils of roc
lhe Otta sow
school roc
for
firat r
prize
greek
I again winning £._.
--~- on
_ their
—:. Laming visitors on Saturday.

AUCTION SALE
.

Having decided to retire from farming, I will sell my per*
sonal property at public auction at my farm, one mile north
ond four miles west of Freeport, on

•

Thursday, Nov. 19
Starting at 10:30 A. M. I Offer the Following:—
50 Poland China brood sows
and shoots.
GRAIN AND CORN.

45 HEAD DURHAM
CATTLE.

6 heifers, yearlings.
4 heifers, due in January.
6 steers, 2 years old.
16 steers, 18 mas. old.
9 caws, 4 with calves by side.
(Some are purebred.)
HORSES.
Pair black geldings, 11 and
12 yrs. old.
Pair gray horses, 10 and 11
yrs. old.
SHEEP AND HOGS.
33 Shropshire ewes, 2 to 5
years old.

800 bushels oart. 100 bushels rye.
1,000 crafts corn.

POULTRY
58 While Bode puHefi.
10 Barred Rock pullets.

FARM TOOLS.
McCarmick-Deering tractor, rebuilt
this spring.
All kinds of farm equipment—enough
to run farm of 372 acres.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS
Home Comfdrt range, goad baker.
Dining rftotn sdite.
Living room suite.
Leonard refrigerator. Beds, complete.
Good waihlng ihdchine,
Many other articles not rrieHtioned.

LUNqH AT NOON.

TERMS OF SALE:—All tumi of $10.00 or under. CASH. Over that amaGnt 9
months* time will be given an good bankable notes with interest at 6 par cent. If
you wish to take advantage of thc credit given, please make arrangementt with
the clerk at date of sale.

WM. C. ANDERSON, Propr.
N. C. THOMAS, Auctioneer.

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes
Michigan hunters who shoot coy­
otes, bobcate or Oolvte during ihe
open deer hunting season from No­
vember IB to &gt;0 inclusive, must first
haw a bounty hunter's contract in
prcMntlng Ute predaldr for bounty
payment, lhe department at con­
servation announces. No bounties
vc paid to individuals who do not
hold state-lMued bounty contracts
for predatory animal control. The
bounty on wolves and coyotes ta 810
and on bobcats »5.

Anticipating a heavy Influx of
deer hunters into the newly-open­
ed west Michigan counties, the de,
partment ot conservation will a*slgn
a special force
of 40 const
rvaUon offiSrTto
the region
to handle

BAB1YttUC.

the deer was shot in Midugan. NonThe MimLvivV aoetety is plifiresldent hunters travelling through ning a Thanksgiving dinner st the
the neighboring states of ttteoonMn. h0^ of Mr ami Mr. L. A Day on

tea. Morgan, on Ttjewday.
niinola and Indiana do not need November 30.
Ute permits.
I Mr. add Mrs. Rgy Fastett tad . Duane
~g . Day la one of Lhe ten
1 son*, at Battle Creek. Called on Mr. I11----- ‘a
. Hastings high achool to
to Chicago. A grandson
The number of ••point*" on the and MrB Burr nuMtt Saturday to win a
K trifi
tr
tatlerg of a buck deer is not Acnew son born November 3. of Rev. and Mrt. J. J. WlUltte also
curate indication of iu sge. But £’hu“bew nsmedUe Edwartl
won the trip.
Heber Foster and Rev. J. JL WUthe diameter of the antlers at thc
„
,
U’.U attended the funeral of Her'.
base or "burr • 1* Game men wifi
be out with calipers again during i SLJS.PTu2da^Vtetai
Birman at the Baltimore U. B.
the open buck season this month
T"*?church Bunday afternoon.
working at checking stations along
111
Weck
01 her
BOBIHirJe FARM. "
lhe northern highway, where tat-1«
Mrs. Zula Bptlnger and,Children
tert can be calipered. A* hunters1
“d Mrs Howard Rice, of
come through with deer on their Lansing, visited Uielr parent* here of Flint. Mr. and Mn. Albert Prost
cars, the taller, will be measured , over, the week end.
. of Lansing and Schuyler Kollar were
Sunday gtteeU at Mr. and Mrt. John
tad information on doer and local
•*-______
—* ____________
------- • _
hunting conditions obtained. The children, of NortJi Hastings, called ( Kollar.
department
of conservation Is on her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam- J Mr. Sewtry and Mrs. Eva Monker
watching lhe age classes of deer uel Geiger. Sunday afternoon.
lot Grand Rapids were Bunday
shot during open seasons by this
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Wilcox | guests of Mr. snd Mrs. George Pomethod. The killing of an excess spent Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. land.
proportion
of
young
deer
or
an
ex■
- -----------r —
—
«aa proportion
of -old
bucks
would

matters of routine patrol and law indicate the herd Is not in a normal
enforcement.
[ condition.
The force win be made up of'
.
local conservation offioera, free-1
NORTHWEST THORNAPPLE
Mtes Lois Morgan accompanied
lance officers from other regions,
fire wardens and towenhtn who Rev. Bacon and family of Cale­
have had experience and training donia to the football game at Lan­
tn law enforcement and win be un­ sing Saturday.
der the direction of Russel) J. Mar­
Mrs. Glenn Allen entertained
tin. regional supervisor of ML her Sunday school close Halloween
Pleasant. It will have Its bate Of op­ night at her home.
erations at the Baldwin district
We were glad to hear Mrs. Ben
conservation headquarters where
Carpenter was on the gain and
additional dormitory facilities now able to be around the house again.
are being prepared.
Her daughter. Incx. returned
to
her home In Interlochen Friday.
A freshly-swallowed field mouse
was found in the crop of a oock 1 Mrs. Wm. Schroder, of Caledonia,
entertained
the
Social
club
tit
hcr
pheasant shot by Kenneth Daniels,
ladlit,
clerk in a sporting goods store tn home Thursday and the
Jackson, ft Was reported by Roy worked on a quilt tor the hostess.
Larhoreaux, district supervisor for The December meeting will be with
the department of conservation Mrs. Verne Thomas.
Daniels gave the bird- away. Dr.
Mr. and Mn Martin and family,
Glenn W. Bradt, farm-game spe­ of Grand Rapids, were Sunday
cialist of lhe department of con­ guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bsnawa
servation. states that pheasants Mr. and Mrt. John Kepkey, of Mid­
may lake field mice if they can gel dleville, are staying with them and
them. •'We've had several reports attending to the farm duties.
of that kind in the past." he Mid.
The new electric line Is nearly
completed going south from thc
Members of the civilian conserve- schoolhouse comers to Harry Stim­
lion corps will help Michigan game son and west to Will Trumble.
workers in live trapping moose and The Telephone company is putting
feeding the captive animals on Isle up a Caledonia line north and west
Royale next Winter. Paul Hickle, of the corners.
mammalofftet of the department of
Mn. Robert Tolan entertained
conservation, has received assurance tiie Home Economics class last
from national parks authorities that Friday Clifford Tolan and Mrs.
sufficient labor from a camp of Dorothy Brower, of Syracuse. N.
100 young CCC men will be avail­ Y.. were guests of their brother,
able for all the cXlra help needed Robert, and family, being called
to live-trap moose on the island here by the death of their brother.
during the coming winter months.
Ross Tolan. Dick Tolan and Mrs.
j Lower Michigan
hunters who Arlotta Fisher of Grand Rapid!
were Thursday evening supper
bring home Michigan deer by way guests at the Tolan home.
I of Wisconsin. Illinois and Indiana.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brown of
• will have no difficulty with con1 serration authorities of those states Grand Rapids were Saturday after­
I If first they obtain a permit from noon guest* ofxMh and Mrs. Oto
'
I the Michigan department of con­ Morgan.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gar bow have
servation. The permit will be rec­
ognized by authorities of each of received word of the Illness of their
the three states, who have Instruct­ daughter. Dorothy, in Detroit.
Don't forget the chicken supper
ed their officers to pass any deer
coming through in the poaacaslon and sale al the M. E. church basc,_____ . .
Of resident Michigan hunters as ment

with their parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Clive churthllL
Ludlle Smith nt Battle Creek
spent Saturday with her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Smith.
Wednesday orcning with Mr. and
Mn. otto Lightfoot. Mrs Ughtfoot
was taken to Ann Arbor far observa­
tion Thursday.
Six ladles met at the home of
Mrs. John Kollar Thursday and
tied four quilts for her. a lovely
chicken dinner was served by the.

hostess.
thins that remain, to roll under the
dresser Is tbe collar button.

The new
ford
CARS for

V-8
1937

Wl11 be on display
Saturday, \OVt
universal garaff

^J*AGE
TELEPHONE 2121

AUCTION SALE!
Because of poor health, I am obliged to quit farming, so will have an auction
sale at my farm, two miles east of Freeport and one mile north, on

TUESDAY, NOV. 17
STARTING AT 1:00 P. M.

HORSES.
Black gelding, 4 yrs. old, wt. 1,500.
Black more, 3 yrs. old, wt. 1,500.
(Well matched team.)

cows.
Holstein cow, 4 yrs. old, fresh.
Holstein cow, 5 yrs. old, calf by side.
Holstein cow, 5 yrs. old, fresh.
Holstein cow, 6 yrs. old, calf by side.
Holstein cow, 8 yrs. old, fresh.
2 yearling heifers.
SHEEP.
19 Shropshire breeding ewes.

HOGS.
Brood sow and 6 pigs.

HAY.
About 10 tons of clover hay.

POULTRY.
45 White Leghorn yearling hens.
FARM TOOLS.
McCormick binder, 7-ft.
TERMS OF SALE:—CASH.

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING:

McCormick mower, 5-ft.
New Idao manure spreader, nearly now.
McCormick corn binder.
Oliver cultivator, nearly new.
Superior fertilizer corn planter, nearly
new. John Deere hoy loader.
2-horso walking cultivator.
Superior grain drill. Belknap sleighs.
Ajax cultivator. Dump rake.
Land roller. P. b 0. riding plow.
Oliver walking plow. Dayton side rake.
Oliver cultipacker. Throe-sec. drag.
Wide tire wagon. Flat rack.
Five-bbl. water tank. Set dbl. harness.
Some extra collars.
MISCELLANEOUS.
DeLaval separator, 600 Ib. cap., nearly
new. 5 ten-gal. milk cohs.
Trusty incubator, 110 egg.
Cyphers incubator, 150 egg.
Super Hatcher incubator, 400 egg.
Ideal incubator, 400 egg.
2 brooder stoves. Laundry stove.
Small airtight heater. Sausage grinder.
Also a 10x30 stave silo.
Other articles Mo numerous to mention.

20 YEARS
OF
SUCCESS
$10,000,000
PAID IN CLAIMS
Citircns* Mutual Inzurance Com­
pany, Howell, Michigan, Mined
butinrae at the right lime in
1915 to get the first pick of au| iMnobiie owner*, and eincc that
I time has built up a elate wide
I organiraiion to ghe senior lo
I policy-holder..
I The

Company

has

sent

out

checks for more than 175,WX)
claims—paying aut about |10,I 000,000.
। During the part three years, its
assets and business hare enjoy­
ed a remarkable growth.
George J. Burke o( Ann Arbor is
President ol the Company and
expericored njrn are on the
Board ol Director?. Trained
claim adjusters and Agents in

WM. I. ROBB. Secretory

NOTHING REMOVED UNTIL SETTLED FOR.

JOHN ZUSCHNITT, Propr.
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioned

AUCTION SALE

E. E. GRAY, Clark.

Having decided to quit farming, I will have an auction
sale at my farm two miles west of Hastings on M-43, pn

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16
STARTING AT 1:00 F. M.

HORSES.
3 good work horses, wt. 1,300
lbs. each.
CATTLE AND HOGS.
Holitain cow, 8 yn., fraih.
Jarwy cow, 10 yrs. old, brad
Aug. 10.
Hohtain cow, 3 yrt. old, brad

Jarsoy cow, 10 yrs., frosh.
Brown Swiss cow, 6 yrs. old,
brad Aug. 30.
Fat Jarsoy cow.
Brown Swiss haifar, 2 yrs. old,
brad Aug. 12.
Brown Swiss haifar, 1 1-2 yn.
old, bred Aug. 23.
Sow. ■

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING:

HAY AND CORN.
About 6 tons timothy hay.
About 3 1-2 tons clover hay.
7 acres corn stalks.
300 bushels com.
HARNESS.
New harness.

Harness.

FARM TOOLS.
Oliver 99 plow.
Banner plow. 3-sec. drag.
Milwaukee mower.
McCormick binder.
Cultipacker.
John Deere manure spreader.
2 two-horse cultivators.
Single cultivator.
Dump rake. Wagon.
Many other articles not men­
tioned.

TERMS:—CASH. No property removed until settled for.
CITIZENS' MUTUAL
AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE COMPANY
HOWELL. MICH.

Martin Cronk, Proprietor
Henry Flannery, Auctioneer.

Wm. Gorham, Clerk.

�Tin raitocoi BArnt thirsday

Weekly Farm Review
The Beit Ideal from the Beet Farm Papen
By WILLARD BOLTE
LIGHTS FOR LAYERS.
The use of artificial lighting for
laying hens has become standard
practice. California Experiment Sta­
tion reports, for example, that 93
acent of thc poultry keepers in
territory are using lights. The
general Impression has been that
the increased egg production that
accompanied the Intelligent u*e of

eating and a better opportunity for
timid hens to eat after the bosses
had gone to roost. Recent experi­
ments Indicate that this te not the
whole story, as scientists have dis­
covered that Hie long red rays of
artificial light stimulate lhe glandu­
lar activity of lhe hens. So long a*
12 to 14 hours of natural plus arti­
ficial light la provided, apparently it
makes no difference whether the
artificial lights an used at night,
at morning, or both. Lamps or lan­
terns will serve as well os electric
lights, but they should have reflec­
tors and should be hung at least 0
fegt high and not over 10 feel apart.
The light should reach roosts and
nest* as well as feeders and foun­
tain*. When light.* are used addi­
tional feed khould be provided and
water should be warmed In cold
weather —(Condensed from Ameri­
can Poultry Journal.)

RASPBERRIES.
The "teepee” system ot supporting
raspberry canes Is fully a* efficient

aa Using slakes or wire and offers
the wme advantage* of Increased
yield and faster picking. The cane*
in each hill are brought togethertied tightly with two pieces of bind­
er twine 6 to 8 Inches apart—and
the encl* of the canes cut off 4
to 8 Inches above the top tie. The
height of the top tie will differ
with the variety—40 lo 48 Inches
from the ground being about right
for Latham canes if they are well
spaced at lhe ground, and a shorter
height being necessary if the cane'
arc too dose together at the ground
to brace each other well. The tying
should be done while canes arc dor­
mant. and late fall 1* thc best time
where snow breakage Ls common.—
American Fruit Grower.
BEET TOPS.
Michigan Experiment Station re­
port/, that beet tops can be fed lo
dairy cows without tainting th?
milk. If it U done properly, accord­
ing to an article In Hoard * Dairy­
man. in a 10-week tert al the sta­
tion it wa* discovered that the beet
top flavor was not particularly no­
ticeable In thc milk until the cow*
were getting as much as 25 lbs. of
tops jrr day. Feeding hay and grain
with the tops—eliminating frozen
and decomposed tops—and feeding
the tops after milking Instead ol
before—all were helpful in avoiding
top flavor Holding the milk for 24 to
48 hours did not develop lhe flavor
and both pasteurizing and aerating
were’helpful in removing It.

alfalfa.

STORING SWEET POTATOES.
Sweet potatoes will not store well
unUl they arc fully matured. When

by breaking. If the sap remains
sticky for some time—and turns
ground u dry enough not to *tlck
to the potatoes. A light frost will do

Y.M.C. A. ITEMS

main sterna close to lhe potatoes or with. a big banquet mentally and
they will not keep well. Bruises must spiritually. Folks from the whole
Barry-Eaton Area are urged to
out the storage room and spray the come. Drop a card to Rev. A. R.
inside with one pound of copper sul­ Kllford to let him know how many
fate to 50 gallons of water U&gt; kill rot for supper.
spores Heat
the well-ventilated
Freeport Hl-Y Club had a parly al
room to 85 degrees before putting in
lhe potatoes and hold at that point the school Monday evening for the
Girl Reserves.
Vermontville organized a Hl-Y
after holding the temperature about
55 degrees Storing In bin* Is prefer­ Club Thursday noon with Coaeh
able to small container* as there is Dale Townsend and Rev. J. R. Btlcn.
much less shrinkage.—Southern Ag­ leaders.
riculturist.
Nashville boys had a meeting las;
Tuesday noon for Hl-Y organiza­
FEBT1L1ZER.
tion and discussion of lhe Older
How long will one application of Boy's Conference at Pontiac Nov
farlillier continue to show results?
Th* Slate Convention of the Y M
Experiment* on various type* of
soil* In eastern Michigan proved C. A. will be held tn Lansing Decernthat fertilizer will show results for
from one to five years after appli­
cation, depending on such varying
factor* a* soil, weather, cultivation,
crop and quantity ol fertilizer u*ed.
In mort case* the Increased yield of
oats and barley that have followed
the crops that were fertilized lias
been sufficient to pay for the ferti­
lizer—thus leaving lhe first year's
gain all profit. Where’ nurse crop*
have been fertilized, the increased
yield of the alfalfa that followed
wa* sufficient to pay for the ferti­
lizer in mort cases, thus making thc
extra grain from the nurse crop all
profit. Fertilizer applied direct to
old stands of alfalfa caused In­
creased yields for at least three
years.—Wallace’s Farmer.

BEES.
In 1934 Ohio bees produced thc
staggering total of 21 million pound*
of marketable honey and could have
doubled that amount If the small
bee-keepers had followed practice*
that are used by commercial bee­
keepers a writer in Ohio Farmer
states that the big operators con­
centrate on the following points:
1—Havc only strong colonies; 2—
Provide winter protection and plen­
ty of winter feed; 3—Keep enough
supers on each hive to provide am­
ple room for honey storage; 4—Keep
the colonies large by preventing
swarming.
NEXT YEAR’S’STRAWBF.RRIES.
When lhe strawberry bed has
come through a hard season such as
the last. It naeds opeclai artmtlon in
the early fait The first step is to
clean out the weeds and cultivate
thonJUflily. The second is ta fill in
missing hills—preferably with this
year's plants. Tiie thtrd L*’to apply
about 500 lbs. per acre of steamed
bonemeal or 4-8-4 fertilizer, scat-

Michigan Experiment Station re­
ports that It is usually safe to make in with a .cultivator.—American
the last cutting of alfalfa around Poultry Journal.
the first of .September—but that it
biliIy land farming.
Ls exceedingly unwise to cut or pas­
contou? farjinng Is a big help in
ture heavily during the middle two
reducing erosion, according to Mis­
period when alfalfa normally stores souri
________________________
Ruralut. but contour„ farming
winter feed in thc roots.—Michigan i plus .strip cropping is ten times more
Farmer.
effective in holding lhe soil in place.
moved to their own home there the
Nov. 5 Letter.
r
.
Arthur Kilpatrick of Jackson [ Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Dye and Lote
spent the week end with hi* parent*, of Lake Odessa. Mr. and Mr*. Roy
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kilpatrick. Mr*. Kauffman and family ot
East
Freda Fluhrcr of Lansing wa* a Campbell visited their parents. Mr.
Bunday gue*t at the Kilpatrick *nd Mr*. Bert Mesecar and family,
home.
1 Sunday.
Mr* Glenn England accompanied 1
Mrs. Alice Strong of Lowell spent
Jean England and Mis* Leemc Leon­
I port of last week with Mrs. H. W.
ard of Harting* to Ann Arbor Sun­
day where they met Mi** Phyllis . Geiger.
England af Chicago, who was tn Ann ■ Mr w,tl i,rs- Clayton Mote. Mr*.
Arbor for lhe Mtchigan-IlUnl foot- Lizzie Reamer and Mr*. Mrytk
ball game and homecoming dance. I Motj'
vltettng their *l*ter, Mr*.
Friday evening tiie local Masonic Solomon Lovy of Ohio, over lhe week
Lodge members are entertaining cn&lt;5 Mr*. Lovy is seriously IU. Raythelr families.
I mond Herron Is doing the chore*
absence.
Dr. and Mr*. T. H. Cobb attended during their absence,
thc Michtgan-IllLni loot ba 11 game in
Mr. and Mrs. vere Howlette and
Ann Arbor Saturday.
three little girls of Clarksville spent
Mr. and Mr*. Ernest Tucker and Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
daughter. Jean, of Clarksville were Oarfleld Slater.
Sunday dinner guest* of Mr. and
Mrs. Mabie Van AlUburg of Grand ।
Mrs. Frank Niethamer.
Mr. and Mr*. Donald Gager and enta, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Brake, Sat­
son. Morgan, spept the week end. urday afternoon. Sunday vUltors
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. were John E- Brake and family and
Harry Hough of Hartford.
I Elwood Brake and family ol Ionia.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Leedy and,
Rev. Vem Hulllberger of Detroit
Mr. and Mrs. Messenger of Battle spent from Friday until Sunday
Creek were .Sunday dinner guest* of with hl* wife and daughter.
Robert and Howard Gibbs of
Mrs. Paul Eaglekroudt and son. South Boston spent Monday night
Paul Edgar, of Detroit spent ths at the Emery Klmc home. Robert Is
week en0 with her parents. Mr. and in the navy and stationed al Boston.
Mrs. E. J. Sheldon.
He expects to leave soon for lhe
The MiMlanary and Aid Society West coast.
of the Methodist church will hold
Do not forget Ute regular meeting
their November meeting al the home
of Mrs. Ro-e Wachter Tuesday eve­ Near’s Thursday. November 12. 1938.
ning.
Everyone welcome.
Bunday vlsllors of Mr. and Mrs.
Woodland Extension Group No. 2
'met Friday at the home ot Mrs. H. W. Geiger-were Vaughn Geiger
Fred Jordan of North Woodland for of Kalamazoo, Emery Benedict and
their first lesson in their study for family of Ionia and Miss Lillian
thc year which is The Well Dressed Leyen of Maple Rapids.
Woman.” Mrs. Frank Kilpatrick is
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
the leader. Group No. 1 with Mr.*.
Mrs. Florence Ten Eek of Grand
Laster Brumm as leader meets at
the schoolhouse Tuesday for Chair Rapids visited the Chas. Woodruff's
Tueeday evening and attended the
first lesson.
/
Mrs. e. J. Sheldon hu been ill Eastern Star meeting In Hartings.
Mrs. Arvllla Bolton. Kitty Wood­
for Uic past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl C- Paul were ruff. and qlara Hammond attended
dinner guests of Mr. and Mis. SUi- the Weteonje Extension group meet­
ing
’at Mrs. Scudder's Wednesday.
Art Clement of Hartings Monday
evening and later attended the It wa* a very interesting lesson on,
"Choosing the Right Partrtbn” and
Cheer-Up dance.
The Woodland Senior play ‘The glvm by our leaders, Mrs. Graham
Ghost Parade” will be given at the and Mrs. Anderson ,
Mr. and MT* CUfford Hammond
Woodland High school on Novem­
spent the week end"- visiting in
ber 13. at eight o'clock sharp.
(J rand Rapids.
PLEASANT VALLEY.
Wc had a very entertaining Hal­
Nos-. 5 Letter.
loween program and pot luck supper
Mr. and Mrs. Hale Lcpard of lake at Ute aehoolhoUNe last Friday night.
Odessa vteltod at H. W. Geiger'* Wc organlzad a P. ?. A. Mr*. Wm.
Thursday evening.
CiaggeU, Pre*.; Mrs. Warren Bolton,
MT. and Mr*. Ray Ferry and fam­ Vico-Pre*.; Miss Edger. Sec. and
ily aiHi joe coon, who have lived Treaa. Our next UMCUng will be Nov.
naar Caledonia the past two years,

WOODLAND.

ASSYRIA.
The Albert Rice farm has been
sold to Mr. and Mrs. Orlle Miller of
Brownlee Park. Battle Creek.
Mrs. Hazel Norris entertained at
Thia la the "WHk of Prayer” by
Y. W. C- A- And T. M. C- A. around dinner Thursday her sister. Mrs. Vi­
the world, ths purpose of which te io da Jewell, of Beulah. Mrs. Winnie
team and practice the will of God Buxton of lhe Dunham district and
their mother. Mrs. Jessie Norris, and
Charlotte Hl-Y Club and thejpUl Mrs. Tena Buxton.
The first meeting of the extension
Reserves attended Sunday evening
services together as groups and the । work of the clothing project of
Hartings Hl-Y Olub and Middleville ■
Hl-Y attended Sunday morningI' on Wednesday for the lesson assign­
ment. Mrs. Lucy GlllaspU: and Mrs
services.
The Adult and Youth Forum at Leola Earle leader*. Pot luck dinner

November

it, i&gt;u

BRANCH DISTRICT.

STATE ROAD.

hcr daughter. Mrs. Henry Bldciman. Fisher school this week owing to
after visiting other relatives for a the ipldemlc of whooping cough tn
lhe neighborhood.
Remember the Dorcas Society
Mr. and Mn. Art. Chasa and Mtes
meeting at the Ostroth-Adam*
Josephine Chase of Grand Rapid* were afternoon via:tart.a
home ihl* week Thursday.
,
Gu* Northrop vlaited Forrest Bid- spent Thursday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Jama Bothard.
"
elman Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Norton and , Mr. and Mrs. Swan Anderson
Margery were Bunday guesta of Mr. ;have moved back lo their home tn
and Mrs. Zeno Docker and family. ,
Mr. and Mr*. Fred Nelson attend­
ed the funeral of the latter1*
daughter-in-law, Mrs. Clare Ma*on. Mr. and Mr*. Clifton Becker, before I
at Nashville, Friday afternoon at I moving to Jickson. He formerly'
two o'clock held al the Hea* funeral . worked for James Swanson but now
hto a Job on a farm near Jackson.
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sothard spent
Sunday evening with Chas. Rowley
CRES8EY.
and family near Quimby.
Mr. and Mr*. Wm Culp were
called to Ohio Thursday by the
EAST DELTON.
death of hl* slater.
George Bhcrmcr of Columbus. I Wm. Stocking of Cressey and

__ _____ Etfsja aastsi
STORM SASH
LUMBER
COAL

was stricken with a heart attack
Saturday night at Bellevue and
dropped dead on the street.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Jewell of Beu­
lah attended sessions of the county
agents’ meeting at laming last week. Ohio, .pen, .enrol don U» r*»&lt;1““5” IS?, H
They visited relatives here and their wee* with hlo .liter Mr,. D. BMui
“•
Ct“‘' we"
son. Paul Jewell, of Kalamazoo, re­
Mr, Helen BOOeru or Keloomoo
turning
home on.
on -w-.-.-n-,.
Saturday.
-—
—
i spent Wednesday with her sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Art CoUUon enter। , Willard Case came last week from
june eh.ioh
talned Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Law­
—
...-..u
h.i'
vulUjrl Bl u* c&lt;rl Hartman ! rroce Jarman, of Kalamazoo,
Portland and ..
Is —
assisting
with .thc
poftito-and com crops at the home
and I R
IWIUC Sunday
OUIIU»J were
writ Mr*.
BUB. Henson
ntiiJVii IU1U
--ev and _Mrs. Waters
-- --- visited
------- -...
__ ... and. ...
... . ...
__ ■ . *»
al ““ John
Ihh.n nror.Hr'olfor
Charles Purcell farm.
Kinney
Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford
Brendstettcr Itrwno
home at
al
Milo Bunday­
Luren Dickinson of Detroit gave Schuyler ol Kalamazoo.
...
....
.
...
&gt;.&lt;
r
arv*
Waa
n.e*
anz*
_
Mr.
and
Mn
Bert
Galnder
and
an address at the Briggs church
Mr and Mrs. Joe Hurd spent Ute
daughter. Lucille. entertained over
Sunday morning.
week end in Nashville.

The Older Boys' Y group held
their bi-weekly meeting at "Camp
Barry.” pancake* being on the menu
and election of officers on thc pro­
gram.
Grand Ledge Area Y Committed
and other men and boy* enjoyed a
meeting and pot luck supper al the
school last week with good attend­
ance. The former board for local
work wa* re-elected
Ted Mires,
president; Fred Deckc. Secy., and
Harry Towner was added to the lo­
cal board.
"Goodness makes no noise anu
noise docs no good."
FR BE PORT.
Nov. 5 Letter.
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Lewis was thc scene of a happy
gathering last Sunday when they
entertained with a miscellaneous
shower In honor of their daughter,
the former Ml** Beatrice Hooper,
whose marriage lo Arthur Webb ot
Battle Creek waa an event of Sat­
urday. October 17. A bountiful pot
luck dinner was served and a pleas­
ant day was spent in visiting and
wim musical numbers wcre enjoyed.
The bride was the recipient of many
beautiful and useful gifts. The
guest* included; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Glidden. Mr and Mm. Alvin Helmrelman and children. Mr. and Mrs.
Vem Heintzelman. Ray Helntzelrnan and brothers. Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Helntzelman, Mr. snd Mrs.
Lloyd Wilkins and son. all of Grand
Rapids. Mr. and Mi's., Aaron Helntzelman and children. Air. and Airs.
Joel Helntzelman and children. Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Parkinson and Mrs.
Archie Potts..all ot Lansing. Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Lewis, Harry Lewis and
lady friend. Lloyd and Floyd Lewi*.
Augustus Northrup and Mrs. Clara
Hummel, all of Battle Creek. Mr.
and Mrs. Mason Whitney of Grattan
Center. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Deming
of Parnell, Mrs. Wilbur Whitney and
family of Irving and Mias Vernlce
Benson\of South Bowne. Mr*. Ida
Dorr of Freeport also called tn the
afternoon.

Mr. and Mr*. J. B.
moved from charlotte
the tenant house on
Russell farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil

Smith have
and occupy
the Curtis

Whipple are

Nickerson house.
Mrs. Evangle Miller returned last
week from an extended visit al her
daughter's, Mrs. Ronald Warner’s,
home.

i saaaaase J

KROGER STORES

THOXINE
Carvcth A Stebbins Drug Store

KROGER

CLOCK

. 10c

BREAD

CARS/

The Biggast Bread Value in Town I

Seethe NEW 1937

BUTTER

STUDEBAKERS

CRACKERS

67c

FRESH MICHIGAN MAID

WISCO SODAS
CRISP. FLAKY

NATIONAL
CHEESE WEEK

CREAM CHEESE

- 19c

MILD. FL'LL FLAVOR

PORK &amp; BEANS

25c

COUNTRY CLUB - MICHIGAN PACK

JEWEL COFFEE
AMERICA'S SPOTLIGHT CARS
cleoaw and automatic orerdriv* • New underdung

re* axle* give big roomy interion

chair height

Malt • Worid't lorgeet luggage capacity • World'i

•oiierl closing doorr with asclMlv* non-rattle

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO

Tiie teacher and pupils of the Otis
school enjoyed a Halloween party at
the schoolhouse Friday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Hoard of South
Haven were guests Saturday of their
daughter. Mrs. Geo. Havens.
Several of the school mate* of
Roseleen Haywood /.urprtsed her
Saturday afternoon with a Hallow­
een birthday parly. Game* and refreshmento made It an enjoyable
time. She received several nice pres­
ents.

THE CROSSROADS. "

Frank fag.

Phon. 2S1S

NIGHT COUGH

SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
rotary door lochs • World's first cart with bvih-in warm air deftoilert • Only
Nov. 5 Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Haywood., can with Automatic Hill Holder e World's rtrongest, safest and quietest all
from near Delton, moved recently
on to the Mrs. Wayne Smith farm.
Little Mis* Sheila Klmmey of
Yankee Springs visited her grand­
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Johnjson Sunday while her parents. Mr.
and Mr*. Stanley Klmmey, were in
HASTINGS
PHONE 2101
Indiana, called there by thc illness

ROBINHVE F.VRK.
Nov. 5 Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wlntermutc of
Detroit were week end guests of Mr.
and Mrs. John Kollar. Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Chappell of Detroit were call­
ers. AU attended the reunion at the
luxnc of .George Poland Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Finkbeiner of
Middleville were Sunday guest* of
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Julian
Fotta.
Mr*. Wright Clifford and son.
Nelson, returned home Saturday aft­
er five week* visit with her parents
and friends at Spokane. Wash.
The Poland family reunion was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
George Poland Sunday. Those nttending, were from Detroit, Owosso,
Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. James Polhcmus and
children of Middleville were Sun­
day caller* of dive Churchill and
famUy.

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

HOT DATED

BULK COFFEE

25c

LARD

25c

PURE REFINED

NUT OLEO EATMORE
SUGAR MICHIGAN BEET

25c

SOAP CHIPS

25c

MILK

49c

SWHTHtAST

COUNTSY CLUB

WHIZ - Mlaiiv vc MILLED

PANCAKE FLOUR
NEW CROP FLORIDA

ORANGES

7 re Irurnctl to depend
on

Highlands

Dairy

during

my

children

lhe

MIDUSS TEXAS

GRAPEFRUIT

FULL OF JUICE

Crude A milk lo help

keep

- 19c

fit

COLDIH YIU.OW

winter

BANANAS

month:i. The high vita­

min content in it buildt

BRUSSELL SPROUTS

up their resistance and

FRESH FANCY

1 2%c

3 - 20c

QUART BOX

gives them extra 'pep'.

So much of their ener­

POTATOES

CELERY

gy is used in keeping

NtcincAY - FRESH. CRISP

warm, that I have my

HEAD LETTUCE

Highlands man leave an

LARGE W SIZE

extra r/uarl during these

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Sledge are,
helping to care for the former'* Ms-1
ter. Mrs. Bertha Couch, of Hastings.;
Mr. and Mrs. Star Grimmett of ■
Grand Lodge. Mr. and Mr&gt;. WUcman
and Mr. and Mr.*. Wager of Lansing.
Mr. and Mr*. Arthur Bennett and
Mr. and mt*. Kenneth Hurless of
Hastings wcre Sunday callers of
Kenneth Hurless and family.
Mr. and Mr* Lawrence Ryan of
Hartings and Mr. and Mrs. Theron
Mead of Battle Creek visited Mrs.
Jane Tuttle Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mr*. Ernert Williams gnd
Harold and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wil­
liams spout Sunday afternoon lit
Battle Cree*.-the guests of Mr. and
Mr*. Rotend Talliferro.
Bunday gverta of Mt* Jane Tuttle
were Mrs. Eliza Joluuon and Mn

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

Clara Tinkler of HMtlnp.

Phone 2651

cold months."

SMOKED PICNICS
UM AU. — i TO 6 LB. AVERAGE
&lt;- Q. CO.MKOLLED QIiMTY 1EYF

POT ROAST

ftKiMhlK

». 1 2V4c

nuniiM.

&lt;"- Q. Co*nu»J.tfl&gt; QtliuTY MU

High in Cream Content. Raw
or Pasteurized. Pt. 5c; Qt.

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Huiinfi

UYM SAUSAGE

CHUCK ROAST
c &lt;?. 9o.\T*oun&gt; quality

10c

■OILING BW
c q. Mwtwaixuj QutLJTY

Keep

ROLLED MB 1OAJT

OYSTERS

21c

�Tin: BASTINGS BANNER. THUMPAT. NOVEMBER 1&gt;, 1*38
Dial his subject for next SundayF
DELTON.
i zoo Friday night with,Mr. Becker
CUANCBXT OHDI*.
Rev. and Mrs Ralph Bates left morning service will be "The AnSunday afternoon to spend lhe week
zoo spent several days last week
_ ____________
.
,
,
with lelntivrs in Wisconsin.
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Willard
Ickes,
»&lt;•«
Ru
by
Newton,
who
is
atMrs Charles Aldrich of Hastings
zwmLmv* at
at lanslng,
I
trlAltwt
| Mrs Ethel Peiumck of Hastings visited l«-r couan. Mrs. John Har­
lending college
walled „
,
Mrs. Willard Ickes Is spending her grandparents. Mr. gad M;s. J,'nr»
IMraSam.
1 spent T hursday and Friday with rington. *1 hunuiay night and Friday
tome time with Mrs. Wayne Wheel­ Sidney Fifield Saturday.
|
NoTICK of male.
Mrs Lida Harrington
they both spent the day with Mrs.
er
at
Battle
Creek
while
Mr.
; Mn Margaret Dannleh has been Prank Kelley at Kalamazoo.
Wheeler
la
in
the
Iwspltai
for
an
I very sick the past week with guilty
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Doster went to
operation. His friends wish him n ,
; but is better now.
Marshall Sunday-to visit Mr. and
speedy recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. c. J. Barnum vlsit- Mrs. Platt Mutiaw.
Thc music of the saxophone &gt;
■ ed Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry
A band of 40 members has been players of Grand Rapids was much I.
'[Carpenter
at Norm
North Adams.
carpenter u;
organized m
in the
lhe Delton V.
W. K. Kel- enjoyed Sunday morning at East i
I Mr. utid Mr- Robert Barnes. Mr logg Agricultural School.
OBDBB FOB FUBUOATIOM.
Baltimore United Bretliern church. |I
1 and Mis. L N Bush. Mack Garri- 1 -----------—
Glee Club —
with ---------80 members.
Several from here attended Uie । Si»t» ®f Mlchlpn^ih.* Prob*!* Con
| son und Lyle Colli-on attended thc
A list of Delton men who are musical 'at Dowling Friday evening | a* * X.ton
«ahl«a*rt b.ld 1
■st that
Rural Carrlrn meeting al Nashville north hunting deer are Loyal Flow­
while
otliers
were
at
Ag-HE
at
j
prub.i*
ogle* la th*
ofHa.iin
Friday night.
ers. Chester Banghart, Addison Pen­
John Wesley Moore is ■*'*.
,k* 2*,u A*&gt; ol °*
Mr. und Mrs C. J Barnum and nock. Edward Lowry. Max Reynolds. Hastings.
th*rAen&lt; “"‘i Vn “ lrv
A
no. Htiurt C!*..*,,. Jo,
Mr* Nettle Kern attended a chick­ Herman Reynolds. Von Dunn. Geo.
Veta pr,bM1,.
en pie supper al the home of Mr. Cowles, charle*. cowles. Royce Ken­ Chicago. Dorris Hoffman.
Rice and Dora Russell look part In
In ti.» m»tt»r of th* utat* at 3
and Mrs Ray Barnes north of ton, Roger Williams. Leon Doster.
Cloverdale.
Frank Doster. William Smith. Rus­
Mrs. Bam Kellar and children
aird ln ,.|d eo,rt hu wuuaa w&gt;r
Mrs. Lillian Hayward and son sell Mott and Freest Smith.
of near Orangeville spent Sunday in&lt; that a day b,
tor hmrinc oa bl«
spent the week end With her par­
Mrs. Henn- Pennells of Kalama­
ents. Mr and Mrs. Scott Lldy a: zoo spent one day last week with with Mr. and Mrs. Edd Rice.
The exhibit from the Durfee y*,J*
Woodland.
Mrs. Luc Ina Eddy.
school
took
second
prize
at
lhe
Ag'
.»
m'
Mr. und Mrs H F Wertman spent
HE exposition al Hastings.
' l&lt;
Sunday after neon with Mr. and
CLOVERDALE.
.
. William Hoffman underwent
an
Mrs Claude Nobles al Climax.
Mr and Mr». Ed. Hunt have operation at Pennock hospital and
Mrs. Clarence Wilkinson of Kala­ moved to Hender&amp;notl. They will be-, u gening along very nicely,
mazoo spent last week with her sis­ missed as they have lived here many
obdsb roB roaurcATiow.
rra. u&gt;*i p “ ofC.
Mr. and Mrs. Julius Paul and
ter. Mrs. John J Doster.
|&gt;«l,llraltoi
years and made many friends.
। friends of Battle Creek spent Sunhr*» tue«M*i«*
Mr und Mrs. Leon Dunning and
Mrs. Otto Lockstldt. who lias been * day with Mr. and Mn. Orville
l&gt; uf krsrins. i
Leatrice visited their aunt. Mrs.
| Puraell and attended the funerui
• »*«*p*Hr b
Georgia Bowker, at Augusta Sunday ill. Is better at present wPiling'.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johncock ।01
Bbman.
afternoon.
Mr atld Mrs Twn Hoffman and A lru» ropy.
Mrs Fred Kopplon of Crooked spent Sunday with their daughter.
•
MllJr.J
Hmllh.
Rr(l«tr
Mrs
Olive
Brown
and
family
of
|
dai«»Rer^l)orr
1
s^Bn
&lt;
l
Mr.^iuMi
Mm.
Ukv will entertain members of her
Buy Clemens spent Sunday eve­
bridge club on Friday night, the fea­
ture of the evening being a shower
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Woodin of, ning with Mrs. Guy Honeysett at
in honor of Mbs Marqulta Henlon. Gobles have moved into the Ed. Plainwell.
dttaulla
Mr. and Mrs, Leon Stanton and
On T liur&amp;uuy afternoon Novem­ Hunt house.’
lain muticx* nU&gt; b, William N. CMdber 18. a miscellaneous shower will
Mrs Chas. Monica Is spending the, daughters, of Battle Creek, spent aatrr
.nd CUra K. Chl.leatar. kaaband
be given for MIm Marquita Henton. week wills her son. Russell, of Kal- Sunday with Mrs. William Holl­ and wlf*. ot (hr eiiy of Ha&gt;ttn&lt;a. Barry
man and attended tile funeral of Count,, Mlrhlfan w HOMB dWNERII*
in the rooms In lhe church base­ jpipzoo
, Bert Birman.
MIAN CORPuKATfDN. a Cor»w»Uoa
ment A general invitation Is -ex­
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fennels and
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clemens de­ cr&lt;ani«r.i unilar lha laaa ot th* Unit'd
tended to everyone to attend from daughter visited their parents at
’ parted tor the north on a hunting Hlataa ot Amrrira. dated Jon* lai, 1934.
two until four o'clock.
Almena Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Wayne Hurd of De- .
Mrs Adda Pierce. Mrs. Margaret trip Die last of Chis Week.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Hynes. Guy
troi: spent the week end with Mrs Owens and Mrs. Myrtle MacLeod,
Juba Weller und Mr. Murphy.
were Kuialnnzoo shoppers Thursday. Makley and Hazel McLaughlin of
Woodland spent Wednesday with
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams 1
spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Hastings yuted her parents. Mr | Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hammond.
Glenn Williams at lhe Kellogg , and Mrs ,W D. Brooks Sunday.
PRAIRIEVILLE.
। Mr. add Mrs. Grant Dickerson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown and
Rev. Bates announced Sunday motored to Augusta to visit Mr. and
Beverley of Hastings were Sunday
Mrs. Roy Headly. MLss Lizzie Lauguests of Mr. and Mrs. Silas Doster.
, baugh. who had been visiting them.
Triple Link club will meet with
returned to her home al Augusta
Miss Dora Johnson Friday. No' with them.
I The annual bazaar and chicken vernber 13. All day meeting.
1 supper of the L. A %T Will be held at
George. Jr., and Jbhn Woods, ac­
I the town hall Thursday. November companied by (heir instructor. Mr.
I 10th. Everyone welcome.
----------------------------Kyburg,
and other members of the
Mr.
- -- ----------and Mrs.
... R. E. Pierce enter- Future FarmersCl--,
Club.visited the
tolned Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Co-operative Association plant at
Sage and son and Mr. and Mr«. Cole | Hamilton Saturday.
llaatlMa.
Thornton of Battle creek.
| Mr. and Mrs. Grande DePriester
Miss Emma Jolmcock. who is entertained for Sunday dinner Mr
teaching in Detroit, spent the week ; and Mrs. Arthur Baker and Palrlclu
end with her parents. Mr and Mrs. and Mrs. Mary stlne of Kalamazoo.
Arthur Johncock.
Mr and Mrs. Roy Linch and fam­
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Penneh enter­
ily of Benton Harbor were Sunday
tained their daughter of Elkhart.
Ha.I.ac.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Japhet.
; Ind., last week.

1

| LEGAL NOTICES

No. 2&gt;/a

Now Pack

PEAS
COFFEE
MILK
SOAP
DOG FOOD
CHEESE
COFFEE
COFFEE
COFFEE
DREAD
CHEESE
SPRY
CHEESE
CHEESE
ORANGES
LETTUCE
CHICKENS
VEAL ROAST
DEEF RQAST b"'ci’j' ‘c“u
STEAK
FRESH HAM wh°-"h*"

■rf.l1.-A

Maxwell Houso

Pct or Carnation

Fels Naptha

Daily Brand

Cream or Brick

Hills Bros.

Condor

Ib.
tins

49°

8 o'Clock

Effective
Thursday, Nov. 5th
11/j-lb.
loaf

Get Your
Cake Recipe

Borden's Chateau

(AT THE TRIO CAFE)

Fhonc 2137, Hastings

3-lb.

y«-lb.
pkg.

Kraft's Old English

Florida 200-216

Iceberg Head

doz.

45‘

each

Fresh Dressed

Choice Chuck Cuts

Round or Sirloin

\ « I’ I (&gt;OD STORES
Taae fa Tfawadays, AftP Bead Wagea, BtarHag Kata Smith I
a^ a Bfa (faat ef tstertelaan, « «. |
M„ Statfaa WBBM
|

■ New time tables avail­
able from agents and

3US DEPOT

Philadelphia Cream

Shortening

IMPORTANT
SCHEDULE
CHANGES

AU Pricaa Pin. 3« Safas Tas
W. Caak WFA CUd.

Little Lorain Johnson, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs- Lewis Johnson, was
brought to lhe home of her grand­
parents. Mr and Mrs. George Adnonson Saturday evening. She had
been seriously ill at Borgess hospital
in Kalamazoo.
Mrs. Jennie Baum pens has gone
to the home of her daughter. Mrs.
Mrs. Winifred Epscy. of Grand Rap­
ids for the winter.
---------------- —-----Mr. and Mrs. Verne Calthrop with
Mr. and Mrs Herald Young ac-»Mrs, Llewellyn Erb and Lamar Erb
ccmpanled by Mrs. Bernice
Bancroft spent Wednesday In Kalxuuazoo.
&gt;&gt;u *«.»----------------of Muskegon
and Mrand Mrs.
" "। Mrs. George Wood and Mrs Mer—
—
Claud Kelley of Hastings visited ritt Wood wcre Kalamuzoo shopMr. and Mrs. Leavitt Sunday
; pets Wednesday.
I Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wertman and !, *•j •»
— Charles
—»— —
—■ —
.
Mr. —
and
Mrs
Deal
and
■ Louie DuBois visited Mr and Mr:,. |I Mrs. David Deal spent Thursday at
. Harlen WerUnan ot Galesburg Sun- Battle Creek.
I day.
Mrs. Mott is visiting Mr. and
j Elwln and Clair Lammers. Joe Mrs. William Duncan and family
; Hammond and Henry Leinaar are of Kalamazoo.
1 on their way to the north woods aftMILO.
| Will Gurd has his new barn all
Mesdames Schultz. Quick. Flow­
I enclosed. It replaces the one that
er. Prouty and McClary of the Home
; was burned last July.
Literary Club attended lhe fall
1 Leslie Pease Is shingling the out­
meeting of Kalamazoo County Fed­
side of his house.
! The meeting of the Community eration of Worben's clubs nt the
club was well attended last Friday Ladies' library Ln Kalamazoo last
Wednesday.
night. All report a good lime.
Mrs. H. Flower and Miss Bernice
•spent the week end and Sunday
with their daughter and sister, Mrs.
H. M. Kennedy and family. In Do-

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Beadle and
family of Hastings spent Sunday
1 with Mr. and Mrjf, Mark Garrison.
Mr. and Mrs.) Applegate and
daughter. Miss ’Elsie, left Monday
to spend the winter to Roann. Wls.
Mrs. Bernice Blakeslee of Des
Moines. Iowa, who has been visiting
■ her mother the post week, returned
] to her home Monday.

Your Cows Will Show a
Nice Profit
If Fed a

BALANCED
RATION
Farm Bureau
Service Dairy

100 Lb*. Not

John Bradfield visited hb son.
Ernest, and family in South Bend,
from Friday till Monday.
Mr. and Mrs.
Pletersma are
moving to a farm near Galesburg,
which we understand they have
purchased.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Bradfield
were visitors in Kalamazoo and
Galesburg Saturday.
Mr and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox and
children of Battle ‘Creek
— ' visited
■ - •
। their mother, Mrs. Emily Wilcox.
Sunday.
M Bradfield and—
— and Mr.
Jack
I Gilbert were at lhe former's un­
cle's home near Galesburg Sunday.
' Mr. and Mrs. E. Quick spent Bun­
day with her sister. Mr. and Mrs.
;Vert Robinson, Jn their new home
;near Bellvue.
I
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.

MORTGAGE BALE.
Default batlaz t&gt;**a made la

llatllara. aecordinf In th*
Plat iS-r.of, thrua* North

•hall forarlot*

l*d: Ortob»r l«lk. 191*.
OMR fltVNRRH- LOAN CORFU
RATION, Murtcaco*.

AJIr.

WAYLAND STATE BANK.
B*rrr L-oontr Ml.hIIUME UWNERH' LOAN COR
ON. a CoriMiratlQO orrael.ad unOBDSE FOB FUBUOATIOM.

NOW. THEBEFORK,

Mr. and Mrs. Orville Bruce had
as dinner guests Sunday. Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Norton, of Grand Rap­
ids; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Vanaman.
of Battle Creek; and Mr. and Mn.
Harold Benedict, of Hastings.
i John Kidder is making his home
tills winter with Mr. and Mrs. John
Krussell.
Russell Engle went to Kalaina-

।

$900
CWT.

Made of ALL GOOD
Grains, Concentrates

OBDBB FOR FUBUOATIOM.

Constipation

NO BY-PRODUCTS
ASK ABOUT IT!

! aa altara*r’a ft*.
4*acr1M aa follow. :
ca ar Mrul at land

FAX! BUMAU ■ ILUN6 CO. be

Cottonseed, $2.15 Cwt.

$42.00 a Ton

B. A. LY BARK ER, Druggist.

Soybean Meal, $2.15 Cwt. $42.00 a Ton
llrax Burp**. da
Nolle* la tiarrby

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES Inc.
’■&gt;&gt;•■■11 iw» Part tbrnorf.

HASTINGS

PHONE 2118

no
•» i«« •‘flack la

CORPO

Ira a rapy

MlKrvd &gt;■!!&gt;. R*&lt;l.Hr at h»ku.

BANNER WANT ADVB. PAT

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN,THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19.1936

16 PAGES

EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

AND SONS
1 C[P||D|TV D| IN
Summer 4-H Members Receive’ FIMIM
WHY SPAIN NOW FATHERS
TWOHUHED
TO HAVE BANQUET (JLuUIll 11 DUUI
''
1 M BISTffll
0UOIMNQUETA"",rdsat
MOMOIIE“
HAS CIVIL WAR
M. C. R. R. STARTS
PICK UP SERVICE

FOUR

-------—
The Railroad
BARRY COUNTY'S SHARE . H. H. Peirce, local agent of the PROF. AITON TOLD ROTAR­
The Hastings Brotherhood will
have its November meeting next
1 Michigan Central.. Is pleased over
THIS TIME WILL BE
IANS THE CAUSES
Monday night at the usual place. As
I the fact that the Michigan Central
$19,674.60
OF
THAT
WAR
it
will be Father and Son night
। pick-up-and-delivery freight servmembers, includ* girl* as well as boys, and
there will undoubtedly be a Urge [
1 ice was Inaugurated here on Mon­

-----------’
LOCAL ORGANIZA­

1

Trips to International Livestock Show,
Pins and Certificates Are Presented

TIONS SPONSOR ARM-

I8TI0E EVENT

£

‘J

7o

Between 250 and 300
t\juC|JTV &lt;JIY MH I IAU
parent* and friend* attended the club* in Branch. Eaton and-Calcrowd. If members of the Brother- 1 “till T"8IA MILLIUN
. day. The contract has been made by. HE HOPES THE REBELS
Achievement Day banquet for sum- ■ houn counties as well a* Barry. The RATE IS $3.30 PER
hood have their own son*. It will of.
TO RECEIVE NUMBERS
DCDcnni e on VCADQithe
1*1* Michigan
Michigan Central
Central with
with the
mer 4-H club member* held In selection will be based on five
course be expected that they will
WILL
BE
SUCCESSFUL
rtnoUN
u-ZU
TtAno
'
Railway
Express
company
for
doCommunity hall Friday evening, points: attendance at club meetbring them, but if any have no: Qlj Age Security Plan To
----------------------- _
Ing the work locally: the service ap-1
Nov. 13. Music during dinner was Ings. Interest shown at meetings, Co.
Treasurer
Maus
Will
piles
to
everything
but
carload
shlpSpain Will Have A Better J**™
Become Effective The
Other Splendid Numbers On provided by the Baseline 4-H club appearance of the club project and
। fnen(j,
ther.- with boys to supply those who •
Distribute To Various
orchestra led by Dr. West. The main whether or not It was entered at u
Chance If Liberals
may not be fortunate enough, to'
Program — Kim Sigler
■ The local faclorie-; have their [
First Of Year
feature ot the evening was the fair, tlie member s annual club re­
have their own "kids."
*5i- |
Schoo) Districts
i own trucks for making the delivery •
Defeat Radicals
Beginning last Monday portal em­
Was Toastmaster
presentation of winners of various port and his previous club record,
Jud
Hyames.
coach
for
the
West,
Notice was given out at IAnzing ' of their products and getting freight;
ployee* in Hastings and every other
Every
in Ci
ern
atate Tfachers
college, will
American flag*, attractively ar­ teips to the International Live- The surprised and delighted winner
■ Rotarian was Interested
•
tl Oldie
ICBCUCga taViicpr.
w»&gt; be J,
1। town, village and city in the state
slock allow at Chicago and award- of this years trip was Robert Hunt­ last week that the final installment at the Michigan Central, and will a very infonnhig address at the Ro- tlie speaker. He is a good one
and
ranged. yrerc used as decorations
continue
to do allow*'TheTn
their own delivering
and nation began the delivery ot
of “
the
club ..taiSta.
under of the primary school fund was be­ , The
ing pins and certificate* to members Ington nf
“ Baseline -U.K
comuanv
tier II taAy C ''^
no0’} b-v PTOfcss^r wllj baVP areaj message forfather*
for the Armistice banquet sponsored who had completed their projects the leadership of Rex Maxson and ing sent out. Early In Beptembei 7 ne company niioas them ac per Alton, ot the history department ot Bnil . „,n.
. the preliminary blanks to start in
for
and the university
of
Ha “n“Alta
..son"-rnnuc. win ta e.puu. »i 1J ”°u“&lt;x°mm
____
for the
the delivery
delivery
university
of Michigan
Michigan.
by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, creditably. Albert Bell. Horry Wil­ Dr. Wert. Robert's project was u there was paid 17.70 per person of hundredweight
. w
• and Ulc unnir
n&gt; oi
Micnignn. II-. " Alien
premier win oe captain at \
”
------- ’ ’—T*—
school
age
In
this
state.
The.
final
1
talked
of
the
Spanish
Civil
wai.
U1C
P2LU,J
.
,,
w«i. tj._
,r sound
000000
U.« suotx
.upptr
»u.d. The
Tile other
ollwr mem«»•. ,or ’M»“
» “» workers.
w“k'"
the American Legion and their liams. Hugh Nevins and Paul Palm­ Hereford heifer which took first al
The considerable merraw in rail-1I whkh
rn ln
rogres., WV
eral ber 4, ^
be Frank
for •mP‘°Jrw«
the Barry county fair in both the payment will be for $330 per per­
which has b,.
been
in p
progress
several
lu be
will
Frank KeUey
Kelley Usile
Leslie! Theie bUnl“
Auxiliaries on Wednesday evening er have entered lambs In the Fat 4-H division and the open class.
way
passenger
traffic
in
Hasting...
;non
ths.
and
about
the
causes
that
fTS-L
Wayne
o(
on
*'
or
n
‘
ore
P«
r,on
’
whkh
«•
son ot school age—from five U
Stock Show to be held in Detroit
■ —
s
wayncj
thr causes that Lockwood.
DeWoyne
St the 1. O. O. F. iuzll- A fine din­ Dec. 8. 9. and 10. and Mary Wil­
T’.*?11 £ ‘he »»&lt;**«»* ““”••« ‘"II have
up to
the . .
cham- lu ** Wlwl 001
by
linvo led tin
t/1 It.
it so hr gave th,. . .. ... .. ..
The state championship livestock twenty years inclusive. The total
ner w'u served by the Rebekah In­ liams will show her Southdown
for Barry county of this second in­ freight shipment* in and out of our hlst3rlcai background of the revoluctemens Harry Dunn Nov
Nov. «•
21. They will .how
»how the numnumberlabi.
Ray
Clemens.
Hi
Judging team, the first from Barry- stallment is 110.674 60.
Hf dld not
M^ H«- ' **r °f
»*Ch •*&gt;“»*«
• eitv
city, have made it neee*M.rv
necessary tn
to inin­ Uon and of
die* to about two hundred. The Rev liunbs in the Grand Rapids Junior Co. to represent Michigan ut lhe In­
County Treasurer Maus has not crease the M C office force, so that «wk to put blame toe pte-rnt eondlR. A. Houghton, a World war vet­ Livestock sliow al the same time ternational. was presented by F. Earl
aiorllng Roger, An “«•
_ „
Ed Smith has been put on fuU tlonx u^n pcraons.'bul
lhe K«ler‘«uri RUma'arorM C^-’
Then on
on Tuesday.
Tuesday, Nov.
Nov. 34.
34. other
other
eran. gave the Invocation.
. Hons
uponfacu
persons,
gavemad.
the uci.T wnri Ktemw
nismu neorue carntn- bUnk
Then
37;c preceding week she will ex­ Haas, district club agent. These at this writing, received a check
sr
th»
hbiorickl
which but
had
’ &lt;U1 *
ens­
»-*•
Burl 5 ,lng' Ge0Ige C
Adalbert cortright. Legion com­ hibit at (he Livestock Show at Chi­ boys will be in Chicago from from the slate for this final pay­ ' time at the freight house if this in-1 nutorical facts
MUo pU&gt;&gt;re. and a short time tater each
c'21 as
" It
!t is
- thu
' - clvll- ltrtfe lnwKabl&lt;. Rota;. ment^V Erway!Tj
ment of the primary school money creased service works oul
mander. acted as chairman and in­ cago
[ Thanksgiving Day until Dec. 5. for this county, but it will no doubt believed it will, -1
lurther
in-I
j
ans
W
h
0
listened
to
him.
and
whoce
n.-vru-s
Every
member
of
the
wlu
receive
an
account
number.
The
a
still
further
introduced Kim Bigler as toastmaster
Thia year a trip to the Interna- , Member, of the team are Albert Ben I £ cominTh. th“ i«r futeJe Be-•
crease in the number of employees [ kno*kdge of thus civU war had been
sbOuld nten to be pre.-1 old •«'
P^n will become
R- H.ofLoppenthlcn
led in the Sing
­ tlonal *h0* Wft’ oflfrc&lt;1lhe Dftt‘ ! ?f ll,e Parryville club. Richard Wai- low wc glvr lhr amounU to
ing
several
selections
aflei
be paid &gt; will be necessary
ualher^ from ljewfpaper&gt;. felt that
«aKS- ' '«*“** Jgn &gt;• 1“1
*U1 *nU“*
ing of several
select Iona
which a number of the post and tlv Creek Enquirer-News
to a boy lace. Monfoe. Aden Campbell and I tq^each school- district of
- -•the counI he gave them a real understanding
workers to annuities"when they
DreintVai and dblrict offteer? of who WM outstanding tn
4-H club Kenneth Dunn. Pleasant Hill The 1
of the conflict now going on in un-,
’
------—
reach the aae of 85.
our
trmti.Ln X ‘
Mr AUken ot l,M*
boy &lt;, were prr«.nted with medals in ty:
Under provisions of the Social Sehappy Spain.
«« .
J'
curtly Act empjpyers will deduct 1
I Professor Alton explained that he
, Dirt. 155 persons
of
Bhrl Bayles
Bule. read
r&lt;-.d
m n.na„.! punnca &gt;h*
‘ nw
mat
next year Ui.
me contest -nd elut «UvUU..
; per cent ot the wages of all eligible
Ethel
! school age
181 50
had visited Spain every year since
will be continued and expanded tq1
(Continued on page 3, Sec. 1&gt;
workers after the first of the year,
Fields" and Ml»s Clara Bush gave ।
iDut. 3Fr....l7 persons of
1920. He U deeply interested in the
. to be paid Into the U. 6. Treasury.
Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdlck's "The '
fifty million historical documents In I
i school oge ..
5.0 10
' Employers will contribute- a like
Unknown Soldier."
both being |
I the University of Seville
(proI Dlst. 4 Pr... .20 persons
amount for use toward payment of
splendidly rendered.
1 nounced Sa-Vel’-yai which give oct school age .
GO 00
James Cleary, an attorney from I
HAVE PROSPEROUS TIME . counts of the Spanish settlcmenU in
! annuities. These deductions will
' Dlst. 5 .
. 70 persons Of
Battle 'Creek, was the speaker and '
1 school
। the American hemisphere, and their BILL OF COMPLAINT WAS Increase until employer and eih231.00
—THEN THEY CELE­
ployee alike is contributing 3 per
gave a serious, earnest and worth- I
1 history up to the lime when Span­
. Dlst. 6 .
persons Of
FILED YESTERDAY BY
BRATE
: Lsti rule was ended and her Amenwhile address on "Government." He
’ school
59.40
pondcnl* are requested to get
All persons working for salary or
compared living conditions in Italy
can possessions were lost. Prof. Alton
persons Of
ATTY. KIM SIGLER
_*gcs. excepting those in agrtculunder Mussolini. In Germany under
[ taught history In the University ot
141 90
LANDLADY MISSES
en account of Thanksgiving Day
HiUcr and In Russia under Stalin MT. HOLLYWOOD MUSEUM
I Seville until July 18 this year, when
Dlst 8 Pr . .30 persons
D.
W.
CHASE.
PLAINTIFF,
an Thursday. The Banner will be
With the United Stales as a repub­
CERTAIN ARTICLES he was compelled tq quit Spain on
RESEMBLES THE HALL
printed Wednesday morning and
lic. He said all dignity as a human
COMMENCES ACTION few other excluded occupations, are
j account of the serious revolt against
persons
all advertising eopy should be in
being had gone m Italy, that Uierc
government
school age
OF SCIENCE
138X01 Their Disappearance
Con­ the
To’“ilnd«rt«Mi Uu. present civil Involves John Halloran, DeThe Pl,n u exp«ted to enable
by Monday night, Nov. 23 and
man is made for the state, not the
—
i.
। millions of workers to retire at Ute
state for the man as in democratic
Total
------nected With Vanishing
.8 97350
tective, Arthur Geukes,
day, Nov. 21. The dead line on
age of 65 with a monthly income
countries. In Russia ail the funds- , HUNTINGTON LIBRARY
rary to gel the background. That
Baltimore.
Of The Twins
Want Adv*, will be Tuesday. Nov.
for life, tire amount of the Income
menial principles that people hold 1
means going back a long time
Defendants
Dial. 1 .. . . 60 person.;
FINEST IN WORLD
i being
dear have been violated—hornet |
The "Gold Dust Twins " blew Into Spain's history 1? unique
.
,
, . . ,
, .
Being based
oasea on
on their
cnetr previous
previous wage
wage
If we
school age ..
.$ 198.00 ।
city about noon Saturday, com- think of Spaniards as* all of one raH,« u°nuw?lPrttuatlom? VIim te?Tn I rctQrd’ n lhc w01*"
befort
broken up. people have no property i
.
_.t. _
Dlst. 231 persons of
ofirp
mitt,.
N^iri.nr
unusual
situations,
has
been
[
65
uo cash values will ba
rights, the church has been de-1 Delightful Reunion With Mr.
ly appreciate your co-operation.
iAom lng by frel&lt;ht
ore gentlemen •vtw
type we are quite mistaken. Neither filed in the Circuit court of Barrv S’ld.tored
hUfamlly
age
.
school
.
10230
1
j
rOn
,
nowhere
and
llielr
names
are
rtroyed, the school system has de-1
~ -----~~
- Sincerely,
in language, maimers, customs nor county by Attorney Kim Sigler in/.
And
Mrs. Claude
Pier
­
Dlst. 325 persons of
generated, children are taken from ।
o, .J John Bn(1 AURUiit Bork Their prln- in appearance are the resident* of which David W. Chase of MiddleunderUkSg
school age .
■
B2u0 cjpai business, they claim. Is sharp- Spain all alike. There arc dark­
their parents
and
the general
son At Pasadena
lL,u,u gU workers is of unpreDlst. 4 . . . - 21 persons
morale of the Russian |&gt;eople Is | Los „,,
B
entng shears Ordinarily they hit a haired, swnrthy-complexloncd and ville 1* plaintiff, and John M. HnlAngeles.
California, Saturday,
69
30
proportions, th* plan m
school age .
gone Similar conditions are no- - jH|y
county seal, get lodging mid break­ dark eyed Spaniards, and Spaniards loran. a Grand Rapids detective,
BARRY DOCTORS HEAR
Geuke*. . meat market whlc|,
Postoffice emptoyw
Dbt. 5 ... .20
“ persons
Uceable In
Germany under Hiller.'
—e- couldn't
I fast at the Jail BUM
and UHUUMV
manage to
W ac- with red hair, light complexion and and Arthur
... Mv.......
...w ' w
get our driver till'
grocery dealer, of MlddleviUc W|U
wlU
who while a clever man. is never-Afternoon. *o we spent the forenoon!
00 001 quire a few pennies to cover the blue eyes. There ore part. %f Spain and acienaanu
DR. 0. H. GILLETTE
.
, arc defendants.
( wlUj all possible convenience to aaaout. 0.......... 3a persons
'cost
of‘ their
other meats. ‘Saturday
Wieless an autocrat
mitarrm and
ann not
tint u
hresting
__ ..__ ___
----- ■__ __
- getting
__ ...._ ____
anti■ cleaning
up.
our
------------i«is'
“* u
wwu uu,ct
’■‘“‘“■r that are as distinctly separated in1
n
,hnt ..r rha*a the
school age
125.40,
afumoon
in
Hasting*
proved
to
be
customs,
ways
of
living
and
dialect*
ployers
and
employes.
statesman________________
like
Mussolini
Mr . igundry done, clothes pressed, etc.. Hospital Reorganization The Dlst. ?Fr . .33 persons
plaintlff. has for several years, been , The postal employes will distribute
Ot
inaon
very
prosperous
for
Golddusters.
‘
‘
~
—
•
1
jf
t
hey
wcrc
m
different
coun
­
Cleary declared that Germany with . and. believe „
, ,not.
w. we
it u
or
wc BMMkcu
started
; in the employ of Mr. Geukes. one applications for an account numSubject Of DiacuBBion
•
108 801 They found themselves in posses- । tries.
it* vast preparations for war. is the | our uternoon drive in the rain We
tries. In
in the
the northernmost
northernmost part
port there
there of the defendant*, a* a clerk.
| ber and I(
for an Identification num,
sion of better than 82. which is a five people who differ essentially
greatest menace tn Europe today ; ,aw w many interesting things dur­
At Meeting
Total for Twp, ^8
— 7W.4U । rcft| fortune for the Twins. So they from the Basques, who also live in I The bill of complaint charges k.. to i» !«»■«(. n*
Hitler and Mussolini have not hesl-1 u,g our tour days around Los An- | nr O H Gillette who t* a mem(Continued on page 5. sec
Sec.- 1)
5bv Mr i pk&gt;re
emPto^rr
tated to violate their contract, with Kclrs Uial „obJy
to have' . Dr 9 » GUlette. who U a mem!1 had to snread
spread themselves after such I the northern rwirt
part The latter are nnf
not 1 rhaVnwaI
applications fa
for employe* re­
Other countries under the Versailles lime to make any entries In our bcr of the staff at St Mary's hos­
! prosperity. One dollar was taken1 Europeans at all. No one knows Chase was approached by Mr ! The applications
Geukes and informed that there was 1
address, occu­
and Locamo peace treaties, the diary, consequently the writings for pital in Grand Rapids and a mem­ MAKE GIFT TO
i to buy gin. They both knew exactly . where they came from, nor when. 1 a man over al the Middleville hotel. quire Ute signature,
. *•ber of the Michigan executive coun­
pation,
age.
*ex. maJr
color and iniairaB
informsWhat
to
do
with
II:
but
one
Of
them
Th&lt;*v
WArp
thorn
thr&gt;
nt
lil«speaker said.
They
were
there
at
the
dawn
of
his
­
iLULRL
nnAi pen
pracq whal 10 d0 wllh ,l; but onc of t,,en*
this and the next two days will all
wbetber tbc applicant to
ncu InUOO couldn't stand ss much as the other. tory. There are the Catalonians 1 who wanted to see them. Arriving at. yQn
Di contrast. Mr. Cleary spoke of be from memory. No doubt if any cil of the American College of Sur­
, a certain room there. Mr. Geukes rPgtjtzred with the United Stat**
the three branches of our own gov­ of you readers are familiar with
r, ,, „ „ ... ,
, They took another dollar and en­ and the Castllhans in central Spain introduced Mr. Chase to Mr. Hal- ^ploymenT iX.
Ing
of
the
Burry
county
Medical
Roll
Call
Workers
Meet
With
,
gaged
a
room
for
the
night,
paying
ernment. legislative, executive and the country you will find several
and the easy-going people in south­ । loran. one of the defendant* whom; -s_ - -----— --------------- ..—a..
Society. Friday evening. His topic
For employes the application rejudicial, and said the men who mistakes a*[to locations, etc.
Fine Sudcess Around
ithe
dollar in advance, ern Spain, tinged with the blood !) Mr. Chase had never seen before, i
was the reorganization of hospital
wrote the constitution of the Unit­
I which was nice of them. They were cl the Moor.
There tat tad,' .~lcr\rt2,
I, I 5“^.,^?,'^..
We have ^what wc tiioughl was
The County
generous and offered to divide their Bpelns *nd m.ny kind, ot s,»n- „„ lhe room The doot w„
ed States were Inspired. The Amer­ mln durlns two or ll» four d.y, ot, „„„ „„ „„„„
' VP~J
numberoc
amthrdocton of Barry county
ican government yra.s 11 noble ex­ our ,u. In lo« AnjrU, Howevrr i apWhile
"S|»ni»li type'!u,a ut „,Uorw according to the 1
'KSE,
Orville Sayles, treasurer of the liquor .stock, but the landlady would *'d&gt; Th'
,ral,u.
nne wrrled Alvrn
periment In the world’s history but lhe native, duafreed with
informed Mr I U,re of t&gt;us*ne-‘s and- 11 manufMand,lh;„, b, Pc„lock hoapltal. to have Barrv county Red Cross Chapter. I have none of that. Before they re- is a myth. The country Is cut up I hlll nt -nmnl«lnt
sharniv
into regions
bv
hteh
maun-1
“R °”r turlng company, the nature of prodIt ha* proven to be a happy one «ld If war nothin, hut a “huh „ pl,cM on u„
was
delighted
last
week
to
receive
tired
for
the
night,
they
Impressed
sharply
into
regions
by
high
moun
­
|U1 ,mld
Chaae that he was a detective; that &lt;
And whetller th&gt; MisbllalMrtl*
bringing greet' blessings and op­ rt»? From the reporta we were p,', rme thin, lot the ddeton. pa- a contribution ot nearly 810 from I upon the mistress of the house that tain ranges.
“tX hS'X.’Z'.nXr £
&lt;°
—
(Continued
on page 5. Sea, 1/
portunities enjoyed by no other readin,
—* urgent
* •-business
—1
•*that
— • would
,J
they *had
In 1200 B C- the Phoenicians es­
about
the
back
-' --- and
—- the
--- community.
------------ — —
---------_
fc.
.... drought
— ---’tient*
Dr. Gil- the committee in charge of the las: • •*country on earth.
Cheer Up parly, call them out of the city next day tablished colonies in Spain. The
home
aure the farmers
lannent of
ot., )cUc jp
nome 1I am sure
mentioned some of
: REDEDICATION OF
Following the program, a group of Michigan would then have
This action was and would have to leave al seven Phoe-meran eotoi, «■ CmThMe'tn;
h... ...
,„a
wel&gt; I
colored people from Battle Creek corned one or two days ot thia high '
greatly
appre- o'clock In the morning. They asked Arrle. gbo had eolonlea tn
he, ,
,t hu„
cnue dented ukFIRST- U. B. CHURCH
set
alarm
so they could
elated by Ute
•*--her
*—to*--‘ “the
------1---------------------------,J SpanUh penliuula Later came the ,
„ charged, but algnwyed. lhe dgnee, being taptaUI-.
„a iigbunng; u&gt;d u» peeclp-,Ind
hear it and be off at that hour. They
membership lias left at about that time. The land­
very confU1^,j
been issued to lady hod no reason to suspect that for the possession of Spain. The best ludt. lha[ he
music ror aancing.
1 dcr C]ouds os wc supposed they were.. Hent* and should be enforced
Speak At Morninf
The committees having the ban-■ was jusl a, wcl and refreshing as, ’ Another-DOlnl brought uo bv Dr
the Cheer Up they had committed any crime and examples of Roman architecture. ■ and frightened and thought of the
Service Sunday
quel and program tn charge are to any
u.e ever bad in Michigan.' ninette was the nerformanee of
engineering
and Roman art aisxrace
dl4»rac; mat wouici
would oe
be neaoea
heaped on
on i
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1) 1
club, for which
• Romah —
w—
•
be congrgluUled upon U&gt;e out„„,th
tn, ,7™, .
’ tL “ _Pe™rnl““
50 cents will have
are ■n
not
to be foimd in Holy but Ui
famU
Nev„ having!
having ' N«‘.
°1^
Never
Starting out north from the camp autop*les To be on the accredited
-in The Spaniards
Rnanlarrta derived
rtrrlvrrl their .__ ______
a
algndlng gueceu oi lhe .hole event
„
u„..e™. nlu«.o. ..«■
to be sent to the BLACK CURRANT
; Spain.
trrested
before and being 1 red lcller
1ot
United
which .g. lhe hr.', ol lu kind In | Or„a
AU Teemlnel There I
RIKHF&lt;5 A MFNAPF i‘ngu&gt;g'‘' Uw’ *nd rell&lt;~ l"ge,y thoroughly frightened, he wa* will-1 DureU15en
*“
national headquarters, the balance
a,, hpa,.. 0,25 p,r „nl 0(
•everal years.
; are ovcr forty airports In the vlclnDUbntb A MtNALt I from Roman rources. They were ln io\xrre to most anything that
“V wU1 ** celebrated the reremaining In the local treasury.
।
who die In the hospital and not one
- -----—[ruled
1 —g-j by
g— Roman
-----------emperors.
— irK Al Ipact
least 1[ w^
" .ld. s“vc publlcUy&gt;
.....
expense, etc.
. I nntantnv
°Penta« anrl
*nd "dedication
Ira firm nf
of the
Should there be any other or­ 1
ity of Lod Angeles and planes could was performed at Pennock hospital
ASKS CONTRIBUTIONS
Workers Are | three
Roman
emperors
were
Span-I
pujnurt
alleges
that
Mr
Halloran
church
and
parsonage.
Bishop
H.
' be seen or heard al any time, night last year. The advancement of med­ ganizations In the county wishing to ![ Government
. .
----- k
--------- ---------.. .. t*uunun aueges cnai Mr nauoran
r*nlards. The Gottis conqueredlards.
the The Goths
conquered the । convinced h*m .that
k_. it would
_“u be
k.Jl.
«• Fout of Indianapolis,
Indiananoll*. bishop
biahoo of
as did the cheer Up
Canvassing County And
FOR CHILD WELFARE ior day. We drove up to the observa­ ical science is aided to a great extent contribute
country
for ills
hu UCSL uiieicaui
interests and
area and also senior
tory and Scientific Museum in Grif­ by the performance of autopsies committee the giftz may be sent to
,
- In 409;
----- . and
,, the
. . Mohamme,,
lur
ana those
un»e of
ui I, the
- ,northwp«t
---Removing Plants
dans conquered all but northern hh famlly u
matUr
btehop , of the United Brethren
Families Of Some World fith Park and spent a very interest­ and the good health of the living Mrs. Forrest Johnson. Roll Call
chairman, or Orville Sayles, treas­
(Continued on page 0. sec. 1)
■ amount bemg reduced to 81.250 cash. cliureh.
ing half hour. The observatory ond can thereby be guarded.
The U. B. Dept, of Agriculture In
War Veterans Need
urer. both of this city.
planetarium were closed to visitors.
' Onc of
condition* wa* that he. e“’*n '- —— ----- .
,
cooperation with the Michigan oumu reameo aain
The members of the society and
Mrs. Johnson reports that the Dept, of Agriculture, is making a SNOW FENCES AND
.
Mr.
chase,
should
sign
such
a
state,
.Thp. PfOP^* Jb* y* 5^. Uw
(Continued
on
page
1.
Sec
2.1
their
wives
had
a
six-thirty
dinner
Assistance
Roll call is progressing nicely, the thorough canvass of Barry county,
PI niA/Q ARC RFARY
M Mr- Halloran might then!church ha* been purchaeed for •
at the Parker House after which
Mrs. Harry Wood. Child Welfare
HLUWb AKt ntAUT
d h
WM personage the rertdenc. having
workers in the city and rural dis­ removing the cultivated European
the ladies went to the home of Dr.
[ chairman for the American Legion MR. AND MRS. PHILLIPS
------------.
h
lied snd
tricts meeting with fin* success.vThe black currants. These plants were
been modem
modernised
and Minted.
painted. KxEX' done.
and Mrs. Gordon F. Fisher for a
I Auxiliary, has had several calls for
ARE LEAVING CITY bridge game. Dr. H. 8. Wedel of campaign closes on Thanksgiving declared a "public nuisance" by the State Highway Workers Arc The plaintiff, tn the bill of com«i
—r--------- -- - --------- ~
I ustetance from families of World
1020 legislature, and their growth or
' plaint, alleges that he was induced
chl?chT*.,”!?w baaement MBotr
Freeport is president of the society day. Nov. 26.
Preparing
For
Winter
war veterans, some needing cloth­
Il is heartening to know that in possession since that time has been
to sign the statement or confession. *he
building, real room*, a
Storms
ing. some needing bedding and oth- WiD Live In St. Louis After and Dr. FUher is secretary.
the Thornapple-Kellogg school in contrary to law.
and agree to pay the 81350. through'
kitchen and • amine room ana
. fraudulent scheme
____ ___and
_ _____
other
tmorovementa
which which
add
en asking for household goods of
improvements
add
Middleville an effort is being made
Two Year Stay In
State Highway Maintenance En­ a
These bushes are one of the alter­
conspir
­ other
THANKSGIVING
various kind*.
to have each room take a member- nate "Host Plante." responsible for gineer A. L. Brown reports that hi* acy on the part of Detective Hal­
Hastings
Tn one veteran's family there is a
AND HOMECOMING। ship. That is a good example for the spread and propagation of men have completed retting the loran and for that reason should be building. The large dining room to
Harold P. Phillips, who for the
six month* old baby tn need of
the Hastings city and othar public White
’lliggc Pine
c-mc Blister
l&gt;ggagct rvuag.
Rust, b
a gggavBAr:
disease snow fences along the trunk lines relieved of any responsibility there­
*warm clothing tor winter. It also part two year* ha* been the automo­ Special Program Sunday At school*
tn the-------county
to follow.
| which 1* menacing the growth to In the county and have the snow under. The bill asks that a decree of of the Sunday school and social ac­
- -- ----- -----------— --------------needs some warm blanket* for It* tive engineer at the Hastings Manu­
Last Saturday the ladles at the' maturity of Michigan's young white plows ready for use. Over in Van, the court should be entered absolv- tivities of the church. Another ImThe Presbyterian
bed and the other member* of the facturing Company, has resigned to
two banks here met with a gener- pine stands
Buren county .the snow plows were ing the plaintiff. Mr. Chase, from
accept
a
position
with
the
McQuayfamily need clothing, etc. So If you
ou* response report* Mrs Harry k
worg wUI be under the dlrec- busy on Monaay morning, clearing any and all further liability uqder air heating plant. Th* auditorium
Church
find any blankets or pieces ot Norris Company at 8t. Louis. Mo.
W°od/who 1* In charge of the busl- tlon of Lou Malloy with theia*sis:- the highways after a heavy snow- sald statement Ind agreement to and pulpit have been changed and
The annual Presbyterian Thanks­
blanket*, any clothing that can be He and Mrs. Phillip* will leave Hmness district. Contribution* at the ance of local WPA men. Barry coun- fall, from which Barry county was pay 11.250. The bill further ask* that redecorated and a new roof ha*
giving
and
Harvest-Homecoming
made over, or anything that can be llngs on December 3.
local factories have been fine also, ty resident* are perhaps more fa­ exempt.
I the defendants should be ordered been added to" the edifice.
During their stay here Mr. and service will be hald Sunday morn­ some exceeding those of last year. miliar with barberry eradication a.&gt;
used by thia or any other veteran's
Now the church and parsonage
Last winter the men were kept by decree of the court, to surrender
■ family, please call Mr*. Wood at her Mrs. Phillips have made a host of ing. November 22, at the First Pres­
Next week Mrs. Johnson hopes to a means of controlling black stem busy night and day part of th*- and deliver up to the plaintiff the are in splendid condition and a fine
home. 2607, or at the express office. friends who will be sorry to hear byterian church. A fine program has be able to give a more detailed re­ rust or wheat rust. The methods are ..
—
a
...
i
—
------------------------—
*,...
time during the severe weather, but Mld Jt4U.mcnl or confession, and credit to the untiring energy of the
219B, and the articles will be called they are leaving. They Ixave been been arranged and the special sol­ port of the campaign.
pastor,
the Rev. E. O. McBherry,
rimllar, only in the case of the this county had cleaner highways ail copies thereof.
actIse workers In the Presbyterian oist will be Arthur Lower, baritone,
black currant*, they are uprooted' than any of the surrounding counThe case seems to be quite an un­
It Is hard to think, these cold church, members of the Hartings a new member of the High school STORM SEWERS
immediately.
ties, so travelling men said, and the usual one and will no doubt be fol­ worked unitedly tor thi* enterprise.
faculty.
The
pastor
will
preach
a
nights, that babies are not warmly Country Club. Mr. Phillips Joined
The people of Barry county are writer know* that M-43 in Barry lowed with considerable Interest, Such loyalty and cnlhostaem apeak
ARE COMPLETE requested to give these workers ev- j county was a better road than II especially by people residing In and
clothed and sufficiently fed. but It the Rotary club and Mrs. Phillips sermon on the subject "Gratitude
To God." and the text will be from
is often the case even here In Barry is a member of the Women's club
ershlp.
the 116th Psalm “What shall I ren­ WPA Project Took A Week ery assistance in locating and re-; was near Richland, where for sev- around Middleville.
and the Monday Study club.
county.
moving
this highly destructive' eral weeks, there was one-way trafThe beat wishes of their friend* der unto the Lord for all his bene­
Any contribution that you may
luck dinner will
RUSSELL SMELKER BUYS
tnenace to one of Michigan's great fie in a number ot places.
Longer Than Origi­
fit* unto me?" if for any reason
moke for thl* child welfare work go with them to their new home and
SMITH
HARDWARE
CO.
natural resources. Work in the I
.. A, .J? *
----members cannot be present on Bun­
nally Planned
will be greatly appreciated and ypUr work.
Russell Smelker. who for the post
southwestern section of Michigan. 51158
day morning will they kindly give
own heart will be gladdened by Such
HEALTH UNIT, ten yean luu been manager of the going to Lake Odaaaa
BARRY CO. HEALT
Eighth district WPA offices In will-^be under the supervision of
or mall their gift to Forrest Lone,
an act and by the thought that you PARKING SPACE READY
neury n
xuiMur u.
uuc Odessa, «..u
M1&amp;s B*1'? Boylan, whose home
Kalamazoo have announced that Henry
R Edgar
of Lake
FOR USE SATURDAY. 717 West Green street?
UUr.lu7,.Xu&gt;«
u7«m.Uon and
»&lt;l ■&gt; ■» North C.roUo., nrl, tn t&gt;- chased the slock of the Smith
have helped some one less fortunate.
The church will be decorated for the storm sewera.ln the city of Has­
Light* are being installed thin
lonmm.m bttIMIn,. n»y be ob- cembtr WIU Join U» Kbit ot th, Hardware company and took pos­ burning.
tings
were
completed
at
a
coat
of
week on the city's parking space on the occasion and the service will
Unit as ■a session of the store on Saturday.
UUhrt by w«Un« to th.I ,dOr«. Ii Barry County Health """
West Court street. The lots have commence at 10:30 o'clock. Every­ 89.745. October 14 was given as the
Residents ot Barry .county are health counsellor. Miss Boylan will Mrs. Harold smith will continue at
been well graded and the space will one given a hearty invitation to at­ actual completion date of this work
which required about a week longer not to be alarmed if they see a.; have os her territory all schools in
be open for use on Saturday of this tend.
I
Carlton,
Castleton.
Hastings
and selling electrical appliance* for Mr.
than it was estimated would be the stranger going through their gar-’
BEN MERRICK.
Smelker.
case when the project was started dens, for his sola object is to de- i woodland townships.
BETA SIGMA PHI.
Because of poor health. Ben Mer­ nlshed free by the etty authorities I
Miss Boylan comas from New
Earl Bruzley of Grand Rapid* ha*
Dance Friday night. Nov. 20. Com­ -- ------ . termine the presence or absence of
rick is having an auction sale at and the city will have a man at the
Hastings officials pledged 12.081 to the cultivated European black cur- York, where she has been working been named Mr. Smelker'* *uoo***cr
his farm four miles out on the space Saturday nights to help pork munity Hall (Puller Bldg ). Dancing
at the Henry Street Health Service,
0
to
12
o'clock.
Martin's
orch.
Re
­
the
work,
which
was
located
on
j
rant*.
There
men
have
all
been
East State Road, with Henry Flan­
an organization famous for work
freshment*.
35c
per
person.
—
Adv.
Green
and
Market
*troets
and
was
;
equipped
with
the
proper
authority
nery as auctioneer. Mr. Merrick of­
designed to relieve the existing load and credentials and will display of this kind. Mis* Boylan ha* also
fer* two horses, four cows. R. I. Red
STORES TO BE OPENED.
I been associated with Ml** Margaret
NOTICE TO JUBTMBIR
MICHIGAN'S TURKEYS.
upon Che city sewage disposal plant-1 them upon request.
pullet*, hay and grain, farm tools,
| Wale*, nationally known authority
Word ha* been received from dMj
The food and grocery store* of'
Michigan * turkey crop 1* expect­
and miscellaneous articles. He al- Hasting* will be open Wednesday ed to be » record one in number.
i on health nursing sarvlc*. who 1* Judge McPaak that the Jury will DOk alIto
Th* regular meeting M the Ameri­
GUILD BUMMAGE SALE.
•o offers hfs farm at private sale evoplng. Nov. 25. for the convenience1 We wondir how this will effect the can Legion Auxiliary will be held on
on
the
staff
of
th*
w.
K.
Kellogg
be
called
until Monday, Nov. 30 M «a.
------------------------------------ ---------Be* th* adv. for particular*.
of Thansgtvlng shoppers.
Foundation.
Thursday evening.
| Thur*, Frt., Nov. 19 and 20.—Adv.
■ price.

'GOLD DUST TW NS'
VS LISTINGS

w.

t
ift

s

E

POSTAL DBPARTMMTT Bl.
GAN DELIVERY TO EMPL0YEE8 MONDAY

EXCELLENT ADDRESS
BY JAS. CLEARY

FORTY A RPORTS
NEAR LOS ANGELES

3

Jud Hyames Coming Hero
As Speaker At The
Brotherhood

Notice to Advertisers
and Correspondents

ftN UNUSUAL CASE
FROM MIDDLEVILLE

u» vnl»r»l Bwauw ««1 m,. 7^,^ ,„ould „

One Auction Sale

B

T3

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEM»Mt 18, 1W
Mrs. Cornelius M*nnl entertained
Robert Bponabie of thia city has
the J. F. P. club on Wednesday aft­ opened an undertaking business at
ernoon.
Hopkins and his wort started the
The two banks of this city will past week with two funeral* and
distribute upwards of 826.000 in three ambulance call*. Hl» friends
wish him success in bls chosen work
Rummage sale—Emmanuel parish Christmas savings
I boose Thursday and Friday—Adv
Robert Brown. Ellis and Leslie
Ideas for Ute holiday table linen
Construction has started on’ a may be found this week in Lite east Daniel* hail a short bunting season
They went north on Saturday and
,8283.000 High School budding In
relumed on Bunday, each man hav­
I Midland.
Miss Ger th a Herbert of Lutke
| The Dart National Bank at Ma­ Odessa ha* accepted a position in ing bU deer Qne HaaUngs man re­
turned with a twelve point buck, we
son lias purchased lhe First State the dining room at the Parker
wbre informed.
l Savings bank there.
House.
There was a fine attendance al
; Officials of lhe Ionia Free Fair
Mrs John F Goodyear is recov­
announce that a profit of 8940100 ering nicely from an operation per­ the Knights Templar inspection on
was made during the 1936 Fair. The formed Monday morning at PennocK Thursday evening, guests coming
from Flint. Grand Rapids. Kala­
nates for 1937 have been set for hospital.,
mazoo. Battle Creek and other cit­
August 17-22.
Mrs John chamberlain enter­ ies. Dinner was served followed by
A recount of the votes cast No1 vember 3 in the prosecutor s race in tained her Bunday school class at lhe inspection
her home Thursday afternoon. Thsy
, Ionia county has been asked by the
I The Boy Scout councils of AUe*
defeated candidate. Burton B 81b- all had a delightful lime.
_ , ।i gon auu
and Ottawa LMun.ira
counties ua.r
have
Next week Thursday. Nov. 28. Is merged
work wlth c M nn.
ley. democrat Geer R. Smith, reThanksgiving Day. Advertisers and neU deputy rcgi0I1»] eleeuiive. act। publican, won by 17 votes.
correspondents
are
urged
to
gel
lng
u
executive
ot
the
united
coun
­
At lhe nu-cting of Lowell Rotary
: di. The new council is divided into
. Wednesday of last week. Hastings copy in earlier than usual.
A report of lhe golden wedding IlUTr dUtricts.
was aell represented by the pres­
ence of Charlie Hinman. Warren anniversary celebration for Mr and
■ Carter. Will Parker. Roy Fuller, Mrs Seymour Lb ington will ap­ the Banner that they arrived O. K
Charlie Leonard and Roy Thomae pear in next week s Banner
Bliss A Godfrey, who )tas friends In Daytona,Beach. Fla, after a
' A daughter weighing six and
hard drive through the snow in lhe
. three-quarter* pound* was bom on tn this city. h«* resigned a* mayor Kentucky mountains Their address
' Friday to Mr and Mrs. Harold of Eaton Rapids, because ol poor
is 201 Fairview Ave.. Daytona
Wright &gt; Bessie Karme* t of Lansing. health. He has served slightly less I Beach. Fla. Il is very warm there,
than
a
year.
The little one has been named Mari1 they said.
'
City Treasurer Jessie Loppeuthien
lynn Mac Mother and daughter arc
The fire alarm early Monday
reported
lhe
sum
of
11,855
47
as
de
­
doing splendidly.
Congratulations
are extended to the tgirenls and linquent city taxes for 1936 The two morning was caused by a small fire
। the grandparents. Mr. and Mrst' ■city supervisors were instructed so al lhe William J. Norris farm south­
spread the same on the winter tax east of Hastings on M-37. The truck
, Louis Karmes.
was also called Saturday morning
i For many years lhe towering. roll.
i stack* of the Alpha cement ComThe National bank and the Has- to lhe Robert Moore home on
pany have stood as landmark.1. but Ungs City bank have been deaig- South Broadway where it was feared
| they stand no mere. A charge o! naled as depositories for the cilys burning leaves endangered lhe
1 djTtamitc leveled them to the funds of all description*, such ac- house.
ground one day last week, and their U°n having been taken by the city
DEATH OF WALTER
I destruction marked the end of a 1 fathers.
OGDEN ON SUNDAY.
!। _™
once prosperous business Erected in ’ Members ol the rales force of the |
... ______________
Walter Ogden, aged 52. died at
stores In
Hastings and
1904. the largest of the five stack; Fekipausch Nr
tA..u...
.
---------------iville had a business meeting Pennock hospital Sunday night fol­
was heralded as the tallest steel
and concrete chimney in the world -* Uie Parker House last week lowing an illness of three days. He
TUesday. Refreshmenu were served
survived by his wife, three sons,
। al that time.
Charles of Grand Junction. Oolo..
Friends of Albert Hafner will re- late in lhe evening.
A daughter was born on Wednes-1 Morris at home and Arthur of
(gret to learn of his death at his
day.
Nov.
11.
lo
Mr
and
Mrs
Alva
Grand
Rapids;
Mrs.
home ui
name
in uuiuui.
Duluth. Minn . ngca
aged 75.
(□
—— .... ........... - ,
« _a daughter.
7 X
.
Fifty years ago he graduated from' A Kirchner (Helen Echtinaw) of Leona Nell of Grand Rapids; his
the Hastings High school In the I Grand Rapids formerly of Has- t parents. Mr and Mrs. William OgIclass of 1886 A few months ago Mr । “"8* Mother and baby are doing
°l Grand Junction: a brother.
.
■_
I —
Fred, ot Hastings and two sister*.
Hafner visited old friend* in Barry splendidly. Congratulations
county, and the scenes of hi* early
»arrV county deer hunter* seemed Amy Ogden of Redcliffe. Colo. and
school days in Hastings in a bust-1 to far® P«“y »e» thl* year, quite Lura Ogden of Grand Junction
Funeral services were held at the
| na»s way. he had been connected for i a number of them getting a deer
several years with a well known lhe flr»t day. In thl* respect the ex- Middleville Methodist church on
stcamship transportation company I pcrlence of O&gt;cir Page is quite un- Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock
«fith
burial in the Parmelee ceme­
1 in Duluth Deceased will be remem-1 usual. Leaving Hasting* Sunday
lxr~d by many friend* around the ' morning. In two and a half hours tery.
county, who will recall the many he was at hL* hunting ground beDEATH
OF ROBT. LENNON.
qualitles of heart and mind that yond Mount Pleasant He hadn’t
Friends of Robi Lennon, former
enabled him to readily make and' hunted long before he downed a
resident of this city. wDl regret to
retain Luling friendship*.
nice buck, and arrived home early
learn of his death Wednesday of
Specialist* have suggested how Sunday evening. Not so fortunate
last week in Sunshine sanatorium.
space can be used Ln the home dur- | was the experience of Ben Gldley
Grand Rapids where he had been
ing the winter month* to serve the B^n knocked down a buck, but it
confined for several years. He was
was
able
to
hobble
away.
Gelling
double purpose of decoration and
-M“ ,n
“w“*
65
years of age and is .survived by
nutrition Basil, chives, summer sa­ sight of H again in a short time his son George of this city, a
vory, sweet marjovam. and parsley he again (clocked it down. When he daughter. Mrs
Edward Peel, of
are a few of the herbs that can be arrived at where it had fallen an­ ..Grand Rapids, and a brother liv­
placed in the window box that can other gang of hunters had put »' ing in Kenokha, Wisconsin. The fu­
be reached by sunlight. Basil and tag on It. So Ben Jost out.
was held at the home of hu&gt;
An Interesting article recently neralpfX?'
chives can be used in flavoring
about- —
the discovery
of the
soups, salad* and stews. Summer tells
--------------------------. » —
- - .
un-a! Jumbo
.Inmho gold
cold mine
mm; in Nevada,
Nevada.
“ie Woodland cemetery
savory, or European mint can be great

LOCAL NEWS

HEAD LETTUCE

5c

Food Center
THESE PRICES GOOD FROM THUMS., NOV. 19 TO THURS. NOV. 26

Make FOOD CENTER Headquarters for Your
Thanksgiving Poultry and Other Food Supplies !

Grapefruit
TEXAS SEEDLESS

7- 25c

2 lbs. 25c
6 lbs. 25c
6 lbs. 16c
2 c lb.

Wax Beans
Spy Apples
Sweet Potatoes
Squash

2Oc
*• 25c

CRANBERRIES
DIAMOND WALNUTS
MILK
TaU Can

7c

is.

K of C Baking powder
25c
Rumford Baking Powder 25c
Sur-Fine Mince Meat
Mamy's Favorite Molasses

size 19c
size 19c
Pkg 9c
10c can

1*4 Pound Can

IO lb. bag
25 lb. bag

49c
*1.19

Salad Dressing, Edna's Best
Pumpkin, Stokley's,
I'/r
Orange, Lemon, Citron Peel
A &amp; H Baking Soda

Qt. 23c
can 10c
9c pkg.
7c pkg.

SUGAR “s-JELL-0
Ail Flavor*

5c

F“j ^\| IQ Pillsbury’s Best
5 lb. sack 3Oc

CIGARETTES
Sir Waller Raleigh». Old
Gelds, Camels. Chester fltldj.
Loekie*.
V

23c

2

lU'/z lb. »ck

Candy Bars
3 for 10c
Hershey's Baking Chocolate Bar, 9c
Peas, First Pack
10c con
Asparagus, Lawrence
19c can

Camay SOAP - 5'ic
OXYDOL

19c
bmall Kt*e. Jr

Has Served The

ahry theatre' !K'

B

HaMiage. Michigan

JHLd

OUR BEAUTIFUL NEW POPULAR PRICED THEATRE

25c

Sunday • Monday—Matinee Sunday 3:00 F. M^—5:00 P. M.
Occasional Special Showing* tn Mid-Week!
Price* Always ADULTS ISc

25c

STEAK
Pure LARD

2

25c

Round, Sirloin or Swiss

Center Cuts

Choice and Tender

‘ 19c

Liver, Beef or Pork
Mutton Stew
Mutton Shoulder Roasts
Spare Ribs

15c
5c
12c
17c

lb.
lb.
lb.
lb.

IFe Will Have a Fine Selection of Ducks, Geese and Turkeys

Pythian Bister*—Do not forget U
regular meeting at Temple, Tue
day evening. November 24 —x x x
The Aid Soclet/of lhe Presbyte
lan church meets this Thursday al
emoon In the church dining roo:
A good attendance is desired.

The regular meeting of the Ir
ing Fellowship will be held Frid
night. Nov. 20. al the Irving Pelkr
ship hall. A good program is bel:
planned Pot luck supper at 7:i
will not become allglble to receive a Come and apend a few hours tn f&lt;
pension from the church fund as a lowshlp with us—K. Eggleston. Be.
retired minister until he reaches
Townsend plan meeting at Ms
the age of 68. HU family has not
as yet made definite plans regard­ cabee hall Thursday night, Nov.
ing their place of residence but they at 7:30 o'clock. Special featui,
will not remain in Elkhart after ' along with a good speaker. Ooij
latest Towns? |
January 7 next. There are four son; and get all the
in the Lockton family; John D- nows.

IS

IS

$
9

Sunday. Monday, November 22, 23

“THE CAPTAIN’S KID”
With Guy Kibbee. Moy Robson. Sybil Jason
ADDED—•Comedy. "Wife of tbo Party-­
ADULTS IS CENTS

CHILDREN 16 CENTS

Wednesday, Thursday. Friday. Nov. 25. 26. 27

TRATMC TtiEATBF

r

PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF NOVEMBER 22

Sunday, Monday, November 22, 23

"LADIES IN LOVE

GERTRUDE MICHAEL and WALTER ABEL

’SECOND WIFE”
SAVE COUPONS—No Cosmos Will Be Given Owl After
9 P. »L On Monday.

Wednesday, Thursday. Friday. Nov. 25. 26. 27
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

WILL ROGERS and JANET GAYNOR

Shirley Temple « "Dimples”

"STATE FAIR"

Special THANKSGIVING DAY Matinee Stert. *13:44 And

Thanksgiving Day Matinee. 3 P. M. and Continuous
Adults ISc

-&gt;

GENE

AUTRY

lhe SINGING COWBOY

WORKERS MEET1!
The Barry County Council of
Uglous Education. northoast ।
i| trict. will meet m the Woodl
OT . United Brethren church Sunt
November 23. dt 2:30 o'ckrk for
. purpose of organising ths distJ
I Tiie pastor* and all Sunday sell
workers of the following churtl
i are included in the district: ]
Brethren of Woodland and gel
Woodland; Woodland Method
। Coau Grove Christian; Woodl]
! Lutheran; East Woodland Evan]
leal; United Brethren ofWoodbl
Tamarac, Kilpatrick and Woodl]
I

K*
Sc;

COUPON NIGHT—Tuesday, November 24

SPECIAL RETURN REQUE5T

With Lew Ayres, Sally Eilers, Norman Falter

every worthwhile community pt
ect Surviving are Ute son ant
daughter, Mrs Vida Morford
1 Delton, also five grandchildren i
seven
great-griftidchildren.
। funeral was held at the Bun
I church on Saturday al two ocl
and burial was tn the Banf
cemetery, the Rev. Oscar Smith
|l ficiating.
SUNDAY KCHOGl'

Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 BL-

CHILDREN lie

Saturday Only. November 28

FANCY CHICKENS -22c
FRESH FILLETS
- 15c

Mr. and Mrj
Wallace Oaboi
have opened their new home* fl
lhe Friday meeting al tlie Warner

Episcopal Ohurch In
Elkhart 17 Years
Many in Hastings will remember
Rev. Walter J. Lockton. who was for
many years rector of the Emmanuel
Episcopal church in this city, going
from here to Battle Creek and la­
ter removing to Elkhart. Ind. He
has been compelled to quit his pul­
pit work due to an illness with
which he has been afflicted for lhe
last four or five years. He has ten­
dered his resignation as minister
of 8t. John's Episcopal church of
Elkhart where he has served since
1919

CkUdrta 10c.

OLEO

Fat Pork
Chunk, 15c
Beef Kettle Roast
12c lb.
Pork Shoulder Roasts
Lb. 20c
Pork Loin Roast, Lain or rib end 20c

Organizations

St. John'*

Lockton is now assistant treasurer
of the General Electric Company. FINE DISPLAY OF
Schenectady, New York; Richard C
PIONEER ARTICLE
Lockton Is lhe northern Indiana
representative of the Clues' Securi­
ties Corpora lion of IndianapolU; Irving Charlton Has Splend
Collection In The
|
Charles H Locktan is the supervis­
ing auditor of the Travelling Audi­
LyBarker Store
tors' list! of lhe General Electric
Company and Robert George LockHave you noticed the splend
lon is the Western Michigan repre­ exhibit of antique articles in fl
sentative of lhe Bancamerica-Blair west window of lhe LyBarker dii
Securities company.
Morel II is the property ot Irvi
At present the Rev Mr Lnckton Charlton, who ha» spent year* m«
it president of the standing com­ Ing a collection of firearms and ot’
mittee of the Northern Indluta dlo-' erpkmeer articles, which he wo]
cese. the highest office in the dlo-’ ^contribute to n museum if th]
cese aside from the bishopric. He is were one in this city and coura
His display contains a *plnn]
a member of the council of the dio­
wheel, some brass
boots, ea..,
can]
cese ana
and many times
limes nas
has served as wncei.
Brass toed bools,
delegate to lhe general Episcopal I molds, mortar and pestle, bow H
convention held every three years arrows, fiat iron. axe*, bool jack ■
He has alwav*
always been held in the
lhe vrrv
very ' many more articles that are rd
high esteem by those who know him. nowadays
Mr Charlton is but one of i
FIRST STATE LEAGUE DE­
peopte of Barry county who wo]
BATE TO BE HELD HERE- contribute relics to a muuiim wh]
The High school debating squad is they would be preserved tor poelj
in the midst of Uwlr busy season
If
anyone
wants
to make ........
him]
now with at least one and sometimes
-------- —-- -------— —
two debates scheduled each week ' famous and beloved in Barry cod
Tuesday evening a negative and an ■ l&gt;- Ju*t endow a museum before]
affirmative team including DcFor- «'&gt; these pioneer things arc loot
rest Walton. Lawrence Moore and I discarded
■
Marian
Hewitt
(negative!
ant! 1 nronruuiA*
Horace Angell. Ruth Hathaway. i REOPENING FORMER
and Robert Hcnney (affirmative)!
on r»D Cl Ci/ATn
went to Ionia for a four-way deUU-Ur. ELEVA I U
bate with Ionia. Greenville and ' T
a/
..
Stanton, on Wednesday afternoon ^65118 Enzian Of Bradley I
Emerson Cairn*. Achsah Buck and
Acting As Manager I
Ruth Hathaway debated at Way-,
nr n
:
land, and on Thursday the affirmBusiness
ntive team from Comstock high [ The former Hastings co-opera
school comes to Hastings to meei elevator was opened again for bi]
lhe local negative team.
i
this week with Leslie Enx]
Plan* have been completed for,ot Bradley, formerly of Creaseyd
the first state league debate to be charge He had been conduct]
held in the central auditorium Wed-'
elevator at Bradley but had
used in dressing* for meat and , seemingly a great range of materia!,
nrsday
•FLYING VISIT.'
. evening.
-----------Nov. 25 at 7:30. De- nrc recently cailslng the loss of I
pouluy. Aside from nutrition value. । through which gold is liberally
------- * Walton.
—
Lawrence
Moore business.
Mrs. Robert B Harkness. Jr., and ”
Forrest
--------they tone to form an attractive sprinkled. For month* Its owner had Harris Fahnestock of Cambridge, and Marian Hewitt wl.
rill-----represent
Thi-s week Mr. Enxlan and I
r---------winter decoration. Good soli, and. been shipping gold bricks to the Maas., literally made a -flying visit" Hastings against Otsego on the helpers are cleaning out the elel
watering a couple of times a week.1 mint for which he realised many with Dr. and Mrs R b. Harkness 1 question—Resolved: That all electric tor. putting the machinery 4n co:]
arc about the only requirements. । thousand* of dollars. This led lu rrmay
of las:
las: week.
week. They
They , uuimea
Friday evening
evening of
utilities snouiq
should De
be governmentally
governmentally tlon. preparatory to opening I
The citizen* of Watervliet, under investigation, and knowledge of the flew to Battle
Creek coming here owned and operated. Arthur Secord. business. While the building is J
the leadership of Rev. Karl Keefer.1 discovery was sent broadcast. The by auto. They left Battle Creek Sat-1 coach of men's debating al Western owned by the bondholders of I
staged a real demonstration in hon- i news tent mining rxperta and rep- urday morning at 7.30 o'clock and State Teachers college. Kalamazoo, former company, the firm name
or of Hon Lean D Case, editor of 11esentative* of great corporation* U* wcre
Washington. D. C.. at 3:30 will judge Ute contest.
been changed lo the Hastings Qr
the Watervliet Record, as soon as It the spot with proposition* to buy., m the afternoon after nuking stop,1
----------------- -----------------------and Bean Oo.
4-H CLUB LEADERS MEET.
was known that he had been elect- I Million* were offered
|n Detroit and Albany. N Y
----------far lhe prop. .
in
PASSING OF MIU*
all —
answered
, --------------------- --------------. « »______
ed Secretary of Slate. A big parade [ erty. but they ------ rerc
2" ™
.if,
— __
Thirty-Ore leaders of lhe girlsDEI.LA WEB8T
and a huge bonfire were incidentab | by the proprietor who inquired: RECBEATION CLASH CHANGED. 4-H clothing clubs in Barry county
Mrs
Della Webster, aged
Democratic Secretaries ot State in | --Whlu would I do with mlllioas ol
The Women s Recreation class un­ nicl in lhe court room Tuesday aft­
Michigan
dollars, over half
Miss Helen ernoon for an outline ot the season'a
Micnigan have
nave been
oeen about
aooui as scarce ! uvuara,
nmi of which
wuk.u would der lhe direction of
- and lu&lt;-—taken
u.. by Use government Merson
held lu first meeting last
...........black-birds,
as white
Mr Case
be
as
work, him Lol* Corbett, assistant Thursday night al the home of
evening with
will be the first democratic incum-, profit As It is I can take lhe gold Thursday
•
..... sixteen pres- rwiK.state UUU
club iraun.
leader, explained
ezpiamca mthe D.
--------- ”
bent of that office in 48 years Mr out just as 1 want it." Quite a sen­ cat. Il was decided lo meet here- projects and lhe new bulletins which Hnc *QA “ 110 10,18 rc*ldenl of Ba
Cam: is one of the well-known, nble conclusion.
But a
small after on Wednesday for the great­ have been rewritten and brought up I county, her parents. Mr. and 5
R
W
Tolle*,
being
pioneer resldJ
newspaper editors of Michigan, has stampede has started for the spot er convenience of many of the to dale iu to style and method Girl*
Meeting* will,----------------therefore. are enrolled in forty clothing clubs of Barry township. On Oct. 18. J
very capably filled many position* of and doubtless a big new gold field members
------ -------------------------trust and responsibility. The best will result. The "Forty Niners" came, be held every Wednesday evening I throughout the county, according to she was married lo Reuben Webs]
wlslies of host* of friend*, regard- far from finding al) the gold in this'at 7:M sharp in the high school | Miss Sfary Bullis, home demonstra­ who died in 1935. Mrs. Webster
a loyal member of the Bun
ted al party, go with him.
great country.
’
I gymnasium.
I non agent.
Methodist Protestant church i

Flake White Soap
6 giant bars 25c
Super Suds, Concentrated pkg. 17c
1 PKG. FREE
Roman Cleanser
Lae. Bottle 10c

BOLOGNA 2

REV. W. J. LOCKTON
RESIGNS PASTORATE

Frank Morgan, Helen WesHey. Stepin Fatchit

ADULTS U Cents

CHILDREN 18 Csnte

Saturday Only. NovsmWr 28
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

THREE MARRIED MEN
Brian. Gwrt« Barbier. Markrte Gateaen '

— PLUS —

"DOWN THE STRETCH

With Lots Wilds. Smiley Biirnsttfl, Lon Ghana-/. Jr.

With Fatrigia Ellis, Dannis Moor*

ADDED-Csrlofn. -Dick WbiUtagtaw'* CM"
ADVLTN X* CENTS — CHILDREN IS CENTb

MATINEE PRICER: Adali* ISe. 3:M aud I* P. M.
EVENING PRICES; After 7 P. M. 36 cento Adalis

MATH or 7. I. GRATIS.
Albert L Greves, 62. who
served as supervisor at Yari
Springs township for eight yd
died an Bunday at his Boom a]
a three months' illness. Hi* &gt;114
•on. Leroy Graves, and a slater, 1
Grace wood ot Oakland. Cal. J
rive turn. The funeral was held
his late home yesterday, WadnasJ
afternoon and the remains taked
Wauseon, Ohio, for burial
]
WHAT SMIlia CAN DO. I
A smile te quite a funny thing;
It wrinklM up your face.
I
And when iu» gone you never 1
Ito secret hiding place
|
But tar more wonderful it to
I
To see what smiles can do;
You »mij« al one. ha smiles at ]
And ao om .smile makes two. 1
He smiles at tome one since I
smiled.
'And then that one smiles back]
] And that ano smiles until in tri
You tall in keeping track.
|
Now. since a sratu) Can do great a|
By cheering hearts of caro.
1
Let's smile and smile andnot I
’
-1
That ini Lie* go everywhere!
I

o Civil Service examination a.
3; penon without pull made the
Steal mark and got lhe Job.

�THE HASTINGS R INNER. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 19. J9J0

'big

gains in farm
ELECTRIFICATION

Sporting Items

COMING ATTRACTION.

$ At the Theatre

:i

Consumers Power Connects
Average.Of 56 Per Work-

promise of a fine pencil with his i
CLASS ELECTS
Summer 4-H
[name on it.
.—3
j Certificates and pins for varying1 Bchodi class bald
I
ratings
in
4-H
work
during
the
ywtg
“
Club Members] I were presented. This wu the first — ‘
Receive Awards made a part of lhe summer pro- fifteen being prewnt.

Gertrude Michael in
I
mg uay
Day in
In uctoocr
October
■"" 1
i/ ing
"Second Wife."
(Continued from page 1. Sec. n
pollowing the presentation of win- Hyde; Treas.. Beuy
। to pull him down. Hastings bucked ; By connecting rural customers at' A sympathetic romance, featuring
Games and refreshment#
I the line and with Inches to go Hall1 lhe rote of fifty-six during tach Gertrude Michael and Waller Abel,
ner». pins, etc. a feature-length
to make a happy time.
Each year the three boys ranking
i carried tiie pigskin over on a powvr; working day in October. Consumer* forms Ute basis of "Second Wife.'
movie "Under the 4-H Flag" waZj
highest in 4-H club work during
I play. The extra point was not con-1 power Company brought the num- the love story of a widower who
shown
»&gt;&gt;«»&lt;■ with
win, wic
Um* Luniuuinniw
compliments ui
of u&gt;c
Ute
in
in ik
1834
&gt;« Americana
American, aw
ate aox
verted on either play.
' bcr of farms receiving electric kervseeks lo make a new home for him­
the summer are awarded a trip to venird Film company, sponsored by 000 pounds of moat against
Thal ended the scoring for eilhkr Ice al lhe end of the month to 25.317, self and his young boy. and of a
tiie International by the Barry Sears, Roebuck and Co.
000.000 pounds of fish.
team although Hastings carried tin*' representing more than a third of girl who accepts him in preference
County Fair Association. The Judges'
fight all the- way and wm in scoring the 73.000 farina located within lhe to a younger and wealthier suitor
decision Is based on attendance at
BENNETTMEN DEF EAT position several times In the las'., frdnchlse area of lhe company,
quarter. Penalties Inflicted on Um I This rapid program of rural ejec- Mary Brian starring In
club meetings, interest In club work,
BELDINQ ELEVEN
Bennettmcn set them back and trlhcntlon was made public Thun.attendance ut camp during the
iialted one of their rallies.
day in a report prepared by H. J.
summer, showing lhe project at lhe
12-0
A fun-filled yarn of the trials, on J
The line-ups were;
• | Gallagher, farm service su;&gt;-rvlsor tribulation* of a young couple who
county fair and the completed re­
Belding—0 for Consumers.
port and story of Hie summer's
1 marry despHe family enmities b
Ha-stlngs—12
TEAM WINS LEAGUE
In addition to adubig 1362 rural told in Paramount’s comedy pic­
work. The trip# this year were
Paubon ]
Smith
L.E.
customers, the report also show* ture ' Three Mamed Men." Lynne
awarded to Duane Fox of Monroe
Chrysler
H.
Bessmtr
L. T.
Phone 2522
144 E. State St.
TITLE BY VICTORY
that
during
October.
211
separate
and
club; Ralph Palmer. Middleville.
Overman.
William
Frawley
'
D. Webster
Brill
L G.
requests
for
farm
line
extensions
I
and Robert KilUck. North Pine club.
comedians.
shun:
top
honors
Wilson
CTouchdown Drives In Second Angell
were
accepted
by
Consumers
Power
]
Alternates are Keith Strickland,
MM Brian in this picture
Spaulding
Moore
RO.
Company.
The
mileage
requested
i Monroe and Phil Smith. Baseline.
Jenks '
And Third Quarters
Doxey
R T
Joan Crawford
Three girls selected on lhe same
"Mdin in Love." •
Hessler 1 was for 26&lt;5 miles to serve 1,237 farm
LaBalllsUr
R E.
Cinch The Game
basis were also chosen. They were
and. Melvyn Dougin
Henry &lt; customers and 218 non-farm cus­
Hall
The most exciting and brilliant
Q
The Hostbigs High school grid* Struble
Dorothy Mack, Lacey; Katherine
1. H.
Dehn tomers. When completed, the utili­ star combination ever to appear in
in
"The
Gorgeous
Hussy"
Horton. Delton and Dorothy Helse.
den closed their season Inst Sat­ Scobey
(C)
Price । ty’s rural line lonstruetion during one film Is bi ’Ladles in Love." u
L H.
1930 alone will-total approximately bitter-sweet romance of four lone­
Woodland. Altematw;; Bonnie Shef­
R.
Bessmer
&lt;C&gt;
Browne
F.
urday at the fair grounds by defeat-,
SILK CREPES
REMEDY FOR YOUR
2.000 miles, or more than twice the
field, Baseline. Katherine Wlbalda.
some,
lovely
girls,
and
their
advenSubstitutions.
Hastings:
...
o Belding .«-v.
,..v oviuhjvwiivo
—— -------• McLeod, distance bel
TOUGH MUFFINS. D:*iton and Betty Beoler, Middle­
Ing
12-0. The
Beiinettmen,' -------‘
Michigan and lures in search of love. A quartette |
$3-98 $4 98 $g.95 $g.75
won the West Central league fool-. Cogswell. Cnppon. Schwartz. Draper., yioridfl.
Secrets of tough muffins are not ville.
of Hollywood’s famous feminine
ball crown as a result of their win. | Leslie. Rcnnlck, Caukin. Clark., At
Al the
lhc present
_re,
secrets at all. announce research
time, the company
Every year a certain number of
The local Inds opened the game Davis,
Sow- ls
workers in home economics nt' delegates from each county are sent
— &gt;■’ and Edmonds.
---------- &lt; Belding:
------- ------b rendering
rendering service in forty-eight
by receiving and from that point on! ers.
vrM'm
G^Webster.
Wtbstcr. and^Mahar.
and Mahar
i‘counties
---------- of• •lhe lower peninsula In etta Young. Constance Bennett and Michigan State College Toughness
Knit Dresses
to State Club Week held at East
marched steadily clown the field to* c‘“ .J.'/ 'lOrli
t
w5,ne counties, service is rendered ut Simone Simon, appears in the film. tn a muffin seems to be merely the Lansing early In July. The exact
$3.98 - $5.95 - $9.75
. &lt;■&gt; 8.
o t
. C&gt; Referee, ....j
.verv township.
n vwrcr
otjier counties.
the eleven yar-l line. They received White. (W.
T.
and levcrv
townsh.p. j&gt;■«
cuuumcb.
jesult
of too inucn stirring. And the number of representatives allowed
Shirley Temple in "Dimples."
remedy? That's simple and is ob­
a five yard penally for being offside' Uhr (Mornlngsidei Head Linesman , u.n-icc has been requested or is br­
each county has not yet been de­
With
love
and
laughter,
tears
and
CoHon Drcties
$1.00-$1.98
and their scoring chance was lo.&lt;t on TDVI1.C rnn’orSTi11'8 rendered by other utilities
tained In three steps. One is to mix termined. but there will probably be
downs. Belding kicked from their &gt; I HI IN U rUn olAIL
Gallagher's report also shows that thrills, trials and triumphs. Shirley the dry ingredients. The next step five or six boys and the'same num­
Temple scores the greatest success
own goal line to mid-field and |
PM A MPIDAKMIP ,hc majority of requests for farm of her career in "Dimples." Frank is to mix liquid ingredients, and b r of girls, candidates for dele­
pulled themselves out of a bad hole. I
Gnwmr ivivumr . Une extensions accepted bv Conthen the third step Is the important gates-are Jane Ann Otto. Gladys
SILK
UNDERWEAR
Norgan. Helen Westley.
one.
The
liquid is added lo and Wallace, Janet Fur&amp;liey. Plorenc-J
Tiie
The uennettmcn
Binn.Tlm.-n. again reiaiiaua r..„v
' M.M.. vi™
n..
.«•« OWW• «~»y «»• Kent, B
!epln ftUMl
,
S'.epln
Fetchll »nd
and many
with their smashing offense but Frank Wceber Making Fine
PanliM _ 25c, 29c, 39c, 50c
Joy„
N„m.,
’ der the "regular plan" five or mon- Q
are featured tn the euppart- rnlxrt «l:b lhe ary muiure &gt;ur
..... just
...... enough to moisten all ...
were rtopped on lhe twenty yard .
ring
the Ii pmncc. Ru[„ w„t MJrun chanl. |
Record At River
I customers per mile and a guarantee .
,
Snuggies,-------29c, 50c, 59c
Drararan
cvf 81250 per mile per month—estabB
.
...
stripe. Belding scored two first
ingredients The brief mixing pre- pion,
„ George
virultsc Bedford.
DCU1(nAl- vnariea
roro. 1
Charles Ford.
Rouge School
, jjxhed by the company the first os ■
downs and then punted, put I Ing the
Silk Night Gowns$1.00
rents developing the gluten in the Robert Traver. Keith SUlckland and I
COMING TO THE BARRV.
Hastings team in a dangerous pari- ' In last Thursday's edition of the Ute year.
flourwhich
It’s the
itii
«/»&gt;.. ft« tt.« qiuten
causes
gmiih.
Sweeter Sett. —$2.25 - $2.91
lion
After failing to make any Detroit Evening Time* appeared a j -------------.
the tunnels and« peaks .
and
na tn.
the
Wpgt of
Baseline club
Speaking -----------recently ------before a -----farm
headway on line plays Hastings picture of Coach Frank "Buck" group. Gallagher warned that "some
Featuring Guy Klbbec. May Rob-. toughness in Uye muffins.
$1.00 - $1.98
Skim ...
- was appointed county president of
punted 28 yards against a strong Wceber of the River Rouge High ।customers, paying minimum month­ son. and lhe charming littie child ।-------------- - 14-H clubs and promised a gavel.
Hots $1. $1.98, $2,25. $2.75
wind. Belding was thus nble to ke&gt;-p school and on article about his foot­ ly bills of 12 50 and in an attempt flar Sybil Jason. A story of treasure
The Word “Daisy"
I inscribed with his name, which hod
Hastings with their backs to lhe ball team. He has been coaching to economize, urc as little as 6 kwh and packed with thrills.
"Daisy"
is
a
contraction
of
the
_______
not yet arrived, and Ronald Mulwall for the rest of the first frame there since 1925 and his teams have Instead of u*mg the entire 54 kwh.
air uamnr me taic
■ word "daY« eye." given because vaney of the same club was made
In the second quarter the local mode n splendid record. During the they pay for in the minimum bill
Will Rogers. Janet Gaynor. “»* flwcr «•««
ni«hl.
j county secretary and also given
boys showed the old drive and past eleven years. 114 games have These customers are not familiar
tramped steadily down the field on been played. Rouge winning WJ. lut­ with electric operation or the ap­
Many people who missed this pic­
short gains which end' d with Stru­ ing 14 and tying four In the past i plication of the rate; naturally they ture will be glad of the opportunity
ble going over the goal line for lhe five seasons they have won 43 lost I think electricity is an expensive to see once again the well-loved late
first touchdown of lhe game.
one and lied one. Tills season lhe ;luxury. They haven’t experienced the Villi Rogers. This may be your last
.. benefits of replacing inconven- chance to see this famous star
Belding elected to receive and team has won al) eight gam&lt;3 i। lu
real
was forced to punt after being played. scoring 210 points while ienlt costly operations with cheap
smeared tor u law Hastings made holding their opponents to eight. electricity—cheap because
it is Gene Autry iu "The
Singing Cowboy."
| worth so much and costs so little
steady gains but the Belding dr- point*
fense bolstered and Belding took lhe
The River Rouge school is now * Anij consumers rates are among. “a story of gold, with love and life
ball over on downs. Again the Has­ listed as a class A school and is a the lowest hi the countrv.
at stake. Produced in Ute setting ol
tings defense proved too much for full fledged claimant for the state |
-A:| farmers believe Uie milk, or
the silk city eleven and they were Class A prep football champiiMUhip. C1(gs Or potatoes they sell are cheap. ’
Hastings
t continued Mr. Gallagher "Utilities
forced to kick out of lhe danger ; , “
“Vr8' friends arc lpleased
’Jeaacd t0
of the honors •*--•
that •have com:
*
—believe the electricity they
zone. The Beiuiettmcn unleashed a ’learn
fierce running attack and when the to Frank and his teams. He b a sell is cheap.
The farmer and
whistle
' ' " sounded
' ‘ ending the
'
half i graduate of the Hastings High utilities are each in the business of
'
school and was on the teain here, producing and selling. The utilities
they were on the three yard line
hammering mercilessly al the Beld­ showing marked ability as an ath­ n.s consumers of agricultural prod­
lete Frank's mother. Mrs. Katherine ucts do not have lhe advantage of
ing forward wall.
They came back In the third Weber, a sister. Miss Katherine buying direct from the farmer. The
quarter with the same savage at­ Weeber. and a brother. Gottlieb farmer as*a customer of the utility
For
tack in the third quarter which Werber. still make their home iicre. ha* the advantage of buying direct
they had displayed In the previous Several years ago Frank married from the producer "
Men
Marjorie
of this -----city.
quarter. Captain Scobey got loose Miss
—----- ----- Todd
------- -------------on an end run and was on Ute four ' daughter of Mr. mid Mrs. Gilbert
Audible Voices cf the Pail’
yard line before Belding was nble Todd.
In books Iles the soul of the whole
Women's
past time; the articulate audible
MORE CHICKEN STEALING.
voices of the past, when the body
Wool and
Chicken thieves raided lhe coop
inatcri.il substance
of• “
it has
ball game was on July 20. 1859. The and lhe ----------------------”
Rayon!
of Andrew Adams. Johnstown some game was between lhe Brooklyn I *,,0«c^u’r vanished like a dream,
Wear it as a
coat or under a
- lime Saturday night His farm is a and New York teams on the Fashion '
A ,hat rnl,hkmd has done.
■ halt mile east of Bonfield. The | Race course on Long Island. Ad- I Uwu«ht- earned, or becn-it is lying
gauge, heavy­
- • cost- vat 50
— cents an! 1.500 as in magic preservation in lhe
H- thieves took sixty hens and chick-1 miiiion
weight
cotton,
pages of books
ens. The loss was discovered and | spectators paid.
fierceImed.
Bar­
never in
* ]. Ribbed
\U
tacked.
reported to the sheriff's office Sun­
Fine for chilly
Dog Chases Thief Into Trap
bulky
cuff.. Not
N
'.*' day morning. Deputy Sheriff Swift,
I
Seeing a thief enter a house at
Children Have Beat Bearing
william Powell and Myrna Loy
Smooth
Atting
. ‘ made a prompt investigation, but
'
Children arc able to bear sounds Kobe.
— Japan,
—,
a dog
„waited
-----------------until...
he
in ‘‘Libeled Lady"
.locking, that
Wool for Real Warmth)
ll'omen s fV% Wool
'this time no definite flues have been of much mgher pitch than older j came out. then drove him up a blind
people do.
। alley and held him until detectives
80 P. C- of the fur coats sold in
w. discovered.
wear. Naw
1 arrived.
the U- 8. cost below 1150 00.
shades. 9 to 10J6
For Sport

H. U. S. GLOSES .
SEASON WITH WIN

Fairchild’s

DRESSES

Shop at Penneys Coat SWEATER Shop at Penney’i
and Save

98“

Hosiery

Warm JACKETS

Union Suits

9»c

DANCIUG
Old Faaliioned Mixed Dances
Friday NigliL Regular Dance
Saturday MgliL

$3.98

SILK HOSIERY

Fine ribbed cotton and French
tnun wool with rayon kiripe.
Wide overlap closing. 34 lo 50

At Clear Lake Lodge

Men’s SOCKS

Wear

Full
Faihioned

Closely woven,
heavy all wool

59c
Picot top chif­
fons or mora
practical serv­
ice weights. All
first quality,
and in ths n»w-

Slw» BH-10K.

and service. But­
ton front, pleat­
ed back. Smart,
becoming. Worn-

25C

pr.

100% pure wool faced sock* . . .
lisle lined. Neat docks and aUover pattern*. Comfortable I

Shop at Penney's
and Save

Part Wool Pair.
A Treat al $

Fleece Lined

Thu Price
Big. soft, wooly plaids. Pastel
shades. Extra large 72 x84 .
Not less than 5% wool. Buy..

Unions

Get PERFECT REST This WinterHeavy

MONUMENTS
and MARKERS
A Family Monument or Marker is always a sound in­
vestment. If there is an unmarked grove on your lot.

let ys be of service Yo you in the selection of o suit­
able Memorial. We have a

beautiful display.

Call

now and look them over. Prices very reasonable.

A Home Induitry

Established in 1907

HASTINGS MONUMENT WORKS
Telephone 1497

Halting., Mich.

Order Now for Spring and Save Money

Nation-Wide Outing
jar Wear!

wear! Woven pattern., Iighi
and dark shades, and white 34

Attend Our Bedding Sale
For a Few Days Only You Get a FREE
BED And SPRINGS With Every One
Of Our $29.75 MATTRESSES.
If you do not need lhe bed and springs you will
receive a beautiful pair of all wool blankets.

We have a big stock of metal beds, wood beds,
springs, cotton felt mattresses and cheaper inner
spring mattresses on which we have placed prices
that you can afford to pay.

Men! Here U a union suit
that will give you service
and warmth. Grey random
with white eotton fleeced
back. Full standard sites!

COTTON BATTS
BOOT SOCKS

Mountain

407* to 50%

Milt Brand

Real Wool

One of our best selling batts for
patchwork quilts
Large size
R|-x9flweighs 1 1.6 lbs.
Paper lined
Easy to handle.

Reinforced heel and toe for
added wear. Sturdy, warm.

Call and dock over our large stock.

MILLER FURNITURE CO
HASTINGS

PHONE 2126

PENNEY

COMPANY

DRESS GLOVES

98°

Sturdy domestic captsida
nonulnr all non style.

�The Hastings Banner

boost the county­
trade AT HOME

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1936

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

Editorials
PROGRESS.

Ifa the Spirit of a Ceuununitw
That Count*—-Not Its Sixo

| «'»y» be
wc

Will the automobile of the future
be much more perfect than the'
sleek, powerful models being offered L

’Roland About Town
Hew to the line, let the quips
fall where they may I

distinct understanding
not ba drawn Into war.

Health of Pope
Causes Anxiety

From Our Scrap Book
ARTISTS.

By Observing Tummy.

A WINDY STORY.
We had the privilege of listening
today? It doesn’t aeem possible but
numerous scholarly talks at a
the chances are that the motor car to
I
of tomorrow Is really Just beginning Ipress meeting last week which
brought to our attention many per­
If any one ol the cars now on dis­ tinent facts concerning the ailments
play In the big shows at Detroit or of the world. But the diagnosis
New York could have been placed which probably hit Just about as
alongside the models on display al near tlie truth as any was given by
similar shows of even a decade ago Chet Shafer, owner, director, chief
it would have provoked a storm of reporter and sole occupant of the
extreme admiration.
In power, "City News Bureau" at Three Riv­
strength and beauty the car of to­ ers.
While other distinguished speak­
day is in a class by Itself. Each year
one wonders how models to come ers told about economic laws, inter­
can possibly be further refined—yet national situations, etc., etc., Chet
told ail about the Honorary AssoMany designers predict that the elation of Former Pipe Organ
Pumpers
which has international
car ot tomorrow will be powered
from the rear and stream-lined In headquarters In the "City News
the so-called "tear drop" shape. Al­ Bureau” and of which he Lt honor­
ready a few models of this variety ary past president or president past­
are being shown—experiments to be honor—or something; he told about
sure, but pcaaibly a forecast of the lhe proposed game refuge for cast
standard designs of a few years Iron stags and animals, he even
mentioned ever so delicately cer­
hence.
In looking back over old adver­ tain of the more Intimate phases
tising circulars, one can repeatedly which help make up the rather
come across statements of automo­ complex life of the wooden Indian.
bile manufacturers to the effect that This, of course, is a mere, colorless
the ultimate had been achieved, that recital of what Chet talked about
practically no new Innovations In because Chet Isn’t here to tell It
design or performance could be ex­ himself.
But what Chet really got across
pected because further refinement
was mechanically impossible. Pic­ was the power of humor—good, bub­
tures of some of the old models bling humor which makes you
about which such
enthusiastic chuckle at yourself as well as others.
claims were made would make a In fact if the people tn this world
driver of today ask. "How could they had more of Chet’s humor there
ever get anywhere in those piles of wouldn’t be much danger from wars
because long before the argument
junk?”
Possibly drivers of a few decades became too heated and serious,
hence &lt;perhaps an even shorter somebody would point out the ludi­
crousness of It and the whole crowd
period' will be making similar
marks about the models which are would have a good laugh. People
would throw jokes instead of bulStimulating sueh widespread
claim today
Maybe all that the impotent
Ix-ague at Nations needs to instill
A GOOD INVESTMENT
People who remember what the a spirited revival U the help of Chet
old dirt streets of this city were HJre and his Pipe Organ Pumpers But
all agree that the paving and tart­. other otuervers remark that there
&gt;. j is already too much wind going to
mac here have been good invest­
v &lt;«ste
waste over
over there
there It
IL’’s
a a
a difficult
difficult
Rents. Muddy in wet weather, dusty

The love of beauty Is a love unsated
By the heaped wealth of It that
round us lies
On earth, tn air, and In the half­
caught eyes
Of faces passing. No satiety
Shall cloy the heart that tolls for

One shot Don, they call him now.'
I know this well. One autumn when
a boy
I crossed a dazzling pasture where
each bead
Of spangled burr and every feath-

My good friend Don smelker. they I
i tell me, having had fair success in I
। this world with the dears went i
| north lo get himself a deer.
On his first day in lhe woods, he
shot. Incidentally it was the only
deer he saw during the entire trip.

That's his story and he sticks to

Boarders at the county Jail al­
most had a hungry week ot it. I un­
, demand.
Sheriff Jay Blakney. they tell me.
started away on a deer hunting trip
taking al! of the cell keys with him.

However, he discovered hla mis­
take just beyond coats Grove and
sent ’em buck by Wayne Smith.

me
Pope's neahn was manifest tn
Vatican circles ai a result ol
the report that the oontlft
mown above in a recent onoto.
has nad difficulty in walking
The Pope now 79 once an Ainine climbet is said to nave
been in weakened condition (or

Glenn Bera, though, was plenty
worried. Understand he “2 on
~
"Sympathy for the working man Is
। the point of scouting about for
I some sort of Inexpensive soup- quickly forfeited whenever the con­
i pumping equipment and had Just duct of strikers Is unreasonable, ar­
lawless,—or.—unjust."
—Louis
.about decided on some slender.,bitrary.
------- ...----------.------- ------------! stream-lined nursing bottles which ; D. Brandeis.
i could be slipped tn between the bars I----------------- • • * -------------• • •
I "Nature ta_lhe most thrifty thing
But as my old friend Will Shakes-1 in the world■. she never wastes any■ All's Well thing; she undergoes change, but
there's no annihilation—lhe essence
That Ends Well.
remains."—T. Blnney.
Sc- that George Carpenter has
returned with a buck

Views and Opinions;
What Others Say

MAY HEAVEN HELP ROOSEVELT
TO GUIDE US SAFELY ONWARD!
Biblically speaking, we suppo'V
that, W1W
our ,readers might expect u
newspaper
. ^.,.r that has supported the
Republican cause more map the,
Democratic to eaptlon a post-elec­
in dry weather and rutty and bumpy question to decide
tion editorial "Lamentations"; on ।
We **
hesitate *to even *"
suggest
most of the time, those roads were
' any the contrary however, we nre quite
about the heighth of Inconvenience ,*tep which might ultimately be the willing, as the result of an apparent j
With the traffic roads have to carry ‘“rrct or indirect cause of producing "Exodus ’ of Republicans to the
New Deal's ' Acts.” to admit that
at present such roads would mean a mar. however alight, on the brllPresident Roosevelt's great victory Is .
llvtng in a perpetual cloud of dust, j
polished (perhaps well-oiled. a bit of a "Revelation" to u*. espe- J
rord to clally w
when
hr w
carried
him
In -1'
Il is difficult to estimate the saving [ might be the more proper word
.w«. ...
..uu with ...
Ul ...
these pavements have helped to ef- employ here, surface of the Pip.- Michigan the entire Democratic
I Ucket’” '
feet in terms of dollars and cents CM an Pumpers' escutcheon
| Uckel
I Personally, we have felt right'
but It has been considerable even |
-----i along that Governor Landon would
judged from the pomt of improved
THE CORRECT SOLUTION.
| no’, bo able to defeat FDR Our
cleanliness and sanitation alone. I Governor Frank D Fitzgerald b practical knowledge of politics and
general publicity convinced us that j
, . - ------- ... --------------- —
l0
commended for appointing an unknown man. no matter how,
GOOD WORK
. senator-elect Prentiss Brown to fill able, could not be "built up" In a
Congratulations to lhe Hastings , the unexpired term of the late Ben- few months lo occupy in lhe public 1
mind a place held by such a chap
High football team and Coach Ben­ ator James Couzens In doing this as Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In
nett. After a rather discouraging lie turned down proposals to honor numerous other phases of campaign
start, they came through and won certain distinguished members of activity, we also feel very’ strongly
the championship of the newly- his own party. The honor, however, that the Republican National Com­
mittee, and the Michigan Blate Cenformed West Central League which would have been a rather hollow
includes such schools as Greenville. gesture since the term ends in Jan­
Belding and Ionia. Several time:, uary. To Mr. Brown, the appoint­
they upset the dope to come through ment U of some significance It
with unexpected victories. It is not gives him seniority over his newlyonly ior winning that the team and
eolu.^e. m u» muter ot.
comnull«. „,w „
„
coach deserve congratulations but appointments. It is probable, too, _________
_____ ___But ....
^
efficiently as possiblethese
more especially for never ceasing to that by this maneuver hr will retain considerations are beside lhe real btry'the important committee appoint -1 sues that confront the American
I menu held by his distinguished
J?5’* ’
..
u
.
1
.
. ..
There Is no question but what the
NO LONGER ISOLATED
predecessor In other words, the en- raM mMorHy of Americans are makThere is no visible reason why lire state may gam some advantage mg known, through their ballots, ths
the United Blates should be sucked, and prestige through the appoint- fact that they intend to gain eco-i
into another Euro;&gt;ewn war. Thu men’, of Mr Brown; it would have'n°m“: security; and that la us II
. should be. of course Tnrv
They .u-o
see in U-.r
Use ‘
possibility of ending war by war has gained notlimg by the appointment
New Deal a concentrated eilort to
been broken completely since 1916 of anyone else The office of senator redistribute national wealth and
However, it does seem probable that ' should be considered too important
this country will be forced to take । to be used m a vehicle for the be­ always the insistence that Individual
freedom and necessity lo work |
a more active part in International stowing of meaningless honor.*
should be prime requisites of such
conferences than ever before. Our
opportunity, partisan politics should '
supposed isolation from Europe has
not enter Into the picture at all. for,
tills is the unfit leaven that canTorbeen a myth for years and Is each
year becoming more meaning­ i As «e understand the situation. rupl lhe political morals ot any na­
non.
less. With telegraph and wireless I half the people would like to check
What will lhe next tour years hold
systems which bring the continent government spending. and the other for the United States? No one can
as close to us is Charlotte is from । half would like to spend government say. definitely, even including PreAdent Roosevelt. But let us al! hope ]
Hastings; with fast ship* wiuch j checks. —Life.
and pray that the victory Tuesday I
span the Atlantic ocean In about;
will not upset the head and heart of |
lour days; airships which travel!
You can tell when a neighbor is the President—for now morn thin 1
the airways in less than forty hours coming to borrow three eggs She ever this nsiton needs to be guided I
and airplanes which promise to cut bnngs back the cup of sugar she by the steidy hand ot a courageous I
man with both feet on the ground.that thne in half, it Is apparent bdfrawed—Detroit Free pre.vs.
George Averill. Birmingham Ecc:n
that our days of easy isolation are1
trie.
The
alligator
pear,
says
a
helpful
over. The world Is nttmg itself
efficiently organized ah an interna-, answers editor, is not strictly a pear
tionaj basis from the standpoint of1 Nor is it. technically, an alligator —
communication but it Is lagging fkr Milwaukee Journal
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
'

Pungent Paragraphs

Crumbs of Wisdom

3P

Some people 1 hear are wondering

I what will happen to BiU Parker durBackward Glances;
। ing his hunting sojourn with Warren
and Charley Hinman Others
Bitso/ Yesterday'l carter
who know Bin are wondering whnt |

make peni­
l»y
gentleness

RETTER

tents

—St. Francis dr Sales

,
'
W/E suggest a change in lhe
” date.of Election Day. Wc
no sooner gfit the campaigns
over than we have to dig out
the earmuffs again for winter.

i
।
।

Yoo-oh-o-oo-ooo!
It’s Lou Gehrig

THIRTY YEARS AGOj At the council meeting Friday
That Estes Park. Colo., wom­ ' night it was proposed to submit to
an who reported that a large
the voters the propostllon of boncbear and small cub have raided । ing for 135.000 lo pave Jefferson and
her Ice box several times had
Church 8ts.
better check up on hubby and I One of lhe best orchestras in.
Grand Rapids has been secured for I
Junior.
! the Masked Ball at the opera house
'
An Albany. N Y_. professor i Thanksgiving.
says n good speech require* a | Mr. and Mrs. Houtstatter. old piopunch nl lhe beginning nnd a 1 neers of Barry county, have gone to
Wayland
to
live
with
their
daugh
­
kick al lhe end But most peo­
ter and son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs
ple don’t like to be awnkened
Tom Hart this winter.
so forcibly
The c K. &amp; 8. discontinued gun­
Penguins carry rocks tn their ning Bunday trains November IB
stomachs for ballast, much In
FORTY YEARS AGO
the manner a bridegroom car­
Natural gas has been discovered
ries lhe first batch of biscuits.
Mich. While clearing some land the
Eight Parts women factory boys noticed the water in the
swamp boll up and smelled gas
sugar for their dully tea. The When a match was touched to It
usual desire Is to have the pay ' the gas flamed up. An eighteen-foot
cnvelone sweetened.
pi|x» was sent down, a burner made
. out of n cartridge shell protected;
1 with a tin pall and lighted. It has &gt;
' now been burning for three weeks i
’ Tlte matter will be Investigated'
1 thoroughly.
‘I
I J. T Lombard is confined lo hU
home with tonsllltls which hat j
been epidemic In hia family.
,
Phln Smith returned Monday1
from Nebraska where he was called
by the. Illness ot his mother who
died shortly after het arrived there, j
dvemher

"All who aspire to power should
state clearly what they Intend to do
with it when they achieve it. To do
otherwise Is to work the confidence
trick, which is not less dishonest be­
cause it Is played on the stage of
। politics."—Herman Piner.
i

•The door of opportunity can be
forced open by adventurous men
who know what to look for and
recognise it when they see it."—Wil­
liam LaVarre.

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

^‘‘iX
Hol,y'ood ___

Buy These Heavy Woolen
Jackets and Be Prepared
Heavy Wool Plaid

|

Blazers

J

Dark Grey &amp; Blue

Beautiful Patterns
Full Zipper
&lt;3 Pockets -

1

$298

$5—

Blazers
Full Zipper

Men's Navy Blue Mackinawe
1 Pockets
Double Breakted
Half Belu Urge Collar
32 Ounce ALL WOOL—

T
WZ

BOYS'SIZES, 12 to 18 .... $4.98
No. hes nnt who you think he
is. but he might be.
This
leopard1-altinncd
fl-liow is none
other. th
than Lou Gehrig, leading
home-run hitter of the New
York Yankees. Gehrig, who has
admitted tic d like to lake a fling
al pictures, u shown here ns he
posed for a role he expects to
play tn the near future.

SoatGetters

&gt;• w w-

Remember
last winter?
Waterprowf—
Fleece Lined

FIFTY YEARS AGO.
! E. H Barlow and kindred spirit•
। met In secret session the night of I
lhe election lo jollify over the dem­
l ocratic victory—which was to have ;
| been. Needles*, to add. the party j
. ---broke
up at
—an
early
early
hour.
hour.
----- -----1 Geo. Senion has opened a res-1 Kgt , uitrnnt and candy store tn thq'
;
I Gardner building lately vacated by J •P'lwBW
, Julius Russell
i E Y Hogle has purchased the tn- 1
: teresl of Henry Cook in the grocery 1
I firm of Hogle de Cook. Mr. Cook reI mains as salesman.
| MIm Winnie Waldorf! of Grand
1 Rapids is the guest &lt;4 her aunt
Mrs. W. H. Powers.

of Our World

u, ... bl. «0.„ .M £ W ™-------------- Wg.
And,l4a8^

And crusted blade and diamondfroeted dart
Ot grass drove rapture Into my
homely heart.
And tn that hour I yielded to the
Joy
Flowing from shapes and airy
sounds and flame.
A captive to the captor without
name
That men call beauty. And from
that hour thereafter
Each day has bffered me an Inward
laughter.
Though there be tears In Its eyes.
| They who serve beauty
Build them a secret heaven of their
duty.
T. Morris Longstreth.

I will happen to warren and Charlie.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
!
Mr nnd Mm. a. F cnidestcr and.;' No. The Klu Klux Klan isn't back.
Mr. and Mrs. W N Chidester mo, ­ They tell me that the big red cross
‘
tored lo Ann Arbor Sunday and at lhe head of main street is simply
spent the day with their sons Oard- a warning that Uie current Red
i cross campaign is now on.
ner and Keith Chidester
Mrs Charles Welwrl and little'
son returned Thursday from Ann I Tommy ..had
“7 expected a new truhk
Arbor where they spent several' Une tura
at _}e“{
weeks.
I
* "
The city council has decided tc
construct a sidewalk grade past Hu*
new factory to Manee's Comers.
The registered nurses of Barry
Allegan. Ottawa. Innta and Kent
counties will meet at Blodgett hospital, Grand Rapids Nov 33 to conalder forming a district association

behind from the standpoint of get­
The law of compensation evens
ting itself organized efficiently on
temple there the saint lights the.
things. The farther you are from a flame of purest sacrifice, which ।
Way
an economic. and political basis. The
zeieniuts and bustnewi men nf all nice aisle seat the less your feet get bums unseen but not unaccepted.",
NEWS GLEANINGS.
—Hannah More.
walked on.—St Dauls Star-Times.
countries have participated in Hie
Rust weighs more than Iron Rust
is formed as the iron absorbs oxy­
,aev.lopme»l
«
eum.mmlr.tta&gt; j „be,:, intro- I "Deference Js tffe instinctive re-i
;
..
spect
which wc
thc'lreat
and । A Child s nature is loo serious a gen. which has weight.
--------------„. nay
—, to ....
B..„. ^...i
«“■ Utt &gt;■.»«= c&lt; .11
0UCM
lhll c
to Kll
good—the* uncorvctous acknowh-dg- j»hing to admit of betni^regarded as'
ment of the superiority nr eW|. a mere appendage to another being
X F^a
M,oe bntat. unvlM.
« O» w„,„n
kr.ee of others.’-Tyron Edwards.
and to beloved or hated according-1
------------ly; they stand with me bpon th.tr.IL,hm,n » &gt;ntt /&gt;» Henchman W
world is ever to be organized eco-1
notnically and consequently pohUcalH pays a
All belief that does not render us own Mock as much as men and' The movie studio, him nracticallv
When buying neckwear II
ly, against war. The United Stales
I
the dozen and fiUhtrnMlf up for the, an erronroua and »?p2st tious b£'
onb bv aeilL L if it wre im
J** J?*1*1 *“hm 300 ,nlk&amp; °f
avoid th® responsibility of partici­
•Lavater.
pating in international affairs. Since Idea to order a quart or two of j
»farthest reaches of what our best - Stocks on the New York stock ex­
we would be interested only In lielp- mixed collarstud., at the umc lime .. „ ne;,P“«*T tnouw be the maxi- may offer. And -uccess. for any ,-ane’chongc: Htgh-Sept. 1. WM-Mf).“m , “•W’MjW. Wd the mini- i adult, ts exactly equivalent Uj doing 668.376351. Low-July 1. 1933-815.avoid war, there should aj- —Humorist.
l mum ol comment."—Cotxieik
fbu bcsk' -DoroUre* Brandc.
Feb. l-450,16€H7^61

E’iT? S’ £ id

A spring of Joy to dip from and to
ponder
In troublous Umea, or times that
mirth has feted

BOYS’ HEAVY

SUIDE LEATHER

Blazers

Blazers

Full Zipper

Wool Collars or
Leather Collars
Plain and Pleated
Backs

Plain

Navy.

Blue

and colorful plaids
Sg.M

S^.98

’5 ”

*6 ”

SNO SUITS - SKI SUITS-SEPARATE
SKI PANTS - PLAID JACKETS For

Woman, Mixes and Children. A Fine
Axortment.

Buy Now For Christmas Gifts

WATERS
CLOTHES SHOP
SELLING QUALITY KEEPS US BUSY

�THt HASTINGS BANNER, THXJKSDAY. NOVEMBER 19. ItM

FMMW

G0LDDU5TTWINS’
VST HUSTINGS

321.10

MONEYDUESOQN

school age
I DUt. 716 person^ * of
school age

4629

824)0

"Then, beginning on Nov. 24.
poitoffices throughout the country
will dUtribute to employes, through'
their employers, forms known as
'Application for Social security Ac- j
count Number.' These employes'
application forms will be distributed

It'omen’s Club Hears '
Mrs. R. R. McPeek

Farmers Save With Cold Storage

The members and guests of the
। available, after such dbtrlbution. at Hastings Women'* club met In the
all postofflees. Local pastmaster* Masonic rooms Friday afternoon.
, so
*o dld
u.o not visl
visut th
inc
s room they
mey bad
niQ will announce
annex.
when these form* are November 13. Mrs. w. R. Cook,
Tt-p. Unit school..267 pere 880.80 ' vacated until about ten o'clock. She available.
Total for. Twp. ...
chairman of the program for the
'
' । found
•'The
found the bolster runner and bed.
bed"The employe's application U a
Rutland.
Carlton.
spread had vanished along with two simple form asking a few questions afternoon, introduced Mrs. R. R.
Dlst. 114 persons of
DUt. 134 persons of
McPeek of Charlotte, who gave in a
20
|
quilts,
ijuuia.
a
&gt;
couple
ujupw
of
u,
nice
nuc
towels
wwru
and
ana
.
such
sucn
as
a*
name
and
ana
address
aaaress
of
or
the
me
school age ...................... J
school age I H240
her Jewelry case, she promptly noti- ' worker, name and adilreM of lhe most entertaining and fascinating
DUt. 324 persona of
DUt. 241 persons' of
fled lhe sheriff's office and Under Employer, the date and place of manner the story of Williamsburg.
school age
school age
7920
12640
Sheriff Bera got in touch with lhe' birth, and father's and mother's Virginia, past and present.
DUt. 422 persons of
Dlst. 339 persons of
second hand dealers he could reach name, when the worker has proOld and historic yet deteriorating
school age
school age
by phone. He found the two quilts vlded thb information
---------- —
­ ­ with each year thb colorful and al
on the ap
at one of these dealer's: The pro­
___ ___
capltol
r___ of Virginia
___ ____
had
_
school
age
8230 prietor said he bought them of two plication. he rnay return It. without one time
school age
14520
paying
any
postage.
Ln
any
of
five
.
been
stricken with the ravages of
DUt. 622 persons of
DUt. 6 FT... 57 person* of
*trangers for 19c. He had to sacrifice ways:
wars and fires. The college of W!lschool age
school age
lhe 19c aa the officer took the two
"By handing ..
It bock to the —
em­ ]tam lind Mary second oldest In
DUt. 721 persons ot
quilts. A iUUe later a first warder ployer. or
'
America and founded in 1693. was
school age
school age
69.30
railed up the sheriff's office and said
"By handing it to any Labor or­ Lhe center of life and activity tn the
DIM.. 912 persons of
DUt. 934 perrons
that he had heard that a rooming ganization of which the worker is town and the glamorous historical!
school age
39 60
school age
11320
house had been entend and things a member, or
beginning which Williamsburg had
DUt. 10Fr . 49 persons
taken from It He explained that he
"By handing it to a letter carrier, enjoyed seemed about lo become on-,
Total for Twp8 452.10
school ago ....
161.70
had purchased a bedspread and bol­
iy a memory
of
Thomappk.
•
ster runner for 40c. but that he
'By
delivering
It
personally
to
any
school age ..
17840 Twp. unit school...625 per­
would be glad to let the- owner have1 local pastoffice, or
Bruton parish, however dreamed a j
Dlst. 1222 persons
sons of school age 82.062.50
them. Up to date no one has re­
"By mailing it—without postage dream of restored Williamsburg. The !
school age .............
Woodland.
ported
the ----------whereabout*
,--------- —
.-------- r of the
— two
... _&gt; . —in a sealed envelope addressed dream envisioned the possibilities,
T*p unit school. 344 per­
towels and the Jewelry case.
' simply to the postmaster.
and the opportunity to preserve the i
"Total for Tr.’p
81.30340
sons of school age 81.13520
These fellows roaming about the ; "On the return on this informa­ early American history with which I
Castleton.
county are known everywhere as the1 tian to the postoffice a social *e- thb historic spot was endowed. Dr. I
Yankee Spring*.
Dist. I FT...317 person* of
Gold Dust Twins. Ordinarily they; curlty account will be set up for Goodwin's first opportunity to di- j
school age .
81.046 10
do not commit any serious offenses.' each person eligible and he or she vulg» 1th dream came when he was
school age
Dlst. 227 person* of
But It Is said that as the weather will be furnished a card^—cornpar- naked to speak in New York at the
school age .........................
school age
75.90 gets colder they like the Indoor life | able to an insurance Identification Phi Beta Kappa which had been
Dbt. 2 FT.... 25 persons of
of a Jail much better than riding card—certifying that on account founded in the famous Raleigh Ta- &gt;
DUt. 4 FT... 29 persons of
school age
8240
the brake rods of freight trains; ao has been set up and bearing the vent of Williamsburg. The spirit of I
' school age
Introduction ol small cold storage plants over the middle west
Dbt. 322 persons of
they may commit some mlsdemean- number of the employe's social ae- thb dream later attracted lhe at­
DUt 8 FT.... 3 persons of
school age
or that will gel them a Jail sentence, curlty account so as to make it easy tention of John D. Rockefeller, who . oilers farmer* a system of food preservation that 1* both convenient
school age
Dbt. 432 persons of
If they should be found that might for the worker to find out ut any generously gave hh financial sup- I and economical. By renting ■ locker, a farmer may bring in hb
school ago
108.60
meals after butchering and store them in temperatures 20 degrees
'happen
---------- *-In,uthU
‘- —case,
— ubut
• ••----------------the officerstlmr*-Juist how his or her account
port.
Total for Twp8 247.50
Dbt. 519 persons of
wont go to much expense, feeling stands.'*
An enterprise sueh as the resto-। below freezing for n yearly cost of approximately 2 cent* a poufid.
school age
cerlaln'whnt their gnrr.e Is. So they
An attendant at a plant in Ames, la., is shown above demonstrat­
ration of Williamsburg was one that
OBITUARY.
Dist. 615 persons of
may be picked up' later in some
ing one of the small lockers.
had never before been undertaken •
Della
M.
Tolles,
daughter
of
Isaac
school age .........................
4950
other town for some offense and get ; There was a good attendance at and the keynote to its success was ,
and jane Tolles, was born Ln Barry
Dbt. 726 person* of
sixty or ninety days in jail, whlcn &gt; the Women's Relief Corps hall on made possible through the accuracy
township. Barry county. July 28,
Where Blarney Started
Noblesse Oblige
school age
would be exactly to their liking.
I
Nov.
14.
Twenty
calLs
were
reported
of
every
branch
ol
science
and
,
1857 and passed from thU world to
Noblesse oblige means literally
Blarney castle was one of the
Dbt. 8 34 jxTsons of
made on the sick and shut ins Five through the accuracy with which 1
her eternal home Nov. 12. 1936 al
"nobility oblige*.” whieh denote*
school age
11220
dollars worth of work, other than the project was undertaken. Today , strongholds of the McCarthy clan
the home of her son. having reached
Dbt. 10 .. .31 person* of
lhe
obligation
of honorabk or gener­
and
one
of
their
chief*
who
wa*
all
j money, was given where ambiance this hbtorlc spot stands practically ’
the age of 79 years, three months
school age
102 30
was needed Twelve members of the as it was in the days of the royal fair word* made Queen, Elizabeth ous behavior assoehted with high
and 15 days. On Oct. 16. 1881 she
Hasting* corps attended the forty- governor*. The reconstructed build­ remark ot onc of hl* (peeehca. "Thb rank or birth. Il Lmpiiea that nobil­
was
united
Ln
marriage
to
Reuben
Total for Twp ...
-.81.808.40
ity or birth makes a certain stand­
third annual district convention In Ings, homes and shops do enjoy, I* all Blarney; what he lay* le nev
E Webster of Johnstown. To this
Kalamazoo. Mrr. Stella Foreman however, the twentieth century con-1
ard of conduct obligatory.
union two children were bom. a
Dlst. 317 person* of
was the delegate sent from Hastings veniences although lhe tangles of |
daughter, Mrs. Vida Morford and a
school age
56 10 son. Vcmor. This union was broken
telephone wires and the plumbing
Corps
and
she
brought
back
a
very
(Continued from page 1. Bee. 1»
have
ail
been
safely
concealed
be-1
DhL 4Fr. . 24 persons
interesting
report
I on May 24. 1935. by the death of---------school age
The forty-iourth convention will neath lhe ground Furnace heal. too.
7850 her husband. Mrs. Webster has U a branch of subsidiary company.
Dbt. 5 Fr.
38 peraons
; spent her entire life In Che ImmeThe identification card will carry be held In this city Ln 193". Mrs enters the room* from carefully
school age ..
135 401 dlate vicinity of her btrth. 0hc war the number assigned lhe worker Stella Foreman was elected &lt;lis­ concealed outlets, thu.i preserving a*
DUt. 7 . .37 person*
I a member of the Bunnell Methodist and hb signature.
Uict president; and Mrs. Nellie much as possible lhe old 18th cen-1
school age
122.10 church, always taking an active' Application forms all will be de- Gower treasurer
Our next busl- tury atmosphere.
The picture of restored gardens,
Dbt 8
.13
! part in all 1U programs until health Uvered by earl? in December. A* ncs* meeting will be Nov. 28. Our
school age
42 90 ’ no longer allowed Surviving are, j soon a* full, information has been guest will be the department presl- homes, taverns and shops a* pointed
Dbt. 926 persons
I the daughter. Vida, and son. Vemor.; supplied postmasters, employers and dent. Mrs Ella Ramsdell Wc urge for us by Mrs. McPeek U one we will
all
wLsh to keep with us and think
school age
.
85.80 boD) of pelton. five grandchildren, i employe* may obtain full informa- all members who ran to be present
Dial. 10 Fr . 31 person* of
i eight great-grandchildren and a ] lion from all postoffices.
| Our monthly birthday dinner Ls al- ol often for as Mrs. McPeek stated
school age
10230 j ho,* o, other relatives and friends | The board announces dbtribuUon ways one of Ute attraction*—Pre.J •It 1* the living monument of a I
glorious past."
z
--------- iWeep not that her loll* are over, plans aa follows:
.
| Corr.
At the clo.se of the program, tea
Total for Twp .. . .8 613.80 I। Weep
^rep not that her race b
Is run.
"Beginning on Nov 16. postofflees ■
----------------- • • *
-----And when-------------the early----------------------Americana ob- was served by Mrs. j. Broxkk and .
j God grant we may rest as calmly. throughout lhe country will dhtrib-1 --------------Hastings City.
1344 persons
.
84.435 20
When our work, like hers. L% ute co employers a form known a* [ jeclcd to taxation without represen- Mrs. A- Hyde. Mrs. F. L. Bahar and i
thc -employer's application for iden- tatlon they didn't realize how much Mrs. G- C- Keller presided at the j
Hope.
done.
tincation number' ThU form will worse it would be with reprczenla- tea table.
DUt 1
“ persons of
Till then wc yield with gladne.'o.
of Exquisitely Furred
ask of the employer only seven lion.
school age
$ 79231 Our mother to Him to keep,
Lexicographic note with a Brltis'i
----------------' And rejoice in the sweet assurance. simple questions, answer* to which
person* of
twist to It: In
the Shorter-------------Oxford •
A Texan has combined 10 garden--------------------------------------------school
------“He glveth hb loved one sleep." will enable Ute Postoffice Depart­
89.10
merit to know how many employes' J[ tools tn one. but It still Isn't perfect I Dictionary, "to make whoopee" b
Dlst 3
20 persons
school
Thomas Macaulay could read well application forht* to deliver to each as long as you have to go out arid'defined as "to go on the rash-.
86.00
| dazzle."
- ■
employer.
I 1 operate it.
Dlst 4
27 persons
rchool
Dlst 6
fterron*
school
105.601
IKTKOn.S of
school age
10230 ,
DUt. 9
38
ot
school age
125.40
(Continued from page 1. Bee. 1)

school age
Dlst. 10 FT...27 person*
school age

141.00

(Continued from page 1. sec. 1)

ot

89.10

buMtuM wumaa

MANY STYLB

ANO

FOR
TOUR CHOICE
COLORS

SECURITY BUNKS
ME DIST BUTETI

CR UE’S
SHOE STORE
Km U C*,

MlWt

your Winter Coat if you corpe to

PR5NTZESS COATS

oo

Total tor Twp
Irving.
I. 2 Fr. .5 persons
school age .
DUt. 332 persons
school age
persons

.8 656.70
of
1630

of
105 80

10230
Dist. 530 persons
school age
DUt. 629 person*
school aqc
DUt 724 persons
--------school age .
DUt. 9 FT 124 person*
school age
DUt. 10 8
persons
school 3gc .
DUt. 12 FT. 29 person*
r
■cnool age . .

of
99.00

of

perrons

7920

40020
ot
of

95.70

ot
18450

person.1

of

persons

of

person*

ol

person*

ot

62.70
8530
125.40

person*

ot

person*

of

persons

of

persons

of

161.70

3 DAY SPECIALS
Aew Fall and Winter DRESSES
LIFEBUOY SHAVING
CREAM. 35c Sin ...

ANACIN TABLETS,
Regular 25c Sixe-----------

25'

|AD SALTS.
A ft'
Condensed, 50c Sixc----- HU

SLOAN'S LINIMENT.

Latest Styles and Exclusive Models - No Two Alike.

17'

PEPSODENT TOOTH
PASTE. 50c Sixe ...

LYDIA PINKHAM'S
QQc
Vog. Comp., $1.50 Sixa _ vO

Prices.

73'

SMITH BROS.
Cough Syrup, 35c Sixe __fcv

50'

ENOS SALT.
60c Sixc_______

45'

.40'

AGAROL,
$1.50 Sixe ....

....... 98'

53'

IRONIZED YEAST.
$1.00 Sixc _________

GROVE'S BROMO
QUININE, 35c 5ixe_&gt;_

24'

BAUME BENGAY,
75c Sixc ____________

VICK'S NOSE DROPS.
50c Sixe_____________

35'

SAL HEPATICA.
60c Sixe
----- J-'—

OVALTINI,
Regular 85c Sixe-------

.35'

TWIN SWEATERS

66.00

108 90

To! 31 for Twp
Maple Grow.
Dlst. I
.42 person*
school age1 ..
^31 person*
.16 persons
school agr
persons
Dial. 3Fr... .85
:
school age&gt; ..
Dirt. 4Pr....46 pcr.von*
.34
DUt. 6;
school age
DUt. 6:
.31
school age
DM. 7Fr .....33
school age
Dist. 8
.23
school age

COMPARE These Prices With What You Pay In the City, THEN
SAVE with SAFETY at lhe Rexall Cut Rate Drug Store

95.70

Total for Twp .. .. 81.029.60
Johnstown.
Dial. 1
.19 persons of
.68
school age
Dbt. 3Fr... 18
school age
DUt. 4Fr .. .26
1
school age
■ 38
school age
Dlst. 6
.30
school age
DUt 7
-49
school age
DUt. 8Fr....iJO
school age
.10
DW. 9
school age
DUt. 11
.33
school age

Special Values for Thrifty Shoppers

persons

per*anj
persons

persona

..81.019.70
of
...3 138.60
of
10230
of
5330
of
11840
of
15130
ot
11226
of
10230
of
10830
ol
75.90

Total lor Twp. . . .
Orsngev Uk.
Dial. 232 persons of
school age I
DIM. 3Fr...l39 persons ol
school age
DiM 434 persons ot
school age
Dlst. kPr....38 person* of
school sgc
Total f07 TWp8 79830
Prairieville.
Dial. 29 persona of

school ago ~I

29.70

50c

Hind's Honey
And Almond

60c

25c

ITALIAN
BALM

Feenamint

CREAM

49'

19

40

40
KOLYNOS

.00 Hopj

35c Pond’

Cecoanut OU

SHAMPOO

CREAMS

CREAM

25

75'

20'

30c

Mead's
PABLUM

Face Powder

39‘

39'

50c Drake's

*1.00

Tooth Paste

CROUP
SYRUP

Pepsodent
.Antiseptic

35

35'

79'

50c

BROMO
QUININE

55c

Woodbury's

105.6C

458.70
11330

SEE LARGE

HANDSILL

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS

FOR FULL
I'.8 90

LIST OF
ITEMS

THEREXALLSTORE

HASTINGS

PHONE 2131

Special On
Window
Shadct
We make them to
fit Your windows.

SEPARATE SWEATERS

SKI PANTS
6 to 14 ot $4 .91

SNOW
SUITS

UHPEF WEAR For Wom.n

AA,irai«n SILK HOSE

39-59-69-85^1
Join Our Hotiery Club!

�1

twf

Hastings

n inner.

thursiht.

November

i». im

.""TeK."!!,,., ■ SPAIN ■

bk«. In larger cities tiiere was a.
PYTHMN SISTERS
Jacob Gteb had a narrow escape
inovi ru«)it to piesrnt the collection
j »
I? 1/1?NJ'l'C
ENTERTAIN GUESTS.. when his auto, was badly damaged
of rent*. In other places' factorial •jfJD
,
r Hill 1
a delightful evening was enjoyeu
Thursday evening. He was drivlean sugar cane in Hawaii. During , ,
. ,
. ..
„
were taken irom their owners ahd
ul
Py^ian Temple last Friday. I h»g souUi on M-M and had dlmmea
the It-tnonth growing period, each Judge Asks Action On Cases
conducted by workmen or by the '
with guests from Middleville and hb lights upon meeting another car.
government
I NasnviUe Temple* present to par- and •’ ha passed Hie car. a wagon
acr* receives enough water to cover .
That Have Long Been
The cause of the present troubles.
‘
"
take of lhe pot luck supper and at-1 without lights loomed up In front
On Calendar
—- •—? • ■ . ---------- - Professor Alton said, was that the
tend the regular Temple meeting ot him. Although he turned as
,
MePre, oren-d lire NoP'
moderate liberal groups in Spain
later. Bridge was also played. Mr*, quickly as he could he waa unable
' veintier term of circuit court Mon- Spain in the year TOO A D The his­ had been betrayed by their supposed
Loks Bennett of Middleville winning 10 ,Tltw the wagon and besides rip'day by a call of the calendar to as­ tory of the next eight hundred !rtends These latter Were inlereseed
high score and M.s. Ethel Huffman Phw the fenders off one side of lhe
certain thr number ut cases ready years Is largely made up of wars of in internationalism rather than the
,
Mr and Mrs. prank E Ward, who of Nashville low score. About set- lr*r * l’r*e hemrd wa* forced
ga&lt;xi cl Sjrain They n-emed anx­
for trial this term.
enly-fivr were present
through lhe windshield and travelnorthern and central Soonlard*
it was expect'd the jury would b&lt; airatnst Hie Moorish invaders The ious to get in line with extreme lived for so many years in this.city,
w ---------------- * • *
n»e wnoie lengtn of the car. Had
called next Monday, November 23; Mohammedans w re driven out of Sovl.-tiMn tn Russia rather than to celebrated their goldi-n wedding
FREEPORT.
tliere bc&lt;n anyone riding with Mr.
get
Spain
somewhere
as
a
country.
but because one of the attorneys ap­ Strain and lhe kingdom consolidat­
The senior class U1
ot rlCTpulk
Freeport „
High
certainly have
yesterday. Nov. ia. at the home of
M.. ?,eM. ,.{*eX
In the judgment ol Professor
pearing m jury cases will be envagrd ed in H92 und-r Ferdinand and Iva■ oeen
killed.
their son.'Omer, in Grand Rapids, 1 school arc presenting their
annual
Alton a nation Hist victory is ileairin a trial Ln the federal court at
, play at lhe I. o. O F. hall on
to Rev
Bitdorf's a bra nee
Grund Rapids next Monday It was bh armies against the Moors in sav­ abl.- for Spain in this civil war. A wide circle of Hastings friend i Thun.day Mid Friday evenings ol ,r°m town lad week and the uncer' nece-aary to postpone calling the
Those who have reb&lt; lied against lite extends congratulation?, and best this week. The play selected b ' talnty of hi* being here Sunday. Rev.
age warfare who came to America
communistic leadership will wishes to Mr. and Mrs. Ward.
jury to Monday. November 30. m- nnd conquered the ancient clviiua- present
• Mountain Mumpa mirth-pro- U. L Wilkins occupied the pulpit
...
._ apt
.... ...
bs- Inn
more
to give Hnnin
Spain „a chance.
PHONE YOUR ORDER Now For Fancy
| stead of the Z3rd.
On Nov. ia. 18W. Frank E. WardI voklng three-act corned?. The play »t the U. B church Sunday momThe judge made some pointed reand Mary Parrish were married iu is directed by Supt 8 G. Voqrhees U,K •'•d Hie evening message was
Turkeys, Geese, Ducks and Chickens
skv. It is not desirable to have Spain Coopersville at the home of the
[marks i-.bout that part of the cul■ and the cast of characters Is as fol- delivered by Rev. J. L. Ickes.
For some time 8pa(n was a very the vicUm of international scheme*
rndar consisting of -cases in which
bride's sister. Mrs. Edna Hosmer lows: pasty Holmby. uii unknown inMessrs. Frank. Claude and Raluh
, no progress has been made for more important country; but through and movement!. Spain ought to be After the wedding they returned to
• dividual—Dorothy
Wallon;
Mrs. Walton nnd Delton Tyler left Pri! than one year." Several of theje mistaken policies and attempts to perndtted to work out her own des­
We Will Have Fresh Peas, Wax Beans,
Margart-i Holmby Chilton, a fas- day evening for lhe upper Denlnrule other peoples Spain began to tiny If thr rcbeU shall win un­ Grand Rapids residlr.g at 27 6tod-....
(dard Ave. in lhe spring of 1893 the, cinaling
cinatlng
widow
—
Pauline
Moore;
sula
In qu.-st of deer
Freeport's
decline.
She
made
some
progress
| year* Th&lt; Juii.rt- reld thr alton.*-v
doubtedly there will be a dictator­
Cranberries, Squash, New Carrots
m *’ txileonic era. Then ship Tticie &gt;s a dictatorship now; moved to Marion. Indiana. wh»r- Florence Chilton, lhe eldest daugh- hunting parties have diminished a
that he did not like the situation pr« yiou«
th&lt;rr w.vr ciri -t wars, seeking to but It l- that of the R'-ds A dif­ , they lived for two and .one-hid' ut Helen Eash Burkey,'?8ue Ch.l- good deal In the last few years.
Sweet Potatoes, Etc.
'
inn
Hi.*
irkiinuf.i
..Vlrulti......
—
'year*,
then
returning
lo
Hili'ton.
the
youngci
daughter
—
Virgin
­
Another Pwa worker and hU
I get action, or they would all go off bring bick tb- 'Jerli'i rulers. Con­ ferent tyi»- of di- tatorship would be home in Grand Rap ds where they ia- Hdi; Calvin Chilton, tne only
family, who have been living in their
'the calendar at lhe February term tending ariDI" wire for one regime better and would result-ultimately, lived until In Nov 1^03. They Hirn
। ol court, probably something will be and then another At that period in tne spe»*)r bedeved. in the return sold their place and moved lu Has­ son—Clarence Surianer; Link For­ house car just north of the stand­
rester. a young inventor—Meredith ard Oil bulk tanks, have moved
Ep:iin the army becane an &gt;m- of liberal government to that un­
Collage Inn
DEL MONTE
done about
tings where they purchased a hame Lewis; Ttmotliv Hnan. a financier
poitant factor and ba« played an happy country
their car onto lhe vacant lot just
—Lawrence Wieland; Kerry Regan, west of the News office and have It
Whole Graen
import.v part tn flpaln" more re- , Spirin ought ,to
w settle her ww
„
CLARENCE BOSLEY
own
Mr. Ward has been a turn! ur- a good catch-William Boughner; placed
PI T ON PROBATION cent ht'iar. For som- t,|-n- 3pain troubles and to give real liberals a
for the winter. Every house
Clarence H. Bo 1-y. of Kalama?oc wa« ihoppng for a king Her prople chance. While dictatorship may be­ worker since lhe age of sixteen, Mrs. Carolyn Bebe snotu. a society In town that is usable, is now oc-working eighteen years for th-? nutren—Luc.ie Lenz; Lida Shutt*
----- ....
• was brought tx-iore Judge McPeek llId nut w &lt;nt too much government
cupied.
- - come
necessary
for a lime .in ..
the
Grand
Rapids
chair
co.
and
thlrn
pocket
edition
—
Dorothy
Dukes;
i on Monday (or sentence He admkM-tth-d upon the Hour- end. it the rebels win. he believes,
Dr H. s Wedel attended th*
No. 5 tin |
। led taking sixteen bushels of wheat b(,n
T in................
Jhe left,
—
^or ---------liberal that Spain_ ....
will «...
take her place I ty-two years for thr Grand Rap.d Dr. Miller, a young physician—Al­ clinic at Grand Rapids last Thurs­
Bookcase &amp; chair Co. of thb c v beit Barcroft; Homer Riggs, of lhe day.
1 that belonged to Lewis Acker of rl-mr-t began to grow The army among the real democracies
Had it not been for the d-pre. i &gt;n ».ul n car squad—Russell Uray.
। Hone. He had never been charged In IU*i* r—&lt; ued the government
Last reports from Aunt Nancy
and
the
111
health
of
Mr-.
Ward
I;
•
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Deming Deming who is with her son. Frank
■ with any offense before He has a from r -volutlonisU. called buck the
would still be at his wor&lt; bench In a Illa Wolfe) of near Remus
wife iuid two children—one born Bourbon line of princes as their rul­
Hastings Their home lias now
» bounce the marriage of their young­ c' iu,rt wl,e ln Grand Rapids,
BEEF KETTLE ROASTS
lb. 15c
, mjou after this offense was com- ers in 11WH Spam lost all h r foreign
to
’
Victor
i
U1“l, i,lr U
slowly.
-old and Mr. and Mrs Want are Ly­ est daughter. Bernice. 'Hie —
। milted
The judge felt that it Colonies It had been a backward
MT
I “r. .‘nt* Mrs V“?U,r flUson
ing with their two aon*. Ralph of Lamb, which occurred a
PORK SAUSAGE
2 lb.. 35c
was a case where probation might country but thereafter modem inAlma and Omer of Grand Rapid., parsonage at Remus on Wednesday vlritors Ttiun^dJ/af
I be extended; but he made it jyry dustrulbm began to penetrate it
Wh.nl On. S.iUrd.y ni.hi | ram, horn.
“•
W**™1 tM&gt;' evening. Oct. ;m. The newlyweds are
x.»««n&lt;»nBUTTER
lb. 35c
plain lo Mr. Bosley that he mu’t and mod-rn Ideas as well
R« v. and Mrs L F. Burkey and
conform * trie Dy to the terms of the last king,
— Alfon-o
...-------«...
XIII . mounted
»«&gt;■«■' wuh a ire. pair ol lxx.u Wile ..id.'
are 11 at home at MxlUruuk. Thr inanj sons. p»ul and Bobbie, were Sunday
frieixls here extend their best
PICNICS, Smoked, Shnnkl...
lb. 2Oc
the eighteen-months' probation. In the throne it whs thought he woula
Mr. and Mrs. Frank
"Riley,
whr/e
did
you
get
the
pair
years
of
age
and
have
four
children,
wishes.
the first place he must make resti­ be a liberal ruler but Instead hHeadswGrlh al Clarksville.
of ox-hide*?," I replied. Oh. 1 bought j Mrs. I. J. Fairchild .Vera Wardi o;
Due to the Hines* of Sujrt. S, O
tution to Mr. Acker for the sixteen Veered to the oppos.u- extreme
Che' Brumlev and family of Carl­
Voorhees and Pri u ipal Evart Ardis, ton have moved into the house just
'em where Fn)way« buy 'em—of the ,
-B' c.'
E
bushels of wheat taken. He must al­
The World war saved Spain from „
Z
.. tnan (Ethel Ward), of Las Angele*. there was no scliuol In lhe High
so pay 110 fin&lt;*&gt; and was given a rea­ a revolution in tne early twentl1**, German
Shoemaker Rower
He Cal
w Wald of Alma W)J
west of the Dlocksmith shop, known
sonable Hine in which to do this. when there was a reaction against
■s
the Dr. Miller house. Mr. Brumknows leather; he always makes 'em (Omer A- Ward of Grand Rapids, ; sutned on schedule Munday
The judge explained that his re­ lhe type of government given by Al­
U-y h a WPA worker.
I Stub Orsbom is nursing a very sore
strictions must be followed lo lhe fonso XIII The prosperity of Spain, good and strong; and do you know '
Mrs. Mary Dodge went to Grand
DREWYOR— BURKHEAD.
right hand, as the result of an In­ Rapids last Thutaday for treatment
letter
and
in
good
spirit,
and
that
he
walks
way
to
Battle
Creek
to
■*|
Rib or Loin End
which was a neutral in the World
if Bosley did that his ease would be war prevented the overthrow of the lect his hides and have them tanned 1 A pretty wedding took place on Jury suffered while adjusting a belt , ant
andj yidted
vldied relatives.
returning
thr elevator on Monday of last home
•
dismissed at the end of the eigh­ king Spain prospered immenscly and brings his tanned hides back on i Tuesday morning. November 17. at
ttie first of the week.
it.
ib
i eleven o'clock In lhe parsonage of, week. Lewis Overholt is aaaUtlng al
teen months. He told him that he becausc it was able to supply bell g- his shoulder?"
Rev. and Mrs. j. i Batdorf spent
must not drink any Intoxicating 11- erenU with needed material, at very
My wife replied. "Oh. yeahiAnd । the First Presbyterian church wh--n the elevator during his enfo.-red last week visiting their children at
Drewyor and MUs Marie • absence.
quor. and that Included beer, that he high prices
Leslie and Stockbridge and the for­
he's some salesman too. One Ume I Lawrence
K Burkhead.
Burkhcad. both of Delton, were 1 Mrs. P. L. Preston has been assist­ mer's sister at Union City. On
Bui
must not be guilty of any Infrac­
Following the World war came the tried on a pair of his «hoes and 1 1
ing In lhe
Perkins, who
unitedi in marriage by Rev. John «»»
me care of
u« carl
u*»« rvrauis.
wuu Thursday they visited Rev and Mrs.
tions of lhe law and must report re­ long drawn-out
between
—
- - conflict
—. — said. 'Mr Rower, they
iney fit
ni too tight
ugnt ' |iOlr.iUi_.
, K1[rhlni.
.... bride
gularly to probation Officer C H Spain and her African Moorish co!-' He said. 'Mrs.
..........................
dey vlil I The
' wore a wed-i has been very 111 with prwutnunU al Inaac Osgood, a former pastor here,
5-------• Vaters,
—
■
home near Woodland.
canton crepehis
and
Osborn. All this Bosley agreed to do onl?s. The
.
, met dis- stredch a leedle' Another time 1 ding
“““ dress of■ •blue
at their home near Athens. Friday
Spanish army
The I. O. O F lodge, which has afternoon they attended the funeral
aster in that war. Investigation* by was trying on a pair of his shoes was attended by Miss Velma IraMARRIAGE LICENSES.
been meeting on Tuesday nlgiit-s of the former's sulcr-tn-law. Mrs
the Spanish parliament placed the They were too lose and I told him Course. William Burkhead acted as
Lerov O Sllbervon. Doster 22
for some time, has changed back to ■ Dora E Bitdorf at Battle Creek and
1
beat
man.
After
a
brief
wedding
tour
Hazel E Heffner. Orangeville .19, responsibility for that dLra .ter upon so. Then he said. Oh. Mrs. Vaters, Mr. and Mrs. Drewyor will take up Saturday night aga.n.
the monarch. As a result there was dey vlll- schrlnk a teedle"
I returned home Friday evening.
•
|
Mrs. Ed Walters suffered painful
...20' a dictator and the king became such
Don E Reynolds. City .
One night 1 stepped tn By D.ck-।[ their residence on their farm al Del- injury lo her limb last Friday in a ■ K. Braendle is confined lo his
20' In name onlv. Troubles increased inson'a tavern and Mr Rower was
Helen J. culver. City
home with an Infection tn his leg
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN.
fall at her home. She was attended
.23 until Ln 1031 Alfonso was compelled In the card room sound asleep It I
Alfred A Lake. Hastings Mr and Mrs. Willard Dltmar of
FAMILY PARTY ON
by Dr H S. Wedel
IB। to flee from Spain The following was closing time and Mr Dickinson |
Helen Wilcox. Hastings .
Grand Rapids were Sunday after­
MOTHER'S BIRTHDAY.
Mr.- Della Perkins of Grand noon guests of Mr and Mrs Victor
day the Republic was proclaimed said- ‘Mr Rower, wake up. Il’s i
Rapids, formerly ot Freeport, enter­ Sisson.
t
Mrs.
Emma
Myers
was
surprised
The moderate republicans and lhe tune lo go home i ll walk along with I
vou Which
wmen wav
’ K
the home of her son tained the local L A. 3 at lhe home
Mrs Thern Nagier and Mrs. Verda
extreme socialists and communists you.
way anan
shall we
we so
go?"
It was
was i on S'U*d“&gt;
of Mrs. James Cool on Tuesday aft­ i Bumford of Hastings attended the
• worked together to overthrow the
of this week We hope lo musical program at the local M. E.
king When that was accomplished said. "Oh. dis is such a fine moon-. J”' ^.ntv"n?« bbui«tevh In nt ernoon
have a full account for next weeks church
£st
cvrnl‘n(l
the two victorious elements began
‘
1 iJu"?
Ivan Roush
M°Ua' wos
w“ a0 Grand
Gr,rlLl Kapid*
. to fight each other There was an
Ed.-.rt My,,,1;
caiuomu. lM^'
Revival meetings are In progress , vU!tor Monday anen£A,,c
election in 1933. when women voted
*«- and Mrs. Asaliel 2..
John Baum, an old pioneer of There were also six grandchildren at the Mennonite rliurch this week ; Mr.
Thompson
tor the first time They favored a
' with Bro Ray Yoder of Wakaru -a. and daughter Ardlth of Bowne were
more moderate policy and u really Barry county who lived for many »nd 'hree great-grandchildren prexwas—
presented
--------------* -,,H with Ind.. In charge
liberal government
But the ex­ yeara on Hie bank of Thorn apple ent. Mrs -Myer*
guests of her mother. Mrs. Ellen
Sam Cannavan was lhe victim ot Seese. Monday
some lovely useful gifts as reminder*
i.*.k-well
remembers
old
"Chl-f
tremists gut possession of thr gov­
a double accid.-m last Saturday
Gary Ntwton. who is employed as
ernment
The new socialist prem- Aska raw" and has been at hb wig­ of tne happy day All hope she may
enjoy many more such delightful afternoon. While he and Mrs cow tester in Ionia county, called
wam many limes
were MmlM • .mail on Mr. and Mrs Victor Sisson SunHe relates that he met Charlie occasions.
and cau'ious to meet the situation
20
amount of wood at their home in (
afternoon
He made the vertou, mistake of at a Thornapple lake picnic some |
BENEFIT CARD PARTY.
Logan the belt on the saw came oil :
D Lester left Saturdav mnm
putting radicals in charge of all year* ago. and Charlie informed him
Pennock nospitai
hospital gvuia
guild so
No m
18 h
h While
attempting w
lo icpuic
replace n.
It. hU ।! jlng
annual deer hunt n^r
■1£
rriuiacx
wmir »«cinp;ui,
ng flor
Or hu
,
departmenu of thr government, al­ that he was living near Pentwater i ■Vina
benefit card
rarrt party
n«rlv on
on FriPrt. hand
hand was
vis thrown
thrown into
into lite
Hie raw
raw As
As i Baldwin
«*r nunt near
1 having a■ benefit
though the previous election had on Lake Michigan
John says that Indian Garden. d*y afternoon at the home of Mrs. Mrs. Cannavan was rushing him to
—
shown that the majority did not fa­
The
Kendall
sisters furnished'
the office
office of
ot Dr.
Wedel, m
in turning
turning |
where
thr
Pottawatomie
Indians
of
Cornelius
Manni.
A
general
invltalhe
Dr.
Wedel,
special
music
at the M E. church
vor a radical government As a mat­
Thornappllake
r*is-d
their
com
I
Uon
b
extended.
Mrs
1.
J.
Smith
the
corner
at
the
U.
B
church
the
ou
,
Bunday morning which was gieatly
ter of fact Profexvur Alton stated
r
—
-------- •— Indian
— -■ -- '■ t» ■•)»•*
• door came open, throw.ng Mr. Can- cnjoye&lt;j
and• -tobacco,
was opposite
guild rh.irman
chairman.
navan forcibly to lhe rood After I -­
" • •
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Yargcr of
of communists who had forced Landing on the south .shore of the .
administering first aid treatment ( Grand Rapids visited hb mother.
BIRTIlDAk NURFR18E.
matters and brought about a prac­ lake He says that lhe plot of ground
A group ot friends surprised Mr*. Dr Wedel took him to Pennock ha.- Mrs. Ellen Target Saturday after­
tical dictatorship, with -moderate was encircled by blackberry vines.
liberals left out of the government elderberry and wild rose bushes. | Cornelius Manni on Monday after- pltal where two fingers were re­ noon
thornapple trees, and was a natural' boon to remind her of her birthday moved. Apparently he was none the [ Dr. H. s. Wedel ana family are
ent'rely Under this radical rule
oaradlse for bird* of every kind.
anniversary and. it was a complete worse for hb fall, and at this writ­ ' moving this week Into their new
there were many reactionary trou. surprise. A happy tune Is reported. ; Ing Is as comfortable as possible.
home recently purchased from Mr.
and Mrs Albert well*. A fine new

HAS CIVIL ■

Golden IFetIding of
Mr. and Mm. F. E. Ward

THANKSGIVING
Time Is Here Again

uTaI"S’w8““"Ct‘" !»«•

BEANS
2 **"• 29c

?■'

TOMATO
JUICE

Riley Stories

FANCY
CHICKENS

PORK LOIN
ROAST

22c

2Oc

XELDPAUSCH
r*MARKET‘
JL Phone 2272 We Deliver

I “I

1

«&gt;■;

SIZES

You’ll be in Seventh

Heaven when you see

C , material being obtained in Freeport.
V as far at possible, and Freeport peo? pic are very happy that thU splen\ did physician and hli family will
X continue to make this town their
c I home.
X
Mr*. Lawrence Johnson of Bowne
\ ! Center visited her mother. Mrs. H,
\ M. Boughner last Thursday. •
Ji
inc M E. church was well filled
C Ivl Friday evening for lhe concert
\ given by the young peoples choir,
X, assisted by the Kendall sisters
C
The Masonic and Eastern Star
X I lodges will observe their tenth an­
niversary with a pot luck supper at
»&gt; the Temple at 7 o'clock this ThuraX | ii*v evening. All members and their
C famlUra are invited.
\
We understand that Arthur Bel­
's fert and family, who for some Um*
have been living in Baltimore, Md,
are preparing to move to Buffalo,
N. Y.. where Mr. Seifert has been
transferred to become assistant
rone manager for lhe Chevrolet
Motor Co. Mrs. Seifert and Dorothy
are spending some time with his
people al Kendall and John U re­
maining al Baltimore where he has
employment.

THANKSGIVING

DAY

these stunning frocks

at this low price!

LET US BE THANKFUL FOR MANY THINGS

Sweet
Potatoes

5

lbs.

POWDERED
SUGAR

15‘ 2

Bulk
Dates

15‘ 3,b. 25

Lbs.

tor your Thankxxir

Donuts, dox. 12c

HEAD LETTUCE, Lorgo Crisp, 2 hds. 15c
Jello, any flav. 5c

Del Monte
Vacuum Pack

Celery
Heart*, bu.

fTc
v

CORN

Squash.
Ripe. lb.
Leaf Let­
tuce, 2 lb.

4c
W

2

27

Oysters.

WOOLS '

Thanksgiving

CREPES 1

PLAIDS'
VELVETS'

BAR FROCKS !
TUNIC FROCKS !

PEPLUM FROCKS!

PRINCESS FROCKS'

DRESS
EVENT
$3.88

CINDERELLA DRESSES
138 W. STATE STREET

HASTINGS. MICK.

25' 2co„.25

25
No. 2 Sixe

is the Word Now!

30c pt.

APPLES

To

$6.88

Fine Quality

10c

PEANUT BRITTLE, Per lb.
3 Cans
Tomatoes

MUM

Bancroft

P E AS

Cooking or eating
ALL PRICES

Carrota,
Washed, lb.

Qc
O

Table Queen.
Squash, 2 for 9c

Chrysanthemums are lhe answer to the flower question
today. Whether it’s a question of sympathy, congralula-

Cranberry
SAUCE

17

lions, or condolence, it's mums. We have them in a wide

variety of color* and sires. We also carry a complete

Texas Seedless Grapefruit, 80's, 3 for 17c

lhe

holi-

d.f,.

CLYDE WILCOX, The Florist
Hastings, Michigan

Telephone 2530

BUY YOUR POULTRY AUVE (SAVE MONEY)

WALLACE GROCERY
FREE DELIVERY

PHONE t4M

OPEN EVENINGS

-r-JJ

• ra from Imiiae to house to kill i
whit*
persons.
Fifty-fire wt
killed before th* insurgents w&lt;
dfspaiwed. After hiding for a Hi
Turner waa captured and hangi

stock of other flowers for all occasions. Don't forget
wreaths for lhe cemetery. Order now before

No. 2 Six*

born about 1*«&gt;. who was the I net l
gator of the Smithamptou tnsurree
Hon In Virginia In 1831. He be
llered himself chosen by lhe Lort
lo free his people. At an appoint

Waler Flows Uphill
Owing to marked variation* In
atmo*ptieric prewtire. the aurfae*
of Lake Geneva. Switzerland, tv not
Infrequently ft nr 0 feet higher on
one aide nf the Inke than on th*
other. The phenomenon la known

lake to swing back and forth f
period* upward* nf an hour.

Member Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association
Kansas City began as a fur
lng post established in 1831 by 1
cis Choteau.

�TO HMTTNCUI UWETHURSDAY. NOVEMBER 11, MM

BANNER S. B. CLAM.
»W»
MONDAY STUDY CLUB.
' were Sunday guest* ot Mr. and Mrs. I The member* of the Monday
Ove members of the Banner Bunday
' Rankin Hyde at Prairieville George study Club met Monday noon for a
school class on Tuesday night for
Hyde, who spent Saturday here, one o'clock luncheon at the home
accompanied them-to Prairieville
of Mrs. Arche D. McDonald on West
their November meeting, there bring
a _good attendance
ot_
members and
Andre flu* of Grand Rapids U, Court street. Mr* Robert T Walton
------.riding Che weak at Kellar Stem a of Kalamazoo completed her review
Announcement 1* made of the ap- guest*.
*Mra Forrest tone and Mra. H. E |Of "tong Live the King" and a re-' preaching marriage of Mis* Lucile
After the usual supper,
Henry Trim visited friends at. Mrs Ophelia O'Hair is spondlng *
I
Carrick
were
tn
Battle
Creek
on
:
»ume
of
Dorothy
Brande
s
"Wake
MacLeod
to
Philip
Turne**.
lhe
was
enjoyed,
conatetlng
I m * wcin ui
Holt Thursday
| month tn Chicago with her son. Bunday.
717 .
.
&lt;
.Mra.
■
n
.-I- -at
■ ­ tin
Mn K..
....... ........to
.. ba ___
. U...
— »J. I,
—fc™ by MUree “Phyllis HlnUp ai.A
and TLive" was .■
given
by Uva
Mrs. tX
H ceremony
read
by V&amp;-.U
Father
V. r«l
cal T-number*
Wednesday,
where
Carrick
John Palmer of Kalamazoo was Charles O'Hair, and family and
Frahk Foote was in Indianapolis
P. FtUlipj.
?.
Phillip*.
■ Dillon
and
Clum, gn original
U.I.UIl al
*4 nine
IUIW o
V clock in
li« the
ws fora- man
—--- ----- Arts*
——
—•
tended a luncheon.
____________ *____________
...
.
—
■
•
, iiV,ii*l*ii i. playlet by Mra. Uarin lhe city on Saturday.
1 with her granddaughter, Mra. Rob- on business the fore part of the
Har• noon
on
Thanksgiving
day
at 81 Thanksgiving
The
Misses
Maude
Wallace.
Win
­
Mrs. Fred Wagner spent Bunday at J***en.
war*"
MERRY WORKERS CLUB.
,I Rose
Bose church. MI
MU*
m Mactood
MacLeod yrtB
Fin vey Burges*
Burgass and Mrs
Mra. Donald Robnie Roush. Helen Angell. Chrystal
___ _ a —
hit. -n—
Eleven yumq,
young a
girls
have recently waar
white
satin
gown and .a in,..
long Inion
in*» and
*nd Mvarisl raadlnoa
readings bv
by Mrs.
with her mother tn Sparta
I Mr. and Mrs J. W MacLachlan I Ban F Blakney has returned from Thomas and
ana Marten
Martan Hallwood
nauwooo spent
uu
—
-..
___ ... . . a ...
&gt;■ &gt; "The ..
— , bridesmaid
j-..—-—-in
rvuetarrn
Miss Ruth Robson visited al her Mnd “»• Donald, of Caro and Mrs. a visit in Michigan Otty and Ohl- Ba&amp;urdav in Ann Arbor and Detroit organized
club . called
Merry ■ veil. v.Her
will kbe Miss Mirv Van
Du?J*
re?w
MUM nuui ivuu~»
nf TUv mtv were ca«0.
party
and attended lhe Northwestern-! Workers" which meets lhe first Leonards Trelb. and Jules Turneas Plansum tor
for the Christmas
Ct
- - discussed, the
meeting to be on
Tuesday night of each month at J will attend hl* brother. Following ' »«•
’iiL®
Arthur E Ktddei of tonring was «umU at Mra Harold Prater over
m o. D writnn 1* u-ndlng thte Michigan football game
w
Dee A A canned
.nd n/Ui e-jwkin 8*wn o\)ock
0 clock at
at th.
lhe tomes
homes of
of the
the । the
the cersmdny
ceremduy and
and a
a wedding
wedding luncfi
lunch Tuesday night Dec.
in th, at, on eiturdi, Inatlnt, “te w~, «nd.
. rak U ChkMO Ind Ivuaon with
WgUosky Ironside and^Bob Corkln members The girls elther
h(lV(
.
g
Mr
McLeod
s.
fruit
and
vegetable
abowar
lor
either have a at Mr and Mrs. John MacLeod's,
-------friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Ashley had friend*.
Clark 1Memorial Home in Grand
■ •ocUJ
for rww
poor rhfl.
chU- 1 tha
' meeting,
tins sew fnr
the bride
bride and
and groom
aroom will
will leave
leave for
for Clark
Eton Pennock of Big Rapid* « Sunday guests Mr. and Mra. L.
U c Harris ot Grand Rapid* v|aI drcn or m*ke book&gt; tor chlklreu! a short trip before starting bouse- R«pM*
-,.12* was brought TUtadgy night..
spent Saturday and Sunday here Harris at Battle Creek and Mr*. Red in ttto city and vicinity on
I
MtehtJan confined to the toapltal Tomorrow keeping In the upper apartment In • nice
n‘ce quantity being donated
on burinra^
! Will Huber and Mra. Ruth Bugtoe Sunday.
morning (Friday) the girls will
will ; the Mra. Elroy Tobias house on N
—
—
-------------Mr*. E G. Edger of Jackson 1*1°! Batll* Creek,
।
Corinne Gould af tonsing game Saturday afternoon
j! present a
—
a Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving play
play at
at the
the Michigan
Michigan Ave,
Ave., which
which 1*
Is ready
ready for
for OFFICER8
ELECTED BY
visiting her sister. Miss Julia Rock, j Mrs. George 8 Hooper and da ugh- ,/uited Mr* Ray Branch over the
---------—--------- —
J.---------- I. occupancy.
---------------- ----For
— -------EASTERN STAR ORDER.
Lloyd Shafer and Dr. John
l5 *e**jon
at
Central
auditorium,
her
travelling
uuju. Sulno
uu.uu&gt; , I0
u'iiii&gt;n
ai-----------central
auditorium.
occupancy,
rur w
ncr
ir* ui— dress.
lor some lime.
' Mr. MTO. Larry Creaon. of Mem—*
101( La
to Sato.
Rato. ill.
Ill. were in the city on
on.!The
The officer*
officer. of
ot lhe
the club are:
an: Pres., the bride ha* chowm
chosen a blue silk
Members of Hastings Chapter No
Mr. and Mrs George B. Green phi*, who were called here by the
Saturday
Sunday,- —
on a hunting । Eia|ne n.uuj,p.
Knapp; vice-pre*. Maxine
Maxine and
and wool with black accessories
a
--------- —-and
—-----------spent Tuesday and Wednesday of death of Mra. Dennis Murray, re­ was in lhe city on Monday calling -Irin
rsn Sunday
Ottndav Dr.
dr Sulno
Rlllnn called
railed on
Zin ' Ayer*
. _ _ ___
____
...
___ __
i . r Last
... Sunday afternoon. MLu Mac• 7. Ordsr ot lhe Eastern Sur. alacttrip. On
xecretary.
June .Leary
and'
last week in Flint
. turned homo Thursday.
e&lt;l the following officers M their reg­
T»---------------. former
tn.no., .treasurer. _
.
.
at
lbe
apartment
.an friends
Dr. Frederick H.
Taylor, a
Beverley Jones.
ular meeting Tuesday evening at
Mrs. Anna Deal of Prairieville Is
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Pkul and
fraternity
brother
at
M
8O..
Bast
!
Attorney Kim Sigler was in Grand
lhe Immediate families being guest*
visiting her daughter. Mrs Oscar Wn returned to their tome in Chi- Rapids on
.fl
' Those from out of town were Mr
on UOf
Monday
on btuineas at I *m.'.ing
BRIDAL 8HOWERPalmer, for a week.
cago Monday alter spending a feif lh/coun
Miss Charlotte Besamer was the
Mrs. John W
MacLeod enter­ and Mrs Rex MacLeod and children Patron. Boes Johnson;
Associate
Mr and Mr* Dorr Kenyon were (jMJ, wUh Mr. and Mra. Char la*,
from----------------Kalamaaoo.
tained
ten
guests
on
Thursday
eve-------------eueaw
on
nnusuay
w
--------.
Matron. Mrs. Margret Barnett; AsBunday guest* of Mr and Mra. tofe jf*u1 and other relatives
Albert Baumer, last week. She has ntng at a china and linen shower'-------------------------------------------------------------- aodate Patron. Archie Rrickord.
Unebaugb of Portland.
• Ratort Ritchie of Detroit, who
graduated from the University hos­ complimentary to her granddaughHesperia
Bunday*
DE
*
..on.,...
Secretary.
Mrs.
Maude
W
Smith;
Mra. Tom T**7ee of Charlotte
returned Irom Nantucket,
RLRVENTH BIRTHDAY.--------------—------------------- kiL.
Bev. C L. Clinton of Grand Rap- pital at Ann Arbor and has accept­ ter. Miss Lucile MacLeod, a pros- I
spent Bunday and Monday with her , , where he gpenl
aUmmer.
ed a position there, beginning her pectlve bride. Dessert was served. J lir;.
— Ritchie delightfully:. rnnHurtran Mra. Rom Gktoy, and
Mrs Bar
Harry
parents. Mr. and Mrs Ray Waters,
hU -*^1*. Mr. and Mra.
work this Monday morning
Mr. and Mra. Harold A- Phillip* H
wuh£
the color motif of pink and white' entertained
ntcrtalned -------about —
thirty ..
of the
.
A_,a«late Conductress. Mrs. Julia
’. O Sheffield home.
Mrs. Albert Bewuner returned last
had a* Sunday guests Mr. and Mrs. l w
• ma. uonnna, .„
a
ana
I2“S wv*k from Chicago where she vlsit- predominating on the dining uble members and gucats of lhe club at Brower These and the other ten
R G Patterson of Shelter Height*, t Mrs. Fred
Honnold and
Ml**
where pink rosebuds, while tapers j her home on Wednesday evening. officer* appointed by the worthy ma­
Ohio’ 1
ncisuw. । nrB|z
.Jlen fiouiur
Onulua
Coullr, of
al Chicago
chkw were
w.r.
,
ar.d white favors composed the deco-! Nov. 11. it has been the custom ot tron will take their offices at a pub­
-----------------,w organization to
„ lic installation Tuesday evening. Dec.
' the club since IU
Mrs James Bristol spent
Friday trich. Miss Charlotte Bradner and rations.
Richard and Hubert pairchild of m Uw dlr row raraap to onirlotte where they wtre guest* of
1. Dinner will precede the cere­
Detroit were Bunday guests of their
, and Saturday in Bangor with her Mervin Kline drove from Detroit to I The bride-elect was the recipient' hold an auction al U*November
uii&gt; Mrs aJ. R. GlfDn.
Chicago and Mra. Beasmer returned 0|
lovely gif U. ।‘ meeUnu.
meeting, of article*
articles contributed bv
by monies.
I,
aunt.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fair­ : JudS, ina MT. B. B.
with them.
-------------J
w----------------I
its
members,
yith
Mra.
George
'
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roger
Ray.
MLu
Ed-1
jjj,
Hu
ley
Tinkler
of
child.
Mr*
Kenneth
Leins
and
daughPARTY
’
AT
GUN
LAKE.
iuuinpo&lt;Mi
ui
cir'
T
^vn
J Thompson of Freeport acting as
arind Rapid* visited Mrs
LOVELY DESSERT—BRIDGE.
Mrs Keith Fox and Mrs. Lyle na Krthn and Robert Taylor of
ter* of Battle Creek are visiting
A group of young people enjoyed I auctioneer this year.
.
Rockhill spent the week end in tonring wtre Sunday vlritor* at the gw, -pinkie r on Sunday
Mrs. Marguerite Hall Parker was
The annual contribution of can- haste** al a beautifully appointed
^d j*™ Warren Wlkot and HMUng* reialives this week while * wtwk end party at Gun lake *1
Grand Rapids as guest* of Mlts Kit­ home of Dr. and Mr*. Frederick H.
Taylor. Mr Ray b a noted aviator, daughter* of Jackson visited Ha*- Mr Lein* is north hunting. Mrs the Albert Beumer cottage Those ned fruit, jellies and vegetable* for,■ deaaert bridge on Tuesday evening
tle Atkin*.
Leins and mt
I*ta&lt;
Mrs. SMw
Edw rtowrc*
Down* wee.
were taUen(ling were Mr. and Mrs Rich- Pennock hospital was made in a at seven o'clock. The fourteen
Mr and Mr* Alonzo Trim *pent ting* rriaUve* an Bunday
Mr*. H. G Hayes and Mr and
ard Jacob*. Mr and Mr* Clark genercu* amount.
Mr*. A. K. Frandsen were Sunday Armistice Day with friends and rel- I Dr. nnd Mr* Frank Carrolhers In Battle Creek on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Kellar Stem expect O’Dojuull; Mb* Thcoline Rogers., Delicious light refreshments were
alive* at Nashville. Mr*- Sarah' visited Mis* Beatrice carrochers in
ing table where autumn coker pre­
to entertain over Thanksgiving. Gay MLu charlotte -Beumer of Ann Ar-, served which included two toveiy
sen in Ionia.
qTinkler accompanied them and vtg-' Detroit over the week end.
dominated in the candle* and tn an
Jordan
of
Sylvania,
Ohio.
Mr.
and
tor. Ml**, Jean Arndt of Grand three-tier birthday cake*.
Mrs. Minute Bhrlncr went to Red her brother and ateter-in-lav.
Mr. and Mrs. E M. Waring re­
attractive disposal of fall fruits As­
Grand Rapids Saturday lo spend Mr
j^r «nrt
and Mr*
Mrs. r
E. t.
L- M/-h»ntr
Schantz
turned Bunday from a three week*' Mrs. Cheater stem and Mis* Patty Rapid*. Neal Adair. Tom Stebbins ■ The drawing of a fine quilt do- sisting lhe hostess in serving were
Stem
of
New
Albany.
Lnd..
and
Dick
of Grand Rapids and Mervin Kline naled by Mrs James Silsbee and
two woeks with Boreal Woodmansee
Mrs R gchlUeman ot Hastings vacation trip lo Mexico City
&lt; Mrs. "
Fred' palmer —
look
at-- this her cousin. Mrs. Harold E. Smith------*- place
--------and daughter.
ts here thia week visiting her
Clare Beach returned on Sunday Stem, who Is a student al the Uni­ of Detroit
j lime, the eleventh ticket drawn be­ Three tables of contract were in
Clarence W. Crawford and son broUlMI
sisters. Mr. and Mra lo hi* work in Detroit after visiting versity of Illinois.
Mrs Herman Zerbel went lo
POST-NUFT11L SHOWER....
_____ _ number and held
ing the
winning
Billy, attended lhe Northwesternand Mrs. Peter his mother. Mrs. Miry Beach.
play with Mrs Richard Groos and
Mra Jessie Al loft and Miss Sylvia by7* Mrs. Earl Boyes..
Mr. and Mrs F. L. Baller attend­ Chicago on Tuesday lo spend some
University of Michigan game al Ann Vcn-klc and Mr and Mrs OU1 Van
time with her daughter and hu*-1 waiters entertained with a mlscel----------------- —■»
--------Artx»r Saturdayed
the
funeral
of
Lou
B.
Windsor
of
Hoven. at their respective borne*\
band.
Mr.
and
Mra.
Charles
VanUnrous
shower
Friday
night
for
Mr.
FORMER
CARLTON
Mr* Minnie Haggerton has re­ Zeeland Record. Zeeland
Grand Rapids last Wednesday.
Middleville was an out of town
i Wbrden. The i.„
latter
U .slowly
re- ii and yj, George Altoft. who were,
— «.
u—k. MAN 16 HONORED
turned from Ann Arbor, where she
uur.to
Mrs. Richard Groos, Mrs Harold
guest.
GuesU U&gt;
of *■*..
Mrs. Jacob Weyerman
from her
op-1
had received treatment at the Uni­ of Shulls lhe past week end were Phillip* and Mrs Aton Johnson I covering
-. recent
. - , serious
, . recently married Bunco was played.
j&gt;ne a Buck, a former Carlton
erauon at Pennock hospital Kur oue.su present from away were Mr. I township re«lden&lt;
was recently
versity hospital
Mr and Mrs. Edwin Hill of Murtt- were in Grand Rapid* on Tuesday,
INFORMAL PARTY.
Richard Cook wa» tn Ann Arbor gon; her son. Don Shute, of Has-' Mr*. Plauie Earls of Lake Odessa Charles Barnes accompanied Mrs &gt;nrt Mrs. George Corder uf Kate- . nonored in Chicago by being electting* called Sunday afternoon and
v
•*'» Zerocl and is visiting her daugh-, rnazoo. Mr and Mrs Lawrence Far- r&lt;| president of the Bans Viyant* as­ twelve young people Friday evening
ter and hmlunri
r—
. .. .. composed
,
..
husband. Mr
Mr. nnd
and Mrs
Mrs. rell of Woodland and it.
tandance at the Michigan Press As­ in the evening Mr. and Mr*. George
Mr and ,Mrs.
relation,
steamship
wuauuil.
tuiiipvocu of
w awMuaiup
.at her apartment at an impromptu
Frank Spensley. of Donner s Grove, Edgar Flfttld ot Irving.
I1 and• •tourist agente. Mr ----- •Buck
Is city ,and informal gathering. Dancing
sociation meetings.
Crakes of Hastings were visitors
a Chicago suburb.
Mbs Ruth A- Rouse of Ann Arbor
. (xusenger agent for the Canadian was enjoyed and refreshments
Miss Marguerite Hetmansperger- Elpar la on Tuesday by lhe illness
BUNCO PARTY.
i Pacific railway in Chicago preand Ml*s Elinor Meston. both grade of her mother. Mrs. Edward BnowOBSERVES BIRTHDAY.
of her sister and husband. Mr. and supervisors at the Roosevelt school
Mrs. Fred Young entertained vlourily working for the Michigan
Mrs Olive Carpenter Ford ot twelve ladies at bunco parly at her Central as a ticket agent before i
Mrs M A tombie.
Mrs. E. J. Pratt was in Lansing on
connected with the Ypsilanti Nor­
Eatpn Rapid*. who L* in her nine­ home last Thursday afternoon. Mr* going to Chicago in 1920.
Mr and Mrs Norwood Sullivan mal. were in the city Tuesday. TheyThursday
------------ - -attending
------------- a meeting
. of
sent .the ----------Banner the fol- . Burl Webb received highest numand daughter o! Grand Rapids were had been visiting schools In Baltic the Democratic state central com- tieth
------ ,year,
-------------we
u Mr;J
He „
is Ule
the son ol
of ml
Mr.. «„
and
lowing item about her recent birth-1 ber and Mrs Allen Pender consol*- j
Sunday guests ot Dr. and Mrs O- L
u b
D Buck
ouua of
U&gt; Carlton and during
win 1'
• TOE AND ACROBATIC
'
I lion
।
l,*3
—k.——attended
j, net,ded ths
Lock wood and family.
his bQ
boyhood
the Cnrltnn
Carlton
Mr* George Putter and Mis*
slopping here to visit the Central
"Mra Olive Ford of East Knight I Refreshment* vfrc served and all' center'
tchooL
ia'tcr
attending
the
Mr and Mrs. Charles Faul nnd ^,MVW,.
center
school,
later
attending
the
Edith
Potter
of
Lansing
were
Sunschool.
Creek High
school. He
He also
also
children and Mrs. Etta Faul were
''Battle
Battl* Creek
High school.
Mrs. Carl flick &lt;Margaret Glad- dgy guest* of Dr and Mr*. D. D. street observed her Mth annlver- reported a gbbd-tlmc
EVERY THURSDAY
sary last Sunday at her home with
——
.
Sunoay guest* ot Mr. and Mrs. Law- stone) visited her mother. Mrs. W Walton.
served in the transportation depart
­
a dinner, most ol which was plan-'
CIRCLE NO. I.
re nee Faul in Woodland.
Emmanuel Pariah JIoom
ment of the sanitarium at Battle
N. Gladstone from Thursday till
Rev. and Mrs. J. A McNulty ol
Mr. and Mrs G F. Chidester Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Bick have Dowagiac were overnight guests last ned and prepared by herself. There ■ Mtf. Robert W Cook entertained, creek.
Circle No. 2 of the Methodist L. A.j------------------------------ ----------spent part of
week in Madison just relumed from their honeymooa Wednesday of Mr. and Mr*.. H- E. were sixteen guests,
I "In her young day* Mrs. Ford 6- on Monday evening, twenty-five
with their son and daughter-in,-taw, trip to Europe, where they spent two Garrick.
FAREWELL DINNER,
’ Mr.
* f21001 WMher and used a attending. Several guesu were also । covers
Ur. and
sr.d Mrs.
Ut;. Rex
T^; MacLeod and j
Pros. Attyi Archie D. McDonald month*. They are . making their two
children of
of Kalamaaoo
Kalamaaoo wve
wve , —
'1‘^*
11 to
her room
Following lhe pot luck sup"■__
home in Indianapolis. Ind.
two children
--- -l*
—
- - call
. to order present.
charmingly appointed
six-thirty
—
- ’ U”U
- “*'-“
-'
. ..
-. t when
dinner w*.&lt; served *he rnng
returned Monday from Winctuster.
SSd
™ M
S per and buxinw session, contest-,1 ch,rmlng
tills bell to caU the guests. Mrs and games were enjoyed under the dinner given by Mr. and Mra; O- TCanada, where he was called Wed­ Hickory Corners, Mr. ----NOONDAY LUNCHES
—-------Cordes on Saturday evening hear­
Ford
received
many
post
card*
nesday by the death of his mother. Mansen Newton of Richland and
direction
of
Mra.
D
D
Walton
and
Mrs, Rose Benham goes on Baling Mr and Mrs. P. E. Johnston,
Mrs. Piiltena McDonald and Miss Fred L Bush and family of Battle day lo Battle creek to visit Mr. and gift* and flower* from friend*.
Miss Ruth Farr.
who leave this week for Lot An­
"The guest* were; Mrs. Jamr*
Ethel Rag la attended the North- Creek were here Bunday lo sec Mrs. Mrs. Henry St*ng (Doris Benham)
DINNERS
gele*. Bridge furnished the enter­
BRIDGE LUNCHEON.
we*tcm-Unlvcrsily
of Michigan Emma E. Bush, who is seriously for several weeks
Covert and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
5:30 to 7:30 F. M.
Mrs. Arthur A- Reasoner was host­ tainment with the honors going to
football game at Ann Arbor Satur­
She Is being cared tor by her
Mr.
•
— and
—‘ •'
Mrs
— •
Lloyd
’—' DeLano
----------and
J
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Cecil
Munlon
and
Mr.
ess lo sixteen guests at a delightful
day.
son Robert of Grand Rapids were ert, Holland: Mr. and Mrs. Fred
SUNDAY DINNERS
blera. Malic and Nina.
Mr* onc o'clock luncheon Saturday al and Mrs. Hugh Riley. The honor
Mrs. Kenneth Buehler and son.'
M. Brower and daughter. MU* Sunday guests of her mother. Mrs. Foster. Lansing; Mr. and
guests were presonted with gtfta
12:30 •• 2:30 F. M.
Kenneth. Jr., of Grand Rapids spent Evelyn, went to Toledo for the week Carrie Montgomery.
Ciem Foster. Onondaga; AD. and her home on West Court street.
also.
from Saturday Co Tuesday with her end as gue*U of Mr and Mrs. Ku------------------Miss Sylvia---Welters
-----------------and------Mr.------and Mrs. Earl Christmas and daughters.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Ly* gene McMurray, where they met Mrs. George Altoft were Bunday Adrian; Rev. and Mrs. E A- Kel­ Un and Mrs. C 8- Potts winning
DINNER FOR EIGHT­
the prizes.
Barker.
Mrs Brower, who was just return- guest* of Mr. and Mrs. George Cor­ ford and Ml*. J. E. Hall.
Places were marked for eight at
Mrs. Jack Snyder of South Has­ ing from a four and one-half weeks' der at Kalamazoo.
"Mrs. Ford reads the papers aqd ।
the lovely bridge dinner given by Mr.
keeps up with the times and stele*
uSOBO,R^?
n ,
tings returned on Thursday from trip through the east. She visited
Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs.
Members of Thu Chapter. Bela and Mra. Frank Rogers at titeir
Parmelee where she vteijed hrt Mr. and Mrs Keith Fuller and fam- Theron Cain were Miss Rachel Caln that she will go to the poll* Tuesoigma r»u &lt;mviu,. «««
items near Dowling last Wednesday
granddaughter and husband. Mr. Uy of Long Island. N- Y.. also Mr. of Lansing and Mr. and Mrs Ed. day to vote for Landon as she ha*1 Surma Phi Sorority, are sponsor mg
a dancing “
party
thU
Friday eveatae
evening t evening. At bridge lhe winning
brf awu«h al lhe Xnr Deal.*
«• “
h Feldav
and Mra. Alton Rnkbeiner. On and Mra. Albert Konkte of BalU- Tolhurst of Middleville
ot
Community Hall. Martin's or- score* were held by Mrs. Harry
Wednesday. Mrs Bnyder was the more. Md.. and look sight-seeing
(As can be seen this happened
Mrs Leonard Post of Grand Rap­
chestra will play and refreshment* Peirce and J M Townsend, and
trip* to New York City. Washington.
vuited her lister and husband. before Nov. 3.J
will be served.
Mra. Townsend and Harry Ritchie,
Carl, of Middleville
_
_ and -other
----------1-.- of interest.
Mr B1K1 Kfr!i Hmrj. Mulder, on
p. Cpoint*
EIXCTED TO THE
, Tuesday and Wednesday
HAYKRB AT W. 5- T- C1 Mrs. J. W. Armbruster and Mra.
Donald Weaver, Hastings, Is one
twenty-two
Western
Blatt
Kalamazoo on Sunday vial ting Dr of
Teachers' College student* to be
and MR. C. H McIntyre.
MT. and Mr* Harry McDonald elected to membership in Players,
and Mrs. Donald Smelker were in the dramatic organizatloa of the
Coldwater on Bunday attending the school Seventy tried out lor mem­
funeral of an aunt. Mra. Julia Carey. bership tn tha organisation
Each year Players present one bij
Friday. Nov. 20 — OFFEXS---------- Saturday. Na». Zl
Martha Lou were in Grand Rapids public performance of some out­
Friday evening attending the Sym­ standing play known as the mid­
• WITH EVERY DOLLAR
phony concert at the CU1c audi­ winter Play which U given in Kal­
amazoo's beautiful Ctric auditorium,
PURCHASE of toilet artitorium.
Miss Teenie Ryko. Miss Doris regarded as one of the moat beauti­
Biddle and Kenneth Biddle of ful LltUo Theatcra In lhe country
Weaver U enrolled a* a Fresh­
Grand Rapids were guests of Mr.
and Mrs Newton Benner tn er the man tn the department of Hural
violets, carnations, sweat
Education.
week end.
i John Ironside ts attending the
BIRTHDAY 8URFHI8KNational Convention of Memorial
6 Flavors
Mra. Jennie Wlbert was complete­
FREE!
Cr.ift*men of America, which is be­ ly surprised on Saturday afternoon
ing held this week al the Stevens
when Mrs Mary McCall. Mra. Me­
Hotel. Chicago.
♦
lissa to u be ugh, Mra. H. P. Tuttle
i Mr and Mrs Allen Pender spent
yew inllrt rvqetremetoa:
Sunday with the club of "Ye Old
mind her of her birthday. Viaiting
Time Friends" from Middleville and was enjoyed and refreshments were
GARDEN COURT POWDER and CREAM... 55c
Caledonia at the home of Mr. and
served by Mra. Verne Prentice,
। MTs Frank Root of Caledonia.
COTY POWDER........ SI.10
| Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Hopwood of daughter of Mrs. Wlbert. who plapned the party, it was a happy occa­
I Belding were Sunday guests of Mrs.
sion and Mrs Wlbert has fully re­
YARDLEY POWDER ...- $1.10
Archie McCOy and Mrs Emms Ecovered from the shock ot the sur­
i Evans. Mrs. M&lt;"Coy returning home
prise
SPRING BLOSSOM POWDER and Cream ... 60c
i with them to spend a few days.
I Mr. and Mrs- Heitoert Bishop were
NIGHTHAWKS MEET.
50c
FLEUR DE MIDI
in Lansing Saturday and Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Freer dall«hlvisiting Mr and ^trs. Sanplc Mont­ fully mttrtained the Night Hawks
50c
MARVELOUS CREAMS
gomery and Mr and Mra. Harn op Saturday evening. A lovely dinBolter, former Hastings resident*.
GERNEY POWDER
--T ,L. $1.00
Mr. gnd MH Cfri Bauer and evening was spent in playing card*
daUghtef of a*gtn«W. Max-Bauer of first prises going to Ora Newton
PARKE-DAVIS POWDER and CREAM
------- 55c
Gladstone and Miss Henrietta Bauer and Ira Shultz; second to Mrs. Flor­
of- Evanston. HL. are expected to ence Norton and Oscar Palmer. All
JEAN NOLAN Hand Lotion, Powder, Cream 50c
ipcndTHanksglVing with Mr. and thanked Mr. and Mrs Freer for a
Mra. MT. O Bau^r. .
very dellkhtful evening. The next
ARMAND FACE POWDER and CREAM
50c
Mr. and Mrs H. E Carrick enter- party Ik y gay Norton's on Nov. 21
talned Mr. M..W
and Mra.
— Curtis
—— — Abbey.
55c
LUXOR FOWDIR and PERFUME
Mr »ntf Mrs Roy Himllton ant) Mr. CHILD CONbERVATlON LEAGUE.
Tha.Hasting* child conservation
aftd Mrt. Jack Klrfemat? of Battle
WOODBURY’S POWDER and CREAM
50c
Creek al a wvtn o’clock' dinner Uague met Monday night al the
50c
home of Mrs. Herbert Reinhardt for
Thursday evening.
. •
COSMETINE HAND CREAM....
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Lane and a discussion of "Self-Control and
children rutted Mrs. J. ft. "Hay and Anger.•' Four papers dealing with
POND'S COLD and VANISHING CREAMS -lhe subject were read by members
on Sunday. F 0- Lone Is slowly re- and a general discussion foUpwcd
JThe ne« meeting will be Monday
cov&lt;ring from hts iltaees.
Mr. and Mrs. E- F- Johnston and evening Dec. 7 at the home ot Mrs
family /nd Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bun Van Houten.
Flynn and two children of Grand
FAST MATRONS MEET
Rapid* wtre Sunday nesu of Mr.
, Yestetday, wednHday. Mra. G
phoniziis
I Mr. and Mrs-1 Finley a Johmtnn Burgess and Vr«. Fred YoUng eDtt
talned the Past Matrons' club of tb«
HAITI
tiK&amp;fryv.
’ it a det-serl
the wtnttr with their daughter.'Mrs. luncheon at yie home of Mrs.
Young.
C- M. Oody at j987 Franklin Ave.

I

Mra Natfla

To Re Married On
Thnnk,giving Day

Social Events and Personal Mention

Prepare nowfor

Zero Weather I
Don’t pul in another cold
winter. Before zero wealh-

to being in front of aa «pen fireplace ia being in­
side of a new winter owcoat—Plain, and fancy pat­
terns, half and full beita
—fine all wool, tailored
by craftsmen, in colnn of
blue, oxford, brown, gray.

MB30

h

*34*

• TAP DANCING

FOX STUDIOS

SPECIAL

Jackets for work of p
new blue and white •
coata, small checked j.
et* in many colon, I
blue meltons and bki
lined whipcords. Buy 1
before the cold WML
gets here—Priced from

*2*7*

PARKER HOUSE

The

BIG

LITTLE Store

Attention, Ladies
TOILET

REQUIREMENT

SPECIALS

CAMPBELL'S
TOMATO

JELLO

SOUP

Your Last
Chance to
Have Those
Storm Sash
Taken Care Of

u

04

co s

_____

-5c

CAMPFIRE Morshmallaws, lb. bx. 15c
SUPER SUDS, 3 Boxes--------------- 27c
MILLER'S 40'' Bron Flakes, 3 For 25c
35»
OVALTINE, 50c Sixe
FELS NAPHTHA FLAKES, 2 Bxs. 44c
HUSKIES, 3 Boxes-------------------- 29c
SAL SODA, 3 No. 2'/? loxes .... 23c
17f
GOLD DUST, Large Box ..;
28c
FRESH OYSTERS, Pint................

Ujay • MMMftTAMl

W

GRAPES - ORANGES - GRAPEFRUIT

HINMAN’S
Hastings

™ws z«l

Mishigan

THU

■qgJCSKT^r

�THr HASTINGS B INNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1«. IBM

FAQ! BORT

Bfl J-.'!....:--------- if .-

INSURANCE

SEeW MBSBmBMKBBMW-HHMWam

ASSYRIA.

ret ary and Hugh Jones, treasurer. Th* Mattino. Rnnno.
Mrs. Mildred Steveiu, vice chair- Anc FiaStingB Danner

THE CHURCHES GRANGE PROGRAMS \

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

WANTS

WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
jason r. mcelwain

ONB CTNT A WORD. NO ADVKR- ,
TIBKMENT ~*

UaXI||

UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
IN CMM1RT-

----- -------- ii ........................... ........... * ■&gt; brother, George Watson, and son
Louts Watson, and families on *
WELCOME ORANGE
I trip lo Califomla lo visit relatives,
I writes they are near their deslinarr tion
'

r

ln« content for thU locality u meetlllf **Ui &lt;lhe response Iroiu indlvtdu-1 workers and also the various
*oc®1 organizations.
Bertha Miller is very much

EIGHTY FIHHT YEAR

uon cok-. s™. Hoitau,.

2

&lt; Merle T..k-r .n-m nonh.n. Mich„ *”
I lean n«r Uw Slr.lU tor
week'. rewiiUy lor a ch«k up.
hunting
' ' '
~
order fob purucation.
,
Mrs Evangie MUkr was hoateis
i on Wednesday to the members of
Like Pleasure Birthday organiza­
tion. The pot luck dinner featured
tlic Thanksgiving season.
*

a

Wont
It

sura, nee

so trHEN—«:&lt;vJ ■*»it. IU tuOf-a ...rrb
of Kllaniatuu J m.t-a ra»t &gt;’lain««ll
l:.|lmatr.l 1 in” . . ,,(. «... ,| . A 1 1-.,WonJ ,rll.hg II . ,.r.| un .lump \M.,
Iira.iate' lura*
»7«m&gt;. Him down, r»«lut.ab1r -,u-,r &lt;•!.
UUlKe J U K. t.uek. ItaltuU I'lkone
IV 11. IN
1 1 1u
W ANTMl— Ni.a.i, . ibgl* tuat. L, uiotith
Wk dairy far.i. at ....re
It I; M
..'and,ion. Ml.ldlr, .11*
Lil.

API'LKR FOR 8A1

FOR Rale—a
Al Brill Pk
FOR RALE—Hit

' &lt;rrrrcBBOM

bt

united bbethxen

ORDER FOB PURUCATION
,
।

Mr*. Mary* Purcell has been very

&lt;

A pair of Holstein twin calves

,

ut Wagoner,
0|ea^ S mH

Poll HALF.—Guu.r

FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH

FOR BAL
&gt;' laXIMHI &gt;

i-J
FOR NKHVH'L—(&gt; 1 f Log 1100 •(
•ervkre lime No Nurnla, err, lee
(barley l^«hlrl(n*r I&gt;*llon
11 SO
k»k kl:NT— One ku .lr*.l eial, err*

1&gt; l»Jd,

OUR DESCRIPTIVE CATAi LOGUE of Michigan farm bar­

al her daughter s home, Mrs Jatnta
Moon, near Charlotte.
Howard Cole. Sherman Jones. Reg
Ma&lt;on. Albert Durham compose a
hunting party who left Wednesday
morning for extreme parts of northa n mt
m
crn Michigan.
■NM *1 MU ptobat. .me.- b. .....
I Mrs Katherine Cole and son
nb, ivpU.trd for bearing »*id *&gt;,(( j Gerald, are spending the week ut
I Hastings with her parents Mr and
— Tasker,
i ....
Mrs. mi..
Oliver
I The recently organized Parent
I Teacher Unit of the Eliks dUtrict

gains is just off the press.
Write Farm Soles Department.
The Michigan Trust Company.
Grand Rapids.

S?

FURS, HIDES, PELTS
Wanted Every Saturday At
120 S. Michigan Ave.
First house south of Trio Cafe.

HARVEY BABCOCK

president, Mrs. Irene Jones as sec- ।

MildrM Rmlth. Reglal

”

Our Service

PILGRIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE. ,
Rev T It HOM Pastor,

OLD TIME DANCE, FEATHER PARTY
AT ODD FELLOWS HALL

rtiR

KUH HA I

half.

NOVEMBER 25. 1936

SPONSORED BY
VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS

ioii ~\i.r

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to eaU

experience or capital needed. Write
today. McNESS CO.. Dept. B. Free-

FARM FOR RENT-

HIGHEST PRICES

BEEF BY THE QUAR­

TER FOR SALE.

REFRESHMENTS BY AUXILIARY

I have returned to Nashville

PHONE 3909
HERMAN

EARNUPT0I77AWEEK

BAPTIST CHURCH

•^ree
I UNI-i ’&gt; HILI I HREM CHl'RCH

irriiir Mi'.rnonisT

.

...

.

■&lt;
ll«&gt;|

I MUST EMPLOY AT ONCE
a man living In small town or
on farm. Permanent work.
Must be ulhUcd with earn­
ing STS a month at first. Ad-

Party lo Uke either small
upright or nearly new
player piano for small bal­
ance due on contracts.

Ml. Detroit, Michigan.

'lJraL&lt;?JQ.X?UAfflb

WANTED

Addreu

FURS AND HIDES

See Our Display of GUARDIAN MEMORIALS
At 121 North Michigan Avenue

The Only Guardian Memorial Distributor In Barry Co.
HENRY GREGORY. REPRESENTATIVE.

NEW BUS
TO

Nr|r»^U.,''*'•»'’*., llr’iadoa/ ’’ t

II

CHURCH OF GOD
St Goodyear BuEdlng,

irru riyna in

CHUBCII or THE UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST
Woodland Circuit- E B Griffin. D. D.

ANNOUNCEMENT
1NSURANCJ1

price*

paid.

fore selling. Always

In

your

trapper

Ar. Chicago 2:45 P. M.

ARCHIE TOBIAS

Ono Way Faro $2.75

One block north of Hastings
National Bank.

Farmert, Attention!
The WOLVERfNE

Highest market

CHICAGO

WASTED—Otrl tu work tn, tn ng&gt;
et*nln(. Kaiwrtei.ee n..| t,*-*..

mcmoAN

WANTED

The PATTEN MONUMENT CO.,Hastings,Mich.

i &gt;ltlA ,o»th. ■; LnU, mu tvv..dUhC.
r»|p MrMuft ■
■........... _ i &gt; r&gt;
1, 11 .* T —‘ hoZ.air
1 uJifted d«&lt; w 11 (
f'lot Wk|(&lt; fe»t berliy (»il An,w,r.
n.‘il

rhe Prescription Drug Store

FASHION rBOOKB IRC.

The Bars Are UP . . . but our prices
are DOWN for NOVEMBER SALES

FOH HAI.E

6'|&gt;ew. itauron

Nashville

Rliuflt. 11
I o

fojTsuKe—M*»nr

Dr. A. E. Moorlag

Bauclal IndapoBdanco ot to
add lo yaur lueona doing

c°s2j
I

Inga.

Optometrist

"AKRON" .MODER A
MECHANO-FOHM TRUSS
yu

FELDPAU8CH

ryea with modem equipment
approved by Michigan Bute
Board ot Optometry. Ijilest

FOR HALE

FOR WORK OR PLAY

WANTED

NOTICE

FtUt KALI

Paid for Dead Stock

Gaaraataed Tran fining

E. R. LAWRENCE A SON

GOOD HEAVY FOWLS FOR THANKSGIVING
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
SCIENTIST.

OR HALL— Mbrvt
Earl Hubl.rll, I
M
1 WANTED—Mad of alfalfa
l.. n (■ ii.^..,.&lt; pt...,
Near Leark lek*
II-IV
Foil s.tl.K—Uaruc t»ga. a a**kt old
Your Dead Animals Are Worth
I trill Leinaar, pell.ui
11 19
uillltLF. AGF.lt man want. light work
In teen t"t ».ut*v Will
..lUn. Um BEST TRICES, call
board and fit tee tu ata,. Wr.l. ‘ S' .
MR, FCOVD BENNY,
ear* llaunrr
11 I •*
Phone Hasting* 2533— We pay the FOR HALF.- S pig., t.n a*. k. old Wm
Mill*
phone charges!
tf.

tASTiwoa

WOLVERINE NO EXCLUSION
POUCIES.

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

SQUARE AND ROUND DANCES
FuU HA 1.1

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Spongo Rubber Pad*
No L»n Strap*

• SEE US FOR YOUR
AUTO INSURANCE.

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY

To PROTECT You Constantly
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co

In a theatrical magazine a croon­
er advertises that he U at Ubert"
Thia Just goes to show what a tol­
erant people we are.

ulil&lt;
a.

HJO

and Fvrd Stevens farm, both being
normal and active,

xVASti b

AUCTIONEER
DEWEY REED

IN ADVANCE .........

Creek staying with her grandl» t
daughter. Mlu Wilma Jean Clark. hl1’”'
(during the absence 6f her father. ruuM“'

CHU1CH

13*

IN BARHT COUNTY. ORE XKAR. 1104,
(If t*aU In ad»aare 1
IN Harry county, six months. ao«.
(If Mid la ad rance, I

hunter

and

CO. af LANSING. MICHI­

GAN 11 represented In Barry County by the following agent,:
•ad BUT EVERT DAT.
sPBIEBTBB
PHONE 717—pj

BUYING

FOR SALE—
a r»nc
z *rfi a arzzr
CARDS of THANKS

weri.eyan methodibt church

„2

FOH HA 1-1

E. R. Lawrence b Son

Hastings

Garner C. Hampton

• Hastings

The Elwood Agency

Middleville

*

Prairieville

Scrap Iron, Brass,

Floyd Shclp

Copper, Aluminum,

When you need AUTO INSURANCE see one of these agents.

-

*

Zinc. Lead &amp; Batteries

I? in
coats grove church

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Phone t&lt;37

• AUTO LOANS and Refinancing...
TO GIVE YOU READY CASH. OR TO REDUCE
YOUR PAYMENTS. OR BOTH

Fidelity Corporation of Michigan
10—2nd Floor Hastings National Bank Bldg.

Haatings

A woman has won the doubtful
honor of poaresring the largest
feet In Great Britain. The MuroIng Post reports that a Durham
woman confea»e« to a size 21 Het
shoes are made on special lasts and
are lil’i Inches long. The firm malt.nullin'
n north coun

WASTED—Maid t«

&lt; AIII' "1 III (XK
A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

GEO. M. NEWTON

LOST—Lady

HASTINGS MARKETS

ran

To my many friends in Hastings and Barry

Needs MUSIC

chased the H. E. Smith Hardware Store Ipoaf-

Mothers end Dods-Give them a

ed at 123 West State Street. We intend lo car-

kai.e-

HASTINGS

ry a complete line of auto
CARD OF THANKS—th*

JERRY ANDRUS

Your Child!

CARD OF TIlANKN -I

OPTOMETRIST and

1J» W. STATE BT.

ANNOUNCEMENT
county 1 wish to announce that I have pur-

uar kinds
Wm. Hoffman

Registered

or christ

MONEY!

is, accessories,

chance-Piano is the basis of mu

&lt;mr .1

*«.re&gt;a
—R
Srs.uilV

hardware, appliances^rtfd radios.

tic-NOW you con buy so reason

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

Watch for advertisement on a later date,

obly-IT IS YOUR DUTY

liabella
FOR 8AL1:—P.

666

In the Alhambra. In Granada. Spain,
that Columbus held his last stull
ence with Queen Isabella before he

day. high up on the side of the Alpojarrai mountains. the fatnoti*
Alhambra of Ui« Thirteenth century
looks down upon a peaceful countryslda

RUSSELL SMELKER
Former Manager of .the Mark’s Store.
Middiioga 1
Sersieb fee-I

DON TAFFEE
302 NO. BROADWAY
PIANOS

HASTINGS. MICH.
FURNITURE

�THURSDAY, NOV. 19. 1936

'

|

Barry Bypaths
9r JANG CAMGRON

J

land.” I can* see now where Uir I

SECTION T

&gt;ome of lhe African Jungle pic- I gue* they do In Hawaii. They MICHIGAN
। Hires which we occasionally see on would paddle them way out about
a quarter of a mile from shore and. ■
and me both if
• particularly
It would tire you
«
Now Livea In Tampa—Enibe in —
any
the b « w*ve coming, would begin pad- ^anort On Rtcodifl
I tried to descrit
,detail
--------------:es we visited during “
bng for shore till the wave caught
w
rest of the places wc visited during UU41K iu&gt; Nimr UH uic wave uu|i»
joyg Hia New Home
up
with
them
and
carried
them on I
Michiffan B&amp;nklRf I
, the afterncun. but they Included
Very Much
among others lhe Mexican Quarter lu crest. It was Just like sliding ....
To B« Hurt
down
till),
only
Che
hill
was
moving
1
The writer had an Interesting |__________________________________ I of Los Angeles. Aimee Semple MePEOPLE OF THE FOURTH
mid-winter rouni
so fast that in just a fraction of a*• The
letter last week from Dr. Wood- bul lht muvum wa&lt; a great deal Pherton's Angelas Temple, the City
DISTRICT KNOW WHERE
bume now of Tampa. Ftarlda^ hL-- hkp lh&lt;.
H
cw. Hall. Will Rogers' ranch and pri­
....-----grounds, the
Rom?- -------Bowl. tn to the beach Some of the boyr cemMr l$ and W by uw pncHM’
HE STANDS
address being 3411 Bayshore Boule-; CM0
v,nou, Klentific prln- vate polo ..vu......
*kllllul and w°old come committee of lhe Michigan HMdk
vard. Tamp*. Alter expressing l,ir . C|P|M. mechanical, electrical and Japanese gard^is. Southern Cali- *ere
standing up on the board, some
n^nci-Hon
.
nope that the writer had recovered |chemlcitl Wefc
ln fomla University campus. Thelma
l
MAKES STATEMENT
X I from the shock o. the election, he glaM caips by
pressing a but- Todd's cafe, a drive along lhe ?f them even standing on lhetr.
ADflllT Cl CPTIflN goes on to speak of thing* that will ton w
Monica,
heads.
beach
through
Santa
U
—
'
1 The
“ chief business bafcv* th*
ln m0,10n
The
■
The
shore
all
around
is
APUU 1
IU11
,
sheer
meeting
will
be
tha
report
at lb*
Ocean Park and Venice ^long the
““w,ssr*£n““U
here
*’ *«»‘ca,“r"r !“■*■
««P “ . 0M speedway and back past the eM. three or four hundred feel commuiion appointed to mak* h
It in ^"fHl!^1J?lLh*?.^&lt;?Le.fi; Mr^o.Ooldwln studio* in Culver JUjU
*^d?irei^JSS S3S^0^r.«5i?tag the tankln&lt;
Thinks
Some
Democratic : through a summer and fouJ'cl 11
’ looking the city makes the trip well?
“y
lta.
Leaders Must Buffer

I CONG. HOFFMAN

We observed Good Book Week
from November 15 to 22. by getting
Prank carpenter's travel book called i
"Alaska: Our Northern wonder- |

Apache's Going Stuy.

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER
DR. WOODBURNE
WRITES FROM FLA.

'A CLEAR THINKER

fflTY ARPOHTS ■[
NEAR IOS ANGELES

ANTA MONICA. CALIF.; book get* its Uli* Have always been j
a Utile partial to Alaska after read '
—A missionary on an Ari­ ing some of Muir's works, but thlzona reservation
say a the book give* the human interest an­
Apache, once the fiercest of the j gle. and I am so Intrigued I Oh boy!
more winter like last and I'm
tribesmen, is going plum’ sissy, One
going (o collect the neighbors
and when a movie company, pooches and Bud a sled and 'Mush' &gt;
Severe Chagrin
iuiu &gt;uu ~
me
u, -7-----”--—
—-—, ;« v
“X!!“' w, li.n went w r.-r.-i u.-n Mr-1i' aiveriiuun
’.r-1------“--’ .—-call
brl.r.-ru II mu-i h*.r
la-.u-d wrll S
plrer. S
wh.rr
there
illtook a group of Indian extras ,
One would expect from Clare
&gt;0 my. u ;u.l wemep Dial
u&gt;.i" 1*
U 1|'&gt;» "1“&gt;- ' Pho lhe evenln,.
on location these original, that’s what III have for supper—' Hoffman, who was re-elected con- ' to stay. It just seemed
..
Still in Ur. nmele. -Sunday.
M*rk«i.
fried much. Jerry loves It and so do jresunkn from this district, the fol­
hack
to
Hastlnits
uualn
after
3
1
’
•xperlence
ut
lea-i.
is
the
mu
'.
j
u
;
y
20l
h.
all
went
down,
but
I
was
afraid
to
Americans, being stripped for
lowing statement which he issued
beautiful cemetery in the world. Wc
j forget to mention yesterday that leave Maude and Franc alone V; the
action, got terrible cases of । about Alaska weren’t we? You see recently commenting on the elec­ whUe.
■ We nave
have just
Just returnee
returned (torn
from m
th' *rrc ncl dUkPPolnled about being
our drjVe we stopix-d In Pasadena car *° I stayed on top. turned on
tion:
j ppX^-nS
-we
..I^O! !»;-W71 .. u, horn. 0. C.X
.i»,
sunburn. They’d worn clothe* . how our mind wanders.
Tile United State!, bought Alaska
a, u&gt;c Iiuuuc wa VHCMUC-«-»•&lt;&gt;«*•. w»v. ---- ----- - - -------- -■'Tiie defeat suffered by the Re-! morning services nt lhe First Presso long. their tender skins1 in 1M3 ot Russia for 17.000.000 and oublicans bi 1932 was a dishearten-1 byterlan church where we have J Kirk O' the Heather" a . a. funeral thirty years or «o ago. uied to help o&lt; l,,« c“b "*&lt;1 Cardinal ball game.
me Krrp
krep the
and .&gt;&gt;*&gt;
fish &lt;&gt;
from
Another ---------reason why -I dkln
uk game au,u
u&gt;m ----------------- --t go
-­
before the turn of the century lng one. The present reverse Ls united. We have a fine minister i was being held there at the time of inr
couldn’t stand the heat.*

S

tings City Bank. 1* chairman of tha
£ a. A lluurMee eoounUW '2
hl. chramhie. h.. been Ohd,01,
un U-eurelm U&gt;. Breul SreurU,
. ,
d
nr.&gt;,ivu|iiy al tormulaU
a so.ca]|rtj -ohl Age Pension"
j
jor bank* and trust cotnpanSSSy
les. ITU* couiBimtT w.u! probably
haVf
report lo make at thr meet-

---------------------------------------... - ---------- - down wax
dizzv
»n „ddltton u-„e wlU
a
was becau**
because It made m?
me dizzy
There's a lesson here, si though.' cwhat an'eleganl phrase). 1320.000.­ equally heartbreaking, but It can and a splendid organization of over I our Visit. This church is an exact overrunning Barry county. Many of
reproduction
of the Glencairn you will remember that he married
10 ,ook down.
speakers' program of banking of­
so far us the victim Is concerned.' 000 was taken out of the gold fields, be as nothing compared to lhe1 j.ioo members, who are very con­ s church in Scotland, where Annie
MKs Franc Lombard I remember it
We returned home through San ficials. bu.slne:&gt;s men and econo­
and royalties from seal skliu alone chagrin suffered by r"
the Democratic 'I genial.
’ "
it's probably too late
Laurie
worshipped.
and
contains
especially
welL
a&gt;
my
musical
caPedro
«'d
Wilmington,
which
Is
the
amounted to many times lhe pur­ leaders and caused t,
mists.
by the
... betrayal i
-We fvad in the paper- and hear
chase price. The salmon Industry le of their party organization
inizatlon Ln
In th*
th* .....
. over the .•
radio about cold weather her communion tokens, portrait reer. If I have had any, began when harbo: of Los Angeles, and saw
it. Onc. we’d backed
gigantic and we get much of our I hands of those who believe In ern-1 nort.i and we arc thankful that wi j and will we did go in lhe Memor- Maude played lhe piano and sang more oil wells right In some of the
the noble red man
। lai Court of Honor, or mausoleum. "Oh. Promise Me" and I rendered suburbs of Los Angeles than there
halibut and pthcr sea foods from lu trnllzed power and the destruction i are here.
into a pair ot
1 which contains the remains of many a very beautiful violin
obligato, are altogether in Michigan. Some
waters and shore*. They have gla­ ot state rights.
| "i am writing In shirt sleeves with ,
--------------- - ~
pants we had him'
“It was Just a few days ago the I the temperature on my desk 78 de- I
pT,p r, !£,L“^a
n’lS~k? while Claude and Franc marched of the wells are right in lhe middle
ciers gallivanting all over the land­
down lhe stairs to take lhe solemn of the alreeL so Uut the traffic has
tamed. Bitting Bull.1
scape and many other interesting president said. In substance, that grees. with all doors and window? • *n ,he
body
DonnaDurDur- vows Very few couples, in fact I to K° around both sides of them. To
in war bonnet and
J’prp- and
*nd llhe
*\e lx
~&gt;- ofDonna
thlng-t. Nearly everyone of Impor­ during hl* first administration prl- open, and it feels good. Flowers are .I here,
guess they are lhe only couple, that Five vou a little Idea of thr sixe of
buckskins, was a
,n
, Uce"le„7
tance has a pet bear cub. 'Dir first vate interests had met 'IL* match' abundant and the sun today Ls Ikpr was
had SUVH
such wu
an auspicious start in life,
Rko’cont
' —- ----------f“nu&gt;ir HOU
•
.................
......*,,n
.......
..... the
- - city, we drove
■
-nearly
---- a hundred
.----thing we must do when we get and tbkL U be was re-elected. It i bright, although we have had vune |
splendid savage,
..
.
—_
mlb-%
r.n on
thl«
nru-one little
Mnir.lnn
vumay weather.
wreuwr Only
umy iw.ee
nave we
we -Moretti
recreation
in
However
we.........
diun't
find ___
them al
miles
this
excursion.
there Is lo gel a bear cub. We must would have met 'Its master.'
vyloudy
tw.ee have
nr”
~ r”“
•’ *stained
“
ugla.wrv
“
but, wearing over­
^dne^l SlagrateU^ no
’ pinned
---------” lunch, just
..........to be ............
home, but there was a note
After
sure of
remember to take him a candy bar
UJ tills statement, ,&gt;«,
nc»Urv&gt; *•—4 -—•
"If. by
he U
intended'
•••■“ —•*• "»
alls and a hickory
on
thr
screen
doot
addrr-.sed
to
putting
in
a
full
day
we
all
went
lo
and a bottle of Armbruster's orange I u&gt;. tcil us he was against private yet for our tna|or heating."
shirt, he became
I Next
picture show
and then came
home
irougn oirii-'
(nr Cooks
vwns from
nuoi Hastings"
uu-muR- telling “ r----------------------------Dr. Woodburne explains that ht
Next we drove on through
Olen- • The
just a orunette farm Irvin S. Cobb pop. They are very enthusiastic over monopoly, oppression and lhe im­
u. &lt;h»t thry h«l bren r.preUny
m ! «nd- Ulkrd orrr old Umn till midar
..o —
Pasadena, ypnreln,
----- 1.^, thr | US
both.
proper use of vast power by In­ has not yet become strong enough I dale and
cverv day
duv for over a week, and that
that1 night,
night.
Missionaries have gone up there
Technology, every
and corpxatlons—well so Lh.it he can gel around much, but CalifornLi InstHute of Technokwv.
The derby hat may oe the home­ and taught the Indians not to eat dividuals
Hubert Cook.
and good! If. by that statement, he geu. a lot of enjoyment out of where the four )&gt;ear Job of grinding they had plenty of room for us to j
liest creation ever devised for hu­ each other for breakfast—aome of
”
he Intended to advise us that, with Ufe nevertheless. Il will be remem-! the two hundred Inch lens for lhe stay with them. So tills Sunday
man use, but it's the crowning tri­ the tribes were cannibals at one him as the leader, private enter­ bered that the Doctor while here world's largest telescope is being morning we called them on lhe
umph of civilization, and the most
phone,
checked
out
of
the
camp
I
Mrs.
Zola
Loomis,
formerly Zola
prise was to be strangled, govern­ had a hobby of astronomy anti i done. Continuing around the fampacifying for alien folks, as wit­ Carpenter's book wm written, the mental control of Individual busi­ owned a fine telescope, in the cleui i ou* Banta Anita race track we came ------------------------and drove over,-------feeling
quite proud , Bartlett, was born In Kent county.
ness Halle Selassie, looking now head of the government Agricul­ nesses established, and the right of skies of Florida, he no doubt can • back to lhe Huntington Library and of lhe fact that we had negotiated i Michigan. September 30. 1882. passed
i&gt;,. ■■
*
rather like a Filipino bellhop un his j tural Farm and Experiment Station the individual to work when and —
get• much pleasure u
with
It. t&gt;He says ।; nnii.rina
Galleries. T»ii«
This i.
is recognized n«
as niir
one the twenty mile drive without miss- ,
Sunday off.
recommended four valleys for settle­ where he pleases taken from him. there are no dull nor idle hours for ‘of the finest libraries in lhe world, Ini » .Imle lun&gt; or luklm • poto-1 •»*» No.tmfcr «. l««. W&lt;1 M
ment-one at Rampart, one In the he will find that, while his major­ either Mrs. Woodburne or himself a'»d lhe examples of the printing man. It seemed &lt;ood lo be among ' years, one month and six days. She
Humans Secerning Menkey-Lfke. valley of the Tanana near Fair­ ity was overwhelming, he has a although they are limited in their art- from the very earliest times friends again. I was afraid after all I was united in marriage lo Claude
With so many show | down to the present, were especial­ these years that I wouldn't even 1 Loomis of Orleans May 2. 1900. She
A professor of psychology nd banks. lhe third on the Island of fighting minority ready to do phys­ activities
. I ly Interesting. The gallery of course know them; but 1 guess after all! U survived by her husband and four
vances the thought that mankind. In Kodlnk and the fourth and soutli- ical battle for lhe liberties won by places to be seen within easy drlv- I ly Interesting. The gallery ot course
,- | contained
a wosderfii!
wonderful collection of then- is something to this Califor- daughters. Mrs. Lester Latta. Devalley their forefathers.”
lng distance of here we have no-.
eer.Ulnei s
ages to come, may be headed fur ernmokl one, Matanutkn
Himau az they
thee both looked and troll;
Iroitt Mrs. Valdle Reynold*. Grand
ThU professor said Alaska would
The people of this district know been able to drive anywhere yet: irate paintings. Including the fam nia climate,
the all-fours posture which once the
some day have a population of 3.­ Just where to find Congressman but we hope to do so before long. I
I(
■ ous Blue Boy.
Boy." tapestries, scuipscuip- , talked and acted Just as young as Ledge; Mrs. Floyd Teachout. Despecies did use— if you accept the 000.000 people as their numerous in­
.haven't
...............................
.
..
...
1
....
__
____
a
__
I,. furniture] .....
Ik. tver.
been out
out oi
of tins
this city
city since
since *, tures
tures unu
and periou
period
| troll; Mrs. Verdan Eldred. Hastings,
Hoffman. Tne
Honman.
The tact
fact tn*t
that ne
he surviveu
survived naven t been
lunusuic, but the
me
When she got there
evolutionary theory, which most of j
------- ,------—
I
we packed our bathing suits. Also surviving are seven grandchildustries would easily employ tha; the landslide this year I* evidence of .ix
we came
here—
In .,April
The tourist
I most interesting rw.„,
part to nw.
me. «•&lt;.&lt;
was
us do, because we like to think of many. The experiments conducted tire approval of his course in con-1 season U starting and we expect to | one room, which was air conditioned blankets and Claude's beach urn- dren. hei father. Charles Bartlett,
And a big doctor bill was
some people we know as having had I at this farm are very Instructive and grew. He 1* a constructive thinker.'see some of our friends this winter .and had some real comfortable up- , brella in the car. all got In and, Belding; a sister. Mrs. Jennie
the toll.
either Hermosa
Wrung. Ionia;
nerinosa or.
or^wruns.
iuum; three
uuw brothers.
urumcz*. Ray
ivuy
monkey-like creatures for ancestors. I Interesting.
He has been an unsparing critic of' We look forward lo seeing several1 bolstered seats, i would have been 1 drove over to eimer
Don't make lhe mistake of
We say to ourselves, the poor things I
I envy those people their rich sill measures which he felt were not for of our old friends, who will Be tak- . satisfied to stay in there for some Redondo Beach It doesn't matter and Lee. Belding and Glen of D»running low or out—Smith
aren't entirely over t yet
which grows vegetables and flower.- the pubUc good. He Incurred the I ;ng time off to come down here dur- time but we had to be on our way whlch. ns wc enjoyed sitting in lhe troll. She joined the M- E. church
Bro*. A Velte Have plenty and
Continuing down Huntington Drive, sand, and watching the other bath- when a girl and lived near Nashville
But the learned gentleman who's to such an enormous size. Dahlias enmity of the leaders of lhe Town- lng lhe cold weainer.”
are dying to sell IL
trying to lift the veil of the future ’ In all our colors and rich blue and rend plan by hl* outspoken opposl-1 Dr. Woodburne say* that ht we stopped at the Luiia Park Zou ers perform, so well that none of us a number of years.
even got our feet wet. After a late 1 --- -----------"" ’
“
overlooks the lessons of the present. purple, growing nine feet high and Uon to it. But even they could not daughter. Mrs. Marjorie Lethbridge and were introduced to lhe os- -------------------------are ) trlche*.
we
followed
neip but
uuv admire
auunre Mr.
mi Hoffman
iionuian for
icr; of
oi Mason and
anu her
ner little
nine family
lamny arc
mows. alligators, ^etA They have, beefsteak dinner
------ -- ---------------the , ••I- would rattier
,-- - face the slings
He should study clew York and large as a dinner plate. Mr. Carpen­ help
— ——
-a vhio
.j. honest
..
..... . nnd
.. ■ ...
.. .hb
i
i..» of liunureds of trained
I,...,!'&gt; Palos Verdes rirlvp
ills frank expression
of
। to coinc
for Christman
that
a collection
drive iilmii/
along tile
the tocicv
rocky'; and arrows of outrageous IndlfferNewport society when European ter weighed a cabbage—just twentyligers. etc
rar... which
WHICH are
uic ex&lt;a- ocean shore ...........
around ....
the wSan
— - -P*oraJ
--------- -™ce.„
------------n
,1---------------------------------C
.
three jxjuqdx. celery four feet high views. They knew Just what to ex- i brother from Chester. Pennsylvania lions, ligers,
royally Is in our midst.
................
................
..................................
• watched o number of boys u&gt;«
erclscd
daily
m their
arena, so they . hills. “
We
lng in •
a «»•(
great d.hi,to&gt;.
delusion. -Hmmod
—Heywood
and delicious. Rhubarb with stalks pre. ttom him II he ... re-elrelrel. m.&gt; com. wlU. ,1U .11. .nd d.ush- r
। will be able to take their ports In riding surf boards on the swells like Broun.
like your arm and leaves as large
We think it will be a help .4 tht' ter.
Denouncing the Baby Derby.
a* an umbrella.
administration to have a man like . The friends of lhe Woodburnes
When Prime Minister F’pbum de­
We could fill the whole Banner Clare Hoffman in congress. wUh tils. will be glad lo know that Mrs
nounced Toronto's so-called baby with our ravings but go to the Has­ keen analytical mind and the abll- i Woodburne has quite recovered her
derby us "the most revolting, dis­ tings library and gel the book and Ity to express himself and his con- health. The Doctor slates that he
gusting exhibition ever pul on In a read It yourself. In the Yukon elusion* In. clear, understandoblo 1 feet, his condition Is somewhat imcivilized country’’ a lol ol us gave Basin. 30 degrees below is no colder language. We believe 11 would beproved but says, "like an old mode)
than 15 above Is here. People take better for lhe country and for Mr. t. I nevei know from one day to the
three loud, rineinr cheers,
i That eccentric Canadian million­ lhe native moss and make thatched Roosevelt If more men who think newt Just how lhe contraption Is goaire, who left his fortune for a con­ roofs and In the summer they are and criticize honestly had been lng to function, so I have lo be alnil
blossomed out In native flowers. chosen as members of congress.
! ways on —
■ ' 'for a stalled
- “ "
test seemingly devised to prove that
the watch
motor "
the human species hn- a strain of Wouldn’t that be thrilling! We've
HORTICULTURISTS
TO MEET
„ _-----------------------------------The Doctor states that he misses
Potomac shad In it, unintentionally got to suk» this!
DEC.. 1-2
net?.
1-3 IX
IN GRAND RAPIDS
RAPIDS. 'I his Rotary connections very much
came near to making cheap and
The annual meeting of the and that he enjoys
------ the
-----------------------Banner andsordid lhe loveliest thing on this
Sometime when you make Jello
Michigan State Horticultural so­ especially the many letters written
earth, which is motherhood.
cut up a candv bar or two along
ciety will be held In Grund Rapids by Hastings friends.
। To see families engaged In a race with your fruit. It Is awfully good, Dec. 1. 2 and 3. Fruit growers in
to bring babies and yet more ba­ and I bet the bear cub would like It Michigan. Ohio. Indiana. Wiscon­
TO ATTEND DENTAL CLINICS.
bies into the world, merely on the
sin and New York have been in­ I Dr. Robert B. Harkness and Dr.
hope of getting paid for it; to realise
I’ve lust got to tell one more vited to attend. An apple showing F. E. Lowry of Delton will leawe
the certainty of vulgar squabbling anecdote out of that book. An offering more than 11.500 in prizes Thursday. Dec. 3. for New York
over the prize; to know that inevita­ American business man Invested will be part of the program. Au­ City where they will attend the
bly lawsuits wih absorb most ot heavilv In a salmon cannery and thorities on all phasos of quality same dental clinic Dr. G. L- Lock­
the money—well there are many situated It on lhe banks where the fruit production will speak to lhe wood. Dr. John Wooton and Dr.
MARSH Al J. L. COOK
who oppose birth control. But de­ salmon were extra plentiful. When 1200 to 1.400 persons who are ex­ Frank carrothers will visit. The
। sessions ot lhe New York State Denliberately fostered birth uncontrol lhe run commenced, they were pink, pected to attend the sessions.
lai society which they are prlvimay have Its drawbacks, eh. what? of all thlnes. and pink salmon then
STATE
ROAD
GROUP.
leged
to
attend,
are
the
finest
of
the
was considered only fit for the
The State Road extension class kind in the country and the latest
huskies. He was ruined. But also re­
He had nrlnted on each was held at the home of Mrs. Lloyd methods tn dental practice will be
Here's what has happened to the sourceful.
Fisher
an all °*
day meeting.
there. under
Under tne
the auscan Uiese word*to -This
salmon
is ' p
“her forwas
mg. The
iout
ne ’ pl
demonstrated
Xanteed™
tlmn
red
m
u!e
spent ymmeet
cutting
«s of lhe mere,
Kellogg Foundation
original Bolshevist leaders, the fa­
thers of the Soviet setup:
can " So effectively did hU
h‘l and rolUr P*l^rn4- At 11 din-, they will have two weeks of post
men do their part .that to thb tv "" *“
Ptaher ,nd &lt;radual*i work al lhe Guggenheim
Trotsky, In exile and due to stay
R*rs- Victor Henney.
; Foundation.
there if ho values his .ieallb; Kam- people In some carts of lhe souili | Mrs.
At 1 o'clock the meeting was
eneR, exiled, recalled, executed last are afraid to eat red salmon. He
called Co order by the chairman.
August: Zinovieff. executed; RykoR. made a million off his cannery.
Mis. Robert Martin, wtio held a
demoted, arrested and trial impend­
short business session, with 14 mem­
ing. hence regarded as bad insur­
I itvd to dread sewing on a collar bers answering the roll call.
ance risk; Radek in Utt same fix and cuff set*. quilt protectors and
The meeting was then turned over
and said to be worried, and 1 sofa pillow covers. But now I buy to our leaders. Mrs. Harry Rlzor and
wouldn’t blame him; Tomsky, com­ snap fasteners by lhe box of twelve Mrs. Eldon Matthews, who gave the
mitted suicide to avoid something
lesson on Fall Fashions. The next
People often wonder who are the men responsible
even more unpleasant; Ki roti, as­ them on all the above-mentioned meeting will be held Dec. 18 al the
sassinated; Mikoyan, got out In time places. One yank and the collar, home of Mrs. Harry Brown.
eration of a bank. Some of them are seldom seen in the bank,
and stayed out; Bukharin, under protector or pillow cover is ready to
AWARDED SCHOLARSHIP.
suspicion and arrest Impending, wash and can be put back on In lhe
but nevertheless lhe success of that institution depends on
William Fox. son of Mr. and Mrs.
odds against. 9 lo 3; EvdokimoR, ex­ twinkling of an eye. Those "dreads"
Harley Fox. who Is a student at
ecuted; Smirnoff, executed; Lenin, should be eliminated.
Western State Teachers College in
them to a great extent.
died a natural death, but then Lenin
Kalamazoo, has been awarded a
At Skagway, lhe gate to the
always was diRerent; Stalin. Bubscholarship for studio classes in
noR and Krylenko, al) going strong, Klondike gold mines. Mr. Carpen­ painting. Hie award Is made pos­
but you never can tell, so would ter slaved at a modem hotel run sible by the Ralph Harmon Booth
The directors of a bank are an excellent measure of its worth,
do well not to play loo far In ad­ bv a widow named Mrs Cullen. Scholarship Fund. The classes are
Mrs. Cullen In the days of the gold conducted by Judson smith, one ot
vance.
soundness and.integrity. We are proud to point publicly to the
rush landed on the beach with four lhe leading contemporary American
children nnd seven dollars. Now she
artists and director of lhe noted
men who serve on our board. Many have been directors from
has this hotel with acres of grounds
As one who saw the first few covered with bungalows which ahe Woodstock (N. Y.) School of Paint­
months and the last few months rents and a 320-acre farm which ing. Mr. Fox also leaches two art
ten to thirty years. They all lend their active guidance to the
classes
at
the
Kalamazoo
Institute
of warfare on the Western front, supplies most of her hotel eats. This
of Arl1'
- - I'm like nearly every other man or

TORS

DIR

woman whO' wiL-essed those things
—I hale war.
It's the next morning of drunken
glory. It’s a stench, an obscenity,
a vain wastefulness, an unutterable
Indecency. It's a machine which
fucks in at the nopper the beauty,
the youth, the hope of the world and
spews out from the spout the fin­
ished product — broken bodies,
blinded eyes, maddened brains;
dead men and dying men and ruined
men.
But because we are against war
and because we believa the best In­
surance tor continued puace Is prop­
er preparedness in times of peace,
and because we behold half oi civilixation on the edge of war again and
wonder where they'll strike after
they've torn one another’s throats,
we do sort of wort? to see our
country cut down on Its defenses.

IRVIN R. OOBR. .

four children. Mr. Carpenter met an
unbelievable number of college men
and women. He found culture where
he least expected It. Garden clubs,
women's cluba connected with our
Federated Women’s Clubs, libraries,
lodges and many social activities
made Ufe Interesting. He says the
climate la much milder than Is gen­
erally believed. The air Is dryer and
you don’t notice lhe cold as you do
here. Now we’ll have to stop. We're
i run out of paper.

LACEY EXTENSION GROUP.
The Women's Extension class met
November 4 at the Ketcham hall at
Lacey with 17 members present. Our
two leaders. Mra. Leola Earle and
Mrs. Harvey OUlaaple. conducted
the meeting al which we learned
how to make hats, collars and sev­
eral new kinds of sleeves. Our next
meeting will be December 18 when
we will exchange Christmas gifts.
ClarabeU McCarty. Secy.

SUNDAY EVENING.
At the Pint Methodist Episcopal
Teacher: What Is It that comes In church Rev. W. M. Jones will talk
like a Hon and goes out like a on “The New Turkey.” A atory of
national reconstruction uhder a
Iamb?
dictatorship. There will be * tireLittle boy: My daddy.
minute pulpit editorial on the sub­
A radio station to be erected In ject "The Preaching Mission and
Turkey will be able to send message* Race Prejudice."
Binging of favorite hymn* and
to America, we can hardly wait to
on
know what kind of tooth paste they
topics of lhe times.
use over there.

Look ^our
BEST...

Going away for Thanksgiv­
ing? Look your best for a bet­
ter holiday! McCreevy’s low
prices and special services
will send you off spick and
span—and you'll be looking
your beat.

shaping of this bank’s policy.

Look at these pictures, and we believe that you will recog­

nize some of them as business men with whom you do business
every day. This bank renders a personal service,, and you arc
invited to consult with anyone of these men. He is your 1banker.

PHONE 2140

CITY BANK

McCREERYS
DRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS - MICHIGAN

TELEPHONE

2103

HIGAN
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
HASTING

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 1», IBM

COATS GROVE.

“Have you heard
abdut Consumers'
,
Sales Carnival?"

Long - time

Allowances

EASY TERMS
That Win Instant Approval.
The biggest thing about this year-end carnival of

bargains is that you now get these desired appliances
on this unusual purchase plan for a small payment
down and nothing more till April Don't wait another
week—greater home convenience is yours to enjoy
right now'

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

THE FORD V-8 FOR 1937

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Installs It.

FRIGIDAIRE
Nothing More To Pay Until April.
Your home nerd* automatic refrigeration
with all it mFans in food savings, better
meals and economies that PAY for the
Refrigerator. Splendid choice of aiu*».
Trade your old box as purl paymenl.

3

YEAR TERMS!
Small Down Payment Installs It.

HOUTHWEST CARLTON.
.
Mr. and. Mrs. Charlie Gibbs of
near Hustings moved into our com­
munity last week.
Henry Williams has been very
sick and in the Pennock hospital

GAS RANGE
No More Payments Until April.

3 YEAR ’W

WASHERS

You’ll marvel at what thin modern automaticfeatured range will do for better cooking, a bright­
er kitchen, anti new freedom from “the Move."
Herr’s a brand new model, never before pIiowii—
and attractively priced, with a liberal allt'twaiur
for your old .stove. All other models at SPECIAL
TERMS, too.

ine Sizes - One Wheelbase

Here’s a new era of WASHDAY FREEDOM and IRONING LEI­
SURE. The famous AIM. and IKONRITE lines make washings
look better, ironing easier—and you’ll feci better, too. You’ll
marvel at the improver! models.

«)»■«****
.©GMiEt**1

HE New Ford V-8 for 1937 is the
most beautiful Ford car ever of­
fered. It ia built in only one sixc—
one standard of roomy comfort and
modern appearance. But you may
have either the improved 85-horsc-

T

Ford car, and arrange to drive onc
equipped with the engine that fits
your needs.

power V*8 engine for maximum per,

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Install* It—

formatter*—or the new 60-horsepower

—NO MORE UNTIL APRILSPECIAL Combination Washer—Ironcr offer
TERMS to 30 MONTHS—Ask About This!

V-8 engine for maximum economy.

A Small Down Payment Installs This
MONEY-SAVING ... HOME COMFORT:

GAS WATER HEATER
Then Nothing To Pay Until April
Day and night your family will be grateful for automatic hot
wdter this new carefree, penny priced way. Join the thousands
who now know what a blessing this service can l»e.

"

hohsepowei

AND A NEW LOW PRICE

IRONERS

COME IN-OR PHONE 2305.

CONSUMERS POWER CO.

SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
। Nov. 12 Letter.
| Quite a number from this vlcint' ty attended the funeral of Noreen
Clem on Wednesday afternoon at
Carlton Center. Sympathy Is ex­
tended to the bereaved family.
Cart Yargnr spent the past week
with his aunt and uncle, Mr. and
Mra. Carl Jackson, of near Clarks­
ville.
Elder and Mrs. E. L. Potter and
Mra. McCormick, of Lansing, were
dinner guests of Mrs. Anna Buck
and family Saturday.
Kendall Buck spent Saturday
afternoon and evening in Battle
Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. J Roy Smith of
Caledonia were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Culbcrt.
Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Landon and
Lets Wilbur and friend, of North
Carlton, and Mr. and Mra. Floyd
Todd, of West Carlton, and Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Jackson, of near
Clarksville were Sunday visitors at
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Yaeger's.

The Bmaller engine makes possible a
lighter car — lower operating costa
— and a lower price.
When you drive the 1937 Ford with
the 85-horsepower V-8 engine, jou
are matter of a power plant that
givea everything you can possibly
demand in «peed and acceleration.
Today, improved carburetion eoablea
it to deliver it* thrilling perform­
ance with unusually low gasoline

consumption.
The new 60-hot*epower V-type 8cylinder engine delivers V-8 smooth*
nesa and quietness—even at speeds
up to 70 miles an hour—with gaaa*
lina-mikape So high that it creates

480"
At Dearborn Plant
Toia*, Dalivary Ond Handling,
Bumper*, Spare lire and Acceuoriv*

Bndy trpea ■■nailable with 60 or 85
^quipmetH);

Tudor Sedan. Todor

Touring Sedan, Fordor Sedan, Fordor
louring Sedin, Fire-window Coupe

• • • P* Luxe typ**1. with fiS-bw*cpower engine: Tndor Sedan, Tudor
Touring Sedan, Fordor Sedan. Fordor
Touring Sedan, Five-window Coupe,
Roadster, Phaeton, Club Cabriolet,
Convertible Cabriolet, Oub Coupe,
Convertible Sedan.

FEATURES
AMLARANCt — A newly derigned c*r. TTesilimpt zeceiwd io fender apron*. Modern lid­
type hood hinged at the bark. Larger loggage
•pace. Spare lire eoeloted within body. Com­
pletely new inleriort. Slanting V-type wlndihield
open* in all doled ear*.
COMFORT AND QUItT—A big, roomy car. Erica
•pare i» in the body, not taken tip by the engine
under the hood. Comfort of the Center-Poi*e
Ride farther increased by smootber action of the
long-tapering spring*, with new pressure lubri­
cation. New method* of mounting body and
engine make thia a quieter car.

SAFETY
IRAKIS—-New Eaiy-Artion Safety Brake*, of
the cable and eondoil control type. “The safety
of steel from pedal lo wheel." Self-energising—
ear momentum i* used to help apply the brake*.
Tests show that abouUone-third let* pedal pro
•ore is required to stop the car.

BODY— Not an ounce of wood med for *lructoral
•imigth. Frame atnKture all steel, sheathed with
Neel panels—top. aide* and floor. All are welded
into a single steel unit of great strength. Safety
Glai* all around al Uo etua charge.

Achsah Buck attended a theater
party tn Hastings on Wednesday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs Leo Barry and Nor­
man called on Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Hall of Hastings Wednesday eve­
ning.
Mr and Mrs Wesley Pew and
daughter of Hastings iq&gt;ent Bunday
with Mrs. Ann* Buck ind family.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shribyr and
daughter of Hastings and Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Barry and son called on
Henry Shriber of near Fenwick
and Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Beard ot
near Loon lake Sunday afternoon.
NORTH HOPE.
I
Nov, n Leiter.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ulrich re­
ceived an invitation to. vigil their
daughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs. I
Nelson Hulbert of Battle Creek Sat­
urday evening. When they got there
they found the house filled with ftl-l
stives and friends to remind Albert
of his birthday and their 43rd wed­
ding anniversary. Cards, music Andi
stunts furnished the entertainment.I
Lunch was served tele tn lhe eve­
ning and Mr. and Mrs. Ulrich recelved many useful presente. They
spent the night and HU Sunday aft-1
cmoon with another daughter. Mr*.
Harvey Hills. Everybody had a won­
derful Ume and wished Mr. and Mrs.I
Ulrich many more such events.
I

Deaf Woman Now
Hoars on Tolophoht
*'I have been hard of bearing fo
• yeara," writes Mra. Sturdevant, 0
Mayville. N. Y. “I could not tal
over the telephone. Last year I ob
talned OUR1NE. My bearing ha
Improved so that I can talk ore
the phone as well as I ever cp'Jld.
OURINE was originated by a Vicn
na ear specialist, for those who ar
hard of haartag, bolhertd by hto
notec*, earache, ringing and bunin
preaching deafness. Get quick
with OURINE today. It'a eaj

'u“ui

SJSEBSJbt

EVER OFFERED

**

TRADE-IN

SS

NEW MODELS AT
BEST BARGAINS

S5

HOIKING TC PAY UNTIL APRIL ’37
Liberal

STORM SASH
LUMBER
COAL

SaP-

Carnival

Only a small down payment on these desired home conveniences—then . .

THE LITTLE RED BRICK

Nov. ia Letter.
Mra. Smith visited our school to­
Friends from here attended the day And gave us * name plate for
Admr. issued, estate enrolled.
| »»
Maurer. Annual ac- funeral of Joel Dernond In Hastings our school. “Little Brick.Rsra May Miller. Petition
““
John Tyler of Vermontville is
PROBATE COURT.
resident here year* ago and died spending the week at Arthur Tylers'
Odn I E*t Loren* M. Hilbert, et .1
Jeorge W. Ehret. Annt
at his home near Tliomapple lake
Visitors ot Rebecca Craig's Sun­
1 count filed.
entered.
Testimony of freeholders filed. 11Mr* Loomis died at her home day were Mr. and Mra. FDrreat Pot­
Est. Duane
Powers, et al. Annual , ccnie M
to
luutd.
I Est. Roaana Charlton., Final ac-,--------------------------------------here last Friday afternoon, The ter of Welcome. Mrs. Alma FlnglefllMl
I
__________
--»__________
’ count filed, order allowing account account filed.
.
&lt;- a
----------------funeral was held at the church ton and Eliza Johnson.
[entered, discharge of Admr. issued
Est. Bert Birman. PetiUon for
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Monday morning at 11 o'clock, con­
Clara Hammond was a
I estate enrolled.
Admr. filed.
I Nov. 12 Letter.
ducted by Rev. Wing assisted by Creek shopper Wednesday.
■ Marjorie L. Stille Nomination of
on in A. and Frederick R. BlrMr *R&lt;1 Mri Ouy Kahtner spent Rev. Thompson.
Our P. T. A. meeting la
~
Gdn. filed, order appointing Odn man. Nomination* of Gdn. filed, or- • Thursday visiting Mr. and Mr*.
The L. A- 8- met with Mrs. Doro­ held at the school house Friday
I entered, bond of Gdn. filed, letter* der appointing odn. entered, bond , RuaseU Kantner and Mrj. Carl thy Barnum with good attendance night. Pot luck supper. Every one
I of guardianship Issued.
Of Gdn. filed, letters of guardianship Wesplnter, Jr., and son. Mr. and test Thursday. The program was invited.
In charge of Mrs. Lloyd Fisher.
i Est. Nellie B. Mger, petition for issued.
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Tyler and
hearing claims filed, notice to credl- I Reva May Miller Bond of Gdn
Maggie Kantner in HasMr. and Mrs Clarence Shelley of son. Robert, and Wm. Blrausbaugh
Midland visited lhe tetter's parents. have gone north deer hunting.
l.tors Issued.
.filed, letters of guardianship Issued ■
Mr.
and
Mrs.
E.
O
Smith,
over
the
Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Sears and
Est Robert T. Martin. PetUion
Est. Annie Wolcott. Order for
ol BatUe
Baltic creek
Creek *oent
spent the week end
for hearing claim* filed, notice to I publication
daughter* of
daughter of Woodland were dinner
publication entered.
entered.
•
J. h ' fthe
.h
11
Mr. and Mrs. Wafnle Kelsey and guests of Warren Bolton Sunday.
creditor* filed, final account ot Sp. I Est.
il;. Anna
,\r.™ Bender. Order assign-1d at th f
I Admrr. filed, order allowing accounl I “
ing
residue
entered.
Floyd Craig and Phyllis Edger at­
lrwt'*
1*t^»n
ntwre&lt;ii-»n.««nn Te«n I Chas. Farlec and family. Mr and son, Kenneth, attended a birthday
supper for Mrs. Alice Chase last tended lhe auto show in Grand
I entered, discharge of Sp. Admrx. is-! ~ ‘
- — -“«MS*
Thursday evening given by Mr and Rapids Tuesday evening.
I.sued.
Mrs. Lawrence Chase.
I1 E*t. Max smith Waiver of notice
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammond
The Extension Class met with I were Sunday guests of Dr. and Mrs.
filed, proof of will filed,- order ad­
Mrs. Mary Townsend test Friday C. D. Mohler in Hastings.
mitting will entered, bond ot exw
‘
rL!L
„J
for the first lesson this year. The
rccutor filed, letters testamentary der lor puMlmlon enured.
Callers at Charles Woodruff's
ar. Milo a. B.rbaur. Order &gt;|. I w'"““
December meeting wfil be held with Sunday were Homer Ingram and
'issued, order limiting settlement
plain,. ,n*&gt;r,d
I Rev. J. E&lt; Ulcry from OtiekamA.
entered
son. John. Alma Ftngleton —
and*
S8 Om“ K Shj. TtiUmonr wh“ u boWU« enmellKle meeV Mrs. Elte Offley.
A
birthday
meeting
will
be
Held
Est. Jacob Geiger. Petition for IM ' oSr defer™! ’*,
Eliza Johnson of Hasting*
BreUir.n ebureb. ... .
with Mrs. Blanch Bayne, to honor
Admr. filed
Charles Woodruff spent a few
1 Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and her mother. Mrs. Flora Wood, on days in Lansing this week on bus­
Est Hannah Geiger. Order ap­ t_re(l
Est. Mary Elizabeth Allen. Antocher.
Wednesday. Nov 18. Mrs. wood was iness for the Farm Bureau.
pointing Admr entered, bond ol
JS5.“S7;oMrJ‘S; 88 years old Nov. 3.
Admr. filed, letter, of administra­ szLrssU""’- °"1" '°r
Visitors at Mr. and Mrs. Morris
tion issued, order limiting settle­
Caulkins Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
MORGAN.
ment entered, petition for hearing
Erl Bin BlrmMi. Walter or no- I
, u
Buryi* Henry of Marshall and Mrs.
Med. order .ppoinun, Admr I
1 cto Nov. 12 Letter.
claims filed, notice to creditors Is­
Glen Henry of Hendershott district.
Cha*. Mead and daughter. Bar­
sued.
Mrs. EH Henry is vlaiUng her
1
| party al the home of Mr and Mr*. bara. and Mt*s Delores Spier ot
daughter, Mrs. Monte Caulkins,
-----—
' Ward Green Saturday evening.
Lansing spent Ute week end with while Mr. Henry is deer hunting.
Bert Nesbit.
STONY POINT.
Glen ard Earl and Bob Knight
HENDERSHOTT.
Nov. 12 Letter.
visited old friends and neighbors at Nov. 12 Letter.
| Bean harvest is now in full blast. Katemo Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. George Varner of
I Mr. and Mrs. B- J. Wellman vlsltMrs. Nellie Wolf entertained her Kalamazoo were Sunday guests at
1 ed the Lawrence ■ apple orchards children of Battle Creek Sunday.
the home «f Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hen­
near Hickory Corners. Saturday.
Mrs. Elgin Mead spent part of dershott.
j Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jones of last week in Battle Creek with Mr
Mrs. Elte Lahr, who has spent
I Grand Rapids and Mr. and Mr* and Mr*. Clare Mead and family.
the summer and fall at Albert
I Elay Mead of Hasting* visited at
Mrs. Donald Mead visited her Brill's, returned to her home in lhe
Lowell Demond's Sunday.
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. E. Young, ot Gregory district Sunday afternoon
' We discovered just recently while___________
___ _
Ravenna a ,part
ot______________
last week rcSunday guests of Ernest Haynes
taxing a anve
me country j turning home Saturday.
taking
drive tnrougn
through the
and Mrs. Carrie Ficher were Mr.
that
“
■"* all the rural schoolhouses have
opal webb of Gull lake spent and Mrs. Riley Stewart and chil­
recently had the names of the dis- 'Tuesday at home.
dren and Mr. and Mrs. Clark
trtet pasted on the front of the
Shears and mother all of Kalama­
schoolhouse.
THREE CORNERS.
zoo. Callers in the afternoon were
Mr. and Mr* John Morgan are Nov. 12 Letter.
■
Mr. and Mrs Ebcn Letnaar with
the parents of a litUc baby girl born
John Bclson of Rutland came Mr. and Mrs. Pete Leinaar of Del­
last week
tiaturday to spend a few days with ton and Mr. and Mrs. Glen CadMr and Mrs. Bert VanderJagt Mr. Mid Mrs. Edgar 8. Fificld and waltedcr of Hastings.
and Mr. and Mr*. Clnud Domond family.
Mrs. Albert Bril! Is taking the
were Lansing visitors last Friday.
Mr. and Mr*. Lester Yelter of Thanksgiving donation .for
wr
the
Phone 2515
Frank Sage
Hastings
Howard Dernond expects to leave Katerrazoo visited lhe former * par- , Bronson Methodist hospital and
soon for Arizona where he will ente. Mr and Mrs. Clair Yelter. ^11 0*11 for Mwh gUU lf you are
spend the winter.
Bunday.
imt able tn luiug them to lier ar
- ---------------------------------------------------------- ' leave at Hie schoolhouse. All sort*
of vegetables, groceries or canned
good* are acceptable. This I* a part
! of our church bulRet and has to be
I met .*nme Stay and this ts thr most
agrernble way for the people and
I most acceptable to the hospital.
.
—
—
—-------Mr. and Mr* 8am Anderson of
Hasting.* spent Sunday with their
daughter. Mra. Robert Haynes.

�THE HASTINGS &amp;ANNER. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 19. 193*

NEW REGISTRATION

V. F. W. Newt

| Ur

FOR UNEMPLOYED
Itinerant

pervice

Be

Will

LOWER CROOKED LAKE.
QUIMBY.
for Mra. Moe. at Mra. McPharlin's■
Mr. end Mrs. Allison Louden spent
in Rutland Thursday afternoon.
। Mr. and Mrs. John Christy and
I Mr. and'Mrs. Robert Miller of Bat­ Wednesday at Rochester with their
BRANCH DISTRICT
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Skidmore tle Creek spent Sunday with Mr.
Mr*. John H Wallace.
and aoo. George, and Mr. and Mrs. and Mra Lawrence Rltzman.
Mrs Edith Louden and tier slsPearl Lowell spent several days
Al Houghtallng of Hastings drove
to Howell Saturday" to visit rela­ last week in Maple Grove helping ter. Mrs. Maud Zerbel. of Hastings
care for her mother. Mrs. Sam Oa- and Mrs. Donald McQuarrle spent
tive*.
.
Friday in Kalamazoo with their ’
troth.
I
ill as lhe result of a tonsil opera­ । Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fuller ot ,-l.ter, Mra. Frank Kelley.
Mr and Mrs. Allison Louden spent
tion but Is gaining nicely.
------• Houghton
lake visited ..
at the ChatSunday evening with S.
Mrs. Dale Conklin, who has been' fee home Thursday and Friday
Mrs Juna -------Martin —
and ----mother ‘ *o,’ » U
H‘cMory
111 at the home of her parents. Is;
and
Mra. juim
Julia zjrown
Brown oi
of M*run
Martin
Mrs. Joe «&gt;»«..»««
Stenger entertained ....
her
. -v. Q,
iu airs,
»»••.
nTlte P. T. A. meeting at the Corncr3 vUlled ul u.o Reynold brother and family. Mr. and Mxj.
Branch school house, was not so bunie Sunday
’Lewis
—'* Hunt from Kalamazoo, also
’l”
»’■
Mr. .na M„. Cm,™ McIntyre Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Brown and Mr
M Huhnu, n» . chalk ut* «nn
al
Bu
and Mrs. Bert Stenger of Kalamamen from Hastings explained the
nduy t&gt;
,!&lt;e aev c.
electricity plan.
I ' Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Lowell and
Mr. and Mrs. Irvan Barber from
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Norton Mr anJ Mrs Loyal Lowell visited Cressey were Sunday callers at Mr,
and Joyce of Marshall and Mr and
8ponable and wife in Hop- and Mrs. Joe Stenger's.
Mra. Rudolph Hall of Battle Creek kin,
■
kins Sunday afternoon
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Zimm ermar
spent.Saturday at the Vincent Nor­
Kenneth Reynolds left Friday In from Galesburg spent Friday at
ton home.
cuui|*ny
company wtm
with uienn
Olenn itousn.
Roush. vne
Orla
Mrs. Loyal Lowell and son .pent IU)Uih and
P
lo bunt d„r Chris Zimmerman's.
Alfred Zimmerman went to Ne­
Friday and Saturday with her par- Ul Crawford county Mra Reynolds
waygo county to get a deer.
ents. Rev. and Mrs. Samuel Os- and
—
-----------------------• —
Shirley
are staying with
Mrs.
Frank Roush and children were
troth.
1 Glenn Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Adams, and i Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Puffpaff now Sunday callers at Harvy Hartwell's
Mrs Sarah Ontroth si&gt;ent Sunday occnov lhe Golden farm horn- for­ near Doster.
with lhe formers brother near merly occupied by Adrian Puffpaff.
HOPE CENTER.
Freeport.
This community was saddened to
companled Mr and Mrs. Kenneth
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
*«w„
h«w of
passing away of Lottie
Lewis «,
to ouviuuuu.
Buchanan muiuay.
Sunday.
Miss Audra Densmore ot Has­
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Smith of Knl- Stldengar last Monday at the home
tings spent Wednesday with Miss amazob visited at Shirley Rittman's of Mr. and Mra. Morris Newsome
Sunday.
near Charlotte Funeral was on
Betty Wotring.
Mra. Wesley French of Assyria Thursday al Menton's funeral home
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hecker and
son of Kalamazoo were week end visited her sister, Mrs. Anna Rita- ,n Delton.
Mrs. Ezra Froman and son have
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest man, Friday.
For several years the Edmonds gone to Biteiy, Mich., to take care
Christian.
Callihan orchestra lias furnished
*M’r fttDier, who la in poor
Mr. ano Mrs. Fred
rrea Mills
mius and
ana
rn ...
.7P. T.
health
friends of Battle Creek were guests muslc for
weddings.
A. meet- neaJth.
WBrn„
of Mr and Mrs Paul Townsend and
“nd “lher functions. Friday
*nd Mrr MUum y,arT’cr,,c5
son Bunday
nl&lt;hl thc&gt;' put on the program at Kalamazoo spent the week end with
a
___
4
.. . ...
,h.l. nA,.t.
W.-,l
W
a w
.
. the AmateuTahow
at. Nashville
Parents. V&lt;»
Mr nnj
and Mrs. Fred

SHIP TOYS TO

daughter will spend Thanksgiving
with her parenta, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Marta near Bellevue.
MUs Susie Philipps Is caring for
Mrs. Predric Fuhr and baby near
Quimby.
/Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bush of Bat­
tle Creek called al lhe home of her
father. W. O. Tobias. Sunday after­
noon.
Mra. Ben Bunnell of Kalamazoo
and Mr*. Lyle Bunnell of North
Bahr spent Bunday afternoon with

Fully sixty members of the Vet­
Given Al The Local
erans of Foreign Wars. Auxiliary
and their friends attended the In­
Poit Office
stallation of officers of the Leo A.
The National
Re-employment
Miller Post 3329. Rev. Hartman, de­
partment chaplain and member of Service office serving Barry county.
PC..I M5 Baill- creek Installed the located on lhe second floor of the
a rery tatereMtng f-t office building In B-tile Creek
manner. Oscar Brady, chaplain of;1-* now removing all regtevratlon
Post M3, pre tented the colors to our wds from their flies of aU •PPUPost. giving a brief history of our c*nU *»&gt;o !&gt;«*” not reported within
flag and telling how much it meant
P**1 W
to famous Americans. Harold De- j
u&gt; hmaw
heir
Mr. and Mrs. Mell Hendershott
Priester, commander of Post MS. should writeJolhe National Re and sona of Kalamazoo visited her
gave thr obligation to Chester ‘ employment,Service office in Battle parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Tobias,
Sunday.
After the business of Ui* evening ‘^e post office in Hastings on
Mr. and Mrs. George Witbey of
was concluded, several talks were ^urmtay mornings J11™™1
Coenatock Park,
Grand Rapids,
given by our Battle Creak visllora. I }£• ta •***■" U
The ladles of the Auxiliary served I Thursday from 8.30 A. M. until spent Saturday night and Sunday
witb Mr. and Mra. C. N. Tobias
a fine lunch to climax lhe evening. 1,102n ,
, . .
„„
Mr and Mrs. Harold Comp of
, . ,
Employers of labor desiring to use
w.
*•&gt; rfiEIWEX Grand Rapids called on her grand­
parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Tobias,
rode Bushs mother is still in a t|e Creefc or
lb&lt;1 rep-^nraUve Sunday afternoon.
critical condition.
f
N R 0 on jhunday mom­
The Cedar Creek Cemetery circle
* * *
।IUlg*
Ings in
Ul lhe
Mie basement
vaiK-nicm of the post‘ met with
"..., Mrs. Leslie Dickerson
-".I Spirts axe
” m. Hastings.
......___ This
Comrades
^Walte
and
U —
last
“ — —..
-------- ।
— service —
. Wednesday.
—------- '■* There were thiramong the deer hunters of tne j Jree both r, uw employer and U&gt; teen member* present.
north.
the
will
meet December
OU
.... unemployed.
___;mber
9th with Mrs
« a *------- i--------। Lyle Dickerson. There will be a
SOUTH BOWNE
] Christmas program and exchange
We are very glad to receive cheer­
Harold Yoder was at Newago of gifts.
ing reports from comrade HowlgSaturday on business.
,
| Mr. and Mra. Will Moore and
He Is improving very nicely.
.
Lob Shatter was a Sunday din- daughter, Margaret, spent Bunday
guest Of John Henry Slohl.
with Mrs. Moore’s brother, Mr. and
Ofllcers appointed last Thursday ner
Marton Griffin was a Saturday 1 Mrs. Carlton Bump In Hastings.
Included: Adjutant. James Clark;
service officer. Andrew Matthews; night and Sunday guest of Mr. and I Ralph Skidmore spent Sunday
with friends ------near----------------Vicksburg.
Bstriatic Instructor. Roy Bush and Mrs. Claude Sabina at Hostings.
The Hinds Comers Community
Mra. Harold Yoder accompanied
Istorlan. Wllford Platt.
Mrs. Plnkbelner and Mra. Kaechele club will have a Thanksgiving sup­
per
at
the
school
house next Fri­
of
Middleville
lo
Lansing
Wednes
­
Don't forget our second annual
dance and feather party on Novem­ day to attend a health convention. day night. Supper at seven will be
ulfnb&gt;' ecnooi
School Numocr
Number ' by
, --------- .7.7
----- . .1
. "Q
wuimoy
oy Jane
Walter
Shaffer
and
Haney followed by a program.
ber 35. Wc are holding it this year al
?n of Vermontville spent aS
the ’week
—.
..
.. herself
.
..
Sd c,ark
' wh0_ accompanied
Vera.
Vesta
and
Donald Gohlen
the Odd Fellow hall. There will be Blough traveled U&gt; th eupper pen­
end with their parents. Rev. and'
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
,
mixed dances with good peppy insula Thursday to bring back some .spent
।
longed
applause
louowea.
Mra.
cole
' ’ Earl Laubaugh in Rutland.
music, plenty of good heavy chick­ deer.
I lhe leachej. Mrs. Flo Cruso and
Mra. Burrell Philipps attended a
Mr. and Mra. Ben Holcombe and
ens for your Thanksgiving dinner
----------- -■
------attended
-- —..j
Mrs. Bertha Mulllneux and chU- Mra. n..
By ~
Edmonds
also
dinner party at Mra. Clarence
and a Jolly good time for alL The la­ Anna Walton were Saturday callers
Jasper Reid who has been quite
Bachler*s south of Shultz Thursday. dren of Battle Creek were week end
dles of the Auxiliary will serve the at the William Pardee home.
sister. Mrs. Walter
‘
... of her ....
,
Tn^_sick,
L., u convalescing.
Mra. Goldie Casey, Mra. Fem guests
Mr.
and
Mra.
Will
Cosgrove
of
refreshments.
____ .z------_____--- a
- ------------------________
i।-------Casey, Mrs. Chas. Gaskill and Mra. Hershberger.
Thr farmers In Southwest WoodWe crust it Is not for Ils war
visited at William Pardee's Sunday.. Sarah Philipps attended a party
HENDERSHOTT.
land nr? enjoying their electric horses that the world wonts stable
Mrs. Prances Hendershott was
Ugbta.
*
। currency.
happily surprised on Thursday night
by Mr. and Mrs. Harlo Holcomb,
his sister*. Mrs. ciessa Bracy and
Mra. Bonnie Haywood, all of Bank'
Creek and another sister, Mrs. Aura I
Lyman of Dayton. Wash., also Clyde I
Hendershott and family of Hastings
and Mrs. Lillie Huffman and grand-1
daughters from lhe Durfee district
A pot luck supper was followed by a
delightful evening of visiting.
Rennie Molt left last Thursday on
a hunting trip to Newberry in the
northern. Peninsula. Mrs. Mott re­
ports that her aunt. Mrs. Gorham,
was not as well Sunday. She Is In
Pennock hospital suffering with n
broken hip.
Mrs, Floyd Garrison spent the
week end with her daughter. Mrs.
Harvey Parmelee. In Battle Creek.
Mr. Garrison and the girls went on
Sunday to spend lhe day and bring
l&gt;er home.
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Hendershott ot
1WLMMI
Kalamazoo called on hls mother
Sunday afternoon.
Miss Beatrice Christensen of Hastings spent Sunday at Lawrence I
r?tirl«tanu&gt;n*«
Annrlau afternoon
nftemrwtn I
Christensen's.
Sunday
callers there were Mbs Bertha
Christensen of Battle Creek and
Pete Ktnney of Hastings.
m cwt
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Matteson
spent Thursday and Sunday In Bat­
tle Creek visiting relatives and
Made
of
AU GOOD
friends.

is » srsr *"

Your Cows Will Show a
Nice Profit
If Fed a

BALANCED

sx

Ashby. «»».
Mr. nnu
and Mrs. William Ashn.uh them
than, to
tn spend
m*.nd
relumed with
••---------Rpv- Walton goes soon to Illinois
to attend school and will return
week ends to conduct his services.
Charlie Williams is improving his
form buildings by giving them
coat of paint.
Misses Phenla and Josie Carpen­
trr called on Mra. Nettle Hyde in
Hostings Saturday.

E.

Willi- ]

Three thousand of the 43.001 in­
a
habitants
of the Dalmatian city of
Split live in squalor In shabby homes
built into the arches and walls of
he ancient Diocletian palace, which
was completed in the third century.

limei as much beet sugar aa taM
sugar is manufactured in the United

^CHEVROLET wii
Cornp£ete£u~Y|eur

Farm Bureau
Service Dairy

SHOO
J

.

'

jo
-n

•

SOUTH SHULTZ.
Mrs. Ethel Hom called on friends
In Kalamazoo Saturday.
Mra. Edith Bonneville of Battle,
Creek spent Wednesday with her
•on. Lester.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hom visited
Mr. and Mrs. Thad Cook of North
Barry Sunday.
Jess Kenyon of Hickory called on
his uncle. George Kenyon, Tuesday.
Laura Hallock of Doud district
visited her aunt, Rose Hallock, lhe
last of the week.
Mrs. Clarence Baechler and Mr
mothfer.
Mrs.
Rosa
Baechler,
pleasantly entertained thf Shulta
Community club Thursday. Twenty
three guests were present.
John Mlnzey did some carpenter
work for Ed. Hunt in the HendcrahoU district Saturday.
"Doing good Is the only certainly
happy action ot a man's life."—Sir
Philip Sidney.

N
A

.

Grain*, Concentrate*
NO BY-PRODUCTS
ASK about rri
rAM IUIUS IIUIHC CO. be.

Cottonseed, $2.15 Cwt.

$42.00 a Ton

Soybean Meal, $2.15 Cwt. $42.00 a Ton

FARM BUREAU
WJ SERVICES Inc
HASTINGS

PHONE 2118

Bank Deposits
and Investments

More Than Ten Million
People viewed the New Chevrolet in the first 24 hours
Thousands upon thousands have already placed orders.
Other thousands are buying at this moment. • • . Sec
and drive this brilliant new car and you will want one, too!
TVS WINNING THE OKAY OF THE

gine, New All-Silent, All-Steel Bodtea and

U. S. A.! And—more than the okay—

New Diamond Crown Speedline Styling . . .
the only low-priced car with Perfected

1

0
N

the enthusiastic preference!

« As a depositor of this bank, wc
give you all the safety of the soundest
investment, plus the extra protection of
Federal Deposit Insurance up to $5000.
for each depositor.
When you buy even the best
stock, bond, or other property, you
Dever know exactly what the value will
be when you want to sell.

But you do know that even
dollar of your bank deposit will be sue
with not one cent subtracted. In addi­
tion, we give you helpful cooperation
and the use of valuable Danking services
that do not go with other investments.

N
K

That’s the word that ia coming from the
cities, towns and farms of all America, where
more than ten million people viewed this
new Chevrolet in the first 24 hours . . .
where thousands upon thousands of people

Hydraulic Brakes, Improved Gliding Knee­
Action Ride* apd Super-Safe Shockproof

have already placed orders . . . and where
the demand for new 1937 Cbevroleta ia
increasing with each passing day!
The reasons are plain. This new Chev­
rolet for 1937 is the only low-priced car with
New High-Compressiyn Valve-in-Head En-

Around at no extra coot!
Take a look at this car, take a ride in it,
and we are confident that you will follow
America’s example and give your complete
preference to the complete car—completely now.

which combines Genuine Fisher No Draft

Ventilation and Safety Plate

Glass All

THE OILY
COMPLETE

CHEVROLET MOTOR CO, DETROIT, MICH.

to

CHEVROUT

Your bank deposit is one of the
best and safest of all investments.

R. K. HURD
HASTINGS, MICH

PHONE 268O

puei

SERVICE G
DELTON

�tub

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes
A veritable flsh hatehery on
Wheel*. tha moat odvanced devetopM!t in moblls ftth-planting units
iu appearance in
Designed by Arvin J.

iBUWn, has maos
Mtetdgan.

AUCTION SALE
On account of my health I must quit farming. Therefore I will have o public auction
ot my form 4 mile* east of Hastings on State Road on

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24
STARTING AT 1:00 P. M.

I OFFER THE FOLLOWING:

HORSES

north central Michigan, an «xpause of Idle semi-wild and wild
forest land is -‘going back” to a
wild condition witti lhe deltberaUvs
help of conservation-land speciall»U after years of unsuccessful use
for agriculture.
Conservation department workers
here, who have been collaborating
In the game management aspects,
are watching the project with tncreasing Interest.
Approximately 44.000 acres of sub­
marginal agricultural land—land
not generally suited lo successful
farming—have been acquired by
the federal rciettlement admlnlstration. The fanners from whom
the land was purchased have been
moved elsewhere and the tract is
being developed for use as a public
recreational area—the use for wiilch
j it Is believed best suited.

I JHcOMBER SCHOOL DISTRICT.
J Nov. 12 Letter.
I Mrs. Wm. Knickerbocker spent
j Wednesday in Battle Creek.
i Mr. and Mrs. Cnas. Haney spent
1 Sunday in Richland.
Mr
Mra John
tnhn -r-».
Mr. and
snd Mrs.
Thomas spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. George
Thoms* In Hickory corners.
Miss Gwendolyn Gaskill spent lhe
week end in Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Traver and
family visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Benham in Bittie Creek Sunday,
A competition was recently held
at a south coast resort to see who
possessed the most beautiful note.
Hundreds turned up.

TOOLS

Dark bay gelding, weight about 1350.
■oy mart, weight about 1300.

cows
Pure blood Jersey cow, 7 yrs. old.
Half Jersey and Brown Swiss. 3 yn.
old.
(The above cows were both fresh this
fall.)
Pure blood Jersey cow, 4 yrs. old, duo
December 26.
Jersey and Durham heifer, due Mar. 16.

Deering binder 6 ft. cut.
Mower. Osborne side rake.
Dump rake.
Dump rake for repairs.
Hay tedder. Oliver plow 99.
17 tooth lever drag.
Calc riding cultivator.
.
. . . .
5 tooth cultivator.
-•
Empire fertilizer drill. Bean puller.
' Lumber wagon. Hay rack.

MISCELLANEOUS
Red pullets,

HAY AND GRAIN
300 bundles corn fodder in the barn.
2 or 3 tons clover hay.
Quantity of first and second cutting al­
falfa.
20 or 30 crates old corn.
100 crates new corn.
100 bu. cots. 3 crates seed corn.
2 crates early seed potatoes.

Corn ahellcr. Stone boat. Iron kettle.
29 icasoncd white oak fence posts.
Oil drum. Feed barrels.

Quantity of rad elm lumber.
Number crates. Vinegar barrel.
Hay fork and rope. Tank heater.
Double work harness. Old work harness.
Collars. Forks. Shovels. Hoes and
Many articles too numerous
tion.

GO BY

BUS

- Bolnbp sleighs.

POULTRY
About 60 Rhode Itland
nearly ready to lay.

lUiffloi tutioat, twvraday, woman u1 nn

alien*, a 10-ten tuei-bodled track Michigan during the current openI
with sleeper accommodation* and a deer hunting season may be shott
by anyone without civil or crimi­'
nal liability, conservation author)-;
parUnent of conservation.
This
(
new-type unit has double the ca­ hunting, the dog was outlawed in!
Michigan
by legislative act tn 1881(
pacity of the standard mobile plant­
_ _________
______
_ __ ____
ing unit*
which
replaced
the and
flshat
' i no time since has It been
distribution railway car. "Wolver-1 legal to hunt deer in this state witn,
tne." several years ago. It will make I a dog.
possible high-speed, day and night
Michigan is witnessing in Alle­
transfer of hatchery flsh between
points in the supper and tower gan county lhe exemplification of।
one ot the newest ideas in land uil-,
peninsulas.
Illation. As if transplanted from,
Dogs running deer in northern the oak and Jnckplne plains pi

men-

TO

GRAND
RAPIDS
Now
Only

s|3O

ROUND TRIP!

Terms of Sale—CASH. No goods removed until settled for.

4

BUSSES DAILY

BEN MERRICK,PROP
Henry Flannery, Auctioneer.

Ernest Smith, Clerk.

I ALSO OFFER FARM AT PRIVATE SALE

b;u SIDEPOT
Trlo|Cafe»Ph&lt;jn&lt;2137.

GLASS CREEK.
|Bt the home of his mother. Mra ■**-**■*•*•
Mr. and Mr*. Chas. Whittemore chaa. Herrington, tn Morgan Tua*-,
mi
spent Sunday with
Fred Bech- Luy

Mr-MM. MCOXKM. u, I

w
«

wr n

| Thorn apple-KellOgg
School Notes
ft ‘

NORTHEAST STRIKER.
Those who went deer hunttnj
from this neighborhood were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Welch and JewCallhan who accompanied Lisle
Bldelman, of Pontiac, Wm. and
Burke Cramer who were accompan­
ied by Adam Hansen of Barryton

and family of Hastings.
young people at the Assyria church N
..
Robert Oil* left Sunday for a Sunday afternoon and evening.
*7
'
____
hunting trip in Lake county.
Mr. and Mra. H. J. Wilcox spent
K R«c'v,s TronnciQ*Mis* Virginia Havens spent lhe
week end In the Ed. Bedford home
in lu football history when it tost Tanning
near Middleville.
i Mra. Vcm HawbltU at Highbank. to Western State High by the stag­
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Fuhr are
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Whittemore Mra. Wilcox will accompany a gering score of is to 0. Blate start­
ths parents of a san bam Nov. 10.
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. friend to Jackson Wednesday and ed out in the flrM minute of play
He hat been named Gordon Fred­
return Thursday.
Ford Enz in Woodland.
and there was no doubt in the erick.
Miss Katie Whittemore is spend­
minds of spectator* as to the ulllMr. and Mrs. clayton Bhurlow
ing the week with friends at Rich­ upper peninsula where he will hunt
. mate outcome of the game, lhe only spent Monday in Kalamazoo on
land.
I question being how many scores business.
Sunday visitors at the Fred Otis
|
State
High
would
roll
up.
Western
Mrs. am Randall and Mrs. James
BARBERS CORNERS.
home were Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Mr. and Mrs. L J. Matthews, Mrs Blate
r.“ -_.was
,“ a
“ far superior aggrega- 8urlne received news of the death
Burkland and children of White
of their cousin. Mrs. Margaret
Cloud. Ray Oti* and family and Mr. Roy Preston and son. Donald, visit- ‘
Leaver of Grand Rapids and at­
™
ma£aJ?"
and Mrs. Lyle Otis and children of ed relatives at Fremont over the
tended the funeral on Tuesday.
week end. They report a snow storm । "J® * el*ht °‘
®ta3?Ia
Kalamazoo.
Mrs. Vesta Harthy and Mra. Neva
I *“ad‘. ov" *?• *? *“ Poun*' anJ
Roy Erway left last week for a there on Sunday morning.
Tate called on their aunt, Edith
Mr. and Mr*. Brandie of Lansing
““ OeW •*"&gt;&lt;«&gt;
hunting trip near Grand Marais
Cramer, one day last week.
, ...
and Maurice Erway is spending a were Sunday visitors of Wm. Mish-: u
Mrs. John Hoffman and daughter.
let's.
Mrs.
Mishler
returned
home
.
how
”
"
u
history
few days looking for deer near Lake
with them for a few day*' vbit
*"d T £ Promises to take revange Doris, and son Duane, are vkiLing
St. Helen.
friends at plainwell.
Mrs. Etta Bump Is spending a few ou‘ °n ^1.*^,.°^, Of™
Mrs. Clara Robinson of Grand
Rapids is visiting at Roy Erway’s days with her son. Nay Bump, and 1 _T!1° hrl«h‘ sP°l ,n lhe game fra
DUNHAM DISTRICT.
family of Hasting.
, J’ K
manner to whkh
home.
Thelma and Beatrice Ball. Enid
Mr*. Grace Brake of Hasting* was
PePPT «»“"»«The Glass creek Extension class
»* •“ J?
Nv CheeMman and Dorothy Mack at­
held Its first meeting with Mrs Rutry a dihfter guest al Roy Preston . Fridav evenlnx
1 downlnK
b|E Uns” from State tended the 4-H banquet held at
Erway last Wednesday. A pleasant d
Misses Nora. Minnie snd Evelyn!
a doubt Hastings Friday evening. Dorothy
day was spent. The clAss has 14
i Matthews returned to their home in th® best1'P,"t c Ua!n ln
staV;
members this year.
Grand Rapids Sunday after spend- ,nd could lake moat any Class B go to Chicago.
Miss Violet Gordon accompanied
ing some time with Mr*. Etta Bump IBnd “rne Class A teams.
BARRYVILLE.
Miss Beatrice Buxton home from
The Missionary society will hold In n few days they will leave for
Additional Area.
Hastings high school Friday and
spend lhe winter.
tlielr November Thankoffering din­ Florida to _____
_ . ___________
Another application hu come to was her guest over the week end.
ner at the home of Mr. and Mra. McCOMBER SCHOOL-DISTRICT. lhc ®®a'tl °' Education to include
Harry Bailey of Potoakey. who
L. A. Day Friday. You are cordially
had charge of the music during the
Mr
Mr.
IM. MMUSon
S"
invited lo attend.
revival services, toft Sunday eve­
Mrs. Royal Bryant of Parma Is H^e^ tamile‘‘hi ^BLukrcreek* ' *cho°l now co*er* more than lwo ning for another service.
Visiting her daughter, Mrs. Milton
S Buftil' S“h"- •'“&gt;
U&gt;“‘ ’&gt;
The Dunham Community club
Oesler.
held its second meeting at lhe
'_______
Sunday visitors at the Rev. J. J. and Miss Mildred Sinclair are in i
schoolhouse Saturday evening. A
Willllls' home were Clayton Wlllitts die north deer hunting.
Sshool Ncwa.
large crowd was present to enjoy
There will be a meeting for mothMrs, McDonald, Mr*. Bennett the fried chicken supper and lhe
of Detroit, Elizabeth Griffin of
Charlotte and Mr. nnd Mrs. Wilson ers at the school house Thursday ' and Mr*. Tungate attended P. T. A program which followed.
afternoon.
(convention at Ann Arbor la*l FriWlllitls tuAl daughter of Detroit
Bunday-, morning, while on her
Mr. and Mrs. Zeno Decker spent day.
Mr^uudtMrs. Chas. Hutton and
way to Sunday school. Mrs. Grace
mother visited nt Will Hyde's Sun­ Sunday with relatives In . Baltic ■ The report cards were delayed bcMack had lo crank her car, which
day. Mrs/Hutton remaining until Creek.
(cause of the fair; however they struck her arm, producing a pain­
Mr. and Mrs Wm. Knickerbocker were issued last Wednesday.
Thuraday with her parents.
ful Injury, though fortunately no
Mrs. L. A. Day attended the and fcmlly spent Saturday in Battle
Last Tuesday Mr. Cunningham's bones were broken. She remained
shower for Arthur Webb and bride Creek.
Civics class took an all school vote over night in Hastings at the Itome
on the election for President of her daughter, Mra. Ellis KtUoy.
President Roosevelt won. ra to Lan­
don's M.
IRVING.
Last Friday Mr. Curry went to
Mr. and Mrs. John Nagel. Mr.Caledonia to
w help
Iioip Judge
juu«c their
uku ag- wua
Lena Nagel
r«agei ana
and Mr*. Bernice Nagel
ricullural exhibits. An agricultural | were in Grand Rapids Saturday,
teacher from Caledonia helped to । They stopped al Byron Center on
Judge ours and wo are glad of thb their way homo to sec Mrs. Nagel's
I co-operative spirit.
sister.
I The junior class members have
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nance have
| been looking nt rings. They are i moved back to Hastings.
planning on ordering as soon ns । Jack Warner wrtea from Conder| possible.
i sport. Pa., that he is well and will
—
probably spend the winter there.
DURFEE.
| Mr. and Mrs. Wright and son of
I William Hoffman and Rcbert
Robert. Maple Grove have moved into the
Gardner had sufficiently recovered
COVered 1 Beverwyk house
hmm. tn
to be nearer lhe
to return to their homes from Pen­ son's work on the new road.
nock hospital Saturday.
1 Mra. Edward Rice, Mrs. Bert
HICKORY CORNERS.
Fancher and Mrs. Harry Hammond
Mr*. Ella Elliott went to Detroit
attended the funeral of Edward lost week to spend the winter with
Gates Thursday at Doud's corners. her son. George.
The East Baltimore Aid society
Mr. and Mrs. O. Haynes and Rob­
meeting at Mr. nnd Mra. Bert ert and clayton of Battle Creek
Fancher's was well attehded.
spent Sunday with Mr. nnd Mr*.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward, Rice and Glenn Asplnalt at Bnnfleld.
Veto spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mr- and Mrs. Fred Haynes o(
Mra. Floyd Palmer near' Orange­ Nashville-were caller* at htt broth­
Always ask for one of these quality brands
ville.
er's. O. Haynes. Tuesday.
PIONEER
GREAT LAKES
RED ARROW
Tlw East Ba litmore extension
The Ladles' Aid society of lhe M.
class meets with Mra. Flossie Rlch- P. church will hold a bazaar and
BIG CHIEF
HOUSEWIFE'S FAVORITE
nrds this Thursday for the first les­ chicken pie dinner at the church'
son.
basement Friday. Nov. 20.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Stanton and
FOR SALE BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
CLAY HILLS.
family of Battle Creek spent Sun­
Mfa. Roy McCaul and Mrs. Sarah
day with Mr. and Mra. William
McCaul entertained the Busy Bee
Hoffman.
Mr*. Willard Ickes came liomc Club at their home la*t Thursday.
Sunday from Battle Creek and re­ Plans for their Annual Christmas
•
ports Wayne Wheeler a* getting party were made.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Poti* spent
along nicely.
Thursday in Lansing with their
How times change! Junior usad to daughter, Mrs. Harold England, and
be caught with hl* finger in the family.
Jam; now he's caught with his
Mr. and Mrs. Roy McCaul have ‘
coupe in it.
gone deer hunting.

INSIST ON

MICHIGAN MADE

BEET SUGAR
Best for Cooking — Baking — Canning
Jams and Jellies—Candy Making
Frostings — Table Use

NEW OLDSMOBILES for 1937

W the Boston Brava* do batter
We are sure now that the good
as the Bee-s, maybe Selassie should Doctor Einstein 1* a smart man. Not
become the conquering butterfly of long ago he refused lo talk because
Judah.
he had nothing to *ay.

SIX

F

the
avibt
mon:

madi

since
that
profl
And

hen
poor

line
Iba. &lt;
dratc

fill

atron
homi
la*t
a hi
teeth
boltii

dig L
main

Afl
•tty

tered

lure
good

avoir

■Wi

Rura
The

and

toftui
Ute s
*h»u
lhe f
place
thee|
snd
ihad
and

Th
I* ot
key 1

sc ha

Sk

Clair
8mlt

Herr
Hou*

aider

’685’

dell

Odd

PRICES REDUCED
mb

OoHi
had

BOTH OFFERING:
Fresh, New Style-Leader Styling-Unger

1

BOTH FEATURINGt
Now Unliteal Bodies by Fisher with Turret
Top • Now Triple Sealed Super-Hydraulic
■rakes • Center-Control Steering • New
Dual Ride Stabilizers • Proved Knee­
Action Wheels • Unobstructed Floors

Mr*
Frtda
Ch.
Clare

"I’ve learned to depend

Wheelbase • Larger Size • Roomier Bodies
Lower Floors • Wider Chassis • Heavier
Frames • Bigger Engines • Higher Power
Extra Safety • Greater Economy • And
Oldsmobile’s Traditionally Fine Quality.

on

Highlands

Dairy

Grade A milk to help
keep

during

BIGGER. FINER AND SAFER THAN EVER

EACH WITH A STYLE DISTINCTLY ITS OWN

my

children

tha

norU

fit

camp
tendi
the 1

w ini ar

months. The high .vita­
min content in it builds
up their resistance and
gives them extra 'pep'.

IE

So much o/ their ener­

Mr
her b

gy is used in

and

keeping

afld
ST

warm, that 1 have my

Highlands man leave an

F

EIGHT

’785

£&gt;!

Cino
HXde
Mr
home

&gt;“yr

extra quart during these
cold months."

btulii
Mr

H.Hi

KT.

Mr
youni

PRICES REDUCED

lng t

»Uy
ak. O

VMI CAIS THAT NAVI IVIBYTHIN* »OI l»JF

FORREST L JOHNSON

High in Cream Content. Raw
or PatioHrizad. Pt. 5c; Ql.

A
EAST STATE STREET
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Th

Sn!

(HIGHLANDS DAIRY

slide*

I

HOUK

I’bone MM

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

Hiring.

�TW BMWWM BAHNWk TWURJDAT, NQytMBKB Ui ing

Weekly Farm Review

Y. M. C. A, ITEMS

The Beet lde&lt;u from the Best Farm Papers
By

Charlotte Hl-Y Club worked bard
Afa&amp;tt Day
little sum

WILLARD BOLTE

POULTRY.
Poultry demonstration records In
one county in South Carolina have
proved, year after year, that IntelUKt poultry-keeping la probably
best-paying farm occupation In
tha county, according to Poultry,
Tribune. One genera) farmer with ।
less than GOO hens made a profit
over Joed coat of 0900 in eight
months' time. On this basis. In a
year these 600 hens would provide
as much profit as Illinois farmers
made last ypar on nearly 0 cows
averaging soo lbs. of butterfat—
since 2S2 of the beat cows on test In
that state only made an average
profit over feed of 0130 per cow.
And the 252 poorest Illinois cows on
teat actually loot B2c each. One good
hen would have made Illinois farm­
ers far more money than they made
on any of a good many thousand
poor cows in that state.

m

ar

about Igo
grain an
pound ft
maslh—and

grain,

hlgh-proteln maah and milk,—Tur­
key World.

ORCHARD IRRiOATION.

Michigan BUte College reports
that in sections where short per­
iods of drouth may bo expected, the
yield and quality of apples may be
greatly Improved—btosoom end rot
may be completely controlled—and
bloaeom drop may be radically re­
duced—by proper Irrigation. And
an Ohio correspondent of Michi­
gan Farmer writes that irrigation
has increased his apple yields at
least 25 per cent and produced fruit
of so much better quality that an
PEACHES.
Seven years of study al the Uni­ expenditure of 012 per acre for Ir­
rigating has produced increased
versity of Illinois have demonstrat­
ed that the addition of 1 lb. of profits of at least 3100.
tine sulfate to a spray mixture of 3
GRAIN PASTURE FOR HOOfi.
iba. of lead arsenate, 3 Iba. of hy­
Southern Agriculturist brings us
drated lime, and 100 gallons of wa­
reports of hog-feeding tests at the
ter. has a marked effect in reducing
South Carolina Experiment Station.
spray Injury lo peach trees.—Prai- Similar lots of hogs were finished

SHAVING THB CORN F1KLDS.
A Jackson county. Michigan, cor­
respondent of Michigan Farmer
strongly recommends the use of a
home-made "safety roaor" for the
last cultivation of corn. He made
It himself—by removing the buck
teeth of a one-horse cultivator and
bolting a sharpened flat iron bar
to the outside legs. By setting the
wheel so that the front teeth do no'
dig too deep, this rig gets every re­
maining weed without cBsturbing
the com roots.

on white-corn and on yellow com­
part of them in dry lot and part on
wlntef grain pastures which in­
cluded barley, rye, oats, and a
check field of rape. These pasture
ctops were found to have almost
Identical value for hogs, but there
was a wide spread in the value of
pasture between white and yellow
corn. Pasture saved an average of
19 85 per acre with lhe white com
lots—and only 15.29 per acre with
the yellow com lota.

Eaton ftapids committees are lotUng local arrangements all made for ।
a good attendance and a very helpfu) program at their Youth Adult
Forum, Sunday P. M. and evening.
Nov. 21. Look for the detailed pro­
gram.
Mr. Sawdin, flupl of Grand Ledge
schools, will direct lhe discussion on
education at the Eaton Rapids For­
um. assisted by flupl VsnBusklrk of
Hastings, if possible for him to at­
tend.
Lee Aubll, Hl-Y leader at Grand
Ledge. Is taking I or 10 boys with
Mm to the conference tn Pontiac,
aaslsted by Stuart Doty and Stewart
Graham, both former Y. M. C. A.
members.
Hastings and Middleville Hl-Y
clubs attended divine services last
Bunday in keeping with lhe Inter­
national Y. M. and Y. W Week of
Prayer.
lng of all Y. M. C. A. secretaries tn
the state was held Tuesday, the
17th. al East Lansing Community
church with Rev. McCune leading
the worship sendee. The State Y.
M. C. A. convention is Dec. 17 at
Lansing.
The Brotherhood at Hastings has
Invited the football squad of 50 boy$
to be their guests for the annual
Father and Son banquet. Nov. 23.
Coach Jud Hyames, of w. 8 T.tf3.
the speaker.
At the bl-weekly meeting of the
Older Boys Y group held at Camp
Barry last Wednesday evening Adelbert Heath wax elected president:
Howard Tusink. vice-pres.; De­
wayne PUgh. secretory and treas­
urer.

TRAMPING SILAGE.
Tramping silage may make II pos­
sible to get a little more into an up
NASHVILLE.
MILAGE FOR IIORSEH.
right silo and It may keen a little
Mrs. Sarah Wallacr of Eaton
After the last drouth lhe Univer­ better—but when short ot labor it b Rapids virited Saturday and Sun­
not
necessary
to
keep
a
man
In
th&lt;
sity of Missouri proved that draft
day with her son. W. D Wallace and
horses could be successfully win­ rilo for the purpose, according tc family.
tered on a ration containing a Michigan Farmer. If the dUtributo:
Mr. and Mrs. Talbert Curtis and
large percentage ot good corn sil­ pipe Is tied In the center of the silo
age. They brought a bunch of ma­ and a man goes up to spread the. 'amity of Kalamo spent Sunday
ture mares through the winter In heap of allage evenly about once an with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Laurent.
Fred Hazog nf Indianapolis Ind
good shape on a roughage ration hour, resuI is win be entirely uUsspent the week end with Mr. ana
Of 21 Iba. ot silage plus 5 Iba. of hay factory.
vtrs Claude Perry.
SORGHUM BILAGE.
avoid feeding frozen or mouldy ull­
Richard W. McLain, chaplain of
Sorghum should not go Into the the Michigan State Reformatory, is
age as II will give horses Indigestion
rilo until the heads are matured the speaker for the November meet­
—Wallace’s Farmer.
and the seeds so hard that thej ing of the Nashville Community
cannot be crushed with your fin
BIGHEAD.
Brotherhood which is held this
Missouri Agricultural college has gers, according to Indiana Farm
evening at the Evangelical church.
lhe following to say. tn Missouri era Guide. Light froate will no Mr. McLain Is an ordained minis­
Rurallst. about "btghead" in sheep harm sorghum—and if It Is cut to- ter. a doctor of medicine and a law­
The causes are not definitely known green II will sour. Water should b&lt; yer and his address should be of
but they are connected with drouth ।j added if lhe stalks are very dry.
general Interest
and extreme heat; and anting dan­
The .senior play "Th" Last of the
DARK beef.
gerous weeds because ot lark of
Apparently the old belief that Ruth vena,”‘has been postponed un­
pasture is under suspicion. Symp­ «ras» Is responsible for dark beef 1 til some time in December.
toms are swelling of the ears and u lot nf hbpey. Ohio Farmer car
Rev. and MTs. E- Pritchard, Mr’,
lhe skin of lhe face. Bick animals rias a report of experiments at Wes
pred Ackett. Mrs. Mahton Strick­
should be promptly removed from Virginia Experiment Station it land. Mrs. C. R. Shaw. Coy Brumm,
the flock and placed in a cool, dark whlcn it was fpynd that the colo
tflsa Amy Hartwell and Virginia
place—and both sick and healthy of the beef was due to the finial Hess were at Battle Creek Tuesday
Iheep should be provided with hey alone and grass had nothing to d&lt; iftemoon and evening attending a
and a little grain, together with
rally at the Evangelical church.
Ehade and an ample supply of salt
Bishop O’. E. Epp ofu Naperville. Ill.
RYE PASTURE.
and fresh water.
was the principal speaker. A fellowUnder general combelt condition
thip dinner was served at B:30.
The General Aid of the M. R.
Th" Oregon Experiment Station any time between Augtist and De
church met with Mrs. George Taft
la one of the lenders in the tur­ cemben. but Iowa Stale Oollegf Wednesday afternoon. Nov. IB.
key field, hence their report on cost recommends sowing It in August foi
Miss Mildred Manolnr of Kalamaof fattening turkeys Is doubly In- best resulu.—Michigan Farmer.
too. r- former teacher here, spent
Jib week end with Miss Ruth Bilk
PRARIEVILLK.
held tn the church at il o'clock and Miss Mildred cole.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Feighner and
Those in Mra. Hyde's room al Monday Nov. 0. Rev. F. C. Wing had
school neither absent nor
tardy charge of the funeral and Rev. E daughter visited Saturday and flunarc: Frederick Castle. Virginie and ff. Thompson preached the funeral lay with the former's sister, Mrs. C.
Minor Uwls. Ronald McKlbbln, sermon. Mrs. Loomis had been 11! C. Gibson, and family in Detroit.
Mrs. Susan Hawbliu of Maple
Clair Munger. Allan Shelp. Carl for many years. Our sympathy is
8milh and Forrcst Stafford; In Mra. extended to the bereaved relatives. Grove L-. spending a few weeks with
McKtbbtn'x room. Milford Freder­
Mr. and Mra. Jesse chase spent Mrs. Mabel Marshall.
Mias Mildred Cole, who attends
ickson. Lloyd
Boniface.
George Bunday al the £. Davenport home
Argubright's college in Battle Creek,
Hermlnetu Richard and Virginia in 8- E. Woodland.
Houvenair. Alice. Janet and Mar- ■ The D. G. T. O. club enjoyed an spent the week end with her pargarat Ann Lewis, Roland and Don- oyster supper last Wednesday eve­
A. ?- Moor lag has returned from
■idenc McKlMHn. Jana Mullen, El­ ning and the program was In charge
len Shelp, Marcella Shepard. Wen­ of Mrs. Floyd Klinble and Mrs. An­ Cassopolis and has his optome trie
dell Spaw and Robert Wilkins.
drew Townsend. Miss Marian Hay- office over Vein Bera's store. He Is
Maying
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
ner
gave
two
piano
selections.
Betty
Saturday night. November 21. lhe
Odd Fellows and Rebekaha will en- and Dick Kimble sang "Reuben. Brumm.
Mrs. Gladys lz- of Cushman.
lertain with a supper at the I. O. Reuben" and a fine pantomime was
O. F. hall. There will be a program, ghen illustrating aotne particular Oregon, who was called here by the
grab bag. a chance to get your event for each month of the year. Illness and death of her sister. Mrs.
Lloyd Dernond and Loy Smith of Gertrude Mason, is spending sev­
Thanksgiving turkey or chicken,
aho a surprise package.
Middleville are on a hunting trip eral weeks with Michigan relatives
before returning to her home.
Harry Kllllck at Doster has been up north.
• guest of Mr. and Mrs. Veme
Oaithrop for a week. Sunday they
had for dinner guesU Mr. and Mra.
Llewellyn Erb and Lamar of Delton
and Mrs Charles Garrett.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Norris and
MrA^Wllbur Polley were in Otsegoj

Charles Hughes. Charles Garrett,
Clarence Garrett. Lyle Billings and
Mr- and Mra. Maurice Hughes ore
north hunting devr.
The members of the 1-H club who
completed their summer's work at­
tended the 4-H banquet held at
the Fuller hall tn Hastings Fri­
day. The members are Virginia and
Elinor Lewis. Allan Shelp, George
Hyde and Ronald McKibbUi.
- Mra. Alice Corwin has gone to her
homo bi Middleville for a two
week's atay.
Mrs, Ethel Stebben entartalhed
her spru-in-law and daughters. Mr.
and Mrs. Dunford Higgins and Mt.
and Mrs. Winslow Martin of XalanUxoo. Sunday, the occasion being
Mr. and Mrs. Higgin's sixth wedGeorge Adrianson and Mra.'
Lawls Johnson were at Homer on
bwslneos Friday.
J4r- and Mrs Carl Krick have
to Grand Rapida wbort ha
cured employment.
Krick entertained fifteen
young people last Saturday honorfiW her eon. Lawrence's birthday.

wopd attended lhe senior
Kellogg Agricultural sdhbdl.
Lake Friday.

The Supreme Blessing of them ALL!

...., Voomls died at h«ff
lidnie hero on Nov. 6. Funeral was

ions ©Mln
8IM&amp;W

6 MIK J

Selling faster than lhe
factory can build ’

Ill TNI NSW

Westinghouse
Electric

HASTINGS

STUDEBAKEK

talned by Mrs. Douse Friday after-

DRINK WATER WITH MEALS
GOOD FOR STOMACH
Water with meals helps stomach
Juices, aids digestion. If bloated
with gas add a spoonful of Adlerika. One dose cleans out poisons
and washes BOTH upper and lower
bowels. B. A. LyBarker, Druggist
—Adv.

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HASTINGS

This In Mind

VP

ALMA ....
ANN ARBOR .
CLARE . . . .
BUFFALO, N.Y.
DETROIT .
FLINT . .
HILLSDALE
CHICAGO, ILL. . .
MUSKEGON . . .
NILES ......
PONTIAC . . . .
CINCINNATI, O. .
ALPENA.................
CADILLAC . . . .
CHARLEVOIX. . .
CLEVELAND, 0.
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HOUGHTON . . .
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PETOSKEY . . . .
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$ 35
.35
.35

.90
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.39
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45
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45
.SO
.40
.55

M
.85
.80
40
.40
.75
.85

Bross Tire 6* Battery Co

Pbone2240 £1

5.37
5.67

..

4.33

BaUogtta, Wtaffahtaa Wlpen

Jefferson and Court
llaaUnc*. Mtehlxaa

Vulcanizing

generator

PHONE 2482

’asUX

The above representative statlon«to**tation
rates are for the first 3-minttte talking period.
They are in effect every night from 7 p. ■).
until 4:30 a. nt. Also from 7 p. as. eeeef
Saturday night until 4:30 a. m. Monday,

....

rrUrHoHr so.

MICHIGAN

.. S4.S3

4.50-21 _
4.75-19 ..

ANDRUS SERVICE f

chan&lt;K grease tn the
. radiator naahed

119 N. MICHIGAN AVI

Button - Slatted

COURIER TYRE
4.4O-2t

30x3 V,

S &gt;■
5O
Afi Vy .nd uP

TO

Rates to other points are correapotidiM^ly
low. Ask "Long Distance”.

Cm&gt;hh^e
and a price
of only . . .'

FROM

Unless you have your car "WINTER-SERVICfD" you will have a
load of trouble when the first real cold spell hits. Drive in to­
day and let us put YOUR CAR IN SHAPE FOR ZERO WEATHER. One stop today will save hours delay.
FIRESTONE
DRIVE IN FOR A
TIRES

COATS GROYK.
Thr P. T. A- meeting will be -held
on Wednesday evening. Nov.». Mrs.
Ola Kimble has charge of the t»r&lt;3gram. with Krjlogg Foundation•" rtwm- A pot luck tupper

AbouSu,lft’’
,nd
X" Winnie Feighner and daugh
MW®
AAf tor Wiles 14 Mttl He*. A. R. IdaUclous refreshmenu were
served/ter.
vonda. of
of Battle
Battle creek
Creek called
called I Mrs. Nettie Ragla and rtet^ter
re served.:
ter. Vonda.
Kuehn In evangelistic meetings for
The third performance given tn on
Mon__z Miss Demaria1 Hagertnan
Mon‘ | Ethel,
epent Thursday afternoon in
itTO
I Nashville's new school auditorium day.
Mr.
and Mrs.
chaa.
Harrington Lansing.
Mr.and mm. D&lt;n aarltnier spent »« r**tly enjoyed by •PJMWU-!
approxi-i r
------------—
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. b. Green mattly uo people from Nashville
Nashville spent Friday in Battle Creo's witn [ A short Thanksgiving program
I *and
vicinity. —
Thu
event—
was—
the Mr. and Mra.
Mrs Arthur Webb.
in Woodland.
”
------------tiw
r Wm be -jv®, nMt Bunday morning
1
"First
Annual
Amatsur
Program
’
*
.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bernie
Bchc
Bchwner of|to Sunday school
Noah Sherk ot Grand Rapids which was sponsored by the Junior «-•••- ------ Mra
■ -Mrs.
­
Battle Creek. -Mr. and
Roy'
7
came Wednesday to spend lhe win­
Kenneth Kelsey spent ,Bunday
class
under
the
supervision
of
Miss
Hanuuacksr and eon, Harold, of
ter with his daughter, Mra. Amok
Martha Zemke. The rural schools Kalamaaoo, Mr. and Mrs. Emeat: with friends in Battle Crook.
taking part in this program were
of Barryville, Mrs. Beni Mrs. Ella Kinnle la spending a
Mrs. W. W. Potter of East Lan- Mason. Norton. Quimby. Maple Golden
Waite and eon, J Inuni e of Pratt few days with her cousin, Mrs. Her­
klji| vttlted Thursday and Friday Grove Center, Barnes, Quailtrap
district, Mr. Monroe and Bert Row- bert Kinsman, tn Barryton.
with Mlsa Mae Potter.
and Belgh. The public Judged this lader ot Woodland spent Sunday at
Mrs. Ruby Barry of near Carlton
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Jones were group and a |5 prize wm received the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. Row- assisted with lhe work part of last
al Bsttle creek on buslnesa Thurs- by the Norton school under the lader tn
M, honor of Mrs. Rowlader's
leadership of June Ireland. The birthday.
____
prize went tn
to the third
third, '
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Thompson andi Nashville nrlze
daughters and Mrs. Ralph Olin fourth and fifth grade classes com­
CARLTON CENTER.
were calling on friends in Char­ bined which were under the leader­
Mr. and M« Jesse Altoft of Has­
ship of Miss French.
lotte Sunday.
tings were guests Bunday of the
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brunt of Bat­
tetter's sister. Mr. and Mrs. Col
MORGAFL
tle Creek were Bunday visitors of
Target.
Leiha Adkins is spending a week
the latter's father. Charles Norton.
Several from here attended the
Rogrr Sackett of western Slate or iwo in New York in company
„ir,,Tn-„ Kalamazoo,
-------------- , spent
-------------------Normal.
Saturday- with Mrs Homer Wade of Battle entertainment al Freeport M. E.
church given by the Freeport-Carl­
and Bunday with his parents. Mr. ', Creek.
and Mrs. Hale Backetl.
Nellie Wolf and family spent the ton Center young people's choir and
Miss Lena Maurer, who has been week end with her parents in by the Kendall sUte.s Friday eve­
ning.
ill with pneumonia is able to be Grand Rapids.
Friends and neighbors of Henry
around the house.
1 °Pnl Webb gave a miscellaneous
-Mrs. Flo Rodgers and aon. Max. shower at the home of her parents Williams are very glad to know he
of Bellevue visited Friday with Mrs tn honor of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Is some better from hla serious illWebb who were recently married.
Elizabeth McDerby.
ME and Mrs. Caryl Fuller have
Miss Margaret Vance of Charlotte Many beautiful and useful gifts
recently sold their farm and will
spent a few days with her grand­ were received.
Mr. and Mrs Harvey Trotter and •oon be moving in with the letter's
parents. Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Vance.
family
.of
fit.
Louis.
Mich.,
visited
parents.
Mr and Mrs. WM. Hale.
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Bell of Mid­
dleville and Ralph Blickle of Olivet Chas. Harrington and family Bun­
Mr. and Mrs. carl Brechcisen and
were callers at the W D. Wallace day.
• _ _ .
'
Jimmy
family ma
and Mie
the micrs
latter's momer.
mother. Mrs
Mrs.
?fr*’
' m ^!Ty i M,ry Bustance. and Mr. and Mrs
home Friday evening.
LTtt?
' M11Urd Brecheisen and son visited
Dr. and Mrs. Wetrich and chil­
□n last
liu-.i week and attended lhe
thr .
....
__
«...____
dren of Marcellus were Sunday ton
Mr. and Mra Theo. Bustance of
guests of Dr. and Mrs. Btewart Lof- shower given in honor of Mr. and Greenville Sunday.
Mrs. Arthur Webb Tuesday.
dahl.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Clark of
„
,
A contemporary
prophesies that
Mr. and Mrs. John Baas and Mrs.
ie present interest in the Tudor
BesJle Burkett of Battle Creek, vis­ Jackson and Mrs. Beatrice Knapp the
and
daughter F.lalne of Hastings period will have a startling effect on
ited Monday with their aunt. Mrs.
called
on
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J.
W.
Howard
fashions,
Bo
far.
however,
the man
Ida Wofte.
m the street remains unruffed.
Mr. and Mrs. William Davin and Sunday.
Mrs. Gertrude Oyster of Battle
Creek spent Bunday with Mr. and
Mrs. 8am Hamilton.
Mrs. C. T. Munro is spending
some time with her stater in Detroit.
Mrs. Carrie Johnson is caring for
Mrs. Id* Wolfe who is gaining
siovriy.
i
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hamilton and
Mr. and Mrs. Ard Decker and fam-1
iiv spent Sunday afternoon with the
former's brother, E. M. Hamilton,
and wife ot Yankee Springs.
Will Miller, who has not been well
for some time, underwent an opera­
tion for gall bladder trouble at Pen-1
nock hospital Monday. The opera­
tion was performed by Dr. Btewart
Lofdahl.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Northrop
took dinner with Mr. and Mrs.
George Ransom Bunday. They were
joined there by Mr. and Mrs. C. G.
Maywood of Albion and Donna
Northrop of Battle Creek.
Mrs. M E Comp and Miss Fergu­
son of Hastings spent Thursday
with Mrs. Laura Dollar and Mrs.
Ola Feighner.
Harley Bailey of Petoskey, who
has been assisting In revival meet­
ings tn Nashville and Maple Grove
tho past five weeks, left Monday tor ■
Riverton where he will assist Rev. j
T- Moyer. Harley U a very capable :
song leader.
Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Vance visited I
Bunday with their son. Dr. Alton ,
Vance, and family in Charlotte.
।
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hrcox were ■
Hastings visitors Thursday.
Misses Julia Martin and Donna I
Northrop of Battle creek spent
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs.
Monhrap .nd In U&gt;. ennln« .parm _,A d„„|
ty of seventeen from Battle Creek
'
came over for dinner and games.
I cleans and aufomotle ovardrtva • Nvw undanlvng
The C- O. class of tho Evangelical
.
.,
_
. . ,
church wm very pleasantly enter- ! ’•* o,,e‘ «'’• b,« ,00"'y •"»*««»-chair KvigM

SUnqcQ

BARGAIN
LONG niSTANt’5
arfalsoini
EVtP.i

�THE HASTINGS BANNED. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 19, 19M

FAC1B BIX

CHICAGO GOES HOLLYWOOD IN PHOTO PRODUCTION I Hn,,ingt H/g/, &amp;/mw,

DEER HUNTERS RETURN
FROM NORTHERN TRIP

were opened this year
Gcar.-e Sumner, conservation of-

nrar by woods

Wexford county.

Activities

to growers, haa neatly 3300 biLd.cl*
MIDBI.KVILIXMrs. Della Allen spent last week in his cellar.
Frederick Onibger spmt the week
। ry county alone which is the larg- assisting in the care of her cousin.
end at home with the folks, return­
I est number sold in several yean.
Woods In Years
ing to school late Sunday night.
Reports from allover the state indi­ pie.
•
Qcer hunters are already return- cate Uie army of deer hunters to be
The Ladles Reading Club was
big from Uielr trip* with quota lhe largest in some lime.
pleasantly entertained by a demon­ to move this week to lhe home of
Some hunter i were only gone for, «tration at their last meeting In the. thr late Mr. and Mrs. Clanton on
filled. It h not an uncommon sigh:
lhe north county line.
to »♦&lt;• cars ko throu-’h town with a day or xo but those going lo the Pythian hall.
-Upper
Nearly nil of our hunters are In
deer strapped on the running
board. Peninsula will stay' the full
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY
l*er seem to be plentiful as a num- length of the season.
the northland looking for a deer.

)2SS &amp;

D.«r WnUftd; Th. Ur,.«

'

Mr. Reinhardt was chairman of
Cogram arrangements for the Armtlce Day assembly given by the
i history department to Central audi। lorlum. DeForest Walton was pre। siding chairman and was assisted
by Clara Bush. Donald Doxey, Mar­
ian-Hewitt and Robert Reed. Rep­
l resentatives of the various patriotic
I organizations of the city and a Civil
I war veteran were-in attendance.

Humber Of Hunters In

The 1B3G football squad will be
the gtiexLs of the Haatlngi Brother­
hood al their Father and Son ban। quel next Monday night.

■k V&amp;hanJuq
iVing ★
wutwmg

1

FOODSALE

The Social ActivlUai Club under
the direction of Miss Michael will
have charge of the assembly Friday
morning.

C. THOMAS STORES Selection of FINE FOODS
FOR EARLY THANKSGIVING FOOD BUYING
PREPARE FOR "BIG MEAL DAYS" WITH A
SELECTION OF THESE FOODS. A LARGE
AND COMPLETE ASSORTMENT AWAITS
YOU. PROMPT, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUL
SERVICE. BIG SAVINGS HERE FOR YOUR
THANKSGIVING DINNER.

1A/AI AJHTC
VoHLiWId

diamond n0. i

NEW CROP

PECANS STUART, GRADE
ALMONDS NEW CROP
BRAZILS RICH, MEATY

PUMPKIN S3 25
PUMPKIN PIE SPICE

CURRANTS

citato

IDEAL SEEDED
15 OUNCE PKG.

RAISINS

FANCY
SEEDLESS

Sn’

15c

SU25c
17c
19c
14c

CAN

CAN
CAN

PINEAPPLE^?-15
FANCY SLICED PINEAPPLE
PEACHES
SLICED YELLOW CLING
PEARS ROYAL KEIFFERS
MARASCHINO CHERRIES

10c

CAN

PURE JELLY
3 8 OUNCE
PRESERVES.

25‘
iu&gt; 18

CHEESE
FINEST MILD
Colby. Lb.—

OOc
UC

!
'
I
I

afternoon Other guests Were Mrs.
SherwOud. Mrs. M. A- Lombie and
Mr* Kenilh McIntyre.
The afternoon meeting was called
to order at 2.30 and after the
necessary business had been trailsarted. Mrs J. F Mohler introduced
Mr. Delaino. program chairman of
Hie State Federation of Garden
Club*, who in a most charming
manner gave a homey, informal talk
of the achievements of her home
garden club In Allegan She uba
dlsplnjed andA-xpluiiied how to
make at horn-.'XattraellvC Christmas
decora lions'srua b&lt;ix wrappings at
little cost. She also told of lhe inleresl and profit enjoyed through

dub

and winch might well

The first year they featured the
sal-.- ot »r«*.t:h« and garlands; the
second year table decorations, one
c’jH-ciiilly intriguing being a chilli's
table, tlie decorations of which con-

lug Christmas gifu wrapped in an , George Altoft in Hostings Friday
attractive ord unique manner. These evening,
wrappings and bouquets may be1 Mr. —
and Mrs Edw. Walters great­
purchased at the bazaar which will ly appreciate the kindness of their
be held In lhe Community Club on neighbors In helping them raise
Dec. 4th beginning at 2 30. In the their barn. There were 39 present
evening thr beautiful sl.de. "Magic lo assist with the work and enjoy
Winter" will be shown.
the bountiful dinner.
Mrs. Delano also explained ’how
...
Mrs._______________________
Claude A. Hammond.. Rase
any Garden club may become fed- Marie and Robert and David Rob­
erated. and the advantages gainedinson were In attendance at lhe
by being thus affiliated.
4-H club banquet ut Fuller hall in
After a period of questions and Hastings Friday evening.

COOKIES 42'
4 C
IO

Chocolate Covered
Grahams, Lb.

c

&amp;? 19c

15

territories and a federal district
which embrace* the City of Mexico. I
Tha country, laid across tha United
States, would stretch from Naw
York to Salt Lake City. ♦

POULTRY •
SEASONING

8TATKME.NT &lt;&gt;F THB OWNERSH1T.
MANAGEMENT. CIRCULATION, ETC..
rkucikf:i&gt; hy the a«t or con

SAGE

/

Leaf or Ground

H. 1

15c
10c

No. 2'/2 CAN

STONY POINT.
Miss ChrysUl Thomas of Hasting!
put on a delightful program at the
P. T. A. meeting Friday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert VanderJagt en­
tertained relative# from Pewamo o

Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Wellman went
to Jackson last Thursday to visit
| their daughter. Mrs. R. G. Keys.

2CANS 25c
OUNCE BOTTLE

v
u oma Jean Garrison and readings
by
by Ruth Munton. Annetta Pierce.I
Margaret Huminel. Bernice Cairns'
and Lenora Pew. a pantomime
"Wraggie Taggle Gypsies" sung by
MIm Jean alerum and portiayed by
Doris Gillespie. Clara Bush. Esther
Smith and Wlllo Jones and a ballad
presented by members of lhe English]
V class were Interesting features of]
the program.

Howard Dernond left Thursday
for Arizona lo be gone for the wm-

TUNA FISH.
4 f-&lt;
Light Meet, con I w
SHRIMP,
Fancy, wet pack

Basket ball season started Mon­
day. Five members of the varsity
and several of lhe second team who
completed lhe season last year
turned out. Boys who did not finish
' last season reported on 'Tuesday.

Tne boys held their assembly tn
i!&gt;e-~gymnasium Monday. Nov. 10,
| with Robert Henney chairman,
i Football lettermen
gave
short
slste'd of all edible material'.; the answers the club adjourned at 4 30 talks followed by a word from Mr.
third year a display of Christmas I every member grateful to Mrs. De- Brozak. aulstent coach. Mr. Bcntrees of all colors and descriptions iano for making this meeting one
.°* J00.
“nd lhe **3'
was featured, a most interesting of the most enjoyable of lhe year — । proachlng basket ball season. I^st
one- being made by a lady of Oer-. Alice DeVries. Secy.------------------------------------ s„bas't,ft
Irltormen—An­
num descent It was trimmed with
----------------- -- --------------------B*U- Struble. Rxnswn. Gladstone
strings ot popcorn
cranbeTries. THREE CORNERS
"nj tI,ronaltle
a
candies and hom -made cookies.
| ram-r wallers end dnuohier i 1,(1 L}‘e ai4elnb&gt;y
with &lt; abort
ana spent
daughter,
These exhibits described, were poElmer
Mna Of Walters
BBll|e Creek
Sun- ।1 «neecli bv
y Mr -Taylor
* not only interesting, but very profit- | dny wllh
parent, Mr. and Mr*. I The teachers meet for carol prac-|
able as well, the last year over J50 E,jW. Walters.
having been realized frOm the sale
—’ ■
- -...
II lice every Monday evening in pr«p-i
oration for their annual Christmas
of articles.
concert.
ach year ters. Rclha and Ruth of Bancroft
'
&lt;r • •
Thr Allegan club also- each
Monday morning the girls held!
s;&gt;onxors a flower show. charging and Lester Larabee of Hastings.
hus tealMrs Re
th Cook iGlarlvs
an admission of 15 cents thus
real­
Seth
'Gladys Walters)
Wellers) ' their assembly under lhe ui.
direction
izing enough through the year U&gt; ■.and Mrs. Louis Everdeen of Lan- of ml-ls Rowe. The glrte" glee club'
secure high grade programs for their ,sing visited In lhe Edw. Wallers entertained with two numbers; there
club
home Tuesday and Wednesday.
| was tt violin duet by Phyllis NewtonIllis year they are featuring at , w
„ ______________
Mrs.
Edgar Pineld.________
^Odelto^ Dora ] and Norma Jacobson accompanied
the.r Christmas bazaar, winter flow- nnd Edgar. Jr., attended a mlsccl- ' by Virginia Jacobaon;
er bouquets and the service of hav- iuneotu shower for Mr. and Mr*. i Lower Thome room*;’ a clarinet aolo

SANDWICH

2

PEAS FANCY SMALL PETIT POIS
ASPARAGUS MICHIGAN GREEN TIPS
NIBLETS FAMOUS WHOLE KERNEL CORN

i —r----------------------------------------------[ THOft-XAFFLE GARDEN &lt; LI B.
। a very enjoyable luncheon was
given by tlte otfleers ot the Thornuppk- Garden club on Thursday.
'Nov 12 at the home of Mrs. Frank
! Andrus, complimenting Mrs Earl
' Di-lano of Allegan, speaker of the

j
'

10c

FANCY WHOLE GRAIN
GOLDEN BANTAM

25c

LBS

OUNCE PKG.

CITRON. LEMON, ORANGE

vUillM

10c

3

OFc
tv

Unpitted,
3 pounds—

12c

a OUNCE PACKAGE

Thia bit of action anaoood In tho ohotograohlo dopartmont of Montgomary Ward. Chicago, la faintly

FRESH NEW CROP

MEAT3Z25c

MINCE
FRUIT PEEL

DATES

7c

1 OUNCE PACKAGE

IB

A

22c
27c
28c
19c

A complete schedule of rehearsaU

for the next four weeks has been is­
sued lo members of lhe two casts ot
lhe senior play "New Fires." ThH
Includes a special vacation rehearsal
on the Friday following Thanksgiv­
ing. Moving pictures are to be laken Thursday
evening.
Excerptsirom all three acts are being select­
ed and every member of both enu
will be seen. The Otsego seniors arc
presenting this same play Friday
evenbig of this week, and as the
members of the Hastings clau are
I anxious to see it. Mr. Becker will
' lake a group to Otsego.

I'ABEE - FLUFF

CAKE FLOUR.
5 lb. bag —

O|-c
CiW

Swansdown. Pkg. 25c
tiaily i«i'i

CRANBERRIES co* otuoow
SWEET POTATOES
&gt; ^am
GRAPEFRUIT TEXAS
FLORIDA ORANGES

l».

sauce

seedless

hewcboe

jucs ounce

KARO SYRUP

10
5

us.
"OH

ooz.

19c

25c
19c

PANCAKE FLOUR SS”.‘
MILK evaporated sunshine brand

FINEST BLEND One
Pound —
bit.

5 ti, 2Oc
3 CANS 22c

OLIVES
Fancy Queent. qt. 35c
Stuffed, 6 ox. jar 15c
PALAlJ bllAU.

Pickles, Qt. jar

27c

Fruit Cocktoil.
Libby's No. 1 cn.

SALAD DRESSING
SURF QFT

J^^eamv

GINGER CAKE MIX
CRISCO EINEST SHORTENING

a
duffs

27c
__ se-

i« ounce pkg.

3 LB. CAN 59&lt;

1 LB. CAN

.22c
22C

c THOMAS STOR ES'
111 WEST IT ATI min

“What shall I
do with these?”

23c

3 £ 23c

S

MISSION INN

COFFEE

HASTINCt, MICH,

CRANBERRY
SAUCE, can—

4
1U
4 -Wc

1 1

IRRADIATED

PET MILK
OEC

3 TALL
CANS —

CO

ter-. Aiaranin u&gt;.
Mleb.

ousekeepers always find a few

H

odds and ends “ left over-” WHAT
SHALL YOU DO WITH THEM? . . .
SELL THEM OF COURSE. Sell them
for ready cash instead of lugging them
up to the attic. An inexpensive Want
Adv. will turn the trick, just

h.n i. evok. n..tin«., m
H. Cock Holl»n-.“‘f J-

Thi£

Phone Miss Adtaker
At Phone 2415

•nbratlnc .1

HASTINGS BANNER

CANDY
Chocolate Stan, lb. 15c

Orange Slices, lb.

10c

a1”'

22e

&gt;•'

Ultb.

WANT-ADS
‘ill,1

.^XsteA'

�ttontMt, Kbvaro it, itw

School

Boulder Dam Torrents Ffoni the Air

WARDS INVITES YOU TO ITS GRE

AND HOME FURNISHINGS DISPLAY

GRAND

sing selectboth cull

les in Home Furnishings! See

lay Friday

OPENING
&gt;bly Friday

Here is the scene from the air as 3.800.000 cubic feet of water
rushes from 1: Bouldir Dam outlets eacl) minute, generating Elec­
tric power for western cities The giant federal project was put
into full operation when President Roosevelt pressed, a buttoo in
Washington. D C„ on the opposite side of the continent.

Clarksville and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Scott spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Slater.
Duane Gray of Lake Odessa and
John E. Brake and family spent
Sunday at John F Brake’s.
Rev. Vcrn Hullibcrgcr who works
at Pontiac spent over Sunday with

{iris

held

deer hunting.
Several of the young people of
the church gave John E. Brake a
Aiirpri.se on his birthday which oc­
curred Thursday, November 12.
A goof! crowd attended the W. M.
A. at Mrs. George Near’s last ThursBaltimore township and Mr. and
Mrs. George Gunisey called at Em­
ery Kimes Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Benedict and
Joanne of Ionia and Vaughn. Gelg-

guest-s of their parents, Mr. and
Mra. H W. Geiger. Bucl Grice and
Deward strong of Clarksville were
Sunday visitors. They took Vaughn
back to Kalamaxoo Bunday evening.
, Mr. ana Mrs. ui.ircnce iwmp.ana
'Joyce. Mra. Jane Kime and Mrs.
Emery Kime were In Ionia Tuesday.

Every onc is invited lo our Open House! Listen to an European reception on Ward’s
famous “Movie Dial” radio! Iron a handkerchief on Ward’s irone r (and keep the hand­
kerchief). See lhe demonstration of die acid-resisting finish on Ward’s Supreme Dinette
and Occasional Furniture—enjoy the wonderful desserts made in a Montgomery Ward
electric refrigerator! In addition there arc many other demonstrations which are un­
usually interesting and* informative. Don’t miss visiting Ward’s Open House tomorrow
night!
I

Store Stay) Open
TILL 10 P. M.
Tomorrow (Fri.)
Night

WARD’S TOY
DEPARTMENT
This Friday Night
Everybody Welcome!

BE SURE TO SEE THE "SURPRISE WINDOW" AT WARD'S

OPEN HOUSE SPECIALS

Save at These Sale Prices!
sher Show

A BIG 3 lo 1 ROOM SIZE

Cireulnt «u

Kitchen Comfort at A Low Cott

CABINET SINK

22 os

HEATH;
Ward Washer
Built-in humidifier moistens
the heated air. Clean heat; no
gas leaks. Joints are fume­
light. Fitted doers and draft
register‘give complete fire con­
trol Finished iu walnut porce­
lain enamel Save at Wards!

Compact .. . every­
thing where it be­
long* . . . all-In-ona.
Large drain board
20 by 20 Inches. 42inch sink of cast

with Motor-driven Pump!

ctumcL Cabinet big
—two storage com­
partments. Shelf.

Mr and Mrs. Ike Lelnaar spent
Sunday afternoon near Banlleld.

ighl.
erJagt an-

The funeral of Mrs. Della Web­
ster was held at the Bunnell church
on Saturday afternoon. She had
. ■reached the age of 79 years and
jr four months and was loved by all

Exceeds 179.50 to
389.50 washers in per­
formance by teat!
Ovenire tub holds20*»
more clothes 1 Drain
pump empties tub,ends
lifting of water! Wards
Triple-Action washee
cleaner, faster, safer:

’“WARDS MEW!,

Floyd Morford and family and

1 Gyrator water action
2. Washbowd-ociionhrb
3 Lovell odjvrtobleprerswe-deanier, big baf-

Hastings shopping Saturday.
Mr. and Mra. Allen Griffen were
Sunday dinner guests ot Mr.’and

$34.95

VAtU^

GASENGINE

well spent Thursday with her sla­
ter. Nellie, who relumed
home
with her for a couple of days’ visit.
Linden and Merle Collison at­
tended the football game at Detroit
on Saturday.

MARTIN CORNERS.
Mrs. Eva Trautweln Is visiting
her daughter, Mr». James Tyler, ui
Woodland while Mr. Tyler is deer
hunting tn the north woods.

AIRLINE
RADIOS
45»5

Cogswell and Mra. Millie FUher
spent Wednesday of last week with
the latter’s niece, Mrs. Reva Shants.
near Vermontville.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Barry and
John Hill of the Center rogd left
Saturday morning . for near Kal­
kaska on a deer hunting trip.
Lloyd Cogswell of East Lansing
waa a’Bunday evcnfpg caller at Mr.
And Mrs. Orr Fisher’s.
There will be a pot luck Thanks­
giving supper at the school house
Tuesday evening, November 21.
Bring tabic sen-ice and good things
Lo eat. AU arc cordially invited.
There will also be a program after
the supper which will be at 7

SH DoWn and li
Small Carrying Charge

in ¥3 Timel

4495 I

Compare Wards Standard with ironera at
130 more! Automatic pressure at touch of
knea or finger-tip contrpll Pressing lever,
built-in ventilated motor, folding table top
and end leaf I Ask for free demonstration.

Odf Famous M-W Electric

Refrigerator
G'V
ftft®
3
UJ Su.
(w» DOWN!
*70 MO
2P/.c.i

WU"dl
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

PRESSURE

»5 DOWN!

The Fair at the church basement
.'last Thursday evening. sponsored
by the Young Peoples’ cliaS. wm
well attended and tho booths all

Un®$, and a
Mlles Stum

1ROXER With

Limited timd didyl AiWr edvartd
in 100% Angora mohair I • Extra

We'vi sold thouunda at Wards
yigtjlar low pricel Now reduced
151 Few available, so hurry I

Intwiot light
Porcelain interior
DjIui eiterior

• Plvr-powwsd
• Proved economy
• Fait freering . r'

MONTGOMERY WVt
118-124 SOUTH JEFFERSON

HASTINGS

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1», 1»36
MILO.
CLOVERDALE.
' Mr. and Mr*-’ Oeorge McKibbin at
BELTON.
Tnataad nf the usual home meetMr. and Mrs. Clayton Peck of Yankee Springs will celebrate their
Mm. Edward Lowry is visiting her ina'olUhe
Instead of
usual home meet | BaUh- creek
cwk spent
Jpenl Bunday with |[golden
H. the
L^C^L^TIm^day
golden wedding anniversary at the
father, at Clawson during her hus­
8WU
'
band'* absence deer hunting.
I-.u-.d ButpM has gone north to
i.un: direr, but Von Dunn did not
welcomed al the plant, we witnessed hunt deer; Lester Monica. Grover
a food demonstration under Ute su­ Davenixirt. Harry Pennels, Roas
;;tms.
Tuesday. November 10th was El- pervision of one of lhe helpers. We Pierce and Frank Barnard
Miss Irene Hosken. who has
n»i r
Reynolds'
seventy-fourth were then taken Into various de­
birthday and he was most happily partments and moving pictures been visiting her parents Ur Mlnnesola, returned Saturday accom-j
surprised by his children coining •howed the workings at Hie plant
panled
by her lister. Laura.
. ,
—----------------with well Idled ba.-.keu and a nice gave the ^history of the corn from
Mary Lou Kahlo of Orangeville ■
MOTICB TO ORXDITOR*.
birthday cake lo help him cele­ Ute seed lo Ute finished product of
Barer
brate liie day. Tho^e present were com flakes and the shlppuig there­ spent the week &lt;md with her cousin.
Mary Joyce pierce.
! A'tb7*autur af tha mui« of
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Reynolds and son of. Then we visited Ute coffee-hag
Mrs. Minnie Penneh and daughter I w-.kos Burp...
I Russell: Mr. and Mrs. Merle Rey- , department
--------------------and-------saw „
it ground.
and MPi- Martha Chamberlain spent! Natire ‘•.‘‘•’•J’’’ «&lt;•»» ‘h»‘'
nolds and baby; Mr and Mrs Percy packed, sealed and placed
Bunday with Mn Pennels' parents
bean .^lo«M f«" rein
Solomon and daughter and Ernest tons. At
... ___________________
noon a delicious
luncheon

EIGHT O'CLOCK

O1DU ro* PUBLICATION.

i rtraw- -

LEGAL NOTICES |

The World’f Largett
Selling Coffey

3-lb.
bag

FLOUR
*1.49
IONA FLOUR
PILLSBURY FLOUR
GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
SUNNYFIELD FLOUR
SPLENDID FLOUR

24&amp;!b- 75c
“ft-*1.05
24’i-lb. C«
bag
In 05
24&gt;/a-lb.
24‘i-lb.
bag

Campbell's

25'
25
29'

cam

TOMATO SOUP
Keyko

lb*.

MARGARINE
Pink

tall
cam

SALMON
Beet

25-lb.

SUGAR
Ann Page

28-oz.

PORK and BEANS
White

25‘

No. 2

CORN
Golden Bantcm

CORN
Whitehouse

MILK
Smoked
4 to 6-lb.

At.

DAILY EGG FEED
SCRATCH FEED
EGG MASH
16% DAIRY FEED
24% DAIRY FEED
OYSTER SHELLS

100 lbs.

*2.25

100 lb*.

*2.49
*1.69
*1.89

100 lb*.
100 lb*.

25&lt;:

100 lb*.

NOW. THEREFORE by lit

AT BARGAIN PRICES!

Best Chuck Cut*

You can buy good unused transportation at prices that will surprise you.
wc give you a list of some of our bargains.

Roasting

CHICKENS

No. 1288 1929 MODEL A TUDOR ..

Armour’s Star
lb.

SAUSAGE

The New 1937 FORD V-8 Cars Are Here

USED CARS

Rib or Loin End

Beef

ROAST

was served at small tables centered
Mr. Rodgers and daughter. Lydia,
by a beautiful frlut piece.
motored to Menton Sunday to visit
Mr. and Mrs. F. Gilbert enter­
tained from Friday till Mdnday relatives. Mrs. Rodgers, who had
been visiting there returned home
morning the former's brother and
wife. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Gilbert with them.
Revival meetings will be held
of Bloomington. ILL
Mra. Mildred Scobey of Battle next week at the Cloverdale church
Creek spent Sunday afternoon a*, with special music every evening.
Mrs. Eva Davenport, who has
home.
been staying with her daughter.
E. Quick and son. burning
Ferris. and
Ui^Tkidmore^e
XrAri;
“ Charlotte, re­
NOTICE OP ARANTQNMENT OP
home if her son there.
UIORWAY.
Mrs. Ike Johnson was a Kalama­ northern Michigan. F. Bmllh of tu™cd h0”nirv.r^n
Pral-ievi'le
with
them
IIMr.
and Mrs. Grant Dickerson
zoo shopper Saturday.
TBlrlevlUe went
went _wiur
with them
’1 Sunday
,h.'ju
prauleVille
went
mem.
with ofMr
and
Mra/ n-U
Mr
and
Mr;.
Johnson
of
Nebraska
***
“
'
M
'
.^
‘
d
uu,,..
Miss Esther Munger has returned
George
Whittemore
Of
Delton.
‘o lhe L'-'omud home alter spend­ were callers of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Penneh enter­
ing several days In lhe hospital In Friday. Mrs. Johnson is a niece of
tained
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Stafford
Ann Arbor for observation.
Harry Leonard, former owner of tlie
of Kalamazoo Sunday.
The teachers of tin- southwest tour Gilbert farm.
Mrs. Bertlui Day Ln company with
townships of which Miss Marie: Mr. and Mrs. Ted
.... Tuck and chllNeuschaefer has charge held their dren of Lacey visited their mother, other relatives from Flint, spent the
week end with her daughter. Mrs.
monthly meeting a: Orangeville' Mrs. E. Quick. SundayMargaret Owens, and family.
. t!:UO
Monday night
j Mrs Ferris Quick and children
and,.....
| &lt; &lt;IU m
Mra. Grover
Davenport
----The teachers of the Dclton-Kel- [ are staying with the former s sister,
logg school gave a dinner party In Frances Doster, at Prairieville while daughter. Helen, spent Friday wlUi ,'uah‘r
Mrs.
Nettle
Casey
of
Hastings.
lhe music room at lhe schoolhouse, Mr. Quick U up north.
Mi.
and
Mr*.
Wallace
M.Calium'
Tuesday night In honor of Miss
Mr. and Mrs. C- F Moreau of Au­
I M.irquita Hentern, a Thanksgiving gusta were afternoon visitors of the entertained the latter's sister and
bride-to-be. She was presented with former's sister. Mrs. H. J Flower ' husband. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Mark...
land niece and husband. Mr. and
r. lovely gill.
and Bernice.
' Mrs. Weldon of betrolt. over the
I Several of our high school boys
Row Norwood represented the I
. with Mr She-Khelm. Mr. Donavon Kellogg School In a county wide | week end.
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Waugh enand Mr middles attended lhe foot­ amateur contest sponsored bv tlie
Kalamaaoo county p. T A. Eleven |I U-ruilned Mr. nnd Mrs. Wm. coru-r
ball game at Anti Arbor Saturday.
| and son and Mrs Jean Snyder of
Mr nnd Mrs. Eberiing Bosnia nnd school* /were represented. Ross ap- 1
|
Kalamazoo
Sunday.
Cleo Pennock of Kalamazoo were peared In a novelty song.
A. D.
Helen Davenport spent the week
Mr. a)&gt;d Mrs. M. Bradfield and.
callers a*, jolxn Adams' Thursday
end with the Lloyd Davis family
afternoon
'
____
___ __Sunday
____ _ _________
Jack spent
afternoon In | of Kalamazoo.
Prof o C Gregg of Lansing will Kalamazoo
be at lhe Delton-Kellogg Agricul -I w a Spaulding and Mrs. Wllccx i
NORTH EAST CARLTON.
I
tural school on Friday afternoon of ! were Hastings visitors Friday,
tills week al 2 o’clock to give his I Last Saturday Mrs. Wilcox enter- 1 Leslie Daniels returned from the It Mart'
•s’°"7
first lesson on landscaping. Every -: talned her son and family from Bai- north Sunday evening with a two
hundred pound buck.
I jjj" ’k&lt;‘
one interested is Un ited to attend.: He creek.
Miss Ruth Richards of Niles spent. Miss Helen Skidmore visited her I
Saturday night and Sunday with I sister-in-law. Mrs. Arthur Skidmore, family visited their uncle. Arthur ;
,
ner mother. Mrs Blanche Richards | over the week end and until Mon-, Stairs Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Decker visited &lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Powell ot Has- day morning when she retarded lo
Mr. and Mrs. Waller Lower and 1
I tings were also Sunday guests of; her school al cedar Creek.
family of Lanning Sunday.
' Mrs. Richards and family.
,
----------------- ---------------- ■—
Mrs Dunnavan began work MonWEST HOPE.
Mr. and Mrs. F.lwyn Hayward and i
day morning Ln a shop Ln Kalama-1 Tlie Community club will meed son of „
Delton visited her parents. ]
i ZOo
.
I this Friday evening at lhe home of Mr. an
d
and
Mrs. Scott Lydy and j
Mr. and Mrs. John Harrington1 Mr and Mrs. Everett McCallum.
Vaughn -Sunday.
I and Marvin spent Fundcv with Mr
Our teacher. Mr*. Lena Lnubaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cole are the
and Mrs. Howard prnnock at Gull &gt;' attending classes at the W S.,T. parents of a nine pound son bom
lake.
•
| College In Kalamazoo every Satur- , November 4.
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Eddy an- day.
There was
nounce the birth of a son. Kenneth
Th..----- no school Tuesday and
new furnace was
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
Edwin ut Nichols hospital. Batik- Wednesday as
Stats ut MkliKan. th. PruVale Cum
Ivivtit, on Wednesday morning, Nov being InstalledGn the schoolhouse.
II
' The
Thebrush
brush cutlers worked onm.our
’ Last
’ t 'xweuk and erected SOme l-ruluita
The Senior class ot lhe Delton- roads
Kellogg Agricultural school is span- more signs.
Several large
truck loads of onI :ormg an annual which is lu; be
Is
.-...w "Maroon Reflection." T"
The Ions
called
” ‘ leave' our neighborhood nearly
&gt;t«u Ucon.po.M-d of Editor-in-chief, eveiv day for storage ut Neely's or
,it*brlh Allrn, bilnur.
I Kathryn Horton; business manager,! cars on the c. K. &amp; 3 tracks This
Aelrlh-rt r-irtrlrtit h&gt;
May-belle Howard, athletic editor, is a brand new- industry around
urt Ilia prtilion prayii
BMter MacLeod: art editor. Robert here, and there are still many
&lt; t-ir hearing un lu&lt;
Louden; club editor. Rex Smith; pieces of undeveloped muck
We
Stuart fl. arnl Ju.lar &lt; t
ORDER roa PUBLICATION.
music editor. Eloysc Cable; and jok - prophesy that inside of five years
j editor. Janette OnskiU
J truck gardening will be our fore­
,
Eleven 4-H dub members accom-.mosl concern.
------------.
....
i pained l-y Mi -s Mary Roush, tlicir Mr nnd Mrs. Robert Lord and '• *»erw«.y
ileadej. and several parents attend- three children of Rutland called Ln
n i« forthre «
rd lhe 4-H Achievement Day pro-. this vicinity Sunday.
' ii.-r»..r h- «l«»
spent
Sunday .at'
«f thl* wl
gram and- -banquet....
Friday ...
night... tn Russen
----------Holmes
—
.
is home
home In
Ln Pontiac.
Pontiac.
I (’,nrrth, '‘lulunt.
II. itoetrr.
Hastings. Four of our girls won ills
and "ii»
honor*. Kathryn Horton as a sev- , Revival meetings are being held (
en’.h year club worker gels a free at Ute church evenings this week
'rar ropy.
trip to Chicago Thanksgiving week excepting Saturday.
Mildred Su
to attend the National 4-H Club!
o&lt;Mrrnw»a&lt;r *s»irrf Am
I*
Council as she was the best nil
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND
I
around club girl In Barry county.
Mr- and Mrs. Roy Oaks and chll- I
Kathryn Wtbalda will be her al- dren spent Sunday with their
•nj wife. ol thr eitr Of Destines. Barre
ternate.
Jane- rusts
Ann Otto
daughter
^,rSn °ey I
Count.. Mlehl»sn. tn HONK OWNEKV
.rtuuic, juik
w.sv win
-in go to —
--- --- —- - -. meeting
.. . . at . .. TVinglno
LOAN CORPORATION. • OoryornllM
4-H Club work
Lansing*'
^°!,lglniS ohH famllv
famlly nf
of BoWtnS I
for having the highest marks In lhe Mini
1 *’
canning food preparation club and ; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Havens were
Naomi Pennock will be her alter­ Sunday guests of their daughter ।
. and husband. Mr. and Mrs. Howard ]
nate.
1 Johnson of Hickory Corners.
,
| Mr. and Mrs. Albert Nash/ and •
MARTIN CORNERS.
1 children of Hastings were Sunday
Nov. 12 Letter.
ROTIOZ MORTGAGE BALK
Frank Cogswell and daughter. 1visitors in lhe home of Mr. and Mrs.
Annabelle, of Hastings were Salur- Jim Wilcox.
day afternoon callers at Orr Fish- ’ The following local men left last
..
Wfek for various northern points
cr's..
r,
Clare Trautweln of near Morgan deer hunting: W. H. Oils. Harry,
--- - .. ... ...... IIIF. ...rr.
men.
visited his grandmother. Mrs. Eva Clem. Robert Wilcox. Forrest John- 1-----------------------------------------------------°«'NKRS' MUN COR
I Trautweln. Sunday.
son and John Lord.
•
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY
I'ORATIOS. • (rrnorstlon orrnntred un

AND WE ARE CLOSING OUT OUR STOCKS OF

Pork Loin

ROAST

Donald R. tisnte

Sampson, all of Cressey and Mr
and Mrs. Clifford Kahler and two
sons of Delton.
Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Wertman
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Johnson at Yorkville.
Mrs. George Eddy received word
Wednesday morning that her sister.
Mrs. Ella Scott, at Grandville had
suffered a hard stroke of paralysis

49‘

PICNICS

*•&gt; “

roll

OYSTERS

particularly

rtloo to tha hlih- . et Herrs,
tlaaa drier (hod In 1 described

WAS

NOW

$125.00

$ 95.00

No. 1292 1928 MODEL A FORDOR

125.00

95.00

No. 1277 1932 FORD V 8 FORDOR

250.00

195.00

395.00
No. 1218 1934 FORD V-8 DELUXE Fordor 425.00

345.00

No. 1274 1934 FORD V-8 TUDOR

Solid Pack

Below

365.00

i Weal k&gt;U
s.riH

Several other models to choose from. These car* will move fast at those prices so
come early. Your old car will serve as a down payment. Liberal terms on balance.

i * P FOOD STORES
W. Caah WPA Cm**

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
FORD PRODUCTS

Phone 2121 . HASTINGS

Ranta Tao Wnl. Tawttihlp ot Ot
villa Merer Count?. Mkhlaaa."

DitZl
1017
HOME OWNRI
OWNERS*'
CORPO
..OMR
m, WAN
RATION. MarjxKi

Dated: October lath. 1*1*.
HOME OWNERS* LOAN CORPORATION. Mot
ol»"“ D

MlrhUaa,

BANNER WANT ADYS. PAY

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                  <text>L

THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR
rlK

,SE

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26,1936

12 PAGES

MOVIE STUDIOS
Lical Business Firms- Factories Mfflf REQUEST
H INTERESTING Receive
?ec.urit)' Fon,“
16858794

I WOODLAND BANK
PAYS 95 PER CENT

SECTION ONE—PACES 1 to 8

TE1CHS' CLUB
SPONSORS COURSE

0(111011111111116
RLIll ID

APPEAL FOR JELLY, JAM
OR MARMALADE.nUUbn

=. . . . . . FOUND NOT 01

James
Barker,
Receiver,
Legion
Auxiliary
Sending
Paying Sixth Dividend
Same To The Otter
To Depositors
Lake Billet
Twenty-Five Hundred Workers
M-G-M USES RESERVOIR
NEW LAW DEMANDS ALL
Am.nc.„ u,a,„ AUI1iur, u JUDOB McBUK HAS DI.
James L. Barker, receiver of the | COMMUNITY FORUM TO
Woodland State bank, announces u
FOR MARINE SCENES
CONSIST OF THREE
making a campaign for Jelly, marAre Listed in City oF Hastings
PHYSICIANS TO RE­
CIDED THE FIBH
20 per cent dividend, which was NTTMRPPQ
1 mala de. apple butter or jam to be
IN PICTURES
Tuesday and Wednesday of this • his number, which he Is supposed to
PORT BIRTHS
NUIUiJCKB
|
(enl
t0
Otter Lake feUlet. a
CASE
payable starting on November 24 1
week
ln hL’ po^f^!on
This Is the sixth dividend and ’
home for children maintained by ]
ww* the
UK local post office employees
postmaster Field says that the
makes a total of 95 per cent paid.! FIRST IS REINALD
VISIT LOCATION OF
are busy distributing the second ■;। clerks
“
d
‘
“
“
“
’
i
COULD
NOT
USE FOUR
STIFF
PENALTY
FOR
All dividends have been paid from r,nai
ntimHLU
at the office wlU assist em­
LARGE'TELESCOPES form 111 lhe
up ot the eoc,ttl ■ ployees in filling out the blanks. A
WERRENRATH, SINGER Members and any others, who. BLUE GILLS TO CONVICT
FAILURE TO COMPLY collections and the remaining as­
Q**urltv program.
norThis
rT'HI&lt; form
tnrm Is
In th?
tH.fc 1window will be opened In the lobby
_______
Security
sets are not pledged or encumbered.
might wish to donate one glass or
z. .__________ , application of the employee for hta 1and If necessary the lobby and the
bank was closed al the time rj- Frederick
Stamm And more of JeUf. Jam or marmalade, are'' Officer Geo. Sumner Follow*
Sixty Cities, Catalinn. Islands account number and is returnable &lt;office of the postmaster will be open Old Age Pensions And Other of This
the bank holiday and the re- ur* *rcaer‘cn
requested to bring It to thr^Legion,
Upton Close Are Other
Oan Be Seen From
r&gt;ec 5. a block of numbers beginning ।evenings until all forms are turned
ceiver was placed In charge In
rooms next Thursday evemhg. Dec.,
Acts Make Buch Cer­
ed Law—Judge Holds
al 8 000 hai becn assigned lo Has- IIn. Mr. Field says the work to be
March. 1934. Surely the depositors
3. at the regular meeting or on the I
Two Speakers
Blgnai rolnt
, Ung* employees.
1done by the postal Department for
tificate Necessary
Warrant Necessary
have every reason to be thankful i
day Of the Christmas bazaar. Sat-1
Los Angeles. Monday, July 27th. i These forms ask for certain Infor- 1the social security bureau U to be
The Teachers Club of this city ur&lt;uy. Dec. 12. Il Is hoped there may i Borne lime ago Blrry Houghtalin,
Until the year 1867 there was no। for this fine record and It goes lo
Today there will probably be mation regarding family history. ।completed by March 1937 and he Is record
.111 sponsor
a community
jonim
a |oncrous tesponse to this ap-1 of Baltimore, was arrested by State
hauiu vi
------- - ■
of uuuu
births Kept
kept ui
In mis
this line,
state.. show tluil the bank could have been' ----nothing of particular Interest to re- age. date of birth, parents' names 1authorized to pay carriers and clerks After that date It was made the du-j reopened with safety following the course
ourse consisting ot
of tnrec
three numbers
and B1|
al| vvllltl
COnlrlbutions will be1 conservation Officer George Bum-------BC1il Bno
YnllTw.-*' Relnald
RMnalrt Werrenrnih.
Warrcnrnth.............
..___ _
..
.
.. . ■ ■
.
cord, as Leslie and I plan lo spend • and name of employer. Thta Infor- &lt;overtime to hurry the work through. ty of physicians to report, births toi holiday. Any bank that can pay off «« follows.
RrcBuy appreciated,
It will be Interesting to know that county clerks, but there was no pen-1 95 per cent of Its deposits with re- j baritonrMn a lecturc^recItal Wedthe day at the Los Angeles Viking ' matian will be copied here In thta
•••
bluegills la hta possession. contrary
9. 1936;' Dr.
office We arrived there around eight .office in duplicate, one copy to be :2,$00 employees in Hastings alone; ally attached to failure to do that., malnlng assets, is certainly not in-' nesday.
* “ December
*
~ Fred­
I tn lhe nmvluinni of Rw MH of the
registered by ---------Hastings
erick K. Stamm. "N. B. C. Minister
o'clock and soon after. Mr. Walton. ’ sent to the social security bureau In '%ere
bonsequently uic
the Daysmans
physician's auty
duty j solvent.
—
- firms.
.----- : vAjitx-uuriiuy
of the Air." Monday. January 19.
WM often
ofUn nrirlwted
neglected, m
result nt
ol''
manager of the Viking's Chicago Washington and one to be filed here 'This number Includes every employe ' was
As ft
a result
:--------*
, me cue WU UiTU Ul JUMAC ww*,
1937: Upton Close &lt;Jowf Washing­
and Kansas City offices, who was From this information a card ta ta- whether there were one or more on i such neglect many, who were born I
where Mr. Houghtalin was convict­
ton Hall), authority on world af­
maklng a trip similar to ours, drop- sued to the employee, assigning him the employers Hat.
Bncl other Michigan counties!
ed and a fine Imposed. An •K5!
fairs. a date in February. 1937.
ped in. Mr. Martin, the Viking a Pa- ,-------------- 1--------------------------------------; from 1M7 to early In 1600. can find I
■ Tin- above course covers liiree
cific Coast manager, suggested that uATCDIAIC AU AII ADI C
I
I no record of their birth In the office ■
i McPeek heard the case without a
{fields of major Interest, music.
we go With him to inspect some ot MArtKIALS AVAILApLt
• of the county clerk or In the state ‘
1 Jury last spring. The Judge found
। world affairs and ethics and will THEY DO NOT TAKE PER- i many difficult questions In thia case,
One Auction Sale
inrttoir tareilor^ hc ,iaa ‘n,u,,cd!
FOR CONTEST DRESSES I
I health commissioner's office al Lan- ‘
| npiM-al to every Individual who
ui uua Kiriiury.
: I sing.
TIT TTV PPGM TWV
and has Just filed hta opinion, holdTILITY FROM THE
I
Hou,htalin ta not guilty
; wishes to broaden his knowledge.
He took us firut lo the new Gen_
—.
JOHN LECHLEITNER.
' Tills matter of having available!
ROSTER
OF 1 In this, as In other forums, the
eral Motors plant, which is about May Be Obtained From vicaSOIL
und directing that he be discharged.
As Joim Lechkilner Is moving to i
Nrf* certificate, to officially I COMPLETE
members
may
avail
themselves
of
town
he
will
sell
hl.
personal
,lU
1
°f
.
h
er
‘
the size of the one Just completed j
—
‘
‘
“
•
Tlie judge state* tn hta opinion
Chairmen In County Or
DISTRICT OFFICERS
! the coiutltutlanW rights of free THF RO-RG RARIR HAR
in Grund Rapids. This plant li;
•lhat
“« UxuM 01 fact and ***
erly at .ucuon
ervy
auction at
al nu
hta puiee
place mile Ii blrlh
kirth.' U
** tx
becoming
‘vamlnK Lncreaslngly
increasingly imIm- I
Mrs. Floyd Gaskell
'
AND TEACHERS
! speech end free tiasemblagc in an I Ot OU OU DAolo riA5&gt;
mvoived. The defense objected to
built on piles in what was a swamp &lt;
west and■ half ..mile
Tery, &lt;Uy
i.. .norto^f
. ..
. ' cedar
.
nortant Nearly e
everv
dnv the conn. i.
। organized consideration of public
The first pile was driven around the | Mrs. Prank C. Andrus, chairman crwk io...
clerk s office Is In receipt of a ;
t---------PROVEN
SATISFACTORY
1
’
X',
I affairs.
first of March of this year. The 1 of Ulp
u clnlU( dressmaking
one“ octoJk
i
whole plant, costing several million
, .
. .
_ mtaatarta‘
. . . 'li'urenre
\IU‘U
: thu
this count
enuntv^ mUno If th* "cords
reenrri. of!
nt I
rnTimr nrrrnrunr ’ H *d“
purpose Of the
REFERENCE■•••
', speaker
to open
subject
doll.,,. «u eompleW and U&gt;. BM ।
•&lt;»««&gt;"« W Ur Hutlnp ^Ixr ta to tt M ctarL kr^t in-11 the county show the u»ie &lt;m uiraiI
■FUTURE
----------------------------------—;—-----•— the
--------~ —for
- dU- Parmer. Becoming More In- .
-------»_J T_
------ •_As• A The JU(1Ke. sald lhls naturB11y mad*
cars rolled on the line In Muy. They Commercial club, wishes to emphnbirth and requesting a birth certlfi-----------1 cuitaton; to outline m fairly and
tcrested
In rn&lt;
Them
two horses, five head of cat-j„,
~ the-------'cate
from
county
clerk,
taken
Enrollment,
Valuations
Of
impartially
as
possible
the major is-,
cven had the ground filled .in. trees tize the fact that those women or eludes
• necessary first an inquiry into th*
tic. chickens, hay and grain,
f,r?m tbe. Ijounly
taken
Cash Crop
„
i' ”
from
the
official
records.
In
many'
Fach
School
District
KUca
lnvolved;
to
interpret
briefly.
•n£^rU21,rry
1 «irl« who would like to make drew- &lt;0015. hou^hoM ioodo. «o.
°m there
“* are no such records. The1
Each Bch00
School
District
• cases
EaCh
‘ D18trlcl
the Important and opposing points
The records ot this year show that. '•
etaimed. the fish were caughL
inowed before the opening) Need­
less to say It was some Job to In- , in but do not feel they can afford
railroads, targe corporations like the 1
Listed
। of view on there ireuee and to despite Lhc dry weather, sugar beets
Ltated
The judge had visited the premto
buy
the
material*,
may
obtain
stall the sprinkler systems and not HLipjJina 11 UUI &lt;*5 J J SUM LUBUIUKH ... . ASK TO ABANDON 26.7
W
believe
our n«.l
rural ...Hun.-.
readers "will rhttrc wlthWyou
Uw__.esse.n^L,_nCt
.• United States and Bethlehem Steell’ w.
’■ *e Mln.
•1 »ur
I supplies from any sub-chairman in
w'into.iJSni
: »r? have yielded better returns than j fes personally to see the whole stt&gt;
Interfere with, or be interfered with, the county, announced two weeks!
MILES C. K. &amp; S. TRACKS I^n1^1"
C°u P“«^“&gt;»rly mu-rested in tnc th_ Drob'1(,m
by the other contractors as there
tills state. Barry county is situat- scrtptions of it. The lake where ths
In th. HnnnAr nr nt Rz«m 8
1
weU „ mBny ojhers have pension I rosler ot the district officers and;
________
,
----------1 systems, .so
n »h»
..i~. •:.teachers
.
. the .rural schools of।1 All of these speaker?, appear on cd near a sugar
were several thousand sprinklers to ago In the Banner, or at Room 8
factory al, fup ^re caught is a small body of
----------that when ,u-&lt;their employin
in
the
National
bank
building
any
be installed. It was especially Inter­
This Would Remove The I res
a certain
they
arc ell- Barry county. While this is pub- such courses as the Town Holl Lansing and not far from one in water, about 25 acres. Th* shore* Of
—reach
---- -------------- --age
-------,--------series
In Detroit. Lansing , “and
esting to Leslie and to me. as It Wednesday or Saturday afternoon.
Holland. Tests have shown Hurt the land adjacent to it are owned
।
glble
to
retirement,
and
in
some
,
ushed
by
county
School
Commis1
’
5
r,ca
,,u
Tracks From Delton
~...bl
-------------------------------------contained several of the now Delujjo Mrs. Floyd Gaskell Is there nt that
considerable
areas
of
this
county by four different persona, the m*
|
cases
are
required
to
retire,
and
reSystems which ore quite a recent lime and sufficient money and ma­
are suitable for sugar beet raising.! jorlty of the shore line being owned
I ceive compensation from the com- 1 form we believe it ha,s never ap-1 Your-Door series in Battle Creek.
To Woodbury
Tickets may be secured front any nie present market practice with by Mr. Houghtalln There arc no
Viking development. These systems terials have been donated by inter­
peered In tll
the. Banner before. Those
Press dispatches of Saturday- from ]pany for the remainder of their
teacher,
al
the
Banner
office
or
are used where fire conditions ore ested persons for quite a number
Washington stated that: -The Chi-11 lives. In such a case a birth certlfi- especially interested in the names of al the office of the Superintendent sugar beets assures th* grower a highways leading to the take. It baa
unusually severe and operate in­
fair deal. He enters Into the pro- no mut or outlet now. although U
1 cate u
is .ci,
very nacuum.
essential. With
the cumcom-1i the
file inis
this copy
v»iwi u»c
me district officers can nie
The goal for this year Ims been
stantaneously. whenever a sudden
—.J bean
cago, Kalamazoo &amp; Saginaw railway । ing
for future
reference. •of ,Scno°}?;
of, membership duction of sugar beets on an as- one time there seems u
Inn of old age
ace pensions
nenslons and the'1 Of the Banner tr.r
rmur* r*f*r»nr*
to lhav*
o7 tth**
niuonil 's£i."l
re.’- 1]
2&lt;UUon to U.e names mentioned
&lt;Mch will
wlU include
include *
&lt;&lt;n&lt;sinu nf
Ha’ tiatiAimi
mAi*t ca
।tickets which
a reserv- sured cooperative basis. How targe an outlet leading to another tain;
rise in temperature occurs. We were set ul 600 dresses and from Indica­ asked ii.a
the Interstate Conunerc? pawing
tions
of
lite
Interest
In
the
contest
glad to see them have so much con­
a
profit he will make or whether | bul lhcre hai been no water tn that
curlty
net.
this
official
birth
record
Is,
are
a
tao
given
the
number
of
per.
cd
ca
5
h
.
nun
&gt;bcr.
Is.
for
fidence in this equipment that they It seems now as though this num- Commission Saturday for permis­ becoming very Important. The ab-: son; whose names appear In lhe , “Jjj*lu *10° and ,or PuPlls 111 school he shall realize any profit at all brook for many years. The judge
sion to abandon 26.7 miles of Che
dared to clean automobile bodies with
will, of course, depend upon condi- held that this body of water ta *
.
line extending from Barry town­ sence of a record of one's birth school census as residing In thei80*.
kerosene and drv them Immediately I closes on Monday. December 14.
Hons. The 50-50 basis on which pro- ! private take.'and quoted several auThere is no particular hurry in ship to Sunfield township. Michi­ in the office of lhe county clerk I district and the number actually I Possibly the most unusual feaafterwards with blow torches. They
the office of the state; enrolled in school. The number of ,ure
Werrcnrath's lec- ducers of sugar beets and manu- thorltles and decisions of th* *1gan. The application said there were or in
have hud two or three fires already
.loner at Lansing. those uf school age_&gt;re those be- ture-recilal. "The Story of American fucturers of beet sugar have agreed prrme Court to .sustain that SOWno manufacturing plants along the healtb Ka commLi
a
aarim..
a.Jw.n
1
_____
..
_________
t
a....
SOhS"
Which
lit
11
tO
ClVP
here
ot u»&lt;five Son*" *hlch he Is to give here has worked out quite satisfactorily j elusion. Among other thing* ha
route except al Hastings. wlUch was may be a serious matter when. । tween and Including the ages
to ________
producers—much more so than quotes: -Public routes of ace***
In order to obtain a pension, or! Bnti 20. Following U thee usi
list and
and 00 Wednesday. December 9. in Cen- „
served by another carrier."
|7uch water at some point Is ■
some uukt
other uciicni.
benefit, 1C
it u
is necessary
necessary' the other miormauon
Information mentioned!
r
menuoneu
J ; tral auditorium,' is . that7, In It.' Mr.
/ the old plan.
While this application was oslon- WOK
. disKHets*
. . • wa
..«h Hi....
—.— hl.
A...L.
goij conditions ought to be known' festly an important U not &lt;1
that
the
date
of
the
birth
of
the
W
jth
reference
to
the
rural
wMn
en®nrath
Illustrates
hta—remarks
dresses
expected
to
be
entered.
But
slbly made by the C. K. 6t S. It
Ooldwyn-Meyer studios, which are i
*"■*'”“ '.• “
with
examples nf
of each period, some- before a farmer undertakes to | nrtnatlve factor in lhe law at 1
person
to
be
benefited
be
definitely
nt
u,
c
county"
h
completely equipped with hundreds the chairman wishes it made clear must have been made by the Michi­
| times singing as many as fifteen raise sugar beets; but that is not! gabillty." Navigabiiity does
gan Central which owns the C. K.
Assyria Township.
of Tyden Valves and thousands and
«chnn) । 50085 during the evening, or almost difficult to ascertain. He knows lhe [ mean navigation by steomshlpi
IV.
UI IIIC UUU1HK.C
8. Where It would be expected to
Na 1 Bell (Census 44: scnooi
M many as he would give on a
thousands of Viking sprinklers. For
The Michigan legislature In 1931!
years Mr Martin has kept one crew sldered as part of the contest. The terminate the line in Barry town­ passed what is known as “Act No. 35 ■ closed) Valuation 8118.815.
I straight recital program.
I----------- ---------------------- ---------------- -- „
._
display
room
and
judges
will
be
ship
is
not
stated,
but
probably
In
Director
—
Luther
SWest.
of workmen there almost contln- :
| Lecturers on musical topics have ‘ most al) of the chemical elements । mg upon private property
of the Public Acts of 1931." which Is
announced
later.
Delton
which
furnishes
a
consider
­
Moderator
—
Maurice
EMulvany.
that
make •■*•
up ,K
the“ structure of a '----would
be conside
red
i been numerous; but for Illustrations ••
’*’ •«•»'*
•------------■-*—
- -a detarmimAFl
Uously, installing systems in new &lt;
entitled "An act to provide for the I Treasurer—Howard Wing.
able
amount
of
traffic.
Just
how
this
buildings as they are erected and
1 of various periods and composers.
beet. The tops are good feed factor as to navlgablUty.
proposition. If carried through, registration of unreported blrtiis." !. No. 3 Fr. Eagle (Census 14; en- especially in songs, they have been sugar
changing the old systems to give CHILDREN’S BOOK
for stock, and the cash receipts
The next question, in the optntal J
Section one ot Act 35 specifies! rolled 5). Valuation 853.450.
would affect Hastings is not easy to
protection to the various sets re­
accustomed to employ additional help to meet the running expense1 of the judge. Is whether the pogaao* &lt;j
that
whenever
a
birth
that
occurred
i
Director—Floyd Rankin.
WEEK OBSERVED determine. There are four manu,­ in
quired for new pictures. In order to
talent And while American singers of the farm, so that it seems a de- i ston of fish caught In a private Mt 1
the state oi
of sucnigau
Michigan suDsequent
subsequent;1. Moderator—Gaylord Holmes.
facturing plants located on the C. Ln me
have water enough on hand for the
have ranked among the world's sirable crop. It seems probable that! u g violation of the statute. IL is
, to 1867 is not on record in the office i
pumps to supply so many systems it !Librarian Gives Some Rules K. &amp; 8. tracks In the first ward. If of the state health commissioner., Treasurer—Howard Serven.
finest, few, If any. have consistent­ the government will Include sugar i undisputed that a riparian owner of j
the rothe should be abandoned these
Teacher—Marlon Doster.
was necessary, and part of the Vik­
and the attending physician is noli No. 4 FT. Austin (Census 16; ly indulged in speaking from the beets tn the list of crops which will! a private lake may fish therein withTo Follow When Buy­
,
would
be
left
without
shipping
fa
­
ing ccntract. to construct a huge
be definitely *"i*^u-****&lt;
•*»* * -—• —*-™
platform.
available to make the registration.: school closed).
'
duties
and
without
the
opportunity
ing Books
concrete reservoir about three hun­
I government
. p---------------------------------------- -------- j judge McPeek says in effect. “It
Director—Earl Wiles.
of getting carload freight delivered the application for the registration
dred feet square and twelve or fif­
may be made by the interested per­
“THANKSGIVING” TALK
1 tural
ma&gt;- be enacted atirewns clear, from the case of the
This last week has been Children's
Moderator—Henry Green
i iiMisrxQui v mu
inurx
the coming session of congress.
! People vs OKed that under the
teen feet deep.
.Book Week and the library has been at the factories. It would leave the son to the judge of probate, either
village of Woodland without any
Treasurer—Elmer N. Wile*.
BY REV. W. M. JONES ,
—--- 77*-----------of *tolsOsUto the powewton of
Mr. Martin said the reservoir was
in the county where the person
No. 5 Assyria Center (Census 70;
barely completed and filled with wn- celebrating It In various ways. All raUroad facilities at all. and that resides or the county where he or
—-----LEISURE TIME
'certain fish at specified times U a
enrolled 44&gt;. Valuation $121,950.
ter before its screen possibilities the children In the city from the would be true of Cloverdale also.
Gave
Rotarians
His
Idea
u
:
violation of the state taw. even
No one can blame the Michigan
Director—Frank R. Jones.
were realized, and It was equipped first grade through Junior High
About
What
Is
Needed
'
CLASSES
PLANNED
j
though
they were legally cau«ht.tI
Section 2 provides that the appli­
Moderator—Lloyd J. Tasker.
with wave making machines, storm school have visited the library. Central for wishing to dispose ot cation for registration shall set forth
Treasurer—Myron o. Tuckerman.
machines, docks, etc A greater part There were a number of new books an unprofitable asset; but ft ought the facta required by the certificate
* For That Holiday
Mr«. Eva Lane To Conduct,
«P»6 “
not
to
be
allowed
to
dispose
of
such
Teacher
—
Theodore
Tack.
on
display
for
each
grade
to
enjoy
of "Tugboat Annie" was filmed on
of birth, which certificate must be
. .
j
by this respondent in a private tak*
Rev. w. Maylan Jones gave a ।
No. 6 Ellis (Census 19; enrolled 9).
Project Sponsored By
। the nme aTit would to fish lawfully
this reservoir, and the tugboat still and there was a puppet play called an oASet when it wlU work to the issued by the Michigan State Health
timely address lo Rotarians Mon- ,
rides at anchor out In the middle. 'The Gate to Book Land” for the serious damage of such communities Commissioner under provisions ot Valuation $64,550.
The WPA
caught In foreign waters."
Director—Lavena Manby?
day noon on the topic of "Thanks­
A huge gray battleship, or I should younger ones and "Tom Sawyer" for as Woodland and cloverdale as well Sec. 7. Act 343. of the Public Acte of
The search for and seizure at th*
Moderator—Fred Miller.
giving." He argued that:
say Just one side of a battleship, the older ones given by the library as this city. Naturally the citizens 1935. Thta application shall be sup­
The recreational
divtalon
of
the
Judge uM.
from
reVLTOa ta
l. sponsoring
.nnn.nrtn* a
. Mr- . ^nd«rt withto
Hau,
aawi U» aw1. We ought to keep history in! Michigan WPA
Treasurer—Hugh 8. Jones.
"“imrtelageM
th*
complete to the last porthole, gun, staff with the aid of a miniature of Hastings will be Interested m ported by the affidavits of at least
this proposition.
observing Thanksgiving. We ough, les of leisure-time classes In various respondent's own nremlaea wu uaTeacher—Marian B. Klein.
davit, bridge, and landing stair
two persons
the our forefathers
rememberofthat
No. 7 Fr. Briggs (Census
41; iiavtng
en­ ' to knowledge
subjecta.
An
attempt
will
be
made
i^fui
This is about the lime of year
now extends two thirds of the way
! facia stated therein, or who Save rolled 23). Valuation $97,050.
1 came to this land to get religious to form clasre. to fit the needs of I
lrBnt
taw o&lt; authority to
across. The other side of the battle' when grown people are purchasing MEDICAL EXAMS FOR
[ reason to believe that such facta are
| liberty as well as personal liberty. women or lUU who would b. Inrnr- '
Director—Emerson cortright.
■ books for Christmas presents. Every
(Continued on page 1, Sec 2.)
oac,r. lo mreh mnDDtr cnunni nun norm I Uue; or “*• aPPMcatlon can be supModerator—Floyd Miller.
I The Spaniards came to this new r.M in the Mlo.lr&gt;, .ubkcU:,
I book a child reads has Its Influ­
wM„ ln&lt;
u
rnt-oUnUUL LnlLUnr.il ported by documentary evidence—
I
world
treking
gold.
The
Puritans
: ence on him. Cheap books are often.
Brwln,. booh rerkw* Blhu Kud,.,
Uw U rtosuch as records in the family Bible.
FOURTH DISTRICT
Teacher—Lillian Leinaar.
I came seeking liberty. The purposes knitting, child study, budgeting or I lBle(j f&lt;onnt give such conscrvaUan
! though not always, cheap in every HaatiDgB Service Committee ! Sec. 3 provides that the probate
(Continued on page 3. Sec. .!&gt;
which the Pilgrims had in mind, home management.
J
officers he savi anvauthorltr to do
CONVENTION
SUNDAY
*
ay
Donl
bu
*
a
u
j
judge
shall
examine
the
application
wu VUI1» ivii vvivw
low prlccd ha3 Bn gttracUve C0Ver ‘
which have Deen
been rolIOWCd
followed oy
by tneir
their I1 These classes will he held once a OW*'18w
* * *--------------I Wlllcn
Working With P. T. A.
I and take such testimony as may be.
.t
Dn.a.
el I of because the boy or girl has read 1
I in hta Judgment, deemed necessaryI' TRAFFIC CHANGES ON
Groups
American Legion Posts And | nnolhcr of thf Mme Krlet wd u
NORTH RROADWAY wha« «he Is. It was the contention persons enrolled In the course* of- of B cltiaen and um what may b*
HUKIH PnUAUWAI | * r^. Jone,
?L&gt;d uSe atMid^e
The Hastings City service com- | to establish the facts set forth in
. that^Christian
I anxious to read this. Here are some
Units Meet At
। the application. If the Judge of ‘pro
­ Neco.aary F^But Ono Line!
TX!
Bv* Lonejrhe hu hu .1
rules by which you cap judge books: m&gt;«« with lhe cooixr.Uon »r u&gt;«IS'uT'SXl'SCVLu
Is satisfied that the la’* ’
Watervliet
Does this book lay stress on villainy, P. T. A. groups of St. Rose, 1st and!: bale
as
stated lie
he aiiwu
shall issue mi
an ui
order
to’
— „ } m o. -n »
&gt;
believes that things do not just great deal of experience In work of' rant. The present
•
j
uo
ill
m Michigan
nwavuu
uoue im.
a Rfnn
।
On Sunday the Laurence J. Bauer deception or treachery? Are all Ito - .
To rtnma
Oomo T
To
Stop bnfnrn
Before । happen, but that there is a definite tms type, ta to be the Instructor.
the state health commissioner that!
American Legion Post and Unit Incidents wholesome, probable and 2nd ward and central schools and such
sequence and a definite goal for, classes are open to all women
wtfh*authretty
birth be registered.
Entering M-37
were represented by Mj. and Mrs. true to life? Does it show young with the help of the Barry County
what ta taking place tn the world, anci gjrls and any one Interested is
.
Sec.
4
provides
that
the
order
is-1
Slate Highway Maintenance cnEn- | ana
....a■*the probate judge to the
tl,-l Slate
Don Foreman, Mrs. Sterling Rogers. people contemptuous toward their Health Unit and the w. K. Kellogg —
Mid mac
that mere
there is
ta an
an over ruling
to or get In com-1 sUtutlon. In the judge's opinion the
tfneer A. L. Brown and hta men Power which shapes It,
Mrs. Henry Hubert, Mrs. Pauline elders and successfully opposing Foundation Is making a survey of
Michigan law was framed so that
state health commissioner must be ; have
?
. _ making
_,kln_ some chinra
In the
o,. next
...... place
olace ,Rev. Jones E Grand St.. Hastings,
been
changes at • In
Bltas and T. 8. K. Retd at the them? Do the young characters in all of the pre-school children In on
a form provided by the state j
a conservation officer might make
1
the
intersection
of
M-43
on
North
thought
It
was
only
fair
that
we
,
,
,
Fourth district convention held al the book show respect for teachers Hastings.
During the home visits the com­ health commissioner and shall be' Broadway and M-37 on W. State should keep "thanks” tn Thanks”
and others In authority? Are tht.se
Watervliet.
properly
signed
by
the
Judge
of
|
mittee
members
will
discuss
the
THINKS
HE
HIT
HIM
The dinner and meeting were held characters the kind of young peo­
that will mean greater safely giving. He said that in the original
probate; also that the birth shall;1' Road
The Judge concludes: •■The de­
medical
and
dental
program
In
the
to traffic.
Thanksgiving each guest at the
at the school building and was very ple you want your own children
be registered Ln the records of the i
—HE YELLED LUSTILY fendant had a right to fish upon the
well attended. During the dinner to associate with? Does the book county for pre-school children. Iden­ stale health commissioner. That! The "Stop" sign has been remov­ table was first served with five ker­
lake in question. His possession of
a program was given constating of speak of and describe pranks, prac­ tification cards will be left for each officer will also send a photostatic &lt; ed from W. State Rotjd. so Hurt nels of com. Tills was to remind
the
fish caught was unlawful. How*
him or
of tnc
the privations enaureo
endured oy
by Joo Harrington Fired His
a spendld chorus of thirteen men tical Jokes and pieces of thoughtless pre-school child for a medical and copy of the certificate tn Issues to)' traffic coming from the west can j rum
1 make the turn without holding up the Pilgrim fathers. We are in the
and three short skits were given___
... —
and______________
cruel mischief________
as though
they, dental examination. All examina­
cure’ment ot the fish. which wm th*
Shotgun At A Chicken
county clerk, who will record those travelling west and making J midst of trying times, he said. Col-1[
by the speech class which all en- were funny and worthy of Imllo- tions will be* done In the family the
Thief
Joyed.
j lion? Is the English correct and ta physician's and family dentist's of­ It In his birth record book, a cer­ ; the turn. The "Stop” sign has been! lege boys, anxious to get to work.1
required legal authority. Therefore
tified copy of such a record in the placed on N. Broadway on M-43.1 find a lack of Jobs. There are hax-1
fices.
Guests were introduced Including the story written In good style?
Joe Harrington, a farmer residing
In the event that certain neces­ office of the state health commis­ as cars can be stopped there easily ards In life in these days caused southwest ot Dowling, reported to the peoples case must fall. Th*
M/s. Marie Schrumpf of Niles, post | No parent or friend will be concourts verdict Is. therefor*. *NM
sioner,
when
Issued,
shall
be
prims
department president of the Auxll- tent to buy a book for a child be- sary medical and dental care as fade evidence In all courts and ' before entering M-37. Thta allows by the mixing of alcohol and ma- the sheriff's office Saturday that Guilty* and the defendant la Oto*
the northbound traffic on M-43 to chinery. Yet thta Is not a tlm* for
lary and Vice-Commander Oansur cause the price fits his pocket-book shown by the examination may be­
of the facts slated In that1 go straight through, also allows despair, but a time for the exercise lie iiad shot at and believed he had i charged."
of Grand Rapids.
If he stops lo think that he may come a financial burden, arrange­ places
■ wounded a chicken thief at his farm
record.
That part of the dstiaMn «Ntf
I those on M-37 to make the turn j of faith, for the attitude ot one's
Al the Auxiliary meeting the dta- | be poisoning the child's mind with ments for the care of these Items
Within a comparatively recent'; without stopping and halts but one mind and heart have much to do early Friday. Mr. Harrington ex- written last September. At ttta* tUM
. can be nutoe.
trict membership chairman an- “
। plained that he had fired at the other authorities were cited toy *4*
| Some of the parents making the time about 20 applications for suchJ; line of traffic, the southbound on in shaping Tine's future.
nounced a contest between Allegan |
Jean Hanies, Librarian.
man
who
let
out
a
loud
cry.
but
home visits for the survey are; First birth records have been made to
10 l M-43.
Rev. Jones instated that we ought■ he managed to get Into a car near­
and Hastings Units. Hastings mem-1
I ward: Mrs. George Havens. Mrs. Judge Stuart clement of this counbcrshlp quota ta 60 and Allegan 40. MERCHANTS TO HAVE
The highway men have also ptac- to keep "giving" in our Thanksglv- by and drive rapidly away. Deputy
' Robt. O'Conner. Mrs Leland Ben­
ed new
new "Slow"
re-' mg.
Ing. uie
Life ista not
not ennene
enriched
so--------much1 Sheriff Glenn Swift of Lacey made
However last year Hastings had 50
tnr. nf
u..r/i. i., . ■ ■ L■*' 60
aww and "Junction"
Juncuon re------b^reaLn^o?
1
nectorlied
st8n5
'
marking
the
inby
what we get as by what we ' an Investigation Saturday but was new author!lias cited
members and Allegan 46. so the lo­
“OPEN HOUSE” DEC. 4. nett, Mrs. Michael Ottoaen. Mrs. XiuTwirt.tHn
lcrBecUon plainly. Thta change share; especially when it Is shared 1 unable to find any trace of the
Lewis Ayres, Mrs. Edward Dchllcal Unit will have to hustle to meet
Members of the retailers division1 naw. Second ward: Mrs. D. D. Wala ?ld i would seem to be a wise one as : for the purpose of service, good will 1 thief. Police in other cities were
Its goal. The losers are to furnish
aod ProbablX lal*r I well as a safely measure. There have and helpfulness to others.
a dinner for the winners. Mrs. Fore­ of the Hastings Commercial club' ton. Mrs. Otto Isenhalh. Mrs. Clar-------------------ple&gt;
.UU unemnlovment
unemployment ln»uran~
uuurwee
j
Vemi-------------------’lSen'l.' .■&lt;'....
ui"u;-, Hb
________________________________
_
man was again named district are meeting today (Wednesday) at■ ence cappon. Mrs. Harold Benedict. state
pltals for anyone seeking surgical warrant, and
music chairman. The new district the Parker House to complete their Mrs. Dewey Reed. Mrs. Lewis War­ . ltr,CyiT.Z^^?5? U'&lt;lK?lr,^Sj.uhKC!i tersectlon that, no doubt, could God in our Thanksgiving. We can- treatment for the removal of gun
nut bow
uuw God out
uui of
ui our universe or shot. So far no reports lytve been
officers were installed al this ses- plans for the holiday "open house"' ner. st. Rose: Mrs. Nay Bump. Mrs.
h**6 h"11 a*olded had the present : not
which will commence the Christmas&gt; Kenneth Labertoaux. central: Mrs. lawfully sojbU birth certificates notations been in force.
I--------------— "-------nation
without
harming
puraelvos.
made.
ran he tuned tzi meet the rerm retherefore,
Hastings Post and Unit will en­ shopping season Friday evening,• Henry Mulder. Mrs. Wallace OsThe God ho had in mind was not
CHANGE IN DAY.
some awful creature, sitting back REPOKT OF WOMEN'S
tertain the convention in January, Dec. 4. That evening al) the stores
will be open, windows and stores dec­ dore Knopf. Mrs. John Ketoham. monte for pensions by railroads or | ----------Because-----of Thanksgiving,
- -------.,_ tM
, .a chance to punish
the w
it is expected.
waiting
for
CLUB
CKOWDKD
OUT.
|
i representative of the National Re- gome p^,.
Ilnner. but u,.
Thor* in attendance at Water­ orated for the holiday season and Mrs. L. E. Foster, Mrs. Kim Bigler. other corporations.
A fine report of the meeting of lb* 4
The state of Michigan now has employment Service. U. 8. Dept, of Ood who u revealed in Christ Jevliet spoke especially of the fine and i the main streets decorated with
poet of- SUS
a law for the registration of births Labor, will be here at the post
------------------------- a -Lover of- men. Hastings Women's Club was rrpW&lt; f l
as a Father
and
cordial reception and the many evergreen and lights, no doubt some Texter. Mrs. Roy Chandler.
that has teeth In It. Every physician fice on Friday from 9:30 till noon,
It was a fine, thoughtful presen­
courtesies they received from the merchants will have Santa Claus
come to visit them and it is hoped
DINNKB AND BAZAAB.
must. In any maternity case where At that time ha will re-regtater any tation of the subject.
entertaining organizations.
that a large number of Hastings
he Is employed, make a certificate of workers who may apply for re-emDANCY AT WELOOMK.
ItalBWttot
shoppen will take advantage of this have a basaar. bake sale and turkey the birth of the child. That cer- ploymenL Next week and thereafter
CHICKEN DINNER.
j Friday. Nov. 37. Scharfs orch. Ev- m would h
Basaar at Pariah House. Thun., opportunity to see the merchandise dinner al the church parlors on Dec. tlficate
tlflcato 1*
is made to th*
the township or
ori. he will b- ----------- •— — .... 1
1 aryono welcome.—Adv.
| woek. Wate
(Continued on page s. 8*c. 1)
I
offered at the various stores.
,. 3 from S till 7, price 50c—Adv.

06703611

DIRECTORY OF
RURAL GRADES

rhi.

^'e^uu;..Tu02S?'«K “urorletw-lmmpwtetonu. COULDBEFUZEDFOR

offici

xi ■
,4-1;

■Jilt

«

"cbij,

3,
riy Vil: times

tw

DRPO-

&lt;h. „,&lt;„.;

S

PROFITABLE CROP

j-;;--.,

lh, mrnQM.

lhe

�THt HASTINGS BANNER. TMUMDAY, NQVWMI M, 1M|

fJUJX TWO

—Mg=3a»i~ IR— i ha— I sheriff Btakxwy and oouply Clerk! fire had Marled from am owr-boalr
a / sirirrc
I Hyde returned from th*north woods od
stove
pipe,
and
burned
LULAL Nt itj
Friday night. The sheriff brought| through the partition to the roof.

AFTER
THANKSGIVING SALE at

Food Center
»

HASTINGS

NASHVILLE

Dry Onions

IO

Oranges

Do«.

Fresh Carrots
Pillsbury

22c
5c

Buacb

Flour

Karo Syrup
Moosehead Flour

Lb.

5 Sack 25c
S Lb. PaU 37c
24) LIb. Sack 83c
a.

DEL MONTE, RED

AMERICAN BEAUTY

SALMON

LIMA
BEANS

U. 3. No. 1

Potatoes

I4c

Lb. Bag

TALL CAN

25c

3 - 25c

&lt;9c

Corned Beef Hash

2
29c
Armour’s Potted MeatsTaic" "•■“•‘■•5c
(5

25c

Tall Sixt

ALL VARIETIES EXCEPT CONSOMME AND CLAM CHOWDER

Viking Coffee
ARMOUR'S V ERIB EST

SUGAR
io it..

- 17c

Zj.Qc

CORNED
BEEF

COFFEE

|5c

22c

c..

10 LB. LIMIT

CHASE A SANBORN’S

5|c

Camay Soap
Ivory Flakes

Large Pkg.

Clean Quick Soap Chips 5

O. K. Soap

it

^2c

29c

LIBBY'S

GUEST

Seminole

IVORY
SOAP

Tissue

N».2!s Can

2 - 25c

6

5c

American Legion
Auxiliary Activities

ICtiICK

JHAVER

A Hit Y THEATHI?
fixating*, Michigan
-Kd

B

23c

BOYS’ AND GIRLS'

Ui OUR WNDOtl |

%

Friday - 'Saturday Evening Show* Only 7:*0 and 9:00 P. M.

PUFFED
WHEAT
3 pi... 25 c

fTRAND
TLEATCF
Baitings, Michigan • Telephones 2244*2557 HLPROGRAM FOF WEEK OP NOVEMBER 23

OUR BEAUTIFUL NEW POPULAR PBIL’ED THEATRE

AVIATION GIFTS!

SUNDAY. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 30

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

Marion Davits, Clark Gable
Occasional Special Showing* in Mid-Week!

Prices Always ADULTS lie CHILDREN 10c

CAIN And MABEL

SUNDAY, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 30

PEANUT

Frankfurts

HOME MADE PORK

BUTTER

2Lb*’
29c

Sausage

BULK

* IOc

a.

COUPON NIGHT. TUESDAY. DEC- I

DANCING FEET

SAVE COUPONS—No Coupons Will Be Qfvra Oat After

Bro Lyon. Jozn Marsh. Eddie Nogent, Isabel Jewell
ADULTS IS*
CHILDREN l*c

Women Are Trouble
With Paul Kelly. HwieM Rfce. Btwxrt Erwin

&lt;-wv&lt;"vvv«*&gt;4-b4-&gt;&lt;^

2 - 35c

WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2. 3

SPECIAL RETURN ENGAGEMENT
THREE GREAT STARS

25c

Slab Bacon

Dills, Jumbo
Hamburger

Beef Kettle Roast

Fillets
Pork Shoulder Roasts
Leg-O-Veal

Organizations

C. B. HODGES

Larg.Bar.

SAUER
KRAUT

BY EDMONDS FINDS
BODY OF WOMAN

lous Iom. The damage was estlmat- Identified At Mr*. Beryl
~
■
=• was not *0 fortunate.
Reynolds Cordes, son of Mr and
Geer H. Smith, republican, cfflAlton P. T. a. will ba bald
Murphy—Had Threaten­
Mrs. Roy cordes. is recoverbig from clally became th* prosecutor-elect
37 with Thanksgiving supper
an attack of pneumonia.
j of lonla county Wodpaaday. when
o'clock. Bring buttered rolls
ed Suicide
The food stores are full of ap- Barton B. Blbley. democrat, made Many Missing
anythtag «1m that goes with d
When Byron Edmonds, who Uvea Thanksgiving supper. All Invited, j
| petlrtng foods and fresh vegetables the announcement that he had
Quimby, was coming in to his
| and fruits for the Thanksgiving din- withdrawn hla recount petition and
Articles Found near
work cm the Michigan Central aooj ner.
1 conceded the election to bls oppon- r
C.il Perkin, « Carlton, wn-ln-1 "J &lt;® “»
“"Tj"
■’
horrified
to find lhe body of a wom­ Mr* I. J. Smith, ill
Oatfax
— the majority given
Do your children come home with
law of Levant McIntyre is slowly ' YOte* which wm
SXXiS fro. » .uLk“r Sen- ‘ Smith “
* election November ’3. a mitten, glove, pen or other article an lying on the track near the old
at ,K
the
, Word baa been received ol the of use or apparel missing and tell Schantz farm, her head having been dinner. Thursday December
' monla.
out off by the train. He Immediately
Mr. and Mrs Ed Smith have pur­ birth of a daughter, Carolyn, to Dr.: *ou 1,1111 to™ one took &gt;lT Perhaps
and Mrs. Charles Todd of Beau- 11 u waiting In the school offioe.
mont, Texas. Mr*. Todd will be re- «Hher high school or grade for some identified by Sheriff Jay Blakney
as Mks. Beryl Murphy (Evelyn Slo­
in last week
membered as MIas Robbie Finnle.
cum; daughter of Frank Slocum of staff Friday evening November
'
. , . , .
...
who was a frequent visitor at the sive-looklng leather glove in the
at i. o. O. F- hall. All members
Xny.
Mr V,d.Mrv home of her brother. Dr. R. O. HnT high school office window and a very this city, aged 38.
A» reported to the Banner, she
Hoaard Main w!U be sorry to learn n,e
nice pair of glaases. not to men­
of the death on Nov 23 of the Infant i WUU,m yo* ta ,
of the tion a number of other things. Ev­ had left her father's house Imme­
Surgery Guild No. IB win have
diately
after
supper
and
it
is
। daughter born to them on Saturday, decoration committee in charge of ery year rubbers, overshoes and
Christmas party and a one o'clcx
. It you are bothered with an iodine arrangements for the annual Beaux caps are disposed of because no one thought she must hav* gone lo the luncheon al the Prc*bytartan churc
stain, put some finely shaved white I Arts ball which was givpn by mtm- claims them. Umbrellas, hats and track and laid doWn upon It as tha
six-ton outbound train approached.
‘oap over it. moisten It with cold 1 ber* of Players, the Dance club and
ben are requested to bring gifts fo
I water and let It stand for a few ’ lhe Art club of Western State library for their owners. Il might be The officers were notified Monday tree and canned fruit or vegetable]
evening that she wu missing and a
I hours
Teachers
Teacher*'’ College
College Saturday evening. well to Investigate before replacing group of people hup ted for ber all for the hospital.—Mrs- Otto Isen
I Fire in lhe leaves on Grant's hill November 23. Thl* costume ball Is missing property.
hath. Secy.
Very ofUn. also, things are left at night along the river and other
Saturday
morning
threatened ( one of lhe outstanding social event*
I buildings in that- vicinity so the de•; on the campus during the fall term, the Banner office and are never places where she might hsve con- FIFTY BOYS AND GIRLS
keys.
partment was called and removed Fox Is a junior tn tho Art depart- claimed —mittens, gloves
threatened
suicide.
so
her
family
the danger
rr.-^,
''
&lt; menu
ATTEND 4-H CONGRESI
close watch of her.
Mrs Burr VanHouten entertainedi
Conservation Officer George Sum­ vestlgate if you have lost anything kept
She is survived by her husband,
the executive board of the HastingsI ner officiated last week In warden as slated above
Judging
Tear
one four years old child and liar Livestock
Civic Players on Monday evening; service tn th* deer territory up
father. No funeral arrangements
Six Other Members To
when plans for the Christmas party north. He brought home a doe that DISTINCT HONOR
have been made. Sincere sympathy
were discussed.
had been shot and took It to the
Represent Barry Do.
Mrs. John F. Goodyear, who un­ county borne, giving the Inmates a
FOR A. L BROWN Is extended the bereaved ones.
Youths from all sections of Mlct
derwent an operation a week ago&gt; fine venison treat.
"tn win bo part of the annual ape
Monday at Pennock hospital, rcTtie finest load of game seen here Solvay
Sales
Corporation
।
taele
In Chicago's stockyards and
turned to her home Sunday and is, coming from the north woods ar­
the loop of Chicago during the n
Benda Circular To Ita
' making a fine recovery.
rived Thursday. Two hunters from
Hanoi 4-H club congress Novemt
! Recent discoveries in northern, Battle Creek had each a fine buck
Organization
’ Michigan promise to stimulate oili strapped to th* running boards. On
1 and gas well drilling very materially.. the back of the cur was tied a big
atate club leader. Michigan Stat
, and 1837 bids fair to set a new rec­ black" bear, and in another place tenance engineer, received word
On Saturday and Sunday. Dec. 5 cnijege
’
"
~ 1
the other day that the resume of
&gt;«
“'■« In
Uw SO
ord in this industry. Michigan will was conspicuously shown a large his
included
in lhe
*&gt;0 wbo
who will
will uuJ
talk before the Hastings Com­
soon offer for sale the oil and gas, bobcat.
presidents, secretaries ana child । ar* wtehard wallam Radfnrri- aii
mercial
club
tn
July,
as
printed
in
w.U^«
ebMrm.0
w«l
b.
h.ld
u
B.,
1
M
If
J*ou
are
reknitting
a
sweater
it
rights on over 80.600 acres of stale
the
Banner,
had
been
used
by
the
l owned lands, and some new fields, Is ciklmed that you will find it a lot Solvay Bales Corporation as an ad­ citv.
City. Those planning
nlannlnc tn
to attend Iron.
frrwt.
Campbell Of Ml?
। easier -if you
take -out—
the "kinks" vertising Item.
may be opened.
!------—--------Hastings are Mrs. Sterling Rogers, k..------ sutsa boys make up th
first. First wind lhe
the yarn
vnm tn
In a skein,
ilraln
More deer hunters have gone firstHis talk dealt with lhe subject of president, Mrs. Pauline Bum. secre­ Michigan 4-H Livestock Judgitg
north this year than in other years, tie together firmly and wash in
tary.
and
Mrs.
Harry
Wood,
child
and will represent Barry courj
Many old-time hunters who hadn't lukewarm water. Fold in a towel putting chloride on the county's welfare chairman, and possibly team
ly and lhe real of the 35.000 4-1
grave! roads and the value of such
1 intended to go. changed their minds ^d place in a warm place to dry. chloride,
others. This conference is always boyz and girls in Michigan In thl
lhe cost, etc.
at the last minute. One of lhe sur- The kinks will be gon* when the
The Solvay Co. had the item re­ very helpful and education.
division during the congress whirfl
prising things was the lar^e num-1 yam Is dry.
Is held at the Ume of lhe annual III
ber of deers killed In territory that I One of the unique spot* for hunt- printed and sept all over the Unit­
The sewing club met Tuesday
Livestock exposition 6fl
I only a few years ago lhe animals1 Ing in the Upper Peninsula of ed State* to members of their or­ night at the home of Mrs Smith ternatlonal
other Barry county 4-H dub bofl
were considered almost extinct. In Michigan Is at Blaney Park, where ganization, which is a fine recogni­ Sherman lo make articles for the and girls will attend the Livestodj
tion
of
Al's
ability
and
kno*
ledge
Lake county for instance it is re- quite a space is reserved for hunters, of road engineering.
annual bazaar on Saturday. Dec. 12 Show and visit Chicago with Court]
ported that around 1.400 deer were whose equipment u limited ‘zto z. a
ty Agent Harold J. Foster and Difl
killed the first day Allegan county, bow and arrow. Deer are quite plenDEATH OF MRS.,GORHAM.
| Don't forgot the appeal for jam. trict Club Agent F. Earl Haas.
j
• not yet opened to deer hunting, re- tlful tn this ----area, —
and
■* J
disciples
‘—
of
Mrs. Jennie Gorham. 77. widow of .jelly, conserve, marmalade, apple
Project achievement contest* l|
ports a herd of considerable size. Robui Hood arc usually successful.
butter,
etc.,
for
the
Otter
Lake
Bil
­
Charles Gorham, died on Sunday
the national congress Include aeleJI
fire department
was called . at Pennock hospital where she was j let. Please bring it to lhe meeting tlon of the national boy and gi||
Perimps this may account for the | The
— —
—----------- —
presence of occasional deer seen in Saturday evening to the home of i taken after she fell and broke her on Thursday evening, Dec. 3 or to । health champs for which Mlchlga|
the western part of Barry county, j Erlo Fuller on Clinton street. The hip about three weeks ago. For lhe bazaar.
has two eligible entries. Haro |
I many years Mr and Mrs. Gorham 1
Bernhardt, Don River, and Vivi]
, had made their home on a farm a
Kalmbach. Gregory. Other comp||
mile east uf Dowling. Mr. Gorham
I tllions will see Michigan boys u||
Fine Attendance
dying three years ago. She is sur। girls compeUng for honors In 11 vd
, vlved by a sister. Mrs. Sarah Zan­
Judging, poultry demonstrd
At Brotherhood Ij stock
der of Orville, Cal., and a niece.
lions, poultry judging, crop* demos I
Mrs R. H. Molt, of near Hastings
i straitens, crop* Judglixg, handlers!I
The funeral was held on Wednesday ■ ---------------------------- ------------ —------- j demonstrations, wood Idcntlficatlo |
at eievcn
eleven uciock
o'clock »v
at inc
the Dowling
ui
Lxrwimg . There was a splendid attendant? [ food demonstrations, clothing den i
church, the Rev. Exncr officiating, at ul0 Brotherhood on Monday m., onslratlons. conning Judging. drq|
Rurlal was In the Dowling cemetery, nlng at the annual Father and Son revue and clothing Judging.
। banquet.
j Leaders who will accompany til
DEATH OF MRS. COUCH.
|
Jud Hyames of the W. 5.1 delegates to the club congress bl
Mrs. Bertha couch, aged S3, a ’ T.Coach
C. gave a fine address to the | elude Mr. Keltunen. Navels Peano I
lifetime resident of Barry county. ■
jLV, 1 M u AVBry lol, corbctl and AB I
-------------------------------.
died Saturday. Nov. 21. at her home tn
Si
on E. Center St., following an illness wUl BPP®ar ,n ncxl week s Banner, Bates of East Lansing, and Clal
Rood and Marcella Mejrr, Mai
Is shaving
of four months She was the daugh­
quelta.
I
•S.
E.
DISTRICT
TO
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Sledge,
HAVE CONVENTION.
known residents of the Wel­
a nuisance? welt
A
Sunday
school
convention
of
come comers community. She is
survived by a brother. Clyde Stcdgc. the southeast district will convene
V. F. TP. Newt
Tlien you need a Sduck Shaver—the only modem way to remove your
also several nieces and nephews. at the Dowling church on Sunday,
The funeral was held at tho Wall­
beard. NO BLADES, NO LATHER, never gets dull. It shears the
dorf! funeral home at two o'clock ful program h.u been arranged tor
whiskers off quickly and surely for a perfect shave. Free yourself for­
Last Thursday was the first mee
on Monday afternoon with the Rev. all teachers and officers.
ever from tlw constant buying of blades, creams, brushes and lotions.
Mrs. Griffin, county president, will in I under our new schedule. We a
B B. Swem officiating. Burial was in
A Schick Shaner is a profitable investment Came in today and we will
assist Mrs. George Stanford with now meeting the first and thl
Riverside cemetery.
.
the program and other special fea­ Thursday each month.
prove to you that slaving am be a pleasure, not a nuisance.
tures have been arranged.
SUCCESSFUL HUNTERS.
The Post voted unanimously I
Thow hunters, who have re­
donate
*3
from
our
treasury
to
t!
An explorer report* that ba has
turned with their bucks, are Waller
j
Johncock. Ernest Erway. George discovered a bean in southern Asia American Red Cross.
Townsend, jay Blakney, Ellis Dan­ that grows at an astounding rate
We have practically compleL
iels. Leslie Daniels. Robert Brown. The usual procedure is to place the
Hastings, Mich.
Dependable Jeweler
L. H. Sunday. Roy Fuller. Forrest bean tn the ground and then jump our plans for Christmas Utas. V
will have trees for sale again ti
Tarter and L. D. Pierce.
clear
year, so watch for them. Procce
from the sal* of them will b* us
tn our Service department to asa
distressed ex-service men and Um
families tn our community.

Clark Cable — Jean Harlow

23c

CHINA SEAS

3 - IOc

ADULTS Uc

29c

* 2Oc

**• 19c

CHILDREN 10c

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 5

The Gorgeous Hussy
Joan Crawford. Robert Taylor. Uenri Barrymore, Fraachol
Tone, Mrtvyn Dwgiaa, James Stewart ta Cteropo* Brawn's
Prod action.

Larry "Butter" Crabbe

UI
g
Ui
Ull

DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

The Girl On The Front Page
— PLUS

The Longest Night

ADDED-KIDDILb REVUE

WITH ROBERT YOUNG. FLORENCE RICE. TED WALT
JULIE HAYDON, CATHERINE DOUCE?
6 WOTSCK-MaUaae Frirer
JhrwdH FrUoJAf*r?VT5r*80 c*

CHILDREN

___________

DIM IN OKLAHOMA.
|
Word Just received in Hazllr

ar&lt;L Oklahoma, where she had gd
leas than three weeks previously (I
a visit with her daughter, Mrs. B

troubto fallowed an attack al flu.-1
Halting*

SATURDAY ONLY, DiCKMRU 5

The Arizona Raiders
ADULTS |&gt;e

A FINE RIHPONKE.
Mrs. Harry Wood. American L
gion Child Welfare chairman, rl
ports a fine rcfiporun to ths appt
for bedding and clothing for t|
famine* of World war veterans. BI
has received quite a supply but the
la still need for more of such su
plies.
U you have anything to dour
please call her at 3001 or 1188 a I
the articles will be called for.
I
The Thanksgiving season is I
good time to think of others fa I
fortunate thap vouraeU and a Q
opportunity to aid In their yretfar

Texas, Wilburn of

With Edmund Lowe. Gloria Blurt, Rxginrtd Owen

13c

- 15c

Wallace Berry

WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY. Doc. 2, 3. 4
bPEClAL ATTRACTION

Al the tut meeting Henry Eggk
ton and Roy Bush were appoint I
color bearer* and William Androv
। guard. The following commute I
were appointed House. Vorn Ysrg.
Roy Bush, WUford plait; relief. A
drew Mauhewa, LoRoy Russell. A1
gelo Spirts; investigating. Vera 51
clair. Bon Waite. William Andrew

returning Tuesday

BteSkM Group jm
first ateeting of the

Carvoth bad Ute Mmou and tea

been stolen from his

�the

Hastings banner. Thursday. November

m, imc

Teacher—Russell Laubaugh.
| Treasurer—Aval) Swift.
Teacher—Marguerite Seger.
:
STARTED SUIT.
MARTIN CORNER*.
1 No. 4 Tanner (Census 19; enrolled
Tha Federal Umd Bank of St.
No. 6 Brew (Census 28; enrolled’ Teacher—Grace Will
Mr and Mrs. William ShanU.
21). Valuation 851.700.
----. (Census
No.
7 Fr. Branch
29; en­ 16i. ValuaUon 851310
Paul. Minn., tor “the
•*--------use and
"* *■bene—
Treasurer—Floyd Nesbet.
Director—John Corrigan.
rolled 16). Valuation 898.650
I Director—Chas. W Von Denburg-f. fit of the American Employers In­
Teacher-Myrtl* Wllsqn.
to attend
Director—Ernest Skidmore.
I Moderator—Joseph Williams.
surance company of Bosun. Mas*, Ing near VermontvtUe. ar* tlx par­
Moderator—Joseph Corrigan.
No. 10 Shores (Census 34; enrolled
Treasurer—Forest Coleman.
_________
has brought
_________________
suit in tho Barry coun- ents of an eight pound son bom
Moderator—Lesu-r Hawks.
Treasurer—Austin Loftus. St.
23). ValuaUon 8104400.
Treasurer—Leia BideIman.
Teacher—Marguerite McPharlln. ty circuit court against Stanley 1
Teacher—Francis Curley.
November 20. Their many friends BRUSH
Director—Howard A. Steele.
.
. Nt&gt;. 5 Pr. Otis (Census 23; en- Prank a and Cleo B. Brown, tat
No. 7 Fillmore (Census 26; school
Teacher—Edna Plorv.
extend congratulation*.
Moderator—Chas.' Early.
vidually and as co-partners under
No. 8 Belgh (Census 32; enrolled rolled 8). ValuaUon 857.115
(Continued from page 1, Bee. 1)
dosed). Valuation 847.000.
Sunday school next Bunday at
Director—Alvin Hetrlgel.
Director—Izola Dunn.
25). Valuation 8110.780.
Teacher—Mary Smith.
the usual hou1- followed by preach- met with Mn. Ida
suit
allegt*
trespass
on
the
case
and
Moderator—Monroe Follls.
Moderator—Ray Erway.
Director—Gertrude pennock.
No, 8 Fr. Checkered (Census 28;
Hastings Township
charge* damages amounting to 88.enrolled 16). Valuation 138.000.
Moderator—Maud Miller
Treasurer—Bert C. Newland.
Lloyd
Goodenough of Battle Creek five vidtar* »nd two
No.
3
Fisher
(Census
20;
enrolled
"Dutcher—Evelyn Newlahd.
Director—Allen Woods.
No. 10 Pleasant Hill (Census 10;
visited the Whetstone family over Joy the bountiful din
No 6 Edger (Census 23; enrolled
18) . Valuation 1169320.
Moderator—Clinton Vannoclcer.
school closed). Valuation 869.400.
Teacher—Georgia Ba.uett.
Director—Homer Becker.
ner n «hnrt
13&gt;. ValuaUon 877.765.
|
FENNOCK HOSPITAL.
Treasurer—George W. Shafe.
Director—M. O Bedford.
Orangeville
Township.
stone
bock
to his work Sunday aft- held followed by cur
Moderator—Wn). Newton.
Director—Myrtle Williams.
Teacher—Orville M Babcock.
Moderator—Fred Johnson.
Three bahle* have been bom at
Treasurer—Andrew Kennedy.
No. 2 Falk (Census 28; enrolled
Treasurer—Btrtus H. Palmer.
Moderator—Beatrice Laubaugh.No. 0 Fr. Lincoln (Census 48; en­
the hoepitAl during the post week:
TVacher—Helen Butolph.
There was a good attendance and
rolled 201.
No. 12 Fr. Little Brick (Census 23; 13). Valuation 861440
Treasurer—James Dibble.
No. 4 Fr. Gregory (Census 21; en­ enrolled 16). Valuation 856.695.
A daughter to Mr. and Mr*. Harold
wlll be held with Mr*. 1
Director—Wm. C Strain.
rolled 8). Valuation 8111330
Moderator—Leon FVlder.
Moderator—E. W McDcrmld.
Director—Wm. BUausbaugh.
No. 7 Fr. Good Will (Census UI; Weick. 402 E- Green St.. Nov. 21; a 6. at Mrs. Lena Cole's last Wedne*- of 1815 Princeton Ave,
Director—Elmer E Bush.
Treasurer—John Carlisle.
day.
■
Treasurer—L. J. Charles.
Moderator—■Chas. a. Woodruff.
enrolled 7). Valuation 859415.
Moderator
—
Glen
Ingram.
Teacher
—
Norma
Castle.
Director—Wm. Shilton
The quarterly conference tar
Teacher—Beatrice J. Moore.
Treasurer—Kenneth Hurless.
Treasurer—Chester B. Tompkins.
No. 3 Orangeville (Census 130;
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Leo TUI, Hastings circuit will convene at t)ie ------------------------------------Teacher—Phy lbs Edger.
Moderator—Burdette Cotant.
Baltimore Township.
Teacher—Donna Mead.
enrolled 77). Valuation 898.180.
603 B. Jefferson, on Nov. 24.
Treasurer—R. J. Hathaway.
Martin church Friday evmln*. De- ' bring a gift to exchange.
Johnstown Township.
No. 5 Altoft (Census 44; enrolled
No. I Dowling (Census 68; en­
Director—Jerome E Coryell.
Teacher—Edna McKibbln.
Na
1
King
(Census
23;
enrolled
28&gt;. Valuation 8198.060.
rolled 25). Valuation 8182.060.
Moderator—Fred Livingston.
No. 9 Yeckley (Census 12; school
9). Valuation 891.615.
Director—Hasel A. Snyder.
Director—Marshall P. Pierce.
Treasurer—Claude Sparrow.
closed). Valuation 870,925.
Director—Agnes Dickson.
Moderator—Roy Preston.
Moderator—Claude Lester.
Teachers—Gleiuia Osgood, Clara
Director—Raymond Shultz.
Moderator—Carl Bowman.
Treasurer—Harry L. Rlzor.
Treasurer—Kendall B. Rees.
Stanton.
.
Moderator—Homer Yeckley.
Treasurer—Cecil A. Strickland.
Teacher—Carrie Fisher.
Teacher—Leland N. Jones.
No. 4 Blake (Census 37; enrolled
Treasurer—Theron Caln.
Teacher—Ethel Prentice.
No. 7 Star (Census 37; enrolled
No. 2 Striker (Census 38; enrolled
15). Valuation 847350.
Yankee Spring* Townxhlp.
No. 2 Fr. Monroe (Census 58; en­
19) . Valuation 8132.700.
24). Valuation 877.250
Director—Ferris Brown.
rolled 26).
No. 1 Fr. Gales (Census 31; en­
Director—Ralph Striker.
Director—tAwrence Beadle.
Moderator—S«m Keller.
Director—Chas. Fox.
rolled 13). Valuation 844488.
Moderator—Allen McDonald.
Moderator—Gilbert Scott.
Treasurer—Zelpha Morehouse.
Moderator
—
Frances
Russell.
Treasurer
—
Ross
Bllvin.
Director
—Mac Bowerman.
Treasurer—Delbert Reynolds. .
Teacher—Irene Bhellenbarger.
Treasurer—Spencer Dunn.
Teacher—Marjorie Oatroth.
Moderator—Glen Nichols.
Teacher—Cleo Brown.
*
Prairieville Township.
Teacher—Elizabeth Martin.
No. 8 Hasting* Center (Census 12;
Treasurer—Katherine Martin.
No. 3 McOmber (Census 35; en­
No. 3 Fr. Parker (Census 13; enNo, 2 Milo (Census 12; enrolled
enrolled 5). Valuation 875350.
Teacher—Irene Japhet.
rolled 23). Valuation 869520.
rolled 8&gt;. Valuation 861380.
14&gt;. Valuation 8145.850
No. 3 Pr. Yankee Springs (Census
Director—Lu die Fisher.
Director—Fred Bugbee.
Director—J. A. Lester.
Director—Frank Roush.
20; enrolled 19). Valuation 835422.
Moderator—Nina Matteson.
Moderator—Frank Prentice.
Moderator—Vern Quick.
Moderator—Henry Germaine.
Trea.‘urer—Carrie Bponuble.
Dtrector--Ed. McKibbln.
Treasurer—John Thomas
Treasurer—Edith Groat.
Teacher—Ludlie Schantz.
Moderator—Juper Raymond.
Teacher—Gwendolyn Gaskill.
Teacher—Caryl Isham.
Trachea—Doris Saunders.
No. 9 Pratt (Census 25; enrolled
Treasurer—Rollo Johnson
No. 4 Hendershott (Census 30;
No. 4 Fr. Blevciu (Census 15; en­
No. 4 Pr. south Pine Lake (Census
Teacher—Opal Houghton.
enrolled 18). Valuation 865.970.
12). Valuation 878525.
rolled
13).
Valuation
877340.
17;
enrolled
9).
Director—Albert L. Reed.
No. 4 Fr. Robbins (Census 29;
Director—Wilbur K. Schantz.
Director—Earl Bristol.
Director—Walter Warrer.
Moderator—Carey Althouse.
enrolled 18). Valuation 8120,154.
Moderator—Jennie Slocum.
Moderator—John Schreiner.
Moderator—C. A. Merlau.
Director—Dora J. Bargent.
Treasurer—Ines Haynes.
Treasurer—Dirk Hoffman.
Treasurer—John Rogers.
Teacher—Ethel Kilmer.
Moderator—Mr*. T. O. Latouretlc.
Teacher—Eloise Storer.
Teacher—Sarah Gillespie.
*•
Teacher—Arlene Taylor.
No 10 Fr. Quimby (Census 26; en­
Treasurer—August Kotrba.
No. 5 Weeks (Census 26; enrolled
The first cold spell—will it cotch you out
No. 5 Fr. Bristol (Census 40; en­
rolled 13). Valuation 8107.496.
.
No. 7 Calkins i Census 14; school
Teacher—Marian Edger.
14). Valuation 899590.
rolled 27). Valuation 895 200
closed). valuaUon 883,750.
Director—Floyd Gaskill.
No. 8 FT Ritchie (Census 2;
Director—Mamie Whitworth.
in it? If you hove your cor winter-serv­
Director—Bernard Peck.
Director—■Jake Johnson.
school closed). Valuation 8170,060.
Moderator—Lawrence Ritzman.
Moderator—Clayton Jarrard
Moderator—Hannaii Stamm.
iced you need not worry. But if you don’t
Moderator—Harold Doster.
Treasurer—-Shirley Ritzman.
Director—A. L- Grave*.
Treasurer--Lyle Dickerson.
Treasurer
—
Will
Hammond.
Treasurer
—
Ward
Lindsey.
Teacher
—
Marie
Cole.
Moderalojt
—
Henry
D.
Shively.
Teacher—Marcella Lester.
heed this warning you may pay a good
Teacher—Leona M. Moon.
No. 8 Fr. North Pine Lake (Cen­
Treasure/—Sadie Lewis.
No. 6 Durfee (Census 32; enrolled
Hope Township.
No. 6 Banfield (Census 33; en­ sus 49; enrolled 26). Valuation 8229.­
24). Valuation 8112.750.
deal. Stop in today and let us winterNo. 1 Doud (Census 23; enrolled rolled 23). Valuation 8123.125.
600.
BRANCII DISTRICT.
Director—Thomas W. Hoffman.
15). Valuation 884.450
Director—Guy Mead.
Director—Ernest Hall.
Moderator—Orville Purcell.
Mr. and Mrs. Kent NeUon and
service your cor and you'll thank us all
Director—John Houghtallng.
Moderator—Delphi Byers.
Moderator—Earl Dunlop.
Treasurer—■Claude Hunt.
Margaret
of
Lansing.
C.
O.
Mason
Moderator—George Norris.
winter. "A few minutes today will save
Treasurer—Samuel Buxton.
Treasurer—Robert C. Ford.
Teacher—Gladys Calms.
and Richard of Nashville spent
Treasurer—Lewi* Maier.
Teacher— Elsie Conklin.
•
Teacher—Arthur W. Lathrop.
No. 7 Pr. Barney Mills (Census 35;
Sunday here as the guests of Mr.
hours delay.”
Teacher—Mary Bishop.
No. 7 Culver (Census 44; enrolled
No. 10 Fr. Cressey (Census 29; and Mrs. Fred Nelson.
enrolled 19). Valuation 886.000.
No.
2
Fr.
McCallum
(Census
17;
22).
Valuation
888.050.
enrolled
13).
Director—Henry Van Syckle.
Mr. and Mr*. Wayne Conklin of
enrolled 7&gt;. Valuation 861.130.
Director—Fnv Whitworth.
Director—Wm. A- While.
Moderator—Harry B. Babcock.
Allegan
were
Saturday
night
ana
Director-William
McCallum.
Moderator
—
Harley
Johnson.
Moderator—Luella Hartman.
Treasurer—Orin cole.
Sunday guests of the latter* par­
13 PLATE
. Moderator—James Collison
Treasurer—Irving Barber.
TTeacher—Henry Beverwyk.
ents. Mr. and Mrs. John Darby.
I Treasurer—Richard Laubaugb.
Teacher—Leo Dull.
Teacher—Charlotte Buckley.
Carlton Township.
Teacher—Lena Laubaugh.
Meetings closed at the South
No. 9 Bullis (Census 26; enrolled
Rutland Township.
No. 1 Rogers (Census JI; enrolled I No. 3 Cedar Creek (Census 22; 12). Valuation 864550
Maple Grove church Sunday evc16) Valuation 8123-300.
No. 1 Al-Gon-Quln LAke (Census ning and prayer meeting will be
I enrolled 16). Valuation 861.675.
Director—Harriett? Van Syckle.
Director—Homer Frederickson.
। Director—Ardy Owen.
26; enrolled 16). Valuation 866.570. held Tuesday evening at the north
Moderator—George Miller.
Moderator—John Blaser.
Director—Burdette Sutton.
---- "--------*
Moderator—John Lammers.
Treasurer—Oeorge Willison.
church
Instead ' of~~----Thursday
eve­
Treasurer—Jerry Andrus.
Moderator—Ray Haywood.
Treasurer—John Ourd.
ning.
Teacher—Prances DeMott.
FI RESTONE
Teacher—AUnc Frisby.
Treasurer—Frank Newton..
। Teacher—Helen Skidmore.
______________
No. 1! Burroughs (Cenus 23; enMr. and Mrs. Vincent Norton,and
No 2 Carlton Center (Census 32; i No. 4 Hinds (Census 24; enrolled rolled 17). Valuation 850.550.
Teacher—Ruth Stutz.
Margery were Sunday callers *c
TIRES
enrolled 10). Valuation 8143.900.
No. 3 Chidester (Census 29; en- the Ernest Gray home in South
17). Valuation 860.850.
, Director—Julius
- - Frey.
Director—Henry Williams.
rolled 16). valuation 862575.
Director—Wm. A. Moore.
Moderator—David V. Conklin.
Maple Grove.
COURIER TYH
Moderator—John Robinson.
Moderator—Keel Toblaa
Director—James F. Mead.
Treasurer—Robert McCarty.
Treasurer—Hale Carpenter.
Moderator—Janies H Knicker­
There can be nq revolution while
Treasurer —Barrel Phillip*.
Teacher—Arabclle Bivens.
4.40-21
HU
Valcanlxlng
Washing
Teacher—Hazel cairns.
a 8700 sedan ckn~overtake a 85.000
Teacher—Gertrude McPharlln.
bocker.
Maple Grove Township.
4.50-21
5.17
No. 3 Fr. Bamurn (Census 35; en­
Treasurer—-Forest weaver.
limousine and toot for gangway.
No. 8 Shultz (Census 22; enrolled
No. 1 Pr. Qalltrap (Census 40; en­
rolled 27). Valuation 8126.000
9). ValuaUon 890.025.
BLUE
4.75-19
5.«7
rolled 22).
Director—Floyd Fenstemaker.
Director—Clarence Beachler.
REGULAR
MOTOR
30*3 Mt
Moderator—Hubert Barnum
Director—Fred puller.
.
4.11
Moderator—Vert Robinson.
Treasurer—Vida Blood.
Moderator—William chetseman.
GASPRICE
FJEL
Teacurer—Frank Hom.
Treasurer
—
Vera
Sheldon.
Teacher—Claudine Matthews.
Teacher—Virginia Havens.
Teacher—Lucille DeWitt.
No. 4 Fr Fish (Census 42; en­
No. 7 FT. Brash Ridge (Census 34;
No. 2 Maple Grove Center (Cen­
rolled 24).
'enrolled 22). Valuation 849.400.
sus 28; enrolled 16). Valuation 874.­
Director—Dale Cook.
। Director—Ethel Enders.
450
Moderator—Clyde W Tooker.
I Moderator—Roy Hull.
Director—John Martens
Treasurer—Claude Yetter.
I Treasurer—W. H. Anders.
Moderator—D. W. Irwin.
Teacher—Ethel Crook.
Teacher—Margaret Johncock.
Treasurer—Bernice Schantz.
No. 6 Fr. Welcome Comers (Cen­
No. 9 Cloverdale (Census 37; en­
Teacher—Annabelle Cogswell.
sus 40; enrolled 26). Valuation 8112.­ rolled 16). ValuaUon 883.950.
No. 2 FT. Mayo (Census 19; en­
445.
Dltector—Chas. F. Monica.
rolled 12). Valuation 896.000.
Director—Rov S. Yarger.
Moderator—Ed. Pennels.
Director—Clyde Kenney.
Moderator—Burwell Scudder.
Treasurer—Grover Davenport.
Moderator—Loe Mapes.
Treasurer—Alma Pinglelon.
Teacher—Velma Wolfe.
- Treasurer—Ray Dingman.
Teacher—Lola Wickham.
Irving Township.
Teacher—Marciel Buckland.
No. 7 Cheney (Census 15; enrolled
No. 3 FT. Moore (Census 41; en­
7). Valuation 8115.800.
No. 2 Fr. Cobb (Census 11; school
rolled IB). Valuation 8114300.
Director—Wesley Booher.
closed). Valuation 845.050.
Director—Clyde Walton.
Moderator—Grace E. Olmstead.
Director—R. B. Walker.
Moderator—Vern Hawblitz.
Treasurer—Cleo Sears.
Moderator—A. M Bmelker.
Treasurer—Kenneth Mead.
Teacher—Christens Fox.
Treasurer—Prank Giner
Teacher—Helen Willltu.
No. 9 Friend (Census 30; enrolled
No. 3 Wood (Census 36; enrolled
No. 4 Fr. Dunham (Census 50; en­
20). Valuation 881300.
13&gt;. Valuation 841.700.
rolled 23). Valuation 8130.400.
Director—Earl Engle.
Director—W. B. Cole.
Heavy Weight, Long Sleeves, Ankle Length—most all
Director—Aubrey Swift.
Moderator—L. R. Allerdlng.
Moderator—Arthur Kidder.
Moderator—Winnie Buxton.
Treasurer—Lewis M. Daniels.
Treasurer—Bert EUlott.
six**—while they lost—go at—
Treasurer—Dale Bponseller.
Teacher—Willard Kidder.
Teacher—Erma Gregg.
Teacher—Maynard Tucker.
No. 10 Fr. Brown (Census 43; en­
No. 4 Fr. Jones (Census 29; en­
No. 5 Norton (Census 33; enrolled
rolled 18).
rolled 12). Valuation 811230024. Valuation 8U7.000
Director—John Usbome.
Director—Phoebe Fighter.
Director—Harvey cheeseman.
Moderator—Clarence Sisson.
Moderator—William Crockford.
Moderator—Lee Gould.
Treasurer—Carl BrecheUen.
Treasurer—Cedi Oler.
Treasurer—John Maurer.
Teacher—Mabel Keller.
Teacher—Evelyn Short.
Teacher—June Irland.
No. 11 Ft. Coats Grove (Census
No. 5 RyaQ (Census 26; enrolled
No. 6 McKelvey (Census 25; en­
56; enrolled 35&gt;. Valuation 8206.616. 24). ValuaUon 850.320.
rolled 17). Valuation 8122300.
Director—Floyd Clutn.
Director—Clara Malcolm.
Director—Vern W. Marshall.
Moderator—W. M Richardson.
Moderator—B. P. Falconer.
Moderator—Sterling Ostroth.
Treasurer—Chas. W Townsend.
Treasurer—Cressle Sledge
Teacher—Flossie L. Allerdlng.
No. 12 Ragla (Census 28; enrolled
Here'* o buy that can’t last long. Only a limited quan12). Valuation 881300.
tity—to clo»e out—
Director—Glenn Miller.
Moderator—Wm. Strickland.
Treasurer—James Bowler.
Teacher—Louise Baldwin.
Castleton Township.
We have in stock a fine line of BEDROOM SUITES
No. 2 Castleton Center (Census
Just at the right time for winter wear—If your boy
28; enrolled 17). Valuation 8117.950.
both modern and period, and we know that you will
needs artic* better hurry—at only, pair—
Director—Freeland Oarllnger.
be surprised at the very low prices for which they
Moderator—Arthur Mead.
Treasurer—Carl Huwe.
.con be bought..
Teacher—Crystal O. Bragdon.
No. 2 Pr. Lake View (Census 22;
enrolled 7). Valuation 878470.
Talon fastener fronts in most all colors end sixes —
Director—Allie Munn.
. »
A beautiful two toned walnut finished
Moderator—E R. Gillespie.
Treasurer—A. A- Turness.
Teacher—Freda Smith.
No. 3 Hosmer (Census 20; en­
rolled 9). Valuation 891500.
• Director—Wesley Brooks.
Consisting
of
handsome A
Efl
Broken lot* and sizes, several style* to choose from—
Moderator—Peter Baas.
Treasurer—L. Gardner.
dresser with good *iz«d mirwV
to dose out at, pair—
Teacher—Ruth Semrau.
rar, a large chest of draw­
No. 4 Wellman (Census 30; en­
er* and beautiful bed to
rolled 14). Valuation 1111.100.
Director—Waller Brown.
match for a* low a*
A Fomily Monument or Marker is always a sound in­
Moderator—Edwin Deaklns.

DIRECTORY OF
RURAL CRAPES

Director—Mrs. Albert McClelland.

BATTERY

SUNDCw

Starting Friday, Nov. 27, at 8 A. M

GIRLS* UNDERWEAR

MEN AND BOYS—STOP!

Children**

Make Your Bed Room
More Attractive

Outing

Pajama*

Boys’ 4-Backle Cloth Top Arctics

Boys’ Corduroy Cossack Jackets

MONUMENTS

BEDROOM SUITE

Ladies’ Novelty Shoe*

and MARKERS

WASH FROCKS

Treasurer—8 W. Smith.
Teacher—Paul W. Smith.
No. 5 Morgan (Census 17; enrolled
10). Valuation 877.800.
Director—Donald E. Mead.
Moderator—D. A. McClelland.
Treasurer—Wayne Christopher.
Teacher—Frances Orsborn
No. 6 Felghner (Census 21; en­
rolled 10). Valuation 8123450.
Director—Ed. Felghner.
Moderator—Roy O Brumm.
Treasurer—Harley L. Felghner.
Teacher—Margaret Perkins.
No. 7 Martin (Census 19; enrolled
7). valuation 895.650.
Director—Orr Fisher.
Moderator—Clara V. HeraeL
Treasurer—Milo Barry.
Teacher—Ruby Cogswell.
No. 8 Barryvllle (cinsus 39; en­
rolled 12). valuation 8129,400.

One lot (hort sleeve house frock*. Several style* group•d in on* lot to do** ouh—go at—

vestment. If there is on unmarked grave on your lot,

let us be of service to you In the selection of a suit­
able Memorial. We have a

beautiful display.

now and look them over. Prices very reasonable.

A Home Indiutry

matched walnuts that you have ever seen at u high as
88940.

Call

Eitabluhed in 1907

HASTINGS MONUMENT WORKS

Our entire store is simply Tunning over with hun­
dreds of beautiful pieces of furniture that would
moke the most lasting Christmas gifts that could
be given. Come in and choose what you want and

we will gladly lay it away until Christmas.

Clean Quick Soap Chips

REMNANTS

AT REAL

MILLER FURNITURE CO
Order Now for Spring and Save Money

HASTINGS

PHONE 2226

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY—
TRADE AT HOME

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26. 1936

Editorials

Haw to tho line, let-tho qulpo
till whore they may I

°f from two to four hundred

nmcance ouwonu
v
•
luJM
pools; eight thouHollywood. We refer to lhe special ■
recreation parks; eighty thouaolar ob*ervatory near Fem liar,. sand tennis court*; one thousand
where motion picture* of the sun medium-sized country dubs; four
are being recorded under the dlrec-; hundred fifty miles of excellent
Uon of Dr. Heber D Curtis. Dlrec- rt31f*nC*‘““ **7*
mortgage debt tram more than ten
tor of Observatories. University of lhoui,nd fann4. wouM ;unU&gt;h
Michigan.
*
•
' fortabte old-age Incomes for more
By use of special filters scientists than two thousand people from in­
fer the first time in the history of 1
charges on investment alone;
astronomy have been able to re- would build more than thirteen
cord a cnntlnunii* picture of Uw tre- hundred miles of paved highway;
mondous activity, the titanic up- w«dd pay for more than fifty thouimvate wh^h lake place on the
medium priced automobiles,
auriaee U the swl II give, a graph-1 Measured in such values as thl*.
Jc, accurate record of the great
th* necessity for peace time
clouds of gas which are hurled at In- preparedness 1* costly beyond comtense velocity thousand* of mites1 prehension. If even a half of trie
above the surface of the sun and '•®ort devoted to warfare could be '
then cascade back like thfe fine tumod to Improvement of life and

Frank Buck they tell me has a
rival—and right here In our little
city at that!
_
Brlng 'Em Back Alive" Frank
(Buck) Kelly, well known Consum­
ers Power employee. Is the man.

Understand that he took Earl
Chamberlain. Charlie James and
Ben oldley up north deer hunting
to show 'em how it was done.

project which cannot be car- j
nn Ywr
nnt.ten nlcyyp 1 hf *11our earth; it shows the mysterious
sun spots which erupt gas clouds tire world must be brought together
at herculean proportions. Scientists on some general plan before the
United States or any other country
tailed, leisurely study ot tbe Incom* can make any decided strides to­
ward permanent disarmament Talk
manifest by surface activities.
to the contrary Is nonsense.
Probably no other "motion picture ■ if France or England, for example,
studio" In the world has had so decided to disarm as an object lesmuch thought and study givxn to ton to the world, what would be the
minute technical detail*; In none reaction at such firebrands as Mus-'
have more elaborate and delicate, solml ar HlUer? Ukswise if this
mochtnical problems been solved. | country disarmed could we be cer- ■
What I* the use of It all? Well, tain of our own future?
NO! For the present, therefore.'
knowledge for one thing. Eve:
since the beginning of recorded his
— ­ our armies and navies art) Just **]VteWS
the important to us as schoolhouses.|
tory and undoubtedly before. L.
universe around us has been a
a universities, highways, parks or oth.
____
-l.u,._ _
;

Standing ready below the tree
were Chamberlain. James an4
Gldley ready with coats in hand to
grab the ferocious animal when
Frank had finished shooting away
the limb (of the tree, of course) on
which it rested.

Understand that George Lock­
wood's favorite theme song Is now
"Oh Olve Me a Home Where tba
Buffaloes Roam I"
Hehl Hehl Hehl It seems that
George has Just about decided that
a Buffalo might be easier to catch
than a big buck at that!

Philo Sheldon. I understand, says
"amen" lo this.
«
-

]

mankind. Throughout the centuries The time has not come when we can
facts have been uncovered from the ■ uy International problems before a
veil of mystery but for each one tribunal for peaceful settlement us
brought to light, a thousand Cante-1 wc lay national questions before

. how MUCH IS A KILOWATT
'
!
HOUR—AND WHY?
: There are score* and scores of
,
. xney pazseu meir graues ana re-,
linns oim nimln.
,
oar o»n supreme court.
ceKed their dusomsi. The, «e
From a practical standpoint, it । H u entirely possible, however, J bright, normal people—yet. how!
seems probable that a study of the ' that such a condition may even-1 many of them eould give an under­
sun may when linked with olh^r tually be achieved. The trouble ie we | ?t“lablc dcftnlUon ot * kilowatt
data collected by weather stations, aro au nationalistic minded today. |
ol
paying tor kilo-'

throughout the world give some । Formerly armed force was used to | WaU hours every month. Yet. they,
new light on the climatic changes on j Mtue deputes by different factions ’ don't know, exactly, what they are '
our earth. Already sun spots have ln e|jly colonial times; armed force 1
‘
'
■— &gt;«“&gt;'«“
™ 'i»“« ■" “»«•»■«tn« mX
tain weather Irregularities. The west Nnw, although the employ- i graduated—aay to the butcher:!
motion picture* taken at this Michi-1 ment of armed force has not been "Give me a four-pound hunk of beef
gan studio will make th* chance eliminated entirely tn this country.! for roasUng ' The butcher tumbled
the arret majority of duputre are
"5* °r
■
for accurate study more complete.
| settled peacefully tn courts. In other
that scientists have not yet had words. »e can think of ourselves a* tomrr could not even guess what
part of Che animal that “hunk"
time to interpret their significance.
cam- from or whether it was suit­
A day by day record of the sun
will doubtle** rrvx*j a story even as parts of a state or a region with able tor roosting, boiling, or dog
more Interesting than the best yet__________________
local traditions and___________
standard* to
produced by the moat gifted of uphoW
paying for a host of thing*
scenario writers.
! l, n impossible that tn Cha future,
Michigan can well be proud of its through education and further ua- Ublea. baked goods, clothing, print­
unlque “movie lot" __
, . liappy experience with the deadlines ing. furniture, flowers and flour..
—--------------- —•
1 -_u
nt mr err mar
A COMMENDABLE MOVE
-come to visualize ourselves as ettiTugwell * retirement from public 1 zens of a world instead of a nation
life will not tend to decrease the'or a region? m no other manner
confidence of about sixteen million will danger of armed conflux be
citizens of voting age In the Roose­ eliminated.
come in the list at everyday things
velt government

Pungent Paragraphs

belief on the part of some educa­
THE WAR DISEASE.
tor* that all high school students
A suggestion bu been made by
■ Mutiny on the Bounty" is not a, would profit in a dUcuasLon of such
practical subject* as will a fleet thetr
Dr. Frederick B- Fisher of the Cen­ story’ of people who refused U&gt; ac­ dally hvwa and their family pocket­
tral Methodist church of Detroit cept relief money —Albany Knlcker- books when they get out of school.

national affairs that possibly the!
.
,—
best way to attack lhe problem of] The person with plenty of «nd
war U to treat it as a disease and usually manages to stay off the
subject tt to a detached, scientific, j
clinical study just as bacteriologist*'
How to wm a war? There is only
| one way. stay out of it.—Richmond
tem of combating virulent microbe5 !'
i
New*
Leader.
As he pointe oat. tt was less than a I

other day. Hr brought up the sub­
ject. We understand that Principal
Hlncbey is an advocate of this sort
of practical information. It sounds
sensible lo us. What do you think of
It? Maybe tt would be as valuable
to know the mewing of a kilowatt
hour as to know how to diagram a
sentence or to glibly recite "Gallia
cst dtvtsa tn partes trrs "—fichuykr •
century ago that disease germs were
An aviation engineer says that Marshall. CHr.ton County Republic -'
just as uncontrollable, just v
, within 10 yrers we shall be trevrla mystery as wars are today. Belen- ing 500 mi&gt;&gt; *n hour through the
tttte ttarted from nothing, .so to joxr. He. maybe, but not a*—Amer:-

Crumbs of Wisdom ■

speak, and arc now making cures, can Lumberman.
BRUCT OBBIRVATICW.
which would have seemed miracu-;
----------I can make a lord but only the!
lous a tew decades ago. Constant re-! Aa authority on nutritional values
Almlglity can make a gentleman.
search, tbe careful assembling o! | caU the Gull pompauo the riches',
teited lacto and the tonnation of ’ h*h. It was our impression the tffiad
IXe ts a long lesson tn humility." |
hn«MU •« i«uk .way &gt;»,.
at—James M Barrie.
accompliahed the seemingly Impos­ gonlan.
leisure wc hast "—Hazlltt.
_
--------I
■The vjtomobUe buslnem.- found
dooevard. with no horizon but the
harder of his own little hamlet; and
li has made Uicm the. monarch of
lime and distance"—Bruce Barton.

"Mussojini U. not a man to slip
quietly acrcxs the 8wu,.t frontier in
the dttquW of a Swedish botanist."
—Harold Nifo^on. M- ?•
.
friendship. Jove^and piety ought
to be handled 'with t sort of pyste-

' Backward Glances;

I
„„,,n8
Bite nf Yesterday he brolM; Bwa* from hb mt«rfer■Dllb
1 caittTUUy ene&lt;,
by a acintillaung exhlbl'OHtBirTW
jxmrrssix- । lion of footwork and dodging broke !
TWENTY TEAKS AGO.
“P“
™
City workmen are now gravelling ;
• • •
Shrtner street, the angling road be-1 Thus the status quo remained as t
tween Jefferson and Hanover streete. m Use beginning
Tbe Clirlstmas seal sale in Barry
• • •
On the
'county under the auspice* of the
__ ground were lhe bring- f
Hastings Anli-Tubcrcutoois society em-back-allvera; in lhe tree wav htwill be in charge of Mrs. Phyllis tie ursus seeking only solitude.
Reynolds.
|
. * .
' The Detroit Free Press gave Fritz
—
----­
So •"
the game
began
once more.
1 Rehor high praise for his good work
| Ln the Penn.-Michigan game Sat-1 bnly thl* time, the offense, armed
urday.
1 now with blanket*, proved more
1 Dr.. C. P. Lathrop was elected, formidable.
' president of the Hasting* Academy |
• • •
“MA" beaten in washroom."
Medicine to succeed tho late Dr
Little Ureus found himself once
•
Johnny must have finally of
J. M. McGuffin at the monthly, more plunging earthward and this
put his foot down on this ear­ meeting of the Hastings Academy of j time his most nimble dodging, his
washing question.
Medicine Thursday afternoon.
most expert "ghoitlng" could not
Hasting* will have a coodensary I get around the "atonewaU” of blankThe average |x-rson uses tbat will take care of from 40.000 to ete presented by Earl and Charlie
about 34 pounds of air a day. 60.000 lbs. of milk a day. requiring, and Ben.
but house lo house canvassers milk from 2.500 cows.
• • •
get more than that.
I Tlven up steolted "Bring 'Em Back
THIRTY YEARS AGO.
[ Alive" Kelly to claim his bc*x
Codfish arc used as a medium
A very preUy wedding was tolem-;
• • •
of exchange in feel and. Dora nlzed st 7:30 Wednesday evening at
&amp;ut cursed fate! Il wasn't a bear
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hub- c“b
«U. But only an ordinary
slpn C. O. D. originated.
bard when their daughter Mary,coonl
was united in marriage to Ro*&amp;i
• • •
"Blast Rips Cleveland Sta­ Armstrong of Middleville.
' Once again live laurel wreath of
dium." These football coaches
Manual training Is proving a val-; victory went fading in the distance
will have to get better control of uabie adjunct to our school and is
• • •
their fullbacks.
progressing nicely.
i But then, boys, don’t lake It too
Sunday While walking through the ’ hard.
"Vienna man attested tor sell­ Goodyear woods Just north of town. I
• • •
ing space in heaven for 15 cents Frank Maynard found several danIl a something lo bnng back even
a square yard." We doubt that dellon blocaoma—a rare And for thl* something alive.
the property was dumped back time of year.
* ‘ *
In fact, after reading the casualty
in his lap.
FORTY YEARS AGO.
' •■-•ports from "Deer Front" Tommy
Mrs Anna rarwth »nrt r j 'conclude* that the bold huntsmen
«v.n. bow of WU ai, «re
' *7
"Jl “ b'""i
llTO‘
married last Thursday evening by,se‘*“ b*ck
,
f ONI.Y atf
Rev. Thomas Cox at the home of1
.
the bride. Only the Immediate rete- • 60 ends oureSa_g,w
^Mrs^Eva^Ruv.11 and children of' But Frank l,ia “Buck" Isn't the

A Quotation

Colorado Springs ore visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hitch-. uule cu&gt;’
r*e empty.'

They tell me that the alibi given
by a deer hunter is frequently even
more ingenious than the one* given
by a fisherman.
,

More reason* than one! Eh Don?
• NOT KROM BARRY COUNTY.

Barry county deer hunter had the
experience that was reported of one
In Wexford county. Thl* particular
hunter, whose name was withheld by
conservation officers, drove into Mc­
Bain with what ha believed to be a
spike-homed buck lied to the side
of his automobile. Conservation offi­
cers examining the animal found
that It was not a deer but a young
steer. The hunter made reetltutlon
to lhe owner. It was decided that no
law had been violated.
,

But little Ursus. stubborn brute,
was strictly non-co-opcratlve.

EI‘£RY duly, even
the least duly, involves
the whole principle of
obedience­
//. E. Manning

Ul our
...

•

John R. Gentry, lhe famous racing
^^7 001 ,, ,
h&lt;r*e was sold at auction last week;
nr(n.in.i
to Lewh O. Tewksbury of New York
City for glf.OOO. Gentrys time isi ot IUslln8’ High, for example.

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

Engltfili Snuin
SUITS and TOPCOATS
Many new fabrics just re­

ceived this week.

Plenty

dark

of

colorful

worsteds and oxford fleece

top coats.

And up to $22.50

GENUINE

Alpa Camel

Fleece Overcoat
One of the Finest Coats Made
along

fleecy

fabric,

knitted,

new

woven.

Q

g
X

Full silk lined.
nm YEARS AGO.
; tolned by Mocdames O. G. SpauldI Ing. Manning Doud. J. E. Hogle.
John Spence. Henry Nobles and J. E
I Wardell Wednesday afternoon at»d
evening next week at Red Ribbon
i hall.
f The young and talented elocutioa11st. ML i Marie Wflson. will appear
। in readings and rrdtaUon* at the
' Prcabyterian church Monday everung. N«. 29 under the auspice*
MEMBER
1 of tho W. CU.
1 Mr*. R. Mudge and Mrs. Fred Bar­
low gave a very pleasant tea party
I to friends Thursday afternoon.
! CUrds are out announcing the
| Intended marriago of diarlee B-1
Baldwin, crack pitcher of the Na-The
M th«.
' I*00*1 UaffUC ,W1 iI1M D°r&lt; E MaX’
InduUrtaUari the&lt;5 daughter of A. A. Matthews
UWW hare made a ere.t ml.I.kr I------ --------- -------------------ay &gt;in uV; ,
the bride!
.vniritual and
and artistic
artLulr. values
vahm U)
tn in
in.­
e-r»i»u«B
y
spiritual
dividual progress. in making quan­
tity rather than quality the end at
which to aim. they have made one
NEWS GLEANINGS.
of the very great mistakes of human
history .’--RalphBcrsod l
During the civil war between1
harUaa T an* feu. n-anla
'
Present
hid'a'favorite
llmexifk which Im delighted to pen star Abbey wag used as barracks for,'
the -soldier* of the-Partlament.
-1
on the back of hte picture:
AT for looks. I know I'm no *Ui:
Water at 4 degree* centigrade wUl

T.

Way of Our World

c- mutually undctitood in’ sjlepcc ...
Many thing?, arc too delicate to'be
they can.- thought; many more to be .pokrh. For J am behind IL
“
Most bird* sk»p with the head un-.
—Novella.
I
It to the folks out in front that I Jar.1 dcr the left wing.
■

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Editor Banner:
' themselves of that knowtedgt.
Now that the campaign la over' There was no public IntlmaUon
and J cannot logically be accused during the campaign that the Demof making mlaretnaenlaUons for ocratlc nominee favored the TownpoUtioal profit may I call attention Msad P1*11 nod we all know that tho
to the political ads Inserted by rar- President was bitterly opposed to 1L
lous Individuals Just prior to dec-' May I have the privilege of *aying “
again
to those who still persist
tion day. which, in subatanct. ad- ,M
*,n *«
dressed lo Townsend!tea. stated: in circulating falae reporta as to my
Vote for your "friendOuy Tyler
(the Democratic candidate) and
against your “enemy," Hoffman;
and lo the other one requesting the to the unfortunate of all ages—to
voters to support Felix A. Racette. all those In need. I do object to
lhe Townscndite. and lo vote against swallowing without reeervallon all
these so-called “recovery plans."
"your enemy," Hoffman.
schemes,"
or
These ad* were sometime* signed "share-the-wealth
by officers of Townsend clubs, someold age
I limes by others, but the principal which are so falsely la
j..i |w
ww* vm
*mc ■** H,&lt;- assistance and which
■ ,,
electton by creating the imprestion designing politicians to further their
that I was lhe enemy of old age as- own political advancement.
....------ ----No statement could be
Reapectfully yours,
distance.
more untrue and U Is regrettable
Clare £ Hoffman.

Thereupon a plan wa* formed.

and Opinions', |
. z^.i
o
Wil (it Vt/ieTS dOJ1. (

sible. Dr. Ftaher suggeSla that this
'The face of every girl you meet
same method might b6 applied to in the street." says an essayist, "bi
a story In itself." Usually one ahe
one can deny that It is a diseased had made up herself —Humorist.
condition of society wlUch impels I
suppotedly civilised people to| Letting a girl call you by jour
slaughter out another at periodic Christian name is sometimes the
Intervals. AU other methods of at-1,—
— —
r toward
--------- letting —
- call
--­
first
step
her
tacking this problem ‘ have tailed I henelf by your surname.—AnowarE
to date. Dr. Pi-vher's proposal de­
serve* to be taken seriously. Perhap.-1 The troops will have a softer time
, in another war’ than, the noncomu new Pasteur might be discovered
*0anL sags a French prophet
Tr.ero are machine* now thst peel
IpoUteei -C Figo, world
Ueatod the. ubic;. In

The Public Forum |||

During a foray tn the forest, the
hero of our story disc.overed high atree nothing more nor less than a Edwin ended up with a porcupine.
bear cub—a cute, furry little fellow,
at peace with the world and all.
Hope that these "bring-'em-backallve" boys never try out their art
The sight of this dlmunitive rep- on these black kittles with white
I resentallve of the family Ursus stripes down tho back.
Amerlcanus started the old "bring
'em back alive" blood coursing
Hehl Hehl Hehl At least they'd
mightily through the arteries and
veins of my friend Frank the acquire a halo that'd be with 'em
•Buck."

spray of a mountain; it allows lhe
■■whirlwind*,■■tornadoes''
and
“monsoon*" which appear sudden­
ly on its brilliant surface, creating
gaseous waves which would over-

W m . pwu.1 be- .uufHnil uaw,
twA nianlfMCatlntu—a I
annie- marching forth they make

III

’Round About Town

FEATURING A OTAR.

of tooimloal achievement end *lg- ■

W. t*. SvfeV W • Cawmife
TUl C—1» Hh lt&gt; Six

Why Pay $40.00
PAFHC

YOUNG MEN'S

Prepster SUITS
Sues 33 to 38
H COULDN'T VQU SEE- X
(WA^ Makin® a RWHT TUrti!!
J Uovj qid i KNOW YOU V
|WtRt GO'HG TO USE N
I Both Slbtio* the
STREET

Double Breasted, Fancy Back Models in the
season's newest colorings.

I p.

WATERS
CLOTHES SHOP
SIU’NG QUALITY KKP$ US.SUSY

�THE HABTINGA RANNER. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER M, 1M8

imm
m ns

I

ANNOUNCE BETROTHAL.
|
POW1
BIRTHDAY DINNER.
---------------------------------------------------------TEACHING AT HULL HOUSE,
MB. AND MBS. HARRY
Albert Myer*, who celebrated hl*
r/xnrrr
lar/rso
GIDLEY HONORED.
MIm Henrietta Bauer, who 1* a
and MH. Charles A. DeLano
Minor Fall
___
__ th birthday anniversary ofMr.
slxty-ftf
The vwt ot str. and Mr* Harry aentar at lhe National Kindergarten Observe Golden
white Pigeon announce the an- dH, huntaea
was the guest of a honor | gagement of their daughter, L.
Gldley of Charleston. We*t Va, who *chool at Evanston, ta receiving her
Wedding Sunday 1 Bunday,turkey
dinner al his home.1 Evelyn DeLano. to Winston Merrick,
orc gue,^
the home of Dr. and' practice teaching al the Mary Crane
Ooven were laid for eight. Out of
CHURCH CIRCLE NO. A
I Mr*. Gordon P. Flj.her has cc-1 Nursery school ta Chicago. The
nircle no 8 of the Methodist caeloued ,&lt;ji»lta a little entertaining. I schooli i«
U u&gt;
ta warowien
connection wi*»*
with **
Hull
“•!
Mr. and Mrs. George McKibbln town rue*t* were Mr. and Mrs. H.
f am met at the eLmM Mr* On Bunday Mr. and Mr* Gldley. Dr.iHou** founded
founde by Mis* Jane Addam*. ol nw Yankee spring* celcbreled K VandoGtaaaen of Battle Creek.
nofd Saveli on ^BroSUy m£Mr and Mr. For-! Thl. 1*
(Continued from page 1. Brr.. D
1* aa C
distinct honor for Mias their golden wedding anniversary ?'1" E * Hilton will entertain the
Floyd o**kellf&lt;£\ta
on 8 wtaTmornhly
Broadway Monand Mrs.
da?ewnta«
John*™ and Dr and Mn M R Bauer ' a*
as she ----------------is ta charge of two gunday at the home of their grand-1 s#m® group for Thanksgiving dlnMUI BL
°&lt; **&gt;"*iaU had dinner to- member,
city clerk. There 1* a stiff penally mcettaTA tavrtv «u^ wm aerved
— ot
of the Junior
Junta.- cl***
c'"» w»
who ________________
children. Mr. and Mr* Burgel! Wat- 1 nerA lovely supper was served
for a doctor's failure to comply with mceting.
*- *■ '*■*
------------at
—the
- ----------------.at seven o'clock
&gt; V , by the committee.
w
gather at "The Farm" near Augu*ta., make lhe trip ta to Chicago every son, ■"*
near*"■
Prairieville.
Present
DINNER AND
BRIDGE.
I
the law. Tbe township clerk reports
CLUB ENTERTAINED.
Tueiday afternoon from three to j day from Evanston.
.
‘bounteous one o'clock
.
..
dinner
were j
Mr. and Mn. Harold Smith enwx Betty Swift
all birth* to ths county clerk and Mn. T. N. Knopf, Mn. Dorrance five o'clock Mn. Fisher was taxless j
—----------*--------------------John McKibbln and children, Mr.
---------- ... ,——----------------------- v.tertalned
B..k Bu««eight
.» guests
uuu* at dinner gMnt q.,
ami
they are recorded by the county Trethrtc and Mrs Geo. Newton. A at an "At Heme" when sixty friends :
DINNER PARTY.
. ».
and Mrs. Byron McKibbln and call- Bottum entertained lhe members ot j RitnrtBv
8unday »v»nln?r
evening. nrlrtaa
Bridge was
wa* nlav^d
played, Johnson.
____
'
clerk In a book provided tor that short buxinem session was conducted of MX* Gidtoy called. Tueidayeve-1 Mr and Mra clarence W. daw­ dren of Yankee Spring*; Mr. and' their bridge club‘last Thursday «t . MXB
pointer and Ed. Smith
by
the
circle
chairman.
Mn.
Frank
purpose. The township clerk t* fur­
ning the member* of their bridge ford entertained fifteen guests very »4r». Lyle McKibbln and children of' luncheon at the Woman's City Club j havij^ high score and Mr. and Mn.
Carrot
her*,
after
which
the
meet
­
Miner Palmar
ther required to report each birth
club.
Mr.
and
Mn.
Gldley.
Mr.
andl:
delightfully
at
dinner
and
bridge
Otsego;
Mr.
and
Mrs
Wm.
McKlb,
in
Grand
Rapid*.
Contract
w*s
|Kgro
j
d
Bjockwzy
the
low.
ing was tamed over to Mr*. Joe.
to the state health commissioner, Brocax
ana
naa Mr’- Jolin*™- Mr and
on Thu reday eventag at their home। bln and son and Mr. and Mrs. Rob- i played al the home of Mr*. Mai,,,
and me
the noitesu
hostess wno
who had
who is alio required lo keep a record- Brocak
Clarkes daughter.) stBUunen had to be smarter ta Middleville. Richard and Rll—H
charge of the entertainment. Radio ®'Conn®r‘uDr‘
0,1 8outh Broadway. Bouquet* of ' ert McKibbln and children of Pral- Cassidy. Mr*
Ralph Decker of Detroit,
of such birth In his office.
------ L----------- — „
- ---------- Dr and Mr* Frederick H. Taylor,
ehry.-anthemums were used an . rlevillc; Mr and Mr. WlU Watson Ten member* from Hartings attend-1^otaday. Theyhadtovotewita? Palmer,
Bob Lyon* of Miuke*m and Mn.
Through the courtesy of Judge program* werq put on by different had a pot luck dinner at the Taylor
ub,„
B bouquet of' and children of Cloverdale; Mr. and ed and there wtxo four guesta from " getting any telegram*/
Eetella Cowell of Grand RapMg.
Clement we were shown the form* of groups, the best being a song sung, horn* on South Jefferson street and the lgr^r vgrlely mBde attractive■ Mrs. wm Shattuck and children of । Grand Rapids.
1 oul ®euln“
««warns,
the order which he la required to in Armenian by Mr*. H. A- Adrounle . thl* Wednesday noon Mrs Robert decontlons. Honore at bridge weret parchment; Mr. and Mrs. Rush,
make, if he shall tame one, tn refer­ and her group. There were 28 pre*- O’Connor.ta having the bridge four- | TO1 by Mr Bnd jgra Kellar Stem.. Saunders and children of Delton;
ATTEND PARTIES.
ence to any unreported Mrth that ent. Mrs. Harry Gldley of Charles­ I tone, to which Mrs. Gldley belonged.. Mn. wilbur Lane and Harold P.. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Foote and sou
Ml** Barbara Johnson of x»Hastings ,
occurred. In thta county after 1887. ton, W Va.. being an out of town 1[ for de**ertPhillip*
, of near PrairievlUe. Later a delicious attended the™Chi--------Omega open
-pen house ;
in which a record of that birth guest. New members in the circle
-----•
------■
-----golden
wedding
coke
and
a
large
the
Northwestern-Michigan
Northwestern-Mlchlgnn
include
Mrs.
J08.
Skinner.
Mrs.j
I
TWO BRIDGE LUNCHEONS.
"
cannot be found cither tn lhe office
,
HUBER
—
MITCHELL.
tox.
containing
a
miscellaneous
a*ganw
Bt
the
University
of
Michigan
he yean sind lhe first Thanksgiving
Merle Conklin. Mn. Earl chamber-1
Mrs. A- L. Brown was hostess at | Mtaa Dorothy MitcheU. daughter soeunent of groceries, were present-1 oa Saturday. November 14. Ian C.'
of tho itiu health commissioner lata. Mr*. Roy Gamer. Mr*. A. B.| two delightful luncheons last weekof Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Mitchell of ed to lhe honored guesta by the ch 11-. inxMtac of Hartings was present at |
Gwinn and Mrs. Wtalfred Snyder.
have passed quickly — great changes
on Wednesday and Thursday at one
Battle Creek, will be married dren and grandchildren. The after- j ttte Alpha Tau Omw informal
It necessary for him to issue several
o'clock. On Wednesday covers wereThanksgiving day lo Richard Huber, noon was spent in taking picture*. | dance the same evening.
HOSPITAL GUILD NO. 14.
orders for the benefit of people who
have taken place — but through it all we con­
laid for twenty-four guests and the Mr*. MitcheU I* a former resident of one a four generation* picture, and ।
--------------- --------------------had to establish tbe dale of their, Mrs. J. L- Brass entertained 38 contract prizes were won by Mr*. Hastings, having made her home for enjoying a program ot Instrumen-1
FLOWERS FOR FAVOBS.
members of Hospital Guild No. 14
birth by official evidence
tinue, once each year to give thanks for the
O. E. Goodyear and Mrs. John Daw- a number of years with Mn. Mary tals. songs, and readings contributed
Favors of chrysanthemums for
When the late Will Roger* went Monday afternoon at ber home. Ji san. On Thursday twenty guesta Wlthey. The wedding will be attend- by the group, caller* during the day 1 ew;b
mBd£ the denert bridge
the annual Thanksgiving meet­
abroad for the first time in 1920, he was
Mr*. Brown, ed by member* _.
of ....
the ------Immediate
were
Wm. Stocking
of Cressey; Mr., glven by
. ouy Bauer -------------last Thur*ing and a large donation of canned were
w-.- entertained
..... by ------ ----- .....
---------------------- —
plenty that is always ours. vegetables
and
fruU*
was
brought
Mrs.
R.
G.
Finnic
and
Mrs.
R.
W.
families
and
will
be
followed
by
a
and
Mrs
Wm
A*hby
and
Maurice
dfty
R
goiorfu]
ft
fi
n
ir.
Bridge
was
turned down because lie failed to
for the hospital. Auction and con-; Cook winning the honors. Guest* wedding dinner, which Mr. and Mrs. Ashby
of lcum
Cedar u.rre».
Creek; mi
Mr.. and Mr*. piayed
pi*yed at six table*, high score* be
be-­
Asnoy oi
This year can be no different. We are a great
____ _on
___________
___ ________
_ _ ____
_____ I.
Bert McKibbln.
tract were played. Mn. George । from out of town
Thursday were
Fred L.____
Fairchild
will_ attend.
McKibbln, Berl
Berl McKibbln. Mr. I ;ng won by Mrs D
D’ A VanBu*klr«
VanBusUrk
annoyed with the delay and wrote Sumner having high score for auc- Mr*. E. A. Frandsan
Frartaicn ot
aS Ionia
Ionic and
——
■_________
——
»• *—
__________
——
and Mrs. *■«•&lt;
Earl Mricihhin
McKibbln nf
of near
nearI■ -------.. j. Coxa.
M
«----nation, rich in all for which man has need,
an article In which he made hl*
-- - of
---------------|
HOSPITAL GUILD NO. 22.
Yankee Springs; Mr. and Mn.
-----------D. French
Middleville,
fammi* italement. familiar to many lion and Mrs. D. A. VanBusklrk Mrs. T.
—
----- --------------Twenty-four member* of Hocpit&amp;l James Null. Sr., and John D. Null of I
' DESSERT BRIDGE.
—
people, that "When you *ec a bay for contract. Mrs. Kellar Btam wa* I
and we have cause to be a thankful country.
—-yy DINNER
j Guild No. 32 were entertained for Otsego. Everyone reported an enVariegated carnations decorated
presented
with
a
vegetable
corsage
,
BIRTHDAY
running around with a pair of pant*
AND ’THEATER
PARTY.1 dessert and bridge last Thursday joyable day and left wishing Mr. I tbe
tables for a dessert bridge
for the loweat score and the award,
r"r‘‘
We may look forward to greater things—
Mr. and Mrs. Darrel Jones and i eyenlng al the home of Mrs. A. A- and Mrs. McKibbln many more hap-1 glven iul Thursday by Mn. Ben
for the best vtaltor was given to Mn.
daughter,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harold
IMasoner
on
West
court
street,
py
anniversaries...
.»
s
—
u.™
—
x.,
—
been born." But the fact that a man J. R. Haye*.
Jones and daughter of Hastings and Winners at bridge were Mrs. L. E.
‘
'
.
' ataeot. Bridge honor* were won by
from the least individual to the nation as a
baa pants on, or that a woman
ANNIVERSARY PARTY.
Olen Brower and Mr*. Wm.
Mr and MX*. Leland Jones and ' Barnett and Mrs D 6- Goodyear. Jr.
BACHELDER—BUSKIRKwears a dree* will not be accepted
Mr.
and Mrs. George,TolhursJt^en-------------------------------------- ---- — D po^oy.
Friday, November 30. MU* Haael daughter of Dowling celebrated al The committee in charge was comuhole—and we can still give thanks for the
by lhe government a* a birth cer­
birthday dinner at the home of Mr. posed of Mrs. Roman Fcldpausch. tertalned a group of 10 neighbor*
tificate. Neither will It aid In eatob- , Buskirk, daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Clair Jones and family o’ Mrs. C- B- Hodges. Mn Forrest' on Saturday evenVig,
DINNER FOB FAMILY.
cventag. it
11 being their :
fishing the age of an applicant for Earl Buskirk, and Arbur Bachelder. Kalamazoo Sunday. After a boun- Johnson. Mrs. J. O. Bristol. Mrs. 4Bth
plenty that is the envy of the
wedding
oUberl
Brt
*~*■" ~ *aAnIversyy
*" "* ' **Pedro
— *—
»on
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
W.
H.
Bachelan old age pension nor for any
i wo* played with the high prtaea 80-1 entertaining with a family dinner
benefits under lhe social security der. both of this city, were united In eiu* dinner In keeping with the Earl Coleman and Mr* Reasoner.
world.
Ing to Mrs. Butler Smith and Mr. jOn Tnanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs.
marriage at Angel*, md.
Ilday season all enjoyed a theater •
■
-...----------PARTY.
Babcock and the consolation, to‘ErfQ
Robtn
Carlloa
FAMILY
The bride graduated from the party at the Stale featuring lhe DlMr and
OUve Patience and Eben Kelly and
mine QiilntuntaU
Quintupleu tn -Reunion.''
"Reunion." A'
tnd Mr*. Orv Haywood enter- Mrs. Olive
itr3 u A Nlchola ot
A
HasUng* High school ta 1928. The nnn»
LENT CORNERS.
most
enjoyable
day
wa*
had
by
all
.
talned
thirty
grot*
last
Bunday
The
host
and
hostess
served
an
,
thU
clly
„
u
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall and Mr groom has employment with the
_- - । compllm*nt*ry
I zumnlimentarv
to hl* father.
to hl* Al-1
father.
oyster
Al-supper,
avstereveryone
xurrner. everyone
having ahaving
1
a1
and Mr*. Arthur Paul and children Bll** Co.
BRIDGE—LUNCHEON.
' feed Haywood, al their home near happy evening.
They are at home ta the Langston
HONORED MRS. COOPER.
of Kalamazoo spent Bunday with
Mrs. Harold Pelham entertained Thomapple lake, it being his eighty--------------- ---------------------1
Mr. and Mr*. Lyle Francisco and apartment on East Center street.
v
.nnH&gt; FOR EIGHT.
Forrest Potter entertained a
DINNER
at a delightful luncheon Saturday first birthday. Mr. Haywood wa*
children to help Master Ronald cele­ Best wishes are extended.
Mr. and Mrs Herman Arold en- , jroup of friend* from Hastings,
U one o'clock at the the home of »urs!y surprised when his children
brate bl* second birthday.
Despite tertalncd eight guests for dinner, Grand Rapids and Freeport on
her mother. Mn. D 8. Goodyear, on and
v”-4 their famine* arrived. rtunire
JOLLY TWENTY CLUB.
Mr*. Lenna Nottingham enter­
Friday ocuu&gt;
evening.
Thanksgiving deco- .Thursday -al —
dinner
honoring
his
years.
Mr.
Haywood
1*
active
and
we*t
Center
streetContract
was
hia
yean,
aunnj-'An,
M
B
.
—— —
----- - Mrs.lamca
me
om»nu&gt;c
v.uu
xuu.m
—
,.
The
Jolly
Twenty
club
met
al
Hie
tained the Bunshine Club Thursday.
_________
u high ______
Vfarv CAArMr
Sayed at two tables. Mr*. A. E. well and enjoys life everyday. All rations
were..--u
used - —
and
scores . Mary
Cooper, It
it Sw-lnv
being her HlrtK
birthThirteen member* and five visitor.' home of Mr*. Oscar Flory Monday
were present.
'
evening with twenty-one present. Johnson having high score and Mrs. hope he may have many more hap- at bridge were held by Mrs. D. 8 i &lt;l*y. Il wa* a very happy gathering.
:
Goodyear
and
Dr.
R.
G.
Finnic.
py
birthdays.
j
। Goodyear and Dr. R. G. Ftanie.
| ----------------------------------------------------Mr. and Mrs. Marc Hammond | Pedro wa* played and Mrs. Belle K 8. McIntyre second prize.
spent Sunday with their daughter* i Brock and Mrs. Walter FUllngham
Mr. and Mr*. George Comfort. Jr., won tlx ladies’ prlxee and Bob Bowand Mi** Jean Hammond of K*l*-1 man and WU1 Allen the men »
i
j prizes. The •«»**
next HiMflnn
meeting will
will n*
be ' &gt;
Mr. and Mr*. John Freed have''held with Mrs. FtUtagham on Dec. I
FOR
sold thelj- farm here and bought an-1 7.
other near Yankee Springs. We will j
.11 ml« (hem. but «U&gt; Ut.m .ut-1 noNoniTO
nnu.irs.
CIS* in their new home.
|
.ndwrxPJ Pratl^ter-

SOCIAL EVEIyl S

WALLACE GROCERY

AND FEED STORE

WINTER

EOT?

j -JrSS

MARK'S STORES, Inc

tertalned about IS relatives and|e*nu
friend* Saturday evening tn honor
ENTERTAINS TWENTY",
of Mrs. Phillips’ birUiday.
, „„ ublea werB in puiy at the
Clarence Hammond of Hasting*,
bridge given by Mrs. John
spent a few days last week helping, tronit(je
Friday evening. Oonhta brother. Mere
।
prtae* were won by Mrs. B.
Mn. Lawrence Hammond was a R Reedj
r
Taylor and Mr*
Kalamazoo shopper Friday.
J warren Carter
Her and Mrs. E- L. Crocker of
—21--------- - -------------------the Wesleyan Methodist church of,
HONORED AT U- OF M.
Hastings called on Mrs. ' Permelia
ian C- Ironside, son of Mr. and
Sage. Wednesday afternoon.
i Mrs. John ironside, ot Hastings ha*
Mr. and Mrs Leland Hammond' been elected treasurer of lhe Junior
spent Sunday evening with Mr. and! das* in lhe college of Architecture
Mrs. Thurl Cook of Plainwell.
i at the University of Michigan.
The children at the Cart Caldwell
- ----------- « » »-—
and John Freed homes have been
Matinee performance «
having lhe chicken pox.
Fixes." Dec. 3—Adv,

STATE STREET

HASTINGS. MICH.

and Save Money
ROYAL DELUXE Hot Water Heaters

MODEL SHOWN

__$9.95
Mascot $3.95

SALE
BUTTER

Type
98\p

LIFETIME
INVADER
BATTERIES

35c
17c
18c

Del Monte Peaches, No. 2’/i can
Del Monte Peas, can
Viking CoHee, pound
New Dates, 3 pounds
Diamond Walnuts, pound
Nuts, Mixed Of Brazil, pound

ISc
17c
18c
27c
25c
23c

$|Z2

BaU boatlag. sttoaasUaed. bouiUfuUy aa• Inch.

RUBBER TIRED IN
GREEN AND RED

HEADQUARTERS FOR

SLIPS
PAJAMAS
ROBES

With whirtie. 28 in.
long — ‘engine can
and track—

Complete— Count­
ing beads, QQc
alphabet—

^l’6

FELT DRAFT MAT

39 PLATE. I yaer $p.79
guarantee, exch.
C

VACUO
Defroster FAN

LAY AWAY A GIFT TODAY
Fog Light

Substandard

SPECIAL FRI, SAT.

GALVANIZED

Beef Kettle Roast »• 15c

PAILS
4

jj

TWIN AIR
HORNS
$■08

Lined Broke Shoes
FORD A LINED
Exchange

. . ,48c to $1.98
.... .$1.00
$2.25, $3.98, $6D0

SLIPS . .
PAJAMAS
ROBES

Work* off
vacuum, saves
battery

45 PLATE. 2 yr. $E-25
guarantee, exch.
V

Suction cup
Attachment

$|6?

.48

&gt; LIONEL TRAIN

10.95

$528

Velocipede

SCOOTERS

BLACK
BOARD

Electric Defroster

Pork Sausage, 2 pounds
35c
Hamburger, 2 pounds
29c
Pork Loin Roasts, rib or loin end
20c
Fancy Turkeys, pound
25c
CHICKENS &lt;■ DUCKS a GEESE

Green. Blue and Orcbid. 8l»e
72x84. Baleen binding. Price

MARK’S TOYLAND OPENS

a. 35c

Premier Shrimp, 2 cans
Premier Tuna, can
Del Monte Pineapple, No. 2 size

COTTON PLAIDS DOUBLE
WOOLS—Kayn taffeta bind.

Manifold
Inhibitor—

After Thanksgiving

RIANISKLSAIF

of

our

$1.00 Admiration
Hoia at

59
ALL THE NEW

Silk awl Wool
.

DARK SHADES

A -w

J[4C

▼I r

•The Superette"
pPair
x'" ■

WEATHERSTRIP
WsSStSVri
|^C

MUFFLERS
FORD A
$ | Z$O
Complete
■ I ‘

39c value —
while

U.t -

they

■
■

I

EXCLUSIVE

BUT

HASTINGS, MICH.

MONEY EACK^ITR ASMII.EIF YOUR!" NOT SAT

NOT

IX

TELTP

�THE HASTINGS RANKER, TWCTSDAT. NOVEMBER M. UM

FACIE MX

Rogers. Tredinnick. W. PInkbelner. I Feb. 19—Charlotte—There.
"China Seas.’
H.iPinkbriner. Townsend and Moore.: Prb. 20—Belding—lienAn all star adventure picture. leal
Tliaw who do not make llie first. March 4. 8. fl. District Tournaluring Clark Gable. Jean HarioJ
l«**m will work under Mr. Brozak. ment.
and Wallace Beery, a story of lord
A full schedule of fourteen games
mystery and intrigue. Leak Stone ll
has been airanged for each team,
in the supporting cast
SERVICE EX­
with lhe first home game December CIVILAMINATIONS
BASKETBALL SEASON
ANNOUNCED.
noruc nrnrUDCD A 11 w,u' Chartotle.The Ionia home; Tha United Slates Civil Service Stuart Erwin In "WarnUrtjilO ULLtlYlotn 4 game on December 18 is the open- _---- , --— --------- -------- .----------U&gt;(ulU-«u.
umounrad
------- - ---_
Kiinic Th,
llir uu&gt;a -re
MeCoraaluhm
- —----h&gt;,
----- .
----- 7---------- -open
,, •---- This picture is a newspaper story
Two stampedes, a running guni
...hard. and. .hope .lo add
.. ..
eumrMUlHv*
na
out Of lhe ordinary in every respect. battle with the rustlers and ranci
Eitfhtv Bova
Report
For working
.e pverrilnAtlAni
*«mlnaUons
us rnllAWa*
followsAUllUII IIUIU
U1IU UULC IV MBU the
MIC J"TpcUUv
------------------------- ---------------- 7
highly ooys
Report ror PhUel U.U iropl., u, Ua rootban
loMtall Lithographic atone grinder and
“0 pol- 11 gives the audience the vlewpunt episodes of horse-breaking and gun
. _ । c-pturecTihh
...... . .... Tall.
. .&lt;■ ’
i&lt;her
2(¥1 ua vi-ar
isher 11
*1.200
year &lt;fur
ifur annolntmmt
appointment on current events that Is had by lhe pix
Practice; Five Letter(award
, keep
Krrp things popping from star
I in Washington. D C- only*. Weath­ working newspaper craft. And. most tpUy
In0 finish
men Return
er Bureau. Department of Agricul- encouraging, it preaenu newspaper I
-----BASKET BALI. SCHEDULE.
,
turv.
junior
custodial
officer.
*
1,800
life
without
exaggeration.
■
■
I T he basket ball sea-ton for lhe
i Hastings High school opens official­ .Follow.ng is the High school bas­ . a year. Bureau of Prisons. DepnrtI
Hastings
High School
ket
bull
schedule
for
1930
1 ment of Justice. Supervising Inxpecly. December 4. al Allegan, but
tor ol clothing factories, 14 600 u
Dec 4-Allegan—There
practice has bcr-n under way for
Activities
year. Federal Prison industries. In­
two weeks already with 80 boys re­
A hard boiled managing editor
, corpora ted.
Dec. lb—Ionia—Here.
porting. Couch Lyle Bennett has the
ctuascs swords and purposes with
D.-c 23—Woodland—There:
Full Information may be obtained a society girl who Inherits lhe news­
following
lettermen
returning:
Three candidates for lhe D. A. Iq
1 from H. C. Wunderlich. Secretary paper lie supervises They battle
Jan b—Middleville—Here.
Angell. Struble. Gladstone. Ironside,
award
made _an
Jan 15—Ionia—There.
of lhe U. S. Civil Service Board ot each other hammer and lungs until Good
Ransom Of last year's team Cook.
---- ■■ -Citizenship
------’T.---------------”l
10
“ TfT
Michigan
senior hlgil
I Examiners, at the post office bi this a blackkmall ring tries to victimize
Jan. 16—Belding—There
Besstner, LaBa'lbler. Doxey. Sothschool girl have been, selected bi
' site
Jan. 22—Allegan—Here.
ard. Thompson give promise of fill­
lhe Uta.
l^.e u Che
lhe
senior
class.
The
faculty
will
del
ing first team requirements, and
crisp amusing editor und Gloria
Jan. 29—Greenville—There.
, Everybody's going to see "New Stuart is lhe owner of the paper cide among them which shall receivJ
other likely-looking prospects are
It. The girls are Elaine Day. Mar
Fire-." senior play. Dec. 3, 3:301 who tries to write features.
Feb. 5— Uikeview—'Diere
Rearlck. Vandergrift. Godfrey, Adgarei Flnglelon nnd Merleta Stiles
8:0U.—Adv.
Feb 12- -Greenville—Here
iock. Schwartx Hall, Karmes. Bolo.
"The Longest' Night." •
1 A gang of department store ban- I Mr. Lower accompanied a groua
' dlls are caught as the result of a of music students to Grand Rapid!
j clever ruse by a brilliant salesgirl Monday lo hear the Don Cornel
and the son of the store owner Male chorus.
Murder, mystery.
romance and
Hastings will debate Otsego Wed
comedy all play distinctive parts in
the story'. The cast Uicludes Robert nesday evening at 7:30 In Centre
Young. Florence Rice, Ted Healy, auditorium. Borne of the students in
tercited heard the national debat
Sidney Toler and many others.
broadcast last Thursday on lhe q
“Cain and Mabel" slurring
lion of government ownershin
Marton Davtca, ( Ixrti Gable. public utilities over a radio
Gable meets hit match in Mabel 301.
.
,, TH A THOMAS SPECIAL
(Marion Davies) and the screen |
breaks Into song to celebrate. The I The Junior Mixer wa' held
I LH GREEN JAPAN
perfect gcreen match—made twice Tuesday night after school Jacl
as perfect when Warner Bron act it [ Rear leks orche»tru furnished mud
to music—shooting the works tn a for Lhoer who wished to dance
happy hilarious jamboree of Joy. A cards were available for lhe ot
WITH
swell yam—a swingtime romance
that puts rhythm in your feet and a
Donations of money and food
love song in your heart
OQc
। taken, at the High school last
' and Thanksgiving boskets made u,
AT THE BARItV.
for
needy families of the commuti
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY

SATURDAY LAST DAY;
OF WARDS VOVE.MBEIl SALE

11-TUBE Airline
Only the World’s Largest Radio­

DON’T FORGET!
WARD S TOYLAND IS

OPEN!

Retailer Could Offer So Big a Buy!

carried!'

plvi imoll corrylng chorg

Features of IlOO sets!
BIG 40' cabinet! World
range! Meta! tubes! 12'
speaker. High fidelity!
0N1Y A fIW1
HUUT1

1OW Girl Doll
A big, very prettily dressed
doll at a low price! Mohair
wig, has teeth, and voice!

USE YOUR CREDIT!

Sporting Items ।

s

At the Theatre ;

1SALE
0 lbs. THOMAS SPECIAL COFFEE

On yout old ,od.oi
Worth new

L

a.-

Give Her a New Coal-Wood

Range!

54“

Doll RaflNlnet

KARA
ZH \ TO ■ ■ SYRUP
■

DRY PEAS
PISTOL SETS

RIVERSIDES
Let your old tires buy
sale miles for voul Trade
them in at Wards now.
Riversides give 28% more
mileage ana non-akid pro­
tection!
Monthy Poytnb omng»d.

sir

Pop piitol shoots harmless
■parks. Leather holster,
belt, 3 wooden bullets.

I G*»

SPARK PLUG SALE
Reg. 23c. Standard quality! Compare
with ocher 35c lo 55c plugs.

SKILLET SETS ]
Polished cast iron holds heat,
Hvti fuel. Self-basting cover.

MACARONI K 17c
CATSUP S“ 10c

r««r« la suaiolns au
l'Sf( Hid Ki'ntUc tral
" '
Invssud

Dancing and ping pong furnli
entertainment Ln the gym during ti
noon hour. Tables are set up arout:
the room and ping pong may I
played at any time, two days a we&lt;
Miu Rowe Is in charge of the dan
tng to lhe music of a radio.

3

CAMS

THE DRUOOIBTB

25c

Adv.

22c
— 2£ 23c

PEANUT BUTTER

CLAPP'S BABY FOODS 3-25c

22«o

*39'

Supreme
Cleaner

s“‘/*' 3D®**
S3 DOWN, Carrying Charge
2 great gifts for one lot
price! Wards Supreme, by
test, equals $75 cleaners!
Beating - sweeping - suction,
headljght! One week only!

HEALTH

DRINKS
5c

TOMATO JUICE

No. I CAN
3 TALL CANS 28o

CAMPBELL’S TOMATO JUICE 4 cans

&amp;: 14c

LIBBY S

39c
l«c
89c
HASTINGS

29c
10c

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE •«&lt;&gt;.. can
ORANGE JUICE IBM OUNCE CAN 10C
PINEAPPLE JUICE

11 Vi OUNCE CAN

10c

RALSTON CEREAL ™ 23c
CREAM OF WHEAT

23c

MALT-0-MEAL «e. 22c

v acunm Bottle

- 79c
r*4t«d *n ,now for 24 hours
—«pt col fit rteamiug hot/
Made .by famous maker.

Montgomery Ward
111-124 JEFFERSON, SOUTH

The assembly last Friday was prt
sen ted by the social Activities Clu
Hdfttce Angell was chairman assls
cd by Ardea Clum and Phyllis HU
man. who sang duets; Donald Doxt
and Banford Rogers who gave a
impersonation of the Rita Brother
Mr. lower led lhe singing and Jar
Rearlck'a "Ll:tie Busies'* furnUhc
music.

5c

VERMONT MAID SYRUP

.

Famous Hswthome reduced this
week-end only! Buy it now I

Regularly 45c! Permanently seals hole*

n.

Senior pictures were taken U
latter part of last week.

4 CANS 25c
28 OZ.
SWIFT’S PORK &amp; BEANS CAN 10c
PANCAKE FLOUR Ete 5 - 20c

Hand Vacuum with Wards

CEMENT FOR ROOFS

13c

PORK AND BEANS

New Battery

Dry cell batteries with matal
tops. Wards Supreme Quality I

The typing room. 303. has bee]
rearranged so that the studenU wi|
now face South Instead of east. Nel
tables and chairs and some nej
machines have been.added to til
room's equipment.

CAMPBELL’S

G varan ft JI TF gXCH
172% more cold-weather starttng power than SAB •pocifieel
51 extra large plates. Rubber
separators.
Road King

FLASHLIGHT CELLS J

3 lbs

fot.soupmawns

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Full coverage! Cover back of
front seat. Give long lasting
satisfaction. Smooth fitting
extra heavy material.
For Sedans v... *3.79 !

SALE! MOTOR BIKE

SPLIT GREEN PEAS

WHOLE
GREEN

Nearly half the high school stu
dents attended lhe matinee perfor
monce of “A Midsummer Night
Dream" at the strand theater la^
Wednesday. School buses remulne
until 5:30 so that pupils from out
side Use city were able to attend
In the evening the Dramatic CI
accompanied by Miss Robson a
MUi Michael had a theater party
the Barry to see lhe same picture!

Nine applications have been r
ceived by Mr. Becker in response
an appeal for stage custodians.

Corveth &amp; Stebbins

Cloth Covers
WOfvb r
r nviu JU.

THIS WEIK OHLYIX. . »

Are Indispensable

c

BLUE LABEL
RICH in Dextrose

■■ &gt;

The Physician's Services

Th' UNCUS ?uu

Liberal Trade-in

Woidj First Quality

In "Dancing Feet."
The 'gay musical romance of a
young radio dance instructor and a
wealthy society girl masquerading
J as a hostess in a cheap dance hall.
: provide lhe basis for a tuneful and
hilarious musical comedy.

PRUNES25C
OLEO Z 2-27

&lt;Aft
OOc

Well built. Large tbe.
Swivel casters, end is bowed.
Green or ivory finish.

*5.00 DOWN (small
carrying charge) puts
it in ner home for
Christmas dinner. 200
extra pounds of cast
iron strength. Porce­
lain enameled. Hot
blast top saves fuel.
Copper reservoir.
Huge 18-in. oven.

vU

FHONE 2491

PH KPIIOV’C* FARINA

FILLbBUKT 61FL0UR

THEArRCS*7 PK6

IOC

CLABBER GIRL
BAKING POWDER
S£*9c 2£22c

G.E.LAMPS E95c
CAMAY SOAP 5C

IVORY SOAP
LARGE BAR

1C
10c

IVORY FLAKES

24c

2
1

MEDIUM BARS

1

MONOGRAM

COAL OR WOOD RANGE
“The Highest Class Cooking
Service Money Can Buy”
Removable

reeNaw GraantAD
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Sink Triv"1*'*

L
package tope 1 Qp
lo Tho B. O. 8. Cam- I dll

a,.,lb. bag------------

’6950

’89

’105

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE
142 I. STATS—-

128 WEST STATE STREET

HASTINGS. MICH

SHONE 2BI

�TOT HABTtNOI BANNER. THOIBAY, NOVEMBER M, MM
|

Humphrey Rahn* of Detroit was a'

' 1

1 in Grand Rapid* on Sunday.
]5^l£Sy’i5:OUtowh0,"| Golifen VeUing
Maurice Pierson to recovering i
UI. m&gt;u mi*, v. r- naiiirvp were
I from a bad attack of polaonlag
j Mtos Grace Hill of Battle Creek the guesU of Miss Olive Lathrop of
wa* the guest of Mrs. Don Foreman
Mis* air*
ChrysUl
Mr*. Mrs
Ed.
The fiftieth wedding anniversary 1 end ..
re!reshmenl* will be donated
j on Friday night.
.
i luuur.
warnThomas.
trway ana
, Tudor. Mr*. Ward Erway and Mr* of Mr. and Mr* Seymour Unington *o the
Mis* Mary McElwain
i— Grand
...... m Rap. . . .
__ ....
i
Mr*. John Nobles spent Bunday wilsou Ouidet were in
gue*t* from Friday until Bunday bar Friday.
Hastings visitor Monday.
tn Jackson as lhe guest ot Mrs i
Saturday
Mrs.
U
W.
Brice
and
Mrs.
Marian
Dr.
Allen
Frank WlUte of Grand Rapid* was
Dr. Allen Moyer of Charlotte wa* Grant Hitchcock.
। Mr. and Mr*. Roy Headley and lake road Thirty-tlx relatives sat
in lhe city on business Monday.
in the city Monday.
|
all&lt;i Mr* John Palmer of daughter Genevieve of Augusta were down to a pot luck dinner, after
Ml** Irma Waters was home from ! Kalamazoo visited Mr. and Mrs. Don' dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John which a lovely wedding cake and
Mrs. Qrace Bullard has returned
. Foreman Saturday night.
1 MacLeod on Batuiday
from a two weeks' visit in Chicago. son and John Texter are gueau of Ovotao over the week end
Robert O'Connor.
Ice cream were served.
Mr. and Mrs Charles McDermott
Miss France* Cowles U home from I Dr. and Mrs E. J. Pratt are: Mr. and Mrs. Wm. p Goodyear
Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Hubbard vis­
LUNCHBOX MIDGE
Kalamazoo for over Thanksgiving
guests of Dr. and Mr*. John Root|*ntl }w0 •wn*
Coldwater will
Unington. wa* born
ited Grand Rapid* relative* on Sun­ of DeHon for Thanksgiving.
'
spend
Thanksgiving
with
Mrs. George Coleman wrs in Bal- , oI tc*Ue for Thanksgiving.
upend Tliank*giy.ng with their
day.
Kight guests
MIm Mildred Angell to home from and family of Evanston. III. are He creek on Friday on business.
J Mr. and Mrs. Richard Allen of aunt. Mrs. p. T- Oolgrove.
Mrs. Georgina Bauer went to seven years old. making hl* home
Constantine for the balance of lbs guests of his mother. Mrs. A. D.
Mr.
and
Mr*
Frank
Andrus
spent
Flint
were
Sunday
guests
of
Mr.
and
KnUkern. for Thanksgiving.
South Haven Monday and in- the with an aunt and uncle, the Ute Mr.
week.
Mondey and Tuesday tn Traverse . Mr*. T. D. French In Middleville.
evening»IInstalled
lhe Bur
newly-elected
Mr. and______
Mr* ________
Stuart_________
Clement CIMr .nd Ur. Hu™ n..r, ... '*»■“» ■“•“»&lt;. oioerr,
Mrs. R. R. McPeek of Charlotte_______
Il» Euurn
cn»pur and Mrs. Irving Unington. Mr*.
officers of-the Eastern Star Chapter
wm In the city on Friday visiting spent Bunday In Bolding with hl»
Mr.. ana
mt* Elton Baker are Mr and Mrr
Loren
Boyes
were
Mr.
, oi that city
mnOwr
mother
Wra
Un
nj-llaRelle
rlamant
Clement
anrt
and
,
Mr
’
D°
ren
Bo&gt;e»
Were
Mr
relatives.
K“5i X.
eVS. “
mu In J.rk.m lor , X„“” o«w ...---- .. «...
f w
Mr. and Mr* Winston Sheffield
19. IBM. In Rutland. Barry county. Frederick H. Taylor.
Bunday from Lowell lo make their
Mra. Allen Pender accompanied , Guy Bauer and Bernard McPhar° ’
visited friends in Owosso over the
l Mr and Mrs R M Lambic went home with their son. Herman F. married in Hastings al ths St. Rose '
HONOUD MBS. PRILUPS.
her son. Uoyd. and wife of Grand Un are enjoying a d
sldwin un in&lt; lnl&gt; lo Detroit Tuesday to spend the Jdhe* They have an apartment in I CaUiollc church. They lived with
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hendershott of Rapid* to Detroit where they visited ' this week near Baldwin
Mrl D D w,lu&gt;n entertained
Grand Rapids visited Hasting* rel­ relatives Friday and Saturday.
। Mr. and Mr* Harold Logan of wsek with their son. Ebcr. and Mrs the Pancoast building Guests on the bride s pyenU one year, and on Bt |uncheflin Thursday &amp;cn for Mr*,
Ijamble.
’
'
Sunday
were ~
Dr “
M. ~~
M. —
Niles
of* ths Gregory farm south of town one H p p^hhd* who teaawe Dec 3
atives on Friday.
Mr. and Mr*. Dorrance Trelhrlc Ann Arbor were week end guest* of
. .. .
Mr. and Mr* Hannan Frost were and chUdren will spend Thanksglv- . DfMrs. Herman Neil. Jr . and son. Fort Wayne. William Knl«ely of vpar and then mnvad tn Lhe farm -■» ' Mrs. R. O Flnnle.
ths hruia*
tn Charlotte. Manhall and Battle ing with Mrs Trethric's parent*. Mr. I Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fuller of Jimmie of Detroit are spending lhe Gary. Dr. and Mr* J. J Van where they have lived for the p»*t Archie McDonald
Kraayenburg and Ml** Mary Oowdy M ywir,.
Archie McDonald received the bridge
Creek on Friday.
and Mrs. J. J. Biefen. at Detroit.
| Maple Grove were guest* of Mr. and week with her parents. Mr. and Mrs, of Grand Rapids.
. -1 ..cy -have four children. Fred. |
Henry Hubert and Victor Benner
Mlu Or«. Bdmona. w«nl W Del |«"
V™!*.
.
Mr.. D. M. Slu»n returned on I,
,"d
“• J'
"" Will and Mrs. Fred Williams of I
were at Baldwin over the week end
Iron. L-nrer .hero -ho! ?
“fj?1
"■£« I Hastings. Edd. of Sturgis and six1
troll last night to spend the balance 1 Mr. and Mrs Ben Gldley and
on a burning trip.
Philip will spend Thanksgiving with
Mr. and Mrs Floyd Gaskell were of the week with her sister and hus­ Mr Gldley'* mother in Owosso.
wu Che guett ol her Wsrer. Mr,. |
ofih grandchildren all ot whom were
band.
Mr.
and
Mra.
Edwin
Pate,
and
Hush Farrell
Itc which marked the twenty-fifth | present lo help them celebrate.
In Grand Rapid* Friday and at­
Mr. and Mrs. Neville Wood of La­ Mugnfwem
wedding anniversary of Mr. and, Many fine gift* were left to re­
family.
Ssloct Your
tended ths auto show
peer are Thanksgiving guest* of hi*
Mr. and Mr*. Harry Ritchie. Mr* 1
E Walsh. Mr. Walsh is Mr* , mind them of Lhe anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. John Eddy, Mrs. parent*. Mr. and Mrs John Wood
Mn. Jack DeBoer (Mary Gould)
Hazel HlnkJey and Richard spent CorUn# brother. Sunday Mr. and' Friends called In tire afternoon to
Packard Sbovtr
of Deteoil visited Hastings friends Winona Downing and Miss Rexlne
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Clarke and
^c. *nd
Frftactl
Oorkln had as a guest Mr*. । congratulate them.
Downing are guest* of Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs E. J. Huffman of
last week for several day*.
| corkin'* sister. Mrs. M S. SUme of'
Mias Amelia Walters and MU* Glen Smith of Grand Rapids for Grand Rapids were In Hastings Fri­ Ritchie at Howell.
NOW
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and' Detroit and ’on Thanksgiving Day family, wore present from Detroit.
Leila Jordan spent Thursday and Thanksgiving.
day.
C. B Hodges wifi be Mr*. Eliza- they will entertain Mr. and Mr*., Grand Rapids. Ionia. Kalamazoo.
To our patron*
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Lahr, Mr.
Mtoaes Elizabeth Finch and Helen Mr*.
belh
Cusick.
Helen.
Anne
Marie
and
Walsh
of
Grand
Rapids
her grandmother. Mrs. Sarah Hanna and Mra Floyd OaskeU and Mr. Wade are spending the holiday va-,
Vicksburg and Hastings.
farts and aaUsUcUan of own­
.... —
Thirty friend* and neighbor* gave
of Battle Creek, a* a Thanksgiving and Mr*. A- J Vender were Bunday cation at the former's home In Ko- Ted Cusick of Muir.
ing a “Packard Shaver.' W
guest* of Mr* Grace Merriman and komo’ In«£’
Mr. and Mrs. Unington a complete
guest
Fe wish you a rery
~
1 Mr. and Mrs Howard Norris of Q. E, $, OFFICERS
daughter. Marie, of Jackaon
Friday in Flint with friends.
Mr. and Mr*. Arthur Havefi and a,raf.d
Wfrf &lt;eek end guest*
-rri np 111 CT A | I tfl , surprise on Wednesday evening. Nov
Happy Thanksgiv­
Mr. and Mra. Guy Giddings are Mr*. Erma Gardner are spending of Mr ■«»&lt;• Mrs Elton Baker of
Mr. and Mrs. Burr Cochnuie and
IU DC IfldlHLUCU 18. wiien Uiey walked In with well
....
iChiifh U'i.hlnoloo
.,
------------two son* of coldwater are Thanks­ wuuolMr .ndM... HeilPrno.01 ml__.__ ____ ......
filled basket* to help them celebrate
wllh reUU.re
n. ,„,Bowh
Wuhlramm a,
Bt.
ing and if you
giving guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Grand Rapid* for Thanksgiving On R1VCJ Junctlon
Mr and Mrs Jolin Crue will Public Ceremony Tueiday their anniversary.
M ’ Newton.
I The evening was spent playing
, Sunday they were guest* of Mr. and i M
d M
J h Walton of
Thanksgiving with
Mr*
Pvawinw Tier 1 Pr.
should spill a little
Evening, Dec. 1, FreDr. and Mr*. F. H- Taylor will be MrJFLoren Johnson of Middleville I Kaumaroo will be Thank*g?vU?g ' Crue's parent*. Mr and Mr*. Frank
: cards and visiting and a pot luck
“Ideal for Christmas preeThanksgiving guest* of his par­ | 5«r. and Mrs. A. J. Vedder will en- riel[1 of
son pr D D Wal. Rawson, at Vermontville.
Cfided By Dinner
’ supper was enjoyed.
gravy or have an ac­
ent*. Mr. and Mrs. J. 6. Taylor, at h"1®1”11},*
®f tlhSl£
। ton. and family. '
'
! John Engel and Catherine Royer |
new]y ckcUd and apPointed
A set of silver teaspoons and
cident with the plat­
: ily next Sunday fur Uirlr Thanks-| Mr and M’ril De&lt;lu c Bron spent the week end with Mrs Engel officers^ Hastings ChapuTNo 7 tablespoons was presented to theqi,
East Lansing.
present Ron
cft Saturday
...
---------- -------Mr. and Mrs. Earl PAInc and Mar- • giving dinner.
amner. Those
inose to
jo be
oe preset
Mn jlcfl
81Uurday for
(or Grand
Onmd Rap- i nt
at Dimondale who I*
to spending some
romc ------brder of
’l^Eaatera
Bter —
will be after which tbe gueats departed for
ter — don't let it
Ur &gt;nd
ion wvnl to Toledo Saturday to visit ' are Mr
and Mrs
Mrs. Clinton Lahr. Mr. |d...
, whfre... (h
d
£ | time with her son there
J?/.
1 home, wishing them many mon
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene McMurray, j and Mr*. Floyd Gaskell and Mr.;Mt
£3y Hotel
Mr. and Mrs E A. Frandsen and :
i, anniversaries.
worry you, just send
m aild
uuwi
- ~ of Ionia will spend Thanks-. cemoer
&gt;. ^toneTZ-Ul
*ne ceremony
wm do
Mrs. Paine and Marlon remained for. and Mr* Bernie More and children [ ..Mr
f Finstrom were ■ children
“"uTaid
£ se^id
to I
. Mr. .nd Mr,, c. E rinm™, „r« j
« l»nu .III w„d ■nmJu- „ubllc „a al„„,r ,0,
„।
the garment along
DINNER FOR OFFICERS.
the week.
of Marshall.
jin
n Ea
it Lansing
dlnlnn
30.
I
East
Lansing on Saturday. Mr sMng
«,v&gt;na and the remainder of
of lhe'the
the
dining room at
al 66:30.
Mr*.
Alma
Flnglelon.
retiring
and Mrs. Hartley Finstrom returnwith Mrs. H O Hayes.
] Mri ocon(ina Bauer, naat grand '
later and we will
------•••- ••
-------for Sunday.
J I Mr.
»«- and
... Mrs.
»».. Forrest
■»- ... James
».
- and
m ,
matron, will be the install-1 worthy matron of the Hastings
i •Ing
with
them
Chapter of lhe Order of Easterr. |
... Mason Norwood «f
| —
Mrs.
of Kala- Jackie of Houghton lake will be । ing marshal.
fix it Up in fine
mazoo and Mr* Chester Banghart Thanksgiving guests of their
“ •par- ’ Officers who win take their place* Star, entertained tbe officer* who I
of Delton were guest* of Mrs. Burrf^hht. Mr and
Kr-f Mrs Ernest
r—— Erwny
shape.
arc Worthjf matron. Mrs. Fred,:served with her at a g:30 dinner]
evening at her home.'
VanHouten last Wednesday.
; Mr and Mr*. E 8 Clark
and joneg; worlhjr patron. ROM John- Wednesday
‘ • ar
«n.
.
Mrs W L. Shulters returned on tnmlly
of Kalamazoo
will be son. associate matron. Mr*. L. E. I The dinner table was centered with
lovely
arrangement
of
fruits.
The
Friday from Belding where she was Thankrglving tuosls of MBs Rose, Barnett; associate patron. Archie a
1
PHONE 2140
called by the illness of Mrs Gordon Miss Catherine and Miss Elizabeth D Reickord; secretary. Mrs. Maude guest* were asked to dress as char- |
kUMrlW*
Clement, who I* now convalescent | Clark
W. Smith; treasurer. Mrs Fay Mar- j acter* in funny papers and some.
Stephen Bristol t* home from Al- j Robert WMldorff and a frirnd. bte conductress, Mr*.’ Ben Gldley;.I amazing personalities attended the I
bion college for the Thanksgiving John Tamsen ot New York City, are associate conductress. Mrs. Glen'I party Cards were played during
vacation. He was accompanied dv
Pending
their
'■’!| -‘LL----- ....
..Thanksgiving
------ t—v»•- Brower; organist. MU* Margaret;. the evening, Mr*- Florence Marble;
Martin SmUanaky of Detr.lt. ‘
Mr ftnd Mr=
Dan 1)e,'*more- Chaplain. Mrs W. L. ' and Mrs. Emma Reickord winning
classmate.
Hinman; marshal. Mrs .Rons John-!I the prise*. Mr* Kate C. Johnston..
DRY CLEANERS
Dr and Mrs George L Lockwood. Mr iuitl Mrs James Langston. .on_ Ad h Mrl Joh c
. R u who ha* served the chapter for ten
will have a* Thanksgiving guests her
D M Stuart and MU* Dona
X G _Byde“gte. Ml« years ax treasurer and who left
MICH.
HASTINGS
*v
■
.
&lt;•
,
__
slater and family Mr and Mr* Fred
Orace Reickord;. Martha. Mrs. C. H. Saturday to spend the winter in
Newman. Richard and Virginia, of C. J. Stuart of Grand Rapids today, i innnuuiTKccta.
"Erma.4Gard-1
'J?* P«’**«nt*l with a
A h’abula. Ohio.
Thanksgiving.
ner w^e“ Mre^ F. Hoeronalf; »Ut
omo*r*
Mr. and Mrs Raymond Barheller. . A large group of Hasting* chil-1 &lt;,entlncl W L. Hinman and aoloLst
►
•—
□ nd family of
uf Fernuale
ary guest* —
drt—
”
marionette
and
Fcnmale are
—- •••
— —— —- : Mr* Robert Burch.
GROSSE POINTE H. B.
of hi* parent*. Mr and Mr* -'how at the Kellogg auditorium in I
Which Will Be Completed Soon
Lyle Vanderbrook, principal and
Charles Bacheller. coming for the , Battle Creek on Friday, presented by
COSTUME PARTY.
Phone 2396
Thanksgiving holiday
I the Y- W. C. A.
One of the delightful social events mathematics teacher at lhe W. K
Thankwivin? guests of Mr. and ।
Geraldine Isenhath was in of lhe past week wa* the party Kellogg Agricultural al Hickory
Corners
school
for
seven
years,
has
Mrs.
L.
E
Bsrnett
will
be
Mr
and
Albion
Saturday
where
she
attendgiven
by
Mr*.
J.
W.
Armbruster,
Wall Paper and Paint Depart­
a fine -----------promotion in the
Mr*. 8. F. Nlchute and Jimmie of ed • dinner and dance given by the lhe guest* coming in appropriate received
----Detroit Mr*. Barnett and Margret. Sigma Nu fraternity a* the guest costume*, representing many claw- teaching profession He is teaching
ments will be continued with
will return with them Friday to of Robert Wolldorff.
e* of society Included were Hl* lhu ye«r *n U»e Grosse Pointe High
stay until Monday.
: Mhw Elisabeth French of Middle- Majesty, lhe King, Farmer and Mrs. *chool to fill a vacancy for Ray
Mr. and Mr* Herman Arold and} v'll« *»“ ^n spending lhe wrek Corntaisel. Mr. and Mr*. Amo* and Watting, who ha* been granted a
some high class lines.
daughters will spend Thanksgiving ! w‘th her grandparents, Mr. and Mr* Andy, Jr., beside* several others of lc»ve of absence. Orowe Pointe High
------- *i*ler
-• ­ 1W. R. Cook, during Ute closing of equal note, the hostess being Mrs school la one of the best organised
wjth •Mr*. Aroid's
and- ■broth
• Wallic - AU of the attics tn town I and equipped high schools in the
er-in-law. Mr arid Mrs. Rafcison. in lhe Middleville school*.
Miss Marie Spaulding of Grand must have been searched to secure' *Ut«- B
* teaching staff of 75
Detroit. In the'morning they will
Walgreen System
Rapidfl wa* a week end guest of the wonderful and amazing creation* ; instructors axid enrolls 1700 student*,
Old Eashiowed Mixed Dance*
attend a football game.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cadwalladcr Ml** Ruth Farr Mi** Farr will of millinery that were worn that I Mr. and Mr*. Vanderbrook and son
DRUGSTORE
with her evening. Needless to say. everyone । arp making their home at the Hanand son Jimmy and Mr. and Mrs spend Thanksgiving
I nah Apartment* in Detroit.
Saturday Night.
Peter Huver and daughter Dorothy brother, Clark Farr, in Grand Rap­ had a grand time.
PHONE 2241
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
of Hasting* were Sunday guests nt id*.
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED.
MT. end Mrs. Ralph Eggleston.
the home of Mr. and Mrs Francis
Mr and Mra. George H. Ragla of '
Huver.—Grand Ledge Independent. Mr* Ethelyn BuholLz and Jack,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bishop were and Mias Eva A Hecoz and Philip Coat* Grove announce th* engage-1
Sunday guest* of Mr and Mr*. Or- and Patricia were Sundov guesto of mcnl ot their daughter Ethel to Ed-1
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Slader and fam­ ward Barber, son of Mrs. Keith Bar­
I lie Bishop and family of Holland
ber of Vermontville, mu* Ragla is'
। Mr and Mrs. Burr VanHouten ily of Carlton township.
Mr. and Mrs. Tho*. Gammage vis­ a graduate of Hasting* High schgol
! and Stephen arc Thanksgiving
guest* of the former * mother in ited Mr and Mr*. J. M. Townsend on .uid the Detroit Busine** University.
TURKEY
Sunday
enroute from West
Branch She Is a member of Beta Sigma Phi
Lake Odessa.
------. ------------------------—----------Celery, Olives and Pickles
I Mr. and Mrs Harry Gldley of'
‘heir home In Grand Rapid* sorority and secretary of the Barry
I Charleston, w Va.. have been the Tom wa* fortunate enough to kill a County Health Unit. Mr. Barber at­
Fruit Cup
tended the Vermontville high school
guest* of Dr and Mr*. Gordon Fl*h- buck weighing 150 lbs.
er and other friends the past week
Mr. and Mrs Frank Kelley and and Howe Military school and u
Roast Turkey and Ojstec
.......■ ■■■*■ 'f
t IP"
—*W»
On Wednesday they went to Mar- Mis* Helen McPherson of Kalama- now employed tn Plymouth. The
Dressing
wadding
will
be
an
event
of
next
shall to spend Thanksgiving with
Bunday gue«ts of Mr. and
Dr. and Mrs. M. R. Kinde.
Mr* Charles Paul. The Paul* wlU aumnwr
Cranberry Relish
J. F. Edmond* wn« in the city over !'P&lt;'nd Thanksgiving with Mr. and
Mashed Potatoes With
—’round the table tho family fathers,
SURPRISED ON BIRTHDAY.
the week end He and Mrs. Ed­ Mrs. Donald McQuarric at Delton.
Thursday was Mrs. John Wood's
Thanksgiving day gureta of Mr
Giblet Gravy
monds have been spending two
voice* blend in convcraation—it's been
birthday so a group ot her friends
months with Mr and Mrs. Bari and Mrs. W J. Field are Mr. and decided to surprise her. taking along
Puttered Peas
a&gt; year sines the last Thanksgiving and
Frasr of Cuyahoga Falls. Ohio They Mrs. Cranston Wilcox of Ann Arbo.- a pot luck supper, covers being laid
and
Mn
Mn.
AM.
Hall
of
Belding.
Baked Squash
I arc visiting Mr. and Mrs. Maurice
for ten. A beautiful birthday cake
there are so many things that have hap­
Edmonds of Detroit over Tlianks- Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wilcox and son with-pink candles centered tho
Salad
of Hastings are also dinner guest*.
giving.
pened »ince than. From die.new baity
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry E Johnson tabic. The evening was spent with
Pie
Drink
I Mr. and Mrs. C W. Wcwplnter. acvisiting.
companled by Mrs. R. T. F. Dodds, will have a* Thanksgiving guests
lx&gt;ni u&gt; John and Mary, to the extra
who spent the summer and fall her parente. Mr. and Mrs C. L
BIRTHDAY PARTI'.
CHICKEN DINNER, 75c
length of Grandpa's whiaken — h’s all
here, left Monday morning for Kan­ Frost, of Lansing and sister and
Mrs. Alma Pinglcton entertained
sas City, where they will be Thanks­ brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. four guests Friday in honor of her
conversation that pertain# to your family
giving guests of Mr. and Mrs. E Herrick, and two daughter* of Jack­ son. George's birthday. Gards were
LB.
son.
M. Dodds. They will be away for
enjoyed during the evening.
Ilariing-'
Phone 2321
"New Fires." Dec 3, 4. by the class
| Mr. and Mrs Harry Cole will have Townsend go to Lowell on Friday■gain for this truly family prthwing
a family Thanksgiving dinner next night, Dec. 4. lo install the officers that gave you "One Mad Night.”—
Bunday at their home. Those to be of Cyclamen Chapter of ttw O E. 8. Adv.
present are Mr and Mrs. George Before the meeting they will be
, Ragla. Mis* Ethel Ragla. Mr. and gucsto at a dinner given by Mrs. R.
Net to know tbe joy of mich • ptM*
Mr*. E.-J. Ragla of Coats Grove. O- Jeffries.
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Will and
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Ragla of Bat­
aor to see tbe glow ol kinehip radiated
bar
5c
PALMOLIVE SOAP
tle Creek. Fred Brand and Riciiard family spent Sunday with Mr. and
Ragla of Detroit and Mr. and Mrs Mra. W. B. Will at Hastings, and
were accompanied home by Mrs.
Barry* Ragla of Hastings.
3 toll can* 25c
SURE FINE MILK
ily”—not to experience the grit
Miss Beatrice Can-others will Will* father. Charlo* Morri* of
hanksgiving commemorates no bat­
come Wednesday from Detroit to Kalamazoo. who will spend several
satisfaction of having been l0|
Clean Quick Soap Chip*, 2’/z lb. bx. 18c
epend the Thanksgiving vacation day* hero—Gratiot County Herald,
tle anniversary, no conquest, no vic­
with her parents. Dr. and Mrs. Ithaca.
again—-is to mh»a oac of lifo’e b&lt;
Thanksgiving guesto of Mr. and
Frank Oarrolhers. On Thanksgiving
MINCEMEAT
2box«(19c
tory—unless it be the victory of mans forti­
moments. Momenta that cannot be
day, Dr. and Mrs. Carrolhers. Bea­ Mrs. W. U Bhultera are Mr. and
trice, Mrs. Isabel Carrolhers and Mr. Charles Fritz. Mrs Charlotte
tude over despair. It is a day of quiet, unaf­
tired by thi*.world’s gooda.
2 lb.. 19c
FANCY BUJLK DATES
Mrs. Anna McGuffin will be guest* Shulters. Mr. and Mr*. Arthur
of Rupert carrothcr* ahd family in Knight. Arthur Knight, Jr , and Mr.
fected thanks to a very real God for very
and Mrs. Lloyd ScoU. all of St.
CANDIED PEEL
Pkg. 10c
Grand Rapids
Johns, and Mr. and Mm. Gordon
LEMON, ORANGE AND ASSORTED
real blessings. Il is q day when we recharge
Otnent and family of Belding
Mr and Mrs. Will Grigsby leave
our spiritual batteries and take renewed
take this opportunity to c
today (Wednesday) for Detroit,
BEST PURE LARD
2 lbs. 29c
where they will spend Thanksgiving
our Greetings for a Happy
strength for the tasks of another year. To
with Rev. and Mrs. Maurice Grigs­
FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
NOONDAY LUNCHES
Thanksgiving.
by. On Monday they win leave for
all our friends — heartiest Thanksgiving
ORDER MEATS AND FRESH FQULTRY FROM US.
11:30 A. M. to2P. M.
Daytona Beach, Fla. where they
will spend the winter. They will
DINNERS
.
greetings.
make
lhe
trip
by
automobile.
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.
Fred O. Fosipr ot Charlotte, hi*
son Hany of Bellevue. the latter’s
SUNDAY DINNERS
father-in-law, W. H. Otto of Has­
12:30 to 2:30 F. M.
tings and Frank Kellogg of Battle
Hastings
PHONI SMI
Creek left Bunday night for 8t.
6 to 7:30 F. M.
"Clothing and Shoes for Men and Boy**
Helen on a deer hunting trip, re­
turning Tuesday night. The Battle
HASTINGS
PHONE 2iF6
PARKER HOUSE
; Creek man got a deer.—Charlotte
Republican -Tribune.

i Social

Events and Personal Mention

Watch for Opening
OF OUR

McCREERY’S

NEW

SODA ROOM

T. S. B

DANCING

&gt; C.

KEELz

Thanksgiving
Dinner * I

BANNER WANT ADVS. BRING RESUV

Thanksgiving Day

Thanksgiving Bargains at
The Big Little Store
viking

Sure Fine

Coffee

Coffee

IO' “ 25

c

Kitt Dairy Store

SPECIAL

HINMAN’S
Michigan

T. S. BAIRD

GOOWEM

Detroit

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER M, 1»M

EIGHT

U, .77®,: w g -.'-as wmrsrT-i-WB j
NASHVILLE.
WOO I) LAN D.
Bertrand Young of charlotte
. gyrrn
Mbs Carrie Grotlnger had a new 'TU C ruriDf'Urc
|
WA N I S ’
asphalt roof put on her house oc-: I n IL Leil UKLnLij ’visited Thursday with her sister,
rrmiiu
.
by Mr an4 Mrr Hetald
tkiiss Atny Hartwell.
:u»uv.
' Miss Donna Northrop ot Battle
ORl CENT A WORD. NO ADVERI Classle
^bketbrbn
Crcck spent
IJX.nl tne
lhe weex
wevlt end
end witn ner
llcr
TTHEM»rr FOR LESS THAN 25c ' The
The deer
d!*r hunter*.'
&gt;‘Unt«r-. w'.vetIncluding
wivc&gt; ii.ouuu.,. first
«.«». united
'o*
• •"jCS ^-churoh
------------. Crecr.

'

INSURANCE
LIFE . AUTO . FIRE
WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON E. MeELWAIN

n^xm- ™

»“ Sr**

~

-#:3U.
—

'Hynes and Ralph Leffler and fam'files had a pot luck dinner at the
i home of Mrs. crockford Sunday.
. ...
1 -Mrs. Luclla Earle uf Sacramento,
uienn Miller. I Cal. who spent the summer with her
:------------- - . Sheldon, passed

“•"

*•

Charles H. Raymond, who lias
all .expressed a desire to take It up
for another year this time acting as lived in Nashville end vicinity for ■
mystery mother lo the boys of the greet many years, has gone to East
8 B. instead of the daughters. Mrs. Musing to reside with the Ralph
Max DeFoe catered witn the lielp of McNltt family.
Born to Rev. and Mrs. Wendell
two men. Fred ACkett and Will
Hecker In Die kitchen and eight Bassett of Marcellus Nov. 13, a
boys in the dining room who acted daughter. Donna Kaye. Rev. Bas­
sett
b a former Nashville boy. son
us waiters. Tltoec in charge of this
through the year were Mrs. Nettle of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bassett, now
Parrott and Mra. Della Bowman of Lansing.
who acted as medium.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Mrs. Ralph Hew was visiting
friends in Kalamazoo Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Welch and
family and Mrs. Laura Dtllar were
Battle Creek visitors
Saturday
morning.
Mrs. Leo Guy. who has been as­
sisting her sister. Mrs. Earl Schulze
the last month, has returned to her
home.
Mrs. Clyde Briggs of Hastings
spent Thursday evening with Mrs.
Laura Dollar.
Ralph Hess was at South Bend.
Ind. Saturday attending the Notre
Dame-Western football game.
w„ JPUBLICATION
_ L
ORDER «FOB
Mr. and Mra. Chester Hodges and 1 8uuaf
’Court tor
■ of MleMaan.
Mlrbtaan. the
th* Prot.ofS
ProbaWCoui
son of Hastings and Mr. and Mrs. j the County ut hurry
Mervel Bowers and Mr. and Mrs. । at a are.ion of aaid mart. held it the
prank Cummings of Lansing were J
i.ffire .u the rity .•« llujtino. in
Sunday visitors of Mr and Mra. Ray
a" D. i»“
Thompson and family.
1 prreeni. Het
Mr. and Mrs. Hector Hawkins and I'n’bate.
grandson of Lansing spent Bunday ; „ *“ 1
with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Warner and
j
Mrs. Mary Hope.
I «««
The Chamber of Commerce met i
for their regular meeting at the
Odd Fellow hall Monday evening.
Tiie dinner was served by the Rc-

Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Ball and son.
James, of Ionia were Sunday guests
of Mr. and Mrs. W D. Wallace.
. Mrs. Villa Olin entertained her
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
I bridge club
Friday
afternoon.
SCIENTIST.
] Dainty refreshments were served
: Mrs. Earl Knoll. Mrs. Claud Perry
| operation.
' and daughters. Beulah and JeanBarbara Joon and Donald Rlvetl
etle. were at Hastings on business
cun at tb» ■ of Detroit are spending a few weeks
Saturday.
; with their grandmother. Mrs.| Lewis , ul&gt;« Mw®.Hnn
I Mrs. Edna Jones of Battle Creek
-1 Schmidt, and Miss Esther Schmidt. '
1 visited the first of the week with
Al Drill
■; .Mr. and Mrs Roy Roberts ana
Mrs. Mabel MarahaU
FOR MALI
„hl '' daughters of Lake Odessa were
| Jack Green of Lansing spent
IM r4O WMOtena
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
| Sunday with his parents. Mr. and
CHURCH
or.THE
NAEARENE
tf. Mrs. Delmond Culler.
sv—Fl
I
Mra. Frank Green.
In
Paccoait
building,
opposite
Hole!
’
Irwin Colby uf Detroit visited hLs
wanted| Mr. and Mrs. George W. Parrott.
sister and husband. Dr. and Mrs
Ellnore and Wilma and Forrest
T. H- Cobb, over the week end.
Wayne.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Parrott,
FOR HALL—The home vt th
, Mrs. Glenn England and daugh­
and Mr and Mra. Ralph Olin and
ters and Mrs. Karl Faul were Grand
Wallace Graham had a pre-Thanks­
Rapids visitors Saturday.
giving dinner Sunday with Mr. and
The Missionary Society of the
Mrs. Albert Parrott and family near
Methodist church will hold their
Jackson.
December meeting Tuesday’Dec. I al
Mr. and Mrs. L G Cole were at
the home of Mrs. Fred Jordon of
Grand Rapids Thursday to attend
South Woodland
,
the auto show.
Mr. and Mrs. Herald Classic and
FIRST PREBBYTERJAN .CHURCH. ■ Mrs. W. D Wallace. Mrs. Arthur
children attended the mortgage I
Kays. Mrs. John Duguid. ond Mrs.
burning at the U B church at Lake
Arthur Johnson entertained lhe
Odessa Sunday This was on all day
AUCTIONEER
faculty of the school Wednesday at
meeting with pot luck dinner at
a e'30 dinner at the home of Mrs.
noon. Bishop H- H Soul was the
DEWEY REED
Wallace.
speaker.
Mesdames Rhea Hess. Izlla Lentz.
BM East Clinton St, HASTINGS
Mrs. Rena Culler entertained with
OlKh Hamilton, and Martha Maeya birthday dinner Sunday in honor
ens entertained the southeast di­
of her sister. Mrs. Lawrence Hilbert.
M1M Agnes Dause of Lansing via- । i
vision of the Ladles’ Aid of the M
Mr. and Mrs. E O Bhorno were I
E. church at the home of Mrs. Hew ited Bunday with lhe home folks, j i
guests.
:
Mbs Ruth Bills attended a Home ।
Thursday afternoon. Lovely re­
The regular monthly supper of |
Economics vocational conference al |
freshments were served.
the Ladies' Aid of tne Methode
W. D- Wallace and daughter. Rockford last week.
church will be held Wednesday eve- ,
H. H. Perkins who lives alone be­
Ruth,
spent
Saturday
with
the
for
­
-I or non
nlng December 2. A cafeteria style ।
mer's mother. Mrs. Sarah Wallace at came quite ill Horn heart trouble I
To PROTECT You ConetaaUy
supper wilt be served. There will abo
and was taken in the Hess ambul- ’
Eaton Rapldj.
be
a
Christmas
bazaar
featuring
(
ance
to Mrs. Jnrstfer's for care.
Adjuat Fairly
Mr. and Mrs. George Becker ot
aprons ot ali kinds and makes.
Mrs. Hubert Wilson Is visiting her I
Lake Odessa ipent Sunday with Mr.
«ra .vibrator,
Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Irvhusband In Atlanta. Iowa, for a
FOR MA LE­
and
Mra.
Dah
GarUnger.
vgaavh. putap ing Jordan of Norin Woodland enMr. and Mrs. C E. Mater and couple of weeks. Miss Lkorulhy Hicks
terlalncd about one hundred guests!
CITIZENS MUTUAL
daughter, patty and Misses Virginia is substitute operator while Mrs.
including the neighbors and rela- |
Hess end Betty Higdon spent Satur­ Wilson is absent
POR HKRVICE—Poland
Fire Insurance Co.
• lives with a miscellaneous snower in I
FREE METHODIST CHURCH.
Mr and Mrs. Max Miller and H.
day
in Kalamazoo.
Colfax Street
honor of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Smith I
The Union Thanksgiving service p. Remington will occupy lhe Mid­
of North Woodland, who were mar­
win be
oe held
neia in
m the
vne M.
ax. Er,. church at «8 die street residence formerly occuwill
ried on Novemocr 4. Mrs Smith was
A. M. Thanksgiving morning. Rev. pied by Vern Hecker and family.
M133 Alma Guy ot MuUiken. On
Wooloil. pastor of the church. wUl
Robert Mason, who was called
Tuesday of last week over one hun­
be in charge of the service.
here by the, illness and death of his
dred people gathered io give Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Oarlinger were mother, has returned to ills work
imd Mrs. Smith on old fashioned
in Lansing on business. Saturday.
In Detroit.
iiilai belling and they were all treated w
'diall, iuMtrd
Will Miller was brought home
"*
candy and cigars. The newly mar­
from Pennock hospital tn the Hess
11-2d ried couple are living on tne Smith
FIRST METFOnIST EPISCOPAL
ambulance. Saturday. Mr. Miller h
CHURCH
Paid for Dead Stock
colt. farm northwest of Woodla&gt;tdW Marian Jonee. Mlnieter.
! gaining nicely from his operation.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nietham-r
CURVES INSTEAD
Under the direction of Mra. Della
Your Dead Animals Are Worth
1I-2C and children accompanied by Mr.
Bowman and Mrs. Nettle Parrot',
in trad* for and Mrs. Fred jordan and Dayton
the Evangelical church choir pre­
?
Jordan
of
North
Woodland
called
getting the BEST PRICES, call
sented a musical program Sunday
the home of Mr and Mrs. ChaunMR. FLOYD DENNY.
evening
Earl Pennock 13 representing the
M E. Sunday school at Michigan
“ the schoolhouse last Tuesday eveOlder Boys' conference al Pontiac
1 ning with a rather small crowd
Nov. 21-28.
\
Tney voted to give $30 to lhe F F
Mrs. Harold Voelker and children.
a A- boys wno are going to attend the
Jimmy and Nancy, of Lansing visit­
"AKRON" MODERN
a National Livestock snow al Chicago
ed Sunday with the former's moth­
■. lhe end of thia month accompanied
er. Mrs. Thressa Dausc.
MECIIANO-FORM TRUSS
‘f. by their teacher. George Parsons.
Mr and Mrs. Allen Brumm cf
FOR WORK OR PLAY
- Mbs Dorothy Helse, who Ls a mcmDetroit spent the week end -witn
Thin Saooth Rebber Back Podi
l»»n. I will J»lh.-r
the former's parents, Mr. and Mra.
three girls ot the county who are beNo Pom To Wear Clofhlno
C- E Brumm.
The Mystery Mother and Daugh­
Show. Moving pictures of the state
ter banquet was held at the Evan­
mgnway department were shown
gelical church Friday Nov. 20. Both
and a talk given by Mr Hujes. A
Mystery mothers &lt;who were ali la­
member of the Highway Depart­
dies of this churchi and the daughPILGRIM IIOLD.T.SS TAFERNACLE.
ment.
r- r.-.. which included all daughters of
air and Mrs. Merritt palmer ot
the s 3 from seven years of age to
Grand Rapids visited Mr and Mis.
t He Alumni cia*s. met in the church
Clyde Rut-U Sunday.
tin lea, pr&lt;
at 5 30 al which time each daugh­
Mg. and Mrs. Ed Truinbo o!
aiciaa. Th
ter was given a chance to guess who
SrugfUl
Montezuma. Kansas, and Mr and
she though: had acted as her moth­
ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Mrs. Chas. Truinbo of Lake Odessa
er al! through lhe past year. Ou:
were
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Milan
and careful cotupooudUg.
Sponge Rubber Pads
of 05 only four had the right one
Trumbo
Monday
of
last
week.
FOR HALEtc HnUn.
so it proved to be much fun. In the
No Lag Shop*
basement of the church, rabies were
Carveth &amp; Stebbins
ROBINHL'E PARK.
laid and beautifully decorated for
The Prescription Drug Store
THE REXALL STORE
Mr. and Mra. John Kollar Friday jeffebson st. united brethren one hundred and thirty which were
Goods 3eUv.
Phone 21
visited his sister, Mrs. Otto Lightchurch
all filled. A bountiful dinner was
HASTINGS
MICinOAB
foot, of Freeport who Ls in Universerved, after which all marched to
slty hospital al Ann Arbor.
I jtun
lhe church auditorium where a
Earl Robinson left Thursday &gt; «• i"
lovely program was given. Buch an
morning for the north on a deer •} ’J,
exceptional succesa was this affair
hunting trip.
I
Farmers, Attention! FOR SAI
Five ladies met at the home of -u«.d»
A.lvlbvr
I PIB pay the HIGHEST MARKET
Mrs Minnie Churchill and tied,
iLE—Sire Daff Orpington
PRICE for VEAL. LAMBS KOOS and
three quilts for her Thursday A
ilio 3 Orpington 1
HASTINGS CIRCUIT METHODIST
lovely dinner was served by the
Ship EVERY
rwein. Mini
hostess.

The Hasting* Banner

IIOim riRlT TEAR

IN BARRY COUNTY. THREE MONTHA
IN ADVANCE ,._...3Sr
OUTMDR BARMY COUNTY. ONI YEAR
IN ADVANCE
II SO
roUElUX BUMSCRIPTIOXIL ONIYRAB
IN ADVANCE-----------------------$3.00

FOR SALE
Choice quality.
JOHN CARROW

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
BEEF BY THE QUAR­
TER FOR SALE.

PHONE 3909
HERMAN

FELDPAL'SCII

Our Service

HIGHEST PRICES,

NEW BUS

fAKE DePRICSTER

BANNER WANT ADAS. PAY

GUARDIAN MEMORIALS
Thcre is no substitute for HONEST VALUE, ond
there NEVER will be.
Beoutiful. Unchangeable. Guaranteed FOREVER.
For 65 years the choice of those who INVEST I
GATE

Buy a Guardian Memorial!

PATTEN MONUMENT CO
121 No. Michigan Ave.

Hastings. Mich.

HENRY GREGORY, REP.

ANNOUNCEMENT
The WOLVERINE INSURANCE CO. of LANSING, MICHI­
GAN i* represented tn Barry County by the following agents:

E. R. Lawrence &amp; Son

Hasting,
- Hastings

Garner C. Hampton

The Elwood Agency

Middleville

Floyd Shelp

Prairieville

-

■

•

When you neej AUTO INSURANCE see one of thew agenU.

Flowers for Thanksgiving

TO

CARDS of THANKS

BUYING

CHICAGO
CHURCH OF THE UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST
Woodland Circuit—E B. Griffin. D. D_

Scrap Iron, Brass,

•if iund, rirruu ■
kll.ltltlllrK I lli nril

Copper, Aluminum,

Zinc, Lead &amp; Batteries

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Raetinge

Every day at 9:40 a.m.

Member Florists’
Telegraph Delivery
Association

Ar. Chicago 2:45 P. M.

Ono Way Faro $2.75

FOR SALE — Eleven moot

EIGHT ROOM nsndrrn' honar. navi,
dreorated. oak ftoon. hot tod eold.
aoft aad hard water opataln and down,
far rant H A Nirhnla
&lt;4

HIDES-PELTS-FURS

CARD OF THANKS
link rolattvea. frieedi
tlful floral offensre al th

COATS GROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST.
10 A. M.—Sunday acho^l 11 A. M—

Stella Ogden

CARD OF THANKS—V
Don’t

u&amp;ard, the .

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

HASTINGS MARKETS

SIR

POMONA GRANGE.
Next recular meetinc ot Pomona
^haVruTt. '1 Granxe will he held Wedneadar. Deeem
will ever ber 2. with Maplr Leaf (iranxe aa boat.

GEO. M. NEWTON
Regixtcred OPTOMETRIST and
SEE BETTER!
139 W. STATE ST. / HASTINGS

ARCHIE

COLDS
FEVER

TOR

Dining Out
Thanksgiving?

AS

IN MEMORIAL

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL' INSURANCE
AGENCY

GRANGE PROGRAMS

' relatives.

Be a thoughtful
guest. Send a bou­
quet to your hostess.

IX MEMtlUV
Toone C

FURS, HIDES, PELTS
Wanted Every Saturday At
120 S. Michigan Ave.
First house south of Trio Cafe.

HARVEY BABCOCK

11 IS

• AUTO LOANS and Refinancing
TO GIVE YOU READY CASH. OR TO REDUCE
YOUR PAYMENTS. OR BOTH

Fidelity Corporation of Michigan

CLYDE WILCOX, Florist
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

TELEPHONE 2530

Open till noon
Thanksgiving Day

�ler

THURSDAY, NOV. 26, 1936

|

$*’. &lt; Cobb
about

(THS.

x 1S3

kL

?vfLthenty

_________ ahniit*

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER
** ma&lt;1* M- S. C. PRODUCES CORN

I

SECTION

JOice at being remembered with a ERROR DELAY* MANY M
fine bird to top off the holiday feast.
DRIVKRK* I.1CKNI

I We arrived at the summit al i
TO WITHSTAND BORER I Turkry
for 193
More employment and hlaherL From 15 to 25 per OMM w WK
MOVIE STUDIOS
| about six-thirty and white it was ।
----------•
——————
wages Ind.catc that more familie.i plications for licenses to aoai
Tile turkey industry has improved can afford to |&gt;artake of thta na- motor vehicles in the slate 1*
»un d«UsM ». look « luolj, Tonghcr sulk I. obtained
lhe turkey ot colonial days to the uve Atnetican bird for their holi-; igan are returned for naceaaary i
the grounds where, day and 1
**
...
,
WIMSfflG around
By Crossing Native Seed
night, eight huge telescope:; are busy ,
extent that the early colonial set- day dinner.
। rection or completion, with oa

_ ____

___ ____ ___

I

With South American
ller''' wh0 hunud *‘,d W^key. wquld................................. ..........
Q14eni delay, Orville E. Atwood,
probing the mysteries of the uni­
who Doutn zMnerjcun
!have considerable difficulty identifyOBITUARY
relary of state, nas pointed oui
verse. Mount -Wilson is lhe astron- |
OBITUARY.
v...... of
w. the
.... world,
..... lhe 100,
.... Scientists attending the annua) ; tag lhe modern fowl The wild Lui:
'
. • j On days when as many as I
omlt-al center
Alta-rt CteteX.
Txwis Graves was barn
inch
“«“! tn
“1'• meeting of tne American society o: *«•&gt;■'
J““ !£
“ «
Inch MtaM,
reflector tew
being U»
the !largest
aucn
uappncauoru »SL w
the world and the 60 Inch lhe third i Agronomy In Washington this week cohitag to directions found In old "««•’l- C“lr. Mimgan^BepiroiMr celved Bl lhe
lrom 300
largest. We of course were not I learned lhe history of development j cook bout-, reminiscent of Uta* ’‘’r™n «•“
• 500 may be returned to appiiCM
privileged to gaze through any of J at Michigan State Colloge of a varl- i day., call for parboiling the turkey Novemwr
ins. aged 62 Kars ana WaIe 01c slate u pliic&lt;d
M
these large telescopes. but taler In leiy of com which enables farmers to! followed by boning and larding, al- ‘*° " ™1,1 J“"‘
' «*"• 1 expense in making au refund
refund of ttho
tho evening we did do a lot of gazthe
gaz-1j "live with" lhe European coni
com borer «» emphasizing lhe u.&lt;of plenty of
P»“™L
gi fee. the greatest InconvenlM
tag through one of lhe twelve tach ’ and even incmv grain yield.
- butter and spices which suggest lhe “n11 Tatar to Wauseon. Ohio, where | ta caused to lhe applicant.
his young manhood. He | aqoul
arrrequired
‘«(uuru »u
About au
20 a»&gt;»
days are
to send
reflectors and were fortunate in; In a paper submitted (November need for modifying inherent, undeflavors as wellas overcoming moved from Chicago lo Yankee . the m-ettse out, once It is rrcelvad at
seeing lhe comet while it was clos- j 18) to the agronomists at Washtag- sirable
;1 Sorina*
.-j
«- nnd ^js period M douSprings about sixteen
sixteen veara
years aea.
ago,
canlU11
est to the earth We had dinner ot I ton by A. R. Marston, com breeding dryness
Among lhe many improvement;. ' k here he and ins family have since ‘^“hen itbecomes necessary to
the hotel Which ta open the year! expert ta lhe farm crops department
round, this being a great winter re- ' at the college, results of a 10 year which constitute the modern turkey resided. Hr was united ta mateito Mbs Ela H Harmon of
C3mmao«tVrar» include that
sort oa they have skiing, toboggan- ‘ program of progress were descnSed. of today, are tiiose gained by con­, mony
Wauseon, Ohio, in 1W5. and to thta ' or(^Tto have the applicant.
tag. etc., on the lop ot the mountain, I Specifically, the farm crops depart- trolled feeding which guarantees. union was born one son Albert .
ipe|led th, Uienllcal way Oil
1 while they are bathtag ta lhe ocean I men has developed Michigan Hy- streaks of creamy fat threading I*Roy. who realties at home. He
As for those who ■
brld No.
No. 551
561 distributed
distributed for
for com
com- their ways in u curious fasidon
nol over forty miles away.
brld
~
voted the opposition
required on the application. Largo
Ml. Wltaon was selected as an ob- merclal producUon
production In 1238
1836 around and between Die muscle fl■ .1*-'
g ticket—well. AmeriUtadi have bared
VUUn&lt; wwrvolr lh&gt;l WBtfr from servotory
servatory site
sue because
oecauir of
m lhe
me r»-।
Parents
used- by Marston1 bers. This fat. which melts slowly son, one stater. Mrs. Grace Wood numbers of applicants fall to an­
ex- j P*
—- originally
------1^1
cans may be greedy ,
n commercial Michigan adapt-1 with the application of heat Is the ot Oakland. California, his parents swer all questions, though Uu ap­
tanks has been released ceptionaliy clear atmosphere as lhe I were
ed yellow
^XSt plication bears lhe caution that all
rJW -par ■ to win. but they're | Who raid November days are drear overhead
yellow dent
dent com
com and
and an
an unun- ‘I most
inostimportant,
important tactor
(actorcwnrwuung
contributing
lo run down wooden chutes to be sun and stars are practically always ed
adapted
putput
borer
resistant
variety
totothe
» Turned htS^r^ ^ktad must be answered.
I™ &amp;
•poriy i°icrs- ^c' ।
"*
”
and **
sad?
shining,
even
when
it
Is
foggy
or
1
adapted
borer
resistant
variety
thejuiciness
julr‘ ~ of the muscle
’ mid j
carried by huge airplane propellers
_____________ ed husband, a kind
__________ , ,
, ।
■
sides. It'll soon be | Still, yes; but many lovely things across the deck, and that if the rainy ta other parts of lhe
lhecountry.
country. I obtainedfkur.
fromSouth
SouthAfrica
Americaur.d
andI preserving
| preserving the undentm ot Ute
,
*?(
r
.±
na
..
‘
The «Un»ud MftM. pr« «t •
ore
still;
as as
maize
amargo.
latter
inch tele
teleknown
maize
amargo.The
The
lattermeat.
meat.Due
Dueto thta fact kitchen—lab- neighbor. He made friends easily used
A
ifl hard to find anybody 1
—--------- .
.... hundred
mtadred inch
­ known
heroine can't take it. all she has to 1711- new two
auWmOtale ta 1250.
who was against I In
°ri*n- come our greatest
scope. which will be four times as wax tough stalked, but the grata I oratory cooktag test) report that, and retained the respect of all who
things—
you. Amongx4h«
solid ground and ta lhe sufi- powerful as the big one on Mt. Wil­ was merely “tough" to look at. says halved turkeys are Just as delicious knew him. taking a prominent part
God's love; healed wounds; lhe on
| and attractive as tlie whole bird.'
son. will be located on top of an­ Marston.
shlne.
multitude, the patrisunrise o'er tlie hili.
Althnueh
Although Mtehliran'x
Michigan's Infestation
infestation ! ThLs
Thta may have solved lhe
the problem ta the work ot all community proIrvin S. Cobb 01 who ac,ual,y °P- rI November's gray makes apples redThe M. G. M. studios, or "Lof as ; other mountain about half way
tlie
“ larger birds 'found* on "the
u“
they
call it. is as big as a good sized from Los Angeles lo San Diego. Four afcom.borera Is..becoming more of “
posed you — except 'l
der seem;
‘ mariteU today. Many markets are term its supervisor of Yankee
uniform
within
the
principal
corn
yearr
seems
llkoa
long
time
lo
be
farm.
About
half
of
it
-is
covered
Springs at the time of his death
maybe in a whimsical spirit — will , Makes Ores seem brighter, and
i with block after block of huge sound grinding one lens, but I know from producing counties, in some of the planning to sell the halved birds or and was interested in other com­
be as lonesome as an honest bone ।
adds to their cheer.
the
parts
—
back,
breasts,
legs,
thigh.
experience that II Is a real Job as
munity projects.
in the average beauty-contest pro­ I November days are lovely days to i studios, which are bam-like struc- during my spare time for tho last sufficiently numerous to make real
I lures around 200 feet long and a hunThe
best
finished
and
most
atT11® ^Ok,h^.l*en
wi^tn
moter's body.
eight months 1 have been grinding
and «
without,
has
been
tractive dreased turkrya wlll be sym- ,nd
uhout the account h
"‘ ***"
on un eight Inch lens. The surface test of placing borer moths on the
ana at er.
. t(nus rwjulre
or
u, of a telescope lens must be ground stalks under cloth cages. 'Die borer metrical and well balanced ta body made up. the. hammer has fallen.
Synthetic Napoleon Brandy
But
we
look
forward
with
hope
and
T WILL now tell about Napoleon
‘ ‘
construct and are often used for and polished lo within one mil­ resistant com had but one-fourth conformation, with wide, plump, confidence to a glad reunion beyond
Were still going strong about onjy a few minutes. They build lionth of an Inch of the correct as many borers on a stalk and fully fleshed breasts. The top and the skyline. We do not toy good­
* brandy. Napoleon brandy Is any
bottom lines of tlie dressed carcass
showed
for
texs
damage
from
rotted
Alaska.
The
vast
northern
part
of
everything
right
on
the
lot
in
their
shape
or
It
is
considered
unsatis
­
brandy more than four yeara old.
«,.
| will be nearly parallel. The turkeys bye. but good night.
Alaska inhabited by our American own fscU&gt;rleS. which include a saw factory for astronomical purposes. and fallen stalks.
it poured from a dark bottle with citizen
Eskimos ta. except for its lnlJ1
bU{ „ any &gt;n Ul
"Preliminary Investigations
L------L, _., by 8.: having abnormal proportions ta' BRIDGE IS THE
Il seems impossible lo measure an
'
■ an "N” on it and decorated with furs, of little commercial uy to us.
.-------------WOOd*hop is as large and
crops -de­ length of legs, length of keel 1
of a millionth of an T. Texter. a|k&gt; in the farm
LONGEST IN WORLD.
cobwebs applied by an expert cob­ so our government imported mostly • completely equipped as our furniture imperfection
&lt;breast&gt; bone, or In depth o, bod.. ;
partment
al
Michigan
State
Col
­
inch, but it is done quite readily by
The Banner is in receipt of a
web - twiner before being served; from Siberia several thousand rein- fnCtoriM
piaster shop was very reflecting a pencil behm of light for lege. indicates stalks from resistant or having a decidedly sloping or
price JI-50 to $3 per slug at your deer. The Eskimos are taught to , lntcresU11K wltll flfty of more men a long distance from the lens. The' strains are less porous. contain less crooked breast born-; or those hav- copy ot the san Francisco Chronicle,
herd them. This ta what Uncle Bam mosl of whom are rfB1
m&amp;k. real difficulty is in correcting the air space and hove greater density," tag a pronounced knob on the front dated Thursday. Nov. 12. The paper
features the opening of the new
More genuine guaranteed Napo­ says about
Marston told Die agronomists. "This end of tlie keel will NOT be found San Francisco-Oakland bridge. The
lng
piaju-r of
of pans
parts replicas
replicas of
of ev-1
ev­ imperfection
T’7’ the situation:
.T.----- 'The
*
&lt;ob. Ij ln
« plaster
leon brandy Is sold every month in Ject of the importation was orlgi- erything from the Statue of Liberty 1 I have kind of wandered from the characteristic ta to be investigated among the belter finished and more length of the main structure Is 32.­
attractive dressed turkeys.
New York night clubs alone than nally to furnish a source of supply 1 down to ornamental brlcabrac fori subject but it U only natural as telofeet (four and one-half miles
It ta no accident that the holiday &gt;1 720
E. E. Down, plant breeder In the
all of the regular Napoleons, num­ for food and clothing to Die Alaskan । room decorations. Mast of Die rest scopes are one of my many Hobbles.
approximately &gt;;
the
maximum
|ot u
Up wlth str(,els Another view from lhe mountain college farin crops department, also season and the abundance of turkeyj height of towers above the water Is
bered. respectively. 1, II and III Eskimos in Uic vicinity of Bering ] of
Strait, nomadic hunters and fisher- i which are replicas, down to the top. Just ns Interesting as that presented a paper before the agro­ should fall within the same period. 5’6 feel: maximum depth of piers
Tradition,
an
outgrowth
of
tiie
fas
­
What brought these Interesting men eking out a precarious existence flnejl detail of pavement, sidewalks 1 through the telescope, is that from nomy soclty. Ills technical subject
below the water ta 242 feet. The
Here lies the body of old man
upon the rapidly disappearing game ,nd bUljdings ta cities from all parta I Signal Point, from which an unob- was "Influence of Varietal Compe­ cinating tales of early hLitory. ta re- length of the Golden Gale bridge Is
Noel.
statistics to mind wus tunning into anlmajs
nulmxlc and fish.
HaIi Within less than ‘I „r n____ j ______ _______
.. _
nt
on Yields of Nursery Plots of spomible for thta habit. There L» no 8.940 feet, height of towers. 746 feet
a collector of Napoleoi brandies. a generation the reindeer Industry of the world and all types of Amer-1 structed view can be had of the val­ tition
question but that holiday lime ta and depth of piers. 100 feet. If lhe Tried to live through the winter
Wheat and Barley."
ley
below
'hie
lights
from
sixty
dif
­
lean
cities
from
frontier
tosms
tc
Why. some of his specimens must has advanced through one entire
without enough coal.
THE TIME when people -become deepest pier. 242 feel, and the highferent
cities.
lhe
shore
line
and
har
­
the
big
metropolises
"Grand
Hotel"
date back as tar as 1914.
A banker ta a fellow who Offen turkey-minded, although turkeys are j est tower. 516 feet, were put togeth­
Call Smith Bros . Velte At Co.
stage of civilization, lhe Eskimos In­
stands on one of these streets. bor of Los Angeles, and even Cata­
But my alm is lo collect the pis­ habiting lhe vast grazing lands still
Their coal will last longer, give
You could walk along these streets lina Island seventy miles away, you an umbrella when the sun is coming more and more tala an al) er they would make a 60 story bulldtols carried by Jesse James and from .Point
w„.. Barrow
______ _________________
lo lhe Aleutian and Just Imagine you were on a present
shining
and
asks
for
It
back
when
It
time
American
delicacy.
Many
resa
sight
unequalled
in
all
lhe
p« &lt;-.« ■&gt;&gt; « »»..» -...h--—- — —• -­
more heat and less ash than any
the handcuffs worn by Billy the j islands; it has raised them from the magic carpet traveling all over the1 world, and one which we will noi begins to rata. The reason he wants taurants. hotels, etc. serve it the ing. It is estimated that ten mil­
lion cars may cross yearly.
other on the market.
it back Is because it was someone year around. Many turkey growers
Kid. It's a great ambition, but may primitive to lhe pastoral stage; from i world. However when you go Inside | soon forget.
elsc's umbrella ta the first place.
j report orders from company exectirun into money because it will take I nomadic hunters to civilized men. lhe doorway of any of lhe buildings I
We can scarcely wait till the base­
Hubert D. Cook,
SMITH BROS.,
1
i lives ordering turkeys to be shipped
targe hall
contain
all, me
the jesse
Jesse ' having ...
in their
herds of - reindeer
ball season opens and the umpire
a Mite
nan to
io con
iuin hi
...... ...
---------- ule
the magic speu
spell is
ta immediately lost. I
wo.nw
Thf French Government Ls asking to their salesmen and other employ­ addresses a catcher on the Boston
James six-shooters and all the Billy assured support for themselves and | BS
tbc buildings are nnthinu
nothing hut
but a 1' MAKE YOUR ■POSTAL
as the
VELTE &amp; CO.
MONEY ORDERS RIGHT, j the United States ,lo consent to a ( ecs for Christmas, also many indl- Bees os "honey."
the Kid handcuffs I've seen.
opportunity to accumulate wealth, । piaster
plaster front with wooden braces to
reduction
of
lite
*ue of battleships 1 vldual orders sending a turkey home
U
• ■ .
I
• • *
|I hold them
up. Even lhe elaborate
Officials of the department ot Will the French Government In, to mother for Thanksgiving or
The real leisure class Is not the
iinrrTinr in c.ri wnnh».
i ln 1023 *hen Mr- Carpenter wrote stage settings Inside the studios are state at Lansing are pointing out
7 ,*
‘
I hta book, he stated that there were I built up the same way. and end up that postal orders sent lo the secre­ turn consent to reduce the size of Christmas. Tills seems like a good class that can afford a maid, but
PHONE 2257
| idea a.s what mother wouldn't re- the class that can keep one.
A A/ HEN 1 see a motormaniae Utx&gt;ut 500 farms In tlie Matanuska I with rough boards and braces at the tary of state should be made pay­ Its debt to the United States!
* * burning up the road and feel I and Swastika Valleys. Aside from exact point on both sides and top able at Lansing, rather than at any
confident that, ninety-nine times out bcinrrdMI for farming with the two I where the range of the camera ends, other point. A fee is charged lor
ot a hundred, there's no earthly or three feel of rich silt, the climate There ta so much sham to the whole cashing postal money orders at any
need for his hurry. I think of a I is as mild as Washington. D, C. And business that when we inspected place other than that designated for
Japanese gentleman who visited ■ they are close to the extensive coal : some of the Viking valves in the payment; as the department has no
il typical New York go-getter.
' fields of Anchorage
buildings we could not help but feel ।appropriation to meet thta. such
of them lo see if they were really 11money orders are returned to their
They started downtown. The guide I
Fox----------fanning
Is ■also
an Important
iron or Just a wood or plaster 1ml- ।makers. Great’ inconvenience to
hurried his guest aboard a subway I ---- —
— -----—
|,those sending fees ta Uius caused.
local, yanked him off at Times industry of Alaska-raosUy silver tation.
Mr. Martin seemed to be as well 'The regulations concerning the cxSquare, jammed him on a packed | r°xes ™e PUP?
Worth a,boul
*
‘
. . ..
tMWl rand the fullarown ones from known around lite Jot as any ot | ।
express, pulled him out of the ex­ 1500 [and lhe fullgrown
52,
Ou)
up
If
anything
happens
to
lhe
stars;
all
the
guards,
policemen.
press further down and violently lhe mother, a mother cat is called in and^officlals calling him by name. ■ (slon of congress.
inserted him into another overflow­ for wet-nurse. One owner lost his and we were free to go wherever and
ing locnl. When they emerged al mother of five pups who then were whenever we liked. We were ac- 1 Analysis of the enrollment re­
n way-station, the Japanese was worth $2,500 and he knew of only corded one privilege that very few cceived from Ute Western State
badly bruised, rumpled and tram­ one mother cal In lhe country. The visitors-ever enjoy -We had our ।Teachers
college shows that thir­
'
pled.
cat's owner knew what he wanted 1 lunch ta th* studio dining room and 11teen students are enrolled from Has­
They are: Seniors. Emms B
He limped to his host's office, It for and asked him $500 for the ate with the rest of the stars, many tings.
t
where they sal down with practi­ cat. Tills made the fox owner so of whom we recognized, but I &lt;Chandler. Charlotte M. Hubbard.
cally nothing to do except relax. hopping mad that he let his $2500 doubt If many of then) recognized 1William M- McCallum. Margaret
So be asked why they'd changed worth of fox pups die rather than us. Maude of course wasn't with me fSnyder. Bemlce M. Springer; Jun­
at the time so I can't go Into too 1iors. William H- Fox. Irene B. Jonas.
cart so often when the original train pay &lt;500 for a cat.
much detail, but I will admit that 1Barbara E. Wilcox; Sophomore.
would have brought them along.
Nearly all of the world's supply I had two very beautiful girls Just ;John A. Chandler; Freshmen. Gene­
"Oh." said lhe New Yorker, "do­
Erway. Howard M. Martin.
’
of seal skin comes from rocky, bar­ across lhe table from me and anolh- vieve
ing that, we save six minutes."
R. Vandergrift. Donald C.
1
ren Islands in lhe Bering Sea which er at my right. However they came Elizabeth
The oriental sucked 4n his breath are so small they are not shown on in after I did and. U Jar as I know. 'Weaver.
politely and did some pondering. lhe maps. Their habits make very paid for their own meals. Their con­
A man summoned at Reading for
"And what." he murmured then, Interesting reading. Our government versation Interested me consider­
—"what were you going lo do with made a wise purchase In 1863.
ably, and gave ma the Impression 1leaving hta car too long In one place
the six minutes?"
that they were not so much dll- 1was stated to be an unemployed
Mr. Carpenter says there ta a ferent from, lots of other women ta 'musician who drove over erery day
Cobb's Pel Annoyances
magic about Alaska that makes other walks of life, as their talk con- 1from Tooting to play In the street.
Apparently
nobody had paid him
1
OMEBODY writes ta, demand­ people make repeated visits there stated principally of hashtag up a to
move on.
ing to know what my pct loath­ and maybe finally settle there.' He lol of dirt and rumors about the love 1
.
has traveled the world over but life of some of the famous stars.
ings are. Well, let's see:
After lunch we went to some of I
finds Alaska's invigorating air. scen­
Is It the fellow who, having heard ery and wildness Irresistible. The the various property rooms, of which I
every blamed word you eaid, waits poem is from Robert Service's "The there are hundreds. When a picture (
until you're al) through and then Spell of the Yukon."
ta finished the principal sets, cos- '
with
says. "What?”
There's a land where lhe mountains tumes. furniture and everything
Or tho barber who. having fin­
used, are card indexed, and stored ।at your REXALL Drug Store
are nameless.
ished the job, grabs up u towel and
And the rivers all run God in these buildings for future tu&gt;e.
The whole job of making pictures ta
dabbles you with ninety hundred and
knows where;
.
seventy-four separate and distinct There are lives that orc erring and practically reduced&lt;to a manufac­
turing proposition, lhe same as mak­
aimless
dabs?
And deaths that Just hang by a ing automobiles, refrigerators, etc.
Or the clerk who, when you go
Double Action Relief
the raw materials of people, wood,
hair;
in for a pair of socks, tries to sell
plaster, etc., going tn one end and
There
are
hardships
that
nobody
you everything in the store, Includ-;
from Stubborn
reck
coming out ta reels of film at the
reckons;
Ing some pajamas that you!।
I There
"- “e are valleys unpeopled and other.
wouldn't be caught dead in?
Comtipation
We returned to the Viking office
etui;
Or the orator who says "one last I' There's
a land—oh. It beckons and and spent the rest of lhe afternoon
word" and buries that last word II - beckons
ta details which would interest no­
Agarex Compound
under about five thousand other
And I want to go back—and I body but ourselves and then picked
with Phenolphthalein
words?
our way through Lhe traffic back to I
willl
Or the solicitor who begins by j
Pasadena and the Pierson home.
While Leslie and I were gone Claude |
asking for just a minute and hangs LIVE STOCK SHOW OPENS
$1.00-Pint
on until you begin to figure the
IN CHICAGO NOV. 28. had taken the rest of the family &gt;
'/--present Christian era must be upTnanksgiving season will again slght-seetag and had assisted David
Of
course
you know that
In capturing alive two Blackwidow '
preaching its close?
j mark lhe celebration of lhe con­
nothing lubricates the in­
state and Stock Market
tlnent's foremost agricultural show, spiders and some Jerusalem crickets.
| the international Live stock Exposl- David still has one of the deadly,
testinal
tract
as efficient­
TS curious that two of the most
It will open In its 37lh re­ spiders ta a Jar in hta room, which .
ly as Mineral Oil, the
fascinating and envied professions i! tlon.
newel November 28. the Saturday he ta now fattening up by feeding
—financiering and acting
—
do
not
base
of
Agarex.
For
it
flies
so
it
will
make
a
good
spec!,
. 7 ...
following Thanksgiving, and will
necessarily call for intelligence. conynue unm December 5. The Ex- men for hta collecflon. The other i
stubborn cases of consti­
Not taut there aren't brilliant per- J&gt;oafuon will be held ta the new two spider was eaten by thta one some­
pation we recommend
sons a-plenty engaged )n both linee. minion dollar amphitheater at the where in New Mexico.
Agarex Compound which
You might think we had put in 1
But lhe mimetic quality, the Chicago Stock Yards, a giant struccontains Phenolphthalein,
knack of rendering other people's j ture that contains over seven acres a pretty full day. but we still had
nearly a hundred miles lo go to sec 1
the laxative that has made
lines, perhaps without ever under- of exhibit area.
JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS CLUB
standing them, may be but a sub- 1 With the exception of tlie horse some things that cannot be seen
Hexal 1 Orderlies one of
properly
by
daylight.
We
had
seen
!
limited emotional Instinct, Just as shows, all of lhe 7.500 seats that
Open one of any lixe you like. We have a plan to suit your needs.
the world's largest sell­
plenty
of
stars
dijing
the
day.
but
.
the main Judging arena
sometimes the ability to make great surround lhe
they do not compare with the mil-1
ing
laxative
tablets.
(ob. ot mono, bi. nothin, to do
•» tm lo the pubUe. The ludtu
lions you may see at night, especial­
WlU. brain,, or ftiher brain. Iiav. ’I”, •‘S "**, ■*?» ““ !TS'
Sold only at Rexall Drug
hhihini tn do With IL A certain comln« trom 17 states, the District ly from tho top of Mt- Wltaon.
The seven of us got in lhe car
n
*
malt nut ■ sidztftn dniiar ot
Columbia.
Canada
Slorti.
of
Columbia.
Canada and
and Scotland,
Scotland.
man can smell out a hidden dollar
Waller Bigger, noted British cattle­ and Mt out through the outskirts of,
exactly as a rat terrier sniffs be­ man. will make hla 12th trip to Chi­ pasadens, again passing the Rose
Cerveth fir Stebbins
hind the wainscoting the rat which cago l[wa
1U&gt; home
nomo in
m Scotland w
from hla
to Bowl to La Canada where we
Tb. REXALL Stere
another dog would , pass unnoticed, determine the winners in the fat turned off on the Angels Crest
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
TELEPHONE 2 103
There are young ladies capably c&gt;ttle claaaas and eelecl tha grand highway, leading to the top of Mt.
Hartings
Ph«w 11JI
interpreting classic roles who prob- champion ateer.
"
Wilson. Thta is » well named and
beautiful drive winding through
ably think Salome 1s lhe name of j
A ton of food is consumed by the the foothills and mountains, rising i
an Italian sausage.
over six thousand feet In a little I
IRVIN S. COBB. I| average person during a year.

galutlog the President
ANTA MONICA. CALIF.
—-Top of the morning to
you, Mr. President Elect I
Many happy returns!
But
you've already seen the happy
returns, haven't you?
We've been behind you right
along. At times, some of us may
have been so far behind you we
couldn't seem to see you. nt all.
But why. bring that

S

Our ix»lk p«&lt;l and nm.nl, r»lr
■conur.u.d non our
November as melancholy. Here Is a | &lt;contlnu*q tfOm PM* ’ J**
protest.
Novemher n.«
; ship is, nothing but two by fours

...................... -»•"
"lx's-*” ■" m""z

1
h“l^“
* XK, «, u,.. uu... mu, ».

rju'W

’"Sx"ed

"w

SI"4 4W“”’“i

fiY

X66

r

S

SAVE

I

j
t-

SAFETY

Christmas comes but once a yeor-ond it's a good thing for most of
us that it does. December is one of thp jolliest months of the yeor
but it's also one of the most expensive. A little forethought now
will make next Christmas a happier one. Plan now to lay away a
little each week and when Christmas rolls around next year you'll
welcome it with open arms.

HASTINGS CITY BANK

•y

■

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER M, IBM
pleted for the year. OCC enrollees Uonal land will be withdrawn from
OT the Fife lake camp ore turning private ownership and dedicated to1 rTilTDT UnttCC AIITU/C
their attention lo tbe improvement conservation UMt u t result of ac- j V VUA ‘ nUUM. HL

CoTweroation and

tered. bond filed, letters of odminliter work projects. Arbutus lake is ing of the itete conservation comPROBATE COURT
tntkm Issued.
mission. Tha lands are within the
wnbert Twrimon.
HUt*rt Testimony
bluegill fishing lakes in northwest boundaries of present state-owned
MARRIAGE LICENSE.
and administered conservation proJ- nIcd- Qrder determining heirs en- Philipp
Steelhead trollara have a UtUe Improved next winter. Lha CCC men
tered.
les* than a week to enjoy their sport will pour gravel for bass and blue­ slrwble both for their game cover' Eat. MUo G. Barbour. Final ac:Leod. city
in the waters of western and north­ gill spawning beds.
and to aid In blocking present state j count filed.
ern Michigan designated open for
holdings in these areas. Furchaecs
Est. Charles H Davis. Bond ot
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
that type of fishing Tlie steelhead
A new wildlife sanctuary of 182 will be made from the 81 AO dser-ll- Admr. filed, letters at administration
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Dcmond and
trolling season, which U. in effect, acres
tn Hillsdale township. Hills- cense fund set aside by law lor the issued,
Issued, order limiting settlement en
en-­ daughter from Hastings and Mr
an extension of the general trout
» 1 •tered,
—J —
— •far
— -hearing
—■- -claims
------- and Mrs. Bob Scobey and son from
petition
fishing season but restricted to dale county, has been crested by I purpose.
the state conservation commission |
* • •
I filed, notice to creditors Issued.
Leach lake were Bunday dinner
limited waters, comes to a clave Nov j The
area was dedicated by Walter
The department of conservation! Est, Clara Both. Final account guesU of Mr. and Mrs Earl Engle
”
• • •
I K. Stanfield and will be closed to all will recommend to tbe state lega­
filed, order allowing account entered.:
tion ting and trapping for a period ‘ latifre next January that the red discharge of executor Issued, estate end at Middleville with her mother.
Federal aid Lx to be asked by the j —
' fox be removed from the list of enrolled.
Mrs. Carrie Couch Is helping pare
department of conservation for the
non-game animals which may be
Ent. Fred Phillips. Petition for for grandfather, Mr. Klngsberry,
construction ot public bathhouse' Bounty hunters in Michigan ael legally shot lhe year around and
and combination service and con­
new. high monthly record during given adequate protection in this Admr. filed, petition for special
Mrs. Will Calms and son. Gerald,
Admr.
filed,
order
appointing
special
cession buildings in Grand Haven[
Admr. entered, bond of special and Willard Kidder spent the week
stale park. Director P. J. HofT- tors killed. This total exceeds the
master will file a formal application
Monday, Nov. 30. U lhe last day Admr filed, letters of special Admr. Mrs Bernie Manker.
&gt;
requesting PWA assistance tn fi-1 old stale-trapper system which be­ of the 30-day open trapping season issued.
Arthur Kidder U having a serious
nancing the project.
came obsolete In Michigan Jan. 1. on muskrats in lhe upper penin­
eye trouble.
1035. It was more than double the sula. In the lower peninsula the filed, order appointing Admr. en­
Sunday school al 10 o'clock and
With trout stream-improvement. September take of the current year. open trapping season an muskrats ured. J
Est Birt Birman. Bond filed, let­ preaching service at 11. You are inwork on the north nnri south1
runs from Nov. 15 to Dec. 15.
ters of Admr. issued, order limit­ । vited to these services.
branches of Boardman river comMore than 5,000 acres of addiSchoo! Notes.
ing settlement entered. Petition for
B.ARRY GUERNSEY MAKES
hearing claims filed, notice to credl- i Thou- with a perfect attendance
STATE RECORD. tors issued.
this month were Clarabelle Couch.
From Peterborough. New Hamp- j mi
£,t. Den
B Dolph.
ueu b
uoipn. Report
nrpon of
oi F^er^rene'^Kldder
s^e^te
shire comes word, that Lockshor-, —
n»r»« Illrt. order
J
Kidder and Raymond Kidder. Doro­
Golden Locks 38M76 has just com­ mortgage entered
pleted a record which makes her
Ert. Fred PhilUps. Inventory filed thy Robinson hiul the highest
queen of all three-year old Michi­ petition to assign mortgage filed, or­ marks but was followed clonely by
gan Guernseys in class E of the der authorizing assignment of mort­ Raymond Kidder.
Visitors this month were Rev. E.
American Guernsey Cattle Club. gage entered, final account filed, or­
Lockshore Golden Locks was bred der allowing final account entered, G. Crocker. Tommy Kidder, Bever­
ly Ann Couch and Mrs. Engle.
discharge Luued. estate enrolled
ESt Cora g BiHenstein. Petition
SOUTH MAPLE GROVE.
[record of 18284 4 pounds of mflk and for determination of heirs, order for
Mrs. Grover Marshall entertain­
' 836.7 pounds of bulter fal.
I publication entered.
I Est John J. Beattie. Order allow­ ed lhe Birthday club Friday.
Mr. and Mrs Harold Gray of East
WELCOME EXTENSION GROUP. ing claims entered.
Est..______________
Earl Beattie. Order
allowing Assyria were Friday callers at their
The members of lhe Welcome Ex- [ ___
____ .______
mother. MraLahi Gray.
। tension daw met al lhe home of claims entered.
Robert and Gaylord Gray were
I Mrs. Mary Scudder for an all day i Est. Burdette Briggs. Order allow­
Grand Ledge visitors Wednesday.
’ meeting. In lhe morning the chair- Ing clnlnu entered.
Alla Campbell of near Charlotte
man gave Instructions for the year
Est. James L- Lancaster. Final ac­
spent
Monday night with the Frank
. After a pot luck dinner the leaders count filed, waiver of notice filed.
gave the lesson on fall fashions and | order assigning residue entered. dU­ Norton family.
Lloyd
Welker and friend of Bat­
, gave the members some hat and diarge issued, estate enrolled.
Phone 2515
Frank Sage
Hastings
collar patterns. The next meeting] E*t. John H Brinker. Bond of tle Creek were nt Lowell Jarrarda
win be held at the home of Mrs. Admr. filed, letters of adminutra- Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sweet and son Lou
: Clara Hammond on Jon. 6.
| Hon Issued.
moved on the Ruracll Hicks farm.
Mrs. Grace Brake of Hastings
| spent Friday and Saturday with
1 her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Lester
I Preston.
The Wilcox Ladles Aid will serve
a chicken supper al the grange hall
1 al Maple Grove Center on Friday,
December 4.

Outdoor Notes

“We always wanted ’em
-and now we’ve GOT ’EM!”
I

I

i

i

RURAL PATRONS

Please Order Your Coal
Before Snow Blockade!
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

So canYOU
in this Year-end

A^Wale
That** &lt; xt oily what thta

F
A SMALL
DOWN PAYMENT^

open

these home conveniences that mean to much to belter

-THEN.. .

k

NOTHING
TO PAY
V
If
APRIL’37
UNTIL

DOUD CORNERS.
, Mrs. Ouxsie Kline went to the
■ hospital Monday morning for an
opera Hon
Mr and Mrs. H. Bergman were
at Battle Creek Saturday
The Cedar Crick L. a 6- will meet
at the church for an afternoon
(meeting Thursday. Dec. 3. All
members are urged to come.
| Mr Bergman butchered a beef last
' week.
j Kenneth HUI of Detroit visited
, friends here and took a load ol
chickens back with him.
[ Mrs. George Norris U 111 this week

Here’s how! — special trade-in allowance on old
equipment; long easy terms: newest model* al moat al-

IRVING.
Boni to Mr. and Mrs. Foster Wad­
' dell on Nov. 17. a son. Robert James
Congratulations.
The Ladles’ Aid Society will meet
December 4 at lhe home of Mrs.
Bernice Nagel.
The community was saddened by
the death of Walter Ogden, who had
resided here since April.
Mrs. Avis Tompkins and Jock
Perry and Miss Madeline Baker ot
Kalamazoo visited Uielr mother.
Mrs. John Perry during Mr. Perry’s
absence in tlie north.

then NOTHING TO PAY UNTIL APRIL!
BE ONE to BENEFIT and PROFIT from this great

The Famous, Popular

A-B GAS RANGE

You Can Reduce
Without Dieting

The Sugar Beet’s Own Story
3 YEAR TERMS

FRIGIDAIRE
THE REFRIGERATOR.

Splendid choice of ilicv. Trade

Small Down Payment, Then . . .
Nothing to Pay Until April
Trade In
3 Year
the Old Box ™
Terms

Big Specials also on WASHERS
IRONERS, WATER HEATERS
ABC—the beat and
pop­
ular wwfc* we ewr eaU.
BCHW WORK. WW
FA**HOB.
YrttJ, KM.
Lat na preve K.

Small &amp;t»n

Iron at eaae with Uk IRONR1TE machine—tanas out the
nicaet Vtft you vwr raw.
•■Wa YlbUBS every month.
'SJte'tt anB act why.

Automatic hot w^lor end* all
the old work and waste—our
new heater gtvrs 2t-hour
wrviee for a few pennies a
day. Our trade-in offer »me»
you moony•

Ddiwo,Then Ko Payment* Until Nest April

COME IH - OR PHONE 2305
•
• «*

“Let'« have a friendly chat, Mr. Grower!
You are situated right in the heart of
one of the best sugar beet sections of
America.”
“Just as certain sections of Louisiana are
best for raising sugar cane, your
section of Michigan is peculiarly
adaptable for raising Sugar Beets.
Thousands of farmers—many of
them your neighbors—find this true.”
“Naturally, every year cannot be good for
a bumper crop. No one is blessed with
perpetual prosperity.”
“So get this fact firmly fixed in your
mind: Farm incomes, like all other
incomes, must vary from year to year.
That is controlled by weather, by sup­
ply and demand, by management and
economic condition*.”
“But, as all authorities agree, and expe­
rience shows, your soil is excellent for
Sugar Beets, isn't it good business to
stick with that which is best for your
pocketbook?”
“Sugar Beets are not a surplus crop. From
the standpoint of consumption, you
cannot raise too manySwgarBeets.The
processors wi]I take all you produce.”

“Sugar Beets do not impoverish your soil
as do other crops. On the contrary,
the growing and proper cultivation of
beets gives to your soil those proper­
ties it need* to keep it healthy and
highly productive of other crop* in
proper rotation.”
“Beets are hardy. They are not so sensi­
tive. They can ‘take it’. For beets,
more than any other crop, take wet
weather, dry weather, hot weather
and cold weather.”
•
“This mean* that when you grow beets
and get up against adverse weather
conditions, you are more certain of a
good yield than you are with any
other cultivated crop.”

prtme Walgreen system
nttv O
DRUG STORE

PHONE 2241

A Customer
Comments . . .
"I have a habit of using
tho bus, Instead of driv­

“So, in conclusion, let me stress thia, Mr ,
Grower: Year after year stick to a reg­
ular planting of Sugar Beet*. Sugar

ing. so that I can catch
• forty wink*” between
towns. Confidence tn

Beets are the ideal crop from which to
make more money.”

yoijr driven enables me

“When planting time come* around next
spring see to it that Sugar Beets are
included in your crop program.”
Farmers and Manufacturers Beet Sugar
Association, Saginaw, Michigan.

to feel completely al
eaae."

if you want net and comfort
when you travel—&gt;juxt aak tor
SHORT WAT SERVICE.

For Reliable Year Is and Year Out Prefits

YOU CAN’T BEAT SUGAR BEETS

BUS DEPOT
TRIO CAFE

CONSUMERS POWER CO. I

HASTINGS

Phon. 2117

�THE HAiTOWI UXW1, THURSDAY, NOVEXBnt M. 1134
club, wallace Swank and Francis

Weekly Farm Review

Thornapple- Kellogg
School Notes

The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers

bent of the faculty at

Y.M.C.A. ITEMS j Dr. Lund of Middleville was sched■Baouai^^gSBai uled for an important health talk to

j A Hl-Y club was organized last nlng but scarlet fever closing the
veruxn—Betty Streeter, mim xanaxe week at Nashville with Edward. ‘cl2°°1POStpoMmehL.
—Katherine Coman. M1m Shaffer—
IL wet and covered. In feeding from Nov. 19 Letter.
Haines, pres.; Victor Higdon, vice’
' "
- Last
Wednesday,
November
11,
Mr
Artelle
Bedford.
Mr.
Smalley
—
Hara truck, the exposed surfaces should
I for Pontiac from . Grand Ledge,
pres.; Wm. Hecker, secy.; and Wm. I Charlotte. Eaton Rapids. NuhvlUe
High school, received bad news from
Hynes, treasurer ond with Mr. ' and Hastings, accompanied by Sec. |
Foamy Cream.
Holt forth—Gherman Clifford. Mr. Keyes, leader. Earl Pennock will 1
। Angell and other local leaders. 1,000
Van Byckle—Fred OllieLie. Mr. represent the club at Pontiac.
II are expected at the meeting.
Ohio State University reports
cream is
is due
due to
to the
the i blast ot dynamite while engaged in Cunningham—Alvin van Der Kolk.
that foamy cream
| Freeport Hl-Y has been gathering
presence of a type of yeast ferment blowing up stumps on a section of Miss lulsi—Donna Nell.
After the students' had laughed Community church at East Lan-'for the benefit of their fund for
which gets into tbe milk from filth his farm.
through that ten minute skit. Thar- sing James Elwood. Y Secy, of New| helping, and the Girts' T group are
.. speak.. .
*___at the home
trouble Is co keep utensils and sep­
York state will
will K
bem the guest
set for a big -party
The Junior cUm haa bsen engaged body's Dorlln’ but Mine” and "That
arator clean and scalded—cool the
.
• of their leader. Mra. Hunter. •
cream to a low temperature—and in the task of choosing their elm | tittle Boy of Mine."
Charlotte Hl-Y club, with their ! C. F. Angell spent Bunday in Eatrings.
However
they
have
al
last
j
The
program
was
closed
with
lhe
sell It a* soon as possible.—Ohio
aeleoted one from a company In I dating at the "Where Oh Where” leadcr. Harlan McCall, conducted, on county with the Youth-Adult
Nmur.
the induction ceremonies for the Forum at Eaton Rapids afternoon
Grand Rapids, Michigan.
| gang.
Eaton Rapids club last Wednesday | and evening and in Charlotte in
Senin* Turkeys.
evening Sweet cider and popcorn A- M.
QUIMBY.
The most profitable time to aell
were served by Basil Porter and his
Harvey Burgess is helping with
Last week tlie High school iiad a
turkeys Is Just ax soon as they are
•ripe”—because they are not only Red cross contest Tbe first class to children of Milwaukee and Mr. and
liable to go off feed but later gains have a dollar by Thursday noon and Mra. Wm. Ritzman of Racine. Wis­
consin. are visiting hto mother and
will be very expensive. Certain In­
other relativeo here.
dividuals. particularly among the
toms, will reach market condition victorious.
Mra Cecil Frey of Charlotte Mis­

Bv WILLARD BOLTE

ration may prove to be the coccldioils preventive that we have been
looking for, according to Poultry
Tribune. Wisconsin Experiment Sta­
tion reports that -‘“
amounts of sulfur
fed
inoculated with coccldiosU germa—
only one chick out of 100 contracted
the plague. In check pens of chicks
that received no sulfur. 53 chicks
out of each 100 died after inocu­
lation. Feeding the sulfur was of no
value after the chicks had contract­
ed the disease. The station is not

ment to this plan, or to make
recommendations as to amount of
sulfur or lhe length of time to feed
It. as further experimental work
must be completed—but since no
bod results nf feeding sulfur axe
day.
I
reported it locks decidedly safe lo the ideal plan is to sort tliem out
Mrs. George Scott is visiting her ■
this writer to give it a trial next
tail, according to American Poultry very hard with members of the fac­ son. Leon, and family In Battle (
ulty. and others on Lhe play. Creek.
Journal.
Arthur Hannah of Grand Rapids I
was at the C. A. Scott farm Fri­
If allowed lo carry on Ils work
day where he blood texted and cull- |
unhampered. Lhe currant worm may i Thls Item from Kansas Fanner
ed
the White Leghorn chickens.
ruin entire gooseberry and currant will be interesting to my Michigan
Mtes Linke attended a Home Ec.
W. J. Rice and family were Bat- j
plants. Use the regular cover sprays mid Ohio grupo-growing renders be­ meeting at Rockford last week.
tie Creek visitors Saturday.
recommended for apples, plus one cause it gives them some Id an of
A new hydrant l» going up out on
pint of nicotine sulfate to each 100 grape conditions In drouth-stricken the football field. This winter the
judging by what we bear of the
gallons nf spray—American Fruit Kansas thia year. A correspondent
propowid new taxes, alm of Congress I
vineyard of about 1.400 Moore’s It sounds like a lol of fun in is to make it as hard to live within
store.
an
Income as without one.
Early
grapes
from
which
he
picked
Timothy in Alfalfa.
M&lt;5 5-lii- baskets last year, when
Alfalfa stands thin out rapidly in there was no drouth, and 123B bas­
Ohio and states farther east, and &gt; KCUi
Jtc
The
Library
Committee
met
last
kets this year. They sold for 14c per
..j roOrc
®'per‘7'e«‘Six lion report*
thu year The highest pcire Wednesday and considered
‘Th’*
.k
.
hf evfr rece^fd w“
P" b*"kel new books for the Library.
±“*» w‘n
IW»
C01t । 1-2 rrnts
’
Junior
Assembly.
planting more alfalfa seed. For this
.................................. •
Last Thursday, the- junior
reason the staUon recommands pro­ 3c each—and net returns to the
entertained lhe rest ot the High
longing the usefulness of thin al­
school with an assembly.
falfa fields by sowing timothy Im-1
B. A. LYBARKER, Draggist.
A group of four girls sera
mediately after taking of! the last!
cutting of alfalfa in lhe fall. Seed
Feeding Straw.
lhe timothy with a drill—or go over'
If you are faced with the neces­
the field with a spring-tooth or a
dt.de and then broadcast the tim­ sity of feeding straw this winter the
othy. Five pound*, of seed to lhe following advice from Wallace's
acre stems to be enough. Don't at­ Parmer is worth having. The best
tempt to get a stand by merely plan b to feed it only once a day
broadcasting lhe wed without har­ and cattle will eat much more
rowing. as this plan invariably foils. straw If it is sprinkled with a mix­
ture of molasses and water—either
—Hoard's Dairyman.
au-au or one or momim to two or
water. When feeding straw heavily,
cattle should have free access lo salt
Within another year or two. farm­ and lo a mineral mixture, such as
ers In the latitude of southern two parts of steamed bone meal, two
Michigan will be using a new Kor­ parts of ground limestone, and one
ean lespedeza—a variety two weeks part ot stock salt. Where wet beet
earlier than regular Korean—de­ pulp or chopped mangels axe avail- I
veloped by the U- 8. Depnrtmcnt of able. .It is a splendid plan to chop I
Agrlculmrc nnd has given excellent the straw and mix it with the rook*
results in field teste near Kalamazoo or pulp and the grain ration.
over a period of three years. Seed
is not yet available for farmers, but
Liming.
lespedeza seeds so abundantly that
Every four years more than a ton
Uiis variety will undoubtedly spread
rapidly over southern Michigan and ot limestone is removed from each
Iowa and northern Indiana, Illinois acre OP soil under normal crop us­
age—jar which reason lime b. im­
and Oitio.—Michigan Farmer.
portant as a fertiliser as well as a'
Moving Corn Silage.
soll-swectener.—Wallace's Farmer. |
Michigan Farmer states that corn i
silage can be moved a considerable
distance by truck or railroad with-1 When
....... ..
_.
it __________
is necessary________
to rahcrpulout much loss of quality—if certain lets on land that is known to be tnpfecautlons are observed. The sil- tested with poultry worms, many1
age should be wet down and covered poultrymen make it a practice to '
CWT.
if possible It can be put into anoth- I worm tlie pullets at the age of three I
er silo—with plenty of water added jnonths and again when the pullete!
Msds of AU GOOD
—or it can be fed out from a truck ro into lartnx quarters.—American'
for approximately a week by keeping Poultry Journal.

Mrs. Loren Freed of Toledo, Ohio, hMr
visited her parents. Mr. and Mn. I
Frank AsptaaH. during the past' grag .
week. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brechelscn
visited at the Asplnall home Bunday.1
Mr and Mrs. Jay Wing spent Bun- J
day with the former* son. Robert
Wing, of Kalamazoo.
Miss Haze! Calms vtdted her sis-'
ter. Mrs. Barcroft, of near Freeport

drink al trail a

NEW 1937
STUDEBAKER

quart of Highland's

Dairy Grade A milk
every day 'cause 1

find it helps me
keep feeling fit. By

giving me extra en­
ergy u builds up

Stomach Gas

my

ADLERIKA STUDEBAKER DEFLATES

Your Cows H ill Show a
Nice Profit . . . If Fed a

BALANCED
RATION...

Farm Bureau
Service Dairy

resistance

to

colds, too. Grade A
is one of the high­

GAS MILEAGE CLAIMS!

est grades of milk

KFP cats have .made magnificent tecoeds in gasoline
economy. But you don't care about records achieved under special
STV.nPRA
ci.curartanccs- You want to know what good, bad and indifierent drivers

produced. And

get under average conditions!
O. K. We will tell you! Studebaker hired Facts. Inc., a buenera
research organization, to question 500 owners of each of tbe ten moot
popular makes of automobdea (1936 models). Each dr.rer wm asked:
"What gasoline mileage do you get?"
The best showing was made by Studebaker. OwnertoftheDictator, with
overdrive, testified to an average of 18.166 miles per gallon. Even the
most popular lightest weight, lowest priced cars used mere gas per mile.
Without overdrive, the Studebaker Dicta­
tor showed 17.199 miles per gallon—which is
better than one of the two most popular, low-V. |
est priced cars._____________________________ jj
U|

STUDEBAKER’S CHALLENGE!

Highland's
purest.

High in Craam Content. Raw
or Pasteurised.

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO.
PHONE 2101

HASTINGS

Grade

A is also one of lhe

Pt. 5c; Qt.

highlands dairy

i Phone

2451

ROBERT W. COOK. Prop.

SHOO

Grains, Concentrates

WOODLAND.
| tor of Athens spent the week end
Nov. ID Letter.
with Mrs. Donald Gager while their
Arthur Spencer of Sou Lb Haven I
was a Sunday dinner gueet at the
o. » wdMrv
1SMra. Grant Osgood and Mrs. Percy ■ nar(j pefimrj Of Schoolcraft ant!
Lehman accompanied by Frank Inc Los Trowbridge of Lake Odessa.
Kohler of Maple Grove visited Mr. I
and Mr-. Forrest Parmelee of Bal- 1. Rlchxld McLeod and Fred Lamtie Creek Sunday.
day afternoon with a deer apiece.
Mr. and Mrs Wm. Warner were Richard having a four point and
Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Har­ Fred a six point. They were very
old Warner of lake Odessa Sunday- happy over their good fortune since
Mrs. Mary Weaver of Hopkins is they could only be out for the week
spending a few days with Mr. and end.
Mrs Dell William*.
Mis- Evelyn Lucas and Mrs. Prank
ULw Phyllis England of Chicago. Hynes were in charlotte Wednesday
Mr and Mrs. Gerald England ot and attended the football game
Grand Rapids and Uta Lcoxir Leon­ between charlotte and Eaton Rap­
ard'and Jean ftigland of Hastings ids. On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Ward
saw tbe senior play at the school­ Hynes of Charlotte were guests of
house* Friday evening. Mlw England Mr. and Mrs. prank Hynes and later
remained for the week end with her were Grand Rapids visitors.
mother, Mrs. Glenn England and
sister.*. Pollyanna and Margery.
Mr and Mrs. Dan Garllngcr of
Nashville spent Sunday with Mr.

NO BY-PROOUCTS
ASK ABOUT IT!

Cottonseed, 92,15 CwL

Having decided to quit forming and move to town I will sell my personal property
at public auction at my farm, Sec. 27, Hope Twp., mile we&gt;t, half mile north of
Cedar Creek, on
$12.00 a Ton

Soybean Ideal, 92.15 Cwt. 942.00 a Ton

MUs Dorothy l&gt;icr.
Mr. and Mra. Dallas Parker of
Lansing visited the letter s parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Thompson.
Bunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Faul of
Chicago visited her parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Jacob Hoover, and other
relatives from Friday until Mon­
day.
Mlsse.t Helena and EUa Benner of
Lansing and George Franklin Ben­
ner of Betfridge Field spent Bunday
with their mother. Mrs. G. F. Ben­
ner and sister Eleanor. George entwo months ago and is training to
be a pilot al Selfridge Field near
.Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Wing of Carl­
ton were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mu. Fay C Wing.
A good sized and appreciative
day evening Oefykrrd FYry «s Rsstus got a good many laughs trora
the audtenrr.
Mr. and Mrs Cisas. JMul and Mrs.
George ^ul of Hastnigs were Bun-

Lawrence Faul.
Mra. Robert Kellogg and daugh-

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30th
SALE TO BEGIN AT 1:00 P. M. I OFFER THE FOLLOWING

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES Inc.
HASTINGS

HORSES
Brown hor»c, wt. 1450. Block hone, wt. 1200.

RHONE 2118

Guernsey bull, 16 mot. old.

N
A
T
I
0
N
A
L

B
A
N
K

Sa.sk is "Too Slow
Too JQisluj * "Toodotketsome

CHICKENS

PAY BY CHECK

50 bu. oats. 100 bu. good corn.
Mow of nice oat straw. Few tons mixed hay.
30 shocks corn in barn. 600 bundles corn stalks.
50 bu. potatoes.

You woutafe t ihfl* o&lt; liaMino your horn.
with candtdr-faint, fliekaring tallow
sticks, to ba carried from room to room.
You prefer to snap a switch and hove
an Instant Moza of Wght.
Cash is about as bothersome ond ou«
of date for paying bills os'cohdles ore
for lighting. Why um ill
Pay by cUtk. W Is quick, safe. wary.
economkoL A pen and a check bock ore
all the tools you naad hx Paying “ bill
ony Mme, anywhere. Your cancelled check

b your reatlptWe invite rau to open a
checking account wWh-HHs berth.

HASTINGS

Cratt scythe.

HARNESS
1% inch heol chain harness, good one.

1% indh

MISCELLANEOUS
Large iron kettle. Scoop ehawol, Bottle and 4 w«4fM.

20 young Rhode Island Red pullets.

HAY, GRAIN, ETC.

.. ..

Corn planter. Potato planter. 4 hay fotks.
Carden rake. Chicken crate. 32 «&lt;w erehN.

CATTLE
Registered forsey cow, 6 yrs. old, bred July 23.
Jersey cow, 7 yrs. old, full blood, pasture bred.
Black cow, 8 yrs. aid. bred Moy 3.
White cow. 9 yrs. old, bred May 13.

Thomas Long of Grand Rapids
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Long.
B. S Holly was a guest at the
home of Mrs. Rena culler Bunday ।
when she entertained with a dinner
in honor of his 73111 birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph RLw are vUiling his parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. T.
Rise, of Beaverton for a few days
and enjoying the deer hunting in
that vicinity.
Miss Elnora Rowland of Lake

AUCTION SALE!

20 gal. meat jar. Butterfly cream separate*, H4. 4,
bags, Handsaw.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS

FARM TOOLS
ptUewo, belief, 2

Studebaker wagon. 3’/|x10, with wagon box.
Deering binder, 7 ft. cut, good one.
McCormick mower, 5 &lt;ft. cut. Dump rake, 10 ft.
2 spring drags. 17 tooth. Walking cultivator, 2 horse.
Spring tooth cultivator.
Spike tooth drag.

with springs, mattress and

Set dump boards. Post hole digger.
Pair wagon springs, 3000 lbs. 3 good log chain*.

pella, iron kettle. «tc. *Wi fur everteel. 2 «bth
coats.. Other artiefog not mentioned.

TERMS OF SALE-CASH. NO GOODS REMOVED TILL SETTLED FO*.

JOHN LECHLEITNER,
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 20. 19S0
GLASd C REEK.
!
1^—
HELTON.
|
PRAIRIEVILLE.
lol
supporting
lhe aged ......
illiterate.
1 ixirtment and a nationally recog-’
oi an
«••••- ••••
"T"’
ILLITERATE ADD
, nired scholar on lhe subject, Barry, and the added cost ot crime, slum
v.
Henton returned home Mr. and Mrs. Manley Billings will|1 Robt. Otis returned the latur
’ marrirl«4 sixty years on November I pari of tlie week from a hunting ! |
—— ■ j chanjrabl- Munday night with hU deer and- be
has 114 Illiterates who con- iubu.uviu
conditions and wdisease,
TO COUNTY'S BURDEN countv
u met by Lyle Leinaar returned Saturday ‘ 30 Mn.s. Billings is
bed —so trip, bringing a flne’deef.
tribute to tlie annual loss In earn-to
to illiteracy,
Illiteracy, that
that must
mustbe
- ill
... in
---—
ORDER rot PUILTCATIOX.
Norman Erway and Harold Oar
­ Witn his deer, some of Dir rest of, plans toe anycelebration have been
tn» oower
to the community.the
the beat
local, .-.Ute
slate and
and federal
federal govern
governBarry Hub One Hundred
hl. flour,..-, menu,
menu, but
but which
which could
could be
be avoided
av.ndr.i Uie rum who ate bunting liavc been abandoned A card shower K pro­
Dr. Akiermau oas&lt;.&gt; ms uuun..J by nriio
,.r education.
'beard~ 'from .....
.have
... deer,
.
...
- -by ...
--------— • Let ut Frtd Otisproper
education.
Hut
they
but'posed
friends
and
neighbors.
Fourteen According
?hT*7eMrI^if&gt;taofeWint«i” “in!I ^ndeTDr
Alderman's supervision
supervision tt:
Under Dr Alderman's
no others have as yet returned.
. it be a regular cloud burst.
. ........
tj-wny. Iiatry
uuiui
uuu
Ray
Erway.
Harry
Dunn
raid SwhSiely the problem of educating the apTo The Records
Delton
and mik
Milo,
will uiw
uniU* *«•
in । Howard Ferris left Sunday fur a
received a nice Kin’
’. I, lx
I -iiod anti
uhU-h it was.
was he said._concluuveiy
said. conclusively ।i
•m't1 George
urorue Eddy
tuny rcccivcu
&gt;. win
which
lllllcrutcJ
airly 8^000.000 HUtcrateilH S;,l;n0:, Ik h Wcljthlnj. n 1X)UiuU nn,| Thanksgiving services with PrairieIlliteracy Is costing Barry county’s proved that workers not having the ,
orairia.,. week's hunting near Comins.
... 10ur Mv shipped to him by his ville
E.
uneducated approximately »17,7M equivalent of a sixth grade cduca- the natlo.i
vine to
uv be
uv held
i«»u in
m Prairieville M. ~
John Erway of M. S. C spent the
hlj hol|u, hcrc
annually in decreased earning pow­ tlon lose a minimum o( fifty cents through adult education projects o. । num Mrs ijoi;y Farrington, of Ta- church Wednesday night There will | wwk end
&lt;oma. Wa511
5|xx.ul
nau-s wm
will । aortJon Tojnpion our substitute
er. It is estimated by specialists in a^Iy foe every working day of their the bureau of education
i_. miMiC ».«_&gt;. «&gt;.,.«
■
• • »
i.
have
ehartrr
nt the
meeting.
the United States Department of
-----------■ r
Mrs Leon Pennock lxu quite
sick..i-i.
haw
charge
of the
meeting.
|
! mail carrier is oil. lhe route this
Tlie
shortest
way
to
glory
isto
Iw
at
u
K
.
present
writing
I
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Milo
Lehman
went
Tlibi loss. Dr. Aiderman explained.
Wra Marie Williams. Mrs Ullion
Kalamazoo Sunday to visit the
Is in addition lo lhe county burden guided by conscience—Home *
Homer Erway and Robt Otis
_ ________
.
■ — Hnywhrd and Mrs. Prunres Norwood latter's nicer. Mrs. Jennie Snook. Spent the Week end al Baldwin.
went to Bradley Thursday to visit until after Thanksgiving.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Guenther of
Mr i. Russell Boulter.
, Mr and Mrs. Guy Higgins liave Lansing were Sunday guesta at I ii7r»brT^ipVolnt«
Mr. and Mrs. c. P Ijuabee of i moved u&gt; Hastings. We wish them Clyde Warren's Clyde spent several uo«
Hustings and Mrs Ida Tulles of success in their new home.
days last week hunting near Glad-1 th
u
Cleveland. Ohio were guests Sun-1 ML” Lucile Cole of Kalamazoo, win.
«r thl. nr.f.r, fi
day ot Mr and Mrs Harry F Wert-1. _
and
Wales-------------------------were married m
— Frank
------ ---------Mr. and Mrs. Dick Rose and Miss '
“‘;
man
1 South 2:™.
- .. Monday. Mr. and .J Esther Erway of Hastings and Har- rnd ct'ui.t.a 1
Bend. F
Ind
Czf
Mr and Mn Ike Lelnoar of East Mr»- Gordon Wales attended them. old Sharp of Grand Rapids were •
I
Delton unit Mrs. Eisle Sivrstsema of 'We wish this worthy couple a long. Sunday visitors al Roy Erway’s.
Mr and Mrs. Rus-seU Whittemore I
Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
prosperous wedded life.
' Mr mid Mr; ike Johnson
’ Mrs. Hazel Billings was tailed to spent Sunday in the Cleo Brown
NOTICE or ABANDONMENT OF
■_
HIOnWAY.
Mrs. Nettle Kern accompanied her Three Rivers Thursday night by the home at Hickory Corners.
Sutler l« h-rrl»» ti«»t&gt; tk»t
। brother. Albert Hampton to the I :enous Illness of her mother. Mrs
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
( rl» e»llrJ mvrtlns ut tb» IH»§
I northern part of the state to visit Lodemia Shephardson.
Mr
and
Mrs.
Guy
Kantner
enterI
| relatives fur a tew aays.
Wr ftnd Mra. Harry Stafford and
FOOD STOimjjf
tallied Rev J. E Ulcry of Onekama ]
| Wednesday. November 18 was lhe Oerald Shepard have returned from and Rev. and Mrs. Harley Town-1
I fifty-third wedding anniversary of Uu. north.
.send, Mary and Francis for .’upper - t n.» puiiis th
I Mr and Mr.’. Jay Wilkinson. In the I M
r.
and
Mrs.
Grande
DePriestt
r.
..... ».... ......
....—..— Tuesday evening
iw&gt;* ** hr»r»n»fi
evening Mr and Mrs. Barton Cort- -■—
■ anil Mrs. WUtar'
Mr. -s.,r..
l,
M, u’„d M„ H„„u
j'
right of Kalamazoo. Mr and Mrs RoUey w.-re &lt;llnmr fU«U or Mrs L, „ KM.muoo
uw ««•« si “ k. ,
I Ray Castle and Mi and Mrs. Pel* r i Arthur Bukrr ut Khlruu.too. WrU- L„j „lh „,,Uv„
and -■ 1
i castle of Prairieville and Mr. and | nesday.
at the j
... J tended the all day meeting at
I Mra. Ike Johnson walked in upon j Mra Amy Slicock entertained
1
| them to help them celebrate the . the following at a family dinner re­ Brethren church Bunday
Omar Barnum has returned from 1
! occasion A pDasanl evening was cently Mr. and Mrs. Harold Reed
the
north
with
his
deer.
I reported.
' of Augusta. Mr and Mrs Bernard
Mrs. Hugh Reynolds from East
a puiat apprnsnu
Mrs. Mmh Norwood- and Mra. Shultz of Bhulu. Mr. and Mrs. Wilot lb» Houtf.-*.! C"
Munhall Nor*oxi drove lo Alger i Hain McKibbln. Edna and Robert Woodland called on Mrs. Chas. Far- ’
t’ h tfS
I Bunday to gel Mason Norwood who i Slicock. local. Mr. and Mrs. Fred lee Tuesday afternoon.
Mrs. Levi Knntner of Hastings
has been north hunting.
i I Haywood, and Paul and Imogene
spent Wednesday night with Guy
: Mrs. Harold Burpee was given a gUcock of Hastings
I Kantner and family and attended
I shower last Friday afternoon Tlirrv' .^wnt
nresent
, th'' Aid Society at lhe home of Mrs.
wrre-:wenty tour friends present! T H. Ketchum of Martin spent II Celia
Townsend on Thursday.
from Kalamazoo and Delton.
Friday afternoon with Mrs Jennie
Mrs. Gladys Lee from Cushman.
OI STY HOAD t'OMMIHHION
Friday was initiation day for the । Norris and Lucy.
I Oregon, came Tuesday evening to
freslpnin of our High .'chooi and
Mr and J«(rs. Mark Norris were
re I spend a few days wtUt her sister.
Friday night the sophomores enter- I Kalamazoo shopper* Saturday.
tuined the frc’hmtn with a ------party Ij Junior Wootis attended the senior I| Mrs. Sylvester Curtis.
NOTICE TO CMDITOBB.
lunlora ' class party Ji Kellogg s. Gull lake.!
■l« 0 Mlrhlon. th» Prubata Coart tor
The seniors entertained the Juniors
ROBINI1UE PARK.
tLr -ounty of Horry.
on Monday night.---------------------------- Thursday.
Nov 19 Letter.
I- matlrr III lh» riUto ot liobrrt
Mrs. Helen Corwin has been ill;
* &gt;■»--------------। Mr and Mrs. Julian Potts spent
the past week, and Mrs EloysiCRESSEY.
Lu.,u«,
&gt;. pu.cnu..
___
Sunday ».».
with Ulc
Uielr
parents. Mr. ■and
Leonard has been substituting as
Chas. McNulty. Lee and Murle Mrs SArn zerbc of Middleville.
teacher in h r place.
i Reynolds and O. Roblyer are in the
Mr and Mrs Ben Baird and alsMr and Mrs Fred Wullbridge and northern
Sun-­
------------ peninsula
r------ ---- hunting
--------- „ deer
------ ' tcr
lvl Myrtle
alylilc of
ui Middleville
,miuui--&gt; llic spent quii
family o' Battle Creek were Sunday j Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Enzlan
Enzian and day
day wllh
w|tb Robert Baird,
Baird.
THE BEST THAT CAN BE BOUGHT AT ANY
guests ot Mrs Mary Smith
'—
family.
**“Mrs.
" O
*"—
. Enzlan.
1—
Mra. Till
Ralph
■
Kllne of Grand Rapids
The
Women'.*
F
.
:­
Foreign
MK-iotiary
conyer
and
Mrs.
Lee
Reynolds
visit«
|X
,
nt
Saturday
with
Harold
Kollar
PRICE. Every one a perfect specimen of tur«■— cd —
Mr. ------------and Mrs.-------Carl --------Enzlan .at
Society will meet with Mrs. Bert
A number- from this vicinity at­
keydom—young, plump (which means extra
Patton Friday afternoon. November Kalamazoo on Thursday evening. , tended
lt-„uvu „,
c ouiy
the
Busy Bee Vluu
club Hv
ut %llv
the
27
| Mr and Mrs. c-rl Hartman spent horac of xn-s Roy McCaul Thursday.
meat on breast bones and iointo), delightfully
Mr and Mrs Oil’ Stienbcrgcr o' Sunday with his father at De I ion
Mr
Mra. John Kollar called
Kalamazoo were Sunday gutsls of
Richard Hartman Is working In 1 On Mrs. otto Kunde of Freeport!
tender and flavorsome. One of these grand,
Mr and Mrs. Robert Barnes
: Kalamazoo.
Sunday afternoon.
Pilgrim Brand birds will make your Thanksgiv­
The Deltop L A S bazaar will be 1 Mrs Jennie Harding is having the I---------------NOTICE TO CREDITORS
held in the churcn uu Wednesday I roof of her house shingled.
I There are two ways of lining a I
ing feast a truly festive fare—and will save you
afternoon and even.ii ; December 2Venetia Enzian has been having
I place.One Is to grow up to it and!
money, tool Don't delay-order yours NOWI
A chicken supper will be served,
the chicken pox.
, the other islo swell up to it.
Vh.r. -.'.I
Ernest Sampson on Wednesdaywill be nn apron ar.d
and f_r„
fancyz
fancy work booth and a llsh pond
evening visited his Inmlly who re- j
ALL MICHIGAN BIRDS
ORDER TOR PUBLICATION
The program is In charge ot Mrs.
centiy arrived from Utah. They are
Helen Pennock and Mr- Beatrice1 njakhig Uielr hom£ with Mr and,
Dunning
- **
— -■
-• —
Mrs- —
E —
D —
Reynoid^
at
Detroit •for
■
ni/ r
n "n* K|orim
il yotjr °Muranco °’
v—j
Hustings the present
Mrs Sellie Cross
WW
“ V Ik choicest quality; for every Pilgrim
Tlie CSC was entertained by
.
,
_„ts Grace
V 11 I £ T A C I Turkey is young and freih-lhe pick
Faulkner and attended the bridge Mra. Carl Hartman and Mrs. Joe
I ■■ ■ 3
l/Aw 1 of lhe country's finoit flocks.
Hurd al the former's home on Wed­
Faulkner nesday, After a bountiful dinner,
in the business meeting was held fol­
. lowing which the program consisted 1
mid CiiUtapo
of roll call aruwvred by reading and
lb.
Battle Creek were Sunday guesLs of jokes, guessing contests. Mrs O
Fresh Dressed
Barber and Mrs. Bert Blom winning
Faulkner is spending first, prizes. The next meeting will
be the Christmas meeting to be held
Fancy Fresh Dressed
lb.
in Middleville. Grand Rapids at Mrs Robert Cosgrove's. '
, Mrs ORs Boulter has been spend-

ORDER TOM PURL!CATION

LEGAL NOTICES

AR THANKSGIVING FEAST

CHANCERY ORDER.

NOTICE OP HALE

3

Coaatr. MUM.

FANCY GRTCBf

I

Roasting Chickens
Ducks
Geese

Fanl^zy Stock, Fresh Dressed

Solid Pack

Fresh from the Coast

CAPE COD'S

Cranberries
UU. S. No. I Jersey

Sweet Potatoes
Florida 176-200 Site

Oranges
Naw Pack

PUMPKIN

3—? 25c
Dromedary

Cranberry Sauce

15c
Nona Such

MINCEMEAT

10°

lb.

pint

25c
25c
25c
25c

19c
5
10
2 &lt;u&gt;i- 45'
Pound

Poultry Seasoning
A&amp;P Bread
Nut Meats
Mixed Nuts
"•wC'”’
Candied Peels
Swansdown c,1“
4XXXX Sugar
Dates
Ripe Figs
8 o'Clock Coffee
Peanut Brittle
Pumpkin Pie Spice

a.

are trying
l». mo.
the collar
button Is---------------------------------------------------search.
I
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY

dolr 1Ih'r

it Drrtlli 0
i th» 1lot

• .1 I II

&gt;11 th.I
Hprlnf.

NOTICE or MORTGAGE BALE.

.11. IO I
iRATIO.X

ITOTICE MORTGAGE BALE.

purtarai ta

Uuadre.1 TMrtoon And 80/100 Dollar*

■s«n. to in
I’ORATION

T.

City of Haatloca.

IOC

- 49c
23«

NOTICE

£

f0c

pk«- 25^

15c

2

IIENDERSHDTT.
The Community Club will meet
at the .schoolhouse Saturday night
M&lt;l.lr«l Niallh. Hrjl.lrr ot l*rr&gt;balr.
i nf this week for their annual oyster
' s’.ipner. All members old and new arc 1NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
invited to be present.
a'iht c
Mr- Chas. Kahler and Mrs. Cllf-1। Mrs Rennie Mott's num. Mrs.! i,’,' ,1
ford Kahler spent Tuesday with Me. I Jennie Gorham, passed away Sun- ii-rm»n
i
and Mr Aubrey Murray of Nash-,■ cay at Pennock hospital.
1 Miss Grace Brill was home Sun- nS,,, uf,
ville
Mr and Mrs Thad Cook spent day evening with MLvs Esther Gier- " '- '
Bunday with Mr and Mrs Frank. I uni of Three Oaks. Harvey Walters
1 of South Bend. Ind . and Lewis Lake ;
Horn of south Shultz
Mrs Ernest Sampson arrived from of Kalamazoo
•;t'~ ~
Rehnie Mott L» expected homr^
Sal: Lake Citv. Utah. Wednesday
from the north on Monday, being *, t,rtuTr
called here by the death of Mrs
»rJ’
•1 im u'dock

Over In England they
to nnd the Inventor of
button. Over here the
more often the object of

9«

a.

ailN'il Sunday. Mr. anti
Mis
•tunli.. Waite and son. Dale, ot
■orkvllle and Howard Waite of Bat-

MORTGAGE BALE

IOC
"ur 19c

All we ask you to do is call and

drive a new 1937 FORD V-8 car
before you buy any other make!

i9&lt;=
2 - 25c
X

9«

A « I’ FOOD STORES

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
PHONE 2121

HASTINGS, MICH.

HOME OWNERS- LOAN CORPOR«t&gt;t»n&gt;h«r 1»4 ISIS
I
RATION. MerUsCM.
1MK OWNERS- LOAN COXPO 0,*“" D
'
RATION. MertBUM.
■/1‘ora*IMohbmm.
Sa«lDMA AdZrMa ■ Matlan.l M..V

BAimiB WiXT ADV. (U

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3,1936

22 PAGES

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

ENCOUNTER HARD Michigan Central to Increase 54
HASTINGS MERCHANTS ARE READY
Service
to
Local
Factories
BUY
i
SNOWPLOW
RAINS ON DESERT
FOR “OPEN HOUSE” FRIDAY NIGI
. Daily Schedules for Freight to Be

ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF
UNUSUAL WEATHER
IN CALIFORNIA
.

,2t:

WILL BE A GREAT CON­
VENIENCE TO CITIZENS
INFORMATION ON
OF HASTINGS

Arranged — Bridge Strengthened

itxrrlbor.
»H4»r Bl

abouTasnow

the w»»t
tn. mark

ENROLLMENT OE
JUNIORS FOR CCC

HOSPITAL HERE TO I.
HAVE TECHNICIAN

rrlbeJ.
t BANK.

HOLIDAY DECORATIONS MAKE
STORES, STREETS BRIGHT
WITH COLOR

“»»

s

v. MUMcrlted as

STARTS SUIT TO
CONSTRUE WILL

Lost week we mentioned the fact' Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday,
USE OF^ELECTRICITY
that a petition had been filed with' so that the only chance for ship- HOW
the interstate Commerce Oom- merits of freight or receiving freight
noinn Qna/'inllat T/, Un
fl I IT I
mission at Washington, asking that by railroad comes to these factories
PLOW FOR SIDEWALKS? Extension Specialist To Be
the C- K. ft 8. railroad be given the | on these three days each week. Mr.
At Court House On
right
to
discontinue
service
from
Peirce
says
that.
If
the
C.
K.
&amp;
8.
i That Would Bo A Fine
Five And A Half Million
Tuesday
a point within tlie township of i Is abandoned for lhe 26.7 miles
Merchants have been busy this Friday evening Is for ChziMmaa
DEATH OF TWO HEIRS
Service For City
Expert consultation service on tne
Barrels Of Cement Used
Barry to Woodbury. We mentioned mentioned, the factories across the ’1
week decorating their stores and shoppers to look the various stpeka
efficient use of electricity in the
RAISES QUESTION OF
lhe fact that such a discontinuance river will get dally service—or If
arranging their Christmas stocks for------ --*----- * *■*—-------- *“*
’ Tn Boulder Dam
Pedeatrians
home
b
offered
the
women
of
Barry
of traffic would be a serious handl- needed, twlce-a-day service. That
the formal opening of lhe Christmas may wish to purchase later on. VlsDISTRIBUTION
It 1* hardly necessary to remind county on Tuesday. December 8.
Los Angeles. Tuesday. July 28th. cap to cloverdale and Woodland, will mean that a switch engine1
shopping season
Friday night. 1 Itori at lhe stares will not ba urged
1790 miles out.
/and that it might possibly affect, will be maintained here and that 1 our d’-Y tenders that there was a through the efforts of Mary E. Bul­
Workmen have been decorating thei to buy but all questions will be an­
We were leaving thb morning, so ' adversely lhe four factories In the the in-and-out freight service for tot of mow during lhe winter of lis. Home Extension Agent.
EST. OF L. MAY AYERS
boulevard 11ghU in the business sec-1 swered and assistance given in any
we got up and expected to got a
Miss Helen Noyes. Extension Spe­
"m"&lt;
i I®35’38- and lhn*“• o«*n not
with Christmas tree* and the; way possible.
AMOUNTED TO $27,500 tlon
good early start
coining down
cialist In Home Management at
Tile Michigan centra) agent here. than Is now possible Up to the1
monument Ln being made attractive]
Stores featuring toys have already
easy to negotiate lhe streets of Has- Michigan State College, will be in
from Mt. Wilson last night we de­ Mr. H- H. Peirce, talking with the present time the Michigan Central i,
, ,.
,
with evergreen and colored lights.' opened these departments and they
veloped a little chirp tn the motor writer about the article iii hut engines- on the Grand Rapids dl-;
outalde of the trunk Unea. The the extension office at lhe court Administratrix Of Estate or The white shades on the tamps have i are being weU inspected by tho
which didn't sound so good to me. so week's Banner, wild that the vision have not been able to give' county and the state highway crews l)ou.u&gt; In Hustings from 9 30 to 11:30
Morton Bassett Asks
youngsters.
It Is expected Santa
been changed to red. green, yellow
I look the car down to the Lincoln change would not inconvenience service to the four factories in kept lhe approaches to lhe city, and A- M . Tuesday to advise women on
and orange and add a festive note
For Interpretation
garage In Pasadena the first thing the four factories, but would be of .
the convenient arrangement of out­
of color to the street.
this morning to have the chirp re­ benefit to them. At the present
An interesting suit has been start­
lets and standaids to look for when
Many of the merchants are plan­ from lhe children.
moved. Hwy gren-vd II thoroughly, Hine the C. X. A S. Li running a wrluhl. RUM now * row .nd much ““
;
"f™, •'
“ u'*! buying electrical equipment and* ed in the circuit court of this coun- ning
The merchants of Hastings have
to decorate their store front
and we look it out and tried It; but freight train only 3 times a week.1
It
difficult
to travel over lighting fixtures.
ty by the administratrix of the es- with
,
.ConUnucd on peg. I. See. l&gt;
11 was not '•
“m.u. i~
lights and evergreens and al! accumulated large and well se­
lhe chirp was still with us. so they
them pedestrians tome times iiad to
late of Morton Bassett, deceased. display
,
windows will be trimmed lected stocks for lhe holiday trade
greased It again and tried It but we
, take to the snow-plowed trunk lines
versus Gordon L. Stewart, executor for
,
the "Window Nlghl" to be port and the 43 firms listed on the full
CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION. • in order to gel down to the. city, or
still had |t. They did everything they
of tiie estate of L. May Ayers. de- of
(
lhe opening.
.
rould think of mid assured Us that
The townships of Assyria and home from down town. They could
ceased, who was a widow. The pur­
Tlie merchants of Hastings wish
It could be nothing serious and it
Johnstown are planning to unite in walk ax far as Die trunk lines went
pose of the suit Is to obtain a con- ,to emphasize Ute fact that the tend "Open House" on Friday eve­
a centennial program to be held at with comparative ease; but when
would probably be O. K. after we [
junction of one of the provisions ,-Open House" from 7 to 10 o'clock ning from 7 to 10 o'clock.
drove awhile. I wish we had stayed '
the Briggs church Saturday. Decc*-' they branrtied off from the trunk
: of the will of Mrs. Ayers, who died
' October 14. 1935 in this county. Her
with it till we found the real trou-,
ber 12. There will be a pot hick din- lines into side streets It was a Job tc
Ole because It caused us a consider। her. old time music and reading of wade through the drifts.
I estate is still in process of adminis­
| APPLIES FOR HIS
1
the
hUtory-nf
th*
two
i/wm.hip.
.
it
will
be
a
relief
to
all
citizens
nbte delay farther on where it
ONLY SINGLE MEN ARE tration in the probate court. Her CASTS READY TO
WILL
BE
HIRED
AT
THE
.
wasn't so cool. We drove back to
1 address by State Insurance Commls-1 of Hastings to know that, al the last
will was admitted to probate on
PASSPORT TO INDIA
PRESENT SENIOR PLAT
ELIGIBLE FOR THIS
I stoner John Ketcham will be a fea- meeting of lhe city
" * council
“
Pierson s, packed up and it was
held on
November 15. 1935. The Inventory
NEXT MEETING OF
1 leven o'clock before we finally said
ture of the program. Wm. Strain, Friday night, that body authorized
hied in the case by the executor Committees
TRAINING
Put Finishing Ralph H. Townaend Will
MEDICAL SOCIETY
j Floyd Miller. Ferd Stevens and Al­ the city engineer and the city prop-;
[joodbv to them and to cool weather ।
show* that, at' the time'of her de- 1
Teach At Landour In
Touches On Sets For
The first fifty miles to Han Herbert Lyons are lhe committee in erty committee to purchase a snow i PUYQ1PAI FITMFQQ
cease, she owned 427.500 worth of real
plow for axe on the city streets rn ’
rl I fl EOd
charge.
nardlno was mostly through the or­ HISTORIAN TO MEET
and personal property.
Northern Part
Performances
ange country and quite interesting
--------------Tills means that
- -------all lhe
- --------------streets will
VERY IMPORTANT The petition filed by Kim Sigler.'
WITH HOSPITAL STAFF ] DISTRIBUTION OF
Ralph H. Townsend. 22. son of
bqt from there on the farther we
------------be kept open this coming winter,
attorney for Morton Bassett's heirs.! The two casts for lhe senior play
New
Fires"
have----completed
drew Otto Townseno of Woodland, mode
went the hotter and dryer It be­
which will be a real convenience.
Camp Life vu
Consists
Of A recites that the bequests made by rehearrete,
-7—stage
.------—scenery
■--------- ---------vump
.rev.
v.
and
com
­
application
Friday al Uie county
Changes
Are
Necessary
To
I
CHRISTMAS TOYS Aj most people in town, tn going
came until we .cached Barstow, and
. ...
. . ..
.
..
ml(lAA« an* raittlnir RnlahlnB rnnrh.. clerk's office for a passport that
Balanced Program Of
believe me It was really hot and
back and forth from their work or
specific bequests claimed by lhe I mlttees are pulling finishing touches
Be On Accredited List
Oamp Fire Girls Request on errands to the business section
plaintiff in this case, have all been 1 to the sets and other committees are would permit him to go to India. He
really dry. We didn't feel like eat-:
Work And Leisure
plans
to
leave
Seattle. Washington.
checking on furniture, costumes
Ing. so we found an air conditioned 1
I of lhe city, travel by automobile,
Of A. O. S.
There will be a general enrollment paid, as have all claims and expen­ and make up materlab so that ev­
Donations Of Discarded
drug store and had sodas and filled .
mta
they will find this action of lhe
ses uituiivu
Incurred iii
In me
lhe uuiiiiiiuituiiuu
administration
A large number of applications
petition recites erything will be in readiness when
Toys And. Dolls
| council will benefit them during lhe for Juniors for CCC starting January of her estaU?
our water Jug with !cj mid water. has been received by the committee
We hadn't noticed the chirp In the
Mrwal
The camp Fire groups and guarI 1. 1937. age limitations 17 to 28 tliat, after having paid all expenses the curtain rises on the opening
of the Barry county Medical Society
; teacher. He will be an Instructor In
. ......
। exceed
last winter s volume of snow
motor particularly, and had begun whlch llas t&gt;e«n appointed to hire a u.
years. Inclusive. Only single men of administration, and ail bequest*, scene Thursday afternoon.
dians
of the *.
city havej,.
again
under-1**
school
al Landour tn th*
It Is not only the Thursday cast 1 Woodstock
-------------------------------------------—;
to think maybe there really was a technician for Pennock hospital, ac- .taken
.
, , , project
.
....
We hope lhe council will make arc eligible.
except that to the complainant.
a .helpful
helpful
and
ask lhe
the|! provision
that b excited and a trlfie nervous northern part of India. He will tiptaken
a
project
and
ask
for
the
clearing
of
aarage mechanic back in Pasadena I corfhng
Dr Oordou p. Fisher,
The Civilian conservation Corps, there still remains in the estate the The Friday group b abo holding Its »««“ lhe Church of the Brethren
I
who knew what he was talking fecretary. Il is expected that a sc- cooperation of lhe citizens of Has-1 snow from lhe sidewalks also, be- (Emergency
Conservation
Work. 5U® of 115.900. which Is more than
breath.
During
the
weeks
of
re!
‘
n
“
undenominational
school
Joabout However, when we stopped to lpCtlon wlll
tnade nl lhe nexl tlngs in helping to make the enter-1 c*,us* pedestrians have to take Robert pecliner. director) was creat- n«'P&gt;e to satisfy Ute specific claims
at L*ndour. where the chUchances If
if tn&gt;v
they wa
walk
in 11,
Um
I| rnttnrA*
IU In
a road rfo:
n. 1 ed in 1933 to accomplish construe- made in behalf of Morton Bassett's hearsal each actor has been observfill up with gas mid water before tIiectlng of lhe roclety Thursday eve- prise a success.
ing closely lhe work of his fellow d,ri:n
En«lUh and American mis­
starting out on the 160 mile trip nlI18 DeCember 10.
they have to dodge automobiles.
live, worthwhile work on national
o
J
.
character to sec where he might im-1 Nonaries Mre taught. White tho
In every home wiiere there are | , The
.... side walk snow plows „„„
used In and state forests, on parks and on
across the desert to Las Vegas, I
Thls
eCessary
(Continued
on page -3. Sec. 1)
—• -This win
will be one
one of
of the n
necessary
prove and polish hh own perfor-1 * J10?1 b primarUy for children of
.U.H will
....
was looking over lhe motor and no-1 stCp, to
taken toward having the children, ^specially, (here arc some thU city are propelled by horses. As VMW
other. lands where such work
mance. There has been competition 1 missionaries, others than mission- ■
Uced one of lhe pump puUeys was । hospital put on lhe accredited list of discarded
or toys
that
need a 1 —
the number of equines In Hastings (UIIUIUU.I
contribute I.-to
the
of —
the
■--- - ------------toys- —
-- .............
- .........
— ,..
w welfare
T...»- »
— BARRY COUNTY LADS
of tlve friendliest sort between the arlcs
or'*" ""
are permitted ••
to --*
send -•
repalrinn to make them useful
iivful I b
1&gt; limited
llrnlicrt It was difficult,
rllfllrult and at country ..
n...ii.. Im” 1
1 1
loose on the pump shaft, and was. th(. .Amerlcan college of Surgeons. Utile repairing
as .a whole. ...
JU .equally
children to this school for In
casts.
again.
The
Camp
Fire
glr's
ask
that
1
times
Impossible
last
winter
to
get
.
portanl
purpose
was-4o
give
Jobs
to
(Continued on page 1. Sec 2 »
Th
e College
WIN CONTEST HONORS two
The
College la
Is particularly
particularly anxious
anxious
Thb Is the first time a class play Hon.
these
toys
be
collected
and
taken
to
,
owners
of
horses
to
plow
the
side
1
approximately
300.000
men
in
vigor1
1 Ui have the small hospitals recoghas
been
prepared
In
the
dramatics
'
Second In Stock
WOMEN’S CLUB TO
Inlzed because of
modem
and the High school where the boys Inland cross walks. When they did -ous. healthful, outdoor activity. The Placed
class and Mr. Becker is more than so hot. especially Ln lhe »umn
-- • •in -----tne program —
was -------extended
1935•—lor
rapid mea&amp;s of transportation more lhe manualjlralning classes will re- they could not do----- —•
Judging At Livestock
usually Interested In ita results. Hej lime, that vacations are taken
HEAR OR. E. B. ELLIOTT emergency
and-------------------------have them ready
for
snow----------------was badly
&lt; -------- •**• "re a period of two years and lias a
rr-them
--------------' —
- ।* ------» —
cases arc being taken pair
b uj
w
tn a poaiuon
position to appreciate wnatwhat ml '--.Ionar les In the northern p
Show In Chicago
care of In rural communities than Christmas distribution The girls of wondering if it would not be poastbls present authorised strength of 350,-1
it means for two students to work * .------------------ - -t-?- ••
3tate
Superintendent
Of ever before.
Ute Girls' League will re-dress the for the city to obtain some kind of' ooo enrollees.
’
Mia.U0.u-. 4-H Umuck &gt;»U«in«|wlu1 on, book. Uie ekln
Into I —fr »
J a .U» .lUU
dolls
and
get
’
hem
ready
for
ChristI
a
plow
that
would
be
operated
by
»
',,
X?
U
j
’
*L!
n
r
n
Bf
,
c
ell81
ble
if
they
are
I
,
uut
mnuutu
,
town
lor
rehearsals
and
the
com'
&gt;ar krsg*
The new technician will make XPublic Instruction To
team composed of four members to»n for rehearsals and the com- 1 wouM ** impossible for Englis
। motor which would take care of lhe United States citizens, between the frorn Barry COUnty placed second as nUttee work that has had to be done. American children to attend
ray photos, do all blood work and mas.
county placed second u mitte«* work that has had to be done American children to attend
Be Here Friday
A splendid pL-in has been worked ’ work of plowing the sidewalks. This ages of 17 and 28, unmarried, un-1. nfrom Barry
i, Uie national 4-H Judging , gut
.
......
: work in bacteriology and urinalysis
a team In
in spite
of this he says ..lhe sen- .’in
,n mo#t nt
of t***
0x5 PUcea Lz.
ta In‘
I
On Friday afternoon at two-thir­ os well as some of the primary worx out whereby toys reach tlu? proper । Ls a suggestion coming from one employed, and willing to allot a sub;™!conl
*st al Chicago in one of Uw ior» have responded like trouper- ,ccount
the extreme heat,
stantial proportion
of their 130 nrst events of the 15th club con- and khe
ty o'clock Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, su­ i In pathology, the more advanced persons before Christina* eve. As ' who usually walks from and to his --------------------------— of
- iIs
- glad he Is spared
&lt; .u_
the’dif- , this
this school
school is
is located
located in
In the
that
whlch u
of the Int&lt;rni. tj Acuity of picking a single cast from ,
perintendent of public Instruction, j work being done under an arrange­ has been the custom for several ■ home.
; monthly cash allowance to
io their
men ■
--- and adependent
--- needy
families. Be- t|on&gt;1 Uvc stock expojlUon heW'XTiio
wlll be the speaker at lhe Hastings ment now In existence with Blodgett years, the camp Fire Girls will have ।
i and everything Is favorable to
to good
these toys that are donated ossein-' SAVES WIFE AND
। lections, under the direction of I NOV. 28
Women’s Club meeting to be held [ hospital In Grand Rapids.
1 health
the climate
Is more llle
----- to
---- --Dec. 5.
j seniors
j senior:
not in the play are boost- health
Mnd and
““ cUnlal
* u mBr1
' agencies designated by the Departin the Masonic hall.
: The
.... /requirements of the Amerl- bled at the Presbyterian church par- j
American
The boys competed against 4-H '«
mg loyally. Each one is taking five ' that
111111 to
10 which
whkh English
Eng*^h and Ama
।
CHILDREN FROM FIRE SS?
mmt “
of lalmr. are tnade from SIS
the
Dr. Elliott will doubtless discuss I can Ccf i-ge also Include a more £*■ —&gt;
»am« from on nfH-r
nnrt ______
___ ........
. . !I folks art*
Bri'iislnnit'rl
are accustomed.
-----------best qualified applicants without dis- placed
sixteen points behind 2^5
ur81!Jg {*&gt;« People to
“Educational problems." a subject | compleL ...
.... the....
record system —
than
one Friday and Saturday, Dec. 18 and 19.
| Mr. Townaend la a graduate at
tor U*lr P"'1 William Wilson Had Real crimination of race, creed, or color.
detegaltoTta
in which every club member should now in use al Pennock hospital. The
the Woodland consolidated school.
be deeply Interested. All members : doctors are organized now as a staff,
are urged to attend on Friday aft- another requirement, and at the
After graduation there he atlendad
tmoon
I meeting Friday noon at the hospital
the Church of the Brethren cnl'sgi
,
------------------I the historian at Btodgstt hospital little for Christmas.
known as Manchester college in
will be present to explain Che record years this plan has worked i ,
North Manchester, Indiana, gradu­
fully and many children's hearts ter of Mrs. Claud Wood of this city. I 8lvcn
I system now in use there.
“J men
°take sure th a. (tcam includes Arden Campbell and
UnANutl Hi
ating this year. He is a nephew of
,1 The staff meets at Ute hospitalwere made happier at Christmas I'will be interested In a most trying I no condttltaj exist which would juchard Wallace. Middleville. Ken-1
RFRKTPRINR
RIRTLK
Ume. The Banner commends lhe ; experience
’xperi^nreVhich
calnZ to
to’her
her famfam? 1nLlke H
« inadvisable
inadvisable for
tor any
any man
man to
I
REGISTERING
BIRTHS
which
came
ncUl
Dunn.
Hastings
and
Alber:
1
ntul
oltnlM
u
Din
I
no
'■
'■
I tho first FTIdoy of each month and
Church of the Brethren al WoodMRS. FRANK FURLONG.
at least 75 per cent attendance
Bell, alternate. Nashville, H. J. Pos­ j Township Clerks Must Send
“«&gt;»
'c°"unaM “i.q- ’■ — 11
Because of the death of her hus-1 is necessary. A further requirement
ter. Barry county agricultural agent, i
school will be in physical education
.“".hu?:UAuu..M.TCnunD..&lt;!
band. Mrs. Frank Furlong will demands that the staff have some
। and mathematics.
coached the boys and accompanied
.tarf.
’
wuito
wiuon.
lu.
CM.
COMMUNITY
CHORUS
Reporta
To
Health
have an auction sale of her per-1 method of cooperation with the gov- CONTEST CLOSING DATE |
|or_Mou.uu«L
|
BEING CONSIDERED them on the trip.
Department
] HASTINGS WINS FUUT
rwiai property
ronal
ptupciuy at
bi. her
ucr farm located (|
(Continued on page 6. Bee. 1)
In scoring the Barry county boys
iI
ADVANCED
TO
DEC
12
On
««•.
wiison
had!
HUVHHVCU IU ULU. ia. xrlsen to iUrt a
In the Mtchen ।
LEAGUE DEBAT*.
five miles north and first house'
A change has been made in the
rated second In judging horses,
The first preliminary League de­
west of Nashville or three miles
Dlanlav And Judirinir Will- aU&gt;ve- He wenl outsld« *nd. on re- Committees
Have
Been fifth in sheep, sixth tn Judging hogs recording of births and deaths In I bate
was held in lhe Central audi­
south and two miles east of Wood­
P ’
‘ “
uaniuon;!
Chojcn To Form Plan»
and seventh In cattle. Richard Wal­ this county. Heretofore the phy­
II.un.u.k
turning, found th.
the kiuu.n
kitchen partition
torium
Wednesday
November 2ft M
land. H. O- Pennington will cry
Be Held At Community
lace placed third In Individual com­ sician reported the birth or death
I ablaze and the fire making jypld'
lhe sale and 8 L- Hefflcbowcr will
J headway He sent his four-year old!
petition in Judging horses while to the township clerk. The latter 130 The Hastings negative team
For Organization
Hall On That Day
clerk. Mrs. Furlong offers a team,
boy out of doors and then picked up: A matter, we think, of Impor­ i Kenneth Dunn was first of the 63 was required to send the original composed of DeForest Walton,
hogs, sheep, poultry, lot of farm
and
Martan
The dosing date of the Santa his wife their nesr-born child and
BJ1U value
„IUC to
„ this
UI4&gt; community young Judges In scoring a class of report to lhe state health depart­ Lawrence Moore
tance and
tools, feed, household goods, etc. See ,
ment at Lansing, and to send a Hewitt opposed an affirmative
Sunday evening. December 6. lhe Claus Dressmaking Contest spon­ the next youngest Infant and. after hai hcen brought up and approved hogs.
the adv. on another page.
choir of Uie First Presbyterian sored by the Hastings Commercial wrapping them In bed clothes. b County Agent Foster slates this copy of the report to the county squad from Otsego on the question
and Roury
church wlll present their annual Club has been advanced from Mon­ carried them all together to a home
Is the best showing a Michigan 4-H clerk. Ths state health commission —Resolved: that all electric utlliM
well
M
by
oUwr
0^11*.
MRS. A. L- GRAVES.
and the county clerk would make
program of Christmas Carols at day. Dec. 14. to Saturday. Dec. 12,
! ’-tons Interested. The plan has been Judging team has mode at lhe In­
Because of the death of her hus- 7:30. A silver offering will be taken as It was impossible for the Judges , ne?fDy'
owned and operated. R L. Taytar,
their records from these reports.
Wlhon U wife
. ,on&gt;p«.Ure
r;
,ehM
,onn M, 1&gt;COmmU
eommu?
„‘t‘„
selected toccata Hastings on The ' Mr ZiThl.
Ud’erably
! bbro
fMched
,orm
y ternational In over ten years.
Hereafter In this county the principal of Hastings High school
up to defray expenses. The follow­
1 KmBli man nt&lt; wlfM imnalrlarahlv Chon
.
.
...
The boys and their coach as well,
“ ana
and. .nave
h,Ve regular
reguUr
monthly
an auction sale at her farm a mile ing fine program has been — first date. The judges are all home. heavteFJhin he; yet In^B erS!? ii cnorus
mommy
are to be congratulated upon their township clerks will make their re­ was the chairman and Actuah
|
meetings,
al
which
time
instrumcnnorthwc|t of the Yankee Springs ranged.
ecanomlc teachers and include Mtes fency he WM apparcnlly glven ,|. I
splendid showing In these contests ports directly to the Barry County Buck, timekeeper. Prof. Arthur 0ustore or 12 miles west of Hastings
city,
Health Department In this c!
‘~ f cord, coach of men's debatins at
Intrott—“There's A song In the Helen Maveety of the Battle Cree&lt; mosl Herculean strength and was tai numbers would be given by the
sale to begin at 12:30 sharp witn Air'—Duet.
n of Western Stale Teachers Collett,
. college. MU3 Helen Van peenan of, ablc lo Mve hls wlfe and thelr | city band, also by the high school
who will see to the correction
NOTED BARITONE
N. C. Thomas ns auctioneer and
the reports If they are not com­
Caro]
-------- —"Christmas
-------------------------Bells."
1 the Kalamazoo public schools and rour.day old baby and a one and orchestra and vocal numbers by the
William Ellsworth, clerk. A fine lot
men and women who would take
plete In details, and will also keep were MBs Grace Farnsworth. 04Carol—"HarkI The Herald Angels Mrs. Schumacher of Western State; a- •--------by carrying
half
year
old
son
,
COMINGTOHASTINGS
of personal property is offered In­ Sing." ‘
| part In the singing.
| them to the neighbor's home.
their own record and forward the
. Teachers college at
at Kalamazoo.
cluding 12 head of cattle, mostly
■ There
can, be
no question
about
Solo—"Luther's cradle Hymn."
।1 Makers of dresses therefore are
-j-n
e nre
------ ; —
~ ------ .—
?-The
fire was
was extinguisned
extinguished alter:,*.
after
Reinaid Werrenrath Opens original report, with any correc­ thereby gaining four points
Guernseys and a good producing
partition had been burned and th5
°f co7imun'ty .
tions made, to Uinslng. A copy of
Traditional
Air — "The
Flr.rt. urged to have the garments in be-1
herd; two horses, lot of feed, grain Noel.”
fore Dec. 12 as Judging will com- the
almost destroyed The fur- *_h'7
h/rmoiw
Forum Course Sponsored
the Dr.'s report Will be sent by the the slate elimination.
and hay.'farm tools and mtoceltanIl tends
to promote harmony
at tan
.. ....
.spirit.
It tends spirit.
to promote
harmony
township clerk to the county clerk,
mence at
ten n*&lt;*i&lt;v&gt;ir
o'clock thnt.
that mnmine
morning, ....&gt;
niture and .most
of the
furnishings
Duel—"A Christ-Child Legend."■ ni,nr,
By
Teachers
leous articles. See the adv. for com­
- ano good will In a community. Such
the same as heretofore, and the Grand Hann. Friday. Dae. H. HagSolo—"Tlie Birthday of a King," Dresses purchased ready-made and Wcre saved.
• I an organization as that projected
When Relnald Werrenrath ap­ proper record will be made by that lings win go there for the meeting
plete information.
.
not entered for prizes may be--------- ■■«♦*■ .
Chorus—"I Heard the Bells."
would be a community asset. The pears here on Wednesday eve- officer In the county records In his and will take lhe negative side of
Pastorale
—
"Gesu
Bambino."
I MRS. GEORGE H. FINGLETON.
run
1 songs attempted would not be of lhe nlng. December 9. under the a us- office.
the question.
Anthem
—
"We
have
seen
Hls
I As Mrs. George H. Flngleton has
CAROL SERVICE Classical order, but of the kind that pices of the Hastings Teachers'
. Warren Carter have charge of the j
'
[decided to quit farming and rent her Star."
ANNUAL MEETING.
-•**
would be adapted to large numbers Club, he will appear not merely as
arrangements for the display which
Quartet—"Deck the Halls.”
SERIES
OF
MUSICAL
fields, she will have an auction sale
I
The annual meet Ina of the Barry
a
singer.
Although
In
the
course
of
I Hastings Teachers To Give
•­
Carol—"Hall the Glorious Mom," wlll be held In Community halt
[at her place, first farm outside the
Agricultural Society will
evening he will sing as many
Makers of dresses are urged to
Twelfth Program On
' Committees have
Hnu* Kbeen
“*n chosen by the
Chorus—"Tlie Angels and lhe
EVENINGS ARRANGED County
fclty limits on No. Broadway, sale to
numbers
as
In
an
ordinary
concert.
I
held
Ln
the court room al the co,
the Rotary and Commercial clubs
attach a slip to the garment show- I
’
begin at one o'clock, with Dewey Shepherds."
,
______
. , house on Saturday, December 12
and by representatives of the band. this ever popular baritone comes tc
1 Ing the age of child the dress 13'
December 20
Trio—"We Three Kings."
Jivjz*
Iccwre.r^iui.
u&gt;
»hia&gt;
h.
■
Sponsored
By
OommoroUl
raed as auctioneer and Dr. B. A.
Those selected are Interested in the
1C ...
Carol—"O Night of Holy Mem- intended for. From experience last
Rehearsals .
are
In progress for the
[Perry as clerk. The list includes
Club And Hastings
year this will facilitate the work of twelfth
annual Christmas
Christmas carol
carol proposition and hope to be able to will tell "The Story of American 1
—’*“» annual
two horses, eight head of cattle,
Song." He 13 splendidly qualified to |
.
directors for terms of two
Song—"Up on the Housetops."
the Judges.
| service to be presented by the Hu­ put it across, in that event the Cen­ discuss American music, having
bogs, fodder, large quantity of farm
ulty Dana
tral school auditorium will be avail­
Refrain
—
"Jingle
Bells."
’
The
committee
wishes
t
stressed
tUt(fS
Teach
ers'
Club,
directed
by
tools, and miscellaneous. The adv.
many
friends
among
the
composers
starting
within the next three
able
and
some
enjoyable
and
helpful
Hymn—"O Little Town of Beth­ that there is still material available 8upL D A VanBusklrk. on Sunday
Elves full particulars.
and has personally done much to weeks It is planned to have a aeries
community
entertainments
will
re
­
lehem "
that has been donated by people a^moon, Dec. 20. at four o'clock
champion the cause of American of musical programs In Central ausult.
Carol—"8ile.nl Night.”
who for soma reason could not make ln the CentnU schoo! auditorium.
■IGNORED BY STATE
music. Werrenrath cornea from a dltorlum. The programs are planned
Silver Collection.
a dress. Mrs. Floyd Gaskell, dty
^rv^es are always bcautl-'
DENTAL SOCIETY.
family of singers and has made an . to be partly instrumental and partly
I Dr. Frank carrothers "has been
Hymn—"Joy to the World."
chairman, is at the headquarters In fuUy s*crtd and radiate the real FAIR ASSOCIATION
outstanding reputation for himself ' composed of community songs with legally come before the
Carol—“Gloria In Excelsls Deo.” the National Bank building every christmas spirit. The program In-1
mo tilled that he has been' made a
ANNUAL MEETING being considered an undisputed au- ] band accompaniment. The date ot
Inember of the public relations and
Vesper—"TUI lhe Shadows Go," Wednesday and Saturday afternoon cludM carols or
naUona. the
thority on American music.
the first event will be announced In
Eral hygiene committee of the State
; to give out lhe material andllo ;-Hallelujah Chorus" from "The I
Amendments Will Bo Voted
Tickets may be purchased from ■ next week's Banner.
benlal society. He will have charge NASHVILLE WANTS
take In the completed dresses. Flf- Messiah" oratorio, and this year 1
any member of lhe Teachers' Club,1 This series la sponsored by the
BETTER SERVICE. teen dresses have already been several new and Intereating Inter­
Upon By The
■if this work in ten counties in
at
the
St.
Rose
school.
Cordes
News
commercial Club, in co-operation
The
Nashville
Chamber
of
Com
­
Southwestern Michigan. This Is a
turned In and all Indications point pret*lions of the Yuletide songs will
Members
stand, tho Banner office and any &gt; with the Hasting* High achool and DELTON
line honor for Dr. Carrothers and merce by resolution has asked the to a total of 600 dresses which Is the be
•------•—-•
rendered.
Members of the Barry County drug store in the city. Reservations the Hastings City Band.
Michigan Central to give that vil­ goal set by the committee.
line he well deserves.
An Invitation Is extended to the Agricultural Society are asked to may be made at the Cordes News- i a
--------committea
—------composed
- --------- * *'
of Bupt. ”
D.
lage better train service. The Cham­
On Monday a nice dress was re­ general public and admission Is
ber of Commerce Is especially Inter- ceived from Mrs. R. J. McCreery of
read the legal notice on another stand Saturday. Dec. 5. from 0:00 A. A. vanBusklrk. Dr. a L. Lockwood,
IUTSTANDINO PICTURE
M. to 9:00 P. M, and at tho High 1 wm. Bhulters. Howard Frost and
, ,
| page announcing the annual meetAT THE STRAND.
Traverse city, showing she Is still
school office on Monday, Tuesday W. O- Cascadden is arranging ths
Theater-goers will be pleased to
Interested In Hastings. Her gift is REKF AND NOODLE SUPPER. lnff “I Saturday. Dec. 12. at the
and Wednesday. Doc. 7, 8 and 9- details.
ear that the picture. "Valiant Is bound traffic from Nashville. Tito appreciated.
Dowling church. Dec. 8. 6:30. 13c.1 courl house- ■
------ —= -----i At this meeting some changes In Only one reservation la necessary
he Word for Carrie." Is coming to secretary of the Chamber of Com­
cHAumnm licenses. u
I the constitution wlll be voted upon for.the entire courae. Prices ot tick­
he strand Theater. It is-one of the merce was Instructed to write the
BAKED SALE AND BAZAAR.
Chauffeur and troak driwu, Mets
are adults 11.00 and students 50
i
as
shown
in
tho
notice.
Study
themulatandlng pictures of the year and .Michigan Central officials urging
BAKR SALK SATURDAY.
over bo you care vote IntelllgonUy at cent* for tho course of three numspiels the mother love of a worn- that a morning eastbound train bo 10 A. M-. Food Center.—Adv. Out
| the annual meeting.
put on.
n for two orphan children.
, U-S.

COLOR OF LANDSCAPE
CHANGED TO CARMINE

ThrllXZeOn

Oirparstloa

ss?1

Three Auction Sales

as;!

SX'KmSXS

IU0 Dollar*
■n IsitltiUrd
r »id nori-

:bv

oiven

(that brine
’ourt In raid

nd all legal
w, including

in&lt;«. County
particularly

rhlch

party l«

Btartal

N CORPO-

Carol Service by
Presbyterian Choir (

KA”

rehearsing for

—

�THE HASTINGS BANNKB, THUBSDAT, DKCTOtBKM »■ ISM

»AOK TWO

cult court, the case being on aa this
■■■■■■■■UKBaKBS
From the feel of the air Monday it
»
a » a/dlFC
won't be long before froaen cars horae will be interested in Um horse 1* written.
LOCAL NEWS
|Win be the common sight.
Kellar stem entertained lhe nemsale adv. of Martin Tinkler's in this
saw■ Joe Springer, who has been ill for Issue of the Banner.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson moved Episcopal church at dinner Tuesday
j thrw months, has recovered and rc­
A Sunday pastime—a boy trying , turned to his work in Middleville Wednesday to lhe house on North evening at lhe Grand Rapids Book­
Broadway formerly occupied by Mr case factory dining'room in honor
to catch snowflakes in his mouth., Monday.
of Bishop Lewis B Whittemore of
Miss ChryXil Thomas has moved; The Rev. Don Qury of Watertown, and Mrs Harold P. Phillipa
Grand Rapids.
into the Bhaw apartment on South vvis.. conducted services at the Em­
Jonah Wickham Is getting ready
Another honor has come to Wil. Jefferson street.
| manuel Episcopal church on Sun- to set bls tra;» on Grand. Thorn­
apple and Kalamazoo rivers. Jonah ley Fox. a student at Western Bute
The Hastings city schools close day morning.
on Wednesday, Dec 23 and open
A total of 415.000 tn Christmas sure knows "Ole Man River."
Teachers College, on Monday be
Men representing the auditor was awarded first prize In a poster
on Monday. Jan. 4.
savings checks Is being sent out this
Mr. and Mrs. Lyman chamberlain week by lhe Hastings City Bank general's department at lensing are , contest sponsored by the Exchange
of Charlotte ore the parents of an and the National Bank of Hastings at the courthouse now auditing the Club of the college.
books
In
all
of
the
county
offices.
eight and a half pound daughter This convenient way of saving
Lyle Story, formerly of Kalama­
born Saturday forenoon al the .money for special purposes Is provCharloUe hospital. Mother and baby ' Ing-more popular all through the zoo. is the new manager of the
Mark's store here, having served
are doing well
- country.
eight years In that city with the and Mrs R. W. Cook and Mr. and
Mrs A. D- McDonald had dinner at
tame Arm.
me VCU.PC..VU.Cthe
former's home on Sunday eveThe
temperature Monday morning
was
seven oclock compllmenwas twelve
twelve degrees
degrees above
above zzero.
— ' n'n*
which is about the average for a I J*ry to Mr and Mrs Harold PhUtnld-winter day Quite nippy for1»P*- wh0 left Wednesday far their
this lime of rear
' neBf hotne Ml St. Louis. The honor
Mr and Mrs. J. B Wolf of South guests were presented with going
Dibble street, who have been 111 for away gifts
some time, are much improved in
DEATH OF L L BENSON.
health. Mrs Wolf is around the
house. Mr. Wolf is gaining slowly
Ed. Jolincock of this city, realized died Monday at his home. 827 E.
the dream of a life time when he re­ Bond St. from arthritis and other
turned home Bunday night with a complications. The funeral will be
flne black bear, that he shot while held this Thursday afternoon at two
while on his hunting trip to the oclock al the U. B church, the Rev
E O McSherry officiating.
Porcupine Mountains
At the last term of court Russell
NOTICE.
Hinckley of Freeport, charged with
- statutory offense, was tried
____ ___
I will not be responsible far any
a
and
•he jury disagreed. A retrial of the debts contracted by anyone other
case began Monday this week in clr- I than myself. Cleo C. Everett.—Adv.

SUGAR

IO - 49c
10

POUND

LIMIT

Candy Bars
BUTTER FINGERS
Regular 5c Bars

J' Pillsbury’s Best

Fred

Highways

CHRISTMAS CANDY
NEW CARROTS

SALMON
TALL
CAN

Open Evenings Until 9:00 P. M.

Pound 10c
Bunch 5c

DIAMOND WALNUTS

2 lbs. 29c

3 Cans 23c

PORK SAUSAGE

2 lbs. 35c

DEL MONTE CORN

2 Cans 29c

10 lb. Pail 67c
51b. Bag 21c

OPEN HOUSE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4!

RINSO

OXYDOL

for Whiter Clothes

Washing Powder

Large Size

Large Size

Package

Package

Iq c

Potatoes
U.S. No. I
PECK

—

/VC

PEANUT

Pound 25c

'

INDIANA PEAS
DEL MONTE PEAS

Can 17c

■

Pound 23c

&lt;

HAMBURGER, FRESH GROUND

23'

PINK

7 for 25'

2 Cans 29c

ROLLED OATS

PK6S,

MIXED NUTS

1 and Harry Payne, father of lhe
two already mentioned, was palnIuuy bruised.

FORMES RE81DKNT DIES.
Oeorgr Herrington, aged 68. died
cn Thursday Ln Kalamazoo, follow­
ing a stroke about a month ago. He
was a former resident of Woodland
lhe
Thornapple-Kellogg
school and Cloverdale. He Is survived by
his wife, two sons and two daughboard says that the money will be
used for constructing a one-story Kalamazoo on Monday with burial
garage and shop building 65x130 in the Woodland cemetery. Mr. Her­
feet just east of the main building. rington was well liked in the comDi lhe front will be space and equip­ munitlM where ha resided and
ment for wood and metal working, leaves a wide circle of friends.
mechanical drawing and allied sub­
jects while In the rear will be a
MARRIAGE UCKN8ESgarage for housing the fleet of Orville M. KvertUL Nashville ....32
school busses.
Madeline Allen. City ...................... 18

GOODY GOODY PEAS, EARLY JUNE:

STALEY'S CORN SYRUP

2

2

QCc

5 lb. Pail 25c

HARVEST TIME PANCAKE FLOUR 5 lb. Sack 25c

Old Cold*. Camel*. Lucky Strikes,
Chesterfield*, Sir Walter Raleigh's

Confirmation has just been
.
celved from Washington that the
Middleville School project has
approved for a Federal assistance
of *11522 00. according to a wire re­
ceived from Congressman Clare E.
Hoffman. James kugg. secretary of

Texas Seedless

No-114
CANS

was left in the hospital at Three

------------

Sum Of 111,622.00 To Be River*, Clair Payne received larerTT.aA
RI,™ ana
aUdns of the fa*
fare a
and
——
head
- —
injur
-Used For Shop And
, las and was also loft al the hospital.
; Boyd Payne received a knee Injury
Garage Building

Grapefruit

2 Pounds 19c

Tall Can 10c

MIDDLEVILLE SCHOOL
t‘ ^±1?.?^“■Clt&gt;„
. —...I Mr*. Gray, Housekeeper for the
GETS FEDERAL LOAN P*ynre, »uffered a broken leg and

PEACHES

RAISINS, SEEDED

INo. 5 Can 23c

electricity, giving helpful suggestion* injured tn a collision cu U 8. 131
on the location of outlets and the not far from Three River* on
selection of electrical equipment. Thursday. A car driven by Clair
The meeting Is open to ths public. . Payne ot this city collided on the
-—;-------icy pavement with another car

DEL MONTE

MOLASSES, AUNT DIANA
ARMOUR'S PORK &amp; BEANS

RESULTS PROVE VALUE

Work Carried On By State
Education Dept. la
Outatanding

Some interesting facta have Just
been disclosed by Dr. Eugene B El­
liott, Superintendent of Public In­
struction. The Information concerns
4 854 disabled persons who have ap­
plied for assistance at the Rehabili­
tation Division of lhe department,
type of frank, kindly open-minded during ths last I years The average
men who won and retained a wide
fore disability was 115.91. The aver­
emor of this state he took a deep age weekly wage at the Ume they
Interest tn the development ot west­ called at the department was 42iH
ern Michigan, particularly its high­
ways. It was through his good efforts habUlUUion is 419 80. This improve­
ment was brought shout by physical
to Battle creek and M-43 from Bar­ restoration and vocational training
'
bers corners through Hastings to and guidance.
the Rhulla county road
Other
PENNOCK HOSPITAL.
counties had had much paving done
through them, while Barry county
had been
neglected.
Governor the hospital since last report. A
Green and Justice potter of the Su- daughter to Mr. and Mrs Norman
pre me court are largely responsible Barry. Woodland, on Nov. 21; a
for the paving of the two trunk lines daughter to Mr. and Mrs Alden
we have mentioned in this county. Todd. Hastings, Route 1. on Nov.
Governor Green made a good gov 24; a son to Mr. and Mrs. George
emor of this state and sought to Martin. M3 E. Thom 81.. on Nov. 22.

3 lb-con 57C

COLLEGE INN TOMATO JUICE

in smash-up

■««*

—TT- '-T— —— w-— — । afternoon, Dec. 8, at the Woodland
INJURED
counsel and good work will be town» hall
hail at
at one
one o'clock
o'clock when
when a
a talk
talk .. ~
1
~
-Lighting the Homa
ra Game Together On
'missed tn this state.
on "Lighting
Home with DecElec-,, *wo °*
Oars
I triclty'
uy Miss
M(M X1EICII
ty“ will be give,
given by
Hslen
iCy Pavement Wear
u of tha
J
acu
I Noyes
the rvtenrlrv,
extension rfletatmi
division ofI,
REHABILITATION WORK
Three livers
Michigan State College
She wUJ

We know that our readers were
saddened when they read in the
papers Monday that former Gover­
nor Fred W. Green ot Ionia had
died at Munising hospital from
heart disease.
He had gone north deer hunting
as usual lhe camp being located
not far from Munising. He was
stricken and later taken to the
hospital where he died

Vegetable Shortening

24^ LB. $1.12
SACK—
I

green dies

Through His Efforts That

CRISCO

FLOUR

F0UR HASTINGS FOLKS

FORMER GOVERNOR

Pound 20c

PORK SHOULDER ROASTS

SPARE RIBS

Pound 16c

BEEF KETTLE ROASTS

Pound 13c

BACON, SLICED,

’/z Pound Package 14c .

Pound 15c

CHUNK PORK, FAT

STOP IN AND LOOK AROUND!

KIRK'S Cocoa, Hard Water

CASTILE

BPound
ULK |C&gt;
r
IVC

Boiling Beef
Lean and Meaty

IO'
Palmolive
Ort CAMAY SOAP

5 bars 25c 4

BARS

22 c

THESE PRICES ARE GOOD DECEMBER 5th, 6th and 7th

The Home of the Lowest Food Prices in Barry County!

FOOD CENTER

BEST QUALITY

Pure LARD

2

i-bs.

25c

NASHVILLE
Open Evenings Until 8:00 P. M.
nn ihov Uckrt. DK. T TOh rath Size punhaK.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 3. 193C

miwH

PERCY C. iNGOVE

Michigan Central
To Increase Service
(Continued from page 1. Sec. It
heavier bridge is to be put In so

MICHIGAN'S WORK FOR that regular Michigan Central en­
gines can give lhe freight service
CRIPPLED CHILDREN
required for lhe factories, and
WAS TOPIC
much better than they can now do.

FIVE THOUSAND ARE
NOW SELF-SUPPORTING
Every Oitixen Should Be
Interested In Repeal Of
Recent Laws

So in lhe proposed abandonment
of that part of the C- K. &amp; 8. inCead of being a detriment to the
factories in this city would be a
□cncnt to them.
On another page of this issue wlll
se fouqd the legal notice asking per­
mission of the Interstate Commerce
Commission at
Washington to
abandon the 26 7 miles of rood be­
tween Delton and Woodbury, it
might be of Interest to Banner read­
ers to know that this fall 127 car­
loads of onions have been shipped
from Delton showing the necessity
of continuing the C. K Ac 8 freight
service from Kalamazoo to that vil­
lage.

Sixteen Rotarians from Allegan
drove to Hastings Monday Ln order
to hear tho address given nt the
Rotary club h?re by Percy C. Angove of Detroit. Mr. Angovc 13 th?
executive secretary of. the Michigan
Society for Crippled Children, head­
quarters at 526 Buhl Building. De­
troit. He discussed the work done in
this state Ir. behalf of Its more than
16.000 crippled children. He began
by paying a high compliment to thW K. Kellogg Foundation for their
excellent work In Barry. Allegan
and the five other counties where
they operate to help these children
(Continued from page 1, Bee. X)
The speaker told how the work fo:
crippled children had started, first
The first proviso of Mrs. Ayers’ I
In Ann Arbor, where the King's will contained in substance this I
Daughters Interested themselves tn paragraph: ’First, J give, devise and I
these unfortunates. As they got In­ bequeath to Imogene Ayers, widow |
to the work they were appalled at lb of Andrus Ayers ot the'city and i
magnitude, and called on the Ro­ county ot Kalamazoo, the sum of
tary club of Ann Arbor to help 82,500; and to my niece tui’d nephew i
them. This the University city Ro­ Agnes and Morton Bassett of Ohl- j
tarians gladly did; but they soon cago 82500 each, it being my Intendiscovered that the Job was far toe Hon to return the sum of 87.500 to
big for them. In 1023, at lhe state the heirs of my beloved husband.'
gathering Of Rotary clubs In Battle
Tlie petition for the. plaintiff in
Creek, that organization definitely this case reeltea that, at tho time
undertook to aid Michigan’s crip- , ot thE deaU, o( Mra. L. May Ayers,
pled children. From 1923 lo 1927 Mrs. Imogene Avera of Kalamazoo
Rotary sponsored that work with j and Alm,,s Blisjg-tt of Chicago were I
some assistance from the state ( both dead; but nt that time Morion I
through the University hospital. Bassett
still living, Having
having sursur-1।
itaiscri was sun
But Michigan Rotarians
ii——I1 vj■ ved• -- -1
---------- learned
Mri - -May AyCrs. -He died
from experience
“ * adequate
‘ ,
Hint
Alnce h„ decease.
treatment for the the state's crip­
Tho petition recites that the first
pled children demanded much that, paragraph of Mrs. Ayers’ wlll ralvcs 1
they
.—, could not give, especially
- ------------ the
question as to whether it was
the follow-up work-the care and lier intention to pay to him or fits
treatment
of crippled children MtBte 12.500. or to give to him. as
..............
which is required after the ortho­
thesurvivorof the three heirs o!
pedic surgeons have done their best Mr, Ayers’ deceased husband, the ।
to correct tlie bone and muscle entire &gt;7.500. as Morton Bassett surdeformities.
| vlved the other two heir, mentioned |
Then there was formed the
t*" ' m the first paragraph of the wlll. and
Michigan Society for Crippled Chil­ because In that paragraph she had
dren in order that mote thorough stated that It wasjier intention to
and much better treatment of the give &gt;7.500 to the three heirs of her'
cases might be given. The Society deceased husband, ot whom Morton
soon discovered that there iaa Bassett was the sole survivor when
much work that could be done and she died.
ought to be done for crippled chllAccordingly the petition, after re­
dren. which It was unable to do (citing
v&lt;vui| nine
iscva. asks
usu Judge
juugc Meaacthese facts,
.without assistance from lhe state Peck to construe the paragraph givth
- legislature m
The
In ior»
1927 passed an lng J7500 lo thp three helr&gt; of MfJ
act to aid the work for crippled chil­ L- May Ayers’ husband ns a class
dren. Wonderful results were gained gift to those heirs, and therefore
for such children. More than 5,000 payable w
to the survivor of lhe three
of them have been made sclf-e.up,( who
woj Morton
?,
‘
Bassett, since de­
their-------------------deformities,had
|«oswk
.porting
-------- - after ----------- he
was Vliving at the time
been corrected and after they had of her decease and the other two
been properly trained. The speaker had died, the petition requests that
made it plain that the deformity of the Judge direct that the executor
every crippled child Is the result o! &gt;of the estate of L May Ayeio puy
an accident, either at or before , the sum of 87.500 to the adminlstrablrth. or due to disease, such as In- trlx of the estate of Morton Bassett
fantile paralysis, which deprives for the benefit of his heirs.
them of lhe proper use of their ■
---------------- SHOWED PICTURES
bodies.
Every crippled child, he said. Is
entitled to physical freedom. ’ to
A delightful social meeting of
mental development and should be Hastings Chapter No. 68, Royal
given an education. Every crippled Arch Masons. was held on Monday
child should have vocational train- .......
K________by
, _
__ luck supper.
night preceded
a Kpot
Ing. in order that he may become I Especially Interesting were the films
lu-tf
• simnortIni' They
TH—v should
iHmilH have
lint*. shown
... v...
n Brooks Mil­
self-supporting.
by Dr c-,ri..,n
Carleton
social freedom and not be allowed ler. pastor of the Battle Creek Con­
lo suffer the "inferiority complex" gregational church. Dr Miller took
which is apt to result in such chil­ his own pictures during a trip to
dren who usually keenly realize their Alaska, some* very unusual scenes
physical limitations. Most of all being Included. Part of his trip was
they ere entitled to spiritual free­ by boat and part by airplane. The
dom of heart and soul. When that pictures began nt Seattle and ended
freedom comes, it will be a help to ______
.....
nt Skagway.
Alaska. His was the
them In overcoming defects In their I first airplane to fly over the famous
physical makeup.
| Muir glacier in Alaska. His descrip­
Tlie speaker called attention to tlon and views of the mountains, rivthe fact that the American people ers. Industries, etc, were delightful
are quite apt. when a Liw Is passed and’ educational.
■
-■
•
after much work and effort, to con­
"Of my two sons." a business man
clude that any further efforts, espe­
cially voluntary effort,. In behalf of stated In court, last week, "one Is an
the work shall cease, because the artist and one a poet." We under­
law is expected to accomplish w stand that he has to keep the other
much. As a consequence when the one. too.
atatc look over the work of treat­
ing. caring for. educating and train­
ing crippled children, the Interest
of the general public seemed to
slacken. Because of that fact the
excellent laws which our slate had
for Uie care, help and treatment of
crippled children were mistakenly
amended by the last legislature in
such n manner as to seriously Inter­
fere with the work of the Michigan
Society for Crippled Children. Tlie
speaker called upon Rotarians and
all good citizens to work together,
especially with members of the leg­
islature. so that the amendments to
Michigan's excellent crippled chil­
dren's laws, which have destroyed
much of the value of those laws,
may be repealed and that the slate
may have legislation that shall give
to Michigan effective laws to aid
crippled children. With over 5.000
.Of them already made self-support­
ing members of society, through
the work of the crippled children’s
organization, there is certainly every
reason why al) thoughtful citizens
should ask for such legislation; and
there is every reason why the state
shall give this aid. so that the
menu to such perfecUon that
crippled children of Michigan shall
they look like new—and It’s
get the help they need and ought to
a gift that we enjoy. To have
have, not alone for their benefit but
the ability of making a suit
for the benefit of the state' as well.
It was a splendid address and was
shape and color, even after
listened to with the closest atten­
tion by the Rotarians and their
Sift that haa been acquired
guests.
inrough nani. consctenuoua

RIDE-ON-TRUCKS !*•»"•••
Gaymod* Hosiery

49c |

STARTS SUIT TO
CONSTRUE WILL

Sturdy
truck for 1 to
2 year olds. Seat
7'.r high.

MEN’S SOCKS
and Rayon!

ACCIDENT NEAR MIDDLEVILLE.
Arthur Lower, one of the teach- j
ers in the city schools, was return­
ing to Hastings from Grand Rap­
ids Thanksgiving night about seven
o’clock when he collided, south of
the narrow culvert on M-37 be-1
tween Middleville and Caledonia,
with another car driven by J. P.

Grand Rapids. The front wheel of
Mr. Gordon's car was smashed, but
fortunately no serious harm came to
either of the men.
■

your garments to us and feel
confident that they will be
treated correctly.

J

r-"

Fashioned!

12'Inch Caddie Bear

98«

Men's Shirts

Cute little bear
of long mohair
•H e
He
_ silky
n bow
Kapok stuffed.

FITTED CASE
7 Fittings!
Shark Grain!

Solve

all

A lovely1 gift at a reasonable
price. Rayon lined, two pockets
in body. I8‘ long! Good looking!

rift

Leather

A dandy gift! Two fold, yritlslide fastener Pockets for Iden
tifieation cards and oueh Boxe^

5
Women's Gloves

Clear toned me-

DRESS GLOVES

nr spring
or. 3 un-

Imported

Leather!

nursery records
Included*

Warm pigskin. Popular slinon
style. Heavy stitching New
acorn and natural colors.

Nice For
Dfiring!

WB

A wsB-choeen rift for an out­
door woman I Trim fitting black
capealdn lined with silky rayon.

Sport and Dress

Travelling CASE
Genuine

COATS

Leather!

Useful handy case. Slide fast­
ener. 6'x9*. Walrus Grain. 9
pieces. Other seta. 12.98.

Movie Proiector
Men r All Wool

JACKETS

$£.9S
Something he's always wanted!
Heavy melton witn slide fast­
ener front. Sport collar, muff
Dockets. Shadowtones

Doable Lens
Direct Renind

Satin Finish

Men's Suspenders
Metal Ends'
Rayon Elastic

Hand driven 16 mzn Keystone
projector with adjustable lamp.
With cold. lamp, and t,wo 100 ft.
spools. Non-inflammable films
extra, 59c and up.

49*

Smart suspenders with bra&lt;s
mountings and buckles
New
patterns. Garters to match, 25c.

Fashiiwble Ncrv

Mederaiatta Fibre Rocker

HANDBAGS
A

c
One of the mmit amazing value*
and
on vou»

gift 1i«i

expensive* Fine quality »nnu
lated leathers in the

lovely

RAYON SLIPS

49«

A remarkable value! Sleek
satin finish rayon with lock­
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Lace trimmed or tailored.

RED VELOCIPEDE

«1.98
Nen'cst Styles /or Fall!

Gifts That Last!

B LOUSE&amp;

9SC

cottons and acetates! For at ret-

A practical suggestion. Pre­
shrunk fabrics in new patterns.
Fast colon. Nu Craft collars.

MEN'S
Lightweight

Pen, Pencil SET

(■"
R'«‘'
for Sowny!
Men’s Handmade

jA A

Real fountain pen with dunum

pen knife tn match Colura-

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Supo»«r Sweaters

98*
You can't beat this value!
Wool face with firm cotlvn
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Slide
fasteners.
Plain or patterned.

49

You'll never go wrong by
giving these ties for Christ­
mas. They're the kind that
meh pick for themselves.
Many new patterns. Re­
silient construction.

C.‘- PENNEY

New Fall Glen Ron

4

Packed in. Qift Box

Raglans
Wrap-Arounds

$14”

Shop At Penneys
And Save!

1814

Men's Shirts

Men. here's the coat
buy o! the aoason!
Fabrica hand picked
for amartnesa and
durability I Season's
most popular styles.

The kind of coats that us­
ually sell for a great deal
more! Rich fur trimming*,
smart surface interest
woolens, youthful stylet!
Sixes 12 io 20. 38 to 46.

child! Comfort­
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cushion! Seat
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Frocks
A Real Gill Value!

BRIDGE BETS

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Embroidered!
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DRY CLEANERS
PHONE 2140

BILLFOLDS

Kiddles* Phoaocraph

McCREERY’S
HASTINGS

COCpr» «:

A thrifty gift for Christmas!
Ringless first quality chiffons
with silk picot tops. New
shade*. Sizes 8W to 10H.

Ever welcome! Mercerized top.
heel and toe with double sole ana
high spliced heel for wtar!

It s a GIFT!

8®

-

COMPANY

For travelling or loungfag.
Beautifully tailored of celaneso
’affela—satin striped. waeheMo

These unusually I
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�The Hastings Banner

BOOST TH! COUJCTY
TRADE AT HOME

A PACE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1936

Editorials

'Round About Town
Hew to the line, let the quipe

decision handed down last week by state, will admit that it takes at
- - ■n
V In rwtrd 1
• war tn iwnma fnltv ar.

to fishing rights on privately owned
lakes. An understanding of several
pertinent points in this decision wlll
help to clear up potential sources
of misunderstanding between law
officers and sportsmen

understand that Gladys Eaton
was absent from work for a couple
of days last week.

Spent the time at home "im-laxThey do look like Innocent little
chocolate drops—but OH MY I

Once In a while
don’t exaggerate.

i In reporting
I'"

i

“
King Edward-

Wallis Simpson affair,'lbe American
editors have given the serfbes over­
seas an example of unlicensed free­
dom but the English Journalists,

ant caught the fish from the dock . Pension and Unemployment Insurin front of his home, lhe arrest was ।

1 .n« a«. WMIM. ot n« -

Good old Dual
Understand that stove Johnson
is now a seasoned veteran of "Doer
Front."
Warren connected but
Charlie missed.

] vj^s and Opinions;
What (JtlieTS bay

' exceeds any issue of bonds yet put
out by the government—and. as wc
recall, government bonds arc the
ones &gt;p*-cified for Investment. In- J
vesting a sum which overshadow*
’”|1------------- _---------- -----------

even the national debt l»
mean* an easy problem.

by

no Who. If anyone, gets paid for leltuig
,. them
ineni mn?
inn?
I Governor-elect Murphy says that
because of tin
I wherever there Is open gambling
top-? about one-half of the total num*
ber of workers are taxed and yet all'gambling cannot exb: If taw eiisearch warrant.
are honest
3-r-A person caught fishing out are entitled to some benefits, in | forrement officials
of season on a private lake in a row
„
. '
. ,
.
,,
are many counties in the state
outside of hl* paid a cent of l*x will under the nhWe Uie mechanical pickpockets
boat on die lake
prevent law receive more than operate should the state ot Michi-,
own property can
sight without the formality of a • workmen who have paid regular1&gt; 18an license slot machine* as they
’
for years
haTe belling on the race*? Should
search warrant.
”*
X,.. ..
w .
Po- --- 1
.
U
' the
u,p Mate license
IK'TIW roulette
rvure’.l'- and
ana chuckCHUCK- ,
4—There to no distinction between 1 For example.
example, If
if a workman ts
is now
norii iuck
ucM
Ux)T should th(1
the Hate '
private and public lakes when the: forty-five
n-ty-hve and earns
earn* an average
average of I treat gambling
gambling as they
tlie? do liquor
£100.00
per
month
for
the
next
'
and
license
K
—
and
crab
a
part
ol
question of jetsesrion of fish out ol
‘
01 *bIch lhe suckrri arc
season arises, poaiession alone being twvnty years, he would be entitled
robbed?
hfinJ t
WuU|lw
held illegal without regard lo source to tn annuity of £3250 per month , Wc
We heard t seasoned legislator
But under the old age dole plan. I ask these questioru one evening re­
or supply. ,
Because of the dual anile of this funds for which also eome In part I really. We will be Interested to

conclusion when the ease was dis- »n equal amount, making a total ot I he i* politically ambHiuus and this
missed without conviction that the £60.00 per month tor Hie family: 8*mbling evil might furnish him
court had decided the possession of•
fish out of season caught from a'
private take was not iDegal.
[
However, the judge
actually'

J,'

,r.xh eonlnhulrt
,, .. —nothin
.
v&gt; tBr
”
sires—Gunton county Republican­
fund a51m*I 13250 per month for News
lhe family which contributed regutarly during a period of twenty

states that lhe converse is true, years.
that dismissal ol the case because] An adequate, fair old age pension

Compare this with the average
story you hear!

Nobody beat Duff Laubaugh to the
tag though! Ho got a buck for him­
self and one tor the camp.

•with the method adopted, wc all
*.
must admit that lhe objective Is
.u.
point. A man's home
the । worthy. It would seem that a plan xea-i&gt;Jww.vwwBw*ww property connected with it are his 1 to compel people lo systematically1
GAMBLING—WITH AND WITH­
of tuvu
their uivuiur
income wto- .
"Casue ana ciuuio; ix cntcrcv ui . save a portion ui
OUT THE STATE'S CONSENT
purpose of arrsst. search or seizure ward on old age annuity at least
One of the big Detroit newspapers
without prop?r warrant from the has possibilities The act as It
has been throwing a ftt lately— h
court. Nor can a warrant be grant- stands today, however. Is at the , throws them periodical?—about
cd on mere suspicion An officer । best an uncertain, unfair step In'
। gambling In Macomb county II npmust have a definite complaint at lhe right direction
__ Wayne county govpears that the
the time the warrant is Issued.
The plan is uncertain because it emmeni has largely discouraged
Since tho arrest was made file-1no guarantee of payment. AU gambling. While
"* ,u
there are spou.'
in Wayne where gambling goes on.
gaily, lhe Judge dismissed the case. of ihe money coUected will be
It Is done furtively. The result Is
in spite of lhe fact that illegal plawi bi ’he general fund end so is open gambling in Macomb county
possession of fish was clearly estab-' »’ the mercy of Congress. It .would i'Exst Detroit!.
The publishers of lhe protesting |
seem that congress •™&gt;
would
Ushed and recognized
w hesitate
newspaper, however, do publish rac-'
Therelorc It appears that several lo take liberties with funds belong- ing odds and attractive writc-upe
imtr-one million; aboul
-oii,U|&gt;.«&gt;d.oir Ui.
Important conclusions can be made Ins w
American workmen—but then one fast filly, won * yesterday's second
from this case:
The government I event and^ paid btUora 13 to j.’
1—It is illegal lo possess fish out niver can tell.
sllould at least give its pledge that 'Questioned
**
about
* *this
"* Inconsistency
of season even when obtained from
they reply that racing has been le­
a private take directly connected these funds wlll never be used for galised In Michigan—that the state
any purpose other than the Intend- ts accepting a "rake off" from the
with one’s home.
betting system.
Weil that's the truth of the matIt lhe plan b realized, the funds
without leaving one's own property,
this law is practically non-enforcr- collected must be invested at in­
When It comes to slot machines 1
able alnce It Is almost beyond rea­ terest to accumulate sufficient to­ thia Detroit newspaper and no other I
son that a law officer could discover tals to meet the probable demands. newspaper. seems to be able to gel
a person in tt»e act of catching flsh Where will lhe money be mrested? any low-down information on the .
out ot season and then go through If forecasts are correct a fund
„„„ BSW
u, ot j
chines? Who
gets V11V
the mwire/
money „
out
the red-tape of obtaining a warrant eventually be available which far ■ them? Why are U»ey allowed7to run?
before Uu- fist) were consumed or
otherwise destroyed. So. if you
catch fish out of seAson on a private
lake from a dock in front of your
home, you are breaking the law
and are liable to arrest but it i» not

ads

Tommy’s getting to he winches
[ when he hears that old one about
rushing up triumphant only to and
some dastard huntsman there first
1 with a tag.

_
lhe

whether forced or otherwise, have
Another'angle entered this case, given Uta world a better example of
however, which has helped to ob­ good manners and respect fof per­
scure lhe opinion
regarding illegal ! sonal rights.
possession. It seems that the officer j
- - -------------------. ■■ ■■■
who made the arrest did not have coot, HEADED ACTION NEEDED
. Since
.
—
- - -, j ^merjCa
now enrolling for the
a *earch warrant
the defend-

invalid.

the

will

IM IW&lt;™ o~r. or IUIM'•
•
eltolr MM. IM&lt; U&gt;« |«»—loo or “*“» non-tottol tolo-OM II

by the manner Ln which the fish
were obtained. In short H is Just
u much a breach of the law to
possess fish out of season from a
private take as it is from a public

even

Found—Ono honest deer hunter.

Guy Bauer admits he didn’t get
a buck because he missed his shot!

roer ond Kulll U In no w»r modHlod | Ullt

Dr. Prank Carro there at the sug- I ton resident to remit for hl*
gratlon of the county committee ! OhrtotmSe TB seals.
called a meeting of Republican* in
hl* office here at 5:15 o'clock ywterday afternoon for what he thought
would be ordinary routine buslnesa.
instead, he found that the “subject
under discussion" was the matter
of presenting him with a leather
travelling bag and kit in apprecia­
About twenty girls of the High
tion of the work he has done during school did a little radio research
the post three years. "Doo" was tak­ work during Thanksgiving week.
en completely by surprls* and found Each one was assigned a letter ot
tivat the surprises hadn't ended with the alphabet and called lhe people
the receiving of hl* gift. He said listed under that letter In the telethat he expects to initiate the pre­ | phone directory. She then asked thu
sent Into use when he leaves for New • persons called to what radio station
York on Dec. 5 for a course of spe­ , they were listening, and If they recial dental cllnle work under aus­ 1 fused to tell her that was noted on
pices of the W. K- Kellogg Founda­ , a special form which each girl filled
tion.
- ~
out.

Hcutingt High School
Activities

aid claimed that the possession of ftem. he will also be a detriment to;
fish out of season was Illegal no » state organization,
matter how they were obtained
। The spoils system 'should come to j
an end in Michigan, if Governor- I
in tms
nnnsc of
oi the
uno case,
ixac. of spesire­
In
this phase

. I Civil service bill hi* whole-hearted
upheld lhe contention of the prose---------- -1 oirmnrt thH

। the state who have received seals

OommitUe Pr««ent« Him make their return* a* soon a* poato that expense ot follow-up
With Leather Travelling | slble
letters might be t^and.
Bag And Kit
। R G. Henton was the first Dcl-

IMPORTANT TO SPORTSMEN. (than does the present political
gpof-urni-n throughout Michigan 1 spolls’system Almost any new offiwUl doubtless be interested In the ] clai whether it be olty. county or

quainted with the duties involved.
। In the slate government where
there Is a possibility for a nearly
complete turnover every two years
a considerable portion of the em­
ployees Just begin lo get familiar
in brief, lhe case involved the with their work when they are
right to possess bluegills caught out shelved to make room for other
of season in a private lake. The ■deserving" party workers.
State work Is of utmost Imporplaintiff. In question, argued that
since these fish were caught in a tance. State employees should be
private lake from a dock oo his Hired and advanced on lhe basis
own property, be should not be con- of «erit Jurt as I* done In brntocs.
victed for illegal possession Prose-1 *'ld Industry, if an Inefficient emruling Attorney Archie D. McDon-1 ploy« h » detriment to a private

! Bruce H. Douglas, president of the
REPUBLICANS HONOR
Michigan Tuberculoria Aaaociatlon.
DR. FRAMCARROTHERS this week urged that all others In

Crumbs of Wisdom

A Quotation
THE man who fails i*
lhe man who fails to
keep on keeping on.
—j. Jackion

W''RE beginning to think the
rabbit has the advantage. He
doesn't have to wear a red cap
nor carry » shotgun while
climbing through n barbed wire
fence

The giraffe is the one mammal
that does not have the power of
making n sound with its vocal
cords, though man sometimes
reveals the same trait when
making a speech

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

Understand that Forrest Johnson
Is kind* choosey about Ute maker,
of cars he will tolerate In front ct
his place of business.

Chet Hodges, they tell me, worked
TWENTY YEAR3 AGO.
io hard on the Cheer-Up committee
Mr and Mrs. J C- Ketcham re­ that he was rewarded with a hard
cold.
turned Sunday from the National
Grange at Washington. D. C.
Take Tommy's advice. Chet, and
Mr.’ j Da Zggelmeier went to
Rqcd City Tuesday to visit licr wear the old blue sweater ou such
daughter. Mrs. 8am Horner.
. -Jobs—That’ll scare tho old
- cold.
------ ’
John Renkrs. gentlemanly clerk aWfty
at Caxveih &amp; Stebbins, has always ।
• • •
had a longing to taste venison but' Dick Poley, I understand, threatnever had any. Recently a Irier.d!
run
E Carrick and Al
I Just returned from the north with r McCall orrt of the tailoring business,
fine buck offered him a piece o!
- - •
Dick, it seems, was caught up in
, meat which John declared lhe mast
delicious he had ever eaten. He was the cold north woods with only o
not a little annoyed to find he had pair of thin khaki trousers in ids kit.
eaten plain, ordinary mutton.
So the resourceful Mr
Poley
The engagement of Mtw Helen
Hayes to Edmund Dana Wood, son bought a warm red blanket and pro­
of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wood of ceeded lo tailor himself a pair of
hunting
pants
this city, was announced Saturday
[ evening nt n dinner at lhe home of
Tlie Idea worked and Dtck wore
I Mis* Hayes' parents. Mr. and Mrs.
i H O. Hayes of south Jefferson St. them but he found, on trial, that
The city supervisors have com- there were certain necessary details
-P.C.U.U, of the
uw state.
.urn- ?n the architecture of trouser:, that
plcted tlie spreading
county, school and road taxes. The u' ’’atl nc8^cl*d to take into conrnte will be £16.17 ner ti.000
slderatlon.

It is said tnat 27 sinRersJarc
THIRTY YEARS AGO
FLASH! — CORRECTION — Bill
' got hU buck after all
only twice as loud as one singer,
but for some reason we can’t Tuesday evening. Nov 30. Joel R .
Understand that George Cheney
make our janitor believe it
। Smith. Jr., of Carlton Twp. and Miss
lia
, and Floy Greenfield had some tali
Mary Lend of Altoona.
■’’'Ptalnlng to do lo Carrie Moyer
In Bethel, Alaska, a girl bar­ ' Mia* Katherine VanValkenburc
V
' - and Mrs. Greenfield, respectively
ber who charges the "sour­ returned Saturday -----from -IronwoSd
doughs" £5 for a shave, seems where she has been teaching school । and collectively after leaving them
to be taking the dough out of ; She will not return because of fail- stranded at Kalkaska, enroute lo
the "Deer Front."
sourdough.
• Ing health.
A pretty wedding look place Tues-1
Il twcnts that the boys tixMiglit
That Salem. Mass., crlin who day Dec. 4 at high noon al lhe
hit his wife on the head with his home of Mr and Mt*. D. W. Rogers , their passengers were in the trailer
clarinet must have tiwught less ( on s Broadway when their dnugh-!
they weren't.
of her singing than he did of ter Jessie became Uie bride cf
I Cimrles
Cliarles H
Babcock
of fwatmlt
Detroit.
hit playing,
aImtwU nt
I
A chivalrous gas station attend­
A special meeting of the board of
directors of the Hastings City bunk ant packed the stranded one* in hit'
was called Tuesday to consider the service car and by some heroic driv­
ing
finally caught up with the errant
installation ‘ of an electrical burglkr protection system. It was voted gentlemen.
। to accept tlie proposition.
। ■ Whether he use the word ‘honor’
or the word *preetlge.’ the patriot
FORTY YEARS AGO
| Mrs Jas. A. Sweezey left Friday means exactly this: his country's
. for a three weeks’ visit with Ohio reputation for getting what she
wants, or defending what she ips
’ friends.
He uAo abusri others must not be
Lieut and Mrs A- D Knlskcrn of
particular 6
the ruuvri he sett* . Ft. Leavenworth are expected in the
Today there arc too many frills
DECEMBER
। city shortly for a brief visit.
in education. I believe that children
1
a
phonographic entertainment should be taught the fundamental
will be given al the Parish house at truths."—Henry Ford.
1 8 o clock
The band gave the last of Its Sat­
^^TRAfF/C
urday evening open air concerts for
this season last wetV. They are con­
tinuing practice and will give a
dance New Year’s night and a
concert later.
The M. E choir undpr the direc­
tion of Miss Ida FltaSimmons Is
funilshing fine music which is an
attractive feature ut the Sunday
services.

at Getters

ceived answers. Many Interesting
ideas and note* are exchanged be­
tween the pupils of the two coun­
tries.

Oyster Supper, Boxing Con­
tests And Talk To
Feature Evening
All former service men in Barry
county, whether members of the
American Legion. Veterans of For­
eign Wars or beior.ging to no organIzntlon. are Invited to the oyster sup­
per to bo given by the Legion at
their hail on Tuesday evening, Dec
15. Supper will be served at seven
o’clock and is free to all ex-service
men.
Following the supper an Interest­
ing program will be presented in­
cluding three boxing bouts by some
high school fellow* directed by Jos.
Brozak and a talk by a good speak­
er. name to be announced later.
Fellows, tell your ex-*ervice com­
rades lo be sure and attend this
social gathering.

FIRST ONES TO BUY
CHRISTMAS TH SEALS.
First tn Hastings to buy 1935 tu­
berculosis Christmas *eals was Oscar
L Bpeneer. the Michigan Tubercu­
losis Association announce*. The
thirtieth annual sale of the liny
messengers of health opened on
Thanksgiving Day and will be con­
tinued through to Christmas. Six­
ty million of the Christmas Mais
were distributed in the state this
year by the Association and its
affiliated organizations, to provide
funds te carry on the fight against
the White Plague In 1937.
Thanking and complimenting Mr
Spencer on his early purchase, Dr.

The high school orchretra will play
at both performances of the senior
play to be given Thursday afternoon
and Friday evening Dec. 3 and 4.
Many .Thanksgiving baskets were
filled by donations made by students,
who brought money and food.

The sophomore mixer will be held
next Tuesday after school. Card*
and dancing will furntoh enlertalnment.
The first basket ball game of the
season wlll be played with Allegan
, there Friday. December 4.

|

The boys' and glrto’

glee

club’

have begun working on their annual
operetta.

|

Junior class rings have arrived.

। Winners in the Ag-HE exposition
; attended the Internationa) Livestock
' ahow at Chicago from Nov. 28 until
j Dec. 1. -

; The “Fortnight. Jr." was published
, last Tuesday night by the Joumai; ism class.
|

’The democratic partnership to

, the only arrangement that can aati tafy both traditional masculinity and
' modern
feminism." — Farnsworth
Crowder.

A LIFETIME of Shaves
Without Brush or Lather!

•5.00 DOWN and ’1.00 a WmIc for 10 Weeks
Never before has there L&gt;ecn ho gentle—yet so
thorough a shaving method. A splendid gift for
Christmas. Use our lay away plan and make
some man happy this year.

T. S. BAIRD
"Clothing and Shoes for Men and Boys"
HASTINGS

PHONE 2396

W.LW. SPECIALS
LEADER FLOUR, 24'/2 lbs-79c
DOGGIE DINNER, 3 cant...25c
GRANULATED SUGAR, 10 lbs. ..48c

BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.

FIFTY YEARS AGO
Frank Knowles, brother of Mr*.
John Goodyear, and who has many
acquaintance* in this city was ser­
iously tnjure4mrecently by falling
from a building al his home in Ohio.
Euchre parties are again the rage
in this cUy.
The Engine and Iron works are
now running.
British education
would be
See the announcement elsewhere
stronger for being based upon firm
of the first annual ball of John
and sound religious reaching. whi h
NEWS GLEANINGS.
WslMerl camp. Bon* of Veterans at
was the true builder of national
Today one pericn can produce as Union hall, this city. Friday evening.
character. -Lord Halifax
much yam in a day as *1.000 could Dec. 31.
"Individual liberty cannot long, ,M l'“ra ago.
"Nothing that the imagination can
omens multitudes of
—------------Tne annual gate receipts ot foot­ picture will match the realities be­
Individuals who choose it and arc
jWt io pay for it.’ —Rose Wilder ball games are twice the amount ing fashioned at this moment in
paid to ace bareball games &lt; Ameri­ hundreds ot reaearch laboratortea by
thousands of devoted inventors."—
ca’s national sport).
David Barnoff.
n °U„r “JS?
Often

Sorrow with his p:ck mines the
a search warrant was not obtained and dole system h unquestionably
heart; but he L&gt; a cunning work-!
ahould not be interpreted as giving j a worthy goal. That the present act
legal sanction to the act of catching [ has glaring faults is no*. sufficient man. He deepens the eJianneb.
whereby happtneea may enter, and
fish out of season on a private lake;; ground for condemning the attempt, hollows out new chambers for joy |
that, in fact, catching tub out ol ■ But everyone must realize that the' to abide in when he ts gone —Man
season on a private take is Just as' mere pa; sing of a law 1$ not gNng Cholmondeley.

mueh a breach of the taw as catch- to make a workable system The
ing fUb out of season from any oth*1- j most difficult task lies ahead. Il b
not going to be easy to strike a fair
’ balance between the old age annuity
CIVIL SERVICE.
, payments to workmen who have
What will be the lute ol the pro­ contributed regularly and lhe dole
posed dvll service bill? This is a payments to lhe aged needy who
question that many people interest­ possibly have made no payments at
ed in Uie good government of Midil- Mil. Rot Is it going to be ahy eaay
ggn see asking tlM’insclvcs now* , , task Iwa politically.controlled con-In theory, at least, civil service
offer- .i better method ot wkcllhg CiMtd Qrc huge funds enlriKtcd to
* capable staff of state employee?
«

Bill and

Many of tho second year French
LEGION POST TO
|students, have written- to their
ENTERTAIN VETERANS I French correspondents and have re­

Chocolate
DROPS

9hi.

PITTED
DATES

10V

Quick Quaker

OATS

X.19‘

Way of Our World

“The hardest tumble a man can
ST &lt;«'«. hUM., or UK na'
r.i- take U to fall over hU own bluff."—
I Ambrose Bierce.

ORANGES, (wmI, juicy, 2 do*39c
ORIENT PANCAKE FLOUR, 5 Ibt. 23c
DONUTS, Saturday only, dozen .. 10c

WALLACE GROCERY
FREE DELIVERY

PHONE S4U

OPEN EVENINGS

�tn WHMM BAMm,
nmunitv

Mba EUaen ftulllvan ot Kahuna-1

Social Events and Per*
sonal Mention
KER 3. 1936
eldent of the
1 Aaaociatlon.
all others in
ol follow-up

the firzt Del­

ft

School

of the High
tdlo research
igivlng week
?d a letter of
«d the people
■r in the tele­
hen asked the
t radio station
nd If they re-

each girl filled

1 year French
en • to tbcli
i and iiave reiy Interesting
sxchanged beho two counleutra will play
ot lhe senior
iday afternoon
ec. 3 and 4.

de by students,
xnd food.
er will be held
school. Cards
ilah entertaln-

II game ot lhe
with Allegan

i* glee club!
n their annual

lave arrived.
HE exposition
lonal Livestock
&gt; Nov. 28 until

wax published
y the Jouroalpartnership is
that -an aatlascullnlty and
— Farnsworth

Don and Dwight Fisher and Wm
Kennedy spent Sunday in Detroit
Jacob Miller was home from Alma
college for the week and vacation.
MIm Maxine Wunderlich was
home from Balding over the week
end.
Blake Boylan and George Flngleton spent part of last week with
friends in Detroit.
Mrs. B- F. Cowles spent Saturday
and B uh day in Kalamazoo with
her daughter. MIm Frances Cowles.
Marsha) Harry Thompson. D R
Raed and Geo. carpenter spent the
week end in the north on a hunting
trip.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Henson of
Richland were in the city on Sat­
urday calling on friends and rela­
tives
Misses Stella Heath of Niles spent
from Wednesday till Sunday with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs George
Heath.
MU* Verda Zuachnltt of cass City
spent Thanksgiving at home with
her parents. Mr. and Mr* Wm.
Ztuchnltt.
Mrs F W. Stebbins. Mis. W. M.
Stebbins. Billy and Helen and MIm
JoAnne Finnic were tn Grand Rap­
ids Friday.
Thomas Kennedy left on Saturday
tor Los Angeles. Cal., where he has
accepted a position with an Insur­
ance agency.
Miss Eleanor Miller of Birming­
ham spent the Thanksgiving holi­
day with her parents. Mr. and Mrs
George Miller.
The Rev. and Mrs. Roy Houghton
ere gueets of her mother. Mrs. S
. Strong, ot
Clarksville for
Thanksgiving.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Deal and
Mrs. Anna Deal of Prairieville were
Thanksgiving guests ot Mr. and Mrs
Oscar Palmer
Mr*. D. L Christian and Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Lake were guests of
Miss Charlotte Lake of Lanslhg on
Thanksglvuig.
Mrs M J- Cross spent Thanks­
giving In Delton and attended the
wedding of MIm Marqulte Hen ton
and Ivan Smith.
Mrs. Nellie Conaway was tho
guest of her sister and husband. Mr.
and Mrs Will Fighter, of Grand
Ledge on Thanksgiving day.
Mr and Mrs. F. Earl Haas spent
Thanksgiving Diy with relatives in
Muskegon Heights and attended tho
wedding of Mr. Haas' sister.
Mrs. J W. Armbruster. Mrs. Al­
bert Dyer and son Kenl'.h spent
Thanksgiving In Kalamazoo with
Dr. and Mr*. Charles McIntyre.
Mrs. J. P. Evans and Mis* Dons
Evans of Grand Rapids spent from
Friday til) Wednesday with their
daughter and tIsler. Mrs F. Earl

MCDfBn g,

tbumdat.

SUB-DEB CLUB.
On November 18th. the Sub-Deb
soo, MUs MarforW Stabbins who
, pretty wedding was solemnised
attends the University of Michigan ,
Thanksgiving day at the home !elub was attended by seven memMr.
Mrs. iu
ton tn
the home ot Marcia Ironat Ann Arbor and Tom Stebbins of or
,
Mr. ana
and Mrs.
R- a.
Q. non
Henton
tn beT*
Grand Rapids were Thanksgiving Delton, when tbetr daughter. Mar- ^e. A
business meeting was
which
refreahmants
,quit*, wm united in marriage to Iheld after
gueate of Mr* Thomas BulUvan.
------------and
—- Ivan Smith of Delton in the pres- j
served.
Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Moorad
ipany
■ On November 23
the Bub-Deb
daughter Marton tn eomp
----- ~with enct of Bboul M guests.
ly of CatoA bower
of chrysanthemum*, 011115 n,etL*one Leonard's with
Floyd Moored and family
---------— |onned the decorative background «h« membership present, eight girls
donla spent a week In the
northern
part of lhe stole visiting Glen lor lh« rKmony u&gt;0 R. T. Dunn.- 'Tbl. wu our Rnt inrrtlnj with OUT
«P«Mor. Mrs Hazel Johnson,
Moored end family and hunting van sang. “I Love You Truly" acdees. They brought home one deer. companled by MIm Eloise Cable who 11 w“ decided that each gtrl will
Mrs Agnes Fisher and Don and
tL «ddtag mkrch Rev.
and give them
Dwight Fisher were guestt of her Ralph Batea performed lhe cere- mas dinner with
P1"11 toT ,a
father. B 6. Holly, of Woodland for mony and Master Jimmie Bales act- * «&gt;*■ w' *l,°
Thanksgiving. Other guests were ed as ring bearer. The bride chose Christmas dance. After the meetMr. and Mrs. Karl Johnson 1 Har­ a periwinkle blue velvet gown, all- [ ^g adjourned refreshmenu were
riet Fisher) and family ot Battle ver slippers, and a bouquet of Ophel- ■ »&lt;rved by the hcxUess.
!* "’.‘J!
I “REEORTERS 1"
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Batee and ur.'T^^axTnB^He'nton. aiunded 1| “REPORTERS PLAN" MEETING.
daughter Betty of Battle Creek, 81- h„
wore royal blue velvet and 1 Women member* of the Reporters
la* Sharpe of Climax and Mr. and carrUd iwiuraan rose* Rex Smith, 1 Plan are planning a luncheon at the
Mrs. D. H. Sharpe and son Phillip brother of the groom, performed the I‘ Parker House on Saturday Dee 5 a".
ST
B
^ata nf
of Sheriff . ..
ww one o'clock. This ch:b wm organized
nf thte cny'^r
rlf..
ottAafs
.__ -__ _
XT’’ J*y
Th“U’1 &lt;ur“0Wto*
^rem&lt;^t Mo7Xidln' .ct^nreXtoindUXMnei8XyS

um

8MITB—RENTON.

A Correction
In last week's paper an error wa
made tn the report of the meetin.'
of Hospital Guild No. 10. for whicl
we are sorry, but mistakes sometime
occur despite our efforts lo get cor
red information.
Guild No. 10 was entertained by
Mrs. George Coleman, instead o
Mrs. John Brass, and Mrs. John Ed
dy was the assistant hostess. Th
meeting was held on Monday. Nov

slS^S

MB. AND MRS. PHILLIPS
HONORED AT DINNER |
Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Phillis:
were the guests of honor at r
charming dinner given Friday eve
nlng by Dr. and Mrs R G. Finnic a 1
their home Sixteen guest* wer&gt;
present and for high score Ln con ,
tract prizes were won by Mrs. R
giving.
"S-and
Mra Robert Cook. Mr. ■ tunim vn*e
~ wx.iu vu* v« w&gt;u
W. Cook and Roy Cordes and secoru
Mr and Mra Robert Cook. Mr. gu^ts were E- Lawrence Carman of
high scores were held by Mrs Ro;
and Mrs. Hub4rl Cook. Mrs. A D. citveland; Mrs. M J Cross of HasCordes and R. W. Cook
Knlskem and Richard Cook, also tlngl. Mr
Mr, R H
of made by calling Mrs. Fred Btebbln*.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis T KnUkern and Naahville; Mr and Mr* Vem Dean, J Mrs E- J. Pratt or at the Parker HONORED GUESTS
son. Culver, of Evanston. Ill., and Albert Bommer. MUa Betty Dun- House.
FROM DAYTON. KY
MIm Marguerite Helmansperger of'nlng and Mias Margaret Welsh of
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Boltai
FAMILY PARTY.
Yprtlnntl
were dinner guests of 3^,,
Bernard
------u.ii.smith;
, Mr Mr. and
Mrs.Mrs.
rwyu
BU'iiri
en- en- were host and hostess to twent:
Floyd
Buskirk
anM XZ —— tl W *&lt;nf
■ .—. __j .■
n■
,ui
_____
judjp ana Mrs- R- R- MeFeex oi ,nd KtT
Mrs. Richard Johnson tertelned with a family dinner on gucsu at Thanksgiving dinner 1:
Charlotte on Saturday evening.
of Kilimnoo; W1U1* Hentou of Au- Thanksgiving day with the follow- honor ot Mr. and Mrs. B- U. Lando:
Mr. and Mrs. £&gt;oyd L- Rice enter- ^sU; and Mr and Mrs. Robert mg guests: Mr. and Mrs. Bert John- of Dayton. KVtalnMi -P?
tha ,fnllnwtna
truest* on
on gjxmahto
—___ -LI. of ,,,..1.1...
-- and...
.. .... and
°UowU’&lt; tunu
Hopkins.
son. Mr.
Mrs E*rl. Busktrk
Gursts from away were Mr. ant*
Thanksgiving day: Mr. ana Mrs,
Mr. and Mrs. Smith after return- i daughter. Mildred, and Mr
and Mrs Robert Gardner ot Niles am
Lou Walling and two daughters of
from B Wp m northern Michl- Mrs Arbur Bachelder of this city Mr. and Mra H. E. Whlttum o
Elate; Mrs. Clark Curtis ot Pe„U1 wke Uielr homo m
of DoWiln?
Charlotte. The others were loca'
watao; MiM Jean Whitlock of Ovid; , ton M Mr
Is associated with
guests.
Robert Wood of Owoswj; Mr. and [he R o Henton Funeral Home
MONDAY STUDY CLUB.
Mrs Forrrst ----------inks of Alma; Mr.. and LUU
and »n*e.
M„ ouuu, win
HONORED MRS. PHILLIPS.
w.u rU11
dmu be
« em«u.-; Members of the Monday Study
Mra Elmar Cook and son Clarence. p;oye&lt;j m the office of C- J. Barnum. Club met for a one o clock luncheon
Three tables of bridge were Ir
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Bcoll. Mr^and ■ aUpertntendent of the Delton school । at the home of Mrs. E J. Pratt on play on Tuesday at the 1:30 desser
Mra. Frank Leydorf and son. Emer. by nelton Corr.
1 West --------—' Mr* A H. Car­ bridge given by Mra. Forrest Lar.«
Grand street.
tnA Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Moore ond
! veth had charge of lhe program glv- complimentary to Mrs. Harold Phil
A COMPLETE
SURPRISE.
two sons. Richard and Thomas. aU I
l Ing a review
of the book.
-Oom Ups. Mrs Floyd Gaskell. Mrs. Ear'
of
Bannister.
.
-- ------------------Mr and Mrs. Laon Potu were with the Wind." by Margaret Coleman and Mrs. Herman Arold
----------------------------------------pleasantly surprised Saturday eve-, Mitchell.
were winners at contract.
NICELY LOCATED
I nlng. the occasion being their thlrtyfN 8T. PETERSBURG- ■ fourth weddihg anniversary.
Many Barry county people are' About thirty relatives were pre*acqualnted with Mr. and Mr». O. H., ent from Lansing. Grand Rapids.
rom. who conducted the We-Gu-1 Kalamazoo and local. AU enjoyed I
La- Lodge at West Gun lake. Mr 1 the evening with games, tap danc- 1
and Mrs. rom have gone to Florida ing and recitations.
for the winter arriving there BaturA mock wedding was performed ]
day. Nov 21- They write that they the bride and groom marching to I
had a lovely trip, no trouble and the altar to the strains of "Here
sunshine all lhe way Mrs Rom was comes lhe Bride," They were atnot feeling well so they travelled tended by the same bridesmaid and
slowly, but Is Improving now. They best man of thirty-four years ago.
have taken an apartment at 540 Mr. and Mrs. Julian Potu.
8th St. N. BL Petersburg. Fla,
A lovely luneh waa served by
where they expect to stay until their two daughters. Mrs. Helen
April 1st. Mr. Rom writes. "Il was England of Lansing and Mrs. Ruth
wonderful to spend our Thnnkagiv- Lewis ot Kalamazoo. The bride cut
tng Day amid sunshine and flowers lhe cake which wm prettily decoHas been about 70 to 76 all tho rated for the occasion.
Mr. and
time, but cool nighu. We crossed
“
■“ Mrs. Potto
‘ were
■ presented
—*
the new Davis causeway into St. F”h an Aladdin table lamp, as a
ON SALE — 8 DIAMOND
Petersburg. It is lovely beyond gift of love and esteem in which
ENGAGEMENT ENSEMBLE
words—21 miles across Tampa Bay they are held. All deported at a late
Have met many people from Michi­ hour, wishing them many more hap­
Roth the 3-dlamond eagagrmeal
gan. we miss our Hastings Banner py years together—One who was
ring and the 5-dlamond wedding
and would greatly appreciate your
band, carved by hand In solid
mailing It to us here."
white or yeU&lt;&gt;w-golA A real buy­
BENEFIT BRIDGE MONDAY.
ing treat .
S^Q
"Die
benefit
bridge
party
given
BRIDGE LUNCHEON.
Monday evening at lhe home of Dr.
Ml'* Sadi? Glasgow entertained
Mr. and Mrs. C. 0. Potts relumed al a charming luncheon Saturday and Mrs. R. O Finnic for Pennock
BuM.y from H.nuwond, indUrn. at her
„„ homo
„„„ In honor of Mrs Har„... । hospital by Hospital Guild No. 22
they &gt;pe»l Ttenkwlrtw »JU&gt; oW p. pMnip..
Thum. । was attended by 65 people, contract
their son and w.fa. Mr. and Mrs (i dav
.
.for .her
-----•­ 1 prizes were won by Mrs. W. M. Stebnew -------home —
In —
St. Louis.
blns. Mrs. C 8 Potto. Dillon Wol­
Richard Potu.
The sixteen guests were sealed at.
Regular price
I d OJO
Thanksgiving day guests of MLs small tables that were cantered verton of Middleville and Earl Cole­
•18.75—Special—
I
man; auction prises by Mrs. Ralph
Mabel Sisson were Mr and Mrs C. with chrysanthemums.
'
Letflef of Woodland and the door
M 8is*on nnd two children of Kal­
Honora for contract were won by nrtse b
Mrs.
clayton
Brandsutler-1
be
Mr*
Clavtnn
Rranrlstetter
1
amazoo also MUses Adah and Zella FY.nv a^aandAar°ileeL*1rwlie,^rM Out of U,u’n f°”:s lticluded
v—
~-m goes:s included Mrs
Odell of Hastings.
Frank Adair and a juesj- prise was , Leffler. ^j,
rm ^,
nV ienna»eteir
Mrs.
Frank
Kilpatrick »nH
and ।'
Miss Bertha Stickney of the presented lo Mrs.. Phillips.
1 Mrs. Karl Faul of Woodland; Mr.
yellow goU.
Morning Gloiy Shop spent Thanks­
and Mrs. Dillon Wolverton and Mr.
It’s guaranteed
giving and Uie week end with rel- ’
ELECTED TO SORORITY.
dependable —
stives in Adrian and Ann Arbor, re­ A Ml-vs Virginia Boyes, who is at-s and Mrs. T. D. French of Middleville
1 tending the Lansing Business Uni­ ' and Mrs. Donald Van Zll* of De­
turning Tuesday right
troit.
A»
all
the
prizes
and
refresh
­
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Heath. versity. has recently been elected to
ments
were
donated
a
substantial
Mr. and Mrs. Adelbert Heath and membership In Gamma Omlcron
Miss Stella Heath were Thanksgiv­ chapter of Alpha Iota, national sum was turned over to Uie hospital
ing guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray­ honorary business sorority. Members Tlie committee Included Mrs. Fin­
mond Gilbert (Margaret Heath) of arc selected by scholarship, char­ nic, ehairman. Mrs Orville Bayles.
Mrs. C. W. Dolan. Mrs. Roman
Muskegon.
acter and personality.
Feldpausch and Mrs. Robert O'Con­
nor
come. In cleverly designed enamel
DANCING PARTY AT CLUB.
fintvh. Beautifully boxed.
* *"
One ot the most enjoyable of the
Chriitmas Special
dancing parlies given for the junto:
members of lhe Hastings Country
' Club and their guests occurred la*t
Wednesday evening when forty
couples attended the dance at the
club house. The door prizes were
I won by Mbs Margret Barnett and
[ Horace Angell and Martin's orches­
tra played the program of dances
' Mr and Mrs. R. W. cook and Mr.
| and Mrs. j. q. Bristol were in
, charge of the party. Plans are un-

iiA ap{Mai£jil

MAN'S WATCH

ves
her!

GIFT
atFRANDSEN’S
Beginning Friday - Window
Night Open Till 9 o'clock

SHOWING OF CHRISTMAS
GIFTS ALL NEXT WEEK

GIFTS
Silk Hull — Gio,..

Lunch Cloths
Linens - Aprons - Slips

Loco Cloths
Pillow Coms

Robot — Kimonos
Sheets — Blankets
Bedspreads
Gowns — Pajamas
Silk Pajamas - Gowns

Donee

Tm and Hama Aprons
19c 25c 35c 50c

Sets — Snow

Suits and Sweaters

BABY GIFTS

M

BloeikaH -$1
Sweaters 69&lt; tw &gt;1.00

MEN'S SOCKS
SHE WILL WELCOME

Admiration Hosiery
IN HER XMAS STOCKING
Admiration—All Silk Host

59

75°

85' *1

Silk and Wool, Full Fashioned. 76c

Silk — Cqshmeru
Lisle — Rayon
19c —25c —35c

Men’s Silk Tiea
In fancy box—50c
Men’s Outing Pajamas
51.00

Rahbar Sbaeta

Bunfinge

Kimonos

Knitted Suits

UmbroHas
Silk fr Gloria $1.98
All Silk — $3.98

COATS

C

Ladies' Watch

•15

10 PC. TOILET SET

15
Weeks

ift for
make

Boyi

*gj‘

FREE!
•&gt; DEUVERIES
DAILY
3:00P. M

8:00 and 10:00 A. M

IE 2396

ORANGES
New Navels. Med. Size.

29‘d„

ILS
.79c
_25c
,48c
Quaker

ATS

19‘
..39c
&gt;s. 23c
.. 10c

ERY
EVENINGS

GRAPEFRUIT
Texas BeedlcAs

7

25‘

Idaho Pofatoei, 10 lbs. ...39c
Celery, Bunch 5c
Del Monte Salmon, 2 cans45c
Butter, per pound36c
Pork Loin Roast, rib or loin and, lb. 20c
Spare Ribs, par pound17c
Beef Kettle Roasts, per pound15c
PICNICS
Smoked Bhanklr.

Pork Sausage
Home Made

special entertainment and refresh­
ments will be furnished.

BIRTHDAY DINNER.
Mrs. Clara clarke was tlie guest
of honor on Thanksgiving Day at a
combined birthday and Thanksgiv­
ing dinner al her homo on East

flfth birthday and the Occasion was
a happy one. Those who attended
were Mr. and Mrs. caseins Clarke
and daughter of Grand Haven; Mr.
■ and Mn Burr Clarke of Holland.
Mr. and Mra. Clyde clarke and Rusisell Mott and family of Delton; Mr
■ and Mra. Morris Johncock of Hick­
ory Corners and Mr. and Mrs. Boyd
1 Clarke and Mr. and Mrs. Merle
Clarke Of Hastings
MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED.
Announeonvnt ot the marriage of
Miss Ottls Kai**!, daughter of Mr
and Mrs. Ogdeu Kaiser, and Emer­
son Royer on Friday. Nov. 20. wat
made at a family gathering al the
1 home of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Royer
last Wednesday evening. The cere­
mony was read by the Rev Harley
Townsand, pastor of the Brethren
church, at his homo in south Wood­
land. Mr. and Mrt. Royer will live
on Woodlawn Street. Detroit, where
Mr. Royer I# employed as an elec­
trictan for the Boyden-Cooper
Heating CO.
LUNCHEON AND BRIDGE.
' MT». Charles 8 Potu entertained
I sixteen (tuesls at a delightful lunch­
eon Tuesday al her home on BouUi
Park street. Mrs Frank C. Andrus.

ELDPAUSCH

F

■MARKET­

Phone ??72 Ilin Dehvrr
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN.

ler held the winning scores in con­
tract.
CLLB MEETS.
Hawthorne was host­
ile etub last Tuesday
her home on No
Ave. Winners at bridge
i were "Mrs. R. O Finnic and Mrs.
1 Herman Arold..

TEUCHRON
ELECTRIC CLOCKS
Make Perfect GtfU
One shown tn blue mfrroe
gtaaa 19.05. Other
Tek-cbroni______

SPECIAL EVANS
CASE AND LIGHTER

26 PIECES OF
FINE SILVER PLATE
In a beautiful tarulsb proof
chest. Priced ao low we

name. Only.

■5"

PUK ES IIEIHTED!

$8.98 - $12.50
Sport Coat
Fur Trimmed Coatsviwuiue. .1 $15.95

COCKTAIL SETS
Beautiful glramlng chrome.

Here's gwallty. Here's real
style. You'D expect to 30.76
pay twice as much—

Ct

•9

We cordially invite you to come in and look around. You will
not bo urged to buy. Store open Friday evening from 1 to 10
until Chrial ma*.

Literally Everything That’s New and Smart in L
to-date Dresses Reduced to-

• l*4«

«7«O

All Wool Sport Skirts

C. B. HODGES
DEPENDABLE JEWELERS

HASTINGS. MICH.

EXCLUSIVE B
HASTINGS. MICH

TELIPHi

#080

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 1. 1936

PAGE SIX

■CTC’CI'C'C'C’C’C’C’CiC’e’C’C'C’C'C’C’C'C’C’C'C’d'C’C'Cl

„ HOSPITAL HERE TO j
WATERS CLOTHES SHOP 1 _ HAVE Mi
A

Christinas Opening
A Store Full of

Gifts Men Appreciate
Hundreds anti
Hundreds of
Luxurious

(Continued from page |. Sec 1&gt;

emlng board and a meeting is being
arranged for this week between a
committee from the staff and a
committee from the
Woman..
A Board
A
The doctors arc also very anxious
£• , to have a clinical laboratory In*3 stalled at the bo.pitnl which would
A l"' of great assistance In the diagJs nosis of disease- Many of these
changes will, of ncccMgity. be *|Ow
A bi materializing as finance’ will play
Jf an Important part In the program.
The public may wonder why the-e
A requirements are so essential but it
Jw b clearly evident that the patient
c-' at the hospital will benefit and any
change that will assbt the physician
.»
and nurse In lhe core of the sick
A
A
Ja
9

Ties %

Mia* Bratrlc-i Blossom. superin­
tendent si th bo pi:al. I- co-operat­
ing to lhe fullest extent with the
doctors of the county In r.-etlng
these ne (I. and the np-mbtn of
both the Men’s and Women's beards
.
are anxious to give wh
’’

SCHOOLS ORGANIZE.
Biriday School workers of the
noriiMi*'-. district met at the Wood­
land U li church. Sunday. Nov22. anil was well attend'd Rev
Fitch ol the Woodland Methodist
church KdctreasetJ the group on Uie
subject, "Leadership Training.
After the address lhe following
officers were elected

Silks from many lands in reps, crepes,
satins, moires. Hand made for wear
and silk lined for beauty.

Rriiber
Wolcott.
Secv-Ttvas —
Paul Smith; primary Sup: - Mr*
Reuben Wolcott. Young p.-opk-'.s
Supt - A H Trestn.il. Jr . Adult
Supt—Ray
Teeter;
Lx-acleruap
Training—Rev pitch. Vacation Bi­
ble School— Hilda Baits

Wc Urge Early Selection In Christmas
Boxes

SUCCESSFUL HUNTERS.
Additional successful deer hunt­
ers are Stephen Johnson. Fred Attcn. Fay Allerding. Wq^ P Parker.
Warren Carter. George Cheney.
Clarence Schultz. Harry Brown
Mike Beckwith Roy TalTes. Keith
Daniels and Miss Carrie Moyer.

Visit
Our Boys
Department
The most complete g.ft
selection we hove ever

enroll at hb camp or of accepting a
dixharge and returning at govern- X
=l
u, hl. pl,.-, o.
.X At the &lt;Theatre

ENROLLMENT OF
13648480

Application* for Uie January en- X
rollment may be placed at Uie Barry I
County Emergency Welfare Relief1
.
.
office, court house. Hastings.
Robert soung in -Sworn Enemy."
-—
I The contrast of young romance
1. Sec D
1
'
-----------and crafty gangsterdom b vividly
Hastings To Meet Old Rival. ““I* smorous outdoor (•«&gt;, «nd
presented In the film 'Swam En­
to guard against communicable dis­
emy.” The story concerns two young
Allegan In First
brother*, born and raised in Uie
poses. Those in camp will receive
Contest
seething heart of a great city. On*
free medical care and hospital care
of them b ruthlessly killed because
Hastings High school will play an li needed. Ip case of accident in the
he "knows too much" and Uie other
old rival in Its first game of the line of duly, enrollees will come un-1 The southeast district of lhe .•v-cars avenge Florence Rice is co­
season when It meets Allegan there der the United States compensation Barry county Council of Religious starred with Robert Young.
T
Education met at the Dowling
Friday night. Dec. 4. in a game cer­ |BW
Work to be done includes fore-! 1 Methodist church Sunday afternoon.
tain to be full u! thr.lls for the specStarring Gladys George. Arline
tatorx Both teams seem to be well improvement and protection. trail' N“vt 29 The meeting was.ln charge
matched m speed and size. Just making, soil crodon control, flood of lhe president of the district. Mr... Judge. John Howard. Dudley Digwhat system Allegan may use this control, landscaping and develop- George Stanford. Tlie music was ges. Harry Carry and Isabel Jewell.
year will remain a mystery until th® ment of recreational areas and many directed by A. Trestrail. teacher of Barry Benefield's story u well as lhe
game, since their Coach Muma Is other similar projects. Work Is under music in the Woodland High school, spirit it fully retained tn this pic­
the supervision of forestry, park. | Mrs Amy Bower conducted Die wor- ture. The story of two lonely, desert­
a new mentor.
liastings'U anxious to win its Ini­ and conservation representatives of, ’hip and spoke ou "Leadership ed children and their faith In Car­
tial game as it will help to even up the federal and state government.' i Training." The theme of the wor- rie arouse Uie protective maternal
the single defeat by a Class B Except in emergencies, working j *hlp period was 'The Master Teach- feeling of a woman of many ' Indis­
' ' “er
Mildred rta.nn
Gaskill .and
Lila Jean
r "' «'«•*&lt;&lt;
na en.
i..„ cretions ’ and she accepts the re­
school in football this fall and will hours are forty each week.
install confident - in the team.
In return for this work each p. Pierce rendered a piano duet and sponsibility of their care.
AUejn.i. u.vs lhe only team last rolln- receives maintenance and a Ali^e Griffin, county president, as- j
, -Reunion" with Jean Heiwholt, Ro­
year to defeat Hastings by mare basic monthly allowance of $30. 0! slsted with lhe organization.
chelle Hudson. Dorothy Pete rum.
The officers for the ensuing year
than four points in any game dur­ this amount he Is expected lo allot
Tlie dramatic Ivome-comlng of the
ing the regular schedule and tourna­ a major proportion (usually $25• are as follows: l»res.—Mrs. Geo
.Country Doctor's 3.000 grown-up
Stanford.
Hastings;
Vlce-Pres.
—
to his dependent relatives, 'rhe re­
ment play.
•
babies"
including
inamocr
is
nata
to
tne
enrouer
in
Mrs.
Albert
Neubert.
Bedford;
Sec- the Dionne
— Quins.
-•——•
Next Friday. D-c II. Charlotte mainder h paid
the enrollee
uuimiu Haynes.
nutiiri, Hasrias- .
r ;
--------- .
Mr». Ronald
comes to Hastings with a record of cash at camp and is sufficient t« reUry—na&gt;a.
Trou»m-MU.
P«h. live
U&gt;e Quin a&gt; father
UU.er-.n4
—»»&lt;■- »Helen Orey.
— comedy nab.
—and
one victory’ in basket ball and one in cover his necessary incidentl exBedford
the
Sheriff,
who
wnn
ordered
orneTea
Sextuple;]
toot bull’over Hastings in two years
Superintendents-Children's Di­ from lhe stork.
which is the same as Hastings' rec­
Camp life consists of a balanced
ord over them for the same period program of work and leisure Um. vision—Miss Ixma Bryant, Hastings.
“The Big Broadcast of 1937."
The oldtlme rivalry between the two activities. For those who wish sup­ R. 4; Young people* Div—Dr. L.
A dozen big radio entertainers In
.. Wr-.l. Battle creek. R. 3; Adult Di­ addition to a strong ilne-up of
teams is sttli keen and an Interest­ plementary Instruction in subject
ing battle should result
ol practical value, there is a worth- ; vhlan—Rev. W. E Exncr. Bedford; screen and stage talent has been
____________
I while educational program. Recrra- ; Leadership Training—Rev swemm. assembled by Paramount to make
death qF MRS.
I lion and sport* are likewise well or- | Hastings;
Administration — Rev this great picture. With Jack Benny.
'
ganlzcd. There are opportunities for Wooton. Nash ville; Daily Vacation George Bums and Grade Allen. Bob
advancenumt to positions ot leader- . Bible School—Mrs Robert GarrLion. Bums. Martha Raye. Benny Good­
pa.’.-u d away on Sunday at her home, ship with corresponding increases tn | 15 Wentworth court. Battle Crees, man and his Swing Orchestra, and
—--------536 8 Montgomery St after an ili- pay status to $36 to $45 per month i
Leopold Stokowski and hb Sym­
i.ea ot eleven years. She had but Camps are under the JurlsdicUon ot '
phony Orchestra heading the list ot
recently returned Iran Henderson­ army officers but no military train­
radio headliners and Shirley Roas,
ville N C wmrre spe hod been for Ing b given.
Ray Milland and others representing
When
a
man
enrolls
he
!»
expect
­
treatment pn» is survived by her
Hollywood. It is an all-star altraced
to
stay
In
camp
al
least
six
I
Although
there
was
not
such
a
I
husband. a daughter. Jean Mary,
Hon whose individual performers
three step daughters. Mrs Verdi months. Otherwise he causes the large crowd al our party and dance,1 have followings rmming into mil­
Reynolds and MLxscs Maude mid government expense tor clothing, all had a good time and voted It n lions.
Sopha Wallace, a brother. Floyd A. transportation, and other Items and I success,
• • •
Gaskill, and other relatives. An does not fulfill hb part of the enAT THE BARRY.
our next regular meeting Is this!
obituary sketch will appear in next rollment agreement. In case some
Jane Withers in "Pepper."
। extraordinary circumstance arises. I Thursday night when plaps will be
week's i»sue
This picture promises to be th]
Funeral services were held on . or If a man receives an offer of per- , discussed for our Christmas trees. I greatest hit in the mischievous miss’
Tuesday afternoon at the Methodist inanent employment, he may be re- . other important matters will abo succession of triumphs. Irvin 8
church with burial in Striker ceme-1, leased before Ute end of his six 1 be considered.
Cobb and Slim Summerville, two of
। months' terfti. After an enrollee hn_-1
...
filmland s most popular funsters, are
! remained for a full term ol service : Next Sunday will be our annual featured with Jane and the cast also
j he is given the opportunity to re- statewide pow wow al the Hotel includes Dean Jagger. Muriel Rob­
BANNER WANT ADVA. EAV
_________________________ _________ Olds in Lansing. Il U expected the ert. Ivan Ix-bedcff. Maurice Cass and
I officers of Leo A Miller Post as well Romaine Callender
| as a delegation of members will at-1
tend from Hastings.
ACCIDENT NEAR
LOCKSHORE FARMS.
j
PYTHIAN FAMILY NIGHT.
The county highway lending from
The next regular Pythian family Prairieville to a connection with
| night will be.held at the Pythian M-43 north of Richland was the
hall. Monday evening. Dec. fl Pot scene of an accident Thursday aft­
' hick supper to be served at 6 :30. ernoon. when Ben Fledoreck of
" Bring table service, buttered rolls kabmazoo and Ralph Norwood of
1 and one other dish of food Coin- Delton received cuts and bruises
| mitte In charge. Mr. and Mra. Frank wh&lt;n their two cars collided on the
Kelley. Mr. and Mrs. O M. Brower highway near lhe Lockshore Furms
j Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Clement. Mr ea*t of Cressey It appears that Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. Woodruff. Mr. and Norwood lost control of his car on
Mrs James Gower, Mr and Mrs. an icy turn. Arthur Miller of
Reuben Oerllnger and Mr. and Mr&gt;. Wayne, who was tiding with Nor­
Milo DeVries
wood. alio received cuts. Three
Edmonds orchestra will furnish other persons In the two cars'
music
escaped with bruises.

-

BASKETBALL SEASON
OPENS FRIDAY NIGHT (Continued from page

Southeast District
Elects Officers

r. F. IF. New,

COLD MAN WINTER
fSONHISWAY!!

hod. Here you will find

ties.
scarfs.
toques,
shirts, sweaters, mack­
inaws. knickers, longies.

gloves, mitts,

Sporting Items

handker­

chiefs. belts, suspender^

&gt;«

—All put in special gift
packages.

■

■

Give Iiiiii

By Mack

50

$*&gt;.00

■ List 110 50)

fILAM
Tt1EATR|=
Hasting*, Michigan • Telephone* 2244-2557 HL—

98

WEEK OF DECEMBER 6

TOT BIKE
Streamlined, steel
frame, en- I 4 .71
aroei finish
•

INVADER BATTERIES

00

Black Board

j

\VIU&gt; beads
QQ
and alphabet— Wv

utiro.tati.

A

g Give Sportswear

51 PLATE. HEAVY
RUBBER CASE, Each.—
30 PLATE 6 VOLT,

’10
’2

•at., ptrlod —XNBTAXLED OEE

INSTALLED FREE!

S498

Ford T
$O.
exch.—
Ford A
$*|.
and Cher. O

.50

SKI SUITS-JACKETS AND PANTS.
Colorful ploid jackets with plain col­
ored pants. Beautiful colorings, 12-20
Sy.50

Ford

Streamline,

RUBBERS

ALCOHOL

SUPERWEAR
SPARK PLUGS

5Q.00

WHEE!

GUARANTEED
25.000 MILES
Buy now. save

—

SNOW SUIT

'Selling Quality Keep, V, Biuy'

Michigan

Thermostat*

85:P

| SWORN ENEMY
• Robert Young and Florence Rice.

25

QQ
3O

WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY

98

Valiant n. Word for Carrie
Cladyi George

Arline Judge

ADULTS 25c

Harry Carey

CHILDREN 10c

SPECIAL FOR

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
DOIFBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

mcoH*

RlC

49c

ju»t what I wanted, a

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP
Ruling.

SAND TOY

Made by V. 8. Rubber
Co. ALL SIZES $4.19
PAIR—
I

$J .65

rub-

2”

SNOW SHOVEL

la

Visit this Family Gift Store. Open Fri­
day and Saturday night of this week.

MEN'S

^BROADCAST
BARGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT

Works with
sand —
Chemistry
Outfit—

GUARANTEED
GENERATORS

SUNDAY AND MONDAY

• Burns and Allen and all star cast.

Velocipede

Other* $3.95 »o $12.95

SNO SUITS for little tots-one and 2piece with caps and suspenders, 4-10

FURNITURE

Mechanical Train
7J(“ _
MASCOT ROYAL ROYAL MANIFOLD | M
HEATER
”
"4-'
DELUXE (List »12.25&gt;
(List $7.95)

Fine broadcloths, sateens
and crepes, silk trimmed
Individually boxed.

Plenty of plain white
Sanforised shrunk. Box­
ed free

$f.50

302 No. Broadway

PIANOS

rood. Guarantee.!
heal your car.

PAJAMAS

"Mellow Check*"
"Dusty Tongs"
"Crystal Rayes’*

BON TAFFEE

Built like higher priced

There is goy color
in the new

These new fabrics are on
display—

$J.OO

GENUINE "HERRICK" WALNUT—Only $25.00

HEATERS

for Christmas
High styles, firm, fine
fabrics in the seasons
newest patterns.

the

GENUINE HOBART W. CABLE—Only $32.95

Save $4.00 to $6.00
ROYAL DELUXE HOT WATER

MACK SHIRTS

(PEAL LIFETIME
CHRISTMAS GIFT

A

■aWI W

Emergency
CHAINS

18

Straight from the Shoulder

49c

• Ralph Bellamy • Katherine locks

USE OUR CHRISTMAS
LAY AWAY PLAN

. j:

YOUR MONEY BACK WITH A SMILE IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED

The BENGAL TIGER
• Barton McLane and June Travis
EVENING PRICES—Adults Mr; Children 10c.
Saturday afternoon IS dents to 1:00 P. M.

ADULTS—

�THE HABTIXOg BANKER, TflUBSDAT. DECEMBER J, UM
—'
i
eatre

Hied bcsause
nd the other
f Rice 1$ ro­
tting.

orge. Arllne
Dudley Dig:$abel Jewell.
tn this pic&gt;nely. descrlaith in carIve maternal
many "India­
ppts the relersholt. Itc­
hy Peterson,
omlng ot the
0 grown-up
tionne Quinn,
e inseparable
futlirr—and
d Sextuple:*

of 1037."
lertAlner.* In
line-up ut
it him been
mt to make
Jack Benny,
le Allen. Bob
Jenny Goodchrr.Ua. and
his 8ymig the list of
Shirley Roas,
representing

performer*
ig into mil-

s to be ths
iiievous miss'
* Irvin 8
rvlllc. two of
funsters, are
the cast also
Muriel RobIce Coss and

IE FARMS,
leading from
.ection with
nd was the
nuHday aftledoreck of
Norwood of
and bruises
llded on lhe
shore Farms
ars that Mr.
I ills car on
Miller of
{ with Nqr- '
:uts. Three
two cars

ETIME
SIFT
.95
5.00

'

.

.

1

.

-

'

”

11 Mr. and Mr*. Harry Waters and1 r- 1 i
| 1 family and Russell Zerbe! visited, g

Social Events and Personal Mention .

।

i—rr^ru:mr-ri
.

. I—
— -I. . and his debating
Albert
Becker
team went to* Kalamazoo Monday
.
,,
TOecU. t^l* ThursMrs. John Noble* spent Thanks- ( Miss Florence Watkins was home night to attend the debate between ,
*hen PIin5
Lhe
Hastings visitor Monday.
giving with her mother at WhJU- from Wyandotte from Wednesday Kalamazoo and Muskegon High1 r.*1 ,
school teams. Muskegon winning. 1
J?rty wU1,b*
A
i till SundayMr. and Mr*. David Water* spent hall.
t n„v.. report of the recent convention at
Mrs. Rose Stone is spending two [ Harold Swanson of Big Rapids I
Rev. Don Qury of Watertown. weeks with relative* in Bancroft and spent Friday with Mr. and Mr*. J.
Flint.
”
H. -------------Swanson,
Mr. and Mr*. Roy Anthony and
pUni
. prowculn. lor
Wiaconaln wax in lhe city Monday.
children and Don Boyes of Bagi-! Christmas bazaar and dinner on
Emil Tyden left Saturday on a
Miss Catherine- Loftus spent
13
two week*' bualna** trip to Cali­ Thanksgiving al her home near Saranac Monday night attending an ! naw and MLm Grace Hart of Laii- I
sing.
.
‘
.
fornia.
Freeport.
MLm Suzanne Bumncr was home j Be sure to remember the donationi
Mr*. Roy c. Fuller and Miss Let­
Mrs. Herbert Bishop Is spending
Mr*. Hattie Parker of Lowell
tie narn spent Friday In Grand lhe week with her son, Orley. and called on Mr*. Mary Cooper on from Olivet college for lhe Thanks-; of jam. jelly, conserve, etc. for the
Rapid*.
family in Holland.
g vacation. On Wednesday eve- Otter Lake Billet Bring your gift*
Tuesday afternoon
I
She attended the concert by' to Uie bazaar or tonight to tho
am a. R. A. Groos and son. Rich­
Mrs. George SmiUi visited her sis­
Mr*. Minnie McDonald has re­
ard. spent Friday and Saturday in ter. Mrs. Louis DeYoung, of Grand­
Hampton In Kalamazoo with i meeting.
।
turned from a three weeks' visit in
Evanston.
ville on Sunday of last week.
a group of Olivet college students.'
------------ - * • *----------------Coldwater with relative*.
KEECH—MATTHEWS.
Mis* Lucille Basse it left Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Eben Pennock and
Donald
Boyes of Saginaw. Virgin­
Mrs. Emerson stauffi-r visited her
Hasting* frlena* of Mrs. Nellie
for YpallanU where *he has ac­ Marion Louise of Big Rapids were
In
Boyes
of
Lansing,
Mr.
nnd
Mrs.
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lacey, of
Matthews alii be interested to
cepted a position.
here from Friday till Sunday.
near Alto on Sunday and Monday Winston Boyes of Hastings and Mrs learn of her marriage on Thurs­
Mr. and Mr*. Alonzo Trim were
Mr. and Mra. Dan Lewis spent
Frank
Edmond* returned on Della yule of Freeport were Thanks­ day, ••venimi at seven-thiry o'clock
Sunday guests of relatives in Nash­ Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs
Monday from Detroit and Mr* Ed­ giving guests of Mr and Mrs. 1 L to CLirint" Frederick Keech. 86 F.
ville and Bellevue.
Frank Huizcnga at Campau lake.
monds will come later In the week Boyes. Virginia remained for the Kingman Ar. Battle creek. The
Mr. and Mr*.' C. W- Dolan and
Ml** Rose DeFoe was a Thanks­
Mis* Ada Michael of Detroit was week end.
ceremony w.is read by lhe Rev H
family were Thanksgiving guest* of giving guest of her parents. Mr.
the guest of Ml** Nonna Michael
Dr. and Mrs. G- L- Lockwood. Dr J Fenn:?;. pj,.u&gt;.’ of the English
Grand Rapid* relative*.
and Mrs M. H. DcPOe. in Charlotte
Miss Evelyn Johnson was home
Mrs. Marne Monee and Mrs for Thanksgiving and the week end and Mrs. F. Carrolhers, Dr. John Lutheran church nt the home they
Mrs. James Silsbee and Mrs. Wooton. Dr R. B Harkness. Dr had
,..u prepared ,for
ur occupancy m
At-.
from South Haven over the week Richards Jacobs spent Sunday with
Frederick Palmer spent Thanksgiv­ Edward Lown; of Delton and Dr tending the bride and groom were
end and for Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Everett Pct tin gill of Grand
ing with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Delnay Neal McLachlln of Vermontvilii ms daughter and husband. Mr and
Mr. and Mr*. Jerry Andru* were ----------Rapids.
of Grand Rapids.
leave Saturday for New York where Mrv ptt„ Naming. 240 Post Ave.
Thanksgiving guest* of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wixom of
Mr. and Mrs Glenn Lee and Mrs. the men will attend dental clinics Ba'.tk Creek. Others present al the
Mr. and Mr*. D. colllge, in Battle South ----------■*-J—
Bend
were —
Thanksgiving
Harold Huber (Gladys Lee, of Kal­
Recent guests of Mrs. Jacob Wey- service were the groom's mother,
Creek.
guest* of Mr. and Mrs. George B
amazoo were Bunday guest* of Dr ermnn of Shultz were Mrs. Frank Mrv C|arft wilder, and a grandson.
Mr. and Mr*. Wesley Hall spent Green.
and
Mrs. B- A. perry
Kurr. Miss Mabel Bennett and Mrs ,
Fahling
Thanksgiving In Grand Rapids a*
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Prentice had
r.
Joaephlnc
Chase
of
Grand
Earl
—
. Payne and daughter -.
ot .....
Has-!
,
1UC
nie ot
bride
,uc wwore
O!c H a *nwn
sour oiol ouve
olive
lhe guests of Mr. and Mra. Richard as Thanksgiving guest* their son
and wife. mt. anti mm. * Hubert Rapid* and Bud-cha*a of Douolt • ting* who called on Friday; Bundav crepe ana Mrs Fihllna'* dn-ts wa*
Johnson.
were
Thanksgiving
guest*
of
Mr.
Tlinnkwivlrur awita nt Mr visitors were Mr. and Mrs. William light green crepe
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Strange Prentice, of Kalamazoo.
rtr.1Tnf
nn
V
,rt
.nA
Mr
.nH
Mr.
g
and Mr*. Arthur Chase.
Crakes of Covert and Mr. and Mrs
leave soon by automobile lo visit i
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mead enter­
Dr. and Mrs. Hnrry Imus and George Crakes of Hastings.
served, with yellow chrysanthcrelative* in Kentucky until after tained hl* brother, Ciiarllu Mead
mums decorating Uie table and the
Christman.
and wife and F. Alien ot Castleton daughter*, Bally and Billy, of Ionia
were guest* of Mr. and Mr*. J. M
CHRISTMAS PARTY.
various room*.
Mr. and Mr*. J. O. Brtriol and non. Center for Thanksgiving.
Next Tuesday evening. Dec. 8. ' Mr. Keech, a former Hasting*
Mrs. Russell Toad spent Thanks; Townaend on Thursday evening.
gtephen. ware Thanksgiving guc*Ls
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clarence
Robinson
Mr*
Fred
Johnson
will
be
the
hostresident, ls
is en rnipioJCV
employee of the
ef Mr. Bristol'* mother. Mrs. Gent- giving Day with her husband at the
and Mr. and Mrs Paul Ward left cm for lhe Christmas party of the,, po^um CG.
co. Mr.
Mr ....d
and M-*
Mr* Keech
Sweet. at Banfield.
Ingham Co Sanllorlum hi Lansing
Tuesday by automobile with trailer Banner class of the Methodist Sun- , arc at -home lo their friends at 66
Mr*. Grace Bullard had as guesu and reports he is improving.'
attached
to
spend
the
winter
in
day
school
at
her
home.
501
E
1
E Kligman. Best wishes are ex­
Chicago on business. While there Florida.
Green St. Tlie usual supper will be tended.
D. Comstock and Mr and Mrs. Louis they met Mr. and Mrs. Sam Homer
served at 6:30. each member being
(Grace Zagelmeler)
of Houghton.
Herndon of Chicago.
(urace
4Me.me.er, o,
nougnum.
who were
were also
also there
there on a
a business
business J**” Carrie Mojer and George eivllcged to bring a guest; also• TO BROADCAST
Mrs. Phyllte Reynolds of Ann Ar- who
.. - on
,
.
eh.n.v returner!
trnm
Ing food and table service. Those'
.
TODAY OVER XVKZO.
bor wu* the guest of Mr. and Mrs trip Ah came to Hasting* Sunday
Roy Cordes for Thanksgiving and | afternoon, surprising Mr. and Mrs 'a l*° wec*s &gt;&gt;unung trip in Mack- who did not bring their canned
Mis* Bernice Springer of Hwfruit tor Clark Memorial Home to Ungs Is one of four Western Slate
the balance of lhe aeek.
; Zagelmeler. leaving Monday for 1
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Johnson and their homes.
, AI McCall and Miss Arlene Loter- the last meeting are requested to' Teachers College students who will
chtldren were Sunday guests of’ Fifteen members of the Allegan |
B.,'p‘ds UI1‘
,l ,c bring it Tuesday night This is the broadcast over WKZO. Kalamazoo
Mrs. Johnson's mother. Mrs. John Rotary Club were here Monday to ।'^aync KioR tiandog party at the time. also, for the Christmas offer­ today. Thursday. December 3 from
deastrom. of croton Dam.
i participate in an inter-city meet-.
1,1 Grand nap.A- ing and ten cent gift* are to be ex­ 1 15 to J .30. when the Country Life
changed
Ulen donated to the club of Western State will present
C. W Clarkz of Grnnd Rapids wax Ing in the interest* of the crippled
.
ki Uie city on Monday. Mr. and Mr;:, children s movement. The visitor.-1 ,.ML vR“,h 8Pu 1,trr' °,f C0l’rt,Bn‘1- Christmas baskets sent out by the a program entitled Youth Goes NaClarke and Mr. and Mr*. Mai ca^- included. Tom Stafford. President J"'*
i'fr„parcn.U Sunday school. Mrs. Warren Roush1 Uonal. ThU will be one of the reg­
adv
fnr Florioa.
Flnrlna
Ij nf
Tart Nnhlrlean
pdy Il-Av.,
leave nw.
Dec. (0
10 for
of Allrt-nn
Allegan Rntnrv
Rotary. Jack
Nahlckan Mr f,r,‘ Mrs- " *-. bnulters. Uy Is In charge of the serving of lhe ular broadcasts given during Westhome__________________
for Thanksgiving. - She
supper and Miss Elizabeth Henry
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Jones of । Secretary. Floyd Holland. Rev. Clyde coming______
em's radio hour presented regularly
during the college year on Tuesday*
Wyandotte were guest* Bf her par- Wilcox. Harold Preston. Vcrn Rey- came Wednesday night and returned , heads Uie program committee.
---------------- *—
rnt-s. Mr and .Mr*. J. E. Mattoon, I nolds. Ned Killian. John Axe. Henry Sunday.
and Fridays fiorn 1.15 to 1.30 over
BIRTHDAY
SURPRISEMIm
Ruth
Farr
and
Miss
Audra
tor lhe Thanksgiving holiday.
I Axe. John Scarlett. Judge Tucker.
A group of relatives dropped tn on WKZO Others who «H1 participate
Densmore
spent
the
week
end
in
Mr. and Mr*. Ross Bldelman and Rep. Arthur Odell. Vern Olcott, Dr
John Baum on Sunday, with we.l। in lhe December 3 broadcast are
Norma ajwnt Thanksgiving day , Elmer Osmun and Sid Wise, all of Detroit. Miss Farr visited Uie A E filled baskets, to remind him It was. Russell Shedd. Leonard Vader and
Wingrave's and .MIm Densmore
with relative* In Grand Rapids 1 Allegan.
his birthday All had a happy ellw­, Lyman Cady.
Nonna remaining unUI Sunday.
Mrs. Adelaide Norton Joy of was the guest nt Uie Edward Hou- and Mr. Baum was remembered
CIVIC VLAVERS INFOKMAI.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Rou«h and Brushton. N- Y-. is visiting her
Mr and Mrs Hnrry Bnrnum of with some useful gifts and bes',
THURSDAY EVENING.
little son of
Kalamazoo spent I cousin. Mrs. Julia Potter, and other
gi'-lng guest willies for many more happy birth­
Tlie winter informal of the Hasthanksgiving day with the former's i relatives and friends. She was a Lansing were T)
days.
cf
her
parents.
Mr
and
Mrs
A
J
tings Civic Players association is beparent*. Mr. and Mrs, Warren former Hasting* resident
Larsen.
Mr.
Larsens
sister.
Mrs.
Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. George Tolhurst re­
Ing planned 1 for the evening of
J. F. F. CLUB.
Mr*. J. W. Armbruster and Mrs ' turned on Sunday from Marshall Park Thomar. of B&lt; iduig was aho
Mrs Bert Yarger entertained the Tiiursday.-JDg. 10. a', the Parish
Alb&lt; rt Dyer and son visited the for-1 where they visited Mr. nnd Mrs. a recent visitor.
members of the J. F. F. Club Wed­ House. The committee In charge
Mr. and Mrs Wm, H. Olney spent nesday at her home st Rogers Cor­ is planning entertainment of a dijmar’s piolhrr. Mrs. Flora Coble, of txon Tolhurst nnd daughter* over
Thanksgiving day with Mr
and ners. Bridge was enjoyed during fcrent type including vaudoviUc
Alvcrlon,’ Ohio, on Saturday and , Tluniugiving and the week end.
Sunday.
I Mr. and Mr*. Robert O'Brien and Mrs. Cleo Rlsbrldgrr and family of the afternoon.
skit* by local and outside talent.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bulling and' daughter Nancy of Mount Pleasant Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mrs. frank OiMr. and Mrs. RoWe Bulling attend-' npcinl Thankrgiving and the week ncr and Mr and Mrs Robert Bliss
ed the burial service for George ' end at the home of Mrs. O'Brien'* of Coopersville were also present.
Dr and Mrs c 8 McIntyre leave
Herrington in Woodland on Mon- parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
tills morning (Thursday! for Clear­
day afternoon.
' Baker.
Mr. and Mr*. C- W. Thoma* of. Guest* of Mr. and Mrs. Ross water. Fia. They will be In Clear­
Kalamazoo visited Mr*. Clarence1 Bldelman nnd Norma on Sunday water until after the holidays and
Grohe Saturday evening. They abo were Delbert Buchanan. Mrs. A then expect to travel through Flori­
called on Mr. and Mrs Floyd Thom-. Keech. Mias Donna Keech. Leo Tut- da for the remainder of the winter.
Mr. and Mrs Harold J. Foster.
as and family.
with relatives in Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. L E Foster. Mias
Mr. and Mrs&lt; Walter C Paulh;' R*piAaand son Richard of Chicago spent 'I Mr and Mrs Walter Eaton. Mr. Bcalrice cobum. T N. Knopf and
Thanksgiving day and tho week end i\uid Mrs. Keith Daniel*. Mr. and, F Earl Ha xs. Jr. returned TUcsevening from Chicago, where
With Mr*. Paulin's parents. Mr. and ' Mrs. Ed. Johncock and Homer Smith 'day
'
Mrs Herbert calkins
) have relumed from their hunting they attended lhe International
Mr. and MTa. Roy Ta flee have re- trip in Ontonagon with two buck.' Livestock Show
Richard Polcy leaves Saturday for
turned Rom a hunting trip in the and one bear.
Huron Forest. It was Mr Taffee'sJ Visitors at the home of Mr. and Sliver Springs. Fla. where he will
flrat trip and he wa* delighted to I Mr* J D Zsgelmeier for Thank*- work' with Rom Allen, the noted
bring home a buck. They were ac- I giving were Mr
and Mrs. Bert herpetologist. Mr. Poiey will give
companled by Mr. and Mrs. Francis 1 Zagelmeler of Grand Rapids After lectures at Louisville. Ky.. and othDooley of Grand* Rapids.
| dinner Bert and his family left for &gt; cr cilie* on lhe way and wlll arrive
in Florida about Dec. 27.
Kenneth Biddle of Grand Rap­
Ids spent Thanksgiving and the re­
, malnder of the week with hl* molh. er. Mr*. Newton Benner. Other
‘ guest* on Thanksgiving were Mr.
। and Mrs. Forrest WoodIn and
daughter of Grand Rapids.
| Mr. and Mrs. a * E. Johnson.
Stophen. Agnes and Aben. Jr., and
Mr. and Mrs. James Radford. Dons
and Jimmy returned Sunday from
| a hunting trip near Ludington.
: Htcphen was the lucky member of
I lhe party bringing homo his buck
Friday, Dec. 4
Saturday, Dec, 5
I Mrs. Mary James accompanied1
|

om Enemy."
mg romance
tn is vividly
Sworn Enis two young
ised in lhe

'

WIN FIRST FLACK.
Up at Traverse City the Chamber
of Commerce sponsors a Christmas
Window Night evary year when

B

I

nesdajr night. Nov. 25. It Is lntere*t-

&gt;♦♦♦♦.

at the community hall in the Fuller
Bldg. An orchestra from Charlotte
wlll furnish music for dancing from

McCrecry's news stand won the
blue ribbon for that classification.
The judges were member* of the
Business and Professional Women'*
Club. The Banner and the other
friends of Mr. and Mr*. McCreery
congratulate them upon being re­
jected a* winner*.

and Mrs. T. N. Knopf. Mr. and Mr*.
Edwin Johncock and Mr. and Mr*.
NIGHT HAWK PARTY.
Tnpi rwte
Foote voiutttnc
comprise U
um
m rxanmitoommltMr. and Mrs. Gay Norton enter- ■ ue In charge.
tained the Night Hawk* Saturday
A group of friend* started the
night, Nov. 21. A lovely Thanksglv- Cheer Up dance* th 1K4 and they
Ing dinner was served st aaven have steadily grown tn number* and,
o'clock. All enjoyed playing cards Interest Uwugh there are no due*. ।
unUI a late hour. First prises were no officer* nor a regular organisewon by Florence V. Wood and Hugh ’ tlon of any kind—quite an unusual
Myers. The second went to Ethel condition of affairs, it seems.
.Shultz and. Wilford Cole. It was a
-----------------1
very pleajant evening Next party at
OBSERVE SILVER WEDDING.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiilord Colp's on Dec., Mrs. 8. C- Brock knd Mrs. George
5.
I Robinson entertained at a family »

g

BIG

LITTLE

*3’5 $5.°°
$g.5O — Sg.50

2r
r"
|
;

8

v — HtyUah — Correctly Tailored

i

Suit* and Overcoat*
for winter

PAJAMAS

M350

Broadcloth and Flannel

*32’°

(5-“

$1

C^rf.1

Jacket*

Pocketbook*
Cigarrite Fonrbco.

*2'75

$3*0

25

v,

’1500

Week-end

Shoving Sets, popular brands $1.00

Store

PARKER HOUSE

Tailored Robes

Toilet Sets 50c to $5.00

77te

12:30 to 2:30 *. M.
« to 730
M.

50 -75£-$1 M-,150

With Us!

Bill Folds 49c to $3.50

t.
f.

SILK TIES

CHRISTMAS WANTS

BARGAINS AT

hiMA.M.ta*F.M.
DINNB*
J-.SO M YiM
M.
SUNDAY OINHtU

Beautiful Wool And

&gt;z&gt;£!«t€&lt;
Check Your

Perfume bottles and atomixers
50c to $2.00

SPECIA

it

Compacts 50c to $3.00

FURE

In

Committee Plant
Untuual Dancnt

;!

Give Shirt*

Stationery 29c to $1.00

$£•50

Com*

$20“

$g-50

.00

Cutex Sets $1.00 to $3.75

ist.

SUGAR
’ SBCSk1

fane Granulated

10 “s 49c
ce.

ie
□r«y

er ;
:ke

R :
IVIS

BISQUICK
Large Box
MONARCH TEA, gr. or bl., &lt;/2 lb.
Bran Flakes, Miller's 40^, 3 bxs.
SUPER SUDS
3 boxes
BUTTER, Middleville
lb.
DELMAIZ NIBLETS
2 can*
BEEF STEAK, Swiss or sirloin lb.
BACON, Dickory brand Half lb.
BEEF ROASTS
lb.

31c
33c
25c
25c
35c
25c
19c
18c
17c

HINMAN’S
Hastings

PHONE 2491

Michigan

Forrest James, to their home in ।
■ Manistee Sunday and will visit
there for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs
James spent Thanksgiving with her j
parents, Mr. and Mrs Ernest Erway,
Mra. R. B. Harkness leaves Fn- j
day for New York City, where she '
i wlll spend two weeks. Shu will then .
go to Waltham. M»m, where she will
visit Mr. and Mrs. Robert Love and
lo Lincoln where she will bo the ,
guest of Mrs. R B. Harkness. She
will return to Hastings about the !
' middle of January.
| Mra. Eleanor Strlcklen entertained ’
' on Thanksgiving, her son, Don Hos­
mer, and family ot Charlotte; Mr. •
and Mrs. Lemuel Edmonds and
wife. ,MLm Dorothy Edmonds and !
Miss Alice Fisher of Woodland; :
Carl Moon and family and Dr. Or-1.
ville Mater and family of Castleton; '1
and Frank Holland and wife of |
Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Daye Waters abler- 1
tained for Thanksving dinner the .1
following guests, Mr. and Mr*. Ira j ।
Chaffee and sons of Quimby; Mr 1
and Mrs. Ed. Chaffee and Mr. and I
Mrs. Ard Waters of Mason; Mr
and Mrs. Manley Sherman. Mr. and ',
Mr*. Linden Norris and Mr. and ■
Mrs. Harry McClurkin of Middleville |
and Mr. and Mr*. K-’C. Lewis of ,
। Portland.
i Mr. and Mrs Warren Moore and i |
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Denny were al ,
Houghton lake over the week end of 1
Nov. 22 and attended lhe "Hunters'1'
Ball" Saturday. Tim Doolittle and ,
His Boys from WJR. Detroit, fur-11
nlshed dance music for a crowd of I
about two hundred hunter* and 11
their guests. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin |1
McCain from Battle Creek. Mr. and 11
Mra. Mike Allcrding and Mr. and ।;
Mrs. Cecil Cappon aL'o attended the
parly. Mrs. Cappon was the only 11

on. .

p.nr .0.

‘

Perfumes 35c to $2.00

Glove*

Tobacco Pouches 79c to $1.00

r*

Cigars 5c and 10c

Christmas Box Candy
GILBERT'S

SCHRAFFT’S

BUNTES

N

*150..*5"
Suspenders

so—Tr-’i^0

Fancy Sock*

Complete Stock

50c to $2-

25c to $1.00
Electric Shaver

A Box for Every Occasion.

For ChrbUn**

lighter

also.

Try

the

Christmas cards. Package wrappings
Cards from 2 for 5c to 25c each.

sj.oo

*15°°

Fancy papers - Seals - Tags - Ribbons

All new stock with latest designs by
the Gibson Art Company.

Do Your Christmas Shopping At

DEErVC WALGREEN SYSTEM
IsEEU DRUGSTORE
Hastings

Phone 2241

Michigan

S
HASTINGS

BAIRD’S

Clothing and Shoos for Men and Boyt

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 3. 1936

PAOJtFTCH IT

ORDER FPS PUBLICATION

OBITUARY.

INSURANCE

7'£J c
J3J*-’

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

ONI CENT A WORD. NO AD VER
TiaKMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c

WILLIAM I). CAMPBELL
JASON E. McELWAIN
Phone UM. NatL Bank Bld*

I OR St.l&lt; V|. f

Par

. 1

j The Hastings Banner

fj r 1 p f' LT P Q
Clara Ann Cutler was bom in j
L*OC/J\l^n
Hastings August 20. 1855 and lived I

in Hasting* and Barry county all
her life excel* the last five years
which she spent with Iter braUicr
in Bronson. She was married to
Isaac Sponabie in Hastings. May 30
1871. To lilts union was born one
daughter who preceded tur mother
in death seven years ago Mr. 8poli­
able died 17 year* ago. Mr*. Bponable passed awny suddenly Nov 28
JEFFERSON ST UNITED BRETHREN 1938 aged 81 years, three months.
, tight day* at the home ot Rev Cut­
CHURCH.
ler of Bronson She leaves to mourn
her loss two sisters. Mrs. Cora Althouse of Vermontville and Mrs. Jen­
nie Whitlow ot Clio, her brother Rev
Cutler of Bronson and many neph­
ews and nieces. Funeral services
were field Monday, Nov 30 at 2
oclock at lhe Baptist church-with
Rev Adcock offleiattng. Burial m
Valley Home cemetery.

IN BAHRY COUNTY. HIX MONTHS. SO*

OUTRIDE BAHRY COUNTY. ONE YEAR

NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Organizations

I'.'H HA 1.1
FIRST MET1’O"1BT EPISCOPAL
CHURCH.

AUCTIONEER
DEWEY REED

Dr. Eugene B. Elliott. State.Supt
of Public Instruction, will Addrev,
the members of Womens Club Fri­
day afternoon at 2 30 oclock at the
Masonic hall.

CARDS of THANKS

«3« Exit CUntou St. HASTINGS

FOR NMtVICE
CARD OP THANKS—

»»• Umb*

iZl-'T

I Our Service
I

Hire . I

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
(SCIENTIST

JOB I'lt NTINO

Townyend plan meeting nt Maccabee hall Wednesday night Dec 9
at 7:30. Spec'al entertainment fea­
tures are to be given and a splendid
speaker is being arranged tor us
You will wantio gel ail the Utett
Townsend news.

FOR

cnvr.cn or (ion.

CITIZENS MUTUAL

*te St

Oaodytar BaUdlng

l.utbau.l

MAUS
UNITED PRET — nE’r CHURCH
IN CHRIST.
Rev Edward Oacibt* Tutor
Baltimore Church

HIGHEST PRICES
Paid for Dead Stock
Yoar Dead Animals Are Worth
DOLLARS. To assure yourself of
getting lhe BEST PRICES. eaU
MR. FLOYD DENNY.
Phone Hasting* 2539—We pay the
phone charges!

McCiUun Cbatca

OBITUARY.
Nelson H Healy, son of Huron
and Miranda Healy, was bom tn
Rutland Tap . July 29. 1862 He was
PILGRIM 'O'
married to Ida L Wing on April
14. 1886 Hur death occurred on
April 11. 1915 He had lived in Kalimazoo. St Joyenh Co. northern
Minnesota and yBlack Duck. Minn .
working at tils \trade as tinsmith
While in Minnesota he took up a
government homestead. In 1922 he
returned to Barry Co. living near
CHURCH or THE UNITED BRETHREN hi* brother. Willis, at whose horn™
he dfd on Nov 1. 1033. Bal'd 74
IX CHRIST.
Woodland Circuit E B OrltTla D. D
years. 3 months and 3 days Surviv-

"AKRCU" MOD*
MECHAUO-fORM T
pl-

and nephews and

many

HIDES — PELTS — FURS
Having worked up a good trade in
the fur business I feel it will re­
quire two days a week to accommo­
date the trappers from whom I am
now buying fur. For belter prices
and a. square dcul bring them on
Wednesdays anti Saturdays to 120
8. Michigan Ave. First house south
of Trio Cafe.

JOHN CARROW
Ottumwa,

MONEY FOR
CHRISTMAS

HARVEY BABCOCK

your Christmas plant are
going to require EXTRA
CASH, see us. Now is a good
lime to arrange for a clean
slate for tlie new year by
getting those debts in otu
place.

A
be
3.
A

Pythian Sisters—Do not forget
pot luck supper nnd regular meet­
ing of Pythian Sliters Tuesday cve-

Trappers Attention!

Choice quality.

HovpitA11 guild No. 18 will meet nt
Lean Leg ton
hall. Dec 10
She Amei.„..
........
for their' annual Christmas party
Pot lucg dinner nt 1 o'clock. Each
member Is requested to bring fruit
for the hospital.
The regular meeting of the Leo
MtUer post and auxiliary will
held Tiiursday evening. Dec
promptly at 8 oclock at the O.
R hall

SALE

Hereford cattle. 200 yearling steer*.

The Women's Recreation class will
meet in the high school gymnasium
Wednesday. Dec 9 at 7.30 sharp.

To PROTECT You Con.t.nl
Pay Promptly
Adjust Fairly

FOR WORK OR

The B E. Rutland W- C- T- U will
meet Wednesday afternoon. Dec 9
with Mrs Gerald Smith A Chrtolma 1 program will be given.

NEW BUS
TO

CHICAGO
Every day at 9:40 o.m.

WANTED
CATTLE,

FIDELITY
CORPORATION

TER FOR SALE.

Of Michigan

PHONE 3909

nd Floor Hastings National
Bank Bide. Phone 2307.

HERMAN

One Way Fare 52.75

HIDES • PELTS - FURS

ANNOUNCEMENT
Hie WOLVERINE

friends

INSURANCE

CO. of LANSING. MICHI­

GAN Is represented In Barry County by the following agents:

Hastings

E. R. Lawrence &amp; Son
coats

r.rnvr, c urn

or ciibut

The Prescription Drug Store

*90 50

DON TAFFEE

MICinOAN

■ABTIXQ8

The Elwood Agency

BRAND NEW 2 PC. LIV­
ING ROOM
SUITES, only—

FIRST UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
GRANGE PROGRAMS

Pianos.. Rugs .Furniture

- Hastings

Garner C. Hampton

SPECIAL!

ADJUSTAULE CCNitR
No Loq Strop*

FELDPAUSCH

Ar. Chicago 2:45 P. M.

doo.

Spon-o Rutbo* Ped*

hogs, veal

BEEF BY THE QUAR­

Floyd Shelp

IIRM
your hunter and trapper friend*.

ARCHIE

-

-

Middleville

Prairieville

-

When you need AUTO INSURANCE see one of these agent*.

TOBIAS

Un* block north H**Ur.&lt;* Naticu

WELCOME ORANGE

Farmers. Attention!
Ship EVERY TUESDAY

RECEIVES ARM INJURY.
Thursday
morning Mrs
Dan
Green ot Woodland sustained an
injured arm when tlie car driven
by her husband was hit by another
driven by Horace Curtis who was

(AKE DePRTESTRR

BUYING

BAPTIST CHURCH

1937 Will be a Big Year for Power Farm
Equipment Dealers

road.
.vrHie t^r injury is painful It
not considered serious.

dealei* in Hasting* or town* in lhe *urroundin&lt; territory. Men
Interested in an opportunity lo enter the Farm Equipment
Business for themwlvrs have that opportunity now. Some

Since radios have been installed
in automobiles preachers reach
more people than ever before

explained by company representative. Write Farm, care Ban

Zinc, Lead Cr Batteries
GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

It appears that the great occiden­
tal powers can neither understand

Scrap Iron, Brass,

Copper. Aluminum,

Phone US1

Hasting*

Flowers

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHUWIB

in

HORSE SALE
SATURDAY, DEC. 5
HASTINGS CIRCUIT METHODIST

A’Little FORESIGHT TODAY Mi
Heap VISION TOMORROW—

HASTINGS MARKETS

SEE

Boy mare, 3 yrs. old, wt. 1550 lbs.

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and
SEE BETTER!
139 W STATE ST

| Krr*

1:30 P. M. of the home of Morfin Tinkler in Hastings

Bay horse, 2 yrs old, wt. 1500 lbs.
&lt;The above team are own brother and sister, well
matched and perfect.)

’•&gt;» ••»*

JHIH.K FOB PUBLICATION

HASTINGS . Batter. 33 He poBod.

Brown mare 5 yrs. old, wt. 1400, with foal.
Gray more 9 yrs. old, wt. 1300. with foal.

JERRY ANDRUS

FREE METHODIST CHURCH.
Colfax JtlMt

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

Brown mare 3 yrs. old, wt. 1200, with foal.

Season
We carry n complete stock of seasonable Howers at
nil titties, ready for immediate delivery. Chrysanthe­
mums are in full bluum, in a large assortment of
rolors and sues to suite every occasion. Also any
other flowers you may desire, ready to be made up lo
suite you.
Remember the cemetery
lot. A wreath will add a

touch of beauty that will
last the winter through.
We have a variety of ever­

Sorrel mare 8 yrt. old, wt. 1200, with foal.

greens in various shapes

Bay mare. 7 yrs. old, wt. 1100, with foal.

and sires

Bay horse 5 yrs. old, wt. 1400.

2 colts, each 5 months old.

£££ COLDS

000

FEVER
Hr.&lt; d.»

Pead*—Beu 11 Price*

Middling*. &gt;2.20

L*i.

•:

Representative somebody-or-O'.her up in Washington suggests cut­
ting all the bunk out of the Congresalonal Record. Why be mealy -!
mouthed? If you want the thing to |
। stop publication, say 30 outright.
(

Grade cow 3 yrs. old, Jersey and Guernsey, due De­
cember 7th.

MARTIN TINKLER and WIFE

CLYDE WILCOX, The .Florist
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN

TELEPHONE 2530

.Member Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association

�s Banner

THURSDAY, DEC. 3, 1936

;

|

THE HASTINGS BANNER

SECTION T

CM'q

ninnilllTrn Hinn
klU Hlllr I HAH
LIlUUUil I L I IlnliU

I regular wlld-and-woolly. wide-open I bright orange colored sand with the UUnM
pi ||D
I homes within the reach of more
OUTVUT.
[town
town,
probably more
more so
so than
t..— any
—. red mountains in lhe background. | ”UrnC’’ 0 bUUD
people, and after all houses are
- Probacy
In tinthe country. It had
iiad Occasionally a few of Hie huge tree-1
Carroll county. Ilitoota.
I[other
other town hi
ENJOYS MEETING
u&gt; “*• m. nu to look upon.
quite a boom during lhe coiutruc- like cacti could be
. Many people mutt reduce prin­
| Hon of Boulder Dam. and has more
to specific formulae, so here
By JANE CAMERON
At New Home ciples
saloon* and gambling joints to the
are your rules: First—Create a plan to Michigan with his mo
square foot than any place In tixe where until we reached Zion Pnrk.j
Of Mr. And Mrs.
which will make the relationship of a small boy and hat Uved
!
world.
However
it
ht
,
ha* some fine Ii which is a veritable Garden of Eden
the rooms suit present day way* of
' Man or devil? Charle* Vance:
Wallace Osborn
!
&lt; Continued from uage 1. Bee. 11 I restaurant*, and we enjoyed lhe «n&lt;!
and nt
of •rlilrli
which vein
you will
will hose
hear l.i.r
Isler.
, living, facilitate efficient housekeep- marriage lo Mina Mlnsey Marah t.
I Millar, as you roast in Hades or
"Architects and Designer*
of Lng and paxmil an economical use 1U2 and to this union four chlldran
,---------- - ------------------ -- ------------------------ l meal* here a* much if not more than
Hubert cook.
(hover In your spirit world. I sup- ]
lame*' was ...
tne -iioject
. . tor.
• Uie
of materials. Second—Permit the wrre bom, one daughter dying jn In­
Jumping all over *nd doing every- i any place on our trip.
. pose you chuckle In high glee at thing but drive (he pump. H wu*, After breakfast we packed up and
program of the Ha.&gt;Hiigs Women'si exterior treatment to be dictated by fancy. surviving ore the widow,
I tlie widespread Utter hate you fortunate that w- found it. u.* we;drove on to Boulder City which L, REVIVAL SERVICES AT
Club Friday, November 20. al the■ the plan with little or no regard tiiree children, Alva Kenyon ot
&lt;h»ve'caused in Toronto. You took did. a* thl* country isn't bie*wd with 1 really beautiful, as every house, store
JEFFERSON ST. CHURCH bratitlful new home ol Mr. and Mr.*.. fur pre-conceived dreams as to its Bellevue. Mrs. Amy Bonneville of
Salting Polllic* Away
t the finest thing on earth and com- roadside aprlnga and rippling brooks' ami building L* less than five year.
Wallace Osborn on W. Walnut St.. form. Third—Use materials eco- Shultz and Mrs. Adah Mlinar of
AS VEGAS N MA few mcrclalixed it. put it in a class!
MiM Campbell, art teacher in ourr nomically.
________ eliminate decorative fea- Kalamazoo, eight'grandchildren, two
like wfc have In Micht'iian. where you old arid there are actually lawn* Guilford Casselman To Have
AS \ LUAS. N. M. A lew wUh
production; I have
local schools, give a most informs- , tores unrelated lo necessity and rely half-brothers, a half-aUlcr. Frank
can cool your motor down mosi
■* weeks ago everybody on iu-ard that human.* in dire poverty anywhere. Just finding whal was the and tree* around the houses. The
Charge
Of
Music
Each
live talk on the history of. archi- --------upon texture
---- ----------and
J "•*
color
’------of
*--------material*
•-*- Hallock of Delton. Will Hallock and
street.* are wide, well paved and I
the train I'm traveling on was would go to extreme lengths to ob- matter however dldn t end bur trou­
lecture from the very beginning to together with a logical arrangement Rose Hallock of Shultz, and many
wind around through lhe hills in­
Evening
the present day. The speaker used of mass and fenestration to give lhe nieces and nephews. He wm a datalking politics. Today every.
»ul jour Bu,rk Derby bles. Back In Pasadena H would stead of being laid out in the usual
Guilford CBwelman. whose rare w
,rtf|m4V„ n
,tuc, M
.„w .....
•
t .
t0’tes “•* ‘be prin-s. The silly crea- have meant about a five minute Job checkerboard fashion.
stereopticon
.slides
to 3)
show
th? house a pleasing appearance. Do Uils voted husband, a loving father and
nody nearly
---------musical ability, both as a singer and C11V(.S of prehistoric man and Uie and you will-have built a modern kind neighbor, always ready lo help
. is talking
.. loot.
, lure who •Is ----ahead- ■In -the
race--------Is no lo put on a new pulley; but Ui lhe
Tlie dam. which is six mile* east instrumet.talLst ha* won so much । ||,rnilual development of home, house. Do this and you will
-balk ”
- ! mother In the first place and her little garage In Barstow. It was a
Exceptions noted thus
111 have all in need. He will be greatly missed
of Bouluer City, was begun In 1931
Is I."'
nq father. They have
: fart
,• husband
------ - —
—-;nc«n.
treat mr
for wicyn
them *&gt;»
to even nev
see na Lancum
Lincoln and .1* now completed nearly two praise and admiration Irom the through the ag«*. Pillar* and arches built a house to live tn.
people of Hailing*. 1* coming here developed by lhe EgypUons and
. .. feature of the after1. A middle aged lady talking
,,’a 1 Cminda ofler.* for jel atone having any spare pails tor
A surprise
t
,homemade candy
symptom*. It seem* *he hn* had '!e ।
w l!’n?nOit 01 ***Ven
o'"- We had to wall over an hour years ahead of schedule. The drive again December 7 Thl* lime he I j{t)iruilis whose designs are used’ex- ‘noon was l..
the
nract cMIv averythlng exceot lock-1
chUd
by
'or lhe mechanic lo gel back from to the dam rile Is all down hill, comes to assist Rev R A- Houghton [ 1(lively today on the interior and made and served
served-.«/
'?by Mrs. Abcn ' al Shultz. Rev Seward Walton of­
liw And •* for operation*—well*’ re,’®r,.elr
Mr,' K'n,iy would
|Unch and nnLsh the cor he wtQ( winding around and atound until in the eViUigelL*tlc service.* which | exterior of many of the old world Jdhnson. chairman for the day. At, ficiating. Burial at Brush Ridge
l’T
nt* murt
, probably have the sleeping-room | working on before he could rtmo* finally It come* Into view. Here we will be held at the Jefferson Bl cathedraL*.
.■
; the conclusion of Lhe program. Mrs? cemetery.
her whole life must----------------------J yermln gold-plated if she won the । Ult pump Irorn our *. He didn't have found a parking space on n ledge United Brethren church beginning I wulloce Osborn spoke on present Osborn very graciously invited Uie
.... ,r___________
He didn't have about a hundred feet wide On a level
have been an open
iialf-mllllon.
. another r-..t__
u.. —
.. fit. „
dem architecture.
Fatal m Auroaamteal Doom
. any or
or mO
moaem
arcnncciurc. Many
aituiy ;.women
women to
w Inspect
uispcci her
ncr modern
mouern home.
name.
pulley .that
would
and- with Lhe top of lhe dam. with a wall Dec. fl and continuing at least two'^y
book. I gather she
I o! today's finest and most conserva- Judge and Mrs McPeek of Char­
Astronomical domM are palnto4
- - 11 JI had
if
IlHU not
IIM. suggested
U boring
MU. Illg Uie
HIV along the edge to keep you from
— archllecta
------------------— to*._»
never had a secret
Mr. Casselman will have charge; live
are-----turning
Mod- |0Ue wcre out-of-unTj guests.
I Wish they'd mark the day after I old one out and making a bushing
white lo minimize the increaao In
toppling of! Into the river gorge, of the song service each evening erne. Why? Simply because modeme
[Thanksgiving
calendar. You'' . _a
“ ~for It. 1 really believe
•
•• -would have
w off
- lhe
-------------------------------he
temperature
in the daytime.
with at least three
j feel kind of logey and lhe lurk's sent a postcard lo Detroit lo order over seven hundred feel straight be- and will also present special insuu- furnishes a betier tool with which,
OBITUARY.
I' chiiuh
doesn't look
I to design houses in which to live to-i
eha.uls doesn't
look very
verv appetizing
nnnrtirln-r a
* new
new one
one and
and we
we would
would have
hove had
had ! l”k ^nuniber’ol rtctun^andTthcn mental number*.
doctor*.
James Franklin Furlong, lhe
Don't
fail
to
iiear
him
HL*
youthI
day.
They
assume
rightly
that
if
the
next
lo
lhe
youngest
child
of
John
2. A
gentleman
you dfcoratf 11 W«ounu&gt;
H,r1‘ndn‘ have C0Ilunued on arrow the top of ihe
ful enthusiasm L* contagious. Learn' fundamentals are right, the result mid Mary Furlong, was bom In
get it eaten up.
any lathe or loob for doing this Job.; d
lU&gt;pping at a number of point.
connected with the
Architecturally Darke Co . Ohio. Dec. IB. 1877 and
...
'but we did locate a fellow In town.- ’ .
"--------- --------- "------ from him the secret of his cheerful I will be pleasbig
movies talking mov| thl* means that THE PLAN IS THE passed away at his home In Castlei ’ Saw a well-dressed lady sneaking , who had a lathe In hL* home work-] house*, etc . and then continued on optimism.
tea. In an eighteenSunday evening. Docember C. | saME Thu.*, the modernist perfects ton township Nov. 19. 1938. having
| into a rummage sale in Hastings I ‘hop. and we finally got the Job across to the Arizona side to view
hour shift
I recently. That's no disgrace, lady. ■
»nd itarled out about five the huge spillway*. We drove on Rev. Henry Adk-r will bring the his plan—he bring* lo bear Ilia reached lhe age of 58 years, 11
3. Another gentle­
message and on Monday and Tues- , knowledge of all the newer and months and 4 days. Hls parents and
1 o'clock.
man talking self.
Irv|B 8. Cobb j Abe Lincoln wore made-over panu.
...
&gt; o,&gt; ..
.1
the „,
mountain
we, |.day evenings. Dec 7 and 8. the me..- better materials and methods, but family moved from Ohio to Wood­
’
-----— ..—•---------------------. pari wav
, Wh.n .,
.ur«
I .. j
„ up
‘Wr(U
vl„, where
o, lb
We can tell that, up
sage will be delivered by Mis* he first studie* lhe needs of hls land when Frank was two years
«, dldn J fed «&gt; b.d .bent th. d„
„„„
, Q, u„ hu
to now. he I* Just browsing around I Whatever
became of Everett,
'Marian Moored.
Il clients —
-• —
— •
and
perfects a plan suitable old. -----------On Dec.—18.•—
1900.■ he was united
Uy.
M
IM
M&gt;WM
BUl
jtowtun.
Ial[
,
„
u
„
wm
the edge* of this fascinating topic. "Uni®- the character of two decades
Each evening during the cam-, to those needs. He deals with first tn marriage to Laura Warner. To
M * •*.»« “» .'»•! u,.„ j would Jud«. U&gt;. water I...
By tomorrow we expect him lo get 8|{o cnrtoon strip?
palgn for .souls an Inspiring tnes- principle*—lie has always done so mis union four sons were born:
nlnu. .nd would luv. U-n irrrlbk. rUc„
sage (Will be given either by Rev. if he is a good architect, but he Charles of Vermontville. Clarence
tn UbbuoL,
tutntu,.
Houghton or on assistant.
finds here
:—-------------------' - a new
freedom. He—ex- of Nashville. Walter of Lake Odes­
4. An elderly gentleman talking
the historical room at the court- WM an unusually Interesting drive
aiwut o fool each day_ They werEvAraone I* cordially Invited to pand* ano breathes more freely and
"* sa and Roy of South Bend. Ind. He
steadily. He hn* been going since : houw.
-------------"7F7
*”?*.'in 1' WB3 57 J7
unuauoiiy unerestuig unve. j testing Hie turbines on the west side
wo left Lo* Angclei. We don't know ,ou,e lie*
,lcs a
ft xnuii
f,nu*1 h0*- wrat&gt;n«l
**™PP«I ta
| as we had some L
more of California's'
- realize.* how much lhe older styles accepted the call of tlie Master 24
attend these services.
of
the
river,
the
exhaust
water
from
exactly what bls subject Is. He has I
n
urTt, “.’^unusual weather They told u» In;
1 have always cramped and stifled years ago. The comforts of his
not said vet
’ wtt 1
eft to the | Barstow that It seldom rains tn that &gt; them shooting out in five huge
him. Now he gives no thought lo family were always uppermost in
OBITUARY.
' - - I county by the late Major Matthew I cOUInjy more than twice a year: but'! streams for hundreds of feet to the
Bertha Mai- Sledge was born ui exteriors He know* that If the plan his mind. He Is preceded In death
pl',,'r"' ,B wr Jjf' ,eEturer. collector । W(. urove Uirough a driving rain.. other ride of the canyon.
Oakland Co.. Michigan. April 25. Is right and the materials consist­ by his parents, four slaters and two
Praising Grand Canyon .
soldier nt
of IH.
the ,-lvn
Civil w.r
war wlf)d flnd thluld(,r!ltor(n ncBrly ljalf ,
I ulld Union «Jdl.r
It would be difficult to describe 1873. When but a small child she ent with It. that he need not worry brothers. Surviving are the widow,
QCOOTING across Arizona I was Nobody knows what Is In the box ,
tCT^th^dewV^And’ whaX* a [ the dam and probably useless, us moved with her parents to Carlton over appearances. Simplicity is his
four sons, seven grandchildren, one
W moved to weave into this a com- , for written in Ink on the outride different place it U when soaked most of you have either seen news Twp Her entire life has been spent keynote. He knows that lhe exterior sister. Mrs. Rosa Kimmel of Lake
plete description of lhe Grand Can- is this inacripHon; "Do not tear ofl down! The dusty, brick-red color of [ reels or other photographs of It in and around Hostings where she I will emerge os on adequate expres- Odessa, and four brothers; William
yon. But mercy stayed my hand. In- । thl* wrapper until
18. ---1961.
lllP landscape iinuivuiuuvj,
immediately uiikul
bright-* | However pictures cannot convey any had many friends and relatives. Al­ slon of a plan Ideally suited to the u*
— April
‘
: | wir
of rircpun.
Freeport. tiurve
Harve ui
of nasnvuic.
Nashville.
'
i
•
tiu*
inmJi
iinnl
»
r»orv
nf
rhe
nivil
...
■
..
____
_
.
..
&lt;
stead, I have decided lo send to all' the 100th ar.
innlvtrsary
------------ 1 of the Civil, cned
1SX1 up lu
t0 Blmwu
a]most «
a CT
carmine,
nnmr. onu
and idea of its huge sire or what on un- ways of a sunny, pleasant nature1' needs of his client.
Calvin and Edward of Woodland. . ,t
iave ourthqr-|
curios
thor-jt ..
....... as
.. though
।
deserving applicant* souvenir post- war." We have our curiosity
al tvunj^s
seemed
most [ tier taking it was lo construct such she overcame life's difficulties andI
To create with simplicity is exclt-! "I know not what the future hath
Remember when you euuad the
card* showing view* of the canyon. ' otjkhly aroused and would surely । of |f1(. landscape wu washing along a massive piece of work In the bot- her first thoughts were always for Uig pioneering and It Is true art.
Of marvel or surprise
” ncross thc roatl
J. ,l raJns here so[ [ tom of a straight-walled canyon the comforts of others, especially Through it at last tiie average Assured alone that life and death
This will give the general Idea. It like
J**® to be present at the opening of !Ior
'dum ole furnace last year?
। nearly n thousand feet deep. To
American may
possess a home,------prac- ------------------------,
Don't lose your soul by repeatin’
Hls mercy underlies.
look* just like lhe postcards, only the inyslerlous Utile box. Must pul seldom that they do not con.*ider it I start with, they had to build huge old people having cared for severalI --------------------that down hi our date book.
| worthwhUe
bU|ld brldg„ or culin
their
declining
years,
She
passed
.
tlcal
and
suitable
and
beautiful
—
And
so.
beside
the
silent
sea.
larger.
this winter. Buy your coal from
I veru., uut
u..« u.p, Ur Ue-' cableways across the gorge and every away Nov. 21. 193C. after an Illness 1beautiful
-----‘
------------------“
1
because
II
Is
suitable.
• • ’
verla, but simply make dip* or deI wall lhe muffled oar.
There's one Ihirtg about the Grand
Smith Bros. At Velte and see tbe
We've Just been rejoicing because I twesslons
pressions In
in the
lhe rood
road to allow fur
for man. every machine and every bit of of about four month,*. She leaves Novelty and worth are not synony­ No harm from Him can come to me
Canyon—long after ever, other nat­ the front |&gt;age of our
difference.
dally paper L*; drainage. This desert country is far material used In its construction had to mourn one brother Clyde Btedge--------mous. —
but —
without
--------------the typical
-----------Amer------On ocean or on shore."
ural wonder ha* been desecrated purged of politics when here come* [ from level, and consists of eroded |,o 1x1 carried out and lowered from of Irving Twp. and several nieces lean spirit of openmlndedne.u towith architectural doodads nnd the tao college professors trying lo [ mountain* and. as Hie rain does not i
cftblc .wayjj' the.
and nephews.
; ward the novel we could not have
scribbled name* of Individuals eliminate "onion odor'' and raising soak Into the rocky soil, you can I which can handle a two hundred
The names of Jewish months ere:
had our wonderful scientific ad­
whose signatures would look all a goal for their experiments. What imagine that these dips soon become 110,1 load- We saw u,E,n Pl£k up b
vances In the. twentieth century.
-Tishri. 2—Ch ji van. 3— Kislev.
FUNERAL SERVICE.
right on the register of any dollar- next?
Funeral services for Mrs. Beryl So with our attitude toward the new
i raging torrents of red water We I
• • •
| never will forget the first one we | ‘track on ‘the rlin
~ and lower
~~ " It' Murphy, who died u week ago Mon­ in architecture. The American re­
around eight hundred feet, selling day nlgh|. were held Friday morn­ quitemerit of the novel Is only that
sort of out of place when smeared
Officials of Montgomery Ward re- came onto Hutt had water rushing
over one of creation's masterpieces, port a gross sales volume for Octo-! through It. We were driving along । It down on tracks leading into the ing at Coats'Orove with lhe Rev. F it be belter. The new In archltec- Elul. ’Adar Shen is an extra month,
PHONE 2257
HASTINGS
| lure Is belter—It will bring better occurring only in leap years.
lhe Grand Canyon will still be un­ ber of 545.455.404. the largest ever; quite fast and were not aware that. power houses below. Five and a half C- Wing In charge.
recorded In a single month. The j It had been raining anywhere near [ million barrels of cement were used
spoiled.
first nine months of the fiscal year us. A* we broke over lhe lop of a' in ite construction. Tills figure
gross sale* totaled »265.598.O51. the small hill, there In front of us was; doesn't mean much, but this Is
California Rivera.
largest sales ever recorded over a ' a dip with a stream rushing through [ enough cement to construct another
T'S fun tu crus* a river with at comparable year. So endeth the de- It. a* big as lhe Thornapple river, I great Pyramid or a standard sixteen
least a trace of wetness in it. It prc:.slon' No more squawking, any-1 with a car hi the middle of It and fool highway from Miami. Florida
.must be my early raising, but I body!
la woman in the car who had ap-1 to Seattle. Washington.
I like a river to be dampish—in spots.
When the water rises to the level
• • •
j parenliy fainted away Wc clamped1
I anyhow.
Delton'.* crying need—a ladles' on the brakes and ?lid to lhe water s of the spillways, the largest artificial
After two years I can't gel used waiting room And Hostings need* edge. Upon seeing u* the people in lake In the world will be created.
.
‘
one
hundred fifteen miles long, with
to southern California rivers, where, one you can enter without a gas. the car regained their courage, evifor nine month* n year, the only ma*k.
' denlly thinking that help had ar- an average width of eight miles and
• • •
| rived, and they came on Uirough. a depth of six hundred fifty feel.
boat, and unless they use a sprlnk-i
In Aki*ka the cliief sporting and that of course gave us courage. A lake in this part of the country is
ling system you can't see where’ events are Uie dog races. The great-1 enough to attempt the crossing. We a great rarity, and no doubt this
will become a very popular resort.
you're going, and they deepen lhe e*t L* the All-Alaska Sweepstake* made it all right, but the water was There Is a probability that so large
channel by blasting and not by where thousands ot dollars arc bet so deep that It came through under a body of water will have some In­
dredging, and you come back from every year. Mrs. Esther Birdsall, the car door* and the fan dipped In-, fluence on the rainfall of the sur­
an aquatic trip full of hayfever dust owner of several whining teams,
commemorates lhe virtues of the blown back through the louvers and rounding country. However the dam
They do say the fish have to learn to
was not built for that purpose, but
Alaskan dug In this poem—
painted the whole cur red. Tlie curswim all over again every fall and Sometimes when life has gone
to control the floods of the Colorado
river, generate power, and give ir­
[down between lhe sleep banks lhe
wrong with you
imagined we were being pushed off rigation to thousands of acres of
poor little frogs suffer terribly from
And lhe world seems a dreary lhe road.
parched
land.
sunburn. It's o great country for
place,
We parsed several of the dry
After we thought we had seen
Holy Rollers but hard on Baptists. Has your dog ever silently crept to lakes, which are hard, white, baked
enough of the dam we drove bock
alkali, and from a dbilatCe look like j
His yearning eyes turned to your water in contrast with the surround-I through Boulder city and Las Vegas,
Crater Versus Manville.
and started for Zion National Park
face?
ing red rock and sand. At this point tn Utah, making quite a record by
'M TORN between temptations. I’d Has he made you feel that he un­
we were within forty miles or so of being In three different states In
like to follow the search now on
derstands.
Death Valley, which Is below sea
twenty-four minutes, our road Just
And all that he asks of you
level; but during the rain it was
been mysteriouiiy misting all these Is to share your lot. be it good or ill quite comfortable tn lhe car. as far clipping the comer of Arizona as we
from Nevada irto Utah. The
With a chance to be loyal and as temperature was concerned How-' passed
,„_nerv was beautiful In places, with
scenery
I hundred limes when somebody said
true?
ever, with darkness coming on and \
green sage brush growing in
Ihe'd been seen. On the other hand. Are you branded a failure? He does in lhe most Ood-fcrsaken country we jinc precn “»e Dru,‘n kro*u,«
not know—
had ever seen up to this time on our
■Tommy Manville, lhe husband of
A sinner? He does not care—
I his country, is reported as having
journey, and the nearest town over I
Ifrcih woman trouble back east— You're master to him—that's all seventy miles away, and a driving i1
that
counts
—
rain
and windstorm raging outside. I
Ithls time of a blonde nature.
A
word,
and
his
day
Is
fair.
we could think of lots more pleas-1
I 8U11. I can always prow) the deslerts, looking for lhe judge. Out here, Your birth and your station are ant situations. We finally crossed |
nothing to him;
the Rend* line, where wc abruptly
Iwe hunt him al regular intervals.
A palace and hut are the same; came onto a nice, wide pavement .
iHe's different from the Liberty And his love Is yours in honor and with bridges and culverts to handle •
[League. It disappeared just as sud­
peace.
the water situation and were soon in '
denly as he did, but stayed that
And It's yours through disaster Las Vegas, where we had dinner
and shame.
and spent the night in a tourist
Tho' others forget you and pass camp that was literally flooded.
|
Commercialising Football.
you by.
Las Vegas. Arizona. Wednesday.
He Is ever your faithful friend— July 29th. fl.083 miles from Hastings.
NCE upon a lime, and not so
IF
David woke us up this morning. I
very long ago, a college was Ready to give you the best that is
YOU
his,
don't know when he got up. but it
(known by the football team it kept.
Unselfishly, unto the end.
was early enough so that he had
WANT
LNow it's known largely aa the col­
taken his net out on the prairie
lege that some football team Is keepSAFETY
Alaska 1* really getting civilized. and captured a scorpion and of
They had a nice, gruesome murder course was so excited about it that
COMFORT
And sport writers say that more there last week that would make he had lo come in and show it lo
money is now being wagered on the Sunday paper editors Shout us. It was placed In a glass Jar be­
and
football than on any sport we with Joy.
side-the black widow spiders on the
ECONOMY
ledge back of Maude s scat in the
OBITUARY.
car. AU we needed now was a rat-. When you travel
Evelyn Hazel Slocum, daughter tie snake and a Gila monster to&lt;
lootbal) is becoming more and more
TRY
sommcrclalixed. more and more a of Frank and Callie Slocum was complete the deadly collection. From ‘
the
professional, profit making industry. bom March 20. 1910 and departed here on I don't think Maude enjoyed
this life November 23. 1936- She much of Uie scenery, as considerable
POPULAR
Ik'eU. if football Is to go lhe way of
grew to womanhood on a farm
wrestling and horse • racing and south of Hastings and lhe last four of her time was token up by seeing
SHORT
that every bump In lhe road or quick
srize-fighting. It'D pretty soon be so years lived near Coats Grove.
stop we made did not overturn the
WAY
hat about the only game a chap
She was a graduate of Hastings jars and allow David's pets to gel
:an play without fixing somebody High school In 1926 and taught/
BUSES
xstorcband will be solitaire.
school several years In Barry
on your next trip.
Las Vegas, which Is a little small­
Still, being a football devotee does county. In 1930 she was married to er than Hastings, is a regular oasis
teep you out in the open air. Bu| Burrel Murphy and to this union In this parched country There are
mu could say that same thing tor a one daughter was bom. Marcia, who hundreds of artesian wells here and
Is left to mourn her loss.
leagult
In the surrounding country, which
She is survived by her huABand. supply water for Irrigation pur­
IRVIN 8. COBB
daughter and father, three broth­ poses. A single well, flowing over
ers. Richard. Predrlc and Harold three and a half million gallons of
of Hastings and grandfather, Bion water dally, supplies the city with
A merchant flag denotes tn« flag Benham of Kalamazoo.
Complete Information At
cold water which Ls quite a treat In
f a country ordinarily used by
this country. Until Boulder City
Fire Helps Hat vest
terchanl vessels as opposed to the
sprang into existence during the.
One
of
the
strangest
agricultural
laqdard flown by vessels of war.
construction of Boulder Dart. Las
TELEPHONE 2103
.
1 some countries lhe. two are the harvests m America is that followed Vegas was the'second largest city
Phone 2137
une. though in some cases lhe in lhe cane fields of Hawaii where in the state which, after all. Isn't so TRIO CAFE
&gt;an-ot-war has the national coat the crop is burned over before cut- much to brag about as the popula- ■
tion ot the whole state ts less than' —
* ।
f arms displayed in lhe center or
make harvesting easier.
half of that of Grand Rapids. It is a
o lhe union of the flag.

;i Barry Bypaths

i

1AINS ON DESERT

X MONTHS. SO«
HRKR MONTHS

L

RATES:

rill

&gt;0

tno.

tention!
S — FURS
Rood trade in

k to accommo
un whom I am
r better prices
bring them on
turdays to 120

&gt;BCOCK

FED
5S, veal
• QUAR-

5ALE.

3909
DPAU8CH

NT
. MICIII-

stings

stings
Ieville
ieville
•c scents.

i: io

SMITH BROS.
VELTE &amp; CO.

I

I

vers
t

son
an the-

.

any
up to

nclcry

add a
t will
rough.

hopes

orist
•2 2530

elation

Travelers !

O

Christmas comes but once o year-ond it's a good thing for most of
us that it does. December is one of the jolliest months of the year
but it's also one of the most expensive. A little forethought now
will make next Christmas a happier one. Plan now to lay awoy a
little each week and when Christmas rolls around next year you'll
welcome it with open arms.
JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS CLUB
Open one of any size you like. We have a plan to suit your needs.

BUS DEPOT

HASTINGS CITY BANK
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, BM

£•»?-« r™

-A EW FIRES”

DON'T MISS

FRIDAY NIGHT, DEC. 4, 8 O'CLOCK
MATINEE THURSDAY, 3:30
CENTRAL AUDITORIUM

cation entered.
I Est Lee Bailey. Final account' GIFTS NEED SENSE
Est.
Elida
Shaw.for
Second annual
1 ruea.
filed, order
en- ,
whir nfx’timfktw EXAMIFREEPORTPOSTMASTER. I
oruer assigning residue cnaC
Oun{
Of mutee
Shaw
.....e...... -»
•— Joseph
------- -■ -v
,„
r„A discharge of Admr. Issued.! n. _hn.
FLUS BtNTIMENTb. '
tered,
estate enrolled
I
what us* Bre Chrlrtmaa glfta. i Receipt ot applications will dose
------------ I Judges named to select the prize­
“, , „
A
, I expensive or Inexpensive. If they are Dec. 18. 1B38. The date for assem-1
Est. George C-’ Paul. Petition tor
PROBATE COURT.
Aims To Interest School I winning photographs are wtdelyEst. L. May Ayres. Order for only valuable enough after the hoU- bling of competitors will be stated i
days to be "burled with Rover's in the admission cards which wlll ।
nkHAran Tn WtWlifa 1 known in Michigan and some of
Est. William Coleman Final ac­ authority to sell stock filed. Order adjournment entered
Ohudren
In Wildlife
llhem hBVe nfttlonM1 wput&gt;Uon4
Est. Morton Ayres Bouetl. Bond bone" li the question asked by Mar- be mailed to applicants after lhe ;
count of Admr. filed, waiver of authorizing sale ot stock entered.
of Admr. filed, letters of admlnls- garel Partlow, member of the tex- close of receipt of applications.
Resources
I wildlife photographers.
notice filed, order nvlgnlng residue
The United States civil Service!
r»&lt; u
»»-&gt;.,
.
ulcs ttnd clothing department at
A statewide photographic contest
Each contest entrant will be per- entered, discharge of Adinr Issued, tltlon for authority to sign ease­ UE&gt;U,°n
P5‘e‘T PeU^?n. or Mkhigan State College. As a re- Commission has announced an ex- j'
ment, order authorizing Gdn to
to interest school children in the | mltted to submit two photographs, estate enrolled.
IAd.
fUcd'
d
fOr PubH“Uon minder that gifta need not be ,ex- amination, as a result of which it U !
Est- Henry a Colllton Waiver of sign easement entered
conservation of wildlife resources although only one prize will be
Est.
Frank
Langs.
Petition
(w
.
--------f°
r
।
en
^!
ed
^u..
.
j
....
1
pensive
to
have
utility
Miss
Partlow
expected
to make certification to fill |
will be sponsored this winter by the awarded to an individual whose en- notice filed, order assigning resi­
Chas. A- Newland, petition
i1 offers a list of suggestions that may a contemplated vacancy tn the ‘
‘
Federated Garden Clubs of Michi­ try meets favorable action by the due entered, discharged of Admr general and special Admrx. filed.1
urdir appointing Adinrx. entered. I I°r license to sell filed.
1 help out In thc pre-holiday shop­ position of fourth class postmaster I
gan tn cooperation with the depart­ Judges. Photographs must not ex­ Issued, estate enrolled
L. Rogers. Will filed, pc- ping.
; at Freeport, and other vacancies as
Est. Thomas E ChecscbrouRh bo!:d fikd. letters Issued, order to
ment of conservation. The conies: ceed four by five Inches in size.
dlschnrgc mortgage entered, final i tition for probate filed, order for
opens December I and closes April
State Judges win select four win­ Third annual account filed, order account of Admrx. filed. dLscharg- ' publication entered.
in office Christmas tree party they may occur at that office, unless
ners. two boys and two girls. In the for publication entered
a bridge or social program It shall be decided in thc Interest ot
of Admrx issued, estate enrolled. । Est.
r“ Bertha
n—”'- couch, petition for
lhe service lo fill any vacancy by
Est.
Alice
M
Coolbaugh
Inven
­
final
judging.
These
finalists
wlll
where
ten
cent
limits
are
used
to
Competition Is open to all senior
E-i Etta Mather Order allowing Admr. filed.
The examination
govern the price of the gifts. Mias reinstatement.
and Junior high school pupils of receive as prizes, a l.OOO-mile tour tory filed.
Est. Lorena M
Hilbert, et til claims entered, petition lo assign I Est. Jennie b Gorham. Petition Partlow finds that there are giflt will be held at Hastings. The compublic,
parochial
and
private through the scenic wilderness aieas
I for Admr. filed.
fund
1
filed,
order
to
assign
funds
Bond
cn
sate
ol
real
estatIU-d
which can be economical and yet pensatlon of the postmaster at this
schools, urban and rural, who es­ of the upper peninsula next sum­
•*,
office
was
81.100
for the last fiscal
oath
before
sale
filial,
report
of
useful enough io that the compari­
tablish a feeding station to help mer. visiting the Tnhquamcnon
E.t Sarah E Ayers Testimony
MARRIAGE LICENSES,
son will) Rover s bone need not be
wildlife through the season of the Falls country, the Pictured Rocks, sale filed
Applicants must have reached
Est. May Hanes Bond of Admr filed, license to sell Issued, oath be- Lloyd L. Elliston. Nashville ..
20 used, included In sueh a list would
year In which it Is faced with the the waterfalls near Munising and
- -filed, letters Issued, order Umltlnr fore snlr filed, bond on sale filed
Elizabeth J —
Foster. -Nashville
the world-famous Soo locks.
be gifts such its „
a uio|i
desk calendar. their twenty-first birthday but not
greatest hardships.
settlement entered, petition for I Est Jerne V Shultz Annual ac- Karl L Kingsbury. Cloverdale .,40 hand lotion, powder pull of fiutfy their sixty-fifth birthday on the
"The establishment of a feeding
hearing claims filed, notice ‘to couijt filed
.SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
Dorothy E. Shupp. Cloverdale . . .28 wool. soap, nail polish, paper cock- dale of the close of receipt of ap­
station for the purpose of attracting
and
' Est May Hanes
plications. Applicants must reside
creditors
Lssued
Mr
and
Mrs.
LaFnyctte
Usborne
tail
cups,
rubber
mat
Harry B. Tusing. Woodland
59 ““
“*■*■
*for
” sink or
*
game or songbirds. squlrrULs. rabWarrant inventory filed
within the territory supplied by the
Est. Charles H
bits or chipmunks is the major re- spent Thanksgiving day with Mrs
Mary Ann Hubbard. Woodland . 64 shower. Ivy plant, narcissus bulbs, post office for which the examlqa, .E&lt;t Nancy
, Cline. .Final account
---------qulrement," Mrs
Aubrey DeWitt Florence Usborne of Lake Odessa and inventory fiten
ball of cord, kitchen scissors, or
Est
Milo
S
Barbour
Order
as.
filed
|
tion Is announced. The exatninasaid who ts aMUting In the ar-1 Mrs. Anna Buck and family spent
DOWLING CEMETERY CIRCLE. waxed paper.
_
,.
,
,
. uwi
tion is
Is ojxrn
open io
to mi
all citizens Ol
of cne
the
rangements. "Birds or animals »t-1 Thanksgiving day with Mr nnd sliming residue entered. dLschant-. I E t Mason cline Final account
The Dowling Cemetery Circle will
Then there Is another type of United States who can comply with
of Admr Issued, estate enrolled
fited.
! serve an oyster dinner at the church
traded to the food placed in these: Md John Gould of near Orleans,
puzzler
that
confronts
those
who.
the
requirements.
Application
Est. Charles A Armstrong Pell- . E-:
M Hilbert,
al. Or- dining room on Dec. 10.
stations arc excellent photographic
Mr. «nd Mrs
Wm. Shriber
and j Uor.
“ ” Lorena
■ I-------------1” et
J--------have
many
Btfta
.to
buy.
What
can
.
blanks.
Form
fl.
and
full
information
Hastings
and Lester
nwign -to.-k filed, order anF '“l
Rennrt of i A bU“nm m«Hn« an‘1 ^‘,on oI
subject* and while experience in children of
I—•-•i.. . ,
,
be purchased that will be useful concerning the requirements of the
’oodland spent
spent ThanksThanks-1 thoriring
thorlzlng assignment
assignment .entered
\i
E Larkin. Report of officers will follow dinner.
•hunting with n camera- is not Warner of Woodland
necessary every entrant doubtless igiving with Mr and Mrs. Leo Barry
E,- t Theron S Hcc.u Annunl nc- sate nk-d.
I All members arc urged to come and yet not cast more than a dollar? examination can uc secured from
,urn,n&lt; ‘2 the Poatmaster at the place of vaEst Fannie Baldwin
Bond on and bring your friends.
wlll learn that much skill and in-; Kendal Buck and friend attended count filed
T)|r foUoKln|t lgdl„ w on thc products of the hand weavers nnd cancy or from lhe United State?
genuity enters into wildlife picture-, e. parly tn Battle Creek Saturday | E’t Char e.s H&lt;wk Petli-. i^lor - nte filed oath before sale filed, re
*'orkcr'' Gifts can in- civil Service commission. Washing­
port of sale filed
| committee for work. Anna Pierce. h?'\d
taking. To be eligible for the con- night.
,
cense to sell filed order for pubbdude hooked mats. ties, hot pads. ton, p c.
---------------------------------- ___ ' ®!anc?* _Powell- Rose
Phillips
sweet grass mats, linen towels.
Applications must be properly exhcarth brooms, pewter tie clasps i ccm*, Bnd on file with the Comand clips, wooden trays, candle hold- mission at Washington. D. C. prior
ell, Secy,
ere. carved animal ornaments or to the hour of claslng business on
napkin rings,
, ,____
the date specified
SANK CU B MEETING,
1
the junior officers and cmroinenen
f- ployecs of the Hastings City Bank
Tbe Spits Dog
In Italy many men raise their
*3 And the National Bonk of Hasting-,
The Spitz dog. named for the Arc­
hats to passing ambulances; in
attended n dinner and meeting WedLiesday evening al the Post Tavern Scotland some Highland women tic islands of Spitsbergen, is p de- ’
! Hotel in Battle Creek given by the still curlsy to the new moon; and in sccndanl of the part-wolf ancestors
of
chows and samoyeds. Like them
Japan
numerous
cities
and
towns
| southwestern
Michigan
Bankers
! Club. One hundred and twenty-five hold-a Buddhist religious service for it pulled sleds in the frozen north.
The breed later became popular in I
banks In the district are affiliate ! the souls of the fishes which icy
| with the club and between four and have consumed duruig the year.— Europe. Various shepherd breeds, 1
and the schipperkc and the pomcr- ;
I five hundred officers and employee.. Stewart Schncknc. New York City,
j anian. were developed from it.
attended the banquet.
I in Collier's Weekly

PHOTOGRAPHIC CONTEST &lt;-• JXijWS£
OPENS DECEMBER 1 uS

COURT HOUSE NEWS

Getting a Bath
Sn ‘ dUKtr

This looks like oretty dangerous
business, playing with electricity
on the “loose."
But Kenneth
Strlckfaden.
noted
electrical

as he prepares hu “gravity neu­
tralizer" for demonstration at
the Electrical Aga Exposition in

*5

/•

VALUES
A Fine Gift

w
v
y
y
y
Select Wool

Bunny Slippers O“C

•ni! greet yon In

Service or Ch.ffon. Pure Silk—Ringloss—In &amp;lt Boxes

In Bright

Toyland

97

o’clock P. M.

USE OUR LAYAWAY! J
A 25c Deposit Reserves Your Choice!
Tabic and chain $1.49-$5.25

Doll cabi ... $1.98 to $3.25
choose From

Brown or
Black Kid

Sleds 95c to $4.89

87

Train on tracks 25c to $5.98

15‘

TOYLAND

25
QQ
OO

— 97 C to ^2 ^
Rubbers That Fit

97

y
y

TOYLAND BASEMENT

First Quality

s
Child s Watertitc

97

Sj.25

I

Novelty Galoshes

GIFTS FOR LADIES

GIFTS FOR MEN

SCARFS______________ _ 50c to 98c

HOSE
_________
10c to 25c
SCARFS _________ .... — 50c to 98c
TIES______________ __ 10c to 50c
SHAVING SETS ... .. 25c to 50c
BILL FOLDS_______ .. 10c to $1.00

HOSE ______________

our dbpUy.

25c to 59c

CLOVES ............................. 25c to 50c

LADY ESTHER gift sets ............

TAYLOR’S
Shoe Store

TREE LICHTS________

25c end up
5c to 20c

GIFT BOXES

15

S’
y

li

CHMSTMAS WRAPPING PAPER
pUDICTUAC

ELECTRIC WREATH . .................
GREETING CARDS
10c—20c—25 c—box

TYING MATERIAL

29c

CARDS AND SEALS

HARD MIX

CHRISTMAS MIX

A £ LHnlolMAo LANUltD peanut brittle taffy

Snyder's Shoe Rcpaii

Quality Footwear For Jhc Family

Men'j-$2.95 - $4.95
Hastings

25c

BULBS_______ _ ______ ._2 for 5c

Heavy Wool Lined

■ALL-BA

Extra Savings
Check

ROLLER SKATES
79c to $1.59
DOLLS.. 10c to $3.35
TINKERTOYS
50c
IRON TOYS 10c to $1.00
GAMES 10c io $1.00
BLACK BOARDS
25c to $1.98

Boys'-$1.79 - $2.95

|I LONG-MOORE 5C $1 STORE
JS &amp;

&lt;w
f

THE STO»i FOS THt THRIFTY 5H0FPEK

The early Egyptian razors wed

ot metal, and it Is plain that thei
were close copies of the older fiirJ
Ones. Tn the Early Dynastic period

SPECIALS

SPECIAL SAVINGS!

SLIPPERS For Men

1

BASEMENT

SANT

Solid Oak
$3.25 *

.19

The affection felt for the lady
bird Is shown by the numerous pel
names by which It is known li
various countries: "St. Michael's lit J
tie chicken.” in Piedmont; "Lucia,’]
short for Santa Lucia, in Italy gen
erally; "Little Animal ot oui
Lord." in Holland;
"CushcoW
or ■■Lady-cow," in Yorkshire.
And in nearly every country the
ladybird’s name Is connected with
religion, states a writer in Pear
son’s Weekly. Tie English "lady'
stands for Our Lady; lhe French
name is "Belt a Bon Dieu”; Spalni
Russia and Bulgaria all talk ol
‘‘God's cow," and tlie Serbians o
"God’s sheep."
These ere a few of the colloquia'
names given to one or other of thd
2.000 species of the ladybird, li
England alone, there are over forty
kinds ot ladybird that teed on othea
insects and ihelr grubs. They posl
sess most unladylike appetites and
they eat huge quantities of green]
fly and insects which prey on
fruits, flowers and trees—particu
larly firs, pines and junipers. Onn
species of ladybird, for instance
devours scale insects and so pro
teds apple trees and ash.

| Prehistoric Shavers of
Metal; Copies of Flin

Books

Quality Galoshes

ST-M2’-5!

, Fine Selection

In Spain the name "St. Anthony's
little pig" Is given to tire ladybird]
that brightly colored and spotted
Utile beetle loved by children the
world over. People of aU aged
everywhere consider it a sign ot
gtxxl luck for a ladybird to settle on
their hands or clothes, and they]
take care not to disturb it until 1

Tin dishes---------- 10c to 50c

Fancy Patterns

Men's Spats
All Wool—

Variety of Names Given
to the Popular Ladybird

■ rectangular razot with four bev]
elled &lt;?dges. An older form, found H
, Late Predynastic times, gives th]
appearance of a broad, double]
edged knife with a short tang. Mos]
। such razors seem to have beeJ
i sharpened only on one side; fo]
example, the specimen found In th]
| tomb ot Queen Hctcp-herea.
|
|
In Europe, at a date comparal
I lively not much later, atates J
i writer tn Pathfinder Magazine, raj
; zora had a long blade with sbghtlj
| concave aides, and a strange irJ
I dentation at the lower end. The mosl
i reasonable explanation ot thia tnl
dent Is that il was used to allow thl
forefinger to feel the skin while on J
•hared. In Western
BobemlJ
about this time, the blade wal
bx&gt;ad and double-edged, with
openwork handle cast tn one piecl
with It. During the Late Bronze anl
Early Iron Age (about 1000 B. C.H
the razor, tn Upper Italy at leasi
■gain assumed the rectangular out!
Mne.
j
The early British razor* werl
shaped like a maple leaf. Thirl
was ■ tang projecting from thl
base of thc blade to take the handlJ
■nd often it was continued dowJ
wards by a midrib along its fncJ
Woafl Carving In black Forest
Fbr hundreds of years the Blacj
। Forest people of Germany have caq
rled on their wood carving an]
homecrafts.
They make cucko]
! elocka. some entirely of wood, fun
I ■nfiure. music boxes and toys. l|
former days many gems were cd
' । thete. and the. region was fame]
. for Its glass. After Uie discovery &lt;J
America, this last Industry experl
enewl ft
tn*
needed great quantities ot beads
trade with tha Indiana.

Tlw Ugliest recorded leap far
bor»a is credited to Keatherbtooo
owned by Herbert Willets, wt
cleared 8 feet 1 Inch in Mamflr
neck. N. V., in 1901

�I

.

THE HASTINGS BANNER. TfTOttDAV. DECEMBER 3. IMG

■

_

••

FRIDAY
DECEMBER

h,

7 to IO

CHRISTMAS GIFT SHOWING
Here's your chance-something you have always Went­
c&lt;* *° do-wander through the stores and JUST LOOK.

know. BUT-none of them will ask you to buy. This is your chance to LOOK to
your heart's content.

V '
Hast‘n9s merchants invite you to do just that. Bring
—s
jUQ
along your pencil and notebook and make up your en­
tire list of Christmas gifts. Friday nigh t, December 4, from 7 to 10 o'clock the
y stores listed below will stay open so that you may come in and shop all you like,
and you don't hove to buy a thing. There will be clerks and managers on hand
to show you anything you may want to see and explain what you may want to

The streets will be decorated with evergreens and colored lights, the windows
full of Christmas things and trimmed to please shoppers, and the stores full of
everything; Santa will be expected to bring. There will be gifts for mother­
father — brother - sister — uncle - aunt — cousin — boy friend — girl friend — hus­
band - wife - and if there are any others you'll find just the thing for them
here. Come and see this GRAND CHRISTMAS OPENING, tt's for you!

/j
zs

V

Firms Invite You To Visit Them During Open House Night for a Complete Pre-Christmas
Showing. Bring the Family With You . . . There Will Be Something To Please Everyone

T/ie Following

'

Forrest Johnson Motor Co.

Universal Garage

Reed's Drug Store

230 F- SUU St.

ISO W. Court St.

101 E. SUU St.

Feldpausch Food Center

Montgomery Ward's Store

Walldorff &amp; Son Furniture Store

206 E. SUU St.

118-124 S. Jeffmon St

IOS E. SUU St

G. E. Goodyear Hardware

Fairchild's

Goodyear Brothers Hardware Co.

Frandsen's Store

^Waters Clothes Shop

Bross Tire &amp; Battery Co.

138 E. SUU 8t

Feldpausch Market

Carveth &amp; Stebbins Drug Store

HR E. SUU St.

126 E. SUU St

Ml E. SUU St

J. C. Penney Store

W. L. Wallace, Groceries &amp; Feeds

W. A. Hall, Furniture &amp; Hardware

116 E. SUU St

241 W. SUU St.

Long Er Moore 5c to $1.00 Store
lit E. SUU Si.

Consumers Power Co.

C. B. Hodges Jewelry Store

John Bulling &amp; Son

108 E. SUU St.

139 W. SUU St.

111 S. Jtttenoa St.

Crue's Shoe Store

Russell Smelker

Andrus Service Station

104 E. SUU St.

(Formerly H. E. Smith Hdwe.), 123 W. SUte St.

Joe Schwartz, Men's and Boys' Clothing

235 W. SUU St.

Gamble Store

L#
y

Taylor's Shoe Store

&amp;

F. &amp; B. Wellfare, Coffee Ranch

121 w. suu st

_

V

128 E. SUU St

y*
V

Miller Furniture Co.

y
W

The Auto Sport Shop

113*117 W. SUU St

L. V. Chase

/

T. S. Baird, Clothing and Shoes

(Formerly Beumer's Jewelry Store). 118 W. SUU St

1y

y

R. K. Hurd, Chevrolet Agency

111 W. SUU st

W

301 E. SUU St

A &amp; P Co.
Comer Jefferson »nd Stale

Hastings Cut Rate Shoe Store
IK w. sal. su

/

Ironside Bros. Monument Works

LyBarker's Drug Store
IM W. SUU St.
/

A. J. Larsen's Dry Goods Store
134 W. SUU St

’

&lt;

S/
1

| !f

•

133 E. SUU St

Meyer's 5c to $1.00 Store
103 W. SUU St

C. Thomas Store

Mark's Store
151W.8UU.8L.

128 w. suu St

y

Cinderella Dress Shop
Jf

j

133 W. SUU St

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1$M

asaisa.

Billion a Year for National Defense
Program Spurs U. S. in Arms Race

”■■■
'
■
■
year before, retained that position been certified for bounty paymentsi brought lo higher ground. A fourth lower peninsula area* Ln which tho
/'Vjm C/&gt;TW 1/7 f inti nnd
(during the past season and th-, so far Ln thl* district. This head- doer, deeply mired In the center of staggered open seasons prevail,
VfMMScFvullOrl UrlU
' creased it* total by more than 400.- quarters recently shipped more thc bog, could not be reached and Hunting and trapping raccoon Ln
the upper peninsula are forbidden
Olltdnnr Nntrc '000 visitor* over 1935.
I than 800 predator pelts to Lansing. had to be shot by the officer*.
• • •
by law.
KJUUiUUi xvutco ।
I representing lhe season's take.
.
nf rnvntn rwif km-xn i
• • •
The 45-day open season on hunt. . .
sxAa^8amtSon ' ha* be^ certified
Frightened by hunter* four deer ing tacoon in the lower peninsula 1*&gt; Digests of Michigan'* 1937 genit district conservation headauar- ran into a bog near Big 8L*r Uke nearing its close Tuesday. Dec. 15. eral flshlna laws arc now in lhe
^rsfor bount? Payment The anl- southwest of here and were sinking Is lhe la*t day on which this ani- hand* of the state printer and are
mSw1 i^th^auendancc* records
from’whlch thTpeh 'wTtaken lnto*the*oon! wticn conservation of- maF may be legally hunted thl* I expected lo be ready7or distribution
parts in roe atumaonce rveo™ miMrom wh'ch the pelt wm taken into the oose when conservation of- mal may be legally hunted this expected to be ready for distribution
law
000 mat from
aTcJ of it. ^les
J^dhod
fleers
arrived. T»n
Two of the
lhe deer were year. Tuesday. Dec. 15. is
Is also the
th.: to 1.800
1400 license dealers
dMler* within a
... /ro
... nelrbr
.
.i KO
——
pe
'
n
r-r« •rrirrd
SSX. £?
rtS XL
ol
- =&gt;&gt;-•! to—. »«&lt; &lt;to —■ . to.. *...
&lt;U, on — racoon
0. —**

ii !

1

।

1

-------------------‘

—I

I

U 11^

ANNOUNCEMENT!
• WE HAVE INSTALLED A COMPLETE NEW REPAIR DEPARTMENT
AND NOW OFFER A MODERN REPAIR SERVICE. ADDITIONS IN­
CLUDE A "MOTOR-ANALYZER", THAT SHOWS EXACTLY WHAT IS
WRONG WITH A MOTOR, A NEW HOIST, AND THE COMPLETE ALE­
MITE SYSTEM OF LUBRICATION WITH A GREASE FOR EVERY PART
OF THE CAR. STOP IN AND GIVE US A TRY, WE GUARANTEE SAT­

ISFACTION.

COAL
REGAL COAL
SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATUR

DAY (DECEMBER 4 AND 5) ONLY!

$750
fl

■ - —~

PER TON CASH

Johnson Fuel &amp; Motor Sales
Hastings

220 E. State St.

Phone 2370

WASHINGTON.—A billion •
’’ year for national defense!
That Is the military pace Un­
cle Sam approximates today and
may exceed In 1937.
Thundering bombing plane*
are taking form, the army I*
atrengthenlng it* ranks, and gi­
digest in use during the current
I -vrAr- The changes that have been
ant battleships are sliding down
K-. vIc are •■! ;r.!i.or nature
!i .1 ,
the way* these days to mark'the
.Il designations of pike' and trout'
greatest peacetime armament in
Uli lakes.
the hlitory of the country.
During lhe current fiscal year
Whltalailed deer are going in for j the navy is spending $529 125 806
contrasting colors near L'Anse. Sev- I and the army, for strictly mili­
eral residents of this community ; tary purposes. $383,104,859 That ■
have informed conservation authortotals $912,230,665. but together
itles at Lansing that a Jet black doe
the two service* will prnbnblv
has beert seen by them on several 1
spend $084,000,000. since they
occasions In thc woods this fall. Al­
have money left from earlier al­
bino or while deer also have been
lotment*.
f seen in thc past In this vicinity.
And next year? A national
defense budget'In excess of $1­
BANF1ELD.
000 000 000 is already predicted
Nov. 26 Letter.
in Informed ounrters
America
Joe Harrington living north of
has plunged full depth Into the
Banfleld. shot at chicken thieves
last Friday night and apparently. world armament race.
( wounded one of them One of them !
screamed but managed to escape Ln
'T’HIS Is necessary the nreslan automobile. Andy Adams' coop, A dent has pointed out. "tn
was recently raided and the thieves
meet the policy of the Con ere”
escaped with 60 of hls flock. Fartnand the executive In making uo
ers are keeping their shot guns
for the delay bv the United
|handy
States In bringing the naw un
Mrs. Mary Putnam attended an
to strength contemplated bv the
O. E. S party
tn Freeport las:
naval treaties of 1922 and 1930
ii Thursday evening
! Merida Bllles has reUirned to
nnd tn provide replacement and
; high school tn Hastings after a
improved eouinment nnd addi­
week's illness.
tional personnel for the armv."
i Tlie P. T A will sponsor a box soAnd so the nnvv enlisted
clal to be (held nt the schoolhouse
stre’"’1h Is moving un toward
j Friday evening. Dec. 4 Let's all go
100.060. while the nrmv Is Ivina
I and enjoy a good old fashioned time.
Increased from 150 000 tn 167.­
----------- ohllteswiU entertain lhe
nnnm&lt; onirrr, „„„ mr„
000 Adding officers nnd men In
North Lndi
lies Aid Thursday afterarrnY and navy, rational guard
noon. Dec. 3.
Geo. Wickwire and son, Henry,
the Annnnnlis cadets, the total
and Mr. and Mrs. Don Putnam will
forces nf th* United States now
spend Thanksgiving at thc Ramom
; number 4R5.000
farm in Rutland.
Carl Bowman. Charles Strickland.
nfFrcra, the personnel of the
S.im Buxton. Don Putnam and Rev.
CMTC enmns. and school stu­
Exner attended thc Brotherhood
dents receiving military train­
me-ting in Hastings last Monday
ing. the number of men tn uni­
evening Each one look a boy as
form would 1ol»l 605.000.
hls guest.
The Ralph penkes have moved lo
Battle creek and Jesse Briggs has
pUT that is only one phase of
returned to hls home hen- afu-r
this now spurt in national
working two years near Gull lake.
fcnsc. During this fiscal year
the number of vessels in mmWhen political parties are not
misrion
Is exnected tn increase
throwing hat* in the ring, they're
from an average nf 312 3 to
passing them around.
319 6 nnri the number of planes

COUGHS

Five ships recently have been
remolded, one pinnctlr aircraft
carrier, the 819.060 000 Enter­
prise. nnd still under con«!ruction are 83 ships—two of them

due to colds rrlimedjwith one swallow.
&gt; ,. . ___ ____ -T".____ J

THOXINE

destroyer* of

more

thin

Strengthening the air forces, building a navy second lo none,
modernising the army—these are the objectives of the new na­
tional defense. Ca-ordlnaled power of these forces 1* illustrated
above, with fighting planes la the air. lighting ships on the waler.
Here is the navy al Ils best to guard American shores.

1560

16 submarines
Moreover, since Great Britain
|r committed to laving two 35,000-tnn battleships next year,

L Stebbins Drug Store

Hiller in the Saar, Russia in the
vast Thenceforth expenditure*
rose rapidly.
They do not indicate, however,
any Jittery fort of war scare.
President Roosevelt’s warning lo
Congress ts the real key:
“We must take cognizance of
marked trends toward uggreasion, of increasing armaments—
a situation which has in H manv
elements that lead to thc trag­
edy of general war
"The United States can plus
but one role: through adequate
defehse. to savt'ouraelvta from,
embroilment or attack.”

and no treaty then will bar con­
struction, United States I* plan­
ning construction of two equally
large men o' war. Installation
of IB-inch guns Is tentatively
considered.
1 national defense altitude of
other post-war days. In 1933.
for instance, the War and Navy
Departments spent $648,149,000
The next year. Roosevelt cut ex­
penditure* to $540,353,000,
Then lhe full significance ol.
European armament srrtrnr
America—Mussolini in Ethiopia,

HINDS CORNERS.
COATS GROVE.
KLINGENSMITH.
.Nov 26 Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Coats and Nov 26 Lctlcr.
daughter. Doris, visited Mr and
Mr and Mr*. Archie Burt and
Mi. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias of Kaii Mrs. Boss Cotton of northwest baby
uuv,.. «•Mr. and
»i.u Mr*
«•••. Marshall .ripp'amazoo spent Saturday night and
Woodland last Sunday
|__2
______
, and *Lol* were guests of *■Mr.
and ___
Sunday
__y with
—their
**— parents. Mr. andJ
Auvrta Mrs.
Mrs C.
I
Tiw Sunday school i* sponsoring ।i Mrs Manwin
Manson Rlantzin
BlxnUui in Assyria
C. N. Tobias.
a pancake supper at church base- ‘ Sunday.
Mrs. Nellie Kline went to the hos­
, menl this Friday evening.
...
—
-- ­ pital Monday to be operated on
Mr and- -Mra. Chas.
Mayo of—
Bat
Mr nnd Mrs. Don Murphy and tle Creek spent Sunday with thc Tuesday morning.
___
.__ __ Moore
__________
i family of Kalamazoo vLsiteti at Ken- latter'* brother Albert Green.
Mr.__________
and Mrs. Will
and
Call Coats' on Saturday.
Mrs. Will Green of Detroit spent daughter and Ralph Skidmore were
.
Mrs. Mattie Kimble is working a few days last week with her *Ls- in Battle Creek shopping last Sal­
for Mrs. Watrous Ln Woodland.
ter. Mrs. Albert Green, before leav- urday. Mr. and Mr*. Mark Garrison
Mr. and Mrs Walter Thompson Ing for Florida to spend lhe win-1 of Cloverdale spent Bunday evening
' nnd family and Robert Luso apenl ter with her husband. She made thc [ with lhe Will Moore family.
: Thanksgiving and the week end trip with her son-in-law who went I M„. E&lt;id. Meyers of Ionia spent
' visiting at Flora. III.
'
down to spend two weeks with his 1 Thursday afternoon and Friday
Mr. nnd Mrs Kenneth Wilcox wife and Will Green
| W|lb Mr and xlra. Edd. Newton. Mr.
I .&gt;nd daughter of Kalamazoo sp-nt
Mra LeBaroi and children will and Mrs. Clifford Morford of Delton
f Sunday night and Monday at the return to Detroit with her husband | called on Mr. and Mrs. Newton Bun: Thompson home Paul Thompson of after spendmg three month* with day afternoon.
Battle Creek al*o vistlcd there on her father.
, There wa* a good turn out at the
I Simday
' Ott HUI went to Kalamazoo Suu- Community meeting at the KhoolRev. and Mrs J O. Crauford and day to spend the winter with her house Friday night- We were enter­
[ Mr ano Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and sister and husband.
| tained by Mr and Mrs. Burge** and
' daughter. Gladys, visited Rev, and j Mr. and Mrs. Fial* arc building a class of young people with Hawal­
| Mrs. F C Wing on Sunday
a new house near Bowens Mill*
un guitars. We enjoyed it and hope
’
Mis* Don* Ebbert. from luc Starr
Mr. and Mrs
Orville Pickard i they tome again. Wc also enjoyed a
I Commm.jraUh, .eeo&lt;»Minrf
moved lost week into the house fine chicken supper
Marian Woodman home fur the f0rraoriy owned by kus Peeling
; Thanksgiving holiday. ML* Ruth orabe.
.
NORTHEAST STRIKES.
. Woodman wm home for several
------------- ' * o » ---- - ------- 1 Nov. 36 Letter.
. day* from Coloma
PODL'NX.
1 Mr. and Mrs. A*a Randall and
■
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Smith ot M.d- j Mr.
air. and
aim Mrs.
*irs. Monta
atonia Replogic
ncpiogic Mr.
nr, and
aim mis
Mrs.. Shrlner
onrincr relumed home
a deer e^h.
land spent Thanksgiving with rela- ' spent —
Thanksgiving at Mr. Spotuel- Thursday night with
I live* here.
ler
’* at Dowling.
I Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. Wm.
Wm Cramer. Jr..
______
_____
-Mr.
' ’ Max Coals was home from MichiAnna and Cody" Laubaugh enter- I will accompay Morris Hamilton of
i' gan Btatc College for Thanksgiving. tained Mra. Cody Laubaugh * par- 1 Nashville and Mis* Vesta Cramer to
’•
Mis* Esther Biert of Lowell visit- ent*, Mr. and Mrs. Kinney of Nash- • Ml- Clemens Wednesday where
. cd Ruth Woodman laaL Friday and ville Thanksgiving day.
they will visit Mr. and Mrs. George
i | in lhe afternoon they motored to
Rachel pain of Lansing visited T. Jensen and Mr. and Mr*. Ray
;. Ann Arbor.
her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Theron , Wintermute of Detroit.
Cain, thc week end.
| The annual Thanksgiving dinner
j anniversary with a supper and pre­
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ransom spent will be held at lhe schoolhouse Wedgram cn Friday evening. December Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. nesday noon. A turkey will be raf11. Il will be n pot luck community Pal Slattery at Kalainaxpo.
&gt; fled oft tn thc afternoon.
supper and the program will be
Mr. and Mr*. Hubert Kenyon |
----------------- -----------------------in charge of Mrs. Orpha Wing. Mr*. vtiUed relatives in Lansing last I
The Archimedes Pr^aciple
Stella Kelsey and Mrs
Blanche week.
1
The
me wm
loss ui
of wcignr
weight oi
of ■a ooag
body *uotubBayne
Mr. Millas of Grand Rapid.', has merged in a liquid i* lhe weight of
| Thc D. G. T. O. club will meet moved onto the Jim Burchett farm, the displaced liquid. It la supposed
Wednesday. December 9/with Mrs.
New York police* head tells hta “’** thl’ Principle was discovered
| Nina Townsend as hostess ond Mrs.
men they should 'sell thc city to
U’eGreek philosopher ArchimeAlice Allerdlng as leader.
thc vUltor" How about those who “e* &lt;287-212 B. C.» who had been
It's *n • c 'sy change for thc Prcsi- already hold deeds to Brooklyn ordered by Hiero. king of Syracuse.
Bridge?
I t0 And whether a goldsmith bad
dent to convert vote into veto.
___________________________________ mixed silver with the gold used
— —min making a crown. To do thia
’ "T . “ . T
.."_____________ without destroying thc crown wa* «
perplexing problem. But ona day
whijc Archimedes wa* al lhe public
| bath, he noticed that hi* body wa*
. buoyed up by the waler in which it
335 L High St. City
, wa* submerged. Seeing in this the
' solution of hi* problem, ho La said
i to have rushed home shouting
'Bronson s nail-loss, air cushion, air rest
•'Eureka!" (I have found it).

1

Automobile and
Radio Show
;
I
i
I

Our Ith
ANNI'AL
SHOW

;

I

’

OPEN EVERY EVENING
ISEII CARS
1934 Studebaker 2-door Dic­
tator sedan, overhauled.
Repainted, excellent buy.

1934 Studebaker
mander coupe.

~
Com-

Look* like naw.

1933 Studebaker 2 - door
Commander with trunk.

NEW CARS

RADIOS

STUDEBAKER
HUDSON
TERRAPLANE

With the accoustical laby­
rinth beam power tubes.
Speakers made of carpin­
choe leather.

STROMBERG - CARLSON

Very good.

1931 Studebaker 2-door Se­
dan. A good buy.
1934 Ford 4-door deluxe
sedan.
1933 Terraplane 4-door se­
dan. Runs like new.
1931 Essex 2-door with
trunk.
1931 DeSoto 4-door sedan.
1929 Essex 4-door sedan.
Most of these cars have been private­
ly owned and have had the best of
care. All have good rubber and arc
mechanically right.

The Pick of the New Car Field

STUDEBAKER-Only car ot thc price
with automatic hill holder and rotary
door latch standard equipment.

TERRAPLANE-Priced with the low­
est. Only low priced car with 117 in.
wheel base, 55 in. seating capacity.
More economical and safer. Hudson
and Terraplane only cars with double
braking system. See these 1937 cars
firstb

GRUNOW With Tclcdial

Violin shaped cabinets. Cplor-flash airplane dial with
clock type tuning. With
electric eye.

Special Prices
During Show

Foot Comfort Shop Opening
SHOES

CLOSEOUT OF TOY DEPARTMENT...30 to 50% Price Reduction

HOSIERY
American Silk Mills Snag-proofcd. spot-proof, indi­
vidual lengths.
. •
•

Goodyear Bros. Hardware Co
HASTINGS

PHONE 2101

Special arch cushion* built la individual

inwn-ssioo al your fool.

ENA H. ROCKWOOD

Diploma tn apocldl greh construcUou from American Cqllcge

Hours—9-11 A. M.

1-5 P. M.

7-» P. M.

Phone $130

'
;
I
,
(

Rivera Older Than Mountains
Evidently several famous river*
art older than the mountains
through which they flow. A typical
one. »aya Colllcr'g Weekly, tho Danube, twice cute through Uie great
mountain chain of aouUicrn Europe.
h Gatex 4 geological phgnoptei vrhoae only pou^k explanation
IhU th* river «xl*t«d before ths
MDtaku and k*pl Us cours* open
they rote during the ages.

�TM HArTTNOS BAXNra. THURSDAY, DECDCBEB j, ltM

Announcing ... the Grand Openir
of the Barry Theatre
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------- ---

WEEK OF DECEMBER 6

Wednesday And Thursday
WEEK 01 DECEMIEE &lt;

"THE COUNT OF
MONTE CRISTO"

SUNDAY AND MONDAY
Jon* Withers, Irving S. Cobh, Slim Summer­
ville head the ca&gt;t.

By Alexander Dumas. Featuring Robert Donat and Elista
Landi.

Friday And Saturday

"PEPPER"

Dick Foran, the Singing Cowboy of Screen
and Radio Fame, will appear in

A cartoon all in Technicolor far the Kiddies.

The California Mail

"TOM THUMB"

And a selection of outstanding short subjects

Good Old Plumbertime
Music Hath Charms
Vitaphone Highlights
Wee Men

Included as extra short subjects the following: Vincent lopex

and his famous orchestra. A novelty, Nature's Handiwork.

Educational Subject and Comedy, "THAT'S PICTURES."

It gives us a great deal of pleasure to an­
nounce the Grand Opening of our new the­
CONGRATULATIONS TO YOU, RAY:

atre, the Barry:

On your new Barry theatre. We are proud to be in

Street, this theatre is completely new

business on the some street with such an outstanding,

throughout and special attention has been

progressive firm.

paid to the seating, ventilating and projec­

C. B, HODGES, DEPENDABLE JEWLER

tion equipment. The popular demand for

Located on East State

OUR CONGRATULATIONS, RAY:

You've done an outstanding job in your
new theatre. We extend our best wishes
for abundant success and prosperity in

the new Barry theatre.
FLOYD H. GASKELL, Plumber

another theatre in Hastings was so great
that we invested in this movie house to sup

ply the demand. Only the best type of pic­
?EST WISHES TO MR. BRANCH AND
HIS STAFF:
\
We appreciate the fact that your splendid new the­

tures will bo shown at prices reasonable for

both children and adults. The theatre has

been operating for the past few weeks to al­

atre is a great addition to the business district of

low us to test the new equipment and make

Hostings.

adjustments which are always necessary in

J. c. PENNEY COMPANY

any now venture. Everything in the Barry is

CONGRATULATIONS:

We extend our congratulations to you,
Mr. Branch, on the opening of the new
Barry theatre-one of Michigan's finest.
G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE

completely new and was purchased locally
wherever possible. We wish to thank the
business firms listed on this page for their

APPRECIATION;

splendid cooperatibn, for it was through

We are justly proud of the naw Barry theatre—and

them that this building and equipment

we hail with appreciation and satisfaction such a

were made possible. We extend an invita­

splendid contribution to the importance of Hastings.

We extend our sincere congratulations to Ray Branch

tion to everyone to visit us, and we will ap­

on the completion of his new Barry theatre.

preciate your comments.

HASTINGS CITY BANK

RAY BRANCH

CONGRATULATIONS AND
BEST WISHES:

for your continued success in your new
theatre.
CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS DRUG STORE

Manager

Our Hearty Congratulations:

We qre happy to have been affiliated
with you in the construction of such a
fine theatre- We wish you years of con­
tinued success and prosperity.

Our hearty congratulations and best

HOME LUMBER COMPANY

REED’S DRUG STORE

■.

Wa Extend Our Hourly

Congratulations and Bost Wishos
for your su«a&lt;H with the new

Barry Theatre ’

wishes on the official opening of the

new Barry theatre.

Congratulations To You, Ray
Your theotre is on outstanding accomp­
lishment in the show-places of Michi­
gan.

SUCCESS TO THE
BARRY THEATRE
A fine theatre in a fine community.
Congratulations, Ray.
CRUE'S SHOESTORE

We extend our hearty congratulafiani to Ray Branch

and staff on their fine achievement. They deserve the

commendation and support of the entire community
for providing new and entirely adequate theatre fa­

cilities for their patrons.

THE HASTINGS BANNER
GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO.

CONSUMERS POWER CO.

�THE lUSTINM BtNNEB, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 3. 1MI

Special
FRIDAY
and

SATURDAY

21
Broadcast

Armour a

CORNED BEEF

CORNED

HASH

BEEF

15

2 tt 25'
P and G

AU Flavor.

SOAP

JELL-O

3 ft 10c
KRISPIES

Wheaties

- 8C

pk«. |QC

Diamond Crystal

Kitchen

SALT

KLENZER

- 5C

Cc
J

can

Excel

ORANGE

SODA

JUICE

Crackers

10°
Texas Natural Sweet

Grapefruit

5

19'

- 10‘
AAP
WHITE-SLICED

BREAD
....

Qc

kxf

Rolled Rib

Lean Fresh Picnic

Beef Roast

Pork Roast

19'
Smoked Hocklesa

PICNICS

18'

ORDBX TON YUNUOATION

CHANCERY OBPEK

,
,.J.!:;!'".’.,
A. P. ivsc.

IM,
Out 13 3

MORTOAOE BALS.

[ LEGAL NOTICE.- |

Kollogg’a

WHEAT

FREEPORT.
Lewis' mother. Mra. Belle Lowder. Moore were In Grand Leder on Odeasa and the latter had brought
l he Women» Literary club will and .family,
, business Monday.
them to their home here Friday
bold their December meeting nt tlie
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Naglcr. Mr.' Alton Rogen., ‘E. R. Sullivan, Al­ evening. Saturday morning Mr.
liaiw of Mrs. L. Jt. Wolcott on tlie and Mrs. Fred Kunde and daugh­ va Moore, and Raymond Wieland Pox built the fire and performed
ufu-moon of December 10. Tlie roll ter attended a family gutnerina at attended lhe father and Min ban- the regular morning task*. altlMugh
| call response will be "The Best the new home of Mra. Naglcr-* quet of lhe Brotherhood at Has- complaining ot a pain around tho
.Gift Santa could Bi mg Me" Word faUter. R. W. Moulton, at Howard tings last week Monday evening.
heart, making breathing difficult.
I study will be in charge of Mrs Otiy Thanksgiving day.
| clarence Van Patten was num- He finally lay down and Uie doc| Vivian Moore nnd the music com­
I mil tee Is arranging for some spe­ all the mump* patients have, re­
rived. Mr. Fox iiad passed away.
"Mr. and Mrs. James Cool enjoy­ A resident here fur many years,
cial Christmas music: Tlie ’ dlory covered and we ont again. A nrw
of Uie Passion Play’’ will Ue given ’crop'’ will probably appear soon. ed a turkey dinner at tlie home of Mr. Fox had won tlie respect nnd
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Judson
Klnpley
and
by Mix. Bernice Carter find Mrs
friendship of every one by hU in­
Raymond Bunn of Middleville family at Grandville.
Mamie Tabbercr will Rave charge
dustrious life and friendly helpful
Ml a|1. Mrs JUC(JD Qle£j of
of thc Christmas Grab Bug. Every spent hoirt Munday until Wednisparent7. Bowne and Farrell Anderson of local Towiuend club and a mem­
; member is urged to be present at day at the^home
.
Mr.
and
Mra.
Chas.
Bunn.
tills meeting.
Hastings were Thanksgiving tilnber of the U. B. church. He Is sur­
I Mr and Mrs. George Townsend ....
...
vived by Ute widow. Bessie, one son,
prayer meeting thl.
of north Hastings were Suncu. Wedel and family and Mrs Vivian Forrest, and a sister. Mra. Etta Sar­
nfti-niom callers al the home of Anderson.
------------geant. of Howard City. He was 74
Mt and Mr- H. M. Bouglincr.
|
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Leland
Jones
and
Ada'^s. The meetings w ill be hi id
..The
.'Hie W
W M.
M. A.
A. are
are holding
holding oh
oh Lil
ull II daughter
daughter Noretta.
Noretta. ot
of Dowling
Dowling call-I
call- held from the U. B. church at 2:30
nt the homes during the Winter
I
day
work
meeting
at
the
home
of
’
m
on
their
grandparents.
Mr.
and
1
Monday afternoon. conducted by
aflOMhS.
%•..
—
I. ITV....
• .
..
.
.....
1 1. ‘&gt;he
&gt;
’ ■j. tI. tin,.
I—— / A..-I
MtsF'jamex
CooFsiunday.
"
Pastor. 0*1
Rev.
Bntdorf
and
Mrs ZChas
Overholt
today. Thurs­ ...
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Burton nnd
Principal and Mrs. Evart Ardis
ln Pleasant “u‘ «««•
son. Moore, of Detroit were week day. w.lh a public dinner at noon.
The Walton hunting party, con- spent the Thanksgiving vacation
r&gt;
, , ,
end guests of her parents. Mr : nd
। listing, of Frank. Claude and Ralph at McBain with their parents.
1
OL’NHAM DISTRICT
Ralph Kenyon and Mi&amp;t Cor-'
PLNHAM district.
Miss Ruth Tnbberer of Detroit Walton And Delton Tyler, are
&gt;
nnd Miss Dorothy Tnbberer of Har­ among the lucky ones, the report rrnZXIleas of Kalamazoo called at Nov 20 L*11*1,
being
that
they
not
only
got
lhelr
the L. R. Wolcott home Sunday
Mr. and Mra Leslie Cheeseman
bor Bench wre euests of their par­
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Clein and. and daughter of Battle Creek were
ents. Mr and Mrs. p. C. Tabbercr. quota ot deer, but also a large
bear.
I daughters Ione. Mary and Doris of ■’guesU Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Herduring lhe Thanksgiving vacation
I Mr. nnd Mrs. C
“
„„w,, wiwl
w Thank^gn- be^t McGlocklln.
Geo.
Thompson ( Carlton
Center spent
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and were Thanksgiving
a guests nf
of Mr , ing W|th Mr. and Mrs «.
P. A.
. Thom~i, RevIvM services which have teen
Mrs. Gad Lightfoot and family and Mrs. Arthur Richardson oi —
■— with a fine -*■
।
as. coming
dinner all * m session the past three weeks
were: Mr. and Mra. Emery Miles South
,
Bowne.
।
choked
and
ready
to
eat Needlev. closed Bunday evening.
and Miss Beverly Bumside of KaiMiss Donna Moore of Jackson to say Mr. and Mrs. Thomas I
amazoo. and Mr. I. J. Caron ot was a holiday week end guest of , thoroughly enjoyed this.'
Mr. and Mra. Merrill Dunkelbi-rg• South Irving.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. E.
Thanksgiving dinner guests at: er and spps. who have been at the
1 home of Mra. Dunkelbergt r\ par­
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Rosser and Moore.
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Allen ents. Mr. and Mrs George Ball since
daughter. Gwendolyn, of Allegan
Carl Lightfoot has been absent Pish were John L. Deming of Chi­
were Thanksgiving guests of hls from school nearly two weeks due cago. Mr. and Mra. George Wald- liie birth of lhelr youngest son
several weeks ago. have returned to
father. Percy Racer and Mr. and to numerous large bolls
ring, Kenneth. Ralph. Jame-. and their home In tlie Weeks district.
Mrs Leon Howk.
j .Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Hawkins
Marion Waldring. Joe Cutting und
Glenn Hoffman is north deer
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Batdor f and nnd daughter of Grand Rapuls Catherine Waters all of Holland.
family of Grand Rapids called on were Thanksgiving guests ol Mr. Mr. and Mra. L. A Srgar and .win hunting. Tlie party of which Orin
hls parents. Rev and Mra. J. I. and Mrs. Alvin Helrigle and Don- Robert and Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Cole and Claud Dunkelberger were
members
lias returned. Orin was
Batdorf. last Friday
-Waldring of Grand Rapids. Mr. and
Bunday guesU of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. 8. R. Wan- of South Boston. successful In getting a deer.
Mrs L. B. Lester was In Lake
I Alvin Helrigle were Mr and Mr*. ML** Olive Waldring of Belding. F.
Last Tuesday. Ethel Donovan.
Odessa on business Tuesday
Clare Emerson of Sturgis and Mr. E Deming. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Ruth Mead and LU lie Cheescmati
Mr and Mrs Arthur Webb of
ahd Mrs.) Claude Emerson of Has­ Roush and Mrs. Geo. Begar of were al Hastings attending a 4-H
Battle Creek were Saturday night
tings.
'
leaders' meeting.
Freeport.
and Sunday guests of her parents, i
Mra. Ida Cheeseman of NashThe December meeting of the P
Mr and Mra. Walter Lewis
I ThanfaJgivmg guests of Mr. and
WTO Mmiw str,.
Emery Walt lias been numbered Mr* Chig,. Moore and son. Ralph. T. A. Is being held at lhe kIk-c!
MOOre
UWe:
Mr
ani1
»..UK«ay
rvciHug
win
house this Thursday evening with spent several days the past week
among thc sick the post week
with
her niece. Mrs. Adella Blanton,
Mrs
william
Moore
and
daughter
M
ra.
8.
O.
Voorhees
In
charge
of
Miss Iris Mlles accompanied her
Margaret of Hastings. Mr. and Mrs. I the program.
In Dowling and returned lo her
too last Thursday returning on Glenn Moore of Nashville and their i Jimmie Cool visited hls tutoe, own home Bunday.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Strau-sscr of
Sunday to Ute home of Mr. and daughter Kathleen of Kalamazoo.' Mr*. Leland Jones, at Dowling last
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Moore and Saturday.
Cloverdale were Bunday guests at
Mrs. Gall Lightfoot.
Mrs. Vivian Anderson spent the Clem Kidder's.
Mrs. Roy Naglcr left Monday for two daughters. Mr. and Mra. Alva |
| week end at the home of licr parChicago to make the acquaintance Moore and two children.
Mr. and Mra. Gordon Usbome ale cnt5. Mr. and Mr5 Jncob Oll?s3i
of the daughter that recently ar­
supper at the home of Rnd with them took Sunday dinner
rived at the home of Mr and Mrs. venison
and Owen
John nnd
George Robtrwon a.
at Carl­ wllh her brojfy.,. Harold Olcis at
Philip Naglcr Congratulations.
ton
Center last week Tuesday eve­ Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lewis and
ning.
I1
The teachers of the Thomapplcson. Raymond, spent Sunday with
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Irving schooL* were given a ban­
Mrs. Lewis’ mother, Mr;;. Wilbur
Mr. and Mra. Dell Godfrey were: quet at lhe Middleville school
Whitney, of Irving
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kunde moved Dr and Mrs. J W. Rigterink and Tuesday evening by Ute Kellogg
the forepart ot the week into the daughter Helen of Grand Rapids. Foundation. The local teachera parLayer house Just vacated by Ken Mr. nnd Mrs. George Hooper of tlclpated.
Campbell and Mrs. L. B. Lester.
Latest report from Mrs. Nancy
Braendle.
.
Mra. Alvin Helrigle and daugh­ Deming, who is nt the home of her
Mr. and Mrs Ed Contes were
ter Donna of Fllmore. Mr. andI son Frank C. in Grand Rapid*,
Thanksgiving guests of
their
—l. b ® , 1 n j
daughter. Mrs. Doty, and faipily’nt Mrs. Laurence Hawkins and daugh­ state* that she Is not getting along
ter Patsy of Grand Rapids called nt well a* she w&amp;vand suffer* a
i prayina tl
Battle Creek
&lt;l» by Ihla
on Mr and Mra. Gordon Usborae1 great deal.
r w... the 1
John I.. Deming of Chicago, here
son Raymond spent Thanksgiving Sunday ufternodn
Mr nnd MrsT\Vm. Klemp entire• for the family gathering on Thanks­
in Battle Creek, thc guc-sts of Mr
tained with a Thanksgiving din- giving day. ,remained
v„,.ulru for „a ,few
cw
ner at their home here, the follow- days’ visit with hls father, F. E
Ing guests being present Mr. und Deming, nnd sisters In Freeport nnd
Mra Rnymond Whitehead and two visited hls nunt. Mrs Oro. Deming,
children ot Selfridge Field. Mr. and in Grand Rapids Saturday.
M's George Gordon of Bottle
j, p. h. Kenyon was very pleasCreek. Mr mid Mrs. Ed Good nnd nntly surprised Sunday afterao-m
Mr and Mrs Royal Good of Delton, when he received as visitors some
Mr and Mra Gordon Usbome friends of hls earlier life whom he
and the Braendle children attend- had not seen for many years. They
cd a Thanksgiving dinner gathering were Mr. Ben Howse nnd Mr and
ORDER ron I-UBl.rtATIO!l
&lt;.f the Knowles girls and lhelr Mrs Sidnev Prnll of Orleans counftimilles at the home of Mr. and ty New York.
Mrs Frank Friend in Campbell
Sunday callers at the Allen Fish
Mr nnd Mrs. Alva Moore and home were Mra. James Elliott &lt;nee
children were Sunday guests of Mr. Vera Ware) and children. Barbara
PtE*fife WALGREEN SYSTEM nnd
Mrs
and daugh
­ nnd Bobby, of Davison and Mr. nnd
r‘ Wm.
*” Moore ""
—
ntLU O
DRUGSTORE
ter Margaret al Hastings.
Mra. M. L. Ware ot Lansing.
1 PHONE 2241
HASTINGS
Clarence Van Patten and Ralph
Mr. and Mrs Allen Fish and
family, accompanied by John L
Deming of Chicago, were callers st
the Arthur Blenm. F. C. Deming. L.
A. Hegar and John Boar hornet in
Grand Rapids last Saturday.
Joy Carpenter of Carlton Center
recently purchased the Mr*. Nan­
cy Deining home here and experts
to move into it very soon. Mrs.
Deming has stored her goods tem­
porarily In the upper rooms.
Ken Braendle and family moved
lost Friday Into the house recintly
vacated by Dr. II. 8 Wede] and
which they recently purchased frpin
lhe Griswold estate.
NOTICE TO CREDITOR.
Rev and Mra. L. F. Burkey were
in Kalamazoo Sunday afternoon to
visit their daughter. Bernice, who
is a patient at Borges* hospital.
MLss Gaytha Loomis of Saranac
accompanied by Gary Newton and
Sirs. Neal Newton and two children
called on Mr. and Mr*. Victor Sis­
son Sunday evening.
Mr and Mra. Edgar Cheney and
daughter. Donna, ot Howell were
Tiianksglving guests of Mra. Che­
ney’s parents. Mr ond Mrs. H. W.

REMOVE FAT

15'
Tender Juicy Beef

Pot Roast

Drive In..NOW!
• Oil Changed

Generator Adj'ed

• Motor Flushed

Timing Adjusted

Radiator Drained, Flushed And Filled With
Prestone.

10'

\«l» FOOD STORES
We Cash WPA Ckwk.

St*.

• Batteries, Windshield Wiper*

Michigan

• Sunoco Gaa and Olla

Greaatng

• Vulcanizing

Waablng

BLUE

aTX

IlasUnr*.

Sunoco

IW37.

p of Yankr.
1 Si.i. ot Ulrb

Be 16 SVrU. hut Ih
■ir.rrihad urtniltt

tin tire twine dnerUied

Out 12 J

NOTICE or MORTGAGE BALE.

by William X. Cbld

7 oi ii*aun(&lt;, iiarr
lo HOUK OVV'NEIU
DKPOKATtOX. ■ Cnr|.or»llo
und«r ,k- *--- -• •*-Hl*|r« of Amrriri
'ounly. Mkhlcai
In Liber 07 &lt;

and CO/IOO Ilullai

NOTICE TO OUDITOll,

I Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Roush. Mra.
1 Clitlie Roush and son. Ivan, mo­
I tored to Rising Sun. Ohio. Sunday
j to attend the funeral of Charles

Battery Charged

• Plugs Cleaned

School resumed Monday with
teachers and pupils none the worse
for a four days' vacation.
Rev. and Mra. L. P. Burkey and
sons. Paul and Bobble, and Mr. and
Mra. Floyd E._Burkey motored to
South Haven last Thursday and
were Thanksgiving dinner guests of
their daughter and shier, Mra.
Frank Ricca and husband.
Mr. and Mra. lawrence Maxson
and daughter. Kathleen, of Lowell
were Sunday afternoon guests of

r.t bidder. *t th

moto"

Roush.
Mr. and Mra. L. R. Wolcott and
J. P. H. Kenyan entertained the
members of the Wolcott family at
their home here Thanksgiving day
Those present were: Mrs Lena Jor­
don and son, Howard, and family
of Lansing. Morris Jordon and
family of Grand Rapids, Mra. Rena
Culler and son. Birdsall Holly, Mra.
Stata Hilbert and daughter. Helen,
I Mr. and Mra. Reuben Wolcott, ail
of Woodfapd. Mr. and Mra. V. L.
Wolcott and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Miller of Charlotte.
Death of John Fox
I
This community was shocked
Saturday lo leant of the sudden
death that morning of John Fox.
Altho. In poor health for several
years hls death was unexpected.
Mr. and Mra. Fox had partaken of
Uie ’nvanksglvlni dinner with their

ORDER TOR PUBLICATION.

MS HI!

by Mn.lar hla|tb
Hut Inn Villa.. C

Dat»d: OrK.brr 14th. 1038.
1IOMK OWXKRS- I.OAX CORPO

sutfk^. B*&lt;lat*r et Prabata .

BANNER WANT ADVB. PAY

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3,

Americas Desert Yields to Man’s Progress

Forging steadily across lhe gieat American desert, this huge dragline docs Its part toward com­
pleting thc $30,000,000 All-American canal for California’s Imperial Valley Replacing the.old canal
which went through Mexico, lhe new channel, with the aid of Boulder Dam, will prevent drouth or
,
flood tn lhe Imperial. Yuma nnd Coachealla valleys.

Thanksgiving evening

when

entrance to Kingston (Janmlca) bar
bor. m« once a city of consider
able size. It wut the headquarlera
of the buccaneers nnd nt Hint time
thc wlckedert.
a military station with highly In­
teresting
historical
associations
S'elsnn was In command there In

I ____
Un ,,Mk«&gt;
MMfly. vw na
SOUTH SHULTZ.
________________
&gt;nStn&gt; several
ov,r«1 —
..L. with
. •
Lucy Sullivan nnd friend and &lt;n
"Pending
weeks
tthe
— .Princess
.
Caravella
.
ou„- daughter. Martha &amp;kh,
retpnu
Bert Cook of Kalamazoo spent Sun”
The ease of the Princes* Cnra- day with Mr nnd Mrs Frank Hom. l,cr home in South Maple 0
reyti n, xaptrn. In probably unique.
Mrs. Alma Whipple of Augurta Thursday.
After giving n dinner party she re­ visited her daughter. Mrs. Ernest
Gloom was cast over this
munity by the passing ct &lt;
tired to her room to snatch a little Peake last week.
Cliarley Herrington of Kalama- ^n&gt;0?
m&lt;rnUig at
rest before the following dance.
He hkd been tn
Very shortly, afterward* she wa» zoo called on Mrs. Mina Kenyon
found dead In bed. thot through the Saturday to tell her hls father.
hls
last
IBnexs,
pneumonia,
lasted
George
Herrington,
had
pa-ued
heart.
,
Thev were well
welt
runerat was ;
Her husband wax arretted on sus­ 1 away Friday night. They
known in this place and all extend "c d ftt tnt Bh'^ftrilcal Church Wed-;
picion, for he was noted for hit sympathy to lhe bereaved family.1
*£lemooa. Rev. Seward ।
Jenloua disposition, and it did not
Mrs Will Gates. Mrs. Vera Craofficiating. He was laid to
seem possible that anyone eiae ven. Mr. and Mrs. Rms Be Ison
amidst banks of flewen in art very slight—tn matt
could nave been in the room. It Gladys Craven and friend and Bnuh RJC1K* cetbetery.
a taw Incbaa. The tta tl
might have gone hard with the Clinton Hom spent Thanksgiving Those from away who attended ' at tha Straits of ibralti
prince but for the shrewdness of a with Mr. and Mrs. Loren Gardnler the funeral were Mr. and kL. influence does wt extend Hr. iwa
of Bedford.
claud Mlnzcy of Tustm Mr
strtlta. at the narrow** point an
er In the Boston Globe.
Mr and Mrs. Mila Ashby spent Mra Jack Mlnzey of Adrian Mrs
mUw wtaU- B«*we«n Gibraltar
I and Ceuta the distance la Ihtrteda
This man carefully exauilntvl tho Thankwivtn.
Thanksgiving wi.H
with their daughter, Helen Brown and Mrs. Bert Whit
c'
——« «»
—■-*- ••
— Edith •-Bofc- , milea.
iiedi liiitnlu-r. mid found one of ’lhe Mabel, in Battle Creek.
of n
Grand
Rapids.
Mra.
very large rnoths common In ithly
in thc floor with wings tmdlv
Fluttering Moth Killed

Mr

currts drove into the ride of the
uiwn
Green car on
MH the
MFC comer .wv
two miles
south of Woodland. Mr. Green's car
was badly dented
j
•"* and Mra. Green
sustained a few bruises but other
' than these the accident did not
prove serious
Dale Hauer of Western Stale Nor­
mal of Kalamazooo spent the
Thanksgiving holiday with hls par­
ents. Mr. and Mrs. John Hauer.
Mrs Gep. Faul. who has been
staying with her son. Chas. Paul,
and family this fall, spent Thanks­
giving with Mrs. L- Faul.
Mr. and Mrs. j. V- Hilbert were
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Shomo of Ann Arbor.
Tuesday evening nt the home of
Paul smith a Y M C A. group was
organized. Hie following officers
strt elected: president. Franklin
Townsend; vice-president. Edward
Fisher; secretary and treasurer. Neal
Rise. Tlie next meeting will be held
Thursday of this week The group
will meet every week

-

—

OVEN-FRESH
Heart. and Hint
showed plainly oir the trigerr.
He iledumi from thr-M- signs that
lhe moth had burned Its wings, had
fallen on the table, flutierlhg and
spinning, and Gift Its wings had
struck ’ lhe lightly sprung trigger
and tired the pistol. &lt;&gt;n this evl-

Lerte;
DELTON.
। Roll call will be answered with a tings and Mr and
Donald E. Reynolds, boi. of Mr.
verse. Mra. Leda Harrington Brumm of “Woodland
and Mrs. Lee Reynolds of Crewey. ttnd Mr» ^“er Dunn have charge
Mr. and Mrs Blake Rising an:
member *'
Is son. Gene, of Wert Woodland. Mi
and Mixa Helen J. Culver, daughter of
"r thc program
------------- Every
— ------and Mrs Perry Flory and sons an
of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Culvai uf cordially Invited to attend
Hastings, were united in marriage
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrlanscn Mr and Mrs Gio Nlelhamer wer
and Mrs. Fran
on Monday evening, November 23 al visited hls brother Jake Adrfihton gubsts of. Mr
Growing Tulips
Being lhe Boss
7:30 o'clock tn the Delton M. E. and wife at Prairieville Sunday aft* Nlelhamer Thanksgiving.
Thc Industry of growing tulip
Jud Tunkins says when things
parsonage. Rev. Ralph Bales read emoon.
Mr and Mrs. Karl c Faul an&lt;
are goin' smooth, everybody wants
thc ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Mau­ ; Rev. Ralph Bates attended a children» were
Thanksgiving guest
-------------------------------------most any part of the United Slates to be boss.
When they're goin’
rice Johncox accompanied them funeral at Three Rivers Sunday of Mr and Mrs H J Stang of Bat
where soil and climate are suitable wrong, ’most anybody can have thc
Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds will make afternoon.
'lie creek.
—v
for oats
Mlu Mnrda Faul entertained th
job.
their home in Hasting* where they
Mr. and Mrs. Will Dunning spent
arc both employed.
,
King's
Heralds
nt
her
home
Satur
Thanksgiving with lhelr son. Loon.1
day afternoon. Seven members an.
Arthur Moorhus. son of Mr anr. and family in Dellon,
Mra. Henry Moorhus nt DeUon tnd
Mr. and Mra Leonard.and fami­ their leader. Mra II A KtUon. wer
Miss Lavtnla Hoddc of Grand Rap­ ly sjwnt Thanksgiving with Mt. present.
and Mrs. Ralph Leffler ant
ids were united in marriage Wed­ and Mra. Wilt Sheldon in Katamachildren spent Thanksgiving wit.
nesday Nov 25, nt KH'r M- m- zoo.
id Mrs. Hubert Bronson o
orlal chain-1 in Grand Rapids by
Mrs. Bessie Tungntc returned to y
Rev. 8. W. Hayes of Lakeview, u her home Saturday after spendlni’ Hastings
■ id Mrs. carl Nlelhamer and I
former Delton pastor. They will live the week in the Henton home anti
al 820 College 81, S. E, Grand Rap­ catering at thc Henton-Srni'.h wed­ Mr and Mrs. H A Kltson and Mu: !
j &gt; .peiu liifeiik.'glvtng lii Gran.
Ids. Arthur has been employed i&gt;y ding
lhe Wolverine Brass Co. tn Grand
Linden Collison. Leo Chamber­ Rapids and altt-nded the theater
Hcrc you will find useful Christmas Gifts for all thc
Mr* D'maid Gager and son. Mor­
Rapids for the past two years Wc lain. Gamer Pennock, and Myron
extend congratulations lo the hap­ Johncox. students in the animal gan. visited her parents, Mr ant
Family
py newly weds.
husbandry class were accompanied airs. Harry Hougn of Hartford tin
Mrs Matilda Smith and son. by Mr. Barnum and attended the part wee|-„ Mr Gai-er joining them
for ThBiiksglvlnn
Chaile.s. entertained for Thanks­ stock show in Chicago from Tues­
Mr. and Mr- Weibv Croekforc
giving Mr Ransom and daughter of day until Thursday.
Hastings, Mrs. Lucina Eddy and
Mr. and Mrs Huddles spent the and family and Mr and Mr- Arthu.
Billie Smith.
Thanksgiving vacation at Manion. Allcrdmg and pons were gue.-.:&gt; o
Mr. and Mrs .J L crockford o.'
Mr and Mrs. H. T Chandler were Mrs L-jretta Magner al Morrice. Carlton Sunday
Thanksgiving guests of hls broth­ Mbs Roush and Mbs Blivcn in
Mr nnd Mrs i| j. Rorick &lt;Ln
Hartings. Mra. Dunnavan in Gales­
er. Roy, and faiRlty in Harting,
Vonnc Culler । and two children o!
burg.
Mr.
Sheathelm
in
Lansing
tnd Mr and Mrs H. F. Wertman
brown elk Q O c
Eaton. Ind visited relative-, her I
leathers— **©
spent lhe day at a family gathering and Mr nnd Mrs.'Raymond Wls- o.i-t the Tnankutiving holiday. Or 1
ncwski nt Wayland
A
It C P. Larabcc s In Hastings.
8 indfly Mr and Mr D«*lni»i»l Cui 1 M
Miss Kathryn Horton was in Chi­
Dr. P. G. Bcmsnl i.jx-nl thc Ural
h
r
entertained
wiiii
a
family
dinnu
of this week attending an X-ray cago from Friday until Tuesday at­ in their honor. Mr and Mr- Van: W
Women's La gib’s Wool S4
Children's Leather
QA*
tending the meeting of the Nation­
clinic ut Ann Arbor.
Cuff
Slipper*
—
J
Slippers
—
W
4
!
Wotnng and Mr .«r.d Mra Alvai t w
Our hunters have all relumed al 4-H Club council.
Miller of East Woodland were guests I K
Faust Patterns
ATI SiZC;.
Dr. and Mr*
Edward
Lowry
lafe and sound Mnx Reynolds and
• Mr and Mra John Di-ll sjxn- y
Leon Doster are two others from zpait Uie latter part of the week Thanksgiving with Mr. «■■
”■ , *"•
and■ Mrs
W
with
relatives
in
Flint
,nnd
will
Delton to bring home a hur-k
Erra Deli of Lansing
mr
.uiu
mra.
narrmgvon
ov
'
C0
'5
T
UCS
?
“
&gt;
'
1
J*
«
onc
l
*°
Mr nnd Mrs. Merl Harrington of
Mis* Dorotlfv Dell Is spending
motlfilTHr n
Kalamazoo
Sunday
with
J’i® dcnUl c,l”*c n*
Kalamiuoo spent
spent
Sunday
v
few days with Iriendt nnd KlaUw
lhelr parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
is *pon»orc&lt;l by
( lhr
the Kcllo
Kellogg
Poundatlmr
' . •- De'roll.
Harrington.
‘r:? Fn'mrfailm.
'
Our high school basket ball team I . Ah. anfl Mrs Wr.lb&gt; Cnxkford and
Padded
Thc Sunday School classes No a I «111 play their flrr.l game at Rich- famlly wcrc ThanksgivIng guests ol
Leather
and 7 will hold their social meet­ ! land this week Friday.
' Mr- a,‘d Mrs C- L Potter of BarrySoles
ing at thc home of Mra. Blanche I
Mr. nnd Mrs. Clarence Wtllum.- vllJ^
Richards on Tuesday night, Decem­
Ti^nk^ivtaR*“*Mr
| entertained "lor
for Thanksgiving
Mr . Mr '‘’’d Mrs. cha* Farthing cn
Women’s - Children’s Rubber
ber 8 Pot luck supper will be serv­
Women's Soft Kid
Kloyd K,mI and Mrs. Claude Harrington of !5.
' rU*mSd Mr 0,1,1 M1
ed at 7 o’clock with n program fol­
. ble e.nd Mrs. Mattle Kimble of ।
i Banfleld. W. W. Lung and- -Mrs.
D’Orsay Slipper
lowing in charge of L. N. Bush.
' Coals Grove. Mi-&lt; B-ltv Ketch*"
| Lillian Raw of Wall Lake
E. Lawrence Carman of Clove-1
, of
I I Sec headed articles about Smith*'* Carlton and Mr and Mrs Glen 1
land spent the Thanksgiving weca
Farthing nnd Jcyce lor Thanksglv- I
Hen ton wedding and Kellogg
end with Ml** Maxine Henton
school on thc |&gt;craonal and front hg dinner
Mr. and Mra. G. Horton of Au­ . pages
। Grcydon Fan! and Chas. Rowladcr 1
gusta spent Thanksgiving day with
of Grand Rapids were Thanksgiving !
Mr. and Mrs J C. Horton. Mr
| guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence .
WOODLAND.
and Mra. L. N. Bush spent the day
,
i
Mr and Mrs Will Hafir r of We* Faul. Mrs. Lawrence Faul returned 1
with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gaskill nf
1 to Grand Rapids to visit until Sun­
Dowling. Mr. and Mra. John Adams Woodland entertained the followin',
Ol j d*v
with Mr. nnd Mrs. Glenn Williams for Thanksgiving dinner Mr. and
'
Mr. and Mrs R a Wolcott ol
at thc Kellogg farm. Mrs. Sylvia Mrs Ward Plants and daughte rs of1 East Woodland. Mrs LxwTence HU­
Colors—Red. Blue or Black,
Knnppen spent from Wednesday Hartford, Mr nnd Mn Jnmrs Fel­ ber: snd Ellen. Mrs Renn Culle.
leather soles and
$4.49
until Friday with her sister. Mrt lows nnd Mr . Biptlcy of Lak ■ Ode,-1 and Blrdsiil Holly were guests of
heels—
IChoice ot black or brown
Clara Gay. nt Grand Rapids and M. Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Hauer of• | Mr and Mrs L R. Wolcott of FreeWyandotte.
Mr
and
Mrs
Rolfe
1
Mrs Blanche Richards, Clair, RUth
v part for Thanksgiving dinner
and Paul and Mim Effie Richard* Bulling and MIm Florence Ander­’ j Mr. nnd Mr* H A Kltson enterwere guesU of Mr and Mrs Calvin son ol Hastings. Mr. and Mrs John I tained Mr. and Mrs Frank Niet-e.u «.o
John R B-.ililng and Mr hnmer Sunday with a Thanksgiv- I
Powell al Hastings. Mr and
Mn.
Holomon Stanton spent lite day Jnd Mrs. Milan Trumbo and ML*- ling anniversary dinner in honor of I
with Mr and Mrs. Ben Cowles at M',nc R3'-rtgh of Woodland
i both Mr. and Mrs. Kltson's and Mr !
“Barry County's Busiest Shoe Store"
Hartings
, Xlr anrt Mrs. Dell Williams. Misi,
and Mrs. Niethamer’s wedding amu- I
,
A basket ball game Is scheduled MiMred Williams Joe Nowicki nnd । verjarles.
iS 114 W. STATE Sv
HASTINGS. MICH.
for Friday night, December 11. be- j Mr and Mr' Gilbert McLeod and j।
Mr. anil Mrs D B Green and I y
sons.
Richard
and
Elwood,
weretween Delton and Martin al Del­
।
cuhl, k... .
Thanksgiving
guests
of
Mr
and
Mrj
ton.
Raymond McLeod of Grand Rapid.. I
Rev and Mrs j o Crawford of1
day afternoon with Mrs Charier.
Prairieville and Mr and Mrs. Lloyd i
Cowie., tn Delton,
Mrs. Bert Patton will entertain Fisher of Hastings were Sunday dUithc Augusta L, A. S. for dinner on ncr guests ol Rev. and Mrs Fay C.1
Wing.
Thursday, December 10.
Rev. Fay Wing will to Wayland '
Mrs Bert Patton entertained tixe
will you fimd thM ex­
past Keek her
IICI abler,
num, Mrs.
min, M.
ns. D
u Tuesday
.to
, preach a- funeral sermon
Stein of Ohio, a neice. Mitt Man for an old re-Mdent
tremely personal gift.
—
&lt;
_____
.
.
.
_
Ur- Josephine
ln«.-i&gt;Htn&gt;. Lewis
1
Mrs.
and rhllStetn of Kalamazoo and her
Our Chrisltnus stuck is
daughter. MLv, Ruth Lawrence of dren-.'Mitt Eirtc Shomo. Muw chetldel Lewis and Mrs. Kate LaDue ot
Battle Creek.
now arriving anti we
Jimmie Faulkner of Middlevilb- Allegan were dinner guests of Mr.
has been the guest of hls grand­ and Mrs. E. O Shomo Bunday.
cordially invite you to
Mr. and Mis. Dallas Parker cf
parents, Mr. and Mrs E. E. Faulk­
Lansing
spent
Thanksgiving
wtth|
ner. for over lhe week end.
drop in and look over
Wednesday night iw.
Lleweliyn the latter’s parents. Mr nnd Mrs. T
our line of jewelry anti
Erb and Marshall Norwood were re­ W Thompson.
Miss Dorothy Tyler “ spent the,
turning home from work in Kolagifts.
- ------ ---in the latter’s car. lhe car
«na M1» Bta0» nowmazoo.
skidded and slewed on lhe icy pave-11,nd of Lakc Odessa,
menl and collided with another car . Mr. and Mr*. Roland Young and
coming toward them. Both men; daughters. Mary Lou and Mildred.!
were badly cut and bruised und Erb, of Bay City spent Sunday with Dr.
had a broken jaw and the loss of nnd Mrs. T- H- Cobb. Mrs. Young w
blood weakened him considerably . “ nt-stcr of Mrs. cobb.
Mr. Norwood was thrown out onto I Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ruell and
Watches .
Watchc*
Watches
Watches
the pavement and his back Injur- family visited the latter.-, parents,,
Billfolds
.Rings
Necklaces
Diamonds
cd. also hls neck and head, but he Mr and Mrs. Ed. covey ot Gobles j
had no broken bones. They were | from Wednesday until Sunday. •
Lighters
Desk covers
Brooches
Rings
taken to Borgo.su hospital wiicrc | Fred Lamberxon visited hls sister,
Cigarette cases
Pen sets
Rings
Toilet sets
they remained until Saturday.
' Mrs. Merrit Palmer of Grand Rapids
Travelling sets
Roy Adrtanson and three children ; over Thanksgiving.
Travelling sets
Chrome ware
Compacts
Billfold sets
of Battle Creek were, Thanksgiving
Mr. and Mrs curl jordan and son.
Humidors
-Silverware
Bracelets
^ts ol Mr. nivf Mra. peter; Rodney, aecomnanied Mr. nnd Mrs. |
Military sets
Military sots
stuon and Harry Tommy re- Lrcri Jordan on n visit to Mr. and
Necklaces
Ear clips
Watch chains
fl
malned for a visit, reluming home Mrs. Wallace jordan and Mi**
Cigar lighters
Pen sets
Dress clips
and knives
Saturday
Gladys Jordan of Chicago over lhe
Mr. and Mrs. James Collins en- Thanksgiving holiday.
tertabied for Thanksgiving. Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. David Kilpatrick of
Glassware, china tcfi, vases and other gifts too numerous to mention.
Mra. I. R. Jones and daughter Ruth. ’ A&gt;m Arbor and Arthur Kilpatrick of
and Irwin P. Jones and wife of । Jackson spent Thanksgiving day
with
Galesburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Har- —
u their parents. Mr. nnd Mrs
old Lindeman and daughter. Nan­ Frank Kilpatrick.
Mrs. Lester Brumm and Mrs.
cy. of Grand Rapids.
The December meeting of the In­ James Tykr were La ns mg vbitn.-s
land Lakes Garden club will be Saturday and Ui the evening called
held on Thnnday afternoon. De- on Mr. and Mrs. Otffi Brown ol Eart
Laming.
Idcni Mr*.” i&gt;lbcr Dunn. Bach . Mr. and Mrs. Tnitium Munion cnHastings. Mich.
Formerly Beumer's
118 W. State St.
• member is lo bring a ChrUtnua I tmalncd lor Tl&gt;ank&gt;glving. Miss
gilt ol not more than 10 cent value Bernice Munloo. Clyde Munion. aud
to be put on tho Christmas treo. Mr- snd Mrs. joint weaver of Has-

ID HOT TO GIUE?

COOKIES’.
1 SALE
• DUTCH SPICE
• COCONUT BARS
• ROB ROr

(irtiict* w« acquitted.

PURE, WHOLESOME. TASTY
VARIETIES FOR THE WHOLE
FAMILY

3 lbs 30c

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

NATURE'S HEALTH AND
FRESHNESS
SEALED
IN

10c
c#n 10c

HoC»"

1
m
2
22

tes»»SsK' 1K
^Oc
i hS**"6

I

I

'*w

c«-

No­
Can

I ,_rrt

t

**

ho.i

A

98

2

HASTINGS CUT-RATE SHOE STORE

1 WWC't

SHOP EARLY

For DAD

LAY AWAY PLAN

Chase Jewelry Store

2
M
A
m
9

A
MNhMhSAMdCrAbAMhSikdMJh* ♦?I

cM«s

Q.5C

HONIttK —

fRANCO-Ht^

Gaiters

For Mother

1 «• 1c

2

Chieftan Quality
Children's Shoes

For HER

■

pt BkS
*

A

For HIM

a

■ ■

■#

EVAPORATED

TALL
CAN

MILK ^nndhne
RICE
5C
FLOURS ’;ii82€
FANCY BLUE ROSE

W■

LB.

1

family CUP
EC
ILL MILD SANTOS, lb. X 3

ROLLED OATS 6

25

NEW
CROP

TANGERINES
°°z 19c
GRAPES
19c
HEAD LETTUCE 2 -15c
CANADIAN BAGAS
EMPEROR

SOUP MIXTURE 3 ’ i 25c
PICE, PEAS, BARLEY, LENTILS AND ALPHABETS

SODA CRACKERS 2-15c
WESSON OIL PINTS 24c QUARTS 45c
MOLASSES auhtimna N^t-iCAH 15c
KREMEL DESSERT
- 5c
VEG-ALL
2 c«s 21c

GREAT NORTHERN BEANS - 8c
DRY LIMA BEANS
. 12c
l

KELLOGG’S
GET

NEW

SINGING

------------- - ----- Pep. pk|. lie
*
“
*
Wheel “
Biecuile.
phi

128 WEST STATI STREIT

12c

’""Oil!,

�THE HV»TTNa&lt;J B tNNFR, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 3, 1IM

1 lor and ha, six or seven rubber-|
EAST DELTOtf.
I Warship of All Nature
stamp diplomas. He iifti had thou­
Mrs. Clara Galnder spent from
Once Prevailed in Peru
sands of pallenu. but where are | Thursday until Saturday with Mrs. |
they? 1'11 tell you. They are ail bur­ Cecil U-tnoa at Hastings.
Religion ot lhe Indians tn the
, led tn lhe Riverside cemetery over at i
Mr. and Mra. JUUerson Louden highlands of Peru is a strange mix­
' Hastings. That's Vfher. lie buried all an&lt;l son. Billy, spent Thanksgiving
WHY HE BUILT A B*lG HOl'SFture of Christian teachings and tho
i hls mistakes."
with her parenu near Kalamazoo.
weird superstitions handed down
stopped. ”
Il con1 hbigs seem to move in regular
, Tlie 'heckling
‘
Things
reg"’
Mr. and Mrs. Bliss Boulter are through
uncounted
generations.
umiX one
»»&gt;••extreme
v&lt;&gt;'
cycles, cvvicA.
going »
from
to vlnced me that a speaker always has happy over the arrival of a six and
thc other. Hie old pioneer* of B.irij the advantage, especially if -he U a quarter pound baby ghl who ar­
World-Telegram. In the days be­
I
rived
on
November
22.
Miss
Alta
county used to‘brbig up btg families &lt; quick on The. -come-back,"
■
.
fore
Uie
Inca
empire
was estab­
of ten. twelve or fifteen children in |
'
—
Louden Is coring for mother and
milo.7
!■ -baby.
little log hut, Uial today wouldn't be (
'
I lished the gods were-almost un­
considered «i.
fi’. iv
to ...«
live ...
in. **-.
But ....
thc [i
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Span en- ^,J-Uson
UWH1 ni;RMn
, spent Thanksglv- ; limited in number—even lhe family
Newton
fdtnillvs always seemed to thrive , terulned Thanksgiving Mr. and pJ1{ wm, his sister. Mac. in Delton. had its god. Among popular ob­
.-.Jik-jidldiy
Mrs. Charles Lechleitncr of East
Ed and, Elmer Willison were jects worshiped were trees, stones,
splendidly
Thrti came a change, and people Barry, Mr and Mrs. Neal Welcher Thanksgiving dilutee guests of Ray rivers, mountains. flowers and ani­
commenced to build great big barn- and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Spau --------' —
- -—
—
Durkee
and
family •-tn —Delton.
mals. The animals were selected
like structure, that spread all over and son.
Elmer Willison relumed from lhe for certain outstanding characterthe lo’.
, Several front here attended a sue- north woods with hb deer on Mon­ । istics—lhe condor, largest of all
i I a ent into a store in Hasting, one ] prise parly for Mrs. Merritt Wood day last.
•
I flying birds and one indigenous to
I day to buy some stuff. I said U&gt; one , nt her home Saturday evening; A | Mr. und Mrs. Bert Oalndcr and
of lhe proprietors. T just met Joe delightful time was reported.
Lucille spent Thanksgiving with
j Alwtne. thc carpenter, and he to'.d I Mrs. Flower and Bernice - were 1 llc
her, sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. its size; the fox, for its cunning;
the jaguar, for its strength.
I me n’iat you were going to build a i Thank.*.giving guests of Mr. and Laverne Shedd near Galesburg.
Rocks, caves and lakes also were
1 twenty-room house, a regular man- । Mrs. C. F. Moreau at Augusta where
Mr Btl(1 Mrs. Marian Rupe and
1 slon When your children are mar- ' a family party of ten was enterwilliam, of Pontiac spent Sun- worshiped because it was lhe belief
1 xied and leave home, won't that b- tained.
day with Mr and Mrs. Wlss Boul- of the Indians that from such places
। a pretty big house lor just the two Mr and Mrs. Henry Germain en- I lcr Bntj daughter.
Uieir ancestors had sprung. In fact,
■of you?'
t tertalned relatives Thanksgiving
George Lclnaar of Hickory Cor- ' one legend has it that lhe first Inca,
He replied. ' Riley, there's a rca- • day. In the alternoon their son. ncrs visited hls brother. Ike. Wed­ Manco Ccapac. made figurines of
■on ..I II"tell you.
don’t -------you tell
Norwood
and cousin
had a bad
' '•but
-----” Rom
*’------*-J----------ne$day&gt;
y
1 clay representing the different na­
anybody &lt;•!-&lt;• It s so i won t have so automobile accident on their return
Grown 'on one of the fi'tiiral irrigation projects in the west, the
Jason Willison and family al- tives he desired to gather into hls
much lawn to mow."
home from a hunting trip, smash- tended a family gathering at lhe
huge slacks ot seed peas shown here me part of 40.000 sacks which
Weil. at lco.it that's one reason for mg their car badly and damaging a horne of her parents in Ross town­ empire; that he painted them with
were handled al «. single warehouse al Ellensburg. Wash., on lhe
the clothes they were to wear, and
Ford with which they collided For- ship on Thanksgiving day.
building a great bin house.
Yakima reclamation area. Graded, cleaned and sorted, the peas arc
tunntely they all escaped scriou*
Mr. and Mrs. AUUon Louden of told them the localities in which the
ready for lhe planters. Many such specialty crops, which either go
Crooked lake were callers at date various natives they represented
tYHEN GREEK MET GREEK.
injuries.
to market at odd sca.ons in cannot be grown in other areas, are
|
were to --------spring up. ------Then —
he -----sent
Mr*.
H.
M.
Kennedy
and
son.
One
Saturday
night
when
I
lived
j
Louden's
Thursday.
.
produced on federal irrigation projects in lhe svesL
Mason Newton and Mr. and Mrs. Diem down below and they later
in Battle Creek, an Indian medicine | Lee. spent from Thursday till Sun­
show made IL, appearance on Hie 1day with lhe latter’s mother and Alien Griffen spent Friday with sprang Into the world—some from
'treet. It was owned by a felinw who raster. Mrs H. Flower nnd Bernice. their brother. Munson, and wife waterfalls, others from caves and
The Bill of Rights
Self-Consciousness
used to live tn Hastings. He came !Mr. Kennedy came Sunday and they near Richland.
trees, thus endowing such objects
The first ten amendments to the out dressed os an Indian chief and all returned to their home hi Do­ I James Boulter and family have with the qualities ot a god.
What tlie world would very often
mistake fur conceit » a self-con­ United States Constitution were pro­ WM gelling a ' cure all" that would wagiac In the evening. Marcia
moved to Prairieville.
Jason Willison and family —
and
sciousness. a recognition of IL In posed and adopted in a croup, und cur.- an) thing from tui ingrowing Hower nlso spent from Tliursday
till Sunday at tlie Flower home. On Mr.
Mrs. John Lepper spent City of Antwerp Recalls
our common acceptation of lhe word are usually regarded as Uie bill of toe nail to consumption.
Friday
Homer
Flower
hod
an
operSunday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wlll
rights,
although
Uiey
bear
no
such
On
the
side
lines
was
one
of
lhe
a' conceited man ts an empty fellow
Story of Painter Rubens
who bases his opinion of himself specific title. The ninth und tenth old-time doctors who used to live in alien for appendicitis at Borgess Vaun in Battle Creek.
। hospital and is getting along nice-1 Jim
• •
•left
- -far —
•• on
In the last years of the Sixteenth
Johnson
Florida
upon no true grounds. Very often amendments are of a different char­ Hastings. He commenced to hefkfe |
century thc Jesuits of Antwerp had
- I Sunday.
great but untried men will take unon acter than the first eight, which deal lhe Indian chief bv yelling "Aw. you ’&gt;■-Mr,. Merle Bradfield * was conffn-1
Betty and Barbara Ixmnnrd of a little lad whose parents had,
halnt o doctor; you ain’t even a '
themselves the achievement ot trf.it with,the rights of the uidividlu.il.
' horse doctor You’re the world* ■ cd to her bed with sickness a couple Delton spent Sunday with Mr. and called him Peter Pau) after the
which the world deems an impossi­
of days last week. Her mother. Mr*.
I biggest faker I"
saints, on whose day he was bom
bility. But if the man has tha with­
Waikiki Once Tabu
iic indiai) chief stopped hls talk. Wilcox, assisted her in entertain­ nord and her mother. Mrs. Ella
The
In 1577. notes a writer in lhe Los
Waikiki Beach, famous American ■ placed
in him which will carry him through,
•
- *hls"ii
- - “id Up to his en,. ftnj ing for Thanksgiving her brother Rogers, came after them and spent Angelei^Timcs. His father John, a
he is to be commended. It is the resort, was once forbidden lo the ■ shouted. "I i
Ute evening.
" g-horn; oh. yes. und family from Battle Creek.
lawyer and magistrate of the city,
ignorant fellow and puffed-up fool common people, ns Island kings had tj-a that oldZvw&gt;v. .ho used to ....
|;ve- There will be Sunday school at
having been under suspicion as a
who is to be blamed.
summer homes there.
j over at Hailing.,. He is ft real doc- ' Milo church during December at
Pronouncing "Phi Beta Kappa'*
Calvinist, had'fled to Germany eith
10:30 A. M. There will be no church
The popular pronunciation ot the the mofllifr of the boy "Where, be­
service.
name
of
lhe
American
society,
coming involved in an intrigue with
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Schultz cnwhose
members
ore
taken
from
terulned for Thanksgiving the for- I
Anna, the second wife of Wilhelm
mer's mother and little grandson of upper-class college students of high Uie Silent, he suffered imprison­
i Chicago. They remained until Mon­ standing, is fai beta kapa. ai as Ln ment and banishment and later
aisle, e as in they. first anu third death at Cologne.
day morning.
Mrs. H. Bcoby and Mrs. J Schultz a's as in Anal, secund a as In cap.
The mother and boy returned to
of Battle Creek spent Wednesday This
, pronunciation
. „
seems to be a
the old home in lhe Place de Meir,
and Thursday afternoon with the transitional hybrid, a compromise
home folks here.
: ■between
-■lhe so-called English pro­ while Uie boy attended school on
what
is now Rue Otto Venius. after
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Tack anti chil­ nunciation
formerly
taught
Ln
dren were callers on Mr and Mrs. American schools and the pronun­ the painter Venius. lie also learned
E. Quick last Thursday ’ after ciation now taught. In lie English painting from Van Noort, who
taught iq thc Rue du Jardin. Then
spending the day with friend., near
system. Beta is pronounced bita.
Faw Paw
।
’
he traveled over Europe and
Mr. H Flower and MU. Brmter- 1
painted for royalty and nobility
now
the -J-.
full same
name is
li prowere in Kalamazoo Sunday to see ns
*“ taught,
—-•••- ~e
everywhere tii) on his mother’s
then grandson and nephew at Bor- nounced 11 beta kapa. I as in police. death he built him a palace In what
as in
in they,
they, first
first snd
and third
third s’s
a's as
as
3cas liospital.
ee ss
became Rue Rubens, for this Is the
1 in Anal, second a as in father. Tlie
story of Rubens, lo see whom and
members of the society themselves
CEDAR CREEK.
learn of whom the world now fiocks
Thc Community club meets again are not in agreement upon lhe pro­
its week Frill ly night. A good time nunciation to be favored. Some to Antwerp, nearly 300 years after
his dealn.
is expected.
prefer to carry the classroom pro­
Everett cairns of Barryville spent nunciation into general usage; some
part of last week with his daughter, cling to the older style, and some
Tea, Coffee as Beverage,
Mr; Lloyd Owen nnd family
are content with Uie papular hy­
Traced Back to 350 A. D.
Henry Lcinaar returned from thc brid.—Literary Digest
north woods a week ago and went
back again last Friday.
I from whom it has extended to all
Sacred
Fish
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wcrtman
parts of thc world,
cannot be
An English traveler in the
spent Thanksgiving in Ypsilanti.
traced with certainty any further
Mr. and Mrs. Wellie Campbell of in the seventeenth century
back than to 350 A. D. or approxi­
Hiuttnt;* and Robert Gerald and that sacred Ash were to be seen
mately that time. This use did not
family of Kalamazoo spent Sunday throughout the East, "fish confined
with Mr nnd Mrs Henry Wertman. in the courtyard of a mosque, with become general in China until about,
Josephine Lrlnaar spent the week rings of gold, silver and copper the Ninth century. Tea was intro­
duced into Europe by lhe Dutch in
end with friends In Cressey.
U.rough their muzzles, not for or­
1610, says a writer in thc Cleveland
nament" he says, "but, us 1 was
Plain Dealer.
Cholera Routed Birds
informed, as a token o. Uieir being
One of the strangest phenomenons consecrated. No one dared touch
How long coffee has been used in
occurring with thc cholera epidemic Uicm. such a sacrilege be in*. sup­ Arabia, its native country, is not
that spread throughout Ohio tn the posed to draw after it Uie venge­ certainly known. It was introduced
summer of 1854 war the apparently ance of Uie saint to whom they into Egypt in lhe Sixteenth century.
instinctive departure of all the Ales were consecrated."
The first coffee house in Europe
and the birds from regions where
This useful magazine rack,
Large full 2 inch post bed.
was established in Constantinople
1 in 1551. The first person lo make it
the disease was prevalent After the
only
In nalnui or maple
"Grandmother" Clocks
epidemic had taken full control of
known to western Europe seems to
"Grandmother" clocks are more
Van Wert county, for example, not
enUtled lo their name than "grand­ have been Leonhard Rauwolf, a
a bird or a rly could be seen, bu by
father" clocks, for Uieir cases, with German physician, a great traveler.
the time tlie epidemic itself was un­
Once InUoduced, the use of this
the exception of lhe face, are carved
der control and on the wane these
Coffee
to represent a woman’s figure. Tlie beverage spread rapidly.
Creatures reappeared.
■ National museum in Helsinki, Fin- houses sprang up In all Uie chief
1 land, owns an Interesting one which cities. The first one in London was
Knights of Mails
“"•"1 a short-sleeved blouse and a opened by a Greek in Newman’s
Valetta. chief port of the island weorl
flared
ot Malta, was founded by a group fl
“r«d skirt and stands, with arms Court, Cornhill, in 1652; Uie first
of Crusaders who became known akJ,nl*&gt;0' ,®n J*'° human-shaped fect- one in France was opened in Mar­
] seilies in 1671; the first in Paris.la
-Collier s Weekly.
thc following year.

Piles of Peas Await Planters

Hot Dated

JEWEL
COFFEE
lb. bag

(3 lb. bag 49c,
Hot Dated

FRENCH lb O 1 BRAND bag
*

KROGER

Vacuum Packed

'd/ot twated

COUNTRY
E
CLUB lb. can A J C

COFFEE

SODA CRACKERS

PUMPKIN

3

ToU

cans

LARGE
No. 1*4 cans

3

COUNTRY CLUB FANCY

15c

2

«»««

PET MILK

23c
29c

SUDAN PUMPKIN PIE SPICE pkg. 10c

CIDER VINECAR

RINSO

10c

ivorsujmr

r,chsundsstahi

X” 18c

LIFEBUOY SOAP 2 bare 11c
Largs pkgCHIPSO OR OXYDOL
10
AMER. FAMILY SOAP
6
SUNBRITE CLEANSER
FANCY TOMATOES AVONDALE No

TWINKLE

THE PERFECT
GELATIN DESSEBT

3

13c

OR MANHATTAN

CUT ROCK
MIX CANDIES
FAMO PANCAKE FLOUR

bulk

5

WALDORF

19c
49c
25c
10c
10c
27c

roll*

S _ •

TISSUE - SCOTT TISSUE 4 rolls 25c

SCRATCH FEED

wcsco

we,co
ECC MASH
14% DAIRY FEED
WESCO

100-lb.

$2.29

100 I*.

$2.49
S1.90

lao.ih

13'-. DAIRY FEED 100-lb. bog M OO - S4‘V 100-lb. bag S2.10

10 &amp; 49c

SUGAR
YELLOW CORN MEAL

5

19c

ROLU-?3 OATS

5

23c

EAP'ORE

2

NUT OLEO

25c

TWIN OR SANDWICH
KOT A 24-02.
LOAF-BUT A

10c

2-lb.| LOAF

I BREAD

COUHTKr CLUB
PLENTY OF RAISINS

io&lt;

o’.n F’cu'OHEn

SWMFH COFFEE CAKE
NEW CROP CALIFORNIA NAVEL

ORANGES M.SZEL.
GRAPEFRUIT

23c
19c

nOBIDM - roll ol lulc

Largs Prsih Bunches
BROCCOLI
YAMS GENUINE - Fine Baked or Candled

15c
15c

NEW CABBAGE

IDAHO BAKERS

10-lb bag

35C

y

_

Riley Stories

,

«

Practical

CHRISTMAS PRESENTS

y
y
y
y Give something that will last. Furniture will do the trick. Our
store is running over with useful and handsome pieces of fur
niture that will go a long way in brightening the home and at
very low cost.

y
y
y
y
y
y
y

y
y

I

GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS

20c
romforl
Spring Mattres* Al

Handsome and well made Living Room
Suites at from

’39

CQ BEEF

POT ROAST

lb

FOR YOU!

!2y2c

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED

MEATY CUTS OF BEEF

TO ATTEND OUR

CHUCK ROAST »m choici
ROLLED RIB ROAST
BOILINC BEEF
»i»n

SMOKED PICNICS
SMALL - SHORT SHANK

SMELT

PORK LOIN
BIB END-LOIN IND

». 16c
u 21c
u&gt; 10c
lb

19c

.

FRES-SHORE OYSTERS
LEONA SAUSAGE

An Invitation

SLICED

-ui 25c
u, 15c

Christinas Opening
NEXT FRIDAY NIGHT
DECEMBER FOURTH

y
y
y
I

y
y

Comfortable Occasional
Chairs al from

’19

■*. 7c

-°«t a 17*/2c
19'Ac-CENTSRS u&gt; 27c

KROGER STORES

•17”

29

We earnestly request you to come into our store and see for
yourself what,an immense stock we carry and at prices you
can afford to pay.

| MILLER FURNITURE CO
HASTINGS

Al which lime wc shall be glad lo help
you select useful and practical Christmas
gifIs for Mother, Dad, Sister, Brother
and that friend of yours.
Come in and see our Christmas Merchan­
dise ready for your approval.

CRUE’S SHOE STORE
PHONE 2176

NEXT TO CITY BANK

PHONE 2226

HASTINGS

Finding Happiness
Big pleasures and great happiness
are but many little ones bound to­
gether as a loaf is many crumbs In
an aggregate. True happiness is
Die art of finding joy and sallsfacUon 1A the little privileges of life;
a quiet hour in the sun. instead of
a far-away journey; a little outing
In the nearby woods. Instead of long
trips away; an hour with a friend
instead of an extended visit to re-

stead of hours of reading at a time;
a hash ot sunset, a single beautiful
dower, a passing smile, a kindly
word, a little thoughtfulness here
and there as the day slips by
—these are the crumbs of happi­
ness. Do not despise them, lest
when the evening finds you, you be
hungry and disconsolate and un­
happy. Sir Launtal. after traveling
the world over in search of the
precious cup found it. you will re­
call. Ln thc hands of a needy begknown.

The phrase "Corpus delicti" does
not refer to the body, but to the
essence of the crime, the facts nec­
essary to its commission, in tho
case of a murder charge, this would
include proof of lhe victim's death
and ot criminal agency as cause.
The body might be burned or muti­
lated beyond recognition, but sersps
of cloth, teeth, or belongings, might
establish its Identity.
Legends of Bible
Hawaiian Legends, many of which
have been almost forgotten since
the islands became part of the Unit­
ed States, duplicate in many in­
stances those of the Old Testar.^aL

�THE HASTINGS BANNER

THURSDAY, DEC. 3, 1936

SECTION

, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Lewis enter­
STATE ROAJ).
during lhe last two years to HuBen^Sterrick are u*m&lt;~
tained remuvrsnn
relatives *from Battle Creek.
Michigan oil-producing area. MichiMr. and Mrs. Ben-JJrerrick
gon is not an easy slate in which moving from Uieir farm to Hasting • Thanksgiving day
to prospect for oil. because lhe rocks we are sorry to lose them
LtLew Ashley
‘ ''
'Is driving
'
a new Ford
do
ml
am.
to
U»
lurt.ee
Ul
Mt,.
Un.
Seeker
.eperu
TOUlktMichigan la The Largest narts
parts of M
Michigan
chlnn but are burled
burled giving day in
... Baitings ..
I&gt;h Steve
c.-,..
with
.„
Janet Pettenglll
npent
Bv WILLARD BOLTE
Field East Of The
generally under from 100 to 1.000 Cooky and family.
Thankzglvlng with iter kUter. Mm
Poultry House Insulation.
I did not Increase feed production ’
feet of sand. gravel and stones that
Mississippi
ware scraped into Michigan from
An article in Indiana Farmer's I sufficiently to pay for the labor. B it'
Tlie greatly increased demand for Canada when It wm covered with
Guide states that either wood sluv- j when sulfate of ammonia was upmgs or ground corn cobs make ef-1 plied ttt lhe rate of 200 lbs. per acre ■ gasoline Is making us all realize glaciers.
that lhe lime Is not *far distant
fecllve filler to go between the walls each spring, with double that.
There are now used electrically-- .u_
of
lhe --•••-;•
poultry home
Mix two i amount" the first year. It required ‘ when this country will be unable to operated devices which are said t&gt;
pounds of air-slaked lime with each little more than three-fourths of an supply that easentlal for automoindicate rock formations In which
live
traffic.
It
may
be
possible
Ural
100 pounds of insulating material acre to pasture a cow for the passome other form of fuel for Inter­ oil may be expected. We have never
to repel insrcu and rats and mice. | lure period.
nal combustion engines will be de­ been satisfied that Barry county
rived from other sources; but un­ has been properly explored for oil.
Fire Blight.
Leg Wcskneos ln pullets.
Fire blight In apple orchards has . When some of your pullets develop til that time shall arrive, if It ever The recent finding of a good-sized
been particular!/severe hi Penn- weak legs. Southern Agriculturist does, dependence must be had up­ oil well near Allegan U an indica­
tion that the field Ln thia state Is
sylvania this year At Pennsylvania I -ays that the trouble Is usually due on gasoline.
State College, the varieties most af- . u&gt; one of two tilings. The weak birds : Michigan lias taken its place as not limited lo Hie present prtduc,—
of ing area. Barry county may be
ft-cled are York. Baldwin. Home ami I may not be getting a balanced diet— the largest producer of oil east
Northern Spy—while there were on- or Uiey may be infested with Intest-1 the Mississippi. It is the belief ot added if there is any way to re­
tire state geologist that other fields cure the location of the rock form­
ly a few dead iv.igs on McIntosh inal worms.
will be opened that will add mater- * at ions that might be expected to
Slayman and Delicious
‘
Skimmlik for Cows.
'Lally to Michigan's oil production,
action. | yieldyield
oil. oil.
Such
Such
a survey
a surv«~
ol Barry
' "-----American Fruit Grower.
made
to be
made.
A gallon of skimmlik
skimmilk will replace Considerable
।
additions were r.
—k county
"_V.7 ought U— --Soybeans.
a pound of cottonseed meal In the
Must complete line of Chineae
Hoard s Dairyman report; that. in dairy ration, according to a report
a scries of seven feeding tests with from Minnesota Experiment Station '
hand finished anil embroidered
dairy cows ut Purdue University, ra­ in Michigan Farmer. One good way '
nm
handkerchiefs
tions containing soybeans mcreaaed to feed it Is to mix it with the grain ■
ration—about a gallon to 4 lbs. of [
shown.
grain—but the cows should be
tent of milk prcxluced by cows get­ brought up lo full feed gradually. |
ting no soybeans.
Cockerels.
Wild Cherry Poisoning.
Iowa State College reports that I
Wild cherries should be complete- 11 cockerels for next year's breeders i
'
should
be
selected
when they are |
ly eliminated from woods and fence
rows where cattle are permitted to about 8 weeks of age. Select 40 cock- !
run. Tho deadly menqce of UiL, erels for every 10 that you actually I
shrub is well demonstrated by a re­ intend to keep—separate them from j
port in Wallace's Farmer which ----lhe -------flock of „„
cockerels that are in■.lutes that one of their subscribers tended for market—and keep watch- i
In Iowa recently lost nine head of. mg and culling that bunch of pros- 1
mature cattle In less than an hour i pectlve breeders until you have the I
No item is more suited for a
after they had eaten a very small 'best 10. based on early and uniform I
LADY'S GIFT. Sec our complete
quantity of wild cherry leaves
feathering, fast growth, body- con-1
formation, color and all-round vlgline of Hl AIMING BIRD HOMilage.
or-Hoards Dairyman.
From an Illinols&lt;Expcrlinenl Sta­
S1F.RY.-A1I the newest shades in
tion report in Michigan Farmer. 1
Raspberries.
both chiffon and service weight.
rather that farmers who cut their
Bo Hi black nnd purple raspberries
drouth-stunted corn nnd put it into have a tendency to develop long,
The Memorial is the one perpetual history of life,
thc silo earlier than the usual allo- weak fanes and it Is important to'
filllng time are goin;; lo be sorry go through Uie planting several
a family record
Normally, corn may be expected to times during lhe summer to cut
double its feed value between Aug­ them back
Black
raspberries,
ust IS and September 15. which should be cut nt 18 to 24 Inches and
Without it. o life's record of a name passes out
means that you lose one-eighth ot the purple varieties at 30 lo 36
entirely, for the unmarked grave too soon be­
tho food value of every acre for each inches—American Fruit Grower.
*rek of development that you cut
comes the unknown, unvisited one
Beet
an during that month—Michigan
For three years In a row. steer
Farmer,
feeding tests at Illinois Experiment
Only on granite can this family record be preserved
Disinfecting with Lye.
Station have demonstrated that
New designs in latest colorings. Large size
Poultry Tribune reports that ex­ steer, fed on pasture will pul on
for future generations.
and guest size and wash chillis lo match. All
periment 'tatlous have proven Hint weight faster than if fed In lhe dry
lot
This year's tests also si lowed
lhe very newest colors.
lye to 750 parts of water—will kill Hint it is practical.to feed more soy­
If you intend to place a monument or marker on
the germs of poultry diseases
a bean meal than Is required to bal­
your lot this coming spring we advise you to place
tew minutes. For practical purposes, ance the ration, when lhe meal is
however, they recommend 1 part of cheaper than corn—and also that it
an order now and save money Right now prices
lye to 150 parts of water—or a can is not wise to feed an excess of dried
to
15 gallons. Use II freely as it brewer's grains —Wallace's Fanner
are at the lowest.
cannot kill gernU unless it touches
Swamp Hay.
them, This solution is not caustkOut of lhe west is coming a new
Coll and make a selection. The most beautiful
or unpleasant lo handle and Hu.swampy-land grass to compete with |
cost fo less than Ic per gallon.
Reed's Canary onus They call It!
display to be found anywhere.
Pasture.
..
Meadow Foxtail—although It Is not1
In Wisconsin studies. rei»rted In a foxtail—ami Oregon fanners like j
Wallace s Farmer, it was found that It better than Reed's because it Is I
where rotational grazing was fol- fur more palatable to stock. Seed Is '
"lowed,
' on unfertilized permanent
icarce and high priced, hence Cap-1
.
pasture. one nnd' one-third
.. . . acres per's Farmer recommends buying a
would supply sufficient grazing for a little seed—planting it in rows—and I
dairy cow for 5 1-2 months. Apply­ hand-stripping it lo get enough to i
ing 6 tons of rotted manure per acre plant your swamp land.

Weekly Farm Review

ADDITIONS TO OIL
PRODUCING AREA

The Beat Ideas from the Beat Farm Papers

Dora coleman in Rutland.
, Mri MyrtU cotomaa
Archie c'unnthgham has returned with her suiir, Mts. M
from Uie north woods. Their party prkport. Mr Fox e.M.a
|u. 1.0
v deer.
oot
UrdSF
I Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kennedy
I spent Thanksgiving "With her folks
I ot South Hatting-..

tWCWCTOOTOTCWW1

Christmas Merchandise
Complete Lines Now On Display in All Departments of Our Store
CHRISTMAS PURSES

CHRISTMAS HANDKERCHIEFS

Hastings

25

39

All lhe newest creations in purses.

Colors black, brovjn, .green and

50

BATES BEDSPREADS

FINE SILK HOSIERY

Memorials

B9

79

89

This beautiful line of Ixxhprrads must be
seen to lx* appreciated. We have lhe twin and
full lied

blue,

rose,

9™ s3

31

BELDINGS FAMOUS SILKS

Pastel Colored Bath Towels

25

sizes. Colors—ivory,

green, orchid, gold.

What could lie more suitable for a gift titan
a dies* pattern of this dainty fabric. Plain
colors as well as fancies.
.00

59:

$^.19

Sd .50

Bed blankets - Pequot sheets and cases in sets - Fancy pillow case sets - Now
house frocks - Imported neck scarfs - Latest style pajamas and gowns - Lorraine
slips and panties - Scotty rugs - Kid and fabric gloves - Wool mittens and new
line of A B C percales in spring styles.

IRONSIDE MONUMENT WORKS

MARTIN

CORNERS.

Mrs. Eva Trautweln returned
home Friday after spending tho
post two weeks with her daughter.
Mrs Eda Tyler, tn Woodland.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Barry arc
the parents of a daughter bom at
Pennock hospital
November 2M.
Congratulations.
Remember the pot luck supper
al the church Friday evening. De­
cember II at 7:30 o'clock, followed
by Hie quarterly conference, Bring
food and your own table service
Tlie district superintendent will be
there and motion pictures of the

Clailjc

Memorial

home

will

shown.
Mr nnd Mrs. Orr Fisher and Mrs.
H. Cogswell were Thanksgiving din­
ner guests of Alice and Melvin
Whetstone.
Lloyd Cogswell of East Lansing.
Dorothy and Oreta Gogswell of
Lakeview were supper guests of
Mr. and Mra. Orr Fisher Friday
evening of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Demond. Mrs
Velma Demond and children and
Mias Florence Coolbaugh were Sun­
day afternoon callers at Mr. and
Mrs. Orr Fishers.
Sunday school next Sunday at

Honoring World's No. 1 Dairy Cow

HASTINGS

Only Monament Works In Barry County

Phone 2497

•

Hasllnga, Mich.

LARSEN’S

GIVE MOTHER A GIFT THAT WILL
give HAPPINESS throughout the gear
SPARTON
REFRIGERATOR

ABC
WASHER

HOT POINT
ELECTRIC RANGE or WATER
HEATER

GE
CLEANER

FREE Gift With Each
Cleaner or Washer
For Christmas

JOHN BULLING &amp; SON

ASK ABOUT OUR LOW EASY TERMS-3 YEARS TO PAY

SPARTON
RADIO

•222

39’°

On hand to honor Carnation Ormsby Butter King, world's moat
famous cow, at the National Dairy show in Dallas, Tex., were
MIm Dolores Keyes, Spencer. WH, left. **Wisconsin's Dairy Queen,"
and Miss Lillian Heard, San Angelo, Tex.. "Texas Dairy Quaen.".
The Holstein record winner of Carnation Milk Farms, near Seattle',
■ Wash., chalked up a. dally average production of 50 quarts of milk
and five pounds of butter during the last year.

PHONE 2166

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FREE Gift With Each
Refrigerator or Range
For Christmas

WESTERN UNION BUILDIN4

�TUK HASTINGS BANNKB. THVKSDAT. DECEMBSB I. 1SU

Ar ii

e»

0F U. S.

| of the unliv'd States ot America, One of these women was Mrs.. a picture of a group of soldiers and
, gave those Immortal words. He won
uieTnnv ‘ntl 10
rePubUc i0T which It Homer Hendricks, wife ot a well, first prize at hls school and Mrs
HISTORY ’ suuiua.
stands, one iiaiiuet,
nation, utuiiutui.
Indivisible with
....... known citizen of that town. About‘ Hendricks was so pleased she filed
! liberty and justice for all." The forty-three years ago sne ncid the! the pledge away
Wm The I story of the origin of these wander- office of natrlotlc Instructor in. the-‘ During the Spanish-American

and* School Lad
Author Of Allegiance

In order to&gt;
fui words should be full of Interest local organization.
to every loyal American citizen. stimulate interest in the nag andI
During lhe year 1888 In the little the things for which It stood she•
Cherryvale in southern arranged to give a prize to the child1
American flag as told by Oscar Kansas there was an active organl- who would give the best essay or:
pledge
of allegiance to the Amcri.’
A “77
-h.irmsn nf I ration of the women's Relief Corps. ,
—_
Brady, Americanization chairman f made up of women who were very. can
- flag.
-— One
one °«
of thc contestantsi
Peat 6«. Veterans of Foreign Wars. |lnxloui to help me soldiers of war I Was a small lad of twe ve. Frank:
of Battle Creek, was as follows:
and to teach patriotism to the Bellamy. When he gave hls pieage
1 pledge allegiance to the flag growing youth.
, he went to the blackboard and dre» ’

Tn

io aiwg

The history of the pledge to the 1 town of

war. President McKinley suggested
that a new pledge of allegiance to
the flag be written to stimulate patrlotbm in those war days and
ana
asked the patriotic organizations'
to take charge of It. Mrs. Hendricks
remembered lhe pledge she had
filed away and submitted It In tlie
name of Frank Bellamy. When the
contest was over it was learned that
the honor ot writing the Pledge of

ffix 2

axe justly proud that it was one of
our coniruaes who was inspired a* I
a school boy lo write the pledge u
the flag of our country, and we d» -1
sire to have every school child, ail I
patriotic organizations and in fact
every United States citizen know the
history of this pledge. We be­
lieve it should be added to the,
hlMory of the United States and
uugbt m the schools. What couio
inspire a school child more than to
know that a grade school boy did
write those wonderful words.
How simple but how majestic
the sentiment which these wore*
betray—the flag, the nation. Its

‘Looking Forward’—the President

r'“ iSXV^t 'SbX“!T.l

1&gt;U r.Ue&gt; to no,.
conum-d m to. rev wont,. ■
। Meanwhile lie had heard the call
The above paragraphs were signed
| of hLs country and enlisted under by the national president of lhe
i the flag whose Ideals had inspired National Auxiliary of the United
him to write his words of alle- spanhht War Veterans. Irma Hill
glance, He went to the Philippine vogel.
Islands with the 20th Kansas Vol-1
----------------- «
, unteers. led by that Indomitable
MILO,
cnlrllnr of
nf fortune.
fnrltlnx- Col.
r-n! Prodorirk
soldier
Frederick1
Nov. 26 Letter.
Funston
Instead of contracting ।
Over MO was realized from thc
yellow fever as did so many of the
dinner
and
bazaar
last Wednesday
boys. FTank
Bellamy contracted I
tuberculosis and was discharged I nt thc church. A good program of
music and readings was given, and.
from thc army, broken in health1 nil felt well repaid for lhe necessaiy
and ravaged by this disease At that (
effort and work to put It across.
time the United States did net have ।
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Bradfield and
adequate provision for caring for
Jack and Mrs. Wilcox were Kalama­
disabled soldier* und he had tU
zoo visitors last Saturday.
Witmer ot lhe greatest popular and electoral vote of confidence a
depend partly on others for support. |
Mrs. Barber nnd sister. Mrs.
pyoole ever gave a president of thc United States. Franklin D. 1
Mrs. Hendricks took lhe responsi­
Swain, spent Thursday at the home
Roosevelt took his news ot victory calmly and appeared, said close i
bility for hls support, giving of her
of the latter In Niles returning that
friends nt Hyde Park, unusually grave. The president is pictured ,
own money and soliciting others lo
evening.
here in his study at his home on lhe Hudson—a characteristic pose I
support this Invalid boy who had
F. Gilbert made a business trip to
written the pledge to the American
“Looking Forward.” as it were.
Charlotte last Wednesday.
flag and had given himself for his
------------------------------------------------------------- !
। John Bradfield spent Sunday aftcountry.
■ ernoon In Kalamezoo.
Kenneth Aldrich is improving no «*ool Tlunrf.1 ona nta«y ol
’------ .
..
brought to
wul„ „„„„
U1 „„
„, „
ul „
.„ in !..--------- Last week Monday while
Harlan „„
from
hls U1JUXZ
injury S1UW
slowly,
but
is ow
still
light the fact that Frank Bellamy Scobey was helping grind feed al a a cast.
I tea in
lie on
mi unmarked
uuiuutxt'u kimvi
ui Fair
r .UI fftrm ne&lt;r Dowimg he caught hls
Iles
grave- in
Mrs Schultz accompanied Mr. i If you like to be staggered, here!
. View cemetery m
tn Ah.^nmi.
Cherryvale with- hand |n # pu)ley mBngUng it w Schulte to Kalamazoo Monday to
are some figures that should do the
out even a grave marker as provid- badly it was
the day. Thanksgiving Milo ^’mlnuw^t wiu^tlkTym^a.OOO ’
... necessary
_..r— to have the। spend
"on account'of
, rd by the government for all de- i middle finfcer amputated.
I On account o:
ceased veterans.
1
- • -jclultz
--*— and
— son
— —
Biillp
— and- P. —r. A
- wlll
— -be postponed one week years to earn the money the Govern- ■
I We. tlie United Spanlsh-Amerlm Chlcavo
visited .Mr.
Mr nnd
will be
be held
held Fridnv
ir&gt; thc last th,
—1
Chicago visited
and will
Friday evening
evening nee
Dec. munt
rnent ho,
has «rw&gt;r&gt;»
spent In
three
1 can War Veterans and Its Auxiliary
C.
J. Bchulu
Schultz Sunday.
,4 instead of Nov. 37 There will be years.

AS LITTLE
AS. .

It's our Christmas treat, folks’—this 4star Christmas Bargain Carnival. Right
nowl-you can have the new range, refrig­
erator, washer, ironer, water heater,
you've been wanting. This wonder-bar­
gain ends December 24th. Act now!

ALLOWANCES

Toom

FRIGIDAIRE
Electric Refrigeration with all its savings that pay for it—all its con­

veniences—now yours at bargain terms. AND A SPECIAL TRADE-IN
ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD EQUIPMENT. Small payment installs

it—then—nothing to pay until April. Three year terms.

GAS RA^TGE

IS THE

Gas Cooking—all the perfection of modern ways, all the desired fea­

tures of the modern range—yours on the easiest plan ever offered In­
stalled now on the winning April pay plan. AND TRADE IN YOUR OLD
STOVE AS PART PAYMENT. Three year terms. You can select any

BIG DAY!

Thrills for

model on this great offer!

GAS WATER HEATERS
Here s the famous qos water heater built like a thermos bottle—opens
Cheap qos makes it cheap to use

Enjoy it pt once on this

April pay plan " Liberal allowance on old equipment
terms

WASHERS

Three ycOr

I RO VERS

Never before the famous ABC Washer on terms like this1 Tins leading
favorite—-latest improved model—for new

Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Rausch and
Miss Olga Eckardt of Woodbury
spent Thanksgiving witfc Mr. and
Mrs. L. F. Eckardt of Grand Rapids
Mrs. Mary Nesbet Is spending
some lime with her brother. James
GOor ot uuulM C1XUM tor hU Mby
jon. Mrs. Rlzor dying Nov. 10.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Baxter of
Kalamo were guests Thanksgiving
day of Mr. "and Mrs. Claud Perry.
aiu&gt;n Btucxey
Mrs. or
Gratton
Stuckey oi
of mo
Mel-­
’"he?* mother &gt;

“”ul
h
mother,
Mrs. Mury luwnscna.
Mr. and Mrs- James Petruska and
Miss Danna Northrop of Battle
Creek. Carl petruska of NUee. Mrs.
Olive Bro&amp;sesu and two grandsons
of Kalamazoo spent Thanksgiving
with Mr. and Mrs. M E. Northrop.
Thc ladies of the Main Street
division of the Methodist L- A- 8. arc
sponsoring a quilt exhibit to be held
at lhe Community house Dec. 3.
There will be a program and light
i refreshments will be servedj Percy Penfold Of East Jordan
sjient Sunday with hls parents. Mr.
I and Mrs E W. Penfold.
I
Mrs- Mae Smith will entertain her
I bridge dub Thursday Hftcmoon.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Blythe Kellerman of
Elkton. Mrs. Elsie Fumlss and
daughter. Helen Miss Electa Fur। Hiss of Battle Crrek and Mias Min­
nie Furnlss were guests Thanksgiv­
ing of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Fumlas.
Mrs. Bungert and son. Victor, and
John Baas ot Battle Creek, visited
i Friday with Mrs Ida Wolfe.
Mr. and Mrs R. G- Brumm and
son. Bruce. Mrs. E- H- Smith and
i Mrs. Charles Ncsman spent from
I Thursday tn Sunday with relatives
i In canton. Ohio.
! Mrs. Amos Wenger was called to
1 Grand Rapids Thursday by the ser­
I lous Illness of her brother-ln-iaw.
|
Miss Edna Brumm of Luther
I spent Thanksgiving and the week
I end with her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
, C- E- Brumm.
I Mr. and Mrs. Amos Wenger. Mr.
and Mrs. Vem Hawblltx and chll1 dren and Mr. and Mrs. Vern Bera
| and family were Thanksgiving day
। guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clare
। Brooks.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kays and
daughter spent Thanksgiving with
relatives tn Dowagiac.
Mrs Elizabeth McDcrby spent
from Wednesday until Monday*
with her daughter and husband. Mr.
and Mrs. David Meyera-of Ham­
! mood. Ind.
Miss Florence Grohe of Grand
Rapids was calling on friends in thc
I village Saturday.
I Mr. and Mrs. Carl Huwe and
daughter. Marian, Mr. and Mr*. J
C- McDerby and Margaret were
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs
Raymond fiellhom at East Laaslng
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson
spent the week end with relative-

Mrs. Florence Lyman and Mrs
Mabel Elder spent a few days last
week with relatives in Saginaw.
Mr. and Mrs. C- T Hess visited
Sunday with the laUcr's sister, Mrs
Melva Gardner of Quincy.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hansen and
Mrs. Aimed* Marley of Grand Rap­
ids, Mrs. Viola Feighner and Mrs
Clara Hanneman spent Thanksgiv­
ing with Mrs. Laura Dellar.
Mr. and Mrs. Porter Klnne wer.
Thursday guests of lhelr daughter
Mrs. Ray Morgenthaler and Mr
Morgenthaler.
Mrs. Susie Kraft spent Thanki glving with her sister. Mrs. Gladys
Woodard, and family In VermontvWe.
Two of lhe three houses on the
property of thc Board of educat lor
have been sold. The. house on thc
Barbara Furalss rerldenco property
was sold t2 Floyd Titmarsh, whe
will more same to the farm ot hit
father. Wm. Tttmarsh. in Castleton
The Perry house on the corner wa;
purchased by Perry van Tuyl anr
will be moved to one of the loU
near the Advent church.
Clark Titmarsh will spend th*
month of December with hla daugh
ter; Mrs.-w. N. Scheldt, and Mr
। Scheldt at Allentown, Pa.

new day of home comfort with automatic, day and night hot water

service

XABKTTUX
MX. ana Mrs. AWre Leedy and
family spent Sunday with relatives
i and friends In Wayland.
I Miss Beatrice Pritchard of Kala. mazoo and Leighton Esellinc of Dctroll were Thanksgiving day guests
, of Mrs. Elmer Pritchard.
Misses Geneva and Marqulta
Marshall of Maple Grove spent the
week end with their grandmother.
MTS. Esther Marshall.
Dr Stewart Lofdahl Is enlarging
and remodeling hls office and plans
to add new equipment.
MXS. Earn Kahler of Ypsilanti
11 spending a few weeks with rela­
tives in and around Nashville.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nelson are
moving to their new home on Phil­
lips St formerly owned by the late
Mrs. Hannah Robinson.
Rev. and Mrs. C- C. Gibson and
family and Earl Feighner of De­
troit. mt. and Mrs. William Lund»trum and family of Vermontville.
Miss Nettle Zimmer of Patterson. N
. J. MT. and Mrs. Ed. Feighner and
family and Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Feighner
and
daughter
were
Thanksgiving day guesU of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Feighner.
Rev. Elmer Pritchard returned
Monday from NUm, where he has
been conducting evangelistic sarv-

freedom, brighter wash­

days And thc famous Ironritc Ironer-completes the*perfect laundry
Small down payment delivers them—no more till April And long easy
terms.

CHRISTMAS BARGAINS

SOUTH BOWNE.
Nov. 26 Letter.
Mr. ahd Mra. William MUhler ant
daughter were Sunday afterhoor
callers on hls mother. Mrs. Lem
Mishler, of Logan.
Jerry Btough made apple butlei
for Victor Erickson of Alto Friday
Mr and Mr*. Jerae Btough o
HaMings and MT. and Mrs. Ro

FOR GIFTS OR FOR YOURSELF
Attractive Prices And Terms On These Too
New shipments ol bcoutiful Better S.ght Lamgi now here — roaster end
Hostess Sets — Populor gloss coffee cookers — Kitchen Mixers — Chorming Ofocks — Automatic Irons — Eureka Vacuum Cleaners Electric
Roasters — and a host of things easy, to buy

f uit Our
TOY
Department
Open House
Night. . .
December t

lug I

Mrs. Peter Griffin and Marloi
ere ttuluus ruiwr. mturfAy.

Hi

SEE OUR CHRISTMAS DISPLAYS OR PHONE 2305

CONSUMERS POWER CO

Porrll’s

I

BANNIB WANT ADVS. rif

�TITF HASTINGS B4NNF1L TIHRDU’. PTC TAIBER 1. 1936

DOWLING.

I

Our community u plowed to anLloyd
nour.ee that they have purchased' Sunday
and liuStallcd a furnace !&gt;&gt; the Un M.
~
„
। cf.urcli and having recently painted j ur und Mrs.
One Utousand delegates at Pon- the building, they ah are rejoicing 1 aild jJX " r
tine, our area furnishing 43. Grand I m there worthwhile accomplish- mto the Vrrae
Ledge rent ten. Eaton Rapids menu
u,u win eddihr
eight. Charlotte six. Vermontville
Skillman of Kalamazoo 1 .chLl
one. Nashville one. Freeport two.
“
IT, A;;
and Hastings 15. Dr. Howard Me1 W* WUh
“
Clusky was greatly appreciated both
MHdJed H^k ^1^11 ’
Ban Bmllh l
by the boy* and
Bev -I ter, Mrs. Mildred Hook. Mr&gt;. Skill­ 1a
“nd h‘PP’
man spent Thanksgiving with lier
Dwight lArge. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Large of the Grand Ledge Metho- wv Carol Skillman, and family at | llau&lt;hlrr, or

Y.M. C. A. ITEMS

WARDS MONTHLY
PAYMENT PLAN

oral Trade-in
your old radio! FREE HOMETRIAL!

the solution to Chtiilmot
Shopping! Moke out yen'
lilt; if if totals S20oimote,
open on account. Have

13-Tube A. €

Veloclp&lt;Ml&lt;kN

Record Breaker

Streamlined! Ball-bearing
front wheel and rear step
plate! Rubber tires, gnpaI

Strong, one piece steel
body. Tubular steel steer­
ing handle. Rubber tiles.

HollarBacring,

50®

A big drum at
low price!
Tough fabric
head!
Sling
included.

Moodd^*1

Waffle Iron
Mod* tn . .. witk !~OH

STUDY
DESK

FIBRE
BUGGIES

Strong! Rigid! Heavy
corrugated
board. Paints
included.

Round fibre
bony. 18*4x9in. Reclining
back. Holds
23 inch dolL

11-Tiihe Sensation
/I &lt;&gt;»S

17HP B?
®

•JIMI

M ouse

Tucked in a
fancy pillowl
Dressed i n

28V1 inches square with steel
braced hardwood legs! Black
fiber top! Choice of 3 colors!

Dells 7

MASK 1

Be in Words Toyland ol store-opening to-morrow'
Every boy and girl accompanied by an adult will
receive a free mask—Mickey Mouse Masks for lhe
boys—Minnie Mouse Masks lor the girls! Onjy a
limited quantity—so be at Wards early!

CARD TABLE
79c

]O&lt;»

Give Year-'round Utility and Helpfulness

ward

Come to Words fomorrow
ond get a

Mickey or Minnie

SET OF

Rides like ■
play car. Cab
forms a tornforublc scat.

«9”5

Biggest radio buy in Wards
history. Only a few! Hurry!

Chrome-plate in a very smart
design . . . 7-4 in. greaselesi
aluminum grids and wide base

Sturdy steen
Rubber grips
and pe da lai

RIDE 'EM
LOCO

Yes, automatic! Put your
finger on the station you're
after, twirl just once, and
you're perfectly tuned-in.
See it in\actionl Compare
this world-range Airline's
tone and' features with any

2.4 ft

TOT'S
PEDAL
BIKE

1’3-inch
DRUM

E
10

irith MOVIE DIAL

HE G

Washer

Modern Cedar

CHEST
than Most.$69.50 Wosheisl

i [j

$5 DOWN
Carrying
Charge

■
®

new —it's handsome — it’s
super-efficient I Washes faster by
test! Lovell wringer, balloon rolls!

Beautifully
matched
figured walnut veneared
front with figured aides
and topi Made of Vi in­
aromatic red c e d a r I
Dustproof I Satiny hand­
rubbed lacquer fiolahl

HUMIDOR SMOKER
3®“
Modern, 24 in. high I Walnut
finished I Door has expe '
Carpathian Elm effects!

THIS WEEK ONLYI

iee Yourself From Chains!

POWER GRIPS
« air
s o as
10.00
12 05
Power Grips* big round tapered
knobs dig deep in mud and
snow, give extra pulling power.
Monthly Payments Arranged

THOMAS FOOTBALL ,

8-Shot Itepealer

Full-Size
Football^

H9e
Leather - like
Texhide fab­
ric—holds its
shape! Value!

Vacuum
Bottle

|79

Designed and autographed by the
famous Alabama coach I Reg. 11.98.

Usually 17.65

24-In. blued afeel barrel; re­
movable hood front sight!
Shoots all .22 cartridges-

daughter.
. tained the following Sunday; Hurvr and Mrs Ned wiikina s
Members having telephone Nos old Williams of Hastings. Mr. and lained ThankMivtaS Dav Mr
755-762-760 and 725 will hold their Mra. Wellington Monica antTdaugh- Mra nlrotHSffi Md «
and Mr
Mr. and Mn
Mrs. “d
“ MB
annual dinner and election of offi- j ter of Bedford nnd
j ’ Mr7sian]eyjLloa
." A..5.
' .TT*
■ ccrs. nt the home of Mr and Mrs Lyle
Lyl* Nonis.
Morris.
i icne UMa and irrlng
Ronald Haynes. Dec. 5 AU members j Mr.
Mr. and
and Mra.
Mrs Floyd
Floyd Mills
Mills and
and of De^oU and Mr. and Mra.
, are urged to be present.
I daughter
..1Bh!.r of
nf South
Rnuth Bend
n.nH spent
«~n. lhe
.H.
8pencf.r of Oale4burI
The Cedar Creek Cemetery Circle ( week end with Uieir parents. Mr.
Dwight Van Horn and
will meet---Dec. .
9 with wMr. .„a
and Mrs. and Mrs. Grant Dickerson.
-------------DUUiCne
V(U1 „wn
I Blanche
Van Hom cntertl
Lyle Dickerson. Ten cent Christmas
Mra. Wallace Nadell is assisting at Thanksgiving evening at afi
lhe home of her daughter in Kai- pirty. •JhtJ' pr^twara. ^
gifts wlll be exchanged.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tobias and
while her daughter is in | Mri
wooden. Mr. and
daughter. Marian, of Kalamazoo the hospital
Doa chenaveth. Mrs. joyca VI
spent Wednesday evening with his
Mr and Mrs. Eldcm Heckor of ' and
olbba ot k
Hastlnga spent Thanksgiving eve- * Mr and Urs Howard Hutaon
Marian remained for the rest of the
Uaughter Joanne ot Battle C
week, her parents coming for her
Garland Chilson of South Bend Mr and Mra. David Artlip of
Sunday.
visited relatives here over the week lakt. and Mr antl Mn Nt£ w
W. O and Mr. and Mrs Keel en?«
«
a &gt;.iik
*n&lt;1 *°n- Bob, of Prairieville.
Tobias entertained
the family
Mrs. Edith Bowers and children
Mr wd
Ned
Thanksgiving. Those present were spent a few lays last week with ter famU_
Mrs
Spencw
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Tobias and son. parents. Mr and Mrs. Arthur John- chUd£n ipeni Sunday at the 1
Mr. and Mrs Fred Bush and fam­ coc*'
i of Mr. and Mr« Harald Traa
ily and Mr. and Mrs. Howard KlmMr. and Mrs. Mark Garrison spent Battle Creek.
mtlu of
__
_ .
_ .
.
erllng and children, all of Battle Thursday wltH
with the Beedlc f®
family
Miss Doris Hartman who
Creek; Mr and Mrs Orson Tobias Hastings.
tended telephone here for M
and family. Mr and Mrs
Eddie
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens and
Brlngsthull of Ann Arbor, Mr. and daughter. Mary, motored to Florida
Hickory Comers.
kBs. Edd. Traver and family ot Monday to be gone several weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Riley Adrianson and
McOmber. and Mr. and Mrs. Evert
Mrs. Martha Replogle !a spend­ children of Neeley were ThankaglvMeyer of Centerville._________
ing a few days with hex grand­ ing guests of Mr. and Mrs. Drag
daughter. Mrs. Hubert Peltingill of Felder.
CARLTON CENTER.
Hickory corners.
Mr and Mrs Martin Reeder and
The Carlton L. A. S. meets this
Helen of South Haven were Than*"
week Thursday Dec. 3 for dinner
WOOD SCHOOL DISTRICT.
giving guests of Mr. and Mrs. A
with Mr and Mrs, Jay Wing.
Mr and Mrs. Glen Baker from
Floyd Aspinall returned from Lake Jackson visited her brother and Oliphant of Prairieville.
Mr. and Mn. Arthur Murray
City Friday night with hls deer. wife, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Bruce,
north Prairieville spent TTianlH
Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Fuller and from Wednesday until Sunday.
ing with their daughter and sondaughter were guests Thanksgiving
Miss Bettie Emerson from Lan­
day of lhe former’s sister at Ur­ sing spent lhe week end with her'.
GraxyJ Rapids.
bandale.
grandparents. Mr. and Mn. William
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Wing enter­ Rockhill.
LITTLE RED MICK.
tained relatives
from
Holland ,
Vernon Engle of Grand Rapids
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Calkli
Thanksgiving day.
। spent Thanksgiving with hls par- tertained lhe
folowing
i
Robert Henney attended the Older enta. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Engle.
Thanksgiving day. Mr. and M
Boys’ Conference at Pontiac from
Tlie Wood school P. T. A. meeting Henry. Mr. and Mrs. Olen J
Friday until Bunday.
will be held this week Friday Doris Henry of Battle Creek,
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Shroyer and night, December &lt;- The ladles are aid Heater. Betty Calkins. W
family of Marshall spent Thanks­ putting on the prognun.
Smith and Dorolha Smith.
giving day with the latter's sister.
The children of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. William Cl
Mr. and Mrs. Hale Carpenter gpd Sidney. Plfleld &gt;11 came home for
family.
Thanksgiving and lhe men put 'a Charles
Freeport.
Mr. and-Mi’s. Fred Henney and new roof on the chicken coop. Just
son spent Thanksgiving with Mr to get a good appetite for the love­ Robert returned home from
and Mrs. G. Fisher of Hastings ly dinner enjoyed by all.
! north with a deer Thursday r"
Other guesU were Mr. and Mrs. H
U Ih,
WV. .nmurh
“
A. Nichols of Hastings and Mr. and
,
Mra A- H. Bellamy and daughter of U&gt; m.kr &lt;l» Lewie week, they ।
could tel Wn, without K.
Detroit.

*]^

|

a|95
■

dut church, was one of tlie discus­
A miscellaneous shower U being
’
sion leaders.
held this week at the church for j _av__ .
,
The trip to Cranbrook church and the family of Frank Coull Who lost
school waj a big event Saturday lhelr home and contents by fire ®?r1'*‘l“ *
afternoon. 121.000.000 has been Tueoday. Bparks from a passing en- Mn- Ho,l,er Anson,
used In church, school and land­ glne ignited lhe clover chaff which* Mr- &lt;nd Ur*- Way Waters
scape work.
has been used to bank the ouUlde
oi Plainwell and Henry W
Dr. Luccock of Yale Divinity of the house and fanned by a heavy of O~nd Rapids visited Mr
school gave two very challenging wind the buildings were ooon de- Mr*- Clinton Castle Saturday,
addresses, as did Dr. Howard Mc­ strayed. Unfortunately there was no dj&gt;’ dinner guests were Mr.
Clusky. We appreciate the willing- Insurance, people arc responding Mrs. Robert cu'.ciier of Orang
&gt; ness of the men who assisted with rplendldly with contributions. MY. I Those entertaining Thanka
■ the transportation of our delegates. and
______________
___ locate in Bed- Day were: Mr. and Mra. Ju. —
Mrs. Coult will
! It took ten cars in all to go and ford for the prerent.
, Mills who had for guests Gerald MBU
| come. Coach Dave Smjlhe of L Mr and Mrs CiT
of IWIrnlt arul Ur ■nil lira
a
Grand Ledge and
and Rnnt
Supt nvkehautfF.
Dykehouse
Beatrice
Buxton of Maple n*rd Mllh ar‘d UI'J Dawn Milla M
of Charlotte attended two of the v.v..
Orow, were
Sunday v*
of West
Q.
ouiiuay
------- —La**
----- •’.
- • and■ Mr
1 ■ * 1 W. aSP
conference sessions
Elwin Strait Mr.
Mr and
larold RlAnLnn
and Mrs. .Harold
Stanton and McKlbbin
McKlbbin had
had Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mra. Byron
Byron
was elected president of Vermont­ family.
McKlbbtn —
of -----Yankee
-Springs;
—
Ml*
ville Hl-Y last Wednesday noon and
Bessie Hughes had Mrs Mott. Mr.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Sandy
Wertman
Robert stanun selected lo represent
and Mrs. Maurice Hughes and Mri.
the club at Pontiac Slate Older celebrated their 85th wedding anni­ Com big and family of Middlevine;
versary at their home in Dowling
। Boys’ conference Nov. 27-29.
on Sunday November 22 and were Mr and Mrs. Honeywell had Rev.
I
Hastings delegation was com­ royally entertained by their chil­ ; and Mrs. Harold Honeywell and eon
I posed of the following: Marshall dren who prepared a dinner In hon­ of Jones; Mrs. Lulu Shepard had
i cook. Jr.. David Jones. Eugene or of the occasion All of Die family ' Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eifler and fam। Bush. Chester Lyons. Norman Hall. was present to enjoy Ute day.
I Robert Henney. carl Edwards. Ned
Mrs. Mark Norris had Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Babcock,
I Rennick. Dick Bessmrr, Wayne
Mn. Ben Temple and sons, Howard
who have lived near BhulU foe sevand Jack, and Mn. Katie Norris at
Hnkbelner. Kenneth Brower and
Kalamazoo.
Don Doxey.
’
W111U Healy farm east of Dowling I
Those spending Thanksgiving Day
The M E- Sunday School assisted
The ToVk-nsend Club will serve sup­
with sending four boys and Die Ro­ per at the church on Tuesday eve- 1 away were: Mn Ethel Btebbtn with
tary club helped with some.
nlng. Dec. I. Joseph Modrack of
Mrs Grande DePriester with
T. K. Reid took a load over and Galesburg will be the speaker.
Mr and Mrs. Irving Fisher arc
assisted with leadership at one ot
moving Into an apartment at Verlhe churches where we ate.
Horace AngvU wm chosen 2nd . montvlUe this week where they wlll
ice-president.
spend the winter with their daugh———&lt;♦» ——
ter. Lucille, who is employed there. George Woods and family with Mr.
----------Mr. Pisher Is an invalid and he and and Mrs 8am Page of Quimby and
HINDS------------------CORNERS.
Mrs. Nellie Kline is getting along hls wife were former residents of and Mrs. Rankin Hyde and ion
this locality.
.
nicely after her recent operation.
A turkey supper is being sponsored
Miss Susie Phillips Is working In
by tlie Ladles' Aid Society and will tings.
Hastings.
be held at the church on Friday eve­
Mr. and Mn. Delos Hughes
Mrs. Sackett and son have moved
ning Dec. 11.
children, who have been visiting
into Edd. Newton’s tenant bouse.
parents. Mr and Mrs. W R. Nr
Ralph Skidmore spent Thanks­
CLOVERDALE.
returned to their home in Tl
giving with friends near Vicksburg.
The Cloverdale L. A- 8. members Sunday.
Mr.
..... and Mrs. Mark Garrison
------- ---and bic
are mjucsicu
requested io
to oc
be preaeni
present at me
lhe
daughter of cloverdale and Mrs. home of Mr. and Mn Bert McCalHammond
of Hastings
spent ■ •lum -----— -be a Saturday night when several
Friday, Dec. 11. —
There wlll
Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs pot luck dinner and election of offi­ dies walked tn proclaiming “1
| birthday.” AU seemed to
Burrell Phillips.
'
cers. Also please bring a gift for the themselves. Cake, sandwiches
* Mr. and Mrs. Jay Snyder and son. Christmas party.
'cakes and coffee were served.
Ivan. Mrs. Vida Phillips of Hastings
Those from here attend*—
and Wayne Snyder of Ohio spent at lhe town hall Friday evening.
funeral of Mn. Haul
Thursday afternoon with Mr. and Everyone welcome.
mother, Mrs. Lodema She
Mrs. Burrell Phillips.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clancy met at Jones Bunday were Man:
! Mr. and’Mrs. Edd Newton enter- their son. Robert, at Kalamazoo
Lyle and Leta Billings. w
«
' tained the following for Thanksgiv- Thursday and they spent Thanks-;' utgs.
Maurlcc Burchett, Mr. and
i trig..Mr. and Mrs. Forest Hall and giving together in that city.
Henry Rogers Mr and Mra
Mr and Mrs. Otto Lockstldt spent | Are and R^v ^aJS? Batea,
1 sou. Norman, of Hastings. Mr. and
. Mrs Orville Hammond and daugh- the week end at lhe home of Mr. f Harold Honeywell had chant
| ter.
and Mrs. Roscoe Rauch of Elkhart, the funeral
Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore and In.d;
.
_
Mrs. Manley Billinas Is soms
I daughter attended the Moore fam-'
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Monica. Mrs. improved tn health which Is
ily Thanksgiving dinner at Charley Lester Monica and Mrs. Wm. Hay- news to her friends
Moore's al Freeport.
ward spent Sunday afternoon with
Callcril on
Jennla Korrt
. no.
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Moore ...»
and Mr. and Mra. Russell Monica of tucv mmd.. wm ur .nd
■ family of Freeport spent Sunday | Kalamazoo
Ben Tem^T^nd^r
Si
with Mr and Mrs. W1U Moore and
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Haney enter- KetchumPOf ff.i.Zu'™ *”■

Heater

Battery

10.95

10.2.1

3

Unlimited

Heats

elates I

forward f
or both!

100% Pure Pen. oil

Words Anti-Frcexc

30c-35c quality! Add 1c
qt. Fed. tax.
4 Ac
Quart, bulk—
I *♦

Non - evaporating. One
filling lasU all CQ1wlnler. Quart— wO

BOYS

COOKIE
JAR

su. 1

79c

hours — kept
coffee steam­
ing hot!

White with
red trimming,
Wards exclu­
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atl30

9-CUP PERCOLATOR

159

Modem design, with cool handle.
Aluminum. Regular price &gt;1.79.

1114411*10 ■ ■?&lt;•
6 ft. flexible or rigid rule in steel
case. Accurate. Buy now! Savel

TROUBLE

LIGHT j

They are regularly 81.00. 20 ft. cord,
husky guard and reflector.

12-IN. J IG SAW ]

ftQe

YEAR AFTER YEAR
Established in 1890. the Capitol Savings &amp; Loan
Company has for 46 years continued to merit the
confidence of conservative investors.

449

If you are not already a shareholder, you will find it
to your advantage to investigate the different plans
offered for both lump sums and regular monthly
payments.

Cuts tn center of 24 in. circle. 8*4 in.
tilting table. Usually 84.95.

Montgomery Ward
118 S. JEFFERSON
IIS

'

uACTlMAe MICHIGAN
uiruinju
HASTINGS,

Capitol Savings &amp; Loan Co.
112 East Alicgaa Street

■

Chicago.
Mr and Mrs. Arthur T
tained about M gureta fr&lt;
and Vermontville Bunds
Mr. and Mn Clifford
entertained II gtwala f
party Saturday night.

Wancta Strausl
Detroit for a few
the LivW‘
PhylUs

�tbi

_________________________________ LA___________________ _

THREE CORNERS.

'

wlB. tbetr
Uwjr BW71 Btoop. Mr. .nA Mn. CBM.
I ta« Haste and hoHttey with

I. J.
J. RobtnHomaMr. and Mr* JainM F. Hammond P,UTnUuxl Mrs. H.
Thsnksgivand Natalie of Lanslmr were lust ®°n- Miss Ruth was a Thanksgiv‘ Mrs.
Satunlay night gvrete of Mr. and
**
—- Claude A. Hammond
---------—enroute
----------- Larabce of Hastings.
ittk.
• of
-•
Mr. and Mrs Benny Adcock
to Grand Rapid* to visit relatives.
Natalie remained for a longer visitHastings
„—---------------------------------------and Mr. and Mra. ...
R.
as her parents are moving to De- Sprague of Battle Creek spent 6pntrait where Janus Wlll assume hls day with Mr. and Mra. Edgar Flcamparyb branch offices.
I Lost Bunday dinner guests of Mr.
Misses Reina and Ruth Robin- and Mra. Claude A. Hammond were
son of Bancroft arrived Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. M. Paul Wing and
evening lo spend their Thanksgtv- Rusaell of Detroit, Mr. and Mra.

HAjnxd

banxh,

■rrnmauT, plenum

RmMtar UM r. T. A tab Vrl-1

uu

QVIMKT.

Boomer Mid Mr fcnd Mn Leo C. A., enaln. The mother, mid | Mn Dtn Hoffman u on the Be.
Hammond of Lansing
t daughters are presenting the pro- list.
Miss Winifred Haye* and friend &lt;™m.
I Mi** Ruth Colson of Olivet visit „
of Grand Rapid* were guest* on .
Mr■ *nd MrL Edgar Mfleld and ed over the week end with Jeanette
werc Thanksgiving dinner Riuman.
'1
Sunday o
olf heruncle and aunt. Mr.
—r.1. **r
U——
- ■ and
__J
' oiloato
gueeto nt
of Kit
hls n.e
parents,
Mr. anA
and Mr*.
Mr. and Mr* vLeo —Reynolds
and Mrs.L Georg* Kelley
8. P. Flflcld in the Cobb district..
Marjorie and Mr. and Mr* Delbert
Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Walter* and. Reynolds vtelted relatives In Battle
cliildren ot Grand Rapids were
। Mr*. Stoughton, have returned, Creek Sunday.
Bunday callers at the Claude A. I home from their trip to Marton.
Mr. and Mrs. Casper Thomas of
Hammond home.
Royden Yarger of Welcome Cor­ Indiana, where lhey were guests In 1 Kalamazoo visited at Uie Rltzman
ners, was an overnight guest of Dav- the home of the formers aou-ln- home Sunday.
i law and daughter. Rev. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ware and
rid Robinson, Friday.
; Dayton Manker. for a few days Robert Nash of Hopkins and Mra.
Rev. and Mrs Manker entertained Rose Ware of Detroit spent Thank*Thanksgiving with a family dinner giving at waiter Bldelman *
and reunion.
i Mr. and Mr*. Melvin Cattipbell en-1
Mrs. Minds Billingsley spent tertalned the following for ThanksTuesday with Mra. Orley Smith in giving dinner: Mr. and Mrs- Clnrthe Ryan district.
jence Campbell; Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
J. Shirley Wing of Grand Rap-, Campbell; Mr and Mrs. John Gurd
ids u-as
was •
a Tu^sdav
Tuesday aftarw/wvn
afternoon guest and family of cedar Creek; Mrs
of his sister.
Mrs.
Claude A. Maud Randall and *on; Mrs. Halile ;
Hammond and Rose Marie.
Wright; Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Campbell of Hickory Corners and
,MB LAKE.
Mr*. Eugene Thornton of Battlo
The Kinsley Ladies' Aid will meet Creek.
Dee. 18 at Mrs. Mary Klblinger's for
Mr. and Mra. Walter Sinclair
pot luck dinner and a Christmas spent Thanksgiving with Archie
party, each taking a gift and receiv­ Sinclair and family at Fine lake.
|
ing one.
Mr. and Mrs James Blackford
Mrs. Mildred Fritz and children spent Thanksgiving with Mr*. James
spent Thankrivtng day with her Foley of Hastings.
mother. Mrs. Frank Davis In BalMr. and Mrs. Kenneth Reynolds
tie Creek.
were guest* of Wesley Edmonds of
| Mrs Lottie colluter and children Dowling for Thanksgiving
spent Thursday in Battle Creek as
Mrs. Clara Sponable. for many
I thc guests of Lawrence Fry and years a resident here, died Saturday
, family.
morning at thc home of her brother.
। Russell Mott has returned home Cha*, cutler in Bronson. Funeral
■ from the north with hls deer.
was held Monday at 2 o'clock at the
j Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dell and Baptist church In Hasting*
daughter. Grace, and Mrs. Thoma-.
t
thc Older
&lt;
T.. 8 K. Reid attended the
1 of- —
st. —
Joseph.
Mo.,
spent
the —
week MV-m
goys' UVUIV,
Conference
at LVU.iuC
Pontiac Over
■—-- —
— • -r
■
uavo .Ab
with Mra. Dell * mother. Mrs. the week end.
Hwnunle Armour.
&gt;
.. ■
■ ■

Catanult Practice for U.

More Good FORD V-8 USED
CARS for You At Bargain Prices
$325.00

No. 1274 1934 FORD V-8 TUDOR...
No. 1127 1935 FORD V-8 FOR DOR SEDAN .

$435.00

No. 1218 1934 FORD V-8 DELUXE FORDOR

$365.00

No. 1293 1935 FORD V-8 COU PE

$395.00

No. 90 1935 FORD V-8 DELUXE
3 WINDOW COl'T-E — ll.Ht MILKS

$435.00

No. 39 1936 FORD V 8 DELUXE TUDOR TOURING $495.00
No. 40 1936 FORD V-8 TUDOR ________ ________ $450.00
Also tome 1929 Coupes and Tudors. Call and look these cars
over if you are interested in good cheap transportation.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
phone 2121

FORD PRODUCTS

Hastings, mich.

German engineer* and aviation experts are staging rehearsals in catapulting these days at City island.
New York, preparatory to launching a projected regular airmail service between New York, the
Azores, and Europe Thc phoio shows thc mother ship Schwabenland and the plane Zfephlr in place,
ready for a catapult teal A second plane, lhe Aeolus, U at the nghL Both planes recently made
succcvefui trial flight* from the Azoiea to New York.

Mrs. Murle Reynolds and Percy
DUfaFKE.
CRESSEY.
Will White was throam from a Solomon, local.
Mr and Mrs. Willard Icketf and
' load of wood on Wednesday, crack-1
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cosgrove Mr. and Mrs Lon Campbell spent
staying with her daughter. Mrs. Lot­
.... —
------ing several ribs.
spent Thanksgiving with lhelr | last week deer hunting In Mecosta
tie Colltoler. for a few weeks
I and also visited Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Guests Thanksgiving day at PorMra Shorter entertained her sister daughter and family at Augusta.
j Swanton in Big Rapids.
Ml
visited Mr. an(1 husband. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice
• ter Knowles' were Mrs. Van Horn
1 Mr and Mrs Edward Rlcc and
and uausiun
niKi
daughter u,
of jutumi,
Jackson. vmuu
Claud "lia MrA Kelln Bowman near caie- olmslcad of Kalamazoo for ThanksNorris and family of Carlton Cen- I doula last Sunday
|
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bllvemall daughter Veta *pent Thanksgiving
ter and Earl Knowles ot Delton.
The R. s. is sponsoring a supper at
Donald Reynolds and Helen Cul- and daughters of St- Johns and , with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Palmer
Edward Lcehlcitner has returned [ the church basement on Friday ver of Brndlc.. wcrc marricd at Del- Mr and Mra Richard Tompkins near Orangeville. Mra. Mary Rice
home from Bridgeport, conn.
evening, Dec. 4. Thc women's classes ton
- --------- ---------•— —
——•— -Monday
evening.
November
33 and daughter of Kalamazoo and returned with them for a visit.
;
--------------- «**
.
, । will do the serving. Everybody is in- by Rev. Bate*. They were attended jack Perry were
Thanksgiving
Mr
Mr, FJ1Jr &amp;lmond.L of
"The end of heavy spending by ' yRed.
Hastings spent Thanksgiving with
by Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Johncox. guesU of Mrs. Joiin Perry.
the government 1* in right." *ay* a i nJP birthday meeting wa* held
They
will
reside
in
Hosting*
whete
Forrest Buchter from near Free- Mr. and Mrs. Grover Brook*.
government official. So i* the Milky j wlth Mrs W1U Bayne antl ElorB
both arc employed at the Hastings P"rt- Dr.rt,Th°'LP1OnuOr w\0,n‘n«
Mr. and
Haul,
Mr.
and Mrs.
Mrs. George
George Baulch
of
। Way.________________________
!
■ wood last Wednesday.
park and John Perry have relumed Hastings spent Thanksgiving
Bean and Grain Co.
I Mr. arid Mra. Charles Hammond.
—
1 One of thc surviving technocrats ii Rev. Thompson and family and
Visitor* al thc home of Mr and from the north.
i Robert Luse were at West Bebewa on
Mr. nd Mn. UW WS« &gt;M .
2,d"J^Tlroi'r Bnxai wnl
say* that man. sooner or later, will
Mrs.
Carl
Hartman
on
Thanksgiving
Mr. and Mra. Grover Brocks spent
I Sunday where the former filled hi*
cMMn-n wm TTrurfadlrtnd ,ue.u BundJ&gt;. UWTOOn ,lth Mr.
g,,
have hLs thinking done by ma­
, appointment at the Church of: were Mr. and Mr*. Harry Lclnaar
chines Well, that wouldn't increase
- —
. ... .-------------------and Chris Hartman of Delton. Clara ol her pmnu at Bellevue
jO
Padelford
near Bellevue.
Christ
unemployment much, anyway.
I Mrs. Mattle Kimble, who has ( Gifts and Donald Hartman of Kai- I . Little Richard Arnlz. whose parMrs. Lzon Stanton and daughters
I been visiting in Ionia county for ( amazoo and Lucite Gos*. of Muske- | ente live on Uie Harry Bennet farm. o
creek were week end
—j* nattie C.;ck
I was kicked in the face by a horse —
*------------------. Mrs. William Hoff­
two weeks, returned to the home of |I Rin.
guests
of Mr.,and
her son. Floyd Kimble, an Sunday. |I Mr and Mra. Joe Hurd cnlcr- and is In Pennock hospital. The man.
— child has everyone's sympathy.
t! MIm Helen Hoffman ot New York
Preaching next shnday morning i(tained Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wallace
. I Mrs. Henry Frost has been car- . City visited relatives here last week.
| of Terry for Thanksgiving
by Rev. J. o Crawford.
S ', spent I ing for Mrs. Waddell and lhe new 1 Mr and Mrs. Elmer Lusk. Miss
The L A 8 arc planning on an ■ Mr and Mrs. Wm Culp
rteien
icr* uuy.
anniversary meeting tn tlie near fu­ Thanksgiving with Mr. ai ind Mr* ■ baby.
Helen nonman
Hoffman oi
of new
New York
City.
Mrs.
Lew Nagel will en.ertaln
the Laurence „
Hoffman
Mias. rvuw
Foote
ture to observe 51 years of effort Bill Strong at Kalamazoo
---------------------WUu».. and ««.
Vteitors at the Reynolds home for ■ Irving Ladles' Aid Friday. Dec. 1.1 ol Hasting* spent Ttiahktglving
They will have, a special program
Thanksgiving were Mr. and Mrs. T. I Everyone is invited.
I wlth Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoffman.
and community' supper.
--। Floyd Dunnt'Sui and Lloyd Dc- D. Crandall. Mr. and Mrs. Carl En-' Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Schcnkel and I
zlan of Kalamnroo. Mr*-and Mrs;children and Mr and Mrs. "What
Bcrle I is thc rarest shade of color
■nend wcrc week end
- hunters up
Leslie Enzian and Mr ana Mra! Gillette and Mr and Mrs Fem Gil- I in existence?" asks a correipondenl
north.
Margaret coaU had charge ofa' Donald Reynolds of Hastings. Mrlette end their families from Midjn the opinion of a married friend
.-.hort Thank'guvin,': program during aud Mrs Millard Houser. Mr. and , dlcville were Thanksgiving guests, of ours, it Is that ot thc ribbon his
a part ol lhe S S hour last Bun-, Mrs.. Hervey Enzlan. Mrs. D. En-. of Mr and Mrs. E. D- Lake of Ver- ( wife sent him lo match thc other
-*
—
zionl Mrs. Till Conycr and Mr. and j montvilte.
] day.
day.

AUCTION SALE

On account of the death of my husband, I will have an auction sale at my place
located 7 miles south of Middleville or 4 miles southeast of Bowens Mills or 12
miles west of Hastings and 1 mile north west of the Yankee Springs store on

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11
Sale to Start at 12:30 P. M. Sharp,
lowing Property:

I Offer the Fol

COWS

Commencing at I o'clock.

TOOLS
1927 Overland automobile.

Grade Guernsey. 5 yrs. old, due Dec. 23. 1936.

Heavy farm wagon.

Grade Guernsey. 3 yrs. old. freshened Nov. 15, 1936.

Light form wagon.

Grode Guernsey. 3 yrs. old. due Dec. 16. 1936.

Set sleighs.

Hoy rack.

Pair light sleighs.

Set damp boards.

Grade Guernsey. 3 yrs. old. due Jan. 15. 1937.

Spike tooth harrow.

Grade Guernsey. 3 yrs. old. due Jan. 19, 1937.

Doering mower. 6 ft. cut.

Two horse riding cultivator.

FEED AND GRAIN

Buggy.

Spring tooth harrow.

Grode Guernsey. 2 yrs. old. due Feb. 8, 1937.
‘Extra good producing herd J
Grade Guernsey. Heifer. I yr. old.
2 Jersey heifers, freshen this month.
Veal calf. 3 weeks old.

About 100 crates com. 64 shocks of com in born.
Quantity of rye. Quantity of com fodder.
Quantity of alfalfa hay. Straw stack.

Cutter.

I will offer th e following property:

HORSES

Rubber tired wagon.

Grade Guernsey. 3 yrs. old. due Jan. 2. 1937.

HORSES

Having decided to quit farming and rent my farm out in fields I will diepose of my
personal property at public auction at the farm located 1 '/j miles north of Has­
tings or first farm outside of city limits on North Broadway on

Wednesday, December 9th

Purebred Jersey. 7 yrs. old. due Feb. 3, 1937.

Bieck mare, weight ehavt 1200. goad warier,
geldiag, weight about 1200. good warier.

AUCTION SALE!

Two horse walking plow.
2 single cultivators.

Hoy rake. Manure spreader. Land roller.
Crain drill. Com shelter. Grass seeder.
Set hay slings, rope and pulleys.
4 row com busker. Quantity of crates.
Now Primo cream separator.
5 5 gel. cream cans.
5 gal. barrel churn.
Post hole digger. Pruning shears. Cutting box.
Range boiler. Wagon box
3 set double harnesses. Set single harness.
Good saddle. Several extra horse collars.
Several good rabbit hutches. Stock tank.
Forks, shovels, chains, saws and several oHiei
articles too numerous to mention.

Bay mare. 9 years old, in fool, weight 1500.
Bay colt, 17 months old.

COWS
Holstein cow, 3 years old, calf by side.
Holstein cow, 3 years old, due December 15.
.
Holstein cow, 7 years old.
Holstein cow, 5 years old, duo early in January.
Holstein cow. 5 years old, due last of January.
Holstein cow, 4 years old. calf by side.
Block Jersey cow, 4 years old, due now.
Holstein bull, 2 years old. pure bred.
This is cn extra good bunch of cows. Average test

HOGS
0. I. C. brood sow. weight 300 lbs.
8 pigs. 2 months old.

CORN FODDER
Quantity of corn fodder.

TERMS: CASH—Everything to be settled for at day of sale. Nothing to be removed
until settled for.

MRS. A. L GRAVES

7 foot double culripacker.
International tide delivery rake.
Belknap togging sleight.
Oliver No. 11 riding plow.
Hay iHngt and car.

DeLovel cream separator, good one.
DeLaval cream separator, dd one.
4 10 gal. milk cant.
50 ft. galvanised ridge roll.
2 011 drums.
10 30 doi. egg coses.
3rd hone hdmen and horte oollort.
Com plenter.

Potato planter, log chaltti.
Other articles not mentioned.

TERMS-AII sums of $10.00 and under eash. Over that amount nine months time
will ba given on good bankable notes bearing 6 par cent interest. If you wish to
take advantage of this credit please moke arrangements with tho clerk at date of
sale.

Mrs. GeorgejH. Fingleton, Proprietress

PROPRIETRESS
N. C. THOMAS, AucHwteer.

Seed Com.

FARM TOOLS
Good wagon and flat rack.
Superior fertiliser disc drill.
Massey Harris double riding cultivator, nearly new.
McCormick-Deering hay loader, nearly new.
7 foot cut McCormick-Deering binder.
6 foot cut McCormick-Doorinf mowing machine.
Moline 2 horse com planter.
Goad 3 section spring tooth drag.

WM. ELLSWORTH, Clerk

DEWEY REED, Auctionwr.

B. A. PERRY, Clerk.

�TH! HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 3. 1M6
Paul Marks of Ludington. 1* caring Russell is a former Freeport boy and way Dept, repaired the crack* in the railroad co
for her now. Mr. Schlffman is al*o hl* friend, here wish him success pavement of our main street last Knowlc* I
very poor!y.
....
----------a----------- -t-----’ In un
hls ------------new venture.
Thursday.
________
„
much
—
needed
-?-. . — and st.00 it U
aMwtrtal
Plins arc being made to set up greatly appreciated improvement
_____________ ,
At thl* writing there arc several
A lawsuit, of interest to Freeport ney for Mrs. Knowles and Dr R. 6 the holidays.
case* of mumpa in the villager a sawmill oh the-8emtah See«- far::.
among them being those of Teddy in the near future Howard W. Coul- people, was tried In the Federal Wedel and Mra. Vivian Andmon
Walton. RuaaeU Blough Marjorie ter of Orand Rapid* Is owner of the Court at Grand Rapids lhe forepart were among the witnesses.
Whitney, and one of th* Kauffman mill and U is expected that a num of last week. It waa the case of Mr*.. Prayer service at the U. B. church
Athletic*
children. An effort is being made at ber of farmers in thl* community U&gt;ma Knowles vs. the P. M. R. R. In will be held on Friday evening this market.
Friday afternoon the Thornapplawhich damages of 830,000 was asked, week due to so many being away for
school lo keep the number of case* will sell him tract* of woods.
1. K. Kellogg fbotbaJl team closed
I Mrs o. R
Lightfoot was re- it will be remembered that Mrs the holiday.
at a minimum.
turned home from University hos- Knowles was seriously Injured when
W. W Boughner Is giving lessons New Tort state
Walter Lewis spent Sunday after­ pltal at Ann Arbor last Sunday and the car In which she and her two &gt; on stringed instruments al F. H. 8­
noon with hls uncle and aunt. Mr 11.* being cared for at the home of children were riding with her broth- at present as part of WPA project
unusually difficult because of the
and Mrs Charley Roush of Carlton. &gt; her daughter. Mrs Otto Kunde. Her er-ln-law, Woodraw Knowles, was
stiff schedule. The opponents were
------- - :
•••&gt;..
Mr and Mrs Floyd Geiger of I condition is considered very serious, ‘struck
tnwk h»
mnniwvnt
V
Martin. Nashville, Lake Odessa.
by ■
a switch &gt;&gt;neiru&gt;
engine at
nt an un.I
un -.
MIDDLEVILLE.
becau
near Alto were Sunday dinner guests 1 Miu ElUsa fzwls Is at Hudson at guarded crossing in Grand Rapids.' Nov. 26 Letter.
eoM*
Belding. Waotem State. Caledonia,
of Mr and Mr*. H W. Oosch.
Galesburg and Wayland. However,
present where she is plan is*, at a more than a year ago. It proved to; Milton Kenneen 1Y moving his exaoa
we won four games. Ued two and
Mr. and Mrs. Max Tucker of revival meeting being held at the be not only a surprise, but a real &gt; family to the Charles Karmecn farm wen
lost two.
shock when the Jury returned a ver- west of Parmelee thta week.
take
Marshfield. Oregon, came Saturday WeMevan Methodist church,
Workmen from the county High- diet of negligence on the part of lhe __________
to spend a few days with Mrs
Thia waa the first year that Mid­
Tucker’s mother. Mrs Ellen Yarger.
dleville has ever beaten the highly
touted Waylander*.
Ray Wieland te the guard now at
The two schools met for the first
the crowing near the creamery
Parente of school children appre­
time on the gridiron five years ago
on the old Middleville athletic field
ciate thl* safety measure
Mrs Ellen Seesc accompanied her
In 1931, and Wayland drubbed the
daughter, Mr*. Wm. Olthousc and
bewildered T. K. men to the lune
of 45 to 0. Football then was a new
husband to their home in Bowne
Sunday. After a visit there she will
thing here and Wayland’s team
w the home of her other da ughwas experienced. Ever since that
go to
u&gt;r. Mrs. A*ahel Thompson, to spend
time Middleville lias been out to
------avenge that defeat.
the winter.
Walter Wallacr nnd daughter’
The MlddlevUJe boys scored in thc
and Mr. and Mrs. Homer Reynolds
first and fourth quarters. Penton
’
Dr. and Mr*. H. 8. Wedel were in
Mrs Mary Hooper left Sunday to of Hastings called cn Mr. and Mrs
made the first touchdown on a
beautiful pass by Peeling after a Hastings on business last Friday aft­ spend the winter with her sister, O. R- Lightfoot at.the Otto Kunde
Mrs. J. D. Zagelmeler. and husband home Sunday afttrhoon.
march ot 83 yards, but the try for ernoon.
of
Hastings
Mr and Mrs. Qaii Lightfoot were
Mrs.
Mary
Dodge
returned
home
extra point failed.
last Tuesday from several days’ visit
L B. Lester returned home last In Hastings Saturday and called at
The next touchdown came when
Friday evening from a hunting trip the home of his brother. Walter
Willis scored for Wayland on an with relatives in Grand Rapid* and
around Baldwin The first of the Wallace.
end run. Haywood's try for point at Middleville.
Freeport High school has recent­
The Sterling Male Trio ot Grand week he returned to chase to hunt
failed and the game stood 6 to 6.
and while there wlll be the guest of ly elected a news staff and we hop*
In the last quarter the fighting Rapids will give a program of sa­
Mr and Mrs. Charles Bisbee Mr I they will favor us with some good
T. K’s. scored again. The scoring cred music at the U. B church on
items in Uie future. The editor-in*
chance came after a number of Sunday evening. Dec. 13 at 8 o'clock. Bigbce’s many friends here will be
This group Is known throughout sorry lo learn that he has been 111 I chief la William Boughner; asslstwell directed passes which.put the
this part of the state by their pro,- and has been confined to hls bed l ant editor. Lola Wieland; literary
boll on the Wayland one yard line.
gram* at the various churches and for some time. He is better at pres- 1I editor, Virginia Fish; Jokes editor.
The Wayland line held like a stone their regular appearance on the ra- I ent and able to be tip. Mrs. Bigbee ,. Paul Burkey, sports editor. Meredith
wall, but Peeling hurdled in true dio. The program Is sponsored by I has also had poor health but is bet- |! Lewis a contest has been in progress
track fashion. The extra point was
I to select a name for thc school pa­
made by way of a pass to Fields the W. M. A ns their regular Thank j ler al present,
offering service and an offering for i Mrs. H. M. Boughner was at the | per. which is being announced thia
and the score was 13-6.
mlasioti* will be taken.
j W R. Schlffman home southwest of
This was the last game for many
Last Thursday evening, two hunt- | town from Friday until Sunday car-! Congratulations to Rusnell Smelof the T. K. boys. Fenton. Fischer. ers returning lo their home from the ing for Mr*. Schiffman who has —
ker.
who
recently
purchased
thc H.
--------------------, r
-------------------------Schantz. Peeling, and Burns played north parked their car on our street I been seriously ill. Her daughter. Mrs. E- Smith Hardware at Hastings,
their last high school football game for a short time. They had been for- |
when Wayland was defeated Fri­ lunate and had on lhelr car two;
day.
large deer, a black bear weighing:
440 pounds and a 31 pound bobcat. ‘
Nov, 26 Letter.
I Ken Braendle 1* gelling his new-1
ASSYRIA.
‘ ly purchased home. Just vacated by I
Thursday, December 3. and Sun­ Dr. H- S Wedel, ready to move into j
day. December 6. will be Bronson this week. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kunde j
hospital Thanksgiving day*. Any expect to move into the hou*e now |
food, fruits, vegetables, or any occupied by live Braendle family
I
World*! Rnl con with dual economy ol From oil
articles tliat can be used in a home
Mias Bernice Burkey and friend.
will be appreciated.
Ed. Biirnia, of Kalamazoo were Sun -1
Harold case and family of the day evening guests of her parents. 1
■ let gi»« big roomy Intarion choir height
Grange hall spent Saturday at the Rev. and Mr.*. L F. Burkey
World*! lergait lugooo* capacity • World*!
O. C. Hewitt home.
I Bert Hooper Mrs. Flora Hooper,
Leon Cole. Eriie.st Hoffman. Al­ and Mis* Flora Bumgardner of Cale-'
bert Durham and Merle Tasker who donla were Sunday guests of Mr. und
doct locki • Woild*» fm&gt; con wllh built-in worn
were In the north hunting, relum­ Mrs. Frank Don
ed Saturday with one deer. Mr.
oil dnfioitnn • Only con with Aulomotic Hill Holder and world*! Rnnil
Mrs. Bessie Annabel of Hasting?,
High in Cream Content. Raw
Durham being the possessor.
waa a week end guest of Mr. and
imoothail hydraulic brak«&gt; • World*! lhong«*l,
und qvlelstt all tletl bodia.
Howard Cole. Sherman. Jones, Or­ Mrs. Gail Lightfoot.
or Pasteurized. Pt. 5c; Qt.
rainforcad by itacl • Studabakar*! C I. 1 Eudgat Plan oHcri low line
ville Greenfield of Charlotte and
joy carpenter of carltnn Center
Rex Mason of Battle Creek return­ was a Sunday caller at thc home cl
ed Saturday from a hunting trip Mr. nnd Mrs. George Thompson.
in northern Michigan, rach one .se­
Supt and Mrs. 8 G Voorhees
curing lhelr quota. It was Mr. Mn- expect to spend the holiday week
100 Lbs. Nel
«on*a and Mr. Greenfield’s first ven­ end at Prescott, thc guest of Mr
Phone 2651
ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.
1
PHONE 2101
ture and they were pleased with Voorhees' mother and brother.
HASTINGS
their buck.
A new roof was put on the Mrs.'
Miss Leona Miller spent the week Meyers house Monday.
end In Battle Creek at the home of
Rev. and Mrs J. I. Batdorf expect.
her uncle. Mr and Mrs. Joe Moore to spend tlie Thanksgiving holiday '
Wesley Russell has rented the with their daughter. Mra. lia Ambs
(ormer Porter Harwood farm.
and family, of near Leslie.
Edward Ourtuey. who is staying
Mr. and Mrs. F C. Tabbcrcr were
st the Curtis Russell farm, fell Grand Rapids visitors last Friday. ;
from a ladder a distance of fifteen
-. .. P.
,,-----------~. of KaiMr. and Mrs.
Workman
feet breaking his shoulder.. He was araazoo were Sunday guests of their I
Made of ALL GOOD
trimming trees. He came here last I daughter. Mrs. 8- G. Voorhees and
Grains, Concentrates
summer from Mobile. Ala.
'husband.
x
Tlie Briggs Ladles’ Aid society
Mr and Mrt&gt;. John Batdorf nnd
NO BY PRODUCTS
will meet on Thursday, December family of Grand Rapids were Sun­
J for an all day snaaion and "wood day afternoon guesU of hls par­
ASK ABOUT IT!
bee” for lhe church fuel. Workmen ents. Rev. and Mrs. J. I. Batdorf.
are given a free dinner. Trees near
the church tliat have been donat­ visitor Bunday.
Mrs. Roy Naglcr and Mrs. Leon
ed are to be cut. Mrs. Lottie Jones
and Mrs. Evangte Miller are com­ Howk were Grand Rapids visitors
mittee in charge.
la.sl Friday.
The Rev. and Mra. Hufton called
at lhe Hugh Case home Sunday.
Willard Case and Mr. Halloway. 8. in tho church basement last Wed­
nesday evening. Jlggs and Maggie
Charles Purcell farm, have returned were present and entertained.
Mrs. B Stitnel. Mra. Rose Metten­
to Portland. Mra. Halloway and
three sons had previously located dorf. and Mrs. Anna Scott of Grand
there al lhe opening of the school Rapids were guests of Mr and Mrs.
year.
C B. Boater last week Tuesday.
।
Mr. Norcult of Clarksville didi
Orson Coon, who has been with
hls daughter. Mrs. Ena Sylvester paper-hanging for Ken Braendle.
of Battle Creek, is now staying at Monday
his home.
' ***■
There
-----------was-- the
-------------usual ----------One atUmd—'
HASTINGS
PHONE 2118
ance at lhe Senior play. "Mountain
THE LITTLE RED BRICK.
Mumps," «hen In 1 o O. P. hall
Good set sleigh*. Dump n
Nov. 26 LeUer
last Thursday and Friday evenings.

Thornapple-Kellogg
(School Notes

BHUEBFORT.
Everyone*had his part very well
Nov. 26 Letter.
I In hand and everyone enjoyed the
A meeting of Freeport’s voluntary Play very much
However, some
fire department was held at the: folks are blaming Oils play for the
fire house recently and the depart- epidemic of mumps that Is breaking
ment was reorganised. Neal Karcher out here now.
wa* elected chief, taking tho place, Mri Walter Lewi* and son. Rsyu« Onto
of
VMIBV Knowles
CK.uzw.sa who
w.aw imw
has served
—a
*•&gt; ■ mond. spent Bunday at Laruing.
In
u... for
,
and Mrl Joel Hummel of
that capacity
several» years, *....
but.,
who is not now a resident of Free­ Nasliville spent Saturday evening
port. Floyd Walton is the new assist­ arxl Bunday with Mr. and Mrs Wal­
ant chief and L. B Lester Is captain. ter Lewi*.
Another meeting will be held in the
near future at which time the state Mrs James cool on Tuesday after­
fire marshal) has agreed to be pres- noon ot last week. Following the
business meeting when plans were
Lsut Thursday waa moving day In completed for the annual Christmas I
Freeport. Dr. and Mrs. H- 8. Wedel bazaar and supper to be held at lhe!
moved into their newly purchased church basement on Saturday. Dec
home, formerly the Albert Wells 12. a delightful lunch was served by
house. The same day Mr. and Mrs. Mra. Della Perkins of Grand Rapids
Albert Wells moved their household Mcsdames Patterson. Jacoba, anil
goods from the Mrs. Rensch home Thompson of Grand Rapids and
to Grand Rapids where they will Mrs. Will Pardee of Bowne were
make their future home, Roy Blough out-of-town guest*
and Harry Fields, with the former *
Mrs. L. B. la-star accompanied her
truck, moved lhe furniture of a1 sister, Mrs. R. A Brown, of Green­
family by the name of Preston from ville to Detroit Saturday where they
near Dowling into lhe C. A. Curtiss were gueste of their brother. W O
house.
Stewart, returning Sunday evening.
Mrs. M. J. cross of Hastings, old
Rev. and Mr*. J. L Ickes were in
age pension Investigator, called at Lake Odessa Sunday in attendance
several homes in the village last at the mortgage burning celebration

/ make it a point lo
drink at leait a
quart of Highland'.
Dairy Grade A. milk

every day ’cauie I

find it helps me

Exciting New 1937

keep feeling jit. By

giving me extra en­

Studebaker

ergy it builds up

my ■ resistance

to

colds, too. Grade

is one of the high­
est grades of milk

produced. And

Your Cows Will Show a
If Fed a
Nice Profit

Highland's

Grade

A is also one of the
purest.

BALANCED
RATION

Farm Bureau
Service Dairy

'

•

’
.
:

GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE CO,

HIGHLANDS DAIRY*

$noo
Xi

cwt.

Cottonseed, 32.15 Cwt.

AUCTION

$42.00 a Ton

Soybean Meal, $2.15 CuL S 12.00 a Ton

FARM BUREAU
SERVICES INC.

Owing to the death of my husband I will sell my personal property at gubbe
tion at my farm, five miles north, first house west of Nashville or three miles
south and two miles east of Woodland on

MONDAY, DECEMBER 7

Beginning at one o'clock sharp. I offer the following
HORSES

Friday night and the children en* tertalned ua with a fine Thanks- 1
giving program which all enjoyed.
Mra. Rebecca Craig attended aj
birthday party at the home of her
daughter, Mra. Forest Polter, Thurs­

CATTLE

day.

Thc American Legion presented
our school with a new flag.
Victor Clam and family of Lake
Odessa called on Warren Bolton*
Thursday afternoon.
PhyllLs Tyler to attending the
Beauty Culture school In Lansing.
Clifford ’Hammond and Leslie
Raber made a business trip to De­
troit Friday.
».
Our school organized a 4-H club
last week. Mrs. Wm Claggett waa
chosen as the1 leader. President. Mclva Claggett, vice-president. Ruth
Gross, secretary. Kila Tyler, treas­
urer. Genevieve Oross.
Bonnie Tyler spent Bunday in
Grand Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Claggett and
family are spending Thanksgiving

Hastings.
Wyman Claggett leaves this Sat­
urday to attend the live Mock show
at Chicago. He te one of the two
boys who won m the AZ-HE Ex­
position held in Hastings recently.
Mr. and Mrs, Chas. Woodruff vfrIted Harold L/nacks and family in
Grand Raptds Sunday
Chas. Woodruff is spending Wed­
nesday in Lansing on business.
Mr. and Mra. Clifford Hammond
were Sunday gueals of the George
Snyders near Caledonia.
Mr. and Mr#. Roy Chandler and
fstjilly of Hasting# were dinner
rueste of Clifford Hammond Salurday
__________

A Strawberry grower at Bhensndoeh. Iowa, advertises a new variety
as "Giant Mastodons .** Do you sup^CT^he means the targe giant mas-

2 horae walking cultivator.

Team work mares.

N

Announcing Our 1937
CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CLUB
The way

©OKI

to make giving easier

E11LUH1

Holstein cow. fresh 10 weeks.
Holstein cow, due Jan. 3.
Holstein-Durham cow. fresh 10 weeks.

A
N
K

SOeWaotar..
Bl,00 Weekly..
200 Weekly..
S-OOWetklr,.

2SOO
50.00
100.01
250on

It ii hard to hr.d any Joy in
Christmaa giving without fi­
nancial pieparednoBs. Your
December salary, alone, is never
Urge enough to stand the added
strain which Santa Claus puts on it
every year.
On the other hand, it is really no
trick at all io have a Merry Christ­
mas yourself, and to put joy and
happiness into the hearts of others,
when you start a year ahead, week
by week, to save the money you
know you're going to need.
Start now. Join our 1937 Christ­
mas Savings Club now forming.

MIMBIt JIDISAl DtPOSIT INSUBANCI CORPORATION

OF

HASTINGS

Platform scales. Com skellor.

MISCELLANEOUS

HOGS, SHEEP, POULTRY, ETC.
Fat bow. 18 months old.
Shoot, wt. 170 lbs.
12 Shrop breeding ewes.
Stock dog.
About ISO Harapihire Red pullett.
Few Hampshire Red roosters.

CHRISTMAS

0
N

5 too* cultivator.

FEED
4 tom alfalfa hay.
Quantity corn fodder.
Few shocks com.
Quantity bean pods.

FARM TOOLS
McCormick grain binder, 7 ft. cut.
McCormick mower. 5 ft. cut.
11 hoc grain drill.
Goad wagon.
Now hay rack
New 2 section drag.
99 Oliver walking plow.

Barrel sprayer. Hand iprayg
Coal brooder stars, 1000 bI*R.
Fairbanks-Morse got engine, t Vi H.
Dexter 2 tub power vainer Fur loaf.

HOUMHOLB GQOBS
Living room suit*. 9 X 12 rug. 2 carpets.
Dining toblf. 6 dining chairs. 4 kiteMB eh
Kitchen cabinet. Sowing machine. Heath
Queen gas range, new. Library table.
Day Fan radio and cabinet.
2 bedsteads, springs and matfveM. Drawer.
Cupboard. Sot glass dishes.
Odd dishes and cooking dishag. Naa-eketrfc sweegar.
Coleman gas lamp and lantern.
Forks, hoes, shoveh and many other articlag apt
mentioned.

Terms of Sale-Cash. No property removed till settled for.

Mrs. Frank Furlong, Propr
H. O. PENNINGTON, Auctioneer

S. L HEFFLII

I

�THE HAS-PN’GS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER X 1938

Fior

(WELCOMES EVERY BOY 6 GIRL TO

EAMUNED POPEY&amp;.

t

FINISHED IN
BAKED-ON ENAMEL WITH
NICKLE PLATED CAP-BALL
BEARING FRONT WHEEL-16"
FRONT WHEEL-10" REAR

w
V)

brought Into tin* i
grim room. They 1 history. It positively established the Grand Rapids and Mr. and Mr?. &gt;
identity
of the^utari. not *as the Hubert R0ilnglll of likkury CorIdentified Uie in:uii as an uncle.
.
Imtehd of conMldenng the mystery "uncle“ of Uie Owosso fanyly but as
of identity solvei the state trooper. ltlr former Eaton county man whose
Mr. and Mr;. Jesse Osgood enter­
I Dead Man, ••Identified" By telephoned Uie iJfenuflcatiun bureau P^nts had reached the stale police tained over thirty for dinner
at East Lansing and reported the through a minor arrest record made Thursday, all of the children and
Relatives, Was Not
classification rending. The prelim- several years ago.
grandchildren being ’present Miss
Inary check lher» indicated .the man
--------------- • • ■
Mildred Osgood of Terre Haute
Tbcir Uncle
to be a former Eaton county real- !
WEST HOPE
came for tour days. Rev. and Mrs.
1 Identification by fingerprints Jias dent und'not tho—uncle" Uuit had
Our school was presented with a Isaac Osgood of Wakrahme for two
) almost ceased.to be news. t; li
tatn identified.
flag by lhe American Legion re- days. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Holly and
family of Bedfont. Mr. and Mrs.
commonplace
&lt;
.Anbtlier "nephew" living in Owoa,-as called He. too. identified Uie „ A‘’’l0"d Webber and sister of Wm. Ellsworth and family of Bow­
Battle Creek started lo their par- ens Mills. Henry Davis ot Grand ,
•mk-‘ mm-t funeral pLuu made by sullation on funeral plans, lhe fin-,Ul Colorado for a vrn,i Rapids, Mr. und Mrs. Lynden JohnI members of a family after tm-u- gerprint man again called the slate Jost _Monduy. Almond worked for ji cock nnd children ol Gun Marsh.
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Osgood and baby
1 Identification, that find' a place In police bureau. He began checking hls Ira Osgood thhi summer.
Mrs. Dorothy Prttlnglll of Hick­ and Mr. and M™- Hay Barms, local
। type.
print card with the-card of the Ea• The Michigan State. Police com- ton man Before thc fingerprint ex- ory Comers stayed with her par­ and MIm Uleim* Osgopd nude up
[pleled niakfii■: a nngcrpruu recorvl pert in tin- bureau. They completed ents. Mr and Mrs. Everett McCal­ Uu? rest b? the guests.
I of un unidentified man In an Owos-| the first telephone fingerprint iden- lum while her husband was north
Miss Barbara Chamberlain spent
Thursday with tier broth.r and
so morgue nccntly a* a couple were tincation made In Michigan police deer hunting.
Richard Laubaugh took two truck wife. Mr. and Mrs. Jahn Chamber­
loads of turkeys to Battle Creek be­ lain. of Hasting*.
fore Thanksgiving, but brought
I Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Johnson en­
home part of lhe last load because
of unfair culling. Moat of the fartn- tertained their daughter and family.
«»
aoiu their
tncir turkeys
lurscys to
io buyers
ouyers who
wno
“Ild
8,“}®y Kimtney ot
——
ers sold
came after them at their homes Yank^.,Thureda&gt;'- T^lr
••— lurteys*
.....— w+re’ku^T^
--------....
son. Forrest, who
FT 7* J*
More
‘“‘thls
wh? vwas
waa north deei
dec* I
lil
-*/
jT neighborhood this year than for | hunttn&lt;. returned* home Friday
•
y-v • z»
ZZ ।
^c*,rs.,
| Fable: Once upon a time a person

I THE VALUE OF FINGER
PRINTING IS PROVEN

POPEYE
FUES AROUND THE

TOP AND THE TRAIN
SPEEDS THROUGH THE TUNN­
ELS AND OVERTHE BRIDGE

'

&gt;&lt; g| 1 !•&lt;• Il I 1 41 S o

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t

C Jtri llirt e trills
CLlCfa
iJiriSinUlb
»/

i£&gt;’4

», Mr un‘&gt; Mrs Clarence Jolincocx n-ent vacationing and took along a
have moved into Uie Cooney house book hc had 10ng U1Mndcd to read
owned by Mrs. Lillie Woodman.
ftnd rcad |t
,
The McCallum families were en-.
'
, , ,
|
tcrtaliM-d Thanksgiving day at the | Threats of higher taxes nnd all
Wm. McCallum liome. Everett Me- ‘ France In more or less open revolt.
Callums entertained their children. I At home or abroad. 50,000.000
Mr and Mrs. Gordon McCallum ot । Frenchmen can’t be wrung.

Hosiery.

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Silk Night-gown.
Pajamas.

I

Dance Set And Panties.

Bathrobe.
Silk. Wool And Quilted.

rnLDENBROUw^

Vlush

*
'ft,

STURDIL^4ADE&gt;
LIMBS AND HEA
ARE MOVABLE
:UNF0RTHE LITTLE

FLESH caw COMPO­
SITION. HAS MAI HA1RANDEYELASHE5.HEAD ARMS AND

LEGS ART MWABlf.SKEPSunAlfAlBJS!

l

Snow Suits.
All kinds of Gifts for Baby.
Fancy Aprons.
Purses and other practical
gifts.
Hats and Dresses.
Sweaters and Twin Sets.
Phone 2522

SZft&amp;U/Z/A'ZZ)123 PIECECHINA „

RURAL PATRONS

1

Please Order Your Coal
Before Snow Blockade!

HENllERHIIOTT.
NORTHEAST STRIKER
1-co Reynolds had the misfortune (
Mr. and Mra. Chas. Van Vrankcn,
of being run Into on hls way lo with Will Johncock und family of
work al Battle Creek one day last Delton, spent Thanksgiving wtUi
week. Mr. Reynolds escaped with­ the Basil Hayward family in Alto.
out Injury, but hls car was a total Mr. Hayward got ills deer while
wreck.
north hunting, therefore Uicy en­
Mr. and Mra. William Cramer. Jr., joyed n venison dinner.
and daughter Sandra. Miss Vesta
Mr. and Mra. Chas. Hendershott
and Miss Martha Cramer and were Thanksgiving guests at Clif­
Maurice Hamilton of Nashville, ford Hammond's north of Hastings.
spent Thanksgiving at the home of Their mother. Mra. Minnie Ham­
Mr. and Mrs George T. Jensen of mond. came home with them for a
Mount Clemens nnd attended the-, sliort visit.
wedding of Lewis Klacffler to Miss
Mr. and Mra. Ernie Matteson en­
Lulu Filmore of Mount Clemens. tertained on Thanksgiving fm a
The couple was attended by Mr. company of thirty relaUves.
and Mrs. Jensen, the marriage be-. Percy Dlinond and family and Mr.
Ing read nt the Presbyterian and Mrs C. J. Lahr* of Hastings,
manse. Tlie bride was attired In Mrs. Otis DeMotl. Rlcliard and
navy blue crepe with matching ac­ Frances, together with Mrs Ella
cessories and carried white chrysan­ Lahr from the Gregory district,
themums. Mrs. Jensen wore red were guests al Albert Brills on
velvet with black accessories and Thanksgiving.
also carried while chrysanthe-'
A. C. Clark and family were
mums The groom Ls a resident of Thanksgiving guests al Uie home of
Detroit and the bride is a former ' Dr. and Mrs. Glen Gunn south of
resident of Mt. Clemens. They wlll, Kalamazoo.
make their home In Detroit A wed- ■
There was a, large crowd at the
ding dinner was held at Uie home 1 oyster supper Saturday night. The
of Mr. and Mrs. Jensen after tlie । friends of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
ceremony. Mr. Klaelfler S a broth- j Slocum of BalUe Creek gave them
er of Mr. Jensen.
. - •
a miscellaneous shower at Hint
Mrs Grace
Chaffee received time.
word from her son. Richard, that he ,
Grace Brill was home from Kaliihas a fine deer.
mazoo from Wednesday noon un­
Mr. nnd Mrs. William Cramer. Jr., til Thursday night.
visited Mrs Ray Wlntcnnutc and
Tlie Ladies Aid wlll hold Utclr
son, Norman, of Detroit on Salur- Christmas party December 10 at
day.
the home of Mrs. Ronald Haynes.

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

A
A

144 E. State St.

Boots have been accepted for the 1930 sheep in Ureal Britain But
it’s no style parade. The Royal College of Veterinarians of Eng­
land It advocating a newly designed tipper boot for Sheep lb coin­
bat the foot rol disease. The bool, which holds dressinQ. prevents
infection, veterinarians claim

Phone 2515

Frank Sage

Hastings

A!

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CONSTRUCTED
OF HEAVY GAUGE STEEL CONSISTS OF 6 CUPS, 6
BAKEDON ENAMEL SAUCERS. 6 BUTTER PLATES &amp;
FINISH. 33^4 in. OVERALL SUGAR BOWL,CREAMERS 5,
6^in. DOUBLE DISC WHEELS । TEAPOT, IT'S THE IDEAL 5EI y

%

Christmas
Shoppers

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FOR ALL

FREE
PRIZES
TOO! )

Here . Ire a Few of the Answers . . .

just the

7Q5. vy

a [Ira

^'TO 5EETHIS jjOfiel

TRAIN FOR THE
TOT WHO IS NOT^^

YET READY FOR THE BIG

&amp;»«

TRAIN WITH THE NEW

y

COMMODORE VANDERBILT tf

TRAINS.4-'A'MECHANICAL
LOCOMOTIVE-REMOTECONTROL
CARWITH OPEN WINDOWS
TRANSFORWERTRACK^WHISTLE y
TRACK IS I4VINDIAMETFR
---------------------------------------------- B

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&amp;

y
Hsftsc® PARTS “SSS I

BIG RED WHEELS.

ANGLES.CURVES. LONG
GIRDERS.

BOTTLE OF PAINT. BRUSH £

MOULDS TO MAKE ACOMPIETESEI ri

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - y

V DONALD'
3NALD*

CFT

ijckWS

HE SQUAWKS AND WAVES
HI5 WINGS ASHE IS PULE
ED ACROSS THE FLOOR
WILL DELIGHT THE UTTLE ONES

BROOM,DUST MOP.

DUSTER AND DUST PANSHE

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PHONE 2331

Toilet Sets
Body Powders
Perfumes
Compacts
Nail Sets
tZippcr Cases)

Perfume Droppers
Fountain Pens
Eversharps
Comb and Brush sets
Dresser Sets
Curling Iron
1 Eleeinc 1

Cards
Manicure Sets
Face Powders
Face Creams
Toilet Soaps
Etc.

Given Away

y
5,

HASTINGS, MICH, g
¥

Wc are told that a .striped suit
tends to give the wearer an appear­
ance of height. This may be some
consolation to the small man who
has sat on a nrwl&gt;-painted |&gt;ark seat
with his new flannels on.

MEN —

Clocks (electric &amp; spring I
Coffee Moker (electric)

Percolator (electric)
Woffle Iron (electric)
Flat Iron (electric)

Tooster (electric)

Tennis Racquets

Stationery
Hot Water Bottles

Military Sets
Flashlights
Bill Folds and Sets
Tobacco Pouches
Cards
Cigars &gt;'
Cigarettes
Tobaccos
Lighters
Razors

PUBLIC -ENEMIES

Airguide

Bath Brushes

(Temperature. Humidity.
Weather)

Shower Sprays
Etc.

Combination Tray
.
And Tea Table

Cocktail Shakers
Sparklets
Mouth Organs
Pipes
Shaving Sets
Etc.

tom Legs fold under—press button and
tht re— ,
.

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ALL-

Lovely tfbTden oak finish with glass bot­

16 PRIZES

WILL HAVE BARRELS OF V
FUN HELPING MOTHER »
CLEAN UP. THE HOUSE

f-women—]

P

G. E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE &amp;
142 E. STATE ST.

It’s Zippers for the Sheep Now

A Tea Tabic. Price $4.95

Given Away

8 For Boys
Rexall
Boys' and Girls'
Contest

y

16 PRIZES
8 For Girls

Candy - Candy
Chocolate and Hard
Christmas wrapped.

Assortment.
,-

All

Price Range 10c to $2.50

Full Instructions
At Rcxall
Drug Store

Rexall Drugs—"Prompt Service and Courtesy to AU”

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
PHONE 2131

WE DELIVER

The Motorist who takes a
drink takes chances not only with
his own life but with the lives of
others.
One drink cannot make a man
drunk but it may so affect his
driving as to make him twice as
“accident prone "
• The One Drink driver impairs
his ability to react in times of
emergency or sudden danger.

This is to be a pot luck 'dinner
and each lady is requested lo bring
a ten cent gift to exchange as
Christmas gifts.
The offering next Sunday wlll bo
lhe Christmas offering
for tho
childrens home at Farmington. Let
us all do our beat for this worthy
cause.

ASSYRIAThanksgiving guesU at Uie Fred
Ml-’ler home were her parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Aaron Treece, of Allegan,
her sister. Mrs. Byron Gray, and
family of Baltimore and daughter.
Mrs. Ronald Warner, and husband
of Detroit.
Jay cole accompanied by Jack
Stanton of Nashville and Orrin Dur­
ham of Battle Creek attended the
Livestock Show al Chicago thc first
of the week.
Kathryn Conklin of Banfleld was
the week end guest of Lucille Cole.
Mrs. Lotlie Jones. Marjorie and
Virginia spent the week end with
her parents at Hart.
The Rev. J. B. Dorris of Grand
Rapids, a former pastor here, wiio
has been visiting at Stanford homes
at Dowling is now at the Jay Colo
home.
Harry Cotton has been III the past
week.
The pupils of the Eagle school en­
joyed a Thanksgiving dinner at the
.schoolhouse on Wednesday served
by their teacher. Mrs. Marion Dos­
ter.
Two local boys. Wilson Thomas of
thc Austin school and son of Mr. and
Mrs Sperry Thomas and Harold
Holmes of thc Eagle school, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Holmes, left on
Saturday for Fort Wayne to regis­
ter at the Indiana School of Tech­
nology. Mr. Thomas was a member
of the Bellevue high school class of
1936 and will specialize In aero­
nautics. Mr. Holmes was of lhe
Battle Creek 1936 class and will ma­
jor In mechanical englhcering.
Mrs. Kate cole entertained on
Sunday honoring Uie fourteenth
birthday of her daughter Lucille.
Covers were laid for sixteen of her
young lady friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Joo Moore of Baltic
Creek were Sunday callers at lhe
Fred Miller home.
HICKORY CORNERS.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Borden of
Kalamazoo were^ Saturday evening
guesU of their parenU, Mr. and
Mrs. o. Haynes.
Mrs. Melissa Tinkler Is working
at the Don Johnston home.
Clayton Haynes of BalUe Creek
I spent Thanksgiving with lhe home
, folks.

A scientist explains that moths are
attracted to a candle by Its wave-

j IcngUis. which they receive as sound.
' It is hoped that further experiments

In this direction may determine the
I
The Good dnz er never takes |
wave-length* emitted by a dress
| chancessuit.

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST‘YE AR

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10.1936

16 PAGES

„ . n
MICM W IS
L1K Red Cross Drive in Barry
Co. Certain to Meet Quota
fj
IS PCWE

02587165

8ETTLED BY MORMONS
WHO THOUGHT WALLS
TEMPLES OF GOD

'

The-L.imit Nearly Reached With
Two Communities Yetto Report

Mrs. Forrest Johnson, chairman i
of the Red cross Roll call for mem-1
ber.«hlps
in Barry county, report.;
j
. .
,

Court House—614.
City Schools—610.
jI WORKS
WAY
In the wards
the results

IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT.
• ers who are thinking of what they
might send to relatives who now

OVER
SENIOR CLASS PLAY 'enthusiastic
PROSPECTS FOR 1937
HINE SUCCESS

sending the Banner. It will to to
HAS AN ! their abvent relative* every week*of TWO

JOHN VAN ZILE
I
----------------------INTERESTING --------TIME
CROSSING OCEAN

l,«M a«* —zh

friends and relative*. Not only that
but II will keep them In touch with

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

Salesman And Advertiser!
For Manufacturing Co.
Express Confidence

[010111(111 (1C
ULUIblll lUH 111

II i 1

OASTS EQUAL IN
INSMrtJTIOM OF BUILDIM1
35 salesmen, representing
ABILITY — PERFORM­ 1: theAbout
TO PRKOKDB PROORAM
Hosting, Manufacturing Co&lt;r.[ pany's line ot pUton rings and other I
ANCES WELL DONE
THURSDAY

automobile accessories, met m this
city all of last week Mod of their
. |nTT
gatherings were In the Community Un. C. D. CLLIUI I
.......
jS
SPEAKER
,
hall
of
the
Home
Lumber
Company
,
Why not send the Banner as a
EFFORTS OF PUPILS building. These conferences of the
With two places in the county. Free-, “
—
salesmen have been a feature of the
This Fine New Edifice Will
Second ward. 86 First
‘
-Letters -Recount The
port
and
Middleville,
still
to
herr
and
Car
Seal;
Open
House
And
Wintry
company's
program
for
the
last
Eleven Miles Of Highway
i1 MORE DAMAGE IS
from, there are 591 memberships. member.,;
* ---------three years. Increased Interest has
Third ward. &gt;31 member...
Prove A Real Asset To
Trip From Brooklyn To
Weather Unfavorable To
Cost Two Million
which is certainly splendid.
been shown each year. Tftere was
Fourth ward. 94 members; BuslneM
The Community
CAUSED BY DOGS
Pacific Ocean .
.
Total memberships and contri­
larger uuc-nuam.*:
attendance unui
than uiu»i
usual mil
this.
Attendance
. ua U&lt;ixn
Dollars
district.
77
member-.;
Veterans
of
butions amount to (678.25. Out of
The Banner ts pleased this week to
The rather cold weather 4nd the “"V"*
«Teal“
Continuing Wednesday. July 20th. this sum half of each membership Foreign War,. $3 00 gift; Cheer Up begin a series of letters written by They Invade Kellogg Bird „
Otx-n manifested. This Was no doubt due, the new Dellon-W. K. Kellogg Agnconflicting
attraction
o
enroute to Zion National Park.
aoodv-.r V.iYziie W hu par­
dollar, or a tola) of 1300 if the quota "mS'wciJ!11 luilirl’ or woodland.!
dLitrict 10 ‘he Increase in the item* manu- cultural school on Thursday. Dec. 17.
Sanctuary, Kill Highly
•XlM be wpoSTfor tte db- factured
by .uthe -----------companyzs_
On Thiin.
We arrived at the Park about 1, ,reached,
rm;,wu. BOt
------------ ....
completed -1 the meeting of the
goes, M
to national’ head- chairman of the northern part of I
dddg^ ,n,‘d
three o clock In the afternoon. ob-J quarter* and the balance remain:. In the county, report, the following Z'*c- 'Harriet Goodyeari of Detroit..
Prized Birds
w-7 evening
........ ...v.v
-----------------------------of education
on Monday evecouragtngly small attendance at the d*y
there
wa, a fine ban- tooard
—
edueaUon «
r.fn.a
talned A..r
our Park hr-n«
license at ththo lhp
Uf,aiury contributions are
quet
given ,h
the
talesmen,
to •
which
The
Banner
ha,
frequently
reFriday
evening
performance
of
tho
”
*■
,
"
*
*•»•«"*
”
•«
hl''h nlng. The building will be open tor
NanhvlUe.
$2050.
20
member,.
|covering
the
trip
which
look
him
fo
Ranger station and entered Up to the used tor
the
Indianapolis
company
which
.
inspection
from 6:30 to 8:00 P. M..
W°rk ■lsoWoodland
Twp.. $6605; Coals Grove. | ch,"a
ferrod to the damage caused by do«, senior play "Ntw Fires" last week,
entrance of the park the rcencry
Report, from various sections of $8 80. For the isouth half of the I at Yen-Ching University In P*klnk- to flocks of sheep Ln this county. The Thursday matinee wa, com- handles the Manufacturing com- the program starting at 8.00 o'clock,
wa, similar to what we had been the city and county include Die fol­
—---------------- ------------------------------------------------------..... ~ -----------------------------------Now come, word
that a serious Jos,U„.
paratively
better, but even so not
as p«nr. .d,.ru.m, .Im&gt; wM to., .nd U u iollowj:
«hoiarship
awarded him at---------------------driving through all day—dry .sand lowing. which, of necesslly. Is not a county. Mr,. C. J Barnum and Mr. un
• * * ..V
m, lbUna
Wntn.
..t-........
.. ... I
the- time of, —
his graduation
occurred
over
the
Kala- 1good as .....
the play
warranted.
How- representatives.
Community Singing—eupt. C. J.
, Leon Dunning of Delton, chairmen u
7,—from 1-------- *Just
——
*• —
7 line in -----nnd ugly, rocky formation., with complete tabulation.
•
'..it- schoolr ,wz.wv.
. .,jwho did------------,i
The .selling
as---------well as--the
i Barnum. director.
for that district report 47 member. Asheville
iNOrth r..Aiin.i
Carolina —
1. mazoo county recently, when »...«■
hunt­ »u4.k-.. ever, those
attend were
well
-—force
------- •
— ad—---------practically no vegetation You could
-.7. enthusiastic --r
Invocation — Rev. Ralph Batea,
including
Prairieville1 ------------lust jLne where ht&gt;
“ ranking i ing
(ng dogs killed the laM
last two of the , repsuj tn bughs and true-to-lifa yertlsing men are
mc.uumg Delton
ikilvi, Village rr.uwrvi.u-.
over
E.
W
BU
m
Co-166
45.
44
memnot Imagine that nil 1)0; could be
11 IIUUU),Johnstownuu.g
t rauicwiu
.. nwu-ni..
fllrin« his
course
Au.trahan
helonelmr
tn
W
K
company's
line
for------1937
and
exof the Methodist church.
church
Grange
crook»l“&lt;l«'l tduring
his two-vear*'
two-year*'
cour^
, rtu.,
Australian
geese
belonging
to
W.
K. comeay
comedy in
In
though
the
ac'the
lhe
comnanvs
line
for
1937
and
exj­ pastor
.
..........
...
...
fact
even
inuugn
me
---—
—
—
-----.
.
left behind, and thar grass, trees,
..-------------------------... • introduction
introduction of chairman—SupL
cd lake r“c
ciuu,' । v.nj'Mn.
..O__
___ _ a. bR
u.. at times,
_____ __the au- ------ ..-----------Yen-Ching Hnlvmitv
University «tnnrti
stand, first
first‘ le-llnou
Kellogg hlrH
bird sanetnnrv
sanctuary. Ov-ral
Several u
n JL.2
dragged
,he conviction
that there wl.l
Hn.llnBS
Table
shrubs and flowers could be fqund in
----------co—&lt;15*0
Ln
Chinese
educational
institutions,
while-fronted
grew
also
were
killed
1
dlcnce
was
highly
appreciative,
and
|
be
n
i*
r
8
r
increase
in
the
volume
cf
j
C.
J- Barnum.
Certainly this is an excellent re-;
profusion by Just driving through member,.
!..
J
H
Is
co-educailonaL
about
600
boys
1
by
there
dogs;
but
the
Australian
.
in
the
very
last
scene
actually
gave
1
W»de
compared
with
1936
EveryRe*nnn*e
—R
port which shows ttuit itll of the;
the gates of a perpendicular walled ' Viking and Car Seal—424 00. 10 wurKcra
busy year
the tary of Board of Education.
workers .»
in me
the «ju„v»
county wi
wi re
re uu-iy
busy arid
and 1■ 1“ld 200 Blrls l*,n« enrollpd wllh ol’-1 variety were the most prized of the Donald Feldpausch a big hand when 1 ^Ing indicates a busy year for the ; Introduction of
canyon.
member,.
1- ! that thev met witha fine rrsrenui &gt;&gt; twelve or fifteen foreign students reserve water fowl on the sanctuary he came on the stage In Ids "Sun-. Manufacturing Company.
The plciuresque part of Zion NaPennock Hospllai-412. 12 meinHenton.
•
I from tiwlr neighbors and frlcnft. .ln Uu? number The requirements • Each year from December to Feb-; day best go-to-meetln"' clothes. The •
~~
t Lon al park L, the canyon formed by 1 ber.,.
Vocal Solo—Robert Dunnavan.
and ft hl*h standard of ruary the sanctuary suffers losses gesture wav a compliment not only,
the north branch of the Virgin rlvGrand Rapid? Bookcase Co-412. ' Mure and-more. the American people 1 ure
Talk. -The Architectural Plans'’
lx demanded
are com big to'realize the value of 'scholarshlp
c*‘°t*r&lt;hlt» U
----------- .for
. en... from the ruthless killing
kllllnie of IU
its birds
bird, tm
o pun and
«..a the
ih. make-up
mak&gt;-nn committee,
er and h roughly about nine mile, 1 12 member,
, —L. J SarviA, Architect.
'
( but to the audience itself In recog420.
20 mem­ the Red’Croa, which serves In every !| trance. To hnvr an opportunity to by dogs.
long and half a mile wide at the I Windstorm Office——
» ~*
Presentation of Building—L. J.
experience,
■"
nixing effective, effortless comedy. ;
1 time of calamity or disaster
1i vtudy here is an unusual
txtltom of the canyon, the entrance bers.
Laird. General Contractor.
/
I for an American boy. and offers ex­
We had the pleasure of seeing only 1
being formed by two gigantic stone
i ceptlonal opportunities. Young John t
the
Friday
performance,
but
ar?
inaase, lowering over half a mile
ry Moorhus. president of the Board
REHEARSING
FOR
u
just
the
alert,
intelligent
type
of
told
the
matinee
was
fully
as
well
high on each side of the road and STATE LEADERS OF
of
Education.
~
—
CAROL SERVICE. I American youth we like to have repdone. No one character "stole" th**'
stream. As stated In a previous letPiano Solo—MU, Marie NenschM4-H CLUBS COMING Rrheawnl* are in progress for the . rfM'nl
(show, although those two kids. Billy HASTINGS WELFARE AS­
country in such a posi-:
and Phyllis, taken by Lloyd Hopkins
. _
,,
,
, i*cuui
twelfth Viuouuu
Christmas vuui
carol service
service mix
to be......................
'
_s„a - ..........
. "
,
SOCIATION TO SUPER­
as such brcau«e at some outstandtng _.
Dedicatory
Address
—
Dr.
Eugene
. and Margaret Flngleton came very
presented uy
by me
the tl&lt;*3.uiK3
Hasting, Teachers
of thia city
»cnvncia i1 Goodyear
—;
-■ ..nnd
- ~ has been‘
natural formation and Zion park is Record Enrollment In Club uicsciivcu
B. Elliott. Bupt. Of Public Inslruc_
ti frAmient
visitor in
In Hastings
Mattinv* since
VISE DISTRIBUTION
| near doing so. And that spoiled.
Club on Sunday«i_„
afternoon.
Dec. 20.!i “
frequent visitor
since
noted for the gorgeous coloring and ■
Work In Barry
। in Central auditorium at four, childhood which will give the Let- TWO COUNTIES CAN CON । selfish daughter. Olive (Dorothy
stupendous size of the rocky forma- 1
Closlng of meeting—The Chair­
o'clock
The
choru,
is
directed
lers
special
interest
to
Banner
read
­
! Roush In everyday hfe» was theeplt- : ORGANIZATIONS ARE
County
,u
chick
,
inc
ciMirus
is
uintica
uy
।
•
—
----—
—
—
”
--------------7,.
tions ci the canyon walls. Tile can­
TROL ITS USE IF PROP
man.
. .......
—i. ! . _____ , . .»r&lt; l,‘ tn Ltni*
enuntv
will1
Barry
county
4-H
handicraft
and
Supt.
D.
A.
VanBuskirk.
A
general
h
.''
’
TcLUd
i
ome
ot
city-bred
sophistication.
The
oupi.
u.
n
vuivDusKiix.
a
KCIKia;
,
~
----—
---yon was discovered ui 1853 by the
The residents of Delton and vi­
ERLY ORGANIZED
poor harassed author-father was
The programabo remember
rememberhishbnaLerna!
paternalcrandgrand­
club leaders will meet at invitation U extended. ------------------ASKED TO COOPERATE cinity are Indeed fortunate In hav­
Mormon* nnd a few years later Mor -1clothing
1
I
father,
the
late
Judge
Philip
T
Van
fine
when
he
asserted
himself
and
f‘,h" eh- u’* ,ud"p phl,1D r VaH
mon rettlirs raided crops and grazed : thc American Legion hall in Has­ will appear In next week's Banner. , Zlle.
of Charlotte, a well known
j brought his high-stepping wife and Extra Care Exercised To ing such a fine new school that will
rlock in the canyon, which they; ting., for an evening dinner meeting
add *o much to the life of the com­
, jurt't in the state, who presided over । U. S. REPRESENTATIVE
। family to time. And of course, there
culled ••Little Zion.” These early | tonight. Thursday. December 10 SHERIFF WAS HOT
munity. They should
also Im
the 5lh Judicial circuit for several
Prevent Duplication Of
nu 1
MADE THAT PROPOSAL was the brand-new bride and groom.
Mormon settlers being deeply re- , Miss Lois Corbett and P G Lundin '3ncnirr
grateful to the W. K- Kellogg Pounand Sid the hired man always both­
liglous. felt that the great moun­ from the state 4-H Club department.
ON THIEVES’ TRAIL Ii terms.
Donations
elation for helping to make thia
John sailed from Brooklyn. July Committees
'
“
-----------------“
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
From
The Two
tains forming the canyon walls were M S C.. will be present to give in­
The old Hastings Welfare Asso- building possible.
111. on tlie Danish freighter Nlel
In truth temple* of God. which L&gt; struction, regarding the two 4-H 8o They Return The Stolen ! Maresk as it offered a chance of
Counties Have Plans
elation will again supervise the giv- j1
*
borne out by the names of some of' club projects.
TUESDAY IS DEADLINE
ing out of Christmas baskets this CHRISTMAS SHOW FOR
Under Consideration
Skunk Hides — Speed
the rocky formations such us "The1 Dinner will be served »
mg
quite
a
sum
of
money.
The
route
'Angels
FOR SECURITY FORMS
CHILDRENAT THEATERS
Great whIUt Ttirone.-----‘ *Land
' • 1 I o'clock, after which the t
At a recent meeting, held in the
Away In Oar
followed took them thru the pana­
n." etc
|' CIUU
club ICIUICIS
lenders Will
will speak. CUUll
County)
,
office of the Barry County Health
V
— "p
Charlie Edwards of carlton. who ma Canal to Shanghai.
From the gateway we drove on
up Agent Foster
Fostet urges all local club
Unit, representatives- of variqus or­ Employee. A.ked To Pay
if possible Both ][vc'
FL'11*.1*. &lt;^ar U,n. t?wn' First letters Dialled from Norfolk. ganizations in Alkgan and Barry
the canyon about four miles io
to mo
the 1 leaders lo
•" attend
•'
Attention To Certain
men, bask.u u pooibu, .nd o repOr Barry County 4
Lodge when- we obtained a cabin, i projects have changed considerably llne- Bnd Sheriff Blaxney had a boat docked fot freight give details counties met to consider what might
___ qur.wd. Ukevlw. u&gt; deUvrr tokeu’
thh year and County Agent Foster Is queer experience Friday night.
look showers nnd cleaned .........
up genbe done to provide for the use of thi­
Items
। uj Qie members of their own organlChildren
erally As usual, when we were anxious that al) leaders understand
11 appeys that Charlie had been. of his duties os a cadet, occupations ne w camp on Mud lake in the Yfmf Ray Branch, manager of t)M
ready to co io dinner. David was these changes early In the year.
fortunate in hunting skunks. He had I that fall to the lol of every sailor as kee Springs park. A fine set of 1 Applications for account number zalion.
surmlMlng. and Leslie and I started nl DUtritt Club Agent Enrl Haas has «s evidence of his succe«. ten hide*. [ a rule—painting,
Pa,"v,"B- cleaning the ^pbuUdlngs
Is being provided, consist- under the provisions of the Social । Other organizations, also Individ-1 Strand and Barry theater*. M*
«■ .rebin. Mrl,
We tow him ‘ -eto, . .to, »&lt; wood ver, .ull“J*"*»
in, „l I eenir.l r.Un, ...d mevto, ' Security Act arc being returned in uals. ure requested and urged to nounces that there will be a fnw
along the river bank with a lizard m able for handicraft work which he ho«ne »»«««hcd on forms to dr&gt; f briuh taking wt off rolWng*. w
headquarters for the manager Increasing numbers to the local post, furnish one or more baskets tor a &gt; Christmas show for the childm|
i office, according to w. J. Field, post- needy family, which they may dr-1 again this year. Because* of tt»|
night
on B
another
r.ne hand and some kind of a big will give out that evening to hand!- Friday %
hl, he left on
“oth^ .
and
and about
about 25
35 cabins
cabins, calculated
calculated to
to master. The dead line al midnight.■ liver or which the organization will opening of Che Barry theater air
(Continued on page 3. Sec. 1)
black beetle in the other It took craft leaders Mis, Mary Bullis. ^nUn«
ln,‘h'
A-\hc *nd ,
• hold four persons each. A represen- December 5. has been advanced to • deliver for them if desired.
| er number will be able to atteol
quite a little persuasion to have him Barry Co. home demonstration ”*r* pa,r,u^,r *J,kcd b&gt; lhJ c,&gt;vda,j
■totlve of the Federal Park Ger'lce! Tuesday. December -----------------p....... duplication. I programs
---- --- ----------------------------15. to--permit
of- ...
in order to prevent
will be--presented
al * 1
. CHRISTMAS PAGEANT
give up hl, nature study for a Utile! agent, will also be present to meet he“ noticed the ten skunk hide,
‘
was present and made on offer of a more complete return of blanks. I each organization or Individual Is theaters.
dangling from the limbs as usual )
_ _ _____
thing like dinner After dinner, col- with the Clothing Club leaders.
the camp to the two counties if they
postmaster Field states that a requested to Inform Adelbert Cort-. This L* the twelfth annual ChrMwr.
icuvru.
u
when
,w
returned,
a
little
before
TO
BE
PRESENTED
I
County
Agent
Foster
report*
(Continued on page 1. Sec 2.»
"
‘
~
would lake charge of and be re- number of Rems on the blanks are right, clialrman. as to how many maa show and the assistance
I record enrollment of 4-H hnndlcn
handicraft midnight the 10 hide, were gone
----------Rs ...»
use ..
as «a camp. TKa.
That not
।' sponsible for ...
niled out correctly and baskets they will furnish or deliver I everyone la needed to make the ooand clothing clubs Already 28 He Immediately telephoned Sheriff Caat To Be Assisted By A would require about 1600 per year wUhes employees would pay strict- and to whom. This list will be cation the success it always hat
TAX RATE IS ONLY
2hLb'S.
b™l»M
u?‘enrollments
eurSutoiX. for Blakney ■'*&gt;'u'
1 schools
have
sent 1In
about u&gt;,
the 'u»h
theft or
of u&gt;.
the
ChOFUS Of Twenty
1 for rental of the property, and that er attention to the following details:&gt;checked and a list of nameakept all been.
S5 54 PER S1.000
‘"‘d’■'™ ciouuns. n&gt;u ua«. th., ome.r «»n
■
| the buildings be furnished with the
Item 1: Be sure to give middle ■ his office for the information of
Teachers of the city and county
J
*
is bettor than double the handicraft lhe ’Pot­
.v(H.nMl
Voices
] necrasary equipment of coU. bedding ■xaine if you have one; If you have I those who desire a family to rtmem-1 schools are asked to co-operata |B&gt;
I
..
. .....
tn u.lilta” Mtolto
tin AttAmntlncr
to
?to
* Chruim..
.nulled, .nd other mov«M. lurnlrtto. n«- none, write "none'' In the space pro- 1 ber with a basket. Likewise, anyone the distribution
- ----- ---- -------of• **—
the tickets. Tbty
Feighnor District Tax Payers I enrollment of law year.
X' ,
hilt fh-r«r. "The
I lie Christmas
viuuiwiin, Star" will
win be
we prepic- e*.*aryj for
• —• a“camp.
v—•
vlded; If you have only an Initial. I who knows of a family in Ute city of are urged to find out as soon as
Will Not Find Taxes
In the auditorium of- the
The representatives
of Barry and write "initial only” In the space.
I Hastings
-------*-•-•- they
••— believe
----------*---which
needs
a possible how many tickets they will
ANNUAL RED CROSS
' many tracks In Die snow about it settled
-----•- - First
- •
Presbyterian church of Hastings this | Allegan counties did not feel that
Hem 6: In stating your age. flg-| Christmas basket is requested to require and to obtain them at one*,
Burdensome
CHAPTER MPFTINR
11 was Impossible to discover ---- -evening ...• 7:3o o'clock., they could determine what might be ure it as at your last birthday.
j phone the name to him.
in this way only is it possible to
ynwr I on mcciinu
particular track. Accordingly Sunday
There is one school dLstrlct In;
• * «continued on page 3. Sec. 1&gt; I Item 8: In addition to city, town
Doubtless it will be necessary to avoid disappointing some boy or
._
the»nc
sheriff
asked
Charlie,
hl,ms
father
Barry county where the tax Ihlt
a„j
nr
snenn
asxea
cnarne.
ratner There will be four colorful acenes ’
| or state In which you were born be i i supply some twenty or thirty other girl.
year will not be oppressive. That Is neporis ana Liecuon ui
Wldther young man who was and a grand finale with the entire
cast
and
chorus
upon
the
stage.
i
baskets,
and
anyone
having
vegeMr. Branch is hoping to make
AMERICAN
LEGION
,
I
sure
to
give
county
in
which
same
is
with *■'
him;
spread out at a ’coiuidNo. e. known ns tiui Felghner dis-■
Officers Main Items
“ *to
-----------—M
The four scenes will be the fol-'
i tables, fruit, meal or any article some arrangement whereby candy
. erable distance from the tree and
trfcl. In Castleton. Tim district for-,
n.
SPONSORS_TROOP 71, , .na 10: Flth„, „me „„;
I suitable for a basket is requested to may be given to every child that
tunalely has no debts and ho* cash !
“UBiness
|see If they could find any tracks go- lowing:
The
court
of
Augustus
Caesar
and
1
phone
Mr.
cortrlght
or
deliver
such
uu hand
iiauu suunneait.
im, m
.c opcrup*. The annual mec-llng and dinner ing or coming toward the tree: They
on
sufficient iu
to pay
the
Decide, To Continue ThU ,, .
1 articles to the Legion hail during
of business tpen donated money fog
ntlng expenses of the school for the ' of the Barry County Chapter of the found
*
J one *track.
* Just then •*they
—- —
no- his wife. Llvla. at Rome. The decree
Work Despite Present
this purpose and In all prababUUf
i surnames.
; Christmas week.
coming year so that no school tax i Red Cross la scheduled for Wednes- tlced a Plymouth car coming from goes forth that all the world shall be■
this will be done again.
I ’ Item 16: The signature should be |
———---------------was levied this year. Neither was; day evening. Dec. 16, at the Unitedi the south and up the hill near the taxed.
Conditions
The second scene will depict the
.
The Christmas party is scheduled
' WS
as lUUniir
usually HIIIACII
written U&lt;
In appL.V-U.O
applicant's DRESSES MUST BE IN
there any township tax. Castleton Brethren church, comer Grand andI Edwards home. When the car was
—z I Laurence J. Bauer Post. No. 45. handwriting .not printed or type]
Thursday afternoon, December
meeting
of
the
Archangel
with
Mary
.
about
opposite
the
home,
one
of
its
got by this year and last without a I East Sts. Dinner will be served at
— ------------ - ”
SATURDAY MORNING for
I American Legion has decided that, wrlllen
and
the
announcement
that
she
will
|
24. the hours of the show, tobeantownship tax All the taxpayers will 16:45 o'clock, the price for guests be­ doors swung open, a canvas bag was । -- -.------ — ----- ~J--------------------- 1■ that organization will continue th,
_?
________
»_•_»
--------------|
«»।
----------i
nounced
later.
,T?l2lcr of thei,Lf,r'1. A , '
have to pay In the Felghner district, ing 35 cents For those who did RedI thrown out. and the car sped rapidly
sponsor the Boy Scout Troop No. 71.'
,
northward
&gt;
The
third
scene
will
be
the
Aeettherefore, will be the county tax.' Cro*,
--------work—*- the •*dinner
’------- is free. Tills
1,0^» .wiu ®'gi° “ T'n - v R00T sPEAKER T
which they have done for so many FORM PISTOL AND
The sheriff and the other, pres- i1,1 L°f
*llh 8al"1 £,l“brlh
which amounts to (5 54 on the (1.000. courtesy U extended because the
nrimi
m no
0 clock — Goal Is Six
t. V. KUUI brtAKtn Al
years.
This
is.
the
second
oldest
Boy
,
T”p fourp’ scene will be the &gt;nonThat ts getting back to old times. worker, throughout the city andI ent thought this a peculiar proceedREVOLVER
CLU .।
Hundred
’ BROTHERHOOD DEC. 21
____
Hundred Garments
Garments
Ing. so
so mey
they gave
gave up
up nunung
hunting lootfoot- : BPr Kene T'
showing
the coming of the Scout Troop In the state, No. 1 at1
have given so irreiy
freely ui
of mcir
their• ing.
The highest tax In Castleton this county nave
”,',*;.? .V*
Jackson being older.
... me
... i 1Wise
and
the
Shooting Range Open Two , Makers of dre**Mio be entered In I tPracUcid
rarmer HilRMlf*
year is N» 1 fractional. Including I _
time and effort
In uiaMin
making me
the cnnicam- pruiu
prints momentarily,
momentarily, picacu
picked. up
up
the
"Isemen
men-----and,the
theshenherds
shepherds
and
th?
- ui
—
, —.and
,,----,
Regardless of the fact that there
Wiffhfa A Wopk Pnr I the ^&lt;ulUl cUus DrcsJm*km« Con-. rracno*x ranuet muu.u
to vUlw, « Neville, dm &gt;h«i b palgn
s™. such ‘a '=
fine success, many - sack and opened It. Lo
u and
— behold 11■ I*“”
,b*•
y .lh
&lt;*,c an*,f lhat
1
is no Scout Executive Ln the county. I
------mile,
■&gt;-----and
..j _,i..
Nights A weeK ror
I teJl sponsored by the Hastings Com-1
He Will Have Mesiafe
n very low rate, being but 412 04 on i SL...
driving
mllos at their own ,„.u_
inside 'were the ten missing skunk ।। will seek lo.desuoy the young child, no formal organization or any other
tne
gl.uuo.
wnicn
includes
tne
coun&gt;
expense
wmie
maxing-inc
canvass,
uinn
cviaenuy
uie
uueves
ma'
The
cast
of
characters
is
a,
fol
­
Practice
i
merclal
club
arc
asked
to
have
the
the 61.000. which
the counwhile making-the
sklnsl Evidently the thieves had!
Of Value
active Troops In the city or coun-! a meellna was held last Thursday i «srrafn15 *t Community hall by ten j
ly tax. school tax and debt service.1 So this is but a small recognition seen the sheriff, had concluded he' ■ow*;
,,
.r .ot . ,
ty. the American Legion Is carrying ’ .. ...-----.r^
------------ -------------------th^i
.
P.Xr
h’,,X
o'clock Saturday morning.. when
the) The next meeting of the Hartls
.....,
- ,Thc aid received by many rural and appreciation of the splendid was hot on their track and that they ] J^°ra ME?' , ,, w,
"uyuslu? an
। evening al the Parker House tor the
The dresses Brotherhood will be Monday nig
I Judging will commence. T
aitricU from the state, and the . work they did.
! had better unload, which they did.. Cn.Cia5, 5“ ..
T
8.
K.
■»&gt;&lt;■•
.ho
h.«
»r,.d
1
pur&gt;»4
o
t
.
pblol
r.!
I
: ’ —Archie TeD. **McDonald;
wife’"
fact that the state now pay* the I Following the dinner the officers1
—— *
r nlilvia.
"
u u u more con- general inlereat to all nv
' of Augustus—Mrs. o M. Fuller; capably us Scout Master for a long; volver club. The meeting wa* caitad.
tuition of all pupils who attend high | will give their reports and election MARFQ A RFNFRniK
of , by Earl Palmatler
Paim.lier and J.
J P. Oles,
Olea.
- farmer
"
'
thaw makina entries i of------------------------especial interest* to
mem­
| Archangel — Miss Agnes Johnson; Ume. asks to be relieved, because of
school from outside the district, has of officers for 1937 will take place
"imrco h uliiliiuuu
living out of town, but his successor I supervisor of correspondence study
. u
p,-, k c Andnu ben The speaker is to be E. V. Root,
Jot y.t ton
.&lt; U» l&gt;l,h uhool Mr. OM.
, ““"J"* “
’*•“* C Andn“- .“^™ntoTol to M. P.W pSi
greatly reduced the expense of I A portial report of the Roll Call!
OFFER TO THE COUNTY
“ft
maintaining schools in this county.! is given in another article In this'
Comprising the Scout committee elected president of the organization । c.°“n y
remembered the dos- lie school*. who will discuss “Fam
,
_,
_
r.
,
«
roil
us;
„
i
Polfus;
rriesicss
Priestess
oi
Apono
of
—
Apollo
.sirs.
—
Mrs.
to U.. F. S.yk., surlln, Itaim .nd Om.r B*tor. ^cr.Ur, .M
~
££££!■
The rate which Nashville pays Is । Issue.
.Irving Charlton Has 210 Hftn.y Waters: cyrentus. a governor | ■----------- -- - -—. —---------------------considerably under the 15-mlll tax
—
-----------». CjpUln of the J and Wt,
yd Wood.
registra-,; treasurer.
-v-nina
another originally set for Monday. December
Mr. Root is qualified to speak of
' Acres Known As “Indian । ' -Keith Clark;
Floyd
wood:Thel937
TheJ93^regfstra.
to’"i».Xnlli VETERANS INVITED
i
I Guard—Robert McOlocklln; Reader: Hon sent in about December first
On Tuesday evening another
*u“ hg(J
id{fBnced
these problems. He U Che owner of
same to mett the comparatively!
«VCTCD QIIDDCD
i-Mlss
Mary
DeVries;
prompter!
numbered
thirty
scouts.
It
is
ex:
urday.
December
12.
as
it
was
Imseveral
farms in Van Buran rojfc
Landing"
! -miss
uevne*; rro...^. ,
small school Indebtedness which was
IU U lol tn oUrrtn j
peeted. however, that this member- House when Earl frlmatier was ^bk^Th^ Jildie. U&gt; come on
usually abandoned farms which ha
| A special session of the Barry Miss Marcelline Campbell; ship
Make-will be greatly Increased be- elected vice-president and plan,
Incurred in the building of Rs fine
-----------1
w com* “ purchased, and which be haa gross­
First
X1FD* Of
VI Series
oeneq Of
VI Social
«UL._. county board of supervisors will be up—Mrs. F. W. Stebbln^; Wardrobe cause of the inactivity of the other were dUcussed for the location of any °“y
new schoolhouse.
“
d
.
-----1
1 held on December 15 to take action —Mrs. Cora Newton.
no
_.
Nearly one
one hundred
hundred dresses have ly improved and brought into good
Troop., in the city.
'•
.( a' shooting range. The plans nn.
Nearly
now
Gatherings Sponsored
’ on the acquiring of land for a Barry
The cast will be assisted by a
.wo already been turned in and the production. The tend he owns re­
DAMAGE SUIT FILED
.. seems call this
for the
range to be open two
It
a shame that
splen| County Park. We understand that I chorus of twenty voices.
committee is hopeful that tu goal of sembles much of that in Barry
By Legion Post
WITH COUNTY CLERK.
[several lake sites have been suggest-' The public is Invited and a silver did organization, so helpful to boys, evenings a week for practice with 600 garments for Barry county's ty-not the best and strongest aoil.
..
Every
A _______________
suit for 125.000_______
damages
has veteran in Barry county,
much of it la hilly, with mostly aand
‘ ed. one of the most recent being the offering will be taken to defray ex­ ha, been allowed to fall by the way- some person tn charge each evening, -rt,*m.vTi~reached
‘•pen filed In the county
rnuntv clerk's
elrrk’i ofnf- 1 whether or not a member of any pabeen
side in Barry county. Would It not Another meeting wiU be held this
T_L_—iiX' offer of Irving D. Charlton, of Has- penses.
flee against Wallace Osborn and the' trlotlc organization. Is Invited to the Ung, Twp.. who would deed to thq
evening
be a good Idea for some other or------*" to complete arrangements.
-------------------ANNUAL
MEETING.
brought into good production by a
----------------—---------------.Universal Garage company. The oyster supper and social evening । county
Mr.
Oles
is
a
former
army
instruciuc
m
ganlzatlons to follow the example
The annual meeting of the Barry system which he worked cut
TWELVE MORE JURORS.
210 acres bordering on
plalptlff ts Alice Fox of Lansing | planned by the American Legion at r,.
river and lake, known as . Twelve additional Jurors have set by the Legion and help lo revive lor and no doubt will be of great I Colinty Agricultural Society Will be
who alleges that she was struck by i their home on s. Church St., on j| Thornapple
1
assistance to the members.
| held m
court,
Bt uje court
Interest In other Troop* also?
“
Indian
Landing."
The
property
is
been
drawn
for
service
In
the
clra car driven by Mr. Osborn at the I Tuesday evening. Dec. 15 at seven
The club now has 25 members and hoUM
Saturday. December 12U».
1 now a game refuge, and will be con- Cuit court for the November term
time he was a salesman for the gargar­ o'clock.
the !^L^
1Q3g jor
president;
NOTH L TO BA^RRl TAXpAYERS anyone wbp Is desirous of Joining
tatoUCh
y the Section of w&lt;Tthr«
tinued as such if the supervisor, In addition to the thirty previously
Following the supper, there will be I shall
age. The complaint recites that the
~
: sccrciotv UIU MENU,ci maw if*.—S
accept Mr. Charlton's gener­ drawn. The added Jurors are as fol­
I will be at the Delton State bank with Mr. Oles. Mr
onim.d-r
nr
Mr
accident occurred in Lansing on Feb. three three round boxing bouts su­ ous offer.
Mr.
palmatler
or
Mr.
directors
for
term* of two years.
lows and they reported Monday. De­ every Tuesday; at Hickory Comers.
33. 1935 and she claims the injuries pervised by Joe Brozak followed by
Barker.
;
wlU
be
open
at
10:00
A.
M. and
cember 7:
Dec. 17 and Jan. 6. for the collection HASTINGS TWP.' TAXP^YIRS. .
received resulted In the shortening a talk by Dr. B. C. flwift of Middle­
wf^JoStmencw af1! MP^M
TO TAXPAYERS OF
Robert Gorham and Elmer Andler. of taxe* for Barry township.
of the left leg. injuries to her back ville.
The c
ORANGEVILLE TWP. city.
Will
be
at
Hastings
City
bank
to
John
J.
Doster.
and nervous shock, pierce, Planck
This Is the first of a series of such
collect taxes for Hasting, Twp on •» w,hlch
William Anders. Hope.
I will be at Orangeville Dec. 34.
Twp. Treasurer.
and Ramsey of Lansing are the at­ monthly gatherings planned by
n«- 19 IQ m Jan 19 ia 23 30 । secretory and treasurer will be read. Hinman, captain; Philo
Perry Preston, Irving.
torneys for MBs Pox.
Adelbert Cortrlght. Legion Comman­ 31. 1936 and Jan. 7. 1937; at Prai­
—Adv. 12-10.
Archie
McDonald. Jam (
and
any
other
business
may
"
nr
oth
*
r
tineas
that
Samuel
Buxton.
Johnstown.
At home other days.
der. An Invitation is extended to ev­ rieville. Jan. 5; at Delton. Jan. 13;
legally come before the meeting will
Claude R. Hoffman. Maple Grove. TO PRAIRIEVILLE
at County Treasurer s office. Has­
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS.
Allen McDonald. Twp. Treas.
ery veteran In Barry county.
be transacted.
Floyd Palmer. Orangeville.
I will be at the National Bank in
tings. Jan. 30. to collect taxes for
TWP. TAXPAYERS. —Adv.
B.
A.
Perry,
pres.
Charles Garrett. Prairieville.
• I will be al home on Fridays; at
Hastings Dec. 13. 19 and event SalNOTICE.
Orangeville Twp
Maurice Foreman. Sec.
AUCTION SALE.
John Benedict. Rutland.
Delton state .Bank Jan. 3 and 9,
day In January. 9 A- M. to 3 P. M.;
I will be at the Hasting* City
• P- E- Castle. Twp. Treat.
-Adv. Out 12-10.
Glen Allen. Thornapple.
Cedar creek. Dec. 15. Jan. 5; Clov­ Bank every Saturday beginning Dec. —Adv. out 13-10.
Jesse chase. Woodland.
'•
Dec. 39. for collection of taxes for Chase Jewelry store, formerly Bess- TO TAXPAYEM OF JOPKOWX.
erdale. Dec. 17. Jan. 7; Eldred cor­ 12 to Jan. 10 and at Don Wright’s,
---------------- - ■
mer’s U being sold at auction, flaks
store at Dowling
every
ner*. Dec. 31. at home every Friday,_______________
_ —
.. Thursday
_____ , NOTICE TO RUTLAND
Joseph Flala. Yankee Springs.
&gt; Prairieville township.
-----------—
TWP. TAXPAYERS.
will be held every day and evening
tor the purpose of collecting taxe, afternoon
for the. collection of
Lewis Johnson. Treaa.
HAMID
I I will be at’the National bank evnotics.
at 3:30 and 7:30 until everything is tn Battle
for Hope township.
''i• taxes f&lt;»r
i —Adv. out 13-17.
for nxltlmar*
Baltimore tnwruhln
township..
at Lacey
The Hasting* city taxe* are now.
sold.
. ! '
Henry Bergman.
Kenneth Garrett. Twp. Treat. | ery Saturday Ln December and Jan­
uary; al home every Friday to col- due and payable, the due data beTO PAY FIVE PER CENT.
—Adv.
Hope treasurer.
I —Adv. 13-10.
TURKEY DINNER'
I The Nashville State Bank through ।
| lect taxes and dog taxes for Rut- Ing Jan. 10. 1937.
Dowling ----------church, ----Frl.--------Dec.... 11.
Mrs? Jessie Loppenthlen. । Receiver Mohrmann Is arranging to
—
1, land township,
CHICKEN HUPPER.
DANCE AT WELCOME.
Legion
hall Saturday night, 35c. I
City Treasurer.
I pay another 5 per eent dividend to starts 6:30. Adults. 50c; children,.10c
Friday. Dec. 11. Scharf's orchestra
__________
Ritchie Mullen. Twp. Trees.
—Adv. 13-10.
I depositors.
’, end 15c,—Adv. 12-10.
Everyone welcome.—Adv. OPt 13-10. Auspices..............
Auxiliary.—A(
■

WORKS WAY TO ORIENT
TO ORIENT
MT. CARMEL ROAD
M™
d’ “
^lud‘n“
ON DANISH FREIGHTER
”"?. "'”7'
ENGINEERING FEAT of 600 members will be obtained.;?.
, the three factories. Table Co . VUclng |
---------—

*“d

07759598

AUDIENCES APPRECIATE

BASKETS WILL
BE DELIVERED

BABRYftND ALLEGAN

A

,'toT ™

�—,

7

THE HASTINGS BANNER, THCMDAt, DlfW—l M, 1M4

FAPR TWO

mt. aid Mrs. O- H. MeCowtn of

I

VISIT

Our NEW FRESH FRUIT and
VEGETABLE DEPARTMENT!
ORANGES

Grapefruit

New Nevels

Texas Seedless
Good Size

2 doz. 29c

7 for 25c

New DATES

3 "&gt;»• 25c

HEAD LETTUCE, Hard Heads
DRY ONIONS
ENGLISH WALNUTS

FLOUR &amp;

each 5c
10 lb. bag 14c
lb. 19c

French’s Perfect Flour
24f lb- sack 69c
24| lb. sack 83c
Moosehead Flour
Del Monte Raisins, Seedless
pkg. 9c
3 lbs. 23c
Prunes, 70-80 size
Fould’s Spaghetti Noodles or Macaroni
pkg. 7c
Harvest Time Pancake Flour
5 lb. bag 23c

COFFEE K
MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
VIKING COFFEE
GINGER SNAPS
FIRST ROW PEAS

FIG BARS

POUND

19c

lb. 27c
lb. 17c
lb. 10c
No. 2 can 9c
\
lb. 10c

7

PACKARD
LEKTROSHAVER

Wheaties

Rippled Wheat

large pkg.

10c

large pkg.

9C

B
Ralston Breakfast Food
21c
Pet, Carnation, or Borden’s Milk 2 Lg. *i*e can* 15c
2 Rolle 15c
Wax Paper
Large Pkg. 19c
Climalene or Bowlene
Urge Pkg: 19c
Chipso

$5.00 DOWN — $1 WEEK

T. S. BAIRD
Phone 2396

Hasting*

om

2

13c

IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT

AHltv TH EAT II |7
Hastings, Michigan
JErf

B

Friday • Saturday Evening Shows Only 7:99 and 8:99 P. M.

Sunday - Monday—Matinee Bunday 3:99 P. M.—3:04 P. M.
Occasional Special Showtags in Mid-Week!
Prices Always ADULTS 15c

CHILDREN 10c

SUNDAY. MONDAY, DECEMBER 13, 14
First Show Sunday — 3:99 P.M.

BUTTER Shultz or Freeport

Lb.

Fresh Hams Whole or Shank Half
Smoked Hams Home Cured. Whole or Shank Half
Beef Kettle Roasts
Round, Sirloin, or Swiss Steak
Fresh Ground

Lb.
u.
Lb.

tb.

34c
22c
25c
13c
19c

Hamburger 2 « 25c

Frankfurters

l&gt;

17c

Food Center
HASTINGS

Stan Laurel and Other Hardy in

OUR RELATIONS"
With Daphne Pollard and Betty Mealy
.
Harold Hoff and his Orchestra.
America Series—“Odd
Occupations"
Adalis U
Cento
---------children 10 Cents

Plans Made To Handle The
Heaviest Holiday Mail
In Yeari
There are only thirteen more days
in which to do your Christmas shop­
ping and this naturally brings to
mind tl»e fact that post office em­
ployees are also beginning on thetr
busiest Ume of the year.
Postmaster W. J. Field expects
the Christmas mall to be heavier
this year than tn many years. Ar­
rangements are now being mad* lo­
cally and throughout the country to
handle the Christmas mall as
promptly and efflclenUy a* possible.
The co-operuUon of postal service
users will help in the efficiency ot
mall handling and Lhls year it Is
more necrae-ary than usual to heed
the slogan “Mall Early,k Tag* cau­
tioning recipients "Not tb Open Un­
til Christmas" may be attached to
packages and mailed as early as con-

fTPAND
TI EATLF
Hastings, Michigan ■ Telephones 2244-2557 ■_
PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF DEC. 13

SUNDAY. MONDAY, DECEMBER 13. 14

"PIGSKIN PARADE
With Skiart Erwin. Johnny Down*. Artlne Judge, Belly
Grable, Patay Kelly, Jack Haley, The Yacht Clab Bey*
Our Gang Cemady — "BORED OF EDUCATION"
BARGAIN MATINEE BUNDAY 1
AND 3:80 P. M. FOR
ADULTS. PRICES AT ALL OTHER PERFORMANCES OF
THIS PICTURE — ADULTS ZSe, CHILDREN 10c

■AkGAtN NIGHT—TUESDAY, DECIMBtR IJ
Anne Sothem
Cene Raymond

WALKING ON AIR
Neveliv Band — •'Ramon Ramos Orchestra" OthA Short
Kubjecte.
'
'
SAVE COUPONS — No Coupon* Will Be Given Out After

WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 16. 17
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 17

Victor McLaglen In

William Powell and Kay Fronds in

Magnificent: Brute

One Way Passage”

Fresh

-MAIL EARLY” SLOGAN
NECESSARY THIS YEAR

Shirk The Shiek" — •’The Cal Came Back"
America Series — "Steel and None"
Adults 15 Cent*
Children 19 Cents

Trchnlcetor Musical Comedy—“Vleirt* In Spring"

Adult* U Cent*

Children 10 Cents

FRIDAY. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 18. 19
DOUBLE FRATURE ATTRACTION!

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, DEC. IB, 19

Murder With Pictures

BUCK JONES IN

WHh Lew Ayres. Gail Patrick. Pawl Kelly
— FEATURE NO. t —

EMPTY SADDLES
Adulu IS Con.

CMMINST
DISEASE BEGUN
RADIO BROADCASTS BY
PAUL DE KRUIF PART
OP CAMPAIGN

LOCAL HEALTH WORKERS
ATTEND PLAY, MEETING
Detroit Newt Oo-operates
With Health Department
In TB Fight

The Detroit
Department
of
Health, together with the Detroit
News and a deeply interested co-op­
erating body of the influential, busineas. and professional men and
women and a number of other per­
sons. representing altogether an ex­
cellent cross-section of those most
concerned In the health, happiness
and well-being of the people of De­
troit. have been carrying on a pro­
The postmaster general has an­ gram against communicable disease,
nounced that all city, village and tuberculosis in particular, which
rural carrier deliveries will be sus­ bids fair to surpass th* successful efpended on Christmas Day. Therefore
all Christmas matter should be dlrecUon. The enlistment of the ac­
mailed in Ume for delivery on De­ tive participation of the physicians
cember 24 or before. The local post ana dentists lias been a major part
office will handle special delivery of the plan.
and perishable parcels on Christmas
William Scripps has placed the
Day.
facilities Of the News behind this
Benders are urged again by post­ acUvtty. and the broadcasta each
master Field to wrap parcel* secure­ Wednesday night written by Paul
ly. address them plainly with name, DeKrulf and presented by a score
street address, city and state of per­ ot competent actors and actresses,
son for whom parcel Is Intended and si well as n highly trained orchestra,
the sender's name ana address have been a valuable and entertain­
should be written In upper lett hand ing factor In the success of thia im­
comer of address side. Using suit­ portant and publlc-*piriled work.
able containers 1* also a help In Through -the courtesy of Dr. Henry
efficient mall handling.
F. Vaughn, commissioner ot health,
Extra clerks will be added at the of Detroit, who with Scripps and Depost office for the busy season be­ KruLf. form the battery, spark plugs
ginning December 12. An extra effort and carburetor of the team, the
will be made to have all out-going staffs of the Barry and Eaton Coun­
and In-coming mall taken care of ty Health Department* were Invit^fi
by Christmas eve.
to witness the broadcast dramatiza­
tion of the Important events In eonnectlon with the discovery of the
microscope by Leeuwenhoek-, a Hol­
Discuss “Anger
lander of humble origin, scientific
and great perseverance.
And Self Control" mind
The play. broadcasCffom the stag«of the beautifully set-up modern
theater
of WWJ. was witnessed by
An interesting meeting of the
Chlld conservation League wa* held invited guests who sat through- th«
on Monday evening at the home of hah hour s presentation in deep in­
Mr*, a. L. Lockwood, with twelve terest and absolute silence, beginnlng with Leeuwenhoek's exciting
member* present.
Mrs. Herbert Reinhardt discussed discovery of the compound lens
the subject. “Distinguishing Between which gave htin the facility lo see
objects.
|&gt;rogret*lng
Bad Temper and Reasonable Anger." microscopic
■•Self Direction and control" was through the study of these minuu
hli
the *ubject of Mrs. Fay Hummel's objects
----- —up—to pthe
—.. point where
„u
paper. Mrs. T. N. Knopf reviewed | work made the demonstration cd
portion* of the study book dealing germ life possible, the opposition enwith -The Problem child at Home," countered, and final recognition bj
and Mr*. Hoy cordre read -Every world-powerful
——bodies
*-------- r-----------1 scientific
DcKrulf as presented
Day Problem* of the Every Day This play- *by
“ ~
wa-s an absorbing experience to ihom
Child."
Till* IcMon finishes Ux. aeries on who witnessed it Dr Burt Shurlj
■Anger and Self Control. "'Mka^purr presided at a meeting which fol­
Van Houten will be tbs fiosiesa on lowed. Dr Bruce Douglas, dtreeloi
Jan. 4. unless other arranaaBseiilj of Ute Detroit city tuberculosis pro
are made in the meantime.
gram, who I* very well known lo tli«
members of the Barry County Medi­
cal Society, spoke of the progress it
DEATH OF LEWIS HARRY.
Lewis Harry, aged 33. took hi* own the fight against TB
life Saturday night, following a per­
iod of despondency cawed by 111 OFFICERS INSTALLED
-------------Barry county are the rock-s thal. in health. For iwvernl months he had
AT PUBLIC CEREMONY
STUDENTS ESCAPE
‘ the proven oil districts, have yielded been unable to work and it Is
n.
u. u 8ERIOL!! TNJLR1., considerable
consiaeraow quantities w
t&gt;u. In
ui thought that he bad brooded over
of oil.
student* and Urne he believed that oil would be his condition causing despondency. Past Matron's Pin Given To
Warren Laubaugh all escaped *cri- du&lt;Ovcred In_______________
Barry county. _______
" | Surviving arc the wife; two dsughThe Retiring Matron,
ous injury Thursday when a car
-— -*" 4; hts
Thls ncw
new resource ha*
has added ma- ter* Marguerite
0.---------and Lol*
...
. income
.
---- ...... Mr
&gt;r. and Mr*
uw Milo
tfllri Harry.
H-rrv
driven by Daniel Hull. 18. crashed UrtaUy
of......
Michigan parent*.
Mrs. Fingleton
Into a wagon on which Mr Lau- nd Drobably will yield much larger two sisters. Miss Annetta Harry and
The officers of Hastings Chapter
j Mrs. Nile Allerdlng
of w»»tin*%
Hasttags; *a I
baugh was riding. The tatter was r-tuX. &lt;n the future
*»»r«4in« nf
No. 7. order of the Eastern Star,
fhrnm to
tA the
fha ground Hut
*
thrown
but was&lt; ha
not* *.
brother. Gale, of Negaunee, and oth- were installed Tuesday evening of
___________ ___________
NOT GUILTY._____ ’er relative*.
badly hurt. Pearl Hathaway, aged
last week al an impressive ceremony
15. suffered cuts on her fac* and
The JU
jury
.Z ...
in «.«
the case »&gt;
of James , Funeral services were __
held
— —
at —
the I open to the public. Arrangements
hand* and was treated al Pennock Hltchmck of Middleville, who wav st. Roae church al nine o'clock were in charge of the retiring
hospital. Others in the car were tried this week to circuit court on Wednesday morning. Father J. V worthy matron. Mr,. Alma Fingle­
Ruth Hathaway. Margaret Brownell a statutory charge, brought in a ver- , Dillon officiating. Interment was ui ton. A aix-thlrty dinner preceded the
and Virginia Ktnyon.
| diet of not guilty.
Mt. calvary cemetery.
installation al which the officers
were guests.
Mrs. Georgina Bauer, past worthy
grand matron, was the inslaUinj
officer a*sL«ted by Mrs Grace Murpity, past grand warder, and Mrs.
Bertha Armbruster as installing

OL’R BEAUTIFUL NEW POPULAR PRICED THEATRE

Soda Crackers

Olffl STITE S OIL
Lians growing

street addies* being 1H5 Valencia
|
Ave. They plan lo remain there for
1 Mrs. Bert Armstrong i* IU with tons* ttmt.
'
I neuritis at her home on E Grand
Mother Nature did a splendid Job
S'.
w
‘ covering the trees and shrub* with
Miss Barbara Pox Is convalescing sliver during Wednesday night and NEW OIL AREAS DISCOV­
after a recent operation for appen- Thursday Burning. They surely
ERED IN POUR MICH­
dlciLM.
were boauUful and the frost reIGAN OOUNTIEB
I Lofrrll's new sewage disposal plant 1 «™Un»d &lt;0 day.
wa* Just put in operation the first of I Mr*. Mina Gregg wM slightly Inthe month.
। Jured Thursday morning when she LAST ONE WAS EAST
Til, MWIIl rUl«„ «h«»
re-1
W
w«:
OF HOWARD CITY
cenlly totally destroyed by fire, lom I **n TravU oo State fit. several
wu itlmatid at m.m
I
«" ““»«*« to ek»e lite
afitmdi an one ear
Rock Strata Under Barry
Mr. and Mr*. Harold Edger and
The nr* department was called
County Ought To
| family have moved to Battle Creek
Bunday morning to the home of Mr.
j where he has secured work.
Bo Tested
and Mrs Glenn Perkins on North
item Udiera. dauahter el W .
That Michigan Is to take rank as
I Clerk and Mr. SterlUtk tto&lt;era U
““ a large producer of oil is conclusive­
hawntt a tuMle with the chlekett |
„„
ly proven by the extension of Ils oil
fields. The first successful drilling
Mrs Joe tcarrar. a sister of Aaron j The store building next to the wa* In the vicinity of Bagtaaw. The
present C Thomas store which has
Gingrich, died Monday. November '
next showing was almost straight
«/buri^^nwPd\^Srine and ^TrJmodeTed: ¥he plan,“are nbt across the state at Muskegon. The
Vunrt m.i.iri.n complete and will be printed when Muskegon field might still be a good
Henry Jensen, the blind musician..,u—w aw, ——*..... .a,.,
producer, but Its prospects were
I «Uhe. te tb.r.k e.rty «&gt;e .1,0
___
largely ruined by over-drilling and
helped him this year and to wish
A Commercial club has been oe- by the release of gas pressure In
them a merry Christmas.
gantaed aL Vermonlvilte with Oard- the rock formations where oil was
Mrs Cha* Bauer is confined u&gt;; ner Rt*erteon M president and L found.
the house by sickness She is being R- Tubb*. secretary and Chas. Btlle*.
The next Important discovery was
,r?
su&lt;►»»
£*rJ «*ri
E*rl fwia
p*'dB. - miv
M1\.e m.h.t in the vicinity of Mt. Pleasant. It
cared for al The'hrme^o?
t?.:
r.~
•«
—
Bauer ,— p,°yd THmorsh are the dlroc- appears that many years ago the
and wife. Mr and Mrs c D Bauer.
We call special attention this week lofl
Dow Chemical company, of Mid­
to a series of letters beginning in
Dr. Alden O. Sheet* wu elected land. In boring far salt water,
' this Issue from John Goodyear Van mayor of Eaton Rapids on Monday out of which lu products are
Ztle who Is studying at a university to a hot contest. The vote was 471 made, had found oil to a few of
In chins
for Sheet* to 428 for O. Elmer Mac- Ito wells.
The Pure Oil Com­
Vernon H Webster, the register of Arthur. Mrs. Sheets Is the daughter pany arranged with the Dow com­
deeds elect, of Barry township has of MTS J. A- McCall, formerly Mar- pany to obtain all the InformaUon
rented Wallace Osborn's house on —
gaxel McCall.
which the latter had as to the loca­
West Walnut street taking posses­
tions of the oil strata. As a result
sion before the first of January.
Greenville will celebrate their twen- successful wells were drilled by the
ly-flfth wedding anniversary and pure Oil company not far from Mt
the acceptance of hl* call to the Pleasant. Men with experience in
Congregational church Bunday. De­ drilling had charge of the work for
cember 13. Dr. and Mrs. parsons are this large oil company and knew
better than to repeat the tactics
well known here.
Peter A. lAmer of Delton will be that had ruined tpe Muskegon field.
a result there has been a steady
IFe’rc telling the folks one of the graduates from Western As
Blate Teacher* college at th* clow oil and gas development to the ter­
ritory surrounding Mt. Pleasant and
about that PACKARD of the fall term on Wednesday, Dec Midland.
The original pools have
16. He will receive a five year rural
Lektro-Shaver
elementary certificate Twelve will been extended to considerable dis­
receive their degrees and certificates tances and new pools have been
found In Arenac and Oscoda coun­
Twin daughter* were bom to Mr. ties.
and Mrs. Walter MuhUtner of L&lt;nThe principal development to 1935
Mng on Nov. so. The little ones hare was the discovery of oil In Mont­
been named Mary Alice and Ruth ealm county and of large natural
Ann* Mrs MuhUtner will be rc- gas field* in both Montcalm and Mt
f!Xr“ta^A£^t‘ 1 costa couuUes."throne
field ex­
Donald, a former teacher Oongmt- ten(jlng ln[o both counties. The
uUUons
I Crystal Lak* field has been a good
Mr. and Mfs. William Solms of producer of oil.
oil, almost equalling the
Detroit are the parents of a son bom Porter field to Midland county. The
on Sunday. He weighed over eight vield of natural gas at comparatively
pounds and has been named Donald iow depth In Mecosta and Mont­
Frederick. Mrs. Solms was formerly calm counties has been phenomenal.
Miss Gertrude Smith, daughter of A* a result of that discovery Has­
Mr and Mrs. Donald D Smith. Con­ tings and dozens of other'Michigan
gratulations are extended
towns now have natural gas. and the
Roscoe B. Starkey ot Lowell, has field seem* to be extending.
been awarded the..medal of the Or­
The best oil discoveries this year
der of the purple Heart by the have been those in Oscoda and Are­
United States War Department. nac counties, and recently in the vi­
This honor Is limited to veteran* cinity Of Howard City. These new oil
wounded In active combat. Mr. Star­ pools recently located by drilling
B 7MDWTB key served 14 months In France and : promise a considerable extension of
was wounded at Chateau-ThlerryI the oil resource* of this state.
' Chauffeur's
licenses —
may
now _.
be
------------ -----------, ----it is to be hoped that there may
obtained
------------- ------from
— the sheriff and the
...V _ be
JT CAUIUlUlfi
exploring tut
for Vlk
oil m
in Barry counOui m HiJh-unnl uhm mm ore mm eity marshal. An effort Is being ty. A successful well has been put
a&gt;Ui&lt;AiU^.«nH47aeu.vj.um4vA4rig made this year to prevent driver* down in Allegan county near the
LigiUA. I \CKARD LrAiro-.'ikai’rrt u-jth bad records from obtaining U-'city of that name. The stale geolonrofiitprtpkyfitf/dtruiMnjjuliuM censes by having all applications fUL tn an addrew In Hasting* last
rimn
chccke&lt;1 ln t,”‘ &lt;*hteal viola lions file J-ear dedated thal he believed that

99c OH, BILL!

24'-’* LB. SACK

xSS.^“,,uS;

LOCALNEWS

and Hewers" — “The Fhantem 8hip"
Pictorial Review
ChiMrra 19 Cents

NASHVILLE

iiOwOiOfr

Love Begins at 20
W ilh Warrm Hull. Patricia E4M». Hugh Hertert

MATINEE Prim far Adalis lie;

EVENING Price* 39c

installing organist. Mrs. Mary Ful­
ler the chaplain and Mrs. Gertrude
Burch soloist.
Miss Irene Jonas of Kalamazoo,
daughter of the incoming matron.
Mr*. Gertrude Jones, gave a num­
ber of readings and flowers were
presented to the officers at the five
no--». of the star by Miss Helm
Stebbins.
The past matron'* jewel was then
preoenied to Mrs. pinglelon by Mrs
Jone* and short talk* were given by
Mrs. Jones. Mr*. Bauer and other
visitors.

MARRIED M YEARS.
Lsst week Mr and Mr*. Manley
Billings of Prairieville Twp. p»&gt;rerred their 60lh wedding anniver­
sary. on account ot the illncM of
Mrs. Billings, no celebration could be
made They were married November
30. 187fl and located Lu Barry county
after ihclr honeymoon trip. Three
years later they moved on a farm to
thia county.
Mr Billings wa* the son of Mr
and Mrs Edward Billings of Orangevtlle Twp • «nd was bom June
19. 1857. His wifa was tho daughter
of Mr. and Mrs Abner Brely. her
parents being pioneer resident* of
Cass county. Bhe wa* born April TO.
1880. They have three children. Mrs.
Hems Burchett of Doster. Herbert
Billing* of Bhetwood end Harry Bill­
ings They have eight grandchildren
and five great-afpuichlldten.

HAND IS CRUSHED
IN CORN CUTTER
The condition of D- M- Scott of
Nashville. whose hand was crushed
in a mm cutter but week and who
ha* been a patient at Pennock hoipital. la coiuidtred good. It wa* not
necessary to amputate the hand a.
It wa* feared at first. He left th-j
hospital yesterday.

DIED IN ST. JOHNS.
Mr*. Charlotte Bhultcrs. aged 94
mother of W. L Bhuller*. died Tues­
day morning at 84. John*. Mr
Bhu Iters was known here a* she was
a frequent visitor at the Bhulten
home. Funeral services will be held
I this Thursday afternoon al ot.
I Johns.

�THE HASTING* BANNER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER it. 1936
eet. the gartering being held in the
I saw the remains of the old
with a man in charge of one of Uie
Allegan County Health Unit office*
loading gangs he told John these French canal started by dh Leasep*
at Allegan. Wm. N. Goodall, repre­
negro stevedae* were paid only 40 built in 1650. Ti&gt;* remarkable tiling
senting the government park serv­
about
the
locks
is
th*
rapidity
with
cents an hour. If paid more they
ice. who had attended the first —----- ---------------- ,----------------------------------which
Uiey
fill
and
tfmpty.
It
take*
wouldn't work over two or three day*
meeting Ln this city, was present al *of 8600.
and perfect an organization that
a week. Il seems as soon as tiiey get scarcely ten minutes* to fill and
the conference in Allegan.
| r was Impressed upon Mr. Good- ‘wU1 accomplish that purpose. But
a little money in their pocket and a ral*e the boat about 50 feet. Il
.Since the first meeting mentioned all at the Allegan meeting that tho
***** couldnot do that if the
little food in their stomach tiiey would like to have seen the Canal
(Continued from page 1. Bee. 1)
quit. An Interesting law in Georgia at rilght. It is brilliantly lighted and I (Continued from page 1. Bee. li
above the two committees re presentprepared lo allow the governing or- _, ____ ..___ _
is. that if a white man is caught must be magnificent a boat cannot
(John made up hU mind when he with a colored woman or visa vena come thru at night; it mu*t wall Uli i done without consultation with mg the two counties had made plans, dertake the responsibility of form-, ganizallon to have the responsibility Mrs. EUen Bennett and Rliie
build* a boat he will eliminate the white person is fined 1100 re­ morning, or it can stay in this ar- । many other* who ought to be inter­ which both were confident could- be I mg
organization which could and for the
camp.
The government
sure-and one brother, Manus.
-—
---------------------------ward*
brass i. citart work and learning to gardless.
tincial lake between the locks. I took ' ested. particularly such organiza­ carried out. for providing the mov-I would take over the operation of the &gt;y ought to do that, because such a neral arrangement* have not I
*
steer were among other duties that
From here on we quote directly about 20 picture* and hope they ' tions as the Boy Scout*. the Y. M. able furnishings of the camp, and' Mud Lake camp for the benefit of local organization would know local
helped to make the hours go by
come out good because that will C. A. 4-H club*. the Camp Fire Olrls. for Its operation far the benefit of the children of the two counties, condition* far better than any out­
from the letters:
quickly.
strengthen my confidence in my Qlrl Scouts. and other organi­ the children and young folk* of the with suitable regulations for It* side agency.
JURY DiMAOUH).
Monday—nearing Panama.
The captain he designates as a
ability a* a camera man.
We understand that it I* the in­
The jury in the statutory case ot
which might desire to avail two counties. The plan called for an proper government. It wa* further
Have been painting all* day. I
The negro stevedore* sold a lot of zations.
J— tention of the government to com­ the People versus Russell Hincktey
fine quiet man. The fir»l male, a
themselves of the privilege* of such organization which would become
plete the development of the Yan- .
huge blond-haired Dane, seemed worked till five but it wasn't to fruit and souvenirs of the canal. I a place. Accordingly it was suggested responsible for the operation of the
kee Springs Park. There is a prob­ w»* duml**ed Wednesday night toy
especially kindly and Interested from hard. I had an arm strength con­ bought a mango but frankly I don't that the representative* from each camp, qnd for.regulation* governing
the start, assuring John he would test with a couple of the crew. I care much for mangoes. I haven't county select a committee Of seven, It* use The W. K Kellogg Founda­ eligible, or provide restrictions a* to ability of two more camps.-possibly juuge McPeek It had failed to
or operation which, tn the three, being built which may be । reach an agreement. II I* reported
know a few tilings about navigation beat the first one. but he is only a been the least bit seasick and I eat who would get in touch with the tion provides so generously for eligibility
judgment
of
the
local
organization.
like
a
horse,
but
I
don't
think
I
ever
Barry
and
Allegan
counties'
under
­
utilized for other purpose* not now to us that the first ballot, after the
by the time he reached Shanghai. dish boy and hasn't been at sea any
situation in the counties, and Joint­
definitely determined. We under­ members of the Jury went to their
The second mate, who hailed from longer than I have. The other one would care lo be a sailor, the life is ly meet with this same government privileged children. Ln It* two camp*
stand that splendid road* will be room in the courthouse, was • tn I
Copenhagen, hadn't seen his family was a Filipino, weighing only 132 too monotonous.
representative on Monday evening.
built through Ure 5,000 acre tract,
in two years. One 22-year-old boy pounds. He took me down fast
December 7. to determine if It is
that it will be wiade a game refuge
in the crew, evidently possessed ot enough and there wasn't any mon­ LANDSCAPING THE
possible to organize so that this
for them. It wa* their Judg­
and. when everything 1* completed. This I' ’be second time the case haa
wanderlust, hadn't.been home in five key business about it either.
I
FARM HOME GROUNDS camp can be operated far the benefit vision
been tried, the Jury being unable to
years. With few exceptions the sea­
We are in the Caribbean and ar"
of the two counties during the ment thal the Y. the Boy Scouts, lite
agree each Ume.
men were natives of Denmark and having quite a heavy sea. If I don't
camping season. The representa­ 4-H club*, the camp Fire Girl*, and
he found them Hie finest kind of get sea sick now the tailors tell me M. S. C. Specialist Coming tive* of Barry county were selected
people, quiet, reserved and hard I probably won't at all. One learn* to
that night as follows: Mrs. Roy
To Delton For Lecture
workers. 'No fooling on this boat." like coffee on this ship. The stuff
Hubbard, chairman; Dr. Robert
On Tuesday P. M.
he writes. Later a young 16-year-old they make 1* pretty good and after
Harknet*. Supervisor Oien Wotring
boy named Taylor from Detroit, who you have been working ;i taste* even
O. L Gregg, specialist in landscape of Woodland. Aiderman W. A
had enrolled as a regular member of better. I spent Tuesday polishing gardening from M. 8. C.. will give Schader. County Agent Harold Fos­
the crew as messboy. who wa* mak­ brass. I thought it easy for a lime
ter. Supervisor Clyde Wilcox and F.
ing the round trip with the boat Just but later changed my mind os it got his second lecture on landscaping ; W. Stebbins of this city. These rep­
the farm home at Delton school resentative* of Barry county met
for the experience, shared his cabin quite tedious.
which was an especially good one.
The second mate and I are fast Tuesday afternoon, December 15.
Wednesday evening of last week and
s &lt;ond only to the officers and reg­ friends. He visited my cabin today.
The Tuesday afternoon lecture will worked out a plan which they be­
ular passengers in the way of con­ He said hb might be able to get off
lieve will prove satisfactory to Barry
treat
the
subject
of
"Planning
the
veniences.
at Yokohama with me We are there
county. At the time of the first
His work began at 5.30 or 6:00 three days. Tokyo is only an hour's Home Grounds'' according to Harold meeting here the Allegan county
A M. hours that seem quite impoa- , ride by train and we could go up J. Foster, county Agricultural Agent representatives selected their coun­
sible at home but soon managed there. Then I could see the friend The lecture will be illustrated by ty* school commissioner, Mr. Kaequite well on shipboard. The food for whom Van Allen gave me a let­ colored slide* (howing farm home* chele. chairman of their committee
was wholesome nnd the work and ter. The second male knows a lot of before nnd after landscaping. This
and would name the other members
salt air gave a kern edge to his ap­ people in Japan.
one of the most Interesting of the later.
petite.
July 22 to Aug 1 (via Panama and four lecture* offered In the course by
The two county committees did
The boat started with only one San pedro. Cal.i.
Professor Gregg Persons interested meet with Mr. Goodall, representing
passenger but others Joined at Pan­
We are now on the Pacific ocean. in landscaping are invited to attend. the government Park Service The
ama. One couple were missionaries
The canal was n marvelous sight.
During the morning Professor Barry county committeemen felt
of ! these bags from our
to China who were reluming from a The Chief mate let me have the Oregg will make Individual planting that since the Allegan folks iiad
collection I
furlough.
day of! to take pictures and see the plan* for the home ground* ot been so well represented at the first
brand
John recommends a book given sight*. It took us about 8 1-2 hours Gordon Moorhtu. c. J Barnum. meeting thal the second should be
Smart simulated leather*
him by a friend "My People and My to go thru, so you can sec it is George Eddy and John C. Kllllck.
held In that county. It wa* hoped
Country" by o, Un Yutang extreme­ quite something. I bought a postal
This service 1* free to a limited that, as a result of that gathering,
in pouch and envelope
ly good reading for an Informative card book which I will send you and number of Barry county residents plan* may be worked out whereby
book on china.
types. Tricky style* and
Il will give you a good idea of what each year through the County Ag­ the Mud lake camp will be made
At Norfolk the boat look on a lot the Canal i* like. There are five of ricultural Agent's office.
available for camping purpose* to
ornaments. Coat color*.
of General Motors trucks and the lock*. The first three lake the
the people of the two counties.
chassis. When the bout docked at boat up; then you go Into an arti­
REBEKAH COUNTY MEET.
Monday evening about twelve per­
Savannah he was given shore leave ficial lake, and the last two locks
Barry county Rebekah lodges held son*. including the Barry county
for 24 hours. He spent the day with drop you down to the Pacific ocean a county Rebekah meeting in Free­ committee of seven excepting Dr
a college friend and among other level. An Interesting thing 1* that at port Monday night. Representative* Harkness. went lo Allegan where
things enjoyed an hour nnd a half of thal point the Pacific ocean is east were present from Nashville. Has­ they met lite Allegan committee and
swimming In the ocean, in talking of the Atlantic ocean.
tings and Prairieville.
others interested in the camp proJ-

MHO LIKE GIMP TO
DM JND MEGAN

MICH Gill BOY IS
STUDENT in CHIHI

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for
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Ml

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY
TRADE AT HOME

If• tU

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

—e Editorials

II ■HIV !R|in
• Cowwiiwity

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1936
LAND OF THE BASQUES.
of Uje American troops and their
I The Basque country ot northern suceea in driving the German* from
Spain, with it* hills and valleys and the front Una* that brought the end
of the car.
Htw to the line, let the qulpa
rarely-fading green. It* neat yiuige*.
After hoatlllUe* were ended the
fall where they may I
'
remind* somewhat of Devoruhire. In real spirit of the French wu shown
England, and the Basque folk them- In thS lighting remarks they made
xlve* are a* friendly a* the English about the American troops. When
By Observing Tommy.
the contest wa* closed America gave
countryfolk.
Nf*r san SebajUan. thg Spanish France hundreds of million* of dol­
Basque capital, is a pretty little har­ lars woyth of 4uppUe* which bad
I
bor known as Paaaje*. You take an been taken to that country In order
omnlbu* for a few mile*, landing by lo carry ph military operations.
the waterside and embarking tn a While the war was In progress
small boat in order to reach Ure old France had begged President WlLion
port. Here you land on a tiny Jetty lo grant huge loans of money which
in Ure shadow of a tall but plain were made. France had given her
••tone house of obviou* JinUquity. pledges to pay this Indebtedness.
Looking closely, you wilP dlxovcr. These pledges were later repudiated.
nearly obliterated by wind and The french government a few years
The Rotary boys sang "God Save weather here at the seaside, a tablet later practically announced that
the King- at. their noon luncheon, informing you that Ln this houx. American need never expect a dollar
during the period of hl* exile from of the four millions, to which figure
Monday. I hear.
France, lived and worked the great Franco's six billion* ot debt to the
Stilted States had been scaled down
The street flghu ot our little city Victor Huge?.
tie French paper*, in discussing this
Yc*. this wa* Victor Hugo'* houx
are now colorful though dim.
Next lo It li * Uttte tnfl presided debt, ridiculed ths Idea ot paying it.
and referred to Uncle 8am as
over
by
a
buxom
and
genial
woman
People are still asking about the
"Uncle Shylock."
of
the
Basque
country.
It
has
a
cozy
significance of that "big kite” in
Nov that France is again threat­
terrace extending out over the water
front of the town monument.
and here. If you like, you may lunch ened by her old enemy Germany,
there bobs up a new agiteUon Ui
Understand that BUI Stebbins or dine, simply but out ot wholr- that country Ln favor of a settle­
। Ukcs his nighties-long and loose - wme Basque fare. Now and then you ment ot her Just debt to the United
. i will regard the dim old leaded-glask
fifteen yards of material being rcwindows of the house that rises State I The proposition Is made by
qulred for only three gowns
somberly beside you and reflect Uiat the French government to pay 8500 000,000 in full xttlement of the four
: Noi Omar The Tentmaker is not: from one of those window* the mas­ billion* which that country owe* the
ter
was wont to glance sometimes
his tailor.
toward the hills of France, while United Statest Foreign dispatches
also announce thal France 1* to In­
i Mrs. Vedder is the one whn &lt;did he worked upon "Toilers of the vite the United States to Join with
Sea." "Ninety-three." or perhap*
I the thread and needle Marathon.
hpr govemipenl and thal of England
even "Le* Miserable*."
Around the hou*e where be spent in fighting the Fascist achemaa of
I Have you ever noticed that Charlie
Hiller and Muasollnl. and If neces­
Leonard’s cigar is an indicator of his the exiled years 1* a UlUe plaza now. sary fight another war "to save
temper (Tommy was going to say and In the afternoon you Will find It democracy."
। "spirits ’ but thought the meaning full of childen. Nowhere in the world,
Il I* not difficult lo see through
you
conclude,
are
there
so
many
chil
­
might be a bit ambiguous)? When
thl* clumsy scheme. France expects
she’s slicking up out of the comer dren as In thl* Basque country, and trouble with Germany. She want* lo
of the mouth threatening to singe certainly nowhere more attractive borrow more billions In the United
nor belter-mannered little one*.
an eyebrow—all’s right with the
'
She would like to have Amer­
world; but when she's drooping. They never regard the tourist with States
saucy curiosity, never giggle behind ican troops again xnl to France, if
watch out!
ills buck al his rtrange appearance hoalilillea should open with her en­
emy across the Rhine.
Understand that one of Chet nnd stranger habit*, never extend a
We hope America has had enough,
begging hand For there Is a pride
Hodge s customers asked
among these Basque* that makes of thl* fool business of pulling other
old blue sweater.
maaoK
a* countries' chestnuts out of the fire
mendicancy a*
unthinkable
a*
And uic*«'-r
these
’’ *° ----that/--------we *1U:not
enUr
of
among
the
Japanese.
Ana
------t 1,110
”
No and It wasn’t Irving Charlton
. .
.the . ‘hw scheme*,
hit.
little children, playing
butH-ttl
will lana
tend to our
after a new specimen for his coun­ happy
favorite Bosque game of handball ‘ own *&gt;uslnes*. We hope America will
ty museum Cither
wherever there is a bit of smooth I •* 'arbe e|lpugh to fortify our coasts,
Another week gone by and Bernie wall ot the side of a building, appeal hulld baUlc l'hlP-' “nd *,r s,dP»
Reed hasn't started tearing up some to you not less than the little folk of 1 enou8b *nd have a sufficient millfar-away Japan itself.—M. T. O
,ary forcr so *bal. If nny of the
hitherto undisturbed section of his
--------»
. .
greedy nations of Europe attempt
store.
WAR DEBTS
r° co™luer this country, we can
Wc
believe
that
m
n
.i
«Vlve
them from our shore*. W»
How come! How come!

’Round About Town

CIVIL SERVICE.
I Mr. Murphy did not come back to
Editor Frank Moses of lha demo- the United States at the urging of
Cratic Marshall chronicle said in a' Jim Farley but rather from hi* own
recent editorial: "We would rather choice since he feared that If he
face a Jungle full of tigers than to stayed longer he would become a
/ace the 1837 patronage problem. To -forgotten man" so far as further
those who want political Jobs wc advancement up the political ladder
would most earnestly advise them to was concerned. "He has Ideas of
spend three Ume* the effort In try- figuring prominently in'the national
Jng to obtain private employment, political picture," this man con­
A political Job Is no good to anyone, tlnued. He is smart and knows that
Those who live by political Jobs al- an outstanding record as chief
ways have the fear of an election executive Ln a state is frequently a
turning them out of office. Young stepping stone to national political
people who seek political Jobs are 'honor*—even, perhaps, the preslmaking the mistake of their live*." [dency.
Yft public service should be an I "There are no limits to his amaltfactlvc career for people to fol- blUon*. He knows that failure In
low. The state needs as capable and Michigan would end his aspirations,
highly (rained a personnel as II can i look for him to forsake partlsiuiposslbly bring together In order to ship to-give this state hl* idea of
give the most In return for the lax outstandingly clean, efficient and
dollars It receives. What It actually popular government. It will be ingtta Is a hodge podge assortment of tercsUng to *ee how his Idea* fit in
deserving party workers not selected with the legislature and with the
anv particular
nnrflrillar standxtAnrt- narlv
according fn
tu any
parly bosses nf
of lha
the stale."**
arfl of merit and who. if they have
If what this newsman says Is true.
any ability whatsoever, are usually-• Mr. Murphy may force some of his
forced by changing pollUcal for­ bitterest critics to swallow the much
tunes lo leave their pd*t* Just yboul quoted "dew and sunshine" tor was
the Ume they are becoming really it "sunshine and dew") gibe they
efficient.
hurled at him during the recent
What Is the an*wer? A system of campaign.
civil Mrvicc for xlecUon and ad­
Well, If this man is correct In his
vancement of *t*te employees on the appraisal of Mr. Murphy. It he does
basis of merit.
forsake partisanship lo give us an
A public career should be an at­ outstandingly clean, efficient and
tractive and a Stable one for those pvpumr
u»vrnnieni, u
popular 8government,
if ne
he aocs
does aeep
keep
. of worth. The *t*te should be able | hhnxlf free from unsavory alliance*
to compete with private Industry Ln (r wbs
tRe opinion of this news­
attracting and holding gifted, cap-' man rh yr Murphy was absoluteable people in Its xrvlce.
1 ly uncorruptible), it will make the
A civil xrvlce system can do away । jjrallowlng of thl* gibe a pleasure,
with patronage evils at one vigorous I
stroke. Do away with patronage and 1 AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION
you will force pollUcal parties to be- j The Christmas season with Its |
come something more than Job dis- ! colorful thougn inflammable deco­
pensir.r salary grabbing machinesrations is a time when special pre-; ’
OpUUOnS,
A Quotation
There will be. presented at the next
cautlcns arc in order to help prevent'
W/lllt OtllCTS Say
legi.-lat&gt;ire a riv)l service bill vljich fires. Here arc a few suggestion*:
THE gical man is he
'--------’
h*s been sjieclllcally designed to
If you have a candle in the win­
■
uuuifiiuuy.' who rciumea
»rfxlrM.
DOES MICHIGAN REPUBLICAN­
meet the requirements of this state I
TWENTY -YeXrs AGO|I "Bingo1’will -be -a (xipular
.cr Paclfle
_trooP* to
.nCr°“ lhp Atlantic Or
I'ltiltTa heart.
pastime ' from
^ro,n France
France L-ere
were ihnrm.ohlu
thoroughly r.a
fH I! huw
dow. Christmas eve. make It an elec­
ISM NEED SOME NEW LEADc to fight some other naIt is a plan that can be worked tric one—that 1* safe.
Mr and Mrs John Bronson
.... well- here this winter now that &lt;omc of I UP on the Idea that America had ! HOn’s batdes
—.l/enrius
I ERSHIP?
known rc.-'dcnls of this vicinity...'!:?
’----- have formed a revolver 1 performed a service to humanity In I
However more legislative approval
the boys
L
Use metal tinsel flakes, flake asFrom various sections of Mich;■Uns’ annn- ji club.
rlnh
savltie FYanee frnm Ewln.-r
I
celebrated their golden wedding
will not be enough There will have I bestos and powdered mica for snow «“n *e rf(wl editorial suggestions
FINDS BEAVER DAM
n:vrrs &lt;ry Nov 30 at the hon^t ot ,
to be a sincere, alert. Intelligent ef­ I effects, instead of highly dangerous *****
that ****
the Republican
parly
qu
brook
****
—
—••• In tin*
their daughter. Mrs Sinclair Brock.
Omar Barker and E*rl Palmatler soldier* who. for some years after,
s&lt;ate needs a housecleaning - We
fort lo carry’ but It* provisions. It
the
World
war,
were
stationed
In
|
------ -----— --------------------------- „ — — arc A couple of the chief perpetrapaper clippings nnd cotton.
[
herewith
present,
as
a
sample
of
this
■will take strong public backing to
Bany County Farmers Federation ter*. I hear.
the demilitarized parts of Germany. Animals Are Quite Rare In
Do no: illuminate the tree with opinion, the recent comment of Ver­
-z-hlrh
&lt;rnv»
nr&gt;
on Saturday. Dec. 9 at the courthouse!
• • •
which gave them on opportunity to
put thl* system into effect--but It
This Section Of
candles. Colored electric light as- non J Brown, of Mason, editor of
to consider the employment of al Earl Chamberlain brought home get acquainted with the Germans,
can be done.
County
News,
and
Jscmblies are more ornamental and the" Ingham
’ '
'
*'
"* a"
farm expert for Barry county
j the baron from the Cheer-Up party usually expressed themselves as feel­
Michigan
If Great Britain has
nss been
oeen able
aoie to
io;
member of the state legblature. ns
County Cierk Andrus has issued —or at least a big ham which he ing that the German people were su­
aril
-nta».l«m
'
&gt;,,er
A
.'ocu^d
upConservation
officer George Sum­
MlAbUsh a t
nearly 1.700 hunting licenses, a con-, won as prize. Some of the boys used perior to the French. We are not ner brought to the Banner offic»
ft.m&gt; empire,
emn.re people
neonle of
nf i 0,'‘ U,e
Uce. Incident*!"There was one vulnerable spot
stderable increase over the number it in a game of "hide the thimble" now discussing that question, nor Monday a piece of a poplar tree
for her farr flung
। in the Fitzgerald armor. That was
WOW ,houl4 be .Mb u&gt; »lve U» I ”•“
,U'
issued last year.
and Earl almost went home the los- th" merits of the conflict Itself, but About two And one half indiea in
‘ his association and close affiliation T'HAT Memphis, Tenn., woman
Dandcllons were blooming in con- er even though he was the winner. the general view of the American diameter, which had been gnawed •
much ewrr probl™ .r
.n i
'‘ml“
with Frank D McKay of Grand
* who look six children to siiierable numbers Ln this vicinity,
• • •
troops as io the French people as off by beavers.
Por this no one b to blame
have their tonsils removed at last week
equally good civil senice system for r wlih their matches and smoking m»-1
compared with the Germans.
1 I like Wally Osborn'* new houx.
These animal* must have com*
terials
while
near
trees
and
decoraexcept
the
governor.
Fr.uik
Fitzthe
same
time
was
mighty
proud
The residents of Middleville are
--------------- --------------------It is well known that when the
the state
recently . to this county and •
lion*.
gerald never needed to hook in with
of her deed, but it was Just a planning to have
municipal «—■
'
■
—
, &gt; American forces in France had Just
stepped In Quaker brook at Nash­
T«. requires .kobol, siuoUn. ot'
M'Sy “"S.10'; ‘.7
l’*v' pain in the neck to the kids.
Christmas tree.
reached nearb’ a million, the French ville. near the Hinckley oil station.
k~.uk.
m
,j bccn elected without thal. But no
commander-in-chief proposed
lo Here they have built a dam and
tetostr.eU&gt;ouMbc.TomM«.tf,ouU ma„„ ho, C1OM,
in a cow. only the nose has 1
Who will be Uie next highway ,
place the American soldiers part of ! have been busy storing up their •
THIRTY’ YEARS AGO.
flimsy
toy motion picture machines, moved the two may have been, there sweat glands. If this cold lasts
them in Belgium to fight under Bel­ winter's food The dnm is on the ,
commissioner of Michigan? This is using
j
The international Sea! &amp; l/»ck
inflammable film.
| l» and *’** been a well defined conmud) longer, we'll begin to CO b moving into the big new fnc- TI1E LU I LE HOUSE THAT
gian commanders, part with the M. C. railroad property in a grove of •
a question one hears frequently
Cheap electrical playthings using' vlctlon about
»Ut* tl,at McKay
moo.
lory buikiUig just north of the Ta. .
WEARS A PLUME English troops nnd the rest of them small trees—alders, willows and pop- t
.
, . . , , , ,,
was altexether
Pitz-­
tbex days. Anything which even re- (
altogether too close to the Fitz
ble factory and will soon be comlltUe house that wears a plume with the french troops, where they lars.
cily current should be forbidden, as gerald administration.
tuv -i/_
।
The apxmbjes a political forecast is held they arc often defectively wired and ^
A noted psychiatrist says that fortably housed In its new quarters. Hrca?M at l*,e ihicket* edge:
would be subordinated to the com­
’intment of* Judge McDonald "as'
All the bar!; has been stripped ;
the noisiest people are * those
. In very low esteem these days. How- ,
C F. Field of the Hastings Herald J1' ''hutters echo pine-grecn pe^cc mands Of the generals of these from the wood and the beaver’s .
have insecure, dangerous conni-c- chairman of the liquor control com- . haunted with a feeling ot infe­ has secured the Hendershott build- j It' roof- bro*i»
countries. To the everlasting credit teeth mark* can be plainly xen.
*»d sedge.
’ ever, it is sale to predict that Mur- (lions. This doe* not apply so much '1 mission •"'*
।
and nl
of Tv
Ivan
“” Hull to the ' riority, and still the politicians Ing west of the Thornapple Gas At .The sturdy chimney shoulders up
of General Pershing he flatly re­
Beaver dams are not common in t
ray VanWagoucr Is going to be a lo
, toy* powered from ordinary dry jI utilities commission were two In- I shout
fused to divide* the American expe­ this locality so this one is attract­
Electric Co.’s office and will soon And puffs blue laughter out
I stances most frequently pointed to
- difficult man to best. About the batteries.
ditionary
forces
in'
‘
the
manner
move his office to its new quarters Grey winds thal sniff out feathered
ing considerable attention.
r
| as evidences of the McKay tie-in. '
"Edgar Allan Poe excelled as
Which tbe French commander-inwont one can say of him is Uiat he
Mrs Edward Butler, mother ot । rhtrg*
If Sant* Clau* b present, he The slot machine racket was anoth-1 a sprinter, jumper, fencer, boxer,
chief not njerely requested, but al­
The average life of a popular song '
has played a mighty shrewd game1
Mrs. Chester Messer of this city. Scatter blue shreds about
should be persuaded to avoid a long 1
mid swimmer." (t seems he wa* celebrated her 89th birthday today ....
most demanded. Gen. Pershing in­ is two weeks, according to a recent
ot politics which has left hb critic..,!
also a pretty good writer.”
sisted that the American troops be,.
j beard, and should keep away from 1
At the meeting Of the National •' *’u,c hf&gt;Ust* Jhat dreamed itself.
I survey. After that il ha* to have it*
both hot under the collar and J open lights and firre It is well. loo. ’
kc|-t together as one body; that namB changed,
Dining Table Association tn Chicago1
itself come true—
chuckling with appreciation al a 1
they be assigned a definite sector of1
--------------- —
n flaunt* to
•" ease
'•«'* Ils
"* Joyfulncsa.
We wonder il that Chicago las', week Emil Tyden of Ihb city It
। to partially fireproof hb costume by.
the war front, where they could and : The new gasoline recently perfcctwoman who was arrested (or was elected president of the organ:- iTh*t smoky plume of blue.
trucly professional performance. On
“ &gt; spraying upon it a solution of wa • ■
! -Kai le VVlbon Baker, in "Dreamers would. as American soldier.', fight *d may be pul up In bricks. It is
tiring a gun into the air to I zattop.
« the other hand he has done an ex- ]
jon Horseback." fDallas Tega*- The their own battles. It was that de- 'going to seem pretty strange at first
1 ter glass.
frr evil frequently mentioned by anfrighten
her
neighbor
finally
did
j,cetlcr.l Job of administering the al, Southwest Press).
cisIon at Gen Pershing that won । to ask how many miles she give* IO
gel back the lawnmower, the
If anjones clothing doe* catch t!-MrKAy crusader* and this ton.
FORTY YEARS AGO
'• fairs of the highway department
the war. It was the fighting spirit the brick.
hose, and the cup of Hour.
1 J S Keeler of Carlton thinks he, ^FANTASY
.
-, SHOP.
IN „
A WM
GIFT
; He has shown a keen undcrstanduig
I :s th? olmjM reader of the New York , The»c tulips of aluminum
rolled
in
a
rug
or
woolen
blanket,
in
I
be
the
stenrlard
l&gt;-«rer
in
1P3S
11
IL*.. .L K-.-r V.l’j.r... in Bafry county" ! Oir*tern*
..... “.................
. gb's
.
Wv.kiy-Tnbune
of’ thin"black
; of Michigan’s tourist and resort pa&gt;order to smother the flame*.
Iso
so then there must bt&gt;- some houvhouse.
having read it regularly since 1849 Nrv.-r raised their glittering sum
albdiUe* and the need for providing
There.mutt toe
bet-­
In-order to prevent the «pre*d of'Icleaning.
cleaning. Therc.mutt
be some bet
j R B. Meuer returned Friday from From earth’s ephemeral grass.
not only better road* but bureau* fire that may start, a bucket or two1I '"
ter’ nominations for ,K
the
minor stare
" —
■ a trip in the interests of the wool
Hun! t o&lt;xn
for giving out Information and ad­
offices and there must be team work ,
Boot Company
' Tnev
They must luve
have nusriMi
pushed from
from metal
&amp;
'
of water and a fire extinguisher among all candidate.'. Tn- Devil i
vice lo incoming tourists *j well.
I Business In the repairing depart[.­ ' ground.
should be kept at hand.
take the hindmost" tactic., followed ]
I ment
A: moiuwn
Bronson ms
ha* mi
In-m.-..u of Wooley «
TJ
"Strangers appreciate courtesy" b
'
Merchants should make special during the past two years will never
creased to such an extent tiuil they .
with * brittle sound
the altitude that Mr. VanWagoncr
win back votes enough to elect a I
have been obliged to put In ajiotiwr T^,elr colored balls of dew.
ha* adopted in assutmg tlie tourl.-l 'effort to keep their places of busi­ stale ticket nor. once elected, will1
i bench.
1 And when they were as tall as wand*
ness as free as possible from paper such an- attitude win the unqualt-'
and resort business. Mr. Van Wagon­
Mr
and
Mrs
Julius
Russell
enterThere
cam?
a
clockwork girl
'
accumulation*
fled *u|&gt;port of the electorate at sub-1
er has done a creditable Job in ad­
। t-ained a small company Tuesday who snapped their stem* with porA most important safeguard b to sequent election.’
evening complimentary to her sbministering the highway affairs. It
"Now that the slate is clean per-J
remove
all
evergreens
immediately
ter.
Mrs.
Dudley.
'
And pointed nails of pearl.
then- b anything lo the principle of
haps instead of speculating who
after Christmas.
----------- k
-•
' Elizabeth Bohmone good term dexrving another.
shall be th* titular head of the par- |
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
Most of these suggestions xcm ty. the party leaders might do better
- then there is not much excuse or
Mr.
and
Mrs.Sylvester
Grcusel
।
obviously
simple
but
It
b
upon
the
by considering plans tn rebuild cn-1
logic In attempting to defeat him.
I
Lnrlul, intone IM&amp;
raffic
common, ordinary safeguard* that tlrely from within, ousting oner and I
। the death of the latter’s mother.
slips are most frequently made One for all the McKay*. the McKrtgiums.
j About 40 relatives and friends ol
THE NEXT GOVERNORthe Barnards and all the ret: of the
' Edmond Pennock of Barry visited
must remember, loo. thal one serious clan leaders vha hate all too lar.g
Qovernor-clcct Frank ''Murphy
’ him at hb home Saturday night in
accident easily avoidable through been preying upon the .peopk- of
I honor of his 32nd birthday.
who even surprised many member*
' the mo*t elemental of safety prccau- Michigan
of his own party by trouncing the
’Now b rhe time for all good men
I tlons can make the holiday scssou
popular and able Frank D. Filrger- i unhappy not only for the family ln­ to come lo the aid of their partv.
The republican parly tn Michigan
aid rather soundly may confound
u
NEWS GLEANINGS.
Visit Qur Complete
. solved but for the entire community can win when it purges itself of the
mapy of hl* severest critic* by giving
Icechef which have clung so long tm
Michigan .one of the boil admuils- j An ounce,
’
Cuffs on trouser* are said tn have
yes even a half ounce of it* limbs. Unless and until it does
I come down to us from an old EdtraUcns in the history of the slate. I; Are prevention measure* nre very this, il does not deserve tn win."—!
| wardian fashion, which wiu introGeorge Averill in The Birmingham'
Buch at least is the opinion of a
। much in order at this sea. on of the EKSlHrlc.
dueed not only to show off bright
prQm|ncni newspaperman who has year.
colored jocks. but nbn m prevent
known Murphy since college 4*y»
We have assembled the finest assortment
mud from soiling trouser bottoms.
and who did not support his candi­
of gifts for boys we have ever shown.
I * coal reserves in the u S arc esti­
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
dacy. "Frank Murphy 1* in deadly
mated
at
more
than
3000-bllllon
In Hunr.arv you can change jour .•••-•* l.,t.— ,--------•;—
earnest about every campaign utter­
’Had an Aladdin crying through
You are su b tafind just the right gift here.
„„ „
3» «■«'
M
„.Only “
bC"‘
It was discovered, after the inter­ the street.’ of New York
in 1875
ance he made.'' this man said. "He is
mined.
brought out of the dahtrd circle a ppl1 ,o havc Brest riches to get a mmea.
ambitious; a visionary; an idealist, val at a provincial mualc-halt. that __ _ ______ _
...
name
. .
.
mere glimp-c of .....
the romfferts
a-d.
Imagination was given to man lo
and sees himself in oth«*r positions the curtain could not be raised enjoyment* the added leisure, the I
compensate him for what he Is hot;
A novelbl
declares
that
the
Tin
itl|hrr than ttiat to which he was more than two feet from the stage. eax of communtcattr.n ,»r,d of! /•
----- .T"
M.*' •’ —■ a sense of humor to console him for
just elected. Ho has a positive genuu A.really bright manager would have travel in this year of 1936 whet a 1 ’■ho would rather phy golf than -at whstheb.
for surrounding himself with c*p- Immediately put or. a tap-danccr - spectacle that would have been! Yet '?hf&gt;uW ncver Ir,arr&gt;‘ L’nlesY ol cour.-&gt;we today take for granted the thou- I’f.5*'".?
™
Recovery color xbpm»; Robert F.
abla men. j would not be surprised HumorUt.
sand and one marhlnes for the! r,’*wr
bridge then cook
Black, president of White Motors in
If-ht makes an ouLstaTKfcng record
Cleveland, report* hi* company out
~
~
A summer reiort is a place where shop, the farm, the office, and the1। .With a censor.ljip
clamped tlghl- of Uje redm governor."
home."
—
Herman
H.
Lind.
} ou eloep under three bUhkeU and
------------ j ly on in Rome, one can only surmise
SfLUNG QUALITY K£gf&gt;§ US BUSY
Contrary to general opinion, thl.. loop lor your own maUxcss.—Dcuoll Glory built cn zelfijjh principles I; *hat discipline wjs meted out to
man stated on good authority that
;-hame and guilt.—Cowper.
, Vesuvius for the recent insubordi- r**b. and dldnt know they were
I nation.
। great. how silly they would seem.

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

...----- -------------------

|N

AKER

! From Our Scrap Book

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

_&gt; T

~ Al ClITtRS

£&amp;&amp;■

Way of Our World

Hoys’ Gift Department

Pungent Paragraphs

Crumbs of Wisdom

;

WATERS
CLOTHES SHOP

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. DECEMBER II, l»M
O’- &gt;19; WI&lt;HW&lt;&lt;1&lt;&lt;F0IIH4BT1KO&lt; roiki HUB

SOCIAL EVENTS

------------------------------ •---------—I—

American Legion

CLUB MEMBERS
HAVE ACTIVE YEAR

| LESTER LAKE’S HERO
I
WINS HIGH HONORS

| At the Theiitrel 1

nrn&gt;«*» nt&gt;&lt;»

WS5

SSi

1 A- W
W. Woodbunie
Woodburoe of Tampa, Fla,
Auxiliary Actil)itie&lt;
night as he was quitting work on the
that their Thanksgiving day |&lt;^t*A**u*ry
Isay** Ural
t- - zyliiuuil
- -------a 8tudentg Win Honors In
Cows Producing Well This Go«n Myer* cottage at Laaeh lake.
HASTINGS STUDENTS
I«UMU WMP mt. ana Mr* e a out- —-------------------------------------------He suffered a dislocated Anger an hl* doo amant^ofr
Judging And Exhibits
Fall Bays John Foiter,
OPT rnUUlCQinuc 1
8II“
"?f'd*Lof
Mailing* waa re presen led by Mr.
i
right hand which has been quite
Ralph Bellamy Starring In
Ut I COMMISSIONS City. Who are spending the winter at Bnd
Foreman. Mr* Ster- i
Axe Excellent
I painful
and keeps
him from--workTester
IC
---------------------------------“Straight From the shoulder."
_ wi • ““ . . -- , Daytona Beach. One can Imagine un» Roger*. Mr.i Harry Wood
and I
HXh herd haloes ter the month
Ihsnklul u. ujurus m
Tender romance between a boy
Hartley Fingtrom And Ngl- the good vteil the two families had
Polina all** al^the ----------annual |1 Mary wlUUm* of Middleville is
—
annual I just back from Chicago where »he and a girl, the heart-warming love of November for the Barry county I
‘1I(
thal day.
j—
•--------•
■
—
conference of president* and *ecre-, showed her pen of 4-H fat lamb* at of a small boy for his dad. and the cow teatlng awoclatlon goea to the |
•on Gardner Named
YOUNG MAN DIES­
attract pe
CARD* PARTV.
tarle* and child welfare chairmen I the international Livestock
r
Show straight-shootln' philosophy of a
Oaptaini
1 Mr and Mrs olenn Kahler en I
tht j5^nericB" ^9lon and Auxll- Mary's pen stood eeventh place In wise, kindly old-timer who has seen herd pf Lester Lake of Woodland J Oliver Thomas, fifteen yean old color* 00
Mr. Lake** hard ot 13 regUtcred and son of Mr*. Ray Phillip* of Grand U&lt;r» wyra
’eSXtel
tory' int tumncntc
conference was
wa* neia
held inin this
thtenational
nationalcomnetltlon.
competition.Marv
Maryis1*toto
At
M.
3
c. at East Lansing
on tertainJd foS^
.
...
«.
a^oiiaui*
wo
—
—
—
—
—
----—
■
mi.
Friday, officers for the allege cadat £r*,n^
£j.’uX
**? nteM D^e
Abe?7s Dar CUy
‘y&gt;' *and
nd Bun^E-'ba
n^embe?
CUy 0,1 8alurd
Satujda
Sunday, ’ be complimrntrd
complimented for
for the
the“e^«Ilent
exrefient a lot of water go under the bridge grade Jerseys produced an average Rapid*, died In that city on Bun- paint everything t
corns were
Were commissioned
cnmmltilnn-d and Has
tfaa.­ ^freah^en
party Ba.Urdav
night.
December
5. ,h&gt;r&gt; bhaino
■ flne
Hno alUftdan«
____
....in the be.t show
. .... ,in. ..
J^re
LJKS
T? the
*ln’ *
Handing
the_ have all been skillfully combined In of 850 lb*, milk and 42.8 lbs. fat for (day of icarlet fever and compllca- the gondola* have
corp*
this picture fealurw Ralph Bell­ thc month
,’I*akerA »«* Mr* i United Blate*.
'
i2=nx.
. Phillip;
1;
th;
diugb.l;;
1 . d&gt;
tings is represented by two of her hoIteS Piru prises *wer? won lby ’ Anwn8
i
Uons.
Mrs.
Phillipa
Is
the
daughter'
.
ob»»rv«*a
day. obeerva* a F
amy, Katherine Locke. Andy. Clyde
young men.
High cow In the association for 1lof
of j.
J. m
M.. Townsend of thl*
this city.
eltv. The
The 1I ..
*
Mr*. Ellis Kelley and Lee Bennett 0 w Hahn of Wayne. jj^Jr.. nacounty Agent poster reports 1936 and others
the month was a five year old grade funeral was held on Monday at the | An&lt;«te» Times.
John Nelson Gardner received hl* and the second went to Mr and Mrs' UonB1 Auxiliary president; John Ms being a very
active year In
' Guernsey owned by Highlands Dairy Metcalf funeral home In Grand |1 -Dte
- aecood te*l
commission a* a
u captain III
in mr
the 111In- -----..T*
------------~cona went t0 *"• *nfl
Thoma* Taylor, director of the na- B»rry county 4-Hwork Two county:
"Murder with picture*."
' of Hastings. She produced 1941 lbs Rapids. Hie Rev. John R. Gregory 1
P*cullar r»i*«| BTAV W
fantry'division and Hartley G. Fin-!1*0*"1 Hayes.
rt tlonal legislation committee of the' 4-H banquet* have been held and a
A mystery calculated to baffle the milk and 794 lb« of fat for Novem- officiating Burial was in the Grand-' bl» * double purpose. It serve* to
atrom was commissioned as captain ANNUAL MEETING
Legion; Guy Cox of iron River, de- county 4-H club camp held. Memmost ardent mystery fan. as It did ber in the small herd class. Ralph ! vllie cemetery, sincere sympathy 1* be*P balance the weight of the gonIn the coast artillery. These ranks
OI* COUNTRY CLUB.' pnrtmcnt
commander;
George ber* attended two 4-H encatppencaqip- the poller This picture reveals how Kenyon of Middleville with regi«- extended.
&gt; dollar in the stern, and it alao prewere conferred for leadership pr.d
a fine exhibit of n photograph taken In a crowded
Ray Branch, president oi me Dorman of Battle Creek. Bert Hal- menu at M 3 C
I tered Jerseys led the association !
--------------- « e »
r
1 vent* his trying to pest under
proficiency in military science. Con­
"£*"• ;~i
“.ea field secretary, and' 4-H animals was made al the Barry room during a slaying betrays tlv with 32 7 lbs fit while Hie mixed
PENNOCK IHfepnAi/
1 bridges too low (o let Ute UIgratulations are extruded these HMtlnga Country club has called John
Gilmer,
national executive county fair The Barry County 4-H killer after the police admit defeat
lhe annual meeting for Tuesday ।John .S?
11 "L
young men.
'
herd
of
Mrs.
Jas.
Smith
ot
Dowling
।
a
daughter
wa*
born
on
Dec.
5
ue cabin of the vessel pas*.
Judging team was first in the state
evening. Dec 15. Dinner will be committeeman.
“T *’"■ J5'11 was
— second with an .......
».
« to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Alderank
average
of
25
Evltn
Venlee la built on
Even ..th&lt;xi«h
though
Ilt m
„ the
lhe medium
med,um sized
&gt;te) herd
h„'a of
Clarksville.
?U.&lt;B Venice la bull!
served at the club at six-thirty folOn® of
enjoyable features of and second Ln the nation. In Judg­ Mirlon. Paul K.ll&gt; and man, ocher,. lbs fat.
ot
Clarksville.
B ANN ER CLASH MEETING.
ing livestock at the International
1117 small Uland* and aven that
lowed
by
the
election
of
officers
Ute
conference
was
the
model
Inclass,
Jxster
Lake
led
the
assoctaMr. and Mrs. Frank Richardson,*: one ordinarily think* of gall
Mrs. Fred Johnson was hastes* to anti other Items of business.
I itoTwith «
stallatlon service presented by the and now more Bitty county 4-H Magnificent
E. South St, are the parent* of
the Banner Sunday School class on
* „
1 f“t Bernard peck of Dowling wa* 417
- member* of the Bay City Auxiliary. member* go out to finish the live­ I o „ . . ..
a daughter bam on Dec B
Tuesday evening for their ChrUtCHOP KUEY DINNER.
| On Sunday C F Ramsey, superin- stock show season at Detroit and
For the first time In this picture 1■second in
In this class with 15 reaisregtsa
A daughter was bom to Mr and explore the city CD foot il baa
ma.s party. There was a splendid at­
• that awe-inspiring bacxground of a l1 Ulc
„ aliu
cGuernsey*, produc- Mrs
about 400 bridges, and many ot th*
tered
and grade
Mrs. Louise Slrlngham enter­ I tendenl of the Michigan Child Iir- Grand Rapids.
tendance of members and gucit*.
steci
mill
na»
ocen
used
tor
a
reacure
lng
Iat
Woodtancl'
1 steel mill ha* been used for a feature jnjf
j
*"
the employee* of the J. c i siitutc. gave the closing address.
canals are lined with streets. Tha
Toys were contributed .for the tained
'screen
file . Routc 11 on Dec' 8
1 screen production.
nrorluetlan Fantastic flame
main comt
*
• ..
Christmas baskets and the Christ­ Penney company at a chop suey din­
effect*, the gtow of molten metal. wlth , herd of 20 gradc Holstein*.
ner last evening at her home on
Remember the Christmas bazaar
forever coming to
toot is that
mas offering taken.
Missionarv
Will
j
"
the
bursting
shower*
of
steel
sparks
producing
an
average
of
27
lbs.
fat.)
West
state
street.
The
party
was
....
and
dinner
at
the
Legion
rooms
on
Miss Elizabeth Henry was In
V" —eT'L'T----- '.'h'Ti'-j' A typewriter ouce turned out ' a blank W*U or a
In
the
nature
of
a
farewell
for
Mrs.
I
Saturday,
Dec
12.
Tell
Experiences
and
*h»dow*
are
shown
iii
j
ed
t|
lc
large
p
e
rd
class,
while
Lloyd
.
charge of the entertainment and
•;* 18
re registered
r
I marvelous
Io
kinregistered
Holstein*
Clarence Wood, who ha* reilgnrd.
. .
7“' ‘k’."’ pnotographlc
*"s---- - - --- - treatment
--- sj,alU
u fcs
s 18
Holstein*
took ux&gt;k bon* fld® **u&lt;e 1OW.. TTWM 1, CMnpariaalMrBf
.
. .7
Christmas carols were .sung.
Jean Dixon te also included in the 1 w^ond honors with 26 lbs. fat. HlghIn January Mr*. John Hoevenair
Be sure to bring your donation of
.
....
GUILD NO. 5.
...
land* Dairy of Hastings had the necessity. This only recorded oc­ strecu.
jam. Jelly, conserve, etc. to the
°.
Rccs- *'dc of the late castwill entertain nnd the members are
casion
when
the
pounding
of
a
typeHospital Guild No. 5 met last bazaar or dinner on Saturday Thl*
I three high cow* in the association. ---- - - - - -------- — —-- ।
c- Rces- former General
to sew for Bronion hospital in Kal­ evening with Mr*. Frank Kelley for
AT THE BARRY.
' Leater Lake's cow .was fourth, which *f •‘er «allicd recognition tn phi-',
contribution is for the Otter
the pilgrim Holfikey church.
amazoo.
It* Chrbtmas party and turkey din-; Billet.
‘' was closely followed by a cow owned■ lately wa* m Uganda, now part ot |
herself a rescue worker for many Kay Francis. William Powell
Andrew Johnson was elected yica
ner. Officers recently elected arc: ’
• « o
».
year* and of late having toured the
-- --------- -I by Marshal) Pierce of Dowling and Kenya and Uganda. Britiih colony . president in
DINNER THURSDAY NIGHT.
Chis. Leonard, chairman; Mrs., ___
...
..
ru«iu ui
There two actor* as lovers face I a grade Holstein owned by Fred Mil­ and protectorate.
Tonight.
held-'' °f the world
in mi
an
A delightful event of last week Mrs.
Edw. Van Popering, secretary-Mrs
Tonight. Thursday,
Thursday, the
.he Auxiliary
Auxiliary!■ mission
Idem upon
vcapacity,
-h-...,, wl
*111 speak at oncoming doom. Graphically por-1 kr of Assyria.
-----ndna ‘
" at th
' . f'AhiteiUtlc
Is *
-ervlng
a 4H
4-H r,ub
Club d,nn
dinner
the
was the dinner given Thursday eve­ Roy HubbZrd!hower^SHre *■ !i '*
Thi* wa* In 1895 and lhe type- ADrn
itTVRt'
both
and’ «
evening service* , Hayed )* the strange Idyll of Joan
John Foster, tester of the asso­ written stamp* are listed as tha 1
ning by Dr. and Mrs. R. D Harkness
1 Legion room*
ho
'h morning *"•
,nd h&lt;* trial
nnd Dan Hardesty—who fir.it elation, report* that cows seem 'o first stamp* of the district. This
for the staff members of the Barry
(,-J At the last meeting of the Auxil- at the P H Tabernacle on N Broad- , Ames
March
HORORITY MEETING.
g)lmp»c'jcach
way.
Sunday.
Dec.
13.
Mr*
Ree*
ex'
gllmprereach
other
in
a
Hong
Kong
I
producing
very
well
this
fall
and Eaton county Health Units.
kind of portal paper wa* used about | aCquiUBi
uL
Members of Tau chapter. E...., --- - -----. meet* “
on
an
ocean
------the
----------------------n “
n ~
‘"*n Count/Agent Foster states that lhe
Aztec Indians
of cafe apd later
Christmas decorations made the Sigma Phi sorority, met last Wed- , ,Br&gt;' R «•*« reported that there pcrlcncc among
waa
0,.aa He had been -ZTZ,
apar
lablM attractive and the evening nesday at the home of their a**l*t- WMc twenty-seven paid-up mem­ Mexico alone I* worth coming miles liner bound for San Franci.’co.
association is full at the present two year*. The final design1 *'
hear. The public is cordially In­ “Empty Saddle" starring Buck Jones. time but as the year ends with the little more elaborate, for mr’h? ; canUni*&lt;i
was spent playing enrds and visit­ ant director. Mrs A. D. McDonald, p*18
nvc Ooltl Star member* to
wa* then spelled out across the bot- dcQt
uj, taaufuraUc
ing. There were 21 guests present.
After their buslnes* meeting Mr*, enrolled for 1936-1937. Those who vited.
Featuring trigger thrills and ac­ month ot December, there may be tom
room
for"V.
one08.orR.two
new herd-,
with
” acrosit
he top.this' »ucce»»or. Grant co March
McDonald gave an interesting talk il0Ve not PMj(1 ’belr dues are urged
tion. western bravado and roaring
FAMILY GATHERING.
on “Music.**
I to do *0 a* soon a* possible before ADMITTED ILLEGAL TRAPPING. romance with two-gun terror In the coming year. Application should be Thl* signified lhe year and Victoria
.. and .Mrs. Thomas Johnston
c
.vre.
mowu
,
J*
s
|,k
;
M;ddu
?"
k
*,*•'
r
­
Regina.
The
value
mark
wa*
in
th*
made
to
the
tester
or
the
County
------------ i the contest clore* Mrs Edw. Down*
saddle.
entertained with a Thanksgiving
center of the stamp.
Agent.
ENTERTAINED CHILDREN.
I and
a ~ Mrs.
«... Erb JJarman
... are contest1 r”led ?nd„herc f&gt;lond,*\i
dinner, thirteen being present Thore
■ ■
। charged with lllcxal trapping He
Mr*. G E Goodyear entertained; leader*.
DEATH OF SAM VELTE.
from out of town were Mr. and Mrs. Saturday afternoon a group of boys I
‘
: wa* taken before justice Matthew*.1
• • •
James Timmerman of Jackson. Mr and gfrh who will enter klndergar-1 At the next meeting of the Auxli- j admitted lhe charge and wa* a*­
Samuel Veltc of Lake Odessa died
.mis
IVYS.. Haa
Bobbed hair for women nad ft*
and Mrs. Harry Leins and family of ..ten
............
WB...
murruKy nigni.
'on Tuesday at the age of 67. He went America^ debut In Hawaii. Ir an­ no resemblance to the shrill, undu- । in what if now French Syria. Um
In January
with her son. ww,,,
John lary „„
on Thursday
nlKht. ucc
Dec 17.
17. ' tW?d. 880 flnP al?d 16 78 COsLs Or
South Haven and Mr. and Mrs. The children enjoyed rome gamcn1 the Christmas party will be * tea- hc h**1”1
•h‘‘n 60
*n J«*U. to Lake Odessa from Woodland cient lime* native women wore their lattng scratch of he annual locu*t*. ■ city existed for ®0 years until III
Kenneth Leins and children ot Bat­ and refreshment* were served
| ture of the entertainment Each He ' boarding with the sheriff. The thirty-three year* ago where he wa* hair abort an4 men worc
The
»ong
and
note*
of
the
larger '
tle Creek
pot of various religious elame
lone I* asked lo bring * ten cent'arLe''t
,nadr b-v Conservation connected with the Fanners and
Iona. But a haircut wag no iucfi easy
.--------- ----------------- - - - ,
IRAK ...
AN ------------UNUSUAL
1 glft to exchange Ice crea-n and’ °®«'r George Sumner nnd Deputy Merchant* bank for many years. matter a* nowaday*. They aawed 11 Purr sound and al least four differ- Babylonian. Syrian. Hebrew.
JOLLY TWELVE.
1
BfRTHDAY PRXBENT. cake W1U be ^rved b&gt;.
coin.. Sheriff Bedford of Middleville.
Since the reorganization a* the Un­
ion bank he has served a* vice­ off with a ItnUe of ahark&gt;‘ feeld- | «nt utterances can be distlnguiahed. |
« Mr
!
__________
TRAPS ILLEGALLY.
president He.was also a member of
* P0,1,, uck suPPcr *’n G®c 3 Tbc|to Grand Rapid.; on Saturday, this*
the grain firm of smith Bros., velte f
HONORFD HUHBANn
1 On Prlda.v Conservation
Officer
"fe,£d Mfrlc
F * Co. While a resident of Woodland. {
evening was *pent in playing 500 tx.|ng hls n„t experience on the' Mrs Si ffeffSf entertained
^5
« n bv
u OraboL’’ trl“n- And
h* enjoy •«
rrvtrtl friend* nt cards on Wednes- ^adMaple Grove town- he served as clerk of Barry county!
। -cveral
and Ellsworth Meyers; low score by
__________ - - ...evening
------ ■— --------— her husband, ‘ship on n charge of trapping wlth- for four years. He is survived by hl* ’
dj*&gt;'
honoring
Haz-1 Ballance and Leo Wrllfare
' j out a license. He was arraigned be- wife, formerly.ML« Grace Sullivan)
MEE,T**' .
* the occasion being his birthday.
AU departed for home at a late , Mrs. K. S. McIntyre entertainer!
--------- JI—
fore Justice Andrew Matthew* of Campbell townahip. Funeral *erv-1
hour
■ the member* ot her bridge chib |
BRIDGE CLUB MEETS.
Saturday who tsmsed him $10 Ices will bexhctil In Lake Odessa on ।
| Tuesday afternoon for
dessert.
Mrs. C- AFriday.
A K^rr
Kerr wa* hostess to her fine and »6 85 cO6t*.
MOVE TO HT. JOHNN
tn. Van
van j bridge
anage ciuo
' Prizes were
were won
won ay
by Mrs.
Mrs. Ed.
club on
on Thursday
Thursday afternoon.
afternoon.' ______ _____________________________________________________
Hom
.
7.’
,7™”’ Popering. Mrs. Robert O'Connor anti two tables being in play Dessert I
d....
Mrs...c. A. Kerr left ye*- , Mrs HerDiau Arold.
| wos jerVcd by the hostea*.
*■
Mr
Umbrellas
terday • Wednesday! for St. Johns:__________ _____________
.
t __________
where they will spend the winter | ,
ENTERTAINED FRIENDS.
I PflDl II A D !TV
PHklTCCT
***
W
i
Gloves — Bog*
months. They haw rented their
Richard T- Groos entertained R|rUrULAnll I LUN 11b I
Sweaters — Aprons
home to Mr and Mr* Wilkerson.| number of hts bov friends Saturday |
at tuc TUFATRCC
WE ARE HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE THE
Bedspreads — Blankets
Mr. Wilkerson Is connected with . afternoon at his home. Moving pic- i
M
nc '
1 nCO
11
F R A n
A'S ITO M
the work on the new M-37 highway.; turea were shown followed by Ojrl j B ~ Ofl
, „ ARRIVAL OF ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF
Gloves — Flowers — Purses
-------- *—*--------------games and a birthday dinner at five-! u _s in “Rrry vounty under
NEW IDEA CLUB.
Card Table Covers — Linen Towels
' thirty.
Fourteen Years Of Age
Members of the New Idea club
Lamps — Shades — Boxe» — Collars
Are Eligible
were entertained last evening at1
DINNER FOR EIGHT.
home of Mrs. George A Sumner for
Hack Scarfs — Turk»k Yards — TW4i«s
On Friday evening Mr. and Mrs.
A contest to determine the five
duinrr and their Christmas party D A. VanBusklrk entertained at mast popular girls m Barry county1
Lunch Cloths — Shoots — Dones Sots — Hurts
Simple gift* were exchanged and mnnrr complimentary to Dr. and under the age of 14 year* opened nt
plans mzde for dhtrihutini Christ­ Mrs. Eugene B. EUlotl of Laniinc the Strand and Barry theaters Fri­
Chsmisos — Silk Panties — Slips — Housos — Dolls
FOR THE MAN
mas basket* to needy families.
. Covers were laid for eight
day. December 4
pillow Cases — Wosh Cloths — Handkerchiefs — Scarfs
To each of the lucky girls a beau­
The Christmas Gift
BIRTHDAY CLUB.
Path Pokes — Ski Foots — Ski Sults — Ski Coots tiful doll, a likeness of one of the
Mr* Vcm Yargcr was hostess to
.... Ave Blrth- Dionne quintuplets, will be given.
The North ____
Michigan
Supreme!
Sweaters — Bobber Cloves — Shouldsrettes — Bed dockets
the j. F- F- Club last Wednesday day club was delightfully entertained The doll* orc now on display in the
afternoon. Honors at bridge were by Mrs. Leona Cleveland and Mrs. Goodyear Bros Hardware store
Children's Dresses — Knitted Spits — Coots
won by Mrs. Dan Lewi* and Mrs. Rockliil) al lhe former's home last window. The dolls will be given
Linen Table
J. E. Mattoon.
evening.
$15.00
away at the 3 o'clock matinee on
Christmas day. the list of the win­
ning girl* to be pmned in the front
jamas — Napot the Strand Theater on that day.
I It will be nrce.vary for lhe girls or
I an adult representative of their
Dependable jeweler
| families to be prerent
I Rules of lhe contest are simple.
Buntings - Ki­
Hastings, Mich.
' For each ticket, children's or adults,
monos - Blan­
i purchased at the strand or Barry
kets — Hoods
theater*, voting tickets will be given
—five for a children'* ticket and ten
Sweater* — Shawls — Utility Baskets
for an adult's. The ballots are then
Platcx Fonts — Pads — Hose — Bloon
filled out and left at cither theater
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
for record.
Men's Ties — Sox — Handkerchief*

QiftS for the Christmas Treel

i

C, B. HODGES

Phone

Veal Roast

$hould«i

it. 23c

ATTENDS CONVENTION.
I
i Mr. E. L Taylor, principal of Hie |
, High school, attended a principals’
j convention tn Lansing last Thurs­
day and Frida) Dr Caswell of the
i d-orge Peabody College of Ten■ nessee gave the two main addresses
on the subject of revision of the
currlculujn. Michigan is embarking
' on a program of curriculum revi­
sion sponsored by the department of
public instruction A number of
high school* will be selected as ex­
t perimentat schools In which an at■ tempt will be mndr to bring the
• course of study up to date and m
line with moderp tendencies.
I
NIGHT IIAWR CLUB. *
I Mr. and Mrs. Wilford coin dcI lightfully entertained the Night
I Hawk flub. Saturday evening. Dec.
| 5. the occasion being the eighth anI mversary of the club, a lovely din­
' ner was served al 7 o'clock followed
by *n evenitut of cards and visiting. prlxes were won by Hugh Mey■ ers and Ethel shulte. oru Newton
land Henry Bothird. a business
meeting was held
A Chrtetfius
I party will be h-ld Dec. 13 at Uy
i home of Mr. nnd Mrs. Q*car PalmCHARITY GUILD MEETS.
The Charity Giutd of Pennock
hospital was delightfully entertained
by Mr*. Charles Vandegrilt. 8. Jef­
ferson Si.. on Tuesday evening, it
being their Christmas party. Santa
Claus wa* present also. Dessert wa*
served at seven o'clock, followed by
contract. Mrs. A D McDonald and
I Mr*. Geo. M- Newton having the
j.winning scores. The rooms were
j decorated with tree* anf| candles.—
! Mrs. Bittle c. Lane, clirm.

Beef Kettle Roast *■ 15c

,
MEET IN WOODLAND.
I Methbert ot the Borry County Edi ucallonal council will hold their
i first mcsUts ot Ute
thl* eve-,
। ning. December 10. al Woodland, be.
Roy Bell, superintendent of the
' (Scouts KJ*X&gt;U’ J9 prrM'Knl Oj

SOME HOT BARGAINS
For COLD DECEMBER
Pecan Nuts

24’Zi Lbs.

Gold Med­
al Flour

FRESH ROASTED
PEANUTS

98c

15:*
UMO
ii*«b ■

aisiMrcti

10 bars
P. - G. Soap

39c

2 cons Sourer Kraut 4 ftc
No. 2’/z size—
I nJ

2 Dox. Oranges
OQ&lt;
Cal. Na*-- med. sx. w v

Creamery Butter
Lb.—

2OC qu.

WLw
COFFEE

4X Sugar (Jack
Frost) 2 pkgs.—

Bancroft
JUNE PEAS
Fine Quality

2 u., 37' 2 c.n, 25c

Complete Line of Useful Lifts at Popular Prices—
And in Many Instances Greatly Reduced I

SALE! Coats

and

Dresses

Large Bars

"Printzess" Coots (none better) selling from 25e,c to 35% less than in the

cities and in addition to our already low prices,, wc have reduced price? Bfl
all Coots. Sports and Dress Coats. Sizes' and colors arc most complete ytl.
come early.
*
High grade Dresses, no two alike, but oil new up to date in ?tyle. mode fHW
good materials. The equal of such dresses would cost you 25% more else­
where. Sizes 12 to 20 and 38 to 50 Also half and stout sizes. Price?

•jmt

Squash (Hubbard
Ripe* lb.—

3?
1?

Chocolotq
Drops

jir*

*yao

Smart, New Wash Dresses 98c qjul 1.95
Flannel and Corduroy Rob**
Christmas 2.98 • 3.98 - 5.00 • 6.7

10w

WALLACE GROCERY
FREE DELIVERY

give all you can.' —John Wesley.

u’-op29c

Pajamas — Scarfs

PHONE 2458

OPEN EVENINGS

HASTINGS, MICH

TEL*

•M N N M M *

Schick Electric Razors

�7 •

faor

TOE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10. UM

snr

rented some of the aparunente.' ■ 11(11110111 01(1
.' - ------------------ . —-------ZT ' basket and leading the local team by i CIRCT HDMF GAME
_
.
a score of 9-7 at lhe half. Hasting.! NKbl hUMt
Wil eh have all the modern con ven* lyll| Uli lllll UflU
lences. mid renj.s were made very.' |fHUIIlUrJI UHIl
WILL BE A RUBBER
I
tb« situation in the third I
OpUTLtllf^
। J quarter witii a score of 11-9 but weie '
rea uiutLli a rental which could b? ,
Tii/Pft an*riABI
I' 1
—--------------——-———unable to hold their lead. At the »afiorded by Uiousands of families mi4
I 11/1 P 11 * I 111 111
Charlotte Shows Signs Of
the East Side Strange U&gt; say non&lt;
I ll |\ | gl UI | I 11 III | Hailing* chapter. No. 7. Order of
Inal whistle lhe score stood 14-20 in
of these wanted such quarters They
I DllUU RU I IUII , the Eastern Star, will hold its regu­
Best Court Season
Allegan's favor.
HASTINGS LOSES FIRST
lar --------meeting
Deseemed lo prefer lhe much more
—--------- “
,l —
- Tuesday
--------- , evening.
-—
In spite of the fact that Hasting- ,
In
Years
HER STUDIES AT COLUM­ congested, unhealthy. |K&lt;orly ar- UR0ES THE SELECTION OF cember 15. when lhe newly elected
(Continued from pace 1. Sec. 2»
GAME OF SEASON lost lhe opening game, an Improved i
The flr*t home game of the basket
ranged, poorly equipped tenement
' officers
----- ---will *•
have
— charge
------- -*
of the! .
,
.-------------------------------- । team seemed In evidence over last
BIA INCLUDED TRIPS
JUDGES
BE TAKEN
meeting. Following the meeting a *»«« "Luclndy" the housekeeper.
homes where they were accustomed
ball reau
reason scheduled for this FriPlay More Interesting Than ?«•«*■• Allegan presented a veteran ouii
THROUGH NEW YORK
Christmas parly will be held and I*".0 «&gt; »urn nagged her ipinster
to living In,order to get lhe apartOUT OF POLITICS
&gt;tt,„--------------------------- ' l**un *,,d il»ould win most of tlielr .Iay IXl. Il with Charlotte will be a
each member Ln uvkrd to bring a ten hf|Per Suianne every chance site
The Score Would
games this amson As usual their &gt;
‘
menu filled it became necessary to,
rubber game, each team having won
cent gift for exchange.
: K01 s,tl n,ld Mn J*rry didn't seem
rent them lo people who did not live
Indicate
breaking system was Hastings' . and lost one football and one b.v • TIMES SQUARE IS
——
------------------------------- ... on tin East Side, such oa clerks. CHARACTER AND ABILbuk«t M
tan I w££‘£onll ,„m
1 k»ball game to the other Last week
ITY QMnill n milNT
"Contemporary
highly
ui) Novelists"
nulling is the
till’ dirnce
.
-------- enjoyed their
..... bicker*
.......
WONDERFUL SIGHT
IU bHUULU LUUNI subject
xubiecl u&gt;
W be
be presented
orcrented by
bv Miss
Mi.-.s i “,K nevertheless.
nevertheless.
Friday night at Allegan with a fine Julies TBry weu by winning with a lhe visitors defeated the Eisl Lansing
She mentioned her visit to Har­
i
team,
a
trick
that
has
not
been
done
,
Jean
Barnes
before
the
Women
.
I The story dealt with the desperate
display of ball playing by both scotv of 18-13. The boys felt more
Tenement Dwellers Did Not lem the Negro quarter of the city Legislature Urged To Con­
1
by
any
other
Class
B
schoOL
in
wvClub at the Masonic hall. Friday | efforts of a lather ur check the ex­
teams, even though mistakes were: than usually elated over the victory ;-•-"4. -;r_rs
and trie provi ions which the city
This. coupled with lhe
Care For Modern
made and Hastings came out the I os Allegan was lhe only team Ll,1 1
afternoon at 2:3'J o'clock. An open travagances ami high-flown man­
has made for that part of Its popu­
sider This Matter At '
fact that they have un all-veteran 1
loser with a score of 14-20. The In- , year to defeat them
forum at lhe close of the program i tier* “I his family by bringing them
lation. winch,has moved to New
Apartments
tram this year would seem to indiFuture Session
ability of the local five to present a
The lineups were
Is expected to be very Interesting. | from their lovely Chicago home to
York
from
’
a
more
congenial
climate.
Mi« Ron,- DcFoe. senior health
well-balanced offensive
Offensive spelled
soeited their
their i Hastings i Hi
an old farm down in Missouri. After
well-balanced
,Allegan i20&gt; ; cute one of their best court seasons
The Michigan Bar Association, nt
Among
th&lt;Interesting
tiling.,
। in u long time tn spite of these ,
Bnvh Ridge Cemetery Circle
’ will
" -----having
-- ----------braved—
the-----------------------furies and terndefeat 81 ruble and Gladstone were I Gladstone
R p
its recent convention, put itself
Nyberg I seeming obstacles the local team counsellor ol the Barry County mentioned by Miss De For wa*
co-captalns and the only boys to I giIub|,.
j, p
squarely on record In favor of the meet with Mrs. John Anders. 1315 pests of his wife and daughter
Health
Unit,
gave
a
very
infarmiii::
______
________
midnight
lour
of
ttie
steamship
■ still Tee! confident that they have a
Princeton
Ave..
Kalamazoo
on
-----wrath
•"* —
iukJ! -shown
------- his Indolent older
score during, the game. Struble was LaBalilsii-r
C
noti-p.irti.ian
selection
of
Judge;;
o!
Vcenkunt
talk at lite Rotary club Monday I piers, where site had a first huiiu
high point man with 10 points to hl; j
h G
Thursday.
Dec.
17
for
the
utual
ion
that
since
he
liad
taken unto
all
courts
in
the
state
except
tho
Brtnninger they were victorious with a score of noon Last summer she look a spe- । view of what it means to provLiion
credit, four field goals and two foul.
,______________________________
himself a wife he must also gel hlmcircuit Christinas party
Baker 12-3 in their flr-t game with Char- dal courv ut Columbia University.' such a great city She told of the probate court whether
— - &gt;
j self a Job. he had the satisfaction of 1
shots. Gladstone look four shots
New York City in sociology and huge -hip lauds at vegetables being Judjet and supreme court Jud-t-s
during the game, only one ot which | Substitutions: Ironsidde. Hennick.
The BaptLst LAS ‘will meet seeing them all change into reason- I
Miller. Shelb. Plat ji. ond only in Uir U.t few minute- ui health Put &lt;»f the course required unloaded, the trull and many othei • '■o.’ld be appointed rather than wiUi
Mrs. Parker. 301 N. Urpadwuy able human beings i
counted. However the fact that they Hoodwin.
:iie st.tdrn'- tv become acquainu-d ’Uppln taken from the boats an.I • !ec«d is not made part of the
play.
were the only players to score. Referee. Van Wingen
------Wednesday,
----------ixc. 1C at 2 o cloek.
nie play was very well done, and •'
The month of December present. with -ome o; the social problems of placed in warehouses, and of th- prog i a in of the Bar Association ou
showed that the other members of
both casts and Mr. Becker deserve •’
that great city she gave some of constant stream ot great truck, Tlmv leave that matter to the legls- All welcome,
two
fine
home
games,
the
one
with
the team failed to carry out their |
European Cormorants
lature:
but
they
no
strongly
im-ls'
■
high
commendation
for
their
work
i
her
impresdons
of
New
Y
irk
Shihauling
these
products
from
th| Charlotte thl-. wrek and the first
The Goodwill L A. 8- meets with . on It. It was the first time that a I
part of the offense.
The European cormorants are like
did not .ittempt to clears b- that city ; docks to the city As an incidental that political consideration* should
It was an interesting game to the birds the Chinese use to cutcb ; league game with Ionia next Fn- nor tell about IU huge building- and feature of that visit, she said sin- not be a factor In the selection ol , Mrs. Gerald Smith on Friday. Dec. ■ class play hud been presented by a
11 for dinner.
watch nnd a much closer battle ’ fish, rings around their necks pre­ day, Dec 18
lhe
Judges
of
our
Michigan
courts
dramatics
class
with
practically
all
:h&lt; imm-n e business tenured there could not help observing lhe many
than the final score indicates There venting them from swallowing the .
B ick in the days wh^n the Supreme; The regular meeting of the Pres­ the rehearsing and committee work
Silk Wurm c.ut oons Used
Sii- - il-: it was a city of exu.iitps—
was little scoring during the-first
ones they capture Tne&gt; gel
In the silk udustry. even the hie): li.'hLs and low lights, pleas­ who eh-pt out ot doors on the docks Court of this state was one of th - byterian L. A 8. will be held on being done during school twurs. and
quarter with a 2-2 lie nt the end larger
....
. unpleasant things, the seemingly In the most uncomfortable outstanding state supreme courts o! । Thursday afternoon. Dec. 17. Thu. Die plan proved very successful.
ing ......
thing',
During the second quarter there was the smaller ones for food The bird |
,„ „
will
be „a Christmas party. Members
vaged and worked into low grade veu r ch and the verv poor Whut positions, qnd yet making the best the country our judges were ap- w
a little more action with Allegan I is extremely rare this
she did
to explain some of the 01 11 Tne next night she visited lhe pointed by the governor for definite uri. rwjUMUd t0 bring a small gilt Damascus May Have Been
making a few fast breaks for the Atlantic.
•Luncheon
-----&gt;—■■ a—
things m was privileged lo we dur- night court where character ., many terms. Not so many years ago cir • —
w4l be
Founded by Kin of Noah
ing het summers stay .it the uni- of
from the dux... were, cult Judges were likewise u;&gt;|x&gt;;nt&lt;-il
Damascus In Syria has bean re­
versttv
'
brought in lor various offenses. It by the governor. Both circuit uml
Supreme
Court
judges
had
to
have
The
W.
C
T
U.
will
meet
on garded as lhe oldest city in tha
She explained a visit to the Hocke- *1VI Interesting lo sec how lhe jiollce
their
appointments
confirmed.by
the
Tuesday
afternoon.
Dec.
15
at
the
world, Ita foundation having been
feller Center In the 04th story of
disposed of them,
tlicit immense building she heard a 1 Miss DeFoe and tier companions state senate. It was dcttnlniy true home ot Mrs. John McLravy Instead attributed by lhe Jewish historian
delightful musical broadcast in one . on
trips were permitted to see that outstanding men were then of Mrs. Claude Wood's as previously Josephus to lhe great-grandson at
ot the studios.
I a Mde of New York life that the or- named for the bench. The question announced.
Noah. Evidence in the fourteenth
ML" DeFoe wax impress-d with dlnnrv visitor would not have a of popularity or political availability
Methodist L A. S. Circle No. 3 chapter was of importance in the
the Immense city traffh Underneath chance to observe. There are many did not enter into their selection,
meets at the church parlors on Fri­ time o^-Aitraham. or at least 2000
the streets on the stm t lei eh and on of tlu' •,nme 'human problems in New und should not.
11 “’•ems absurd that a day
manfor a one o clock luncheon and
the eletftted routes wa. carn-d the! York City, spe said us in Hastings,
'are intensified
—- Christmas
----.puny.
. -Please bring
- ,
It Is difficult to list other old tremendous truiflc of the metropolis, only they /nr:
:r.'.rr.zt“r4 many should be chosen for circuit or Su- the
&gt; cities in the order of their founda- |
She was impressed with the efllniT.t many tunv.4 —
The -----business ot...
look- prrme
r - Court
------- --Judge
—because
---------- he
—is
-----e. table service.
in the De- !
manner in which that traffic i- i U,K after the city's mi-snt.s. its unfits republican or a democrat. He should
Methodist L A S Circle No. 7 will tion.- observes a writer
..........
.....
i.
—
...
..
..
...
.
.ana
ktT-Tlmlnals
is
tremendous
re’
■elected
because
nt
bls
nutstnnd.
handled. While in New York she i ani1 lts criminals Ls tremendous,
bi- selected because of his outstand-1 meet nt the home of Mrs LeRoy ,r°'» News. Bagdad, o a site wfi»h
visited ttie Quern Mary, the largest1 fidinng constant study and huge
ability as a lawyer and his high ■ Foiter. 508 S Park St., on Dec. 17.1 has been occupied since very affrly |
transatlantic liner she gave a tine I sums of money
character as a man
Kame J
at 8:00 o'clock. This la the Chrinmas times and preserving the name
description of its wonderful equip-I The informal talk by Miss De Poe The Bunner wishes the Michigan party and every one please bring which it has held for at leasti 4.000
s non ,
ment tor conveying several thousand : was not only pleasingly given, but Bar Association complete success In one ten Cent gift.
I years, did not become a city ot ।
passengers ou each trip across th 11 eave her hearers u chance to,
efforts to have all judge.* except
IIr«t rank
rat.lr until the
th* Arabian
Arnhmn town
tztiL-n
first
Atlantic, giving tflctn all the con- j learn things about New York City । P'obate judges selected without ref­
Regular meeting Leo A. Miller
' sentences of c. fine city home while : which newspaper accounts do not erence to their politics, their selec- ! Post No, 3326 V F. W. nnd Auxiliary was founded in the Eighth century
on their journey
contain, and which lhe ordinary vis- ,110,1 being based solely upon high , Thursday. Dec. 17. 8 P. M In G. n
A ,। A. D.. on the site of lhe ancient
character
and
legal
ability.
,V
the
I
Babylonian
city.
■
.
She said a mo-.t wonderful sight hoc would never see
character and legal ability.
1 R, hall. Arrangements for the
Christmas jiarty will be dbcussed. |
Peking (now Peiping) In China
Is Times Squait in the evening Tin- '
“ ‘‘
Girls ijleose bring sample Chrbtmas ■ stands un the site ot one of the oldbrilliant lights, the animated crowns |
The Word “Impetus"
and lhe great buildings moke u set­
Csi cities of the world. The earliest
On June 29. 1698. the. Common cards.
The word "impetus" is defined a» I.
ting that one can not soon forget
’•r
I city of which there is authentic
council of New York city appointed
Naturally in carrying an her stud- lhe properly possessed by a moving
Eaily Doctor's Equipment
! record there was Ch'i. the capital
les she Visited lhe East Side—the
Die average equipment of the of Ycn. ,n0#l northcrly of the feupaniers for the building of a Pew
Ghetto, where revcral. hundred tlon—applied commonly to bodies , in Trinity Church for the use of ploneer physician In Ohio emulated oai
dal stiiics
stales which
acknowledged tho
wnicn acxiiow-icagea
tna
thousand Jews live. Little Italy, the moving suddenly or violently ut.d &gt;e Mayor. Recorder. Aldermen and of a few roots ana herbs, several I1 authority
of tlie Chou Dynasty in
1 dLstrlil given over lo tin- Italians
drugs, plenty ot calomel, a few i the Twelfth century B. C.
Assistants
of
this
city
ui.d
lur
their
and especially the congested tene- j
crude surgical instruments, a Jar of
Successors.**
The city of Caifo In Egypt Is near •
ment districts and the slum quarters ।
leeches and a dignity which led peo­
j the site ot the ancient Memphis. ’ |
of the great rity She said that the
ple lo believe dial he was possessed
Polileneau Essential
Barbed Wire- Entanglements
municipality had built, in the tene­
, one of the world's first cities lo be
"Politeness under all circum­ of great learning.
,......
ment district, ......
what ..it ~&gt;...
believed would ' Barbed wire entanglements were
I established.
be an ideal tenement apartment first Uicd by ,he Spaniards fn Cuba stances." said Hi Ho. the sage ol
home Quarters in it could not lx- during the Spanish-American war. Chinatown, "is a valuable commen­
ORDER TOR PUBUCATIOir.
Sargon 1. founder ot lhe ancient
dation. It assures men that you may
afforded by the very poorest, but But it was "during the •••
World
—•■* wa
tlicre were many living on the East
--------------------.....
be trusted to transact busmess with- Akkadian empire, is looked upon as
the first royal gardener.
Side who were well able to have •n some Insluoces were electrified. j out temperamental complications."

ROTARIANS HEAR
MISS ROSE DE FOE

Items

'

I
I
.

.
-

Organizations

SENIOR CLASS PLAY
A FINE SUCCESS

SMART WOMEN KNOW
THAT MEN LIKE

x!

^PRACTICAL

Unexpected News!
COMPLETE CLOSE-OUT SALE OF ENTIRE
BESSMER JEWELRY STOCK AND FIXTURES

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

at AUCTION
I I the men to whom you intend to give presents

were to tell you whot they wanted you'd learn thal

Now Going On and Continues Daily Until
Entire Stock Is Sold

practical gifts would be most in demand' And
something to wear is practical! Waters Clothes

Shop, his favorite store, invites you to shop for his
present today'

WOOL ond BEACON ROBES

Hours of Sale: 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m
$4.75 to $7.50

MACK SANFORIZED SHIRTS. . _$1.50 to $2.00
WOOL HOSE
25c, 35c, 50c
SILK and SILK AND WOOL HOSE‘.25c »o 50c

LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS15c to 50c
COLORED BORDER Handkerchiefs. ...15c to 35c

PAJAMAS-------------- -----------------

Auction Will Be Under Management of THOS. J
FAUSSETT, Nationally Known Auctioneer

$1.00 to $3.75

NECKWEAR—Silk Lined69c to $1.00

MUFFLERS—Silks ond Wools59c to $2.50

Christmas Belles
The End of a 5O-Year Old Store — Fixtures Sold Last Day of Auction

BELTS And SUSPENDERS25c to $1.50

ARROW GLOVES 98c to $3.00

C. L CHASE

PORTIS HATS$2.98 to $5.00
BEAUTIFUL SWEATERS$1.98 to $3.75
VISIT OUR SPORTSWEAR DEPARTMENT For Women.
Mtaaei And Children. Sno Suite. Ski Suits, Pante. Toques.
Wool Milts. Skating Sox.

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP
Hastings

'Selling Quality Keeps Us Busy
"Selling

Michigan

Nothing Reserved I

Everything Goes!

Sales Daily at 2:30 p. m. and 7:30

r.

Until Entire Stock Is Closed Out

m

Step Out
When you’re ••having your
fling" over the holidays—
when your name Is on all
the guest lists for tho
rounds of parties, rcceptlans and what not. it'a
quite important that you
uphold your reputation for
looking your beaL Brows;
through your wardrobe,
decide on what you’ll need
ready at a moment's notice
and send it to McCreery'*-

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS

THONS tlta

�^HASTINGS STUDENTS

Social Events and Personal Mention

ENTER MUSIC CLUBS
:

CMr ««yer» Party

At Parish House

Belong To Band, Olce (Hubs
And Ohoirn At Weit] tings civic Player* association will
ern State
Mr*. Paul Jones and Mr*. Trevett |

Plight'bofara
George Bauer waa home from East I
held this Thursday evening at the
Lansing on Sunday.
IC- Chase of Grand Rapids spent last
Six Hastings student* are mem- be
Parish nvusc
House av
at 010
8:15 ocioc*.
o'clock. Thl*
sms
UU Bow cluk .pen. W.anreU, wedneuMr In Kulm.. Mr. Jone.. ber* of musical organizations of riuiui
evcnl t,
-o membevs only bu;
Christmas
in CMctio on bulneu.
out cf
of town guests “
may
7 tc
be Included.
UI..
.nnn, ih- .—v ‘ “d Mrs. Chase was the guest of! । Western state Teachers' college. In - 'cut
chiding the Men's Glee Club and and single members may bring one
A. ... .
Baird’s offort
end at her home in Evart.
I1 Mr.. orwlle
...
' Miss Lena Leiter waa lhe week end I
Mr,,‘
J' WBlkln3 went ' Teachers' college choir both directed friend or eacort.
| by Harper C Maybee, the Women's, A vaudeville pi
guest of friend. In Katamazoc
f»
U\.r’.,?,Vor Glee club and Auxiliary choir both sented and the
Quick,
Easy
Mr.-ond Mrs. Wendell Aahley and ,
“L Wat' directed by Mr.*. Dorothea Sas- “
will 'furnish
—'‘u mus
Wendell. Jr., .er. in LUMiM Bon-,
Bnyder. and lhe band directed by and throughout
Relief!
hcarsah have been held to assure
for several days.
. George E. Amo*.
Mr. and Mrs. M M- Crookston Florence Walkln* In Wyandotte,
that the program be conducted with
Mrs. Robert Burch and Mr*. Hen- spent the week end with relatives tn
Mr. and Mr*. Eugene Springer.'I William Fox, an art Junior. Is a professional "pep" and smoothness.
Banficld.
I Mr. and Mr*. LeVere Snyder ol member of/the Men's Glee Club. The program Includes a puppet show
Rapids Thursday.
The Rev. and Mr*. R. A. Hough- Highland Park. Mrs. Elta Acker and Margaret Snyder. Later Elementary
Colorfu Scort*
Mr. and Mr*. Kenneth Bteckle of ton were In Lansing on Saturday Mr. and Mr*. Clarci.ce Humphrey senior, and Barbara Wilcox. Early by Mrs. Amy Bower and Miss Lucy
Bassett; professional dancing by
Lansing were Bunday guest* of Mr. on business
.spent Thanksgiving with Mr and Elementary Junior, are members 0: Miss Maxine of the Kalamazoo
both the Women's Glee Club and
and Mrs C- D. Bauer.
Mr*. W. H. Thwaltes of Grand Mrs. Bert Humphrey at Hastings.— 1 Teachers' College Choir. Howard Charm school; numbers by lhe Has­
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Nash of Rapid* spent Friday with relatives Plainwell Enterprise
: Martin. Senior High freshman, and ting* saxophone quartet; "Echoes
Hopkins were Bunday guest* of Mr. I in Hasting*.
| Mrs. William Wilaon and three
John A. Chandler. Manual Arts from the Alps" by Paul Gangulllet;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lapo of Ot- 1 children came from Grant on 8un- sophomore, are member* of the a descriptive solo. "Blow lhe Smoke
Miss Irene Weaver has returned
were Sunday guest* of Mr. and day and will visit until after Christ- band, both playing the comet EUza- Away.' by Roy Cordes and other In­
from a visit with her sister. Mr* sego
At ten.
~„ mother. Mrs. Claude beth Vandergrift. Senior High fresh­ teresting features. After the per­
Mrs. Fred Alien.
mas with her
Lloyd Victory, ot Toledo, Ohio.
Mbs Anne Cusack of Belding Wood. It will be remembered that man.
tnan U a member of the Auxiliary formance there will be cards, dancThings to wear—practical
Mrs. Charles Wood left Tuesday
the week end with her *lstcr. Mr. and Mr*. Wilson loot their home
, ing ar.d various games and refreshfor Detroit to spend lhe week with spent
Un &lt;- n WnHtM
: h..
Srn na milhlw
'
by fire
couple nt
of a-natr*
weeks airn
ago.
i menu will be served.'
useful gifts that he would
her sister, .Mrs. Charles Kiley.
1.00
50
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jacobs were
Mrs. John F. Goodyear and daugh- i
It
is
at
tins
event
that
members
TURNES—MACLEOD.
like in his wardrobe. Our
in Chicago tills week end attending Sunday guest* of Mr. and Mr*. Tom ter. Mrs. Donald Van Zlle of De­
Wearing a lovely -gown of while arc asked to express their approval
Taffee
In
charlotte.
troit.
who
has
been
here
for
several
or
constructive
crltlclsnu
of
the
an automotive pari* convention.
StyUBk Shim
Mr. and Mm. Ralph Whlnnery of weeks, left Tuesday for Detroit satin and carrying while roses. Miss year's program Questionnaires are
selection of gifts and wear­
Beautiful Neckwear
Mrs. Frank Carruthers is .visiting
Lucille
MacLeod
was
a
most
attrac
­
relatives In Niagara Falls, Ont.. Lowell were Sunday guest* of Mr. where Mr*. Goodyear will spend the tive bride when she spoke her mar­ given to each member for comment
where where Mrs. Goodyear wUl riage vows with Philip Tumen a: St. upon the affairs of preceding
ing apparel has never been
while Dr. Carrothers Is In New York.
Ed. Pierce and Frank Cincebeaux spend lhe winter with Judge and
Mr*. Guy Giddings vialted her
I Rose church on Thursday. November months Abo there Ls the annual
os complete ond colorful.
, ballot for the most popular presendaughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs. made a business trip lo Toledo Mon­ Mrs. van Zlle.
Mr. and Mrs G Winston Sheffield 1 26. The bride Is the daughter of Yc tatlon which the Players have of­
Raymond Hyatt. of Battle Creek day.—Plainwell Enterprise.
Mis* Beatrice Blossom and Miss and Mr. and Mrs Don Potter were D. MacLeod and the groom is the fered. Thus far "Outward Bound"
son of Mr nnd Mrs Philip Tumts, has always been an outstanding fa­
Marte
Rowe
spent
the
week
end
al
in
Lansing
Tuesday
evening
attend
­
Mrs Smith Will was in Battle
ing the graduating exercises at the all of Hastings
vorite and member* are interested to
Creek part of last week visiting Mr. their homes In Big Rapids.
Acme Business College of which; From a narrow halo formed of know whether "The Servant in the
We surest inspection of
and Mrs. Morris Will. She returned
Bunday guest* of Mr. and Mrs. J. P Mrs Bheffield Is a graduate After small plaits fell the bride s white House" will not upset the long es­
on Friday.
tulle
veil
which
wa*
carried
by
little
Hutching*
in
Grand
Rapids.
the exercises a ball for lhe grjduate* 1 Anne Feldpausch and Patty Davis.
tablished lead of the older favorite.
50
our new gifts—leather bill­
Mrs. Eliza Johnson and Mrs. Al­
Mr. nnd Mrs. Herman Arold.
ma Flngleton spent Sunday with'; Richard Poley left Thursday for and alumni was held at the Hotel,1 The ceremony was read by Father
folds ond tobacco pouches,
Mr. and Mrs. J, R. Matthews of l a visit at hl* home In Climax before Olds.
Dillon, who also celebrated the chairman of the social committee.
, going to Sliver Springs. Fla.
Mrs. F. L Bauer. Mrs. G A. Bur- John
; arc in charge, assisted by Dr. and
Grand Rapids.
nuptial
high
mass.
Yellow
chrysanMi, iv ,vi t.iuiu, ui uiiu mis. r
Drew Sheet
also many new tie and pipe ■iHfold* And Key Rmft
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Finstrom and Ij Judge and Mrs. Stuart Clemen*.
McCoy and Mr* Emma Evans : thcmunui and tall cathedral candle:
_,,,i H
Il Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
Miss Gertrude were Sunday guest*;, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Faul spent I.Ida
were In Nashville Thursday night. ^Blnsl
Hi
of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kemp ol '। Saturday afternoon ond Sunday in,
tacks and clothes brushes.
ferns made the church very attrac- Hawthorne and me members of Ute
'
Chicago.
1
where
Mr*.
Bauer
installed
the
O
executive
board.
Battle Creek.
tlve.
Miss Janet Teale and her room-1' Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Llchty of E 8. officers, Mrs. McCoy serving as
Price* ore reasonable.
Mis* Leonards Treib wore a
HAS FINE POSITION.
Mate. Miss Lodisca Payne, of Kala­ Gull lake were here last Tuesday to plank I. Dinner a-a* served al 6 :30 I bridesmaid's gown of blue moire
Sutpenden And Betti
Men's
Slippers
Many Barry county friends of ‘
mazoo spent the week end al the, attend the funeral of Mrs. Walter j, following by the Installation cere- fashioned velvet, the skirt lengthen I monies
Mbs Rachel M Caln will be Inter­
home of Dr. and Mrs. K. 8. Mc­ Wallace.
'
ing
In
the
back
to
form
a
slight
$g.25-Sg.TS-JJ.SQ
Mr and Mrs Frank Prentice of
ested to know that she has submit­
Intyre.
trnin.
She
wore
a
matching
blue
Audery Oilford nnd Mr nnd Mrs Hastings Twp. spent Sunday with
velvet hat nnd enrrted Talisman ted her resignation to the state com­
E. F. Mclxiughlln of Muskegon ar.d their son and wile. Mr. and Mr*.
roses. Jules Turncs of Chicago was missioner of agriculture, effective
i Giblum
Council
____given
______
________ Ladies* Suitcases
excellent
Mtn’a SimH
MIm Jean Barnes were guest* of Allen Prentice.
the groomsman.
Mary Agnes
Mur- Dee. 15. She has
Mr
and
Mr*.
Frank
E
Haar,
At that time she will Like up
Mr. and Mr* p. Marvin Sage on
Re-Elects Officers 'phy. "dressed in pink "crepe and service.
and
Mr.
and
Mrs
Maurice
Haas
ol
Sg.SO
Bunday.
M
' wearing a wreath of small chrysan- het new duties In the branch office g
Muskegon
Height*
were
Sunday
of the International Harvester com­
Mr. nnd Mrs Gerald Ahrens nnd
——————————J, thetnums. wu.* the ring bc-.irer.
PHONE 23%
HASTINGS
Mr and Mrs Laurence Town of guest* of Mr. and Mrs. F Ear) Hna*
Officers elected by Giblum Coun- &gt; The wedding breakfast for friend- pany nt Fort Wayne, where she Will
Mrs Lyman Johnson ha* returned
Grand Rapids spent Sunday with
th" be the secretary to the manager
ell. No. 49. Royal Mid Select Masons, and relatives was served nt 1^Thh new position not only gives her
Mr nnd Mrs, Oscar Palmer atid from Spruce where she had been for , on Saturday ever.:.
.;
bride's
home,
the
wedding
cake.
evening
were:
Thrice
। five weeks with Mr Johnson who
a fine salary to start with, but hold*
Miss Barbara pox.
completed
a new highway , Illustrious Master. F L. Bauer; Dep- adorned with a tiny bride and the promise of a very good futuiv..
Mrs. Leon Bauer wns In Olivet 1 ;has Just- .—
. ! uty Master. John Eddy; Conductor .groom, centering tlw dining table
Wednesday evening where she in-1ln l*ial vicinity,
Her many friends have every con­
GUEST OF HONOR.
CHRISTMAS PARTY.
NEW MASONIC OFFICERS.
,
Mrs.
Erma na
Gardner visited Mr of the Work. Finley Johnston; , which was covered with a cloth of fidence that she will make good In
stalled the officer* of lhe Olivet and
Mr
* ,rrma
pointe
venise.
The two sub-deb groups of HaaWednesday night Hastings lodge 1 Mrs. Leon Bauer, past worthj
Treas. Walter Snyder; Recorder. —
* ---Brookfield chapters of the Eastern and Mrs. Robert Gardner of Lan­ Jas. Langston; Captain of the
At two o'clock a reception was Iter new position.
tings have united in plans for a n0. M P.
A. M ejected the fol- grand matron of the Order of East­
sing
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Nelson
U
iraStar at a joint Installation.
Guard, F. E. Adair; Steward. Clar held for Mr and Mrs Tunics, who
ern Star in Michigan, was tha gue*|
Mr and Mrs. Robert Ho**ack iLoi- ner of East Lansing Saturday after­ I ence Bennet:;
Sentinel. Henry, left later In the afternoon for Kala­ ELECTED TO NATIONAL
Langston) .of Cedarville have been noon and Sunday.
HONORARY GROUP. are making a *j&gt;ecial effort for dec- W. M . Douglass Hindes; senior war­ of honor at a party given Wednes­
Chamberlain; conductor of Council mazoo where a Thanksgiving dinner
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Langston
day evening of last week at th;
Miss
Irene
Jones
and
Mi*-*
Mar
­
was
served
in
their
honor
at
lhe
orations.
planning
to
use
silver
and
den.
Winn
Green;
junior
warden,
,
John
LPatrick.
The
officers
wen
1
They are now guest* of Mr. and Rapid* Wednesday evening where. installed that same evening, all be­ Columbia hotel.
garet any do qD Hastings are two of blue balloons and Christmas decora- William L. Hinman; treasurer. Har­ home of Mrs. Gladys Lcnkfield la
she attennea
attended inc
the Christmas
Mrs. Robert Moore of Kalamazoo
, -*ne
cnruima* party, ing re-elected
Upon their return they went to nineteen Western State Teachers' tions. Marrin's orchestra will j.'_play । old —
Radford;
-* —
secretary. Ed. Tudor;
•— North Park, a suburb of Grand R*pHenry Trim accompanied by M E S»"n by the uauerettes at the home
(
guest*
Included
tile
program'
of
dances.
Tickets
wi..
w
----------------—. —the
— mem&gt; will S. D. Gamer Hampton; J. D.. Har-, Ida. The .
Th'' Council planned. ol&gt;&gt;, for a hou lekecpltig immediately In the CoIIcrc students to be honored wlth
Caukin ot Grand iiapltb, ami the of Mrs. Gladys Ltnkfielrt nt Norta banquet, card and dancing party on Tobias apartment. 420 N Michigan election to Western's Chapter of be on sale roon and may be obtained I; a
IK Dawns. The TH'Iv
• — 1 A.'t«l ofof— !’ beta of lhe “Bauerettes" who aatteU
old
newly-elected
latter'* grandson. Meredith CFUklh, Park.
Ave. Their many friend.' extend con­ Kappa Della Pi. national honorary from any member of the groups ! floer.* will be inawital on Wcdncs-.j rd Mr*. Bauer at Grand Chaptei
Mr'’ MU
Ella Grave*
of Detroit «-»&lt;=
wa*L Friday evening. January 8.
of this city ieft
left Monday'Arning
Monday morning
- "»
I gralulations and best wishes.
, forority in education, election to. Miss Rose ix-Foc and Mrs. Forrest day evening. December 23.
they will
.*pcnd
for Florida there
----- ----------J"-----J ' the guest of Mr and Mrs. Calvin;
I which is based upon .scholarship.' Johnson, rponsor* of the two clut^
CHEER UP DANCE.
Plumley j&gt;nrt of last week. Mr. and,
the winter.
p-rsonaltty and leadership. Miss will assist the girl* with Iheit plans.
The Cheer Up dance Monday, REPORT MIS CLUB WAS
1 Mr*. G. Winston Bhrfllcld accoinORGANIZED
SATURDAY.
Jone,*, a senior high Junior, and Ml** 1 ' ---------night
was
a
most
enjoyable
affair,
I panled Mrs. Graves lo her home on
Bnyder. a later elementary senior.
The
Reporters
Club
of
Barry
TAU CHAPTER.
-eventy-nv”
cc'iples
attending.
' Thursday
The members of Tau chapter of
i Guerla at the home of Mr. nnd There were confetti and serpentine; county was organized by a group of are active In affairs of the campus.
Beta sigma Phi were entertained,
I Mrs. A- J Larsen Bunday were Mr. dances as well a. the usual circles i women Saturday at a luncheon at
and Mrs. Harry Barnum ot Lansing Three door prizes were given away.' Die Parker House. The club is non­ ODD ITLLOWS NAME OFFICERS. by Mrs. A- D. McDonald on Wed­
NOONDAY LUNCHES
Hastings odd Fellows have named nesday evening, lhe program theme
and Mr. Laracn'a- sister. Mrs. Park Mrs. waiter Eaton, Earl Chamber-1 partisan and its object Is to study
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
Thomas, of Belding, who is staying bin and Milton C- Lamb of Ver­ and discuss lhe various government the following officers for the ensuing being - Modern American Music."
montville winning them. Marlin's agencies, current event* and to be­ year; Noble Grand. Charles Perkins; I plans for n progressive dinner on
fhr a longer visit.
DINNERS
.orchestra ptayca
played tne
the program o:
of come informed on modem trends in vice grand. Lawrence Larkin; scc-,^^. ,u
'Mr*. Warren Roush. Mrs Agnes -orenestra
5:30 to 7tB0 P. M.
Fisher. Misses Jennie McBain. Lil- dances. Mr and Mr? Harold Brock­ politics and world nflairs. Officers retary. Charles Annable; financial1 ter will care for a needy family at
way are cntilrmen
next
dance electa! for a term of one year are: secretary. Hale Carpenter; member I Christmas time,
han Christie. Elizabeth Henry and--------------------------'of-- the
----------------SUNDAY DINNERS
Mabel Bisson were Sunday guests of and will be avtsted by Dr. and Mrs President. Mrs. Harry Bennett. of board of trustees, C. H Leonard.1
Dr. Winifred MoLravy ot Grand Gordon Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Middleville; sec.-trca.*.. Mrs Emma
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
ENTERTAINS AT BRIDGE.
| Memben 0( the U and I bridge
Rapids. Mr*. B- F. Cowles spent Sat­ powers, Mr. and Mrs Harold Parker 8. Evans; publicity chairman. Mrs.
6 to7i30 P. M.
Mrs. Clarence Goucher enter-!club atre entertained on Wednesurday and Sunday with Dr. McLravy Mr nnd Mr?. Dorrance Trcthric. Mr. L F. Maus, nnd director of programs.
returning Sunday with the others. and Mrs. D Sharp nnd Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. E. J. Pratt. Meetings will be laincd at bridge on Thursday after-; day afternoon at their Christmas
held the first Saturday of each noon, two tables being in play. Win-1 party at the home of Mrs. AUison
Irvin McFaul ot Middleville.
PARKER HOUSE
month al the Parker House preced­ ners were Mrs. Ray cook and Mrs. Tolles. A pot luck luncheon w«s
| Grand Rapids were also guests.
ed by a luncheon.
ELLISTON—FOSTER.
Loul* Kannc.v
served and gifts were exchanged.
Miss Elizabeth J. Foster, daughter
of Mr. and Mr* Heber Foster, was
united in marriage to Lloyd L. El­
liston Saturday evenlhg. December
5. at the home of the bride's parent*
The ceremony wa.* read by Rev. J. J
Wlllttts. only the immediate family
and the grandparent* of the bride.
Mr and Mr*. Samuel Geiger, being
present. Ml*-* Agnes Foster, sister of
the bride, acted as bridesmaid and
George Gillett acted as best man. A
simple wedding supper was served
after which they left for their home
In Nashville, which was in readi­
We will also have Oti hand several reg­
ness for them.—Sent by Barryvllle
D. R. Miller went to Chicago Fri­
day on business. &lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Trim spent
Bunday with friend* at Battle
Creek.
Mn. Clara Wilder of Battle Creek
wa* in the city on Tuesday calling
on friends
Mr*. Edith Bonnell 1mm been vlslt-

Give a Man Gifts
That Are Ok’d
by Him ।.

»5“

50c

5395 s5°° ’750

55'

T.s.HAini&gt;

M350

MO00

*32“

YSiMhbiMhsaiMiaAaiMtbddhbMdatbaibibibdh

T«W&lt;We«&lt;UtMMPCMPe«P«MMPl

SPECIAL

Arctic
ICE CREAM
for Christmas
Place Orders Now

THE BIG
LITTLE

Friday, Doc. 11

STORE

Saturday, Dec. 12

Poos, fine quality, No. 2 can
9c
,
Dozen $1.05
Del Monte Seedless Raisins,
pkg. 9c
6 pkgs, for 50c
Tangerine!, sweat and juicy, 2 doz. 35c
Lipton's Green Tea, the best, lb.

Hershey's Cocoa,

59c

2 1 -lb. boxes 25c

College Inn Tomato Juice, 3 cans 29c
Hill: Brother! CoHee, 3 can:

95c

Fel: Naphtha Soap Flakes, 2 boxes 45c
Quaker Macaroni, Spaghetti,

Noodles, 3 boxes

Jello, All Flavors, 4 boxes

25c
25c

HINMAN’S
Hastings

Fancy Bricks
Moulds
Cakes

Michigan

JOLLY TWENTY’ CLUB.
The members of lhe Jolly Twen­
ty club had a delightful meeting
Monday evening at the home of Mr
and Mrs. Waller Filling ha in in Rut­
land. Progressive pedro was played,
the prizes being uon by Mrs Will
Allen. Miss Beatrice Christianson.
Will Martin nnd Harold Christian-,'
son. A chicken supper was served. I
The occitalon was lhe twenty-first*
wedding anniversary of Mr. and j
Mr,. Fillingham and they were pre- ’
sen ted with a lovely wool rug. The!
next meeting will be a N-w Year's!
eve party at the home of Mr. and'
Mrs. Elmer Andlcr.
OBSERYX THEIR
SILVER WEDDING. '
Mr. and Mrs Harvey Burge** en­
tertained nine guests al dinner Sat­
urday evening al their home In hon­
or of their silver wedding anniver­
sary. A very lovely dinner was served
by tho hostess The guest list in­
cluded Mr. and Mrs. James H. Ben­
ham. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bureh.
nnd the Rev, and Mrs. W. Marian
Jones and children. Gladys. Stanley
and David. The host , nnd hostess
were presented with many beautiful
gilt*.

BUSINESS WOMEN'S
HOSPITAL GUILD.
Misses Rose DrFXic and Anne Bur­
ton are hostesses for the December
meeting of the •Business Women's:
Hospital Guild n*ixt Monday evening
at tho Methodist church parlors.
This tflll be their chrotma* parly
when each member entertains a lit­
tle girl. Dinner will be served al 5;45
followed by a social Hine nnd a
Christmas tree Thue parlies are
always detighlful nnd this one

। promise: to be equally enjoyable.

ular flavors In brick or bulk ice cream
An ideal Christmas dessart

COMPLSTt STOCK OF GIMON

CHRISTMAS CARDS
TAOS * SEALS . PAPER - RlBtON

BOX CANDY
FOR GIFT AND HOMt USI
Comphto stack Christmas wrapped
Gilbert - Stkrafft - Bunte

Chrlstir-*-- ■•"S
template

REED’S^
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 10. 1930

INSURANCE

THE CHURCHES

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

।
im
COATS GROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST
h:.

ONE CENT A WORD NO ADVER­
TISEMENT FOR LESS THAN 35c

WILLIAM I). CAMPBELL
jason e. McElwain
Phone 234*1. Natl. Bank Bldg

•

i

..

The Hastings Banner

SUPERVISORS
nnnnr
PROCEEDINGS

BOOK BROS . Editor,.

OCTOBER SESSION
CHURCH or THE UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST.

Woodland Circuit—E B. Orllfln. D. D..

Paster.

KILPATRICK CHUIUH—10 JO A M.

1 Harr Brook*. 633 W

llrria. C*U F
IV Kelly Phon, 2394
U

IIX HARRY COUNTY, THREE MONTHS.
IN ADVANCE .......... ..................

gl

Ftl

RAHCt '

M ^"iimlay artuul

FOREiGNHI'HrC'CKlPTlONB. ONE YEAH

IV . J h* ait*, iiiuiri.

ADVERTISING RATER:

:■ ■ I '.V. "I Tlln’.JST CHURCH

PHONE ZI65

l.ddS.H'j

lannNd. t'li

AUCTIONEER
DEWEY REED

JOB PRINTING.

FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH

5 000 On

Pto*. 2141.

CSS Eaat Clinton at. HASTINGS
BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY

iTo B-‘ CotHUlued ui Future Issues&gt;
MARRIED MAN

The "Emerald Buddha"
The "emerald Buddha" 1l really

Our Servicev
To PROTECT You Conatanlly
Adjust Fairly

about 25 inches high. There is Utile
doubt that the stntue was carved
in Ceylon tn the Fourteenth century.
Ils history from 1436 ts well authen­
ticated. and the sacred image
played an Important rule in many
wars for its possession. Rama I. re­
moved the emerald Buddha to Bang­
kok. built tlie l*mple, and surround- |
cd with «olld gold images of Budd- |
has, elephants and sacred idols.

CITIZENS MUTUAL

MAUS

STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY

Hereford cattle, 200 yearling steers.
200 calve*. 3 cam heifers. 150 cows.
Choice quality.

experience or capital needed,
today. McNESS CO., Dept. B.
port. Illinois.
12-10 T AIRES—Nnutb ot Yorkville, 4 room

"AKRON" MODERN

liimir Plenty ot abad*. 13 mile, from
Kalauiatoo. 1.1 mile* from Battle Creek.
Prjee 9*2.1. 960u eaab. balance or.

1

I'lmne Delton 19 — 1 long, 3 abort
12 i't
FOR SALE—Uaanline engine. primp jack

JOHN CARROW
Box 193

Ottumwa. Is.

Trappers Attention!

MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
1 atwve. chicken trr-dera. |«&gt;ultr&gt; fenre
FOR WORK OR PLAY
■ 53r* N Hanoter. Haatn.g.
1.' l-i
FOR SERVICE -Young iKiar. nnr dollar
Diln Smooth Rubber Bock Podi
at time ot termer Al*o corn tor ante
No Po«t» To Weor Clothing
|| line mil* .birth ot Delicti. Onrdnti
_ Mocrlrua.

HIDES — PELTS — FURS
Having worked up a good trade in
the fur business I feel It will re- I
quire two days a week to accommo­
date the trappers from v,hom I am |
now buying fur. For better prices j
nnd a square deal bring them on i
Wednesdays and Saturdays to 120 |
S. Michigan Ave. First house south 1
of Trio Cafe.

12 10

PILGRIM HOLINESS TABERNACLE.

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

HARVEY BABCOCK

BEEF BY THE QUAR­

TER FOR SALE.

ADJUSTAlLE CENTER
Sponge Rubbet Pads

HASTINO3 CIRCUIT METHODIST

PHONE 3909
HERMAN

The Prescription Drug Store • »-ok **«:-

MONEY FOR
CHRISTMAS

FELDPAUSCII

CARDS of THANKS
3 BUSES DAILY
TO

Farmers, Attention!
and BUT EVERY DAY
ILXE DaFRlESTLB

BUYING

Hast! On

BAPTIST CHURCH.

ST UNITED BRETHREN
CHURCH

rll.ti.- Campaign nt the aanl
flu, Lome, ol r endura of the church t
M. Suu,Uy canning follow|
■ d by a »|&gt;re. &gt;1 arriuon at " n'clock.
Again we Im He the public to attend
at.&gt; or all of thr-ac arrakra
YANKEE SPRINGS CHURCH—Sun
Jay achoal a1I 2 00 P. M Prtachlug at
church

or non

CUPBOARD or buffet

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW

GRANGE PROGRAMS

TIBST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
SCIENTIST.
M- Rub

GEO. M. NEWTON
HASTINGS MARKETS

,n„

Your dead animals are worth

DOLLARS

Poinsettia
A rare gift value for a
happy Christmas. Special­
ly selected, sturdy plants
outstanding for their beau­
ty of blossoms and foliage.

Mr. Floyd Denny
Hastings, Michigan
Phone
Hastings 2539
We pay lhe phone charges.

ARCHIE

TOBIAS

On* block north HMtlagi NaUon-

HOLLY

ANNOUNCEMENT

travel through far corners
Industry.

KuKul a V alued Tree
The kukui tree ot Hawai, pro.
duced oil for torches before Ameri­
can industry developed lhe electric

hfifiCOLDS
UUV FEVER

9tost Up-To-Date Toys In Mlrhlgai

It..

■■•Uri IUT IIIIHIRT

Oil m«*1. S3 M

■AJOnn^WANT *AD1

Dead Stock

UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
IN CHRIST.

Long Search (or Rests

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

HIDES-PELTS-FURS

Heading

rand dinner.

CorracUd Wtdneadiy. D*c 9. 1934
"uT** j'"'’’*0'1**
Ti,,:
ch*®K» E &gt;t.|e*n

JERRY ANDRUS

Cash Prices

To assure yourself of getting
the best price, call

SEE

HASTINGS

2nd Floor Hastings National
Bank Bide. Phone 2307.

Chrysanthemum
Ore of winter's favorite
flowers — appropriate for
every occasion. We have a
large assortment In vari­
ous colors and sites.

Paid for
l-.t-L

7°?* *

129 W. STATE ST.

Of Michigan

PEOPLES RAPID
TRANSIT

area Ur. C R. SLaM . Naaliatlte, Na.n
rille |&gt;hone
I.Af'k - - Wgnta Iranata.rlation to Florida
Sharr r&gt;|vniH K.-Ie ream eacbangrd
V V cate Hann.r
13 10
FOR HALE —1 X I.
fl tower ItohM t
Tau n.ilea aouth on
JUrr HOVr-ES (■ t r,n near Delton In
nuira .1 W Nilccuk. Delton Fbor.e lu
—Ftt
13 lo
LoHT—Black lar
neckpiece. corner
Church ant Greet, Hta Mr*. G E
i.o-.tj.ar 115 «
Walnut.
13 10
\YANTED—Ta barroa
I3.1U0
Would

»ud.

Registered OPTOMETRIST and

FIDELITY
CORPORATION

$2.00 One Way
$3.60 Round Trip

Jtraey Giant Inti
Anon* rovatera
Fll 13 lu
&lt;f SuO 1b (eealrr
ga II 1 (' Gilt

Z

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

FLINT

wo l,oUBekr--t«in&lt;
and warm. State
Harry Ew&gt;ng at

’ --

Scrap Iron, Brass,

Copper, Aluminum,
Zinc, Lead &amp; Batteries

W.tXTED—One or
roam*. rauat br rlea
price aid a&gt;Idreaa
Parker linear.
Fug HALE—50 Black
let! IrglBniag to U
Frank Trrg.. Phon
FOR HALF. -Ten Lea.
• tej-r* 16 feeder 1

Nothing you could give
brings with It more of the
spirit of Christmas than
a poinsettia plant; nothing
could say your best wUhea
and love more eloquently
titan beautiful roses; and
nothing is easier to buy
from the standpoint of
time, money, or assured
acceptance than flowers.

If your Christmas plans are
going lo require EXTRA
CASH, see us. Now is a good
time lo arrange lor a clean
slate for lhe new year by
getting those debts in one
place.

MICHIGAN

HOOS and

Merry Christmas
With Flowers

FOR SALE

Fll::.T (i-.ITKn KEETHF.I"; CHURCH

RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call

.
’
!

SAY

WOOD SCHOOL COMMUNITY
SERVICE

Waffle irons of Colonial daya took
vaclbus forms. In the "Colonial
Kitchen" in the Baltimore Museum
of Arts, a composite representation
of the kitchens of New England
705 E. Stale Road. Hastings, Mleh. and Ute South, there are at least
five different kinds of these earb
.waffle trona.
-

VERN J. TROYER
TOY COMPANY

Tire WOLVERINE INSURANCE CO. of LANSING. MICHI
GAN is represented In Barry County by the following agents

English Holly

E. R. Lawrence &amp; Son

After December 15. we will
have a complete stock of
English Holly for Christ­
mas decorations. Order
early.

Hastings

Garner C. Hampton

- Hastings

The Elwood Agency

Middlevilla

Floyd Shelp -

Prairieville

-

When you need ALTO INSURANCE see one of theae HtoU-

■PJO-

CLYDE WILCOX
Tin- florist
Hastings

Phone 2530

Member Florists' Telegraph
Delivery Association

�THURSDAY, DEC. 10. 1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER

SECTION fl

....

Ing that neither of these tunnels | we were doing better tha-t seventy
,!*£• “L
SIMPLE CHRII
hour—
when
bang!- “
went
were over four or Are feet long, yet miles an '----*---------—• - SYMPHONY TO PRESENT &gt;
when you approached tlieln It looked
HANDEL’S “MESSIAH"
DECORA'
a* though you were driving straight hundred fool drop off on lhe side
of the road toward the river, and Uniting With Calvin Chorus
into the side of an Immense cliff.
OBITVABT.
--------------Four Scbonta I
Arriving In the park you are on a we held our breach for a moment,
For Dressing
For
Sea.on’.
high plateau, fairly level and cov- but Leslie used his head and did not
with tree*, shrub*, flowers, etc.. apply the brakes and we coasted
Production
was born in Hastings townshlp. JanAnd are wc ever happy—found o'
Tha Tree
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 11 j ered
and as you drive along you begin to about a quarter of a mile without
Four prominent Chicago soloists.
bSe^IuKS! ?!S »
Presbyterian minister named Cab­
Mor. simplicity and rwuteM
even
swerving
Ln
the
least
and
we
This Changing World.
bage.
beauty in festooning Ute ChriaUM*
al lb, Me *of J
«„&lt;l mollon
of «&gt;t|, .Um-.UK caught up with our breath and the calym College Chorus of 450
EW YORK.—They say
mw Mid wlnur Krne. In ih. Pa,. 1 dr ,v' *d d
I?'!" “ ..l" changed lhe tin-.
tree is suggested by Winifred 0MU 1
voice* and the Grand Rapids Sym- months and 27 days.
manner and finally came to the
poker is dying out, Its | After digesting all that Aladta
This little delay brought us lo the
' Information.• we alii Just stick to ; nature talk, by a good natured na-, park buildings but still no unusual rim of Grand Canyon. Just In time phony Orchestra will unite under' Her entire life wa* spent to or
place being taken by bridge,
i lighter veins this Ume.
turallsl ranger. Tills wa* followed by I[ scenery, so we parked the car and to see lhe dark red sun Selling In a under The direction of Seymour ne*r Hastings. She graduated from old fashioned conglomeration" of
began
looking
around,
following
a
Swets
to present for lhe seventeenth :
Hastings High school a* udu- many kinds of ornament* defeats It­
a game played with 52 cards
a regular musical comedy show, put i
through the woods over lo our deep purple haze over lhe- ridges of consecutlvc sexson Handel's famous1 talorlan of her class of 1912. She al- self in too many household* tn ter
and frequently, as between , a good brand of mincemeat on by lhe waitresses, bell-hops and '• trail
left where we saw some benches. the opposite rim. lhe canyon Itself CJirlstmas oratorio the "Messiah.' । »o was a graduate of lhe Hastings
partners, with fully 52 times solves the fruit problem for lhe other camp employee*, all of whom,’ Coming to the higher ground where shading from the deep purple al the on December ll In lhe Civic auditor-1 Normal In 1913 and taught to the opinion.
fruit cake. Just one box are sludenls from college* in Utah |' the benches were, we looked down top to almost pitch blackness at lhe lum. lhe soloist* are Mary Ann I Center. Pratt and Striker schooli.
When it comes to dressing up tte
that many harsh words. I ,1 Christmas
and your raLslns make all the fruit and are selected for their entcrtalnbottom, and IJ certainly seemed tha:
look for a revival of tit-tat- ; the cake needs and Is perfectly de­ Ing ability. It wa* very enjoyable. A on a breath-taking sight, the weird we hnd actuallv come to the very Kaufman, soprano; Sydnie Smith . Site attended the Slate Normal at simplicity. Four schema* art umIhL
beauty ot which can never be odeCooley, contralto; William Miller. Kalamatoo from which slie received
dance
followed,
but
the
music
was
I
llcious
Don
i
use
so
much
spice.
toe. ”
t
You can quarrel over
quatciy expressed in words. From edge of the world which we thought tenor, Raymund Koch, baritone, all; her U!e certificate. She taught two
for the moment we were leaving a
that, too.
K,,nw lt
WPrn lhaf few miles back on the road This exceptionally talented In the ora- &gt;ears in Kendallville. Ind., lhencame
1 We've heard so much about Mrs Maude and I require, so we sat ou. I
' l® Hastings as teacher and principal
And out on the dude*anches. old Roosevelt's syndicated column that and Just watched for a while and 1 canyon below it would seem that view of the canyon wn* the mo-.: torlo field.
।
the imagination of some titanic
MLm Kaufman I* engaged this of th* teeond word school. Oil July would be all sizes in different colors.
we want 'to read It. Wonder what then retired.
beautiful ot any and the one which year by the famed Apobo Musical 8- 1W3 slw wai united to maiflsge A third type of decoration can In­
'
sculptor
had
run
Hot
and
cut
into
rough with heifers
.papers have It?
Zion National park. Utah. Thurs-1i the soft limestone every figure and will never be erased from our mind;.
1 to waller L- Wallace also of Has- clude tinsel strips with ball deco­
Hubert d. cook.
day. July 30lh. «354 miles out.
| tings, to this union was bom one rations, and lhe last suggestion is for
shape known or dreamed of by man
Ing schooled In dis­
What power in a wee *R,,e 'f®"1'
iI hcmiwmt
hesitate w
lo siari
start writing auout
about , LX&gt;mes.
| daughter. Jean Mary. In early life the use of just tinsel stripe and bulb
Domes, spires,
spires, castle*
castles ana
and temples
temples
creet love making
.ma. In * city we saw a sign BLOW the events of thL* day as quite a predominate, but there are aL*o LARGEST DEER “KILL”
। she was converted to the Christian lights for decoration.
I MEN WORKING. Buster locked the' go&lt;xl deni happened and n lot ot. *t*mury
groups
of
people,
animal*.
and other romantic
statuary
groups of .rcolor*
people, animal*.
faith and Joined the Methodist
w2a
m
htex^'
trrrtUryW
“
eOWed
‘
le
d«o?£d\n
of
th..
.
-----.
-,
aJ
]
co
)
ors
O
f
ti,,.
IN MICHIGAN’S HISTORY
exercises to qualify
church. She was also a devoted
| had the right dea. I told him w.uit i ln zfon Park, took the Park Drive (spectrum, but with reds, pink* nnd
them for celebrating
member of the Banner Bunday talks about himself; and a brilliant
It really meant.
with stops and side trail*, drove to creams predominating. One great More Than Thirty Thousand I
rchool class. To this faith in church
Re Good to Debu­
,,
'Bryce canyon and did likewise, then : white statue of Queen Victoria, comtantes week next
Bucks Were Legally
.M uni Hon manufacturer*
oren 11 across the Pointed Desert to Grand p|rte with bonnet, flowing drex
faithful in attendance as long as you about yourself.
summer.
Taken In State
exactly what you would call popu- j canyon arriving there just before | and carrying a bouquet or lunch
health would permit. For the last
And It no longer
lar around thL* country any more. । dark, having had one puncture and box or something in her armsstands
The largest "Wil" of wnitetail deer I
lncy7
one blow out. driven nearly five hun- 1 On a massive red pedestal looking at in Michigan's history was made dur­
with a form of paralysis so was un­
terest when Die
, „„ „
' *,
,
I drtd miles and never missed a meal. &gt;ou from octok. the Impenetrable ing lhe past deer hunting season. In
able to attend as she would like to.
plaintiff in a breach Irvin S. Cobb
I never could get the wordspeas- | we rose quite early, had breakfast j chasm. The Paiute Indian name for lhe belief of H R. Sayre. chief of
of promise suit, or
w a d
straightened out at »cven. checked out and started utils region "Unka-tlmpe-wa-wtoce- conservation law enforcement.
of this affliction but all to no effect,
even a suit for alimony. Is a man. Mane a perfectly ■candalou* break । Up the canyon. The sun was just । pock-ich" describes the whole scene
Sayre estimated that more than
for God in Hls all seeing wisdom
well as anything that L might say. 30.000 buck deer were legally shot In
Or nt least such is the Impression once when I was giving an account J breaking over the great dome of the ;
willed It otherwise. But she never
’I 'OffOl Wlille Throne" on Hie east. A* translated t means ' red rock* northern Michigan.
which his lawyer, in addressing the
was heard to complain and her
asked a hunter for iomr feathersl । wall of the oqnyon and casting IU funding like men in a bowl shaped
The number of 1936 deer-huntlng
cheerfulness and smile were an in­
jury, would create.
, „.
.
t
.
I shadow* on the opposite wall The canyon"
licenses void will not be known until i
spiration to all who met and knew'
In tills country, when a man buy.;, coloring and formations are difficult i nrv
-_
&lt;. nn( i,,.,,,,,! bv early next year when sufficient re­
her. She will be greatly missed In
Bryce cwoil
Canyon b.Is not
not lormad
formed b,
by
. ... b. Irani. U« nun, ol u.r„ th,
Br&gt;«
Sool-Laden Cities.
ports from license dealers are re­
the home and by her friends.
sellers
wife
by
hook
or
crook
and
U
p.
these
maryelou*
walls
and
tern-1
™
froslon
Uk
?
lon
.
Cw
'
&gt;
.
OS ANGELES may have Its
She leaves to mourn her loss her
but from rains, winds, frost anti ceived to Indicate a total, but con- I
names
lhe
cow
Dial.
That
Is
uadip
jf,
ar
e
painted
gorgeous
reds;
then
I
servation authorities here believe'
husband. .Walter L.* Wallace, and I
drawbacks (laud cries uf "no!"
chemical
acticgi.
It
is
teaily
not
a
daughters. Verda Reynolds. Maude. |
from all native suns, including the tion nnd hn* been as far back a* 1 ' above the reds, Uicy rise in startling, canyon id nil. but a great horseshoe that approxlmalfiy 110 000 bought U- 1
trace And if a calf come*, it Lv I white, sometimes capped with vivid!
censes, another new high figure.
|
Sopha and Jean Mary Wallace ail I
foreign-burn ones), but she certain­ can
I
shaped
bowl
ar
aniphltheat.
r
three
named for the seller s offspring. But; red Near the base of the cliff*, espe.Mary Ann Kaufman.
of Hostings, one brother Floyd Al
ly spoils a fellow for thz clinker­ the womenfolk* draw the line on clally in the shadows, lhe red be- mile* long and two miles wide,
OBITIARV.
■ -—- - ■
—
- gbsxjii
Gaskill,. oi
ot ijssungs
Hastings townsnip.
township, lour
four
eroded a thousand feet or more
laden. smut-frelghlcd atmosphere ot furnlshlng names for swine.
'. comes deeper and shide* ....
Allen Lasby wa* bom at Brad- • club of Chicago and has appeared nephew*, many other relatives and
into ....
pur­• , down into the pink and white mar­
many other cities.
pie. If you can Imagine such a for­ ly limestone of the otherwise level ford. Ontario May 17. 1885. later with Ute leading symphony orches- a wide circle of friends and ac­
If you don't know what to give
Take Chicago, where the weather
and
choral
associations quaintonce*.
mation extending from Ba nB1I
half „
to Ba ■ plateau. Ages have been consumed centing to Lowell where for twun- I Iras
fhe funeral wa* held at the First
bureau, it so inclined, frequently little girl for Christmas. I find you 1 mile above and on both sides of the' In IU making and it is still under­ ty-elghl years he was to business ' throughout Die United state* She L*
might report a two-inch fall uf soot. can't go wrong on doll clothes. No' green floor of '.he canyon, with the I. going changes, the older forms willi hl* father in a confectionary especially commended for her un- Methodist church on Tuesday aftstone. Mr Lasby. who conducted sec- ; usual talent in interpreting Handel emoon, the Rev. W. Maylan Jones
Or Pittsburgh, where a chap comes little mis* ever has enough acccsso- beautiful clear mountain stream in '
ties
for
her
favorite
"baby."
And
iho
center,
you
will
have
some
J*
home fur a week looking us though quilted holder* are nice gtfU for tire of the view.* that unfold themselves I S,°wl£
fr01n U,c fresh’&gt; and iiand stores in thl* city and | music, both operatic and oratorio, officiating. Burial was In the Strikin Freeport, died suddenly on । Mis* Cooley L&lt; singing tills season er cemetery.
he'd been cleaning out a soft-coal
, attacked walls.
us you drive up the
Use canyon
Wednesday at hls home in that under the management of the Amer- Life was so very sweet to her.
stove. New York is nothing to brag ladies. They can be made quickly. ,i os
What's all the fuss Just when w«
a -----lunch. at the soda . foun- village, death being due to a heart lean Artists Association.
«
— loved ----------— all. ’
We slopped frequently and got out After
- -- Her
ones were 1her
get to sleep? The fire trucks!
on. either. Leave a snow-white pup
It's a wonder Muscle Inny doesn't as it is impossible to view the 1 wln we returned to the car where a attack He is survived by his wife,
cnorus ha.* been In rehearsal But she patiently bore her crosses,
What's up? Nothin' but MYs.
surprise awaited us &gt;n
In lhc
lhe for,n
form ®
off •a a cAn Allan ,lr IhrM rlaltoHlort '
out over night and he could pass (or make a dicker with the Canadian i scenery from a closed car unless you surDrLuf
a son. Allen. Jr, three daughters. fOr
llme under the direction of And was ready lo answer lhe call.
Jones' chimney burning out that
a Dalmatian.
government to buy up Toronto- put your head out of the window flat lire, our first but not last tire Maxine. Joann* and Annie, also two seymour Swets al the college, while How blessed lo know
Yet heating engineers say that what with the quantity production and of course that is dangerous on trouble. We had lo wall while lhe sisters. The funeral was held on; tj1(. Qmmj Rapids Symphony Or- Our dear one U *afe,
p’opcr smoke consumers would pro­ program at Toronto and Calendar, account of the canyon walls and garage mechanic pulled lhe nail Sunday at two o'clock al the Roth che*lra I* revlowtog the Prout or- After the Storm clouds have passed,
and
repaired
lhe
tube.
In
addition
Wish
lhe
Judge
would
hurry
up
that
|
passing
cars.
From
where
the
rood
funeral
chapel
tn
Lowell
Burial
in
-------- ' *” ’
o"’“'
chestration of the oratorio under And many sweet memories of her.
duce such saving in fuel cost us to
s&lt;Tnu Hke lhe &lt;.lly ends W(. wa]kcd W| for about a m|J&gt; he also twisted off the pants button Oakwood
nothin'.
cemetery at Lowell.
pay for themselves in about one stork verdict. Seems nice me eny,
the baton of the regular conductor, Will live with us all till the last.
of Toronto ought
it m
They "Hl। up to the narrow, where lhe trail. holding lhe wheel guard in place,
. &gt; to get. i.
Karl Wecker. The soloist* will arrive
A woman writer mentions that fox from Chicago several days before
SMITH BROS,
It before all those babies are ends and lhe cliffs rise abruptly' and It seemed like hours before he
would rather not lave money, or need
raised and educated.
liundrvds or thousands of feet from could find lhe right shaped tool so furs are absolutely waterproof. This 1 the performance for dress rehearsals
Cirdstoo. Alta. Is lhe home of the
just naturally don't care a dern?' ;
VELTE &amp; CO.
lhe water's edge. Numerous other the pant* could be again buttoned explains why you never see a fox । with chorus and orchestra.
only Mormon temple In Canada.
Or possibly
fear they
an umbrella, \
- the citizens
,
- i Jones: Did you give your wife lhe trails lead off from lhe main road on to the fender Finally we got carrying
________________________
|
Tickets
went
on
sale
December
1
built
at
a
coat
ot
81,000,000.
Card1
might collapse their lungs and ]cclUre on economy?
to various points of Interest and up started, retraced our route to Mt.
The moon, a scientist says, prob- and are available at the Civic audl- *ton is in the foothill district of j
choke to death did they start breath- I Smith; Yes. and now I must slop to lhe canyon rim. but we had., Carmel, not far from Zion Park and
ably throws back radio wave* from ' lorium box office. Mail orders should Alberta, close to the international | PHONE 1237
ing something remotely resembling
walked enough for orte morning so!! started for Grand Canyon crossing Die earth. Who can blame it?
, ue sent directly to Calvin Seminary border.
fresh air?
।
we started buck. The drive back
Cruelly
-------- , to
— Wives.
Our greatly admired former presldown the canyon presents another' Just out of Fredonia we encoun­
MAYBE you'll remember — It dent. Calvin Coolidge, wrote our panorama of views Just as fine as. tered another terrific rain storm
was In all lhe papers — the Htt|e Poem this week A tribute from those we had seen coming up.
which washed in rivers across and
lady who got u divorce in Chicago [ a Hreat man.
along
road
hesitated about
We left the park through lhe east ----- the
-— —
— We -----------No man
man- was
was ever
ever meanly
meanly bom;
bom;,
entrance
over
the .new .u-Mt. Carmel driving through
some of these
some mill
BUI1IC
lime back MJ
by alleging
£11. A u.M.
that on |,I No
---- —
... ....
„ ' -----the Fourth of July her husband as* I About his cradle Is the wonderful
wonderii ! highway, the first eleven miles of'streams as the road here was not
....
....
.
..................
mlrarte
nf
Hr»
.
whlrh
i-n&lt;l
nsnrlv
&gt;&lt;vn
rhilllr...
HM.
Mirfaerd
Verv
sliDDerv In
111
miracle
of
life.
|
which
cost
nearly
two
rhiiUon
do)hard
surfaced,
very
slippery
sailed her with firecrackers; on
He may descend Into lhe depths; ltrs and required four years to places, and the water was so roily
Thanksgiving day he threw a turkey
live In Infamy and ;&gt;crish build. This highway has been called ; that we were not at ail sure whether
at her, and on Christmas morning He may
miserably.
' ""--------------spectacular
----- • -• high1-------or- not
-------------there —
was- even
- —-■a4 road under
। "lhe 1
most
feat'of
he beat her up with a Christmas
But he 1*s bom great
undertaken.' j il. We finally got through the rain
I way construction ever undertaken."
Men bulla monuments
r.._--------- U above the I due to lhe stupendous construction | and entered the Kaibab National
..
. ।| difficulties,
j._
---------. .In getting
...
Forest, where we iuiw the most ex­
But assume Ute union had lasted
L'raVM'n*
graves'
of their •—
heroes .to mark
encountered
until now. You can Imagine the
Hie end ol a great life.
i the road up over lhe great cliffs tensive growth of beautiful timber
But women seek out the birthplace I forming the wall of lhe canyon, of the whole trip This was on a
poor woman's anguish if. through
nnd build their shrine.
I From its start ou the floor of lhe high plateau, nearly two mllM above
the last political campaign, her hus­
Not
where
a
great
life
has
It*
ending.
( valley the road zigzags up over the sea level, and ns we came to the
band had made her read ail the
but where it had its beginning. । slope of Pine Creek canyon In a ser­ edge we could look out over lite
polls taken on lhe election by the
------- —-------- —------i les of six switchbacks and then cn- Colorado river valley and obtain the
inspired outfits thal did take polls
REATH OF FRANK OLNER. ।! lers
u-rs a tunnel 5.607
o.«n feet
leel long, where longest view I have ever seen, over
and through that period hnd com­
Frank F- Giner. 75. died Satur- j It continues lo ascend on a five per a hundred miles. We crossed the
pelled her to listen on the radio to day. December 5, at the home of hls cent grade. The tunnel follows river qn the Navajo bridge five hun­
the average professional broad­ daughter. Mrs. Bertha Risbrldger In quite closely lhe face of lhe cliff. dred feel above the water. Incldencaster on football gomes, especially Kalamazoo Several w«cks ago he . and al six selected point*, galleries, tally the only gas station in one
lhe rapid • Are dcscriptluntst who gave up work on hls farm because overlooking Ute canyon far below hundred sixty some miles is located
talks all at once nnd gets so excited of poor health and went to live in, have been broken out affording here, and this little one pump sta­
himself that the game, in compari­ Kalamazoo. He had been sick only a other colorful views. Tunnel driving tion is lhe only building in this
is quite a riovelty, there being noth- whole stretch. From the bridge on to
son. seems but a tame and com­ weel&lt;Mr. Olncr was the son of Joseph ing to distract your attention from Cameron the road traverses a good
monplace affair!
That would Indeed be cruel sea­ and Mary Olner. pioneer residents - the road, except possibly the sound many miles through lhe painted
of Barry county. He was born on a of your own motor, which resembles desert which looks like I imaglte
sonal suffering for any wife.
farm in Rutland Two. where he a freight train climbing a hill. If Bryce canyon will look in a few mil
lived all hls life until hls retire- you blow, your horn, which we did lion years, after il has eroded down
ment a short time ago. On Oct. 4. just for the novelty of It. the sound to a nearly level plain and nothing
Outwitting the Laundry Man.
IRAQ he
hn wits married in
....... you.
.....
....
___ Is __
1889
lo Mica
Miss rva-.i..
Carrie nearly deafens
There
no, is left but Utile mounds of sand of
EEING a Pullman porter pry B Travis of Irving Twp.
danger of a collision In thp tunnel every color of lite rainbow with
open a car window with one of
He Is survived by his widow, three as you can hear other carstomlng a black and white besides. The road
those burglars' tools which Pullman daughters, Mrs. Rlsbrldgcr of Kal­ quarter or half a mile away.
&lt; through here varies In color Just the
porters carry for thal purpose gave amazoo. Mrs. Grace Hathaway, and
We entered Bryce Canyon Na­ rame as the surrounding country, it
Mrs. Gladys Bryant of this city and tional Park, about a hundred miles, being Just sand and pieces of rock
I'm going lo buy one to use on one brother, w. H. Olney of Has­ from Zion, around eleven o'clock, scraped up and leveled o* without
the twenty-flve mile drive in from much emphasis on the leveling.
dress shirts when they come back tings.
Funeral services were held Tues­ the junction on the main highway
Cameron which is Just an Indian
from .the laundry with the little day
afternoon at lhe home in Rut­
town with Its one store and filling
flaps on the collar band cemented land. Rev. John J. Kltchlng. pas­ being unusually interesting. It is a station was a welcome sight after
down over lhe back button hole.-The tor of' the First Presbyterian steady climb through beautiful red driving the last hundred and twenty
rock formations from around fivelaundries may claim it's starch, but church, officiating. Burial was In thousand feet above sea level to over miles over the most desolate and
I know better—it's concrete and Irving cemetery.
eight thousand when we arrived at, Qod-forsaken country and road I
high-grade concrete at that It acts
the park. Some of the rock forma­ have ever seen. From here on to
OBITUARY.
tions along the road were of. very Grund Canyon Is a fine pavement
Jennie b. Sanborn, daughter of unusual shapes, two in particular and LesUe was Just remarking on
may have noticed on licking same.
With the aid of this happy device, David and Sarah Sanborn, was born being buttresses from way up the never having driven over so smooth
I shall save my nervous system, my hi Battle Creek. Oct. 15. 1859. She mountain sides sloping down across a rood surface before In hls life.
was united In marriage to Chas. H.
salivary juices, my fingernails nnd Gorham on Oct. 17. 18113. and they part of the valley and making il The sun was getting low and we
the road were hungry. HL* Toot wa* getting
—If profanity be a grievous sin— celebrated their golden wedding an­ necessary to tunnel
probably my Immortal soul as welL niversary-Oct. 17. 1033. Mrs. dor- through them, the odd part of it be- quite heavy on the accelerator and
But 1 don't suppose anything can ham passed away at Fennock’ hod-’
be done about the eighteen or pita) Bunday. Nov. 22. 1938. at the
twenty pins with which every effi- age of 77 years, one month, seven
■ dent laundry hand pins up a dress days. hjr. Oorham preceded her In
-'•Ghlrt'before delivering. And per­ death on Jan. 7. 1934. Since his
haps we’d belter not try—It would death she has made her home with
reduce the consumption of pins In MUs Elizabeth Smith of Dowling.
Mrs. Gorham was a life member of
this country by from one-half to the Dowling church and was a reg­
two-thirds, and goodness knows the ular attendant when her health per­
Industrial balance Is already upset. mitted. She Is survived by one sis­
IRVIN 8. COBB. । ter. Mrs. Sarah Zander, of Oroville.
SAVE ENOUGH ON YOUR TICK­
Cal, several nieces, one nephew,
ET FOR AN EXTRA WEEK OF
SUFFERED A STROKE.
other relatives and a host of friends.
Thursday afternoon, two days Aft­ The funeral was held at the
PLEASURE. Choice of route*—ex­
er he had suffered a stroke. James Dowling church on Nov. 25. Rev. Extra savings on round-trip tickets.
Clark, aged 74. waa found in his ....
ner officiating. Burial at lhe Dowlhome near Pritchardvllle. He had • Ing cemetery,
Phone for complete information.
been alone In hls house after the
—---------stroke, and was without food or fire. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH.
Sunday
evening
moving
BUS DEPOT
A relative who nollced that no
-------. --------- al
— 7:30
---------------smoke was coming from lhe chim-. pictures will be shown of the Clark
TRIO CAFE — PHONE 3187
ney Investigated and found Mr. Memorial Home In Grand Rapids.
Clark and provided for his care. On There are five persons Ln thl* home
Bunday Mr. Clark passed away at from Barry county. These moving
you -a --•*
splendid
the county home.
|। pictures will give —
“
idea of the Home and it* equipment.
When and If the Townsend plan Rev.. Jone* will speak on one of O.
becomes effective, a lot of young Henry's stories called "The Gift of
SHORT WAY LINES
people will bdgln charging their par-. the Magi." Christmas carols Will be
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
TELEPHONE 2103
ents for board.
rung by all

tx

—

• C rQfjblfBarrydBypathsl’ZION NATIONAL PARK
IS PCI WE
nhi-uif-

N

-Mas 'St&amp;&gt;

L

100,000
TO LOAN

ON IMPROVED
REAL ESTATE

S

LOW FARES

TO TUMMIR fUNfHINt

SOUTHWEST
CALIFORNIA.

Property owners in Barry county
and Hastings in need of financial
assistance can secure a loan on
their real estate. We are in a
position to make first mortgage
loans to individuals based on their
ability to repay. If you are a
farmer of Barry county, or if you
own a home in Hastings or vicinity we invite your application.
Stop in and talk it over.

HAST

�Tire HASTINGg BANNIB. THUE1DAT, DECEMBER U,

WLOBTWO

fitness of curing. Estimates of mots-1 loose hay. Low moisture contact, i
8OUTHWKST BVTfcAND.
lure were consistently tower than ventilation to remove generated he** |.
the results obtained in the drying , or complete exchulon of air to keep
Newland of M 8 C spent
machine*.
oxygen neeemary for com bus- ’
In trying to US* Judgment and enmin comnienilng on the cause of
*uggested as possible remeWot 0*t roUafB Often The
«&gt; fwraun barn fires started In
all possibility of spontaneous com­ bare mt* during a year when field
1«MM Tor SjoMlAneous
bustion and also get a high quality curing of hay apparently wa* com-' h*Twere In Dowling last Wednesday to
product.” Musselman said recently i parativeiy simple. Musselman *tuOmn&amp;Btlon
eesb
a
logical
theory.
The
extremely
I
at a meeting In Chicago.
He described laboratory tests con- Lt and dry earth surfao^and at- COURTHOUSE NEWS
mospbme
led
to
rapid
drying
of
।
.
maeM^ty- method* and oxperimendunk and Mrs. Hattie Anders and
Utlan* still lacas aclantfflc knowl­ ment at the college Hay sample* leaves and outside surfaces of alfalfa ।
daughter Blilrlay of the McCallum
PROBATE COURT.
edge. Proof of thh t* apparent in ths were tested accurately for moisture stems so that the farm operator wa* ;
dbu-ict were Sunday caller* in the
aumbar of barn fire* in 193B in content after experienced and prac­ misled a* to the actual condition of j t-{ jtrome cote Order allowing Geo. Havens' home.
Michigan, although the season for tical haymakers had rendered Judg­ the cut foliage Chopped hay seem* &lt; account entered, discharge of Admr.
Uncle Oley Douglas U.not so well
’ st present.
ment on their moisture content and to retain generated heat more than Ltsued. estate enrolled.
Mr. and Mr*. Myron Blabop and
Admr. filed, letter* testamentary Usued.
Est. Hannah Geiger. Inventory giving with friends In Detroit.
filed
Kenneth Dunn left but Thursday
Est. Jacob Geiger Bond of Admr.
filed, tellers of administration fa- Uonnl Stock Show. He goes as one
sued. order limiting settlement en­ of the competing livestock Judge*
tered. petition for hearing claims from this county.
filed, notice to creditor* tasued. In­
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson ot
ventory filed, petition for license to Hickory comer* spent Sunday with
sell filed.
Est. Alonzo E Kcnaston. Bond on ven*.
| *nte filed, oath before sale filed, re­
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilcox and
port of sate filed.
BenJ. Jenkins w’ere Thanksgiving
I Est. Max Smith, petition for hesr- guests of the latter'* daughter. Mr*
j ing claim* filed, notice lo creditors Albert Nash of Hastings.
। issued.
Clarence McNutt of Irving spent
Est Agnes Bristol. Order allowing from Thursday Ull Saturday at the
claims filed.
home of hi* aunt, Mr* Roy OrJu
I Est. Anna F. Eckert. Petition for
Mr. and Mrs Harry Clem enter­
i license to sell filed
tained for Thanksgiving. Mr. and
1 EsL Ashton W Burpee. Inventory Mrs. Eugene Rowden and Mrs. Moel, filed.
। Est. Ott Fisher. Annual account Wald of Rockford and Edward Clem
। filed, order for publication entered.
of Middleville.
Est. Sarah E. Ayer*. Report of
sale filed.
Sunday with her parents. Mr. and
E*L Mary N WUUuns. Report of
sale filed.
Est. Jennie B Gorham. Waiver of Yankee Springs
notice filed, order appointing Admr.
entered.
Harry Dunn. Forrest Johnson.
Est. Betty Sneathen. et al. Nomi­
nation of guardian filed, order ap­ turned Saturday from their hunt­
pointing guardian entered.
ing trip north, i
Est. Faye Donley. Order aUowtng
Harold and Lorraine Otis of Kalclaims entered.
CONSUMERS GAS
amaaoc visited from Thursday till
Saturday with /their cousins. Allowing claims entered.
pheous and Mary Dunn.
Esl Richard B Meaner Annual
Mr. and Mr* Roy Oaks enter­
account filed, order far publication tained their children and grand­
entered.
children on Thanksgiving day.
1st. Henry Crapoff Petition for
Admr. de iwnLs non. filed, order for E. WALL l-AKE AND VICINITY.
publlcation entered
FAMOUS ABC
1st. Nelson H Healy. Petition for
Mb* Alloc Laubaugh of Grand
Admr. filed, order for publication
Rapids spent Wednredsy and
entered.
E«t. Lloyd Allerdlng. petition for Thursday al home.
Chas, and Clifford Kahler re­
■ license to sell real estate filed
NEW IRONERS ALSO ON SALE
Est. Annie Wolcott License to turned from the north Wednesday
I mortgage issued, oath before mort- I with their deer.
Wendell Vreeland and son. Bobble,
। gage Hied, bond on mortgage filed.
of Detroit were at theiAcoUagc Sat­
AS LITTLE
। Est John McLravy. Order allow- urday preparing it to leave for the
mg claims entered.
winter.
I Est. Minnie B- Whltwam. Proof
AS....
Clayton Mattison and friend of
I of will filed, order admitting will
Jackson spent Sunday at their cotj entered.
tags H. H. Musselman of Michigani
HAYMAKIM FAULT IS
State Collage.
CAUSE OF BARS FIRES "Iren the experts sometimes fall,

you can

FRIGIDAIRE

ELECTRIC REFRtGERATOR

GAS RANGE

WATER HEATER

ELECTRIC WASHER

Clifford Kahler and family spent
! An PERA director In Maine say*
• the State presents unusual employ­ Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mr*. E.
ment problems He figure* there are D Reynolds of Delton/
six moose callers for each moose.
I Mr. and Mrs..Cha* 'Kahler were
Sunday ’ visitors at Garner Hamil­
Can you remember way back when ton* of Hastings.
all an American Administration at
Washington had to worry about was
"Reverence b Use clUef Joy and
where to teal Mr* Dolly Gann?
poa-cr of life."—John Ruskin.

MU* Eldlcne Preston of Grand
Week end visitor* al Fred otls
Rapid* spent Thanksgiving and
Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Kalamaaoo. Harry Dunn and famMrs. Cedi Preston.
Uy of Southwest Rutland spent

Sunday there.
and Mrs. J. W. Howard Bunday.
Thanksgiving wa* the wedding Thanksgiving with their daughter.
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mrs. Harold Rlttenger and family
Van fiyckle. Those who spent the
vlsited H. Taylor-* from Thursday
John Van Ryckte and family. Mr* until Sunday.

famllle* of
ouo of Lansing. Catherine Mc­
Adams and Marguerite Murphy of

Sycklc of Woodland township.

Dunn al Bouibwaat Rutland. Frank
Thanksgiving

with

made a burin ess trip to Grand RapMs Friday.
John Erway of M. B. C. and Mbs
children spent Thankiglvtng with auta, Mr. and Mr*. Garfield Slater.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon August of Ruth Erway of Brighton were
Lake Odessa spent Thanksgiving Thanksgiving guests at their home
ryvllle.
with their daughter. Mr*. Clarence. here.
। Roy Erway returned home the latRapids were guests Sunday of Nel­ Kime and family.
Mr and Mr*. Bert Moeecar enter* 1 tar part of-the week from a hunting
lie Wolf and family.
talnod for Thanksgiving, Mr£ Mat- trip and wa* fortunate to bring
tie
Phillipa
and
Lewi*
Tonner
at
home hb deer.
Battle Crock, Russell Rose of Grand
Rapid*. Mrs. Ben Walt of the Pratt Berlin and Wilbur Dye and family I Mbs Virginia Warren of Lansing
District. Virginia Me Larry of Hus­
tings, Esther Grey of Freeport, Mr*
Roy Hamacher and Mr. and Mrs. Beulah were among lhe 33 present. Thanksgiving guests al Roy Er­
Ernest Golden spent Saturday eve­ at tha Thanksgiving dinner held at1 way's wen Mr. and Mrs. Al Wolfe,
------------------ -----. Maurice Erway and Harold Sharp
ning with Mr. and Mrs Bordy RowI of Grand Rapids. Mr and Mr* Dick
Middleville.
------------------------------------------ ' Rose and Miss Esther Erway of
Clayton Webb ol Harting*. Mr
and Mrs. Arthur Webb of Battle 10, with Mrs- Don Stowtas. This will Hastings.
be our Christmas meeting. Bring a
Mrs. Clara Robinson returned to.
to be present.
|her home tn Grand Rapids after
Ralph Cramer of Sonoma. Demarb gift and be sure
I,.. Van* Vim*
a«aae a-aaV with War
Hagerman and Marguerite Mills of
Nashville spent Thanksgiving day
with Mr. and Mr* Cha*. Harrington.
Mrs. Lydia Thompson and Mra. had a* Thanksgiving guests. Mrs.
Karl Btarhaxd and JDmtj KUoe and Cteo Brown of Hickory Corners. Mr
family
I and Mrs. Lowell Whittemore ot Del­
------I ton, Mr. and Mn. Fred Bechtel and
MT*. Bertha Mullinex and chil­
LOWER CROOKED LAKE.
j Bllile of HBMing* and Bob Bhrtcker
dren of Battle Creek and Mrs. Ralph
’ i of Richland.
Hershberger and friend of Detroit
Mr. and Mr* Keith Graham „
OUIIU
o*
Sunday callers at Chas. W)title - ■
-------—j Mrs. W
in
were Thanksgiving day guests of Mr. Kalamazoo. Mr. and Mr*.. Ted Zlmm&lt;n
ws----wcra^Mr.
mores
and
Wm.
and Mr*. Walter Hershberger.
merman of children of Galesburg. whltlemort and. mother and Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bandbrook spent Thursday al C. Zimmerman'.
nmermah'3. Surte prsnebco of Delton.
and children spent Thanksgiving
Prank Roush and children spent
Mr. and Mrs: Russell Whittemore
with the former's parents. Mr. and Thuraday at Harvsy Hartwell's of h&gt;d as punday guest*, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs Thomas Sandbrook, near Doster.
pew ot HMtlngs and Mr. and Mrs.
Blanchard.
Mr*. H*rry Bidelman and son.
Bridges ol Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Casgo Smith and Mr*. Ida Bidelman of Pontiac aqd
jM Arny at Detroit. WM a we«k
daughter of Lansing called on Mr. Mr*. Ho*s Bidelman of Hastings end guest of hb family here.’
and Mrs. Bert Smith-Thursday.
spent Friday at Frank Roush's.
,
&lt;w
,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Kantner and
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Stenger of |
BOH?CS CENTEJL
children spent Thanksgiving day Kabmasoo spent Bunday at Joe d®- 3 Letter.
with Rew. and Mrs. Moxon at Mid­ Stenger's.
| John Nash and family.'Mr*. Jendleville.
Mrs. Frank Rou*h and chUdrea ^le Flynn and Mrs. Amanda Ekvln
Thanksgiving day guests of Cha*. were Sunday callers st Ed Keyes' of of frvtng spent Thanksgiving with
Parlee and family were; Mr. and Bellevue.
mt. and Mrs. Howard McDaniel* of
Mrs. Isaac William* and Doris al
Ml** Dorothy Hartwell of Plain- Mulliken.
Dealing. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wil­ well spent the week end with Mlsss
Alice Nash ot Lovell »pent from
liams and son Charles. .Mr. and Mr* June Roush.
Wednesday until Sunday st home.
Kenneth Williams ana son. Mr and
Mr. and Mrs. Allbon Louden spent, jkfr. and Mrs. Reo Wilcox of FreeMrs. Olive Strole and Mr. and Mr* Sunday al her brother's. Donald Me- port are papering the Roy Deming
Nell Granger and son all of Battle Quarries, of Ea*t Delton.
house. A family from Grand Rapids
Creek. Mr. and Mrs Ellsworth Smith
Mr and Mr* AlU*on Louden spent u expected to tyoys bi soon.
and daughters of Hastings were eve- Friday afternoon in Battle Creek.
| Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas qnd
nlng callers.
Miss Marie Rounds of BaUle Mrs. Adie Benton wsVs ThahksglvMr and Mrs William Strang and Creck b spending this wsek with ing guest* of Mr &gt;nd Mr*.' Merrill
daughter of Jackson. Miss Qteuna1 her grand pa rente. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ratchet.
Blocher and friend of Holland and Stenger.
.
I John Onell had the misfortune to
Mr and Mrs. Jay DItman of De­
«a»
1 fan while buicheilng and fractured
No doubt. If they thought IL
X
*
troit spent Thanksgiving with Mr
- -----—-------------------•
and Mrs- Harrtoon Blocher We are would help, taxpayer* would like lo . -Mr*.
Merrill
Ksrcber and —
ion• —
and
sorry t° report that Mr. Blocher b band thcmselve* together into with­ , Mr* WaU Thoma* were in Lowell
holding
companies.
I
not well.
Wednesday.
' . Mr. sod Mrs. Orrtn Anelker and
I Marbo wore Tlianktglvlag dlnui r
I guests of their sister, Margaret, and
family of Grand Rapid*.
■ Mn. Wan Thomas and Mary

16 PRIZES S
The
Most Popular

Christmas Offer
We Ever Made
Its our Christmas treat, folks?—this great 4-star Carnival of Bargains.

Right

yoa ve been wanting. Yovr* for a rm all payment — then nothing to pay until
April
and long, eary economy termd Liberal trada-in allowances on old

equipment. This wonderful bargain ends December 24th.

Act now!

At the

Rexall Boys'

and

Girls’ Contest

EIGHT PRIZES FOR BOYS - EIGHT PRIZES FOR GIRLS-AWARDED TO
GIRLS AND TO BOYS SECURING LARGEST NUMBER OF VOTES IN
THE REXALL BOYS' AND GIRLS' CONTEST.
i

■ ■

-

ONE VOTE MAY BE CAST FOR EVERY PENNY SPENT IN OUR STORE.
REGISTER YOUR BOY OR GIRL AND HELP THEM WIN A NICE GIFT
CHRISTMAS EVE.

Nash and Alice and Marte to Grand
Rapid* Friday
Wayne Benton and Merrill Karth-

urday.
Mrs. John Simpson and Mr*. Mil­
ton WlcU aero Hailing* shoppers
Salttrday.
Frank Barnhart and dark Boulard came home Thursday from the
Nash. also enjoying

hunting

and

Roy McNaughton and family of
Mulliken and lAVerne Huntington
and family ol Eaton Rapid* enjoyed
Thanksgiving with Ralph Hunting­
ton and family-

The children, grandchildren end
great-grandcidldrcn of Mr. and
Mrs. A&gt;g, Harding, numbering 35
gathered at their home for Thanks­
giving dinner. ' .
Mr. nnd Mm. Harvey Cbceaeman
entertained on Thanksgiving day.
Mr. and Mr*. Bam Buxton of Ban-

and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Drag and chll-

Frigidaire
ElecUW RrfrUeration with all its sating*

Gas Range
Enjoy

Gm Cwking—all the perfection of

yo*r» al bargain Irena AND A SPECIAL
TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD
EQUIPMENT. Term* op u

. a* part payment. Easy monthly term* after

3 Years

lOc a Day

Electric Washer
Urered for small down payment—no more

Gas Water Heater
in wasteful oik equipment on our April pay

See These—For Gifts or for Yourself
Beautiful New Lamps - Table, Bridge And
Glass Coffee Maker*. 1195 up

Models

new irons, only
up
lock*, from |3.jy
wUb jrttU.
W-I1,
„
grids.
toaster*.
&lt;
cookers. FLW up
....
.
r
a.hn,
H.U,itetM
»»* and
. uwu
n,
ixss:

We Have Holiday Gifts for Mother,
Father, Sister and Brother at

Clifford Moody ns tha guest of
hl* grandparent*. Mr. and Mn
Blgpumey. south of Battle Creek
from Thursday, when they- were
guests at the Moody home, until
Btindsy .when Mr. and Mr* Byron

neaday with

25c to *10.00
ALL GIFTS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. SEE THESE GIFTS. COMPARE
OUR PRICES WITH THE CITY STORES. YOU CAN SAVE WITH SAFETY
AT THE REXALL STORE.

and Mr*. Sidney fiUntou were Mr.
and Mr*, ch**. HUhten gad chil­
dren. Mr. and Mrs. Glide Chwwmnn
and fkmll/. and Mr. «Qd Mra. Clif­
ton Harris and daughters.

WtUU OORNUlH.

t Thsuksgivtag v|
O&lt;L»t* Day of Bsr
Matteson ai the Etule Mal1 home In the McOmbef district

CHRISTMAS TRIE LIGHT SETS

49c TO $1.49

EXTRA BULBS

. 5c ANO 10c

Mrs. Gamer

ALL KINDS OF CHRISTMAS WRAPPINGS

5c, 10c, 15c

CHRISTMAS CARDS AND FOLDERS

. 1c TO 25c

dar Creek Cemetery Circle *ni
M yUl.Mh. Ufa Dickerson. Dc1. for
«fHraton meeuag.
* Wing a ta cent gjgt,
**!*«* U *° *• * c*tfl*tmas P*rty.

Percolators, from H»5

H &amp; STEBBINS

VOU U ENJOY OUR DISPLAYS — COME IN NOW

GOODS DELIVERED

POWER CO.

THE REXALL STORE

Preston and

RHONE 2131
raj-i Minne*
i. elena in the Big

�THE HASTINGS B INNER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10. 1938

I

FAMOUS FREEPORT.
MEMORIES OF HASTINGS.
A short time ago I read a short' The following poem was written
i
ditty
by Tommy Miller, aged 12. of Jack(Telling of the beauty of fair Has- son and was received by hb aunt
Ungs city.
&lt; Mrs. F. E Adair. Tommy mode hb
Friday afternoon. Dec. 4. ' the"!,
| It was good too. I thoL and DI give I home here with Mr and Mrs. Adah
members of the Hastings Women's I
you a hint
. for several years and the poem exSSu«K?5u,,ito'w ,h'n 1 “* " p'~" h“
prittf.
B- Elliott. Blate Superintendent of
1in pr
‘a*'
11 wandered far and near

Women's Club

■*

Public instruction of Lansing. Hb she told of the churches where pco- But have nev*'r
» K&gt;wn so
subject was ' Education and some of.
pie can go
dPBr ’
ite phases."
!And wor!,hlp on Sunday, which b A» Ums town where my home I've
Dr. Elliott contrasted the differ-,
rigMt, we al) know.
made.
_ ences in the methods of teaching in She could have told of lhe railroads,
t°*n where my happiness laid
the past and the present. The need •
and factories too.
| It's Just a little bit of a town,
for education for lhe masaes was felt j Where men can ftnd jobs If they
i Wouldn't take an hour to go around
centuries ago for the purpaw* of I
want something to do.
I That doesn't want lo race or rear
reading the Bible, so our first form I . , ,. ,
___ . the Mayor Charles Something In my heart always rings
of education was of a religious na- sne.tow
।
Leonard by name.
। For lhe good little town of Hastings
ture.
'And by the way, this man has ac-i
---------- •—»• *
In years past the measure of edu-1I
quired great fame,
OBITUARY.
cation was based on the knowledge Now thb Is the thing that I want .to
Lawrence Edward Benson, son o'
one accumulated by memorizing the ,I
tell
Anto and Ida Benson, was born Ir
most facte, dates, the alphabet and About little Freeport, the
town Morley. Mecosta county August 3
the multiplication table: Every stu- I,
where I dwell.
! 1897 and departed this life al hk
dent crammed for examinations and
If these were not answered satbfac- It Is not any city. It's just a small 1 home in Hastings Nov 30. 1930 al
the age of _39.years, three months
torily lhe pupil was considered a
town
failure.
And has people in it of great re­ 27 days. Hls boyhood days werq
. spent with hb parents at their
nown.
It b now considered a waste of
form home.
On May 8. 1919
lime to memorize anything tiiat we 'The President lives here, and b not he was united in marriage to
do
not need
-----------it...is necessary w
When
to
afraid lo labor,
-----------MLu Rava Bumford. also of Morley
know about a particular subject the i We see him quite often for he Is a Mr. Benson was a lineman by trade
pupil
study ’up*
pupil can
can easily
easily ’’study
un on
on “it}
it!
near neighbor.
having worked for the Bell TeieMiXmoXJ'
m™° U ,mh
*&lt;» The Mil ipUuer. hat
The school todav Is revolving1
R ileP at 8 tlmc'wa* *h,le at, .lhU work hc met w,lh
around Individual needs. Lessons In 1 don’' know whftt t0 “F to ®ct JL?d *'n’'
Engibh. spelling hbtorv et7 ore
ln rhF”ie
I
? J*'
deftth' He
a
worked out in the &gt;chool room in the I T*11’ u uhat 1 want to trF
“F
loving husband, devoted to his home
Mm or rwoleeu. e«h puWl wmkl.u
bu“" ";-J
. sports. He possessed that personally
it out more or less from hb own
made him a friend to everyone
point of view. Thb makes the school He didn't send It here, nor did he that
who knc.w him. He leaves to mourn
room of today a room of many ac- ,
send il there.
hls loss. hls loyal wife, who minis­
tlvltlrs
7
1
; But he sent it to Chicago to the tered so faithfully to hls needs dur­
Dr. Elliott spoke of the planning
World s Fair.
ing ids sickness, ids father and
commission, organized about two
whom do you think was the mother, two sisters, five brothers.
years ago, made up of rcpre.wntaives And lucky
man?
[ and n wide circle of friends and acfrom tiie State Grange, industrial' They sent Ute premium to Freeport quoin tances.
world. Federated Women's clubs and !
to Dan.
the achoob. working with the State
NORTHEAST IRVING.
—E. H. Adams. Freeport.
Board of Education in solving the
Mr. and Mrs. Rec Wilcox attend­
school problems of the state. Every'
ed the funeral of Allen Lasby of
school is governed by its local board ;
Freeport Sunday afternoon.
but the State Board supervises nil
.1 —
Six -----------hundred .................
musicians
from
Edna Clsler of Lansing s)*ent the
schools Many school p.v
problems
are twelve cities and villages of south- week
U».„a „»e
end with her sister, Mrs. Ar­
settled
by our Mute legislature.
One | westent Michigan will participate in thur Moore.
®---*.
rr,....uu v. wric
Of them entwine
t-r«r- .u•—&gt;- ­ the accoml annunl Messiah Festival
of
coining before
the legis
Mr. and Mrs Albert Prost of Mil­
lature thb year will be in regard to to be given In the men's gymnasium lett
spent
Sunday with Mr and Mrs
tuition for rurnl pupib.
of Western State Teachers College O. R Lightfoot
The time will come when the Stale at Kalamazoo Friday evening. Dec
Mrs. Wert SchitTman. who has
Superintendent of public Instruction 11. under the direction of Harper C been 111, Is Improving.
will be suggested by the Stale Board Maybee. AU of the choral organlxa-1 Mr. and Mrs. c
~ J.
* Moore and
of Education and elected by a vote lions of W S T. C. will take part in family spent Sunday with Mr. and
of the people. Dr. Elliott said
lhe presentation. There are to be Mrs. olenn Moore al NashvlUe
Following hb talk there was an several assisting artiste Those going; Mr. and Mrs Harold Rosenberger
open forum when some interesting from Hastings are Mbs Jean Gier- 3«d Marvin of Freeport were Sunquestions were asked and answered um. Miss E-'ther Doty. MLss Frances day evening guests of Mr and Mrs
■ by the speake
Conklin and Arthur Lower
Arthur Moore

&lt;/&gt;

o
a
t
e

M®

BUY AT U/todi. AND SAV

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i^A Gift of Comfortable Sleep

JNN.ERSPRING I
If U &gt;5

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it and obou I Waidt new olhtr
ol o F rev Home Trial.

OCCASIONAL CHAIR
J3 DOWN,

$10 VaW

55 Monthly
Solid

hardwood

conitmc-

Carrying LMSBS

queue back, velour scat I

«9»5

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carry ing chg.

. T.

Feature for feature it
compare* with mattresaee at $39,301
Lamb's wool and hair
upholstering make il
ideally
comfortable I
209coibl Sox. ticking I

high I Walnut
Ash Hay.

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natched. fig­
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! ■

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89“

Leather-like Texhide fabric
that holds its shape! Double
leather-laced: stitched!

clutively by MONTGOMBi
WARD—come in models I
boys and g’-d». $18-95 to

MASltR
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50c
14 DO*N

THIS xWEEK ONLY!

* Crucible
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• Hold* a
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PASTRY SET
10 Pjaces

Streamlined Tram Sets

Bread board, bowl. ■ &lt;tato
masher, food chopper, and
dishes are included.

lt«4 quanutrl

2 Pc. Mohair

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should
be the price!
Allover uphol­
stered in 100%
Angora mohair!
Extra large —
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4-INCH
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A fine bench
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BENCH
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I4
REPEATING RIFLE ’
6““
EXTENSION (ORD ’
29”
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98”
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89
SALE Of SKATES ,

Usually *1.59 at Ward'll Have Dread­
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famous Western Field Tubular
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Regularly 35c. 12' all-rubbe?
washable cord. 3-way outlet.
press. Weighs
32 lbs.

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1 eloci ped on

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480

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metal washer is 8%" high.
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। *5*00 Ho. &lt;3e
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Rod and
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118.124 S. JEFFERSON

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|

418 - 124 SOUTH JEFFERSON

HASTINGS

�Tire RAmxas banner, thctwbat, picwoin tt.me
PLEASANT VALLEY.
cently when several buildings and
Mr and Mrs. Emery Benedict and their contents were destroyed by
Joanne of Ionia spent Sunday with fire.
Mrs. Edith Stckoe who has been
H. W. Geiger and family.
visiting relatives In St. Louis. Mis­
T~
' "
“
hook have come to live with'their souri the pas’, three weciu return­
,»r.
&amp; outer called dluIh&gt;.r Mo Floyd N«, Mid ed home last week.
Mr ragett or jann tOtealH
.1 ....
at
the n,.h
High school ....
last week ...d
and (imUj ,or lheWnttr
Mrs. O. L. Ftnkbelncr was in
gave instructions on the mounting
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hamblin Wayland Friday and due to the
of pictures for the Fortnight An­ and baby of Cedar Springs spent slippery
roads struck a man riding
nual.
.
over Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. a bicycle, fatally Injuring him. No
' Chas. Hamblin. They called at the blame whatever is attached to Mrs.
The Outdoor club al its meeting Prank Pnend hotne Bufiday. Mrs. Plnkbelner.
•
Monday agreed to sponsor the wild- Hamblin was
formerly Geneva
Andrew Wlerenga of Grand Rap­
life photographic contest which Is. Friend,
ids street waa taken to a Grand
being promoted by the Federated I Those attending Extension Club Rapids hospital recently.
Garden Clubs of Michigan and the ! at Mrs. Man' AUerding'a and
The Pythian Sisters entertained
department of conservation. They Sophta Hickey’s were Mrs. Mabie
win draw up plans and present cool Maude Scott. Cassie Stater, tho men at a pot luck supper Mon­
•
them to the school and make ar- Harriet and Myrtle Mote and Myrtle day evening.
Clarence Thompson who wm takrangementa for judges, etc.
Taylor.
Members of the club have also deFrances Scott of Grand Rapids
nock
hospital
Monday
for
an
op-;
elded upon a noxious animal cam- spent the week end with her par- c ration.
paign to begin December 15 and ents. Mr and Mrs. Elmer Scott,
Mr and Mrs. Henry Fry and son
Mr
continue till January I Tlte club, ’
*• and Mrs. J F. Brake spenthas been divided into two teams Saturday afternoon with Mt and Oitlen of Middleville returned Fri­
from their two weeks’ visit with
which will have a contest to see Mrs Don 8|owlns and family of day
friends and relatives at Sayre. Okla.,
Boston
which one can kill the more precis- South —
----lory birds and animals during the
congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. also attending the funeral of her
campaign.
--------------Richard ---------Heaven, —
who
were recently mother, Mrs. s. C. Goner. of that
। married They were married al Ch J place.
Student Association tickets are
_ । Ionia M. E parsonage by Rev. M.
now on sale at lhe High school.' W. Duffy and left immediately for
Henry Burden of Troy. New York.
' These tickets cover the remainder a honeymoon trip to Lansing. De­
1 of the basket ball season and spring troit and Chicago. They will reside In 1835 made the first horseshoes by
on the Seymour Heaven farm.
I sports and also Include debating.
machine.

-------------------------- ----------------------- j

Turret Tops in Unending Stream
As New Plant Starts Operations

Hastings High School
Activities

MIDDLEVILLE.
' The English department with
Vcm Congdon, for some years an
. Miss Robson as chairman will have
charge of the Christmas assembly employee of the hardware company
of
Mertltiold
Al Fullmer, who later
lo be presented Dec. 33.--- -----------moved to Bloomingdale and was
The Girls’ Sports club held their elected president of lhe county and
December meeting In the gymnas­ village, suffered a severe loss return Monday. Ping pong and basket
DRAWN AND FORMED under 5.200 tons pressure, solid sterl turret ball demonstrations were given with
.
B fee the new "untsteel" Fisher bodies Imus In an unending stresm I Miss' Helen Merson In charge.
The first hotne game of the bas­
TTj.
p.oaiooo h«.a.
ket ball. season will be heldK&gt;MJn
-this
daylight atrwetura containing soma 400,000 square f«et of floor apace, la pr|dHy witjj charlotte.
naw producing 1,500 completa aeta of body itamplnga dally for ship...
mast to aaatmbly plants alsewhere and It employing 2,100 men.
f- Try-ouu for the Dramatics clut
, were held Monday morning. Mis.:
Rose
DeFoe -addressed
members,FREEPORT.
I much surprised but enjoyed a pleas------- --------------------- - the
----------------“Mr and Mrs F C Tabberer en- ant evening of games, contests and
*ereral poems and interpreta-

________ _

WARDS HISTORY!

11-TUBE Airline
IJniied
ffuautltyl

Grant Uninterested fn Polhics
General Grant, before becoming
President, had never taken an ae&gt;
tive Interest in politics and had vot­
ed for a Presidential candidate only
once.—Gas Logic.

/| Q95
■■i ■ ■ M
rvwa
DOWN

Hurry!

• A lupar-dynarak 12'spwakar* Bip40*hande
rubbad cabinet. • World range/ all 3 wave
band* I • Mwterl tubas plus tuning aya I • Naw
•dgw-llghted glass dial. • ExtraJin* shoH-wava
tvnar. • Adjustable high fidelity. • Colored
FLASH SIGNALS" for tone, volume, wave band.

a* •

W-

WHY IS

STUDEBAKER

the n.
U. B
B. aundw
Sunday reboot
their; fifte.
fee
MBool at
« feelr
««&gt;«■

1 n, numb„s
„„
home last
Wednesday evening.' Harold Rosenberger was In Grand , service to be presented by the
Music and games furnished a pleas-. Rapids on business last Friday
Teachers' Club Dec 20 have been
aat evenings pastime and a de*«» ...
selected and are m rehearsal. The
Hdous lunch was served to f|flcen,
DELTON.
। men of the club will sing "We Three
guest*. The gathering turned out to
M-a
Whittemore, who Is at Kings of Orient Are ' and "God Res'.
be a surprise shower for Mr. and prfAcnl staying at the home of her Ye Merry Gentlemen” as written
Mrs Floyd £ Burkey who were re- loa aud wlfe Mr
Wi;iUm for male voices alone. There will be
married nnd^ they were ^he Whittemore, cas! of Delton, will cel- solos and instrumental numbers b;
recipler.u of many lovely »•
gifts.
~
•• Mr. cbjntc jler ninetieth birthday on
and Mrs. Lewis Overholt were also Sunday, December 13. Mrs Whitte­ the orchestra under the direction of
presented with a nice gift from the more's maiden nnmr was Amy Brin- Mr. Htne. and a men's quartet com­
posed »of Mr. Garner. Mr. Hine. Mr.
church.
nlnrioo). She was bom in Jackson Lower and Mr vanBuskk-k
Dr. H. C. Parkham and Mis. Edith county in 1846 A fnmllv gathering
Godfrey had a1- their guest last and birthday dinner will be the feaMr*. Hat'.e Parker of Lowell. Hire of the occasion next Sunday
at lhe William Whittemore home.
Mr:. Inis Bennett of Middleville
and Mrs. E. J. Pratt of Hosting*
made calls in Dalton Tuesday.
• scheduled for this week Friday ha.cludtn; jours by th-- choir nnd i»n
Mr. and Mrs I. N. Bnsit were teen changed tn next week, al­
sddres-. by Rev L I. Dewey, dis­
guests of the tetter's brother. though no definite date has b-.t.i
trict superintendent
] Charles Gaskill, in Hastings ou Sat■ There will b» a practice debate
‘ urdny.
Tuesday evening at Mcnnonlte |
and Mrs. Ludnlph £&gt;1l&gt;brrs*n 'this week and n tournament a.
church with Rev. shelter nnd Rev.J arcMr.
moving to Nealy. We regret ios­ Hope collegu Saturday. Hastings wiU
Yoder as teachers.
send an affirmative team composed
Ing three people from our vlltegc.
Freeport people are being offered
Church services will be held nt 11 'Of
"HRoliert
'olrti,’ Henney. Emerson Cairn.-'
a real treat next Sunday evening
"«E
when the alerting Male Trio will at 10 o'clock A. M- from now on.
I Phyllis Hinman. Marian Hewitt on
give an evening of sacred mu.de
Mrs. Helen Pennock spent Satur­
nt the U. B. church. The program day night and Sunday with herI' one and Russell Engle. Wayne Ftnkand Lawrence Moore on the
mother. Mrs. Frank Davis. at Gales­ I belncr
other..
feature of their Thank offering burg.
service.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrtataan and I Monday night after school two
Mr. and Mrs. H- M. Boughner vls- Harry I were in Battle Creek Tuesa­ I practice debates with Lakeview
day arid Mrs. Leda Harrington and’ I Battle creek, were held and a tenW. R- SchlCman near Jones school Mrs. Bertha Adams were shoppers j UtiveXdate made with Lansing
Eastern to debate at Charlotte
a^ffmon lx .llahtb' there
uirir Wl
.varuaj.
on o
Saturday.
improved from her recent serious | Mr arfd Rrrs T castc]cjn have, Wednesday.
fltoesx.
Sehlflnutn remains , ra0Vfd lnU,
m~.« Mr.
xrr
Shiftman
new house.
DOWLING.
about the same
____
J. Mr and Mrs Harry F. Wortman
Dowling is gay with festivities this '
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Bunker of ' were in Grand Rapids Wednesday
week and everyone is busy with
.C?."S "
“* c.,n J"!' I Mrs “
«&gt; &gt;«&lt;»»
Leon
Leonard u.a
and &lt;uus"daugh- preparations. An oyster dinner will
hay afternoon, enroute to their rers Barbara and Rettv and Marv
__
be served on Thursday by the Com-

ml®:“

~

&gt;f

which the the Ladles’ Aid Society on Psiday.

UiffT"

tn s

“■!

mrnlsrt

•« MrI

Low

Kenneth, of Clalmtore. Ctata. were, spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs
rhe m.M,.
K,r. v™. ......... wConUln o( Jc,lu!stown
’

St1 '^s“nrM.‘ D“"’____

.^'^1 ?? S',^! « 3 EE™ °™,rr
UAb^ut thirtv tampVTHnrH-Vr^t« Iday af‘«noo»- December 18
I Mr and Mr., Fred Nelson are
Ln S
b,
G"gg of the M 8 C , moving to NoshviUe this week, as
W
rh,^h at EB1,‘
WIU give his second!they have sold their home to Mr.
basement Last Friday af*7rJ™Ta lPC'',rc
‘hr Home' and Mrs Keith Norton, who expect I
Tueidas afternoon. Dec is. at | to take potion soon
demembration wa^’ crtovS? ‘
* 30 o*lo«k tn the schoolhouse. Thu ' Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Swift w.H
Mr, Flta rare rJbit, tn
itecturv will be illustrated witn i-lldcsffnlertatn the Dorcas Society of
th” week tofprnd thT.lnter with
V&gt;? ■tntCrr6t-1Vc
is welcome to atlcrid. The ermber 10. for an all day meeting,
her son. piwis. and family of near •Tvone
men arc especially invited.
I TIcotrc Skidmore accidently shot
Eaton Rapids
Dr. Prosper G Bernard today i himself in the hand causing a painBurma oTKatan^^0vtut*o
Ianrujunced'thc
•’—opening
nine of'his~new
of his new ful flesh wound
wound.
SSI?.
Iw-'PIUI «nd “link on thMiss Sylvia Whitmore of Battle
Creek spent the week end at home, j
SSSIL™
i
D'1'on
FTOUBTU*. In
Mrs. Sarah
troth visited rela- '
«n?UtaS »»
raionktwn ,mee fi-ntomoor. Ita tires tn Middleville the tatter part
of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Norton spent
brother Ed. Cool and family ■ &gt;t I £ccclVB-aS1 ‘IP'S
cases The
Grand Rapids last Tur.vtay and !hn8plt,,;’ *hwh is of fireproof con- Thanksgiving in Marshall the guc»U
of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Norton.
Mrs Dale Conklin, who has been
from his serious illness
1
A3* ~
’ ‘f'clu‘*,n« a
111 has Improved so that t-he was
nn* rpiw-c tor me tn-patlent*. able to return to her home.
Sunday guests of h^r j«rents. Mr ! A rrgt-terrd nun*' will u:,ist Dr
Ond Mra. J. E. Babbtu Mr. and Mr; I! Bernard in hL, work.
Babbitt are both in poor health al
podunk.
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rhScb’sS

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118-124 JEFFERSON. SOUTH
\A7HAT ii behind Studebaker's
’ ’ Sensational Climb’ Stude­
baker knew that only one thing could
focus on The Dictator and The Presi­
dent the attention and patronage of
motorists. That one thing wai— and is

HASTINGS

PHONE 2691

SOLVING
model, the public has found these two
outstanding bonus features: 1. Smart,

Amatinf fasoline economy. And all
this has been offered at prices x. low t hat

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WIlVUi
imilWinilL CO
Wo
HASTINGS

PHONE 2101

Your Cows Will Show
Nice ProJit
If Fed a

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a

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Ton

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&gt;t luck dinner will

11 .S -Wedd *nd
Mrs Mary
Miry Laubaugh
Loubaueh has
ha been on
Mrs.
laughters. Jean and Patsy, were tlv
»lck list the post week.
Grand Rapid-, visitors last ThtrrsMr. and Mrs Theron Cain and
Rachel attended a birihrtav party tn
Mr and Mrs Floyd e Burkey Grand Rapid*.Bunday, the (ccaslon
wtps invited.to the home of Mr. and
Mu.. Cato'i brother. WUltam
Mrs. Lewi* overhalt lai-c Friday cvc- Utborne
’s sixtieth birthday.
ning for a men quiet evening Hwy
Mr. and Mrs Amll Bauchman
awptrei the Invitation but upon spent
Sunday tn Ora nd "
*
their arrival found a number of
Mrs. Marie Smith enu
others there ready,
Showerto
’ give Uwm a r&gt; D. D.J at her home la*t Thurt»«r«Uy.
,PHOM 22^.

8-Tub&lt;. AC I 13-Tube AC
53»S

On Any Ward Radio

J

££ SCh”d"

Frt«».1

i &gt;*****■*■ ■-**■•

••’««*«« “nrt ,I u.u
Mr and
Williams
and vwmj
ously- in
ill the
with a
bad
---- . Mrs
.. Glenn
...........
........ ........
nw ptut
pn-.i week
»iTi wnn
a oral
■&lt; 1
. children of the
'
the Krlioac
Kellogg Farm were aitork
attack «r
of »..«««■
quinsy
There was an unusually tarae at­
Miss Elizabeth Smith was tho
tendance at the w M- A meeting at • cuesta of Mr. and Mrs. Roger WilH*™
’
S
J*'
1
1
'
1&gt;
y
KU&lt;fc
t
list
week
of
her
stater.
Mrs.
the home of Mrs Chas Overholt
The
Delton
Community
chib
-.
ill
Sadie
Clemons
of
Battle
Creek
She
last week Thursday The chicken
dinner at noon was also well pa­ meet on Monday night. December I abo visited her brother. Joy Smith.
14. A cooperative supper will be and family while there.
I
tronized.
.
served by Mr and Mrs. Gordoni Mr. and Mrs. Otis Ftahcr and'
Mcorhu, and Mr nnd Mr-. Roy Me- Mrs Julia Skillman of Cormxcck
meeting
I.Fell.’-mg dinner tlwre will were dinner guests Sunday of Mr 1
home o!
b- a Intainer, meeting and then a and Mr*. Orlle Ftaher
’
progra-.
program ta» charge of Mr. nnd Mrs i Mrs. Either Erne ^nd chudren.
Llewellyn Erb. one feature of which who have been rating for several
will be moving picture.-, shown by weeks at the home of her parents
low.c and Rcbekalts a: the local hall C J Barnum of views Hut he took 1 Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Oswald left for
on Iils travels through the New Saginaw Thuraday where Mr. EnuMonday evening
' l, employed.
A0D0UDC««ncnt ha.-, been made by | utcland stater.

erentT

TO THE FRONT?

TOYS OF ALL KINDS FOR THE CHILDREN
$ki« — Skatwa — V«ldclpc4«s — Bicycles for Bays and Girf«.

FARM BUREAU

SERVICES Inc

------ nr'REED'S *AlDRUG
”*“STORE
N s’,5TtM
. '

HASTINGS,

HASTINGS

PHONS 2118

G. E. Goodyear Hardware
142 East State

HASTINGS

Phone 2331

�Ttt MAfftwoa

wm, phiMDAT, wctam m, mm

- i Mr. and Mr* Arthur Todd are on
MILO.
The H. L. Club was called jo or- th»
&gt;kt. Carl Nelthamer of
der by the pres!dent. Mrs. Bertha Woodland is-working at the elevato.
ZLL.-.r
_
____
tn
Ur
Tndrt
’
s
nl.r.
in
Mr
Todd's place and Miss M.,Maty
Prouty, Dec. 3 at her home in Mid­
The Beit hieai from the Best Farm Papers
land Park with Mrs. Lulu Bnlffin as- Allerdlng Is aAslsllng at the home.
Some papering is being done this
(btant boetess. Twenty-one mem­
y WILLARD BOLTE
bers and two guest* were pre*ent. week at the church by Henry Oolr
Does it pay to milk three Ume* ■ ment Btatton al Beltsville. Marytend
Roll call waa answered by "inter­ and son.
—and the either has to have hay
esting facte about Christmas" and
The following officers were elected
as three herds In tho cedar Falls i available to replace the mining 100
each drawing from the Christmas at o
S.. o
8.. last Sunday; SupC.. Arthur
(IOWA) cow Testing Association can pounds Of grass at she lose* flesh
baakat. Mrs Newkirk* paper on Rjchardaon;
Asst.
—*-—•—
—Bupt
Bupt.,. n=7d
Floyd
rra wanted to and drops in production. The lots
Christina* was read by Mrs. Me-1 clum; Secretary, Martan Haynes;
they milked
find out exactly—«o t-~,
—,—r of milt-flow that rrt often Blgm* on
Clary and Mrs. Whldby's paper AMt. aec, Anna Mae Dunnigan,
wast
of
Shultz.
x-- than: flies and hot weather 1* usually the
twice a day for one month and
•The Development of the EngILh, Treasurer, Harve woodman; PtanQuite often you can get a better bargain in a uwd car
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bush of Bat­ Blble" was read by Mr*. Kx-rtead. ut. Mrs Kendall coat*; Asst. Ptenmilked three times a day for a• rwuit
rwult of partial
parti*! starvation,
starvation. tf
If p*«pt*month. During the second month I tore and plenty ot supplemental hay tle Creek spent Sunday with her Mr*. Ptltenglll a* Sant* Claus dis- 1Jt. Mrs. Floyd Kimble; ChorUter.
than in a new one, because the original owner has taken
irftuted ,U.
the Christmas -&lt;n.
gifts. SeveralI | Rfrf)fr. Luse. AMl chorister. Paul
the cow* in those three herds aver-! fall to keep up.production. Nebras- father, W. O. Tobias.
aged 315 pound* more milk per cow j ka Farmer recommends feeding 2-5
Mrs. Allen Bishop and sons of Christmas carols were sung and tho Woodman.
the first year's depreciation which is about one-third the
than they did during the month pound of grain for each pound of poud comers vtelted Mrs. C. NI Christmas spirit seemed to abound.
The Mth anniversary of the L. A.
sale price of a new car.
when they were milked twice daily । nrtlt over 30 per day from Hotatetn* Tobias last Wednesday.
The hostesses served a delicious din­
The objection to very heavy feeding i —and 3-6 pound of grain for each
ner
at
1
o'clock.
The
next
meeting
nlng at the .cutch. A pot luck com­
A number from thl* community
Therefore you can drive such a car a year or two an&lt;
and milking three times dally U [ potind of milk over 20 for Jkraey*.
attended the telephone meeting at will be Family Day at • Kellogg munity supper will be served at fl;30
found in the fact that the cow* are,
-----------All friends of the Aid and church
I Donald Haynes' Saturday. After a school. Dec. 30
take a small depreciation..We have some in 1934,
liable to break down at an earlier ■ The Poultry Tribune experimental bountiful dinner they had their
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Germain vis­ in past or present time are cordially
age.—Wisconsin Agriculturist.
! farm ha* a demand for eggs with election of officers and a good old- । ited the former's father at Allegan. Invited to attend. A good program Is
and 1936 Ford V-8 Tudors and Fordors.
----------: pale yoik»—«nd where such a de- fashioned visit. They will meet; Sunday,
being planned by Mrs. P. C. Wing.
Every pullet should be treated for mand exists buyer* will usually pay with Mr. and Mr*. Harold Slocum J Arthur Skidmore moved onto Ell Mrs. Wamle Kelsey and Mrs. Wm
Bring in your 1929, 1930 or 1931 ANY MAKE, and w«
warms with one of the standard * —
premium.
-— »In —
order
•— »to keep •*-the
Bayne
which
will
begin
as
soon
as
Hall's farm near Shultz last week.
will make you a very liberal allowante toward one of
after the supper.
worm capsule* before she begins to &gt;Du pal* the; have found it necesMr. and Mrs. Mell Hendershott
Mrs. Jennie chase was called to possible
Mr.
and
Mrs
Christy
and
family
lay—m any worm remedy is slmoit
of Kalamazoo spent Sunday with Kalamazoo last Saturday by lhe
these cars.
certain to greatly reduce egg pro­ lure until 4 o'clock in the afternoon lhetr parents. Mr. and Mra. C. N- Illness of her daughter, Mrs. Cecile of Hastings have moved Into the
Smith house and Mr. and Mrs. Grif­
duction if It Is delayed until the
Tobte*.
Parmatler.
fin have moved into the house va­
pullet* are laying. For best reaalts gra*s or legumes at all
Mrs.
Richard
Smith
and
son
Bernice Flower Is a patient in cated by Claude Loomis.
the pullet* should be treated as soon
Clark, and her daughter. Mrs. Earl BorgcM hospital.
as they are moved to laying quarters
SPECIAL - 1936 Ford V-8 Delux. Tudor $£■ A*OO
H you plan to seed alfalfa this
and son of Allegan, and
Mr. and Mrs. A. B Lowell and
QUIMBY.
—giving them a light grain feed In fall, on tend where it has never Thompson
Touring. Cost new $730.00. A bargain at “T’yw----tha evening and no feed or water grown before, ft 1* none too early to another daughter. Mrs. Ranta of Mrs. Loyal Lowell, and little son
lhe following morning, al which have the soil tested for acidity. For Martin spent Bunday with the of Hastings were callers last Wed­ and Mrs. By Edmonds were Battle
time they are dosed. Do not feed or land that is not to? acid the prompt i formers sister, Mrs. Nellie Rhine. nesday at lhe home of Mr. and Mrs. Creek visitors Wednesday.
Lyle Beadle
were
The second meeting of the Com­
water several hours after dosing. At application of time may awoeten It! Mr. and Mrs. -y/------ — Merle Bradfield
Mrs. N. H. Barber was accompan­ munity club will be held at the
tha Ume the pullet* are handted for rufflelently—bqt for very acid land; ,n Battle Creek Thursday after ied to Hastings last Saturday by church Dec. IS. Supper will be served
----------- . ------------------------- r— - JI would te advisable to make a i noon on business
apply a pinch of sodium fluoride 1 heavy application ot lime And delay! Mrs. Sarah Phillips, Mr*. Elmer Miss Dora Johnson and Lucy Nor- at 7:30 followed by a program of
which music will be lhe main fea­
powder al the vent, under each wing the seeding uutfl next spring to per-1 Bu*h and Mr*. C. N. Tobla* tpent
Mr. and Mrs. E. Quick and neph­ ture. Everyone is urged to come.
j the neck
----- ,---------------.. clean mil lhe Ume to x_
----- ..
— 1 -^ssday
and—in
feathers—to
do its work
thorTucsdas afternoon with Mr*. An­
ew Le® were Saturday evening visi­
Mrs. Cole, our teacher, Is co-opcr­
out the body lice. The laying houses oughly^-Pralrte Farmer.
I na
a. W.l.
Wlllitl* In south Hastings.
tors of lhe former's sister, Mrs.____
ating with the Sunday school In preshould be thoroughly cleaned and’
--------—
,
i Mr. and Mra. Cha*, oaskill en-)! Jennie Lyons. Leo remained Uli paring for a Chrlslniaa tree and
disinfected—and the roosts painted
An acre df com ip the silo I* urtalncd her brother and sister I
।
Mqpday
morning.
«Mrth
rwn
nf
--------------------------1
,
_
—
____
__
__
.
.
with crank cate oil—to get rid ol worth two acre* of chopped fodder— from near Nashville Sunday,
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Quick of
Miss Evelyn Lowell and friend of
mites—before the
lhe pullets
nulleto are moved and an sere
acre of chopped
ehotroed fodder is'
ur and
.nd Mrs.
u,. Will
uztii Moore and
te
Mr.
in.—Breeder's Gazette.
I worth several acre* of whole fodder., daughter spent Bunday with her I Kalamazoo visited their parents Battle Creek visited at A. D. Low­
ell’s Bunday and attended church In
This being the ease, a number of bfottier and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Sunday.
W. C. Schulte, went to Clil- , Quimby.
\
For eight years lhe Colorado Bub- Missouri tanners are planning to ^MrT'vida tphllilnsHa&lt;^,nHaittntts 1J caMrs.
*° 11115
cago
this Montw&gt;
Monday' morning
morning to spend 1 Mrs. Manley Sherriian. Mrs. Shcr.BLallon at Austin has been growing chop fodder and store It In snow •Jmfiat^d^ nlch- amd^unda^| M
’vend days wlth reIallvcs
nil Mrs
, man
man “
and
Mrs. Grqce
Gr^te cnanee
Chaffee w&lt;
were
the Oorham pear experimentally.! fencing out in the field where It 1*
PhHJ
There w111 ** n0 Odles' Aid meet- Battle Creek visitors Thursday.
This New York cross from Bartlett be fed. Quite a few subscribers of IrtTh1 Mrl^nrty
« this month as was previously
previously., Visitors ai
Ing
al Uw
the Chaffee home St
Sun­
stock has now been approved for; Missouri Ruraltst hare been storing It n KMlM Rusts' msEEH^we Fn‘ ' ln
arranged
day were Mr. and Mrs. Dave Wacommercial planting. Of particular i chopped hay tn the field In this way
PRAIRIEVILLE.
&gt;(
------- rOATM GROW-------- ! ter*. Mr. and Mrs. Manley Sherman
importance 1* the fact thal in an1 —and they believe that the sam-*
THI SAF»TY of steel from peg
orchard where fire blight has killed plan will work equally well with ^Ir'f,nra^rtrR«mrt^w«r'in rowjj1 The 8 3 i’uP|L' ftrc planning on and Mrs. Ila Norris, all of Hastings.
Miss Myrtle Willson of Barryville
most of lhe Bartlett and Whiter (chopped fodder nnd save a great n^tt^iaT ThevPl^J7t
Chrlitmas exercises to be held SunBartlett tree* in adjoining rows, the amount ot work In feeding.
Saturday. They expect to move. .
eventrur Dec 20. Mr*. E. G visited Donna McKeown over SunOorham row had only one twig
n«r fh^lXh°ld ff°°dS *hCre
t1''' I SnlKh ftnd
Warren Coolbaugh
Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Riteman and
blighted. The fruit is similar tn size I Burdltt Kraft 6f MeLean pounty,
Mr iJd Mrs John Brigham of [ are lhe
the eommlttra
committee in
tn charge of Janette visited friends tn Level Park
and shape to the Bartlett, but It Is Illinois, has worked out a thorough­
Sunday.
ready to pick about ten days earlier ly practical plan for marketing three Decatur called on Fred J. Hughes program.
The Extension class will meet
in spite of the fact thal the two va- litters of pigs a rear—and thl* is and Mr. and Mrs. Cassius Hughee with Mrs. Wayne Offley Dec. Ifl.
|
BANNER WAICT ADV8. PAYrietiea bloom at the same time.
how he does It: First he starts With Saturday.
American Fruit Grower.
■ ?&lt;iay gilt* and breeds them to far­
Lloyd Lindsey made a business
----------- row the following May. He breeds
trip to Ann Arbor Saturday.
For every 100 turkey poults that these fame sow* again In October
Charles Bishop zt Kalamazoo
---------were hatched by commercial batch- to farrow in February. He breed* wifi make hls home with
' the Dojcries in 103S. the same hatcherios I them again about April 1st to farrow ter family tilts winter.
produced 163 poults tn the same j in August—and after the third litter
Mesdame;
Florence
HUghes.
months in 1030—according to a re- the sowr. are finished to go to market, Maggie Lehman. Belle Mu Ben.
port In Turkey World. The 190. the middle of November. Hls neigh- J Ethel Btebben and Lucy Norris at­
hatcheries reporting hatched nearly hors like the plan to well that It t*j tended the O- E 6. installation at
2.100.000 poults in the first five spreading rapidly. One advantage Hickory Comers Thursday night.
months of 1938— and as tong as feed I claimed is that no sow 1* held more ‘ Mrs. Hughe* lhe outgoing Worthy
and market price* will permit the' than 30 months, hence they do not Matron was presented a gold Pas:
successful grower to clear a dollar 1 &lt;ietertorate with age. Another Is Matrons' pin and her officers gave
or more over the coat of poult* and . found tn four marketing periods her a fine gift.
feed, this writer predict* that the each year—February pigs tn August
Mrs. Merritt Wood went to Bed- I
turkey business will continue Lo ex-'
September, August pig* tn April ford Wednesday to attend. Mr. and
pand with startling rapidity.
‘
I or vtrf.' ttoy ptgs tn Deccmbec or MT*. Will E- Dougla*' golden wed-1
----------| January', and sows in November. ding. Mrs. wood was at the wed-!
Hie gras* capacity of a large cow Each year he select* 20 of the best ding fifty years ago. Three others. I
—like the Holstein—li about 150 May gllta to maintain hl* breeding Mrs. Nonna' Douglas Whitcomb of1
pounds per day. That amount of [ herd—and each fall 20 sow* go to I Wayland, Mr*, charlee Walton of!
pasture grass will enable such a cow market. He follows the McLean Bryant, ohto and Frank Ooykento maintain herself and produce I county system of awtne tan!tation— dall of Lake Odessa were also pres-1
about 36 pounds of milk containing! finds thal 40 acres of legume pas- ent at both weddings
Phone 2515
Frank Sage
Hastings
1.04 pounds of butterfat, without los- Lure Is sufficient to provide pasture—
Ttie Trip!* Link club will meet
ing weight. But when pasture gets | and handles his rotation so that with Mrs. Clinton Castle. Friday.!
scanty the same cow was only able hog* occupy tha same pasture only December 11. AU day meeting. Co­
to graze about 50 pounds of forage— I once in four ytan.—Capperts Farm­ operative dinner. Will pack a
In tests al lhe Government Expert-1 er.
\
Christmas box to send to the I. O
O. F. home at Jackson.
Mrs. Ethel Honeywell
spent
BRAKI
HIGHBANK.
LITTLE RED BRICK.
Thursday and Friday at Battle
Dec 3 Letter.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammond Creek the guest of her son*-in-law*
PIDAL
Mrs. Susan Hawbhtz returned were Friday dinner guests of Mr. I anti daughters, Mr. and Mrs. PhlBp
MIS5URK
home Saturday after visiting rela­ and Mr*. Harley Durkee of Way- . O
U’Toole
I UVIC Iand MT and Mrs. Willis
tives in Nashville for two weeks.
, land.
.
Babcock.
ISES
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Marshall of
Floyd Craig and Phyllis Edger atMr. k
and Mrs. Rankin Hyde,
Qualllrap district were
।guests tended a Christmas dinner and George Hyde and Mrs Blias Doster
LESS CBItEin
Annin. V*1irvrf were
fn in
Irnlnmn-nz,
Thursday afternoon at Mr. and mrtv
party at
at lb.
the 'THnt-n
Thonteppto-Kellogg
Kalamazoo. Saturday.
Mrs. Laurel Marshall's.
| school at Middleville Tuesday.
Mrs. Bessie Hughes.' Charles. Jr.,
Mr. and Mr.t Usllr Adams and , ,Mr.
tu. aua
and mm.
Mrs. Clarchce uavw
Davis ui
of and Rankin Hughes. Mrs. Belle
Mrs. Sarah Ostrolh attended the Battle Creek were ylslloc* al Wht. Mullen, jane Mullen and Mr. and
Eckart reunion Thanksgiving day , Claggett's Sunday.
Mrs. M. W. Hughes were Bunday
al Mr. and Mrs Ben Snyders all The 4-H club girls met at Mrs. dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
As Hille us
Woodland Mrs. O-itroth went home Claggett s Friday evening.
Leon Doster and Elizabeth of Delwith her sister. Mrs. Andrew Pink- I Mr. and Mr*. Warren Bolton and
beiner at Middleville for Friday and family spent Sunday at Lewte
DUBFEE.
Saturday.
■ elum'a near Lake Odaaao.
Mrs. George Hoffman and daugh-1 Mr. and Mr*. Charted Woodruff
William Huffman went to Pennock
ter. Velma, of Jackson went to Chi- ! called on Elmer Beamer In Bliss-| hospital at Hastings Thursday where
he underwent an operation Friday
cago Friday to visit Merle Hoffman | field Friday.
and Mrs. Ethel cavennugh. They I Ttie children enjoyed a happy morning. He is gening along nicely.
A DAY I
The East Baltimore Aid Society
mum rconotny.
also attended tlic International birthday party Friday afternoon at
Dependability and soft pedal
Stock Show.
1 the sehoolhouse. Mrs. Orville Tut- will be entertained al the home of
huys a leontird
NEW LOW RRICES — NtW O*IRATIN«
Mr. and Mr.. Laurel Marshall and tie was the hostess for her daugh- Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ickes Wednes­
ECONOMY —Tbe loweU priced Feed in
dnughters spent Bunday afternoon | ter Helen’s party. Refrrehmente day. December 16.
Mr. and Mrs. nay Clemens re­
action—that's what you get in
at Mr. and Mrs. Orville Purscll’a in 1 were served,
lumed
from
deer
hunting
Saturday.
Baltimore.
| Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bolton And
Mr». H. Norris of Battle Creek I*
Ford V-8 brakes for 1937!
Thnnk.ogiving day Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hanunoiid
visiting Mrs. William th Lt week.
George Hoffman and daughter. Vel-, wore Lansing visitors Friday.
Mr. and MT-., Dean Potter of Has­
m» and Mr. and Mr*. George HoffHusking com seems to be the or­
Scientific 6tudy*of every type of
•ireamline design from grille lo tall light.
man. Jr., of Swanton. Ohio, were I der of the day Ui thto vicinity thb tings spent Bunday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Rice and Mrs.
NEW EAST-ACTION SAFETY BRAKES
guests at MT. and Mrs. Charles Jan -1 we*k.
braking produced these new
sens at Battle Creek.
‘' ~~
Mrs. Wm. Voisin is taking care of j Mary Rice accompanied them home
Quicker Nraigbl-linc slops whh eta
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Jones of Nash- her mother, who Is UI.
'
for nn extended wlstt.
Ford Easy-Action Safety Brakes.
one-third 1—&lt; brake pedal peotawre,
Ernie Bateman spent Sunday
vll|e
... spent Wednesday
-•
evening with
... •, Robot Tyfer has gooo to Lanslxig
with his father, Mjton Bateman, at
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawblitz.
.1
NEW COMFORT AND QUHT — Smeothrr
They arc positive and direct,
Meecra.
The neighbors gathered at the
•nd quieter Center-Poke Ride. Easier
TTTE CROSUOADS.
Tht Chas. Hammond family spen
horn" of MT. and Mrs. Aaron Trft^r i
with “the safety of steel from
recently to welcome them to thb! Mr. and Mrs. Glen Wing of BeUe- Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. William
vue were Sunday guests of Mr. and Catn al charlotte.
neighborhood.
Au*smt ioww
pedal to wheel.” These brakes
Latir -I Marshall had the misfor- Mrs. Orley Smith and Homer Bates.
Mrs. Pete Triljens Is UI at his
Htne to lore hls large black horse ,' Don Stedgc of Hasting* spent writing.
arc self-energizing. The forward­
inp, floor^nd panel). Safety Glatt
; Bunday with hto pat-cute, Mr. and
Saturday night.
There will be preaching every
To those who hove wonted o new Electric Refrigerator
Mrs. Clyde Btedgr.
.
Sunday at ten and Bunday evening
but felt that tho price was more than they could af­
motion of the car is used to help
CLOVERDALE.
--------Mira Beatrice Smith of near Mldat eight al East Baltimore United
Mrs. Lucy Davenport and daugh- tflevifte te visiting,Mr*. Orley Smith, Brethren church until further no­
ford,we have exceedingly good news.
terr Helm.
apply the brakes. You use about
Helm, »nd
and Mrs. Gertrude Mon
Mon-­
Mr*. Mildred Roush has gone to tice.
• were Kalamazoo shoppers Sat­ Battle Creek
l. afor
___aa___
__ .’ visit.
ica
few 1
days
We have just received a big shipment of the
urday.
SOUTHWEST CARLTON.
one-third less brake pedal pres­
Mrs. Anns Raymond of Jacksun.
Mrt. t^o Barry aUendcd the short
Mr*. Mattle Orton and Mrs. Sarah
tended the tap-dancing redial at Johnson of Grand Rapid* spent « courses for lecturers at Michigan
sure. Your Ford dealer will be
Schoolcraft in which their daugh- lev daya last week with Mr. and Blate College on Tuewlay. Wednes­
day and Thursday of last week.
.
ter Mary Joyce took pert. Batur- Mrs. Will Pate.
glad to show’ you this beautiful,
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Bt rodfbeck
day evening. Mary Joyce U takinj{.| Mrs. Rolland TaUlafcrro of Baltic
l4Mpm tn the dancing tiara, held al .Creek is veiling her parents, Mr. were west nf Grand Rapids T.iursroomy car. Ask’ him about the
and un
Mrs. Rmro.wmtem&gt;
Emcat writlguw.
D*llon each wrek.
two)
d*y on bustnesa.
DeRvcry end Heading, lawpert,
Mu* Laura
Iloeken of
Delton spent
Mrs. Frank Shriber and daughter,
two engine sizes. Then drive this
________
___________
_____________
1 ; WOOD SCHOOL DUftRfCT.
on which wc oro quoting o big ipociol holiday diicounl.
Fira aod Accessories AddMoael
Thjirsday with Mrs. Myrtle Mac-,
Hazel, and Mr. and Mrs Leo Barn
Lrod.
i Henry Kkfdrr. who has been ktI- ■nd soti were tn Grand Rapids Frimodern
car
and
you
will
know
Be
sure
and
investigate
this
offer
os
wc
know
that
wc
The L. A- 8. will meei with Mr*. °u»Iy W. Is some better.
*
can save you money if you choose before the first of the
‘tlU McCallum Thursday of ihl* I Mr* Carrie Ooueh ot' WtolevUle
Anna Buck end family spent I
why it has tho best type brakes
wt*k tn elect officers and bring t»
her daughter, Mft. Alto Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrtx
new year. The new Leonard has proven one of the out­
gifU for the chrlstmaa party.
' Kldlfer.
,
Tkte Bock and family of Battle
standing electric refrigerators of the past season. Every
available.
Mr. and Mrs. R. E, Pierre and • .
En^ia Norton pt Haallnga U Creek.
.
. ,
customer
who
owns
one
is
perfectly
satisfied
they
have
eft.tighter, spent Sunday and Mon- &gt; making an extended visit with her
Mr. and Mrs. LaFayette Usborne
the best to be hod.
n
.
dqy vliltlnj the Harold England t daughter. MTs. taxi Engie.
■ •
attended a surprise parly on WllMt.
and
Mrs.
WUllam
knusell
ot
U*tp
U*b
family tn Lanstng.
I Mt *n« Mr*.
Kr * " *
Usborne of Grand Rapids BunCome in and let us give you our holiday proposition.
Creek
liu- occasion being William’s
. The Camp Fire girls met at the Bailie
H-1111' c
’**k were -Sunday dinner &lt;lny. 23
FORD
DEALERS
home of Bonita Gates Mondaf, IW** M hte patant*, Mf. Ito fin Uh bird
Art’ll'if Target and)
evening.
•
.
,•
Yen spam sunder with her par,
Bticceas Is ju*t a matte/ of lliink-'
MU.laj.ry Soclro wGia w«. mu. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Lartdon ot
Ina in larger unite. Belling poeket ne»day ’i
North carlton. Wilbur London and
HASTINGS
PHONE 2226
knives Is Just as hard u selling' Twelve I
frlend oi Haslins* spent Sunday
homes.
.
tho pro*
quill, evening with mt. and Mrx Yarger.

Weekly Farm Review
B

.

HINDS CORNUAMr. and MT*. Lyle Btadle apanl
Sunday evening .with hl&gt; parent*,
Mr. and Mr*. Lewte Beadla. In
HaiUnp).
Mr*. Nellie daaklil viaited her
paranta, Mr. and Mrs. Martz near
Bellevue one day last week.
Mrs. Borah Phillips and Miss
Busie Phillips attended the com­
munity meeting la*t Thursday at

GOOD USED CARS

Are BARGAINS If Bought at the RIGHT BRICK!

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
phone 2121

FORD PRODUCTS

Hastings, high.

WANT TO BUY OR SELL? TRY OUR WANT COLNUM

THE 1937 FORD V-8

RURAL PATRONS

Please Order Your Coal
Before Snow Blockade!

SAFETYBRAKESi

Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.

40%

15!

Let Santa Bring HER an

ELECTRIC
Refrigerator

NEW. . .

—’480

Leonard Refrigerators

M I C H I 9 A

MILLER FURNITURE CO

t or tiiti

�Page six

nn? Hastings banner. TinmsnAY. December io, me

J Stewart sang three numbers. MhNASHVII.I.E.
|
LENT" CORNERS.
PLEASANT RIDGE.
MOkTOAOB 1AU.
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Jone* and pronounced words were given by n&lt;-c 3 Letter
, Dee. 3 tztter.
Dec. 3 Letter.
daughter. Joyce, were at Battle Mrs. Hickman.
The^ Christmas The
Tb. Ministerial
‘ »sini*f
Mr. and Mrs. Marc flarnmonrt nnd . Mrs. Lavame Klnne spent last
Auoclatlon of
meeting will be held December 18.
Creek Saturday.
Barry county together.with Councili daughter Jean. ML** Opal Hreurly, i week with rvtatlves in Jackson.
i The Ladies Ai&lt;i of Hu* Evangelical
«»■
ML"
“,1U
"d m'1 unar
Charles Bette enter- I church wa* jerrteruuied Wednesday talned the fL.;.L.?'s
former's mother an 1 of Religious Education will meet Mr. and MH. Leland Hammond and i Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Lehman' ot
Tuesday st the U. B. church in. boy*. Mrs. Permella Sage. Mr. and | Woodland spent Thanksgiving at
brother
Sunday.
I afternoon al the home of Mrs. ub-'' b,A,h
*’ of Kalamazoo.
—
Woodland. Sunday School workersi Mrs. Lawrence Hammond and chll-1 Wamle Kelsey's.
'
ble
Marshall.
The
following
officers
Funeral ^services for Emmett
weII
. n,erp a
lo&lt; drtn spent Thanksgiving with Mr. | Mr and Mrs Arthur Richardson
1 were elected for the coming year: Felghner. 69. were held Sunday aft- as well as ministers are expected
“
and Mrs. Roy chandler of Hasting*. I and John spent Thanksgiving with
' ""'V.
/President. Mrs. Libble Marshall; Fhu^r’tlVlr1,*0 wC10C^L?fc. ‘he
and Mr‘l 8amue‘ Gel«er
The occasion was also Mr. Chand-1 relatives at Ovid.
। Vice-President. Mrs Prank Felghr ‘"fcr
it
f**»hner ,*iad tertalned for Thanksgiving Mr. and ler s birthday.
| Mr. and Mrs Bennie Merrick had
1 ner; Secretary. Mrs. Daniel Garhngc &gt;«Uf ,
*° tfll
--------- ------------------------- • — ' Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Paul and a sale and are moving lo Hasting*,
j_«r; Treasurer. Amy Hartwell; PlanMr. ----**and*-----Mrs.---------Dave ------RagU, "
Mr
HliU Mrs. William i.umbiTum; Chor- daughter. Mrs. Clyde Schnurr. at and Mrs. Heber Foster and family, children of Kalamaxoo. Richard Hall
Mr tt,,d Mrs F‘orlcit' J“ck-$otl *nd of Richland and Mr. and Mrs. Jay and Mr*. George Ragte. Ethel and
J hter. Mr ., clarence Shaw Lovely and two dau^te« and
01 Norl“ Hastings. Mr. and Halj had Thanksgiving dinner with , Esther spent Sunday with Mr. and
refreshment* were served.
'&lt; •«/ ,
। Geneva and E-Jcy Curtis of Kolaraabjr |l&lt;
n4dd&gt; th* y°U
Saranac. The occasion was also their
mo spent the week end with their of the wrVIce Mrs VTT
Gall
|1 Mr. ahlt Mr*. Frank ChiUon of
u*u Lyklnx
LyKUM
52nd '**
wedding
anniversary.
BANNER WANT ADV8. PAY
cenw- 52nd
dd“,‘{ “
nnnersary.
rl.^crdate
Cloverdale and
and Mr
Mr. and Mr*
Mrs chaa
Chas !'
grandmother. Mr*. Nettle Johnson. sang. Burial was tn Lakeview
|/L_
'’’orn .
,Review centoAnother Sunday School contest COnyer of
Kalamaxoo
spent
,
The
Clover
Lent
Club
held
its
,, c
m f
tcry.
has ~
been started with __________
Elaine Day ,Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mr.-. ।
1 Christmas party Friday nlgni at the
—
Curtis Wash of Detroit Is spend- and Lioyd Elliston as leaders.
Mlrhli
I home of Mrs Maude Ackett A pot ing
’ him r ,ot» ■
a few day* with hls family here.
Eldon Day ha* been employed-at
I luck supper was served ut seven
“
Mrs.
Esther
Johnson
and
son.
the'Penney
store
In
Hastings
the
I o'clock, a short business meeting
ing with pneumonia.
Dicky,
are
spending
several
weeks
P»«
week
a a« held when plans for making
LUO AL NOTICE
' '*■"
Mbs Marjorie GlUett of Muskegon
. money were made. A Chrt-lrna* tree In Detroit
iS spent Thanksgiving with her par- spent Thursday with her parents at I ,i.
The first basket ball game was
I with bifu for uh was ehjoyi-d and a
South Bend. Ind.
I V&lt;
G.c cnt'*
towel shower was given for Mrs played here Friday night at the
&gt;iih Article II
-•
Lewis Hyde nnd friend of Grand
hew —
gymnasium
Clarksville,
John Thorax-. spent Thanksgiving
| Prichard
-------------------with
Rapids
with hls with hls granddaughter. Mr. andp-'-t
” both
Funeral services for Mrs. Warner | Clarksville wuuilng
uuin games.
game*. —
----- sp-nt
•- - Saturday
—■ were held Sunday morning at te:i ; Tuesday night MiUdlevllle played Kranaporents. Mr. and Mrs. . Will Mrs. Ed. Britton ar-d son of Kala­
Hyde.
oeloct « U» HL. Fui»r«l Hou..- I ten.
“'"I- Thanksgiving guests were Mr. mazoo.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Marc Hammond I tj»rr
J Mrs Warner moved here seven I on Thursday afternoon the Main and Mrs. Gent Ganka and two chil­
were Kalamazoo shoppers Monday. I ’’
sears ago to a farm ne*r. NaahvUlc. I street division of the Methodist La­ dren of Yorkville.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph DeVine and
Mrs FlOMle Burchett's mother. I !?*
. She leaves her Int'Ound. Rev. Wool- j dies' Aid held a Colonial T*-. '
a,
tn.
Mrs
"k,‘ AdrUmon
’r',^uU;'i nZuu?
Mrs. J
Jake
Adrianson.- had-the
had lhe mumis- : ;;;n/".',"tb
•
on of the Methodist church was In qpihs
exhibited Mualc
their dinner* and spent Tiianksgiv- fortune to fall and injure her leg -ty. u&gt; bald officr u, tha to
charge. Mr . Gall L\kins sang. Tin-1 joyed throughout the a.'
Ing with their mother. Mrs. Anna Saturday.
— ■
I body wa* taken tu Decatur for bur- Light n I:&lt; -.hir.cnis were se
DeVine and Mrs. Neal
,
Cowles has gone north hunt­
Quite an interesting program has
,_r
-----Lykins been prepared for the dbtrlct meet- , tj,c Mbse* Dora Brandstetter '
—•
son. Douglas, spent Sunday with the ; Mr- joiin Woodard and Mrs. Sam mg of the church at Barryvffie on JulUe Hawley Wld
Z?nX t'iJ°TnJ’,g * ftnd ThaniuZ^nVr
Qien Leeper and Beryl
j former** parents near
Freeport.
,
________
CrCt k 8h°P* _t*y meetingIn
tn Hardt-r
0^
!— even_ng ■
, naj*tL»ai»inx dltnicr in
G»letNOTICE OP MOBTOAOK SAUL
,
Ml-v. Norma Biggs spent the week ;
Doris
Betts
all*
”
01
.
......
R«
“
lan
from
Lansing
will
gjve
a
burH
th
,,
an
.
fr
,
n
rie&lt;i
a
nlav
*
Rusxlan
will
give
B
pUy
at
| end with Miss
-1
Mr unci Mrs Fondrn of Marshall talk on condition* a* he knew them KBUmaaoo in lhe afternoon
Grand Rapids.
| Mr Bn[1 M„
phiujpS en.
!
Mrs. Ft.uik Coley and Mrs. Goll spent Saturday night with their in Russia.
Camp|
—------------------------------Mr- and Mrs. Dak DeVine of u-rtalned relative* from Kalamazoo
’ Lykins were at Hastings Thursday •
.
.. .
Nashville spent Sunday at Ralph a..d .,.w p„w Thanksalvlnc
and wife. nf tha ally of lla.rfoia. Harry
। Mr. nnd Mrs. OLeury tuu[ son.
ButaUatlon of (he new officer, of DeVine's
, Mrs Ha^TmiU^rSed word
Caaail. Mirblcan. in HOME OWNERS*
Jlrtunlc. are planning to leave poon ?.U.r^Ch“VU’r NO 31 o E 8. w.,| Mr and Mrs Floyd Fussell and Ih*
ridded m
LOAN CORPORATION. a Corporation
1 for Detroit.
*■
held Thursday n.ght at the Masonic daughter of Charlotte visited relacounty had passed away
Mr. and Mrs. Gall Lykins and .Tentpie
Guests from Battle Creek. Uves here Sunday.
|
county, nan passeti away.
at&gt;|K&gt;li&gt;i
sons spent Thursday nnd Friday Vermont: Die. Hastings and Flint I
—
••
**
—
•
1
rt‘S»B. I
Rev.
and
Mrs.
J.
j.
WHIRL*
re-1
Governor
Landon
sent
out
10.000
with Mr. and Mrs Fred J. Fisher
VI of
were present A pct luck supp-.r was ।celved a c^ll Sunday that their New Year'* card*. Thb Is hb ring­
ur.d children al Houghton Luke.
Mrs Georgina Bauer of daughter. Mrs Clara Day. wa* taken ing answer to the charge that he Is
High in Cream Content. Raw
The womens Literary club me: served
Hastings
was
the
Grand
Installing
Wednesday afternoon nt the library officer Mrs. Morey Clemmer of Bsl- to the St. lAwrence hospital in Lan­ a Kansas Coolidge.
or Pasteurized. Pt. 5c; Qt.
sing and Operated on Sunday eve­
■ plardity
for Social Service Day. Mrs. Car)
Creek was grand Installing ning. Monday morning report was
Tuttle was hostess. Mrs. Chester He
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
marshall. Mrs. Ida McCoy of Has­ that she was In a serious condition
I Smith gave "The Awakening" nnd tings
wns Installing pianist and
"The Pie Lady" In a very pleasing Mrs. Viola Felghner of Nashville lhe Mrs. W11111La remained with the
family.
i manner. On the other Side of the
;. man. ■ Milled to oua
I Fence" by Mrs. George Taft was installing chaplain. The chapter:
was decorated in palms, plants ’
----------- --------------Phone 2651
ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.
Haslings ■ very interesting. She told ot her room
ond
flowers.
Mrs
pultz
sang
"Open
.
Dec.
3 Letter.
Al&gt;l
. experiences as a social worker In the Oates of the Temple" as the fol-| Harold
Yoder and family had
Detroit. A girls' trio composed ot lowing officers were lo enter the Thanksgiving dinner with Andrew
Chapter room. Worthy Matron. Mr.; . Gackk-r and family near Middleville.
KlaluUa
Hlalr of Mlrbli
■ Carrie Campbell; Worthy Patron.
A teachers' meeting was held 13. IMS
(Colon T Munro; associate matron.!Wednesday evening ut lhe Elmer
■ ball
j Mrs. Minnie Cortrighi; associate
‘ Shnffer ‘home.
-----M
patron. John Martens; secretary.1 Thanksgiving guests al the WilI Mrs. L Maude Evans;
•-------Ham Pardee home Included Mr. and
oftlea
Mrs Myrtle Caley. conductress to Mrs Harry Miller and family of
I be elected; A'soc&lt;ate conductress. Elkhart. Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
will be rareMrs. Floy Wotring; Adah. Mrs Ger- Nash and Mrs Nash of Clarksville.
I Lrudc Martens; Ruth. Mrs Hazel Lydia Porrlt and Jennie Pardee.
i In
-Higdon.
Mis.
Lillian
Vance; of
I Belle,.. Esther.
Mr and
Mrs.
Lyn Griffin
Martha,
Martha. Mrs Leila Lentz;
Lentz: Electa.1 vue are the proud parents of a baby
Darleiye
Mrs Zoe Gillette; marshak -Mrs. girl.
■I“‘ Janet
‘---- ‘ ”
—’— ‘born Thanks
‘ ­
Villa Olin, pianist to be supplied, giving. Mrs. Peter Griffin is caring
warden, Mrs Martha Mueyens; for the new bafey And mother.
Mr and Mrs William Mishler and
sentinel. Miss Minnie Bailey. As the
so
Worthy Matron was at lhe altar. Gwendolyn were- dinner guests
Mrs. Pultz sang "My Task " Mrs. Thanksgiving of John Miller and
folloa
Bauer was presented with flowers family at Grund Rapids.
Virginia Heller of Kalamazoo
and Mrs. Campbell received gifts
OMDEB FOB PUBLICATION.
from the Clemmer Club of Battle spent from Thursday until Sunday
. Creek and others The regular meet. with Mr. and Mrs. Clare Eash.
XT.
। ing of Laurel chapter No. 31 O E
Peter Griffin and Marlon speni
S met at lhe Temple Tuesday Sunday at lhe Lyn Griffin home In
I night The pythlan slaters were in- Bellevue.
vi’ed for a . pot luck lunch and to
Mr and Mrs John Huizenga of
play bridge following the meeting. Grandville spent Friday at the Har­
Mrs. Gladys Potter Curtis is in old Yoder home.
Poa
Ipl'li
| the Lilia Post hospital ui Buttle
Mr and Mrs. Elmer Shaffer had
I Creek inhere she underwent a major xs Thanksgiving guests Mr. and
id M*b)». hie wife.
operation.
Mrs. Raymond Shaffer and Sanford n..ur4, I*)**'
• ny nf ord pattli
wopirra-IL
’
;.
Frank Caley was In Hastings Ellis of Grand Rapids. Paul Kauff­ Klar itl.r/M
.
Wednesday.
man nnd family and Mrs Karcner. Ru»*1 y.ra AjJn. 1
Lois Shaffer was a week end visi­ Fm**w.
cw„
' The Knights of Pythias had their
1 annual Jlggs supper Tuesday night tor in Grand Rapids. .
(■•Ulloa;
1 ---------at their-------hall
Mrs. Lucy Clum and sons spent
The Pythian Sisters met Monday Thanksgiving day at Mr. and Mra. a.ALls Mt*
night for their regular meeting and Harry Field's at Freeport.
In th*
election of officers.
Mrs. Clare Eash 1* spending the H.Vk Mte- Ce, iVJrt’f 1
week with her parents at Kalama­
alrcoUtrd h
b.|., !
BARBERS CORNERS.
zoo.
Muar\ Clara
Dec. 3 Letter.
Walter Shaffer returned Tuesday
Mr and Mrs. Roy Preston and son from a hunting trip in the north.
t'talHk'fnnde for ,*»•
via*; AM.‘ CMrttao. Karra, llooaan
Donald. attended a family dinner
OBn» FOB PUBLICATION.
Sunday dinner guests at the El­
State of Mlrhlran. th* Probata Cotti
at the home of Lester Preston in mer Shaffer tome were Rev. and
tetaUr till). lose.
1
Maple Grove Sunday.
Mrs Schroch and the former* tied
OWNERS' LOAN CORPO
Margaret Snyder of Kalamazoo। brother and family of Kansas.
spent Thanksgiving vacation with
Mr and Mrs. Raymond Shaffer of
Your situation on the farm is
Grand Rapids spent Saturday night
increased yields in the fol­
Mr and Mrs. Roy Huver of Lan­ at the Elmer Shaffer home.
Out IT
identical with that of the
low crops.
sing Were Sunday visitors dt Mrs.
John Blocher and family, who
Jerry
Foley's.
business man in the city.
rent the Clarence Benedict farm,
Otto Wilburn Rotrra
ORDER FOB PUBUOATION.
Sugar Beets are not a surplus
Mr and Mrs. L J Matthews at­ will move to their home at South
eoaneil *■ pre.ljint «fhc»r
tended a family dinner at James Woodland March 1.
crop. There is always a mar­
Vfo.fd by Aid BtUdrr.
If he is a manufacturer, he
Matthews' m Grand Rapids. Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Thompson of Aid. Hnanan. that c'.onci
ket for all you can grow.
In honor of the Misses Matthews, who Freeport. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Rich­ V 31 o'clMk P M r.M:
must study his production
left on Monday for the south
ardson of Grand Rapids and Mr
methods to make sure he is
Sugar Beets give you two crops
Mrs. Jerry FXiley and sons PaulI and Mrs. Paul Cahoon of Saranac
and Martin were Thanksgiving were guests of Mr. and Mr*. Art
OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION.
getting maximum results.
in one for the beet tops have
guests of Mr and Mrs Roy Huver Richardson Thanksgiving.
a large feed value.
the Cntintr of Harry,
He cannot afford to overlook
of Landing
Al
a ....loo of aald
aid trailMrs. Grace Brake and,Mlss Helene1
--------------NORTHWEST THORNAPPLE.
a single bet.
Then too, beets are hardy.
Plastnan of Hastings were guests Lt Gee 3 Letter.
Roy Preston's Thanksgiving.
| Mr and “
Mrs. Owens and family
* •' ’J-**
They
stand
hot
or
cold,
wet
Isn’t that your position?
B'“'
Mrs. Herman Hauer spent Tues­ and Mrs WUlhyde of Chicago were ..
or dry weather. Also survive
day afternoon with Mrs. Glenn Thanksgiving day and week end
I* ih. matter of tb
Clum at Hastings.
guests of the former's parents. Mr. B
Now, no money making ac­
severe hail storms.
Mrs. Etta Bump and Mr. and Mrs and Mrs. Hiram Garrett.
|.T7
tivity in life is all roses. But
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Morgan accom- Fuiirr.’ "mil!, b..
L J. Matthews were Thanksgiving
tlon.
'
Thus, with beets, if bad weather
Il &lt;• farther c-rdrrad. that public nolle*
guests of James and Ray Matthews panted Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brown »-rart ibrir rrtition pn
if you take full advantage of
OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION.
comes along, you are always
Of Middleville
of Grand Rapids to Capac, where
•'•renm •• «ru&lt;
every opportunity you will
Mr and Mrs George Hauer of they spent the week end with relamore certain of a better re­
Grand Rapids were dinner guests at'
make the most money over
turn than you are from any
Herman Hauer's Sunday.
----------Mr* McCaul of Northeast Thom- frt,‘i »nd all thia*,
a period of years.
Mr. and Mrs John Weaver spent »PPle
aulstlng Mra Dora Kepkey
ii‘"i0,w!1? iIJj'1*,! ,
other cultivated crop. Beets
Thanksgiving with Mr nnd Mrs. wlth her housework.
J.no.rr a D Isa? s
are
toughr-don
’
t
forget
that.
।
Mr. and Mrs. Henry ~
Raw and' '&lt;&gt;&gt;r»noo». »■
Truman
Munlon
al
woodland.
First and foremost you should
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
I family spent Thanksgiving Day with
,t,IH
grow Sugar Beets because
SOUTH SHULTZ.
relatives in Grand Rapids.
I
Mrs. Forest Havens and VirginiaThe chicken supper and sale at te»r»«t b» ■
money on Sugar Beets is to
‘ they give you a larger money
of Goodwill
attended
—
Sunday lhe M. E church was well attended
,bl* nrd'
grow always a certain defi­
school here Sunday
return, per acre, than any
: and netted the Aid society about n,'.’ "/,
Qur teacher. Miss Virgin!* Ha­ *70
I ,nd rlr^ulat
nite acreage every year.
other major cultivated crop.
vens,
pupil* nnd
• .L. her r--.--...... young people
I,.^
r
....
„.
lu ......
mauiikv
IIIUUIU Ol
Mr
and
Mrs
Maurice
Thoma*
of
«•»•«
You’ll make more money on
of this vicinity are working hard Galesburg spent the Thanksgiving
on the Christmas program which vacation with relatives.
”I
Sugar Beets have a definite ro­
Sugar Beets than from any
a-ill
h.. held
K-’H at
•&lt; the
lb. church
__ _
I
1
will
be
OBDBB FOB PUBLICATION
other major cultivated
tative value. The beneficial
ROBINHVE PARK.
। Clinton Hom Is spcndinK some
crop.
1 tin&lt;' with his mother. Mrs. Aaa -----------. ,, .
effect on your soil, from the
j Murray, at Nashville
“"Mr. and Mrs William Poland and S-r£bM**XTu
h*1,.!! 'i*
fertilizing which proper
| Mrs. Ethelyn Thompson enter- son- Warren, of Grand Faplds spent•*&gt;&lt; county. •« th* 3rdday •( bttrm
A into eop».
I tained the Shultz Communitv Club Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. 1 ‘•♦J; *• ”
beet culture requires, is al­
Mildred 6m
Farmers and Manufacturers Beet
| Thursday at their annual Christ- J°&gt;'n Kollar and Harold.
of p«bau
Jud»»
ways plainly evidenced by
:rowd
Mr
Sugar Association, Saginaw, Mich.
mas chicken dinner. A nice crowd
Mr-- Rnd
Bnd Mrs.
Mrs. Erwin
Erwin'' Peters
Peters of
of I I ° to"»e
In th* matu
mitt.r &lt;,t th»nUl.
v.T.on
NOTICB
attended and al) report a good Grand
Grand Rapids
Rapids spent
spent Saturday
Saturday with
wilh I IHH „!*,***&gt;'J*'*1’- ■tee»*aed
•&gt;*«»
CHICAGO. KALAMAZOO AND NAG­
NOTICB TO CREDITORS.
time.
their parents, Mr. and Mr*.
Mra. Clive r«„t hi. FtJi
- ’,'
’“’V’* r‘,wl iB mH IN AW RAILWAY COMPANY and THE
Frank Hallock and Mrs. Thelma Churchill and Sunday ail spent lhe Ri.l.iAtta?*^if'0Mi4,'w“*,tu’kii m.ud NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD
White and daughter. Wana June. d“Y wlth Mr. and Mr*. James Pol-. &lt;• M*«rice Hraiy or t* .&lt;&gt;»* «&lt;*,, *ait
of Delton called on Mrs. Mina hemus of Middleville.
| ,, II'
Kenyon Wednesday and Mr. end
Mr and Mrs George Poland spent J*aa*n. A^D i»z»**i’ua 1'dMk‘ra tn!
■rtifleaie of pub
Mrs. Ronald Kenyon of 'Hickory Sunday with Homer Ingram and f»r»r&gt;*on. at rate Pr«b*t* »rn»», b. «nd
Comers visited her Friday.
family of Hastings.
i *• k«»*y *j&gt;poi»t*4 far hearing uid »«ii
Mr and Mrs. ecnard Smith of
P011* and family spent ’ “t t, fBrU„ ordir,d lh&lt;1 Mb|1,
Hastings spent Sunday afternoon Thanksgiving with their parents. I ih»rr«t b. (|T*a V* pobii»tian af *
with tiie latter's brother. Fred Mr. and Mr*. 8am Zerbe of Middle- i **»»w af thia ardor, for throa rarm&gt;i&gt;(
Hom. and family.
‘
vllle
11’**?**. ^
10
UHICAUq, KALAMAZOO AND 8A01
- - ----------------- r
Mr. and Mr. Harry Mendenhall ot
No Tamlly Is well settled down un- Caledonia called on Mr. and Mrt.
ffiaart ffiaam*. Ja4«a at PwUtl , wi? RfrVArasi&amp;L un,
iw. It cti wtu. up.
wrisH cunort aundu xunum.
* iliLTL...
ROAD COMPANY. LESSEE.
Dated. Ntnenhar »«. A. D. IMS.
ciram ju*. w

I

l?’u5rbSTrtMs&gt;M'-

d"’” «&gt;

cu»

I

«...

| LEGAL notices I

VWr. M. J.V.XIT'V Sr-""1'

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

C

tun
dep
of

me

tior
rhi
nos
1.SC
bef

me
ne

WHY YOU SHOULD

I

BEETS

For Reliable Year in and Year out Profits

YOU CANT BEAT SUGAR BEET5

om

fro

the

ch

pui

ne

dr

an

Cl

ci

th

�TBX HASTDfGA BANNKB. TWJM1DAT. DBCXMBXB M. UM

Steel Church

STUDENTS ENTER
CHRISTMAS TREE CUT
STOCK AT SHOW
DOES NO DAMAGE

1 charge of this group of club mem- |

Eaglldi Salt
One million nine hundred and ten
j Over A Million Treea Are Lambs Taken To Detroit
thousand tom of *a)t are made In
And Grand Rapids For
Out Annually In The
England every year, and nearly all
|
Northern Woods
Exhibition
■
of It come* out of Cheshire and
Hugh Nevin* of Prairieville and Worcestershire. Most of It is uaed
I All Uitnga remaining equal, northI em Michigan can continue tndefl- Harry WQUama of Irving townoiilo In chemical factories, but a good
•• fertilizer. Three bushel*
nltely to supply the entire slate with arc ahowlng their 4-H Club lambs I
°J “U
Chrtetmaz tree* without suffering at the junior llrertock zhaw in De- p*r
troll, uecemucr
December th
B, hB.. ano
and io.
10 vouniy
County of- *be*‘ b’X .(our , to , twelve
bushels
serlotu or notable damage to IU for­ i iron,
------;
est cover, believe specialists of the Agent Poster accompanied the boys P" *cr*- ■“&lt;’
&gt;« »»
fertilizer
for plnki, cnrnatlone, and
I department of conservation.
1 to lhe show on Tuesday. On WedMuch concern has been expressed i nesday the lambs were shown celery.
Rome plants, however, do
.
j by many persons over the heavy cut­ against prize winning lambs from - not like It
It. Among there are the
ting ....
of young spruce,. balsam,. .ptnr other counties In lhe state. Thursday apple
—
■ -tree, the cherry, and the vine.
' and
«nrt even
pirn cedar
erdnr trees
trev-v on
an northern
northern the lambs will be sold at auction aft- In drexlng land with Rilt ymi
I wild lands each year, but forester? i u-r which the boys will return home. cafi have too much of a good tiling,
(do not think that
removal
----- ’ -Williams
—•--------------------------------„ this
------------- - of
Mary
arid Paul Palmer of• ■for
or sixreen
sixteen uuaue„
bushels per
per acre
acre w.i.
will
very serious &lt;k|for-1 ming township and Albert Bell of destroy
all plant life. Inthiding
factor.
Nashville, all 4-H Club member-: of
been variously estimated Barry county, exhibited pens of fat weed*. Salt I* otic of the most
million or more young Christ - lambs nt the Grand Rapids Fat. widely , diatrlhiiii-d of all mineral*.
arc cut annually nnd sold Stock show which wa* held on the
Fame date* as the Detroit show. Dis­ and other
southern ecn- trict Club Agent Earl Haas was In

use on Michigan lands In one season
could be produced on a good-size
southern Michigan farm, growing
4 BOO trees to the acre.
AU cutting of Christmas trees
must be confined to privately-held
wild areas. The department of con­
servation forbids by law any putting
on .state-owned lands. Every poten-

Thousand* at tzn»U
tn » *mgle network
Culver City. Calif.
tion the framework
tions 12 by 20 feeL

steel rod* are being interwoven here to weld
lhe frame of St Augustin's Catholic church in
Representing the newest method in construc­
waa moved to lhe building site In panel* sec­
Thl* type of construction Is said to be resistant

V. F. IF. New.

john

McPherson
INSTANTLY KILLED

wise he Is committing trespass and
Is subject to the penalty provided by
law if apprehended.

1

,'iiur nom
,
um vb
LanihulL a mountain peak near ' Solid rr.otaU are
tha American Bland city ot Hono- Coppar Ju*I swallows
mcan» ,n ^Wa“ "*b&lt;r*
?"uaea lU&lt;U to lod
heavena change.
। fa«L
, —------------------------ —
~
'
'
’
1 —

ENTERING MISSION
WORK IN AFRICA
Takca Preliminary Work In
Paria Then Goes To
Port Archambault

5

This Christmos he wants
something for the car If
you are wondering what
he would like frohv-^anta.
bear this in mind. We
have o full line of acces­
sories, tires, batteries,
radios and healers. Stop
in when you arc shopping
for his gift.
•

SWEETHEART Soap &gt;-5c
KIRK'S
.. 5c

10

• Sunoco Gas and Oils
• Vulcanising

BLUE

BIG BUYS FOR
THIN DIMES THIS
WEEK!

Greasing
Washing

MOTOR
FUEL

lOc

Apple Butter

lOc

uo.«.j.

lOc

Salad Dressing

Pure Cider Vinegar »■ lOc

. ■»

Honey

C fl 11 P

UUl

TOAIATO, VEGGTAM.E, MOCK
TURTLE
iiOvacaCaa

PORK &amp; BEANS

■■ jb

GOOD QUALITY
CANNED FOODS
YOUR CHOICE

k» can

Pickles IXJ*’

lOc

Olives

5c Candy

Gum 3 &lt;- lOc

Muffels WHret Kacu't*

Pkg.

Chocolate &gt;&lt;«**•

lOc
lOc

Grapefruit Juice •»» &lt;*- lOc
Orange Juice

mo-

lOc

Pineapple Juice &lt;&gt;»o- lOc

c-

lOc

Sardine*

lOc
lOc

Clothe* Pin*

lOc

Jersey Glove*

lOc

lOc

MoptHandle*

lOc

p^r. su»i*.d aoi.B«t»'.

Fruit Peel
FANCY SEEDLESS

RAISINS

LIMA BEANS
B
—
.
VEGETABLES »ho_c
IOM OMcaCaa
CARROTS
TOMATO JUICE wo-c-

••*.%•!

Asparagus Tip* •».
S y r U pPURS MAPLE

L-

lOc

Ic SALE

3** 25c

DATES ^3*. 25c

SNO SHEEN &lt;&gt;*:,.

CAKE FLOUR

PKG.

laaJVt

pounds 100% filled
CHSUTMA* CANDY

B«n*M-Bi4tae(u&gt;toh Loti Recipe

ORIENTAL
VEGETABLE
CHOP SUEY

1

Ne. j

FOUND CHOCOLATE OSOFS

_______

FSIDAY AND SATURDAY OHLY

STOCK UFON YOU* CHSBTMA1 CANDY NOW

crisco-0-22^59*
NORTHERN TISSUE

6«&gt;ut33c

TISSUE GAUZE

4 sous 17c

^_16‘ UZL2T

OLD DUTCH CLEANSER

GOODYEAR BROS.

cots fOTHER — DOESN'T SCRATCH — BtCAUSI
IT S MADE WITH SEISMOMITt

3 CANS

23c

COMPANY

6 CANS 45c

, I'AS-Wo R!

PHONE 2101
128 WEST STATE STRICT

BANNER WANT ADV8. PAT

JOc

o— »«*•

Mustard

30% to 50%

buds break into piak tuny blossoms. |

।

ITEMS

C

Catsup
Cor. Jefferson and Coart
SU-. Hastings, Michigan

CLOSE OUT
of ALL TOYS
HASTINGS

PEAS &lt;£. - 5c
RICE
- 5c
SALT 2 « .ox5c

BROWN SUGAR

SUNDCU

HARDWARE

■

ITEMS

C

COCOA HERSPEY’S
CHOCOLATE SYRUP c.. 5c
KREMEL DESSERT
5c

Phone 2240

Scientists have determined by ac­
tual count that birds wear mare

feet —
across
—
large as Big
parliament
in
...u
------- - &lt;_

HUNDREDS OF HIGH GRADE FOOD ITEMS LOW PRICED For
This SUPER-VALUE EVENT AT C. THOMAS STORES. QUALI­
TY FOODS IN CONVENIENT SIZES To Restock Yow Fetitry
Shelves - DON'T MISS IT - CHECK ITEMS WANTED.

A Urge group attended lhe Pow , Was Bun Over By Weal
Miss Elma Kitchen, daughter of
Wow tn Lansing Bunday and re-1I
R. D Kitchen. M- C- railroad agent
Bound Passenger Train
turned with a citation from the stato
at Caledonia, sails on Monday, Dec.
department for obtaining our quota 1
Near NaahviUo
of new members since the encamp-1 John McPherson, a farmer rcslmenu William Andrews and Glenn 1
to go to Fort Archambault tn
.w«.cu personal
pe.MM.., cita- dfnl °f Battle creek but who had French equatorial Africa, serving
Patton also received
tions for their part In the member- been for amne tunc living near . andsr
M..d.r the Mid-African Mission
Fhlp drive. A new state-wide drive u Nashville, was instantly killed by Board’ She is the third member of
now starting with liopes of adding the 8:20 P. M westbound passenger the Middleville Baptist church lo
1400 new members and 25 new posts train on Uie Michigan Central at enter missionary work abroad with­
before the encampment next June. :1Gregg
---- —-s crossing,
------- *“ —
two miles west
~
of in the last two years Miss Helen
I Nashville. Wednesday rveninq. Cor­
We had a good turnout at the last oner Gordon PLther qf this city w.&lt;* Field.-. Is zta’.ioiud nt Nlanii. West
meeting with about 20 present. The summoned, but was unable to de­
termine whether McPhcraon a death
we will elect a new trustee as a was accidental or whether he com­ ion- having for the same field
special order of business. Our cam- mitted suicide. It was known that he
O । Sunday evening a farewell
giandcr urges all who can to attend. was In poor health. He waa lying on service honoiln:! Ml'-* KHcl»*n wa..
the railroad track.', when run over by neli at the Middleville church. MLv
Dcm't forget our ChrLvtma* pjrty. the tram. The coroner said that he Kitchen Lt a graduate of the Cale­
at the welcome Grange halt Dec 22. might have fallen and struck his donia HlRh school r.nd of the Moody
Something jpeclal for the kiddles head on otic of the rails making turn Bible school In Chicago. Her sister.
and a good lime for ll»e older ones. . unconscious. The engineer raw a Miss Ruth KitChfii...........
M hLvo prepar• • •
person lying acrotu the tracks a:. Itc i mcfo_- missionarywork.
Our sale of Christmas trees Is pro-1 approached Uie crowln; but was un.
’ Dl’NHAM BIBTBICT.
groMing nicely. SUU plenty of dan-1 able to bring tho train to a stop
.
in Ireland, . Wednesday evening. December
dy tree* left but if you want a nice i McPherson
Licr.'.x,.-.... wax bom in
’ ’ 40* 16. there will be a liarvent minting
one come early a* they are going : and came to thin country about
fast. Someone will be on the grounds years ago. He waa about 60 years uf al the cnurch. There will be spe­
from now until Christmas to help age. There are no surviving rela­ cial music and n chalk talk by Ret.
you. All trere sold on the lot next tives In this country. The body was Prllcluird of Nashville.
Last Wednesday night a major
to Smith’s hardware are for the local taken to the Hess funeral home in
operation was performed upon Rob­
Post, and proceeds will be used for Nashville.
ert Gillespie, son of Mr. and Mrs.
lhe Welfare of lhe Post and com­
--------...—._ al Pennock
x— •- hosplU
bospiial.
MARTIN CORNERS.
' Ray
Gillespie
rades.
Remember the circuit quarterly
Mr and Mrs. Herb McGlocki.
. —
Vern Sinclair. Americanization meeting at Martin church Friday visited- the -former’* uncle.
Horace
evening.
December
11.
There
will
Wagoner near Olivet Wednesday.
chairman, has two historical calen­
Among lhe 4-H Club members
dars which will be placed tn the be a pot luck supper al 7:30 fol­
puollc schools, one In the high school lowed by quarterly’ conlcrence and ,who went to Chicago Saturday.
and one in lhe MeOmber school. We moving'pictures of the Clark home. ;November 23 and relumed Tues­
Miss Jeanette Trautwein of near (day. December 1, was Miss Dorothy
invite everyone to Inspect these
Morgan spent over the week end ;Mack, who represented the canning
calendars.
with her grandmother, Mra. Evs iclub*. There were over thirty who
।made the trip. Howard Martin tak­ e Batteries. Windshield Wipers
According to national headquar­ Trautwein.
ters figure*, les* than 13 per cent of Mr. ond Mrs Frank Cogswell and ;ing them in hts school bus.
lhe World war veterans belong to children of Hastings were Friday
Mr. and Mrs. Ells Kelley and son
any veteran*’ organization. Before evening callers at Mr. and Mra. Orr ,of Hastings called at Wallace
REGULAR
next June Uie figures should be dif­ Fisher’s.
Mack's Sunday afternoon.
Preaching service next Sunday fol-; Ralph Swift Is staying with Ids
GASPRICE
ferent. If you served your country
lowing Sunday school st 10.30.
daughter. Mrs. Ray Ostroth. Tlic Martin Ladk *’ Aid will hold |
hostile waters. you should belong lo
the Veteran* of Foreign Warr,, if you their Christmas party at the boms
wi*h more Information concerning ot Shlriey Slocum Wednesday eve­
,
ning.
Pot luck supper at 7:30. Bruig
the Post send your name and ad­
dress to the post commander or Past a ten cent gift also remember a gift j
adjutant and he will send someone for the Clirwtmas basket
to toll you about our organization.
Commander. Wesley B. Webb. 902 Oleomargarine Known a*
E South street. Adjutant. Jimmie
Margarine and B utterin e
.Clark. Middleville. They will be
pleased to receive your inquiries ar.d
margtirloe and Putterinc. It to an I
lo help you all they can.
artificial aubatltutc for butter, first J
manufactured In 1870. In France, ,
Mr. and Mrs. chfton Campbell by Ita inventor Mrge-Mourles. It
nnd Mr. and Mr-. Joseph Corrigan In made from oil obtained from
season with Mrs. Campbell’s abler beof fat, neutral lanl and cotton­
and husband near White Cloud. seed oil, with a little butter, cream.-'
Cliff returned with a nice eight or milk added during th*’churning, i
Tn preparing the oil. the fat cm 1
point buck.
from beef cattle nt the lime of '
Chicago intcmaltanui Livestock •laughter la washed, chilled, and
Show.
•learned to purify it and reparaU
We extend congratulations to the the. membrane. The stearine la aL
Judging team which won second lowed to crystallize out. and the-oil
l« separated from it by pressing. |
are members of Pleasant Hill Live­
stock dub.
' .
.
Paul Palmer is recovering from a flcndlng on lhe source of the far,
—
________
the treatment. Neutral lard, or
The Bunshinc Club met with Mrs. neutral, a* It Is called, to made
imlllam*
'TVmb-*Hhv
ia 1leaf
a«F and
An.l H
aaV Fnf
dare Williams
’Itursday.
Gewing Ywim
from FI
the
back
fat nF
of nlrt
pigsTn the production of oleomarga­
rine,
says
the
Indianapolis
Sew*.
Clare and Mary Williams attend­
ed tho Chicago international Show.
CUre was lucky enough to win the mixed In definite proportions, the
EngiiAh cup offered by Ute England cottonseed oil being added to the
Suffolk Steep society each year lo mixture, the poorer grades contain­
ing larger amount*. Milk or but­
the best flock.
termilk (rarely melted butter or
cream) la added to the mixture,
which le then churned, salted, and
'■«wank»“ in a penal code. Anyone worked. Stringent laws In She Halt­
ed States forbid the addition of
coloring matter miles* a heavy tax
ally 1* or falsely claiming a title la paid on the product; but mean*
liable to throe months' imprison- have been found of evading the
lew by addin; a fat which imparts
marry ihegirl
the desired color. When properly
made, olcomnrjarluc la a whole­
some and nutritious product
Olin Honolulu teridd love in bloom

Malines ha* much to Interest visi­
tors but the Cathedral of SL Rombold is the outstanding attraction at
lhe city. It was conwgAcec in the- the limits of vision on the Meth's
earl, Twelfth century and took 200 surface are much smaller, because
years to complete, and is one of (be of the nrreturv cd the ereth. A
finest Gothics tn Belgium. It has a
solitary Western tower. 2M feel tn
height and out of proportion with
the rest of the building. Its clock

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10. 1936

FAMBTmrr

of stale
lamslng.
but until recentlj a
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Since 1903 lhe
of Michigan
resident of Die Branch district. She ■ Mr. and Mra. Otto Townsend and
V M C * ITFMCI
underwent an appendicitis opera-Ison. Franklin, and Mr and Mra.
1.IV1. V. A. 11 t-IVlD
L.x
■.
=^.—^
lion a week ago and although alill Russell Kantner and Mra. Maggie
C
*
quite IB. Is reputed to be on the, Kanlner of Hastings were guests of
Outdoor
Middleville Hl-Y benelltu-d from a gain.
Mra. Arlle Spindler Bunday In hontalk on Hygiene and Health by Dr
Mrs. Keith Norton end Barbara; or of the birthdays of Rimel!
—w -a •few
—-jdays
— Kantner. Mrs Otto Townsend and
Be sure to remove'all shells
were...in Bauie «Creek
-------or
Wildlife students from all of the Lund last Wednesday evening. -• -----JZ &lt; irtridges from your gun before north central States me ■"-emblm,- _-C
Mra. Arlle Spindler.
v. P.
r. Angell I11CI
ntw.
met W1M
With, „
the Wood; j lacing U m an automobile. This
‘
here this week to hear ar.d dlsctc-s lxnd H1.Y
Thursdfcy evening,
Lawrence Cox of Hastings spent
’ ■- -minder to sportsmen was Issued the latest plans, developments. and, g|Vmg a shor: rnx&gt;rt 0| lhe older
ASSYRIA
'• Km Friday until Bunday with
A 1 by the department of conservation1 progrcXA of the conservation move- uo&gt;h- confercnce. A B. Treilrail is
Ith Farlee.
•
The opening season for rat trapafter' a check-up revealed that car-j ment. The occaslort is the annual leader and Franklin Townsend,
John Smith of Jackson and Laa&lt;3 I rylng loaded firearms |n an automo- f meeting of the Central States Wild­ president The group meets each ground did not permit the setting son Smith of Battle Creek spent the
bile lopped Uie list of 635 armts for life and Fish conference lo be held ’Tuesday-evening.
of trap#.
week end with their parents. Mr.
violations of the conservation Jaas Dec 10. 11 nnd 12. Headquarters will
At tire Briggs church wood bee' kDd Mrs. Owen Smith,
The Hastings Hl-Y held their regr- | In October. Although the law plain- be at the Michigan Union building.
Ouy Kantner and family were
ul^r meeting at the home of their a large tree was cut on lhe road
FJ ly states that a loaded rifle or shot-;
side. ex;&gt;ecllng it U&gt; fall In the : Sunday guwite of Wlllte Kanlner
|
president,
Horace
Angell,
this
week
’
|K j pun must not be curried in an au-I
BARRYVILLE.
Held. Instead it went across lhe I h* Hostings.
Monday evening.
jt . (umbbilf. sportsmen in large num-1
Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Willitts and
road obstructing traffic. Nine men' Mrs. Caroline Bliopbell, who has
The Y group led by Adelbert the next morning cleared the high-1 been visiting in Mason, was brought
rj j bers each year persist through Ln- daughter. Helen, went to Lansing
n| tent. carek-Mnesi or Ignorance in, Sunday They found Mrs. Clara Heath ut Hastings, are volunteering । way and telephone service was re- to lll(‘ home of her daughter. Mra.
to tidbit with distribution of Chrbl- fanned
JS committing thl$ violation.
Day alightly improved.
1 Torrence Townsend, hi an ambuMcCoy
"
of
mas
btu-keU and all Y fellows ate
Mr. and Mra Chas. ------- . —
Harry Cotton, who w'os taken m’lance Saturday.
We hope Mrs.
—tj- - contributing to a Christmas fund.
. .. new
.... deer
-----------------hunters' -------license- tag Grand Rapids and Mr. nnd• M
two we- ks ago. was taken to Leila, Shopbell will soon be well again,
Freeport Hl-Y members are gath­ hospital on Friday for observation
tried out for the first time in Michl- Gent Gonka and two children of
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Fisher of
ering
pipers
and
magazines
tojvlm':an this fall, has proved generally Yorkville were Sunday
dinner
and X-ray. Hls condition is serious. Woodland entertained Mr. and Mra.
■ntlsfactory.
.
—
very few
violations &lt;ft! guests of Mr and Mrs. Will Hyde.
He will return home Monday.
j Forreat Christian and son. Mra.
afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Wm. tiona'I Registration
-- --------------------the license tag regulations
were re-|. In
The Union cemetery organization 1 Mary Fisher. Mlsa Susie Fisher and
Grand Ledge Hl-Y and local com­ will meet at the Jones hall on Wed- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fisher and
ported. In one instance a hunter w-’s Cory anil two children called on
mittee hold another Joint meeting nesday for pot luck dinner andi*011- M * birthday dinner Bunday
observed wearing his tag upside tiiem.
dean; in another lhe numerals had
Mr and Mra. Kenneth Wilcox this Thursday at 6 30 with pot luck election of officers
*5! in honor of the birthdays of six ot
b;k-iu Monuny
beep smeared with mud in Loth unu
nnd Lxnuui
Donna spent
Monday ion-noon
forenoon supper when the 10 delegates lo
The Briggs Ladles' aid will meet ■ the gueate.
cum-s the numerals were no: readily with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. H PonUfic will give their rejwrLs.
Chas Farice and family
were
on Thursday. December 17. The
"
James ITlwood. N Y Slate V M ladles will tie comfortables while Sunday
legible. Many hunters in the field J Wilcox, and Mrs Wilcox regueau
of -----Mr.-----------------and Mra.
- ------- • «
------ —
loft their license tags and were turned with them to their home C. A. secretary, will be the guest the men will finish lhe "wood bet." I^aac Williams and Doris of Dowlforced lo apply for new hunting 11- ...
...—remaining until speaker at the stale convention hel l
in Kalamazoo.
Gordon Lee has employment al lnH 111 honor of Mra. Williams’
v-nses and lags at a cast of 50 Cents Wednesday when Mr. Wilcox came at F-‘5t Lansing church. Dec. 15 Rattle Creek with the Hunter and birthday.
before
continuing
huntingo.
----------------------.--------for her. Frank Wilcox spent sever- from 9 to 5Prt-11 plumbing Co.
j
--------------- * • •
• • •
। al days with hls grandson also! Y. M-C-A-work lost an old friend
Many pleasing reminders were
KLINGENHMITH.
I
BegLnning Wednesday. Dec. 10. Vein Wilcox nnd two daughters *l“-n Fred W Green left us. He received by Mr. and Mrs. Frank' Mr. and Mrs. Albert Green and
[ commercial fishermen may begin 1 were Sunday callers nt the H. J. served as treasure of the Ionia Thompson on their recent golden eon spent Thanksgiving In KalaI fulling for whitefish in Lakes Mich- Wilcox home.
,county Y. M. c. A- for ninny years.
wedding day. December 2. Mr. and , mazoo with E. B. Walls.
| f| an. Huron pud Erie. The 40-duy | Wedding bells rang for MLm Ar- !--------------- ------ -------------- j Mra. Edwin Bennett of Battle i Lw Lapham ohd children of
* BRANCH DISTRICT.
। ila-ed season for commercial flshtng I dis Rice and Ellis Bracey of |
Creek and brother Jack, and Mrs. Maple Grove were guests of Mr. and
- on this species comes to an end Dec. Olivet. The ceremony was performed
Mrs. Samuel Ostroth b better at Muggle Bennett were callers in Uie Mrs. Archie Burd and Mr. and Mrs.
this writing.
| 15 A 26-day closed season on white- Friday evening.
afternoon and their daughter. Mrs. Marshall Tripp Thanksgiving.
1 ft$h m Lake Superior expired Nov.
—'-**----------— ”Endeavor
-J------------------Mr.
and vMrs.
Kenneth
The
Christian
meet-t
----------'1'7 will
„ »,
„-------Mabel Hyland, was with them fori Mrs. Btorkan entertained rela, at the parsonage Friday evening. It and Joyce Marshall were Bunday &lt;llnnt.r
| t!vM from Cleveland and Grand
» election
...vnv.. of
u. vaa.vE-aa.
UfU-niOOn visitors
ViSi~.a. at
... mw
tu.wv..; is
officers.
।I afternoon
lhe Vincent
---------------. &gt; ,
Rapids Tlianksglvlng.
--------------- « • •---------------| Norton home.
Michigan's 1937 fishing licenses
MOUTH BOWNE.
I Mr. and Mrs. George Couch
nnd dti:«".'.' of general fli.hlng Jaw.-,
ROBINHUE PARK.
1 The infant daughter of Mr and! -Mrs.
w.
Noah Shaffer of Allo visited iutve moved into the Win. Clark
ure now bring dt-tributed by lhe
... Gaturday
------------Mr. nnd Mrs. Ocorga-Poiand and 1 Mrs. Lee Bell fell from her high ' from Tuesday —
until
eve- juxue.
“ John v-~n
— .spent
—— -• chair striking oi^ the hot stove _..j
— at lhe
— —
------ ..Shaffer .home,
—
department of conservation to more Mr and J*
Mrs
Kollar
m-.cl . ...
ning
Elmer
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lord and chil&gt;
than I JUJU license n gents All agents Sunday wL
vtih
Mr —
and
burning
quite......
sevenly
..........
_ Mrs.' WUllam
----------------------„ her
—hands
_____ ...........
......... , ; Mrs. Lydia Porrltt and Bob Bal­ dren .of- -Rutland spent Saturday
1 The
* mother
*
*had
“■" stepped‘ out' af' lurtl of Harris Creek visited Wed­ evening at the Green home.
Poland oftOrand Rapids.
Howard femith nnd son. Arthur, doors tor a few minutes u:ui doesn’t nesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. ; Our school bus made its regular
1933 11attended /he Live Stock Show t;» ’know *how **■
the accident •happened.•
William Pardee.
Chicago Thursday.
। , A harvest lime met ling a ill be | Mrs FwniUr
Huntington
of vacation.
Drilling for oil continues on an
Mrs. Ethel polheinus and children held at the North Maple Grove B-iwne Center has been visiting the
Mrs. Storkan. Mrs. Peterson und
unprecedented scale In Michigan, of Middleville spent Sunday after­ church Thursday evening. Decem­ past two weeks with Mrs. Minnie Sldrley were guests of Mr. and
indicating that operators still feel noon with her mother. Mrs Clive ber IL- Rev. Hill of Batllb Creek Bouck.
' ■
Mrs. Jim Storkau In Grand Rapids
certain that there are rich |Ktoln of Churchill, who is 111.
will deliver the message.
Mr. and Mrs Mart Griffin and Friday evening.
black gold” as ye*, undiscovered
Mr. and Mrs. John Kollar called
Congratulations are in order for Carole Joan of Clio. John GoldBurd has been quite 111
The otr.ee of the state geologist re­ on his sister. Mrs Otto Lightfoot, the newly-weds. Mr mid Mrs. pltclier of Bellevue, and Veva Grif­ lheArchie
past week.
ports tha*. 624 permits to drill were ut the home of Mra. Otto Kunde Lloyd Elliston of BarryvtUe. Mrs fin visited Sunday afternoon with
of Freeport Thursday.
Elliston was formerly Miss Betty Peter Griffin and Marion.
SOUTHWEST
RUTLAND.
each. exceeding Lhe record high
Howard Smith and family spent Ruler.
Emery Kime and family of North
Mr
Mr. ana
nnd Mrs. Fred Otis of liIaM
Glass
number of permits issued for the Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Chester
We are sorry to hear of the serl- ,
tvhole of 1935. whlc
Guekcs. west of Middleville.
ous illness of Mrs. Clara Day. now, the Harold Yoder home.
of
lftU4,r s brolher. Wln Havens.
■— ■
- I Mr. and Mra. Francis Gorham
were Sunday guests of their daugh­
ter. Mrs. Willard Bagley* and fam­
ily. of Kalamazoo.
Tlie pupils of lhe Olla school ore
preparing a Christinas program.
Mrs. Hazel Otis nnd children of
Hickory Comers spent Sunday with
W. H otu
Kenneth Dunn returned Friday
‘ from lhe stock show Ln Chicago.
Mrs. Frvlda Lord and brother,
Don Barlholemew. of Battle Creek
were Sunday guests of Mr. end Mrs.
Roy Oaks.
Mrs. Richard Laubaugh and son,
RUaiell. and Mrs. Bert Newland
were in Kalamazoo on Saturday.
has planted nearly 140 000.000 forestry scedUngs. the lands reforested
totalling
'.Olutnng 175.000
175.'W acres. Tits'"
I lie majorit
majuru,
*•
Notes
ot t!iest* Plantings occurred within ■
______ i the pail IU years.

Conservation and

'5 ----

BE YOUR OWN
SANTA CLAUS
IN 1937
WHY WAIT for some indefinite someone to bring you
the things you desire?

JOIN OUR 1937 CHRISTMAS CLUB
NOW OPEN « . . Save something each week and then
Dec. 1, 1937, you can feel just like Santa himself.
Some objectives for your Christmos Club Sovings. Sovc
for Christmas Gifts, Takes, Cool, Winter Clothes.

(©/ NATIONAL BANK OF HASTINGS

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

YDS of GIFTSAv

Check \/ and

'

Double Check

TOYS! TOYS!
TRAIN

TOYS!
L

Streamline
englne with whistle,
ears and track.

“YIS” YM CAN AFF9SD NATURAL GAS
HOME HEATING
investigate

$1.98
SHIRLEY
TEMPLE
DOLL
SCOOTER
Streamline,
disc wheels,
robber tires,

NEW 1937
AUTO
SLED—Flexible

98c

nets. Full

steer-

98c

$4.98
Brand New Rubber Footwear.
Made by U. S. Rubber Co.

curly hair. The
meve. Eyes op-

With bumper,
lights, robber
tires and ped-

NATURAL GAS

$1.98
Rubber tires and grip
Drams
G-Man Gun ------- ..

HEATING
FOR YOUR HOME

Royal De Luxe 5-Tube

HOME
RADIO

MEN’S RUBBERS. Pair

$1.19

PLEASANT RIDGE.
Mary Allerdlng has been assist­
ing with lhe work in the Art Todd
liome.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Barnum
attended the International stock
show Ln Chicago last week.
The D. G. T. O. club met with
Nina Townsend this week Wednes­
day.
Remember the Ladles' Aid and
community are putting on a pot
luck supper Friday evening, Dec. 11,
in lhe church basement. A program
will follow.
Officers chosen for Sunday school
arc: 8upl„ Arthur Richardson;
Secy.. Marian Haynes; Treas.. Hone
Woodman; pianist. Margaret Coals,
and chorUler. Robert Luse.

Costs no more than a good high-grade coal—and less
than oil.

Arctic,
4
buckle,
cloth lined, pair

$2.79

AC-DC colored illuminated dial, dynam­
ic speaker, built
»
in aerial, walnut
■ I O)
cabinet.
Will Y| I &lt; W
make fine ChristI
mas present.
U LI

$||9=

GAITERS

$2.98 to $3.29 poll

ROYAL DE LUXE HOT
WATER
HEATERS

ju j VI

S±_$5.95

Built like the most
expensive heaters —
and sells for half

Mai^ot
$*1.95
(list 7.951 w

COST OF HEATING

GET THE FACTS

HOME

WITH

Pir Siam

Let Us Give You—a
FREE
ESTIMATE

INVADER BATTERIES
Guaranteed for lhe life

10.95

01 baiting yaur htma with Natural Rai

39 Plate, 6 volt g y Q

DI,L 2305

Standard. (All 1917

COST OF HEATIHG THIS SEVEN-ROOM HOME WITH

Felt Back Mats
Rubbcr face, pressed

felt back.
All cere—
U5l W. State 6L, Hutinn. MlcK«

OuC

ONLY

ALCOHOL
proof. .Will
not rest tadtator.

49c

Far camplati Intarmilhn ... «na al mr aathaart will
call

"CHEAP" NATURAL GAS

Sedan and Coach

ROOM

OHLY

New 1937
Seat Covers

Coupe

SIX

These Hornes Hare Changed to Natural Gas

SPECIALS
Freezomcters 17c
Draft Mats
19c
Radiator Seal 5c
Weatherstrip 19c
Defrosters
Ash Trays
5c
Light Bulbs

THIS

"CHEAP" NATURAL CAS,

Per Season

«n&lt; (l» yau in aallaala hr y»r kiai.

CONSUMERS
POWER COMPANY

CARLTON CENTER.
Mr. Baron, father of Mrs. John
Shupp, returned to lhe Bhupp home
Sunday after several weeks' visit
with relatives in Indiana.
Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Fuller were
In Battle Creek Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Allan King of Wood­
land visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Henney Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Wing visited lhe
former's daughter In Grand Rapids
Tuesday.
The Ladles' Aid meeting held at
the home of XU. and Mrs. Jay Wing
was well attended. AU had on en­
joyable time.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne EUlotl of
Flint visited relatives In this vicini­
ty Sunday.
IRVING.
Mr. and Mrs. George Fox have
gone to Chicago to spend the Vin­
ter with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Reamcs and
two daughters have moved from
Prairieville to Mra. Benham's house
In the east end of town.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred BchlfTman of
Battle Creek have been recent visit­
ors at lhe home of hls family here,
Mra. Alva Johnson from near Mid­
dleville spent last week here with
Mr. and Mra. E. D. Johnson. Mr.
Johnson Is not very well. y
Mr. and Mra. John Perry spent
Sunday with their children in Kala­
mazoo.
Mra. Mary Belknap died recently
at lhe home of her daughter. Mrs.
John Unp. She was buried at Riv­
erside.

When Captain Cook discovered
Hawaii In 1776. be found W varieties
of bananas, brought by lhe natives*
ancestors on their Pacific migra­
tions by canoe. Today Hawaii ships
this fruit to other parts of tha
United Stales.
■

maiden voyage from Southampton
to New York on April 15. 1011 as a
result of collision with an iceberg.
Two thousand. -two hundred and
twenty-three passangers and crew

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAH

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY,.DECEMBER 17, 1936

16 PAGES

EXPLORES GRAND Board of Supervisors Accepts TWELFTH ANNUAL
CUROL SERVICE
GM ME Offer Made by I. D. Charlton
DAVID R. COOK TELLS
OWN STORY OF HOURS
SPENT THERE

Charlton Park to Contain 2IO Acres
On the Shore of Thornapple Lake

HASTINGS TEACHERS TO
PRESENT CHRISTMAS

To Our /Ulvertigerx

And ('orrefpondentu
Because

of

Christmas

next

published a day earlier than us­
ual—on Wednesday. l&gt;ec. ZJ, ln-

PROGRAM

OPTIONMONEY
AVAILABLE SOON

■y

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

Warrant Charge* Him With
Embezzling $500 From
A. Geukeg

NUMI

W TOWNSHIPS
wen

------ ----------------, .tr—
YANKEE SPRINGS LAND
On Saturday pros. Atty Archie D JOHNSTOWN AND ASSYRIA
OWNERS TO RECEIVE
McDonald issued a warrant for the I
—
——---------------MIT
—— -AT
RESIDENTS
■ arrest ot David chase of Middleville, i
CHECKS
BRIGGS CHURCH
who was charged with embezzling

their copy In earlier. We would
At a special meeting ot the Barry the ccunty for a county park. His
4300 from Arthur Geukes. a Middle-'
county board of supervisors held on offer was presented to the txmrd and
Ville merchant, between the daler UICTHRIFQ TFI I HP
«iblr.
ESTIMATED COST OF
Tuesday several Important items of was accepted unanimously. Accord- MANY COUNTRIES
br May 10 and Nov 6. 1836 He was . ° d UnltO I ELL Ur
ini' to the provisions of the agree­
business Were considered.
TO
BE
REPRESENTED
PROJECT
IS
$660,856
arraigned before Justice Adelbert
ment this will be know:* as Chari­
IMPORTANT
EVENTS
The five banks of the county, the
CortrigWT
on Monday forenoon and
.
,
.
ton Park and the county Is to erect
Government Purchases About released on bond of 41.000 and or- First RAttUra Camo
VanBuskirk Directs
Shows Origin of Many Types Delton fftate bank. Fanners Bank a building there for the purpose of Supt.
of Middleville. City National bank establishing a county museum. The
derrd to appear before Justice Cort- ■ r,r,t
From
5,000 Acres in Barry and
and Mrs. F J. Palmer Is
of Land and Rock
of Nashville. Hastings City bank net Income from ail concessions at
State* of Vermont And
mid National Bank of Hastings, were the park is to be used for mulnteanunailon.
•
the Accompanist
Allegan Counties
Formations
'
New York In 1836
named as the depositories for coun-, nance of the park and museum and
Mention of this case was made m'
•It Caine Upon the Midnight
Grand Canyon. Arlzunu. Friday. ty'funds.
Word from Washington Indicati-j
There was a fine crowd at the
the Banner several weeks ago.
such concessions must be approved Clear. " played by a brass ensemble
that money will soon be available
centennial celebration of the first
A resolution was adopted by the by the board of supervisor* Under from the balcony Of Central auditor­
settlement of the township* of As­
for the balance of the options on all
and took the cur down to the garage board expressing tu sorrow over the । the agreement with Mr Carlton, he ium. will call Hastings and Barry
syria and Johnstown, which wee
the lands comprising the Yankee
' to get it gn-a-s-d and to buy a new d&gt;ath of Supervisor A L Graves is to be custodian of the park, by
held Saturday in the Briggs church,
Springs project so far there has
and with lhe approval of the board nunl Christina.-. Carol service pre­
tire, returning to the hold about of Yankee Springs T^p.
a little distance from the Johns­
been
paid
813329
for
470
acres
Roy Everett was again named a-' of supervisors
,, vented by the Hastings
____ Teachers
town-Assyria town line.
which have been turned over to Use
We Intended to do our sijht- dug warden for the county to serve t Because of the crowded condition Cluo on Sunday December 20. a
government. Checks for that amount
until April I. 1937
_____________
.
of the Banner....
and the lateness of lour O'clock This
hour of reverend
bbout 100 persons at noon, other*
have been sent to the former own10 30 mi I could attend Rotary at
Mention was recently made in the I the hour, it te impossible to go into (“nd joy U anticipated each year by
(cmir.g in for the program after tt&gt;*
tiocn in Flagstaff, but late- ruled Banner about the offer made b&gt; 1 further detail this Week, but a more an appreciative audience. Every ।
FIFTY 1&lt;n&gt;
POMlble, some delay being SMALL ATTENDANCE INTWO
HUNDRED
. u
ilhcrwlse Returning to the hotel 1 Irving Charlton to deed 210 acres complete report will appear next j member of the teaching staff takes
The speaker was John C. Ketch*
caused by the clearing of titles The
' part In the chorus which is dlrectr.l i
tuund the family had gotten up cf land itlbiig Thornupple lake tu ■ week.
DRESSES ENTERED BY
DICATES FOLKS LIKE
am. Mata insure nee cot nitesloner,
estimated total to be expended on
"_________________________________________ __________ _________________ , by Supt D. A. VanBuskirk Mrs F
toon after I left and that Maudi
who »ave a very timely talk which
the
park
te
4660.856.
This
includes
WOMEN
OF
COUNTY
THE
MANAGEMENT
J Palmer u accompanist this year ;
Had sent David-back to his room io
was appreciated by all who heard
outlay for a large tourist camp.
The program Ulis year will be all ’
comb hte hulr and clean his teeth
, him. A letter of greeting was also re­
mu'ic closing with the well-loved, COMMERCIAL
--------------- ....
camping bathing, picnicking. US'DR. PERRY, PRESIDENT
before they went to bn-nkfiot and
ceived from Dr. Lyman Briggs, di­
CLUB
carol "Silent Night " softly sung ns ,
that he hadn't been j*-eii nor heard
of the Bureau of Standards
SPONSORS PROJECT i,K"l“u‘ *“p"l&gt; °*
MAURICE FOREMAN, SEC. rector
the curtains close
of since We didn't worry much
at Washington. D C. who was born
■ Following is the program for the
about him at fir»t, as wc-thought he
end grew to young manhood on tha
«
.
Onc catnp is nearing completion.
.
7* . ." . ,
„
Sunday afternoon service
had either gone out after butterDresses
Distributed
This on Mud lake Government author!- Amendment Adopted Calls Lri*gs farm in Assyria township. Mo
The high school gtrb
club
or to some of the muMntms in
l'. also president of the National
Week By Health Unit
"*? ar.c, "cku»« 1 b, Ucr name tha,‘
“
1 plans to go caroling Mu
For Nine Directors —
vicinity, either one of which he
G« o»raphlo-3r&gt;~*ty md a grandson
Upon the Midnight
•
Mud take camp. The word mud !*
would miKh rather do than clean EXHIBITS BY 4-H CLUB December 21
Three Chosen Yearly
o! tne donor of the land on wb'xh
Counsellors.
not &lt;0 enticing it an Indian name
j
If
you
like
the
songs
that
are
lite to th or rumb hu&gt; hair, or even
MEMBERS WIN PRIZES
the Briggs church and schoolhouse
TWO
hundred
and
fifty
wash
c
ul
found
which
has
the
right
The
annual
meeting
of
the
Berry
■ sung at Christmas time why not let
। at breakfast as tar as that te tonnow stand. Albert Lions of Johns­
dresses
of
ail
styles,
color-and
sized
“
Und
and
some
appeal,
it
will
be
County
Agricultural
Society
was
AT
SHOWS
them ting for you’ Put a lightel
rented However, when it war. tell
town gave a brief but interesting
’ candle in your window or let any
The Christmas story from St. from five years to 16 were entered in adopted Two other camps are con- held as per call in the court room rtory of the early history ot hl*
o'clock and I had
made
the
the
Santa
Claus
Dressmaking
Contemptated.
one
on
Long
lake
and
Saturday afternoon. There was not
■ member of the club know of your Luk. a Gospel—Miss Emily McEl­
rounds nt all
museums and MARY WILLIAMS HAD
test sponsored by the Hastings Com- **lother possibly al Deep lake It is a large attendance. Evidently the tJWttehlp and Walter Btsntcn did
wishes and the girls will try to ac- wain.
,
mercial club, according to Mrs. hoped to complete these camps by people are well satisfied with the the same for Assyria.
CHAMPION LAMBS commodate- you
In the Immediate nrlghbnrhoofl of
Frank C Andrus, county chairman u,e l“tter part of next summer, or fair management. They selected the.
Pnz i-.sMonal—G Come. All Ye The dresses were *11 well made and rarly next fall.
------------ ---------following
officers: President. Dr. the Briggs church live several very
Hugh Nevins, Paul Palmer, i
Faithful” •Adeste Fldelrs. (Italian) attractive and will gladden the
A government park official recent- 1 Burton
Pern
“
7
: -; secretary. Maurice old people Mn. Mary Buller the
could think of where hi* might be
hearts of the various Barry cpuntv Iy l‘ald ,n substance “The Yankee "
----------- ----Foreman;
treasurer. Orville Sayles. oldest, aged 81. was unable to atAlbert Bell And Harry
Resound - -Bee* girls fortunate enough to receive SpflhK' park urea, when fully de­ Directors cho*rn for three years)। tend -s were also two otliers UriM
canyon
Williams Also Won
thoven
one
veloped according to the plans al- are Harold J. Foster. Hastings; Fred in that vicinity, one aged 88 and ths
• Joy to the World' —Handel
The dresses were all numbered J*ady laid out. will represent the Mayo. Maple Grove and Clare Wil­. other. 90. Griffin Cummin- 85 year*
Barry county 4-H club member::
(town lite trull and
• Angela We Have Heard On High
rnme home with the major 4-H cluo
with no names attached and were
recreational
demonstration liams of Middleville The amend­, cLi. a life-long resident of Assyria,
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
—
I
French)
In) aheep honors In the two main
judged entirely on workmanship.
1,1
midwest. Scenlcally it ment to the constitution, adopted at
■ Come. All Ye Shepherds' — i Bo­ pattern and suitability of pattern to “•’‘‘■dy ran*tsb
ll'c most outstand- this meeting changed the manner of
tat .-(cm k shows of Michigan, accord­
tu make inquiries of an old Indian
CO.
TREAS.
L.
F.
MAUS
RE
­
hemian*.
ing area in the midwest region."
ing to Harold J
Foster. Barry
choosing directors in a way that DISTRIBUTES MONEY
who keeps track of parties on mule,
O Little Town of Bethlehem'—
county agricultural agent
Aside from the 5.000 acre tract in should benefit the society* The new
Th* winners are
CEIVES $31,777.00
goin-j down, not only when they
• English)
TO CITIES, TOWNSHIPS
Harry Williams of the Pleasant
Adult group—First. Mrs. R. K Yankee Springs, on the north side plan adopted Saturday provides that.
Marl but also
watching them
FROM STATE
Teachers’ chorus
..... second. Circle No 1 of tfw of Oun &gt;“4c. tiie government ha, each annual meeting shall choose.
Hill 4-H Livestock club and Hugh
Hurd,
through telescopes us th-y come In
Methodist church; third. Mrs Fred purchased about 44.000 acres of land three directors who will serve for a. Delinquent Taxes OolleoUA
view at various points thousands of
W Stebbins, all of Hastings.
1,1 t,lc western part of Allegan coun- period ot three years The advanClub Allowed pens of fat lambs al
"When
Christ
V.'as
Born
on
MONEY WILL BE A
feet below W&lt;- gave him Das id By County Treaaurer *”
High .-chool group—First, Lucille ly Ukc th“l °r nearly al) of thEarth
Neapolitan:
description. but he had not seen 1 the Junior Mvcntork show In De­
Maus
' 4
troit. December 8 to io Harry’s pen
MATERIAL ASSISTANCE
"Wake. O Wake Ye Shepherds All" Warner; second. Patricia Osborn; Yankee Spring* park lhe soil in the
of southdown Wethers took first tn
tiiird. Adrianna RaldtAali of Hxs- Allegan tract te very poor. The threc of the nine directors who will
—&lt; Catalan)
county
County Treasurer L. F.
F Mau* on
Just a little before nine he had seen
their class against 20 pens from over
tings.
■
x j)
fanners located on these lands were have had ’experience U) conducting Monday, made a distribution of IM
Women's Chorus.
a young fellow alone way down be­ the slate. The pen later won Grand Hastings City Schools Get
Junior high group—Ftnt. Mildred 'hiding It increasingly difficult to the fair. The amendment was adopt- delinquent taxes he had collected
yond the Indian Gardens over four Champion pen of the show His In­
Sum Of $10,536 As
Gaskill ot Dowling, second and ,nake thc soil produce enough for
the months of September. OctokOT
, "God Rest You
Gentle- , tiiird, Geraldine Heath of HastlAgs. “ ,?ar** »ving. and the area hod da- ' cd by a vote of 43 to 9
dividual Southdown wether lamb
Their Share
1 menEnglish)
According to the treasurer's re- aqd November of this year. *mrewfblur sweater on. so we still didn't
I The dresses were marked for dis- teriorated without question. The port the total receipts for lhe' last ing to 4538056. Th* majority
won first In Rs cla.-s and Grand
County Treasurer L F. Maun re"We Three Kings of Orient Art'
know whether or not David had Championship Individual of the
trlbutlqu
Tuesday
morning
by
the
purpose
of
lhe
government
te
to
refair
were
nearly
116.000.
After
all
Of
these delinquent tax** will go 1q|q
reived from the (.late department of — (English)
■ Continued on page 1. Sec 2.) ’
show. This tomb void to Armour and public instruction a check Ior-$3lr*;
| health counsellors of the Barry *clUB lhow *•*» had lived on the lhe actual expenses of the fair had, tlie treasuries of the village!, tows**'
Mtn s Chorus
County Health Unit and were then ,and which the government has ac- been |&gt;ald there resulted a net profit' ships and this city, and will help to
777 which is to tatbuu-d among i
vu
BANDITS ROB GAS
hi mb weighed 75 lbs. Harry is the
wrapped in Christmas boxes ready't»ulr, d on better soil, with better llv-: of 42.004.60 Tills would have been1 meet local expense* as well M aM
the school districts of the county
Solo—“The
Christ
Child"- _. to be given to needy girls • in the Ing and tfarming
opportunities
than' considerably Increased except for in the support of M-hcyU* ThO com—'"-----------ri
son of Clare Williams of Irving Twp.
follows':
Whitney Coombs—Mbs jean Gier-, county fiy the riMinsellors, which is they had m the region which the
STATION ATTENDANT
one rainy half-day which cut th&gt;- ty's general fund will benefit to Qty
um.
government has purchased
! in Thornappic High .school He te in Assyria—
being done this week.
attendance
materially. Improve- extent of over $1,800. Although dam
VIII
Paul Bryant Ordered to Hand his fourth year of 4-H Club work
The nearly 50.000 acres in the two men is were nude on buildings and &gt; te no tax now levied for the Mat* of
The judges in the contest—all
Selections from Handel's "Mrs- home economics teachers—were Miss areas in Allegan and Barry counties1 grounds, which were paid for out of Michigan, some of the** coliectod
No 6— Elite—$94
'’and it was his second year at lhe
Over $41.00 to Two
1 • I ah"—Arranged by Eric De Lamar- Helen Maveety of the Battle Creek will afford req-rational centers for' the earnings for the year. After pay- back taxes were for years when ■
No. 7 fr—Briggs -444
I diow
No. 8 fr—Check eted 1119
'
Fellows
। Mugn
I Hugh Nevins' pen of Shropshire
college. Mis* Helen Van Peenan of the ten million middle western div big for them there remained a cash । state tax was levied, and the MAo
Quartet (Violin. Clarinet, CeII° the Kalamazoo public schools and dwellers
whom it will be available balance of $75338 which was carried ■ »m benefit to the extent of 83ULM
‘ sided
tenth in their class and
----- to
-----------Friday evening about 8 4i o’clock, lonibs
«!
and Plapoi.
Mr.- Schumacher of Western Slate Thf« c,Ues include Chicago. Detroit to surplus, over 4.000 membership , from
two fellows, aged about 30 or 35 1 his indivniual lamb entry look sixth Baltimore—
— ——
•—dutributwn. The u
this
Misses
Glerum
and
Doty
।
place
iigabuit
a
class
of
36
choice
Teachers College at Kalamazoo.
Milwaukee. Cleveland. Toledo. In- tickets were sold this year.
No. 1—Dowling—4341.
driving a 1935 or 1936 Chevrolet se­
I trlbution will be as follows:
Messrs.
Lower
and
Hine
■ Those contributing to lhe success “’ahapolte. Fort Wayne. South Bend.
No 2—Striker-190
dan stopped nt the Mobil gas sta­
City of Hastings (
i cnw
—
------- Mrs
Andrus. Muskegon. Grand Rapids. Flint. CHANRF NFPF^ARY
No 3—McOmber—$112.
.
IX
of' the contest were
...
tion. coitiir No Broadway mid Apple complimented on their fine showing
;
village
of
Freeport
Gaskell. Lansing. Ann Arbor. Battle Creek unHI',uc IvCLEooRnl
The Birthday of a King' —Heid- J chairman; Mrs
Floyd
No 4—Hendershott-4131,
Sts., turnrd oil 'heir headlights, but in the competition County Agent
iiaai
and »■
In und -----------------Kalamazoo. The
development
•Inger
। chairman of materials »uu
.
left the motor running. One of tin­ Foster accompanied the boys to
IN
GUEST
SPEAKER
&lt;
Village ot Middleville ..
Men's Quartet
| charge of the headquarters in th* which the land te undergoing in­
,
No. 6—Durfee—455
men got out ot tin- car and told Paul Detroit for the show.
Mary Williams showed the cham-1 No. 7 fr—,Barney
.
Messrs Garner. Hine. VanBuskirk , National Bank building; Mrs. W R V0,VM the construction of camps. Captain C. J. Scavarda Of
Mills—480
Bryant, atlFhdmit at the station, to
Total
ptnii
4-H
Club
pen
of
fat
lambs
at
Barry
—
and
Lower
Cook
and
Winn
Green,
publicity
«**Wcklng
of
lakes
and
streams
fill up th'- gas lank so Paul put
State Police Coming To
I Assyria Twp.
X
| chairmen, and Warren Carter in *llh 5-*h. lhe establishing of feedTwp. Unit school al Delton—4822.
51.3g
in five gallons Tin- man gave him the Grand Rapi&lt;V fat slock show.
----pen
carlton—
"Hallelujuh Chorus" from Handefs I charge of the display. Mrs Allen l,‘«
,for b‘crca.M.-d numbers
10133
n 410 bill and Paul reached into hi' !’4f
e*pen
• was
.. reserve champion,
— .
.
Brotherhood
.‘ Maple
- - Grove
- - Twp.
--r
—
No 1—Rogers—145
pocket for a roll of bills from which •»» Um 0|»-n show
Sh- ‘beat out the
"Messiah"
j Pender was also of great assistance
fow* and other game, and
2MJ4
A change has been necessary fn I
to make change, when he looked , entries ot her father. Clare William)., No. 3 fr—Barnum—420.
"Deck lhe Hail"—(Welsh).
substituting for Mrs. Andrus, who «)&lt;? construction of motor roads to
"As Each Happy Christmas"— , waswas
taken
ill m
Saturday
e2* :-----, the
1/5 take full the speaker for the Brotherhood johrutown Two
No. 7—Cheney—4106 ’
up. he was looking into a revolver “n&lt;1 ,ler Brandfather. Robert Wil-,
uiacn
oaiuruay
——--------next Monday eyenlag. as Rep. Root; BalUmore Twp. i""!
AzrAumiw.
in charge also appreciate aajrantage
adyantage of thk
“i; U
which the holdup man was pointing Hams, to receive this high placing,
No. 9—Friend—490
(German).
Those In
this made-to-order,
,
-rwp
“Kolyada"—(Russian&gt;
'the generosity of all who donated wilderness. The area will be re- 1 is unable to come.
straight at him. The fellow said, i She also secured the Grand Cham....
No. ------------12—Ragla—------4104
Through the efforts of Insurance ,
—.
.. -------------•“Let Our Gladness Know No End" I materials or money for materials forested and fitted for recreational
ItTJt
"Give
that to me."
meaning |jjt., pion 4-H Individual of the show Castleton—
Conunteaioner John C. Ketcham. XT* '
p
against
4-H
fat
lambs
from
.
...
Western
--------No
j
0
(
Nashville
—
iBohemiani"
Bohemian
&gt;
and
are
grateful
to
the
members
of
purposes
There
will
be
deer,
bear
;
and
are
grateful
to
the
members
or
nine
»ui
ue
oeer.
near
money, which amounted to
—
....
—.
....
.
...
and
small
.... — a ...I---.
w.k____ _ Captain C J Scarvada of the Michi- “
Michigan.
Tree
the
lasl
Cheer
Up
dance
cbmmittee
a
",
snia
’
1
game
galore;
fishermen
83.264
O Fir IT
and Paul immediately handed it over
gan State Police has been secured as pytTi-j £L'
Albci t Bi II. a member of the
y
I
who
contributed
the
proceeds
of
lhe
n,,u
P^hty
of
sport
In
lhe
streams
No. 2—Castleton Center-456
Dear"—'Swedish!
guest speaker in place of Mr. Root. ■. J
p
I dance—about $6-to the fund ; and lakes
Bnd hidden
L‘k** h
away a- -----maps
-----------the
18132
ing north on M-37 toward Grand BarryviUe club, showed the first
Teachers' Chorus
Captain Scarvada 3s a membet nt Prairieville
! hills of the two areas In Allegan
prize 4-H pen of Shropshire fat
No. 3—Hosmer—450
Rapids
the Michigan Safety Council and o
evlll&lt;, * P_ .
county the state conservation depart15637
No. 4—Wellman—137
Sheriff Jay Blakn-y was notified lambs ai the show He also won the
Away in a Manger"—(German). ! SPECIAL CHRISTMAS
will no doubt pertain to lhe v,nkL^ onrm»&lt;
ment is assisting in the construction his .alk
No. 5— Morgan—195
and he lent itu- news
m the individual Shropshire honors. Harry
of
U»,
or,^
1Ull
on
.!,!«
coJ
™
,
........
In A Manger He U Lying"—No. 7—Martin-453
slate police station at East Lansing Williams mid Paul Palmer each had
SERVICE SUNDAY 0,...a ,ar*e Bsh r*orln« p°,u| »hich operates with all oilier taw epforc.Polish!
*11* amply ouw.li
Stock me
the lanes
lakes ano
and
■
win re n broadcast was given. No high ranking pens of lambs at the
"O Sleep, sleep on. Thou Fair,
bodies in the .state. Captain
__
Total ..
Presbyterian Choir And The ®lream-' of th“t “rea Realizing that ■ ing
No. 10—Shores
—485
pTfltl
clues have been found up to this Grand Rapids show. The 4-H show। Child Jesus"—(Alsatian)
;
n
,
a ,
u,c Bre“ never will be worthwhile Scarvada is a fine speaker and Mr
ing
honors
tn
fat
lambs
these
six
Hastings
Twp.
lime.
•Silent Night"—■German)
jI
Pastor
Plan
Splendid
—
-■
'
farming
country,
the
government
is Ketcham considers lhe Brotherhood i
young Barry county 4-H Club mem-No. —
■
*~
4 fr—Gregory—473
. fortunate in securing him for Mon- ‘ Co. general fund.81.800.76
Teachers' chorus
trying to turn tills practically worth­
Program
SOCIAL SECURITY FORMS !SijTnSX“U'"!
I, no i—otar—mb.
day evening. He has had many in-1 Covert Rd Redemption .... 31.73
I No. 8—Hastings Center—864
j Christmas te to be observed at the less tract into a worthwhile actual tcrestlng experiences some of which 1 State tax .
31640
CHRISTMAS MUSIC
SLOW IN RETURNING The Barry county 4-H Club pro- [ No. 10 fr—Quimby—472.
| First Presbyterian church on Sun- asset. When the numerous phases of he will nq doubt relate. You will,
the two projects are fully developed
gram te going very strong this year ,
Hastings City—410.536.
BY METHODIST CHOIR ’
Total
84.380M
want to hear hinv
Deadline Has Again Been
champion tn LLeswek Hope। the following program
u..| free d|str|b0t|ON
man who-feels he needs a change,
. judging team came from Barry No. 1—Doud—8129
I Organ Prelude—"Alleluia! Alic
Extended To Monday,
I county, consisting of Kenneth Dunn. I
Presenting
Fine
Program
whether he lives in Detroit. Chicago.
No. 2 fr—McCallum—&lt;110.
. iuta!"
I Toledo, south Bend or Indianapolis. IN READINESS FOR
RIEhard Wallace, Aden Campbell
* ,
0F CHRISTMAS TOYS
No. 3—Cedar Creek-4139.
.
. December 21
At Church On Sunday
- Processional—“Silent Night." ♦ h. W,U
Bble
10
Bet
,wa
&gt;'
fro,n
u
B11
and Albert Bell and placed second in 1
No. 4—Hinds—$141
I Introlt—"There’s a song in
Between-thirteen and fourteen national competition at the Interna­
in into a wilderness which will lack
Evening
WINTRY WEATHER Camp Hr. Oriulntipn in
I Air.” (Brahin).
hundred
Social Security foqns. tional County Agent Foster acted as . .(Continued on page 5. Sec D
only Indians to make It completely
Sunday evening at lhe First
Call to Worship—Psalm 103.
*
Charge
On Friday And
about one-half of those sent out. coach.
resemble what It originally was.
State Highway Department'
Methodist Episcopal church at 7:30
Doxology and invocation
had been returned to the local post­
To date over 40 schools over the I. 0. 0. F. GIVING
Saturday
o'clock the choir will render a pro- ■
Hymn—No. 213—"Hark the Heroffice by. Tuesday afternoon, accord- । county have indicated their internPlaces Barrels of Chloride
u&gt;
w.
J.
IVW.
IMMAr.
;
1
lion
o'l
cunlniTon
elihSY
Hindi:
CH
RISTM
AS
PARTY
gram
of
Christmas
music.
The
choa
id
Angels
Sing
"
HOLIDAY
MAIL
IS
Friday and
Lng to W. J. Field, postmaster.
’ OnSaturday
Hills of this week.‘_________________
ras of 25 voices, directed by Mrs i Responsive Reading
’
INCREASING NOW To help driven who may get by the Hastings Camp Fire (roups
,5“
'Children Invited To The HoU Robert Burch with Mrs James Bri.«-' Gloria Patel.
has delayed the return of a large winter. Many enrollments
are in at
tol at the organ, has selected a fine J Scripufre—8ain»- Matthew. Chap­
stalled on icy hilte on trunk lines, and guardians for lhe distribution
number of the forms These decli- the present time. According to Coun-1
Next Thursday To
Rural Patrons Are Asked To Lynn Brown, county maintenance 1 toyi al lhe Presbyttrian social par*
- program to be augmented by a cor-: tcr 2
loin must come from the secretary ty Agent Foster over 600 Barry I
Meet Santa
net solo and clarinet and flute duets.
Prayer and Three-fold Amen.
i
superintendent of the state highway lors.
■of the treasury in Washington. D county rural youtha will enroll '
Affix Own Stamps
department, has placed six M-gallon
If you have toys that you can eon■C— and naturally has slowed *■' the 4-H clubs for 1837.
Tuesday evening at tffMr meet- The program fittingly closes with; Anthem-'We Have Seen HU
During Rush
•The
Jiallelujnh
chorus"
from
Hanstar."
routine of assigning numbers to
barrels containing a mixture
sand tribute please take them to Um
। Ing. the I. o. O. F. decided to have
dels
"Messiah."
The
program
fol1
Announcements
and
Offertory.
and
chloride on lhe larger hlllsrThe. church on either of the two dty*
Hastings employees.
The Christmas holiday mail com­
another Christmas party for the
ESTABLISHING
BIRD
ld
**
:
,
t
,
.
Collection
Voluntary
—
&gt;
A
ChristTlie state newspaiiers have car­
menced to increase In volume Mon­ barrels will be labeled so that mo- j mentioned.
children, the date ta-lng Thursday.
Processional. “O Come AU Ye mas Medley"
y
i
ried a story to the effect that the
day morning of this week, accordins tor is u can easily locate them and! The response to the appeal $sr
FEEDING STATIONS
b“’
Faithful."
, Bolo—'Gesu Bambino" (Pietro A to W. J. Field,_______________
deadline has been extended to!
postmaster. "Mall use the mixture to help make tho toys to be repaired and for dolls to
"Hark
Early' is more necessary this year grade.
be re-dreaaed was jplenaw, MMK
Dec 21 but nq official word has been Seventy .nv.
in no&lt;«c uiliu tinvc uiiw*.
' Carol.
.. __
------- The
----- - -Herald Angels ■ yonr
Shelter,
To '
«f
c
_
1 Carol_No 219—“O Utile Town of than in several years because of the
They have planned for a Chrtel- 8'SL**Th^
, —
received at the paMofflee. according
The county as.well as the state numbers having been team 1*4^
highway department
is prepared
for manual training and home
Be Constructed And
to Mr. Field.
Bethlcm."
mas tree and a gift for each child
huge volume of mail expected.
if'
'
'
snow---if -it------------------shall come.----------So far--| tea ctasaw al High rohool.g
Sermon Topic—'The Holy child."
who cornea.
invited to ,
'.. ^11 My Heart This Night
Rural patrons of lhe carrier serv- heavy ------Maintained
।
I w,u&gt;
comes. Mothers are Invited
maintained
»
also brlng
thelr
5mallcr
„
-------------------- chUdren
' Rejoices"
—The Choir.
th*
— —
- two
—; days
! Scripture Text—Luke 2 11 "For Ice are requested not to ask the they have not had much to contend ■ On
Conservation Officer George Sum- thert. W1U
gHu (or tU.
Solo. “The Birthday of a King''— unto you is bom this day in lhe city rural carriers to stamp large num- with. Both the maintenance crews of children who
u._
...__ _ , ..
...
.from
.... the
_ .two
__ ______
._ )i* )*•are well tie for their zaa
per
Robert v.„a..v
VanderVcen.
Ohrtat
.* and noK-H
— NYA vltatlon includes all children.
- Reid Bassett
organizations
1 of Davtd a Saviour which is Christ ber of Christmas letters for them. ..
— —
----------------------------------------county supervisor, are planning fori Fur
r„, .
numoer of
ot years
yrB„ the
MIC I. O.
Clarinet and Flute Duet. Mr ' the Lord ."
the church parlor*
Thqy are asked to purchase the equipped for fighting snow drift*,
a number
‘
WILLIAM CONRAD.
the construction and maintenance of' o P. hM tx-e-H bringing Chrtet- Wakenhut and Mr. Hine.
gifts they daslre, i
1 Carol—Ho. -210—"Joy
the stamps and affix them themselves
-----------------------William Conrad is obliged to quit about 75 feeding stations and shel- Inaj u&gt; hundreds of children, and
Anthem.
"While
“ '
’
in the slack months the carriers arc SAFE AT WOODLAND
Shepherds
world."
■
farming because ot the death of his ters for birds around Barry county, mis year they hope for another Watched '—The choir.
Thia U
glad to give this service but it can
ELEVATOR BLOWN OPEN,
Benediction.
niece, so will have an auction at hit this winter. The deep snow and se- happy gatlwring
be easily seen that service would be
About 3 o clock WednMday moni* which the
Carols. “There's a song in the
Postlude—“Gloria." (Mozart&gt;.
farm located one and one-half miles vere cold of last winter prompted'
, B t__________
Air." "Infant Holy. Infant Lowly."
sadly disrupted if carriers were ln&lt; lhe
west of the Nashville standpipe with this action. Last winter fifty stations TO PRAIRIEVILLE
asked to stamp hundreds of letters Ewvator at Woodland was blown
Comet Solo. W Maylan Jones. Jr.
DEATH OF MBS. MASON.
Hqpry Flannery as auctioneer and were maintained and doubtless the
Mrs. Anna B Mason, aged 80, a or cards
open, damaging a stove and desk
TWP. TAXPAYERS.
______ -Hearken All What Holy
Carols.
and " breaking
several windows.
Ernest Gray clerk. The list include-! Ilves of manv birds were saved there-I I will be at home on Fridays; at Singing," ’’The First Noel."
pioneer resldem of this city, died at
■ team. 12 head of cattle, lot of hay. by. Feed will be supplied this year Delton state Bank Jan. 2 and 9.
Money and papers were taken but
Solo. "There were Shepherds"— her home on Wednesday morning
PUBLIC INVITED.
grain and fodder, farm tools and by the state department of conser- 1937; at Cressey Dec. 30; at Doster. Mrs. Burch,
after an illness of several months.
Ruth Springer, supervisor of the
household goods. Sec the adv. on vation.
i Dec. 29. for collection of taxes for । Carol. "Silent Night."
Funeral services will be held al the book mending project, announce!
another page for complete informa­
This te a splendid undertaking as Prairieville township.
i “Hallelujah Chorus" from '“The. Emmanuel
.................... Episcopal church on
... that the public is cordially invited to clues as to bow the thieves entarwd.
tion about the dale andi the list the birds are the farmer's best
Lewis Johnson. Treas. i Messiah"—The Choir.
, Friday at two o'clock, the Rev j. a. visit the project every Wednesday as all doors and windows were found
locked as usual.
offered.
, friends.
, —Adv. Out 12-17.
Benediction, Rev. Jone*.
McNulty of Dowagiac officiating.
। of each week al the oily hall.

FEATURE OF GRAND
CANYON IS SIZE

CONTEST WINNERS
ME ANNOUNCED

;
YOUNG PEOPLE
AWARDED HONORS

THE FA ROT'S
ANNUAL MEETING

Lighted Candles
Will Call Carolers

SENDS DEL NQUENT
TAXES TO D!STR GTS

at

9®^°

One Auction Sale

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1936

I TWO

Taylor. There are surprisingly few. '
Dr J. W- Rig tar Ink of Grand Rap-1 Familiar slghu this week—ChristREOPEN NORGE
t ids has been elected director of the , mas trees on cars or being carried |
If any, women ranked among the
Kent County Medical Society. Dr. home to.be made ready for the;
great composers of the world and
STORE SATURDAY
Rtgterlnk is a former resident of. coming of Santa.
especially U this true in America
■ Freeport and Is well known hen*.
| Dr. D. R. Lethbridge and family Home Eoononwot
-However,
there U gne song "Duua".
Will Be
’
almost iierfect technically, written I
Mrs. R R McPeek is one of a com- expect to leave December 21 to
[
Mrs. Charles H Bauer, wh
Present
—
Giving
Favors
' by a southern girl Josephine McGill. ।
milter w
which
will juugv
judge wic
the vnrzsiChrist- ,j -wspend
Lcthbeen ill. is steadily improving.
«jvh wui
— Christmas with Mrs. —
—-.
■
__
hrlrtoo
’
A
urrnlt
Or
A
W
Woodwhich Mr. Werrenrath always sings.
!
Mrs. Harlow Moored, who has mas Lighting Contest a*, charlotte. | bridge* b*"nU-Dr. A W. WoodTo Adults
REINALD
WERRENRATH;
Today's
great
song-writers—
I been ill for some time. Is somewhat Prizes will be offered for the best, i»ume »nd Mnr Wocdbwne. in TamAfter a year's rest. D. B. .Green is
tn'orge Gershwin, Irving Berlin. Vic­
imnroved.
'
decorative effects obtained from the, P®- Florida. Dr. Lethbridge plans toj
AU FRESH STOCK
COMBINES CONCERT
tor Herbert. Jerome Kerns—can be
Have vou noticed the attractive outside in homes and' business11,0 baclc *n Mason December 20. Mrs again selling the Norge refrigerator UsStmg’ ^Xs around the places
ix.hbridge and Richard wiU remain and has opened a atore at Woodland,
classed os-better Qpe ballad writer*.
GILBERT'S
• SCHRAFFT'S
• HUNTE'S
WITH SONG HISTORY
monument?
Mrs. Walter McKelvey (Helen. &gt;n Florida for a visit. - Ingham where he will have hU grand open­
Ocnhwln'a .' Rhapsody in Blue" is
ing on Saturday of this week.
one of the finest things that has
Mrs Earl McKibben Is avesting al Linni of Battle Creek is recuperat- County News. Mason
Miss Bessy Barth of Detroit. SAYS RADIO GIVES
| come out of America and Kerns’
the A. J. Larsen store during. Die mg from a severe attack of pneuMr. and Mrs. Charles A. Kerr, for
Christmas shopping season.
mourn Mrs McKelvey was formerly 35
residents of Hastings, will Norge home economist, will be presI ITTI c Tn M||Q|P , "The Song Is You" from his producLII ILt IU MUblU UofJ - Mualc ln the Alr" Is one of
C. Thomas of Grand Rapids was with the Barry County Health Unit ; occupy one of the Williams apart- I ent and give suggestions concerning
in Hastings Saturday, looking after and
now on
the O.~..
staff w.
of &gt;..v
the Ca!- |; merits on East
,H— baking, cooking and how to use the
the best thinks he has ever written.
&lt;W.U is ..VW
. .........
houn County Unit nt Marshall
week and will make their home here Norge effectively in order to save, Believes Public Schools Re­
The question of music in the
the contract* for the new signTne scarlet fever epidemic at Mid- during the winter months Mr. Kerr food at small cast.
schools was raised tn lhe forum fol­
sponsible For Increasing
Tiie interdenominational grayer
Farm "Win be distributed to the
LATEST DESIGNS
LARGE STOCK
lowing the lecture, and The speaker
band met at Mr*. Eleanor Stricklin's d)&lt;“llle has about subsided, accord- IU well known to many people in adults who attend on Saturday. The
Interest In The Art
, said lhe schools arc responsible for
home on Tuesday afternoon and was Ing to ofilciaLs ot the Barry County | this community through his long adv on another puge gives full par-J
Health Uni;, but a number of cases j connection with the Michigan Mi&gt;Also Complete Line of PACKAGE DRESSINGS—
The lecture forum sponsored by the gr-uitly increased interest in
tlculars about the Norge and the the Teachers' club was opened las'. music today. But because radio pro­
Mrs Shirley B Henry submitted h ivr be-.n reported from Orangeville tual Insurance co.—Clinton county 1 opening on Saturday.
TAGS. SEALS. RIBBONS and PAPER
.»«. operation
...... ..
«...
Wednesday evening by the world- grams are sponsored by business
i an appendicitis
on township. An increasing number of I Republican-News, 8L Johns.
famous
baritone. Reinaid Werren- men who as a rule arc not musician**,
Monday at Pennock hospital and u cases of whooping cough and mumps
MRS. vA.N W1E WAS
nunl of niuos tvngate.
doing as uell as ;&gt;0Mlblc.
are being reported by the doctors in
AWARDED JUDGMENT. rtith, He prefaced his lecture proper radio has done practically nothing to
Byron Tungntc, who has been In
Mrs F a Blnrktord of Rutland Hasting*.
After four hours' deliberation a with a brief nutline ot his ancestor.,. advance musical-education in Amer­
ica. The
the lecture
who were all professional musicians
___ singer
— doted
____ _____
township write* that on Monday she
The common council h'ud lhe.r poor health for a long time, passed jury granted a judgment of »6o0 to
'
“Road to
saw a live ground mole crawling on regular meeting Friday evening, but away at his home at Midland Park. Mrs. Minnie McPherson Van Wie HU maternal grandfather. Henry j with the cver-popular
there was little *"«•"-&lt;«
business ”
except
con- ;Gull lake, on Tuesday night. The fu­ against the Fidelity Health and Ac­ Camp, was choirmaster Jp Henry ' Mandalay."
the ground by her back door ’
"01 eonThe matter of ,neral will be held at the Methodist ' cldent
uem vo.
Elmrr White, the local new- bay :ld*rntlnn of bills
Co. m
of uenwn
Benton tsaroor.
Harbor.
' Ward Beecher's favorite *Jhurch in----------------- ------------PLACE YOUR ORDERS NOW
informs us that he will celebrate ti - water supply tor the Pancoast build­ Protestant church at Hickory Cor__________
______
...____
,__ ....
It was alleged
that
Mrs. Van
Wie JXV’T nSTu.J^eanie to METHODIST SUNDAY
--------- -------iutomoblle latlier. a Danish U-nor. came to
torty-ntnth birthday on Wednesday ing on state St
“ and- Ute first,, ward .ans
nets un
on rnuay
Friday niiernuun
afternoon bi
nt itwo
»u suncrcu
suffered
Injuries in
injuries
in an automobile
rchoolhcurf was taken -7
Insurance America with a two-fold contract. |
up. !!
Il np-, o-ciock. H(. b ,urvlved by hls wife i accident and that
SCHOOL PROGRAM
D.c. 23. Happy birthday. Elmer*
'
to
a famous
York
ie supply
supply p.j&gt;cs
p.pc., for
tor these
tn . an(J
',,",'“r,v ,lia
The Fcldpausch employee* and years
yeat that lhe
unn one
one jjujhtei'.
uausnier. Mrs
Mrs Don
Lxm Fore-1
rore- Ccompany
did not ’luinu
uia
fulfill tne
the agree~ sing
" with
------ ~
~
, , ;New
,
two
place*,
which
were
pul
in
many
Departments
To
several other invited guests number- two ------------- r
------ - man of Hastings, also three grand-' ment made In their policy carried by orchestra and to be soloist in Plym- Various
ore
plugged-up
In
some
।
ing 65 had a meeting Friday evening year* ago.
plugged up
som&lt;- daughter
1 the comnlalnant
outh church Mr: Werrenrath’.-, sub-1
.
me complainant.
, Jpci f(jr the cvenlng waa -Amerlcan
Participate In Observing
at the Parker House where they .saw manner so that they can’ not supply I
a demonAtraUon of canned goods, the needed water The matte, was re­
Songs" which he fell quallfied.SpJ
Christmas
PHONE 2241
HASTINGS. MICHIGAN
____
_____
F-Tr'.
’
d
eomnulMe
tor
j
Moving pictures were shown giving f-rr- ci
hr waler commll.ee for
‘
“
'
Bv American song* he meant
Sunday morning at 11:20
and such action
In detail the process of canning
------- *— *investigation
—
"
"" as.
ihoi written by people bar.; in the oclock. the
Methodist Sunday
they felt was required
fruits and vegetable*.
United SiaUht. Tn hLs opinion ni. Schoollsr.nderingaChrlsunasptathough America hits produced some i
ll’* Whi.e Christmas
Visit our Progress Counter today
fine music. It must stUl be constd-'
Tilt* off-'.and lot a Packard Lakho-Shavar
cred iwcond-rate bcMfec of the *»«
great mixture of races In this coun-, “at Redford maintained by the
"
smooth, gliding stroko. A clean
Methodist
churches
of
Michigan,
try and its extreme youth as a na­
shave and a cool ono without the
tion. with the latter the.more im­ giving a fine home to hundreds of
children.
The
program
follow-;
portant cause.
Christmas carols- •Audlcnc.-.
after-shave bother. The round head
Indian songs cannot be termed
Pantomime— Kindergarten.
muter cutter shaves those hard-to, American tn Mr. Were nrath’s sense
Song
roaeh places with elfortless ease. Its
’^.M lhe word and he feels they con, 8 and Exercise—Primary Dehibuied Utile to Its development. par-m«)U.
glidingstroke stlmulatssyourskln.
In-.ir'ftmi'htal Number. Song and
ThA Negro
Nporo spiritual
snlritual has greatly
areatlv inIninsiFume
The'
Tha Packard Lektio-Shsver sells
Recitation
—Junior tx-partment.
•
fiuenced
nuenced
our
music
although
it.
too,
too.
•
••
for Sip, tha coat of a year's old• ’Christmas Story—The Anchor
cannot be classed as truly American
rstyle shaving, and Its matchloss ■_
L perhaps lhe best-known of them
efficiency will solve all your shav­
Song
—
Mrs
Fred Johnson’s Cla&amp;«.|
R "Swing Low. sweet chariot," which
ing problems for years to come.
r he sang ns arranged by Harry |
t’a"’.
Violin
Spears There is another type of Nen *’ Solo
‘ — Mio* Margaret Dens­
.
gro song often wfongly called a ■ more.
Song and Recitation—Mrs Adet-'i
}
spiritual which is really a “shout
Bilk Iks Sswsik-Caniag AOUMO fln&lt;
*
song" sung at revival meetings. A- bert Heath's Qla-s
Christmas Play—Warren cartel at
an example the artist gave "O. the
CUsa.
I .and I Am Bound FW "
, The first record of a song by a
white man is by a Philadelphia law­ ROTARIANS HEAR
yer and personal friend of Georg.
HON. J. C. KETCHAM
Washington who wrote "My Day •
Have Been. So Wondrous Five" |:i
1737. The linger called it "a pah- Michigan
H«3
Wonderful
gray imitation of the Elizabethan
Natural Resources Still
songs of a century before, only no*,
so good.” Then came a line of fivin
Undeveloped
nologlsts called "tune book writers
A lust minute rush of holiday a lwhose works arc found in nearly vcrtising will prevent our giving th;
every hymn book today
It la the one cigarette lighter that
1 i I 1— •&lt;» on the
Tne minsiryl siiow was respoiwlbh fine address given by State Insurcannot fail. No winds can blow it
lar one dt tne greatest names in
out. No bother about constant re­
American
song. . . stephen Col- am at the noon meeting of the Rofilling. You refuel a Loktrolite
Fine Granulated
i.U, itllU 111 Will. 11 I,- UI.YVII IV &lt;1 Ila.
I Dream of Jeannie wllhJier Ligl; liiMonrti] backutuund &lt;&gt;! Michigan
month*. No llama. No falling
prawn K,lr. one ol Fo.Ur . I . .. ....
..
He discus &lt; d „„
the .............................
wonderful natural
■parka. No odor. The magic glow
known woik*. With the proper train-, resources of the tatr. the ev.-n mare
Li.1?
' wobdcrful strtdi . thtU have been
■Uncos from cigsrottoz.
might have become the
... American nmd- in manuiacturUig and Ihad
Loktrolitos are priced hom $1
Schubert for there Is a great re­ Michigan has a place aiming tl:&lt;4
24^ lb. sack
semblance between the two men.
to $25.
leaders in lhe educational world W.J
The golden age of American .ion" still have ic.sotnce* to be devrlnped]
came In the latter half of the nine­ but the question of what can bq
AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
teenth century when Edward Mac- done with them will Tlepend uBQtf
Dowell, E.hclbtrl Nevin and Chari • the moral and religious development
\
PACKARD SHAVERS ARE $15-00
10 Lb. Limit
Chadwick were writing. Their work of the people as will ns their mater­
was of a more serious character ial nnd i diie.ittonal ndvayct*. It w.-us
Use our time payment plan. $5.00 down — one dolthan anything preceding It. A- sam­
•
lar a week.
ples of thii finer type of music tne urn'* usual fervor i.nd vigor
speaker gave "The Sea" by MacCktit 6- S*nbo&gt;n
Dowell and one ot Nevin’s composi­
tions "Time Enough" in which the
The First united Brethren church
author lias gone to greater drama*, will celebrate Clirl trmir. with a
tc lengths than u.iual.
white Christmas. The Rifts will be
The •erioui art form .is not Used .for. the Otterbein
________ ____
home ___
mid for
HASTINGS
PHONE 2396
by present writers, but there are Im- baskets for lhe needy fnrn'llr- Th J
Blue Label
! portant figures In today's mu-ac. ChtUtnii. program will be given by]
। world—Oley Speaks. Charles Cad- lhe children of the Sunday School
.’■ popular brand*
GET THE SHAVER WITH THElU
HE AD
man. Frank LaForge and Deems Wednesday. Dec. 23. at 7:30. All aril
A Carlon

3

&gt;.;m MBITOHE I
LECTURES HE

LOCAL NEWS

CANDIES

BOXES 39c to $2.00

GREETING CARDS
2 For 5c to 25c

Don't Forget the Special Arctic Ice
Cream for the Holiday Season

rx ■“ P" r\ &gt; o Walgreen System
KttU ^DRUGSTORE

EVERY MAN SHOULD HAVE THEM

Give FOOD for Christmas

BANANAS 3

17

ENGLISH WALNUTS .

APPLES, Fancy Spies
5 Ibs. for 25c
FLORIDA ORANGES.......... doz. 27c

MIXED NUTS

BRAZIL NUTS

FLOUR

SUGAR

10

""lektrolite

19c lb.
_______ ... 23c'lb.
... 21c lb.

GRAPES_______ __________ 2 Ibs. 19c

PILLSBURY

LEKTRO-SHAVER

___ 10c lb.
10c lb.

CHRISTMAS CANDY
PEANUT BRITTLE

GRAPEFRUIT,Texas Seedless, 7 for 25c
ORANGES_____________ 2 dozen 29c

PACKARD

CIGARETTE LIOHTEB

Rinso or
Oxydo!

48c

P cr G Soap, giant bars, 10 for 39c

Viking coffee, 17c lb.; 3 Ibs. 49c

Jack Frost 4X Sugar _ 2 Ibs. 15c
Karo Syrup______ 5 lb. pail 33c

Fancy chocolates _ _ 1 lb. box 25c
Cherries___________lb. box 21c
Chocolate Covered

Sure Fine Mincemeat _ _ 9c pkg.
Stokcley's pumpkin No. 2\ cn. 10c

Brer Rabbit Molasses

_ _ 25c

•No. !’i Can. Green Label

Aunt Diana Molasses 51b. pail 25c

COFFEE

23c,b

Cigarettes

Seminole tissue ____ 4 rolls 25c

Balloon chips, _ _ .

5 lb. box 29c

Royal
Gelatine

Pancake flour .

5 lb. sack 25c

6 Flavors

'fClothing and Shoes for Men and Buys”

2 bars 11c

Camay Soap

*1.15
41/2Cpkg.

T. S. BAIRD

Super Suds, giant size, 17c pkg.

III \ I)

.. 23c pkg^

Creom of wheat _ _

Quaker Oats, large size

19c

BAftRY TIIEATIli;
Ila^tingH. Michigan

A»

I

JH-«d

OUR BEAUTIFUL NEW POPULAR PRICED THEATRE
Friday - Saturday Evening Shows Only 7:00 and 9:00 P. M.
Sunday - Monday—Matinee Sunday 3:00 P. M.—5:00 P. M.
Occasional Special Showings In Mid-Week!

MEAT

Prices Always ADULTS 13c . CHILDREN 10c

SUNDAY and MONDAY. DEC. 20 and 21

JOE E. BROWN
in "POLO
JO E"
With CAROL HUGHES and SKEETS GALLAGHER

Pure Lard

2 ibs. 25c
4 lb. limit
HAMBURGER

PEANUT
BUTTER

iblOc
2 Ibs. 29c

Ducks and
Chickens Now!
22c lb.

PORK CHOPS

lb. 13c

EGGS

22c lb.

25c lb.

PORK SHOULDER ROASTS

20c lb.

BEEF KETTLE ROASTS

36c Ibr

LEG OF VEAL ROASTS

23c lb.

These Prices Good Until Christmas

SUNDAY and MONDAY. DEC. 20 and 21

SNOWED UNDER

NASHVILLE

PLUS Musical Revue. ‘Sunday Roundup'* Novelty.
"When Fi.Ji Fight,” News Events
BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY 1:00 AND 3:00 P. M. FOR
ADULTS. PRICES AT ALL OTHER PERFORMANCES OF'

With GEORGE BRENT. GENEVIEVE TOBIN, GLENDA
FARRELL ami PATRICIA ELLIS

BARGAIN NIGHT—TUESDAY. DEC. 22

ALso Following Short Program: "Sunday Go To Meetin'
Time." VUaphone Hippodrome." "The Blond Bomber"
Adults 15c: Children 10c — Matinee Starts at 3:W o'clock

Hollywood Boulevard

WEDNESDAY ond THURSDAY. DEC. 23 and 24

WED.. THURS. ond FRt. DEC. 23. 24 ond ft

By Special Request We Bring Bark Again for you al
Popular Prices!

SPECIAL ATTRACTION

JEANETTE MACDONALD and NELSON EDDY in

’ROSE MARIE’’

Errol FLYNN in "The
Charge Light Brigade"

Adults I5c: Children 10c

With Olivia DeHaviltand and Patrie Knowles

FRIDAY and SATURDAY. DEC. 25 and 26

Matinee CHRIHTMAS DAY. Starting at 3:00 O’clock
Adult* 25c; C hildren 10c

fi
JOHN WAYNE and DUKE, the
Miracle Horse, in

FOOD CENTER
HASTINGS

«&amp;

Turkeys,

19c lb.

10c lb.

BUTTER

Christmas

SIDE PORK

RIB BOILING BEEF
SLAB BACON

Order Your

• SATURDAY ONLY — DEC. 26
DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION!

— FEATURE NO. t —

COMEDY—"At Your Sendee Madame."

..

HERE COMES CARTER

'ISLE

OF

'

FURY

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 17. 1938
coaddered to the advantage of the
. OFFICERS RE-ELECTED
BY MEDICAL SOCIETY.' general public.
™
«&gt;«„.&gt;•
„.
Caaaed Milk
---1 •
’ '
23. 7 o’clock. Mr Warnock ot Gales- clely met lot Thuraday evvning
Evaporated milk is produced by
■* Methodist U a S Circle No. B Du»*c willfce with us again, this Umt-i at the Parker House and re-elected exaporating about 00 per cynt of lhe
met-ta tomorrow. Friday. Dee. 18. with questions and answers. The1 Dr. H 8. Wedel of Freeport pretl- waler from whole mlDc. Sweetened
wlth Mrs. Smith Will E Clinton St student* of "Honolulu Conservatory ( dent and Dr. Gordon Ft&amp;her secre- condensed milk is produced by
for their GhrLstmns party and pot of Music" will also be with us.
jury for the coming year. Dr. E. T. evaporating the same proportion of
luck dinner ut noon
-|
•
—
Morris arf Nashville gave a report of
water and then adding pure cane
1 Mrs. Fred Smith is entertaining | the meeting of the legi.slatlve cornsugar.
The Pythian fllsurs will have Methodist L A 8. Circle No 2 on • mlltee in Landing which he and Dr
their regular meeting Tuesday eve- Monday evening at her home. 1151 Fisher attended. Tire legislative
Mileage in Shaving
lling. December 22. al the K of P W Center St. The usual pot lues committees of the local and slate soFrom his first shav. to his last lhe
hall As It Is Die last meeting of the rupiicr will be served followed by the cietlea cooperate in formulating
year, a large attendance b desired Christmas, party and exchange of: medical legislation they’ deem-ad- average man shaves over twenty
Plans will also be made for installs- gifts
I vlsabte or they oppose measures not square miles of face.

■

■'
— tlon of officer* In January.
.
■
. •
--------- —
rganizations

1

I
'

1

Give Him Gentry

GLOVES

He’ll be delighted with these handsome Gentry
dress gloves of fine Capeskin. In either snap or
wrist strap styles! Also unlined gloves of pig­
grain Capeskin in slipon style. Grand gifts that
are bound to please any man!

definitely the gift
a thoughtful pers

throughout

the

cold

weather for one of thsso.Give him a silk one for
' dress wear . . . and a bold
plaid woolen for everyday.

The price is especially at­

tractive because these look
much more expensive.

Whoever
evfh ■ h?rr’,fypf
thrilled;wfjii’ the

how is his
HANDKERCHIEF supply?

lie ^raifi frocks.

Wlt'W

I'iabpllt the.house? 'They
’stay

n*;vfr - looking.

*T1ify

won't lose their crisp’ coloi-

49

A gift sure to be welcome. Linens
with plain or colored borders. And
solid colored cottons. A fine selec­
tion to choose from.

ful freshness either, !&gt;c. iuje
tfty're made ol List color
prints—nur

famous

and Malabar! Si.’r

Kondo

i i ».&gt; 5_-

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

Editorials

'Round About Town

UhmtmaA Irophecij

Hew to the line, let the quips
fall where they may I

ONG, Iobr uro the Magi came
with trophies__________
To pay their homage to an infant
King.
The vanished years saw shepherds
in Judea
Find magic light, and pause,
remembering
That there would be a sign that
early morning
When One would come with balm
for weary scars,
A donor of new hope, gay love,
warm shelter.
Who came Io earth attuned to
Christmas slars.
has"
HE prophecy of pc;
never vanished;
Il sings its way through blur of
martial drums.
Good will to men is more than
mylh or fancy:
There are so many kindly ways

L

lights con be. Bute street is a dif­
ferent place with lhe colored lamps
and lhe old monument gay with
strings of tinted bulbs. Christmas is
supposed to be a gay ana festive
time and a little effort at street
decoration adds tremendously to the
effect. The Job has been well done

FOOD FOR THOUGHT
A scries of statutory cases have
been concluded here which are a

would be a complicated, dlthcull

THURSDAY. DECEMBER 17. 1936

Hastings High School
Activities
Enrollment blanks for next semes:
•r are being made out this week.

it n literature, solid geometry, dra­
matics for sophomores and Juniors.
:;k*cch composition, horticulture and

Un’tii-i -land that Miss FL
Campbell walked into Cartel
Stebbins drug emporium this

T

asslgament to Uy and rlx respon­
sibility for the situations which
brought them about. Unfortunate
home environment is possibly lhe
main contributing cause, ignorance
of the Law governing statutory-cases
another. Then. too. the laws of her­
edity are relentlessly exact.
Strange as it may seem, the sym­
pathy of Barry county Julies in such
cases as this usually appears to
lean toward the defemk.n.. Tills
makes the problem of prosecution
more difficult than hi the average

ciinc up sinilin.

•njoyed.

Mcrieta Stiles. Lucille Warner. Vir­ ATTENDED LANSING MEETING.
ginia Waters and Isabel Sage.
County Clerk Allan' Hyde, who is
vice-president of the
Michigan
The Hastings negative team de­ County Clerks Association, went to
bated an affirmative squad from Lansing Sunday to attend a meet­
Grand Haven there Monday after­ ing of the county clerks, registers of
noon phyllta Hinman. Marian He- deeds and county treasurers asso­
!WK» andTWFonest w~alton repre­ ciations. The meeting had to ba
sented the local squad. To the prac­ held on Sunday because there wa ;
tice tournament held at Holland las: no other lime when lhe officers
Saturday. Hastings sent Uiree teams, could get together. The business
participated in eight debates and taken up was the consideration of
won two.
matters to be presented by the three
associations to the legislature, which
BEGIN DAMAGE SLIT.
will convene early in January.
'
Suit has been filed with Couhty
Clcrk Allan c. Hyde by Helen A­
HONORED AT COLLEGE.
mid Fruiik L. Petersmarck against
Frank Newton of this city.
The
Stephen Bristol, who 1$ a sopho­
former 'asks $25,000 and the latter more at Albion College, has been
$5,000 damages for alleged personal honored by electton to the Fine Arts
injuries resulting from an automo­ Club of lhe college. He with nine
bile accident but fall. The accident others was initiated Tuesday eve­
happened on No. Broadway at the ning of lait week, the eeremony be­
' Intersection of M-43 and M-37.
ing preceded by a dinner.

Hundreds of Pairs of
Useful Christmas Gifts

Where stockings bang, gift-filled,
and dreams arc mended,
Where fires, long dull, glow, high
and true again.
Because we shared, an echo finds
fulfillment:
••Peace on earth, good will once
more to men!”

Views and Opinions;
What Others Si

A Quotation
XO NATIOX (.III k
destroyed while it pos­
sesses a good home
life. —J. G. Hollanl

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday
gcrigrnphj

Smartly Styled Slippers And Galoshes for
Every Member of the Family.

Women's Galoshes

Boys' Hi-Clits

that being ot age he is old enough
to exercise self control, at least
where minors arc Involved.' Punish­
ment for this type of crime brings
a prison -sentence which usually
ranges from eighteen months to tin
rare instances) life.

Folio .vine is the honor’ll
i.-.t marking quarter of t
■■■■• ■ Ni’t'h grade: V--rldi

glances with their freedom when
they dabble in this type of crime.

Vigorous prasecution. although c sentfhl. can never hit'"at liie real
heart of lhe trouble. It can seek to
fix. by clear-cut evidence. guilt on
.. ............ .
the individual held responsible i«\! from being Thr ’ialt of the earth,
"If you lived in Alaska or Labra­
dor or far up in Canada In the re­
gion of the big snows where you did
connected with the case point out no*, reach a trading post until spring
unfortpnate conditions which exist. you would have to get read.,- for win­
We have as yet. however, no ade­ ter or you would p.-rish. How much
quate institutions that do much to­ more ought you living in a country
ward arriving at a solution to the
sordid problems thus exposed.
in fact, the need for such an inatitution. empowered to step in
the eyes of the law; it can through

ing to be dimly comprehended.

rpHERE arc 14 golf courffiS ot
lhe gold mines nenr Johan­
nesburg. South Africa.
Wo
wonder if the African golfers
use those white cubes with iit-

?L

|r

I

L
k

Black
Rc,on
Uppers
Thick

Block
or
Drown

Tough
Soles

Worm /
Fleece
Lined

A Bargain
Sg.79

98'

Adrotibie.
Jacquelyn ■ Bacamu.
Clam Bud). Iniotiehi* Cooluy. Rob;

Those Ashtabula. O.. sales­
men who use horses and bug­
gies for transportation because
oats is cheaper than gasoline

3 snap
styles

Women's Sheepskin
OkAy. ~~~~

Slipper-

Men’s Opera Slipp;
Soft Kid
Irown $&lt; QQ
r Black I -Ov

X

sends city manager check for
$20 because she loafed on her
job in a city office. More such
people would put WPA on a
payingtjasir.

Watsonville, Calif., man has

A SYMBOL OF STABILITY
The stately, dignified manner :n
which the switch of kings was made
in England gives one a comprchenin the government of the British
Empire
\ . An English kin; « sjo mare puppet whose chief duty UK.life Is to
run about in funny looking'ujuformj
dedicating buildings and laying cortier stones Naturally some ofSh-y
tradition-bound royai paurantry
England appears to us land possibly
Is) extremely ludicrous. However, in
the eyes of the English the king and

That Count*-—Not It* Six*

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

Jusl concluded outrigltt conviction
was obtained in one. an aslor. lining
comprom.se verdict of "assault and
battery" In a second, disagreement
(twice) in a third and acquittal in
only one.
Responsibility for this type ot
crime involving ■» juvenile, r.u mat­
ter what the circumstance, is placed
Squarely on the defendant if he.

It's Um Spirit of a Community

Women's Slide
Rubber
Goiters

atuff. He’probably holds it up
to his wife as a model' of how

-n
ev
™
h*
pa
m;
J';
■

The height of oppression—
* ‘
the parking meter. You hunt
for an hour for a parking spot
a
and then have to pay a nickel
to park in it.
.-ucc

Bunny
Slippers

49

59

D'Orsay Slippers

frt^. ... . ........ .. ............
.»ru\n ,i&gt;...yi- ..rd alon.

the royal family symbolize the unity
ot the empire. Although practically
devoid of political power, an English
king can exert an influence denied
even to the most powerful of poli-

Mcn‘&gt; Dress Rubbers

his people An English king can
never rule by force He is not even
permitted to express a political
opinion. Yet no one can deny that
the late King George V was a stab'.;force, not only in. the British Em­
pire but throughout the world as
well. He rnied without ruling. Xo to
speak, thereby demonstrating the 'rankly we don’..
• are too bw.y
old saying that "He, governs best rendering where it’s coming from.—
who governs leaat.’’The English throno- is a . symbol
-Qf_..4cnUnulty. Governments may
Car radios don': work when the
come .and go: political ideas may operator is passing under a steel
change; social- barriers may be bridge—but the trouble u there u
broken down; the titled nobility may only one bridge to’eiery three tpik*..
—Philadelphia Bulletin

Pungent Paragraphs

Women's Fur Trim­
med Gaiter Rubber

HOLIDAYS-ARE
HAPPY DAYS!
ideal
Christ.

Crumbs of Wisdom

Men's Everett Slippers

BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
If’Nero's fiddle sounded anything
throne stands intact, a binding
"Bcirncr can have no quarrel wit!
like the one the neighbor's'little boy
force connecting the past with the
a religion which pMtulatc* a cio.-l H
is learning to play, n may have been
present and liie present wjrn lhe
tlv people next door who set Rome Arthur H Cbmpton.
We
nn reaum why Doc Town­
afire.—Grand Uland Irulcpcndept.
"Sound and enduring progress &lt;Xn send ahd the. R-v. Mr. Smith aui’;
merge their .movement-'. I:.- a
THE CAROL BINGERS
b?
built
of
mutual
rcs]&gt;e£*.
and
re
­
In many parts of Europe, remarks
that if they give the old folk* p agard ’ -N. W. Aver.
Arcature of lhe Christmas reason
a wanderinsc^cquchpoudent. persons
here is lhe carol service given by the
with moderate means do not run
Hasting.. Teachers* club under di­
ship
ears, because they can t afford to.
rection of Supt. D-. Ai VanBuskirk.!
What's that got to do with it?-BosHincc lhe first program given, it hu,
man’s be.: prodji-4-. might ca ilv bbecome an institution her* and the:
any other man's '—St. John Ervins
Christmas season without the. carol
Harvard utrono.-nrrs have Righted
What more felicity can fall te
service would not seem cbmpletc.
I a star a third of a mite in diameter.
man than
enjoy delight with lib10 “r w;'rlhcI u
We are KU manufacturers-. . mak­
. asteroid or old-Ume*
_■
------------ ■
ing. good, making trouble, or'mak­ Wuncrian soprano-El Paw, world
,T5y2n'‘ ln GrfB‘ Brt?W can
I New,
rritfciee his government and expre s
ing excuses.—Balance Sheet.
I
divergent views.'—Stanley Baldwin.

Soft Kid

Way of Our World
HKWS GLEASISU3.

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS

PHONE 1140

HASTINGS CUT-RATE SHOE STORE
"Burry County's Busiest Shoe Store"
114 W. STATE ST.

HASTINGS. MICH.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17. 1936

1 the Mountles" and many more in
I thu QUU’-anding picture.

I . No. 3 fr—Yankee Springs—*160.

PLAN FOR BANQUET.

SOCIAL EVENTS- Bunday
School class met at her
home on Wednesday evening for a

SENDS OELINOUENT
TAXES TO DIS (BICTS PENnev employees
1

The abpve amounts will be of ma­
terial assistance to lhe schools of
this county.

pot luck Oupprr and social time.
■They also made plana for their
HAS TWO DESSERT­
Daughter
banquet
to be
BRIDGE PARTIES., Mother
------------ -and
— ----------------------------------Mr. H.rokl ro»ur n» hou... MM In Ul« chcncB Rrlnr, Tt&gt;ur«My
TO RECEIVE BONUS
(Continued from page 1, Sec. 1&gt;
a^ two deughtful dessert brld*e par- [ «Uht.__________
_____
“no. fi—Shultz—*98.
”
twd^TJLmat
nTwectal1?
WILIJNQ WfftMM CLUB.
Two Weeks Extra Pay For
No. 7 fr—Brush Rldjre—Site.
Hv nianTh^.
-Mu’ Virginia Smith entertained
|
All Permanent Members
No. 9—Cloverdale—890.
hvcuTS Jr.
h" c,ub- th« Willing Workers, on
Mrt aH&gt;r a idle J4un^ o Uin
evening at the home of her ■Irving—
Of Organisation
.
Jr,r? v«A n ° H n‘ M”
HUl! aunt. Mrs. Dbrothy Dunlap. Twelve
No 3—Wood—*88
The announcement has been made
e’«b-membm enjjycd a Christmas
No. 4 fr—Jones-899
by-the manager of the local J. C
on Monday es. ning. Attractive dee-. .w,rrv
exchange of gifts
No. 5—Ryan—*127
Pcnney
company store. O. F- Carorations in keeping with the Christ-P"rty * a rxcnan«ct
a&gt;n*
No. 6—Brew—*124
(renter, 'hat the a*-aetates of ths
mas season were used in the variou.
iirwmn CHOIR
r-uniu PARTY.
»*utv
JUNIOR
; No. 7^-Ftllmore—*123
&lt;tore will share in a Chrlstmarooms.
I The members of the Methodist
i bontu. Tht Penney company recent­
Junior choir had a delightful
No. 10-PleasAnt HUI—m.
ly au'.hur^u d on em payment for
-- ----------------- ---- -------Christmas party Friday evening in
-No. 12 fr—Little Brick—*103. ’
Mrs Grace Cha flee entertained at. the church parlors, with Mrr John
J-1— Johnstown—
. offices and wkreltouwx AH reaul.ii
dinner Thur.ulay the .members of th&lt;-. C
Ketcham rupervising. Games
No. 1—King—*’.05.
, ...... ..... —... -............
Lucky Eleven Club. It was a Christ- i were played after nupp-r.
No. 2 fr—Monroe—*21.
*
company over a year will receive two
mas party nnd gifts were exchanged I
——
No. 3 fr—Pnrk-r—fl 19
cx;:'a pay. Those employed for
DESSERT AND CONTRAC T.
Thow prvent .were Mrs. Effie Roush j
No. 4 fr—Stevens—J67.
shorter period* will receive propor­
and granddaughter, Mrs. Martha! —----- ,
No. 5 fr—Bristol—$54'.
I tlonatc amounts.
o.mbM. Mr. VWI- RMd. Mr. V«. “ • ^‘”'n »,'««'««» Tuf
No. 6—Banfield—858.
I In the announcement of the .plan.
U HMtlry. Mr, M.r.lr&gt; Siimn,„ I &lt;M,. Uim ubl„ bdM In pto Mr,.
No. 7—Culver—*39.
MM d.uwhlrr. Mr,. u«re W.u-r• J-""’
«"a
D t&gt; WMNo 9—Bullis—851
piny, said:
Mr. Mrrrle CMMlrln. Mrr. HIM Iton w*re winner, M eonrrMi
•The year 1936 has been the most
No. 11—Burroughs—8119.
Castelein, Mrs. Glenns Winslow and |
* * *
“~
''successful in the history of our bu.-lMaple Grove—
daughter.
' tuvs. The associates have contribNo. 1 fr—Qualltrap—$30.*
Nein
I; utid largely to that success. This
No.
2
—
Maple
Grove
Center
—
*116.
DINNER AT MIDDLEVILLE.
[
bonus is not a bonus on any per­
No. 2 fr—Mayo—*7.
manent plan It is additional 1936
Members of the sub-deb group of!
,
No. 3 fr—Moore-851
which MBs Rose DeFoe is advis r'. Tonight la the regular meeting of
remuneration for loyalty and service
No. 5—Norton—869
enjoyrd a (*rojr('.*ivc dinner Tues-' L**° A- Miller Pom 3326. V. F. W. As
that have played a part in making
No. 6—McKelvey-443.
day evanln, at M drib r.llr TM War ll.'bT «"•« « ■""&gt; “
;
this the greatest year lor the Pen­
No. 7 fr—Branch—*66.
courM »u armd ar lhe tome o: "Pbed atottor Ml be nomhMted
' ney Company."
No. B—Beigh—386.
] In the Hastings store twelve a-v-o■ Mra. DUImr Wrrherton. aMhunt «d- j
Orangeville
—
vhr r, the dinner rnur—• at raallne1 year Final plate, Mr the enrhtma,
' elates will share in litis bonus.
No. 2-Falk-$m
be told
held ™,r
nextTue.d.v
Tuesday arat
Berieway • and lhe deawri and eye. party to be
j. Welcome Grange hull will be dis­
x,nV EXTENSION GROUP.
nine's entertainment was enjoyed ni
'' cussed.
Fifteen women of the HiCKory
lhe home of Betty swift.
Prairievlllc—
Curners community met Friday aftOur--------------Christmas
are -------going -- No. 2—Milo—S10B
rrr.oon. Dec. 11 at the home of Mrs.
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER.
---------—. trees
------- Wr urge
Itrir.b all
nil who
whn have
h-“ not ie-fnxf We
Mrs. Floyd Bwklrk. aulated by . fast.
No. 3 fr—Prairieville village—3237. Gena Broun, for the purjwM- of or­
Mrs. Arthur Struble, gave a mlscel- lectcd theirs not to wait too long anti1
Nt». 4 fr—Sauth Pine Lake »10
ganizing a Hom*' Economies Exten­
No. 7—Calkins—*4
*
lanrous shower at the former's home be disappointed
sion group. Mrs Floy Bechtel and
Monday night in honor of Mrs. 1
• • •
i . No 10 fr—Cressey—326.
Hazel Bachcld»r. a recent bride. Sh • | We are planning to start our Rutland—.
.
Glass creek group, were present to
received many useful and beautiful! membership drive in earnest th.-,
No. 1—Algonquin Lak-—353.
assist in organizing the group and
gifts. Games were played and re-1 first ol the year. D&gt; urging com- , No. 3—Chidester—&lt;59.
they also Rave us the lessons for the
fresrtmenta were served by Un trades to Join a V. F. W. Post. Com- I No. 4—Tanner—3119.
first meeting. The following officer ,
hostess.
mander Wesley Webb points out the I
v.cre elected: Chairman. Marie Bur­
---------------- ■»••
, 'ervices rendered by our organiaa—
dick; First leader.’ Gena Brown;
No. 6—Edger—«10-4
HONORED ON BIRTHDAY.
non. Not only does n member have
No. 7 fr—Goodwill—$29.
Second lender. Marv Johnstone; Re.
Mrs. ynrry Ragla was the gue.'the comradeship ot the organization, Yankee Springs—
creation leader. Edna Brown;, Sec.
of honor at a surprise birthday din- hut is secure in the knowledge that
No. 1 fr—Ciatc;.—W0
and Treat.. Nellie Hollman
nor Wednesday evening of last week in event of an emergency his loved
at h-r home on feist State Rond An ; ones v ill be cared for at the national
oyster supper was served to Mr and home in Eaton Rapids. The V. F W.
Mr;. Ragla. Mr and Mrs George p]\o maintains a National Service
Ragla. Mr. I&lt;nd Mrs Leo Cummings I Bureau nt Washington, D C. who. .­
and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hough- fac.lltl.-s are alwayr. available to ev-!
tnlln.
। crv member of lhe organization. The

r. F. IF.

:• At-the Theatre

Brown plays the part of a brag­■
gart who is Torccd into a jxue:
match though he has never been ar.:
a horse He u in terror a: what lies;
ahead and his valet hides a gang ot:
-bruisers" to kidnap Joe before the&gt;
«game. His 4rival overbears M
,v plans
the
To’j^T’comwu’ed'tr'pUolteTu
gam&lt;-. "SV'ct-Gallagher is the val• and
- -Cartil
—
■
■
ct.
Hughes
pUjs
opptnit

GETS IT!. D. DEGREE..
i commander This 1-. very
Georgc Bauer, son of Mr. and Mi .v ; tant - _
rWc v7;.VT’;:-,.1:Judraw finesVor

impor-

Shows Net

VIOLATING LAW
ilia ihe.-i Trapping Without The Metal
rlends cx.i?..di
‘
Tags Proves A Costly
Experience
BIRTHDAY PARTY.

congratulations.

Tl ursdity evening,’ D-c.inber JC
.Trapjw* ahntiid remember to pro- I
several friend', gathered al the home c»rv their metal tags when they get |
their "
licenM«.
have
nf L&lt; : D.nnctt to help him cel.-- ......
.............. ns several’ u
— found i
to
their dismay.
brat-* his birthday. The evening was ।
spent in playing card-- Flrrt prizes; On Wednesday of last week. lame.-.
went to Mr. and Mr.-. Ed. E:h:inaw ------------- — ---------- - ■ ------ ------- -;
and second prizes to Mr . Ghnn before Justice Andrew A. Matthews,
Kahler ..nd Ellis kclby.
on aicharge of trapping without
। tags.lThey were each ur.sc-sed 310 [
| fine and $63$ casts, and were glv-|
•re I cn until Saturday lo raise the cash.!
entertained b;
Ii’- Metal tags would have jirobably cost;
jf’emoon. it'lev. than n dollar for the ts^p of
Millet: on We
(urty. Bridg- : them. Conservation Officer George!
bcin,’ their c'.
i also played
, Stunner made lhe arrests.

GIVE FOOD

Pacific aide. a feature

Gain

Cash

j

HURRY IN

For

****Oti«. S7I.SS

iO-Tube
BATTERY AirUn. with MOV­
IE DIAL! Finest mid.I Ask
about LIBERAL TRADE-IN.
monthly payments, and a Frw
Home Trial.

5IOXTGO31E1IY WAI11I
PHONE 2691

118-124 IEFFERSON. SOUTH

thrilling raids of aroused ranchers
tn attacks on the wails of an army
barracks are all in this thrilllug
story John jWaync has the stellar
rofe with Ann Rutherford. Etta Mc­
Daniel. Jim Tony and others.

Nelson Eddy and Jtannelle MacDcnald in "Rose Marie.”
The glorious voices of lhe co-s’aru
ring our in the familiar tunes. "Rol­
Marie," "Indian Love call." "Song of

COFFEE
HOT DATED COFFEE

u, be,

BRAND

FRENCH

EXTRA

21c

u&gt; ««

COUNTRY CLUB

This Wcc/. Only

25c

MARGATE TEA

19c

(3 lb

HOLLYWOOD SOLE TEA lb. 25c

How About
a Swell SOCK
for Xmas?

TEA RINGS
ba«*

I 9c

Cast p&gt;a.

1 6:

4

Palmolive

50c}

15c

HOKE-usr n avos

3 ‘SS1 25c

CGiiN FLAKES
EMBASSY - EICH20. 3WEEIEB

"

FANCY SELECTION

MixejJ Nuls

P2A15UT BUTTER 2 £. 25c

ib. bulk 23c

LA8GS Si3E BRAZi-LC—lb. bulk Bio

admits 'eml

;
J?”
"

tag

COUNTRY CLU3 - CSISP. CHUHCHY

SOAP

Super Suds

Walnuts

1/

lb. bag

FRAGRANT. FLAVORFUL JAPAN

■■■■V

nM

special

VACUUM PACKED COFFEE

Every body

MA3KST DAY - 3EZELES3

4

29c

SODA CRACKERS 2

15c

RAISINS

it tuik 23c

MICHIGAN MAID

BUTTED

CAELOADS - AcJCuTED VAE’ETIES

FRESH DAILY

Xmas.
Shado-less,

The rainfall cf 14
lhe Caribbean ai

TteUuw

,

t.,onsar2really"tops",
io why not insist cn al
least ONE BOX for

Andaman

KROGER'S HOT DATED JEWEL

AT THE BARRY.
"The Lcn-l) Trail."
The pounding hoofs of panting
.......
hone*. lhe all-night (sopping o'
r[fic nrPi mc clash ol man against
n)an ln blt,cr fisl flghu an(J the

These swelllsent cfea-

dcfcn

th«

*edding» or other festive occasions
they huddle together and wall Su Bo
nour.

“Charge cf the Licht Brizad?,"
Year Of $753.38 — Make
"Charge of the Light Brigade*
Errol Mynn and Olivia -de
Improvements
Haviland
of the
। n.s &gt;•
.j- - The financial statement
---------- —
This
i« :ii uynn-Tuc
dynamic arama
drama u
pro?
auced on a luaaimbth scale with a Barry County Agricultural 3ocl«
,liui
(j^-anguished
&lt;aU
nr„(
in full all rccrlpt* r.n
.1,1,1. aad
&gt;a,aaa u
, airy,uin, ,a «, a.*,
'v, la.i
’t which gives
■
thousands of extra player-. The pic- disbursements, will be found as a
lure Is adapted from ‘ the famous !l'Sal
“» tiu*
o! ,hv P-1'
poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson. The !»»• Wc truv‘ thtu every reader of
supporting
cast includes Patrie
Banner will look R over careKnowles. Henry Stephenson. Nigel fully for it K a very creditable styteBruce. Donald ert'p and many otn- mens. It shows the net income of
ers
■
lhe fair was *2.137.12 le&amp;s Improve ------------menu lo grounds and buildings *1.
••Hollywood Boulevard" starring - 383.74. leaving net cash gain for the
John Halliday. Frieffa. Inc&amp;cort. year. $75338
A Paramount production featuring
John Halliday in a colorful story of,
the rorne-baek of a fallen screen idol
and has Ln it a big parade of fam­
ous names of Ute.silent film days
and current players of prominence

*rV,“ C®Cer °f °Ur ,0Cld P05t

, I drew Matthews, can b&lt;- of great
” rH.rl ,noeUn’^ 011 help to the average Veteran in many
Vl,ry
0 ' r,ll,a-v L-veninr.,
5
। b ,ad lo
o{ ^Blancc
the city fathers were guests of
,. .n„Vpr possible
Mayor Chr.rl H. Leonard et a ven- *",ntvrr Po*™*; ,
ison dinner served at "The Pines" ' If any member of the Post Is. not
And. bv the way. this was a dc.r • receiving fils M. O- V. or Foreign
which "His Honor" n-ccntlv shot , Service, or if you have changed
while huntin.': m northern Michlga?. 1 vnur address, please notify your

found on

natlvea

FAIR ISSUES ITS
■ANNUAL REPORT

^tY'RE CALLED

”VENf&lt;UlN
aniNNRR---,,

NaUvea Wall for Jay
Wailing it a sign ot Joy among

i__
,
Georg? Brent-Gtend* Farre.1
in "Sncwed Under."
A rollicking comedy romance In
which a playwright U snowbound
in A Connecticut farm house with
two ex-wives and a sweetheart while
he b madly trying to finish a drama ‘
The supporting cast includes Frank!
McHugh. Genevieve Tobin. Pa trie.a
EU13. Hortcr Hall and many more

'3.

flawless,

XMAS. CANDIES

styles and shades to

SPRY

FANCY FLORIDA

suit the most fastidi-

GIVE HIM

10c

lb. bulk

OLD FASHIONED CHOCOLATE DIOPS

ib 'on

Grapefruit Juice Ko-Bean 10c

VECETA2LE SHORTENING

CHOC. PECANS

Northern

lb. bulk

59c
25c

TISSUE

Full
Fashioned

5Qc 6Qc • 85c • $l

Doggie Dinner 3 CQrJ -23c

HOSIERY
It Wears and Wears
Silks • Lisles - M'ooh

SINCERITY

24ft IK

Michigan Ivlilied

sack

IO

19' 25‘ 35'

S4’i-ib. sc?k

King's Flake

77r.

MICHIGAN'S FAVORITE FLOUR

for Christmas!

Lily While

24',rib. .ack 99c
THE FLOUB THE BEST COOES USE

Country Club

»ack 85c

LAIOIAT017 TESTED FLOU*

Gold Medal.
pausuars best

»ock $1.05

DEL MONTE

ORANGES
Lgc.

150 Sixc

De Luxe
PLUMS
or Prepared

PRUNES

39;.

2ri[nJ5e

Texas Seedless

POT ROAST ♦

Grapefruit

7

MEATY CUTS OF BEEF

SUO5T RIBS

, 15c qt.

SPINACH, FRESH

3 Ibs. 25c

Shulls or Frccpw-I

BUTTER

Pork Loin
ROASTS

22c lb.

Beef Kettle
ROASTS

Loin or rib end

3Se.s

20c a

11 W
*\clb.

ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS TURKEYS,
DUCKS, GEESE AND CHICKENS NOW

Bl'SXCT

CHUCK ROAST
VZ« CHOICE

F

ROLLED RIB

DRESS AND COAT SALE!

HASTINGS. MICHIGAN.

BOAS I

STEAKS

Stouts or Regulars. Prices drastically cut lo reduce stock before
Christmas. Ny two dresses alike, so come early. You will find Red

Tags on each dress. Tags that save you money.

Coats Are All Reduced! The Sale Tags Tell the Story!
r Them On ! There Is a Saving on Every One!

ORANGES

33c

19c

FLORIDA - FOB JUICE

16c

LEMONS

lb.

21c

TANGERINES

u, 21c

CHOICE SIBLOIN OR CLUB

run or juice - medium size
SWEET-EASY TO FEEL

GRAPEFRUIT
rLCBID.VS - TULL Ot JUICE

CRAPERUiT

PORK SAUSACEj w. 23c

CRAPEFdUIT

LEONA SAUSAGE

LEAF LETTUCE

TEIAl

,

ul

15c

FILLETS OF

HADDOCK

PICNICS’

MIATI

nusti CSMF

u, 14i/2c

ASMOUrS STAR MOCK

CHICKEN LQAF

* 29c

u., 19c

SMOKED - SMALL - SHOST SHANK

.

HEAD LETTUCE

2 »

HIM

TOMATOES *

BED RIFE - Hol Hou. Ub t

KROGERSTOP
UC1.US1V? BUT NOT EXPENSIVE
HASTINGS, MICH.
. TELEPHONE H04

4

TUCAS SKSOLZM - MID1UM MU

BSOADCAST

I P TO DATE. STYUSH SILK DRESSES. All Sizes 11 n. 50,

doz.

lb.
.

OYSTERS FRES SHORU plat 25c

ELDPAtJSCH^SS

•PKone
market- v-b
2-27^ We Dol.iyer'

a. 10.

BOILINC BEEF

Fresh ground Hamburger, 2 Ibs. 29c

FANCY CHICKENS

1172‘

roi bu’mc

2 for 15c

HEAD LETTUCE

■■

'*•'

CALIFORNIA NAVELS - SWEET
SEEDLESS - MEDIUM SIZE

25c

BRUSSELS SPROUTS

ORANGES

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. TIH^ISDAY. DECEMBER 1?. 1916

page snr

TWO TOM PS

WAT ERS

Let this store fill your wants for the men folk ond boys. HOre* you will
find style, quality and abundant assortments.
Not just ordinary shirts, ties, hosiery, pajamas and other things for men
and boys, but styles that are new and different.
VISIT THIS CHRISTMAS STORE

&gt;e name-, of the four Uw.-hlp. i when Blaisdell located In Assyria
len.iont'U
township tliere were two Indian vllTne nut settler m the township. Uge*. one wua, 20 and tfie other with
* ...... . ...hi.i.
»
......
u-

Sic 36 A quakdt pfeacher named; splendidly. Hla kindliness unci-good
... . ... .. .
.... ------- will had much to do with keeping ----------- — .—. «... ....
r.i¥ly hi “JO. The real •ettlerncnt g! peart between the Indians and the Mr Merrill; tax collector. John Cui-**'! constables. Solomon Gelman
iti.it utwnship Mgan wh-n HsiHow wn|te rettlen
When BHsjdcll tame to A&amp;syrla he “'id Philo Norton; overseers of the
Metrill came froip C»,»rgo. ■ New
York in 1838. and located in the brought wldi him a Free will Baptist-Poor. Wljliam H. Smith and Mr.
.'southern part of jahnrtown Twp. Al- minister, g.vlng him an 80-acre tract York; fence viewers. LJ1 Lapham.
of land, stipulating only Hurt the ■ John Culver and S. V. R. Yorx;
minister would settle on it and hold path masters.
Mr
Bristol and
1 s-vrral
k- which
d Tltwe
Hayd
rm A .1.

^tepben Collier located in Johiutown near Merrill not U»‘g after the
.Utter took Up land there. He wu» year he i.ft. selling hi, land ' I
Ha- lather ol victory P-Collier wha BlaiMtrll. A Freewill Baptiit churcl
w.ie for many years a prominent uigmiued through BlaudoiTs eilurt

Downs and Joseph H. Blaisdell; Jultlci-4, Mr. Blaisdell. Samuel Andruj.
Peter Downs and Peter Dillln; highway commiMloners. Henry Wilbur.
Charles G. Baker and Eldredge Aus­
tin; school Inspectors. Mr. Blalsd.-ll
and Arc he lu us Harwood; director.-,
of the poor. Henry Mallory and C.
P White; constibl-s. Charles Dodge.

.-j-.-.-r’ tlinltar. in n mi-ans; for he'took up 68'J acu-.
by hand, and • • curnpanylng him were Calvi
was planed by hand White. L P Hayes and Philo !.

A different shirt than the regular "mob style". Select the new

Assyria township held Its first
town meeting April 1. '1844 at the
home of Cleveland Kills. Supervisors
of the tk-olion were Cleveland F.1U-.
John F. Fuller. Henry Mallory and
Olin Ball and lhe clerk uf the elec­
tion boarcf'witS'Jolin s'. Van Brunt,
who laird moved to Hastings. The
voters rejected the following officers:

■t*xi 803 ucrek ot land In the early &lt; ai
two he
a great help tt&gt; Other .»c..h •
riving rinpldymetit to-many on h

J
1
!
1

I
]

ui America's' leading scientists,
here was a rather stirring his- low L-iphani

Mack Shirts
Mellow Checks
Dusty Tones
Cryptol Royes
Flextan Collars
Duke of Kent styles

Msicii 12 that year. Two days later
t:.- grave was luund open and th-Uaiy gone. The entire region and
th- county were quite excited over
the Incident. Investigations were
made, but the my.rtety -was never
cleared Up. The matter got Into thcourts of Calhoun county, bur noth-

i

Sporting

Items

HASTINGS UPSETS
CHARLOTTE 30 TO 18
Local Team Shows Improved
Playing Over Allegan
Game
The bn,ki t bull game last Friday
provided one of the biggest surprises
in a long lime w;hen lhe Hastings
team defeated the charlotte quintet

YOUR FAMILY WITH THESE
G|FTyTRUW:^«^4L
Sandwich
TOASTER

■ 09
Double slice;
top folds back

Hundreds to choose from. Bright
plaids, stripes, plains. Silks
plain white, and colors, too.

double frying

Pressure
Cookers

Electric
Percolator

save % of the usual
time it takes to cook
a meal

players of the past season.

Give n Toaster

Heat Control Iron
Don Sothard, Sam Schwarts and
Torn Shay. Thirteen of these boys
will return next year, seven being
lost by graduation and one by the
age limit.
The trophy
representing
th"
championship of the West Central
League was presented to ths .High
school by the president of the
League, Mr. E. L Taylor. Special
recognition was also accorded Mr.
Brozak for Rtf splendid work with

Good House­
keeping
ap­
proved. Retor. Juicer.

Whistling
KETTLE

79c

it liie prospects lor lhe varsity team
next year would be considerably
slimmer. Out of lhe CO boys who

whistles. Alu­
minum—2 qt.

CURLING
IRON

pkied it. which
sporting spirit.

Waffle Iron

The items listed here are only suggestions picked from our large stock Visit
this store-you will be surprised at the fine selection and moderate prices.
urge you to visit this store of Gifts Men Appreciate.

3-IIEAT PAU
2 thermostats prevent over
heating; asbestos lined wool
cover. Compltu with cord.

heating

Here you will find mackinowsj zipper
jackets, caps, sweaters, shirts, ties,
hose, pajamas, fur ear muffs, belts,
suspenders, all in the new styles and colors to make
boy's heart glod on Christmas Dav.

cord and plug.

CORN
POPPER

enamel. Emp,
ties automa­
tically. Cord.

Silverware
26-pc. Set

•»««

Creani Shipper
I c Ward bargain |»U

Flashlight
W.nLlZ'Zk.’ !•!»

Glass bowl, convenient on-off

.switch. Whips eggs, malted
milk, mayonnaise.

WATEKS CLOTHES SHOP

Montgomery Ward
118-12* S. JEFFERSON

Those

Angell. ulro designated bent luckier;
Dick BesAmer; Don Doxoy; Nornun
Hall, vhq'a-n best blocker: Charles.
Struble, best ground gainer; Clinton
Bcouey. most improved player on
the squad and honorary captain for
the past year; Cleon Smith, Clinton
Brill. Earl Cappon. Maurice Cogs-

grids. Nickel
top and black
I tray base.

Whether it's brie
have the new
plain black silk§,
patterns. Every one a "Cooper's" hose

The second team proved them­
selves superior to the visitors with
a score of 24-8. Mr. Brozftk Used 15
boys in the lineup, five of whom

At an athletic assembly held al
the High school last Tuesday. 21 ma­
jor letters were awarded football

WAFFLE
IRON

For the young col­
lege mon or miss:
Gladstones, Gladrobes, Over night
cases, Fitted cases and every one
Genuine Samson product.
.

Collliu was high scorer on the vlsllinii team with 8 points and Putman
was next with 5. Dewey and Putman
played a fine floor game for Chnf=~
lotte. At the end of the first quar­
ter the visitors were leading 9-8. By
the half Hastings had taken the lead
15-12 and kept it through lhe third
quarter'which’ ended '23-lfl. Until
anybody's

Small sire far a small family
and sold with nil equipment
at Wards low price.

num percola­
tor.
9 - cup.

FOOD
MIXER

perior team, but their inability to'
change their style of play to meet
that of Hastings spelled their de­
feat. The game was played before
the iargust crowd Hastings has seen
In a long time—almost n capacity
crowd—and it was a much improved
team over trial which played Alle­
gan which took the floor.
Gladstone Was high point man for
'he local boys with 13 points; Stru-

HASTINGS

PHONE 2691

When lhe Ionia eagers come here
Friday night to meet the local team
In the first League game of the sea­
son. they will bring with them three
exceptionally good players. Zanders.

need careful watching. Last week
they defeated Belding—a supposedly
improved team—by a score ot 50-14.’
Consequently they are regarded with
the greatest of respect by the Has­
tings players. Last year the Blue and
Cold was defeated by the Prison
City squad 18-21 in their first game
at Ionia and by a much larger scan
in the recond here at Hastings.
tliq local boys doubled their score,
and Oiujhti fact and their Improved
team thyy are pinning their hopes I
for Friday night..
From all indications .there will be­
a fine crowd on hand to see this'
game which Is a record one tivlwo
respects—the first League game Wthe reason and the last home 'game
before the holidays. ,

Glue Long In Use
The history of glue dates as tar
back as lhe story of civillMtiOQ
runs. Among lhe possessions ot King
Tut which were brought to light
plaques that were pul together with
glue Apparently it was one of tha
first manufactured products which
are still in general* use today.

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 17, IBM

CIVIC PLAYERS "WINTER &gt;

SoczaZ Euents-and Personal Mention

INFORMAL” ENJOYABLE
Program. Of Music, Dances,

Puppet Show Presented
Mrs. Orville Sayles spent Tuesday i Miss Laura Francisco was a Bat­
in Grand Rapids
. tie Creek visitor over tiw week end.
Ileveland
Mr. and Mrs. .Ellis Kelley, and/son
Jackie spent Sunday with relatives
Lansing i’1 Lacey and Battle Creek.
Tuesday on business.
j- Mrs. D. L. chrlslian'and Mrs. NclO. E. Goodyear was in C
eil Conaway heard SmedleJ- Butler
j at Battle Greek Monday evening.
Rapids Monday on businew. .
Clarence Crawford was in
• Mrs. Phllcna McDonald, one ol
' the Kellogg nurses. and Mrs. R. A.

Mrs. o. L Lockwood and chil­
dren visited in Grand Rapids over
Sunday.
.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Craig and
Mr. and Mrs.
MlM Doris were In Battle Creek on 'Tutd spn, Lincoln.
Saturday.
•
" "
1 •*&lt;
— ~
— --Surina of Nashville
Miss
Geraldine
Mrs. Burr Van Houten and Mrs. were Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
Roy Cordes were Kalamazoo visitor.*. and Mrs. Erneit Erway.
.
On Monday.
Mr. and M.*a. Roy Kcal and twins.
Miss Lucy Baxsrtt- vldled her sis­ Donna and Donald, of Mancelona
ter. Miss Lucille Bassett, in YpmlanU on Sunday.
! Mrs. Ellis Kelley Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Royer of-; Mr. and Mrs. Bert Ullery and Miss
Detroit visited •relatives lure -over Neva Ullery were Sunday guests ot

Jean clement, who had b en vtritFor Members
ing Mr. and Mrs. w. L. Shultcrs. re­
turned to their home In Belding
Thursday evening - al the parish
with Judge and Mrs. clement.
house by the Hastings Civic Players
association was a moat enjoyable oc­
casion. In spile of cold weather and
icy streets 60 members turned out
Monday evening, lhe members of for the evening. The Hastings Give
the Business Women's Hospital orchestra added much to lhe pleas­
Guild had their-Christmas parly. ure of the evening by playing be­
tween numbers on the program. 137.
D. D. Walton, director, chose wellknowq .selections nn&lt;t medleys which
the guests Joined In singing.
Rose DeFoe and MLis Anne Burton
being hostesses.
charm school did a number of tap-'
Red balloons were used as deco­ dances and gave an exhibition of
rations around the lamjis and one acrobatic dancing. Mr» Amy Bower
was tied to each little girl's chair.

carols and Mrs, D
told a delightful original story;
"Peggy Ann's First &lt;------- ------- ... .
Sarita. making his appearance to the

ted the gifts found beneath two
beautifully lighted Christmas trees.

Mr. and Mrs. Hartley Finstrom of SzuHvtck* of Grand Rapid.;.
Lansing spent Sunday with Mr. and
arrived Monday to spend some time
with her sister and husband, Mr.
arid Mr.. H. C. Wunderlich.

Mr*.. Calvin Plumley and Mrs. g. 1 Saturday lo hl» home in Grand
- «•»—"»-•••
——
'’-•••- &gt; Rapids after spending. «rvrrnl days
Creek visitors on Saturday.
at the Dr. p. O- ShefiteTd home.
W. T Wallace of Jonesville came
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Buskirk spent
Sunday In Battle Creek with her Monday to spend the balance ol thb
week and to participate in the teachmother. Mrs. Clara Wilder.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Giddings visited trs' carol service on Sunday afterMr. and Mrs. Henry Poth of Kala­
mazoo on Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. and Mm. Alien Prentice spent ttendetl a Christmas party for tlu
mployevD of the Fidelity corpora-

day night.
Mrs. Alonzo Trim entertained her

American Legion
Auxiliary Activities
Membus of. lhe American Legion
Auxiliary- aYe urged to rcificmber the
meeting this Thursday evening. Also
please bring your donation'of jam.
jelly, conserve, etc. for the Otter
Lake Billet. Some nice contributions
have been received but more Is
needed lo meet the quota.

SHOPPER

Delegates to to recent conference
at Bay City are to give their reports
Thursday weiring.

COLORFUL

ano equipment of their own manu­
facture gave a tine exhibition ol major of Western stale Teachers' I
College band ofTO pieces dircctid by!
Raul GangUillel gave "Echoes of
the Alp'" in his usual capable way.
his .numbers featuring a lullaby and
yodelling. The Hastings Saxaphone and klso participate* in many pa­
quoru-t gave a group of selection.-, rades including the Blossom Festival
which were greatly enjoyed. The at Benton Harbor. They are sched­
qqartet. composed of Dr. Walton. uled to give a concert at the Civic
Hubert D. Cook. Forrest Wolfe and auditorium during the winter term.
John Crue. has just recently bwi This year they win appear in snappy
organized and judging from the p?r- new uniforms of brown and gold
formance that evening will be pop--

PAJAMAS

Give HAHSEN GLOVES

WOOL fir SILK SCARFS

SHOP EARLY
AND SHOP AT
BAIRDS

THE IDEAL GIFT

$3.50 $5.00 $6.50 $8.50

orations were used on thcJ.vgc ta­
ble from which dlnpi-r waritervod hi
buffet style. Garni
er pinner. Mrs. «
Fay Marble. Mrs.
_.... .....
Mrs. Fcrmor Howenajr winning the
prizes. Mrs Fingl-ton was given
a lovely gift bv «hc officers and
Huglr.Rlley.’retlring worthy patron.

questionnaires were filled out an.'.wiring questions In regard io pol­
icy, type ot plays desired and as us­
ual "Outward Bound ' won first place
in popularity though closely followed
by -The Servant in the House." The
annual children's play was heartily

T. S. BAIRD
Clothing and Shoes For
' Men and Boys

buffet table being most n”r»r’i-ft wa • covered with a lace cloth with
a centerpiece of lane silver n« ,....
m a silver compote and four tall red

HASTINGS

$1.00 to $2.50

mas decorations in red. grecti
!vrr wire used to give the par-

rimm i iu&lt;- day in honor of Mr.
Trim's birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Edmonds and
Mr. and Mrs Frank Edmond.', were

Bernice Sprin;

WANT TO BUY OR SELL? TRY OUR WANT COLNU.

of Battle Creek on Monday.
Mr. Herman Arold and daughters. Jones is improving nicely.
Mrs David Boyes and Miss Doris
Rari'nid were In Battle Creek on
Delton and Mr-. Margaret Welton of
Grand Rapids on Sunday.

handicraft

at the University of 8otr.li Califor­
nia at Eos Angeles, came Sunday to
remain til! Jan. I with his parents.
lr and Mr Cecil Munton
vilucatlon department.
Mr. 3!Jd Mr? M 8 Hodgson find
—•-► Friday, from
to Spend two
toon's parent*

NOONDAY LUNCHES
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
DINNERS
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.

SUNDAY DINNERS
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
6 to 7:30 P. M.

leett-frimrir at nrr
The annual top”tlng of the Conn­
or tTnrrity-ffi* th'* try*curt» waz/henrTur.idsy rveninr.
time war. spent preceded by A dinner at rt.30. Treas-

Mr... G. L’Lockwood leave:, today
•Thursday &gt; for. Columbia city. Ind . W&lt;-’tcm state icachcrs College for cards. Despite her years Mr1
whose she was called by the death the women of the iacully and stu-1 iof. her mother. Dr. Lockwood, who dent body. Wednesday -------------- ed In all that is going on around her.
Her friends hojie she may keep well
Thursday to accompany her.
to enjoy more such happy occasions.
Mrs. N"Hie Hyde and Pau) Hyde League during the fall term. Mikl
were Sunday guests of
Mtw. Jones Is a Junior In the senior highJosie and phenla carpenter of Wall
Mrs. Kellar stem was hostww at
a delighted! luncheon last Thursdiy
BAIDU F.-DlSSUt.
and Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Hyde of
nt her home on We«t Green street.
Prairieville.
.
Mrs Ethel Ragla. Mrs. L- A. Case
bouquets of small chrysanthemum
land Mrs. A. A. Roth were in D'trait
.and the tally card design yras in ac­
Ua .t w&lt;“‘k Wednesday night witness- ------ • — ------- ------ -- ——ing the Paul De Kruif broaden ■' oNdleviile. Chrtsltnas decorations made cord wi'li the holiday season. Con­
the life of Louis pas.eur nt Station the dinner table attractive. Prizes tract was played at wven’ tables
WWJ in the News building.
for contract were won Uy Mrs. Roy
judge and Mrs. Stuart Clement. Cordes. Mrs*, prank Andrus. Robert intyre and. Mrs. 1
winning the prizes.

ivid f.o-’dyy:
compiled ' I
is Gangullk

A Beautiful

the Nashville Feldpeusch Market
end Food center enjoyed a Christ­
mas party at the* Masonic hall in
Hastings Wednesday evening.

BLUE or RED
STEEL ARCH

Pure SilkjHose

PARKER HOUSE

Fine Kid
D'ORSAY
Steel arch support

Christmas Bargains At

WORLD

THE BIG
LITTLE

In All The
No Finer Gift

STORE

FRIDAY, DEC. 18

-•{ Boys'Slippers 69c

MEN'S
SPATS

Many Styles
All Heels

SAT., DEC. 19

Men’s Slippers
89c up
CHILDS'

MISSES'

GALOSHES

FIRST
QUALITY

COFFEE, VIKING, lb. 17c; 3 Ibs. 49c
TOMATOES, 3 No. 2 Cons .25c
Coke Flour, Soft-as-silk, 44 ox. pkg. 25c

and up

CHRISTMAS CANDIES AND NUTS
Broken Mixed Christmas Candy, lb. 10c; 3 lbs. 27c
2 Ibs. 23c

FILLED CHRISTMAS CANDY, 25

100
FILLED CANDY. 2 Ibs. 27c
PEANUT BRITTLE. Best quality 3 Ibs. 57c

ffl'i LAST

FIRST QUALITY

WORD IN
HY-STYLE

ARCTICS

Goloshes

MIXED NUTS2 Ibs. 45c
WALNUTS. Finest Quality lb. 27c

Wool Fleece

SOFT SHELLED PECANSlb. 27c
CHOCOLATE COVERED CHERRIES,._ lb. box 23c
ELIZABETH LEE CHOCOLATES.lb. box 23c
5 lb. Box ASSORTED CHOCOLATES$1.17
SPECIAL —' LOW PRICES on Oranges And Christmas

Candies in Quantities.

ASK FOR YOUR 1937 CALENDAR

HINMAN’S
Hastings

r.HONt 24»|

Michigan

“An cxquLito-Aparkling diamond is
n grit with which Santa Clam, vast­
. ly enjoys surprising his very special
favorites. Tha diamond* u’o arc
showing arc not only superb Jewels,
fairy-like works of art in platinum
and geld, but they hlso carry oux
guarantee of mutiny, based on our
accurate rei&gt;rc..envttipn of our dia­
mond Jewelry.
...
.

C. B. HODGES

and up
QUALITY
RUBBERS

^TAYLORS SHOE S’
SNYDER'S MODERN SHOE REPAIR
QUALITY FOOTWEAR FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

HASTINGS

�Tlir HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER &gt;7. 193d

FIGHT

INSURANCE

CARDS ol THANKS

WANTS

LIKE . AUTO . FIRE

spent Wednesday with the latter's
— ---------------------n—. . tiler and husband. Mr. and Mr*.
'
'
John Koenvers of Grand Rapid*.
&lt; Mill rm TltAXKs V... wi.h ur
Mr and Mrs. I#le Quimby Of
■
’•»—
Battle Creek spent Thursday with
i'..i ’ .’,.*« Ji.’. ♦rf*’lV.»’;,,
Mr- and Mrs. Henry Williams
• ■ ■ "■
: f &gt; i .
....
Mrs. Anna Buck and family caU......- ■ ■- .—■

Janie; Nagel were in Grand Rapids ;
Monday.
The Ladle*' Aid Society held their
December meeting with a Chritfnnu!
party and grub Unt ijl’Uie home of«
Mr. and Mrs. Lrw Nagel Frichy.
1
The January nuretin# will be with

sIiodljIii.'

Ncrth V.'tmtland Saturday evening
Xfuts'llarcl Schriber • »pent tirr
wn k end with Mus Donna Mead of
west Hastings

|*li came upon the mid

Sydney Gelb ot Caledonia Sunday.
Mr. and Mis. Leo Barry and wii

THE CHURCHES

Grand Rapids is slaying 1tn Irvin#
at hi* grandmother's home.

Units fiunday afternoon.

H1GHBANK
Mr. and Mu. Henry Mayo and
faihily ol Baltic Creek were Sunday
evening guc&amp;u of Air. and Mrs.
Lowell Marshall.
Merle Hof hr.an of Chicago spent
the week end with hU parent*. Mr
Saturday. •
and Mrs. George. Hoffman. Merle;
Everyone wlio can skate K enjoy­
ing the fee on the lakes and panels. i. planning, a new route out- of I
Grand Rapids and to several larger1
cities In Michigan for the transpor-!
tat ion company nt Chicago.
*

S A LJ

FOR

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, yEAL

Hereford cattle, 200 yearling steers,
200 calves. 3 car* heifrr*."15O cow*.
Choice quality.

JOHN CARROW
Box 193

Ottumwa. la.

BEEF BY THE QUAR­

TER FOR SALE.

HIDES-PELTS FURS

PHONE 3909
AUCTIONEER
DEWEY REED

3 BUSES DAILY

GRANGE PROGRAMS

NOTICE

FLINT

Our Service

Will those who have
goods ot the Lasby sec­
ond hand store on -N.
Michigan Ave., please
call for them? Will be
there on Saturday, Dec.
19. Mrs. Allen Lasby.

$2.00 One'Way

To PROTECT You Constantly
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly

$3.6 O' Round Trip
PEOPLES RAPID
TRANSIT

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co.

Cash Prices
Paid for
Dead Stock

STEADY WORK. GOOD PAY
on farmers in N. Barry County. No
experience or capital needed. Write
today. McNESS CO., Dept. B, Free­
port. Illinois.
U-10

Year dead animals are worth

S

DOLLARS

__________________ I',1 17

To assure yourself of getting
the best price, call

"AKRC . ' L'.CD.

mechal’o-for;..

n

Mr. Floyd Denny

FOR WORK OR PLAY
Thia Smooth Rubbnr Cock Podi

NEW

ADju

ARCHIE TOBIAS

Ou« black nor'.k llaaUnga Ballon- i
al bank.
|3 17 j

FURNITURE SALE
There will bo a

sale of TWO TRUCKLOADS of

GOOD FURNITURE ot the

WATERS LIV-

OLD

'ERY BARN or just across from the Farm Bureau

Elevator SATURDAY AFTERNOON.
AT ONE-THIRTY PROMPT.
’

Hastings, Michigan
ie
11 as tin &lt;* 2331)

No Pom To Waor Cloihlnq

It U horn* to me to he tn th* far j
bualnaaa. I Jn.t fUltA an urder ’
for 1100 akuuka. 300 coon. Alaa
bar* taken ■ large order for coon,
akunk. rata, and mink. Thia la
my 33rd year In the fur bail !
neaa. My lone eaparlence baa gtv- 1
cn me one ot tke alrengeat out­
lets far all kin da ot tan and i
hld.i. Tke le*dln&lt; fur buyer cf
Barry county. The place to meet
your hauler and trapper frienda.
- All (ure mack hl*her then taet-r
I year. L-»lll *l«o call on fur deal- ,
। cr loft personally

STARTING

JOHN BIRMAN, Adm

OLD

CLNTER

the P:

Store

Farmers, Attention!

that’s always
right!

_ .
.
*■• &gt;« &gt;a:.C. -Ilirr. d llcwk t .1.-1l &lt;r r. I- ., a A

GLEL’N F. LAUSAUGh
llaaUng*

Pbour W37

We. have one of lhe

mh,T5 Vn Tr
' &lt; —■•* «!.«».••
• »

■■ - -'

-

finest

assortments

of

Poinsettia

plant* that we li.ivc ever bad. all arc sturdy plants, in

lull Idoutn ready for delivery. Order to*

&gt;- ’«
Xr! I

MONEY FOR
CHRISTMAS

■

SLI C - fir
. f .» ,T , .
■
tl, r,—M,,rL ti.i,... ... ■•.. — V* •
a--' ’ ■ '• filer. ..-.all
&lt;v„
y;.&gt;r p'pe hn.l 1 airbank.Ai. r.r ■;

■Bosca — Cnnmtion* — SOME­
THING NIM

no exception. They carry
an
a&lt;i&lt;lnl
feeling &lt;»f
tlmuahilulnos anti re*
m&gt;*mlirance. and yet they
coih Irwa than most Chri.tmat gift*.

FIDELITY
CORPORATION

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VtSIQN TOMORROW—

0C
Chrysanthemums

If your Christmas plans'are
going to require EXTRA
CASH, see us. Now Is a good
time to arrange for a clean
slate for the new . year by
getting those debts tn one
place._______

tar&lt;a&lt;^ , Erne-t iia.A-ll, Lake Odr...

O [“

dat and Ik? sure of timely delivery,

Of Michigan

All Colors. Priced.from $2.00
lo S UM) Per Dozen.

GENERAL INSURANCE

English

Real
ter Bouquet"

HASTINGS MARKETS

JERRY ANDRUS
y

Will Mother’s Christinas He a
H?lp To Her In Years to Come?
her a

the

with

natural

Holly
lurries,

ready lo bring a touch*

njgrge assortment to

of real Chrintinna daf

choose fro|tt. Stop in,

ttrytnrr homo.- There ir

the

material*

nothing to quite take

and we will make it Up

lhe place of tins gen­

to suit you. We. alio

uine Christmas decor­

have a

alion.

I trge - assort­

English' I lolly

ment made up fur im­

breaths,

mediate delivery.

and single^

both double

Potted Plants

MAYTAG WASHER
Also see our stock

on

cemetery lot. nr have

select

A dollar and a quarter a week will buy

FEVER

*

WREATHS

SEE

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and
SEE BETTER!
139 W. STATE ST.
HASTINGS

*Thc English'

variegated varieties. Hoses —

of second bond machines.

ij

JORDAN MAYTAG CO.

bl

Woodland and Hastings

-

fine a.Mirtmenl of a»I&lt;1 fator■s to chiHwe fruirt including
iilinirn. Azalias aad English

1

CLYDE WILCOX, Florist
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

TELEPHONE 2530

�THUHSPAY, DEC. 17, 1936~]

EXPLORES GW

THE HASTINGS BANNER
l Canyon, as he is the only one who'

SECTION
METAL TAGS ABE

TELEPHONE RATES

Lewis Perry Harry, old**
David's description of his hike in­
CUT FOR HOLIDAYS
MUCH CHEAPER Milo and Estella Harry, wa
... to Hit Grand Canyon is as follows;
j Wo* up about seven o'clock but
i Long
Distance
Tolls
To
I Benjamin Demaray Had The Bellevue township. Eaton
■ ■s' 1 Mother wasn't dre-CM-d yet. so I f The members of the Hastings;
Foreign Countries Are
• i.... . ■■
Proper License Which
I
। wt.nt to the lookout place wherf they , Women's Club met In the Masonic.
home
Also Reduced
,
Fiction.
Was Not Enough
:-----—~ ------ T-—:--------------- - —r—had
hadtelrscones
telescopesfor
forobservation
observationinto
into rooms Friday afternoon. Dec. 11.'
(Continued from page i. Sec. 1&gt;- |tlic c*nyon but found it was no: Mr;.. O. L. Lockwood, as chairman'
Long distance telephone rates will
Helen Hull-^Condte indoors.
Benjamin Demaray was trapping days. He moved to Hastings wit!
open yet. *tn walked over lo where ot u,e literature department, intro- .-'-j
p reduced for the approachlm: ‘ Elizabeth 8- Payne—Something To on a stream north of Middleville parents when a small child ant
gone down th. teal! We came back
again In an hour, but the old In;2*
*t*»t*d
'
l
.
..._
--------------•_
_
Saturday
morning when
Consem- lived here ever since. He wag u
in marriage to Clara Brinker.
, dian had seen nobody of David's de- There I sUuck on the Idea of «ulk- ' noon The tonic was - Contemporary cording to announcement by the; Rafael Sabatini—Fortunes of cap- tion Officer George Sumner
27. 1823. To this union were
scriptlon on the trail; but he did re- ing down the trail a little way to Novelist* " Mia Barries introduced Michigan Bell Telephone Company i tain Blood
neared on Die *«me it w.« .
cuvensw
mw
---z wt
Miss&gt; name*
. S!n,!!!r reduct!anM
will apply • Kurt Steel-Murder Goes To Col- Mined (hat while Demaray had the' two daughters, Marguerite, a
. Twilight ot Ex-Debutantes
I call tiiMt the f« |iow he had seen pass the time away till breakfxst. I Novelist*
&lt;
earlier
looked
li*
if
he
were
carrying
|
proper
license,
he
did
Sot
have
metihtereiUng ’taik’on a well-known throughout the Bell system for the lege.
,
--------------- - --- ------- -..«=*- and Louise, age 4. He tears
SANTA MONICA. CALIF.
nl
tatfn
nn
hie
tran*
•
&lt;
1
.«•
r
.._
novelist
Willa
Cather
two
iiolidays.
it
Is
slated
by
J,
E
I
Jeffery^Pamol
—
A
Pageant
of
Vical
tags
on
his
traps
as
the
law
reAompDtttig which mlght-iwive been
children; hl* parent*. Mr. and Mrx I
—Should the king marry -iirtiue sweater. We were llien pret­ where I came to a tunnel which the
Mlts Cather wa* born in the state &gt; Johnson, manager in thte area for . tory.
quires. These metal tag* should
Mrs. Simpson or should^Jt-iJe' ty sure tliui it was our prodigal sop. trail passes through, a sign here of Virginia At lhe age of eight she l*&gt;* Michigan Bell Telephone Com-| Eugene Cunningham — Whistling have contained his name so that it Milo Harry; two slater*. Mrs. VataMS
attention to an Interesting moved to Nebraska where she had I
cOU,d ** '•*u?
b&gt; anyone, Alierding and Mbu Annetta Harry
•vice versa and Mra/Slmpson ; and U ticif the Indian sold lie could culled
feature
at
tills
point
—
the
layer
of
verv little association with AmenThe Christmas and New Year'.. I W C Tuttle— Hashknife of the Demaray was brought before Jus- of Hastings; and one brother. Gate .
not jiostlbly walk back from where i
marry the king, in cither event &gt; lie saw him last before four o'clock red rock about a thouiand feet thick can people *uch as she had known 1 rotes *nl “» general be Hie same
Double Bar 8.
tice Matthews that forenoon and as­ Harry, of Negaunee, and other T.1the-happy outcome is'bound to i in the afternoon, we decided liial if rested on a layer of grey rock, with in Vlnrinia ihl* chanite of environSunday reduced rates applying i Frances Parkinson K-yes— Honor *e**ed fine ind cost* Of (180^or 15
the dividing line between the two mental such an impressionable age on routes on which _t he day _*la tion- f Hr-g ht
we
were
lo
see
lhe
canyon
ourselves
days In Jail. He paid the cash. The Wednesday ai the Bt Rose catholic
' prove blighting upon a large
being along both sides of the tun­ had much to do with her later con- to-stauon'cKarge is 40 cents or more.? Mignon G Eberhart—-Danger in officer confiscated two dawn traps
। wv had better get started.
coterie of slightly weather­
nel. Therrtwas also a shift, or fault,
and five rat skins which were worth John V. Dillon. Burial waa In ML
We «et out westward on the fam- at the end of lhe tunnel where both tributions to literature Her writings ’ The rates also will apply to call* to. the Dark.
beaten ex-debutantes of the
are permeated with her own per- Canada, central and South America. • MacKlnlay Kantor—Arouse and 1160 apiece. This made Die matter Calvary cemetery.
i ous Rim Road, along the brink of lhe grey and red rock was broken
We miss thee from our home, dear
crop of 1925.
; the chasm, slopping at several ob­
father.
Anyhow, it was a great vintage . servallon points, each affording it*
We mis* thee from thy place.
year for debutantes, because that ; own superb view and finally arriving
than 50c.
was when we had the most mem­ I nt Hermit's Rest, a striking cllfl,
We mis* the sunshine of thy face.
orable of boyal visits. And ever ; house built of canyon boulder* which tea"
period, one ot ofTlrmarion a* depict- Lsles and most of continental Eur- [ turers.
.
We miss thy kind and willing hand
REVOLVER CLUB RENTS
* period one of affirmation as depict­
since there have | witli it* rustic lounge, great stone
Thy-fond apd earnest csrt,
•
ed In "O Pioneers;" second period °Pe
fireplace and observation porch
1 kept on going, stopping only lo one of unrest or maladjustment as
Carolyn Wells—-Book of Humorous
SHOOTING RANGE Our home Is dark without thee.
w.ti'.'uv
overhanging the canyon, is an atWe miss thee everywhere.
now somewhat ma­ {traction Ur iteelf 1 wish I could dr­ n-ad lhe signs that told about the • in "Lucy Gayheart;' third period
OBITVAkY.
(
diflerent
rock
formations,
a
little
Permission
To
Install
It
Has
tured buds who, scribe these different views and per- |uruicr oown B&gt; , WBS
one of ' tranquility as shown in
Melvin Hanna, aged 60, passed t Jesiie B- Rittenhouse Little Book
down, a* I was running
season after season, haps I could if we had concentrated further
Been Given By The
,round , ^nd , manuP(1 t0 sU»p • Death Comes For the Archbishop ’ away Dec 9 in Kalamazoo, death of Modern Verse
Mis* Barnes then sketched briefly ' being lhe result of peritonitis fol&gt; lnK Eor 1936.
have
maintained more on the teenerv and less on try- Jull In Ume to keep from bumping
City Council
Konrad Bercovicl—Story of the
front rank Ir society i nB 1°
a C *nd wh,.U‘ i into •* d&lt;«T. which regarded me as u lew of our new novels Her first! lowing pneumonia. Surviving are
review
was
with me
the wmu
Wind , .wi
four brothers, william «.
of Hastings.[Gypsies
Members of the ftewly organized
by being reminded, I speck somewhere down among the ।
&gt;»„ nni(
nn ihli n-,ie
* w
“ "Gone
*»une wnn
:
red and green rocks of the canyon X£d*f me toaUy ImnSnrun^ii b
■ &gt; ---------- ------------MitchelL The sUrrlns . Ed
«•_. and Charley of ^-u»
Califomla
—&gt;. —
and
..I
Gilbert and Sullivan Operas.
Pistol and Revolver Club met last
about once In so oft­
far below
I ^nk ^i^dlsaDnetrlni" bThind the drama of the Civil war and recon- Hezzle
Hanna
of Kalamazoo;
two'
CIVM..V
««•*•»•
,
—
Katherine
Mayo
—
The
StandardThursday
evening at the Parker
en, of the supreme
After lunch we took lhe east drive !
Atoutum ume I c^mi U&gt; the ’ !&gt;lr“«‘on era 1* brought vividly to .m*.
rms, Elmer
Elmer of
of Kalamazoo
Kalamazoo and
and WHWil-, Bearers.
House and made arrangements to
.
..------ j—------- -- Hom7~D«orating
winnifrcd Fales—What’s New In rent the basement of the Gamble
epll‘ uL
^iJ^r-^leave^and^Mr^D
danced with, the aloiig the nm. stopping at Yavapai, first fountain, where j took a good Ufe bl lbU ’“’I"’1,Th*
Hardware store on Sputh Jefferson
dr’"‘“ ® A »*
“52 J
and mJ?G1S
™"
then prince of Wale*’' Observation station and at several drink although 1 was nut ver/.
Bernice Starr—People and Art.
street for a shooting range Th*
other . points
point* jutting
Jutting out Into
into the ’' thirsty.
thirstsand the aftermath, it L* not a war Dygcrt ot Kal.ima.oo and Mrs. Glen,
and speaking of him other
Van Wyck Brooks—Flowering of basement is ideal for this purpose a*
r thmnrht mavbe I chnuiri he «tan i novtl except u* it affected the lives । Borton of Vicksburg; also thirteen
I
1
In a fondly senli- canyon, und Anally at the end of the
w
thmkinu
rnfviX thlrZ 1, ot
character*. Thl* books pop- J grandchildren. Air. Hanna was well New England
B_
it
h w
60 w/
feet long and not used by
drive
came
to
the
Watch
Tower
at
ing
back,
but
thinking
maybe
there
1
mental tone a* "Dear David.”
ur hark, but Chinkina mavbe there l uUrUy |na&gt;.
dU(_ to lhe facl that known arounj Hasting* where la­
Hawthorne Daniel—Householder'* the hardware company.
But even such a precious remi­ Desert View which is a faithful would be other sight* Just as inter­ the subject matter lias been dealt had lived for jhe past eight years. Complete Handbook.
Permission has been received from
niscence suddenly becomes, mighty re-creation of the strange towers (eating as those 1 had Just seen I with In such a way as to make onetThe funeral wa* held on Saturday.
Frederic C- Howe—Denmark the the city council lo Install the range
by the prehistoric inhabl- kept on. The *un was getting
gelling warm j,
,,1? '
"Xl 7,
12 at The Truesd.1T chanel Cooperative Way
pale, mighty puny alongside a pro­ erected
and at the present tune it is plantents of the southwest. Built of na- by thl* time and lizards. some of ‘ “lr , ,
.’Ji*
burial in" m^ldecemetenGeorge Arliss—Up the Years from ned to have five range masters. Thspective achievement which may I live stones and probably thirty feet &gt; them pretty good sized, were scoot-&gt;l,MJrs .U,f’ r®° Jbc
“
are *“!’ bl^1 ,n RU^ld
Bloomsbury
executive committee composed of H.
change the ancient slogan of maj­ . in diameter at lhe base and 75 feet ing across the trail quite often, 11 n‘*5ur“l' true*U?,.,.v Pcople; „. ,. .
Constance
Rourke
—
Audobon.
P.
Gies. .Earl Palmatler und Omar
esty to "Boni soit qui Wally pense!” • high, lhe Watch Toweri&lt;.commands
_ .... .
..
. ...
Another. novel
and Yin bv 1
----------’ • ■
...v . ...
, ,, , Yanit
,
Harwood—Insurance and Annul- Barker will be range masters, lhe
OBITUARY.
one of the most breath-taking of Gardens, a beautiful place with A^“.Tl?fale Hobart was discussed,
“
other two to be appointed later.
James W. Clark, son of Mary.and •*
ll«Grand
Canyon
views,
as
well
a*
a
springs
of
running
water
and
buildby
T,
ie sUkX dcal5. *l.th
Passing of the Train Butcher
_____________________________
*lepson
wasofborn
pewitl Frances
Raney, was
c Morse
born —Furniture
p"
of
At present there are 30 members!
.tartling panorama of the Painted । ing* where the tourist* eat their1 modcIp China as seen through
the ■tepson of 'Dewitt Raney,
puywcunijln
state. Cattaraugus ‘he Olden। Time
’T’HERE'S melancholy in the Desert and Navajo country which we I lunch.
enrolled and many other* have *lg- :
17
Iicycui
eye*
“ ot
of »yvungnu»iun«ry
»
a youn*
young misstonary
missionary physician
physician
। in New
New 5Ydrk
” ’
nifled their intention of joining.
u'Hnip whole
u Hnle life is nne
one nf
of unselfish.. POUntV.
county. January 3. 1862. and depart.Helen Simpson—The cold Table.
* news that the railroad "train had traversed the day before. At the j Until now the trail had been lead- . whose
devotion to ut
his
ed t».u
this nr.
life rw.mh.r
December «
6. ids
1936.
the
—
— —
-----— profession xs ..a ' ..i
* at
nt th*
Martha
Perrine
Munger—The
butcher" is vanishing. Soon, like base of the tower 1* a low. round Ki- ’ ing down, but here it leveled off to- 1'....
1
”ook of Puppets.
puppets
CARLTON CENTER.
so many fixtures of the passing va. or reproduction ot the ancient ward the river. The next three and ;11means ol improving Chinese welfare, i age of 74 years. Il months, three Book
—, .. He
... had ,spent nearlyWilla
Catherw,Ha
—Not Under Forty.
The Carlton Center school pupils
all his
»
generation, such as the dried-pota­ ceremonial chambers of the Pueblo a half miles were very dull, not see- liie author ha* succeed.-d again In' days.
—..Chhte
-----------------------------Barryliie
county.
He was|
Ln»amuThCL*t"muYrryt™i'nr
It.-.-z
lnt*r-----Pi*l.inK
’:s'heritage"#*i.»_
the ...
i enure
in Barry
county. He was
Beverley Nichols-No Place Like will give their Christmas program.
to as cure for rheumatism and the Indians. On the walls and ceilings
at diZ^nt
greatest barrier to her progress.
I a good neighbor and friend and will Home
Tuewtay evening. Dec. 22. at thdrooping sidewhisker, he’ll be an are hundreds of authcnUc repro­
“mST
OU». boo., mcnUoSrt. by Mb,! be ire.Uy mtoed by .11 who knew I O. Henry Mrtnorlwl Award Hrta carlion M. E. church at rt.ht
ductions of Indian plctograptui found
extinct species.
SSrti.“Xt’U'Wm"
Ckndle tata»- by‘h.m; He le.ve. u&gt; mburn hl« low.. Stale, ol m«.
............ All'
............
..............................
o'clock.
are cordially
Invited.
Looking ..OTOed Ind hldVnta uik Ibou.
Hul1'
“nd Beware' by ' two niece., .our nephew, .nd a ho«
I*wU Oannrtl—Sweet Land,
In my earliest recollections of throughout this region,
There will be no church services
down into the canyon from this
hid The M... Wl.n l Ol mends Funeral service, were
Lynn Hohrbomh-Handy a
at lhe Carlton M. E. church next
travel he has a fond place, along
point we could not see lhe bottom,
“k Weather- by Bes. held Tuesday alleniota al ora
Archltalural FblUm -.Book of Sunday evening. Dec. 20. as lhe con­
with the lunch put up in a congress us we were looking dnwn on top of a Ov.r ull^lt tale 1 hlilld be^X
I
Strata Aldrich.-so
o'clock.. Dec
Um^
--------- - --------gregatlon Is Invited to attend the ,
shoo box. lhe cinder in lhe eye and thunder storm and. believe it or not
Bo Free
rree we
we seem
seem iociucx
uec. i.
n. at
uc mr.
ivow
— ot
«. M. SmUmun.
Hon" Bright" by
bv I nephew. Nelson
------------------Henry V.
Morton—
—In
the Steps
DuBol*. Route 4., henry
------------------------------ .of Christmas program at Freeport M.
the smell which made every day we wondered how our thlrteen-year d,” SnSJId'ol ..IX. •' W "*”-«* "Honor
E. church. The young people Of the
Keyes. and "Rich । I Rev. Adcock officiating. Interment
........ . St. Paul.
coach remind you of a woodpecker's old son was enjoying himself down the fountain I went on down to tlie Prances Parkinsoni Keyes,
1
Birds
of
America.
Carlton church will assist in the
Man. Poor Man" by Janet Ayei was made in Hickory Corners ceme- J
nest
there in the rain with no breakfast river bank.
-jean
program at Freeport.
Jean Barnes
Barnes. Librarian.
Fairbank.
j lory.
I didn’t stay there long as there
On almost the first car trip 1 ever or lunch and no money in his pock­
&lt; &gt;*
I----------------- * * ►
Frank Hosmer went lo Ann Arbor
The discussion and reviews as!
made unaccompanied 'Iwas he wbo et to buy any. and probably no place wasn't much to look al. only a riv­ given will do much to inspire
"Herriot brings up debt to United : Several political lectures were hospital Saturday for observation
sold me a sealed volume entitled to buy It even If he had the money. er two or three times wider than the those present to delve further into States again."—News Item. That'* canceled in London recently owing and treatment
HLs frtendg here
Lola of people rave about the Thomnpple. The water was black as
the debt somebody is always bring- । to the heat. We've certainly had hope he may soon be much improved
•Th- Jolly Old Drummer'* Spicy
Che
books
so
well
reviewed.
•
ing up but never over.
&gt; some ideal weather this month.
in health.
Library.” with a whispered warn­ beauty of Grand Canyon, but I can t mud with the banks all slippery clay
truthfully do that after having seen ■ and no vegetation growing near it so
OBITUARY.
ing not to break the wrapper be­ Yellowstone and Zion canyons first.' I hurried back to get a drink but
Mrs. Mary Jane Belknap, daugh­
fore leaving
the train for , fear of
Tlie
outstanding u
feature
Grand
found mere
there was no waver
waler in
In me
the ter of James and Eliza Welch, whs
,
.
•••« vumuiiuui*
uiuiv of ui
iu&gt;u । luunu
arrest. I remember my guilty feci- canyon in tny estimation Is Just 1U 1 fountain. This bothered me greatly,
born in Delta county. Ohio, and
mg. my youthful thrill ot anticipa- ' colossal size—over a mile deep, from; as It was three and a halt miles up
came to Michigan at the age o'
tion. I got my money’s worth right j eight to twenty miles wide and sev- j hill lo where I could get another I[seven.,
she was married in 187$. to
there. I didn't gct.it, later, because j enty odd miles long. Its formation is drink so I stepped ofl up the trail [ Francis M. Belknap, who died in
there was nolhing'in that book you the rc-ull of the .same forces seen on ' as fast as I could The sun was at its 1923. a: their home in Riverdale,
couldn't read nt a meeting of the !,n&gt;' roaifclde ditch—the stream cut- hottest now. and it was like an in­ whe re they had made their home for
ladles* aid with Impunity.
I tlnB the
Horn down and lhe rides'ferno down there and I'also found 20 years. Five children were born to
He was indeed un menoino w,whlnK oR
caving of! Into it. ] it nece*Ary to rest once in a while, this union, twin daughters. Mary
scoundrel nnd envntrins srn.mX^' T&gt;,ls I’roceM
ot course, been go- My mouth and tongue became coat­
e. I *n« on r,,r thousands of centuries,:ed over and fliiHlly driedoutDll it and Martha, who died in infancy.
Herbert. Rose and Prank. She died
grow increasingly scarce. There s1 (uld, ns the river bed Is still neatly I felt like sandpaper.
Dec. 2. 1936 at the home of her
nothing plcturc*quc about an "in-i half a milc above sea level, the pro-1By this time the beautyof Grand
daughter. Mrs. John Loop of' Rut­
vzslmcnt counselor" doing business 1 wva
cess, will vuiitwiuc
continue ivi
for uiuuumu
thousands muir
more ,, u&gt;ui&gt;un
Canyon hod
iiwu gone,
gunc. and
nnti my only land. where she had been confined to
With
&gt;tnwov»r rirnno
.. out as soon
wlth the aid of a suekrr
sucker list and a c-nnturlrx
centuries. However.
Grand r-nnv»-&lt;
Canyon ’ thought was of getting
her bed for the past six years. Fu­
new issue of Bull Con. preferred.
extnslLinn of
of1 a* j could. About two miles from neral sendees were held Sunday in
is the most instructive exposition
geology in the world, particularly as the Indian Gardens I found a hole Riverdale with burial in the River­
many of its features can be under­ tilled with rain water and an old dale cemetery. She is survived by
Ugly Railroad Stations
stood by persona not. familiar with rusty can beside it. There was scum two sons. Herbert of Moorstown and
XTO MATTER which way you're that science. It exhibit* thick suc­ growing around the sides and the
Frank of Lansing, one daughter.
’ going, it seems you must cession* of rock* of various kinds water was warm, but this did not
Mrs. John Loop, six grandchildren,
change trains In Chicago, and near­ and ages, sbme of thqtn tilted at dif­ bother me so much m the polllwog.-: three
great-grandchildren,
two
ferent
angle*,
otliers
with
faults
and
swimming
along
lhe
bottom
and
ly always, change stations as well.
brothers and many friends.
Chicago proudly boasts ot more shills, nnd II illustrates most dear­ •tlrrlng up a roll. I dipped the can
APPOINTED DEALER.
railroad stations and uglier ones ly on a titanic scale, the origin of in. being careful not to gel any of
The o. E- Goodyear Hardware has
. and situated at more remote apd many types of land formations. Doz­ the polllwog* or scum and drank
FiremAi"
Inconvenient intervals from one ant en* of fixed telescopes at the various enough to last me till I got back to been appointed “Iron
dealer in thl* territory, according to
other than any city anywhere; It's observation stations, focused on the Indian Garden*.
these different rock layers and for­
Just
before
reaching
the
Gardens
an
announcement by the Iron Fire­
as though once upon a time she set
mations. give a close view of them I caught a large two-tailed swallow­ man Manufacturing co
out to collect the largest covey of and at each of these, telescope* is a
tail butterfly, the "Papilio Daunas"
truly homely stations in the world diagram and description of the which, though quite imperfect. I
Stars are self-luminous; planets
and then the bunch flushed and scat­ particular object in view.
prize very much and is the only shine by reflected light
tered on her.
We returned to lhe hotel about thing except blisters that I brought
three o'clock. Of course liie first out of the canyon. Al the Indian
reel me if 1 err—there's no struc­ thing we did was to contact-our--In­ Gardens I rested up. drinking as
tural reason why through cars on dian friend, but he had nothing much waler as I could hold and then
most lines could not bi switched further to report. I don't believe he set of! up the steep trait zigzagging
directly to the connecting line- with­ was taking the matter as seriously back and forth up the face of the
.
out being brought into the heart ot as we were, because after scanning canyon wall.
By this lime I was resting more
the city. Maybe Chicago loves the the trail myself through the tele­
| iliori Way
distinction of being the largest junc­ scope I could see David sitting on a than I wa* walking and It got worse
rock about half a mile below, his the farther I walked, but finally I
tion point on earth.
head in his hands and hi* elbows on reached the top. There was not a
| Lines lakes
his knees. He sat there about five happier person in the world than I
I me within a
minutes, then walked up the trail a
Hungarian Duels
waiting
for
me
at
the
top
of
the
XrOUR correspondent has been
block of my
trail and didn’t even ask me where
* quite calm about that Budapest
I had been or even let on that he
Friends Home
dorter . .Irin, of nta du.lt 1 lived nrit impuue wu lo ruah down Un mLssed me. but escorted me over to
through several Kentucky primary trail and’ help him up; but then I the hotel for breakfast at 4:30 In the
• ••and Dad
elections, to a scrap where you realized that if I did ao, somebody afternoon.
don't have to- replace any divota would probably have to rush a mule
I wouldn't make the trip again for
said, the
a.*terward leaves me comparative-; down lo help me up and I hadn't anything, but I am glad 1 did it
Jy calm.
* ’
! seen a mule around there that I once anyway.
tkhet costs
. There’s an average of 300 duels “
thought
*'* capable
' ' of• such
• a Job.
- - So
David R. Cook.
less than he
Ceve/y rnonth in Hungaiy. but to date I waited patiently and about 4:30 h&lt;OBITUARY.
the only fatahtie* are among tho^e reached the top. For over nine hours
could afford
who were bore&lt;L to death waiting he had .walked and run nearly six­
Hattie Viola Edwards was born In
for somclhing to happen. It's fing. teen miles over a rocky and at times Ovid township. Branch county. Sep­
slippery -trail with nn empty stom­
to be able to appease your sacred
ach. through the hot sun and tember 14. 1817 and died at Nichols
honor without losing iny of your
through rain and with what were a hospital. Battle creek, on December
sacred epidermis.
brand new pair of white shoes. His
If. in th? old dayat we'd only had toe* were a mass;of blisters, but he and 25 days. She spent most of her
that system for adjusting political was smiling a* he exhibited a huge life with her parent* in Hastings
differences, 1 can think of at least new species of butterfly he had attending school here and also at­
one uncle and several cousins pf caught down in (he canyon. After tending the Methodist Episcopal
mine wbo might still be alive and breakfast, nr raUjer two breakfast*, Sunday school. She had a pleasant
voting - tlie regular pemocratic he was Just as spry and full of pep disposition and was a kind and lov­
a* ever and suffered no til after-ef­ ing daughter she leaves to mourn
ticket.
fects from hl* experience.
her loss her mother. Mrs. Anna Ed­
JllVIN 8. COBB.
YouEllen
might
think
that I would be
wards, two sisters. Mrs.
Ben
­
hard-hearted and bawl him out for nett and Elsie of Hastings, one
FORMER RESIDENT DIES.
causing us all this anxiety and delay, brother.uMarvln, of Hastings and
Irving S. Paustle, aged ta. a real but I didn't as I knew that he knew other natives and friends, Her
estate agent in Long Beach. Cal., is that when I w«* his age and was father. Melvin Edwa/ds. preceded
dead at his home there. He was a visiting Colorado with my folks they her in death July 24. 1828. Funeral
former Hastings resident and al one spent a whole forenoon searching services were held on Friday after­
time owned a barber shop in this the Rocky Mountains for me. and noon at two o'clock at the Walldorf!
city and for many year# was a con- finally found me In the roundhouse funeral home, the Rev. W. Maylan
_dU£Xor. on the Grand Rapids street of lhe Pike's Peak cog wheel rall- Jones officiating. Burial was made Phone for complete Information.
... road. The only penalty I have Infllctrailway.
In the Lake Odessa cemetery. Her
----------— w
■■ ■ ■
i ed on him happened Just a-few mo­ death wa* the result of an accident
The lifeboats of the S. 8. Queen -mant* ago whan I asked him to test May. she had been a hospital
fary are all equipped with radio.
[write his experiences in the Grand jiatient since that time.
TRIO CAFE — PHONE 2127

’•

Women's Club

New Books In
Public Library

GmiME_______

!^-v“

’“.a" “loss, s-ssr.

*100,000
TO LOAN

ON IMPROVED
REAL ESTATE

I'M GOING VISITING

BUS DEPOT

Property owners in Barry county
and Hastings in need of financial
assistance can secure a loan on
their real estate. We are in a
position to make first mortgage
loans to individuals based on their
ability to repay. If you are a
farmer of Barry county, or if you
own a home in Hastings or
cinity we invite your applies
Stop in and talk it over

HASTINGS CITY BAN

TELEPHONE

2103

HASTINGS, MIC NIG

�runnra

THE HASTINGS BANNTH, THCMDAT, HtCXMHn 17. 1»M
Tlw Evangelical Sunday school velour curtain* have been hung
THREE COKNERH.
will hold their ChrULma* svrrclsM —*
*" "*
““
time
Mr and Mr*. Middleton of .Grand
and tree Sunday evening at 7 :&gt;0
The officers for Ivy Lodge. K. of I Rapids were Friday evening guest*
P. are: Chancellor Commander, of M- E Moore and Miss Clara J.
Mrs. H. D. Wotrlng fell an the Clyde Hamilton; vice commander. Bisson.
ice Saturday night and broke her Voyle Varov; prelate. Ralph He**,, Quest* of Mr. and Mrs. Claude A
right wrist Mr*. Claud Perry tell--------------—, , master Hammond „
master of--------yrork.- U O. Cole;
last Bunday were Mr. ana
HarTurlond oX Dttfo't,
Wedpesddy and broke her right nt
of exchequer. *&gt;»&gt;-«
Robert Stellh.
Smith; keeper -----jgr*.pJames
arm.
of records and seal. Cecil Barrett. Mr. and Mr
Mrs. Leg C- Hammond and
Hinman Sackett has gone to master of arm*. Frank Caley; inner *X&gt;icky Lee of Lansing and Bernard
ranting
guard. Milo Young; outer guard. Ryan arid Harry Martin of Jack­
Cl*r, Ode
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brumm and - ------------—
Mr*. Coy Brumm went te Auguste ’ The officers for the Pythian SuRev. Crocker of Hasting* called
Sunday to se Mr and Mrs Frank lcrl »«: Moat Excellent Chief. Mrs al the Edw. Walters homc Friday
Lauer
i Vada Kane; Senior. Erma Kraft; evening. Merideth Lewi* of Freeport
Mr and Mr*. J Clare McDerbv Jun,or- OUth Hamilton; Manager, was also a caller that evening.
were
&gt; Inez Wallace; M- of R. and C, Ethel
Mr. and Mrs. carl Lents spent
„„ in Umta, Prtd.r
(Hollrnu.. u. ol n.
H«. FroWright of Evart fell lector. Floy Bheldon; Guard. Lei* Bunday with her parent*. Mr. and
recently .nd
and broke .
a bnn.
bone tn h.,
her y&lt;jun&lt;. CgpUln of Degrw 8U„ Mrs. Claude A- Lester of Dowling.
ankle. Rev. Wright was a former Villa Olin; installing officer, Belle;
Miss Odetta Flfield of Hastings
Methodist pastor here.
Everts; Trustee for three years. was at hojne with her parent*. Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar 8 *Fificld. and fam­
Mr. and Mrs. Burgett and son of Mae Smith; Pianist. Mae Smith.
ily for the week end.
Battle Creek visited Mrs. Ida Wolfe
Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Vance enter­
on Monday.
*. meric
Mr- Mn&lt;* Mr’- HarveY Kenney of
tained Sunday. Dr. and Mr*.
Merle
vanew .iki baby
u«u» of
&lt;u Eaton
cwn Rapid*.
Rapids I
were last Bunday guests of
Vance
In Battle Creek Thursday.
Dr. andand
Mrs. Alien
Vance and
two i
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Clair YciV—^.
Arthur Jeffery of Battle Creek C,. —d Xchildren of Charlotte and Mr. Me-.
spent the week end with hl* family Naughton of Mulliken.
| Thomas Caln of Coral and H. A.
here.
,
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. McDerby and. Christiansen of Edmore called al the
Mrs Charles Kahler was hostess
daughter. Margaret, and Mrs. Ells- (E4’- Walter a home Saturday afterto the "We Are Four" dub on Wed­
abeth
McDerby. attended
the jnoonnesday.
Week
** end
"" guest* *of**Mr. and
•
Mrs
Al the Ag-HE Fair held Friday pageant at the Presbyterian church
H. J. Robinson were their daughter*.
and Saturday at the achool house. in Hastings Sunday night.
Mr*. Butler's room received ant.
Mrs. D. H. Evan* is visiting rela- ’ Ruth and Retha, ot Bancroft.
Mr. and Mr*. Leo C. Hammond of
place. MU* Carrie Coley's room sec­ lives in Fort Wayne. Ind.
ond and the Homer achool first
Mr. and Mn. E. L. Kane will live Lanslng spent Bunday evening with
place In the rural school exhibit.
tn Battle Creek during the winter his parents. Mr and Mrs. Claude A.
Hammond,
and family.
The senior class will give their months.
------_...
u
WH4
wtH1
Leonard will stay here wlUi
play "The Last of lhe Ruthven*" at hu gnmdparenU, Mr. and Mrs. L.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Coleman and
the auditorium Tuesday
1-------- ,
.... w Felghner and go to school.
Uw
night,
Mrs. LLuie McGarvey of Grand
Those taking part arc .i
Jean
Smith,
—n Hmith
uoyd mtl ot vennontbllle ha* ac- Rapid* were guest* ot Mr. and Mr^.
Sigmond Lenic, Jack Bowman. DenEdw. Walters last Tuesday.
Son.
nla Yarger, Jean Brown, Winifred ccBr“ a position with Hess
..—..w.- Literary Club met
Mr and Mr* Clair Yelter were ftt
The Women's
Yargtr, Norma Briggs. Edward at the library Wednesday for their j Alto Sunday visiting the latter's
Haines. Betty Higdon, Richard Ma­ ——-------------------parents. Mr. and Mn. John Clark.
Chrlstma* program.
son and Grace Wood. Tlie new
I Dr. and Mr*. W. A. Vance attendMr. and Mrs. Floyd Walters ——
and
’ ed a birthday parly for th. latter'* Marion-OTGrand Rapid* were Bun-'
I brother-in-law. Mr. Davis, al Kum- day dinner guests of her father. M
back Comers last Wednesday night E Moore and aunt. Clara J Sisson.
। The regular meeting of F. and A. I and spent the evening with his par­
I M. was held Monday night at tne ente. Mr and Mr- Edw. Walters,
' Masonic temple. A pot luck supper end grandmother. Mrs. Stoughton
' wa* served. 1 olio wed by election of
•••
•
SOUTH SHULTZ
officers.
■ A farewell party was held for
' Kenneth Babcock and family al the
_ .
,,
‘ home of Mr and Mr*. John Hint*
1ThL.t^her' MBy’^d1?lcker^ Saturday night They will be tniwd
die pupils of the Dunham school ln our conununity and we wuli
are preparing a Christinas program them succoas in their new homc
to be atvan
Lo
given at the aehnnl
school hn&lt;iw&gt;
house PrlFri­ re#r XJowllllg
day evening.
Mum Mabel Hom of Battle Creek
Mr. and Mrs. Ford Kidder and visited Wr parent*. Mr and Mi&gt;
,_n. of
nt north Maple Grove were. pr?d Hom, from Wednesday until
.amily
jucsts Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Saturday.
Clem Kidder.
Mb* Lucy Sullivan and Mrs. Eu­
Friday evening two carload* of nice Naugle* of Kalamazoo vialled
young folk* of the community went Mr. and Mrs Frank Hom Frldi.y
Best
m Battle Creek lo lhe home of MLv. and they all drove to Grand Rapid*
Dorothy Norton where they spent to visit Mrs
Maud Meyer* and
I family
in enjoyable evening.
Robert Oillasple. who has been in [ Mr and Mn. Frank Hom spent
Pennock hospital recoverUut from a Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Thad
ecent operation, relumed to hk&gt; Cock of north Barry
home. Sunday.
i Mr. and Mr* Aha Kenyon of
Always auk for one nf these quality brands —
Sunday evening callers al Clem Bvllevue and Mr. und Mrs. Ronald
PIONEER
GREAT LAKES
RED ARROW
Kidder's were Mr and Mr*. Harold Kenyon of Hickory Comer* spent
Kidder and family of Baltic Creek Friday with Mrs. Minn Kenyon,
BIG CHIEF
HOUSEWIFE’S FAVORITE
and Fred Hill and son*.
' Mr. and Mr* Roger Wisweli of
Mum Mildred Mark, who tea ehr* ( Kalamazoo called ou her Saturday
FOR SALE BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
near Ouosso. spent the week end ui* and Mr. and Mr*. Lynn Bi--h*&gt;p of
Battle Creek and at her parents' Rattle Creek spent Sunday after**
home here.
noon with her.

Ing residue entered, discharge of
NASHVILLE.
I Mrs. Elmira Hullinger. 8®. passed
Admrx. issued, estate enrolled.
! Mrs a f. Gag*, Mre Jack fall* ; away Saturday afternoon at the
Est Sarah E- Ayers. Order con- ton and daughter. Alice, and Mer- j home of her daughter, Mr*. Maude
Est. Max smitn. warrant ana mfirming sale entered.
hn Gage spent Saturday with Mn I Wotnng with whom *be made her
। ventory filed.
' bt Mary N William*. Order con- John Johnson al St. Maiy** Lake
F««*ral service* ware held
I Est. Mary E. Larkin. Petition to ....
and In Battle Creek.
I Monday afternoon at two o'clock al
firming filed,
sale enter
chart*®
Methodist church conducted
_____________________
of sell and assign certificate
order •
freehoders filed, license to sell’ is- i te sell and assign entered.
Est. Mary Elisabeth Alien. Order
1 by
lUr^ TownsenO of
allowing
account
entered.
night andI B*turtUsy with Miss Don* Wood2lind assisted by R«v Wooton.’
goad, oath before sale filed.
i bL Frank Olner. Petition for
. v «
! 8he leave, three son*. Bert HullinEst Edward B Gate*. Declination
Eat. Della Webster. Inventory' Admr. filed
। Jack Green of Lansing »pcnt lhe: grr of Iowa. Ora Hullinger of Chlfiled final account filed.
I bt. Alonso E Ken as ton. Order of trust filed.
'
cnt? here.
, cago, william of Royal Oak and
bL Jennie B Gorham. Bond of C°^”^Td“^S£d
Est. Mattle Spaulding. Order al­
Funeral service* for Mn. Gertrude ; One daughter. Mrs. Maude Wotrlng
lowing claims entered.
Admr. filed, letters of admlnlstr*Maiming were uciu
held ouLuiuur
Saturday Muirafter- ।, nt
of N«*nvine,
Naahviile. uuriaj
Burial in LaKeview
Lakeview
tion issued, order limiting settlement
10 *“
Est
Cora
O
Blllensteln.
Order
noon
a
t
t
h
e
home
of
her
daughter.
■, cemetery.
noon
at
the
home
of
hsr
daughter.
ccm«ltry. Thcue
Thoss from
uvui away
away attendattend--------«L bond on
entered. -HlHon
petition for
for hearing
hewing claim*
claim*
00 sale filed, re­ determlning heirs entered.
j.rv« nsariM
9
------- ■------Ch?r
M&gt; wlw’e homc I
hig ..
the funeral
wsre------------------------Bert Hullinger
fljed notice to creditors issued.
I port ofsaie filed.
UNO. nonce vo
Frajik Giner. Waiver Of notice
.«he died. Mrs. Manning had been
WEST HOPE.
B,t- nT* H' T»&gt;ior. Discharge of nlrd OT(leJ. appointing Admr entersick tor several week*. Be-.de* the ger of Chicago, and son, Merle Hulexecutor issued, estate enrolled.
.
ol A&lt;jmr.
utter* of
Everyone Is cordially invited
daughter she leave* a son. Ed Man­ llnger of Milwaukee. Mr. and Mr*
ning.-----------------------------ot near Marshall,-------------------and several Will Hullinger of Royal Oak, Mr.
attend
our ---------------Christmasr------------program
bt. Mary E Larkin. Order con- administration issued, order limit-------— —
------firming sate entered.
ing settlement entered, petition for | the church on Christina* eve. Santa grandchildren. Rev. M. E Hoyt of and Mn Henry Ford. Jr., of Kalabt. Fannie Baldwin. Order con-1 bearing
"
“ claims filed. noUce to credi"** *•*
—- will make
■— -a personal
*’ —
- •—. serv- maaoo. George Wearing of Lansing.
Claus
appear- Okemos —
was
In charge of» •»
the
tors issued. Inventory filed.
I ance and our play which is enUtled ice.
Mrs. Platt of Wayland. Mr. and
firming sale entered
bt. Minnie B. Whltwam. Bond of ‘ "Star of the East.' promLMM to be
Funeral service* for
Charley Mr*. 8. W. Smith of Woodland.
bt. Bert Birman. Warrant and
Admr. filed, tetters testamentary is-1 fine. Bring the children and enjoy Brooks. 72. who passed away in YpMrs Lyman has gone to Saginaw
inventory filed.
*ued. order limiting settlement en- our tree and entertainment
sUantl were held Bunday afternoon and Mrs Fred Elder Ls visiting her
Eat. Phoebe 81»*on. petition for tered. petition for hearing claims! Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lord and al tlie Hess funeral home at two
daughter and hu*band at Harbor
determination of heir* filed, order filed, notice to creditor* issued.
children of Rutland were Sunday o'clock. Mr. Brook* was a former Beach.
for publication entered.
E$t- Alien O. Lasby. Petition for (dinner guesL* of Mr. and Mr*. Les- resident of Nashville. He leaves hl*
Mr. and Mrs Jame* Pctruska and
Est. Phoeble Warner. Will filed. Admr. filed, petition far special' ter Lord and son.
wife and three Children, besides
petition for probate filed, order for Admr.
,
filed, order appointing *pe-; Bean threshing is the big new* other relative* and friends. Rev. Ml** Donna Northrup of Battle
publication entered.
|,clal
soecla! I■ around here at present. The bean* Wooton cf the Methodist church Creek and Carl Petnuka of Nile*
dal Admr. entered, bond of special
b(. Nellie B. Edger. Warrant and .Admr. filed, letters of special Admr. I are coming out of the pod* better was in charge of the service and spent Bunday with Mr. and Mrs.
I than could be exported and arc Mrs. Lykin* sang. Burial was in Elmer Northrup.
inventory filed, petition to sell or Issued.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel OarUnger
Est. William Evan*. Order assign -' yielding better than we dared hope. the Wilcox cemetery.
assign Consumers Power stock filed.
spent Wednesday In Grand Rapid*.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wash and
Mr*. Clyde Hamilton were in Has­
ting* Thursday.
Mr. and Mr*. LeRoy Bell of Mid­
dleville were guests of Superinten­
dent and Mrs. Wallace Friday. Mr.
Bell was one of the judges at the
Agricultural fair.
Mr. and Mr*. Hhrpld Spears end
children of Ypsilanti spent lhe week
end with Mr. and Mrs. Orvlllo
Hook.

COURTHOUSB NEWS;

to

. O!

BARGAINS

COME IN SMALL
PACKAGES
AND LARGE
y

INSIST ON

MICHIGAN MADE

BEETSUGAR

For you and your family—the gracious
gift of hotter homo life... wouldn't you like that?

So tart io do .. . our Christmas Carnival ot
Values brings you lhe fin eel in home helps

for Cooking —Baking —Canning
Jams and Jellies—Candy Making
Frostings — Table Use

*^JL

for EVERYONE on Your List . . .
and at Prices You Can Afford to Pay!

Only 7 More Shopping Days ’til Christmas!
35c

BOYS' AND GIRLS' BOOKS

MANICURE SETS

50c to $4.50

PERFUME......

25c to $4.00

PLAYING CARDS, Fancy Backs

.. 29c to 75c

PURSES AND BILLFOLDS

HERE’S TO GOOD COOKING! . . . Good looking
and Good Cooking are two different things—but
these mean both. Brighten your kitchen, add new
charm—ond enjoy perfect cooking results. Just
orrived—this newest A-B is a beauty. Buy on 3­

25c to $3.50

CHOCOLATE CREAMS, Fancy Wrapped 33c to $2.50
CIGARS, Christmas Wrapped-------------- 50c to $4.50

5 YEAR DIARYS

. 49c to $2.50

FOUNTAIN PENS

..25c to $7.50

98c
ELECTRIC CURLING IRONS, with'switch
$1.98
ELECTRIC COFFEE MAKERS ...............
$1.29 and $1.79
ELECTRIC TOASTERS
ELECTRIC ROOM HEATERS
$1.98
ELECTRIC HEATING PADS, 3 heats ....

$2.98
$3.49

ELECTRIC BED LIGHTS _A.........................

_.98c

ELECTRIC FLAT IRONS, GUARANTEED
Hostess sets with grills, wof­
Sandwich Grills _Z_$3,95 up

ClKtric Caawnle. $4.95 up

Touatpn oa low oa$2.95
Parcolatora. from ....$4.95
Naw Irena, only ..$2.95 up

fle grids, toasters, condiment
dishes, “snack” plates and
other new features.

Waffle Irons ....

Electric Clocks from .$3.95

Electric Cookers ..

-$4.95 up
$7.95 up&lt;

Heating Pads____

...$325

Here's wash-day freedom —
and ironing day leisure
The
Famous ABC washers that
clean more thoroughly' than
ever Liberal allowance for old
equ'pmcnt^Small payment deliv$rt-£^no more to pay until,
April.

See Our Display This Week

Como In ... or Phono' 2305

CONSUMERS POWER CO

es and in sets.

75'

M5

Ask For Votes

On The Sixteen

ELECTRICAL GOODS

IIAUTIFUL NIW LAMPS

Give Her the Best—
Cara Nome Creams.
Powders.
Lip Sticks
and rouge. Single piec­

.49c to $1.50

FLASH LIGHTS

year terms. Small payment installs it—no more to
pay until April. Liberal allowance for old stove.

Toi I etries

CHRISTMAS CARDS AND FOLDERS..... 1 c to 25c
CHRISTMASTREE ELECTRIC SETS39c to$L50
TREE ORNAMENTS AND EXTRA BULBS

BOYS' &amp; GIRLS'

PRIZES!
We are

giving

Christmas

Eve.

away
Help-

some boy or girl get a

nice gift for Christmas

FREE—Our

Calendars

Weather

given

away

Chart
this

week. Ask for one

Carveth &amp; Stebbins
THE REXALL STORE
GOODS DELIVERED

PHONE 2131, HASTINGS

�MANY ACRES OF &lt;sTATF
J.? L*.

perintendent nnd wife Friday eve-, have been recently elected; Pres. Augusta. there; Tuesday. Jan. 26.
The auction* will be held al MidDELTON.
,an* WeU Branch. Atlanta. Charle-. There were about 25 in attend- nlng at a venison dinner. A flue time' Vonda Louden; Vlce-Pres.. Thelma Schoolcraft, there; Friday. Jan. 29.
’Mott; Bee. Dorothy Wibalda; Re- 1 Richland, here; Tuesday. Feb. 2.
Kalkaska, si. Ignore nnd F.s-lance nt'the class party at Mrs. was reported.
Members of the extension clast I porter. Mildred Watson; Advisory Schoolcraft, here; Friday. Feb. 5,
canaba. Each- will hr held in lhe Richard’s Monday evening, a lovely
Platted Lot* of Wild Char- office of the county treasurer at 10 time was the expression or all. Th-? please remember lhe dale of the 'board. Mesdames Leonard. Louden open; Tuesday. Feb. 9. Middleville,
leader. Ml«
i.
o'clack In Uie morning, except the next parly willjie held at tlie.home next meeting. Friday, Dec. 18. with and Dunning;
Dunning; Under.
Mary there; Friday. Feb. 12. Kellogg, here;
■No Waler
i.._. *.--------■
' Roush
Ftnnth with
w.th icaihrvn
Kathryn ttnrir.n
Horton. Eloise Friday, Feb. 19. Martin. there; Fri­
; sale al West Branch which will of Mr. and Mrs. James Collins.
day. Feb. 28. Portage here.
’
Frontage
|&lt;&gt;pen at 2:30 and the sale at Kai- ! ReV.'Bales
'
sermon subject next, A Christmas party will be given
Sunday will be "Feeding the floul."| the children of the Sunday school
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Warner of
Mure than 12.000 acres *of stateThere will be * Christinas service in the church basement Tuesday ।
Kalamazoo were Sunday guests of
owned land. Including 130 platted |
held In the church on Bunday eve1 Mr and Mrs. James Collins.
right after!
lots, wlll.be offered for sale to the ।
Mr. and Mrs c. J. Barnum wert
public at a series of auctions lo be
— ----------. rlll have a nlrig Dec. 20. Hymns and Christ-;
Friday
----- -------in Lansing Saturday.
conducted by the department of Christmas tree and prograr
. mas carols will be sung and Inter•spersed between will be given the joyed a pleasant afternoon. Thurs- wife from
conservation In northern Michigan evening. Dec. 18 at lhe schoolhouse,
beginning
Wednesday.
Dec.
10,
I
Quarterly
meeting.
of
the
North
day at the home of Mrs. Von Dunn. I The Delton-W. K. Kellogg school । will be held In lhe new schoolhouse
..........
mtv. 1O.
• -——•, origin or meaning of each song.
Except for the platted lot* all of and South Maple Grove churches Everyone fa Invited to meet at the After the program, gifts from the' basket ball game schedule is Friday. on Thursday afternoon. December
the
— land
I.—.* b of
_• "wild ‘character
------------ “and
_ . ~&lt;n
*1U»— K-ia
held-&gt;“l iklhe
. ann&gt;H
&gt;»uth church parsonage on Friday evening to re­ Christmas tree were distributed ant! j Dec. 4. Richland there; Friday. Dec 24. Everyone Is welcome.
.Miss Mary Roush and her Camp
none has water frontage, which Is nrxl Saturday afternoon and Sun­ hearse the song* which will be di­ then the hostess served tea and' 11. Martin, here; Tuesday. Dec. 15.
rected by C. J. Barnum.
wafers, pop com. «andy and nuts J Middleville, here; Friday, Dec. 18. Plrr group spent the week end at
being assiduously retained by the'morning at 11:30.
Winka. Clear lake. Saturday night.
department of conservation for pubMr. and Mrs. Vincent Norton and
_________________
he use None of the land Is hi estab- Margery attended the funeral of a mined tlie member* of the'Delton- MUs Effie Richards and her musj; litre; Friday. Jan. 8. Kellogg, there; i They had a council fire and six girls
Ushed 6r tentative conservation cousin near Bellevue last Friday aft- W K- Kellogg Agricultural School clgw Saturday evening at a recital. Friday. Jan. 15. open; Tuesday. Jan. i took Ore makers' rank and one wood
The following 4-H Club officers 19. Portage, there; Friday. Jan. 22. I gatherer.
j-

LAND ARE ON SALE vo1*-

*

------------

&gt;T

Mr. and Mrs. Alien Terry of Utah-1
field spent the week end with Mr.
and Mrs. Wade Town.
Mrs. Amy Whittemore enjoyed the
festivities In her honor at Use home
of Her son. William, last Sunday.
Most especially did she' appreciate
the beautiful, large birthday cake,
decorated with 90 yellow roses, made
by Mr. Banghart and presented to
her by her daughter-in-law, Mrs.

entertain al their home In *
Cedars on Christmas day lhe
lowing guests: Mr. and Mrs. Ot
Ransom of Rutland, Mr. and
DeVon Putnam of Mason and
and Henry Wlckwtre of Banfiel

DOLLARS «
Holdr

Monthly
Paymenu

Liberal trade-in I
FREE HOME TRIAL

iMovie Dial!
Big II-Tube

your kitchen
up to the minute with WARDS VOGUE

GAS RANGE

Airline Deluxe

Perfect Biscuit* in It minutes
with the big Double-Quick
oven! It's insulated, porce­
lain lined,lias automatic heat
control! You cook on4 fast,
round, non-clogging burners,
too! Every feature lifts this
range above its price! See it!

OVERSIZE WARD
WASHER WITH
TRIPLE-ACTION
55 DOWN Dallraraltl
Small Carrying Chargt
Compare with &gt;59.50 and
&gt;69.50 washers! Big 23gsllon porcclsin tub hold*
18 gal. to load line (often
called 7-shect size). Lov­
ell wringer ha* big bal-

ROCKER

At S90 Gih far Yatr Ho~al

Hand Vacuum WITH WARDS

3 Pe. Modern

Supreme Cleaner
For children up to 10
year*. Children love these
J i b r e rockers, Because
they're so colorful! Clean,
cotton padded seats In
floral cretonne! Flaring
arm*. Design woven ini

10" Baby Doll
SJ DOWN, Carrying Charge
2 gVeat gifts! Wards 8uKme eouals 175 cleaners!
iting - sweeping - suction!
Headlight! One week only!
Saturday Last Day!

Adorable! A big doll for this
price I Sleeping eyes, and
••oicel Soft body,.See it! t

MOOWN

Richly veneered in oriental
wood, swirl and American
walnuts! Dustproof drawers!
Bed, cheat and vanity os'
dresser! Bench, &gt;6.93.

If It’s Luggage—Wards Have It!

. i e

Overnlte Bag

Full Site

SALE!

MOTOBBIKE
Strong basswood box—cov­
ered with black, grained
fabric.. Well re-inforced—
it'll bo a valued possession
for years I And you’ll save I

19““

'Shooting Star

SALE! ROASTERS
Hold* 18-lb. turkey. Porcelain
enamel with »elf-baxting cover.

• Sold exclusively at
MONTGOMERY WARDS—
Hawthorne Bicycles range in
price from 118.95 to &gt;47.95.

WARDS MONTHLY
PAYMENT PLAN

CH RISTMAS
GIFT OFFER

GLADSTONE SALE!

the solution to Chnslmot
Shopping! Moke out yovr
list/ if it lotah $20 armors,
cp«n an account. Have
everything in lime for
Christmas, and pgy for
M. your purchoses dunng the
[ - Irt -mi*. Th* down

EXCLUSIVEI

Renter nnd Fan

“Blue Racer'
Stmatronal

new wagonf
Ball-bearings, rubber cush­
ions. saddle 1 Strong steel I

118-124 S. JEFFERSON

Value!

They Are Machine Woven —
^^^JfJust Like Mother’s

She111 like this

TRAVEL KIT

$69.95

Compare itg. beauty and features with $175
radio*. Ward* exclusive Movie Dial illumi­
nates. 3 wave bands, and plenty of power to
bring them in. Cathode ray tuning eye. Genu­
ine metal tube*. Big superdynamic speaker
for better tone. A luxury radio, low-priced!

payment is una II, so tl the
carrying charge. Come in,
lei v» tell you the odranloges ot using Wordi
Monthly Payment Pion

HASTINGS, MICH.

ELECTRIC TOASTER
Air Rifle
Rifle-type peep sight! 1000
shots without reloadingl
Walnut finished stock.

DEFROSTING FAN

�TTDt HASTINGS BANNER, THUBSDAT, DECEMBER IT, 1W

Ms too*

SOUTH THORNAPPLJS.
I and good Job for a mere boy.
home ot Mr. and Mr*. Cha*. HarThe department of conservation ; family of Coal* Grove were, caller? ...
James Johnson, who boards with' We all are enjoying our new elec- nngton Thursday afternoon.
ha* reminded fishermen that then-, at Herman Hauer’* Sunday.
' i Mr. and Mn. Bordy Rowiader and
general fishing licenses, expire on! Mr*. Etta Bump is spending a few I hl* nephew. Rollo Johnson, and wife , trie light*.
i
Jan. 1. the date on which lhe new day* with Mrs. L- J- Matthew i. at Yankee Sprxgs and work* in the
7------------- .wo
.
&gt;daughter, June, spent the- week'end
fishing licenses for 1937 go into ef- Thursday afternoon they- attended park which is being built at Mud I
MORGAN.
at Kalamaaoo with Mr. and Mrs.
; feet. All dealers and conservation ot- the Ladle*’ Aid at Mrs. B- Scudder’* lake visited last Saturday with his Dec. 10 Letter.
.Hoy Hamacker.
fievrs in various parts of the suite at Welcome and helped pack 17 slster-in-Uw- Mr*. Cha*. B- John-1 Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Howard made |
r„,
THE CROSSROADS.
son. They called In the afternoon a business trip to Lansing last j
Muskrat trapping remain* legal in .will be fully supplied with the new|Christmas boxes.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy prestnn attend- at the home of her children. Mr. and Wednesday.
i Mr. and Mn. Newman Tuttle of
. the southern half of the lower pen­ licenses before that date.
insula to and including Dec. 31. the
• • •
|ed the funeral of an uncle at Pre- Mrs. Theodore Wieringa and family i
Nellie Wolf and family spent Che
8und&gt;y tue&gt;U
tn Middleville ana also saw their un­ week end in Grand Rapid* lhe -01 Mr Jane Tuttle.
| department of conservation nnAt least $150,000 win be added to, mont on Saturday.
nounced. The open season on trap- the fund net aside for lhe purchase. । The program at Allofl school will de. James Matthews, and son. Ray. I 1 guest* of Mr. and Mr*. Fred Hill. I Mr. and Mr*. Howard Hadley and
iplng thl* fur-bearer in the lower maintenance and development of be held Tuesday evening. Dec. 32.
Guy B Hoaley of Livingston ooun-1 [ Lelhfi Adkins and Mr*. J. W
*nd
*** Hadley
Orand
I third portion of lhe stale runs from game refuge land* and public hunt-| Mr. and Mr*. Roy Preston and son, ty wo* In the vicinity recently at-1 Howard attended a birthday circle Jzd&lt;fe
8“nday w,la Mr- and
l Dec. 1 to Dec. 31. inclusive, below ing grounds from lhe *a|si.of 1930 Donald, were caller* at Vernon tending to business in connection I gathering Friday at the home ot.Mr*’ Clyde Sledge.
.
I the north line of Townline 1C hprth deer-huntlng licenses.
The game *1 Preston’s at Lowell. Sunday.
with the new M-37 road. He also, ' Mr*. Grace Kaiser north of Noah-I Mr. and Mr*.
Mrs DeDon ~
Kircher of
and cost of Saginaw bay including law requires that $1,50 from the sale
----------------- ►
■
purchased the right to cut th* big 1 vllle.
near Freeport were Bunday guests
, all of the Thumb district. Above of each deer license be made avail-,
LENT CORNERS.
.white oak tree which stands in front || Clair Van 8yckle ot Lansing spent of Mr. ahd Mrs. Orley Smith and
| that line west of Saginaw bay the able for the above purpose*, and । Dec_- jq Yetter.
of the late Cha*. B. Johnson rest-'
Homer
Ba
’
es.
open season on muskrats Is from conservation authorities here eatl- j Mr. ftnd Mr*. Clare Thoma* were (knee, it Is estimated to be mote Tuesday and Wednesday with hl*
I parent*. Mr. and Mn. Wm. Van
Mr. and Mrs Will Page spen*.
Nov. 15 to Dec. 15. Inclusive. Nov. 30 mate that the sale of 1030 deer U* । Kai imazoo shopper* Saturday,
, than 200 years old.
1 Byekle.
Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
was lhe last of a 30-day open musk­ censes exceeded
the 103.000 mark. . .----------M|._, Gforla
Francisco spent
.-------------------------r-------- —
Mr. and Mr*. George Smalts were ।
Glenard Earl and Bob Knight Page of Hastings.
rat season in lhe upper peninsula.
* * *
1 ‘lays recently with her aunt and ln orand Rapids Friday to have the spent Wednesday
wc-ancsnay nut
nt wiui
night
with m
Mt.
Mi’, and Mrs. Chas. Cooper of
The legal open season for hunting family. Mr and Mrs. Arthur Paul Dr. dreM Mr Smalts’ hand afu-r ^d Mrs Will Martin of Kalamo
’ The life of a Christmas tree may
Hasting* »pent Sunday afternoon
rabbit* In southern Michigan coun- of Kalamazoo.
which they visited at a daughter’s
Mr and Mr* J. W Howard enter- and evening with Mr and Mrs.
be extended al least a week If lhe tics comes to an end New Year* day
Alvin Fox. wlio ho* double pneu- home.
Iglncd Mr and Mn C J Hunton Clyde Sledge.
tree is set in water when brought bS i.,«™u.:h of
rx
wm
Mr. and Mr*. John Cook and chil­
Into the house.
Wednesday after roofing after wltich , Rev, Dortha Haytei
dren visited Mtn Jennie McBain
Perry Barnum assisted him in roof- , Hanes ot Nashville
of Hailing* Bunday.
Xot'
neM
ring their summer kitchen,
i____________________
df the Thumb district.
-----Mr. Uwr.nct Hammana .is a
O"»
■&gt;&lt; MMdlrtUla waa |
------... shopper
.-------- —
....
up u) me farm last Monday bagglny .
BARBERS---------------CORNERS.
---------------; Kalamazoo
Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huver of Lan-1 congratulations are extended to, up cam and rye which he sold at the
mill In Middleville.
I
„
sing were Bunday guest* of Mrs. I Mr. and M„. Blu# Boulter on the
: jerry Foley. .
.
|I birth- -*
Theodore Wieringa. Jr., of Mid- 1
jTr
of -a daughter.
i Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Manker and
Howard Carpenter Is doing chorea dlevllle on Saturday drove out to the ।
| family ot East Woodland were Sun- ,for
u, Walter Warner while he is on home of hi* grandma. Mrs. Chas. 13..
Johnson, and cleaned both her
day dinner guest* at John Weaver s the jur&gt;’ home.
;
chicken houses, got in litter and
। Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Clum and j
BANNER WANT ADVH. PAY
■ patched tlie roof on a porch. A big
;

RURAL PATRONS
Please Order Your Coal
Before Snow Blockade!
Hastings Lumber &amp; Coal Co.
Frank Sage

Phon* 2515

Hastings

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

““SXS'X XifKS’li"

H“" o!

,

,

1 his Christmas

New! \

“n“1 “ ““

। € HUE’S SHOE STORE
Have the Perfect

Give Some­

thing For
The Cor

• HEATERS
• RADIOS

^Coleman

• TIRES &amp; TUBES

GAS BURNING

FLOQR FURNACES
This modern economical beating unit produces abundant
healthfoi heat while it thoroughly conditions the air in your
home for wintertime comfort. Clean, live warmth penetrate*
every corner, keeping temperature even.
Coleman Floor Furnace* pull cold air off floor*... dry out
air that is too humid... moisten air that is too dry. No open
flame to contaminate air. No oxygen taken from room.
No hot ceilings, no cold floor*, no sweated walls, nor
•taffy air pocket*.
Your family will enjoy greater comfort and belter health
at'le** fnel coat... with a Coleman. Yoa'll haveaammer-like
warmth on the coldest day*. Come in today for a demonstra­
tion of these fuel-saving, cold-chasing furnace*.

1

CLEAN. CAREFREE
HEAT— No dirt, .mokr.

2

HEALTHFUL HEAT—

3

LOW-COST HEAT —

• BATTERIES
• ACCESSORIES

Large, active air circu­
lation penetrate* CT«7 cor'
ner. Pull* cold air off Hoort.
Keep* floor* warm. Givea a
sis..

Pion to spend some of

your Christmas money on

Highly efficient, pro­
duces 104 lo 20% more beat.
Daras all lhe gas... prevents
—tool wa*te. Low initial cost.

something

the

family

enjoy.

can

whole

Buy

something for the cor.

CONSUMERS POWER CO

• Firestone Tires and Tubes
• Batteries. Windshield Wipers

,

..

,.

Michigan

Hastings.

• Sunoco Gaa and Oil*
• Vulcanising

■ BLUE * Y '

■

ss-siiNoca

Greasing
Washing

'

CRUES SHOE STORE
NtXT TO CITY BANK

PHONE 2176

^GOODYEAR BROS. HARDWARE j
IT S SO EASY TO SHOP HERE - A QUALITY GIFT ALWAYS PLEASES.

flECTRKAt

SPORTING GOODS
Skits......................$1.50 to $3.75

Sleds$1.50 to $4.00

Tricycles1 $2.00 to $15.00

*1.75 to *4.50

Toasters ....

Irons*1.25 to *6-95
Waffle Irons .

Percolators .

. *3.00 to *7.00
.

.

*1.50 to *5.95

RADIOS
STROMBERG-CARLSON
With the acoustical labyrinth beam power

tubes. Speakers mode of carpinchoc leather.

Icc skates and shoe combinations$3.75 to $4.75

GRUNOW with TELEDIAL
Violin shaped cabinet*. Color-flash airplane
dial with clock type tuning. With electric
eye.

SUGGESTIONS

.

*1.25 to *3.50

.

.

*1.25 to *7.50

Heaters .

.

Sandwich Grill

toaster

*1.50 to *5.50

Electric Plates . . *3.50 to *7.25

Scissors and shears

Carving sets

Aluminum cocktail shakor-J pl. sise, $2.50
Aluminum highball glasses \ $5.00

25c to $1.00
$1.00 to

$5.25

Pyrex top-of-oven work75c to

$2.65

Coke tins, square and round

$1.00

finl,h

Aluminum pitcher with four glasses $2.30

...25c to $3.50

Jack knife

Now dotijo "WEST BEND" with satin

which will not tarnish or diwolor WEST BEND'S
25th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

Sauce pan with two Scouring pads ...39c

Hcalth-o-Mctcr both scales $3.00 to 57-.5O

Heating Pads .

WGFtn

Bicycles- girls' and boys'- $27.50

TOYS-3O% to 50%
Reduction in Price!

8 in set with server

Aluminum whistling tea kattle..$2.50
Aluminum cigarette server50c
Aluminum ring mold.70c to 90c

�TH* HASTTNOO BANNER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1SJ4

NEW FROCKS

gallon of water: 2 lb*. for 10 degree* If your aotl la ready—and you did
above zero; 2 1-3 lb*, for aero; 3 lb*, not get It seeded In lhe fall—put on
for 10 degree* below; 3 1-3 lb*, for your rubber boots and seed It a* soon
25 degree* b*Iow; 4 Iba. for 40 d?th*'snow Is gone In the spring,
greet
below aero. — Pennsylvania a little standing water will do no
Farmer.
harm, clip the weeds when they
By WILUARD BOLTE
-------| start—but do not leave them an the
Curing Hunt.
' ground, as they will smother the
A Living from Broiler*.
bushel of rya—will give good result*.
1 think it te a fair estimate that 75 Sweet elover 1* a fine soil-builder for ' The chief problem in curing hams y^ung seeding.
out of every 80 people make a failure «*rdcns. but it has to be aeeded In on the farm te to be *ure that the i
------------.
of lhe broiler bustnea*. By that I August and mu*t not be turned un­ curt penetrates clear to' lhe bone— 1
Rubber Tractor Tire*.
Michigan Ulate college report*
mean that they fall to make money,
until It te Mvtral Inches high In thu* avoiding ' bone-aourtng." The
packer* have surmounted thl* trou-' lbat rubber tractor tire* will pay for
or actually low money. For that ret-1 the spring,
! bte by "pumping" the cure'along the themselves through fuel saving*
son i think II well worth the space ' _—
-----------bones ar.d Into the joints by the use Alone in the first five aeason*.—
to gtve my reader* a brief resume
Can Swarming He Controlled?
of a story tn Poultry Tribune about. Writing In Pennsylvania Fanner,, of a 4-ounce ayrtDS® with a long; HoArd's Dairyman
---------- -a Kentucky factory worker who, L- W. Uglily advances Ute opinion needle having several outlet holes ■
®ClL?l^
U_f?r—
.P*,r7.c!!wx . .
made lhe business go—right from that th* swarming of bees cannot be The sjTlnge mis. filled with the pickle
-------------th* start. First he built a two-«tory, done sway with by rutting out lhe —being careful to avoid any air-,
te rather generally believed by
broiler house—25x50 feet, in on* end queen bee e*lte each w»ek. or by any pockets. The needle is inserted full- r&gt;lry’n,en.
,5°** wU1 produce
of tlie second floor he installed a other method known to him. Instead length along the shank bone and the
'box etall* than In the usual
1.400-chlck brootter atov*. with insu- of trying lo atop swarming entirely, liquid is Injected with a slow even llne °&gt; stanchions or lie stall*. A re­
lated walk and ceiling around It to Mr. Llcnly holds it down to no*, pressure
Then it te inserted along ernt teat by Ohio Experiment 8taconflne the heat The real of the up- more than one. swarm each season the thigh bone, pointing toward lhe'
?a,ne “T*
stair* wa* not heated. Downstair* he ‘ by shaking -so many bees Into thf bunckle
Then it te inserted along alternated between box stalls and
installed a coal stove of sufficient new swarm, from lhe old colony, the butt bone. Large hams should stenchtona— failed
to show any
air* to keep lhe floor temperature al1 that the old colony is loo depleted •!*&lt;» be injected from each side.1
Production in the box stalls.
85
month aurmg
during tne
the.! to swarm
with 50 pouning
pointing towara
toward me
lhe knuckle bone, t The only advantage that the *ta_ degree*
_egr«tes Every montn
swarm twice, starting witn
-----. . 400 chick* under the colonies each
. . spring
—...
.he .frequently —Breeder's Gazelle,
tion see* tn the box stall is protecyear...
he i atari*
I Hon against accident* and contagbrooder stove, a* »oon as they know , has 70 or more in lhe fall—and then
---------I lous diseases and IHs feed-stealing.
Planting Reed's Canary Grata.
the way back to the stow he per-, he consolidate* these Into 50 strong
। —Hoard's Dairyman.
mite them to run in and out of the colonies before they go into winter,
Writing In Hoard's Dairyman, an
•■cold room"—to promote vigor and
-----------expert give* lhe following Instrue- (
Colombia River Cataract
uniform feathering. When they are,
Farm Fire Protection.
Ilona for planting Reed* Canary
a month old they are moved to lhe
Farmer* who depend upon barrels Grass on low land that is subject to
first floor—and a new lol of chicks | of water for Are protection must be overflow. The soil should be free net aeon* *go,
- - on the Columbia
goes into lhe brooder room. In 1035 j gure that those barrels do not freeze, from weeds and offer a good seed rlrer ,n Washington, over which
he raised 4.800 broilers—filing them n,f eaaieal way lo prevent freezing bed. Use 7 lb*, of seed per acre- Pa»»«4 • n°w of «“»« &lt;«»«/ time*
at retail for an average live price , u
dissolve flak, calcium chloride mixed with an equal amount of Um- U*® volume of Niagara Thi* fall*.
ot Mc.*^ch; Th575°*1 h‘T “’l *ver-1 into the water. Following Is a tabla
age of 3lc for chicks and feed, leav- showing the amount required per
ing him a grana income of 29c per .
broiler. Seven pounds of feed can ~
be counted on lo make 2-pound
broiler* tn this plant in a period of. •
7 weeks- and they are vigorous and'
fully feathered. He keep* hte price
average up during the spring dump'
by selling the pullet* for breeder* I

Weekly Farm Review

The Best Ideas from the Best Farm Papers

IN WINTER AS IN SUMMER
...KEEP YOUR FOOD BELOW 50°! j
• U you could m* food under a mi­
croscope you
,— would
------------know
------ why any
,
leg-box or other refrigerator that cancan­
not maintain
u—
tin temperature*
below 50*
i* dangerous. For above 50*, bacteria
multiply by the millions—on meat, on
leftover*, in milk They endanger
health, lower resistance to disease and

waste your food money. And don't be
fooled by winter weather. Outride
temperatures are varying and uncertain —but it'* always summer in your
kitchen. 1 f the temperature where’
food is kept i* not in the Safety-2
— below
—
ibt aha* th
daogerl

2
PLAIN and
PRINTED

CREPES

Smartly styled street and af­
ternoon dre»»e* in your iavorite solid color* and dark
ground Spring print*.

JAKWBmhl

C&lt;nrr (Tops for Gardens.
Rye (ORkea an excellent winter
cover crop for the vegetable garden.
according to Pennsylvania Farmer
It may be sown at late a* Novem­
ber 1st tn the latitude of Pennsyl­
vania. but earlier sowlrut will pro­
vide nvu^h more green material to
.turn yr let . Hairy vetch provides
more flilrogen. but it must be sown
during August or early September.
Two to three bushola" ot rye lo the
acre—or tn tn on tho of vetrh and a

’
-

FMEIIIAIREIfNHEIHISffl'

PROVES SAFER FOOD PROTECTION

auvear'roond

GOOD USED CARS

Apple* and Winler-KIUlng.
Ten years ago the president of the
Iowa Fruit Grower* Association
planted several thousand apple tree* 1
In a a-ay that then wa* new. In be-1
tween every two McIntosh or Slay- ‘
man tree*, for example, he planted a •
Hibernal tree which wa* later top-1
worked to match it* neighbor*. The
extreme cold of last winter proved
the value of Hibernal for understock
—as lhe top-worked trees showed
much les* winter-killing and a light
to moderately heavy crop of apples,
whereas there were no apples on the
tree* on their own stem*. Thl* was:
true with McIntosh, stayman. and
Winesap—somewhat less true with !
Jonathan —American Fruit Grower.

'

protection with

Are BARGAINS If Bought at the RIGHT PRICE!
Quite often you con get o better bargain in a used cor
than in a new one, because the original owner has taken
the first year's depreciation which is about one-third the
sale price of a new car.
Therefore you can drive such a car a year or two and only
take a small depreciation..We have some in 1934, 1935
and 1936 Ford V-8 Tudors and Fordors.
Bring in your 1929, 1930 or 1931 ANY MAKE, and we
will make you a very liberal allowance toward one of
these cars.

$89

• Come in, tee usprorr how Frigidaire Meets AU'
Fht Standard* for Refrigerator Buying: Lower,
Operating Cost, Safer Food Protection, Fatter
Freezing—More Ice, More Usability, Hve-Yaar
Protection Plan. See how the remarkable Mtfflr
Miser cold-making unit cut* curreut com to *b&lt;
bone. Sec the most beautiful, usable cabinet:
Frigidaire ha* ever built. . . wider, roomier
with every worthwhile convenience. New
before has there been such
'
‘
refrigerator value. And never
so easy to own a Frigidaire
For health, for economy, you
without a Frigidaire

IMKWM

UP

SPECIAL - 1936 Ford V-8 Deluxe Tudor $ fo ff^OO
Touring. Cost new $730.00. A bargain ot *ryj------

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
phone 2121

FORD PRODUCTS

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY
PHONE 2305

Hastings, mich.

FORD

AUCTION SALE

Because of the death of my niece* who made her home
with me, I am compelled to quit farming, so will have an auc­
tion sale at my place, one and one-^half miles west of the
Nashville standpipe, on

MONDAY, DECEMBER 21
Sole to begin at 1:00 o'clock P. M. I offer the following:—

Pair good work horses, wt. 2800.
Durham cow, 8 yrs. old, fresh 8 wks.
■lack cow, 6 yn. old, fresh 5 weeks.
Black cow, due soon.
Guernsey cow. 5 yr*, old. due soon.
Roan cow. 7 yrs. old, due soon.
Guernsey cow. 2 yr*, old. due soon.
Holstein cow, 6 yn. old, due soon.
Yearling heifer, pasture bred.
3 last spring’s heifers.
Yearling Durham bull.

GRAIN AND FODDER.
SO bu. rye. 25 bu. oat*.
25 bu. earn. Corn atplk*.

_

,

andnew operating economy
Tur

addition

of a new 60-hor*rpowrr

cnginc^to the Ford line for 1937 bring*
you q new, low price and give* you a

erratra an rntlrrly Dc9c, standard of

modern motoring economy!

rhoire of tarn V-type 8-cylindcr en­

gine*. 85 horsepower for maximum

body Flic and whcclhaac — to the aatna

performance. 60 horaepower for maxi­

advanced design — with the *a*nt com­

mum economy.
The 60-horsepower V-B engine wa*

fort and convenience as the “83." And

3 bedsteads. 2 dressers. 4 rocker*.
3 set* spring* and 3 mattresses.

originally developed for use. in Eng­
land and France, where fuel coal* arc

to 70 mile* an hour.
Two engine aisen-3-but only one rar

Dining table and 6 chair*.
Center table. Wardrobe.
Helton player piano. Lamp*.
Kitchen table. Sewing machine.
Some dishe*. Jars.
Boiler and washboard.
2 wash tubs. Wringer.
2 milk cons and milk pails.
Some canned fruit. Barrel churn.
Heating stove. Round Oak. nearly new.
Round Oak coal stove. Stand.
2 linoleum rugs, 9x12.
Brussels rug. 9x12. Leather couch.
Few gallons maple syrup.
Seme potatoes.
Other articles not mentioned.

high. It ha* been proven there for two

and one purport—to give you Mote

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

FARM TOOLS.
Spring tooth drag.
|ohn Deere walking plow.
Champion binder, good condition.
Cultivators. Dbl. work heme**.
Good lumber wagon. Flat hay rack.
Pair sleighs. 3 hoy forks.

LOWEST PRO IN YEARS
Tho “60’,’ engine, available in five
body type*, b built in exactly the **tna

12 ton* mixed hoy.
Some straw in born.
11 acres wheat on ground.
10 acres rye on ground.

LIVESTOCK.

advances into 1937with the

year* with brilliant success.

Now, brought to America, it

FORD BASE PRICES FOR 1937

AND UP

Al MlfblfB

it deliver* V-8 «moothncs* at speed* up

mile* and more ■aii«fariion for
ynnr money in 19.37.

ro«o hawks roa
arruiMHct—d;.u.«ii..
terior*. Slaaihg V tjp. wfeUltU.

Plant

Spar* Ttr* and Acccnoriet Additional

wh&lt;wl." Cable Md rnoSujt C|MIN
miMhtrd *r»i&gt; br«k* fdal F&lt;um

AUTHORIZED FORD Fl NAN Cl PLANS

COMFORT AN© QU

TERMS OF SALECASH.
nettled for.

Nothing to be removed until

WILLIAM CONRAD, Prop
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer.

E. E. GRAY, Clerk.

—
FORD MOTOR L0RFAR1

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THtTlSDAY. DECEMBER 17. IMG

PAGE mx

PRE-HOLIDAY
SALE
at all A&amp;P Food Stores This Week
Soda or Graham

DOUGHNUTS

CRACKERS

- ioc

it J5C

Plain, Sugared, Cinnamon, Spiced

■nuell. The Christmas Frolic was in prayer by Rev. Thompson; history
IVOODIAND.
NORTHWEST THORNAPP1.E.
JaAnne purnie of Hastings was a charge of Sarah Fislur. Ruth Lake, of the L- A- 8. by Mrs. Bessie WoodDre 10 Letter.
wrt-k end euest of J&lt;»n Lzrtler.
Anna Deli and Betty Cobb. Mrs. man giving many interesting items;
Mr.L Earl Kermeen ’ and Sirs. Al­
neraid Pottri
Allerdlng. Mrs. Plnreme Kit- an original song by aome ot Uh
ton F'Uikbelner were shopping in
reeMvtal I
’‘,ld Mr5'
Bru,,l,“ wrre aP‘, members; reading by Mrs. Blanche
□rand Rapids SaturdaytKatherine Hynraj
I pointed to lake charge ot the Chtist- Payne; play by eight ladles under I
22h
t
‘
i?
to
«2?iIrdTv
Defter
12
mM
,,,U
W U duuU»uUd- ™
direction ot Mr. Stella Kelsey; 1
The Social Club met with Mrs.
ui.
I
member
not
present
at the meeting two solo, by Jay Wing; a reading by I
Verne Thomas Thursday with a good
to one of
c001. ■ MrS- Ludle. Fisher and a duel by
attendance. Tlie ladies tied a quilt 1 lie little one has been turned .Mar can |lve
. millee. Also any clothUig that would ’ Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Chase. Mrs.
for Mrs. Wm. Schroeder. Mrs. Otis cUl KMorgan will entertain In January. , Mr. and
ana Mrs. sanlord
aantora Filloon
ruiam of
u.
Um;Iu1 tor
uwful
[Or pre-school
prc.school and
aw sciiool orpha Wlng. Mrs. Kelsey and Mrs.
Ullfleld were Sunday-dinner
Sunday dinner JiUestS'children
will
brappreciated,
unnm-lated.
' .I Bayne were
w-ti- in phnrua
. nn&lt;_
.Mr. and Mrs. George Schroeder Sunfield
-.hll.irrn
------------------------wl
n be
r,------------- L
charge nt
of ik
the
proand son ot Caledonia were Friday I of
ot Mr.
Ur and Mrs
“”**■■ F. E Border.
BotderI• T.he Men's Brotherhood meeting gram. Honor wax abo paid Mn.
Mr. and Mrs. ward Green and Mi will
-----------------------be held on Monday
-----------------------------------------------evening, De- Buy tie who
----------------------------celebrated her------------birthday
evening guesU afUic Earl Kermeen
home.
I'and
,— Mi • D B Green were Grand cember 14. al 7:30. George M. Fuller that day and her mother. Mn&gt;. Flora
..■ .visitors
--------------------------- Saturday,
------------ of Lansing wIM
-• be----the
.Vspeaker.
--------------------------Tlu&gt; | Wood, who
t,. I.
lias been - •£-- iu--, B faithful
We were sorry to hear Mr. Scher-. ------Rapid
„
U111C
u,
....
.
Rebecca
Smith
and
J.
W.
Hastings
orchestra
will
furnish
lhe
'
member tar many years.
wood was sick at lhe home of hU
Mrs.
daughter. Mrs. Glenn Allen. Little
East Woodland
and mu.tc.
'daughter.
Utile. Kilpatrick
KI!|m....» of «...
--------------- ----Richard Clark has scarlet fever, and Harte Towns were Sunday dinner
' COATS CKOVC.
lhe Sine* family is entertaining lhe gUeSta of Mr. and Mr... Wm. Winter
.Dame Durden was the notable
mumps.
Mr- and Mrs Fay C Wing spent • Tlie P. T. A. will meet Wednesday ( housewife of a famous old English
- - Sh k ,
th b |( d
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Swegles of'Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jesse evening. Dec. 23. with the teacher
and school putting on the program.
,„£•
Hastings were Sunday evening guests Chase of coals Grove.
Each umll, m., tris, euSy. pop. *” "",n*
w
""
of their brother and family. Mr
Mrs. Leon Tyler and Mrs. T W
“
and Mrs. Earl Kermeen.
Thompson were guests of tiwir to,., or Apple, tor WOMtamu
Kr«l Sund.y rvrnls, lhe Bunday
“&gt;r ,p.d. and Sad. Th. rarojul
Kenneth Cline of Pontine and ' mother. Mrs. e. J Sheldon on Wedgrandmother. Ltrs, Hale, of Linden nesday last m honor of her birth- School will put on a Christmas pro- : And conscientious Esther Summer­
gram
and
all
tn
tlie
community
are;
»on
in
Dieken's
•dlcuk
House"
is
uere week end guests of the for- dny.
mer's parents. Mr and Mrs. Guy | Mr and Mrs. j. U Smith called on urged lo be present. A pageant en-I nick named "Dame Durden.",&lt;
। Cline.
| Mr. and Mr- Verlin Murphy of titled. - The Priceless Gifu" will be
Mr. and Mr- Manuel Flnkbelner South Woodland Sunday afternoon. given. ‘
X-u’ Extension. class tneeU this
und daughter. Margaret, of ColeMr. and Mr Milan Trurnbo enterdoi.la uere Sunday guests of Mr. tulned for dinner Sunday Mr. and week Friday with Mrs. Wayne Of-,
।
। and Mrs. Verne Thoma,
Mrs Reuben Wolcott. Elmer Warren Icy.
Mr. and Mrs M lion Kermeen -and Miss Lena Warren of East - The D. G. T- O. met with Mrs. t
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
Chas. Townsend last Wednesday aft-1
were .'hopping in Hastings Friday ' Woodland.
and Mr. and Mrs. Chirr Z.-rU- were! The Sunday
Sun ' - School of the Metho- ernoon. The program In charge of
dlst
In Grand Rapids Saturday.
" ' church
**’ ' Is planning a pageant to Mrs. Alice Allerdlng was: Res|»nse |
the church
Christmas
Roll
Call------------------were Bible verses;
Mrs. Eppen of Detroit is visiting
v.™»...„ be'given-in
-- «------ ----------------- ------------.. to
— ---------------------- -O
| at the home of her parents. Mt. und Eve.
.
Little Town of Bethlem" and • O
Mr-. Gurbow.
: Mr. and Mrs Ralph Rise called.pn Come.all Ye Faithful." by club
Tlie committee has started work Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Roberts and members; Christmas story by Alice
1 on th-- program for Christmas at: lamily Sunday afternoon.
j chase; Duel, "Silent Night.'- Bevle
I lhe M F. church
'
I Mrs. C. B Benham of Ha-Ungs is &gt; woodman and Stella KeUey: Re«d. Mr. und Mrs. otto Schantz are' spending a few weeks with her intf by Mrs. Bertha Case. Otfls wurv
: driving a new car.
daughter. Mrs. Karl C. Fuul. and exchanged. The next meeting win
---------------- * ♦ ►
I family.
i be with Mrs. Alice AihrdiRg. chair- •
POWERS ECHOES.
| Tile December meeting of the man. Mrs. Alma Boulter
.s Fred Hauser left SundAy afternoon . Woodland Women's Study Club was
The church looks very nice since
Flor Detroit, where he has employ- held at the schoolhouse Tuesday; the new papering has been done und
! ment.
evening. December 8. After a de- with the new rug for the platform.
Miner Palmer l&lt; suftrrlng with licious pot luck Supper the business; Tne L. A. 8. observed iu 54th an­
, blood pol&gt;oning flu-, infection wm meeting and progiam were held nivrrsary last Friday evening. A fine
caused b&gt; a small cut on lhe third After Christmas ’------ '* ------.v__i---------- -------------. .
.... .
linger of his right hand
club, the Roll C{
was answered by people The tables were decorated |
o....i.. । wl(h small Christmas trees and hi I
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Andrew* and current events, i._ie. Michigan Study
daughter ot Augusta were Sunday was the
‘
~
’
Territorial
Period 1704 to' the center was a large cake in |
visitors at the home of her broth­ 11837 given by Mrs. Joale Watrous.; pyramid form made by Mrs. F. c
er. A. Bedford.
Christmas carols were given by i Wing and Mrs. Mattie Kimble and
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Johnson At­ Grace England. Lena KH|»atrick. I marked “54th Anniversary." The
tended the Stock show at Grind Leia Shorno. Etiilyn Buckle. Mae Ii program was as follows; "Count
: Leonard. Rose Wachter and Mae Your Blessings" by those present;
Rapids Wednesday.

MORTGAGE RALE

| LEGAL NOTICES |

Easy Task

k 29“

SOAP CHIPS
Keyko

SOAP

MARGARINE

10 b * 35

2 b 25c

FAMO PANCAKE FLOUR
A&amp;P BREAD
K

RITZ CRACKERS
SPRY SHORTENING
FIG BARS •'sST

5*lb. ba,

27C

912| 0

loaf
lb. ph,.

&lt;‘.b. 21C

3

Iba.

mid'

■&gt;( lha rliy vl Hsalliisi. Barry
Slkhlnn. lo HUME OWNERS'
I IlUPnUATlON

’ and pursuant lu lhe Htatulea •( the ]
le lit Mlrhiran in au-b rate made and J
Oded NUTICE IN HEREBY GIVEN j|

. MlrMxi

aInr Clrrvl

100 Iba.

SCRATCH FEED
EGG MASH
16% DAIRY FEED
OYSTER SHELLS

Out 19 21

NOTICE OF MORTGAGE BALE.
nWanlla batluc b~n m.d. (and w

NOW. THEREFORE,

59C
25C

’It

WAYLAND STATE BANK.

$255
Sf 75
100 Iba. 72C

•le at tiubllr aurlloa

100 Iba.
100 Iba.

NORGE

Popular Brands

FLOUR

CIGARETTES

24%-lb

"W C

b- 73

carton
of 10

WOODLAND
ORDER FOB PUBLICATION
I Mleblran. the l*rub*|-

IS NOW REPRESENTED BY

Sunnyfield Flour, ?4*/g-lb bag 79c

Henkel’s Velvet Cake

5-lb.
bag

FLOUR

31'

Eicht W..L Barry

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

Michigan Beet

Bulk

SUGAR

GREEN TEA

25-lb.

$|23

* 25

OK DEP. FOR PUBLICATION.

Fill

Pillsbury or Gold Medal

None Such

FLOUR

MINCE MEAT

24%-lb.
bag

IIOMK OtVNEHH* ‘LOAN' CORPO­
RATION. Uurlcxr.

sell Norge for exactly the

V vE chose to

$|05

10'

Sno-Sheen Cake Flour, pkg. 25c-

same reasons that we would advise our
best friends to

buy Norge.

Norge, is without question the beauti­

Eagle Brand Milk, can 19c

ful refrigerator.

It is certainly the con­

venient refrigerator to use, with its flexible

Round—Sirloin
Swiss

STEAK
Best
Chuck Cuts
BEEF ROAST
ROLLED RIB ROAST
FRESH GROUND BEEF

ib.

|7c

lb.

12C
17C
25c
18C

usual convenience features.

Ib.

2
Loin

PORK LOIN ROAST
or Rib End
Center
PORK CHOPS
Cuts
No Bono
POLLOCK FILLETS
LAMB SHOULDER 1934 *ria» L",k

Iba.

■ Ib.
Ib.
lb.

Ik

25c
1(F
13"

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

interior*arrangement and its many un­

Most

im­

portant of all, however, Norge has the
efficient, dependable, almost everlasting

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

mechanism—tlie famous Rollator Com­
pressor. More than anything else, the
Rollator convinced us that Norge is
the line we prefer to handle.

Learrpfhe inside story of Rollator Re­

frigeration before you shop, for a refrig-*

pril. A. I&gt;.
Ill b» beard

orator. And, by all means, see the Norge
before you buy.
-

AIK FOR DETAIL^ AROUT THE N0RQE

10-YEAR WARRANTY

NOTICE
7A0O. KALAMAZOO AND BAG­
RAIL
NEW YORK

t carry a cumplrlc Ihu oj Norge diumclive borne appliancec. Wbalever appliance
yon are muiderng next—ue Ibe Norge
before you bay.

CounliM. Micblon.
CHICAGO. KALAMAZOO AND BAOL
NAW RAILWAY COMPANY
THE NEW YORK CENTRAL RAIL­
ROAD COMPANY. LESSEE.

�the hasting! banner,

Thursday, December

HP-NDERSHOTT.
I of Bellevue, all former reaidenU of1
QUIMBY
| by neighborhood orchcaua and re­
Mr. and Mr* chaa Henderahott, &lt; thia locality, were here for the CenM1M Dmn| McKeown waa a Lan- IrrahmenU will be served.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Garrison and tennial obeervaUon on Saturday.
। tlyjg vUltor Saturday
“ *"
"
SOUTHWEST WOODLAND.
Mr
»•- Ch*rle« Purcell
Mr and Mr*. Stoker of Battle
Creek Sunday to attend the funeral .pent Wednesday al lhe home ot cr«Tk vUlted at-Jay Smith* home
Rev. nnd Mrs Frank Maxon ot
™“l".
CUro&gt;» cum- lhrU- *ug.«r, Mn. p&gt;un
1 Tmfid™
”
’
Middleville were guesU of their
”»CTone cnUTM U» IU&gt;« put
CKmpb«U « IM »n j or’Smrtji w"n Sjli? oFm?'™" daughter. Mr* Guy Kaniner, iaat
- --------------- ---------- -- ----------------- ------------ Tuesday.
Kenneth Reynolds Friday.
i Mr. and Mrs John Weyerman
at the Aid meeting at Mrs. Ronald tom to Rev. and Mrs. Henry Camp- Mre.
Margaret Hoffman and Orville1 (Rllth Eddy» of Hastings are the
Haynes' Thprsday.
The rem'.i.-.
it A^yri.urley of Battle Creek were v'.Ulors proud parent* Of a baby boy born
meetlng* are held lhe third Thura-1 center on Wednesday. December 9
' recently
• day of each month.
Mrs. Fleming, mother of Mrs. Camp- at Dick Hoffman’s Sunday.
Mrs. Lillie Huffman of Baltimore ben
wim them.
entcrumed by Mrs Mjrtle Caatel- m
.,-h surorbed
and Mrs, Essie Norris of Battlei
----------------- -- --------------------mush
surprised Fridav
Friday night,
night, when
when a
a
group of their' friends came to spend
B'n' I
MIDDLKVILLE
jlhn Broran i* suff^rtne from in.' 'ni* dr,ver of
MuUer J"**1 ot ,h*
program, games and 1 the evening with them and preser.tfeetlnn
3 ht ?r«n w,«on lo“ control of hla truck one the exchange 5t Christmas gif te. A ed them with a bridge lamp. Re­
Sg a hian obkrt on his
P* of thwc *y momlnii when he tried fine lunch was served and a happy; freshmenu were served and a social
time enjoyed by nil. Those present
Mr andI Mre Snest mtte^n rle-stop In front of lhe Vander Veen llIr.e enjoyed by aH *
ited Ed ca£dd?tar aftUe errek 4tore'
lruck enuhed Into anvern Bumford, who has a fine jrare Mr. nnd Mrs. Ezra Dell of
hStThuredM ’
other
11
position with an electrical company Lansing. Mr. and Mrs. Vane Wotring
of Woodland. Mr. and Mrs.
These items are caHrd bv the *1Ut “nd brc,klnK 0,1 * wheel.
m Angola, Ind., was at heme over
Walter Hershberger. Mr. and Mrs.
nameTf SXtt ten the dolni’
A *lr‘n«rr
,o»n driving hi. car Sunday.
Cf T certate ctoud in the Mc^mter Jlruek *nd broke off * ,lrf h*drB,n
Mr. and Mm Char
Bacheller. Waller PUher, Mr. and Mrs. For­
dtstrlet havc^n luted therein al ,n ,ronl of F“nk Lee'a ’*’ldencr' Mr* Blanche Padelford and Mra. rest Christian and Mr. and Mrs.
Owen Smith and Eloise and RayIons its the writer enn remember 1 tlM’n 1111 “lree and ran lnto lhe
Clarence Grow of Hastings called on inond. ’ ‘
.
,-jrch damaging it considerably. Be-! me RlUmana Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Kaniner and
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Reynolds and
I
ly associated In thb neighborhood fore
,on the water could be shut off. the
’
Marjorie attended the Christmas children were Sunday dinner guests
and all attend the community meel- street was flooded.
of
Mr.
and
MrsrATthur
Teeter near
at
the
Presbyterian
'
Ing.:, that we are one In fellowship.: Elden Paulson has obtained cm- exercises
i church in Hastings Sunday night. ! Coats Grove.
if there arc two district* Involved.. p
Lrhm*ta ,
Mrs. Minnie
la very 111
The P. T. A. meeting will be held
-Mr.
------and
J **Mrs. Bert Rogers of Lake
We are grouped so clone to the Hen- ‘ M
M,nnU Churchill **
I' at the school
school house December 18. Odessa spent Sunday afternoon with
dershott district that It almost, at her home northeast of town.
Mr.. and
C. W. Bennett
are I: There will te
be a program with music Mr. and Mrs Harry Bandbrook.
seems as If we belonged there. This
----•- Mrs.
---------wlU aiuxr lhe quutta of Uu»«
f"'"1* 01 • ■'•“«»!" !»"&gt; &gt;»cently.who wonder why some of lhe names cenuv
E.
H.
Flnkbelncr
Li
improving
the
appear In items of both dUtricls.
.,„r„-------------------------- J.
We ought to go by a community1 lront ot &gt;lbl
I
.
Iteme, ln«kad 0( a district name and I
qoiITll MAPI F OHIOVF
I
believe us when we say that you
SOUTH MAPLE GRLOVL
will look a long time to find as good. I Mr. and Mrs. Otis Walker and
or a better neighborhood, than ours.. «n. Harry, of Olivet spent Sunday
-----afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Preston. Mrs. Grace Brake of HasRev. Dorris has returned to Grand tmgk spent lhe evening with her
Rapids after visiting at lhe Jay Calc parent*.
■,
- -and th* Stanford homes at Dowling. ! My. and Mrs. James Vandr Gel­
Mrs. Edna cate who recently un­ son nnd Mr. and Mrs. Karl Vandc
derwent an operation nt Leila hos­ I Gelson and son of Kalamazoo spent1
pital. returned home on Saturday. last Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. Rob-:
, Eul.i Case is assisting al the Clayton ert Gray and Mrs, Lulu Gray.
Case home.
—
Mr. and Mrs
Grover Marshall I
Mrs. Fred Miller and daughter. spent Saturday with Mr. and Mra. '
I«eona. were Battle Creek shoppers Chas. Toth In Grand Rapids nnd .
Saturday.
Mrs. Marshall remained for a longer
County Clerk Allan C- Hyde and visit.
‘ family of Hastings. Mr. and Mrs.
A. B. Campbell and Mrs Beulah ,
Fred Bullis. Nashville. Mr and Mrs. Snoke nnd daughter. Gertrude, of ,
LONG DISTANCE
Frank Marlin. Mr. nnd Mrs. Dick northeast Kalamo spent Sunday
Phlnncsey. Chas. Pratt. Miss Irma with the Frank Norton family.
Briggs. Mr. and Mrs. Coral Eldred
Mra. Sadie Fuller entertained the i
’ Mrs. Bessie Shepard of Battle Creek. Ladles' Birthday club Friday at a
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schaflhauser Christmas party.

"jj'.

ESoSuS

Xu

....... ——■

—

---- --

^

it. imi

DOWLING.
MLm LU'lan Leyrer of Maple R*&gt; rpent Sunday with thatr dMMhttr,' Raptda vUliot
' The
’ UU"UU|
Dowling-Cemetery
5 We'. lcU *P«nl ---lhe weck
end----------at the----H. W. —
Mr* . Vera
•
KuCIIlCWiy vuus,
------- ------ — - Howieue,- and famfly of weft.
_
________
~ Thursday,
Xh
It.
nwi—- home.
ra-rWviti
—
. JqIjq Nash )
which
met at_•the
church
Oelirer
Clarksville
--------------...
--------0fhcer3
Mrs. Emery Kime had the mis-1 Mra. Harley Taylor snterialned fracture a rib
re-elected the fallowing officers
fortune of losing some of her fat
Nobl&lt; Granda ot Saranac.
for the comingr year.
year: ncs..
Pres.. Mrs.
1
Hcc-prea..
Mrs. Jane black giant roosters by thieves Fri- Wednesday. .
Vere Segur; Vlcc-pn
~________________________
-- ------------[ Mr. and Mrs. Harley Taylor had
Smith; Sec.. Mrs. --------Blanche
Powell, day night
Bryant. 1
Mr
and Mrs. Bert Slater and “ U^ir 8t«te on Sunday, an uncle
antFTrtM . Mr*. Ells Smith. These
j
wdpten?
officers have handled the work ef- Richard are moving to Ionia.
. Y'd_??nl f™m ®drooJT'
flclently the past year and eonac“d M-s
Herbert Geiger d*^Ur,
..RUtenger
QUfflUy n,« MU. „» oppoKUta.
□JSXp.SX', “&gt;
*■
-md
•pent Tuesday in Grand Rapids and
Mr. and Mrs Orlle PUher spent Wednesday afternoon in Ionia
BOWNE CENTER
Sunday in Kalamazoo where they
The ladles tof the W. M. A. arc I ,,
.
7.
called on their niece. Mrs. Paul Til- planning on a thank offering prous and tlie new baby. Ellen Marte. gram at the church January 3. 1C37.'
at Bronson hospital, and also visitDuane Gray of Lake Odessa spent, Mni Joh? N1,h with butchering the
ed Mr. and Mrs. Clinton PUher Sunday at lhe home of hi* father.;iJiL5t
....wcck
-...'
TOJ due to colds
and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Titus.
•*.
— /-«
— «Mr
Ur. tM-i.
'Bert
Gray.
He also called ..
al .u_I
the
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gaskill at­ J. F. Brake and the J. E. Brake visitors at Watt Thomas’ Monday , relieved by
1
evening.
' one easy swallow of pure, rwtbla
tended the funeral of their aunt, homes.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Smith of 1 Chas. Poalhumu* and family at- ' 21’2^’iJa'a*a aalsS*'**L^25*
Mrs. Gertrude Manning which was
held at Nashville Saturday. Mrs Lansing called at lhe Elmer Scott
l^e^nlnTjJU0* *
Manning was burled In the Dowling home Saturday evening.
cemetery.
’
'
Mr. and Mrs
Garfield Slater
Mrs. WlU Watte was a Grand' Carveth A Stebbins Drug Stera
Robert Johnson left last week for
the’ northern part of the stale,
where he will spend the winter.
Mrs. Anna Pierce of Hastings
spent the week end with her -on.
Marshall Pierce and family.

, ..Mrai-Aman£?,
V.v1n|L^r‘‘!
rM“Utrt0£ ^SeriJ^J

TH OX IN E

CHRISTMAS SEASON
FOOD VALUES

PLEASANT VALLEY.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Heaven ot near
Clarksville called at the Nceb and
Osborn homes Sunday afternoon.

A LARGE COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF FINEST

WITHOUT BATTERIES OR POWER LINE

OUS CHRISTMAS DAY WHILE SELECTIONS ARI

PLENTIFUL.

Keeps the

1' SALE

1 - 8 OZ. BOTTLE VANILLA- 15c

Zenith

1 - 4 OZ. BOTTLE LEMON - 1c

Charged by Air Power

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONUY

GIVE
Special Price— Do Luxe

the new Zenith Economical Farm
Radio.

• Ygico-Muaic High Fidelity

Control

RS
Oft PRESS OF THE LBO!

AW IT HURLS AROUND
MKE THE MUSK TM1B
JftRHLY.-rzz/JMAf

$29.90

These astonishing new Farm Models operate from a single 6-volt storage
battery. They use no A, B, or C dry batteries ... no dry batteries at
all. See us at once . . . Find out about this famous Zenith Fann Radio­
Wincharger Combination.

CCNSlROCfED^JXT
OFOURAfllf STEEL
WITH BRIGHT BAKED
ENAMEL FINISH-HAS
FOUR BALLOON TYPE
MJOD-N WHEELS AND
DUMWMEAOUGMTS
AUJN6WUMNG TOY.

MILLER FURNITURE COMPANY
STURDILY
CONSTRUCTED OF WWT
TIN THAT GIVES IT THE
AFFfARANCEOFAREAL
(WET EIGHT KEYS ENASlfSOftTORAYTUW

CURRANTS

Bogulat price* . . . $44.50 tad

pjjg

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
AMERICA'S MOST COPIED RADIO

Always a Year Ahead

FOOD GIFT BASKETS’
THIS CHRISTMAS

DAiCIMC
RMlOl110

SIS- Uulity Modal, $10 — !
• Lightning Station Find ar
• Split-Sacond Ra-locatar

EXTRACT

Battery

of Your

And Every New

$5.00
Down

IDEAL SEEDED
l9P°ez II
FANCY SEEDLESS 3 lbs 2!

A TCQ
I CiW

ivwwip

TOi.ElECrKrcAL/
LIGHTED PvMPS^^
04 WAGON. WATE8JNG
CAH.STAT ION MOUSE AT F
ENDANTS. 5TREAMUMD
RDAOM ER* REST STOOLS

FINISHED

ML STEEL T&gt;/

IN BRIGHT
RED WITW6REEN
DIAL*CORD-OIAL
HAS REAL NUMBERS
AND BELL RINGS
WHILE DIALING

CONSTRUCTION
BAKED ON ENAMEL
RED ROOF-BUCK BOW
l5*L£)N6-5'f WIDE

CO-OP SPREADER
has Advantages that YOU want

UNPITTED

MINCEMEAT x
FINEST
FOR PIES

1

FAREE-FLUFF

CAKE FLOUR
FINEST FOR
CAKES AND
PASTRIES

p*
h

l D
L

Np.2'aOEC

3

CANS
7c

XMAS CANDY am NUTS
CANDY ' Faacy Harf Aferf LB. 10c
100% Filled Candy i*lSc
MARSHMALLOWS i» 14c
10c
ORANGE SLICES
WALNUTS SLT’“’
22c
BRAZILS hsvcww
18c
ALMONDS DRAKE
28c
MIXED NUTS 8I28W 22c

Devil’s Food
K 22c
Ginger Bread Mix
22c
Spice Cake Mix .&gt;** w« 22c
“W

MOLASSES No. 2’., O"7f*

BPER RABBIT

3

O

DON'T FORGET THESE...

RF
Jhft

J BAG 4UU

CITRON. LIMON. ORANGS

9OZ.
PKGS,

2 OUNCE PKG.

FRUIT PEEL n. in*.

II INCHES HIGH

3 lk 2

FRESH NEW CROP

7577

12c

6 OUNCE PKG.

FANCY BA6DAD-

PUMPKIN PIE SPICE
AaoTItllNC

Station WE eufa/EL
0-^

SERVICE

COURTEOUS

C. THOMAS STORES

J

Exclusive Feature

PROMPT.

AWAITS YOU AT

FARM RADIO

S.S.2

PREPARE FOR THIS JOY­

GREATER VALUES.

. SEE

CAN dfat f V

Ginger, 4 ox. pkg.

^UErCCE
n E E E1

POPULAR fZVj

TYFB.ALtfP®^
DF HifittMED STEEL AM)
EQUIPPED WITH STEEL TY’EJkz z/zzzArflzr

40 PIKES
OF APPARATUS WITH
MANUAL SHOWING
160 EXPERIMENTS
RACKED MHMOYBd

WTERNtt AFTER THE
RACING BOJrTS-FlNMD
IN BRIGHT RED WITH
YELLOW TRIM-IT MAST

BICYCLE, Fully Equipped _.
26 Qt. PRESSURE COOKER
SLEDS____________________
SKATING SHOE OUTFITS

._ $27.45
._ $16.00
$1.15 up
— $3.95

BATH ROOM SCALES___
- $2.25
FLASHLIGHTS ________________ 49c, 59c. 99c
SKIS n$1.00 up

BOYS’ WAGONS. 34 In.$3.88. $4.95
WINCHISTIR REPEATING SHOTGUN$26.95
DAISY AIR RIFLES$1.00 to $2.95
DECORATED OVEN PROOF CHINA Conerolei.
Teo Pots, Refrigerator Sots 98c to $1.10
7 QT. CANNER
$1.25

G. E. Goodyear Hardware
PHONE 2331

HASTINGS, MICH.

W

THE FARM
BUREAU LINE
Plows
Discs
Drags
Cultivators
Planters
Mowers
Rakes
Loader*
Wagon*T ractar*

FINEST MILD
WISCONSIN COLBY

CO-OP MANURE SPREADER
This spreader was produced in answer to the farmer s
demand for an efficient, easy-to-handle spreader. The
Co-op is dasy to load (only three feet high) light draft,
short turning and is built on a flexible frame. Mounted
on French &amp; Heck sjeel. wheels with self-ol|gning bear­
Ings and. Zerk lubrication, this machine azures, smooth;
efficient operation.
/

Tho Co-op Sprcodor hos a capacity of 60 bushels and
is adjustable to 6-12-18-24 loads pdr acre. Jts 14 inch
road clearance makes it possible to drive over almost
any kind of land.
&gt;

ORANGES

rot

29c

FLORIDA FINEST

GRAPEFRUIT
6 for 19c
GRAPES CALIFORNIAS
u. 10c
FINEST

ICEBERG

LETTUCE

2

13c

Excellent Distributor
Shreds and pulverise* manure and spreads it in a wide, even
blanket of fertility. A real crop maker.

8EE THE CO-OP SPREADER
Farmin Co-op

Associations. It

will pay

you to

■

investigate.

SPRY-NEW SHORTENING
I Ib. can 22c &lt;• 3 Ib. can 63c
GET NEW MINCEMEAT

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, INC.
Haitings, Mich., Phono 2118

LB*

SUNKIST OR BLUE GOOSE NAVEL SEEDLESS

Woodland, Mich., Phono 27

128 WIST STATI STREIT

PIE MCIFE

MILK OtmiMa
K'JK"- J"&gt;“4UU
FAMILY C

BULK COFI
GOOD CRADI M
SANTOS cor-

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 11. BH

EIGHT

ship an the Kahler farm. Burial
WOODLAND.
.
Secretary Angell wa* in Hilluia'Dec. 10 Utter.
'
i'. •.'.&lt;• U R. church
ThurMlay,
of Mr. And Mss. Angell with bowling Sundav. pie 13th. to see Walter Go»Mr. and'Mrs. Clyde and family,
as the game and a special program. ipill, Sec£-and also Dean Triul Of
James Pettit of Muskegon, daugh­
and Fred Lambitraon visited Mr. and ter of Mr and Mrs. Tomlin, has bean
the
College
They already have made a blj
Mrs Merritt Palmer of Grand Rap- with them the puat week.
Ciirlslma* gift to help a lamlly.
..!■ Bunday.
.
•
Macaroni. Spigbctn Shupes
Rev. and Mrs. puy C- Wing enter­
Some 1-xua work this winter it
Harold Warner, who Is working n =
Madhrom and spaghetti
Hal)
being planned to Improve -Camp
an
ai-i-ounlaiit in Detroit, spent the tained for dinner Sunday Mr and
Barry" for the boys and girls next have almost as many shapes m- : .viek eiid with hH family in Lak • Mrs. Ora Lehmaiv Carl Lehman and
there arc cities in the country. At
summer.
Esther
Warner oL Wainerville. Mr
I Odessa and Bunday'aUirnoon with
Attendance at the state conven­ Bologna it is ribbon shaped; in :.i. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Win. Wor- and Mrs. Lawrence Chase of Coats
tion In East Lansing this weflCTUes- Rome it comes in strips, but tha| ol
Grove and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
fwasifrom
___ ______ Eaton
___ _____
r.__ ______
__
day
Rapids.
Wbad- Sicily amaze* travelers most of all.
Mrs. Ann E. ftsJc, age 72, pa.wd : Lehman of Woodlan'd.
.n
in., Middleville
t ■ 1 rial..,.,
land. ti
Prairieville,
and -it I* skillfully rolled around knitting
away at the home of her daughter.1 I Mrs. Hannah Wright. Carpenter,
Hastings.__________________________ 1 needles to make it a tiny sp.ruL
Mrs, Howard Tomlin Monday after* who is being cared for at the Purnoon. December 7. Mrs. Fbk had rott home, is reported to be gaining
been ill for a number of months. Mr. steadily.
Standard
Bearers
met
and Mrs. Tomlin recently moved In- I Tlie
:o Mrs. Matilda Myer's home in the at the home of Miss Ellen Jean Leff­
village, living previously tn Ute town- ler Monday evening for their De-

Triangle Y group met at the home '

Y.M.C. A. ITEMS
Eaton Rapids Hl-Y group ore
working on a project of organizing
a second Y for younger boys.
Wm. Cannichaei of the MiddleviILhigh school, spoke to the Hastings
Hl-Y group last Monday nlghl on
his northern Canadian trip ImC
summer.
Tills wtek Wednesday evening the

'K H15URED CHRISTmnS

N
A

*** ®4VTa_.

fa 1937
Start Paying Small "Premiums"
Now In a Christmas Club Account

0
N
A

You know w£at a "compromise Christmas" is: ybu sw Lee

"• Per.
»&lt;ldy
„ r
. ' tlv

gifts which you would Ilka to buy, but you compromise oa
somathing chaapar sod last suitable, because you are
abort of money.

’

&gt;1,
•Von,

cause you give yourself loo short a limo to get ready for it.
You should allow 50 weeks.
Join our 1937 Christmas Club now. Decide how much
money you will need nest year lor a liberal.
n®cu]
deposits. Your Christmas will be "insured".
You will be able to shop early —and
you will la able to do right by iho children.
Join now.

C, H1EIEEQ

KEZHjETH

A
N
K

&lt;t„
o„.

HUE! fir

OF

HASTINGS

MARK’S STORES, Inc
»

_____________ .__ ____

High in Cream Content. Ravv
Pt. 5c; Qt.

OF GIFTS

THOUSANDS
AT. PRICES

r____________

THAT

EFFECT

HIGHLANDS DAIRY
[’hone 2651

FOG LAMP
senger

HEATWAVE
BAG

u

ber lens.
Black

cushioned. boys’
and Kiris', pr.—

QQ
vO

One piece steel body,
rubber tire .disc wheel -,
enamel

1.98

■S' $1.98
98

Rifle.

Romer Roller AAc
Skates_____ 30
Mirror
Clock—

$4 AA
I &gt;03

AUTO—Red and white
trim, rubber tires and
pedals.
disc
wheels,
bumper, and »A QQ
lights..........
‘♦.□O

SCOOTER—Disc Wheels
rubber tires, and park- VELOCIPEDES — Rub:
ber tires, grips and ped­
als. sturdy frames and
enamel
80 “7Q
.
C.O
A SHIRLEY TEMPLE finish
DOLL — 13 in. sizcOpcns and elates her LIONEL MECHANICAL
eyes, reaches out iter TRAIN — Engine, track
arms, has real golden and cars modeled after
curls, and verv beauti- the famous Streamlines
with
QQJdressed....
“X...
live whistles
whistles .»a-----------------vOU
wWw

X....

ELECTRIC
Defroster Fan
Adjustablc bracket fits
steering post or any
place in
car. Keep
windshield
■ ■ clear.

1

Catalin Gear AA&lt;
Shift Balls.. CC
Sinko Cigar
Lighter_____

Ifli

Q3

Aufo Robes, $0.45
Iga.. all wool w

98c

$1.92

ROYAL DE LUXE HOT WATER HEATER
Built like the most ex­
pensive and sell for half
the price Have . Drlco
motors, copper lubes
Finished
In chrome,
gold
brown,
black.
MASCOT

Invader Life Time Batteries

Septate. J1&lt;L95 Ex.

$2.79

$5.25

Exchange

$7.20

Free loan ar and recharge during guaran­
tee period. Tree installation.

METRO B
■ATTIRY-

79'
1 **

Hastings

Mina Aldrich spent several days
e past week with Mr. und Mn.
Carl Ricker of- Hastings
Mr und Mrs. Carl Soo!'tnan sere
Hastings tnopp;.s Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kahler nnd
family visited Mr. nnd Mrs. Warner
Bera at Nashville Sunday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Chas Kabier spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Shedd
of Galesburg.
,
BANNER WANT ADV:

3uuda&gt;

or Mr .nd Mr,. Wm.1""“ "*- Mr‘ pn'1 ?"■
XX.r»..r“■

&lt;1„&lt;, clMd on trbmd. In Uw ,11. i““
,Mr "&gt;d M„_
Un Sunday .rut noon
‘"i1 clan™ Bcnnall or
XSE X."
tSS'-™,. 1... .b. a.und«l Ui.
o7 .h”™.. once, ha"

cha.rd the houae rec.nUy occupied
by CHSord Bird and r.mlly and | “
formerly knoan aa lhe Hiram Lie- |

AUCTION

2 Cell Flosh 4 Q
Light___

I 3

Fender
Guides.

65‘

•mart pat&lt; QQ
tern*. Coupe
I
Sedan and Coach. All

BESSMER JEWELRY
Stock and Fixtures
Fast Drawing To a Close

.... $3.48
4 Ac
I O up

Complete Close-Out of Entire Stock
and Fixtures

Nothing Reserved

Fender Flops. QPc
Chrome trim 03

New 1937 Royal De Luxe

Hours of Sale: 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m

II &lt;» M E
RADIO

Watches, Diamonds, Silverware,Toilet Sets, Jewelry,

AC, DC—5 tube
super-heterodyne,
colored illuminat­
ed dial, dynamic
speaker,
walnut
cabinet. A real
Christmas gtft —
$20.00 Value —

-

HASTINGS, MICH.

IO^
wintm

Oiyood home had
■”. M' ■”? «’!_■
r" «ilertahi lhe club

Ing.ston nouse. and are now living i ,n„a’!
,y;
,,
..
j .—.------ I
Rutland township plMis to hold.a
there. Mr. Bird —
and
family have
i centennial celebration at &lt;he Good­
; will church on Tuesday. December

Electric
CC
Defroster___ WW

Class Vanity QQc
Mirror_______v3

MARK’S STORES, Inc.

WEST STATE ST.

79c

Emergency
Chaim—

Others 85.95 to J9.95

Theae batteries are GUARANTEED FOR THE
LIFE OF YOUR CAR as long xs you own it.

riihange

Flexible Steering Sleds
—These sleds are built
sirong and will s’and
hard
RQr
usace ... . . Omv
Others S1.48 A

Conducts heat from
heater to windshield
■Melts
ice and
snow

ROBERT W. COOK, Prop.

'
| ’
FREEPORT.
| moved to lhe Jarman form south of
Mr-and-Mr*. Walter Ilctklibcrgrzt_ Mra Otto thtbifool pawed away'10*?□i South Woodland were Sunday nboUl onc odocit Monday morning i zlva Moore was in Grand Rapld-t
dinner guasu of Mr and Mrs. Wm at trw honw of h&lt;.r daughter. Mrs Ion business Monday.
Warner.
otto
of
UlU) Kunde,
icunue. whera
wnrre tlie
sue has
nas been
oveni, ■_ Mr
— ■ ■• *nd Mrs. Carl Rickert
1. w.
. . return
.
... Uhl. ... .a___
HrnliH
D.inl.k
u-or..
.. ..................
from
JaAu’ Ra1^
‘U
Sunday
visitors
Woodland fared rather poorly at cured for since tier
basket ball Friday evening. liMing veraity hospital at Ann Arbor. Mr».Iat
H*1' P"«&gt;U. Mr.
Lightfoot
had
been
ill
only
a
few
!"«»
Mru
JOhn
RicUrt
and
called
at
all three games to Bunfield
Mrs. Stanley Rlvett and children weeks, but liad been a great sufferer..t,w
Lightfoot home in the aflof Detroit have been visiting her Besldes the husband, and daughter. 1
.____
Alton Rogers was a Sunday nftermother, Mrs. Ethel Schmidt, since she is survived by the aged father.
rhanksgivlng. Mr. Rivett came for Schuyler Kollar of Middleville, three 1 P°°n
»«• the Joseph Kidder
Sisters. Mr*. Stella Prost of East home In South Bowne.
them. Sunday.
Mrs. Mattie Kimball ‘ Is keeping Lansing. Mrs. Zula Springer of Flint ■ ~a*^cnce.
^nd,L' D' LesUr
house for Mrs. Frances Rlngqui-st and Mrs. Bessie perkins of Pontiac.1 ttPrc Grand Rapids business visitors
and three brothers. Wm. Kollar nnd j °n Monday.
and Pauy.
1
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gager and Harvey Kollar of Flint and John ,Mr‘.. ^lrnrr pghlfoot of North
son, Morgan, were Grand Rapids Kollar of Middleville, besides four | Manchester. Tnd.. Mr. and. Mrs.
brothers-tn-law and a sister-in-law P.an‘‘. Lightfoot
and
daughter,
visitors.Saturday.
Mrs. Rose Wachter and Mrs. F. E. and hosts of more distant relatives Marliyn. and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Border were luncheon guesu ot the and friends. Br.ef services were held J*neman of Elkhart. Ind., motored to
formers daughter. Mrs. Nicholas from the home of the daughter at Jhe vil age Bunday to see their ais­
.
....
.
। t •1.. I-1 1 ran,l atmf
Hollandsworth of Uuuing last 1:30
on Wednesday and at 2 al the ter-in-law and aunt, Mrs. O. R.
Thursday.
Methodist church in ciiarge of Rev. Uthtfoot. With Mrs. Effie Rickert
Mr. and Mri. Ward Hynes and Fern Wheeler Burial was in Pleas­ they were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Gall Lightfoot and family.
ant Hill cemetery here.
Decorated and lighted Christmas
lotte were Thursday evening guests
TheH B. church was well filled on
trees are making their appearance at
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hynes
Bunday evening for lhe sacred con-­ various homes around town. We saw
Mrs. T H. Cobb entertained two cert given by lhe Sterling MaloTTrio
tables of bridge Thursday afternoon. of Grand Rapids. The program was two very pretty ones in our Journey
Mrs. Glenn England won high and sponsored by the W- M. A and a tor items Monday evening.
L. B Lester was in Hastings on
Mrs. J. V- Hilbert consolation.
•.hank offering was taken for the business Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Leedy and Mi missionary work.
Christmas programs are being pre­
and Mrs. Howard Sutton of Battle
The annual Christmas bazaar ot pared by Bunday schools. Thu
Creek called on Mr. mid Mrs.
B
the L. A. 8- was held al lhe church Methodist program will be held on
Green Sunday afternoon.
The hot lunches sponsored by the Last Saturday afternoon and eve­ Bunday evening, Dec. 20 and will bo
ning.
a "White Gift" program Instead of
Messrs. Clyde Bassitt and Alton the usual Christmas tree. The pro­
school, lunch being seved each noon
to the children. Mrs. Clyde Ruell Rogers were In Hastings on business gram st lhe U. B. church will be on
Christmas Eve.
Is in charge with Mrs. Drake and Saturday evening.
Mrs, viola Rogers and son. Alton,
Mr.*. Carl Burkle us helpers.
u w,
.» Rapid-;
Russell r&gt;*r.,
Friend
of U&gt;M
Grand
Xlr. and Mrs. S. W- Smith nnd I Wfts K Sunday caller at tlie Ken are at present looking after the du­
ties at the p. E. Brunner home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Green of South i Braendle home.
Perry Preston was in Hastings
Woodland and Mr. and Mrs. Paul | Much sympathy Is expressed to
1 smith spent Saturday evening In | Mr. and Mrs. Elwooti Sullivan In lhe •several days last week, where he
Landng. On Sunday Mr. and Mr., 1 ioj» of their child, which was born served on tlie Jury.
! joe Frace-and baby son of Charlotte early Monday morning and passed
SOUTHWEST RUTLAND.
were dinner gucslr. of Mr. und Mr.- lawny later in the day.
Paul Smith.
, Mrs.
__________
Rose Wise
_ _____
of_____________
Chicago moMr. and Mrs. Geo. Harthy of Has­
' torrd to lhe village last Wednesday | Ungs were Bunday guests of Mr and
and was uie
lhe guess
guest ui
of nci
her suui,
sister. Mra.' Mrs. Wm. Havens. •■
EAST GUN LAKE.
II anu
Walter Slater, James Null and Viola Rogers. On Thursday lhe la-1 Mrs. Nelh/Pbreman of Kalamazoo
Carl Sheerin returned home Mon-'dies drove to Greenville and vL-dted »panl the week end in the home of
day night from Chicago where they another sister. Mis. Ellen Hubbard. | Mr. and Mrs. Dan Douglass.
....
. -employed
....... 1...
' InRWt.lo,.
‘O
...
..
-returning
Friday nVaatilllLT
evening. Ur,
Mrs. U'I
Wise
Mr Bnd...
htrs ....
„ T Lord...
of Battle
were
by ol.,..
Sinter Brothers.
Mrs
William Crawford
and
Mrz. left Saturday for her home, going Cret.k wcre aund4y BUMU of
..a ., py urn way of Battle Creek.
and Mfa Ro. Ottk' •
,
James Null were in Delton Monday
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Overholt did
M
’
/
on business.
Cbiistmns shopping iit-&lt;irand Rap- '
, ' a,?d Mrs. Harold Prlndle of
Nita Mae and William Null spent hr.
-----------------wujz- plal„weU were
Qn 8unday
the week end with Mr. and Mrs. I Ids
Monday. Nagler has returned' “* l*Mrr'‘ broU,tr' Jim w“ro«- and
~Mra1w
Kenneth Andrews in Shelybvilie.
Tfthnvin
n
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Crawford were home from a visit with Philip Nag-1
h-r
-ma famtlv of Hhiraim
on made
In Otsego Wednesday.
k,*S
J.o.. II Forrest John,X
”1 n business
•"'1 ■
Mr. and Mrs. William Crawford, i ------- --------- —
-----Mr. nnd Mrs.- Charles Crawford ol business Monday evening.
•
Mr.
and
Mra.
Harry
Clem
and
son
Orangeville, Merritt pike and friend
Mrs. Viola Rogers and son. Alton. |
und Mrs. Sadie Ward were dinner | were in Battle Creek on business 1i spent Sunday with their daughter
and sister. Mrs. Cecil Wald, and
guests of Heber Pike at his collage I Tuesday evening.
husband of Rockford.
ut Fish lake.
t K Braendle was a week end guest |
John and William Crawford were at the home ot hU grandparents. Mr. I
ui Hastings Saturday.
ccmber meeting.

Glassware and other articles too numerous
to mention

EAST DELTON. '
Mr. and Mrs. Will Lein a ar and
Mr. and Mr.s. Rom Waters and son.
William, of Delton were dinner
guests Sundayx&gt;f the former’s broth­
er. Ike. and wife.
•
Mr, and Mrs George Letnaar and
daughter. Josephine, of Hickory
Corners were visitors at Rex Wa­
lers' on Sunday afternoon.
Mr Stocking of Cressey. Kir. and
Mrs. Vcrr. Town and family and
Mr. and Mrs. Gay Waters visited
Mrs. Mary Waters at the home of
her son. Rex, on Wednesday after­
noon and evening.
Floyd Morford and family spent
Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. Shell­
man Casey and sons near Hindi
Corner*.
Mrs. Beulah Norris of Battle
Creek. Mrs. Alta Louden. Clair Piper
and son and their mother, Mrs Ida
Piper attended the funeral of their
aunt and sLster-in-law al Mance­
lona Inst Friday.
We are sorry to hear Mrs. Miyy
Hartman. Is on lhe sick list.

NORTHEAST CARLTON.
Dec. 10 Letter.
''
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Decker and
Mr. and Mrs. Murry Decker of
Grand Rapi'ds visited Mr. and Mrs.
John Abbott Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Price of Ona­
way are visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. Marlow.
Mr. and Mrs. 8cott Lydy visited
their daughter and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Elwyn Hayirard of Delton
over the week end.
Will Tasker has been on the sick
list, but Is better at this writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Decker spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Kessler
of Hastings.
FAIR LAKE.
Sixty friends and neighbors, gath­
ered at the home of Jason Willison
Saturday night for a progressive
pedro .party. A flpe time was re­
ported.
_
Chas. Pixley and family spent
Sunday in Lansing as the gilests ot
his sister.
Tva Case, Thelmv Mott and.Vjndn Lowden spent Saturday night
and Sunday at Winka Camp at
Clear lake.
—
Lawrence Pry nnd family of Bat­
tle creek were cullers Sunday at
Loltle colllster’s.

DON’T BE FAT!

C. L CHASE, Propr

FRONTS—

THOS. J. FAUSSETT, Nationally Known Auctioneer
YOUR MONEY BACK WITH A SMILE IF YOU

ARE NOT SATISFIED

nCCU O

PHONE 2241

WALGREEN SYSTEM
DRUG STORE
HASTINGS

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIG11TY-EIKST YEAH

12 PAGES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 21.1936

Monday Was Busiest Day at
VIST NATONAL
Local Postoffice Since 1929
PETRIFIED FOREST
GEOLOGISTS SAY REGION
WAS ONGE GIGANTIC
INLAND BEA

,,i.

Money Orders Also Show Increase;
Eleven Sent to Foreign Countries

MEMBERSHIP QUOTA
600 IS EXCEEDED
—HAVE 702

OF

SECTION ONE—PAGES 1 to 8

BARRY COUNTY TO HAVE
A PARK OF 210 ACR

Monday. December 21. marked the regular clerks are working overthe biggest volume of business at I »&gt;mc. H »*• bec«‘ found that it is
UU exper’’ Ij easier to do the UA.L
work —
with
the local postoffice since 1929, ac­* । fenced help than to train persons CHAPTER VOTES TO
MGOODLUSE NEAR DELTON
cording to Roy G. Hubbard, assbit• ­• not use
START RESERVE FUND
u«e to the work.
work
ant postmaster.
The cancelling
The money order department alw.
„
. —
.
«
Over 130 Carloads of Onions
Met Many Former Residents machine marked up a total of 22.- has had a good month and more or-' Excellent Reports Given By
Shipped This Year From
(XX) which means that that number ders havu bcm sent to foreign
"" Of Whom
Officers AU
Of Michigan On The
uf pieces df first class mall left the countries than usual. Eleven orders
That Area
Were Re-Elected
pqstoffice There is no way to check were Issued to Great Britain. Ru­
Trip
un the number of parcel post pack­ mania. South Rhodesia and Sweden, i The Barry County Red cross ’ In the vicinity of Drlion good use
Grand canyon. Arizona. Friday ages'but Mr. Hubbard says the vol­ according to Hugo C- Wunderlich
is bring made of tracts of muck
July 31. continued
Chapter held its annual dinner
ume of paicel past usually runs in who tiu.s charge ot
w. the
...&lt; department.
; land. From and near that village
T&gt;«
ilu lor num, mrrUn, on w.dn.ul»y rvrnln. In. 130 c„toa, ol „,lo„
c„.
the same proportion os first clav
David from the 'canyon
and inn 11. Tuesday started out brlskiy years has been in first class which ' the United Brethren church parlor* loads of potatoes and one of cari A special session of the Barry place for a county museum. TheH
quenched his thirst and satisfied hU nnd almost reached the total of r«iulres a total business OI 840000 wlth aixty-alx In attendance. many rots have been shipped over the C.
।county board of supervisors con- 210 acres of land have scenic.beauty
--- •
------ — —----- —
u, aihcnukuice,
appetite, we checked out and start­ Monday.
and there u
.nd
I* no question .H..
that &lt;.
tt «&lt;n
will coming from outside ..
the city,
I K &amp; s. railroad. Large quantities
vened' last week Tuesday. The and. with so much water frontage,
ed. leaving a little after 5 P M. In­
No extra help has been pul on but make the grade again this year.
— -a --------- several• de- hnve also been taken out by trucks BARRY COUNTY IS OUT­ ■■ubject tor consideration was the will make an ideal county park. Ke
After
fine
dinner
stead of 10:30 A M us planned, we
proposition of a county park, as well said it was hb desire to give thia
had intended arriving in Flagstaff
lightful selections were played by and put in storage.
STANDING ONE. THEY
as any ot^er business that might land to the county of Barry for a
I
।
the
,,lc
saxophone
naAvjwiuuc
quartet
quurici
compo.-wd
tumpvx'u
of
u;
,
Growers
------were
“
quite
disappointed
-----------------by noon no that I could attend Ro­
DECLARE
,
C-OKKLCTIO.V
Or
lawfully come before that body. All county park on conditions which he
Dr.. j)
D. D. Walton. Hubert D. Cook. I over the low prices offered for ontary and then spend an hour or so
An
error
appeared
ui
Usl
week
s
,
por
ns
i
Wolfe
and
John
Crue.
will)
ions;
but
many
of
them
sold
their
the supervisors were present. Schuy- would name and which we give beI Forrest
with
visiting some of its surrounding
anner in connection -1th
o
Banner
with the re.
re-'' Mr&gt;
EFFICIENCY AND FINE
ler Bowen representing Yankee low.
points of interest. Flagstaff with a
। port of the Dressmaking contest, tor , Reports were given by the officers &lt; were not very good chances of th"
ornwinr «nr rwinniT 8prln«»
ph»&lt;* of Supervisor
Mr. Charlton has been tor several
population of less than 4.000 is the
which we are sorry. The Item stat- 1. and heads of departments which ! price goUig higher.
SERVICE ARE EVIDENT g«v« deceased
years accumulating many interest-*
county seal of a county larger than
Irving D. Charlton of Hastings Ing and valuable relics of early
10 were most encouiaglng. Mrs. For-, Cngrles Smith harvested the first
---------of great aeslstance substituting for rest jonnson. Roll Call chairman. । sugar beets to be grown in tha'.
township appeared before the board pioneer days as well as Indian relics,
This
Commendation
-Is
Very
MasMchuxelU. V.rmont and Rhode
------------- I Mrs. Andrus, who was taken ill Satand stated that he owned, and was such as arrowheads of various kinds
Island. Il U a great tourist center, S0H00L BOARD SPONSORS j urday.” ThU should have read "Mrs*! said that she was delighted with the j area, his crop being around 200
Pleasing To Two Officers
ready to give to Barry county to be including a copper arrow head,
splendid response during tiie Roll tons of beets on about 25 acres.
being Imaud in Uu* San Franchco
PLAN FOR NIGHT
! Frank Pender.” We beg your pardon Call
,
used for a county park. 210 acres tomahawks, skinning knives, pipes,
campaign.
C'-—
Glrn
”7~~~~
Kenyon
*7' raised
*500
" bushels
" ' * * bf
Who Retire Jan. 1
mountain rrglon"'fcilh many beausituated in Hastings Twp. and hav- etc. Those who have seen his cod­
Barry
county's
quota
for
1936
was
potatoes
on
two
ucre.i
of muck
ttfnl lakes and streams which pro­
Mr.
R.
C.
Shlpler
of
Lansing
and
CLASSES
ing a shore line ot 1 1-2 miles on lection, in which he has invested •
600 memberships,
but again the goal
i OFFICERS
ARRESTED
... ground.
__________ '
vide excellent fishing and hunting.
Edward Dresser of Big Rapids, rep­ Thornapple river and the lake uf good deal ot money as well as a lot
About 40 miles out of Flagstaff We
Tliun MCM TIircnAV ,MU bevn.more than reachod as.
resenting the state auditor general's that name. This Includes the hh- of time, say that If all his reltea
JMUUL WILL
WILL OPEN
UPtN ON
UN
«vu mere ! UCOUAI there p a total ot 702 members and :
passed thc famous Arizona Meteor SCHOOL
department, have been busy for gev- | toric spot known as "Indian Land- were assembled they would more
Crater which resembles tlie craters
eral days auditing the books in the (Ing.” It also includes the site of an than fill a very large room in any
TUESDAY NIGHT, JAN. 5 | They Are . Charged With 102'memu^ and1^0cosh surplus of ,
on the moon. It was formed prob­
(county offices of this county. Mr. । Indian mission church and school, county museum. He has expressed a
1
Rtealinc Cloveraeeri
820050. Half of every membership'
---------ably, forty or more thousand years
[Shipler is a trained accountant which were there tn the early days willingness to give this collection to
lose
Interested
Should |
™
jo nauon.i he.dqu.rago by tlie Impact of a giant inc- Those
__________
of^Barry county. He also explained the county to be placed in ttM
One Hag Confessed
--------ters and fifty cents of every sum dotcorltc drawn to the earth by the
' as county clerk of Mecosta county. thut this tract contains 80 acres ot county museum on condition I
Write Or See Supt. D. A. I
pounds
of nat*d «&gt;*o sow there.
force* ol gravity. And what a splash
On October 9. 266
,--------------. and knows all about Ute work m splendid timber and that there is a they -shall be
properly dlspla
Bikini this fine report it will be
it did make. The crater Is nearly cir­
VanBuskirk
cloveraeed were stolen frsrn
from Hiury
Harry
। county offices.
sightly place on the area, known as cared for and protected. He sti
Babcock s milk house tn Baltimore remembered that lost spring a call JOHN VAN ZILE FIGURES
cular. tlie diameter at the rlin bcThere have been requests for a
In conversation with these gentle­ "Council HUI." This was the place tiiat there are many others 1
townzhlp. The oflUcers have been 1 came tor, funds 10 assl3t ln ‘he flood
ing about 4XXX) feel, and the top of night
,
men. who will comolete their work where Indians gathered to consider hare relics of the early days or
HE
WILL
BE
EIGHTEEN
school tn this city, and the
Barry county's
the rim 160 feet above the surround- board of
OJ education
CUUCBMOn has
n„ arranged
Brrangea tor
ion quietly at work on the case and on are,s of ‘he
here Wednesday of this waek. we' matters of interest to their tribe or dian relics which they, no dOw
Tuesday of last week arrested Ralph ’ ‘lr»‘
»r&gt;d Uter there
UNTIL NEXT YEAR
ing level ptaleau and 600 feet above . such
were glad to hear the fine things group. He stated that the crown of would be glad to give the county;
Woodmansee. 28. whose home is in were additional cans
calls nn
all oi
of wmen
which
----------- -the bottprn of the crater, the walls open on Tuesday. January 5. in the woodmatwee.
they said about our county officers. that hill would be a wonderful
*—*"* *“on
---------* 6. sec.
les1)
&lt;-----Continued
pajfr
n'°“ VerUcal tfcr high school building. Classes will be Battle Creek and William Clemence were paid, in tact, a total of 8826 ( lApAMCCC UAVP TAlfCAJ
They stated that Barr}' county is
whose
home
is
Dowling,
but
who
»
as
M-n
‘
or
™
P"
cent
of
the
1
CdC
flRVE
IRKtN
some d.stance down.
offered in tubjecu for which there
of the outstanding ones tn the
• creek
- --------------------------------------------------------UP U. S. FOOTBALL 1 one
Battle
at the
time of »m°unt first assigned. For thc Roll1
We arrived in Winslow a Utile be- u ,
aVBUable. u . efficient was in excellence of the public records-and EMMANUEL CHURCH
FIRE DAMAGES HOME.
his
arrest.
It
appears
Uiat
the
offi.
c
“
n
Ule
rMU1
‘
133
per
cent
of
I
lore eight where we spent the night. number Of persons desire the class.
the efficiency of its county officers.
.
fC°.lfre2 °n‘y
"I11”’.1"; Regular teachers now employed In cers found that this cloverseed was thc quota—a fine record Indeed, x ! His Driver in Japan Was One I Both of them said that ail the
CHRISTMAS SERVICE
stead of thc five or six hundred our schools will teach these classes sold lo J. P. Burroughs A: Son of 1 Volunteer workers signed up for ,
records of this counts* are in ex­
ot Mrs. Mary Bayne on Brot
Mint. rajviiig.ii.
Michigan. The
check paid
work........
will have
Who Piloted the Lind­
W\‘^h *^^^pUn,‘e.d .Tb‘*’ne*n‘ T»&gt;b plai. wUl not Interfere nor jiiii,.
i uc viitil.
puiu 1.1831 so the
..............
-- an' excel-1
cellent
condition, well kept and । Bishop Whittemore Speaks
&gt;_ .. . __ «__ ... .. 1 wilt atari ilirAual.A,,, ,l,«
1
°{
a long grind the next day.
change the arrangement for the by that firm for the seed was 855.411lcnt *lar‘ throughout the ■county. I
verv satixfactory.
berghs
Company's plant. Fire had evlc.
Sunday — No Christmas
assisting Mrs. Johnson.
!
.
ArU?T- a""?**- Au“ gymnasium classes already organ- and was cashed on Oct. 8. The check
This statement of the two audi-1j
j started from the chimney and
was made out to "Ralph Smith” who hfrs. Victor Hilbert of Woodland!
•Via
— 7Los
— Angeles to Yokohama.
- ---------'w034 nl
froiS
. 1 kxd. nor for the extension clans or
tors k naturally highly pleasing to
spread into the attic and mau
Eve Service
gave his address as Maple Rapids, i B“d Mra-C. J. Barnum of Delton 1 A,*‘1 lo Aug. )». 1BJ6.
We saw nothing in Winslow lo banij rehearsal
nil the county officers, but It will
stubborn blaze to fight. Firemen
write home about and so got up i — classes
■
- meet• -for a route 3. It was found that this wus l“avc a,'ort' ‘allu concerning their!
Members and friends of Em- good work and put it out r
The night
-will
out
th&lt;A Pacific from ■ be especially so to County Treas­
early and were on the road al seven.!' period of ten weeks, on Tuesday and the assumed name and'that Ralph . eapertenc« in soliciting member-1
urer L. F. Maus and Register of manuel Episcopal church are asked 1 damage of only 8200. Unfortuni
interesting to know that
About 50 miles out we came lo Pet­ 1 Thursday evenings from 7 to 9 Woodmansee was the man who sold‘»h,l»- 11
! Deeds Earl Boves, who will cease to remember that there will be no Mrs. Bayne did not carry any
the
clover
seed.
i
B.
S.
Holly
of
Woodland,
aged
79.
j
2,300
"
,,
.
les
“
‘’
d
have
about
2..00
rified Forest National Monument o'clock. The classes will be an hour
Woodmansee was taken before I secured the most members of any'! mure
,or*’ to
0 an
nr*‘ Yokohama.
A n
" to be county officers on and after Christmas eve midnight service as surance.
go before
In
which contains thousands of acres of in length, so It will be possible for
tl»e first of January. Both of them
'
petrified coniferous trees, and Is ttje an individual to take two classes If Justice Matthews on Thursday and I *° lc“or in the county, having a to- I exactly 19 more davs i will o» in have served the countv of Barry lias been the custom for several
■ Shangha* and then my .adventure
years.
charged with grand larceny. He;‘a*of40 .
largest fossilized area and contains
■very capably. Ute. tegtalature_J)A4_w«ri5MnM.
wu» ae &lt;». .SERGEANT SULLIVAN
• proper really- begins.
more petrified wood than any other be $)AO- paid -In advance by each waived examination and was taken , 11 *as voted to open a reserve
We skip “
a —
day
In changing time
ehu
"
1
'
«"
aund
*
’
BROTHERHOOD
SPEAl
bafore
Judge
Runtil
R.
McPeek
I'und
for
the
local
Chapter,
starting,
z
,
similar place tn the world. These individual enrolled.
-lh8t »(lcnW9IL He entered a plcaj*lth 1100 to be taken from the 1936 ^1P,U.1C
aU,&gt;r^Uf‘».V“U —? jci tney nave carried on in such a rv.c vj when The hl R«« i^wta
•
trees are not like those we saw in
f t’J tPpror‘! Blba Whittemore ot Grand Rapid.” nXve’ An
Talk
■ ““d to add the same amount 1 b
®° 1 ?-ln 11111eighteen and ! S**thZr ^1/°
Yellowstone j&gt;ark. standing U|&gt;rlghtheen made. ..uch as English, French, or BUIIlFWra was reniandeTTo tFie
U
will conduct the rervice at ren-th^ ‘aaTe “
custody
of
the
sheriff
without
ball.
cach
(
&gt;'««•
until
8500
has
been
'
»
1
J*
1
hCnW
right where they Brew, but are all German, sewing for beginners and
- o'clock.
....A program of- Christmas
-- •
^.1----------- --------...—
— .... I saved for emergencies which maylP**? ’Ubimer. Maybe on tne way । that both auditors are reoubllcans. ty
•‘Bafely" And Traffic
prone on the ground many of them ror Ummp BdyBnced m the art. type­
’ while tlie.se two county officers are
arise
as
did
the
necessity
for
assist.
,S
k
w,,en
wp
B
“
ln
“
day.
Aug.
ll
music,
Mozart's
Twelfth
Mau.
will
,
a.
complete with roots
and slub
wrlUllM shorthand. Insurance, taxa- lice Matthews on Friday. He ap­
Regulation*
come twice so that I will again . democrats. To have such commend­ be given by, the choir with Miss Vlr- .
page 1. Sec 2.)
2 &gt; । yon&gt; B|gebrtt&gt; geometry, trlgonome(Continued on oaue
peared with an attorney and de­ ance during the flood period, nils *
I leaves 838627 for local calls the I ** n,y norm®‘ a8e- The first days out ation os was given them and their glnia PotU as soloist, and Mrs. Sa-1
w------------------------------------i try, bookkeeping, orchestra, coin- manded on examination. The dale [coming year, a total of 8524 was 01 San Pvdr0 thc wnler WM» uulte work by tije.se republican representdie Mae Palmer, organist. The tiW Brotherhood Monday n
-------.1-. Jaw. business arithmetic. set for that was Monday, December
WOODLAND ELEVATOR
j।merchil
raised In Hastings city and 8370 rou“h 10 my w,y of Staking. Most
program follows:
follows;
degpUe
&lt;Ur&gt;rt
. &lt; American literature. 28. Bonds were fixed at 8500 with throughout thc county.
of‘the
ROB&amp;ERS GOT $584.59 metakrail,
'1 of
h,‘ '•|possengcn&gt;
as'"no',’&lt; were sick“and
"*4 mv- pnrtment is‘naturally very pleas­
...V...V....L. economics, preparation two sureties required. Clemence fur­
ing. Both men can retire from their 1 Prelude—Canlique Noel,
Sergeant Sullivan of the State
County vrauiira*.
Chairman A.C.UC
Archie U.
D. MCMc- 1he,,C &lt;ll{3n‘t fet‘* “ny 136 8(X*1 respective positions with the feel-1 Processional Hymn—Adesle
[ for civil service examinations, etc. nished the required ball to appear Donald
read
the
names
of
the
lUe
1
fcl1
“
11,lle
Ups
*bul
k&gt;
dells.
Used Big Charge Of Nitro- ■ Any who are Interested in such a at the examination.
. members of the Red Cross, several pul1 lh,'outfh wKhout losing any food Ing that thev have ser.ed Barry
school should write Superintendent
and
of . whom do not now live In Barry' lhrou«h ‘he UPP« channel. It b couhty faithfully, honestly
Gradual Hymn—Holy Night.
Glycerine On The
D A VanBuskirk giving the name.
COMMITTEE SENDS
■ ooQnty• bul are still enrolled from now calm “8aln We :,av" lud ldeal with the public interests always at. Gloria Tibi—Mozart.
heart. They will retire with Ute I
Sale Door
,&gt;re« .ddre^ lllephone number.I d, IT. Tn'ucinmi*OTCOO ih£'
— ‘’TSo'VS
—----------- ...
.
wcaUicr and probably will not rufl
. per cent of traffic acddenta
Gratias Tibi—Mozart.
the
rourtea
deured
end
whether
I
PLAN
TO
HEADQUARTERS
™*
y
“
p
T
Coltroee.
good
wishes
of
all
the
people
cf
_
’ । Into any bad storms this trip
! the, peeler Ute hour lrt&gt;m 1 u&gt; • or!
------------Mc'
thia
county.
Their
republican
suc
­
of the robbery of" the Fann Bureau ' ,hcy p*V*raU,e
J?®?/
fin
romewae
7 10 ,®.
or'' R
n&lt;r&lt;raatinna Pnr
finnrotinn
I Knight,
c. J
L^hr^Frajmr'sa'w'al'l
eight passengers on
or .both
both m
they
Sng&lt;e.tioni
Operation ./.
.Y?,/0
J.bXwK.a?
^**nlt s***
*1' ,■ There are now
* era. He said statistics also |
elevator at Woodtand. of which we Irom ■ to &gt;. “
th&lt;y
Su
Waa»°pa For OperstlOfi
of ^rSs;
A.S
*• • Udy with a llrtle cessors are well qualified for the of­ ginla Potts.
carry two itudlei.
।
— .1...
1°' HeiUhfi; ebo LewJ, HeeUt. two,
Sermon
Hymn
—
Oh
Little
Town
that drinking and drunkrt
had learned-only a short time be- carry l*0
Of Government-Built
I Patrick. Dr. Dennis Murray’ Mrs
of lwo BOln8 10 ^"^la and an- fices and will be animated by the of Bethlehem
, caua* a large percentage of
fore ll was necessary to
ATlfWC Mill I
'
Mud Lake Camp
' R; T prench and N » Waterman other woman who
"" is“ getting off al same desire to give good service
Sermon—Bishop
Lrwls
Bliss, accidents. He urged that at l_
so we could not look up the details1 REGULATIONS WILL
.
“
vamp
Qrand Rap^ DookCIUP Shsngiuu to be a nurse. Unfortu­ and to be real public servants.
Whittemore.
. 200 more Stale Police patrolmen
which have since become available.)
nc rucnDDCn
Tlt C°‘n'”1“cc appointed lartloo. and the international Beal a­ nately she knows nothing about
Offertory—Solo — Miss Virginia put upon the highways to end 1
Il appears that the robbers found
“E ENrOKLED , month to consider what might be | lo^ qq
China. The missionary is very IMPORTANT LEAGUE
Potts.
I frightful number of deaths I
little trouble in getting Into the L
.
----------- —— .
| done In the matter of operating the | Surely thoae who worked so hard benevolent-looking and says "Good
—"All Things Come caused by careless drivers. He c
DEBATE JANUARY 15 ofPresentation
building. They blew off the safe I Parking Now Prohibitsd On Mud Lake camp held a meeting atighould feel well repaid bv the won­ morning” but as for getting any real
Thee. Oh Lord.”
mended the schools for boglm
door with nitroglycerine at about
■ ProDertv Owned Bv
. Jhe Parker House on Thursday eve-1 derfui reaulu obtalned-the beat Information about China, hr has
3:15 Wednesday morning of last
rropeny uwnea ay
nlng. All seven members from Barry , ever in Barry county
been very little help.
Squad Not So Large Thia
Ing. teaching the proper course
Sanctus—Mozart.
—
-u They
’
Government
( county were present and two of the ' Officers elected for’ the eniranx
week.
used a lol of the ex-!
Upon arrival In Pedro I was
both driver* and pedestrians.
Benedlctus
—
Mozart
—
Solo.
Miss
Year But Considered
----------- -*■■&lt;•
plosive. When
it went off «
it w.vw
blew-; with the opening of the new, Al.e8*!?, committee were on hand. yenr are:
(.reeled with ten letters which cer­
Cyntheal Reed.
the
city pariung
parking kjl
lot me
the oemana
demand ior._~~r.-7
tor
J*efenLltacU,sf*J ■ chaIrmin
—Aicme
Archie u.
D. Mcuonaia;
McDonald; tainly gave me a warm friendly feel­
Very Good
cause
of fatalities.
.... safe door a considerable dis-1! eny
u&gt;-„—
Agnus Del—Mocart.
tjinr-,. smashing
&lt;ma&lt;htnv the
tiirt office -stove
,iAv, _____
.. wiial could
order
ttiat vu-wa-rM.
___________ . Cortright;
. . Ing.
lance,
ip&lt;ce.___________
ln u,t down.____
lo&lt;n. dUtricl
w&gt;ube
‘ done In dc
^e £
‘hat (Vice-Chslrman-Xdelbert
mg uisiue.
Inside. iI reaa
read mem
them an
all a couple
Gloria in Excelsls—Mozart.
An important debate will be held1
th. facU1Ucl
lacUilln ot
oi lhLs
thU can,
t.n,
’! ]I of times. I have read three books
that was In the way of It and been somewhat relieved.
,he
o m**r be'
•»—
Recessional
Hymn
—Hark The
here January 15 when the local,
-----------------—
------------------ WISCONSIN MAN TO BE
nude
...liable
to
the
two
coonlle,.
Tretuurer-OreUle
S.yle.
Flr.1
Aid
'
‘
'
and
have
four
more
to
go.
I'll
send
damaging furniture in the office, j jn view of this situation PoslmasIt wu weed th.l Ute iiov.ni-._D,. c. r uuhrop; Lili Se.ta,” you the one I think would Interest team, composed of Robert Henney. i Herald Angels sing.
Tho robbers secured 8684.59 in cash, ter Field has decided to strictly en­
CALLED BY CHURCH
PosUude—The Heavens Resound |
Tbey 'also took wme papers, which! farce the^jslofflce regulation in ment park service neadquarters at Russell Cleveland- Volunteer Rcrv you and give you seme knowledge of Emerson Cairns and Ruth Hathaomra be oouned th.t. In U» j le^-ch.rt„ “ulway will take an affirmative stand —Beethoven,
will be of no value to them. 11 ap-ircgard to car parking on governwhat China Is. Lin Yungtang's "My against East Lansing.
■
••Episcopal Pariah Sends Aa
pears that the explmlon was heard i ment property. In the past the post- judjmem ol the commitlee. .n «■&gt;,„, P B«,I.; Junior Red o™ Country and My People.” I think,
1
SHEEP STEALERS ARE
by several people, but It did not: office authorities have been lenient
Invitation To The
U.ude w. Smith, Oeiur.l will give you the best picture of
ui™
QUICKLY APPREHENDED
.,,d —,. ;.
.7' , He.lth—
—mi
Dr.
Robert a.
a Harxness:
Heinen; China. On the other hand 4I shall
make a loud enough noise so that: m enforcing these regulations, real­ - „
- ---—— -. nooen
-..a., .wK
Rev. Gary
tev,^v,„ui‘_ ...77 keeP ‘he book on Chinese callithe unr.ino_u^
Nursing—Mrs. John^Noble*^Nutri. they
—thought
_____ anything
It anything
serious,
serious,
to;
so; uing the need of more parking sponsible for the operation of tht
------------At the pariah meeting
1 |pace Bul thp im&gt;U ipftcp ln
egmp. There was also sent a state-; iton_MUs R0*e DeFoe; public In- «r*Phy for further study. Work They have already gained eight of i
no officer...
wasnn.l«UH
notified.rr~Up,n to•»the
present time there are no clues.
‘' rear of the postoffice at times has ment as to the number of children formation—Miss Mabel Sisson- Roll boura lately have been quite long the eleven points necessary b&gt; de-1 Stole And Killed A Sheep ,
!r.™'S&lt;£T 1 “ ° “* °”n"
And 0,fried It To
parish house, the members of
In
the
two
counties
within
the
age
1
call
Chairman
—
Mrs.
Forrest
Johnpnd
hxjd
*
no
Ume
0,1
Bl)
flve
w,d
! been so-crowded that It was Inade- 1 I ml (a rrtiulrwl for n sninnwr- ramn ...... r.,.
n,
... I’m pretty tired and don't get
....
manuel Episcopal church d*
then
1 ■ quate for the needs of the postoffice.
With this next debate with East
Their Cabin
The plan that met with the com1
a‘
Reld
that a call would bo made tc
much reading done. I Just naturally
The «8ulations which Mr. Field
“°" I*"
Tborrte, bUhl uuneon. e.uhl Rev. Don Oury of Watertown.
drop off to sleep without having nave been used In state 1league
,
। Intends to enforce read as follows: mlttee'a favor was briefly outUnfd; EMPLOYEES MUST
de- i a
in Mrs Phillip Merlau's i
to the Omaha headquarters:' The
read many pages. But it's putting me
”
' f."1
"Automobiles or vehicles of any
committee can do nqthtfig -further,
FILE APPLICATIONS ; in good condition and they sav a
FRANK ASFINALL.
| character except those used in the ’ until they know thaf their suggestcul ,u lhroa‘ there- T11' thieves | for dinner at 6:30 which was
—_—
I lw.lu&gt;, bud, m.kt. a bnllb, mlM.
As he has sold his farm and is transaction of government business jnui U», Wo.,IMl u»lr .uuru«cept tonally good CTIUCIIHJ
evidently waited UIHU
until Hit
the **■
animal
,b
rr.n, Aipuun =.« no, « p.r.m on arirmy. ot
‘"7,““ D'“d- L“e For
■ think I ought ro iiave a good start I
-- „-- . flowed by the business session.
moving to town. Prank Asplnall must not be parked on driveways or :
uri.—”
g- practice
debates. jia
lud
blcd thoroughly,
thoroughly, they then
then cov- rl Rev. Lewlk B. Whittemore, I
. ■ nfi
-.-7
t
debates,
&lt;j tiled
---------------in that
erfd
up lhe blood^wthey
“h str*w covand
will aiicuun
have an sale
auction
at the ;Cviiiievieu
grounds connected
with
federal par* hS*°qu»rters.
Social Security Numbers
on
b*«’mlnj8 a
* scholar In
that case. nartVeinOtJmt^*etab2rh^?Ve
Will uSVc OT.
at uicsale
' aTvuiiui
wiui federal
j
'
-----•
-------------------------------•
।
-■
•------.
4
•
■
r
Todav
is
the
15th
of
Alienist
as
I
Today is the 15th ot August as I
farm located one and one-half miles building, and in no case should ....
nrrnrn
r
*°
,,r
oth
"
«««
,nd
camed
™
H* Grand Rapids, presided. A- A.
Is December 31
continue this letter. We’have just
north of Carlton Center. Henry parking be permitted when It would TWO SHOWS NEEDED
.
.
carcass, ft was discovered next derson and George £. Walker,
— j' Postmaster W. J. Field has re- finished cleaning the decks The sea U1“ sgMon
Flannery will cry the sale, starting interfere with the vehicles' used in
enp AMM||A| PARTY
morning that a sheep had been of Grand Rapids, a
at one o'clock, and Clyde Tooker Li ‘he transportation Of the mails."
rwn-.HraiiUMU rnn i• i• , celved word that the work of assign­ has really done me a lot of good.
NAME
DEPOSITORIES
killed and
Deputy
Sheriff Doster meeting._________________________
ing numbers to employees under the 1 weighed myself on the ship scales
the clerk. Mr. Asplnall offerx a good ■ Those who have been using the Two Thousand Children A splendid spirit of
CriD PnilWTV’Q DACU
DeUon was notified. He went to
work team, two rnwi
cows, ih»«n
sheep, nnaU.
poul- ■i nostofnee
poatofflee lot for a narklno
parking .nara
space are ।j *
Work
xwu SDOUoUUU uuuurun xo provisions of the social security act, the other day and I weighed 74 kIIgt
rUn LUUN I I O LAon the premises and thought he found
which goes into effect on January —165 pounds. This is Sunday and
■ tryr farm tools and some house- ; therefore asked not to do so but to I .
Be Entertained At
----------'
evidence
that
might
lead to an ar- members are anxious to
hold goods. See the adv. on another , use the space provided by the city,
‘1. 1937, must be completed by De­ I've Just finished reading Genghis
Theaters
The
Supervisors
Designate
rest,
so
he
notified
undersheritl
page for full particulars.
'
■ ----------------- -----------------------; cember 31. 1838.
Khan. It's a very entertaining and
The Five Banka Of
Bera who came PromP‘,y- The two may be continued.
Judging from the requests ..—
.~ ...
fOr.' .^EJpP,°yee# w
who
have not filed well-written book. The book which
PRESIDENT LEFFLER
... ..
.forr a
num. will.give you the most information
J.
Iound ■dn* blood 4poU on tha road
EST. ALLEN P. LASBY.
tickets for the annual, kiddles' their _applications
NOTICE.
This County
I leading eastward and went ahead
Christmas show st the Strand, the I ber are urged to do
u. M1C ,WJU( on wnat China is and what her
The Gull Road Auction House of
TALKED
ON
"SECURITY"
At the special meeting of the su-1 «nUl they came to the woods on
Kalartuuoo will have an auction sale
affair will be as
days. The
poetoffice cmem- jwuviiicca
an big a
" success
nwwvoo this j few u«ya.
iiw local |&gt;osu&gt;luce
provinces «uia
and people lire
are iiuvcu
noted tor,
for.
ot the stock at the Allen P. Lasby
year as In the past, according to. pioyees will pul forth every effort I her problems, her past and present, pervbors held Tuesday last week. Wilbur Sllcock's farm, about a mile o.' the next regular r
store on N. Michigan Ave, every­ Commercial Club Heard An Ray Branch, manager. •
to issue numbers to employees filing U “China Yesterday and Today” by the question of niacins the nubile distant. Going into the woods tney Common Council falls
thing to bq sold. The stock Includes
To accommodate the children Mr. their applications but cooperation! Edward Thomas Williams. At the monies of the county wa. broi.sht | found • cabin in which tt was eriExcellent Talk On
up and. as required by law. the I dcnl that someone was slaying,
furniture, wearing apparel/pianos,
Branch
3.-±r.ch has
hio decided to have
heve two
tra by those who eome under the pro-! time of writing this we are Just two
That Topic
fixtures. Ford truck, guns, tools,
shows, one al ten o'clock In. the ' visions of the act Is needed.
j days out of Yokohama. I am get­ board designated the banks in | B^PPlng inside and moving a cloth
etc. See the adv. for date, list, etc.
Dr. .--------------------Emil Leffler,- president
.. . ......
mention was
—
------ Of morning for the .city .children
and
w_ not made in “ng a little excited about tha big which the county treasurer shall P*rUtton. they s»w the carcass o|
Battle Creek College, gave an ad- the other at one o'clock for the the order to complete the work by i things ahead of me. I have taken deposit such funds as may come in- lht »hrep They went some dUA GENEROUS RESPONSE.
dress Tuesday noon on the impor-j rural children. When the Strand, January 1. 1837 how an employee over 73 pictures, and I think I have to his hands. The banks designated lanc* 'rom ,he caWn ,whe”
At the meeting of the Hastings tance of the Security Act. After । Theater Is filled the Barry wtH be'would then gp about getting a serial seme quite wonderful snaps I got a were Hastings City Bank. National ’ »«od
?__,**** 5*5
Rotary club on Monday the mem­ mentioning the conditions which i opened and shows run until all the number, it can easily be predicted beauty of a little schooner when we Bank of Hartings. Delton Bute : •ti‘zr, ■
a™x*]
bers were. Informed
there
Farmers
- 7 that
------- was have made
lluaora lb
It necessary to have
liavr , small patrons have seen the shows. | that a great deal of red tape would v-ere five days out of Los Angeles. It Bank
Bans of
oi Delton.
pciton.
Farmers SUUState : Virgil E. K®Uer,
.7 28. add Bure A.
for *ccurlty as a pari
of «...
our govern■.* nt
j, expected that at last two thou- have to be unravelled to oblain a was only about 63 feet long and had Bank of Middleville and City Na-1
l^y ihU?”n 10 thU
।menl p°llcy-1“
lhal &lt;** o» sand children will be entertained at number aft&lt;er the time limit
Uonal Bank of Nashville.
*nd
(Continued on page 6. Sec. 1)
and vicinity Their names had been the great dangers is.that we may the party.
______ - t day and taken before Justice Oort---------------- &lt;• -—---------------j *»»----------------furnished the proper committee by conclude
BKKAKS
BONE IN
right. They waived examination and
As usual the members of the!
NOTICE"REUNION*’ AT STRAND.
BREAKS BONE
IN ANKLE.
ANKLE.
conclude . that
that legislation
legislation can
can cure
cure
NOTICE
I
those in a position to know the i our economic ills. An educated pub­ American Leginn Auxiliary
Foirtst smith, local null ear- wart bound Ov“
**“ ------- “*
annual
of the StockStock-I "Reunion” starring the Dionne
The ann
uel meeting ol
needs Imuch cases. Rotarians were lic. willing to cooperate..willing to■ on hand to help tgke care of the holders of the Fratriavtlla Telo- Quinta and Jean Hershoit, wbloh U -rier.~
‘er. had the misfortune to fall Bal- ‘«rm of circuit
asked to chip tn What they felt they sacrifice and serve, and to do their children. The Hasitnix Rotary Club phono company, will be held at the to be shown Sunday and Monday at urday morning while delivering
could spare to help purchase shoes
i has aulsied flasnetfiy In making I Prairieville town hill on Wadnea- the Strand, is one of the ouUtand- and fracture a bone tn his t
for themj youngsters. Those present I prims essentials. Wo wfah we had the annual kiddles' party Ita usual d»r January 11. 1837. at 1:30 P. M. Ing pictures of the year. It has a cast ankle, a cast has been pul on
contributed 88L This sum it Is ex­ space to outline his talk which wag. success and their assistance Is —Adv. 13-31. Henry M. Rogen, i of over 3.000 and Is full of entertain- Mr. Smith will probably not
thing,
&lt;4
pected will be Increased to 8100.
I greatly appreciated.
I
Secretary. | Ing situations.
wars mHt-hwngryable to work for six weeks.
an unusually good one.

GENEROUS GIFT OF IRVING DELOS
CHARLTON OF HASTINGS TWP.

SOUVENIRS CANNOT BE
PURCHASED THERE

AUDITORS PBA SE Park Wil1 Have ®ne and one-Haw
Mlles of Lake and River Frontage
CDUNHOFFICEIIS

A NIGHT SCHOOL
OPEN TO ADULTS

misses mW
05017669

Two Auction Sales '

i

TTJ

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 19M

I

J**— *—*---- **— *—- *--— ***
.
SPECIAL PROGRAM
---------------- 7"
1)10 past week and Is still confined for seven years been the proprietor
AGAIN ON THE JOB ’T’atofc Nigh
to his home.
of the Homing Glory Bhoppc on
SUNDAY MORNING
. .The city council and board ol Jefferson street, la closing out her
------------Service
at
Church
of BunervUors Sm| education at Greenville have decld- business because of 111 health in her
PreibyteriaD Ohuroh Will
family.
Mias
Stickney
will
leave
in
"
OBra
»up«rviM&gt;ra
Tom Myers Is assisting In the cj to hire a nurse for the public
Sear Obristmai Music
ploys Roy Zverette For I
, .,
.
u
pastoffice this week.
j schools, the cost to be paid jointly about a week for her home in Reed
..
i A Watchnight service will be obYe scrivener Is sponsoring Mrs.. by the council and board of educa- city.
And Sermon
Four MonthB
I served in the social rooms of the
George Hayman, who lives near'
Mary Nadu’s fruit cake against all tlon.
Because of the pestiferous actions ' First Methodist Episcopal church
Next Sunday morning at the First
earner*. — Charlotte Republican- [ The city parking space on Court Nashville, was In the Banner office dlUamu popuutwn ot u,u Thunda, ..TOtaj, ree. II. K&lt; lac»
Presbyterian church lhe following
on
Saturday
subscribing
for
th*
street is becoming Increasingly popTribune.
special Christmas pre^ram will be
U.,
.1
Mrs. Belle Pattison was taken ular. seventy car* being counted paper, and Mid that he made his
——..*• vw.w wa ....... w rendered at ten-thirty o’clock.
sick Friday, her *on. James p»ttl- there last Saturday. It relieved the first visit to Hastings over 74 yeajs
food tor the table. An Illustrated
Organ Prelude. ‘Gloria"—(Mo­
son. of Grand Rapids coming to . crowded condition In Ute streets ago When a boy he attended the sideration to what ought to be done lecture of 53 slides will be shown on
zart).
Mudge school where the late Judge
care for her.
during the shopping season.
lb limit their activities Ln destroy­ “What a group ot travellers saw In
Processional. “Gloria in Excelsls
Japan.* There .will be a period for
Word has been received by Dr.
Dr. Bruce L..Hayden of Saginaw Clement Smith waa then teaching..
ing livestock and lo their other games and sociability. The closing Deo."
and Mrs. C. B- McIntyre that their was recently elected vice-president
mtrolt, "While 8h e pile r daaddress Is 1307 North Garden -street, of the Northeastern Michigan Ga­ DIES FOLLOWING ACCIDENT. depredations.. The' Judiciary com­ period from 11 lo 13 will be a devo­
Chester
Hubbard,
aged
50.
died
on
tional
one.
with
songs,
music
and
Watched
their Flocks."
mittee of the board was Instructed
ellea rwater. Fla.
'
'tcopathlc association. Mrs. Hayden
Friday In the Sturgis hospital fol­ to have the law as to the authority an address. All the friends of the 1 Call to worship and Doxology.
j. M. Hutchinson. publisher of
the Grand Ledge Journal, has sold । daughter of Mrs Isabel Pancoast, lowing an automobile accident, of the board In controlling and tax­ church are invited, if you cannot - invocation. Lord’s Prayer and
his business and printing plant to
Receiver F. C- Stapleton of the when hla car collided with a freight ing dogs fully looked up. and lo come to the potluck supper, come Dresden Amen.
*
The Lowell Ledger, published by | First State Bank at Hartford is train near that city. He was found present a report at the April ses­ anytime during the evening.
Carol—"Hark the Herald Angels
0 Jeffriea
-•
noi
’In, aa 1T1
paying
10 rw.r
per cent rilvirtwnrl
dividend thia
this
sion.
DEATH OF^GED
Bing."
week,
bringing the total paid up lo lying unconscious beside his wrecked
By resolution the dog warden,
The fire alarm Thursday was due
' Responsive Reading &lt;Pa. oi) and
BALTIMORE
WOMAN.
90
per
cent.
He
hope*
to
make
the
machine
about
an
hour
after
the
whose term of office had expired on
to a roof fire In the home of Mrs.
j Gloria Patrl.
.
Mrs. Mary J. Merrill, aged M, died
William Hackney on East Stale pay-on 100 per cent in the new fu­ accident and waa rushed to the hos- lhe first of Ndyember. was employed
Scripture—Saint Luke. Chapter 3.
Saturday
her -home
in,
Balcarry
• j on ,,,0
nls work
wuan ,,
from Decern- ----------- , night
--- —at
------------ —
- -----Road. The blaze was soon extin­ ture.
pita! where he soon pavnd away.. to vn,
Monday. December 91. was the
i ber 15 until the board shall meet in Hmore township. She Is survived by
guished. The damage was slight.
nay
er.
He
waa
the
brother
ot
Lee
A.
Hub:
j np.
April.
year uuiuig
during that
a son. Orley *'
Merrill,
—
two brothers
r
U. Last
uasi JIB,
IIIB. period
pv.luu »
Friend* of lhe Rev. E P. Knowles, shortest day of the year and at 7:40
Anthem. ”O N'vht of Holy Mem­
and -------------------three sisters.---The
—-----------funeral—
rfn
former pastor of the Presbyterian that evening winter waa officially bard of Rutland Twp.. Mrs. Rom there was no dog warden on the Job —
ory” (Frans Gruber).
church, have received a letter from ushered in. From the way some of Armstrong of Constantine. Miss Et-! Mr. Roy Everetts, who ha* filled the , held at her late residence, on TuesAnnouncements and Offertory.
day
and
‘-K ------------------of
* the .board,
------- . . h
«- al
.&gt; tert A.
a M.
.. .
nH the remain.',
to --------the Rfttlafactlon
him stating that, because of 111 the days luive been we d almost be­ to Hubbard of Balti* Creek and Job
. collection Voluntary. "There'* A
health, he has been obliged to give lieve it had been here for a month Burt Hubbard of Kokomo, Ind. His was continued in that office with taken to Schoolcraft for burial.
Song in the Air" (Brehm*)
aged mother. Mrs. Marcia Hubbard. &lt; lhe same compensation per month '
up preaching. Mrs. Knowles also or six weeks.
Carol "Adeste Fideles." &lt;18lh
At
their
special
session
on
TuesPENNOCK
HOSPITAL.
of Constantine also survives. Mr. as he had previously received.
Is not well. They have moved to
Century).
Hubbard was an automobile sales- - The board is getting quite con­ I During the past week girls were
9444 Elmhurst, Detroit, where they
Sermon—8U Luke. 3:40. "And the
passed
suitable resolutions
-- F
----------------------------man for a Stiirglj firm. Funeral_____________________
cerned about „
dog* and the large ex- bom to the following parents: Mr. child grew and waxed strong and
will be glad to sec their friends — pervisors
Northville Record. Rev. Knowles 13 concerning the death of Supervisor services were held Sunday forenoon pensc they force upon the taxpayers and Mrs. Waller Powell, 1148 8 lhe grace of God was upon him."
. L. Graves
-------------of
.------------------------------------Yankee Springs, who &lt;t H;ls al thB QeUler fUncral by thclr rald5 on gb^p Th,, board Jefferson. Dec. 10; Mr. and Mrs
a brother of Mrs. John F. Goodyear A.
Hymn No. 177. "It Came Upon the
had been a member of the board for , home in Constantine, with inter-. will do something about It if they Charles R. Ackley. 910 B. Washing­
Midnight clear."
Northville Presbyterian church.
: ment In the Irving cemetery al ‘ have the necessary authority under ton at.. Dec. 20; Mr. and Mrs. Ford
many years.
Benediction and Poctlude
three o'clock.
Enz. Lake Odessa. Dec. 10.
DEATH OF MRS.
MIRANDA SISSON
Mrs. Miranda Sisson, aged 70.
widow of Hudson L. Sisson, died
early Tuesday morning at Pennock
I hospital from pneumonia and com­
' plications. Mrs. Sisson had but re­
cently moved from her farm In !rv; Ing Twp.. to Woodland where she
had purchased
home near her
! daughters. Surviving are two sons.
। Clement of Kalamazoo and Charles
of Marcellus; two daughters, Mrs.
Albert Reesor of Woodland and
Mrs. Arnold Malcolm of Lake Odes­
sa; several grandchildren; a broth1 er. Andrew Houfstattcr of Hastings
and two sisters. Mr*. Ida Palmatier
of this city and Mrs. T. B. Hart of
Allegan.
The funeral will be held on
Thursday forenoon at eleven o’clock
nt thc home of Mr. and Mrs. Al­
bert Rcesor. two miles west of
Woodland, the Rev. Fay C. Whig
officiating. Durlal will be In Irving
cemetery beside her husband a ho
Texas Seedleaa
passed away several years ago.

. zy/' A r

the dog warden is

Kirtl/C

LOCAL NEWS

Merry Christmas

Worlds of good chwr ond hoppiness in obundonce —rhot's th. Christmas -wish ws moke
for every one of you.

REED'S

DRUG STORE

Want to Buy or Sell? Try Our Want Column

We Wish You a Very
Merry Christmas

STRAND THEATRE

SUNDAY AND MONDAY, DECEMBER 27 and 28

E FOLLOWS SURPRIS
as the Country Doctor untangles
the Ilves of his 3,000 grown-up
"babies" in their dramatic home­
coming I

THESE SPECIALS GOOD UNTIL CHRISTMAS
BANANAS
Finn, Klpe

3

I*,.

4

17‘

10ib,.48c

CHRISTMAS
CANDY

STRICTLY FRESH

PURE
LARD

EGGS

,b. 25c

7

CHASE A SANBORNS

and the year's most important cast, in

eujvio

19

23k

JEAN HERSHOLT

JACK FROST
4X

PILLSBURY’S

FLOUR

DOROTHY PETERSON

2 ib.b;15‘

99'

TOM MAHAR WAS
SERIOUSLY INJURED.
Tom Mahar, well known in Has­
ting*. suffered a serious auto accldent on Wednesday about five P­
M. just what happened no one
knows but Mr. Mahar was found
by some of thc state police on the
higha-ay between .Eaton Rapids and
Rives Junction
He was uncon­
scious when found. The men took
him to a hospital In Jackson where
It was found that both jawbones
were broken, his pelvis fractured
and other .injuries, besides suffering
• from the cold, as he was not found
until Thursday.
For many years, Mr. Mahar has
been a conductor- on the Michigan
Central railroad. He Is a brother of
Mark and Michael Mahar.
’
-LEAVES HOSPITAL.
Merle Scott of Nashville, who
has been in Pennock hosnltal fol­
lowing injuries to hU hand when It
w&gt;* caught m a r r
the hospital yreterday, Dec. 23. It
was found neccswu.,
a large portion ot ins left hand at
lhe lime the Injury occurred and
last week it was amputated above
lhe wrist. He is gaining splendidly
for which hi* friends are-glad.

1

ROCHELLE HUDSON-HELEN VINSON
SUM SUMMERVILLE-ROBERT KENT

SUGAR

24’4 IJ&gt;. Sack

20‘b.

HE QUUITUPLET!

fo,25€

RINSOOR
QXYDOL

COFFEE

Ww

10 Lb. Limit

GRAPEFRUIT

10k

ur

ROYAL
GELATINE

SUGAR

2

SWEBT
POTATOES

• JOHN QUALEN

J.

1UI DINEHART •
EDWARD BROMBERS
SARA HADEN • TOM MOORE
6E0B6E ERNEST • MORIUO LDVE
Directed by Norman touroa

TOWNSEND CLUB.
The Toamsend Club entertained
the members and friends on Satur­
day night Dec. 19. at Maocabee hall,
aupper was served with Mbs.
Charles Solomon a* chairman. A
fine time was reported
; Mr. Warnock of Galeaburg was
thc speaker al lhe last meeting on
Wednesday night, Dec. 33.
1 BETTER PRICES* FOR WOO!&gt;

Fancy Roasting

GEESE

CHICKENS

PORK LOIN
ROAST

FANCY
TURKEYS

RIB END

20k

22a

19k

26k

After Christmas Values
for Saturday, December 26 Only
LIBERTY BELL

VIKING
COFFEE

SODA
CRACKERS

DEL MONTE or LIBBY'S

ARMOUR'S

RED
SALMON

PORK &amp; BEANS
Tall Can. 28 Os.

U. R. No. 1

POTATOES
PECK

19-

BARGAIN NIGHT
Tuesday, December 29

SATURDAY ONLY. JANUARY 2
— DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM —

JOAN BENNETT • CARY GRANT

RICARDO CORTEZ AND
JUNE TRAVIS IN

“WEDDING
PRESENT”

-

_

BARGAIN MATINEE SUNDAY-1 and 3 P. M.
All Other Performances, Adults 25c • Children lOc

TogethertAgoir» In

61/2k

15' a

SO GROWN-UP NOW/
THEY ENTERTAIN
YOU DEUGHTfUUYl

HEAD
LETTUCE

HOME MADE

8HULTZ OR FREEPORT

SAUSAGE

BUTTER

Large, Crisp Head*

5'..

2

a. 29'

34k

WITH GEORGE BANCROFT, CON­
RAD NACEL, GENE LOCKHART
A Paramount Picture
“Viiaphone Spotlight” - Comedy — Other
Short Subjects

“THE CASE .t
BLACK CAT”
-

FEATURE NO 2

\

“ALONG CAME

WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY, FRIDAY
Dacembar 30, 31, January 1
MATINEE new years day starting

FOODCENTER
H ASTI NOS

T/wm Prices Cowl Until Christmas

NASHVILLE

SPECIAL ATTRACTION
Joan Crawford, Clark Cable In

LOVE ON THE RUN”
Adah* W Cfflti

Children !• Cents

WITH IRENE HERVEY
CHAS. STARRETT AND
DORIS KENYON
A Warner Bros. First National Picture

I According tn market reports there
‘ is every Indication of Increased
• prices for wool, which our farmer
I readers will appreciate. It Is claimed
I that the stocks of wool in this and
I other countrlea arc much below
normal, while last year and this
| the demand tor that staple ha* been
' above normsfl.

! DEPARTURE FROM
REQULAR PROGRAM
1 At the Rotary club Monday noon
thc members were entertained by
moving pictures and talkies, two
reels of fllfn. a humorous play en| tilled "it'a Up TO You." The club
1 areatly enjoyed this change from
the usual program.
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
: Lyle T- Miner. Assyria 18
Marjoria A-Kicwr. A/uyria . v.... 18
| Everett L. Courh, City Route 4 . 22
i Dorothy A. Dickaon. Johnstown . .31
। Theodore N. ZaeUch. City 30.
Eleanor N. Muir. Kalamazoo ....23
| Gilbert E. Sattler. Grand Rapid., 20
Lorraine M. Hubbel. Middleville 21
Maurice Craig, city Route 1 ....23
Doris R. Shute. Qlty....................... la

HOPE CENTER.
, 'Charles McDermott doe* not gain
I as well a* hla many friend* would
• like to *ee him.
I Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gate*, Mr. and
; Mr*. William Ashby, Mr. and Mrs.
i Fred Ashby. Lyle and Maurice mo­
tored to Kalamazoo last Monday
evening and spent the evening with
Mrs. Inez w«rner the occasion be­
ing Mrs. Warner* twenty-third
birthday. Bhc received many Use­
ful gift* and an enjoyable time was
reported.
Mr. and Mrs Dan pajtie. Mrs
Chas. McDermott ane M«urie»
Ashby attended the dedication of
i the new Delton Rural Agricultural
school Thursday night.
Mr. and Mrs- clart A*»by and
children motored to 8«ttle Creel;
jlTidsy on business.

�TOK IUOTINGS BANNER. tmilUUfeAT, DECEMBER U. IBM
• son. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wilcox. In will not be able to return

MILO.

Sporting Items
LOCAL QUINTET
LOSES CLOSE GAME

Several from Milo attended the
idlcation of Delton Agricultural
school. Thursday evening. Delton
and surrounding territory are to be
.congratulated upon tlielr obtaining

honor of their mother’s birthday.
Mr*.
three
**“ Bradfield look
v “a ’lovely
—
tier birthday cake with yellow
trimmings and seventy yellow can­
dles. May Mr*. Wilcox enjoy many
more happy birthday occu-’lons is
Mcsdamrs Barber nhd Boyle were the wish of her many friends.
Mrs Barber and Sister spent FriKtlamarno shoppers Thursday.

Ionia Wins By Score Of 24 Jack and.her mother, Mrs Emily Bernice
Wilcox, spent Batunlay in Battle'from the
To 23 In Overtime
Creck al the home of lhe latter’s noon and
Contest

to

. No doubt Ethiopia could get
around Mr. Roosevelt's injunction
Flower returned home against American travel on her
hospital Thursday after- ships. by transferring the same IS
is. gaining nicely now, but Swiss registry.

FOOD SALE

Hastings High school basket ball
fans received the biggest thrill they
have enjoyed in three years on Fri­
day night when Ionia defeated the
local quintet on the home flair
24-23. The game ended In a lie at
22 all and a three minute overtime
was necessary to determine the wlnner.'Campbell took the ball on the
tip-off in the opening of the over­
time period and dribbled down lhe
center of lhe floor to drop the wintog basket through lhe hoop.
With a two point lead the Ionia
eftgers gained possession of the boll
and in that way kept .the Bennettmen from scoring. However a foul
shot, made by Gladstone of HasUngs, put lhe local team to position
to win the ball game should llmyi

C. THOMAS STORES GREATER HOLIDAY FOOD VALDES!
OUR STORES ARE FULL OF FRESH,’ NEW CHRISTMAS FOODS WITH A KIA*
INC VARIETY FOR THIS JOYOUS HOLI DAY — BEST QUALITY AND SUBSTAN­
TIAL SAVINGS PREVAIL — PLAN TO BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS FOODS AT C.

THOMAS STORES DURING THIS GREAT CHRISTMAS VALUE EVENT.

Hastings stepped out to an early
lead and were ahead of Ionia at the
end of the first quarter fl lo 4. The
BennetUnen slipped both offensively
and defensively in thc second frame I
and Ionia was leading tlie locals 14

STORES OPEN WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY EVENING
Men like these smartly styled Nu-

Craft collar attached shirts! They
are pre-ahrunk and color fast.

third quarter «u a Roman holiday
for both teams ns far as'Scoring
goes with Hastings outpointing the

Each in an attractive gift box.

XMAS CANDY
FANCY 100* FILLED CANDY, Assorted Flavors, lb. 15c

the last quarter and held Ionia
scoreless and tied the game up in
the last thirty sreorids of play.

Hastings can hope tor now Is a tie
for the league trophy if they ran
win their return itanje gdth Ionia
which will be played there Jan. ifl.
In last Friday night's encounter
Gladstone was top scorer with ten
of tlie 23 points the locals were able

het'

work
" *for another
"
week.
w
After spending a week^with
daughter and other rtla Uvea in
eastern part of the county Mr*
Quick returned home Friday &lt;

CHOCOLATE COVERED

WALNUTS
Give him several of these colorful
ties. They're handmade and look
much more expensive than they
really are! Popular patterns.

CHERRIES

BRAZILS, New Crop, Large
FILBERTS, Finest Quality
ALMONDS Fancy Lb. 28c PECANS
MIXED NUTS, Choice Selection

Lb. 19c
Lb. 20c
Lb. 27c
Lb. 22c

Largo Site

FROM OUR OWN FINE ASSORTMENT

J. C. PENNEY CO

MINCEMEAT

Incorpon

GOOD COFFEE
FOR CHRISTMAS DINNER

shape. Campbell. for Ionia, led* his

THOMAS SPECIAL

eight points.
The line-ups were:
Hastings .(231

SEEDLESS. 3 lbs.
25c
IDEAL SEEDED, 15 os. 10c

PINFAPPI F­
I

Campbell. r-f.

' ADORABLE

COTTON
FROCKS
Y. M. C. A. ITEMS
Tlie Charlotte Hl-Y club put on
a Christmas party for some needy
boys Tuesday. December IS. The
Olrl Reserves did the same for some
girls.
Freeport was also represented st
the state convention In Lansing, last
Tuesday as were Vermontville and
Eaton Rapids. There Were nine to
all from our area.
The World Y. M. C. A. conference
to Mrsore. India, begins January 2
with Dr. John R. Mott, president of
lhe World Alliance, presiding.
There are 4.149 Hf-Y clubs In the
U. 8. There ace 2A409 publ'c and
3 289 private high schools. There Is
a negro population of 12.000,000 to

MORGAN.

Mm. Edith Renkes of Clarksville
was the guest of her niece. Mrs.
Marcel Evalet, from Tuesday until
Friday.
Merle Husbman and Mr*. Minnie
Campbell of Lansing were week end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Clark of
Jackson visited Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Howard over’ the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Adams were
guests of hU daughter al Chesaning
Thursday

Battle Creek called on Mr. ' and
Mrs. Chas. Harrington and family
Sunday evening.
Mr. Hunter of Lowell and Albert

of Marcel Evalet last Monday.
Mrs. Nellie Wolf entertained com­
pany from Battle Greek and Grand
Rapids Sunday.

lllkni

I

LIbi

HAWAIIAN

CAN

SLICED PINEAPPLE, No. 1 Can
FANCY CRUSHED PINEAPPLE, No. 2 Can
HALF SLICE Pineapple, punch bowl style, No. 2 can 16c

SHRIMP «Ti
TUNA FISH S
CRABMEAT
ANCHOVIES

30c

TRIPOINT — FRESH. CREAMY

Salad Dressing s. 27

BISQUICK
Bake* BJaeoito

SURESET=e4 15
FRUITS FOR SALAD, Miracle No. 1 Can
FRUIT COCKTAIL, Libby's No. 1 Can
PEAS, Green Giant, Big, Tender, Can
ASPARAGUS, Cut Green Tips, No. 2 Can
SWEET POTATOES, Vacuum Packed
NIBLETS CORN, Famous Whole Kernel Corn,

The Eaton Rapids Hl-Y club had
two Alblfin college students at their
meeting last week, who acted as
leaders In-the discussion of vital
questions. Their leader. Mr. Moore,
went after the students and took

Hastings Hl-Y club has a vaca­
tion party for roller skating set up
at Hickory Comers, next week
Rev. Maylan Jones of the Has­
tings Methodist church, spoke to
the Triangle club about Christ mas,
Wednesday evening at their regular
meeting at the home of Mr. and
Mr*. C. F. Angell.
C. F Angell assisted to the pro­
gram with the Middleville Hl-Y
Monday evening at the high school
Victor Blaine of Battle Creek will
apeak to the Barry Cdunty ministers
al their monthly church meeting.
January S. at lhe Hasting* U. R.
church.
■ Merry Christmas to you all I

CRANBERRY
SAUCE RffU

17c
15c
17c
19c
Can 13c
Can 14c

Largs Qf|«

CAMPBELL'S
TOMATO JUICE

SHEFFORD*S

CHEESE

SUNKIST SEEDLESS

M ACC
UltMllVlEiO
GIVE HIM ■

GENTRY

GLOVES
He'll be delighted with these lined
Gentry dresa gloves of fine Capeskin.
In either snap or wrist strap styles!
Others in pig-grain Capeskin
. un­
lined, slipon style! A grand gift that
will please any man!

rri
fry
VLlaLIl
I

Finest California

LargeSixe Navel

fresh

BAKER'S PREMIUM

CHOCOLATE j £ 1
BUNCH

CRISP HEARTS

CRANBERRIES ^coo
TANGERINES Kin”,5,™'
SWEET POTATOES I™

SQUASH

DOZ.

JELLY

CHERRIES loV.IT
20c
MUSHROOMS 4 &amp;, 27c

DOZ.

PIMIENTOS

LBS.

FANCY HUBBARDS

GRAPES Sa£ 10c | RADISHES 2 -

2

Lbs. Glint
Ydtew

Tip Tag Ftpew*. IS

OLIVES B
PICKLES SWEET, SOUR AND MIXED
PURE PRESERVES RASPBERRY

QUART JAR

CANADA D

16 OZ.
JAR

C.THOMAS STORES
I2B WEST STATE STREET

HASTINGS MICH.

LUX

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THE COUNTY—
TRAM AT HOME

le. lh» Spin, of • Comrauaic-

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

SHOES TO FILL!

Editorials

'Round About Town
Hew to the line; let the qulpe
fall where they may I,

A MERRY CHRISTMAS.

By Observing Tommy.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1936

Public Forum
headed Views and Opinions George
AveriU states. "It’s not a time to
speculate on who shall be the titular
head of the party." is lhe republican
party questiontnk who shall be Its

When republican party leaders
with their retinues can forget per­
sonal ambitions; personal fear of
reprisals; or fear of national dis­
aster they will follow thc banner of
lhe man who has not compromised
in his battle for democracy; who
bears in his soul the scars of that
battle fought for the tenets of the
Frank Andrus, they tell me. got republican faith sublimated to thc
many good pointers from the Ro­ point of American idealism: a faith
that questions not result to much
tary program Monday.
ns the obligation under Almighty
One of tlie town s young business­ God to fight to a finish.
Mary E. Isham.
men. I sec. is ^porting a new
Christinas trade must have
pretty good.
Hastings. Michigan.

crumbled; heroic figures
have
flamed brilliantly lo the firmament

comparative oblivion of history. Yet
the spirit in which these words are
spoken has not changed. Prom
century to century they have aignlfied the same kindliness, good
will, optimism and unselfishness
The spirit which prompted these
words is one of tlie uncliangrabla
factors in a world that is constantly ,
shifting

QAY STREETS

Docs. Lock wood. Wooton and

Car't you bur up opposition to the
abandonment of the C. K At B or
better yet help start a movement to
try to induce a competing Une to
The Great White Way, I
buy it? Since lhe N. Y. Central took
stand, was no less gay because of it
jt over we have had decreasing serv.
their presence.
la
Ice on a Une that at one time was
among the best paying roads of Uie
| Can think of no better chaperon
1 for such an expedition than Dr.
Nothing can so hasten die flay of
Robert Bruce Harknera.
government ownership as Urn way
In wnich thc railroads ore treating
Understand that Dutch Houvcnalr local needs. The only train that
and Fred Bechtel like to fi..!i make local stops on the road from
Grand Bap! !i to Detroit goes
through lhe Ice. )
through In the night when decent
.
They had good luck. loo. a dozen ixtople are aslren.
Sincerely yours.
beauties that woujd grace any fryE. Davenport.
tr.g pan.

tire spirit in ths air this Christmas

villages have put forth a special efpropriaU manner. A drive through ’
the state reveals many a “main
street" aglow with colored lights
and festooned with ornamented

moment are good and this fact
seems to have stimulated special ef­
fort to celebrate the Christmas

HAOTINGB’ CAROLERS.
Foctunauly Um custom of carol­
ling has not been entirely lost. The
group of high school students who ’
trooped about Uic streets Monday
evening singing carols before homes1 *

But alas, as lhe famed tragedians

'iwas not to be!
. ■ ■ ■
-

Wallace Grocery and Feeds

Hatlingt High School

Activities

.

The vllllan of our ditty now ap­
pears In the disarming guise of the ] ,,
,
,
hound dog Dutch and Fred had tak -1 Members of the Future Farmers
cn along for company.
I
America and lhe Home Econorn• • •
J If' chibs held a parity at thc High
i But in these troubled times one ’ schqol Thursday evening. Dec. 17. •
, never knows who Is friend, who Ls i
• . • •
extremely popular in Sixteenth Cen-1
foe; who true, who is false.
I Several dolls have been dressedVC41.TII low. H&gt;n». f
tury England and survived even the
...
• • •
i by Miss Carters Sewing and Home
efforts of the Puritans to stamp out W£. AOg NOT JN A '
thine lost; honor lost. |
It seems that Dutch and Fred Economics club girls. These will be
CHRISTMAS 23 YEARS AGO.
much lost: courage i
this Ihorouxhly enjoyable custom.
“
POSITION TO SNEER
stopped at a restaurant en route . distributed to needy children.
,
Tlie oratorio "Hcly City” wa’, home to take on a bit-of provender.!
lost, all lost.—Goethe. L
. . .
The chrlstmas-srason would not b"
..Wh)U b Uu.
vhe 3,.,.^
qiven by ’a chorus of 200 voice., leiivlng hound dog in tlie car to’ Mr. wm T. Wollacc was In town
complete without such carols ax Empire jyiytnj millions cf dollars
Thu: da., ■ ’.enir" st the M-ihodttt i'uard the l.-h.
irec-nlly and took part in thc
“Hark. The Harald Angela Sing" annually to maintain a royal famchui &lt; h under the direction uf Mrs.
'
' Teachers’ Carol Service. Sunday.
: !em —
•
But as thing*, turned oui-.hoiind
-O pw. TWB « B.tokb.m.- ud
'
Masons have been compelled to dog wax hungry, al-.o-posyfbly a bi!
otbey tuneful old melodics.
| American im, n hard time under-,
srop work on the new high school dbgruntkd. too. at belnAle’ft be­
—-------- -- ----------------------standing it all. This Kmg business.1
The library is a busy place these
bulldujg bccaU’i* cf the very cold hind In the cold.
)
j days with freshmen and lophomores
A PERPETUAL PROBLEM.
the royal family, thc spiritual and
choosing their declamations.
Not a icarcUy of gold but loo financial tribute paid-all that tt
J0.1l C. I'.ixham wni almost
However, hound dog was never
much gold U now a dan«er that is''0* bun5, »&lt;
American
unanimously re-elected mastiv ot one lo sulk. Finding nothing better
r.ndnw
: “mmentator can be believrd,
the state grange at the annual .v
The Chorus b studying music apto do than v.*
cat ,„**.
fish, «*e
tlie u«,
fish -«v
were
causing Washmgton officials worry.
^eJ1 maibe jt
Bul who are Wf
• meeting of that organization in cAtety—a-|th only a mess of bones prcclatlon under Mr. Lowers ihA too rapid importation of foreign'In this country to point a Anger of,
, -Lansing
ini’ u&lt; -k...
-------- -- —
nlWf n fCW miscellaneous pieces of struction.
'TRAFFIC
statistics
show
that
capital might very easily start a , scom? Whit have we just finished ।
• Red Cross Christmas acais
jitcatorlal anatomy left stream!
’ * *
mo s t accidents occur on &gt;' nnu,
credit Inflation that could get out '&lt;loln&lt;? According to the'last reports 1
now belnj:
iwin.- sold In
in eve™
every part
.v*rt nf
of i^ab(nil for
and Du{£h-।
An-assembly was held last Friday
we s*'r- thc
Republican
party
spentto build up straight sections of read and
county.
• • •
i when recognition was given the dcof control. Uncontrolled .. prosperity
। about
W-ooojx»
trying
not on curves.. an argument
Tommy cannot repeal here The'
and basket ball teams.
can be just as disastrous as extreme M Kansas governor so that he would against following lhe r.traighl ' CHRISTMAS 30 YEARS
rc.o. flow of words and thoughts which.
,
,
’
depression since the one is an open gain the stature of presidential, and narrow
. Mi . P M. Lamole and
poured forth from thc tongues and i A lovely Christmas tree ho* been
road to the other. Il is when times I ^mber. The Democrat* spent about,
minds of the two fishermen—sutfici •M&gt;t UP 1J* 1,lc tower hall of the High
। half
*%«ir that
■*««, amount to
,A promote ,u■
I
the
Elephant
Became
drunk
from
, Tlmrsday nt the’ hpmc
Mrs. to say. ll was a matt unclasslcal -^’bool. and two smaller ones, gayare good and business booming that1
j candidacy of a man who was al­
whisky given him to slop pain. ; Lanibie on W. Cenjef St.
cusabig.
J decorate
..........
cly lighted,
each of *the
a maximum amount ot study should' ready a national hero.
That night he probably saw I Mrs, Royce R^rf.e of Coats Grove
front entrances. The Central build"Yes. butklhal is different." you
be given to conditions of the near
I was thc vlctinybf a terrible accident
The only undisturbed member of has a tree over its main door, and
future.
Eaturday rffkrnoon when her cloth- MW
wna hound
,1UUMU dog.
uu# His
nw tummy several of the rooms have their own
the trio was
It IS different. It is our system.
University of California re­
ing c^ugbtrfircwhlie
tclng fllled
flsil lie
he Ctuicu
curlcd up
up IrxivldUAl Christmas trees.
-- ------- — -rne
— was
----- --trying
- - • bvuig
filku wlth
with uaii,
It is 4 system built on thc premises
ports that women write more
lard. .She
It was
was severely burned and and went
wenl t0
l0
.
AN INFLUENCE FOR GOOD.
that we shall look for a new leader
dietL
r__jut
--------------7 o’clock
- *that
—------evening.
j—
,----------------easily than men but usually not
Tlie Journalism class Is working
Regardless of religious belief, ev­ •very four years. Not only do we cx.
.Trappers
report
tncre
are
more
rn special features for the Fortnight
as interestingly.
Still. Uicir
ruDDCrs rcpor. there
mure DE.SCRIBEB "CHRISTMAS
eryone In tlie Christian world ap­
... .i.m' .i.iink
.,_u In
- ........
.. .........
.
TIME
DBNMABKLmtt'i.-aL!?• lakes
mid
diaries aren't bad.
Annual.
Tstream of this county this sc non1
preciates what a tremendous in flu Artielse st Marine la
following
poem
about
"Christ­
re erlreirU Mr their jnt
-i-tlian tor-many years past.
I: The
- ------­
A&gt;l students have been enrolled
. ..
’
.
* orwuni;
—J
Time
Dcr.rncric
111 bq
Jm»io
na7““n'7 represses our ova
”■ ! cabulary of 7000 lo M^OOO
The Mlsw-s Harriet and Erinlnn m,u
1™ in
*« De
£m“rk„’’ was com- fy thc coming seuurslnr*.
by the Pope living in semi-retire-1IL
1 opiweas.
—_________1____________________
word*; those used most.’.tfne is ‘ Goodyear nrtlit’if home trim;'V;.- *r t,ol
jxncd
*’d bv
by-- Mrs. R,,,h
Ruth Bry an Rohde j
ment at Vatican city. He has no
'------'
' ' "
and first was used on a Christmas
I
----7
—
7
-----------------married
being
nrobablv
“
yes
”
College.
Poughkeepsie.
New
York.
Several olunu'l navi been visiting t
visible kingdom, no armies, navies' P^t OI
one
man
be lhe bWdnws.
business, so-1
so- “J™*- '*‘n«
» m
*n, to
°*
f ri&lt;tly ugnl for the lioltd i.
, card. The ship referred to Is tho the High sciiool Uil&gt; seek while
I cial and
—'
or air fleets, yet he rules over
*"'* spiritual
*"*"'* ' leader of our • ona aoar’
...
one in which she crossed to Den- home from college.
■
government—
—we
we expect
expect mm
him to
to be
be
.
....
~ 'l government
CHRISTMAS
40
YEARS
AGO.
in»rk.
Il
carries
a
fir
tree
on
its
far flung realm of people through a wl of national herb. Sometimes ‘
An Ohioan tyi'd the same um­
Invfiotim.-. have been issu-d by
nnd as 11 steams into port Ls
Double casts have been chosen for
brella for 23 ycara
Probably I the band fcr a select party .at tin- ’n&lt;Jl
the respect and admiration people we do not. get all those qualities in
band* playditg Cluutnias lhe operetta "Ask the Professor."
» krarf« tor, rw
1■
hymns.
hl* detachment from the ordinary! ,
Brttbh ayatem sets asidefone!
----- ‘—■---------------------Services at Emmanuel churely/on M’hen it’s Christmas lime in
The Christmas assembly was held
Den­ Tuesday morning in chaigc of tiie ,
, .^ . tamiiy
family io
to per:arm
perform me
thc will
social runcfunc-'
noiiumi vni.bhu&lt;
Christmas Day Will be holy com­ T
pouUcal squabbles of mankind and .40ns and MU4jy lhttee who demand
mark.
munion at 7 JO; morninu prayer Thc little stars ham; tow.
EngiUli department. Mis* Robaon:
tils character.
cliaraclcr.
his
pomp, hero-worship and fanfare .
!
and
sermon
at
10
with
mu.-tz
by
the
chairman.
Mr. Gamer’s cImm opened i
- L--- 1 ■l"1
i
1 .
b
-■ Tlie
Amrrtrin Kvnfem
And silver nil the roof-tops,
The American
system liolds a presi­ .
Ute program with a group o&lt; 1
I vented choir.
' And twinkle on the snow
dential campatitn every.four yeaK
slot machines
UlirLXma* carols; followed by the I
What u the fate of Uie slot ma­ tn ahleh they make a lot of bfol. CHRISTMAS 50 YEARS AGO.
And in the twilit harbor.
reading of St Luke’s story of Uic j
kh claims and countcr-claimo/Both
Thc M. E Sunday school will hold Where ice is forming fa*t,
Christ child by WHm&gt; Royer with
chine racket in thb slate to be?
j nations pay uvriuiir
liberally iur
for njrsc
Uy'Sc nnicon- i
. a Christmas tree service a’, tlie A ship comes steaming into port.
violin obligato. Four original poems ’
Each dbw admlnutxatton for the | cesslons-but both will Jkely con’-.
j church. Friday evening.
With a fire-tree at ILs mast.
by the English class were read, and
—
—
-----------------------1
—
humXh
nature
is
past several yaars ha* promuod lo j Hnue so long as hi
। While on their way to Lowell SatRutli Hathaway gave the Story of
And
over
narrow
street
'do something about It,” but. as In wh,t ,l *&gt;• And&gt; InctoMnally.
1 ‘
human
"At Oirulmaj |&lt;ay j'J wAi good rliwu | urday Mesdnincs Geo. Baker and
lhe Other Wise Man. An Interesting ’
mdeh lhe same.on’ for Chrutinai cciiwf but OttCi a year." .Parks of Freeport, attempted'to Tlie evergreens hang high.
u» »»or to.
I
There s a ChrUtnm tree at Raad- and novel part of lhe proftram was
rf Atlantic ocean —i
• jsaas a loaded wagon when the roll
DECEMBER
‘ Santa Claus Is coming tn Town” I
&lt;«*•■
' Schuyler Man ill. Clinton- County'
hus
24—South Citolm* iuu&lt;* •
thev were driving became unmxnsung by Phyllis Newton During me ,
Only a uttle more than a year ago.; RepublicsnXi L
I
Hl INilM.i.oo ol fod«p«n4- I agcahie and tipped buggy and ociong gifts were distributed to ap-.
XV-Q
erxr. 1SW.
when Harry Toy was attorney gen-1
cupanls into lhe ditch. Mrs. Baker A thousand bearded elfin-men.
prepriate members of lhe audience
; suffered a sprained ankle and Mrs. With pointed ceps and red.
Including Mr. VanBusktrk and oth-!
; Parks a fractured collar bone.
Will bring the Christmas presents.
verge of forcing a thowetown. After!
rrs. The n.wmbly closed with "Si­
' BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
‘ We were In Grand Rapids Satur- When children are in bed.
lent Night ’ played on Che bell lyre
Mr. Toy waa "kicked up" -into the?
। day forenoon bul saw no such crowd There’s-an alnjond in the porridge
'Duty then u the eubltme.ri word.
by Evelyn Hunt.
supreme court, however,
on any street there as on our Main
sytr I in our language. Do your duty in
Which *he wooden spoons will share.
street Saturday afternoon
and all things. You cannot do more. You
pctaor quashed further i
Chrr.tmas vacation began Wed- j
Ana oh. tlie special present.
lhon
■
should
never
wish
to
do
lot..-Robneeds
v. Dec. 23 and !a.4s until'
the subject was dropped,
For thc one who finds it there.
"WHATEVER WE SAT —
Jan. 4
*
j
nothing has been donj&gt;
There
..
roasted
goose
in
plenty
। it tt not only for chllaccn,
•nt aa incubetae. Itta
‘You would not tliink ahv duty
machine racket is prqbab!
I A3 so many jicople say.
Where the hearth-fire is aglow.
Merry chnsttnas and Happy 1
small, if you yourself were great."—
1 But a definite pause in the hurrying Ana candles on the window alii.
ing 4$ rigorously g« w»r.
has also' Oeor»e &gt;»&lt;d°ru!d
' year.
Shine out upon live snow.
i one brief Remembering Day;
promised "Uy tto gotncttilng" about
"Whatever tt is your duty to do
sL*HMn« I Not only gay tinsel and holly.
T|i% ciicavas of oats are hung.
jBUsratttet- fJilt-sjaU has forces at &gt;** can do without harm to your-1
K F. IF.
urderad si P«oor»i 1 Chill winds and a flurry bf snow.
gral4,.U| b;rd&amp; Mn ujij’ihe’unu
its command strong enough to bring **V-’
Wary Baker Eddy.
..
BU. to. turn oi . *e&gt; to to.
o! whJ„ chruun “
When Christmas hymns arc aing
I No meeting of Leo A. Miller Post
this illegal business under-control. I "Knowledge 't*‘ a rieep which’few
I
a dream
And
light*
will
gleam
and
sparkle.
u mV* i A* buck in lhe past we gn.
if tt were attacked in a determined may climb, while duty is’- a path^
1 thU week. Next meeting. Thursday,
* say of Bug*le. Ilia
• ■
As the bells of Christmas ring
‘ January 7.. 1837.
| The dream has color and texture.
manner. Bui somehow, good resolves which 4II may tread.’—William
lu thc cottage of tlie peasant.
Morris.
ar
I The love in your mother * eyes.
and promises hare folded up and
. And thc palace of the King.
Cord parties for the roming win- .
fluietly sneaked away when they
,
__
v 19 more de‘,nie“vp ,hao; VVay
' The Mcret sliiiSe'surprt*’
Th" Air Raid precautions Depart- ter were discussed at our last nunt- ‘
game face to face with tills racket
nt &lt;h- facial.I.
—
ment oTttwBrttWi
Home b£c«."c&gt;ri
Wc cx»crt &lt;»
l’w,n k0*0*
&gt;' world can
™ be just tu gay
,n lhe
thP ;
OlmANINGa.
|I
That thc
Poaslbly Mr. Murphy will prove an
U‘5J U 80011 ln
Rantzcd about a year ago, ha* Loen I,n * sh0'5 tUne' Morc about UieD‘ ■
■-------- ;--e—” ——I $789,000,000
paid out in gaao-1
issuing Information to inhabitants InCxt *e”.
i
exception to tne
the rule,
rule. Tt
reported'
mowKion
it is renortea
__
. .
।
"Human progress is largely a rec-’ . ?e
U tf. motor-!
fore
and prescribing precautions agalnat
'
that he handled the slot machine
On the morning of Christmas Day! gax attacks. The department rec-: Hart',d DePriesUr. Past Comord of overcoming difficulties ' -Al- i
a,&gt; tln,r high’ situation adequately while he was
omnwnds'that every hnnbhojdrr mander of Post 56S. Battle Crock,
•.
iis;.0?!’
_
‘
।
gnaypr of Detroit. If he succeeds
have
a
refuse
room
which
mav
bo
I
*
’
”
*
8
“
M
t*
DM
Tliuraday
eve
­
Tne holly, the horns, or the snow.
"God never imposes a duty with-1?”1 ■hwys v» ft'
. :udi*y sealed against gas attacfcJ. n5's'
Ve,fl about thc meeting
where other governors Have failed.
a'r-’iim for your ,.The
%l9’ivi*
jon u*
of stable and WAV*.
oxer.—
—
inc Vto
---------------- ------------------- ----'there Monday night at which Oen.
ilwav station.
’ And
- • a Boy born 'long
— ago.
—
It »yi do no harm to Ina political W^griW lune to do it.’ -John. mousy at the ntlwi
The Uend to hiking, long populu i Gmedlry Butler was guest of honor,
It ’a af! the Jove ifid the laughter
future.
------------- । in the Europe*})
• Undunmid b&gt;- our raxes and fears.
1»5 ,w v,ry up! ~£rnms; niUltanzM tones *iAnd oul iwy
the Continent. Is now evident in the
Our Cliristmas tree program will
A signing of Ion that we may not
A British enthusiast tt prompting
K &lt;. ,oni?n’ S*1* ^“ynent on plainly. TWrc the .one* full of »olUluuiu oroxs. hivetv are mure man ' b* fWished this 'r’*lr ""d we thank
forget
her vuluto New York City)
Idlers.
3 000 hiking clubs in the country.
th®9* *ho paUprilzod ua.
tor
aeum T&gt;r h*«
In these adult diflliui’, year*.
in which tapers were burning, are
1
keeping alive a custom which dates I &lt;-

Try os w* moy to recite some fancy
lingo, it’i no use . . . but to one and
all. we wish you a Merry Christmas.

---------------------------------—a mem n a n —Myaai

and Opinions; |
What Others Say

Backward Glances;
Bits of Yesterday

A Quotation

nt ecstvci

or. Ie;,—

__ ,

. .

.

ynf

.

^runtbs of Wisdom

Nuu-t

of Our World

rars oitoAXTNoa

- be SflKl rw know. Id han much
•T*«
pt
tn a home’—Hirdware * .!!!!.'«
mi.

&lt;

«*“"' &lt;!»» Ui*l rnrrr *W. TIB Iralli U Uli': BtUlp-r — &gt;«r.

~

*12.!°

rfcaorttk u. BUuuu.

।

p-r«n. nnplo^d In BrK- We wo -re ehlklren-KXi Cl.tblnu*
e-.eTreewSM ter;
D.y.
—New York Times.

counuy.

“■"“I CIUHUt U&gt;
The rmuwa, hM rmM u.
— • «. ,owr Duneun from uw veteran* 8
IV U JOWd m the Ulgl JTnsinLatR. *&gt;—i------- —•
C.T— :
and til Brazil.

We pouse in our.efforts to render service
•to wish you o very Merry Christmas.

WATERS CLOTHES SHOP

Gift Values
At the REXALL STORE
LAST DAY SELECTIONS AND AT A
PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD TO PAY.

Box Stationery ...19c to $1.00
Cigars, Christmas wrapped, 50c Gilbert Chocolatesto $1-00
Chocolate Creams, 1-5 lbs., 49c Fountain Pens25c to $5.00
Powder &amp; Rouge compacts, 35c Men’s Purses &amp; Billfolds, 25c to

$4.50
$1.98

$2.50
$3.50

3 DAY DRUG SPECIALS for Thundoy,
Friday and Saturday. 55c Pond*' Cream* .
25c Kotex, box of 12
25c Ex - Lax
50c Klaonex, 500 iheets
35c Bromo Quinine
Old fariiioned Horehound
Drope, I lb. bag 19c
35c Vick's Yapo Rub ..23c
60c Alka Seltxer49c

CARVETH

STEBBINS

THE REXALL STORE
Goods Delivered

.......... ....................-

—

7-

•

Phone 2131

. ■

- -r—

WANT to BUY? TRY the WANT COLUMN

�m

■abttngb bannu. Thursday. DxcvMvn u.

imc

Mr*. Anna--------------------------Coleman. Mrs
FREEPORT. '
the dedicatory addraee using as FAMING OF HAS­
---------------.....
NORTBWEBT nOBNAJPFLK.
----- - ------------------------------------------------------- ---in
-------SSs ~ ।
TINGS PIONEER
: hU subject
"Education
General."
-------------------------------------------Earlier publication thl* week Peebles, Mr and Mr*. Howard Col*- . Mr. and Mr*. Wayne Kerm
Education t* the door to opportunity.. with the pawing of Mrs. Anna ! necessitate* our sending our lel- man and daughter of Grand Rap-1 orc the parent* of
ll mu*t be something functioning in Dana Mason Wednesday. Dec. Id. ter a day earlier. Which account*
the Uvea of our gtrU and boy*. De- another of the longtime resident* Of for any omissions
preaslon ha* taught Uw le&amp;ton that n^ungs Is taken from that small
Tlw. Chrutma* program of lhe Mrs. O. R Lightfoot Iasi Wedne*t Uhe-d seven pounds and thirteen '•c ,n
gaining wealth is not th* only number now remaining -who were u. B Sunday School will be held a’
means of education Many good bom here In th* first twenty year*: the” church on ThUrtdav evening of . Miss Wilma Wieland is now era­
We extend our sympathy to Mrs : East
Dr.
WHI
a
II
in
rtfl*.
—
/.'.tv
1
*
I
'
thoughts wer* left by
EUloU
of the city'* beginning*,
, ployed In Grand Rapids.
. thl* week.
0hc WM
*co'nd dau«1»ttr of 1 Mr* B- SUmel. Mr*. Rote MledenM«k«y family moved last cr, Scott schcrwood. who died Sun-1 Middlevilla
, remark* by th* chairman and th* i
and Mra Jwne&gt; p
JAn. dorf an£ ^g_
ofcrena! Wednesday from the former Geo. day Dec. 13, al her home.
i na M. Robinson) and was bom Aug.. Rapid* were guests of Mr and Mr* 18m*Uur house in th* ea*t part of
' loan to th* Ira Blough house.
of Dutton spent Wednesday with Mr*.
Among those from Freeport wh*'
Mr» ^7^*
reason to be proud of thc fact that be alio,
_______
_..
of Mr. and Mr*. W, H. Olney onj were ehopping In Hastings lut »»d «&lt;m. 8t*FW‘. and M. K. Light­ arid wife. We are glad to report Mr. trtP*
wo have one of lhe best, most com- In the front of the school yard and And now everyone Is happy that 1
Broadway. In 1800 when four years.
----------------------—
ton: Mr and Mra, lamp 4W. w
ol Oraud ---Hapto
Umudod Um Bcnawa belter at this writing. . i
pletc and fully equipped school, given by Mr*. M. J. Oros* In mem- we-have such a nice place for edu- of age she moved across lhe street today
„ .k ..
... ’ d...
M
w ao.c.h’ CaatoMr
funeral
of Mr*. V*
O. D
R. V'oHffaziL
Lightfoot !■«!
Iasi
..
..........
-&gt; 1 nt
bulldlngs in thc stale. That was cry of the late Dr. M. J. Cros*.
1 cational purposes.
with her parent* Into lhe house
j*;and Ivan Roush’ Wednesday.- ------------The latter
y. Theremained
Utter remained Freeman had to have an operation i John
the statement made by contraotor j The chairman then proceeded to
Punch wm served in the home bum by her father on tlie corner of
M™ M‘ r&gt; “A*.... . . until Sunday with
«'•»&gt; Ida brother.
for appendicitis thia week. ,
. th-------L. J. Lalyd In his presentation introduce the guest* sealed on the' economics room by girls of thc Hlfh Breton.? «M Wn&lt; CreWr. th.
M&gt;. "M M“
Vicar Wren and 14*Whtar?*Rob«rtZ ^wara^HaittoM donfa.
Mr. and
Ltrs Mrs.
Roy MaurUa
Smith ofThom-,
Cale-i, bls
nt brother ui Grand^uplta*01
I
while
clipboard
house
with
Mr. and
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Victor
Sisson
and
speech st the dedication Thursday platform who were as follows. Mr. ‘ school.
l.hllr claiMud r.olua with jroan
daujmer BoOrrta. tore Santo
. .. . so .familiar to all ___
r j__ ■ - of Hinns.
«i WnVil.i
evening.
Bingham from the PWA office in1
—
J
Lulu
"'” ’
E Werunan. —
reporter.
—. blinds
residents
dinner slinala
guests of Ml
Miss
Mabk Ql.im
SlMon
la" prjday.
•» ol Galesburg were Bunday guest..
Henry Kidder U alill confined to
This beautiful new building, lo- . Detroit: Major Brent. State Dlrec.
’
^
erP
p
A
Thomas
was
m
HuUnn
Verne
Thoma*
and
his bed and under Cha doctor’s cure
£ ^"arly mwried Ufe. she attended the Teachers’ Carol ServP A. Thomas was in Hasting*
cated on M-4J al lhe corner where 1 tor of PWA; Dr. Eugene B. Elliott.'
Birge.
Willard Kidder, the teacher, and '
the Prairieville'road connects with, Supt. of Public Instruction; Messrs I o/Y/^r Jr ri/rjV'TQ haa lived ever slnce-a home she'ic-’ «t Central auditorium, and in on busincssSalurday..
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Kenyon and j his pupils are
'
'
' * '
M-43 Just north of the village of R” O.
"
-------- ---------------------------------------Renton.
Adalbert Sager. OULsl/LLi Ej r JD2V 1 O.haa dearly loved and of which she the evening attended the program ।
Tocher.' Cl.rWOU.,
, s“ a,, ,;,h u„ ■£„ , ™
iwL
(has
seemed a
a very
very part.
pari.
i At t,lc — E
|,..------------- Ih.'
Homer Aldrich. Henry Moorhus and I
’
lias seemed
- - church.
— - ------—— -------- spenv ouJiuny will) I
tional purposes on Thuraday eve­ George Eddy as present members ot
rtnrnl service
n-rvlee at
nt Central auditorium oYother
__ _Dave
___ Benawa.
_____
night. DtC 24
"
Mr and Mr* P A. Thomas vUlt- . Carol
| Mrs. Maron’s memories of life tn
the school board; Dr. Henry Otto
CHRISTMAS PARTY.
ning, December 17.
.
covwco a
« wide
wiuc span of
Marlon Clem home at at Hastings Bunday afternoon were
-■
Imasunxs
Hastings covered
Mrs.
McCaul
of Northeas*
1
Wn.Wiseman and her grandson.
Tlie t^ir.ty-criwenly-one sirgirl* emricyrd
employed =
at‘-•,
. - Tnrec time* had she seen Carlton Center last week Monday Mr and Mr*. Fred Tabtercr. Mr apple is staying w
At 8:30 P. M. the building was representing the Kellogg • Founds-1 Th;
with. Mrs.
1. iw
Wm Perry, arc slaying tn her old home
ue office
offltt of the Windstorm Co.
Co enen- ;tijrough
uuou
„n the .
streets
UVCWI ol and Wednesday
-- ------------ - -------and-----on Tuesday ------------------------------and Mrs. Nell Newton.
—■—
Daniel
7—- -Fol- , Kjpkey this winter.
opened for everyone'* inspection, tho tfon-M member* of the faculty the
.. .
..
.
......
... war&gt;
____ Uj
... were guests
niiA.fc nt
InVin UnIn
n &gt;. It*.
Ialu
ln
at the John
Helnzleman
1U. VemOn
Vernon NeWtOn
Newton Slid
and tllC
thc M1SM.-S
Misses
schbol atudents acting as were Mr*. Lettie Kahler, first grade, joyed their annual Christmas party I d
country and tuex* were Imtne al Lake Odessa.
Donna Helrlgle and Pearl Follls.
guide* lo aiiow people through and Mrs. Ella Roger*, second and third Tuesday evening at tlie home of I !Jhlch
to explain the detail*.
CTrto’ J,0"11’1 M«. Morrt* Fender on South Jeffer- mv0lred. She had seen tha tallow; A meeting of those interested In
anurMWEAT Varlton
’f
.FTe?.‘x&gt;.rl..F,rf..Depar?nt?lJ?,s
Mr^nd Mn“£rd Ens i6rpha
Al 8 o’clock the auditorium, which
------ r
------------ .T—_
............... ,
... cancu* ana xcrotcnc lamp age
me rreepori rirc Department nas, Mr ,nrf xfr. rv,r(i rn, lOrnha
‘
»
X
n&lt;
’
"wi
Ra
?r
Wl
*m!wski.
there
was
the
exchange
of
Bdt&amp;'
hnd
w
jt
n(
.
fW&lt;
j
the
coming
of
the
been
called
for
this
week
Monday
n’uck) of north Woodland are h»DIs also used as a gymnasium and
! W’d *&gt;nglng
Christmas carols. , nr8t ral]road. and had teen the evening at the Council room. Stare py over the arrival ofa baby-.girl
has a seating capacity of 700. was Hnme E^nurh^h* Uta
murt* on 7
comfort* and convenience* of our Fue Marshall Charles Lane. of ^,rn Sunday morning at Pennwk
nearly Ailed with people who had
NO- 7.
Mflgner, Latin.
Latin, French.
Prcnch. English;
English, I
CIRCLE NO.
'' '
already expressed many lime* their,. Magner.
' mn/fam
modern Ufa
life oxlahllKhed
established. Her
Her alrlgirl- nhirlntl*
charlotte i* &lt;»Yn«irrM
expected tn
lo lw»
be nrM&gt;n&lt;
present. .....
hOjpita|.
| Mr. R, b Shealhelm. shop-matheappreciative sentiment*. ’
, Methodist L- A. 8- Circle No. 7 hood wa= a particularly happy one.
new|y elected officers of the
Mr.
Mr. and
and Mrs.
Mrs. O.
O N
N Landon
Landon and
and
By this time member* of th* ■ mallcs; Mr. R. F. Dunnavan. music.
was entertained by Mr*. Leroy Pus- Full of life and good spirit*. *hc loca( Mason|C lodge are being In- Mrs. Anna Buck were in Bedford
_
school board, the faculty, thc archi­ social science; Mr. W. J. Dud dies. j ter on Thursday * evening, wllh
participated ______________
In the parties, lhe en- &gt; s;an-d this Monday evening. The —
’
■
Br7oUows’w‘“j£ Ken Thursday on business.
tect, thc general contractor, to­ Barnum "^SkSture 1 Fr^d’ tJfTrev ! “^V-elghr in attendance.’’’Dessert; urtimmenu and Simple, wholesome I
Mrs. Henry Williams. Geraldine
w“ *rved ,0U0Wed ** ‘ ChrUl’ Ple“ure' lh* “n’e
Braendlw;B W. Dee Bryant; J. W..
gether with several other honored S^rXnThSI^- l
and Lawton spent Thursday In
am
.. . ..
.
_
guests to the number of about 35 government inspector. L. J. aarvts.
home being a popular nainarimgathering Alvln
Bc^y;
a.’ _
D. __
w. w. Bough­ .Grand Rapids.
had seated themselves on the plat­ architect, L- J- Laird, general con-. p&gt;Arj for fliiuw &gt; Christinas hmke- place for all the younger crowd.
,Mr. j p
Joc gage; treasurer.
tractor;
Rev.
Ralph
Balas,
poster
*
B
unnsunas
oasse.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McOuirk
form. which 1* also a beautiful pari
She attended school in the wooden ' Percy Rosser; secretary. J. E Bab- and daughters ot Delta Mills called
of the building. Including the of the M. E- church; Mr*. Maude s*ere o^usssa
bulldlng on the hill and went to blU; trustee. F. D. Cool; alternate on Mr. and Mrs. Frank ‘ ShrMwr
architectural work, the draperies, Smith. County School commission-1
BRIDGE
CLUB
MEETS.
ihlgh
school
tn
the
old
rod
brick
.
delegate.
G
H
Perkins.
.
Sunday
evening.
etc. The draperies are of a maroon er; Dr. R. D- Harknew. County |
Tiulldlng under the late Prof. Samvelour with gray overhangings, and Health director and President of the , Mrs. Edw. Smith entertained her
uel Dickie. Afterward for a short
the valance trimmed with silver State Dept, of Health; Miss Marie , bridge club on Friday evening, th.' j
eight members being present.
Mr« I
;— —
gray fringe will have thc monogram Neuachacfer. county nurse; a* ex-'—---- •— --------------- -7
2?
IKS:
score
ot a large letter "D" enclosing lhe school board members since the Robert Moore won high bridge sc-.re
at Bethlehem. Pa.
letter “K" symbolic of the name project started were. Messrs. Clyde I •Uld W»- Elmer Robinson held low school
She was married Jan. 54th. 1377 lo |
Clark.
Marshall
Norwood.
Leon
i
"core.
■‘Deltun-W. K Kellogg Agricultural
rk...।
—
,
-------—
j
‘
rthur
!
***
Charlc*
Calvin
Mason
of
Kalama
­
Dunning.
Lacey
jonec,
and
Arthur
School." which was chosen by our
zoo. and for a few years they lived 1
Dickerson; as vldtlng superintend-'
worthy school board.
In Middleville. He passed away in
The dedicatory program opened enU were. O. E- Harrington from 1
IHflg. Following her husband’s death.
with community singing of "Ameri­ Kellogg rehool; B. V- Radrbaugh 1
Mrs. Mason became a member of
ca Tlie Beautiful' and ’The Mere from Augusta; R. W. Harper from1
the local post office force serving...
We Oil TOgathcr.” led by Sup*. C. Galesburg; E G- Weber from Rich- ‘
there twenty-nine years where she
_
J. Banum. rl’h Mrs. H. F. Wert- land and D. A- VanBuskirk from'
COMING TO STRAND
naturally enjoyed a wide acquaint-1
man presiding at lhe piano. Invo­ Hastings
,,
„ ,
Joan Crawfoed-Clark Gable in
ance and made friends from every
cation was offered by Rev. Ralph
Mr. R. j. Dunnavan then sanx
«Uve on the n„r
Bates, partor -ci thc local M. E. ’
&gt; L4UI°..UOl.hfr
B»Uy PAfker- beautiful American walk tn life.
Her tastes were strongly domestic
rh’.i.ci..,
____ ______—r»to~C&lt;1 On
pUn° by heiress living abroad, leaves her
i and it was in making her horn; atSnpt. c. J. Barrum then. In a few mi» Eloise cable,
Port WmI. 72x64, PUM
I Prtnce brldagroom-elret al the altar. । tractive and u
in, providing inc
the uu&lt;u
com.­
well chosen woiil*. introduced the
Mr. l. J. Sarvis. the architect was1
.
to-..
V
Xk
f
S
ii
rCfU
M
C
u
1
hCr
hme
8Ult
^
*
orU
of u,e ,or Uwie the lovcd ik..
‘hat
CP«.rm« o! 11V, ewnta Mr. R O clkd upon w gl„ . uu on Um S u^llStod" ta T VJtoMto
B followed by
f
d tho
enjoyment
Etntcn. who responded in his
| architectural plans, which he did in' and--y— a newspaper
correspondent who promBei&gt;10 helpland M{UfacUon ’jncreaslng tnfirmlexpLclt manner. Mr. Henton gave a
very oaUsfac
systematic review of the steps taken, spoke
of th* pre
Holl WmI, 70*10.
cr the line of wora tluit has been , considered in plans, such M
Postal S«m4m
done during the whole time of: Uon. arrangement of rooms, cost
her
two
sisters.
Mrs.
W.
N.
Chidester
ft1’1’1*
cnn'tru“‘on of the'sire of building, etc. He Um* ex- Owen Mona
oUiera
. land Mrs. wm. R. Cook of tills city
building. Our needs have oeca lo-1 plainad the -Whys
the
_______ •
of how thc
cuM -d on
Dili
----... _
bulki.ng was planned as It was and
.urrin*
P1* Xuncr,i tn^e,Jon Friaay’ Dtc
during the last
..he raid Dial one unusual thing of
nionne omni*' ',B- were “ rhe h"d rewwed. un
through the d.prcssion. !’.«• credit this type of building was the doubledramatic home-cominx of
al,d ‘taP,e- be,n« helf|
for the bcglnnuig and completion of entrance to the bujlding. He alsoI .J country Doctor^ 3 W0 grown-Bt Bn®"11161 Episcopal church ot
Ulis’ wonderful new structure,he | explained lh« uses of the dWeiWt! ‘" tSj.s wim taiutledUvS and 1 whlch ihe WM “ member “nd werr
places on others who have gone on.; equipment and told bow the ma- ..Rm
rr
,, p g-own-un f0,,duct*d b* Rev- J- A- McNulty o!
as
Jui to
;
as well
wen a*
as the
tne presenl_school
present scnooi toatd
ooaia, 1। terUI was ■ Mlectod. This is the !^bles,----- , ..C . ..
"
Domes turn out 10 oe ncn man.
contractors, laborer... Kellogg Foun­ iour'l1
L,*a1, Mr.Barvis has.^f Mn. beggar man. thief, and Members of the younger generation
dation and state and federal aid
st
.1
•»
r"’Th. ■auj.u- xo of old time friends acted as bearers
mentioning the lalqDr.M. J.^Cr^i
lb Kerovnd.Uhn
Brom*up now. play the piano. carrying her to Riverside where sh'
was laid to rest beside the husband
Mr. fc. 4. UM U&gt;a |Mfal eon
ao
... *
and J D Murdock as prqmoLeu- of
hundred other anthis project. Mt- Henton al-o gave motor. Uien prMCntM the build- tlcA
Htrabon. Dorothy peur- of her youth and those other dear
rtaUnnenls concerning the financial
? * JULton. BoeheU. Htoto BUm Sum- one* who had preceded her to the
he prograt...
—------------irn. ..
A ,telegram
of Lhe acceptance of th* presentaUot. njcr^mc and hundreds of others arc other land.
picture
congratulation from the MicFad- was made by Mr. Henry Moorhu*.! ™
$1.00 Silk SIIm
DEATH OF MRS. SAGE.
p
.
den co., at Lansing from whom president of the board of education. I
Mrs. Susanna Sage, widow of Ja­
much of tlie equipment luu been
Miss Mane Neu$chaefer then fa
Wedding Present wilt J
cob
W.
Sage,
died
Sunday
momlne
vored
&gt;'llh
a
piano
solo.
"A
Polish
purchased, was read; also the beau- -------Bennett and Cary Grant at four o’clock at Pennock hospital
$1.98 Silk &lt;m*8
llful basket of flowers sent by the j Dance."
J or j. D. Brent. SUtr
What happens when a newspaper­
Satin Slip*
MacFadden Co. and a lovely bosket । Director qf tlie WPA was called up- man with a flair for gag* set* out to of pneumonia complicated by in­
of flowers sent by the Hastings on to ma
1 few
a
’z ~ remarks and —
he give his'' former sweetheart lhe juries received wh^n she fell from a
at her home
School board for the occasion were. willingly responded. Then followed world' most sensational wedding
And hope that good old St. Nick is as good to you
on West Center street last Wednes­
very courteously acknowledged by1 community singing of America, aftpresent, on me
lhe eve or
of ner
her nupuai.*
nuptial*. day night.’ She was found on her
.. .PreMni.
Kj
wblCh Dr, f'.r—maa tl EHlIratl
Mr' tl.'ntnn
H-.-nton
□s he has been to us
anotiwr mon forms lhe bash of
Sunt, of public
Publii Instruction, was In-10&gt;e coniedy-romancc ot "Wedding lawn at seven o’clock Thursday
A beautlful.U. S. fla4 adorned the supt.
east side of thc platform which was, troduced by the chairman and he j pre^m." gdapted from the Satur­ morning by F. Earl Haas, district
We ore thankful indeed for the loyal support of
4-H club agent, and It is impossible
day Evening Post story by Paul lo know how long she had been
this community that has enabled us to continue in
j Galileo.
there. The pneumonia followed the
the furniture ond home "furnishing business for
*hock and exposure

Dedication of the Delton
Kellogg School Building
An Interesting Program Was
Carried Out Thursday Evening

Between the Lines of this Greeting is inclosed
an invisible but none the less hearty handshake

Merry Christmas to You!
And may the New Year bring twelve months
brim full of happiness to your life

Fcrg’cetpegwececwgwcTOS ’g

We Wish You a
Merry Christmas

j At the ^Theatre §

T II T It S ■» A Y AND

SATURDAY
Many Bargains Are In Store For You

★ ★ Two Star
BlanketVoluei

89‘

A Very Merry
Christmas
Is Our Sincere Wish tor You
Fancy

Fancy Boaaliag

TURKEYS

CHICKENS

26.*

22.b
it. 2Oc

GEESE
Armour's Star

SMOKED
HAMS

27lt

PORK ROASTS
Shoulder or fUb End of
Lota

20.*

Hervey-Cnanc* hlarrell.
A rlippcry sidewalk and
gust of
wind—and beautiful Irene Hervey
finds herself face to face with thr
man ohe dreamed about
He
Charles Starrett, a young medical
student working hl* way as a thcahim.4* hilariously told In thU pic­
ture’

With Ricardo Cortex tn the role
of the
famous laayer-dctecUve.
Perry Mmoo. and Jun* Travt* a*
Della Street. hL* secretary. There
are murders galore, one of an eccen­
tric millionaire's nurse, one of .hLs
tarclakar who owns a mad cat and
a Uilrd for good measure. The plot
Ils baffling and the thrilling climax
comer* in a courtroom at a sensa­
tional trial.

Mrs. sage, who was 80 years of
age hnd lived in Hastings for 50
Methodist Episcopal church and
until recc.il years when her health
tailed sho hnd been active In thc
the Ladies' Aid and Missionary so
cieues.
She
Ls survived---by-------her dgughlt
-------------------— let.
Mrs. Frank sage, and two granj-l
daughter*, Frances and Isabel Sage
daughlcr-in-law
of Hastings;
Mr*, Carl Orlcre. and four grand­
children of Detroit; a «Uler. Mrs
Mollie Berger of Baltic. Ohio, and a
brother. C. FLJ&gt;cr of Millersburg
Ohio,
Funeral service*
o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the ■
Walldorf! funeral home with burial &lt;
tn Riverside cemetery, Rev. w. May-:
lan Jone* officiating.

over thirty-five years, ond we more than ever have
mode up our minds to give our customers the
maximum in values for the money they spend with

At the present time we have some very good holi­
day values and we earnestly suggest that should
you be in want of anything in our line that you
take advantage of the present low prices as they
are bound to be much higher in thc near future

' Fresh Ground

2 o. 26\

Shall* or Freeport

BUTTER

36V

Prices Also Good Saturday

I'rundwnn
Exclusive But Not Expensive

AT THE BARRY.
Atnbaaiader BUI' sUryin*
Will Roger*
Till* picture filmed by the beloved
lalo Will Rogers Is relumed by
popular demand. Shlrl-*tec*e eti­
quette and hilarious none *cn*e arc
featured in his wires*, wtlllest role
in tlie Fox hit “Atnbusxlor BUI." It
present* Roger* in the type of role
that mad* him famous—a good-will
diplomat, filled with humorous wise
cracki. and homespun philosophy.

HASTINGS

"EELDPAUSCH.
I"-MARKET' '
&amp; Phone 7 ?72 We Deliver
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN.

PHONE

2504

-SMS

TELEPHONE
YOUR CHRISTMAS
AND NEW YEAR’S GREETINGS

Tlie Second Ward group of th-t
Home Extension work will meet at
lhe home of Mrs Dewey Reed. 03&lt;i
K- Clinton St., for an all day meet
ing. Dec. N. 1938. Bring table
le« and note-books.—Mrs. bcmic
Callihan. Sec.
LITTLE RED BRICK.
Dec. 17 Letter.
Those having perfect attendance
In our school for the past month .
were: Lewi* and Boyd Bolton. Keith
Doyt and Jerrel Hurless. Hcleu.FwIfr. MBiva ciaggett and Ella Tyler,
Floyd Craig anti Phyllis Diger
spent Bunday at Forest Potter'
tictir Welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. McCulla and
Hastings X
Dorothy oarhnger
-of
----------------were dinner Bursts of Clifford Ham­
mond weffnej^gy,
MLm j|Mty Cauklns and Don
Heat ter were mirrled recently a
Etthart-. Ind. congratulations.

CtMits and Dresses
Greatly Reduced!

MILLER FURNITURE CO

Organizations
HAMBURGER

.00

81x99 MmcM4

AT REDUCED HATES
Low night and Sunday Long

rates will apply all day thi«

GREETINGS
With pleasure we look back upon the service we have been able to render In
1936

with anticipation we look forward to setving you in 1937.

HIGHLANDS

and ftew lear s, a»y tune

7 p. in. the night before

in. thc next day.

DAIRY

MICHIGAN BELL

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, DFCEMBER SI. 1M4

FAOI SD[

ty. For quite a -time after lhe In- county. He explained that Chief park with the following agreement: the county some time ago, and had’a county park. That the term* of old stories and traditions handed
ilians had gone away, a lew
at them..
Auka
saw was
head-wof the
tribe — “Barry county agrees to
---------,-------------------■■ ■ ■the
.
- •*.—
lo lhe folfob considered the tame at some of their said offer, a copy of same being al­ down from generation to gener­
ation concerning Indian Landing
were Jn the --------habit -----------------of returning
.-----and —
of Indians
-- --------- who were
...» ...
at ।
Thomapplc | towing conditions
;« u..
as to thc
recent
construe*
meetings. so they were no", inched hereto, were diseuwd and
holding nieelingv and camping on--- lake- and who iud gardens wiure I t.oti and maintenance of said public surprised when tlie matter wus thatthexaidcountyroad .commte- which was the home of IndUuu
Uils land Some Ume after lhe Irani- they raised com near the mouth ’of: park’:
‘
brought up. at the special session, slon expressed itself a* agreeable to long before tlie whiles came in po*
fer to lhe government three Indians Cedar creek and hot far fromQulm-1 ' •Diat.aald park will be called when Mr. Charlton offered the
the I lhe
acceptance
acceptance
of said
of said
proposition
proposition teuton at it. if any attempt t
bought a part of thte land, because by. Askasaw's bodv Is burled in the Charlton park.
. agreement.
i-&lt;—
i.- -nu^
—-------- - tomade
also—
ot—It* willingness
co-operate
lo get this Uiformarion. I
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 1)
of their previous ajuaxtiallon with It, • —
Barryville
It would
seem
—
:
Thatcemetery.
Mr Charlton
be appointed
The board, after having listened । In any reasonable manner In tlie dethe county had a proper and n *e- ,ln the farm he proposed to give thi md tried to make a living by farm- 1 ntting.
—ri~ said
—«■* Mr.
— Charlton,
-■
•• , for the term of hte useful life nsyus- to Mr. Charltanb talk and having vetopment thereof.
that- •his
,
late. Periiapi It would not be whoV
cure place for them. He explained !county because of having signed Ing- but Indians generally are no: remains be removed to lhe proposed todlan or ground superintendent ot received his offer and the term* un-1 "This committee further- reports ly reliable, but It would add mud
that a museum containing all these, treaties with the state and federal niccessful farmers and so they gave Barry county park as Askaaaw was , said park, with the privilege of de- der which the offer was made, re- that they have consulted Archie D. to lhe interest and glamour of lha
item* would be a great attraction In J governments by which they gave il It up. Mr. Charlton explained that thoroughly familiar with that place vetopipg play-grounds and other en- ferred hte proposition to the special McDonald, prosecuting attorney for beautiful place. My thought Is tha
a county park and would bring manj up flnd. In return the Indian owner- lear Bradley lives an Indian woman and it wo* hte home for many years tertalnment facilities, subject to the committee ot three named above.
Barry county, on said matter and
110 years old who had. in her earlier He was a fine Christian man. and approval of the Barry county board
tourtetf
wrre sent to other places, such a
That committee met With the-Uial said prosecut^tg.jutornry ha* to beat all the'other papers In this
Mr. Charlton stated that the In- Mt. Pleasant and Hie Indian settle- Jays, visited Indian Landing before the county would honor itself by; of supervisors cr tlieir appointed Barry county road commission to given hte approval u.» to th« legality
’u.»»-i..&gt;
learn what the attitude
—
of• •».*
the —
com— , thereof.
.
Surely if Li
dians had tost tlie acreage contained ment near Bradley in Allegan coun- shite people had settled in this showing tills respect to hit memory. • rrpies.-nlalives.
It was evident from Mr. Chari"Tiiat Barry county agrees to de­ mission would be toward lhe pro- • ’This committee therefore ■ re­
ton s talk that he had wcll-copsid- iveloji said park to an extent that will posed pork at Thornapple lake. Tlie ' .’.pecUully recommends lhe accept- make it interesting.
! ered Idea.-, as to how thjs tract of |
it of service lo lite public.
said -------------------------------proposition in accord
commudon told them that they unce
--------of
* "*•*
"* ­
land could be made an Ideal county ; ■ That Barry county agrees to erect would be pleased to cooperate wlUi ance with the term* of the off-r for contributions for lhe be*
I park. He did not insist upon thc-la suitable building for the’purpose the supervisors and do whatever submitted by said Irving “
'
Iklo*
museum of its kind In thc state
I work being done as he had outlined. ’Of establishing a county museum.
they reasonably could In furthering Charlton.
We can do it.
j because he realizes that the county{
-That all concessions that will be the development of the proposed Dated Hasting*. MLtlrtgan
Yours for luck.
will be hampered in some respects j approved by the board ot supervi- pork. The laws of Michigan make , December 15. 1936
ln providing money to improve thU -or-, or’lhelf duly appointed repre- the members of a county rOacT com­
Signed:
iarea which he proposed to give as-entatlves be under the supervision mission also county park commis­
Bert Brown
; a.park; but he said he believed Unit1 Cf Mr. Charlton,
sioners, who will have charge ol
Charles H tzonard
I by making each year such improve-1 -That any and all Income from thc county parks and *teo of their Im­
Fvrd H. fitevuu
1 ments as could be afforded. It would 4aHlc be used for the development ol provement, and are empowered to
i
Special committee on park&lt; "
be po-.’lbl? to make an Ideal place me park’ and museum."
u e county road funds for such hnThe member* uf thq^xiard of su­
|l|e believes that lhe people of this
Mr. Charlton explained to th* provement when authorized so to do
pervisors
were pleawcf and thor­
.county will appreciate and use such board, ln prc entlng this agreement by the board of supervisors. That
I..11
oughly
satisfied with the offer mi.de
a place for holding picnics and social which hi- had signed and which war committee also discussed the legal,
(Continued from page 1. Sec. 9)
। tathermy H iring thc .teason when properly witnessed, that he would phases of the proposition with At­ by Mr. Charlton. While their com­
thut can be done out of daori II will not ask. nor did he desire, any com- torney McDonald. They then pre­ mittee wiu conffdering the matter
members ot lhe board, in an Infor­
| also b&lt;* a place where tourists and pensation for hte own service* ’ as pared the following report:
rec sails. Boy! Those babies real
campers will feel they are always ‘ cust0dion and superintendent ol
•Your special committee on part; mal manner, dizussed the projioslwelcome if they abldy by thc regu-1 grounds.
‘
respectfully submit the following re­ ilon and they talked it ovet among the ocean in a boat like that. Make
-hetnsclvea after the board had ad­ me fi-el a little fcoiith when I fee
I lotions which lhe supervisor* may
Al the October. 1936. session of the peal ;
■ •
journed its forenoon sev.ion on • ’’&gt;■ complaint abcut the length o
adopt to iovem the park.
'board of supervisors the question of
"The special committee on purk
Tuesday. They were, therefore, well time Its taking on this ship. Yot
In concluding hte remarks. Mr n Barry county park was brought up
met with lhe Burry county roa-| .repnred to act upon tlie commit­
' Charlton off red the 210 acres free nnd dLscus-M-d. As n result of such
know no matter how bad off you an
commission
under
even
date
and
dis
­
tee
a report, which was. presented you can always a-n' somecne else i
I ..nd clear to Barry county, under thc j discussion a special committee was
.'oltowjng term*.:
jciiosen to consider the subject of a cussed with the said, rood commis­ ruesday afternoon. After they had.• little wotm- off lima you But whet
Hastings. Michigan.
county park. That committee wa ■ sion the offer made by Irving Delt» lie*rd lhe report. Supervisor Brown you are well off there b nobody anj
diLnnsn of the committee, moved belter off than you. If you look a
Dec 15. 1936.
made up of Supv. Bert Brown of Charlton. Hastings Twp..
Barry
"Mr. Irving Delos Charlton agree* I Orangeville. Mayor Charles H Leon- county. Michigan to deed tn Barry tte acceptance and adoption. W. A things in the right way. I uni lok
| to died to Barry county, free and ' nrd of this city and supervisor F*rd county, free and clear, a tract ol bchadcr of this city, member of the that Hi? Japanese government w!l
clear, a tract of land bordering on ' H. Stevens of Johnstown.
land bordering on Thornapplr- Like bourd. heartily seconded the iimllcri not let a person take a picture whirl
Thomapplc hike, approximately 210 I This committee had been informed and river, consisting of approxi­ and Uw report was unanlmoudy uc- in a disappointment. I have beer
I
--------- -- everyday for a week. At
| painting
I acres, for the purpose of a county of Mr. Chariton's proposed gift to mately 210 acres, for the purpose of cepted and adopted.
Thc board atro unanlmom'y voted though fm Improving. I wondn
to accept the offer of Mr Chariton whether I get more paint on mysel:
We are sure the people pf Burry । or the-a£tlclc I m painting
county will appreciate lhe generotThte is Thursday night and I m if
ity of Mr Charlton and the fine Ml. Thomas' home in Yokohama
.spirit of the board of superrUori hi, The Ford Motor Company is a won­
/
OS RIVERSIDE POWER GRIPS.
their action with reference to *edtrful cconcern.
---------- ----I ‘have
------ nad
• u cai
w.-» .I..ERSIDE POWER GRIPS.
-- |-...wl
curing this county park, which has 1 an(ha*
j dr nnd driver at my dl«i»*al allI 1-2 miles of shore line on ThornWith the tread like "built-in" skid chains!
srn- I Here's what happened. I met Mr
apple river and 'iTiornapplr lake. It Thomas on the boat and procure
Sure Gripping! Self Cleaning! Non'Packing!
will make an ideal place for tburteu permission to get
gel off and spend
ipend tw&lt;
tat
to camp. Picnic grounds and place* night* at his home. I met hli
- Exchange price
for sporting events are also planned daughter -------•
- J
• Get Wards Power Grips for
Irene —
and «he
is indeec
so that this park will be made very a very nice Ciilnesc girl, She speak:
"bad road" driving. Best for
useful to the people of Barry coun­ perfect English. We nte at a nice
deep mud, sticky clay and
ty us well as lo tour 1*ta and visitor'­ hotel and then went to n movie
■now! Their patented round
ll is Mr. Charlton's hope, and he While there I met a M&gt; Harris wh&lt;
knobs, tapered from the base,
recommended, that structures re-1 is connected „
u, lllB
, ’^
on
with
thc run
Ford
Company
give more traction—are more
Site
scmbling thc old log schoolhouse a&lt; tranjr agent. He Is quite a footaelf-cleaningl Save the cost
and mission church be built sub- ball player. It reems that the Jap*
and trouble of chains and get
.-tantlally where the- old building-.-' anese universities have gone in for
more traction than tires using
4.75- 11
were erected. He also advised that-u. a. football In a big way. Then I
them!
’
4.75- 20
a log home, such as the first set- returned here to spend the night at
4.75- 19
8.05
tiers built, be put upon the prem- hte home.
5.00-19
8.05
Ise* and that there be provided in | Early this morning, (Thursday)
WRITTEN GUARANTEE
10.0.-,
5.25-18
it th.
It
the niri-tim.
old-time «tvte
style nf
of .h.ir.
chairs, ...
ta­ Irene her friend Marla who alio
ogoimt EVERYTHING that
*
ble*. flreplace, bedsteads and the ••’■‘■•k’ fluent Fngllih and inyseU
can happen to a tiio in teiAgain
lhe
wondrous
halo
of
5.50-n
spinning wheel of that early day.
vics—WITHOUT LIMIT oi
started for Miyanushlia, a very
14.65
Thl* location will lend itself, Bi thi beautiful drive to which til foreign­
to number of months or mllei!
green and red eiirircles the earth
judgment of those who have visited er* nrr taken, incidentally our driver
LESS TRADE-IN
ft
andJtlie joyous Christmas season
it, to a fine development for park Suzuki, known a* "Fatty," Ls the best
CONVENIENT TERMS MAY BE ARRANGED
purposes. This gift to this county driver in Japan. He drove the ’ • iby Mr. Charlton U a God-send lo it* berghs when they were here. While
is at hand, when our hearts are
people. There are not many counties there we vteU.a rioxomn laite. it u
where 210 aeres of ideal park land about 2.000 feet above sea level and
happy and our thoughts are turned
would be given outright ns U done quite a cl-mb for a car. All the roads
Ln this case. Mr. Charlton has had are very narrow and one haz to be
towards making others happy.
.his matter on his mind for a long a wonderful driver lo avoid acriUme. He did notaay anything about dents.
...vas
„ wmen
„ W«_,
u„,k UUH
onV4V&gt;
bicycle*
dart out
Our officers and employees
It before became the Ume was not from all sides and If you hit them
ripe; bul Jie has been gathering rel- you must pay damages regardh-M of
join in wishing you a Merry
les for many years, hoping and ex- whether it s your fiult or not. I took
Guaranteed
peering that some dav his collection seine lovely pictures of the Likes and
Ciiristmas and a Happy New Year.
might be made available to the pub- flower gardens there.
188 Proof Radiator
18 Monthil
11c. He had also had In mind for a
Wc came back to Olso where the
long Ume that this land which he girls stayed for Ute nigh’. I m gethas donated to the county, would be Ung permission to stay on and go
for Ford
' ideal for recreational purposes. He down by train to meet the boat at
xGuirsnteed full
lha* considered wliat Improvements Kobi. I have been provided with a
strength. Treat­
Exchange
jean and should be made on the car which will take me to Tokyo,
ed to resist rust­
property, but he has not insisted on maybe to Kobl. On the way back to
ing.
gol. Bulk
liavlng hte own Ideas carried out Mr. Thomas' from Olso we stopped
Tubular type. All bnuw
He believe* that the county will be at Kamakura which 1&gt; a Buddhty
construction. Lcakprocf,
disposed, and ll surely ought to be temple where there l\a huge statue
WARDS ANTI-FREEZE
air pressure tested un­
to give lhe fullest and fairest con- ol Buddha, very impressive. We aba
der water at factoryNon - evaporating L7»
sideration to such plans as he may m*w lhe shrine of Hashmu w.ilch h
Chev. -29-TO M 50 Ex­
propose, and will carry them out as both Buddhist and Shinto. Thc Japchange. Radiators for
Fill oj&gt;—Forge,! u bu|k
far as Is reasonable and possible. H-s anese come to pray then every
other cars, trucks and
proposal
to become the superintendnight,
------ —
--------------------*
,— -----------------------------------------------------------very
snort
prayer, and
tractors at proportion­
I-quart can 49c
ate savings.
ent of the park, serving without pay. in money. I .am closing so this let
1 gallon can SI.98
is certainly a generous brie, and It ter will get the boat U&gt; BeatUe to
will be noUced from -hte agreement morrow. I am enclosing a few pic
that he is not asking that me coun- tures which I hope you will like,
ly give him leave to go ahead lo
ASsYltlA.
carry out his own ideas, bul that he
Mrs. Ina Millard left Saturday
will work subject to lhe direction ot
the board of supervisors or Its own -'P**id Uie arek end al tlie home o
representatives, such a* the county h“ hrollur. Roy Belton of Nash
road commission and the supervlLater she’ will spend some
‘•supreme
sor* committee on parka.-A county te l,nM?
her sister. Edna, of V«f
fortunate, indeed, when It ha* pub- montvllle.
Quality"
Ilc-splrlted men. m Mr. Charlton
Th' Baders of the Lacey Exten
shows himself to be in thl* matter 'lon Unit. Mr*. Leona Earl a
WH
We know we voice lhe sentiment* of Mr*. Lucy GUlasple. were In Hu
Filtingi
the people of Barry county when we “”«» Wednesday lo attend lhe lead
say that they appreciate it and hte rM nteeUng.
fine gift* for not only their benefit,C&lt;JWon' wh?
been crlt
Flood* heat Downward!
bul for lhe benefit of coming gener- “-“hy Hl the past four weeks.
Forward! O
Both!
much improved. He went lo A ‘
Give* more heat then
is--------lions.
n.TTLT""
observation
Now that Barry county ha* made sa-maay
...
S19.95 heaters! Only
such a fine .tart In the matter of Ur"*nenl
,
st Ward*.
Gbsa enclosed heating ele­
The
Briggs school and
ch
public parks, we hope It will con7 “
Improved
"Mandard
ment-keeps vision clear!
llnue. and that iniere«t in county
cooperated In their Chr
Quality" heater Inpark* will not .top with the acqulpresentaUon Monday nigh
ktalled .
I *l'-|on of this one. Barry county ha* Th® Steven* achoo1
a wonderful asset: tn tt* fine lake* pro«™*n «» Wedne«iay nUhtand the recreational ground* which
Ear 81X1
they can so easily provide. There Olllaspie me!; mcir wtenstog
ought to be at least two or possibly
Prld8y •» ,Uw
, three other county park*1, probably ha’1 to PT«*®nt the lesson on
not as large nor os well-developed a*
Un”.
...
— one can artd
— should
---------- be. ....
Mrs.
thl*
but at
--- Eveline Tasker
—-------. and
—~ Mr*
! least one* that will be convenient Mabel Horton were tn Hi
of access and that will not only be a Thcid“y to receive instruction*
benefit to our own people, but will
of
*
,be a standing Invitation to tpurtel*
wor’f• They went before
1 to put Barry county on their route ^ass Thursday at the home of
for summer travel. We hope to see o&gt;?n*
°LCentfL
. every road that reaches a resort lake . Mr» Hildred Poff. a former real
dent
the Ellis and---Fred
in Barry county, greatly improved
----- of
--------------------------- --- Hill
» to m.«. two pl.«, K«»lol.
oron ™. WUH1,
10 louruu andn.
* ,ew *•*" •«" “ Angola. I
I Balo, ae gl»l«Ur. wHUan b, TBa, .IU rauda al U&gt;. HUI Ia»m
AUTO FLOOR MAT
Ptad rao«. which ,a«d.ncea .plan„,rbm
did interest In lhe subject of a
”,
Guaranteed 12 Mol
WARDS NEW PLUG
lew priced 30e
countv oark Mr Peck is a Ha*- w,u entertain at Chrtetmai
KJ toaiiship farmer and
a ^e member, of the Belle family.
Standard qual­
39 full size Han­
neighbor of I. D. Charlton, donor
ity. Equal* any
Exc
ds rd plates.
of the-210 acres of land, which thc people of Assyria Center will
for pattern and trim to size.
18,000 mi plug.
county ho* accepted, which 1* lo
* cantata. "The Guest Room
Felt-backed—79c. Reducedbe called "Charlton
Mr. lheNonn&lt;
Heart,Caje
vnapro i
---------------wUj
.
Peck makes a suggestion.
-------------------------- -------- — -—
which ought to be carried. In hte h'r Christmas vacation with
letter to the Banner, which te as parent*. Mr. and Mr*. Hugh Case.
■ Bfrt Wing of the Bell dis
follows:
has been at the University hospl
My
Mr. Cook:
- Dear
.... at Ann Arttor. wh«re recently one
in my estimation it would be of hjj toca was amputated,
considerable benefit, and an ever600
tons of—
rock
tlsfaclion
obtain
If 11 — A mau
I lasting
-1
—- — to
—
... — —
— of
—
---------------—
can be done while some of the from Gibraltar Into the sea. Wha
| Indian tribe who reside at Bradley, ever became' ot the old-f
i especiallyLhe old lady 110 years Gibraltar that had tha strength
HB-ize 3. iirreuMJN
HASTINGS
PHONE 2691
I old. are still alive. They must have an Insurance company!

BARRY COUNTY TO HAVE
A PARK OF 210 ACRES

fywb ftruje a Tumefy

COLD WEATHER AUTO NEEDS

J

25 /O Off For Your Old Tires
5”

N
A

FREE MOUNTING SERVICE

B

Had la tors

A
N
K

ALCOHOL

OF

So

Richard

Mis* BC
from Deti
Ml** B&lt;
Midland

W. Mai

home In ]
Miss M
from Belt
lion.

her vacat
troll.
Merwyr
Detroit ft
end.
kites B

MISSES BIRTHDAY
ON EASTERN TRII

friends.
Mis* E
from Sou
catton.
Mias R
home in
vacation.
Hugh a
from Eos
tend M.
Bishop
University
the holld
Miss
teaches t
lhe holid
Robert
Bristol o
lege for t
Mias E
nesday u
Ind., for

burg wen
Crook th

Sunfield
Edmond
day Mrs. B
guest of

Edwar
venpartin Gran
Harry
Cham pa

j

Royal
Friday,
| turning

was the

E] Sparta.

|
li
"
I
;

I

Tribune

mumi

Hubbar
from W
vacatio

j come c
spend

Carveth

si

NO

5

S

HASTINGS

Final Clean-Up of

M/ZZ// FINEST heater
EVER MADEI

USED CARS and TRUCKS

IO”

Before We Take Inventory Jan. 1st

17c

ELECTR C DEFROSTERS

No. 1274 - 1934 Ford V-8 Tudor

$335.00
$435.00
$350.00

No. 1127 — 1935 Ford V-8 Fordor Sedan
No. 1218
1934 Ford V-8 Deluxe Fordor
No. 40
1936 Ford V-8 Tudor

No. 1293

1935 Ford V-8 Coupe
No. 41-1935 Ford V-8 Tudor
No. 39
1936 Ford V-8 Deluxe Tudor - Trunk

No. 43 - 1933 Ford V-8 Coupe (New Motor)
No. 1118 — 1933 Ford V-8 Pone! Delivery

$450.00
$385.00

$395.00
$485.00

$325.00

$225.00
No. 136 - 1929 Ford Model A. A. Stake Truck ..
$95.00
No. 1155
1932 Ford Model B. B. Chassis and Cab -$195.00
No. 89 - 1929 Ford Model A Sport Coupe
$85.00

711

2

23&lt;

All the above cars are in first class condition and are
REAL bargains. Come and get the first choice
Your
old car will serve as down payment

FINAL CLEARANCE OF ALL TOYS
DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTIONS!

Montgomery Ward

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
phone

2'121

FORD PRODUCTS

Hastings, mich

I

�nrt inrrmoi baxmt*. rrtun.T mcXmm* m. itM

KbMmmoo M Um

Social Events and Personal Mention
Rlchard cook spent Saturday and
Bunday in Detroit.
Mix* Beatrice can-other* to home
from Detroit for her vacation.
Mlu Belva Riley to home from
Midland for the holiday vacation.
W. Maytan Jone*. Jr, to home
from Ann Arbor for lhe holidays.

Miss Florence Watkins ol W&gt;anJacob Miller is horns from Alma
dotU to/the guest of her parents,
for lhe holidays.
Ian Ironside is home from Ann Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Watkins, during
ths
holidays.
Arbor fur the holiday vacation.
Miss Charlotte Lake of Lansing to
Miss Grace Edmonds leaves 8a'
tha uiuuucu
chrtotmaa num
guest oi
of mt
Mr.. and
anu
urday for York. Pa . to visit friends uie
| Mrs. D. L Christian and Mr. and
- - .
,
[ "Mlu Frances Sag®, a student at1 Mr*. Waiter Lake.
i Mr. and Mr* Ed. Van Popering
&gt;&lt;■ jf
will spend Christmas in Grand
।lho
holiday*.
Mr. and Mr*. Dwight Beumer of,
’^kTrenU'
*'
J **'
Detroit spent the week end with,
Hasting* relatives
I Florence French of Middleville
Ur .nA it-. P to mn..
1 WM the #u“l °* her &lt;randporento.
•»*
" “■«. &lt;» *«Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph urday
and Bunday.
Whlnnery at Lowell.
Mis* Suxanne Sumner, a atudent
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ryan of
Jackson were Sunday guest* of Mr. at Olivet college, is apendtag her
vacation with her parent*. Mr. and
and Mr*. H. P. Tuttle.
Mr. and Mr*. Warren E Carter Mr*. George Sumner.
Mn. Nellie Charlton and Mr. and
spent lhe week end with relatives In
Mrs. Clarence Chartion left on Sun­
Saginaw and Bay City.
Ellsworth Newton, who attends day for Miami. Fla., for a visit with
Tri-Btate College at Angola. Ind, Mr. and Mn. A. J. Cook.
to home for the holidays
| Mis* Genevieve Rider of Akron.
Francis Hamilton of Kalamazoo 1 Ohio, cam* Monday for .
M.
a visit _.
with
rpent lhe week end at lhe home of friend* here and in Kalamazoo durMr. and Mrs. Fred Jone*.
ing the holiday vacation.
Mln Virginia Potts arrived home
Chrtotmaa night fUesto of Mr* 1 frotn New
Tuesday to spend
Crut’a parents. Mr. and Mr* Frank lh
, —
holiday*
- —
------- Mr.
....
—Jlth her
parents.
Rawson, at Vermontville.
1I and Mrs. Charles
-■
8. Potto.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry E. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Simmons of
"J
TS!"11.
Sil!?
,« e^o.
Kalamazoo attended the
carol M".
servend with relatives in Jackson.
I ire on Sunday afternoon and vtoltMrs John J. Dawson goes to Cad­
illac today (Wednesday) to spend ■ cd her brother. O*rl Dainaon
I Ml** Allecn laenhath of Detroit
lhe holidays with friends there.
Kim Sigler will return today 1 come* Thursday to spend the baliWednesday) from L'An*e. where he *ncc of tha week with her parent*,
■pent several days on business
; Mr. and Mrs. Otto Isenhath.
--------------------Mr*. ---W.
Thwaltes of
Grand
Mr. and. -----------Mr*. Tbm
Toffee of Char------------— H.
------------------ --------------lotto were Sunday guests of her par- Rapids was in the city Friday. She
report* her father. Dr. DennL* Hur­
ento, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Waters.
|~
ra*
tn
hr
In
vrrv
nnnr
hralth
Dr. and Mr*. F. H. Taylor will ray. to be in very poor health,
•pend Chrtotmaa Day with her1 Ml** Frances Cowles of Katomafather. E- 8. King, at East Lansing, too come* home today (Thursday)
Mr and Mrs. Carson Williams for a week’s vacation with her parMr. and *Mrs. ”
B F. Cowles.
(Esther Smith) of Lansing vtoited enta. **'
“
William D. Parker of lhe Form
Hastings relatives over lhe week
Services. Inc. returned Frli'M-. .H4 Mn,.
W,...r
a 1 Bureau
S Fro^LouUv.S:
h.

Vernon Wlninger. Jr_ of Sheri­
dan visited Hastings friends las’.
Bunday.
,
Charle* Hunton of Grand Rapid*
•pent Friday night with Victor
Mun ton.
Mn. Rolla Wilhite of Lansing
■pent Bunday with her mother. Mr*
Wm. Bwegele*
Mr. and Mn. A. B. Oidley and
Philip are (pending Chrtotmaa with
relatives In Qwosao.
Mr. and Mn. Edmond Darling of
Detroit were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Fox on Saturday and Bun­
day.
Mr. and Mn. John Wood and
Floyd Wood were Sunday guest*
of Mr. and Mrs. Neville Wood ot

TEACHERS RENDER
--------------------------------SPLENDID PROGRAM, Telb of Chrittnuu
In California
Christmas Carol Rsrrioa At
Auditorium Was Wen
Attended

We Wish You AU

Crus. Californio. wrlta* Um folMw-

Small Christmas
and
brightly colored cathedral window*

thc twelfth carol service presented
by the Teachers’ club at the Cen­
Banu crui. Cal.
Dec. 1A IBM.
tral auditorium on Sunday after­
noon. Supt D. A VanButolrk di­ Dear Editors:
rected *he chorus and Mrs. Sadie
The New Teat
Mae Palmer wa* lhe accompartot. Ing us and I rem—
home In Buchanan for lhe holiday*.
The prog.-am a* outlined in the renew Ute Hastings Banner fed lhe
Mlaa Maxine Wunderlich to home
Banner of tost week was splcndldiv coming year, tt Is a welcome visitor
from Belding for the holiday vaca­
rendered, a result of hours of re­
tion.
hearsal.
Hubert Cook t« a wonderful descrip­
Interest in the carol service has tive writer it sterna one la with
Miss Anne B Burton 1* spending
I increased each year, as hu» the at­ them on their trip, he deatrtbee It
her vacation In Ann Arbor and De­
tendance, uie
lhe auai
auditorium being sell
Mr. and Mr*. Henry Gordon of, tcmwncc,
troit.
Detroit were gueata of Mr. and Mrs., filled on Sunday.
-y. This ...
to a fine trip end*.
Merwyn Plumley to home from
Henry Smith. E. MUI St, over the .public »etvice the teaciiera are renj »pcnt my Thanksgiving th Ban
Detroit for chrtotmaa and the week
week end.
coring the cornin’mlly eacn YuleUde 1 Francisco with tny ion and family.
end.
Mr. and Mrs. Lorraine Issnhath ai.d one ahich our residents appre-j A&gt; dearly as I love California I
Mlu Edith Heald ot Kalamazoo
of
sagmaw
come
Saturday
to
spend
'
elate
more
and
more
lhe
Sunday
'
cannot
get into the holiday iptrit
waa in the city on Sunday visiting
&lt; u - week
..uh. end
•
It, .enjoyable.
nlAv.hU . • . ....
. . . - . •_
_
the
with Vfr
Mr. and Urv
Mr*. CM
Ot-­ concert being especially
friend*.
yet. It'S too fiowery. too many roses
to uenbath.
Following the pregram. Bupt. and 1 and other lovely flowers dished up
Miss Evelyn Johnson to home
Saturday and Bunday guest* of ltrs. D. A VanBuskirk entertained with the turkey. I enjoy the holiday
from South Haven during her vaMr. and Mr*. Kenneth Laberteaux the board of education, the teach­ spirit (his poem describe*. written
were Mr. and Mr*. Robert Moore of ers and guests at their home on E by Lydia Marian Child:
Mlaa Ruth Robson to at her
Bute BL Several former Hastings Over the river and through the
Kalamazoo
home in Jackson for lhe Christinas
We could wy ■'Cheerio." or perhaps "Best
Mr. and Mr*. Bverett Swegles and teachers wera also present. A light­
vacation.
Wishes." But we'd rather with you a pood old
Mr*. Mary Sweglet wiU be Christ­ ed Christmas tree and other deco­ To grandfather's house We to.
Hugh and Robert Kelly are home
mas gueeto of Mr*. Rolla Wilhite of rations appropriate to the season
Merry Christmas!
from East Lansing where they at­
made the rooms attractive. Assisting
Lanalng.
the sleigh.
tend M. 8- C.
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Earl
Paine
go
today
Through the white and drifting
Bishop Kuhn, a student al Ute
kern.
Mr*
Philena
McDonald,
Mlu
to
Toledo
to
remain
Uli
Sunday
with
mow.
University of Michigan, to home for
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Arlene and Miss Florence Campbell.
the holiday*.
MIm Mabel Sisson and Miss Marcia Over the river and through lhe
McMurray.
Miss Margaret
Merrick,
who
Ironside.
teaches in Royal Oak, to iiome for
Ruth Baine go to Chicago fcr thc
Oh. how the Wind does blow.
the holidays.
Jolly twelve mext.
IWRTALL8 omCHUL
holidays as lhe guests of tho for­
It stings the toes and bllee the
Robert Walldorf! and Steven
Members of the Jolly Twtlro I Hastings Chapter NO. «&amp; Royal
public Instruction, Arthur Rice, edi­
mer's rister*.
Bristol are home from Albion Col­
Club met Monday evening at the Arch Masons have installed the folMr. and Mn. A. J. Herbert went tor of lhe Michigan Education As over the ground we go. '
lege for the holidays.
journal,
and
Mrs.
Rice.
EB
Rob
­
to
Otsego
Wednesday
to
visit
until
home
ot
Ur.
and
Mrs
Leo
Welfare
Fur
thia
is
Thanksgiving
day.
&gt;
Miss Elizabeth Finch went Wedafter the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. bins. assistant editor, and Mrs. Rob­
neaday to her home in Kokomo.
But Bin Francisco surely knows tot k pot luck dinner and Christbins. all of Lansing:
Principal how to decorate for Christmas, one mat party. The evening was spent jamte M. Langston; scribe.
Lowell Herbert.
Ind., for her vacation.
Guests of Dr and Mr*. K. S. Mc­ Emeritus w. T. IY»ll»ce of Janes­ cant help but imagine they are playing five hundred, top scores be­ Tudor; trtaaurer, Walter H.
Mr. and Mrs. Don crook of Vicks­
Intyre on Christmas day will be Mr ville; Mr. and Mr* Melvin Buchner wandering around th fairyland. ing won by Mrs. Clara Stanton and secretary, Frank R. Adair; captain
burg were guests of Oscar and Guy
and Mr* A B. Teal and Mis* Janet (Louise Showertnkn) ot Sunfield; Their winter scenes carry one back ElUworth Myer* and low scare* by of the boat, Walter lake; prineRaU
Crook the first of the week.
Mrs. Pauline Holcomb Oierman of to the lime when horses
Teal of Kalamazoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Buchner of
were Mrs. Alice Myers and Fred Ml- sojourner. Finlay R. jahnaton; royal
Mr*. Gertrude Hou ven er went to Grand Rapids and Miss Edith •■knights of lha road.- with their
Sunfield were guests of Miss Grace
Plymouth on Tuesday to remain for Heald of Kalamasoo.
tet of third veil. Clarence Tk
Edmonds Bunday afternoon.
jingling sleigh bells and merry ।
several
weeks
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mr*. Betty Caine of Chicago is the
sleigh loads.
..rign
mas. They
iney wax
look so real.
res*.
’ , “Oratory ;is emotional rather titan master 6f second veil. William
NEW IDEA CLUB MEMBERS
Emest Sutherland man; master of first
Curtis Butt and family.
“*■
I had the pleasure of crossing the "’“‘“Ctuai.
ENTERTAIN
WrtALL
BOTE.
Chamberlain; aenUnel.
Everett Jacobs, a student al St.
world’* moat famous bridge, over to
Edward Caukln to home from DeKonkte were Bunday’ guests attended a farm machinery school Mary’* college In Cincinnati, is the
Members of the New Idea Club
Mr*. R. M. Bate* and daughter. tueu of hto parents. Mr. and Mrs. acted m "big sisters" Monday eve­ Alameda to call on Hastings folks.
LX&gt;n and Hazel Geiger Westbrook
_)
nr unrmmas.
i«
«&gt;»—«Ml“ A,l°?
Ciiarles Jacoba, during the holidays. ning to fourteen small boys at a and family. One can’t describe lhe
In arena
Grand Kapia*
Rapid* Ifor
Christmas.
| —‘ Bownc.
Harry Adrounle U home from I F. R. Thomas of Battle Creek *«
J?
Mr. and Mr*. Russell Beatty leave Christina* party. A chicken dinner feelings he has a* he gaze* on that
Champaign, Ill, where he is a atu- called on Mr*. Clarence Grohe and *nd Mrs. C. M. Overstreet of De­ Thursday for Terre Haute. Ind., to was served by the women of the U.
beautiful bridge hanging to high
dent at the Unlveraity of Illinois.
| Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Thomas and trollspend Christina* with relative*. Mrs. B. church in the basement of th&lt;J
Mr. and Mn. Francis Huver and Beatty to remaining for a week* church. There.were Christmas dec­ lower* by ImmenM steel cables, high
Royal Myers went to Ann Arbor family on Wednetday
Mr--"
above the water. Hundred* of auto*
orations on the supper tables and a are crossing all the Ume. The truck*
Friday, hto son. Bumner Myer*, reMr*. C. E. Thoma* and daughter, children were BUnd*y guests al lhe visit.
.
Hasting*, Michigan
JBll
lining with
wnn him
mm for
ror the
me holiday*.
nouaay*. 1&gt;«»«=••••»•. wmw ■■■&gt;■■ xjcuuik vusw
of
turning
•• Mr. and Mr* Ed Hasting*
Mr. and Mrs. J. M Townsend. Christmas tree added to lhe boys’
Mr*. O. W. Murphy of Hastings mweve to spend the holiday* with
Ledge Inde- David Towniend and Sanford Rog­ enjoyment. Each boy was given a
the electric cars will soon commence
stocking
cap.
pair
of
gloves,
a
toy.
ers were guests of Mr. and Mrs
was the week end guest of Mr. and the O- E. Goodyear family.
Mr. and
and Mr*
Mrs' Clarence
Clarence' Goucher
Goucher
Mrs. Mary Bhowerman was In the Reuben Lee of South Boston on n pop corn ball and a sack contain­ to cross on that floor also. We alm
Mr*. L. Cushman —Sentinel-Leader.
Mr.
saw the island that man is building
DUR BEAUTIFUL NEW POPULAR PRICED THEATRE
_p*ru»
..were in Benton
Harbor Bunday to
city part of to«t week, going from Sunday.
ing candy, nuts, an apple and or­
Sparta.
b
’ ‘
'
■
foe the exposition in IMS. It U a
Mis* Marie Rowe of Kutins* was I Yi»U their non. Donald Donald will here to*2*“*“****}'™*.,U
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Reasoner will ange. Games were played after din­
three —
weeks
of evan­ have as Christinas guests her moth­ ner and the young guests had a hi­ wonderful piece of work. I have
a week end guest of MF. and Mrs. ’P™d Christina* here with hto par- duct -a ,hrw&gt;
k‘’ scries nf
Sunday - Monday—Matinee Sunday 3:M P. 5L—3:M P. M.
lived
through
an
age
of
great
gelistic meetings.
R.
Charlotte RepublicanK J. Rowe.
nowe—
—vnaruKte
jtepuoiican- *nt*.
. ....... er. Mr* J. 8- Fetter of South Bend larious time. The funds wure taken
Tribune.
i Mtos Barbara Johnson and Mto*
Charles p. Parker. Jr., of Middle- and Mis* Ruth Reasoner of Ball from the treasury of the club being changes. building and inventions
and 1 wonder what groat things man
Mlue* Barbara Wilcox. Charlotte J MarjorieStebbins, who are students villc was a Sunday evening guest oi Stole College al Muncie, ind.
PrieM Alwan ADULTS Me . CHILDREN IBe
accumulated to be used, lor such will build or invent in the corning
Hubbard and Irene Jone* are home al the U. of M. at Ann Arbor, are Mr and Mm. Boman Feldpauich
i
Mr. and Mr*. Floyd Jones of Oak purposes.
yrars.
’
~ T
I*. C- during the holiday spending the holidays
with their Mr. Parker to a student at thc U. ot Grove were guest* on Tuesday of
from
W. 6.
Wish all a Merry Christmas and
!
parents
M.
at
Ann
Arbor.
CIRCLE NO. r
their nephew and wife. Mr. and
SUNDAY. MONDAY. DECEMBER 11. 21
vacation.
Happy New Year.
Mr*. J. M. McElwain will arrive
Mrs- —
Sa----™h. Tlnkl&lt;r
*nd
M" Mrs. A B. Oidley. The former are
Mrs. Fred A. Smith entertained
inn Mr*.
Mr*, Robert
jtooeri Burrell
nurren
----------------­
Mr. and
Mr*.
Robert
Burrell
fekrftfelfr.
MATINEE STARTS AT
P. Mcome Chrtotma* eve from Detroit to Thursday from Lanalng to »pend Clarence Orohe were« *£• en route to California for the winter. the members and gucata of lhe
spend lhe holiday* with Mr*. Bur- the holiday* with MUs Mary Me- ana Mrs- Shirley Rltztnan and Mrs.
Mrs EfDe Ickes Foster.
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. McDonald Methodist L. A. S. Circle No. 3 on
p?renu. Miand Mr? A H Elwaln and Mr. and Mr*. J. E. Me- Anna Riuman
"'^non of
near
Qulmbv
on
of near Quimby on Frederick and Anne leave Thursday Monday evening at their Christmas
Wednesday last.
El“
wain.
tor Port Huron, where they wiill party. After dinner. Carols were
Carveth.
'*
•
PAST MATRONS PARTY.
Robert Fighter, who to attending spend Christmas with Mr*. Mc­ sung and the business meeting was
Mis* Betty Vande Grift, who is a
Mtt. JM. Towturhd and Mr*.
student al W. 8. T. C. at Kalamn- Ferri* Institute at Big Rnpids. rpen’. Donald's parent*. Mr. and Mrs. followed by a Chrlstmaj program Jacob Haney entertained sixteen
WUh Datrthy !rt**ar, Ray MOlaad. Aktoa Ta ad riff, WM*
Including a Christmas poem read Past Matrons of the Hastings and
*oo. Is spending lhe holidays with thc week end with hto aunt, Mr* Fred Fead.
OnrWM
by Mrs. Agnes Fisher; solo by Mrs. Freeport Chapter* at the farmer’s
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chaa. Nellie Oonaway. on hto way lo his
homo
in
Grand
Ledje.
TWO
BRIDGE
LUNCHEONS.
Robert Burch; readings by Mrs. home on Friday. A one o’clock
Vande Grift.
W.
Maylan
Jones.
Jr.,
and
Da
­
Mrs. Richard A. Groan waa hostess Mary Van Dugteren; instrumental chicken dinner was served followed
George Bauer 1* home from M. S.
NOONDAY LUNCHIS
ADULTS 1&gt; CENTS
C. for the holiday*. He ha* been vid Jones returned Wednesday from at.two charming luncheon* Tues­ numbers by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald by a business session. Christmas
visited
they
‘ day and Wednesday of last week, Smith and Mr. and Mn. Melvin
signed to teach chemistry and as Ludington where
carols, a Christmas tret and ex­
coach in fencing at M. 8. C. for the friends and attended thc alumni twenty guests being present at each Smith. Banta then appeared and’ change of gift*. The January m*etDINNERS
; basket ball game Tuesday night.
second Mtiesler.
luncheon. Christinas decoration.’ gifts were exchanged.
5:30 to 7:30 F. M.
Dr. R. B. Harkness left Tuesday made her home most attractive and
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30. Bl
Mr. and Mr*. A- K Frandsen will
Ocorftna Bauer.
EMPLOYEES' PARTY.
have as their Christinas guest*. Mr for Waltham. Mass, where he will lhe small tables were centered with
SUNDAY DINNERS
Sixty employees ot the Interna­
and Mr*. Robert Lauren-ton and Mr. join Mrs. Harkness and spend miniature Santa Claus on skis
SURPRISB WAYNE UMITH.
Christmas
with
their
daughter
and
and Mr*. Forrest Baldwin of Pitts­
Winners al contract Tuesday were tional Seal Ac Lock Co. held their
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
Waylie smith htd a birthday oh
burgh and Mr and Mr*. E. A husband. Mr. and Mr*. Robert Love. Mrs. C. 8. Potto, Mrs. James Bris­ Christmas party on Thursday eve­ Saturday so Mr*. Smith invited in
6 to 7:30 P. M.
Miss Mabel Sisson to the guest of tol and Mrs Harry O. Hayes and ning at the Eastern Star dining
Frandsen and children of Ionia. Hie
about forty friends aS a surprise,
Pittsburgh folks will arrive Christ­ her sister and husband. Mr. and those holding high score on Wed­ room. Dinner wm served by the and he *urely was surprised Ptomas evv and return the next Sun­ Mr*. U. C. Mann*, of Traverse City nesday were Mrs. Bldnev French. United Brethren L. A- 8. followed gresalve pedro was played with Mt.
for Christmas. She accompanied Mrs. Bernard Reed and Mrs E. L. by a Christinas tree, exchange of
day.
nnd Mrs Butler Bmllh Winning
With Creta Nbten, Marguerite Churchll!
1 Miss Helen Wade to Traverse City.
gifts, cards and dancing. Music was high score* and MT* Morris cal­
Mr*. ncun
Nellie vuumm
conxway
___ _______ ______
____
_ —___ —
, ----mi».
.7 will
wu. have a* lotte was present on Tuesday and furnished by Scharff's orchestra.
A DU LT 8 » CENTS - CHILDREN !• CENT*
Christmas guests Mr. and Mrs. Will Mrs. Sidney-French of Grand Rap­ Small Christmas trees made a Urac* kins and Carson Williams the low.
Thi hostess served rtfttahmenM
“ Fighter and son. Robert, ot Grand ids on Wednesday.
live table decorations. This was the and the guests departed at an eartp
I Ledge and Mr. and Mrs. Michael
seventh annual party held by the hour, reporting * splendid Ume.
। Sullivan. Margaret and Jack of Dc- CHOIR RENDERS
employees, their wive* and hus­
FRIDAY, SATURDAY. JAN. I,
1 troll.
CHRISTMAS MUSIC. bands.
CHILDREN HAVE
A chorus of twenty-six voices, di­
I
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stanley, who
CHRISTMAS PARTY.
। have been living in Detroit, are rected by Mr*. Robert Burch. wtU&gt;
CHRISTMAS PARTY.
Fifty
children
of
tha
Junior
de
­
spending. thLs week with friend* tn Mrs. James Bristol al the organ,
The employee* of the Frandaen
I Dowling and Cloverdale before go- tendered a delightful ptogram ok store were entertained at a pot lUc* partment of the Methodist Bundap
i Hut to their new home at Indian Christmas piuaic al the Mediodtol dinner and Christina* party last School and their leaehetx had a
’
L
Christmas
‘_2_
church on Bunday evening. Aastot- Wednesday al thc home of Mr*. grand time at their
River.
party oh Friday evening at the
I
Bernard Banasch. who attends ing Utr regular choir were MIxah Mamie Mince on North Broadway
chttrth parlors. A ChrMnUs uro,
l the University of Detroit, will spend Jean Olerum and Esther Doty. Ar­ There was a Christmas tree with
rift*,
games
and
refreshment*
made
thur
Lower.
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Lewia
Hine,
Lhe Chrtotmaa holiday* with hl*
an exchange of gifts and game*
1 father. Peter Banasch Bernard to a Mr. Wakenhut and W. Maylan jonei. were played during the evening. The
I sophomore in the College of Engl- Jr- Much credit to due each one for guests Included Mr. and Mrs. FrandEXTENSION
GROUP.
the excellence of lhe provtam. the sen. Mr. and Mr*. Richard Nixon,
[■'neerlng.
,
MT» Bllto Kelley entertained the
I Dr. and Mr*. L E. Holly and son last number, "The Hallelujah Cho­ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cobum. Mrs.
members at Ritension group No. I
of Muskegon. Mr. and Mr*. Carl rus” from Handel's "Messiah” being Mary Hilton and Mr. and Mrs.
at a Christina* pa
Bauer of Saginaw and Mtos Hen­ especially well done. The coqipiete Richard Jacobs.
noon at her home.
rietta, Bauer of Evanston. Ill, air program appeared irj last *Mk»
PLAN CHRIHTMAN DANCE.
the- Chrtotmaa guests of Mr. and Banner
Members of the two Hasting* tubI Mr*. W. G. Bauer.
CHEER-UP
DANCE.
deb
groups
have
combined
in
plan*
Mr. and Mr*. A- H McEldowney
The committee in charge of the for a dance Christmas night, Dec&lt;
and daughter, MUs Virginia Roush,
of Jacks®, toft Bunday for a three Cheer-Up dance to be given Mon­ 35. al community Hal). Martin*
week* auto tour to Florida. Mn. day evening. Dec. 28. al Community orchestra will play and ref
McKIdowney was formerly Mrs. Mae lull has secured Higbee's orchestra ment* served. Tickets may b»
from Belding lo play the program coined from any member of th
Roush of this city.
Guests of Mlu Tillie Tyden and of dances, nils alii be the Christ­ group* who hare made elaborate
John K. Tyden for the holiday* will mas party and special decorations. ttfor thc event. Blue and stiver
to will be Used for decorations
ba Mr. and Mr*. James E. Olesen Including a Christmas tree, will be
and son. Jimmy, of Aurora, til, and used. Mr. end Mrs. Arthur Willitls in addition to tha usual Yuletide
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bartltng and have been addl'd lo lhe committee. coion.
daughter, Mary Jane, of Glenn El­ All members of lhe committee are
BIRTHDAY DINNER.
working hard and thc dance prom­
lyn. 1U.
*
Mtoa Marcia ironside entertained
Mr. and J4rs Homan Fcldpattoch ises to be most successful.
eight guests at dinner Saturday
will have As chrtotmaa guests Mr.
Meeting at middlevillr night in honor of her birthday. Th*
and Mrs. charle* F. Parker. Br_ and
The officer* and member* of the table appointments were most at­
Charles F. Parker, Jr, Nrt Middle­
constitution and by-law* commit­ tractive being of blue and stiver and &lt;
ville. Mr. and Mr*. William Thoma.* tee of the Reporters club of Barry
Christmas decoration* were used in X
of Nashville and Mr. and Mrs.' G. F. County were entertained at a one
lhe room*. Games were played’after r
Feldpausch of Hullng*.
o’clock luncheon Saturday by Mrs dinner. Isabel Sage. Jocelyn Don* I £
Mrs. Sterling Roger*. Mr*. -Henry Barry Bennett, president, al Mid­ ■Ida and Dorothy Roush winning
Hubert, Mr*. Pauline BU*». Mr*. dleville. The next meeting of the
lhe prize*.
Donald Bdielkcr and Mr*. Harry
club will be, held Saturday, January
Water*, representing Lhe American
SECRETARY OF CABINET.
I. at the Parker House preceded by
Legion Auxiliary, attended the fu­ a iuncheoi\,
Miss Irene "Jones of Hastings to
neral of Byron Tungale at Hickory
secretary of the cabinet of the
Comer* on Friday afternoon.
Women’s League-of western Teach­
telephone co. party.
Mr. and Mr*. Clair Emerson of
Members of the commeiclaj and ers’ College, an organization of
Sturgto spent Sunday with Mr. and traffic departments ot the Michigan which all women of lhe oollege are
Mrs. Claude Emerson.-Mr*. Emerson, Bell Telephone co. enjoyed their member* The eablnet Is the execu­
who to manaxvr of one of the Cin­ annual Christina* parly Saturday tive group of the organization. Miss
derella Shop* in Sturgis, to being evening. A pot luck turkey dinner Jone* to enrolled a* a junior in the
transferred to Nile* the first of the was served at the home of Mis* Au- Senior High curriculum.
year lo lake charge of the new store dra Densmore after whlcn gifts
ENTERTAINED HUSBANDS
, there.
.
Were exchanged and games played.
Members of Uta Tuesday bridge
' Mr. and MT*. L. E- B«rt\ett will
clpD
hiubahd*
VENISON DINNER.
riiih entertained 1their
-------- —
____ ,
have a* a Chrt'Lr** guest Mr. Bar­
Stephen Johnson entertained at Monday evening at a turkey pot
nett’s brother. Stanley, of Orceu
Bsy. MT. BAir.ett trill drive to MH- a stag venison dinner last Wednes­ luck dinner and chrbtmat) party al
PHONE 2491
I Waukee Christina* morning. Uh a day evening at his home on Squth the home of Dr. and Mr*. Frederick
i plane acro.-a Lake Michigan to Park street. Nine gueaU were pro*- Taylor. Contract prises were won by
Grand Rapid* arriving in Hastings Snt and they later attended the Mr*, jack Stem. Mrs. Herman Axold
.... ...............................................................................................................................
......
MMM
thaw it the strand.
•nd Mn. K 3 McIntyre.
। on the six o'clock train.

‘■St

T. S. BAIRD - Clothing

Barry tiieatrv

The JUNGLE PRINCESS'

SPECIAL

WILL ROGERS in

“AMBASSADOR BILL

PARKER HOUSE

Christmas
Greetings

BOB ALLEN in

“The Unknown Ranger"
With Marttia Tibbati

from the BIG Little Store/

Thursday, Dec. 24

Sot., Dec. 26

COFFEE, VIKING BRAND, Lb. 19c
HILLS BROTHERS
Lb. 33c
MONARCH, 3 lb. Christmas
Wrapped Jar
95c
JUMBO PEANUTS
2 Lbs. 27c
PEANUT BRITTLE
. 3 Lbs. 57c
CHOCOLATE COVERED CHERRIES
Lb. Box 23c
3 For 63c
ELIZABETH LEE CHOCOLATES
Lb. Box 23c
3 For 63c
100 Parcant Filled Christmas Candy
2 lbs. 27c
DATES
3 lbs. 23c
BUTTER
lb. 36c

Order Your TURKEYS, CHICKENS,
DUCKS Cr FRESH MEATS FROM US

We trurt that *vory material thing you wish this Christ­

HINMAN’S

of Health, Happiness and Success.

Hastings

Michigan

mas to bring will be yours and in addition the blessings

GOODYEAR

BROTHERS

HARDWARE

�THE HASTINGS BANNER -THfRAOAT, DECEMBER 84. IMO

jThe Sunday

INSURANCE
LIFE . AUTO . FIRE
WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL
JASON E. McF.LWAIN

We Wish Yob All
A Merry Christmas

DEWEY REED
AUCTIONEER

5 - PHONE 2105

"AKROH" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
WdlWfc Naahkill

NEW C

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
IIMtll
PUB RA

rhe Prescription Drug Store
fUlTWOi

FOR

MWHKJAB
IVri'e or pbonr B H. Phillip.,

!J2« at Kiit Slur*

Our Service
Adjust Fairly

CITIZENS MUTUAL

BUYING

i ri'T

Scrop Iron, Brats,

Copper, Aluminum,

Mldaierilk
von bALt:

Zinc, Lead &amp; Batteries

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH
Pbanr tS3'

School

gave

Hutinn

..
. tm d. s. cum «« km., uurthe junior class, the noon
noon with
with Mrs.
Mrs. Alice
Alice Pennock
Pennock for
for
worn in church Imlldlm wn "e&lt;in».d*v।: *aA
. wntd
.......... by
, P 11
II mifrnmd
Tnnlriy.djrnlr,. Ktmf
.
outcome ryt
of ttm
the Junior-Senior
hunt.।: ,helr chrtstmu party and. ewhuige
The decorations
were... in —
keeping Qi
of glfu
luck lun h w_
----------gilt*. .
WOOD SCHOOL COMMUNITY
with Lhe hohday
SERVICE
lay reason. A short jerved
j&lt;-r.e.-1
&gt;». Putor .
| program was Riven, followed by, Uorn 1&gt;c 15
nrw, Mr,
-------... —
_
---------------: riuoeri uatnrop. i---------- ------. by n Battle creek orchestra.
pou,^ daughl„.
v
a’2? Vi”' W .A »Y1U1Cl'r&gt;N?rf 1 Mr- and) Mrs. Ottle Lykins spent
J?’
0’1cl
Thursday (afternoon with Mr. and
Wetherbee were Ln BatUe Creek Mrs MerlA Knolls near Assyria
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
Thursday
Mrs ploti of Wayland is spending
IN CHRIST.
Edward Oamble Parlor.
li?‘1
jBarnrS.w' *onie:inie'wlth Mrs Maude Wotring.
Baltimore Church
Battle Creek spent Bunday at the
tt»c officers for Morning Glory
Johnson and Laurent hftme.
-Rebekah lodge are- N G
Mrs
, The grade pupils are haying, their Blanche Vandeventer; V. G-. Mrs.
c,hrij«•«£'
on Wednesday VclmB pennmgton. sec.. Mrs. Adah
night.
The
trees
and
exchange
ot
,
Murray;
treas..
Clyde
Briggs.
The
McCullum Church
gifts will be Thursday morning.
------------------ will
-&gt;-be in January.
**
installation
Miss Frcida Betts of Detroit will
spend Christmas with her brother.1
CARLTON CENTERi Chfirle-s Belts, and family.
The Welcome Comers and Carl­
GRANGEPROGRAMS ,O“K
ton Grange are sponsoring a CarlI
ton
township
centennial to be held
Wednesday afternoon. A Christmas
CARLTON ORANGE
tree and lhe exchange ot gifts was nt Carlton Grange hall Wednesday,
enjoyed. Dainty refreshments were Dec. 30. There will be a pot luck
dinner and program in Ute after­
served.
Tlie Biptljt Mlclonary Society noon.
Chas. Paulus, who has been very
h.’d an interestin ' •reeling Friday
afternoon at the home of Mrs. Ar­ ilL. is a little Improved at this writ­
thur Kays, it beln.: their Christmas ing
Tlie families of Carl and Millard
meeting and the bringing In of their
annual Christmas offering. Light BrecheLsen have been quite ll) witii
the mumpfi.
refreshments were served.
Several from thu community at­
Mrs. Ltbble-Marshall and Mrs.
Minerva Rothaar were called to tended tiie Christinas carols given
k. Ind.,
*»&gt;u. Tuesday
luv-Muv v,
Lakeville.
by uiv
the by lhe Hastings—teachers Sunday
~.,uuv
illness of
their sLster. Mrs. «ftemoon and several also attendserious f
** —
HOLD CORNERS.
The Cedar Creek Ladles' Aid So­ Anna Hawbllta. who paired away on c'! ‘he Christmas service given at
ciety will serve a supper at the Wednesday. Funeral services were 11,0 Freeport M- E. church Sunday
h''lti
Frldnv.
afternoon.
Mrs. Mnr- evening.
church Thursday. Jan. 7.
Mrs. Silvia Larabee is on the sick shall and Mrs. HawbUtz were twin , ITank Hosmer is still at Ann Arbjr hospital and will be obliged to ,
list this week. She is gaining slowly. slsters.
A nvr per p.'nt dividend was Dald sln&gt; there for some time.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Nobles and
Oklahoma City's pay-as-you-go Thursday bv the Nashville Stale
park machines, on the flrsi day -of Bank, maldilg 50 p'r cent paid ‘ons fre&gt;mJ3e:rolt visited home folks
Satuiday night and Sunday.
opeyiUgn, coliecle^ a lot of mint since the closing of the bank.
candies The city asked for a dime
Thc M.-'hot’l ’ choir r.r&gt; wnted a a mint.
progrum of rnu -id Sunday evening; ■

CARDS of THANKS

GEO. M. NEWTON
1» W. STATE ST.

CARD OF THANK

Tarda. Bhl* EVERT TUESDAY
ud BUT BVEXT DAT.
KE DaPRIZBTBR
PKOMB 711

1 MUST EMPLOY AT ONCE
HASTINGS MARKETS

STOVES, RANGES, OIL STOVES, GAS
STOVES, FURNITURE, CLOTHING,
SHOES, PIANOS, SHOWCASES
FORD MODEL T TRUCK
FEED GRINDER, GUNS,
TOOLS LARGE AND SMALL
BELTING, PULLEYS, FORKS
HOES, SPADES AND
MANY OTHER ARTICLES
TOO NUMEROUS TO
MENTION

UMS. MRUS

FEVJR

JMNNB* WANT ADV*. PAY

I All obltua

MONEY FOR
CHRISTMAS
&gt;t Probata .

rill

rill be tnibllakad «a

JOB PHI.XTIXO.

If your Christmas plans are
going to require EXTRA
CASH, see u*. Now is a good
time to arrange. tor a clean

ORDER FOR PU81J0ATI0N.
getting thoae debts
place.

r. A. II. 1036.

In

one

WANTED

FIDELITY
CORPORATION

CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL

Of Michigan

BEEF BY THE QUAR­
TER FOR SALE.

2nd Floor Hastings National
Hank Bldg. Phone 2307.

PHONE 3909

I5lh da,

•paper ,

A Very Merry Christmas
And a Happy and Prosper- 1
ous New Year is extended to
all our friends and pol'cy |
holders. If you will coll at the
office we have a small but
. USEFUL GIFT for you.
;

i
:
j
;

HERMAN

Cash Prices
Paid for
Dead Stock

3 BUSES DAILY
TO

FLINT

Your dead animal* are worth

$2.00 One Way
$3.60 Round Trip

DOLLARS

PEOPLES RAPID
TRANSIT

To aaaure yourself of getting

JERRY ANDRUS

Mr. Floyd Denny

GENERAL INSURANCE
AGENCY

Hastings, Michigan
Phone
Hastings 2539

FELDPAUBCH

BANNER WANT ADVS. PAY

Flowers
are Ideal

. . . exquisite . . . graceful - - natural cut flowers. They'll
convey your message of Yule­
tide Greeting belter than any
other gift because they carry
nn extra note of thoughtfulness
in their freshness and outstand­
ing beauty. They cost no mure
than ordinary gifts.

^CHRISTMAS
C

/•

v

U e have a complete stock ol
rut flowers for Christmas, in­
cluding a fine- assortment ol
Korea, in fresh full blooms.

Poinsettias:
bad. Large sturdy plant* dial

Center Pieces for
thc Christmas table
. . . add a (ouch ol old
fashioned Christinas
Cheer.

Ceiitune'English Holly
ailh natural berries
and candles made up
complete ready to set
on your table.

Priced at 75c and 81.

English Begonias:
For ■ greeting that lives . . .
rend a polled plan). You’ll find
• perfect living gift in our ime
relectiun. Our Engli»li Uegoniav
•re especially beautiful, large,
healthy plantk in full blotwm.

Alio a fine aelectioo in oihw
varielies.

Member Florists’Telegraph Delivery Association

COLDS

■ “
Headache. 30 minute*

----- . ,J!

Our slock ol poinsettia planla in

TERMS - CASH. No goods removed till settled for.

Uvv

ll.e katne be alltnard
filed, that he be ;
autbonini lo pa, tie .redltuia on a pro
rat* boat*, and tint he be di&gt;char,ed
from said trait.
"
ll i» onlerd. that lhe 13th d»,'.of Jar.- ;
ubrr. A. t&gt; 1017. at tell v'llu.k- in lhe ■

THE STOCK CONSISTS OF

HASTINGS

Farmers,, Attention!

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 30
Beginning at 10:30 A. M., and continuing until the complete
stock is sold.

Registered OPTOMETRIST and

STATE ROAD.
t Congress has the power to m- TL* yaotinw. Qannai
Arthur Coleman, while drawing create the number of Justices of the 1 xnc **«3llI*gB DailllCl
gu from hb model a FMrd. nad : U 3 Supreme Court
liie misfortune lo hove it catch on
—
Htanitt M KI UN­
nre and bum up.
EXPERIENCED ACCOUNTANT
Mrs Fred Main has been sick
»nd in Pci mock lioipllal. but Imm ,
COOK HRoa... Kdllars.
retutned home.
•
klOHTY riKHT YEAR
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Kennedy of
Town LlntYkUoPBunday with Mrs.
Lena Becker and family.
Mr*.' Afchle Cunningham enter-1FUiaw.lL Mumtamed her sisterTrutn Bedford 1*«J.«,&gt; pu— 7t immh .Mregw.
144
week.
•
Mr. and Mrs. James Sot hard have
I :
IX HARRY COUNTY. NIX MONTHS, «&lt;N
both been alck with lhe flu. - .
| (If PeM lft. kdiaacs ) .
IN Barmy county, three monthi
onpim FOB FUaUOATION.
IN ADVANCE .......................... U
Stktr uf MIchljkB. tn» rrokklc Court for
1 With You One
At a w.n.L.a ot uU court, k.ld at U»
• ond All A Very
I'roKale atHra in Ur »il» of Uaallnf*. la
IX ADVAXCE
.&gt;14 fount,, un tin I7lh &lt;la| uf !&gt;&lt;■&lt;• ui ;
Merry Christmas
Ur A 1&gt;. IMG. .
•
1
ADVF.RT1BIX0 BATES:
I'rraunl, H..n Bluait Clamant. Jud&lt;« uf
kF adrartlaU* raise va sblrill
Probate.
lieu.
in the (natter uf tlie estate uf William
WARD
BAINE
E Johurueb. dei-ea..4.
H.l.-tl P hi.iaon huvina f.lr.l &gt;n aald
rnurt talk petition pra,.l,&lt; that a da,' be1
. ■
‘ ‘ *....... ...
* I

AUCTION SALE
In order to settle the estate of the late Allen P. Lasby, there
will be an auction sale of his stock of goods at the second
hand store on N. Michigan Ave., on V

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

their I

'TU C CUllDrUr^
Mr. and Mrs D. D. Bullen ot ■
Trit. LnUKCnLJ Parma visited the former's jitter. c&gt;»uVh-

Tuesday e*cnln&lt; Bl 9»r
afternoon the pri,
■ ■■- . Mrs. Frank McDerty, on Wednes-' n*Bry
Uieparunent
enjoyed
a
udyro-; r
■
Chruiou. wuy »&gt; u» .ommmlo
clay.
’OMB CENT A WORD. NO AD VEH
FIRST METrOrf. I EPISCOPAL
1 TIBXMENT FOR LESS THAN 25c
-Mrs. Ralph Hess and Miss Vir­ house.
The Lre department was called
ginia Hcia were jji Kalanuaoo Satout Friday morning to thc nlicy
urday.
near the Uera hardware where a
Mn. Nel UcJohi Eton spent latt
week wl;h her daughter. Mn. Tal­
The officers elected in Nashvd'.-.*
bert. curtli. and family hr Kaiamu
tuwnahip.
W. M—Leslie F Peighner. S. W —
Mr. and Mrs. Rogrr Warner and Menno Wenger J W -Otto Lass
Miss Berth* Woodard of Batll-« Treas.—Un W. Felghner. Secy Creek spent Lhe week end-in Grand Carl H Tuttle. S. D—J G. Duguld
hole church Rapids.
J. D.—Ralph Pennock. Tyler—Colin
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betts and T. Munro.
son were in Grand Rapids Saturday.
JEFFERSON ST. UNITED BRETHREN
Mrs. Fred Elder und Mrs. Lyman I For Zion Chapter No. 171. Royal
CHURCH.
.
E H- P.—Lcsl:e
returned Friday from Saginaw and Arch Masons:
Harbor Beach where they spent lhe Felghner. King—Menno Wcngrr
Scribe—John Marten*. C. pf.IL—
Mrs. Ray Thompson entertained Otto Lass. P. 8— Luman Surine. R.
A. Captain—Earl Olmstead. Master
1 her bridge club on Thuraday.
The Women's Literary Club met 3rd veil—John D. Duguld. Master
Wednesday nt tlie Library for its Ind veil—J. Clare McDerby. Muter
Christmas program. After a ihon 1st veil—Roy SinlUi Secy.—Colin T.
business session, Mrs. Stewart Lof- ■ Munro. Treas—Carl H Tuttle.
dahl as hostess presented the fol-1 Mrs. E. L- Kane of Battle Creek
lowing program. Christmas carols • was in town Thursday.
MEM FOR HF.NT—T-. mil.
Yankee Sprliijr Church
, were sung by the club with Mrs. Gall' Mr. and Mrs.' Bertrand Young of
- -chord.■■ ••
Ing at jftw
I Lykin* at the piano. Bethlehem and ' Charlotte and Mr. and Mrs. C T.
P 31
ruR UKKVICE
j the Chrhtmaa story were read
- by
-z lieu were Christmas guests of Mbs
B;IAPTIST CHURCH.
I Mrs. Chester Smith. Mrs, J
— .....
Milo
! Amy Hartwell and (he Hess chilJ AJ.h-k
■ Young sang “Oh Little Town of dren.
■
Kun,Hr •
ken he at 1
Mr. .nd Mr.. Dr.ry Jonr. Mid
at . *• r|.-rr
klrh.rd omn
ChrUim.r — ary
.nd Mr. Brrher MarMurll
rueetiu, al i
by Mn. clMr rumlu drifted Ihr „u )p.„d chll.u„., u,th Mr. .nd
carnet lun uf
-rrdwnrr-. nrh onr brrni.h. . u&gt;y M„.
8 MM.n.U .nd I.rnlly
to be Riven to lhe children for ln
’
in MaDte
Maple Orove
Grove.
FIRST CHURCH OP CHRIST.
Christmas.
Refreshment*
wei
Arthur Johnson, teacher in thc
■CIENT 1ST.
-rnvd by lire ;&gt;royr«m rommUUe. ; high school, was absent ,from
rom school
“
t
• "« b.y. IM put
bre»u.r
i was held at the auditorium Wed- of nim-.u

WANTS

GULL ROAD AUCTION HOUSE

CLYDE WILCOX, Florist

2008 Gull Road, Kalamazoo, Mich

HASTINGS. MICH.

Owners.

TELEPHONE 2530

�THUHSDAY. DEC. 24, 1936

what

| '

IL 'd'C’S'C'S'C'C'CWC'c

‘X

Barry Bypaths

THE HASTINGS BANNER
VISIT NAT ONAL
PETRIFIED FOREST

rational, u you wondered how and
why anybody could or would live in
such desolute places. Very few peo-

Christmas Song Stirs Hearts
Of Millions the IForhl Around

SECT10
COURT HOUSE NEWS

[thatr hall Dec.
were mostly Indian* and Mexican*.
PRORATE COURT.
I and in one stretch we traveled 130
Eit. Clyde D- Brown. Order ap-’
- ... •
mlk-s without'seeing a town or pasapointing Admr. entered.
I
Mr*.
ing even a gas stotlon.
,ytc?:,l&gt;rcSr
From an exchange we have taken lion* hod rendered lhe instrument I Est. Sarah B. Bmth. Order allow(Continued from page 1. Bec.’li
In crossing the whole state of i the following beautiful hletory of, temporarily useless. So ll came about ing Hahns entered.
Jl,nlor Vlce-Pras» Tfilte
Oar Good Wilt Ambassador
; A state dally give* the plans for
branches, others in block* and frag- Nrw Mexico the only river we saw lhe bclovi d .song. -'Silent Night. Hol/ i that the firxt transcription of the
E-t. Josephine Txeqart. Petition
C1ya pnH";
FVFRLY HILLS CALIF U,&lt;‘ uw
Yankee Spring* park.
.B,° Grande and ***** *e Night.' which we are sure our read- &gt;ong was of necessity written for for license to sell filed.
| CUtl Clark; conductress.
MILLS, UAL11 . ,A uood muny undCTprtvjjeerd clul- menu, as though Paul Bunyaji had wa%
Guard.
E&lt;t. Marv Nk Wiliams Order con- 'tor,
”r' n,
“"* Busan Craig.
—What better salesman ' dren will b? brought to the caznp* come down from Michigan 1 and ««“•&lt; » *»» absolutely dry. Every ere will appreciate. Anyone who guitar accompaniment.
‘heard the late Madam SchumannAfter th.- Christina* exercise* were firming sale entered final account
Our next meeting will be
Kiwed them into blocks and chopped *!rop Gf Wat" lhal ftn&lt;U
of good will and brotherly un- there and die 50.000 acres, most of
jHeink
«ing
thl*
.song
which
sitrredia
thing
ot
mr
post
an
.organ
builder
them
Into
slabs
and
chips
Scientist!
t,own
lhl
*
,,vrr
K
“
•
Hied.
them Into slabs and chips. Scientist t .
.
.
•
„. derstanding could we send to which iv m Alb-gon county will be believe these tree-, were growing danu ,or *"18X1100 purposes und [ thouhand* of iieafls. will especially . from Zillrrthal was called to put the
E*t. Charles Francisco. ’PrUtinn
allowed to go back lo its countless
these
dams, «
except
in w
wet
»«&gt;« «**«»'•
“*?«■ *f»
«* . enjoy the history given herewith. ; instrument In repair. Gruber played and order for partial distribution
our great sister republics in lakes and streams, which will be probably two hundred million year* between “
ttrflr,lrr' ‘he stream Is entirely cut ' A melody—calm and tender ami' and sang the unpretentious little entered.
the lower half of this hemis­ stocked with fi*h from its own ago. but not on the site where they ort
We‘ tttr
ate our
our *lunch
in Boeoero.
Socorro.'1 strong with the strength of humility I melody even to the last verse:
are found today.
0,1 w&lt;
u,lch ,n
EsL Hannah Oeiter. Petition tn
rearing
|&gt;onds.
will
make
the
large
phere than oyr own president.
RECRUITING MT ATI ON.
which was oner tlie largest town in
comes moving along the highways
81&gt;hl nU!lt, Kol, nlght,
- rive deed pursuant to contract filed.
park
a wllu
wild parazuse.
paradise. uncie
Uncle num
Sum i*
is
Geologists say thi* whole region
■ ,
.
,
, .
•
t•
I"*
’* “
The U. 8 Navy Recruiting Butt
0( God tovc s
1;ghl
who carries for Ins samples his taking a liability and turning it into wa* once a gigantic inland mu ft is thc .slate, having a population of :uid Iqrways of the world leodln.:
Raduni beam* fpm Thy holy face.
personality and hi, spoken ' an a**ct, for farming there was believed that these trees were car- around 2.000. It l&gt; over 300 year* thought back through 2 000 years
old und is a typical Spanish or
t
*!TnJ
nlU
’
a5,er
whrre
a
*
1
’
I
With
the
dawn
of
redeeming
grace.
i
mostly
abandoned
The
poor
soil
rled from a distance by streams
words?
lowing account entered dlvcluirge of good character between the ages of
Mexitan town with it* large plaza He Child.
I jesui. Lord, at Thy birth.
If. in the past, we looked mainly had been cropped until it was de­ running into thi* aea. nnd after or public touore in tlie center and 1 Silent night! Holy night!
Admr. ixMied estate enrolled
| ir^d 25 who may bTlntemKd to
' Jerua. Lord, at Thy birth.
void of fertility, and the cost ut drifting for a time became water­
। all tlie public buildings, stores I AU i* calm, all I* brlgnt
to lhe old world for our markets. budding It up and keeping it up was
lz,° Cooper, et al. Inventory. au enlistment m the Navy are r»| The organ builder liked the song
logged and Anally sank to the bot­
etc
surroundin#
ll.
Even
our
lunch
It Is certain that bevond any consideration. As a re­ tom ot some quiet cove where the
‘ Round yon virgin mother and »o much that he carried it with him ‘
I
quested to apply at the above adw.«* so- typically Mexican that we ,
Est. Ransom Wolcott, petition for tdress any week day except Saturday
child! . .
. when he returned to ZIUerthal. and
sort it will accommodate multitude* eddy or whirlpool carried them
license to sell filed, order for publl-^Ta^L «d
must
increasingly and ought to pay in the future for Here they lay for countless centur­ | still remember it and left most Of it
From proud European cathedral*, ‘,,r" chanced to .sihgTi before th?
cultivate the Latin thc expenv of lhe undertaking. And ies. being slowly covered deeper and on the table after the first taste.
4 M p M
, A. M. to 1
hamlet churches in Alpine passes/,our Strasser sister*. These am­ ration entered
We bad pavement for eleven mile- I missionary hut* in tangled Jungle-..' bltious and musical women were not
Est. Bert R. Tinkler. Order allow- P
stocks of tha new June Is doing some planning and deeper by silt and sand, and then
;
’
,,
world,
on a con­ scheming about bear cubs.
lhe land sank and the ocean came I south from Socorro, but turned ort ’ barrack and col. hovel and hospice.: “"‘F bx a position to spread the pop­ ing claims entered.
,
from
it.
crossing
the
Rio
Grande
Est.
Gertrude
B
Manning.
Will
j
'There
u
no
simple
word,"
writes
temple
and
tepee,
and
calm,
white
ularity
of
any
music,
but'
they
were
in. submerging the entire region
tinent whose incred­
una through nearly 70 mile* of the
a western editor, "to express what
ible natural resourcAbout the best modem stories of and adding its weight to the terrific ■ worst road and mo*t'de*oiate coua- I Christopher Wren "(Metin* house* t Qulclt «® recognize that Silent Night, filrd. pett’ion for probate filed
want." Well.
high adventure anusrig count*, lord* prrsvure already present. This pres­ try imaginable As we came in sight ' on anowy New England hillsides, the! **' 0 melody bound to dppeui to, Ext. Wilbur E Solomon. Annual I the American people
, account filed
brother, how about "More?"
part still virgin and und other minor royally are writ­ sure packed the sand* into stone ot Carrizozo In the valley below, we I strains of that peaceful Christmas. ‘be public fancy. They added it to,
E't- .........................
Anna B-n«n'
petition fcr
tunaoy seep out into the
tne world
worm..
program of nn.
folk euim»
zongs with
ten by Dornford Yates and run in anti the clay into shale. Already tlie:. could look down on top ot a great lullaby
-u.i
which thev
entertained
attriUnr»« audiences 1 license to sell filed
bustling market-places,
bringing
a ( which
they entertained
log* were impregnated with o strong
cured of persisting the Woman'* Home Companion
solution ot silica and so. molecule i black lava flow, with its huge quirting sense appropriate to Christ- while touring Austria and Germany f E,‘ Annie Wolcott. Report of
......
O,ir.
j.
MTl.l.
H
now
jolnn
ana
u
beliefs 4.that
the
swirls and eddies, apparently block- nu* observance*.
I selling glove; of their own manufac- Mtg. filed, order confirming mtg. j
by- molecule,
the cells’ of
Irvin H. Cobb Mtmroo
1.1,,.,,^ doctrine
Anrtrine i«, I (|rllghMul
entitled "Counterfeit
Cointhr It
I* I, were
—
— tlie
—wood
------|y wrltlen
p|ou
dUsoived and replaced
by i ing the road ahead. The flow looked
Holy infant, so tender and mild, ture.
cntered:
for them, a threat and not a shield. remind me of George Barr Me- ‘the
Ext Livingston McKlnnls. An­
*|llca whirh
which h.rrf.n~&lt;
hardened, taking 1I1 so real that we almost hesitated
It* Popular! I &gt; Spread.
he silica
Sleep in heavenly peace.
If yesterday was Europe's and Cutcheon'.* writing*.
, In the meantime, from lhe little nual account.filed.
the exact shape of the cell whi&lt;gj i about driving into It. for fear we
Bleep in heavenly peace:
'
would
be
.'.wept
down
into
tlie
val
­
Ext. Fannie Baldwin. Final ac­
today is North America's then sure- i
nucleus
of
songsters
about
Obern
­
it had destroyed. Nature did not ‘
A Simple Melody.
ley.
Tlie
heat
of
the
m:d-summer
count
filed
dorf. »&lt;•«
thc pu|AiMin,
popularity ui
of me
the Mnit.
song
, u«u.
ly the promisa of tomorrow belongs 1
sun reflected from the black mir­
It is not a carol, .nor
folk .pn-.|
d. largely un/uv
because UI
of IIS
it* CIWUll
charm,
Ext.
Storr. Final
account
--- i is iti a.1----pn-u.
**
’— Alfred u.vu
&lt; m«i ■k.T.UUIlk
to South America.
(
szirt:' It Is lusl u
ilmnlr
melndv
u
__
_
_
___
.....
boys
and girls took home over 130.rored
surfaces
of
the
broken
lava.
u simple melody setjpurtly because it was so easily ac- filed, order for publication entered
rtructure of the wood was replaced
oou m prizes and slock soles from
in a simple IltUe companied on the guitar. By 1854 thc ; *’"* z'“*— • '•
------------•
Moury.
Annua)
Tugwell'a New Job.
tlie International Livestock Exposi­
Austrian borderr village just 11?'
117 ■ p|e*e
piece had become *o
so well known that account filed
XJOW that brother Tugwell, almost llon. l hl.rt. neve,. ha* t»ern a n,n&lt;. o™t numbers ol Ih.'m .How' Hr.- ""1&gt;"--1”' «[« 1H- now l,.d «. yean ago Bo^k |n
on 1&gt;'Cmany were
were ascribing
ascribing It
It to
to lhe
the mumuE*‘ cainerine
Catherine Reexor. Petition
many
the last surviving lobe of tha when farming uos rc.ix-cted as it U, Mars. ln.Uo.Unk Uu.i lhey were'
“ Oberndorf
n&gt;—
..
.
“"»•&lt;»«■ Uunr« He nWr. the minister of t*'
the
l.siclan. Michael Haydn: the
Royal for Admr. filed,
original brain trust, has left the now. and the young farmers and IKOb.blk relied by • .weopmir tor-t ‘" 'T''
church. Joseph Mohr.
hr. took some I
Band ln ^un had added n | gst. Anna F Eckert. Waiver of
can.........
look .......
into ...........
a rosy
government flat, folks are wonder- fnrmrietti's
.....................
. eat fire caused by lightning.
sersr.« hr had compocd
Iha,,ds °r J*®" *K°ZTZZT I?to
..u *1...
i10 *** repertoire, und'on effort was notice filed, testimony of freehold­
ing how he'll make out in his new 1 future. Our own Kenneth Dunn of
1
i
w track it to its source, it*1 era filed, licenie to sell issued.
The logs iay ouried for age*, but
The rcad from hrre on t^ually friend. Fran* Gruber- who was likeline.
Rutland Twp carried off the chamwise lhe church organist and the composers having been lost sight • O3‘h before sale filed.
natural forces were at work bring- b«ame better xnd'lhc last hundred village schoolmaster at the neigh­
Don'l worry, anybody. To’ some. plWBhlp for lhe United State* in
of during the Intervening years
Es‘- William E Johncock. Final
the molasses business might be ‘••’K judging. It wo.* stated in the ing them to the surface again, until I mile* down through Roswell and boring town of Arnsdorf.
Finally, through Franz Gruber * account filed, order for publication
. ,
, . . —
....
Mlrhloan Warmer lh»l flitu wn« !&gt;».. finally they are now over a mile 1 Artesia to Carlsbud were over a fin&lt;•Stille Nacht. HeiUge Nacht." youngest son. himself an organist, entered.
sticky, but It offers no obstacles to Michigan Farmer that this was the above sea level Freed from the pavement It uas a relief to M*e Irees
best Livestock Exposition ever held.
hummed Gruber, strumming chord* thc story ot its origin became known
Ert
Doris Smith.
Bond
a young gentleman who wrote and. (This must have been a great year I pressure of “
lhe
sea
nnd
warmed
by
nnd
gras*
in
the
towns,
nnd
cotton
I
,v *«“ «*&gt;u warincu uyumu
m sne iu»ns. unu cu
from his mellowed guitar:
nnd belated recognition accorded to guardian filed
for fairs Barry county put on their
brilliant Arizona *un. the wind I and other cropx In thc fields.
Shepherds quake at the sight!
author and composer. It was no'.
Henry Roe. petition for li-------------------ther\t
j stead of lhe
.'U&gt; llu, dc.u.1.;, retrain: "1 will ,
Ulr lbu ;„r. ... 'p„land
ul| rain
lnland
finallv
rain rut
nna y
lIhmtish
y cut through
I
... barren rock*, .sand and j
■unu
m
„
Glories
.stream
from
heaven
afar,
possible
to
mark
the
church
where
cense
to
sell
filed,
order
for
publisandstone and
and *1
shale until bit by bit i lava which, though beautiful
in a“ i&lt; H«»'"nly hosts sing Alleluia,
now roll up my sleeves and remake ulr agricultural’end of it.
sandstone
of Jein
the first performance of Silent Night cation entered.
.
, ,
I the covering was lifted from the I way. after several day.* ct
.ir. , .
m i-seem
chrUt
savmr. 1* bom'
was given for that had been washed
Bd. Thomas E. ChNMbrough.
Mark lhe word*, in cjx month*
. »^11L,h. Annie'mtr. r m
'burlcd k’«s- “l,d
«»»&gt;« they 1 nothing else, do become llresom.
Christ,
the
savior,
is
bom!
away in the Salzach flood of 1899. Order allowing account entered.
be ll be en ouUUndlni! p-icornbell.
.”1"u,rk Slrlbd H ll/
'
“t" th' *'!!“ "
E'e'r W' "r"'d ln Ckrhb.d )u.« el duH.
/raS
Rcmember what General Sher­
I
'kr.j----- :• &lt;i«iu inmsiurrn ui mis region today i ana got a wonacrrui suite or rooms! ---------------- 1
lhe , coun‘r&gt;‘ but a memorial to lhe two men was I E&gt;‘. Charles Hook. Testimony of
man said about war? Weil, it's
I -MnJ
‘ l. U&gt;t» n
B d #ly'' bHnK'' ”’on? of
item-like won- in the beautiful nrw La Caverns schoolmaster had finished lhe mel­ erected in Oberndorf and. both I freeholders filed, license to sell Isa dum sight worse'n that when a
acknowledged taffy-klixea king of |I Now
Nos w
w&gt; can have some coffee |der&gt; to vleft.
Hotel, fireproof with shower bathsi^J’ Scratching the note* down on there and in Salzburg, each Christ- । »ued. oath before .sale filed
goll dum cold snap comes and
North America. And pretty toon । bread."
ma* Rve at midnight hear* the Iran- ,
Jennie B. Goham. Warrant
your coal Is gone Cal! Smith
.. .. .. •'
In
the
museum
ut
thc
park
head'&lt;
electt'ic ceiling
fan* in
each
scored
paper,
he --------went about
,
in
me
museum
ut
uic
park
head'"
“
'Mi
ui
rai.i
—
........
—
----...
--------we'll be 'laxiea-coniciou* to a point i
' quarter*
.......... are great .sections
... of...
or the evenimr
Bros, dr Velte and have your bin
mu.it.
Uicm- • ,ooni After .u.i.im
cleaning up und cooling i| nrriuiruiv
preparing ifor
evening service at quihzing measures sung once more, “nd inventory filed.
where thc effect will be that the , Doesn't th? i SiU 1 brUhl°
E*t. Lloyd Allerding Order con' to“s- ground «*d beautifully polish- off we had a fine dinner und strolled
* “’* church in Oberndorf. At while in Christian communities
filled today.
iook ftoe
line with
witni Ils
entire country it paved with froth j look
lu bright
bright grevn
*r&lt;tvn texf ihe .original grain "and '-an rinvs around the town. Carlsbad -t* a I midnight? us part, of-/he Christmas throughout the world those who du. firming sale entered.
JX's m that
me And
now dutiful beautiful little city with-fine build-1 Eve sendees. thesong was rendered reverence to lhe Christ find freeh1 E»t. Elbe Vasmer
Petition for
roofs? Whoeverit thought
up of lhr *&lt;&amp;
fly paper.
calls
to
Inspiration
in
the
hushed
license
io
sell,
order
for
publlcaluu
good
taste,
rauntr^ichMlhJ^v
it
seem*
to
me.
And
carnelian,
agate,
*
”
onjx.
.
----and
T",
jasper
-------•»«»
“
nd
stores,
mo
t
of
which
are
.
antf'gained
the
Immolate
approval
1 wouldn't be surprlted to tec ut don't all ’the country schoolhouses • fJ’JS*?!'
*'
sense that accompanies the appre-. ‘ion entered.
uzing caramel* for currency. And look luck near In U»lr nrw pain:?
rainbow Tile air-conditioned In the drug store °* “K peasants,
ciauon of an unpretentious song.
----------------- -----a- for peanut brittle—well. I've al­
First‘ Written for Guitar.
...
great red logs lie around In great while absorbing chocolate malted*.
----------------- -----------------------■ The Guggenheim people have anI rorly-Ohd proplr In th. Vnludl"?!""? T
""cuini yuu we became acquainted with one of
ready started hoarding.
Now a strange circumstance atThey bloom but bear no fruit—the nounced the invention of a solid,
SUU. had an inenmr or Il WOIxn1""', “ “l- S""'
* »“•; the city officials, who when he tended the premiere of Silent Night, famed Japanese cherry trees of I nonexplosive gasoline for use in alrfound
we
were
from
Michigan,
took
or ovrr Ua year. And eounllews Ilk- । ‘./"nJ™, °n10
II seems that mice had been at work washigton. and the late naval con- p^nes No progrru is reported, howPHONE 2257
Il Dace's Soo-ln-law.
great delight in showing us the on the church organ. Their depreda- fercnce in London.
Ur Children Seyer heard the ChrUt-1"
“J"* *"•
ever, in producing a tax-proof gas.
HEN Mussolini let the word
I ma, Biory or ot sanu claua. ll " S" bi°"„b"n«
” ,he town He even took us to the jail
percolate that he waa groom­ put doewi’t *eem powlbte In a dem-:
and introduced us to the sheriff and I
* "IT"?" ,rom t,le
chief of police. I never did exactly j
ing that new son-in-law to nil his ocraue country.
mil &lt;d aun and rrent
dictatorial boots he must have
...
Visitors are not allowed to keep get the significance of this, unless ।
hicant what he hinted at. Because ; son, hit title iwdlen: “I O»e I °r
lh'
«•«- he had sized us up and • thought i
latest photographs show the heir Up My Throne tor a Woman.- It "i™?:/!-11
““'"St, “n JS sooner or later we would meet them 1
apparent with his Jaw also thrust luu lots of meter not ires meter Purch*'«* This h probably a good under possibly less favorable cir­
forward, his brows also knit in but rhythm meter And the Duke of J^t^iJlndTkRireVveaZand’if cumstances.
This official was formerly a fur­
menacing frown, and his plumplsh Winduf reminds me of a sad book “**?
* Kar- •»&lt;* lf
look home * generous niture salesman from Grand Rap­
bosom inflated until bls medals ' I cincrArenorted on In Enxliih -A e"eh
Man Wllhmt a country?It hU re* ,
*!kl‘ id* we met a great many people on
stand forth like carnival tags on a
our trip who. upon seeing our Mich­
Cent photograplks are indication* of
,!he f®.resl
marquee.
* his mental state his decLsion* co*- nrounrt “ thousand cords of wood a igan license, would introduce them­
Thc likeness to the original model . him nlenty
uecwion* co*., Kaf Mowever
plcn. selves and a*k if *e had ever
is so perfect that II Duce could
...
ty left, as nobody could run off with known so and so In Vermontville or
use a picture ot the young man for
We wrote to Santa last nixht and “ny of the bloelo»s M ‘*»ey Ionia or some other of our neigh­
a hand inirro..
'asked him for a hammer and a die.lOn J? 0W 200 boring town*. In Wyoming we met
Ornithologically, It seems fitting tlonary Jerry thinks when Santo J?"*
^.* ,ProJj"b; ano‘*‘" "**on lhe manager of a telephone com­
that Italy, having kickec the dove reads it he'll bring us » phrenolo-1
d° no‘ •»Pr&lt;&gt;v&lt; 01 c-rrylhU pany who used to be a travelling
manager for lhe old Citizens Tele­
of peace
in the •pants,■ should--------cherwant the
to nail I P*reclow
w"y ‘
LMich
' l*‘»as
l ««•"&gt;'
&lt;*m|
i.h • the pouter pigeon
pose to typify gist
*p tlWe
* furnUurt
. hammer Christ.
garnets,
to-- phone company out of Grand Rap­
deflance.
,1UUI vacatlan. and tbc dictionary to'
"nd a«*u's “» ids. He had been in Hasting* many
time* and had known Jason McEl­
find big wordi to u*e tn thi* col- JrT?.Ufn*’X *’ound
‘*»y P^rk.
umn. And wed like a holly' tThe norUwni Part
the l»rk is wain. Hie part we could not under­
Tlie language of Lawyers.
*he Paint- stand was why these good people
REGRET J didn't think this up ! wreath around Barry Bypath* thi* J*Je ®®uU“rn
week. too,
too, mease.
pkase. Mr.
W—
011
n,ll?u?nd “I1*’4• r.ho appeared perfectly normal and
Mr Editor.
bailor.
,
first— some dirty plagiarist is wee*,
-...
I of'miound*
of-mounds. washed and hlnam
blown turn
Into Intelligent in other ways, liadjevcr
always thinking up something be­
Peace On Earth. form* resembling rare colored hay­ left Michigan.
fore I get around to doing so. But
Hubert
Men fight again, God. inthe east- ‘ ?.{ac,^* On li?e u,ps o! m*t,y 01 ‘ht-in
1 feel ll my duty to help spread it
cm meadow*
■
, He the remains of great stone trees.
aivuiiu, especially
viuvtlbu/ since ll
.
around,
It was a
Tlie peace of the world would be
---------------- .-------u -s Here were also found the fossilized
lawyer »b» M It. rm quolrnl
-Were .hrpherd.
more
secure
if
governments
could
wwehrt
u&gt;e!7
»&gt;.„»
----■
"
*
,
&gt;*"&gt;"«•
»&lt;
p«-i&gt;»iortc
iwm
■ .
.
watched their siiecu
him:
get their appropriation bills through
Th.: i.l«ht wbe» .u«,l wto mad,
"If a layman gives an orange to
a hymning
rkwl
ntuxeums and universltie* without pointing the finger of
alarm
at
their
neighbors.
you ba simply says: ’Have an or­ Thu wnk.nr.l lira tram &gt;i«nlri Uraihoul lhe world, workmen In
ange.* But when a lawyer puts the
trlohlrnrd sleep
'
lhe roadway rhrouih Ihl*
Pear, on r.rm tood will lo men । p“‘ ",
transaction-in legal form he writes:
1"* mwovered o Ume
forever "
and v“*‘’“ble deposit of cycad. fem
*1 hereby give and convey all and
,olheT *f*f impressions formed
singular, my estate and Interests, The song went on. "The Prince of I
Peace
ha*
come'"
1
1,1
“
ndstoite
and'shale from
r‘-hL title, claim and advantages
J0 Jhc “?,d
ol and In said orange, together with Two thousand years have passed
since that first citan ting—
**** °* Ulls 6rca‘ inland sea milall its rind. Juice, pulp and pips,
There Is no peace, no rest, no muf- 1
ai y5ar* “,0
and all rights and advantages there­
fled drum.
Throughout Arizona can be found
in. with full power to bite. cut. suck
| trace* ot a vanished people’ In and
and-otherwise to eat the same or Tonight the war clouds shut away i “”“"5 u!f, PeUMfcd Foreat. prehlsgive the same away with or without
the heavens
lorlc dwelling* and "picture wrllthe nnd.. skin, juice, pulp or pips, And dim lhe glowing star that I‘T*8" are P*‘"UfulJ“nd, °r «"•» ®n*
anything hereinbefore or hereinafter
high'
i u«iuiiy
development.
swung so high
। ‘Iqully
and ana
highnign
development.
TheThe
or in any other means of whatever Around the world the bugles caU to yn00th sandstone was an ideal surnature
battle,
’ ” j face for the** ancient artist* to
naturc or kind whatsoever to
tn lhe
tho
the
co.trary in any wise notwithsland- ships guard the coast and men ride w0,.k uP°n- and ,lowherc in the
&lt;—.’ And then
-----------—■--------------------u the
.
world in that age. could such suiling.
another
lawyer cornea
** *°and J® work w*‘*'
along and takes it away from you.** We bring no answer to the angel a?)le
chorus
IthP chisels formed by nature from
Who asked one night for brother-' Uie Pe‘r“'*t*‘wood, hard enough to
Underdone Movie Hama.
«|U1.
HIT P"
pens
u
hood of men.
'VMI
cul
w,lh Th®
k museum is
A MEDICAL Journal reports that We held a vision once of peace for- filled *with
“*“■ these
“■ “ anctant foaslls of
-•
a preventative has been found
। prehistoric
animals, trees and
ever.
foY~)richlna. But I'm afraid it's * This Christmas, God, give us the leaves and also the more recent pic­
loo late to do anything for some of
tographs carved into lhe atone by
dream* again.
.
our Hollywood actor-folk, trichina
lhe inhabitant* of this region thou­
sand* of years ago.
THREE CORNERS.
being a thing common to under- '
We would have liked to spend
Mr.---------------and Mrs.—C. —
A. -------------------Lrster and
done hams.
! ----A lot of us who came out here Jean Marie of Dowling spent Bun­ more lime in this desolate but inter­
esting place, but here it was Satur­
as greenhorns and went to cutting
with Mr. and Mr*. Carl Ixnz.
Ellxsa Lewis, 'Clara
up didoes for-lhe screen bgve an
”*r* Curtis and day and we still had 2500 miles to
aiibt Whe-i lhe movie crjtica ac­ Zelma Bird of Freeport called on go before reaching home on Wed­
nesday as planned, and we had to
cuse us of having contracted the dis- Mrs. Edw. Walters. Saturday.
M. E Moore was In Grand Rap­ visit our office in Dalia*, and pant­
ed to visit the Carlsbad Caverns enids on business Saturday.
tfia^we’d been exposed to.IL
- w— .^..w w,
p-.- route. Before leaving lhe park at
Yet lhe Dims have produced a ent*. Mr
and
Mrs.
Edward I *0:30
enquired the best route to
g'»nd arub-of good actors, out of Walter*, that Mrs. Cecil Plank "
—*-*--■ —
*--*------'
L"
Carlsbad.
We had*-------our choice
of ‘the
very raw material, loo, sometimes. iPearl
?&lt;-««*&gt; Walters! i»u
uuiuimcu to
ui route through El Paso, which is
had *submitted
And they keep right on doing so. an appendectomy at lhe hospital at around 630 mile* and mostly paved,
• notwithstanding that every now and KendallvUle. Ind. She was expected and the bee-line road of around 540
then the popular fancy picks on to return to her home Sunday and miles without much Improvement
and were advised to take lhe latter
some male I..-..:,
beauty with set of her sister. Mrs. Seth Cook, of Lanif we expected to g*‘ 1° Carlsbad
educated eyelashes anid' lhe win- **n&lt; »hl care for her.
evening.of Of
courea
we don't
Mr. and Mrs.that
B. Adcock
Has
­
some trick of a languishing jiaoce.
: tings were Sunday guests of the know what the paved road would
IRVIN 8. COSB.
have been like, but I would gamble
that we could have driven lhe extra Phone for complete information.
A communist is a fellow jwi», S*r a. Flfleld.
..
ninety.mlle* and gotten there much
thinks It's more likely that there's j XjRe Pacific ocean makes up more more comfortably and quickly than
something wrong with tha country ' than half of the total waler surface we did on the bee-line. However, it
TRIO
CAFE
—
PHONE
2137
than with him.
. of the globe.
was quite interesting and cdu-

thinks j. . ■&gt;JANt '**t’ON

—

-

^hnnt- 'WCfWC’C’C’WC'S

B

SMITH BROS
VELTE &amp; CO

W

1

I'MRTRRVEUNGMRN
I Travel By
Bus because
I can ‘get
Stopovers
Anytime and
it &lt;osb me
about 31 less
"per mile than

iS*7Tli driving my
own. Cor/

BUS DEPOT

�TTTF. HASTINGS BANNBB, TITURSDAT. DECEMBER if, UM

SUPERVSORS’
PROCEEDINGS
(Continued from preceding page)

Ltitle Tkatnappla ........
Lilly Ped Lake . - .
Lake Ono "M.pls

;3’&gt;KMW2&gt;|

H»i*nd latke ......
Mananlhakr *...... .._.ZT
Miller and Meyer* ......
Mercaa ...........................
Mnd Orevk - --------------

53£3£. •2S?.&gt;S|5

1

s

' ?■

isassssas

g;

:

i

! sf ’
•- rr Fth

E'

K KE

Melller&gt;a epd Kstessalen

MX. end Mr*. Charles Deal start­
ed for Peoria, Illinois. Monday
where they will spend the holiday*
with Mn. Deal's parents. Mr. and
Mr&gt;. Armstrong.
Mrs. Morehouse and Mrs. Florence
Mott attended the Maccabec meet­
ing at the home of Mrs. Emma
Dickinson of Cloverdale Thursday
After the business meeting a Christmass tree and program were en­
joy^ . .
__________

Naak Meinc
XjiskvUle ___ ------ -Oren**, lite Creek
•'&lt;iran&lt;rville” .... .
Olmstead and Muirs

Twenty per cent of Denmark s re­
tail trade is handled by co-opera­
tive tocieUe*.

■:.&lt;iov.&amp;3 ijsui

1’* rkrr...................
1’edunk
Hkalle
-—
PlraaSBi Valley "Carl
Pauslle .......................

WH if iiHf eJ 'l

W TH A

। ■■•akin r ii

Htilllkousr and Hrahrav
Kerond Lak* Joint .
Klorkdaln ................ .......
Ksildler Joint ..............
Hhra ............. ...............
epiudlw ’’Woodland'
Rpringrr snd Kutfnrd

7M
10 uo

Nmrlker ”lrUt&gt;*r’ ...
Heamp ............
II 00 kprura
n.|n»w Hrook "Maple
rII 00 I Shallow Lake ...........
iT.sn I,
US'! | ilavtla**. and Carlton
Tenn Drain No. 3 ut
__ Yankee fprlny, .......

PRAIRIEVILLE.
Mr. and Mm. George Adriuuou
will be host and hoxleas to Mr. and
Mr*. Clarence Adrlan.wn and fam­
* i;.-. | ily of Albion. Mr and Mrs. Leon
»2" Adrianion of Olivet. Mr. and Mr*
‘Richard Adrutnson. Mr and Mr*.
’ «&gt;n George Adrtanson. jr.. Mr. and Mr*.
'.&lt;!• Raleigh Adnanson. Mr. and Mrs.
George Haven* each with their
। families all from Neeley. Mr. and
I Mrs. Lewi* Johnson and daughter
i and Miss . Lucile
Adrlaiuon of
Adrlanson
Prairieville / Christmas Day. There
i will be Ihlr".■-three
“------*---------guest*.
। Mr. and J *. rrea Stanley of !&gt;■s/mi troll and M_______________________
nnd Mrs. Orlie Fisher
•' ■-,° of DowIlQg called on Mrs Sam De­
’
, Bffck' Thursday.
”
Mr* Honeywell is visiting rclai 7« lives in Dowagiac.
Sherman Boulter I* ill with a
severe cold.
•
Will Hughes of Kalamazoo was in
town Saturday paying taxc.-. and
calling on friends.
Many from here attended thc
dedication of thc Delton-Kellogg
Agricultural
school at
Delton:
Thursday night.

v.:..

i,A,

’S’llije W, ’Castleton"
Whertlry ....... ...............

3&lt;l ilirdl
I?..10

MeKihlun

4-J 11-rt MeKIbbln

Woodland .............
Willow Marsh "Irvine
and llutland" ......
W»rt* '’Assyria’-'. ........
Wpknti ............... ......
Woodlaad Center ......... 7
Walter* ...... .................
Zrrhei ... .....................

Sincerity is our keynote
thought when we take thi*
Ume to wish each and
every one of you 'a Joyous­
ly happy holiday season.

McCREERY’S
DRY CLEANERS
HASTINGS

PHONE

h—lthfaL low-cost bcaL

Consumers Power Co.

HASTINGS LUMBER
&amp; COKL COMPANY

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, IQ36

FRANK SAGE

HASTINGS

CO-OP SPREADER
-has Advantages that YOU wants

|

Hoving sold my farm, I am moving to town so will have an auction sale at the
farm one ond one-half miles north of Carlton Center, on

SALE TO BEGIN AT ONE O'CLOCK SHARP. I Otter the Following Property:

HORSES
Black gelding, 7 years old, wt. about
1500, sound and right.
Black gelding, wt. about 1500. (This is
a good work team).
COWS
Jersey cow, 6 yrs. old, giving milk. Bred
Aug. 7. _
Guernsey- and Jersey cow, 4 yrs. old,
bred Oct. 4, giving milk.

SHEEP
10 Shrop ewes, most of them young
sheep.
7 Shrop ewes, year old.
10 ewe lambs.
2 Shrop buck lambs, eligible to registry.

Jlllrlirll
YLoiu

11 ill mo

THE FARM
BUREAU LINE
Plows
Discs
Drags
Cultivators
Planters
Mowers
' Rakes
"
Loaders
Wagons
Tractors

POULTRY
20 Rhode Island Red hens.
30 Barred Rock hens.
20 White Leghorn hens.
2 Barred Rock roasters.

CO-OP MANURE SPREADER
This spreader was produced in answer to the former's
demand for’ an efficient, eosy-to-handle spreader The
Co-op i$ cosy to load (only three feet high) light draft,
short turning and is built on a flexible frame. Mounted
on French &amp; Heck steel wheels with self-aligning bear­
ings ond Zerk lubrication, this machine assures smooth, efficient operation.
The Co-op Spreader has a capacity of 60 bushels and
is adjustable to 6-12-18-24 loads per ocre. Its 14 inch
road clearance makes it possible to drive over olmost
any kind of land.

Excellent Distributor
Shred* and palrerixro manure and spread* it in a wide, even
blanket of fertility. A real crop maker.

NEK THE CO-OP SPREADER
And other Farm Bureau Machinery at our branch store* and
Fanners Co-op Association*. It will pay you to invMtlgate.

HAY AND GRAIN
About 300 crates sorted corn, most of
it old corn.
4 crates good seed corn.
About 225 bushels oats.
About 12 tons mixed hay, put up in
good shape.
About 300 bundles corn stalks.
15 bushels potatoes.

FARM TOOLS
Studebaker wagon, 3 inch tires, good
one.
Good land roller, single disk.
TERMS OF SALE - CASH.

FARM BUREAU SERVICES, Inc
Halting*, Mich., Phone 2118

Ituliut warmth
_aa you want... without

AUCTION SALE

PHONE lais

Gaskill

MERRY
CHRISTMAS

extend our best wishes
for a Merry Christmas |

('To all our patrons, we

K

FLOOR FIRNACE

Motion

Woodland, Mich., Phong 27

United manure spreader. (This is a
ood one.)
ob sleighs, widened out.
2 sheep racks.
Hay fork ond rope.
60 tooth spike drag.
17 tooth spring drag. Lag boot.
Keystone side rake and tedder combin­
ed. 'John Deere hay loader.
Superior drill. Hay tedder.
Dump rake, good one.
McCormick mower.
Oliver 2-horse cultivator.
2 five tooth cultivators.
99 Oliver walking plow, good one.
Gale riding plow. Flat rack, good one.
Combination stock rack.
Dump boards. Hog crate.
Hercules drag saw and 2J H. P. engine,
- a good one.
Double harness, U inch tugs.
Single harness. Lown mower.
2 wheel barrows.
2 ten gallon milk cans.
5 gallon milk can.
Grain cradle. Good fishing boat.
Grindstone. Scolding barrel.
Oil drum. Sickle grinder.
Crosscut saw. Doubletree and single­
tree.
Cross bar and most all kinds of small
tools used on a farm.
22 Winchester rifle.
. i
Some household goods. , ”
Everything on this bitt will be sold for j
just what it will bring.
-w s

S

NOTHING TO BE REMOVED UNTIL

FRANK ASP I NALL, Pt
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctions,.

=

“
CL

�THE HASTINGS It INNER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 34. 1916
PRATRUltll.LE.
ROUTH BOWNE
:
Dec. 11 Letter.
Dec. 17 Letter.
i Dec. 17 txticr.
Our school will close for vaca­
Milo sclitol will have iu CliflitHarold Knack from Detroit was
ma* tree and program Wednesday a 'Ultor at thc Jerry Blough home tion December 23 with ChrUtma*
evening, Dec 23. at die schoolhouse. Wednesday.
exercUe* at night. A good program
Nearly Throe Thousand Men
A good jirogram is being prepared. 1 Wiliiain Mlshlen and family call- is bang prepared by lhe teacher*.
Find Employment
Mr. mid Mrs. F. Gilbert enter- cd on hia mother at'Logan Sunday Mr&gt;
Hyde and Mrs McKIbbln.
tallied D. Dauphin of Marcellu.-,: afternoon.
1
Anniiiilly
over the wit k end.
Harry sanders from South Bend.
Christmas tree and program nt «*-•
ll. rnn e Flower Is slowly improvin’ Ind., wus a caller at Hie Jerry Hie Methodist church Tuesday 2ui»'
IrguJature for the past biennium. P.
at Borges* Luspi'al.
1 Blough home Thursday.
nlghl. December 22 A welcome to- j«u,
J. HoUm-.t'-r. director of the de­
Homer and Herman FUher re-1 Mrs. William Pardee and dough- all Mrs. David Shepherd has charge
triment ot conservation, will ap­
turned Saturday evening from a U-r. Mrs. Marion Nash of Clarxs- of the program
praise Michigan s commercial Rshweek'a visit with relatives a'. Weld-. vllle attended a thowfr given for -Mrs. Hazel Billing was called
ing industry at a value uf approximCn.
Mrs. Jack Watt* Thursday. ..
Thursday to Three Rivers by the ill­
m.itcly iijen mdliun dollar*.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gilbert were: Ben Quick Bpm Cressey silent ness of her sister. Mlsa Mabie
I Tills apprahal will cover not only
business visitors in Kalamazoo Mon- -from Friday noon until Saturday Shepardson
1 the aggregate annual catch whjch
day.
I'forenoon
"
u *.
...|। Ray Jephel wax Hut first to pay
at the Jerry r&gt;&lt;
Blough
home
yielded a revenue of nearly S3.9O0.leaving
Saturday
tor Grund
E. M. Cadwallader of South Hick-1--------„ there
------- ------------ —
--------- taxes In our towmhip this year.
000 in 1935, but ako the value Of
ory called x&gt;n hl* aunt. Mrs. ll. J Rapids.
.nets, boats, buildings and ground:
Flower. Monday.
■Mrs. Lydia Poult and Jennie Par­
estimated at $4,000,000
Last *1 hursday Mr. and Mrs. M.' dec of Hartl* Creek spent Friday
I The figures on Uhich ttie.se ap­
Bradfli id and Mrs. Wolston were I with their sister, Mrs tyRUm Par­
praisals are baaed were compiled b-'
r.: bmuzoo sh.spjiera.
Idee.
t«
. the flMierirs d&gt;v!‘ion of tie? dirpm
*1 H|.rinc«. Harry rou*
- ird.i; M. Bradfield ahjl Jock
Roy Blough's family of Freeport
Hiei.t *nta
utm'.i'ed h&gt;
. :
M;.i lb-ville. Joliu BrudniTli: spent Sunday with his folk*:. Mr Get a small bottle Borbol-Quadniple-a
colorless
llnlmrnl
For
*im-I
(
. ;tuiani.icoo. visitor t.hc same : and Mrs. Jerry Blough.
Chnr'.if. Booth from Ntles wat a p'.e cnltre apply twice dally ’ Thou*- ‘ ,
!.
. M :• quite Gated over J Thursday caller at the Jerry Blough •ands*hAre been relieved. It qujckly
•
supplies substance needed by’ • thc
!
. ■ ... cfl- .1 tie made tiwently.: home
.
। . • ;^n-^'-rt ;hed nearly two ib&lt;
‘ J N. Long from Goshen.. Ind., thyroid gland Does not Interfere
,
• • w. J ton .-.nd «on. De- was a culler at the Elmer Shaffer with wdrk cr pleasure. Get further
information nt Carveth * Stebbins.
'
•
.. ;.i Kalomnadb Saturday ,liome 1-Ylday evening
Mm. Peter Griffin was called Druggist. ’Approved by a regfstered ,
।
its Minnie Qul^k went Saturday home Sunday night as Mr. Griffin physician. Note: K. Mae Osborn.
;;e
v.r.f d.tv. frith her 11 un lhe sick list. She was ac- 0366 Pryor Ave., Detroit. Mich., will
ind family. t-omiuuiled home by Mr. and Mrs. Kindly tell about her success will*
oxlip. .‘L
Sorbul-Quadruple.
Lyn Griffin and Janet Darlene of
; Bellevue who will stay until after
Christmas.
C.au:! rmi'iBv and Gc-rald of Kalmarigold, larkspur, parry, poppy
:....oo -ji iit Sunday with Mr. and
crow-flowcrr, ioag-purplc. croru»/&gt;» II IZ.WI.
,fr . John Abbott
. pomegranate, tnydle. rcsemar
Mi. and Mrs. Joe Stenger and]'
rv.«ti::i: t; • y. r
livre ■ n
•"’,1 Mf- Walter Lower of
-------- lavender, mint--', marjoram !,.•ai.
.1 pro.-ram : nu .
■ to intoL; :&gt;: ii'i: enti Mr. and Mrs. Fred faintly spent Sunday nt Mr. end '
txith young and old At mi.lnigh: Decker of Holme*; district 6prut Mrs. Bert Stengers of Kalamazoo. i
Frank Roush and children rprnt'
•&gt;
’ .. . r (Jle oll)
)n;| ,,(i. Sunday with their parents. Mr. and
Sunday
afternoon
nt
George
C mw Will be iriin-h
Alonzo Deck*/.
canin'
i Kathleen Dmikl’. spent the week Roush'a near Hastings
.John Gtird mid ‘"‘I tn HustUms with her Frank
kraiid-Roush made a business trip
| to Knlnmazoo Thursday afteniocn.
rhtldren spent Sunday with Mr nnd' mmner. Mrs. Towrwnd.
..
.
.
... '..................
•
---- ■ ---Mr. .....l
and Mrs C'ln,..r
Elmer t,
Price
and
Mn j Donald Kingsbury of Hastings
returned to thein home al Onaway I called nt Frank Rousli s lost week,
Mr. i !id Mi" W. I. Hnmmo.id of after u Iwo weeks' visit here with! Mr and Mrs. Joiui H. Wallace &lt;f
her
jwirenla.
Mr./
and
Mrs.
Chas.
I Rochester. Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Battit- Cudt ajieiil Sunday e.et-iiu
Louden of Gull Lake. Mr.-and Mrs.
with Mi. and Mrs. Ar&lt;iy Oath. Jo­ Mnrlow.
seph Hammond returned Hume with I William Barry of Flint spent Sun-1 Kenneth Nash mid two daughters
day with his parents. Mr. und MisJot Vicksburg spent Sunday with
them for, a visit.
1.....
. their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Allison
• Mr. and Mi’. Mason of Delton Tom Barry.
j R Louden.
spent Sunday with Ihdr son. Myron,
Mr. and Mrs, Allison Louden spent
and family
Thursday in Hostings visiting Mrs.
of
' Louden s sisters. Mrs. Herman ZerMr. und Mrs. James Tyler
WrxxiUnd were Sunday guests of be) and Mrs. Chas. Paul­
Mr. ana
and airs,
Mrs. neitn
Keith uranam
Graham of
their mother. Mrs. Eva Trautwcin... I' •'«■.
Mr. nnd Mrs. H F. Munn of Lake- Untile Creek were Sunday evening
1 On Friday evening lhe annual
cuuer.. at C.
w. Zimmerman
/.immermani.
|.Ur«B»ui
’s,
meeting of the Brush Ridge com­ view were Sunday afternoon callers ; callers
| Alfred ’
Zimmerman
-“t-r—Jtr. and Carl M.,-hi&lt;*n
munity club was held with twenty- al Orr and Alfred Fuher's.
MUkle of
of South
South Hnven
Hnven spent
.“pent tin* y1The Martin school will have a ]' MUkle
nine in attendance.
Offlcers for the coming year arc: Christinas program and Christmas week at C Zimmerman's
'president. Mrs Mina Pranshkn; tree nt the nchoolhouse Wednesday j
"
J•*
BARBYVILLE.
1 n.r e
vice-president. Ml." Doris Peake: evening. Dee. 23 Thursday evening,',
1 JliAi
secretary-treasurer. Mi.* Margaret Dec. 24 there will be a Christmas Dec 17 Letter.
The
Missionary
Society met
with
'
*
Johncbck. A supper and program tree and old fashioned Ciirtstmas 1 .
,
„
.....
.
...
Mrs.
Jesse
Fossett
Wednesday
aftui.u.
| Mrs- Jci4*! Fa-,setl Wednesday aft- ! l|,u
i.Ur »n.
were enjoyed. The ivxt meeting will progrum at the Marlin church.
Two clubs of the L. A. S. served erJ,oon, ,, ,
. „
be on Jan. 8 ut the «chooliit&gt;use.
.Program comnillU-e,. MG- Greta. 4UPJXT to the U-nciieib of lural - ’J''
guests uf Mr.
„
Murphy and Wilhelmina pranshkn; schools ot their monthly/meeting at
ii.r iuui,r.
Edna Wurm is the supper comniit- the Martin schoolhouse last Monday ar^l “rs. W ill Hyde.
evening.
v~--&gt;
Mr nnd Mrs- Vern Hawblitz and 1
. tec.—Doris Peake.
j children of Highbank were Sunday unjrMixiJ
'
dinner guests of Mr. mid Mrs. H. J. .....m i.. 1
Wilcox.
।
j Saturday evening the new neigh- VhiZhVn»
1 bora Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Wilcox nnd
that „
I George and Mary Hayman enjoyed
&gt;•
; an oyster supper together al the
.
• Wilcox home.
Vi
| Heber Foster made a business trip of fi E. ",
to Lansing Saturday.
i«.t hri«»
' Tlie Consumers Power Company
has btm obtaining right of way fur ; i„j«. u. t.
prr&lt; ration. distributed to member* durin; 1936 of
the new line the post week.
। •&gt;
Thc school children nnd teacher
J
$357,300.00.
. are preixirltig a ChrUtmas program 1
We invite you lo share In the coining year'* prosperity!
। to be given at the church Tlie esc-. J -'-i* shohkr.
nlng has not been fully decided up- '
Writs u» ilirert for lull Jpformatlon or arc Mr. J. L. Maus,
on and will be- announced next lu.iT/’ur.u.i 7t'
week iiu re will be a ChrLstmas

FISHING INDUSTRY
HIGHLY VALUED

Fn the true, friendly spirit that dominates the

whole world at this time, we extend our wish­
es for a delightfully happy holiday.

ANDRUS

SERVICE

I
. —-

Want to Buy or Sell?

Try Our Want Column

You’ll be sure of a

KOBINHUE PARK.
Dec- 17 Letter.
.
.
'
, .
Mrs: "Macle Fotta mid daughter.
Betty, mid Mr*, Lavina Fititetoicncr
of Middleville were hhqpping tn
Grand Rapids Thursday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. .George Poland at­
tended tlie fuucrul of Frank Olncr
mar Hasting* Tuesday.
Mrs. Hilda ‘Peten. anil friend of
Grand Rapids spent. Sunday with!
Mrs. dive Churchill who has bx-ni
ill. Mr. end Mrs.. Alex Potts of I
Grand Rapid* were calletA Sunday. 1
Homer Ingnun..and Mr. nnd Mra,
Fred Ingram spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs George Poland.
Mr. and Mrs. George Poland spent
one day last week with Mn. Nora
X! anker Smith uf Portland. Ore.,
who ts visiting in Grnhd Rapids
Mr. nnd Mn. John Kollar and the
former'.; father . .tpent
FWirday

I

GOITRE

Make Thin Quick Test | •!$•*£*

| LEGAL NOTICES |

MERRY CHRISTMAS

AP

with one of our

FOOD STORES

'.'AL'K

FANCY

$I77,5OO In Dividends

Swiff* Premium

HAMS
lb.

“9

g V

Small
10 «» 12 lb-

Capitol Savings &amp; Loan Co.

BUTT HALF, lb. 29c
Solid Pack

OYSTERS
-• 25c

ROASTING

CHICKENS
lb.

112 East Allegan Street

SiMft.'fr

Lansing, Michigan

J. I- MAUS, RepresenUllve, 202 S. Park SL, Hastings, Midi.

COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS

k* J I.' C

BACC I

CHICKENS. Medium Fowl, lb. 19c

| Crisp Solid Head*

\ COAL FLOWS
FROM BIN TO FIRE

Popular"Breads

Lettuce
Seedless Nevclt 200 Size

s1.35

Oranges
Texas
Seediest
1
exas oceaicsx

—

Grapefruit

3

3 o’Clock

A &amp; P

BREAD COFFEE
to 9c
&amp; 19c

Fancy California

Lei us
tell you about it

Tender
Crisp
lenaer^p

Celery Hearts 2 L‘h' 13^
U. S. No. 1 Sw««t

Potatoes

4 u 19c

Campfire

Marshmallows
19c

Brussels

Sprouts

2 lbs. 25c
HARD MIXED CANDY lb. 10c
LIBERTY CREAMS
2 lbs. 25c
lb. 23c
MIXED NUTS
BRAZIL NUTS
lb. 21c
PEANUT BRITTLE

2 - 25c

flow, no fuel give* more all around convenience than coal.

A « P FOOD STORES
tarring Kata Smith
I., Station WBBM

I
|

W. Caah WPA Check.

over firing coal by hand, becautc the Iron Fireman way of

you more vtcady heat. See a diynonur.iion
of this marvelous seif-firing Iron Fireman.
Prepark fox a ''summer home" neat winter.
Price, are lowest in Iron Fireman history, and

»IO7.’

MANY SIXES AND MODELS . . . FOR
OLD OK NJW H.RNACV

G.E. GOODYEAR HARDWARE g
142 E. STATE ST.

PHONE 2331

HASTINGS, MICH.

lhe Klalola

&gt;. nun. al

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                  <text>THE HASTINGS BANNER
EIGHTY-FIRST YEAR

NEEDED LESSONS
llufl-

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31,1936

12 PAGES
HASTINGS TRADE
SHOWS INCREASE

87

OFOUAINTCUSTOMS'

16452398

l*ME,„,S'l’l1u»Ii!50ILCIIECI(SBEIffi !
SBTTBISWEEK

Government Cenmi Records
Local Oancellationi.Are Nine
।
Growth Over $600,000
.
Thouiand Over Same
;
In 1986 Over 1933
1 I AWW- —. ” • ,
"
I
FOOR SHOCKING TRIALS i That Hastings has made consider-1 JOHN VAN ZILE SPENT
Th.
THREE,
INTERESTING
I
HERE REVEAL LACK
I able progress toward recovery was
the largest volume of mall since
j shown by the report ot the census
DAYS SIGHTSEEING
OF HOME TRAINING
Km Si I
.bureau at Washington, which has.
by Postmaster William J. Field. For |

'SJJJ’SiXTC XuX; ENJOYED MOTOR TRIP
FOUR YOUNG GIRLS
WRONGED BY NEGLECT (when a similar* census was taken.
THROUGH INTERIOR

forth

i hl ch

WILL P1RMIT
TO SHARE IN

DOLLARS FOR BARRY
COUNTY TARMEBB

brnrfitb

FIRST PAYMENT FOR
SOIL conservation

;

Allowed To Do Ai They hod seven more retail stores In 1935 Finds Eels And Rice Tasty a single day was made in 1929 when Farm Measurement Deadline 1
11 had In 1933. and the retail
Please — Serioui Result! jthan
j
23000 pieces of first class mail were I
» Placad At Janunrv
—Chopstick Technique
Liles from these stores increased
sent out; Thta year the highest [
riaceii At January
Not So Easy
Naturally Follow
I from (1.452.000 In 1933 to (2.086,000
number of cancellations was 19.000
Fourth

Unemployment RtUgf RIH
Will Be RffecUv*
January First

highest number of cancellations in

-------------

Within recent weeks there were In ’’ in 1935. This sharp increase In busi­ Wednesday. Aug.*19 to Sunday, Aug.
on u» Honda, prmdln,' M1 C0M.r,.u„ ehKU
o,.:
■Die Michigan legisbture tn sp»our Circuit court five trials involv­ ness also brought about a like In­ 23.
Christmas.
: u)g delivered to Ml Barry county
•
| cial seulon last week paired a quaU
ing four young men. three of them crease In the number of employees
The volume of parcel post mailing I faxmers frora county Agricultural.
Now as 1 begin thb letter I am
married. They were all charged tn Hastings stores. In 1933 there back
showed
a
proportionate
increase
and
'
AKrnt
Harold
j
offlce
j
OACk on me
the boat. I wat
wav able to drive th, mntiav
agent Harold j. Foster's office. ।
with statutory offenses against girls were employed In Hastings storvi to Kobi. thanks to captain Bruhn !“
?• mon*y &lt;yxll'r donortmant
department foil These checks represent (11.981.3!
in Uielr early teens. Tt»e unmar-, 129 workers; In 1935 our stores gave who went Uirough a lot of red tape IH** monlh ot December will also Bn(1 arr Uw
Ior the am
tied man. who admitted previous Jobs to 254 persons. The payrolls of to get me permission. In Uiree days f*port. “ ,ftr|,cr Mtn°unt- ,££chaMd. lot
lol Ol
of farmer
sent into
into
rarrner applications
applications sent
Hastings
retail
stares
Jumped
from
arrests for tire same offense, was.
1 belkre I aw mm. or J.pwn than:11'"' ■" *”&gt; w*"
|-------------------' from Barry county. [
I lhe
government
convicted and Is now serving time. (137,000 bl 1933 to (187.000 Ln 1935. the usual foreigner sees in a much ;
** "
gan In line to share tn the benefits
,
These
are
the
first
checks
to reach ।
!
No
doubt
me
year
1038
will
show
a
Two of the three married men were'
I longer time. Il took us two days. We!
I
fouthem
Michigan
covering
lhe
1936
of the federal social security law.
acquitted. The other was tried!! considerable increase over 1935.
I left Saturday morning from Yoko-1
( Boll Conservation program.
twice, the jury disagreeing in both '
hama and drove to Nagoya, famed |
1 All fanners who have a check In
clsl session, as the national security
trials, the last Ume with such a
for its porcelain. We were going to,
• this shipment are receiving notice!
large vote tor acquittal that anoth­
stop nt Kamagara on Die sea but
j through the mall to Dial effect. I
er trial Is improbable.
I Checks will be held in count}- Agent1
Much of me testimony in their
' took of some delicious eel meat, rice ■
I Foster s office until called for by '
coses was so vile as to be imprint- i
i and several kinds of pickles, rice, SPOKE
AT NEW YORK the owner. The checks range from &gt;
able. We would not even refer to'
cakes, etc. We ale soy beans as an g
start toward unemployment In­
iMPVTTWrt
np
patth
I89 crau w ovcr two hundred dol-i
them*if facts had not been brought;
mELllflU ur BALLB
according to lhe degree of par- I
| entree. I was very clumsy with chop;
ner
Next year that will ba
out In the trials which revealed con- &lt;
. —. ,
r I slicks. They were trying to show me i
REPRESENTATIVES
' Ucipallon in me Bqjl Conservation
dltions which can be and ought to. IS TAKING YEAR 8 MEDI ‘ how to use them and had a good'
following year
i program by thel farmer.
be guarded against by many par-1 (j£L COURSE AT HEIDELlaugh at me. One old woman there
ents. who seemingly arc not aware!
measured whenVlhe owners have!
was quite taken with my light hair FORMER RESIDENT AND
that these conditions exist which:
BERG UNIVERSITY
and my height. While in Japan 11
I It was a forced action, as far as
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE S5SS.
threaten to blast the future of their ’
------------saw no one taller than I and only
j Michigan was concerned; because
children. Some of these conditions TfikCQ CCrWlP TRIP
' nnr itate has hernme a areal mann.
one or two as tall. The proprietor ot
should be prohibited by law. Wei
ODCKIU I nlr
the eel place presented me with his, Hi!
Topic
Was
Fnture
deem it n duty which we owe to all |
ON A MOTOR BIKE card and so 1 promptly did the.
ReBponsibilitieB
For
!
An
y
Iarlnfr
*
’
ho
has
been
missed
or
our parent renders to comment on,
* Michigan's pay rolls will yield (20.­
same to him and that gave hlrn
*
... •
I *h0 ypt wants his farm measured
these ugly social conditions revealed , Visited Hohenxollern Castle, quite a kick. I got the drive to KbU i
1000,000 toward the permanent sotQuality
. must notify county Agent Foater
by these trials. In order that parents :
.
,
.
.
I up for unemployment Insurance.
because the Ford company had to' A number ol our city readers wUl! by January 4th. Tills is the absomay uke me necessary steps to &gt;
Electoral Palace at
send a new car there and I Just was I remember Her Fairchild, who was lute deadline for this work. This
•save their
young
girls from|
Stuttgart
lucky. "Fatty" drove me again. He I born in this city, graduated from work
so “
the coun­
"* must
** 1be closed
'
‘ "*
becoming social derelicts, with th? I
„i*.c*h
m ‘nrim speaks pretty fair English, so I was!
our schools, and later from me Uni­ ty records can be summarized and
hopeless fate of the moron await- tv.W*“e
thU
k
.
...
_ Wo
... hold
w
. . .for and I
.....
ing
them.
no h
brief
' rnn If “bl® to learn much more than I versity of Michigan, and who has payment made where due to all
have
’no’delense
•V Charles
... ... for ^Xn^eS
.
written'wUten
bv Charles
riinilss.Furaire.
son of son of could have by myself. The Jap-! been for several years connected county cooperating farmers.
have no defense for any man, least.
.»
Furniss ol “«««? In the Interior see very few
There arc about 3,600 farms in
SitatarL^^^lM^oT^iwoodtand. formerly of Hastings.|tor«i«nm. No taUor. 'J"/0"”; with the Federal Bureau of Stand­ Barry county. So far about 70 per
ards. He is now the Chief ot me Di- -------- ----------------------- -------- — ,—
uiuuicA
uic uauuuLiwry u* u rharles Ls now takina a vear s’there and so I could see the Japan vision of Trade Standards. It Is a cent of them, or about 2.500. will
unemployment Insurance law which
saving ?oungB‘iu?htSs from'"the cour“ m lhe M'dlcul School at! that does not cater to . foreigners.
b acceptable to the federal govern”
inattar ot pride to his friends here' participate in the national soli confu»U of* such £nrav«1 creature Heidelberg. Germany. He is a grad-1 The characteristic of lhe Japanese to know that Iler has made such servatlon program which supplanted
rnent. Every slate that has such *
rwu rerv lar«el^Pwlth ti^ home uaV® of Lhe Hostings High school and । People that first catches the eye is progress. It is a matter of gratlflca-! the AAA. This figure is higher than |
to-tetv hL lUdutv tS ra cleanTn C* University of Michigan and won I cleanliness. 1 went to a lol of small
total received from that stale,
lion. Ido. for them to realize that »'»s anticipated.
MISS YVONNE TREGO.
X der^
Monle thb scholarship of a year at Heidel-1 P»&gt;*ces. some dirty, but m none ot the Chief of the Bureau of Stand-! The soil conservation program was1
by ita employers of eight or i
tne vile uens wnere young people »
vnrir Aituuxt k
ia*r«
’hwim&lt; nirtv
them were th*
the iu.
bathrooms
dirty, tn
in ords is none other than Dr. Lyman started In Barry county, as well as
Seldom-------------------------------has a death--------------------caused such
Yvonne was enthusiastic about employees. Thus of the (20.00
gel a running start toward demoral-1 °*rg- ,Je left New York August 8.
America the public toilets are us­ Briggs, who was bom and grew to in other counties of Die state In shock and sadness in our com- her Job from the beginning, always which will be paid by thb ab
Izatlon.
'
|
Heidelberg. Germany.
ually filthy; in Japan Hie reverse is vA..n.
reiterating that ahe
’loved
her employers on ih«lr igjg pay I
m
,h.
lAMFA.nm
»r
Mirth
this ywr. It ha* addvd ma-!
.. “ lh
..*1. of. y
_ *°'*'
.
young
manhood
in
Die
township
of
“
STtSTwJrk'^
Tre
Right here It should bo- explained ।
August 31. 1938.
true. The people themselves are Assyria. Both Mr. and Mrs. Fair­
work." and that ground duty
had »18.000JX» will come back to Ml
agent; but he plannedjan organ!-1 the P«tty. attractive and popular entirely lost lb charm for her. The •«&gt;. to be distributed by our s
1 "rtved ln B«nienh.ven on the much cleaner than we are. While
«urtbb2£lL S^latau 13th 01 thl8 monlh- °n my UIP from on the way I saw a cute little boy child completed their courses in ration, held meetings tn all 161 Hastings girl who lost her life tn air line Job furnished Just the according to the terms of the
cases Into court because complaints
York tn n,rmanv i have los- in the street and tried to give him Hastings High school as members townships, where the federal plan the fatal airplane crash near Bur­ amminf
vaMalv
n
rlvi...
&lt;i..a
*n^
CSAed
11V Lhe
BCUl/Vl AZ
passed by
the Knecl.1
special session
ol
amount
of
variety,
adventure
and
had been filed which required such •***
J '
of the class of 1908.
action. The Jury which convicted ^Vto^nuT
. From the a penny. He wouldn't take It and
association with interesting people legislature. Of the U0XXJ0AM
There was held on December 15. was explained. After that, perma­ bank. Cal., Sunday evening.
on 1936 pay rolls tS4.000.006 wl
nent lownsnip
township conunuiecmen
committeemen were
to make special appeal to her.
the single man probably d(d so be- , ™ “J1
»m” h^en we went my driver Informed me that he was in the Commodore Hotel In New ncni
She had spent all her life in returned to Michigan, tn be db
cause he had previously violated lhe
bSTSSTto^ht rtd no beggar and had enough money York city, a meeting ot the Na-, selected and a county organization this year. She was the daughter of
himself.
. Hastings up to the time of her uted in payment'for unemployi
tional federation of Sales Exe-; perfected.
Japan still clings to many of her cutlves. The program speakers inUnder the direcUon of County Colei 110 East State Road and at­ high school graduation. She took an of the laborers represented on
old customs, that b, the really old eluded such' notables as United 1 Agent Poster work sheets have been tended the Hastings schools, grad­ active part in all school affairs, and
Japanese families do A girl still has States Senator Royal 8. Copeland;! complied for all the farms-tn the I uating with the class ot 1931. The ‘was very popular with her fellow
wise to speak ui me sea voyage n- nomuig
nothing io
to say about
aooui wnom
whom sne
she win
will
had admitted on the witness stand self. The Europa Is on unbelievably marry; that prevails even among Robert O’Brien, chairman of the county. These In turn were listed: same year she entered training at,. students and teachers.
She had a natural charm and
so many like offenses with other huge ship. It is virtually a floating the lower classes. Many times she tariff commission; Honorable Ray- land plat maps prepared and surveys’ Butterworth hospital. Grand Rapids,
married and single men. The Jurors city, having a crew of one thousand.' has not even seen the man she Is to mond Moley. editor of 'Today". made to locate farms that might, taking the three years’ course, and friendly manner that made special
appeal, and her vivacity and abun­
evldenUy believed Dial Die ends of Sc crossing was all in fine weather, marry. A queer thing is that when magazine, and several heads of this I have been missed in the preparation graduated in 1934.
country's very large corporations. It' of the work sheets.
She went to Ann Arbor for addi­ dant spirits made her beloved by lions to the federal government justice could not be met. nor bad
ly once or twice was there much!they have children they want lhe
conditions be cured by punishing rolling, arid fortunately I turned out ■ first child to be a girl, the second a was n distinct honor to Mr. Fair- j The local committeemen have set tional work and then accepted a, all. She leaves a happy memory with
whatever from the collected
only one when several others were to be a good sailor. However, my, boy. This 13 because the first child, child to be given a place on such a i the productivity for each farm and position on the staff ot Herman, everyone.
Her parents, her sbters. her if they were unemployedequally guilty In each case. We ore sense of equilibrium was astray for ■ according'to them. Is never so good program. His theme was: "Future the county committee adjusted soli Kiefer hospital. Detroit.
Thls country Ls now def
Yvonne returned to Hastings last, grandmother, and her fiance on
making these statements In order about four days after I Janded. wiUr me. Everywhere you go you see Re.‘ponsibllltics for Quality." As the, depleting bases for each work sheet.
:
whom
the
blow
falb
heaviest,
have
Chief
of
the
Division
of
____________________
After
much
effort
figures
_______________
Uiat
were
spring
with
the
intention
of
being
Divhlon
Trade
that our readers may get the prob­ There were only about 350 third I was fortunate In having “Fatty"
the summer to&gt; the. sympathy of the entire comable viewpoint of the Jurors, who class passengers on my ship and with me. Everywhere you go you see Standards of the National Bureau acceptable to the state committee &lt; married during
of Standards. It can be seen that have been reached and work was: Charles Kelley, of Detroit, after he■ munity.
were all married men.
mast ot mem were returning Ger- myriads of wine shops. There are Mr. Fairchild would fit into such a started on measurements. That work, had graduated from the engineering;
As yet no details concerning fu-Neither should it be assumed that mans. The trip was uneventful ex- literally hundreds of mem.
has now largely been completed and! department of the University ol! neral arrangements can be made.
the evil condlUons disclosed by lhe cept for the appearance of two| While in Tokyo I had an Inter­ program.
United Air Line offlciaU have a»- In tills country In a very
In discussing hb topic he said the soil conservation program has Michigan.
testimony in these cases apply only stowaways,
two girls in their । estlng time. .1 looked up Mr. that three generations ago our been set up in Barry county.
! But both concluded it would be• sured Mr. and Mrs. Trego that thr&gt;
ta fiarry county. As a matter of early twenties. I made the ac- Hawasaki. His father
owns the grandfathers lived in households
Barry county as usual was in ad- t wiser to wait another'year until he■ will be kept in constant-touch as to European countries, which have
fact this county 13 better than the qunintance
of
three
or
four-largest insurance company in Jasuch insurance,
bare gradually
vance of most counties in getting I wm established in his work.
developments.
UCTC
.U|,..w..w. "
*
average In this state in respect to people who were most interesting • pan. He was very nice and took me which were very nearly self-suffi­ ----------------------- — .. . .
...
3hc then appUed tor tt position M
mim Trego had recently written
cient. Not only did they raise the proper set-up. thanks to our
such conditions. Nor do wo ahare
and promise to be friiends. Two of out to lunch. I had a taste of Jap- nearly all of the food they con­ energetic county agent.
air hostess with United Air Lines bnm*
home lh«t
that «h«
she h«H
had h**n
been annmarhsH
approached
the view that the young folks of them arc Americans, a retired bank- ancse saki. It is almost like wine but
laws.
Il
la
to
be
hoped
by
one
of
the
head,
officials
of
the
our time are a -problem" because of er and a publisher. Another was a f I guess mine was very weak. Mr. sumed. make from the raw mater­
Grace Line boats offering her a the state and national m
inherent moral defects. In our young married woman from London Hawasaki graduated from Kenyon lab the clothes they wore, but they FOUR APPLICANTS
She began work in July, first be, position with their company as
Judgment those who go wrong today and another was a German man of as did his brother who was also with also fashioned many of their toob
at the home forge.
FOR EXAMINATION Ing assigned to the Chicago-Omaha stewardeis on one of their round(Continued on page 1. Sec 2.)
25 who was returning to the Father- . us. He was Psi U; his brother an Aldivision; later being transferred on the-world boats.
Thb was followed by a generation
land for a short stay. The food was pha Dell. They told me when they In which expert craftsmen .served Selection Of Freeport Post­ the Cheyenne run and then to the
The United Air Line plane on
m
At'
cl
; excellent and very different from, came to America they couldn't individual customers according fc
(Continued on page 5. Sec. 1)
west coast.
master Based On The
1WO Auction bales
my regular menu. Uiough it wasn't speak any English. In six months their personal tastes. In the nature
■
■
1 especially German. The trip was all they say I can get along and en­
of things, under such conditions, it
Candidate ’« Rating
forced that payments to them shall
w W r I X.F’ 1 delightful—I only regret that I was Joy myself. I hope they are right.
BRING
CHRISTMAS
WALTER
CAUKIN
CALLED
Four applicants were in the field
LuM'^l^old’ar^auetiMi
hb I Returnln«
my
real glimpses syivania are the bunk! They said1
J“hfdi nc purchased°f
for the postmastership at Freeport
CHEER TO MANY
FOR NAVY SERVICE
UniF ^eX
will hnlri toown
nn ■tiAtlAn
■ hl, 1 01
S.
i^heat liv
Brenlen
W“U/W‘ne; W°™n | * Xt jS&gt;d b ^e^s referred when applications to take the com­
OHuihM farm which u Th*
one of Germany's finest, though not and song- on Sunday why be s u u
cottage period There fol- petitive examination for lhe Job Sent To Norfolk, Va., For Gronps And Organisations If it shall work out. will reqi
&lt;meHwlrt”of^ralrtreme ^ll£eflm 016 Urg“t- The slreeU arc
hypocrite about It. They were almon
(Continued on page 5. Bee. 1)
closed at the civil Service Com­
every citlsen do his part as
Twelve Weekg Recruit
Contribute Basket! Of
mission on December 18.
They were Mrs, Pearl M. Light­
Training
Food And Gift!
eludes livestock, farm machinery I'
1 ’
"—--------- -------------------------- ----------------------------------- -’FINE RECORD
IEC0RD OF CITY
CITY’S
foot. Meryl D. Neeb. Mrs. Carrie
The Strand Theater, the Rotary as far as he b physically
Among the 18 boys enlisted in the
and hty. fice adv. on another page ;
FIRE DEPARTMENT DeWeerd and Louis J. Overholt.
it. Otherwise he should
for complete information about Hie;
Selections of all postmasters for■ United States Navy during the week Club, the American Legion Auxil- in the bene flU. ,
d*t&lt; and lb: offered..
The Total Loss In Hastings first, second and third class offices is was a Hastings youth. Walter Cau- lary, the I. O. O. F* and other dubs,
now based entirely on rating secured kin. of 419 E. High street. Before groups and organizations cooperat- the very early history of Vtrg
E. A. 8HELER.
For 1936 Was Only
by candidates in the competitive ex­
who announced thia plan to
Because of ill health E. A. Sheler 1
amination, as a result of President enllstlng, Caukln attended Has-1 ed In bringing Christmas cheer to
1707.00
will dispose of hb farm, stock, toob 1
Roosevelt’s order placing all such Ungs high school, from which he' about three thousand children and
The report of the Hastings fire post masterships under civil service.
and equipment at public auction.
last June. Walter is the j adults in Barry county.
shiftless. Indifferent type ot
The sale will be held on hb place
department was given to the coun­ Any late applications showing by graduated
son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Caukln.! On Thursday, Ray Branch enterknown as the Bent Lewis farm, lo­
cil at their meeting Monday night postmark they were mailed before
themselves upon society as
FIRST 1936 BABY
He Passed hjs_eI! Ua4
taU?od J:?
8® cetiUUren
.hlldrcn
fro® *bows.
cated three miles off M-79 on Cen­
by, Fire Chief Ou,
Guy olddlnw.
Giddings.
ckaUu dtu
will
1.7W
Mt
them.
Mr OlddUln reported
thtl there i SuSrtto
“diul
“r S icSSl
*'"^.5*1“?“?" XT &lt;•=» child
.bo beln,M remeabered
den. That cannot be toUrat*
ter Road and one-half mile south.
K,nr&gt; 50
(A "calls
natl. during
Miiwlru* the year.)
VB.r I ... .
...
.
.. find 11 C WOS notified latC III NOV 1'111- 'I with
wrlih candy. He
VC* was
e-ee assisted
acwlwtnH ■‘with any security act which to a
had been
If coming from Nashville on M-79
At
*• «e&gt;nn u th* Ante has been Pcr 10 rePort
22 ftt D«trolt- He, funds from me Rotary dub and the
turn north al Kellogg OH station
At 15
15 of
of them
them there
there was
was no
no damage
damage
and go one and one-half Mlles
done; 2o calls were lor grass fires
..-Because of the great Interest and 4 for car fires.
FRIENDS REMEMBER
north. He offers several Guernsey’
port postmastership Is to be held at,
... r*cr,11,'. —«,*• .* ,».* n«. children.
,
shown In the First Baby of the Yeai
end Jersey cows, team of horses,
The fires found In responding to Hastlnu.
|
v.r
Eleven hundred children ware «.-.
PENNOCK HOSPITAL,
. a &gt;
val Trailing Station. Norfolk. Vir- ; tertaJned b. the x. o. o. R Iod-e *£
hogs, a fine ibt of farm toob. some
contest last year, the Banner with the other 11 calls caused a total
ACCIDENT
ON
M-79.
Ki.™
in
whSh
thelr
haU
*
hcre
hay and bean pods and fifty acres
the cooperation of Hastings mer­ loss of |707 for the year. This is the
A car driven by William Crutten*"
ana ^t^? ohf
ol PcanuU’ &lt;*•»«» and candy, Individual! And Guild* Mato
lapd with buildings. Dewey Reed
smallest loss for any year slnco
chants
will
sponsor
thb
event
again
contributed during
will be the auctioneer and N. R.
1830. when Hastings* fire loss was den left the rood on M.79. four । includes the study and practice of thc fundj
Varioui Donation! AL
in 1937. All babies bom to .Barry •460.
miles east of Hastings Sunday eve- , seamanship, life saving, naval eu- ..
. ...----------- ------------- j—
Hhellenbargcr will be the clerk. Bee
county parents are eligible. There
the adv. in thb issue for particulars.
. Ohriitmas
It seems to the Banner that the nlng and ended up In Cedar Creek, quette. and military drills. Aiter mittec consisted of Everett Swegles?
U no entry fee. The first baby will good work done by the Hastings fire The
11-vear old
of the
driver
th*1 Pcriod of training Ls over they Bert Lancaster and Walter Rockhill.
iS i!S
. I son
“Xr
cuu
wo -in
be awarded prises by the following department and the fine equipment wno sunerea a lew minor cuts was
SENTENCED SHEEP STEALERS.
”----- —
—Adelbert cortright. chairman of
Hastings business men: Carvcth * It has for fighting fires., ought to the only one hurt. The driver turned homes before being sent to ships of the Welfare Association, reports
Virgil E. Keller and Steve A. Tur­
ley. whoso arrest for stealing and
Stebbins Drug qwiv
Store.. m
J.. C.
. that about a hundred baskets ol
w. Penney
*
aecreases in
. result.
result in siui
still runner
further decreases
In out
out to
to pass
pass a
a car
car going
going in
in the
me same
same thej
—~ n”Lr?T duty
------ '
..
.. ’ as .he and
__ . side-swiped
__ &lt;__ ■ a
_
T-1i
- SXIrhtiran
direction
The
Michigan trAA
area will
will furnish
furnish A
a tooc and gifts were distributed,
killing a sheep belonging to Mrs.
Co.. Hastings Cut Rate Shoe Store, nre Insurance rates here.
third car coming fro&lt;n the opposite quota of 36 recrulbdirtng the month; various groups and organisations
Frandsen's Store. Highland's Dairy.'
■» e *
Phil Merlau of Orangeville 'town­
direction,
the
Crutlenden
car
plungJanuary.
Tliey
will
be
sent
to
i, sending lhe major portion.
ship was mentioned last week, were
Food Center, Reed s Drug Store and I
ANNUAL MEETING.
ing
over
the
embankment
into
the
Nftr
*
1
,.T
r
^
l,:Un
F
8U
^
U
Great!
Taylor's Shoe Store.
| To the stockholders of the River-1
brought Into circuit court Wednes­
Lakes. IlUnoiS’Jor their recruit
Sec their advertisements In thb side Cemetery Co.: The annual stream.
day. Both admitted their guilt and
issue of The Banner.
| meeting will be held Jan. 6 1937 In i
were remanded to the sheriff to
of Christmas, bringing hap- a Yuklide gift
CITY BANK ANNUAL MEETING. II their
their 17th~blrthday
17th birthday and
and who
who are'not
are not 1:
othera wbo mi»hl not bare
await sentence. On Monday of thb
the council rooms at the city hall at
Rulea of Contest:
l7 S0 &lt;&gt;’«»«* pfor
purpose
over-------------34 years---of —
age, —
may
h
cheerful Yulctlde.
The annual meeting of the stock--------— apply at
week judge McPeek gave each man
60 days tn Jail, with a fine of (10
'of electing three members of the holders of the Hastings City Bank the Recruiting Station. Detroit, for Isucn
enlistment,
or
at
lhe
nearest
sub-i
wxvivai
meetings
for
the
purpose
of
electing
directors
apiece. Each must also pay to Mra.
1. Baby must be born to parents board of directors ajid to transact
stations at Grand Rapids and Un-1
...
Merlau (400 to compensate her for
living in Barry county.
, such oilier business as may come for the bank, will be held In the
v
Directors room on Tuesday. Jan- sing,
sing, in
m the
me Post
rosi Office
umcc Buildings
uuuainBs-1I A
•• “f,1*" v*^T.'
th*
the sheep they slaughtered. They
u
.
before said meeling.—Adv. 12-31.
? Arrival
ka V*.
.
.
qtfkllfy
for
enlistI
New
Yw
a
•5®
““* m
uary
12.
1937.
Polls
will
be
open
for
Applicants
who
qUkUfy
^
“
N^YMr
s
evcrung
M me
are to be on probation for a year,
voting
from
9
A.
M
until
12
noon.
•
—
"
—
“
•
u
'"Prct
Methodist
church
and
will
con
­
ported to the Banner by January
NOTICE.
ment will be placed on the waiting
Hut! Vivian Kidder. Wisner of the
during which time they are to re­
list In the order of their application. । Unue every evening except satur14.
.
! The annual meeting of the Stock- &lt;
port regularly to Probation Officer
Signed:
i1,41 in
, ,7
day until January 24. The evangelist
holders of the Prairieville Tele-:
M. A. Lamble, Cashier.
C. H- Osborn. During the year they
CEDAR CREEK.
will be th! Rev. Maude Robert. Th!
3. Report of arrival must con- phone Company, will be held atdheL
must not leave thb state.
______________________
L- A- 8. will serve supper at । sermons will be both inspiring and
tain (a) Exact time and place of Prairieville town hall, on WcdnesCHURCH SCFFRRI church Thurs.. Jtt. 7. beginning at helpful spiritually to youngand CM.
birthr (b) Parent*' name, and ad- i
January U. 1937. at 1:30 P. M.
DANCE.
----- J—&gt;. .am* an* afl&lt;
a.
a.____ __
—_____
U. B. church. Wed.. Jan. 6. 25c.—,8 P. M-. 15 cents. Good program, Everyone Is invited to attend Uta
Adv. out 12*11.
•
| from Kalamaaoo.—Adv.
| services.
i

ILERFARCHLD
0 VIS ON HEAD

C.FURNIS5WRTES
FROM GERMANY

brine

HASTINGS GIRL KILLED IN AIR
CRASH NEAR BURBANK, CAL 1

NINETY PER CENT WILL
BE RETURNED TO STATE

According to me report Hastings

KUS'
•lion
nll*4

SECTION ONE— PAGES 1 to 8

H.m,

to taM. W. w.i

‘‘■k”!:;

I

FIRST 1937 BABY
TO RECEIVE GIFTS

Hastings Merchants
Again Offer Prizes

&gt;

�THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY, DECKMBgR M..1SM
who spoke a little English and he
took us to a nice Japanese hotel.
There we had some suklaki which is
very delicious. A Japanese girl came
well known
wen
Known reaident
rcsmem of
oi this city.
ch?.
out and sat beside us and cooked
Had Participated In Tb®-pa**ed away at Pennock hospital
the meal before ut». They cook it
me Bush suffered anoth-;
early Sunday morning following n
ahrietmaa Program At
unday and to in a very
onions, beef, pickles and several
critical condition.
stroke which she suffered on Thurs­
(Continued from page 1. See. 1)
Striker School
other things I didn't know the name
day morning. Dec. 24. She was mak­
A daughter waa bom Tuesday1 oirTC.. lc4I
OiU
u.
Bnd
Vegn^Bumford of the ing preparations at that time to too modern for me. but they were of. We had an entree of sally tea
and finished up with the traditional
Homer Bauchman.
striker community, died suddenly take the 10:30 A- M- train to Grand nice and I appreciated what they green tea. The Japanese never put
Rapids, to spend Christmas day with did for me very much. They are
A daughter WU bora W Hf. Mid Hut Wednesday evening, lhe cause
sugar in their tea—they drink B
Mrs. Lee Mead, Hastings, on Dec. 1 of death being unknown. He had not her slslar. Mrs. Jeaneue Beattie terribly rich and have several cars plain. I tried to show Mark flow to
27 at Pennock hospital.
1 been feeling well so his parent* took Pike, of Grand Rapids, when the in their menage.
attack evidently seized her. Mrs.
I visited the biggest department use the chop sticks but most of the
Found—A good evangelist to hold him to lhe doctor that day. the Pike became worried on Friday store in Japan, and I must cay they time the girl fed him a* he wasn't
Lhe revival services at the Free doctor assuring them that it would morning because Mrs. Goodyear had sell a lot Of different things there. very good. A man kneels oh his
Methodist church from Jan. 1 to 24 do no harm for the boy to partici­ not arrived on any of the trains as On each floor they have at least one knees and a woman 1* expected to
pate tn the exerclsoa at the Strik­ expected and telephoned to Has­
except Saturday evenings.
clerk who understands a little Eng­ sit cross-legged. I did neither as it
er school that evening. Mrs Cleo tings. Receiving no response from
wasn't comfortable so I‘just lolled
lish. Many times, however, I en­
moved tills week to Kalamazoo Brown, the teacher, had given Dar­ her sister's home she appealed to a countered difficulty in getting to around. Mark and I had a lot of
rell
a
recitation
which
he
was
anx
­
fun u they couldn't understand us
where Mr. Crookston is employed by
neighbor, for help in locating her. that clerk.
■
ious
to
give
and
did
give
at
the
arid we kidded the life out of them.
lhe Kalamazoo Stove co.
Finding the house locked and no
There Is one road here leading up They probably got even more fun
Christmas program. The gifts from
Miss Lucille Eichelberg is the new the tree had been distributed and sign of life within Sheriff Blakney to the Imperial palace which only
out of us. The price of that sump­
school nltrsc al Greenville, the ex­ the pupils and teacher were visiting was sent for and forced an en­
the emperor and hl* family when tuous meal was only two yen for
.
pense of which is paid by the city with the guests, when the boy fell trance.
Mrs Goodyear was discovered ly­ they are with him can use. When both of us.
council and board of education.
from his seat to the floor He was ing on the floor of the den in her Lindbergh came he went tlirough
We are now a day out of Shang­
Miss Thelma Wheating under­ rushed to Pennock hoapital but was
t home, .unconscious. She was taken 1 another entrance and put hl* name hai. so 111 finish up this letter. One
went an operation for appendicitis dead upon entering it.
, 1Ito
to Pennock hospital and never re- *in
“ “
a 1book,
—v •but
— *had
’•'* *"
to
imir.e- • ot the .passengers on the teat is a
on Christmas day at Pennock hos-| Wille not strong physically. Durnurse from Hankow. She reads and
lul and
ind Is
U getting along
ilon« as
u well
w.11 as
u,: re
„n'
ui'"hu"«5ool —•—1 consciousness. born in or dlately. Once a year the ministers writes Chinese and teaches young
pltal
il was interested in
&gt;n be
t. expected.
nzilM
' J ° ; and consuls are permitted to use
can
■ wort
- — did wlrnaim, u ■ lounh :.
the** Imperial entrance. I couldn't Chinese nurses. She Ls a very effiMr. wa Mr. C. W. CUrt. h.r. trxla pupil He «u popular wuh hU iJfVlX
Si “ O~r!' take any pictures of it. I saw the dent woman. She ha* been to Peip­
rrlvra in
In 8
S'.’- PMenlruni.
ru, -»a
MlxoIm.UU----------------------Ind Mater, wte te« . “
arrived
.
---- -------------------'and Harriet Beattie, pioneer rest­ American embassy which is a square ing and has seen Yen-Ching. She
are located nt 2716 No. Bth St. for. greatly saddened by hl*
told me that it is a perfectly beaudents there. She went to school at stone white building.
the present. They like it there as passing.
At seven Saturday morning Fatty tllul place, she said the lawns are
Orangeville and later to Ypsilanti
I the days are sunny and warm.
■ ■■■ 8 * *
for a short time, coming to Hastings and I started for Kobi. Had it not like a golf green. 111 probably want
Come—hear Evangelist
Maude
to teach in our High school in 1880. been for Captain Bruhn I would to slay more than a year, but I'll
Robort at the Free
Methodist
In 1882 she married William H never have been able to go. I had haw to wait and find out. She has
church every evening from Jan. 1 to
Goodyear, who died in 1902. She Ls to get a special permit because I heard of Miss 8------ and Dj. Ste­
24 at 7:30 except Saturday evenings.,
oa
a survived by two sbters - and - two was a member of the-crew and not I ward and also knows of Dr. Houghvmw Sit
a!te?ded^the brolh"»w
ol Oranl a passenger, and thus my passport ton She said that lhe P, V. M. C.
The Hastings Commercial Club'
_________________________________
hospital
alisPeiping
I
good
at all After a deal I hospital al
Peiping
one of
the
Si Welcome
w.ko™ CarcSf.lwPIte-.
Mr..- OsC8r
o~.r B°
Souter
rf Or- did me no _
office
has a supply of winter maps I Ehrts"tmas'nartV7t
I RaPI(U- Mrs
uner 01
disgusted finest *in
n,.the
uJ,e T
or,ll so if I get sick
sent out by the Michigan State
a? reeS
angevUlei O«rt* WatUe of Doster of red tape which much dlsguctcd
world,
Highway Department, for free dis-,
^21 uTSShS mi a and w,lUflm BeatUe of Orangeville, lhe captain, we got things taken ' I won't have to worry.
.( I* had to fill out my
tribution to any who may call for
‘®'h
5?” '{{*
F*0™ her earliest years
iars Mrs.
Mrs. care of.
oi.
‘“x customs
«.u»wiu» poppup­
.
-------------- - --------------- QjxjQyear nas teaa an unusually I On the way we stopped al Hakon ['r» Utl* morning. I expect that goluck supper, ana
and me
the party cioscu
closed .
j active life. «he
She taucht
taught her beach and saw Mr.
Mr. .Thomas and ।JW
nS through will
will be a
a long-drawn
long-drawn­.
-, pot iuck
w1th Lhe dLstributlon of alfts from .
.
. * . °‘ .. .* * ___ _ .. _____
__
. ......... out nrne&lt;&gt;xs 1 don't .mwi
hl.
.te-j
the tree.
(years old, and a* i teacher in our'The hotel they were al.is a famous• Shanghai. They tell me that It is
sending 179 Christmas
greeting
younger
than
I
old
P
lace
“
'er
160
years
old,
Al
10:30
1
lhc
New
York
of
the
East.
Anyone
High school was ,,, .
.
.
. .
telegrams
and also----------------delivering
an
----„-----------------------„ —
Nearly 700) Christmas trees were some of her pupils
slopped and I took a picture of
of who must stay
slay in
in Shanghai never
। we stopped
__ the sacred
_______Japane.se
-_______ I really
...Hu ...r
LlI In ■
unusually large number sent from so|d this yea^.
She supplemented the meagre cd-1I ...
Mt Fujiyama,
se^rohfna.
other places.
i
...
■ ucation that the early days of her mountain. W’e had some soy beans
The .second mate called me infb
Charles Shelienbarger and several, The next nSeetlng will be ThursThurs- ' glrlhood aflorded wlU,\ wide range 1 and rice cakes and I got the lady his room last night and showed me
others filed a petition with the day. Jan. 7. Ut a all be there a* we;
rfadtnB kwn observation and there to pose while I took her pic- “n»e picture* of hl* family. Hi* lltcouncil. which met Monday evening, will launch our new social program
.
• u MrtlciDatlon in ail ture. Site told Fatty that I wa* n 1 ‘,e 8&gt;rl L» cute- He i» going to get
for a -ewer on East Blair street, then and complete plans for our
cullunU movemenu life in Has- very tall man. Kamagara which 1*1 leave for home this fall. He doesn't
The matter was referred to lhe serie* of card parties.
tings afforded. She wa* a char- quite a famous hotel on lhe sea was I llke the sea because it keeps him
sewer committee.
i
* ’ ’
.
I ter
member
away
fr°in his. family
tcr member of
or the
tne Shakespeare
gnaxespeare and
nnu filled
uucu up
up so
eu we went
wen* on
on to
mj Nagoya | -----* —.........
•
7 too much.
mu&lt;;u. He
•»&gt;s
——Salvation
ci...,,-------offered
«.------1 ■-&lt;...&gt;
l ■■'.'•'v
fonjet •your
Hasting*
Women's
Clubs ano
and concon_.tth
*18t
l,e
thinks
Hastings women
con' On the way ,&gt;through
I »«&gt;■«
»t —
he
think* he will work
work
Free
in —
revival
-------— *v 1Hastings
s ciuoa
,
muu&gt;&gt;&gt; •we
v had «some
hiu {
•—
- —
......
......................
. . ee* ano rice a* Ii believe
-l.
’.hnri" vitno
If
h. can.
services at lhe Free Methodist on,
y **&gt;'
w be
1)6 ,urc
best
talent to ...
the .laiashore
some nlaro
place if
If he
v..ly
wiy to
sure of not
r.to ...toetag rejjjuted
tributed her .
laibeiicve Ii have al-1
ni- ii li
church uan.
Jan. ,1 to 24 except oavuiSatur-'1 your
M O.
■
n'’----------tForeign
*'’-'-1'™ —
R»rvi.
— .iter
.
............................................
i' —
. m
.—. —
M.
V. and
Service
lo
the
o{ hcr deall)
ready .x,told —
you.
When
we —
got. to II Tna...
Today i.
is Thursday and we wrff........
—• v
----- —
day evenings. Rev. Maude Robort &gt;«
**«P &gt;our n8”1' on the mailing
-• ‘
ghH
interested in all civic ' Nagoya, we stopped at a tine hotel R°lng lo get into Shanghai about 12
1
.
. .
. , .
—.ua.u k-. ____ .— _U__
. tnlM tiAAM
nc« „l
l,lu ...
evangelist.
, &gt;1*1noon, Hur
but llast
night
we ran into
, movement*, wa* instrumental in ’ which has very modern convenfounding the Thornapple Garden lences. I had a large room, bath and' 8 Wl of a typhoon and had to go
Sunday evening at 7:30 an illus­
trated lecture on China will begin'I Our adjutant. Jimmie Clark, is out Club here, putting across their flrst shower and breakfast for nine yen 12q miles south to go around It. it
ot
quarantine for scarlet fever and ■ very successful flower show. It was Including lips. There is no hotel jwas plenty rough and the officers
at the First Melhodtot Episcopal
will soon be back with us.
:due to her enthusiastic worfcr that in the States as cheap and still us were 8 little on edge. I wa* ail
church with 45 beautiful hand col­
nice as this one.
| oreased and ready for supper and
ored slides on the Methodist work!
..
....
'the late Dr. W. E. Upjohn sent a
Willie there I met a Mr. Stem- ••&gt;«&gt; we found out for certain that
Henry Hubert is our new sergeant-1 ^misand peony plant* Into Barry
in Central China shown in story
major appointed by lhe commander. county
------ ... for u.'.JL.,.,
— —
&gt;
distribution
and
tlic born and hi* twin brother who an-111 wns really coming. w« worked
form.
The council at their meeting
CLLD MEETING.
yearly "Peony Day" was established with lhe RCA Victor company. I ,8Itt f°r about an hour taking down
talked with them till 11:30 and lheyieanvM- fastening the hatehea. eta.,
Monday night considered "the relo­
Ola** Creek Home
Economics I
m.emo5y:
, .,
. ,
told ,,,c
me M
a &gt;w
lot awu*
about yapuii
Japan u&gt;&gt;u
and k
gave
8l&gt;oiit
she wa*
really
—.u.—u
.1...
i Site also did valuable work for ,u,u
»»i- i a,,&lt;1 .----— midnight &lt;•«.«.
».»« .nuij
cation of Center Road railroad S.tu??_ c_i..k.
u2? 8.at!ie^d_.: Pennock hospital in the orgoniza- me a lot of good advice. Tills man blowing, i couldn't sleep and didn t
crossing, a little beyond the Bll&amp;s of Mrs. Fred Barlow of Hastings j
lion
ot
Uw
Chilorcn
’
s
Free
Bed
answered
me quite frankly about a |.«01 more than two hours' rest at the
plant. T.icy left the matter in th?r i —
"
man
getting a career out in i1 most.
m°st All
Ail the passengers
pa wngtrs gre
are seasick
acaslc,
•young
—~
— ~:tung
color atm
’ ’’
she was a charming hosto&amp;s and the Orient. lie said in Japan there' £•» ™ onr rtre ts: f felt bad at time*
members and alKweje present. The
wu
at
mueii
Japanese
as yet have not been sick. I.
. &gt; ner
was
me renter
center
oi much
much 1, was
*‘u’ no
**u chance. The
nnuipiutw ore
u&gt;v j but
—,,
Extensions asked for water mains I■ membersa and Jtm°
two B
jfuesU
a
"ct nome
holife
™ thru
»“ out.
cthe
5nUr
ot
.mJ,™"
.. a. “
Mr.Hv
*1..
d?nrnrenjoyed
anrt
social
years.
Shi! Gradually taking ‘thing*
on them- *wouldn't
nuldn 1 *Hire
l*'' 1this
,b 85
c»dy diet.
on North and South Broadway and
will be greatly missed byher wld &gt; »dve*. He said he'd hire a Japanese J1W wouldn I let me work today
East Mill street were referred by the I mrotlna wn b^’ heW iuith^Mrs circle
oMriend*. who remember her before a white man because ot that. | ««««*t£Ht&lt;£,?a™"ou-?--i‘o U,cy
council, nt their meeting MondayI ’
rJmn
wr.net
ria/ for her loyalty, her charity and un-1 facl- 1,1
yeais. he said,.mast of, think—which ..........
father. ../fampelrid,
my
.......
night, to the water committee to' ; Harry Dunn.-Mr*. Francis O?r- }2im«km2ri*s
{th. foreigners will be oommercUUy pride. I wM given my discharge
.I”
discharge
investigate and report nt their meet- i
|hun. Bee.
.
paaatng also leaves a great'out of Japan. In China il"lV.xW »Mp torUtejfflh- -nlaybc tta| it
.... paastng also leaves .
----- --- -------- —
— ■ wiry. We hbpc the ship will make
Inif on February 12 next.
vacancy
in
her
family
circle
now
,n
d
probably
is,
a
lot
different,
Winners in the popularity contest
DEATH OF CARL DAMON,'lp ’’W m,n&lt;* Shanghai on the 28th but i don'6
Carl Damon. 68. was found dead tn grown so small, lhe brothers and I Valcr. x, can
sponsored by Ray Branch of the
know. It Is getting rough again.
Strand and Barry theaters were his bom on his farm in Orangeville sisters whose welfare and interests dcflnitcly as to whether or not I Just a* long as I get ttrrc by ths
Maty June Clark. Senta Furrow. township Saturday night, al a little were of such paramount interest to. •'»* make my life work tn China, if 1st of September, i don't care.
J
P*ck “P the language I may
Beverly Jeanette Dryer. Maxine after eight o'clock. He evidently suf­ her thruoul her life.
I am beginning to bito my nail*
Funeral services were held from
®f some use to a company-lime
Ayres and Dorothy Lou Reynolds. fered a heart attack. Danton was for
until the 4th. I made the mistake
tell.
Esch girl received a Dionne quin­ a number of years in the Jewelry­ the home on Jefferson street Tues-, wlH
The
next day
day
lunched
at
Kioto
«x&gt;n; ii think
that
day afternoon al two o'clock con-'
The
next
lunched
business in
in this
this city.
cltv Falling
Fallinc health
health , ducteST^.v^rimsldT^y
con-1
Ine U
&gt;' . Il‘. capital
iur.cnrd
at Kioto।
Kioto ।I %
"• packing too
uuuk Well
u&gt;nt la
is
tuplet doll.
' - business
:XSThtaTgli?liSupan^
of &lt;^h
......
theaaold
.....
ofal
u,
... bad
I..... weather.
IHIT BY AUTO.
mo?ed to Orangeville and bought a Grand Rapid*. A* she had requested. *‘ld
afternoon i got on the murt clo“ nor­
Saturday, at about 11:30 P. M..' farm there. He was highly respected she was laid to rest In the Beattie boat alter having tea at Fatty's
meat
Craft.
23.
of
Sarattsc.
a
rural
by
all
who
knew
him.
&gt;
family
lol
al
Orangeville
be*lde
her
uncles
jdare^
They
were
very
nice
m.imtawv
Ernest Craft. 23. ot Saranac, a i
to mr
me there. Several of them wanted |
OBITUARY.
.... .carrier,
—
-----------Wu , 1
I mother,
amid
OBITUAR1.
mail
was. u..
hit .by
a car.while
------------------ mother, amid the scenes
of her
girl-the scenes of her girl- 10
. to borrow money from me. but 11 Byron F. Tungatc. son of Mr. and
crossing the intersection al Stale.
SENT TO IONIA.
, flood in lhe little community she had
and Michigan. He told Sheriff Jay 1 Ralph Woodmansee, whose arrest w dearly loved all her life.
said "no soap." I was rush’d in the
n-rnnmin Tuncate was born
—- . v, 4O1U
-------------- - - He
--------—’
---------------------------------------last hours. I intended to go to bed .| nul
duihiiici
paas.'d
—-—
Blakney that he did not see the we mentioned last week on a
carlv but as Mark Taylor
Tavlor (the
itl-.e boy
bo.' away at his home at Midlend Pirk
ner-­ charge
cnarge of
oi stealing clover
ctovcr tern,
au-j, Dr. Collins H. Johnston of Grand early
seed, adapproaching car. the driver render
circuit court
and (. Rapids, well known to Hastings pco-, from Detroit) hndn t seen
much ui
of1 Tuesday evening.
evening Dec.
Doc 15 followtiw
mg
Hi*
mi.i« his
nu guilt
gum tn
m curuu
cuun un
xtn »iuu&gt;
ing an
all assistance posstme.
possible. HU
r‘ milted
name was not learned. Craft »uf- was sentenced un'.n.te)
on Monday
onbyunndir
Judge I hv
pie tud?e
who. nle
consulted
who consulted
him profeshim Japan
Drofe.‘I- told
Jauan
himI we'd
told him
go out
we'd
and
co aout
severe
and Iheart
n . ......
attack
i......He
. was tnlr... *
TrfWrftvcre bruises and a scalp McPeek to from six months to four sionally. died suddenly Monday fol- liave
Japancc
dinner.
After about
! ried
-— a--------------- --------.......
—-&gt;i
(lcu to
wj Ida
ran Hampton
nampton. daughter
rmuciiter of
of
1.0 hours'
hour. search
kucU w«
w found
icxind a&gt; man
mu&gt;। ...
U, __a
.nd .Mr&gt;.
jL. Hunlloo. ot
liceratton
years at Ionia.
j |lowing
lowingaa heart
heartattack.
attack.
| 1two
—

LOCAL NEWS

A Happy
New Year

PASSING or MRS.
;SUDDEN DEATH
pF
MARIAN GOODYEARDARRELL BUMFORD Wn. Martan BeatUe Goodyear, jt

i

■

---- *

——
--------- .
_ .

MJ COUNTRY
OF OOJINT CUSTOMS

V. F. ft'. New,

CAMPBELL’S

RITZ

SOUPS

CRACKERS

All Varieties Except Chicken

“n 8c

pkg.

FRESH FRUITS AN» VEGETABLES
FLORIDA ORANGES
TEXAS GRAPEFRUIT

CELERY HEARTS
FANCY ROASTED PEANUTS

2

Bunchts (or

2
5

SPY APPLES

PUFFED
WHEAT

2

15c

27c
25c
15c
29c
25c

Seodloiz and Juicy

lb*-

&gt;bs-

Del Monte

CRYSTAL

COFFEE
il. 26c

Ginger Ale or Lime
Rickey. No Bottle Charge

8c

Pillsbury Flour (
MKlb. ...k $1.09

Quaker Oats Regular or Quick
■■■- p&gt;&lt;i. 19c

K - C Baking Powder
25c can 22C

Cream of Wheat

Super Suds

ROLLED
OATS

5ib ...k

23c

25c

pb«»-

Super Suds

— 17c

ndy D

PANCAKE
FLOUR

5ib-‘k 21c

Regular Size

3

Aunt Diana Molasses
sib.r«ii 25c

23c

$

ittar Fingan
By Jiminyi

2 for

HBAHIIY TH EAT II
JED
Hastings, Michigan
-BLd

Bean Sprouts

23c
k.“::

P1., 9c

Pork Roast
Cubed Steaks

lb.

20c

lb.

25c

lbs.

29c

Del Monte Corn N.°J 14c

Hamburger

Doughnuts

12c

Pork Chops liT.'’

lb.

20c

9c

Peanut Butter 2

lbs.

23c

Brood

'Mullers Milk

do*.

i,..ite&lt;

2

AT POPULAR Prices and if you raisaed thia one when
il played the Strand you will want to sorely see it and If

SUNDAY. MONDAY. JANUARY 3. 4

‘HEARTS IN BONDAGE'
With James Dunn, Mac Clarko. David Manners

And a Complete Short Subject Program
ADIXTS 15 CENTS
CHILDREN 18 tENTS

WED.. YHURS, FRI.. (ANUARY 6. 7. 8

Spare Ribs
Nack Bona Cut*

4 -

25c

Beef
Kettle Roast

- 13c

SPECIAL RETURN ENGAGEMENT OF

Rib
Boiling Beef
lb.

Clark Gable and Jeanette MacDonald in

IBS ‘SAN FRANCISCO
ADULTS 15 CENTS

OYSTERS

Food Center

Starts at 11:30. Admission 23c. Entire Change

to the return engagement thb week of

‘SAN FRANCISCO”
Cigarettes 5

I- r

CHILDREN 10 CENTS

of

Program

SUNDAY. MONDAY, JANUARY 3. 4
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

k;

‘PENNIES from HEAVEN'
With Bing Crosby, Madge Evans
al all other performance* of this
Children 10c.
BARGAIN NIGHT — TUESDAY. JANUARY 5

‘TWO IN A CROWD
Joan Bennett, Joel McCrea
WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY. FRIDAY. JAN. 6. 7, 8
SPECIAL ATTRACTION

BORN TO DANCE'
With Eleanor Powell. Jamra Stewart. Virginia Bruce. Una
Merkel, Sid Silvers. Frances Langford. Raymond Walburn.
Alan DlneharL Buddy Ebsen.
CHILDREN 10 CENTS
ADULTS U CENTS

SATURDAY ONLY. JANUARY 9

SATURDAY. JANUARY 9

Hopolong Hit» Ths Trail
Clarancs E. Mulford's

|omei Dynn, Marian March, Wynne Gibion

DOUBLE FEATURE ATTRACTION!

With Wm. Boyd. Jimmy Ellison, Gwynna Shipman '
Also Complete Short Subject Program
ADULTS 15 CENTS
CHILDREN W CENTS

First Performance liRF.IL

*&lt;■

Ki

was active in t
ant church al Hickory Comer*, serv­
ing a* trustee. Sunday School su­
perintendent for many years and a
member of the choir. Surviving are
the widow, a daughter. Mrs. Don
Foreman of Hastings; three grand'datighters; a slsicr. Mrs. Ella Bow­
men. of Kalamazoo, and three
brothers, Ezra and Bert of Battle
Creek and Fred of Alma. Funeral
services were conducted by the Rev,
Oscar Smith at the Hickory Corners
church on Friday. Dec. 18. with in­
terment in the Hickory Corners
cemetery.

HASTINGS GROUP Np; 2.
What color and color harmonies
are most becoming to you and to
various types of indlviduah? This
subject togeUier with a study of
lines suited to type of figure, formed
the topic of discussion for the De­
cember extension lessort. Mrs. C- D.
Bauer and Mrs. e. Echlinaw of Itas, Ungs Group Na 2 presented the les­
son to ten members and four, guest*
at the home of Mrs. Ellis Kelley on
Dec. II..
| All member* desiring to have the
। lesson on tailoring met at the home
of Mrs. FayXirecn on Dec. 1st. This
was a special lesson and not re-,
, qulred for the course, but tan mem­
ber* took advantage* of the oppor-|
, lunity and received some valuable
ipoifiten on the subject from Mrs.
I Bert Fancher, county chairman]
iwhn took the lesson given a limit-1
■ ed number at the court house by
। the data leader in .October.

I

‘COME CLOSER, FOLKS'
— FEATURE NO. 2 —

I'd

B

SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOW NEW YEAR'S EVE.

WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION

5c

TKAND TI EATI f

Hastings, Michigan • Telephones 2244-2557 BL-

I Bunnell on Sept 23. 1892. For reven।; teen year* they lived near Bunfleld
then moved to a farm near Hickory
.Corners, but lie was forced to quit
farming in 1916 He owned and op­
erated the grocery at Midland Park.
■'Gull lake for ten years, retiring a.
year ago because of poor health He

% ‘THE BIG SHOW'
PRICES: Matinee 3.00 and ItOO F. &gt;L Adult* He—Children
Ifc; Kreataga A4olto 20c - Chltaren ife

IJ ‘Uli .'lU'.'G

ACCIDENT NEAR WARNERVILLgJ
About a mile south of Warnejvfiie

in Woodland Twp. on Sunday. H. A
j Emery ot Nashville and Jake Smith
wffo Uvea near Warnervlllc. drove!
their automobiles into each olhrr ini
; the middle of the road on M-14. id
! was raining hard and impossible nJ
see an approaching car. Fortinwell
both were driving slowly or eeriauJ
conseqUencea would have resultedJ
Mrs. smith suffered some injijne.]
H piUch are not considered teztaul
3 Both cars were wrecjtcd-

�FOR the;

UJ H O

L UUin THESE PRIZES

Who Will Be the Lucky Miss or Mr. 1937?
• Whoever it may be is sure to get a GRAND
START in LIFE, because that baby will be an
honored guest at all these stores, with each
contributing something to its needs! So here's
luck to all you parents-to-be . . . and may yours

be the first bundle of joy in the new year!
• Those merchants whose ads appear on this
page WILL PRESENT the FIRST 1937 BABY
WITH GIFTS as enumerated in their advertise­
ments below.
।

Baby’s First Year . . .

The
first
baby

born
in
1937

★

★

To the Pint Boby born in Borry Co. in

1937

oro giving ona Tiny Tot Mt

of

consisting

we

Boby

Soap, Baby Powder, Baby Cream and Boby Record
book bound in Pink or Blue.
COUNTY CLERK S RECORD WILL BE TAKEN IN

DECIDING THE WINNER

DAINTY
THINGS
for BABY
Lovely little garments that every mother dreams
about and so moderately priced that she can
choose a complete layette economically.
Our boby department is complete in every detail
and is in charge of MRS. HAZEL HINCKLEY.

SHE WILL PRESENT THE FIRST
1937 BABY WITH A CRIB BLANKET

SPECIAL PRICES
HASTINGS

MICHIGAN

To the First Baby
Born in
Barry County
in 1937 *

You can Save With Safety at the Rexall Store.

Feldpausch’t Food Confer

CARVETH &amp; STEBBINS
GOODS DELIVERED

Extends Congratulations I

PHONE 2131

and will present this baby with
12 CANS OF GERBER'S BABY FOOD
AND 12 LARGE CANS OF
ARMOUR'S VERIBEST MILK

FOOD CENTER
for the FIRST BABY
born in Barry county
'
in 1937

• That the efforts of medical science to conserve
the lives of children under one year of age are prov­
ing successful, is evidenced by the fact that the In­
fant mortality rate (number of deaths under one
year for each thousand live births) has been reduced
within the state of Michigan from 159 in 1900 to 52
in 1934. This is an activity of vital importance
which is carried on in Barry county by the Health
Department.

FIRST
SHOES!
Mothers realize the importance of early footwear

for their babies. Those tiny feet must be treated
gently and^correctly. Our years of experience in

fitting shoes qualify us to invite you to make this
store your shoe headquarters.

WE WILL PRESENT THE FIRST 1937
BABY with its first PAIR OF SHOES

• Three hundred seventy-three babies were bom in
the county in the year preceding June 30. 1936.
All of these were registered with the Health Depart­
ment. and 599 visits were made during fhat year by I
the family health counsellors in behalf of these
babies.

•' We ore happy for the part we are privileged
play In this great work and hope to continue to
our part.
.

Barry County Health

Hastings Cut Rate Shoe Store

IN BABY NEEDS ALL THE MONTH OF JANUARY

STORK BABY NIPPLES, 5c, 3 for 10c
8 Oz. MILK Sterilizers, 10c, 2 for 15c
PURE CASTILE SOAP ........ 10c
JOHNSON'S BABY POWDER .. 19c
CLAPP'S STRAINED Vegetables 10c
BORIC ACID ........................
10c
CASTORIA .1_________ 25c to 69c
KIDDY HOT WATER BOTTLES, 50c
REX Mentho Chest Rub__ ____ 19c

BABY'S

HASTINGS

NASHVILLE

HASTINGS

MICHIGAN

FOR BABY!
One of the earliest problems
of a child is proper dieV
Many mothers have learned
to depend on Highlands
Dairy Grade A milk to an­
swer this problem. The
Grade1 A standard is your
guide to purity and high
cream content.

• We will deliver one quart of
GRADE A MILK to the home of the
FIRST 1937 BABY for 30 days, deliv­
ery to start when the parents wish. If
Baby lives in the country, we will pay
$3.00 cash instead.

HIGHLANDS DAIRY

FRANDSEN'S STORE
1937 with a gift in our Baby Department. A soft,
fluffy, warm Bunting FREE to the first boby born.

The Hastings Banner will open
a Savings Account (in either

The National Bank of Hastings
or The&lt;iity Bank) with an ini-,
tial deposit of $5.00. The Ban­

BABY

FEET...

Tiny though they may be it is most important
that they be fitted correctly. We carry a com­
plete line of children's shoes ranging from the
first shoes to adult sites. We specialize in
corrective footwear. We have a pair of shoes
for the first boby of 1937.

BABY SUPPLIES

ner asks all doctors and parents

to notify the Banner of the date
and time of birth of all babies

Taylor's

born after December 31, 1936

Shoe Store

and before January 14, 1937.

Hostings, Michigan

Life Starts with the Baby

WE INVITE MOTHERS to make this store their
headquarters for Baby’s needs. Our stock is com­
plete and includes JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON. MENNEN’S and other nationally-known products.

_

_

We have a special
9ift f°r f^e first
1937 Baby — a
Johnson &amp; Johnson
Baby's toilet set.

REED’S
DRUG STORE
HosHssgB.Mkh.

Sweaters. Bonnets and everything e

Visit our Baby Department.

FRANDSGN’S S
Exclusive But Not ”
HASTINGS, MICH,

o

•

•

�The Hastings Banner

BOOST THI COUNTY­
TRADE AT HOME

Um Spirit of a Community
Thai Count*—Not Ito Sixe

A PAGE OF EDITORIALS AND FEATURES

HASTINGS, MICHIGAN

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31. 1936

. ASSYRIA.
[Mr* stebben with bar children. Mr. I tie creak called on her lather, W.
Mr. and Mr*. Theodore Tack left
Mr*. Danford Higgins and Mr., O. Tobias, and Keel and family
Sunday mowing on a trip to 8t. ao&lt;1 Mra Winslow Martin of Kala-, Bunday afternoon.
Augustine. Florida, to visit their sis-1 &gt;naaoo; Mr. and Mn. Rankin Hyde
My. phenla Wilkinson ot Kalater, Mrs. Robert Brunney. and fam- “nd son with Mr. and Mrs. Bliss masoo flatted Mr. and Mn. Alt
lljr. Mr. Tack teaches the Assyria Dostar.
! Bishop and daughter Bunday.
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
Center school and his brother*. Mifctr' And Mrs Philip OToole and : Mr. and Mr*. Mell Hendershott
nor and Lloyd Tack, accompanied I daughter and Mr. and Mn. Willis. and son Burrell of Kalamazoo spent
Happy New Year! May 1937 j
'
Babcock of Battle Creek will bo ■ Sunday with her parenta, Mr. and
PERCENTAGE OF CRIME him.
Mr. and Mr*. Bernard Tuker and &gt;ue&gt;t* of Mr. and Mrs. Honeywell. Mrs. C. N. Tobias.
UUons. We hope that you may en- i
IS HALF OF AVERAGE
-•
— at­ and Mr. and MYs. Arthur Baker and
Marian Tobias and Burrell Hen
Hen-­
Mr. and —
Mrs. Leon
Cole
Will
joy a full measure of health, pros­
IN STATE
daughter of Kalamazoo.darsholt
Mrs. Sarah
of Kalamazoo
‘ **
are ipendlng
-------- *----------------------tend the annual Christmas gather.perity and happiness. The past year
ing of the Tasker family, to be held Smith and daughters of Mr. and their vacation with their grandparent*. Mr. and Mr*. C. N. Tobias.
was an interesting and turbulent one.
at Woodland, at the home of an Mn. Grande Deprlestar.
THREE FACTORS
' Mrs. Jennie Norris and Lucy had
Mr*. C- N. Tobias ipenl last week
Il appears that the illusive corner
ARE RESPONSIBLE aunt,
5"’ Mrs, Dorr Stowell, and fam- ; Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Norris and Mrs in Kalamazoo with her »on. Floyd
Tobias and family and Mrs. Mell
„
„
Mr. Rn(1 Mrs. O. C. Hewitt will Katie Norris as gueata.
been definitely rounded. May there
Hendershott and family.
Y. M. C. A. And Boy Scouts Join a family group at the parental : The Christmas exercises at church ,.
be no detours or hard bump* in the
’ Do Fine Work — Also W. I “
' ”
" ; and at lhe schoolhouse were splen-1 .■ Misses Irene and Mildred Haskins
of Hasting* spent Sunday with Mr.
North Avenue road on Christmas did.
pavement until the goal Is reached'.
K. Kellogg Foundation
I Day.
•
*»*
A •■—
and Mrs. Ohas. Gaskill.
।
One thing the Infant 1937 must face
HINDS CORNERS.
| Mr. and Mn. Floyd Gaskill and
Christmas festivities began at&gt;
in a recent talk at the Hastings
Is the possibility oC war. This calam­
23 Letter.
। three sons of Quimby-spent Sunday
Rotary club State Insurance Com- Assj'ria Center on Friday night the ' Dec.
Mian Susie Phillipa vhlted her I with their son. Mr. and Mrs. Chas,
ity can be avoided with strong leadmlSKioner Ketcham, speaking cm IBth; at the Briggs on Monday;
erthip Will this direction be forth­
■ the history of the state of Michigan, night, the Eagle Tuesday night and cousin. Dr. and Mn. Miley. In j Gaskill.
Grand Rapids last Monday.
-Mr. and Mr*. John Weyerman are
coming! About all the average per­
slated that crime statistics showed the Stevens Wedne.sday night.
Rev. Swem of Hastings called on.; the parents of a son.
Earl Bristol Clare Norris. Floyd,
that while Michigan had only 1-25
son can do Is wall and hope. But if
ot the population of lhe country, Miller and Harry Babcock were. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Newton Friday. | Mish Susie Philipps spent Sunday
this one pitfall can be avoided,
Mr.
and
Mn.
Fred
Bush
of
Batin
Hastings.
among
those
to
attend
the
Has
­
yet as compared with the rest of the
there Is every possibility that the
country. Its criminal record showed tings Brotherhood on Monday eve­
ning.
1
new year win be a splendid one.
on' population. While that is true, i ^f,rs- Mabel Hartom- and Mrs.
the percentage for Barry county Evaline Tasker leaders of the As- ■
FINE CO-OPERATION.
was only 3 1-2 per cent or about *yrta Center Extension. Unit met
Governor Frank D. Fltxgerald and
one-half of that for the state of "cently al lhe home of Mrs. Glenna
Michigan.
|
and gave the lesson presentsthe governor-elect. Frank Murphy. '
The question will naturally arire' Uon on C°,or “&gt;»d Lines. Mr*. Addie
are exhibiting a fine spirit of co- i
; wiiy should crime in Barry county Inward W*H entertain the January I
Morning Glory
operation. The next administration
.yaslon.
■*
. be about one-half of the average in
will get away to a much smoother
Harry Cotton who hits been so
this state? Il seems to us that the
| answer is due principally to these critically 111 the past four weeks hl
start because of this harmony. This
•
'three factors; First, Barry-county j very much Improved
state of affair* should be the
Miss Orrn Strickland came Fri-1
: has maintained for many years the
Large
O&lt;c
rule rather than the exception,
county Y. Af. C. A- organization; day the iBth for the week end with
Sixe—
Cl
which It is. If a political party and I
which ha* done excellent work; in' her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
the leaders of that party arc not big
the second .place until this past Strickland.
The
major
pan
of
the
rural
•
year.
Die
county*
has
maintained
a
enough to put good government
splendid interest in the Boy Scout schools will enjoy a week's vacation.
ahead of ambition and the unpleas­
Work on Uie rural electrification
! movement which ha* Interested
antness of defeat, then they are not
boy* and young men at a time when line on the North Aveitee road ha*
big enough to be Intrusted with the
! such activities would be most help­ been extended from the Court school
house north lo the Allan Wood’s
. ful.
responsibility of leadership. Ooverj Not less Important than there is home .near Goddes corners. The
nor Fitzgerald should be given ma­
I the work of the W. K. Kcllog &lt; poles'are distributed to that place,
jor credit for making this co-opera- 1
Foundation in thia county. The con­ and to the Bailey Brother* prppery
tloa poMlble. although Mr. Murphy
stant Interest manifested by that or- the pole* have been set and wire
j ganization in the welfare of Hie strung.
deserves praise for conducting him- [
Mr and Mrs. Ronald Warner of
' young people and children has had
self as a victor in such a manner j
: much to do with promoting their . Detroit will be guesfc of their par­
good health which is a factor in ent*. Mr. nnd Mrs. Fred Miller of
keeping boys straight. Ln the next I!th« Ellis and Mr. and Mrs. -Homer
b,
The
place is fhe good work it is doin; I Warner of Hastings.
have set an example which
»
o
Hew to the line, let -the qulpa
through Its cam(M and for under- j
should become a fixed custom.
fall where they may I
THREE CORNERS.
WEALTH lost, someprivileged children, ali of which has
This community was grieved by
iliinp lo»l; honor Insl,
had an important bearing bi reduc­
A PROGRESSIVE PROGRAM, j WHAT $220,000,000 COULD BUY
ing crime, ifi our Judgment.
i (hq news of the death of Mr*. Mi­
much losl: courage
A Happy And ITospcrou* 1931.
randa
gisson,
who recently moved to
. Of course the regular work of the!
By Observing-Tommy.
One of the first acta of Governor-1 For the first nine months uf this
lo.«L ali lost.—Goethe.
’ schools is a factor, and we believe it, Woodland. She was a fine friend
elect Prank Murphy, according lo a I year, lhe nation s eulmaud fire
httr'bcen the alm of Mrs. Maude’ and neighbor and the heartfelt symPr„. mn br w.m-1
jfimtth tn~ her niporvision *of tha t uatliy of everyone is extended to t
. ..
L
7'
, I,; Hits marked a $30,000,000 advance
stall a merit system for sclcctln,. over ljR. !OiV( sus^iKC(i ;if tj,e 443^
icurai school* of theYounty to stress 1 the family
HASTINGS
PHONE 2453
and advancing state employees. If I period last year.
tho.se things whichrmake for good| Seth Cook of Lansing called on'
। character. We believe that lhe high Mr. nnd Mrs. Edw. Walters Chrtst•0. this will be one of lhe most proWe have become accustomed to ,
I schools Ui Ulis county have done air | mas Day.
I important work in interesting young I Mr. and Mrs. Leo c Hammond nt
years Mr. Murphy will have taken
we UMKl (o My
mlHu,n Bul
evening
folks in the better and higher thing* i LansinK spent Sunday
in life.” We believe that tn small with hLs parents, Mr and Mr.-,, c. A
advantage of an opportunity that the fact remains that $220,000 000 is |
w...
U been screeching ■»
I towns and cities it is possible to Hammond
has H&gt;».II
literally
at a Inf. nf mrmfv—a little ar.alvnit ’
Christmas Day guevta of M. E.
,
c rrry on more beneficial work in the.
state administrations for many a
Earl Bove*. I understand, bought developing of the right kind of lives Moore and Miiw Clura J. Sisson were
Suppose that instead of burning
hi:n.clf a-Tice big turkey last week of children through such work as U, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Walters and
up that $220,000,000. we had put it to . npULSA, Okla., dancing instrucand parked it'in his car by the 1 being done in lhe schools and by the j Marion of Grand Rapid*. Mr. and
Nothing make* lhe general run of productive Use. What COUld it have I A
tor
declares
that
tn
he
n
‘‘’tor declares Hint to be n
Mr*. Henry Thompson and family
people more "fed up" on politics and done?
I good dancer one must hold his court- house pendinq Uanspofl to ; w. r. Kellogg Foundation than Ls
if Bowne and Miss Pauline Moore
tjjc kitchen.
jxjssiblc in the larger cities
We hear much ot the housing
chin right The same applies to
more distrustful of their state gov­
of Pre-port.
shortage in this country. The money; boxing.
ernment than the spectacle* of pat­ we gave to the god of fire tn nine
Mr. and Mr*. Harold McKenzie of
I Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Har­
ronage grabbing which take place mantas could build 55.000 homes at a j
Farmers of Hebron, Conn.,
vey Kenney of Lansing and Mr.
with each change ot administration. cost &lt;V $4,000 each—homes which | nrc^fceding cows stale bread in­
! .and Mrs. Lester Yeiter of Kalama­
Most people appreciate the fact that would have comfortably housed I stead of fodder, hoping to find, y -Not--UitandUig-to-be cheated otti j
zoo were gueata of Mr. and Mrs.
of a del'cious dinner thus easily, my
200.000 to 300 000 people.
in time, that they've buttered
you can’t keep lhe right type of em­
Clair Yeiter on Christmas Day.
friend. Earl, took his troubles toi
There are millions of men in our
their bread on both sides.
Mr. and Mr* James F. Hammond
ployee on lhe job when faithfulness. country who lack _„_„
z jobs. Had
steady
Sherlll Jh&gt; BUkwy
j n,ra
D.„„- »Urrl„,
ind NatalU of Detroit arrived at
ability and intelligence are com- 1 we put that IX10.000.000 in produc-:
• * *
j
Eleanor Powell. lhe home ot his parent*. Mr and
Toothpick manufacturers of
PRICES WILL SOON BE ADVANCED VERY MATERIALLY
pletely outweighed by political1 live enterprise. It would have given!
Jay. after listening to the fact’. I a picture with a navy background Mrs. Claude A. Hammond. Thurs­
Merrill, Wis., report that busi­
on almost everything in oar line. We are offering acme
went into a regular "Sherlock-' and a swift, delightful story. There day to spend Christmas with them
trends. The state needs the best | —' L
ness is picking up.
Holmeun" huddle with himself nnd I ts n lively plot but this brilliant'
employees it is possible to obtain. A f
' finally proclaimed: -.Earl, if you go group of player* gives you the story Later tn lhe day Rose Marte ac­
Canadian birth rate In 1033
companied them to Grand Rapidstate Job should be a real stamp of
was 20.2 births to the thousand. i right home. I kinds expect you may largely tn music and dancing and to visit Mrs Hammond* relative*
celling.
find —
your
turkey right there."
ability. There Is no reason why the
-—
: daughter. Included In the all-star I and Mr. and Mrs j Shirley Wing)
United States had only 16.8 —
cast arc James Stewart. Una Merkel. and family all reluming late Sat­
state should not be sble to offer at,hln
mpn
a
births to the thousand, but then
Earl did and HE DID.
, France* Langford. Std Silvera. Vir- urday afternoon.
lhe U. S. wasn't entered in a
tractive career jobs to those who
- • ginta Bruce. Buddy F.bscn and many
derby.
Floyd Watters and family of
show proper qualifications.
Jay doesn't eUborate much
Grand Rapids and Elmer Walter*
If Mr. Murphy goes ahead with still in need of good roads If we
and family of Battle Creek spent
Nothing but death will stop
had put that $220.00(1.000 Into road
conclusion—In fact, lie doesn’t need
plans for a merit system, he will 'construction, it would have built
the homing flight of a homing to!
’ ’
‘ Filmed mostly at the Texos Cen- lhe evening of Christmas Day with
run into plenty of trouble. He will ■ 44000 miles of highway costing $5.­
pigeon, which leads us to believe
• . •
tennlal Exposition at Dallas, this Is Mr. and Mrs. F.dw. waiters ano
that the trailer era is going to be
Bernie Re.-d is looking forward to‘lhe firtf-’peclal musical western to tlieir grandmother. Mrs. Stoughton.
000 per mile—a road long enough to
Good two piece liv­
Mr. and Mrs. Leo c Hammond
Handsome
floor
mighty hard on these little bird^ a boomlm: trade in Bromo Seitz-r 1!*‘ produced starring Gene Autry.
go back and forth across the conitpartisanship no matter bow Impar--&lt;-----------------------------------ing room 5QC-95
lamps as
Others included in the cast arc Kny and Dicky Lee of Lansing were
$0.95
year s day
tially he acts. In fact, he will be i nf£’
| Hughe.’, leading lady; Smiley Bur- ChristmM Day gur*t.» of his par­
suite, Only vv
low as___
ents.
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Claude
A
Ham
­
j One of the happiest boy* in town ■ nette. Sully Payne and many more.
mond.
\ Ls Roy Cordes
MUsea Ruth' and Ret ha Robinson
James Dunn in "Come
represent* interest at s per cent for
of Bancroft are visiting home folks.
He bought hi* son a toy electric
But If the governor-elect does
He always had crowds yelling *.. .
$4.400.000.000!
train
with
all
the
trimnrthKs
for
make a sincere effort to establish a
for their money back! He could talk so a Christmas day guest of the H
Good
unfinished
Good upholstered
Is fire prevention worthwhile? I* It
, Christmas.men*, system, partisanship should be worth lhe little time and effort Ural
his way in-and out-of everything ।। J. Robinson’s.
breakfast suite, 4
seat
occasional
orfi Plank.,
from jml to jewels Marton Marsh. j Friend* of Mrs
pul aside, at least temporarily, so 13 required of every - individual to
Reynolds, they tell me, hopes that Wvnnc
choirs and
$0.55
chair for
$E-95
Gition arc co-starred with |I &lt; Pearl Walter*) of Ligonier; Ind , plU
make
it
an
actuality?
Read
the
that he can $ave whole-hearted,
diddy will get tired of it before long ’
table..
.. O
only... _.
j be pleased to team that she 1* mak-1
"Follow lore and it toll fleet flee low
Dunn.
above again, and make your own
so he can have a chance.
united public support for thia proand it u-tU follow thee."
ing a fine recovery and expected lo
answer.—Industrial News Review.
"Fennies
From
Heaven'
........
....
cat
chri.-tma.s
dinner
with
her
famgrMrive effort..
JANUARY
A Happy New Year’s Eve lo all-.With Blns Crosby. 11 v. Her sister. Mrs Beth Cook of
But not too happy!
Bing has never been In belter of Lansing I* earing for her.
। voire, and never ha* he had more
---------------- - • «-------------BRIEF OBSERVATIONS.
Handsome Walnut
Good felt base floor
, melodious and intriguing tune* ul
—
PRAIRIEVILLE.
•
-­
"Map* are dangerous things un­
Mr.
■his beck and call than in this pic- and
— Mrs.
—— - w
-—R.
-­ Norris spent
finished dining room
coverings
for
os
Between Government bookkeeping le»* children learn how to- look
i turr Madge Evan*, prettier than . ’he holiday* with Mr apd Mrs. De­
suite for $OQ.50
and that of the sport* broadcaster through them ond not at them.’’—
low os
I Hastings Banner.
ever, does extremely well and lnUe|i,M Hughes and family of Toledo.
square
yard
Cv
who adds four and *evcr. to make 10 . Jan,es Fairgri«-ve.
F.Ulh Fellow*, the
t l.n 113-yrar
tn . ''
Ohio.
.
.. :.
only______
i Mr Fidttor
।II Edith
3-rear old ac- Oh
Mr. "and Mrs. Mark Norris enter­
I ‘I think everybody enjoys' Jane tress, co-star* with Bin?.
yards, an entirely new system of
-AftCT evcry depression the Amer| Cameron's column and it deserve-1 ■
------------tained for Sunday dinner. Mr. and
arithmetic is being born —Sau I lean people have created higher levmention.
Joel .McCrea-Joan Bennett
Mrs. Fred Stanley ot Detroit, Mr.
Franclsco Chronicle.
I
of opportunity and progress.
| I always read Jane’s column the!
in "Two in a Crowd." and Mrs Orin Fisher of Dowling,
_______
Alfred M. Landon.
I first thing when I get the Banner.
They find the tom halve* of a Mr. and Mrs. Ben Temple and son
All cotton soft motSeveral good used
j J..ne. you are a clever writer and j thousand dollar bill, which start* and Mrs. Katie Norris of KalamaThere is some worry over whether . „
,
’
’
tross, full siso and
1 bet cue af the best lipusewne.s and Lhe fun tn tins picture. Those two;
reconditioned radios
lb. r.d» MW « .
|
; cooks in Bury county. I have tiled
ideally starred as a mirth pro-1
Vlughn MoU of Bear Lake la
5
newspaper win tnjure the Fourth So shines a good deed in a naughty
! your recipes and suggestions and voklng pair of sweethearts.
home for the holidays.
only.
Estate; bul we don’t see why. Mil-1
world."
। they arc fine. 1 never miss one little
* " *
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Mill* and
lions now are buying newspapers to ■
—Shakespeare.
' detail, you sure, notice things and I,
AT THE BARRY.
tlieir guest..Harvey Mills, of Pontiac I
••Hearts in Bondage."
l thunk you for the nice compliment
were Christmaj guests of Mr. and
UM
on IM ur-Bu-l-o,,,,
nnm d„.
। you
ju gave to
io one in our lamtiy.
family.
I; jamr*
Jamoo uunn.
Dunn. Mag
Mac ciarxe.
Clarke. Frame
Frank 1 Mrs Bernard Mills and ML*a Dawn I
ron’s.
1 They with th* tun and moon renew
| A couple of weeks ago you men-!
McGlynn. In this picture make it a Mills of West Lake.
m
1
thetr light
'turned the re»l room In Hasting:, well worth seeing for anyone. David
Mis* Ruthcva Nevin*. MlM Rata
Beautifully
carved
2 inch post bed, cotWe’re curious to know what goes Forever, blessing (hose that look on
ill’s a shame such a beautiful city, Manners and Dunn are civil war Miner and Miss Ruth Gray accom­
on at lhe broadcasting station that
oak 8 piece dining
them."
,
ton
mattress and
■can’t have a better one. I think' I'avnl officers separated by the war panied MlM Elva Warner, of Kellogg
—Tennyson.
roam
suite.
For
.their splendid Mayor and the tine The tragic conflict causes a breach Agricultural school to Florida. They
good
springs
and
makes people laugh so hard al the
NEWS GLEANINGS.
■ men of the council coukl do some- in Uiatr romancer
started on their trip Saturday and
comedians.—Milwaukee Journal.
’’Good dce3s are immortal, bring­
The American Automobile Asso- thing about It. I brt Delton will have
I spent Christmas at Tampa with
ing joy tnrtead of «ncf. pleasure in­
Hcpalong Casoldy in "Trail Dtt»t.~
Miss Wimer's parent*.
A musical journal says that it is stead of pein, and life instead of elation has found by a recent check a nice one.
William Bovd as Hopalong - tn
up that the "average safe driver".
A Subscriber.
Mr and Mrs. Russell Lewis and
quite possible to buy a ptano for death.”—Mary Baker Eddy.
___ Trail Du»t’’ has'the job of bring­
is 45 years of age and has been dnv-1
family spent FYiday with her par­
tan pounds.. That, ot course, is the
. Letter writer* to the Ohio State *nR
“V,e ,thr°HRh 4
Ing tor- more than 20 years.
ent’, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sensiba,
"Our grand business undoubtedly
great trouble with pianos— Humor- is. not to see what dies dlmlv nt a
of Dunean lake.
distance, but to do what lies clear!)
Mrs. George Wood* is home for
al hand/’r-Citlyio
a two week*’ vBcatjon.
Itoddaga i* » curioua plant which
Mi» Elizabeth Wood.- of State
A correspondence cwrre In Kmhospital
spent Thursday at home.1
has grown by crowing a radish and
nt ‘"♦Wr’•
«on»
n-rn .VaUable. On* ,urt$ .nd s^er
i'
I Christmas dinner *111 be held on
51
;I
101 wh‘ch
M,ry
££»!“
,n .,h*uatu
of 'he^.taX^ yXc!X™i!!
! that day for the family and Mn !
। Merrill Woods
fiarsr.-Ottaw* Brening CHI-] ...
-t---------? J
| It U not unusugj to have snow I
-------- ——
-------------- n
. - F r
HASTINGS
PHONE 2216
I Mrs. Alice Corwin spent Chrlstm
d’l- Ul) during every one of tM twehe.i Fruits .nd regrtabky: k—p tenrr. "Ontr thri day d^n’ U&gt; which Ft 1l-urvffli
1
Mr anti ffri. Emnftt
I icrmt things. —Cicero.
monflu in the Rocky Mountain*.
If picked ui the early morning.
.ire awake.’ —H. D. Thoreau. .
1bwan and family ol NiahvUk:!
I
I
.
1
*
A PASSING THOUGHT

Editorials

8M COUNTY’S
SPLENDID RECORO

Ring The New Year In

rr-aomiy
Fnnfu

wo Vie^s an(j Opinions;

\Vhat OtherS OUy

A Quotation

MILK

Med. Size
ORANGES

3C'±25C

2 .D.7 3S5

RITZ
Crackers

VIKING COFFEE, Lb.17c
3 Pkgs. SUPER SUDS, small size, 25c
5 Lb. Bag ROLLED OATS25c
2 Lbs. KING NUT Oleomargarine 29c
Gold Medal or Pillsbury's Flour
24 J Lb. Sack$1.09
3 Lbs. PRUNES................................25c
CREAMERY BUTTER, Lb35c
2 Cans Golden Bantam Corn25c

’Round About Towt

WALLACE GROCERY

Start the New Year Right
Buy Some New Pieces of j

J At

the Theatre $

FURNITURE

That Will Make the Home More Attractive

Just a Few.of the BARGAINS
We Are Offering

15 J'.™'’

Pungent Paragraphs

c

Crumbs of Wisdom

Public Forum

03

■

9QC

Eg,

::mJ5"520

’59”

E, . . .’16 ”

Way of Our World

Bl."!,«.!^«‘aSLrr,&lt;X« b"™
'8°"jI

MILLER FURNITURE CO

�THE HASTIN 08 BANNER, THUB8DAY, DECEMBER 31, IBM .

HASTINGS GIRL KILLED IN AIR
CRASH NEAR BURBANK, CAL

, Constance)* During all the trip the
weather was exceptionally fine. The
Hungarian student went with me
and shared expense*. We first Jour­
neyed to Karlanihe. a large Indus­

full force of trade boards and the both the producer and the produM; aUdaa co U*
companies' reputations.
and will forge ahtad to higher tevel* ' pan. W« wm
5. Furthermore, they will asaume of competitive opportunities, con-.family en a
in fuJ1 wponslblllty to the buyer tor ; romer acceptance and stability.
| period, gar, . (Continued from page 1. Bee. 1)
I UlS
III
products
conforming with roch I It iJ gratifying to know that *'11 to 12.
trial city. Here there,, were several
1 VI ll
V lir flll I grades and standards, by means of wan so closely in touch with tho garter's
which she wa* serving a* hoateu I slope. An ominous fact wa* that no I
। large park* and a castle which were
u searcher
IIW uil
liunu
reported
anyIvojuntuy
signa of life j legally -binding state- ’subject
■»—4-----of—trade standards a* fo Mr Special mi
crashed Sunday evening.
■*”
~- -• «&lt;- I
■
lent* in advertising.
Fairchild, the Chief of that ttopart- I Burch fo» ,
about
lhe
craft.
|
(Continued
from
page
1.
Dec
1)
(Continued
from
page
1.
Bee.
the celebrated city of Baden Baden.
First indication of trouble came
6 Having ceased to ra*l*l the
National Bureau of invite any w
*&gt;•«&lt; ia.uk: mum aiulu
mr. piiuc
ravine
into which the. plane
Here are located numberless spas or
Srandards brltevoi that real nm.
at 7:28 o'clock when Pilot Edwin crashed U located The
pro- ' avontaw
evening,
four mite* .from row' bricked with stone and spot- hot mineral spring*, a* well a* a 1cwed th', factorv period. an1 later,strong trend* heretofore cited: hav- j Standard*. believe*
&lt;
~~~
W. Blom a*kcd the Union Air Ter­ the nearest road and 1* *o inacces-. leuly clean. The buildings are low, &gt;,gambling casino. We were now in lhe machine age with mass produc-1 ing emerged from their previous de- , £e“ u
J .&lt; Art +»• ■
Uon.
and
now,
chemistry
ha*
I
fenaive
wjalUon;
having
avoided
any
'
h!
«
b
9
“
*
“
^
oi
Product*. honest *4- Menleg
minal control tower for a radio ,•ible that It can only be reached ! a* are aU buildings in Germany
the Black Forest (Schwanwald). On brought forth an amazing amount of i need fcfrestrictlve leghlattpn; hav-1 JrerJ^In* and P®****” earorance “
In
beam to help guide him through a (afoot. Beaching plane* circled overIn con
cunMctlM with
n.r)(n
! our left stretched mile* of forest be­ synthetic product*,
by
processe*
'
mg
taken
the
lead
ta
progressive
I
*
**•
0^^
&lt;*
V***
*&gt;*
ing.mi
-------------by Pr°ce»se* mg taken the lead ta progressive ■
rain storm.
The tower operator
u&gt; lh« rtKix p«rtr
,ery decked hills and mountains. This
i Inga- ara llnaa, eitbar
which the customer doe* not under-1 and constructive cooperation neces-'
a*ked hl* position. Blom replied:! From fvt&lt;u&gt;nrrt .v.ii.Mo rmw-rt ®W- The Germans have harmonized 1
.until we entered Freiberg,
lfltei.ei. MiirbUiatU warn ' *»»“UfuUy the old style and taste of continued
WATCH NIGHT PARTY.
"Walt a minute." Nothing further i
univrrmy city.
eny Here
Here Is
is located
iocatea aa----------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 classifying, grading and esaa university
modeling of object* I*
At the First Methodist Episcopal
targe and modem educational plant
Mr Schild noted that, as the tabUshing standards as a bads for
engraving! By then* II
being one of Germany's finest. Here number of product* Increased and jnArheting their producU; and hav- church, a Watch Night party will
begin
with
a
pot
luck
supper
at
also te an old cathedral, which ws Industry became more and more di-1
s“'k"n.n‘S'v1rtnk "f‘ft'' 'V1’'
1 h*':
seven o'clock. Bring tabu- service.
' !SvPkave not 'cen a
bulld&gt;nR made
, sandwiches and dish for table. Firs*, render the effect uf vibrating light*,
"h™ “
hfiljr h"S “
br.e3. eon.
period, supper together: second per- and io mark distinctly I
" -J” '„X“: ““'“"J
JI” pX'.'h'l
lod, a lecture with 53 hand colored
I down the ss
a!“. «.pn
-“O' '”&gt;7- sste,'►■'"st »",u -“'i
oak.
It
apparently
j growth of scrub
I
IV
Iiuv mw)cnce and fr0l,; the
g|Van |or |Ocatxd.wh|et u
unure. nf (he UM- The World war seem* to have
struck the bottom of the ravine with !
,
many of the tuliduigs and other;. nanube
river
ronsrance
and
the
bcvn
lhc
which
mark*
an .I
uaniiDe
river,
uonsuuice
ana
tne
.
.
—
L
----------.
.
urrmc lore., bounced . .bon
then are nrrmnnent ,n. ' lakes
. .
.
.......................
tn. II
were
all delightful,
but there 11inrr*»*slncr
110!/??.1"8 .1,
J‘ m.sud
nwh&lt;* &gt;n.- srw-ri'i- •"*
Unee up Uu. dope end Ulen UM structures,
‘‘X “
were too many things of Interest to 1 f?rm?2 °?. khoul. pr?,‘JS'' "nrt ^or
remember all The m.tn point* of
tnJ.
t
ta duun“ 01 be*1'* ■ Tbrr are wen everywhere. However
interest'at Freldereckshaven were ,
l?nlihe bl,.ycr,as
*• , yarM
I there are quite a few • bug-like" au- the leppelins and the flne view of.
In
traced
The first man at the scene of Die | tomoblle* that look like tovs beside 1 the Alps over in Switzerland. We saw ,
which the producers of I
accident, L. F. Atwood, reported
new Ford
piUUULUI, agricultural
.VU.UnHIM as well
WV.l -3
- the ' a-----------------the
..
another «hin i peoducts.
asi
interior of the plane as
■
—
i
Just a
From Bremen I traveled to Han- wuieh ia tn the nrnreu nf rnnntr,^ mechanical, have taken in order
orile to |
over afte? .raying the night with my
u 1x1 the Proceu °f construe
scrambled mass of humanity.'*“
igive the customer assurance of
quality of lhe product he buys. It'll I
The Union Air Terminal at Bur­
to
H.UUJb.r,
w.'' an interesting story.
bank. about twenty miles from Los tvlnkfnrt nn ^he^vrain Tn
climbed a high mountain, on top of
Angele*. 1* a broad, flat field bor­ (Xt |kfhld
Producers
have
increasingly
*h,ch was lhe celebrated Hohenxoldered by Jagged foothill* which ex­ ine
I hlx Mte ftee ,em C“l,C Th,S really *,s a al«hl- , reached the conclusion that to
I maintain or increase their business
tend back into a semi-desert coun­ ixsTia' s.'M
•ate
try. broken by low mountain range?
cart I wen’ thc&gt; mUst k?eP ,allh wlth bu&gt;'«r8 b?
and valley*.
,
— —
■lace which «lvU1« lh«m correct Information
-rcal
about their
goods Now the- consumProm the standpoint ot emergency' through the huge railway
me
inrcc
nours
K It
. -(------------- ------------------------—--­
iBy
took
rnBimosv
'' "rmost
tl”'ce
hours.
Tealtending, the region near the airport al}d reached my train.
However. &gt;|
। y was
thc
I. However.
was aIinost
aImos, Uke
llk. th
„ hhuge CMtIes er* are banding together .in de- j
I might be classified a* dangerous.. when I returned with, tne other two ayd paJacCa we
m th! movie*. mands Ior more
knowledge j
■ Under normal condition* and even * th® train had left. I rested a short Pa,ntlngS tape&amp;tries. china, carv- oi lbe ProducU they buy and guar-.
, in bad weather with lhe assistance . time and proceeded to find out what . Jn||a&gt; meul works and even' oth*r antce8
to quality.
I of radio beams, landing* can be I should do. I finally located my luxUrv,onc TOU|(1 UlUlk of werc
In summing up the situation nnd |
I made
madewithout
R00m
j tne
the looking ahead as to what tiie future .
withoutdifficulty.
difficulty.But
ButIn
tncase
case! i J&gt;
**ext
—*-— *faln which was• to
ww leavefln
•——
nn,—' afler
aiicr room
room strcU;hK
wTretcnea
or blinding to, or rata, w pUn, j forty-flve
lorty-nve minutes I1 carried
mvted two
l« of
ot |len
,ltl
blocl, ant
,„d
™
(!ngt
h 0{ lwo biorirg
j ,elch
a-h on
n, will brine.
bring, Mr
Mr. rwrrbUJ
Fairchild ,tel.«.
declares
traveling at
miles a|
m bag*
h®** to that
1,1X1 train
t,aln stall
MtaU but
but,------------ ■ • wlth ihe besl (#atln ■ he believes
. ...
.v nearly
w«,z three
uun: muc,
a my
waa &lt;urnlshed
that the successful seller
minute
find
my
two "*.71
bags , nd
the cj,^® «•dl. of. the
*
»-«"or more
~1
1
turrifull'
will”take
one
mltaute would
wuulu not
uut have
tiawc a
a very
Vny large
large i couldn
— ---------t "7
— —
* other '""x
- —— -C0VerlnB3
-- -........ 4
-, Or ....
Iivw.w-r.w&gt;rtrt margin of safety _____
time-factor
before..Wien
: when TI returned There I was.
was. al
al.. vana eu., Dul~ for “ vn«u». ui ot the following strides and shout-1
It might And itself in difficulty. |
b"a^'ba8»
i beau‘y tbe return lnto Heidelberg der
greateB
responribiKies for
Next day the wreckage of the particularly if It were easing down •&lt;«•»»
i that ItstU.’ouid b0’" was Hie finest. The drive klong the product quality:
'
landing.
n£ Nector must be ^en to be appoint­ : 1. By individual companies, or
plane was sighted from lhe air ------front* high altitude
for ... I . halfJ*?®;
about twenty miles northwest of
I preferably by Industry-wide asso­
Previously to calling for lhe
radio
'
'
Onb-lb.lv.vrvmom.n.would
'* . *
-------- ---------------Burbank by R. E Dickinson and his beam. Pilot Blom had advised the the ensuing three quarters of an!
ciation. they will establish definite
rcnhtinuarf hmi
brother tn a searching plane. They airport that he would arrive about hour I talked more German than
: classes, grades, sizes, tolerances,
.v.r had
h.rt before,
h-fnrn or
nr since.
«(nr. Tiie
T1,. re-1
rn.
(Continued IlCXt WCCkl
reported tiie wings of lhe craft on a , seven minutes behind schedule. The IT ever
gauge syatems. methods of test and
I
FINEST MILD
ridge with the fuselage, apparently plane wa* within ten minutes flight markable thing is that everyone un- —
other standards, as yard sticks for
derstood what I was saying and 111'
undamaged, resting lower down the1 from Burbank when It crashed.
rating or classifying product char­
eventually found my bags. I had I
F/,t&lt;iic
acteristics or performances.
gotten into the wrong train stall. I
OpUTLlIllL ILLlllS
1 2. Wlthtn each class, grade or
OBITUARY.
|
OBITUARY.
arrived in Heidelberg nt 2:00 A. M. I._______________
.
standard, they will leave ample latiMiranda Ann Houfslalter. daughRichard Darrell, son of Vernon Monday morning nnd attempted to
———------- ---------------------- I tude for Individual company varlaAMERlOkN*MUCK
PKGS.
ter of David and Esther Houfstatter. j and Gretchen Bumford, was bom In sleep in the waiting room. I went LOCAL FIVE DE| lion and selling points, for initia­
FEATS WOODLAND, tive ill the direction of improve­
wa* bom in Rutland
township.; Hastings. June 12, 1920 and depart- directly to the foreign department &lt;
Th- Ha&gt;Un&lt;* basket ball team de­ ment and for complete freedom in
Barry county. April 2#. 1MB. and; ed from hl* happy home and school and was very ahortly located, every| tested IL* Woodland neighbors by a ' style and design.
fSrd.*.?’ “
22 ।
nltbl. Dee. 33. al lhe thing being as expected.
At. present
I am
lodged
in a stu- seori. of 22-11 Wednesday
evening,
J. They will tighten factory in­
jb.10. ai me age ui vb years, seven. _
____
...... mt
--------*.r
: —
" ■ mnnmniKm
weoncsaay
evening,
hmiut
was
—________
____ ..._____
.
months nnd 23 days. Her early lifc'*Ie ot 10 yeara* slx moa- and 1* dent
house
which wa*
modernized 1 po
r three______
years although
Woodland
spection on both processes and
■■
Fresh, Creamy Edna's Bait
Best QT. JAR
was spent in teaching school until daT8-Though he had not been feel-1 by an American benefactor. It u , has been rated a Class C school, they . products
ahe was united in marriage to Hud-1 ing well Wednesday he took his part j no,.hlng , ,CJL.
,
,!?rac
’ have managed lo over-power the io- | 4.
4. They
They will
will use
use the standard
son L. SIs-un on April 28. 1879 They i -In
the Christmasprogram
programininthe
the R”“ c.
“I*'pfay 12
! cat
cal team, out
but oils
this year Hastings
HasUngs took classifications
classifications and grades as founfour.--------------------------began housekeeping on their farm cvening.
----------- "
“h'"'
1 Wl a mon,h
°r mv
—
'-------------- hOid3 dgtlpn*
-*—— for
*" both
*■—* individual —
He was ...........................
fond of hunting. 1 '(ab
9ul
montl. rfor
my rno,n
room., ........................
an ear|y
and
manage(-i u,
and
in Irving township where they spent fishing and outdoor play even However I have to pay extra for a tl throughout the entire game Thc group advertising, trade promotions
u‘! (*cond
continued It* Mieccss- and correction of unfair practices,
51 years together until his dealh on though he was not strong physical- j
they ....
will —
back
tipsuch
.suchadvertteadvert!*----------k tip
No. 2 CAN
June 10. 1930 To thL* union were ly. His last hope and desire were! Food-18 nu*1* chfaP and 80 J8 ever&gt; -. ful season by defeating the Wood- and
land reserves 22-20
SL.SI-----------------------------’ promotions with
............
I ‘ing and trade
the
bom five children: Grace, who died &lt;0 r&gt; to hb new hom. In
hl* dear daddy. He leaves to 1
ha8 beea 1,1 acclimating
when a small child. Clement F. of with
mourn his low his loving father my?c!O’.9^ "e* m“*e ®L’‘V}2‘'
Kalamazoo. Charles 8. of Marcellus.
a OUNCE CANS
........ . _.
. .
. .
. mid onlntr tnlnirs 1 uni now onto tne
and doing things. I um now onto the
MT.*, Orpha Re*«&gt;r of fcoodland and and
mother, one sister, his grand­
Mrs. Minnie Malcolm of Lake odcs- parents. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Scot?, run of things. One of lhe outstand­
sa. who with 14 grandchildren and and Mrs. Wm. Bumford, several ing characteristic* that I have no­
SWEET,
TENDER
EARLY
JUNE
two great-grandchildren remain to runts and uncles, and cousins be­ ticed thus far U the using of every­
mourn the pxulng of a dear mother side* numerous friends and ac­ thing possible. Nothing is wasted. In
MEDIUM SIZE
NO. 2 CAN
and grandmother. She is aho sur­ quaintances. The funeral was on a restaurant you pay for a meal,
vived by two sisters. Mrs. Id* Saturday afternoon at the Qutmby butter extra, etc. ia note of interest

C.FUBNISS WRITES
ROM GERMANY
I

ILERFARCHLD
n Ilin nil nr

llLflll

."1~ . ...

0 Ol

FOR A GAY FESTIVE OCCASION AND
HAPPY NEW YEAR MENUS. YOU WILL
SING THE PRAISE OF C. THOMAS
STORES FINE FOODS AT "EVERYDAY
LOW PRICES."

SK

22*

CHEESE ;snsn

SWIFT’S CHEESE SPREADS

SALAD

15c

2

dressing

PINEAPPLE ™ 16*

PINEAPPLE TID-BITS

Paltimalicr with whom she had gone church. Rev w Maytan Jones offletto spend tiie a inter and Mrs. Cyn­ aling. interment In the Striker
thia Harr of Allegan also one broth- I cemetery.
n. Andrew Houfstatter. who reside* A flower from your garden
in Rutland township.
Has been taken out to grow
The funeral was held Thursday Whole light and love are perfect.
forenoon at eleven o'clock at the
More'joy thin we could know.
home of Mr and Mrs. Albert Rcesor,
of West Woodland, the Rev. F. J. ■ Look up and still remember
Flteh of woodland officiating. Bur- Within a garden fair.
tai u-as tn Irving cemetery in the You gave a flower to blossom
family lot.
Into HLs loving care.

HaPPy Neu,
Fancy Roasting

CHICKENS

■

Year!

BEEF KETTLE
ROASTS

22*,,

15*

Oysters

pint

Spare Ribs

25C

'b.

I7c

HAMBURGER

Shultz or Freeport

Fresh Ground

BUTTER

2

lb. 29*

35*a

New Carrots

■ bunch

5c

d«. |7c

Head Lettuce
Cranberries

Fancy

21*' 15c

222 W« DeliHASTINGS. MICHIGAN.

ib. 21c

10 per cent charge 4or service, and
it Ls 15 per cent tn hotels. This L«
a nation wide custom'.
Heidelberg itself and Its immediate
surroundings Is probably one of
Germany’s most delightful spots. It
Ls absolutely wonderful. The city is
stretched out in two narrow belts on
either side of the Nector river, the
wooded mountain* ascending almost
immediately, thus sheltering the
buildings. One can stand on tiie
main street and see the" bottom of a
'steep mountain not over two blocks
I away. Going upstream the moun, tains close in even closer with their
1 green sides and is a beautiful sight
| which takes you away.
I Tiie city Is picturesque, dotted
I with buildings which date back for
| centuries. Ail of them are in use
i too. There are about 85 thousand liv
. habitants. What the people all dn
I for a living I don't know. There
' seem to be only stores and shops, I
i hope to clear this matter up latter.
। There arc no bill boards that I have
j yet seen. All advertising Is placed on
I large round pillars located in epn■ splcuous and convenient
spot*.
There are only sLvcry few small
*Ltns hanging in the street. To get
to a restaurant it is*just as likely as
not CHat you will havp to go through
several small alleys and even up a
flight of atalrs to get there. Every­
thing here In Germany Is different—
1 everything from doorknobs to gaso, line stations. Though in the end the
isamp result is attained, though not
' so quickly.
| .To properly
travel over any
। ground at all it is necessary to have
something more speedy "and power­
ful than a bicycle. My solution was I
a cheap, second hand motor bike.
They are economical to run and
are ideal for traveling when then?
Is no special med for dress clothes.
At least halt tiie tourists ride them.
They arc equipped for two passen­
gers. Mine war. a good buy and
promise* to be ideal for my travel­
ing. Already 1 have used it for two
trips—one for a day into lhe moun­
tain*. and the other tor a five day
trip that took me through the cities
of Karlsruhe. Baden Baden. Frei­
berg, Constance. Freldereckshaven
and Stuttgart. .
My fir«f trip into the mountains
was through scenic country .An Hun­
garian student and I rode along the
Nector and turned off at a small
-dorf" or village. The climb started
immediately and it wa* very steen.
Throe fourths the way up wo atojk
ped to look back. The sight remind- •
ed me of a picture from a book. The i
river cotfld be seen far below, on the
other side stood equally high moun­
tains. all covered with a dense green
forest. On our side well kept woods
ro*e upward*. Below stretched In­
numerable small Irregular green
patchee. little fields about the size
of a large garden. U was Sunday but
people were working, husband, wife
and chlldrtn. This was my first
glltnpte of th* (coni* beauty of
Germany and I shall always rctneni*
ber Ik
• T iwre-jutt returned from my fl-e
day-trip to the Boden Sea - (Lake

PEAS
CORN

I5c

2

GOLDEN BANTAW

IOC
25*

No. 2
Cans

CREAM STYLE

PURE JELLY

Campbell's — Rich, Extra Good

TOMATO JUICE 4 ^ 29c
20 ox. can 10c '

SHRIMP

FANCY WET PACK

TUNA FISH FANCY LIGHT MEAT
ClIAPIZC
SEA FOOD
OJlHUnO TASTY
KING OSCAR

CAN
CAN

15C
15C

FRESH. TASTY FLAVOR

5C

■.25c

CAN

FANCY SANDWICH

|O

COOKIES

I2c

MILK CHOCOLATE COVERED GRAHAMS. LB. 17c

Franco - American

SPAGHETTI

3

CANS

25c

15c

APPLE SAUCE

CORNED BEEF 0EST°QUALITYAR c 17c
MUSTARD SALAD SHU QT. JAR IQC

READY TO SnVi 4 A.
No. 2 Con
IW

DILL PICKLES

FIRM, TASTY

QT. JAR

KELLOGG'S

WHEAT KRISriES
ORIENTAL-VEGETABLG

CHOP SUEY CHOWCMEIN (300L23c
PILLSBURY’S FLOUR 5
30c
SNOWDRIFT •HourtNiN® 3 can 58c

2

Hg&gt;.

CANADA DRY
Ginger Ala
Lima Ricky

CAMAY SOAP « 5'
P&amp;G SOAP 71S??7
IVORY SOAP 2^11
LABCI BAR 10c

128 WEST STATE STRI

CARNATION Ml

3
SUN

TALL
CANS
■—

�'W'1

Dinner Gown

Delightful Dining
Creation

“East (turn the old year passes ...” and
once again tie set our course for hirin'
new ports of rail. May yourj be a calm and
happy rdyiige. and may your ship come in
uell laden u ilh a goodly store of'u liaiet er
you may seek.

A new year riawn-. bright with prunUM-; w&lt;- have all

and unoriginal as lhe saying may be . . .
-J these three n ords express a sentiment of good

fought through the dark years of tin- depression

anti have emerged bright with

hope

‘

mid

ill and good cheer from us to you as no other

promise for a glorious \K\\ year. Hap­
py Ni-w V.ir!—with real im-ailiftg

nords can . . . Happy Neu Year!

.

and promise and enthusiasm!\

T. S. BAIRD

THE HOME LUMBER COMPANY

CLOTHING

HAPPY NEW YEAR.. 1937
Importance oi a wide shoulder
line is indicated by the bodice of
this gray taffeta dinner gown,
worn by Gladys Swarthout. film
player. The surplice treatment
is repeated in the back and the
skirt gains Ils generous fullness
through pleats and folds. The.
severity ot the neckline is in­
teresting.

For dining Joan Blondeil prefers
this charming garment
She
wears a foundation skirt of Diack
crepe roma. topped with a semi­
fitted peplum blouse of beige
chiffon, appllqued with lace.
It has full puffed sleeves crushed
above the elbow, and a black

JMSOMS JOYJO

illajj 1937 Be Your BestIUim Year

Y.M.C. A. ITEMS
To all our friends and associates during the last
men and boys In the Christian life
and lo lead them to avail them­
selves of the opportunity it offers
for lhe development of experiences.

year. a mosi happy and prosperous New Year, ami
,

continued good luck for 1937.

ITilh an outlook that's on lhe up and up .. . and
with high hopes for a better, surer future, we ex­
tend wishes for a Happy, More Prosperous Neu
Tear for you and yours.

Irani far and aide come greetings of lhe se
but ihl-re are none more-sincere than our I
lor your prosperity and well being in the

Organizations

TAYLOR'S SHOE STORE

^3

Dowling Townsend club will meet
Tuesday evening. Jan. 5 at 7:30.
! Club ladies are asked to bring cake
and every one bring an article In
a sack for the flsh pond. Good
speakers. Everyone welcome.

:

friends and custom­
ers who helped lo

Circle No. 1 of the Methodist L.
A. 8- will meet Thursday sdternoon.
January 7. al the home of Mrs.
Wayne Mesick. 838 8. church St.

make 1936 a ban-

A nets year is close at

happinr...

“The Hume of Good
I alues."

W. A. HALL
Furniture — Hardware

f HERE uas something tie planned to say here,
something we’d had in mind all year about autd
acquaintance that shouldn't be forgot . . . something
very flowery, but il/all seems rather unimportant in
the light of uhat ue feel like saying now that the time
has come. It’s simp!) this-, everybody uants a hap­
py new year, for himself and the other fellow, and
ueve resolved lo do. our best in the next 365 days
to make it a happy new year for lhe other fellow, be­
cause we know of nothing that will make us happier,
a year from today, than the knowledge that we did.

ANDRUS

Townsend Plan meeting at Maccabee hall Wednesday night. Dec.
130. 1938 al 7:30. Mr. Flody R.
-Moody, state director, is to be lhe
। speaker. This Ls hU first visit to the
। Hastings Club. Don’t fail lo hear
I him. Bring your friends with you.
!

000 members. One of every ten is a
a volunteer worker, serving on
boards or committees.
There an- 3.800 employed secret
Uries, working tn 643 city assoda.tlPM. 55 negro-Y—M--G. -Arbr-tM
transportation branches. 140 col­
leges and universities, and 67 rural
units and 29 service posU
Nearly two million in group ac­
tivities. 5.000 Hl-Y clubs in High
schools and 5.700 persons in Educa­
tional classes. 56.837 Jobs were se­
cured for men and boys last year.
There are 13.844 employees outside
the secretaryship,
All Ute above figures apply to lhe
U. 8. In addition tiie Y. M. C. A.
Is working in 53 foreign countries.
Now a word for ourselves: The
area committee and secretary thank

SERVICE

FRANK C. ANDRUS

•iron* and weal. *.• r-xt.n.l
this greeting. happy !■&gt; h«»r
lhe opportunity l» add our
|h-M withe* for a bright New

McCreery's

the coming year, we

Year ue eitend a sincere

our sincere

pish a Happy and

wish that new heights of

uishes

for

continued happiness,

Prosperous 1937

Crue's Shoe Store

health,

happiness

and

prosperity will be reach­

greater success and real,

C. B. HODGES
JEWELER

WE WISH
YOU EVERY
HAPPINESS
NOT ONLY
DURING 1937
BUT ALWAYS

SHORT WAY
BUS LINES

At lhe daun of a New

hand . . and n ilh it comes

sound .prosperity.

Cleaning and Dyeing*

ticipale meeting in

ed by everyone.

FAIRCHILD'S

The Barry county Reporters club
will meet for luncheon Saturday.
January 3. at the Parker House. The
program will be on modem banking

Home Extension group No. 4 will
meet Tuesday. January 5. at the.
Th* Uoiran
Tn spite of all the hard nnd won­
derful work done In It. this world
Which we see Is but a shadow, ft
I* the uns«*en In It which Is lbs
truth, and which does not pass

BIST WISHES FOR »93z|

toms.

wson when we regret, n little, lhe passing of old cas­

• Time in its flight . . . days, months,

'd like, just for today, to go hack to the days when

years literally whirling by. But never

.it was customary to keep open house on New Year's Day, just so we

could be sure oj seeing each and .every one oj adr customers and

friends and add a hearty handclasp to the greeting we print here,

so swiftly that we can't call a halt to
wish every one of y

joyously Hap-

py New Year.

. “Happy New Year!”

BUS DEPOT
Trio Cafe Phone 2137

FARM

BUREAU

SERVICES

CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY

�W1 HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER M, IBM
MIm Joann* cincabeaux who Is a I

Social Events and Personal Mention
William Bchader of Detroit spent
Mr. and Mra. Cranston Wilcox of
Edwin B’.wer Is visiting relatival
Christmas at home.
, Ann Arbor are spending lhe holiday
in Ionia.
Miss Marie Kurtz Is home from vacation with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Anderson
Tom Stebbins of Grand Rapids
Detroit for her vacaUon.
spent the week end in Muskegon.
Mr. and Mn. Beryl Will and fam­ spent Christmas with his parents.
Ohaa. L. Coaseimon ot Blx Udte*
was a recent Bunday guest of Mr. ily visited relatives al Kalamo on Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Stebbins.
Christmas day.
and Mrs. Fred Bower.
Mr. and Mrs. Kim Sigler returned
Mr. and Mn. Smith Will were Wednesday from L'Anse, where Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Kahler spent
Christmas day with Mr. and Mrs Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs Bigler wm called on business.
Maurice Will of Battle creek.
Mrs. Eliza Johnson is spending
George Kahler al Cloverdale.
Frank and Miss Lettie G»m spent the holidays in Ann Arbor with het
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Kelly and son
were ChrLvtma* day gue*ts of Mr. Christmas in Grand Rapids, thc Ion. Dr. Lester Johnson, and fam­
ily.
guests ot C. D. Garn and family.
and Mrs Wallace Mack of Lacey.
Mrs. Mary Angus of Rockford. HL.
Donald Wldrig of Lansing is
Mr. and Mr*. Dan Kurr and fam­
Uy are visiting relatives in Chicago. spending the holiday vacation with hu returned home after spending a
week wjth her mother. Mrs. Mattle
his
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
V.
D
Mr. and Mr* Wm. Bliritx-r and
Striker.
family spent Christmas with her
Robert Angell and Lewi* CascadMr. and Mrs. Richard O'Brien and
parent*. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ourd.
family of Laiuing spent Christmas den. students at the u. of M.. arc
of Cedar Creek.
spending the holidays with their
Miss Rosalyn Gallup of Grand with Mn. O'Brien's brother, Chule* parents.
_ ... ••
Faul. and family.
Rapids is spending her Christmu
Mr. and Mn. Gay Jordan and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Barnes en­
vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
daughters of Sylvania. Ohio. were, tertained Mr. and Mrs. Stanton Wil­
8tM) and other relatives.
holiday guests of her parents. Air. cox (Modesta Barnes) ot Grand
Mrs John McLravy and Mrs and Mr* Kellar Stem.
Rapids for Christmas. ■
Mary Van Dugteren were Christ­
Mrs. H A. Adrounle and Zabelle
Mr. and w
Mrs. uoraqn
Gordon uiement
Clement
mas guest* of a cousin. Mrs. Lizzie •inMam
will return n»7ha«t
the end of the week nn&lt;a,r
j children of Belding
were ChrislReamer, of Lake Odessa.
thThnUrtav7u-nh
‘P*”1 i m’S tUy ,,K1 WW&gt;k Cntl 8UMU °f
Dr E. J. Pratt left Bunday for
Chicago to attend special clinics al
Mr
H L WUU.™
Drd,.M? „? p- Ulhrap are
thc Chicago Osteopathic iMNpItal. Jwnr.eUr Loulw of Battle Creek
.ere rie,u for Chrittmaa and Ufa ’dendlna lhe IwlUw BMaon In He.
He will return January 5.
end ol Mr.----------------and Mra.. M.
L.,
°™ °&gt;
Mr. and Mr*. C P. Laughlin, Mr.week
---------------------------...
tiie
holiday tour*.
•nd Mr, 11. T. Brook, ,nd Mix. i —
plrrwn.
lte conducted
randucud holld.y
lour,.
Miss Pauline
Pauline Strong
Strong of
of Hartland
Virginia Williams of Chicago spent I MIm Helen McPherson of Kata-'' Miss
Hartland
ChrLvtma* al the home of Dr. and ।, maxoo spent Thursday
Mia*
Irene Hale
of
McBride
Thu. .._, and Christ- and
----- —
--------------- ________
| mas 2-7
Day with Mr. and '*
Mrs ‘
called on Rev. *
and
Mrs.
R. A.
Mr* E. J Pratt.
“■' **
“
”
*
Mr*. John Kurtz «penl Christ- Charles Faul an
and Mr
and Mrs. । Houghton Saturday afternoon.
I Rev. and Mr* R A. Houghton
ma* in Grand Rapids with her Herschel ia^k.
Follick,
Mr. and' Mr*. "
V. D. Wldrig had aslspent Christmas nt the home of lhe
daughter-in-law. Mr*. Anna Kurtz.
"
and two granddaughters, the Ml»*e.i guest* for Christmas Fred W Wein- latter* sister and husband. Mf. and
Jane and Margaret Anne Kurtz.
erl and Max Weinert of Lewistown. Mrs. H. W. Geiger, at ClarkAvllle.
Mr and Mr*. Harry Cole and Mont . andHobcrt Wldrig and fgmMiss Charlotte Hessmer, who is a
Ir—m- at the University Hospital.
Harold and Mr. and Mr*. Hugo An­ Uy of Charlotte.
derson were Christmas guest* of Mr.
Mr. and Mr*. Sterling Zerbcl and wiU »pend New Year's day with her
and Mra. George Ragla and Mr and famUy of K.-tlamazoo and Mr. and
Mr*. D. J. Ragla of Coat* Grove.
Mr*. Charles Worden ot Chicago nier.
Mis* Marjorie
Stebbins
left were Christmas guest* of Mr. and I Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Trim attend*
Tuesday for Buffalo. N. Y.. where Mrs Herman Zerbcl.
ed a family gathering Christmas day
she will visit in the home of Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thoma* of at the home of the latter's parenU.
and Mr* George crewson until thc Columbus were Christina* gucste of Mr. and Mra. Otto Schulze, of Nash­
opening of lhe U. of M- next Mon­ her [inrer.U. Mr and Mrs Charles ville.
day.
Mrs. A- L. Houvcner and Patrirla
Johnson. Mrs Thomas remaining
returned Tuesday from a week's
Mr. and Mrs Fred Bower and for the month of January.
family had a* their guest* Christ­
Guest* of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. | visit with the former's daughter
ina’ day. Mr*. Ada Snyder. Mr*. VanBusklrk for ChrUUna* were hi* Mra. Clair Fuller and family at
Ione O’Neil. Clayton Bower of Has­ sister. Miss Anna VanBusklrk. of
ting*. Ml** R/Maiyn Gallup and Rob­ Kalamazoo and Mr. and Mr*. Kirk
Christmas guest, of Dr. and Mr?
ert O'Neil of Grand Rapids.
Hamilton and Catherine Anne of Charles D. Mohler were Mr. and
Mrs. John Maser of Lansing and
Mr and Mrs. J. R. Hayvs enter­ Flint
tained Mr. and Mrs. Frank DroullMr. and Mr*. Vernon Bumford Mrs Jahn Mohler and Sterling of
lard and their daughter and hus­ and daughter left Monday for their Kalamazoo.
band. Mr and Mrs. Casliim of Chi­ new home at Angola. Ind., where
Mr and Mrs chu. A Kerr left
cago Mr. and Mrs Cashlm will Mr. Bumford ha* employment with Wednesday for Chicago. U&gt; spend
mase their home in Pontiac, where the Northern Indiana PubUc Serv­ Christmas with Mrs. Kerr's sister
I and family —Clinton Co. Republican
he hu accepted a fine position with ice as a lineman
a bank there.
' Stephen Bristol returned to De­ News. St. John*
Mr. and Mr*. Sumner Sponablc.
troit with Mr. and Mrs. Ear) Ware­
ham. who spent Christmas and Ute Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Sponable and
week end at lhe Kellar Stem home. Howard Dickinson were Christmas
He will also visit a college friend
son of Kalamazoo
and will lai away a week.
Mis* Elizabeth DeYoc of Muske­
T. D. French of Middleville went
NOONDAY LUNCHES
gon was tire guest of Mis* Mabel to Chicago Bunday night, where he
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
SL'-xtn Monday night, returning to left by plane lo spend two weeks
Kalamazoo Tuesday where she i* with hu parenU. Mr. and Mrs. R. T
DINNERS
the guest of her Blater and hus­ French, in Loe Angele*.
5:30 to 7:30 P. M.
band. Mr nnd Mr* Arthur Park*.
Mr. and Mrs a. C. Brock. Mr. and
Mr and Mra. G. F. Chidester en­ Mr*. Weldon Bronson and Mr. and
unday inners
tertained for Christmas Mr and Mrs. George Robinson spent Christ­
12:30 to 2:30 P. M.
Mr*. Gardner H- cnidester of Madi­ mas in Jackson, lhe guests of Mr.
son. WLv. mi** Helen Chidester of and Mrs. Warren Wilcox.
6 to 7:30 P. M.
Grand Rapid* and Mr and Mr*.
MLu Jean Arndt, who is a stu­
Sam Nndu of Charlotte. Mr. and dent at Davenpdrt-McLachlan col­
Mr*. Chidester remained until Mon- lege in Grand Rapid*, ls spending
^day.
I her vacation with her parents, Mr.
1 and Mrs, A. W. Beumer.
’
Mr. and Mr* F Earl Haas spent
Christmas and the week end with
rXatlve* in Grand Rapids and
Beginninr the New Year 1937 we will coiled lhe 3 Per Cent
Muskegon Heigh'-' Miss Betty Haas
Blate Malt* Tax on all sales, on the usual scale beginning at
returned with them to spend a week
here.
I Mr. and Mr*. Frank Foote had a*
but the state officials prefer to bare tu rolleel the tax direct.
i Christmas guest*. Mr. and Mrs. W
FRANDSEN S STORE
T. Harris. Mr. and Mrs. Ward Har­
ris and children. William Harris. Jr.
, and Mrs. P. E Selby, all of Kala­
mazoo.
Mr and Mr* Gordon A. Ironside,
Mr. and Mrs. P W. Stebbins and
Mr. and Mrs. w. M- Stebbins wendinner guests last Tuesday evening

S

D

PARKER HOUSE

ANNOUNCEMENT

NEW YEAR’S
GREETINGS

FROM THE BIG little STORE
Thursday, Dec. 31

Ritz Crackers
Large
Siu Box

OI
IC

, Xi

Sat., Jan. 2

Salad Dressing
A. G.
Quart

2QC
&lt;

Tomato Juice, College Inn, 20 oz. 9c
SUPER SUDS, Reg. Size, 3 boxei 25c

MONARCH COFFEE, Lb.

29c

Peaches, Del Monte, 2 No. 2 size 25c

TOILET TISSUE, 6 rolls

25c

Orangs Juice, Libby's, 2 tall cans 25c
PEP BRAN FLAKES, Box

10c

HINMAN’S
Hastings

PHONI 2491

Michigan

Middleville.

Bobby. Miss Barbara Fjschdell ana
Egncr Mclin of JoUel were Christ mu and week end guests of Mr.
and Mrs. P. E. Adair. Mr. and Mrs
Harold Steiger. Nancy and Virginia
of Lansing were there for thc day
and Tom Miller of Jackson Is a
guest Ulis week.
j Among those who attended the
Kay Kayser dancing party at thc
Civic auditorium tn Grand Rapids
were Mr, and Mrs Richard Jacobs.
Theollne Rogers Nell Adair. Miss
Barbara Fuchdell and Egner Meltn of Joliet. HL. Barbara Wilcox.
Barbara Trego. Gordon Crother*.
Stephen Johnson and Dwight and
i Doti Fisher.
I Mr. and Mrs Gerald Hine and
I son of Hope. Miss Dorothy Goldrlng.
Miss Blanche Springer and Mr. and
Mra. Clarence Springer and daugh­
ter of Grand Rapids. Mr?. ManHaight of 8prm£port. Miss Bernice
Springer of Kalamazoo. Mrs. Addle
Springer and daughter or Hastings
.and Burdette Norris of Yankee
। Springs were Christmas dinner
gucsta ol Mr. and Mrs. Wm JxNoe-

CRAIG—«HUTE.

senior at McMurray college at JackA pretty wedding took place
sonvllle. Hl.. I* in Plainwell spending Christmas Day at ana o'clock at the
her vacaUon with her parent*. Mr. home of Henry C. Shute, 431 East
and Mn. F D Clncebeaux—Plain- center street, Huting*. when Maurwell Enterprise.
’ ice Buzchlm Craig and Doris R.
Mr. and Mra. Francis Huver en- Shute were united in marriage by
tertained Mr. and Mrs. Peter Huver. I Rev. John W. Kltching. pastor of
daughter Dorothy and son Lawrence the First Presbyterian church of this
and Mary Elizabeth Blankenberg all city. The beautiful, new double-ring
of Hustings on Bunday—Grand : ceremony wu used on this occulan.
Ledge Independent.
;The bride wore a wedding dress ot
William Wallace will spend lhe royal Wue 041 "’I* and wu ac-1
holiday *ea»“.t Hutinf.Hc
. companied by Ml*. Gertrude Craig,,
invited to sing In a musical to be u bridesmaid. Miss Craig wore a I
held in the city with “a few days. &lt; “T
,•«*» pW!

fr
THE DIRECTORS, OFFICER:

EMPLOYEES OF Tk

Mr Wallace hu a good tenor voice iE*11 Shute acted u best .
-JonuxUk, Wdcpmaml
”*"■ *
‘“"P"1?J*
|
MX. o. H
Chxtttt I
M*. C'“" wU1 ■” ,l 1,om' "■ “"‘x
Nettle'tann home near Hasting*
‘Ih“« from &gt;ut of town who al- 11
night. Mrs. Hide. Patil and Mrs. (f,nied the wedding included Mr
FIe^Un?
^klnAy‘Vna
Mr* Btuart Jack*onCand Dicky |
SftSL’SSol Deuou'
cr“«ot 1

Stun'S?4
to visit her mother.

Mr*.

Pontiac. Mr. and Mr*. Carlton BabSunday nl^ht In Hastings.
cock of
and Mr. and Mrs.
Guest* of Mr. and Mrs. A. W..Bryce Myers and daughter. Maude.’
Beumer for Christmas were Mixi of.Grand Rapids.
Jean Arndt of Grand Rapids, who
- ——&lt;w»
attends lhe Davenport-McLachlan ENJOYABLE DANCING PARTY. ■

?°.
U?elJTd.ML^
Thtv tjid
An?

One of the enjoyable social oc- i
°n
caslons of the holiday week was the ।
They all enjojed a familydinner dancing party given
Citrislm'ui
atthe home of Mr and Mrs CO nlgnh“Jy t^e two sub deb gK?J?S?

AND ALSO EXTEND TO EACH AND EVERY ONE A

"HAPPY NEW YEAR”
AND WE TRUST A PROSPEROUS ONE ALL THROUGH
THE YEAR

1937

FAMILY DINNER.
Mr and Mrs. Clarence Bump en­
tertained at a family dinner on
Christmas Those present were Mrs.
Stella Bump. Mr. and Mrs. Carlton
Bump. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tudor.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Matthews and
family. Mr. and Mrs. William Moore
and daughter. Margaret, of Hope
Twp., and Mr. and Mrs. Max Bump
and daughter Frieda, of Carlton
Twp.

John C. Ketcham
Burton A. Perry

Cha rias S. Patti
Charlei Hindirihott
Kim Sigler
W. E. Carter
O. A. Sayla«
W. A. Eaton
Fred Bishop
Arlana Campball

ML** Mildred Murphy, daughter
of Mr. and Mr*. Milton Murphy of
Freeport, was united In marriage
at high noon Chrlstmu day to Don
L. Swartz, son of Mrs Jessie
Swartz, of Marcellus
Thc cere­
mony was performed in the church
house of the First Presbyterian
CHRISTMAS DINNER.
church in Kalamazoo by the Rev.
Mr. and Mrs. Ebcn Kelly and son
Johnson.
The bride wore a floor-length Merle entertained at a Christmas
gowij of blue taffeta with collar I dinner Sunday when places were laid
and cuffs of brilliants. She carried for seventeen. Out of Lown gueaU
a bouquet of while roses and pink »«re Mr. and Mr*. Allen Everhard.
rnapdrngon.*. Mr*. Carrie Sisson of Mr. and Mrs. George Everhard of
South Bend, sister of the groom, wu ‘ Belding. Mr and Mrs. Ellis Kelly,
thc bridesmaid and she wore n Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kahler. Miss
mustard-colored gown. Milton Mur- Ruth Stadel and Alvin Burkey of
Phy. Jr., brother of Uta bride, wa» I Hastings wen: included.
best man.
----------- -------------------------Immediately after tiie ceremony
a wedding dinner was served at the i
Columbia hotel with cover* laid for i
thirty, which included members of I
lhe immediate families. Mr and Mrs.
'A jolly party of twenty-five Camp
Swartz left on a short wedding trip
lo Chicago after which they will Fire Girls, riding in a truck driven
make their borne in LaPorte. Ind, by Henry Mulder, went to lhe hos­
pital
Tuesday
evening
before
Where Mr. Swartz is employed by the
CluLstmas and assembling Ln the
Montgomery Ward Co.
The bride U a graduate of the lower hall, entertained the patient*
Hastings High school and Argu- with several Christmas carols. Other
bright college in Battle Creek and stops were made on the way back
at the time of her mZrriupc wa* in and songs were sung in front of
charge of the credit department of home*. Mrs. Mulder and Miss Hazel
Caukln accompanied the girls.
lhe Parchment co. at Kalamazoo
Two groups made up thc number.
Best wishes are extended.
After lhe ride girls from each
group went to thc homes of their
COUCH—DICKSON.
respective guardian*. Mrs. Mulder
MIm Dorotha Dickson, daughter and Mrs. K A Caukln. and enjoyed
of Mr and Mrs. Wm. Dickson of
games, refreshmenu and an ex­
Bedford, and Everett Chase, son of change of glfu.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Couch of Has­
tings. were married Saturday afterThe Camp Fire toy shop tn thc

ALL DISOSITS INSURED UR TO $5,000.00

Camp Fire Note*

parsonage by the Rev. Roy Hough­
ton. The bride wore a gown of navy­
blue chiffon velvet with gold trim­
mings and carried a bouquet of
roses and sweet pea*. Mrs. Donald
Couch attended the bride and die
wore a black gown with white trim­
ming. Donald Couch, brother of the
groom, was best man. Following lhe
ceremony a lovely two course lunch­
eon wu served al the home of the
bride's parents. Covers wcrJ laid for
twelve.
Mr. and Mrs. Couch will be st
home after January 1 at 427 East
Madison street. HMtlngs.

STORE-WIDE

&lt;36 ' A

PRE-INVENTORY

BARGAINS;
Ladies9 Fur Trimmed

DRESS COATS

basement
of
the Presbyterian
church open on Dec. IS again sup­
plied many mothers with glfu for
their children. While not so many
toys were available as in the past
three years thc shop has been sponaround and it is hoped that some
children were made happy who
would not otherwise have been re­
membered
Him Madeline Cook a former
Camp Fire girl and a Torchbearer
(one who attains the highest rank)

Brown and Mrs Ray cook assisted
in making arrangements.
Greta Benedict, Joyce Hyde. Betty
HAMMOND—HEALY.
Kidder and Verland Clark, girls
A charming Christmas wedding who are working for the rank of
took place on Christmas cvc at thc Torchbearer, assisted Miss Cook at
home of Mr. and Mn. Maurice the shop.
Healy of Dowling, whfn their only
daughter. DorL* Marguerite, wa*
The Camp Fire group, whose
united in marriage to Muri 8. Ham­ leaders are Mrs. Barnes and Mrr.
mond. of Bellevue. They were at­ Ricker, held a Council Fire at the
tended by Mis* Dora Day. of Lan­ American Legion rooms on Tue.'.sing and Huron Healy, brother of day. Dec. 33. At this time, .several
the bride. The single ring ceremony new members were formally ad­
was performed
by Rev. E. F. mitted to the group malting the to­
Rhoades qf the South Evangelical tal membership twenty girls—a full
church in the presence of thc im- quota
__________
____ Honors were prefor a_group.
mediate families The bride wa* ; rented to girls who had been memgowned in a tunic frock of blue silk • tx-r* long enough to earn them.
rr,.rv»
ind
her
ntfpndin*
I,..,.....
__ .. .
crepe and her attendant wore gold
Mothers of thc girls ____
were ,Invited
Silk crepe. The bride is a graduate guests.
,
of Hastlnga- High school, also of
thc Barry County Normal. She is MASONIC OnaCEKS
at present teaching at thc Lincoln
INSTALLED WEDNESDAY.
school near Union City. The groom
The newly elected officers of Has­
I Frank Ream was the Christmar has been employed until recently at tings Lodge No. S3. F. &amp; A. M. were
guest ot Mr. and Mr* Richard the Battle Creek Sanitarium.
installed Wednesday evening by the
1 Johnson of Grand - Rapids. Mrs.
retiring Master. F. L- Fairchild, and
Vlnnle Ream Boyd of Atlanta. Ga..
DANCE WELL ATTENDED.
Marshal John L Eddy. After the
was also a guest, going on Monday
Ninety-four couples, thc largest installation lhe members reUred to
' to Toledo, where she will visit her number on record, attended the the dining room where they enjoyed
! sister. Mrr Hugh Ellsworth, before Cheer Up dance Monday evening at ।a short program, followed by re­
। returning to Atlanta. Enroute from Community hall. Two Christmas freshmenu. Mr. F«lrchlld wm pre­
and to Atlants. Mrs. Boyd has given trees, red balloons and streamer* sented with hl* past muter's Jewel.
I several recital*. one being at Toledo formed thc decorations and Higbee’s The new offlear* who were installed
where she appeared before a large orchestra from Belding played thc were; Worshipful Harter. Douglas
'Republican gathering.
program of dances. Monte Nowland Hines;
Senior
Wardep,
Wynn
Those from away attending thc of "Grand Rapids entertained with &lt;Green; Junior Warden. William
funeral of Mr*. Miranda Bisson on a chver exhibition of tap dancing. Hinman; treasurer. Harold Radford;
. Thursday were Mr. and Mrs. ChM. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Arold arc secretary. Edward Tudor; Senior
Bisson, son Lyle and daughter Do­ chairmen for lhe January dance.
Deacon. Gamer Hampton, and Juni reen of Marcello*: Mr. and Mrs.
lor Deacon. Harold Downs
NIGHT HAWK CLUB.
i Clement Bisson son Walker and
Mr. and Mrs. orcar palmer enter­
1 daughter. Janet of Kalamazoo; Mr.
.
Marajo Island
i and Mrs. Irving Sisson. Mrs Char­ tained thc Night Hawk Club with a
Marsjo is an island about the size
lotte Baker. Clare Simon. Chas. Christmas p»rty bn Saturday. Dec. of Belgium. In the mouth ot th*
। Nelson and Mrs. John Blow of ot- 19 All partook of a bountiful din­
| sego; Mrs. Ch*' Rachor and baby ner at Mven o'clock. Card* were Amazon. Its government is a feuson and Mrs. Chu Baker of White playpd in Ute qvpnlng. first prizes dal system which ha* toy its object
Pigeon; mt
Mr.. inn
end Mrs. T.
B. «■«»
Hart of going to Mr. and Mr*. Hugh Meyers •ha happiness of the people. There
navuii;
*• *&gt;■
Allegan: Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Rout- land the low to Gay Norton and Ora art no biting insects on the island,
wng and Mr. and Mrs. Ira Routsong Newton. ChriMma* gift*« were exv and pretty girls play guitar* to the
of UGrange. Ind . and KenncUi 8L*-! rhanied. Next party fl Mr. and I ...
stranger there for the sola fun ot
ton ot Elkhart, md.
Mrs. Roi Preston's on Jan. 3.
j coafusing him.

WISH TO TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO THANK
THE PEOPLE OF HASTINGS AND BARRY COUNTY
FOR THEIR LOYAL SUPPORT AND PATRONAGE
DURINd
■

1936

Dletrlch u ,u7ing for Hastings at Community hall. A large I
inis week.
.
lighted and decorated Christmas,
Mr and Mrs. Cenard Smith had . tree centered the hall and groups of
a* guests for Chrlstmu dinner Mr., red balloons decorated the overhead
and Mrs. Wm. Riley and three *on* lights. The side lights were sur-1
of Detroit. Mr. and Mr*. John rounded with large red paper bells',
Shultz and two daughters of Grand and festoons of red dripping with I
Rapids. Mr. and Mrs Otis Boulter, tinnel were hung from the side* of I
Lawrence Doyle and Dori* of Cres- the hall to lhe center. Door prizes |
—
.... John
t-».~ ...
----------ot- Carlton werp won by
MHdre{| Wuodsey. Mrs.
sUouse
Center. Ml** Beatrice' Smith of rnaruee. Mr*. Stuart Clement and
Flint. Raymond Tobias of Baltimore Roy Fox and the floor show con- [
and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shultz silted of solo* by Miss Pollyanna!
and son Gerald of Hastings.
England of Woodland and Miu
Pauline Benaway of Middleville Bixly couples were present. Music wu
MILDRED MURPHY IS
1 by the Mkrtln orchestra of Middle­
CHRISTMAS BRIDE ville.

Marries Don L. Swartz Of
La Porte, Indiana, At
Kalamazoo

NATIONAL BAN
of HASTINGS

In thia group you will find

£ —

lavish fur trimmed coats with wool

B

intcrlinings . . . all of our better

B

AA
WB

coate ape placed in thia group!

FUR TRIMMED and

SPORT COATS
In thia group you will find what
you want in either a Sport Coat
or Fur Trimmed coat... and at
a price you can’t believe!

LADIES’ MILLIN

1
:
,
!

All of our fall and winter
styles are placed in this group
Greatly reduced. Better hurry!

�THE HASTINGS BANKER. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, MM

INSURANCE

Rev Ralph L. Bates went lo
E V Keyes spent th/ holidays Grandville
Sunday afternoon to of-1
: With his daughter. Mrs Zaida Wolfe, --------..
.
...
. 1
land sons at Farmington
I Air and Mrs Samuel Hamilton
Mr..Joe Torek spent the Cltrisl*
and daughter spent th* Week end
mas holidays with relatives at South
[with relatives at Flint
’
, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Thompson were
in Lansmg/Monday.
Mr. and M»r, Pred Warner and
Mrs. Mary Hope spent Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. Hector Hawkins

WANTS

LIFE . AUTO . FIRE

We Wish You All

A. Happy New Year
DEWEY REED

Mrs. Attic Lykins U spending the
holiday.* with
relatives m and
around Winchester. Ind.
Mr. and Mrs Porter Klnne enter­
tained their children. Mr. und Mrs.
Charles Hawthorne and family of
Lacey. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Morganthaler of Maple Grove. Mr. and Mr.'.
Carl Huve and daughter. Marion, of
Castleton for Christmas. The Harley
Klnne family of Grand I-edge were
unable to come as Ethel Mae had

Marr Bn
W Kall*

sorrj

insure

(Mrs. Beatrice Dunning will enter-'
tain the L. A. S on Wednesday after­
noon January 0.
G. 8. classes No G and 7 will hold
their monthly meeting nt lhe home
of Mr. and Mrs. James-Collins on
Tuesday evening. January 5. The
men will have charge of the pro-

Mrs. Almon Sheldon of Kalamazocr is visiting at-the Ralph Weth­
erbee home She and her daughter. •
Miss Floy Sheldon, were ChrlstmasJ
guest* of Mr. and Mrs Robert Met-' Davis at Galesburg.
Mrs. Christie Lawrence of Parch­
Mr nnd Mrs. Duguld and Patty ment was a Christmas guest of Mr.
weie WTek end guests of relatives at
Belding.
til Sunday.
George Wotring of Unionville Is
Mrs Julio Miller and Mr. Murphyspending his vacation with his entertained thc formers daughter.
mother. Mrs. Maude Wotring.
Tiie Community Brotherhood met
Monday night with the supper be­
ing served nt the Conununity house
in charge of Chester Smith and the
following helpers: Rodney Warner.
M. J. Hinkley. Elmer Gillette. Harry

Mr. and Mrs. Will Cosgrove of
Lowell were Bunday visitors at Mr.
and Mrs. Will Pardee’s
Mr. Dedwalor of Grand Rapids
was a visitor at the Elmer Shaffer
home Tuesday and Wednesday evc_ Mr and Mrs. John Mishler of
Grand Rtfpias were Sunday after­
noon callers at Mr and Mrs. Wil-

Marion. Mr. and Mrs.. Lynn Griffin
and baby were visltocs at Hastings
Saturday.

Green Monday Dec. 14th a 7 1-2
pound son. Visitors there Sunday
were Mr. and Mrs. Hurry Green of

— Mater. Jack Southern Ralph Wethi‘, crbcc and John Higdon. The pro•■•i gram was given at the high school
“ auditorium by the players Club
1 1. from Central High school. Battle
it Creek. They gave two plays and
&gt;4 there was.a' reading by -Miss Emily

"AKRON" MODERN
MECHANO-FORM TRUSS
FOR WORK OR PLAY
Tkle Smooth Rebber Bock Pods

Cheviot. Ohio, spent !rom Thursday
until Sunday at the Hecker home

NEW

spending the holidays

Mr and Mrs. George Hoffman at­
tended the Christmas gathering of
about 40 at the home of Elezy Jon­
son nt Riehland. Their daughter

A nice Christmas program was
Mr. and Mrs. Laurcf
given by the pupils in the audi- daughter. Meriyn. wef
Creek Wednesday.

sumed. The teachers will spend the
vacation nt the following places. The

OLD

The Hastings Banner

CARDS of THANKS

R°y Blwh *nd
port were Sunday afternoon callers
at the Jerry Blough home.
Otto Sash and daughter of Cali­
fornia are visiting his parenU. Mr.
ami Mrs. A. T. Eash and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Shaffer en­
tertained as supper guests Wednes­
day evening Mr. and Mrs. George
Stahl and family. Mr and Mr*. Will
HuffmaiX' Mra Susie Miller and
daughter of Elmdale. Lydia Karcher.
Rev D. A. Yoder of Elkhurt. Ind.,
gnd Mi - Shcdlar of Pennsylvania.
Mr. and Mrs. William Mishler and
daughter were Friday forenoon

NOTICE!
Genuine "Hoffman*
Apartment Size

THE CHURCHES

PIANO

spent Christmas together.
Miss Phyllis Brumm of Grand
Rapids and Miss Helen Brumm o!
St. Louis spent Christmas with
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Coy.

ADJUSTABLE CENTER
Sponge Rubbar Path
No Leo Strap*

In perfect condition.

$50.00

Banium’ are remaining at home and
entertaining Mr. and Mrs. George
Meyers of Cleveland: Mr. George
Stokes of Grund Ledge and Mbs
Muri-? Maylan of Grund Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adrianson and
Mrs. Cleo Fox of Kalamazoo. Mr
and Mrs. Ward Hynes and son of Harry spent Thursday and Friday
with Mr. and Mr - Roy Adrlunsoq

Hie Prescription Drug Store

DON TAFFEE
302 Na Broadway

3 BUSES DAILY

FOH HALE — loo KboJe I.I»U&lt;1 Re.l pul Mrs. Frank A- Purchis and family.
lrl«. A. B*na&lt;ch. Ruuie 2. h'u. Unud Mr. and Mrs. John Purchls and Ed. spent Christmas day with Mr and
■wey,
19 31
Mrs. Bert Utts in thc Kinsley disW IN'TEI&gt;— Hiredr reliable «iu&lt;l» uieu
a work on ileiry terra l&gt;y mouth, i
iteedy Job yeer round. K K. MrNeughton, one mile e»»t ot Middleville. I
13-31
Nesman and son. Bobby. Mr. and
Mrs. Sumner Hurtwell and family.
Mr. and Mrs Seymour Hartwell and
Miss Rilla Noyes spent Christmas
with Mrs. E. B. Smith.

HAPPY
NEW YEAR!

FLINT
$2.00 One Way
$3.60 Round Trip
PEOPLES RAPID

DON TAFFEE

TRANSIT

and Mrs. Russell Reynolds
amtly of Ohio .-pen: Christmas
Mr. and Mrs H T- Reynolds.

GREETINGS

FOR 1937

Our Service
To PROTECT You Conetantly
Adjust Fairly
Pay Promptly

was taken ill while visiting her sis­ Saturday.
Edward Thompson and family of
ter in Marshalltown.'Iowa, several
weeks ago and was unabi; to rebaby of Kalamazoo. Frank Haight
nnd family, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Dunnigan and daughter. Harlow
Barnum and family spent Chrlstescaped serious Injury about 1:30 mas with Mr. and Mrs. E- S. ThompFriday raoralng when the car driven
The L. A. S. will meet on Thurs­
by Mr. Wenger went out of control
day Jan. 7 with Mrs. E S. Thomp­
son with Club No. 1 serving the
dinner There will be annual re­
; ports and election of officers. All
members nnd friends of the Aid are

CITIZENS MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Co.

Scrap

Iron, Brass,

Copper, Aluminum,

1 W AN I &gt;1- lo lll’V
o lu&gt;!. i. ..... IV*.
1 U.Lu. rnrn E A
Per t&gt;r, pl,.^
| 33U w •-•ter
। i on xr.Kvn c—si. &lt;k
ire Al ll.rry. &gt;. iai!r r.
Jl'.,l:i’l McDerby.
1 mil..
c.rhun Otnrr

Zinc. Lead &amp; Batteries

party was'held, at the schoothou?
j Ia.*t Tuesday evening. We had a ntu
crowd and a fine program by th
school pupil*

GLENN F. LAUBAUGH

VOUR

GRANGE PROGRAMS

Patrick of MiddbvtUc.
*
Wm. voision has gone to Caledomil to live for-the wjnter where
! Mrs Voiiion is taking care ot hes;

A Little FORESIGHT TODAY May
Mean VISION TOMORROW—

GEO. M. NEWTON
Registered OPTOMETRIST and
REE BETTER!
IM W. STATE ST.
HASTINGS

Farmer*, Attention!
X ertu pay the HI HEST MARKET

family spent last Sunday at th"
home of Dove Granger in Lansing
Christmas guests at the Wm.
Claggett home were: Herbert Clag­
gett and family of Freeport. Mr. and
Kir: 1
r* ■
* 14 . 11... - 1 .

HASTINGS MARKETS

Mrs. Pearl Dtmond has been sic
but Is reported better.
DorlS'OoaLi. Dorothy Sease. Bel

To all our friends in

Barry county uho have

helped make this last
year a cheery one for
S.nr Extension Class met Dec. 17.
at home of Martha Bvadle. A re­
view wa/ given or; hat and collar
patterns, person was then given on
(Color and Lines. At close of meet­
ing every one enjoyed a Christmas
| party. Next meeting Is to be held at
Fem Bllvens'—Emily Helmer. Sec.

us, we in turn wish a

,

ioned London stenographer who
would grease herself up on the day

very happy and bright

WANTED
CATTLE, HOGS, VEAL
BEEF BY THE QUAR­
TER FOR SALE.

Rlchard.-on. and Wilma Haight reedved prizes for perfect attendance
during the pa-&gt;t quarter in the S. 8.
The awards were given by the su’xrin^nder.l. Arthur Richardson.

PHONE 3909

Mrs. Thompson, returned to hb
home in Flora. 111., and was mar­
ried to Miss Dorothy Berry’ of that
place on Christmas day. The wed­
ding was held nt the U. B. church
with 50 guests present. They were
attended by Rex Dunnigan, cousin,
of the groom nnd Mbs Alatha Losarf of Flora. III. Mr. nnd Mr
Lute came Sunday evening to their
grandparents home here.'.*

Cash Prices
Paid for
Dead Stock

Happy New Year
... A Happy and Prosper­
ous New Year Is extended lo
all our friends and policy
holders. If you will call at the
office we have a small but
USEFUL GIFT for you.

JERRY ANDRUS
GENERAL INSURANCE

DOLLARS
Mr. Floyd Denny
Hastings, Michigan
Phone
Hastings 2539

Andrew WUrrlngii Ls Improving as
rapidly as can be expected after hl i
recent operation at Biodgeu hos-1
pital. Grand Rapids.
The Past Chiefs Club of the
Pythian Suters distributed Christ­
inas gifts to the needy ones of this

QUALITY

Thc basket ball team played at
Wayland Friday evening and won
Rebecca Cfalg Tuesday.
7
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammond all’ three games.
The Christmas mail was very
and Bernard were Christmas day
guests of Bert Sparks i» Hasting* heavy through lhe local post office
tills year.
street Saturday evening, but no one.
' was injured.
Mr*. Lea Nys has purchased the
Eyck in Grand Rapids Christmas Poland house on the west side of
the river which she and her hus­
! Mr and Mrs. Leslie Raber spent band will occupy as soon as a few,
(Christmas day visiting lhe formers impairs have been made.
i -Mr. and Mra. George Masters left
। brother m Kalamazoo.
। Mr. and Mra. Mofrls Calkins en­ I for Grand Rapids Saturday to spend
tertained Mr. nnd Mrs: Clarence | the winter with their son Richard
I Tester and family ot Hastings land family.
Henry Oriffeth Is spending a fe^r
Christmas day.
| weeks visiting relatives here.
A hardwood tree 21 inches in di­ i Finkbeiner's hardware store is beameter 5 feel from lhe ground will j tr.g improved by thc addition of a
i yield 1 cord of wood.-

And that is what you gat, when you
purchase "FURNITURE" at -

DON TAFFEE’S
PIANOS
circuited
H Inert Clei

FURNITURE
302 NO. BROADWAY

�THURSDAY, DEC. 31,1936

THE HASTINGS BANNER

SECTI

i Such conditions as we have de- "Dads" did more of that now. not! ANTI-FREF7E
, scribed were revealed in these trials, in a gruff, unfeeling, unreasonable ,
.
t* ..3™
------------------------------ ,------------------------- ------------------------------------------------ ---------- OFFEMI
. and others besides those concerned way. but calmly and patiently, kindtn the
TH— law
law suits
vnlfa took
tnnlr part
nart in
In them,
fham ly
1— yet
, nfirmly.
—1— ------------------------------------- |----------------------- "T™!
in
The
attorney
for
&lt;he
defendant!
The
reatest
asset
any
boy
or
girl
.
Gives
Engine
N. R. 8. Will Make Analysis
married men. Mr Sigler, asked the can have b self-respect—not the
Of Number And Kinds
,
witnesses, including the glrb. point-ibumptious, egotbtlcal kind, but lhe j
zsegTWCR i
WreWre ' Beginning Jan. 1 and thereafter
ed questions about these places, the culm, serene variety that fruiu in I
Denatured
Of Occupations
(Continued
from
pace
1.
Sec.
1*
perfonnances and thc drinking, self-control and good chancter.
~ ------------------!■■■■ untl&gt; JUne
n will be Illegal tc DR. EUGENE B. ELLIOTT
An occupational count of persons '------ —----- —-------- ------------- --------------- there, m order that a public record wha ever will promote aelf-re»pect
। take black tiasj from any of the
applying
Don. offering angtoe I .
OUTLINES IMPROVED•
UUUI/U1K for
IVI Jobe
luum through
MUVUMII lhe
uir Na- ’are the vtetlm» of parental
--------- —neglect.
----- -----! waters of the state. The last day
re1. That Service
b the .is
realTh#t
iwnhlem
\ 1.
tlortal Re-employment
** not
problem—not might be made of the facts, to that will help eny boy or girl to suc- temperature five degrees
PROGRAM
fof bau-fishing season in Mlchl1 ! beginning in all pans of the state, i
,al‘u" °r
J™”* l*°Pk Barry county parents could know if ce-r.ftllly meet and solve the prob- ordinary denatured al
‘gan. Dec. 31. a bo marks tiie ex­
Major Howard Stand, state re-em- bu‘
,“llure of Puente in ro they caret! to that there are such lems he or she will meet on hb ar been announced by lhe Ford
places accessible to young glrb and her-way through life.
.
-plration of the
1936 Michigan
ployment director, has announced. | l™ny.,5Hya !°
Pare’,ta&gt; r&lt;-. ***ys as well as lo married men. I —------------- -•*------------------- —
Company.
CHANGE"l IN
TUITION
IAMT*
r'Af TI?-ftshlnt
On Jon. 1 sport
-----------jieted. j »PonslbUIUes
'J
AWR PROPrKFn H
' .......
*h"'
u
ranpUm.
wnUMHUre to
u&gt; their
ihrlr own
own children.
children “
.li're^ueJ'teMucmni
1r—UuUaMlut
p such debauching’and
and drereddegrad-1L to^orlirt —
'ANTA, MONICA, CALIF, fishermen will be required to buy
LA W IS PROPOSED up lo d,w Intorm.non .bout in. » lhe parenU ol th, tour youn, ln, lhinn lakr plare
h- or Ute U God', child Buch a uau
’
—
Every
time
I
write
a
squib
»ew
licenses
to
ruh
in
Michigan
1
I-x a..a. - ------------- -..............
.- irire
..--------------- ... ,
prlMp&lt;I
I vkum
Thb nei
(kJ—Every lime I write a wjuib Brew
abK
mv.Tved m
t 'waters Dec. 31 is also the lost dav
agamat commuimm. •there z&lt;ol-|
“» Removal Of Office Of Bupt. Wahi,an unemployed perren. .-m
pu,„ dul), „
Iran .rere
ram, re re u “■»
ra.^,re&lt;&gt;red
„ „ reU-Irrem
try to please Him. It b roasonzble
7. TXteed from Lti uaTof
.lows a flood
lluou of letters
1' rnni
considered
u.rMi the
the inexperience of th-ttheir
letter* from per-, tail!
uhi of the tnlanrt
inland lakes anil
and i Of Pnhlin
Public Tnntriirtinn
Instruction Vrnm
From " aval table.
U&gt;1&gt;.
wrenu
rev.
.
reunra
rere
reure,
lnI1
uw
CTr&gt;UJr
errerer
mre.
'
*
&amp;
"bid u&gt;« ™^fly-.
[sons who begin by.^sgying streams designated for that purPolitics Suggested
™ lo
u reread
UUUIUIUGWI auuui, me natl-ntlv
patiently, with
with Inve
love and
and sincere mn.
con- •poreiwinx re ireir reuinra, th., rere nre re ire.1 ol .ret
they’r« not comniifftists—pcrish
cause u*
of uuuuc
public kikko
school eaucaeduca-ji chance.
In employment
and
­
■i.. The
me
cause
.—-— .—
------- —
r— unem
victton.
do in ted
ttiem them
to thetortaht
should prevent young girls—or boys .or woman should become. Thus _»
vlcUon.
pointed
tiie I right
_
............
. rare.
...
. 1 —
nlzvvrre*ret
which hav*
lalrrere
nine*
■iren-pretojlrel,
mure
rerSre
ran
Sn
.ura-Iran
,ra,
re
ran
pure.
5
Him
relrera
.
prare
ra
----------|thBut'°el^er I'm attacking free
be«lnn*n« 10 ,0°k *• though
r.vi.ei—Iiuu. Bvu&gt;t w Juiu piacn ■—-• —«■
-~r,
addition, the Ford so
Malar
“**n .c_
nrm..—
*'hen dis- ,...
areas, would be greatly aided if the i during tne last months.
Major [ paln' —...lnry
.....■
I—azwvi in An. , nr* if »».•• r«i.H k—
.re.pre..re
.rewurereu. n.c
jauukui' for so called "entertainment." There
one*
thttt fallh **, contains a soluble oil which t
Stinit said. "The
-nt. stanlfi
. UM&amp;rere ot
■&gt;” -wo"!™'
speech — as though free speech 'Sm’wiro Wft£r
wild | imi iefi&amp;Wre
t.mi.f.t.ra. Sdopta
.,ithe
.... major
...ire. Btarret
of their young daughters would have ore. legitimate ways for boys and tal«hfully and intelligently exercised., lve|y retard* evaporation,
thb analysts m studying labor been solved without much question, glrb to obtain social pleasure with- b R not reasonable to expect that' n^anj that Ford antl-freeM
। meant free license to undermine our
'government; or, by indirection. I'm
ment publicly advocated by Dr. Eu­ shortages and labor clearance prob- ■ In our Judgment, in lhe great ma-, out carrying it to excess or crossing a Pxtoer will help Hb child to ap- |
lems is obvious
j trying to undermine
i Jority of cases where young people into the danger zone. Young peo- preach that ideal? Religion you
docJ nrdinarv alcohol antl-l
,[ believe Deep snows have come?gene B. Elliott, superintendent of
' trade unionism, alnA TLTnnk’ tHrelr ln,,rre,l.n,. n re,I 1 n',»v .HnillH rent fw* MrereraM rrerereztnahlre SSV? Of COUTSe. W11V IlOt ? We are.
_
..
... .re-_____
unusually early this year. Read- | public instruction. While the whole
N11
* nc
«lecl °
.lcohol
the
neglect
off thrtr
their parenU.
parents, not pleasures; but these should be had not referring to creeds and drIngs from snow depth-gauges cs- 1program constitutes a comprehensive
■ though what trade
J£t£
a jJerwJhkls ■ lhrlr
°*
’n b&lt;dne
“ ot
"rt w
’ 1 *~
n a
freasonable
'-a,..«’nablf
manner,
at
nominations
their —
own
badness
of h
heart
or wU
wil-jin
a
manner, but
at reasonreason—
------v.
.re—
nominations
to a simple
“Way" I but to a iimnte -Wav-1 rMlce “
j unionism has In
tabllshed in various parte ot tiie plan for betterment of the entire
northern counties
to
correlate public school system, much emphasis in thb world, he or she may have l ful Waywardness are the principal able times and hours, and under 01 hfe. That was what Christianity *
-common with com­
J causes of their wrong doing" In the i wholesome conditions
The
Bamboo ^ft*n erowi to ba jiit
The beer;
hrer I wa&gt;
was celled
Called in
in Its
its earlier
earlier historv
hlstOTV an
Oh ll i'
j munlsm is some.SUOS’ conditions with winter obser- |I was laid by the stale's school head to compromise and train for one causes of their &lt;rnnv dnlnir Tn thi- urhnlriuimr rzrnrlitlnn.
Bre asked to follow the Idea! I
, . ..
•
vations of deer and other game on educational problems peculiar to which will give a good chance to cases we are now considering there "parlors" and the promiscuous pub-1
| thing which I don't
■------------ of
... a lamentable lackhall.
ac. .mt
Manofofthe
Galilee,
filled
and filledlcrl
'auwas—
evidence
lie dance
hallsntarerihc-c
not Of
fit the
places
Man of
Galilee,
and
indicate that In various places/i the areas outside metropolitan dls- earn a living as well."
quite see.
irlete.
'
•
of
home
training
and
parental
inwhere
young
girls
or
boys
.can
be
I
completely
ruled
by
the
Spirit
of
snow b already as deep as two"
Tlir national re-employment *CTV- I terest in their welfare—a shameful trained for useful living. The hop- The Living God which He made
| Ono camouflaged
Underlying the whole proposal,
ice, a divbion of the United States.
red — or anyhow be
which was in the form of the blen- Employment Service, b affiliated * mnoring or the inexperience of the | pocket whiskey flask is not a sign available for his followers. Do you
। must be reddish—
1 four young girls. Their daughters that a boy has become n "ije-man." think “
that
•-* *'*
kind
—* of a life *in
“ “a home
The United stales War deport­ {nial report of the department of
■
It.... — _ — rere
: were
negitet
proper would help children to grow up as
• public instruction to Governor Fitzwere a?towed"
allowed lo
lo go
go “ where
where ”’they
they | fFtitakeiis
II betakeiu a~sad
a sad negk
■' of ---------ment.
which
has
started
an
1mThis Federal agency attempts to
ily 100,900 kno
j gerald. as required by law. was the
i wished, permitted to stay away from home life and home training for they should into clean and useful
and n-iocauai
relocation project
project | basic contention that the public nnd the unemployed Jobs for Which | home without chaperoning till lou- that
•Z,—™'_i.,
’
। provement anu
___boy.
(living? is not a vital part of
' ianronUrwto*»&lt;imOn* ,rv,n 8" c*bb in
“* the
»*&gt;e Keweenaw
Keweenaw peninsula
waterpeninsula waterthey are. qualified with private em­
*We
“ are aware of the demand for child-training in a home the bulldj 120,000,000 of us, so
| way. expected to involve the ex- i school system must receive substan­ ployers who have jobs to fill. There । at night or early morning and
*hy*^y? But wouldn't you w°rry p&lt; ntmun- of more than $2500,000 ; tlaliy more state aid in order to Ls no charge for the service, ac-1 sometimes for wjiok- nights, under "self-expresslon" in -these days.1 *ng up of a conviction in thc boy’s
' । circumstances anil conditions which When the "self-eprcsser" U of ma- °f girl's mind that he or she- Ls
if 100,900 lepers were suffered to has been given a right-of-way i meet existing social and economic cording to Major Slarret.
;
conditions.
Public
schools
now
re
­
।
no
right-thinking)
parent
would
ever
go at large among us. or 100,000! easement by the state conservation
stinging lizards to run wild?
commission on 165 acres of state ceive $38,000,000 annually from the
allowed to go fo dance halls and
state, including the primary school YOUNG MEN ACCEPTED
। A very passionate lady Jh&gt;s been lnni1 through which the improvc- fund.
BYi u.
U. S.
MARINE
CORPS I,
o. BiHnm
c uunro
0^0^,^ 8UCh
wriUng in, calling hard names. But n,ent *» projected. In addition the I Following ore the phases of the
that ore unwise, so long os he harm;, j make him or her feel that the suI shan't argue with her, because I'm commission has given consent to
nejket. And reelety u oniy himself by his folly. But when' preme thing is to so respect that
a victim of aelurophobio. On look-!fh.e dUB1Ping of excavated mater­ Elliott plan which would particular­ Imtilule Offer, Training For'!ul
parents grant the right of "self- life God gave that he will not de­
_
. . large completed the sorry Job of
ly
benefit
the
rural
areas;
Payment
ing In the dictionary, you'll find that | ta*J«» atate-owned descriptions ag'_____ ,__..
_________ ____ . m- i,
_ ___ i_________
Men In Several
1 demoralizing these young glrb by expression" to their immature and file It with' mean, low conduct?
aelurophobia means one who has J
nPProxlmately 350 acre* by the state of all tuition costs
providing lhe beer joints arid vic­ inexperienced boys or girls, such
What on opportunity then every
now charged non-resident pupils for
Courses
an interne aver*lon for cots.
‘
c
'
lous
dance
halls.
1
,
parents
---------------------thereby
, advertise their own parent has to train a child so as to
7th and 8th grade instruction tn city
The
U. 8. ------Marine corps Ls now ce
­ &lt;rhe testimony in these-cases dis- ‘ shallow thinking or low moral sta-------------।
respect
himself,
respect others, and
I
&gt;k&gt;
,
I Acquisition of nearly
30,000 and village high schools, which pu- cepttng young men between the age cj01ed the fact that there are joints tus. It simply "will not work.
come clean with hb life. That h
pits must pay at present.
nt IS
la and 25
ok years
v»nr&lt; for enlistment
mtiatmrnt I
... ....
... .. .
...
.... days
j .....■
of
tw
‘I* .
nacres ot privately-owned land to be
in ....
the old
the mother had something for parents to consider
TY EADING about r. police sergeant. administered and managed for the , Increase of the stale's payment of I Men being enlisted now will be sent —a few in this county and others in
adjoining counties—which are easily plain, confidential, heart-to-heart very earnestly. But can a parent
for non-resident high school
who retired
retired after
after forty
forty years
years’’।j production
production of
of wildlife
wildlife"’ and
and
who
for ।। tuition
students. The state now pays $65 1I to San Diego. California, for train- accessible to young boys and glrb talks with her daughters about life, who scoffs at. or U indifferent to. I
service and never set foot off of hb
his public recreational use qras au। ing. The Marine Corps offers a where beer h sold and other Intoxh its duties, responsibilities, the pit­ the claims of religion give that kind
per pupil per year, but the report I
-sdSHU
native Manhattan island made me thorbed by the state conservation
splendid opportunity for travel
points out that in many cases actual I Marines arc stationed in Cuba. cants are permitted, where drink­ falls in the way. the dangers to be of training? Parents must answer
think ot a gentleman known a s commission at Its December meet- costs are considerably higher, the ।
। When Smith Broa. A Veita
ing to excess by boys and girls is met. how to shun them and live that question for themselves.
"Smltty" who, in my reportorial; ln«- All purchases are being made difference being met by local tax-I Guam. Hawaii, lhe Philippines. allowed and not discouraged. Undh- a good, clean wholesome life.
There have been added many so-'
days on Park Row, was general fro,n
$150 deer license lund
China, the Virgin Islands, and the puled testimony in these cases Daughters so trained were not apt cial diversions in our modern life—t
. payers.
livery weighs 2000 lbs., they ’
Panama canal Zone. Marines are showed that there are dance haUs to go astray. Mother love, mother not wrong in themselves but requlrroustabout at Andy Horn's saloon, j e3,nbllshcd b&gt;’ ,awRelief from the present over-1
also stationed on all the larger'shlpt opened to very young boy&lt; and girls, faith and wisdom guided and guard­ ing often much time and effort to "mean mebbe. They have the
| Smitty was bom In the shadow
• • •
crowded condition in many schools,
of
the Navy and travel to all ports where the boys carry flasks of hard ed the daughter until she had ma­ meet these "social demands." Can it ■you've heard so much
of Brooklyn bridge and grew up! T^16 stole legislature w
will be particularly of the consolidated
the coal with gobs of heat
of
lhe
world.
liquor in their hip pockets and tured in years, observation and be possible that these outside social
there. He had traveled the various I -------- —.re..—.1 com­ type, by direct assistance from thc
Utile ash.
Through the Marine Corps insti­
so she could----------moke —
her diversions and the urge for enter-1
,— _ ---------------------------boroughs, but no matter where ho munion to increase the non-resl-1 1 state to school districts for the con­ tute, Marines are able to further where young boys and/ sometimes Judgment,
glrb in their early techs not only own way In life. Fathers then did tain men t are taking too much of tiie'
•
went was always within the greater dent amall-game hunting license' struction of new schools.
fee to $15. Under the present law
— —
so *'•
often
— sidestep
----------- their duties time and thought from the home;
Higher pay for county school their education by enrolling tor any drink such liquors, buljctually be- not
city. Finally he took a tour to for­
one of several courses. A diploma is come intoxicated. There are "li­ to the children, and did not then and from the children in the home? f
non-residents from nearby states
eign parte. He went to visit his may obtain a non-resident small­ commissioners "commensurate witii awarded upon completion of each quor parties" too. sometimes held in place so much of the responsibility That is a question which every par­
their educational qualifications and
sister, who'd married a truck gard­ game license for $5. By increasing
course and these courses are with­ a rented room or home, where thb for home training on the mother. ent should honestly answer—not to ■
responsibilities."
ener back of Newark, and the broth­ this fee to' 8)6. Michigan’s non­
liquor drinking by young boys and "Dad" found it necessary to say us bul to hb or her own con-!
। Revision ot lhe whole body of out cost to the individual.
er-in-law, who owned a car, toured .«.«&lt;»
B.n&gt;c nunung
Full details can be obtained from glrb proceeds until some of them "NO"
resident .-...&gt;.usmall-game
hunting n11- school
‘
“ sometimes and to mean
.
U science in the light ot the inex­
transportation ' legislation
Smltty about lhe landscape.
। cense would be comparable in cost which at present lacks uniformity in the U. S. Marine Corps recruiting are helpless from having imbibed too. There was no dpubt about what perience of the children nnd the' PHONE 2X57
staUoa.
824
New
post
office
building.
I was one who greeted Smitty on! to those of mostly nearby states,
loo much,
’
he nytat. It would be better if more , besetting evils ot our day.
different districts, as lo legal and
Van Buren
Canal streets, Chicago,
his return.
...
financial arrangements.
"Fur me." he said, "never agalnl j Tiie November kill of predatory
Reorganization of school districts Illinois.
I don't like that Jobcy. Why, all'animnh in Michigan totalled 579. where economy and
increased
them towns over there ta got dif-; complete reports received by thc efficiency would be brought about,
.department of .conservation show. with consent of local residents a
Dolling Up Lobbyists.
I (This kill consisted of 507 coyotes. primary condition.
HAT ever became of the bill | 70 bobcats and two wolves. More I While enactment of legislation
PROBATE COURT.
introduced into the Louisiana |■ than
than 3.0oor
3.000r jpredators were -killed in conforming with any one of these
Est. Florence Murray. Petition for
recommendations would be reflected Admr. filed.
legislature requiring lobbyists to j! the first 1| months of 1836.
in caslng^the cost of education in
wear special uniforms while follow- i
Est. Fred Reuther. Annual and
rural areas, the other points in lhe final accounts filed, waiver of notice
ing their trade? As I recall the '
Eliott program would be beneficial filed, order assigning residue en­
original oct. it provided that lob- •
throughout thc entire state.
tered. discharge of Admr. issued, es­
bylsta of less than three years' ex­
Summarized, the more significant tate enrolled.
perience should wear green skull
recommendations are: removing the
caps and rainbow-hued plaid trous­
office of Superintendent of Public lowing account entered.
ers; veterans were to wear the
THE OLD. QUIMBY STORE.
!I Instruction from partisan politics
Est. Clyde coleman. Order assign­
green caps ond all-white suits,
One Indian summer day Lute by making the office appointive by ing personal property entered.
which latter seemed especially ap­ Bennett and Froggy Wickham went | an enlarged state Board of EducaEst. Clyde D. Browne. Bond of
propriate, white being the color for to Thomapplc take to catch bull | lion; higher salaries for all teach­ Admr. filed, letters of administra­
heads, remaining
until Sunday ers. modification or repeal of thc
purity.
tion Issued. order limiting settle­
It's just too bad if the notion has night. On the return home in their 1 "teachers' oath of allegiance" law to ment entered, petition for hearing
been allowed to languish. And if an boat, they saw a light at the Quimby II avoid certain abuses, a tenure act claims filed, notice to creditors is­
amendment were tacked on requir­ store, so they stopped to get some I to protect "efficient" teachers from sued.
tobacco. The country-side forum I being dismissed capriciously if such
ing that a certain type of legislator
Est. August F. Geiger. Order al­
was In full session, silting around a measure con be agreed on; pre­
must wear garments with no pock­
lowing claims entered.
the store, eating crackers and vention of use of slate aid funds, for
ets in them and buttoning up the
Est. Lottie Wisner. Order allow­
cheese, and occasionally zwlplng a purposes supposed to be met by lo­
ing
claims entered.
L
. back, princes so style, so the wear­ herring.
cal taxation,. .
Est. John, H. Miller. Petition foF
er couldn't slip anything inside bls
Lute showed them hb fish, and!
license to sell filed, order for publi­
bosom—well, there you’d have an started to quote from the Bible with
GUINEA
PIGS
LOSE
cation entered.
idea that any state in the Union which he was very familiar. Lute
Est. lantha Cunningham. Annual
could profitably adopt, or, anyhow, Informed them that many of the
‘
JOBS AT COLLEGE account
filed.
almost any state.
। Holy Men of Biblical times were ■
Est. Donna May Beach. Annual
I "harvesters of lhe deep." and fisher- Chemical Used To Test All account filed.
1 men of those days were held in high
Styles Id Women's Data.
Est.
Allen
Lasby. inventory filed.
Foods For Presence
repute. Froggy Wickham didn't
AVE you noticed those sub-divi­
Est. George Dull. Annual account
know much about the Bible, but he
Of Vitamin 0
filed.
sional bats the women aro did know a lot about fishln'. so he
Guinea pigs have lost some of
wearing this season’lf not, kindly told one of hb "tall" fish stories.
do so. It'll distract your attention Not to be outdone, one of lhe fel­ their Jobs at Michigan State Col­ Ulion for authority to make repairs
from the part-limo frocks some of lows sitting around the stove, told lege. And a simple chemical, a red filed, order for repairs entered.
Est. Lila B. Surlne. Waiver of no­
them are wearing.
of the time he was picking huckle­ dye. has usurped their places but
tice filed, order assigning residue
The average woman is wearing berries near the lake and a big has saved many of them from con­
.
tracting scurvy, a disease prevalent entered.
what looks like part of a hat—say black bear took after him. Thc fel­
Est. Watson Dram. Petition for
when
foods
lack
vitamin
C.
one-half to two-thirds. I've heard low said that he ran like a white­
Formerly the guinea pigs were board of determination filed, order
the more qf the original hat the head straight for the lake, with fed experimentally to see if they appointing board of determination
milliner chopped off. the higher the bear in hot pursuit, and made would develop scurvy, says Miss entered, notice to board of determi­
went the price for what was left hb escape by side-stepping the Flora Hanning, research fellow in nation issued.
' bear on the slippery Ice.
1 suppose with hats, as In the case
' Joe Pales was a fisherman too. and nutrition at the college. This test
OBITUARY.
of a good clean appendix operarequired two or three months of
“
‘11
.F-t
°&lt; '»«
non.
Charles Crockford, son of Henry
u
theym
cut —
IB. -retire
mini •Io,"'™»"
um on
V, ilbli
p.ruQUU&gt;l&gt;r
tulre evening,
tvreure.
- “.- —
-d —
—
nls particular
nuzav only
onlv very
verv wealthy
wealth* women
women but
u... he
.....
L_” Even for foods that require the and Nancy Crockford. • was bom
away,
couldn’t swallow that bear
September
20.
1872 in Carlton town­
longest
process
lhe
test
with
the
dye
could afford to go bare-headed.
I story that had Just been told, sq he
ship. Barry county, and grew to
Even so, the wearer has sorne^1 raid: "Mister, you're the.biggest liar •an be completed Ln an hour.
A chemist and scientist in Ger­ manhood there. He was a motor­
thing to do with the effect. I ran in Barry county. Thornapple lake
man
in
Grand
Rapids for several
.Into the ‘lovely Mrs. Clark Gable wm never frozen over in hucklc- many discovered the process which years, where helmet and married
uses Die dye. The German. Till­
' and -she had on one of the new berry time." "Oh. that's all right,"
mans, found that a certain red dye Miss Maude Appiedorn. Later he
fractional hats and it was power- ,he fe,tow “Jd- "I can brln« y°,u 50
fades when it comes in contact with farmed for several yean around
fully becoming to her. But l'U bet men who ylU
the “me
Hastings. For the last nine years he
vitamin C■
I, ...
n..1U Ire-U
__JI-l.
___
it
would
look 111,like the ...
very
dickens
The more vitamin present the has lived in Lansing where he passed
“BUST THE TRUST."
on me or Jimmy Durante.
I When Rough Rider Teddy Roose- more dye that can be bleached. To
i
IRVIN 8. COBB.
I veil was president the slogan was a measured amount of fruit Juice of 64 years, three months and three
, "Bust the Trust." Oreusel was in the red dye is added unUl it slops days. He leaves to mourn his loss,
1 the market for pig iron for plow fading. With tomato Juice the nu­ his wife and one brother. William
EXTENSION GROUP,
Dec. 23 Letter.
/
points and sent to different iron trition worker finds that the red Crockford of Carlton antj three sis­
The Coats Grove extension class' centers for quotations on pig iron color of the tomatoes must first be ters. Mrs. Sylvester Oversmlth. Mrs.
. met at the home of Mrs. Wayne prices f. o. b. Hastings. Replies came removed so that the colored dye can Milo Anspaugh of Woodland and
Mrs. Dwight Grames of Carlton, be­
be used for the test.
Offley Dec.
.. 18.. -----------A short
.------------businessin•“due
•*—time
-------and- the
-- -------prices
*------------quoted
sides several other relatives and a
, meeting _rz
,ai held. '.Z
16 members an-1‘ were Identically the same. Greuse)
&gt; OBITUARY.
host of friends.
.. —
.. —
--------------mem that they can't
* swering to. ..
the roll
call.
Dinner
wassaid.
------„ . lhow
- --------------------------------------Lucy
Nettle,
daughter
of
Marquis
served at noon by the hostess, Alice fool the Iron Master of Hastings.
USE CHRISTMAS TREE
Chase, Hlldred Chase and Bessie i'll order the iron from the farthest and Cornelia Knowles, was bom In
FOR FEEDING STATION.
Angola.
Ind..
May
30.
1859.
and
de
­
Woodman. The leaders, Ola Kimble point. Alabama, and let them pay
Don't bum a Christmas tree. This
sight."
Thf iron
arrived —
not ~
so ported this life Dec. 23. 1936. She
and Hlldred Chase, gave the lesson the frei,1-' " —
------------suggestion comes from conservation
on "Color." The next meeting will long afu.
fterwards.. but
««. ..
it was shipped was married to Reuben Hah in 1879 authorities who say that every tree
and to this union five children were
be held Feb. 2 at the., home of Mrs from Mancelona, Michigan.
bom. There are .two living. Oscar is a potential feeding station for
. Prank Haight.
1
--------- ---------*—i-------------game and song bird*.
D.. Of Hastings
and Zetha
Fenton of GROUP.
LACEY
EXTENSION
By placing the tree in the yard,
! The Women's Extension Group of Middleville. Mr. flail passed away in
-re ' i------ ™
.
i Lace&gt;' IMt December 18 at Ketch- OdL 18. 1915. Tn Dec. 12. 1924 she the butt stuck in snow or in lhe
The Hawaiian Sugar Planters asfOr dinner. Our leaders, married John Lens ot Irving town­ ground, sportamen may use it a., a
ooclation seta out hundreds of thouEarl and Mrs. Harvey ship. She leaves to mount, the hus­ place to hang suet or food scraps
sands of trees annually to restore 'otllasple. presented
the lesson band. two children, ten grandchil­ from the houge for game and song­
naUva foresb of Hawaii, chief which was on "Color and Unw." dren and nine great-grandchildren, birds. Christmas trees used In that
watershed tor the American sugar Our next meeting will be February also eleven stepchildren besides way may help many birds through
ths winter months.
other relatives and many friends.
producing area in the blandz.
I 5.—Mrs. ClarabeU McCarty, Bee.

Conservation and
Outdoor Notes

RURAL SCHOOLS
WOULD BENEFIT

COUNT OF EMPLOYABLE
PERSONS HAS BEGUN

NEEDED LESSONS
BRO’TTO PARENTS

for

SMITH BROS
VELTE &amp; CO

COURT HOUSE NEWS

W

Riley Stories

H

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER &gt;1, 1M4

AkpUM'i Shadow Constant

Inspiration In Teaching

The shadow of an airplane la al­
ways the same tiu regardless at
the altitude because the sun's rays
are virtually parallel.

The teacher who is attempting to
teach without inspiring the pupil
with a desire to learn is hammering
on cold iron.

SALE STARTS AT 1:00 P. M. SHARP.
Because of ill health I will dispose of my personal property
at public auction. The sale will be held on the place known os
the Bent Lewis farm located 3 miles east off M79 on Center
Road and half mile south. Or, if coming from Nashville on
M79 turn north at Kellogg Oil Station and go one and a half
miles. I offer the following:

Cray horse. 10 yrs. old, wt. 1450 lbs.

This is an exceptionally good work

cows
Guernsey cow. 9 yrs. old, bred Aug. 12.

Disk grain drill.

Deering mower.

Dump rack.

99 Oliver plow.

Melfetto cream separator.

Jersey cow, 3 yrs. old. bred Oct. 1.

2 wheel push cart.

Jersey cow, 3 yrs. old, due Jon. 11.

Double work harness and collars.

.

Single shovel plow.

Bean pods, corn fodder and small stack
of straw.

Terms of sale cash. Nothing to be removed until settled for.
I WILL ALSO OFFER 50 ACRES OF LAND with 2 houses and
other buildings. I reserve the right to reject any or all bids on
farm.

E. A. SHELER, Prop.
Dewey Reed, Auctioneer.

■

&gt;300 00

300 no
«&lt;»i on
BS0.M

MO no
I.too.og

th»« ।

COATS GROVE.

HAY AND GRAIN

3 shoots 100 lbs. each.

'ndvr.h.rif t

The Birthday meeting was held
with Mrs. Lena Mead last Wednes­
day a comfortable was made for
the president.
Mr. and Mrs. H Woodman and
son. Paul, were in Battle Creek on
Thursday.
A fine Christmas program was
given at tflt church last Sunday
&lt; venlng by the Sunday School. Offer­
ings of
each were given for thc
Cleveland Christian Home for Chil­
dren and tor the Emily E. Hinn
Home for Aged Women in Marian.
Ind.
Thp Extension class met with Mrs
Ella Offley last Friday. The lesson
was given by Mr*. Ola Kimble as­
sisted by Mrs Hlldred Chase.
Mr? 11 A Woodman represented
Coats Grove al the annual Red ...
Cross Roll call and supper nt the ' f"
U B church at Hastings last Wed- !1‘
nesday 'evening.

Quantity of Alfalfa and Timothy hay.

0. 1. C. sow weight 300 lbs.

.noo&lt;M
.000 04
ooo oo
IM 0 I
i&gt;o M
non on
5LM on
."BOu no
soo.no
300.00

Mlkaa.

Hk.ritt

agriculture, dairy production, dairy
manufacturing, poultry, agricultural ed i-v
engineering, floriculture, golf cotir.w
management, and forestry
wildlife conservation.

2 horse walking cultivator.

Guernsey cow, 5 yrs. eld, bred Sept. 8.

HOGS

i MU I
BekaJ C«

‘’Stale College, EnM Lansing. Other

Case 2 section drag, new.

Jersey heifer 3 months old, state ac­
credited herd, T. B. and Bangs test­
ed.

p Ma " 1

student* '.o famlharlae themselves
’vilh nurs-ry school work and child
ctaervacion, Home economl '; chert |
cour.se student* also will study
problems In the selection of colors
and design* tn clothing and will be
given some practice in actual cloth­
ing construction.
Work also will be given to Improve
the.efficiency of hony.management
such as choice of cqulptnenptaie of |
the house, marketing, ancyinatruc- :
tlon on budgeting Selection and ar­
rangement of home furnishings will
be a part of the student's program.'
together with art appreciation, mu- j
sic and dramatics.
The home economies short course
Is but one of nine short course:

FARM TOOLS
Wagon and rock.

(Oonllnued from Dec. 2i&gt;

preparation, child care, clothing and
home furnishing. The studenu will
Include prospective and practicing
homemakers. They, will studr the 1
principles involved in lhe prepara­
lion of good meals and will receive
training in menu planning and ta- I' Monon made .by Martens and ■
ble service in the child care work.' »&lt;• by iMiolia ih«t the matter

TUESDAY, JANUARY 5th

HORSES

PROCEEDINGS

Term Borins Jan. 4 And
Offers Instruction In
Many Phases
Better living In the Michigan
home— for both the homemaker and
her family—U the theme of the
elght-*eek.i home economics short
course which starts at Michigan
State college, January 4.
Those who enroll will receive
practical inltniction in all general '

AUCTION SALE

Gray marg. 9 yrg. old, wt. 1400 lbs.

BETTER LIVING THEME
ICIIOCOVODC'
M. S. C. SHORT COURSE dUf Ell f dUlId

Halley's Comes

N. R. Shellenbarger, Clerk
J)

Halley did not ducovwr the eomet
which bears his name, but five
years later, in 1687, he computed its
1 orbit

AUCTION SALE

Having rented my farms, I will dispose of the-following personal property, at auc­
tion at my farm, which is the first one w est of Prairieville village, and was former­
ly known as the Fred 0. Hughes farm.

MONDAY, JANUARY 4
COMMENCING AT 12:30 O'CLOCK SHARP.

LIVE STOCK
One black Percheron mare colt, wt.
about 1350, 3 years old.
One steel gray Percheron gelding colt,
wt. about 1350, 3 years old.
One pair work horses, mare and geld­
ing, wt. about 2600, color bay and
chestnut.
Two Red Poll yearling heifers.
59 breeding ewes due to lamb about
March 1. '
1 Hampshire ram.

FARM TOOLS, ETC.
1 heavy double harness, brass trim.
.
1 New Idea corn husker and shrpdder,
new last year.

1 F12 Formal! tractor, nice condition.
1 No. 90 tractor plow for FI2 tractor.
I Brockway farm truck with rack, ex­
cellent tires and in good mechanical
condition.
1 wagon and hay rack.
1 Deering grain binder.
1 Parker bean puller.
3 two horse riding cultivators.
1 American Seeding Co. alfalfa and
grass seed disk drill.
I spike drag. 1 walking plow.
1 set platform scales.
1 Ford power plant mounted on truck.
’ Ford speedster.
1 onion drill. 2 wheel hoes.
About 20 tons of alfalfa hay.
1 stack.wheat straw.
Quantity of onion crates.
Other articles too numerous to mention

:.n&lt;K&gt; no

I.AM Ao
ton on

Imwirt reNet

IT.MO.nn
•I«»v» *i»h ta ,,
tket
'Hnniie*

|

AJUrMMi Bentes

TERMS^-CASH. ALL PROPERTY TO BE SETTLED FOR ON DAY OF SALE.

lilt I

A

W. W. LUNG, Proprietor
HENRY FLANNERY, Auctioneer

r
HOMER ALDRICH, Clerk

rd Of mpervuor* |

u uw

«COiitlntml on next pagrt

aadmau.tr la, t0 J,

�THE HASTINGS BANNER. THURSDAY. DECEMBER JI, ItN

DELTON.

SOUS
1CEEDINGS

Over 500 people attended the ded
icatlon of the new Delton-W. K.
Kellogg Agricultural school build­
Ing on Thursday evening. Dec. 17. ,
Kep E E Faulkner u in Lansing
LhU week lo attend a special meet­
Ing of the legislature.
Word waa received here last week
□f the death ot Adclbcrt Norwood
at Sheridan The funeral was held I
there on Sunday afternoon
I
Several from Delton attended lhe I
funeral of Byron Tungate at Hick-:
cry Corners Friday afternoon.
Mra. Elsie Horton spent the moat *
of last week m Kalamazoo with her .
sister who. wax verv 111 and flnallv

SPECIAL SESSION

Mrs. Helen Schaffer is a patient*
tn the Bernard hospital.
The Cedar Creek Community
dub hold their regular monthly i
meeting on Thursday night. Decern-1
ber 31. and make a watch meetlni
of the affair. They are planning on
a large crowd and a fine time.
4
The annual meeting ot the DelWn Telephone co will be held on
Saturday Jan 2. 1837 at 1 P M.
Clair Richards, who is teaching
».iw I near Jackson. Ls spending a two
a.oo weeks* vacation on a trip to Florida
•« •«&gt;1 with a boy friend.

BaUau4
T r.. ra*M
v.. &lt;1 In. &lt;
t

■

w oleic*
Coanaittr. .ntwimtam. for : Iforkti

— -■

—1

—

1
t
i
s
5
s

?

-rrrnvot
l.n.l’r •*r«&lt;* lo ih&gt;

-j
-

jrai'll* ?»rk
rk wilt U- ral

J
w

iS

1
&amp;

■

f

—

s

- '

r

I
•

_

i

1

.....

—
»

lotcac

•
■

.

H
•

j

J2

-H

8'= I

•
LI

JJ

i •
11 ;
*3 j
a &lt;.
... t.

a

i 3

-.1 DM*

iIIJ
n

at PRE-INVEHTORY PRICES!
’• WE ARE PRICING THESE CARS AND TRUCKS BU
LOW MARKET SO AS NOT TO CARRY FAST I NV IN­

TORY TIME.

WILL RAISE FRICKS AFTER JAN. 1.

No. 39-1936 FORD V-8 DELUXE TUDOR TRUNK $485.00
No. 43-1934 FORD V-8 DELUXE COUFE, naw mot. $325.00
No. 41-1935 FORD V-8 TUDOR

$395.00
$385.00
$435.00

units* be baa bad a Ant das* high
school education or Ite equivalent.

No. 1127-1935 FORD V-8 FORDOR SEDAN

.$435.00

No. 1274-1934 FORD V-8TUDOR

. $335.00

ALSO SOME CHEAPER CARS AND TRUCKS.
• CALL OR GIVE US A RING

WK WILL BE PLEASBD TO DKM0N&gt;

STRATI ANY OF OUR CARS. COME AND GET THE FIRST CHOICE OF
THE ABOVE BARGAINS.

UNIVERSAL GARAGE CO
;

■f

TRUCK

No. 40-1936 FORD V-8 TUDOR

53

-4
1

::

and

plicant for admiitlon to Watt Point
be a high school graduate. But lhe
entrance examination la such that

■* h
P1 *

—

CARS

No. 1293-1935 FORD V-8COUPE

terlng grade. The course of study
is four years, during which the ca­
dets are under strict military disci­
53.30 i pline Summers are spent in eamp.
Upon graduation* cadete are com­
missioned second'lieutenants tn the
np"rt
United State*
signed wherever they may be need­
ed. Upon entrance to the academy
a student binda himself to the gov­
ernment for eight years.

a
i

Last Chance to Buy GOOD U

u.TH OXINE

FORD PRODUCTS

Phone 2121

Hasting*, Mich.

WOODLAND.
On-ydm'ruul. who 1, .uoMin,IC.rr.lh &amp; Stebbin, Drug Store

r thr
1 Junior College at Grand Rapids, is
"'***" rf h*. hon5P for the cllrlslni(k&gt; holidays
ib, ‘
MIm Helena Schuler Ls enterjaining the girls of thc Home Economic*
i Club at her home Monday evening
with a Christmas party.
Mr mid Mr?. JJ. B. Green call?.!
on Mr and Mr.-. Claud Dcmond ot
Coats Grove Sunday aitemoon.
Miss ixiecna Hilbert of Minne­
apolis. Mln.. is spending thc Christ;m»&gt; vacation with h&lt;r mother, Mr*.
Lawrence Hilbert. Mr. and Mrs Don
r»ii&lt; -. ; Shorno of Ann Arbor arc expected
.Tuesday for the holidays.
f
| Thc members of lhe Fellowship
, f„| class of thc Methodist Sunday school
arc planning to entertain the nca
• «n.iI Young People s class on New Year*
"■"•'jeve at thc church.
*
”Jn"l Mr- and Mrs- bee Hansbcrgcr
r th. were Sunday dinner guests ot Mr.
••
and Mrs Lynn Osgood.
R&lt;
| B. S- Holly U vbdllng hLs son. Dr.
»&gt;. i»«» &gt;r uirhi-1 Leland Holly, and family of Muske­
gon for a few weeks.
Meadamqs Lester Brumm, j v.
Hilbert. Leon Hynes. A- W. Bates
and Ml-J&gt; Susie Fisher of Woodland
and Mrs Beasle Woodman of Coats
Grove attended the Red Cross ban­
quet at Hasting* Wednesday eve­
ning.
Woodland Extension class No. 2
held iu December meeting at thc
home of Mrs. Kida Guy of East
Woodland Friday.
Mr. and Mr*. Ford Enz of North
Woodland are receiving congratula­
tions on the birth of a daughter.
Sunday. December 20.
Thc teachers of the Woodland
township achooi and their wives and
husbanos enjoyed a Christmas party
at the home of Mm Helena Schiii^
last Thursday evening
On Monday evening Hie Uth ot
vicinity met for a supper and pro­
gram tn the Methodist Episcopal
church of Woodland Supper n&gt;
served at seven followed by a brief
business meeting Officers
were
elected for thc year; President. Rev.
F. J Fitch; vice-president. Glenn
Wotring; secretary. Carl Brodbcck.
treasuier, George Foreman. It wa.,
voted to hold three meetimu. lhe
second- Mondays of January. Feb­
ruary and March For thc program
niu.de was furnished b/the Masonic
orchestra of Hastings under thc di­
rection of Dr. Walton. Rev F. J
Fitch, pastor of the Methodist
church, acted a* toastmaster and
introduced Rev Harley Townsend
and Dean Davenport who made
brief talks Thc address ot the eve­
ning was given by Dr. George N.
Puller, state historian al Lansing,
who spoke on the early history ot
Michigan and especially of Barry
county. A resolution was read and
passed by the group protesiuu
against thc possible removal of lhe
railroad. Further action will be tak­
en later on agaihst such removal.

I HEAT
WITH

HOME
J&amp;fAHD

MOORES
tIRCULATIRE HEATER
expenses lhe Missus and I have managed to sava
link each week. Had co figure coats psDMy does i» 4o M
and still keep house the way we’re used co to. Oac *

costs besides thc fuel. Inn clMBMig
bills, replaciag burnt out grain, remov.1

ing ashes, doctor bills for winter siduMsr.

"Two yean ago a man from The Gaa
Company called and wanted ue
gas heat. "We’d like it? I told

GAS
DOESN'T
COST.

* qaas®.®8*—

we can’t afford it? He asked
heating survey and estimate the com
heating out home with (U. w&lt;a. g«, wa(
found that clean, trouHe-frea gu bs«&lt;
really coat leu—all com comitiuN/

Take my upaatf ok The Gaa CaupMp

Voter bymbollsm
Color aytnbol in ha* soma of it*
root* in mythology. For instance,
divine being* were supposed to in­
habit heaven which wa* m lhe blue-

surprise you just like they di4 ««■

VOLUMES OF COMFORTABLE, HEALTHFUL HUMBtcame symbolic of much that waa aasocta ted with divine be Jig*.

FIED, CIRCULATING HEAT ARE DISTRIBUTED ALL

GOITRE

THROUGH THE HOUSE-UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS,

Make This Quick Test

ALL OVER THE HOUSE—3UST LIKE THE AIR IS

Get a small bottle Sorbol-Quadmple a colorless liniment For sun­
pie goitre apply twice daily.* TbotUand? have been relieved. U quickly
supplies substance needed by the.
thyroid gland Does not interfere j
with work or pleasure. Get further
information at Carvelh A; Stebbins.
Druggist. ‘Approved by a regtetered
physician. Note: E. Mac oafxirn.
P3M Pryor Ave. Detroit. Mich will
jtedte ten about Iter tucccx. with
Sorbol-QuadruDlc.

CIRCULATED BY A FURNACE

Consumers Power Co.
HASTINGS, MICH

PHONE 2305

MAU. COUPON FOR A
ran hiating
wavrr

�yniT. i.

'■

—■

THE HASTINGS BANNER, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 21, MM

■■■--—■—------- — ------------

FREEPORT.
Ivun wilii hu daughter. Mrs H. 8.1 Mn. Chris Nauma. son und were guests. An impressive c,
i following rules for handling seed [ unirrigaUd fields on the same farms
lighting senlw
service fjrttow^
followed th«^~
the p*Two of the local bpsines? place: Wedel and family.
daughter, and Mrs. Lessie Stewart ^^ttag
com. according to Michigan Farm- produced little or no coni. And
। er; H&gt; Select the ears from the some of them reported a pumpiim gave Christinas
of Grand Rapid*. Paul Bt-wart and &amp;..£
enmtinas treats to the
tne kidxio-1 Mr
Mr. and
ana Mr*.
Mr*, Lewis
xxwis Overholt
uvernoit,
and the
— 1
--------------- ----------- •
• standing crop—before damage from cast as los- as 25c per acre, accord­ die*.
dies Ttiursday afternoon f
Santa
! spent
the —
iioliday
weyk ------end in CoopDetroit were Saturday a.
din- made vivid by this display.
frost. &lt;2i Protect the ears from ing to a report from Nebraska Ex­ Clsus arrived at Rosenberger s drug j ersvllie. the guests of lhe tatter's ner guests of their son and brother, vart-colored llghta P‘*Y‘n« j
! Heeling until they have dned ijsnment Station tn Nebra-ka Farm- i-.orv
r.orv anu
and passed
out sacx*
sack* oi
of canuy
candy : parents. Mr
und .Mr*. Warner
Ralph
Alph Slewart
Stewart and family.
;| the
me pure
pure white
wnne of
ot the
t
decom
p.i.-&lt; a out
.
..
By
a beauitiui
beautiful
I down to.nut more than 14 per cent vt
... . .....IT. .. .... -t-.u__
«»..
..
...
_
..
.
__ .___ _ .
xj and
msde* a
Rev. and Mrs Gearheart
and
*"
d costumes,
and peanut* to tiie children. Sa'.-1 jjr and Mr*. Dan Yarger of
long
remembered spectacle '
will1 moisture content. «3&gt; Dry them
------------ ~
• Mara About Forced Molting.
| thawed, as every fingerprint
urday eV'cning Kunde and Sons gave i Grand Rapid* were Christmas eve children of Allendale were over lonj{ remembered
rotten spot.—Wallace » down lo 14 per cent moisture- or le»s
Tractor for Bog fjuid.
out targe sacks ot mixed nuts and, AUpper guests of his mother. Mrs El- night guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jed
South Carolina Experiment StaStowe. Mr*. Ruby Lewis and dsugh- P«*t of lhe childrens villa
as,rapidly a» possible. &lt;4» Store the, A Minnesota correspondent of apple* to al! children who called nt, im Yatger.
Uon recently reported on a farced
--------- ------------------- *
cured ears in a dry location where Capper * Fanner writes that he lias their store. Dr. H. C. Peckham abo. Born
M
Au..&lt;n Ml. ter Helen accompanied them home (101,1
molting experiment. One pen of
Boren in Potatoes.
- they cannot be damaged by mots- u*cd Isis heavy two-row tractor fur distributed hl* annual Chrbtmas I
M bl
on Saturday for a few days* visit.
. . Experiment
--------- -------- ----— insects,
.------ -----------... and rats, •
working bog land without any trou- lerst of• eandv to all the little folks
Connecticut
Station i.lure,
or mice
;
unto
Emery n*u
Walt u
is aurau
slowly recovering
tn-.it
candy
ali lhe
Tuwda"v Dec 227a daughi»
From
50 --------to 1W--bananas
reports serious damage to potatoe
------------, bU- The drive wheels were made in town on Thursday.
' * recent
* Tines*
andana
Is able
...
..
j...
..
— ..
— .x
. from hl*
Illness
is aoie i
-—
-----was farced by having their mash
from
com
borers,
according
to
sweet
Kudsn
Gram.
.double
wldtli
by
Huosn
Grain.
iaouoie
wmui
oy
using
extension
..
vm
„
Tho
„,
nMln
hr,.n
ui
and
’
M*
and
Mr*.
Galen
Overholt
of
to
around thr house on crutches’ ■!««&gt;• clutter or bunch.
taken away for three weeks, begin। Southern
Fanner
repotts
that
the
nm*
—
were
front
wheels
, Thompson has been ill and
curk»viile and Maurice Overholt of
nart of the time
________ ____________—
'nms
—and
and so
werthe
.............................
Pennsylvania
Farmer.
The
station'
bouuicm
ranner
reports
mat
tne
:
ruu*
anu
so
weir
me
iront
wneeu
i
"'-r
"
ntng July Ml. And a third pen hod field survey of two counties in Con-1 Texas ..
.................. —
..............
'
-------- *5«?!
Uwd to
MrtH^ard Batdorf and i
MO.WAOl 1AXJ
Experiment
Station
ha* deTiie -----------------------------------------driver also carried a log chain,
S0"™*"
w hU
nw bome
nome the
lnc »P“a*
’1 ,ew WMnwcU were chrblma* eve .up-,*
,
"
'
.
.
.
P"
»
U
'
’
5L
'
,
‘
W
Mr
und
Mrs
Charles
‘
fanllly
of
aunfield
called
on
hU
V"
mU‘
nectlcut uncovered the dismaying vcloped a lu-w type of sudan grass and when lhe tractor hit a soft spot ■
data. All three pens were put fact
that borer infestation ran as which
stem
1*----------------------alino- t as he --------uncoupled
plow
the 1I Otto
O««r Eash
“* " and
“J daughter
J*■
“ rCali'~"
....—hj«3
----- ---a —
... that -- — -the
— r
.-w —drove the
of
Overholt and family. Maurice 1* ren*v wui *»rs J I Batdorf J1""..-*
•*»«*•»
r lights after Bepteinbcr 15th.
varieties, ot, cone, tructor onto firm
ground—and; fornta have been visiting at the maUdng for a two weeks' vacation p..d,.v
*n route home from
w,4..., u
iilgh as 95 per cent in certain po- sweet' a*
* certain
. .
AnoOler
advantage
ot
Ihisl
new
pulled
lhe
plow
through
lhe
wit
I
home
ol
hi*
parents.
Mr
and
Mrs.
|
with
)»«
parents
11™**
'
rt'
bl&lt;
cn
roUt
'
homr
,rom
Ju
a.
r
laid an average of 107 tato fields—with looses os high us
“’7. t‘?e?wd
lx&gt;t wiUl .ttte thaln.
i A- T. Ea*h. oi South Bowne.
I Mr and Mr*. Clarenpc Doty and
Mrs Geo. Thompson went to &gt;}%
25 per cent of the potato crop. The
com borer I* also proving to be a be readily distinguished from the
—--------' Tl&gt;e„ Mtases Mabel Sisson nnd children of Battle Creek were J Grand Rapid*
?!• u.rki&lt;&gt;t&gt;.
nili.t 4.
Rapids Sunday to-be
to* be with T,;
pen that had
new menace to dahlias.
seed of Johnson gmai. Tile station
feeding Iteea.
I Helen Wade of Hastings called at; Christmas guests of her parentst. Mr.
’. 1i»
“ ub»»
Mr.।; her
her daughter
daughter. Mrs.
Mrs. Ed
Ed. Hart
Hart for
for aa I •«»
i»«7.
Ut~-r 7* *»* ■•»*«»«
has'not yi't produced :.ufflc&gt;cnt .-eed
Never under any circumstance* | the home of Mr
and Mrs Victor und Mrs Ed. Coots
l few days Mr Hart underwent a 4ia;*sMlai®rws«*i*s»ui«te
Straw Removes Nitrogen from SoH. for general distribution but it should ; buy honey to feed your bee ' suson Thursday morning, en route
M and Mrs neo
itoonerenter-' seriou* operation at St Mary * ho*than tne eggs of the check pen—and
i»J2. *«I4 s»*ica*wnt «&gt;♦•»«
Missouri Experiment Station re­ be available within a year or two. | American Foul Brood Is so wide- to Traverse City to spend Christ-1 talned ut Christmasdinner the fol- P*t*l Bunday morning.
the pen that had no mash for three ports that it is costly practice to
-----------ly spread that no bee-keepej can । mas
.lowing Kuexts Mr and Mr*John
Mrs Luella Draper is ill and
Is lh*
“t «•&gt;’•&lt;»«'•«« b
weeks laid an average of 118 eggs. turn under targe quantities of dry
•iH°rd to take a chance. If winter. Friend* of Mrs. Miranda Sisson. j|olcon)b and dau^jJter alut MUs’ confined to her bed at present.
l?,*MMi",iw?l&lt;iiir,|iter"»
straw—before it has rotted—because
Two years ago this fall when the c‘7n ^m4of1Ta^Ui&gt;\rt&lt;Mof“i-ri^P|
i
Ctarftbc,,e Hooper of near Pleasant I Ralph Stewart and family were
u. Kg,’io i*». b»
lhe rotliuK process destroys nitro­ 1934 drouth was followed by heavy
!Lrl!'td. whospital
.hear.. ?f hlast
. . Tuesday
0 x 5;I Valley. Dr and Mrs J W Rigterink j! ^r
uinner gussu Yriter^
of Mr* SS1
Qtewart*
““"f"1* •••J''
thinks that It would have been bet­
tatedsugar
dtasoived
m
one
part
ftAnoek
gen. Straw contains so Mttle nitro­ fall rains. Illinois farmers Ian more
‘
1
brother. Lloyd Yeiter and family of
*?. L.?,, u b
ter to atart the forcing about June
It ls&lt; bod morning following an Ulnm of only ™
. ar2f M? an "2?. a । nS : UwS on Ctutal^u day
gen that the decay bacteria are than 5.000 hones from a new type of boiling water.
Lowell on Christmas day.
um ky TirwI Jr n&gt;l mw**
ML—American Poultry journal.
**"' A‘ I neap
Mta* Arma Btowe who ha*
farced lo use nitrogen from the soil of disease. Up to the present time cheaper and safer than foreign a few day* with pneumonia Funer-'j oXfrey of FYerport.
Ml** Anna
Stowe who
ha* been &lt;■*14
«• •i»u f»r
■ al sen Ice* were conducted Hom tiie । chrtMUnas dinner gu„ta Of Mr |I attending
Houghton
College
during the process of rotting the ______________
__ __
______
no one has been_able
to_____
dMbvcr
thr, honey -Southern Agriculturist.
■ attending Houghton
College at
•*
straw, if the straw cannot be put, cause of this "corn stalk utaease"—or
and Mr
Mr*.
L. R Wolcot
Wolcott‘ *
and
J PP. «
H Houghton. N Y
Y-.. returned to
to her ruur, “bOT1„ to lh, ,llr „
Third Year clover.
* u
nd d
through lhe barns as bedding, and j a remedy for it. But Illinois Uni­
Contrary
to
common
belief,
red
°[.
bStaFVSteUv*
!
Ken
&gt;'®
,
‘
Mr
and
Mrs.
Vc.-.Gi.
1
*
.............
.....
"_____ ____ _ _____ : i^_j. Vernon lj home here on Friday, trouble with Mkhisaa. •&lt;&gt;&gt; is» s«b
ing apples U to select only hard. ripe, then rotted in the pile, lhe station venity reports that it is definitely
cl9ver is a perennial Inrtend of a “ 1 LI*“ thC
Wolcott.
Wolcott. Mr
Mr and
and Mr*.
Mrs. Paul
Paul Miller,
Miller. | her
“ ------------- — it --------------***“‘’
*
eyes making
necessary*“
for*"*
her .. .....................
perfect fruit for storage—and the recomtmaids making artificial mo-; connected wth com stalks—and that
biennial crop-and unless
th?
m«tin« u belnu 1 Rob
RobMt
*t and llarr
Harry'
&gt;- Rebcler.
Relgler. all of lo give up her school work for thc
second rule Is to wrap each apple in nure by adding.78 1-2 lbs. of am- the stalk held
- . Is a rt-ky
stand ha* been reduced by taucte: JJV.h?
. of S Beiae ^x 1 CharlotUf' Mrt F L ah‘*«d ot present.
tissue paper or regular apple wraps. monium sulfate—60 lbs. ot fine horscs —Prairie Parmer
or disease it 1&lt; not through nt [
TnirsdavTvenli^
Mias Hetan Shepherd of
Mr and Mrs. Baal) Thompson and
Newspaper is not satisfactory. Keep limestone—and 22 1-2 lbs. of super­
thc end of thc second year For tills ‘ ... ,11 dav^meettatr of the W M i
Nur5&lt;?5 Home al Battle Creek mother. Gertie Thompson of near
the apples as cool as possible—with­ phosphate—to each ton of dry straw
An all
day meeting of thc
W. M.
Turkeys.
f^uon llltoU
.m
ioSuTinrWM
ihuw
”.' i c,hrWm*s a"“‘r
»'
Pontiac were Christmas guests at
out freering--and provide extra —and tailing It rot lu piles —Mis­
This year—for the fir*t time—the
.........
• —
■ T,'T
• -----------.. ----------A. lor work
*orlt u
L' being
txing neat
held this
mu wen
Wed- ; vl(jU
an&lt;1
Aiajj, at Ulc the home of Mr nnd Mrs. John
moisture by spraying walls and floor souri Rurallst.
plowing unto gooll.
al
O1 M„ cl,„
Poultry Tribune Experimental Farm Kdvt.s
F. E. Brunner home were Mr. and Thaler, reluming home Monday.
to prevent drying out. Apples that
raised all of their turkeys In con­ old &gt;un&lt;U of r«l clovtu-pwrucu-1 ov„,£,lt ,1lh p« lucK dinn„ M
Mr. and Mrs. clay Adams and
Storing Seed Com.
।। Mrs. Prank Hubbard of Greenville.
finement. By that I mean that no*, laxly thu year when clover seed ------, daughter Helen of Hastings. Mr. and
Purdue University sets forth thc one of the more than 400 turkeys promise* to soar out of sight '*
be touched until they have
in
Mrs. Leslie Adorns of Coats Grove,
raised ever set foot to ground Anri, price—Prairie Farmer.
over Christmas guest of his sister. ,n ... rr^.g
, H
Mr and Mrs Lisle Adams and son
1
Mra
Roy
Naglcr
and
family.
j
jju*
Margaret
Brown
attended
the
as a xesult. mortality was consider­
Paul of Grand Rapids, and Mr. and
ably less than in any of thr sevgi
Mrs. E. H Adams enjoyed Christmas
v -J izurr
’
, - . . u .
luoerar oi airs, joiui uenz
years that they have been raising
There »as .■ Urge crowd present“ h ll?Zi' K3J'''t L?*,Middleville Saturday afternoon.
dinner with Mrs. Ruby Lewis and
turkeys in large numbers. Think
Tld.iv evening
evening at
at the
the schoolhouse
schoolhouse MrMrs
. *"’** Newton, and
...
m
.tcv Usborne
Uxbarnr of
of Ann
Ann Ar- family.
Friday
"
“
7
Miss
Mercy
that over. non Rkhort, .nd|Sia^^r,u£US£^Sj«
The many friends of Mrs. John
lo wltiM.-s the program which tiie/'S.’.nd M
Dunham pupil* and teacher so ably
'Wilt-Resistant Watermelons.
of her death last Wednesday at her
Iowa Experiment StaUun has de­ pre anted. Santa arrived at the conr.hrbinms
ue/k
,
1
«r«re
rrulay
evening
callers
ar
rhe
iiome south of town, following a
veloped two wilt-resistant water­ clu.lon of th-.- program and found, ■ftX.'k&amp;.lffwb
s,;1"
U“ stroke on Tuesday. Funeral service*
melons of duilrablu iiuxltet quaU- innnv children eager to help dis­
were held at the Bena way Funeral
tles—according
to a rvr»ort in tribute the gifts about the tree.
..Bt.‘rtha Jbtinwn and. Mrh clUtle Rous}l nnd Mn lvan Home at Middleville Saturday aft­
unu
wnc served.
.wivru.
■,
and caiiuy
candy were
Southern Farmer. Thtac varieties PopcorniKatheryn
Conklin
of
Ban- Lirniiy at Hostings.
Mb* ------ -------- —
| were Christmas guests of tiie for­ ernoon.
have been named Improved K’eckRev.
.
..as the week-end guest of
n,v and
om' Mrs.
Mrs J.
’ L Ickes were mers brother. OUs Landon, and
Mr and Mrs. H. W. Oosch had as
ley Sweet No. G—and Improved
.holiday guests of Mrs. Ickes' chtltheir Sunday dinner guests. Mr.
family of Carlion Center.
Stone Mountain No. 5. Seed wdl Enid Cheeseman.
drcn
Detroit and attended the
Severn! from this • netahbarluxMl
___ - Mrs. Viola Rogers and son Alton and Mrs. Don Richards and two
probably be. commercially available
- rhrLstenlng nt her great-grandchild. I
?av.m;kv
children
of Dearborn. Miss Thelma
did Christmas shopping at Hosting!
for the 1937 season—Southern attended the shower fur Mr. and
The Christmas program r.cneduled last Thursday afu-nioon.
'UHPoRATION.
Wlngeler of Saranac and Charles
Mrs Fred HUI iMrs. Mildred Puff:
Fanner.
which wa&gt; laid at the Grange hall.
Mrs Vivian Anderson,
A"""”"- accompanoceompan- Geiger.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgsr Cheney and
Saturday evening. They were mar­
Better Than an Oil Well.
I The writer has a friend who. is ried in indbna in November.
daughter Donna of East Lgnslng
| pumping oil out of seventeen oil
Laura an&lt;L Margaret McKelvey with the local board of education
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
j wells tn Kentucky—and for much of were guests Sunday of their grand­ and Dr Wedel in the prevention of Kulamazoo, thc gue»u of Miss. Cor- Mrs. H W Oosch
J. W. Reuter and daughters. Pearl
the time during the lost four or five parent- . Mr. and Mrs. A. E Harding a scarlet fever epidemic. Instead a rent Giess at lhe Ralph Kenyon
I years he has lost .money on every
T7w Moore school pupils hold short program Wfc&gt; given'in con­ home.
and Doris, of Grand Rapids called
( gallon of oil. Compare this with 1­ their Christmas program on Wed­ nection with the Sunday srhool on
Mr. nnd Mrs Alvin Helrigle of on friends and relatives here Sun­
Sunday
morning
and
the
treats
to
day.
nesday
evening
of
tin.
week.
. 700 Nebraska farmers who pumped
Filmorc and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
the children were passed out ul
There was a splendid attendance
waler from irrigation wells—lifting. The B«rt Hardin.- und Geo. Ball
, Hawkins and daughter of Grand
the water from lhe gravel strata un- famtii-.. went to tiie home of Mr. that time.
Rapids were Christmas eve caller* at lhe M. E. church Bunday evening
r aimMr “nd Mr' « W GO»Ch. Earl at tiie home of Mr and Mrs. Gor­ when the Sunday school, assisted by
Sun­
‘ der their own farms and sprcudln.: nnd Mrs Merrill Dunkelbcrger
and Glenn Owrh were Christmas don Usbome.
l it on their coni fields Many of day evening and had
the Young People’ choir, put on their
'family
"
ilinner gueMa of Mr and Mrs. Floyd ■ Mr and Mrs* Frank Rica of South beautiful ChrLstmas pageant. Thd
| them reported yields of 40 to 50 ChtiilihiLs tree.
Geiger near Alto
C
! bushels of corn to the acre—when
Haven. Mr Ed. Burrma and Miss Christmas stpry was depicted in UvMr and Mra. Hx.MJ Boughner re­ Bcmlece Burkey of Kalamasdo were j
The Beecher Family
pictures while colored lights
Dr. Lyman Beecher, father of the ceived a Christmas greeting from
vi chttalmas guests at the horn.- of, were thrown upon the scene* and
Dexter
Smelker.
«
Don't Suffer
distinguished Henry Ward Beecher
«r.,i Mrs, Clarence. Rev
- »”&lt;• Mr*. L. F. Burkey and; Christmas caroLs were sung with lhe
boy. son of Mr and Mrs
,—...__ .
*M&gt;nM -rh» vmmv
and of Harriet Beecher Stowe (au­
family Mr and Mrs. Floyd E. Buf- suggested scenes. Thc young peo­
From
Smelker who is now a teacher in
thor of ’'Uncle Torn's Cabfh"), was the school* at Bayamon. Puerto , key of South Bowne were aitemoon ple of the Carlton Center chtirth as­
callers Mr. and Mrs. Rica remained sisted with the program and the
himself ti distinguished man. He
congregation of the U. B chureh
.,„a »». t -„r- over the’week end.
m'
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Moore nnd two
..h
clnklnn motored to Clare last
cinnati from IFJ2 to 1832. After
and Mrs. Geun,t Thur&lt;(14&gt;, |0 ipend chrtstnilis uith
preaching one of his powerful scr- Thompwn
Mrs. Moore's people.
Will Draper of South Lowell called
• minis in which he would become
Lloyd Reamer of Lake Odess*
wrought into a state cl nervous ex- on Ills mother. Mrs. Luella Draper spent Hie week end at the "
'
cltcment, he would relax by going and sister. Mr. Irene Andru*. last Relgler home.
into his cellar and shoveling sand Thursday.
Revival services b-'gtin al
Swift’s Prtmium
Wood schoolhouse Sunday ci .cning I
WALGREEN SYSTEM •ng "Auld Lang Sync" or some oth­
with Mr*. Bernie Monker । Lila .
chlldr.-n. Mr and Mr- Bert Hayner
DRUG STORE
er tunc on his tlddle, or by dancing
Caim.si of Flint as evangelist.
i _• •
nnd children, all of South Wood- •
Chrt.-mas quests of M. und Mr*
PHONE 2241
HASTINGS
land and Mr. and Mrs Kart Olllllind ot Alto wire Christmas guests]
Wm. Harrison and daughter Flor-1""’ 1
of Mr. anil Mrs. Adam Endres.
me? ot Graifd Rapids. Mr. end Mrs.

Weekly Farm Review

The Be»t Ideas from the Beat Farm Papers
WILLARD BOLTE

&lt;i»» '

OYSTERS
Pint

CHICKENS - Z3

huringer or Salami

25c

uncheon Meat

Ihili Con Carne

25c

leef Roast

| LEGAL NOTICES |

HAMS

REED’S

S

A kb tha Manager about our complete line of Pickled
Fmk — Anchoviee — Roll Mopae and Appetitea in

■ SH" Y“K'r- 1“l T,”'r’a,r
s
Mr and Mrs. H. M. Boughner

^To all our patrons, we

Wine Sauce.
Other Naw Yaar’t Party
SUGGESTIONS

3 JX95C
Yukon Ginger Ale
18C
Kraft'* Old English Cheese
IOC
Excel Soda Crackers
39C
Stuffed Olives
Campfire
23C
Lipton's Tea
carton $1.15
Ggarettes
p.Tu.'
La Choy ■
SXX,
tcx.i.

Crab Meat
■ Lobster
Tuna Fish
8 o'clock Coffee

extend our best wishes
for a Happy 1937
HASTINGS LUMBER
&amp;■ COAL COMPANY
PHONE

2315

FRANK SAGE

HASTINGS

John,son and family of Bowne Con-'
ter.
•
• '
Mrs. Gordon Usbome entertained
thc former members of the Pythian
Sixers Lodge at her home on Monday evening of last week A beau­
tifully decorated Christmas tree and
exchange of gifts, together with a
pot luck supper furnished entertainment for the evening. Santa Claus
was present und furnLdied much
laughter before his (her) Identity
became known, a pleasant evening
wa* enjoyed by the ladle*.
■, Mr. und Mrs. Harry' Lane were
= Christmas dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Leon Howk.
l|r.S
John w Owens of Sharon. Pa.
Illlllfip came last Thursday for a few day*'
=
=
=5
SS
gs
S
. =
I!=§
~
5
™
=
SB

27c

1IQMK 0WNRR8' LOAM CORPO­
RATION. Mort&lt;*(M

I Annn,
Oct t t

M &gt;•

0 I. E. Moore were Grand Rapids vbiv tors Saturday.
R D Hide of Grand Rapids and
C son Marshall of Port Huron called J
X on friends here last Thursday eve­
X , ning.
nlng.
J«»pn aaui.ar.
X
Mr. Ray NMMr hu b«n very UI JiffiXi '^.’.’."tS

19c

lb.

Campbell's Tomato Juice
French's Mustard
Dill Pickles /
Lemon Juice
Cocktail Olives

5/ltHI

15C

Cherries
XXXX Sugar

wXX
n.,.., atouart and
r .... --------- / with her;
parents. Mr and Mrs Lewis Yeiter |
•»t Lowell
^Mlss Valenta Doyle of K a lam* too |
Is spending her holiday vacation
i’.’.0?" ,? «^lr‘
iiere with her parents. Mr and Mrs. I &lt;ntut-.i ta r»«.„r the
John Doyle •
---------------------- |m44
v. aa* pa
Mr. and Mrs Harry pish and son „fN*u ‘-tLteu’Ja
«
Harry oi Middleville were Christ-1 tHtmaai t. th. lutut*.
mas guests of his mother. Mrs. Mary) Mi«h«*u &gt;■&gt; ..&lt;•&gt; «... ।
Dodge.
I »4. Nollre * !•' k»r»by
Mr and Mrs. L A. Segar and sous
of Grand Rapid* called on F. E,1 north fr.nt 4&lt;x&gt;r »f th&gt;
Deming and Mr. und Mrs. J. E 1
*’•»
- •
Roua&gt; Chrwmv moniln, ci. route
“
to Coals Grovb for their family ,
wm b&lt;- foraeic
dinner.
; i&gt;.Liir *urtt«n io th* i
Robert Boughner of Kalamaxoo ‘
2&gt;
vtsitet) his parents, Mr. and Mr*. Io («r th, .mount dun
W w. Boughner and family the •»&gt;
°r ”i«» nhirh
forepart of the week
••»4«*&gt;«"*4 al or
Lyle Arnold of Lansing and J E
“7*Bj *ii"h,r“
Babbitt motored to the latter's «a&lt;l»r»ieae&lt;i. with .ot»r
farm near Marlon Saturday.
,u
••
Mr. 1. B. Lr.Ur .pnn Tl.ur.".‘.’llu'.’l'
day at Greenville the guest of her which rr*mii» ar« dw&lt;
sister. Mrs. R. a. Blown.
, Thai certain piece &lt;&gt;
Mr*. Eliza Knowles Ls aulstlng ’J*".'!'*,,)
with the work at the home of Mrs | uiari/ d^riLnT'a*
‘
Maude Rogers at present.
75 acre owt of a u.

17C
IH oa. jar

|2c

19C

GREETINGS
With pleasure we look back upon the service we have Seen able to render in

OOD STORES

1936 — with anticipation we look forward to serving you in 1937.

HIGHLAND'S

DAIRY

1 at her home the past week.
BUs. Or*nd Rapid*.
&lt;1 Mr. and Mrs Ralph Burton and
' two children. Moore and Ann. and
OBDEX TO! PUUUCAT10M.
• Lloyd Moorb of Detroit. Ml«* Don­
na Moore ot Jackson. Mr vnd Mrs.
Wesley Keim und son Vern of near
Clarksville, and Mr. a:;d Mis. Semlah Seese celebrated Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. I. E Moire
Percy Rosser sp«;nt Christmas
with his son Wesley and family at
Allegan Mbs Beatrice Rosser ac­
companied him home. Wesley and
family coming after her on Satur­
day.
Russell Kaercher. who Is employed
on a fruit farm at Bloomingdale,
spent Saturday and Sunday with
his mother. Mrs. Laura Kaercher
and called on other friends here.
Mr. and Mrs Don TafTee of Has­
tings called on Mr. and Mrs. Oto.
Thompson Friday forenoon.
, Mr. and Mrs. Lar Ambs and f*mUy of Laslle were Christmas guraU
of Mrs. Ambs' parents. Rev. and Mrs.
:|J. I. Batdorf.

puSlicallua

- MIMr^^mitb.

■OTI01 TO CUDIT0BX.

X— « hu.» . 1 ”’ilL. a.tv.'.’j

ft

J

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                <text>&lt;strong&gt;The Hastings Public Library wishes to thank Smith Imaging of Rockford, MI for their work digitizing the Hastings Banner.&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Library also wishes to thank all of the community members who donated money to support our digitizing efforts.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Banner Overview:&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Hastings Banner newspaper has been published in Hastings, Michigan since 1856. The following history highlights are taken from Richard Cook's history as published in the 1956 Centennial Edition of The Hastings Banner, and recapped by Esther Walton in her From Time to Time column in The Banner dated April 12, 1984.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Links to online copies of the paper follow the history section.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Searching the paper:&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;The Banner, and all other PDF files on this history portal, are fully searchable. To search:&lt;br /&gt;&lt;ol&gt;&lt;li&gt;Click on the magnifying glass search icon in the upper right.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Enter your search term(s) in the simple search box and press Enter or click on Search.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Any PDF file on the site that contains your term(s) should be listed. Do not use the Advanced Search.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ol&gt;&lt;strong&gt;See &lt;a href="https://www.barrycountyhistoryportal.org/files/original/676/How_To_Use_Online_Newspapers_8x11.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;How to Use Online Newspapers&lt;/a&gt; for more information about using and searching online newspapers.&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;-----------------------&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Banner History&lt;/strong&gt;:&lt;br /&gt;C.S. Burton &amp;amp; Co. were listed as the proprietors of the "Republican Banner", which first appeared here on May 1, 1856, with Dr. C. S. Burton as the publisher and Norman Bailey as editor.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Publication office was on the second floor of the Rower Block, whose address was given as "corner of State and Church"; which corner was not specified.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The objective of this publication was to win support for the newly created Republican party and thus counteract the influence of the Barry County Pioneer, a Democratic journal that had been published here since 1851. No copies of the first three issues of The Banner were saved.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Make-up on the first journal corresponded with a pattern typical of most local journals then published. Page one contained a few columns of advertising, fiction (often a continued story), and a short feature of no particular news value. Page one was the "literary" page.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Page two contained the editorial barbs, along with state news, political articles, Washington items and news of the national and territorial giovernments. Page three contained a few items of local news, sandwiched inbetween the local and foreign news.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Page four was usually solid with advertising and as such was the editor's "bread and butter" page....Locally it was the pattern until the early 1880s.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Several changes in ownership and management occurred during the first two years of publication, with J. M. Nevins taking over ownership interests on July 16, 1857. With the issue of May 7, 1862, "The Republican Banner" became "The Hastings Banner". Editor Nevins thought the village had developed sufficiently during the past several years to merit this recognition.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Another major change in the management of The Banner came when Nevins sold the newspaper to George M. Dewey of Niles on March 14, 1866, who then took over as editor and publisher. Dewey, an ardent Republican and somewhat of a crusader, gave considerable space to editorial comment and party affairs and also directed pointed paragraphs against the saloons and local traffic in liquor. Dewey was the grandfather of Thomas E. Dewey, Republican presidential nominee in 1944 and 1948. Editor Dewey on May 4, 1870 changed the format (and name) of the paper to "Hastings Republican Banner". &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A fire in December 1883 burned The Banner plant (located in the middle of the block on the north side of State St. across from the courthouse). Files and back issues from August 1880 to December 1883 and the January 4, 1884 issues are missing.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Banner was purchased by Marshall L. Cook and George Bower on July 21, 1880. They changed the name to "The Hastings Banner". M. L. Cook soon became the sole owner and remained so until July 7, 1887 when Albert Nishern (M. L.'s brother-in-law) joined him. Albert Nishern sold his interest on November 6, 1889 to William Cook (M. L.'s younger brother).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Cook brothers partnership held together (56 years) ... Richard Cook followed his father into the newspaper business, and Richard's son William joined him. So the Cook family ownership continued for 85 years, from 1880 to 1974, when Richard and William sold the paper to High Fullerton. J-Ad Graphics became the owners of "The Hastings Banner" in August of 1981.</text>
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